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PAGE  TWO 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


For  The  New  ThiAkers; 
Hope  Lies  In  The  Mind 


A  irt'slviiiaii,  aitendino  the  I'lii- 
Aersitv  lor  ilu'  first  time,  iiiav  be 
short  (Ml  poise,  setiirity.  money 
:in(\  a  dozen  other  thinos.  But  the 
l'ni\ersitv  makes  sure  there  is  no 
shorta|!^e()l   one   thing — advite. 

So.  in  line  with  past  e<ht(nials 
to  the  Ireshinen.  herewith  is  oin 
advice: 

Don  I   he  aha>id  to  he  dillerent. 

There  are  (ertain  limits  to  what 
vou  rati  wear,  say  and  do  while 
v(»u  aie  at  the  I'niversitv.  bin 
there  is  no  boundary  on  \our 
mind. 

A  treshmairs.  mind  shordd  be 
rr<.e.  atid  it  should  be  kept  tree. 
11  it  loses  iLs  frt^dom.  the  I'ni- 
versitv will  ora<h»ate  in  h)ur  yea-rs 
a  t  lass  «>f  innelfectnal  simpletons, 
readv  and  willinij  to  lollow  Axhen- 
e^er  anvone   else   beckons. 

Bin  how.  viui  will  ask,  (ould  a 
freshman  s  mind  be  auythin;^  but 
Ireer  How  lould  he  be  an\thin!J 
but  dillerent? 

We  tan  oidv  airswer  that  we 
have  seen  treshmen  <<)jne  to  this 
I'lUNersitv  with  free  minds.  We 
h  \e  seen  them  lose  theii  freedom 
of  thou'^lu.  iheit  freedom  to  think 
differeiHU. 

This  pret  ious  freedom  (an  be 
l«)>t  in  manv  ways.  Perhaps  the 
e;tsiesi    was    is   through    fear. 

It  is  easier.  h)r  instan<e.  to  ag- 
ree with  the  other  fellow  simply 
betause  vou  lear  he  will  dislike 
you  if  \nu  disagree.  It  is  easier  not 
to  argue  with  the  professoi  when 
you  disagree  f)e(a'use  vou  are  scar- 
ed of  him. 

It  is  nuuh  easier  to  become  an 
academii  sheep,  to  follow  blindlv. 
bleating  througii  four  years  of  col- 
legfe.  But  the  freslimftn  who  be- 
comes a   sfieep   has   turned   into  a 

coward. 

*  *  *■ 

There  is  .i  ureat  conformity  of 
thinking  on  ili.:  campuses  of  the 
United  States  tiula'y.  No  one  kno%vs 
exactlv  whv.  l>ut  it  is  evident  to 
everyone  who  looks  even  half- 
closely. 

The  rniver<uy  of  North  Caro- 
lina, its  historians  recall,  used  to 
be  a  center  ol  liber.tl  rliongfit.  .At 
one  time  v.'m  v  ve  almost  ^  lange 
if  yo.      '      I  .    tinuk  liberally. 

'It  i>  (inferent  now.  While  the 
,towii  aiid  the  University  remain 
the  citadel  of  liberal  thought  for 
this  St.  :e.  the  strange  people  no 
lonofer  are  the'  (onser\aii\e  think- 
ei^s— thev  are  the  lif)erals. 


J  he  increasing  pressme  of  state 
politics  has  been  blamed  lot  this 
phenomenon.  A  (owardly  geneia- 
tion  of  (ollege  student^  has  also 
been    blamed. 

Wherever  the  blame  lies,  this 
fa<  t  lemains: 

I*  It  of  the  hope— pret  iselv  one- 
louiili  of  the  hope — for  the  pres- 
er\ation  ol  the  freedoju  of  man's 
n)ind  in  the  United  States  lies  in 
the  groups  of  fteslnnen  who  are 
gathering  this  week  in  cam|)usis 
aioiuid  the  touiniy. 

If  those  freshmen  keep  their 
mituls  open,  if  thev  lefuse  lo  be- 
come aiadeinii  sheep  and  cowaicls. 
if  they  \vill  stantl  up  and  speak 
their  lujnest  t(»n\ictions  !)eh)re  ev- 
ervone  else  (whethei  or  not  they 
be  popidar  t onvit  tioirs)  then  they 
Avill  lia\e  struck  ;v  haid  blow 
against  the  conformitv  of  mind 
that  is  { reeping  a(  ross  the  toun- 
tiy. 

We  (ould  ask  nothing  mote  (»l 
tltis   fieshman  class. 

And  Coeds: 
Our  Arms  ^ 
Are  Open 

.\nd  heres  some  ad\  ice  l<»r  the 
new    Uaroline  ('<»eds: 

If  e\ei  there  was  a  plate  lor  fe- 
males to  get  interested  in  extra- 
cmTitiilais.   this   is   it. 

The  woma'u's  pl.u  e  on  this  cam- 
pus is  not  in  ^lie  lounges  of  the 
coed  dorms;  nor  is  it  in  the  soi- 
oritv  house  kitchens.  It  is  e\erv- 
wheie. 

In  prattitallv  e\eiv  tampus  oig- 
ani/ation  (with  the  exception  ol 
the  athletic  teams')  the  <<>eds  are 
invited  to  join.  wt)rk  and  dirett. 
That  intludes  everything  fioin 
student  govenniient  organi/ations 
and  The  Daily  Tar  Heel  to  <  hurt  h 
groups  and  the  Cardboard. 

, Coeds  who  work  in  campus  org- 
anizations receive  an  everlastjing 
feeling  of  self-satisfaction.  Tliey 
a'o  tan  show  to  their  Carolina 
Gentleman  friends  that,  the  wo- 
man's plate  is  not  neces-sarily  ,in 
the  home. 

And.  in  case  you  ha\en*t  thought 
of  it  yet,  it's  a  dandy  way  to  make 
friends  among  the  male  pipula- 
tion. 


One  Legend  Isn't  True 


1  heie  are  many  legends  about 
Cljapel  Hill.  S«)me  of  them  aie 
true.  But  the  one  about  the  toun- 
try  t  lul)  is   false. 

For  yeais  now.  j>eople  around 
the  state  have  been  referring  to 
the  Universitv  as  the  "(kjuntry 
Club  in  the  1  ar  Heel  education- 
al  system. 

If  yt)u  dt)n't  know  already,  you 
will  find  out  in  a  couple  of  weks: 
Carolina  isn't  a  country  c\uh. 

The  studeius  who  think  it's  a 
plersure  resoit,  a  place  to  escape 
the  draft  for  foin  years  either  (i) 
Discover  it  is  a  place  of  serious 
study,  and  c  hange  their  haf>its  ac- 
cordingly, or  (2)  Fail  out  cjf  school 
and  get   drafted. 

The  studeins"  who  stay  are  us* 
ually  the  ernes  who  have  found  the 
correct  mixture  of  studies  and  ex- 
trrrinriculars. 

They  blend  the  two  together, 
and    get    something    gtHxi    out    of 


The  Daily  Tar  Heel 

Til*'  official  student  publication  of  tlie 
Publications  Board  of  the  University  of 
North  Carolina,  where?  it  is  published 
daily  except  Sunday.  Monday  and  exam- 
ination and  vacation  periods  and  sum- 
mer terms.  Entered  as  second  class  mat- 
ter in  the  post  office  in  Chapel  Hill, 
N.  C,  under  the  Act  of  March  8,  1870. 
Subscription  rates:  mailed.  $4  per  year, 
$2.50  a  semester;  delivered.  $6  a  year, 
$3.30  a  semester. 


Editor 


FRED  POWLEDGE 


Managing  Editor      CHARLIE  JOHNSON 
News  Editor  RAY  LINKER 


Business  Manager 


BILL  BOB  PEEL 


Fieshman  Issue  Staff:  Fred  Powledge, 
editor;  Charlie  Johnson,  managing  edi- 
tor; Larry  Cheek,  sports  editor.  Bill 
Bob  Peel,  business  manager,  and  staff 
writers  Clarke  Jones,  Charlie  Sloan, 
Ray  Linker,  Frank  Crowther  and  Bili 
Barnes. 


iheii    h)ur  years  here. 

These  are  the  well-adjusted  peo- 
|)le.  the  people  the  country-club- 
bers enw. 

And  it  has  been  foinid  that  the 
bctter-adjustetl  people  in  later 
life  are  those  who  carefully  l)lend 
their  social  and  iiucllectual  lives. 
The  wise  freshman  will  do  well  tcj 
apply  the  same  rule  here. 

No  Beanies 
This  Side 
Of  Durham 

As  a'  biand-new  fieshman,  you 
probably  have  started  to  feel  a  lit- 
tle  bad  abt)ut  one  thing: 

Only  three  nioinhs  ago  you 
were  on  the  top  of  the  heaj).  ^'c)lt 
were  seniors,  and  you  haci  the  te- 
spet  t  of  all  the  freshmen,  soplio- 
moies  and  juniois.  Hut  now  vcui 
ate  back  on  the  l)otiom. 

Well,    heie's    some    consolation: 

While  you're  at  Carolina,  you 
probably  won't  be  asked  mote 
than  a  do/en  times  what  class  you 
aie  in.  Votr  won't  wear  a  l>eanie. 
(Freshmen  at  the  other  univers- 
ity. <»\er  in  DcHik  territory,  we 
hear,  are  distinguished  by  their 
beaines.  When  they  grow  older, 
they  aie  distinguished  !)v  their  ait 
of  siiperiority.) 

Mt)st  people  here— even  lots  of 
thitcl-year  coed.'  —  really  don't 
tare  what  class  youie  in.  They 
caic  about  what  sort  of  person  vou 
aie. 

So  thete's  reallv  no  need  to 
wtirrv  about  In-ing  a  freshman:  It's 
a   nice  <Kctipatioti   foi   a'  year. 

But  make  sure  it  doesn't  last 
longer  than  a  year. 


DR.  FRANK  REMEMBERS  HIS  UNIVERSITY  TOWN 


FRIDAY,  SEPTEMBER  14,  1956 


^• 


This  Is  Center 


Chapel  Hill:  A  Chapel  For  Spirit,       Of  Free  Thought 
A  Hill  For  Increasing  The  Vision  r 


Dr.  Frank  Graham 

{Dr.  Frank  Porter  Graham, 
mho  is  better  known  around 
here  as  'Dr.  Frank,"  ha^  done 
an  much  as  any  person  of  OTiy 
generaiion  to  mold  ihc  sluife 
of  the  University's  present  . 
and  fntnire.  A  former  presi- 
dent of  the  University,  he  is 
noic  contributing  his  energies 
to  creation  of  East-Wesi  un- 
derstanding in  the  United  Na- 
tions. Here,  he  remembers 
Cfuipel   Hill.) 

Chapel  Hill,  in  the  mid.st  ul 
primeval  forests,  hills  and 
streams,  as  the  beautiful  seat  c>l' 
the  original  University  ol  the  peo- 
ple and  as  the  lovely  village  home 
of  a  friendly  folk,  is  rich  in  b(>th 
its  historic  heritage  and  its  hu- 
niare  hopes. 

The  strategic  little  University 
village  has  been  for  more  than  a 
century  and  three  scon;  years  the 
symbol  of  struggles,  advances, 
Irustrations  and  strugs*ks  again. 
The  words  denote  a  Chapel  for 
deepening  thi>  spirit  of  youth  and 
a  Hill  for  heightening  the  vision 
of  the  people. 

The  class  rooms 'and  playing 
fields,  the  historic  buildings  from 
other  centuries,  the  moss-coVL"r?d 
rock  walls,  the  ancient  oaks,  tho 
memorial  bell  tower  and  Cupolas, 
the  monumental  laboratories,  hoi  - 
barium  arboretum,  planetarium, 
institutes,  graduate  and  profes- 
sional schools.  Memorial  Hospital. 
E.xter.sion  Division  and  Commuiu- 
caction  Center,  discussion  fo^uiis. 
music  hall,  theatre  and  ait  gal 
leries,  dormitories  and  fraternity 
houses,  village  homes,  flower  gar- 
dens, streets  and  a  store,  campus 
walks  vivid  with  students  on  th;' 
way  to  classes  and  gatherin;^  plac 
es  for  zestful  vnuthful  talk  before 
and  after  the  hour,  the  bells  ring- 
ing early  in  the  morning  and 
youth  sin^inK  in  the  evening,  the 
alumni  returning  for  the  nncnv- 
al  of  associations  and  fealties  t>> 
alma  mater  beyond  price  in  the 
brotherhood  of  the  University, 
past,  present  and  yet  to  be  —  all 
these  are  a  part  of  the  onnota- 
tions  of  the  life  and  spirit  of  Car- 
olina. 

Inherent  in  thi-  place  are  the 
liberty  and  learning  of  the  self- 
governing  community  of  teachers 
and  scholars,  the  tested  wisdom 
of  the  ages  and  the  venturesome 
idealism  of  youth  in  the  campus 
democracy. 

On-going  with  old  and  recur- 
ring problems  for  fresh  and  zest- 
ful ma.stery,  student  self-govern- 
ment develops  the  self-discipline 
of  defeat,  without  bitterness.  an:l 
of  victory,  without  vain  glory,  in 
the  common  duties  and  civic 
sen.se  of  the  general  life,  on  the 
way  from  the  campus  t()  the  com- 
monwealth, as  old  as  the  Univers- 
ity and  a.s  fresh  as  the  hopes  of 
youth. 
SHADEFUL  TREES 

Under  its  shadeful  trees,  with- 
in its  ivy-clad  halls,  and,  under 
its  steepled  towers,  religion,  with- 
out cant,  would  undergrid,  and 
learning,  without  bias,  would  en- 
lighten young  men  and  women  in 
their  quest  for  truth,  goodness 
and  beauty. 

It  is  in  the  tradition  and  hope 
of  the  college  that  youth  win 
freedom  without  license,  find  and 
publish  facts  without  fear,  organ- 
ize knowledge  logically,  interpret 
the  truth  clearly  without  slanting, 
develop  democracy  without  vul- 
garity, active  excellence  without 
pride,  strengthen  lasting  friend- 
ships and  high  loyalties  above  all 
vicissitudes,  serve  private  and 
public  causes  without  patronage 
or  bending,  become  leaders  of  the 
people  without  demagoguery,  and 
grow  in  reverence  in  the  way  and 
spirit  of  Him  who,  under  the  Va- 
tberhood  of  (Jed,  would  have  us 
all   become  more  truly  the  chil- 


dren of  one  God  and  the  broth- 

eys  of  all  people. 

-I  NOW  RBCALI ' 

AJove  many  scenes,  faces  and 
events  which  nGi\^  \ome  to  mind 
.  .  .  I  Aow  recall  an  episode  which 
expresses  the  sense  of  the  one- 
ness of  the  I'niversity  commun- 
ity and  still  shines  through  the 
shadows  of  a  dark  time. 

The  Great  Depression  had 
brought  in  its  train  foreclosed 
farms,  bankrupt  enterprises,  clos- 
ed banks,  the  mounting  state  de- 
ficits, increasing  legions  of  unem- 
ployed, desperate  and  almost  de- 
feated  men  and   women. 

Moth(>rs    and    fathers    all    over 


in  the  lowest  brackets  and  to  ab- 
sorb the  difference  in  the  larger 
cuts  to  be  made  in  the  highest 
brackets. 

This  policy  had  not  yet  been 
announced  ai^d  was  then  unknown 
to  the  janitors.  We  were  thus  pre- 
pared to  tell  this  to  the  janitors 
fir  whatever  little  value  it  might 
have  in  their  hard-pressed  situa* 
tion. 

The  meeting  opened  with  the 
regular  procedures  and  character- 
istic dignity  of  the  association. 
A  cho.sen  spokesman  was  recog- 
nized to  state  the  case  for  the  j 
janitors.  i 

He    spoke    not    a    word    about; 


moving  part  in  helping  to  raise 
in  alumni  meetings  and  other  con- 
ferences approximately  $150,000 
in  cash  for  the  Student  Loan  Fund 
at  the  bottom  of  the  depression. 
The  students  borrowed  from  the 
Loan  Fi.nd  and  paid  the  Univers- 
ity. 

The  Ifniversity,  stricken  by  the 
heavy  cuts  and  blows,  came 
through  to  better  days.  The  jani- 
tors revealed  the  living  Biblical 
truth  that  those  with  the  least  in 
income  can  give  the  most  in  spir- 
it. They  made  deep  and  personal 
the  fac.  that  we  are  members  of 
one  University  family. 

In    the    fellowship    of   learning 


THE   ETERNAL  CHAPEL   HILL 

a  pUue  of  hearts  tiud  saids  aiid   mntds 


ihe  land  communicated  their  anx- 
ieties to  the  children  of  the  De- 
pression. The  State  of  North  Car- 
olina made  heavy  cuts  in  the  state 
budgets  and  horizontal  slashes  in 
the  low  salaries  and  wages  of  tho 
staffs  of  all  state  institutions. 

In  the  mid.st  of  emergency  pres- 
sures an  invitation  came  from  the 
.Janitors"  Assn.  requesting  the 
I'niversity  president  to  attend 
tlieir  appointed  mtH'ting.  He  glad- 
ly went  and  expected  to  hear 
a  justifiable  petition  that  the  jan- 
itors, if  po.ssible,  should  not  be 
cut  the  full  amount  of  the  hori- 
zontal cut. 

A  decision  had  been  made,  with 
the  advice  and  approval  of  the 
faculty's  own  elected  advis  ny 
committee,  to   make  the  cut  less 


their  own  difficult  situation.  The 
ci.ncern  spoken  eloquently  by  him 
and  (>thers  was  only  for  the  plij^'iht 
of  the  students  caught  short  of 
fur. (Is  by  the  closing  of  all  banks. 

They  had  heard  that  the  Stu- 
dent Loan  Fund  was  running  put 
and  that  the  students  were  un- 
able to  pay  the  University  imd 
other  creditors.  Therefore,  to 
help  out  as  much  as  they  were 
able  to  do,  the  spokesman  said 
that  the  janitors  had  raised  a 
small  fund  to  put  in  the  Loan 
Fund  for  students  and  hoped  it 
would,  when  added  to  such  other 
funds,  help  both  the  students  and 
the  University  to  come  through 
the  hard  times. 

This  example  of  sacrifice  and 
sense  of  common  loyalty  ha^l  its 


and  struggle,  the  University  lea- 
ches us  that  we  arc  one  commun- 
ity i.i  heritage  and  hope,  loyalty 
and  sacrifice.  • 

The  ties  that  bind  us  all  reach 
from  the  Old  East  Building  to  the 
Mon>hcad  -  Patterson  Memorial 
Boll  Tower,  from  Davie  Poplar  lo 
Kenan  Stadium,  from  Battle  For- 
est lo  Hill  Hall,  from  libraries  to 
laboratories,  teachers  to  students, 
janitors  to  Kenan  Professors, 
from  centuries  gone  to  centuries 
yet  to  come,  from  the  immortal 
dead  to  eternal  youth,  in  the  light, 
liberty  and  brotherhood  of  the 
University  of  the  people  by  whom 
it  was  given  birth  and  for  whom 
it  lives  to  serve  in  spirit  and  in 
truth  from  generation  to  genera- 
tion. 


CAROLINA  CAROLEIDOSCOPE: 


Thoughts  About  The  University: 
Notes  On  Piloting  Your  Own  Ship 


DR.    FRANK    GRAHAM 

. . .  part   of  Chapel  Hill 


Frank  Crowther 

(Columnist     Crou-ther,     like 
Managing     Editor    Johnson     a- 
have,  us  usually  a  tough   num. 
But     vyhen     he     uHtes-    about 
Chapel     Hill,     he     remembers 
very  sentuuvntal  things.) 
In  the  next  days  and  weeks  you 
will  direct  many  questions  to  your 
cla.ssmates.    your  professors,   and 
to  yourselves,  .\mong  those  may 
be: 

Just   what   kind   of  a  place  is 
Chapel  Hiir" 

"What  is  expected  of  mc?" 
"Why  am  I  here,  anyhow?" 
Each  of  these  is  justified.  After 
all,  this  is— we  trust— to  be  your 
home  for  the  next  four  years. 
You  should  want  these,  and,  even- 
tually, many  others  answered. 

MORE  WORDS  -':. 

Well,  all  we  can  do  is  add  to 
the  already  many  thousands  of 
plain  and  fancy  words,  phrases, 
sentences,  paragraphs,*  editorials, 
stories  and  books  written  in  at- 
tempts  to  answer  the  first  ques- 
tion. 

One  almost  feels  compelled  — 
after  having  been  infected  with 
Chapel  Hillitis  —  to  attempt  to 
capture  its  stray  moments,  exper- 
iences and  feelings: 

The  warmth  of  a  summer  after- 
noon that  covers  you  with  con- 
tentment; the  despair  of  a  drip- 
ping fall  n.'irning  that  gilds  your 
loi.eliness;  the  bite  of  winter  tens- 
ing your  muscles  during  a  Janu- 
ary walk  to  the  library;  spring's 
arrival  seeming  to  ooze  the  stop- 
per from  your  bottle  of  fevered 
emotions  and  winterized  energies; 
shrugging  your  shoulders  and 
going  to  class  unprepared,  know- 
ing you  will  be  spotlighted  the 
moment  you  enter  the  classroom; 


listening  while  in  the  barbers 
chair  to  Chancellor  Hous^  and 
Paul  Green  as  they  discusjs  the 
creative  processes,  Shakesjpeare, 
higher  education,  and  agnostics: 
sitting  on  the  rock  wall  in 
front  of  Batlle-Vance-Pettigrew 
and  rhythmically  bouncing  your 
shoes  on  the  stones  while  Casual- 
ly, almost  disinterestedly,  |vvatch- 
ing  the  passing  parade  and  mull- 
ing over  a  few  thousand  things; 
morally  supporting  the  squirrels 
in  their  unceasing  flight  from  the 
Chapel  Hill  canine  citizenry:  and, 
finally,  as  Dr.  Frank  P.  Graham 
put  it.  "...  a  Chapel  for  deep- 
ening the  spirit  of  youth  and  a 
Hill  for  heightening  the  vision  of 
the  people." 

These  are  but  a  few  of  the 
many  "moments  to  remember"' 
you  may  have  to  savor  ...  or  pass 
over  unnoticed. 

EXPECTED  j 

.And  what  is  expected  of  you? 

Sincere  effort.  No  orie  is  to 
blame  but  yourself  for  any  type 
of  failure.  Your  previous  exam- 
inations have  proved  that  you 
possess  the  capabilities  and  meet 
the  standards  of  the  University. 

You  must  build  and  captain 
your  own  ship  from  now  on.  Do 
not  try  crying  or  pleading  or  self- 
pity  or  rationalizing  or  postpone- 
ment. Come  out  of  the  .<;hell;  ex- 
pose yourself  and  enjoy  it. 

And  why  are  yoii  her^'? 

To  answer  this,  we  rjiust  look 
at  the  basic  essentials  land  pre- 
requisites. Examine  yourself,  for 
once,  instead  of  those  around  you. 
Get  outside  yourself  and  look 
back  in.  Get  up  in  a  strong  tree 
and  look  down  with  a  new  per- 
spective. Unless  the  basic  drive 
is  there,  unless  there  is;  sincerity, 


unless  there  is  good,  no  fruit  will 
he  borne. 

Only  you  can  make  it  bear  the 
fruit  and  only  you  can  retain  the 
fruit's  stains.  "It  is  only  with  the 
heart  that  onf  can  see  rightly; 
what  is  essential  is  invisible  to 
tie  eye." 

And  don't  be  a  college  'pas.s- 
man;  "  we  can  all  pass  in  life. 

Some  men  are  born  great;  some 
make  themselves  great;  others 
have  their  greatness  thrust  upon 
them;  but.  they  all  have  the  same 
basic  qualities  of  honesty,  sin- 
cerity, goodness,  loyalty,  justness, 
and  fear  of,  respect  for  and  faith 
in  their  God. 


Charlie  Johnson  - 

(Writer  Johnson  is  The  Daily  Tar  Heel's t 
ryianaging  editor,  a  position  ustiaUy  calling  for* 
lots  of  grumbling  and  a  rather  sarcastic  out- 
look on  life.  But  when  Managing  Editor  Johnson 
returned  to  the  cantpus  this  year,  he  couldn't 
help  but  get  a  little'  sentimental  about  Chapel 
HiU.) 

Chapel  Hill  and  the-  University  make  a  unique 
community.  The  town  and  Carolina  are  so  interposed 
that  they  are  unsepa/able. 

The  melting  pot  of  North  Carolina  adequately 
describes  this  locality.  People  of  all  races,  creedsr 
religions  and  nationalities  live  and  work  here  anrf 
get  along  because  they  are  all  seeking  the  basi<* 
things  of  life. 

This  is  a  liberal  community,  and  Carolina  is  a 
liberal  university.  Freedom  of  thought  and  belief 
abounds  here  with  practically  no  obstruction  olhei;. 
than  the  expression  of  opinion  by  the  fellow  with 
the  opposite  viewpoint. 

Students  who  come  here  grow  into  the  commui^- 
ity  and  begin  to  love  it. 

W^hat  is  here  that  attracts  and  becomes  dear  to 
so  many? 

Is  it  its  liberal  atmosphere,  its  serenity,  its  beau- 
ty or  its  opportunity  for  anyone  who  seeks  it? 

Or  maybe  it's  the  friendliness  and  brotherhood 
that  exist  here.  It  could  be  football  and  the  thrili 
that  goes  with  seeing  Kenan  Stadium  packed  to  the 
top  rows  to  see  the  sons  of  Carolina  give  all  they've 
got  to  win  for  LTNC. 

One  who  comes  and  lives  here  will  always  re- 
member the  noisy  hustling  and  bustling  of  classes, 
football  weekends  and  Y-Court  .  .  .  the  beauty  o| 
the  Arboretum  in  springtime  .  .  .  CU  Day,  with  hun- 
dreds of  WC  girls  milling  around  .  .  .  that  cute 
little  coed  you  spent  many  happy  hours  with  .  .  . 
a  professor  who  instiHed  many  ideals  in  you  .  .  ^ 
the  night  you  drank  coffee  all  night  to  stay  awake 
to  study  for  a  final  i.  .  .  or  to  await  the  outcome  o£ 
an  election  .  .  .  extra-curricular  activities  that  in; 
terested  you  ... 

It  has  often  been  said  that  when  a  person  leaves 
here  and  returns,  he  will  always  find  someone  he 
knows,  usually  just  by  running  into  them  on  the 
streets. 

Some  remember  the  echo  of  cheers  at  football 
games,  the  first  game  they  go  to,  the  Bell  Tower 
wafting  out  its  sweet  sounds  through  the  many  pines 
and  the  Alma  Mater  being  sung  at  the  end  of  ^ 
game — a  game  that  may  have  ended  in  defeat  for 
the  home  team,  but  the  song  still  means  as  much. 

The  day  you  slept  through  a  quiz  and  begged 
your  prof  to  let  you  take  it  late,  the  old  familiar 
sound  of  "Go!  Tar  Heels,  Go!"  resounding  through 
Woollen  Gym  to  urge  on  a  cage  victory — all  these 
will  remain  with  you. 

Some  of  you  will  stay  less  than  a  semester,  a 
semester,  one,  two  and  three  or  four  years  or  more"; 
and,  some  of  you  will  stay  here  for  life.  You  may 
leave,  but  its  been  said  before — "They  always  come 
back." 

Fraternity  or  sorority  rush  just  in  the  thick  of 
your  studies  .  .  .  dancing  at  the  Patio  to  a  pop  tune 
...  all  night  parties  for  Germans  .  .  .  the  thousands 
of  friends  you  meet  .  .  .  these  will  forever  floofl 
your  mind. 

It's  hard  to  say  what  people  see  in  this  place, 
but  stay  here  a  while  and  you'll  know  .  .  .  You  can't 
explain  it,  but  you  can  feel  it.  It  isn't  taught  in 
text  books,  nor  is  it  on  file  in  the  library.  It's  just 
a  feeling,  and  a  great  one  at  that. 

Campus  Landscapes . 
Offer  inspiration 

University  of  North  Carolina  Magazine 

Circa   1860 

The  College  Campus  is  now  arrayed  in  all  the 
charms  of  Nature  assisted  by  the  fostering  hand  of 
Art,  and  the  soft,  balmy  air  is  perfumed  by  the 
almost  eternal  flowers  that  bloom  in  vernal  beauty 
along  the  works  that  lead  from  the  Buildings  fo 
the  Village. 

If  it  be  true  that  the  noblest  traits  of  character 
and  intellectual  progress  and  development  are  the 
effects  of  such  natural  scenery  —  if  it  be  true  that 
it  is  owing  to  such  scenes  as  these  that  a  W^allace 
and  a  Tell  were  reared,  and  if  "the  untrammelled 
element  of  liberty,  the  safeguard  of  religion  and 
virtue  "  be  there  nourished  to  bloom  and  bless  the 
world  —  then,  surely,  it  is  fortunate  for  students 
here  that  such  gay,  smiling  landscapes  spread 
out  before  them,  with  forests,  hills  and  valleys  ex- 
tending in  majestic  grandeur  and  the  freshness  of 
perpetual  morning  far  away  to  the  distant  limits  of 
the  horizon  ... 


iRIDAv, 


atl 


THE 


F 


The  I 
to  fai 
Thai 

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Lcagij 
us  b>J 
will 
year.  I 
cr  sh| 
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JUST  SITTING  AND  WATCHING  LIFE  GO  BY 

•  i. .  mulling  over  a  fete  thouaand  things 


.    1 


.a.. 


1,. 


i*^ 


!    / 


1956 


FRIDAY,  SEPTEMBER  14,  1956 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


PAGE  THREI 


it 


-rs. 

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ipel 

Inique 
(posed 

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reeds: 
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iwake 
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Ihat   in; 

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lootball 

Tower 

ly  pines 

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feat  for 

much. 

begged 

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through 

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more"; 

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thick  of 

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lousands 

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place, 
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It's  just 


es 


igazine 

|n   all   the 

hand  of 

by   the 

Lai  beauty 

fldings    to 

character 

\{   are   the 

true  that 

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students 

;s    spread 

(•alleys  ex- 

leshness  of 

It  limits  of 


Bachelor 
Life  Can 
Be  Casual 

By  CHARLIE  SLOAN 

Coiumnist  Sloan,  an  associate 
editor  of  The  Daily  Tar  Heel. 
hoo-  put  so^ne  time  in  Univers- 
ity dormitories.  But  his  secreted 
hotplate  got  found,  amd  noic  he 
lives   in   a  fraternity   house  ) 

Most  of  the  many  facets  of  life 
at  Tar  Heclia-on-Franklin  St.  have  |  How  to  present  your  prettiest  and  very  best  self  during  the  rapid 

been  described,  extolled  or  gencr-  i  succession  of  rush  parties  is  probably  a  weighty  question  in  the  minces 
ally  drooled  over  in  other  parts  of  ^  of  many  incoming  Caroline  Coeds. 

this  issue.  !      »      .u  u  i     .u 

I      In    the    rush    manual,    there    is 

However,  there  is  one  phase  of '  a  sketchy   description   of  what-to- 

University  existence  that  draws  lit-  j  wear  for  each  party,  but  with  the 

tie  attention,  but  takes  up  most  of  |  variable     weather     prevalent      in 

everybody's  time.  For  the  sake  of  |  Chapel  Hill,  this  list  often  needs 

convenience  it  can  be  called  Caro-  j  revising  somewhat.  Let  the  type  of 

liuB  Homclife.  I  party  guide  your  selection  of  dress 

for  the  most  part. 


JUST  TAKES  A  LITTLE  WORK: 


''•^^■%  t  M 


W  O  MEN 


^  :P«g  Humphrey,  Coed  Editor 


How  To  Look  Best 


Nattirally,  Carolinra  Ladies  are 
v^ry  much  aware  of  this  situation, 
and    domesticity    in    the    women's 


At  a  casual  affair,  your  costume 
should    definitely   be   casual.    But, 


dorms  is  more  or  less  passed  over  i  for  instance,  if  sweaters  and  skirts 


rather   casually,    according    to    re- 
ports from  the  inside. 

But,  to  the  Carolina  Gentleman 
facing  a  heavy  date  with  nothing 
but  dirty  socks,  there  is  some  real 
meaning  to  'I  have  to  rinse  out  a 
few  things."  Of  course  he  could 
meet  his  lady-fair  bare-footed  or 
in  sandals,  but  .  .  . 

While  the  young  man  in  ques- 
tion is  working  on  his  argyles,  his 
roommate  —  which  one  does  not 
really  matter  —  will  usually  start 
whipping  UD  supper.  Cooking  is  not 
allowed  in  the  dorms  —  draws  ants 
and  things.  So  the  hot  plate  comes 
out  of  the  bottom  of  the  trunk, 
the  milk  off  the  window  sill,  and 


arc  the  order  of  the  day,  and  the 
thermomctor  soars  to  108  ft\  a  flur- 
ry of  Indian  Summer  enthusiasm, 
the  smart  coed  wil  appear  at  her 
polished  best  in  a  simple  Ivey 
League  skirt  and  tailored  shirt. 

ATTITUDE  COUNTS 

One  important  thing  to  remem- 
ber is  that  although  clothes  are 
important  at  rush  parties,  just  as 
they  are  everywhere,  they  are  def- 
initely not  the  iast  word.  A  natural 
relaxed  attitude  plus  meticulous 
grooming  will  sell  you  faster  than 
the  latest  Adcle  Simpson  or  Dior 
creation. 

The  stores  are  crammed  with  the 


CAROLINE  COEDS  AT  A  PARTY 

.  .  .  there  are   iufonital   ones,   too 


the    other    necessary    items    from  ,  exciting  but  surprisingly  very  basic 


similar  storage  places. 

MUSIC 

Now  add  music.  Carolina  Home- 
life  is  not  a  silent  affair.  First, 
tune  in  the  latest  rock  and  roll  hit, 
put  some  Brahms  on  the  hi-fi  down 
the  hall,  tell  the  dorm's  bath  tub 
baritone  to  sing  a  little  louder  and 
call  in  the  trumpeter  from  the 
dorm  next  door  for  a  jam  session. 
The  musical  stage  is  almost  set. 

For    added    satisfaction,    get    a 


selection  of  new  fall  fashions. 
Bulky  knits,  slim  tailored  lines  and 
good  tweeds  seem  to  be  most  popu- 
lar. Black  is  back,  as  important  as 
ever.  Loden  green  is  the  biggest 
newcomer,  color-wise.  The  various 
shades  of  the  brown  family  are 
good,  with  sand  and  maple  sugar 
the  newest  and  most  exciting  ones. 

If  the  temperature  should 
plunge,  a  good  knit  sheath  or  a 
tailored  wool  dressed  up  with  some 


group  together,  and  serenade  coeds  |  simple  jewelry  would  be  ideal  for 


Chapel  Hill.  Frills,  bangles  and 
faddish  ensembles  are  strictly  out 
of  place.  Coeds  are  alert  to  the 
latest  in  good  fashion  and  select 
the  basic  styles  which  appear  each 
season.  This  year  t^e  new  blouson 
look  and  the  high-waisted  styles  re- 
miniscent of  1912  can  easily  be 
worn  at  Carolina.  These  lines  are 
appearing  in  modified  forms  in 
wools,  jerseys  and  knits. 

SILK  SHIRT 

The  silk  shirt  might  come  in 
handy  at  one  of  the  dressier  par- 
ties,  highlighting  a   jumper  or   in 


passing  under  the  window  with  the 
good  old  college  songs.  The  ones 
Hith  the  unprintable  titles  are  best. 
D">rm  wall  decoration  varies  from 
room  to  room,  with  taste  ranging 
from  "Still  Life  of  a  Fruit  Bowl 
With  Half  Eaten  Apple"  to  Marilyn 
Monroe  and  Diana  Dors.  Pennants, 
girl  friends'  pictures  and  last 
week's  shirt  are  hung  impartially 
from  available  outcroppings  in  the 
wall. 


the   dressy   parties.    For   the   teas, 

most  girls  will  be  wearing  exactly 

what  they  would  wear   to  church, 

complete    with    gloves,    bag    and 

simple  hat.  Although  some  may  ap-  I  enough  f^r  cashmeres  and  tweeds, 

pear   in   bouffant,   more   elaborate  I  you  may  be  sure  they  will  be  worn 

dresses,  there  is  no  necessity  to  |  at  the  informal  parties.  White  col- 
lars frequently  spark  necklines, 
and  skirts  are  generally  slim  with 
little  or  no  detail.  Tailored  shirts 
with  good  leather  belts  are  always 


Parties:^ 
Ice  Water 
And  Talk 

Coeds  planning  to  go  through 
rush  will  find  an  imposing  sche- 
dule of  parties  on  their  agenda. 

The  hectic  pace  of  the  sorority 

rush  parties  is  indeed  a  memorable 

combination    with    a    dressy    skirt,  |  experience  even  for  the  coed  who 

perhaps  in  bold  plaid.  Dressy  blous-    decides  not   to  pledge  one   of  the 

es  in  cotton-Dacron  are  also  good.  '  six  Greek  sororities  on  campus. 

!      At  the  Panhellcnic  tea,  whidi  be- 
If   the   weather   actually    is   cohi  i  gj^s  ,he  festivities,  the  rushee  may 

expect  a  minimum  of  conversation 


Dorm  Can  Be  Nice 

Your  "home  away  from  home"  really  can  be  a  joy  to  live  in  dur- 
ing your  stay  at  Carolina. 

E^'en  with  three  girls  packed 
nto  a  room,  it  is  quite  possible  to 
:reate  an  atmosphere  of  spacious- 
ness and  comfort  with  carefully 
selected  harmonizing  furnishings. 
Each  room  is  equiped  with  one 
bureau,  closet,  desk  and  bed  p«r 
,'irl.  Waste  paper  baskets,  bulletin  j| 
boards,  ciu"tains  and  such  are  sup-  ! 
plied  by  the  inhabitants.  Each  room  |i 
has  one  comfortable  chair,  but  the  |' 
girls  often  add  sling  chairs.  | 

School  regulations  say  no  to  pok- 
ing holes  in  the  plaster,  but  the 
molding  at  ceiling  level  may  be  i 
used  for  hanging  pictures.  Several  I 
girls  last  year  hung  a  mammouth  | 
fish    net    from    their   molding    on  ! 

Rvhich  they  were  able  to  tack  all 
;heir  souvenirs  and  pictures.  Two-  i 
way  tape  is  useful  —  with  careful ; 
handling,  it  may  be  used  without  | 
lamage  to  walls.  1 

Notion  counters  in  department ' 
stores  offer  an  abundance  of  inex- 
pensive containers  for  garments, 
hats,  and  shoes  for  the  coed  with 
an  eye  for  a  neat-looking  closet.    | 

The  plastic  paper  with  a  sticky 
back  found  in  dime  stores  might ' 
be  used  to  cover  boxes  and  shelves. 
This  paper  is  also  useful  for  bureau  ! 
tops,  for  spilled  cosmetics  can  be  j 
easily  wiped  off  with  a  damp  cloth. 
Even  waste  paper  baskets  can  re- 
flect your  personality  by  being  cov- 1 
ered  with  this  same  paper,  pictures, 
or  magazine  covers.  ' 

The  current  color  taste  in  de-  ' 
signing  seems  to  be  leaning  to-  j 
wards  the  greens  and  beiges.  The  | 
popularity  of  aqua  and  pink  is  pre- 
dicted to  end  shortly.  House  & 
Garden's  forecast  colours  for  1957  I 
includes  a  wide  range  of  the  beiges 
and  off-whites  which  are  assuming 
great  importance  in  decorating. 
For  accent  colors  cantaloupe, 
flame,  tangerine,  mustard,  and  saf- 
fron are  suggested. 

Generally  a  scheme  of  about 
three  colors  or  varying  shades  of 
one  color  with  an  accent  of  one 
other  is  a  good  rule  to  follow. 
Plants  always  provide  a  good  touch, 
but  it  is  advisable  to  have  a  sturdy 
one,  able  to  withstand  temperature 
changes  and  lack  of  water  when 
you  forget. 


:*.M 


wear  attire  of  this  sort  if  you  feel 
more  at  case  in  conservative  de- 
signs. 

Simplicity    reigns    supreme     in '  a  perfect  topping. 


THE  IVY  LEAGUE  LOOK  IS  STILL  HERE: 


Caroline  Coed  Picks  Clothes 
For  Informality  And  Comfort 


TTie  comfortable,  casual  approach 
to  fa."+iion  is  highly  approved  by 
Chapel  Hill  coeds. 

Obvious  at  Carolina  is  the  Ivy 
League  look  which  took  the  camp- 
us by  storm  last  fall  and  probably 
will  continue  in  popularity  thi.--: 
year.  Back-belted  skirts  and  tailor 
er  shirts  with  matching  print  belt* 
are   -cen  everywhere. 

During  cold  weather  coeds  don 
luxurious  cashmeres  to  mix  and 
n>atc'h  with  good  tweeds,  usually 
«Iim  in  line.  Bermudas  take  over 
on  weekends  for  fraternity  cabin 
parties. 

For  dressy  occasions  such  a^ 
football  games,  wool  sheaths  am 
suits  are  preferred.  Jewelry  is  sim 
;"|>le,  with  gold  and  pearl  creation 
mrorn  most  of  the  time.  One  dazzlinj- 
^in  and  tiny  button  earrings  an 
*ahray.;  in  good  taste. 
Z  According  to  predictions  from  th' 
•top  fashion  magazine,  Milady  wil' 
■jiresent  a  more  softened  appear 
''Snce  this  year.   Polished   elegancf 


prevail. 

Vogue's  editors  say  the  silk  shirt 
is  the  key  to  the  coming  era.  This 
however,  won't  mean  any  radical 
change  in  the  way  UNC  coeds  wil 
be  dressing  this  year  .  .  .  only  that 
they  will  add  a  silk,  or  perhaps  a 
fraile  locking,  cotton-Dacron  shirt 
with  tiny  ruffle^?  to  wear  with  vel- 
vet or  bold  plaid  skirts. 

The  costumes  which  Cecil  Bea- 
ton designed  for  the  set  of  "My 
Fair  Lady"  have  had  a  thundering 
'mpact  on  the  garment  industr>' 
this  fall  The  high-waisted  look  of 
1912  is  appearing  not  only  in  ex- 
treme styles,  'highly  unsuitable  for 
college  students,  but  also  in  mod- 
ified designs. 

The  blouson  is  another  big  new- 
-onfer  this  season  which  also  ap- 
pears styled  for  the  college  level, 
instead  of  purchasing  simply  a 
suit  with  a  box  jacket,  why  not  se- 
'ect  one  with  the  drawstring  hip- 
length   jacket? 

As   for   shoes,  they   are  due   to 


oivith  the  stress  on  femininity  will    have  skinnier-than-ever  heels  with 


with  any  individual,  for  at  this 
time  representatives  from  all 
groups  will  be  shaking  hands  and 
exchanging  brief  words  with  each 
girl  planning  to  attend  the  follow- 
ing parties. 
GET   ACQUAINTED 

When  the  parties  at  the  houses 
begin,  the  rushee  will  have  a  bet- 
ter chance  to  become  acquainted 
with  members  of  the  different 
arnips.  She  v.'ill  be  entertained  in 
the  finest  tradition  of  Southern 
hospitality  at  each  of  the  houses. 

As  rush  progresses,  the  number 
of  rushccs  dwindles,  anti  everyone 
has  a  chance  to  become  better 
acquainted  with  her  prospective 
sisters. 

During  the  course  of  the  parties, 
the  rushees  will  be  taken  on  a  tour 
of   each  of  the   "nouses.    Entertain- 


Not  In  A  Sorority? 

Join  The  Independents     I 

The  Ind<»pendent  Women's  Assn.  i 
is   the    legislative    organization   of ; 
all   UNC  women  i-tudents  who  do 
not  belong  to  a  sorority.  i 

The  association  is  composed  of  \ 
three    representatives    from    each  i 
of  the  women's  dorms  and  three 
representatives    from    the    Town 
Girl's  Assn. 

Its  purposes  are  to  promote  ex- 
tra-curricular activities,  aid  other 
campus  oganization*.  provide  op- 
portunities for  independent  coeds 
to  participate  in  campus  activi- 
ties, make  dorms  more  home-like 
and  to  coordinate  the  activities  of 
independent  and  sorority  girls. 


Nearly  200  Expected 
In  School  Of  Nursing 

Elizabeth   L.   Kcmble,  dean 


very  pointed  toes,  but  the  heel 
height  is  apt  to  be  about  two 
inches.  Suede  is  said  to  be  gain- 
ing in  popularity.  i  ^^^^  ^j,,  ^e  provided  in  the  form 

Color-wise,    black   will   predomi- j  of  skits  and  song-fests. 
nate  with  loden  green  and  various       ice  water  is  served  at  the  first 
shades    of    brown    ah-o    important,  j  round   of   parties,    but    each   time 

Brown  and  black  are  good  in  thereafter,  the  refreshments  be-  I  estimated  number  of  undergrad- 
combinalion.  and  sand  is  an  ex- '  come  more  complex,  with  progres-  uate  students  by  classes:  fresh- 
cellent  blouse  color  as  a  change  sive  dinners  scheduled  for  the  final  i  men.  61;  sophomores,  52;  juniors, 
from  stark  white.  night.  '  41,  and  seniors',  29. 


Dr 

of  the  University  School  of  Nurs- 
ing, has  estimated  approximately 
200  students  will  be  enrolled  in 
the  School  of  Nursing  this  coming 
semester. 
Dr.  Kemble  gave  the  following 


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PAGE  POUR 


THE  6aiLY  TAR  HEEL 


PRldAV.  SeHeMBER  14,  \\i*^ 


FRIDAY 


Four  Officers  Hold  UNC's  „ 
Government  Executive  Power 


SATURDAY 


The  Executive  powiT  of  student 
•government  iif  vested  in  four  stu- 
dent  body  officers — president,  vice- 
president,  secretary  and  treasurer. 
All  are  elected  every  spring  in  \ 
campus»-wide  elections.  i 

President  this  year  is  Bob  i 
Young,  senior  of  Aa*heville.  The 
other  officers  are:  Vice-President 
Sonny  Evans,  junior  of  Durham; 
Secretary  Jackie  Aldridge,  senior 
coed  of  Winston-Salem,  and  Treas- 
urer John  Kerr,  junior  of  Warren- 
ton.  I 

Much  of  the  book  work  is  done  by  j 
the  student  government  executive 
secretary,  who  is  a  hired  secretary.  : 
This'  position  is  now  held  by  Mrs.  j 
H.  J.  Grassman.  I 

The  president  has  the  power  to 
appoint  various  committees,  ap- 
point a  cabinet,  to  administer  and  i 
enforce  laws  enacted  by  the  Stu- 
dent Legislature,  to  veto  acts  of ; 
the  legislature,  to  serve  as  an  ex- 
officio  member  of  all  committees 
and  boards.  One  of  hLs  very  im- 
portant duties  is  to  represent  the 


student  body  of  Carolina  in  all 
dealings  with  students  of  other 
jchools,  the  University  faculty  and 
the  University  trustees. 

The  vice-president  advances  to 
the  office  of  president  should  that 
office  become  vacant.  He  also 
serves  as  speaker  of  the  Student 
Legislature  and  presides  over  its 
meetings;  this  is  his  most  import- 
ant duty  and  most  of  his  time  is 
spent  at  this  job. 

The  secretary  maintains  all 
records  and  filec?  of  the  student 
body  and  arranges  for  permanent 
preservation    of    its    archives. 

The  treasurer  disburses  all 
monies  appropriated  by  the  Stu- 
dent Legislature  and  serves'  as 
chairman  of  the  Budget  Commit- 
tee. # 

The  president  each  year  delivers 
a  State  of  the  Campus  address  to 
the  Student  Legislature.  He  gives 
recommendations  and  comments. 
of  the  state  of  affair^*  here  at 
Carolina.  The  president  has  the 
power  to  veto  legislation,  and  then 


again,  legislation  is  often  passed 
over  his'  veto. 

Past  presidents  have  received 
much  criticism  in  performing 
their  duties,  especially  in  editor- 
ials in  The  Daily  Tar  Heel. 


with 

Joel  McCrea 

Brian  Don  levy 


SUN.-MON.-TUES.      •  i 

The  most  Intimate  story  to , 
come  out  of  the  war! 

William  Holden 
Deborah  Kerr 

in 


FRIDAY-SATURDAY 

'QUINCANNON,  FRONTIER  SCOUT' 

STARRING 
TONY  MARTIN  —  PEGGIE  CASTLE 


SUNDAY.MONDAY 

"AUTUMN  LEAVES" 

STARRING 
JOAN  CRAWFORD  —  CLIFF   ROBERTSOM 


TUESDAY 

INNOCENTS  OF  PARIS" 

STARRING 
'^ALASTAIR  SIM 


// 


The  Proud  And 


Profa 


ne 


// 


WEDNESDAY-THURSDAY 

"LISBON" 

IN  TECHNICOLOR  &  CINEMASCOPE 

STARRING 
RAY  MILLAND  —  CLAUDE  RAINS 
MAUREEN  O'HARA  —  RITA  GAM 


Germans 
Brings  Top 
Musicians 

The  German  Club  is  the  organi- 
zation that  brings  some  of  the  big 
name  entertainers  to  Carolina.  It ; 
is  an  organization  of  13  UNC  so- 
cial     fraternities      and     sponsors  i 
three  big  weekend  dances  during . 
the  school  year.  > 

In  the  past  the  agenda  has  in-  j 
eluded  such  big  time  musical 
men  as  Louis  "Satchmo"  Arm-  j 
.Hrong,  Les  Brown,  Ralph  Mar- 1 
terie,  Johnny  Long,  Tex  Beneke,  ■ 
and  Stan  Kenton.  It  is  anticipated  i 
to  have  the  Four  Freshmen  this 
year  for  one  of  the  dances.  i 

These    dances    are    formal    and  j 
bids  are  limited  to  members  only,  j 
but    anyone    wanting    to    go    may 
usually  obtain   a   bid   from   some 
member  who  does  not  wish  to  go. 

The  German  weekends*  usually 
include  a  concert  in  Memorial 
Hall  and  a  dance  in  Woollen  Gym. 
The  activities  are  spread  over 
Friday  and  Saturday. 

These  weekends  are  a  time  of 
big  parties — those  kind  that  last 
on  and  on,  usually  all  night.  Stu- 
dents- date  coeds  for  these  dances, 
or  either  date  imports  from  home, 
WC,  Meredith,  or  one  of  the  many 
other  girls'  schools  in  the  sur- 
rounding area. 

These  gala  times  are  often  look- 
ed forward  to  with  great  enthus- 
iasm by  some,  whereas,  others 
come  to  Carolina  and  never  at- 
tend one  of  them  during  their 
entire  college  career. 


South  Building  Is  Hdiri^'' 
Of  UNCs  Top  Brass     '' 


STUDENTS  GATHER  IN  Y COURT 

-"'.       (luite  often  duHng  class   breaks.  * 

_  "     :    J     v      t  '  -.1'  _  *    £ 

Y-Court  Is  Center  Of 
UNC's  SBcial  Activity 


Where's  the  center  of  social  ac- 
tivity at  Carolina?  Ask  any  upper- 
classman,  and  he'll  tell  you  that 
the  most  popular  ^•pot  on  campus 
for  casual  conversation,  friendly 
get-to-togethers,  and  chatis  with 
coeds  is  a  square  of  asphalt  be- 
side South  Building  known  as  Y- 
Court. 

The  bench-lined  square  is*  lo- 
cated in  front  of  the  YMCA,  where 
late  sleeping  students  who  miss 
breakfast  may  grab  a  cup  of  cof- 
fee and  a  doughnut  during  the  10- 
minute  break  between  classes. 

It  has  been  estimated  by  expert 
ob.v>rvers  that  a  high  percentage 
of  romances  here  got  their  start 
on  a  bench  in  Y-Court  or  perhaps 
on  the  steps  of  South  Building. 

Y-Court  has  other  uses,  in  adt 
dition  to  serving  the  cause  o( 
I'amour.  Almost  any  weekday 
morning,  a  dedicated  scholar  may 
be  seen  paring  over  a  formidable 
looking  textbook,  obliviou.v  to  the 
light  hearted  trivialities  of  the 
world  around  him.  an  expression 
of  intent  concentration  on  his 
face.  Ah!  A  straight  "A"  student, 
you  say  to  yourself.  Not  .so.  The 
poor  lad  probably  gave  his  all  for 
the  fraternity  cau.se  the  night  be- 
fore, and  now  must  do  something 
about  that  mid-term  exam  next 
period. 


The  administrative  moguls  in 
South  Building  also  have  a  good 
use  for  Y-Court.  The  brass  has 
made  Y-Court  its  favorite  retreat 
from  th(»  cares  and  worries  in- 
volved in  running  a  University. 

For  them,  Y-Court  is*  a  haven. 
Here  they  can  relax  in  unsophis- 
ticated (jomfort,  rubbing  elbows 
with  the  man  from  the  lower  quad 
and  tht  lowly  freshman  from 
Hicksville,   USA. 

Y-Court  is  a  common  denomi- 
nator. It  serves  as  a  common  meet- 
ing ground  for  all  those  who  call 
Carolina  their  home.  Football  he- 
roes, student  leader.?,  deans,  camp- 
us personalities  and  just  plain  old 
Joe  College  guys  gather;  all  are 
one  in  Y-Court. 

They've  told  you  about  the  Car 
olina  tradition.  This  is  it. 


Scabbard  &  Blade 
Is  ROTC  Honorary 

The  Scabbard  and  Blade  is  a 
national  honorary  organization  for 
men  taking  part  in  the  school's  Re- 
serve Officers'  Training  Corp 
(ROTC). 

Each  .spring  yeveral  outstanding 
member?  of  the  Air  Force  and 
Navy  units  here  are  tapped  for  the 
organization.  Membership  is  by 
election  ouiy. 


By  CLARKE  JONES 

(JoTies  was  South  auUding 
reporter  for  The  Daily  Tar  Heel 
iast  year — Editor' s?  note.) 

South  Building  is  the  place  where 
most  of  the  Consolidated  Univers- 
ity and  administration  officials 
work. 

The  first  person  you  v/ill  prob- 
ably see  when  you  walk  in  is  Mrs. 
Gustav  Harrer  at  the  information 
desk.  Called  by  some  the  friend- 
liest person  in  town,  she  can  in- 
form you  about  almost  anything.      I 

Let's  skip  on  down  the  list  and  ! 
look  at  other  members  of  the  who's  '■ 
who  club:  > 

First  are  the  officers  of  the  Con- ' 
solidated  University,  very  busy 
men  as  their  activities  are  divided 
among  Woman's  College  in  Greens- 
boro, N.  C.  State  College  in  Ra- 
leigh and  UNC. 

W^illiam   C.   Friday,    the   actinp 
president  of  the  University  heads 
the  list.  At  the  age  of  35,  he  is  "he 
third    youngest    man    ever   to   oc- 
cupy the,  top  executive's  chair.  Hr 
is  prominently  mentioned  as  a  can-  j 
didate  for  the  permanent  presiden- ' 
ty- 
HOUSE 

Chancellor  Robert  B.  House,  who 
has  become  almost  synonjTnou? 
with  UNC  itself,  serves  in  both  the 
Consolidated  University  and  the 
administration.  Being  the  adminis- 
trative head  at  UNC,  he  represent.^; 
the  school  in  the  University.  He  is 
known  also  for  his  harmonica  play- 
ing. 

House  is  facing  retirement  in  Ju- 
ly, 1956,  due  to  the  automatic  re- 
tirement age  of  65.  He  will  remain 
at  UNC,  however,  in  a  teaching  ca- 
pacity. 

i  William  D.  Carmichael  Jr.  is  the 
Consolidated  University  vice  presi- 
dent and  finance  officer.  He  con- 
trols the  University  purse  strings 
and  assists  the  president  on  pro- 
grams  of  adequate  financing 
1  through  legislative  appropriations, 
!  foundation  grants,  endowments, 
etc. 

j  The  University  Business  Mana- 
\  ger,  Claude  E.  Teague,  serves  as ; 
the  assistant  to  the  president  on  j 
matters  of  University  business  j 
'  management  activities.  He  also  is  i 
1   the  man  behind  the  ball  on  the  new 


dormitories  scheduled  to  be  con- 
structed in  the  near  future.  He  al- 
so faces  retirement  next  July. 

Dr.  William  M.  Whybum  is  pres- 
ently serving  as  acting  provost.  Be- 
fore taking  over  the  position  in 
mid-February,  1956,  he  was  the 
chairman  of  the  L^C  Mathematics 
Dept. 
WEAVER 

Turning  to  the  UNC  administra- 
tive side,  the  two  top  officials  are 
Dean  of  Student  Affairs  Fred  Wea-/ 
ver  and  Dean  of  Women  Miss  Katb- 
erine  Kennedy  Carmichael  (no  re- 
lation to  the  University  Finance  of- 
ficer.) 

W'eaver  is  on   leave   of   absence" 
this  year  in  order  to  get  a  PhD 
degree.  Miss  Carmichael  was  away 
last  year  touring  different  colleges  • 
and  universities  to  study  the  his- 
tory and  positions  of  deans  of  wo-' 
men  in  light  of  economic  and  cul- 
tural changes  in  this  country  dur- 
ing and  since  World  War  II.  Miss 
Isabelle  MacLeod,  assistant  dean  of 
women,  was  acting  dean  of  women 
during  Miss  Carmichael's  absence. 

Ray  Jefferies  serves  as  assistant 
to  the  dean  of  student  affairs. 

The  director  of  student  activities 
is  Sam  Magill,  a  Carolina  student 
in  the  late  1940's.  He  came  "home  " 
last  year  from  Davidson  College 
where  he  was  YMCA  secretary.  He 
also  is  an  ordained  minister. 

Miss  Martha  Decker,  who  works 
in  the  dean  of  women's  offiee,  is 
the  assistant   director    of  student 
activities. 
ARMSTRONG 

The  man  who  admitted  you  to 
Carolina  is  Roy  Armstrong,  the  ad- 
missions director.  His  assistant  is 
Charlie  Bernard,  whom  many  of 
you  will  probably  get  to  know. 

Charles  M.  Shaffer  is  the  direc- 
tor of  development.  His  assistant 
is  Roy  Holsten,  former  director  of 
student  activities. 

Serving  as  dean  of  awards  and 
distinctions  is  E^mtst  L.  Mackie. 

Cecil  Johnson,  C.  P.  SpruUl  and 
J.  Carlyle  Sitterson  serve  as  deans 
of  the  General  College,  faculty  and 
the  college  of  arts  and  sciences, 
respectively. 

Information  about  draft  status 
can  be  supplied  by  Gen.  Carlyle 
Shepard  who  maintains  his  office 
in  315. 


r^ 


Ty  Boyd^'54 


'BREAKFAST  WITH  BOYD"  7-9- 
WAKE  UP  TO  GOOD  MUSIC  -  THE 
CORRECT  TIME  AND  A  CALENDAR 

OF  CAMPUS  AND  COMMUNITY  HAPPENINGS 


ON  THE  DIAL  1360 

FREE 

5  WESTINGHOUSE 
POCKET  RADIOS 


5   FREE 


WESTINGHOUSE 


Hank  Cheney— -'54 

"MOSTLY  MUSIC"  1 0-1 1 :30  - 
AND  A  LITTLE  CHATTER.  INTER- 
LUDE" 1-2  P.M.  -  MUSIC  OF  THE 
MASTERS 


POCKET 


•^ 


WCHL  WILL 
GIVE  5  WESTING- 
HOUSE POCKET  RADIOS 
TO  5  LUCKY  UNC  STUDENTS. 
2  POCKET  RADIOS  WIL  BE  GIVEN 
AWAY  SEPTEMBER  17th  AND  ONLY 
FRESHMAN  STUDENTS  WILL  BE  ELIGIBLE. 
REGISTER  AT  THE  INFORMATION  BOOTH  DOWN- 
TOWN ON  THE  AFTERNOON  OF  SEPTEMBER  17th. 
LISTEN  TO  WCHL  DAILY  FOR  ADDITIONAL  INFORMATION 

1360  ON  THE  DIAL 


Carl  Kasseli—'56 


TRANSISTOR 
RADIOS 


5   FREE 


"DIG  THESE"  3-5  P.M.  -  j 

THE  TOPS  IN  POP  MUSIC  I 

AND  CAMPUS  CHATTER.  "EVEN*-  ' 
SONG"  5  TO  $IGNOFF.  SOFT  AND     .. 
EASY  SOUNDS  FOR  THE  END  OF  DAY 


Ed  Zimmerman—' 58 


FLYING  HIGH"  -  JAZZ, 
JAZZ  AND  MORE  JAZZ 


Big  John  Rogers 


(NO  CLASS  AT  ALL) 
i    HILLBILLY  -  6-7 


n 


SANDY  McCLAMROCH- Class  of  1950 


General  Manager 


r"'li*   nJAL 


FRIDAY.  SEPTEMBER  14.  }9S6 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


Mantovani  To  Be 
On  SEC  Program 


Montovani,  master  of  the  cascad- 
ing strings,  is  one  of  five  top  per- 
formers scheduled  to  appear  on  the 
student  entertainment  program  this 
year.  Students  are  admitted  free 
to  these  SEC  programs  upon  pres- 
entation of  ID  cards. 

Metropolitan  Opera  Soprano  Li- 
cia  Albanese,  the-  General  Platoff 
Don  Cossack  Chorus,  Actor  Henry 
Hull,  and  Jose  Limon  and  Dance 


Radio,  TV 
Dept.  Is 
Improved 

Another  segment  of  the  Uni- 
versity is  the  Dept.  of  Radio,  Tele 
vision,  and  Motion  Pictures,  usual- 
ly  referred  to   aj  RTVMP. 

The  dept.  has  two  operating  sta 
tions:  WUNC.  91.5  on  your  Fre 
quency  Modulation  dial  and  first 
born:  and  WUNC-TV,  the  Consol 
dated  University's  educational  sta 
tion  operating  on  Channel  4  fron^ 
Greensboro,  Ralei^,  and  Chape 
Hill. 

The  department  has  expanded 
and  improved  considerably  in  the 
past  few  year^:,  and  today  is  on 
of  the  be.st  known  and  best  re 
spected  in  the  country.  Many  of 
the  productions  have  attained  na- 
tional recognition  and  these  werr 
produced .  to  a  large  extent,  b 
the  "Students  themselvei. 

'"American  Adventure."  written 
by  John  Ehle  and  directed  by  John 
Clajion,  was  a  radio  dramatization 
of  '"man  in  the  new  world,"  an:-' 
won  the  Freedoms  Foundation 
Award  two  years,  first  award  for 
two  years  from  the  Institute  of  Ra- 
dio, 4:    Television    at    Ohio    State 

(rated  as  one  of  the  highest,  awards  1  mon     and     his     dancers   recently 
in  the  country),  and  was  cited  thi? 
year  by  the  National  Conference  o 
Christians  &  Jews. 

One  of  the  outstanding  produc 
tions  of  the  te'.evision  station  las' 
year  was  their  presentation  o' 
William  Saroyan's  'Hello  Out 
There"  in  its  first  TV  adaptation 
The  kinescope  reproduction  o 
this  drama  was  shown  at  the  Ohio 
Stftte  Conference  last  May  and  ha 
since  been  well  received  through 
out  the  country. 


Company  will  also  perform  for  | 
Carolina  students  in  the  coming ! 
year.  | 

Mantovani,  the  international  re-  \ 
cording  sensation  and  his  orchestra  j 
of  45,  will  feature  his  "New  Mu- 
jic"  on  Dec.  6.  This  Venetian-born 
Londoner,  who    began   the   era  of  j 
new   music   with   his    first   album 
for    London     Records,     "Waltzing 
With     Mantovani,"    has    currently 

nade     many     records     including 

Cara  Mia,"  which  was  written  for 
David  Whitfield. 
A  versatile  concert  figure,  Man- 

;;vani  has  music  for  everybody,  be 
it  the  300-year-old  "Greensleeves," 
i  serenade  by  Tschaikowsky,  or  the 
itrains  of  "Charmaine,"  which  ha- 

ome  to  be  his  theme  song. 
COSSACK   CHORUS 
Also    internationally    famous    is 

he  Gen.  Platoff  Don  Cossack 
Chorus,  directed  by  Nicholas  Kos- 

rukoff,  appearing  here  in  its  18th 

ranscontinerital   tcur  on   Feb.    12,1 

957.  The  booming  cossacks   have  ' 
■jcrfornted  in  2.100  concerts  in  th? 

ISA  and  appeared  in  65  countries  | 

n  six  continents.   The  Chorus   is  i 
■omposed    of   the   best   vocal    an;' 

'ancing  talent  of  the  White  Russi-  | 

n  emigres,  who  have  fought  com-  ' 
nuni.sm   in  Russia  j 

Henry  Hull,  noted  for  his  per-' 
formance  as  Mark  Twain,  will  be  | 
presented  by  the  SEC  on  March  1 
26,  1957.  Through  his  four  decade ^  | 
in  the  theatre  he  has  also  di.,'ting 
.jished    himsflf    in    such    roles    a   !  ical  examinations. 


FOR 


StUdtktS: 


P'.GE  FIVt 


Part  Time  Jobs  Are  Open 


A  great  majority  of  Carolina 
students  earn  part  of  their  school- 
ing by  working  part-time. 

U  you  would  like  a  job,  here's 
what  you  will  have  to  do. 

You  will  first  visit  the  Student- 
Aid  Office  in  the  b^asement  of 
Hanej  Hall.  There  you  will  be  in- 


kind  of  job  you  are  interested  in; 
and  the  kind  of  work  you  are  cap- 
able of  doing.  I 

You    may    have    the    choice    of 
working  for  cash  or  you  may  like  ( 
to  work  for  your  meals.  They  will 


Old  Well  Is  Memorable  Site 

Th«  Old  Weil  is  a  plac*  well-remembered  by  Carolina  sfudants. 
\i  stands  across  from  South  Building  and  is  surrounded  by  a  walkr 
way  and  many  beautiful  flowers.  It  was  rennovated  by  the  graduating 
class  of  1954. 


Look  At  Infirmary  Will 
Come  With  Physicals 


try  to  land  you  the  position  you 
tervie^ed  and  will  tell  them  the    want^  In  either  case,  you  can  earn    Lenoir"  Hall  Carolina  Inn,  Graham 

Memorial,    Scuttlebutt,    Monogram 
.  j  Club,  various  libraries  or  one  of 

the  many  other  university  owned 
',.      .      j  places  on  the  campus. 

AC  average  is  usually  required 
to  keep  a  job  or  scholarship  but 
exceptions  ..ometimes  can  be  made. 
The  reason  for  this  requirement  is 
that  there  are  a  large  number  of  ap- 
plicants who  would  like  to  have 
jobs. 

Mr.  Ed  Lanier  is  the  head  man 
and  he  will  likely  talk  to  you  be- 
fore you  get  approved  for  a  loan, 
job,  scholarship  or  grant-in-aid.  He 
i^'  the  man  who  will  reject  or  ap- 
prove your  application. 

Good  grades  in  high  school  or 


up  to  about  half  of  your  expenses !  your  fir^-t  semester  here  may  earn 
by  working  part  time.  !  you   a    scholarship   ranging   from 

Also  available  are  scholarships,   $150  to  S500  if  you  have  definite 
loans,  and  grant.s«-in-aid.  These  can    financial  needs, 
all  be  applied  for  at  the  Stu(^ent '      The  Student  Aid  Office   thinks 
Aid  Office.  j       |  it  best  that  freshmen  not  work    if 

If  you   get   a    job   working   for 'a*    aU    possible,    but   they   realize 
the  University  it  will  likely  be  at    that  not  all  can  get     by     without 


Golden  Fleece, 
Valkyries  Are  Top 
Honoraries  H 


The  highest  honorary  organiza- 
tions at  Carolina  are  the  Order  of 
the  Golden  Fleece  for  men  and  tho 
Valkjries  for  women. 

Golden  Fleece  members  are  jun- 
iors, seniors,  graduate  students  and 
faculty  members  showing  the  high- 


undergraduate     coed     enrollment. 
Founded    to    promote    leadership 
and  service  amcng  women  students,  . 
they  tap  new  members  in  secretive  i 
pre-dawn  ceremonies. 

Members  are  chose  for  member-  j 
ship    on    the    basis    of    leadership,  j 


w<>rking. 

The  Student  Aid  Office  Ls  open 
from  9  a.m.  to  4:30  p.m.  on  week- 
days and  until  noon  Saturdays, 
and  have  extended  a  welcome  to 
anyone  interested  in  discussing 
any  phase  of  the  above  mentioned 
program  that  they  handle. 

One  thing "  should  be  pointed 
out.  Approval  of  the  Student  Aid 
Office  is  not  needed  if  a  student 
wants  to  work  at  one  of  the  down- 
town eating  places,  theaters,  down- 
town store.i',  -  filling  stations,  fra- 
ternity houses  or  other  privately 
owned  places.  In  this  case,  a  stu- 
dent is  on  his  own  and  his  job 
has  nothing  to  do  with  the  Stu- 
dent Aid   Office. 


By  BILLY  BARNES 

New  students  will  get  a  look  at 
the  University  Infirmary  this  week 
when  they  go  there  for  their  phys- 


Chances  are  it  won't  be  a  last 
look;  for  sooner  or  iattr,  there 
will  be  a  sore  throat,  cold  or  sogie 
other  ailment  for  whidi  they  will 
return    for   medical   treatment. 

The  pre.vnt    Infirmary  building 

.vas  built  during  World  War  II  by 

he  University  and  the  U.  S.  Navy. 

The  Infirmary  staff  first  occupied 

;t  in  1946. 

It  is  best  entered  through  the 
hospital's  clinic  entrance  if  one 
goes  there  walking,  or  through 
the  side  entrance  at  the  rear  of 
the    hospital    if   one   drives   over. 

The  {'irA  floor  houses  ,the  out- 
patient department,  housing  con- 
sultation rooms,  waiting  hall  and 
laboratories. 

The  second  floor  provides  rooms 

("or   overnight    patients.    It    boasts 

some   60   beds,   although   the  aver- 

Kai  Jergcnson,  Olin  Mouzon,  Jim  t  age  number  of  .-ludents' who  stay 

my    Wallace,    and    Misses    Martha  i  tiiere  at  one  time  is  from  20  to  25., 


Vlalvolio  in  "Twelfth  Night,"  Jes- 
;er  Leester  in  "Tobacco  Road." 
ind.  Edgar  Allen  Poe  in  "Plumes 
n  the  Dust,"  along  with  such 
olays  as  "Mr.  Roberts,"  "The  Trai 
of  Joan  of  Arc."  and  many  others. 
He  has  also  played  in  "Great  Ex- 
pectations." "Objective  Burma, ' 
"Lifeboat,"  and  many  other  mov- 
ies. 

Jose  Limon  and  Dance  Compan' 
A-ill  perform  on  April  11,  1957.  Li 


swept  South  America,  not  with 
native  rhythms,  but  with  modern 
;lance  selections. 

Licia  Albanej3,  soprano  of  thf 
Metropolitan  Opera,  will  open  the 
SEC  programs  on  Nov.  1. 

The  members  of  the  SEC  are: 
tohn  Kerr,  chairman,  Joel  Carter 
Don    Freeman,    George    Hamilton 


Barber  and  Shiralee  and  Barbaree 
Prestwood. 


UNC  Board  C^  trustees  Is 
The  Supreme  Governing  Body 

7  h  e     Consolidated     University 
Board  of  lYustees  is  the  supreme 
governing  body  of  the  three  mem-j 
bel"    schools  —  Woman's    College, 


N.  C.  State  and  Carolina. 

Consisting  of  100  members,  at 
least  ten  of  whom  are  women,  the 
trustees  have  numerous  and  de- 
tailed powers  on  matters  concern- 
ing the  University.  The  mo.-t  im- 
portant, student-wise,  are  roughly 
as  follows:  *• 

1.  power  to  make  rules  an:! 
regulations  for  the  management 
of  the  University  as  they  see  fit. 

2.  power  to  appoint  a  presi- 
dent and  with  the  president's  ap- 


in   the  University's   Art   Dept. 

infirmary  doctors  say  they  have 
the  greatest  number  of  patients 
during  -January,  February  and 
March  when  respiratory  di-^-eases 
are  most  common. 

Excuses  in  some  cases  come  from 
the  Infirmary.  Students  may  be  ex- 
cused from  classes  for  medical 
rea^'ons  at  the  time  an  illness  oc- 
curs, if  in  the  judgment  of  the 
attending  /physician,  such  excuses 


are  justified.  It  is  expected  that 
students  will  meet  their  obliga- 
tions and  accept  their  responsi- 
bilities- for  classroom  work. 

E.xcuses  are  not  granted  for  rea- 
sons other  than  medical  nor  for 
trivial  complaints  where  the  ful- 
fillment of  their  obligations  does 
not  endanger  the  students'  wel- 
fare. 

Excuses  are  not  granted  at 
night.  Saturday  afternoon  or  Sun- 
day. In  the  event  the  student  IJ 
ill  at  home,  a  signed  statement  by 
the  ph.vsician  or  parent  must  be 
presented  at  the  Infirmary  before 
the  student  can  be  excused  from 
those  classes   mi.-.sed. 

Infirmary  hours  are  9-11:30  a.m. 
and  2-5  p.m.  Monday  through  Sat- 
urday. Sunday  hours  are  10-11:30 
a.m.  and  2-5  p.m. 

However,  the  Infirmary's  doors 
never  close;  emergency  cases  are 
received  24  hours  a  day,  including 
holiday..-  and  periods  when  school 
is   not   in   session. 

The  Infirmary  has  equipment  for 
laboratory  work  and  routine  X- 
rays.  plus  the  opportunity  of  eon- 
suiting    the    staff    and    using    the 


est  character,  versatility  and  ability   character,   scholarship   and   unsel- 
n  University  life. 

Th?  Order  was  founded  in  1903 
through  the  interest  and  encou- 
ragement of  the  late  Horace  Wil- 


fish  service. 

OTHER   HONORARIES 

The  Order  of  the  Holy  Grail  is 
an    honorary    service    organization 


liams.  Its  purpose  is  to  cut  across  I  composed  of  outstanding  Carolina 
sectional  boundaries  of  student  in-    men  selected  each  year. 

Thirteen  rising  juniors  and  seni- 
ors $re  honore<d  with  membership, 
deavor  as  the  occasion  should  arise,    six  (jlorm  men.  six  fraternity  men, 
The  tapping  of  members  into  the    and  the  delegata,  the  choice  being 


i  terest  and  to  honor  the  outstand- 
ing men  in  all  fields  of  campus  en- 


Flcece,  which  is  held  each  year  in 
public  ceremony  in  Memorial  Hall, 
is  the  only  public  function  of  the 
Fleece. 

The  Valkyries  is  limited  to  ap- 
proximately  two   per    cent    of   the 


Administration 
Is  Mixed  Up 
At  Present 


The    situation     concerning    the !  point  system. 
Consolidated   University  of  North 
Carolina    (Woman's   College,  N.  C. 
State   and   UNC)    is  mixed  up  at 
present. 

How  did  it  get  that  way?  Here's 
the  picture  in  a  nutshell: 

Gordon  Gray,  Uni\'«rsity  presi- 
dent a'ince  1949.  obtained  a  leave 
of  absence  last  year  to  become  as 
equipment  of  the  larger  Memorial  sistant  secretary  of  defense  for  in 
Hospital.  I  ternational  security  affairs. 

No    charge    is    made    for    u.-nial  I      In  July,   1955,     Dr.     J.     Harris 
treatment  because  a  standard  med- 1  Purks,  vice  president  and  provoi.'*. 


made    largely    on    character    anr! 
achievement. 

The  Grail  is  dedicated  to  improv- 
ing the  Carolina  way  of  life  by 
awarding  scholarships  to  deserving 
students,  sponsoring  informal  dan- 
*es,  handling  senior  rings  and  in- 
vitations, aiding  other  organiza 
tions  and  sponsoring  campus  im- 
provements. 

The  Order  of  the  Old  Well  is  an  , 
honorary  organization  open  to  both 
men  and  women.  Members  are  se- 
lected for  their  outstanding  partici- 
pation   in   campus   activities    by   a 


BENNETT  and  BLOCKSIDGE 

EXTENDS  A  CORDIAL 

Welcome  To  Freshmen 

AND  INVITES  THEM  TO  SEE 
OUR  COMPLETE  LINE  OF 


^  Fans 


^  Electric  Clocks 

-^  Electrical  Appliances 


BENNETT  and  BLOCKSIDGE 

105  E.  Franklin  St.  Phone  6161 


ical    fee    is    including    in    jrtudent 
fees  paid  along  with  tuition. 

However,  if  treatment  requires 
u.se  of  Memorial  Hospital  facili- 
ties, the  usual  hospital  expenses 
must  be  paid  by  the  student 


Sfchool  Supplies 
Can  Be  Bought 
At  Book  Ex 

The  Book  Exchange,  located  in 
the  Basement  of  Steele  Dorm  on 
th^  South  side  of  the  campus, 
selL"  used  and  new  books  and 
otper  School  supplies,  including 
pia^jer,  notebooks,  and   pencils. 

Mew  books  are  sold  at  the  maark- 
€tj  price,  but  prices  of  used  books 
vary,  depending  on  the  condition 
oC  the  books.  The  Book-X  aU'O 
bdys  books  back  from  students  for 
from  half  price  on  down  to  noth- 
ing. 

•Hours  of  the  store  are  8:30  a.m. 
tfli  5:30  p.m.  on  class  days. 

The  Scuttlebutt  is  located  di-j 
agonal ly  acro^^'s  from  the  Carolina 
Iitn  and  Big  Fraternity  Court.  They  officio  chairman  of  the  full  board) 
also  sell  school  supplies  in  addi- 
ti{in  to  snacks,  sandwiches,  soft 
dfinks,  magazines,  news-papers  and 
tdilft  supplies. 

•The  Scuttlebutt  is  open  from 
7i30  a.m.  to  11  p.m.  on  weekdays 
a(id  from  1  p.m.  to  11  p.m.  on  Sun- 
day. 

'The  Monogram  Club  also  has  a 
snack  bar  and  fountain,  known  a^; 
tfie  Circus  Room,  and  sella*  various 
stipplies  for  the  students'  use.  The 
same  hours  that  are  observed  by 
tlje  Scuttlebutt  are  kept  by  the 
Circus  Room. 

[  Supplies  can  alo*o  be  bought  at 
the  Y  Court  from  7:30  a.m.  to  5 
p»m.,  at  Lenoir  Hall  during  meal 
iu)urs.  and  at  downtown  stores. 


Carolina  Playmakers  Is  A 
AO'Y ear-Old  Organization 

By  MARCEL1.INE  KRAFCHiqK 


The    Carolina     Playmakers     are 
one  campus  organization  whicN  has 


For    Ser- 
called    to 


proval,  a  provost,  business  officer  brought  nation-wide  fame  to  UNC. 
and  treasurer,  finance  officer,  j  It  began  as  a  pioneer  folk  theatre 
chancellors,  professors  and  other  almost  40  years  ago,  and  since  then 
University  officials  a.v  may  be  has  trured  from  Boston  to  Texas, 
necessary.  ,  including  several  performances  in 


.>itarred  in  "No  Time 
grants  ■  before  he  was 
Hollywood;  Bob  Armstrong,  who 
appears  in  "Cat  on  a  Hot  Tin 
Roof;  Dick  Adicr.  collaborator  on 
■Pajama  Game ';  Shepperd  Strud- 
wick,  screen,  TV,  and  stage  actor; 
Douglas  Watson,  who  has  appeared 
in  several  successful  Broadway  pro- 


3.     power   to   enact    regulations  |  New  York  City.  Although  it  claims  ^^^uctjons    and  many  others. 


dealing  with  streets  and  parking 
areas  of  the  campus. 

In  addition  to  the  full  board, 
which  meets  twice  a  year,  there 
are  several  standing  committee.^', 
the  most  important  of  which  are 
the  Executive  Committee  and  the 
Visiting  Committee, 

The  Executive  Committee,  chair- 
ed by  the   governor   (who   is   ex- 


acts for  the  full  board  and  sub- 
mits in  writing  all  its  actions  to 
the  board.  They  cannot,  however, 
change  or  nullify  any  orders  of 
the  board.  This  committee  of  12 
meet.i*  four  times  annually. 

The  Visiting  Committee  is  in 
charge  of  visiting  each  of  the  three 
campuses  at  least  once  a  year  to 
study  the  problems  and  needs  of 
the  institutions.  Members  of  thi  • 
committee — there  are  12  here  al- 
so— 'have  power  to  look  into  any 
problem  considered  important  to 
the  campus  general  welfare. 


Dance  Committee 
Riavs  Host  Here 

\  Fulfilling  the  role  of  host  at  i 
Oarolina  dances  and  maintaining ' 
order  at  social  functions  gi.ven  by  j 
various  campus  organizations  are  j 
the  main  functions  of  the  Uni- 1 
vtTsity  Dance  Committee.  | 

!  Chairman   for  *this   year   Ls   Pat 
VUnter,  senior^  of  Charlotte.  [ 


University  Club  Seeks 
To  Promofti  Enthusiasm 

The  University  Club  is  primarily 
a  service  organization,  and  all  of  its 
functions  are  carried  out  in  the 
interest  of  the  student  body  and 
University. 

The  functions  of  the  club  are 
many  and  varied.  Through  its  co- 
operation with  the  Athletic  As- 
sociation, the  club  seekit  to  pro- 
mote and  maintain  enthusiasm 
and  good  sportsmanship  in  all  Un- 
iversity  events   and   contests.  i 


to  be  nothing  more  than  a  univf»r- 
sity-community  theatre,  it  often 
proves  to  be  a  stepping-stone  for 
many  eventually  successful  profes- 
sionals in  the  theatre. 

The  Playmakers  Theatre  is  one 
t;f  the  University's  oldest  buildings, 
located  on  Cameron  Ave.  across 
from  Old  East  Dorm,  and  has  been 
everything  from  the  University 
Library  to  the  'University  Stable" 
during  its  history. 

It  houses  four  of  the  six  produc- 
tions each  year,  while  the  annual 
musical  comedy  is  presented  in 
Memorial  Hall  and  the  spring  out- 
door production  is  at  the  Forest 
Theatre,  across  the  road  from  the 
Monogram  Club. 

Besides  having  produced  such 
famous  persons  as  Paul  Oreea, 
Thomas  Wolfe,  -Betty  Smith,  and 
Kermit  Hunter,  the  UNC  Dramatic 
Art  Dept.  has  been  the  training- 
ground  for  about  thirty  profession- 
als recently  working  in  New  York's 
theatre  and  television. 

These  include  Andy  Griffith,  who 


The  Playmakers'  tryouts  and  ac- 
tivities are  completely  open  to  the 
public  and  the  student  body.  Any- 
one at  all  who  is  interested  may 
try  out  for  a  part  or  help  with  the 
backstage  work.  The  name  "Play- 
maker"  applies  to  anyone  who  has 
in  any  way  worked  on  a  production 
—  often  including  representatives 
of  such  departments  as  Statistics, 
History,  and  Economics,  as  well  as 
local  housewives,  merchants, 
clergymen,  and  members  of  the 
faculty. 

This  year  the  Playmakers  will 
present  a  varied  program  of;  "An- 
astasia",  a  recent  Broadway  suc- 
cess; "Arvdrocles  and  the  Lion",  a 
comedy  by  Bernard  Shaw,  which 
will  later  tour  the  Carolinas  and 
Georgia;  "Desire  Under  the  El^ns", 
an  American  classic  by  Eugene 
O'Neill;  "Brigadoon",  one  of  tHe 
most  popular  Broadway  musicals 
of  all  time;  a  premiere  production 
of  an  unknown  play  introducing  a 
promising  new  playwright;  and — 
outdoors — Iben's  "Peer  Gynt". 


in  charge  of  assisting  Gray  on  edu- 
cational matters  of  the  University. 
became  acting  president  during 
Gray's  absence. 

Gray  offered  his  resignation  t.") 
the  Board  of  Tru  -tees  who  first 
refused,  then  later  accepted  it. 
Purks  continued  as  acting  presi- 
dent while  a  nine-man  trustee 
group  began  searching  for  a  per- 
manent   president. 

During  the  first  week  of  Jan- 
uary, 1956.  Purks  was  appointed 
director  of  the  N.  C.  Board  o*" 
Higher  Education.  William  C.  Fri- 
day, then  Consolidated  Universi- 
ty .'^cretary,  stepped  in  as  acting 
president. 

On  Feb.  13.  19.56,  Dr.  William 
M.  Whyburn,  chairman  of  the  UNC 
Mathematics  Dept.,  was  appointed 
acting  provost. 

All  this  "shaking  up"  has  left 
the  Consolidated  University  with 
an  acting  president,  an  acting  pro- 
vost and  a  vacancy  in  the  secre- 
tary's position,  which  Friday  held 
before  assuming  the  temporary 
presidency. 


BERMAN'S 

DEPARTMENT  STORE 
Established  Since  1914 

WELCOMES  THE 
FRESHMEN 


WELCOME  FROSH 


Do  As  So  Many  Others  —  Make 
The  Town  &  Campus  Your 
'    Clothing  Headquarters! 


=h::;S.i 


I  j  I    • 

Bob  Cox-vlass'49  Monk  Jennings-Class '49 


I 


FAdI  SIX 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


FRIDAY,  SEPTEMBER  14,  1?55 


October  1  Is  Deadline 
for  Student  Insurance 


October  1   has  been  set  as  the 
deadline  for  applications  for  stu-i 
dent  insurance. 

The  cost  of  the  policy  is  $9.50  I 
a  year.  According  to  Ray  Jefferies, 
a '.istirvt   to  the  dean   of  student  i 
affairs,    the    premium's    cost    has  i 
dropped  since  last  year. 

Insured  students  will  be  covered 
for  up  to  $1000.  and  for  up  to  $200 
for  surgical  expenses.  If  the  slu- 
dcnt  dies,  his  beneficiaries  will 
receive  $1000. 

Jefferies  said.  "I  think  this  in- 
surance plan  payed  off  for  us  last 
year."  He  pointed  out  that  the  in- 1 
« 1 

UNC  Club  Provides  | 

FychAnge  Of  Ideas  | 

The  Cosmopolitan   Club   is   the  j 
cmpus  organization  for  American  j 
and  foreign  students  to  come  to 
gether   to    give    members    an   op- 
portunity  t3   exchange   ideas   anlj 
cultures. 

It  ha?  an  object  of  promoting 
friendship  and  understanding 
among  different  nations.  There  are 
-about  90  regular  members.  ' 


..trance    comes    to    less    than    80  { 
cents  a  month.  1 

The  insurance  coverage  is  for  a | 
12-month  period,  including  "le 
periods  when  ?tudents  are  travel- 1 
ing  to  and  from  Chapel  Hill,  and  j 
while-  thoy  arc  on  vacation.  Jef- 1 
ferics  said  la<;t  year  there  were 
not  many  claims,  but  during  the  < 
summer  the  company  payed  on  j 
policies  .'jiveral  times. 

An  information  booth  will  be 
set  up  during  registration.  Appli- 
cations for  the  insurance  will  be 
available  at  the  information  booth, 
the  Y  and  at  Graham  Memorial. 

The  policy  is  made  available ' 
through  the  Pilot  Life  Insurance 
Company,  Raleigh.  Jefferies  ex- 
plained that  students  here  will 
pay  a  slightly  higher  premium  than 
student?  at  St^te  College  because  ; 
of  the   surgical   coverage.  ' 

He  reminded  .'students  who  .•al- 
ready hold  policies  and  are  eligi- 
ble to  receive  payments  for  claims 
must  file  claims  with  the  com- 
pany. Blanks  are  available  at  his 
office  and  the  Infirmary. 


Hi 
Freshmen! 

WHEN  FIXING  UP  YOUR  ROOM 
COME  SEE  US  FOR 


it  I>ESK  LAMPS       it  ^ANS 

ir  CLOCKS        it  EXTENSION  CORDS 

•  ROYAL  PORTABLE  TYPEWRITERS 

Electric  Constrirction  Co. 

165  E.  Franklin  Sr.  Established  1935 


New  Art  Museum^ 
Will  Be  Erected  i 


I  Graham  Memorial  Patronizers  Meditate  Over  Game  of  CK^ss 

Tvo  Carolina  students  art  shown  abov*  in  the  Main  Lounge  of  chess   anW   listen   to   music   over   the    loud   speaker   system,   Graham 

Oriiham  Memorial,  the  student  union  building.  They  art^  involved  in  Menr>orial    will    celebrate    the   25th   Anniversary    of    its    opening    this 

a   ciame   of  ch«ss.   The   Main   Lounge  of  GM   is   thoroughly   used   by  fall   and  of  its  dedication  in  January.  Miss   Linda  Mann,   1956  UNC 

UNC   students  to  read    newspapers,  masaiioM,  play  ch«ck«rs   and  graduate,  is  temporary  director  of  ih«  building. 


UNC  Cardboard  Prepares  Stunts  For  Foctbaii  Garne  Color 


One  of  the  phases  of  Carolina, 
life  that  students  enjoy  and  oup  | 
that  adds  enjoyment  to  college  is! 
the  UNC  Cardboard.  i 

The  Cardboard   is  a  student  or-j 
ganization    that    design.-   and    pre- i 
pares  the  card  stunts  performed  a";' 
halftime      entertainment      at      all 
h?mc    football    games,    and    .some- 
times, at  games  away.  | 

Much  work  and  cooperation  is 
invv-lvpd  in  preparation  of  a  stunt 
from  the  time  an  idea  is  submitt- 


ed until  it  i?  finally  performed. 
But  work  is  not  all  'there  is  to  it. 
At  the  Cardboard  offices,  in 
Emerson  Stadium,  the  members 
have  a  change  to  meet  others,  dis- 
cuss different  things  and  have  a 
lot  of  fun  working.  Work  g  cs  on 
in  a  voluntary  manner  during  the 
football  sca.-jn  through  the  last 
game,  for  essentially  the  organi- 
zation is  only  a  fall  semester  activ- 
ity, but  last  sea.son  there  was 
much   activity   that   ran  over  int^ 


late  spring.  '"        | 

Last  .s-eason  began  what  is  hoped 
to  be  an  expanding  of  activity  in- 
to other  areas  besides  that  of  just  j 
.'Students.  All  members  were  givei' 
transportation  and  admission  to 
the  Duke-Carolina  came  where 
stunt.*  were  performed  before  na- 
tior'^1  television  cameras.  | 

An  awards  banquet  was  held 
and  awards  were  ;i'ven  to  members 
who  did  outstandina  work  during 
the    season.    A    scrapbo.ik   of   the 


iyear's  activities  was  also  present- 
ed, and  new  officers  were  also  in- 
. vailed. 

Late  in  the  spring,  a  pre-exam 
party  was  given  by  the  executive 
council.  All  these  activities  were 
well    received    by    the    ir  embers 

New  and  better  activities  ar. 
planned  ior  this  year.  Among 
these  will  be  more  group  get-to- 
gethers and  partie.'.  entries  in  pa- 
rades and  coordinated  stunts  with 
the  Band. 


-'ili^ 


M 


Welcome 


n. 


Your  name 
anrd 
address 
here  ( 


Students! 


M3t»y  of  you  are  away  at  school  for  tli<3  first  time— V/s  weicon^ie 
your  accounts.  Put  your  finarices  on  a  sound  and  sensible  basis, 
open  a  bank  account  at  the  beginning  of  your  school  year— No 
possibility  then  of  losing  cash  and  you  always  have  receipts  for 
every  transaction. 


Our  officers  always  available  for  conferences  with  students. 


WIUIAM  6,  FARNSWOBTH     «^ 

:^^  leMAINSfl.  ^     !^ 


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By  CHARLIE  .JOHNSON  | 

Erection  of  the  new,  spacious  ! 
Ackland  Art  Museum  here  on  | 
Columbia  St.  i.'  expected  to  bring  j 
about  considerable  imprcivement  j 
in  the  University's  Art  Dept.  ' 

Work  on  the  building  has  a'- 1 
ready  started  and  it  is  anticipated ; 
that  it  will  be  completed  in  a  j'car  j 
and  a  half.  \ 

The  building  itself  is  efitimated  i 
at  a  cost  of  $800,000  with  another  I 
$100,000  allocated  for  equipmen*.  I 
The  interest  on  $1  million,  donat  ! 
ed  by  William  Hayes  Ackland 
(figured  at  approximately  $30,000 
per  year)  will  be  utilized  for  the  I 
acqui -ition  of  objects  of  art  for! 
the  museum. 

Ackland  died  in  Washington  in  | 
1940.  His  will  directed  that  his  en- j 
tire  $1,500,000  estate  go  toward  e  •  j 
tabiJshment  of  a  memorial  art  mu- 
seum, provided  the  university  or  i 
college  getting  the  money  would  j 
install  his  tomb  in  the  building  i 
Duke  University  would  not  take  it.  j 
and  Carolina  won  the  bequo  't  af  I 
ter  an  eight-year  court  battle  in 
volving  Carolina,  Duke  and  Rol- 1 
lins  College.  | 

The  structure  is  designed  in ! 
t'vo  parts,  with  the  gallery  in  the  | 
front  facing  Columbia  St.  and  the  ; 
art  school  behind  the  gallery.  On  i 
the  first  floor  of  the  school  wil'  I 
be  the  school  of  art  history,  the  j 
art  library  and  a  lecture  hall.  i 

The    second    floor    will    contain 
clas  rooms    and    art    studios.    Th?  | 
sculpture    department    will    be   in  j 
the  basement.  , 

The  building  will  also  contain  a  | 
memorial  to  the  late  Ackland.  His  ; 
white  Italian  marble  tomb  will  be  : 
in  the  main  floor  gallery.  The  new ! 
museum  will  also  contain  belong- 
•ngs  and  personal  effects  of  Ack- 
land, in  addition  to  other  art  col 
lections.  j 

-;REAT   ENTHUSIAS.Vl       ! 

The  University  Art  Dept  !.■  hap 
oy  over  the  new  building.  It  will 
help  in  various  ways,  according  1 1 
lohn  Allcott,  head  of  the  depart 
ment.  Tlie  new,  enlarged  gallery 
^jpace  will  allow  for  changing  exhi 
bitions  and  a  permanent  collection 
Varioas  collections  have  in  the 
past  been  offered  to  the  depart- 
ment, but  a  lack  of  space  prevent 
od  accepting  them.  These  gifts  can 
be  accepted  now. 

The  new  space  i  ■  tremendoush 
important  for  consolidation  of  all 
the  effects  of  the  department,  All- 
cott .said.  They  are  now  spread  over 
various  parts  of  the  campus.  The 
new  space  will  provide  excellent 
classrooms  and  ."tudios  and  the 
establishment  of  a  fine  art  library, 
he  said.  * 

The  art  staff  is  now  made  up  of 
six  members.  "We  have  a  very 
exceptionable  staff;  you  can't  beat 
fhcm  any  where  in  the  country," 
according  to  Allcott. 

Degrees  offered  now  by  the  dc 

Carolina  Forum 
Celebrates  \ 
20th  Year  \ 

The  Carolin-a  Forum  celebrated 
its  twentieth  anniversary  last 
year. 

Since  its  founding  in  1935  this 
student-run  speaker  series-  has 
brought  to  the  campus  national 
and  international  figures  whose 
views  have  an  important  meaning 
in  current  affairs  of  tiie  state, 
nation  and  world. 

During  its  two  decades  of  exist- 
ence, the  Forum  has  presented 
such  .speakers  as  Governors  Averill 
Harriman  and  Robert  Meyner;  so- 
cialist leader  Norman  Thomas. 
Senators  William  Knowland,  Estes 
Kefauver  and  Robert  Taft.  and 
British  Ambaayador  Sir  Roger 
Makins. 


partment  include  a  B.A.  and^^ 
M.A.  in  art  hi.-lory  or  in  »tu4i» 
creative  ai't.  But  most  of  the  4tiC 
dents  in  the  department  are  gMP 
eral  University  students  who  Ma 
taking  courses  in  art  but  are  VOf 
majoring  in  art.  '-«** 

Over  60  art  majors  were  enrol^' 
ed  in  the  department  Inst  >e»r» 
and  there  were  575  individual  slif' 
dents  who  took   art  coiir -JS.        •"* 


Planetarium  ^ 
ScheduhslO  5 
Fall  Programs^ 

Tlie  1956-57  schedule  of  piM 
grams  at  the  Mnrehead  PlanefSP 
ium  on  the  University  campus 
was  rec«T.t'y  announced  by  Man- 
age,- A.  F.  Jcnzsno. 

Eight  new  celestial  dramas  and 
the  populsr  Christmas  and  Easter 
•'ories  mke  up  the  ye.ir.'^"  pr-sram. 
starting  September  25.  Until  th-;t 
date  the  interesting  ?.n6  tamely 
•'Mars.  Planet  of  Mystery"  will  be 
presented  in  the  Planetari«i» 
chamber. 

The  year's  program  schedu'e 
follows:  September  25-October  22.1 
"Our  Sun:"'  October  23-November 
19,  "Mister  Moon:"  November  20- 
December  31.  "The  Chrisim^s 
Story:"  Janunry  1  -  .January  28, 
"1957  Celestial  Preview;"  January' 
29-February  25.  "Satellite  ■:"  Feb- 
ruary 26-March  27.  "Weath«- 
Whys;"  March  28-Aprii  29.  "East-; 
er.  the  Awakening;"  April  SO-May 
27.  "Signals  from  the  Stars;"  May 
28-Julv  1.  'Science  Fiction;"  and 
July  2  through  September,  'A  Trip 
to  Venus." 


Bill  Friday 


Bill  Friday  is  acting  president 
of  the  Consolidated  University, 
the  third  youngest  man  to  Hold 
the  top  executive  post.  He  is  36 
years  old.  A  story  about  Friday 
appears  elsewhere  in  this  paper. 


Serving  The  Student  Body  Since 
August  1,1899 


V- >':'■,* -t-x^M  K 


TteB 


h:      -«-'■■      ^ 


apelHill 


Chtpel  Hill 


MiMtorilipM 


C«rrl»9rQ 


Open  a  checking  account  with  us  and  he  jisstired 
of  additional  safety  for  your  funds !  In  a  matter  of 
moments  we  will  imprint  your  name' and  address 
on  your  checks  and  make  them  unmistakably 
yovrs,  What'i  more,  each  check  is  printed  on 
special  safety  paper  and  is  insured  against  fraud- 
ulent alteraticMi. 

Imprinted,  insured  checks  are  today's  ajiswer  to 
crooks  who  might  otherwise  have  opportunity  to 
falsify  f>ayee  and  amount  lines  without  immediate 
detection.  Yet  these  new  checks  are  economical. ;j| 
ordinary  checks  are  obsolete  by  comparison.  ^--^ 
Drop  in  amd  open  your  checking  account  nowi" 
Secure  added  safety  for  your  funds  with  im- 
•printed,  insured  checks.  Get  yours  today.         ■ 


.-■  'i 


■«•' 


Glen  lennox 


1  - 


Freshmen! 

j    GET  YOUR 

ROTC  SHOES 

(Brown  or  Black) 
I   PLUS  YOUR 

'  Expert  Shoe  Repair 

I    -   ■    AT-    •-. 

LACOCK'S  SHOE  SHOP 


E.  Franklin  St. 


Phone  9-2976 


.     ♦ 


»*<?^^ 


Jl^ 


Friday,  septembbr  14,  19S« 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HiEi. 


PAGE  SEVEN 


1956  Pigskin  'New  Looli'  Brings  Air  Of  Optimism  To  UNC 


Thft  freshman  of  '56  couldn't  have  picked  a  better  time  to 
enter  Carolina,  athletically  speaking.  Things  are  looking  up  in  all 
sports,  especially  the  three  that  hold  the  fail  spotlight.  Football 
has  Jim  Tatum  and  the  new  look.  Cross-country  has  Jim  Beatty  and 
a  host  cf  rising  sophs.  Soccer  has  a  goad  chance  for  the  conference 
crown.  And  the  freshman  football  squad  looks  slighNy  terrific. 
GRIDIRON  DOPE 

The  first  lovf  of  most  newcomers  to  the  Hill  will  probably  be  Jim 
Talum's  t'octball  team  How  long  before  we'll  be  national  champs, 
you'll  ask  The  answer  to  that  is  rather  uncertain,  but  it  probably 
v.vn'l  be  this  year  Coach  Tatum  himself  will  tell  you  this  present 
edition  of  the  Tar  Heels  has  far  too  many  wcalt  spots  to  be  a  really 
great  team. 

Chief  early  season  sore  spot  has  been  the  line.  "Our  line  lacks 
technique  and  finesse,"  says  Tatum.  "The  potential  ability  is  there, 
and  if  we  could  just  bring  it  out  and  start  to  function,  we  could 
really  go  offensively." 
Tatum.  speaking  at  a  press  conference  here  last  Friday,  was  be- 
r.-iCaning  the  loss  of  his  top  quarterback,  Dave  Reed.  "That's  the  worst 
thing  that  ever  happened  to  me  on  a  football  field,"  he  said.  Reed  suf- 
fered a  knee  injury  that  will  keep  him  on  the  sidelines  for  the  entire 
.s:fcun  whea  he  was  tackled  from  the  blind  side  by  an  overeager  team- 
mate.   'That  bJy  could  have  been  one  of  the  best  quarterbacks  in  the 
land,"  he  said.  "He's  the  type  player  who  can  tear  a  defense  to  pieces 
v.hen  he's  right.  With  Reed  in  the  lineup,  I  thought  we  might  spring 
an  upset  or  two  this  season,  but  now  I'm  doubtful,"  he  went  on  to  say. 
With  Reed   benched  for  the  year,  the  search  for  a  signal  caller 
must  begin  an:w.  Sophomore  Curt  Hathaway  apparently  has  the  inside 
tiuck,  but  a  dark  horse  candidate  named  Doug  Farmer  has  served  no- 
tice he'll  be  a  hard  man  to  deal  with.  Farmer,  a  senior  who  didn't  go 
(  ut  for  football  last  season,  has  displayed  a  nifty  touch  with  the  pig- 
skin in  fall  drills,  and  could  turn  out  to  be  a  real  surprise  package. 
Inside  tip:  .   .  .  Here  are  some  other  Tar  Heels  to  wktch: 
Howard  Williams  and  Don   Kemper  at  guard,  Vince  Olen   at  end, 
and  Emil  DeCantis,  Jim  Varnum  and  Daley  Goff  at  halfback. 

The  Tar  Heel  backfield  should  have  speed  to  burn.  Ed  Sutton  and 
Larry  McMullen.  the  starting  halfbacks,  are  sprinters  on  the  track 
t-am.  So  are  Moe  DeCantis  and  Varnum.  DeCantis  should  be  the  top 
d:tsh  man  on  the  cinder  squad  next  spring.  Other  gridders  who  double 
in  track  include  Kemper.  John  Jones  and  John  Bilich,  shot  put;  and 
Luddy  Payne  and  George  Stavnitski,  javelin. 

I'atum  uncovered  another  possibility  at  his  press  conference 
that  may  come  as  a  surprise  to  many.  The  Tar  Heel  mentor  dis- 
closed to  the  sports  scribes  that  McMullen  may  be  held  out  this 
year  if  Sasser  is  moved  back  to  halfbaci<.  "The  boy  has  everything 
a  good  halfback  needs  except  polish,"  he  said,  "and  we  beHeve  a 
little  hard  -work  and  close  attention  would  turn  him  into  a  great 
player"     --—---'---=-•,. 

Whenever  anyone  is  inclined  to  wax  too  optimistic  over  the  pig- 
skin cutlook,  he  need  only  take  a  look  at  the  schedule  to  get  a  more 
realistic  v  •w  of  the  situation.  Half  of  the  Tar  Heel  games  this  season 
i-re  against  teams  rated  among  the  nation's  top  twenty  in  many  pre- 
s'iflson  polls.  O.klahoma.  Notre  Dame,  Maryland  and  Duke  are  generally 
conceded  spots  in  the  top  ten,  while  Tennessee,  reportedly  on  the 
comeback  trail,  figures  to  finish  somewhere  in  the  second  ten.  Need 
.vc  say  more?  , 

ON  THE  MrNOR  SPORTS  FRONT: 

It  looks  like  a  good  year  for  cross-ountry  and  soccer.  AH-.^m^rica 
Jim  Beatty  is  back  to  pace  the  harriers,  and  he  will  be  capably  sup- 
I'jrted  by  soph  Wayne  Bishop  and  junior  Everett  Whatley.  'in  spite 
(f  intense  competition  from  State  and  Maryland,  we're  willing  to  go 
cut  on  a  limb  and  predict  a  conference  crown  for  the  runners. 

As  for  Coach  Marvin  Allen's  hooters,  the  only  thing  that  ap- 
parently stands  in  their  way  is  a  Nov.  17  date  with  Maryland's 
defending  champs.  If  they  get  by  this  one,  they  should  have  a  good 
chance  to  sweep  all  the  marbles. 

Allen  and  cross-country  coach  Dale  Ranson  have  issued  a  call  for 
ail  interested  freshman  athletes,  runners  and  hooters  both,  to  turn 
cut  for  practice  as  soon  as  possible,  regardless  of  experience.  Some 
if  Carolina's  greatest  athletes  have  been  boys  who  never  played  in 
}::gh  school.  Why  not  you". 
IT  HAPPENED  THIS  SUMMER: 

UNC  athletes  were  busy  this  summer.  Jim  Beatty  spent  the  month 
of  June  on  the  west  coast  participating  in  track  meets.  He  came  home 
v.'ith  a  second  place  in  the  NCAA  5,000  meter  run  and  a  host  of  high 
finishes  in  other  meets.  For  the  past  five  weeks,  the  dininutive  distance 
runner  has  been  in  Finland  with  an  AAU  team. 

Charlotte  junior  Gene  Lookabill  advanced  to  the  quarterfinal 
round  of  the  NCAA  Golf  Championships  last  June.  Other  Tar  rtenl 
representatives  didn't  fare   so  well,  however. 


Tar  Heel  Starting  Backfield,  Minus  One 

Above  is  the  backfield  tabbed  by  Coach  Jim  T  turn  as  his  number  one  unit  earlier  this  season.  One 
change  since  that  date  has  found  sophomore  Curt  Ha  «haway  taking  ever  the  quarterback  duties  from  in- 
jured Dave  Reed.  The  four  are,  left  to  right  halfback  Ed  Sufton,  fullback  Giles  Gaca,  left  halfback 
Larry  McMullen  and   Reed. 

AMONG  THE  PICTURESQUE  PINES  .  i 

Kenan  Memorial  Stadium:  Natural 


In  a  natural    valley   about    two 
,  thousand  feet  from  the  center  oi" 

the  campus  of  the  University  an  1 
i  ju.-'t   above  the  spot   long   known 

as  the  Meeting  of  the  Waters. 
I  there  is  a  natural  amphitheatre, 
I  easily  approached  by  paths  that 
'  follow  the  lay  of  the  land. 

The  brook  that  flows  through  this 
!  valley  has  cut  a  ravine  so  that  the 

floor  of    the   stream    is    level   and 


smooth  and  the  bank.i"  rise  with 
equal  steepness  on  either  side. 

Here  is  the  site  of  Kenan  Me- 
m.orial  Stadium.  In  the  complete- 
ness and  harmony  of  its  appoint- 
ments, the  convenience  of  its  i-oal- 
ing.  and  the  beauty  of  its  design 
and  location,  Kenan  Memorial 
Stadium  is  unique  mong  the  stadia 
of  America. 

The      stadium,      truly      one      ol 


JIM  TATOM 

...Sunny  Jim  comes  home 


UNC  Welcomes  Back 
Jim  Tatum  As  Coach 


Chapel  Hill's  beauty  spots,  was  a 
gift  of  William  Rand  Kenan  Jr.. 
a  distingui.-hed  and  loyal  son  of 
the  University  of  the  Class  of 
1894,  and  constructed  as  a  me- 
morial to  his  mother,  Mary  (Har- 
grave),  and  his  father,  William 
Rand  Kenan. 

The  original  cost  was  $275,000 
but  the  property  is  valued  at  man. 
times  that  figure  now.  of  coura'C. 
Alter  the  stadium  proper  was 
built,  a  field  house  was  added  a 
one  end  of  the  field,  where  both 
the  visiting  and  home  teams  dress 
for  games. 

Conslructi.'n  of  the  stadium  wa 
begun   in     November,    1926t     and 
completed    in    August.    1927.    The 
first    f>'>tbail    game    played    there 
waiivhetween   Carolina  and  David 
son    on    Nov.    12.      However,      the 
formal  opening  and  dedication  di 
not  take  place  until  the  game  wit 
Virginia  on  Thanksgiving  Day.  The 
Tar  Heels  won  14-13. 

The  stadium,  as  originally  built 
seated  24,000.  For  many  years 
however,  an  ingeniou.-  arrange 
mcnt  of  portable  grandstands,  used 
for  all  the  games,  has  increased  th^ 
capacity  to  43  917  seats.  On  o- 
casions  even  this  capacity  has  bee  ■ 
increa.-ed,  and  games  with  Vir- 
ginin.  Duke.  Notre  Dame  and  Tex 
as  have  accommiidated  as  many  a 
46000. 

On  one   side   of   the   stadium    is 
a  gi;es4.-_bpx.  used   by  Trustees  o 
the    University    and    other    specia" 
gue    s.  The   press   box.  of  simila 
oi't"ard  design,  is  located  on  th'- 
other  side',  directly  opposite.  Gift 
from   Mr.    Kenan   enabled   a   com 
pletc  rebuilding  of  these  structures 
in   1950.  The  now  press  box  is  of 
unique   design,  different  from  th 
.•.i-£\vling   pre-ss   boxes  and  highlv 
functional      for     reporters,     radio 
men    and    photographers    and    has 
been  highly  praised  for  its  beauty 
and  utility. 

The  stadium  is  used  primarily 
for  football  games  but  on  occasion'; 
other  functions  are  held  there,  in 
eluding  the  annual  Commencement 
e.xerci.-es  of  the  University,  con 
ducted   in  the  twi-light. 


New  Tatum  Regime  Will  Try 
Jo  Better  Poor  '55  Mark 
Against  Rugged  Competition 

Sophomore  Curt  Hathaway  Replaces  Reed 
At  Quarterback;  Sutton  Shines  At  Halfback 

By  LARRY  CHEEK  '         ** 

This  is  the  ye;ir  of  the  "new  look"  in  Car  »lina  football. 
Wholesale  rhantie.s  have  been  made  all  the  w:«v  down  the  line  in  an  effort  to  re.stue 
the  Tar  Heels  from  the  gridiron  doldrura  in  which  they  ha\e  wallowed  for  the  past 
six  years.  \  brand  new  coaching  staff  heade  1  by  Jim  Tatum  has  been  brought  in  to  re- 
plal(e  the  Geoige  Barclay  regime.  New  train  rs  have  been  added.  F.\en  the  uniforms  have 
been  altered.  ♦  ~  " 

And  yet  there  remain  two  signifl-  during  spring  drills.  When  Reed  Pell  at  right  tackle  with  Leu  Rus- 
cant  items  that  have  changed  very  was  injured,  Sasser  was  shifted  savage,  victim  of  a  leg  injury  all 
little!.  The  schcidule  is  a  back  break-  i  back  to  his  old  position.  i  last  season,  in  the  fourth  position, 

ing  one  just  ,  like  last  season,  and  ■  Front  running  candidate  for  the  Russavage,  a  scholastic  junior  m 
the  'player  personnel  is  es.sential-  j^^y  quarterback  assignment  is  a  ^'^  ^''"^^  year  of  varsity  competi- 
ly  the  same  as  last  year's  when  the  six  foot  sophomore  from  Norfolk,  ^ion,  is  the  biggest  man  on  th3 
Tar  JHeels  posted  a  dismal  3-7  rcc-  ya.,  named  Curtis  Hathaway.  Hath-  squad,  weighing  in  at  234  lbs.  and 
ord.i  awav  was  number  one  field- general    standing  six  feet  four  inches  taU. 

OPTIMISTIC  OUTLOOK  for  the  frosh  squad  last  year  and    GUARD  SPOTS  SET 

Still  there  exists  a   decided   air  ;  is  considered  a  top  prospect  by  the       Transplanted  fullback  Don  Lear 

of    (Optimism    in    the    UNC    camp.  ■  UNC  brain  trust.  Ron  Marquette,  a    ^"*^  Lenoir  native  Hap  Setzer  are 

Coach  Tatum  has  termed  his  half-    rangy  junior  who  missed  most  of  |  currently   rated  tops  at  the  guard 

back  crop  among  the  finest  in  the   last  season  due  to  a  leg  injury,  and   spots.  Lear,  one  of  the  team's  top 

'  lancl,    and    golden    boy    Ed    Sutton    Doug  Farmer,  senior  veteran   who    blockers,    rates    the    nod    over   ag- 

j  is  rated  a  prime  All-America  can-   vvas  a  frosh  sensation,  are  two  oth-   gf'^ssive  but  light  Jimmy  Jones  at 

didaite.  There    s  an   abundance  of    er   boys   battling    for   the   starting  ^^^^  guard,  with  Howard  W'illiams, 

I  cxpt^'rience  at  the  fullback  slot  with    nod. 

j  threje  lettermen   returning  headed 

by  slpring  sen.sation  Giles  Gaca.  But 


210  lb.  junior  who  was  also  shift- 
ed from  fullback,  running  third. 

Dick  Smith,  e  195  lb.  Pennsyl- 
vania junior,  was  shifted  from 
tackle  to  guard  by  Tatum.  and  is 


VETERANS  TO  START 

The  halfback  spots  on  opening 
at  the  quarterback  post,  there  is  a  ^^y  ^■^^^  y,^  canned  by  a  pair  of 
real  stickler  of  a  problem.  battle  tested  veterans,   if  all  goe- 

On    the    first    day    of    practice,    according  to  plan.  Sutton  has  the  i  <^>""rently  on  the  second  team  be- 
star  ing    quarterback    Dave    Reed,    ^ight  half  position  sewed  up,  while    ^'""^  ^^^''^'"    *^'^^^'"  '"^'^  "^'^^  ^'" 
callM  -one  of  the  finest  quarter-   Larry  McMullen.  a  195  oound  sen- 
bac^s  I've  seen"  by  Tatum,  turned  ,  j^r  with  speed  to  burn.*  seems  set 
up  )|vith  a  knee  injury  that  put  him    ^^  g^  at  the  left  half  slot 
cm  the  sidelines  for  the  entire  sea- 


be  a  host  of  shifty  ball  carriers. 
Emil  DeCantis,  a  soph  who  doubles 
as  a  sprinter  on  the  track  team, 
is  ruftning  behind  Sutton:  while 
Daley:  Goff  and  Dick  Darling,  a 
pair  of  juniors,  are  fighting  fir 
the  second  string  assignment  be- 
hind McMullen.  Juniors  Jim  Var- 
num,   Charley   Reed    and    Francis 


son.  This  leaves  the  Tar  Heels  with 
only  one  experienced  caller,  little 
Budjdy  Sasser,  the  Conway,  S.  C, 
flas|i  who  was  moved  to  halfback 

UNC  Athletic 

Home  Located 

Ih  Gymnasium  \  '^:^T^'X,„,  „  ,„„. 

Woollen   Gymasium,  located   on    "'"8  ^'^h  the  first  string  unit  at 

the  Isouthea  'iern  end  of  Ihe  camp  '  fullback.  Although  the  Pennsylvan 

IS  on  Raleigh  Rd.,  houses  all  the  1  ^  junior  has  the  inside  track,  he 

■ithietic.    ph.vsical    education,    and  I  "^    •^ejng   seriously   challenged    by 

ntriamural  offices.  |  three   other    junior    line    busters. 

Tlie  model  structure  contains  a  ^'^^^y  ^'^^^-  the  teams  top  punter, 
maip  auditorium  which  covers  j  '•"*  cui'rently  running  num»>er  two; 
more  than  an  acre.  This  indoor '  ^^^^  Haywood  is  number  three  and 
arena  can  seat  6,000  at  basketbal'  ^^^^  hmning  Joe  Temple  is  num 
'ames  and  c;ir,  accommodate  an  '^^^  ^^"^-  ^**"  ^ear.  last  year's  top 
nddor  track  which  is  longer  than  f"»f'a«'f.  has  been  shifted  to  guard 
Mafjison   Square   Garden's.  ,  *»  '»<»'*t*^^  ^^e  Tar  Heel  line. 

V^hon  the  seating  arrangements     -INEIS  PROSLEM 


be  counted  on  for  duty  at  guard 
include  junior  Glenn  Daughtry  and 
sophs    Don    Kemper,    Ray    KryzaJc. 

Backing"up"7he7wo  starters  will    TuJ^^!^  ^"'"V"    Kemper,  starting 

lullback   on    last    years   freshman 


year  s 

team  who  has  received  praise  from 
Tatum,  Ls  the  number  three  choice 
at  right  guard,  while  Kryzak  is  rat- 
ed immediately  behind  him. 

The  center  spot  will  be  capably 
manned  by  George  Stavnitski,  let- 
terman  from  Fairfield.  Conn.,  in 
his  third  year  of  varsity  play.  Sophs 


'.erry,  and  soph  Ed  Lipski  are  oth-  1  H^""''  ^^'^  f  "^  ^Z^'  "^''d'^^""  ^iVe 

the  Tar  Heels  a  three  man  puneh 

•It  center  that  can  he  matched   by 

few  schools  in  the  country.  Other 

center  candidates  are  Donnie  Kel- 

iey  and    Df:n   Smith,  a  junior  and 


nreltaken  out,  the  firmer  accomo 
dates  four  basketball  courts.  Bas- 
betball,  badminton,  volleyball  and 
"ther  snorts  take  pi  nee  here  a 
part  of  the  physical  educatinn  pro- 
gram. 

0|n  the  main  floor.  Jim  Tatum 
nndi  hi.'  football  staff  occupy  the 
left  end  of  the  building  while  ath 
letic  director.  Basketball  Offices, 
and!  Ticket  Offices  occupy  the 
right  end  of  the  building. 

Coaches  of  intercollegiate  and 
physical  education  sports  have  of- 
fice$  upstairs,  along  with  the  in- 
traiTiural  office  and  three  large 
clas^sroom-s-. 

Locker  rooms,  dressing  facili- 
ties! and  showers,  and  other  sports 
roopis  occupy  the  basement. 


ED   SUTTON 

.flashy  Tar  Heel  halfback 


The  face  in  the  above  photo  i." 
fast  becoming  a  familiar  one 
around  the  Carolina  campus.  Sunn\ 
Jim  Tatum  is  back  at  Chapol  Hil; 
after  a  fourteen  year  absence.  And 
his  coming  has  touched  off  cele 
bration  among  Carolina  football 
followers  everywhere.  For  during 
the  fourteen  years  since  he  wa.- 
last  at  Carolina,  the  genial  big 
man  has  made  a  name  for  himsell 
as  one  of  the  nation's  really  grcai 
football  coaches. 

James  Moore  Tatum,  1935  grad- 
uate of  Carolina,  where  he  was  a 
star  tackle  and  catcher,  scaled  thi 
heights  in  his  profession  during 
his  nine  years  at  the  University  oi 
Maryland    in    1947  55. 

Shortly  before  the  opening  of 
the  1955  season,  the  NCAA  an- 
nounced that  Tatum  had  the  bes 
10-year  record  of  any  of  the  na 
lion's  active  football  coaches.  Dur- 
ing that  period  his  teams  achieved 
the  phenomenal  collection  of  7( 
victories,  19  defeats  and  six  lies 
Including  last  season,  when  Jim 
turned  out  an  undefeated  team  for 
the  third  time  at  Maryland,  and  hi.'- 
one  earlier  year  as  head  coach  at 
Carolina  in  1942,  his  record  shows 
86  victories,  19  defeats  and  six  ties. 


No  current  coach  can  match  it. 

Tatum  had  three  undefeated,  un- 
ied  teams  at  Maryland,  five  bowl 
'•ams  and  one  natioal  champion 
He  elevated  that  school  from  a 
ootball  shambles  into  a  national 
power  which  annually  ranked  high 
n  the  polls.  In  1953  he  was  hon- 
ored as  "Coach  of  the  Year." 

A  colorful,  spectacular  and  arti- 
ulate  fellow,  he  is  a  prodigious 
vorker  and  superb  organizer.  He 
'<eeps  long  hour«  on  his  job.  F.Tr 
recreation,  he  likes  golf  best.  At 
the  game,  characteri.stically,  he 
ometimes  lacks  finesse  but  is  pow- 
erful  and   potent. 

Th»  42  year  old  native  of  McColl. 
S.  C.  has  posted  a  winning  percent- 
age of  .812  over  his  11  years  of 
"oaching. 

While  at  Maryland  Tatum.  ii.  col- 
'abcration  with  able  assistant  War- 
••en  Giese.  now  head  coach  a! 
"outh  Carolina,  wrote  a  scholar!' 
■■•oek  called  'Toachin^j  Footbal' 
and  the  Split-T".  It  has  gone  into 
many  printings  and  i.s  widely  used 
IS  a  textbook. 

Tatum  is  married  to  the  former  | 
Edna  Sumrell  and  they  have  three 
-hildren:  daughters  Becky  (10)  and 
Rcid  (2),  and  son  Jimmy  (9). 


Footballers 
Have  Rigid 
Time  Table 

It's  been  "early  to  bed  and  early 
to  rise"  for  Carolina  football  play 
ers  during  pre-season  practice, 
which  began  on  Sept.  1. 

New  head  coach  Jim  Tatum  get* 
his  stalwarts  out  of  their  sacks 
shortly  after  6  a.m.  every  morn 
ing.  Immediately  upor  rising,  they 
are  fed  tomato  or  orange  juice 
according  to  their  preference  or  al- 
ie'-gies.  At  6:45.  the  athletes  report 
to  the  field,  with  practice  ending 
at  8:30. 

After  a  rugged  workout,  the  play- 
ers sit  down  to  a  hearty  breakfas; 
at  9  o'clock. 

After  breakfast,  until  11  a.m., 
•hev  attend  to  personal  affairs 
such  as  writing  to  their  living  dolls, 
p' ay  ing  checkers,  etc. 

Lectures  occupy  the  period  from 


11  to  12  each  day  and  dinner  fol 
owJ!  at  12:30  p.m. 

Dinner  is  followed  by  a  rest  pe- 
•iod.  with  nap.s  recommended,  untii 
3:45  p.m..  when  they  report  for  af 
ternoon  practice.  Supper  is  serveti 
at  6:30  p.m. 

After  a  streaous  day  such  as  that, 
the  tired  young  men  usually  weJ- 
-•onie  a  10  o'ciock  curfew  for  sleep. 

The  Tar  Htel  head  coach  thinks 

he  j  probablv    was    the    first    head  ■      u ,  j     ^       .      ,.        ^ 

Lu  .  .  11  .u  1  •   „        ^^^^    Coach    Jjm    Tatum    has 

}oath  to  mstjill  the  earlv  morning  I  ,.     j  ,      . 

.,!.,,.  ..  !  lined     up     a     freshman  coaching 

befpre-breakfast  practices,  now  us  ,«[,,•       ,        u-        .. 

-  i  .       f.         .  ./.aff^  of  five  for  this  tail. 


ed  by  a  number  of  coaches 

He  hit  up(m  the  idea  his  first 
year  as  a  hesd  coach,  back  in  the 
wai  year  of  1942  when  he  first 
oathed  the  Tar  Heels.  The  heavy 
tnoj-ning  dew  caused  the  balls  to  be 
wr(  and  slippery,  but  this  paid  off 
that  very  year.  The  Tar  Heels  play 
ed  their  first  game,  against  favor 


ed  Wake  Forest,  in  the  rain,  and  '  ^u<iation  graduate  school, 
nded  a  two  year  losing  streak  with  I      O^^^s  are  Ham  Wade  of  Chap 
the  Deacons.  I  ^^   ^''''   ^^*'   "Student,   who   playe 

After  the  war.  against  the  ad- '  his  football  as  a  fullback  at  Dav 
vice  of  assistant  coaches,  Tatum  ^  'dso":  Hubert  vJim)  McGee  Jr.,  oi 
had     the     pre-break  practices  I  Greenville,  alumnus  of  N.  C.  Stat 

during  his  one  year  ai  Oklahoma,    and    Ea.st  Carolina   College,   grad 
Bud  Wilkinson  went  back  to  mid 
moirning  drills,  when  he  took  over, 
but    since  then   has   gone   back   to 
ibc  Tatum  program. 


sophomore  resDectively. 
PAYNE  MAY  STAR 

Lanky  Buddy  Payne,  who  may 
develop  into  (me  of  the  best  ends 
ever  to  perform  at  Carolina,  is  slat- 
ed to  hold  down  the  starting  po- 
sition on  the  right  flank;  while  sen- 
ior Larry  Muschamp.  only  punter 
in  the  first  team,  currently  rates 
the  nod  over  the  field  at  the  left 
.»nd  spit. 

Payne,  a  demon  on  defense  and 
a  starter  last  year  in  his  sophomore 
season,  may  be  slowed  down  by  a 
":nee  operation  he  underwent  last 
-pring.  If  he  turns  un  unfit  for 
'uty.  junior  Paul  Pulley,  one  of 
he  squad's  top  pass  receivers,  will 
ake  over. 

Charley  Robinson  and  Vince  01- 
-n,  both  juniors,  are  pushing  Mus- 
champ for  the  left  end  berth,  with 
'tobinson.  especially,  being  tabbed 
for  future  stardom.  Other  flank- 
men  who  may  figure  in  Tatum"s 
olans  are  sophs  Bernie  Donalelli. 
Clyde  Turlington.  Charles  Shelton 
and  Takey  Crist;  junior  Sonny 
'<"orbc^:  and  senior  Bill  Ellingtoij, 
the  oldest  man  on  the  squad  at  27. 
7UGGE0  SCHEDULE 

One  look  at  the  10  game  sched- 
ule is  enough  to  dampen  the  hopes 
of  the  most  ardent  enthuiast.  The 
Tar  Heels  once  again  must  face 
-ome  of  the  nation's  strongest 
teams,  beginning  with  Oklahoma 
in  the  second  game  and  ending 
with  arch-rival  Duke  in  the  last. 
In  between,  they  must  contend 
with  such  outfits  as  Notre  Dame, 
Maryland.  Tennessee  and  Georgia, 
not  to  mention  Big  Four  rivals 
>tate  and  Wake  Forest. 

No  miracles  are  expected  in  fac- 
ing this  back  breaking  schedule, 
*)ut  Carolina's  football  Im'ers  ex- 
pect to  have  a  little  fun  this  year. 

The  complete   schedule: 

Sept.  22— N.  C.  State  at  Chapel 
Hill. 

Sept.  29 — Oklahoma  at  Norman, 
Okla 

Oct.  6 — South  Carolina  at  Coium- 
bia,  S    C. 

Oct.   13~Georgia  at  Chapel  HilL 

Oct.  20— Maryland  at  Chapel  Hiil. 

Oct.  27— Wake  Forest  at  Chapel 
Hill. 

Nov.  3 — Tennessee  ai  Knoxvilie, 
Tenn. 

Nov.    10 — Virginia  at  Charlottes- 
uate    student    in    Physical    educa-    ville,  Va. 

tionj    and   John    Murphy,    forme         Nov.   17 — Notre   Dame   at  South 
head  coach  of  Bridgeport,  W.  Va      Bend,  Ind. 
Higl^  ScfaooL  I     Nov.  24— Ouke  at  Chapel  Hill. 


Thti  biggest  headache  lacing  Ta- 
'um  is  a  lack  of  manpo\i^er  in  thr 
:orwajrd  wall.  The  genial  mentor 
has  repeatedly  warned  Tar  Heel 
oHowers  that  the  line  would  not 
•e  strong  enough  to  carry  the  Blue 
md  White  through  the  murderou 
schedule  that  lies  ahead.  Brightcs; 
>pot  In  the  forward  wall  is  right 
tackle  where  giant  230  lb.  Stewart 
Pell  ijrovides  a  solid  anchor  foi 
he  rest  of  the  line. 

Pell,  a  transfer  student  with 
service  experiences,  was  ineligible 
last  season,  but  should  be  ready  to 
terrorize  the  opposition  this  year 
Phil  Blazer,  a  junior  from  Whitak 
•r,  Pa.,  who  sat  out  last  season 
with  an  injury,  will  be  Pell's  run 
ling  mate  at  left  tackle,  although 
he  is  being  hard  pressed  by  senioi 
letterman  John  Jones  and  John 
Bilich.  Soph  Fred  Sveai'ngen  i. 
runnjng  fourth  in  the  battle  foi 
the  left  tackle  assignment,  wit!. 
Chapiel  Hillian  Tom  ^  Maultsb> 
bringing  up  the  rear. 

Doh  Redding,'  a  rough  tough 
soph  and  Stan  Leftwich,  215  lb 
junic»r,  are  scheduled  to  back  up 

Coaching  Staff  Set 


Filed  Tullai,  full-time  staf, 
memjber,  and  head  freshman  coach. 
willjhave  four  student  assistants 
Tatujm  announced. 

Bcfb  (Goo-Goo)  Gantt  of  Albe 
mark,  star  North  Carolina  back 
in  the  class  of  1952,  heads  thi» 
groulp.  He  will  be  in  the  physical 


PAGE  EIGHT 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


TEN  LETTERMEN  RETURN 


FRIDAY,  SEPTEMBER  H,  1%^ 


Potent  Soccer  Squad  Sets 
Sights  On  Conference  Title 


Outstanding  Newcomers 


Above  are  four  of  Coach  Jim  Tatum's  top  sophomore  prospects.        and  Hathaway  are  currently  running  first  strfvig,  while  the  other  two 
They    are,     left    to     right:      tackle     Phil     Blazer,     quarterback     Curt         are  on  the   second  team. 
'Hathaway,  center   Ronnie   Koes  and   halfback    Emil   DeCantis.   Blazer  *         .' 


WELCOME 

FROM 

->* 

LEDBETTER-PICKARD        / 

YOUR  SOURCE  FOR 

^  College  and  Social  Stationery 

^   Esterbrook,  Parker,  And  Shaeffer  Pens 

^   Hallmark  and  Gibson  Greeting  Cards 

i^  School  Supplies— Ink,  Blotters,  Note  Books,  Pencils,   Paper, 
T/pe  Ribbons,  Rubber  Stamps,  etc. 

^   Lamps 

Olympic  Bound 

Fate     and     the     Olympic    trials 
brought  t(;g(.'lher  a  pair  of  former 
UNC    swimming    co-captains     and  \ 
could    put    them    tojitther    on    the 
plane  for  Australia  and  the  Olym- ' 
pie  Gaines. 

Stan  Tinkham  of  Washington.  D 
C.  and  Donnie  Evans  of  Charlotte. 
1952-53  UNC  cu-captains.  may  go 
to  .Melbourne,  but  in  different  ca- 
pacities, j 

Tinkham   is  definitely  going,  as 

coach  of  the  United  States  women's 

team.  ["Lvans  will  go  as  a  freestvler  ; 

I 
should    one    of    the    four    regulars  ' 

mi.ss  the  trip.  He  finished  fifth  by 

a  split  decision   in  the  recent  De- 

troit  trials  and  was  named  first  al-  ^ 

ternate   in  that   event.  I 


Coach  Marvin  'Allen  and  his 
North  Carolina  soccer  squad  begin 
practice  Monday  with  one  though 
uppermost  in  their  mindj-.  That 
15  to  beat  Maryland  and"  knock 
the  Terps  uut  of  the  co.nfereiice 
championship  .for  the  first  time 
since  the  Atlantic  Coach  Confer- 
ence was  formed  four  years  ago. 

The  Tar  Heel  booters  almos 
made  it  la.st  year,  finishing  »«3c 
ond  to  the  Terps  in  the  final  stand 
ings.  The  present  squad  figures,  on 
paper  at  least,  to  be  even  strong 
er  than  last  year's  edition.  Coac'. 
Allen  ha.?  t.en  lettermeft  return- 
ing plus  a  host  ol  talented  sopho 
mores  from  last  fall's  unbeaten 
frosh  squad,  rated  by'  observers 
as  one  of  the  finest  in  Tar  Heel 
hi  -Lory.  ' 

Tapping  the  list  of  returnees  i.*^ 
captain  Grover  Brown,  who  is  se 
to  go  at  one  halfback  slot.  An- 
;)thsr    letterman    halfback    return 


ing  is  Bill  Blair,  a  mairistay  on  last 
year's  squad. 

At  fonvard.  Coach  Allen  can  ca!' 
on  a  trio  of  lettermen  for  depend- 
able service.  They  are  Frank  But 
ler,  Charle..-  Covell  and  Pat  Mc 
'  ?ormick.  one  -of  the  lop  scorer.*- 
from  las'  season's  team. 

Fullbacks  on  hand  include  Mikf 

Galifianakis.  John  Harris  and  Ted 

Tones.  Jihn  Foster,  h  junior  wh' 

also   .•"lines   on   the  tennis  courts 

will  hold  dowh  the  left  wing  po- 

■iition,     while     baseballer     Chuck 

Hartman    will    handle    the   goalie 

duties. 

;      Sev^n  booters  up  from  the  frosh 

I  squad   wil   greatly   strengthen   thf 

I  varsity.    The    saphs    who    should 

•.jarkle  are  Coleman  Barks,  Ricky 

i  Grausman.    Pete   Killinger.   Jimm\ 

'  Purks    and    Tom    Rand,    forwards: 

ind  Bob  Borden  and  Dave  Corkey 

."ullbacks.   Ted  Yohanna.   a   native 

)f    Baghdad,    Iraq,    is    a    transfe: 


student     from     (jjampbell     CoUegr 
who  should  see  jmuch  action. 

Tar  Heel  hopds  for  a  succes.:,*fu 
veason  were  deplt  a  jolt  earlie- 
this  summer  wh^n  co-captain  eleci 
Pete  Cothran  graduated  in  sum 
Tier  school  and  'decided  n't  to  re- 
turn for  his  finjrt  year  of  eligibility. 
Cothran  was  the  sparkplug  of  th< 
Tar  Heel  attack  all  last  season. 

There  are  two  newcomers  ti 
this  years  eight  game  schedul. 
Lynchburg  College  will  be  here  for 
the  season's  opener  of  Oct.  8.  and 
the  Davidson  Wildcats  will  pa' 
Chapel  Hill  a  visit  Oct.  19. 

Although  Duke  is  reported  to  b 
stronger  thi.-  year,  the  main  wo  ■ 
ry  in  the  Tar  Heel  camp  is  Mary 
land.  The  Terps  look  better  than 
ever,  and  will  be  hard  to  dislodgf 
from  the  top  of  the  heap.  "Oui 
game  with  Maryland  on  the  last 
day  of  the  season  is  the  key  to 
to  the  entire  year,"  said  Coach 
.\llen.    "This    is    the      one      we're 


pointing  for.  and  if  tilings  gtk 
•ight,  I  believe  we  can  do  it,"  hfe* 
concluded.  ,  «»» 

Coach  Allen  aL-j  issued  a  call  ^ 
all  interested  freshmen  to  come 
on  down  and  begin  working  out 
with  the  varsity  Monday,  althoug'i 
freshman  practice  doesn't  official- 
ly begin  until  the  later  part  of  the 
month. 

The  varsity  schedule:  :«w 

Oct.  8  —  Lynchbury  College  Jtt 
Chapel   Kill. 

Oct.  16 — Washington  4  Lee  at 
Lexington,  Va. 

Oct.  19 — Davidson  at  Chapol 
Hill. 

Oct.  24— N.  C.  State  at  Chapel 
Hill. 

Nov.  1 — Roanoke  College  at  SaN 

em,  Va. 
Nov.  8 — Virginia  at  Chapel  Hill. 
Nov  13— Duke  at  Durham.  » 

Nov.    17— Maryland    at    College 

Park.   Md. 


OME  FROSH! 


For  Recreation  —  Carolina  s  Newest 
Tavern  ~  Next  To  Town  &  Campus  — 

Cool  Beverages  &  Music 

The  Tempo  Room 


UNC  Head  Coach  Jim  Tatum  is  shown  above  flanked  by  his  six 
man  staff  of  assistants.  The  coaches  are,  left  to   right:  Pat  Preston, 


Eddie  Teague,   Ed   Kensler,   Emmett   Cheek,  Tatum,   Fred  Tullai  and 
Ed   Hickey 


Jim  Tatum  Gathers  Six-Man  Coaching- 
Staff  To  Help  Tutor  UNC  Gridders     : 


F'art  of  the  celebrated  "new  look'.' 
ui  Carolina  footbau  is  an  energetic 
and  capable  six  -  man  assistant 
coaching  staff  that  head  Coach  Jim 
Tatum  has  gathered  around  him. 

The  .six  assistants  —  Emmett 
Cheek,  Eddie  Teague,  Ed  Kensler, 
Pat  Preston.  Jim  Hickey  and  Fred 
Tullai— are  all  hand  picked  men 
c.f  provtn  ability.  Here,  by  way  of 
introduction  to  the  UNC  students, 
is  a  rundown  on  each  one  of  these 
men  who  contribute  so  much  to 
the  making  of  a  Carolina  football 
team. 

For  Emmett  Cheek,  it  was  home- 
coming   when    he    followed    Coach 


WELCOME 


FRESHMEN 


,^:^ 


Your  Friendly  Chapel  Hill  Barber  Shops  Are 

Always  Willing  To  Serve  You  With  Expert 

Barbers  And  Excellent  Facilities 


^«<;*> 


'Where  Clipping  Is  Legar 


Carolina 


University 


Tar  Heel 


Jim  Tatum  t(j>  Chapel  Hill  and  Car- 
clir.a.  Chapelj  Hill  is  his  home  and 
Carolina  his'  alma  mater.  Cheek 
was  a  star  gjuard  here  under  Carl 
Snaveh  in  the  years  ol  the  Justice 
era.  i 

While  worlking  on  his  Masters 
here  in  1949  land  '50,  Cheek  sen  ed 
as  line  coach  and  head  baseball 
ciach  at  Gujilford.  After  complet- 
ing work  onjhis  Master's,  he  join- 
ed Tatum  at  jMaryland  and  remain- 
ed with  him  for  five  seasons. 

At  Marylahd  Cheek  and  Eddie 
Teague  werle  the  Terps'  chief 
scouts.  The  tWo  wrote  and  publish- 
ed a  successjful  book  on  scouting. 
He  will  work  on  the  field  here  at 
Carolina  in  addition  to  his  scout- 
ing duties. 

OUTSTANDING  RECORD 

Eddie  Teague  is  another  coach 
with  a  sparkling  record  as  a  play- 
er. Teague  began  his  career  as  a 


brilliant  schoolboy  performer  in 
his  nanve  Washington,  D.  C.  He 
was  a  three  sport  man  at  N.  C. 
State  in  1942.  and  in  1943,  he  shift- 
ed io  Carolina  as  a  serviceman  in 
the  V-12  program  and  made  the 
All-Conference  team  and  All-.^m- 
erica  honorable  mention  under 
Tom  Young. 

Teague  was  both  head  coach  and 
athletic  director  at  Guilford  dur- 
ing the  post  war  years  after  his 
graduation  from  Carolina  in  194.3. 
He  joined  Tatums  staff  at  Mary- 
land in  1952. 

Pat  Preston,  a  Wake  Forest 
grad,  has  the  most  illustrious  car- 
eer of  anyone  on  the  coaching 
staff.  A  native  of  ThcmasviHe. 
Preston  gained  .All-.America  hon- 
ors in  his  college  days  while  per- 
forming fur  both  Wake  Forest  and 
Duke. 

He  was  an  outstanding  guard  for 
the    Chicago    Bears    pro    football 


Village 


WELCOME 
FRESHMEN 


REASONABLE 
PRICES 


HOME-COOKED 
MEALS  ' 


PLEASANT 
SERVICE 


I  MODERN 

j     ACCOMMODATIONS 

I     N.C  CAFETERIA 

i 

I         "HOME  OF  GOOD  FOOD" 
two  Doors  From  Bank  of  Chapel  Hill 


team  in  1946,  and  was  termed  by 
Coach  George  Halas  as  "one  of  the 
hardest  hitting  linemen  I've  ever 
seen.'" 

Preston  joined  the  Wake  Forest 
coaching  staff  in  1951.  .serving  as 
line  coach,  end  co&ch.  talent  re- 
cruiter and  scout.  In  an  athletic 
upheaval  at  Baptist  Hollow,  he  was 
named  athletic  director  in  19J4 
and  was  serving  in  that  capacity 
when  brought  to  Carolina  by  Ta- 
tum. 

Another  man  with  long  expeti- 
ence  in  the  coaching  and  adminis- 
trative field  is  Jim  Hickey.  Before 
joining  the  staff  here  at  Carolina, 
Hickey  had  a  five-year  tenure  at 
Hampden-Sydney  College.  He  w^as 
five  years  head  coach  there  and 
four  years  athletic  director.  He 
was  named  "Coach  of  the  Year"  in 
Virginia  for  the  second  consecu- 
tive year  in  1955  when  his  team 
had  'an  8-1  record. 

A  native  of  Springdale,  Pa.  Hic- 
key attended  William  and  Mary 
where  he  played  in  the  all-impori- 
cmt  tailback  slot.  From  William 
and  Mary,  he  moved  to  John  Mar- 
shall high  school  at  Richmond,  Va., 
where  five  years  of  successful 
coaching  stamped  him  as  one .  pf 
the  nation's  outstanding  young 
coaches.  He  went  to  Harr.pdcii- 
Sydney  from  John  .Marshall. 

The  youngest  man  on  the  T-ar 
Heel  coaching  staff  is  Fred  Tullai, 
a  1955  graduate  of  Maryland.  T-ul- 
,!i<i  played  three  years  of  varsUy 
football  at  Maryland,  and  starred 
ai  both  the  center  and  guard  slo4.s 
for  the  Terps. 

In  addition  to  his  college  experi- 
ence as  a  player,  Tullai  was^  a 
standout  as  a  service  player  while 
in  the  Marine  Corps.  Tullai  will 
handle  the  freshman  head  coach- 
ing duties  here. 

These  men  work  for  the  most 
part  behind  the  scenes.  They  work 
with  individual  players,  drill  the 
squad  for  long  hours  on  fundamen- 
tals, and  turn  in  detailed  scouti'pg 
reports  on  opposing  teams.  Togeth- 
er with  head  coach  Tatum,  th'py 
form  a  well  oiled  machine  desisn- 
to  bring  football  victory  to  the 
Carolina  Tar  Heels  on  Saturday  af- 
ternoons 


F'  ii 


At 
If 

in 

that 

that 

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will 

enoul 

t<i  c^ 
Vn| 

ing 

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bask< 

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And 

is  col 

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such 

pong.  I 

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men 
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year 


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John-H 
Carol 
South! 
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were 

Th( 
paren| 
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Mone^ 
Darlir 
.\.C.: 
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ton  0 
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Elizal 
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Pa: 
Al<j|ui^ 
Clark 
Jin 
mont.l 
(230)] 
JosepI 
Va., 
Atlani 

Tacl 
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McCai 
Brunf 
ley, 
(205:, 
Steel 
N.C; 
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Eugeil 
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tenia. 


a  el 


FRIDAY,  SEPTEMBER  M,  1954 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


PAGE  NINE 


Talent  Laden  Harrier  Squad  Begins  Practice  Monday 


Athletics  At  UNC 
Is  For  Students 


By  DAVIS  MERRITT,  JR. 

UNC    Asst.    Sports    Publicist       ' 
Athletics  at  Carolina?      ^  ' 

It's  a  tremendous  area  to  cover 
in  one  column.  Suffice  it  to  say 
that  you  are  standing  at  the  door 
that  leads  to  a  great  experien-ce  in 
sports. 

Whether  you  are  "athletus  acti- 
vus"  or  athletus  armchairus,"  you 
will  find  athletics  at  Carolina  big 
enough  for  pride,  yet  small  enough 
to  consider  everyone. 

You  have  the  f(M)tball  team  play- 
ing l>(?fore  40,000  and  some  other 
sports  playing  before  40,  yet  there 
are  no  'minor  sports*  at  Carolina. 
'.Minor  sport'  is   a  label  forbidden 
in  the  USC  Athletic  Department.  ' 
Sports    include   not   only    football,  | 
basketball  and  baseball,  but  track, ' 
tennis,  golf,  soccer,  lacrosse,  wrest- 1 
ling,  swimming  and  cross  country. ! 
And  on  Big  Four  Sports  Day,  there  ; 
is  competition  among  UNC,  N.  C. 
State,   Wake  Forest   and   Duke   in  j 
such    intra-mural    sports    as    ping  | 
pong.  Softball,  touch  football,  horse-  \ 
shoes,    volleyball,    badminton    and  | 
many  others. 

•  •         • 

So  this  is  the  athletic  program 
that  lies  before  you.  It  includes 
40,000  seat  Kenan  Stadium,  5,500 


There  are  cynics  who  will  voice  | 
the  "opposite  opinion,  but  these  are  ' 
the  real  indispensables  of  Carolina  ; 
athletics.   Jim    Tatum,  .Frank    Mc- ; 
Guire,  Ralph  Casey,   all  could  be 
•eplaced  (though  admittedly  at  high  ' 
cost),    but  the*  guy   in   the  grand-  i 
stand  and  his  folks  and  friends  pay  i 
the   freight    and    pull    the    entire  ■ 
train.  Without  him.  the  entire  pro- 
gram  would  die  from  atrophy. 
•  •  * 

Carolina  athletics  have  had  their 
black  days  as  well  as  their  golden 
days — football  seasons  devoid  of ! 
bright  spots,  contir^ial  basketball 
losses  to  rivals,  springs  full  of  mis- 
ery. 

But  you  are  entering  this  door  | 
to  athletics  at  a  fortunate  time.  A  ' 
time  when  all  phases  of  the  pro-  i 
gram  are  showing  an  upward  trend. 

Look  down  the  line: 

Track  has  its  All-American  in  I 
Jim  Beatty,  a  dogged  distance  run- ' 
ner,  plus  a  host  of  other  rising  i 
stars  like  Ronnie  Austell,  Wayne  | 
Bishop  and  Dave  Scurlock.  I 

Basketball  is  the  big  hope  this  j 
year,  with  All-America  Lennie  Ros- 
enbluth   and  a   team   loaded  with 
experiencced  veterans  and  talented 
sophomores. 

Football  has  Jim  Tatum  and  new 


"Experienced  Veterans 
I  Will  Spearhead  Team 


seat  Woollen  Gym.  huge  Emerson    life,  plus  a  dazzling  airay  of  fresh- 
(baseball)  Stadium,   Fetzer  (track,   man  recruits, 
soccer)  Field,  18  hole  Finley  Golf       Baseball  has  a  host  of  Jp+termen 
Course,  spacious  Bowman  Gray  In-   returning    with    the    promise    of 
door  Pool   and  six   varsity  tennis  ,  stronger  hitting  this  spring, 
courts.  I  .  •         *  • 

These  are  inhabited  by  the  big  |  Swimming  has  All- America  Char- 
names,  Sutton,  Beatty,  Rosenbluth,  j  lie  Krepp,  the  NCAA  champion- 
Raugh  .  .  .  they  have  been  inhabit-  j  ships  here  in  March,  and  an  ex- 
ed  by  other  big  names — Justice, ;  perienced  team  of  returning  let- 
Glamack.  Simmons,  Seixas,  Ward,  I  termen. 

Thomas  .  .  .  Bu?  they  are  also  in-  Wrestling  has  some  experienced 
habited  by  guys  like  Jones,  O'Don-  men  for  a  change  and  promises  to 
nell.  Smith  and  Jackson,  and  these '  stage  a  comeback  after  several  bad 
are  the  real  stais.  years. 

The  guy  in  the  Rep  tie  and  three  '     Lacrosse  gets  another  chance  fol- 


button  coat  who  sits  in  Kenan  on 
crisp  Saturdays:  the  guy  in  the  Ber- 
mudas who  watches  baseball  in  the 
hot  spring  afternoons;  the  fresh- 
men, sophomores,  juniors  and  sen- 
iors who  pull  for  the  Big  Blue  all 
year  long. 


lowing  re-instatement  as  a  varsity 
sport. 

Tennis  has  three  regulars  back 
plus  the  South's  finest  young  pros- 
pects. 

They  are  all  preparing  for  an- 
other golden  era. 


UNC  All-America  Candidate 

Stewart  Pell,  giant  Tar  Heel  tackle  shown  above,  is  rated  one  of 
the   country's  top  tackles  by  experts.   Pell   will   be   in   the  starting 
i    lineup  when   Carolina   tangles  with   State   in°  the   season's  opening 
I    game  Sept.  22. 

Here's  How  To  Get  In 

!         Carolina  students  are  admitted  to  home  football  games  when  they 
j  present  their  athletic  pass  books  and  ID  cards  at  the  gate  on  the  home 
I  side  of  the  field. 
j  For  games  away   from  home,  if  they  are  with  other  conference 

teams,  students  will  be  able  to  get  in  for  half  price  by  presenting 
I  their  pass  books  and  ED  cards  to  the  Woollen  Gym  office  about  a  week 
1  before  each  away _  game.  Stubs  with  seating   location   in  the  stadium 

will  be  given  at  the  ticket  office.  Pass  books  and  ID  cards  must  also 

be  presented  at  the  away  stadium. 
i  If  a  student  desires  to  get  a  ticket  for  any  game  for  his  date — 

i  and  she  is  not  a  coed — he  must  present  his  pass  book  at  the  ticket 
j  ttfice  here  during  the  week  before  the  game  in  order  to  get  seats 
I  together.  Date  tickets  cost  the  regular  adult  price.  If  a  student" s  date 


8y  RAY  LINKER 

'  What  promises  to  be  one  of  the 
I  finest  cross-country  teams  in  Caro- 
\  Una  history  will  begin  regular 
',  practice  sessions  Monday  morning 
I  under    the    experienced    eye    of 

Coach  Dale  Ranson. 

I     Six    returning    lettermen    from 

'  last     ycafs     state     championship 

squad  Will  form  a  nucleus  for  this 

.season's  team,  while  there  will  be 

I  eleven  numeral  winners  from  last 

j  year's  undefeated   freshman  team 

moving  up  to  try  for  spots  on  the 

!  varsity  squad. 

The  list  of  returnees  is  headed 

,  by  renowned  Jim  Beatty,  Charlotte 

:  senior    who    returns     next    week 

from  an  AAU  tour  of  Finland  with 

I  eight  other  top  American  distance 

runncxs. 

Beatty,  an   All-American   in  the 
;  two  mile,  won  the  conference  cross- 
country championships  in  both  his 
sophomore  and  junior  years,  and 
.  looms  as  a  heavy  favorite  to  re- 
peat this  year. 

I  FLASHY  SOPH 

Also  expected  to  burn  up  the 
j  trail  for  the  Tar  Heels  this  season 
1  is  Wayne  Bishop,  top  man  on  last 
year's  freshman  team.  Bishop,  who 
;  Iiails  from  Greenville,  was  unbeat- 
en last  season  and  won  the  state 
I  frosh  championship.  Bishop  came 
I  within  a  very  few  seconds  of  Beai- 
!  ty's  record  for  the  freshman 
I  course. 

j  Letterman  E^rerett  Whatley,  jun- 
ior from  Atlanta,  and  Dave  Scur- 

'  lock,  a  sophomore  from  Greens- 
boro, will  be  gunning  for  top  po- 


Monogram 
Club  Aids 
Athletics 


is  a  coed,  they  need  only  present  their  pass  books  at  the  gate  at  game 
time. 

The  dates  that  the  students  must  appear  for  date  tickets  and  for 
r.way  game  tickets  will  be  announced  by  the  athletic  office  from  time 
to  time. 


Fifty  Eight 
Candidates 


Freshmen  Grid 
Begin  Practice 


Paul     Russell     (205),    Bridgeport. 
W.  Va. 

Centers:  James  Edwin  Davis 
(190),  Elco.  Pa.:  Robert  Michael 
Fitzula  (200),  Carteret.  N.J.;  Rich 
ard  Finch   Need   (200),  Castleton 


lino,  Jr.     (215),     Monessen.   Pa.; 
Charles  Dowd  Gray  (190)  Gaston  , 
ia.  N.C.  I 

Quarterbacks  Thomas  Leon  Lit- 
tle (175)  Raleigh.  N.C:  Jerry 
Wofford  Amofi  (170),  Charlotte. 
N.C;  Michael  Joseph  Kopnski 
(182),  Morgantown,  W.  Va.;  Rich- 
ard Chapman  Pattisall  (190),  Clint- 
woon,   Va.;    David    Nelson    Lowe 


Fifty -eight  freshman  football  ion,  Jr.  (218),  Eddystone,  Pa.; 
candidates  reported  to  practice  j  George  Edward  Crawley  (230). 
at  North  Carolina  last  week,  with  {  Wilson,  N.  C;  Stanley  Allen  Rob- 
Coach  Fred  Tullai  and  his  staff  |  erson  (205),  Henderson,  N.  C: 
sending  them  through  their  first !  Kermit  Layfette  Guthrie.  Jr.  (215) 
Forkoul  Thursday.  |  New  Bern,  N.  C;  Bobby  MyUnger 

•  The  group,  one  of  the  largest  Stanton  (227),  Port^miouth,  Va.; 
ever  to  be  invited  for  early  prac-  j 
tice,  included  fullback  Cornell 
John^'an  of  High  Point,  who  chose  i 
Carolina  over  N.  C  State  and  ; 
South  Carolina  alter  a  publicized  i 
newspaper  controversy.  ; 

Twenty-five  native  Tar  Heels,  in-  i 
eluding  three  from  New  Bern,  i 
were  in  the  gn>up.  i 

The  player.s.  with  weights  in  1 
parenthesis:  ! 

«Ends:  John  Francis  Stunda  (205), 
Monessen,    Pa.;    Robert    Fairchild  | 
Darling      (185).     Elizabeth     City,  j 
N.C;  Edward  Frank  Furjanic  (218).  I 
Sressler,  Pa.;  Charles  Thomas  Cot-j 
ton   (205).   Providence.  R.L;   Clay- ! 
ton   Bernard     Smith,     Jr.,    (190),  I 
ELizabethtown.   N.C;   Francis  Jos- 1 
eph   Dobrowlski     (195).     Natrona,  | 
Pa.;  Ronald  George  Markel  (195), 
Alquippa,     Pa.:     Harold     Douglas 
ClaA  (200),  Hazel  wood.  N.C;  Co- 
Jin  Fraser  Smith     (180),     Clays- 
mont,  Del.;  Alva  Donald  Stallings 
(230),  Rocky  Mount,  N.C;  James 
Jos^h  Jenrett  (226),  Portsmouth 
Va.;  Ralph  Michael  Pittman  (198). 
Atlanta,  Ga. 

Tackles:  Earl  Ray  Butler  (230), 
Fayetteville,  N.C;  Franci.v  Xavier 
MfCann  (240),  Phoenixville,  Pa.: 
Bruno  Anthony  Ra.so  (215),  Sewick- 
ley,  Pa.;  Frederick  Otto  Mueller 
(205),  Iselin,  N.J.;  Ralph  Thoma^ 
Steel  (230),  Nr>rth  Wilkesboro. 
N.C;  Michael  RicJiard  McDade 
(235),  Rochester.  Pa.;  Jimmie  Nel 
»on  Buzzard  (230),  Pennsboro 
W.  Va.;  Phillip  Joseph  Reinhard' 
<220),  Harrisburg,  Pa.;  Edward 
Eugene  Monoghan  (235),  Bala- 
'Cyo'wyd,   Pa.; 

Guards:  Robert  Albert  Bran- 
nan  (198),  Newton  Square.  Pa.- 
Robert  Edward  Kordalski  (195), 
S^Iem,  Ma.-'s.;  Frederick  Henry 
Harris  (185).  Rocky  Mount,  N.C; 
I>obney  Ellis  Wooldridge  III  (190), 
Cuyahoga  Falls,  Ohio;  Joseph  Pel- 
ligrinj  (198).  Yatesboro,  Pa.;  Luth- 
er Truett  Lineberger  (180),  Gas- 
tonia.  N.  C;  Dominic  Josepb  Mar- 


(194).   N.  Wilkesboro,   N.C. 

Halfbacks:  David  Lee  Leffler 
(190),  Arlington,  Va.;  James  Clar- 
ence Crew  (183),  Morganton,  N.C; 
John  B.  Cummings  (190),  Lower 
Merion,  Pa.;  Herman  Edwin  Ray 
(185),  Burlington,  N.C;  Ronald 
Herbert  Hopman  (185),  Salem 
N.J.:  Larry  Gene  Frederick  (188) 
Goldsboro,  N.C:  Edward  Porcher 
Brunson,  Jr.  (160).  Albermarle, 
N.C;  Thoma.-r  M.  Howerton  (170) 
Madison  Fla.;  Wade  Marvin  Smith 


!     All  winners-  of  Carolina  athletic 
'  letters  are  eligible  for  membership 

in  the  Monogram  Club. 
I     One  of  the    main    purposes   of 
I  the  club  is  to  act  as  a  service  or- 
j  ganization. 

The  club  holds  open  houses  af- 
ter   some   of    the    home    football 
,  game^•  for  students  and  alumni.  A 
Bowman  Gray  Indoor  Pool  next  i  "^^"^  ^^^^^  ^"  important  game  is 
spring   will    be   the  site  of   Caro-    "'"^"^  ^^^^  *^"""S    '-^«    •^o^^*'*" 
Una's  third   NCAA  championships    s^^^^on. 

in  three  years.  I     Inuring  the  spring,  the  club's  ef- 

',  I  forts  are   directed  toward  having 

a    successful   Blue-White   football 
game,   wnich    is    the    intra-squad 


NCAA  Swimming  Meet 
Set  Here  Next  March 


on-Hudson,  N.Y.;  John  Robert  Mai- 1  (170).     Albermarle,   N.C;     David 


Eart  Smith  (187),  New  Bern,  N.C: 
Billy  Atkinson  (160),  New  Bern, 
N.C. 

Fullbacks:  Loyd  J.  Hepler  (185) 
Thomasville,  N.C;  James  Warren 
Stevens  (210),  Hazelwood,  N.C; 
Harry  Cornell  Johnson  (190),  High 
Point,  N.C;  George  Kirk  (180). 
Sewickley,  Pa. 


The  executive  committee  of  the 
NCAA  announced  recently  that 
North  Carolina  has  been  awarded 
the  1956-57  swimming  champion- 
ships set  for  March  28-30.  It  will 
be  the  .second  time  that  spacious 
Bowman  Gray  Pool  has  been  host 
to  the  nation's  top  collegiate  swim- 
mers. The  first  NCAA  .swim  meet 
here  was  in   1949. 

A  national  tourney  will  be  noth- 
ing new  for  UNC's  athletic  pro- 
gram. The  Tar  Heels  put  on  the 
1955  NCAA  tennLs  championships 
and  the  1956  gymnastics  event. 


game  between  evenly  divided 
teams.  This  game  officially  ends 
the  team's  spring  practice. 

The  club  provides  programs  and 
concessions  at  this  game  and  help* 
in  other  ways. 

According  to  the  constitution  of 
the  club,  the  purpo^s  and  ob- 
jectives are  to  aid  athletics  of  the 
University,  to  seek  to  improve  our 
intercollegiate  relationships 
through  the  sports  program,  and  *o 
serve  the  University  in  any  ca- 
pacity in  which  the  club  Ls  uer.d- 
ed. 


sitions  along  with  Baltimore  soph 
Howard  Kahn. 

Marion  Griffin,  Larry  Thames 
and  Frank  Bernhardt,  all  seniors 
from  Charl(>tte,  and  Ronnie  Har- 
wood,  senioi*  from  Winston-Salem, 
are  the  other  lettermen  who  fig- 
ure prominently  in  the  plans  of 
Coach  Ranson. 

Bill  Luesjing  of  Huntington,  W. 
Va.,  and  Nick  Palmer  of  Valdese, 
two  numeral  winners  last  year  for 
the  freshmen,  are  expected  to  im- 
prove with  Iversity  experience. 

PROVIDE  DEPTH 

Ennis  Robinson  of  Wrightsville 
Beach,  Walt  Mills  of  Charlotte, 
James  Menzel  of  Southern  Pines, 
Don  Furtado  of  Garner,  Vic  Hug- 
gins  of  Chapel  Hill,  and  Alex  Foe- 
fin  of  Asheboro  won  numerals  last 
year  and  should  provide  depth  to 
the  varsity  squad. 

The  UNC  cross-country  course,  a 
distance  of  3.7  miles  for  the  var- 
sity, starts  on  the  Fetzer  Field 
track  and  winds  around  the  prac- 
tice football  fieid,  past  Kenan  Sta- 
dium, behind  the  nurses  dorm,  and 
through  the  woods  and  on  to  the 
Durham  Highway.  Mter  a  short 
distance,  it  leaves  the  road  and 
goes  into  the  woods  and  finally 
winds  around  the  football  practice 
field,  ending  on  the  track. 

Freshmeh  run  a  similar  course 
but  cover  a  distance  of  only  2.2 
miles. 

FRESHMAN  SCHEDULE 

A  scliediiile  of  eight  to  ten  meets 
is  being  lined  up  for  the  frosh 
squad,  according  to  Coach  Ranson. 
Meets  are  set  with  Duke,  State, 
and  Wake!  Forest,  twice  each;  the 
state  freshman  meet;  and  possibly 
East  Meckjlenburg  High  School  and 
Myers  Park  High. 

The  varsity  faces  a  tough  eight 
meet  schedule.  The  season  opens 
with  a  dlial  meet  with  Virginia 
here  on  Obt.  5,  and  the  conference 
meet  at  Clharlottesville  on  Nov.  19 
closes  the  campaign. 

The  corhplete  schedule: 

Oct.  5J-Virginia  at  Chapel  Hill. 

Oct.  121  —  Clemson,  State  and 
South  Carolina  at  Columbia,  S.  C. 

Oct.  20;  —  Maryland  and  Wake 
Forest  at; Chapel  Hill. 

Nov.  3  —  Tennessee  at  Knox- 
ville,  Tenb. 

Nov.  6-j-Duke  at  Durham. 

Nov.  12 — State  Championships  at 
Raleigh.  I 

Nov.  10  —  ACC  Meet  at  Char- 
lottesville. 

FcH^tball  'Days'  Set 

Three  Special  '^days"  will  bright- 
en pre-gkme  and  halftime  festivi- 
ties at  the  Carolina  home  football 
games  this  fall. 

The  battle  with  Georgia,  Oct.  13, 
will  mefk  the  traditional  Home- 
coming igame,  wiiii  all  the  trim- 
mings abd  the  old  grads  I'eturn- 
ing.  0<t.  20,  with  Man-land's 
strong  l"erps  in  town,  will  be 
Dad's  Day,  and  the  Oct.  27  date 
with  W|ake  Forest  marks  Band 
Day,  when  several  thousand  high 
school  musicians  will  gatlier  on 
Kenan's!  turf   for   a   gigantic   and 


DAVE   REED 

sidelined  by  knee  injury 


WELCOME 

TO 

CAROLINA 


UGGINS 


ARDWAR 


colorful 


WELCOME 

NEWCOMERS 

We  Are  Set  Up 
To  Serve  You  With 


MODERN  SHOE 
REPAIR  EQUIPMENT 

EXPERT  WORKMEN 


ALL  TYPES  OF  SHOE 
POLISH  AND  SUPPLIES 

QUICK,  EFFICIENT  AND 
ECONOMICAL  SERVICE 


COLLEGE  SHU-FIXERY 

Two  Doors  From  Post  Office 


halftime  show. 


ANY  WAY  YOU 
LOOK  AT  IT.... 


You  Caii 
Get  Clipped 

FOR  LESS 
AT 


Graham  Memorial 
Barber  Shop 


IN  THE 

BASEMENT 

OF 

GM 


HOURS  9-5:30 
MONDAYSATURDAY 


?"^*^r 


Mr{.% 


Haircuts  Are 
Just  90^ 

GRAHAM  MEMORIAL  BARBER  SHOP 


STEVEKS^  SHEPHERD 

EXTENDS  A  CORDIAL       . 

WELCOME! 


TO 


FRESHMAN  STUDENTS 

MAY  YOUR  YEARS  AT  THE  UNIVERSITY  BE  THE 
HAPPIEST  OF  YOUR  LIFE. 

Come  In  -  Register  -  Win 

OUR 

BACK  TO  SCHOOL 

CONTEST! 

Be  The  Lucky  Winner  Of  One  of  The  Following 

Prizes: 

1st  PRIZE  —  Imported  Tweed  Sport  Jacket 
2nd  PRIZE— Crew-Neck  Shetland  Sweater 
3rd  PRIZE— Ivy  League  Dress  Shirt 

No  Purchase  Necessary! 

Simply  Register  In  The  Store 

FOR  ALL  YOUR  CLOTHING  NEEDS:  SHOP  THE 
FINEST  MEN'S  SHOP  ON  ANY 

CAMPUS!  ^ 


•"'tr' 


STEVBKS-  SHBPHERD 


\ 


■-■r--^— ' 


..'•-'rf   *   j^t  .    «.  i*i  ^M.mt^tLJlJla^^0f^iJa 


PACE  TEN 


THI  DAILY  TAR  HECL 


miOAY,  fiPTPMBCR  14/YfSf 


GM  Is  Center  Of  UNC  Extracgrriculars 


By  CLARKE  JONtS 
The  stitdent  uflkm  buadillg— ^t- 
ter  known  as  Gribam  HtJAwiid^ 
is  the  center  of  student  extracurri- 
cular life.  Let's  tatt«  a  \otik  d'tiie 
different  rooms  in  the  hoildtng  and 
briefly  note  what  they  are  used 
for. 

tlie  place  to  start  is  on  the  main 
floor.  The  main  attraction  htit  is 
the  spadous  lounge  where  shidents 


come  to  read,  talk  or  maybe  just   a  cup  of  coffee  and  pastries  from 
relax,    listening    to    music    piped  j  a  machine. 

through  from  the  information  of-  j     Adjoining  the   coffee   room-kit- 
fiee's  hi-n  set.  |  chen  is  a  television  room,  equipped 

Sometimes  you  wiU  see  two  stu-  i  to  seat  about  25  TV  viewers. 
dents  en^ged  in  a  game  <rf  chess,  j     You   walk    through    the    coffee 
On  Sunday  nights,  the  Petite  MUsi-  j  room-kitchen  and  go  all  the  way 


be  play  you  a  record— GM  recently  j  south  end  is  the  assistant  directors    all  the  canipus  acti\ities. 


cj|les  acre  presented  here. 

At  the  nwth  end  (xf  the  building 
is  a  eombiiiatien  coffee  room-kit- 


down  to  the  end  of  the  hall.  Here 
is  the  information  office,  where 
the  person  in  charge  will  check  out 


ehen.  Here  you  can  buy  for  a  dime, !  to  you  ping-pong  equipment,  may- 1 


acquired  100  new  hi-fidelity  re- 
cords— or  simply  provide  you  with 
information. 

Jtist  around  the  comer  from  the 
information  office  is  the  office  of 
the  director — ^Miss  Linda  Mann,  a 
1956  UNC  graduate. 

The  two  stairways  leading  to  the 
second  floor  each  have  mezzanine 
landings    about   midway.    On    the 


(Dan  Turner)  office  and  mimeo-  i  Across  the  hall  from  the  fund  of- 
graph  and  embossograph  machines,  i  fice  are  the  offices  of  The  Daily 
The  north  end  is  the  office  of  the  j  Tar  Heel,  campus  nev/spaper. 


Constant  U^e  Is  Made 
0/  University  Library 


Carolina  Quarterly,  student  liter- 
ary magazine. 
SECOND  FLOOR 

At  the  top  of  the  stairs  is  the 
Student  Activities  Fund  office. 
£[eaded  by  Harry  Kear,  the  office 
tiikes  care  of  the  accounting  for 


WELCOME 


INCOMING 


:jf  ^ 


•A;0^  X^^i'-m 


CAROLINA 


C 


STUDENTS 


'i*   iir^  ■ 


X  r*""*  t,*-'  •«-  i'^i^ 


The  Welcome  Mat  is  ouf-We  want  to  meet  you  and  get  ac- 
quainted. We  invite  your  inspection  and  will  welcome  your 


criticism. 


.      ra 


In  order  to  make  it  more  appealing,  we  will  have 


OPEN  HOUSE 


-^    -,f 


4    i 


Tv 


On  Freshman  Day 

Refreshments  Will  Be  Servedl 
Souvenirs  For  Coeds! 


^.  ':^-  t 


n 


iv   «*■ 


Be  Our  Guests! 


''m 


^-y^...-. 


l.\ 


i'tb?*^' 


'xM^y. 


THE  HOUSE  OF  FASHION 


<'-'^' 
'# 


it 


,•:-.:* '.r 


I*: 


^<^ 


^:^i  %o\ 


„jt. .. 


One  o/  f fie  South' s  Most  Beautlfi^l  Stores 


All  Merchandise  Fully  Guaranteed  &  Price  Protected 


YA 


i<"'«(ii'»  M 


I      Down  the  hall  past  the  newspa- 

!  per   offices   and   the    fund   office 

I  are  the  Roland  Parker  Lounges  1, 

2  and  3.  Large  meetings  are  held 

in  these  rooms,  which  hold  150-200 

persons. 

Carolina's  two  political  organiza- 
tions, the  student  Party  and  the 
University  Party,  stage  their  meet- 
ings here. 

Directly  opposite  th(j  RP  Lounges 
are  the  student  government  offices 
where  the  student  bcdy  president 
— thi.'.  year  Bob  Young,  senior  from 
Asheville — and  other  student  body 
officers  work. 

Next  to  the  president's  office  is  I 
the  Woodhouse  Conference  Room,  i 
Meetings   and   conferences   of   dif-  | 
ferent   sorts   are   held   here.   The  I 
room  gets  its  name  irom  Edward  | 
i  James  Woodhouse,  a  political  sci 
j  ence  professor  here  J'rom  19?6-54. 
!     Adjoining  this  room  is  the  Coun-  i 
cil  Room,  where  violators  of  the  , 
!  campus  and  honor  codes  are  tried 
I  by  the  men's  and  women's  councils.  I 
I  The    Women's    Residence    Council  i 
I  also  holds  meetings  here.  ! 

;     Directly    opposite    the    Council ' 
Room   is   the   joint   office   of    the 
Publicationis   Board  and  the  Caro- 
lina Foriim. 
At  the  end  of  the  hall  on  the 
:  left  is   the  Graham  .Memorial   Ac-  j 
[  tivities  Bo^rd  office.  GMAB  annu-  ' 
1  ally    sponsors     such    activities    as 
band  concerts,  bridge  and  dance  in- 
stiuctions,  free  movies  and  Petite 
Musicales. 

The  Grail  Room,  the  last  room 
on  this  floor,  is  across  from  the  ' 
GMAB  office.  The  order  of  the 
Holy  Grail  meets  in  this  room,  con- 
sidered by  many  tne  nicest  room 
upstairs.  Other  small  conferences 
are  alsp  held  here. 
BASEMENT 

The  basement  is  the  last  floor  in 
the  "tour "  The  APO  Room  is  the 
first  stop.  APO,  Carolma's  service 
fraternity,  holds  meetings  here. 
Other  small  groups  n:eet  here  also. 
Just  off  the  APO  Room  is  the 
ping-pong  room.  The  room  has  two 
brand  new  tables  inside  and  two 
old  tables  In  the  alleyway  just  out- 
side the  r0om. 

About  miidway  down  the  hall  are 
several  vending  machines,  where 
j'ou  can  buiy  a  snack  lunch  between 
games  of  pool  in  the  pool  room, 
right  across  the  hall.  The  room, 
open  to  cOeds  as  well  as  Carolina 
gentlemen;  is  the  most-used  room 
in  the  building. 

Next  to  the  pool  room  is  the 
Rendezvous  Room,  i  .sed  for  quiet 
recreation  purposes.  It  is  complete 
with  a  jukebox,  piano  and  has  20 
tables  which  will  seat  up  to  40 
couples.  The  room  is  also  often 
used  for  small  Graham  Memorial- 
sponsored  parties. 

The  Yackety  Yack.  the  student 
annual.  h4s  its  office  just  beyond 
the  vending  machin(?s. 

Around  jthe  corner  on  the  right 
is  the  darkroom,  recently  renovat- 
ed, with  riew  equipment  installed. 
Lockers  aite  available  for  rent.  Gra- 
ham Memorial  furnishes  everything 
but  chemicals,  which  you  must  ob- 
tain yoursjelf. 

The  m$in  obliga'aon  on  those 
who  use  the  room  -s  to  clean  up 
the  place  Ibefore  leaving. 

The  barbershop,  located  at  the 
end  of  the  hali.  serves  the  students 
with  90  cent  haircuts,  the  cheapest 
in  town.  The  barb«'rs — there  are 
three —  can  afford  che  lower  rate 
due  to  having  no  overhead. 

Graham  J'llemorial  gives  them 
the  space  with  the  understanding 
that  the  price  will  not  exceed  90 
cents. 


The  University's  Louis  Wilson 
Library  is  the  one  building  ihal't 
in  use  constantly  from  morning  un- 
til night. 

Eh'en  the  toughest  football  game  , 
down  in  Kenan  Pines  won't  keep  j 
some  students  from  the  library.  It  ' 


peare,  Bialeigh,  Wolfe,  folklore, 
Latin,  American  studies.  Southern 
literature,  romance  languages, 
W^orld  Wars  I  and  U,  maps,  prints, 
graphic  arts,  and  books  by  and 
about  the  Negro. 
Other  places  of  interest  are:  the 


will   be   used  many  times  during   Rare   Book    Room,    which    houses 
the  coming  months  for   reference  I  many  literary  treasures  from  long 


'  work,   reading  assignments  and   a 
place  for  quiet  textbook  study. 

And  don't  forget  the  library's  so- 
cial side:  For  years  now,  it  has 
been  the  perfect  place  for  Carolina 
Gentlemen  and  thein  dates  to  study 
together. 

The  library  contains  almost  800.- 
000  volumes,  most  of  which  are  in 
the  Main  Library  building,  named 
for  Louis  R.  Wilson,  longtime  pro- 
fessor of  library  science  here. 

Special  collections  of  importance 
include:  The  Southern  Historical 
Collection  of  more  than  two  and  a 
half  manuscripts,  the  North  Caro- 
lina Collection  of  items  relating  to 
the  state,  the  Hanes  Collection  re- 
cording the  development  of  the 
book; 

The  Whitaker  Collections  of 
Johnson.  Dickens  and  Cruikshank. 
the  Jenkins  Collection  of  public 
documents,  the  Nolen  Collection  of 
city  and  regional  planning,  the 
Archibald  Henderson  Collection  of 


times  past;  Current  Affairs  and 
Public  Documents  Reading  Room, 
a  bureau  of  information  on  current 
information  and  thoughts;  the  Sir 
Walter  Raleigh  Rooms  furnished  as 
in  1800;  the  Early  Carolina  Rooms 
equipped  as  in  174C;  the  Print  and 
Map  Rooms;  the  Assembly  Room 
and  the  Bull's  Head  Bookshop, 
where  students,  faculty  and  towns- 
people browse,  Iwrrow  and  buy  the 
latest  books.  Individual  libraries 
are  also  assigned  to  different  de- 
partments of  instruction. 

Freshmen  \nill  have  to  spend  a 
l^v  of  time  in  the  General  Collegf 
library,  where  Hhey  will  do  read- 
ing assignments  in  first-year  sub- 
jects. Elxhibits  are  also  displayed 
in  the  halls  of  the  library. 

The  largest  room  in  the  lihrary 
is  the  Reference  Room.  It  is  on  the 
second  floor  in  the  front  of  the 
building  and  is  a  place  where  sto- 
dents  often  seek  and  find  quiet 
surroundings    to    pour    out    their 


Materials  Relating  to  George  Bern-  ^  meditations  on  their  studies. 


ard  Shaw; 


The  different  librarians  and  staff 


The  August  Thomas  Collection  of  }  members  are  always  willing  to  help 
dramatic  manuscripts,  together '  students  in  any  way  possible.  They 
with  unusual  collections  of  Ameri- 1  are  there  to  serve  you  and  they  flo 
can  drama.  Spanish  drama,  Shakes-    just  that. 

Entire  Y  Program  Here 
Operated  By  Students 


The  students  operate  and  run 
the  entire  program  of  the  YMC.\ 
and  the  YWCA  and  have  three 
adult  leaders  to  guide  them. 

Officer  are  located  in  the  Y 
Building  near  South  Building.  Mr. 
Claude  Shotts  is  the  YMCA  Gen- ^ 
eral  Secretan.'.  John  Riebel  is  the 
Associate  Secretary'  and  Anne 
Queen  is  YWCA  Director.  Mrs.  j 
Nora  Kurd  is  the  Y  receptionist. 

The  two  student  organizations' ' 
— the  YW  for  women  and  YM  for '. 
men  —  have  separate  identities, : 
but  the  programs  of  the  two  are 
often  planned  together.  The  full : 
time  staff  works  together  for  both  ■ 
groups. 

Organization  of  the  two  groups ; 
is  divided  into  committees  and . 
many  of  the  committees  have  joint  i 
chairmen,  a  member  from  the  YM  ■ 
and  one  from  the  YW^  j 

A  few  changes  in  the  building  j 
and  i'taff  are  now  taking  place  to : 
enable  the  staff  members  of  the  I 


YW'-YM  to  work  more  closely  to- 
gether and  more  efficiently. 

Postions  newly  created,  which 
will  be  filled  soon,  are  an  in- 
training  graduate  assistantship  ahd 
a  staff  office  managerial  post. 

Mii-s  Queen  has  been  in  Vpr 
position  since  June  1.  She  has 
previously  been  with  the  YWCA 
at  the  University  of -Georgia  and 
with  the  American  Friends  Ser- 
vice  (Quakfer)   in  Greensboro. 

Mr.  Riebel  has  been  associate 
secretary  for  about  five  y<*ans. 
He  had  previoui'ly  been  with  the 
organization    in   California. 

Mr.  Shotts,  a  long-time  worker 
and  counselor  in  the  Y,  came  to 
Carolina  from  Northwestern.  He 
did  his  undergraduate  work  at  the 
University  of  Alabama. 

Gerry  Mayo,  junior  from  Falk- 
land, is  president  of  the  Y^cA, 
and  Martha  Richardson,  senW^ 
from  Midlothian,  Va.  is  president 
of  the  YWCA. 


Six  National  Sororities  Have 
Chapters  Here  On  Campus 


Six  national  sororities  have  chap- 
ters on  this  campus — Delta  Delta 
Delta,  Chi  Omega,  Pi  Beta  Phi,  Al- 
pha Delta  Pi,  Kappa  Delta  and  Al- 
pha Gamma  Delta. 

All  six  of  those  sororities  have 
their  own  houses  in  which  many 
of  the  members  live  and  most  of 
the  members  eat  their  meals.  Many 
other  activities  are  also  carried  on 
there,  such  as  coffee  breaks. 

Sorority  rush  week,  which  be- 
gins soon  after  school  begins,  is 
controlled  by  the  Panhellenic  Coun- 
cil. It  is  made  up  of  representa- 
tives from  the  six  sororities,  a  rep- 
resentative from  the  Stray  Greeks 


WELCOME 
FRESHMEN 

Come  See  Us 
■     For  Your, 

^  CAMERAS         -:-  PHOTO  EQUIPMENT 

I      -:-FiiM        -:- PICTURE  FRAMING 

I  -:-  DEVELOPING        -:-  FLASH  BULBS  .. 

We  Also  Carry  The  Latest  In  Photography 
^;  Books  and  Magazines 

FOISTER'S  CAMERA 
I  STORE 

161  E.  Franklin  St.  Phone  3176 


and  an  advisor  from  the  Dean  of 
W^omen's  office.  It  coordinates  sor- 
ority life  and  plans  special  proj- 
ects. 

Many  coeds  remain  independent, 
but  coeds  interested  in  joining  a 
sorority  can  usually  find  a  group 
with  which  to  affiliate.  Sorority 
houses  are  centers  from  which  girls 
participate  in  campus  activities. 

As  a  member  of  a  sorority  each 
girl  experiences  a  close  fellowship 
among  her  group  and  at  the  same 
time  realizes  the  importance  of  so- 
cial and  intellectual  responsibility. 
Pan-hel  awards  a  scholarship  cup 
each  year  as  an  additional  incen- 
tive to  hard  work. 

Further  information  concerning 
sororities  can  be  found  in  the  Pan- 
hellenic Rushincr  Manual. 


237  Students  Expected 
To  Enroll  In  Pharn»acy . 

Dr.  E.  \  Brecht.  dean  of  the 
School  of  Pharmacy,  has  estimated 
that  a  total  of  237  students  would 
be  enrolled  in  pharmacy  when 
school  opens. 

Estimated  registration  by  classes 
follows:  freshmen.  60;  sophomores, 
65;  juniors.  55;  seniors.  48  and  nine 
graduate  students.  The  September 
enrollment  last  vear  was  232. 


Les  Petites  Musicales 
Presented  Each  Sunday 

Les  Petite  Musicales  are  musical 
programs  presented  each  Sundi^ 
evening  in  the  Main  Lounge  of 
Graham  Memorial,  the  student  un- 
ion building.  "Phey  are  presented 
by  the  Graham  Memorial  Activities 
Board. 

The  programs  u.sually  include 
different  kinds  of  classical  and 
semi-classical  music  and  are  per- 
formed by  students  and  townspeo- 
ple, either  in  groups  or  individual- 
ly. Classical  music-lovers  usually 
find  these  programs  worthwhile 
and  entertaining. 


\*^ 


\,  1956 


FRIDAY,  SEPTEMBER  M,  1956 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


PAGE  ELEVEN 


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CAROLINA  FRATERNITY  PLEDGES 

go  all  out  in  icorking  in  the  annual  Greek  Week  ivork  day    ,'''.' 


Carolina  Has  24  Social  Fraternities 


One  thing  on  the  mind  of  many 
a  young  man  who  is  going  to  col- 
lege is  fraternities.  Carolina  has 
24  social  fraternities. 

Fraternities  have  long  been  an 
integral  part  of  college  life,  li  us- 
ed to  be  that  a  boy  wanted  to  be 
in  a  fraternity  more  than  anything 
.else  while  at  college.  At  one  time, 


it  was  almost  necessarj  to  be  in 
one  to  enjoy  college  life  to  the  ful- 
lest extent. 

That  situation  no  longer  exists 
Social  fraternities  here  play  an  im- 
portant part,  but  they  are  not  nec- 
essary to  a  well-rounded  college 
life. 

The   24  social   fraternities   here 


SP  And  UP  Furnish 
UNC  Political  Activity 


.<  -  Students  are  free  to  join  either 
q{  the  two  political  parties  on 
campus  or  to  remain  independent. 

••  .  However,  students  dont  have  to 
>oin  either  party.  The  president  of 

>Jhe  student  body  last  year  was  an 
independent.  Bob  Young,  the  pres- 
ent president,  is  a  member  of  the 
Student  Party.  Student  Party  mem- 

.  bers    also    occupy    the    offices    of 

-..yice-president  and  secretary.  The 
treasurer  is  a  member  of  the  Uni- 

.  yersity  Party. 
'  •  The  Student  Legislature  is  pretty 

--well  evenly  divided  among  mem- 
bers of  both  parties. 

The  Student  Party  tends  to  be 
liberal;  the  University  Party  tends 
to  be  conservative.  The  Student 
Party  usually  introduces  more  bills 
in  legislature  and  is  a  little  freer 
in  appropriating  student  govern- 
ment monies. 

t  Most  of  the  active  members  of 
student     government     belong     to 

.either  of  the  two  parties.  A  stu- 
dent can  become  a  member  of  the 

.  Student    Party    by    attending    two 

^  meetings  and  paying  a  small  party 

.  .fee.  Members  of  the  University 
Party  either  represent  different  or- 

.  ganizations  on  campus  or  become 
members  by  turning  in  a  petition 
signed  by  25  students. 

At  election  time  posters  go  up 
on  all  conceivable  and  inconceiv- 
able places,  from  sidewalks-  around 

.  campus  to  walls  and  doors  in  dorm- 

■   itory  bathrooms. 


Much  of  the  campaigning  tim*' 
by  candidates  is  spent  telling  stu- 
dents how  much  more  qualified 
they  arc  for  effice  than  the  fellow 
running  against  them.  One  thing  is 
certain:  A  student  cant  believe 
everything  he  nears.  because  often 
he  will  hear  contradicting  views 
and  opinions,  not  facts. 

The  politicians  —  who  will 
ually  say  they  are  not  politicians- 
do  seem  to  maKe  an  iionest  attempt 
to  carry  out  their  promises,  but 
they  are  often  blocked  by  other 
members  of  the  legislature,  includ- 
ing members  of  their  own  party. 

It  is  seldom  that  any  proposal 
can  carry  without  support  from 
seme  of  the  members  of  both  par- 
ties, since  the  legislature  is  so 
evenlv  divided. 


are:  Alpha  Tau  Omega,  Beta  Theta 
Pi,  Chi  Phi,  Chi  Psi.  Delta  Kapp: 
Epsilcn,  Delta  Psi.  Kappa  Alpha. 
Kappa  Sigma.  Lambda  Chi  Alpha 
Phi  Delta  Theta.  Phi  Gamma  Del 
ta.  Phi  Kappa  Sigma,  Pi  Kappa  Al 
pha.  Pi  Kappa  Phi.  Pi  Lambda  Phi 
Sigma  Alpha  Epsilon,  Sigma  Chi. 
Sigma  Nu.  Sigma  Phi  Epsilon,  Tau 
Ep&ilon.  Phi.  Theta  Chi,  Zeta  Beta 
Tau  and  Zeta  Psi. 

Students  interested   in  joining  a 
'raternity  will  be  given  a  fratern- 

GM  Supplies 
Place  For 
Foto  Fixing 


-  ■>  ♦ 

regulations 


Many  bills  are  introduced  into 
the  Student  Legislature,  and  some 
bills  pass  and  are  enacted  and  stay 
on  the  books  for  a  long  time. 
Others  are  wiped  out  by  those  in 
power  who  follow  them  and  some 
are  killed  before  they  have  half  a 
chance  to  become  law. 


Voting  for  the  candidates  is  done 
by  districts.  Ballot  boxes  are  placed 
■n  convenient  places  around  camp- 
us. 


In  the  basement  of  Graham  Me-^ 
mor-al.  there  is  a  source  of  poten 
j  tial  enjoyment  for  frustrated  "foto- 
usu- 1  bugs." 

Though  "'basement"  often  con- 
notes dust  and  corrosion,  the  rooms 
composing  the  photo  lab  have  been 
completely  renovated  and  include 
all  equipment  necessary  for  pro- 
cessing  photographs. 

The  GM  photo  lab  is  composed 
of  three  rooms.  The  first  includes 
machinery  for  printing  and  devel- 
oping, the  second  is  used  for  film 
loading,  while  the  third  has  equip- 
ment for  washing  and  drying.  An 
Omega  B2  enlarger  is  one  of  the 
valuable  machines  placed  at  thi 
students'  disposal. 
•  A  charge  for  the  use  of  this 
equipment  is  refunded  at  the  term 
ination  of  residence.  The  equip- 
ment and  iab  is  available  for  ust 
any  time  Graham  Memorial  is  op 
en.  Additional  information  con 
cerning  use  of  the  equipment  and 
lab  can  be  obtained  at  the  infor- 
mation office  of  Graham  Memorial. 


ty   interest  card  during  registra- 
ion    on   which   he  will  list  those 
raternities  in  which    tie  is  inter- 
ested. 

It'' 
DECISION 

The  decision  to  join  a  .Iratern- 
ly  IS  an  important  one.  There  is 
.nuch  to  gain  from  fraternity  life 
in  the  way  of  lasting  friend.'hips. 
\  fraternity  is  more  man  a  party 
^roup.  The  boys  in  the  house  will 
je  living  companions  for  four 
years. 

Certain    rules    and 
governing  conduct  of  the  fraterni-  ! 
.ies  are  made  and  enforced  by  the 
interfraterniiy  Council.  It  is  made 
up  of   the   president   of  each   fra- 
ternity and  a   representative  from  '[ 
each   house.   Within  the   IFC   is   a  ; 
jourt  that  enforces  these  rules.        | 

The  rules  concern  social  activi 
lies,  coed  visiting,  fraternity  drink- 
ing and  other  conduct.  ' 

Fraternity    rush    comes    earlier  i 
this  year  than   in    previous   years.  ; 
If  a  student  pledges  a  fraternity, 
he  is  eligible  to  be  initiated  at  the  \ 
end  of  the  first  semester  if  he  has 
a  "C"  average. 

Students  who  do  not  wish  to  join 
during  formal  rush  and  need  more 
time  to  make  up  their  minds  can  ! 
wait  and  go  through  informal  rush,  ; 
which  is  held  at  various  times  dur- 
,  ing  the  school  year. 


hiazing  Not 
Custom  At 
Carolina 

By  FRANK  CROWTHER 

j  If  you  are  coming  to  Carolina 
expecting  to  be  pushed,  pulled. 
:  shoved,  sworn  at,  or  hazed,  you  , 
;  have  been  reading  the  wrong  prop- 
I  aganda  sheet.  Freshman  hazing  at 
I  UNC  is  a  thing  of  the  past. 

There  are  colleges  and  univers- 
j  ities  in  the  country  and  in  this 
!  state  which  still  adhere  to  the 
i  practice  of  "putting  the  Freshmen 
;  m  their  place"  when  they  reach 
:  their  respective  campuses.  If  you 
i  look  closely  in  the  vicinity  of  the 

■  Duke  Chapel  you  can  see  an  ex-  : 
I  ample  of  this  continued  practice. ! 

I     We  treat  our  Freshmen  with  re- 

■  spect,  consideration,  and  confi-  \ 
I  confidence.  It  is  our  objective  not  i 
I  to  "put  you  in  your  place"  but  to  \ 
I  instill  in  you  the  confidence  and  i 
1  respect  we  think  all  Carolina  Gen-  ' 

■  tlemen  should  command.  Being  in  ! 
\  your  first  year,  moving  into  a  new 

i  environment  and  faring  for  your- 1 
!  self,  making  many  of  your  own  de- 
cisions, and  budgeting  your  time  ; 
and  money  will  be  enough  to  keep 
you  fully  occupied  for  some  time  i 
i  to  come.  We  upperclassmen  don't 
I  feel    that    we    or    the    Univeriity 
:  should  add  any  more  hazards;  con- 
i  tranly.  we  think  that  it  is  our  duty 
}  as  Carolina  Gentlemen  to  help  you 
{  orient  yourself   in  our — and   now 
!  your  —  world  oi  books,  buildings. 
squirrels  and  Sile  it  Sam. 

We  will  give  some  words  of  cau- 
tion. 

1  Don't  put  up  an  Iron  Curtain  of 
defense  between  yourself  and  the 
people  around  you.  If  something 
troubles  you,  go  see  your  advisor 
!)r  counselor  or  even  a  good  friend: 
■ou  will  be  surprised  how  accep- 
tive and  helpful  they  can  be  when 
you  most  need  it.  Too  many  stu- 
dents come  to  college  with  a  men- 
tally formed  shroud  under  which 
thev  function. 


Go  out  and  familiarize  yourself  i 
with  the  campus.  No  matter  how  \ 
many  maps  or  charts  you  look  at,  ; 
it  all  appears  different  when  first  1 
visited.  j 

Study  in  the  librar>-  until  you 
think  you  are  accustomed  to  dorm 
itory  life  and  have  learned  to  bud- 
get your  time  appropriately. 

And  don't  .  .  .  don't  ramble  on 
as  we  are  when  preparing  your 
first  theme  for  English  1  or  2. 

You  will  be  surprised  and  warm- 
ed, we  hope,  with  the  friendly  at- 
mosphere at  Carolina.  You  will 
find  it  hard  to  walk  across  the  cam- 
pus without  smiling  and  saying, 
"Hello."  to  those  whom  you  pass. 
Reticence  is  a  sickness  on  this  cam- 
pus. 


YDC  And  YRC 
Operate  Here 
At  Carolina        i 

v,.^  Both  national  political  parties, 
•  are  well  represented  on  campus  by 
,  the  Young  Democrats  Club  and  the 
Young  Republicans  Club.  Their  ac- 
tivities are  expected  to  go  along 
at  4  high  rate  of  speed  this  year 
because  this  is  an  election  year. 

Both  clubs  meet  regularly,  spon- 
sor rallies,  bring  noted  men  here 
to  speak  and  have  their  fun  by 
sponsoring  parties  at  various  times 
in  the  year. 

Students  are  usually  solicited  to 
join    either    of    the    two    by    club 
members  during  registration.  Both 
kfc'Clubs  have  small  dues. 

It   is   anticipated  by  YDC  mem- 
bers to  get  Governor  Frank  Clem 
ent  of  Tennessee,  keynote  speaker 
at  the  Democratic  Convention,  to 
come  here  to  speak  this  year. 
Students     who      are     politically 
»>"»fninded  and  wish  to  get  in  on  the 
^hick   of  politics  can   join  the  one 
'►-r^f  the  two  clubs  that  coincide  with 
,i,.their   t>e)icfs    and    political   affilia- 
•-"^ions.  This  election  year  is  a  good 
>.  uye;ir  to  get  slarteci  in. 


Meet  Me 
At 


THE  LITTLE  SHOP 


WELCOME  TO 
CHAPEL  HILL 

AND  TO 

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and  GIFT  SHOP 

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SUnON'S  HAS  A  GIFT  FOR  EACH  UNC  FRESHMAN.  JUST 

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Free  Delivery  To  All  Dorms  &  Frat  Houses  Daily 


PAGE  TWetVE 


THE  OA<LY  TAR  HEEL 


FRIDAY,  SEPTEMBER  14,  1956 


3  Major  Publications 
Put  Out  By  Students 


Three    major    publication^    are 
published   here    by    Carolina   stu-  [ 
dents  —  The  Daily  Tar  Heel,  Yack- 
ety  Yack  and  Carolina  Quarterly, ! 
all   of  which   are   connected  with  i 
the  Publications  Board. 

The    I>aily    Tir    Heel,    student 
newspaper,  is  published  every  day  I 
except  Monday,  and  is  delivered  to  | 
all  students.  It  is  run  entirely  by  j 
students.  No  control   is  exercised 
over  it   or  its  editorial  policy  by  | 
the    faculty    or   administration.    It ' 
has  alisolutely  no  tie-in  with  the  | 
Carolina  School  of  Journalsim,  ex- 
cept for  a  plan  thereby  journalism  i 
students  gain  practical  newswriting  I 
experience  by  working  periodically  I 
on  the  staff. 

Fred  Powledge,  senior  from  Ra-  ■ 
leigh,  is  editor  of  The  Daily  Tar 
Heel.  Students  are  welcome  t.- 
work  on  the  staff  of  the  four-page 
paper.  Occasionally,  it  publishes 
six,  eight  and  10  pages,  depending 
on  volume  of  advertising.  \ 

Offices  of  the  Daily  Tar  Heel  are  i 
on   the  south   end   of    the  second ; 
floor"  of  Graham  Memorial.  It  has 
the    wire    services  ^f    Associated 
Press,  national  advertising  services 
and  several  national  news  features. 

The  paper  became  a  controversi- 
al  campus   issue   last   year  when 
Co-EIditors    Louis    Kraar    and    Ed  i 
Yoder  were  forced  to  run  in  a  re- . 
call   election   after  a  petition   was 
circulated  and  signed  by  studeqts  i 
dissatisfied   with   the  paper's   edi- 
torial policy.  I 

Circulation  of  the  petition  began 
shbrtly  after  the  editors  criticized 
the  hiring  of  head  football  Coach 
Jim  Tatum.  The  editors  said  he 
would  bring  "professionalism"  in 
football  to  the  University.  1 

YACKETY  YACK  | 

The  Yackety  Yack  is  Carolina's 


annual.  It  also  is  .:;tudent  published. 
The  Yack  staff  last  year  put  out 
an  annual  with  a  red,   white  and 
gold  cover. 
In  the  Yack  are  recorded  those 

IDC  Controls 
Activities  Of 
Men's  Dorms 

The  controlling  body  of  the  men'-; 
dormitories  is  the  Interdormitory 
Council.  Sonny  Hallford,  senior  of 
Rocky  Mount,  is  president  this 
year. 

The  IDC  is  made  up  of  the  presi- 
dent of  each  men's  dorm  and  a  rep- 
resentative elected  by  each  dorm. 
It  chooses  its  own  officers  each 
spring  to  serve  for  one  year.  The 
officers  have  the  power  to  author- 
ize and  carry  out  dorm  elections 
each  year. 

Powers  of  the  council  itself  are 
to  make  rules  affecting  conduct  of 
men  in  dorms,  represent  dorm  men 
in  dealings  with  the  University, 
promote  social  activities  in  the 
dorms  for  the  residents  and  pro- 
vide for  continuation  and  operation 
of  the  council  and  the  IFC  court 
during  summer  school. 

The  Men's  Dormitory  Executive 
Committee  is  composed  of  the  pres- 
ident, .vice  -  president,  secretarv- 
treasurer,  and  IDC  representative. 
The  executive  committee  has  the 
power  to  make  such  special  rules 
concerning  conduct  in  the  respec- 
tive men's  dormitories  that  shall 
not  conflict  with  the  rulings  of  the 
Student  Legislature  and  IDC.  It  ial- 
so  has  the  power  to  plan  and  pro- 
pose all  activities  of  the  respective 
dorms. 


elements  of  Carolina  that  will  in 
future  years  bring  back  the  memo- 
ries of  college  life.  Students  are 
welcome  to  work  on  the  staff.  Of- 
fices arc  in  Graham  Memorial's 
basement.  Tommy  Johnson  of  Nor- 
folk, Va.,  is  editor  of  the  college 
yearbook. 

The  Yacks  comi^  cut  early  in 
May.  Every  student  gets  one.  Addi- 
tional copies  can  be  purchased.  An- 
ticipatitr.  and  enthusiasm  build  up 
around  the  time  when  they  come 
out,  bocau.sc  ca'.h  student  is  anxi- 
ous to  see  how  iiis  'mug  shot"  — 
class  portrait  —  turned  out. 

CAROLINA  QUARTERLY 

Crjative  talents  of  Carolina  stu- 
dents are  put  to  good  use  in  the 
Carolina  Quarterly,  which  is  the 
literary  magazme  published  three 
times  a  year  by  UNC  students.  Edi- 
tor for  this  year  is  Miss  Marcelhne 
Krafchick  of  Philadelphia,  Pa.  Its 
offices  are  also  in  Graham  Memori- 
al. Students  with  creative  writing 
ability  are  welcome  to  contribute 
to  it.  Other  posts  that  do  not  re 
quire  creative  ability  are  also  open 
on  the  Quarterly. 

UNC's  humor  magazine  is  dead. 
Tarnation,  long  known  over  the  na- 
tion  for   its   good   college    humor, 
quit  publication  last  >ea"  because  | 
of  financial  difficulties.  ] 

It  received  no  appropriations 
from  student  funds,  as  do  the 
other  three  publications,  and  thas 
it  could  not  hold  up  under  the  fin- 
ancial strain.  It  will  be  greatly  ^ 
missed  by  humor-loving  collogians. 
Various    other    publications    are 

.  the  books,  magazines  and  phamph- 
lets  published  for  orientation  pur-  [ 
poses,  such  as  the  Carolina  Hand-  [ 
book,  the  Women's  Handbook,  the  1 

;  Interfraternity  Handbook   and   the  \ 
Student   Directory. 


Most  Popular  UNC 
Activity  Is  Dating 


SILENT  SAM,  CONFEDERATE   MEMORIAL,! 

. . .  atancb  tall  and  proud  in  GM's  front  yardl 


'Old  Sam'  Is  Permanant  Part  Of  Tradition 


BUY  USED 


One    guy    students    at    Carolina ' 
he^r  a  lot  about  and  see  a  lot  of  is 
Silent   Sam.    He   is   a   statue   of   a  i 
Confederate    soldier    and    b'tands 
tall  and  pr;)ud  in  Graham  Memor- 
ial's front  yard.  | 

He  was  erected  in  memory  of 
"the  sons  of  the  University  who 
entered  the  war  of  1861-65  in 
answer  to  the  call  of  their  country 
and  whose  lives  taught  the  le.sson 
of  their  great  commander  that 
duty  is  the  atiblimest  word  in  the  j 
English  language."  ^ 

Erected  under  the  auspices  of 
the  North  Carolina  Division  of  the 
United  Daughters  of  the  Confed- 
eracy and  aided  by  alumni  of  the 
University.  Si. em  Sam  has  become 


a  permanent  part  of  Carolina  tra- 
diti<|>n. 

It  is  told  down  here  that  every- 
time  a  virgin  walks  by  him,  he 
fire^  his  rifle.  That  may  be  so, 
but  I  most  students  have  never 
heaixl  his  gun  go  off. 

Pk^ank-'ters  hiw  been  known  to 
hid<^  behind  the  statue -and  thro  v 
firecrackers  out  when  eirls  walk 
by.  'One  girl  once  would  not  walk 
by  it  after  her  boy  friend  had  tol  1 
her;  the  legend. 

At  present,  "Old  Sam"  i.*  adorn- 
ed iin  spots  with  red  paint  either 
frohl  the  brushes  of  N.  C.  State 
Collegfe  enthusiasts  or  publicity 
meh  of  Sound  di  Fury,  a  musical 
shdw  presented   by   student*'. 


•  «y>^r»»-' 


And  Save 


Students  Will  Hedr  Lot  About 
UNC's  Bill  Friday  While  Here 


W  i- 


Check  Our  Prices  Before  You  Buy 


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Come  In  And  Get  Your  Free  .^ 
fee  Cream  Cone  Or  Coffee  The 


Bill  Friday  is  one  man  you 
will  hear  plenty  about  while  you 
are  at  Carolina.  He  is  Acting 
President  of  the  Consolidated 
University,  which  consists  of 
tlie  Woman's  College  at  Greens- 
boro. State  College  at  Raleigh 
and  Carolina. 

Last  March  1  he  succeeded  J. 
Harri  •  Purks,  who  had  been  act- 
ing president  since  the  depart- 
ure of  former  President  Gordon 
Gray.  Various  newspapers  have 
lately  urged  that  he  be  named 
president. 

Friday  is  a  young  man  of  36 
years  and  is  well  liked  by  hi.u 
associates.  He  served  as  assistant 
to  the  president  and  later  as 
secretary  of  the  Consolidated 
University.  Prior  to  that,  he 
served  for  three  yea^  as  assist- 


ant dean  of  students  here  at 
Ciarolina.  • 

Reared  in  Dallas,  N.  C,  he 
attended  Wake  Forest  College 
iri  1937-38  and  was  graduated 
fijom  N.  C.  State  College  in  Ral- 
eigh in  1941  with  a  B.S.  degree^ 
rie  entered  the  Law  School  here 
ii^  1946  and  received  his  L.L.B. 
irj  June  oi  1948.  He  passed  the 
North  Carolina  Bar  in  August 
of  that  same  year. 

At  State  College,  he  was  pres- 
ident of  the  1941  senior  class, 
president  of  the  North  Carolina 
piederation  of  Student  Govern' 
ments  and  a  member  of  the  Gold- 
en Chain.  He  served  as  president 
of  the  Law  School  Assn.  while 
at  Carolina  and  was  a  member 
of  the  Golden  Fleece,  highest- 
ranking  honor  organization. 


By  LARRY  CHEEK 

(Dating    at    Carolina    in    the 
eves  Off  a  Carolina  Gentleman) 

Perhaps  the  most  popular  extra- 
curricular activity  here  at  Carolina 
is  dating.  And  the  most  persistent 
question  heard  on  campus  is 
"Where  can  I  get  a  date?" 

For  upperclassmen,  this  is  no 
problem.  They've  been  here  long 
enough  to  learn  the  ropes  and  cul- 
tivate contacts.  But  for  incoming 
freshmen,  especially  this  year,  it's 
a  different  story. 

In  the  past,  Carolina  freshmen 
have  chosen  Woman's  College  in 
Greensboro  as  their  happy  week- 
end hunting  ground.  But  this  year, 
the  ruling  that  freshmen  may  not 
have  cars  in  Chapel  Hill  has  com- 
plicated matters  considerably. 

No  longer  is  it  possible  for  the 
enterprising  .first  year  man  to 
hop  in  his  convertible  and  take  off 
for  WC,  or  any.  other  of  the  numer- 
ous girls'  schools  that  surround 
Chapel  Hill.  Instead,  he  must  turn 
to  local  girls,  a  skimpy  field  at 
best. 

UNC  coeds  will  give  him  little 
encouragement.  .Most  of  the  thous- 
and-plus girls  here  are  juniors  and 
seniors  with  eyes  only  for  the  old- 
er college  men.  There  are  a  few 
lasses  in  the  School  of  Nursing, 
however,  who  are  freshmen  them- 
selves, and  can  sometimes  be  per- 
suaded to  look  with  favor  upon 
their  male  classmates. 

Or  the  lonely  yearling  student 
may  decide  to  study  industriously 
during  the  week  and  import  his 
old  hometown  sweetheart  from 
^igh  .school  days  for  that  special 
weekend.  This  is  rather  hard  on 
the  youth  who  yearns  for  frequent 
female  companionship,  however. 

And  then  there  are  the  local  high 
school  and  working  girls.  These 
girls  have  always  proved  to  be 
pleasant  and  willing  company  for 
the  college  freshman  who  is  a  long 
way  from  home.  Warning:  look  out 
for  irate  high  school  romeos. 

Of  course,  the  best  solution  to 
the  problem  is  to  talk  an  older 
buddy  out  of  his  jalopy  lor  an  ev- 
ening and  pay  a  visit  to  Greens- 
boro and  WC.  Carolina  students 
have  \n)tn^  integrated  into  the  in- 
t«»rior  decorating  in  most  dorms 
there,  and  the  welcoming  mat  is 
alwaj's  out  (up  until  midnight  on 
weekends,  that  is). 

Even  if  you  don't  have  a  date 
when  you  get  there,  don't  despair. 
Just  walk  in  any  of  the  freshman 
dorms,  look  appropriately  lonely, 
and  get  the  receptionist  to  help 
you  out.  You'll  be  surprised  at  the 
results.  No  money  back  if  this  does 
:  not  work,  though. 

You  might  even  want  to  chal- 
lenge the  State  students  by  invad- 
ing some  of  the  Raleigh  institutions 
:  attended  bv  eligible  young  ladies. 
Meredith,  Peace  and  St.  Mary's  all 
are  possibilities,  although  the  dif- 

iculties  encountered  here  are  stif- 
I  fer  than  at  WC. . 

I  The  alternatives  are  many,  and 
j  the  results  can  be  rewarding.  Take 
i  vour  Dick:  Greener  pastures  over 
j  the  hill,  good  old  home  cooking,  or 
j  iust  sitting  and  waiting  for  the  one 
i  and  only. 


By  PEG  HUMPHREY 

(Dating  at   Carolina  as  seen 
bij  a  Caroline   Coed) 

"How  to  get  a  date?"  is  often  a 
question  puzzling  Carolina  fresli- 
men. 

The  men  find  themselves  facing 
an  age  barrier  /  when  it  comes  to 
dating  the  junior  and  senior  coeds 
which,  however,  is  often  penetra- 
ble depending  on  the  maturity  of 
the  individual. 

Open  houses  in  the  dormitories 
take  placp  during  the  first  week 
of  school.  This  is  an  excellent  op- 
portunity for  the  freshman  to  be- 
gin his  dating  campaign,  for  at  this 
time  many  of  the  coeds  haven't  had 
a  chance  to  meet  young  men  on 
"the  hill." 

If  this  'fails,  there  is  always  the 
classroom  romance.  Suggesting  a 
coffee  break  in  Y-Court  after  class 
is  often  a  successful  approach. 

The  library  has  a  notorious  rep- 
utation of  being  a  date  bureau  as 
well  as  a  place  for  concentrate^ 
study.  The  reserve  reading  room  is 
the  most  famous  spot  for  arrang- 
ing coffee  break  dates  for  the  Pine 
Room. 

If  you  are  in  the  depths  of  des- 
pondency over  the  looks  of  your 
social  calendar,  there  are  always 
the  nearby  women's  colleges,  such 
as  WC,  Meredith  and  St.  Mary's. 
The  dormitories  there  usually  in- 
vite whole  dorms  from  Carolina  ov- 
er during  the  first  weeks  of  school. 

However,  don't  despair  if  your 
first  attempts  fail  and  decide  that 
dating  girls  from  other  colleges  is 
the  only  solution,  for  there  is  b 
surprisingly  number  of  Carolina 
coeds  who  remain  with  a  good  book 
on  Saturday  night  simply  because 
their  classmates  assume  they  are 
dating. 

Those  who  join  fraternities  will 
have  an  opportunity  to  meet  coeds 
in  the  various  sororities  as  parties 
between  the  Greek  groups  are  fre- 
quently planned. 

Many  campus  romances  begin  in 
the  extracurricular  groups.  This  is 
where  you  meet  others  with  com- 
mon interests,  and  age  differences 
mean  less.  .^ 


Sf  ray  Greeks 
Is  Sorority 
Organization 

The  Stray  Greeks  is  an  organi- 
zation composed  of  sorority  girls 
whose  chapters  are  represented  on 
this  campus. 

Its  aim  is  to  provide  a  social  out- 
let for  its  members  and  to  preserve 
the  bonds  of  unity  and  sisterhood 
in  sorority  life. 
I    'The  group  was  founded  in  lft44 
under    the    leadership    of    Twigg 
i  Branch.   It   has   gained    more   and 
i  more  recognition  on  campus  since 
then,  and  its  membership  now  to- 
tal^ almost  30. 

Last  year  they  handled  the  Pan- 
,  hellenic  Post  Office  during  soror- 
j  ity  rush  week  and  each  member 
1  served  as  a  Panhel  ad\'iser  in  her 
\  own  dorm.  Thev  also  took  part  in 
the  women's  athletic  program,  ser- 
vice projects  and  social  activities. 


4'i  '  ^H  O  i^'-'-l. z'.*:^'^-  S  *W    i  4.  -^  ^-  *^*  ■•*' 


'tSvitc 


First  Day  Of  Classes 


*;*>$»-''  •:*' 


Intimate  Bookshop 


Oppsite  The  Campus 


•w>  '■««» 


Open  Evenings 


Welcome  Class  of  '60 

i^ilton  w«lcom«s  you  and  extiends  tvery  courtesy  to  you. 
Want  you  to  feel  at  hom«  when  yeili  com*  ip  «nd  brouse  around. 

You've  probably  heard  or  hopt  ^eu've  hoard  that  we  initiatod 
ivy  styling  on  this  campus.  Our  shocks  art  now  conH>l*t*  with 
all  those  clothes  you've  dreamed  about  wearing  when  you  came 
to  the  Hill.  The  nicest  part  about  this  is  that  you'll  find  our 
apparel  most  popularly  priced  to  fit  into  your  clothing  budgets 
and  allowances.  Neither  Milton  nor  any  of  his  personnel  will 
offer  you  one  stitch  of  clothing  thaf  doesn't  fit  or  is  net  suitable 
to  you.  We  pride  ourselves  with  our  integrity.    '     ;  v, 

Since  you   are  about   to  become  a  Carolina  gentleman  we 

invite  you  to  open  an  account  with  us  and  send  the  bill  home, 

offering  you  the  same  servicos  as  home,  but  with  the  choice  of 

smart  apparel  worn  on  the  Carelini  cantpus. 

I 

So  take  heart  and  put  zest  into  your  fall  ensemble. 

Clottitns  Cupboarb 


Official  Governing  Body 
Is  Student  Legislature 


The  official  governing  body  of 
the  student  body  here  at  Carolin; 
is  the  Student  Legislature. 

This  50-member  body  is  auth- 
orized under  the  Student  Conatitu 
tion  to  make  certain  rules  and 
regulations  to  govern  UNC  stu- 
dents. It  has  the  power  to  levy  all 
student  fees  except  athletic  fees 
appropriate  funds  for  student 
publications,  make  lafws  concern- 
ing elections-  and  to  levy  laws 
necessary  for  carrying  out  the 
constitution. 

One  of  its  most  important  pow- 
ers is  the  determining  of  offenses 
against  tiie  student  body,  categoriz- 
ing each  offense,  and  fixing  max- 
imum and  minimum  penalties  and 
punishments  for  each  category. 
Another  important  function — and 
one  that  requires  a  lot  of  work — 
is  setting  up  the  annual  student 
budget  of  approximately  $100,000. 

The  student  Legislature  also  ap- 
proves or  rejects  appointments  of 
the  s-tudent  body  president,  and 
has  the  power  of  impeachment  of 
any  elected  official. 

The  powers  of  the  body  are  some- 
what  limited.    Of  course,   it   does 
not  control  class  attendance  regula- 
tions and  other  important  matters  | 
which   are  left  up  to  the  faculty , 
and  administration.   But  the  UNC  ] 
constitution  is  considered  all  over' 
the  nation  to  be  very  liberal.  I 

Legislators  meet  every  Thursday  j 
night  to  hash     out     the     various  ^ 


•ssues  that  oome  before  them.  Some 
)f  them  take  their  work  seriqys 
and  live,  eat  and  Aeep  legislature. 
It's  important  to  them;  they  kn»w 
it  and  they  work  hard  at  it. 

Others  get  elected  just  to  know 
they've  got  another  honw  and  ju«t 
let  it  go  by. 

Party  lines — there  are  two  politi- 
cal partie*  here  at  UNC — are  us- 
ually split  down  the  middle,  and 
members  vote  just  that  way.  But 
on  mediocre,  usual  bills,  nothing 
is  said  and  they  usually  pass  them 
unanimously. 

Words  are  spouted  by  the  dozens 
in  long  orations  in  attempts  to  get 
across  certain  points.  The  Student 
Legislature  provides  good  speak- 
ing training,  and  it  has  through 
the  years  produced  many  good  and 
efficient  speakers. 

Quotations  of  famous  statesmen 
flow  freely  in  attempts  to  influ- 
ence voting.  Oftimes,  accusations 
are  made  of  "crooked  politics," 
but  if  they  be  there,  they  ar^ 
never  exposed. 


Norfolk  Big  Contributor' 

NorfDik.  Va.,"  has  made  the 
biggest  contribution — quantity  wl»? 
— to  Carolina  football  for  idSS 
with  three  players,  Buddy  Payne, 
John  Haywood  and  Curtis  Hatha- 
way. Duryea,  Pa.  tnd  Dunn,  N.  C, 
each  have  sent  two  stalwarts. 


X/  / 


DIFFERENCE 

Extracurriciulars     and     studying. 
There's  a  diff  erance.  S—  Pa«a  2. 


3r()  c  Daily  M^ar  Keel 


WEATH  ER 

LiHie     warmei-,     with     axpacted 
hiflh  of  78. 


NO.  1 


Complete  {JP)  Wire  Service 


CHAPEL  HILL,  N.  C,  THURSDAY,  SEPTEMBER  20,  19S6 


Offices  in,  Graham  Memorial 


EI3HT  PAGES  THCS   ISSUE 


UNC  Asks  More 
Operating  Money 


By  CLARKE  JONES 

R.\LEIGH,  Sept.  19— The  Um- 
versity  today  requested  more  mon- 
ey  from    the   state   lor   its   facul- 


o£  the  University  divisions  made 
during  the  meeting.  They  were 
recomrne'hded  by  the  Board  of 
Higher   Education.   They   are    for 


ty  members  and  library  resources. '  ^^^  years  1957^8,  193S-59,  respec- 
The  requests  were  presented  to    t'^ely; 


mission  as  part  of  the  state  Board 
the  state  Advisory  Budget  Com- 
of  Higher  Eiducation's  recommen- 


N.  C.  State  College  of  Agricul- 
ture and  Engineering.  $4,044.  575 
for  1957-58,  $4,055,880  for  1958-59; 


dation's  for  a  $6  million  approp-  Agricuiltural  Experiment  Station, 
riations  increase  for  the  state's  $1,793,299,  $1,793,299;  Coopera- 
colleges  and  Utiiver/.ty  during  the  **^*  Agricultural  Extension  Ser- 
bienniura   1957-59.  j  vice,    $2,512,602,    $2,512,602;    Uni- 

Thi5  year  is  the  first  year  the '  versity  of  North  CanDlina  at  Chap- 
state  Board  of  Higher  Education  I  «1  Hill,  $5,042,783,  $4,993,903; 
has  had  a  hand  in  presenting  the  Division  of  Health  Affair.-,  $2,- 
University's  budget  requests*.  Cre-  118,277,  $2,118,277;  N.  C.  Memor- 
ated  in  1955,  the  Board  now  acts  i  »«1  Hospital  $1,332,462,  $1,332,462; 
as  a  naddleman  for  the  12  state '  Ps.vchriatric  Center.  $437,338. 
supported  institutions.  I  ''*37.  338;   Woman's  College,  $2.- 

Salary  increases  for  Consoli-' ^'-^l**'  $1,981,853;  Consolidated 
dated  Univer-lty  officers  were  also '  Office  of  the  University  of  North 
recommended.  j  Carolina,   $169,675.   $171,241.    and 

Other  divisions  asking  for  more  ^^^  In.*titute  of  Fisheries  Research, 
money  were  N.  C.  State  College  j  576.828,  $76,828. 
of  Agriculture  and  Engineering,  i  The  request  for  state  appropria- 
the  Agricultural  Expe.iment  Sta-  ^'""^'  ^^^  nurchase  of  library  books 
ton,  the  Co.aperative  Agricultural  ^^^  ^^^  biennium  1957-59  was  as 
Extension,  the  Division,  of  Health  fo^ows: 
Affairs.  N.  C.  Memorial  Hospital.'      University    of 


Campus 
Seen 


Student  amazing  automobile 
registrars  in  Woollen  Gym  loith: 
Wiiat  do  yon  do  when  yon  have 
four  cars? 

*        *        * 

Students  slowly  but  sttrely 
dragging  through  the  registrar 
tion  line. 


Graham  Mem4>riai  ;illed  icith 
students  a,v  neic  year  opens. 

*         •         « 

Sttident  who  had  just  become  a 
proitd  papa  pasi;tng  out  cigars  in 
registration   line. 

«-       «        * 

Hvndred  of  cars  on  camnpus 
ami  streets  that  indicated  that 
upperclassm^n   had   returned. 


Housing  Situation  Becomes  Worse 
As  All  Available  Living  Spaces 
Are  Sought  By  University  Students 

"  7,000  Enrollment  Aids 
Rising  Living  Problem 


COURT  MARTIAL 

A  special   Marine  court   martial 
in  Parris  Island,  S.  C,  will  try   a 
corporal  on  a  charge  of  maltreat- 
North    Carolina,    ing  a  rookie.  According  to  Private 
the    Psychiatric    Center,    Women's' *1 85,000  for  1957-58.  $165,000  for    Donald  Hemisfar  of  Norwalk,  Ohio. 
College  in  Greensboro  and  the  In-i  1958-59;  State  College  of  Agricul-    the  corparal    slugged    him   in    the 
stitute  of  Fisheriej.                            I  *"''®    ^^^    Engineering,    $120,000,    abdomen  for  not  addressins  him  as 
Concerning  salary  increases  fori^H^-^^'    ^"^    Woman's    College,    -Sir",  causing  an  injury   that   re- 
faculty      mc'mbers,      Con.solidated    »«>.000.   $40,000.  .quired  and  operation. 

University  Ac-ting  President  Will- 1 
iam  C.  Friday  pointed  out  the  dan-j 
ger  of  losing  so  man>'  profesj-ors. 
"WiB  must  keep  the  people  we  ^ 
have  and  we  must  get  good  and , 
qualified   people,"   he   said.  I 

In  order  to  keep  those  already 
at  the  University,  Friday  said 
there  are  four  ways.  He  outlined 
them  a.»"  follows: 

1.  Salary  increases. 

2.  Give  the  staff  the  essential 
and  necessary  equipment  with 
which  to  work. 

3.  Do  something  about  the  li- 
brary resources. 

4.  Provide  the  University  with  I 
research  money.  I 

UNC  Chancellor  Robert  B.  Hou^s^e 
said  'I  would  like  to  emphasize 
that  item  of  research.  We're  not 
talking  about  great  projects;  we're 
talking  about  the  lifeblood  of  the 
institution. 

"As  to  the  library,  you  cannot 
be  overextravagant.  It  is  the  work- 
shop for  the  entire  community, 
the  powerhouse  and  lighthouse  for 
the   entire    state." 

The  increase  in  salary  for  the 
Consolidated  University  officials 
are  as  follows:. 

President,  to  $18,000,  an  in- 
crease of  $3,000;  vice  president 
and  finance  officer,  to  $15,500, 
an  increase  of  $2,000;  vice  presi- 
dent and  provost,  to  $iB.500,  an 
increa^  of  $2,500,  and  business 
officer  and  treasurer,  to  U3,000, 
an   increase  of  $1,000. 

Here  are  the  different  requests 


By  RAY  LINKER 

Approximately  yr,  male  students  spent  last  night  in  the 
Irasement  ol  Cobb  Dormitory.  Meanwhile,  every  available 
living  space  in  CThapel  Hill  was  being  .sought  after  by  male 
and  female,  man  ied  and  unmarried  .students. 

.    .\s    enrollmem    ne.red    the    7.000    mark    yesterday,   the 


30  Winners  In  Student 
Quiz  Contest  Announced 


President  Young  Asks 
For  Fair  Sportsmanship 

Student  Body  President  Bob  be  true  Carolina  ladies  and  Caro- 
Young  this  week  i.ssued  a  state-  lina  gentlemen.*'  he  said. 
ment  calling  upon  the  student  body  j  "We  are  hosts  for  five  football 
to  remember  their  obligation  dur- 1  games  this  season.  Let's  conduct 
ing  the  coming  football  season.  |  ourselves  properly  at  all  times. 
*In  victory  and  def<»at."  he  said  ;  ^irsU  remember  that  there  are 
"we  »ust  display  good  sport.«iman-  *  many  parents  in  1he  'stands  ever>' 
ship"  and  remember  that  "victory  Saturday.  Please,  lets  not  create 
is  important  but  not  necessary,  ^ny  .scenes  that  might  be  embarass- 
Lefs  be  true  Carolina  ladies  and  i"g  ^^r  o"""  guests.  Lets  be  con- 
gentlemen."  siderate  of  our  parents. 

His  complete  statement  is  as  fol-  'Second,  throwing  rolls  of  toilet 
lows:  tissue  may  be  exciting  but  it's  also 

'With  football  season  opening  dangerou.s.  We  have  been  fortun- 
Saturday,  let's  see  where  we're  go-  ate  not  to  have  had  a  serious  in- 
mg"  this  year.  Athletic  Direvtor  jury  result  from  a  throw.  Just  re- 
(Chuck)  Erickson  and  the  football  member,"  he  said,,  "that  any  roll 
coaches  say  it  should  be  a  good  you  throw  may  hit  someone.  Would 
year  from  all  indications.  We  may  you  want  one  to  hit  you?  Plea.se. 
not  win  them  all  but  the  spirit  and  let's  leave  toilet  ti.ssuc  in  its  ap>- 
attitude  are  right.  propriate  place,  and  this  place  is 

"I  think  most  of  us,  as  students,  not  Kenan  Stadium, 
are  rather  optimistic  about  pro-  "Third,  Head  Cheerleader  Jim 
spects  for  the  year.  Even  with  an  Bynum  and  the  other  cheerleaders 
undefeated  season,"  he  said  "this  have  really  been  working  to  get 
year  could  still  be  a  failure.  This  ready  for  the  season.  They've  got 
s  where  you  and  I  come  in.  We  a  cheer  for  most  every  situation, 
^lave  an  obligation  also.  .  Let's  all  back  these  cheerleaders. 

"In  victory  or  in  defeat  we  must  j  But  let's  remember  that  we  can 
display  good  sportsmanship.  Let's  i  support  our  Tar  Heels  without 
"Al  "yell  our  lungs  out."  Let's  hope  "damning"  the  officials  or  the 
to  win  every  game.  However,  let's  other  team.  Let's  have  respect  for 
always  remember  that  victory  is  the  officials  and  for  the  fans  and 
important  but  not  necessary.  Let's  [  visiting    team    members.    We    will 

!  want  respect  when  we  visit.  Let'.*; 
make  our  team  proud  of  the  way 
we  treat  the  visitors,"  he  said. 

"Let's   all   work   together.    Let's 
all  support  the  Tar  Heels.  Let's  dis- 


New  Students  Patronize  Merchants  Assn/s  Information  Booth 

Two  new  Carolina  Coeds  are  shown  above  at  th  information  booth  set  up  by  the  Chapel  Hill-CaTr- 
boro  Merchants  Assn.  to  welcome  new  students.  T  10  booth  was  in  operation  last  Monday  in  the  most 
extensive  welcome  ever  given  new  University  stud  nfs  by  the  local  association.  Shown  above,  left  to 
right,  are  Oliver  .Watkins  and  Mrs.  Roland  Giduz  o  the  Merchants  Assn.  Trade  Promotions  Committee 
and  new  students  Miss  Opal  Sheppard  of  Jacksonv  ilc  and  Miss  Anita  Whitener  of  Lenoir.  (Photo  by 
GiduT)  . 


housing  situation  be<;ame  worse.  ' 
The  housing  office  had  only  a 
couple  of  places  intown  listed  for 
rent  and  les."  than  a  dozen  places 
outside  of  town,  all  of  which 
would  require  the  renters  to  have 
cars  or  some  other  means  of  trans-! 
portation. 

There  are  no  rooms  for  women 
in  or  around  town.  Housing  Di- 
rector James  Wadsworth  said  yes*- 
terday.  He  added  he  felt  there 
were  a  few  rooms  lor  men  located 
outside  of  town. 

On  campus,  all  men's  dorms 
were    fillet!,    including     15    three- 


news 

in 
brief 


(By   THE   ASSOCIATED   PRESS) 

President  Eisenhower  broadcast 
an  assurance  tonight  that  he  is 
physically  fit  for  four  years  more 
in  the  White  Hou.«e, 

And  stressing  one  of  the  Repub- 
lican campaign  themes— peace- — 
the  President  asserted  that  his  ad- 


ninistration  has  defended  freedom 
man-to-a-room  dorms,  all   women's  '  without  recourse  to  war. 


dorms  were  filled  and  only  three 
vacancies  remained  in  the  iix  so- 
rority houses. 

There  are  2,000  males  in  three- 
man  dorm  rooms,  leaving  only  1,- 


*  *  * 

Adlai  Stevenson     says     he     gets 
pretty   disgusted    hearing  Republi- 
can campaigners   claim  credit  tor 
ncr.asing   the   national   rninimuai 


Yack  Photo    ^^^  Freshmen  Are  Generally 

«'  Opposed  To  Automobile  Bah 


Schedule 
Announced 

The  i-chedule  for  making  the  in- 
dividual class  pictures  for  the 
1957  Yackety-Yack,  the  UNC  an- 
nual, was  released  yesterday  by 
Editor  Tommy  Johnson. 

The  pictures  will  be  made  in 
th  the  Graham  Memorial  basement 
from    1   to   7:30  p.m. 

Girls   were   asked   to   wear  dark 
sweater*,    black,    brown,    or    dark 
blue,    with    one    strand .  of    pearls. 
Men  should  wear  dark  coats,  white 
shirts,  and  con.servative  rep  ties. 
The  schedule  is  as  follow:?: 
Oct.  1-5 — Freshmen  and  Nurs- 
ing      Schooi      (except      Senior 
Nurses) 

Oct.  8-12— Sophomores,  Phar- 
macy School,  Dental  School,  and 
Dental    Hygiene    student.-- 

Oct.  1.5-19 — Juniors,  Medical 
School.  Law  School,  and  Grad- 
uate   School. 


j  010   men   students   in   the   double- 1  ^^'^S^  ^o  *1  an  hour.  Stevensop  XoxA 
i  men   rooms.  Only  Cobb,  Winston,  j '^^^teel workers  Union  Convention 
Joyner    and    Connor    are    two-men 
dorms.  .  . 

For  married  stu■d<^tUs,  "there  i  ■ 
2.  great  need  and  shortage  of  mod- 
erately priced  homes,"  Wadsworth 
said.         .  , 


Ffeshmen  at  the  University  are  tion.*,  which  have  not  been  out- 
generally  oppo.*.>d  to  the  new  law  wardly  contested,  has  come  in 
banning    cars,    by     first-year    stu-    dormitory    meetings   and    late-into- 


dents. 

They  realize,  however,  the  acute 
traffic  problems  which  last  year 
prompted  action  by  the  Student 
Legislature,  placing  stri-"t  r:'gula- 
tions  on  freshmen  this  year  and 
on  .vtphomores  beginning  in  1957- 
f>S.  Those  .sentiments  were  ex- 
pi-essed  during  week-long  orienta- 
tion activities  just  completed  on 
the  university  campus  and  speak 
generally  for  .some  1,700  new  .-lu- 
dents  here. 

The  Student  Legislature,  upon 
recommendation  of  a  stuient  traf- 
fic advi.sory  commission,  said  last 
year  that  only  exceptions  to  the 
freshman  rule  would  be  in  ca.*AS 
of  commuters,  veterans  and  physi- 
cally handicapped  students. 

And   to  further  the  curtamment 


All  of  the  356  apartments  in 
Victory  Village  are  taken  by  mar- 
ried students,  and  the  waiting  list 
has   500    names.    Wad.vworth    said. 

The  Glen  Lennox  Rental  Of- 
fice, which  has  440  apartments  for 
rent  to  couples,  is  completely  full 
It  came  early  in  the  week  when,  anj  ha.v  a  waiting  list  of  200.  Man- 
ager C.  E.  Mcintosh  said  he  felt 
the  people  on  the  waiting  list 
would  find  rooms  elsewhere. 

Approximately  55  girls'  dorm 
rooms  are  being  used  as  trinle 
rooms,  according  to  Miss  Isabelle 
MacLeod,  executive  secretary  of 
the  dean  of  women's  office. 

There  are  567  coeds  living  in  the 
•  X  girls'  dorms,  while  of  the  total 
150    living    spaces    in    all    sorority  ; 
houses,  there  were  only  three  va- 
cancies yesterday. 

From  35  to  50  people  have  in- 
quired at  the  dean  of  women's  of- 


thc-night.  got-acquainted  sessions 
which  have  drawn  hundreds  of 
new  students. 


with  only  a  relative  handful  of 
student.*  here.  Chapel  Hill's  streets, 
campus  parking  lots  and  alley 
ways  were  already  showing  signs 
of  severe  congestion.  And  there 
were  many  more  vehicles  to  come. 

In  one  dorm  meeting,  a  firs^- 
year  .'.udent  questioned  whether 
the  University  could  prohibit  his 
keeping  a  car  in  Carrboro,  using 
it  only  on  weekends  for  traua'por- 
tation  to  his  home. 

Other  schemes,  too,  were  being 
discussed    arf   a    few    students    at- 


n  Los  Angeles: 

"That  increase  was  made  possi- 
ble by  a  Democratic  Congress 
which  pushed  it  through  over  the 
expressed  objections  of  the  Presi- 
dent." 

*  *  * 

Another  Geneva  Summit  Con- 
Terence — This  one  on  Suez — is  sug- 
gested by  Russian  Premier  Buigan- 
in. 


tempted  to  bypass  the  new  regu- 1  fice  for  rooms  in  town.  Miss  Mac- 


lations.  But  while  they  opposed  it 


The  names  of  the  30  winners  of 
a  campus  quiz  contest  conducted 
for  the  benefit  of  new  Carolina 
students   were   announced   yester- 


20  Busloads  Of 
WC  Girls  To  Be 
Here  Saturday 


SUEZ  CONFERENCE 

London  reports  after  the  first 
play  the  best  sportsmanship  in  the  day  of  the  new  Suez  Conference  of 
i  entire  conference  throughout  the  18  nations  that  a  strong  feeling  has 
j  year.  Even  though  we  may  be  on  built  up  among  deleeatf's  for  t^k- 
day  by  the  Chapel  Hill-Carrboro ;  the  short  end  of  the  score,  we  will  ing  the  dispute  to  the  United  Na- 
Merchants  Assn.,  sponsors  of  the ,  still  be  victorious,"  he  concluded,  j  tions. 
contest. 

Held  in  conjunction  with  the  ex- 
tensive welcome  given  new  Jtu- 
dents  last  Monday,  the  contest 
was  open  to  all  participants  in 
every  member  store. 

Winners  of  the  contest  will  be 
recipients  of  a  $10  gift  certificate 
redeemable  in  merchandi^^e  at  any 
member  store.  The  certificates  are 
to  be  presented  not  later  than 
October  15.  The  winners  are  asked 
to  come  to  the  Merchants  Assn. 
office  in  the  Smith  Building  at 
117  N.  Columbia  Street  and  pick 
up  their  certificates    immediately. 

The  30  winners  are  as  follows: 
Danny  Allen,  A.  W.  Benthall,  J. 
Robert  Bingham,  Frank  T.  Bowen 


of  growing  traffic  problems,  the  i  verbally,  most  freshmen  agreed 
Legislature  set  sophomore  car  re- ,  the  Legislature's  action  wa.?  need- 
striction^'  which  would  go  into  ef-  j  od  to  curtail  an  already  serious 
feet  on  an  academic  basis,  begin- 1  problem. 

ning  with  the  1957'-58  school  year.  \ 

Second  vear  students  will  not  be  i 


alowcd  to  keep  cars  in  this  over- 
crowded town  if  they  do  nod  main- 
tain a  "C"  average  or  higher,  ac 
corning  to  the  regulations. 
Opposition   to   the    new  restric- 


NO  WAR  •    - 

Arriving  homo  in  North  Africa 
from  a  visit  to  France,  the  Pricmier 
of  Tunisia  said  tonight:  "The  war 
of  Suez  will  pot  take  place." 


Leod  said,  but  no  count  waa*  avail- 
able of  how  many  girls  were  liv- 
ing  in   town. 

In  order  to  live  in  town,  a  'wo- 
man student  must  be  a  graduate 
and   be   24   years  old   or  older. 

The  School  of  Nursing  reported 
there  is  no  doubt  that  the  School 
of  Nursing  Dormitory  will  be  full. 
An  enrollment  of  175-200,  includ- 
ing 50  freshmen,  i.^*  expected  in 
Nursing. 


What  Are  These  People  Doing? 


Twenty    busloads    of   girls   from 
Woman'i*    College    in    Greensboro 
will  arrive  on  campus  Saturday  to 
join  in   the  festivities  of  Consoli- 
dated University  Day. 
'  The    activities    will    begin    with 
the  State-Carolina  game  at  2  p.m. 
in    Kenan    Stadium.    Special    half- 
time  atcivities  have  been  planned.  ■  Jr.,    Reid    Brawley,    Jim    Carroll, 
A  reception  will  be  held  at  Gra-    Mike    Collin.-,    Bill    Davis,    Monty 
ham  Memoi-ial  immediately  follow-  i  D*?Witt.  Phil  Goodson,  Herb  Ellis, 
ing  the  game.  |  Jr.,  John  R.  Griffin,  John  Horney, 

The  highlight  of  C.  U.  Day  wiU  -  Edward  L.  Jennings,  Charles  Las- 
be   the   presentation  of   the   Con- 1  ley. 

solidated  University  Queen  at  an.  Charles  H.  Little.  George  G. 
informal  dance  in  Woollen  Gym.  |  Menke,  Teddy  Moore.  Marvin  Mor- 
Three  coeds  from  each  of  the  three  I  ton,  Donald  H.  Partin,  Hfcrvey 
branches  of  the  Con.-alldated  Uni-  Peck.  Gayle  Ramsey,  Mary  L. 
versify.  Woman's  CoHege,  North  Roundtree,  Elizabeth  Russell.  Sus- 
C^rolina  State  College,  and  Caro- 1  an  Saunders.  Ferrell  Shuford,  Ho- 
lina,  will  compete  in  the  contest.  1  hart  T.    Steele  Jr.   J.   A.   Turner 

The    dance,    sponsored    by    the    Jr.,  John  Wilbur,  and  Sara  Will- 
Grail,  'jvill  begin  at  8  p.m.  iamson.  I 


New  Students 
Invited  To 
Work  On  DTH 

students  who  want  to  work  on 
The  Daily  Tar  Heel  have  been  in- 
vited to  "come  up  and  get  ac- 
quainted." 

Editor  Fred  Powledge  ;-aid  "The 
Daily  Tar  Heel  welcomes  any  and 
j  all  students  who  want  to  work. 
I  As  the  present  staff  will  gladly 
testify,  this  is  perhaps  the  most 
rewarding  work  on  the  campus." 
He  emphasized  that  all  a>.udents 
— freshmen,  new  coeds,  old  stu- 
dents, and  those  in  and  out  of 
the  Schooi  of  Journalism — are  wel- 
come on  the  staff.  The  Daily  Tar 
Heel  has  no  connection  with  the 
Schol  of  Journali.-.n,  but  journal- 
ism .students  have  in  the  past 
combined  their  studies  with  work 
on  the  newspaper. 

Powledge    said    a    general    staff 
meeti;ig    will    be    held    this    after- 
noon   at    4    o'clock    in    The    Daily 
■  Tar  Heel's  new. 'room. 
I      "Al  this  meeting,"  he  said,  "we 
i  will    meet    all    aspiring    staffers, 
;  and  »e  will  attempt  to  explain  the 
newspaper's    working     to     them." 
A  tour  of  the  newspaper'^-  offices 
will  be  held,  he  said. 

"There  are  vacancies  on  the  news, 
editorial,  sports  and  business  and 
advertising  staff.*."  he  said,  "and 
we  are  looking  for  hard-working 
new  people  to  fill  them." 

At  the  meeting  this  afternoon 
plans  will  be  announced  for  the 
first  Daily  Tar  Heel  party  of  the 
school  year.  New  staffers  will  be 
invited  to  the  party,  Powledge 
said.  .    ,,- 


■z  r..  ^^ 


GWEN   HEINZEN 


SHIRLEY  DEES 


FRAflKIE  BLACK  MARY  LEE  BREECE 

Don't  Know?  Then  Turn  To  Page  3 

t 


HAROLD   V<>ILLIA/VidUN 


Fowledge  Ph6tos 


YAck  Staff  To  Meet; 

All  staff  members  and  students 
interested  in  working  on  the  1956- 
57  Y.ickety-Yack,  the  UNC  annual, 
have  been  asked  to  attend  an  im- 
portant meeting  today  at  2:30  p.m. 
in  th?  Yack  office  in  the  ba.^ment 
of  Graham   Memorial. 

Accordi'ng  to  Tommy  Johnson, 
Yack  Editor,  much  help  will  be 
needtid  to  put  out  this  year's  an- 
nual. Anyont  interested  in  help- 
ing u'ith  any  phase  of  the  annual 

i  is   invited   to   attend   the   meeting 

[  today. 


X 


PAGE  TWO 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


THURSDAY,  SEPTEMBER  20,  1956 


Circle  Studying/ Too, 
On  Those  Activity  Cards 

^■'      ^l^iihmAn  Oif)  ■      Old  St udeiH  (     )        Transfer  f 


DANTE  WHO? 


IJIBAHAM  MEMORIAL  .ACtlVJTlES 
H&ftAHA»  Mf:MORUl.  STllJKNT  V 


I 
I 


B0u\H5>    OMAB;  UK     \ 

SlON  1 

i 

(     «  C«!vn«Jar  t>?^n5!ta' 


DlSCi-SSiOX,  DEBATE: 


:.■•- .^  .-vs.: 


MUSICAL :       ; 


-\s  the  heslinian  with  tht-  above 
atiiyity  card  will  soon  tiiul  out. 
it"s  easy  to  spread  yoiusell  too  thin 
on  'he  r\C  campus. 

I(  \onre  a  joinei— and  most  ol 
n>  were  in  hij^h  sthoo! — you  pi<»b- 
.ihly  clurked  more  than  half  a 
(lo/en  orttnii/ati(ms  on  the  student 
attixitv  cards  handed  oiu  dining 
(n  ientation. 

Now.  (Ju'ckiniT  them  is  fine.  It 
means  you  have  an  idea  which  ex- 
tracurricular activities  youd  like 
to  lake  part  in  durins^  the  ct)mins' 
year  and.  perhaps,  throughout 
vour  college   life. 

But   one  word  of  taution: 

When  you  get  your  l)ooks  bought 
and  your  rooinniates'  names  mem- 
orized and  when  you  go  around  to 
the  campus  organizations  to  see 
liow    they  operate,     don't     spread 


yourself  KM)  iliin. 

Don't  attempt  to  give  an  hour 
a  d.iv  to  del>ating.  two  hours  to 
publications  and  ;^o  miiuues  to  .stu- 
dent goexrnment.  ^'ou'l!  soon  learn 
iha't  \ou  (ant  do  anything  well 
bv  doing  a  d<i/en  things  at  once. 

.\nd  theies  the  little  matter  of 
studving.  VOu'l!  find  the  two  hours 
per  subject  jht  night,  recommend- 
ed l)v  the  I  ni\ersitv  for  new  ( om- 
ers  here,  mightv  haid  to  keep.  Some 
of  you  can  get  bv  on  less  than  ttvo: 
others  will  ha\e  to  studv  e\en  hard- 
er than  the  normal. 

liut.  remember,  get  the  studying 
done  first.  It  is  fjad  to  spread  your- 
self too  thin  on  the  exirac  iifricul- 
ais  here.  And  it  is  suicide  to  let 
extracmriculars  (omj)letelv  ovei- 
shadow  studying. 


Move  Over,  South  Carolina 

Xou-,  ii-i'  art  not  ^ii,oing  to  defy  the  tSul/rftnc)  Comt,  hut  I'll 
fell  you  u'luit  we  are  gomg  to  do.  We  are  ^^oiua  to  u.se  evet^  legal 
meaus  we  am  devise  to  insure  that  the  efforts  of  what  we  feel  is  an 
erroneous  de(  iston  hy  the  Sufiretne  Court  arr  not  forced  on  oui  state 
iti  a  fa.yl'inn  wliid:  could  deprive  us  of  one  oi  our  dearest  possessions: 
namely — ou>  Imhlic  schools.  It  is  to  that  end  that  we  are  assent  hied 
here  in  sfjecjuj,  session.  —  Xorth  Carolina  Gov.  Luther  Hodges,  •he- 
fore  special  session  of  the  General  As.<:enihly.  July  23.  1956. 


r*-<  '"    7ot    his    V  ish.    .A 
the   \oting   people   ot 


The  gc- 
majorir- 

Nor'  Tnolina  felt  his  Pearsall 
Amciuiment  to  escape  public 
school  devegregation  was  better 
than  alU)wing  the  stated  s( hoal 
svstem  to  continue  as  is.  with 
probable  integregation  of  students. 

liiu  the  passing  of  the  ameiid- 
ment  immediatelv  placed  on  shaky 
Sr(HJnd  the  system  of  Iree  and  pub- 
lic schools,  which  (iov.  Modges 
calls  "one  of  our  dearest  p>SNess- 
ions.  "   he  amendment  reads: 

'■.  .  .  the  (ieneral  Assembly  may 
pro\ide  for  a  uniform  svstem  ol 
local  option  whereby  atiy  local  op- 
tion imit.  as  defined  f>y  the  Cien- 
etal  Assemblv.  mav  choose  by  a 
majoiitv  \ote  of  the  qualified  vot- 
ers in  the  unit  \oting  on  the  ques- 
tion to  susj)end  or  to  authcjri/,e  the 
suspensic^i  of  the  cjperatton  of  one 
or  more  of  the  public  scluxils  in 
that   ujiit." 

That  means  our  public  sdioo! 
system,  which  in  the  past  was  being 
guaranteed  bv  the  state  ccmstitu- 
lion.  can  be  wiped  otit  by  a  simple 
election: 

While  we  had  it.  that  guarantee 
was  double-edged.  It  protected  the 
sch(M>l  irom  the  citizens'  emotional 
cHitbt^rsts.  It  proteded  them  frcmi 
politician"  who  were  not  too  con- 
scious ol  the  state's  educational 
needs. 

The  Daily  Tar  Heel 

The  ofticial  student  publication  of  the 
Publications  Board  of  the  University  of 
North  Carplina.  where  it  is  published 
daily  except  Sunday.  Monday  and  exam- 
ination and  vacation  periods  and  sum- 
mer terms.  Entered  as  second  class  mat- 
ter in  the  post  office  in  Chapel  Hill, 
N.  C.  under  the  Act  of  March  8.  1870. 
Subscription  rates:  mailed,  $4  per  year, 
$2.50  a  semester;  delivered,  $6  a  year, 
S3.$G  a  semester. 


Editor 


FRED  POVVLEDGE 


Maaaging  Editor    .  CliARLIE  JOHNSON 


News  E]ditor 


Business  Manager 


RAY  LINKER 


BILL  BOB  PEEL 


Now.  ihe  bars  arc  down.  .Ml  we 
need  is  an  emotionally  enflamed 
majoritv  of  the  voteis  in  the  hnal 
option  unit:  all  we  need  is  a  group 
of  scheming  j>oliticians  who  place 
personr.'I  gain  alnive  education  for 
the  state. 

Then  well  be  right  beside 
South  (avolina  and  Mississippi  in 
the  hog-wallows  of  educational  in- 
difference. 

Another  Year 
Starts  With 
No  President 

Ihe  I'niversity  is  o\erstuffed 
with  acting  people. 

No.  we  don  t  measi  the  C^arolina 
Play  makers.  Or  the  Sound  and 
Fuiy  people.  We're  talking  afM>ut 
ihc  wav  the  I'niversity  tills  empty 
offices. 

We  have  an  acting  president. 
\Ve  have  an  acting  provost.  There 
are  acting  heads  of  departments. 

Some  of  the  'acting"  titles  are 
needed  because  of  c  ire  uinstaiices 
peculiar  to  the  particular  depart- 
ment. Iku  c^ne  such  office  should 
be  done  away  with  right  away. 

That's  the  olfice  of  the  presi- 
dent of  the  Consolidated  I'niveis- 
ity.  It  has  not  f>een  filled  with  a 
full-fledged  president  since  Cror- 
don  Cray  went  to  the  Pentagon 
early    last    summer. 

Presently  the  president's  office 
is  being  capably  filled  by  William 
Fiiday. 

Friday  lias  proven  he  can  handle 
the  job  of  the  presidem  with  ef- 
ficiency.  skill,  iionesty.  and  cour- 
age. It  is  the  consensus  of  most  Vn- 
i\ersity  -  wauhcrs  and  this  news- 
paper tiiK  IwW  make  a  fine  |)erm- 
anent  present. 

The  Board  of  Trustees,  the  I'ni- 
versity !x>dy  which  decides  who 
will  be  president,  has  had  more 
than  a  year  to  find  its  man.  A 
special  ccmnnittee  of  the  board  has 
met  dozens  of  times  to  hear  rec- 
onnnendations   for   the   job. 

It's  time  the  f)oard  picked  the 
man  to  head  the  Constjlida'ied  I'n- 
iversity. .A.nrl  it  is  time  the  lK>ard 
named  William  Friday  to  the  job. 


So  Whatism— Whither  Education? 


By  ED  YODER 

(This  is-  the  first  of  three  parts 
of  ail  e.'isay  by  fonmier  Daily 
Tar  Heel  Editor  Yoder.  Future 
pieces  with  the  Yoder  byline 
icill  be  dateiined  England  s'ince 
he  unll  soon  be-  taking  a  place 
at  Oxford  University  as  a 
Hhode.;  Sctiokir.) 

Ix'cturing  to  his  class  a  tew 
months  ago  in  this  same  Univer 
sily,  in  this  same  town  of  Chapel 
Hill,  a  certain  English  inslruclor 
was  shocked  to  drop  with  no 
visible  effect  on  his  listeners  the 
name   of  —   Dante   Alighicri. 

He  thereupon  administed  a  brief 
quiz;  and  the  question  of  course 
was:  Who  was  this  Dante  Alighi- 
eri?  One  student,  as  I  remember, 
guessed  rightly,  or  knew,  that 
Dante,  one  of  the  sublimest  of 
poets,  author  of  The  Divine  Come- 
dy, patriot  of  Italy  in  the  days 
of  the  Guelf-Ghibelline  battle, 
lived  in  the  14th  Century  and  had 
something  to  do  with  poetry. 

Other  guesses  missed  the  mark, 
some  by  odd  and  long  shots. 

There  were  votes  for  "noted 
French  General,"  for  example, 
and  "hacj  something  to  do  with 
Julius  Caesar."  To  be  centered 
around  one  of  the  half-do;',en 
great-  poets,  it  was  all  in  all  an 
apalling  display  of  ignorance. 

To  an  entering  freshman,  the 
most  natural  response  to  all  this 
may  well  be  an  undcflated  'sn 
what?"  And  unle.s.^  -which  would 
probably  set  him  apart  from  hun- 
dreWs  of  his  fellow  freshmen — he 
has  reason  to  know  or  caro  Viho 
Dante  was  or  what  he  did  for  a 
livmg,  we  can  only  sympathize. 
Interest  in  Dantes  doesn't  grow 
unplanted:  and  to  top  that,  the 
freshman  lives  in  a  school  era 
when  "so  what?"  may  be  spok- 
en fashionably,  with  respect,  even 
appiause,  from  many — and  even 
by  the  supposedly  "educated. ■" 

It  may  be  applied  with  impuni- 
ty not  only  to  Dante,  but  to 
Shakespeare  ?nd  Goethe  and 
Keats;  to  Bach  and  Mozart  and 
Beethoven;  to  .Michelangelo  and 
da  Vinci  and  Rembrandt  and  EI 
Greco;  to  Herodotus  and  Thucydi- 
des  and  Tacitus;  to  Planck  anc! 
Ein.stein.  ET  ALII.  In  short,  tb  all 
of  those  vague-sounding  •'ames 
adorning  the  rolls  of  cultivation 
— of  civilization. 

"So  what?'  is  probably  and  old 
question.  Certainly  it  is  at  times 
a  valuable  question.  But  for  those 
who  have  traditionally  sought 
"education."  it  has  not  alv/aya 
been  respected  as  applied  to  thn 
great  poets,  scientists,  artists,  and 


musicians.   In   fact,    before  there 
was  much   of  today's  broad   de- 
bate about  Wi.Hi  'education'"  do-s 


RHODES  SCHOLAR  YODBR 

mean,  say   in  John   Milton's  age, 
there  were  deiinito  boundaries  to 


it^  possible  meaning. 

Milton  and  his  contemporaries 
may  have  disputed  the  word  as 
much  as  we.  But  the  latitude  was 
narrower — and  John  Milton  and 
his  polite  company  would  have 
considered  it  unpardonable  edg- 
ing on  the  despicable  for  an  ed- 
ucated person  to  confuse  Dante 
with  French  generals  or  to  say 
thai  he  "had  something  to  do 
with  Julius  Caesar." 

If  Mozart  or  Beethoven  had 
composed  by  Milton's  day,  an  ed- 
ucated person  would  have  known, 
at  best,  the  themes  of  the  great 
.symphonies  by  movement;  and, 
at  worst,  one  ^eat  symphony 
from  the  others.  But  if  we  are  tp 
day's  attitude  differs,  since  to- 
judge  by  the  record  boxes,  to^ 
day  is  tpe  day  of  a  syncopated, 
blasting  song  called  "Roll  Over 
Beethoven."  The  gist  of  the  song 
is,  as  I  recollect,  that  Beethoven 
is  to  tell  Tschaikovsky  that  Elvis 
Presley  has  rung  in  a  new  era  in 


musical  art,  and  that  the  word 
for  t.he  masters  is  Rest  in  Peace. 

But  it  wasn't  always  so.  To  be 
precise,  John  Milton  wrote  in  his 
1644  essay  Of  Education: 

"I  call  ...  a  compleat  and  gen- 
erous education  that  which  fits 
a  man  to  perform  justly,  skilfully 
and  magnanimously  all  the  offices 
both  private  and  publick  of  peace 
and  war."  For  Milton  such  an  ed- 
ucation called  for  rigorous  study 
of  language,  literature,  music, 
the  sciences,  mathematics,  even 
military  strategy;  in  a  word,  Mil- 
ton's ideal  education  was  to  be 
in  liberal  arts. 

Notice  several  features:  He  call- 
ed not  only  for  preparation  for 
"publick"  office  —  which,  except 
for  the  Republicn  administration, 
may  be  well  taken  care  of  today 
—  but  for  "private"  office  as  well. 
I  interpret  this  as  what  might  be 
called  "private  life",  something 
related  to  the  "secret"  'life  of 
Walter  Mitty. 


'It's  Best  To  Keep  Ahead  Of  Me' 


0ftiOu«Ji. 


One  Way  .  . 


\  \ 


A  Freshman  Writes  His  Parents 


.  r 


By  BARRY  WINSTON 

eCoiumnist  XNinsUm  recently 
acquired  an  orientation  conn- 
selior's  uianual  ttiat  .ttartcd 
him  thinking  hack  on  his  first 
days  at  Carolina.  Beloiv  is  an 
iinoginary  letter  he  might 
liave  H>ritten  irere  he  a  fresh- 
man, today.) 

September  20,  1956 
Dear  Folks, 

Well  I  been  here  a  week  now 
and  I  mean  to  tell  you  I  really 
have  been  oryented.  Everything 
started  out  pretty  quiet-like  last 
Thursday  night  with  a  big  get 
together  in  the  meeting  hall  they 
have  at  this  place. 

Some  differnt  gUys  all  dressed 
up  like  those  men  in  the  magazine 
ads  stood  up  and  talked  to  us  [or 
awhile  about  the  stuff  that  goes 
on  around  here  and  what  we  shud 
expect  and  how  we  shud  act  and 
things  like  that. 

They  all  talked  about  some- 
thing they  called  the  carolinaway- 
alife  which  I  aint  too  clear  on  and 
nobody  around  here  seems  to 
know  a  awful  lot  about.  But  class- 
es start  tomorrow  and  maybe  one 
of  my  perfessors  can  tell  me  what 
its  all  about. 

But  anyhow  that  was  just  the 
beginnin.  The  next  day  which  wa.s 
Friday  I  was  supposed  to  meet 
my  cownseiler    in    front   of   the 


South  building  at  nine  o'clock  in 
the  morning  so  after  I  had  got 
me  something  to  eat  at  Lenor 
Hall  (thats  a  sort  of  a  big  mcetin 
place  where  everbody  goes  to  sit 
and  talk  at  meal  time)  1  looked 
at  the  sun  and  then  struck  out 
tr.rds  the  South  figurin  to  run 
into  this  building  directly. 

Well  its  just  a  good  thing  I  run 
into  somebody  who  new  what  he 
was  doin  cause  that  darn  place 
wasnt  South  at  all.  It  was  North. 
Anyhow  after  while  I  found  him 
(that  fella  I  was  supposed  to  meet 
I  mean)  and  he  said  good  now 
that  everbodys  hen?  we  can  go 
get  our  fisicals  and  I  said  whals 
that  and  he  just  looked  at  me 
kinda  funny  and  said  youll  find 
out  purty  quick. 

Well  as  it  turned  out  I  didnt 
find  out  purty  quick  at  all  cau=e 
first  we  walked  a  couple  a  milos 
-ar.;i  then  we  stood  in  a  line  til 
I  begun  to  thinTt  that  maybe  they 
had  run  out  of  them  fisicals  thoy 
was  givin  away.  And  I  wood  have 
left  e.xcept  that  there  was  so 
many  people  there  all  just  stand- 
in  around  that  I  decided  those 
things  must  be  purty  good  so  I 
stayed. 

I  shuda  left  when  I  had  the 
chanct.  I  was  pushed  and  poked 
and  prodded  and  looked  at  and 
into  and  thru  til  I  begun  to  feel 


like  a  head  of  cattle  at  a  auction. 
And  if  that  werent  enuf  they  had 
to  stik  me  with  about  fourteen 
differnt  kinds  a  needles  so  I 
wudnt  get  sick  they  told  me.  Boy 
I  felt  purty  healthy  til  they  got 
holt  of  me.  ■ 

When  we  left  there  we  went 
and  took  some  tests  an-1  I  never 
seen  the  like  of  some  of  the  ques- 
tions they  gave  us  but  I  gue^s  I 
musta  done  purty  good  cause  they 
want  me  to  come  back  next  week 
and  take  some  more. 

Seem*:  like  all  we  done  all  week 
Avas  walk  and  take  tests  and  walk 
and  meet  our  cownsellers  a<id 
walk  and  stand  in  line.  Last  Sun- 
day I  stood  in  line  for  an  hour 
and  half  just  shake  hands  with 
some  old  guy  who  looked  like 
Santa  Claws  without  no  beard 
and  had  a  harmonica  sticking  out 
of  his  pocket. 

And  there  was  something  call- 
ed registrashun.  I'd  tell  you  all 
about  that  too  but  my  roommate 
says  the  sooner  I  forget  about  it 
the  sooner  I'll  be  able  to  sleep 
nignts  so  maybe  I  better  not  talk 
about  it  rite  now. 

There  was  one  real  nice  thing 
tho.  All  the  girls  around  here  got 
together  tonight  and  had  a  big 
party  for  all  of  us  where  they 
live.  It  was  real  nice  with  punch 
and  cookies  and  all  that  sort  of 


stuff  and  everybody  sat  around 
and  talked  about  the  weather  and 
do-you-kncw-so-and-so  but  one 
girl  ast  me  didnt  I  think  it  was 
aw-ful  hot  and  I  said  no  I  was 
purty  darn  cold  and  after  that 
nobody  said  much  to  me  e-xcept 
its  time  to  go  home  now  young 
man  and  I  said  thank  you  mam 
but  I  reckon  I  better  stay  in  town 
cause  I  got  a  class  at  eight  o'clock 
in  the  morning  and  I  doubt  if  I 
could  get  back  in  lime  for  it  if 
I  went  home  this  late. 

Theres  gonna  be  a  big  fight  this 
Saturday  afternoon  down  in  the 
woods  between  some  fella  name 
Tatum  and  inother  guy  I  think 
his  name  is  Murray  or  something 
like  that  and  everybody  is  sup- 
posed to  go  and  watch  and  holler 
so  I  reckon  I  ought  To  go  see  what 
its  all  about  but  from  what  I 
hear  these  two  fellas  aint  really 
mad  at  each  other  so  it  probably 
wont  be  much  of  a  fight.  But  111 
write  and  let  you  know  if  Tatum 
is  as  tough  as  cousin  Lem  u.sed 
to  be  before  he  fell  down  the 
stairs.  I  think  hes  the  one  Im  sup- 
posed to  holler  for. 

Somebodj's  poundin  on  the  door 
yellin  for  me  to  stop  wTiling 
cause  the  scratchin  of  my  pen  is 
keepin  him  awake  so  I  better 
close  for  now.  Write  soon. 

Your  loving  son, 

Barry 


IV\  Abner 


Bv  Al  Capp 


Era  Of  Change 
In  South' s  Mind 

By  WOOPY  SEARS 

(Co^iimnijt  Sears  comn!,ents  on  the  tlioughis 
high  in  ttie  niinds  of  his  native  South,  and  tae 
era  oj  change  prompting  tiiein.) 

This  is  an  era  of  change.  I  don't  think  there 
arc  many  who  will  dispute  that  fact.  Changes  come 
almost  daily  now,  and  each  change  brings  its  own 
particular  problems. 

Paramount  in  the  aggregate  mind  of  the  South 
today  is  the  "social  matamoi-phosis"  which  is  bring 
ing  with  it  a  myriad  of  problems.  No  problem  is 
insifrmountable  when  all  parties  involved  can  work 
together  for  an  amicable  se-ttlement. 

However,'  the  South  lacks  the  necessary  unamimi- 
ty  of  purpose  and  ideals  wUhout  which  the  settling 
of  these  unprecedented  problems  v/ill  be  slow  and 
tedious;.  Yet  progress  will  b<!  achieved. 

We  must  keep  in  mind,  though,  that  no  real  prq- 
gress  can  be  made  through  the  use  of  force.  Nor 
can  any  friends  of  the  "new  idea"  be  cultivate^ 
through  the  use  of  tanks,  guns,  and  militia.  It's  con> 
men  knowledge  that  people  can  be  led,  and  some- 
times  almos.  herded,  but  rarely  can  they  be  pushed 
with  any  degree  of  lasting  effectiveness. 

Of  course,  fear  is  a  powerful  weapon  in  the 
hands  of  those  who  wish  to  mold  public  opinion 
and  create  unnatural  circumstances.  Fear  can  be 
evoked  by  display  of  forceful  determination,  such 
as  tanks  and  militia.  But  bully  tactics  seldom,  if 
ever,  create  good  will,  without  which  the  "new  idea'* 
will  be  a  predestined  failuri;. 

In  a  recent  election  to  let  the  people  of  North 
Carolina  express  their  opirion  of  the  "new  idea". 
Chape'  Hill  had  the  singular  distinction  of  being  the 
only  city  or  town  in  the  whole  state  to  approve  it. 
It  is  fitting,  I  supposo.  for  this  center  of  liberalism 
to  be  a  forerunner  in  this  new  social  movement. 
This  places  Chapel  Hill,  aid  the  University,  in  a 
unique  situation. 

To  many  people.  Chape!  Hill  is  loved  as  a  cen- 
ter of  culture,  knowledge,  and  progressiven  1  s.  To 
many  others,  it  is  despised  as  a  hot-bed  of  radical^ 
ideas,  a  haven  for  intellectual  day-dreamers  living 
in  the  abstact  world  of  theories,  hypothese,  anS 
text  books. 

If  Chapel  Hill  can  take  the  "new  idea'  »nd 
transform  it  into  an  applied  science,  then  perhaps 
it  will  prove  itself  to  the  greatness  it  acclaims. 

If.  however,  the  "new  idea  "  can't  be  put  inla. 
actual  practice,  successfully  and  peacefully.  Chapel' 
Hill  will  deserve  the  scornful  laughter  and  the  "I 
told  you  so's." 

To  the  social  reformers  who  would  revamp  our 
society,  I  offer  the  following  prayer  composed  by 
Di.  J.  H.  White.  Negro  President  of  thv  Mississippi 
Vocational  College  for  Negroes  al  Itta  Bena;  "Lord, 
give  me  the  patience  to  accept  those  things  which 
cannot  be  changed,  the  courage  to  change  those 
things  which  can  be  changed,  and  the  wisdom  to 
know  the  difference." 


Switched  Camps 
On  The  Nile    " 

(Tlie  jolloicing  sketch  of  Egypt's  strong  j:ion    . 
Abdel  Nai,ser  appeared  in  The  Neiv  York  Ti'mes.)  ""', 

N-cknanied  "Tiger  '  for  his  toughness  and  "Fox*' 
for  his  wanness,  Eg>prs  Premier  Gamal  Abdel  Nas- ', 
scr  has  been  described  as  "a  dictator  by  default"" 
in  a  "revolution  without  a  doctrine." 

Not  so  long  ago,  the  33-year-old  lieutenant  colon- 
el who  ousted  King  Farouk  was  looked  on  generally 
with  approval  from  outside  Egypt  and  with  close 
to  adulation  inside  his  country. 

He  was  regarded  by  many  as  moderate  man  wh«»-^ 
did  not  seek  power  but,  when  it  came  to  him,  honest-" 
ly  and  efficiently  began  to  resape  Egypt's  rotted^ 
society  and  political  structure. 

But  as  a  leader  wno  relies  on  empiricism  —  he 
had  prepared  no  dogmatic  blueprint  for  Egvpt  for- 
its  post-Farouk  period  — Col.  Nasser  has  recently 
emerged  as  a  man  who  has  acquired  a  taste  for 
power. 

While  his  popularity  with  his  countrymen  is  ap- 
parently as  jhigh  as  it  has  ever  been,  much  of  tho 
non-Egyptian  world  is  beginning  to  worry. 

Premier  Nasser  is  welding  an  Arab*  bloc  and, 
according  to  British  charges,  is  fomenting  anti- 
British  sentiment  throughout  the  Middle  East. 

An  advocate  of  what  he  calls  "positive  neutral- 
ism," Premier  Nasser  has  risen  in  the  estimate  of 
neighboring  Arabs  as  well  as  Egyptians  since  he 
purchased  arms  from  Communist  Czechoslovakia 
and  vastily  improved  the  Egyptian  Army. 

Privately— in  the  past— Premier  Nasser  has  said 
that  he  recognizes  Israel's  rights  as  a  nation,  and 
—in  the  past— he  has  given  orders  to  the  press  on 
occasion  to  play  down  criticisms  against  Israel 

But  today  many  of  the  Arabs  are  lookin.-r  to  Col 
Nasser  as  the  logical  leader  in  their  conflicts  with 
Israel. 

Pi-emier  Nasser  is  a  man  of  patience.  As  an  un- 
known instructor  in  the  Army  staff  college  he  wait- 
ed and  planned  for  ten  years  for  the  revolution  that 
ousted  King  Farouk. 

Known  as  violent  and  kind,  impulsive  and  serene 
Premier  Nasser  began  fighting  against  the  authori- 
ties when  he  was  17  years  old.  He  recalls  p-oudl^ 
mat  he  came  upon  a  group  of  demonstrators  in  a 
Cairo  street  being  belabored  by  club-swinging  police- 
men. 

He  entered   the  fray  and  was  beaten,   arrested"' 
and  taken  to  jail.  Only  then  did  he  ask  a  cellmate 
what  the  trouble  was  ail  about. 

The  handsome,  wall-built  Premier -he  is  just 
over  six  feet  tall  and  weigh.  200  pounds-still 
carries  a  head   scar  he  received  in   1935.  when  ho 

he  l^Z7^'  ''"'r'^  '"  '  demonstration  against 
the  Bluish  Demonstrations  and  rebellion  were  pa. t 
of  his  growing  diet.  ^ 

On  his  first  assignment  to  garrison  duty  after 
he  was  graduated  from  the  military  academy,  he 
led  a  cabal  against  the  senior  officers 

In  those  days,  the  corruption  of  Eevptian  mili- 
tary ana  social  life,  epitomized  in  the  iuxury-loving 
Kin.  Farouk Jired  Col.  Nas.er',  zeal  fo.  correction  -  - 
if  neces.*ary  by  rebellion. 


THUI 

THE^ 


JUi 


TmjRSOAY,  SEPTEMBER  20,  1956 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


PAGE  THREE 


THEYI^E  LEADING  CHEERS,  OF  COURSE: 


thts 
line 


lere 
lomo 
Iowa 

nith 
ring- 
is 
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iimi- 

tling 
and 

pr<(- 

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shed 

the. 

Inion 

be 

such 

if 

Idea"' 

forth 
ea", 
the 
fe  it- 
ilism 
lent, 
in  a 

een- 

To 

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an^ 

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our 
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[Lord, 

.hich 
I  those 
l>m  to 


Irian    « 
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irally 
I  close 

who--^ 
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for- 
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and, 
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said 
and 

pss  on 

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that 

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ly,    he 

mill-  i 
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Ect'.on,"*" 


Calisthenics  And 
Sunrise  Sessions 


By   FRED   POWLEDGE 

While  Sunny  Jira  Tatum's 
getting  his  football  players  up 
at  dawn  to  practice  for  the  UNC- 
State  game  Saturday,  another 
fellow  named  Jim  is  getting  hia- 
team  in  shape. 

He's  Jim  Bynum,  a  senior 
from  Raleigh.  He  is  the  Tar 
Heels'  head  cheerleader  this 
year,  and  his  team  of  12  students 
alternately  cusse  s  and  praises 
him. 

The  other  cheerleaders  cuss 
him  good-naturedly  because  he 
gets  them  up  at  sunrise  and 
starts  calisthenicj.  They  praise 
him  because,  they  say,  he's  got 
the  best  chocrleading  squad  Car- 
olina's seen   for  many  years. 

Bynum  was  head  cheerleader 
back  at  Needham  Broughton 
High  School  four  years  ago.  He 
was  named  to  the  job  here  in 
campus  -  wide  elections  last 
spring. 

"The  cheerleaders  this  year 
have  said  themselves  they're  in 
better  shape  than  ever  before," 
say..'  Bynum. 

"They  know  their  cheers  bet- 
ter, and  are  a  much  closer  group 
than  in  the  past.  They  love  each 


other." 
Why? 

Bynum  and  his  cheerleaders 
attribute  part  of  the  answer  to 
the  fact  that  Bynum'  is  a  student 
naval  officer  (Naval  Reserve  Of 
ficers'  Training  Corps).  He  ^-pent 
six  weeks  this  summer  with  the 
Marine  Corps  Schools'  Training 
and  Test  Regiment  at  Quntico, 
Va. 

CALISTHENICS 

Tliere,  he  says,  he  learned  the 
value  of  calisthonici*.  He  came 
back  and  applied  what  he  learn- 
ed to  his  cheerleaders,  both  co. 
cds  and  malej. 

Even  the  coed  members  of  the 
cheering  squad  say  they  feel 
better  than  ever  after  doing 
regular  exercises.  Legs  and  arms 
were  sore  for  the  firo-t  few  days, 
but  by  yesterday  the  girls  were 
happy  they  had  done  those  deep- 
knee   bends. 

Bynum  also  started  practice 
earlier  this  year. 

The  squad  came  back  to 
school  10  days  early  to  start 
getting  into  ^'hape.  Since  Sept. 
10  the  cheerleaders  have  been 
practicing  twice  a  day  —  from 
6:45  until  10  a.m.,  and  from  4 
to  6  p.m. 


JUMPING  JACKS  (TOP)  AND  DEEP  KNEE  BENDS  (BELOW) 

.  .  .  Qrianticcjti  lesacms  pay  off  in  Chapel  Hill 


SHIRTS-19C 


EA. 


(Packaged  In  Cellophane) 


uiithMRE 


With    or   Without     -^ 
Starch 

Prompt  Service  f'^/k^^  '^) 

Glen  Lennox  Loundromat 


22 

25 

26 

28. 
29 
.31. 
32. 


44 


ACRO.SS 

Jury 
member 
Frenzy 
Vegetable 
Girls   name 
Distress 
signal 
King's  son 
Exclama- 
tion of 
pleasure 
Showered 
ice  and  snow 
Exclar-.a- 
tjon  of 
contempt 
Wolfs  cry 
Former 
Japanese 
i.sland 
Title  of 
respect 
Discourage 
through  fear 
German 
river 
Half  ems 
Giant    beATi, 
Small    i.sland 
Unit  of  con- 
ductance 
(Elec.) 
Defame 
Interjection 
Backbone 
(anat  ) 
Distant 
Ohio  city 
Capital 
<Switz. ) 
Antlered 
animal 
(poss.) 
Floating 
in  water 
DOWN 
Girls 
nickname 
Steady 
River   (Sp.) 


Hawaiian 
bird    (pi  ) 
Registered 
Nur.se 
(abbr. ) 
Fire 

prevention 
officer 

7  Regent  of 
the  .sun" 
( Milton) 

8  Lease 
At  one  t!me 

10.  Bamboo- 
like grass 

14.  Farm 

implement 

1.5  Dwelling 

16.  VVor.sted 
suitings 

18  Strikes 


21.  Compas.s 
point 
(abbr) 

22  Asiatic 
kingdom 

23  Small 
ink 
bot- 
tle^ 

21   Re- 
place 
turf 

Greeting 
(Slang) 

30.  Malt 

beverages 

31   Acid 

discharge 

33  N'ail 

34  Body  of 
water 


r-iniMB    BOSQ    I 

DHHH  !nn:?n 

aRDHIl  L=4a&!IL2 
[SQBD  sua  DS 
SB       RE!r;[l    UfJIl 

Gmnn  aaDaaa 

□□D[^  DDHB 


Yrt(rr(la.v'*  An«v 


35  Land 
measure 

38.  Not  many 

39.  Con.stel-   v, 
lation 

41.  Bachelor  of 
Art.s    (abbr.) 

42.  What? 


^-kO 


Wentworth  &  Sloan 

S.fcs  tSte  pen  and  pencil 
every  student  wants! 

Porker  "21" 


8.95  Set 


in  handsomt 
gift  box 


"must"  for  cver>'  student  ...  the  new 
Parker  "21"  pen  with  electro-polished 
J\  point  for  smooth  writing  and  long  service. 
Easy  filling  Perfectly  balanced  for  writing 
case  .  .  .  never  scratches  or  skips.  Has 
large  visible  ink  supply.  Pencil  has  smooth 
.  propel-repel  action.  Large  eraser.  Beauti- 
ful plastic  barrels  in  blue,  red,  green,  black. 
Pen  points:  medium,  fine,  extra-fine.  Get 
this  special  back-to-school  set  today. 

Headquarters  For  School  Supplies 

Wentworth  &  Sloan 
Jewelers 

CHAPEL  HILL,  N.  C 


HEAD  CHEERLEADER  JiM  BYNUM 

. .  Uiey're  gdiig  to  be  ready  for  State 


(Author  0/  "Barefoot  Bny  w\tk  Cketk."  ttc.f         .  I 


ANOTHER  YEAR,  ANOTHER  DOLLAR 

Today  I  begin  the  third  year  of  writing  this  col- 
umn for  Philip  Morris  Cigarettes,  and  I  am  meny  in 
mj'  heart.  x 

I  am  merry  for  several  reasons.  First,  because  I  am 
being  paid. 

Not.  let  me  hasten  to  state,  that  an  emolument  was 
necessary.  "Sir.s,"  I  said  a  fev*-  days  ago  to  the  makers 
of  Philip  Morris,  who  underneath  their  dickeys  are  as 
friendly  as  pups  and  twice  as  cute.  "Sirs,"  I  said  to  this 
winsome  assemblage,  "there  is  no  need  to  pay  me  for 
writing  this  column.  If  I  can  introduce  America's  college 
men  and  women  to  Philip  Morris's  natural  tobacco  good- 
ness, if  I  can  inaugurate  them  into  the  vast  sodality  of 
Philip  Morris  smokers  and  thus  enhance  their  happiness,  ., 
heighten  their  zest,  upgrade  their  gusto,  magnify  their 
cheer,  broaden  their  bliss,  augment  their  glee,  and  in*  - 
'  crease  their  PQ— " 

"PQ?"  said  the  makers,  looking  at  me  Askance. 

"Pleasure  Quotient."  I  explained. 

"Ah!"  said  the  makers,  nodding  their  sweet,  shaggy 
heads. 

"If,"  I  continued.  "I  can  do  these  splendid  things  for 
the  college  population  of  America,  there  is  no  need  for 
money,  because  I  am  more  than  amply  repaid." 

We  wept  then.  1  am  not  ashamed  to  say  it.  WS 
WEPT!  I  wish  the  wiseacres  who  say  big  business  is 
cold  and  heartless  could  have  been  there  that  day.  1  wish 
they  could  have  witnessed  the  deep,  croaking  sobs  that 
racked  the  gathering,  the  great,  -shimmering  t^ars  that 
splashed  on  the  boardroom  table.  We  wept,  every  man- 
jack  of  us.  The  makers  wept.  The  secretaries  wept.  I 
wept.    My  agent,  Clyde  Greedy,  wept.    We  wept  all. 

"No,  no!"  cried  one  of  the  makers,  whose  name  u 
Good  Sam.   "We  insist  on  paying  you."  >. 

"Oh,  all  right."  I  said. 

Then  we  laughed.  The  gloom  passed  like  a  summer 
shower.  We  all  laughed  and  chose  up  sides  and  played 
stoop-tag  and  had  steaming  mug.s  of  cocoa  and  lit  plump, 
firm,  white  cigarettes,  brimming  full  of  natural  tobacco 
goodness.   I  mean  Philip  Morris,  of  corris! 


t  "%s' 


*-> 


*.'*:* 

•>}■ 


!- 


Refreshed  and  exalted,  we  returned  to  the  busi- 
ness at  hand.  "Now  then."  said  one  of  the  makers,  whose 
name  i.s  Merry  Andrew,  "what  will  you  write  about  in 
your  column  this  year?" 

"About  students  and  teachers,"  I  said.  "About  classes 
and  cutting.  About  eds  and  coed.s.  About  Greeks  and 
independents.  About  the  important  issue*  that  occupy 
the  supple  young  minds  of  college  America." 

"Like  what?"  asked  one  of  the  makei-s.  whose  name 
is  Td'able  David. 

"Like  how  to  finance  a  full  .social  life  without  a  re- 
volver," I  replied.  "Like  how  to  wear  Bermuda  shorts 
though  your  knees  look  like  brain-coral.  Like  how  to 
double-date  in  an  MG." 

"And  will  you,"  asked  one  of  the  makers,  whose  name 
is  Peter-Sit-by-the-Fire,  "from  time  to  time  say  a  pleas- 
ant word  about  Philip  Morris  Cigarettes,  which  are  now 
available  in  two  sizes  — Regular  in  the  familiar  Sr^ap- 
Open  Pack,  and  Long  Size  in  the  new  Crushproof  Box?" 

"Crazy  kid!"  I  chuckled,  pushing  my  fist  gently 
again.st  his  jaw.  "You  know  I  will." 

And  we  all  shook  hands  -  .silently,  firmly,  manlily  — 
and  I  left,  dabbing  at  my  eyes  with  my  agent,  and  hurried 
to  the  nearest  typewriter. 

€Max  Shulnwn.  195C 

The  tnaken  of  Philip  Morri$,  take  plenaure  in  brining  y»m 

thii  uncensored,  free-teheeling  column  each  week  during  tfc« 

'M:hool  year  — and   also   in    bringing  you    today's    nete   PbUtp 

Uorris,  packed  tcith  natural  tobacco  goodness,  lip  end  to  tip  end. 


WE  ARE  IN  BUSINESS  TO  SERVE  YOU! 


A  COMPLETE  LINE  OF: 
COLLEGE  STATIONERY 


SCHOOL  SUPPLIES 


PENNANTS 


GREETING  CARDS 


GIFTS 


LEDBEHER  -  PICKARD 


PAdC  FOUR 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


^THURSDAY,  SEPTEMBER  20.  1956 


Berman's 

Est.  1914  ^ 

ROTC 
STUDENTS 

Plain  Toe  Shoes 

by  Crosby  Square 

Khaki  Trousers 

Black,  White  and  Khaki 

Socks 


Large  Selection 

Gym& 

Basketball 

SHOES 

In  All  Price  Ranges 


For  Medical  Students 
White  Duck  Pants 


FOR 

Your  Room 

Lamps,  Towels,  Sheets, 
jiankets,  Bates  Spreads, 
Drapes,  Canvas  Hitch- 
hiking Bags 


NEW 

All-Wooi  Fall 
'^port  Coats  and  Pants 
vy  Lr.igue  and  Regular 


NEW 

Wash  and  Wear 

No  Press 

Winter  Weight 

Gabardine  Pants 


Open  All  Day 
Wednesday 

PERM^N'S 

DFPT.  STOR3 


'56  YACKS 

Anyone  who  did  not  receive  his 
1956  Yack  may  pick  it  up  upon 
presentation  of  his  ID  card  at 
jither  the  GM  Information  Office 
or  the  Yack  office. 


CAMP  PICTURES 

Anyone     wishing     to     order     s 
iresiidian  camp  picture  may  do  s  > 
at  the  YMCA  office  through  next 
lonciay.     I  hv  tliar^e  lor  each  pic- 
ture is  $1.50 


DTH  Publishes  First  Issue 


:  ANNOUNCING    COLGATE'S. 

\miSK\ 

:  FLUORIDE  Toothpaste  : 


With  this  edition  The  Daily  Tar 
Heel  start  •  it  publication  schedule 
for  the  academic  year. 

The  newspaper  will  be  publish- 
ed six  mornings  a  week,  Tuesday 
through  Sunday,  for  the  whole 
schorl  year. 

Fred  Powledge,  senior  from 
Raleigh,  is  editor  of  the  newspap- 
er this  year  Hi..*  managing  editor 
is    Charlie    Johnson,    senior    from 


Le.noir.  Bill  Bob  Peele,  senior  from 
William.slon.  is  business  manager. 

Editor  Powledge  said  yesterday 
he  will  announce  new  staff  ap- 
pointments within  the  next  few 
days. 

The  Daily  Tar  Heel  Freshman 
Issue,  a  12-page  preschool  edi- 
tion published  for  freshmen  and 
transfer  -'.udents,  was  distributed 
last  Friday. 


Managing  Editor  Johnson  an- ' 
nounced  that  a  limited  number  of 
extra  copies  of  the  freshman  edi- 
tion may  be  picked  up  at  the  news- 
paper's offices  on  the  second  floor 
(1  Graham   Memorial. 


INTRAMURAL  OFFICIALS 

Students  majoring  in  physical 
education  are  needed  as  intramu- 
ral officials  for  tag  football.  Those 
interested  have  been  asked  to 
come  to  301  Woollen  Gym  on 
Tuesday  sjt  4  p.m. 


HARDENS  TOOTH  ENAMEL 
WORKS  ALL  DAY... 

to  defeat  tooth  decay! 


f/on'r   he 

CAM  FUSED 


Ity  your 


COMPLKXIO.N! 


/-< 


Z)'^- 


f) 


DOILS; 

"I'lir  cunipus  'hull' 
Mighl  think  you're  slii-k. 
Bui  wliat  of  the  B.M.O.C.'i 
■|"o  be  Hirr  your  cainpl««ioii 
l';iss«>i  'kiitsiiif  inapertioii'  .  .  . 
(Jrmi  olToid  makr-up  with 

TKN-0-}«I>^.  please!" 

OUYSf 

"  rtml  icurtroan  'iaiie' 
U  illi  .ohape  aiid  britiii 
Han  niso  two  eyaa  that  won't 

liiisii  you  .  .  . 
Keepyourskiiiclearaiidniale-y 
JseTKN-O-Sl.X  daily. 
*>r.  nhe'll  ouly  be  »ren  .      .  nut 
>rni  with  vou!  " 


Baptist  Church  Welcomes  New  Students 

The    Baptists  of  Chapel    Hill   could  teach   the   ass  ^mbly   line   factories  of  Detroit  a  thing  or  two  with 
the  feeding  techniques  they  employed  this  week.    N    w  students,  above,  were  treated  to  a  picnic  cVner 
'    r    .'ed   in    eight  fast-moving  chow   lines   In   the  chur    h    basement.    About    750    students    attended,    alolag 
with  members  of  the  congregation  and  rookies  in  th .    Highway   Patrol    School   here.   (Photo  by  Gidui) 


Daily  terdbbinir  with  Tcn-O-Six  help* 
rid  skin  of  impurities  that  cause  many 
skin  problems  .  .  .  Combines  antiseptic 
eleansins  and  thernpeuiie  healinc  .  .  . 
Effeetivc  for  dry,  oily  or  normal  skin. 
Ui»  Ten-0-Six  for  a  clear,  clean  com- 
plexion,  tl   and   12  plus   tax. 


'^"^a^^i^  ^).&.^^^^  ^^"^tm^^yji  TEN-0-SIX 


Coming  Soon    #    Our  Semi-Annuai  Gigantic 
'One  Cent  Saie"— Watch  For  This  One  In  October 


DRUG  STORE 


"The  Tar  Heel's  Prescription  Center" 
Free  Delivery  Phone  9-8781 


All  Ihe  thrills  of  sport  ...  ail  the  joy  of  family 
occasions  .  .  .  can  be  captured  forever  on  film 
.  .  .  when  you  make  your  own  movies.  See  our 
wide  range  of  home  movie  cameras,  projectors 
end  screens. 


FOISTER'S 
Camera  Store 


Now  'n  Our  Third  Generation  .  . 


\\ 


ff 


YOUR  BANKING   HOME 
AWAY   FROM   HOME 

We  always  look  forward  to  meeting  the  new  class 
of  students  entering  the  University.  For  each  year 
we  not  only  make  many  new  friends,  but  run  into 
familiar  names  of  the  past. 

Since  1899,  tUe  3ank  of  Chapel  Hill  has  been  the 
Community  Bank  of  Chapel  Hill.  For  a  number  of 
years,  we  have  been  greeting  sons  of  former  Uni- 
versity students  who— like  father,  like  son— want 
to  handle  their  University  expenses  in  a  business- 
like mar.ner. 

More  recently,  .even  a  few  third  generations  have 
begun  to  show  up.  (How  time  flies!) 
Bui  whether  you  are  the  third  or  the  first  genera- 
tion attending  Carolina,  the  welcome  mat  is  out. 
Serving  you  is,  to  us,  not  only  a  duty  but  a  privi- 
lege. 


ThcBnnlf^^iaprl  Hill 


Glen  Lennox 


Member  Federal   OeP9<it   Insurance   Corp. 

Carrboro 


Chapel  Hill 


Free  To  All  Students 

Your  Name  and  Address  Imprinted 
On  Your  First  Book  Of  Checks 


Your 
name 


Insured 
against 
alteration 


In  a  matter  of  moments  v^e  will  imprint  your 
name  and  address  on  your  chacks  and  make 
them  unmistabably  yours.  What's  more,  each 
check  is  imprinted  on  special  safety  paper  and 
is  insured  against  fraudulent  alteration.  Open 
your  account  with  us  and  enjoy  this  added  pro- 
tection. 


Cowering 
TheCampus 


VARSITY  GLEE  CLUB 
The  Varsity  Glee  Club  has  Invit- 

jii  ai.  iiK'n  inierestod  in  singing  to 
aft  inlormal  meeting  on  Wednes- 
'  ila;.  at  5:00  p'm.  in  Hill  Hall."  Re- 
Ireshments  will  be  served  and  a 
sh:n\  concrt  by  the  Cilee  Club  wii! 
be  presented.. 
DANCE  COAAMITTEE 

AU  members  of  the  University 
Diuct  Commiilec  will  be  required 
to  work  at  tiic  Grail  Dance  Satur- 
day Lijiht,  according  to  Chairman 
Don  Miller. 
PROGRAM  SELLERS 

.Students  interested  in  selling 
programs  at  home  football  games 
iiis  year  h:n  -  b'M^n  asked  to  at- 
tend a  meeting  at  4  p.m.  today  in 
ii)t  Woollen  (iym. 
ART  EXHIBITION 

A  lollcction  of  reproductions  of 
famous  paintings,  which  are  cur- 
rently on  exhibition  in  the  Person 
Hall  .Art  Gallery,  will  be  available 
lor  rent  beginning  September  26  at 
9:0!)  am. 

.V   picture   may    be  reserved   for 

rental  for  25  cenls  per  month   per 

picture  plus  a  $100  deposit.   Each 

picture  may  be  rented  for  a  three 

;  mnnMis  period. 

This  service  is  offered  to  Chapel 

MEN'S  GLEE  CLUUB 

All  members  of  the  UNC   Men's 
'  Glee  Club  have  been  asked  to  meet 
in  Hill  Hall    .Monday  at  4:30  p.m. 
for  the  first  meeting  o4  the  year. 


Want  Your 
OLD  SUIT 

Ivy 

Lcagueired 

We  take  cut  pleats,  Re- 
cut  Shoulders,  convert 
to  3  button,  put  belt  in 
the  back. 

Fast  and  Efficient 
Service 

Fete  the  Tailor 


^■..>^  -j^-^^-  ^i/:^u::^f- 


^tm 


l*f^^^  m 


Then  Avail  Yourseif  Of 
Our  Compiete: 
SHOE  SUPPLIES 

INCLUDir:G-        \ 
LACES,  POLISH,  TRECS,  DYEING  a  OTHERS 

and 


Expert  Workmanship 
Keeps  Old  Shods  On 
Job  Months  Longer 
Than    You    Expacted! 


COLLEGE 
SHU-FIXERY 


Stevens-Shepherd's 
:       BACK  TO  SCHOOL  -  - 

CONTEST! 
ComQ  In! 


Regisferl 


1 


Wmt\ 


ISi  PRIZE-IMPORTED  TWEEP  SPORT  JACKET  : 

k 

2ND  PRIZE-CREW-NECK  SHETLAND  SWEATER: 

3RD  PRIZE-IVY  LEAGUE  DRESS  SHIRT 

> 

NO  PURCHASE  NECESSARY!  : 

WE  WANT  EVERYONE  TO  COME  DOWN  Ta^ 
SEE  US  AND  BROWSE  AROUND  OUR  SHOP.  YOl^ 
WILL  FIND  AN  EXCELLENT  SELECTION  OF: 
CLOTHES  WITH  DISTINCTIVE  TAILORING  AND; 
THE  TRADITIONAL  COLLEGE  STYLE,  THAT  HAS: 

BEEN  LABELED  "THE  IVY  LOOK."  \ 

• 

MAKE  STEVENS-SHEPHERD  YOUR  CHOICE  FORZ 
ALL  YOUR  CLOTHING  NEEDS.  ^ 

WE  WELCOME  YOUR  CHARGE  ACCOUNT,     t 

« 

DRKSS  WELL;  YOU  CANT  AFFORD  NOT  TO!     : 


STEVBKS^SHBPHBRD  : 


THE 

GOODY  SH 

OP 

•  DINNERS 

•  SANDWICHES 

•  BEER 
•  PETE  AND  SPERO 

I 


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W.   19S6 


THURSDAY.  SEPTEMftER  20,  195« 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


FAGI  FIVI 


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^11 


Tar  Heels  Wind  Up  Heavy  Work  For  Wolf  pack  Contest 


latum  Fears  Wolf  pack 
Backs,  Passing  Attack 


A  Tuesday  scriramage  capped 
off  heavy  work  for  Carolina  this 
week,  aj  the  Tar  Heels  prepared 
to  open  their  first  season  under 
the  new  regime  of  Jim  Tatum  Sat- 
urday in  Kenan  Stadium. 

With  the  same  first  string  play- 
ing together  that  has  been  operat- 
ing in  practice  since  early  Septem- 
ber, the  Tar  Heels  underwent  their 
final  full  scale  scrimmage  against 
N.  C.  State  playj. 

Tatum,  in  a  Tuesday  noon  press 
conference  with  writers  and  broad- 
casters, said  that  his  main  prob- 
lem in  coping  with  the  Wolfpack 
Sa lure' ay  would-be  stopping  the 
fine  Slate  backs  Dick  Hunter, 
Dick  Christy  and  George  Marin- 
kov.  He  is  a'.-)  concerned  about! 
the  Tack's  passing  attack,  as' 
quarterback  Tom  Katich  has  two 
line  receivers  in  ends  John  Lows 
and   John   Collar. 

Tatum  pointed  out  that  bis  de- 
fensive secondary  will  contain  on- 
ly one  man— halfback  Ed  Sutton 
—with  aoy  game  experience.  Up 
front,  hi  ends— Buddy  Payne  and 
Larry  Muschamp — are  experienc- 
ed, but  elsewhere  down  the  line 
he  is  thin  on  experience. 

He  said  that  his  offense  had 
been  pleasing  in  late  sessions 
and  that  he  is  more  concerned 
about  •  opping  the  'Pack  than 
scoring  on  them. 

It  will  be  the  46th  meeting  be- 
tween N.  C.  State  and  UNO,  sister 
iuit'tutions  in  the  Consolidated 
University  of  North  Carolina. 

A5    in    last    years'   opener   with 
Oklahoma,   the  Tar  Heels  will  be- 
gin the  jjason  with  a  sophomore 
— operating  the  split-T  offense.  Cur- 1 
tis  Hathaway,  a  6-0,  189  Norfolk,  | 
product    will   take   charge   of  i 
the  Tar  Hels,  backed  by  halfbacks  \ 
Sutton    and    Larry    McMullen   and  j 
fullback  Giles  Gaca. 

While    Hathaway    has    had    no 


Tar  Heels  Get 
New  Uniforms 
This  Season 

TJe  UNC  footbaU  squad  this 
season  is  wel!  fitted  out  with  a 
complete  new  wardrobe. 

This  not  only  includes  three 
new  seU  of  game  gear,  in  varying, 
striking  colors,  but  also  a  wide  as- 
sortment of  practice  equipment 
which  the  Tar  Heels  have  been 
ive  work  going  on  in  strict  secreoj- 1  making  good  use  of  in  preparing 


college  varsity  game  experience, 
he  perfwmed  well  as  a  freshman 
and  irapress«d  Tatum  in  spring 
drills  so  much  that  he  was  running ' 
second  team  behind  Dave  Reed 
when  Reed  was  injured.  Behind 
Hathaway  will  be  Doug  Farmer,  a  | 
non-letterman  senior,  and  junior; 
Ron  Marquette. 

For  10  daj-s  leading  up  to  Sat-  ] 
urday,  Tatum  has  had  his  defens- 


Intramural  Program  Is 
Set  Up  For  This  Fall 


behmd  a  canvas  erected  on  Navy 
Field.  Offensive  drills  have  gone 
on  outside,  but  the  defense  de- 
vised the  stop  the  'Pack's  decep- 
tive multiple  offense  has  been 
kept  top  secret. 


North  Carolina 

Muschamp 

Blazer 

Setzer 

Stavnitski 

Lear 

Pell 

Payne 

Hathaway 

McMullen 

Sutton 

Gaca 


L^ 

LT 

L". 

C 

Rl 

RT 

RE 

QB 

LHB 

R  IB 

F3 


N.  C.  State 

Collar 

Szuchan 

Tokar 

Oddo 

Compton 

DeAngelus 

Lowe 

Katich 

Hunter 

Christy 

Guerrieri 


;  for    its   opener   with    N.    C.    State 
here  Sept.  22. 

The  main  line  of  practice  uni- 
forms' are  numbered,  which  is  an 
aid  to  the  coaches  in  keeping  the 
players  identified. 

In  addition,  the  squad  now  is 
equipped  with  several -sets  of  slip- 
over scrimmage  jerseys  of  differ- 
ent colors,  enabling  two  or  three 
scrimmages  to  go  on  at  the  same 
time,  with  the  players  all  attired 
in  different  colors. 

The  travelling  squad  also  will  one  big  change  has  been  made 
have  brand  new  Jim  Tatum  Texas  („  the  intramural  program  for  the 
hats  to  wear  on  trips.  i  coming  season.  The  graduate,  pro- 

Thc  Tar  Heels  never  had  it  so  |  fessional.  and  independent  divis 
good.  I  ion  will  be  included  with  the  dorm 


The  following  schedule  has  been 
posted  concerning  the  first  intra- 
mural    manager's     meeting:     Fra- 
ternity—Thursday, Sept.  27.  Dorm-  i 
itory — Tuesday,  Oct.  2.  Joint  Man- 1 
agers  Meeting — Nov.  27. 

The   intramurals   department   is  i 
in    need  of  tag  football   official.?.  ' 
Any   one    interested    is   requested 
to  go  by  room  315     in     Woollen 
Gym  anytime  after  1  p.m. 

Rufus  Hackney  has  been  named 
chief  assistant  to  Walter  Rabb  in 
the  department.  The  undergrad- 
uate assistants  are  Bill  Bailey  and 
Tommy  Johnson. 

Another  Field  and  Gun  meet 
will  be  held  thi.r  yeaV  on  October 
25.  The  meet  will  be  sponsored 
jointly  by  the  intramurals  depart- 
ment and  Graham  Memorial.  SAE 


division.  Last  year,  the  three  form- 
ed a  separate  division.  This  will 
leave  only  two  intramural  divis- 
ions:  Dorm   and   Fraternity. 

Tag  football  play  will  get  under- 

j  way  in  early  October.  The  fratern- 

I  ity  division  will  begin  play  on  Oct. 

I  2   and   the   dormitories   will   start 

shortly  after  on  Oct.  9. 

Fraternity  entries  will  close 
Sept.  27  and  dorm  entries  on  Oct. 
2.  The  tag  football  program  will 
be  round   robin  play. 

The  single  elimination  tennis 
schedule  will  begin  on  Oct.  9  for 
both  fraternity  and  dorm  divis- 
both  fgraternity  and  dorm  divis- 
ions. Entries  close  on  Oct.  2. 

Qualifying  rounds  fc-  intramur- 
al   golf   will   end   on   Oct.   9   and 


fraternity  is  the  defending  champ- !  i"atch  play  will  start  Oct.  11. 


Barclay  To  Aid 
On  UNC  Grid 
Radio  Airings 

Former  Carolina  head  football 
coach  George  Barclay  will  add 
color  and  expert  opinion  to  Big 
Four  football  broadcast*  this  fall 
on  a  statewide  network  originat- 
ing with  WPTF,  Raleigh. 

Barclay  will  work  with  Jim  Reid 
of  that  station  in  carrying  UNC, 
Duke,  N.  C.  State  aUd  Wake  For- 
est games  to  NortU  Carolinians. 

All  five  North  Carolina  home 
games  are  on  the  slate,  plus  home 
appearances  by  other  Big  Four 
schools.  Barclay'j  comments  will 
come  during  the  game  itself  as 
well  as  during  halftime. 

Coach  here  for  three  years,  Bar- 
clay is  now  operating  a  service 
station. 


Taturn  Will  Appear  On  Radio, 
Television  Shows  This  Year 

Carolina  football  coach  Jim  Ta-    Asheville,   WLOS-TV    (13);   Char- 


tum,  never  accused  of  not  staying 
busy  all  the  time,  will  carry  a 
big  load  this  autumn  in  addition 
to  all  the  chores  and  ramifications 
of   coaching   his  football   team. 

Tatum  is  booked  for  weekly  tele- 
vision and  rdio  shows. 

His  brand  new  television  pro- 
gram, called  the  "Jim  Tatum 
Show,"  will  be  filmed  by  the 
"Home  Security  TV  network"  and 
shown  on  six  North  Carolina  tele- 
vision stations,  starting  next  week. 
It  is  sponsored  by  a  Duriiam  Life 
Insurance  Company  (Home  Securi- 
ty). 

The  stations  will  present  the 
shown  on  different  days,  the 
schedule  to  be  announced  by 
them.  The     network     consists     of 


lotte,  WBTV  (3);  Durham  WTVD 
(11);  Greensboro,  WFMY  (2); 
GrefinviUe,  WNCT  (9):  and  WU- 
mington,  WMFD-TV  (6). 

Tatiim,  who  had  a  similar  high- 
ly successful,  show  on  a  Washing- 
ton television  station  whea  h^ 
coached  at  the  University  of  Mary- 
land, plans^  to  give  scouting  re- 
ports on  Carolina  games  and  will 
use  blackboard  and  game  films 
in  an  expert  analysis  of  what  the 
fans  have  seen  or  many  expect  to 
see. 

His  weekly  radio  show,  in  the 
form  of  an  interview  with  UNC 
sports  publicist  Jake  Wade,  will 
be  carried  by  40  North  Carolina 
c'tations  afffli^d^d  with  the  Tobac- 
co sports  rWtwork  and  opens  this 
week. 


N.'c."sTATrCOLLEGT—  COLISEUM^ 

N.  C.  Stota  G)ll«g«— COLISEUM  - 

P.  O.  Box  5905— RALEIGH.  N  C.  I 

— .ADULT  Tickets  ot  $ each  $ • 

CHILD   Tickets   at   $ eoch  % | 

PteoM  Include  25c  for  Postage  and  Handling     $  25  I 

Amt.  of  Check  or  Money  Order  Er>cl. — Totol  $ I 

Price:   $3.00 D      $2.50 H      $2.00 O       $1.50 n| 

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Mon.  Nite  Sept.  24....n  Frid.  Mot.  Sept.  28. ...D  J 

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Androcles  And  The  Lion 

November  14,  15,  16,  17  and  18.  The  Playmakers 
Theatre— As  a  part  of  the  GeOrge  Bernard  Shaw  Cen- 
tennial Celebration,  we  present  his  most  delightful 
comedy.  This  production  will  tour  the  Carol inas  and 
Georgia. 


ANNOUNCE  THEIR  THIRTY  -  NINTH  SEASON 


Anastasia 

October  17,  18,  19,  20  and  21.  The  Playmakers  The- 
atre—The recent  smash  hit  in  both  New  York  and 
London,  by  Marcelle  Maurette  (adapted  by  Guy  Bol- 
ton). "Enthralling— filled  with  suspense,  love,  joy, 
and  fear." 


>1 


=>n*> 


»nibi 


,:.       JA     .ir 


■^•vaM 


'uO 


>  ..»a- 


*;'., 


Brigadoon 


March  I,  2  and  3.  Memorial  Hall— At  last  we  are  stag- 
ing the  musical  show  which  has  been  requested 
most  often  by  our  patrons.  Music  by  Frederick 
Loewe;  book  and  lyrics  by  Alan  Jay  Lerner. 


Desire  Under  The  Elms  !I    .  C^  * 

December  14,  15,  16,  17  and  18.  The  Playmakers 
Theatre— Eugene  O'Neill,  one  of  the  greatest  play- 
wrights this  country  has  prorduced,  gives  us  here  a 
startling  tragedy  of  the  American  scene. 


4 


Peer  Gynt 


■^A 


May  1 0,  1 1  and  1 2.  The  Forest  Theatre— Henrirck  Ib- 
sen's fantastic  satire  on  human  nature,  especially 
translated  and  adapted  for  outdoor  production  by 
the  director.  .,  f?-^*;.  ,-..■- 


'*»  firt'  ■ 


^c 


A  New  Play 


Season  Tickets  $5.00 
Save  50% 


March  27,  28,  29,  30  and  31.  The  Playmakers  The- 
atre—A premiere  production  of  a  new  script  by  one 
of  our  own  playwrights  which  we  hope  will  be  chal- 
lenging and  timely. 


On  Sale  At  Abernethy  Hall 

(next  to  Scuttlebutt)  and  Ledbet- 

ter-Pickard 


AS  AN  ADDED  ATTRACTION,  THE  STEPHEN  ROSE  PRODUCTION  OF  "THE  BEST  OF  STEINBECK"  STARRING  IN  PERSON  CONSTANCE  BENNEH,  TOD  ANDREWS,  FRANK  MCHUGH, 

ROBERT  STRAUSS-MEMORIAL  HALL-SAT.  DECEMBER  1 

Mail  Orders  to:  Playmakers  Business  Office,  Box  1050,  Chapel  Hill,  N.  Ce         i 


■■;^    i  ^     i 


PAGE  SIX 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


THURSDAY,  $«PTlM»eR  20,  1V56 


THUI 


Sutton  And  Stavnitski 
Named  As  Co-Captains 


EO  SUTTON 

new  Tar  Heel  ctxxtptoin 


Flajhy  senior  halfback  Ed  Sut- 
ton and  veteran  center  George 
Stavaitski  hav«  been  named  co- 
captains  of  the  UNC  football  team 
for  the  1056  season.  The  selections 
were  announced  by  Coach  Jim 
,  Tatum  in  a  Tuesday  press  confer- 
ence. 

Sntton, '  a  200  pound  scatback 
f^om  CuUewhee,  has  been  tabbed 
by  Coach  Tatam  »-•  one  of  the 
fine.v  halfbacJu  Around.  The  Cull- 
owhee  Comet,  a  star  under  George 
Barclay  for  two  years,  will  hold 
down  the  starting  right  halfback 
slot  Saturday  when  the  Tar  Heels 
entertain  N.  C.  State  in  the  sea- 


Stavnitski,  a  strapping  210 
pounder  from  Fairfield,  Conn., 
will  anchor  the  Tar  Heel  line  at 
the  pivot  post  this  season.  Stav  has 
been  a  starter  off  and  on  for  tA'o 
seasons. 

Sutton  has  been  activ-e  off  the 
field  as  well  as  on.  The  curly 
haired  youth  is  here  at  the  Uni- 
versity on  a  Morehead  scholarship 
and  is  active  in  campus  affairs. 
During  his  first  two  ^ears  here, 
Ed  turned  in  a  creditable  perform- 
ance with  the  Carolina  basketball 
ball  team. 


Baseball  Practice  Set 

Fall  baseball  practice  will  get 
under  way  next  Wednesday  aft- 
ernoon at  3  p.m.  on  Emerson 
Field. 

A  meeting  will  be  held  for  all 
interested  candidates  Tuesday  at 
4  p.m.  in  room  304  of  Woollen 
Gym. 

Practice  sessions  will  be  held 
daily  at  3  p.m.  for  three  weeks 
until  the  15th  or  16th  of  October. 


Thirlecn  North  Carolina  towns 
had  populations  of  less  than  1,000 
according  to  the  1860  census. 


Carblfna  Caravan 


GEORGE  STAVNITSKI 

. . .  named  co-captain 


Never  Lower  Than  Fourth    scored  early 

Despite  ^harp  competition,  Uni         The    1955    UMC    football    team 
versity  of  North  Carolina  footbaU  j  ^^'"'^^^  '"  the  first  period  of  five 
teams  have  .tayed  in  the  fir.-t  di- '  S^""^'  last  fall,  including  its  first 
vision   of  the  Atlantic  Coast  Con-    ^^^^^  gamej. 
ference  standings  all   three  years 

the  conference  haj  operated.  The       The   Wilmington    "Star",  found- 
Tar  Heels  have  been  third  twice    ed  in  1867, njs  North  Carolina's  old- 


and  fourth  once. 


est  newspaper. 


*   .^. 


SPECIAL 

Afternoons 


■t-  J.V 


®^ 


.ri 


1     AT 


THE   PATIO 

-  >.  Regular-25^ 
King  Size-35< 
_  1  to5  ; 


By  JAKE  WADE 

Pre-season  football  practice  at 
Carolina  draws  to  a  close  this 
week,  as  the  Tar  Heels  step  into 
their  opener  with  N.  C.  State  in 
Kenan  Stadium  Saturday  .  .  The 
long,  gruelling  conditioning  pro- 
gram has  been  interesting. 

The  only  person  not  directly  af- 
filiated with  the  j'iuad  who  was 
present  at  every  practice,  without 
a  single  miss,  was  a  local  theatre 
man,  E.  Carrington  Smith,  long  a 
devout  supporter  of  the  Tar  Heels 
with  passionate  and  unwavering 
loyalty. 

Mind  you,  our  Tar  Heels  drilled 
every  morning  before  breakfast,  a 
Jim  Tatum  innovation  that  dated 
from  his  fir.-t  year  as  a  head 
coach,  at  North  Carolina  in  1M2 
And  Mr.  Smith  is  a  night  worker 
at  his  theatre.  But  that  didn't 
keep  him  from  rising  with  the 
birds,  joining  Coach  Tatum  a* 
Woollen  Gymnasium,  riding  with 
him  to  the  field  house  and  then 
walking  through  the  woods  in  the 
morning  dew  to  check  in  with  the 
first   candidates   on    the   field. 


Mr.  Smith  is  a  pipe  smoker  and 
a  stranger  might  have  taken  hin- 
for  a  meditating  professor,  com- 
muning with  nature,  as  he  made 
his  twice-daily  trip  to  the  practice 
field,  arriving  for  the  first  one 
with  the  dawn  and  departing  from 
the  second  one  after  sunset. 

The  Chapel  Hill  theatre  man 
who  is  also  president  of  the  en- 
terprising Chapel  Hill  Atlilctic 
Club,  also  has  the  dignity  of  a  pro 
feasor,  has  never  been  seen  with 
out  a  tie  and  maintained  his  sartor 
ial  perfection  during  the  hottest 
hours  of  practice.  We  plebian.*^ 
sweated  in  sport  shirts  and  some- 


times j-liorts,  but  good  old  E.  Can- 
rington»k)oked  cool  and  detachetf* 
as  fee  etood  In  the   broiling  sun 
and  watdied  Ed  Sutton  and  others 
gallop. 

Mr.  Smith  was     annoyed     only 
once,  and  then  mildly.  When  the 
two-a-day  practice  program  ended. 
Coach    Tatum    forgot    to    tell    his 
biggest  booster.  So  K.  Carrington 
the    next   day   was    up   at   six,   as 
ujual,  and  sat  for  a  long  time  in 
Woollen    Gymnasium    waiting    for'^ 
the  coach,  who  was  having  his  first" 
morning    slumber    since    Sept.    1. 
"Jim  shouldn't  have  forgotten   ttj  ' 
tell  me,"  luid  Carrington  sadly  and 
somewhat  deflated. 


Wbile  no  other  sideliner  had  a 
perfect  practice  sejiion  attendance 
record,  there  have  been  many  loy-^ 
alists  who  by  now  are  pretty  well 
acquainted  with  Ed  Sutton,  Stew- 
art Pell,  Curtis  Hathaway  and 
the  other  lads  who  go  to  battle  this 
weekend. 

Dr.  W.  P.  Jacocks  is  one  of 
them.  He  is  a  retired  University 
alumnus  who  gets  rao.-t  of  his 
recreation  by  following  his  alma 
mateVs  sports  teams.  He,  too  is 
a  coat-and-tie  man.  like  Smith, 
and  is  a  familiar  figure  on  the 
practice    field    sidelines. 

University  Acting  President  Bill 
Friday  has  caught  the  big  scrim- 
mages and  Chancellor  Robert  Be 
House  has  been  down  almost  every 
afternoon,  after  knocking  off  from 
work.  He  has  been  the  mcot  ag- 
gressive of  the  practice  viewers, 
often  s.'traying  on  the  field  and 
ioining  in  the  team  huddles.  If  he 
doesn't  know  the  numbers  of  the 
key  plays  by  now.  he  is  not  as  ob- 
servant as  I  think  he  is. 


.© 


o^ 


WELCOME  BACK  TO  U.N.C. 

^\     '  ,  And  To 

MICHAEL'S  GRILL 

We  ser\'e  all  meals  and  snacks  at  reasonable  prices 


Chapel  Hill— A  Good  Place  To  Livel 


These  Carolina  Alumni  Liked  Chapel  Hill     So  Much 

They  Stayed! 


jmk 


^  «-J4M. 


And  stayed  we  did!  And  that's  not  the  half  of  it,  we're  going  to 
keep  right  on  staying!  We  love  Chapel  Hill  .  .  .  and  so  far,  Chapel 
Hill  loves  us!  You  might  say  it's  because  we  carry  the  finest  men's 
clothes  in  town,  or  you  might  say  it's  because  we  think  you,  the 
customer,  are  also  the  boss.  Bjjt  besides  those  things  above,  it's 
really  because  you  know  you're  ALWAYS  welcome  around  our 
way.  Just  tell  'em  youll  meet  'em  at  the  TOWN  &  CAMPUS, 
and  we'll  be  mighty  proud.  Come  on  in.  Stranger,  you  won't  be 
a  stranger  long! 


;..;^:»  V-*->»     t*,    .^^    f-     V     -.' 


WELCOME 
STUDENTS 


It  hasn't  been  too  many  years  ago  that  we  were 
students  too.  Therefore,  we  try  to  look  at  things 
from  the-  student's  viewpoint.  For  instance,  we  al- 
ways keep  up  with  the  fashion  in  student  men's 
clothing,  and  have  clothes  that  will  please  you  and 
keep  you  well-dressed.  Stop  by  today  and  see  for 
yourself  some  of  these  IVY  LEAGUE  Clothes  .  .  . 
FRANKLIN  Suits  and  Slacks  .  .  .  KEYS  &  LOCK- 
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Down  Dress  Shirts  by  MANHATTAN  .  .  .  and  Ivy 
League  Crewneck  Sweaters  ^y  BANTAMAC  and 
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A  Fine  Men's  Store  Carrying  Nationally  Known  Brands 

BOTANY  500  Suits  and  Sport  Coats  .  .  .  PHOENIX  Suits  .  .  .  GORDON  Clothes  .  .  .  BOTANY  BRANDS  Slacks  .  .  .  ALLIGATOR 
Top  Coats  .  .  .  BOTANY  Wool  Ties  .  .  .  HARRIS  tweed  Top  Coals  .  .  .  HARRIS  Tweed  Sport  Coats  .  .  .  FORSTMANN'S  Cash- 
mere Sweaters  .  .  .  Lamb's  Wool  Sweaters  by  TOWN  &  KING  OF  CALIFORNLV  .  .  .  DOBBS  Hats  .  .  .  EXETER  and  INTER- 
WOVEN Socks  .  .  .  MANHATTAN  Shirts  .  .  .  VAN  HEUSEN  Shirts  .  .  ..COOPER  and  HANES  UNDERWEAR  .  '.  .  PLEETA\'AY 
Pajamas  .  .  .  fflCKOK  Belts  .  .  .  Sport  Shirts  by  MANHATTAN,  VAN  HEUSEN.  and  BOT.\NY  .  .  .  HICKOK  Jewelry  .  .  . 
AFTER^IX  Formal  Wear  .  .  Tailoring  Line  by  HAAS  of  BAl^IMORE  .  .  .  Jackets  by  BANTAMAC  .  .  .  Swim  and  Sports 
Wear  by  GANTNER.  *• 


WELCOME  TO 
CHAPEL  HILL! 


Our  name  is  Town  &  Campus,  and  we  like  for  you 
to  think  that  whether  you  are  from  town  or  campus, 
you're  always  welcome  at  our  store.  Many  of  the 
students  make  it  their  headquarters  for  clothing 
and  just  congregating  down  town.  We'd  like  for 
you  to  do  the  same.  All  of  our  suits  have  that  good, 
clean,  fresh  look  that  helps  make  you  look  so  well. 
And  the  accessories  will  bring  out  the  finishing 
touch.  We  take  pride  in  listing  as  some  of  our  best 
customers  and  friends  .  .  .  the  townspeople  of  our 
Viliage.  After  you're  settled  down  in  your  new 
room,  apartment  or  home,  stop  in  to  see  us.  We'll 
try  to  please  you!  P.S.  Welcome  to  Chapel  Hill 
we  hope  you  like  it  as  much  as  we  do. 


CHAPEL  HILL,  NORTH  CAROLINA 


;».;'. 


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i 


20,  1956 


THURSDAY,  SEPTEMBER  20,  1956 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


PAGE  SEVEN 


n 


E.  Car- 
detached' 
^ing  sun 
id  others 

only 

1  the 

ended, 

tell    his 

Irrington 

six,   as 

time  in 

ting    for 

[his  first 

;pt.    1. 

)tten   to 

idly  and 


ir  had  a 

[endance 
lany  loy- 
itty  well 
Stew- 
ly  and 
kttk  this 

one    of 

liversity 

of    his 

lis   alma 

too   is 

Smith. 

on   the 

;nt  Bill 

scrim- 

|>bert   B^ 

5t  every 

)ff  from 

lost  ag- 

iewers. 

?ld    and 

;.  If  he 

of  the 

bt  as  ob- 


Men  Asked  To  Take  Care 
Of  New  Phones  In  Dorms 


I 


New   telephones  are   now   being    Committee  and  they  made  an  ad-   aware   of   how    fortunate   we   are 
mstalled  on   every  floor  of  most   justment  in  the  University  budget  Let's  not  abuse  this  privilege. 
oi  the  men's  dormitories.  ,  which  was  necessary  for  us  to  re 

.The  phones,  long  sought-after  by  j  eeive  these  new   telephones, 
student    government     here,    were  '■  \ 

RESPONSIBILITY 


made  available  through  an  adjust 
m»;;it  in  the  University  budget. 

Student  Body  President  Bob 
Vqung  last  summer  talked  with  J. 
S.  Benne'.t,  director  of  buildings 
aad  grounds  about  bhe  matter  and 
submitted  a  request  to  him  for 
the  new  phones. 

Bennett  turned  the  request  over 
to  the  State  Budget  Committee 
who  then  made  a  provision  for  it 
in  the  University  budget. 

-Ydung  this  week  issued  a  state- 
ment regarding  the  responsibility 
of   dormitory   residents 


"As  you  know,  they  are  now  be- 


"For  many  years  student  gov- 
ernment has  sought  to  have  tele- 
phones placed  on  every  floor  of 
the  dorms.  Now  we  have  achieved 

ithis 


Freshmen  Fellowship  Planned 
For  Tonight  In  Lenoir  Hall 

All  freshmen  have  been  invited  |  ing   will   be   available   for  exper- 
to  attend  a  supper  meeting  of  the ,  ience  in  public  speaking  and  lead- 
Freshmen    Fellowship,     a     group   er&hip. 
sponsored  by  the  YMCA,  today  at 
6:30  p.m.   in  Lenoir  Hall. 


mg  mstalled  on  every  'floor  of  ;  g^^^' student  will  b2  appreciative 
most  men  sdorm.tories.  This  places  3„^  considerate  of  this  additional 
added  responsibility  in  the  hands  .^rvice.  If  you  appreciate  your  new 
of  dormitory  residents.  ^Ve  must  j^^ne  then  show  it  by  taking  care 
not  damage  these  phones,    he  said 


If   we   do.    they   will   be   removed 
immediately. 

"It  was  necessary  for  us  to  re- 
move coin  boxes  from  all  tele- 
phones but  one  in  every  dormitory. 
During  the  past  year,  the  Universi- 
ty lost  as  much  as  $30  from  one 
telephone     because     of     students 


Two   other  social     events     are 
planned   for  September.  On   Sun- 
Students  planning  to  attend  have  !  day,   Sept.   23,   approximately   150 
been  asked  to  get  their  suppers  on    girfs   are   coming  to   the   campus 

«    the  main  floor  of  x^noir  hall  and  j  from  Averett  College  in  Danville, 

oal.  I  am  very  confident  that    then  bring  their  trays  to  the  South    Va.    A   reception   will  be  held   in 

Room.   A   short  business  meeting    Graham    Memorial.    Refrejhments 
will  be  held  after  supper  in  the  i  ^ill  be  served  and  a  combo  v^ill 

Library    Assembly    Room,    begin-    v^  „„  i.      ,  .  .  , 

be  on  hand  to  provide  music. 

On  Saturday,  Sept.  29,  the  Fel- 


Baby-Sitting  Strvices 
Available  On  Saturday 

Baby-sitting  services  will  be 
available  on  football  Saturdays 
from  1  to  5:15  p.m.  at  the  Victory, 
Village  Nur-^ry  to  children  of 
students,  faculty  and  University 
employees.  ■ 

Only  phiJ-^^oa   seven   years   and , 
und«r  will  be  accepted.  The  mini- 
num  charge  will    be     $1.50    per, 
child  for  the  first  child,   and  $1 
for   each    additional    child    from '. 
the  .same  family.  The  charges  are 
for  the  entire  afternoon.  i 


Planetarium  Shows  Exceeded 
Expectations  This  Summer 


of  it."  Young  concluded. 


The  length  of  North  Carolina 
from  east  to  west  is  greater  than 
any  state  east  of  the  Mississippi 
River. 


ning  approximately  at  6  p.m.  andj 
I  lasting   until  6:45   p.m.  I 

i  The  fellowship  program  for  this  |  'o^^^hip  group  will  go  to  Danville 
y«ar  will  be  a  varied  one  and  will !  ^or  %  dance  with  the  Averett 
include  socials,  dapcej  and  dis- '  girls.  Final  plans  for  these  social 
cussion  groups,  acocrding  to  an  events  will  be  made  at  the  meet- 
announcement.    Leadership    train- '  ing  tonight. 


Kannapolis,  N.  C.  has  the  largest 
towel  mills  in  the  world. 


Public  interest  in  the  Morehead 
Planetarium  here  this  summer  ex- 
ceeded aM  expectation,  according 
to  Manag:.  A.  J.  Jenzaro. 

More  than  7,835  peisons  saw 
"Mars,  Planet  of  My^rtery."  More 
than  300  peered  at  the  lusty  red 
planet  thrcmgh  the  telescope  atop 
the  Planetarium.  j 

Jenzano  says  the  interest  evi-, 
denced  this  summer  is  attributable : 


to  Mars'  bein^  in  its  most  favorable 
viewing  po^'.tion  in  17  years. 

Two  Planetarium  patrons  came 
all  the  way  from  Asheville  to 
Chapel  Hill  solely  to  see  the  dem- 
onstration and  to  look  through 
the  telescope.  The  weather  being 
unfavorable  for  viewing  on  the 
night  .they  arrived,  the  couple 
stayed  over  till  the  next  day  to 
get  a  look  at  Mars. 


in   taking 

care    of   the    phones.    He    warned  cheating  then   with   long  distance ' 

against    damaging  them   as   "they  ^^"'''-  ^'^  cannot  have  this  happen  j 

■   "^  •    •  during  the  coming  year,"  he  said. 


will  be  removed  immediately"   in 
that  event. 

His  complete  statement  is  as  fol- 
lows: 

"First,  let  me  say  that  without 
the  cooperation  of  Mr.  J.  S.  Ben- 
nett, director  of  buildings  and 
grounds,  we  would  not  be  enjoying 
the  privilege  of  a  telephone  on 
every  floor  of  the  men's  dormito- 
ries. After  conferring  with  Mr.  Ben- 
nett this  summer,  he  took  action 
immediately.  I  submitted  a  request 
to  him  for  the  new  telephones  that 
I  thought  we  could  use. 

"When  he  received  this  request, 
he  referred  it  to  the  state  Budget 


"The  coin-box  phones  are  now 
in  a  private  booth  for  our  conven- 
ience for  making  long  distance 
calls.  If  it  is  found  that  students 
continue  to  cheat  the  company, 
then  the  coin-box  phones  will  be 
placed  in  a  hallway  in  a  most  con- 
spicuous place.  I  urge  each  student 
to  cooperate  and  be  fair  in  using 
these  facilities.  If  a  few  students 
cheat,  then  all  of  us  must  suffer. 

"Another  reminder  is  that  we 
are  very  fortunate  not  to  have  to 
pay  for  local  calls.  On  any  other 
campus  it  costs  lOtf  to  call  from 
one  dormitory  to  another.  Please  be 


FOR  THE 

Ultimate 


IN 


Enjoyment  and  Relaxation 


VISIT  CHAPEL  HILL'S 
NEWEST  AND  BEST 


The  Tempo  Room  j 


ANY  WAY  YOU 
LOOK  AT  IT... 

You  Can 
Get  Clipped 

FOR  LESS 
AT 


HOURS  9-5:30 
MONDAY-SATURDAY 


Graham  Memorial 
Barber  Shop 

IN  THE 
BASEMENT 

OF  V      ^ 

GM         ^ 

Haircuts  Are 
Just  85^      • 


GRAHAM  MEMORIAL  BARBER  SHOP 


USED  TEXT? 


NOVEL? 


CHILDREN'  BOOK? 


THE 

INTIMATE 

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BREAKFAST  WITH  BOYD"  7-9-  ^. 

WAKE  UP  TO  GOOD  MUSIC-THE 
CORRECT  TIME  AND  A  CALENDAR 

OF  CAMPUS  AND  COMMUNITY  HAPPENINGS 


2  WESTINGHOUSE 
POCKET  RADIOS 


FREE 


WESTINGHOUSE 


Hank  Cheney— '54 


'MOSTLY  MUSIC"  10-11:30- 
AND  A  LITTLE  CHATTER.  INTER- 
LUDE" 1-2  P.M.-MUSIC  OF  THE 
MASTERS 


Barry  Clark— 58 
Ed  Myers- 58 


•^ 


PAGE  EIGHT 


THE  OAILV  tar  heel 


THURSDAY,  SEPTEMBER  20,  195* 


Passbooks  For 
Students'  Wives 
Go  On  Sale 

students  at  the  University  who 
have  wives  living  in  Chapel  Hill 
are  entitled  to  purcha^^  season 
athletic  books  for  their  wives  at 
the  special  rate  of  $10,  according 
to  an  announcement  from  the  UNC 
Sports  Publicity  Office. 

These  b^aks  will  admit  bearers 
to  all  athletic  events  at  home  to 
which  student  may  go.  They  are 
now  on  sale  at  the  ticket  office  in 
Woollen  Gymnasium  and  can  be 
picked  up  by  students-  as  soon  as 
they  have  registered.  It  may  be 
necessary  for  the  student  to  pre- 
sent some  evidence  that  his  wife 
is  residing  in  Chapel  Hill. 


Greensboro  Minister  To 
Speak  At  Y-Nite  Tonight 


Dr.  John  Redhead,  miniiter  of 
the  First  Presbyterian  Church  of 
Greensboro  .will  speak  at  the  first 
Y-Nite  of  the  new  school  year  to- 
night at  7  in  Hill  Hall. 

Also  on  the  program  will  be 
Dave  Davis  and  "His  Boys,"  a 
novelty  singing  group,  and  the 
Y-Nite  mixed  chorus,  led  by  Jean 
Vavoulio.  The  chorus  has  been  as- 
sembled especially  for  the  Y-Nite 
programs  scheduled  throughout 
the  year. 

Plans  for  the  programs  began 
last  year  with  emphasis  on  attract' 
ing  a  wider  cross  section  of  Car- 
olina students.  According  to  Miss 
Nancy   Shuford,  Y-Nite  chairman, 


the  plan  is  not  intended  to  offer 
a  substitute  for  church,  nor  will 
it  be  entirely  a  social  hour. 

Instead,  it  will  be  a  place  where 
the  entire  student  body  can  unite 
for  fellowship  and  good  times  as 
well  as  for  the  spiritual  uplift 
neces.ury  in  campus  life,  she  said. 

The  first  Y-Nite  was  held  last 
spring  with  Dr.  Bernard  Boyd, 
chairman  of  the  Religion  Dept.,  as 
the  featured  speaker.  A  picnic 
>upper  and  singing  by  George 
Hamilton  added  to  the  evening's 
activities. 


Orientation  Plays  Havbc 
With  'Gung  Ho'  Freshmen 


NOTHING  CHANGED 


0 


SAME  CLE  HARRY! 
SAME  OLE  MRS.  MAC! 
SAME  OLE  DRAFT  BEER! 
SAME  OLE  WONDERFUL  SANDWICHES! 
SAME  OLE  GOOD  MEALS! 


harry's 


ES£0  GAS 


Reg:  29.9  HT.  32.9 


CASH 


Whipple's  Esso  Service 

ACROrS   FROM  CHAPEL   HILL   NURSERY— DURHAM   HWY. 

BUY   EARLY— SAVE— NATIONALLY   ADVERTISED 

PERMANENT   ANTIFREEZE   $2.75   Gal. 


EXTRA! 


EXTRA! 


EXTRA! 


Bring  this  ad  and  receive  one  cent  per  gallon  off  on  gis,  and 
five  cents  per  quart  off  on  oil.  This  makes  ESSO  gas  28.9  and 
31.;.   Good   Sept.  20,  21,   24,  25,  &    26,   1956. 


f.^.V 


/linj^ 


Welcome 

Each  Of  You!! 


Our  Very  Best  Wishes  for  A  Wonderful  Year 

•  H.  FREEMAN  CLOTHES 
•  FLORSHEIM  SHOES 
GENUINE  IVY  STYLES 


For  The  Finest  In  Clothing  And 
Shoes  Visit  Us  At 


Julian' 


t  ftiiop 


Cardboord  To 
Hold  First 
Meet  Tonight 

The  UNC  Cardboard  will  hold 
its  organizational  meeting  tonight 
at  7  p.m.  in  the  Roland  Parlter 
Lounges  of  Graham  Memorial,  ac- 
cording to  W.  S.  Pate,  president. 

The  Cardboard  is  the  organiza- 
tion which  stages  displays-  during 
half-time  at  football  games.  Color 
slides  of  last  year's  stunts  will  be 
shown  at  the  meeting. 

The  program  for  the  evening 
will  also  feature  explanatory  talk.' 
by  the  president  and  by  the  three 
department  heads.  Functions  of 
the  departments  and  the  awards 
>(>stem  will  be  discussed. 

President  Pate  invited  every- 
one to  attend  "even  if  it  L-  for 
curiosity."  He  announced,  how- 
ever, that  applications  for  mem- 
bership in  the  Cardboard  will  be 
accepted  at  the  meeting,  and  that 
he  expects  that  the  membership 
quota  will  be  "more  than  met." 
Anyone  who  is  interested  in  join- 
ing is  reminded  to  bring  his  ath- 
letic passbook  with  him  to  the 
meeting. 

•  The  Cardboard  will  go  into  ac- 
tion Saturday  at  the  State  game, 
it  was  announced.  Anyone  inter- 
e  ted  in  working  on  this  week's 
program  has  been  asked  to  come 
bv  the  Cardboard  office,  second 
floor  of  Emerson  Stadium,  on 
Thursday  and  Friday  from  2  un- 
til 5  p.m. 


By  DOUGLAS   EISELE 

Orientation  at  the  eldest  state- 
supported  university  in  the  nation 
plays  havoc  with  energetic,  "gang 
ho"  freshmen. 

For,  by  week's  end,  the  average 
new  student  at  the  University  is  a 
pooped  out,  tired-legged  reminder 
of  a  17-year-old  in  his  first  week 
of  boot  camp. 

And  the  average  "Fredna  and 
Freddy  Freshman"  might  easily 
have  outwalked  many  a  soldier's 
14-mile  hike,  or  been  handed  more 
literature  than  civic  clubs  pick  up 
in  a  good  Sunday's  paper  drive. 

This  is  orientation.  It  is  a  once 
unthought-of,  now  necessary  prac- 
tice which  trains  the  new  student 
in  campus  life,  familiarizes  him 
with  the  outlay  of  educational  and 
other  buildings.  . 

And  it  is  a  period  in  which  fresh- 
men get  to  know  freshmen.  It  is 
such  a  conglomeration  of  events 
th^t  only  the  person  who  goes 
through  it  knows  what  it   is. 

With  it  comes  this  advice:  "Boys, 
have  fun  while  you  can.  Classes 
start  Thursday,  and  then  begins 
the  grind."  That  grim  reminder  us- 
ually soaks  in. 

At  ITNC  emphasis  is  centered  on 
the  student-inaugurated  and  main- 
tained honor  system  and  campus 
'•ode.  It  is  the  importance  of  these 
basic  traditions  that  is  made  clear 
to  eveVy  freshman. 

But  outside  of  orientation  activi- 
ties, new  students  get  to  really 
know  their  roommates  and  other 
freshmen  "down  the  hall."  They 
sit  late  into  the  night  to  joke,  to 
talk  .  .  .  and  to  complain. 

For  it  is  not  unusual  to  be  kept 
lyir?  awako  by  a  sinking  guitar 
on  th*>  one  side,  and  a  french  horn 
or  baritone  on  the  other.  Among 
the  manv  oersonalites  is  the  youns  : 
lover  with  tales  of  romanticisms  j 
over  the  nation.  | 

There  is  the  world  traveler  who  I 
tolls  of  buying  English  luggage  i 
while  on  a  trip  to  Hong  Konc.  tho  I 
politician  who  shakes  more  hands  j 
than  Kofauver  on  election  day,  and  | 
the  humor-filled  Dutchman  who  | 
brin<js  laughter  late  into  the  night,  i 

Mix  these  together,  add  a  dose 


A  MILLION  DOLLAR  DOUBLE-CROSS 
EXPLODES  IN 
LISBON! 


of  upturned  dormitory  rooms  and 
up  with  orientation  at  UNC  and 
homesick  students,  and  you'll  come 
up  with  orientation  at  UNC  and 
major  universities  across  the  na- 
tion. 


Picnic  For  Graduate 
Students  Is  Today 

The  Graham  Memorial  Activi- 
ties Board  i.*  sponsoring  a  picnic 
at  5:30  p.m.  Thursday  on  the  lawn 
behind  Mclver  Dormitory., 

All  new  graduate  studenta  and 
their  wives  have  been  invited. 
Two  hundred  and  fifty  students 
are  expetced  to  attend.  Miss  Lin- 
da Mann,  director  of  GMA^,  and 
Dan  Turner,  assistant  director  of 
OMAB,  are  in  charge  of  details. 

This  event  will  be  the  conclus- 
ion of  orientation  of  the  new  grad- 
uate studentii.  Tliis  is  the  first 
year  that  any  orientation  program 
has  been  set  up  for  .students  of  th« 
Graduate    School. 


Scholarship  Winner  Named 


GERALD  MAYO 

.  .  toins    scholarsiiip 


A  junior  student  from  Falkland, 
Pitt  County,  has  been  awarded  tbi 
second  annual  Burlington  In- 
dustries Scholarship  at  the  Uni- 
versity. 

The  student,  Gerald  Mack  Mayo, 
i'  among  nine  rising  juniors  in 
the  same  number  of  colleges  aiid 
universities  who  were  chosen  this 
yeajr  for  the  awards,  which  pro- 
vide $500  annually  during  the 
junior  and  senior  years. 

A  total  of  16  two-year  scholar 
ships  are  offered  by  the  Founda- 
tion under  thio-  program.  Seven 
awards  were  given  last  year. 

Selection  of   Mayo,  an   interna- 


tional relations  majoi*,  was  an- 
nounced by  Prof.  D.  D  Carroll,  un- 
til recently  chaiman  of  the  facul- 
ty committee  on  scholarships.    • 


TODAY 

There  Is  No  Might  Like  the 
AAight  of  Moby  Dick! 


lUCHARP,  Leo 
BaS£hart  G£KNr 

IKTMI 

JOHKjUJSTOn 

rmMucTioii  or  himun  Mtivmci 


JVlPBy  Dfcjc 


ca.M  •.Tfchnicolor 

Prices  This  Attraction 
Adults  65<-Chiidren  15^ 


MILTON  WELCOMES  YOU 
WITH  STARTING  SPECIALS 


Group  belts  including  elastic   repps  and  leather  backed   chailis, 

values  to  $3.50,  yours  for  $.99 

By   popular   demand   we   have   reduced   our   dacron/cotton   suits, 
the  poplins  and  the  baby  cords  from  $39.75  to  $27.99. 
Ivy  white  or  blue  oxford  button-downs — $4.50 
Ready  cuffed  cotton  baby  cord  slacks  for  only  $4.95 
Spasnoli  sweaters,  imported  from   Italy,  full  fashioned,  blend  of 
lambswool  and  angora,  values  to  $25.00,  V-necks  and  long  tleeve 
polo  sweathers,  all   reduced  to  $12.50.   Entire  stock  short  sleeve 
Ivy  button-down  shirts  reduced.  Large  assortment  of  wool  flannel 
slacks,  all  ivy  model  —  from  $13.95. 

Handsewn  loawers  in  rich  dark  brcwn  or  black,  leather  soles  11.95 
Cordovan  loafers,  fully  leather  lined,  gugaranteed  not  to  rip,  or 

loafers  will  be  replaced $20.00 

Worsted  flannel  suits  with  neat  black  stripes;  imported  tweed 
-Shetland  suits  in  black/brown  or  olive/black — all  with  rich  un- 
usual foulard   linings  $59.95 

For  an  exclusive  approch  to  sportswear,  you  must  see  our  dif- 
ferent array  of  sport  jackets  , from  $42.50 

BILLS  MAILED  HOME 

Milton's  Ciothinq  Cupboard 

163  East  Franklin  St. 


. 


THE  LADY 
MILTON  SHOP 


That  different  sportswear  shop 
in  Milton's  Clothing  Cupfcoard 
Welcomes  you  to  view  the  new 
fall   collection.  * 

Just  received  complete  shipr 
ment  of  new  colors  m  pullover^ 
and  cardigans  in  famous  Braenv 
9r  cashmeres — from   $29.50. 

Rich  asortment  of  ivy  worsted 
flannel  and  lightweight  tweeo 
aKirrs  in  ivy  model  ...  at  $12.95; 
New  group  of  those  irresistibi* 
Lady  Hathaway  Shirts  tronf 
$5.95. 

Ivy  model  shirts  in  blue,  black, 
red  or  helie  —  $5.95. 

I 
Very    complete    assortment    of 
jackets      in     cottons,     tianneis, 
tweeds,  from  $9.95. 

Group  Spagnoli  Italian  sweaters, 
also  soiled  Bernhara  Mirmon  1 
cashmeres  at  40%  off  regular 
price. 

Men's      imported      jrew     neck 

sweaters  in  ladies  sixes — $13.95.' 

BILLS  MAILED  HOME 


MILTON'S 
Clothing  Cupboard 

163    E.    Franklin    St. 


>^%: 


}  ' 


The  staff-  of  the  U.  S.  Public 
Health  Service,  the  Children's  Bu- 
reau and  other  agencies  of  the 
U.  S.  Department  of  Health,  Edu- 
cation and  Welfare  participate  in 
the  teaching  program  of  the  Uni- 
versity   School   of   Public    Health. 


CUSSFIEDS 


AVON    CALLING    —    T.    V.    AD- 

vertising  rings  the  bell  and 
helps  you  sell  Avon.  Earn  your 
Christmas  money  now.  Write 
Avon,  Camellia  Dr.,  Fayetteville, 
N.  C. 

LOST:  ONE  WALLET.  FINDER 
please  return  to  James  Harry 
Menzel,  DU  House,  East  Rose- 
mary StreeL 

WOULD  LIKE  TO  GET  IN  TOUCH 
with  daily  commuter  to  Chapel 
Hill  from  Burlington.  Interest- 
ing proposition.  Call  5-8253. 
Burlington. 


WITHOUT 


A 


STRAINED  SMILE 


We  Say 


4.>. 


v< 


Welcome! 


tG^  a  nmytmte 

WE  CARRY  A  COMPLETE  LINE  OF  SHOES 
SUITABLE  FOR:     . 
DRESS  -  WORK  -  LEISURE 
ALSO  MILITARY  SHOES  FOR  ALL  THE 

ROTC  Students 


And  if  "Ole  Man  Wear" 
is  getting  you  down, 
bring  us  your  problem. 
Our  modern  sh6e  repair 
department  will  quickly 
solve  it. 


.'V 


LACOCK'S 

E.  Franklin  St. 


.J";^ 


,?"•«?(.  «i|riU:f.  Uiu-;.-, 

■»«'i.';r<:i,Ti.'.  ^ 


■  ,M. 


,■      P 


.        ^  So  your  summer  was  a  fantasy  of 

sunshine  and  swimming.  Or  perhaps  it 
was  marked  by  hectic  weeks  at  camp.  Or 
'    .v   r*  1     maybe,  in  your  special  memory  book  you've  re- 
corded moonlikht  and  the  beach.  Perhaps  your  summer 
meant  bright  flowers  and  happiness  ...  or  perhaps  you  re- 
member broken  romances  and  rain.  Maybe  your  summer  meant 
hard  work  ...  or  colorful  travel  .  .  .  travel  to  the  corner  store  or 
across  the  continent  or  across  the  sea.  No  matter  how  the  summer 
influenced  your  outlook..  .  .  whether  it  gave  you  a  touch  of  con- 
tinental ways,  contentment,  bitterness,  achievement  or  frustra- 
tion ...  a  whole  new  world  of  experience  will  be  yours  in  Chapel 
Hill.  And  J.  B.  Robbins  takes  this  opportunity  to  welcome  y&u. 
Without  a  false,  strained  smile:  Welcome,  one  and  a!!. 


.    :iV  ' 


.     .1 


of  Chapel  Hil 


U.«.C.  ■  LtBRARt 
SERIALS  DEPT. 
BOX  870 
CHAPEL  HILL,  N.C. 


Pep  Rally  To  Kick  Off  Football  Activity  Tonight 


WEATHER 

Mostly  tunny  and  cool,  with  •*- 
ivccted  high  of  70. 


VOL.  LVIIi,     NO.  2 


2rar  Heel 


GRAHAM 

Hit   dtparfure   presents   several 
problems.  See  editorial,  page  2. 


Complete  (/P)  Wire  Service 


CHAPEL  HILL,  N.  C,  FRIDAY,  SEPTEMUER  21,  1956 


Offices   in   Graham   Memorial 


FOUR  PAGES  THIS  ISSU6 


Parade  Will  Start 
At  8  p.m.  At  Gym 


A  parade  and  pep  rally  tonight  I  unless  the  students  show  a  desire 
will    precede    tomorrows    opening    to  continue,  Bynum  said. 
football    game    with    N.    C.    State  i      All  the  cheerleadero-  have  been 
^^^'  I  working    on    the    arangements    of  i 

Head    cheerleader    Jim    Bynum ,  the  night's  program.  Bynum  said,  j 


said  the  parade  would  start  at  8 
p.m.  in  front  of  Woollen  Gym. 
Bynum  plans  to  lead  the  parade 
through  the  campui.  circling  past 
all  the  dorms,  and  winding  back 
to  the  intramural  field  beside  the 
gym,  where  the  pep  rally  will  get 
under  way  about  8:30  p.m. 

The  cheerleaders,  riding  in  con- 
vertibles, along  with  other  stu- 
dents in  cars,  walking  people,  peo- 


The  cheerleaders  will  make  their 
first  appearance  of  the  year  be- 
for  the  entire  student  body  tonight. 
They  are  Misses  Mary  Lee  Breece, ; 
Gwen  Heinzen.  Patsy  Poythress, 
Amy  Morje,  Val  Von  Ammon, 
Shirley  Dees,  and  Larry  Ford,  Tom 
Davis.  Frankie  Black,  Harold  Wil- 
liamson, Pete  Julia,  Miss  Joan 
Wender  and  Bynum. 

"I   hope    the  student   body   will 


people  in  West  Raleigh  can  hear 
that  we  mean  business,"  Bynum 
said. 


pie  on  bikes,  and  possibly  part  of  i  t"*""    out   en    masse    so    that    the 
the   band    will    be   in    the   parade, 
BjTium  said. 

The  cheerleaders  will  unveil 
several  new  cheers,  on  which  they 
have  been  practicing  since  Sept. 
10.  j 

Exact  details-  were  incomplete  ■ 
last  night  but  Bynum  said  the  pro- 
gram will  be  completed  early  to- 
day. The  rally  will  last  for  about 
an  hour  after  the  parading  stu- 
dents reach   the  intramural  field, 


Sorority 
Rush  Week 
To  Begin 


Sorority  Ra:*h  will  begin  formal 
ly  today  w  ith  the  Pan  Hellenic  Tea  | 
in  Graham  Memorial.  I 

By  attending  this  tea  a  girl  in-i 
dicates  her  intention  of  partici-| 
pating  in  sorority  rtiehing,  accord-  i 
ing  to  Miss  Harriet  Lewis  of  the 
Pan-Hellenic  Council.  All  girls  at- 
tending this  tea  automatically  re- 
ceive invitation  from  the  six  so- 
rorities on  campuc"  for  the  first 
round  of  parties  Monday.  Failure 
to  attend  the  tea  eliminates  a  girl 
from  rush. 

Girls  wishing  to  participate  in 
rush  and  unable  to  attend  the  tea 
should  notify  the  office  of  the 
Dean  of  Women,  Miss  I^wis  said. 
Tea  invitation  time?  are  as  fol- 
lows: 7  p.m..  Smith,  Carr,  Nurses' 
dormitories;  7:30  p.m..  Alderman; 
8  p.m.,  Mclver,  and  8:30  p.m., 
Spencer. 

The  Pan-Hellenic  Council  has 
urged  that  this  schedule  be  strict- 
ly followed.  At  the  tea,  girls  will 
be  introduced  to  Miss  Martha 
Decker,  advisor  to  the  council; 
members  of  the  council;  the  soror. 
ity  presidents;  and  the  sorority 
rush  chairmen. 


Students  Invited  To 
Ball  In  Rock  Hill 

The  Winthrop  Recreation  Assn. 
of  Rock  Hill,  5.  C.  has  invited  the 
Univ€r..':ty  student  body  to  its 
"Bermuda  Ball"  on  Saturday,  Sep- 
tember 9.  in  the  Peabody  Gym- 
nasium In  Rock  Hill. 

Student  President  Bob  Young 
received  the  invitation  this  week. 
The  ball  will  be  from  8  to  11:45 
p.m. 


Money  For  Dorms 
To  Be  Authorized 
Here  Tomorrow 

By  CLARKE  JONES 

Contracts  for  the  building  of  the  three  mens  dormitories  and  an  addition  to  Spencer 
uoniens  dormitory  have  not  yet  been  awarded. 

A  ,spe(  iai  meeting  of  the  Consolidated  U  niversity  Board  of  Trustees  will  be  held  here 
toincvrow  at    ii:^;o  a.m.  to  formallv  authoriz-  .$2  mjllion  for  the  new  buildings  here. 

Iloldiiio  up  the  routract-n^vardinq;.  acco  din'^  to  Iniversity  Business  Manager  Claude 
Vca^iuc,  are  the  arrhitcctural  plans.  "The  architects  (George  Watts  Carr'  and  Raymond 
Weeks,  both  of  Dm  ham)  are  working  on  them  all  r.-long."  he  said. 


Frat  Men  Plan  Protest 
Against  Parking  Bans 


UNC  Students  Wait  Fcr  Drop-Add  Processing 

Students  wait  wearily  in  line  to  get  their  class  schedules  changed  at  tha  Central  Records  Office  in 
Hanes  Hall.  Drop-adJ  closas  tomorrow  at  noon.  Studants  wirh  drop-add  problems  hava  been  urged  to 
report  to  the  Hanes  Hai!  basement  as  soon  as  possi  j|e  with  the  proper  drop-add  forms.  Freshman  and 
sophomores  must  obtain  the  forms  from  their  advisors.  Upper  classmen  are  required  to  have  slips  from 
their  advisors  and  the  dean  of  their  respectiva  schools.  (Photo  by  Truman  Moora) 


Campus 
Seen 


Students  loalking  past  Grahani 
Merr.nrial  vnth  squirrel  sitting  on 
shoulder. 

*  *  :; 

Soccer  team  stopping  practice 
as  elderly  lady  walks  across  '"•«!• 
die  of  soccer  field. 


Three  Coeds  Named  For  UNC's 
Representatives  in  Annual 
CU  Queen  Contest  Tomorrow 


The  Tau  Epsilon  Phi  Fraternity 
plans  to  protest  the  parking  regu- 
lations imposed  by  the  Chapel  Hill 
aldermen     last     summer     banning 
I  parking  on   Rosemary  Street. 

The    fraternity    mm    who    are 

temporarily  being  allowed  to  park 

at  the  old  Institute  of  Government 

I  building,  feel  that  the  regulations 

I  leave   them   "in    the   midcHe"    and 

I  '"in  a  hole." 

I      The   Sigma    Alpha   Epsilon   Fra- 
1  tornity,  which   is   affected   by   an- 


DiSCRIMINATiON 

"It's  just  plain  discrimination 
against  fral  men,"  according  to 
Charlie  Tompkins. 
"We  feel  Lhat  the  main  problem," 
Jack  Jones  said,  "is  to  have  to 
come  back  from  classes  every  day 
to  use  that  fluid  we  have  to  clean 
little  blue  marks  from  our  tires." 


"It  takes  a  good  while  to  dra\^ 
up  plans.  As  .soon  a.' they  are  ready 
they  will  be  reviewed,"  he  said. 
It  will  take  about  "a  month  or  six 
weeks"  to  let  the  contract  to  bid- 
ders. 

The  actual  construction  of  the 
buildings  will  not  start  probably 
for  a  couple  of  months,  Teague 
jaid. 

The  dormitories  were  proposed 
last  fall  after  a  request  for  a  i2 
million  government  loan  was 
granted  by  the  Federal  Govern- 
ment's Housing  and  Finance  Agen- 


The  Pi  Kappa  Alpha  Fraternity    cy.   Teague   made   th   request   un- 


expresses  the  views  that  the  regu- 
lations leave  frat  men  with  no 
place   to  turn   and  that   frat  men 


Three  Carolina  Coeds  have  l)een 
selected  as  UNC's  contestants  in 
the  race  for  Consolidated  Uni- 
versity Queen. 


news 

in 
hnei 


'Ruby  Gentry' 
Will  Be  Shown 
Free  Tonight 

"Ruby  Gentry,"  the  first  of  the 
new  movies  in  the  Graham  Mem- 
orial Activities  Board  Free  Film 
Series,  will  be  shown  twice  to- 
night in  Carroll  ,Hall,  at  8  and 
10  p.m. 

According  to  (}fficial8  in  charge, 
the  film  is  a  story  of  a  "beautiful, 
passionate  woman  of  the  swamp- 
lands of  ea^'tern  North  Carolina 
who  fights  the  easy  way  for  a 
position  in  a  community  of  aris- 
tocrats." Starring  are  Jennifer 
Jones  and  Charlton  Heston.  It's 
a  movie  "that's  a  must  for  any 
patriotic  Carolinian,"  they  said. 

No  smoking  will  be  allowed 
dtiring  the  presentations. 


INFIRMARY 


These  in  the  lnflrn»ary  yattar- 
day  included: 

Clay  F.  Church;  William  G. 
Lynch,  Earl  T.  Ki'lcman,  Donald 
C.  AAcMlllion,  Claudius  L.  Carl- 
Ion,  Alvin  W.  Smith,  Harry  M. 
Giles  Jr.,  Michaal  P.  Cap,  Harry 
L.  Ellsrta  Jr.,  Harcourt  A.  Mor- 
gan III. 


FRANKFORT,  KY.  {JP)  —  Har- 
ry Lee  Waterfield,  acting  gov- 
ernor of  Kentucky,  said  last  night 
a  decijion  on  whether  to  with- 
draw the  National  Guard  from 
the  towns  of  Sturgis  and  Clay 
will  depend  upon  what  action  j 
courts  take  in  school  integration 
suits.  This  means  the  troops  will 
be  on  hand  at  least  until  early 
next  week. 

LONDON  iJP)  —  Twelve  of  the 
nations  attending  the  meeting  on 
the  Suez  Canal  in  London  have 
accepted  the  plan  for  a  canal  us- 
er/ association.  Sources  close  to 
the  big  three  say  they  think  all 
of  the  nations  except  Pakistan, 
and  possibly  Sweden,  will  adopt 
a  dccaration  of  intention  to  set 
up  the  association.  The  London 
conference  ends   today. 

In  Washington  the  State  De- 
partment invited  10  American 
siiip  pilots  to  come  in  and  talk 
things  over.  The  pilots  have  ap- 
plied for  passports  to  go  to  Egypt 
to  work  at  the  Suez  Canal.  Ac- 
cording to  the  State  Department, 
there  is  no  restriction  on  their 
going,  but  it  feels  they  ought  to 
know  the  tensions  they  would 
walk  into. 

Meanwhile,  in  Cairo  the  cap- 
tain of  a  British  rms  :jhip  said 
yesterday  that  Egyptian  recruit- 
ing agents  lured  away  16  of  his 
crew  members  with  promises  of 
high-paid  jobs  in  Egypt.  The  cap- 
tain said  he  had  to  speed  out 
to  sea  from  a  port  in  Libya  to 
keep  other  crew  member.?  from 
deserting.  None  of  the  deserters 
was  British. 


UNC  Campus  Is 
Used  For  Civil 
Rights  Filming 

The  Carolina  campus  was  the 
scene  yesterday  for  the  filming 
of  a  picture  by  the  Fund  for  the 
Republic,  an  organization  sponscr- 
sored    by   the   Ford   Foundation. 

The  film  deals  with  ciail  rights 
and  UNC  was  chose  nfor  a  sub 
ject  o'ince  integration  has  been  in 
effect  here  since  1951  with  no 
violent  opposition  as  there  is  in 
some  southern  schools.  This  year 
13  Negros  have  enrolled. 

The  film  deals  with  civil  right.'; 
and  UNC  was  cho.sen  for  a  sub- 
tury  Studios  of  Raleigh,  will  show 
interior  and  exterior  scenes.  Ap- 
proximately 600  feet  of  film, 
which  would  last  18  to  20  minuie.<: 
if  nothing  is  cut  out.  was  shot.  The 
film  will  be  made  available  for 
CBS-TV,  NBC-TV,  and  all  major 
network    syndicates. 


They   are    Mi.*3    Lucinda    Holder 
ness    of    Spencer    Dormitory,   Mis 
Jane   Welch   representing   tiie   Chj 
Omega  Sorority  and  MLss  Jane  Lit 
tie    representing    the    Pi    Beta    Phi 
Sorority. 

The  CU  Queen  will  be  selectei 
;rom  nine  contestants,  three  from 
Wrvman's  College  in  Greensboro 
three  from  N.  C.  State  in  Raleigh 
and  the  three  from  UNC 

She  will  be  crowned  at  a  aance 
'n  Woollen  Gym  after  the  game 
sponsored  by  the  Order  of  th"- 
Holy  Grail.  All  nine  contestants 
^«ill  be  presented  at  the  halftime 
of   the    football    game   tomorrow. 

Other  girls  in  the  contest  to 
select  the  3  *o  represent  Carolina 
were:  Mi.-fscs  Dickey  Pickerrell. 
Kappa  Delta;  Phil  Kraftt,  Mclver; 
Pat  Dillion.  Alderman:  Ann  Smith. 
Alpha     Gamma     Delta:     Barbara 

Subscriptions 

Students,  faculty  members  and 
tcwnspeople  who  wish  to  con- 
tinue receiving  the  Daily  Tar  Heel 
by  mail  have  been  asked  to  notify 
Dale  Staley,  subscription  man- 
ager, at  9-3361.  Rates  are  $4  per 
srhool  year.  Students  who  wish 
to  send  the  Daily  Tar  Heel  home 
can  do  so  at  the  same  rate. 


other  phrase  of  the  regulations  re-  i  keep  the  town  in  busines  and  are 


'  'ohnson.  Car  and  Marion  Dickens, 
Smith. 

All  nine  contestants  in  the  CU 
^ueen  contest  will  receive  gifts 
Vom  a  local  merchant  and  a  cor- 
age  from  a  local  florist. 

CU  Day  is  sponjored  by  the 
Consolidated  University  Student 
Council,  which  will  meet  Saturday 
Tiorning  with  the  University  Trus. 
tees  in  the  Morehead  Building.  The 
reception  after  the  game  is  also 
sponsored    by    the    Council. 

The  reception  will  be  in  front 
)f  Graham  Memorial  immediately 
'ollowing  the  football  game. 

Approximately  1,000  WC  girls 
•»re  expected  to  come  for  the  game 
and   other  CU  Day  activities. 


stricting  parking  on  Columbia  I 
Street,  is  backing  up  the  protest  I 
very  strongly.  These  frat  men  feel  I 
they  are  being  placed  at  the  mercy  ! 
of  the  town.  Several  men,  having 
talked  wth  some  townsmen,  indi- 
cate that  the  regulations  are  meant 
to  apply  pressure  on  the  Univer- 
sity to  build  its  own  parking  lot.s. 


Lanner  of  SAE.  "No  one  uses  the 
space  except  fraternity  men;  it's 
ridiculous  to  make  a  guy  move  his 
car  when  no  one  else  is  using  the 
space.  I  think  W?  just  a  reason  to 
keen  cars  away  from  school." 

"It  makes  things  crowded  and 
harder  on  frat  men:  they  took 
awav  another  lot,  you  know.  I  just 
don't  like  it,"  Dudley  Baird  said. 


der  authorization  of  the  1955  Gen- 
eral  Assembly. 

There  was  only  one  men's  dorm- 
itory— to  be  built  behind  Kessing 
Pool — to  start  with  and  would 
have  housed  over  700  students. 
Construction  was  expected  to 
have  begun  on  it  and  the  additioa, 
which  will  iwovide  for  spptoiA- 
mately  75  coed.s,  shortly  after 
Christmas,    1955. 

Later  it  wa^  decided  three 
should  be  built  with  space  for 
a  total  of  800-650  students.  Thia 
protesting  individually.  They  hope '  caused  the  architects'  plans  to  be 
to  ease  the  problem  by  building  I  changed.  The  bidding  and  con- 
their  own  parking  lot,  for  v/hich  struction  was  also  put  off. 
some  money  has  already  been  ap-  The  special  meeting  of  the 
propriated.  j  Board  of  Trustee.^  was  called  for 

A  few  other  groups  plan  to  meet !  the    formality    of    authorizing    the 


due  a  little  consideration.  j 

The  Alpha  Kappa  Psi  Fraternity  j 
has  taken  a  mild  approach  to"  the  j 
parking  regulatioDS  because  it  has  | 
its  own  parking  lot;  but  various ' 
members  feel  it'?  -»  little  incorj- 
venient,  although  they  plan  no  pro- , 
test.  i 

The   PI    Beta    Phi   Sorority    feels  ' 


"I  feel   it   is  unjust,"  says  Mike    left  "in  a  hole."  The  girls  plan  no 


formal  protest,  although  a  few  are 


to  discuss  the  regulations;  so,  by 
no  means,  is  this  parking  situation 
settled  yet! 


INTRAMURAL  OFFICIALS 

Students  majoring  in  physical 
education  are  needed  as  intramural 
officials  for  tag  football.  Those  in- 
terested have  been  asked  to  come 
to  301  Woollen  Gym  on  Tuesday  at 
4  p.m.  „ 


YDC  Mem'oers  Solicit  For  Members 

^mbers  of  the  Carolina  Young  Democrats  Club  are  shown  above 
soliciting  students  to  join  their  club.  From  tha  Stevenson-Kefauver 
signs  they  w  using,  they  seem  to  be  taking  advantage  of  the  com- 
inf  year,  ^Photo  by  Truman  Moo'c) 


Playmakers  To 
Give  Program 
Here  Today 

"Adventures  in  Playmaking"  is 
he  program  scheduled  for  the 
Playmakers  Theatre  tonight  at  7:30 
•'clock,  to  introduce  informally  The 
Carolina  Playmakers,  dramatic 
?roup  at  the  University. 

Samuel  Selden,  chairman  of  the 
Department  of  Dramatic  Art  and 
Playmaker  director,  will  give  his 
annual  illustrated  lecture,  includ- 
ing a  history  of  the  famous  Uni- 
versity theatre. 

Members  of  the  department  will 
tell  about  its  history  and  that  of 
the  Playmakers,  now  entering 
their  39th  season  of  playj.  Sel- 
den V  ill  announce  plans  for  the 
coming  season's  activities  and 
describe  types  of  participation 
open   to  everyone. 

The  name  "Playmaker"  is  given 
not  only  to  members  of  the  de- 
partment and  stud^ntj"  of  Dramat- 
ic Art,  but  to  everyone  who  par- 
ticipates in  a  Playmaker  produc- 
tion, all  of  which  are  open  to  the 
public. 

Six  productions  planned  for  the 
1956-57  season  are  "Anastasia," 
recently  given  on  Broadway;  "An- 
drocles  and  the  Lion,"  by  Shaw: 
O'Neill's  "Desire  Under  the  Elms": 
the  musical  comedy,  "Brigadoon": 
a  new  play  in  it.*  first  production: 
and  "Peer  Gynt"  by  Henrik  Ibsen. 


October  1  Is  Deadline 
For  Student  Insurance 


funds.  Teague  explained  the  loan 
has  already  been  approved  but 
the  trustees  have  to  formally 
adopt    a    resolution    adopting    it. 

The  loan  will  be  paid  back  in 
30  years,  Teague  hopes,  from  sur- 
oluses  received  from  a  $30  increase 
in  dormitory  room  rent  per  per- 
c-on.  The  increase  went  into  ef- 
fect last  fall. 


CAMP  PICTURUES 

Anyone  wishing  to  order  a 
freshman  camp  picture  may  do  so 
at  the  YMCA  office  through  next 
Monday.  The  charge  for  each  pic- 
ture is  $1.5Q. 


October  1  has  been  set  as  the 
deadliine  lor  application.?  for  stu- 
dent insurance. 

The  cost  oi  the  policy  is  $9.50 
a  year.  .According  to  Ray  Jefferies, 
assistant  to  the  dean  of  student 
affairs,  the  premiums"  cost  has 
dropped  jince  last  year. 

Insured  students  will  be  cover- 
ered  fo  up  to  $1000,  and  for  up 
to  $200  for  surgical  expenses.  If 
the  student  dies,  his  beneficiaries 
will   receive  $1000, 

Jefferies  said,  "I  think  this  in- 
surance plan  payed  off  for  us  last 
year."  He  pointed  out  that  the  in- 
surance comes  to  less  than  80 
cents  a  month. 

The  insurance  coverage  is  for  a 
12-month  period,  including  the 
period.'  when  students  are  travel- 


while  they  are  on  vacation.  Jef- 
feries said  last  year  there  were 
not  many  claims  but  during  the 
summer  the  company  payed  on 
policies  several  times. 

Applications  for  the  insurance 
are  available  at  the  Y  and  at 
Graham  Memorial. 

The  policy  is  made  available 
through  the  Pilot  Life  Insurance 
Company,  Raleigh.  Jefferies  ex- 
plained that  student?  here  will 
pay  a  slightly  higher  premium 
than  students  at  State  Ccl'ege  be- 
cause of  the  surgical  coverai?e. 

He  reminded  students  who  al 
ready  hold  policies  and  are  eligi- 
ble to  receive  payments  for  claims 
mu..'t  file  claims  with  the  com- 
pany. Blanks  are  available  at  his 


ing  to  and  from  Chapel  Hill,  and    office  and  the  Infirmary. 


Governor  'Drops  Drawers'  To 
Advertise  N.  C.  Products 


RALEIGH,  SEPT.  20  {JP)— Gov. 
Hodges  will  do  a  lot  to  advertise 
North    Carolina's    products. 

He'll  take  a  shower  wearing  a 
native  North  Carolina  suit  or 
even  drop  his  pantj  slightly  to 
show  off  Tar  Heel  made  drawers. 

Hodges  is  shown  in  these  two 
poses  in  a  seven-picture  layout  in 
the  new  issue  of  Life  Magazine. 
The  Governor  .-aid  he  got  an  ad- 
vance copy  last  night  and  "pro- 
ceeded to  hide  it  under  the  pil- 
lows so  Mrs.  Hodges  wouldn't 
see   it." 

Mrs.  Hodges  finally  did  see  the 
pictures,  he  said,  "but  she  didn't 
make  any  outcry"  when  d-he  saw 
the  pose  of  the  governor  standing 
next  to  his  bed  with  his  pants 
dropped  slightly  adjusting  a  pair 
of  "indigeaous"  drawers  made  at 


Asheboro. 

A  girl  reporter  wanted  to 
'enow  just  what  are  "indigenous" 
drawers*. 

Hodges  replied,  "they  are 
drawers  that  stay  where  they  be- 
long." 

The  governor  said  there  was  a 
picture  "even  worse"  than  the 
one  showing  him  adjusting  the 
drawers  that  the  magazine  did- 
n't use. 

Hodges  admitted  with  a  smile 
that  a  governor  hz?  to  make  a 
lot   of   "sacrifices." 


GM  SLATE 


No  aetivitias  are  tchaduled  on 
the  Graham  Memorial  slata  for 
today. 


Senior  Yack 
Pictures  Are  :  ' 
Being  Made 

Senior  class  pictures  for  the 
1957  Yackety-Yack  are  now  being 
made  in  the  basement  of  Graham 
Memorial,  according  to  Editor 
Tommy   Johnson. 

Hours  are  from  1  to  7:30  p.m. 
everj'  day  except  Saturday  and 
Sunday.  Seniors  have  until  Fri- 
day, September.  28  to  have  their 
pictures  made. 

Girls  have  been  asked  to  wear 
dark  sweaters,  biack,  brown  or 
lark  blue,  with  one  strand  of 
oearis.  Men  have  been  asked  to 
A  car  dark  coat-,  white  shirts,  and 
conservative  rep  ties. 

The  schedule  for  taking  the 
photographs  of  other  students  is 
Ls  follows: 

Oct.  1-5 — FYeshmen  and  Nurs- 
ng  School  (except  Senior  Nur.'ss) 

Oct.  8-12  —  Sophomores,  Phar- 
macy School,  iDcnta!  School,  and 
Dental  Hygiene  students 

Oct.  15^19  —  Juniors,  Medical 
School,  Law  School,  and  Graduate 
School. 


Library  Gets  Autograph 
Book  Of  Civil  War  Man 

The  autograph  book  of  a  Ral- 
eigh druggist  and  Ci\il  War  vet- 
eran has  been  acquired  by  the 
Southern  Historical  Collection  in 
the  Wilson  Library. 

The  book  belonged  to  James 
McKimmon.  class  of  1860,  and  was 
signed  by  his  classmates  and  other 
students  at  the  Universitjr  ber«. 


PAGE  TWO 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


FRIDAY,  SEPTEMBER  21,  1956 


Woman's  College  Situation: 
All's  Not  Love  And  Kisses 

CLASS  OI-  i<),S2:  Dr.  Kdu-nxi  K.  Graham,  n'lio  resiii^tird  in 
Max  a.s  chain  fllo)  of  ]]'(>nian's  CoUcge  o/  f'.V(.'  at  (Uernshnio 
after  sen'i}i^  there  sitne  m;-,o.  lias  hern  af>l}f)iiited  dean  of  the 
Liberal  Arts  Colleirr  of  lioslon  i'niversity.  He  and  Mrs.  Graham 
and  their  three  children — Susan,  Julia  and  Edward  K.— enter  iijion 
their  neu-  f>ost  on  Sefit.   i .— 7'lie  Ahimiii  Re\it'\\. 


'I  Need  the  Money  For  Text  Books!' 


So.  in  two  st-ntemes.  The  Alum- 
ni Review  of  this  month  closes 
the  book  on  another  North  Caro- 
lina educator  wlio  has  gone  to 
search    lor   greener    pastures. 

It  wasn't  a  ca.se  of  Chancellor 
CirrL^iani's  not  getting  paid  enough, 
ah  hough  that  would  have  been 
a  gfKxi   reason. 

It  was  a  case  of  his  being  reinox- 
ed,  ever  so  ptilitely.  from  the  head 
office  of  our  sister  institution  in 
Greensboro. 

*  *  * 

']  he  rumblings  at  (ireensboro 
came  last  \ear  after  a  rcpjrt  was 
lllv-d  uiih  the  Board  of  Trustees 
fiom  its  X'isiting  C.onnnittce.  Fhe 
report   said: 

■"With  respect  t<i  the  administra- 
tive j'roblems  existing  at  the  Wo- 
m;in  s  (lollege.  and  particuiarlv  to 
I  Fie  differen(e  between  some  of 
the  fatultx  members  and  the  ad- 
ministrati(m.  this  (onniiittee  has 
recpiested  the  acting  president  of 
the  rniversity  (William  Friday) 
to  make  a  detailed  investigation 
and  re{)ort  (oncerning  the  prob- 
lems which  he  finds  existing  at 
Woman's  College,  together  with  a 
recommended  plan  of  action  for 
the  solution  of  such  problems  .  . " 

1  he  committee  met,  investigated 
and  turned^  out  its  report.  Once 
all  the  excess  language  has  been 
burned   off   the    rejx)rt,    it   says: 

1.  "The  coimnittee  received 
much  e^  ident  e  of  the  chancellor's 
efforts  to  upgi.ide  the  Woman's 
College,  both  academically  and 
structurallv.  The  vigor  with  which 
he  executed  thee  efforts,  it  is 
thought,  has  f)et  n  responsible  for 
some  of  the  opp  isiiion  which  has 
developed." 

2.  I heie  are  (XMmxuces  ivhich 
exist  between  tJie  Tm  iilty  and  the 
administiatioii  .iud  beiv\c'en  facul- 
ty groups."  Th -M  crilcuncLs  were 
•"impai.  the  internal  organiza- 
tion ;  rr'  vffective  operation  of  the 
c-.,I!ege.' 

Ohanre11(»r  Cfraham  resigned  as 
ni(el\  as  a  man  under  fire  can  re- 
sign. .\  '  t  hange  in  administration 
is  clearlv  lucesary  as  the  first  step 
towi-rd  a(hie\ing  the  degree  of 
campus  unitv  and  (<»nfiden(e  whi(  h 
is  essential  hir  the  college  to  move 
ahead."  he  told  the  trustees  in  his 
lesignation  letter. 

The  trustees  told  him  thev  were 
sorry  he  was  lea\  ing.  voted  to  ac- 
(cpt  his  resignation  and  started 
looking   lor   a   new   (hancelh^,   all 

in  one  day. 

*'  «  # 

As  a  residt  of  the  C.reensboro 
rumblings  atid  sufxsequent  resigna- 
tion of  Chancellor  (iraham,  the 
Consolidated  I'nixersity  now  has 
iwc)  f>ig  problems: 

1.  Who  will  be  the  new  chan- 
cellor? 

2.  How  will  the  "differences' 
that  existed  at  (.reensboro  be  re- 
solved? From   the     looks     of     the 


trustees'  re|)ort  Chancellor  C.raham 
was  not  totally  responsible  for 
those  differences.  The  lacidty  wai 
at  fault,  too. 

.As  h)r  the  first  pr(»l)lem.  the 
I'nixersity  will  proba'blv  hide  its 
linte  mnil  WC  leathers  are  smcMMh- 
ed  down.  It  probably  will  bring 
in  a  chancellor  fiom  the  other  side 
(»l  the  coumry.  one  whose  views 
aie  not    too   widely  known. 

But  a  larger  problem  Avont  be 
s(*lved.  That  is  the  j)roblem  that 
comes  when  the  State  gets  i  id  of 
a  fine,  intelligent,  native  North 
Catolina  educator.  Dr.  (iraham 
belongs  to  Boston  l'ni\ersitv.  now. 
lie  wont  be  educating  .North  Ciar- 
olininas  any  more. 

As  for  the  second  jjioblem  that 
I'.as  residted  from  the  (ireensboro 
pmge.  the  resolution  of  the  ■'dif- 
ferences: " 

From  the  tone  of  the  report,  the 
Woman's  C-ollege  facultv  needs 
straightening  out.  .Accepting  Dr. 
(irahams  resignation  helped  pla- 
cate the  faculty.  It  was  easier  to 
get  rid  of  Chancellor  (iiaham  than 
it  would  have  been  to  fire  half 
the  faculty.  But  the  facidty  dif- 
ferences still  exist  under  the  sur- 
face at  th.e  schcK)!  wlieie  the  pretty 
young  ladies  go. 

So,  while  the  rest  of  the  state 
wonders  what  really  happened  at 
(ireensboro,  the  Consolidated  Vn- 
iversitv  would  do  well  to  straighten 
oiu  the  faculty  fa>itions  that  helped 
bring  on  Dr.  Grahant's  dismissal. 

And  the  l^niversity  might  al.so 
consider  wavs  of  keeping  its  best 
educators   in   this  state. 

Button-Down 
Collars  Are 
Also  Stylish 

Times  are  getting  worse  than 
we  thoiiglit. 

The  Vackety  Yack  advises  stu- 
dents to  wear  "conser\'ai'»ve  rep 
ties  '  wheti  thev  get  pictures  taken 
h)r  the  class  .sections  of  next 
spiings  yearbook. 

This  is  going  too  far. 

There  was  a  time  when  a  stu- 
dent coidd  have  his  yearbook  pic- 
tme  taken  in  pruKtically  anything 
— chec  kerlioard  tie.  Mister  B  collar 
or  \erti( ally-striped  jacket. 

But  the  woifl  is  "conservative 
rep   lies." 

The  trend  toward  conformity 
has  reac  hed  the  Vack.  a  book  which 
usually  tries  each  vear  to  be  less 
like  the  one  the  year  before. 

Our  suggestion  to  students  on 
gettitig  their  a'unual  pictures  taken: 
Forget  the  ^'ack's  instructions. 
^^'ear  what  you  like.  A  checker- 
board tie  would  look  nice  in  the 
midst  of  all  those  pages  of  conser- 
\ati\e  reps. 


You  Got 'Em:  Now  Keep 'Em 


n  you're  a  freshman  or  a  trans- 
fer student  jiving  in  a  men's  dc^rm 
itory,  you  wont  notice  the  differ- 
ente.  Bi»t  if  you've  been  here  be- 
fore and  had  to  walk  dowtistairs 
to  make  a  telej)hone  call,  you'll 
aj>j)rec  iate  ihe  new  telephones  on 
all   fl(H>rs. 

It  t<K>k  just  a  few  minutes'  con- 
suita'tion     between    student     body 

The  Daily  Tar  Heel 

The  official  .student  publication  of  the 
Pubhcations  Board  of  the  University  of 
North  Carolina,  where  it  is  published 
daily  except  Sunday.  Monday  and  exam- 
ination and  vacation  periods  and  sum- 
mer terms.  Elntered  as  second  clas.s  mat- 
ter in  the  post  office  in  Chapel  Hill, 
N.  C.  under  the  Act  of  March  8,  1870. 
Subscription  rates:  mailed,  $4  per  year, 
$2.50  a  semester;  delivered,  $6  a  year, 
$3.50  a  semester. 

Editor  FRED  POWLEDGE 

Managing  Editor      CRAfiLIE  JOHNSON 


News  Editor  RAY  LINKER 

Businese  Manager BILL  BOB  P££L 


President  IJob  Young  and  Director 
of  Operations  j.  .S.  liennett.  Then, 
the  I'niveisity  started  installing 
telephones  on  every  floor  of  n.ost 
men's  dormitories. 

Their  ac  tion  has  eliminated  one 
of  the  rniversity's  most  vicious 
pests:  the  third-flooj  student  who 
answers  your  tall  for  .someone  liv- 
ing on  the  .second  floor,  and  Avho 
is  too  lazy  to  walk  twcj  flights  of 
steps. 

Now  most  men  smdents  can 
transmit  and  receive  telephone 
calls  with  a  minimum  of  efforts. 

Young  and  Bennett  a'ls(j  were 
wise  ti^  advise  students  that  mis- 
tieated  telephones  will  be  re<noved 
'immediately.'  In  the  past  several 
dormittory  telephones  have  been 
beaten,  thrown,  ripped  and  torn 
with  legulariiy  every  Saturday 
night. 

Ihe  men  students  have  griped 
about  not  having  telephones.  Now 
they  have  them,  thanks  to  Young 
and  Bennett.  Whether  the  tele- 
phones say  is  up  to*  the  students. 


Fraternity  Rush, 

Lookmg  Ahead 

To  Hectic  Time 

Barry  Winston 

Rome  had  its  gladiators.  The 
Borgias  had  their  Iron  Maidens. 
Spain  had  its  Inquisiton.  We  have 
all  three.  We  call  it  F'ormal  Rush. 

It  is.  Sunday,  the  thirtieth  of 
September,  shortly  after  two  in 
the  afternoon,  and  over  a  thous- 
and Freshmen  are  venturing 
forth  from  the  comparitivc  safety 
of  their  rooms  to  begin  participa- 
tion in  a  week-long  sacrificial 
ceremony  to  the  god  of  Chaos. 

Freddy  Schraink,  Graduate  of 
East  F'etuch  High  School,  emerges 
from  Old  North  doi-mitory  and 
starts  hopefully  down  the  street 
in  the  direction  indicated  by  the 
arrows  on  his  map  of  the  campus 
and  environs. 

Tightly  clutched  in  his  little 
hand  are  a  half  a  dozen  bids,  tho 
most  important  of  which  is  the 
one  bearing  the  heading:  Eata 
Bita  Pi.  His  Dad  was  an  EBP. 
That's  the  one  for  him. 

He  has  read  ru.shing  rules  care- 
fully. Very  carefully.  In  fact,  he 
has  them  memorized.  He  has  no 
intentions  whatsoever  of  violating 
them. 

Freddy  .starts  down  the  street 
now,  arms  swinging,  head  high, 
stride  full  of  confidence,  his  rep 
tie  streamint;  proudly  in  the 
breeze.  At  the  corner  he  pivots 
sharply,  and  there,  looming  large 
and  magnificent  ahead  of  him  in 
the  di.stance,  is  the  HQUSE,  its 
bronze  letters  gleaming  in  the 
sun. 

TIME  OF  DECISION 

In  the  middle  of  the  street  his 
step  falters.  Should  he  go  directly 
to  the  EBP  house?  Or  should  he 
first  dispose  of  the  other  five, 
saving  the  dessert  for  la^t.  as  it 
were?  FYought  by  indecision,  he 
is  nearly  impaled  by  the  hood 
ornament  on  a  now  Olds  looking 
for  .1   place  Tn  park. 

In  lerrctr.  he  leaps  for  the  side- 
walk, loo.ses  his  footint;  on  a  hwr 
can,  and  tumbles  headlong 
through  a  hedge  to  find  hinisell' 
sprawled  on  the  front  lawn  of 
one  of  the  other  five.  His  de- 
cision is  made  for  him. 

Climbing  gracefully  to  his  feet, 
he  saunters  causually  up  the  front 
steps  and  through  the  door  and  is 
greeted  by  the  beaming  face  anc* 
iron  grip  of  the  doorman.  In  the 
space  of  three  minutes  his  hand 
is  shaken  forty  more  times,  he 
loses  'lis  name  tag,  consumes  a 
gallon  and  a  half  of  rather  in- 
sipid punch  and  is  given  four  pep 
talks  on  the  glories  of  Mu  Mu  Mu 
social  fraternity. 

The  story  is  much  the  same  at 
the  remaining  four  houses.  Final- 
ly, wearily,  he  turns  his  steps  to- 
ward THE  house. 

GETTING  ACQUAINTED 

For  the  next  four  days,  all  is 
confusion.  He  is  introduced  to, 
and  expected  to  recognize  on 
sight,  sixty-some  brothers  of  EBP. 
He  manages,  always  smiling,  to 
remain  his  own  natural  self  in 
this  most  natural  situation. 

Uppermost  in  his  mind  at  all 
times  is  the  advice  in  the  hand- 
book: Get  To  Know  The  Men; 
You'll  Be  Living  With  Them  For 
The  Next  Four  Years.  And  of 
course,  he  follows  the  advice.  He 
gets  to  know  the  men  by  chatting 
with  them  about  Saturday's  game, 
his  last  trip  to  W.C,  the  great 
flick  he  saw  yesterday,  and  the 
rising  price  of  Old  Horseshoe.  His 
conviction  is  concrete  now.  This 
is  the  place  for  him. 

THE  BIG  NIGHT 

And  then,  Thursday  night,  one 
of  the  older  boys  takes  him  aside 
and  begins,  "I  want  you  to  know 
that  we  all  feel  terrible  about 
this,  but  you  see.  there  was  this 
one  guy  who  didn't  think  that 
you ". 

Aud  it  won't  be  until  next  year 
sometime  that  he  finds  out  that 
the  real  reason  was  that  his  fa- 
ther didn't  go  to  Carolina.  He 
went  to  Dook. 


On  Learning— Part  2 

Understanding  The  Great  Writings 


Ed  Yoder 


(This-  i.s  the  sfecand  of  Yod- 
er'.s-  thres--part  essay  on  the 
yneanhig    of   U'aming.) 

That  meant  that  if  a  man  was 
ti  be  a  lawyer  and  enter  the  In- 
ner Temple  his  education  must 
fit  him  for  such  a  "publick  '  of- 
fice. But  if  he  was  to  be  educated 
to  suit  Milton,  he  would  not  stop 
with  the  study  of  law  alone,  but 
would  delve  besides  into  the  ed- 
ucational amenities.  Those  amen- 
ities, though  perhaps  not  vital  for 
making  his  living  in  society, 
would  be  absolutely  vitifl  for  mak-  ' 
ing  his  life  as  a  person,  in  private, 
as  an  individual  human  being, 
meaningful. 

The  educated  dmh  might  not 
need  to  identify  oSitc  or  a  piece 
of  baroque  chamber  music  to  be 
successful  at  law  —  expect  inci- 
dentally in  so  far  as  knowing 
about  great  poets  and  great  works 
of  music  might  temper  his  style 
of  speech,  his  tone,  his  angle  on 
the  problems  of  justice,  or  might 
hone  the  edges  of  his  logic  and 
power  to  argue. 

If  you  want  to  get  down  to 
money  cases,  today's  vogue,  the 
education  for  private  life  was  not 
es.sential  to  getting  food  and 
raiment.  Justice,  skill,  magna- 
nimity, private  office — these  pa.ss- 
ed  above  and  beyond  economic 
wants. 

It  is  perhaps  here  that  today's 
college  freshman,  faced  with  all 
the  educational  salesmen,  like  mc, 
faced  with  their  wares — from  nu- 
clear ph.vsics  to  Dante's  Divine 
Comedy— departs  John  Milton's 
way.  He  will,  he  says,  equip  him- 
self to  be  a  successful  business 
man  or  lawyer  or  doctor:  but  as 
for  the  "private"  life,  he  would 
rallier  study  personnel  problems 
or  management  than  Paradise 
LosI  and  mutations. 

Since  this  i.s  the  age  .f  Mr. 
Spectorsky's  Exurbanite  who 
commutes  by  train  to  work,  wears 
gray  flannel,  owns  an  Olds,  a 
Buick  and  a  Cadillac  and  a 
ranch-style  home  in  Westchester 
or  Fairfield;  since  the  image  of 
what  is  termed  "succe^'sful  edu- 
cation" gets  back  to  the  towns 
of  the  South  and  of  North  Caro- 
lina, the  college  freshman  is 
looking  first  of  all  at  what  will 
provide  a  bigger  pay  check.  For 
that,  as  a  product  of  the  massed 
goals  of  his  parent.,-  and  friends, 
he  won't  apologize. 

So.  like  the  freshman  who  says 
"so   what?"   to   ignorance   about 


Dante;  like  the  freshman  who 
will  leave  Chapel  Hill  as  a  grad- 
uate more  under  the  poetic  in- 
fluence of  a  Satevepost  Richard 
Armour  than  of  Shakespeare; 
more  under  the  influence  scien- 
tifically of  the  science  page  of 
Time  Magazine  than  of  hard 
hour.^'  spent  with  physics  prob- 
lems; more  under  the  influence, 
musically,  of  Presley  than  of 
Bach — he  will  leave  without  once 
having  awakened  to  the  dimens- 
ions of  real  education.  In  effect, 
he  will  shrug  his  shoulders  and 
squander  his  most  preciou.-.-  op- 
portunity For  Chapel  Hill,  a 
giant  among  liberal  arts  institu- 
tions in  America,  ha.s  spent  dec- 
ade upon  decade  educating  these 
who  really  wanted  to  be  edu- 
cated. 


but  perhaps  read  his  absorbing 
histories.  Only  there  will  Shake- 
speare and  Mozart  and  Michelan. 
gelo  and  Tacitus  cease  to  be  ab- 
straction and  skeletons,  barely 
conceived,  barely  seen.  Ab^.*trac- 
tions  can  be  made  whole;  bones 
can  gain  flesh. 

When  a  political  wit  .like  Adlai 
Stevenson  says;  "Eggheads  of  the 
world  unite;  you  have  nothing 
to  lose  but  your  yolks."  he 
knows,  from  a  familiarity  with 
the  Communist  Manifea'tc.  that  a 
cleveh  joke  is  involved — unlike 
a  certain  newspaper  reporter 
who.  hearing  Stevenson,  missed 
the  point  entirely  and  quoted  him 
as  having  said:  '^Eggheads  unite; 
you  have  nothing  to,, lose." 


CHAPEL    HILL 

...  a  giant. 

I  am  not  talking  about  getting 
the  most  out  of  General  College — 
as  important  as  that  i.;.  General 
College  is  the  place  where  you 
may,  if  you  listen,  hear  Dante's 
name  dropped  once  to  a  dozen 
times — but  perhaps  not  at  all.  In 
the  rare  instance,  you,  as  fresh- 
men, may  have  some  instructor 
who  will  tell  you  more  than  the 
baic-l  handful  of  biographical 
facts  about  the  Italian  gentleman, 
or  maybe  even  induce  you  to  read 
a  few  lines  of  his  work.  But  it  is 
only  when  you  move  into  the  Col- 
lege of  Arts  and  Sciences,  where 
not  only  Dante  but  his  co-stars  in 
the  firmament  of  civilization  are 
dealt  with  every  day.  that  you 
will  begin  to  see  what  John  Mil- 
ton, in  the  mid-17th  Century,  was 
talking  ab;>ut.  It  is  only  there  that 
you  may  not  only  find  out  who  , 
Herodotu.-?"  was,   where  he  lived, 


Voters'  Choice 

(Carolina  Times) 

The  Negro  voter  must  choose 
between  "tweedledum  and  tweed- 
ledee"  at  the  polls  this  Novem- 
ber, editorializes  the  current  is- 
sue of  The  Crisis,  journal  of  the 
National  Association  of  the  Ad- 
vancement of  Colored  People. 
Commenting  on  the  civil  rights 
planks  of  the  two  major  parties, 
the  editorial  says: 

■  Both  parties  ignored  the  fact 
that  1956  is  not  1952.  We  now  live 
in  perilous  times  in  race  relations, 
especially  in  the  Deep  South.  We 
have  the  U.  S.  Supreme  Court  de- 
cision on  segregation  in  public 
education,  and  rulings  on  discrim- 
ination in  public  recreation  and 
travel. 

"We  have  Montgomery,  Ala- 
bama, and  the  implications  of  the 
bus  boycott.  We  have  had  nullifi- 
cation resolutions  and  a  Congres- 
sional manifesto  insulting  the 
highest  tribunal  in  the  land  and 
advocating  virtual  rebellion.  We 
have  had  U.  S.  senators  travelling 
up  and  down  the  land  urging  the 
people  not  to  obey  the  Supreme 
Court.  And  we  have  had  cam- 
paigns of  villification  and  terror 
and  violence  visited  upon  sec- 
tions of  our  population  which 
merely  asked  that  the  law  of  the 
land  be  obeyed." 

The  Crisis,  the  editorial  ex- 
plains, 'had  expected  more  forth- 
right civil  rights  planks  than  the 
ones  adopted  by  either  party"  be- 
cause both  'are  anxious  to  win 
the  balance-of-power  Negro  vote 
this  fall." 

"We  had  not  expected  much 
of  the  Democrats  because  of  their 
pro-segregation  southern  wing, 
but  we  had  expected  a  little  bet- 
ter of  the  Republicans." 


LiTAbner 


By  Al  Capp 


AMERICAN  AID  HELPS 

India's  Five  Year 
Plan  For  Progress 

NeaE  Stanford 
In  The  Christian  Science  Moniter 

India's  first  five-year  plan  that  ended  this  spring 
turned  out  better  than  New  Delhi  had  hoped. 

Its  second  five-year  plan,  now  under  way,  should 
also  outrun  its  blueprints,  if  the  recent  unprecedent- 
ed United  States  $360  million  food  loan  just  con- 
summated is  any  indication.  Which  suggests  that 
India  is  ultraconservative  in  anticipating  the  pro- 
gress it  can  make  over  a  five-year  period. 

When  India  charted  its  first  five-year  plan,  back 
in  1950,  it  had  anticipated  large  balance  of  pay- 
ments deficits  in  operating  the  program.  It  got  them 
— but  not  to  the  degree  anticpated.  It  had  expected 
to  drop  $609  million  from  its  sterling  balances;  in- 
stead it  used  ^p  only  $317  million  in  foreign  assets 
in  carrying  out  the  plan.  • 

Likewise  India  had  expected  a  certain  amount  of 
foreign  help — but  not  to  the  extent  received.  It  had 
counted  on  some  $328  million  in  external  assistance; 
instead  it  received  some  $408  million.  On  both  counts 
then  India  did  better  than  it  had  hoped. 

Its  program  cost  less,  and  its  friends  helped  more 
than  expected  —  something  unusual  if  not  unique 
in  international  affairs. 

The  United  States  was  the  greatest  contributoB  of 
foreign  aid  to  India  during  this  period.  It  contribut- 
ed a  total  of  $298  million  in  grants  and  loans — not 
to  mention  a  $190  million  wheat  loan  that  had  been 
consummated  just  prior  to  the  five-year  plan. 

Next  largegst  contributor  was  the  Colombo  Or- 
ganization, representing  British  Commonwealth 
countries.  Australia,  Canada.  New  Zealand,  and  the 
United  Kingdom  together  contributed  some  $100 
million. 

The  United  States-India  program  actually  got 
under  way  with  the  general  agreement  of  January, 
1952. 

Such  projects  as  community  development,  tube 
wells,  river-valley  developments,  fertilizers  and  steel 
for  agricultural  purposes  were  stressed. 

And  up  lo  1953-54  these  were  the  main  activities 
in  which  United  States  aid  was  channeled.  But  with 
the  1953-54  program  there  came  a  widening  scope — 
and  the  activities  selected  for  United  States  aid 
were  more  in  the  field  of  transport  and  industrial 
development. 

Under  the  1954-  program  some  200,000  tons  of 
United  States  steel  were  imported  for  use  by  In- 
dian i-ailways.  by  steci-processing  industries  such 
as  shipbuilding,  manufacture  of  hospital  equipment, 
oil  drums  and  containers,  pipes  and  tubes  and  in- 
dustral  machinery,  and  for  requirements  of  river- 
valley  rievelooment. 

Then  under  the 
1955  program 
some  138.000  tons 
of  billets,  sheets, 
plates,  etc.,  were 
provided  for  iur- 
ther  aid  to  rail- 
ways, to  alleviate 
critical  steel 
shortages,  for  the 
-tube  -  well  p  r  o- 
gram  and  other 
rural  development 
projects.  Some 
10  0  locomotives 
and  approximate- 
ly 8,000  freight 
cars  were  includ- 
ed in  this  aid 
total. 

During  the  five  years,  United  States  aid  has  in- 
creased every  year  but  one.  For  1951-52  some  $50 
million  ,was  authorized;  the  next  year  it  was  re- 
duced to  $39  million;  but  in  1953-54  it  jumped  to 
$62  million;  and  for  the  last  two  years  it  was  first 
$73  million  and  then  $74  million.  Of  the  total  for 
the  period— $298  million— some  $150  million  still 
remains  to  be  delivered  because  of  the  recognized 
delay  in  delivery — or  whaf  is  called  the  "pipeline." 
*       *       * 

In  the  field  of  agriculture  the  most  important 
contribution  by  the  United  States  was  fertilizer.  Im- 
ports of  ammonium  sulphate  from  the  United  States 
were  primarily  responsible  for  increasing  agricul- 
tural production  in  India. 

Ground  water  irrigation  was  next  most  important 
agricultural  activity  carried  out  by  the  United 
States  program.  Some  5.000  tube  wells  were  con- 
structed—a tube  well  irrigating  on  the  average  400 
acres.  The  program  also  undertook  to  help  solve 
India's  grain  storage  problem. 

As  a  demonstration  project  two  10.000-ton-capacity 
silos  with  elevators,  and  features  for  aeration,  dry- 
ing, disinfection,  bulk  handling,  etc.,  were  built. 


FLOOD3 

. .  money  helps 


STUDENTS   IN   BOMBAY    LIBRARY 

.  .  .  training  minds  to  handle  money 

Next  to  agriculture  India's  greatest  shortage  is 
in  steel.  Under  the  United  States  aid  program  some 
700.000  tons  of  steel  have  been  allocated  to  India 
over  this  five-year  period— 150,000  tons  for  produc- 
tion of  agricultural  implements,  100.000  tons  for  the 
railways. 

India  is  running  a  deficit  of  245,000  tons  of  steel 
for  its  railways  annually— but  aid  and  expanded 
steel  production  is  expected  to  meet  this  crisis. 

River  valley  projects  rank  next  to  agricultural 
and  steel  in  America's  aid  to  India  program.  The 
United  States  has  helped  build  such  projects  as 
the  Riband  Dam,  the  Hirakud  Dam,  Kakrapara,  Mahi, 
Ghataprabho,  Chambal,  and  several  other  similar 
projects. 


FRiOAl 

Pr 
Coi 

"One  01 
of  our  tir 
roe,  Uni^ 
professor,  j 
whether  tl 
not  perfoJ 
them  und| 

This  is 
Monroe 
teaches  "J 
United  StJ 
fall. 

The  coul 
for  credil 
Univer^ntyj 
station,  wi 
into  som< 
the  presei 
emments.  | 

"At  no 
this   been] 
porta nee 
roe;  a 
field,  said] 

The  ceni 
is  a  de.^cr 
nriunicipal  | 
emment.- 
they  do  a J 
people  mj 
other  for 
added. 

Phase.': 
■which  wi| 
course 
mental  U 
ervation, 
of  fugitii 
lobbies. 


956 


FRIDAY.  SEPTEMBER  21,  1956 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


PAGE  THREE 


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Prof  To  Teach  Credit 
Course  On  WUNC-TV 


"One  of  the  leading  questions 
of  our  times,"  Dr.  David  G.  Mon- 
roe. University  political  science 
professor,  declared  recently,  "is 
whether  the  state*  shall  or  shall 
not  perform  the  functions  given 
them  under  the   Constitution." 

This  is  one  of  the  questions  Dr. 
Monroe  will  take  up  when  he 
teaches  "State  Government  in  the 
United  States,"  over  television  tliis 
fall. 

The  course,  which  will  be  taught 
for  credit  over  WUN€-TV,  the 
University's  educational  television 
station,  will  give  people  an  insight 
into  sonve  of  the  basic  issues  of 
the  present  crisis  facing  state  gov- 
ernments. 

"At  no  time  in  our  history  has 
this  been  a  subject  of  such  im- 
portance as  it  is  now,"  Dr.  Mon- 
roe, a  recognized  authority  in  the 
field,  said. 

The  central  theme  of  the  course 
is  a  description  of  "state,  county, 
municipal  and  special  district  gov- 
ernment;':  wKat  they  are,  what 
they  do  and  how  they  serve  'more 
people  more  frequently  than  any 
other  form  of  government,' "  he 
added. 

Phases  of  state  government 
which  will  be  covered  during  the 
course  will  include  intergovern- 
mental tax  immunity,  peace  pres- 
ervation, grants-iU'^iid.  rendition 
of  fugitives,  presimre  groups  and 
lobbies,    financial    administration 


and  law  enforcement. 

The  course  will  begin  on  Sep- 
tember 25  and  continue  through 
Feb.  7,  1957.  There  will  be  two 
lectures  each  week.  Students  may 
enroll  in  the  course  for  credit  or 
for  non-credit. 

"I  think  television  courses  such 
^cT  this  one  provide  a  wonderful 
opportunity  for  busy  people  to 
get  an  education,"  Dr  .  Monroe 
said. 
He  added  that  as  far  as  he  know?, 
this   is   the   first  course   in   state 

j  government    ever    taught    in    the 

I  nation  over  television. 

j  Dr.  Monroe,  who  also  taught  a 
course  over  TV  on  the  national 
government  last  year,  is  not  only 

!  a  political   scientist,   but   also   an 

'  attorney. 

He  is  a  member  of  the  Ameri- 
i  can  Bar  Assn,  the  Ohio  Bar  Assn., 
I  and  the  Southern  Political  Science 
!  Assn.  He  hold*  a  bachelor  of  his- 
!  tory  degree  from  the  University 
:  of  Chicago,  a  law  degree  from 
1  Baldwin  Wallace  College,  Berea, 
i  Ohio,  and  a  Ph.D.  degree  from 
I  Northwestern  University. 

i  He  is  a  well-known  author  in 
I  the  field  of  law  and  political 
,  science,  raving  written  "The  State 
I  and  Provincial  Police"  and  co- 
I  authored  "Village  Government  in 
j  Winnetka.  Illinois."  At  the  pres- 
j  ent  time,  he  is  working  on  a  book 
about  state  government. 


Freshmen  Gets  Early  Study 

A  freshman  is  seen  above  gattinfl  an  early  start  with  the  bo6ks 
in  tha  Wilson  Library,  used  by  many  studants  for  a  quiet  haven.  Ha 
is  probably  ono  of  the  few  studants  there  as  ntany  others  wore 
going  through  the  processes  of  drop-add.    (Photo  by  Truman  Moore) 

Covering  The  Campus 


RED'S    CAFETERIA 

> 
WATCH  YOUR  BARBECUE  COOK 

IN  THE  PIT! 

Chicken  -  Steaks  -  Chops 

Open  from  6  A.M.  Til  1 1  P.M.! 
Alt  UNC  Personei  Welcome! 

All  Sorts  of  Cool  Beverages 

Main  St.,  Carrboro 


BABYSITTING  SERVICES 

Baby-sitting  services  will  be 
available  on  football  Saturdays 
from  1  to  5:15  p.m.  at  the  Victory 
Village  Nursery  to  children  of  stu- 
dents, faculty  and  University  em- 
ployees. 

Only  children  seven  years  and 
under  will  be  accepted.  The  mini- 
mum charge  will  be  $1.50  per  child 
for  the  first  child,  and  $1  for  each 
additional  child  from  the  same 
family.  The  charges  are  for  the  en- 
tire afternoon. 
PASSBOOKS 

Students  at  the  University  who 
have  wives  living  in  Chapel  Hill 
are  entitled  to  purchcase  season 
athletic  books  for  their  wives  at 
the  special  rate  of  $10,  according 
to  an  announcement  from  the  UNC 
Sports  Publicity  Office. 

These  books  will  admit  bearers 
to  all  athletic  events  at  home  to 
which  student   may  go.  They  are 
now  on  sale  at  the  ticket  office  in 
Woollen   Gymnasium    and  can   be 
picked  up  by  students  as  soon  as 
they   have  registered.  It   may    be 
necessary  for  the  student  to  pre- 
sent some  evidence  that  his  wife 
I  is  residing  in  Chapel  Hill. 
I  VARSITY  GLEE  CLUB 
I      The  Varsity  Glee  Club  has  invit- 
I  ed  all  men  interested  in  singing  to 
I  an  informal  meeting  on  Wednes- 
1  day  at  5:00  p.m.  in  Hill  Hall.  Re- 


WC  Acting  Chancellor  Pierson  Says 
Sijpreme  Court  Overstepped  Powers 


GREENSBORO,  Sept.  20  (AP)— 
By  quoting  others  and  asking  un- 
answered questions,  Dean  W.  W. 
Pierson,  acting  chancellor  of 
Woman's  College  intimated  that  he 
feels  the  Supreme  Court  overstep- 
ped its  bounds  when  it  made  its 
famed  ruling  against  segregation. 

The  general  feeling  of  the  acting 
chancellor  at  Ihe  local  institution 


Free  To  Students! 


freshments  will  be  served  and   a 
short  concert  by  the  Glee  Club  will 
be  presented. 
DANCE  COMMITTEE 

All  members  of  the  University 
Dance  Committee  will  be  required 
to  work  at  the  Grail  Dance  Satur- 
day night,  according  to  Chairman 
Don  Miller. 
ART  EXHIBITION 

A  collection  of  reproductions  of 
famous  paintings,  which  are  cur- 
rently on  exhibition  in  the  Person 
Hall  Art  Gallery,  will  be  available 
for  rent  beginning  September  26  at 
9:00  a.m. 

A  picture  may  be  reserved  for 

rental  for  25  cents  per  month  per 

picture  plus  a  $1  deposit.  Each  pic- 

i  ture   may  be   rented   for  a  three 

j  months  period. 

j      This  service  is  offered  to  Chapel 
!  Hill  residents. 
MEN'S  GLEE  CLUB 

All  members  of  the  UNC  Men's 
Glee  Club  have  been  asked  to  meet 
in  Hill  Hall  Monday  at  4:30  p.m. 
foi-  the  first  meeting  of  the  year. 
'54  YACKS 

Anyone  who  did  not  receive  his 
1956  Yack  may  pick  it  up  upon 
presentation  of  his  ID  card  at  either 
the  GM  Information  Office  or  the 
Yack  office. 
APO 

Alpha  Phi  Omega,  Carolina's 
service  fraternity,  will  hold  its  first 
meeting  of  the  year  on  Monday 
night,  Sept.  24,  at  7:30  p.m. 


Hospital  Gets 
Display  Case 

A  bronze  display  case  has  been 
presented  to  the  North  Carolina 
Memorial  Hoi.'pital  by  Mrs.  Birdie 
Pritchard  Davis  in  memory  of  her 
late  husband,  Dr.  Royall  0.  E. 
Davis. 


Dr.  Davis  received  his  bachelor's 
degree  from  UNC  in  1901  and  was 
awarded  a  Ph.  D.  degree  in  1903. 
He  remained  at  the  University  as 
a  member  of  the  faculty  until 
1909. 

Dr.  Davis  joined  the  U.^S. 
Dept.  of  Argiculture  in  1909  and 
remained  with  that  organization 
until  the  time  of  his  death  in  1949. 

Mrs.  Davis  is  a  volunteer  worker 
at  the  hospital.  She  has  been  do- 
ing volunter  work  since  before 
the  hospital  actually  opened  Sept. 
2,  1952.  At  the  present  time  Mrs. 
Davis  average?  160  hoia-s  a  month 
volunteer  work. 

Mrs.  Davis  has  done  more  work 
at  the  hospital  than  any  other 
volunteer  worker.  She  works  most- 
ly in  the  sewing  room  and  the 
linen  room. 

She  was  among  the  firet  women 
to  graduate  from  the  University. 
The  University  first  accepted  wo- 
men students  in  1897. 

Dr.  Robert  R.  Cadmus,  hospital 
director,  said  the  display  cas| 
would  be  used  for  various  types 
of  exhibits  concerning  the  UNC 
Divicrion  of  Health  Affairs. 

The  Division  of  Health  Affairs 
is  composed  of  the  hospital  and  the 
UNC  Schools  of  Dentistry,  Medi- 
ciiMt,  Nursing,  Pharmacy  and  Pub- 
lic Health. 

The  display  case  is  built  into 
the  wall  near  the  information 
desk  at  the  entrance  of  the  hos^ 
pital.  At  the  present  time  pictures 
are  being  displayed  in  it  that 
show  the  hospital  building  while 
it  was  being  constructed. 


seemed  to  be  that  the  Supreme 
Court  made  a  new  law  when  it 
ruled  that  the  "seperate  but 
equal"  doctrine,  upheld  60  years, 
was  no  longer  right. 

Making  new  laws  is  the  business 
of  the  legislative  branch  of  govern- 
ment and  is  beyond  the  power  of 
the  judicial,  Dean  Pierson  pointed 
out. 

The  separate  but  equal  doctrine 
was  followed  in  the  interest  of 
social  peace,  he  said,  quoting  the 
late  Dr.  Howard  Odum  of  Chapel 
Hill. 


Many  thoughtful  people  believe 
that  the  Supreme  Court  ruling  has 
increased  racial  animosity,  hatred 
and  tension  instead  of  social  peace. 
Dean  Pierson  said. 

He  said  he  sees  no  prospect  of 
a  solution  of^the  race  problem  at 
an  early  date  on  a  rational  basis, 
either  in  the  United  States  or  else- 
where. 

American  citizens  have  been 
warned  by  Jefferson,  Jackson,  Lin- 
coln and  the  "two  Roosevelts" 
from  time  to  time  that  the  Supreme 
Courts  OJ?.  occasions,  stepped  out  of 


j  character  as  defender  of  the  Con- 

I  stitution     and     added     legislative 

I  powers  the  dean  said. 

I  If  the  constitution  is  what  the 
Supreme  Court  says  it  is,  then 
shouldn't  law  abiding  citizens  read 
and  swear  to  uphold  the  court's 
decisions  rather  than  saying  they 
will  defend  the  constitution?  Dean 
Pierson  asked. 

Dean  Pierson  was  dean  of  the 
graduate  school  of  UNC  from  1930 
until  last  spring,  when  he  became 
acting  chancellor  of  Woman's  Col- 
lege. 


N.  C.  STATE  COLLEGE  —  COLISEUM^ 

N.  C  State  Coll«g»-COLtSEUM  , 

f .  O.  BoK  5905— RALEIGH,  N.  C  I 

..ADULT  TKkM%  or  $ :^..«(Kh  $ _■ 

.-..:....„. I 

25 1 


. — WKh  $.. 

CHILD  Ticl(«n  at  $ Mch  $. 

FfeMM  Indude  25c  for  Poctoo*  end  Handling    $ 


A§m.  «f  Chack  or  AAoncy  Ordw  End.— Total  $ ...„ | 

^»*«  M.O0 n    $2.50. a   $2.oo.„....a    $1.50 .ni 

Children  Vi  Price  Friday  Matin**  Only 
Mb^  Nit*  Si!pt.  24....a         Frid.  Mot.  Sept.  28...£]  | 

Tu*.  Nit*  S*pt.  25...r]         Frid   Nit*  S*pt.  28....n  ■ 

W*d  Nit*  S*pt.  26....n         Sot.  Mot.  S«pt.  29...0 
Thur.  NH«  Sept.  27....Q        Sot.   Nit*  S*pt.  29.„JII  | 

NlBh»»y  t:30  —  Friday  Matin**  3:30  —  Sah^rday  Matin**  2:30| 

... , 


10  Blli  PRODUCTIONS    •    20  GRtAT   ACT 


Addi«« 
City  ...... 


Phon*.. 


Telephone 
9-2681  or  8-1357 

located  over 
Sutton's  Drug  Store 


TYPEWRITING 


SHORTHAND 

Classes  Begin  September  24 

(Special  Section  of  Personal  Typing  for  Housewives) 


town   classes 

tor    college    men    mnd    women 

Chapel  Hill,  Norih  Carolina 


Now  YOU  CAN  ENJOY  the  prcstige  of  a  pockct-sizc  ^^f  ^ookjith  each 
check  handsomely  imprinted  with  your  own  name  and  address  . .  at  no 
Tstto  yon !  You'll  like  this  personal  touch  that  adds  to  the  safety  of  your 

^""mie^  of  waiting  days  or  weeks  for  your  imprinted  checks,  you  have 
them  in  a  matter  of  mom.n^.-thanks  to  the  new  Todd  Imprmter  we  have 
iust  installed.  This  machine  prints  your  name  and  address  in  sharp  clear 
letters  right  here  at  the  bank,  in  about  the  time  it  takes  you  to  make  an 
ordinary  deposit!  _       ,   ,     ,     «  u 

Stop  in  at  the  bank  and  gel  your  book  of  imprinted  checks.  Remember, 
there's  no  charge  for  imprinting  and  service  is  fast.  Get  your  checks  today. 


Art  Museum  Is 
Expected  To 
f^elp  Art  School 

treetion  of  the  new,  spacious 
Ackland  Art  Maseum  here  on 
Columbia  St.  is  expected  to  bring 
about  considerable  improvement 
in  the  University'c-  Art  Dept. 

Work  on  the  building  has  al- 
ready started  and  it  is  anticipated 
that  it  will  be  completed  in  a  year 
and  a  half. 

The  building  itself  is  estimated 
at  a  cost  of  $800,000  with  another  ! 
$100,000  allocated  for  equipment. 
The  interest  on  $1  million,  donat- 
ed by  William  Hayes  Ackland 
(figured  at  approximately  $30,000 
per  year)  will  be  utilized  for  the 
acquisition  of  objects  of  art  for 
the  mu^um. 

Ackland  died  in  Washington  in 
1940.  His  will  directed  that  his  en- 
tire $1,500,000  estate  go  toward  es- 
tatlishment  of  a  memorial  art  mu- 
seum, provided  the  university  or 
college  getting  the  money  would 
install  his  tomb  in  the  building: 
Duke  University  would  not  take 
it,  and  Carolina  won  the  bequest 
after  an  eight-year  court  battle  in- 
volving Carolina,  Duke  and  Rol- 
lins- College. 


-4. 


jMor^  chickens 


r  .  / 


«  ^ 

cross  ilie  road 


CLASSIFIEDS 


AVON  CALLING  —  T.  V.  AD- 
vertising  rings  the  bell  and 
helps  you  sell  Avon.  Earn  your 
Christmas  money  now.  Write 
Avon,  Camellia  Dr.,  Fayetteville, 
N.  C. 


LOST:    ONE    WAI.LET.    FINDER 

-^^^.^.«.      .— ._     .^m  m^.^m»^     wb».hmI      pleBfie   rcturtt   to  James   Hirty 

YOUR     HRST     BOOK     OF     CHECKS     FREE        Menzel    DU  House    East  Ros. 


in  front  of  CheirolMs 


I  than  any  other  car  I 

1^  \ 


Btl  ^ir  Sport  S«da» 
with  Boay  br  Fith*f. 


TheB 


lrKr%t 


Glen  Lennox 


apeimil 

Carrboro  Chapel  Hilt 


mary  Street. 


WOULD  LIKE  TO  GET  IN  TQIICH 
with  daily  commuter  to  Chapel 
Hill  from  Burlington.  Interest' 
ing  pr^osition.  Call  5-8253, 
Burlington. 

FOUND  ON  CAJIPUS  —  TWO 
large  denomination  billa^-OwMr 
contact  Lenny  Sack?,  107  Fra- 
ternity Court 


\ye\\,  sure.  There  are  more  Chevies  on  the  road.  More  people  bay  *«n  y^ar  after  year.  And  this  year,  Chevrolet's 
the  most  popular  car  again-by  a  margin  of  more  than  150,000  se  far.  . .  .  Must  be  the  best  one  to  buy,  for  sure! ' 

Tm'o  million  more  people  own  Cheirolets 


Only  franchised  Chevrolk'ieaien  ctisplhy  this  famous  trademark 


See  Your  Authorized  Chevrolet  Dealer 


4 

J 


PAae  pouft 


THt  DAILY  TAR  HIEL 


FR'DAY,  SEPTEMBER  21,  19S4 


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Tar  Heels  Wind  Up  Practice  For  Battle  With  Wolfpack 


Pack  Girds  To       I       ^'"^^^  Runners  Work 

Test  Tar  Heels 


RALEIGH,  Sept.  20  (AP)— North 
Carolina  State's  Wolfpack  polished 
its  offense  today  in  a  brisk  two- 
hour  workout  in  preparation  for 
Saturday's  opening  game  with  Caro- 
lina at  Chapel  Hill. 

There  was  no  contact  work.  Dur- 
ing the  first  part  of  the  session, 
Coach  Earle  Edwards  put  the  three 
teams  through  passing  tests  against 
the  frosh. 


Fifteen  candidates  for  the 
freshman  cross-country  team  are 
going  through  their  paces  on 
Fetzer  Field  in  preparation  for 
the  season's  opening  meet  with 
Duke   here   Oct.   5. 

Anoong  the  outstanding  pro- 
spects reporting  for  practice  are 
Cowles  Liipfert,  State  high  school 
mile  champ  from  Winston-Salem; 
Paul^Wachendorfer  from  Vienna, 
Austria;  and  Fick  Aurther  of 
GrMnville. 


.arfv  v-ne^ 


The  long  awaited  and  much  dis- 
cussed 1956  football  season  gets 
under  way  tomorrow  afternoon 
with  a  sparkling  array  of  intersec- 
tional  feuds  and  neighborly  dog- 
fights lined  up  for  Big  Four  and 
Atlantic  Coast  Conference  teams. 

Holding  the  center  of  the  spot- 
light will  be  Kenan  Stadium  clash 
between  the  Jim  Tatum  led  Caro- 
lina Tar  Heels  and  the  upset  mind- 
ed State  Wolfpack.  This  one  shapes 
up  as  a  spectacular  offensive  show 
between  two  squads  now  very  much 
in  the  rebuilding  stage. 

Other  Saturday  contests  involv- 
ing Bg  Four  squads  find  Duke  in- 
vading South  Carolina  to  do  battle 
with  the  youthful  Gamecocks,  and 
Wake  Forest's  undermaned  Deac- 
ons traveling  to  Williamsburg,  Va.. 
to  challenge  the  William  it  Mary 
Indians  of  the  Southern  Confer- 
ence. 

KICKOFF  FOR  TATUM  REGIME 

The  Chapel  Hill  contest  between 
Carolina  and  State  has  attracted 
widespread  interest  for  a  number 
of  reasons.  One,  of  course,  is  that 
this  is  the  debut  of  Sunny  Jim 
Tatum  as  Tar  Heel  Head  Coach. 
It's  the  year  of  the  new  regime  in 
Carolina  football,  and  the  fans  are 
anxious  to  see  just  what  the  big 
man  with  the  ready  smile  has  cook- 
ed up  since  his  arrival  on  the  Caro- 
lina campus. 

Also,  the  game  is  shaping  up  as 
something  of  a  grudge  battle  be- 
cause of  the  recent  recruitng 
squabble  between  Carolina  and 
State  over  the  services  of  High 
Point  schoolboy  star  Cornell  John- 
son. UNC  landed  Johnson  after  the 
High  Point  youth  had  signed  an 
agreement  that  he  would  attend 
State,  and  this  caused  the  Wolf- 
pack to  howl  bloody  murder. 


WHICH  WAY 


S^^i^iine  €tt  0to^4no€icU 


T^OES  k  sorpriM.  yod  diat  Nordi  Ctfotlni  \tk\%  tiit 

nacion  m  textile,  tobacco  and  housdxjU  (umiture  pro^ 

^occioo,  ]rec  ranks  43rd  m  per  capita  iooooe?  ,^^y 

W!iy  is  it  that  22  of  North  Carotma*s  100  cetmcks  W 
population  in  die  last  census  deca<!e?  Whjr  an  so  manjr 
tk.  our  o>llege  graduates  seeking  careets  cbewhere? 

■  low  can  we  remedy  a  situaciofi  ufougm  mi  \ff  IM 
tai^  a  percentage  oi  non-agricultural  workets  in  low-w^ 
'hradtets.  and  the  hrgest  farm  population  in  the  natioa, 
mndi  o£  k  fighting  a  losing  battle  with  mechanised  agri- 
culture and  competitk>n  from  chemical  substitutes  for  farm 
products? 

Contmm  Hodges  IndttstriA  Development  Program  k 
4  Positive  Approsch  to  One  of  North  CtroUnas  Pressing 
Prohl 


ems. 


Write  the  Dcpt.  of  Conserration  &  Development  ia 
Raleigh  for  the  free  booklet  on  Community^Organizadoa 
for  Industrial  Development.  It  is  a  guide  book  to  the  right 
turn  at  our  economic  crossroads. 


STATE  OF  NORTH   CAROLINA 

DEPARTMENT  OF 
CONSERVATION  AND  DEVELOPMENT 

This  is  No.  1  of  a  scries  of  adveftitemcnts  pablisiic<l  hf  du* 
newf|Mper,  ■  member  of  the  North  Caroiiiu  Press  Assodatiaa, 
wititoat  cost  to  the  Sute,  as  a  Public  Snvice  in  prescatiag  !a> 
fennatieB  about  the  Industrial  Development  Profram. 


u 


state  hasn't  tasted  victory  in 
their  series  with  the  Tar  Heels  in 
13  years,  and  are  sure  to  be  hungry 
for  a  win  tomorrow.  Last  year  the 
Tar  Heels  captalized  on  Wolfpack 
errors  to  take  a  25-18  win  over  in 
Raleigh. 

OFFENSIVE  BATTLE  LIKELY 

Both  teams  are  reported  to  have 
their  offensive  machinery  in  high 
gear,  so  touchdowns  should  come 
fast  and  thick.  State  has  a  bevy  of 
pony  backs  and  a  razor  sharp  pass- 
ing attack  that  could  spell  trouble 
for  the  Tar  Heel  defense.  Coach 
Tatum  is  confident  that  his  offen- 
sive punch  will  be  more  than  am- 
ple, although  he  has  expressed  con- 
cern over  the  defense. 

l^oth  squads  are  relatively  weak 
at  quarterback  as  each  has  inex- 
perienced signal  callers  in  starting 
positions.  Soph  Curt  Hathaway  will 
take  over  for  injured  Dave  Reed 
as  Tar  Heel  mastermind,  while 
youthful  Tom  Katich  will  be  at  the 
controls  for  the  Pack. 

From  this  angle,  the  game  looks 
to  be  a  wide  open  affair  with  fire- 
works aplenty.  Regardless  of  which 
way  the  decision  goes,  it  should  be 
a  real  crowd  pleaser.  The  winner? 
How  about  Carolina,  27-20? 

GAMECOCKS  MAY  BE 
DANGEROUS  ""■■    ' 

The  South  Carolina  Gamecocks 
could  prove  to  be  rather  pesky  if 
the  Blue  Devils  from  Durham  let 
down  their  guard.  The  Gamecocks 
have  a  team  loaded  with  talented 
sophomores,  and  witii  one  game  al- 
ready under  their  belt,  they  may 
give  the  Blue  Devils  more  trouble 
than  expected. 

Duke  is  figured  by  experts  t  • 
have  another  powerhouse  this 
year,  and  early  season  rankings 
have  placed  them  among  thf?  na- 
tion's elite.  The  only  possible  weak 
point  that  may  plague  them  tomor- 
row is  'first  game  letdown',  a  dis- 
ease that  has  often  crept  up  on  the 
best  of  teams.  We  believe  the  Blue 
Devils  will  prove  to  be  too  strong 
for  South  Carolina,  though  it  might 
be  close.  Duke  34,  South  Carolina 
13. 

DEACS  IN  OWN  CLASS 

The  third  Big  Four  team.  Wake 
Forest,  steps  outside  the  confer- 
ence for  a  tilt  with  William  & 
Mary.  The  Deacs,  under  their  new 
head  coach,  Paul  Amen,  are  start- 
ing an  extensive  rebuildng  pro- 
gram this  year.  As  a  consequence, 
the  manpower  on  hand  is  rather 
limited;  so  limited,  in  fact,  that  it 
may  be  hard  for  them  to  compete 
on  even  terms  with  other  schools 
such  as  Maryland  and  Duke. 

This  is  one  case,  though,  where 
the  Deacons  will  be  playing  in  their 
own  league.  The  Indians  have  a 
small  squad  and  shouldn't  be  too 
tough  a  morsel  for  Wake  Forest 
to  chew.  Wake  Forest  20.  William 
&  Mary  14. 


]Squad  Runs  Through 
Brisk  Final  Workout 


Carolina's  Tar  Heels  rounded  out 
their  pre-season  football  sessions 
here  yesterday  in  preparation  for 
their  big  four  battle  with  N.C. 
State  in  Kenan  Stadium  tomorrow. 

This  was  the  last  practice  session 
for  Coach  Jim  Tatum's  charges  be- 
fore they  do  battle  with  their  big 
rival  from  Poileigh  in  the  Atlantic 
Coast  Conference  game  of  the 
week. 

BRISK  WORKOUT 

Tatum,  who  nev^r  carries  his 
squad  on  the  practice  field  the  day 
before  a  game,  sent  the  Tarheels 
through  a  final  brisk  workout. 
Quarterbacks  Curtis  Hathaway, 
Doug  Farmer,  and  Ron  Marquette 
ran  their  teams  through  pass  pat- 
terns, with  the  teams  alternating 
on  offense  and  defense.  The  squad 
was  dressed  in  shoulder  pads  and 
pants. 

Coach  Tatum  will  move  his  club 


to  Durham  tod^  where  it  will 
spend  the  nght  at  the  Washington 
Duke  Hotel  to  get  away  from  pre- 
game  festivities  on  the  campus. 
Their  will  be  a  movie  and  a  squad 
meeting  for  the  team  toniglit'"*^ 
Tatum  completes  preparations  for 
the  big  opener  Saturday. 

According  to  athletic  director 
Chuck  Erickson,  a  crowd  of  at  least 
30,000  is  expected  to  be  on  hand 
for  tomorrow's  2:00  p.m.  kickoff. 
EIrickson  said  that  ticket  sales  had 
been  "brisk"  and  that  if  the  v.'^ea- 
ther  was  right,  he  expected  at- 
tendance to  exceed  30,000. 


Officials  Needed 

Students  are  needed  at  intra- 
mural officials  for  tag  football. 
Those  interested  h»ve  been  asked 
to  conte  to  301  WooHen  Gym  en 
Tuesday,  September  25,  at  4  p.m. 


Cross-Country 
Team  Prepares 
For  First  Meet 

Some  fifteen  candidates  for  the 
varsity  cross-country  squad  began 
limbering  up  muscles  stiffened  by 
a  summer  of  inactivity  Monday  in 
preparation  for  the  season's  open- 
ing meet  with  Virginia  Oct.  5. 

Absent  from  th^  harrier's  pre- 
liminary workouts  was  all-american 
star  Jim  Beatty,  now  on  an  AAU 
tour  in  Finland.  Beatty  is  due  back 
in  Chapel  Hill  tomorrow. 

Only  casualty  of  the  season  so 
far  is  junior  star  Everett  Whatley, 
suffering  from  an  unidentified  ail- 
ment that  has  kept  him  on  the 
sidelines  for  most  of  the  week. 

Coach  Ranson  announced  yester- 
day that  the  squad  will  hold  an 
organizational  meeting  tomorrow  at 
4  p.m.  on  Fetzer  Field. 


Eight  Veterans 
To  Spark  UNC 
Soccer  Squad 

I  E^ght  lettermen  form  the  back- 
1  bone  of  Coach  Marvin  Allen's  soc- 
I  cer  team  which  began  practice  this 
I  week. 

Allen  said  yesterday  that  letter- 
men  will  start  in  most  positions 
when  the  team  opens  against 
Lynchburg  Oct.  8.  But  he  expects 
several  new  men,  including  some 
outstanding  sophomores,  to  see 
plenty  of  action. 

The  practices,  which  started 
Monday,  have  revealed  that  some 
talented  material  is  on  hand.  Coach 
Allen  said.  Thirty-two  men  showed 
up  for  the  first  drills. 


5  New  Advisers  Named 
in  UNC  General  College 

Five  new  advisors  in  the  Gen 
eral  College  have  been  announced 
by  Dean  Cecil  Johnson. 

They  will  bring  to  12  the  num- 
ber of  faculty  members  v/ho  ad- 
vise students  during  their  first 
two    years    of    University    study. 

The  new  advisers  -^re  :  Cmdr. 
John  H.'  Graves,  asjfociate  profes- 
sor of  naval  science,  represent- 
ing the  Navy  ROTC  Unit;  William 
R.  Straughn  Jr.,  assistant  pro- 
fessor of  bacteriology.  Medical 
School;  Robert  A.  Howard,  as- 
sistant professor,  Dept.  of  Art; 
George  E.  Shepard,  professor  of 
physical  education,  repr'esenting 
the  Education'  School,  and  S. 
Young  Tyree  Jr.,  associte  profes- 
sor, Chemistry  Dept. 


TODAY 

There  Is  No  Might  Like  the 
Might  of  Moby  Dick! . 


JLiMiUJ 


fflBH 


DAILY    CROSSWORD 


ACROS.S 
1.  Yield 
5.  Musical 

instrument 
9.  Dress  of 
pilgrims  to 
Mecca 
10.  To  wait  for 

12.  Claws 

13.  Scope 

14.  Parasitic 
insecta 

15.  Arid 

16.  Music  note 

17.  Like 

18.  Low  ialand 
1».  Property 

<L> 
20.  Flowed 

23.  Carry 

24.  Foretold 
26.  Suspend 
28.  Vocation 

31.  Sorcery 

32.  Pig  pen 

33.  Musical  note 

34.  Maaurium 
(sym.) 

35.  Part  of  , 
"to  be" 

M.  Underwater 
craft  (short- 
ened) 

M.  Notoriety 

40.  Morning 
reception 

41.  A  napped, 
tanned  skin 

42.  Measurea 
(Heb.) 

43.  Plant  ovula 

44.  Beveragea 

DOWN 

l-Two- 

wheeleil 

oarriag* 
t-Man'a  nam* 


3.  Valley 
(poet.) 

4.  City 
(Prusa.) 

S.Tom,  Dick 
and 

6.  Absent 

7.  Flowed 

8.  Little  pij^ 

9.  A  relative 
by  marriage 

11.  Plague 

15.  Takes 
away 

IS.  Cask 

19.  Traveled 

21.  Narrow 
road- 
way 


22.  Tote 

23.  Thrice 
(mus.) 

25.  Beam 

26.  Dwell- 
ings 

27.  Count- 
ing 
de- 
vice 

29.  Live 
coals 

30.  Stands 
up 

32.  Satis- 
fled 

35.  Walk 
through 
water 


aCDDEm    nQHI3H 

nPiH  HBnraaa 

uxs  (^HSSaSlD 
ROffi  cascsn 
Eonisnrin  hop 
rai^nsi:!  [ficiaciB 
^iriH  (3Draa!:?i3n 
annw  nms 
offlaHcaHci     SB 

ESaQB    OnDEtB 


Vrdrrdmy't  Aiitwer 

36.  (Covered 
with  small 
figures 

37.  Part  of  eye 

39.  Sheltered 
side 

40.  Fate 


Pecjc 


lUCHAKP,  JJBO 
BaSehart  Genn 

JOHNHaSTON- 

rHOnuCTION  0»  HIRMAN  MClVlltrS 


lve>Bv  Dfcjc 


COLO!  i.TECHNICOI-OR 

Prices  This  Attraction      | 
Adults  65<-Children  15<i 


MILTON^S- 
The  Mecca  of  Connoisseurs 

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Over  100  Belts,  values  to  $3.50,  now ^    .99 

Very  Complete  Array  of  English  Wool 

Challis  Tie  and  Belt  Sets 5.00  &  6.00 

Cashmerized  Cotton  Hose  in  Ribs  or 

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Cotton  Poplin  London  Fog  Raincoats  at    29.75 
Sport  Jackets  at  their  unusual  best  from     42.50 

Shetland  Crew  Neck  Imported 
See  our  New  Collectcion  of  Very  Shaggy 

Sweaters  at  13.95 

You'll  never  in  your  whole  life  see  such  a  vast 
assortment  of  (dress  shirts  in  both  the  ivy  button- 
<down  and  the  English  tab  mo<dels.  Since  we  senci 
out  so  many  of  our  shirts  throughout  the  country 
and  overseas  we're  able  to  offer  you  a  far  greater 
assortment  than  any  other  store  anywhere.  We 
have  a  standing  offer  of  a  free  shirt  to  anyone 
who  can  name  us  another  store  in  the  country 
who  has  a  more  complete  assortment  of  shirts 
than  we. 
Our  Customized  Cordovan  Shoes  are        ' 

stocked  from  size  6  to  13,  widths 

A  to  EE— plain  toes  and  wing  tips  from     18.95 
Handsewn  Plump  Veal  Loafers  in  Dark      ^ 

Wine  or  Black 11.95 

So  if  you  really  want  to  put  some  spice  into  your 
outfit,  Milton's  is  the  place  for  you. 

MILTON'S      ; 
Clothing  Cupboard 


USED  TEXT?  NOVEL? 


CHILDREN'  BOOK?-    f 


^ 


INTIMATE 
OOKSHOP 


MODERN  UBRARY?      PAPERBACK?      RARE  BOOK? 


II  H  C  LIBRARY 

SERIALS   DEPT. 
CHAPEL  HILL,    N.   C 
8-31-49 


WEATHER 


G«n*rally  fair  Mtd  warmar,  with 
t«mp*rature  around  76  to  tS. 


Sfl)  c  3)aity  ^^Tar  Jiecl 


VOL.  LVIII,  N0.3 


Complete  (JP)  Wire  Service 


CHAPEL  HILL,  N.  C,  SATURDAY,  SEPTEMBER  22,  1956 


Offices  in   Graham  Memorial 


DORMITORIES 

Th«y  are  way  bahind.  Sea  Editor* 
iai,  paga  2. 


POUR  PAGES  THIS  ISSUE 


Tar  Heels  Will  Meet  N.  C.  State  Today  In  Season's  Opener 


Today's  Activities  Include 
Game,  Reception  And  Dancey 
1000  WC  Girls  Are  Coming 


Approximately   1,000   girls  from ' 
Woman's   College   and   many   stu-  j 
dents   from  State  College  will  ar- 
rive  here  today  for  the  Carolina- , 
State  football  game  and  Consolidat- 
ed University  Day. 

Activites  of  CU  Day,  sponsored  : 
by  the  Consilidated  University  Stu- 
dent Council,  will  include  a  recep- ! 
tion  at  Graham  Memorial  following  ! 
the  game,  a  dance  in  Woollen  Gym 
and  the  crowing  of  the  CU  Queen.  \ 

This  is  the  first  of  three  CU  Days 
to  be  held  this  year.  One  each  is 
held  annually  on  the  campuses  of  i 
UNC,  State  and  WC.  ! 

The  reception,  also  sponsored  by  i 


the  CUSC,  will  be  for  all  students  j 
from  the  three  sister  institutions  of 
the  University.  Punch  and  cookies 
will  be  ser\'ed. 
GRAIL  DANCE 

The  dance,  sponsored  by  the 
Order  of  the  Holy  Grail,  will  be 
held  from  8-11  p.m.  Bill  Langley 
and  his  Stardreamers,  a  12-piece 
band,  will  play. 

Tickets  will  cost  SI  each,  stag 
or  drag.  The  dance  will  be  inform- 
al, according  to  Grail  dance  chair- 
man Don  Miller. 

Boys  have  been  requested  to 
wear  coats  and  ties. 

The  dance  will  be  the  biggest  of 


Three  Girls  From  Each 
School  In  Queen  Race 

Three  students  of  Woman's  Col-    dated     University     State     College 
lege  in  Greensboro  and  three  girls    Committee,  and  were  selected  from 


the  year  here  as  thefe  will  be  no  j 
Coed  Ball,  said  one  member  of  the  j 
Grail.  The  organization,  which ! 
holds  the  dance  concession  here, ' 
will  turn  the  proceeds  over  to  the  ■ 
Grail  scholarship  fund  or  to  chari-  ■ 

t.v-  ; 

The  Consolidated  University 
Queen  will  be  announced  during 
intermission  at  the  dance.  She  will 
be  chosen  from  among  nine  cm- 
tpstant.s,  three  each  from  UNC. 
State  and  WC.  The  nine  contestants 
will  be  presented  at  halftime  dur- 
u.g  the  game  today. 

Representing  UNC  will  be  Misses 
Lucinda  Holderness  of  Spencer 
dormitor>',  Jane  Welch  of  Chi 
Ome?a  sororty  and  Jane  Little  of 
Pi  Beta  Phi. 


representing  State  College  in  Ra- 
leigh will  participiite  in  today's 
Considated  Universitj'  Queen  con- 
test along  with  three  contestants 
chosen  from  Carolina. 

WCs  representatives  chosen  in  a 
recent    campus-wide    election    will  i 
be  Misses  Ann  Fitzhugh,  a  senior; 
Pat    Mane,    a    junior;    and    Nancy 
Morrison,  also  a  junior.  j 

Representing  State  College  will 
be:  Miss  Pat  Ponder  of  Raleigh,  a 
freshman  at  State;  Miss  EVeverly 
Little  of  Jefferson,  a  freshman 
nuclear  engineering  major  attend- 


a  group  of  thirteen  nominees.  A 
beauty  contest  was  staged  at  State 
to  determine  which  of  the  girls 
would  represent  the  college. 

Carolina's  contestants  will  be 
Miss  Lucinda  Holderness,  of  Spen- 
cer Dormitory;  Miss  Jane  Welch 
representiftg  the  Chi  Omega  Sorori- 
ty; and  Miss  Jane  Little,  represent- 
ing the  Pi  Beta  Phi  Sorority.         .    ! 

Representatives  from  all  dorm.s 
and  sorority  houses  particpated  in 
the  contest  this  week  to  select  Car- 
olina's coed  contestants.  Those  par- 
ticipating were  Misses  Dickey  Pick- 


Pep  Rally 
Held  Here 
Lest  Night 


ing  State  College   on  a  Lockheed   errell.   Kappa   Delta;    Phil    Kraftt, 


scholarship:  and  Miss  Ursula  Swiss-  i 
good    of  Raleigh,   a  sophomore   in 
General  Studies  at  State. 

State's  contestants  in  the  contest 
were  chosen  by  a  15-man  Consoli- 

Forum  Bringing 
Dr.  K.  Tong 
To  Speak  Here 

Dr.  Hollington  K.  Tong.  ambass- 
ador of  the  Chinese  Republic  to  the 
United  States,  will  give  a  public 
address    here    Thursday    night. 

Dr.  Tong's  appearance  is  being 
sponsored  by  the  Carolina  Forum, 
non-partisan  student  organization 
which  brings  to  the  campus  from 
tiA»e  to  time  prominent  speakers 
"who  reflect  varying  shades  of  po- 
litical and  economic  thought." 

"The  Success  of  the  New  Tactics 
of  the  Chinese  Communists"  is  the 
tentative  topic  for  Dr.  Tong's 
speech,  to  be  given  at  8  p.m.  in 
Hill  Hall. 

Forum    chairman    James    H. 
Holmes  announced  that  Dr.  Tong  | 
will  be  honored  at  a  private  ban-  j 
quet    preceding    his    address,    and  \ 
at  a  public  reception  following  in 
Graham  Memorial. 

Dr.  Tong  became  Ambassardor 
to  the  United  States  in  May,  1956.  j 
after  serving  as  the  first  postwar 
Chinese  Ambassador  to  Japan.  A 
former  journalist,  he  was  editor 
or  managing  editor  of  a  number  of 
North  China  newspapers  before 
World  War  H. 

Chairman  Holmes,  a  junior  from  j 
Washington,  D.  C,  said  that  an- 
nouncements will  be  made  soon  of 
five  other  prominent  speakers  who 
will  visit  the  campus  under  Forum 
sponsorship. 


Mclver;  Pat  Dillin,  Alderman;  Ann 
Smith,  Alpha  Gamma  Delta:  Bar- 
bara Johnson.  Carr;  and  Marion 
Dickens,  Smith. 

The  contestants  from  the  three 
campuses  of  the  Consolidati-d  Uni- 
versity will  be  presented  at  the 
halftime  of  today's  game,  and  the 
winner  will  be  crowned  at  tonights 
dance  in  Woollen  Gym,  to  be  spon- 
sored by  the  Order  of  the  Holy 
Grail. 


news 

in 
brief 


The  Student  Body  staged  a 
most  enthusiastic  "Beat  State"  pep 
rally   last   night. 

Preliminary  "firing  up"  events 
iacluded  a  dani>8  fire-blaefng  ba- ' 
ton  twirling  demonstration  by  Jo 
Carpenter,  head  majorette,  and 
spontaneou  -  singing  of  "Dixie" 
and   "Hark  the  Sound." 

The  parade,  going  up  Raleigh 
Road  to  Columbia  St.  to  East  Cam- 
eron and  down  Raleigh  back  to 
the  gym,  was  led  by  the  majorettes, 
the  band,  and  a  motorcade  of 
cheerleaders,  with  the  students 
joining  en  masse. 

The  enthusiasm  of  tlie  crowd 
grew  so  inten..'e  once  with  so  much 
toilet  tissue  streaming  through  the 
air.  the  batons  cracking  some 
heads,  that  a  slight  melee  almost 
occurred  between  students  and 
majorettes,  but  thi^.'  was  quickly 
broken  up  by  Head  Cheerleader 
Jim  Bynum. 

The  pep  rally  ended  with  a  large 
crowd,  gathered  around  a  huge — 
and  hot — bonfire  on  the  Intramur- 
al Field,  cheering  the  team  on 
to  victory  today. 


INFIRMARY 


Students  in  the  Infirmary  y—- 
t*rday  included: 

Miss  Oonna  L.  Anderson,  Miss 
Mildrad  A.  Disaker,  Clay  F. 
Church  Jr.,  Durwood  G.  Whit- 
fiald,  John  G.  Bur«wyn.  William 
Grant  Lynch,  Earl  T.  Kirkman, 
Donald  C.  McMillion,  John  M. 
Spivay,  Alvin  W.  Smith,  Harry 
M.  Giles  Jr.,  and  Klarcourt  A. 
Morgan  ill. 


Wolf  pack  Is  7  Point 
Underdog  Against  UNC 

By  LARRY  CHEEK 
Daily  Tar  Hetl  Sports  Editor 

Cloach  jim  Tatiim's  a-jTibitious  but  untested  Carolina 
Tar  Heels  uill  receive  their  baptism  under  fire  here  this  af- 
teinoon  in  Kenan  Stadium  when  ihey  play  host  to  the  dan- 
;j[eious  .\.  C.  State  Wolf  pack. 

The  game,  expected  to  draw  a  throng  of  move  than  30,- 
000.  is  slated  to  get  underway  at  2  p.m.  under  crisp  cloiidle.ss 
skies. 

C:"olina  has  been  made  .1  7-point  favorite  by  tlie  odds- 

■ — — ♦  makers,   but   most  observers   rate 

•  the  content  a  tossup.  Both  squads 
are  figured  to  be  improved  over 
last  season  when  the  Tar  Heels 
took  a  25-18  decision.  Each  has 
a  potent  offensive  punch,  while 
both  Tatum  and  State  Coach  Earle 
Edwards  have  been  moaning 
about   inadequate   defenses. 


CAROLINA'S   SOPHOMORE   QUARTERBACK    CURTIS   HATHAWAY 

.  .  .  replaces  tnjured  Dudc  Reed  nt  signal  caller's  post 


While  You  Were  Gone 


THE  FRANK  GRAWAM  POR- 
TRAIT caused  con.siderable  con- 
troversy over  where  it  should  be 
hung.  It  was  hung  in  the  .Vlorehead 
Building,  but  several  students 
thought  it  should  have  been  placed 
in  Graham  Memorial.  Different 
opinions  were  expressed  in  editor- 


of    tickets   to 
August. 


all   persons   in   early 


THE    PSYCHIATRY    DEPT.    re 

ccived  a  grant  of  .SliiO.OOO  from  Ihe 
National  Institute  of  Mental  Health 
of  the  U.  S..  Public  Health  .Service. 

THE  INSTITUTE    OF    GOVERN- 


ials  and  letters  to  the  editor  in  the    MENT  moved  into  its  new  buiidinj 


LONDON   (/P)— The   Suez    Canal 
Users'  Assn.  has  comp   into   being 
— at  least  on  paper.  A  majority  of  | 
the  18  nation.^  at  the  second  con- : 
ference   here   have   supported    the 
organization.  The  pact  wrs  cooled  > 
by    refusal    of    the    French    to    go 
along  at  this  time. 

Secretary  of  State  John  Foster 
Dulles  said  he  was  very  satisfied 
with  the  outcome. 

In  PARIS,  the  French  Cabinet 
will  hold  a  special  meeting  today  | 
to  consider  results  of  the  London 
conference  and  hear  a  report  from 
Foreign  Minister  Pineau.  He  said 
last  night  the  users'  plan  is  too 
hazy  on  canal  tolls.  | 

In  CAIRO,  the  Middle  Ea^t : 
News  Agency  announced  the  Big 
Three  of  the  Arab  nations  will  I 
hold  another  meeting  next  week.  | 
Attending  will  be  President  Nasser  | 
of  Egypt,  President  Kuwatly  of 
Syria  and  King  Saud  of  Saudi  i 
Arabia. 

In     WASHINGTON     the     State  \ 
Dept.  approved  passports  for  seven  j 
Americans   who   want  to   work  as 
pilots  on  the  Suez  Canal. 

'      WASHINGTON    (/P)    —   Politics 

j  continued   here.    President    Eisen- 
hower returned  to  the  Capitol  af- 

!  ter  a  two-day  visit  to  Iowa.  Demo-  • 

i  cratic   carididate   Adlai    Stevenson 

I  talked  labor  matters  and  party  fin- 
ance with  organized  labor  leaders.  \  need  of  donations  of    "A-Positive" 

I      IN   MINNEAPOLIS,   Vice   Presi- 1  type  blood.  His  condition,  inherited 

j  dent  Richard  Nixon  continued  his  |  from    his    mother's '  family,    was 
defense  of  the  administration  farm  j  brought  on   by   a  cerebral  hemor- 

j  program.   It  is  working,   and   will '.  rhage  last  week.  The  lad's  uncle  is 
restore    proi-perity   to   agriculture,  j  also  in  Memorial   Hospital  with  a 

I  he  said.  1  hemophiliac  condition. 


Playmalcers 
To  Begin 
Tryouts 

The  Carolina  Playmakers  will  1 
hold  tryouts  for  their  first  produc-  j 
tion  of  the  season,  the  recent 
Broadway  success,  "Anastasia",  on  | 
Monday  at  4  and  7:30  p.m.  in  the  i 
Playmakers  Theatre. 

The  play  will  be  directed  by , 
Samuel  Selden,  chairman  of  the  j 
Dept.  of  Dramatic  Art  and  Director 
of  the  Playmakers,  and  will  appear  | 
at  the  theatre  October  17  through 
21. 

"Anastasia"  is  a  suspenseful 
drama  of  a  girl  involved  in  a  plot 
to  claim  as  the  heir  to  the  Rqs- 
sian  dynasty.  The  play  has  thirteen 
characters.  Copies  of  the  play  are 
available  at  the  reserve  desk  in 
the  library.  Tryouts  are  open  to 
everyone,  according  to  Selden. 


Summer  School  Weekly 

TRACK   STAR   JIMMY   BEATTY 

failed  in  his  attempt  to  gain  a 
place  on  the  United  States  Olympic 
Track  Team,  but  finished  second 
in  the  5,000  meter  race  of  the 
NCAA  meet. 

THE  UNC  GOLF  TEAM  failed  lo 
qualify  in  the  NCAA  tournament. 

UNIVERSITY  OFFICIALS  asked 
the  state  for  $16  million  for  perm- 
anent   improvements,    including    a 

new'  pharmacy   building  and  three  ;  Hill  and  visited  Coach  .Jim  Tatum. 
new  dormitories.  |  She  met   Tatum     while     he     \va.- 

coaching  at  Maryland. 


past   Woollen  Gym  on  the  Ralei^^ii 
Road. 

100   NEW    RECORDS   WERE   ao 

quired  for  Graham  Memorial's  col- 
lection. 

ONE  OF  CAROLINA'S  ALL 
TIME  GREAT  football  stars  gave 
up  a  business  career  to  return  here 
and  become  a  member  of  Coach 
.lim  Tatum's  football  coaching  staff. 

GLORIA  DE  HAVEN,  glamorous 
Hollywood  actress,  came  to  Chapel 


A-Positive  Blood  Needed! 
For  Youth  At  Hospital        ' 

Wayne  Brov/n,  12  -  year  -  old 
munity  In  southern  Chatham,  is 
battling  a  rare  hemophiliac  (in- 
ternal bleeding)  condition  at  Me- 
morial Hospital   and   is  greatly  in 


DEAN  MAURICE  WENTWORTH 

LEE   of   the  School   of   Economics  1 
and  Business  of  the  State  College  ^ 
of  Washington  was  appointed  Dean 
of  the  UNC  School  of  Business  Ad- 
misisttation.  | 

SCHOLASTIC    HONORS   for   last  | 
year  were  won   by   Delta    Psi   fra- 
ternity and   Pi   Beta   Phi  sorority, 
according  to  an  announcement  is- 
sued last  s-ummer. 

DR.  EDWARD  KIDDER  GRAH- 
AM, who  resigned'  last  year  as 
chancellor  of  the  Woman's  College 
in  Greensboro,  was  named  Dean  of 
the  College  of  Liberal  Arts  of  Bos 
ton  University. 

MISS  LINDA  MANN,  a  1956  grad- 
uate of  Carolina,  was  named  tem- 
porary director  of  Graham  Memor. 
ial  to  succeed  Jimmy  Wallace  who 
resigned.. 

MISS  LiBBY  MCDOWELL  repre- 
sented Chapel  Hill  in  the  Miss 
Carolina  contest,  but  failed  to 
place. 

CAPTAIN  ALEXANDER  M.  PAT- 
TERSON succeeded  Col.  Robert  C 
Burns  as  commander  of  the  Navy 
ROTC  unit  here. 

NEGRO  INQUIRIES  about  swim 
tickets  for  the  use  of  the  Un:.''r.s- 


A  COMMITTEE  to  assist  in  find- 
ing a  chancellor  to  replace  Robert 
House,  who  will  retire  next  June, 
was  appointed  by  Acting  President 
Bill  Friday. 


Averett  Girls 
Will  Visit  i 

Here  Tomorrow 

One  hundred  and  fifty  girls  who  , 
are    freshman    and  sophomores   at  i 
Averett    College   in    Danville,   Vir- 
ginia will  be  on  campus  tomorrow 
afternoon. 

They  will  attend  a  show  at  The 
Morehead  Planetarium  and  a  re- 
ception following  in  Graham  Mem- 
orial. 

All  freshmen  have  been  urged 
to  attend  the  reception  at  Graham 
Memorial   at   4   p.m. 

A  return  trip  for  Carolina  men 
will  be  held  in  Danville  on  Sep- 
tember .27.  This  will  be  an  annual 
dance,  sponsored  by  the  Freshmen 
Fellowi'hip  group  of  the  YMCA. 
Bus  transportation  will  be  pro- 
vided   to    Danville,    which    is    55 


Rameses  VII 
Will  Be  On         \ 
Hand  Today      \ 

Rameses  VII,  who  was  christened  j 
at     the    Carolina-Oklahoma     game 
last  year,  will  be  back  today  before 
kick-off  time  of  the  Carolina  State 
game.  ^ 

.\lthough    the    Carolina    mascot  ; 

will  be  down  on  the  field,  his  guar- 1 

dian    for    the    1955    season,    Glenn  \ 

Hogan.  has. retired.  Replacing  Ho- 1 

gan   after   28  years   of  service,   is  j 

his  nophow ,  Robert  C.  Hogan,  who  ■ 

will  have  the  responsibility  of  car-  1 

i  ing    for    and    protecting    Ramese.s.  j 

;  Both    Hogans    live    on    the    Hogan  ' 

'  farm  on  Rt.  2  where  Rameses  lives  1 

■  when  not  on  duty.  I 

Thirty  months  old  and  50  pounds  , 
heavier.   Rameses    is    an    authentic  1 
ram   with  a   black  face  and  horns  ; 
and  IS  sire  for  50  sheen  on  the  Ho- 
gan  farm.  The   present  mascot  is 
a  direct  descendent  of  Rameses  V, 
a  gifi    from  a  Carolina  alumni  in  , 
Texas. 

Yesterday,  an  extra  heavy  guard  ' 
was  placed  on  the  ram  in  the  hop- 
es of  preventing  the  recurrence  of 
an    abduction    by    State    students 
such  as  has  happened  in  past  years. 

Rameses  will  enter  with  the  Caro- 
lina students  and  proceed  down  the 
aisle  through  the  Carolina  cheer- 
ing section  to  the  field.  His  arrival 
is  set  for  1   p.m. 

The  mascot,  with  his  bearded 
game  attendent.  Bushy  Cook,  will 
come  to  all  home  games  and  will 
probably  be  at  the  Wake  Forest 
game  and  possiWy  the  Virginia  con- 
test. 

In  1924  Vic  Huggins.  head  cheer- 
leader, started  the  tradition  of  hav- 
ing s  ram  as  mascot.  "State  had 
their  wolf.  Army  its  mule.  Navy 
its  goat,  and  Georgia  its  bulldog," 


Yack  Photo 
Taking  Is 
Going  Slow 

A  mid-afternoon  check  yesterday 
showed  that  very  few  seniors  had 
appeared  for  their  Yackety-Yack 
photographs  in  the  second  day  cf 
scheduled  picture  taking. 

Twenty  members  of  a  class  of 
approximately  800  had  shown  up  at 
3:30  yesterday,  according  to  Editor 
Tommy  Johnson. 

"We  hope  to  have  an  unpreced- 
ented number  of  class  jSictures  in 
the  annual  this  year."  Johnson 
stated,  "but  it  cannot  be  Hone  un- 
less classes  cooperate  by  using 
their  scheduled  time  to  the  great- 
est advantage." 

Johnson  urged  that  members  of 
the  schools  and  classes  turn  up 
early  in  their  sche<kiled  times  to 
facilitate  the  photographing  and 
for  lh*>ir  own  convenience. 

Seniors   will    have    until   Friday. 
September  28,  to  be  photographed 
for  this  year's   annual.  The    sche- 
dule for  other  classes  and  schools 
I  is  as  follows: 

I      Ocf.  1-5  —  Freshmen  and  Nurs- 
ing School  (except  Senior  nurses..) 
'      Oct.  8-12    —  Sophomores,   Phar- 
macy  School.    Dental    School,   and 
Df^^'-nl  ffif  tone  students. 
I      Oct.    15-19  —  Juniors,    Medical 
'  School.  Law  Scho.'l.  and  Graduate 
I  School. 

I      Johnson  expressed  the  hope  that 
more    fraternity    men    would    turn  j 
out  this  year  to  be  photographed  j 
He  pointed  out  that  the  Yackety-  j 
YaeV  is  one  of  the  best  means  of 
publicity   for   fraternities   because 
of  its  large  circulation  among  high 
.schools  and  prep  schools.  ! 

Individual  annual  photograps  arc 
being  made  this  year  by  Smith 
Studios  of  Raleigh.  | 


Campus 
Seen 


Student   roashing    hvf  face   at 
the  Old  Well  fmintain. 


Student    lighting    up   cigar   in 
class  the  first  day. 


ity's  outdoor  pool  stopped  the  sale    miles   from   Chapel   Hill. 


Mars  Show  To 
Close  At 
Planetarium 

"Mars,  Planet  of  Mysten."  will 
close  at  the  Morehead  Planetarium 
here  on  Monday  night  after  a  speci- 
ally arranged  football  weekend 
schedule  of  performances. 

So  that  N.  C.  State  and  Univer- 
sty  football  fans  may  view  the  cur- 
rent demonstration,  performances 
will  be  given  at  11  a.m.  and  imme- 
diately following  the  game  today, 
in  addition  to  the  regular  8:30 
Vic  Huggins  said.  Carolina  took  the    o'clock  nightly  demonstrations.  To 

morrow's  schedule  of  matinees  at 
2.  3,  and  4  p.m.  will  remain  un- 
changed, and  the  final  offering  of 
the  Mars  show  will  be  Monday  at 
8.30  p.m. 

An  entirely  new  demonstration 
titled  "Our  Sun"  will  open  on 
Tuesday  night,  September  25. 


Rameses  I  was  introduced  at  the 
Carolina-VMI  game.  Carolina  took 
VMI  three  to  nothing  to  break  a 
two  game  loing  streak.  Rameses  I 
was  accepted  as  a  symbol  of  good 
fortune.  Rameses  is  the  continua- 
tion of  a  34  year  tradition. 


SECRET   DRILLS 

Tatum  has  been  putting  his 
:«[uad  through  secret  drills  all 
week  long  in  a  effort  to  shore  up 
his  sagging  defensive  fences,  but 
still  is  uncertain  as  to  what  may 
happen  this  afternoon  when  Ed- 
wards turns  loose  hi^-  speedy  crop 
of  racehorse  backs,  and  his  potent 
passing  attack. 

"We  have  no  way  of  knowing 
what  our  boys  will  do  under  game 
conditions,"  he  said  yesterday. 
"Our  defense  is  untested  and  inex- 
perienced, so  we  don't  know  what 
to   expect,"   he   went   on   to  say. 

The  Tar  Heel  offense  should  be 
able  to  take  care  of  itself,  ftom 
all  indications.  Tatum  has  a  flock 
of  fine  backs  headed  by  veteran 
halfbacks  Ed  Sutton  and  Larry 
McMullen.  Hard  running  junior 
Giles  Gaca  should  capably  handle 
,  the  line  plunging  chores.  Backing 
I  the  •-•  three  up  will  be  Buddy  Sas- 
ser  and  Daley  Goff  at  the  second 
string  halves,  and  Wally  Vale,  the 
team's  leading  punter,  at  the  num- 
ber fullback  slot. 

QUESTION  MARKS 

Only  possible  question  mark 
spot  in  the  backfield  is  quarter- 
back where  sophomore  Curt  Hath- 
away i..-  set  to  start  in  place  of 
injured  Dave  Reed.  Hathaway,  a 
190-pounder  from  Norfolk,  Va., 
lacks  game  experience,  but  Tatum 
is  confident  he  will  prove  a  com- 
petent mastermind  for  the  Tar 
Heel   attack. 

Doug  Farmer,  senior  non-letter- 
man  whorti  Tatum  calls  "the  best 
passer  we  have"  has  been  the  sur- 
prise of  fall  practice  so  far,  and 
will  6>&e  plenty  of  action  with  the 
second   unit    in  today's   game. 

Up  front,  veteran  ends  Buddy 
Payne,  a  rangy  junior,  and  Lar- 
ry Muschamp  will  handle  the  pass 
receiving  duties.  Paul  Pulley  and 
Vince  Olen.  a  pair  of  promising 
juniors,  will  spell  the  two  starters. 

The  remainder  of  the  Tar  Heel 
line  finds  Stuart  Pell  and  Phil 
Blazer  at  tackles.  Don  Lear  and 
Hap  Setzer  at  guards,  and  co-cap- 
tain George  Stavnttski  at  center. 

SPEEDY  BACKS 

State  will  trot  out  a  fast,  tricky 
starting  backfield  and  a  multiple 
offense  which  could  spell  trouble 
for  the  Tar  Heel  defense.  Dick 
Hunter  and  Dick  Christy,  two  jun- 
iors with  a  year  of  experience  un- 
der their  belts,  will  open  at  the 
halves,  diminutive  Tony  Guerrieri 
at  fullback,  and  youthful  Tom 
Katich  at  quarterbcak.  Guerrieri 
and  Katich  are  also  juniors*. 

j  In  addition  to  the  four  boys 
above.  Coach  Earle  Edwards  ha« 
a  trio  of  high  steppers  who  are 
just  about  as  good.  George  (Wag- 
on-Wheel,"?) Marinkov.  the  game 
captain  for  the  Pack,  is  considered 
to  be  the  squad's"  most  dangerous 
runner,  although  he  is  weak  on 
defense.  Billy  Franklin  is  an  ex- 
perienced signal  caller,  and  shifty 
Hike  Miller  is  alway.s  a  threat  at 
halfback. 

John  Lowe  and  John  Collar 
will  start  at  end  for  the  Wolfpack; 
John  Szuchan  and  Dick  DeAngelis 
will  be  at  tackles;  Julius  Compton 
and  Franci.>-  Tokar  are  set  at 
guards;  and  Jim  Oddo  will  be  at 
center. 

j  WEIGHT  ADVANTAGE 

The  Tar  Heels  will  outwei^ 
State  by  an  average  of  15  pounds 
State  by  n  average  of  15  pounds 

i         (See  FOOTBALL.  Page  3) 


PAGE  TWO 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


SATURDAY,  SEPTEMBER  22,  1954 


SATURI 


Si 


Carolina  Housing  Problem: 
Just  One  Generation  Back 


ON  LEARNING  -  PART  3 


Just  about  a  year  ago  the  l^ni- 
versity  was  reasonably  certain  it 
would  get  money  ior  new  dormi- 
tories. Now  the  Bt>ard  ol  Trustees 
is  gcttiJi,2j  around  to  aiuhorizing  the 
expenditure. 

This  is  tvpical  of  Pr<.)gTess  in 
Chapel   Hill. 

It  isn't  the  trustees'  fault.  Bv  law 
they  had  to  wait  until  all  the  de- 
tails were  decided,  then  gather  in 
special  session  to  approve  the 
dormitory   contracts. 

\'ou  can't  place  the  blame  for 
the  vear-long  delay  on  anyone  in 
particular.  The  Tniversity  just 
took  j(K)  long  to  get  the  dormitor- 
ies started. 

This  is  bad.  as  the  men  studen;.i 
cmrcntly  living  in  the  basement  of 
C'obb  Dormitorv  will  gla^lly  testi- 
fv.  While  the  University's  housing- 
planners  are  fiddling  around  with 
plans  atid  bhie{>rints.  the  over- 
ciowded  dorm  men  and  women 
arc  burning. 

Foi  years  now  the  I'niversitv  has 
been  about  a  generation  behind  her 
suideuits.  She  saiv  tlie  present  trend 
toward  a  bulging  enrollment  far 
before  it  got  here.  She  has  been 
slrnv  to.  do  anything  about  it. 

More  than  a  year  ago  former 
President  (iordon  Ciray  of  the 
Consolidated  University  told  the 
people  of  North  Carolina  in  his 
President  s  Rep)ort: 

■■\Ve  are  confronted  with  tfve 
the  prospect  of  greatly  increased 
enrollments  .  .  .  there  is  the  prob- 
lem of  dormitorv  facilities,  for 
1x)th  married  and  unmarried  stu- 
dents. .\t  present,  despite  the  con- 
struction of  new  dormitories  in  , 
recent  years,  wc  are  overcrowded, 
with  three  students  in  many  rooms 
designed  for  two  at  State  College 
and  Chapel  Hill,  and  there  are 
long   waiting  lists.' 

At  the  time  the  1953  General 
Assembly  iiad  tcfused  to  give  the 
Unixersitv  hero  anv  money  with 
which  to  bui.'il  dormitoi  ies.  In- 
stead, the  I  "ii  latois  passed  an  en- 
abling: a  .^  allowing  UNC  to  bor- 
row :  -  i.iillicHi  for  dormitory  con- 
iij  .:ciion. 

While  most  rni\ersity  officials 
and  planners  were  happv  to  get 
the  enabling  act,  some  of  them 
didn't  change  their  pained  express- 
ions. Bv  liie  time  the  dorntitories 
are  built."  one  said,  ■well  be  just 
as  ctowded  as  before.  Where  will 
that  get   us?"* 

While  the  tonstiuction  delay  is 
bad  from  the  standpoint  of  cramp- 


ed students,  it  is  even  worse  when 
\iewed  in  the  liglit  of  fiuure  Leg- 
islature appropriations. 

The  University  is  asking  the 
state  for  money  from  a  $10  million 
revoh  ing  fui'd.  That  monev  would 
be  used  to  build  new  self-li(juidat- 
ing  dormitories  to  house  700  un- 
married  students. 

.Now.  what  will  the  it);,;  (.eiieral 
.Assembly  sav  when  the  Universi- 
ty ask.s  lor  the  monev? 

Chances  are  it  will  sav:  'Whv 
haven't  you  spent  that  S2  million 
yet?  \'ou  ask  us  for  more  monev 
when  you  ha>\ent  even  spent  what 
vou"\e  got." 

In  the  eyes  of  the  state,  it  will 
be  like  the  little  boy  with  two 
handfulls  of  marbles  who  wants 
an<jilu'r  do/en. 

The  greatest  housing  sin  com- 
mitted re(enilv  on  this  campus  is 
the  lack  of  adequate  housing  for 
married    students. 

Married  students  who  li\e  in 
Ch.tpel    Hill   have     four     choices: 

1.  They  can  cross  their  fingers 
and  maybe  get  one  of  \'i(  tory  ViU 
Kvges  inade<|uate  units.  This  may 
take  vears. 

2.  riiey  can  scramble  with  oth- 
eis  for  the  houses  and  apartments 
available  in  town.  Rent,  while  not 
so  high  heie  as  in  some  other  col- 
lege towns,  is  still  high  to  the 
student  who  must  work  afternoons 
and  nights. 

■^. .  They  can  biiv  traileis  and 
live  in   then>. 

4.  They  can  go  somewhere  else 
to  school. 

For  a  long  time  the  University 
lias  failed  to  do  ativthing  ol  (on- 
sequence  to  alleviate  the  pioblem 
of  married  students'  housing.  S<.)mh 
Building  and  Capital  Square  ears 
have  turned  suddenly  deaf  at  pleas 
for  action  from  men  like  Gordtm 
Gray.  The  University  appears  to 
still  believe  that  the  married  stu- 
dent is  the  exception  lu  the  rule, 
while  modern  survevs  prove  more 
and  more  people  are  getting  mar- 
ried and  raising  a  family  while 
going  to  school. 

.Meanwhile,  baik  in  South  Build- 
ing, plans  are  slowly  being  drawn 
for  additional  housing  of  approxi- 
inaielv  700  immarried  students. 
Bv  the  time  the  new  dormitories 
are  built,  students  will  be  living  in 
the  halls.  .\nd  the  married  stu- 
dents will   be   living  in   tents. 


Broader  Street  And  Mind 


If  the  town  does  .something  the 
student  doesn  t  like,  the  student 
(barges  the  town  is  ganging  up  on 
the  students. 

That's  a  pretty  .safe  rule  in 
(ihapel  Hill,  as  in  most  iniiversity 
towns.  Often  the  merchants  and 
townspeople  forget  where  their 
monev  comes  from,  and  take  ad- 
vantage of  t*lie  student  body. 

.\s  we  said,   that   rule  works  in 


The  Daity  Tar  Heel 


The  official  student  publication  of  the 
Publications  Board  of  the  University  of 
North  Carolina,  v*-here  it  is  published 
daily  except  Monday  and  examination 
and  vacation  periods  and  summer  terms 
Entered  as  .second  class  matter  in  the 
post  office  in  Chapel  Hill.  N.  C.  under 
the  Act  of  March  8,  1870.  Subscripton 
rates:  mailed.  $4  per  year,  $2.50  a  semes- 
ter: delivered,  $6  a  year.  $3.50  a  semes- 
ter. 


Editor 


FRED  POWLEDGE 


Managing  Editor    .  G|L\RUE  JOHNSON 


News  Ekiitor 


RAY  LINKER 


Business  Manager BELL  BOB  reEL 


most  (ases.  liut  in  the  ( ase  of  park- 
ing on  Rosemary  St..  it  doesn't 
hold  true. 

"Its  just  plain  (list  rimination 
against  frat  men,"  said  one  (ireek 
society  brother  about  the  towns 
decision  to  ban  parking  on  both 
sides  of  the  l>usy  stieet. 

What  the  fraternity  man  didn't 
know  is  that  the  town  has  spent 
more  than  one  year  studying  Chap- 
el Hill  parking  and  street  patterns. 
The  town  hired  a  traffic  expert 
from  State  College  to  studv  routes 
and  make  pPans  for  the  increased 
traffic  that  is  bound  to  come  in  a 
grownig  town  like  this  one. 

The  fraternity  man.  we  susjiect, 
was  speaking  cjuite  selfishly  when 
he  charged  discrimination.  He  was 
h)rgetting  about  the  thiitrsands,  of 
automobiles  that  daily  pass  up  and 
down   narrow   Rosemary  St. 

When  the  town  was  considering 
elimitiation  of  jiarkitig  on  the 
street  a  vear  ago,  it  circulated  let- 
ters to  all  resideiHs  of  Rosemary 
St.,  asking  their  opinions  on  the 
plan.  .Most  bf  the  residents  —  in 
fact,  just  abfjut  all  except  for  the 
few  fraternities  on  Rosemary — 
were  in  favor  of  the  ban. 

The  others  were  satisfied  to  park 
their  cars  elsewhere  in  <»rder  to 
make  Rosemary  a  wider,  safer 
street  to  travel.  Most  of  the  fra- 
ternities weren't. 

This,  we  believe,  is  narrowmind- 
edness.  .And  Rosemary  St.  is  narrow 
enough. 


Liberal  Arts,  The  Fox 
And  The  Hedgehog 


Ed  Yoder 

(This  is  the  final  part  of  Yod- 
der's  essay.) 

All  educational  exposure  aier- 
ges  in  the  exposed — making  him 
livelier,  freer,  making  him  feel 
his  place  in  the  universe,  or  at 
least  have  deeper  questions  about 
it.  There  is  reason  to  think,  too, 
that  education  can  take  effect  up- 
on character:  certainly  it  takes 
effect  upon  outlook  and  philos- 
ophy. 

How  would  the  world's  course 
since  1930  have  been  changed  if 
Adolph  Hitler  had  been  civlized 
at  G-oettingen?  Of  course,  there 
was  his  arch-compatriot.  Benito 
-Massolini,  a  newspaper  editor  and 
self-styled  egghead — showing  that 
you  never  know.  Perhaps  he 
could  have  been  civilized  by  a  Mo- 
zart symphony  early  every  morn- 
ing. Karl  Barth.  the  austere  Swiss 
theologian,  has  recently  revealed, 
indeed,  that  Mozart  is  such  a 
daily  apertif  for  him. 

A  thousand  related  conse- 
quences, features,  come  to  mind. 
One  who  ventures  upon  liberal 
education  with  a  will  had  better 
be  forewarned  that  a  little  bit  is 
as  teasing  as  a  tidbit  of  anything 
vastly  good. 

The  question  marks  can  become 
marching  obsessions;  the  quest 
for  a  bit  develop  into  a  mad 
search  for  great  quantities — for- 
tunate, in  that  the  well-known 
poem  beginning  "A  little  learning 
is  a  dangerous  thing""  has  often 
proved  itself  so  crucially  right. 
QUESTION     MARKS 

It  is  in  .Arts  and  Sciences,  if 
one  applies  himself,  that  the  un- 
deflated  "so  what?"  of  a  green, 
unknowing  freshman  may  be 
changed  as  if  magically  into  a 
thousand   question   marks.   There 


BOOKS 

. .  .  of   iminy    things 

are  those  who  think,  with  reason, 
that  education  in  liberal  arts  at 
its  best  is  the  creation  of  ques- 
tion marks.  It  is  certainly  closer 
to  that  than  it  is  to  having  your 
mind  crowded  to  the  cobwebby 
corners  with  detail — like  a  great 
canvas. 

But  there  are  obstacles.  Let  us 
a.ssume.  perhaps  wildly,  that  you 
decide  as  a  freshman  to  enter  his- 
tory or  English  or  classics  rather 
than  businejjs..  You  will  be  con- 
fronted sooner  or  later  by  a  hard- 
shelled,  unreconstructed  friend 
from  the  B.  A.  School  or  from 
Pharmacy,  who  will  badger  v*ou 
with  arguments  like:  "Why  amass 
facts  about  Italian  poets  when 
you'll  forget  them  all  inside  10 
years?" 

You  may  lack  a  ready  answer. 
But  experience  will  teach  the 
falsity  of  that  argugment,  since 
the  eventual  object  of  education 
is  seldom  to  amass  facts. 
MEMORY 

Studying  Dante  is  not  like  mem- 
orizing a  list  of  criteria  fo  success- 
ful hiring  or  conveyor-belt  effic- 
iency. This  is  not  to  say  that  you 
cannot  approach  Dante  that  way: 
or  that  you  cannot  be  like  the 
memory  experts  who  glance  at 
pages  and  never  forget  a  word  of 
them. 

It  is  to  say,  instead,  that  unless 
you  possess  a  trickster's  memory 
or  uncommon  genius  in  your 
chosen  field,  your  best  hope  as 
a  liberally-educated  person  is 
something  intangible,  but  akin  to 
what  happene  to  the  mind  of 
our  theoretical   lawyer. 


This  lawyer  had  his  style  tem- 
pered, the  edges  of  his  logic  and 
his  power  to  argue  honed.  What 
has  happened  to  the  liberall.v-edu- 
cated  person,  more  than  that  he 
or  she  has  amassed  facts  or  learn- 
ed to  perform  cerebellum-springs, 
is  that  he  or  she  has  gained  a 
certain  spirit  that  only  education- 
al peers  know  about.  The  fresh- 
man has  gained  as  his  own  a 
small  area  of  civilization. 

He  has  read  with  appreciation 
some — perhaps  many,  but  quali- 
ty counts  more  than  quantity  in 
this  enterprise — of  the  great 
books.  He  has  looked  perceptive- 
ly at  some  great  painting,  or  a 
Venus  de  Milo  of  sculpture.  He 
has  listened  penetratingly  to  some 
good  music.  He  has  begun  to  find 
out  what,  in  layman's  terms.  Ein- 
sten  was  getting  at  when  he  ad- 
vanced the  General  Theory. 

The  venturer  upon  liberal  edu- 
cation— education,  to  return  to 
Milton,  for  "private"  offices — 
had  better  be  forewarned  in  ad- 
dition that  old  affections  for  com- 
monplace ideas,  for  commonplace 
intellectual  currency,  for  medi- 
ocre goals,  may  be  smashed  and 
swept  aside. 

Certain  prevalent  brands  of  con- 
formity may  become  totally  for- 
eign and  obnoxious  to  you  as  a 
graduate  cxpo.sed  to  liberal  edu- 
cation, when  they  were  next  door 
an  J  compatible  to  you  as  a  fresh- 
man. You  may  even  want  to  be 
diftorent  from  the  other  hundreds 
in  your  class. 

Climax  of  climaxes,  you  may 
want  to  think  independently  of 
the  old  thoughgt  patterns  you 
were  brought  up  in.  Such  are 
the  hazards  of  being  exposed  to 
learning. 
DILEMMA 
And  if  you  really  get  in  deeply. 
-  you  will  no  doubt  come  to  the 
Fox-Hedgehog  dilemma. 

The  German  philosopher  Hegel 
drew  this  distincton  between  the 
fox  and  the  hedgehog:  that  the 
fox  knows  a  little  about  a  lot  of 
things,  whereas  the  hedgehog 
knows  a  lot  about  one  big  thing. 
Exposed  to  education,  .vou  may 
come  to  this  dilemma — particular- 
ly if  a  synthesis  has  taken  place 
in  your  curiosity,  and  ever>-  field 
of  study  seems  part  of  a  greater 
whole  about  which  your  curiosity 
is  equally  burning  This  .synthesis, 
this  coming-together,  explains  in 
part  why  it  seldt)m  makes  sensa 
to  an  educated  person  to  hear  an- 
other say:  "I  am  crazy  over  Eng- 
lish literature,  but  I  hate  to  study 
history." 

Here,  and  as  it  happens,  be- 
tween any  two  liberal  discplines 
or  fields,  it  all,  in  the  long  run, 
begins  to  look  like  grist  to  the 
small   mill. 

But  the  fox-hedgehog  dilemma 
— as  I've  found  it— is  this:  Will 
I  spend  the  summer  vacation  read- 
ing the  complete  works  of  Ed- 
ward Gibbon?  Or  will  I  read  the 
Portable  Gibbon  among  three  doz- 
en other  hooks  in  a  dozen  differ- 
ent areas'*  Will  one  concentrate 
all  his  energy  upon  a  footnote, 
the  reading  and  writing  for  which 
may  take  a  day? 

Or  will  he  forc^sake  this  slow 
enterprise  for  a  dashing  offensive 
on  all  fronts?  It  becomes  a  both- 
ersome, puzzling  question,  even 
if  some  ave  more  suited  to  be 
hedgehogs  than  others. 
STUMBLING  BLOCK 

.And,  lastly,  there  is  a  negative 
proolem  that  will  bear  warning. 
Education  can  create,  or  bellow 
out  of  low  coals,  or  plant,  nt^bili- 
ty.  But  it  can  also  create  wliat  the 
Noftli  Carolina  -  born  journalist 
Gerald  Johnson  has  called  cynical 
foppism. 

Liberal  education  at  premium 
must  create  a  critical  instinct, 
taste,  a  certain  persistent  dissatis- 
faction with  the  half-done,  the 
poor  in  taste,  the  mediocre,  the 
colorless,  the  commonplace,  in 
the  realms  of  both  ideas  and  arti- 
fice. 

But  cynical  foppism  appears 
when  critical  instinct  and  taste 
mistake  their  objectives,  when 
they    make    themselves    absolute 


CD  CD 


Dating:  For  Pleasure 
Or  Personal  Prestige 


Reserved  Parking 
Hurting  Students 


Woody  Sears 

I  have  often  wondered  ii  girls 
talked  as  much  about  boys  as 
boys  talk  about  gigrls  and  related 
subjects. 

On  occasion  I'll  ask  a  girl  that 
question,  just  out  of  curiosity, 
and  I  always  get  some  sort  of 
shim-sham  which  amounts  to  the 
same  thing  as  "no."  I've  never 
been  thoroughly  convinced,  but  I 
suppose  that's  just  a  matter  for 
each  man's  speculation. 

Every  now  and  then  you  hear 
something  on  the  subject  that 
strikes  your  funny  bone.  I  heard 
the  other  day  about  a  freshman 
who  had  such  a  good  line  and 
was  so  good  at  meeting  all  the 
good-looking  girls  on  campus  that 
he  had  to  put  the  names  in  a 
little  black  book.  But  he  got  so 
many  names  so  fast  that  he  could- 
n't remember  who  was  who.  I 
think  it's  funny,  anyway. 

On  the  subject  of  girls  still.  I 
had  occasion  the  other  day  to 
wonder  why  bovs  date  girls,  but 
en  a  different  level  of  thought. 
While  talking  to  a  grad  student. 
I  found  out  that  a  boy  is  really 
expected  to  date  a  "queen"  in 
some  circles. 

This  is  okay.  I  guess,  but  it 
boils  down  to  the  fact  that  one 
often  dates  a  girl  for  a  show-piece 
rather  than  for  any  other  of  the 
more  usual  reasons.  I  wondered 
what  the  girls  thought  of  this,  or 
if  they  were  aware  of  it.  .\nd 
then  I  thought  that  possibly  they 
do  the  same  thing. 

This  same  grad  student  said 
that  he  had  dated  a  lot  over  at 
WC,  and  that  it  was  important  to 

menarchs,  when  they  sour  into  a 
pucker  at  everything  and  ever5-- 
body. 

Cynical  foppism  becomes  down- 
right intolerant  of  imperfection; 
it  'oecomes  especially  irritating 
because  it  seldom  if  ever  looks 
into  the  mirror  and  it  forgets  that 
learning,  like  the  universe,  may 
be  finite  but  that  it  is  unbounded. 


date  some,  of  the  "wheels  "  on  the 
campus.  He  justifed  this  by  say- 
ing that  he  had  been  told  that  a 
girl  will  ask  who  a  boy  has  dated 
before  she  will  accept  a  blind 
date.  If  said  boy  has  dated  some 
of  the  big  names  on  campus,  then 
he  is  all  right. 

So  I  guess  it  boils  down  lo  the 
old  adage  that  one  is  judged  by 
the  company  he  keeps.  This  is  - 
undeniably  true,  and  something 
that  everyone  should  already 
know.  The  thing  thats  interest- 
ing to  me  is  the  varying  motives. 

Not  having  had  any  psychology 
courses  to  date.  I  don't  know 
about  the  motivating  forces,  other 
than  those  of  "companionship.  " 
Yet  it  does  seem  strange  that  a 
boy  needs  to  date  a  beautiful  girl 
as  a  crutch  for  his  own  sagging 
ego.  or  to  try  to  keep  up  with  the 
other  guys. 

So  many  of  us  on  the  male  side 
of  the  fence  are  far  from  being 
worthy  of  the  things  we  expect 
in  our  dates  by  the  complete  ab- 
sence of  good  manners  and  rudi- 
mentary courtesies  that  we  so  of- 
ten display. 

However,  that.  too.  is  a  matter' 
for  speculation,  for  often  you  s«e 
mighty  nice  girls  dating  boys 
whose  actions  and  general  atti- 
tudes are  almost  unbelievably 
crude,  by  even  minimum  stand- 
ards. 

So  that  leads  me  to  believe  that 
to  even  certain  "nice"  girls 
such  actions  and  activities  are 
amusing  and  pleasant.  In  the 
event  that  you  don't  know  what  I 
mean,  just  take  a  look  around 
you  when  you  go  to  the  football 
games  this  year.  But  then  on 
the  other  hand,  maybe  I  m  just 
a  prude. 

But  whatever  our  motives  for 
dating  the  girls  we  do  might  be, 
I  think  that  we  should  watch  our 
deportment  a  little  closer,  for  is- 
n't this  supposed  to  be  the  home 
of  'Southern  Gentlemen?"' 

Who  wants  to  laugh  first? 


Barry  Winston 


I  have  a  car.  It's  a  very  nice  car,  but  the  wind- 
shield just  isn't  big  enough.  The  fact  is,  it's  begin- 
ning to  look  rather  cluttered.  Something  has  got  to 
go.  But  I've  forgotten  which  of  the  stickers  is  this 
year's,  so  I  may  just  have  to  muddle  through  as  \^st 
I  can,  peering  through  the  cracks  in  the  decals. 

If  I  can  find  some  one  who  knows  what  color 
the  new  one  is  supposed  to  be,  maybe  I  can  locate 
it  (this  may  be  difficult  since  I'm  color-blind)  and 
scrape  off  all  the  old  one.  Except  I  think  maybe 
they're  ;ili  thafs  been  holding  my  windshield  to- 
gether since  last 
June  when  some 
^  _^„,_^  ...  drunk  fell  out  of 

a  tree  and  put  a  big  crack  in  it. 


ONE  MY 


Li't  Abner 


By  Al  Capp 


I  guess  I  could  buy  a  new  one,  but  I'm  just  about 
broke  what  with  buying  stickers  and  license  plates 
and  parking  permits  and  paying  off  the  protection 
collectors. 

I  had  to  buy  a  slate  license  plate,  a  county  plate, 
and  two  city  tags:  an  uptown  parking  sticker,  a  down- 
town parking  sticker  and  a  campus  parking  sticker; 
an  iridescent  sign  for  my  back  bumper  reading  Slow 
Down  and  Live,  one  for  the  front  imploring  every 
pedestrian  I  run  over  to  See  Rock  City.,  and  a  tourist 
decal  for  Bulgaria..  Now  when  am  I  ever  going  to 
get  a  chance  to  go  to  Bulgaria  with  this  miserable 
semester  system? 

I  read  in  the  paper  the  other  day  (or  maybe  it 
was  on  one  of  those  several  dozen  forms  I  had  to 
fill  out  to  pick  up  my  class  tickets)  that  the  proceeds 
from  this  bizarre  bazaar  are  going  into  somebody's 
piggy-bank  until  enough  is  stashed  away  for  a  couple 
of  parking  lots.  At  the  rate  they've  betp  denting  my 
checking  account,  construction  ought  to  start  some- 
time the  middle  of  next  week.  And  when  they  do 
finish  them,  I  bet  all  the  spaces  will  be  marked  Re- 
served for  General  Officers  and  Trustees  of  the  Uni- 
versity. I  saw  some  men  from  Buildings  and  Grounds 
putting  up  those  Reserved  signs  down  in  Kenan 
Woods  the  other  day.  Those  guys  get  all  the  good 
spots. 

And  parking  tickets!  Just  you  wait.  Pretty  soon 
now  they'll  have  the  campus  policeman  patroling  the 
dorms  and  ticketing  you  for  oversleeping. 

With  eight  men  to  a  room,  everybody's  going  to 
have  to  sleep  in  shifts.  I  saw  three  tickets  on  a  tri- 
cylce  that  was  ovreparked  in  front  of  South  Build- 
ing today,  and  they  were  getting  ready  to  tow  it 
away  when  the  kid  that  owned  it  showed  up  and 
promised  to  appear  in  court  next  Tuejjday. 

I'm  told  that  all  of  this  exaction  stems  from 
the  fact  that  there 
are  not  enough 
parking  facilitic;- 
to  go  around.  1 
ifuess  the  people 
oehind  all  this  arc 
figuring  that  pret- 
ty soon  we'll  de- 
cide it's  cheaper 
to  take  a  taxi  and 
start  leaving  our 
cars  at  home. 


uMivERsiry  wmm 

A.HB 

visrmfts 


RESERVE1D 

all   the   choice    places 


So.Tiebody  told  me  yesterday  that  I  may  have  lo 
pay  for  a  sticker  that  will  allow  me  to  park  in  my 
own  front  yard,  but  the  board  of  trustees  is  going 
to  restrict  possession  of  cars  to  grauate  botany  stu- 
dents next  fall,  anyhow. 

Aiiybody  know  where  '  can  buy  a  pogo  stick? 


«} 


JeMis 

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SATURDAY,  SEPTEMBER  22,  1956 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


PA(SE  THREE 


Ind- 

to 
hhis 


>lor 

cate 

land 

^ybe 

to- 

last 

>me 

It  uf 


Six  Top  Teams  Debut  Today 

Nofre  Dame  Gets  First 
Test  Against  Mustangs 


Ufftiversity  Qiorus  Is 
Conducting  Auditions 


Cardboard  To  Periorm  Stunts 


PHIL  BLAZER 

.  starts  at  tackle  a^ainiit  Pack 


COMMUNITY 

CHURCH 
CHAPEL  HILL 


IS  CONCERNED  WITH  PERSONAL 
AND  SOCIAL  MORALITY 

JeMis  brings  to  men  princ  iples  that  arc  essential  to  the 
Avell-being  of  the  indivithial  and  the  increase  ot  justice 
and  gcMxi-will  in  society.  Believing  this  we  want  our 
Church  to  play  a  critical  and  corrective  role  within  the 
haniework  of  our  common  life. 

We  are  concerned  with  the  smial  problems  of  mankind- 
war,  proverty,  diser.>e,  crime,  prejudice  and  all  the  im- 
moralities of  our  s<xia].  economic  and  jx>litical  piactices. 
The  existence  ol"  black,  white  and  yellow  races  is  accepted 

gladlv  and  re\erently  as  a  part  of  God's  purpose  for  the 

enrichment  of  human  life. 


ENCOURAGES  FREEDOM  OF 
THOUGHT 

(iod   has  spoken     in   \arious  times  and  divers  places." 

So  no  church,  indeed  no  single  religion,  has  the  complete 

and  final   truth  aboiu  (.od  and  mans  relationships  to 

him. 

«« 

We  cherish  the  opportunity  to  join  with  other  seekers 
after  religious  truth  with  no  constraint  save  a  devotion 
to  truth  and  right  as  they  are  made  known.  We  would 
rcmii'in  humble  and  teachable  in  the  conviction  that 
God  will  lead  us  into  fidler  truth. 

YOU  ARE  CORDIALLY  INVITED. 
WORSHIP  SUNDAY  1 1:00  A.  M. 

HILL  MUSIC  HALL 

(On  The  Campus) 


DAILY    CROSSWORD 


ACROS.S 

1.  Mid- 

VVeat 

city 
8.  Perform 

11.  Takes  away 

12.  Conjunction 

13.  The  palm 
coc'kato 

14.  Cord 

16.  Member  of 
family 

17,  MU'ir  not* 

19.  Spani.sh 
duke  of 
16th  C. 

20.  Thin  cookie 

22.  Interjection 
— same  as 
•Od- 

23.  Lawyer's 
retamers 

26.  Entire 
amount 

27.  Kind  of 
poetry 

28.  Concise 

30.  Part  of 
'to  be' 

31.  Lifted 

33.  Music  note 

34.  Lines  of 
Junction 

35.  River   (Sp.) 

37.  Sun  god 

38.  Refciound 

41.  Daughter  of 
Tantalus 
(Gr.  Myth.) 

43.  Pin  set 
in  boat 
fi;unwhal« 

45  Weep 

46.  Home 
appliance 

48.  Man's 
nickname 
(poas.) 

49.  Neatest 


DOWN 

1.  Stuff 

2.  Leading 
actor 

3.  Mohamme- 
dan priest 

4.  Heart 
(anat.) 

5.  Mountain 
slide 

6.  Earth  as  a 
goddess 
(Gr.) 

7.  Malt  kiln 
( var. ) 

8.  Indigo 

9.  Shake  with 
laughter 

10.  Pedaled 
15.  Conflict 
18.  Astern 


20.  Chinese 
river 

21.  Gauged 
2.3.  Mans 

name 

24.  Passe- 
rine 
bird 

25.  Anger 

26.  Skill 
29.  Large 

worm 
32.  Rowing 

implement 
34.  Weep 
36.  Boy's  name 

(po«s.) 

38.  Sleep 
lightly 

39.  Malt 
beverages 


naaac]  nnnna 
fan     nr^n  nriH 

L.'jLJi>li4i-tl'l    bbJuiy 

HPiLiwy  wnniriH 


Vcttrrday't  Amtwar 

40.  Saucy 
42.  Newt 
44.  Game 

of 

cat's 

cradle 

(Haw.) 
47.  Smallest 

state  (abbr. 


By  WILL  GRIMSLEY 
The  Associated  Press 

Six  leading  contenders  for  na- 
tional college  football  honors,  in-  , 
ciuciing  always  potent  Notre  Dame 
and  bowl-hardened  Georgia  Tech, 
make  their  debut  today  in  a  far-  ; 
flung  program  which  would  be  a 
credit  to  mid-^-aason. 

The  South  Bend  Irish,  rated  No. 
3  in  the  Associated  Press'  pre- 
season poll,  invate  the  Cotton 
Bowl  at  Dallas  for  their  perennial 
opener  with  Southern  Methodist 
University.  The  night  game,  (9 
p.m.  EST)  will  broadcast  nation- 
ally by  Mutual. 

Georgia  Tech,  fielding  virtually 
the  same  :.quad  which  whipped 
:  Pittsburgh  in  the  Sugar  Bowl,  in- 
vades Lexington,  Ky.,  to  test  its 
No.  4  pre-season  rating  against 
Kentutfky  in  television's  game  of 
the  day. 


No.  9  which  meets  Villanova  at 
College  Station;  and  Pittsburgh, 
No.  10  which  has  an  unusually 
early  date  with  its  old  rival  from 
the  coal  and  steel  belt,  West  Vir- 
ginia. 

The  Eastern  and  Middle  West- 
ern sections  of  the  country  are 
relatively  quiet,  with  moo-L  of  the 
heavy  firing  in  the  South,  South- 
west and  Far  West  —  the  latter 
area  still  suffering  the  shell-shock 
of  the  summer  sanity  code  probes. 

Stanford,  the  team  many  are 
picking  to  grab  the  Rose  Bowl 
bid,  has  a  night  engagement  with 
Washington  State  at  Spokane, 
Wa^'li.  The  Indians  have  one  of  the 
nation's  leading  passers  in  John 
Brodie,  who  completed  76  last 
year  for  1,024  yards,  while  Wash- 
ington State  was  rebuilding  un- 
der Jim   Sutherland. 

Southern    California,    suffering 


The  Music  Dept.  has  announced 
that  Dr.  Wilton  Mason,  recently  re- 
turned from  a  year's  study  in  Italy, 
will  assume  direction  of  the  newly- 
formed  University  Chorus. 

Chapel  Hill  audiences  should  al- 
ready be  familiar  with  Dr.  Mason's 
activities  as  a  chora!  conductor,  ba- 
causo  he  is  musical  director  of  the 
Carolina  Playmrfters,  and  has  serv- 
ed as  composer  and  director  of  the 
famous  Boone  summer  drama, 
'Horn  in  the  West." 

Auditions  for  the  new  group  are 
now  being  held  in  204  Hill  Hall 
and  will  cc^tinue  through  today. 

Two  seasons  ago  he  conducted 
the  performances  of  Mozart's  Mar- 
riage of  Figaro,  the  first  operatic 
prAentation  of  the  Music  Dept. 


The    University    Chorus,    which  | 
will    carr>'    one   unit    of   academic  j 
credit,  was  organized  last  spring  to 
provide  opportunities  for  students  | 
to  take  part  in  a  mu.eical  activity,  i 
and  to  perform    'andard  and  mod-  \ 
ern  classics.  Membership  is  open  to 
anyone  regularly  enrolled  in  the 
University. 

"I  am  very  enthusastic  about  this 
new  group,"  Dr.  Mason  said.  "I 
firmly  believe  that  withn  the  large 
student  body  of  this  University  we 
can  find  a  group  that  is  interested 
irt  singing  the  very  best  choral  lit- 
eratiure  according  to  exacting  stan- 
dards of  performance.  I  am  look- 
ing forward  with  keen  interest  to 
try-outs  to  see  what  talent  is  avail- 
able." 


Covering,  The  Campus 


The  IJNC  Cardboard  makes  its 
1956  debut  in  Kenan  Stadium  this 
afternoon  at  the  Carolina-State 
football  game. 

Headed  by  Cardboard  president 
Bill  Pate,  the  Cardboard  will  furn- 
ish entertainment  at  halftime  to- 
day as  well  as  at  all  home  games. 

The  CardboM^  will  give  a  "wel- 
come home"  for  "Big  Jim  Tatum" 
who  sends  his  1956  editon  of  UNC 
football  against  N.  C.  State.  The 
Cardboard  will  also  offically  ring 
open  the  curtains  of  the  new  sea- 
son. This  stunt  will  .begin  with  a 
stage  curtain  that  will  open  with 
successive  flips  and  will  reveal 
a  football  with  1956  imprinted 
upon  it.  Several  puns  depicting  a 
Carolina  victory-  will  follow  the 
opening  stunts. 

This  year,  the  Cardboard  is  mak- 
ing an  attempt  to  publish  and 
make  known  instructions  on  how  to 
operate  the  Cards.  There  will  be 
a  stunt  caller  who  will  announce 


the  stunt  number  to  be  performed. 
He  will  also  lead  the  students  so 
that  the  stunts  can  be  done  in  uni- 
son. 

Each  student  sitting  in  the  Card 
Section  will  find  an  instruction 
card  beneath  his  seat  with  the 
stunt  number  on  it.  Colors  wili  be 
stamped  beside  the  numbers  so  the 
student  can  see  what  color  is 
stamped  by  that  number  and  hold 
it  up  when  the  stunt  is  called. 

When  the  stunt  is  called,  the 
entire  section  is  to  follow  the  call- 
er on  the  count  of  three  by  lifting 
their  cards  from  their  laps  upward 
in  an  arc.  The  cards  must  be  held 
at  nose  level. 

The  most  important  thing  to  re- 
member in  performing  the  st,:nts 
is  to  listen  to  the  caller's  instruc- 
tion and  to  follow  them  exactly. 
"If  this  is  done  by  everyone,"  said 
Pate,  "the  stunts  should  be  a  per- 
fect success." 


The  contest  ^11  be  televised  na-  i  conference    penalties    which    force 


tionally,  starting  at  2:30  p.m.,  EST 
by  the  National  Broadcasting  co. 

Other  members  of  football's  pre- 
season top  10  in  action  are  Mary- 
land. No.  6,  host  to  Syracuse  at 
College  Park;  Texas  Christian, 
!  Christian,  No.  7,  which  takes  on 
Kansas'  at  Lawrence;  Texas  A&M, 

Student  Passbooks 

Student  passbooks  which  are 
lost  will  not  be  replaced,  and 
neither  ere  they  transferable. 
Anyone  finding  another  student's 
passbook  is  urged  to  return  it  to 
the  owner. 


SAVAGE 
PASSIONS! 


NOW  SHOWING 


LATE  SHOW  TONITE 
SUNDAY -MONDAY 


THECKYTHAT  I 
ROCKED^ 

THE  ItfORLDS^ 
HOTTEST 
STRTP 


ifev*^"^! 


^21 


its  seniors  to   play  only  half  the  i 
schedule,  will  send  Jon  Arnett  & 
Co.  into  the  first  five  game*-,  mak.  | 
ing    the    Trojans    a    slight    choice  \ 
over  Texas  in  anotlier  night  game 
at   Austin.  j 

Oregon  State,  rebuilding  under  j 
Tommy  Prothro,  throws  its  s-ingle 
wing  attack  against  Missouri  at 
Columbia.  Oregon  plays  at  Colo- 
rado and  California,  hoping  for  a 
return  to  its  golden  yesterdays, 
is  host  to  Baylor— with  the  Tex- 
ans    conceded    the    edge. 

In  the  Southea.-tern  Conference, 
Vanderbilt  is  favored  over  a  Geor- 
gia team  of  unknown  quantity  in 
a  game  at  Nashville;  Mississippi 
State  meets  Florida  in  a  tossup  at 
State  College.  Miss.;  and  Tulane 
is  given  an  edge  at  New  Orleans 
over  Virginia  Tech,  an  out-of-con- 
ference  rival. 
^ere  are  other  games: 

^outh— Virginia  vs.  VMI,  Wake 
Forest  vs.  William  &  Mary.  The 
Citadel  vs.  Newberry.  Duke  vs. 
South  Carolina,  North  Carolina 
vs.  North  Carolina  State. 

Midwest — Cincinnati  vs.  Dayton: 
Marquette  vs.  Detroit:  Nebraska 
vj.  South  Dakota;  Kansas  State 
vs.  Oklahoma  A&M;  George  Wash. 
ington  vs.  Miami  of  Ohio.  Louis- 
ville vs.  Toledo. 

Southwest — Arkansas  vs.  Hard- 
in-Simmons.  Texas  Tech  vs.  Texa-J 
Western.  Alabama  vs.  Rice  (at 
night).  New  Mexico  A&M  vs.  New 
Mexico. 

Far  West— Denver  vs.  Utah  State, 
Nevada  vs.  Idaho  State.  Washing- 
ton vs.  Idaho,  College  of  Pacific 
vs.  Colorado  A&M,  Arizona  State 
at  Tempe  v.\  Wichita,  Montana 
State  vs.  North  Dakota. 


Officials  Needed 

students  are  needed  as  intramur- 
al officials  for  tag  football.  Stiv 
dents  interested  have  been  asked 
to  come  to  301  Woollen  Gym  on 
Tuesday,  Sept.  25  at  4  p.m. 


Carolina 


RIDING  A 
HABIT  HE 
CAN'T  STOP! 


2Ctl  CHtif)  Fit  prcscRtt 

JAMES  MAserf 

BARBARA  RUSH 


Late    Sh«w 

Tonight-1 1 :30    P,M. 

Sun.-MON.-Tue. 


BABY-SITTING  SERVICE 

Baby-sitting  services  will  be 
available  on  football  Saturdays 
from  1  to  5:15  p.m.  at  the  Victory 
Village  Nurset"}'  to  children  of  stu- 
dents, faculty  and  University  em- 
ployes. 

Only  children  seven  years  and 
under  will  be  accepted.  The  min- 
imum charge  will  be  $1.50  per 
child  for  the  firjt  child,  and  $1 
for  each  additional  child  from  th^ 
same  family.  The  charges  are  for  I 
the   entire  afternoon.  | 

VARSITY  GLEE  CLUB  I 

The  Varsity  Glee  Club  has  in-  i 
vited  all  men  interested  in  sing- 
ing to  an  infomal  meeting  on  Wed- 
nesday at  5  p.m.  in  Hill  Hall.  Re- 
freshments will  be  served  and  a 
short  concert  by  the  Glee  Club 
will  be  presented. 
DANCE  COMMITTEE 

All  members  of  the  University 
Dance  Committee  will  be  required 
to  work  at  the  Grail  Dance  tonight, 
according  to  Chairman  Don  Mill- 
er. 
ART  EXHIBITION 

A  collection  of  reproductions  of 
famous  paintings,  which  are  cur- 
rently on  exhibition  in  the  Pear- 
son Hall  Art  Gallery,  will  be  avail, 
able  for  rent  beginning  Septem- 
ber 26  at  9  a.m. 

A  picture  may  be  reserved  for 
rental  for  25  cents  per  month 
per  picture  plus  a  $1  deposit. 
Each  picture  may  be  rented  lor 
a  three  months  period.  This  ser- 
vice is  offered  to  Chapel  Hill  rec-i- 
denfs. 
MEN'S  GLEE  CLUB 

All  members  of  the  UNC  Men's 
Glee  Club  have  been  asked  to 
meet  in  Hill  Hall  Monday  at  4:30 
p.m.  for  the  first  meeting  of  the 
year. 
'W  YACKS 

Anyone  who  did  not  receive  his 
1956  Yack  may  pick  it  up  upon 
presentation  of  his  ID  card  at 
either  the  GM  Information  Office 
or  the  Yack  office. 
APO 

Alpha  Phi  Omega.  Carolina's 
service  fraternity,  will  hold  its 
firi«t  meeting  of  the  year  on  Mon- 
day night  at  7:30  p.m. 
ALPHA  GAM  TELEPHONE 
'  The  telephone  number  of  the 
Alpha  Gamma  Delta  sorority 
house  has  been  changed  to  8-9083. 
WINTHROP  COLLEGE  DANCE 

The  Winthrop  Recreation  Assn. 
of  Rock  Hill.  B.C.,  has  invited  the 
University  student  body  to  its 
"Bermuda  Ball"  on  Saturday, 
Sept.  29,  in  the  Peabody  Gymnas 
ium  in  Rock  Hill.  The  ball  wUl  be 
from  8  to  11:45  p.m. 
DTH  SUBSCRIPTIONS 

Students,  faculty  members  and 
townspeople  who  wish  to  continue 
receiving  The  Daily  Tar  Heel  by 
mail   have   been   asked   to   notify 

Fresh  Soccer 

Freshman  soccer  coach  John 
Wienants  would  like  for  all  boys 
interested  hi  trying  out  for  the 
team  to  report  to  the  athletic 
epuipment  office  in  Woollen 
Gym  Monday  at  2:30  p.m. 


CLASSIFIEDS 


Inema: 
COLOR  by  Do  Luxe 


TODAY 

There  Is  No  Might  Like  the 
Might  of  Moby  Dick! 


lUCHAHP,  Leo 
B  aSehxrt  Gekpi 

INTMI 

JbHNKJSTOH 

r*opucTioN  or  hihhM  Miviiict 


IVlCBy^Cjc 


I 

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Prices  This  Attraction      ! 

Adults  65<-Chiidren  }5i\ 


AVON  CALLING  —  T.  V.  AD- 
vertising  rings  the  bell  and 
helps  you  sell  Avon.  Earn  your 
ChHstmas  money  now.  Write 
Avon,  Camellia  Dr.,  Fayetteville, 
N    C. 

LOST:  ONE  WALLET.  FINDER 
please  reium  to  James  Harry 
Menzel,  DU  House,  East  Rose- 
mar>'  Street. 


FOUND  ON  CAMPUS  —  TWO 
large  denomination  bills.  Owner 
contact  Lenny  Sacks,  107  Fra- 
ternity Court. 


LOST:  BLACK  POCKETBOOK 
with  green  billfold  inside  plus 
driver.^'  license.  Probably  lost  in 
Peabody  Hall.  If  found,  please 
return  to  Elizabeth  Hightower, 
Smith  Dorm. 


Dale  Staley,  subscription  manager,  I 
at  9-33ffl.  Rates  arc  $4  per  school  j 
year.  Students  who  wish  to  send  1 
The  Daily  Tar  Heel  home  can  do  , 
so  at  the  same  rate.  { 

I 
INTRAMURUAL  OFFICIALS  I 

Students    majoring    in    physical . 
education   are  needed     as-     intra- 
mural   officials    for   tag    football. 
Those  interested  have  been  asked 
to  come  to  301  Woollen  Gym  on  j 
Tuesday  at  4  p.m. 

CAMP  PICTURES  { 

Anyone  wishing  to  order  a  fresh-  j 
man  camp  picture  may  do  so  at  i 
the  YMCA  office  through  Monday. 
The  charfe  for  each  picture  is  $1.- 
50. 

Football 

(Contimied  from   P<vge   1) 

per  man  in  the  forward  wall  with 
230  pound  Stewart  Pell  leading  the 
way.  Pell  and  tackle  running  mate 
Pil  Blazer,  a  210  pounder  playing 
in  his   first  varsity   contest,   will , 
I  spearhead  the  Tar  Heel  defense. 
i      Most  of  the  Tar  Heel  offensive 
!  punch  will     be     built     around  a 
j  stroCBg  ground  game  operating  out 
of  the  split-T  formation  with  co- 
I  captain   Ed   Sutton     bearing     the 
major  part  of  the  load.  The  pass- 
i  ing  arms  of  Hathaway  and  Farmer 
I  will  be  used  as  the  situation  de- 
mands. 
j      The  Wolfpack  squad   is  report- 
I  ediy  fired  up  to  a  fever  pitch  for 
j  this  afternoon's   game.   State   has- 
I  n't    beaten   Carolina     fince     1942 
when,  ironically,  Tatum  was  serv- 
:  ing  a  one-year  coaching  hitch  here. 
j      It  will   make   the  46th   meeting 
j  of  the  two  schools.  The  Tar  Heels 
are  far  ahead  in  the  series  with 
35  wins   and     five     losses.     Five 
i  games  have  ended  in  tie?. 


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Chapel  Hill,  North  Carolina 


PAOt  FOUR 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


SATURDAY,  SEPTEMBER  22.  ^9U 


'Sr 


^ 


1 


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'■'"'      '';  w-.^'    ''*'-K' 


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WEATHER 

Expected     generally     feir     and 
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OThc 


STarHcel 


REVIEW 

A    new    Daily    Tar    Heel    service 
starts  today  on  page  2. 


VOL.   LVIII,     NO.  4 


Complete  (JP^  Wire  Service 


CHAPEL  HILL,  NORTH  CAROLINA,  SUNDAY,  SEPTEMBER  23,  1956 


Offices   in   Graham   Memorial 


FOUR  PACE^  THIS  "'UE 


N.  C.  STATE  OVERPOWERS  TA 


WC  Girl  Named  CU 
Day  Queen  Here 


By  CHARLIE  JOHNSON 

Hundwds  of  Woman's  College 
and  N.  C.  State  Co'iege  students 
came  to  Chapel  Hill  yesterday  for 
the  annual  Consolidated  Univers- 
ity Day  activities. 

Highlights  of  the  activities  in- 
cluded the  football  game  between 
UNC  and  State,  a  reception  at 
Graham  Memorial  after  the  game 
and  a  dance  in  Woollen  Gym, 
which  included  the  crowning  of 
the  CU  Day  Queen. 

A  WC  senior.  Miss  Ann  Fitz- 
hugh,  was  named  Consolidated 
University  Day  Queen.  She  won 
out  over  eight  other  girls  from 
the  three  schools.  Also  introduced 
were  the  chairmen  of  the  Consoli- 
dated University  Student  Councils 
from  State  and  WC  and  Bob 
Young,  president  of  the  UNC  stu- 
»  dent  body. 
RECEPTION 

Students  gathiered  around  Gra- 
ham Memorial  for  a  reception  af- 
ter the  game  and  friends  from  the 
three  institutions  iraid  their  "'hel- 
los." 

Suez  Canal 
Is  First  j 
Di  Debate   ,' 

The  Stwz  Canal  problem  will  be 
debated  by  the  Dialectic  Senate  in  ■ 
its  Ilrst  meeting  of  the  year  next  1 
Tuesday,    according    to    President  ! 
Stan  Shaw.  ! 

The  Senate   meets  on  the  third  i 
floor  of  New  West  building,  which 
is  directly  across  the  street  from 
Memorial   Hall.    The   meeting   will  '■ 
start  at  8  p.m.  | 

The  president  and  the  society  has  | 
extended  an  invitation  to  all  fresh- : 
men,  transfers  and  upper  classmen 
who  have   an  interest  in  debating 
topics  of  current  interest  to  attend.  I 
A  short  reception  will  be  held  af- 
ter the  meeting  so  that  new  stu- 
dents will  have  an  opportunity  to 
get   acquainted   with    members   of 
the  society. 

The  Dialectic  Senate  was  found- 
ed in  1795  shortly  after  the  Uni- 
versity opened  its  doors  as  the  first 
state  supported  institution  in  the 
country,  and  it  enjoys  the  unique 
position  of  being  the  oldest  debat- 
ing society  on  any  campus  in  the 
country. 

The  Di  and  its  sister  society,  the 
Phi,  were  the  originators,  and,  for 
many  years,  the  only  expression  of 


This  was  the  first  cf  thtee  CU 
Days  to  be  held  this  year.  One 
is  held  on  each  campus  annually. 

WC's  Queen  contestants*  were 
Misses  Fitzhugh;  Pat  Mane,  a 
junior,  and  Nancy  Morrison,  also 
a  junior. 

State's  girls  who  put  in  their 
bid  for  Queen  were  Misses  Pat 
Ponder  of  Raleigh,  a  freshman  at 
State:  Beverly  Little  of  Jefferson, 
also  a  freshman,  and  Ursula  Swiss- 
good  of  Raleigh,  a  sophomore. 

UNC'.:.-   Queen    contestants   were 
Miss    Lucinda      Holderness,      Miss 
Jane  Weich  and  Miss  Jane  Little. 
JUDGES 

Judges  who  selected  the  Queen 
were  Charlie  Bernard.  Miss  Har- 
old Lee  and  Tony  Jenzano.  She  wa.< 
selected  after  the  game  and  was 
presented    at    the    dance    in    the 

gym- 

Jim  Kimsey,  chairman  of  the 
UNC  delegation  of  CUSC.  said  he 
thought  CU  Day  was  a  great  suc- 
cess. "Approximately  3.000  at- 
tended the  reception  at  Graham 
Memorial.  The  contestants  for 
Queen  were  most  charming."  he 
said.  Kimsey  expressed  thanks  for 
help  given  in  carrying  out  the  ac- 
tivities to  Miss  Linda  Mann,  di- 
rector of  Graham  Memorial;  Ray 
Jefferies  and  the  beauty  queen 
judges. 


LS,  26  TO  6 

I 

j  Slashing  Ground  Game  Sets 

'  Up  4  IDs  For  Wolf  pack  As 

Carolina's  Defense  Falters 

By  LARRY   CHEEK 

''    '  Daily   Tar   Heel    Si>orts   Editor 

I'iicd  up  \.  f;.  Statr  i^ave  Carolina  Coac'i  Jim  Tatmii  a  l)iiicr  weUonie  home  present 
lure  \esier(lay  aliernoon  m  Kenan  Stadium  a,  they  imleaslied  a  .sa\aoe  olleUMve  attack  to 
lake.i  one-sided  2(>-()  \  irtorv.  their  first  in   ij^   years  o\er  a  Tar  Heel  team. 

In  a  <;ame  pla\ed  helove  ;{7.o()o  lans  and  r  ciondle-ss  skies,  the  \\'oIipa(k  unleashed  a 
slashinj;  nniltij)le  ollen.se  that  toie  the  Carol  na  defense  to  shreds.  The  Pack  dominated 
play  from  start  to  Finish,  striking  lor  two  tou.hdo\vns  in  tlie  second  quarter  and  two  more 
in  the  fourth.  Carolina's  only  TD  came  on  a  20  yard  end  sweep  by  halfback  Ed  Sutton  in 

♦  the  second   period.  ♦ " 

All     the     State     markers    came        The  Statistics 
through   the   air,   although    it    was 


Lear  Blocks  'Pack  Field  Goal  Try 


Counselors 
Named  For        1 
Coed  Dorms      | 

Five  University  graduate  stu- 
dents have  been  nam.d  to  serve 
as  counselors  in  undergraduate 
women's  dormitories  during  the 
1956-57  school  year. 

Dr.  Katherine  K.  Car.-nichael, 
dean  of  women,  announced  that 
couttw-eling  posts  will  be  filled  by 
Misses  Elizabeth  Anne  Barnes. 
Kingsport,  Tenn.;  Harriet  D.  Holl. 
Chapel  Hill;  Mary  Sue  Honaker, 
Hinton,  W.  Va.;  Lydia  Moody,  Siler 
City;  and  Mary  Louise  Stirewalt, 
Granite  Falls. 

Miss  Barnes,  a  UNC  graduate  in 
English  literature,  has  been  as- 
signed to  Spencer  Hall.  Now  work- 
ink  toward  an  M.  A.  degree,  she 
has  done  newspaper  work  for  the 
Richmond,  Va.,  News  Leader  and 
the  Kingsport.  Tenn.,  Times-News; 
has  taken  a  European  tour;  and 
has  worked  with  Kings-port  Blue 
Cross. 

Miss    Holt,     couselor     in     Carr 


Don  Lear,  No.  61,  senior  Tar  Heel  left  guard,  bl  sts  through  the  State  forward  wall  to  block  the 
field  goal  attempt  by  the  Wolfpack  in  the  first  qOa  te»  of  yesterday's  game.  Lear  was  the  spark  of  the 
Carojind   defense   alt    afternoon.   (Photo   by   Truman    Moore.) 

■   •••■  ••• :»,   -.- 

Sutton  Highly  Complimentary 
Of  Victorious  Wolfpack;  Say$ 
Will  Be  Ready  For  Oklahoma 


Late   football    scores   (see   details 
on  page  4.) 

South    Carolina    7,    Duke   0. 

Wake     Forest     39,    William     and 
Mary  0. 

Syracuse  26,  Maryland  12. 

Virginia   18,  VMIO. 
I 


Fumbl-es  Lost 
Yds.  Penalized 


By  BILL    KING 

Daily  I' in  Hrel  !H>oit.\  II' j iter 
"  A  slAm  group  of  Carol  ma  Tar 
Heels  filed  into  the  home  team 
dressing-room  yesterday  aflernooi 
following  a  devastating  defeat  suf- 
fered at  the  hand.?  of  Big  Four 
rival.   N.   C.   State. 

The  Wolfpack  had  spoiled  Jim 
Talum's  1956  debut  with  a  dazz- 
ling display  of  speed,  passing  and 
just  do)\n  right  efficiency.  The 
Wolfpack  had  won  a  well  deserved 
victory  after  a  13-year  famine 
against  their  Consolidated  Uni- 
versity  brother. 

Coach  Tatum  could  not  be  *o- 
cated  following  the  game  but  he 
made  this  official  .^atemcnt  to 
the  press:  'State  College  has  got 
a  great  football  team,  and  they've 


might  have  caught  a  plane  to  Co|  j  said  the  congenial  senior  from 
iumbia,  S.  C,  immediately  foll»w»|  Cullowhee.  "They  were  probably 
ing  the--«a#n<*>  f«J"'S*^^<*-'ton5gWN*V-tTrtto  rtiorr- ■^Tirod' iip  than  we 
game  between  South  Carolina  and 
Duke.  The  Tar  Heels  play  South 
Carolina  in  Columbia  Ocl:;ber  6, 
and  finish  the  season  against  the 
Blue  Devil'  in  Kenan  Siadium 
November  24. 


WASHINGTON    (/P)  —  Secretary 
of    State    Dulle.-.-    returned    to    the 
United    States    from    London    this 
afternoon.  He  said  the  Suez  Canal 
decision   offers   a   fair   and    peace- 
ful   solution    of    the    dispute.    The  1  average   of  6.6   per  trip. 
French   announced  that   they   will  j 
join    the    Suez    Canal    Users'    As-  i 
sociation,  but  with  strong  r^jsrva-  i 
tions. 


the    Wolf  pack's    devasting    ground     1st  Downs 
game  thai  set  up  each  score.  Quar.     Rushing  Yds. 
terbacks  Tom    Katich     and     Billy  i  Passing  Yds. 
Franklin  proved  themselves  to  be    Passes 
more   than  adequate   replacements     Passes  interc.  by 
for   departed  star  Eddie   West   as     Punts 
they   each   uncorked     a     pair     of 
touchdown  strikes. 

Halfbacks  Dick  Christy  and 
Dick  Hunter  sliced  the  Tar  Heel 
defense  almost  at  will  as  they 
dazzled  the  crowd  with  a  swivel 
hipped  display  of  ball  carrying. 
Hunter  was  the  leading  ground 
gainer  for  the  Pack,  racking  up 
a  total  of  83  yardj  in  17  carries. 
Christy  followed  close  behind  with 
80    yards    in    only    12    carries,  *?n 


NCS 

24 

253 

B3 

7-14 

1 

1-14 

0 

10 


Carolina 

H 

21S 

38 

3-8 

0 

3-27 

2 

2S 


over  left  guard  for  five  yards  to 
the  Tar  Heel  ten.  .After  a  loss  of 
one  yard  on  the  next  play,  Katich 
spotted  end  John  Collar  in  the 
end  zone,  and  hit  him  with  an  11 
yard  strike  for  the  TD.  Hunter 
^dded  the  extra  point. 


TAR  HEEL  SCORE 

The   Tar   Heels  took   the   follow- 
ing kickoff  and  put  together  their 
_    _  ,  only  touchdown  push  of  the  day. 

SUTTON  SPARKLES  1  ^u^y  ..-ept  71  yards  in  only  eight 

Carolina  s  supposedly  potent  of-    pi^j.^   f^r    the   score. 
fense  showed  flashes  of  brilliance,         gutton    and     sub     halfback     Jim 


PREVALENT  GLOOM 

.Most  of  the  Tar  Heel  .squad 
.showered  and  dressed  quickly  in 
order  to  get  away  from  the  pre- 
valent gloom  amidst  the  Carolina 
dressing  mom.  Quarterback  Doug 
Farmer,  who  was  injured  in  the 
third  quarter,  was  in  the  treatment 
room,  but  commented  that  he  wa.< 
okay.  "Just  a  few  brui..vs,"  said 
Farmer. 

Co-captain  Ed  Sutton,  the  one 
got  too  much  for  us.  I  guess  a  man  i  bright  star  in  the  Tar  Heel's  dis- 


has  to  take  this  every  now  and  j 
then  in  hi.*  life  to  see  what  he's  j 
made  of.  That's  all  you  can  say."  j 
There  was  a  good  deal  of  specu- ' 
lation  among  the  press  that  Tatum 


astrous  opener  and  one  of  the  few 
who  stayed  around  for  an.\   length 
of  time,  was  highly  complimentary 
of  the  Wolfpack. 
"They  (State)  have  a  good  club," 


student  government    on   the  Caro- 1  Dormitory   and    a    student    in    the 


lina  campus.  The  present  student 
government  and  our  Honor  System 
grew  out  of  the  two  societies.  In 
addition  to  this,  the  University  Li- 
brary was  originally  endowed  with 
the  libraries  of  the  two  debating 
societies. 


Law  School,  is  a  graduate  of  the 
University  of  Minnesota.  She  has 
worked  in  San  Francisco,  Calif, 
with  Dun  and  Brad^-treet,  an  im- 
I>ort  house,  and  a  law  firm. 

Miss  Honaker  received  her  A.B. 

(See   COUNSELORS,  Page  4) 


UNC  Coeds  Begin  Rush 
Parties  Here  Tomorrow 


Sorority  rush  begins  here  tomor- 
row night. 

Rushees  will  visit  the  sorority 
houses     on     either     tomorrow     or 


CU  Queen  Contestants  Pose 


The  candidates  for  the  title  of  Miss  ConsolidatKl  University  pose  for  cameramen  at  haiftime  of 
yesterday's  game  here.  The  Tar  Heels  were  hosts  ti  the  N.  C.  State  Wolfpack  on  rhe  field  and  to  over 
1,000  students  from  Woman's  College  in  the  stands  fjr  the  annual  CU  Day. 


Tuesday   night,    according   to   Pan  i 
hellenic  Council  officials.  I 

Three  one-hour  parties  are  sched  j 
uled,  beginning  at  6:30  and  laslin.^  j 
until  10  both  tomorrow  and  Tucs  | 
day.  I 

The  rushees  can  pick  up  their , 
party  schedules  at  the  Panhellenic 
post  office  in  the  three  Roland 
Parker  Lounges  in  Graham  Memor- 
ial. The  post  office  will  be  open 
tcmorrow  from  9:00-1:15  and  a.'^ain 
on  Wednesday  at  the  same  hours. 

Coeds  who  did  not  attend  the 
Panhellenic  tea  on  Friday  ni^ht 
may  not  participate  in  rush  unless 
they  contact  the  Dean  of  Women's 
office.  They  will  be  eliminated 
from  rush  if  they  do  not  visit  all 
six  sorority  houses  tomorrow  and 
Tuesday. 

Since  their  arrival  on  campus, 
sorority  girls  and  rushees  havo 
been  allcwod  only  to  exchange 
greetings  with  no  further  conver- 
sation permitted.  This  silence  p:'- 
riod  will  continue  through  bid  day, 
Wednesday,  Oct.  3.  The  purpose  of 
silenf*e  pr-riod,  aceording  to  Miss 
Harriet  Lewis  of  the  Panhellenic 
Council,  is  to  avoid  unfair  rush  ng 
and  to  allow  each  rush:'e  to  make 
up  her  o'vn  mind  without  pressure. 

Miss  Lewis  also  cautionecj  each 
rushee  to  read  her  rushing  manual 
thoroughly  because  she  will  be  re- 


were.  \\\'  iluuiglil  we  could  take 
them,  but  we  difinitely  weren't 
over-confident." 

"They  were  more  ready  for  us 
than  we  were  for  them,"  Sutton 
continued.  They  are  more  exper- 
ienced than  we  are  and  they  play- 
ed a  fine  game." 

Asked  about  the  Tar  Heel'..'  de- 
fense, Sutton  said  that  it  wasn't 
as  good  as  the  team  thought  it 
would  be.  'Still,  they  all  played 
a  good  ball  game,"  he  added. 
OKLAHOMA 

What  about  Oklahoma,  Sutton 
was  asked''  "What  can  you  say 
when  you're  playing  the  nations 
number  one  team,"  he  answered. 
"I  believe  we'll  be  more  ready  for 
Oklahoma.  We'll  give  them  a  good 
game." 

Over  in  the  Slate  dres.-ing  room 
the  scene  was  naturally  quite  dif- 
ferent. The  jubilant  players  were 
making  the  mr)st  of  the  happy  mo- 
ment. Nobody  was  in  a  hurry  to 
go  anywhere.  Everjbody  was  quite 
content  just  to  sit  around  and  cele- 
brate. 

Smiling  from  ear  to  ear.  coach 
Earl  Edwards  was  overjoyed. 
"We're  delighted,"  he  smiled. 
"Fourteen  year..*  is  a  long  time  and 
thats  an  understatement,"  said 
Edwards.  Nothing  at  Michigan 
St3te  could  ever  match  this,"  said 
the  former  Michigan  State  assist- 
ant coach. 

"I  think  we  were  pretty  well 
prepared  fo  Ihi^'  one."  said  Ed- 
wards, "but  we  weren't  especially 
up  for  it.  The  boys  just  wanted 
it." 
GAMBLED 

"We  gambled  a  lot."  he  said. 
"We  didn't  know  just  how  strong 
our  reserves  were  and  we  had  to 
gamble.  I  thought  the  boys  were 
very  pois^^d  out  there  today. " 
See  SUTTON.  Page  4) 


'  seven    Americans    are    due    to    ar- 
rive .sum. 

Meanwhile,   in  SAUDI  .ARABIA, 
I  the  Big  Three  of  the  Arab  world 
are    beginning    talks    at    the    sum- 
mit. Presumably  they  arc  discuss- 
ing Suez. 


but  never  really  got  going  against     varniim 

Klrvcn    I'oii.sli   (ana!    pilots   have     a    ru^fged    State    line    that    refus-^d 

arrived   in  CAIRO  to  take  jobs  on     to  give.  Sutton  was  just  about  the 

I  the   Suez   Canal.    Fifteen    Russians    only    Tar    Heel    to    make    a    dent 

I  are   in  training  for  this   work,  and     in     the    Wolfpack     defense    as    he 

bore  the  brunt  of  the  Carolina  of- 
fense. The  Cullowhee  Comet  was 
the  game's  leading  ground  gainer, 
racking  up  ninety  yards  on  only 
ten  carries,  an  average  of  nine  per 
!  carry. 

State    took    the   opening   kickoff 

and    launched    a   drive   from    their 

A  hurricane  watch  has  been  or-    own   28   yard    line   that   consumed 

dered  along  the  Louisiana  and  up-    nine  minutes  and  seventeen  pay^ 

per  Texas   coasts     in     connection    before  it  was  halted  by  a  blocked 

with  the  tropical  .-  orm  called  field  goal  attempt  on  the  Tar  Heel  tra  point,  but  this  was  of  no  con 
Flossy.  The  disturbance  has  been  21  yard  line.  The  two  teams  battled 
picking  up  speed  and  energy  in  on  comparatively  even  terms  dur- 
the  Gulf  of  Mexico,  and  was  last  jng  the  remainder  of  the  opening 
reported  about  450  miles  south  of .  period  as  neither  could  initiate  a 
New  Orleans.  I  sustained  drive. 

Vigorous    political    campaigning.  ^.^^^gg^^i^ggp^YDIRT 
continued   with   Steven.,()n   appear- 
ing  in    NEWTON.   Iowa     just     24'       E^""'-^'     '"     ^he     second    quarter. 


did    most    of    the    work, 
operating  behind  the  qijsrter back- 
ing   of    Doug    Farmer,     who    tooJc 
overover   when  ^farter   Curt   Hath- 
away was  shaken  up.  With  the  ball 
on  the  Carolina  43,  Sutton  took  a 
pitchout  from  Farmer  and  raced  17 
yards  to  the  Wolfpack  40  with  the 
help  of  a  key  block  from  Vanium 
on   the   midfield  stripe. 

After  Farmer  had  gained  one 
through  the  line,  Varnum  blasted 
his  way  for  19  to  the  State  20. 
Then,  on  the  next  play.  Sutton 
..'.vept  end  for  20  yards  and  the 
score.   Phil   Blazer  missed  the   ex- 


sequence  as  it  turned  out. 

QUICK   TD  THRUST 

The  Pack  wasted  little  time  on 
the  next  kickoff  getting  their  sec- 
ond touchdown  of  the  day.  George 
.Marinkov  returned  the  kickoff  to 
the  39  and     from     there,     Wallv 


Early  in 
hours  after  Eisenhower  Steven  1  ^^^^^  ^^^^  posses.non  on  their  own  Prince  3nd  Dick  Christy  combined 
son  charged  that  the  President  has  ^7  .vard  line  and  began  their  first  ;  to  move  ihe  ball  down  to  the  UNC 
become  an    almost    passive   figure.  I  Payo^^    P"s^i-    Hunter  and    Christy  j  21.    From    here.    Franklin    fired    a 


and  has  failed  to  give  the  leader 
ship  he   promi.vd  four  years  ago. 

The  change  drew  quick  response 
from  Postmaster  General  Summer- 
field  who  said  Eisenhower  has 
dominated    the    administration. 

A  medical  team  of  U.  S.  Army 
and    civilian    personnel    from    the 


shared  the  ball  carrying  duties  to  i  21  yard  pass  to  end  Bob  Pepe  in 
move  the  baM  down  to  the  Tar  ^  the  end  zone.  Thi.-  gave  the  Pack 
Heel    31-yard    line    where    it    was    a    13-6   margin   at    haiftime. 


first  and  ten.  \    'Although    State    controlled    the 
Wally    Prince,    hard-running    re-    ball   lor  most  of  the  third  period, 
serve  fullback  ^.-abbing  for  injured    Carolina  managed  lo  hold  them  in 
Tony  Guerrieri,   took  over  at  this  !  check.    The   third   Pack    TD   drive 
point   and   moved   the   balj    to   the  ,  began    late    in    the    third    quarter 
Panama    Canal    Zone"  has    arrived    ^4  on  a  well  executed  draw  pla.v.     when  Tar  He^j  fullback  Giles  Gaca 
in  Nicaragua  to  help  treat  Somoza.    Quarterback  Katich  went  to  the  15    fumbled    and    State    recovered    on 
..     _       _.^on  a  bootleg,  and  Christy  slammed  |         (See  N.  C.  STATE ^  Page  4) 


Boy  At  Hospital  Not 
in  Need  Of  Blood 

The  stor>-  in  yesterday's  Daily 
Tar  Heel  saying  that  "Wayne 
Brown,  a  12-year-old  boy.  is  batt- 
ling a  rare  hemophilias  condition 
at  Memorial  Hospital  and  is  greatly 
in  need  of  donations  of  Apositive' 
typo  blood"  is  incorrect.  The  in- 
formation furnished  The  Daily  Tar 
Heel  was  incorrect. 

The  boy  is  not  in  need  of  blood, 
according  to  a  blood  bank  spokes- 


man at  Memorial  Hospital.  Besides, 
sponsible  for  the  contents  and  will  i  the  boy's  blood  type  is  "O-positivc," 
be  disqualified  from  rush  if  in-  not  "A-positive,"  according  to  the 
vulved  in  an  infraction.  '  spokesman. 


Hunter  Gains  For  N.  C.  State 


N.  C  State's  Dick  Hunter  tears  around  end  for  a  first  down  before  running  into  a  Tar  Heel  tackier 
in  the  first  half  of  yesterday's  game  between  the  Tar  Heels  and  State.  Wolfpack  quarterback  Tom  Ka- 
tich.  left,  No.  16,  who  made  the  handoff  to  Hunter,  looks  on.  (Photo  by  Truman  Moore.) 


PAGE  TWO 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


SUNDAY,  SEPTEMBER  23,  195f 


SUNDAY 


The  Week  In  Re  view:  Fall  Classes  Open, 
Hodges  Displays  Drawers,  Siate  Wins 


Housing  Still  Problem, 
1,800  New  Students  Here 

Carolina  and  St^itc  supp<;mis  januntd  Kenan  Stadinm 
ytstcrday  afternoon  for  the  lar  Heels'  lirst  game  and  lir.st 
losj>  to  State  sintc  1912. 

F(M)tball  season  eolors,  dress  and  spirit  permeated  the 
air  around  Cirafiam  Memorial  yesterday  after  the  <»ame  as 
students  <>atheied  for  a  tea  field  in  (onnettion  \\ith  (".onst)li- 
dated  rniversity  Day. 

Iwenty  f>usloads  of  girls  tame  to  the- Hill  from  Wo- 
man's College  in  (ireensboro  to  attend  the  game  and  many 
festivities  plamied  by  various  campus  organizations  in  (on- 
neition  uith  C^l'  Day.  Highlighting  last  night's  a(  tivities  was 
a  dante  sponsored  b\   tlie  Order  of  the  (iraiU 

In  aieordance  with  a  decision  made  last  spring,  stu- 
dents entering  the  l^niversitv  as  freshmen  this  year  are  not 
allowed  to  have  cars  on  the  Tniversitv  lainpus. 

I  he  three  exceptions  to  this  ruling  itulude  veterans, 
((innnutess  and  handicapped  students.  Rav  jefferies.  assis- 
tant to  the  dean  of  student  affairs,  said  last  week,  that  .stu- 
dents granted  student  parking  permits  nnist  display  the 
stickers  on  this  automobiles  at  all  times. 

.Stickers  this  year  are  issued  on  pa\ment  of  a  St>.-,o  park- 
ing lee.  earmarked  towards  future  parking  improvements. 

jamming  on  the  Carolina  frcmt  is  not  restricted  to  traf- 
fic. A  student  body  of  7.000  ha*  found  itself  assigned  to 
three-man  rooms  in  all  but  the  f«)in  newest  dorms.  The  over- 
flow of  studcms  has  been  assigned  to  dormitory  basement 
and  apartments  in  Chapel  Hill. 

The  VM-Y\VCA  sponsored  ^'-Xite  was  presented 
Thursday  night  with  approximately  300  interested  stu- 
dents on  hand  to  hear  Dr.  John  Redhead  of  the  First  Pres- 
bvterian  Church  of  Greensl>oro  speak  on  how  he  found 
God. 

Entertainment  A\as  provided  by  Da\e  Davis  and  his 
noveltv  singing  group  and  the  Y-Nite  chorus,  assembled 
especial  I  v  for  the  Y-Nite  programs  throughout  the  year, 
led  b\    Jean  \avoulis. 

At  8:26  last  night  fall  officially  struck  Chai)el  Hill. 
With  the  Autumnal  Equinox  conies  the  traditional  activuies 
of  students  just  returned  to  school,  football  games,  chilly 
mornings,  and  :.  cascade  of  muUi-colored  leaves. 

Tiie  first  pep  rallv  of  the  year  was  held  Friday  evening. 
Honking  horns,  shouting  and  a  march  through  campus  dem- 
onstrated student  j)acking  for  the  Tar  Heels  opening  game 
against  the  WoffjJack  yesterday  afternoon. 

Some  191  freshnrin  came  to  the  Hill  five  days  before 
formal  oripnta::;iii  to  aiti'u;  the  V.MCA  sjumsored  freshman 
camp.  • 

Tn  M)iie  of  two  frigid  nights  and  widespread  hayfever, 
the  liisiimen  returned  to  campus  from  the  campsite  at  Camp 
New  Ffope.  eight  miles  north  of  Chapel  Hill,  more  aware 
)l  Carolina  s  tiaditions.  iiistruc  tors,  courses  and  many  facets 
of  extras  urricular  life. 

1  hroiigh  Orientation  Week,  Carolina's  1,200  fresh- 
man learned  about  the  honor  system,  the  locaticm  of  build- 
ings, dorm  and  L'ni\ersitv  regulations  and  something  of  the 
workings  of  South  Building. 

Young  Greets  New  Students, 
Outlines  Student  Government 

l^.st  Monday  night  Bob  'Soung,  president  of  the  stu- 
dent hod\  greeted  the  new  students  cm  campus  in  a  speech 
presenting  the  basic  structure  of  student  gcnernment. 

In  his  message,  ^'oung  lcM)ked  back  on  his  first  year  at 
Carolina  when  he  first  "heard  Chancellor  Hou.se  plav  his 
hamicjnica  and  sav.  Welcciine,  Class  of  \<)i)-  "■  Young  ex- 
pressed his  sincere  desire  that  the  new  stiulents  will  find 
their  ci.mpus  exj>eriences  as  enjoyable  and  rewarding  as  did 
he. 

Young  told  the  new  students  that  "things  are  not  per- 
fect at  Clarolina."  He  explained  that,  although  one  of  the 
best,  the  fac  iiltv  makes  mistakes  and^  while  highlv  Capable, 
the  administration  sometimes  falteis. 

He  called  the  students'  positicm  in  this  svstcm  adangei- 
ous  one  inasnuuh  as  students  are  held  lesponsible  for  their 
own  actions  and  for  the  actions  of  their  classmates. 

In  the  lemainder  of  his  speech.  Young  briefly  outlined 
the  makeup  and  workings  of  .student  government. 

\Vhile  descril)ing  the  honor  councils,  \'oiuig  reminded 
the  new  students  that  soiliecme  has  called  the  hcmor  system 
perfect,  but  it  is  the  people  living  under  it  who  sometimes 
falter.  Young  asked  that  it  not  he  anyone  in  his  audience 
who  falters. 
"^  In  c  leasing.  Young  iiuited  the  new  students  to  talk 
with  the  student  government  officials  and  to  express  their 
cjpinions  to  them. 


The  official  student  publication  of  tfie  Publications  Board  of  the 
University  of  North  Carolina,  where  it  is  published  daily  except  Mon- 
day and  examination  and  vacation  periods  and  summer  terms  Entered 
as  second  cla.ss  matter  in  the  post  office  at  Chapel  Hill,  N.  C,  under 
the  act  of  March  8.  1870.  Subscription  rates:  Mailed,  $4  a  year,  $2.50 
per  semester;  delivered,  $6  a  year,  $3.50  a  semester. 


Editor 

FRED  POWIvEDGE 

Managing  Editor    _- 

■——      -- 

CHABMF  JOHNSON 

Night  News  Editor  

--- RAY  LINKER 

Business  Manager 

_ BnJ,  BOB  PEEL 

The  State:      Third  Suez  Meeting- 
Humor  And  Dulles' SCUA  Approved 

Highways 


The  governor  dropp<;d  his 
pants  for  Life  Magazine,  North 
Carolina  highways  have  been 
promised  a  boost  and  the  state 
has  been  asked  for  more  money 
for   teachers    and    facilities-. 

It  was  a  medium  week  for 
North  Carolina,  broken  by  chuc- 
kles throughout  the  state  when 
Life  .Magazine  came  out  with 
pictures  of  Gov.  Luther  Hodges. 

The  governor  fed  a  cat.  ex- 
posed his  shortj  to  the  lens, 
hung  up  the  Mansion  wash  with 
clothes  pins  in  his  mouth  and 
took  a  shower  in  water-resistant 
clothes — all  to  adverti:re  the  state. 

Tar  Heel  highways  may  be  ex- 
panded due  to  an  increased  fed- 
eral allotment  of  $43  million 
this  year  and  $51  million  next 
year.  It  will  be  the  largest  sum 
the  iitate  has  ever  received  from 
the  government  for  highway  de- 
velopment. 

The  State  Board  of  Higher  Ed- 
ucation asked  for  $50  million  to 
be  used  for  better  facilities  and 
higher  pay  at  state  in.rlitutions 
of  higher  learning.  Profes.sors  at 
the  various  colleges  and  the  Un- 
iversity here  would  get  a  crack 
at    10  percent   pay  increases. 


While  Carolina  Students  were 
picking  up  their  class  tickets  last 
week,  the  rest  of  tha  world  was 
watching  a  conference  in  London. 

Representatives  of  18  nations 
gathered  in  that  city  for  the  second 
Seuz  Conference.  Secretary  of 
State'  John  Foster  DuUe.:  arrived 
by  air  from  the  United  States 
bearing  his  proposed  User's  Plan 
and  a  promise  of  $500  million  to 
the  western  European  countries 
agreeing  to  boycott  the  Suez  Canal. 

Here  at  home  the  political  scene 
consisted  of  Prc'ldent  Eisenhower 
talking  peace,  prosperity  and  prog- 
ress in  a  television  address  Wed- 
nessday  night,  and  preparing  for 
a  campaign  tour  of  the  Iowa  farm 
belt. 

The  ••onference  ended  Friday 
night  with  majority  agreement  to 
form  the  Suez  Canal  Users'  As.so- 
clation.   SCUA.   within   ten   days. 

One  of  SCUA's  first  tasks  will 
be  to  seek  help  from  the  United 
Nations  in  reaching  final  settle- 
ment of  the  Suez  di.»pute  by  the 
middle  of  October. 

Meanwhile  Adiai  Stevenson  pre- 
pared for  his  forthcoming  tour 
of  the  South  and  midwe^;!.  Steven- 
son predicts  that  the  southern 
states  that  abandoned  the  Demo- 
cratic party  in  1952  will  this  year 
return  to  the  Democratic  side  of 
the  fence. 

A  feeling  of  optimism  about  the 

INTERPRETING  THE  NEWS 


midwestern  farm  vote  is  circulat- 
ing in  the  Republican  Camp. 
Cheering  crowds  greeted  Eisen- 
hower in  Dej"  Moines  last  week  and 
appeared  in  many  places  along 
the  60  mile  route  from  that  ci'iy 
to  Boone,  where  the  first  lady 
visited  her  aunt  and  uncle. 

In  a  speech  Friday,  the  Presi- 
dent asked  that  judgment  on  his 
policies  concerning  farm  issues  be 
held  until  he  can  outline  them  in 
a  major  political  speech  next 
week. 

A  talk  billed  as  Eisenhower's 
"major"  farm  speech  of  the  cam- 
paign is  scheduled  for  Peoria,  111. 
Tuesday. 

In  the  vice  presidential  part  of 
the  campaign.  Senator  Estes  Ke- 
fauver  rejected  Vice  President 
Nixon's  demand  that  he  apologize 
for  saying  Eisenhower  has  fought 
again.t  "the  best  interest  of  the 
little    people." 

On  the  home  front,  the  Union 
County  School  Board  voted  to  bar 
Negro  students  from  public  schools 
in  Sfurgis.  Ky.  Negro  students 
have  been  barred  from  attending 
the  Clay  Ky..  consolidated  school 
pending   court   decision. 

Harry  Lee  Waterfield.  acting 
governor  of  Ky.,  said  that  the 
withdrawal  of  National  Guard 
from  the  towns  of  Sturgis-  and 
Clay  depends  upon  court  action. 


There's  A  Struggle  Going  On 
Within  Adiai's  Staff  Mind 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL  WEEK  IN  REVIEW 

Editor : .  CHARUE  SLOAN 

Staff  Writers GEORGE  PFINGST  and  INGRID  CLAY 


James  Reston 

WASHINGTON— A  quiet  strug- 
gle is  going  on  here  within  Adiai 
E.  Stevenson's  .staff,  and  in- 
deed within  Sfevencon's  mind, 
over  the  tone  and  direction  of 
his  campaign  for  the  Presidency. 

So  far.  the  Democratic  nomi- 
nee's principal  political  advisers 
—  James  Finnegan.  Hy  Raskin, 
Wilson  Wyatt  and  James  Rowe 
— have  had  the  upper  hand  in  ad- 
vocating a  campaign  of  political 
opportunity    ahd    expediency. 

Now  Stevenson  has  gathered 
here  a  group  of  writers  and  in- 
tellectuals who  are  unhappy  about 
the  tone  of  his  public  speeches 
to  date  and  want  him  to  revert 
to  the  nobler  themes  of  his  1952 
campaign. 

In  this  group  are  John  Hersey, 
the  novelist;  Arthur  Schlesinger 
Jr..  the  Harvard  historian;  Ken- 
neth Galbraith.  the  Harvard  econ- 
omist, and  John  Bartlow  .Martin, 
a  magazine  writer  and  a  Steven- 
son biograpther.  They  are  work- 
ing under  the  direction  of  Will- 
ard  Wirtz  of  DeKalb,  111.,  who  is 
Stevenson's  law  partner. 

Some  of  these  men  think  that, 
in  his  efforts  to  stir  up  the  Dem- 
ocrat'c  party  workers  during  the 
period  since  the  nominating  con- 
vention in  Chicago,  Stevenson  has 
lost  a  great  deal  of  the  appeal  he 
had  in  the  1952  campaign  for 
the  independent  voter.N*.  They 
want  him  now  to  plan  a  differ- 
ent kind  of  campaign  for  the 
second  phase  of  the  race,  now 
beginning. 

The  question,  therefore,  is 
which  Stevenson  the  voters  are 
going  to  hear  in  the  next  seven 
weeks,  and  the  meetings  he  is 
having  here  this  week  in  Wash- 
ington may  very  well  answer  this 
questionr 

There  is.  for  example,  the  Stev- 
enson of  the  last  month,  concen- 
trating on  the  Democratic  party 
workers,  attacking  President  Eis- 
enhower personally,  implying  the 
possibility  of  ending  the  mili- 
tary draft,  throwing  out  charges 
of  "legal  corruption,"  and  argu- 
ing that  "almost  one-fifth"  of 
the  American  people  are  living 
in  poverty  and  insecurity. 

In  contra.st,  there  is  the  Ste- 
venson of  1952,  whose  theme 
was  quite  different. 

"What  concerns  me,"  he  said 
then,  "is   not  just   winning   the 


election,  but  how  it  is  won,  how 
well  we.  can  take  advantage  of 
this  great  quadrennial  opportun- 
ity to  debate  is./ues  sensibly  and 
.soberly. 

"I  hope  and  pray  that  wo 
Democrats,  win  or  lose,  can  cam- 
paign, not  as  a  crusade  to  ex- 
terminate the  opposing  party,  as 
our  opponents  seem  to  prefer, 
but  as  a  great  opportunity  to 
educate  and  elevate  a  people 
whose  dei-liny  is  leadership,  not 
alone  of  a  rich  and  prosperou.'--, 
contented  country  as  in  the  pa.st, 
but  of   a   world   in   ferment tack  and  political  expediency. 


week. 

Finally,  he  blurted  out.  half  in 
je.'.  and  half  in  earnest.  "Am  1 
master  in  my  own  hou.se?" — A 
reference  ti)  the  fact  that,  the 
night  before,  he  had  accused 
President  Eisenhower  of  not  be- 
ing master  of  the  Republican 
house. 

In  short.  Stevenson,  while 
agreeing  on  the  necessity  of 
forging  a  stronger  party  organi- 
zation than  he  had  four  'years 
ago.  is  clearly  not  happy  with  a 
campaign   devoted   mainly   to   at- 


•'The  ordeal  of  the  twentieth 
centurv — the  bloodiest,  most  tur. 
bulent  era  of  the  Christian  age — 
is  far  from  over.  Sacrifice,  pa- 
tience, understanding  and  im- 
placable purpose  may  be  our  lot 
for  years  to  come.  Let'.;  face  it. 
L/et's  talk  sense  to  the  Ameri- 
can people. 

"Let's  tell  them  the  truth,  that 
there  are  no  gains  without  pains, 
that  we  are  now  on  the  eve  of 
great  decisions,  not  easy  decis- 
ions  Let'.-,'  <bc)  unafraid  of 

ugly  truth,  contemptuous  of  lies. 

half-truths,    circuses    and    dema- 

goguery." 

TACTIC  CHANGED 

The  voters  have  heard  very 
little  of  this  sort  of  thing  from 
the  Democratic  nominee  this 
year.  He  started  out  this  way 
in  hi.-.'  early  primary  campaigns, 
but  his  defeat  by  Estes  Kefauver 
in  Minnesota  had  a  profound  ef- 
fect on  his  tactics. 

Thereafter,  in  Florida  and 
California,  he  adopted  the  old- 
fashioned  combination  of  hand- 
shaking the  voters  and  scalding 
the  opposition,  and  this  i^■■  what 
he  has  been  doing  in  the  series 
of  fence-mending  regional  con- 
ferences he  has  had  in  the  last 
month. 

The  arrival  here  of  the  intel- 
lectuals, however,  and  the  gener- 
al criticism  of  his  first  major 
televi.'lon  address  in  Harrisburg. 
Pa.,  have  revived  the  doubts  be 
had  about  placing  primary  em- 
phasis on  political  organization 
and   attack. 

He  had  a  meeting  here  with 
his  staff  on  a  recent  night  during 
which  he  listened  to  conflicting 
advice  about  how  he  should  pro- 
ceed in  the  second  phase  of  the 
campaign.  This  begins  in  the 
Farm   Belt  at   the   end   of   this 


It  is  interesting,  incidentally, 
that  the  Republican  staff  around 
President  Eisenhower  is  going 
through  something  of  the  same 
debate.  Here  again,  Leonard  Hall, 
like  Finnegan,  his  counterpart 
in  the  Democratic  organization, 
i.-,-  arguing: 

"This  high-level  stuff  is  all 
right,  but  we  must  find  things 
to  be  against;  we  must  stir  things 
to.be  against;  we  must  stir  things 
up." 


DIRECTOR  LINDA  MANN  AT  HER  FANCY   DESK 

llic   studcul    Hfii<)n\\    liclling    (lie   wonuui's   touch 


SHE'S  DIRECTING  GRAHAM  MEMORIAL: 


New  Job  For  Miss  Mann: 
Pool  Room  To  Ping-Pong 


Charlie  Sloan 

Miss  Linda  Mann  and  her  parents  were  enjoying 
a  tour  of  Europe  last  summer  when  a  letter  from 
student  body  President  Bob  Young  reached  them  in 
Paris. 

The  letter  offered  Miss  Mann  the  position  of  Gra- 
ham Jlemorial  director  when  she  returned  to  the 
United  States.  It  al.so  asked  her  to  reply  immedi- 
ately. 

Two  weeks  had  e'apsed  between  the.  arrival  in 
Paris  of  the  letter  and  the  arrival  of  the  Manns,  but 
the  details  were  soon  straightened  out.  When  Miss 
Mann  arrived  in  New  York,  she  continued  straight 
to  Chapel  Hill. 

Recalling  her  days  as  a  psychology  major— she 
graduated  last  June — Miss  Mann  noted  how  pleased 
she  is  that  she  can  be  back  in  Chapel  Hill  this  fall. 

"I  adore  Chapel  HUi,"  she  said,  adding  that  she 
had  hated  to  leave  the  town  and  campus  last  spring. 

Her  original  plans  ftere  to  enter  some  form  of 
guidance  work  near  her  home  town  of  Hollywood, 
Fla..  where  her  family  has  lived  for  18  years. 

A  real  Southern  belle,  Miss  Mann  was  born  in 
Memphis.  Tcnn.  Since  she  has  lived  in  the  South 
most  of  her  life,  her  voice  bears  that  pleasant  set 
of  sounds  known  as  a  Southern  accent. 

.\s  director  of  Graham  Memorial  she  is  directly 
and  indirectly  responsible  for  the  building,  its  up- 
keep and  improvement,  the  personnel  and  schedul- 
ing of  rooms  for  meetings  of  the  many  activities 
centered  in  GM. 

Miss  -Mann  served  as  a  vice  president  of  the  Gra- 
ham Memorial  Activities  Board  last  year.  With  this 
experience,  she  says  she  has  "been  doing  fine  so 
far"  this  year. 

Her  appointment  came  after  a  tentative  director 
from  the  student  union  of  another  university  decid- 
ed he  could  not  take  the  post  until  next  year. 

Mi.ss  Mann  started  right  to  work  under  the  in- 
struction of  former  GM  Director  Jimmy  Wallace. 
WALLACE'S  PLANS 

Miss  Mann  remarked  that  her  first  few  weeks  as 
director  will  he  relatively  easy  since  Wallace  had 
made  many  long-rango  plans  which  will  be  carried 
out  under  her  supervision. 


One  of  the  changes  in  GM  this  year  is  the  ex- 
change of  the  sandwich  machine  for  a  pastry  ma- 
chine. Miss  Mann  said  the  change  came  as  a  result 
of  complaints  that  the  machine  was  not  regularly 
.serviced.  She  said  rather  than  risk  one  of  the  stu- 
dents getting  food  poisoning  from  two  or  three-day 
old  sandwiches,  the  machine  has  been  taken  out. 

Other,  less  important,  items  come  up  every  day. 
When  school  opened  this  fall.  Miss  Mann  recalls, 
some  students  mistook  the  student  union  building 
for  Memorial  Hall  and  Graham  Dormitory.  Mail  is 
occasionally  missenl  in  the  same  manner. 

Dominating  the  Graham  Memorial  Director's  of- 
fice i^:  a  long,  curved  desk  defying  clear  descrip- 
tion. This  desk  proves  a  major  point  of  interest  for 
visitors  in  the  office. 

The  ritual  for  Carolina  Gentlemen  stopping  by 
the  directors  office  appears  to  be:  Exchange  greet- 
ings with  Miss  Mann,  reveal  reason  for  visit,  sud- 
denly realize  presence  of  desk,  stand  a  moment  in 
drop-jawed  silence,  then  ask  how  the  desk  is  put 
together  and  crawl  around  it  to  see  for  themselves. 

A  variation  on  thi?  is  the  friendly  group  passing 
the   office  door  and   suddenly   discovering  the  un- 
usual curvature  of  the  desk. 
SAME  OLD  DESK 

Miss  Mann  seems  to  enjoy  showing  off  her  mod- 
ern office.  The  secret  of  the  desk  is  that  it  is  the 
same  old  desk  with  a  tremendous  new  top  and  two 
more  legs. 

Wallace  found  the  old  setup,  with  him  behind 
the  desk  at  one  end  of  the  officce,  and  his  guests 
scattered  around  the  rest  of  the  room,  awkward  for 
conferences  and  meetings,  so  he  had  the  new  desk 
made  this  summer. 

Miss  Mann  has  added  to  the  room  a  desk  set 
she  bought  in  Italy  last  summer. 

Since  the  presenco  of  students  is  essential  to  the 
existence  of  a  student  union,  Miss  Mann  says  she  is 
'thrilled  to  death  at  all  the  people  playing  pool, 
ping-pong  and  sitting  in  the  lounge.'' 

She  added  that  she  expects  the  crowd  to  slacken 
a  little  after  classes  get  down  into  their  time-con- 
suming routine,  but  she  hopes  students  will  continue 
to  make  use  of  the  many  facilities  available  in  Gra- 
ham Memorial. 


Pogo 


By  Walt  Kelly 


Li1  Abner 


By  Al  Capp 


A  CUK&F.Osi  ME,.'.'- 
eOVL-ESS  AH  v,/AS 
BORN  -Arj   eoVi.F-bS 

Am  i 


OH,  E>OVi   ;;SS 
E>AlLFV.':'-.-K_)Virf 

KIN  >0'  00 

t>>i   LIVIN    t»^) 
eOVLESSLV  -^ 


r 


Wl 
Aft. 

After 
W^NC- 

with    reg^ 
,  Channel 

The  stai 
ly  one  shl 
rest,  •Todl 
TV  opera  I 
leigh.  an( 

The  edl 
Consolidai 
few  yeara 
statev,  kie  I 
recognitif 

The  tell 
gi-owth  of  I 
an  institi 
operation! 
these  sta^ 


HI 


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SUNDAY,  SEPTBMBSR  23,  \9S6 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


PAGE  THREI 


cx- 

ma- 

lesult 

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stu- 

-day 

Kit. 

day. 
kcalls, 
tiding 
(ail  IS 

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lelvcs. 
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mod- 
lis  the 
Id  two 

behind 
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rd  fur 
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to  the 

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—        4 


PP 


WUNC-TV  Returns  To  Air 
After  Four- Week  Vacation 


After  a  four  week  vacation, 
WTjNC-TV  returns  to  the  air  today 
with  regular  iaily  programs  on 
Channel  4. 

The  staff  has  been  presenting  on- 
ly one  show  during  its  four  week 
rest.  Today  on  the  Farm."  WUNC- 
TV  operates  from  Greensboro,  Jla- 
leigh,  and  Chapel  Hill.  ■ 

The  educational  station  of  the 
Consolidated  University  —  in  its 
few  years'  operation— has  gained 
statewide  importance  and  national 
recognition.  ; 

The  televison  station  is  an  out- 
growth of  the  radio  station  WUNC. 
an  institution  now  having  been  in 
operation  over  five  years.  Both  of  ; 
these  stations  originated   as   ideas 


LATE  SHOW  TONITE 
SUNDAY -MONDAY 


THECWTTIMT  p 

ROCKED 
1  THE  WORLDS^ 
HOTTEST 
STRIP 

OF 
HELL... 


of  the  Dept.  of  Radio,  Television 
and  Motion  Pictures,  a  department 
which  is  respected  in  its  field  as 
one  of  the  best  in  the  country. 

WUNC  has  presented — in  addit- 
ion to  its  regular  programs — pro- 
ductions of  special  interest  or  im- 
portance in  the  past  several  years. 
Produced  in  the  main  by  the  stu- 
dents themselves,  these  programs 
have  attained  national  recognition. 

WUNC-TV  was  cited  for  national 
recognition  in  its  presentation  of 
William  Saroyan's  "Hello  Out  ; 
There,"  in  its  first  TV  adaptation.  ; 
A  kinescope  reproduction  of  this  i 
drama  was  shown  at  the  Ohio  State  ; 
Conference  last  May,  and  has  since  : 
been  well  received  throughout  the  i 
country.  ■, 

THE  STORY  OF 
THE  HANDFUL  OF        | 
HOPE  THAT  BECAME     ! 
A  FISTFUL  OF  HELL! 


J 


^  ^ 


iHOeiMICIIUMi 
iGieERI  ROLAND 


COLOR  b>D«LuM 

NOW  PLAYING    . 


NOW  PLAYING 


They're  smart  on  campus 


They  score  in  sports... 


They  rate  on  a  date  ..* 


:-;-:/wr;5»d4'>?K'^:«i!;'X*x«->T-a'-vi<W<«^«:-J 


They're  I KPDS1 

...they're  great! 


United  S4«««s  Rubber 

fcuketclUr  Centar,  Hfm  Ycrk  20.  N.  Y. 


FASHIONS  AT  THE  GAME: 


Winter  Cottons,  Light 
Wools  Spark  Stands 

By  PEG  HUMPHREY  bright  scarf  at  the  neckline. 

Leiiaing  that  needed  dash  of«:oI- 
Carolina  coeds  sparked  the  foot- 1  ^^^  ^,^^^  gy^.^  coeds  as  Sally  Pat- 


bail  stands  in  winter  cottons,  light 
weight  wools,  and  sweater-skirt 
combinations. 

Attire  leaned  toward  the  dark 
side  with  black  and  brown  sheaths 
prevailing.  "Pee  Wee"  Batten  wore 
a  suit  of  brown  winter  cotton  with 
a  tiny  black  stripe.  Her  shoes  were 


terson  who  graced  the  stands  in 
a  red  plaid  winter  cotton  by  Ann 
Fogarty.  It  had  the  mandarin  neck- 
line and  a  rather  tricky  belt.  Her 
black  leather  shoes  were  by  Del- 
manette. 

Carolyn  Thompson  cheered  in  a 
brown    cotton   tweed    suit   with   a 


Cardboard  Says  "Hi!' 


As  the  scoreboard  in  the  background  indicates  the  halftime  score  of  State  13,  Carolina  6,  the  Card- 
board section  flashes  a  message  across  the  field  ts  the  opposing  fans.  It  says  simply,  "Hi,"  with  a  big 
exclamation    point. 


Churches  Start  Student 
Activities  Here  Today 


The  churches  of  Chapel  Hill 
will  this  Sunday  begin  their  pro- 
grams and  activities  for  the  stu- 
dents. 

This  will  be  the  first  Sunday  of 
the  fall  semester  in  the  church 
calendar.  Although  not  a  complete 
picture,  the  general  programs  are 
as  follows: 

The  Episcopal  Chapel  of  the 
;  Cross  on  Franklin  St.  will  hold 
its'  regular  morning  services;  at 
6  p.m.  the  Canterbury  Club  will 
hold  its  first  meeting  of  the  fall 
semester  at  the  parish  house,  op- 
posite the  Planetarium.  The  guest 
speaker  for  the  evening  will  be 
Chancellor  Robert  B.  House,  who 
will  talk  on  the  various  problems 
of  .studies  at  the  University.  It 
is  anticipated  that  the  famous  har- 
monica of  the  Chancellor's  will 
accompany  him  to  the  meeting.  A 
welcome  has  been  extended  to  all 
new  students  and  all  old  members 
who  desire  to  attend. 

At    the    Baptist    Church    on    S. 

Columbia  St.,  Morning  Services  and 

Sunday    School    will    be    held.    In 

the  evening,  at  6  p.m.,   a  student 

j  supper  will  be   served,  to  be   fol- 

I  lowed  by   a   worship  service  at  7 

I  p.m. 

j      The     Congregational     Christian 
j  Chiiich  on  Cameron  Ave.  will  ob- 
j  serve  its  morning  services,  Bible 
;  Study    group    at    10    and    Regular 
Worship  Service  at  11,  to  be  con- 
ducted by  Mr.  Harvey  L.  Carnes. 
the   new   minister  of   the  Congre- 
gational Church.  The  members  of 


the  United  Student 
have  been  invited  to  a  supper 
given  by  the  J.  R.  Ellis-"  at  their 
home  on  Davey  Circle.  Students 
are  asked  to  meet  at  the  church  at 
6  p.m..  where  they  will  be  driven 
to  the  Ellis  home. 

The   Lutlieran  Church  on  Rose- 
!  mary  St.  will  hold  its  student  ser- 
and     Morning 


At  The 
Planetarium 


vice    at   9:45   am. 
Service  at  11. 

At  6  p.m.  the  Lutheran  Stu- 
dent Asoti  will  hear  J.  B.  Rhyne 
of  the  Psychology  Laboratory  at 
Duke  University  in  a  talk  entitled: 
"Extra  Sensory  Perception." 

The  j:atholic  Church  in  Ger- 
rard  Hall  will  hold  Mass  Services 
at  8.   10.  and   11. 

Morning  Worship  Services  will 
be  held  in  the  University  Meth- 
odist Church  at  11  a.m.  The  stu- 
dent activities'  in  the  afternoon 
will  include  a  recreation  hour  at 
5:30  p.m.  followed  by  a  program, 
supper, '^nd  worship  service. 

Th€  Chapel  Hill  Presbyterian 
Church  will  hold  a  Bible  Class  at 
9:45  a.m.  in  the  lounge  of  Graham 
Memorial.  Morning  Services  will 
be  held  in  the  church  on  East 
Franklin  St.  at  11  a.m..  The  even- 
ing program  and  supper  will  be 
presented  in  the  Hut  at  6  p.m. 
The  title  of  the  program  is  en- 
titled: "Introducing  We:>timinister 
Fellowship". 


The  Morehead  Planetarium  pres- 
Fellowtfhip    entalion,    "Mars,    Planet    of    Mys- 
tery," will  be  shown  Mond^'  night 
for  the  last  time.  "Our  Sun"  will 
run  Sept.  25-Oct.  22. 

Photographs  by  UNC  students 
are  now  on  display  in  the  South 
(ialler>-.  In  the  North  Gallery,  there 
are  exhibits  of  Leonardi  da  Vinci'.s 
inventions  consisting  of  26  plates. 
These  plates  belong  to  the  IBM 
Corporation. 


in  that  rich  new  shade  of  brown,  j  ^^^^^  f  j^^j,  jacj^g^  and  a  stand  up 
taupe  leather  and  suede.  j  ^^^^^j.  u^ed  in  yellow.  Her  jacket 

A  black  pin  striped  winter  cot- ,  ^^g  ^^^^  ijned  in  yellow  at  the  hip. 

Brown  jewelry  and  alligators  com- 


ton  sheath  was  seen  on  a  tall  blond. 
She  was  wearing  black  leather 
heels  and  gold  jewelry.  Evelyn  Hos- 
terms^n  cheered  enthusiastically  in 
her  gray  sheath  of  winter  cotton. 

Doris  Adkins  displayed  her 
school  spirit  in  a  brown  sheath 
with  a  bateau  neckline.  Her  beige 
duster  was  lined  with  the  fabric 
of  her  dress.  Beige  was  also  the 
choice  of  Kater  Poteat.  Her  heavy 
linen  dress  with  brown  and  black 
figures  had  a  matching  box  hip- 
length  jacket. 

Nancj'  Suttlc  appeared  in  a  slim 
black  cotton  with  a  white  ruffled 
bib.  Black  leather  pumps,  white 
string  gloves  and  silver  loop  ear- 
rings completed  her  outfit.  A  brown 
winter  cotton  was  worn  by  Anne 
Melton.  Her  sheath  was  accented 
by  lizagator  pumps  and  bag  and  a 


pleted  her  ensemble. 

Other  fashionably  attired  coeds 
included  Nan  Schaeffer  in  a  match- 
ing cashmere  sweater  and  skirt, 
Anne  Newsome  in  a  dark  sheath, 
and  Liz  Gardner  in  a  dark  gray 
wool  suit  with  hip-length  jacket. 

Gold  jewelry  was  worn  almost 
exclusively,  with  button  earrings 
and  bangle  bracelets  especially  fa- 
vored. Leather  wis  popular  in  foot- 
wear, and  it  is  apparent  that  black 
and  brown  will  be  the  favorites 
for  the  fall. 


Bible  Course 
Jo  Be  Taught 
OverWUNC'TV 

"The  Origin  and  Significance  of 
the  Bible"  will  be  taught  over  the 
University    television    station    be- 
ginning Tuesday.  Charles   F.   Mil- 
ner,   acting   director   of   the    UNC 
Extension,  said  yesterday. 
i      The    instructor    for    the    course 
I  will  be  Dr.  Bernard  Boyd,  who  is 
!  a  James  A.  Gray  professor  of  Bib- 
\  lical  literature  at  UNC.  He  will  lec- 
ture each  Tuesday  and    Thursday 
!  at  7:15  p.m.,  over  WUNC-TV,  Chan- 
;  nel  4. 

j     The    course    will    carry    three 
semester   hours    credit   towards   a 
degree.    Students    may,    however, 
I  take  the  course  for  non-credit. 

Dr.  Boyd  received  his  A.B.  de- 
i  gree  from  Presbyterian  College,  his 
I  Th.  B.  degree  from  Princeton  The- 
ological Seminary,  his  M.A.  from 
!  Princeton,  and  his  Th.D.  from  Un- 
I  ion  Theological  Seminary. 

Although  he  has  been  offered 
pastorships  at  large  churches  all 
j  over  the  countr\-,  he  h.^s  preferred 
;  to  remain  in  the  teaching  profes- 
j  sion.  UNC  student  polls  have  fre- 
i  quenlly  rated  him  among  the  fav- 
I  orite  teachers  on  the  campus. 


A  script  film  on  the  Suez  Canal 
gives  the  history,  construction,  and 
operation  of  this  first  great  inter- 
national waterway  indicating  its 
importance  in  contemporary  world 
affairs. 

In  October,  the  North  Gallery 
will  have  an  exhibit  of  15  paintings 
called  "Winston-Salem  Portraits." 
There  wil  also  be  an  exhibit  by  the 
Oak  Rid^  Atomic  Energj  Museum, 
"Summary  of  Atomic  Energy." 

Students  have  been  invited  to  at- 
tend the  shows  arid  fhe  exhibits  it 
the  Planetarium.  Programs  are 
shown  on  weekdays  at  8:30  p.m. 
On  Saturdays,  at  11  a.m..  3.  and 
8:30  p.m..  except  on  home  football 
game  days  when  they  are  shown 
at  11  a.m..  5  and  8:30  p.m.  Pro- 
grams' are  shown  on  Sundays  at  3, 
4,  and  8:30  p.m..  and  on  holidays 
at  3  and  3:30  p.m. 


Left  Holding 
The  Bag? 

We'll   find   a   market   for  yo«r 
dropped  texts.  Bring  them  in! 

THE  INTIMATE 
BOOKSHOP 

205   E.   Franklin   St. 
Open  Till   10   P.M. 


Buy  With  Confidence  At 
VARLErS  Men's  Shop 

Featuring: 

Arrow  Shirts  Bostonian  Shoes 

McGregor  Sportswear      Interwoven  Socks 
Mayfair  Slacks  Paris  Belts 

English  Pipes  and  Smokers  Accessories 


V  Men's 


eyf 

Shop 


EST.  1938 


Political 
Activity 
To  Begin 

By  NEIL  BASS 

Carolina  political  activity  will 
shift  into  high  gear  with  the  ad- 
vent of  party  meetings  Monday 
and  Tuesday  nights. 

The  Student  Party  1|ets  the  jump 
on  the  University  Party  with  a  ses- 
sion Monday  night.  Not  far  behind, 
the  UP  holds  its  initial  meeting 
Tuesday  night. 

According  to  SP  Chairman  Tom 
Lambeth,    his    party    get-together 
•will  be  highlighted  by  an  address 
by   Student   Body    President    Bob  j 
Young.    Other    itenis    on    the    SP  j 
agenda    include   opening   remarks 
by  Lambeth  and  a  social  .gathering 
after   the  business  portion  of  the  I 
meeting.  j 

UP  Chairman  Mike  Wefrimah  | 
was  not  a.yailal51e  for  comment. 

Also  on  tap  during  the  coming 
week,  a  busy  one  for  the  poHticos 
who  will  he  seeking  to  solid  new 
membership,  is  a  session  of  the 
Student  Legislature. 

At  present  the  Legislature  is  | 
controlled  by  the  Student  Party. ! 
The  SP  legislators,  under  the  di-  \ 
rection  of  Jim  Holmes,  floorleader.  [ 
have  a  one  vote  majority — ^25-24.    j 

University  Party  legislative  ac-  | 
tioB  is  under  the  supervision  of  I 
Mike  Weinman,  currently  serving  1 
as  floorleader. 

Both  parties  have  urged  any  and  ^ 
'all  sfudents  'who  lire  interested  in  ' 
participating  in  student  govern- 1 
ment  to  attend  the  opening  ses- 1 
sions.  ! 

Both  parties  wfll  meet  in  Gra- 
ham Memorial  at  7:30.  { 

The  Student  Legislature  will 
hold  its  kick-off  meeting  —  and 
all  subsequent  sessions  —  in  the 
Phi  Hall  on  the  fourth  floor  of 
New  East  Building. 


Playmakers  Begin 
Tryouts  Tomorrow 

The  Carolina  Playmakers  will 
hold  tryouts  for  their  first  produc- 
tion of  the  season,  the  recent 
Broadway  success,  "Anastasia."  to- 


morrow at  4  and  7:30  p.m.  in  the 
Playmakers  Theatre. 

The  play  will  be  directed  by 
Samuel  Sclden,  chairman  of  the 
Dept.  of  Dramatic  Art  and  Director 
of  the  Playmakers.  and  will  appear 
at  the  theatre  October  17  through 
21. 


N.  C.  STATE  COLLEgF-^  COLiTeUm] 

N.  C  State  Cortege— OXISEUM 
P.  a  BoK  5W5--RALEIGH,  NL  C 

.>DULT  Tickets  of  $....__— eoch  $ 

^CHILO  Tickets  ot  $ eoch  $ 

Pleowlndude  25c  for  Postage  and  Hondting    $ 

Amt  of  Check  or  Mor>ey  Order  Encl. — Totol  $ 

Prtc*   $3.00 D      $2.50 U      $2.00 G       $1.50 m 

Children  \^  Price  Friday  Matinee  Only  - 

Moru  N»te  Sept.  2A...SD         Frid.  Mot.  Sept.  2B...S3  | 

Tue.  Nite  Sept.  25....D        Frid.  Nite  Sept   28...I3  ■ 

Wed  Nite  Sept.  2«....n         Sot.  Mot.  Sept.  29...0  * 

Thur.  Nite  Sept.  27....D        Sat.   Nite  Sept.  29...n  | 

NigKHy  8:30  —  Friday  Matinee  3:30  —  Soturdoy  Matinee  2:30| 


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PAGE  FOUR 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


SUNDAY,  SEPTEMBER  23,  1956 


State  Win  Ends  13  Game  Losing  Streak  To  Hapless  UNC 


Wake  Forest  Upsets  W  &  M 
39-0  With  Barnes  Starring 


Spahn 
Comments 
On  Bums 

By  CHUCK  CAPALOO 

MILWAUKEE.  Sept.  22  (JP)—\ 
Warren  Spahn,  the  graybeard  of  j 
the  Milwaukee  pitching  s'taff,  be-  j 
lieves  the  Braves  have  lost  what- 
ever mound  advantage  they  might  ! 
have  had  over  Brooklyn. 

Discu<>sing  the  hectic  National 
League  pennant  race  today  before 
the  Braves  took  the  field  against 
the  Chicago  Cubs,  the  35-year  old 
lefthander  said: 

"There's  no  doubt  that  we  had 
the  edge  earlier  in  the  season,  but 
times  have  changed.  We  had  five 
starters  at  one  time.  Then  the  two 
rookies.  Taylor  Phillips  and  Bob 
Trowbridge  came  along  and  you 
might  say  we  had  seven. 

"But.  that's  all  changed  now. 
Brooklyn  has  as  good  a  pitching 
staff  as  anyone  in  the  league,  us 
included.  They've  got  Sal  Maglie, 
Don  Newcombe,  that  old  head  Carl 
Erskin  and  guys  like  Clem  Labine 
and  Don  Bessent. 

"For  my  money  there's  nothing 
wrong  with  that  staff." 

What  Spahn  left  unsaid  is  the 
almost  complete  about  face  of  the 
Braves'  staff,  once  conifidered  the 
finest — bar   none — in   the    majors. 

Right  now  Manager  Fred  Haney 
is  going  with  only  three  starters — 
Spahn.  Lew  Burdette  and  Bob 
Buhl  He  is  using  Ray  Crone  and 
Gen  Conley,  earlier  members  of 
the  Braves'  "big  5"  in  relief,  along 
with  the  rookies.  \ 

And,  unfortunately  for  the 
Braves.  Burdette  and  Buhl  haven't  , 
been  overly  effective  of  late.  Both  ! 
have  had  their  troubles  and  be- ! 
cause  of  it,  the  Braves  have  I 
slipped,  although  not  far  enough ; 
to  put  them  out  of  contention.  | 
Spahn  has  won  three  in  a  row.  but  I 
even  he  needed  help  against  the 
last  place   Cubs  Friday  night. 

The  Braves'  staff  has  turned  in 
only  two  complete  games  in  their ! 
las"t    18    starts.    Spahn    accounted  j 
for  both  of  them. 

That's  the  prime  reason  why, ; 
since  Labor  Day.  the  Braves  have  j 
won  only  8  of  18  games.  I 


Sutton 

(Continued  from    Page    1) 
The   losa-  came   as  somewhat  of  , 
an  upset  for  the  slightly  favored  > 
but  untested  Tar  Heels.  Next  week  • 
the  story  will  be  different  and  the  j 
Tar  Heels  could  profit  by  yester- 
day's   defeat.    Against    Oklahoma,  { 
they  will  be  the  underdog  as  State  ; 
was  today.  Coach  Tatum  has  sev- 
eral scores  to  settle  with  Bud  Wil- 
kinson and  his  Sooners;  thus  the 
Tar  Heels  should  definitely  be  at 
a  mental  peak  next  week  in  Nor- 
man. 


WILLIAMSBURG,  Va.,  Sept.  22  { 
(JP) — Bill  Barnes,  a  long-legged 
fullback  with  amazing  ability  to ! 
elude  tacklers,  broke  loose  on ; 
three  long  touchdown  runs  today 
as  Wake  Forest's  football  team ; 
stunned  William  and  Mary  39-0.       I 

A  crowd  of  8,000  looked  on  in  ; 
disbelief  as  Barnes,  striking  on  j 
the  first  play  from  scrimmage,  | 
zig-zagged  his  way  67  yards  on  a 
burst  over  his  own.  right  guard  j 
and  put  the  via'iting  Deacons  ahead  i 
with  only  40  seconds  gone.  j 

Barnes,  187-pound  senior  from  \ 
Landis,  N.C..  kicked  up  his  heels  | 
again  before  the  first  period  end- 1 
ed,  grabbing  William  and  Mary 
halfback  Charlie  Sidwell's  kick  on  1 
his  23  and  knifing  77  yards  to  the  j 

Terps  Upset 
By  Syracuse 
In  Opener 

COLLEGE  PARK.  Md..  Sept  22  ] 
(i**) — Syracuse  used  Jim  Brown  to  ! 
rip  along  the  ground  and  scored 
twice  on  passes  and  a  71-yard  re-  i 
turn  of  a  fumble  by  end  Dick  i 
Lasse  to  beat  Maryland's  mixed  i 
up  football  team  26-12  in  their 
season's  opener  today.  j 

Brown,   a  bruising  212-pounder,  ! 
caught  one  touchdown  pass  from 
Jim   Ridlon,   blasted     four     yards 
around  end  for  another,  and  zoom- 
ed 78  yards  to  set  up  a  third.        ; 

Syracuse,  beaten  34-13  las-t  sea- ' 
son  when  Maryland  was  coached ; 
by  Jim  Tatum,  practically  gave  j 
Maryland  its  second  touchdown ' 
just_J)efore  the  game  ended  with 
third  stringers  playing  on  both 
sides. 

Maryland  started  off  impressive- 
ly for  the  lirst  time  under  Coach 
Tommy  Mont  by  taking  a  6-0  lead 
soon    after    the    opening    kickoff. 
But   Syracuse   marked   right   back  ■ 
to  the  tying  townchdown  and  lead-  ' 
ing  extra  point  by  Brown  to  take  , 
charge  the  rest  of  the  way.  j 

John   McVicker,   Terp   Halfback,  ■ 
returned  a   punt  67  yards  to  put 
Maryland  in  its  e.^irly  scoring  po-  : 
sition.    Quarterback   John    Fritsch 
plunged    for    the    touchdown    and 
then   he    dropped    the   pass  from  ; 
center  on  the  extra  point  try  which 
fullback   Tom   Selep   was   waiting 
to  kick. 

The  Maryland  subs  returned  a 
short  Syracuse  kickoff  47  yards 
in  the  clo.sing  minutes  with  Jack 
Mealy  going  over  just  before  the 
final  gun.  ' 

Syracuse  7     6     6     7—26 

MarylancJ  6     0     0     6—12 

Syracuse  Scoring — Touchdowns: 
Brown  (24,  pass-run  from  Ridlon: 
4,  run):  Lasse  (71,  runback  fum- 
ble); Ridlon  (4,  pass  from  Zim- 
merman). Conversions:  Brown; 
Ridlon    (Pass   from   Zimmerman). 

Maryland  Scoring — Touchdowns: 
Fritsch  (1,  plunge):  Healy  (2, 
plunge). 


pay  window.  He  added  his-  longest 
touchdown  sprint  of  the  day — ^A 
78-yard  beauty — in  the  fourth. 

Quarterback  Charlie  Carpenter, 
halfback  Jim  Dalrymple  and  substi- 
tute fullback  Deane  Hillenbrand 
shared  the  spotlight  with  Barnes 
with  touchdown  excursions  of  their 
own. 

Carpenter  scooped  up  a  deflect- 
ed punt  and  scooted  19  yards  to 
the  goal  secondo-  after  the  second 
period  started.  Dalyrmple  swung 
around  right  end  for  seven  yards 
and  six  points  to  climax  a  90- 
yard  drive  to  put  Wake  Forest 
ahead  25-0  at  halftime. 

Hillenbrand  ripped  up  the  mid- 
dle of  the  Indians'  sagging  line 
with  time  running  out  in  the  game 
and  fled  32  yards. 

Barnes  made  good  on  the  con- 
ver^>-ion  after  his  second  and  third 
touchdowns.  Sophomore  quarter- 
back  Dave  Toothman  split  the  goal 
posts  after  Hillenbrand's  score. 
Wake  Forest  12  13    0  14—39 

William   &   Mary     0    0     0     0-0 

Wake  Forest  Scoring  —  Touch- 
downs: Barnes  3  (67,  run;  77,  punt 
return:  78,  run):  Carpenter  (19, 
returned  blocked  kick):  Dalyrm- 
ple (7.  run):  Hillenbrand  (32, 
run).  Conversions:  Barnes'  2, 
Toothman. 


DTH  Deadline 

A  3  p.m.  dcadlint  for  material 
for  storiM  for  The  Daily  Tar 
Heel  will  be  enforced  this  year, 
according  to  Managing  Editor 
Charlie  Johnson. 

This  means  that  all  material 
for  all  stories,  except  these  orig- 
inated by  Daily  Tar  Heel  staffers, 
must  be  in  by  3  p.m.  in  the  after- 
noon for  those  stories  to  appear 
in  the  next  day's  paper,  he  said. 


Counselors 

(CoTitinH«d    fror.1   Page    I) 

degree  from  Randolph-Macon  Wo- 
man's College  and  has  been  study- 
ing for  an  M.  A.  in  musicology  at 
VNC  during  the  past  year.  She 
has  been  named  couselor  for  Smith 
Dormitory. 

Both  Miss  Moody  and  Miss  Stire- 
walt  are  working  for  master  6f 
education  degrees,  with  majons 
in   guidance. 

Miss  Moody  received  her  A.  B. 
degree  in  recreation  from  Wo- 
man's College  in  Greensboro,  and 
has  attended  summer  se.-sions  at 
UNC  aijd  at  Columbia  University. 
She  has  been  a  city  recreation  di- 
rector in  Winston-Salem  and  rec- 
reation director-counselor  at  Hock, 
aday  School  in  Dallas,  Tex. 

The  second  UNC  graduate  in 
the  group.  Miss  Stirewalt  attended 
Lenoir-Rhyne  College.  She  com- 
pleted an  A.  B.  degree  in  educa- 
tion, with  a  major  in  English  at 
UNC,  and  taught  at  Parkton  High 
School. 


DAILY    CROSSWORD 


150  Averett  Girls  Will 
Visit  Campus  Today 

Approximately  150  freshmen  and 
sophomores  from  Averett  College 
in  Danville,  Va.,  will  visit  the  cam- 
pus this  afternoon  for  a  Morehead 
Planetarium  show  and  a  reception 
in  Graham  Memorial. 

All  UNC  freshmen  have  been 
urged  to  be  at  Graham  Memorial 
at  i  p.m.  for  the  reception,  where, 
YMCA  officials  said,  it  will  be  a 
good  time  to  get  acquainted  with 
some  of  the  girls  who  will  enter- 
tain University  freshmen  at  a 
dance  in  panville  next  Saturday. 

This  event  is  an  annual  affair 
sponsored  by  the  Freshmen  Fellow- 
ship of  the  YMCA-  Trai^portation 
to  Danville  will  be  provided. 


CLASSIFIEDS 


LOST:  ONE  WALLET.  FINDER 
please  return  to  James  Harry 
Menzel,  DU  House,  East  Rose 
mary  Street. 


LOST:  BLACK  POCKETBOOK 
with  green  billfQld  inside  plus 
driver^-  license.  Probably  lost  in 
Peabody  Hall.  If  found,  please 
return   to  Elizabeth   Kightower, 

Smith  Dorm. 

_j : . 

GERMAN  SHEPHERD  PUPPIES 
5  weeks  old,  registered.  Best  of 
bloodlines  from  national  and  in- 
ternational champions.  Phone 
Durham  5-0289. 


ACROSS 

1.  Shut 
6.  Game  of 
skill 

11.  Seraglio 

12.  Midday  meal 

13.  Across 

14.  Male  goose 

15.  Selenium 
(aym.) 

16.  Least  whole 
number 

17.  Nickel 
(«ym.) 

18.  Printer's 
error 

21.  Man's 
nickname 

22.  Anger 

23.  Wading: 
bird 

25.  Keep 

27.  Will  ^ 
Harrison 

28.  Light, 
colored 
volcanic 

,       tuff 
SO.  Owns 
31.  Snakelike 

fish 
22.  Frequented 
S6.  lUlian 

river 
27.  Dispatched 
S8.  Music  note 
39.  Covered 

with  a 

metal 
41.  Pack  away 

43.  Anxioua 

44.  Clamor 

45.  Thin  strata 
(reel.) 

48.  Narrow 
roadway 


2.  Cleanser 

3.  Metallic 
rock 

4.  Indian 
weight 

5.  Girl's 
nickname 

8.  Demands 

7.  Search  for 

8.  Finish 

9.  Stagie  back' 
ground 

10.  Contract* 
14.  African 

antelope 
16.  Shoshonean 

Indian 

19.  Competitor 

20.  God  of 
war 
(Gr.) 


21  Brag 

24.  Con- 
junc- 
tion 

25.  Euro- 
pean 
tracts 
of 

level 
land 

26.  SmaU 
treas 

29,  Filmy, 
thin 
fabrics 

30.  Rude 
dwelling 

S3.  Particle  of 
addition 

34.  Appearing 
as  if  eaten 


f.'iMai-iiii  piK 

^r\'i':   r.in   ;onrj 
::in>;i.!H   iiciKflM 

U..U'i     !J(;1HMH(-'l:) 


fatardty't  Aaswer 
35.  U.  S. 

admiral 
37.  Branch 

40.  Turkiah  title 

41.  Peruvian 
coin 

42.  Sesame 
44.  Sodium 

(sym.) 


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1 

State  Tops  Tar  Heels 


It's  A  First  Down  For  State 


N.  C.  state's  Dick  Crisfy,  No.  40,  picks  up  20  yards  as  he  moves  past  Ed  Sutton,  No.  30,  of  Carolina 
before  being  brought  down  by  Tar  Heel  Hap  Setzer,  No.  62,  on  the  nine  yard  line  to  set  up  State's 
first  score.  (Photo  by  Truman  Moore.) 


(Continued  from  Page  1) 
their  own  38.  Marinkov  turned  in 
a  20  yard  jaunt  to  the  UNC  39, 
Katich  hit  Pepe  with  a  pass  on  the 
26,  Hunter  went  to  the  20,  Katich 
flipped  a  pass  to  John  Collar  on 
the  10.  and  the  State  end  rambled 
over  the  goaline.  ^ 

This  just  about  spelled  the  end 
for  Carolina,  but  the  Wolfpack 
hadn't  finished.  Burly  tackle  John 
Szuchan  blocked  a  Wally  Vale 
punt  on  the  Carolina  34,  Larry 
Cox  recovered  for  State,  and  the 
Pack  had  their  fourth  and  last 
touchdown  a  few  minutes  later. 
A  pa^-s  from  Bill  Franklin  to  Mike 
Miller    accounted    for    the    score. 

Both  squads  cleaned  their 
benches  during  the  last  few  list- 
less minutes. 

The  26  point  total  racked  up  by 
the  Wolfpack  was  the  largest  num. 
ber  of  points  scored  by  a  State 
team  against  Carolina  since  the 
1895  season.  In  1942,  State  scored 
21  while  beating  the  Tatum  led 
Tar  Heels. 

Statistics  reflected   the  story  of 


the  game.  State  piled  up  24  first 
downs  to  Carolina's  14,  and  amass- 
ed 273  yards  on  the  ground  to 
Carolina's  218.  Passing  netted  the 
Pack  83  yards  compared  to  the 
Tar  Heel's  36. 

Coach  Tatum's  squad  looked  very 
shaky  but  also  very  promising. 
The  line  held  like  a  s-tone  wall 
each  time  State  penetrated  deep 
into  Tar  Heel  territory.  Only  by 
going  to  the  air  could  the  Wolf- 
pack counter. 

The  offense  sputtered  all  after- 
noon, but  with  Ed  Sutton  and  a 
pcir  of  adept  quarterbacks,  it 
should  do  better  on  succeeding 
Saturdays.  Hathaway  and  Farmer 
both  turned  in  creditable  jobs  at 
the  signal  calling  slot,  although 
each  was  shaken  up  slightly  dur- 
ing the  game. 

Next  Saturday  the  .  Tar  Heels 
travel  to  Norman,  Okla.,  for  a  bat- 
tle with  the  nation's  top  team, 
Oklahoma.  According  to  an  an- 
nouncement made  yesterday,  the 
game  will  be  played  before  a 
packed  house  of  60,000  people. 


Q.  Why  Are  Viceroy^ 

201000  FIITERS 

Made  From  Pure  Cellulose? 


•«   .  .  '■  < 


-  .JS 


Because  cellulose  is  a  soft, 
snow-white  material  •  •  • 
the  same  pure,  natural  substance 
found  in  many  of  the  good 
foods  you  eat  every  day* 

Only  the  exclusive  Viceroy  tip  contains 

20,000  tiny  filters  made  from  pure  cellulose— 

soft,  snow-white,  natural— tu; ice  as  many  filters 

as  the  other  two  largest-selling  filter  brands. 

That's  why  Viceroy  gives  you ...  ,  .  ' 


The  Smoothest  Taste  in  Smoking 
Smoke  Smoother 


yiCEROY 


^  i  ...*■*  ^_ai.i__-.-*i..*fii-'-— ''— - 


Viceroy 

"filter  "^Jip 

CIOARETTES 

KING-SIZE 


%\  -- 


•     *8«J<P 


m. 


serials  Dapt. 
Cliapsa  Bill,   Ii«   C. 


WEATHER 

Rain    becoming    modtrat«,   with 
high  of  68-76. 


/ 


3r()  e  Dally  ^^Tar  Keel 


NASSER 

Maybo   it's   tinw    to   quit   being 
biuHod.  S«e  page  2. 


VOL.  LVIfl,  NO.  5 


Complete  (JP)  Wire  Service 


CHAPEL   HILL,   NORTH    CAROLINA,  TUESDAY,   SEPTEMBER   25,   1956 


Offices   in  Graham   Memorial 


FOUR  PACES  THIS  '**Ui 


Prof  Named  To  Aid 
Senate  Commitree 


University  prof.  Alexander 
Heard  has  been  appointed  by  Sen. 
Albert  Gore  as  Consultant  to  the 
United  States  Senate  Subcommit- 
tee on  Privilege.?  and  Elections, 
it  was  announced  recently. 

Heard  will  commute  to  Wash- 
ington, D.  C,  periodically  during 
the  Committee's  current  investiga- 
tion of  political  campaign  finan- 
cing. 

Director  of  the  "Money  in  Poll- 
tits"  research  project  at  the  Uni- 
versity's Institute  for  Research  in 
Social  Science.  Heard  testified  be- 
fore the  committee  in  1955,  and 
wao  the  lead  off  witness  at  the 
hearings  which  began  on  Sept. 
10  of  this  year. 

At  the  conclusion  of  Heard's 
testimony   on  the   latter  occasion, 


Sen.  Gore  extended  the  invitation 
to  him  to  act  as  consultant. 

Dr.  Heard's  research  on  the  role 
of  money  in  the  political  process  I 
has  been  accorded  wide  publicity  j 
in  several  American  and  foreign  i 
publications,  including  The  Econ-  j 
omist  of  London.  A  series  of  six  I 
newspaper  articles  was  releas-ed  j 
in  August  by  United  Features  Syn- 
dicate. 

Earlier  this  month  the  Public 
Affairs  Committee,  a  non-profit  ed- 
ucational organization,  published 
one  of  its  Public  Affairs  Pamph- 
lets, written  by  Heard  and  called 
"Money  and  Politics."  This  pamph- 
let, which  is  being  distrit>uted 
throughout  the  country,  contains 
a  summary  of  the  results  of  some 
of  the  research  that  has  been  com- 
pleted at  the  University.  This  ma- 
terial will  be  supplemented  and 
published  later  in  a  book  which 
he  is  now  writing. 


Graduate  Counselors  Named  For  Women's  Dorms 

Shewn  above,  laft  to  right,  are  Missei.  Elxabath  Anna  Barnes,  Harriet  D.  Holt,  Mary  Sue  Honakar, 
Lydia  Moody  and  Mary  Louise  Stirewalt.  These  five  UNC  students  were  recently  named  graduate  coun- 
selors for  the  women's  dormitories. 


Young  Lists  Car  Rule, 
Book  Return,  Phones 
As  Accomplishments 


Workmen  vrnkirig  h-asty  ad- 
jii^iments  on  the  sundial  due  to 
the  cloutiy  weather. 

General  College  Dean'a  car 
parked  hesnde  SoiUh  Building 
bearing  a  parking  ticket. 


Band^  New  Uniforms 
Praised  After  Game 

Students  who  noticed  anything  on  after  a  minimum  of  rehrarsal, 
different  about  the  UNC  Marching .  at  the  State  game.  Drum  Major 
Band  last  Saturday  may  be  inter-  Don  Jefferson  put  his  large,  well- 
ested  to  know  that  it's  the  biggest '  dressed  band  and  four  majorettes 
since  1950,  in  the"  days  of  Charlie  j  through  their  paces  with  precision. 


"Choo  Choo"  Justice. 
Also,  brand   new   uniforms   give 


Only   one  complaint   concerning 
the    band    was    voiced:    "Couldn't 


By   CLARKE    JONES 

Student  body  President  Bob 
Young  last  night  listed  the  student 
government  accomplishments  since 
the  March  27  election  and  briefly 
pointed  out  the  problems  facing  it 
this  year. 

He  addressed  the  Student  Party 
at  its  first  meeting  of  the  year.  Ap- 
proximately 125  old  members  and 
interested  newcomers  attended. 

Young,  in  speaking  of  several 
main  accomplishments,  listed  fresh- 
man automobile  restriction  and  the 


New  Faces  Seen  Among 
UNC  Faculty  This  Year 


the  band  that  "new  look"  Caro-  hear  'cm,  sitting  down  at  the  front 
I  lina's  bandsmen  are  so  enthusias- '  like  that."  In  1954,  the  band  sat 
j  tic  about.  Those  beautiful,  new  j  at  the  top  of  the  card  section,  af- 
i  blue  and  white  uniforms  dress  up  i  fording  Carolina  students  plenty  of 


I  the  University's  fine  band  in  do- 
i  serving  .style,  according  to  specta- 
I  tors  at  Saturday's  game. 


easily-heard  spirited  music. 

Any  musicians  who  wore  unable 
to   audition    for   the   band    during 


New  faces  will  be  seen  among 
the  faculty  as  well  as  in  the  stu- 
dent  body  this  semester. 


Medical  School's  Pathology  Depart 
mcnl;  Miss  Mary  Walker  Randolph 
professor  in  the  School  of  Nursing;  ! 
and  Sigurdur  Jonsson  and  Earl  T.  j 
Brown,  associate  professor  and  as- 
sistant professor,  respectively,  in 
the  School  of  Pharmacy.  | 


They  are.  incidentally,  the  first  ^  the  first  week  have  been  invited  to 
entirclv  new  set  of  uniforms  since  !  contact    Mr.    Herbert    W.    Fred    at 


Dr.  Wilton  Mason 

Or.  AAason,  above,  will  direct 
th«  campus'  nswast  choral  group, 
the  University  Charua,  which 
will  hold  its  first  meeting  of 
tha  new  yoar  today  at  4:30  p.m. 
in  108  Hill  Hall.  Organized  last 
spring  the  chorus  is  open  io  all 
UNC  students  and  will  perform 
"standard  and  moredn  classics 
•f  the  choral   repertory." 


Speeding  L^ads 
Police  Blotter 


Several  of  the  new  faculty  mem-  \ 
\  bers  are  returning  to  their  alma  ' 
mater  after  teaching  elsewhere,  j 
and  others  are  coming  to  Chapel  ! 
Hill  from  West  Coast  and  New  Eng  I 
land  institutions.  j 

Among  those  beginning  their ! 
new  teaching  duties  this  week  are  i 
Joe  S.  Floyd  Jr..  associate  pro- 1 
fessor  of  finance.  School  of  Busi-  [ 
ness  Administration;  Rolfe  E.  > 
Glover  HI,  assistant  professor,  Dc-  i 

partfnent  of  Physics:  William  R- j  Por  AA/^AKPTld 
Cattoo  Jr..  assistant  professor.  De- 1  ^^  ^  '  ^^IV^I  t%M 
partment  of  Sociology;  Ransom  T. 
Taylor,  assistant  professor.  Depart- 
ment of  Germanic  Languages;  and 
Roy  Klmer  SommerficM,  assistnal 
professor  of  education  in  extension. 

New   personnel    in    the   Division 

of  Health  Affairs  include  Dr.  Wal- 

:  tcr  R.  Benson  and  Dr.  William  W. 

I  Forrest,  assistant  professors  in  the 


1930.  The  Student  legislature  ap- 1  Hill  Music  HaJl  for  information 
propriated  $1,800  of  the  better  than  I  about  the  band.  Band  officers  for 
$6,000  expenditure  for  the  band,  11956  57  arc:  Don  Jefferson,  presi- 
the  remainder  being  donated  by  i  dent;  Eddie  Bass,  vice  president; 
the  Athletic  A.ssn.  Included  in  i  and  John  Hamp,  secretar>-treasur- 
that  figure  is  the  cost  of  repairing  er.  Artie  Sobel  is  business  manag- 
and  roconditioning  University-own-  er.  and  Dale  Glover  holds  the  po- 
ed  instruments  —  eight  tubas,  ten  '  sition  of  quartermaster.  Herbert 
drums,  four  baritone  horns,  and  '  W.  Fred.-  conductor,  formulates  the 
various  other  smaller  horn.s.  •  I  plans  for  all  band  formations,  and 

The  band  drew  much  prai.se  after  I  Bert  Davis  and   Calvin  Hubcr  are 
its   excellent    half-time    show,    put '  his  assistants. 


4  Artists  Will  Appear 
In  Concert  Series 


Four  concerts  featuring  distin- 
guish'^d  musical  arti.sts  will  be  held 
in  Chapel  Hill  this  year  as  a  part 
of  the  Chapel  Hill  Concert  Series. 

Appearing  on  the  program  will 


stalled  on  every  floor  yet  but  will 
be  soon,  he  said. 

About  the  return  of  the  library 
books,  he  said  reports  had  been 
received  last  year  for  several 
months  about  books  being  stolen, 
torn  and  underlined* A  drive  was 
put  on  to  restore  the  stolen  books 
and  over  200  were  returned. 
PROBLEMS 

Young  listed  some  of  the  main 
problems  faced  this  year  by  stu- 
dent government  as  follows: 

(1)  The  parking  problem;  (2) 
Compulsory  or  non-compulsory 
physical  education  for  veterans; 
(3)  The  installation  of  vending 
machines  in  the  dormitories;  (4) 
A  reading  day  between  the  last 
day  of  classes  and  the  first  day  of 
examinatons  and  (5)  The  present 
class  attendance  policy  which  many 
feel  is  inadequate. 
Children's  Choir  is  a  fairy  tale  of  Student  Party  Chairman  Tom 
modern  times.  The  beautiful  sing- 1 1-ambeth,    in   welcoming   the   new 


$2.50  registration  fee,  the  placing 
of  telephones  on  each  floor  of  most 
men"s  dormitories  and  the  return 
of  over  200  lost  books  to  the  Wil- 
son flbrary. 

Concerning  the  car  restriction, 
Young  said  "The  crisis  forced  on 
us  was  very  unpleasant.  We  hope 
this  year's  freshman  class  is  the 
only  one  to  suffer"  under  the  rule. 

Young  felt  the  money  from  the 
registration  fees  would  help  to- 
ward getting  parking  lots  for  stu- 
dents. 

The  telephones  have  not  been  in- 


ing,  fresh  innocense  and  charm  of 
these  30  girls  and  six  boys  is  evo- 
cative of  Grimm's  Fairy  Tales  and 


be  Eileen  Farretl,  Oct.  10,  the  Chi-  \  fantasies  of  Hans  Christian  Ander- 
cago   Opera   Ballet,    Jan.   22,    the !  sen. 


Phi  To  Debate 
Banning  Girls 
At  UNC  Tonight;  yocHc  Confrocts 

Must  Be  Signed 


A  bill  proposing  that  UNC  re- 
turn to  its  original  status  as  an 
all-male  institution  will  be  debated 
at  the  fir^  meeting  of  the  Phil- 
antropic  Assembly  thij  evening  at 
8  o'clock  in  Phi  Hall,  located  on 
the  top  floor  of  New  East  building. 

The  Ways  and  Means  Commit- 
tee, in  proposing  the  bill,  was 
motivated  by  the  fact  that  exclus- 
ion of  women  would  help  alleviate 
overcrowded 

dormitories  by  allowing  men  to 
jnpve  into  the  vacated  women'j 
dormitories,  according  to  Lawrence 
Matthews,  speaker  for  the  Phi. 
Also,  the  diversion  from  academic 
pursuits  caused  by  the  presence  .of 
coeds  would  be  eliminated,  he 
said. 

The  Phi,  along  with  its-  sister 
society,  enjoys  the  distinction  of 
being  the  oldest  debating  society 
in  the  United  States^  added  Matt- 
hews. The  Assembly's  many  alum- 
ni who  have  become  prominent 
state  and  national  figures'  exempli- 
fy the  success  of  the  Phi  in  teach- 
ing extemporaneous  public  speak- 
ing, parlimentary  procedure  and 
lilerarj'  awareness,  he  concluded. 
.All  students Mnterested  in  the 
debate  have  been  invited  to  at- 
tend the  meeting. 


By  Oct.  W 


All  organizations  desiring  space 
in  the  1956-57  Yackety  Yack  must 


!  Since  the  start  of  school,  stu- 
dents have  found  themselves  in  a 
variety  of  situations.  Chapel  Hill 
police  found  necessary  to  report, 
ranging  from  parking  on  the  side- 
walk and  going  the  wrong  way  on 
a  one-way  street,  to  speeding  and 
I  driving  recklessly. 
j  Speeding  led  the  field,  with  three 
i  violation  registered.  The  list,  com- 
'  piled  from  the  Chapel  Hill  Police 
blotter,  is  as  follows:  Edith  Linn 
Cashwell,  parking  on  sidewalk; 
Zane  A.  Grey,  parking  tickets; 
John  Vernon  Whitaker  Jr.,  Public 
display;  Samuel  Ulysses  Burchcttc, 
public  drunkenness;  Jackie  Der- 
ring  Worley  (State  College),  reck- 
less driving;  Charles  Wills,  (Duke) 
speedmg;  David  Richard  Dean, 
wrong    way   on    one   way    street 


Carolina  Men  Invited  To  Dance  At  Averett 

The  group  from  Averett  College    bcgin.s  at   8:30.   Refreshmcnti  will 
which   visited  .the   camfMw   Sainl«.**|  be  .♦rrvert  at  intermission  and  snp- 
is  sponsoring  a  dance  on  .Saturday,    per  at  niidni;k'ht 
and    all    Carolina    genHeinen    have 
been  invited. 

Averett  College  for  Women  is  lo- 
cated in  Danville.  Vircmia. 

Bob    Cleveland's    orchestra    will 


Obernkirchen  Children's  Choir,  1 
Feb.  21,  and  Witold  Malcuzynski,  i 
March  28. 

The  passcssor  of  one  of  the 
greatest  voices  this  country  has 
ever    produced,    Eileen    Farrell    is 


Tho  sreat  piano  traditons  of  Cho- 
pin, Listz,  and  Paderewski  arc  con- 
tinued unbroken  in  the  gifted  play- 
ing of  the  internationally  acclaim- 
ed virtuoso,  Witold  Malcuzynski,  an 
artist  wth  few  living  peers  today. 


also  recognized  by  critics  through- 1  He  was  the  celebrated  protege  of  j 

out  the  land  as  a  superb  musician  |  Paderewski. 

Season    tickets    can    be    ordered  I 
by  sending  a  check  or  money  order  I 
to:  Chapel  Hill  Concert' Series.  Gra- 
ham Memorial,  Box  30,  Chapel  Hill. 
Rates  art  $7.50  for  resen-ed  mem- 


persons  present,  called  the  SP 
"the  best  campus  political  party" 
because  of  the  things  it  gets  dona. 
"The  Young  administration  is  a 
daily  evidence  of  the  truth  of  that 
statement." 

He  also  stated  "it  is  an  open 
party  .  .  .  where  ideas  and  individ- 
uals and  —  the  professional  cynics 
to  the  contrary  —  principle  are 
more  important  than  victory  or 
I  numbers." 


Bu.s.sps  will  be  chartered  and  in- 
fere.sted  pcrson.s  have  been  asked 
to  contact  tho  YMCA  office  or  at- 
tend the  Froshm.m  Fellowship 
meeting  on  Thursday  at  a  time  and    FAIRY  TALE 


and  artist.  She  is  beloved  by  au- 
diences across  the  continent  as  one 
of  America's  warmest  concert  per- 
sonalities. 

The  Chicago  Opera  Ballet  will 
anpear  in  the  original  ballets  "The 
Merry  Widow."  and  "Revenue" 
(from  "II  TYovatore")  with  a  com- 
pany of  45.  soloi.sfs.  corps  de  bal- 
let, complete  scenery,  costumes 
and  orchestra. 


N.  C.  Public 
Still  Prefers 


bcrship  for    the   season.  $6.60  for  ]  ^  -  _ 

'unreserved     membership     for    the  \'  \j(rt  nnf^lfn    nAtJ^t^ 
ficaaon    and    .$2.50    for    unreserved'  w*#v#i,##v#    #riwafW 

seats  for  a  single  concert. 

Tickets  can  also  be  obtained 
from  Mr^.  Dojiglas  Fambrough  at 
the  Graham  Memorial  Information 
Office   every    day    except    Sunday 


furnish   the   music   and   the  dance ,  place  to   be  announced  later. 


The   story  of  the  Obernkirchen    from  9  a.m.  to  1  p.m. 


OF  200  APPLICANTS: 


100  Named  As  NROTC  Cotract  Men 


After  processing  more  than  200  j  Charlotte;  Alan  G.  .^twcll.  John 
applicants  for  the  Navy's  ROTC  C.  Jester  III,  Edmund  H.  Schench, 
Contract  Program,  the  Universty  Edward  W.  Slei.^ht,  and  David  C. 
NROTC     unit     has     accepted     100 !  Wible.     Greensboro:     Sheldon     C. 


freshmen  as  contract   students. 

Captain    A.    M.    Patterson,   com- 
mander of  the  unit,  said  that  so 


sign   contracts  in   the  Yack  office    jg^es  Gooden  Exum  Jr.,  speeding;  t  lection  was  based   on   high  school 


in  the  basement  of  Graham  Mem-  j  p^ed    Marshall    Daniel   Jr.,   speed-  j 
,   ,  o"al  by  Oct.  10,  according  to  Edi- ,  jng.  gillie  Farrington,  passing  stop 

conditions    m    mens     t^r  Tnmmv    Tnhnson  •  r-  ...  lV-       .         . 

j  lor  lommy  jonnson.  j  g,gn.  Ernest  Horn,  public  drunken- 

Contracts   may   be   signed   from    ^ess. 
2    to   4    p.m.    any   weekday    after- 
noon. 

Yack  senior  class  pictures  will 
be  taken  today  througli  Friday  in 
the  basement  of  Graham  Memor- 
ial. Senior  girls  will  be  photo- 
graphed in  "black  drapes.  It  is  ad- 
visable that  they  wear  skirt.?  and 
sweaters.  Men  are  requested  to 
wear  white  shirts,  and  dark  ties 
and  coats. 


-       Officials  Needed 

*•  students  are  needed  as  intra- 
mural officials  for  tag  football. 
Those  interesed  have  been  asked 
to  come  to  301  Woollen  Gym  at 
4  p.m.  this  afternoon. 


INFIRMARY 


students  in  the  Infirmary  ye»- 
ttrday  included: 

Miss  Patricia  B.  Shoras;  Miss 
Halen  L.  Yatas;  Ml»»  Martha  J. 
Slllay;  Miss  Ann  C.  Brown;  Miss 
Isabel  A.  Holbrook;  Mrs.  J«nat 
E.  Summarall;  John  G.  Burgwyn; 
Hal  M.  Millar;  James  K.  Coward; 
Timothy  Harris;  Bob  S.  ftoWr* 
son;  Clarence  E.  Smith  Jr.;  Alvin 
W.  Sntith;  and  Kannath  H.  Oak- 
ley  Jr. 


Correction 

The  change  in  tha  telephone 
number  of  the  Alpha  Gamma 
Delta  sorority  house  was  report- 
ed  incorrectly  in  the  Saturday 
Daily  Tar  Heel.  The  correct 
number  is  8-9089. 


First  UP  Meeting  Set 
For  Tuesday,  Oct.  9 


academic  records,  college  entrance 
test  scores  and  individual  inter- 
views. 

Capt.  Patterson  also  said  that 
he  was  gratified  with  the  interest 
shown  in  the  Na\'ys  program,  and 
that  he  was  "impressed  with  the 
highcaliber  of  the  young  men  ap- 
plying for  the  Contract  Program. 

He  added  that  he  regretted  that 
quota  limitations  had  preventcii 
the  acceptance  of  more  of  the  stu 
dents  who  applied. 

The  100  students  arc  in  additi  )n 
to   32   previously    selected    by   na 


Austin  Jr.,  James  L.  Carter,  Rich- 
ard M.  Daily  Jr.  .Andrew  P.  Den- 
mark, Tommie  L.  Little  and 
Charles  G.  Poole  III.  Raleigh. 

David  S.  Evans.  Michael  S.  Lan- 
hani,  Junius  S.  Williams  Jr.,  and 
James  A.  Moss  II,  Fayetteville; 
Donald  R.  Andrews  and  James  O 
Bledsoe,  New  Born;  James  S.  Belk. 
Hickory;  Tommy  L.  Brceland,  Wil- 
mington; Paul  C.  Clark  Jr.,  Candor; 
Alfred  L.  Cope  Jr.,  Elizabeth  City; 
James  W.  Crawford  Jr.,  Oxford; 
Edward  W.  Crow,  Hanes;  Charles 
M.  Dewitt  Jr.,  Concord;  and 
Thoma.s  C.  Fisher  III,  Salisbury. 

Other  North  Carolinians  accept- 
ed for  the  Contract  Program  are. 
James    R.    Frazier,    Rock    Mount; 


The  Univers-ity  Party  will  not 
meet  tonight  as  was  reported  in 
Tlie  Daily  Tar  Heel  earlier.  The 
party  will  meet  Tuesday  night, 
October  9,  acocrding  to  Mike 
Weinman,   party  chairman. 

Weinman  listed  his  reason  for 
cancellation  of  this  week's  meet- 
ing aj-  "sorority  and  fraternity 
rushing." 

Weinman's  full  statement  con- 
cerning party  prospects  for  this 
yiear  is  as  follows: 

"I  am  looking  forward  to  an- 
other outstanding  year  for  the 
University  Party.  I  have  spoken 
to  many  promising  incoming  stu- 
dents who  are  interested  in  the 
UP,  and  we  are  indeed  interested 
in  them.  If  you  are  a  new  student 
or  a  battle  weary  veteran  you  are 


"I  urge  all  old  party  members 
to  be  on  the  lookout  for  fresh  tal 
ent.  Refre  ,+inients  will  be  served 
at  the  first  meting,  which  will  be 
in  the  nature  of  a  get-acquainted 
gathering.  Some  of  the  party's 
most  outstanding  men  will  be  on 
hand  to  say  a  few  words." 


Donald  D.  Haithcock,  Durham; 
James  M.  Harper,  Southport;  John 
K.      Horncy,      Guilford      College: 


tionwide  competitive  examinations  |  Stephen    S.    Girard,    Cumberland: 
for  the  NROTC  Regular  Program. 

Both  programs  are  designed  to 
train  young  men  as  midshipmen 
luring  their  college  careers.  Upon  j  George  W.  Jackson,  Belhaven; 
graduation  they  will  receive  com  ,  Thomas  H.  Jordan,  Wilson;  Robert 
missions  in  either  the  Navy  or  N-  W.  Knott,  Ashcboro;  Luther  T. 
Marine  Corps  as  regular  or  reserve  I  Lineberger,  Gastoniai  Harold  S. 
officers.  i  Manning  Jr.,  Windsor;  Charles   C. 

Students    selected    for   the    Con     ^Tason.   Dillshoro;    Dewey   L.    Mur 
tract    Program    include    .59    North    Phy.   Stokcsdalc:  David  W.  Myers 


Carolinians: 

Jerry  W.  Amos,  Charles  A.  Bare- 
foot! Frederick  L.  Hirsch,  Thomas 
C.  Guiles,  Edward  L.  Vinson  .Jr., 
and  Lawrence  R.  Withrow,  all  of 


Polio  Vaccine  To  Be  Given 
To  Students  At  $1  Per  Dose 


Salk  polio  vaccine  is  now  avail- 
able to  the  entire  student  body  on 
a  voluntary  basis  through  the  stu- 
dent health  ^rorvice. 

First  doses  were  begun  yester- 
day and  will  be  given  through 
October  5;  the  second  dose,  one 
month  later;  the  third,  during 
always  cordially  invited  to  attend    the  first  two  weefcs  of  May.  These 


any  and  all  UP  meetin|s. 


shots  can  be  obtained  Monday  — 


Saturday  during  regular  office 
hour:-.'  at  the  student  infirmary. 

Salk  shots  will  be  given  at  costs, 
$1  per  dose.  Students  will  be  billed 
through   regular  channel-s. 

This  vaccine  is  now  recognized 
as  an  effective  and  safe  procedure 
in  the  prevention  of  polio,  accord- 
ing to  Infirmary  officalj. 

Students    have    been    urged    to 


Elkin;  and  Robert  F.  Neal,  Hen- 
derson. 

Edgar  L.  Nealon.  Burlington; 
Clifton  W.  Paderick,  Kinston; 
Hugh  L.  Patterson.  Edenton;  Bruce 
G.  Pearson,  Ft.  Bragg:  Ashmead  P. 
Pipkin.  Reidsville;  Teddy  L.  Raab, 
Garner;  Robert  A.  Sherrill.  Lenoir; 
N'orman  B.  Smith,  Franklin. 

Wade  M.  Smith,  Albemarle:  Alva 
P  Smithson.  Cre.swell;  Chester  W. 
Taylor,  Castle  Hayne;  Charles  S. 
Walters,  State  Road;  Thomas  L 
White  Jr..  Lumberton;  and  Charles 
A.  Webb,  Asheville. 

Freshmen  in  the  regular  NROTC 
orogram  from  North  Carolina  arc 
Dennis  P.  L.  Dooley,  Thomas  L. 
Overman.  Stephen  B.  Honeycutt, 
and  John  B.  Mayo,  all  of  Raleigh: 
William    N.    Franklin,    Grady    H. 


Greensboro;  Edward  L.  Cameron. 
Raeford:  Michael  L.  Collins,  High 
Point;  Thomas  L.  Cordlc,  Charlotte: 
Gary  R.  Greer,  Spindale;  Henry 
W.  Harris  Jr..  Winston-Salem; 
.Jackie  L.  Lawing,  Marion;  Theo- 
dore C.  Moore  Jr.,  Chapel  Hill: 
George  W.  Reese  Jr.,  Taylorsville: 
Robert  M-  Rhodes  and  Howard  P. 
Troutman,  Lenoir;  and  James  N. 
Thomas,  Cherry  Point. 

Out-of-.state  students  under  the 
Contract  Program  are  Sanford  L. 
.Ainslie  .Ir.,  Huntington,  W.  Va.; 
f.  Bodenheimcr.  New  Orleans,  La.: 
Charles  W.  Baldwin.  Baldwin,  N 
Y.;  Theodore  N.  Bodcn  and  Henry 
Dixon  W.  Christian,  Vicksburg. 
Miss.;  Robert  K.  Cofed.  New  York, 


nev5 

in 
brief 


STORM  STRIKES 

FT.  WALTON,  Fla.  iJP)  —Hurri- 
cane Flossy  hit  the  coast  of  North- 
west Florida  last  night  and  then 
began  to  weaken. 

The  storm  struck  the  coast  near 
here  with  100-mile-an  hour  winds. 
A  short  time  after  it  struck  it  was 
reported  that  the  winds  had  died 
to  80  miles  an  hour  around  the 
center. 

The    hurricane   caused    at    least 
four  deaths  yesterday  on  the  coast 
of  Alabama   and  Louisiana. 
'DIVIDE   AMERICA' 


N.  Y.;  Marion  K.  Costcllo  and  ; 
Thomas  T.  Lawson,  Roanoke,  Va.;  '• 
John  B.  Cummings,  Philadelphia,  i 
Pa.;  James  R.  Cunningham,  Char-  j 
leston,  W.  Va.;  Houston  S.  Everett,  j 
Baltimore,  Md.;  Wallace  A.  Gra- ' 
ham,  Homestead,  Fla.;  Peyton  S.  j 
Hawes,  Elberton,  Pa;  Charles  H.  { 
Howson  III,  Villanova,  Pa.;  Ben- 1 
nette  E.  G.  Keys,  Greenville,  S.  C; ; 
and  Arthur  L.  Kilpatrick.  Chesire,  ■ 
Conn. 

Other  out-of-staters  are  David  L. 
Leffler   and    Joseph    L.    Loughran 
Arlington,   Va.;     Peter   C.    Liman,  j 
Hewlett,  N.  Y.;  Frank  W.  Lockett, ; 
John    H.    Oliver,    and    George    N.  \ 
Schroeder,  Summitt,  N.  J.;  Denton  j 
Lotz,  North  Port,  N.    Y.;   John  N. ! 
Mcintosh,  Savannah,  Ga.;  Philip  V.  j 
Moss,  Kew  Gardens,  N.  Y.;  Willara 
F.  Palmer,  West  Long  Beach.  N.  J.;  I 
Charles  G.  Reeder,   Laurel,  Miss.;  ] 
Herbert  A.  Ross,  South  Orange,  N.  j 
J.;    and   Paul   Russell,   Bridgeport,  i 
W.  Va.  I 

Others   include  Henry  C.    Simp- 
.ijon   Jr..  Lexington.   Ky.:    Hoke   S.  i 


Rock  'n  roll  may  have  its  North 
Carolina  devotees,  but  where  sym- 
phonic music  is  concerned,  the 
North  Carolina  public  prefers  the 
j  s>ca]Ied  standard  orchestral  li-t- 
j  crature.  In  fact,  the  concert-goer*' 
i  taste  is  probably  better  than  you 
I  think  it  is. 

!      This    much    is    learned    from    a 

j  questionnaire     which     the     North 

Carolina    Symphony    Society    sent 

j  out  to  hundredo-  of  its   members, 

,  who   were   given    the    opportunity 

;  to  st-te  preferences  in  orchestral 

compositions  as  request  selections 

to  be  considered  in   programming 

concerts  for  the   1957  ovason. 

The  Franck  Symphony  received 
the  greatest  number  of  requests, 
and  next  in  popularity  were  the 
Beethoven  Symphonies  and 
Brahms'  First  Symphony.  After 
these,  the  Tschaikowsky  Sixth 
(Pathetique)  was  mojt  in  demand. 
Sibelius'  "Finlandia"  seemed  al- 
so to  be  a  favorite  of  the  public 
and  various  Mozart  works  were  re- 
quested. One  of  the  surprises  was 
the  small  number  of  votes  for 
Wagner. 

Very  few  modern  works  were 
even  mentioned,  although  two 
votes  were  registered  for  Straviiv 
s'ky  and  one  for  a  work  by  Hinde- 
mith.  Only  two  requests  were 
made  for  Gershwin.  Some  of  the 
old  (sentimental  pieces  received 
only  one  vote  each. 

Stu^  of  the  returns  indicates 
only  that  the  public  prefers  the 
old  standard  orchestral  literature, 


Simpson    Jr.,    Larchmont,   V-   Y. 

Arthur     W.     Sims.     Orange,     Va.;  i  '"  the  opinion  of  Dr.  Benjamin  F. 

James  A.  Turner  Jr.,  St.  Stephen, '  Swalin,  director  of  the  society  and 


S.  C;  Paul  L.  Wachindorfer,  Ponte 
Vcdra,  Fla.;  Gale  F.  Wallace,  Ips- 
wich. Mass.;  Mark  K.  Wilson  HI. 
Chattanooga.  Tenn.;  Dabney  E 
Wooldridge  III.  Cuyahoga  Falls, 
Ohio;  and  Michael  A.  Rosen,  New 
Haven,  Conn. 

Out-of-state  students  under  the 
regular  program  include  Robert  M 
Congdon,  Hingham,  Mass.;  Clyde 
O.  Draughon  Jr.,  Mobile,  Ala.: 
Hugh    C.    Embry,    Fredericksburg 


take  advantage  of  this  opportunity.  I  Phillips,    and    Charles    D-    Sheets, 


S.\LT  LAKE  .CITY,  i,Pi  —  Vice  j  Va.;  Harold  H.  Fortner,  Anderson 
President  Richard  Nixon  Jast  night  s.  C;  Charles  H.  Fuller,  South 
accused  Adlai  Stevenson  of  con-  Charleston,  W.  Va.;  John  W.  John 
ducting  a  campaign  aimed  at  divid-  j  son,  Belford,  N.  J.;  John  G.  Jones 
ing  Americans— class  against  class  Clayton,  Mo.;  Edwin  Levy  Jr..  Nev 
and  group  against  group.  Orleans,  La.;    Francis  J.   McGarry 

Nixon,  speaking  at  a  rally  here,  Raynham,  Mass.;  Henry  T.  Mehl 
said  it  becomes  more  and  more  ap- 1  Mechanicsburg,  Pa.;  Charles  W 
parent  that  all  Stevenson  has  to  \  pittman  Jr.,  Columbia,  S.  C;  Willi- 
offer  the  American  people  is  a  car- 1  ^^  j^  p^^er,  Orchard  Park,  N.  Y.- 
bon  copy  of  what  he  calls  the  "same  j  ...      tt  i.  iu  _i   m.  o  j 

t  ^«i  tj^oi  A  .^o.,^.,.^^ 'Julian  H.  Tolbert,  Macon,  Ga.;  and 
type     of    political     demagoguer>'    ; 

which  characterized  the  Fair  Deal  I  William      S.     Webster,      Virginia' 
of'Harn^  Truman.  Beach.  Va. 


conductor  of  the  North  Carolina 
Symphony  Orchestra.  This  prefer- 
ence, he  believes,  is  conditioned 
by  the  recordings  which  are  being 
bought    and    heard. 


Art  Rental  Exhibition 
Closes  In  Person  Today 

PercDn  Hall  Art  Gallerj-'s  exhi- 
bition of  its  Picture  Rental  Col- 
lection will  close  todaj'. 

Beginning  tomorrow,  universi- 
ty students  and  residents  of 
Chapel  Hill  can  rent  pictures  of 
their  choice  from  the  collection. 

The  rental  charge  is  25  cents 
oer  month  per  picture,  pax'able 
in  advance.  Pictures  may  be  rent- 
ed for  not  le:'s  than  one  month 
nor  more  than  three  months.  A 
deposit  of  $1  is  also  payable  in 
advance  and  will  be  refunded  up- 
m  return  of  the  picture. 


PAGE  TWO 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEBL: 


TUESDAY,   SEPTEMBER  25,   1956 


TUESDAYJ 

DTH 

The  D| 

a  staff  me 
Editor  Fr^ 
purpose  of 
to  discuss 
important 
all  cid  an| 
the  rneetir 


Maybe  A  Litfle  Boycott 
Would  Bluff  Col.  Nasser 


REACTfON  PIECE 


Readjusting  to  The  United  States 


It  is  cN  idem  that  F.gvptian  Presi- 
dent Nasser.  like  many  Middle 
Eastern  powers,  stands  continually 
on  shakv  ground.  His  regime  was 
built  and  (ontinnes  to  exist  on  a 
kind  ot  personal  jX)pularity  that  is 
foreign  to  the  Ameri<an  political 
system. 

Nasser  unist  placate  his  snhjetts. 
or  he  may  he  lemoved  in  the  same 
wav  he  came  to  jx)wer. 

F<'r  this  reason,  it  wonld  he  wise 
hir  the  Western  j^ouers  to  consider 
bov{<)tring  his  country.  Then,  per- 
haps Nasser  would  start  talking  aiid 
acting  sensihlv  about  the  Sue/ 
Clanal. 

The  rnited  .States,  for  example, 
holds  an  axe  high  above  Nassers 
head,  but  refuses  to  dr{»p  it.  Ac- 
cording to  New  ^■ork  Times  ex])ert 
I  homas%|.    Hantilton: 

*■  There  seems  to  l>e  no  intention 
in  Washington  oi  invoking  the 
most  |ioiini  \ve.ij>on  ol  all.  the  lilt- 
ing oi  testrittions  on  the  produc- 
tion ot  long-staple  cotton  ii\  the 
liiited  Slates.  Fhese  lestrictions 
lia\f  heljHil  keep  up  the  prite  h)r 
Kgyptian  long-staple  cotton,  which 
is  KgApt  s  chiel  expoii;  iheir  re- 
moval would  pi*obablv  break  tlie 
market  and  reduce  KgApt's  loreign 
exchange    resources    acocrdinglv." 

Cihaiues  are  strong  that  a  West- 
ern bovcott  of  Fgvpt  Avc^uld  hint 
Nasser's  popularitv  among  his 
subjects,  something  that  means  a 
lot  in  Fgypt. 

C'.ertainlv.  we  would  have  to  fig- 
ure on  the  possibilities  of  Russia  s 
nio\ing  in  where  the  West  had 
mo\ed  out.  But  indications  are  the 


NASSER 

■.  ...  boycott? 

'  The  Reporter 

Soviet  I  iiion  woiilcln't  ha\e  enough 
inonev  to  make  up  lor  the  Wests 
patient  jiatronage  of  Kgypt. 

.Nasser  has  used  the  bluff  better 
than  most  people.  While  he  ob- 
viously woni  get  the  .\suan  High 
Dam  built  wiihoiu  help  from  the 
outside  (that  was  his  ■'reason  "  for 
seizing  the  Canal  in  Jnly).  he  has 
succeeded  in  shuffling  the  diplo- 
matic pomic  lies  of  the  rest  of  the 
Avorld. 

It  is  time  ofr  the  Western  na*- 
lions  to  cjuit  playing  the  part  of 
the  f)lufee  and  to  ^el  to  \\ork  on 
Nasser.  An  economic  boycott 
woidd   be   hi>»hlv  effectixe. 


Fall:  Time  To  Contemplate 


Autumn  canu  o\er  the  weekend. 

The  arrival  <.f  the  autiminal 
equinox  confimied  what  we  had 
suspected  for  quite  some  time:  The 
summer  is  fading  awav.  although 
vve  still  wear  lic^it  clothes;  fall  and 
winter  are  coming  in.  and  Nature 
is  dying  for  a   little  while. 

Now,  remindel  by  the  fact  that 
jr  is  officiiliv  l..;i,  we  see  more 
dead   L  on    the  ground.   The 

grass  <  .  -vhich  this  university  rests 
is  taking  on  a  different  hue,  and 
the  sunlight  is  coming  from  a  total- 
ly difterent  cjuarter. 

The  graitmier  and  high  school 
students  are  begimiing  \isit  the 
PPIPanPetarinm  in  their  thcm.s- 
and-toloied  school  buses.  The 
girls  from  Woman's  College  and 
the  girls  from  .\verett  College 
have  come  and  gcjne,  and  a  whole 
new  rasli  .of  leters  fjetvveen  here 
and  Danville  and  betwen  here  and 
(.reensboro   will   soon   develop. 

l-irst  examinations  will  be  given 
beh)re  too  long,  another  sure  sign 
:»f  the  seasons'  change.  In  just  a 
few  weeks  Walter  Spearman  will 
have  his  high  school  journalists 
here  for  a  weekend  of  talk  and 
exploration,  and  in  only  a  little 
while  the  cars  will  be  lined  up  late 
at  night  before  the  gasoline  stat- 
tions'  antifree/e  cans. 

The  .Xrboretiun  will  become 
alntost — but  n<»t  cjuiie— too  cold 
a  place  to  take  your  date,  but  some- 
how both  of  vol!  will  live  through 


The  Daily  Tar  Heel 


The  official  student  publication  of  the 
Publicatiuns  Board  of  the  University  of 
North  Carolina,  where  it  is  published 
daily  except  Monday  and  e.xaminatioii 
and  vacation  periods  and  .summer  terms 
Entered  as  second  class  matter  in  the 
post  office  in  Chapel  Hill.  N.  C,  under 
the  Act  of  March  8.  1870.  Subscripton 
rates:  mailed.  $4  per  year.  $2.50  a  semes- 
ter; delivered,  $6  a  year,  $3.50  a  semes 
ter. 


another  winter     on     those 
benches. 


irecn 


Editor 


FRED  POWLEDGE 


Managing  Editor      CHARLIE  JOHNSON 


News  EMitor 


RAY  LINKER 


Business  Manager BILL  BOB  PEEL 


As  we  learned  in  grammar  school, 
the  leaves  will  pile  themselves  upon 
the  ground,  and  thev  will  decay. 
They  will  make  new.  greener  grass 
for  next  spring — taller,  thicker 
trees  for  next  summer  . 

The  leaves  also  m.ike  the  woods  ' 
aroimd  the  Ihiiversity  soft  and 
springy.  They  are  nice  to  walk  on 
these  aiuumn  days.  .\s  ycui  walk 
on  them,  voii  think  harder,  and 
you  think  about  deeper  subjects 
than  last  v\eekend's  date  and  how- 
to  oxercut' without  getting  an  K. 

For    this   reason,    primarily,   an-"" 
tunm  is  a  gcM)d  season.  It  is  a  sea- 
son o  fself-contemplation,  of  men- 
tal  and  emotional    prejjaration    lor 
the  long  months  of  little  sunlight. 

Kxcept  lor  s|)ring,  a  better  sea*, 
son  couldn't  ha\e  been  invented 
for  students. 


Now,  Let's 
Get  Down  To 
Essentials     - 

Carolina's  loss  to  .State  College 
down  in  Kenan  Pines  .Saturday 
seived  onci  good  puipose.  It  made 
S(»me  peojile  realize  that  Coac  h  )im 
Tatum   is  human. 

There  was  coirsiderable  doubt 
about  this  fact  beh)re  the  game. 
Some  overeager  alumni— and  manv 
students,  too — had  the  feeling  that 
Tatcnn's  ariival  here  would  im- 
mediately set  I'.NC  back  into  the 
justice    Kra. 

Of  course,  anything  o  fthe  soi  t 
uoidd  have  been  pine  coincidence. 
V\  hile  Taium  is  known  from  coast 
to  coast  as  otie  of  the  country's  best 
h)otbaill  coaches,  he  is  not  knovvn 
as  a   magic  ian. 

If,  as  his  advance  pid)Iicity 
claims,  he  has  thc*^  ability  to  give 
(Carolina  a  wimiing  hiotball  team- 
within  the  conference  rules  and 
regulations  .u)d  within  the  frame- 
work of  the  University  —  then  it 
will  take  a  little  time  for  him  to 
do  it. 

Foi  those  few  who  already  have 
started  yelling  goc»d-Jiaturedlv  for 
Tatmn's  head,  a   little   patience. 

.And  for  (ioach  latum  and  our 
football  team,  more  j)ower  and 
practice. 


Dave  Mundy 

David  Mundy  u>  a  IXi. 
ftsychology  major  if  ho  rr- 
iin)ird  a  inonl/i  ai!;o  from  a 
\rar  of  study  and  travel  in 
f.uropc.  He  sj)eut  two  se- 
mesters at  Georg  August 
L'niversitaet  i>i  Goettiuge^i. 
('•eruiany.  as  the  first  e\' 
</m><t;c  student  in  a  pro- 
gram arranged  hy  admiu- 
isfration.  faculty,  and  stu. 
dent  agencies  of  I'XC  ami 
(ioettingen.  Muridy  is  a 
former  Dail\  Tar  H  e  e  I 
.staffer  who  has  also  been 
active  iyi  sfxieral  other  e\- 
tra-curriculars.  He  returns 
to  the  I)  I'H  this  semester 
it'ith  his  old  column.  "Re- 
at  tiou    Piece." 

The  fir.st  thing  to  which  I  log- 
ically could  be  expected  to  re- 
act is  the  mast  recent,  and  big- 
gest, experience  of  my  jrhort  and 
blue-eyed  lite:  a  year  in  Euro'pe. 
That  at  least  provides  a  rich 
field  for  reactions  of  all  shapes, 
colors,  sizes  and  odors:  and 
those  reaction.^■  may  well  range 
from  "Sex  Life  of  the  .Average 
European  Student"  to  an  article 
on  "Sein  Excellenz.  Herr  Bunde- 
spraesident  Theodor  Heuss  von 
Schwaben." 

Just  pardon  the  recurrence  of 
the  pronoun.*!  "I"  and  "me."  If 
these  ■"reactions'"  seem  di.sjointert, 
it  s  only  because  my  experiences 
were  di.sjointed. 

Anything  I  say  about  the  UNC- 
Goetlingen  exchange  program 
must  of  necessity  show  a  strong 
personal  influence,  even  to  the 
point  of  an  honest  admission  that 
I  can  33  of  yet  offer  no  objective 
evaluation  of    the    program. 

The  year  was  spent  in  compar- 
ative isolation  from  "The  Amer- 
can  Culture,"  Excepting  two 
graduate  students  from  L^NC 
whose  company  I  enjoyed  on  oc- 
casion, the  very  well-welcomed 
Daily  Tar  Heels  and  an  occasion- 
:  aly  European  edition  of  Tnuc?, 
the  isolation  was  almost  com- 
plete. 

Even  after  a  month  in  the 
U.S.  I  ffeel  less  -in  place."  albeit 
far  happier,  than  in  Goettingen. 
But  I  still  cant  speak  German. 

I  spent  eleven  months  in  Goet- 
fiihgcn,  one  in  Berlin,  one  in 
Bonn,  and  .something  more  than 
one  month  just  traveling  around. 
The  winter  seme.-ter  extends 
from  November  through  Febru- 
ary, the  summer  semester  from 
May  1  until  the  end  of  July.  The 
amount  of  time  spent  in  Goet- 
tingen is  not  indicative  of  my 
like  of  that  ci(:ty.  but  of  my  dis- 
like for  traveling. 

There  are  no  compulsory  class 

SIDEBAR 


attendance  rules  fo  mo.-.'t  lectures 
at  German  universities,  so  a  stu- 
dent can  take  a  two  or  three  week 
vacation  smack  in  the  middle  of 
a  semester  if  the  five  months  of 
regular  vacation  isn't  enough  for 
him. 

Admittedly  I  could  have  been 
ether  than  a  diligent  student  had 
Goettingen  offered  a  few  means- 
of  con.suming  time  other  than 
just  plain  studying.  So  sometimes 
I   was  bored   stiff. 

My  disillusionments  were  many, 
whether  petty  or  seriou.-.-.  The 
greatest  one  was  in  regard  to 
the  German  universities:  they 
just  aren't  the  fine  institutions 
I  had  expected.  In  the  un.settled 
years  after  Police  .\cUon  Num- 
ber One  many  profes.vors  came 
to  the  ITnited  States. 

During   the    National    Socialist 


era  the  university  staffs  enjoyed 
the  possibilitie.s-  of  being  Nazi- 
fied  > National  Socialized),  kick- 
ed out  of  the  glorious  thousand- 
year  Reich-,  allowed  to  escape  the 
land  of  the  supermen  to  Eng- 
land or  the  United  States,  gassed, 
shot,  or  jujt  quietly  liquidated. 

During  Police  Action  Number 
Two  many  staff  and  faculty  mem- 
bers were  casaulties  of  war, 
whether  by  action  on  the  fronts 
or  by  American  and  English 
"Terror  Attacks."  Most  ot  the 
buildings,  in.^'titutes  and  librar- 
ies were  pulverized  in  these  at- 
tacks. 

After  the  end  of  the  Police 
Action,  the  Universities  were 
denazified,  which  meant  that 
much  of  the  remaining  teaching 
staff  was  forbidden  to  teach,  al- 
though   some   in   West   Germany 


were  retired  on  s-alary. 

The  natural  science  faculties 
weathered  these  storms  better 
than  the  other  faculties,  but 
even  they  were  deeply  hurt. 

So,  despite  the  efforts  of  sev- 
eral very  able  profesa-ors  in  the 
post-1945  era,  some  German  uni- 
versities are  still  academically 
bankrupt. 

Their  chief  asset  is  a  stupen- 
dously efficient  and  thorough 
school  system.  American  univers- 
ities would  be  far  better  had  they 
.-Mch  a  system  behind  their  stu- 
dents. 

I  had  a  whole  slue  of  disillus- 
ionments and  disappointments  in 
regard  to  the  beauties  of  the 
"fair"  sex  in  Europe.  On  that 
i-core  it  is  a  distinct  pleasure  to 
be  again  in  North  Carolina. 


'Those  Poor  Freshmen  Have  To  Walk!' 


'BAiCMftSi, 


Re-Announcing,  A  Forgotten  Candidate 


t:-v 


Charlie  Sloan 

Columnist  Sloan  sf)ends 
most  of  his  time  around  the 
Daily  Tar  Heel  office  with 
hehind-the-.scenes  stuff,  hut 
frou)  time  to  time  lie  finds 
time  tt)  break  through  tite 
f)ile  of  maiiu.<icrij)ts  on  his 
desk  to  fiound  out  one  of 
own. 
This     columns     overline,     the 

word   between    the   cartoon    and 
the  headline,  is  one  of  the  more 

Pdgo 


printable  term.s  heard  around 
GM's  second  floor  snake  pit,  the 
offices  of  The  Daily  Tar  Heel. 

The  word's  exact  meaning  ha.-; 
something  to  do  with  an  allied 
story.  That  is.  a  story  about  the 
story  that  made  the  story.  Sim- 
ple? 

•  •  • 

Riggest  national  news  in  mr.st 
ncwspaper.v  thes  days  is  what 
the  candidates  for  president  are 
doing  to  get  votes. 

Unfortunately    it    seems    that 


only  two  of  the 
major  candidates 
are  getting  any 
recognition.  This 
is  a  gross  injuo'^ 
tice. 


'Missing  from  POGO 

the  front  pages. ..  iV/r.  Caricfidatg 
of  our  nation's  papers  is  the 
name  of  a  candidate  who  has 
been  well  known  to  students-  for 
years. 


Without  further  beating  around 
the  bush,  let  it  now  be  said  that 
I  find  myself  Pog  chairman  for 
this  paper,  and.  as  such,  am  in 
po.--session  of  a  passel  oi  "I  Go 
Pogo"   buttons. 

A  real  campaigner  would  go 
running  madly  about  the  camp- 
us thrusting  the  buttons  at  every 
peison  he  met.  So,  if  my  read- 
er in  interested,  ho  can  come 
up  to  The  Daily  Tar  Heel  office 
and   pick   up   his  button. 

So   much   for   tub-thumping. 


hf\i 


By  Wait  Kelly 


MV  MKD 


^rupyiN  AN  A- 

'-  AN'  I  eguevf 

1^  '30\!^  MAP£ 


r 


A    n/^V 


'^ 


gaar  cow  \    AiN*r 
sTtHJ   if  Ml.'$t       f»W  U^Al- 

OF  066N  ^(ye  '  t^5  WAV7  J 

WAP  T. 


r^ouSu^  \vA5,  wr£)^f/ 


Li'l  Abn^r 


By  Al  Capp 


/^re   You    a    Run-down 
Ridiculous   Runt? 


Of  Course  You  Are    ! 


9  ir 


▼Vovild  you 
like  to  look 
like  m«? 

I,   Stanley 
Strongnose . 
can     make    a 
MAN  of  you!  ! 
Send     in 
a      photo     of 
your    anemic, 
pitiful     body 
and     I     will 
teach  you  how 
to  build  your- 
•  elf  up  !  ! 


WHAT  A  BUILT.'.'- AH'uL   SEND   IN  A 
PirCHER.  O   MAN   AMEMIC,  PiTiFUL 
e>ODV,  AN'  MEBE>f     STRONGNOi:>F^ 
h-  IN   HELP  ME.':'' 


l^-y 


I     Carolina 
Caroleidoscope 

Frank  Crowther 

I  wonder  just  what  goes  through  a  professor's 
mind  the  day  before  his  first  class  of  the"  secest§t 
(wind!)  V, 

Some  of  them  undoubtedly  fret  over  their  first 
impression  made  on  the  students.  Some  think  they 
must  be  harsh  and  scare  hell  out  of  them;  others 
don't  think  too  much  about;  and  others,  most  likely, 
become  more  benevolent  and  are  very  anxious  to 
return  to  the  classrooms. 

But  what  comes  out  that  first  day  is  nev^r  pre* 
dicctable. 

"If  you  haven't  heard  of  me,  you'll  wish  you 
never  had  after  this  semester!"  from  an  old  FYencli 

stalwart. 

"Do  you  realize  that  one  half  of  the  graduating 
have  never  had  any  American  History?"  from  the 
students  that  march  across  Navy  field  every  year 
history  professor. 

"If  you  study  until  6  a.m.  in  the  morning  aiid 
sleep  through  my  class,  my  heart  will  bleed  for 
you,"  in  th&  Psych  section. 

"Look  out  the  windoy,  and  you'll  see  the  pro- 
fessors riding  on  bicycles  while  the  students  drive 
Cadillacs!"  said  the  Social  Science  instructor. 

"IVe  been  in  this  racket  for  25  years,  so  don't 
try  anything!"  from  the  BA  school. 

"Miss  Carolyn  Jones?"  asked  the  instructor  call- 
ing the  role. 

"That's  Mrs.  Jones,"  came  tht  reply.  ' 

"Oh!  I'd  better  make  a  note  of  that,"  said  the 
D.  A.  Assistant.  • 

"Miss  or  Mrs.  Joan  McCleod?"  he  asked,  con- 
tinuing. 

"Here.  That's  Miss  XlcCleod,  sir,"  she  stated.    * 

"Ah,"  he  said.  'I'll  have  to  m|ke  a  note  of  that, 
too!"  : 


I  have  just  come  upon  the  true  characterization 
of  the  Philosophy  Department. 

They  have  the  men  who  spend  much  time  and 
effort  explaining  to  us  the  explinations  that  ex- 
planations of  the  explainers  who  explained  the  first 
explanations  .  .  .  er  .  .  .  well,  that's  what  he  said. 

I  was  complaining  that  Philosophy  left  one  with 
the  feeling  that  he  had  come  in  hanging  n  midair 
and  was  sailing  back  out  in  the  same  predicament. 

"Philosophy  is  supposed  to  do  that."  replied  the 
professor.  "You  are  supposed  to  be  left  hanging  In 
abeyance.  We  don't  necessarily  have  to  take  a  stand 
or  state  oiu-  beliefs.  We  just  put  forth  the  opinions 
of  others  and  let  you  knit  your  own  sweater." 
Izzat  so?  .  .  .  Drop-Add. 


A  thought  . 
fusius. 


by  a  new  author  of  promise,  Con- 


"Learning  without  thought  brings  ensnarement. 
Thought  without  learning  totters.  Study  as  if  you 
were  never  to  master  it;  as  if  in  fear  of  lo.sing  it." 


YOU  Said  It: 


:.^'^ 


I  -        *>'■>,  i'-   I 


Ivy  League  Look, 
Sign  Of  Peasant 

Editor:  ■  .  -.     r    •  •  .  > 

When  one  sees  all  the  students  dressed  in  what 
seems  to  be  the  "college  uniform"  around  here  all 
day  and  realizes  it  is  representative  of  the  con- 
formity that  has  pervaded  this  place,  it  is  not  sur- 
prising that  we  still  have  the  three-cut  rule. 

Last  year  a  plan  was  presented  by  the  legislature 
which  was  a  compromise  for  the  present  three-cut 
rule.  Without  going  into  particulars  it  was  essential- 
ly the  same  thing  except  you  didn't  fail;  your  grade 
was  lowered  after  the  third  cut.  It  was  turned  down 
as  academically  unsound.  What  they  meant  to  say 
was,  it  was  almost  as  academically  unsound  as  the 
one  we've  got.  '?=         ^ 

This  is  supposed  to  be  a  student  governed  school. 
Yet  we  have  Saturday  classes  which  no  one  includ- 
ing the  instructors  want  and  >re  fail  after  three  cuts 
which  puts  both  studerrts  a/id  instructors  under 
pressure. 

The  mos  academically  sound  thing  that  can  be 
done  is  to  make  the  three-cut  rule  null  and  void. 
This  would,  at  least,  eliminate  the  tension  of  com- 
pulsory attendance  six  days  a  week  and  no  one 
would  fail  who  probably  wouldn't  have  failed  any- 
way. 

If  the  stuf^ents  could  see  past  their  striped,  but 
ton-down  shirts  they  would  realize  it  is  peasant  at- 
tire and  the  absolute  monarchy  is  in  South  Building. 

Byren  Frtaman 


Wc 

If  o| 

Ivy 

Lec 

We  tak 
cut   Sh( 
to  3  bu 
the  bac 
Fast 

Pete 

F 

E 
E 


i 


TUESDAY.  SEPTEMBER  25,  1956 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


PAGE  THRBI 


tu 


lou 
Feb 


the 


Iro- 


kn't 


all- 


Ithe 


PA- 


lat. 


kticm 


and 
ex- 
first 
lid. 

with 
idair 
lent. 

I  the 
»g  in 
tand 
lions 
ler." 


Con- 


DTH  Staff  Meeting 

The  Daily  Tai*  H«el  will  hold 
«  staff  meeting  at  4  p.m.  today. 
Editor  Fred  Powledge  said  the 
purpose  of  the  meeting  would  be 
to  discuss  accuracy  and.  other 
important  items.  He  urged  that 
all  eld  and  new  staffers  aHend 
the  meeting. 


Trustees  Make  Progress 
On  President  Selection 


Covering  The  University  Campus 


Want  Your 
OLD  SUIT 

Ivy 

Leagueized 

We  take  out  pleats.  Re- 
cut  Shoulders,  convert 
to  3  button,  put  belt  in 
the  back. 

Fast  and  Efficient 
Service 

Pete  the  Tailor 


The  University  Trustees's  com- 
mittee to  recommend  a  nominee 
for  President  of  the  Consolidated 
University  is  making  good  prog- 
ress. Governor  Hodges  told  the 
full  Board  in  its  meeting  here 
Saturday    morning. 

In  i«ome  informal  remarks  on 


Left  Holding 
The  Bag? 

We'll   find   a 'market   for  your 
dropped  texts.  Bring  them  ini 

THE  INTIAAATE 
BOOKSHOP 

205    E.    Franklin   St. 
Open   Till   10   P.M. 


the  quest  for  a  successor  to 
Gordon  Gray,  the  Governor  add- 
ed that  the  presidency  commit- 
tee, headed  by  attorney  Victor 
Bryant  of  Durham,  might  re- 
quest another  meeting  of  the 
Trustees  soon  to  make  its  rec- 
ommendation so  that  the  Board 
might  elect  a  Preaident. 

The  Board  also  approved  reso- 
lutions authorizing  $2,000,000  in 
bonds  each  for  construction  of 
new  dormitories  on  the  campus 
at  Chapel  Hill  and  at  State  Col- 
lege. A  resolution  was  passed  to 
build  additional  dormitory  facil- 
itie.v  in  the  amount  of  $1,000,000 
under  a  similar  bond  issue  at 
the  Woman's  College  in  Greens- 
boro. 


I  RALEIGH  MUSIC  ASSOCIATION     I  sentee  ballot,  write  the  League  of 
j      The  Raleigh   Civic  Music  Assn.    Women  Voters,  Box  1038,  Chapel 

will  present  seven  concerts  by  the  [  Hill,  or  Call  Mrs.  Robert  Sager  at 

world's  leading  soloists,  symphonic  j  &-2679. 


F 
R 
E 
E 


WIN  AN  ENGLISH  BIKE 
OR  MOTOROLA  TABLE  RADIO 

STUDENTS  ONLY! 

ALL  YOU  HAVE  TO  DO 

IS  BRING  THIS  AD  INTO 

OUR  STORE  AND  REGISTER 

NOTHING  TO  BUY! 


F 
R 
E 
E 


VOTING  INFORMATION 

The  League  of  Women  Voters 
will  give  detailed  information  con- 
cerning all  States'  laws  on  absentee 
voting.  Persons  away  from  home 
who  want  to  vote  in  the  national 
election,  may  call  Mrs.  Robert 
Sager,  82679,  or  write  to  the 
League  of  Women  Voters,  P.  0.  Box  | 
1083,  Chapel  Hill.  I 


and  choral  organizations  on  its 
1956-57  concert  series,  and  will  in- 
clude a  performance  by  the  famed 
Ballet  Russe  de  Monte  Carlo,  ac- 
cording to  Charles  Stepaenson  Jr., 
president  of  the  association. 

Memberships    may    be    secured 
from  Miss  Louise  Ward  of  the  Bac- 
teriology Dept.,  Memorial  Hospital 
in  Chapel  Hill. 
CHESS  CLUB 

The  UNC  Chess  Club  will  hold 
its  first  meeting  of  the  year  to- 
night at  8  in  Roland  Parker  Lounge 
3  in  Graham  Memorial.  All  old 
members  and  other  interested  per- 
sons are  urged  to  attend,  according 
to  President  Jack  Speir. 
YOUNG  ADULT  FCLLOWSHtP 

The  Young  Adult  Fellowship  will 
meet  at  the  University  Methodist 
Church  tomorrow  night  at  8  p.m. 
All  graduate  students  have  been 
invited.  A  party  has  been  planned 
in  honor  of  new  students. 
ABSENTEE  BALLOTS 

The  League  of  Women  will  assist 
any  non-resident  of  age  to  vote  by 
absentee  ballot.  For  any  informa- 
tion   concerning    any    state's    ah- 


PW  DELTA  KAPPA 

The  Phi  Delta  Kappa,  Beta  Theta 
chapter  of  the  professional  frater- 
nity for  men  in  education,  ask  all 
UNC  members  and  brothers  of 
other  chapters  to  attend  their  meet- 
ing in  Lenoir  Hall  at  6  p.m.  on 
Thursday.  Dr.  Guy  B.  Phillips,  pro- 
fessor of  education  at  UNC  and 
director  of  the  survey  of  the  Golds- 
boro  Schools,  will  discuss  the  tech- 
niques, findings,  and  recommenda- 
tions of  the  Goldsboro  Schools 
survey. 
PUBLIC  HEALTH  SCHOOL 

A  total  of  137  students  have  been 
registered  in  the  University  School 
of  Public  Health,  according  to  Dr. 
E.  G.  McGavran,  dean  of  the  school. 
INTERVARSITY  FELLOWSHIP 

The  Inter-Varsity  Christian  Fel- 


!l 


B.F.Goodpich 


FIRST  IN  RUBBER-  Fll^Sr  IN  TUBELESS 


BROWN'S  AUTO  SUPPLY 

312  W.  FRANKLIN  ST. 
PHONE  6981 


ESSO  GAS 


Reg.  29.9  H.T.  32.9 


-  CASH  - 


iSr^i 


Whipple's  Esse  Service 

ACROSS   PROM  CHAPEL   HILL   NURSERY— DURHAM  HWY. 

BUY   EARLY— SAVE— NATIONALLY  ADVERTISED 

PERMANENT  ANTIFREEZE   $2.7S  Gal. 

EXTRA!  ^XTRA!  EXTRA! 

Bring  this  ad  and  receive  one  cant  p*r  gallon  off  on  gat,  and 
fivo  contt  per  quart  off  on  oil.  This  makos  ESSO  gas  M.9  and 
31.9.  Good   Sept.  25  Thru  Oct.    1,  19S6.  ^ 


Soccer  Squad 
Is  Shaping  Up 

Coach  Marvin  Aliens  Carolina 
soccer  squad  is  gradually  rounding 
into  shape.  No  starting  lineup  for 
the  season's  opener  Oct.  8  has  been 
set  yet,  as  Coach  Allen  is  experi- 
meotioe  with  various  combinations 
to  determine  the  best  possible  unit. 

Sunday,  Coach  Allen,  Freshman 
Coach  John  Wienants  and  varsity 
captain  Grover  Brown  attended  a 
rules  clarification  meeting  at  Char- 
lottesville, Va.,  along  with  repre- 
sentatives of  the  other  four  teams 
in  the  ACC. 


»*ri^«iT.f..  v<^\' tt^irjii/j  :!-♦*:_♦  "i  fr,,/'';^-^-'^ 


i-f*-- 


't^-jt    ^-    ■  rrc^    / 


^     SUTTONS 

Wednesday  Only,  Sept.  2^th 


Mushroom  Discussion 
On  WUNC  Today 

Some  of  the  n(v>'ths  about  mush- 
rooms will  be  exploded  when 
WUNC-TV  presents  its  first  in- 
school  program  of  the  1956-57 
school  year  today  at  2  p.m.  op 
Channel  4. 

Dr.  John  Couch,  head  of  the 
Dept.  of  Botany,  an  expert  on 
mushrooms,  will  outline  the  dif- 
ferences between  poisonous  and 
edible  mushrooms  on  the  first  pro- 
gram in  the  series,  "Science  and 
Nature."  He  will  also  discuss  some 
of  the  superstitions  regarding 
them. 


i«t  Us  Treat  Your  Rmltmgi^ 


^ed,  storting  tomorrow,  you  con  bring  your 

Remington  Electric  Shaver  to  our  store  and 

hove  it  cleaned,  oiled,  sterilized  and  adjusted 

absolutely  without  cost  or  obligation  by  a 

factory-trained  Remington  Shaver  expert  f 

Damaged  or  worn  ports  replaced  at 

low  factory  prices.  If  your 

Remington  isn't  giving  satisfaction, 

be  sure  to  bring  it  in  tomorrow. 


FREE 

HOME  TRIAL... 


we  will  hold  your  old  shaver  until 
the  trial  period  is  up. 

$29.50 
7.50 


Regular  Price 
Less  Trade-In  . 


1'"  * 


1^^  Pa^a^  ^22.00 


SAVE  REAL  MONEY  ON 
A  NEW  REMINGTON  I 

$7.50  is  almost  one  quarter  of  the  full 
purchase  price  of  d  new  Remington 
60  De  Luxe.  Yet,  that's  exactly  what 
we  will  allow  you  for  your  old  stand- 
ard moke  electric  shaver  as  a  trade- 
in.  Dig  out  that  old  shaver  and  bring 
it  in  . . .  YOU'LL  SAVE  REAL  MONEY  I 


PRESS-LIBRARY  SHOW 

One  of  last  year's  outstanding 
educational  TV  programs  will  re- 
turn In  a  new  fall  scries  Tuesday 
at  7  p.m.  on  WUNC-TV.  On  alter- 
nate weeks,  Andrew  Horn,  Univer- 
sity Librarian,  and  Lambert  Davis, 
Director  of  the  University  Press, 
will  preside  on  the  programs.  This 
Tuesday  there  will  he  a  joint  in- 
troduction to  the  series  bj»the  two 
hosts. 


CLASSIFIEDS 


LOST:  BLACK  POCKETBOOK 
with  green  billfold  inside  plus 
driver;/  license.  Probably  lost  in 
Peabody  Hall.  If  found,  please 
return  to  Elizabeth  Hightower, 
Smith  Dorm. 

STUDENT  WANTED  FX)R  PAKT- 
time  work,  preferably  upper- 
classman  with  automobile  who 
has  some  circulation  experience 
on  newspapers.  Guaranteed  sal- 
ary plus  commission.  Write  Bmc 
XYZ,  stating  qualifications  and 
giving  references. 


IXIST  —  BILLFOLR.  FRIDAY  IN 
Lenior  Hall  or  Law  School  be- 
tween 10  a.m.  and  noon.  Con- 
tains valuable  personal  papers 
and  approximately  $200.  Money 
for  nurses  attending  my  wife 
who  has  a  fatal  disease.  If  finder 
feels  he  needs  money  more  than 
me,  please  return  papers.  $S0 
reward  offered  for  honesty.  Con- 
tact E.  M.  Murry  at  Law  School. 


WANTED  —  RIDE  TO  RALEIGH 
Mon.  thru  Fi-i.,  arriving  in  Ra- 
leigh prior  to  «:30  a.m.,  return- 
ing to  Chapel  Hill  approximate- 
ly 5.00  p.m.  Contact  Lee  Gotten 
at  Milton's  Clothing  Cupboard 
or  call  Durham  l-862h  after  6:00 
p.m. 


FOR  RENT  —  ADJACENT  TO 
campus  conveient,  furnished  two 
room  apartment.  Electric  kitch- 
en, bathroom  with  shower,  cen- 
tral heat,  j)ris«te  entrance.  Also 
— ^Attractive  studio-bedroom,  pri- 
vate entrance.  Call  5421. 


LOST:  ONE  WIVES  PASSBOOK. 
Lost  Saturday  in  or  around  Ken 
an  Stadium.  Finder  please  call 
M362. 

WANT  ADVENTURE,  TRAVEL, 
driving  experience?  Want  to  go 
to  Ann  Arbor,  Mich.,  Thursday 
at  noon?  Back  for  Monday  class- 
es. Share  gas  bill.  Call  Powl- 
c#9e,  9^mi,  «lter  2  p.n. 


lo.Tship  will  hold  its  first  meeting 
today  at  7  p.m.  in  the  Hill  Hall 
Choral  Room. 

FULBRIGHT  AWARDS 

Opportunities  for  study  abroad 
in  Europe,  Asia,  Latin  America 
and  other  parts  of  the  world  are 
available  this  fall,  according  to  Dr. 
Sturgis  E.  Leavitt,  chairman  of  the 
local  Fulbright  committee  at  UNC. 

Nov.  1  is  the  deadline  for  sub- 
mitting applications,  he  said.  Ful- 
bright awards,  made  on  a  national 
competitive  basis,  are  available  for  | 
study  in  19  countries.  ' 


DTH  To  Carry  Police 
Blofter  Report  Nov^ 


The  Daily  Tar  Heel  will  carrj- 
the  Chapel  Hill  poiice  blotter  from 
now  on,  according  to  the  paper's 
editor. 

Editor  Fred  Powledge  said  yes- 
terday "We  wil  check  on  and  print 
the  names  and  charges  listed  on 
the  police  blotter  with  regularity.  ' 

He  warned  students  who  may  get 
into  trouble  with  the  police,  and 
who  would  want  their  names  and 
charges  withheld  from  the  student 
newspaper,  that  'publication  of 
the   blotter   is   part   of    The  Daily 


Tar    Heel's 
community. 


responsibility    to    its 
We  will  not  withhold 


any  name  or  any  charge. 


6EISHA  vs  NAVY  WIFE 
BATTLE  OF  THE  SEXES! 


THE  STORY  OF  JUNGLE   LOVEl 

UNTOUCHED 

A  Strange  and  tender 
love  in  a  place  which 


6ENIETT 

SHItI 

MERSIll  •  TAMiieUCHi  j 


NOW 
PLAYING 


■I, 


i    . 


NEW  sights,  HEW  experiences  . . . 
"    and  solid  comfort... when  you 


€!• 


TRAILWAYS 


CHAPEL    HILL    TO 

ATLANTA 

•  3    trips,   1    thru-linar 

WILAAINGTON 

•  2  trips,  direct  route  ^ 
plus  add'1  daily  service 

NORt^OLK 

•  7  trips,  4  thru-liners 


1-way 

CHAPEL   HILL    TO                                   1-way  1 

$8.95 

AAEMPH1S                           $16.00  1 

•  6  trips,  3  thru-liners 

$4.25 

^^'^-                                                                -'4..r.--\"*'^ 

>ltW  YORK                       $n.20 

■  Sanford, 

•  Thru  (no  chang*)  service  via 
Washington 

$5,35 

(plus  tax) 

CHARLOTTE                      $  3.90 

•  7  trips  daily                                                      1 

(plus  tax)    1 

UNION  BUS  TERMINAL 

311  W.  FRANKLIN  ST.    PHONE  4281 

Or  catf  your  n«or«it  TraHways  Agitcyl      | 


TRAILWAYS 

The  route  off  the  Thru-L-Inersl    ^ 


^AGf  pout 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


TUESDAY,  SEPTTEMBER  25,  19S5. 


Hippy  With  One  Point  Win 


Wilkinson  Fears 
Tar  Heel  Squad 


latum  Makes 
Lineup  Shifts 
ForOkla.  Tilt 

Sept.  24  — un —  Retrenching  for 
Saturday's  battle  with  mighty  Okla- 
homa after  a  26-6  loss  to  N.  C.  State 
last  week,  Coach  Jim  Tatum  did 
some  shifting  of  personnel  on  the 
Carolina  football  team  today. 

Most  noticable  changes  of  sever- 
al was  the  return  of  Don  Lear  to 
fullback  after  a  stint  at  guard. 
While  the  stocky  Lear  played  a 
fine  ball  game  at  guard  Saturday, 
he  has  been  returned  to  fullback 
to  hoisted  that  corps. 

Jim  Varnum,  who  picked  up  39 
yards  in  four  carries  against  State, 
was  promoted  to  first  string  left 
halfback  today,  with  Jim  Jones 
filling  in  at  Lear's  old  left  guard 
spot  and  Dick  Smith  moved  into 
right  guard's  first  spot. 

The  remainder  of^  the  probable 
starters  remain  the  same. 

Ed  Sutton,  whose  brilliant  run- 
ning was  the  Tar  Heel  offensive 
highlight  Saturday,  sat  out  the 
sessions  with  a  bruised  elbow. 
However,  the  injury  was  not  seri- 
ous and  Sutton  will  be  back  in  gear 
Wednesday. 

Dave  Reed,  slated  as  the  starting 
quarterback  before  he  was  injured 
this  fall,  was  back  jogging  around 
the  field. 

Reed  may  be  held  out  for  the  re- 


♦  OKLAHOMA  CITY,  Sept.  24  <^V- 
"If  we  win  by  one  point,  I'll  be 
very,  very  delighted"  Bud  Wilkin- 
son, coach  of  the  No.  1  rated  Okla- 
homa Soeners,  said  today  in  speak- 
ing of  his  team's  first  test  against 
North  Carolina's  football  team 
Saturday. 


Wilkinson,  speaking  at  the  week- 
ly Oklahoma  City  Quarterback 
Club  meeting,  was  commenting  on 
optimistic  talk  after  North  Caro- 
lina was  upset  in  its  first  game 
of  the  season  by  North  Carolina 
State  26-6. 

Net  known  for  his  optimisim, 
Wilkinson  told  some  300  persons, 
"We  may  play  the  same  kind  of 
a  game  as  North  Carolina.  I  hope 
we  won't,"  he  said. 

"They  played  *a  sound  game  but 
it  was  a  typical  opener.  We  are 
in  top  physical  condition  but  I 
don't  know  if  we  are  sound  men- 
tally." 

Oklahoma  was  rated  in  the  pre- 
season Associated  Press  poll  as 
the  nation's  No.  1  team.  The  Soon- 
ers  won  the  national  title  last  year 
and  stretched  their  winning  streak 
to  30. 

He  also  pointed  to  last  week- 
end's football  upsets  and  added 
that  this  is  a  "yardstick  of  what 
will  happen  all  season." 


mainder  of  the  season  if  his  knee 
injury  fails  to  come  around  prop- 
erly. Today  was  his  first  tr>'  at 
running  since  the  injury.  Return- 
ing to  full  scale  work  was  full- 
back Joe  Temple  of  Valdese,  who 
had  been  sidelined  over  a  week 
with  a  concussion. 


IT'S  FOR  REAL! 


by  Chester  Fi«ld 


1^. 


'*To  (»tch  a  man,**  aaid  Violette 

"Hie  wisest  gals  (day  hard  to  get!** 
To  seem  remote  and  quite  akwf 
She  sat  six  years  upon  the  roof. 

"It  doesn't  seem  to  work"  she  said 
And  so  she  clobbered  ihem  instead. 

She  dirugged,  "I  do  the  best  I  can 
(JnamaeiouB  or  not^  e  nmn  it  a  manF' 


¥^ 


Moaaii  Faint  pleaeurs  ain't  pteasursT 
In  smoking  too,  take  your  pleasure  BIG. 
&&oke  tor  ml . . .  smoke  Cherterfiekl. 
Packed  mote  smoothly  by  Atm-ttmf 
it's  the  gmoothtM  tasting  onoke  today. 


DAILY    CROSSWORD 


ACROSS 

1.  Performer 
6.  Shore  road 

of  Hong 

Kongr 

11.  Speech 

12.  Competitor 

13.  Girl's  name 

14.  Capital  of 
Colombia 

15.  Negative 
word 

16.  Afternoon 
perform- 
ance 

17.  Thulium 
(sym.) 

18.  VenUlated 

19.  Philippine 
trees 

31.  Smallest 
■Ute  (abbr.) 

32.  Exclama- 
tion of 
disgust 

29.  Song  bird 
98.  Kamas  of 

tribes 

(comtt. 

form) 

30.  Bon« 
(aaat.) 

SO.  Se«l 
coating 

31.  Insects 

33.  Type 
mcasurs 

34  Contami* 
nated 

37.  Half  ems 

38.  Kitchen,  aid 
88.  Supporting 

timber 

40.  Man's  name 

41.  Swell 

42.  Equals 

43.  Genhan 
dty 


DOWN 

1.  One  of  the 
hills  of 
Rome 

2.  Republic 
(S.A.) 

3.  Slant 

4.  Tuber  (S.A.) 

5.  Music  note 

6.  Necessary 
food  element 

7.  Unbending 

8.  River  (Eng.) 

9.  WestraUan 
eucalypt  tree 

10.  Wings 
14.  English 
coonsel 
14.  Music  note 


18.  Tree 

20.  Grow 

old 

22.  Stripe 

23.  Status 
of 


24 


an 
alien 
Steers- 
men 

2«.  Work- 
ers 

27.  Fuel 

31.  Collier 

32.  Man's 
nickname 

a.  Cup  holding 
diamond  for 
cutting 


3nL411    Ljrj:aLi:LlLJ 

PiLj     jQuna  nil 
L-uiiaanz  Jim 


Vesterdky't  Aaawer 

35.  Fencing 
sword 

36.  Festival 

37.  Lampreys 
39.  Public 

vehicle 
41.  Exist 


Up  Car  ^ 
SPORT" 


Urry  Cheek.  Sports  Editor 


The  gloom  around  the  Carolina  campus  Saturday  night 
was  thick  as  London  fog,  and  rightly  so.  Coach  Jim  Tatum's 
Tar  Heel  football  team,  much  ballyhooed  in  pre-season  pub- 
licity, had  gone  down  to  stunning  defeat  at  the  hands  of 
State  in  the  season's  opener  that  afternoon.  And  the  students 
were  bitterly  disappointed.  The  expected  miraculous  trans- 
figuration of  last  year's  losing  teatn'into  a  conference  power- 
house this  season  hadn't  taken  place. 

Is  the  outlook  as  bad  as  a  hasty  look  would  seem  to  itidicate? 
We  don't  think  so.  We  still  have  one  dt  the  country's  best  coaches, 
and  a  team  with  lots  of  potential.  There  are  nine  more  games  ahead 
of  the  Tar  Heels,  and  each  Saturday  is  a  new  day  when  anything 
could  happen. 
DEFENSE   IS  WEAK  SPOT 

Let's  take  stock  of  the  situation.  A  lot  of  things  went  wrong 
against  State,  but  many  of  these  are  flaws  that  can  be  cleared  up  with 
time  and  »  lot  of  hard  work.  The  >^cefully  inadequate  Tar  Heel  de- 
tetfse  was  the  chief  sore  spot,  but  this  was  not  entirely  unexpected. 
Tatum  had  issued  repeated  warnings  that  his  defense  might  not  be 
up  to  par,  that  it  was  unpredictable. 

The  Tar  Heels  spent  no  time  on  the  defensive  phase  of  the 
game  last  spring,  and  very  little  this  fall.  Lack  of  preparation  proved 
disastrous  Saturday  when  State  Coach  Earle  Edwards  unleashed  his 
colorful  and  confusing  multiple  offense.  The  Pack  crossed  midfield 
seven  times  during  the  game,  and  four  times  they  countered  for 
touchdowns.  Each  score  came  through  the  air,  as  the  Tar  Heel 
ground  defense  stiffened  near  payoff  territory. 

Prospects  for  remedying  the  weak  defensive  situation  are  good. 
Tatum  is  a  recognized  master  at  cooking  up  impenetrable  defenses, 
as  Maryland  opponents  for  the  last  few  years  will  testify,  and  chances 
are  he  will  field  a  tougher  Tar  Heel  defensive  team  in  future  games. 
OFFENSIVE  PUNCH   SHOWS  PROMISE 

On  the  plus  side  of  the  ledger  was  the  Tar  Heel  offensive  punch. 
This  too  left  something  to  be  desired,  but  at  least  Ed  Sutton  and  Co. 
demonstrated  some  ability  to  move  the  ball.  Five  times  during  the  game 
they  penetrated  State  territory,  and  on  every  occasion  but  one,  some 
unforseen  incident  prevented  a  successful  payoff  push. 

On  the  first  drive,  Sutton  went  20  yards  for  a  touchdown,  on 
the  second  they  were  stopped  by  the  halftime  buxzer  on  the   Pack 
22,  the  third  found  them  losing  a  fumble  on  tha  State  43,  a  punt 
was  blocked  on  the  fourth,  and  a  pass  intercepted  on  the  fifth.  Add 
to  this  the  fact  that  Stae  controlled  the  ball  throughout  most  of  the 
game,  and  the  reason  for  Carolina's  sputtering  offense  becomes  clear. 
Top  individual  performer  for  the  Tar  Heels  was  without  a  doubt 
flashy  halfback  Ekl  Sutton,  who  more  than  lived  up  to  advance  notices. 
Sutton  was  the  day's  top  ground  gainer  with  90  yards  in  10  carries. 
The  Tar  Heel  co-captain  ran  through,  around  and  over  the  Wolfpack, 
and  looked  like  one  of  the  greatest  backs  to  wear  the  Carolina  blue 
and  white  in  years.  On  his  20  yard  TD  dash,  the  curly  haired  senior 
went  the  last  8  yards  with  a  psir  of  would  be  State  tacklers  hanging 
on  hi.s  back,  unable  to  bring  him  down. 

Other  Tar  Heels  had  their  moments.  Curt  Hathaway  and  Doug 
Farmer,  although  lacking  polish,  displayed  a  skillful  touch  at  quarter- 
back. Speedy  Jim  Varnum  broke  loose  for  a  couple  of  nifty  runs. 
And  scrappy  Don  Lear  sparked  the  Tar  Heel  line  in  his  first  game  at 
guard. 


Cross-Country 
Team  We/come 
Jim  Beatty  Back 

Varsity  cross-country  stock  took 
a  big  jump  Sunday  with  the  return 
of  number  one  ace  Jim  Beatty  from 
an  AAU  sponsored  tour  of  Finland. 

Beatty  spent  six  weeks  abroad 
with  several  other  American  dis- 
tance runners.  During  that  time, 
he  worked  on  training  methods 
and  running  styles  with  the  Scan- 
dinavian runners. 

Coach  Ranson  said  yesterday  that 
the  squad  as  a  whole  had  a  long 
way  to  go  before  the  opening  meet 
with  Virginia  Oct.  5.  Beatty  is  in 
top  flight  shape  after  his  European 
trip,  but  others  on  the  squad  still 
haven't  reached  good  form  follow- 
ing a  long  summer  layoff. 

A  pair  of  sophomores,  Wayne 
Bishop  and  Dave  Scurlock,  are  pro- 
gressing rapidly  and  head  the  list 
along  with  Beatty.  Everett  What- 
ley,  number  two  man  from  last 
year,  has  been  slowed  down  by  a 
virus  infection,  but  should  get 
down  to  heavy  work  this  week. 

First  time  trials  of  the  season 
will  be  held  Friday. 


Fall  Baseball  Practice 
Meeting  Set  For  Today 

Coach  Walter  Rabb  has  announc- 
ed that  all  boys,  (freshmen  inclu- 
sive) interested  in  baseball  tryouls 
are  urged  to  report  to  room  314 
Woollen  Gym  this  afternoon  at  4 
o'clock. 

Rabb  said  that  if  anyone  inter- 
ested had  labs  or  previous  com- 
mitments today,  he  could  report 
to  Emerson  Stadium  tomorrow  at 
3  p.m.  After  today,  practice  ses- 
sions wil  be  held  at  Elmcrson  every- 
day beginning  at  3. 


We  Have  Just  Bought  In 
A   Small   Library   Of 

EUROPEAN 
HISTORY 

If  your  interest  runs  that  way, 
take  a  look  in  our  Old  Book 
Corner. 

THE  INTIMATE 
BOOKSHOP 

205    E.    Franklin   St. 
Often  Till  10  P.M. 


Managers  Meet 

Fraternity  intramural  manag- 
ers are  urged  to  be  present  in 
room  301a,  Woolen  Gym  Thurs- 
day night.  Each  fraternity  must 
have  a  representative  at  the 
meeting. 


the  Magic 
Pin 

By   Chapel    Hill's    Own 

Ina  B.  Fergus 

A     wonderful,    warm,     magic 
book  for  the  6  to  10  age  group. 

$2.50 

at 

The  Intimate 
Ek>okshop 

205    E.  FRANKLIN   ST. 
OPEN  TILL   10  P.M. 


SHIRTS -19c 


EA. 


(Packaged  In  Cellophane) 


I'^mffiiHim 


We  handle 


uiithCARE 


With   or   Without 
Starch 

Prompt  Service 


Glen  Lennox  Laundromat 


.  ,  .  near  Howard  Johnson's 
on  the  Chapel  Hill— Durham  Blvd. 


^^4:.^iM' 


""'^^rv^Tt.^l^^^i^ 


'/ 


For  The  Young  In  Heart, 
Thrifty  and  Smart ... 


Ti 


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GOOD  FURNITURE 

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GUARANTEED  SAVINGS^  "^  '  ^^ '    '^ 


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(Saturdays  Til  6) 


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Afternoon  Cocktail  Hour 


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1603   BEER  35c 


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Membership  Cards  For 
1956-57  Season 

Now  On  Sale 

'  r~'       -.        -     ,  ■ 

Avoid  Cover  Charge 

GOLF  DRIVING   RANGE 
BEER-DANCING 


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CHANCE 


To  Register  For 
1957  Westinghouse 

Transitor  Radio 
To  Be  Given  Away 

FREE 

This  Friday  Afternoon 

We'll  Call  You  On 
'Dig  These. "   Be  Home! 

WCHL 


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Phone  

Address 

Name  

Clip  This  Out  and  Mail  To  WCHL,  Chapel  Hill 


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ff  «  C  LIW^ART 
SERIAL.    DEPT. 
CHAPEL  HILL,   H.   C* 
8-3X-49 


WEATHER 

Rain,  with  eyp«ct«d  high  of  74. 


VOL.  LVIII,     NO.  6 


V 

3rar  Xecl 


YOUNG 

Editor     comments     on     Student 
Body  President.  See  page  2. 


Complete  {/P)  Wire  Service 


CHAPEL  HILL,  NORTH  CAROLINA,  WEDNESDAY,  SEPTEMBER  26,  1956 


Offices   in   Graham   Memorial 


FOUR   PAGES   THIS    ISSUE 


f  rat  Rush 
Bids  Go 
Out  Today 

s 
All    men    students    may  obtain 
their   fraternity   rushing   bids    be- 
tween the  hours  of  9  a.m.  and  4 
p.m.   today  at  Gerrard   Hall. 

Rushing  bids  will  be  available 
for  three  days,  today,  tomorrow 
and  Friday.  Gerrard  Hall  will  be 
open  from  9  a.m.  to  noon  tomor- 
row and  from  10  a.m.  to  noon  on 
Friday,  the  final  day  for  picking 
up  bids. 

Rushing  will  then  begin  on  Sun- 
day, Sept.  30. 

Interfraternity  Council  regula- 
tions stipulate  that  rusheej  must 
visit  every  fraternity  from  which 
they  receive  bids.  Failure  to  do  so 
will  eliminate  them  from  further 
rushing   in   all   fraternities. 

Rushees  may  begin  attending  the 
fraternities  of  their  preference  af- 
ter they  have  once  vi^'ited  every 
fraternity  from  which  they  re- 
ceived a  bid. 

To^orow  at  9  p.m.,  an  IFC  rep- 
resentative will  visit  the  social 
room  of  each  men's  dormitory  to 
give  a  short  talk  to  all  freshmen 
going  throi^h  rush,  and  to  answer 
any  questions  concerning  the  rush- 
ing program. 


Yac!<  Staff  Members  Find  Time  To  Loaf  And  Work 


Yack  staffers  (in  the  picture  at  left).  Miss  Lari  Lawrence,  left, 
junior  of  Bradford,  and  Miss  Bootsie  Fowler,  right,  junior  of  Greens- 
boro find  no  seniors  appearing  to  have  their  pictures  made  for  the 
Yackety-Yack.    But  business  picks  up  in  the  photo  on  the  left.    Miss 


N^nry  M'-Far*den,  senior  of  Atlanta,  Ga  ,  and  Miss  Sandra  Clarke, 
senior  of  W.  Palm  Beach,  Fla.,  fill  out  the  necessary  cards  and  pre- 
pare to  face  the  photographer  Seniors  have  until  Friday  to  have 
their  class  pictures  made.  (Photos  hy  Norman  Kantor.) 


October  15  Is  Deadline 
For  Student  Insurance 


Quarterly  Asks 
Students  To 
Join  Staff 

Students  interested  in  working 
on  the  UNC  literary  magazine.  The 
Carolina  Quarterly,  have  been  in- 
vited to  come  to  the  Quarterly  of- 
fice in  the  north  mezzanine  of 
Graham  Memorial  today  between 
4  and  6  p.m. 

According  to  Editor  Marcelline 
Krafchick,  the  University  literary 
magazine  is  the  oldest  in  the 
South.  In  a  recent  issue  of  "Writ- 
er's Digest,"  The  Quarterly  was 
given  highest  rating  among  liter- 
ary magazines,  ranking  with  "The 
Chicago  Review,"  "The  Atlantic 
Monthly"  and  "Harpers,"  she 
said. 

Positions  are  open  on  the  fic- 
tion and  poetry  staffs,  for  volun- 
teer typing  or  office  services  and 
for  help  in  the  circulation  and 
ousiness  diepartments. 

Students  are  welcome  to  submit 
stories,  articles  and  poetry  for  pub- 
lication in  The  Quarterly,  Miss 
Krafchick  said.  Material  for  pub- 
licatioti  should  be  sent  to:  The 
Quarterly,  Box  1117,  Chapel  Hill. 
Stamped,  self-addressed  envelopes 
should  also  be  sent  with  the  ma- 
terial, she  said. 


October  15  has  been  c-2t  as  the 
deadline  for  applications  for  stu 
dent  insurance. 

It  was  recently  reported  that 
the  deadline  was  October  1.  but 
this  was  incorrect. 

The  cost  of  the  policy  is  $9.50 
a  year.  According  to  Ray  Jeffries, 
a-'jistant  to  the  dean  of  student 
affairs,  the  premium's  cost  has 
dropped  since  last  year. 

Insured  students  will  be  cover- 
ed for  up  to  $1,000  for  any  ex- 
pense caused  by  an  accident  and 
for  up  to  S200  for  .%'urgical  ex- 
penses caused  by  sickness  If  the 
student  dies.  hi.s  beneficir.ries  will 
receive  81,000. 

Jeffries  said  recently.  "I  think 
this  insurance  plan  payed  off  for 
us  last  year."  He  pointed  out  that 
the  insurance  comes  to  less  than 
80  cents  a  month. 

The  coverage  is  for  a  H-month 
period,  including  the  pericd  when 
••tudents  are  traveling  to  a^d  from 
Chapel  Hill,  and  while  they  are  on 
vacation.  Jeffries  said  last  year 
there  were  not  many  claims  but 
during  the  summer  the  company 
payed   on   policies   several    times. 

Applications  for  the  insurance 
are  available  at  the  Y,  Graham 
Memorial  and  the  student  govern- 
ment office.  Jeffrie.-  reminded 
students  who  already  hold  policies 
and  are  eligible  to  receive  pay- 
ments for  claims  must  file  with 
the  company.  Blanks  are  available 
at  his  office  in  South  Building  and 
at  the  Infirmary. 

Students  who  have  already  paid 
premiums  can  pick  up  their 
identification  cards  at  the  student 
government  office.  But  students 
who  now  sign   up  for  the  insur- 


anci>  will  have  their  cards  mailed 
to  them,  so  they  should  give  their 
addresses  when  filling  out  the 
blaniis. 


INFIRMARY 

Students  in  the  Infirmary  yes- 
terday  included: 

Miss  Martha  Jean  Sitlay,  John 
G.  Burgwyn,  Hubert  H.  Hs^vkins, 
Timothy  L.  Harris,  Bob  S.  Rober- 
son,  Clarence  E.  Smith  Jr.,  Miss 
Isabel  A.  Holhrook,  Miss  Janet 
E.  Summerell,  Alvin  W.  Smith 
and   Kennrfth   H    Oakley  Jr. 


nev5 

m 
brief 


Mascot  And  Miss 

Rameses  VII  started  his  second  season  as  Carolina's  official  mas- 
cot at  the  Carolina-State  game  on  Saturday.  He's  shewn  above  with 
Patsy  Poythress  of  Chapel  Hill,  junior  Carolina  coed  and  one  of  the 
Tar  Heel  cheerleaders. 


University   Radio  Will      Debate  On  Frats  is  Tomorrow 

Start  Operation  Thurs. 


The  Univer^'ity's  educational 
radio  station,  WUNC,  will  return 
to  full-time  activity  tomorrow,  af- 
ter  having  an  idle  late  summer. 

Oxford  Man  To 
Speak  Here        \ 
October  10-11 

Prof.  .Alfred   Ewert  of  the  Ro- 1 
mance   Languages   faculty   at   Ox- . 
ford   University    will    deliver    two  | 
addresses    at    the    Univer^-ity  on 
October  10  and  11.  I 

His  lecture   on   "Judas  Iscariot 
in  Medieval  French  Literature"  is 
scheduled  for  8  p.m.  on  Thursday, 
Oct.    11,   in  the    Louis  R.   Wilson 
Library  auditorium.  He  will  speak  \ 
on   the   afternoon    of   Oct.    It)   to  < 
graduate  students  in  the  Romance  j 
Languages  Dept. 

Professor  Ewert's  address  in  the 
library   auditorium   will   be   open 
to  the  public,  but  his  address  to  j 
graduate    -.-tudents,   entitled    "The 
Strasbourg  Oaths  and  the  Eulalia,"  ; 
will  be  limited  to  persons  in  that. 
departmenL 


The  station,  broadcasting  at  91.5 
on  the  FM  dial,  will  begin  its  fall 
programming  with  a  three  day 
Festival  of  .Music  beginning  to- 
morrow and  running  through  Sat- 
urday. 

On  Sunday,  the  30th,  the  station 
will  begin  regular  programming 
with  a  host  of  new  programs  of 
both  local  and  outside  origination. 
Prcgramc'  will  consist  of  a  variety 
of  subjects  .  ranging  from  the 
lighter  vein  to  the  music  of  the 
m.asters. 

There  will  be  drama,  interview, 
documentary,  and  special  news 
programs  presenting  a  v/ider  cov- 
erage of  newsworthy  events. 

Station  Manager  Joe  Young  ha.v 
announced  that  the  new  station 
staff  is  now  being  completed,  and 
has  extended  an  invitation  to  Uni- 
versity students  interested  in  radio 
to  make  applications  to  join  the 
staff. 

In  addition  to  the  Festival  of 
Muiic,  WUNC  will  begin  its  fall 
activities  with  a  broadcast  of  an 
address  by  Dr.  Hollington  K.  Tong, 
jmbassadpr  of  the  Chinese  Repub- 
lic to  the  United  States,  at  8  p.m. 
tonjorrow. 


'Views  on  fraternity  and  inde- 
pendent life  will  be  aired  by  advo- 
cates of  botTi  sides  tomorrow  night 
at  seven  o'clock  in  the  library  as- 
sembly room. 

The  discussion  and  debate  will 
be  sponsored  by  the  YMCA  F'cllow- 
ship  group.  Bob  Leonard  of  the 
YMCA  will  be  in  charge  of  the 
program. 

All  freshmen  planning  to  pledge 
fraternities  have  been  urged  by 
the  Y  to  attend  the  discussion. 

According  to  the  Y  circular  an 


nouncing  the  debate,  representa- 
tives from  both  sides  will  present 
the  advantages  of  joining  a  fra- 
ternity. 


DIRECTORY  DEADLINE 

Today  is  the  deadline  for  cor- 
rections to  be  placed  in  the  Stu- 
dent Directory,  according  to  Jon 
Dawn,  editor. 

Corrections  of  telephone  num- 
bers or  addresses  should  be 
turned  in  by  calling  the  YMCA, 
6761,  today. 


BROOKS   WIN   NO-HITTER 

BROOKLYN,  N.  Y.  ;/pi— Sal 
Maglie  pitched  a  no-hit  game 
last  night  to  keep  the  Brooklyn 
Dodgers  within  one-half  of  the 
first  p'ace  Milwaukee  Braves  in 
the  National  League  pennant 
race. 

Maglie  beat  the  Philadelphia 
Phillies,  S  to  0. 

Maglie,  allowed  only  3  Phillies 
tc  reach  base — two  on  walks  and 
one  when  hit  by  a  pitch. 

Milwaukee,  with  three  games 
left,  now  has  a  record  of  91  and 
6C  Brooklyn  has  90  and  60.  (Sec 
A/.i'waukee  results,  page  4.) 

SUEZ  CRISIS  REACHES  UN 

NKW  YORK  tAP)— The  eyes  of 
the  wo.'ld  will  be  looking  at  the 
Suez  Canal  crisis  today  through  the 
windows  of  the  UN  Security  Coun- 
cil. 

Both  sides  involved  in  the  dis- 
pute—  Egypt,  which  seized  the  wa- 
terway, and  the  western  powers 
and  3ther  shippers — will  be  trying 
to  make  their  points. 

Britain  and  France — who  brought 
the  casf^  to  the  Council — are  tryins 
to  boat  down  a  counter-attack  by 
Kgypt.  which  claims  Anglo-French 
moves  are  endangering  peace. 

The  United  States,  meanwhile,  i.- 
keeping  its  stand  to  it.sclf. 

IN  PARIS,  British  Prime  .Minis- 
ter Eden  and  Foreign  Secretary  Scl- 
wvn  Lloyd  plan  to  discu.ss  the  Suez 
crisis  with  French  leaders  today. 
It  is  reported  that  the  French  are 
consideriiig  promoting  a  new  oil 
Dipeline  across  Israel  to  move  Ara- 
bian oil  to  the  Mediterranean  in 
the  event  the  United  Nations  fails 
to  act  on  Suez. 

IN  NEW  YORK.  Wall  Street  bro- 
kers attributed  a  sharp  decline  in 
the  stock  market  yesterday  to  un 
certainties  over  the  Suez  Canal  and 
to  tight  money.  There  were  losses 
of  more  than  $5  per  share. 

ADLAI   ASKS  ACCEPTANCE 

LITTLE  ROCK,  Ark.  tAP)— Ad- 
iai  Stevenson,  in  a  speech  here  last 
night,  called  on  Southerners  to  ac- 
cept the  Supicme  Courfs  school 
'lesegregation  decision  as  law-abid- 
■ng  citizens. 

IN  OKLAHOMA  CITY,  Okla., 
Vice  President  Ni.xon  interrupted 
1  speech  last  night  because  of  an 
attack  of  influenza  and  laryngitis. 


AT  8  P.M.  IN  CARROLL  HALL: 


Civil  War  Scholar  Speaks  Tomorrow 


Dr.  Bell  I.  Wiley  of  Emory  Uni- 
versity, one  of  the  nation'^-  lead- 
ing authorities  on  the  American 
Civil  ^'ar,  will  deliver  a  public 
address  tomorow  night  in  Carroll 
Hall. 

The  8  p.m.  address  will  be  the 
fitst  in  a  series  of  three  scheduled 
to  be  given  this  year  under  s-pon- 
sorship  of  the  Graduate  History 
Club,  Phi  Alpha  Theta  history 
frati^rnity,  and  Graham  Memorial. 

Other  prominent  historians 
slated  to  appear  for  the  addresses , 


are  Prof.  Sidney  Painter  of  John  • 
Hopkins  University  and  Prof.  Hen- 
ry Steele  Commager  of  Columbia 
University.  Their  addresses  will  be 
given  in  November  and  March, 
respectively. 

Tomorow's  speaker,  after  -serv- 
ing as  chairman  of  the  hi.lory  de- 
partments of  the  University  of 
-Mississippi  and  of  Louisiana  State 
University,  was  appointed  profes- 
sor of  American  History  at  Emory 
University  in   1948. 

His  pioneer  volume,  "Southern , 


Negroes,  1861-1855,"  v.dn  the  Mrs. 
Simon  Baruch  Prize  and  was  pub- 
lished by  the  Yale  University 
Press  in  1938.  Three  of  his  later 
books  are  "The  Plain  People  of 
the  Confederacy."  "The  Life  of 
Johnny  Reb,"  and  The  Life  of 
Billy  Yank." 

Professor  Wiley's  address  in  Car- 
roll Hall,  entiteld  'A  Time  of 
Greatness,"  will  sum  up  his  years 
of  research  into  the  role  of  the 
common  soldier  of  the  Confederacy 
and  his  views  of  that  conflict. 


IDC  Mo/ces  Chinese  Diplomat 
Plans  For    Speaks  Tomorrow 

This  Year 


Interdormilory  Council  plans  for 
the    coming    academic    year    were  j 
presented,  in  part,  to  a  meeting  of  i 
dormitory       presidents       Monday ' 
night. 

President  Sonny  Hallford  laid 
out  a  suggested  agenda  for  the 
fall  semester  for  each  dorm  pres- 
ident to  mull  over. 

Items  far  up  on  the  Council's 
agenda  which  were  mentioned  are: 

(1)  Nominating      seuons      for 
dormitory    secretaries,    treasurers, 
IDC  representatives  and  intramur- 1 
al    managers    to    be    held    tonight 
or    tDmorrow    night,    as    each    in-  i 
dividual    dormitory   sees   fit. 

(2)  Turning  tn  of  candidate^,'' 
names  for  the  respective  offices 
to  the  IDC  office  in  Now  East  An- 
nex by  Friday.  Sept.  28. 

(3)  Elections   in   the   individual 
dormitories  on  Tuesday,  Oct.  2. 
(4)    Interdormilory    Council    ban- 
quet   to   be   held    in   the   Carolina 
Inn.  Oct.  10  at  6:45  p.m. 

After  Hallford  had  'announced 
these  high  spots  on  the  immediate 
Council  agenda,  ether  Council  of- 
ficers ;?poke  briefly  to  the  assem- 
bled presidents. 

Council  Vice  President  Neil  Bass 
explained  attendance  regulations 
to  the  presidents  and  urged  regu- 
lar attendance. 

Treasurer  gob  Carter  then  pre- 
sented a  a"tatement  of  current  fin- 
ances to  each  of  the  dorm  presi- 
dents for  their  respective  dormi- 
tories. Carter  a  •  so  explained 
necessary  processing  which  mus-t 
occur  before  dormitories  n^ay  se- 
cure  fund.s   from   the  Council. 

The  next  Council  meeting  will 
be  held  on  Oct.  10  at  the  Carolina 
Inn.  University  dignitaries  will 
also   attend   the  banquet. 


DR.  K.  TONG 

.  io  sjjeak  here 


Editorial  Staff 
Of  Yack  Named 
By  Tom  Johnson 

Editorial  appointments  for  the 
1956  Yackety-Yack  have  been 
completed,  editor-in-chief  Tommy 
John-,-jn    announced    yesterday. 

The  recent  appointments  are: 
managing  editor,  Gene  Whitehead; 
assistant  to  the  editor.  Miss  Judy 
Davis,  chief  photographer,  Tru- 
man Moore;  senior  class  editor. 
Miss  Ann  Melton;  junior  class 
editor.  Miss  Barbara  Stockton; 
sophomore  class  editor,  Clem 
Davis; 

Freshman  cla.^B  editor.  Ken 
Walker;  professional  schools  edi- 
tor, Miss  Nancy  Turner;  activities 
co-editors,  Frank  Schrimsher  and 
Tom  Ray;  student  government  ed- 
it;>r.  Bert  Davi.*:  sports  editor,  Don 
Millen:     • 

Sororities  editor,  B.  J.  .Madison: 
fraternities  editor,  Larry  Harris; 
R.O.T.C.  editor.  Bill  Kane;  hon- 
oraries  editor,  Martie  Whedbee; 
secre'ary  to  the  editor.  Miss  Bobbi 
Smith.  , 


Dr.  Hollington  K.  Tong,  Chinese 
ambassador  to  the  U.S.,  will  deliver 
an  address  in  Hill  Hall  tomorrow 
night  at  eight  o'clock. 

Dr.  Tong  will  be  the  first  of  a 
series  of  speakers  to  be  presented 
to  the  campus  by  the  Carolina 
Forum.  Jim  Holmes,  chairman. 

Dr.  Tongs  schedule  includes: 

(li  5:52  p.m.:  arrival  at  Raleigh- 
Durham  Airport  with  probable 
coverage  by  Durham  television 
station,  ,WTVD. 

(2)  6:30  p.m.:  banquet  at  the 
Carolina  Inn  with  student  leaders 
and  University  officials  in  attend- 
ance. 

(3)  8  p.m.:  deliverance  of  ad- 
dress in  Hill  Hall. 

(4)  9  p.m.:  Reception  to  be  held 
in  Dr.  Tong's  honor  in  the  down- 
stairs lounge  of  Graham  Memorial. 

Dr.  Tong,  who  became  ambassa- 
dor to  the  United  States  in  May, 
1956,    will   speak   on   the   subject. 

The  Success  of  the  New  Tactics 
of  the  Chinese  Communists." 


Seniors  have 
Only  3  Days 
For  Pictures 

Seniors  have  until  Friday  to 
have  their  class  pictures  for  the 
Yackety-Yack  made. 

The  pictures  are  now  being 
mad3  in  the  basement  of  Graham 
Memorial  from  1  to  7:30  p.m. 

Editor  Tommy  Johnson  said  a 
new  drape  featuring  a  rounded 
neekhne  is  being  used  for  senior 
girls  this  year  to  replace  the  V- 
necked  drape  used  in  previous  an- 
nuals. 

The  remainder  of  the  picture- 
faking  schedule  is  as  follows:  Oct. 
1-5 — Freshmen  and  Nursing  School 
(except  senior  nurses). 

Oct.  8-12— Sophomores,  Phar- 
macy School,  Dental  School,  and 
Dental  Hygiene  students. 

Oct.  15-19  —  Juniors,  Medical 
School,  Law  School  and  Graduate 
School. 


Weil  Lighted  Reminder 


Miss  Sylvia  Yelton,  UN£  graduate  student  and  runner-up  for  the 
title  of  Miss  Chape!  Hill  last  spring,  serves  as  a  photogenic  reminder 
of  the  Jaycees'  annual  light  bulb  sale,  to  be  staged  house-to4)ouse 
throughout  the  community  this  evening. 


Students  Going 
To  Averett  Sat. 
Must  Sign  Up 

Slucients  -"ho  plan  to  attend  the 
dance  at  Averett  College  in  Dan- 
ville, Va.,  this  weekend  should 
sign  up  tomorrow  in  the  Y,  accord- 
ng  to  Bob  Leonard  of  the  YWC.\. 

The  trip  is  sponsored  bj:  the 
Freshman  Fellowship  of  the 
YMCA,  but  is  open  to  upperclass- 
men  as  well  as  freshmen.  Busses 
have  been  chartered  and  will  leave 
at  6:15  p.m.  on  Saturday. 

The  dance  starts  at  8:30  p.m. 
and  ends  at  midnight..  Music  at 
the  dance  will  be  furnished  by  a 
nir:e-piece  band.  Refreshments  and 
a  snack  supper  will  be  served. 

Total  cost  of  the  trip  is  $2, 
which  is  for  the  bus  trip. 


Discussions  On 
Rush  Will  Be 
Held  Thursday 

Tho  Interfraternity  Council  is 
sponsoring  a  discussion  of  frater- 
nity rushing  for  all  freshmen  and 
transfer  students  tomorrow  at  9 ' 
p.m.  in  the  social  room  of  each 
dorm.  I 

One  member  of  the  IFC,  who 
will  speak  and  answer  questions 
on  rush,  has  been  assigned  to  each 
dorm,  except  Cobb  and  Battle- 
Vance-Pettigrew.  Cobb  has  been 
assigned   two  and   BVP  three.  i 

"We  feel, '  said  Dave  Ward,  IFC 
vice-president  and  chairman  of 
rushing,  "that  rush  means  much 
more  to  boys  if  they  attend  these 
meeiings,  which  are  designed  to 
enlighten  and  answer  all  questions 
concerning  rush."  | 

•  This  is  the  second  year  that  any 
system  of  dormitory  discussion  on  , 
rush  has  been  used.  Students  who 
have  problems  concerning  rush 
either  before  or  after  the  meeting 
have  been  asked  to  contact  Ray  i 
Ambassador  of  the  Chinese  Repub-  j 


Alex  Shepard  Named  Acting 
University  Business  Officer 


Acting  President  William  Fri- 
day recently  announced  the  ap- 
pointment of  Alexander  H.  Shep- 
ard to  be  acting  business  officer 
and  treasurer  of  the  Consolidated 
University. 

The    position    approved    by    the 


ALEX  SHEPARD      .,. 

, . .  new  CU  officer. 


1955  General  .\.ssembly,  was  fiU'Cd 
by  action  of  the  executive  com- 
mittee of  the  UNC  Board  of  Trus^ 
tees  and  Shepard's  appointment 
is  effective  immedjately.  It  is  one 
of  the  major  positions  in  the  con- 
solidated  office. 

Shepard  has  been  assistjint  to 
the  UNC  bu.^\ness  manager. 

Friday  stated.  "Mr.  Shepard's 
superior  capabilities  and  his  inti- 
mate knowledge  of  the  functions 
and  details  of  finances  and  busi- 
ness management  of  the  Universi- 
ty are  the  reasons  why  he  was  the 
natural  choice  in  making  the  selec- 
tion. His  years  of  devotion  to  duty 
in  the  University,  his  knowledge 
of  University  affair."  and  his  fun- 
damental ability  were  prime  con- 
siderations." 

Shepard  is  a  native  of  Wilming- 
ton and  a  graduate  of  Davidson 
College.  He  has  been  with  UNC 
since  1932.  and  has  been  assistant 
to  the  bu.'iness  manager  since 
1943.  He  is  married  to  the  former 
Miss  Sallie  Cowell  who  was  from 
Washington,  N.  C,  and  they  have 
a  son  and  a  daughter. 


PAGE  TWO 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


WEDNESDAY,  SEPTEMBER  26,  19S6 


President  Young:  The  Best 
In  A  School  Generation 


THE  LIVESPIKE: 


B«ib  \'r>un<>  has  pro\en  liimseH 
the  best  student  bodv  president  in 
his  college  oreneration. 

.\s  he  said  modestly  at  a  politi- 
cal ineetin<»  this  week,  his  admin- 
istiation  already  has  stained  work 
on  some  of  the  students'  hardest 
problems,  and  lia;*,  turned  out  some 
fine  residts. 

^'ouno  listed  these  thiee  areom- 
plishments   abo\e   the   others: 

1.  .Strict  registration  of  student 
automobiles  and  enforcement  of 
restrictions. 

2.  Telephones  on  all  floors  of 
most  men's  dormitories  whit  h  for- 
merK  had  only  two  telephones  to 
serve  three  floors. 

;.  Return  of  more  than  200  lost 
books  to  the  Wilson   Library. 

It  was  personal  action  —  good, 
hard,  sweating  work  —  on  the  part 
of  President  Voimg  that  turned 
up  these  results  so  soon  after  his 
election  last  spring.  And  there  are 
indie;  tions  he  has  just  got  started. 

^olnlg  stepped  in  the  day  alter 
his  election  to  start  solving  the  au- 
tom()])ile  problem.  Facing  an  ul- 
tiiii.uum  from  the  Board  of  Trus- 
tees, lie  s.iw  the  onlv  satisfactory 
answer  to  the  problem  of  too  many 
cars  —  no  automobiles  for  fresh- 
men. 

It  was  a  nasty  job  to  do.  but 
"^'oung  did  it  swiftly  and  fairly, 
and  lost  little  respect  from  his 
classmates  in  doing  it. 

^oung  has  shown  that  he  can 
deal  effectively  with  all  sides  of 
the  campus — students,  faculty,  ad- 
ministration, the  town.  He  is  re- 
spected from  all  those  quarters. 

We  caimot  afford  to  let  him  rest 
at  this  point,  because*  student  tiody 
presidents  like  Young  are  rare.  If 
studeiu    politicians  would  concen- 


trate their  efforts  on  heljiing 
^oln^g  build  a  better  campus  this 
year — instead  of  raising  some  of 
the  pettv  arguments  that  ha\e 
(ome  up  in  past  years — this  I'ni- 
\ersity  would  be  improved  tenfold 
bv  commeiuement  day. 

Hope.  Left: 
People  Are 
Still  People 

When  vou  get  to  worrying  too 
much  af)out  the  State  of  North 
Carolina  going  to  hell  in  a  ballot- 
box,  and  when  campus  life  appears 
a   bit   too  dull,  remember  this: 

The  Phi  debated  a  bill  to  get 
rid  of  coeds  here. 

The  Hi  was  working  over  tlie 
Sue/  Canal   dispute. 

You  can  get  polio  vaccine, 
through  the  courtesv  and  interest 
of  the  rniversity  Infirmarv.  for 
Si    a  shot. 

^ou  can  rent  a  work  of  art  for 
;v  month  from  Person  fiall  for  two 
bits    plus   a   dollar   de{>osit. 

I'our  top  musical  artists  will  ap- 
pear here  on  the  Chapel  Hill  Con- 
cert Scries  schedule. 

The  head  of  the  Mens  Honor 
Clouncil  has  been  charged  with 
speeding. 

That,  plus  the  smile  of  a  cute 
C.aroline  Coed  at  your  8  ockxk 
class,  plus  a  good  dose  of  Franklin 
St.  friendliness,  is  enough  to  con- 
vince anyone  tliat  the  I'niversiiy's 
a  fine  place.  < 


Car  Problem  Is  Continuing 


Studen^^  with  automobiles  have 
shelled  out  their  S2.r,o  toward  im- 
proving the  traffic  lacilities.  Fresh- 
men have  been  s\v(»rii  not  to  main- 
tain automobiles. 

But  a  look  at  th:-  •  treets  of  Cha- 
pel Hill,  the  (logged  thor-ugh- 
Lres,  th^'  I  :..  .:lca  lots  iKninJ  dor- 
niitories— .his  suggests  a  continu- 
ing i   .  ..  at   the  parking  problem. 

^ludent  government,  under  the 
astute  leadership  of  student  Presi- 
dent Young,  has  done  a  great  deal 
to  tem|>oia>ily  alleviate  the  prob- 
lem. But  the  mounting  stream  of 
automobiles  into  this  liny  town 
shows    that    parking    lots   —    huge 


parking  lots,  capable  of  holding 
thousands  of  automobiles  —  must 
be  built  soon. 

In  another  10  years  the  enroll- 
ment will  liave  almost  doubled. 
The  number  of  student-owned 
<avs  wiil  rise  proportionatelv.  Re- 
strictions on  freshmen  will  not  be 
enough. 

Fhe  only  lasting,  true  answer  to 
the  parking  and  traffic  problems 
is  a  system  of  parking  lots,  legated 
on  the  fringes  of  the  campus.  Stu- 
dent and  trustee  planners  should 
keej)  the  plan  in  mind  as  they 
bank  the  autcjmobile  registratioii 
lees. 


THE  GREENSBORO  DAILY  NEWS: 


Aim  For  Prime  Essentials 


The  Consolidated  I'niversity  of 
North  Carolina  concentrated  cjn 
prime  essentials  for  the  life  of 
learning  in  requests  made  this  year 
t(j  the  .\dvisory  Budget  Commis- 
si cjn. 

What  seemed  once  to  l>e  a  pre- 
occup;v.ion  with  building  build- 
ings has  given  wav  to  a  concern  lor 
lacultv  salaries,  research  in  huma- 
nities and  the  need  for  ijiore  li- 
brary lM)oks. 

But  this  fervor  h)r  putting  new 
life  into  the  heart  of  the  Cnivers- 
itv  imist  be  conmninicated  not  on- 
ly to  the  budget  conmiission  but 
to   the   new    Legislature. 

Of  the  S J. -,00,000  increase  per 
vcar  asked  for  operational  lunds, 
more  thr-i  %2.^\\■J.•]•-^i^  would  be  for 
the  purpo.se  of  increasing  faculty 
salaries— an  overpowering  neces- 
sity over  which  Acting  President 
1  riday  sounded  the  alarm  serine 
montlis  back. 

l.ovalty  won't  hold  liimgiy  pro- 
fessors. Chancellor  House  of  Cha- 
pel Hill  inferred  at  the  budget 
hearing.  The  I'niversity.  he  .said, 
must  compete  in  n  seller's  market, 
and  this  l)udget  inc  re.' se  is  asked 
mainly  to  keep  the'  present  faculty 

The  Daily  Tar  Heel 

The  official  .student  publication  of  the 
Publications  Board  of  the  University  of 
North  Carolina,  \\^here  it  is  published 
daily  except  Monday  and  examination 
and  vacation  periods  and  summer  terms. 
Entered  as  second  class  matter  in  the 
post  office  in  Chapel  Hill,  N.  C ,  under 
the  Act  01  March  8.  1870.  Subscription 
rates:  mailed,  $4  per  year.  $2.50  a  semes- 
ter; delivered,  $6  a  year.  S3.50  a  semes- 
ter. 


Eciitor „_  FRED  POWLEDGE 


intact. 

Book  appropriatioirs  must  be 
lipped;  libraries  at  the  state  col- 
leges and  imiversities  have  slipped 
shamelully  in  the  last  lew  yeais. 
Heie  a  lot  of  missic%nary  zeal  must 
be  used  on  legislators,  who  last  ses- 
sion indicated  their  attitude  on 
books  bv  sharply  slashing  book 
buying  recjuesls. 

It  is  almost  odd  to  hear  I'nivers- 
itv  ofJicials  stressing  humanities. 
Originallv  the  heart  and  core  of  a 
liberal  education,  the  humanities 
have  gotten  short  shrift  in  .North 
CriTulina  and  elsewhere  in  recent 
years. 

Foiindations  for  subsidizing 
fcjotball  players  have  been  formed. 
Professional  and  busine.is  groups 
have  banded  together  to  foster  and 
promote  training  of  young  lledg- 
lings.  )n\t  there  have  l)een  jjiacti- 
cally  lU)  alumni  asscn  iations  of  la- 
tin or  history  majors. 

Iiicrca,>ed  funds  hir  humanities 
research,  said  Or.  |.  Harris  Purks. 
state  director  of  higher  education, 
would  encouiage  sc  holarly  researc  h 
in  a  field  where  little  money  is 
now  available.  Added  Chancellor 
House: 

■'We  are  not  thinking  of  great 
jHojects.  but  we  are  thinking  ol 
encouraging  the  faculty  members 
along  the  lines  of  their  ability,  of 
their  geniu.s.  which  is  the  lifcblocxl 
of  the  I'niversity." 

Ihe.se  are  laudable  olijectives— 
more  monev  for  professors,  tor  li- 
brary bcKiks  and  for  research  in 
humanities.  (Ujupled  with  higher 
entrance  requirements,  the  I'ni- 
versity's  cducern  for  prime  essen- 
tials of  education  is  a  gcM)d  sign 
for  North  Carolina. 


Gov.  Hodges:  Convention  Go-Getter 


Fred  Powledge 

(Editor  Powledge  covered  the 
Democretic  National  Conven- 
tion last  summer  for  The  Ra- 
leigh Times.  Later  he  chaired 
a  college  editors'  conference 
in  Chicago  at  the  ninth  Nation- 
al  Student  Assn.   congress.) 

North  Carolina's  Gov.  Luther 
Hodges  displayed  a  convincing 
style  of  leaders-hip  at  the  Demo- 
cratic  National    Convention. 

Not  that  1  agreed  with  every- 
thing he  did — I  didn't — but  the 
governor  fooled  some  oldtime  ob- 
5erver«  U'ho  thought  he'd  sit 
back  and  let  the  convention  run 
on  its  ov\-n  steam. 

When  Hodges  arrived  in  Illi- 
nois Central  Station,  he  was  a 
Southern  governor  who  had  been 
mentioned  —  partially  in  jest — 
aa-  a  protest  candidate  for  Presi- 


d'ent.  He  wasn't  known  too  well. 
One  Chicago  reporter,  quizzing 
Hodges  on  the  Tar  Heel  delega- 
tion's feelings,  said  "Thank  you, 
Gov.  Hodge." 

'That's  Hodges,"  th€  gover- 
nor corrected.  Don't  forget  the 
final  's'." 

The  governor  remembered  too 
well  the  case  of  Orville  Hodgr. 
Illinoi.f  politician  who  stole 
money  from  the  state  treasury. 
He  didn't  want  his  name  even 
loo.-.cly  connected  with  Hodge's. 

When  the  governor  left  Chica- 
go at  the  end  of  the  convention, 
he  was  quite  well  known.  He  was 
known  by  Steven.son  people  as 
the  man  who  more  or  less  swung 
the  North  Carolina  delegation  in- 
to line  behind  Adlai. 

H«  was  volunteered  as  a  brief 
candidate  for  vice  president  by 
the     Tar     Heel     delegation,  and 


even  got  four  votes  from  South 
Carolina,  whatever  good  that 
did  him. 

And  Hodge.^-  had  the  distinc- 
tion of  sitting  on  the  convention 
platform  while  Adlai  Stevenson 
tha.nked  his  fellow  Democrats  for 
his  nomination.  The  North  Caro- 
lina governor  was  reimbursed 
kindly  for  his  efforts  to  get  Stev- 
enson nominated. 

In  short,  Hodges  came  home 
from  Chicago  considerably  more 
valuable  politically  than  -when  he 
arrived.  He  increased  his  value 
in  several  ways. 

First,  he  smashed  any  of  the 
Tar  Heels'  hopes  of  entering  hi^- 
name  as  a  favorite  son  Presi- 
dential candidate.  From  North 
Carolina's  first  caucus  on,  Hod- 
ges was  talking  Stevenson  right 
and  left  to  fellow  Tar  Heels-  and 
fellow  Southerners. 


'r  Said  There'd  Be  Trouble,  And  I  Won't  Have  You  Making 
A  Liar  Out  Of  Me' 


Speaking  Of  Many  Things 


Ken  Sanford 

Writer  Sanford  is  a  former 
managing  editor  of  The  Oatiy 
Tar  Heel.  He  has  just  returned 
from  a  tour  of  duty  with  the 
Army. 

Speaking  the  sentiments  of  a 
host  of  other  veterans.  I  yay. 
"We  are  happy  to  be  back."  Act- 
ually "veteran"  for  most  of  us 
just  returned  is  a  misnomer. 
The  only  thing  I  can  boast  is 
that  I  was  a  member  of  th^  Oc- 
cupation Army  in  South  Caro- 
lina. 

*  -k  -k 

Some    suggejted     reading    for 


I'.NC  students  is  an  article  in 
two  parts  publishcni  in  the  cur- 
rent and  past  week's  issues  of 
'•Life'N.'.  It  i.v  a  brief  but  compre- 
hensive evaluation  of  Tom  Wolfe 
who  came  down  from  the  hills 
beyond  Chapel  Hill  to  this  Uni- 
versity and  went  on  to  reach  a 
literary  height  that  far  surpassed 
his  physical  height  (six  feet,  six 
inche  •;.  Wolfe  was  a  campus 
leader  here,  being,  among  other 
things,  editor  of  The  Tar  Heel. 
•  •  • 

Discerning  movie  goers  are 
going  to  be  treated  to  one  of  the 
Italian  film  industries'  finest 
productions  when  a  Chapel  Hill 


theater  presents  "Umberto  'D". 
This  movie  present.^•  an  Italian 
social  problem  through  the  eyes 
of  a  man  living  it.  It  rivals 
•The  Bicycle  Thief"  for  taking 
the  viewer  inside  a  man's  heart 
and  mind. 

•  •  * 

Welcome  back  Pogo!  The  Daily 
Tar  Heel's  two  comic  strips, 
Li'l  Abner  and  Pogo.  contain 
some  of  the  be^-t  satire  on  the 
American  scene.  The.'se  two  strips 
are  a  sugar-coating  for  those 
who  don't  like  their  politics 
straight.  Both  Pogo  and  General 
Bullmoose  (of  Li'l  Abner)  have 
•been  supported     for     the     presi- 


It  was  Hodges  who  appeared 
considerably  hurt  the  week  be- 
fore the  convention  when  Steven- 
son made  his  famous  statement 
favoring  desegregation.  Hodges 
had  rea^'on  to  be  hurt;  he  haci 
just  finished  working  more  than 
energetically  for  passage  of  this 
state's  Pearsall  Plan,  an  action 
designed  to  side.^'tep  the  Supreme 
Court's  desegregation  order. 

But  when  Hodges  got  to  the 
convention  and  saw  Harry  Tru- 
man back  Averell  Harriman  for 
the  Presidency,  be  lost  all  his 
distru.l  of  Stevenson.  He  started 
politicking  immediately  for  the 
Illinoisian's    nomination. 

Newsmen  hiad  trouble  keeping 
up  with  the  governor.  He  was 
rarely  at  either  of  his  two  hotel 
suites,  and  he  bounced  in  and 
out  of  his  seat  in  International 
Ampitheatre  with  the  regularity 
of  a  five-year-old  in  a  candy  fac- 
tory. 

W^here  was'  he?  Out  getting 
vote*  for  Stevenson. 

Even  the  North  Carolina  dele- 
gates who  swore  and  bedamned 
before  the  convention  that  they 
wouldn't  crusade  for  Stevenson 
were  sheepishly  wearing  Adlai 
buttons  by  the  second  day. 

Hodges-  led  the  cielegation's 
caucuses,  and  he  led  them  well. 
He  gave  no  room  for  doubt  about 
his  choice  for  the  nomination. 
And  he  got  his  way. 

Hodges  didn't  w^ork  only  for 
Adlai.  He  was  missing  from  his 
seat  when  Tar  Heel  Democratic 
chairman  John  Larkin.^-  dropped 
his  name  into  the  vice  president- 
ial hopper.  Where  was  he'? 

"I  was  out  trying  to  round  up 
some  votes  for  Kefauver,"  he 
said.  And  there  was  sweat  on  his 
forehead. 

There  was  s<)me  speculation 
among  North  Carolina  newsmen 
about  the  reason  for  all  the  gov- 
ernor's running  around.  Some 
guessed  he's  trying  to  be  more 
and  more  valuable  to  the  Nat- 
ional Democratic  Party,  with 
maybe  an  eye  cocked  toward  a 
Presidential  or  vice  presidential 
nomination   in  the  future. 

Others  opined  he  will  run  for 
a  .seat  in  Congre.-s  four  years 
from  now.  after  he  has  served 
his  term  as  governor.  Still  oth- 
ers, more  friendly  toward  the 
governor,  said  he  was  simply  do- 
ing his  job  and  trying  to  lead  a 
confu.'ad  delegation  down  the 
right  path. 

Whatever  the  governor  was 
doing,  he  did  it  well.  He  gained 
respect  from  the  people  who 
watched  him  do  it. 


dency.   I  am  partial  to  Pogo. 

Senator  W.  Kerr  Scott  recent- 
ly made  what  was  perhaps  the 
opiening  attack  on  the  man  who 
most  likely  will  oppose  him  in 
a  campaign  for  his  re-election  to 
the  Senate  in  1960,  Governor 
Luther  Hodges.  Scott  said  that 
the  governor  should  intervene  in 
a  squabble  over  rural  electrifica- 
tion. The  governor  replied  to  this 
that  he  doea*  not  intend  to  step 
in.  The  governor  will  be  looking 
for  a  new  job  when  his  up-com- 
ing term  expires  in  1960.  and 
this  could  result  in  one  of  North 
Carolina's  biggest  political  bat- 
tles. 


Pogo 


By  Walt  Kelly 


Li'l  Abner 


By  Al  Capp 


South  Searching 
For  Legal  Ways 

Josephine  Ripley 

hi  The  Christian  Science  Monitor 
Shoutina  and  riots  along  the  school  integration 
front  mean  little  in  comparison  with  the  "massive 
resistance"  on  the  legal  front.  For  it  is  not  in  emo- 
tional explosions,  regardless  of  their  sensational- 
ism, but  in  the  courts  that  the  decisive  battle  will 

take  place.  ,      o      .. 

And  it  is  by  legal  action  that  the  South  is  brac- 
ing for  its  most  determined  stnnd  and  the  one  on 
which  it  hopes  to  hold  its  ground.  In  such  measures 
the  opponents  of  desegregation  see  their  strongest 
hope  of  maintaining  the  traditional  color  line. 

Eight  southern  states  have  already  passed  laws 
designed  to  circumvent  integration  in  one  way  or 
another.  Mississippi  has  a  law  that  openly  defies 
the  Supreme  Court  order  by  forbidding  mixed 
schools  within  its  borders.  Other  southern  states 
have  gone  about  it  more  indirectly. 

Two  methods,  in  particular,  are  favored.  These 
include  the  abolition  of  public  schools  through  a 
cut-off  of  state  funds  to  any  school  permitting  in- 
tegration; and/or  adoption  of  a  pupil  assignment 
plan  under  which  pupils  could  be  assigned  to  differ- 
ent schools  on  a  wide  range  of  qualifications,  none 
openly  mentioning  race. 

Net  result  of  the  pupil  assignment  plan  —  and  ^ 
its  obvious  intention  —  would  be  to  assign  white  ■[ 
pupils  to-  one  school  and  Negro  pupils  to  another.  - 
As  for  the  cutting  off  of  state  funds  to  local  schools,", 
this  would  be  tantamount  to  closing  thtf  public  ■ 
schools  since  the  local  communities  could  hardlyj 
support  them  alone,  and  the  white  population  would- 
probably  refuse  to  do  so  if  they  were  desegregated..t 
Without  state  or  local  support,  schools  would  irt-~ 
evitably  have  to  close  their  doors.  — - 

A  number  of  states,  such  as  Virginia,  have  al-* 
ready  paved  the  way  for  such  a  move  by  amending  • 
their  constitutions  to  permit  the  use  of  state  funds  \ 
for  private  tuition  of  those  refusing  to  attend  in' 
tegrated  schools.  .-m 

Virginia,  ready  to  lead  this  new  rebellion  is  rush-^ 
ing  the  erection  of  legal  bulwarks.  The  legislatur*. 
is  now  in  special  session  with  more  than  seventj^ 
bills  before  it,  all  keyed  to  the  integration  issu*'- 
and  most  of  them  designed  to  circumver.t  it. 

The  largest  program  of  full  integration  has  bees- 
undertaken   is   in   the   District   of  Columbia.   Here.T 
some   70.000  Negro   students   —  two-thirds  of  the 
entire  school  population-— have  been  integrated  inlol 
the  public  schools.  "■ 

Some  integration  has  also  taken  place  in  cities., 
in    West    Virginia.    Delaware,    Maryland.    Kentucky^ 
Missouri,  Oklahoma,  and  Texas.  But  obviously,  thc- 
movement  is  limited  to  the  so-called  border  states, 
or  to  areas  where  the  percentage  of  Negro  popu 
lation  is  small  and  opposition  to  integration  com- 
paratively mild. 

Unyielding  is  a  solid  bloc  of  southern  states 
which  arc  braced  for  defiance  with  every  legal  tool 
to  be  mustered.  These  states  include:  Virginia. 
North  Carolina,  South  Carolina,  Georgia,  Florida. 
Alabama.  Mississippi,  and  Louisiana. 

Such  legal  maneuvers  as  are  now  in  the  making 
may  be  of  no  avail  in  the  end  but  they  will  un- 
doubtedly delay  the  coming  of  school  integration 
in  the  South.  Possibly  that  is  all  that  is  hoped  for, 
providing  that  delay  is  prolonged. 

In  all  fairness  to  the  South,  it  should  be  remem- 
bered that  any  large  measure  of  integration  presents 
many  problems  —  not  only  those  involving  the  gen- 
eral objections  to  racial  mixing,  but  practical 
problems  of  educational  disparity  and  of  adequate" 
school  facilities. 

Integration  has  been  accomplished  with  a  mini- 
mum of  difficulty  in  the  District  of  Columbia,  but 
even  here  the  problem  of  the  lower  scholastic  stand- 
ing of  the  Negro  has  been  diffcult,  particularly  in 
view  of  the  lack  of  teachers  for  special  catch-up 
classes. 

There  is  also  the  fact  that  many  Negroes  in 
the  South  have  little  or  no  desire  to  move  into  a 
white  school.  It  is  mainly  through  activity  of  the 
National  Association  for  the  Advancement  of  Co'- 
ored  People  that  the  issue  is  being  forced. 

It  is  not  being  forced  indiscriminately,  but 
rather  on  the  basis  of  cases  which  appear  to  the 
NAACP  to  have  the  strongest  moral  and  legal  basis. 
Thus  is  the  battle  shaping  in  the  courts,  while  the 
South  itself  prepares  legislation  that  may  well  dis- 
rupt its  public  schools  for  a  generation  or  more. 

SIDEBAR 


The  Invasion 
Of  Fall 

Charlie  Sloan 

F'all  is  slowly  but  surely  invading  the  campus. 
Already  falling  acorns  compete  with  an  occasional 
rainstorm;  classroom  radiators  are  again  developing' 
a  friendly  warmth  and  coeds  arc  wandering  around 
with  their  heads  enveloped  in  bright  kerchiefs. 

Chapel  Hill  has  experienced  cold  nights  and 
warm  days  in  rapid  succession.  In  not-too-many 
weeks,  students  will  greet  each  other  with  sharp 
fneezes  and  bleary  eyes. 

Soon  Y-Court  coffee  will  be  a  welcome  treat,  and 
even  the  stuff  dished  out  by  the  GM  coffee  machine 
will  at  least  impart  an  inward  warmth. 

Fall  wiil  bring  with  it  the  collection  of  smells 
usually  drooled  over  by  poets.  Burning  leaves,  pipe- 
loads  of  super-masculine  tobacco  and  the  sharp 
smell  of  mothballs  are  as  much  a  part  of  fall  as 
football  games  and  fraternity  parties. 

Unfortunately  fall  is  not*  all  coffee  and  colored 
leaves.  Desk  lamps  will  have  to  be  turned  on  earlier. 
and.  as  the  semester  progresses,  will  stav  on  later. 
Colder  weather  will  follow  shortly,  bringing  with  it 
dark  mornings  and  night  air  that  snaps  at  the  clouds 
of  breath  trailing  students  around  the  campus. 

Once  again  pained  bellows  will  reverberate 
through  the  halls  of  men's  dorms  as  bare  feet  hit 
ate  flicks  will  be  more  like  incidents  by  Jack  Lon- 
late  flicks  will  be  more  like  ncidents  by  Jack  Lon- 
don than  routine  strolls. 

Pleasant  or  not.  fall  is  .something  that  has  to 
be  faced,  so  why  not  enjoy  it?  -■■        ' 


WEONESI 

Two 
Begii 

Two     sor 
here — one 
rector — havj 
with    the 
Kappa  Delt 

Mrs.    Err 
boro.  who 
of  absence | 
houje.  has 
sorority,  re 
Morris  of 

A  new 
Gorman    ol 
house  mot! 
ta  Delta 
native    of 
Carolina. 

A  gradiiJ 
College  an^ 
of  the  Uni^ 
ceived  a 
eastern  Ui 
Washingtor 
ber  of  tw( 

She    has  I 
Insurance 


A^' 


D 


5 

9. 

10. 
11. 
12. 


14 

15 
17 

18.1 
20] 

2?\ 
24J 
25| 


WEDNESDAY,  SEPTEMBER  26,  1956 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HIEL 

A. 


PAGE  THREI 


9 

S 


tion 

isive 

lemo- 

|onal- 

will 

[brac- 

on 

sures 

igest 

laws 
»y  or 
lefies 
lixed 
states 

'hese 
»gh  a 
»g  in- 
iment 
liffer- 

none 

and  ' 
(white  ^ 
)then— 

loolCT 
>ublir— 

;ate(L« 
Id    iiF^ 

[ve  aP- 

tnding-  • 
funds  I 
id  ia'v 

ruslf^ 
Hatur«>.. 
jventJ2 

beei»~ 

Here;r 

)f   the- 


cities^ 
^tuckr;- 
By,  the* 
I  states, 

popu- 
com- 

states 

kal  tool 

rginia, 

lorida, 

laking 

fill    UB" 

ration 

tor, 


roes  in' 
into  a. 
of  the^ 

of  Col-- 


Two  Sorority  House  Mothers 
Begin  Their  Duties  Here 


Two  sorority  house  directors 
here — one  of  them  a  former  di- 
rector— have  begun  their  duties 
with  the  Delta  Delta  Delta  and 
Kappa  Delta  sororities. 

Mrs.  Ernest  Graham  of  Golds- ! 
boro.  who  took  a  one  year's  leave 
of  absence  from  the  Kappa  Delta 
hou.^«.  has  returned  to  direct  that 
sorority,  replacing  Mrs.  Katherine 
Morris  of  Elkin. 

A  new  director,  Mrs.  Lewis  W.  , 
Gorman  of  Chapel  Hill,  will  be 
house  mother  this  year  at  the  Del- 
ta Delta  Delta  sorority.  She  is  a 
native  of  Craven  County,  North 
Carolina. 

A  graduate  of  Flora  MacDonald 
College  and  the  Woman's  College 
of  the  Univers'ity,  Mrs.  Gorman  re- 
ceived a  law  degree  from  South- 
eastern University  Law  School, 
Washington.  D.  C,  and  is  a  mem- 
ber of  two  bar  associations. 

She  has  practiced  law  in  the 
Insurance  Claims  Divi-non  of  the 


U.  S.  Veterans  Administration  in 
Washington.  D.  C,  San  Francisco, 
Calif.,  and  Denver,  Colo.  After  the 
death  of  her  husband.  L.  W.  Gor- 
man, Mrs.  Gorman  returned  to 
North  Carolina. 

Mrs.  Graham,  wife  of  the  late 
Ernest  (Tiny)  Graham,  a  famouif 
athletic  star  at  Davidson  College, 
is  the  former  Mary  Borden  of 
Goldsboro.  She  was  an  active 
member  of  the  Kappa  Delta  soror- 
ity during  her  college  days  at  Hol- 
lins  College  in  Roanoke,  Va. 


YOUR    PENNIES 
GO    A         c^fc^ 

WA^^^AT    OUR 

ffONe 

4 1.CEMT 
SALE 

6  BIG  DAYS 

Starts  Monday 
OCTOBER    Isff 


0Xitti 


Covering  The  Campus 


ORuc  ST  a  fie 


CMATCW  MliX.M.^ 


iVixe^ie^HClpeHa/  DRUG  store 


Student  SEC 
Programs  Are 
Announced 

The  student  entertainment  se- 
ries at  the  University  for  the 
school  year  will  begin  Nov.  1  with 
the  appearance  of  Licia  Albanese. 
Metropolitan  Opera  soprano. 
!  Others  to  appear  will  be:  Man- 
'  tovani  and  his  45-piece  orchestra. 
Dec.  6;  the  General  Platoff  Don 
Cos^rack  Chorus.  Feb.  12:  Henry 
Hull,  veteran  actor  of  stage  and 
screen.  March  26;  and  Jose  Limon 
and  Dance  Company.  April  11. 

The    chairman    of    the    Student 
Entertainment  Committee  is  John 
Kerr   of   Warrenton.    Other   mem- 
bers include  Joel  Carter.  Kai  Jur- 
gensen    and    Olin    Mouzon  of   the 
faculty;  and  student  members  Miss- 
es Martha  Barber.  Durham:  Donald 
Freeman.     Raleigh     and     Barbara  ' 
and     Shirlee     I*restwood.,     Lenoir.  | 
SEC    programs    are  ,  financed    bv-j     The    indoor   swimming    pool    is 
student  fund^.-  and     are     open     to    open    for    recreational    swimming 
students   without   charge.  Non-stu-    Monday   through   Friday   from   4-U 
when   seating  j  p.m.,  Saturda.v  from   2-6  p.m.   and 
Sunday   2-5    p.m.    Swimmers    may } 
wear   their   own   bathing   suits   in-  j 
stead    of   the   special   suits   issued ' 
by  the  gym.  j 

YACK  CONTRACTS  | 

All  organizations   desiring  space  ' 
:  in  the  1956-57  Yackety  Yack  must 
sign  contracts  in  the  Yack  office  in 
the  basement  of  Graham  Memorial 
by   Oct.    10.   according   to    Tommy  ; 
Johnson.    Contracts  may  be  signed 

any  weekday  from  2-4  p.m.  j 

I 
DEMOLAY 

The  Order  of  Demolay  will  hold 
its    first    meeting   of   the   year    to- 
night at  7:30  in  the  Masonic  Lodge  1 
on   W.    Franklin    St.    .\11    members] 
or  pro.'spective  members  have  been  ' 
urged  to  attend  and  wear  coats  and 
ties.  ; 


Glee  Club  Asks  Men  To  Join 


The  UNC  Varsity  Glee  Club  has  , 
invited  all  men  interested  in  sing- ' 
ing  to  its  first  meeting  at  Hill  Hall  I 
today  at  4:30  p.m.  | 

•  The  afternoon's  program  will  ' 
include  refreshments,  a  short  con-  ' 
cert  by  the  club,  and  talks  by  i 
Zane  Eargle  and  Charlie  Shoe, 
president  and  the  business  man-  i 
ager  of  the  choral  group.  j 

Under  the  direction  of  Dr.  Joel  : 
Carter,  the  cju*"  will  present  a1 
program,    October    12,    University ; 


We  Have  Just  Bought   in 
A   Small   Library   Of 

EUROPEAN 
HISTORY 

If  your  interest  runs  that  way, 
take  a  look  in  our  Old  Book 
Corner. 

THE  INTIMATE 
BOOKSHOP 

205    E.    Franklin   St. 
Open  Till  10  P.M. 


Day.  From  November  7-10  the 
group  will  tour  Virginia,  stopping 
in  Charlottesville  to  give  a  concert 
with  the  Virginia  Glee  Club.  The 
group  will  also  participate  in  the 
Mozart  Festival.  December  2. 


FRESHMEN: 

DO  YOU  KNOW 

WHAT 

CHEESE  BLINTZES 

ARE? 

Find  Out 
At 

HARRY'S 


Pell  And  Russavage  Pack  A  Lot  Of  Tar  Heel  Weight 


Shown  above  are  Stewart  Pell  (left)  and  Leo  Russavage,  the  two 
heaviest   players   on   this  year's   football   team.   Pell    is    a    junior  of 


Lykens,  Pa.,  plays  tackle  and  weighs  230  lbs.  Russage  is  a  junior  of 
Duryea,  Pa.  and  tilts  the  scales  at  234  lbs. 


INDOOR  POOL 


NEW  FACES 

-  On  the  48<  Shelf 

-  On  the  72<  Shelf 

-  On  the  97<  Shelf 

IT'S  FUN  TO  BUY 
OU>  BOOKS  AT 

THE  INTIAAATE 

BOOKSHOP 

205   E.   Franklin   St. 
Open   Till   10   P.AA. 


Oct.  4-6.  A  recording  of  the  na- 
tional convention  keynote  speech 
by  Governor  Frank  Clements  t)f 
Tennessee  will  be  played. 

CLASSIFIEDS 

WANT  ADVENTURE.  TRAVEL, 
driving  experience?  Want  to  go 
to  Ann  Arbor,  Mich.,  Thursday 
at  noon?  Back  for  Monday  class- 
es. Share  gas  bill.  Call  Powl- 
edge,  9-3361,   after  2  p.m. 


STUDENT  WANTED  FOR  PART 
time  work,  preferably  upper- 
daysman  with  automobile  who 
has  some  circulation  experience 
on  newspapers.  Guaranteed  sal- 
ary plus  commission.  Write  Box 
XYZ,  stating  qualifications  and 
giving  references. 


THE  NEW  YORK  LIFE  AGENT 

ON  YOUR  CAMPUS 
IS  A  GOOD  MAN  TO  KNOW 

George  L  Coxhead 

Nylic 

NEW  YORK  LIFE 

INSURANCE  COMPANY 


UNC,  '42 
A  Mutual  Company 


Campus  Representative 
Founded  1845 


WUNC 

I      Today  s  schedule  for  WUNC.  the  1 

'  University's  FM  radio  station,  91.5  : 

j  megacycles: 

1 12:44— Sign  On 

'  12:45— Music 

i    1:00— Today  On  Farm 

i    1:30— Play  Period 

;    2:00 — Career  for  You 

2:30— Sign  Off 
j    5:44 — Sign  On 
j    5:45 — Music  . 
;    6:00 — Magic  Lantern 

6:30— News 
i    6:45— Sports 
I    7:00— Best  Things 
I    7:30— Desk  for  Billie 
i    8:30— Long  Village 
'    9:00— Living  Together 
j    9:30 — American  Politics 
j  10:00— Final  Edition 
:  10:05— Sign  Off 


i 


f 


LOST   —   BILLFOLD   FRmAY   IN 

Lenior  Hall  or  Law  School  be- 
tween 10  a.m.  and  noon.  Con- 
tains valuable  personal  papers 
and  approximately  $200.  Money 
for  nurses  attending  my  wife 
who  has  a  fatal  disease.  K  finder 
feeis  he  needs  money  more  than 
me.  please  return  papers.  $80 
reward  offered  for  honesty.  Con- 
tact E.  M.  Murry  at  Law  School. 


WANTED  —  RIDE  T(5  RALEIGH 
Mon.  thru  Fri.,  arriving  in  Ra- 
leigh prior  to  8:30  a.m.,  return- 
ing to  Chapel  Hill  approximate- 
ly 5  p.m.  Contact  Lee  Gotten 
at  Milton's  Clothinu  Cupboaif! 
or  call  Durham  7-8635  after  6 
p.m.  . 


LOST:    ONE   WI\^S   PASSBOOK 
Lost  Saturday  in  or  around  Ken 
.  an   Stadium.   Finder   please   call 
9-6362. 


DAILY    CROSSWORD 


ACROSS 

1.  Frontier- 
man's   shoes 

5.  Enclosure 

9.  Old  com 
(Or.) 

10.  Across 

11.  Rock 

12.  Former 
President 
of  Czecho- 
slovakia 

14.  Neuter 
pronoun 

15.  Number 

17.  Compas.s 
point  (abbr. ) 

18.  Plexus 
20.  To  pluck 

again 
2.3.  Epochs 

24.  Club's  rules 

25.  Indian 
(Utah) 

27.  Lamprey 

28.  Former 
Russian 
workers   as- 
sociation 

31.  Seaweed 

34.  Draw- 
aimless 
designs 

35.  Indian 
peasant 

36.  Building 
addition 

37.  Wine 
receptacle 

39.  From 
(prefix) 

40.  Slant  < 
43.  Sets  of 

nested  boxes 
(Orient.) 

45.  German 
river 

46.  Large  flat- 
lx)ttomed 
boat 


47.  Cereal 
grains 

48.  Observed 

DOWN 

1.  Worker 
in  clay 

2.  Finnish 
seaport 

3.  Vied 

4.  Killed 

5.  Male 
swan 

6.  Hail! 

7.  Universally 

8.  Heretofore 
11.  Title  of 

respect 
13.  Lizard 
16.  Sphere 
19.  Redund- 
ancy 


21.  Organ 
of 
sight 

22.  Pass- 
age 
of 

cheeks 
( Bank- 
ing) 

26.  Build- 
ing 
addi- 
tion 

2S.  Fruit 
drinks 

29.  Canary 

30.  Body 
of 
water 

32.  Oriental 
warehouse 


riL-JllHiJ     ^'ri7J'J3 

iJij;j!ia.ii:   unci 
:•!.,!  in' 1.1   ;■•:•'>■: 

Ul4  ?u3iJ    UyUDi 


l>H«rdBy'«  Anvwrr 

33.  Groddess  of 

infatuation 

<pos8.) 

38.  Fail  to  hit 

41.  Letter  of 
alphabet 

42.  Bitter  vetch 
44.  Spawn 

of  fish 


YDC 

The  Young  Democrats  will  meet 
tomorrow  night  in  Roland  Parker 
Lounges  2  and  3  in  Graham  Me- 
morial at  seven  o'clock.  Plans  will 
be  submitted  for  the  YDC  Conven- 
tion to  be  held   in   Winston-Salem 


PATRONIZE  YOUR 
•    ADVERTISERS    • 


ATTENTION:  ALL  PHYSICS  MA- 
jors,  students  of  physics,  and  in- 
terested persons  are  reminded 
that  there  will  be  a  meietihg  of 
the. physics  club  on  Thursday  at 
8  p.m.  in  250  Phillips  Hall. 

1-5834-2 

Sunday  new  york  times  de 

livered  to  your  door.  For  further 
information  call  8-0572  or  8-0368 
after  5  p.m.  1-5833-5 


F 
R 
E 
E 


WIN  AN  ENGLISH  BIKE 
OR  MOTOROLA  TABLE  RADIO 

STUDENTS  ONLY! 

ALL  YOU  HAVE  TO  DO 

IS  BRING  THIS  AD  INTO 

OUR  STORE  AND  REGISTER 

NOTHING  TO  BUY! 


F 
R 
E 


I 


B.F.Goodi'ich 


FIRST  IN  RUB»<R-  flUSf  IN  TUiEliSS 

BROWN'S  AUTO  SUPPLY 

312  W.  FRANKLIN  ST. 
PHONE  6981 


SHIRTS-19C 


EA. 


(Packaged  In  Cellophane) 


\iim(fi^ 


Oie  hdndte 


a;ith£ARE 


With   or  Without 
Starch         '   <     ' 


Prompt  Service         ^^'^^"^^ 


Glen  Lennox  Laundromat 


HERE  ARE  THE 

WINNERS! 

OF 

Stevens-Shepherd's 
Back  To  School  Contest 

1st  PLACE  -  DICK  HUDSON-  K.A.  HOUSE 
Imp.  Tweed  Sport  Jacket!  • 

2nd  PLACE  -  MIKE  HERRING  -  312  GRAHAM 
Hand  Woven,  Crew-Neck  Shet.  Sweater 

3td  PLACE  -  TOM  MAULTSBY  - 
1101  ROOSEVELT  AVE. 
Ivy  League  Dress  Shirt 

You  Can  Be  A 
Winner,  Tool 

FOR  ALL  YOUR  CLOTHING  NEEDS,  SHOP; 


STEVEKS^  SHEPHERD 


HAPPY-JOE-LUCKY  presents  STICKLERS! 

What  is  a  wet  tag? 


STUCK  FOR  MONEY?  DO  A 


STICKLERS  ARC  TICKLERS  and  a  mighty  soft  way  to  make  money! 
Just  write  down  a  simple  riddle  and  a  two- word  rhyming  answer.  For 
example:  What's  a  ball  player  who  gets  a  raise?  (Answer:  richer 
pitcher.)  Note:  \ioih  words  must  have  the  same  number  of  syllables 
—bleak  freak,  jolly  dolly,  vinery  finery.  Send  your  Sticklers,  with 
your  name,  address,  college,  ^nd  class,  to  Happy-Joe  Lucky,  Box 
67A,  Mt.  Vernon,  N.  Y.  Don't  do  drawings!  We'll  pay  $25  for  every 
Stickler  we  use  in  our  advertising — and  for  hundreds  that  never  see 
print.  And  remember  —  you're  boimd  to  Stickle  better  when  you're 
enjoying  a  Lucky,  because  Luckies  taste  better.  Luckies'  mild,  good- 
tasting  tobacco  is  TOASTED  to  taste  even  better.  Fact  is,  you'll  say 
Luckies  are  the  best-tasting  cigarette  you  ever  smoked! 


SEND  IT  IN  AND 

MMKE 


"IT'S 
TOASTED" 


to  taste 
better! 


Luckies  Taste  Better 

CLEANER,    FRESHER,    SMOOTHER   ! 

CA.T.CO.       PFOUUCT  OF     iJAc  i^fmjtUf^in  fJff^itgeo-K^nyMMu^    amkkica's  lbadinq  manufacturkr  of  ciqarxttxi 


PAGE  FOUR 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


WEDNESDAY,  SEPTEMBER  26,  195^ 


Freshman  Footballers  To 


Sunny  Jim  Tatum.  who  saw  N.  C. 
State  deal  his  Tar  Heel  football 
team  a  sound  lacing  Saturday,  is 
looking  forward  to  this  week's 
game  against  powerful  Oklahoma 
with  mixed  apprehension  and  op- 
timism. 

Speaking  at  a  press  luncheon 
here  yesterday,  Tatum  admitted  a 
healthy  respect  for  the  Sooners  of 
Coach  Bud  Wilkinson,  but  said 
■'there's  no  reason  to  be  pessimis- 
tic. We're  going  out  to  play  a 
ball  game  and  we're  going  to  try- 
to  learn  something.  It  should  be 
good  for  us." 

•BEAT  THE  TAR  OUT  OF  US' 

Tatum  talked  freely  about  last 
week's  debacle  against  the  Wolf- 
pack.  'We're  ail  embarrassed  and 
downhearted  about  what  happened 
Saturday.  State  just  beat  the  tar 
out  of  u^,"  Tatum  said.  "Their 
quarterbacks.  Katich  and  Franklin, 
called  a  near  perfect  game. 

"Everything  we  did  was  ill 
conceived  and  poorly  executed. 
Our  squad  was  just  trying  too 
hard,  and  nothing  ran  true  to 
form.  The  boys  would  have  done 
better  on  defense  if  I  had  just 
turned  them  loose  and  told  them 
to  go  to  it.  As  it  was,  they  were 
overcoached  and  too  careful." 

The  Tar  Heel  mentor  went  on 
to  explain  some  of  the  line-up 
changes  he  made  earlier  this  week. 
"We  moved  Don  Lear  back  to  full- 
back because  Giles  Gaca,  our  start- 
er, broke  his  nose  in  the  State 
game,  and  we  needed  more  depth 
in  that  position.  And  anyone  at 
the  game  Saturday  knows  why  Jim 
Varnum  is  our  starting  left  half- 
back now." 

Tatum  surprised  the  gathering 
of  sports  scribes  by  announcing 
that  ace  quarterback  Dave  Reed, 
sidelined  with  a  knee  injury  dur- 
ing pre-season  practice,  might 
net  b*  held  eut  for  the   entire 

Coach  Is  Optimistic 


season  if  his  knee  responds  to 
treatment.  "We're  not  in  a  posi- 
tion to  hold  anyone  out,"  said 
Tatum. 

The  quarterback  situation  is  not 
very  good   now,   according  to  Ta-  | 
turn.  "Curt  Hathaway,  our  starter  | 
i  in  the  State  game,  suffered  a  con- 
cussion  Saturday,    and    it    remains 
to   be   seen   just    how    he'll   come 
around.    Right   now,   it   looks  like  \ 
Diug   Farmer    may    start    against  j 
Oklahoma." 

OKLAHOMA  HEAT  BAD  ' 

Tatum  expressed  concern  over 
the  possible  hot  weather  his  team  ' 
may  face  in  Oklahoma.  "It's  usu- 
ally  hot  as  blaze*;  out  there  this 
time  of  year,"  he  said.  "I'm  afraid 
our  boys  may  wilt  in  the  heat  after 
practicing  in  such  cool  weather 
here." 

The  Tar  Heels  will  follcw  a  I 
regular  practice  routine  this 
week  with  equal  amounts  of  time 
being  spent  on  offense  and  de- 
fense. The  Tar  Heel  Coach  said 
that  his  defense  should  be  fairly 
steady  against  a  straight  split-T 
team  such  as  Oklahoma. 

This  year's  Sooner  team  should  | 
be  just  as  strong  as  last  year's 
national  champions,  from  all  indi-  i 
cations.  Coach  Wilkinson  lost  only 
five  first  stringers  via  graduation, 
and  he  has  a  host  of  capable  re- 
placements to  fill  their  shoes. 

When   asked    if   he   thought    the 
Sooners    would    use    their   famous 

■quick   opening   plays'   against   the 

i  Tar    Heels,    Tatum    replied,    "We 

wouldn't  be  surprised  if  they  did 

We've    been    using    our    freshman 

team  to  prepare  for  it,  so  we  hope 

not  to  be  caught  short/' 


Field  Strong  Team,  Says  Tullai 

*  Squad  Promises  To  Have 
Depth  As  Well  As  Talent 


Frosh  Whiz  Cornell  Johnson 

Cornell  Johnson,  High  Point  schoolboy  star  who  ciecided  to  cast 
his  lot  with  Carolina  over  strong  objections  from  State  College, 
should  be  a  mainstay  in  the  Tar  Baby  backfield  this  year.  Johnson 
will  be  in  the  starting  lineup  when  the  Carolina  Frosh  meet  Wake 
Forest  in  their  opening  game  of  the  season  in  Greensboro  Oct.  5. 


By  JIMMY  HARPER  | 

"This    is    the    finest    group    of ; 
freshman  football  players   I  have  j 
ever  seen."   Thus  has  Coach  Fred 
Tullai  described  this  year's  fresh- 1 
man  football  team. 

This  opinion  is  not  Tullai's 
alone,  but  is  shared  by  his  assist- 
ants and  members  of  the  varsity 
coaching  staff,  as  well. 

When  asked  to  name  stan<louts 
in  practice  Tullai  was  hesitant,  ex- 
plaining that  to  do  so  would  eijtail 
naming  the  entire  roster  of  candi- 
dates. This  might  seem  unusual  in 
light  of  the  fact  that  there  are  61 
players  on  the  squad,  but  to  em- 
phasize the  fact,  at  least  seven 
tackles  are  rated  evenly. 
ENTHUSIASTIC  SQUAD 

Much  more  enthusiasm  than  in 
past  years  has  been  noticed  among 
the  players,  and  a  large  number  of 
boys  out  are  not  on  athletic  schol- 
arships. The  great  depth  in  all 
positions  has  created  keen  compe- 
tition for  starting  berths. 

However,  there  is  no  implication 
that  the  team  has  no  good  indi- 
vidual prospects.  Some  of  the  top 
prep  and  high  school  players  in 
the  nation  last  year  are  on  the 
squad. 

One  of  these,  Francis  Dobrowl- 
ski,  195-pound  end  from  Natrona, 
Pa.,  was  picked  as  one  of  the  top 
prep  stars  in  Pennsylvania  last 
year  by  Sports  Illustrated. 

Another,  Cornell  Johnson  of 
High  Point,  is  rated  by  Tullai  as 
good  enough  to  play  any  backfield 
position.     Johnson     is     presently 


working  out  at  halfback. 

LOADED  AT  QUARTERBACK  | 

At  the  quarterback  post,  the  Tar 
Babies  have  both  depth  and  talent. 
Currently  fighting  for  the  starting 
role  are  Nelson  Lowe,  John  Cum- 
mings,  and  Jerry  Amos.  All  are 
good  passers,  ball  handlers,  and 
field  generals.  Coach  Tullai  rates 
them  almost  on  a  par,  giving  Cum- 
mings  only  a  slight  edge  on  his 
punting  ability. 


Tullai    is    definitely    optimistic 
about  his  team's   ability   to   move 
the  ball   and    plans   to  mould  his 
attack    around    a    strong    ground ' 
game.  If   the   necessity   arises  the  j 
team  can  break  out  a  strong  pass-  j 
ing  attack.  j 

In    recent   practices,    much    em- 1 
phasis  has  been  given  to  strength-  | 
ening  the  defense  and  a  great  deal  : 
of   improvement    has   been   noted 
there.  ! 


The  Tar  Heels  will  embark  for 
Oklahoma  Friday  morning  at  8 
a.m.  by  plane  from  the  Raleigh- 
Durham  Airport.  They  will  make 
their  c^mp  in  Oklahoma  City,  18 
miles  from  Norman,  home  of  the 
University  of  Oklahoma. 


Frosh  Harriers  Look 
For  Successful  Year 


By   CHARLIE    HOUSON 

Since  a  week  ago,  some  ten  to 
fifteen  candidates  for  the  fresh- 
man cross-country  team  have  been 
going  through  their  paces  on 
Fetzer  Field  under  the  watchful 
eye  of  Coach  Boyd  Newnam. 

Coach  Newnam,  who  has  gath- 
ered a  promising  crop  of  runners 
under  his  wing,  was  optimistic 
over  the  coming  season  when  in- 
terviewed Monday.  "I  believe  we'll 
have  a  good  year,"  he  said.  "We've 
got  some  good  boys  out  such  as 
Arthur  Fickland  from  Greenville, 
Paul  Wachendorfer  from  Vienna, 
Austria;  and  Cowles  Liipfert  of 
Winston-Salem."  Liipfert  was  last 
year's  North  Carolina  State  high 
school  mile  champ. 

Because  the  freshman  team  car- 
rires  an  unlimited  number  of 
squad  members.  Coach  Newnam 
emphasized  the  need  for  more 
candidates,  experienced  or  not,  to 
join  the  squad.    He  said  that   he 


only  wants  those  boys  who  are 
willing  to  work  hard  at  the  sport. 
At  present  the  team  is  prepar- 
ing for  their  first  meet  with  the 
Duke  frosh  Oct.  5  in  Chapel  Hill. 
A  tentative  schedule  of  meets  has 
been  drawn  up.  , 

The  schedule: 

Oct.  5— Duke  at  Chapel  Hill. 
Oct.  10 — Wake  Forest  at  Chap- 
el Hill. 

Oct.   15  or   16— N.   C.   State  at 
Raleigh. 

Oct.  20— Wake  Forest  at  Chap- 
el Hill. 

Oct.  24 — N.  C.  State  at  Chapei 
Hill. 

Nov.  6 — Duke  at  Durham. 
Nov.  12 — State  Championships 
at  Raleigh. 


Mural  Meet 
Set  Tomorrow 
In  Woollen 

An  important  fraternity  man- 
agers'  meeting  will  be  held  this  j 
Thursday  at  7:30  p.m.  in  Room 
301  of  Woollen  Gym.  All  fraterni- 
ties arc  required  to  have  a  rep- 
resentative at  the  meeting. 

Entries  for  tag  football  in  the 
fraternity  division  will  be  due  at  i 
this  meeting,  apd  a  drawing  will 
be  held  for  the  round  robin  toui-  ' 
nament  which  is  to  begin  Octo- 
ber 2nd.  j 

The  dormitory  division  will  not  I 
hold  its  first  managers'  meeting 
until  next  week  on  Monday.  The 
Intramural  Dept.  .advises  all  dorm- 
itories to  hold  a  meeting  soon  in 
order  to  elect  their  respective  in- 
tramural managers  or  appoint  a 
representative  for  the  coming 
meeting. 

More  referees  are  needed  before 
intramural  play  begins.  Seventeen 
students  have  signed  up  so  far, 
but  at  least  eight  more  are  need- 
ed to  assure  the  presence  of  an 
official  at  every  intramural  con- 1 
test. 

An  cnthusiastc  turnout  is  expect- 
ed when  intramural  play  opens  in 
early  October.  Competiton  will  be 
keen  in  tag  football  as  the  fra- 
I  ternity  teams  will  strive  to  depose 
Sigma  Chi,  last  year's  winners,  for 
the  championship'.  Cobb  won  the 
championship  last  year  in  the 
I  dormitory  division.  Dormitory  play 
j  is  scheduled  to  begin  on  October  9. 

Several  sports  will  be  held  dur- 
ing the  open  house,  including  bad- 
minton, handball,  table  tennis, 
squas'n,  and  fencing. 


Braves  Still  On  Top 


\i^»^ 


Milwaukee  Tops  Reds 
Behind  Warren  Spahn 


trictly  upper-class... 
through  many  semester 
'     of  satisfaction! 


B  O  B  and  M  O  N  K 
of 

TOWN& 
CAMPUS 

SALUTE 
Athlete  Of  The  Week 


Frosh  Basketball 

Coach  Buck  Freeman  has  an- 
nounced that  freshman  basketball 
practice  will  start  Monday,  October 
15,  at  3:30  p.m.  at  Woollen  Gym- 
nasium. , 

All  candidates  have  been  a$ked 
to  fill  out  an  information  form  m  j 
the   basketball   office,   Room   20£, ' 
Woollen  Gym  before  Friday,  Octo-  j 
ber  5. 


Athletic  Passbooks 

Vernon  Crook,  athletic  de-  \ 
partment  business  manager,  said  ' 
yesterday  that  students  who 
have  lost  their  athletic  pass-  I 
books  can  not  obtain  another  j 
and  therefore  will  have  to  pay  | 
full  price  to  get  in  to  future 
Carolina  athletic  events. 

Many  students  have  either  lost 
their     passbooks    or    had     them    ' 
stolen  since  school  started.  Any- 
one  finding    a    passbook   should    : 
take    it   to   the    ticket    office   as 
soon  as  possjble. 


LADY  MILTON  SHOP 

it's  raining  crew  neck  Shetland 
sweaters  at  Milton's. 

Just  received  8  delicious  fla- 
vors, imported  from  Scotland — 
liglitsray;  beige;  blue  heather; 
green  heather;  black/brown; 
Mack/ blue;  deep  charcoal; 
black/green;  all  futl  fashioned 
and  hand-framed ;  by  McGeorge 
— S13.W. 

Also  just  added  is  a  very  com- 
plete assortment  of  Bermuda 
shorts  in  ivy  model  in  brown 
watch  tartan,  rich  assorted  flan- 
nel stripings,  and  many  interest- 
ing contbinations — from  $5.95. 


cut-ins  Cupboarb 


By  JACK   HAND 

CINCINNATI.  Sept  25.  iJf>— 
Warren  Spahn  assured  Milwaukee 
of  holding  the  National  League 
load  alone  for  at  least  24  more 
hours  as  he  won  his  20th  game, 
7-1  today  behind  a  15-hit  attack 
that  virtually  snuffed  out  Cincin- 
nati's pennant  hopes. 

The  victory  boosted  the  Braves' 
lead  0  a  full  game  over  Brooklyn, 
which  plays  tonight. 

The  35-year-old  lefthander  be 
came  the  third  pitcher  in  National 
League  history  to  win  20  or  more 
in  seven  seasons,  a  feat  topped 
only  by  Christy  '  Mathewson,  13. 
and  drover  Cleveland  Ale.xander, 
9. 

Spahn  had  been  tied  with  the 
Phils'    Robin    Roberts    and    Morde- 


The  Magic 
Pin 

By   Chapel    Hill's    Own 

ina  B.  Fergus 

A      wonderful,     warm,     magic 
book  for  the  6  to  10  age  group. 

$2.50 

at  , 

The  Intimate 
Bookshop 

205    E.   FRANKLIN   ST. 
OPEN   TILL    10   P.M. 


I  cai  Brown  at  six  20-win  years. 
I  Spahn,  a  stylish  veteran  of  the 
!  1948  champion  Boston  Braves, 
drove  in  enough  runs  to  win  his 
■  own  game  with  a  two-run  double 
I  to  left  center  that  chased  36-year- 
I  old  Larry  Jansen  in  the  second 
inning. 

I  The  Braves  whacked  an  array 
of  Cincinnati  throwers*  for  15  hits, 
including  four  doubles  and  a  triple 
and  left  13  on  base. 

Birdie  Tebbetts\  Redlegs  needed 
only  one  home  run  to  tie  the 
Giants'  all-time  major  league  rec- 
ord of  221,  setin  1947. 


FLORSHEIM   SHOES 

for       U.N.C. 

Imported  Scotch  grain  and  genuine  cordovan  in 
mahogany  and  black. 


«J4/, 


Julian' 


e&iiop 


ED  sunoN 

Senior  halfback  Ed  Sutton 
from  Cullowhee  has  been  named 
Daily  Tar  Heel  Athlete  of  the 
Week  for  outstanding  perform- 
ance in  the  State  game  last 
week.  Sutton  was  the  day's  lead- 
ing ground  gainor,  rushing  for 
90  yards  in  10  carries.  Sutton,  a 
Morehe^d  Scholar,  is  co-captain 
of  the  Tar  Heel  squad  this 
season. 

We  want  him  to  drop  by 
TOWN  &  CAMPUS  and  pick  out 
a  shirt  to  his  liking — complf- 
ments  of  the  house. 

We  want  the  old  and  young 
alike  of  Chapel  Hill  to  make 
TOWN  &  CAMPUS  their  head- 
quarters for  the  finest  in  men's 
clothing.   Drop   in   today. 

TOWN  & : 
CAMPUS 


TdGETHEit 
for  the  first  time! 


IJInID®  is  the  most  scandalous  'foreign  Affair"  in  laugh  history!  ^ 


P 

I 
I 


OLIVIA  de  HAVIllAND 
lOHNFORSYTHEDimNAlOYADOLPHEMENlOU 


I  ^ie^l)a8sado]^])ai]^ite] 


*     ou..^  lomiRy  Noonan  -  Franas  lederef  -  Edward  Arnold  Minor  Watson 

I  *r.::s^Ni)()n3iiKri»i;    CiNBMAScoPg  .  prK..b,  TECHNICOLOR 

^  MtiSti  Thru  United  Arlists 


TODAY  AND 
THURSDAY 


M-G  M  presents 

SOL  C.  SIEGEL 
PRODUCTION 

rslarring 

BING  CROSBY 

GRACE  KELLY 

FRANK  SINATRA 

M  the  hMarious  tow-down  tm  higk  M« 

''HIGH 
SOCIETY 

ki  ViSTAVlSiON  and  COlOU 

CELESTE  HOLM 
»,   JOHN  LUND 
LOUIS  ARMSTRONG 

AND  HIS  BAND 

tf^iaCOli.  PORTER 

PRICES  THIS  ATTRACTION 
ADULTS   65c     CHILDREN    15t 

NOW  PLAYING 


w 


THE  PATIO 


Afternoon  Cocktail  Hour 


1-5  P.  AA 


]a  Oz.  BEER  25c 
16  Oz.  BEER  35c 


n-  -^a 


Membership  Cards  For 
1956-57  Season 

Now  On  Sale 


i   iii-ikUH^t 


Avoid  Cover  Charge 


»•"  r 


•■^-i  .,''^- 


GOLF   DRIVING   RANGE 
BEER-DANCING 

T  H  EPA  T I O 


Serials   Dept. 
ChapeX  HIX:.   H.   C. 


I- 


WEATHER 

Ktin,  with  exiMcttd  high  of  74. 


VOL.  LVIII,  NO.  7 


m  c  Dally  liSrat  He  c  I 


COORDINATION 

There's  a  lack  of  it  on  campus. 
See  page  2. 


Complete  (/P)  Wtrc  Service 


CHAPEL  HILL,  NOltTH  CAROLINA,  THURSDAY,  SEPTEMBER  27,  19M 


Offices   in   Graham   Memorial 


FOUR  PACES  THIS    ISSUE 


Acting  President  Friday  Refuses 
Comment  On  Permanent  Prexy 


By  CLARKE  JONES 

Consolidated  University  Acting 
President  Willam  C.  Friday  yes- 
terday would  malte  no  comment 
concerning  the  permanent  presi- 
dency of  the  University. 

Friday,  who  has  frequently  been 
mentioned  as  the  successor  to  for- 
mer President  Gordon  Gray,  avoid- 
ed committing  hinwtlf  on  the  sub- 
ject by  saying  only  four  words— 
**I  have  no  comment."  • 

At  a  press  conference  yesterday, 
Friday  was  questioned  on  this  and 
the  chancellorships  here  and  at 
WC.  the  problem  of  the  University 
losing  many  faculty  members,  the 
shortage  of  housing  facilities,  the 
increased  enrollment  and  the  in- 
tegration begun  at  Woman's  Col- 
lege this  year. 
CHANCELLORS 

Concerning  the  positons  of  chan- 
cellor at  UNC  and  WC.  Friday  said 
the  tM'o  committees  set  up  to  rec- 
ommend candidates  are  now  at 
work. 

UNC  Chancellor  Robert  B.  House 
retires  this  summer.  The  position 
at  WC  was  left  vacant  last  spring 
when  Edward  K.  Graham  resigned. 
W.  W.  Pierson,  on  leave  from  his 
position  as  head  of  the  UNC  Grad- 
uate School,  has  served  as  ■•icting 
chancellor  since  that  time. 

"The  committee  of  17  people 
made  up  of  faculty  representa- 
tives, alumni  and  members  of  the 
Board  of  Trustees  who  were  ap- 
pointed," he  said,  referring  to 
House's  replacement,  "have  had 
an  organizational  meeting  and  will 
meet  in  Noveml>er.  They  have 
been  asked  to  submit  three  names 
to  the  president."  j 

About  the  WC  job.  Friday  said 
the  15-man  committee,  appointed 
during  the  summer,  "has  had  two 
meetings."  This  body,  "made  up  of, 
facwUy  members,  alumni  and  trus- 


news 

m 
brief 


UN  APPROVES  SUEZ  TALKS 

NEW  YORK  (*  —  The  UN  Se 
curity  Council  has  approved  hold- 
ing a  debate  on  the  Suez  Can**' 
crisis  beginning  next  week.  At 
least  five  foreign  ministers  plan  to 
take  part  personally  in  the  dis- 
cussions. 

IN  P.VRIS.  British  and  Jfrench 
leaders  have  begun  secret  talks  on 
the  Suez  Canal.  The  British  and 
French  are  reported  to  feel  tfe 
United  States  has  been  too  soft  on 
Egypt. 
ADLAI  CRITICIZES  IKE 

KANSAS  CITY.  Mo.  {/P*  —  Adla' 
«=tovrnson  said  last  night  Presidcn 
Eisenhower  had  rejcfcted  the  pos- 
tivc  responsibilities  of  leadershir 
throughout  his  administiiatioo. 

Vice  President  Nixon,  alao  in 
Kansas  Tity.  declared  Stevenson  i' 
not  in  the  same  Icacup  with  Presi. 
dent  Eisenhower  wh^n  It  comes  tcj 
nii;»lifirations  for  leading  th - 
United  States  internationally. 


Carolina  Forum,  History  Club 
Present  Speakers  Here  Tonight 


\'  t 


The  President  Talks  Across  The  Desk 

Acting  Consolidated  University  President  William  Frjday  pauses 
for  Daily  Tar  Heel  reporter  Clarke  Jones  to  take  down  a  note  in  a 
press  conference  with  the  President  yesterday.  (Photo  by  Norman 
Kantor.) 


Egyptians  Take  Sfand 
I  In  Di  Favoring  Nasser 

j      Four  Egyptian  graduate  students  ,  popular  election  last  June.  He  also 

[  at    the    Dialectic    Senate    Tuesday    attempted  to  convince  the  Senate 

j  evening  took  a  stand  in  favor  of  i  that  Nasser's  sympathies  were  not 

I  Nasser  and   the   Egyptian   govern- ;  with  the  Communists;  that  he  had 

'  ment  in  the  debate  over  the  Suez  |  only  attempted  to  get  economic  aid 

Canal  issue.  from  Ruiisia.  aid  which   be  could 

,r     .,     ^          .         .,•.,...      'ind  no  place  else.  j 

•Y.    M.    Dessouky,    first    of    theU-^ -  —      .—  .-   .  -| 

Egyptian   guests   to   speak,    empha-        Neither     Dessouky     nor     Hassen ; 

tees  has  also  been  asked  to  submit    sized  there  is  no  reason  to  expect :  went  to  the  rostrum  until  they  had 

three  names  for  consideration,"  he    Nasser  to  ever  close  the  Canal  to 

s*Jd.  {  the   present   shipping    traffic.     He 

Friday    reported    last   spring   to !  said   that   such    action   could    only 
the  Board  q{  Trustees  the  problem  ;  make    enemies    of    Egypt's     most 
of  the  University  losing  many  fac-  i  valuable  allies,  allies  which  he  felt 
ulty  members,  mainly  because  of  i  Nasser  cannot  afford  to  lose, 
salary.  i 

He  said  yesterday  "The  Univer- 
sity administration  is  doing  every-  j 
thing  possible  to  improve  the  sal-  j 
ary   situation  and  is  asking  for  a  I 


Young  Republicans 
Plan  StDtegy  Tonight 

Campus  Young  Republicans  will 
get  together  tonight  to  plan  their 
strategy  .for  the  November  nation- 
al elections. 

President  Keith  Snyder  said  re- 
freshments will  be  served  at  the 
get-acquainted  session,  to  be  held 
in  GM's  Roland  Parker  Lounges 
1   and  2  at  7  p.m. 

Last  year's^  Young  Republican 
Club  meml>ers  will  welcome  the 
newcomers,  Snyder  said. 

Approximately  50  of  last  year's 
members  are  here  this  year.  TTie 
club's  officials,  after  soliciting 
new  members  during  registration," 
estibate  their  present  strength  at 


^ 


special  sum  of  money  to  be  used 
in  making  salary  adjustments  to 
help  prevent  further  losses  in  our 
faculty." 

He  said   in   the   last    18  months 
"we    have    lost    over    200    faculty 
members  in  the  three  institutions 
(See  FRIDAY,  Page  3) 


Several  times  in  the  roiirso  of 
debate  Nasser  was  likened  to  Hit- 
ler. Tawfik  Hassan  violently  chal- 
lenged this  and  pointed  out  that 
Nasser  was  chosen  president  by  99 
per  cent  of   the  ballots   in   a   free 


INFIRMARY 


2  Days  Left 
To  Pick  Up 
Rushing  Bids 

Men  students  have  two  days  re-  i 
maining  in  which  to  pick  up  their 
rushing  bids. 

The  bids  may  be  picked  up  to- 1 
day  between  9  a.m.  and  noon  and 
Friday  between  10  a.m.  and  noon  i 
at  the  YMCA  Building  if  it  i:,- 
raining,  or  Gerrard  Hall  if  the 
weather  is  clear.  Students  unable 
to  collect  their  bids  will  receive 
them  in  their  rooms.  No  one  will 
get  any  more  than  one  envelope, 
containing  from  one  to  24  bids. 

Approximately  10,000  bids  have 
been  sent  out  by  fraternities.  Fif- 
teen hundred  individuals  receiv- 
ed bids,  according  to  Ray  Jeffer- 
ias.  There  i*  no  master  list  which 
names  the  individuals  and  the 
fraternities  from  which  they  re- 
ceived bids.  Any  student  who  los- 
es his  bids  and  forgets  the  hous- 
es he  must  attend,  have  been  ask- 
to  contact  Ray  Jefferies. 

Each  person  receiving  a  bid 
from  any  house  must,  according  to 
regulations-,  within  the  first  two 
days  of  rush  attend  that  house. 
Although  a  student  is  usually  not 
required  to  present  his  invitation 
at  each  house,  a  record  of  atten- 
dence  is  kept.  |f  a  student  fails 
to  attend  a  fraternity,  he  will  be 
ineligible  for  ru.-hing  until  next 
year.  There  is  no  way  a  man  can 
skip  formal  rush  and  still  pledge 
a  fraternity  this  year. 

An  IFC  member,  in  speaking  of 
tonights'  talks  about  rush,  said. 
"This  dij'cussion  will  let  a  boy 
know  what  to  expect,  and,  also, 
give  hhn  a  good,  clear  picture  of 
rush. 


Student  in  the  Infirmary  yes- 
terday included: 

Miss  Franklee  Gilt>«rt,  Miss 
Martha  J.  Sillay,  John  G.  Burg- 
wyn,  Herbert  H.  Hawkins,  James 
E.  Holshouser,  John  H.  Stratton, 
Timothy  L.  Harris,  Bob  S.  Rober- 
son,  Clarence  E.  Smith  Jr.,  Wil- 
liam C.  Elliott  Jr.,  James  H. 
Epps,  III,  William  S.  Michael, 
Miss  Isabel  Holbrook,  Alvin  W. 
Smith,  Kenneth  Oakley  Jr.  and 
Richard  A.  Reavis. 


heard   all    of   the   debate,    pro   and 
con.  of  the  senators.  j 

The  bill  of  the  evening,  which 
wns  introduced  by  .Tim  Holmes, 
called  for  continued  international 
holdi.ng  of  the  canal  by  peaceful 
methods  if  possible,  but  by  force 
if  necessary.  The  bill  was  defeat- 
ed 21-3. 

:  Senator  Holmes  blamed  the  en- 
I  tire  crisis  on  President  Nasser  and 
I  said  that  the  Western  World  must 
I  prove  that  it  will  not  accept  such 
I  violation  of  international  law. 

Senator  David  Mundy  argued 
that  if  the  bill  of  the  evening  were 
carried  out  it  would  only  turn  the 
A.rabic  nations  again.st  the  West 
and  leave  them  open  to  commu- 
nism. 

An  invitation  was  extended  for 
the  four  Egyptian  guests  to  be- 
come members  of  the  Senate. 
Three  of  the  students  arc  in  this 
country  on  Egyptian  government 
grants:  the  other  is  sent  hy  the 
World  Health  Organization  of  the 
United  Nations. 


Med  School  Man    ;      "^ , 
Completes  Study 

Dr.  J.  Logan  Irvin,  associate 
professor  of  biochemistry  at  the 
University  School  of  Medicine,  has 
recently  completed  nine  months 
of  research  at  the  National  Insti- 
tute of  Health  at  Bethesda,  Mary- 
land. 

His  research  on  the  biosynthesis 
of  proteins  and  nucleic  acids  of 
normal  liver  and  of  liver  tumors 
was  supported  by  a  fellowship 
from  the  Guggenheim  Memorial 
Foundation. 


Widely  Differing  Subjects        j; 
To  Be  Aired  By  Speakers 

University  students,  faculty  and  townspeople  will  have 
1  choice  ot  two  prominent  speakers  on  two  widely-diflering 
subjects  tonight  when  the  Chinese  Republic's  ambassador  to 
the  Ihiited  States  and  a  pre-eminent  authority  on  the  Amer- 
ican Civil  War  will  give  public  addresses  on  tlie  campus. 

Or.  Ha|^hn<ifon  K.  long.  Cliinese  ninbassador  since  last 
Nfay.  will  appear  at  8:13  p.m.  in  Hill  Hall  under  sponsorship 

of  the  Carolina  Forum.  He  i.r  ex- 
pected to  speak  on  "The  Success  of 
the  New  Tactics  of  the  Chinese 
Communists." 

The  second  speaker  will  be 
Prof.  Bell  I  Wiley,  professor  of 
American  hij^tory  st  Emory  Uni- 
versity and  past  president'  of  the 
Southern  Historical  Association. 
His  address  on  'A  Time  of  Great- 
ness," .?et  for  R-  p.m.  in  Carroll 
Hall,  will  sum  up  his  years  or  re- 
search into  the  role  of  the  com- 
mon soldier  of  the  Confederacy 
and  his  views  of  the  conflict  be- 
tween the  states. 

Both  programs  will  be  open  to 
the  public.  Professor  Wiley  will 
be  the  first  of  three  speakers  who 
'.vill  be  presented  this  year  by  the 
Graduate  History  Club,  Phi  Alpha 
Theta  history  fraternity  and  the 
Graham  Memorial  Student  Union. 
The  Carolina  Forum,  an  offici- 
al, non-partisan  student  body 
agency  which  irponsors  speakers 
of  various  political  and  economic 
tiiought,  will  honor  Dr.  Tong  at 
a  private  banquet  at  the  Carolina 
Inn   tonight    before    his    main    ad- 


Dr.   H.   K.  TONC? 

talks  here  tonight 


Frat  Talks 
Set  Toni 


ght 


CIVIL  WAR   JCriOLAR   BELL   I.  WiLEY 

Will  speak  on   I  he  common  confederate  soldier 

of  the  Civil  War  Book  Club. 

Among  his  writing.s  are  "South- 
ern Negroes,  1861-1865."  which 
won  the  Mrs.  Simon  Baruch  Prize; 
"The  Plain  People  of  the  Con- 
federacy." "The  Life  of  Johnny 
Feb."  and  "The  Life  of  Billy 
Yairfc." 


editor    or    managing    editor    of    a 

number  of  North  China  newspa- 
j  pers   before   World   War  II.   After 

wartime  duty  as  a  high-level  in- 
j  formation  officer,  he  re.-'umed 
I  his  journalism  work.  In  1950  he 
i  was  named  managing  director  of 
j  the    Broadcasting    Corporation    oi 

China  and  chairman  of  the  Board 


Brecht,  Hammemete 

Will  Be  Honored  Todev 

Dr.  E.  A.  Brecht.  dean  of  the 
University  School  of  Pharmacy, 
and  Dr.  F.  C.  Hammemess,  faeul- 
ty  member,  win  be  inducted  into 
the  North  Carolina  Academy  of 
Pharmacy  at  Charlotte  today. 
Membership  in  the  academy  L: 
considered  one  of  the  highest 
honors  that  can  come  to  a  pharm- 
acist. 


80  Student  Midshipmen  Officers 
Named  For  Naval  Training  Unit 


Student  midshipmen  officers  of 
the  ;»faval  ROTC  unit  for  the  fail 
semester   were   announced   yester- 
day by  Capt.  A.  M.  Patter.,'on,  USN,  I 
professor  of  naval  science. 

They  include  80  student  partici- ' 
pants  in  the  naval  training  pro- 1 
gram.  Capt.  Patterson  pointed  out  ■ 
that  60  per  cent  of  the  appoint- 1 
ments  went  to  UNC  students  from  ; 
North   Carolina. 

The  top  rank  of  battalion  com- 
mander went  to  Midship  man  G.  B. 
Hall  of  Camden,  N.  J.  Others 
named  are  as  follows: 

Battatfion  stafif:  Midshipmen 
D.  E.  Kentopp  of  East  Orange, 
N.  J.;  L.  H.  Hodges,  Raleigh;  D.  L. 
Ward,  New  Bern;  C.  G.  Mackie, 
Mt.  Pleasant,  N.  J.;  and  L.  R. 
Williams,  Concord. 

Drum  and  Bugle  Corps:  Midship- 
men F.  C.  Byrum  of  Edenton  and 
W.  T.  Davis  of  Nashville. 

Color  Guard:  Midshipmen  M. 
Glatzer,  Kenoington,  Md.;  T.  Ma- 
haffy,  Jacksonville,  Kla.;  W.  T. 
Rose,  South  Miami,  Fla.;  and  G.  C 
Pridgen,  Sharpsburg. 

Drill  Team:  Midshipmen  J.  K. 
Bryant,  Elkin,  and  W.  E.  Barbee, 
Durham. 

A  Company:   Midshipmen   M.   M. 


Pritchett  of  Lenoir;  H.  B.  Cowan 
of  Ann  Arbor,  Mich.;  W.  G.  Branch 
of  Winter  Haven,  Fla.;  and  D.  C. 
Kerby  of  Charleston  Heights,  S.C. 

First  Platoon:  Mid.^hipmen  W.  E. 
Cable,  Greensboro;  D.  Steine,  Ral- 
eigh; W.  H.  Redding,  Asheboro; 
C.  S.  Dawson,  Charleston,  ^i  ^C; 
P.  Fulton,  Walnut  Cove,  and  C.  E. 
Smith.    Raleigh. 

Second  Platoon:  Midshipmen 
W.  H.  Baddley,  Water  Valley, 
Miss.:  H.  L.  McCall,  Bennettsville, 
S.  C.  :  C.  A.  Barrington,  Fayette- 
ville;  W.  N.  Keever,  Hiddenite; 
R.  S.  Sirkin,  Miami,  Fla.;  and 
J.   B.   Roberts,   Charlotte. 

Third  Platoon:  Midshipmen  C.  R. 
McMillan,  Houston,  Texas;  C.  D. 
Stevens,  Salisbury;  J.  N.  Black- 
welder,  Statesville;  J.  J.  Murphy. 
Hamlet;  J.  T.  Duvj^ll,  Ononset 
Point.  R.  I.;  and  W.  F.  Snell,  Wins- 
ton-Salem. 

B  Company:  Midshipmen  J.  E. 
Martin  of  Charlotte;  S.  F.  Wells. 
Reidsville;  T.  R.  Brenner  of  Riviera 
Beach.  Fla.;  and  R.  Mines  of  Kins- 
ton. 

First  Platoon:  Midshipmen  D.  M. 
Michaux,  Jacksonville,  Fla.;  B.  L. 
Burbridge,  Jacksonville,  Fla.;  C  C 
Davis,  Havana,  Cuba;  W.  K.  Wible, 


Greensboro;  H.  G.  Snipes,  Knox- 
ville.  Tenn.;  and  E.  N.  Evans,  Dur- 
ham. 

Second  Platoon:  Midshipmen  J. 
M.  Ludwig,  New  Orleans,  La.;  H.  E 
Whitlock.  Baltimore,  Md.;  T.  H.  Up- 
ton, Raleigh;  W.  D.  Alexander, 
Statesville;  and  W.  G.  Jones,  Lou- 
isville, Ky. 

C.  Company:  Midshipmen  J.  J 
Bynum,  Raleigh;  G.  R.  Brown,  Dur- 
ham; G.  P.  Hunter,  Charlotte;  and 
P.  L.  Hogaboon,  Arlington,  Va. 

First  Platoon:  Midshipmen  D.  E 
Bollard,  Charlotte;  W.  S.  Pate, 
Pikeville;  H.  J.  Sommer,  Aberdeen 
Proving  Ground.;,  Md.;  J.  B.  Dunn, 
Winston-Salem:  E.  L.  Meekins,  Ral 
''igh;  and  D.  W.  Nichols.  Neuse. 

Second  t*latoon:  Midshipmen  D 
M.  Connor,  Durham:  R.  L.  Fowler 
Hillsboro;  C  F.  Rouse,  Raleigh: 
E.  D.  M.  Schacnner.  Charlotte;  J. 

A.  Snow,  St.  Petersburg,  Fla.;  and 
L.  C.  Wardrup,  Middlesboro,  Ky. 

Third  Platoon  :  Midshipmen  T 

B.  Garrett,  Danville,  Va.;  S.  S 
Shaw,  Hamilton,  Ohio;  D.  H.  fill- 
er. Cedar  Rapids,  Ohio;  F.  T.Set 
zer.  Rural  Hall;  H.  D.  Shepherd 
North  Wilkesboro;  Jid  R.  L.  Stap- 
leton,  Gastonja. 


Two  events  arc  planned  for  to- 
night to  acquaint  freshmen  and 
transfer  students  with  the  proce- 
dures of  rushing  and  the  pros  and 
00ns  of  fraternity  memt>ei'ship. 

Advocates  of  both  Sides  will  air 
their  views  of  fraternity  and  inde- 
pendent life  in  a  session  under  the 
sponsorship  of  the  YMCA  FellW- 
ship  group  from  7  to  8  p.m.  in 
the  library  assembly  room. 

In  another  meeting,  at  9  p.m.  the 
IFC  will  conduct  discussions  in  the 
social  rooms  of  the  men's  dormi- 
tories. 

Ed  H  u  d  g  i  n  s,  Interfraternity 
Council  president  will  represent 
the  IFC  in  the  debate  at  the  libran 
at  7  p.m. 

Representing  the  Interdormitory 
Council  will  be  Jimmie  Womblc  of 
^ocky  Mount,  president  of  Grimes 
^nd  Intramural  coordinator  for  the 
IDC. 


dress.   A.  public  reception   will   be  ,  ^^j  Directors   of   the   Central   Daily 


held    afterward    in    Graham    Me- 
morial. ] 

Born  in  Chekiang  Province,  Dr. 
Tong  studied  in  the  United  Stat«s 
at  Park  College  in  Missouri,  the 
University  of  Missouri,  and  Co-  j 
lumbia  Univer.''ty,  where  he  was 
a  member  of  the  first  class  of  the 
Pulitzer  School  of  Journalism. 

As   a  pioneer  in   modern   journ- 
alism    in    Chima,    Tong   served    as 


News,   both    in   Taipei,    Formosa. 
Dr.    Tong    was    the    first    postwar 
ambasj-ador    from    his   country    to 
Japan,     holding     that     post     from 
1.952  to   19.56. 

Author  of  several  noted  boaks 
on  \)\\e  Civil  War  days.  Dr.  Wiley 
formerly  taught  at  the  University 
of  Mississippi  and  Louisiana 
State  University.  He  is  currently 
a   member  of  the   editorial   board 


Studer\H  May 
Suggest  New 
Chancellor 


'Flossy'  Heads 
To  Va.  Coast; 
16  Are  Dead 

CAPE  HATTERAS.  N.  C.  <;P>  — 
Propical  storm  Flossy,  a  weakened 
killer  that  .«howed  signs  of  possi- 
Iv  regaining  hurricane  force  swirl- 
ed toward  the  Virginia  coast  la.st 
night. 

In  her  wake  were  at  least  16 
deaths,  perhaps  that  many  miss- 
ing persons,  and  m.illions  of  dol- 
lars in  property  damage,  princip- 
ally on  the  Gulf  Coast. 

Flo.ssy  had  picked  up  speed 
slightly,  to  20  miles  an  hour,  and 
was  about  20  miles  north  of  Wil- 
mington at  11  a.m.  EST.  She  was 
moving  cast-northeast  with  off- 
shore squalls  of  45  to  50  miles  an 
hour,  and  winds  of  35  miles  an 
hour  250  miles  to  the -north  and 
east. 

The  Weather  Bureau  warneci 
that  the  storm  might  intensify  as 
it  moved  up  the  coast. 

Tides  two  to  three  feet  higher 
ban  normal  were  predicted  from 
Cape  Hatteras  on  North  Carolina' 
Outer  Banks  to  northern  New  TcI* 
iey. 

The  tides  and  torrential  inland 
"■ains,  in  some  places  up  to  six 
inches  within  a  12-hour  period 
*irought  a  threat  of  localized 
floods. 

Much  of  the  interior  of  Georgia 
South  Carolina  and  North  Carolina 
■vhich  got  the  most  rain,  had  l)eer 
suffering  from  drought.  This  wa 
expected  to  minimize  the  flood 
threat.  There  was  slight  prpspec* 
for  a  repeat  of  last  year's  disas- 
rous  Hoods,  which  resulted  from 
a  succession  of  hurricanes  thai 
taxed  nmoff  and  reservoir  capac 
•ty  to  the  breaking  point 


Weil-Known  Musicians 
Will  Give  Show  Here 


Two     internationally-known     ar- 
tists.   Yella    Pessl,    harpsichordist 
and    Mischa    Mischakoff,    violinist, 
will   play   a   concert    here    in    Hili 
Music   Hall  Tuesday  at  8  p.m.   tc 
open   the  Tuesday   Evening  Series 
I  for  the  fall  semester. 
I      The     University     Music     Dept., 
I  headed  by  Dr.  Glcn  Haydon.  spon- 
j  sors   the   musical    series   which    is 
;  open  to  students  and  others  with- 
!  out  charge. 

!  Tuesday's  concert,  co-sponsored 
i  by  Graham  Memorial  Student 
j  Union,  will  mark  the  dedication  of 
the  Music  Dept.  new  Macndler 
Schram  harpsichord,  made  accord- 
ing to  the  department's  specifica- 
tions by  Maendlcr  of  Munich.  Ger- 
many. 

This   concert   model    two-manual 
harpsichord  is  similar  to  the  fine 
Maendlcr  harpsichord  belonging  to  1 
Nfiss  Pessl. 

She  is  one  of  the  best  known  of 
American  harpsichordists.  Born  in 
Vienna,  she  was  a  graduate  in  Key- 

Legislature 
Holds  Meet 
At  7  Tonight 

By  NEIL  BASS 

The  first  fall  session  of  the  21st 
legislative  assembly  will  begin  at 
7  o'clock  tonight  in  New  East 
Building. 

According  to  Speaker  Sonny 
Evans,  two  bills  are  scheduled  to 
*>e  thrown  into  the  legislative  hop- 
per.  These  are: 

(1)  A  bill   placing  an   indivdual 
n   the  board  of  directors  of  the 

V^ictorj'   Village   Day   Care  Center 

(2)  A  bill  completely  revamping 
he  current  Elections  Law. 

Another  item  scheduled  on  the 
-genda  deals  with  the  appointment 
>f  three  individuals  to  the  Graham 
Memorial  board  of  directors.  Of 
the  three,  one  will  be  a  sophomore, 
one  a  junior,  and  one  a  senior. 


.^1* 


i>oard  Instruments  and  Composi- 
ion,  19.31:  and  in  America  at  Man 
hattanville  College.  Her  early  edu 
cation  was  at  Vienna  Academy  o 
Music. 

The  harpsichordist  made  hei 
.\merican  debut  at  concerts  of 
^chola  Cantorum  and  the  Lcagut 
of  Composers  of  1931.  She  con 
certized  throughout  the  Uniter 
States  and  appeared  on  several 
radio  broadcasts. 

Miss  Pessl  was  selected  three 
times  by  Toscanini  to  appear  with 
the  NDC  Symphony;  was  in  charge 
of  programs  of  the  Bach  Circle  and 
ha.s  taught  at  Eastman  School  of 
Music. 

Since  1938  she  has  been  a  fac- 
ulty member  of  Columbia  Univer- 
sity and  Barnard  College.  She  has 
also  made  many  recordings. 

Equally  well  known  is  Mischa 
Mischakoff.  He  is  perhaps  best 
known  as  concertmaster  of  the 
former  NBC  .Symphony  of  Arfuro 
To!5canini. 

The  violinist  was  born  April  3, 
1897,  at  Pro.skoiirv.  Ru.ssia,  and  is 
considered  in  the  great  tradition 
of  Ru  r-ian-born  violinists,  along 
with  such  artists  as  Hcifetz  and 
Milstcin.  Mischakoff  comes  from  a 
large  family  of  well-known  pro- 
fessional   musicians. 

He  wai-  concertmaster  of  the 
New  York  Symphony  Orchestra 
for  four  year  seasons;  of  the 
Philadelphia  Orchestra  under 
Stokowski;  of  the  Chicago  Sym- 
phony; and  accepted  Toscanini's 
invitation  in  1937. 

It  will  be  the  first  Chapel  Hill 
appearance    for   both    artists. 


I      Universitjj'  students     may     now 

make  suggestions  as  to  a  .successor 

for   Chancellor  Robert  House,  ac- 

;  cording  to  student  body  President 

Bob  Young. 

The  suggestion;?  are  to  be  made 
I  to  a  three-man  committee  appoint- 
•  ed  for  the  purpose  by  President 
j  Young.  They  will  be  forwarded 
I  to  President  Young  and  then  to 
i  the  principal  selections  committee 
;  headed  by  R.  Mayne  Albright,  Ral- 
'  eigh  attorney. 

Members  of  President  Young's 
'onimittec  are  Tom  Lambeth.  Son- 
ny Evans,  chairman,  and  Miss  Mar- 
tha   Barber. 

The  committee  was  established, 
according  to  Youn2.  upon  request 
of   Chairman    Albright. 

House  Ls  retiring  at  the  end  of 
the   present    academic   year. 

Albright's  letter  to  Young  sug- 
gesting that  the  student's  voice 
be  heard  in  he  selections  matter 
reads,  in  part: 

"I  write  e.."pecially  to  let  vou 
know  that  our  committe  for  the 
selection  of  a  chancelor  welcomes 
student  suggestions  and  participa- 
tion in  the  choice. 

'We    will    be    pleased    to    have 
you   appear     briefly     before     our 
i  committe  at  its  propo.sed  meeting 
I  on   Oct.  27,  if  you  have  some  re- 
i  pert  to  bring  in  at  that  time." 
Young's  answer,  in  part,  reads: 
"I   am   quite  sure   that   all   stu- 
riepts    realize    that    we    can   never 
find  anyone  to  replace  Chancellor 
House  . .  .  Your  sugge.rtion  for  get- 
ting    student    sentiment    will    be 
used." 


WUNC  Asks 
New  Students 
To  Meeting 

The  University's  radio  station. 
WLfNC.  has  announced  that  a  meet- 
ing will  be  held  tomorrow  at  4;  15 
p.m.  in  Swain  Hall  for  all  new  and 
transfpr  students  inf<^rested  :n 
participating  in  any  phase  of  the 
broaHcasting. 

The  Frequency  Modulation  sta- 
tion is  operated  on  professional 
standards  by  students  in  the  Uni- 
Activties    scheduled    for    Gra-    j  v«rsitv  who  participate  on  a  volun- 


GM  SLATE 


ham  Memorial  today  include: 

Carolina  Forum,  8:15  p.m.. 
Main  Lounge;  Sigma  Kappa  Ep- 
silon,  7  p.m.,  Grail  Room;  Young 
Republicans,  7  p.m.,  Roland  Par- 
ker 1;  Young  Democrats,  7  p.m., 
Roland  Parker  2;  Orientation 
Committee  2  p.m.,  Woodhouse 
Conference  R9om. 


tary  basis.    There  are  no  salaried 

positions  for  students. 

Dave   Setzer.   assistant    manager 

of  the  station,  said  th^re  were  a 
I  limited  number  of  vacancies  still 
j  open  in  all  departments. 
j  Any  interested  students  have 
I  been  urged  to  attend  Friday's 
i  meetmg. 


PAGE  TWO 


THE  DAILY  TAH  HEEL 


Well,  We're  At  It  Again, 
Like  Chickens  Sans  Heads 


GOETTINGEN  LETTER 


\Vt'';t'  Iw'fii  ;4<)in.>5,  to"  classes 
alKUit  a  week,  and  already  it's 
starte«i. 

I  he  laik  of  (oordiuaiioji  of 
campus  exeiits  will  l>t*  shown  bii- 
terly  tonight.  If  yon  re  a  reason- 
al)ly  interested  student,  and  fin- 
ish vonr  stndvinfj;  aronnd  supper- 
time,  (heck  out  of  Lenoir  Hall 
al)oitt  7  j>.m.  and  want  to  do  some- 
thiiii;  besides  ?.»(>  to  tire  movies, 
yon  tan  do  ihesi-  tliitijj.s: 

At  7  p.m.  yoii  can  rij)  over  to 
(irahain  Memorial  and  attend  .i 
Voinig  DenKKrais'  Clid>  meeting. 
Or.  if  von  re  a  Repnhlitan.  von 
tail  go  down  the  hall  and  meet 
with  the  V«>inig  Republicans.  So 
far.  so  gotjd. 

If  you  are  interestetl  in  hearing 
both  sides  of  fijaternity  and  in- 
tlependent.  voull  have  to  run.  A 
^■M(■.  A -sponsored  dist  ussion  of 
the  subjt-tt  starts  at  7  p.m.  in  the 
librar\. 

.Vi  S  p.m.  \ou  (an  hear  a  sthol- 
ar  speak  on  llie  subjett  of  the  Cliv- 
il  War.  He  is  Dr.  Bell  1.  Wiley  of 
I-.morv  rni\ersity.  and  he  speaks 
in  Carroll  Hall.  But  there  are 
(omjilitations.  Dr.  HollingttMi  K. 
roiio.  the  Chinese  ambassador  to 
the  I'jiitod  States,  starts  speaking 
ai  S  (Vclock  in  Hill  Hall. 

If  von  are  still  alive  and  breath- 
ing, you  can  nni  l)a(  k  to  the  dorm- 
itory and  hear  an  Interfraternity 
Couiu  il-sfMmsored  discussion  of 
fraternity  rushing. 

Maybe  von  want  to  attend  some 
of  these  meetings,  take  part  in 
some  of  the  organizations  which 
meet.  It  is  impossible  to  go  to  all 
of  them.  .\nd  it  will  be  hard  to 
decide  what  to  leave  ont;  all  of 
them  are  interesting  atid  educa- 
tional. 

l.aik  of  s<>me  sort  of  campus 
(leariug  house  (.luses  all  those  or- 
ganizations -to  sdvedule  their 
events    «»n    lite    s.Tme    night.    The 


same     lack    will    hold    attendance 
down  at   ail  of  the  e\ents.      ' 

litre's  a  pioblem  student  bodv 
President  l)ob  \"oinig  and  t  Ik- 
Si  udent  Legislature  should  w<»rk 
oui  rapidly.  \\'h\  not  establish  an 
agent  \  of  student  goxernment  to 
nrtiniain  a  st  hedide  of  all  tamp- 
us  e\ents"-  1  he  st  hedule  would  be 
ax.iilable  lo  all  orgajiizations  h)r 
plainiing    pinposcs. 

Then  ni.i\be  wc  wouldn't  ha\e 
the  Chinese  and)assador,  a  Ci\il 
^>  ar  s(  holar  and  both  nation;  I  po- 
lilital  parties  meeling  on  the 
same  night,  plus  two  dist  iissions  (»f 
fiaiemity  life  going  on  at  the 
same    tinu-. 


Governor's 

Dignity 

Remained 

K\erybody  else  has  had  his  say 
(»n  (iov.  Hodges  and  his  drt)pped 
diawcrs.  so  \\e'\\  have  ours. 

The  go\ernor  showed  great 
coinage  to  show  off  North  Ciaro- 
lina-manufa; tmed  skiwies  to  the 
readers  ol  Life  Magazine,  and  he 
kept  his  gidiernatorial  dignity  at 
the   same    time. 

He  obviously  did  a  great  deal 
for  the  state's  industry  — and  in- 
dustry that  will  l)e(()me  more  im- 
}x>rtant  as  more  small  farmers  go 
out  of  birsiness.  He  tfid  it  in  good 
tiimior,  and  he  is  taking  the  after- 
publication  wisetratks  with  a 
grain  of  salt. 

He  helped  us  in-staters.  ttw): 
He  didn't  knt)w  about  the  elastic 
shoelaces  that  are  manufactured 
at  Charlotte.  Went  out  and  got  a 
pair;    they're   excellent. 


Ike's  Already  Forgetting 


Prf^^ru-nt  tisenliower,  we  see 
frtni  iiic  wire  reports  along  cam- 
paign trail,  has  attacked  the  Dem- 
ocrats on  the 
farm    issues. 

I  h  e      Demo- 
crats'   rigid    price 
s  u  p  |)o  r  t     prt)- 
grani.     says     Ike, 
is      a      'jxjlitital 
gtab     iMg"      that 
h  (X I  d  s     nothing 
1>  u  t        "mot  kery 
and    deceit  "     h)r 
.\meritan     farm- 
ers. And  his  opj^onetits  ^lave  been 
"politi(king    at     the    farmers*    ex- 
pense. "   lie  says. 

^V'el!.  well.  well.  We  wonder  if 
candidate  lisenhower  remembers 
the  biggest  jwjiitital  grab  bag  of 
I  he  year  —  his  Soil  Bank  program? 

.And  d()es  he  remember  how 
liard  he  fought  to  get  Soil  liank 
diet  ks  in   the  hands  of  the  larm- 


IKE 


ers    before    the    November    elet  t- 
ions? 

Does  he  remember  how  he  was 
politicking  to  give  the  farmers 
graphic  exidente  (via  fat  (hecks 
at  the  taxpayers'  expense)  of  the 
Republicans'    big   brotherliness? 

Ike's  Soil  liank  ( het  ks  were  be- 
ing mailed  vesteidav  Irom  the  .\g- 
ritiiltural  StatbilizatiiMi  and  i'xnx- 
seiAalion  oflite  in  Hillsboro.  ()l- 
fitf  workers  there  had  (ounted  up 
more  than  S2 1,000  in  checks  for 
tobatto  farmers  and  smaller 
amounts  for  those  who  withheUl 
their  wheat  and  totton  crops. 
Lhats  just  for  Orange  Cotnny, 
too. 

I  sk.  tsk.  .And  Kisenhower's 
talking  about  political  grab  bags. 
Polititians  (t'\cn  intumbents) 
have  ;iwfid  short  memories  along 
alK)ut  the  end  of  .September  of  an 
elet  t  ion  vear.  -        ..  . 

/ 


Congratulations  to  Lhe  Satur- 
day  Kvening  Post. 

The  Post,  long  the  st  ion  of 
.American  weekK  magazines,  (ante 
Ota  this  week  in  favor  of  President 
Lisenhower  for  another  term.  The 
ina>a/ine     gave      its      "tonsidered 


The  Daily  Tar  Heel 

The  official  student  publication  of  the 
Publication.s  Board  of  the  University  of 
North  Carolina,  where  it  is  published 
daily  except  Mondav  and  examination 
and  vacation  periods  and  summer  terms 
Ent«Ted  as  .second  class  matter  in  the 
post  office  in  Chapel  Hill,  N.  C,  under 
the  Act  oi  March  8.  1870.  Subscription 
rates:  mailed,  S4  per  year,  $2.50  a  semes- 
ter; delivered,  $6  a  year,  $3.50  a  semes- 
ter. 


Editor 


FRED  POWLEDGE 


opinion  "  in  the  form  of  a  full- 
page  editorial  titled  'The  Coun- 
try Still  Needs  Kisenhower.' 

Now,  we  don't  agree  with  what 
The  Post  said.  Kven  if  the  (oun- 
trv  did  need  Kisenhower,  it  would 
get  Kisenhower's  friends  for  an- 
other four  veavs,  and  that  defin- 
itely would  J)c  l)ad  lor  the  tountry. 

What  wc  like  is  the  fat  t  th\»t 
The  Post  can\e  out  with  a  vigor- 
ous, full-page  editorial.  In  the 
Ameritan  magazine  industry,  this 
is  an   uncommon   event. 

Magazine  editors  in  general  ap- 
pear to  be  somewhat  scared  to  tell 
.Amerita  what  they  believe.  They 
have  a  great  fear  of  t  ant  el  let!  sub- 
scriptions and  dropped  advertising 
(ontracts.  The  result:  No  editorial 
page,  or  at  best  a  jellied,  watered- 
down  one  that  stirs^ip  no  (ontro- 
versy  and  elicits  no  letters-to-the- 
editor. 


Managiog  Editor  . .  CHARLIE  JOHNSON 


lint    The    Post    ha«    somewhat 
broken    this    barrier.    It's    a    g<»od 
sign    for    the    .American    magazine 
Business  Manager BILL  BOB  PEEL  industry.  ^ 


Getting  Adjusted  To  German  Life 


Dan  Southerland 

(Writer  Southerland  and 
'John  Raper  have  received  the 
stucient  government  scholarship 
to  study  in  Goettingen  Univer- 
sity. They  »rt  presently  study- 
ing German  at  the  Goethe-In- 
stitute  in   Rochei,   Bavaria.) 

:  Since  leaving  the  States  on 
July  3.  I've  spent  ten  days  cross- 
i^ig  the  Atlantic,  a  week  in  Lon- 
don, fi\e  days  in  Goettingen,  and 
a  month  in  the  Ecumemical  Work 
Camp  in  Wie.-.-baden.  On  Septem- 
ber 3,  I  started  a  language  course 
hei*e  at  Roche!  am  Lee  which 
will  last  until  October  28.  Time 
was  also  spent  on  a  short  moun- 
tain-climbing tour  in  Switzer- 
land before  coming  here. 

During  the  week  of  July  13  to 
July  20,  a  Niverian  friend  of 
mine,  probably  the  most  popular 
fellow  on  our  boat,  and  I  stayed 
with  an  English  family  in  the 
suburb-  of  London.  Following 
that,  I  went  on  to  Goettingen 
where  I  met  the  people,  saw  their 
way  of  living  and  also  spoke 
with  t)avid  Mundy,  last  year's  ex- 
change student  to  Goettingen. 

In  the  work  camp  at  Wiesbaden 
we  lived  very  clo.sely  together 
under  rather  crude  conditions. 
The  work  was  down-right  hard, 
which  wa.'  an  unexpected  develop- 
ment. 

The  twenty-five  of  us  in  the 
camp  represented  many  different 
church  denominations  including 
t  h  e  Coptic  and  Orthodox 
Churches.  Our  international 
group  was  made  up  of  people 
from  eight  different  nations.  To- 
gether we  built  a  street  for  the 
workers  of  the  DyckerHoff  Ce- 
ment Company  and  helF>ed  them 
with  the  new  homes  they  are 
building  for  nine  worker's  fam- 
ilies. 

In  Germany  there  i.?  quite  a 
rift  between  the  church  and  the 
industrial  worker.  Therefore  our 
job  was  not  only  to  build  homes 
and  streets  for  the  workers,  but 
to  do  what  we  could  to  strengthen 
the  worker's  relationships  with 
the   church. 

Rochei  is  a  nice,  quiet,  little 
town  of  about  5.000  persons.  It 
is  a  health  resort,  and  as  a  re- 
sult, is  visited  by  quite  a  few 
tourLsts.  1  am  living  with  a  fam- 
ily in  the  town.  Sharing  my  room 
is  a  boy  from  Thailand.  So  far 
my  main  diversions  have  been 
talking  with  the  people  and  get- 
ting to  know  them,  rowing  and 
dancing.  La.;t  weekeUd,  a  friend 
and  I  bicycled  around  some  of 
the    surrounding   countryside. 

While  on  our  cycl<?  trip,  we 
stopped  off  at  a  cloister  in  a 
small  village  and  watched  them 
bring  in  wagons  loaded  with  hay 
from  the  fieltls.  We  went  swim- 
ming, and.  later,  sat  in  the  tav- 
ern of  an  almost  primitive  vill- 
age, watching  the  farmeri'  drink- 
ing beer  and  playing  cards  amid 
shouting  and   roars  of   laughter. 

I'm  satisfied  with  the  .school, 
and  think  that  the  instructors 
are  fairly  good.  Fifty  of  us  from 
nine  nations  are  divided  into 
lour  cla.s.'js.  John  Raper  and  I 
are  in  the  third  class  (next  to 
the  top)  with  about  13  other  stu- 
dents. 

Learning  a  new  language  is  a 
lot  of  fun,  but  also  quite  hard, 
for  even  though  I  learned  quite 
a  bit  of  German  while  at  Wie.s- 
baden.  my  grammar  Ls  still  not 
veffy  good. 


'I  Thought  Sure  This  Was  Where  We  Parked' 


The  Post  Becomes  A  Man        pogo 


(4: 

YOU  Said  It: 

Same  Old  Thing'  Hurts  UNC  Pride; 
Student  Dislikes  Blotter  Feature 


Editor: 

Does  the  University  of  North 
Carolina  live  or  is  it  dead;  or  is 
it  neitTier  exactly,  but  simply 
limping  along  like  a  wounded 
giant'.'  This  is  t-s '.'ntialiy  a  letter 
concerning  f(;otbail.  but  un- 
avoidably it  goes  further  than 
that.  It  is  involved  with  the  prin- 
ciple of  school  spirit  in  general. 

On  Saturday  afternoon,  thirty- 
seven  thousand  football  fans 
found  themselves*  in  Kenan 
Stadium  watching  what  they  were 
ready  to  admit  by '  the  fourth 
quarter  was  "the  .'-ame  old 
thing,  only  worse'.  We  beat 
State   last   year. 

I  don't  know  exactly  what  the 
Carolina  portion  of  that  great 
crowd  expc'dcd,  for  I  don't  be- 
lieve they  knew  too  exactly  them- 
selves. They  expected  something 
to  lift  their  faltering  egos.  That 
much  was  fairly  easy  to  feel. 
And,  when  it  did  not  come,  the 
di.iappointment  was  as  bitter  as 
it  was  silent.  Defeat  was  unac- 
ceptable, yet  unavoidable;  and 
Tar  Heel  pride  lay  shattered  with 
the  broken   whiskey   bottles. 

I  have  faitli  in  the  school,  the 
football  team,  the  human  value 


enoi  jh  to  Ix'lieve  that  there  are 
enough  students  in  this  school 
who  feel  a.- 1  do.  that  we  will  win 
every  last  game  lelt  on  the  sched- 
ule, and  to  make  our  team  know 
it  before  they  leave  for  Okla- 
homa. If  we  let  them  know  that 
we  believe,  win  or  lose,  they  are 
the  best,  nothing  can  stop  them, 
—or  us.  Roy  Talley,   Jr. 

Grad  School 
Dean's  Office 
In  South  Bidg. 

Editor: 

We  read  The  Daily  Tar  Heel 
too.  Reference  is  made  to  your 
column  that  appeared  in  the  Sep- 
tember 14th  issue  entitled  "South 
Building  is  Home  of  UNC's  'Top 
Brads'." 

For  your  irtformation,  the  Grad- 
uate School  is  located  in  202 
South  Building.  While  Dean  W. 
W.  Pier.son  is  away  on  leave  as 
.Acting  Chancellor  of  the  Wo- 
man's College  of  the  University 
of  North  Carolina,  .\ssociatc 
Dean  A.  K.  King  is  carrying  on 
in    his    usual   fa..-hion    in   seeing 


that     our     approximately     1,000 
graduate    students    are    properly 
fuided   in   degree   programs. 
Mrs.  Ruth  Ann  Ford,  Secretary 
Mrs    Allette  Hill,  Secretary 
Mrs.   Sally  Coe,  Secretary 
Mrs.  Shirley  Daye,  Secretary 
Editor: 

.Ml  throughout  orientation  per- 
iod, the  Honor  System  and  the 
Campus  Code  were  given  extra 
stress.  Many  of  the  Council  mern- 
bera*  gave  speeches  concerning 
violations,  trials  and  student 
rights.  It  was  made  clear  to  me 
and  to  my  constituents  that  a 
violator's  name  would  not  be 
publicized. 

In  Tuesday's  Daily  Tar  Heel, 
an  article  was  written  ;'aying  that 
the  Chapel  Hill  police  blotter 
would  be  a  regular  part  of  the 
paper.  If  I  am  not  mistaken, 
many  of  the  violations  on  the 
blotter  are  subject  to  Campus 
Code  trials.  Why,  then,  are  these 
names  now  being  publicized  in 
the  school  paper  when  we  were 
told  that  our  violations  would  be 
kept  silent?  I  believe  that  this 
publication  of  names  to  be  ma- 
licious rather  than  corrective. 
Michael   Fieisher 


By  Wait  Kelly 


I  THiMK  ru.  6rr  INTO  9o*'\i  ot^s?  Veojf 

U«Jg  OF  COMMUMICATICM""  /  W6  ,^ 

IT  AIN'T  AS  WUCH  P'M  5?  ^'  /  CALLIM'? 


H06  A\'wH6er^  \r3ir 

'-wriAfee  voj 


rr  mi  ttJAT  I  c^N'f  v^i 

MAltMAMNIN'""  Bur  TMf  t\K 

eote  jjjT  Of  It  wH^M 


T) 


y~ 


W\H  A  PgCK  Of  P06X  CAEW  TO 

Oilw/iZ  AN'  M5'$  60T  A  3J6y,  ^i 
M?PV  PAY  AHSAP  Of  MI,V\,      ,  \ 
^r—^  PfAPiN'A^J'  CHUCKUNJ'"^ 
<^i^        But  NOWARAY^ 

75^  p?05fEeiTv  eoT  tvse'- 

/    <X^BOQy  A\A1HN'  ^fjff 


Lil  Abner 


By  AI  Capp 


News  Editor  RAY  LINKER 


THURSDAY,  SEPTEMBER  27,  19M 


Letter  Home  On 
Saturday  s  Brawl 

Barry  Winston 

Dear  Folks,  ^      '     ^ 

Well  I  been  pretty  busy  se  thats  why  you  ainl 
heard  nothin  from  me  since  last  week.  I  guec  the 
thing  you  probly  want  to  hear  about  most  is  that 
big  fight  in  the  woods  that  I  went  to  last  Saturday. 
Well  acktully  it  wasnt  much  of  a  brawl.  Anywise 
nothing  like  some  of  the  ones  the  boys  used  to  get 
into  down  in  the  city  every  weekend. 

Me  and  my  roommate  got  there  about  one  thirty 
or  50  and  I  wish  you  could  this  here  place.  We 
was  walking  through  the  woods  and  all  of  a  sudden 

^      there     was     this 
^y§-    big     fence     and 
___„_„»„„       ™_—  couple    a    things 

thaHo^eFlike  purty  solid  outhouses  and  a  couple 
a  million  p&ople  running  around  at  least. 

So  I  s.ays  to  my  roommate  is  it  always  this  many 
people  at  one  of  these  fights  and  he  says  just  wate 
til  the  dock  game  whatever  thai  is. 

So  anyhow  there  we  were  stand!,,  outside  and 
then  we  were  standin  inside  and  then  we  was  at 
the  edge  of  this  big  hill  with  seats  all  around  look- 
in  down  into  a  pretty  green  field  that  made  me 
right  homesick.  .";' 

After  while  we  found  us  a  place  to  sit  down 
and  we  had  no  more  than  got  sat  down  good  when 
a  couple  aguys  come  along  and  said  hey  stupid 
you  got  our  seats  and  I  says  who  me  and  he  says 
yes  you  ^nd  they  was  bigger  than  us  so  we  found 
some  other  seats  that  were  better  anyhow  cau.se 
we  could  see  the  whole  field  better.  Thats  what 
my  roommate  said  anyway. 

Pretty  soon  a  bunch  of  people  came  out  on  the 
field  and  started  running  around  and  after  a  while 
I  said  to  my  roommate  whens  the  fight  goin  to 
start  and  he  said  its  already  the  second  quarter 
dummy  and  I  .said  whats  that  and  said  he  was  go- 
ing to  get  a  drink  and  that  was  the  last  I  seen  of 
him  'til  the  next  day. 

I  got  tired  of  waiting  for  the  fight  to  start  di- 
rectly so  I  left  and  ^ent  back  to  my  room  and  took 
a  nap.  I  never  did  find  who  it  was  that  won  the 
fight  if  they  ever  had  it. 

Guess  I  got  to  tell  you  that  I  had  my  first  date 
last  Saturday  night.  My  roommate  said  he  was 
tired  at  looking  at  me  so  he  fixed  mo  up  with  a 
real  doll.  Thats  what  he  told  me.  Theres  still  a 
whole  lot  about  this  place  that  I  aint  to  clear  on 
but  Im  sur  gonna  find  out  what  a  dol  is  so  HI  know 
better  next  time. 

I  picked  her  up  at  the  dorm  where  she  stays 
about  eight  o'clock  and  the  only  time  she  stopped 
talking  all  night  was  when  she  had  her  mouth  full 
of  popcorn  which  wasnt  very  long  cause  she  finish- 
ed off  those  three  boxes  of  the  stuff  in  about  ten 
minutes. 

I  aint  seen  nothing  like  the  way  that  girl  ate 
popcorn  since  they  had  that  big  steam  shovel  in 
town  diggin  the  basement  for  the  new  store. 

W^hen  we  got  put  of  the  show  she  said  dent  you 
like  to  dance  and  I  said  yes  mam  do  you  know 
anywhere  around  here  where  we  can  go  and  dance 
and  she  said  theres  always  the  rondayvoo  room  and 
I  said  is  it  and  she  said  is  it  what. 

We  never  did  get  it  settled  what  it  was  that 
we  were  talking  about  but  we  did  find  this  ronday- 
voo room  only  we  didnt  stay  long  cause  she  didnt 
know  how  to  square  dance  and  I  didnt  see  any  point 
in  just  sittin  there  watchin  all  those  people  just 
sorta  standin  around  out  in  the  middle  of  the  floor 
while  music  was  playing  so  I  took  her  home. 

When  we  got  there  I  said  I  had  a  real  fine  time 
and  she  said  so  did  I  why  dont  you  call  me  up 
again  for  another  date  sometime  next  fall.  But  I 
bet  she  forgets  my  name  by  that  time  so  I  probly 
wont  bother. 

Ivc  got  to  read,  something  in  my  book  about 
higene  so  I  have  to  close  for  now. 

Your  loving  son, 
.    Barry 


OTHER  NEWSPAPERS  SAY: 

Alabama  Council 
Anti-Rock  'N  Roll 

The  Saint  Louis  Post-Dispatch 

"Rock  and  roll"  music,  so  dear  to  the  hearts 
of  teenagers  as  of  even  date,  has  come  under 
attack  in  Alabama  on— ol  all  grounds!— the  basis 
of  racial  prejudice.  The  leader  of  the  Klan-like 
North  Alabama  White  Citizens'  Council,  Asa  Carter, 
says  some  "rock  and  rcll'  records  are  immoral  and 
he  is  going  to  a.sk  juke-box  operators  to  throw  them 
out.  A  Dixieland  band  leader  in  Birmingham,  Gerald 
Scott,  says  the  songs  aren't  immoral  but  they  are 
"not  even  music  .  .  .  worse  than  bo-bop  or  even 
hillbilly.  " 

Our  authority  on  things  musical,  popular  divi- 
sion, tells  us  that  "rock  and  roll"  is  simply  fast 
blues,  and  is  sometimes  somewhat  suggestive  oc- 
casionally perhaps  a  little  more  than  somewhat,  but 
no  more  so  than  many  other  songs  in  the  popular 
genre  that  neither  rock  nor  roH.  We  suspect,  how- 
ever, that  Bandleader  Scott  is  right  when  he  savs. 
Teenagers  don't  know  what  the  words  mean.  If 
they  did,  they  couldn't  stand  them."  The  words  of 
popular  songs  are  seldom  to  be  borne. 

The  governing  fact  about  the  matter,  howev.r 
IS  tliat  teenagers  love  this  wretched  cater-wauling; 
and  If  they  love  it.  it  is  g^ing  to  stay  until,  in  their 
own  good  time,  they  move  on  to  a  taste  for  some 
thing  that  sounds  worse.  Mr.  Carter  can  put  that 
in  his  pipe  and  swallow  it.  "Rock  and  roll"  music, 
predict  we,  wiU  roU  to  the  punch,  and  rock  right  on. 


THURSDAY,! 


-Fri 

(Continiii 

OJSC,    N.    C. 
College." 
HIGHER  EDI 

"Hie  Board 
during  the 
Commission 
recommendec 
propriation   il 
solidated   Unj 
million  for  ej 
nium  l»57-5£ 

"In  this  t( 
the  sum  of 
creases    for 
here  in  Chap| 

Also  incluj 
mendations  i| 
for  library  b^ 
a  sizable  incr 
quisition  fur 
was  requests 
the  Board,  tl 
general  facul 
main  UniversI 

The   enroll 
sity,  as  of  laS 
sents    an    jn< 
students   in 
said. 

UNC   lists 
State  5.505 
2,329.    "This 
cent  years" 
DORMITORH 

Concerijin^ 
dormitories. 


i  ^i- 


;   f 


F()< 


At 

in  yofl 
you 

down  J 
goodr 
listed 


tani 
(hos 


tol 

P'l 

al 

SI 


f. 


195^ 


THURSDAY,  SEPTEMBER  27.  1956 


THE  bAILY  TAR  HEtL 


PAGE  THREC 


n         —Friday  (Conference— 
I 


aint 
M  the 
lat 

lay. 

vise 
to  get 

I thirty 

We 

Ridden 

this 

and 

nngs 

iuple 


many 

wate 


and 

'as  at 

look- 

le   me 

down  > 

when 

[stupid 

|e  says 

found 

cause 

what 

Ion  the 
while 
join  to 
luarter 
?as  go- 
keen  of 

tart  di- 
id  took 

the 

[•St  date 

le    was 

with   a 

still    a 

llear  on 

11  know 

|e  stays 
Slopped 

luth  full 

finish- 

)ut  ten 

I  girl  ate 
lovel   in 


lent  you 
^u  know 
Id  dance 

)om  and 


.-as  that 
ronday- 
^he  didnt 
my  point 
)ple  just 
[the  floor 
Ime. 

fine  time 

me  up 

111.   But  I 

I  probly 

!>ok   about 
son. 


(Continued  from   Page    I) 

(UNC,  N.   C.   State    aftd   Woman's 

College." 

HIGHER  EDUCATION 

The  Board  of  Higher  Education, 
(luring  the  State  Advisory  Budget 
Commission    hearings    last    week 


passed  by  the  1955  General  As- 
sembly wh€h  enabled  us  to  bor- 
row $5  million— $2  millon  each 
for  UNC  and  State  and  $1  million 
for  WC — for  dormitory  construc- 
tion. 

Last  Saturday  the  Board  of  Trus- 


recommended  to  the  Board  an  ap-  tees  authorized  the  money  and  we 

propriation  increase   for  the  Con-  are  going  ahead,"  he  said, 
solidated   University   of    over  $4.3 

million  for  each  year  of  the  bien-  Housing    for    married    students 

niiim  1957-59.  was  also  discussed  by  Friday.   He 

"In  this  total,"  Friday  said,'  'is  referred  to  the   Board   of  Higher 

thf  sum  o£^97.000  for  salary  in-  Educations  recommendations 

creases    for    the    main    University  which  said  "The  Board  is  greatly 


here  in  Chapel  Hill. 

Also  included  in  these  recom- 
mendations is  the  sum  of  $165,000 
for  library  books.  This  represents 
a  .sizable  increase  for  the  book  ac- 
quisition fund,  he  said.  $50,000 
vva.s    requested    and    approved    by 


concerned  about  housing  of  mar- 
ried students  and  has  come  to  the 
conclusion  that  the  State  cannot 
advisedly  undertake  to  provide 
housing  for  married  students  ex- 
cept thrse  in  professional  schools 
and    those   doing   graduate   work 


the  B«ard,  the  sum  to  be  used  for    ^^'^  ^^'^"  "^  s"ch  cases  only  to  a 
general    faculty    research    for    the    limited  extent.  .^  , 

main  University  here.  ;      The  Board  explained  this  stand 

The  enrollment  at  the  Univer-'  ,^3  taken  because  "most  of  the 
sity.  as  of  Ust  Friday  night,  repre-  {  graduate  and  professional  school 
sents  an  increase  of  over  1,100  j  students  are  older  than  ander- 
students  in  the  three  schools,  he  ]  graduates  and  from  their  ranks  we 

must  recruit  our  college  and  many 


said. 

UNC  lists  6,969  students.  N.  C. 
State  5.505  and   Woman's  College 
2.329.  "This  is  the  highest  in  re- 
cent years"  Friday  said. 
DORMITORIES 

Concerijing   the   need   for   more 
dormitories,   he    said    an    act   was 


of  our  public  school  teachers." 

About  the  three  Negro  girls  who 
applied  and  were  admitted  to  WC 
this  fall,  Friday  said  "The  situa- 
tion at  Greensboro  is  proceeding 
in  an  orderly  fashicm." 


Population  Up 
To  2,500  In 
Last  3  Months 

Chapel  Hill's  population  has 
been  boosted  by  an  estimated  2,500 
persons  over  a  period  of  the  past 
three  months. 

According  to  Tom  Rose,  Chapel 
Hill  city  manager,  this  addition  is 
the  result  of  a  series  ot  annexa- 
tions which  increased  the  total 
land  area  of  Chapel  Hill  by  approx- 
imately 75  per  cent.  The  annexa- 
tions, which  took  place  between 
June  1  and  Sept.  1,  1956,  raised  ! 
the  Chapel  Hill  estimated  popu-  { 
lation  of  9,500  to  12,000  persons,      j 

Rose  stated  that  most  of  the  peo-  j 
pie  living  in  these  fully  developed  j 
outside  areas  work  in  the  town  of  , 
Chapel  Hill  and  had  voted  3  to  1  j 
to  be  included  in  the  town  limits. 
All  services  of  the  town  will  be  1 
extended  to  inelude  these  newly 
annexed  regions. 


YACK  CONTRACTS 

All  organizations  desiring  space 
in  the  1956-57  Yackety  Yack  must 
sign  contracts  in  the  Yack  office 
in  the  basement  of  Graham  Me- 
morial by  Oct.  10,  according  to 
Editor  Tommy  Johnson. 


Concert  Series  Offers 
Special  Student  Price 


Students  Still  Inhabit  Cellar  Of  Cobb  Dorm 

Mitchell  Borden,  at  th?  left,  junior  from  Charlotte,  and  C.  T.  Stephens,  junior  of  Bel  Air,  Md.,  relax 
among  the  crowded  living  conditions  in  Cobb  Dormitory  basement.  Housing  Director  Jim  Wadsworth 
said  yesterday  there  were  still  approximately  50  students  living  there.  The  University  is  in  the  proc- 
ess of  moving  them  out,  but  it  is  going  slow  at  the  present.  Wadsworth  said  it  should  pick  up  next 
week,  however.  He  said  the  big  problem  is  the  lack  of  rooms  in  Conner,  graduate  dorm,  for  graduate 
students  who  ask  for  them,  and  the  lack  of  two-m  an  room?  for  men  who  ask  for  them.  (Photo  by  Nor- 
man  Kantor.) 


A  special  ticket  price  for  the 
Chapbl  .Hill  Concert  Series  is  be- 
ing offered  the  University  student 
body,  t 

A  season  seat  in  the  unreserved 
orchestra  may  be  obtained  for  $5 — 
only  $1.25  per  concert.  Student 
tickets  may  be  purchased  in  the 
office  of  Graham  Memorial  during 
regular  office  hours. 

A  concert  by  Eileen  Farrell  will 
open  the  series  on  Oct.  10.  Oth^r 
presentations  include  a  pair  of 
ballets  by  the  Chicago  Opera  Bal- 
let, a  recital  by  the  world-famed 
Obernkurchen  Children's  Choir, 
and  a  concert  by  virtuoso  pupil  of 
Paderewski.  Witold  Malcuzynski; 
distinguished  artists  for  a  discrim- 
inating audience. 

In  addition  to  this  special  stu- 
dent rate,  the  Concert  Series  has 
adopted  a  new  policy  concerning 
ushers.  Ushers  this  year  will  have 


a  special  section  for  themselves, 
consisting  of  the  first  everal  rows 
of  the  orchestra  section.  After 
seating  the  audience,  they  will  be 
be  allowed  to  hear  the  concert 
from  some  of  the  best  seats  in 
the  house.  AIjo,  each  usher  will 
be  issued  a  free  pass  to  each  par- 
ticular concert  he  works.  This 
pass  will  entitle  a  friend  to  join 
him  in  the  usher's  section  for  the 
concert. 

Students  interested  in  helping 
wth  the  producton  of  the  Ballet 
program  will  receive  two  tickets 
each,  for  the  Ballet,  the  Children's 
Choir,  and  Malcuz>'nski.  Students 
interested  in  this  series  or  in  ush- 
ering have  been  invited  to  con- 
tact Mrs.  Douglas  Fambrough  in 
the  GM  office  between  the  hours 
of  9  to  12  in  the  morning,  or  see 
John  Ludwig  at  the  St.  Anthony 
Hall. 


QaCanQOfi 


with 


t Author  of  '-Bmrtfo^t  Baf  H'llA  Chmk,"  «te.} 


FOOTBALL:  ITS  CAUSE  AND  CURE 

At  next  Saturday's  football  game,  while  you  are  sitting 
in  your  choice  student's  seat  on  the  ten-yard  line,  won't 
you  give  a  thought  to  Alaric  Sigafoos? 

Who,  you  a.sk.  is  Alaric  Sigafoos?  Corae  closer,  sit 
down,  light  a  Philip  Morris,  .savor  that  natural  tobacco 
goodness,  sigh  contentedly,  cross  your  fat  little  legs,  and 
li.sten. 

Alaric  Sigafocs  (186S-1934)  started  life  humbly  on  a 
farm  near  Thud,  Kan.^as.  His  mother  and  father,  both 
named  Ralph,  were  bean-gleaners,  and  Alaric  became  a 
bean-gJeaner  too.  But  he  soon  tired  of  the  work  and  went 
to  Memphis  where  he  got  a  job  with  a  logging  firm.  Here 
the  ex-bean-gleaner  worked  as  a  stump-thumper.  Then 
he  drifted  to  Texas  where  he  tidied  up  oil  fields  (pipe- 
wiper  K  Then  to  Arizona  where  he  strung  dried  fruit 
(fig-rigger).  Then  to  Virginia  where  he  was  a  research 
assistant  (book-looker).  Then  to  Long  Island  where  he 
dressed  poultry  (duck-plucker ) .  Then  to  California  where 
he  lectured  young  women  who  were  about  to  get  married 
(bride-chider).  Then  to  Minnesota  where  he  cut  up  frozen 
lakes  (ice-slicer).  Then  to  Nevada  where  he  determined 
the  odds  in  a  gambling  house  (dice-pricer).  Then  to 
Milwaukee  where  he  pasted  camera  lenses  together 
(Zeiss-splicer). 

Finally  he  went  to  Omaha  where  he  got  a  job  in  a 
tannery,  beating  pig-hides  until  they  were  soft  and  supple 
(hog-flogger).  Here  he  found  happiness  at  last. 


}ie  fpUiiicf  happittCSi  <f/  Uit"- 


Why,  you  ask,  did  he  find  happiness  at  last  as  a  hog- 
flogger?  Light  another  firm  and  fragrant  Philip  Morxis, 
taste  that  true  tobacco  flavor,  puff,  relax,  let  sweet  lassi- 
tude possess  your  limbs,  and  listen. 

Next  door  to  the  hog-floggery  was  an  almond  grove 
owned  by  a  girl  named  Chimera  Emrick.  Chimera  wa-s  . 
pink  and  white  and  marvelously  hinged,  and  Alaric  was 
hopelessly  in  love  the  moment  he  clapped  eyes  on  her. 
Each  day  he  came  to  the  almond  grove  to  woo  Chimera, 
but  to  no  avail.  He  tried  with  all  his  vigor  and  guile, 
but  she,  alas,  stayed  cool. 

Then  one  day  Alaric  got  a  brilliant  idea.  It  was  the 
day  before  the  annual  Omaha  Almond  Festival.  On  this 
day,  as  we  all  know,  every  almond  grower  in  Omaha 
enters  a  float  in  the  big  parade.  The  floats  always  consist 
of  large  cardboard  almonds  hanging  from  large  cardboard 
almond  trees.  • 

Alaric's  inspiration  was  to  stitch  pieces  of  pigskin 
together  and  inflate  them  until  they  looked  like  big, 
plump  almonds.  "These  sure  beat  skinny  old  cardboard 
almonds,"  said  Alaric  to  himself.  "Tomorrow  they  will 
surely  take  first  prize  for  Chimera,  and  she  will  be  mine !" 

Early  the  next  morning  Alaric  came  running  to 
Chimera  with  his  inflated  pigskin  almwids,  but  she,  alas, 
told  him  .she  was  not  entering  a  float  that  year.  In  fact, 
she  had  just  sold  her  almond  grove  ar.d  was  moving  East 
to  try  out  with  the  Boston  Red  Sox. 

Alaric,  upon  hearing  these  glum  tidings,  flew  into  a 
violent  rage.  He  started  kicking  his  j)igskin  almonds  all 
over  the  place.  And  who  should  be  walking  by  at  that 
very  instant  but  Abner  Doubleday! 

Mr.  Doubleday,  who  had  invented  baseball  some  years 
earlier,  was  now  trying  to  invent  football,  but  wHhout 
success.  The  trouble  was,  he  couldnt  figure  out  what  kind 
of  ball  to  use.  Nov/,  seeing  Alaric  kick  the  pigskin 
spheroids,  his  problem  was  suddenly  solved.  "Eureka !" 
he  cried,  and  ran  to  his  drawing  board,  and  the  rest  is 

history  .  ^^^^  Shulm»n.  1953 

When  you  go  to  next  Saturday'it  game,  the  mmlten  of  PMUp 
Morru,  aponaort  of  thU  column,  tuggeat  you  take  along  tkm 
perfect  football  eompmnion-Philip  MorrU,  of  eorrUt 


Covering  The  Campus 


Placement  Officer  Named 


ENGLISH  CLUB 

The  first  social  meeting  of  the 
Elngl'sh  Club  for  the  fall  semester 
will  be  held  tonight  in  the  Library 
Assembly  Room  at  7.30.  Refresh- 
ments will  be  served.  All  old  mem- 
bers and  all  new  graduate  students 
in  EInglish  have  been  invited  to 
attend. 

II4000R  POOL 

The    indoor   swimming    is    open 
for    recreational    swimming    Won 
days  through  Friday  from  4-6  p.m.. 
Saturdays  from  2-6  p.m.  and  Sun 
days  from  2-5  p.m.  Women  swim-  j 
mers  may  wear  their  own  bathing 
suits,    but    men    students    are    re-  : 
quired   to   wear   the   special   suits ! 
issued  by  the  gym.  I 

YDC 

The  Young  Democrats  will  meet  j 
in  Roland  Parker  Lounges  2  and  : 
3  of  Graham  Memorial  tonight  at  1 
7.  A  recording  of  the  national  con-  1 
vention  keynote  speech  by  Cover- 1 
I  nor  Frank  Clement  of  Tennessee 
will  be  presented. 

I  WUNC 

Today's  schedule  for  WUNC,  the 
University's  FM  rado  station,  91.5 
megacycles:  .  .         , 

12:44 — Sign  On 
12:4.'5 — Music 

1:00— Today  On  Farm 

1:30— Music  In  View 

2:00— Your  Child  ,  *  '       . 

2:30— Sign  Off  •   .  '  ■  v 

5:44 — Sign  On 

5:45 — Music 

6:00— Magic  Lantern       * 

6:30— News 


CLASSIFIEDS 


^STUDENT  WANTFD  FOR  PART- 
time  work,  preferably  upper- 
classman  with  automobile  who 
has  some  circulation  experience 
on  newspapers.  Guaranteed  sal- 
ary plus  commission.  Write  Box 
XYZ,  stating  qualifications  and 
giving  references. 


LOST:  WILL  PERSON  WHO,  UN- 
intentionally  or  otherwise,  took  a 
B.  A.  72  text.  Elementary  Ac- 
counting, from  Lenoir  Hall  be- 
tween 9  &  9:30  a.m.  Wed.,  Sept. 
26,  return  it  to  owner.  Bob  Ga.il- 
lard,  21a  AjFcook 


6:45 — Sports 

7:00— Mental  Gymn. 

7:15— Bible  Course 

8:00— Dr.  Shivers 

8:4.5 — State   Government 

9:30 — American  Holiday 
10:00— Final  Edition 
10:05— Sign  Off 


Miss  Margaret  McGowan  has  ac- 
cepted a  position  as  assistant  di- 
rector of  the  University  Placement 
Service,  succeeding  Miss  Marcella 
Harrer. 

Formerly  associated  with  the 
Wachovia  Bank  and  Trust  Com- 
pany of  Charlotte,  she  began  her 
new  duties  a  week  ago. 

Miss  McGowan  will  offer  coun- 


sel and  advice  to  students,  particu- 
I 
larly   senior   women    desiring   em- 

j  ployment  on  completing  academic 

I  studies. 

I  The  Placement  Service,  directed 
I  by  J.  M.  Galloway,  aids  all  univer- 
'  sity  students  in  securing  jobs  by 
I  arrangement  with  perspective  em- 
ployers. 


Broadcasters  Will  Hold 
Meet  Here  This  Weekend 

Some  50  directors  and  broad- 
casters from  radio  and  television 
stations  in  the  two  Carolinas  are 
expected  here  this  weekend  for  the 
fail  nreeting  of  the  Radio  and  Tele- 
vision News  Directors  Association 
of  the  Carolinas. 

Ernie  Greup  of  Station  WTVD- 
TV,  Durham,  president  of  the  As- 
sociated Press's  television  report- 
ers   a^'sociation,    said    Vice    Presi- 1 
dent  Lyle  C.  Wilson     of     United  j 
Press,  Washington,  D.   C.  will  be  j 
keynote  speaker  at  the  semi-annual ! 
meeting  at  the  Carolina  Inn.  ! 


When  YouVe 
Broke . . . 

Come  loaf  in 

Good  Company 

in  that  amiable 

emporium 

The  Intimate 
Bookshop 

205    E.  FRANKLIN   ST. 
OPEN  TILL   10  P.M. 


iil  « 


LOST  —  BILLFOLD  FRIDAY  IN 
Lenior  Hall  or  Law  School  be- 
tween 10  a.m.  and  noon.  Con- 
tains valuable  personal  papers 
and  approximately  $200.  Money 
for  nurses  attending  my  wife 
who  has  a  fatal  disease.  If  finder 
feeis  he  needs  money  more  than 
hie,  please  return  papers.  $20 
reward  offered  for  honesty.  Con- 
tact B.  M.  Murry  at  Law  School. 

LOST:  ONE  WIVE'S  PASSBOOK. 
Lost  Saturday  in  or  around  Ken 
an  Stadium.  Finder  please  call 
9-6362. 


NEW  1956  SAV-A-STAA/iP  CATALOG  JUST  OUT! 

NOW-EXCITING  NEW  itsmmm 


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A  wonderful  New  Catalog  with  hundreds  of  thrilling,  Tamous- 
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you  finer  free  gifts  faster!  If  you  have  not  received  your  caUlog 
in  the  mail,  ask  for  one  at  your  Colonial  Store. 


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HALF  LOIN  ROAST  ibVavg  lb  53c 


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ATTENTION:  ALL  PHYSICS  MA- 
jors,  students  of  physics,  and  in- 
terested persons  are  reminded 
that  there  will  be  a  meeting  of 
the  physics  club  on  Thursday  at 
»  p.m.  in  250  Phillips  Hall. 

1-5834-2 

SUNDAY  NEW  YORK  TIMES  DE- 
livered  to  your  door.  For  further 
information  call  8-0572  or  8-0368 
after  5  p.m.  1-5833  5 

STUDENTS  EXPERIENCED  ON 
Linotype  or  open  presses  may 
obtain  part  time  work  at  Colon- 
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PAGI  ^OUt 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HBBL 


THURSDAY,  SEPTEMBER  27,  1f54 


Soccer  Team  Will  Be  Strong  Contender  For  ACC  Title 


Booters  To  Be  More 
Powerful  This  Season 


By  DICK  TANNENBAMM 

This  year  the  North  Carolina 
Soccer  team  looks  to  be  one  of 
the  strongest  contenders  for  the 
Atlantic  Coast  Soccer  Crown  with 
probably  the  best  team  in  its  his- 
tory on  hand. 

Coach  Mar\in  Allen  said,  "This 
year's  team  is  better  than  last 
j-ear's  and  they  like  to  play  soc- 
cer." 

The  toughest  team  to  beat  will 
be  Maryland,  who  has  won  the 
ACC  crown  every  year  since  it 
was  started  in  1953. 

The  others  in  this  conference 
»re  Duke  (who  had  one  of  the 
strongest  freshman  teams  last 
year,  most  of  it  to  be  used  on  the 
varity    this    year),    Virginia,    and 

Meeting  Held 
To  Push  Gym 
Team  Here 

A  group  of  veteran  gj'mnasts 
held  an  informal  meeting  last 
night  in  Joyner  Dormitorj'  to  dis- 
cuss the  possibility  of  having  a 
gjmnastics  team  here  this  year. 

Gymnastics  has  been  discontin- 
ued as  an  intercollegiate  sport  ait 
use  due  to  the  lack  of  a  coach. 
Last  year's  coach.  Bill  Meade,  left 
the  University  this  summer  to  be- 
come head  gymnastic  coach  at 
Southern  Illinois  University. 

It  has  been  reported  that  gym 
nasties  was  dropped  here  due  to 
lack  of  interest  in  the  sport.  How- 
ever, it  was  pointed  out  at  the 
meeting  that  interest  in  the  sport 
has  not  waned.  For  the  first  time 
there  are  freshmen  enrolled  in 
school  who  have  had  previous 
gymnastic  experience.  In  addition, 
there  are  fifteen  returning  squad 
me#ibers. 

About  twenty  students  were  at 
the  meeting,  and  representatives 
were  appointed  to  meet  with  Ath- 
letic Director  Chuck  Erickson  on 
Menday.  This  group  will  ask  Ath- 
letic Director  E^rickson  to  investi- 
gagte  the  possibility  of  resuming 
gymnastics  as  an  intercollegiate 
sport. 

The  representatives  will  report 
their  findings  at  a  meeting  Mon- 
day night  at  7  o'clock  in  Room 
102,  Joyner  Dormitory.  All  persons 
interested  in  resuming  gymnas- 
tics have  been  invited  to  attend. 


N.  C.  State. 

Captained  by  one  of  last  year's 
co-captains,  Grover  Brown,  the 
team  is  in  good  physical  cocndi- 
tion.  Many  lettermen  are  back  to 
form  the  backbone  and  with  the 
players  from  last  year's  freshman 
team  coming  up,  Coach  Allen 
hopes  .to  have  a  "winner." 

Oa  the  forward  line  will  be  John 
Foster  at  left  wing.  Ted  Jones  or 
Ted.Yohanna  (Yohanna  is  a  trans- 
fer student  from  a  Junior  College 
and  is  not  affected  by  the  usual 
rule  of  waiting  one  year  before 
playing  a  sport)  at  left  inside, 
Grover  Brown  at  center  forward. 
Coleman  Barks,  a  Morehead  Schol- 
ar, at  right  inside,  and  Pat  Mc- 
Cormick  at  right  wing.  Brown, 
Foster,  and  McCormick  are  return- 
ing lettermen. 

The  backs  will  be  Bob  Borden 
at  left  half.  Dave  Corkey  at  center 
half.  Bill  Blair  at  right  half,  Ted 
Jones  at  left  fullback,  and  Mike 
Galifianakis,  a  returnee  from  the 
armed  services,  at  right  fullback. 
Blair,  Jones,  and  Galifianakis  are 
returning  lettermen. 

The  goalie  will  be  Chuck  Hart- 
man  who  was  one  of  the  contend- 
ers for  all-conference  goalie  last 
year. 

Coach  AJlen  has  expressed  the 
wish  that  as  many  people  as  pos- 
sible attend  the  games  this  year 
to  cheer  the  boys  on.  He  also 
stated  that  although  the  freshman 
team  is  already  working  under  the 
direction  of  Mr.  .John  Wienants 
(who  played  goalie  for  the  team 
that  won  the  National  Soccer 
Championship  last  year),  he  would 
appreciate  it  if  any  other  boys 
who  are  interested  in  the  sport 
would  come  down  and  try  out  for 
the  team. 


Cagers  Engage 
Utah  In  Classic 

Coach  Frank  McGuire's  Tar 
Hdel  cagers  will  meet  the  Uni- 
versity of  Utah  in  the  opening 
round  of  the  Dixie  Classic,  which 
begins*  m  Raleigh,  December  27. 
Utah  is  the  defending  champion 
of  the  Skyline  Conference. 

McGuire  drew  the  Utes  at  a 
meeting  of  the  Big  Four  basket- 
ball coaches  held  in  Raleigh  yes- 
terday. 


Carolina  Caravan 


By  JAKE  WADE 

This  week  it's  mighty  Oklahoma 
for  the  humbled  Carolina  Tar 
Heels.  It's  a  long  journey  out  there 
and  it  could  be  a  longer  one  back, 
but  heads  are  high  here. 

Maybe  the  loss  to  N.  C.  State 
isn't  forgotten,  but  on  the  practice 
field  and  in  the  coaches'  inner 
councils  right  jjow  there  is  talk 
only  of  those  great  Sooners  and 
this  week's  ball  game. 

The  Tar  Heels  were  soundly 
whipped  last  Saturday  by  a  mighty 
fine  N.  C.  State  team,  but  there 
does  not  appear  to  be  a  defeatist 
attitude  on  the  vanquished  squad 
as  it  prepares  for  its  contest  with 
the  team  ranked  number  one  in 
the  nation. 

•  «     • 

THE  TRIP!— The  Tar  Heels  will 
have  a  good  many  supporters  in 
that  60,000  sellout  crowd  at  Nor- 
man this  week. 

University  alumni  living  out 
there  in  the  open  spaces  have 
planned  a  luncheon  in  the  Univer- 
sity  of  Oklahoma  student  union 
buildihg,  beginning  at  11  o'clock 
Saturday,  game  day. 

Jack  Davidson  ('38)  is  heading 
the  arrangements  with  alile  assist- 
ance from  Dr.  J.  J.  lUiyne  ('19), 
James  E.  Webb  ('28),  Dick  Buck 
('37)  and  others. 

Mr.  Webb,  former.  UiMlersecre- 
tary  of  State  and  Director  of  the 
United  States  Budget,  has  written 
letterr  to  alHmni  throughout  the 
Southwest  in  drumming  up  a 
crowd. 

And  that  Dick  Buck  is  the  one 
time  Tar  Heel  star  end  who  cap- 
tained the  1936  team.  Dick's  big- 
gest moment  perhaps  was  in  1934 
when  he  was  a  sensational  pass 
catcher  in  a  7-0  win  over  Duke. 
Among  his  teammates:  Jim  Tatum. 

♦  •    • 

FROM  HBRll— A  number  of 
Chapel  Lilians  also  will  be  out 
there  to  see  the  Tar  Heels  in  theur 
brave  challenge  against  the  Soon- 
ers. 

The   Tv  Heeb   will   travel    by 


chartered  airplane  and  they  were 
able  to  get  one  of  those  really  big 
ones  for  this  journey.  In  addition 
to  the  squad  and  its  attaches,  there 
will  be  the  travelling  press  and 
some  distinguished  guests  from  the 
faculty. 

A  large  and  fine  press  will  ac- 
company the  Tar  Heels  to  Norman 
and  the  folks  back  home  will  be 
well  and.  expertly  advised  about 
the  game,  win,  lose  or  draw.  Ray 
Reeve  will  broadcast  it  over  the 
Tobacco  Sports  network,  with  his 
old  sidekick.  Bill  Currie,  doing  the 
color. 

Incidentally,  this  year  there  are 
nearly  60  stations  affiliated  with 
the  Tobacco  Sports  network,  mak- 
ing it  one  of  the  largest  in  the 
nation  and  definitely  the  largest  in 
its  history. 

*     ♦     * 

FOOTBALL  WEIGHTS— Some  of 

the  customers  may  be  confused 
about  weights  of  North  Carolina 
players,  since  two  sets  have  ap- 
peared in  printed  form. 

Football  weights  are  variable.  In 
an  original  list,  weights  of  Caro- 
lina players  of  last  spring  were 
used.  For  the  official  roster  this 
year,  the  weights  of  the  players, 
as  t^ken  at  their  physical  exam- 
inations, were  published. 

The  latter  are  those  shown  on 
the  center  spread  of  the  Carolina 
game  programs.  Even  those  cannot 
be  guaranteed,  as  the  weights  of 
players  frequently  change  and 
some  of  our  big  fellows  have  work- 
ed off  weight  since  these  were 
taken,  or  maybe  even  added  a  few 
pounds  on  their  grade-A  cuisine. 

In  the  old  days  a  lot  was  made 
of  weights,  and  coaches  and  school 
officials  frequently  were  charged 
with  altering  the  weights  for  pub- 
lication. I  doubt  if  any  school  does 
this  any  more.  Coaches  think  more 
about  speed  than  beef  these  days 
and  it  is  old  hat  trying  to  con- 
fuse a  foe  about  weights. 

Sooner  or  later  we  will  have  all 
our  weights  jibe  in  the  statistical 
program  which  hounds  the  sports 
publicity  offices  these  days. 


Gridders  Work  Inside 
As  Hurricane  Strikes 


The  »kirts  of  Flossy  forced  Car- 
olina's Tar  Heels  indoors  for  the 
first  time  yesterday  afternoon  as 
wind  and  heavy  rain  assaulted  the 
campus  all  day. 

Coach  Jim  Tatum  had  his  forces 
in  Woollen  Gym  running  through 
offensive  and  defensive  forma- 
tions. Rain  failed  to  halt  Tar  Heel 
work  Tuesday,  as  the  team 
prepped  for  its  date  with  mighty 
Oklahoma  .Saturday. 

Trainer  John  Lacey  reported 
that  star  halfback  F>i  Sutton's 
bruised  elbow  was  responding  to 
treatment  and  that  the  Cullowjice 
('omet  should  be  ready  for  full 
scale  work  against  the  Sooners. 
Sutton  bruised  the  joint  in  the 
opening   loss  to  N.  C.  State. 


TOGETHER 
for  the  first  time! 

\ 

WHAT 
ERTEITMMIEKT! 


UlnlDS  is  the  most 

scandalous  foreign  Affair* 

in  laugh  history! 


Bums  Lose  To  Philly, 
Fall  One  Game  Behind 


BROOKLYN  «»— The  Philadel 
phia  Phillies  defeated  Brooklyn 
today,  7-3,  knocking  .the  second 
place  I>odgers  a  full  game  behind 
the  idle  Milwaukee  Braves  in  the 
tense  National  League  pennant 
race.  Brooklyn  and  Milwaukee 
now  have  only  three  more  games 
to  play,  and  the  Dodgers  are  one 
down  in  the  important  loss  col- 
umn. 

If  Milwaukee  can  sweep  its  3- 
game  series  opening  Friday  night 
at  St.  Louis  and  ending  Sunday, 
the  Braves  can  clinch  the  flag  re- 
gardless of  whether  Brooklyn 
sweeps  its  set  at  home  against 
Pittsburgh  starting  Friday  night. 

Robin  Roberts,  who  had  lost  his 
last  four  decisions  to  the  Dodgers, 
slipped  over  the  deadly  body  blow 
this  time  as  he  held  the  Brooks 
to  five  hits,  two  of  them  home 
runs  by  Duke  Snider.  They  were 
his  40th  and  41st  of  the  year. 

Phladelphia  jumped  on  Don 
Newcombe,  Dodger  ace  who  had 
won  eight  in  a  row  and  was  26-6 
for  the  year,  with  a  3-run  blast 
in  the  second  inning.  Roberts  won 
his  19th  victory  against  17  losses. 

The  box: 
Philadelphia 
Ashburn,  cf  .... 
Blaylock,  lb  _.. 

Lopata,  c  

Ennis,  If 

Jones,  3b  .^ 

Valo,  rf  3 

Hemus,  2b 

Roberts,  p  

Smalley,  ss 


Totals    __'„ 

Brooklyn 

Gilliam.  2b 

Reese,  ss  

Snider,  cf  

Robinson,  3b  . 
Amoros,  If  ...„ 

Hodges,  lb  

Furillo,  rf  ..^._ 
Campanella,  c 
Newcombe,  p 

Bessent,  p  

a-Mitchell   

Labine,  p  


2,  Bessent  2.  HO — 'Newcombe  5  in ' 
5,  Bessent  5  in  3,  Labine  0  in   1. 
R—E21— Roberts     3-2,     Newcombe  | 
4-2,  Bessent  3-3,  Labine  0^.  HBP— 
By   Newcombe   (Hemus).   W— Rob- 
erts  (19-17).   L— Newcombe   (26-7). 


NEW  FACES 

-  On  the  48^  Shelf 
~  On  the  72<  Shelf 

-  On  the  97i  Shelf 

IT'S  FUN  TO  BUY 
OLD  BOOKS  AT 

THE  INTIMATE 

BOOKSHOP 


205   E. 
Open 


Franklin   St. 
Till   10  P.M. 


■ 


Tailored 
SUITS 

AS  YOU  LIKE  THEM 

W*  aro  ropretenting  fhe  finost 
ivy  tailoring  house — D'Alonzo- 
Lancaster.  Perfect  fit  quaran- 
tood — all  choice  patterns  avail- 
able— Delivsry — 3    weeks — from 

$64.00 

Clotftintt  Cupboarb 


5  ^^JhassadorS  • 

■■  *  .n  CINKMaScOP^ 

»  TCCNMCOUM  •  ItHnnd  THru  Umtti  ArtMi 

LAST  TIMES  TODAY 


M-GM  presenb 

A  SOL  C.  SIEGEL 
PRODUCTION 

starring 

BING  CROSBY 

GRACE  KELLY 

FRANK  SINATRA 

in  the  hilarious  low  down  on  high  life 

"HIGH 
j  SOCIETY" 

I       lo  VISTAVISION  and  COLOR 

i      CELESTE  HOLM 
i  ^   JOHN  LUND 
[  LOUIS  ARMSTRONG 

I  t  AND  HIS  BAND 

j  15?:l^ COLE  PORTER- 

I         PRICES  THIS  ATTRACTION 
ADULTS   65^     CHILDREN    15( 

j  NOW  PLAYING 


CORDUROY  I 

hasa 
greater  percentage  of  ^ 

DACRON 

WASH  'N  WEAR 

conoN 


TiWurre 


Dacron  woven  in  the  length 

and  in  the  width 

of  the  fabric 

to  give  you  the  maximum 

comfort  and 
long-lasting  good  looks 

Julians 


■Cii  Hm  Wa<»watt  l«r  r«(vMt*r  ihm 


AB 

H 

0 

A 

5 

1 

1 

1 

4 

0 

9 

1 

5 

1 

9 

1 

5 

3 

2 

0 

4 

1 

2 

2 

3 

1 

2 

0 

3 

'  1 

2 

3 

3 

0 

0 

0 

4 

2 

0 

1 

36 

10 

27 

9 

AB 

H 

0 

A 

4 

0 

1 

5 

4 

0 

3 

3 

4 

3 

5 

0 

4 

0 

0 

2 

4 

1 

0 

0 

3 

1 

11 

0 

2 

0 

3 

1 

3 

0 

4 

0 

2 

0 

0 

1 

0 

0 

0 

0 

1 

0 

0 

0 

0 

0 

0 

0 

Totals „ 31       5     27     12 

a — Struck  out  for  Bessent  in  8th. 

Philadelphia  031  000  304—7 

Brooklyn  110  001  000—3 

R — Lopata,  Ennis  3,3  Jones, 
Valo.  Hemus,  Snider  2,  Amoros. 
E — Amoros  Lopata.  RBI — Snider  2, 
Smalley  2,  Roberts,  Ennis  ^ones  2, 
Valo.  2B — Smalley,  Hodges,  Snider, 
Valo.  HR— Snider  2,  Ennis.  SF— 
Roberts.  DP — ^Furillo  and  Hodges. 
Left—Philadelphia  6,  Brooklyn  2 
BB — ^Roberts  1,  Newcombe  1,  Bes- 
*  sent  1.  SO — ^Roberts  10,  Newcombe 


DAILY 

ACROSS 

1.  Remove 

beard 
6.  Bundle  of 

wheat 

11.  Greek 
poet 

12.  Net-like 
fabric 

13.  Leave  out 
i4.  To  hold 

conferenca 

15.  Free 

16.  Dove's  call 

17.  Biblical  city 

18.  Half  an  em 

19.  Dry 

20.  Indian 
(Utah) 

21.  Emblem 

23.  Compass 
point 

24.  Lofty 
mountain 

25.  Moimtain 
defile 

26.  Belonging 
to  me 

28.  Touch 

lighUy 
31.  Frozen 

water 
S2.  Found  on 

a  leashore 
t3.  Exclama- 

tion 
34.  Chinese 

river 
S5.  Emmet 
86.  Part  of 

the  faca 
37.  Copier  oi 

manu> 

scripts 

40.  Manuf  ae« 
ture 

41.  Shun 

42.  Mistake* 
(slang) 

43.  Prevent 


CROSSWORD 

44 


Measures 

(Heb.) 
DOWN 
1.  Props 
2  grita 

3.  Amon^ 

4.  Velerinar. 
ian  (short* 
ened) 

5.  Erbium 
(sym) 

6.  Endured 

7.  A  vandal 

8.  Sprite 

9.  Aleutian 
natives 

10.  WeaseMikt 

animal 
14.  Wind 
16.  Harvest 
19.  Dexterous 


» 


20  Afri. 
can 
river 

22.  Hair 
on 

horse's 
neck 

23.  Part 
of 
a 
sentence 

28.  Jargon 

26.  Failed 
to  hit 

27.  PendanI 
of  ice 

28.  Walking 
stick 

29.  Member  of 
Millennial 
Church 


YMterdsr'a  A«»ir«s 
SO.  Planters 
32.  Cavalry 

sword 
36.  Girl's  nam* 

38.  Groove 

39.  Chemical 
suffix 

40.  Mother 
42.  Small  \>of 


uv 


THE  PATIO 

I 

Afternoon  Cocktail  Hour 
1-5  P.  M. 


•^j- 


■X,-: 


m 


12  Oz   BEER  25c 
16  Oz.  BEER  35c 

Membership  Cards  For 
1956-57  Season 

Now  On  Sale 


j-'«-^^?i 


^'/.. 


:'i  .i» .  •»»• 


Avoid  Cover  Charge 

GOLF   DRIVING    RANGE 
BEER-DANCING 

THE  PATIO 


■BBSflBSHIP^S 


SERIALS  DEFT. 

BOX  870 

CHAPEL  HILL,    N.c. 


WEATHER 

Continued  heavy  rains,  with  ex- 
pected high  of  65-70. 


m  e  lOaily  |i  ^Tar  Heel 


DEMAND 

Editor   sees  demand    for    libeul 
arts  majors.  See  page  2. 


VOL.   LVm,     NO.   7 


Complete  (/P)  Wire  Service 


CHAPEL  HILL,  N.  C.  FRKXAY,  SEPTEMBER  28,  1956 


Office;!   in   Graham    Memorial 


FOUR   PAGES  THIS    ISSUE 


Phi  Defeats  Bill 
To  Exclude  Coeds 


t,..^^^' 


"A  Bill  to  Elxclude  Women  from 
th€  University  of  North  Carolina" 
was  defeated  Tuesday  night  in 
tlte  initial  meeting  this  term  of 
the  Philanthropic  Literary  Socie- 
ty. 

The  bill  was  defeated  by  a  vote . 
of  26  to  8.  i 


are  19  million  working  women  ia 
the  United  States,  constituting  one 
third  of  Americas'  working  force. 
For  these  jobs,  women  must  be 
trained.  They  need  more  educa- 
tion, not  less." 

The  debate  followed  a  history  of 
the  Phi.  now  in  its  161st  year,  b/ 


Legislature  Calls  For  Removal 

Of  Columbia  St.  Parking  Ban; 

Campus  Coordination  Asked 


Miss      Katherine      Carmichael,  j  Past-Speaker  John   Curtis. 
Dean  of  Women,  stated  in  opposi- !      Speaker      Lawrence      Matthews 
tion  to  the  proposed  bill,  'There    presided  at  the  session. 


New  Fashions,  Jewelry 
Appearing  For  Coeds 


Tong  Lambasts  Communists 

Hollington  K.  Tong,  Chinese  Ambassador  to  the  U.S.,  is  shown 
above  as  he  told  a  Hill  Hall  audience  last  night  of  his  views  on  the 
communists  in  Asia.  The  speech  was  the  first  this  year  to  be  present- 
ed   under   the   sponorhip  of   the   Carolina   Forum. 

(Photo  by  Norman  Kantor) 

Tong  Hits  New  Policies 
Of  Double-Talk  Masters 

By  NEIL  BASS  weapon  •'after  a  period  of  frantic 

"The  Communists,  since  the  days  ,  preparation." 
of  Lenin,  have  been  past  masters  |  Dr.  Tong  called  this  action  "hy- 
in  the  art  of  double-talk."  Chinese  ;  pocrisy  '  citing  how  on  March  31, 
ambas.sador  to  the  U.S.  Hollington  \  of  this  year  "Russia  proposed  with 
K.  Tong  told  an  audience  in  Hill  j  a  straight  face  at  the  London  dis- 
Hall  last  night. 

Ambassador  Tong's  speech  was 
presented  under  the  auspices  ol 
the  Carolina  Forum,  ,Jim  Holmes, 
chairman. 

Tong  assailed  the  new  commu- 1 
nist  policy  of  "peaceful  co-exist- : 
ence."  by  saying: 

■"A  communist  does  not  use  such 
an  enticing  and  emotion-charged , 
word  as  "peace"  in  order  to  con- 
vey a  meaning:  he  uses  it  as  a 
weapon  to  secure  an  emotional  and 
unreasoning  effect  from  his  hear- 
ers.'' 

Tong,  in  a  speech  outlining  and 
lambasting  "Communist  Advance 
in  Asia."  said,  "Peace  is  not  a  mat- 
ter of  empty  words.  It  should  be 
demonstrated  by  deeds  and  ac- 
tions." 

Going  on  to  outline  how  "the 
deeds  of  communism  during  the 
last  few  weeks  belie  all  its  pre 
tensions  to  a  genuine  quest  for 
peace,'  Dr.  Tong.  first  post-war 
ambassador  from  his  country  to 
Japan,  listed  numerous  actions. 
FRANTIC  PREPARATION 

(1)  How  Khrushchev  and  Bul- 
ganin  had  made  a  number  of  'barn- 
storming tours"  to  various  coun- 
tries talking  "peaceful  co-exist- 
ence," and  yet  on  Aug.  24,  in  Si- 
beria, Russia  exploded  a  hydrogen 


armament  talks  that  all  hydrogen 
weapon  tests  be  banned  by  the 
powers." 

(2)  The  shooting  down  of  an 
American  plane  in  August,  off  the 
coast  of  the  Chinese  mainland. 

The  ambassador  called  it  an 
"outrage"  that  the  Chinese  com- 
munist regime  scoffed  at  attempts 
to  search  for  bodies  of  the  dead 

and    possible    survivors.    The    CJjin- 

ese  communists  called  such  action 
a  "grave  provocation." 
RUSSIAN  INSTRUMENT 

Dr.  Tong,  who  was  born  in  the 
Chekiang  Province  and  educated  at 
Columbia  University,  ha:I  harsh 
words  for  Chinese  Communist  gov- 
ernment, calling  it  "the  faithful  in- 
strument of  Soviet  Russian  policy 
in  Asia.  The  l.^o  huge  communist 
regimes  are  marching  in  lockstep," 
he  said. 

Then  the  ambassador  enumerat- 
ed several  "aggressive"  actions  by 
Red  China  to  substantiate  his  ac- 
cusation. 

(1)  The  innudation  of  Red  Chin- 
ese troops  into  Burma. 

"If  Red  China  follows  the  pat- 
tern which  she  set  in  North  Korea 
and  North  Viet  Nam,  we  may  ex- 
pect to  see  Burma  delivered,  help- 
less and  broken,  to  the  Chinese 
(See  CHINESE,  Page  3) 


By  PEG  HUMPHREY 

The  impact  of  the  Broadway 
adaptation  of  Shaw's  Pygm'alion  is 
bein'4  felt  throughout  the  country 
and  is  particularly  noticeable  in 
the  new  fashions  and  jewelry  ap- 
pearing for  young  ladies  of  taste. 

The  costumes  which  Cecil  Bea- 
ton designed  for  the  set  of  the  mu- 
sic;*!  with  the  einpire  look  and 
other  styles  reminiscent  of  1912 
are  appearing  in  modifications 
which  even  the  Carolina  coed  can 
fit  into  a  college  wardrobe. 

Emphasis  is  definitely  on  the 
feminine  more  softened  side  in  con- 
trast to  the  more  tailored  look  of 
last  .season.  To  achieve  the  "My 
Fair  Lady,  look,"  it  is  important 
♦o  wear  jewels  that  blend  well  with 
the  gentle  picture. 

For  simple  Saturday  night  dates, 
gold  creations  predominate.  Gold 
and  pearl  combinations  are  deli 
caicly  designed  to  spark  plain  wool 


Bryant  To  Address 
Faculty  Club  Tuesday 


or  knit  sheaths.  The  textured  look 
is  gaining  in  importance.  Basket 
weaver  patterns  of  delicate  golden 
wires  and  hand-tied  knots  ol 
parallei  golden  ribbons  are  two 
such  examples  of  the  "MFL"  ap- 
proach. 

The  gold  safety  pin  which  loom- 
ed so  important  last  year  still  en- 
joys high  esteem  in  accenting 
casual  costumes.  To  achieve  the 
meltingly  beautiful  look  of  My  Fair 
Lady,  why  not  try  pinning  on  a  big 
flower  or  a  scarf.' Pins  may  appear 
almost  anywhere  for  that  needed 
spark  ...  at  the  collar,  on  a  cuff, 
on  the  bodice,  and  are  always  good 
on  a  belt  especially  a  heightened: 
otie. 

Color-wise,  the  warm  rich  shades' 
of  brown  are  making  headlines  this 
year.  The  Napier  Company  is  turn- 
ing out  many  new  designs  in  Topaz, 
Carnelian,  Tortoise  Shell,  and  Cin- 
namon Topaz. 

For  dressier  occasions  the  de 
signs  become  more  elegant  but  arr 
always  sparingly  displayed.  A  mass 
of  pearls  at  the  throat  with  simple 
pearl  button  earrings  is  often  just  W 


Vice  President  Addresses  Legislators 

Student  body  Vice  President  Sonny  Evans,  center,  addresses  the  opening  session  of  the  Student  Legis- 
lature last  night  as  they  convened  in  New  East  Building.  At  left  is  Clerk  Sylvia  Phillips,  and'at  the  right 
is   Parlimentarian   Sonny    Hailford. 


Victor    S.    Brj^ant.    I^urii^m    at-  ^  eaouxh  for  a  black  sheath 


torney  and  member  of  the  Execu- 
tive Committee  of  the  Board  of 
Trustees,  will  be  guest  speaker 
at  the  first  fall  meeting  of  the 
Faculty  Club  here  on  Tuesday, 
Oct.  2.  at  1  p.m.  In  the  Carolina 
Inn  Ball  Room. 

Bryant,  who  is  also  chairman  of 
the  Trustees'  committee  to  recom- 
mend on  the  appointment  of  a  new 
University  president,  will  speak 
on  "The  Functions  of  a  Trustee 
in  a  State  University." 

The  Faculty  Club,  open  to  all 
full-time  faculty  members  and  ad- 


UNC  Prof  to  Preside 
At  Dental  Meeting 

Dr.  William  W.  Degieritt,  assis- 
tand  dean  of  the  UNC  School  of 
Dentistry,  will  preside  as  chair- 
man of  the  pedodontics  section  of 
the  97th  annual  meeting  of  the 
American  Dental  Association  in 
Atlantic  City,  N.  J.  on  October 
1-4. 

Dr.  Demeritt  also  will  present  a 
paper  before  the  Amertoan  Dental 


Sundial  Is 

National 

Landmark 


Rushees  Get  Day  Of  Rest; 
More  Parties  Are  Tomorrow 


Today    is   the   first   lime   of   rest 
for    sorority    rushees    since    rush' 
.^.^pacti^ 'beDjan^Moiiday  night. 


Assistants    Association;    which    is 
ministrative    staff    of    equivalisnt  I  meeting   with   the   American  Den- 
rank,  will  meet  on  alternate  Tues-  I  tal  Association, 
days  during  the  fall.  j      Two  other  members  of  the  UNC 


Dr.  Alexander  Heard,  club-presi- 
dent, said  that  new  faculty  mem- 
members  will  be  introduced  at 
Tuesday's  nveeting.  Other  officers 
are  Herbert  R.  Baer,  Law  School, 
treasurer;  and  Df.  Andrew  H. 
Horn,  University  Librarian,  sec- 
retary. Dr.  Heard  is  on  the  Politi- 
cal Science  Department  staff. 


School  of  Dentistrj  fjM^ulty  will 
collaborate  in  presenting  a  clini- 
cal demonstration  at  the  nveeting. 
Dr.  Clifford  M.  Sturdevant  and 
Dr.  Roger  E.  Barton  will  give  a 
demonstration  of  Uset  of  Rubber 
Impression  Material  with  a  Newly 
Designed  Syringe  for  Multiply  In- 
lay  Impressions." 


Radio,  TV 
Assn.  Meets 
Here  Today 

A  two-day  fall  meeting  of  the 
Radio  and  Television  News  Di- 
rectors Association  of  the  Caro- 
linas  will  get  underway  this  morn- 
ing at  the  Carolina   Inn. 

Registration  will  begin  at  10  a.m. 
prior  to  an  afternoon  session  of 
panel  "shop  talk." 

Norvin  Duncan  of  Station  WFBC- 
TV  in  Greenville,  S.  C,  association 
president,  will  preside  at  the  meet- 
ing. Associstion  directors  will  con- 
vene at  a  closed  session  tonight. 

Highlights  of  the  Saturday  pro- 
gram will  be  a  discussion  on 
"What's  New  in  Radio  and  Tele- 
vision Reporting?"  and  7  p.m.  ban. 
quet  with  United  Press  Vice-Presi- 
dent Lyle  O.  Wilsoy  of  Washing- 
ton, D.  C,  as  the  main  speaker. 

INFIRMARY 

Students  in  the  Infirmary  yes- 
terday  included:  i 

Miss    Frank  lee    Gilbert,    Miss 
Frances  M.  Raid,  Miss  Isabel  Hol- 
brook,  John  C.  Burgwyn,  Herbert    ; 
H.  Hawkins,  James  E.  Holshous-    | 
er,   John    H.   Stratton,   Thimothy    ! 
L.  Harris  Clarence  E.  Smith  Jr., 
William    C.    Elliott   Jr.,   William    i 
S.  Michael,  Reginald  Mallett,  Earl    j 
T     KirWman,    Alvin    W.     Smith, 
Peter  V    VanStory   and    Richard 
A.  Raavis. 


Common  Soldiers  Of  Civil  War 
Were  Real  Heroes,  Wiley  Says 


■The  Morchead  Planetarium  Sun- 
dial has  become  a  national  land- 
mark, according  to  Planetarium 
Director  Tony  Jenzano. 

Official    confirmation    has    been 
received   from   the   Dept.   of  Com- 
merce, Office  of  the  U.   S.  Coast 
and    Geodetic    Survey.    A    survey 
of   the   location   of   the   mark  was 
made  on  .'X.ug.  8  determining  the 
location  to  be  latitude  35°  54'  51.- 1 
462"  North  and  longitude  79^   03 
04.432"  West. 
Following  the  receipt  of  the  of- 
1  ficial      confirmation,        University 
i  workmen      installed      a      circular 
I  bronze   plaque  at  the   base  of  the 
j  arm    of    the    sundial    which    pro- 
i  claims    it   a   triangulation   station. 
;  a  position  cf  known  latitude  and 
longitude,  of  the  U.  S.  Coast  and 
Geodetic   Survey. 

The    plaque    also   states   a    $250 
I  fine  warning  to  would-be  tamper- 
i  ers.  This  is  the  second   triangula- 
tion station   to  be  established   on 
the  campus  of  the  University. 
I      The    first    station    is    located    in 
the  center  of  the  oampus  between 
I  South   Building  and  the  Library. 


cmpus 

SEEN  I 


disease  rate  in  both  armies.  Prosti- 
tution was  rampant  in  both  Rich- 
mond and  Washington.  .An  official 
complaint  was  made  in  1864  by 
the  Army  of  Tennessee  to  the  com- 
mander of  the  post  at  Dal  ton,  Ga. 


The  greatest  fighters  the  world  j  Reb." 
has    over    known    were    the    plain  \      Among  the  revelations  disclosed 
soldiers  of  the  American  Civil  War,   by  Wiley  in  his  speech  are  the  fol- 
a  historian  stated  here  last  night.       lowing: 

Too  many  history  books  are  "writ-  1.  The  plain  soldier,  in  his  let- 
ten  i.bout  bigwigs;  the  common  j  ter  writing,  wrote  poorly  or  not 
folk  are  crowded  into  the  back- 1  at  all,  and  usually  had  to  get  some-  {  'Complaints  are  made  daily  to  me 
ground — or  worse,  distorted  into  I  one  to  write  letters  for  him  and  !  of  the  number  of  lewd  women  in 
impossible  caricatures"  it  was  de-  to  read  to  him.  One  Alabama  pri-  this  town,  and  on  the  outskirts  of 
clared  at  a  special  history  confer-  vate  carried  on  a  love  correspon- 1  the  .irmy.  They  are  said  to  be  im- 
ence  by  historian  Bell  I.  Wiley  of  j  dence  for  several  of  his  comrades  pregnating  this  whole  command." 
Emory  University.  |  and    got    three    of    them    engaged       5.  Son>e  soldiers  were  critical  of 

An  authority  on  the  Civil  War,    within  a  month.  their  officers.  One  Florida  soldier 

He    was    poetic,    too,    and    once    wrote:  "Our  officers  are  not  fit  to 


Prof.  Wiley  told  intimate  details 
about  the  life  of  common  soldiers 
taken  from  30,00  letters  and  manu- 
scriDt  diaries  written  by  private 
soldiers. 

The  jokes,  the  profanity,  the 
womon  camp  followers  and  the 
2jr?s  back  home,  the  leters,  camp 
life,  ragged  clothing  and  wormy 
food,  gambling,  drinking,  fighting, 
griping    all    were    related    by    the 


wrote: 
"When  this  you  se*, 

remember  me, 
Thotigh  many  miles  a  part 

we  bea. 
My  pen  is  bad,  my  ink 

is  pale. 
My  love  for  you  shall 

never  fale." 
2.  Speaking  of  a  very  thin  m-.v 


tot6  guts  to  a  bear."  A  Masachu- 
setts  soldier  said,  "I  wish  to  God 
on«'  half  of  our  officers  were  kn<M;k- 
ed  in  the  head  by  slinging  them 
aganst  the  other  half." 

6.  Another  Yankee  soldier  didn't 
think  much  of  the  medics.  He 
wrote:  "The  surgeon  insisted  on 
sending  me  to  the  hospital  for 
treatment.  I  in.sisted  on  taking  the 


Georgia  historian.  He  told  also  of   that  was  killed  for  beef,  a  soldier   field  and  prevailed — thitrking  I  had 
the   courage   and    heroism   of    the  '■  wrote,    "It    takes    two    soldiers    to    better  die  by  rebel  bdllets  than  by 


soldiers — as  well  as  a  few  examples 
of  cowardice  displayed  by  both 
Confederates  and  Yankees. 

The  common  soldiers  of  the 
Civil  War  "proved  themselves 
worthy  ancestors  of  the  khaki-clad 
neroes  who  covered  themselves 
with  blood  and  glory  at  Belleau 
Wood  and  on  the  beaches  of  Nor- 
mandy," said  Wiley.  "Indeed  the 
world  has  known  no  greater  fight- 
ers than  Billy  Yank  and  Johni^ 


hold  up  one  beef  to  shoot  it."         ;  Union  quackery." 

Describing  the  tattered  clothing,  i  7.  Letters  and  diaries  contained 
an  Atlanta  private  wrote:  "In  this  many  references  to  girls.  A  Texan 
Army  one  hole  in  the  seat  of  the  j  wrote:   "Give  Laura  tny  love,  not 


britches   indicates   a   captain,   two 
holes  a  lieutenant,  and  if  the  seat 
of  the  britches  is  all  gone,  the  in- 
divdual   is  a  private. 
3.  Of  all  cuss  words  the  "time- 


best  respects,  but  love  by  "G-d." 
8.  They  bore  hardships  without 
complaint,  picking  upon  grains  of 
corn  where  horses  had  eaten,  and' 
parching  the  corn  for  meals.  They 


honored  SOB  was  a  favorite"  said    walked  over  icy  reads  ih  their  bare 
Wiley.  !  feet. 

4.  There  waa  a  heavy  venereal  (See  COMMON.  Ppie  3> 


'  Miss  Rehder 
Publishes 
New  Novel 

Miss  Jessie  Rehder,  who  teaches 
creative  writing  in  the  English 
Department,  is  the  author  of  a 
new  novel,  •'Remembrance  Way." 
which  will  be  publLshed  Oct.  5  by 
G.  P.  Putnam's  Sons,  Publishers, 
of  Now  York  City. 

The  novel  is  described  by  Dr. 
C.  Hugh  Holman  as  "the  sensitive 
ly  toid  st^ry  of  the  crucial  and 
maturing  experiences  of  a  girl 
attending  ^  summer  camp,  but  it 
is  more  than  the  story  of  the 
change  from  adolescence  to  ma- 
turity, for  its  implications  as 
shown  in  the  later  lite  of  its  hero- 
ine are  mature  and   pervasive." 

The  bn-^k  has  already  received 
high  praise  from  pre-publication 
readers,  among  them  Frances  Grey 
Patton.  Betty  Smith,  and  Paul 
Green.  . 

Miss  Rehder.  who  holds  the  posi- 
tion of  lecturer  in  English,  is  a 
publishers'  representative  in  ad- 
ditibn  to  her  work  with  the  Uni- 
versity's creative  writers,  and  she 
has  been  published  in  a  number 
of  national  magazines,  among  them 
"Harper's."  .  j 


Stitilfitl  wnlki)!'^  ill  rain 
cnnyitt'^   miiicaal   and   linl. 

*  -1:  * 

AFROl'C,  Ill/Ill  lini.sliino, 
liitlliuir  his  niiijoriii  foo^r/hri 
in  ( hi.ss. 

Piof  essay  askiiiii  sludt'iil 
to  ri'iid  [jiiffcr  in  (lass  and 
sludcnl    rcltiying    "Alond^" 

GMAB  Brinas 
Combo  Here 

Graham  M.emoriai's  Activity 
Board  will  inaugrate  its  1956-57 
program  of  free  comb:)  dancing  in 
the  Rendezvous  Room  tonight  and 
tomorrow   night. 

Starting  at  8  p.m.  this  evening, 
a  campus  combo  headed  by  Bob 
Neal  will  present  two  hours  of 
dartcing  music.  Brunos  Combo 
will  make  the  music  for  dancing 
tomorrow  night  from  8  till  11. 
Both  dances  arc  free  to  all. 

G.  C.  Pridgen.  manager  for  Bru 
nos'  Combo,  reports  that  the  re- 
cently formed  group  is  planning 
an  extensive  schedule  of  engaj^e- 
ments  starting  in  early  October 
throughout  North  Carolina.  The 
grouo,  which  performed  at  the 
Freshmen  Picnic,  will  be  present- 
ing "new  concept  in  cr)mbo  music" 
t'lmorrow  nisht  as  a  warm-up  for 
the  forthcoming'  tour. 


The  second  round,  of  one-hour 
parties  was  completed  last  night. 
.«r^nvitations  to  third  i*ound  of 
event.s  will  be  issued  today  from 
1  to  3:15  p.m.  in  the  Roland  Park- 
er Lounges  on  the  second  floor  of 

(iraham     .Memorial. 

Events  scheduled  for  the  week- 
end   include    four    45-minute    par- , 
tics,  from  2  to  5:45  p.m.  tomorrow. 

The    rush    schedule    designates , 
Sunday  as  a  time  of  rest,  with  fin- 
al parties  set  Monday  and  Tuesday 
nights. 

Bids   will   go  out  again  Wednes- 
day. 


Person  Art  Gallery 
Holds  Sketch  Classes 

Person  Hall  Art  Gallery  has  an- 
nounced a  Wednesday  evening 
sketch    class    beginning    Oct.    3.' 

The  class  will  include  sketch- 
ing from  life,  and  there  will  be 
opportunity  to  plan  compositions, 
:iccording  to  Lynette  Warren,  cura- 
tor of  Person  Hall  Art  Gallery. 

The  class  will  meet  7  to  9  p.m. 
and  will  be  under  the  direction 
of  John  Allcott  of  the  Dept.  of 
.^rt.  The  fee  is  $13  for  13  weeks 
and    includes    materials. 

Students  interested  in  joining 
have  been  invited  to  come  to  the 
first  class  Oct.  3  at  7  p.m. 


Cosmopolitan  Club 
Meets  Here  Sunday 

The      Cosmopolitan      Club 


will 


By  CLARKE  JONES 

Thd  Student  Legislature  last 
night  passed  a  bill  calling  for  the 
establishment  of  a  student  govern- 
ment commission  to  act  on  the 
Cilum.bia  St.   parking  situation. 

The  commission  would  aim  to- 
ward removing  the  recently-en- 
acted two  hour  parking  limit  on 
Columbia  St.  between  Franklin 
St.   and   Cameron  Ave. 

Introduced  by  University  Party 
Chairman  Mike  Weinman,  the 
measure  was  passed  by  special  or- 
der of  business. 

Gardner  Foley  and  Andy  Milnor, 
both  Student  Party  members,  in- 
troduced a  bill  proposing  a  stu- 
dent committee  for  the  purpose  of 
coordinating   campus   events. 

Foley  stated  lack  ot  coopera- 
tion betwen  sponsoring  organiza- 
tions has  frequently  caused  two 
or  more  events  of  interest  to  con- 
flict. 

The    bill    will    come   up   for   ap- 
proval  at   next  week's  meeting. 
PARKING 

The  parking  situation  bill  norm- 
ally would  also  be  held  over  to 
next  A'cek.  The  Board  of  Alder- 
men, however,  are  meeting  Oct. 
14  and  Weinman  wanted  .some  ac- 
tion taken  by  that  time. 

Weinman  gave  four  reasons  for 
the  bill,  which  are  as  follows: 

1.  "Columbia  St.  is  not  a  com- 
mercial street  between  Franklin 
St.  and  Cameron  Avenue. 

2.  "There  is  no  need  to  limit 
parking  on  a  street  which  is  not 
commercial  as  this  limit  serves  no 
jbvious  puipose. 

I       3.  •"It  is  the  aim  of  student  gov- 
;  "rnment  to  look  out  for  (he  inter- 
ests  of   all   students. 
4.  "The  parking  limit  recently  ef- 
!  lected  on  Columbia  St.  works  great 
hardship    on    those    students    who 
live  on  Columbia  St.  and  the  Stu- 
dent    Legislature    feels    that    this 
hardship    has    been    invoked    un- 
necessarily." 

Weinman  called  upon  the  stu- 
dent body  president  to  appoint  a 
three-man  investigating  commiss- 
ion at  his  convenience  to  study  the 
mntter.  The  commission  would  al- 
so work  with  a  similar  commiss- 
ion set  up  by  the  Interfratemity 
Council. 

COORDINATING 

Foley  and  Milnor,  in  the  coor- 
dinating measure,  asked  for  a  five- 
man  committee,  known  as  the 
Committee  for  Coordinating  Cam- 
pus Events.  This  organization 
would  assist  in  scheduling  the  im- 
portant campus  events  and  form 
a  schedule  to  prevent  conflicts  of 
these  events. 

The  Legislature  also  received 
the  following  appointments  by  stu- 
dent body  President  Bob  Young: 
Don  Furtado.  Joel  Fleishman  and 
Clamm  Shankle  to  the  Graham 
Memorial  Board  of  Directors;  Miss 
Jean  Peay,  replacing  .Miss  Sylvia 
Tarantino  on   the   Women's  Honor 


hold  its  fir.st  meeting  of  the  year    Council  and   Burt   Warren,  replac- 


in  the  Library  Assembly  Room  at 
t   p.m.  Sunday. 

This  club  was  organized  to  pro- 
nrte  friendship  and  understand- 
ng  between  nations  by  giving 
members  an  opportunity  to  ex- 
•hange  ideas  and  cultures. 

Intere.sted  students  have  been 
i   nvited  to  attend.  ' 


Vets  Don't  Want 
ToTakePhys.  Ed: 


A  petition  to  the  effect  that  veterans  enrolled  in  the  General  Col- 
lege should  not  be  required  to  take  courses  in  physical  education 
wMll  be  posted  today  in  Sout^  Building  by  the  Veterans  Affairs  Com- 
mittee. 

The  committee  has  asked  that  all  persons  favoring  the  petition 
sign  it  at  their  earliest  convenience. 

The  petition  will  be  posted  in  room  308  of  South  Building  today 
through  Oct.  4. 

Darwin  L.  Bell,  chairman  of  the  Veterans  Affairs  Committee, 
states  that  the  petition  provides  that  no  physical  education  courses 
be  required  of  veterans. 

The  present  curriculum  set-up  requires  veterans  to  take  one  year 
of  physical  education  in  individual  sports  and  those  other  than  the 
basic  requirements  for  students  in  the  General  College. 


ing    Dan   Southerland    on    the    ap- 
pointments   committee. 

The  approval  by  the  Legislature 
will  be  held  over  until  a  week 
from  Thursday  instead  of  this 
Thursday  because  of  Rush  Week. 
Phil  Malone  and  Tom  Kenan, 
both  of  the  University  Party,  were 
sworn  in  as  new  members  by 
Speaker  Sonny  Evans. 


Today  Last  Day 
For  Yack  Photos 


[  Today  is  the  last  day  for  seniors 
to  have  their  picture  made  for  the 
1957   Yackety-Yack. 

Pictures  will  be  made  in  the 
basement  of  Graham  Memorial 
from   1   to  7:30  p.m. 

The  picture-taking  .schedule  for 
other  classed  and  schools  is  as 
follows:  Oct.  1-5 — Freshmen,  Nurs- 
ing School  (except  Senior  Nurses) 
and  Fourth-year  Medical  students. 

Oct.  8-12 — Sophomores,  Pharm- 
acy School,  and  Dental  Hygiene 
students. 

Oct.  15-19  —  Juniors.  Medical 
School,  Law  School  and  Graduate 
School.  "  ,   . 


PAGE  TWO 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


FRIDAY,  SEPTEMBER  2S,  1956 


FRIDAY 


The  Liberal  Arts  Major: 
There's  Still  A  Demand 

"ilif  IcitifilatioH  la  \if'l<l  on  ^yoiinds  of  f'\j)e(iicncy  lo  fiopnlur 
deifuoids  )oi  the  .\o}t  of  hainin;^  which  protnisrs  quick  tnonclary 
rcivtud.s  -will  Ite  great,  '/'his  is  not  to  disfjorage  those  itustilutioiis 
frankly  orie)ited  to  ftvactical  vocations  and  skills.  For  a  xuniety  of 
reasons  we  need  more  rather  than  fewer  such.  What  I  do  say  is  thai 
desffiie  hard  times  and  adverse' f)ressure.  the  liberal  arts  colleges 
mnst  not  falter  in  fjnrsning  with  a  whole  heart  and  witho.ut  menial 
resen'ation  the  f nil  )nt'asure  of  their  historic  fiiirjjosr.  IIV  know  thai 
close  aj)f)li<alioy\  will  find  an  an<>ice}  lo  the  ffrohfems  and  hard  work 
will  do  the  if>l>."— President  Harold  \V.  Doddsot  Pi  iiict'toii  rniveiNi- 
tv.  at  bireiiteiinial  tonvocation  this  week. 


ONE  WAY  .  .  . 


The  PriiuetoM  president's  wor- 
ries are  well  foundtd.  American 
("olIeL^es  anil  universitie^,  now  lair- 
Iv  sately  througfi  the  Red  Pro- 
fessor Period,  have  another  prob- 
lem to  contend  with:  1  he  in<rca?.- 
iny  importance  in  most  peoj)les 
minds  ol   a  college  diploma. 

The  diploma  is  impf^rtant.  But 
fur  ttK)  many  pet»ple  think  it  is  im- 
portant l)ea(  use  it  means  move  and 
qui<  ker  money.  For  too  many  peo- 
ple a  diploma  is  a  license  to  prac- 


stitiition  ol  higher  Icarnini";.  he 
rti>istcrs  with  a  |)la(ement  seiAi<c 
on  his  (ampiis.  II  his  work  is 
spe{  iali/ctl.  il  he  knows  a  lot  about 
a  little,  be  probabh  will  set  a 
job  (piickei  and  \vith  move  pay 
than  the  student  who  has  develop- 
ed broad  interests  in  a  lot. 

ri.ie  people  who  hire  ,y;raduaies 
are  most  at  faidt.  It  is  their  !»hort- 
sij>htedness  that  makes  some  stu- 
dents i»rope  iov  the  diploma,  tlie 
almi<>hiv  dipl(»ina.  instead  ot  .^^rop- 


tite  some  small  part  ot  some  large      in,i»    h)r   the    lij;ht    of   learning. 
Ntxation.  But    there   arc    indications    that 

Spec  iaii/ation  is  the  kev  to  these      some  employers  have  seen  the  value 
pi"oj)le.    Ihev   spend   their  college 
lile    hitddled    in    one   (ornev   of   a 


very  hi;;  roojn.  AV'hen  they  lea\e 
thfv  tan  ,ui\e  the  exatt  specifica- 
tions and  dimensions  of  that  corn- 
er, but  thev  know  nothing  about 
the  whole   ro<^m. 

C  onsetjuentlv.    when    they    start 


Ol  ;  lilieral  arts, education.  W'heth- 
ei  it  is  because  they  themselves 
where  liberal  arts  people  we  do 
not  know,  but  reports  are  steadily 
<  (Mning  in  ol  employers  who  advise 
a   placement   ser\ice: 

"We  dont  care  what  he  major- 
ed in.  just  give  us  a  man  who  has 


to    practice    living    thev    lack    the      a  good,  solid  education.  Well  train 
ability  to  understand  much  ot  life.      l»im    on    our    time    after    we    hire 
These  people,  then,  have  lacked      him. 


what  is  called  at  Carol  in."  the  lib- 
era] arts  education.  That  education 
is  obtained  here  in  most  of  the 
<  lassrooms  on  the  east  side  of  the 
flagpole.  It  also  is  obtained  in 
dormitorv  rcxjms,  in  the  Wilson  Li- 
bvarv.  o\er  coffee,  in  novels  and 
on    the   brick   walkwavs. 

Nowadays,    A\hen    a    student    is 
about  to  be  giaduated  from  aai  iu- 


That  is  a  good  sign.  But  not 
goocl  enough. 

What  is  needed,  as  Dr.  Doilds 
suggests,  is  the  universities'  and 
cc>lleges'  close  application  to  the 
task  of  fulfilling  the  need  for  peo- 
ple, educated  in  the  liberal  arts. 
.\s  he  says,  "hard  work  will  do  the 
job.  "  .        • 


McCarthy's  Boys  Sinking 


As  The  NeAv  Republic  editorial 
savs  so  nicely  elsewhere  in  this 
(ohnnn.  the  .\meucan  Legion  is 
going  dcjwn. 

It  s  about  tnne. 

Never  has  sue  h  a  narrow-m'nded 
collection  nl  Ha^-<va\eis  been  so 
successft  i  in  c  laiming  so  many 
meml:  v  \evei  has  so  much  mud 
bcvu  slung  by  so  many  pecjple  at 
so  manv  innocent  bvstanders,  and 
never  have  the  mudslingers  got 
awav  with  tlu'ir  slinging  with  such 
ease. 

It  is  interesting  to  c«)mj)ave  the 
rise    (*1  -the    Legion's    power    with 

THE  NEW  REPUBLIC: 


that  ot  the  man  who  represents  it 
best:  Joseph  McCarthv.  .\ud  now, 
sincie  SicClarthy  has  suffered  severe 
setbacks  in  his  business  ot  manu- 
facturing slander,  the  Legion  ap- 
pears to  Ikt  on  the  downswing. 

Nothing  better  could  happen  for 
freedom  in  the  L^nited  States.  You 
know,  tieedom:  Respect  for  one  s 
fellow  citizens,  the  right  to  believe 
what  one  wants  to  believe,  the 
ri'^ht  to  worship  a  flag  and  a  (iod 
cjuietly.  as  well  as  when  wearing  an 
oversca'S  cap  and  when  at  annual 
c<tn\entions.  " 


Business  As  Usual 


In  Los  Angeles  this  mcjnth.  ;^.200 
American  Legion  delegates  passed, 
without  debate,  the  usual  resolu- 
tions attacking  LNLSCiO.  the  Fimd 
\tir  the  Republic,  the  admission  of 
Cionnnunist  China  to  the  I'N.  tlie 
IN  Ciovenant  on  Human  Rights, 
etc. 

The  Usual  investigations  were 
urged,  including  one  this  yehr  of 
the  International  Labor  Organi/a- 
ticjii. 

And  the  ivsu;  !  National  Com- 
mander— whose  military  service 
consisted  ot  onlv  basic  training — 
was  elected  and  made  the  usual 
Legion  speech  attac  king  'the  crim- 
son philosophv  "  which  Avas  "con- 
(ei\ecf  in  the  womb  of  Scnialism, 
born  in  an  eva  of  social  and  eco- 
nomic conflict  and  nursed  in  the 
l.Tp  ol  (!f>nnminism  "  and  is  'gnaw- 
ing at  (he  \itals  of  our  society  and 
threatening  the  destruction  of  our 
nation.' 

The  onlv  debates  that  did  take 
place  were  o\er  the  admission  of 
peacetime  ser\  icemen  to  the  Leg- 
ion fno.  thev  will  not  be);  the  in- 
ternal power  fight  betweeti  the  na- 
ticmal  executi\e  committe  and  the 
40  et  8.  an  allegedly    "elite  "  group 

The  Daily  Tar  Heei 

The  ofticial  stucient  publication  of  the 
Publication>  Board  of  the  University  of 
North  Carolina,  whyrc  it  is  published 
daily  except  Monday  and  examination 
and  vacation  periods  and  summer  terms 
Entered  as  second  class  matter  in  the 
post  office  in  Chapel  Hill,  N.  C,  undei 
the  Act  01  -March  8.  1870.  Subscription 
rates:  mailed.  $4  per  year,  $2.50  a  semes 
ter;  delivered,  $6  a  year,  $3.50  a  semes- 
ter. 


Editor 


FRED  POWXBDGE 


of  Legicmnaires  (the  committee 
won);  the  deletion  ot  a  'Csucasian 
only  "  cause  from  the  40  et  H  con- 
stimtion  (it's  still  in):  and  the  act- 
mission  of  Chiropractors  to  prac- 
tice in  \'A  hospitals  (thev're  still 
oin). 

I'he  Legion  has  become  less  able 
to  cope  with  its  own  reactionary 
elements.  Nobodv  is  willing,  any 
longer,  to  tight  the  I'NLSCiO  cpies- 
tion  since  e\esybodv  knows  what 
the  result  will  be.  States  lights  is 
becoming  a  new  rallying  cry  h>r 
the   Legicju. 

And  although  it  is  difficult  to 
judge  political  orientation  frcjm  the 
respectful  silence  accorded  Nixon 
and  the  boos  given  Stevensc:>n.  it 
did  appear  that  the  majcnity  ot 
delegates   were    Republicans. 

On  the  (i\il-iights  questions, 
the  U'liti-integration  forces  seemed 
dominant,  although  no  official 
resolution  on  this  matter  was  pre- 
sented  to   the  convention. 

The  very  intemperateness  ol 
Legion  political  language  is  driv- 
ing many  njembers  into  inactivity 
and  ultimately  into  leaving  the  or- 
ganization. (Membership  has  fallen 
to  2.8  million  fvcjm  a  postwar 
high  of  ;{.2f,o.ciooi.  Is  the  day  com- 
ing when  all  who  remain  will  be 
those  who  together  with  Wlothei  ' 
Hobavt,  the  founder  of  the  Legion 
ladies  auxiliary,  believe  that  the 
problem  ol  Connnunism  is  suscep- 
tible of  a  wonderlully  .simple  so- 
lution: 

■We'll  pu.sh  them  out  and  push 
them  out  until  we  have  them  all  in 
Russia.  .\nd  then  we'll  have  a  c  ircle 
of  gcjod  bcjndjers  and  every  weapon 
we  ran  find  and  that  will  take  care 
ol  iheui." 


Special  Bargain  For  A  Bit  Of  Culture 


Barry  Winston 


a   half   a   dozen   people   on   this  gain  of  the  year, 

campus   who  don't   mind  culture  For  a  limited  time  only,  (.some- 

Hoo  Boy!  Every  body  loves  a      in  small,  infrequent  doses.  Well.  thing  like  eighteen  months),  the 

bargain.  And  there  must  be  all  of      then,    here    is    the   cultural   bar-  Chapel  Hill  Concert  Series  is  of- 

'Let's  Not  Go  Hog  Wild' 


CAROLINA  CAROLEIDOSCOPE 


fering  each  and  every  one  of 
you  the  opportunity  to  save 
enough  gold  to  last  you  through 
a  night  at  the  Tempo.  If  you  drink 
your  cokes  real  slow.  Hoo  Hal 

Actually,  its  a  pretty  good 
deal.  To  Whit:  A  Student  Season 
Ticket  to  the  Series  for  only  five 
of  your  worthless  old  inflated 
dollars.  That  covers  all  four  of 
the  presentations  for  this  aca- 
demic year,  and  five  divided  by 
four  is,  ah,  well . . .  ask  some 
math  major. 

The  important  thing  is  that  the 
regular  price  is  six  and  a  half, 
and  just  think  of  all  the  things 
you  can  do  with  that  extra  dol- 
lar fifty:  buy  150  pieces  of  bub- 
ble gum,  75  two-cent  stamps  or 
50  three-cent  stamps,  eat  three 
meals  at  Lenoir  Hall,  or  make  a 
down-payment  on  a  movie  ticket. 

Ushers  for  the  Series  this  year 
get:  (1)  Special  reserved  section 
consisting  of  the  first  rows  of  the 
Orchestra,  (2)  a  free  ticket  that 
may  be  used  for  a  guest  who  gets 
lo  sit  with  you.  if  you're  an  usher. 
And  (3)  a  personally  autographed 
member  of  the  Oberge^rkinich 
Children's  Choir,  complete  with 
a  year's  supply  of  Pablum. 

And  To  Top  It  All  Off:  In  ex- 
change for  a  measly  old  eight 
hours  (apiece)  of  their  worthless 
time,  the  fifteen  lucky  people 
who  volunteer  their  services  as 
stage  hands  for  the  Chicago  Ope- 
ra Ballet  will  get  two  (count  'em, 
two)  tickets  for  the  Ballet  and 
each  of  the  following  perform- 
ances and  a  special,  reserved 
section  in  the  basement  of  Hanes 
Hall.  Or  is  it  the  lop  floor  of  Al- 
derman'? I  forget.  Trying  to  re- 
member all  this  information  to 
disseminate  (HaI^)  to  you  fortu- 
naleT)eople  has  been  a  .strain  on 
my  memory,  no  end. 

So  rush  right  down  to  the  in- 
formation office  at  GM  (I  think) 
and  grab  a  ticket  \vhile  there  are 
still  some   left. 

Don't  forget  to  take  your  five 
bucks  with  you.  They're  awfully 
fussv  about  lOU's. 


About  yhls  Game  They  Play  In  Washington, 
And  On  Growing  Old  In  A  Reluctant  Way 


Frank  Crowther 

Well,  old  John  Fo-^er  Dulles, 
our  wandering  minstrel  and 
Foreiiin  policy  i^hredder,  has 
pulled  one  of  Charlie  (what's 
good  for  General  Motors  is  good 
for  the  nation)  Wilson's  stunts — 
the  clodhopper  in  the  mouth 
routine. 

Now  I'm  just  an  average  guy 
Avho  wants  to  keep  up  with  world 
affairs  .so  that  I  know  exactly 
when  they  plan  to  blow  the  place 
to  smithereens.  So  last  Sunday 
night  I  turned  the  television  set 
on  to  NBC's  Meet  The  Press 
program. 

Bless  my  bones  if  Flying  Fos- 
ter wasn't  their  guest. 

Well,  I  thought,  here's  where 
they  pump  the  old  boy  for  some 
extra  information  relating  to  the 
touchy  international  situation. 
Sure  enough,  the  first  question 
related  to  the  Suez  Canal  furor. 

Foster  looked  very  fatherly  and 
all-knowing  when  he  replied. 
"Well,    in    this    game    of    world 


peace  .  .  . 

That  did  it.  That  was  enough 
for  me  before  he  went  any  fur- 
ther. 

So  it's  games  we  are  playing 
with  these  other  countries.  I'm 
sure  glad  he  told  me  otliefwise 
I  might  have  grown  up  ♦I'lth  a 
warped  idea  about  our  govern- 
mental policies.  If  we  are  only 
playing  games,  why  worry  atwut 
our  national  debt,  or  immigf^ion 
laws,  or  the  maintainance  of  over 
125  Embassys,  Consulates,  and 
Legations  around  the  world,  and 
such.  But,  if  Foster  says  we  are 
only  playing  games,  why  concsern 
ourselves.  ^ 

•  •  • 

I've  never  heard  more  talk 
about  puttmg  old  people  away 
than  on  WUNC-TV's  new  World 
Of  Man  show  which  started  last 
Monday  evening.  The  topic  of 
discussion  was,  'Our  Aging  Pop- 
ulation." 

Two  things   that  were   not  cov- 
ered, unfortunately,  were  proper 


mental  conditioning  and  prema- 
ture retirement. 

It,  may  be  difficult  for  those 
of  us  who  are  still  screeching 
through  our  extuberant  youth  to 
stfjp  and  contemplate  old  age. 
We  don't  bother  ourselves  about 
thoughts  of  growing  old  and  dy- 
ing . . .  there's  always  time  for 
that   tomorrow. 

But  if  we  do  for  a  moment,  I 
for  one  do  not  want  to  think  that 
when  an  alarm  clock  goes  off,  I 
am  going  to  be  put  in  some  home 
to  rock.  rest,  and  rust. 

If  we  condition  ourselves,  there 
vill  be  no  fear  of  aging.  After 
all,  senility  is  in  many  cases  self- 
inflicted. 

Also,  premature  retirement  is 
folly.  Why  is  it  that  people  think 
that  they  must  retire  at  a  certain 
age  and.  when  it  arrives,  plunge 
into  inactivity  without  the  slight- 
est preparation. 

Many  men  and  women  have 
worked  well  beyond  the  supposed 
prime  of  their  lives.  G.  B.  Shaw. 


when  he  was  past  90  and  still 
writing,  said  liiat  he  had  had 
his  share  of  fun  and  saw  no  rea- 
son why  he  should  not  go  on 
h.iving   it   indefinitely. 

Goethe  finished  the  second 
part  of  Faiist  a  year  before  his 
death  at  83. 

William  Randolph  Hearst  at 
84  still  ruled  his  vast  newspaper 
empire. 

Connie  Mack,  the  grand  old 
man  of  baseball,  directed  his 
Philadelphia  Athletics  from  the 
dugout  at  85. 

Winston  Churchill,  in  his  60's. 
rallied  Briton's  to  their  "finest 
hour"  and.  now  in  his  30's, 
has  been  writing  of  the  history 
and  many  conflicts  of  his  home- 
land. 

Can  wf  say  that  these  men  let 
themselves  be  prematurely  re- 
tired? 

I  certainly  hope  that  the  next 
in  theii  series  will  deal  with  some 
of  the  brighter  aspects  of  "Our 
Aging  Population." 


Pogo 


By  Walt  Kelly 


J  Mjfkze"'  1  rou  u 
reuTH'-:  c^,av  m 

y<E  you  WA4 
eomK  PUMH 
Him  INI  -r^i 
NO$e. 


Li'l  Abner 


By  A!  Capp 


Stanley  Strongnose. 


My  latest  photograph. 

fv:»/7e  to  /ooj^  //Aw  jTx? 

Seotf  for  my  cr?urs9.  ■ 


(DONT  BOTHER  ANSWERtMG. 
I     VOKUM'S  LETTER.  JUST 
\  RUM  rHAT  AD.'.'- WE'UL  CiET 
f  A  MILLION  MEW 


CUSTOMERS 


A     l^££K   LAJ£R 


NO  REPLY 
'     FOM  MR. 
SrROMGNOSE 
VET  TINV  .'.'■ 


GUESS  AH     . 

IS  yOQ  VWEAi^ 

AN'  RUN  DOWN 

f=0'  HIM  T' 

&OTHER  WIF.'T 


TEACH  US  TO  REAP^ 

Fast  Reading 
Course  Needed 

Woody  Sears 

I  think  the  University  should  afford  every  stu- 
dent the  opportunity  to  learn  lo  read. 

Im  referring  to  the  speed  reading  program,  that 
was  conducted  on  the  campus  last  spring.  I'm  re- 
ferring to  the  program  which  is  supposed  to  double 
and  even  triple  one's  reading  speed.  I'm  referring 
to  the  program  that  could  make  everyone's  work 
load  easier  by  cutting  down  on  the  time  required 
to  read  the  assigned  textual  material  and  the  bur- 
densome oiitside  reading. 

This  increased  reading  speed  is  also  reputed  to 
improve  the  reader's  comprehension,  thus,  in  many 
cases,  doing  away  with  the  necessity  for  re-reading. 

In  addition  to  all  these  other  features,  just  think 
how  much  this  improved  reading  speed  could  mean 
to  one  who  likes  to  keep  up  with  the  new  books 
that  come  out,  but  never  has  ihe  time  to  read 
them.  Think,  too,  of  the  student  who  leaves  the 
University  to  take  a  job  which  requires  the  em- 
ployee to  keep  abreast  of  the  new  developments  in 
his  field  by  reading  trade  journals  and  associated 
literature. 

STJtINGS  ATTACHED 

However,  when  it  was  presented  last  spring,  th« 
program  wasn't  open  to  everyone.  At  least  not  with- 
out a  lot  of  strings  attached.  Before  a  student  could 
get  into  the  program  he  had  to  fill  out  more  forms 
than  are  required  during  registration.  The  questions 
concerned  everything  from  home  life  to  high  school 
background  and  grades  throughout  high  school  and 
college. 

Then  there  was  an  interview,  and  for  those  who 
did  not  make  the  grade  there  was  another  interview 
where  the  student  was  told  that  unfortunately  he 
could  not  enter  the  program  then,  but  maybe  there 
would  .be  another  chance  next  year.  It  seems  that 
the  folks  who  were  planning  to  go  on  to  some  sort- 
of  graduate  school  got  priority. 

Well,  that's  all  well  and  good.  It's  easy  to  see 
where  such  a  course  would  be  an  invaluable  aid 
to  a  grad  student.  And  it's  easy  to  see  how  that's 
going  to  make  him  a  better  doctor,  lawyer,  or  mer- 
chant. 

BUT what  about  the  rest  of  us.  the  folks 

who  aren't  going  to  grad  school?  Are  we  going  to 
get  the  opportunity  to  take  advantage  of  this  won- 
derful program  for  sclf-improvcmcnl?  Your  guess 
is  as  good  as  mine. 

Last  year  out  of  the  399  students  who  applied 
for  this  no-credit,  no-cost  program,  only  202  were 
accepted.  And  according  to  the  oficial  report  issued 
on  the  results  of  the  program  by  the  University 
Testing  Service,  which  is  handling  the  program, 
only  ■"139  students  .  .  .  can  be  considered  to  have 
completed   all  aspects  of  the  course."  ^ 

This  fact  is 
aiost  discouraging 
in  view  of  the 
number  of  people 
who  were  not  per- 
mitted to  take  the 
course.  Those  w'ho 
dropped  out  did 
so  of  their  own 
accord,  as  no  one  SPEED 

was       "flunked"   ■  "  ^    thing  for  grad  students? 
out.  This  means  that  better  than  forty  per  cent  of 
t^e    orignal    enrollment    failed    to    complete    the 
course. 
DEAD  BEATS 

It  is  on  the  basis  of  this  fact  that  I  am  opposed 
to  small  enrollments  of  this  course.  For  so  long  as 
the  enrollment  is  restricted,  there  will  be  "dead- 
beats"  who  will  deprive  a  more  earnest  student  of 
a  chance  to  participate.  This  40'u.  mortality  rate 
shows  the  inability  of  the  Testing  Service  to  screen 
out  the  chaf,  as  it  were.  Therefore,  there  will  al- 
ways be  an  element  of  injustice  involved. 

RECOMMENDATIONS 

Steps  are  bemg  taken,  however,  to  see  that  the 
program  can  accommodate  more  students.  In  the  of- 
ficial report  previously  mentioned,  the  Reading  Pro- 
gram Director,  Paul  Irvine,  mentions  in  his  list  of 
recommendations  that.  "Instruction  in  reading  and 
study  skills  should  be  offered  as  a  regular  part  of 
the  University's  program." 

At  the  present  time,  Ir\'inc  is  running  his  pro- 
gram on  an  emergency  budget  secured  from  the 
funds  appropriated  to  the  University  Testing  Serv- 
ice. 

Last  year,  Irvine  ran  the  program  with  the  help 
of  five  half-time  grad  .students.  It  was  for  this 
reason  that  the  program  had  to  be  restricted.  It 
will  be  run  this  semester,  but  according  to  reports 
from  Peabody  Hall,  even  fewer  students  can  be 
accommodated.  It  is  hoped  that  the  spring  session 
will  be  larger  even  than  last  year's,  but  that  is  a 
matter  for  speculation. 

At  the  present  time,  Irvine's  report  is  rin  the 
hands  of  the  State  Advisory  Budget  Commission. 
If  the  commission  approves  the  report  and  allots 
funds  for  the  program,  it  will  be  expanded  ac- 
cordingly. But  even  if  they  do.  it  will  be  next  fall 
l>ctorc  the  money  can  be  secured. 

PAY  AS  YOU  GO 

Sources  in  Peabody  have  disclosed  that  a  plan 
whereby  each  student  would  pay  his  own  way  was 
considered  before  adopting  thfe  present  set-up.  but 
it  seems  that  often  the  students  who  need  the  help 
the  most  are  the  ones  who  could  least  afford  the 
additional  financial  burden.  For  this  reason,  the 
plan  was  abandoned. 

Possibly  a  plan  could  be  conceived  which  would 
enable  needy  students  to  take  the  plan  at  the  ex- 
pense of  the  Testing  Service,  and  those  who  can 
afford  to  pay  do  so.  The  fact  that  a  pay-as-you-go 
plan  was  ever  considered  would  seem  to  indicate 
that  the  co.st  would  be  of  a  nominal  amount- 
As  to  whether  or  not  the  Budget  Commission  will 
appropriate  the  money  for  next  year,  or  if  the 
powers  that  be  will  attempt  to  arrange  for  the 
Reading  Program  on  a  fee  basis  are  both  unan.swcr- 
ablc  questions  at  this  time. 

But  in  the  meantime,  the  program  will  be  re 
stricted  to  those  with  the  most  need,  with  sonu* 
priority  given  to  seniors  and  grad  students. ' 


commur 
passage 
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hibtts  he 
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SPIDER 

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serted    t| 
into  a  ' 

"The 


I,  1956 


FRIDAY,  SEPTEMBER  28,  195$ 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


PAGE  THRtf 


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Chinese  Ambassador        -Common  Soldier- 


(Continued  from  Page   1) 
communist  aggressors    before  the 
passage  of  many  more  months,"'  he 
said. 

(2^  The  Chinese  Communist  ad- 
vance in  Nepal  and  Tibet  on  the 
Northern  border  of  India. 

This  aggression.  Dr.  Tong  said, 
keeps  India's  hands  tied  and  pro- 
hibits her  from  using  her  influence 
to  remove  communists  from  Bur- 
mese soil. 

(3)  Evident  courtship  of  Indo- 
nesian officialdom  by  communist 
leaders.     • 

Such  false  "wooing, "  Tong  said, 
may   lead   Indonesia,    "one    of    the 
exponents  of  neutralism,"  into  the 
communist  camp. 
SPIDER  WEB 

Assailing  the    "wooing"  of  indc-  ■ 
pendent     peoples     by     Communist 
smiles  and  promises.  Dr.  Tong  as-  I 
serted   that   they    were   being   led 
into  a  "spider  web."'  \ 

"The  Republic  of  China,"  Tong  \ 


said,  will  never  give  up  its  resis- 
tence  to  Godless  and  cruel  com- 
munism. And  in  the  end,  with  God's 
help,  the  Republic  of  China  will 
prevail." 

Tong,  who  assumed  his  present 
position  last  May,  concluded  his 
address  by  saying: 

"We  can  only  halt  the  advance 
of  international  communism  when ! 
men  everywhere  awaken  to  the  ag-  j 
gressive   purposes   of   the   commu- 
nists. The  time  for  that  awakening 
is  now."'  ! 

The    ambassador    was    feted    a 
private    banquet    at    the    Carolina 
Inn.  at  which  student  leaders  and  [ 
University   officials  were  present, ! 
prior  to  the  address.  ' 

After  the  address  was  concluded, ' 
a  public  reception  was  held  in  the 
main  lounge  of  Graham  Memorial  ! 
!()  enable  students,  faculty,  admin- 
istraf.ion  and  visitors  to  meet  and: 
speak  personally  to  Ambassador ! 
Tcng.  I 


(Continued  from  Page  1) 
9.  Many  were  ennobled  in  com- 
bat. A  Rebel  private  named  Mattix. 
injured  in  the  left  arm  at  Mur- 
freesboro  so  that  he  could  no  long- 
er fire  his  musket,  went  to  his  com- 
mander and  said.  ""Colonel,  I  am 
loo  badly  wounded  to  use  my  gun 
but  I  can  .carry  the  flag;  may  I? 
Three  standard  bearers  had  been 
killed  already,  but  when  the 
colonel  gave  his  consent.  Mattix 
grabbed  the  colors,  stepped  bold- 
ly in  front  of  his  regiment  and 
bore  them  through  the  remainder 
of  the  fight. 
REMEMBER  THE  CIVIL  WAR 

Pi'ofessor  Wiley  said  we  should 
not  iorget  the  Civil  War.  People 
often  ask  the  question:  "Why 
stress  the  Civil  War?  Doesn't  it 
mean  reviving  hatreds  that  should 


;  be  left  alone?" 

Answering  "No,"  Wiley  explain- 
ed: "The  Civil  War  was  the  great- 
est experience  this  nation  ever  had. 
•  It  is  our  richest  heritage.  The  con- 
'  flict  made  enormous  demands  on 
[  the  people,  and  especially  on  the 
masses.  It  was  their  testing  time: 
It  proved  to  be  their  time  of  great- 
ness. For  they  acquitted  ^hemselves 
in  a  more  laudable  manner  than 
any  other  group  in  society.  By  their 
magnificent  conduct  in  this  time 
of  the  nation's  greatest  crisis,  they 
proved  their  right  to  share  fully 
in  this  nation's  limitless  oppor- 
tunities." 

The  appearance  of  Wiley  on  the 
campus  was  sponsored  by  the 
Graduate  History*  Club,  Phi  Alpha 
Theta  history  fraternity  and  the 
Graham  Memorial  Student  ynion. 


Covering  The  Campus 


FIRST    OF    THE  SEASON! 

SALE 

STARTING  WITH  ALL  NIGHT  SESSION 

FRIDAY    NIGHT 
7    P.M.-ALL   NIGHT 

REMEMBER  LAST  SPRING? 

BIGGER    STOCK! 
BETTER    PRICES! 


COME  SEE  NOW 


M^^ 


GET  FIRST  CHOICE! 
207  E.  Franklin  St. 


ENGLISH  CLUB 

The  first  social  meeting  of  the 
English  Club  for  the  fall  semester 
will  be  held  tonight  in  the  Library 
Assembly  Room  at  7:30.  Refresh- 
ments will  be  served.  All  old  mem- 
bers and  all  new. graduate  students 
in  English  have  been  invited  to 
attend. 

INDOOR   POOL 

The  indoor  swimming  pool  is 
open  for  recreational  swimming 
Mondays  through  Fridays  from  4-6 
p.m.,  Saturdays  from  2-6  p.m.  and 
Sundays  from  2-5  p.m.  Women 
swimmers  may  wear  their  own 
bathing  suits,  but  men  students  are 
required  to  wear  the  special  suits 
issued  by  the  gym. 

STUDENT  WIVES  CLUB 

The  Student  Wives  Club  will  hold 
Its  first  meeting  this  fall  on  Tues- 
day at  8  p.m.  at  the  Victory  Village 
Nursei-y.  according  to  Secretary 
Pat  Howard.  All  Student  Wives 
have  been  invited  to  attend. 
PHARMACY  WIVES 

The  Pharmacy  Wives  will  hold  a 
uicnic  tomorrow  at  5  p.m.  at  the 
home  of  Mrs.  W.  J.  Smith  on  Ar- 
rowhead Rd.  In  case  of  rain,  it  will 
be  held  in  the  Institute  of  Pharm- 
acy Building. 
YACK   CONTRACTS 

All  organizations  desiring  space 
in  the  1956-57  Yackety  Yack  must 
sign  contracts  in  the  Yack  office 
in  the  basement  of  Graham  Me- 
morial   by    Oct.    10.    according    to 


Editor  Tommy  Johnson.,  Contracts 
may   be  signed   from  2  to  .4  p.m. 
any  weekday  afternoon. 
EVENING  SKETCH  CLASS 

Person  Hall  Art  Gallery.  Chapel 
Hill,  has  announced  a  Wednesday  ' 
evening    sketch    class,    beginning : 
Oct.    3.    The    class    will     include 
sketching  from  life,  with  drawing  j 
in  various  materials.  The  class,  to  | 
meet  from  7-9  p.m..  will  be  under  | 
\  John  Allcott   of  the  Dept.  of  Art. 
i  The   fee   is  $13   for    13   weeks   in- 
I  struction,       including       materials. 
Those   interested    in   joining   have 
been   invited  to  come  to  the  first 
meeting  o<"  the  class  next  Wednes- 
day, at  7  p.m.  '     .  > ;, 

wuNC-Tv  ;-'■; 

Today's  schedule  for  WUNC-TV, 
the   University's    educational   tele- 
vision station,  Channel  4: 
12:44— Sign  On 
12:45— Music 

1:00 — Today  on  Farm 

1:30 — Notes  on  Music 

2:00 — Engineering 

2:30— Sign  Off 

5:44— Sign  On 

5.45 — Music 

6:00— Children's  Corner 

6:30— News 

6:45— Sports 

7:00— Science  Fair 

7:30— Arts  Around  L's 

8:00— Coffee 

8:30 — Pi-elude 

9:00— Art  Museum    .■^^.  -^t     . 
10:00— Final  Edition  "  _      •. 
10:05— Sign  Off 


Gives  you  more  fo  enjoy 


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Real  Filtration 


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FILTER  TIP 

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SUNNYF 


PANCAKE  FLOUR 


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SUNSHINE  BISCUIT  COMPANY  HYDROX  COOKIES  11"^^  ...—  p^ 

Dry  ^  f 

^^      Lb. 
Cello 
Pkg 


7 .  oz  23c 


BLAGKEYEPEAS      --2^25 


•   •   •  DEL-MONTE    WEEK    SALE  •   •  • 


No.  303 


can 


23c 


FRUIT  COCKTAIL ./&^23c     SLICED  PEACHES -.7:. 

DARK  SWEET  CHERRIES,  17^i.  jar  _______  35e   APRICOT  NECTAR,  12k>z.  can 13e 

SPICED  PEACHES,  No.  Vh  jar 45e    ALL  GREEN  ASPARAGUS  -  "^.f  37c 


NIBLETS  MEXIGORN 


LIBBY  CANNED  FOODS 


A  GREEN 
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2     Cam     3  i  C 


FRUITS  for  SALAD 

No.  303 
17-oz. 


KRALTT  A>K:E     \ 


STRIETMANN   GRAGKERS 


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HONEY  GRAHAMS 
TOWN  HOUSE 
CLUB  CRACKERS 


4>V' 


YOUR  CHOICE 
g,       1 -POUND 
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33c 

A&P  PEAK  FRESH 
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VEGETABLES  • 


Save  on  p'r-  Meats 


Oscar  Av\ayer's  Short  Shank  10-14  Lb.  Avg.  —  Skinned 

SMOKED  HAMS 


LEnUCE-2  ^35c 
CARROTS  -2St19c 
CELERY ---- 1 2c 

Fresh  Cocoanuts  Tc 


SHANK  WHOLE  OR 

PORTION  I         HALF 


35c 

Per-Lb. 


47c 

Per-Lb. 


CENTER 
SLICES 

89c 

Per-Lb. 


"Super-Right  Old  Fashioned  Pure  Pork 

SAUSAGE  --.>^63c 

"Super-Right"   Delicious  All  Meat  Sliced 

BOLOGNA  -  -  ^ 
STEAKS 


Pkg. 


All  Detergent  -  -  - 


'A?  37c 


Lux  Toilet  Soap  -  -  2  "-  25c 
Lux  Toilet  Soap  -  -  2  g.'fs  i7c 
Lifebuoy  Soap 3  "•'.  28c 


Swan  Soap  -  -  -  - 


Lifebuoy  Soap "ii'  t4c 

15c 

Swan  Soap  -  -  -  -  "b^-  9c 
Dial 
Dial  Soap  .  -  ■  -  2  »"^'  35c 


Large 
Bar 


Soap  -  -  -  -  2  B?ts"25c 


Vel  Detergent  Powder  ^^^  31c 


Clorox  Bleach  ^^^  17c  b^"  31  c 

OATMEAL  MIXED  CEREAL 

PABLUM  -  -  -  "«  37c  -  37c 


"Super-Right" 

Grourvj  Beef         Lb.        *1^P 
Sandwich  WW** 

FINE  JANE  PARKER  BAKED  FOODS 


39c 
59 


CHOCOIATI 


Chiffon      Blackberry 

Cake  45c   PiV«^"53 


EACH  CAKE 


SPEtlAL 


JANE  PARKER  PRESLICED 
SANDWICH  OR  FRANKFURTER 


ROLLS- fr15 


Texize  Floor  Cleaner  - 
Little  Lady  Brooms  .. 
SOS  Pads 


Qt. 

BoL 


69c 


--     Ea 


'^%r$1.25 


10   ^^'^   2V 


SAIL  DETERCENT  -  -^'^^%23e 
SPIC  &  SPAN -27c 


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DULANY  FROZEN 

SL'CED  PEACHES 

2  p"^?'  4y 


CUT  CORN 


c  pk?  1 9c 


Store  Address 

210  W. 

Franklin 
St. 


*M(«IC*-t    MMIMOtt    >eO*    MTAIll*  S'MCI    <•>* 


(^  I  Super  (Markets 


These  Prices  Effective  Tkru  Sat..  Sept.  ZMh 


New!  Cap'n  John's  Pre-Cooked 

FISH  STICKS,  10-oz.  pkg. 


29c 


PACE  FOUR 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


Tar  Heels  Leave  Today  For  Battle  With  Oklahoma 

Team  Is  In  Excellent 


Harrier  Practice  Hampered 
By  Injuries,  Bad  Weather 


Injuries  and  cold  rainy  weath- 
er have  slowed  the  Carolina  cross- 
country team's  pre-season  prepara- 1 
tions  down  to  a  walk  with  the 
opening  meet  of  the  season  only 
one  week  off.  ! 

According    to    Coach    Dale   Ran-  i 
son,  the  Tar  Heels  still  have  a  long 
way    to    go    before    the    season's 
opener    with    Virginia    here    next  j 
Friday.  Three  of     his     top     boys  j 
have  been  plagued  by  ailments  of  i 
one  sort  or  another  since  the  start  I 
of  practice  with  only  veteran  ace 
Jim    Beatty    and    soph    whiz   Dave 
Scurlock  going  at  top  speed. 

Soph  Wayne  Bishop,  undefeat- 
ed ace  on  last  year's  freshman 
team,  is  the  latest  adjlition  to  the 
casualty  list.  Bishop  aggravated  an 
old   knee   injury   Wednesday  that 


may  slow  him  down  for  a  while. 

Junior  Everett  Whatley,  strick- 
en by  a  virus  infection  last  week, 
has  just  about  shaken  off  the  bug, 
and  is  once  more  going  through 
full  scale  workouts.  Soph  Howard 
Kahn  has  been  slowed  /own  by  a 
knee  injury  in  early  practice  sess- 
ions, but  is  gradually  rounding 
into  shape. 

Coach  Ranson  still  isn't  sure 
just  which  boys  he  will  be  count- 
ing on  for  points  in  the  meet  with 
Virginia.  Sixteen  boys  are  out 
fighting  for  the  eight  starting 
positions. 

Coach  Ranson  would  like  for  all 
boys  interested  in  cross-country, 
freshman  or  otherwise,  to  report 
to  Fetzer  Field  for  practice  any 
afternoon. 


LITTLE  WEEK-END  HOUSECLEANING 

SALE 

DROPPED  TITLES  IN  RELIGION, 
INSPIRATIONAL  BOOKS,  AND  PSYCHOLOGY. 

Starts  Tomorrow 
THE  INTIMATE  BOOKSHOP 

205  E.  Franklin  St.  Open  Till  10  P.M. 


4 


Buddy  Payne:  Ace  Tar  Heel  Flankman 


CALL  THIS  ONE  WHAT  YOU  WILL  - 
LAST  ONE  WAS 

^'STARDUSr' 


--  REMEMBER? 

COME  GET  YOURS  FROM  THE 

LARGEST    STOCK 

I'VE  EVER  OFFERED  -  AT  PRICES  BETTER  THAN 
rVE  EVER  BEEN  ABLE  TO  GIVE  YOU! 

Now  -  Now  -  Now! 

207  E.  Franklin  St. 


DAILY    CROSSWORD 


ACROSS 

1.  Shade  of  red 
6.  Cut  wool 
H.  Sheeplike 

12.  Door  joint 

13.  Cougars 

14.  Beginning 

15.  To  diminish 
front    (Mil.) 

16.  Fish 

17.  Nickel 
(sym.) 

18.  Water  god 
( poss. ) 

19.  Tree 

20.  Devoured 

21.  Fears 

23.  Sound  of 
a  goose 

24.  Underworld 
river 
(Myth.) 

26.  A  small 

piece 
29.  Line  from 

upper 

corners  of 

sail  to  the 

yard 

33.  Youth 

34.  Fortify 

35.  Disfigure 

36.  Part  of 
"to  be" 

37.  Underworld 
god  (Myth.) 

38.  Church  part 

39.  Having  sides 

41.  Mistreat 

42.  Scarf 

43.  Warning 
signal 

44.  Shouts 

45.  Lords 

DOWN 

1.  Caught 
r  slang) 

2.  Of  the  ovul« 
iBot) 


3.  Full 
of 
fissures 

4.  White 
ant 

5.  Man's 
nickname 

6.  Agitated 

7.  Female 
red  deer 

8.  Half  ems 

9.  Deputies 
10.  Binds  again 
16.  Wheels  on 

swivel 

frames 
1 9.  Poem 
20  Sloth 
22.  Lofty 

mountain 


23.  Femi- 
nine 
pro- 
noun 

25.  Son 
ot 
Noah 

26.  Sty- 
lish 
(slang) 

27.  A 
de- 
scend- 
ant of  Ham 

28.  Fish  ( var. ) 

30.  Unclean 

31.  Egypt's 
president 

32.  Putting 
areas 


All  uuHH  aiuy 
nniii-iaa   ;iini:3a 

-     'JHUrj  Had 


nau  Hona  aa 

an     nnu  naa 


Yesterday'*  Antwer 
34.  Helpers 

37.  Valley 
(poet) 

38.  Man's 
nickname 

40.  Dollar 
(abbr.) 

41.  Viper 


1 

2 

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4S- 

Buddy  Payne,  veteran  Tar  Heel  end,  is  stated  to  start  against  Bud  Wilkinson's  Oklahoma  Sooners  to- 
morrow. Payne,  a  letterman  from  Norfolk,  Va.,  has  been  tabbed  by  Coach  Jim  Tatum  for  stardom 
this  season. 


Condition  For  Contest 


Fresh  Booters 


The   freshman  soccer  squad  be-  ! 
gan  practice  yesterday  under  the 
supervision   of  coach   John   Wien- 
ants. 

Coach  Wienants  is  a  graduate 
student  in  Physical  Education. 
He  attended  Brockport  State 
Teachers  College  in  Rochester, 
New  York. 

Coach  Wienants  said  that  all 
freshmen  interested  in  playing 
soccer  should  meet  him  on  Fetzer 
Field   at   three   o'clock  today. 


SPORTS 

,     S^atxy  Cheek.  Sports  Editor 


Dorm  Man,agers 

Dormitory  managers  for  intra- 
mural sports  will  have  their  first 
meeting  Monday.  Oct.  1.  The  In- 
tramural Department  has  asked 
that  all  dormitories  appoint  rep- 
resentatives. 


PATRONIZE   YOUR 
•    ADVERTISERS    • 


TOGETHER 
for  the  first  time! 


WHAT 
EKTERTAINMENT 


If    the    favorites    fall    in    this 
weekend's  football  games  around 
the  Big  Four  circuit  as  they  did 
last    weekend,    a    lot    of    pigskin 
prognosticators,    including    yours 
truly,  will  throw  away  their  slide 
rules   and    start  coin   flipping   to 
pick  the  winners. 
Nothing  went  according  to  form 
last  Saturday,  as    upsets   occurred 
in  all  three  games  involving  mem- 
bers of  the  Big  Four.  State  wallop- 
ed Carolina,  South  Carolina  turned 
back  Duke  and  Wake  Forest  whip- 
ped William  &  Mary. 

SOONERS  ARE  FAVORED 

Tar  Heel  supporters  would  like 
nothing  better  than  to  see  last 
week's  upset  trend  carried  over 
into  tomorrow's  games.  Oklahoma 
has  been  made  a  27  point  favorite 
over  the  Tar  Heels  in  their  gdmc  at 
Norman. 

Coach  Jim  Tatum's  squad 
showed  promise  in  their  loss  to 
the  Pack,  but  hardly  enough  to 
compete  with  such  a  powerhouse 
as  Oklahoma.  The  Sooners  are 
currently  ranked  number  one  in 
the  country  by  the  Associated 
Press.  Coach  Bud  Wilkinson  lost 
only  a  very  few  men  from  last 
year's    Orange   fiowl    champion- 


M-G-M  presenb 

A  SOL  C.  SIEGEL 
PRODUCTION 

stirring 

BING  CROSBY 

GRACE  KELLY 

FRANK  SINATRA 

ia  the  hilarious  low-down  on  high  life 

"HIGH 
SOCIETY 

ia  VISTAVISION  and  COLOR 

CELESTE  HOLM 
.  ^   JOHN  LUND 
LOUIS  ARMSTRONG 

AND  HIS  BAND 

T;;iT?C0LE  porter 

PRICES  THIS  ATTRACTION 
ADULTS   65c     CHILDREN    15c 

NOW  PLAYING 


f» 


ship  squad,  and  has  enough  m*n- 
power  on  hand  to  field  three  al- 
most   equally    strong    teams. 

Although    playing    the    nation's 
top  team    is   admittedly   an   honor 
and  a  sure  thing  at  the  box  office, 
it   tends   to   be   rather    hard   on    a 
school's    won-iost    record.    In    all 
probability,  the  Tar  Heels  will  find 
this    out    tomorrow.    Give    Tatum 
three  years  and   a   lot   more   fire- 
:  power,  and   it   might  be  different. 
Oklahoma  27.  Carolina  0. 
OTHER  BIG  FOUR  GAMES 
!      Wake  Forest  also  has  an  unenvi- 
lable    assignment    tomorrow.    The 
fiery  Deacons  will  catch  Maryland 
on     the     rebound     following     the 
;  Tcrp's    surprise    loss    to    Syracuse 
I  last    week.    The    Terps    have    the 
horses,  and   if  they   ever  start   to 
click    under    new    Coach    Tommy 
Mont,  il  will  be  goodbye  for  some- 
body.  Maryland  27,   Wake  Forest, 
13. 

Duke,  despite  their  loss  to  the 
Gamecocks,  still   has  a  potential 
powerhouse,   and   Virginia,   even 
with    the    Plunging    Persian    Jim 
Bahktior,  will   be   lucky   to   hold 
them   down   as   did   South   Caro- 
lina. Duke  20,  Virginia  6. 
State  will  try  to  live  up  to  the 
showing  they  made  in  the  Carolina 
game   tomorrow   when    they   meet 
VPI.  The  Gobblers  gave  Tulane  a 
pcckful    of    trouble    Saturday,    but 
will    have    to    go    some    to    match 
the  Wolfpack  'new  look'.  State  27, 
VPI  6. 


CLASSIFIEDS 


By  LARRY  CHEEK 

Coach  Jim  Tatum  and  his  Tar 
Heel  football  team,  still  feeling  the 
effects  of  last  week's  unexpected 
trouncing  at  the  hands  of  N.C. 
State,  will  leave  by  airplane  early 
this  morning  for  Oklahoma  City 
and  a  Saturday  afternoon  date  with 
the  nation's  number  one  football 
team,  mighty  Oklahoma. 

The  Tar  Heel  traveling  party  was 
scheduled  to  board  a  70  passenger 
charter  plane  at  the  Raleigh-Dur- 
ham Airport  at  8  a.m.  Scheduled 
time  of  arrival  in  Oklahoma  City 
is  11:40  a.m.  CST.  The  Tar  Heels 
will  make  their  camp  in  the  Okla- 
homa Biltmore  Hotel  in  Oklahoma 
City,  22  miles  from  Norman  where 
the  game  will  be  played. 

Except  for  possible  limbering  up 
exercises,  the  Tar  Heels  will  take 
it  easy  today.  Oklahoma  has  sche- 
duled a  short  afternoon  practice 
session. 
WET  PRACTICE  SESSION 

The  Tar  Heels  woitnd  up  pre- 
game  d*  lis  yesterday  with  a  soggy 
workout  on  rain  soaked  Navy 
Field.  The  first  team  spent  most 
of  the  afternoon  working  on  a  de- 
fense against  Oklahoma  plays, 
while  the  second  and  third  units 
engaged  in  a  two-hour  offensive 
scrimmage. 

The  entire  squad  is  in  good 
shape  with  the  exception  of  full- 
back Joe  Temple  and  quarterback 
Dave  Reed,  who  have  not  seen  ac- 
tion this  year. 

The  oddsmakers  have  establish- 
ed the  Sooners  as  27  point  favorites 
in  the  contest.  Coach  Bud  Wilkin- 
son's crew  was  ranked  as  the  coun- 
tr>''s  top  team  in  the  latest  AP 
poll.  The  Sooners  have  a  wealth 
of  manpower,  and  are  three  deep 
at  every  position. 

McDonald  may  be  sidelined 

Sooner  halfback  Tommy  McDon- 
ald, a  top  All-America  prospect, 
may  miss  the  game  due  to  a  leg 
sprain.  McDonald  has  been  out  of 
action  since  Sept.   12. 

Wilkinson,  known  for  his  prolific 
use  of  the  crying  towel,  feais  the 


Tar  Heels  may  be  rougher  than 
most  people  think.  "This  will  be  j 
our  toughest  game  of  the  season,"  i 
he  said.  "I  don't  say  Carolina  will  j 
have  the  best  team  we  meet.  But 
they  do  have  fine  personnel  and  j 
a  world  of  morale  and  enthusiasm  j 
because  of  their  new  coaching  | 
staff.  It's  our  key   game."  ' 


FRIDAY,  SEPTEMBER  28,  1954 

When  You're 
Broke ... 

Come  loaf  in 

Good  Company 

in  that  amiable 

emporium 

The  Intimate 
Bookshop 

205   E.  FRANKLIN  ST. 
OPEN   TILL    10   P.M. 


a  man  s 

best 

friend 

Slacks 

eORtfCTLY  TAKORiO  M 

"IVY  LEAGUE" 

STYU 


GM  SLATE 


Activitits  scheduled  for  Gra- 
ham Memorial  today  include: 

Panhellenic  Council,  12:30 
p.m.,  Roland  Paricr  Lounges  1,  2 
and  3;  Women's  Honor  Council, 
2  p.m..  Council  Room;  Sfudenf 
Audit  Board,  3:30  p.m.  Wood- 
house  Conference  Room. 


•  TAPERED  TROUSERS 

N«at,  Narrow  Linos 

•  BACK  STRAP  & 
BUCKLE 

Perfect  Fit 

•  NO  PLEATS 

Smart  Simplicity  In 

THE  RIGHT 
FABRICS 

Domestic,  imported  and 
Worsted  Flannels  and 

THE  RIGHT  COLORS 

Charcoal  Gray,  Charcoal  Blue,  Cambridge 
Brown  and  Block  and  Charcoal  Green. 


>- 


x^ 


And  Also  Newest  British  Heather  Colours. 


'■M^ 

-;^i 


Julian* 


The  B.M.O.C.  is  here! 


(^  MARKTiVAIN's. 


In  Color  Sy 

TschnlGolof 

Heieisrt  ttiru  UWTtO  ARTisrs 


LOST  —  BILLFOLD  FRmAY  IN 
Lenior  Hall  or  Law  School  be- 
tween 10  a.m.  and  noon.  Con- 
tain.'; valuable  personal  papers 
and  approximately  $200.  Money 
for  nurses  attending  my  wife 
who  has  a  fatal  disease.  If  finder 
■  feeis  he  needs  money  more  than 
me,  please  return  papers.  $20 
reward  offered  for  honesty.  Con- 
tact E.  M.  Murry  at  Law  School. 

STUDENTS  EXPERIENCED~ON 
Linotype  or  open  presses  may 
obtain  part  time  work  at  Colon- 
ial PrCoS.  Phone  333-6. 


LOST:  ONE  WI\'E'S  PASSBOOK. 
Lost  Saturday  in  or  ground  Ken- 
an Stadium.  Finder  please  call 
9-6362. 


TODAY 


SUNDAY  NEM'  YORK  TIMES  DE- 
livered  to  your  door.  For  further 
information  call  8-0572  or  R-036B 
after  5  p.m.  i-5833-5 

WANTED  — RIDE  TO  RALEIGH 
Mon.  thru  Fri.,  arriving  in  Ral- 
eigh prior  to  8:30  a.m.,  return^ 
ing  to  Chapel  Hill  approximately 
5:00  p.m.  Contact  Lee  Gotten  at 
Milton's  Clothing  Cupboard  or 
Call  Durham  7-8685  after  6:00 
p.m.  


Big  model  on  campus,  that  is.  It's  the  new 
Arrow.  University  shirt .  . .  all-around  choice 
of  smart  college  men,  from  button-down 
collar  in  front — to  center  button  and  full 
box  pleat  in  back.  And  these  men  are  really 
traveling  in  style  with  their  Ar.row*ties  .  .  . 
in  the  season's  highest  rated  patterns. 

Oxford  cloth  shirt  (in  white  and  five  muted 
colors,  including  new  "linen"),  $5.00;  same 
model  in  authentic  tartan  stripes,  $5.95 ; 
checks  and  stripes  in  cotton-rayon,  $7.95, 


ARROW 

CASUAL  W£AR 


BUY  ARROW  SHIRTS  AT 


Var  leys  Mens  Shop 


SERIALS    DSPT. 
CHAPEL  HILL,    U.   C« 
8-31-49 


WEATHER 

Partly  cloudy  and  warmer,  with 
high  in  7Cs. 


OThc 


star  Xecl 


.    SNOBBERY 

For    editor's    comments   on    aca- 
domic  snobbery,  see  p.  2. 


VOL:  LVIII,  NO.  8 


Complete  (/P)  Wire  Service 


CHAPEL  HILL,  NORTH  CAROLINA.  SATURDAY,  SEPTEMBER     29,  1956 


Offices   in   Graham   Memorial 


FOUR  PAGES  THIS   ISSUE 


Tar  Hpels  Tangle  With  Nation's  Top  Team  In  Headliner  Game 


Fats  Domino,  Billy  May  Band 
Scheduled  For  Fall  Germans; 
Sam  Donahue  To  Appear  Also 


A  twin  bill  of  Fats  Domino  and 
the  Billy  May  Band,  led  by  Sam 
Donahue,  will  be  featured  at  the 
1956  Fall  Germans  next  month. 

The  concert,  from  3  to  5:30  p.m., 
and  the  dance,  from  9  to  1  a.m., 
will  be  held  Friday,  Oct.  26,  ac- 
cording to  George  Ragsdale  of 
the  German  Club.  Thi^  wUl  be  the 
Friday  before  the  Wake  Forest 
football  game,  he  said. 

Both  bands  will  play  at  both  the 
concert  and  the  dance. 

Fats  Domino,  known  through- 
oat  the  South  as  "The  Little  Fat 
Man  from  New  Orleans,"  will  be 
a  treat  for  all  the  'rock  'n'  roll" 
fans  on  campus.  Many  students 
have  attended  his  shows  through- 
out the  state. 

Fats  began  singing  in  New  Or- 
leans in  his  early  teens.  Soon  be- 
coming a  favorite  around  southern 
Louisiana,  he  was  signed  and  cut 
a  session  for  Imperial   Records. 

His  first  record,  "Goin  Home." 
immediately  rose  to  popularity 
among  "rhythm  and  blues"  fans. 
His  following  records,  including 
"Where  Did  You  Stay."  "Rose- 
mary" and  'I'm  Gonna  Pack  My 
Suitcase"  were  also  popular  in 
this  field.  , 

ftIG  BREAK 

His     biggest     break.     how«ver, ! 
came  with  his  recording  of  "Ain't 
That  A  Shame,"  which  after  climb-  i 
ing  to  the  top  spot  on  th«  R  &  B  ; 
popularity  charts  moved  over  into  | 
the    Popular   record   listings.    The ' 
"Rock  'n  roll"  conscious  American  ■ 
listening  audiences  rode  this  tune, 
(written  by   Domino  himself),   to 
sixth  spot  in  the  nationwide  pop- 
ularity   song    charts,    and    it    re- 
mained there  for  several  weeks. 


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FATS  DOMINO 

. . .  rock    'n'    roll    nian 

Since  then  he  has  kept  at  least 
;  one  of  his  songs  on  one  of  the 
I  nations'  hit  parades.  Juke  boxes 
all  over  the  country,  including 
'  many  on  the  UNC  campus,  carry 
:  his  records.  Some  of  his  latest  re- 
!  leases  are:  "I'm  In  Love  Again," 
]  "My  Blue  Heaven,"  "When  My 
Drcamboat  Comes  Home,"  and 
:  -Blueberry  Hill." 
i 

Sam  Donahue  began  his  musi- 
cal career,  as  did  Domino,  while 
still  in  high  school.  In  his  senior 
year  he  organized  a  dance  band. 
Some  of  the  members  of  this  band 
are  sttU  with  him. 

After  graduation  and  a  summer 
of    professional    work    he    decided 

!  that  in  order  to  gain  national  rec- 

■  ognition  he  would  have  to  play  as 
a  side  man  with  some  of  the  more 

;  famous  bands.  During  this  stint 
in  his  career  he  played  with  such 

I  leaders  ri<i  Benny  Croodmnn.  Gone 

i  Krupa  and  Harry  James. 


Dance  Is  Tonight 

Deadline  is  Extended 
For  Trip  To  Averett 


The  deadline  to  make  reserva- 
tions for  a  dance  tonight  at  Aver- 
ett College,  Danville,  Va.,  has 
been  extended  to  noon  today  by 
the  YMCA,  which  is  handling  ar- 
rangements. 

Approximately  100  people  have 
signed  up  to  leave  here  at  6:15 
p.m.  today,  acocrding  to  John  Rie- 
bel,  Associate  Secretary  of  the 
YMCA. 

Riebel  said  he  would  like  to 
have  as  many  more  people  who  are 
interested  to  sign  up  by  noon.  Up- 
perclassmen  as  well  as  freshmen 
are  invited,  he  said. 

Buses  will  be  chartered  for  the 
55-mile  trip,  and  a  fee  of  $2  is 
being  charged  each  person  to  cov- 
er the  cost.  There  will  be  no  other 
charges.  Some  students  will  go  up 
in  cars. 

The  girls  at  Averett  are  putting 
on  this  dance  solely  for  Carolina. 
The  nine-piece  band  of  Bob  Cleve- 
land, regarded  as  the  best  in 
southern  Virginia,  will  furnish  the 
music,  and  refreshments  and  a 
snacl^  supper  at  mid^i^t  will  be 
furnished  free. 

Plans  are  to  have  the  dance  start 
at  8:30  p.m.  and  end  at  midnight. 
The  bu.s«s  will  leave  Danville  for 


INFIRMARY 

Students  in  the  Infirmary  yes- 
terday included: 

Miss  Isabel  A.  Helbroek,  Miss 
Sue  B.  Gilliam,  John  G.  Burgwyn, 
James  E.  Holshouser  Jr.,  Marvin 
D.  Harriss,  Alfred  J.  Julian, 
Thimethy  L.  Harris,  Clarence  E. 
Smith,  Jr.,  William  C.  Elliot,  Jr. 
Reginald  Mallet,  Earl  T.  Kirkman, 
William  H.  Hathaway.  Michael 
P.  Cap,  Miss  Mary  D.  Dance,  Al- 
vin  W.  Smith,  Peter  V.  Vanstory, 
Clautfhis  L.  Carlton,  Richard  A. 
Reavis  and  Rebert  A-  Barnwell. 


the  return  trip  about  12:45  or 
later  if  the  men  want  to  leave 
later. 

Riebel  said  all  who  are  going 
should  eat  before  leaving  Chapel 
Hill. 

Arrangements  are  being  coor- 
dinated by  Bob  Leonard  of  the 
YMCA.  Riebel  said. 

The  Carolina  men  will  be  re- 
turning a  visit  which  about  130  of 
the  Averett  girls  made  to  the  UNC 
campus  this  past  Sunday.  They  at- 
tended the  Planetarium  show  and 
a  reception  in  Graham  Memorial 
and  were  guests  of  the  various 
night  church  groups. 


SAM  DONAHUE 

...heads  Billy  May   Hand 

SAX  MAN 

By  this  time  he  was  becoming 
recognized  as  one  of  the  outstand- 
ing tenor  sax  men  in  the  country. 

Feeling  that  he  had  gained  the 
necessary  experience,  Sam  rejoin- 
ed  his  .own  band,   which    had    re- 
mained almost  entirely  intact  dur- 
ing  hLs  absence,  and  opened  at  the 
Roseland    Ballroom    in    1941.   One 
night    stands    and    an    opening    at 
the  Glen    Island    Casino  followed.  ; 
Donahue   peemcd   set   for   a   long  j 
and  successful  stay  there  until  the  | 
Navj'  called  hint  «r  service  and  he ' 
was   forced   to  disband. 

In  the  service,  Sam  had  his  own 
band    and   played   on   service   pro-  ■ 
grams  and  United  Kingdom  broad- 1 
casts. 

After  his  discharge,  Donahue 
went  back  to  playing  in  ballrooms 
and  theaters  until  his  career  was 
again  interrupted  by  the  Korean  ' 
War.  After  about  six  months,  an 
old  back  injury  began  to  act  up 
and  once  more  Sam  got  an  honor- ; 
able  discharge. 

Sam  planned  to  rejoin  his  own  ; 
band  but  an  offer  from  Tommy  j 
Dorsey  as  an  assistant  leader  j 
couldn't  be  refused. 

It  was,  as  a  result  of  this  di- 1 
versified  experience,  that  Billy ' 
May  chose  Sam  Donahue  to  go  out ' 
with  his  already  popular  band  j 
when  May  elected  to  stay  in  Los  ; 
Angeles  with  Capitol  Records.         | 

Debbie  Brown  will  be  fe?tured  I 
as   vocalist  with   the  band   at  the 
concert  and  dance  here.  I 


First  Frat 
Parties  Set 
Tomorrow 

The  first  day  of  fraternity  rush  \ 
parties  will  begin  tomorrow  af-.i 
ternoon. 

Formal  invitations  for  tomor- 1 
row's  parties,  set  for  2:30  to  5:30  j 
p.m.,  went  out  earlier  this  week.  '■, 
The  rushing  manual  stipulates : 
that  men  arc  required  to  accept  ■ 
all  initial  bids  fo  parties,  or  be 
disqualified   from   rushing. 

Parlies  next  week  are  scheduled  | 
for  Monday,  7  to  10  p.m.;  Tues-  | 
day,  7  lo  9:30  p.m.;  Wednesday, 
7  to  9:30  p.m.;  and  Thursday,  7 
to  9:30  p.m. 

Friday  is  set  as  .shake-up  day, 
and  strict  silence  will  be  observed 
from  9  p.m.  Friday  until  Monday 
noon.  The  afternoon  of  Monday, 
Oct.  8,  will  be  pledge  day. 

.After  accepting  their  initial 
bids,  men  may  visit  fraternities, 
of  their  preference. 


cflnpuSi 

SFFN 


/  ivo  slnt'crittg  freshmen 
^tandini:^  at  Monou^rarn  Cluh 
III  7  ni  I  he  inornintr  fo  see 
team    off    lo    OhUt- 


loot  hall 
hoina. 


Coed  lifliiiii^  ff><>t  lo  lie 
sliDf  (itid  faliih^,  hooks  und 
all. 


Big  Sooners  Favored  Over  UNC 
By  27  Points;  Game  Begins  At  3 

By  LARRY  CHEEK 
Daily  Tar  Heel  Sports  Editor  ,  ■    « 

.\ORM.\N.  (;kl,i.  Sept.  29-Upset-minded  North  Carolina  will  be  trying  to  bounce 
Ijack  fi(jm  an  opening,-  :<aiiic  loss  to  .N.  C.  State  here  this  afternoon  when  they  tangle  with 
the    naiiona'l    dianipion    Oklahoma   Sooners   in  college  football's  game  of  the  day. 

The  imer.st't  tional  headliner  will  kick  off  at  3  p.m.  (EST)  hi  Oklahoma's  Owen  Sta- 
dium bciore  a  throng  of  (io,ooo.  The  game  will  be  telecast  locally  by  station  WKY-TV.  Ok- 
lahoma Citv,  :  1(1  will  be  broadcast  nationally  by  Harry  Wismer  over  the  Mutual  Broad- 
i listing  System.  Ray  Reeve  and  the  Tobacco  Sports  Network  will  pipe  the  game  back  to 
'- '■ ♦  North  Carolina.  ♦  ~~  ~" 


Yack  Grants 

Reprieve 

To  Seniors 

I 

Seniors    have    been    given    one!'  National  Scholarship  Winners 

more  chance  to  have  their  picture^!  ^      Shnown  h«r«  wifh  Rj^y^Armslrong^  director  of  •dmiisions,  leff,  and 
ckely  Yack.l     RobeTtB.  'House,  chancellor,  right,  are  three  Norifji  Carolina  ^uths 


made  fortEe  19.5^  Yack  ely 
cditbr  Tommy  .Johnson  announced  j 
yesterday.  1 

Seniors  who  have  not  had  their 
pictures   made  may  do  so  Monday  I 
through  Wednesday,   at  a   cost  of  i 
$1  per  student.  .   ' 

Pictures    will    be    made    in    the  j 
basement      of     Graham    Memorial 
from    1    to   6:30   p.m. 

The   rest   of     the     photograjHiy 
schedule   is  as  follows:   Oct.    1-5 —  1 
Freshmen,   Nursing     School,     and  j 
fourth  year  Medical  School.  ! 

Oct.    8-12 — Sophomores,    Pharm-  ] 
acy  School.  Dental  Hygiene.  Den- 
tal School. 

Oct.  15-19 — .Juniors.  l,aw  School, 
rest  of  Medical  School.  Graduate 
School. 


who  are  attending  the  University  this  year  on  National  Merit  Pro- 
gram scholarships.  Standing  in  the  center  is  Otis  William  Jones  of 
Z'rconia.  Seated,  left  to  right,  are  Murphy  Bryan  Conry  of  Rockwell 
and  William  Happer  Jr.  of  Lenoir.  The  scholarships  were  awarded 
on  the  basis  of  ability  and  promise  to  benefit  from  a  college  educa- 
tion. 


YDG  President  Warns  About 
Seriousness  Of  Ike's  Health 


Chopei  Hill 
Scenes  Go 
On  Exhibit 

A  new  exhibit,  entitled  "Chap- 
el Hill  Scenes  by  Sam  Boone," 
was  put  up  this  week  in  the  Uni- 
versity Library,  in  five  cases  oh 
the  main  floor. 

The  exhibit  of  36  photographs, 
which  will  be  on  view  through  Oc- 
tober, represents  a  selection  of 
Sam  Boone's  best  photographs  of 
University  buildings,  campus 
scenes,  local  churches  and  flower- 
ing trees.  Included,  also,  are  a 
few  studio  portraits  of  indivic^ial 
flowers  in  close-ups. 

Boone,  a  native  of  Gates,  served 
with  the  U.  S.  Army  Signal  Corps 
in  North  Africa  and  Italy  from 
1942  to  1945.  He  graduated  from 
the  University  in  1949  with  an 
A.  B.  in  Journalism.  From  1950 
to  1952  Boone  worked  as  a  pho- 
tographer in  the  University's  Cen- 
tral Photo  Laboratory,  and  since 
1952  he  has  been  head  of  the 
Library's    Pbotoreproduction    Ser- 


Vogue  Begins 

Prix  De  Paris 
NafI  Contest 


By  PEC   HUMPHREY 

Two  weeks  in  Paris  or  $1,000  in 
cash  is  being  offered  by  Vogue 
Magazine  to  the  college  senior  who 
proves  her  capabilities  in  Vogue's 
22nd  Prix  de  Paris  contest. 

The  Prix  is  open  to  all  senior 
women  with  a  yen  for  a  career  in 
writing,  publishing,  '  advertising, 
merchandising  or  decorating.  Con- 
testants will  be  judged  on  writing 
ability,  grasp  of  subject  matter, 
general  intelligence,  originality 
and  demonstration  of  special  tal- 
ents. 

Using  Vogue  as  their  textbook, 
Prix  competitors  must  complete 
two  quizzes  of  four  questions  each, 
based  on  actual  editorial  prob- 
lems. Those  who  satisfactorily  an- 
.swer  both  quizzes  will  be  eligible 
to  write  a  1500-word  thesis  on  one 
of  the  topics  in  Vogue's  Ameri- 
cana issue  of  F«b.  1,  1957. 


LATE  SPORTS  SCORES 

Miami   14,  S.  C.  6. 
Milwaukee   4,   St.   Louis   5. 
Qreoklyn  vs.  Bitt»burg,  Ppd.,  rain 


237  In  Pharmacy 
Brecht  Announces 

Dr.  E.  A.  Brecht.  dean  of  the 
University  School  of  Pharmacy, 
yesterday  announced  the  rnroM- 
ment  of  the  UNC  Pharmacy 
School. 

A  total  of  237  students  are  tak- 
ing undergraduate  work.  This  is 
an  increase  of  16  students  over 
last  year's  enrollment. 


By   HIL   GOLDMAN 
"The    American    people    shruld 
be    aware    of    the    situation    con- 
cerning   the   seriousness   of   Presi- 
dent Eisenhower's  condition  when 
!  they  go  to  the  polls  in  November." 
,      This   warning   was   given   Thurs- 
i  day  night  by  George  Miller,  presi- 
j  Jent  of  the  UNC  Young  Democrat- 
■'c  Club,  during  the  organization's 
first   meeting  of   the   year. 

He  stressed  the  possibility  of 
Richard  Nixon  succeeding  to  the 
presidency  in  ca.se  of  illness  be- 
falling the  chief  executive,  adding, 
"We    hope    nothing    will." 

Speaking  on  Steven.son's  chances. 
Miller  said  that  since  the  1952 
election  there  has  been  a  definite 
trend  away  from  the  incumbent 
Ei.senhower  and  that  all  indica- 
tions point  to  a  Democratic  vic- 
tory in  the  coming  election. 


The  YDC  leader  continued,  sav 


The  Tar  Heels,  rated  27  point  I 
underdogs  by  the  experts,  landed  i 
in  Oklahoma  City  yesterday  after ' 
a  smooth  and  unenventful  plane  i 
ride  out.  Coach  Tatum,  as  is  his  f 
custom,  did  not  take  his  boys  onto  j 
the  practice  field  yesterday.  Ok-  ! 
lahoma  ran  through  a  brief  warm- 1 
up  drill. 

WEATHER  MAY  HELP  j 

The  weather  is  one  factor  that  j 
i  may  play  a  vital  role  in  the  Tar  i 
Heel  performance  tomorrow.  The  I 
;  temperature  is  expected  to  climb  j 
{  into  the  90's  by  game  time,  and  I 
the  humidity  makes  the  atmosphere  '■ 
j  sticky  and  muggy.  i 

i       Carolina    worked    out    all    week 
long  in  rain  from  Hurricane  Flos-  j 
sy  and  cool  fall  temperatures.  Just 
how  the  stifling  heat  here  may  af- , 
feet  them-  remains  to  be  seen. 

Tatum      has      announced     four ' 
changes  in  the  lineup  that  started  j 
last  week's     opener     against     the  j 
Wolfpack.   Don   Lear,  who  played  j 
h=s  first  game  at  guard  last  week,  i 
has   been   shifted   back   to  his  old  , 
I  fullback    slot    and    will    start    in 
place  of  Giles  Gaca.  Jim  Varnura 
1  replaces   Larry   McMuUen    at   one 
I  halfback    post.    Varnqm'   turned   in 
several    spectacular    runs    against 
the  pack.  | 

JUNIORS  START  | 

Juniors  Dick  Smith  and  Jimmy] 
Jones  have  moved  into  first  .string  ! 
guard    spots    replacing    Lear    and 
Hap  Setzer.     who     is     reportedly; 
bothered  by  a  Charley  horse.  ! 

Pacing  the  Tar  Heel  attack  will  j 
be  wheelhorse  halfback  Ed  Sutton, ' 
star   of   last   week's   tilt  with   the  ' 
Wolfpack.  Sutton,  a  powerful  run- 
ner  with    speed    to   .spare,   rushed 


ing  the  club  will  exert  all  its  ef-  j  for  a  total  of  90  yards  in  10  car- 
fort   in   getting  out   the   vote,  and  '  ries   last   week. 


in  the  next  few  days  will  launch 
a  button  campaign  designed  to 
furthor  the  goals  of  Stevenson  and 
Kefauvcr.  Miller  pledged  the  sup- 
port of  the  group  in  helping  out 
at  the  polls  on  Nov.  6. 

The  club  has  A-ritlen  to  Wash- 
ington asking  permission  to  have 
Governor  Frank  Clements  of 
Tennessee  speak  at  Chapel  Hill  in 
the  coming  weeks.  If  Clements  is 
not  available,  an  allornatc  fi'^ure 
of  national  importance  will  be 
sought. 

A  tape  recording  of  the  Gov- 
ernors Democratic  National  Con- 
vention keynote  address  was  play- 
ed back  for  the  gathering,  esti- 
mated at  150.  X 


The  quarterback  starting  assign- 
ment is  still  uncertain,  but  it  looks 
like  soph  Curt  Hathaway  will  get 
the  nod  for  the  second  straight 
week.  Doug  Farmer  will  alternate 
with  Hathaway. 
WEAK  UNC  DEFENSE 

hTe  Tar  Heels,  so  ob\iously  weak 


Team  Telegram  Needs 
Signing  By  10  A.M. 

Students  who  desire  to  sign 
th*  telegram  being  sent  to  th« 
Carolina  football  team  in  Nor- 
man, Okia.,  have  been  asked  to 
do  so  before  10  a.m.  todiy. 

The  message  can  be  signed  at 
the  Y,  Graham  Memorial,  and 
the  downtown  stores. 

The  telegram,  which  is  being 
sponsored  by  the  Chapel  Hill 
Athletic  Club,  will  be  delivered 
to  the  team  this  afternoon  in  the 
field  house  before  they  take  the 
field  against  Oklahoma. 

The  message  reads:  "The  soon- 
er you  get  under  the  Sooner'* 
goal  post  the  sooner  you'll  bring 
us  a  win.  We  know  you  won't 
let  Coach  Tatum  down." 

on  defense  against  State,  plan  no 
special  tactics  to  stop  the  Sooners. 
Coach  Tatum  is  confident  his 
boys  will  have  less  trouble  against . 
a  straight  split-T  offense  such .  as 
Oklahoma  uses  than  against  a 
State  style  multiple  offense. 

A  long  string  of  Oklahoma  ,wc- 
fories  will  be  at  stake  this  after- 
noon The  amazing  Sooners  have 
w-on  30  in  a  row  since  a  7-7  tie 
with  Pitt  in  the  second  1953  game. 

Last  year,  the  Tar  Heels  scared 
the  daylights  6ut  of  Oklahoma  be- 
fore bowing.  13-6,  in  the  seaspns 
opening  game  at  Chapel  Hill.  In 
the  only  other  mePtmg  of  the  two 
clubs,  the  Sooners  stopped  Charlie 
Justice  and  Co.  in  the  1949  Sugar 
Bowl. 
EQUAL  IN  WEIGHT 

The  two  clubs  are  .iust  about 
equal  in  the  average  weights 
cohtmn.  Bulwarking  the  Tar  He-jl 
line  will  be  giant  Stewart  Pell, 
230  pounds  of  muscle  at  tackle. 
Other  starters  up  front  for  The 
Big  Blue  are  Buddy  Payne  and 
Larry  Muschamp  at  ends;  Phil  Blaz- 
er at  the  remaining  tackle  post: 
Smith  and  Jonus  at  guards:  and 
(See   FOOTBALL.  Page   4) 


YRC  Seeks  Democrats  Help 
In  Taking  Preference  Vote 

Campus      Young    Republicans  straw   vote     on     the    presidential 


Thursday  night  unanimously  adopt- 
ed a  resolution  challenging  the 
Young  Democrats  Club  to  cooper- 
ate  in   prompting   a   campus-wide 


Total  University  Enrollment  Is  Now  6,97/ 


By    BILLY    BARNES 

A  near-record  total  of  6.971  stu- 
dents registered  for  UNC's  fall 
semester,  according  to  a  report 
i.ssued  this  week  by  the  Central 
Records   Office. 

This  is  the  highest  enrollment 
of  students  since  1§49,  when  7.- 
419  students   were   here. 

The  total  this  year  is  an  in- 
crease of  396  over  last  fall's  en- 
rollment. 

Seventy-nine  per  cent  of  the  stu- 
dents arc  North  Carolinians.  But 
1,377  out-of-state  students  list 
home  addre.s.scs  that  include  all 
but  four  of  the  forty-eight  states. 
Virginians  make  up  the  largest 
group  of  out-of-staters,  followed 
by  New  Yorkers  and  South  Caro- 
linians,  respectively. 

Foreign  students  number  89  and 
hail  from  such  far-off  lands  as 
Pakistan,  Lebanon.  Viet  Nam  and 
Korea.  A  seven-member  Costa  Rica 
and  delegation  leads  the  group, 
followed  closely  by  six  Canadians 
and  six  Chinese. 

Women  students  at  UNC  number 
1.215,  supporting  a  male-female 
ratio  of  five  to  one.   The  College 


of  Arts  and  Sciences  claims  315 
coeds;  Elucation,  244;  Graduate 
School,  165;  General  College,  54; 
Library  Science,  32;  Social  Work. 
30;  Journalism,  25;  Business  Ad- 
ministration, 15;  and  Law,  5. 
Ex-servicemen  and  women  make 


26  per  cent  of  the  student  body. 
Twenty-one  coeds  are  among  UNC's 
vcte'-ans.  Only  15  remain  of  the 
host  of  men  that  once  attended 
UNC  using  the  W^orld  War  H  "GI 
Bill."  Korean  W'ar  Veterans  at- 
tending  UNC   under  the   "Korean 


UNC  Typewriter  Ribbons 
Would  Reach  To  Greensboro 


The  ribbons  used  yearly  in  the  University-owned  typewriters 
wculd  reach  almost  to  Greensboro  if  laid  end  to  end. 

.According  to  H.  R.  Ritchie,  general  manager  of  the  University 
Retail  Stores,  there  are  approximately  1,400  typewriters  seeing  serv- 
ice throughout  the  campus,  including  over  50  electric '  machines. 

The  keyboards,  which  require  a  staff  of  375  secretaries  to  operate 
them,  eat  up  an  average  of  S5,000  in  repairs  and  maintenance  every 
year.  Carolina  possesses  all  leading  models  including  Remington, 
IBM,  Royal,  and  Underwood. 

Ritchie  made  il  known  that  any  student  desiring  to  rent  one  of 
the  200  additional  machines  available  to  them  may  do  so  at  a  cost  of 
from  $^  to  $6  a  month,  depending  upon  the  condition  of  the  type- 
writer. "Often,"  he  added,  "a  student  may  wish  to  make  use  of  this 
facility  for  a  term  paper  or  theme.  I  have  been  told  that  this  may 
raise  his  mark  as  much  as  ten  per  cent." 

Al'  profits  from  r«>ntals  go  to  ♦bp  TTnivprsity  S/'hnlarship  Trust 
Fund. 


Bill"  number  1,430. 

General  College  rolls  list  1.181 
freshmen,  1.440  sophomores  and' 
three  special  students.  Total  Gen- ' 
cral  College  enrollment  falls  196  i 
students  short  of  last  years'  num-  j 
her.  I 

Upper  college  enrollments  are  i 
headed  by  the  College  of  Arts  and  | 
Sciences,  with  1,175,  folowed  by; 
Graduate  School,  878;  Business  I 
Administration,  540;  Education, , 
311;  Law,  241;  Journalism,  63:  So-| 
cial  Work,  44;  and  Library  Science, 
41.  I 

The  Division  of  Health  Affairs ; 
has  an  enrollment  of  1.054.  "niis  i 
figure  represents  students  in  the  j 
Schools  of  Dentistrj'.  Medicine, , 
Nursing,  Pharmacy  and  Public ! 
Health.  | 

In  addition  to  the  total  Univers- ' 
ity  enrollment,  there   are   125   in-  j 
ternes.    residents    and    fellows    as-  j 
sociated  with  the  Medical   School  j 
and  Memorial  Hospital.  Other  ad- 
ditional students  are  56  members  i 
of  Special  Education  Classes   and 
96  enrolled  at  the  Cliariotte  Grad- 
uate Center.  i 


preference  of  UNC  students. 

President  Keith  Snyder  com- 
mented that  officials  of  the  YDC 
had  repeatedly  been  approached 
concerning  the  project,  but  that 
they  made  no  comment. 

"The  Republicans,"  Snyder  said, 
'are  on  the  upswing  in  North 
Carolina.  The  YDC  is  obviously 
afraid  that  Ike  would  beat  Adlai 
worse  this  year  than  he  did  in 
1>52,  when  Ike  won  the  campus- 
wide  straw  vote  by  3  to  1  over 
Stevenson." 

The  club  worked  out  campaign 
strategy  at  Thursday's  meeting, 
and  formulated  plans  for  a  daace 
and  an  election-night  victory  cele- 
bration. 


UNC  Reading  Course 
Applications  Begin 

Students  interested  in  taking 
the  Testing  Services  reading 
course  should  apply  at  108  Pea- 
body  Monday  through  Friday  of 
next  week,  according  to  Paul  Ir- 
vine Jr.   of   the   Testing   Service. 

Applications  will  be  received 
only  from  8:30  a.m.  to  4:30  p.m. 
on  those  days.  Applying  takes  only 
30  minutes,  Irvine  said. 

The  reading  classes  will  meet 
three  hours  a  week.  No  credit  is 
given  for  the  course,  which  is  de- 
signed to  help  students  improve 
their  reading  and  studying  effic- 
iency. 


FA6E  TWO 


THE  DAILY  TAJl  HEEL 


SATURDAY,  SEPTEMBER  29,  19S6 


SATUi 


2 


Tilted  Noses  And  Other 
Unrelated  Things 

i 

"The  Hoaid  is  greatly  iomonrd  ahoiil  liousini:^  of  man  led  .\hi- 

(it'nf\  and  has  come  lo  the  (oik  lusidti  that  thr  State  (aiinol  ad\'isf'dl\ 

undertake  to  provide  Itoitsiii*^  hn  married  students  except  those  in 

iirofessiofhil  schools  and   those  doinji  i^raditate  woik.  and  even   in 

such  cases  only  to  a  limited  extent,  justification  fo)  this  disli)iction 

is  (onnd  in   the  fact   that  .  ...  it  is  essetitial  to   the  ;j^ood  refnitalio)! 

and  educational  rank  of  our  I'nixersity  system  tJiat  slrona^  pro>!^ranLs 

o\  prolessional  and  advanced  'graduate  en  u<  til  ion  he  maintained."— 

Recommencbtunvs  i>l  the  Board  of  Hijilicr  Kdiuaiioii  lor  the  hicii- 

nitim   •0.",7-Kj')f). 


SKYSCRAPER  CAMPUS 


Tl»f  t  <)nne<ti(»n  hetwt-eii  liousino; 
married  students  enrolled  in  pro- 
fessional and  graduate  sthoois  and 

lilt   proi>Tams  carried  out  by  those 

schools  escapes   lis. 

Alur  all,  students  are  students, 
whether  ;hev  be  married  or  unniar- 
rietl,  nnderj>raduates  planning  or 
not  planning  on  entering  profess- 
ional or  graduate  sthools.  or  stu- 
<!ents  already  in  these  outstanding 
di\isi(»irs  of  the  I'nixersitv.  .\nd 
without  students  of  any  or  all  of 
the  al)o\e  (ategories  the  l^niversi- 
tv  uoidd  be  at  a  loss,  if  not  for 
students,  at  least  for  the  outstantl- 
ing  indi\iduals  who  fit  in  one  of 
the  missing  categories. 

But  the  Board  would  rather  pre- 
ser\e  the  high  academic  standing 
of  the  graduate  and  professional 
scliool  than  see  the  20  per  cent  of 


the  student  hodv  which  is  man  ied 
properly  housed,  providing  of 
course  there  is  some  coiniection 
between  the  two. 

I'or  the  graduaie  and  j>i<)fess- 
ional  schools  to  lose  the  high  stan<l- 
ing  tiiey  hold  among  the  nation's 
institiuions  woidd  be  a  tragedy, 
biu  the  loss  which  is  already  fx - 
curring  is  also  lujfortunate.  That  is 
the  loss  of  outstanding  individuals 
who  ne\er  come  to  the  I'niversi- 
ty  betause  they  (ant  find  a  pla';e 
for  their  family  at  prices  they,  as 
studeius,  (an  afford. 

The  connection  of  housing  for 
maried  students  with  the  standing 
of  the  giaduate  and  professional 
MJiools  of  the  I'nixersity  seems 
more  like  a  case  of  academic  snob- 
bery tlian  soinid  reasoning. 


An  Old  Standby  Returns 


.\n  old  stand- !)y  is  back  on 
campus.  -Nothing  exists  as  openly, 
or  is  condennied  as  often  as  stu- 
dent apathy.  Every  vear  student 
leaders,  It'iiversitv  officials  and 
casual  b\s"t.nirteis  carefully  point 
out  that  participation  just  doesn't 
seem  to  be  as  \>  :de  as  in  years  past. 

There  arc  nujM'MdUs  reason,  for 
studcn:  :  •■  !i\.  init  from  time  to 
tune  one  icasofi  stands  out  above 
the  rot. 

I'nr  ('ir'ent  outstanding  ])ack- 
ground  belli  id  this  falls  "S(^ 
\Vliatism  ■  it  will  be  necessary  to  go 
bad.  ala  Bridey  Murphy.  t(»  the 
time  before  the  mental  rebirth  that 
supj)o.sedlv  (H(urs  after  entering 
college. 

l*>aik  lo  h'gh  s(  hool  then,  to  .see 
where  tlu-  weeds  of  apathy  are 
sown. 

The  Tnixersity  is  a  liberal  place, 
free  lifieral.  not  leftist  liberal,  but 
often  students  arrive  with  .sour 
t.isies  in  their  mouths  from  having 
Noiuhful  ardor  squelched  by  high 
school  teachers. 

\V'ith  the  alarming  rise  in  juven- 
ile delin(juen(y  in  places  where  it 
lias  never  been  noted  before,  higli 
schtxjl  administrators  and  educau 
tors  ha\e  a  riglit  to  be  leery  of 
bursts  of  independence  on  the  part 
of   pre-college  students. 

So  new  students  airive  on  camp- 
us and  as  a  general  rule  split  into 
two  groups.  I  here  aie  those  who 
have  not  tasted  Carolina's  kind  ol 


The  Daily  Tar  Heel 

The  official  .student  publication  of  the 
Publications  Board  of  the  University  of 
North  Carolina,  where  it  is  publishcci 
daily  except  Mondav  and  examination 
and  vacation  periods  and  .summer  terms 
Entered  as  second  class  matter  in  thf 
post  office  in  Chapel  Hill,  N.  C,  undei 
the  Act  oi  March  8,  1870.  Subscription 
rates:  mailcKl,  $4  per  year,  $2.50  a  semes- 
ter; delivered,  $6  a  year,  $3.50  a  semes- 
ter. 


Editor 


FRED  POWLEDGE 


Managing  Editor      CHARLIE  JOHNSON 


News  Elditor 


RAY  LINKER 


Business  Manager 


BILL  BOB  PEEL 


freedom  and  lose  control  of  them- 
selves: and  there  arc  those  wlui 
have  observed,  or  even  felt  the 
thrill  of  doing  what  they  please, 
and  find  themselves  an  imjKirtant 
part  of  extras  urriculais.  '1  here 
aie  also  small  groups  of  individual 
cases  who.  for  variou.s  reasons.  ne\  - 
lv  !..i\e  cared  about  imuh  of  any- 
thing. 

.A  challenge  stands  before  the 
upperclassmen,  then,  a  challenge 
to  drop  their  air  of  boredom  and 
show  that  freedom  at  ("arolina  is 
more  than  consuming  as  much  al- 
cohol as  jxissible,  and  forsaking 
studies  for  any  diversion  that  pre- 
sents it  sell. 


Orientation 
Important  For 
Grads  Too 


Although  the  Tniversity  takes 
great  pride  in  its  graduate  school, 
the  individuals  enrolled  in  it  have 
been  left  on  the  outside  of  campus 
life. 

(Most  graduate  students  are  older 
and  tnore  mature  than  the  normal 
imdergraduate,  facts  which,  with 
the  higher  educaticm  which  be- 
longs to  the  grad.  tend  to  separate 
them  from  the  undergraduates. 

It  all  boils  down  to  the  fact  that 
the  graduate  students,  outside  ot 
studying,  are  left  out  of  campus 
ac  ti\  ities. 

\i  orientation  time  new  students 
and  freshmen  were  led  around  the 
campus,  and  told  exac  ilv  who  to 
see  for  everything  from  books  to 
advice  for  the  lovelorn.  Not  so  for 
the  graduate  students.  There  was 
suppcj.sed  to  be  an  orientation  pro- 
gram, but  when  registration  time 
came  around  many  grad  students 
didn't  kjiow  whete  to  go.  Some  of 
them  still  don't  know  the  build- 
ings as  well  as  fre.shmen  who  went 
through  a  more  complete  training' 
])eriod. 

.\\  present  a  group  is  being  or- 
ganized to  rectify  all  this.  If  it  siu - 
ceeds  the  giaduate  students  will 
probably  be(()me  a  more  integral 
part  (jf  Carolina  instead  of  the  left 
out  ingrediant.  ^^ 


Moscow  University  Starting  Place 


Chuck  Hauser 

Author  Hauser  is  a  former 
acting  editor  and  managing  edi- 
tor of  The  Daily  Tar  Heel  He 
gathered  the  following  impres- 
sions of  the  University  of  Mos- 
cow during  a  trip  to  Russia  this 
past  summer  while  on  leave  of 
absence  from  The  Chapel  Hill 
Weekly.  He  has  recently  joined 
the  staff  of  The  Charlctte  Ob- 
server. 

I  knew  the  University  of  Mo.s- 
ron'  was  tjoinu  to  be  different 
from  the  liiii- 
versit.v  of  .\orth 
Carolina,  b  u  t 
I'm  afraid  I 
was  still  a  bit 
startled  by  what 
I    found. 

In  the  first 
place.  instead 
oi  having  a 
sprawling  hori. 
zonlai  campi.^^. 
this  academic 
world  is  biiilt 
on  a  vertical 
plane.  The 
main  University 
building,  a  huge 
monster  of  a 
structure,  has  a 
central  tower 
storie.s    inta    the 

surrounded    bv 


ivy  League,  Moscow  Style 


A  male  student  with  shaved  scalp  (not  required)    and  a  Russian  coed  check  out  books  at  the  Univefo 
sity  of  Moscow's  geology  department   library. 


Hauser 

.  in  tlie  KrcitiUu 
which    soars   33 
Russian  .sky. 
The    tower    is 


four  wings,  two  of  wtiich  rise  18 
stories  and  two  of  which  reach 
only  nine.  Cla.ssroom.s,  laborator- 
ies, libraries,  dormitory  facilities, 
and  the  other  rc^quirements  of  a 
student  body  of  22,000  are  al- 
most entirely  housed  in  the  one 
building. 

This  is  the  new  campus  of  Mos- 
cow University,  opened  on!:' 
three  years  ago  in  the  rolling 
area  known  as  Lenin  Hills  on  the 
southea.st  edge  of  the  capital 
city.  The  old  campus,  in  down- 
town .Moscow,  is  of  a  more  famil- 
iar .vtvie.  and  i.s  .still  being  u.^ed. 


The  new  campus  is  unquestion- 
ably magnificent,  but  at  the  same 
time  it  has  a  sterile  look.  The 
area  around  the  main  structure, 
dotted  with  a  handful  of  addi- 
tional buildiniis  (including  an  in- 
door track  and  a  basketball  stad- 
ium), is  almost  devoid  of  trees 
of  any  size.  A  formal  garden  is 
laid  out  2*  fhe  rear  of  the  cen- 
tral building. 

At  the  front  door  you  run  into 
the  University's  own  ve.'sion  of 
the  Iron  Curtain  in  the  form  of  a 
stony-faced  young  woman  wear- 
ing a  blue  uniform  and  a  per- 
petual frown.  No  visitors  are  al- 
lowed to  enter  without  special 
permits.  '       / 

When  you  try  to  take  her  pic- 
lure,  she  shakes  her  fist  once 
and  then  retreats  behind  a  door 


Iron  Curtain  Campus 

This  uniformed  young  lady  is  a  door  guard  at  the  front  entrance 
of  the  University  of  Moscow.  With  her  aid,  the  University  maintains 
its  own  Iron  Curtain,  and  visitors  may  be  admitted  only  with.  «pecial 
passes.  >,^»?( 


out  of  the  reach  of  the  camera's 
long  lens. 

A  large  wooden  platform  drap- 
ed with  red  crepe  paper  has  been 
erected  on  the  front  steps  of  the 
building.  Workmen  are  busily 
setting  up  microphones  and  test- 
ing television  equipment.  Sum- 
mer vacation  is  about  to  begin, 
and  a  big  sendoff  is  planned  for 
thousands  of  students  who  have 
"volunteered"  to  help  farmers  in 
the  fields  during  the  warm 
months. 

Your  interpreter  obtains  the 
necessary  passes,  and  the  young 
woman  in  the  blue  uniform  re- 
luctantly permits  you  to  pass 
through  her  door. 

Inside,  you  find  polished  mar- 
ble and  a  tomb-like  atmosphere. 
An  enormous  batterv  of  elevators 
waits  to  take  students  to  classes 
in  their  vertical  campus.  In  the 
great  hallway,  a  large  book  stall 
displays  scientific  publications 
and    general    magazines. 

The  University  has  no  central 
library.  Each  department  and 
school,  scattered  up  and  down 
the  33  floors  of  the  building,  has 
its  own  stacks  and  reading  room. 
In  the  geology  department  library 
on  the  29th  floor  a  man  with  a 
shaved  head  and  a  pla  nly  dress- 
ed young  woman  wait  patiently 
for   textbooks. 

Living  quarters  for  students, 
in  one  of  the  wings,  are  comfort 
ably  furnished  and  well  lighted 
No  three-men-to-a-room  routine 
here.  Each  student  has  individ- 
ual quarters,  equipped  with  bed. 
desk,  dresser,  bookca.se.  reading 
lamps,  a  chair  and  a  state-provid- 
ed radio  with  which  he  tunes  in 
(you   guessed   it)    Radio  Mo.scow. 

Each  undergraduate  is  provid- 
ed a  room  containing  eight  .square 
meter?.  For  each  two  rooms, 
there  is  a  shared  bath. 

Russian  youngsters  earn  their 
places  and  free  tuition  and  ex- 
pen.ses  at  the  University  through 
competitive  examinations.  They 
attend  classes  in  48  "professions" 
under  12  major  departments  and 
schools. 

In  the  student  cafeteria,  at 
ground  level  below  the  main 
floor,  food  is  appetizing  and 
amazingly  cheap.  A  ham  sand- 
wich   sells    for   one    ruble  (    less 


than  10 'cents  in  true  value);  a 
bowl  of  salad  costs  one  ruble; 
and  a  glass  of  milk  goes  for  only 
50  kopeks   (one-half  a  ruble). 

At  a  table  in  the  cafeteria  sits 
a  young  girl  in  a  white  smock 
and  a  while  kerchief,  adding  up 
her  counter's  receipts  on  a  black- 
beaded  abacus,  the  standard  "add- 
ing machine"  of  the  Soviet 
Union.  There  is  noise  here  in  the 
dining  hall,  and  youthful  sound, 
and  the  friendly  clatter  of  dishes 
and  silverware. 

The  huge  central  auditorium  of 
the  University  is  dominated  by  a 
sweeping  mosaic  dealing  with 
world    peace     (practically    every 


One  Man   Rooms 

..  .author's-  interpreter  tries  bed 

mural  and  mosaic  in  the  country 
hammers  peace  slogans  at  you) 
and   Soviet  history. 

Marble  columns,  fluorescent- 
tube  chandeliers  and  rich  drap- 
eries add  an  air  of  magnificence 
to  the  immense  chamber. 

Flanking  the  stage  are  en- 
graved marble  plaques  bearing 
quotations  from  Lenin  and  Sta- 
lin. Over  the  words  are  bas-re- 
liefs of  the  two  Russian  dicta- 
tors, poised  high  over  the  au- 
dience like  all-seeing  Big  Broth- 
ers, even  in  death. 


Pogo 


By  Walt  Kelly 


I  AMP  >C:.  WA$  y^Z  V/iTN  "W? 

COPr  Of  r.i  5:NK,;V>AM  ^//jPA^^ 

iNTO  OJZ  0A0y  0RA1H$-''  iT     „ 

AiM'f  P0U1B  ro  Ncr  co^'^  uiuH' 
'0  P5\v  ya  eggf'K^. 


Li'l  Abner 


By  Al  Capp 


At  AM£/f/tl/\-5  FOREf^tOSr 
0ODy-3U/LD£R,  Mil  '^/OU 
S£l£Cr  ~A4fi.  &EALJT/FUL. 
OF  1956'  AT  rȣ  CATTLE 
SHOtV.  MR  STROVQ/'AD&f.^ , 

,  :^^ 

OKAY. 


World-  f-^^^^J^r^ 
physical  specimen* 

to  compet^ 


AH  ADMIRES  FiNt 
VOUNJG  PHV^ICAU 
SPEClMENS    Vs'ISHT 

AH  WAS  ONEr.'' 
WISH'T  AH    COULD 

GO  SEE  ^M 


ONE  WAY  .  .  . 

Poinf  Oi  Honor; 
A  Missing  Wallet 

Barry  Winston 

This  isn't  very  funny.  It  isn't  even  intended  to 
be. 

A  week  ago  Friday,  on  the  21st  of  this  month, 
shortly  before  ten  o'clock  in  the  morning,  a  man 
stepped  out  of  Manning  Hall  and  walked  the  fifty 
yards  or  so  to  Lenoir  Dining  Hall,  It  was  just  an- 
other coffee  break. 

At  ten  o'clock  he  got  up  from  his  table  and 
went  to  the  cashier's  sfand  by  the  magazine  rack 
in  the  north  end  of  Lenoir.  He  made  another  pur- 
chase and  paid  his  tab  with  a  dollar  bill  from  his 
wallet  and  eight  cents  out  of  his  pants'  pocket. 
Then  he  walked  the  fifty  yards  or  so  back  to  the 
Law  School. 

Two  and  a  half  hours  later  he  made  a  dis- 
covery. His  wallet  was  missing.  So  he  went  to  look 
for  it.  He  didn't  find  it.  I  just  finished  talking  to 
him,  and  he  still  hasn't  found  it.  He's  just  about 
given  up  on  it.  Can't  say  as  I  blame  him,  since  it's 
been  a  week,  now. 

What  was  in  the  wallet?  Just  a  driver's  license, 
some  notes  aifd  the  usual  odds  and  ends  that  a  man 
carries  around  in  his  billfold.  And  two  hundred 
dollars. 

The  fifty  yards  between  Lenoir  and  Manning  is 
all  open  ground— sidewalk,  mostly.  In  two  and  a 
half  hours  a  couple  of  hundred  students  shuffled 
their  way  to  class  along  that  sidewalk. 

_  The  man  asked  at  the  cashier's  stand  in  Lenoir. 
Nobody  had  seen  it.  He  posted  a  notice  in  the 
Law  School.  Nobody  had  seen  it.  He  ran  an  ad  in 
the  Tar  Heel.  Nobody  had  seen  it. 

But  somebody  saw  it.  Somebody  HAD  to,  be- 
cause it's  not, there  anymore — not  in  Lenoir,  not 
in  the  Law  School,  and  not  on  the  aidewalk.  I  think 
it's  in  somebody's  pocket. 

This  is  not  an  isolated  incident.  It  is  an  extreme, 
but  the  same  thing  happens  every  day  on  this 
campus,  to  a  lesser  degree.  Textbooks  disappear. 
Raincoats  are  "lo-st".  And  billfolds  somehow  rarely 
ever  get  back  to  their  owners,  once  gone. 

It  seems  to  me  that  I  remember  reading  some- 
thing, a  long  time  ago  when  I  was  a  freshman, 
that  started  out.  "I  am  on  my  honor,  as  a  gentle- 
man   " 

I  thought  everybody  had  to  sign  that  thing  be- 
fore they  could  get  into  school.  It  must  be  that  some 
people  figure  that  because  they  were  given  no 
choice  about  signing  it,  they're  not  really  morally 
obligated  to  abide  by  it.  But  they  did  have  a  choice. 
Nobody  made  them  come  to  CiroJina.  So  they  did- 
n't have  to  sign  it,  did  they? 

But  they  did.  And  I'm  betting  that  one  of  them 
is  losing  sleep  nights,  trying  to  figure  out  how 
he's  going  to  spend  that  two  hundred   bucks. 

I  hope  he  has  a  real  big  time. 

REACTION  PIECE 


More  Opinions 
On  Sunny  Jim 

Dave  Mundy 

The  time  has  come  for  Tatums'  turn.  For  Uiose 
who  are  interested,  I  am  organizing  the  first  chap- 
ter of  a  string  of  "Tatum's  Scalp"  (or  T  S  for 
short)  clubs  in  honor  of  Sunny  Old  Big  Jim  Tatum. 
It  IS  hoped  that  the  clubs  will  stretch  from  Manleo 
to  Murphy,  or  at  least  from  Raleigh  Road  to  Frank- 
lin Street. 

Our  program  is  very  simple:  it  calls  for  the  im- 
mediate retirement,  resignation,  traasfer,  dismissal 
(all  with  reluctance,  of  course)  or  promotion  of  one 
Tatum  as  Head  Football  Coach.  Dean  of  the  Faculty 
and  acting  president  of  the  University  of  North 
Carolina  at  Chapel  Hill.  As  long  as  soitiething  is 
done. 

This  is  not  to  declare  that  we  advocate  the 
complete  severance  of  his  relations  with  the  Uni- 
versity. If  sufficient  additional  funds  can  be  ob- 
tained we  plan  to  raze  the  library  and  endow  in  its 
stead  the  Snavely-Barclay-Tatum  Institute  for  post- 
graduate advanced  research  in  football  te<rhniques. 

But  is  will  be  no  ivory  "football"  tower.  To 
keep  the  members  of  the  institute  down-to-earth, 
they  will  be  required  to  hold  seminars  for  football 
players  on  such  subjects  as  hew  to  pronounce  "aca- 
demic curriculum." 

If  these  don't  pan  out,  we  are  almost  certain 
of  persuading  the  trustees  to  give  Tatum  a  special 
Kenan  professorship  in  football  research.  They 
know  as  well  as  you  do  that  this  university  will 
never  get  its  name  in  a  single  national  newspaper 
until  it  has  a  better  football  business. 

Admittedly,  we  shouldn't  be  judging  boss  Ta- 
tum so  early  in  the  season.  Decision  cmild  be  post- 
poned until  after  the  Oklahoma  game  but  why 
wait? 

As  a  special  adjunct  to  the  Snavely-Barclay- 
Tatum  Institute  there  should  be  a  "Department 
of  Cheerleading",  inasmuch  as  this  also  seems  to 
be  one  of  the  professions  most  valued  by  college 
students.  It  is  difficult  to  decide  whether  it  should 
be  named  after  Keichskanzler  Hitler  or  Cheerlead- 
er By  num. 

The  simplest  way  to  decide  would  be  to  call 
Adolf  back  from  the  dead  and  pit  them  against 
one  another  in  a  straight  contest,  with  impartial 
people  like  me  for  judges.  (Even  though  I  have 
a  strong  prejudice  in  favor  of  Adolf,  secretly.) 

Adolf  (Hitler,  not  Bynum)  would  probably  do 
all  right  down  in  Kenan  Stadium,  although  it  com- 
pares with  neither  of  the  stadia  in  Berlin  or  Nurn- 
berg.  I  can  hear  it  now:  "Geben  sie  mir  bitte  ein'  C 
....  Geben  sie  mir  bitte  ein'  A  .  .  .Geben  sie 
mir  bitt^  ein"  R  .  .  ,  Bet  B.vnum  couldn't  roll  and 
R  like  Adolf.  And  he  has  no  moustache. 

But  the  cheerleader  (BjTium,  not  Adolf)  might 
even  up  the  score  with  his  arm-waving  and  high- 
pitched  screams.  Thanks  to  his  calisthenics  he 
might  even  •  do  pretty  good  at  goose-stepping. 
(Wonder  if  Adolf  took  calisthenics  every  morning?) 

Ths  is  just  a  suggestion,  but  what  about  'Pel- 
vis' Presley  as  the  first  Professor  of  Cheerleading 
and  Mob  Action?  At  least  he  should  be  invited  over 
to  try  out  for  the  job.  Now  isn't  that  fair  enough? 


Pf>. 
first 
lature'l 
night. 

App| 
of  49 
call- 
Sonny 
abscnc 
rushinl 
lecturd 

As 
flictini 
Party 
Andy 
bill  tol 
for  be| 

This 
Legisl| 
for  a 
ed  by 
Youn^ 

The! 


YardN 

tormJ 


19.  19S6 

r; 
\let 

fnded  to 

month, 

a  man 

ie  fifty 

Ijiut  an- 

t)le   and 

[ne  rack 

Jier  pur- 

|rom  his 

pocket. 

to  the 

a    dis- 

to  look 

bkjng  to 

ft  a-bout 

jince  it's 

license, 

|t  a  man 

lundrt'd 

ming  is 
and  a 
shuffled 

Lenoir. 

in    the 

|n  ad  in 

to,   be- 

loir,   not 

I  think 

Extreme, 

|on    this 

sappear. 

rarely 

|g  some- 
eahman, 
gentle- 
ling  be- 
^at  some 
iven  no 
I  morally 
choice, 
ley  did- 

)f  them 
)ut  how 
?ks. 


^     SATURDAY,  SEfTEMBER  W.  1995^ 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


PAGE  THREE 


or  tliose 
rst  chap- 
S.  for 

Tatum. 

Mariteo 
0  Frank- 

the  im- 
lismissal 
n  of  one 
Faculty, 
)f  North 
rthing   is 

ate  the 
the  Uni- 
be  ob- 
)w  in  iU 
or  post- 
hniques. 
wer.  To 
to-earth, 

football 
ice  "aca- 

certain 
special 
They 
'sjty   will 
wspaper 


29  Scions  Attend 
Legislature  Meet 


By   CLARKE   JONES 

Poor  attendance  marked  the ! 
first  meeting  of  the  Student  Legis-  [ 
lature's  21st  assembly  Thursday' 
night.  I 

.Approximately   60   per   cent— 29  ! 
of  49  members  answered  the  roll 
call — were  in  attendance.  Speaker 
Sonny  Evans  explained   the   many , 
absences     were     due     to     sorority  i 
rushing,  various  meetings  and  two 
lectures  held  at  the  same  time. 

As  a  result  of  the  several  con-  i 
flicting    campus    events.    Student  | 
Party  members  Gardner  Foley  and  ! 
Andy   Milnor  jointly   sponsored  a 
bill  to  set  up  a  student  committee  i 


Campus 
Seen 


Committee  for  Coordinating  Cam- 
pus Events,  would  "notify  all  cam- 
pus organizations  to  submit  a  pro- 
posed schedule  of  events  in  order 
that  they  might  be  fitted  into ; 
and  checked  with  the  maMer  j 
schedule,"    according    to    Foley,      i 

President  Young  was  not  avail- 
able for  comment  on  the  bill.  He 
has  been  called  home  due  to  his 
father's  illness. 

Some  controversy  arose  con- ; 
cerning  the  approval  of  thre  mem. ' 
bers — Don  Furtado,  Joel  Fleish- 
man and  Clemm  Shankle — to  the 
Graham  Memorial  Board  of  Di- ; 
rectors. 


for  better  scheduling  of  the  events,  i 

This  measure,  if  passed  by  the  j  The  approval,  to  be  held  over 
Legislature  next  week,  provides  j  for  two  weks  due  to  coed  rush- 
for  a  five-man  committee  appoint-  i  ing,  caused  a  small  disagreement 
ed  by  student  body  President  Bob    between  University  Party  chairman 


Young 

The  committee  to  be  called  the 


Mike  Weinman  and  Student  Party 
member  Andy  Milnor. 


M  Off/ THERE  WILL  BE  A 
BRIEF  CATCH -YOURMEATN'  I 
INTERMISSION  EACH  SN0WM8! 


WAfiNER  BROS  present 

t/i»  2-yeMr-run  stage  sensation  with  th»  priz9-wmning  east  of  tho  play '     O 


NAHCyiiEllK  'iiTTiiTtmH  :.«, 


axis,  iiumtAMU 


JERV^HliROK 


rMibCliM    MU  —mm 


HOURS  OF  SHOWS:   12:30—2:41—4:52—7:03—9:14 


LATE  SHOW  TONIGHT 
SUN.-MON.-TUES. 


Carolina 


PRICES  THIS 

ATTRACTION: 

.65c 


By  appointment  purveyors  of  soip  to  the  late  King  George  VI,  Yardley  &  Co.,  Ltd.,  Lendoti 

f  

C' .  . .     . 

•  *  ■''%':   '"^Xl  •*v  » >M« %*■?'; 


Yardley  After  Shaving  Lotion 

tops  of f  any  shave,  electric  or  lather  I 

•  soothes,  refreshes  the  skin 

•  helps  heal  razor  nicks 

•  counteracts  dryness 

•  gives  brisk,  masculine,  non-linger!n{|  scent 

Starts  you  off  with  your  besf  face  forward  I 

At  your  campus  store,  $1.10  and  $1.50,  plus  tax 

Yardley  products  for  America  are  created  in  England  and  finished  in  the  U.S.A.  from  the  orifinst  CngKtli 
(•rmulae,  combming  imported  and  domestic  ingredients.  Yardley  of  London,  Inc.,  S20  Fifth  Ave.,  H.I.C. 


WUNC-TV 

Today's  schedule  for  WUNC-TV, 
the  University's  educational  tele- 
vision station,  Channel  4:  6:29 — 
Sign  on;  6:30— World,  Weather, 
man;  7:00  —  Your  Child.  7:30  — 
Frontiers  to  Health;  8:00 — Point 
of  View;  8:30 — American  Politics; 
9:00 — Final  Edition;  and  9:05— 
Sign  Off. 
COSMOPOLITAN  CLUB 

The     Cosmopolitan     Club     will 
hold  its  first  meeting  of  the  sea- 
son in  the  Assembly  Room  of  the 
library  at  4  p.m.   tomorrow.   The 
;  club    was    organized    to    promote 
I  friendship   and   understanding   be- 
!  tween  the  nations  by  giving  mem- 
bers an  opportunity     to     exchange 
I  ideas  and  cultures.  All  who  are  in- 
i  terested     have     been     invited     to 
!  come.  The  membership  is  usually  | 
divided    "about    evenly"    between  ] 
I  Americans   and   those  from  other  i 
countries,  it  was  stated. 
I  FRATERNITY  BIDS 
j      It  is  reported  that  there  are  a  ! 
I  number  of  fraternity  bids  still  in  ! 
I  the  office  of  Ray  Jefferies,  assis- , 
j  tant  to  the  dean  of  student  affairs. ! 
I  Students    who    have    not    received  i 
!  their  bids  should  drop  by  this  of- 
I  fice  to  pick  them  up.  j 

INDOOR   POOL  I 

The    indoor    swimming    pool    is 
open    for    recreational    swimming 
Mondays    throi>gh    Fridays    from  i 
4-6  p.m.,  Saturdays  from  2-6  p.m.  i 
and    Sundays.   2  -  5    p.m.    Women  ' 
swimmers    may    wear   their    own 
bathing  suits,  but  men  swimmers  ' 
are  required  to  wear  the   special  i 
suits  issued  by  the  gym. 
STUDENT  WIVES  CLUB 

The  Student  Wives  Club  will 
hold  its  first  meeting  this  fall 
on  Tuesday  at  8  p.m.  at  the  Victory 
Village  Nursery,  according  to  Sec- 
retar>-    Pat    Howard.    All    Student 

Tong  Delighted 
With  Invitation 
To  Speak  Here 

Dr.   Hollington  K.   Tong,  speak-] 
er  presented  by  the  Carolina  For- 
um  Thursday   night,   said   he   was ' 
extremely    "pleased"    by    the    pre- 
speech    banquet     at    the    Carolina 
Inn. 

Tong,  who  was  presented  at  the 
banquet  by  Forum  Chairman  Jim 
Holmes,  expressed  delight  at  be- 
ing invited  by  student  government 
and  not  the  University. 

Present  at  the  banquet  were: 

Chairman  Holmes,  Chancellor 
Robert  B.  House,  Mr.  and  Mrs. 
Sam  Magill,  Dean  Katherine  Car- 
miehael,  Minister  F.  S.  Chu,  Doc- 
tors Alex  Heard  and  W.  D.  Perry, 
Ray  Jeffries.  Mr.  and  Mrs.  Jim 
Wallace. 

Students  attending  the  banquet 
were: 

Bob  Young,  Luther  Hodges, 
Miss  Ester  Ballentine,  Lloyd  Shaw, 
Mike  Strong.  Stan  Pearman  and 
John  Bish; 

Neil  Bass,  Stan  Shaw,  Brandon 
Kincaid,  Cecil  Hartsoe,  Pao  Chien 
Yang. 


Passions 

gone  wild 

in  an  outlaw 

wilderness! 


Frosh  Discuss  Frats, 
Start  Plans  For  Year 

By   JERRY   ALVIS  |  on  Sept.  23,  and  the  planned  trip 

The  Freshman  Fellowship,  spon-j  to  Danville,  Va.,  on   Sept.   29,   to 
sored  by  the  YMCA,  met  last  night  I  an  Averett-sponsored  dance. 

"Freshman  Fellowship  offers  a 
real  opportunity  to  any  freshman 
to  become  active  in  an  organi- 
zation that  is  tailored  to  meet  his 
needs.  We  like  to  think  of  the  Fel. 
lowship  not  as  an  end  in  itself 
but  as  a  chance  for  a  freshman  to 


at   7   p.m.    in   the   assembly  room  j 
of  the  Library     to     discuss     their  j 
plans    lor    the    coming   year    and  j 
hear    the    views    of    members    of  j 
fraternity  and  independent  circles. 
Ed    Hudgins,    president    of    the 
IFC,  from  Greensboro,  elaborated 
on    the    advantages    of    fraternity ' 


GM  To  Present  Jazz 
Music  Every  Monday 

The  best  in  recorded  jizz  music, 
will  be  heard  in  the  Main  Lounge 
of  Graham  Memorial  on  Mondays 
from  7-9  p.m.,  according  to  GM 
Director  Linda  Mann. 

In  the  past,  the  music  of  the  { 
Main  Lounge,  supplied  from  a  hi- 1 
fi  set  located  in  the  information  j 
office,  has  basically  been  along . 
classical,  semi-classical  and  light- , 
classical  lines.  Repeated  requests ' 
from  students  influenced  the  init-  i 
iation  of  the  jazz  program.  i 

Although  the  present  jazz  in-  j 
ventory  of  the  GM  record  library 


Bruno^s  Combo  To  Pfdy  Here 

Bruno's  Combo  will  provide*  the  music  tonight  from  8  to  11  for 
tije  first  Graham  Memorial  Activities  Board  sponsored  Rendezvous 
Room  informal  dance. 


WEEK  SPECIAL 
All  Capitol  Records 


TncicZeiitr 

^  TRUCOLOIt 


by  Consolidated  Film  Industries 

LlNDIBARNELL*  DALE  ROBERTSON 
JOHN  LUKO*WARB  BOM 

REGIS  TOOMEY  •  SKIP  HOUilEIER 

IRVING  BACON      JOHN  OOUCETTE 

WHIT  eisseu 

Written  by  FREDERIC  LOUIS  FOX 
Hiiociati  Producer  MICHAEL  BAIRD 
bi/ectad  by  LEWIS  H.  FOSTER 
>  HtPUy.lC  PROOUCTIOM     


find   and   develop   his   real   inter-'  •',••.  j     *  „  k       u 

I  IS  limited,  staff  members  have  con 
«sts   in   his   college  career,"   said 


life.    Grimes   Dormitorv   President  i 

Jim  Womble  of  Rocky' Mt.  upheld!""   "'   '"'   "^^""^^e  career,     saio  |  rented    to    supplement,  the    stock 

th^  freedoms  of  the  independents,  j  J^^  Associate  Secretary  Riebel.  >  from  their  personal  libraries. 

According  to  John  Riebel,  as- 
sociate secretary  of  the  YMCA, 
bol;h  talks  were  more  of  an  in- 
formative instead  of  an  argument- 
ative nature. 

Following  the  talks,  fellowship 
menjbers  filled  out  interest  query 
sheets  with  topics  ranging  from 
"Social  Etiquette  for  College  So- 
cial Functions"  to  "A  Saturday 
Stu<ly  Retreat  with  Freshman  Girls 
fron)  Duke  University  in  Durham." 
Th^'  sheets  were  divided  into  "I 
Am  Interested"  and  "I  Want  To 
Help  Plan"  columns.  Query  sheets 
for  freshmen  unable  to  attend  the 
meeting  are  available  at  the  Y. 

A  nine-member  council  was  al- 
so solicited.  Members  include: 
Danny  Allen,  Forest  City:  Tommy 
Allred.  High  Point;  Jon  Q.  Clark, 
Rockville,  Md.;  Jim  Cunninghar.. 
Charleston,  W.  Va.;  Frank  H. 
Lance,  Jr.,  Rosman;  Bob  Mathews, 
Herford:  Robert  Murray,  Hender- 
sonville;  Laurence  Wilson,  Mt. 
Oliver,  and  Larry  Withrow,  Char- 
lotte. 

Bob  Leonard,  chairman  of  fresh, 
man  work  and  director  of  the 
freshman  camp,  convened  the 
meeting  and  met  with  the  council- 
men  to  plan  the  next  meeting  and 
discuss  the  interests  and  ilesires 
of  the  freshman  class. 

Two  of  the  most  current  activi- 
ties of  the  group  included  the  re- 
ception of  the  Averett  College  girls 


WEEK-END  HOUSECLEANING 

-V  SALE 

TODAY  —  Shopworn  books  and  dropped  titles 
in  RELIGION,  INSPIRATIONAL  READING, 

and  PSYCHOLOGY.  -     ^    '^ 

Next  Week— Biography,  History  and  Philosophy. 

THE  INTIMATE  BOOKSHOP 


Wives  have  been  invited  to  attend. 
PHARMACY  WIVES 

The  Pharmacy  Wives  will  hold 
a  picnic  this  afternoon  at  5  p.m. 
at  the  home  of  Mrs.  W.  J.  Smith 
on  .Arrowhead  Rd.  In  case  of  rain, 
it  will  be  held  in  the  Institute  of 
Pharmacy  Building. 
EVENING  SKETCH  CLASS 

Person  Hall  Art  Gallery  has  an- 
nounced a  Wednesday  evening 
sketch  class  beginning  Oct.  3.  The 
class  will  include  sketching  from 
life  with  drawing  in  various  ma- 
terials. The  class,  to  meet  7  to  9 
p.m.,  will  be  under  John  Allcott 
of  the  Dept.  of  Art.  The  fee  is  $13 
for  13  weeks  instruction,  including 
materials.  Those  interested  in 
joining  have  been  invited  to  come 
to  the  first  meeting  of  the  class 
next   Wednesday  at  4  p.m. 


205  E.  Franklin  St. 


Open  Till  10  P.M. 


Series 

List 

Special 

T- 

$4.12- 

$2.75 

W- 

$5.15 

$3.75 

My  Fairlady 

List  $5.15 -Special  $3.75 

AII10"LP/s*l« 

(Except  EJekira— Angel 

L'Oylyre  -  Telefonken)  /** 

All  EP's  $100  Per  Record 
L  P.  SALE 


207  E.  Franklin  St. 


Here's  How  to  Play 


.■♦<*■. 


OLD  GOLD'S  GREAT  NEW  GAME 


TOGETHER 
for  the  first  time! 


M-G  M  prwMHi 

SOL  C.  SiEGEL 

PRODUCTION 

BING  CROSBY 

GRACE  KELLY 

FRANK  SINATRA 

i«  liM  Marious  low-down  en  hiik  lift 

"HIGH 
SOCIETY 

k  VISTAVISION  M  CMOIt 

CELESTE  HOLM 
«i   JOHN  LUND 
LOUIS  ARMSTRONG 

AND  HIS  BAND 

tSitCOLE  PORTER 

PRICES  THIS  ATTRACTION 
AOULTS  65<    CHILDREN    15^ 

NOW  PLAYING 


w 


A  total  of  24  puzzles  will  appear  before  the  Christmas 
holiday.  Get  started  now  in  Old  Gold's  exciting  new 
game  for  college  students  only.  -,  - 

Here  are  the  Official  Tangle  Schools 
Rules!  SAVE  THEM! 


1.  PRIZES  (■)  P.  Lorillard  Company,  the  makers  of 
OLD  GOLD  CKJAKETTES,  will  award  a  total  of  86 
prizps,  valued  at  more  than  $15,000— to  college  atudenU 
in  th*-  I'nited  States  in  accordance  with  the  (ullowing 
OfTicial  Kules.  (See  complete  list  of  prizes.)  (b)  This 
K%a\e  will  consist  of  twenty-four  (24)  monogratnnaed 
puzzle  drawinRS  to  be  published  in  this  and  other 
colleKe  ocwpapers;  three  puzzles  each  week  for  eight 
weeks,  and  a  series  of  tie-breakinK  puzzles,  if  needed, 
as  outlined  in  rule  2.  (c)  Contestants  must  arrange  the 
scrambled  letters  from  esrh  of  the  24  monogrammed 
drsAinga  so  that  they  corri-ctly  spell  the  name  of  a 
certain  American  college  or  university.  In  the  scrambled 
drawings  there  are  no  supertluous  letters,  no  distortion 
of  letters,  and  no  letters  are  left  out  to  confuw  or  mis- 
liiad  entrants.  A  clue  will  be  furnish>*d  with  each  draw- 
ing lo  help  identify  the  correct  answer  to  the  puzzle. 

2.  (•)  The  person  couplyiog  with  all  the  rules  of  the 
game  and  holving  the  highest  number  of  puzzles 
correctly  will  be  declared  the  winner  of  the  first  prize, 
a  40-day  tour  of  the  world  for  two  persons -the  winner 
and  another  p«'rson  of  his  oho<*eing  or.  at  the  option  of 
the  winner,  the  first  prize  shall  consist  of  15,000  to  be 
paid  to  the  winner.  The  person  complying  with  all  ihe 
rules  of  the  game  and  solving  ihn  second  highest  number 
of  puzzlex  correctly  will  be  declared  the  winner  of  the 
seconrf  prize.  In  Ilk*'  manner,  the  winners  of  the  remain- 
ing M4  prizes  will  l>e  determine^,  (b)  In  case  more  than 
one  person  solves  correctly  the  same  number  of  puzzles, 
the  prize  tied  for,  and  as  many  subsequent  prizes  as 
there  are  persons  tied,  will  be  reserved  and  those  so  t}°ing 
will  be  re<iuired  to  solve  a  set.  of  tie-breaking  puzzles,  to 
determine  the  order  in  which  the  reserved  prizes  will  be 
awarded.  Each  oX  the  tie-tareakiqg  puzzles  will  be  com- 
prised of  scr8rol>k'd  letters  forming  the  names  of  either 
one,  two  or  three  American  colU-ges  or  universities.  Clues 
with  each  puzzle  drawing  will  indicate  whether  the 
puzzle  contains  one,  two  or  three  schools  to  be  iden- 
tified. If,  after  solutions  have  lieen  submitted  to  this 
•eoond  set  of  puzzles,  a  tie  or  ties  still  remain,  those  tied 
will  be  required  to  solve  another  tie-breaking  puzzle.  Kc- 
coinpaaying  this  tie-breaker  will  be  an  oflicial  list  of 
American  coHeges  and  universities.  From  these, contest- 
ants will  make  up  a  list  of  schools  and  colleges  in  accord- 
ance with  instructions  to  be  given  at  that  time.  The 
contestant  earoio];  the  highest  soo.'e  in  so  doing  will  b« 
awarded  the  highest  of  the  prizes  tied  for.  1  he  next 
highest  prize  will  be  awarded  the  contestant  earning  the 
second  h.ghett  score  and  so  on  down  through  the  re- 
served prizes  that  have  been  tied  for.  These  tie-breaking 
puzzles,  if  necessary,  will  be  mailed  to  each  contestant. 


P.  Lorillard  Company  reserves  the  right  (only  in  the 
event  of  further  tie  or  ties)  to  require  contestants  lo 
•dive  as  many  tie-breaking  puzzles  under  supervision, 
and  without  assistance,  as  are  necessary  to  determine 
a  single  winner  for  each  prize. 

3.  NOTE  (a)  When  entrants  have  completed  solutieus 
to  the  complete  aet  of  24  initial  puzzles,  which  are  to  be 
published  three  per  week  in  this  paper,  the  solutions 
are  to  be  printed  or  typewritten  by  the  entrant  in  the 
answer  space  provided  on  the  puzzle  (or  a  reasonable 
facsimile).  The  complete  set  of  24  puzzles  mtlst  be 
anewered,  neatly  trimmed  and  enclosed  in  nn  envelope, 
flat  and  not  rolled  and  addressed  to:— Tangle  Schools, 
P.  O.  Box  26A,  .Mount  Vernon  10,  N.  Y.,  and  mailed 
bearing  a  postmark  not  later  than  December  19,  I9.S6. 
De<-oraied,  pasted  or  embellished  puzzles  are  not  per- 
mitted. Kach  set  of  24  puzzles  must  be  accompanied  by 
a  wrapper  from  any  type  OLD  GOLD  CIGARETTE 
package  -(KEG ITLAR,  KING-vSIZE  OR  FILTER 
KINGSi  or  a  reasonable  facsimile  thereof,  (b)  More  de- 
tailed instructions  on  tlie  mailing  of  completed  sets  of 
pu7.2.1es  will  l)e  published  lat«r.  No  .Solutions  are  to  be 
sent  in  separately.  Save  the  puzzles  and  your  solutions 
so  that  they  may  be  sabmitted  as  a  complete  set  at  the 
end  of  the  game.  Entrants  are  not  limited  as  to  the  num- 
l>«rof  complete  sets  of  Solutions.  However,  each  set  miist 
be  submitted  individually,  and  only  one  prize  will  be 
awarded  to  any  one  entrant,  (c)  .\fter  the  deadline  for 
mailing  solutions,  the  correct  answers  to  all  24  puzzles 
will  be  published  in  a  single  issue  of  this  paper.  Each 
cxiiiti'stant  must  keep  an  accurate  record  of  all  solutions 
and  check  his  answers  wit  h  t  he  (published  correct  answers. 

4.  WHO  MAY  ENTER:  (a)  Thi.s  game  is  open  to  all  bona 
fide  college  students  in  the  United  States:  that  is, 
persons  w  ho,  at  the  time  of  entering,  are  duly  registered 
in  an  accredited  ccjlege  or  university  within  the 
continental  boundaries  of  the  I'nited  States,  exc<>pt  that 
the  game  is  not  open  to  students  whose  immediate  fami- 
lies are  «mpioyed  by  P.  I»rillard  Company  or  its  adver- 
tising agencies.  Contest  is  subject  to  all  State  and 
Federal  regulations,  (b)  Contestants  may,  if  they 
prefer,  make  copies  of  the  puzzles  by  hand.  Copies  of 
the  puzzles  bnd  of  OLD  GOLD  package  wrappers 
reproduced  hy  a  multiple  process  such  as  carbon  paper 
or  mim>H>graph  are  not  acceptable.  Entrants  who  want 
back  puzzles  and  copy  of  Official  Rules  may  obtain  them 
by  addressing  their  request  lo  Tangle  .Schools  Back 
Puzzles,  P.  ().  Box  9,  Grand  Central  .\nnex,  New  York 
17,  NI.  Y.,  enclosing  5t  in  payment  for  each  puzzle 
dt«ired   and/ or    rules,    together    v.ith    a    ST.\MPED 


SELF-.*DDRESSED  envelope,  (c)  Prior  to  rec«v-fng 
a  prize  each  winner  may  be  required  to  sign  an  a(h- 
davit  certifying  that  he  or  she  is  eligible  to  compete  in 
accordance  with  rule  4-a;  that  he  or  she  has  not  bought, 
sold  or  exchanged  the  puzzle  solutions  and  is  not 
acting  for,  either  by  proxy  or  in  collaboration  with,  any 
person  who  is  not  qualified  to  participate  under  the  rules. 

5.  METHOD  OF  JUDGING:  Decision  of  the  judges  is 
final  and  contestants  so  agree  upon  entering  the  game. 
Solutions  to  the  puzzles  will  be  judged  on  correctness, 
including  the  spelling  of  the  names.  All  entries  become 
the  property  of  P.  Lorillard  Company.  None  will  be 
returned.  P.  Lorillard  Company  cannot  be  responsible 
for  any  solutions  unduly  delayed  or  lost  in  the  mails; 
this  also  applies  to  mail  from  the  P.  Lorillard  Company 
to  any  contestant.  On  entering  the  game,  each  c»n- 
t4Btunt  accepts  the  foregoing  rules  as  binding.  P. 
Lorillard  Company  reserves  the  right  to  disqualify  any 
entrants  not  conforming.  Evidence  indicating  collusion 
by  or  ineligibility  of  contestants  will  automatically 
disqualify  such  contestants.  P.  Lorillard  Company 
reserves  the  right  to  correct  any  typographical  errors  or 
other  errors  which  may  appear  in  any  published  matter 
in  connection  with  this  game.  P.  Lorillard  Co.,  insofar 
as  publication  of  puzzles  is  concernnd,  is  responsible 
only  for  submitting  material  for  publication  to  newt- 
papers  involved. 

Copyright  1956,  Harry  H.  Hollister- 


SAMPLE   PUZZLE 


CLUE:  The  third  oldest  institution  of 
higher  education  in  theUnited  States,  this 
university  was  chartered  in  1701,  and 
later  named  for  a  native  of  Boston.  Walter 
Camp  was  a  great  football  coar-h  here. 

ANSWER:  YALE 


Save  this  alphabet.  Letters  shown  in  all  puzzles 
will  have  the  same  characteristics.  Notice  tiie 
M's  have  straight  sides;  the  W's  are  slanted. 
Note  the  difference  between  the  N's  and  the  Z's. 

ABCDEFGHIJKLM 
NOPQRSTUVWXYZ 


QTAPT   N  AW  I  ^^^^^  smoking  those  great  Old  Gold  cigarettes . . .  start  playing  the  great 
0  IHH  I    HUfl  ■  new  game/'Tangle  Schools"!    Win  a  free  tour  of  the  world  for  two! 


PUZZLE  NO.  I 


CtUE:  Situated  in  an  attroctive  New 
Kngland  town,  thie  college  for  wottiph 
op<>n«d  in  1875.  .4  traintng  school  fur 
wom*n  n*val  ittQ^iera  wag  held  herv  during 
W.>f1d  Wurll. 


A.\SWER_ 

S' a  lite 

AiUras — 


City 

College — 


-Sftite- 


PUZZLE  NO.  2 


CLUE:  This  university  is  located  in  the 
^lidwast.  and  i.s  known  for  its  large 
engineeriiig  SJ-hools.  It  was  first  oi»ened  to 
students  in  1«74. 


ANSWER 
Same 


Adtlress- 
City 


College 


-SUiie- 


PUZZLE  NO.  3 


CLUE:  Founded  in  1!<.14.  this  university 
acquired  its  present  name  .SO  years  later — 
in  18S4.  Originally  a  medical  college,  it 
iiwued  the  first  degree  in  medicine  con- 
ferred in  the  .South we.st. 

A  NS  W  E  R 

Ka  me 


Adilrens- 
City 


Cullege- 


SUite-^ 


f  fv»n«t.»i4i»fticHs  m  iilM»Iiil«i  iiiiiif  iT*/.* » i 


t 


I 


PAteC  POUft 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


SATURDAY,  SEPTEMBER  29/195* 


Football 

(Continued  from  Page   1) 
Co-Captain    George    Stavnitski    at 
center. 

Although  the  Sooners  are  top- 
heavy  favorites  to  win  No.  31  in  a 
row,  there  is  an  unmistakable  air 
of  _  apprehension  around  the 
campus  here.  Incurably  pessimistic 
Bud  Wilkinson  has  been  moaning 
as  usual  in  his  pre-game  state- 
ments, but  some  observers  feel 
there  may  be  a  slight  note  of  au- 
thenticity in  his  crying. 

•Tatum  and  his  Tar  Heels  are 
naturally  not  overly  optimistic,  but 
nevertheless  they  are  not  content 
to  sit  back  and  take  their  lick- 
ing. Tatum  himself  is  not  promts- ! 
ing  anything,  but  neither  is  he ' 
backing  down.  He  says  his  stal- 
warts are  big  enough  so  they  won't 
be  blown  off  the  field,  but  beyond 
that,  he  doesn't  know. 

The  starting  lineups: 


UNC 

Pos. 

Okla. 

Payne 

E 

Stiller 

Muschamp 

E 

Bell 

Pell 

T 

Greenlee 

Blazer 

T 

Emerson 

Smith 

G 

Krisher 

Jones 

G 

Northcutt 

Stavnitski 

C 

Tubbs 

Hathaway 

QB 

Harris 

Sutton 

HB 

McDonald 

Vamum 

HB 

Thomas 

Lear 

FB 

Pricer 

Baseballers  Hold  Outdoor  Drill 
As  Weather  Conditions  Improve 


son,  Joe  Shook,  and  Delon  Lam- 
bert. Jim  Love  is  currently  the 
number  one  candidate  for  the 
catching  chores. 


PATRONIZE  YO«R 
•    ADVERTISERfl(   • 


BROOKS  POSTPONED 

BROOKLYN.  (/P)  —  Rain  and 
cold  weather  postponed  the  open- 
er of  Brooklyn's  crucial,  windup 
three-game  series  with  the  Pitts- 
burgh Pirates  last  night.  It  was  im- 
mediately re-scheduled  as  part  of 
a  doubleheader  for  this  afternoon. 

CLASSIFIEDS 


FOR  SALE  —  1950  CHEVROLET 
convertable,  topnotch  condition, 
new  top.  all  extras  (Powerglide, 
radio,  heater,  M-hite  walls).  See 
C.  S.  Jones,  Wilson  Hall,  2-5 
daily. 

BLACKBURN'S    MARKET 

(across  from  ice  plant).  Open  7  1 
days  a   week,   7   a.m.  to  8  p.m. 
Fresh  fruit  and  vegetables.  Also 
beer. 

LOST  —  BILLFOLD  FRIDAY  IN 
Lenior  Hall  or  Law  School  be- 
tween 10  a.m.  and  noon.  Con- 
tains valuable  personal  papers 
and  approximately  $200.  Money 
for  nurses  attending  my  wife 
who  has  a  fatal  disease.  If  finder 
feeis  he  needs  money  more  than 
me,  please  return  papers.  $20 
reward  offered  for  honesty.  Con- 
tact E.  M.  Murry  at  Law  School. 

STUDENTS  EXPERIENCED  ON 
Linotype  or  open  presses  may 
obtain  part  time  work  at  Colon- 
ial. Preas.  Phone  333-6. 


COACH  BIG  JIM  TATUM 

.  meets   IVilknisoti  again 


Oklahoma  Starts  Defense 
Of  National  Title  Today 


LOST:  ONE  WIVE'S  PASSBOOK. 
Lo»t  Saturday  in  or  around  Ken- 
an Stadium.  Finder  please  call 
9^362. 


SUNDAY  NEW  YORK  TIMES  DE- 
livered  to  your  door.  For  further 
information  call  8-0572  or  8-0368 
after  5  p.m.  1-5833-5 

WANTED  — RII«:  TO  RALEIGH 
Mon.  thru  Fri.,  arriving  in  Ral- 
eigh prior  to  8:30  a.m.,  return- 
ing to  Chapel  Hill  approximately 
5:00  p.m.  Conta^  Lee  Cotten  at 
Milton's  Clothing  Cupboard  or 
Call  Durham  7-8685  after  6:00 
p.m. 


By  HUGH  FULLERTON  JR. 
By  The   Associated   Press 

Oklahoma,  a  football  team  that  i 
seems  destined  for  as  long  a  run  ; 
of  triumphs  as  the  musical  show  ' 
of  the  same  name,  begins  the  de- ; 
fense  of  its  unofficial  national  col-  j 
legiate  championship  Saturday  on  ' 
an  afternoon  that  could  dim  the  | 
title  hopes  of  a  go<>d  many  teams,  i 

Coach  Bud  Wilkinson's  Sooners.  ^ 
whose  record  is  unsmirched  since  I 
they  lost  to  Notre  Dame  and  were  i 
tied  by  Pitt  at  the  start  of  the 
1953  season,  go  after  their  31st  \ 
consecutive  victory  against  North  : 
Carolina. 

They're    facing    the    coach,    but  ■ 
not   the   team,   that   gave    them   a  ' 
real   run   for   national   honors   last  ' 
season  and  wound  up  on  the  other  j 
side  of  the  Orange  Bowl  on  New  j 
Year's    day.    Jim    Tatum,    whose  | 
Maryland    team    finished    third    in  I 
the      Associated      Press      national 
ranking  poll     last     year,     now   is  [ 
North   Carolina's   coach.   And   one  I 
oddity  of  this  already  upset-riddled 
season    is    that    both    Tatum    and 
the  team  he  left  behind  lost  their 
opening  games   this   year. 

North  Carolina,  soundly  thump- 
ed by  N.  C.  State  last  week,  hardly 
looks  like  a  threat  to  Oklahoma, 
which  is  reported  deep  in  talent 
despite  some  pessimistic  state- 
ments by  Wilkinson. 

Elsewhere  the  day's  most  im- 
portant and  exciting  games  appear 
to  be  Georgia  Teach  vs.  Southern 
Methodist  at  Dallas.  Michigan 
State  vs.  Stanford  at  Palo  Alto. 
Calif.,  Auburn  vs.  Tennessee  at 
Birmingham,  Ala.,  and  Pittsburgh 
vs.   Syracuse  at  Pittsburgh. 

After  only  one  week  of  major 
college  play,  and  before  many  of 
the  top-rated  teams  even  opened 
their  seasons,  Georgia  Tech  and 
SMU  advancd  to  second  and  fifth 
places  in  the  weekly  AP  poll  rat- 
ings. The  SMU  Mustangs,  with 
Tommy  Arnold  sparking  a  sensa- 
tional air  attack,  overpowered  No- 


tre Dame  19-13  last  week.  Georgia 
Tech,  14-6  winner  over  stubborn 
Kentucky,  could  run  into  the  same 
kind   of  trouble. 

Stanford  and  Michigan  State 
have  been  tabbed  as  the  top  teams 
in  the  Pacific  Coast  and  Big  Ten 
conferences.  Tliis  meeting  of  Stan- 
fords'  passing  attack  and  Michi- 
gan State's  multiple  offense,  most- 
ly running,  could  be  a  Rose  Bowl 
preview  but  for  one  thing — State 
isnf    eligible    two   years    running. 

Tennessee  and  Auburn  are  rated 
as  two  leading  challengers  of 
Georgia  Tech  for  the  Southeastern 
Conference  title.  This  game,  listed 
as  a  toss-up,  could  eliminate  one. 


By  BILL   KINO 

Fall  baseball  practice  at  Caro- 
lina finally  got  a  break  weather- 
wise  yesterday  after  a  three-day 
dominace  by  Hurricane  Flossy 
which  kept  the  Tar  Heels  indoors 
for  their  first  three  practice  sess- 
ions. 

40  FRESHMEN  OUT 

Coach  Walter  Rabb  said  there 
were  some  forty  freshmen  among 
the  seventy  candidates  who  report- 
ed to  practice  Monday.  Rabb  was 
unable  to  make  any  predictions  at 
this  early  date  but  appeared  to 
be  quite  enthused  about  the 
number  of  pitchers  that  showed 
up  for  the  first  three  days  of  prac- 
tice. 

The  candidates  went  through  a 
brisk  workout  in  Emerson  Stadium 
yesterday  and  will  practice  there, 
weather  permitting,  for  at  least 
two  more  weeks. 

Rabb  commented  that  there 
were  a  number  of  boys  who  looked 
good  during  their  indoor  sessions 
but  added  that  he  could  make  very 
little  judgment  on  this. 

STRONGER  PITCHING  SEEN 

Asked  about  the  pitching  de- 
partment which  lacked  depth  la.s^t 
sca.son,  Rabb  stated  that  he  felt 
the  Tar  Heels  wo'uld  be  much 
stronger  in  that  department  this 
season. 

Two  of  the  hurlers  who  are  ex- 
pected to  boost  the  Tar  Heel  1956 
lefthander,  and  righthander  Don 
mound  staff  are  lefthander  Joe 
Morgan    and    righthander  Charles 


Aycock.    Both   have   just    returned 
from  military  service. 

A  couple  of  last  years'  freshman 
moundsmen   are   also  expecliad    lo 
aid    veteran    hurlers    Jim    Raugh 
and    I>on    Saine.    Bill    Harding    a  j 
Jackson  were  the  two  aces  otf  the  | 
Ta/  Heel's  '55  freshman  club.  [Rabb  j 
was    al.so    pleased      that      veteran  j 
righthander  Tom  Maultsby   •ik'ould  \ 


be  back  after  a  one  year  absence. 

Rabb  has  not  had  a  chance  to 
see  the  outfielders  and  infielders 
in  actual  practice  and  was  unable 
to  make  any  predictions  in  that 
department.  The  Tar  Heels  do, 
however,  have  veterans  Chu;.k 
H«rtman,  Carson  Oldham,  and  Don 
Lewis  back  for  infield  duty  along 
with  veteran  outfielders  Dick  Hud- 


YACK  CONTRACTS 

All  organizations  desiring  space 
in  the  1957  Yackety  Yack  must 
sign  contracts  in  the  Yack  Office 
in  the  basement  of  Graham  Mem- 
orial by  Oct.  10.  according  to  Edi- 
tor Tommy  Johnson.  Contracts 
may  be  signed  from  2  to  4  p.m. 
any  weekday. 


IDC  To  Include  Intramurals 
In  Judging  Best  Dormitory 


Intramurals  wifi  be  an  evien 
more  important  feature  of  dormi- 
tory life  this  year  due  to  a  in- 
novation by  the  Interdormitory 
Council. 

The  IDC  announced  it  will  in- 
clude intramural  participation  of 
the  dormitories  as  a  consideration 
in  the  rating  of  the  best  dormi- 
tory for.  1956-57. 

The  Intramural  Dept.  again  has 
urged  all  dormitory  presidents  to 
have  the  intramural  managers  of 
their  respective  dorms  elected  as 
soon  as  possible  in  order  to  be 
represented  at  an  important  man- 
agers' meeting  to  be  held  Tuesday, 
Oct.  2. 

MANAGERS   MEET 

The  first  fraternity  managers' 
meeting  was  held  Thursday  night. 
The  four  -  man  nominating  com- 
mitte  was  appointed  during  the 
meeting.  Buddy  Clark  of  Theta 
Chi  was  made  chairman.  Other 
members    are    Paul    Fulton,    Zeta 


Psi;  Pete  Williams,  SAE;  and  Bill 
Mason,  ATO. 

Tag  football  competition  has 
been  postponed  for  a  while  due 
to  poor  weather  conditions.  The 
officials'  clinic  has  not  had  an  op- 
portunity to  work  outside  as  yet. 
and  the  fraternity  teams  have  not 
been  able  to  work  out.  Another 
reason  for  the  postponement  was 
the  coming  rushing  period  which 
would  prevent  several  teams  from 
participating. 

FIELDS  OPEN 

All  the  intramural  fields  will 
be  open  next  week  for  both  frater- 
nity and  dormitory  teams.  Any 
teams  desiring  to  reserve  a  field 
should  call  the  Intramural  Dept. 
at  9424.  Official^  will  be  assigned 
to  call  the  practice  games. 

Dormitories  are  especially  urged 
to  reserve  fields.  The  officials 
present  will  help  any  new  mem- 
bers with  the  rules  of  the  game 
or  any  other  questions. 


ONE  WEEK  SALE! 
All  Capital  Records 


Series 

List 

Sale 

T 

$4.12 

$2.75 

W 

$5.15 

$3.75 

All  Angels-Special 
Ail  Columbia: 


Series 
ML 
SL 
OL 


List 
$4.12 
$5.15 
$5.15 


Sale 
$2.75 
$3.7$ 
$3.75 


All  Victor: 


List   '  Sale 

LM  Series                                 $4.12  $2.75 

i^AW  EP  45  RPM $1.05  ea. 

-^All  10"  LP. $1.45  ea. 

(Except  Elektra— Angel 

L'Oylyre  —  Telef  unken) 


207  E.  Franklin  St. 


DAILY    CROSSWORD 


ACROSS 

1.  Shade  of  red 
6.  Cut  wool 

11.  Sheeplikc 

12.  Door  joint 

13.  Cougars 

14.  Beginning 

15.  To  diminish 
front   (Mil.) 

1«.  Fish 

17.  Nickel 
(■ym.) 

18.  Wattr  god 
(poss.) 

19.  Tree 

20.  Devoured 

21.  Fears 

23.  Sound  of 
a  goose 

24.  Underworld 
river 
(Myth.) 

26.  A  small 

piece 
29.  Line  from 

upper 
'      corners  of 
•      sail  to  th« 

yard 

33.  Youth 

34.  Fortify 

35.  Dlafigur* 

36.  Part  of 
"to  b«" 

37.  Underworld 
god  (Myth.) 

38.  Church  part 

39.  Having  sides 

41.  Mistreat 

42.  Scarf 

43.  Warning 
signal 

44.  Shout* 

45.  Lord* 

nawn 

1.  Cauffht 
(slang) 

2.  Of  the  ovul* 
(Bot) 


3.  Full 
of       , 
fissures 

4.  W^it* 
ant 

5.  Man's 
nickname 

6.  Agitated 

7.  Female 
red  deer 

8.  Half  ems 

9.  Deputies 
10.  Binds  again 
16.  Wheels  on 

swivel 
frames 

19.  Poem 

20.  Sloth 
22.  Lofty 

mountain 


23.  Femi. 
nine 
pro- 
noun 

SS.  Son 
of 
Noah 

26.  Sty. 
iish 
(slang) 

27.  A 
d«. 

scend- 
ant  of  Ham 

28.  Fish  (var.) 

30.  Unclean 

31.  Egypt's 
president 

32.  Putting 
areas 


:i]:-i:j :ij   nciaau 

-!u  Liuaa  iijiiy 

[lOLii-jria   iiinaa 

'2&U  Han 

Lin       rjdU    Fin<3 


♦-» 


V«tt«r4s|r'«  Aatwcr 
34.  Helpers 

37.  Valley 
(poet.) 

38.  Man's 
nickname 

40.  Dollar 
(abbr.) 

41.  Viper 


TT 


ar 


3r 


?* 


19 


AX 


W 


»-B 


W. 


i 


3T 


^ 


Ta 


i 


i 


1 

ao 


^ 


4S 


4? 


^ 


sr 


17 


31 


tx. 


PENNIESGO  ALONG  WAY... 


AT  OUR 


GIGANTIC 


*al 


'    .    >" 


BIG  DAYS... 

STARTS  MONDAY  OCTOBER  1st 


Woj^xceK' 


Fraternity  Rushing 
Begins  Tomorrow! 

WHAT  DOES  YOUR  WARDROBE       ^ 
I  LOOK  LIKE? 

}i   ARE  YOU  STILL  PLAGUED  WITH         ^^ 
\;  OUT-OF-DATE  STYLES?  /    ' 

Whether  you  ^x^  trying  to  create  the  proper  im- 
pression for  rushing -purposes,  or  whether  you 
simply  want  to  present  the  proper  appearance 
at  all  times:  «^  ,     :! 

You  can't  beat  the  well-tailored  look  you'll 
have  when  you  are  wearing  a  smart-looking  suit 
or  sport  jacket  by  SOUTHWICK. 

In  cbthing,  furnishings,  and  accessories, 
youMI  find  the  best  buys  and  widest  selections  at: 


H51KCY  DBtfC  SIO«t 


CMAMi  H4U..M.C. 


STEVEKS  "  SHEPHERD 


*"**«is<»»_ 


•^m-j 


\ 
?. 


Old  Gold's  Exciting  New  Game 
for  College  Students  Only 


^m 


r^'^M 


How  would  you  like  to  spend  next  summer  on  a  40- 
day  tour  of  the  world?  All  expenses  paid!  Visit 
England,  France.  Italy,  Greece,  India,  Siam,  Hong 
Kong,  Japan  . . .  the  far-away  places  you've  dreamed 
of  seeing!     •  -    -        '-i- 


1  Q^    PflTA  All-expense,   40 -day  tour  of  the  world  for 
*  ^  *    ■    ■  ■  ^^  rwo,  OR  $5,000.00  in  cash 


2nd  Prize 


lO-dcy  all-expense  poid  trip  to  Paris 


3rd-6th  Prizes  ;;,t°;jJ'^-'""'°""'"'"' "'"' 


7th- 16th  Prizes 


RCA  Hi-Fi  sets— MARK  iV 


*!I>4.J5 


-A 


17th. 36th    PriTl^C  ^100  B'^'^s  Brothers 
Alin-OOin    ITIZe^  wardrobe  certificotes 

50  Additionai  Prizes  $25  Brocks 

Brothers  wordrobe  certificates 

Beprinninia:  this  week  and  continuing  throughout  the  Fall 
semester,  thh  paper  will  publish  three  puzzles  a  week,  con- 
taining the  letters  which  make  up  the  names  of  American 
colleges  and  universities.  The  letters  are  scrambled  and  must 
be  re-arranged  to  form  the  names  of  the  schools.  Clues  with 
each  puzzle  will  help  you  identify  the  correct  answer. 

It's  fun  . .  .  it's  easy  .  .  .  start  now! 


YOU'LL  GO  FOR 
OLD  GOLDS 

Either  REGULAR,  KING  SIZE  or     *■''  ' 
The  GREAT  NEW  FILTERS. 

Old  Golds  taste  terrific!  The  reason: 
Old  Golds  give  you  the  best  tobaccos. 
Nature-ripened  tobaccos  .  .'. 

SO  RICH,  SO  LIGHT, 
SO  GOLDEN 
BRIGHT! 


Coiurrigiit  1966,  Harry  H.  HoUiater 


Rules  and  First  Three  Puzzles  Appear  on  Next  Page   V 


'i^j^ip*^ 


WEATHER 

Partly  cJoudy  and  warmer,  with 


Serials  Oept. 
Cbapal  Hlll»  N.  C. 


high  in  70's. 


VOL.  LVill,  NO.  9 


m  e  Dattu  M^xMt  d 


REVIEW 

Campus,  State  and  National 
News  of  the  week  in  review.  See 
page  2. 


Complete  (A^)  Wire  Service 


CHAPEL   HILL.  NORTH  CAROLINA,  SUNDAY,  SEPTEMBER   30,   1956 


Offices  in  Graham  Memorial 


FOUR   PAGES  THIS    ISSUE 


MIGHTY  SOONERS  STOP  TAR  HEELS,  36-0 


60,000  Fans  See  Oklahoma  Offense 
Roll  Over  Weak  North  Carolina  Team 


Aldermen  AskStudenfs 
To  Give  Parking  Ideas 


By  CLARKE  JONES 

I      A  member  of  the  town  Board  ol 

.^liloimen   said    Friday    the   board 

I  w  ,iikl  be  happy  "to  hear  any  sug- 

j  gestions    from    students"    concern- 


terfraternity  Council.  Both  would 
work  jointly  tow^.d  removal  ol 
the  restriction. 

University  Party  Chairman  Mike 
Weinman,  who  introduced  the  bill, 


►  By   LARRY   CHEEK 

Daily  Tar  Heel  Sports  Editor 
NORMAN,  Okla.,  —  Oklahoma's 
big  and  powerful  Sooners  handed 
Coach  Jim  Tatum's  undermanned 
Carolina  Tar  Heels  their  second 
one-sided  lacing  in  as  many  weeks 
here  yesterday  as  •  they  smashed 
the  Tar  Heels,  36-0.  in  a  game 
played  before  a  sellout  crowd  ol 
60,000  fans  under  a  blazing  sun. 
The    Sooners,    ranked    No.    1    in 


NC  Opponents 
Break  Even 

Four  of  the  football  teams  slat- 
ed to  meet  the  Carolina  Tar  Heels 
later  on  this  season  won  their 
games  yesterday,  and  three  other 
opponents  to-be  wound  up  the  day 
on  the  short  efid  of  some  big  scores. 

.,  ^.        .,,,..„       ,,         Georgia,     Maryland.     Tennessee, 

ing  the  parkmg  restrictons  on  Co-    gave  four  reasons  for  the  measure    the  nation  in  the  lale^i^AP  poll,    ^^^   ^^^^   ^j,    ^^^^.J^^^   j^   victories 
'       '       "  •  -  -  •     ■  -  ••  proved  their  right  to  this  position  ^  ^.^jje   South    Carolina..  Wake   For- 


lunibia  St.  and  Rosemary  St..  .  which  are  as  follows 

Wiilam    M.   Alexander,   assistant  1.  "Columbia   St.   is   not   a  corn- 
manager   of  radio   station    WCHL, '  mercial    street    between    Franklin 

said  the  Aldermen,  who  meet  Oct.  St.  and  Cameron  Ave. 

14,    ■  very    definitely    would    want  2.   "There   is    no   need   to   limit 

to  hear  them."  parking  on  a  street  which   is  not 

ilis   statement    followed    a    bill  commercial  as  this  limit  serves  no 

passed  by  the  student  Legislature  obvious  purpose. 

Thursday  night  calling  for  the  re-  3.  •Jt  is  the  aim  of  student  gov- 

mr.val  of  a  two-hour  parking  ban  ernment   to   look   out    for   the   in- 


as  they  mowed  down  the  Tar  Heels 
with  a  sharp  slashing  offense  and 


est  and  Virginia  lost. 


South    Carolina,    wno   will    play 
L    ""''''^..^^^^"'l  ^^^^    '^?^^.''    "osl   to   the   Tar   Heels   Saturday. 

lost   to   powerful   Miami,   14-6,  Fri- 


Carolina  cold  all  afternoon.  Coach 
Bud  Wilkinson  wore  down  the  Tar 
Heels  in  the  90-degree  heat  by 
alternating  two  and  sometimes 
three  teams  with  just  about  equal 
effectiveness. 


on  Columbia  St.  between  Franklin 
St.  and  Cameron  Ave. 
Th?  measure,  passed   by  special 


tcrests  of  all  students. 

4.     The  parking  limit  recently  ef- 
fected on  Columbia  St.  works  great 


day  night. 

A  field  goal  was  the  only  thing 
that  enabled  Georgia  to  edge  Flori- 
da State,  3-0.  The  Georgians  wili 
visit  Chapel  Hill  Oct.  13  in  the  Tar 


Coach    Tatum's    team    held    the    Heel's  next  home  game. 
Sooners   scoreless     in     both     the       Maryland  and  Wake  Forest,  who 
first    and    third    quarters,    but    in    will  be  at  the  Hill  on  Oct.  20  and 


order   of   business,   asked   for   the    hardship    on    those   students    who    the  second  and   fourth,   the   Ok!a-    Oct.  27,  respectively,  b'attled  down 


They  Direct  Alumni  Annual  Giving  Program  Here 


Pictured  above  is  the  council  which  directs  the  Alumni  Annual 
Giving  program  at  the  University.  This  group  will  meet  with  William 
H.  Ruffin,  Durham,  chairman  of  advance  gifts,  and  alumni  from  57 
towns  and  cities  in  the  state  here  Thursday  to  map  out  plans  for 
this  phase  oi  the  program  to  be  conducted  during  October  and 
November.  They  are,  left  ro  right,  back  row;  Mayor  E.  J.  Evans, 
Durham;  Charles  M.  Shaffer  and  Dr.  Sterling  A.  Stoudemire,  Chapel 


Hill;  James  W.  Poole,  Greensboro;  Richard  E.  Gordon,  Asheville; 
and  J.  Maryon  Saunders;  front  row:  Tom  Bost  Jr.,  Chapel  Hill;  James 
Webb,  Greensboro;  R.  Mayne  Albright,  Raleigh;  Archie  K.  Davis, 
Winston-Salem;  Chancellor  Robert  B.  House  and  Dr.  John  N.  Couch, 
Chapel  Hill.  Not  pictured  are  John  W.  Harden,  Greensboro,  and 
James   L.  Godfrey,  Chapel   Hill. 


establishment  of  a  student  govern-  'ive  on  Columbia  St.  and  the  Stu 
ment  commisson  of  three  to  work  dent  Legislature  feels  this  hard- 
with  a  similar  group  from  the  In-    ship  has  been  invoked  unnecessari- 


Lenoir  Hall  Revamped 
For  Cost  Of  $60,000 


By  JERRY  ALVIS 

During  the  past  year,  $60,000  has 
been  spent  reconditioning,  repair- 
ing, and  purchasing  new  equip- 
ment for  the  Lenoir  Hall  dining 
facilities. 

George  Prillaman.  director  of 
the  hall  since  1951,  revealed 
that  Lenoir  is  serving  more  stu- 
dents this  year  than  at  any  time 
since  1948. 

Monday's  tabulations  reflected 
that  5,250  paying  customers.  80 
patrolmen,  40  athletes  and  196  em- 
ployees were  served.  Including  the 
Pine  Room,  which  is  a  part  of  the 
same  operation,  an  estimated  7,500 
people  dined  in  the  hall. 

In  order  to  perform  the  gigantic 
and  demanding  task  of  feeding  the 
student  body,  with  a  minimum  cost 
and  maximum  efficiency,  Lenoir 
employs  60  regular  workers  and 
150  students  who  work  on  a  part- 
time  basis. 

The  employees  have  recently 
been  supplied  with  lockers  in  the 
basement  of  the  hall  which  are 
designed  to  supply  the  worker  with 
a  clean  serving  jacket  upon  the 
insertion  of  a  dirty  one — another 
improvement  by  Prillaman  who 
trys  to  keep  the  hall  "modernistic 
and  up-to-date  in  all  respects." 
MODERNISTIC 

In  keeping  with  the  "modernis- 
tic" policy  of  the  hall,  a  new  dish- 
washer, installed  at  a  cost  of  810, 
500.  went  into  operation  in  the 
basement  of  Lenoir  at  breakfast 
OR  Tuesday,  Sept.  25 

The  main  problem  of  the  dish- 
washing section  in  the  past,  in- 
volving the  easily  stained  plastic 
dishes  used  in  the  hall,  is  expected 
to  be  solved  by  the  extremely  high 
temperature  capabilities  of  the 
new  machine. 

The  pre-wash  section  of  the  mac- 
hine is  maintained  at  temperatures  ' 
of  120  and  130  degrees  Farenheit, 
the  two  wash  tanks  average  160 
degrees  and  the  rinse  section  180 
t(j  200  degrees.  "This  machine  will 

INFIRMARY 

Students  in  the  Infirmary  yes- 
terday included:   Misses  Mary  J.    i 
Douglas,  Evelyn  B.  DeHeart,  Sue 
B-   Gilliam,   Carol    T.    Covington, 
Jane   E.   Palmer,   Ann   P.    Ha.ncy,    i 
and  Mary  D    Dance,  and  John  G. 
Burgwyn,    James    E.    Holshouser,    | 
Marvin  W.     Hareless,  Alfredo  J,    ' 
Julian,  Reginald  Mallett,  Earl  T.    ' 
Kirkman,  Micheal  P.  Cap,  William    I 
V.'    Burress,  Robert  A.  Barnwell,    i 
Alvin   W.   Smith. 


,  take    care    of    all    the    dishwashing 
I  worries    well    ever    have,  "    Prilla- 
man said. 

The  Lenoir  bakery,  although  not 
a  recent  operation,  has  been  re- ; 
i  equipped  with  new  stainles.s  steel 
equipment  including  a  revolving 
oven  costing  S5.500,  a  tempering  i 
machine  for  the  raising  of  bread, 
a  batter  mixer  and  various  tables, 
trays,  pans  and   other  utensils. 

More  new  equipment  has  been 
ordered  -for  the  bakery,  which  is 
now  three-fourths  complete,  and 
is  expected  within  the  next  two 
weeks. 

Early  October  has  been  set  as 
the  "projected  completion  date  of 
the  overall  bakery  renovation, 
which  will  cost  in  the  vicinity  of 
$18,000.  All  baked  goods,  with  the 
exception  of  light  bread,  served 
in  Lenoir  Hall  and  its  affiliate,  the 
Pine  Room,  are  products  of  the 
bakery. 

REfJOVATION 

i      Another   recent  accomplishment 

was  the  renovation  of  three  rooms 

on   the  second   story   of  the   hall. 

These  rooms  were  decorated  by  a 

Durham     interior     decorator     and 

furnished  with  new  furniture. 

!      The  largest  of  the  three  rooms  is 

presently   being   used   for   serving 

i  the  varsity  football   team;   but   all 

I  three,    the   front   with    a   capacity , 

I  of  80  persons,  the  middle  30  and 

the  back  50,   are   available  to  any 

student  group  or  organization  upon 

reservation.  1 

Worth  note  are  the  air  condition 
ed  and  spotlessly  clean   vegetable  : 
and    ifie.Tt    preparation    r;)nms    lo- 
cated in  the  basement  of  the  hall. 
The.se  rooms,  once  merely  unwall- 
ed  areas,  were  designed  by  Prilla- 
man.   They    are    completely    tiled 
;  arl   furnished   with  stainless  steel 
I  equipment  including  some  specially 
made  implements  designed  by  the  ; 
director.  Other  sections  of  the  food  i 
preparation  and  storage  layout  in- 1 
elude    air-condtioned    meat,    milk  ; 
and    vegetable  storage    rooms,    a  • 
general   store   room   with   a   $5,000  , 
inventory,  a  bake  shop,  chef's  de- 
partment, and  salad  and  desert  de- 
partments. 

Serving    as  an  example  of    the 
Prillaman    "up-to-date"    policy    is  : 
the   new   combination   toaster   and 
sandwich    freshener    of   the    Pine  \ 
Room  which  has  been  on  the  mar- 
ket only  60  days.  Future  plans  for 
up-to-datedness  include  the  instal- 
lation  of  a  conveyer  system  lead- 
ing from  each  of  the  dining  rooms 
to  the  dishwashing  section  in  the] 
basement  of  the  hall.  Such  a  sys-  j 
tem  is   estimated  to  cost  $55,000.  | 


cflnpus 

SEEN  I 


Three  coedv  xtrolliyig  through 
the  rain,  singing  love  songs  to 
providv  music-  for  t}iosv  trho  do 
not  carry  portables  to  the  arhorr- 
turn. 

*  ♦  « 

Political  Science  professor 
stating  that  Eisenhower  and 
Kefauver  will  get  most  of  the 
labor  vote  in  the  November  elec- 
tion. 

Injured  Girl 
Wins  Radio 

By  WOODY  SEARS 

People  are  always  happy  when 
they  win  something,  especially 
when  it  comes  as  a  complete  sur- 
prise. 

No  one  could  have  been  more 
happy  than  Miss  Mary  Ruckcr 
when  she  was  called  Friday  al- 
ternocn  and  informed  that  she 
had  won  one  of  the  new  all- 
transitor  radios  offered  by  radio 
station  WCHI.. 

Ed  Myers,  the  disk-jockey  on 
the  "Dig  These"  show,  who 
called  Miss  Pucker  said,  "I 
don't  know  who  was  the  more 
excited,  Miss  Rucker  or  me.  It's 
really  wonderful.  If  we  ran  the 
show  like  one  of  the  "heart- 
line'  type  we  couldn't  have  pick 
ed  a  more  deserving  person  to 
give  the  radio  to.  It  wa.s  a  real 
thrill  to  pull  that  ticket  with 
th"  Memoral  Hospital  address." 
INJURY 

Miss  Rucker,  a  member  of  Chi 
Omepa  sorority  here,  was  in- 
jured in  an  automobile  accident 
last  April  28.  and  has  been  in 
and  out  of  Memorial  Hospital 
since  then.  She  is  here  now  for 
a  new  cast  and  physical  therapy 
treatment. 

"I'm  so  excited  I  can  hardlv 
stand  it,"  Miss  Rucker  said.  "I 
bet  my  pulse  was  goin?  200 
miles  an  hour."  When  the  phone 
rang  .Miss  Rucker  was  working 
on  a  stole  she  is  crocheting 
"for  a  member  of  the  family," 
and  talking  to  .several  visitors. 

"Gosh."  she  said  after  the  first 
rush  -  of  excitement  was  over. 
"I've  n'.'vcr  won  anything  before. 
I  never  dreamed  I'd  win  it.  One 
of  my  f'-iends  brought  me  a 
copy  of  The  Daily  Tar  Heel  and 
I  paw  the  contest  blank  and  sent 
it  in.  Golly,  I  nevei'  thought  I'd 
win." 


Di  To  Air 
Opinions 
Of  Nixon 


Controversial  Vice  President 
Richard  Nixon  will  be  the  topic 
of  discussion  at  the  regular  Tues- 
day night  meeting  of  the  Dialectic 
Senate,  acocrding  to  President  Pro- 
tem   Pat  Adams. 

The    bill    will    commend    Nixon 
^  "for   his  excellent  service  to   the 
nation." 

j      The  proponents  of  the  bill  will 

'  probably  cite  Nixon's  "good  will " 
missions  abroad  and  his  strong 
civil  rights  stand  as  an  indication 

!  of  his  service.  Opponents  are  ex 
pected  to  counter  with  attacks  up- 
on    his    campaign    fund    and    his 

I  honorary  membership  in  the  Nat- 
ional Assn.  for  the  Advancement 
of  Colored   People. 

The  meeting  will  be  held  at  8 
p.m,  on  the  third  floor  of  New 
West.  Visitors  are  welcome,  ac- 
cording to  President  Pro-Tern 
Adams. 


New  Y  Club 
■  Plans  Events 
i  for  Grads 

I  By  ANN  DRAKE  j 

^        The  Graduate  Student  Fellow- 
j  ship,  a  new  organization  sponsored 
by    the    YMCA-YWCA,    is    making 
pl|ins    to    sponsor    formal    and    in- 
formal programs  and  social, even^  , 
I  iW  graduate  and  professional  stu-' 

denLs. 
I  The  first  meeting  will  be  a  cof- 
I  fee  hour  Sunday,  Oct.  7.  in  Gra- 
ham Memorial.  In  addition  to  grad- 
uate and  professional  students, 
i  nurses,  dieticians,  teachers  and 
I  other  college  graduates  employed 
I  in  Chapel  Hill  have  been  urged 
!  to  attend.  Further  details  about 
'  this  meeting  will  be  announced 
I  later. 

1  Although  there  are  1,060  graduate 
and  professional  students  enroll- 
ed at  UNC,  there  is  little  planned 
social    activity    for   them,    accord- 


PROTEST 

Several  days  ago  a  protest  was 
raised  by  Tau  Epsilon  Phi  frater 
nity  on  Rosemary  St.,  where  all 
parking  has  been  banned.  Pi  Beta 
Phi  Sorority  also  complained  al- 
though planning  no  formal  protest. 

The  Board  of  Aldermen  first 
placed  a  no-parking  ban  on  one 
block  of  Rosemary  as  an  experi- 
ment. Recently  the  ban  was  ex- 
tended to  cover  the  whole  street. 

Alexander   said    the    restrictions 
wer(>  not  the' result  of  "hasty  ac- 
tion" but  had  been     in  the  making 
for  some  time." 
TRAFFIC  EXPERT 

The  town  hired  a  traffic  expert, 
Mr.  Babcock.  to  deal  with  "the  ter- 
rific traffic  problem  here,  "  said 
Alexander. 

Babcock  studied  the  town's  traf- 


homa  offense  clicked  with  almost  to  the  wire  with  the  Terps  of  Mary- 
effortless  precision.  The  Sooners  land  winning,  6-0. 
racked  up  three  touchdowns  in  Tennessee  beat  Auburn,  35-7,  in- 
the  closing  minutes  of  the  first  dicating  they  will  be  mighty  tough 
half  to  take  a  commanding  lead,  when  the  Tar  Heels  go  to  Knox- 
then  added  the  remaining  15  ville  Nov.  3. 
points  in  the  last  period.  Powerful    Duke,    which    will    be 

Deepest  Tar  Heel  penetration  of  here  Nov.  24.   had  a   field  day  in 
the  day  came  in  the  third  quarter  trouncing   Virginia.  40-7.  Carolina 
when    they    drove    to    the    Sooner  also  meets  Virginia,  in*  Charlottes- 
six-yard  line  before  being  stopped.  \  ville  Nov.  10. 
The   drive   covered   34   yards   and  \  ~      ~ 
consumed  11  plays  from  the  Okla- 
homa 40. 

Longest  gain  of  the  thrust  was 


The  Tar  Heels  did  a  good  >ob 
of  holding  their  more  powerful 
opponents  in  check  for"  24  minutes 
by  fullback  Giles  Gaca,  who  car-  of  the  first  half.  At  this  point,  how- 
ried  from  the  30  down  to  the  17.    ever,   the    dam     broke      and     the 


From  the  17,  quarterback  Curt 
Hathaway  drove  to  the  12.  Half- 
back Ed  Sutton  picked  up  four 
down  to  the  8.  and  here  the 
push  stalled  with  the  Sooners  tak 
ing  over  on  the  six  three  plays 
later. 

The  Tar  Heel's  longest  play  came 
late  in  the  fourth  period  when  UNC 


ing  to  Bob  Rennick.  Spokesman  for    „„h.a  St.  instead  of  the  two-hour 
the  group.  The  Graduate  Student 
Fellowship  will  be  an  opportunity 
for  graduate  students  to  meet  oth- 
er  department    students     and     to 


fie  problems  a  ydbr,  then  submit-  third-string  quarterback  Ron  Mar- 
ted  a  thoroughfare  plan  which  the 
Board  adopted.  The  plan  was 
thought  to  be  the  best  for  the  fu- 
ture of  the  community  as  a  whole. 
.Mexandcr  said. 

He  stated  Babcock  originally  pro- 
posed a  one-hour  restriction  on  Co- 


ban  now  in  effect. 

The   blame  could   not   be   placed 
on  anyone,  he  said.  "The  planning 
ten  years  ago  was  obviously   neg- 
learn  of  other  walks  of  life,  fields    Ugent     in    not    preparing   for     the 
of    interest,    and    customs    of    for-    tremendous  influx  of  cars  h(*re." 


quette  flipped  a  49-yard  pass  to 
halfback  Moe  DeCant  s.  on  the 
Sooner  46.  The  Tar  Heels  couldn't 
move  from  there,  however. 

The  game's  sad  tale  is  clearly 
shown  by  the  statistics  Oklahoma, 
sporting  at  least  a  dozen  hard-run- 
ning bs- ks,  rushed  for  369  yards 
to  Carolina's  93,  and  gained  61 
yards  through  the  air  compared 
to  47  for  the  Tar  Heels  .  The 
Sooners  also  had  20  first  downs 
to  five  for  Carolina. 


Sconer  touchdowns  came  thick  and 

fast,  three  of  thctn  in  a  little  over 

five  minutes,  to  be  exact. 
The   first  Oklahoma  score  came 

with  6:29  remaining  in  the  second 
period  on  a  tricky  lateral  play 
from  halfback  Dave  Baker  to 
quarterback  Jay  O'Neal.  The  Soon- 
ers started  their  drive  on  their 
own  48yard  lin«.  and  moved  52 
yards  in  only  7  plays.  The  payoff 
punch  came  from  the  Carolina  17- 
yard  line  when  Baker  flipped  a 
desperate  lateral  to  O'Neal  as  he 
was  being  tackled.  The  Sooner 
s:)ph  gnthered  in  the  pigskin  and 
rambled  across  the  goal  unmolest- 
ed. 

In  four  minutes,  the  Sooners  had 
their  second   marker.   After  a  78- 
yard    quick    kick    by    Sooner    full- 
back Billy  Pricer  had  put  the  Tar 
(See  SOONEiRS.  Page  4) 


SP  To  Fill 
3  Vacancies 
On  Monday 

The  Student  Party  will  hold  an 
election  tomorrow  night  at  its 
weekly  meeting  to  fill  three  va- 
cancies in  Student  Legislature 
seats,  according  ).o  party  Chair 
man  Tom   Lambeth. 


The     vacancies     are     in     Dorm 
Mens'  districts  II,  III  and  V.  j 

Dorm  Men's  II  consists  of  Alex-  j 
ander,  Connor  and  Winston  dorm- 
itories; Dorm  Men's  III,  Battle 
Vance-Pettigrew,  Steele,  Old  East, 
Old  West  and  Whitehead  and 
Dorm  Men's  V,  Stacy,  Grimes,  Ay- 
cock,  Lewis  and  Everett.  | 

The  SP  will  also: 

1.  Vote  on  an  amendment  to  the  | 
party    bylaws   calling   for   removal  ! 
of  the  dues  requirement.  A  fee  of 
$1.50    is    now    required    for    mem- 
bership. 

2.  Fill  a  vacant  position  on  the 
party's  Advisory  Board. 

3.  Hear  some  remarks  by  Chair- , 
man  Lambeth.  1 


eign  countries,  he  said. 

Tentative  plans  call  for  a  series 
of  programs  geared  to  promote 
fellowship  and  discussion.  These 
programs  will  include  mixers, 
dances,  square  dances,  and  dance 
instruction  if  desired.  A  weekly 
friendship  hour  with  refreshments, 
stimulating  conversation  and  good 
music  is  planned. 

The  group  hopes  to  incorporate  ' 
"faculty  firesides,"  meetings  in 
the  professors's  homes  when  stu- 
dents have  a  chance  to  know  their 
professors  "as  human  beings,"  is 
their  program.  According  Rennick, 
this  idea  has  proved  very  popular 
:;t  the  University  of  Wisconsin  and 
other  campuses. 


Members  of  the  Board,  in  addi- 
tion to  Alexander , are  Obie  Davis, 
g^s    station    proprietor;    Dr.    Paul  j 
Wager,  UNC  political  science  pro- 1 
fessor;     Gene   Strowd.    local    mer- 1 
chant;  Kenneth  Putnam,  insurance 
man  and  Hubert  Roberson,  Negro 
who  works  on  the  Morehead  Plan- 
etarium staff. 


Frat  Rushing  Starts 


Today  marks  the  start  of  a  some- 
what hectic  week  for  most  fresh 
men  and  unpledged  upperclass- 
men. 

The  first  fraternity  rush  parties 


New  Personnel  Advisor 
To  Women  Announced 


Mrs.  Richard  V.  Neill,  a  Univer- 
sity graduate  from  Richmond,  Va., 


Also  the  group  hones  i■^  sponsor    has  taken  over  the  duties  of  per 


programs    with    Duke    and    N.    C.  ;  sonr.jl  adviser  to  women  at  U.NC. 
St.ite  graduate  students. 

Some  of  the  graduate  students 
feel  there  is  a  definite  need  for 
a  more  extensive  orientation  pro- 
gram, to  inform  them  about  the 
history  and  traditions  of  UNC  and 
to  let  them  know  what  is  exp<!cted 
r{    them    as   students    here.    Thev 


Dr.  Katherine  Carmichael,  dean 
of  women,  yesterday  announced 
the  selection  of  Mrs.  Neill  to  suc- 
ceed Mrs.  John  Rendleman,  who 
has  movad  to  Greensboro. 

Mrs.  Neill,  whose  husband  is  a 
first-year  law  student,  is  the  form- 


hone  to  encourage  a  program  for    '-''"    Ann    Mason    Chapin    of   Rich- 
next  year  that  will  contain  more  in- 
formation   on    the    University    in- 
cluding   such    routine    matters    as 
how  to  register  for  classes. 

Anvone  interested  in  planning 
"ith  this  group  may  contact  Bob 
R^nn'^V  of  th*»  Sociolopv  D»^rtt.  or 
Miss  Eleanor  Riggins  at  the  YWCA. 


mond,  Va.  Her  duties  will  include 
working  with  the  Women's  Resi- 
dence Council  and  other  student 
r.roan'-'alions.  She  will  also  hold 
regularly  scheduled  interviews  with 
;ne   women   students. 

While  an  undergraduate  at  the 
UniveiMty,  Mrs.  iVcui  wa»  a  intiii- 
ber  of  the  Valkyries,  highest  honor- 
ary group  for  women;  the  Student 
Council;  Graham  Memorial  Board 
of  Directors;  and  the  Splash  Club. 


'  are  set  for  2:30  to  5:30  this  after- 
noon. 

Asst.  to  the  Dean  of  Student 
Affairs  Ray  Jefferies  had  this  bit 
of  advice  for  rushees:  "Just  be 
yourself." 

"Fraternity  rushing  can  be  very 
enjoyable  for  both  parties  if  the 
the  rushee  goes  into  it  with  the 
idea  of  meeting  friends,  rather 
than  trying  to  impress  everyone. 
It  can  be  a  terrible  drudgery  if 
you  "put  on  an  act.*  The  people 
you  meet  will  be  your  friends  for 
four  years,  even  if  you  don't  join  a 
fraternity,"  Jeffries  said. 

Parties  ne.xt  week  are  scheduled 
for  Monday.  7  to  10  p.m.;  Tuesday, 
7  to  9:30  p.m.;  Wednesday,  7  to 
9:30  p.m.;  and  Thursday,  7  to  9:330 
p.m. 

Friday  is  set  as  shake-up  day, 
and  strict  silence  will  be  observed 
from  9  p  m.  that  day  until  the 
following  -Monday  at  noon.  The  af- 
ternoon of  Monday,  Oct.  8,  will  be 
pledge  day. 

After  accepting  their  initial  bids, 
men  mav  visit  fraternities  of  their 
preference. 


STUDENT  WIVES  CLUB 

The  Student  Wives  Club  will 
hold  its  first  meeting  this  fall 
on  Tiie.sday  at  8  p.m.  at  the  Victory  She  was  also  vice  president  of  the 
Villa.ge  Nursery,  according  to  Sec-  campus  YMCA  and  rush  chairman 
retarv  Pat  Howard.  All  Student  ,  of  Delta  Delta  Delta  social  sorority. 
Wives  have  been  invited  to  attend.  1      After  completing  her  A.  B.  de 


MRS.    MASE    NEILL 

.  .  .  official  nltf/ointnu'Jif 

gree  in  sociology  in  1954,  she  work- 
ed for  a  Richmond  insurance  ad- 
justing firm,  and  later  at  Fort  Gor- 
don, Ga.,  where  her  husband  was 
stationed  with  the  U.  S.  Army. 


Yack  Pix 

Seniors  who  have  not  had  their 
pictures  made  may  do  so  tomorrow 
through  Wednesday,  at  a  cost  of 
SI  per  student. 

Pictures  will  be  mad«^  in  «*ie 
basement  of  Graham  Memoral 
from  1  to  6:30  p  m. 


PAGE  TWO 


THi  DAILY  TAR  HBSL 


SUNDAY,  SEPTEMBER  30,  1956 


The  Week  In  Review:  Oklahoma  Wins, 
UN  To  Talk  Suez  And  Flossy  Passes 


Discussions  and  Sorority  Rush      The  StotG' 
Go  On  In  Spite  Of  Wet  Weather  _  .         '        , 

Clanijjus  iutivitifs  "ot  oil   u>  a  Imsv  start   last  week  in    V*f  ffflC      A^K  l%J 

spite  o\  the  rain  aiitl  mist  wliiili  <  loiuiecl  the  tainpus  the 
tirst  tew  days. 

At  Thursday  iiij;ht'>  ineetiiv^  of  tlie  Student  Legislature 
a  bill  uas  sponsored  pro\idin<>;  for  a  student  (oinniittee  lor 
better  sthedulini;  ol  laiiipus  events. 

Ihe  l.eoislatme  meetins;  was  marked  by  poor  attend- 
anee  (hie  to  sorority  rush  and  two  speakers  present  on  tite 
campus. 

Speaking  that  evening  were  Holhngion  K.  fong.'  C'hi- 
neie  ambassador  to  the  I'nited  States,  in  Hill  Hall:  and  Hell 
I.  Wilev,  professor  o[  hisiovr  at  l.morv  rnivcrsii\.  iti  (iar- 
rol  Mali. 

Kong  spoke  on  the  ■(^(jnununist  Advance  in  Asia."  In 
his  speech  he  charged  that  the  Communist  uses  such  words 
as  "peace"'  as  "'a  weapon  to  secme  an  emotional  an<l  un- 
reasoning effect  from  his  hearers.  ' 

.\fter  the* lecture  there  was 
a  reception  in  the  lounge  of 
Ciraham  Memorial  in  honor 
(j|    Amba>.«>ador  Kong. 

W'ilev's  subjei  t  \\as  the  c om- 
mon  s(ndier  in  the  Civil  War. 
Speaking  ol  the  aspects  of  the 
war  other  than  the  faiiYous 
men  and  great  fjaitles.  he  (ited 
samples  from  the  letters  of 
diaries  of  "johnnv  Reb  '  and 
•  liillv   Yank." 

liiggest   e\ent  of  llie   week 
for  the  coeds  was  soroiitv  rush. 
The  rush   period  started   Fri- 
day a   week  ago  with  a   Pan- 
AMBASSADOR  KONG  hellenic   Tea   in      the      niam 

...u-amings  of  Red  double  talk  lounge  of  (iraham  .Memorial. 
Last  .Monday  and  Tuesday  the  girl  gieeks  held  open 
house  for  the  rushees.  After  a  f:)reak  in  rush  partie<i  and 
open  houses  Fi  iday  night  the  weeding  process  resumed  with 
each  liouse  holding  four  forty-fi\e  parties  yesterday  alier- 
noon.  y 

I^'jst  Tuesday,  the  two  oldest  debating  societies  cm 
campus,  the  Dialectic  Senate  and  the  Philanthropic  Societ\, 
held  their  first  meetings  of  the  fall  semester. 

The  Phi  div  iissed  ".X  Bill  to  Exclude  Women  From  the 
I'niversity  of  North  Carolina.  "  The  bill  was  defeated  by  a 
vole  of  2t)-S. 

In  the  Di.  tlie  currently  vital  issue  of  the  Sue/  Canal 
"ivas  debated.  Four  L;^y!/ijan  students  spoke  at  the  invitati(m 
of  the  socic  •  .  I  -c  four  ;.'.l  s^.oke  in  favor  of  Nasser  and  the 
Egvptia'       At.  nment. 

^-  •-  -l.tht-  vote  was  taken,  the  bill  calling  for  continued 
in:c!i:.:ional  holding  of  the  canal  by  peaceful  methods  it 
po«^sib!e  l)ut  by  force  if  necessary  Avas  defeated  2i-:?. 

Dr.  Alexander  Heard  was  appointed  C>>ivstdtant  to  the 
Senate  Subcommittee  on  Privileges  and  Flections  by  Sena- 
tor Albert  (.oie  last  week.  Heard  is  the  director  of  the  re- 
seaich  project  "Money  in  Politics"  now  being  carried  on 
at  the  Institiue  for  Research  in  Stxia'!  Science  here  at  Car- 
olina. 

Ihe  VMCA-Sponsored  Freshman  Fellowship  met  V\\- 
day  night  to  make  future  plans  and  hear  the  president  ot 
the  Inter-lrateniiiv  C'oinuil  and  the  president  of  Crimes 
Dormitorv  discuss  the  relative  merits  oi  fraternity  and  non- 
Iraternity. 

Last  iiii^ht  two  busloads  and  se\eral  carl«)ads  of  stu- 
dents traveled  to  Danxille.  \irginia  h>r  a  dame  at  Averett 
>Vomcn".s  C.ollege. 

.\ctinsf  President  of  die  Consolidated  I'niversity  Will- 
iam C.  Frida\  had  no  comment  concerning  the  permament 
presidencv  ol  the  Lnixersiiv  Wednesday. 

Fi  iday  said  coimiiittees  which  have  been  set  up  to  select 
new  chancellors  lor  Women's  College  and  the  arm  of  the 
Consolidated  I'niversity  here  ha\e  already  had  several  meet- 
ings, (ihancellor  Robert  B.  House  is  due  to  retire  this  sum- 
mer and  the  post  at  WC  was  left  \acant  when  Fdward  K. 
Craham  resigned  last  Spring. 

Last  spring  Frich  y  ad\ised  the  Board  of  I  rustees  that 
the  Consolidated  I'nixersity  was  losing  main  faculty  mem- 
bers. mainK  because  ol  salary.  Wednesday  he  revealed  that 
in  thf  l.ist  i.S  months  the  three  divisions  of  the  Consoli- 
dated I'niversitv  has  lost  over  2oo  lac  iiltv  members. 

.As  of  Frida-v  a  week  ago  the  enrollment  at  Ciarolina 
stcMKi  at  <>.t>(H).  -Although  a  lew  students  are  still  housed  in 
C6bb  basement,  the  housing  oflice  reports  that  as  soon  as 
vaianc  ies  become  a\ailable  in  the  dorms  students  are  moved 
iino  the  rooms. 

Fraterniiv  invitations  went  out  to  students  last  week 
in  preprration  for  the  rush  parties  which  start  this  afternoon. 
Approximatefv  lo.ooo  bids  ha\e  been  sent  out  to  i..'>oo  in- 
dividuals, reported  .\ssistaiu  to  the  Dean  ot  Student  .Vffairs 
Ray  Jefferies. 


A  Storm  Rages  In  Washington 
And  The  Campaigns  Continue 


Industries 

Up  to  six  inches  of  rain  tell  in 
variou.s  parts  of  North  Carolina 
last  week  when  a  faltering  Hur- 
rican  Flossy  revived  long  enough 
to  bring  moisture .  to  drought- 
stricken  areas  in  many  parts  of 
♦the  state. 

The  North  Carolina  Research 
Triangle  Committee,  Inc.,  was 
formed  in  Raleigh  last  week  un- 
der the  leadership  of  Go\-.  Luth- 
er Hodges.  The  committee  is  de- 
signed to  encourage  industrie.s  to 
locate  research  laboratories  in  the 
vicinity  of  the  researcn  facilities 
of  the  University,  Duke,  and 
State  College.  ^ 

The  six  convicts  who  escaped 
from  the  Burnsville  prison  farm 
Monday  were  back  in  captivity 
Thursday  after  the  last  two  were 
captured  in  a  stolen  car  near  Big 
Stone  Gap.  Va.  'Earlier  in  the  day 
three  others  were  rounded  up. 
One  surrendered  Tuesday  night. 

Crime  in  North  Carolina  in- 
creased during  the  last  six-month 
period  over  the  same  period  last 
year,  the  FBI  disclosed  last 
week. 

Crime  in  four  catagories,  mur- 
der and  non-neglii?en<  manslaugh- 
ter, aggravated  assault,  burglary, 
breaking  and  entering,  larceny 
and  theft  and  auto  theft,  increas- 
ed in  North  Carolina  during  the 
first  six  months  of  1956.  and 
decreased  in  only  one — robbery, 
said  the  FBI  report. 


A  soggy  lady  named  Flossy 
struck  the  Southern  seaboard  last 
week.  The  hurricane  lashed  out 
of  the  upper  Gulf  of  Mexico  into 
northwest  Florida  with,  winds  of 
100  miles  an  hour,  and  swept 
across  the  southern  states  into 
the  Atlantic  where  the  winds  sub- 
sided. Then,  reduced  to  a  tropi- 
cal storm,  Flossy  headed  across 
the  northeastern  states,  leaving 
23  persons  dead  in  her  wake. 

Elsewhere  ih  the  nation  there 
were  storms  of  another  sort  as 
the  NAACP  attempted  to  bring 
pressure  on  the  special  House 
Subcommittee  investigating  inte- 
gration in  Washington.  D.  C^The 
investigators  were  told  by  a 
Washington  health  official  that 
one  fourth  of  the  Negro  child- 
ren attending  public  schools  in 
the  District  of  Columbia  were 
born  out  of  wedlock. 

The  majority  of  witnescs  ha"c 
said  that  Washington  should  not 
be  held  up  as  an  example  and 
that  more  time  should  have  been 
required  before  integration  was 
adopted  by  the  Washington  .school 
system. 

Elsewhore  in  the  United  States, 
the  presicjential  contestants  con- 
tinued their  campaigning.  Presi- 
dent Eisenhower,  speaking  at 
Bradley  University  last  week,  at- 
tacked the  farm  program  of  \dlai 
Stevenson  as  "mockery  and  de- 
ceit." The  Pi-esident  pledged  con- 
tinuance of  the  flexible  price-sup- 
port program  and  offered  hope 
for  a  brighter  future  for  farmers 
than  they  have  had  in  years. 

Meanwhile  Stevenson  reaffirm- 
ed his  support  of  the  Supreme 
Court   decision   outlawing   segre- 

INTERPETING  THE  NEWS 


gated  public  schools  in  Little 
Rock,  Ark.  Eisenhower's  foreign 
policy  in  the  Middle  East  was  ac- 
cused of  being  completely  off  the 
track  —  morally,  poltically  and 
economically  by  the  Democratic 
candidate. 

In  the  United  Nations,  the  Se- 
curity Council  decided  to  debate 
the  British-P'rench  complain  I 
against  Egypt's  nationalization  ol 
the  Suez  Canal  Company,  and  the 
Egyptian  counter-complaint  accu.s- 
ing  Britain  atld  France  of  action.-^ 
threatening  international  peace 
and  security  and  of  violatng  the 
UN  Charter. 

In  Cairo,  the  Egypt  Suez  Canal 
Authority  was  informally  notified 
by  the  United  States  that  Soviet 
pilots  will  not  be  taken  aboard 
its  warhips  going  through  the 
waterway. 

The  first  of  the  five  American 
Sea  Captain  reported  to  the  Suez 
Canal  Authority  headquarters 
Wednesday  and  were  jubilantly 
met  by  the  Egyptians.  The  pilots 
accepted  the  jobs  after  having 
been  warned  by  the  State  Depart- 
ment that  they  could  lose  their 
citizenship  for  working  for  a 
foreign  government  under  certain 
conditions. 

Babe  Didrickson  Zaharias.  one 
of  the  greatest  sportswomen  that 
this  country  has  ever  produced, 
died  of  cancer  at  Sealey  Hospital 
in  Galveston,  Texas  Thursday 
morning  after  a  three  year  battle 
with  the  dreaded  disease. 


MINISTERIAL  MATERIAL 


Suez  Users'  Association  Proves 
Weakness  Can  Be  Strength 


Hard   Work   Has  Marked   Road 
To   Presidency   For   Bob  Young 


Thj  official  student  publication  of  the  Publications  Board  of  the 
University  of  North  Carolina,  where  it  is  published  daily  except  Mon- 
day and  examination  and  vacation  periods  and  summer  terms.  Entered 
as  second  cla.'.s  matter  in  the  post  office  at  Chapel  Hill,  N.  C.  under 
the  act  of  .March  8.  1370.  Subscription  rates:  Mailed,  $4  a  year,  S2.50 
per  semester;  delivered,  $6  a  year,  $3.50  a  semester. 


Editor 


FRED  POWLEDGE 


Managing  Editor 


CHARUE  JOHNSON 


News  Editor 


RAY  LINKER 


Business  Manager _ _ BILL  BOB  PEEL 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL  WEEK  IN  REVIEW 

Editor  CHARLIE  SLOAN 

Staff  Wrrters GEORGE  PFINGST  and  INGRID  CLAY 


Joseph  C.  Harsch 

/»i   T}>e   Ctiristifin   Sciey^ce    Monitcr 

WASHINGTON—By  one  set  of 
standards  the  second  meeting  of 
Suez  Cannel  users  was  an  abys- 
mal failure. 

It  was  not  able  to  perfect  an 
agreement  to  put  effective  pres- 
sure upon  Eg>pt.  In  fact,  it  went 
so  far  the  other  way  that  France 
was  farely  induced  to  have  any- 
thing to  do  with  the  watered- 
down  version  of  a  users'  associa- 
tion which  emerged  and  the  Brit- 
ish Government  was  left  with 
the  embarra.ssing  problem  of  what 
to  do  with  all  the  troops  it  had 
once  so  militantly  moved  to  the 
eastern  Mediterranean. 
•  •  • 

But  it  should  be  noted  that  on 
the  day  after  the  meeting  broke 
up.  Prime  Minister  Nehru  of  In- 
dia spoke  of  Egypt's  behavior 
over  the  Suez  affair  more  cri- 
tically than  he  had  allowed  him- 
self to  speak  during  the  period 
when  there  appeared  to  be  a  pos- 
siblity  that  the  countries  of  West- 
ern Europe  might  employ  force 
against   Egypt. 

Also.  Mr.  Nehru  did  this  just 
before  leaving  for  Saudi  Arabia 
for  a  talk  with  officials  of  a 
country  which  has  racial  and  re- 
ligious ties  with  Eigypt  but  a  very 
large  interest  in  the  market  for 
its  oil  in  Western  Europe. 

The  main  thing  that  happened 
at  the  second  London  conference 
was  not,  it  seems  to  me  the  achi- 
evement of  the  users'  association, 
but  the  final  dispelling  of  any 
idea  that  Britain  and  France 
would  resort  to  arms  as  a  means 
of  obtaining  what  they  want  at 
Suez,  or  even  resort  to  the  weap- 
on of  full-scale  economic  boycott. 

This  idea  was  not  easy  to  dis- 
pel. Mr.  Dulles  had  to  go  to  the 
unusu'il  extent  of  declaring  that 
his  country  would  never  ""shoot 
its  way  through  the  canal."  and 
also  to  make  it  very  clear  public- 
ly, that  despite  earlier,  appear- 
ances, he  did  not  regard  the 
users'  association  as  an  instru- 
ment for  putting  pressure  on 
Egypt,  but  as  a  base  for  future 
negotiation. 

But  by  these  moves  Mr.  Dulles 
did  finally  succeed  in  drawing 
from  the  Western  position  the 
idea  of  using  force,  either  the 
military  variety  or  all  out  econom- 


ic boycott. 

This  is  a  basic  change.  It  pro- 
vides a  clear  line  of  division  be- 
tween what  can  be  accurately 
called  the  ""Suez  crises"  and  the 
sequel  to  the  crisis  which  now 
lies  ahead. 

During  the  "crisis"  the  exist- 
ence of  the  po.ssibility  of  the  use 
of  Western  European  force 
against  a  .Middle  Eastern  countrv 
was  having  the  inevitable  effect 
of  giving  President  Nasser  of 
Egypt  allies.  He  was  rapidly  be- 
coming not  only  a  hero  but  "the 
hero"  of  the  Arab  and  Moslem 
worlds.  The  range  was  even  wid- 
er. India  is  largerly  Hindu,  not 
Moslem.  But  India  had  another 
kind  of  tic  with  Egypt.  They  are 
both  former  members  of  the  Brit- 
ish Elmpire.  And  the  Soviet  Em 
pire.  And  the  Soviet  Union  loves 
to  pose  as  the  champion  of  form 
er  colonies  of  Western  countries. 

The  period  of  the  real  "crisis  " 
was  the  period  in  which  Colonel 
Nasser  could,  and  did.  represent 
himself  as  the  potential  victim 
of  what  he  called  "collective  col- 
onialism." You  could  see  and  feci 
the  Arab-.Moslem  world  drawing 
around  him.  with  India  forced  to 
be  .sympathetic  and  Moscow  look- 
ing on  benignly.  We  will,  I  think, 
come  to  see  that  President  Nasser 
was  the  principal  beneficiary  of 
the  threat  of  force. 

During  'hat  "crisis"  period  it 
was  impossible  for  many  of  the 
countries  involved  to  recognize 
that  they  had  any  interests  in 
common  with  those  countries 
which  were  thinking  and  talking 
of  using  force. 

But  now  that  the  threat  of 
force  is  rcmovad,  the  other  in- 
terests can  begin  to  operate.  In- 
dia for  example,  depends  heavily 
on  shipping  through  Suez  for  the 
supplies  it  wants  for  its  five-year 
plan. 

Iran  and  Saudi  .\raba  are  set- 
tng  on  top  of  vast  pools  of  mar- 
ketable nil  which  they  wish  to 
market  in  Western  Europe.  Ethio- 
pia obtains  almost  all  of  every- 
thing it  imports  through  the 
cannel.  .Japan's  economy  would 
be  injured*  by  the  extra  costs  of 
sl5ipping  around  the  Cape  of 
Good  Hope  rather  than  through 
Suez. 

•  •  • 

As  long  as  President  Nasser 
could    present   himself    in   the 


guise  of  a  prospective  victim  of 
Western  force,  he  could  compel 
the  support  of  a  large  portion  of 
the  world.  But  when  he  is  de- 
prived of  that  threat,  when  he 
no  longer  is  being  coerced,  when 
he  can  only  tilt  against  so  ob- 
viously harmless  a  windmill  as 
the  users"  asociation.  ho  faces  a 
far  greater   threat   to   himself.     • 

He  is  threatened  now  with  is- 
olation. There  is  less  excuse  now 
for  Moscow  to  go  to  his  rescue — 
there  being  no  danger  to  rescue 
him  from.  .Mr.  Nehru  can  afford 
to  question  the  propriety  of  Col-, 
onel  Na.ssers  behavior.  The  Arab 
countries  with  oil  to  vsell  can  be- 
gin to  worry  about  their  markets. 

There  can  be  strength  in  weak- 
ness. The  users'  association  is  so 
weak  and  harmless  that  it  has  se- 
parated Colonel  Nasser  fronj  his 
martyrs  crowli.  Without  that 
crown  he  soon  could  find  him- 
self in  most  uncomfortable  iso- 
lation from  his  allies  of  the 
""crisis   period." 


George  Pfingst 

Most  students  at  the  University  are  familiar 
with  Bob  Young,  president  of  the  Student  Govern- 
ment. The  majority  of  upperclassmen  will  remem- 
ber voting  for  him  in  the  elections  last  spring. 
The  freshmen,  should  be  able  to  recall  the  speech 
on  the  structure  of  our  student  government  which 
he  made  to  thenTduring  orientation  week. 

Bob  is  one  of  a  family  of  eleven  children.  He 
arrived  at  the  University  as  a  freshman  in  1953. 
Since  his  arrival,  via.  the  Andrew 
Burshak  Scholarship,  Young  has 
been  very  active  in  politics  as 
well  as  numerious  other  activities 
on   and  off  campus. 

During  his  freshman  year  ^ 
Carolina.  Young  was  a  member 
of  the  student  legislature.  He  went 
on  to  become  the  president  of  his 
cla;-»s  the  following  year,  and  was 
initiated  into  the  Order  of  the 
Holy  Grail  the  same  year.  While 
he  was  a  junior.  Bob  served  as 
president  of  the  Graham  Memor- 
ial .\ctivities  Board  and  became  ^ 
member  of  The  Order  of  the 
Fleece.  Meanwhile,  he  continued 
being  active  both  in  the  VMCA  and  the  Methodist 
church  here  in  Chapel  Hill. 


YOUNG 


Mr.   Young   sits   behind    his   desk      in     Graham 
Memorial  six  davs  a  week,  when  not  in  clas.ses,  ful- 


filling the  respcm;ibilities  of  his  office.  Such  prob- 
lems as  the  campus  traffic  situation,  class  attend- 
ance problems  and  consequent  disciplinary  action 
come  before  him. 

Nothing  but  praises  echo  through  the  halls  of 
GM  for  Bob.  One  of  the  janitors  took  time  out  from 
dusting  the  tables  in  the  Rendevous  Room,  to  re- 
mark. "You  want  to  know  something  about  Bob 
Young?  He's  the  nicest  guy  on  campus.  He's  the 
kind  that  tries  to  do  something  for  everybody.  He's 
the  most  honest  guy  on  campus." 

As  if  that  weren't  enough,  his  secretary  ex- 
pressed her  amazement  at  the  amount  of  woric 
that  has  been  accomplished  since  Bob  has  taken 
over  the  job.  There  is  still  quite  a  bit  to  be  done, 
but  she  feels  confident  that  he  can  handle  the 
task. 

Young  is^  extremely  modest  about  his  success 
here  on  campus.  He  attributes  it  to  the  efforts  of 
friends  and  the  student  body,  seemingly  unaware  of 
his  power  to  attract  people  and  inspire  trust  and 
confidence   in   them. 

Young's  reaction  to  Chapel  Hill  is,  ""It  means 
more  tj  me  than  any  place  but  home.  This  is  a 
place  that  can't  be  replaced.  It  is  a  place  where 
Tve  made  friends' who  will  always  have  a  deep 
meaning  ^or  me". 

From  the  response  that  he  obviously  receives 
from  the  student  body,  and  the  capability  and  ef- 
ficiency he  has  displayed,  looks  as  if  it  will  take  a 
mighty  big  man  to  fill  Bob  Young's  shoes  when  he 
leaves  Carolina  in  June  for  divinity  school. 


Pogo 


By  Walt  Kelly 


HOW  CAN  you  so  OH  l<( 

If  \^  re  ^M4JP!f"'  ID  ^HAgg 
WHAT  Or^ifl'i  HAVi"'rO  &XAW 

r^'uvi"'  -ro  i!^AN—  to  /i^or- 

9l?CWMCi  ID  «CHgM0'-'ANp 

No.v  YOu'P  Bt  UHrnu^r 


Li'i  Abner 


By  Al  Capp 


SUNI 


GM 
Less 

Dar 
fered | 
dents 
orial 

.Mrs 
Sludi^ 
hallrd 
night 
Room! 


I 


205 


30,  19S« 


SUNDAY,  SEPTEMBER  30,  19S« 


THE  DA4LY  TAR  HEEL 


GM  Offers  Free  Dance       j  ON  THE  SOCIAL  SCENE; 


PAGE  THREf 


Lessons  This  Year 

Dancing  lessons  are  being  of- 
fered free  again  this  year  to  stu- 
dents as  part  of  the  Graham  Mem- 
orial  Activities    Board   program. 

Mrs.  V.  L.  Bounds  of  the  Bounds 
Studio  of  Dance  here  will  start  the 
ballroom    dancing    class    Tuesday 
night    at    6:30    in    the   Rendezvous! 
Room  of  Graham  Memorial.  i 


Air  Society. 
Holds  Firy' 


Parties,  PInnings  And 

Marriages;  AH  Hit  UNC    '^^eefrngWere 


By  PEG  HUMPHREY 
And  JOAN  MOORE 

A  Hurricane  Party  was  the  high 
light  of  the  Sigma  Nu  social  calen 


Brand  New,  and 
Pretty  as  a  Possum! 

^  The, 

POGO 
PARTY 

GRAB  A  BUCK 
and  Run  to 

The  Intimate 
Bookshop 


205  E.  Franklin  St. 


Open  Till  10  P.M. 


Such  prob- 
tiass  attend- 
In  ary  action 

the  halls  of 
le  out  from 

foom.  to  re- 
about  Bob 
s.    He"s   the 

Kbody.  He's 


k' ret  ary  ex- 
it of  work 
has   taken 

I  to  be  done, 
handle    the 


his  success 
|c  efforts  of 

unaware  of 
|e  trust  and 

•It   means 

This   is   a 

)lace   where 

JVC    a   deep 

iy  receives 
flity  and  ef- 

will  take  a 
>es  when  he 
:hool. 


They're  smart  on  campus 


lelly 


They  score  in  sports . .  * 


dar  last  week.  It  was  planned  at 
lunch  time  Wednesday,  when  they 
heard  Flossy  was  on  her  way,  and 
given  that   afternoon. 

The  Sigma   Nus  started   having 

hurricane    parties     this    summer 

when  a  number  of  them  were  at 

j  the    beach   and   encountered    fre- 

I  quent  stormy  weather.  Last  Satur- 

I  day  they  had  a  party  at   Honig's 

Cabin   with  Phil   Lathams  combo 

providing  music. 

Chi  Psi's  entertained  their  en- 
trants in  the  Yack  Beauty  Contest 
with  a  dinner  at  the  Lodge  last 
night.  They  are  planning  a  house- 
party  for  the  latter  part  of  October 
which  will  carry  the  theme  of  the 
"Ri)aring  20's." 

John  Gorman,  Chi  Psi  from  Win- 
terville  is  pinned  to  WC  student! 
Betty  Anne  Roper  of  Hickory.  Chi 
l^si  Don  Hall.  Chapel  Hill,  is  en- 
gaged to  Iowa  eoed  Peggj-  Thomas. 
Iowa   City. 

PINNINGS  I 

ATO  Pete  Kelley  is  pinned  to  | 
Pi  Phi  Happy  Watson.  The  ATOs 
gave  a  party  at  the  Saddle  Club  i 
Saturday  and  will  entertain  the ; 
Kappa  Deltas  Monday  night  after  j 
rush  parties.  I 

The  Sig  Eps  engaged  the  Star- 
dusters  for  their  party  at  Lloyd's 
Barn    last    Saturday.   On   Oct.    18. 
j  they  are  giving  a  ShipuTeck  Party 
j  for  the  KD's  SPE  Bill  Self,  Shelby,  \ 
married  Barbara  Hedberg,  former-  \ 
I  ly  of  Charlotte,  this  summer.  Vi*' 
i  Paderick.  SPE  from  Kinston.  mar- 
1  ried  Nancy  Lewis,  High  Point. 
I      ADPi   engagements   include   that 
I  Of  Shirley  Williams  to  Bob  Schrod- 
[  er,     Duke   Delta   Tau    Delta,    Pat 
'•  Howard.  High  Point   to  Phi   Gam 
Erie  Haste.  Edenton.  and  Sue  Ow- 
!  en,    Sharleston,  S.   C.  Dick  Arm- 
'  strong  Chi  Phi.  Mary  Miller  Her- 
man, Statesville.  is  pinned  to  Jim 
Cole,  KA  from  Statesville. 
Student  members  of  the  Campus 
,  Cooperative  Society  now  living  in 
I  the  former  DU  house  are  holding 
'  open    house   for   members    of   the 
advisory   board   and   other   guests 
thisf  afternoon. 
;  WEDDINGS 

Phi  Kappa  Sigs  Dick  Hart,  Win- 
ston, married  Jean  Schinn.  Leaks- 
[  ville.  last  spring.  Another  Phi  Kap 
I  marriage  was  that  of  Bob  Nichols, 
Durham,    to    Harriet    Watson. 
iJohn    Dickson,     P  i  k  a     f  r  o  nj 
I  Wrightsville   Beach,   is   pinned    to 
'  Donna    Hosteller.   Tri   Delta   from 
j  Florida.  Pika  Roy  Mann.  Elizabeth 
City,   is  engaged   to  Frances   Par- 
ham.  Oxford.  Wiley  Fisher,  Rocky 
Mount,  is  pinned  to  Marg  Proctor. 
Rockj'    Mount.   Skip   Knox.    Pitts- 
burgh,    is    engaged    toBetty   Ivey, 
Rocky  Mount. 

The  Lambda   Chis   are   givng    a 

black     and  white  tacky  party  for 

I  the  Kappa  Deltas  on  Oct.  8.  Jeep 

1  Myatt,  m  Gam  from  High  Point 

j  has   given   his    pin  t©   Betsy  Bab- 

cock,  Duke  coed. 

Harr>-    Steele,    KA    from    North 

Wilkesboro,    has    pinned    Shirley 

Culler,     Salisbury,     and     Barbara 

I  West,  ADPi   from  Jacksonville,  i» 

{  pinned  to  Pat  McCormick  KA  from 

i  Rutherford. 

The  KAs  plan  a  pre-rush  party 
'  with  a  combo  at  Smith's  Lake  to- 
I  night.  SAE  Pete  Williams  is  en- 
i  gaged  to  Dutchy  Milligan,  and  SAE 
Snyder  Garrison  is  engaged  to 
I  Nancy  Shuford. 

I  Alderman  is  planning  a  dorm 
j  dance  for  Oct.  19.  Chi  Phi  Clyde 
I  Mears  married  Frances  Timber- 
I  lake,  and  Jim  Smth  married  Midge 
I  McMann. 


WtTHO<APEL  HILl  CHURCHES: 


Religious  Activities  In  2nd  Week 


They  rate  on  a  date ... 


M  Capp 


j  UNC  Reading  Course 

I  Applications  Begin 

j  students  interested  in  taking  the 
j  Testing  Service's  reading  course 
i  should  apply  at  108  Peabody  to- 
j  morrow  through  Friday  of  this 
j  week,  according  to  Paul  Irvine  Jr., 
1  Of  the  Testing  Service. 
i  Applications  will  be  received 
I  only  from  8:30  a.m.  to  4:30  p.m. 
j  on  those  days.  Applying  takes  only 
30  minutes,  Irvine  sad. 


CLASSIFIEDS 


»•  •!»»««**»*»»=  •'K***''**''**'**''*^*''? 

I®' 


They're  \  REDS' 

...they're  great  I 


United  Stales  Rwbbei 


FOR  SALE  —  1950  CHEVROLET 
convertable,  topnotch  condition, 
new  top,  dll  extras  (Powerglide, 
radio,  heater,  white  walls).  See 
C.  S.  Jones,  Wilson  Hall,  2-5 
daily. 


BLACKBURN'S  MARKET 
(across  from  ice  plant).  Open  7 
days  a  week,  7  a.m.  to  8  p.m. 
Fresh  fruit  and  vegetables.  Also 
beer. 


STUDENTS  EXPERIENCED  ON 
Linotype  or  open  presses  may 
obtait)  part  time  work  at  Colon- 
ial Prea's.  Phone  333-6. 


SUNDAY  NEW  YORK  TBIES  DE- 
livered  to  your  door.  For  further 
information  call  8-0572  or  8-^368 
after  S  p.m.  3.-5833-5 


'  Members  of  the  Arnold  Air  So- 
ciety held  their  first  meeting  of 
the  school  year  last   we^. 

The  AAS  is  an  honorary  society 
composed  of  outstanding  senior 
AFROTC  cadets.  Commander  of 
Jthe  society  for  the  "SO-'S?  school 
year  is  James  M.  Howey. 

Organization  of  a  brother  soci- 
ety, the  Sabre  Air  Command,  an 
honorary  society  for  basic  AFROTC 
cadets,  was  officially  completed 
and  made  autonomous.  SAC  was 
established  during  the  *56  spring 
semester  but  was  not  officially  in- 
dependent. 

Plans  were  discussed  for  various 
field  trips  during  the  year.  Com- 
mander Howey  will  attend  the  area 
conclave  held  this  year  at  Penn 
State  on  Oct.  5th.  6th.  and  7th. 

'Operation  Buildup."  a  program 
designed  to  promote  interest  in  the 
Air  Force,  was  further  planned. 
A.\S  members  had  appeared  be- 
fore freshmen  during  orientation 
to  talk  Air  Force.  On  University 
Day  at  leading  high  schools,  when 
universitj*  officials  will  be  on  hand 
to  talk  UNC,  AAS  members  will  be 
on  hand  to  talk  AF. 

The  society  this  year  has  20 
members.  Other  officers  are: 

Don  Strictland,  deputy  command- 
er; Al  Mojse.  operations  officer; 
Jose  Stuntz,  recorder;  and  Joe 
Murray,  comptroller. 


Student  church  activities  here  in 
<-  hapel  Hill  are  now  iri  their  second 
week. 

THE  CATHOLIC  CHURCH  will 
hold  regular  services  at  8  a.m... 
10  a.m.  and  11:30  a.  m.  The  New- 
man Club  will  meet  in  Gerrard 
Hall  at  7  p.m. 

THE  EPISCOPAL  (CHAPEL  OF 
THE  CROSS)  will  have  Holv  Com- 
munion at  7:30  a.m..  family  service 
at  9:15  a.m..  students  Euchrist  at 
9:30  a.m..  morning  prayer  at  11 
a.m.  and  evening  prayer  at  8  p.m. 

The  Right  Reverend  Richard 
Henry  Baker,  D.D.  will  speak  at  the 
Canterbury  Club  Sunday  night  at 
the  6  p.m.  dinner  meeting.  His  top- 
ic will  be  The  Christian  Minis- 
try.' Pete  Kelley.  president  of  the 
Canterbury  Club,  has  invited  afl 
University  students  to  attend. 

THE  LUTHERAN  CHURCH  will 
hold  a  discussion  group  at  9:45 
a.m.  The  regular  church  service  is 
scheduled  for  11  a.m.  The  minister 
will  opeak  on  "Law  and  Life".  Stu- 
dents will  meet  at  the  church  at 
5  p.m.  for  a  picnic  at  Camp  New 
Hope.  « 


THE   PRESBYTERIAN   CHURCH 

i  will  conduct  services  at  9:45  a.m. 
I  and  11  p.m.  The  minister's  sermon 
I  is  entitled  "Man's  Response  to 
!  God's  Gifts"  ThI  is  one  of  a  series 
'  of  sermons  on  the  ten  command- 

mandments.  The  Westminster  Fel- 
■  lowship   will    assemble    at    6   p.m. 

for  a  dinner  meeting.  Dr.  Arnold 

Nash  will  address  th  Westminster 

Fellowship  at  7  p.m. 

THE     BAPTIST     CHURCH     will 

hold   Sunday  school   at  9:45  a.m. 

and   morning  worship   at    11   p.m. 

The    rnorning    sermon    is    entitled 

"Haunted  By  Goodness '.  The  Bap- 

i  tist  Student  Union  will  meet  at  6 

p.m.  for  a  supper  forum.  "The  Na- 

;  ture  and  Content  of  Faith'"  will  be 

i  discussed.  Following,  a  short  wor- 

I  ship  service  will  be  conducted  by 

I  students. 

THE  CHRISTIAN  SCIENCE 
I  CHURCH  will  have  Sunday  morn- 
ing services  at  11  a.m.  at  11  a.m. 
j  in  the  lecture  room  of  Carroll  Hall. 
I  THE  SOCIETY  OF  FRIENDS 
j  will  conduct  church  services  at  11 
I  a.m.  in  the  Grail  Room  of  Graham 
I  Memorial. 


THE  UNITED  CONGREGATION- 
AL CHRISTIAN  CHURCH  will  be 
gin  Sunday  school  at  10  a.m.  and 
church  services  at  11  a.m.  The  ser- 
mon is  entitled  "No  One  Needs  To 
Stay  The  Way  He  Is!"  A  dinner 
meeting  for  students  will  be  held 
at  the  pastor's  home,  78  Hayes 
Road,  at,  3  p.m. 

THE  METHODIST  CHURCH  will 
conduct  services  at  9:45  a.m.  and 
11  a..m.  The  Wesley  Foundation 
will  meet  at  6  p.m. 

THE      COMMUNITY  •   CHURCH 

will  have  a  Sunday  morning  ser- 
vice at  11  a.m.  in  Hill  Music  Hall. 
Undergraduates  having  no  denom- 
inational church  preference  or 
whose  denomination  has  no  (fhurch 
here  are  invited  to  have  supper  to- 
gether at  6  p  m.  in  an  upstairs 
room  at  Lenoir  Hali. 

This  meeting  is  planned  for  stu- 
dents concerned  to  find  others  with 
whom  they  may  search  and  learn 
together,  who  can  search  and  dif- 
fer, who  can  accept  one  another  as 
they  are  and  not  expect  everyone 


"I  WON'T  WEAR  A  THING 
BUTTOWNEAND  KING!" 


THE  TRUE  AND  IMMORTAL 

STORY  OF    INDIAN  AGENT 

JOHN  PHILIP  CLUM! 


nyi  HECTOR  LIBERACHI.  ptpstick  eftai^. 

SNOWBANK,  ALA.,  Sept.  10. 

Rated  the  fastest  man  oa  a  pogo  nick 
»iiK«  S»r  Vitus.  Hettor  drcli^  tis_dld 
man's  bam  on  his  bouncing  broomstick 
m  7.3  sec.  n«t.  a  new  reeortl.  Hector's 
hobbies  are  taxidermy,  fiddlin'  and 
girls.  When  interviewed,  he  said 
modestly. "'Twarn'i  nuthin*.  I  had  a  dry 
track!'  Hector,  a  7-color  sweaterman. 
says  Townella  Sweater  Shirts  are  bi« 
four  season  favorite. 

Townella  Sweater  Shirts;  premium 
quality  imported  fibres.  6  California 
colors;  S-M-L-XL-  10  95.  Crew  length 
SOX  in  matching  colors;  lOVi.i3_1.95. 

TowNE  AND  King.  ltd. 

Coordinated  Knitwear 
595  Brof.d»tiy.  Rednood City.  California      i 


Science  fUm 
To  Be  Shown 
Here  Tuesday 

'  'Time  and  Eternity."  one  of  the 
1  latest  Moody  Institute  of  Science 
I  flms,  will  be  presented  by  the  UNC 
I  chapter  of  the  Inter- Varsity  Chirst- 
j  ian  Fellowship  on  Tuesday. 
'  This  film  employs  many  unusual 
'  camera  effects  to  assist  the  viewer 
in  visualizing  and  understanding 
something  of  Einstein's  theory  of 
relativity.  The  spiritual  significance 
I  of  time  as  related  to  human  life 
i  is  p;e.sented  in  a  penetrating  man- 
I  ner.  according  to  members  of  the 
!  Fellowship. 

I  There  will  be  no  admission 
j  charge  for  this  film  vVhich  will  he 
j  shown  in  Gerrard  Hall  at  7  p.m. 

I  to  be  that  which  he  is  not  or  can- 
not be.  according  to  members. 

Students  have  been  asked  to  go 
!  through  the  cafeteria  line  at  5:45 
in  order  that  the  major  part  of  the 
j  hour  may  be  spent  in  a  general  dis- 
;  cu.ssion  of  religious  problems.  This 
'  me-^ting  is  liberal  and  non-deuom- 
I  inational. 

TO  THE  PUBLIC:  This  is  the  Broadway  het  play  called 
'too  sensational'  for  motion  pictures.  Warner  Bros, 
believe  that  YOU  should  decide  for  yourself  —  that 
there  is  pure  excitement  in  its  daring  love  and  its 
sheer  terror  and  it  will  grip  you  as  few  motion  pic- 
tures ever  have. 


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HOURS  OF  SHOWS:   12:30—2:41—4:52—7:03—9:14 
LATE  SHOW  TONIGHT  PRICES  THIS 

SUN.-MON.TUES.  ATTRACTION: 

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earolina 


HAVE  A  REALCIGARETTLUe  aComdii 


Discover  the  difference  between  "just  smoking"  and  Camels! 


B  J.  B»;iwIJ>  Tub.  Cu. ,  «"lii«(ua  HttJeuj,  S  C. 


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PACE  FOUP 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


SUNDAY,  SEPTEMBER  30,  1956 


Cross  Country  Team  Shaping  Up 
For  First  Meet  Here  Next  Friday 


By  JIMMY  HARPER 

The  varsity  cross  country  team 
held  its  first  time  trials  of  the 
season  in  a  practice  session  Friday. 

Coach  Dale  Ranson  said  the  re- 
sults were  "fairly"  good  for  this 
stage  of  the  season.  The  first  meet 
is  scheduled  for  Friday.    ' 

Ace  harrier  Jim  Beatty,  who  re- 
turned recently  from  a  trip  to  Fin- 
land, was  among  the  first  to  finish 
but  turned  in  no  outstanding  time, 
Coach  Ranson  pointed  out,  as  he 
was  serving  as  pace  man  for  the 
squad.  Beatty  is  in  good  shape, 
having  run  in  competition  all  sum- 
mer. After  completing  thb  regular 
course,  he  continued  to  run  the 
freshman  course  as  well. 

The  entire  squad  is  in  good  phy- 
sical shape  with  the  exception  of 
sophomore  Wayne  Bishop.  Bishop 
injured  a  knee  in  practice  recently 
and  did  not  participate  i^  the 
trials. 

Times  for  the  trials,  which  cov- 
ered the  3.7  miles  varsity  course 
are  as  follows: 

Dave  Scurlock,  22:00:5;  Marion 
Griffin,  22:11;  Everett,  Whatley 
22:19;  Jim  Beatty,  22:19; 

John  Reaves,  22:54;  Perrin  Hen- 
derson, 22:55;  Ben  Williams,  23: 
04;  Alec  Coffin.  23:10;  Doug  Hen- 
derson, 23:26; 

Walt  Mills,  23:26;  Howard  Kahn, 
23:37;  Jim  Hunter,  23:38;  Bailey 
Liipfert,  25:44;  Nick  Palmer.  25: 
44;  and  Bill  Luesing,  25:53. 

The  freshman  squad  also  held 
time  trials  yesterday.  Cpach  Ran- 
son noted  with  disappointment  that, 
••Only  seven  freshmen  have  report- 
ed for  practice  when  we  should 
have  at  least  50." 

The  seven  freshmen,  in  the  order 
they  finished,  are:  Coles  Liipfert, 
Fick   Arthur,    Paul   Washendorfer, 


Tar  Heels  Roll  On 


Tar  Heel  cross  country  runners,  ledt  to  right,  Wayne 
Jim  Beatty  and  Everett  Whatley,  go  through  their  paces 
Fetzer  Field  track  in  a  practice  session.      (Photo  by  Norman 


Bishop, 

on   the 

Kantor.) 


Tullai's  Footballers 


^'i*'. 


Top  3  Frosh  Units 
Look  Evenly  Matched 


Coach  Fred  Tullai  ran  his  squad  ♦ 
of    freshmen    football    playcrsi 
through  a  grueling  two-hour  scrim-  [ 
mage  Friday,  the  repercussions  of  j 
which    will    be    heard    around    the  I 


Sooners 


John  Richardson,  Ray  Bagwell,  Joe    campus  for  the  next  four  years. 


Friedberg  Sirianni. 


There's      • 
Fresh 
Treasure 
In  The 
Old  Book 
Corner! 
Come  See- 

The  Intimate 
^  Bookshop 

205    E.   FRANKLIN  ST. 
OPEN  TILL   10  P.M. 


Thi-s  group  of  talent  is  the  nuc- 
leus around  which  Jim  Tatum  plans 
to   mould   a   Carolina   powerhouse.  \ 

This  was  the  "make  or  break"  ^ 
session  to  determine  the  starting 
eleven  for  next  Fridays  opener 
with  the  Wake  Forest  frosh.  No  an- 

I  nouncement   w^s  made  of  Tullai's 

1  choce  of  starters. 

i  Coach  Tullai  was  not  available 
for  comment  but  it  was  apparant 
that  Utile  distinction  can  be  made 


(Contirmed  from   Page    1) 

Heels  in  a  deep  hole,  quarterback 
Curt  Hathaway  booted  out  to  the 
Carolina    37-yard    line    where    the 
Sooners  took  over.  Clendon  Thom- ' 
as  and   Pricer  alt«rnaled  carrying 
the   ball   for   four   plays,   and   the 
Sooners    had    their   second    score.  '\ 
Thomas  tallied  on  &  12-yard  burst  I 
through  the  line.  ' 

A  little  more  than  a  minute  lat-  j 
er.  the  Sooners  scored  their  third  i 
and   last  TD  before  the  half.  The  \ 
1  big     break     came     when    Thomas  i 


between     the    first     three     teams  !  intercepted  an  Ed  Sutton  pass  on 


These  units  operated  with  almost 
equal  effectiveness  both  on  offense 
and  defense. 

Individual  performances  were  far 
overshadowed  by  the  spirited  tean; 
play.  Noteworthy,  however,  were 
the  booming  punts  off  the  toe  ot 
quarterback   John    Cummmgs. 

End  Fran  Dobrowlski  sustained 
a  knee  injury  early  in  the  session 
but  the  trainer  who  treated  him 
said  that  barring  complication:', 
Dobrowlski  will  be  able  to  partici 
pate  in  heavy  work  next  week. 


w 


9  '^QjJLolQ^. 


£)o  uou.?" 


Of  course.  Most 
everyone  does— often. 
Because  a  few  moments 
over  ice-coid  Coca-Cola 
refresh  you  so. 

It's  sparkling  with  natural  goodness,  pure  and 
wholesome  — and  naturally  friendly  to  your  tigure.  ' 
Feel  like  having  a  Coke.-* 

DURHAM  COCA-COLA  BOTTLING  CO. 

IpTTLep  UNDER  AUTHO«irr  or  thi  coca-cola  company  »v 


the  Sooner  39  and  romped  to  the 
Tar  Heel  11  before  being  stopped. 
It  took  only  two  more  plays  for 
the  Sooners  to  score  with  Harris 
passing  to  McDonald  for  the  final 
four  yards  with  only  44  seconds 
left.  This  gave  the  Sooners  an 
overwhelming  21-0  lead  at  the  half- 
way point. 

The  two  squads  battled  on  al- 
most even  terms  for  most  of  the 
third  period  before  the  Sooners 
initiated  their  fourth  touchdown 
push.  The  score  came  in  the  first 
minute  of  the  last  quarter.  All- 
America  Tommy  McDonald  did  the 
honors  from  two  yards  out  after 
halfback  running  mate  Clendon 
Thomas  had  set  up  the  tally  with 
a  16-yard  burst  from  18  yards  out. 

Oklahoma's  No.  3  unit  racked 
up  the  day's  last  TD  with  1:58  re- 
maining in  the  game  when  quar- 
terback Lonnie  Holland  swept 
end  from  13  yards  out.  The  final 
Sooner  points  came  with  8:20  left 
to  play  when  tackle  Steven  Jen-  1 
nings  threw  Marquette  in  the  end 
zone  for  a  safety. 

Today's  win  was  No.  31  in  a  row 
for  Oklahoma  and  the  107th  con-  i 
secutive  game  in  which  they  have  i 
scored.  The  magic  number  31  ties 
the  modern  times  record  for  con-  j 
secutive  victories,  also  set  by  the  i 
Sooners.  I 

Coach    Bud    Wilkinson    cleaned  i 
his  bench   in  the  closing  minutes  \ 
in  an  effort     to    hold     down  the 
score,  but  the  Sooner  subs  played  j 
hard  inspired  football.  In  all.  Ok- 
lahoma used  61  men. 

Gaea  led  the  impotent  Tar  Heel  ' 
ground  offensive  with  25  yards  in  i 
four  carries.  Sooner  sub  halfback 
Baker     was     the     day's     leading  i 
ground  gainer,  picking  up  64  yards 
in   11   trios. 

The  Tar  Heels  today  disolayed  ■ 
occasional  flashes  o£  brilliance, 
but  more  often  thev  were  grab- 
bing at  air  as  the  Oklahoma  run- 
ner went  by,  or  pounding  their 
heads  against  the  stone-like  Soon- 
er defense. 


Managers  Needed 

Coach  Walter  Rabb  urges  anyone 
interested  in  acting  as  manager 
for  the  freshman  baseball  team  to 
contact  him  in  the  intramurals  of- 
fice  in  Woollen  Gym. 

There  are  openings  for  several 
mana^prs,  and  Coach  Rabb  says 
that  this  year's  freshmen  mana- 
gers will  move  up  to  the  varsity 
next  year. 


i^^kMi 


Heavy  Kraft  Paper 

Shopping  Bag 

With  any  purchase  at 
our  Drug  Department 
during  this  BIG  ONE 
CENT  SALE. 


Get  TWO 

for  1c 
More! 


Reg  45^ 

Walgreen 

TOOTHPASTE 

Anti-Enzyme  Action 
decay  ^  ^^^^^  ^U 


NON-FATTENING 

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SWEETENER 


ADD  Ic  ■ 

GST  ONE 

MORE.' 


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Phone    9-8781 


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OCTOBER  1,  2, 3,  4/  5  &  6 


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Reg.  $6.79.  Bottle  of  100  . 

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PLAIN.   16-oz.  bottle 


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Reg.  $1.98.  Pint  bottle.,   fc  »  I  "~ 

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16  oz     2   5  QQC 

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Q  White  Pine  &  Tar     o  g 

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D  RUBBING  ALCOHOL 

Walgreen.   16-oz.  bottle  .  . 

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Powder  or  Crystals.  8-oz. 

D  49*^  CASTOR  OIL 

Aromatic.   I6-07.  bottle  .  . 

D  Children's  Aspirin 

Reg.  33c.  Bottle  of  50  .  .  . 

D  Buffered  Aspirin 

Walgreen.  Bottle  of  72  .  . 

D  Octine  Eye  Drops 

Reg.  49c.  V4-0Z.  size  .  .  .  . 


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D  55'  BABY  SHAMPOOo^ci; 

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Formula  20.   4-oz  jar  .  .  . 


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c  D  98°  SHAVE  CREAM 

or  Lotion.   Briargate  .  .  . 

c  n  Pre-Electric  Shave 

PO-DO.  4-oz  bottle  .  .  .  . 


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TERRIFIC  VALUES! 


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Reg.  75c.   Oral  or  rectal  .  , 

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BILLFOLDS 

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D  Cotton  Applicators 

Reg.  19c.  Box  of  100  .  . 

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Regl 
47c 

PO-DO] 

Lanolized 

LATHER] 

SHAVE 
CREAM 

l39'  Brushless^ 

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Regul9f  tSc 

SAFETY  PINS 


Buncfi 
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2 1 16' 


*  ^  r  I- 


IB  W   e  LIB!?ARY 
SERIALS   DEPT. 
CHAPEL  HILL.   N.   fi« 
8-31-49 


WEATHER 

Cloudy   and   not    so   warm   with 
occasional   light   rain. 


3rh  c  Da( 


Sat 


AUTOS 

Editor    discustes    car    problem. 
See   Editorial   on   page  2. 


VOL.  LVill.  NO.  10 


Complete  (JP)  Wire  Service 


CHAPEL  HILL,  NORTH  CAROLINA,  TUESDAY,  OCTOBER  2,  1956 


Offices  in  Graham  Memorial 


FOUR  PAGES  THIS   ISSUE 


SP  "New  Party 
Says  Lambeth 


n 


/         By   CLARKE    JONES 

Student  Party  Chairman  Tom 
Lambeth  last  night  called  the  SP 
a  "new  party"  and  said  by  staying 
behind  student  body  President  Bob 
Young'.s  administration  we  can  ac- 
complish  a   great  deal. 

Speaking  at  the  party's  second 
meeting  of  the  year,  Lambeth 
pointed  out  'there  arc  a  lot  of  new 
people  in  the  party  and  the  party's 
goals   are   much   clearer  now." 

He  urged  members  of  the  party, 

which    is    •100'';     behind    Young's 

administration  now  '  to  stay  behind 

it. 
/ 

The  main  activities,  in  addition 

to   Lambeth's  remarks,  were: 

1.  Filling  two  vacant  seats  in 
the    Student   Legislature. 

2.  Electing  a  member  to  a  vac- 
ancy in  the  party's  Advisory  Board. 

3.  Approving  an  amendment  to 
the  party's  bylaws  calling  for  re- 
moval of  the  compulsory  $1.50 
membership  fee. 

^  EUected  to  the  Legislature  seats 
until  the  fall  election  on  Nov.  13 
were  Gary  Greer,  freshman  from 
Spindale,  Dorm  Men's  II  and  Ev- 
erett James,  freshman  from  Ro- 
bersonville.  Dorm  Men's  V.  A  third 


vacancy,  Dorm  Men's  in,  was  held 
over  rntil  next  week's  meeting. 

Ed   Proescher,   a   transfer    from 
N.   C.   State   College,   was    elected 
to  the  open  position  on  the  Advi.s- 
j  ory  Board. 

I  The  amendment  passed  concern- 
i  ing  removal  of  membership  dues 
means  persons  can  become  mem- 
I  bers  of  the  party  by  simply  attend- 
j  ing  two  meetings  and  showing  a 
j  preference  to  join. 

j  Lambeth  also  spoke  on  a  SP- 
I  sponsored  bill,  introduced  last 
I  week  to  the  Legislature  by  John 
i  Brooks,  which  calls  for  placing  bal- 
I  lot  bo.xes  in  each  dormitory  during 
I  an  election.  They  are  presently  lo- 
I  cated  in  central  areas  on  the  cam- 
!  pus   during   elections. 

j  About  the  measure,  Lambeth  said 
j  it  is  in  "keeping  with  the  best 
;  ideals  of  fair  campus  elections.  .  . 
I  and  the  facts  will  prove  removal 
I  of  dorm  ballot  boxes  would  mean 
lower  participation  in  campus  elec- 
tions." 

He  urged  both  the  SP  and  the 
University  Party  to  vote  for  the  bill 
when  it  comes  to  a  vote  Thursday, 
Oct.  11  at  the  Legislature  meet- 
ing. 


Phi,  Di  Meet  Tonight 


Di  Will  Discuss 
Merits  Of  Nixon 

Controversial  Vice  President 
Richard  Nixon  will  be  the  topic 
of  discussion  at  tonight's  meeting 
of  the  Dialectic  Senate,  according 
to  President  Pro-Tem  Pat  Atams. 
The  bill  will  commend  Nixon 
"fon  his  excellent  service  to  the 
nation."  | 

The  proponents  XtT^tiG  Wtl  will' 
probably   cite   Nixon's  "good  will"  j 
ttlssions    abroad    and    his    strong  | 
civil  rights  stand  as  an  indication  ' 
of  his  service.  Opponents  are  ex- 
pected to  counter  with  attacks  up- ' 
on    his    campaign    fund    and    his 
honorary  membership  in  the  Nat-  j 
ional   Assn.   for  the  Advancement , 
of  Colored  People.  ,1 

The  meeting  will  be  held  at  8, 
p.  m.  on  the  third  floor  of  New  j 
West.  Visitors  are  welcome,  ac- 
cording to  President  Pro  -  Tern 
Adams. 


Phi  To  Debate  Bill 
On  Free  Farm  Mart 

A  bill  to  "restore  a  free  market 
for  agricultural  products"  will  be 
debated  by  the  Philantropic  Socie- 
ty tonight. 

This  is  considered  to  be  one  of 
the.  most  controversial  farm  ques- 
tions to  confront  political  parties 
in  recent  years  as  both  the  Demo- 
crats and  Republicans  are  putting 
on  vigorous  campaigns  to  get  the 
farm  vote,  according  to  Phi  Speak- 
er  Lawrence   Matthews  Jr. 

The  debate  will  be  held  at  8 
p.m.  in  Phi  Hall  on  the  fourth 
floor  of  New  East.  Guests  have 
been  invited  to  attend  and  par- 
ticinate  in  the  debate. 

The  bill  calls  for  a  sradual  de- 
crease of  supports  with  all  Fed- 
eral farm  subsidies  to  be  discon- 
tinued   by   Jan.    1,    1958. 


Harpsichord 
Dedication 
Set  Tonight 

A  sonata  recital  and  the  dedi- 
cation of  a  new  harpsichord  will 
form  the  first  fall  program  to- 
night of  the  Tuesday  Evening  Se- 
ries. 

Guest  artists  Yella  Pessl,  harp 
sichordist,  and  Mischa  Mi.schakoff. 
will  perform  at  8  p.m.  in  Hill 
Music  Hall.  The  Music  Dept.  and 
Graham  Memorial  will  co-sponsor 
the  program,  which  is  open  to  tie 
public   without   charge. 

Two  Bach  Sonatas,  in  A  Major 
and  E  Major,  Mozart's  Sonata  in 
C  Major  and  A  Major,  Fresco- 
baldi's  Toccata,  and  Milhaud's  So- 
nata for  Harpsichord  and  Violin 
will  be  presented  by  Miss  Pessl 
and   Mischakoff. 

It  will  be  the  first  public  per- 
formance on  the  Music  Dept's  re- 
cently acquired  Maendler  Sch- 
ramm harpsichord,  made  by 
Maendler   of   Munich,   Germany. 

A  keyboard  instrument  that 
preceded  the  piano,  the  harp  i- 
chord  is  played  by  plucking  its 
strings  ^i-ith  a  resulting  sound 
that  resembles  that  of  an  organ. 
The  instrument  was  commonly  us- 
ed by  all  musicians  until  late  in 
the  18th  century,  when  Mozart  be- 
gan developing  the  piano. 

Miss  Pessl  comes  to  Chapel  Hill 
from  New  York  City.  Mischakoff 
is  currently  concertmaster  of  the 
Detroit  Symphony  Orchestra.  The 
t'.vo  artists  have  made  numerous 
recordings  together. 

Arrangements  are  being  made 
to  accommodate  a  capacity  audi- 
ence in  the  700-seat  Hill  Music 
Hall   for  the   concert. 

Senior  Pictures  Must 
Be  Made  By  Tomorrow 

Seniors  have  until  tomorrow  t.i 
be  photographed  for  the  1957 
Yackety  Yack. 

Seniors  will  be  charged  $1  tr» 
be  photographed,  due  to  the  de- 
lay in  the  pV^ptography  schedule 
which  necessitated  extending  the 
deadline  for  Senior  shots. 

The  rest  of  the  picturetakins 
schedule  is  as  follows:  through 
Oct.  5 — Freshmen,  Nursing  School 
and  Fourth  Year  Medical  School. 

Oct.  8-12 — Sophomores.  Pharm- 
acy School,  Dental  School,  Dental 
Hygiene. 

Oct.  15-19 — Juniors,  Law  School, 
rest  of  Medical  School,  Graduate 
School. 


Dormitory  Men  Will 
Hold  Elections  Today 


Bryant  Talks 
To  Facui 
Club  Toi 


f/fy 


>day 


MISCHAMISCHAKOPF,   LEFT,  AND   YELLA   PESSL 

.  .  .  wiLl  herfGrvi  here  tonight 


Rhodes  ocholarship 
Blanks  Due  Oct.  10 


Application  blanks  for  select'or 
of  Rhodes  Scholars  for  next  yeai 
must  bo  handed  in  to  Dean  C  P 
Spruill.  of  the  UN'C  Rhodes  Se 
lection  Cjmm''.iee  by  Oct.  10,  it 
was  announced  ,  yesterday  b> 
Spruill. 

Application  blanks  and  informa 
tion  concerning  the  two-year  scho- 
larship for  study  at  Oxford  Uni 
versity  in  England  may  be  obtain 
ed    in    room   303    South    Building 

Thirty-two  scholarships  for.tAo 
years  study  at  Oxford  are  offerer 
each  year  in  the  United  StatcB  to 
unmarried  male  students  bct\yeen 
the  ages  of  19  and  25.  The  valU' 
of  a  Rhodes  scholarship  is^600 
pound5,  approximately  $1.8.')0  it 
American   currency. 

To  be  eligible  for  selection,  can 
didates  must  have  at  least  junior 
standing  at  "some  recognized  de 
grec-granting  university  or  crlf 
lege  in  the  United  States  of  Am- 
erica," the  current  memorandum 
on    the    scholar.ship    states. 

Nominees  from  UNC  will  be  <;e 
lected  by  a  faculty  committee 
headed  by  Dean  J.  Carlylc  Sitter- 
son  for  consideration  by  the  State 
Committee  of  Selection.  Final  el- 
imination and  selection  will  be 
made    by    a    District    Committee, 


yhich    will    select    from    12   final- ' 
sts    four    men    to    represent    th?! 
district. 

Recent  UNC  Rhodes  students 
■vho  won  the  Rhodes  Scholarsh.pj 
include  Ed  Yoder,  a  1956  gradu- 
ate, Dick   Baker  anc;!   Paul   Likins. 

The  basis  of  selection  as  sat 
down  by  donor  Cecil  Rhodes  in- 
cludes 'literary  and  scholastic 
ability  and  attainments,  qualities 
of  manhood,  truthfulness,  cour- 
.ige,  devotion  to  duty,  sympathy, 
kindness,  unselfishness  and  fel- 
lowship, exhibition  of  moral  force 
of  character  and  of  instincts  to 
lead  and  to  take  an  interest  in 
his  fellows,  and  physical  vigor, 
:as  shown  by  fondne.>s  for  and  suc- 
cess   in    sports." 


INFIRMARY 


Misses  Evelyn  B.  DeHeart,  Eliza- 
bath  A.  Baumann,  Erma  A 
Mary  D.  Dance,  Carol  Covington, 
Jane  Palmer,  Anne  Haney,  Ann 
Hartford,  Jane  Kolshouser,  and 
John  Burgwyn,  Marvin  Harless, 
Alfredo  Julian,  Donald  Kemper, 
John  Corbett,  Michael  Cap,  Craig 
White,  Hugh  Price,  Alvin  Smith, 
Enno  Rekendorf  and  Norman 
Smith. 


Victor  S.  Bryant,  Durham  at- 
torney and  member  of  the  Exe(;u 
live  Committee  of  the  Board  of 
Trustees,  will  be  guest  speaker 
at  the  first  fall  meeting  of  the 
Faculty  Club  here  at  1  p.m.  today 
in  the  Carolina  Inn   Ballroom. 

Bryant,  who  is  also  chairman  of 
the  Trustee  committee  to  recom- 
mend a  new  president,  will  speak 
on  'The  Functions  of  a  Trustee 
in  a  State  University." 

The  Faculty  Club,  open  to  all 
full-time  faculty  members  and  ad- 
ministrative stall  of  equjvalent 
rank,  will  meet  on  alternate 
Tuesdays  during  the  fall. 

Dr.  Alexander  Heard,  club  pres 
ident,  said  that  new  faculty  mem- 
bers will  be  introduced  at  today's 
meeting. 

Other  officers  of  the  club  are 
Herbert  R.  Baer,  Law  School,  trea- 
surer; ahd  Dr.  Andrew  H.  Horn, 
University  Librar<ian,  secretary. 
Dr.  Heard  is  on  the  Political  Sci- 
ence Department  staff. 

GM's  Dancing  Lessons 
Begin  Tonight  At  6:30 

An  organizational  meeting  will 
i  be  held  tonight  at  6:30  in  the  Ren- 
1  dezvous  Room  of  Graham  Memor- 
j  ial  for  all  students  who  plan  to 
'  join  the  free  dancing  classes  of 
I  the  Graham  Memorial  Activities 
1  Board. 

i       The  cia.sses  will  be  under  direc- 
!  tion    of    Mrs.    V.    L.    Bou,nds    and 

are  open  to  all  U.VC  student3. 
i  They  will  be  held  each  Tuesday 
I  evening  and  will  feature  many  of 
I  the  new  steps  students  request  as 

time  permits.  Fundamentals  will 
'  also  be  taught. . 


Dormitory  men  will  go  to  the 
polK  today  to  elect  officers  for 
the  coming  academic  year. 

Elach  dormitory  will  name  m^n 
to  fill  the  following  posts: 

Secretary,  treasurer,  Interdormi- 
ory  Council  representative  and 
intramural  manager. 

Dormitories  held  nominating  ses- 
sions the  latter  part  of  last  week 


I  YACK  CONTRACTS 

I  .\!1  organizations  desiring  space 
!  in  the  Yackety  Yack  must  sign  con 
;  tracts  in  the  Yack  office  in  thr 
i  basement  of  Graham  Memorial  b; 
I  Oct  10,  according  to  Editor  Tomm? 
'  Johnson.  ' 


Four   coeds   hitchhiking   from 
east  end  of  campxis  to  rrnrh  par- 
ty at  Tri  Belt  houce. 
•  .      *         * 

History  student,  in  answer  to 
professor's  question,  giving  the 
story  in  a  nutshell  of  Little 
Black  Sambo. 

Library  Shows 
Exhibition  I 

On  Press  Week  j 

The  University  Library  is  ob- 
serving National  Newspaper  Week, 
with  the  1956  theme,  "Your  News- ' 
paper — ^Freedom's  Key  to  Better 
Living,"  in  an  exhibition  on  the 
iQain  floor. 

In  one  case,  books  and  pamph- 
lets are  featured  on  the  freedom 
of  the  press,  fre«d<Mn  of  informa- 
tion and  communication,  freedom 
to  read,  and  the  peoples'  rijht 
to  know. 

In  honor  of  local  newspapers, 
the  Chapel  Hill  Weekly.  Chapel 
Hill  News  Leader,  and  News  of 
Orange  C6unty  and  the  Daily  Tar 
Heel,  n  Second  case  presents  a 
sample  issue  of  each,  with  an  ac- 
count of  their  history  and  growth. 
Tnd  individual  clippings  selected 
from  these  newspapers  to  show 
how  they  attempt  to  further  '"bet- 
ter living"  in  Chapel  Hill. 

The  special  exhibit  was  prepared 
by  Mrs.  Myra  Lauterer  of  the 
QNC  Library  staff  . 


to   pick   the   following   candidates: 

Manly:  Alec  Coffin,  secretary; 
Bill  Yates,  treasurer;  Rex  Moser, 
intramural  mansqer:  L«?on  Rooke, 
Billy  Wearnouth.  Harold  Vaden, 
.Joe  Browning,  IDC  representatives. 

Everett:  L.  R.  Calclough,  Buck 
Hundley,  secretary;  .John  Devogt, 
Bob  Jones,  treasurer:  Drk  Frazi^r, 
Rudy  Edwards,  IDC  repre.senta- 
tive;George  Stetier.  intramural 
manager. 

Winston:  Fi'ank  Eagles,  Tom 
Clark,  secretary;  Dan  Hilliard.  trea- 
surer; Bill  Blon,  R.  Burlson,  intra- 
mural manager:  .Jimmy  Sullivan, 
Billy  Burke,  Tally  Eddings,  IDC 
representative. 
MANGUM 

Mangum:  Ted  Smith,  .John  Dal- 
'cn,  vice-president:  Robert  Pender- 
graph,  secretary;  Ed  Evans,  trea- 
surer; Harold  Johnson.  Lou  Hardy, 
IDC  representative;  Doug  Bayliff, 
Bill   Russell,    intramural    manager. 

Old  East:  Frank  Gibhs,  secretary; 
Tommy  Davis,  Frank  Williams, 
treasurer;  John  Fitchett,  Mason 
Wilkins,  intramural  manager:  Paul 
Carr,"  Bill  McLester,  Di?k  Robinson. 
Don  Gray,  IDC  representative;  Bob 
Hicks,  Howard  Jones,  Randel  Shel- 
ton.   socal    chairman. 

Connor:  Donald  Ross,  seciotary; 
Barkev  Siroonian,  treasurer;  John 
\ffigne.  IDC  representative:  Ben- 
jsmin  Mast.  Allan  Dickenson,  Earl 
,  Diamond,  Lloyd  Smith,  floor  rep- 
resentative. 

Avcock:    Dick    Clark,    secretary, 
Carlisle     Jackson,     treasurer;     Ed 
Jennings.      intramural      manager; 
Jack    Lynn,   IDC    reDrt»sentative. 
(See  DORM  MEN.  Page  3) 


DTH  Staff €frs  to  Meet 

The  Daily  Tar  Heel  news  staff 
will  meet  t:)day  at  4  p  m.,  accord- 
ing   to    the    newspaper's    officials. 

Purpose  of  the  meeting  will  be 
to  reshape  the  news  staff.  The 
meeting  will  be  held  in  the  news- 
room. 

Editor  Fred  Powledge  said 
"This  will  be  a  major  realignment 
of  the  staff.  The  whole  News 
Dept.   setup  will  be   changed." 

He  invited  all  staffers  to  attend, 
including  these  who  indicated  in- 
terest in  the  newspaper  earlier 
in  the  year. 


Sorority  Rushir\g  Finishes  Tonight 


Sorority  rushing  ends  tonight 
with  three  progressive  dinner  par- 
ties  lasting   from   5:40   until    9:35. 

The  first  party,  at  which  the 
rushees  will  have  an  appetizer  or 
first  course,  will  begin  at  5:40 
and  end  at  6:40. 

There  will  be  20-minutP  breaks 
between  each  party.  The  second 
party  begins  at  7  p.m.  and  ends 
at  8:15  p.m.  The  main  course  will 
be  served  at  this  party.  The  last 
party,    at    whiih    dessert    will    be 

served,    begins    at    8:35    p.m.    and 
is  over  at  9:35   p.m. 
The    Pan-Hellenic    tea    last    F  i- 


day  night   marked  the  open  ng  of  the    times    stipulated    by   Pan-H  1- 

sorority    rush    on    the    UNC    cam-  lenic   for  the   individual  sororities 

pus.   Last   Monday.  Tuesday,  Wed-  to   put  on   their  skits, 
nesd^y  and  Thursday  ni.hts  were        On    Saturday    and    Monday    ths 

Passerby  Rejected  By  KDs 

S.iturday  aftrrnoon  there  was  posted  on  the  front  of  th?  Kappa 
Drita  house  a  sign  reading  "K  D  College  of  Musical  Knowledge", 
which  referred  to  the  skit  which  the  Kappa  Deltas  gave  during  the 
rush   parties. 

A  passerby  believing  that  music  was  actually  taught  there  start- 
ed un  the  walk  saying  that  she  had  always  wanted  to  study  music. 

One  of  the  ru.shces  waiting  outside  stopped  her  before  she  actu- 
ally reached  the  do(»r.  i 


parties  w«re  devoted  to  friendly 
conversation.  Today  the  sororities 
will  give  the  final  dinner  parties 
that  formally  mark  the  end  of 
rush.  A  sorority  may  use  any 
theme  or  ceremony  that  it  wishes 
at  this  party,  according  to  Mivs 
Harriet  Lewis  of  the  Pen-Hel 
Council. 

Rushees  can  pick  up  their  bids 
to  the.se  narties  this  morning  from 
8:30  until  11:30  at  the  Pan-Hel 
post  office.  In  the  event  that  a 
rushce  is  unable  to  come  at  this 
time,  she  can  pick  up  her  bids 
at  the  Dean  of  Women's  Office. 


UNC  Sororities  Entertain  Rushees  With  SUits  During  Rush  Weel< 


At  upper  left,  rushees   receive   ice  cream  with  cone  "chasers" 
served  over  the  bar  at  the  Chi  Omega  House.  Davy  Crockett  becomes 
a  local  hero  at  the  Alpha  Gam  House,  at  lower  left.  At  lower  left 
center,  the  PI  Phis  put  on  "Back  to  the  Farm"  or  "Jills  From  the 


Hills."  At  lower  right,  the  Tri  Delts  give  on*  of  four  presentations 
<*f  the  Mexican  Hat  Dance.  The  Kappa  Deltas  are  mixing  up  a 
"Devil's  Brew"  at  upper  right.  These  skits  were  presented  by  the 
sororities  during  rush  week  last  -week.  (Photos  by  Chal  Schle?) 


•y» 


PAGE  TWO 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


TUESDAY,  OCTOBER  1.  1956 


Students  And  Townspeople 
Can  Work  Out  Car  Problem 


FOLLOWING  COLLSION  WITH  STOCKHOLM 


Chapel  Hill  Niartfd  out.  like 
most  towns,  as  a  tiiiv  villa<>f.  It 
UmI  no  |>arking  uoiries  and  there 
was  no  traffit  |»vohlen>  to  speak  ol. 
But  the  I'nixersity  greu.  and 
the  town  j;ie\v  with  it.  Pretty  soon 
the  touu  was  tairly  bursting  with 
automobiles  —  studetits"  automo- 
biles, fatuity  members'  automo- 
biles, administration's  amomobiles, 
townspeoples'  aiuomobiles. 

When  Mejuoria'l  Hospital  open- 
end.  hundre(K  more  people  lame 
to  li\e  lud  work  in  Chapel  Hill. 
Manv  ol  them  brought  wives  and 
families,  ami  ahvavs  thev  brought 
mote   automobiles. 

And  the  town  remaine<l  prettv 
nnj(  h  the  >ame  >i/e.  It  was  ob\  ions 
that  the  town  wa>  approaching  a 
♦  risis. 

The  Towji  Hoaid  of  .Mdermen 
realized  more  than  a  vear  ago  that 
the  ( risis  was  {<nning.  f'he  board 
hiit'd  a  tiaffii  and  parking  expert 
to  >tudy  Cha-pei  Hill  and  tome  up 
>\  ith   re<  otnmendaiions. 

I  he  expert  eomitetl  ears  and  he 
meaMired  the  rate  of  automobile 
flow  at  dilferent  hours  of  the  dav. 
Ifc  sur\e\ed:  he  et)unted  noses:  he 
asked  tpiestions.  Me  tame  up  with 
a  rei>oft. 

The  long-iange  portion  of  his 
report  tailed  f«)r  a  series  of  traffic 
f>elts  around  the  town,  on  the 
north,  south,  east  a;u<i  west.  This 
would  somewhat  allexiate  the 
strain  tansed  t>n  the  tt)wn  by  driv- 
ers passing  through. 

The  short-range  portion  recom- 
mended restriction  of  parking  iti 
certain  areas  t)f  ttiwn.  One  such 
area  wa.s  Rosemary  St..  the  busv 
"back  of  the  main  street"  road. 
Another  was  Columbia  St.  be- 
tween Franklin  St.  and  Cameron 
Ave. 

The  town  a*  cepted  runst  of  the 
rejx>rt  and  Avtnt  to  work  imple- 
menting it.  .A'dermen  ruled  out 
paiking  om  much  of  congested 
Rosemaiv  St.  This  brtiught  pro- 
tests of  distrimination  from  some 
memf)ers  of  fr.tiL'riuty  houses  lo- 
cated f>n   t/iat  streetu 

The  -Akleinien  also  chose  to 
limit  Ct>lumbi.j  St.  parking  tt)  two 
ht)urs.  This  bsniiiht  howK.  along 
A\ith  '1  T  ■  Msjfie  intrtKiucetl  and 
passed  ':.isi  week  in  the  Student 
leg]  !'.. ;ne.  The  measure  called 
foi  repeal  of  the  two-ht)ur  limit 
DU  Cohnnbia  between  Franklin 
ami  Cameron. 

One  of  the  reasons  for  the  mea-- 
stne.  gi\en  bv  University  Party 
Chaiiman  Mike  Weinman,  was 
thai  Columbia  'is  nt>t  a  commer- 
tial  «>tuet  between  the  other  twt) 
roatls. 

"There  is  no  neetl  to  limit  park- 
ing <m  a  street  which  is  not  ttim- 
mert  iai.  as  this  limit  serves  nt>  t)b- 
vions   purpose."    s;iid   Weinman. 

■  The  paiking  limit  .  .  .  works 
great  hartlship  on  tht)sc  students 
wht>  live  on  Columbia  St.,  antl  the 
Sttident  Legislature  feels  that  this 
hardshij)  has  been  invtiked  imnec- 

essarily. ' 

«  *     *        * 

First  ol  all.  no  hardship  has  been 
in\<iked. 

It  IS  (»b\ious  that  Weinman  was 


speaking  lor  the  automobile-own- 
ing membeis  of  the  fraternity 
house  adjacent  tt)  Coliitnbia  St. 
when  he  spt)ke  t)l  "haidship," 
What  he  meant  was  that  these  peo- 
ple tloti  t  like  to  walk  moie  thij.i 
7-,   vartls   to  theii    autoiiiobiles. 

Weiinnan  said  the  street  is  "not 
tdrnmeit  ial."  l\\  tl.at  we  suppt)se 
he  means  there  is  no  business  on 
the  street. 

That  is  true.  But  Ct)luntl)ia'  S». 
runs  straight  in  to  Chapel  Hills 
busiest  street.  Parkin'^  on  Cohnn- 
bia shoidtl  be  restritled  h)t  p:'o- 
ple  going  tlownto\.n  for  less  than 
two    ht)urs. 

The  stutlent  whi»  paiks  his  au- 
tomobile t)n  Columbia  .St.  lor  ilavs 
at  the  time,  «)idv  to  (rank  it  up 
on  weekentis  or  ot  t  asionallv,  is 
(heating    the    re>t    of   Chapel    I  fill. 

It    would    n<»t    hurt    XH'einntan's 

tonslitueiHs  to  tlo  a  little  walking. 

I  here   is  enough   parking  spa(e   to 

the   west   of  ("ohnnbia  St.   to  take 

tare  of  Big  Fraternity  Coint. 

Ihe  town  of  Chapel  Hill.  too. 
migiit  take  a  hitit  from  the  hurt 
feelings  of  the  students  tlepri\ed 
of  tlieir  traditional  jiaiking  spat- 
es, whether  they  be  de|)ii\ed 
lightlv  01    wronglv. 

We  pitjpose  a  joint  totintil  ol 
students  and  town  Aldermen.  tt» 
be  formetl  spetiliralK  to  merejy 
talk  over  the  pinking  and  trafiit 
problems. 

The  group  woidd  ha\e  no  a( - 
tual  power.  It  woultl  ser\e  onlv . 
to  give  the  town  the  students' 
feelings  on  parking,  and  to  give 
the  students  an  inkling  of  the 
problems   that  confroiu    the   town. 

Perhaps  situatitms  sudi  as  Wein- 
man's Student  I.egislatine  mea- 
sure then  woultl  not  aiise.  There 
is  reflectetl  in  that  measure  great 
ignorante  of  the  town's  pretlita- 
nient. 

The  town  has  been  guilty  of  not 
going  tt)  the  students  for  ad\  ice. 
The  students  have  been  guiltv  t)f 
acting  hastily  and  witht)ut  respon- 
sibility. 

Some  Profs 
Weigh  Them 
For  Grades 

We  tlon't  know  where  H.  R.  Rit- 
thie  got  his  information,  but  we 
get   ouis   elsewhere. 

Ritchie  was  tpioted,  bv  a  report - 
et  as  saying  studetits  sometimes 
rent  ty|>ewriters  IVom  the  l'ni\eis- 
ity  Retail  Stores,  whith  he  m.tn- 
ages.  ft)r  the  tvping  of  term  papers 
aiwl  themes. 
#  "I  ha've  been  toltl,  '  he  saitl.  'that 
this  mav  raise  (the  stutletn's)  mark 
as  nnich  as  10  pertent.  " 

Now,  where  di<l  he  get  that? 
We'Ve  always  tht)ught  that  type- 
written term  papers  were  muth 
tt)f)  easy  lor  the  professor  to  read. 
The  worse  the  haiitlwriting.  wt 
heat,  the  better  the  giade.  ;'    ' 


Paradox  At  Woollen  Gym 


Outside  room  ^{i-,  of  South  Build- 
ing, there's  a  petition.  It  calls  for 
sigtiatures  of  men  who  want  to 
alM)lish  tt)mpuisory  veterans'  phy- 
sical edncatit>n  on  this  campus. 

The  Daily  Tar  Heel 

The  official  stutfent  publication  of  the 
Publications  Board  of  the  University  of 
North  Carolina,  where  it  is  published 
daily  except  Monday  and  examination 
and  vacation  periods  and  summer  terms 
Entered  as  second  class  matter  in  the 
post  office  in  Chapel  Hill,  N.  C,  undei 
;he  Act  oi  .March  8,  1870.  Subscription 
rates:  mailed,  $4  per  year,  $2.50  a  semes- 
ter; delivered,  $6  a  year,  $3.50  a  semes- 
ter. 


Editor 


FRED  POWLEDGE 


Managing  Editor      CHARLIE  JOHNSON 
News  Editor ^  JIAY  LINKER 


Busjnt?ss  Manager BILL  BOB  PEEL 


Advertising  Manager  Fred  Katzln 

BUSINESS  STAFF:  Rosa  Moore,  Johnny 
VV^itaker,  Diek  Leavitt,  Petw  Alper. 


The  petitioti  is  really  unnetes- 
.saiy.  \'eteran»  should  never  have 
been  tompelletf  to  take  physical 
edutation  in  the  first  plate. 

Most  of  the  veteiaiis  we  have 
obser\ed  on  this  campus  are  pret- 
t\  serious  peo|)le.  Thev  work,  for 
liie  most  j)art.  ttj  get  themseKes 
through  sthool.  Many  t)f  them 
have  families  tt)  Mtppt)it,  and  ev- 
ery ht)ur  outside  the  classrtxim 
means  they  t^n  afford  mtire  of  the 
basic   materials  of  life. 

This  alone,  of  course,  is  not  en- 
ough to  warrant  their  excuse  from 
physical  edutatit)n.  But  there's  an- 
t)ther  reason  that  the  University 
seems  bound  to  ignore.*' 

Those  veterans — all  of  them  — 
spent  mt)nths  in  basit  ttaining. 
Thev  got  then,  and  tontinued  to 
get,  hard  physical  exercise.  They 
learned  tt)ordinatit)n  (which  is 
one  of  the  reasf)ns  the  University 
has  physical  ediitatit)n)  or  they  got 
rheir  teeth  kntwked  out.  And  they 
gtit  tpiite  a  bit  of  training  In 
.sportsmanship  and  team  work. 

Lets  ht)pe  the  petition  gains 
names  and  stietches  t  lear  down  to 
the  first  fltK)r  of  South  Building. 
The  silly  regulation  has  been  en- 
forced far  too  long. 


Rescue  Vessels  Rushed  To  Doria 


John  Underwood 

Underwood,  a  junior  majoring 
in  English,  took  part  in  the  re- 
scue operaHons  following  the  Ar- 
drea  Doria — Stockholm  collision 
last    July. 

It  was  our  last  night  out.  to- 
morrow we  docked  in  New  York, 
and  I  was  looking  forward  to  it 
with  immense  anticipation.  I  wa.i 
serving  abroad  the  Pvt.  W.  H. 
Thomas,  of  the  Military  Sea 
Transportation  Service,  as  a  civi- 
lian waiter  for  the  summer  mo- 
nths between  college  semesters. 
We  were  just  completing  a  twen- 
ty-three day  voyage  to  the  Metli- 
terranean  Sea  area. 

The  night  of  Wednesday,  July 
25.  .so  ominous  and  frightening, 
left  everyone  with  an  eerie  sense 
of  premonition.  Great  waves  of 
fog  rolled  over  the  ship,  so  dense 
that  visibility  for  more  than  a 
few  yards  was  impossible. 

Off  in  the  gray  mixture  of  fog 
and  twilight,  the  blasts  of  the 
horn  of  an  unseen  near-by  ship 
penetrated  the  fog;  each  blast 
seeming  to  come  from  a  different 
location.  Our  foghorn  answered 
into  the  thickness  at  regular  in- 
tervals. 

The  next  day  someone  mention- 
ed that  this  was.  perhaps,  the  An- 
drea Doria  passng  us. 

Anxious  for  tomorrow,  and  New 
York,  to  come.  I  went  to  bed  ra- 
ther early.  I  was  awakened  by 
talking  from  the  room  across  the 
hall.  I  heard  the  second  steward 
use  the  word  "emergnncy,'  but  I 
thought  at  first  that  this  pertain- 
ed oniy  to  the  room  stewards,  to 
whom  he  was  speaking,  and  1 
hoped  the  waiters  wouldn't  lie  dis- 
turbed until  the  usual  time  at  six 
thirty.  I  thought  it  was  probably 
already  pretty  close  to  that  time, 
and  that  we'd  have  to  get  up  soon 
anyway. 

Then:  ".•Ml  hands  man  your 
boat  stations"  sounded  through 
the  ship;  everyone  began  jump- 
ing out  of  bed.  running  this  way 
and  that,  grabbing  clothes  and  life 
jackets.  I  kept  thinking  it  was 
a  drill,  not  understanding  why 
it   was   being    held   at    that    time. 

Deep  down  inside.  I  wondered 
secretly  if  something  hadn't  hap- 
pened to  the  ship:  could  it  be 
possible    that    we    were    sinking*!" 

Being  accustomed  in  the  weekly 
drills  to  having  the  fire  drill  im- 
mediately preceeding  the  boat 
drill.  I  proceeded  unthinkingly 
to  my  fire  station,  located  near 
passenger's  cabins  on  the  second 
deck.  When  I  arived  there.  1  saw 
a  woman  come  hurrying  out  of  a 
compartment  in  her  night  clothes 
and  knock  on  Ihe  next  door,  say- 


ing to  her  husband  when  he  ap- 
peared. "You'd  better  get  dressed, 
something's  wrong." 

Then  I  heard  "Lower  all  boats  " 
over  the  p. a.  system.  I  realized 
I  was  at  the  wrong  station,  and 
if  they  were  lowering  the  boats, 
something  must  be  wrong.  I  had 
visions  as  I  scrambled  up  to  the 
main  deck  of  all  the  boats  leav- 
ing without  me.  but  when  I  reach- 
ed my  boat  station  on  the  port 
side  I  found  only  a  few  crew 
members  there. 

I  noticed  Ihe  fog  had  disap- 
peared, and  the  night  was  perfect- 
ly still  and  clear,  a  spangled  ar- 
ray  of  stars   twinkling   overhead. 

I  asked  another  crew  member 
what  was  wrong,  but  he  didn't 
know  either.  I  asked  him  the  time, 
and  he  said  one  thirty.  One  thirty: 
I  was  astounded.  What  was  going 
on? 

Off  in  the  darkness  the  lights 
of  several  ships  could  be  seen. 
The  .Andrea  Doria  was  ponted  out 
to  me  directly  off  the  starboard 
beam.  The  ship  was  almost  com- 
pletely dark  except  for  a  row  of 
lights  high  above  the  water,  and 
onlv  after  a  few  minutes  could  I 


was  taking  place,  that  very  near 
to  us  people  were  dying. 

Then  the  show  began.  Two  life- 
boats (the  only  ones  equipped 
with  motors)  had  been  sent  in  an- 
swer to  the  .Andrea's  plea  for  life- 
boats. The  whole  ship  waited  their 


EYEWITNESS  UNDERWOOD 

■\aitiinin:i  Assniialcd  Press  j)i<hins  of  disasler 


SAFETY 

.   .   ."soiju'  jmi   itared   b\ank\y" 

distinguish  that  the  ship  was  list- 
ing away  from  us,  and  the  lig'ils 
were  the  deck  lights  of  the  main 
deck  high   out   of  the  water. 

I  returned  to  the  port  side  to 
see  if  any  activity  was  occuring 
at  my  boat,  hut  finding  none.  1 
returned  to  the  starboard  side.  \n 
impressive  sight  met  my  eyes: 
closing  in  on  the  dark  Andrea  Do- 
ria was  an  immense  ship,  illumi- 
nated from  bow  to  stern  like  a 
gay  carnival;  and  most  colorful 
of,ail.  blazing  into  the  night  from 
between  the  two  stacks,  was  the 
large:  ILE  DE  FRANCE. 

Nobody  was  quite  certain  ex- 
actly what  the  story  was.  The  first 
version  I  heard  was  that  the  .An- 
drea Doria  was  hit  by  an"  oil  ta'nk- 
er.  Even  after  the  nane  'Stock- 
holm' reached  us,  we  were  still 
uncertain  as  to  her  type. 

I  was  standing  at  the  rail,  gaz- 
ing at  oil  and  wreckage  floating 
by  on  the  water,  when  an  orange 
life  preserver  drifted  by  the  side 
of  the  ship.  It  was  torn,  and  the 
insidf>  stuffings  trailed  behind  the 
jacket.  .As  I  looked  at  that.  I  rea- 
lized that   a  great  human  drama 


return:  rugs  were  spread  tiver  the 
d  cks  to  prevent  slipping,  ladders 
were  lowered  over  the  sides,  nur- 
ses and  soldiers  stood  by  the  blan- 
kets and   hot  drinks. 

Soon,  through  the  darkness, 
there  appeared  a  small  light,  quite 
far  (iff.  It  approached,  its  beam 
light  turning  from  one  direction 
to  another.  Then,  out  of  the  in- 
distinctive distance  into  the  vis- 
ible sphere  of  light  cast  from  our 
ship,  appeared  one  of  the  life- 
boats. 

It  contained  practically  all  wo- 
men. Most  of  them  crouched  over 
in  their  sea:.s.  hugging  life  jack- 
ets strapped  around  them.  They 
were  very  still,  some  of  them 
stared  up  at  the  ship  as  the  boat 
drew  alongside,  some  of  the  jnst 
staj-ed  blankly  off  into  nothing- 
ness. 

Ropes  were  tossed  down  over 
each  of  the  ladders  and  were 
tied  around  the  waists  of  the  wo- 
men as  they  began  ascending. 
Their  faces  were  very  tight;  there 
was  no  moaning  nor  crying  out. 
One  quite  elderly  woman  closed 
her  eyes  as  her  hands  slipped 
from  the  ladder,  and  the  crew, 
tugging  on  the  rope  tied  to  her, 
pulled  her  over  the  side.  As 
each  survivor  reached  t  h  e 
deck,  someone  placed  a  blanket 
over  her  shoulders  and  led  her 
off.  The  general  strength  and 
stamina  prevailing  was  express- 
ed in  the  attitude  of  one  short, 
thin  woman  who,  as  the  blanket 
was  thrown  over  her  shoulders, 
said,  in  a  voice  half  assuring, 
half  thankful,  "I'm  all  right, 
just   give  me  a  cigarette." 

One  Italian  woman  and  her 
thrtje  children  sat  in  a  corner, 
their  clothes  soaked  in  oil  from 
the  Doria. 


ANDREA   DORIA   GOES   DOWN   AMONG   HER   OWN    DEBRIS 

..."a  great  Jinrnan  drauia  teas  taking  place" 


AP  Photo 


When  the  beds  were  prepared, 
the  survivors  were  led  into  the 
room  to  them.  More  passengers 
kept  coming,  and  soon  men  pas- 
sengers w?re  among  the  women. 
There  was  little  talking,  as  if  the 
sense  of  unrealness  still  held 
each  of  them.,  perhaps  unsure  yet 
that  this  was  all  happening  to 
them. 

Close  to  nine  o'clock  in  the 
morning,  the  Thomas  left  for  New 
York.  Crew  members,  passengers, 
and  survivors  crowded  the  deck 
for  a  last  look  at  the  deserted 
liner,  an  awesome  slence  over  all. 

Standing  in  the  doorway  to  the 
main  lounge,  an  Italian  woman 
stared  after  the  slowly  diminish- 
ing picture  of  the  Andrea  Doria, 
her  eyes  full  of  tears. 

The  survivors  had  a  half  day  of 
comparative  rest  before  the  mass 
confusion  accompanying  the  dock- 
ing at  the  Brooklyn  Navy  Yard. 
Newspaper  reporters  boarded 
with  the  pilot  in  the  harbor.  Thev 
immediately  besieged  the  survi- 
vors, who  had  been  ushered  into 
the  dining  room  in  one  large 
group. 

At  the  dock,  the  ship  was  met 
by  large  crowds  and  TV  cameras. 
Many  tearful  reunions  occurred. 
The  most  outstanding  of  them,  if 
one  could, be  said  to  have  contain- 
ed more  emotion  than  another, 
took  place  between  a  mother  and 
l\er  one  and  a  half  year  old  baby 
from  whom  she  had  been  separat- 
ed the  night  before. 

As  the  mother  embraced  the 
baby,  the  crew  members  and  pass- 
engers watching  from  the  ship's 
decks  applauded. 

Finally  all  the  survivors  had 
departed  from  the  ship,  and  the 
dock  became  dark  and  silent,  the 
day  of  drama  drawing  to  a  close. 

During  the  evening  a  friend 
casually  reminded  me  of  an  inci- 
dent which  had  occured  just  as  we 
were  entering  the  Mediterranean 
It  was  during  dinner,  and  word 
got  around  that  a  luxury  liner 
was  passing  very  near  to  us. 
Eveiyone  excitedly" Rooked  out 
portholes  or»ran  out  on  deck  to 
see  the  famous  Italian  ship,  the 
Anrrea  Doria. 

I  had  my  camera  with  me,  wait- 
ing to  take  a  picture  of  the  Rock 
of  Gibralter,  and  my  friend  sug- 
gested I  take  a  picture  of  the 
liner.  I  looked  at  him  and  said, 
"What  do  I  want  a  picture  of  a 
luxuiy  liner  for?  You  can  see 
them  anywhere,  I'm  much  more 
interested  in  getting  the  Rock  of 
Gibralter." 


Pogo 


By  Walt  Kelly 


U'l  Abner 


By  Al  Capp 


ALL  STATE  / 


\AU 


Hammus-Al&b&mfWK 
CtDntesI: 

*Mr.  E>e*ut  li  a  1  '0H9  S  fc 
to  be    cruwned  - 
Pi«r^    recital    by 
Loverbpyni  k .  accompa^»iM 
ijy  his  brother   Morris 
("A  special  treat   Jbf 
tha    ladies.^ 


Carolina 
Caroleidoscope 

Frank  Crowther 

I  dropped  a  subtle  question  upon  entering  the 
Daily  Tar  Heel  office  this  afternoon,  "Whom  should 
we  back  for  Chancellor?" 

Talk  about  reaction.  .  ."Mickey  Spillane".  .  ."Walt 
Kelly".  .  "Why  doesn't  someone  ask  Billy  Graham*?' 
(another  Graham?).  .  .'Lionel  Hampton".  .  .murmer 
from  the  background,  "Please  don't  feed  the  colum- 
nist any  peanuts".  .  ."How  about  Bill  Poteat?".  .  . 
"Man,  let's  get  Elvis!'.  .  .(please,  I've  just  had  my 
lunch).  .  .'Old  banjo  Pegram  would  string  a  few 
things  up!  ".  .  .another  serious  vote  for  Bill  Poteat 
(he's" gaining  ground  and  followers).  .  .'I  like  Frank 
Klingberg  of  the  History  Department ".  .Ray  Linker 
nominates  Rav  Linker,  "but  only  if  tjiis  isn't  going 
to  be  printed  ".  .  ."I'd  suggest  Pogo,  but  he's  running 
for  President  ".  .  ."Hey,  I  want  to  withdraw  Walt 
Kellv  and  nominate  John  Foster  Dulles"  (you  mean 
out  jet-propelled  scty.  of  State?).  .  ."Irving  Berlin  ".  . 
"PMF ".  .  .(that's  Pierre  Mendes  France,  Sam).  .  . 
"Let's  railroad  Bill  Poteat  into  the  office".  .  .(well 
we  may  not  have  to  do  that  if  we  just  think  about 
it  a  minute).'.  .'What  about  old  'fast-buck'?".  .  . 
sure  he  could  install  HiFi  sets  in  every  dorm  and 
sell  the  Vets  Club  for  profit.  .  ."One  vote  for 
Peanuts".  .  ."I  think  that  Pogo  should  run  for  the 
Chancellery  and  withdraw  from  the  Presidential 
race;  after  all,  the  Presidency  would  ruin  his 
health!"  .  .  ."How  about  Dr.  Lyons".  .  .from  the 
outer  office,  "How  about  him!?".  .  .(don't  know 
if  that  was  positive  or  negative).  .  ."Spillane  would 
be  a  good  one;  then  you  really  couldn't  walk  through 
the  Arboretum  at  night  ".  .  .AND  A  FINAL  VOTE 
FOR  WILLL\M  H.  POTEAT. 


BILL  POTEAT 

. .  .  top    contender   for    cliancellors'hip 

O.  K.,  what  has  Poteat  got  and  who  is  he? 

He  is  an  Associate  Professor  of  Philosophy  who 
was  born  in  China  in  1919  and  returned  to  the 
United  States  with  his  parents  in  1929. 

His  father  was  a  Baptist  minister.  His  grand- 
father, Edwin  McNeill  Poteat,  was  a  Baptist  minis- 
ter and  President  of  Furman  University.  His  great 
Uncle  was  William  Louis  Poteat,  President  of  Wake 
P'orrest    College. 

Well,  is  he  qualified  educationally? 

Yup.  He  went  to  grammar  school  and  High  School 
in  Raleigh. 

He  received  his  A.3.  in  1941  from  Oberlin;  his 
Bachelor  of  Divinity  from  Yale  in  1944;  and  his 
Ph.D.  from  Duke  in   1951. 

He  is  married  to  the  former  Marion  Kellv,  and  is 
well  settled  in  Chapel  Hill. 

Ask  anyone  who  has  taken  one  of  his  classes 
whether  they  respect  the  man.  Without  question. 

So,  what  does  this  add  up  to? 

It  adds  up  to  a  man  who  can  fill  the  job  with 
youth,  energy,  prestige,  personality,  and  educational 
competance. 

Let's  have  some  more  reaction. 


YOU  Said  \h  •         ^  . 

'Hey\  Dirty  Ram 

Editor: 

To  the  visiting  students  from  other  lands,  one 
of  our  common  expressions  is  rather  puzzling.  It 
IS  our  use  of  the  expression   "Hey!" 

Just  what  does  "Hey"  mean?  To  me,  Hey"  means 
"hello.  I'm  glad  to  see  you."  Add  a  warm  smile,  and 
it  means,  'Tm  very  glad  to  see  you."  Wave  the 
aand  in  passing,  and  it  means  that  I'm  very  busj. 
but  in  passing  I  want  to  say  "hope  you're  getting  oii 
well." 

We  say  '  Hey  "  to  our  closest  and  dearest  friends 
and  to  those  we  have  not  yet  come  to  know.  It 
means  though  we  seem  to  be  strangers,  it  is  not  so 
for    'Hey  "  also  means,  *  we  understand  and  here  is 

our   out-stretched    hand." Hey. 

Evelyn  Sinha 
Editor: 

We  can  clearly  understand  why  the  Tar  Heel 
spirit  was  low  (at  the  State  Game).  One  look  at 
that  black  ram  would  be  enough  to  discourage  any- 
body! 

If  Carolina's  record  at  the  end  of  the  football 
season  is  as  black  as  Rameses  VH,  it  wll  be  a  pretty 
dark  year  for  the  Tar  Heels.  That  mascot  of  ours 
needs  a  new  blanket  just  as  Carolina  needs  and 
has.  a  new  perspective  on  football  with  Sunny  Jim 
So  come  on  and  lets  get  Rameses  VU  cleaned  up.' 

Walter   Pool* 
_  Tommy   Phillips 


TUESDAY 


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pe 


ering   the 
)m  should 

•Walt 

draham?" 

.murmer 

the  colum- 

teat?".  .   . 

st  had  my 

ing   a   few 

iill  Poteat 

like  Frank 

lay  Linker 

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s  running 

iraw  Walt 

(you  mean 

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link  about 

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.\L  VOTE 


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*4,    and    his 

welly,  and  is 

his   classes 
qui'.stion. 

he    job   with 
iducational 


^am 


r    lands,    one 
puzzling.    It 

Hey'  means 
m  smile,  and 
."'  Wave  the 
11  very  busj, 
re  getting  on 

farest  friends 

to   know.   It 

),  it  is  not  so, 

i  and  here  is 

Evelyn  Sinha 


the   Tar   Heel 

One   look   at 

iscourage  any- 

f  the  football 
11  be  a  pretty 
ascot  of  ours 
a  needs,  and 
h  Sunny  Jim. 
II  cleaned  up: 
Walter  Pool* 
ny   Phillips 


TUESDAY,  OCTOilR  %   1956 


THE  DAILY  TAR  H^BL 


PAGi  THREI 


'Tobacco 
Road'  Opens 
Film  Series 

Tobacco  Road"  will  be  shown 
hire  Thursday  as  the  first  of  the 
film  series  put  on  by  the  Film 
(.'ommittee  of  the  Graham  Memor- 
ial Activities  Board. 

The  film  series  movies  are 
shown  in  Carroll  Hall  on  Thurs- 
d..ys  at  8  p.m.  Tickets  for  these 
films  may  be  obtained  at  only  $2 
for  the  entire  series  at  the  GM 
Information  Office,  Ledbetter- 
P.ckard.  Abernathy  Hall.  Yackety 
Yack  Office  and  at  the  door  at 
the   first   showing. 

The  rest  of  the  films  this  se- 
mester are:  "Alexander  Nevsky" 
(Russian),  Oct.  16;  "The  Belles 
(if  St.  Trinians"  (English),  Nov. 
1;  "M"  (German),  Nov.  15; 
•Flamenco"    (Spanish),    Nov.    29; 

Lifeboat"    (American),    Dec.    13; 

Incorrigible"  (Swedish),  Jan. 
10;  "Arsenic  and  Old  Lace"  (Am- 
erican), Jan.   17. 

Selected  short  subjects  will  be 
.shown  with  most  of  the  films  in 
the  serfes. 


High  Schdol  Press 
Will  Hear  Top  Men 


—Dorm  Men- 


By  BUCK  PAYSOUR 


DELIVERY  ROUTE  OF 
THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 

Dorms  (men  and  women) 

Fraternities  and  Sererities 

Rooming    Houses    with    mors 
than  3  students 

Subscribers  .^    , 

Nurses'  Derm 

Infirnfary     and     Memorial 
Hospital 

Victory  Village 

DTH  Boxes  en  Raleigh,  Dur- 
ham, Hillsboro,  Pittsboro  High- 
ways, and  on  Franklin  Street. 
McCauley  and  Cameron  Ave- 
nues. These  are  pick-up  points 
for  comntuttng   students. 

If  you  fall  into  the  above  cata- 
gories  and  are  not  receiving  the 
Tar  Heel,  Call  Circulation  Man- 
ager, 9-6362  between  hours  of  S 
and  10  p.m. 


When  North  Carolina  high 
school  editors  gather  here  Friday 
and  Saturday  for  their  fifteenth 
annual  N.  C.  Scholastic  Press  In- 
stitute, they  will  hear  talks  by 
Manly  Wade  Wellman,  author  of 
numerous  juvenile  books,  and 
Barry  Farber,  former  editor  of 
The  Daily  Tar  Heel,  who  just  re- 
turned from  a  two-month^  trip  to 
Russia  and  Europe. 

Wellman  is  the  featured  speak- 
er at  the  opening  session  Friday 
afternoon  at  5  o'clock.  Among  his 
books  for  high  school  readers  are 
"The     Wild     Dogs     of     Drowing 
Creek,"  "The  Mystery  of  Lost  Val- 
ley," "Gray  Riders"  and  "Flag  on 
I  the  Levee."  This  fall  his  book  for 
I  adults,  "Rebel  Boast,"  a  study  of 
J  five  Confederate  soldiers  from  En- 
I  field,  N.  C,  will  be  published  by 
j  Henry  Holt  and  Co. 
I      Farl)er,    former    student    editor 
i  from    Greensboro,    will    speak    at ! 
I  the  closing  banquet  "Saturday  ev-  { 
I  ening  at  7  o'clock  at  the  Carolina 
i  Inn.    He    will    discuss    his    recent ' 
trip  behind  the  Iron  Curtain   and  | 
tell    the    high    school    editors    his  i 
impressions   of   life   in   Russia  to- 1 
day. 

Saturday  will  be  devoted  to 
talks     and     panel     discussions    on 


(Continued  from  Page   1) 
Stacy:  Charles  Allen,  secretary; 
i  Eddie  House,  treasurer;  Andy  Den*  ^ 
'•  mark,  intramural  manager;  Benny !     When  sclwol  began  at  the  Uni- 
:  Thomas,  IDC  representative.  |  ^«"'ty  ^^^  ""•  ^^^  Graham  Mem- 

'■  GftlMES  I  ^^'^^  Student  Union  —  "a  home 

Grimes:  Don  Howard,  Bob  Her-  *^*y  '""o™  *>o">e"  —  »>«8an  its  25th 
ford,  secretary;  Fred  Schneel,  Wal-   y^^""  <*'  service   to  students 


GM  Begins  25  th  Year 


MANLEY  WADE  WELLJMAN 

.  .  .  author  of  many  books 

news  writing,  feature  writing,  ad- 
vertising, editorials,  sports,  make- 
up, yearbook  procedure,  photog- 
raphy and  other  topics  to  help 
the  high  school  students  improve  | 
their  publications. 


ly  Kuralt,  Ronald  Hamilton,  trea- 
surer; Mike  Hayes,  IDC  representa- 


It  was  exactly  25  yeare  ago  that 
most   of   the   recreational   life   Of 


tive;  Gary  Nichols.  Chuck  Harky,j**>*  building,   which   headquarters 
intramural   manager.  JUNC  students,  was  completed  and 

Lewis:  John  Riley,  Jim  Sparger,  I  ^^^^  '^^  ^^^  'i"t  time. 
Don  Marion,  vice  president;  B.  J.  |  ^nd  it  was  in  January  of  the 
Moffett,  Wiley  Shearin,  Tom  Fish- j  game  school  year  that  a  Charlotte 
er.  secretary;  George  Worsley,  j  man.  Charles  W.  TiUett,  Jr.,  dedi- 
David  Fox,  Bert  Joyner,  treasurer;  i  jated  the  building  as  a  "lasting 
Jim  Summey,  intramural  manager; j n,emorial'  to  Edward  K.  Graham. 
Frank  Clontz,  Jack  Mason,  IDC  re-  j  University    president    from    1914 

through  1918. 

The  next  several  years  proved 
to  be  an  eventful  period,  both  for 
Graham  Memorial  and  ihe  history 
of  the  world. 


presentative. 

Alexander:  David  Jones,  CJeorge 
Reese,  Carroll  Glenn,  Bob  Jacobus, 
vice  president;  Charles  Pittman, 
Al  Dodge,  secretary;  Leon  Weilons, 
Hobart  Steele,  treasurer;  Doug 
Henderson,    intramural    manager. 

Ruff  in:  Burton  Horwitz,  Dave  Su- 
kow,    Robert 


Women  were  clamoring  for  more 

Lowder  secretary- '  **'"^"*^'  ^^^  '"  government  and 
T  ^  T^  K  r^,'  secretary,  ^^  ^j,^  University.  One  bravb  coed, 
Ljndon  Deborde,  treasurer;  Ken |  „„„,„^.„„  .  ;.  >=  "»«  ^  ^-v^u, 
r-^^^^--        „♦-  1      1  according    to    the   student    news- 

Goodman,     intramural     manager;   _,„„,    .,^„     ...  «       ^i. 

*"    '  •  paper,    "paved   the   way   for   the 

fairer  sex's  use  of  the  pool  tables 

in  Graham   Memorial." 


Bob  Hill,  Pat  Leonard,  IDC  repre- 
sentative. 
COBB 
Cobb:  Leon  Froshing,  Erwin  Ful- 
A  new  feature  of  the  institute  i  ^^^'  secretary;  Avery  Thomas,  Sam 


Want  Your 
OLD  SUIT 

Ivy 

Leagueized 

We  take  out  pleats,  Re- 
cut  Shoulders,  convert 
to  3  button,  put  belt  in 
the  back. 

Fast  and  Efficient 
Service 

Pete  the  Tailor 


for  Saturday  morning  will  be  two  | 
panels  on  how  to  produce  prize- 
winning  newspapers  and  year- 1 
books.  The  newspaper  panel  will  j 
be  led  by  Chris  Folk,  faculty  ad-  j 
viser  at  Central  High  School  in  I 
Charlotte,  assisted  by  David  Mc-  j 
Swain,  editor  of  the  Rambler  at  | 
Central  High,  and  Ro!>ert  Kirk-  \ 
Patrick,    managing  editor.  j 


Dorsett.  Dick  Robinson.  Willam 
Dean,  treasurer;  Henry  Rodenhei- 
mer,  Aruthur  Kutz,  intramural 
manager;  Mike  Rosen,  Hank  Cald- 
well, Bill  Beck,  First  floor  IDC 
representative;  Bob  Noble,  Jim 
Barbee.  Second  floor  IDC  repre- 
sentative; Bill  McGee,  John  Fox, 
Kenneth  Anderson,  Jerry  Sullivan, 
Sherwood   Thompson,  Third   floor 


IDC    representative:    Otis     Oliver, 
The     panel     on    Prize-winnning  j  ^on  Markins,  Don  Kroe,  Mike  Fleis- 

her,     Jerry    Blumenthal,     Fourth 
floor  IDC  representative. 

Old  West:  Robert  Cowan,  secre- 
tary, James  James,  treasurer;  Joe 
Cheekmore,  intramural  manager; 
Richard    Jennings,  William    King, 


yearbooks  will  include  Miss  Mary 
Humphrey,  yearbook  adviser  for 
the  New  Hanover  School  in  Wil- 
mington; Betty  Parker,  editor  of 
the  yearbook  at  High  Point  High 
School;     Bob    Denham    and    Kay 


Swain,   editors   at   James   A.    Gray  '  Julius  Banzet,   IDC  representative. 


SH1RTS-19C 


High  School  in  Winston-Salem, 
and  Mrs.  Ruth  Barfield  and  Jan- 
ice Parker  of  North  Melklenburg 
High  School  in  Charlotte. 

The  annual  institute  is  sponsor- 
ed by  the  University  School  of 
Journalism.  The  Daily  Tar  Heel 
and  the  Extension  Division  of  the 


Steele:  Jerry  Shields,  secretary; 
Tom  Long,  treasurer;  Charles 
Reed  intramural  manager;  Gene 
Weathers.   IDC   representative. 

Whitehead:  Wayne  Martin,  vice 
president;  Eli  Atteyek,  secretary; 
Grayson  Montgomery.  Norman 
Hall.  Jim  Bell.  Billy  Gibson,  trea- 


University,  with  Walter  Spearman  j  surer;  Bobby  Gaucom,  Charlie  Sa- 


EA. 


\(^mtUki 


a)€  handle 


oiithCARE 


With   or  Without 
Starch 

Prompt  Service 


f^^. 


Glen  Lennox  Laundromat 


of   the    Journalism    School    as    di- 
rector. 

Officers  for  the  1956  institute 
are  Miss  Pat  Brown  of  Goldsboro, 
president;  Miss  Linda  Diggle  of 
Charlotte,  vice-president;  Mias 
Betty  Woodbury  of  Wilmington, 
secretary;  and  Miss  Theresa  Pe- 
lone  of  Charlotte,   treasurer. 


blston.  Artie  Shaw.  IDC  represen- 
tative. 

Battle-Vance-Pettigrew:  Bert 
Warren,  Bob  Kuhns,  secretary; 
Dave  Mundy.  John  Smith,  Gus  Da- 
vis, treasurer;  Rick  Orr,  intramu- 
ral manager;  Courtland  Edwards. 
Arthur  Jones.  Jim  Merritt,  IDC 
representative. 

Graham:   Randy  Oglesby.  secre- 


Covering  The  Campus 


DAILY    CROSSWORD 


ACROSS 

1.  Claw 
5.  Hastened 
9.  F*rovisioni 
stored  by 
explorers 
10.  A   hue 

12.  Ghastly  pale 

13.  A  fruit  used 
as  a  relish 

14.  Periods 
of  time 

15.  Enemy 

16.  Half  an  em 
IT.  Shilling: 

(abbr.) 
18  Drinks  in 
small 
amounta 

19.  Road  (abbr.) 

20.  Hit 
23.  Throw 

25.  Some 

26.  Chum 

27.  Courage 
29.  Walked 

across  a 

river 
32.  Sun  god 
23.  Prepare  for 

publication 
35  Greek  letter 

36.  NTeuter 
pronoun 

37.  Pole 

38.  Glass  in 
fusion 

40.  Musical 
instrument 

42  Erected 

43  Device  for 
detecting 
underwater 
craft 

44  Narrow 
roadway 

45.  Timber 
trees 
(K.I.) 


46.  Vehicle  with  18.  Firma- 


runners 
DOWN 
1. Cipher 

2.  Meaaurf 
of  land 

3.  ^titchbird« 

4.  Guided 

5.  Large  ladle 

6.  The  North 
star 

7.  High  prieat 

8.  Capital  oC 
DelAwar* 
(poss.) 

9.  Rank        ', 
11.  Teara 

violent!/ 
15.  Exclama* 
tion 


ment 

21.  Meas- 
ure 
(Siam) 

22. In. 
ward 

24.  Ancient 

26.  Kettle 

27.  Suit- 
cases 

28.  Propor- 
tions 

29.  Splicing 
tool 

90.  Banished 
from  one's 
country 

91.  A  kind 
of  song 


;^Ufej    KLJa    'JliH 

:<izm:-^  ■rjrj;i'nii:-i 
n'2[i.   Mjri]   I'j'rj 


8»t«r4m)r'i  Aatwcr 

34.  Movable 
barriers 

38.  Not  empty 

39.  Vex 

41.  Miscellany 

42.  A  roulette 
bet 


PHARMACY  WIVES 

The  Pharmacy  Wives  will   meet 
tomorrow  at  8  p.m.  at  the  Institute 
of  Pharmacy.  All  Pharmacy  wives 
have  been  invited  to  attend. 
WESLEY  CHOIR 

The  Wesley  Choir  of  the  Wesley 
Foundation  will  hold  rehearsal  to- 
day at  7  p.m.  in  the  University 
Methodist  Church.  All  interested 
persons  have  been  invited  to  at- 
tend.. 
BAND  MEMBERS 

All    UNC    Band    members    have 
been  requested  to  .be  on  Emerson 
Field  at  4:30  p.m.  for  band  rehear- 
sals. 
INDOOR  POOL 

The  indoor  swimm.ing  pool  is 
open  for  recreational  swimming 
Mondays  through  Fridays  from  4 
to  6  p.m.,  Saturdays  from  2  to  6 
p.m.  and  Sundays,  2  to  5  p.m.  Wo- 
men swimmers  may  wear  their 
own  bathing  suits,  but  men  swim- 
mers lare  required  to  wear  the 
special  suits  issued  by  the  gym. 
EVENING  SKETCH  CLASS 

Person  Hall  Art  Gallery  has  an- 
nounced a  Wednesday  evening 
sketch  class  beginnng  tomorrow. 
The  class  will  include  sketching 
from  life  with  drawing  in  various 
materials.  The  class,  to  meet  7  to 
9  p.m.  will  be  under  John  Allcott 
of  the  Dept.  of  Art.  The  fee  is  $13 
for  13  weeks  instruction,  includ- 
ing materials.  Those  interesting  in 
joining  have  been  invited  to  come 
to  the  first  meeting  of  the.  class 
tomorrow  at  4  p.m. 


But  the  male  students  did  not 
give  ground  easily. 

"Once  they  (the  girls)  start  to 
bowl,  the  boys  gather  around  in 
high  sarcastic  glee,"  a  UNC  stu- 
dent wrote.  "Masculine  snickers 
drive  blushes  into  their  resentful 
cheeks,  or  drive  them  away  alto- 
gether."   .  ' 

DEPRESSION 

The  nation,  during  the  early 
days  of  Graham  Memorial's  history, 
was  recovering  from  a  financial  de- 
pression. At  that  time,  it  cost  each 
student  three  dollars  to  operate 
Graham  Memorial.  Today,  due  to 
the  higher  cost  of  bving  and  the 
increased  services  provided  by  the 
Student  Union,  it  costs  six  dollars, 
ham  Memorial   was  established,  a 

And  at  about  the  same  time  Gra- 
ham Memorial  was  established  a 
young  upstart  called  Hitler  was 
making  speeches  in  German  beer 
parlors — speeches  which  were  to 
change  the  world — and  Graham 
Memorial. 

The  Student  Union,  which  spon- 
sors roost  of  the  campus  entertain- 


CLASSIFIEDS 


BLACKBURN'S  MARKET 
(across  from  ice  plant).  Open  7 
days  a  week,  7  a.m.  to  8  p.m. 
Fresh  fruit  and  vegetables.  Also 
beer. 

STUDENTS  EXPERIENCED  ON 
Linotype  or  open  presses  may 
obtain  part  time  work  at  Colon- 
ial Pre.vs.  Phone  333-6. 


ANNOUNCEMENT:  THERE  IS 
room  for  two  more  men  at  the 
campus  cooperative  Houae,  208 
W.  Franklin  St.  Interested  per- 
sons leave  their  name,  address, 
and  telephone  numl)er  at  tite 
"Y"  or  come  by  the  house. 


YDC 

The  YDC  is  planning  an  open 
house  especially  for  coeds.  They 
will  serve  punch  accompained  by 
the  rhythm  of  a  combo  from  7:30 
to  9  p.m.  Thursday  evening  in  the 
Rendezvous  Room,  Graham  Mem- 
orial. 

COED  SWIAAMING  j 

The    Women's    Physical    Educa-  j 
tion  Dept.  will  gve  swmming  and 
tennis   tests    today   and   Thursday 
from  3  to  4  p.m. 

All  women  students  must  have 
successfully  completed  a  course  in 
swimming  and  an  individual  sport, 
or  have  passed  the  above  tests  in 
order  to  graduate. 

STUDENT  WIVES 

The  Student  Wives  Club  will 
meet  tonight  at  8  at  the  Victory 
Village  Nursery,  according  to  Sec- 
retary Pat  Howard.  All  student  wi 

ves  have  been  invited  to  att  nd. 

I  •    ■ 

READING  COURSE 

Students  interested  in  taking  the 
Testing  Service's  reading  course 
should  apply  at  108  Peabody  some 
time  this  week,  according  to  Paul 
Irvine  Jr.   of  the  Testing  Servce. 

SCIENCE  FILM 

"Time  and  Eternity,"  one  of  the 
latest  Moody  Institute  of  Science 
films,  will  be  presented  by  the  In- 
ter-Varsity Christian  Fellowship  to- 
night at  7  p.  m.  in  Gerrard  Hall. 

WUNC-TV 

Today's  schedule  for  WUNC-tV, 
the   University's   educational  tele- 
vision station,  Channel  4: 
12:44    Sign  on 
12:45     Music 

1:00    Today  on  Farm 

1:30    Music   in   Air 

2:00    Science  &  Nature 

2:30     Sign  Off 

5:44    Sign   On 

5:49     Muse 

6:00    Magic    Lantern 

6:15    Sports  Clinic 

6:30    News 

6:45     Sports 

7:00     Books  L  People 

7:15    Bible  Course 

8:0U    Dr.  Shivers 

8:45    State  Gov't.  ; 

9:30    Final  Edition  ! 

10:05    Sign  Off  j 


tary,  Don  Owens,  Billy  Gautier, 
Jim  Moore,  treasurer;  Jerry  Long, 
Tom  Nettleman,  Curt  Champlain, 
intramural  manager,  Bill  Burress, 
Ken    Jenkins,    IDC    representative. 

Joyner:  John  Alexander,  Gene 
Maloney,  treasurer. 

Dormitory  presidents  and  vice 
presidents  were  elected  last  spring 
in  accordance  with  a  new  stagger- 
ed electoral  policy  of  the  IDC. 

Some  dormitory  vice  presidents 
didn't  return  to  their  respective 
i  dorms  this  fall,  necessitating  new 
elections. 


ment,  has  seen  many  fads  come 
and  g(k  during  its  history.  Ellvis 
Presley  is  by  no  means  the  first 
craze  it  has  wtnessed.  In  the  mid- 
thirties,  the  director  of  Graham 
Memorial  seriously  considered  ban- 
ning fhe  "big  apple"  at  the  Stu- 
dent Union. 

The  Student"  Union  has  alwf»ys 
tried  to  stay  within  the  l>ounds 
of  the  law  in  its  activities.  There 
was,  for  example,  the  time  the  dir- 
ector of  Graham  Memorial  led  a 
pep  rally  on  Times  Square  in  New 
York  just  before  UNC  was  to  meet 
the  New  York  University  in  a  foot- 
ball game. 
f 

"We  couldn't  build  a  bonfire 
because  it  was  raining,"  the  direc- 
tor said. 

"And  also,"  he  added,  "it  is 
against  the  law." 

NIGHT  CLUB 

Then  there  was  the  time  the 
board  of  directors  decided  to  set 
up  a  "night  club"  for  students. 
They  hastened  to  explain,  however, 
that  the  only  cocktails  to  be  served 
would  be  milkshakes  and  ice- 
cream. 

When  Hitler's  armies  marched 
into  Poland,  the  United  States  be- 
gan 'juilding  up  its  defenses.  The 
University  responded  with  the  ac 
nouncement  that  it  would  furnish 
beds  and  other  accommodations  for 
soldiers  passing  through  Chapel 
Hill.  Graham  Memorial  did  its  part 
by  4'urntishing  entertainment  for 
the  troops. 

Graham  Memorial  continued  to 
support  the  war  effort  after  Japan 
the  war.  it  staged  dances  and  con- 
attacked  Pearl  Harbor.  All  during 
the  war.  it  staged  dances  and  con- 
certs for  the  benefit  of  the  War 
Bond  Drive. 

During  its  quarter-of-a-century 
history,  Graham  Memorial  has  had 
18  directors.  The  first  was  Noah 
Goodridge,  who  is  now  a  Washing- 
ton D.  C.  businessman.  The  latest 
was  Jimmy  Wallace  who  recently 
resigned.  Miss  Linda  Mann,  the 
third  woman  ever  to  head  Graham 
Memorial,   is   now   acting   director. 

INCOME 

Graham  Memorial,  which  has 
steadily  expanded  its  activities  dur- 
ing the  past  25  years,  is  still  en- 
larging its  program.  In  1952,  for 
example,  its  income  was  $15,000. 
In  1955,  it  was  $55,000. 

In  fact,  its  is  jfrowing  so  much 
that  is  staff  members  now  say  that 
there  just  isn't  enough  roo.m  for 
all  its  activties  in  the  present  build- 
ing. The  building  is  much  smaller 
than   was   originally   planned. 

Included  in  the  services  offered 
to  students  at  Graham  Memorial 
are  a  barber  shop  where  students 
can  get  a  haircut  cheaper  than  the 
going  prices  and  a  modem  dark 
room  for  amateur  photographers. 
Graham  Memorial  also  houses  bil- 
liard and  ping-pong  rooms,  several 
conference  rooms,   a   lounge  with 


TV  and  rado,  a  room  for  daneng 
and  the  student  government  and 
publications  officers. 

The  Graham  Memorial  Activities 
Board  is  the  first  student  program- 
ming group  at  UNC.  It  sponsors 
and  schedules  musical  events,  free 
movies  and  ether  entertainment  for 

students. 

Another  function  of  Graham 
Memorial  is  to  house  the  office  of 
the  Carolina  Forum.  Amojjg  out- 
standing speakers  presented  last 
year  by  the  Forum,  a  nonpartisan 
student  group,  were  Sen.  William 


Knowland,  Rep.  Sam  Rayburn,  Dr. 
Frank  Graham  and  Sen.  Wayne 
Morse. 

As  Graham  Memorial  begins  its 
25th  year,  its  staff  can  truly  say 
this  has  ben  true  to  one  of  its  slog- 
ans: "Graham  Memorial  is  the  liv- 
ing room  of  the  campus." 


George  L  Coxhead     | 


U.N.C.  '42 
Campus  Representative 


AUTOCONDITiONING 

The  New  Way  to  a  Successful 
Life 

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DIH  Reports  $5,500  Gain 
Over  Previous  Fiscal  Year 

The  Daily  Tar  Heel  gained  better   spent   during   1954-55. 
than  $5,500  in  funds  last  year  over 
the  previous  fiscal  year,  according 
to  the  Carolina  Publicatons  Union 
1955-56  financial  statement. 

The  Tar  Heel's  surplus  was  used 


It  had  an 
and  spent 
deficit    of 


income     of   $40,474.67 

$41,192.76,    leaving    a 

$718.09. 

Due  to  the  Tar  Heel's  financial 

standing,  the  paper  will  run  six 
to  cover  losses  by  the  Yackety  [  days  each  week  all  year,  excepting 
Yack  and  the  Carolina  Quarterly,  I  exam  periods   ana  holidays.   Plans 


which  amounted  to  more  than  $1, 
300. 

Official  figures,  submitted  by 
Harry  A.  Kear,  auditor,  show  the 
Tar  Heel  operating  on  a  $49,601.15 
income  during  1955-56,  had  a  total 
expenditure  of  $46,591.41,  leaving 
a  balance  of  $3,099.74.  The  1954- 
55  Tar  Heel  had  a  total  income  of 
$41,760.74,  and  spent  $44,278.20— 
leaving  a  deficit  of  $2,517.46. 

In  the  fiscal  year  ending  June  7, 
1956,  the  Carolina  Quarterly  over- 
spent $377.37.  The  Quarterly  work- 
ed from  a  total  income  of  $2,494.39, 
and  its  total  expenses  were  $2,- 
871.76.  The  previous  year  the 
Quarterly  went  $240.80  into  the 
red. 

During  the  1955-56  fiscal  year, 
the  Yackety  Yack  went  $996.22  in- 
to debt.  The  total  expense  was 
$44,070.32;  the  total  incoipe  only 
$43,074.10.   The   Yack   also   over- 


for  a  monthly  magazine  to  be  put 
out  by  the  Tar  Heel  staff  are  now 
shaping  up. 


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PA6i  POUR 


.THE  DAILY  TAR  HHEL 


TUESDAY,  OCTOBER  2,  7955 


Reed    Returns    To   Heavy   Duty    Workouts 


A  Sound  Licking  —  But  No  Disgrace 

The  nation's  number  one  team  gave  Carolina  a  bad  beating  Sat- 
urday, but  the  Tar  Keels  had  nothing  to  be  ashamed  of.  It  was  simply 
a  case  of  a  minor  league  team  stepping  out  of  it's  class  to  play  the 
country's  best,  and  the  result  was  inevitable. 

Oklahoma  doesn't  hav*  just  a  good  team,  they  have  a  great  one. 
The  Sooners  displayed  channelled  power  and  precision  in  every 
phase  of  the  game  in  their  runaway  victory  over  the  Tar  Heels. 
Sharp  slashing  blocking  and  savage  tackling  were  not  the  exception, 
but  the  rule,  as  they  always  seem  to  be  with  a  Bud  Wilkinson  Coach- 
ed team. 

And  the  Sooner  backs  never  stopped  their  hard  driving  forward 
motion  until  at  least  three  Tar  Heels  were  sitting  on  them.  When  they 
were  hit  and  dropp^,  the  Oklahoma  ball  carriers  would  bounce  to 
their  feet  like  rubber  balls  and  hustle  back  to  the  huddle  to  get  the 
next  play  under  way. 
SOONER  SPEED  UNDER  A  HOT  SUN 

The  accent,  respite  the  burning  temperatures,  was  on  speed,  speed 
and  more  speed.  The  line  was  fast,  the  backs  were  swift  as  jackrabbits, 
and  the  resting  time  between  plays  was  at  the  barest  minimum.  And 
the  flow  of  fresh  hungry  reserves  off  the  heavily  laden  Sooner  bench 
was  like  a  spring  torrent. 

To  most  observers  in  the  press  box,  the  Sooner  subs  looked 
•very  bit  as  good  as  the  number  one  unit.  When  the  Tar  Heels  were 
knocking  at  the  goaline  gate  in  the  third  quarter,  they  were  moving 
well  against  Oklahoma's  first  string.  When  the  Carolina  push  reach- 
ed the  Sooner  eight  yard  line,  however.  Coach  Wilkinson  rushed 
his  second  unit  into  action,  and  the  Tar  Heels  went  no  further. 
VICTORIOUS   BUT   STILL    DISAPPOINTED 

The  Sooner  players  themselves  were  happy  to  win,  but  seemed 
a  little  disappointed  over  their  overall  performance.  Coach  Bud  Wilkin- 
san  and  his  proteges  were  distrubed  by  the  frequent  fumbles  and 
penalties  that  plagued  them,  but  marked  the  miscues  down  to  opening 
game  spottiness. 

Most  of  the  Sooners  thought  the  Tar  Heels  were  big  and  hard 
hitting,  but  just  ran  out  of  steam  too  soon.  Or,  as  halfback  Dave 
Baker  aptly  put  it,  "They  just  had  too  few  personnel." 

Among  the  Tar  Heels  singled  out  for  special  praise  by  the  Sooners 
were  big  Stewart  Pell  at  tackle,  Ed  Sutton  at  halfback.  George  Stav 
nitski  at, center.  Dick  Smith  at  guard  and  Curt  Hathaway  at  quarter- 
back. ■  1 
CUFF  NOTES  FROM  SOONER  LAND 

The  Tar  Heels  looked  bright  and  sassy  in  their  Carolina  blue 
Stetson  hats  when  they  stepped  off  the  plane  in  Oklahoma  City.  Photo- 
graphers were  out  in  force,  and  the  papers  next  day  were  liberally 
sprinkled  with  pics  of  the  Carolina  football  team  and  their  "Tatum 
special"  headgear. 

It  <was  a  drastic  switch  from  cool  Carolina  temperatures  to  the 
parching  Oklahoma  sun.  The  thermometer  was  in  the  nineties  for  the 

gmm:  ^ 

Some  phases  of  the  athletic  program  at  the  U.  of  Okla.  may  be 
rather  surprisng  to  the  rabid  Big  Four  basketball  fan.  The  big  winter 
sport  and  crowd  drawing  card  is  not  basketball,  but  wrestling.  When 
the  grunt  and  groaners  from  Oklahoma  and  Oklahoma  A&M  met  last 
winter  at  Norman,  over  6,000  frenzied  fans  turned  out.  The  Aggies  are 
perennial  national  champs,  with  the  Sooners  not  far  behind. 
KEY  TO  PLAY  WAS  FORWARD,  NOT  LATERAL 

Game  movies  show  that  the  Dave  Baker  to  Jay  O'Neal  lateral  that 
gave  Oklahoma  their  first  TD  was  not  a  lateral  after  all,  but  a  forward. 
Wouldn't  have  made  much  difference  in  the  long  run,  though. 

UNC  Coach  Tatum  was  responsible  for  the  sellout  crowd  and 
tremendous  interest  in  the  game.  Sunny  Jim  formerly  coached  at 
Oklahoma,  and  his  Maryland  teams  and  Oklahoma  have  been  fierce 
Orange  Bowl  rivals  in  the  past.  Sooner  sports  publicist  Harold  Keith 
said  the  game  wouldn't  have  drawn  a  capacity  crowd  if  it  hadn't  sold 
out  before  the  Carolina-State  clash. 


^Wally  Vale  Is  Shifted 
To  Halfback  Position 


Stavnitski  Out 

George  Stavnitski,  Tar  Heel  veteran  center,  is  still  under  obser- 
vation in  an  Oklahoma  City  Hospital  from  injuries  received  in  the 
UNC-Oklahoma  game.  It  was  reported  by  hespitaf  officials  yesterday 
that  he  is  resting  comfortably  with  no  broken  bones  or  paralysis 
but  with  his  condition  not  completely  determined. 


May  Not  Start  Wednesday 

Maglie  Sidelined 
By  Stomache  Ache 


Spartans  Second;  Tech  Third 


By  ED  WILKS 

BROOKLYN,  Oct.  1  (>P)— Sal  The 
Magnificent  Maglie  had  the  mis- 
eries today,  leaving  wide  open  the 
question  of  who  will  be  Brooklyn's 
pitcher  against. the  New  York  Yan- 
kees and  lefthander  Whitey  Ford 
in  Wednesday's  World  Series  open- 
er at  Ebbets  Field. 

The  Dodgers,  hungry  for  some 
relaxation  after  the  fr.intic  finish 
to  the  National  League  pennant 
race,  had  the  day  off.  But  when 
Maglie  showed  up  with  the  rest 
to  pick  up  his  ticket  allotment,  he 
admitted  to  an  upset  stomach  and 
reported  his  shoulder  "a  bit  stiff." 

That  confirmed  Manager  Walt 
Alston's  worry  over  the  39-year- 
old  righthander,  who  proved  the 
Big  Guy  in  the  stretch  run.  The 
Dodger  skipper,  given  little  chance 


Sooners  Top  Poll 
After  Routing  NC 


By  HUGH  FULLERTON  JR 
The  Associated  Press      ' 

Oklahomii,  Michigan  State  and 
Georgia  Tech  are  the  nation's  top 
three  football  teams  in  the  opin- 
ions of  sports  writers  and  broad- 
casters. Then,  with  their  minds 
on  the  World  Series,  they're  ap- 
parently paraphrasing  an  old  base- 
ball question  and  asking:  Who's 
in  fourth? 

Although  there  were  few,  if  any, 
major  upsets  last  weekend,  the 
second  weekly  Associated  Press 
ranking  poll  resulted  in  another 
big  reshuffling  of  the  top  10  teams 
Eight  of  last  week's,  first  10  re- 
tained their  places  in  the  upper 
group,  hu'  except  for  Oklahoma's 
No.  1  ranking,  none  held  the  same 
spot. 

Oklahoma  received  60  first- 
place  votes  out  of  97  ballots  cast, 
20  more  for  second  place  and 
polled  883  points  on  the  usual  basis 
of  10  for  first,  nine  for  second, 
eic.  As  usual  the  balloting  dropped 
off  a  bit  during  the  excitement 
over  the  end  of  the  baseball  sea- 
son. 


Michigan  State,  an  impressive 
winner  over  Stanford  in  its  season- 
al debut,  moved  ahead  of  Georgia 
Tech  into  second  place  with  17 
firsts  and  773  points  to  Tech's  five 
and  662. 

Oklahoma,  the  top  choice  in  the 
AP  pre-season  poll,  stopped  North 
Carolina,  36K),  while  Michgan 
State  whipped  Stanford  21-7. 
Meanwhile  Georgia  Tech  chalked 
up  its  second  close  one  of  the  sea- 
son, beating  Southern  Methodist, 
early  conqueror  of  Notre  Dame, 
by  a  9-7  count. 

After  these  three,  the  writers 
and  broadcasters  participating  in 
the  AP  poll  indicated  a  lot  of 
doubt  as  to  how  the  teams  should 
be  rated.  On  the  point  scores  they 
came  out  in  this  order:  Ohio  State, 
Michigan,  Mississippi,  Pittsburgh, 
Texas  Christian,  Tennessee  and 
Southern  California. 

The  strong  opening  perform- 
ances of  the  Big  Ten  appar- 
ently made  a  big  impression.  Oho 
State  moved  up  from  eghth  place 
and   Michigan    from    13th. 


All  Premiums  And  Draft 

T.  V.  —  Good  Place  To 

Watch  Boxing  A  Football 

Bring  Your  Date 

WEST  FRANKLIN  STREET  LUNCHEONEHE 

Next  te  Bus  Station 

Phone  9-2846 


United  States 
Tops  Italians 
In  Cup  Play 

FOREST  HILLS,  N.  Y..  Oct.  1  (/P) 
— Texan  Sam  Giammalva,  stung 
by  an  Italian  slight,  crushed  string 
bean  Orlando  Sirola,  12-10,  6-3.  6-2, 
today  to  give  the  United  States  a 
4-1  rout  in  the  Davis  Cup  inter- 
zone  tennis  final  at  West  Side  Sta- 
dum. 

The  bowlegged  Houston  young 
ster,  a  third-day  substitute  after 
America  had  clinched  the  series 
with  a  doubles  victory  yesterday, 
played  with  a  vengeance  when 
he  learned  that  the  other  member 
of  the  Italiar^  team,  Nicola  Pie- 
trangeli,  had  refused  to  play  him. 

In  the  first  of  the  two  super- 
fluous singles  matches,  the  color- 
ful but  temperamental  Pietrangeli 
downed  19-year-old  Mike  Green  of 
Miami,  3-8,  6-4,  6-3,  6-3. 

The  referee,  Don  McNeill, 
came  to  me  and  said  'You  play 
Giammalva,'  "  Pietrangeli  said. 
"I  said  nobody  tells  me  whom  I 
play.  I  said  I  will  play  Green  or 
nobody. 

"I  have  -nothing  against  Giam- 
malva. personally  I  have  never 
played  him  in  my  life.  But  I  didn't 
want  anybody  telling  me  what  I 
had  to  do." 


to  enjoy  his  second  consecutive 
pennant  has  doubted  whether  Sal 
could  get  the  job  done  after  only 
three  days  rest. 

"Maglie's  the  logical  choice," 
said  Alston,  "but  he  may  need 
more  rest.  I  know  he  pitched  that 
no-hitter  last  Tuesday  with  only 
three  days  rest,  but  how  can  you 
be  sure  he  can  come  back  again?" 

Sal.  who  has  been  comng  back 
all  season,  figured  the  stiffness 
might  work  out  of  his  shoulder  in 
a  pre-game  warmup,  and  Alston 
followed  the  lead. 

STARTER  UNCERTAIN 

"I  won't  know  who  starts  for  us 
until  just  before  game  time,"  he 
said. 

"And  if  it  isn't  Maglie,  it  might 
be  Carl  E^kine,  or  Roger  Craig, 
or  maybe  even  Clem  Labine.  I 
just  don't  know." 

>  "It's  Ford,  all  right,"  said  Case 
as  his  Yanks  worked  out  at  the 
stadium  today. 

"Yeah,  yeah,  I  know.  They  say 
those  guys  the  Dodgers  have  a 
picnic  wth  lefthanders  over  there 
in  Brooklyn's  bandbox  ballyard. 
But  I  can't  afford  to  wait  'til  we 
get  over  here,  so  I  gotta  go  with 
my  best  and  my  best  is  Ford." 

WEEK'S  REST 

Ford,  28,  hasn't  worked  since 
last  Wednesday,  when  he  lost  his 
shot  for  a  20th  victory  at  Balti- 
more. That  gives  him  a  full  week's 
rest  going  into  the  opening  game, 
scheduled  for  1  p.  m.  E:DT  'n 
predicted  cool   and  clear  weather. 

Whitey,  however,  hasn't  won 
yet  in  Ebbets  Field,  although  his 
3-1  World  Series  record  includes 
two  of  the  Yankees'  three  vic- 
tories over  the  Brooks  last  year. 
In  his  only  start  at  Ebbets,  Whitey 
lasted  just  one  inning,  giving  three 
hits  and  three  runs  in  the  fourth 
game  of  the  1953  classic. 

Still,  the  bookmakers  have 
junked  the  idea  that  Brooklyn'.* 
righthanded  hitting  power  will 
ruin  Ford  again  as  he  works  in 
the  snadow  of  the  nearby  left  field 
stands  in  Ebbets  Field.  They've 
made  the  Yankees  a  6-5  choice 
in  the  opener,  picking  Labine  for 
Alston.  If  it's  Ford  against  Mag 
lie,  however,  it's  6-5  and  "pick 
'em." 


ESSO  GAS 


mssssmmmr—* 


Reg  29.9  H.T.  32.9 

-  CASH  - 

Whipple's  Esso  Service 

ACROSS  FROM  CHAPEL  HILU   NURSERY— DURHAM   HWY. 

BUY   EARLY— SAVE— NATIONALLY   ADVERTISED 

PERMANENT  ANTIFREEZE   $2.75  GaL 

EXTRA!      EXTRA!      EXTRA! 

Bring  this  ad  and  receive  one  cent  per  gallon  off  on  gas,  and 
five  cents  per  quart  off  en  dil.  This  makes  ESSO  gas  28.9  and 
31.9.  Good  Oct.  2  Thru  Oct.  8,  1956. 


Carolina's  Tar  Heels,  with  two 
straight  one  sided  lickings  under 
ther  belt,  welcomed  back  ace  quar- 
terback Dave  Reed  wth  open  arms 
yesterday  as  they  began  work  for 
Saturday's  game  with  the  surpris- 
ingly powerful  South  Carolina 
Gamecocks  at  Columbia. 

Reed,  who  had  been  counted  on 
by  Coach  Jim  Tatum  for  he3vy 
duty  this  season,  tore  a  ligament  in 
his  knee  on  the  first  day  of  fall 
practice  and  has  been  out  ever 
since.  The  160  pound  junior  from 
Shomokin,  Pa.,  had  originally 
been  pronounced  out  or  the  entire 
season,  but  the  injured  knee  re- 
sponded to  treatment  sooner  than 
had  been  anticipated. 

VALE  AND  VARNUM  AT  HALVES 

Reed  worked  with  a  backfield 
unit  yesterday  that  included  Jim 
Varnum  and  transplanted  fullback 
Wally  Vale  at  the  halves,  and  Don 
Lear  at  fullback.  Vale  was  trans- 
ferred from  fullback  after  the  loss 
to  0^1ahoma  Saturday. 

In  front  of  that  quartet  was  a 
line  composed  of  Buddy  Payne  and 
Larry  Muschamp  at  ends.  Stewart 
Pell  and  Phil  Blazer  af  tackles.  Hap 
Setzer  and  Jim  Jones  at  guards  and 
Ronnie  Koes  at  center.  Halfbacks 
Larry  McMullen  and  Ed  Sutton  al- 
ternated   with   Varnum    and   Vale. 

STAVNITSKI   STILL 
HOSPITALIZED 

Koes  replaced  co-captain  Stavnit- 
ski, who  was  injured  in  the  Sooner 
contest,  at  the  center  slot.  Stavnit- 
ski, who  was  knocked  out  on  the 
second  half  kickoff,  is  still  under 
observation  in  an  Oklahoma  City 
hospital.  Latest  word  received  here 
today  is  that  he  is  resting  com- 
fortably with  no  bones  broken  or 
paralysis,  but  with  his  condition 
'still  not  completely  rletermined.  It 
is  thought  that  he  may  have  suf- 
fered a  concussion. 

The  Tar  Heels  were  continuing 
their  search  for  a  potent  offense 
to  replace  the  one  that  racked  up 


140  yards  rushing  and  passing 
against  the  Sooners.  The  defense 
was  not  much  more  impressive,  al- 
lowing the  Sooners  to  move  for 
430  yards  total  and  giving  up  20 
first  downs. 

GAMECOCKS   ARE   TOUGH 

This  weekend's  tilt  with  South 
Carolina  promises  to  be  another 
rough  and  tumble  affair  for  the 
luckless  Tar  Heels.  In  two  starts 
to  date,  the  Birds  have  split  even, 
whipping  mighty  Duke  7-0  in  the 
season's  opener;  and  losing  to  high- 
ly rated  Miami  by  a  single  touch- 
down last  Friday  night.  By  com- 
parison, the  Tar  Heels  have  been 
dealt  decisive  setbacks  in  both 
their  games.  They  dropped  their 
opener  to  State  by  a  26-6  count, 
and  then  went  down  before  Okla- 
homa, 36-0. 

An  added  attraction  involved  in 
the  contest  with  the  Gamecocks 
is  the  teacher-student  relationship 
that  exists,  or  has  existed,  between 
SC  coach  Warren  Giese  and  Caro- 
lina head  man,  Jim  Tatum.  Last 
year  at  Maryland,  Tatum  was  head 
coach  and  Giese  his  right  hand 
assistant. 


Harriers  Hold 
Trials  Today 

This  afternoon  on  Fetzer  Field, 
Wie  Carolina  varsity  and  fresh- 
man runners  will  hold  their  fin- 
al time  trials  before  the  initial 
meets  of  the  season  against  Vir- 
ginia and  the  Duke  Frosh  respec- 
tively  here   Friday. 

When  asked  whether  or  not 
sophomore  Wayne  Bishop  would 
be  able  to  run  in  the  trials,  var- 
sity Coach  Dale  Ranson  replied, 
"I  think  he  is  going  to  run."  Pre- 
viously Bishop  had  been  hamper- 
ed by  a  knee  injury  which  pre- 
vented   extensive  workouts. 

The  Tar  Heel  head  mentor  also 
said  that  it  was  too  early  in  the 
season  to  predict  the  success  of 
the  team.  He  added.  However,  that 
the  team  should  show  definite 
improvement  over  last   year. 

This  afternoon's  trials  are  sche- 
duled to  start  at  4:30. 


Soccer  Squad 
Aiming  Toward 
Opening  Meet 

In  spite  of  bad  weather  for  the 
past  few  days,  the  Carolina  soc- 
cer team  has  been  going  through 
stiff  workouts  in  preparation  for 
the  season's  opener  with  Lynch- 
burg College  here  Oct.  8. 

Although  little  is  known  of 
Lynchburg,  a  newcomer  to  the 
Tar  Heel  schedule,  UNC  Coach 
Marvin  Allen  expects  a  tough 
match.  Last  year,  Lynchburg  beat 
Roanoke,  a  team  that  was  one  of 
Carolina's    conquerors. 

Coach  Allen  said  yesterday  that 
the  squad  worked  hard  last  week 
in  an  effort  to  strengthen  its 
weak  points.  The  Tar  Heel  head 
mentor  feels  that  the  squad  at 
this  stage  of  the  season  is  better 
than   last   year's. 

Managers  Meet 

The  first  intramural  dormitory 
manager's  meeting  will  be  held 
tonight  at  7:30  p.m.  in  Room  301- 
A  of  Woollen  Gym.  Graduate  and 
Professional  Schools  are  also  in- 
cluded. 


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IT'S  FOR  REAL! 


by  Chester  Field 


IIF  I  HAD  A  MILLION  I 

"Life,"  he  cried,  "ia  so  unfeir 

I  should  have  been  a  millionaire! 
I'd  drive  «.  car,  a  white  Jaguar 

with  leopard  trim  and  built-in  bar. 
Complete  with  blondee  and  red  heads  too, 
A  movie  queen  or  two  would  do  .  . . 
Fm  lazy,  crazy,  debonnaire 
I'd  make  a  perfect  millionaire!" 

"Instead,"  he  sobbed,  "at  twenty-five 
I'll  have  to  work  to  stay  alive!" 


MOKALt  If  you  are  $999,999.00  short  of  being 

a  millionaire,  but  you  like  your  pleasure  big. 
Enjoy  the  big  full  flavor,  the  big  satisfaction 

of  a  Chesterfield.  Packed  more  smoothly  by 
AccvRcqr,  it's  the  smoothest  tasting  smoke  today! 

So,  try  '<Mm.  Smek*  for  rmat  ...  •aiek*  Ch«st«rfl«ldl 


WEAR 


% 


SPORT  COAT  . 

In  Hand  Woven  Irish  Tweeds 
And  CHEVIOTS 


Bright  dear  colors  (lively  as  an  Irish  jig)  proclaim 
fhe  unique  individuality  that  only  skillful  hand-craf- 
ters  can  weave  into  a  bolt  of  Irish  Tweed. 

Large  bellows  pockets,  and  side  vents  give  a 
casual,  country-life  air  to  this  sportsman-like  jacket. 

And  only  long  experience  and  fine  fashion  flair 
can  give  this  Irish  Tweed  Sport  Coat  the  appearance, 
the  feel,  the  character  of  far  costlier  jackets  at  thi« 
popular  price.  Colours:  Olive  ISray,  Brown  Gray, 
■nd  New  Louat. 


Julian' 


e  ^i^o{) 


WEATHER 

Partly  cloudy  and  moderaUly 
warm  with  a  few  scattered  show- 
ark. 


Seri-ns  Dept. 
ehapel  Hill.  M.  C. 
8-31- 


VOL.  LVill,  NO.  11 


COORDINATION 

Editor  praises  bill.  See  editorial, 
page  2. 


Complete  tJP)  Wire  Service 


CHAPEL   HILL,  NORTH   CAROLINA,  WEDNESDAY,  OCTOBER  3,   1956 


Offices   in    Graham    ^emttrial 


FOUR   PAGES   THIS    ISSUE 


Chapel  Hill  Man  Fined  I  Second  Round 

For  Assault  On  Prof 


By  WALLY   KURALT 

A  Chapel  Hill  man  was  fined 
yesterday  for  assaulting  a  Univer- 
sity psychology  instructor. 

Ernest  Taylor,  owner  of  an  Old 
Fraternity  Row  rooming  ho  I  a, 
was  found  guilty  of  assault  and 
battery  in  recorder's  court.  He  was 
fined  $50  and  costs,  and  appealed 
his  case  to  Orange  Superior  Court. 

The  psychology  instructor,  Al 
Krebs,  was  unavailable  for  com- 
ment after  court  yesterday. 

Mrs.  Krebs  gave  this  account  of 
the  incident: 

Duo  to  the  recently  imposed 
parking  ban,  Krebs  could  not  find 
a  parking  place  Friday  morning, 
and  finally  parked  his  car  at  8  a.m. 
in  front  of  Taylor's  rooming 
house.  When  she  and  Krebs  re- 
tmned  at  1  p.m.,  Taylor  walked 
up  to  them  and  pointed  out  they 
had  parked  on  private  property, 
disregarding  his  'No  Parking" 
sisn. 

Krebs  replied  he  thought  it  was 
public  property. 

A  car  had  parked  behind  Krebs 
car,  blocking  the  alley,  and  Tay- 
lor refused  to  tell  whose  car  it 
was.  Krebs  then  left  to  get  Officer 
Graham  Creele,  who  reportedly 
ccould  not  leave  his  post. 

Krebs  called  the  police,  told 
them  his  stor>',  and  was  told  Ihe 
car  would  be  moved,  Mrs.  Krebs 
said. 

Krebs  returned  to  his  car.  Tay- 
lor invited  Krebs  to  call  proper 
authorities  and  ascertain  whether 
the  alley,  was  public  or  private. 
Krebs  said  if  he  found  the  alley 
were  public,  he  intended  to  park 
there  every  day,  Mrs.  Krebs  said/ 

Taylor  hit  Krebs  in  the  mouth. 

Krebs  and  his  wife  then  walked  i 
to   the    police   station    and   swore 
out  a  warrant  for  Taylor's  arrest.  I 


terday,  had  this  to  say: 

"My   car   was    parked   right    up 
out  by  going  forward.  He  (Krebs) 


Set  Tonight 


Freshmen  and  unpledged  upper 
classmen  will  continue  in  the  sec- 


Playmakers  Show  Of  'Anastasia' 
Will  Be  Presented  In  Two  Weeks 


In  Bryant  Speech:,  . 

Faculty  Stiiories,  Preserving 
Acaclei^ic  Freedom  Stressed 


„„»   K   „.  ■ r  J    TT     /.,     L     I  ond  round  of  rush  parties  tonight 

out  b  going  forward.  He  (Krebs) ' 


parked  his  car  within  13  inches  in  i 
back  of  mine,  blocking  me  in,  < 
locked  his  car,  and  had  his  wheels  ! 
turned  so  I  couldn't  push  it  back,  j 
He  had  plenty  of  room  farther ! 
back.  There  was  a  space  of  about  I 
30  feet  behind  him.  His  car  was 
parked,  one  foot  in  front  of  my 
steps." 

A  Coffee  Shop  worker  drove  up, 
said  someone  had  taken  his  park- 
ing place  farther  down  the  alley, 
and  asked  permission  to  park  his 
car  behind  Krebs'  car.  Taylor  said 
it  was  "all  right  with  me;  I'm 
blocked  in  anyway."  The  worker 
could  not  get  his  car  in  the  space, 
so  he  left  it  blocking  the  alley. 

Krebs  came  back  to  his  car  and 
"said  he  didn't  care  about  the  no 
parking  sign,"  said  Taylor.  "Said 
he'd  park  here  any  time  he  want- 
ed. He  was  mad.  He  said,  'I'm 
going  to  park  it  here  Saturday  and 
six  days  next  week.'  " 

Both  Taylor's  and  Krebs"  cars 
were  then  blocked  in  by  the  third 
automobile. 

"1  told  him  I  was  blocked  in  for 
four  hours,  and  I  didn't  care  if 
he  stayed  there  until  tomorrow 
morning.  Then  he  went  to  get  the 
police." 

"I  told  the  police  whose  car  it 
was,  but  I  wouldn't  tell  him."  Tay- 
lor said.  "He  was  real  mad." 

"My  deed  calls  for  a  19  foot 
drive.  That  alley  is  the  only  ac- 
cess to  my  place. 

Taylor  said  he  could,  but  is  not 
going  to  pay  the  $50  and  costs.  He 
has  appealed  to  Superior  Court 
plans  to  hire  a  lawyer,  swear  oul 
a  warrant  against  Krebs  for  tres- 
passing and  leave  it  up  to  the  law- 
yer. 

"I'm  "hot  through  fighting."  said 


from  7  to  9:30. 

Parties  will  continue  tomorrow 
night  and  Friday  is  scheduled  as 
shake-up  day. 

Formal  bids  will  go  out  Monday 

from  9  a.m.  to  1  p.m.  in  Gerrard 

!  Hall,  at  which  time  men  pledging 

I  will    sign    pledge    cards    and    pay 

i  fees. 

Rushing  began  Sunday  afternoon 
and  Monday,  when  men  were  re- 
quired to  visit  all  fraternity  hous- 
es from  which  they  had  received 
invitations. 

In  the  second  round  of  parties, 
which  continues .  tonight,  men  arc 
permitted  to  visit  houses  of  their 
preference. 

Assl.  to  the  Dean  of  Student  Af- 
fairs Ray  Jefferies  advises  rushees. 
"Just  be  yourself."  I 


Taylor,  reached  at  his  home  yes-  j  Taylor. 


Alumni  Giving  Committee 
Chairmen  Meet  Here  Tomorrow 


Individual  chairmen  from  57 
towns  and  cities  throughout  North 
Carolina  will  meet  here  tomorrow 
at  noon  in  the  Caroiiaa  Inn  with 
State  Chairman  William  H.  Ruf- 
fin  of  Durham  to  map  out  final 
plans  for  the  advance  gifts  phase 
of  the  Alumni  Annual  Giving  pro- 
gram this  year. 

The  advance  gifts  campaign  will 
get  imder  way  on  Oct.  15  and  will 
continue   through   Nov.   30. 

Ruffln  has  appointed  seven  vice- 
chairmen  to  assist  him.  These 
chairmen  are  Marion  R.  Cowper, 
Kinston,  District  I;  R.  D.  Lee  Co- 
vington, Raleigh,  Dictrict  II; 
Franklin  S.  Clark,  Fayetteville, 
District  III;  James  W.  Poole, 
Greensboro,  District  IV;  Esley  O. 
Anderson  Jr.,  Charlotte,  District 
V;  Gerald  Cowan,  Asheville,  Dis- 
trict VI;  and  William  E.  Stevens, 
Jr.,  Lenoir,  District  VII. 

On  June  30  Alumni  Annual 
Giving  wound  up  its  fourth  year 
at  the  University.  A  total  of  3,773 
alumni  contributed  $57,621.89  for 
an  average  gift  of  $15.26. 

The  Alumni  Annual  Giving 
Council  held  its  annual  fall  meet- 
ing here  on  Sept.  30  and  made 
grants  to  the  University  in  such 
vital  areas  as  faculty  research, 
faculty  travel,  faculty  retirement, 
Chancellor's  Emergency  Fund, 
student  welfare,  etc.  Archie  K. 
Davis  of  Winston-Salem,  chairman 
of  the  Alumni  Annual  Giving 
Council  presided  over  this  meet- 
ing. 

The  towns  and  cities  in  the  state 
in  which  the  advance  gifts  solici- 


tation will  be  conducted  and  the 
districts  in  which  they  are  located 
are  as   follows: 

District  I:  Elizabeth  City,  Green- 
ville,   Kinston,    New    Bern,    Rocky     .  ,  ,,„.  ,,      .... 
„     \    ,„    .          ,„    ,.     /      „,..     strains  of    Charmaine,     which  has 

Mount,  Tarboro,  Washington,  Wil-   ^^^^  .     .     .  .    ..  „„„  „ 

'      „  .     ^ '  t  come  to  be  his  theme  song, 

son,  and  Edenton. 

District     II:     Raleigh, 


Albanese 
To  Open 
SEC  Card 

Licia  Albanese,  Metropolitan 
Opera-soprano,  will  be  the  first  of 
five  top  performers  who  are  to  ap- 
pear on  the  student  entertainment 
program  this  year,  beginning  Nov. 
1. 

Other  artists  who  will  perform 
for  Carolina  students  during  the 
coming  vear  include  Mantovani, 
master  of  the  cascading  strings; 
the  General  Platoff  Don  Cossack 
Chorus,  Actor  Henry  Hull  and 
Jose  Limon  and  Dance  Company. 

Students  are  admitted  free  to 
these  SEC  programs  on  prefenta- 
tion  of  ID  cards. 

Mantovani  and.  hjj  orcliestra  ttl 
45,  will  feature  his  "New  Music" 
on  Dec.  6.  This  Venetian-born 
Londoner,  who  began  the  era  of 
new  music  with  his  first  album 
for  London  Records.  "Waltzing 
With  Mantovani,"  has  currently 
made  many  records  including 
"Cara  Mia,"  which  was  written  for 
David  Whitfield. 

A  versatile  concert  figure,  Man- 
tovani has  music  for  everybody,  be 
it  the  300-year-old  "Greensleeves," 
a  serenade  by  Tschaikowsky,  or  the 


The  Carolina  Playmakers  wil 
open  their  current  theater  seasoi» 
two  weks  from  tonight,  with  five 
performances  of  "Anastasia",  re 
cent  Broadway  success  about  exil 
ed  Russian  nobility,  at  the  Play 
makers  Theatre,  UNC  campus. 

Adapted  from  the  French  o. 
Maicelle  Maurette  by  Guy  Bolton 
the  story  is  set  in  Berlin  early  in 
1926.  The  action  is  based  on  a 
rumor  that  one  of  the  Czar's  chy- 
dren,  Princess  Anastasia.  then  17, 
escaped  the  massacre  of  the  Roy- 
al family  by  the  Bolshevists  in 
1918  and   fled,  into  Geimany. 

Prince  Bounine,  exiled  Russian 
nobleman,  finds  a  destitute  girl,  i 
Anya,  and  builds  up  the  story  that 
she  is  t'he  Princess  Anastasia  who, 
because  of  waunds  and  privations, 
has  lost  her  memory.  The  attempt 
to  convince  those  who  knew  the 
princess  reveals  a  series  of  sur- 
prises about   the  unusual  Anya.      j 

Rusti  Rothrock,  Aniston;  Ala., 
is  cast  in  the  title  role.  Mrs.  Roth- 
rock, wife  of  a  UNC  graduate 
a.^sistant.  has  acted  with  several 
community  theatres,  at  Cherokee 
in  "Unto  These  Hills"  and  at  the 
University  of  Arkansas.  She  is  how 
a  speech  therapist  for  Durham 
County. 

Marion  Fitz-Simons,  Chapel  Hill, 
portrays  the  formidable  Dowager 
Empress,  grandmother  of  Anas- 
tasia, wiho  presents  t'lc  strongest 
challengs  to  the  plan  of  Bounine. 
Mrs.  Fritz-Simons,  wife  of  a  UNC 
professor,  has  appeared  in  a  long 
list  of  P'lymaker  productions,  in- 
cluding "Macbeth",  "Medea",  "Ar- 
senic and  Old  Lace",  "Dark  of  the 
Moon',  "Lysistrata".  and  last  year's 
"Blood  Wedding". 

Morgan  Jackson,  freshman  from 
Charlotte,  plays  Prince  Bounine. 
A  Korean  War  veteran,  Jackson 
has  acted  with  fihe  Paris  Ameri- 1 
can  Hiftn!  <Jr©tfp  Iff  TStts 
Weisbaden  Theatre  Guild  in  Ger- 
many, The  University  of  Alabama 
Theatre,  and   "Unto  These  Hills". 

Joe  Whiteaker,  Pine  Bluff.  Ark., 
appears  as  Prince  Paul,  childhood 
sweetheart  of  Anastasia.  A  Navy 
veteran,  Mr.  Whiteaker  was  active 
with  the  University  Theatre  at  iH" 
U.  of  Arkansas,  where  he  received 


I     Provision  of  "adequate"  facu!t>  1  the  UNC  Faculty  Club 

!  salaries,  and  preservation  of  aca- 
demic freedom  were  two  points 
stressed  by  Victor  S.  Bryant  in  an 
address  yesterday  afternoon  before 


Geology  Dept. 
Seeks  Facts 
On  Earthquake 


The  UNC  Dept.  of  Geology  has 
requested  that  any  persons  who 
were  in  the  region  of  eastern  Ten- 
nessee  and  western  North  Caro-  ■ 
Una  during  the  earthquake  shocks 
which  occurred  Sept.  7  and  felt 
the  resulting  tremors  contact  the 
UNC  Dept:  of  Geology  and  Geog- 
raphy or  Gerald  R.  MacCartliy, 
professor  ol  Geology  and  Geophy- 
sics at  UNC. 

MacCarlhy  states  that  the  Dept. 
of  Geology  wishes  to  know  the 
exact  locations  at  which  the  quake 
was  felt,  and  additional  informa- 
tion as  to  the  number  of  shocks 
felt  and  the  sensations  produced. 

The  shocks  were  recorded  on 
the  seismograph  at  UNC,  Mac- 
Carlhy says,  but .  geologists  have 
been  unable  so  far  to  pin  down 
the  exact  location  of  the  quake. 
The  shocks  are  known  to  hlave 
been  fcli  throughout  much  of  wes- 
tern North  Carolina  and  adjacent 
areas,  he  states. 


j  Bryant,  a  member  of  the  Execu- 
'■  tive  Committee  of  the  Board  of 
i  Trustees,  discussed  'The  Responsi- 
I  bililies  of  Trustees  of  a  State  Uct- 
i  versify,"  emphasizing  that  he  was 
presenting  "my  individual  views" 
!  and  was  not  authorized  to  speak 
:  "either  for  the  Board  or  any  group 
I  of  Trustees." 

1  He  outlined  the  trustee's  respon- 
i  sibilities  to  "four  distinct  entities: 
i  thi  state,  the  University  admin- 
i  istration.  the  faculty,  and  the  stu- 
i  dent  body." 


Maintaining  an  adequate  salary 
schedule  for  both  faculty  and  ad- 
I  ministrative  officers  is  "peculiarly 
the  responsibility  of  the  trustee," 
Bryant  said.  "This  schedule  should 
be  one  which  will  enaole  the  con- 
tinual recruitment  of  an  outstand- 
ing faculty,  and  at  tiie  same  time 
enable  the  University  to  retain  its 
present  distingushed   faculty. 

"We    must    expect    our    faculty 
i  members   to   receive   offers    to    go 
;  elsewhere,  but  we  should  be  pre- 
I  pared  through  financial  and  other 
means  to  fight  to  hold  them."  Bry- 
ant said. 

He  expressed  gratitude  to  those 
faculty  members  who  have  re- 
ceived such  offers  but  "who  have 
chosen  to  cast  your  future  lot 
here  with  fhis  University." 


.i,.OKoMiM  jMcKaON,  LEFT.  AND  MRS.  RUSTI  ROTHROCK 

.  . .  //;  l*hfstn<ihi')s'  Pro(ht(  llott 


an  acting  award    last  spring.. 

The  Rev.  W.  Robert  Insko.  Chap- 
Iain  to  Epi.scopal  students  at  UNC, 
takes  the  role  o'.  Dr.  Scrensky.  who 
knows  the  pretender.  .\nya.  in  an- 
other identity  trom  that  of  a  prin- 
ces.s. 

Others  in  the  cast  are:  Russell 
^jj^!4lnk»  Jamaica.  N.  Y.,  as  Chernov: 
Gene  Duke.  Oxford.  ,  a.s  Potriivin; 
Peter  O'SulIivan.  Valhalla.  N.  Y., 
as  Counsellor  Drivinitz;  Betty  Jin- 
nette.  Goldsboro,  as  the  Charwo- 
man; Hope  Sparger,  Scarsdale.  N. 
Y.,  as  Varya:  Frank  Rinaldi,  Water 
bury.  Conn.,  as  Sergei:  John  Sned- 
en,  Tenafly.  N.  J.,  as  the  Sleigh 
Driver;  and  Eve  Janzan.  of  Chapel 
Hill,  as  Baroness  Livenbaum.  i 


"Anastasia"  is  under  the  direc- 
tion of  Samuel  Selden,  Chairman 
of  the  UNC  Department  of  Dra- 
matic Art.  Sta-^e  Manager  is  Dick 
Newdick.  Augusta,  Maine,  and  the 
set  is  designed  by  Tommy  Rezzuto, 
Ashville,  Technical  Director  for 
thePlaxTnakcrs.       - 

Oniy  50  specially-priced  season 
ticket  books  arc  left,  at  a  saving 
of  fifty-percent,  and  can  be  ob- 
tained at  214  Abernethy  Hall,  Led- 
bellrr-Pickard's,  or  Bo.\  1050.  Rcgu 
liir  reserved  scat  tickets  will  be 
available  for  each  production  ten 
days  in  advance  for  season  ticket 
holders,  a  week  in  advance  for  the 
general  public.  I 


English  Dept. 
Adds  Stoffers 


.  OBLIGATION 

I  However,  Bryant  said,  "I  cannot 
.;  feel  that  the  state  has  any  right  to 
profit  financial iy  from  such  loyai- 
I  ty  on  your  part.  The  University  is 
j  under  a  great  obligation  to  you.' 


The     speaker,    who     heads     the 

:  Trustees'     committee     which     will 

Three  new  instructors  have  been  j  recommend  on  the  appointment  of 

added  to  the  Dept.  of  English,  Dr.  j  a    new    UNC    president,    predicted 

Dougald  MacMillan,  chairman,  an-  ,    a     glorious     future     immediately 

aounced  recently.  \  ahead    for    this    University"     and 

Beginning    new    teaching    duties    asked     the     facuJiy     members     to 

with  the  fall  semester  Were  Rich- (    hold  on  a  little  longer." 


song. 
COSSACK  CHORUS 

Also    internationally    famous    is 

the    Gen.     Platoff     Don     Cossack 

Chorus,  directed  by  Nicholas  Kos- 

trukoff,  appearing  here  in  its  18th 

boro,    Clinton,    Jacksonville,    Lau-   transccontinental  tour  on  Feb.  12, 


Durham, 
Chapel  Hill,  Henderson, '  Oxford, 
Roxboro,  and  Sanford. 

District  III:  Fayetteville,  Golds- 


Graham  Portrait  Likely 
Will  Stay  In  Morehead 


rinburg,  Lumberton,  Southern 
Pines,  Pinehurst,  Whiteville,  and 
Wilmington. 

District  IV:  Greensboro,  Win- 
ston-Salem, High  Point,  Burling- 
ton, Reidsville,  Mt.  Airy,  Leaks- 
ville,   Asheboro,   and  Liberty. 

Distri<n  V:  Charlotte,  Gastonia, 
Concord,  Kannapolis,  Belmont, 
Shelby,  Rockingham,  Hamlet  and 
Albemarle. 

District  VI:  Asheville,  Brevard, 
Canton,  Hendersonville,  Marion, 
and  Waynesville. 

District  VII:  Hickory,  Lenoir, 
Lexington,  Morganton,  Salisbury, 
Statesville,    and   Thomasville. 


Cardboard 
Membership 
Has  Quota 


The  UNC  Cardboard  has  an- 
nounced that  their  quota  of  106 
members  has  been  accepted  for  the 
1956-57  season. 


INFIRMARY 


Thosa  in  tht  irtflrmary  yaster- 
c!ay  included: 

Mistas  Evelyn  Baatrlea  Da 
Hart.  Mary  Danca,  Jana  Elixa- 
bath  Painter,  Ann  Haney,  Linda 
Paul,  Sua  Giltiam,  Julia  Mart- 
anna  Black,  and  Marvin  Hariess, 
Donald  Kamper,  John  Cerbatt, 
Hugh  Prica,  Clayton  Smith, 
Crais  White,  Millar  Smith,  Al- 
vin  Smith,  Earl  Covington,  Enno 
Rarkandorf  and  Norman  Smith. 


A  successful  campaign  made  it 
possible  for  old  and  new  students 
to  become  acquainted  with  ths  or- 
ganization, according  to  President 
Snyder  Pate. 

President  Pate  said,  "We  would 
like  to  take  this  opportunity  to 
thank  everyone  who  helped  make 
this  campaign  so  effective. 

'Stunts  at  the  State-UNC  game 
were  a  tremendous  success.  Of 
course,  as  usual,  a  few  cards  of 
the  wrong  color  appeared,  but  pos-; 
sibly  ,ths  can  be  corrected  in  fu- 
ture games.  The  Cardboard  wishes 
to  congratulate  the  student  body 
for  such  a  fine  performance." 


1957. 

The  booming  Cossacks  have  per- 
formed in  2,100  concerts  in  the 
USA  and  appeared  in  65  countries 
on  six  continents.  The  Chorus  is 
composed  of  the  best  vocal  and 
dancing  talent  of  the  White  Rus- 
sian emigres,  who  have  fought 
communism  in  Russia. 

Henry  Hull,  noted  for  his   per- 
formance as  Mark  Twain,  will  be 
presented    by    the   SEC   on    March 
26,  1957.  Through  his  four  decades 
in  the  theatre  he  has  also  distin- 
guished  himself  in  such   roles   as 
Malvolio  in  "Twelfth  Night."  Jest- 
}  er  Leester  in  "Tobacco  Road,"  and 
I  Edgar   Allen   Poe   in    "Plumes   in 
j  the  Dust,"  along  with  such  plays 
I  ds    "Mr.   Roberts,"     "The   Trail   of 
Joan  of  Arc,"   and   many   others. 
He  has  also  plaved  in  "Great  Ex 
pectations."     "Objective     BUrma," 
"Lifeboat."  and  many  other  mov- 
ies. 

Jose  Limon  and  Dance  Company 
will  perform  on  April  11,  1957.  Li- 
mon and  his  dancers  recently 
swept  South  America,  not  with 
naliye  rhvthms.  but  with  modern 
dance  selections. 

The  members  of  the  SEC  are; 
John  Kerr,  chairman,  Joel  Carter. 
Don  Freeman,  Georee  Hamilton. 
Kai  .lereenson,  Olin  Mouzon,  J'lm- 
mv  Wallace,  and  Misses  Martha 
Barber  and  Shiralee  and  Barbaree 
Prestwood. 


Rushees 

Ed  Hudgint,  presidant  of  the 
IPC,  taid  last  night  that  no  fra- 
farnity  had  bean  eonvictad  of 
dirty  rushing,  and  that  no  fra- 
iirnltf  hi*  ^•n  barrad  from 
rushing  or  pMdging,  as  has  bean 
rUmcfrM. 


By  CLARKE  JONES 

The  portrait  of  Dr.  Frank  Gra- 
ham is  still  in  the  Morehead  Build- 
ing faculty  lounge. 

And  the  painting  of  the  former 
University  president  is  likely  to 
remain  in  its  "temporary"  home 
for  some  time,  according  to  an  in- 
formed South  Building  source. 

The  reason  for  its  staying  there 
for  awhile,  said  the  source,  k  be- 
cause some  persons  have  been  so 
up  in  the  air  as  to  where  it  should 
be  hung  permanently. 

Chancellor  Robert  B.  Hou.se,  who 
will  determine  its  permanent  site, 
has  apparently  for  that  reason  de- 
cided to  let  things  settle  down  be- 
fore deciding  where  to  put  it. 
CONTROVERSY 

The  storv  behind  the  controversy 
goes  like  this: 

Last  spring,  toward  the  end  of 
the  school  year,  the  portrait  was 
unveiled  in  Hill  Hall,  then  moved 
10  the  Morehead  Building  faculty 
lounge. 

P*rotests  immediately  followed 
ihis  action.  Many  persons  thought 
•iince  Dr.  Graham  was  such  a  good 
friend  of  the  students  while  he 
was  here  it  should  be  placed  in 
Graham  Memoriral  where  they 
could  see  it  everyday.  The  faculty 
lounge  was  rarely  visited  by  stu- 
dents, some  said. 

Members  of  the  committee,  how- 
ever, seemed  a  little  doubtful 
about  putting  it  in  Graham  Me- 
morial— named  for  Dr.  Edward 
Kidder  Graham,  another  former 
Universi.ty  president.  It  would  be 
a  slight  upon 
they  felt. 

And  that's  how  it  stands  today. 
The   South    Building   source,    how- 
ever, said    it   will   be   moved,  that 
it  is  there  only  temporarily. 
FIRST  STEPS 

The  fir.st  steps  toward  obtaining 
a  portrait  of  Dr.  Frank  Graham 
were  taken  by  University  students 
in  1949,  the  year  he  resigned  the 
presidency   to  accept  appointment 


to  the  U.  S.  Senate. 

Many  students  contributed  small 
amounts    but    they    did    liot    raise 
enough  to  obtain  the  type  painting 
flesired.    Accordingly,    at    the    re- ' 
quest  of  some  of  the  students,   a 
committee   was   organized   in    LQ.'i.5 , 
to      receive      contributions      from 
friends  of  Graham.   The  committee 
included  such  persons  as  Dean  of 
Student  .\ffairs  Fred  Weaver.  State - 
Board  of  Higher  Education  Chair- 
man  D.    Hiden   Ramsay   and  John  I 
Sanders,  Raleigh  lawyer.  I 


Atomic  Energy 

Exhibit  Set 

At  Planetarium 


A  modern  age  exhibit,  'The 
Summary  of  Atomic  Energy," 
which  has  been  prepared  by  the 
American  Museum  of  Atomic  E.n- 
ergy  at  Oak  Ridge,  Tenn,  opened 
yesterd^v  at  the  Morehead  Plane- 
tarium. 

Free  to  the  public,  the  exhibit 
will  be  on  display  througi  Oct. 
12  only  in  the  North  Science  Ex- 
hibit  room   of  the   Planetarium. 

"The  Summary  of  Atomic  Ener- 
gy" has  been  developed  to  famili- 
arize the  average  person  with  the 
basic  principles  and  uses  of  atom- 
ic energy.  It  includes  stale  mod- 
els of  the  Oak  Ridge  atomic  and 
uranium  reactors  and   a  model  of 


mm 

SEEN 


^\ 


Squirrel  sitting  on  lann  ivatcfv- 
tiro  men  on  Graham  Memonal 
roof. 

*         *         * 

Dog  .sleeping  through  French 
3   tecttirc — didn't  learn  a   thing.' 


ard  P.  Dotithit,  Mrs.  fYances  Gray 
Palton,  and  Derek  Roper. 

Roper  received  his  A.B.  degree 
from  the  University  of  Durhani, 
England,  and  is  a  candidate  for 
the  B.Litt.  degree  from  Oxford. 

Mrs.  Patton,  who  is  teaching  two 
sections   of  Freshman   English,   is 
the  author  of  the  best-selling  nov- , 
el,    "Good    Morning,    Miss    Dove,'" 
and  a  resident  of  Durham. 

Douthit  comes  to  UNC  from 
Louisiana  State  University,  where 
he  also  received  his  M.A.  Degree. 
He  is  expecting  to  receive  his 
Ph.D.  Degree  from  LSU  soon. 

Dr.  MacMillan  also  said  that 
there  are  three  new  graduate 
teaching  fellows  on  the  staff  of 
the  English  Dept.  They  are  Daniel 
J.  Gore  of  Fayetteville,  Barbara 
Donnell  of  Honolulu,  Hawaii  and 
H.  Ray  McKnight  of  Charleston. 
W.  Va.  ! 


Student  Leaders  Air 
Problems  Facing  UNC 


the  latter  Graham,  i  ^"  ^^""^'^  P^'^^r  P'an»  as  well  as 
I  panels  explaining  the  parts,  en 
ergy  and  differencs  of  atoms,  neu- 
trons used  as  bullets,  uranium  and 
thorium,  production  of  radioiso- 
topes and  their  uses  in  industry, 
agricultore  and  medicine. 

The  exhibit  may  be  viewed  daily 
from  2  to  5  p.m.  and  from  7:30 
to  10  p.m.,  Saturdays  from  10  a.m. 
to  10  p.m.,  and  Sundays  from  1 
to  10  p.m. 


Leaders  of  student  government 
will  talk  with  their  South  Build- 
ing counterparts  about  four  cam- 
pus problems. 

The  problems,  agreed  at  a  meet- 
ing  yesterday,   are: 

1.  The  parking  situation,  as  it 
confr.ints  members  of  the  Inter- 
f'-aternity    Council. 

2.  Tlie  need  for  a  student  group 
to    coordinate    campus    activities. 

3.  CompuI<^'ory  physical  educa- 
tion  for  veterans. 

4.  Allocation  of  men's  dormitory 
vending    machine   profits. 

The  meeting  yesterday  was  at- 
tended by  members  of  the  Stu- , 
dent  Government  Executive  Coun-  j 
cil,  headed  by  student  body  ! 
President  Bnb  Young.  The  coun- 1 
cil  will  meet  Friday  with  mem-  j 
bers  of  the  administration's  Coun- 1 
cil    on    Student    Affairs.  1 

President  Young  said  the  pur-  | 
pose  of  the  joint  meeting  "is  to  j 
familiarize  the  student  affairs  i 
council  \jith  what  we  feel  are  the  i 

Pi  Lambs  Add  Members 

Pi  Lambda  Phi  has  added  three 
new  members  to  their  fraternity. 
Dick  Oresman  of  Providence,  R. 
1.,  Stanley  Greenspon  of  Raleigh, 
and  Harvey  Salz  of  Brooklvn.  N. 
Y.  became  brothers  last  week 


problems     that     confront    student 

avemment." 

Members  of  the  Student  Gov-  > 
?rnment  Executive  Council,  in  ad- 
dition to  Young,  are  Luther  Hod- 
ges Jr.,  Student  Council;  Tom 
Lambeth,  GMAB;  Ed  Hudgins,  In- 
terfraternity  Council;  Fred  Pow- 
ledge,  The  Daily  Tar  Heel;  Son- 
ny Hallford,  Interdormitory  Coun- 
cil; Miss  Peggy  Funk,  Women's 
Residence   Council; 

John    Bilich,    Monogram    Club;  . 
Jim     Bynum,     head     cheerleader;  , 
Sam  Wells,  attorney  general;  Tom  ; 
Johnson,   Yacketv  Yack;  Miss   Pat 
McQueen,  V*^omen's  Council; 

Jim  Exum,  Men's  Council;  Ger- 
ald Mayo,  YMCA;  Stan  Shaw,  Na- 
tional Student  Assn.;  Sonny  Ev- 
ans, student  government  vice 
president;  Miss  Jackie  Aldridge,  ', 
student  government  secretary; 
Miss  Sally  Price,  Panhellenic 
Council,  and  Miss  Elaine  Burns, 
Independent    Women's    Council. 

Members  of  the  administration'.-* 
Council    on    Student    Affairs    are:  I 

Samuel  Magill,  student  activi  ^ 
ties;  J.  M.  Galloway,  placement:  i 
Dr.  E.  McC;.  Hedgpeth,  Univers-  i 
ity  physicianj  E.  S.  Lanier,  cen-  ^ 
tral  records  and  student  aid;  Miss 
Katherine  Carmichael,  dean  of ' 
women;  W.  D.  Perry,  testing  serv-  ( 
ice,  and  J.  E.  Wadsworth,  hous-  j 
ing.       ,  ...  ,  .       .  1 


i  Referring  to  important  Univer- 
.sity  positions  now  filled  on  an  act- 
ing basis.  Bryant  said.  "These  will 
be  filled,  and  I  believe  filled  well, 
with  all  reasonable  dispatch.  What 
might  have  seemed  stumbing 
blocks  will  be  stepping  stones  to 
belter  days  ahead. 

ACADEMIC  FREEDOM 

Three  principles  of  academic 
freedom  summarized  by  Br>'ant 
were:  ' 

1.  Full  freedom  in  research,  and 
the  right  to  publish  the  results  of 
his  research. 

2.  Absolute  freedom  in  teaching 
those  subjects  which  a  faculty 
memoer  has  been  assigned  to 
teach,  assuming  that  the  instruc- 
tion is  "of  a  scholarly  nature,  and 
compatible  with  the  dignity  of  the 
profession." 

3.  The  right  to  formulate  and 
express    his   opinions    outside    the 

(See  BRYANT,  Page  3) 

Film  Series 
Starts  Thurs. 

The  first  of  the  film  series  put 
on  by  the  Film  Committee  of  Gra- 
ham Memorial  Activities  Board, 
"Tsbacco  Road.'  will  be  presented 
Thursday. 

To  be  shown  in  Carroll  Hall, 
the  film  series  will  be  seen  on 
Thursdays  at  8  p.m. 

The  rest  of  the  films  this  se- 
mester are:  "Alexander  Nevsky" 
(Russian).  Oct.  16:  "The  Belles 
of  St.  Trinians"  (English),  Nov. 
1;  "M"  (German),  Nov.  15; 
"Flamenco"  (Spanish).  Nov.  29; 
"Lifeboat"  (American).  Dec.  13; 
"Incorrigible"  (Swedish).  Jan. 
10:  ".-Arsenic  and  Old  Lace"  (Am- 
erican). Jan.   17. 

Selected  short  subjects  will  be 
shown  with  most  of  the  films  in 
the  series. 


GM  SLATE 


Activities  scheduled  for  Gra- 
ham Memorial  today  include: 

Pan  Hellenic  Post  Office,  8:30- 
12:30  p.m.,  Roland  Parker  1,  2, 
3;  Jehovah's  Witnesses,  S-9:30 
p.m.,  Roland  Parker  1;  Graduate 
History  Club  reception,  4-^  p.m.. 
Rendezvous  Room;  Pan  Hellenic 
Committee,  9:30-11:00  a.m.,  Rth 
land  Parker  3. 


PACt  TWO 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEft 


WEDNESDAY,  OCTOBER  3,  1»56 


WEDNESDAY 


There's  A  Place  For  Court    you  Said  it: 


In  Chariging  The  Rule-Book       y^^  Qp^^^  l^ff^^  Jq  YeterOnS 

".  .  .  (he  meiniitiv  of  a  coti.slihitioH  is  lixed  xchcn  it  is  irriften  m 


the  meaning  of  a  constitution  is  fixed  when  it  is  iryitten 
and  is  not  difU'rcnl  at  ati\  siihseqiwut  tune  ii'hen  a  (ourt  has  occasion 
to  p(Lss  on  //.■— North  Cinolina  Sen.  Sam  ).  Krxin  Jr..  speaking  to 
tlie  state  Bottlers'  Assn. 


II  what  Sen.  Kr\in  said  is  tiue. 
the  I'nited  States  of  America  would 
be  dull,  dissipated  and  deiaved. 

The  Constitution  ot  the  Tnited 
States  has  been  in  full  force  and  ef- 
fect since  17S9.  and  it  has  chanoed 
tremendously  since  then. 

It  has  been  changed,  in  a  few 
cases,  by  the  will  of  the  people,  it 
has  been  chaiioed.  temporarily,  by 
Presidents.  And  it  has  been  changed 
by  U>f  Supreme  Court. 

It  was  meant  to  be  that  wa'N.  It 
is  what  professors  cjf  political 
science  and  authors  of  b(K>ks  on 
the  subject  call  'the  dynamic  Con- 
stitution.' It  is  responsible  for  the 
dvn^mic    .\merita  we  live   in. 

Amerii  a  could  not  move  forward 
if  she  weie  bound  solidlv  to  a  set 


of  rules  adopted  in  i7<^ci-  Those 
rules  ha\e  to  be  changed  as  .\meri- 
ca  changes. 

Changinii  the  rules  bv  amend- 
tnent  is  a  good  prcxess.  but  it  takes 
many  vears.  Changnig  the  rules 
bv  interpretation— as  the  Supreme 
Court  has  dor.c — is  a  risky  f)tisi- 
ness,  because  Supreme  Courts  are 
not  geneni'Ilv  known  as  the  most 
judicious  of  l)odies.  But  the  Su- 
jneme  Court  was  correct  in  its  in- 
terj)retation  this  time.  The  Daily 
Tar   Heel    feels. 

\Vithout  judicial  inierpretalion 
of  the  Constitution,  the  riiitetl 
States  of  America  still  would  l)e  li\  - 
ing  in  the  iHtli  century.  Senator 
Sam  knows  th.tt,  loo. 


I  would,  like  to  borrow  a  few 

minutes  of  your  time  now,  with 

the  hope  that  you  can  be  repaid 

in  hours,  days,  and  indeed  years. 

I   would  like  to  talk  first  about 
unity. 

Unity,  as  defined  by  Webster, 
is  the  state  of  being  one  in  con- 
cord, harmony,  conjunction, 
agreement  and  accord.  Unity  is 
essential  to  power:  power,  in 
some  degree  is  the  key  to  action 
and  specifically  change.  And 
change  brings  to  light  the  second 
and  main  poiQt  I  want  to  talk 
about. 


Perhaps  the  news  hasn't 
reached  you  yet,  but  in  room  315 
of  South  Building  there  is  a  pe- 
tition addressed  to  Dr.  Oliver 
Cornwell.  chairrpan  of  the  physi- 
cal education  department,  ask- 
ing that  the  physical  education 
requirements  for  us  veterans  be 
removed.  As  you  know,  the  pres- 
ent requirement  is  one  year. 

Now.  you  know  about  the  bill. 
But  what  are  you  going  to  do 
about  it?  From  the  159  signatures 
that  have  been  appended  tj  the 
petition  since  its  birth  on  Sep- 
tember 27.  I  think  it  is  destined 
for  'file  thirteen".  That's  a  great 


show  for  a  bill  that  has  the  po- 
tential backing  of  1.836  vets, 
representing  26  per  cent  of  the 
entire  enrollment  of  the  uni- 
'versity. 

How  about  you,  Joe?  Wouldn't 
you  like  to  spend  more  time  out 
in  the  village  with  Ann.  Joe,  Jr., 
and  little  Sue?  Wouldn't  it  be 
wonderful  to  get  home  in  time 
for  lunch  every  da^v?  You  might 
even  break  Joe,  Jr.  from  holding 
his  fork  like  a  club. 

And  you.  Bob,  you've  been 
griping  more  than  anyone  else. 
You  have  to  work  part-time  to 
supplement    the    old    $110,    and 


'Well,  Nobody  Can  Say  I'm  Not  Keeping  On  A  High  Level' 


Let's  Get  Coordinated 


At  their  next  meeting  student 
legislators  u  ill  ha\e  a  c  hance  tcj  do 
a  great  deal  for  the  liTiversity. 

riuv  will  \()te  on  a  bill  propos- 
ing a  "student  committee  for  the 
purpose  ol  coordinating  e\ents  on 
the  campus.  "  If  passed,  the  bill  will 
set  up  aTive-member  conmiittce  to 
'coordinate  and  assist  in  the 
sc  heduling  of  all  important  campus 
events  and  to  form  a  master  .sched- 
ide  t(j  prevent  time  conflicts  of 
these  events.' 

If  the  committee  is  set  up,  it 
can  do  much  to  prevent  Jiiixups 
such  as  last  week's,  when  Chanel 
Hill  was  the  scene  of  half-dozen 
meetings,  all  important  and  all  (jf 
innnense  interest  to  the  students. 
The  committee  would  ask  camp- 
us organizations  to  ^submit  pro- 
posed schedules  of  events.  Once 
comjMlecl.  these  events  would  be 
fitted  into  a  master  schedule.  The 
Jiiasie;  schedule  could  be  checked 
by  other  organf/ations.  when  plan- 
ning other  events. 

The  result,  it  the  (omviinre 
would  do  i:*^  v:r  \  uel'.  ^\orld  be 
less  coll.'  and  a  smoother  sthed- 
u!e  1'^  r\tracunicular  events  for 
tlie  sludeiUS. 


It  is  a  go<»d  bill,  and  the  Studeiu 
l.egisiatiue  shoidd  [)ass  if. 

Big  Brother 
Forgot  About 
Adiai's  Talk 

Raleigh  s  News,  and  Observer, 
which  covets  Kastern  North  C'ar- 
olina  like  Kerr  Scotts  black-top- 
ped  roads,   forgcjt   the  other  clay. 

It  was  the  day  after  .\dlai  Stev- 
enson, speaking  at  Little  Rock. 
Ark.,  asked  for  "law  abiding"  ac- 
ceptance of  the  Supieme  Court  s 
decision  abolishing  segregation  in 
the  public  schools. 

Newspapers  all  over  the  country 
headlined  Steven.sons  statement  the 
next  day.  But  iu  The  N&O:  Narv 
a  word — or  at  least  there  w-as  noih- 
iny  in  the  ediiiuu  wliicii  hits  Chap- 
el   Hill. 

This  soon  before  the  election, 
too. 


THAT  NASTY  OLD  WORD  AGAIN: 


yoy  don't  have  the  time  to  study 
and  you  don't  ever  »have  any 
fun.  Well,  here's  your  chance, 
boy.  get  up  there  and  sign  that 
bill.  If  this  petition  goes  through, 
you'll  have  time  to  be  more 
thorough  with  that  physics  and 
maybe  even  get  a  chance  to  take 
that  cute  little  coed  out. 

Jim.  I  realize  that  your  cir- 
cumstances are  somewhat  dif- 
ferent. Your  father  helps  foot 
the  bills  and  you  aren't  espec- 
ially pressed  for  time,  but  there's 
something  in  the  bill  for  you 
too.  If  it  goes  through,  you  can 
pick  up  another  course  that  will 
prove  more  beneficial  to  your 
career.  Don't  you  think  you 
learned  enough  about  physical 
education  during  those  four  years 
you  spent  in  the  service? 

Don't  try  to  sneak  out  on  me, 
Sam.  You're  the  man  I  want  to 
talk  to  most  of  all.  Have  you 
ever  been  on  a  campus  where  the 
vets  were  organized,  where  there 
was  unity  and  brotherhood  among 
the  ex-servicemen,  where  other 
■.Joes"  and  "Bobs"  and  "Jims" 
and  "Sams"  had  a  strong  voice 
in  campus  activities?  No,  Sam, 
I  don't  think  you  have.  Just  be- 
cause you've  already  met  the 
physical  education  requirements 
you  don't  care  whether  the  bill 
passes  or  not.  That's  truly  a  mar- 
velous attitude,  Sam.  Your 
knowledge  of.  the  benefits  of 
unity,  brotherhood  and  organi- 
zation overwhelm  me.  But,  Sam, 
some  day  you're  going  to  learn 
about  these  things  —  some  day 
you're  going  to  want  something. 
And.  Sam,  if  you  don't  drag  it  up 
to  South  and  sign  this  bill, 
you're  not^  going  to  get  that 
something  you  want,  because  the 
small  amount  of  'esprit  de^  corps'' 
we  veterans  have  now  is  going  to 
be  broken  by  you  slackers,  you 
people  with  the  "I-don't-give-a- 
damn"  attitudes.  It's  now  or 
never.  Sam.  If  we  move  now, 
we'll  weld  our  unruly  ranks  in- 
to a  strong,  efficient  force,  oper- 
ating for  and  from  the  needs  of 
all  veterans  arid  future  veterans. 
Leave  that  coffee  on  the  table, 
Sam,  let's  go  sign  that  petition. 
Let's  have  unity. 

Thank   you    for   your    time. 
'     '  Jerry  Aivis 

P.S.    You  21  lady  vets  sign,  too. 


FROM  THE  NEW  YORK  TIMES; 


Is  Apathy  Super-Sophistication? 


Power,  Diplomacy,  Canal  wo»dy  sears 

'  ■  •  Hpre'i;  that  unrH  acnin-   An.TtViv 


Hanson  W.  Baldwin 

Two  major  military  lessons  ha\e 
been  re-emphasi/ed  sliarjjly  by  tl»e 
Sue/.  C"anal   crisis. 

One  is  the  militarv  and  politic.il 
liabiliiv  of  over-dependence  on  a 
nuclear  strategv.  The  other  is  the 
necessity  ol  a  jjroper  uiderstanding 
of  the  lole  ol  force,  military  jx>wer. 
in   iiuernational   relations. 

When  Carnal  Abdel  .Nasser. 
President  ot  Kgvpt.  nationalized 
the  I'niversal  Suez  Canal  Com- 
])zn\  the  immediate  goverinnental 
and  pid)lic  reaction  in  Britain  and 
France  was  forcefid.  .Military  ac- 
tion was  enxisaged.  liut  neither 
Britain  nor  France  was  ready  to 
applv  militarv  power  of  a  type 
suited  to  the  situation. 


The  Dally  Tar  Heel 

The  official  student  publication  of  the 
Publications  Board  of  the  University  of 
North  Carolina,  where  it  is  published 
ddilv  except  Mondav  and  examination 
and  vacation  periods  and  summer  terms 
Entered  as  second  class  matter  in  the 
post  office  in  X'hapel  Hill,  N.  C,  under 
the  Act  oi  March  8.  1870.  Subscription 
rates;  mailed,  S4  per  year.  $2.50  a  semes 
ter;  delivered,  $6  a  year.  $3.50  a  semes- 
ter. 


Editor 


FRED  POWLEDGE 


Managing  Editor      CHARLIE  JOHNSON 


News  Editor    .    .    -  RAY  LINKER 


Business  Manager 


BDLL  BOB  PEEL 


Advertising  Manager  Fred  Katzin 

BUSINESS  STAFF:  Rosa  Moore.  Johnny 
Whitaker,  Dick  Leavitt,  Peter  Alper. 


If  force  was  Ui  be  employed  the 
only  pcjssible  objective  that  made 
sense  was  seizure  of  the  Suez  C'anal 
— and  seizure  in  such  a  manner 
that  the  canal  coidd  not  be  block- 
ed for  any  Icjug-term  pericxl  bv 
the  defenders. 

Neither  Britain  nor  France  was 
jjrepared  lor  any  sucli  operation. 

Thus,  though  both  Britain  iiiid 
F'rance  talked  of  military  action, 
thev  did  not  ha\e  innnediatelv 
a\ailablc  the  type  of  armed  force 
needed  to  carry  oiu  such  ac  tion  on 
the  Sue/  crisis.  Time,  perhaps  the 
most  piecicjus  of  militarv  and  po- 
litical coumiodities.  was  recjuired 
to  assemble  the  task  loices  needed, 
and  e\en  then  Peter  was  robbed 
l()   |)av   Paul. 

The  other  great  lessoti  of  tlie 
Suez  Crisis  \\as  mentioned  inter- 
entially  Sundav  bv  Secretary  of 
State  i)ulles.  Mr.  Dulles  warned 
that  the  "'danger  of  war  would  re- 
cur" unle,ss  a'  Suez  solution  could 
be  obtained. 

When  the  Sue/  crisis  first  de- 
\ eloped  Mr.  Dulles  indicated  by 
his  actions  that  he  did  not  belie\e 
vital -interests  were  iincilved.  Pres- 
ident Nasser  learned  that  the  \Vest 
was  divided  and  that  the  Cnited 
States  would  not  use  force  and 
\vould  oppo.se  its  use  by  others. 

Mr.  Dulles  has  now  restoied 
lone  to  its  traditional  plnre  in  in- 
ternational politics.  Bin  it  would 
ha\e  been  better  if  Western  jk)W- 
er  had  been  obvious  and  readv 
but  neither  forsworn  nor  in\<)ked. 

I'nfortunatelv,  military  power  is 
a  continuing  factor  in  the  world  of 
men. 

.\  realization  of  the  proper  place 
of  force  in  international  relations 
is  essential  to  a  sound  diplomacy. 
But,  more  than  ever  in  the  nut  lear 
age.  the  homely  policv  of  Fheo- 
dore  Roose\eli  is  siill  applicable: 
■'Speak  softly  and  carry  a  big  stick."' 


Here's  that  word  again:  Apathv 
Recently  it  has  become  one  0 
the  most  discussed  words  on  the 
campus.  And  its'  about  time  foi 
people  to  wake  up  and  see  what's 
going  on,  and  what  they're 
part  of. 

Apathy  is  not  like  an  epidemic  " 
of  influenza  that  the  folks  out 
at  the  Infirmary  can  clear  up.  It 
is  not  like  much  of  anything  at 
all.  It  is  rather  an  absence  of 
everything. 

Webster  defines  apathy  among 
other  things  as  being  an  "indif- 
ference to  what  appeals  to  feel- 
ings or  intere.'^l."  Anyone  who 
will  stop  a  moment  to  cinsidcr 
the  question  is  bound  to  see  the 
same  thing  that  so  many  people 
have  seen  of  late;  That  there  is 


no  interest,  or  feeling,  or  emo- 
tion on  this  campus. 

What's  the  matter?  Whose  fault 
is  if.'  A  lot  of  people  would  like 
to  know  the  answer  to  these 
questions.  There  are  more  things 
going  on  on  this  campus  than 
mast  of  the  students  have  ever 
been  exposed  to  before.  Oppor- 
tunities are  constantly  present 
for  a  student  to  improve  himself 
or  to  broaden  his  field  of  inter- 
est, but   they   ail  seem  wasted. 

Almost  everyone  likes  jazz,  in 
some  form,  so  a  big  jazz  festival 
was  planned  last  spring.  Eight  of 
the  best  bands  in  this  area  were 
here,  competing  with  one  an- 
other with  a  .S500  prize  in  the 
balance.  Each  band  was  at  its 
very  best,  and  the  music  heard 
that  afternoon  was  really  superb. 
One     of     the     best-known   disc- 


jiK-keys  in  the  area  was  here  to 
emcee  the  program.  But  where 
were   the  students? 

Only  a  very  few  were  there. 
Memorial  Hall  was  less  than  h.ilf 
full.  Tickets  were  only  $1  a- 
piece,  buying  almost  tliree  hours 
of  good  jazz.  But  where  were  the 
students? 

Eventually,  those  who  plan 
student  activities  are  going  to 
give  it  up  as  a  lost  cause,  and 
tell  the  students  to  amuse  them- 
selves, which  apparently  they 
seem  to  do  already. 

Football,  basketball,  tennis, 
baseball,  soccer  and  all  the  rest 
of  the  athletic  activities  suffer 
from  this  prevalent  attitude  of 
apathy.  The  whole  campus  is  sick 
with  it.  And  it  is  indeed  a  shame. 

Probably  everyone  has  his  own 
theory  of  the  cause,  and  will  ad- 


mit to  cognizance  of  the  affect 
But  no  one  seems  to  be  able  to 
combat  it. 

Maybe  it's  an  attitude  of  sup- 
er-sophistication on  the  part  of 
the  student  body  as  a  whole.  All 
indications  seem  to  poin^  that 
way.  But  where  does  this  idea 
originate?  Who  are  these  great 
intellect.s? 

Are  they  the  students  who 
mope  about  the  campus,  going 
to  class,  doing  the  minimum  and 
giving  nothing  of  themselves  in 
return?  Are  they  the  students 
who  poke  along  in  the  driving 
rain,  unable  to  wax  enthusiasm 
even  for  getting  out  of  the  rain? 

But  that  seems  typical  of 
these  super  -  sophisticates,  tjo 
blase  even  to  get  in  out  of  the 
rain. 


Ppgo 


By  Walt  Kelly 


^    I'M  NOT  A     Y    IP  VOU  WON'T 
"'^  CASPiPATB     \  O'JV'U-r  i£4ffr 

ID  THieow ,  ,  >  TmCow  our  TWg 


I  6  CON^B  ovgc  TO  ue< 

BALL,  h^imn  one 


l\'\  Abner 


By  Al  Capp 


(Ah 


AND  MOV^,  I  HE  STAR 
or   PHF-  CATTLF  SHOW, 
STANLEY  STRONGNOSE, 
WHO  WILL  Sf  I  ECT  *MR 
BFAUTIFUL  OF  iPSfc'.T 


iOMMLJr-OY, 

AH  HAi^  H/S 
&afLT  -HIS 


(-irs  SSO  HHOr-.f-ANO 
THIS  COffSET  15  H-K/L 


Terms  Change -- 
No  One  Notices 


Barry  Winston 


How  long  is  the  memory  of  the  American  press? 
How  just  are  the  rules  by  which  it,  as  a  collective 
institution,  judges  the  relative  merit  of  a  given 
news  item,  and  accordingly  allots  it  an  amount  of 
spa(:e  on  the  proper  page? 

Brief  months  ago,  the  headlines  of  nearly  every 
newspaper  in  this  country  were  ablaze  with  ban- 
neni  announcing,  "Six  Die  in  Parris  Island  Tradg- 
edy" 

The  mothers  of  Arnerica  rose  up  as  a  body, 
screaming  for  the  crycifixion  of  one  man.  The  en- 
suing shake-up  was  felt  by  every  Marine  from  the 
conrmandant  on  down.  The  word  was  out. 

Parris  Island  is  a  concentration  camp,  run  by 
sadistic  butchers  who  delight  in  torturing  and  maim- 
ing the  flower  of  young  American  manhood.  Drill 
instructors  are  vicious  fiends,  trained  in  the  fash- 
ion of  the  Spanish  Inquisition,  venting  their  drunk- 
en wrath  on  our  poor  defenseless  boys. 

The  man  was  crucified.  His  brothers,  to  the  man, 
became  the  subject  of  disdain  for  every  indignant 
citrcen  that  considered  himself  a  qualified  authority 
on  instruction  ^n  the  art  of  warfare.  The  ^ame  of 
the  Marine  Corps  was  Mud. 

Last  week,  at  Camp  Lejune,  another  drama  of 

Marine  stupidity 
unfolded.  It  was 
during  a  period 
instruction  on  the  use  of  the  Mark  11  fragmentation 
type  hand  grenade. 

One  instant,  all  was  quiet;  the  next,  there  was 
a  live,  sputtering  grenade  in  the  midst  of  a  group 
of  trainees.  It  had  been  blown  completely  out  of 
the  demolition  pit,  and  had  already  lived  at  least 
two  seconds  of  its  brief,  four  and  a  half  second  life. 
For  one  paralyzed  moment,  no  one  moved.  And 
then,  in  the  typically  vicious  and  brutal  manner  of 
all  Marine  instructors,  the  sergeant  in  charge  of 
the  detail  did  move.  And  what  did  this  symbol  ''•i 
terror  do?  He  threw  himself  on  it.  That's  right — 
he  threw  himself  on  a  very  live  hand  grenade. 

You  see  it  all  the  time  in  the  movies,  but  this 
wasn't  the  movies.  Th's  was  lior  real.  His  name 
wasn't  John  Wayne.  The  grenade  wasn't  a  dummy. 
Do  you  begin  to  get  the  idea? 

When  it  exploded,  only  one  man  was  injured. 
Guess  who.  The  last  time  I  could  find  anything 
about- the  incident  in  any  of  the  local  papers,  he 
w-as  in  the  hospital  and  not  expected  to  live  much 
longer. 

The  life  of  one  man  is,  perhaps,  not  much.  But 
this  man  knew  what  he  was  doing.  He  wasn't  a 
runny-nosed  little  brat,  disobeying  orders.  He  wasn't 
clowning.  He  didn't  need  disciplining.  He  knew  the 
statisticfs  on  the  destructiveness  of  a  grenade  at  25 
yards,  so  it  follows  that  he  had  a  pretty  good  idea 
of  the  effect  of  one  at  a  range  of  six  inches. 

All  this  wasn't  necessary  stark  heroism.  More 
likely,  it  was  the  result  of  training.  Boot  Camp 
Training  You  know  —  Parris  Island,  where  they 
drown  people.  ' 

And  the  story?  I  found  it  buried  on  page  seven 
of   one  of   our  local  papers.  The  follow-up?   If   it's' 
been  written,  and  I'm  beginning  to  have  my  doubts, 
it  must  be  in  the  small  print  at  the  bottom  of  the 
want-ad  page. 

Does  the  voluntary  death  of  one  man,  to  save 
the  lives  of  half  a  hundred  more  deserve  less  at- 
tention that  the  death  of  five  who  died  because  they 
couldn't  learn  to  grow  up?  I  think  not.      '  ..       -  v 

The  Hill:  No  Place 
For  Spartan  Type? 

Charles  Craven  • 

fn    The  Xcics  afid  Obsen'er 
News  and  Observer  columnist  Cr«v«n  atttndtd 
the  University. 

All  the  hope  you  can  summon  goes  with  'em  . . . 
Folks  work  their  fingers  to  the  bone  getting  em 
ready,  put  beautiful  new  uniforms  on  "em,  see  that 
their  shoes  don't  pinch  their  big  feet,  feed  'cm 
steaks,  make  "em  study  so  they'll  be  eligible,  run 
'cm  out  past  a  big  noisy  band  amidst  roars  of  good 
will.  And  what  happens?  A  starved  bunch  of 
Wolves — some  of  'em  not  much  bigger  than  a  .45 
caliber  bullet — just  kicks  the  living  .  .  . 

Sob!  I  can't  go  on  .  .  . 

+  *  * 

I  had  to  be  excused  a  moment  to  pitch  some 
cool  water  on  my  face  .  .  . 

Maybe  Chapel  Hill  is  too  beautiful  .  .  .  Maybe  the 
languorous  atmosphere  forbids  the  necessary  Spar- 
tan life  of  a  good  athlete  .  .  .  Maybe  there  are  too 
many  coeds,  convertibles,  lush  fraternities  .  .  . 

Whatever  it  is,  it  is  death  to  any  kind  of  spirit 
that  enables  a  line  to  charge  fast  and  hard  and 
backs  to  drive  until  they  are  stone  cold  smothered 
.-.  .  even  then  they  should  have  the  will  to  wriggle. 

Perhaps  the  single-track  intelleclualism.  ex- 
pounded by  the  intense,  bi-focaled  type  young  men 
who  gravitate  to  the  college  publications  is  right  .  .  . 
Maybe  a  university  IS  a  place  where  scholarship 
alone  should  reign  without  the  "hysteria"  and  ex- 
citement engendered  by  a  big  winning  football 
team  .   .   . 

But  if  so.  let's  cut  the  schedule  .  .  .  Let's  not  play 
Oklahoma  and  Notre  Dame  .  *.  .  Let's  arrange  for 
contests  with  lesser  foes.  East  Carolina  might  not 
be  too  tough.  Elon  and  Guilford  always  provide  en- 
tertaining contests  .  .  .  and,  too.  .maybe  we  could 
arrange  football  contests  between  English  classes, 
with  the  cardinal  rule  that  participants  should  trim 
their  finger  nails  so  that  no  one,  simply  no  one,  will 
get  .scratched  .  .  . 

Btit  I'll  tell  you  what  .  .  .  My  football  appetito 
has  to  be  satisfied.  I  require  seeing  at  least  three 
"big  lime"  football  games  a  season  .  .  .  This  season 
I'm  following  the  WoUpack  .  .  .  just  as  often  as  I 
can  corner  a  pass. 

«  *  * 

One  other  thing:  Some  of  the  underpaid  pro- 
fessors at  Chapel  Hill  can  supplement  their  pay 
bountifully  by  selling  soft  drinks  at  the  home  games. 
The  going  price  is  15  cents  per  bottle. 


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WEDNiSDAY,  OCTOBER  3,  1956 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


FACE  THREE 


Gastonia  Senior  Wins  I  ^^*  Rosemary  Kent,  Public  Health  Professor 

Tuition  Scholarship       I  ^'^''^  '''^'^  ^"P  ^"^  ^^''  ''''"'''  '''''"*' 


A  senior  from  Gastonia  has  been 
selected  as  this  year's  recipient 
of  a  Union  Carbide  and  Carbon 
Corporation    scholarship   at    UNC. 

Alfred  Leonard  Rhyne  Jr.,  a 
mathematics  major  and  1953  grad- 
uate of  Gastonia  High  School,  has 
been  granted  full  tuition  plus 
$200  for  the  academic  year  1956- 
57. 

Established  to  stimulate  inter- 
est in  business  problems  and  basic 
sciences,  the  senior-year  scholar- 
ship goes  to  a  person  whose  major 
is  in  either  the  field  of  mathe- 
matics or  economics,  according  to 
scholarship  committee  Chairman 
George  E.   Nicholson,  Jr. 

Nicholson  said  the  ^  scholarship 
is  also  to  promote  interest  in  sta- 
tistics as  a  field  of  graduate  study, 
for  the  ultimate  improvement  of 
human  understanding  and  to  im- 
prove the  teaching  of  such  meth- 
ods. 

The  program  of  the  Dept.  of 
Statistics  is  a  graduate  course  at 
the  University.  A  holder  of  the 
senior  year  scholarsihip  who  does 
outstanding  work  could  expect  to 
be  awardea  graduate  scholarships 
through  his  entire  graduate  ca- 
reer. 

Rhyne.    of  Gastonia.   played   on 


Dr.    Rosemary    Kent,    associate  I  baseball  coach.   She  didn't  expect 


LEONARD  RHYNE  JR. 

.   .   .   wins  grant 

varsity  squads  of  the  three  major 
sports  during  his  high  school  ca- 
reer. He  also  took  part  in  other 
high  school   activities. 

Through  last  year  he  was  on  the 
UNC  football  squad  and  was 
awarded  a  letter  for  his  partici- 
pation. Rhyne  is  married  to  the 
former  Rebecca  Neel  of  Burling- 
ton. 


professor  of  public  health  educa- 
tion of  the  School  of  Public  Health 
has  just  returned  from  a  three 
month  inspection  trip  in  the  West 
Pacific. 

Her  trip  was  sponsored  by  the 
World  Health  Organization  of  the 
United  Nations. 

During  the  past  10  years  the 
UNC  School  of  Public  Health  has 
had  51  students  from  this  area. 
Dr.  Kent  said  the  pucpose  of  her 
trip  was  to  bring  back  to  the 
School  of  Public  Health  first  hand 
information  about  the  public 
health  programs  and  problems  of 
the  East. 

In  Thailand  (some  still  call  the 
country  Siam)  Dr.  Kent  found 
many  public  health  officials  who 
had  been  trained  at  the  UNC 
School  of  Public  Health. 

Remember  the  old   story  about 

how  former  UNC  Baseball  Coach 

I  Bunn    Hearn    was    introduced    to 

King  George    V  of   England.    Ac- 


to  see  the  King  of  Siam,  but  in 
the  courtyard  of  the  Emerald  Wat 
(Temple  of  the  Emerald  Buddiha) 
Thais  and  visitors  were  told  to 
be  seated.  The  king  was  leaving 
worship.  Dr.  Kent  had  a  grand- 
stand seat  on  the  pavement  with- 
in 10  feet  of  the  royal  procession. 

Dr.  Kent  says  Tliailand's  healiti 
problehis  are  aggravated  by  its 
lack  of  physicians.  Many  Thais 
have  never  seen  a  medical  doctor. 
With  a  population  of  20,000,000 
the  country  has  fewer  physicians 
than  North  Carolina,  with  a  pop- 
ulation of  about  4,000.000. 

Two  weeks  were  spent  at  For- 
mosa. Here  Dr.  Kent  found  that 
public  health  doctors  were  show- 
ing '  concern  for  better  under- 
standing of  customs,  attitudes  and 
health  education  of  rural  people 
in  order  to  plan  public  health 
measures  understandable  and  ac- 
ceptable to  t^ese  people. 

Also  in  Formosa  Dr.  Kent  visit- 


cording  to  the  tellers  of  tall  tales,  |  ed  in  the  home  of  aa  iceman  who 


;   -Big  Steam,"  as  Bunn  was  called. 

;  tipped    his    baseball    cap    to    the 

i  king,  shook   hands  with   him   and 

;  said,   "Howdy,   Mr.   King."* 

\  SEES  KING 

I      Dr.    Kent    stands   a    little    more 

I  on  formality  than  did  the  former 


Bryant  Points  Out  Academic  Freedom 

(Continued  jroni  Page    1)        :  tution  regardless  of  the  subject  on  |  and      guardian     for     discovered 

which  they  may  choose  to  express  I  knowledge,  but  it  must  in  addition 

themselves.  "  '  insist    on    the    extension    of    the 

A   variety   of   ways   of   thinkmg  \  known    boundaries    of    knowledge 

and    "respectable   viewpoints" 


classroom  and  beyond  the  teach- 
er's chosen  field.  "At  times  pro- 
fessors fail  to  realize  that  their 
opinions  carry  great  weight,  and 
that  laymen  frequently  judge  them 
as  official  spokesmen  of  the  insti- 


had  tuberculosis.  Despite  this,  all 
three  members  of  the  family  slept 
in  the  same  small  bedroom. 

In  the  Philippines  Dr.  Kent 
found  about  35  former  student^ 
of  the  UNC  School  of  Public 
Health.  While  there  she  visited 
President  Magsaysay's  training 
program  for  community  develop- 
ment officers  at  Los  Banos. 
LACK  POOD 

Of  all  the  countries  visited  by 
the  UNC  teacher,  only  Thailand 
produces   an   excess   of   food,   yet 


according    to    the    national    direc- 
ior   of    nutrition,    malnutrition    is  | 
one  of  the  country's  major  prob- 
lems. The  diet  of  the  average  per- 1 
son  ooasist  of  one  pound  of  rice  , 
a  day.  | 

Dr.  Kent  found  that  sanitation,  j 
'omnmnicable  disease,  parasitism, 
maternal  and  ciiild  health  school 
health  and  nutrition  are  <a  few  of 
the  public  healtti  problems  of  the 
East.  . 

Among  the  many  souvenirs  Dr. 
Kent  brought  back  from  ihe  East 
is  a  chop.  This  is  not  an  imple 
ment  for  eating  but  a  rubber 
stamp  gadget  made  of  ivory  with 
Dr.  Kent's  name  on  it. 

Her  name  in  Chinese,  given  her 
in  Formosa,  is  Kan  Lo  Sho.  This 
translates  into  Health,  Hiappiness 
and  Long  Life. 


Three  UNC  Freshmen 
On  Merit  Schobrships 


Seniors  Get  Last  Go 

Today '}S  the  last  day  for  senior.'* 
to  be  photographed  for  the  1957 
Yackety  Yack. 

Seniors  will  be  charged  $1  to  be 
photographed,  due  to  the  delay  in 
the  photography  schedule  which 
necessitated  extending* the  <iead- 
Ime  for  Senior  shots. 

The  rest  of  the  picture-taking 
schedule  is  as  follows:  through 
Oct.  5 — Freshmen,  Nursing  School 
and  Fourth  Year  Medical  School. 

Oct.  &-12 — Sophomores,  Phar- 
macy School,  Dental  School,  Dental 
Hygiene. 

Oct.  15-19 — Juniors,  Law  School, 
rest  of  Medical  School,  Graduate 
School. 


advisable  on  a  University  faculty, 
Brj'ant  said.  "The  University  must 
serve  not   only   as  the   repositorj' 


ONE  WEEK  SALE! 
All  Capital  Records 


Series 
T 
W 


List 
$4.12 
$5.15 


Sale 
$2.75 
$3.75 


All  Angels-Special 
Ail  Columbia: 


Series 
ML 
SL 
OL 


List 
$4.12 
$5.15 
$5.15 


.    All  Victor: 

List 
LM  Series  $4.12 

*AII  EP  45  RPM 

*AII  10"  LP. 

(Except  Elektra— Angel 
L'Oylyre  —  Telefunken) 


Sale 
$2.75 
$3.75 
$3.75 


Sale 

$2.75 

$1.05  ea. 

$1.45  ea. 


by  a  relentless  search  for  truth. 

A  professor,  he  continued,  faces 
the  'inexorable  tests  of  integrty. 
competence  and  citizenship"  just 
as  does  a  physician,  a  lawyer  or  a 
business  man.  "A  university  pro- 
fessor, like  it  or  not,  is  judged  by 
his  integrity  and  his  professional 
competence  as  demonstrated  in  his 
research  and  teaching." 

Bryant  warned  of  inevitable  col- 
lision with  "established  and  ortho- 
dox beliefs"  while  enjoying  and 
exercising  academic  freedom. 
"Your  views  may  conceivably  be 
offensive  to  others..  They  may  con- 
ceivably be  wrong.  But  right  or 
wrong,  you  have  the  right — and 
sometimes  the  obligation — to  form- 
ulate and  express  your  conscien- 
tious beliefs  so  long  as  they  are 
not  immoral  or  illegal. 
TRUSTEES'  DUTY 

It  is  the  trustee's  duty  to  "pro- 
tect to  the  fullest  your  rights  un- 
der academic  freedom."  Bryant 
said,  adding  that  "it  may  be  an 
unpalatable  task  to  rescue  some 
academic  exhibitionist  who  has 
chosen  to  float  upstream,  but  it 
must  be  remembered  that  Galileo, 


TV  Seen  As  Important  Part 
Of  Future  Learning  Process 

"I  thiiA  it  will  someday  become  [      "We  are  very  anxious  about  the 
very   integral    part    of    our    ed- 1  new  course   and  Tiave   noted   con- 


Three  students  at  the  Univers- 
ity entered  as  freshmen  this  year 
on    Natiopal    Merit    Scholarships. 

The  three  youths  are  among  14  j 
North     Carolina     winners     in    the  I 
program,  which  had  58,158  appli- 
cants for  the  554  scholarships  giv-  i 
en.  j 

Enrolled    at    UNC    are    Murphy 
Bryan  Conry  of  Rockwell,  William  j 
Happer  Jr.  of  Lenoir  and  Otis  Wil- 
liam Jones  of  Zirconia. 

The  three  students  who  are  us-  ; 
ing  their  four-year  scholarships 
in  the  University  were  graduated  j 
from  high  school  last  spring.  Es-  { 
tablished  during  the  past  year,  i 
the  Merit  Scholarship  program  is  j 
a  nationwide  search  for  high  ; 
ichool  seniors  who  have  demon-  j 
strated  ability  and  promise  to ; 
benefit  from  a  college  education    j 

An  independent   non-profit  org- 


ucational  program." 

In  those  words  Dr.  David  G. 
Monroe,  UNC  political  scientist, 
summed  up  what  he  believes  the 
future  holds  for  television. 

And,  with  his  first  full-legnth 
course  over  television  now  under- 
way, the  professor  did  not  limit 
its  effect  to  within  a  small  ra- 
dius of  Chapel  Hill. 

"It  changes  the  frontiers  of  ed- 
ucation from  the  University  cam- 
pus to  the  frontiers  of  the  .state," 
he  declared.  "It  brings  education 
into  the  home."  "-' 

Dr.  Monroe,  professor  of  politi- 
cal science  and  advisor  in  the 
General  College,  began  a  36-hour 
course  on  slate  government  over 
station    WUNC-TV    recently. 

rt  was  the  first  36'hour  course 
to  be  taught  by  the  lawyer  and 
authoritative      political      scientist. 


siderable  interest  in  it."  said  Ex- 
tension Director  Charles  F.  Mil- 
ner  after  the  first  lesson. 

However,  Milner  pointed  out. 
persons  who  have  indicated  'an  in- 
terest in  the  course  and  who  have 
not  yet  signed  up  must  do  so  by 
tomorrow  if  credit  is  to  be  re- 
ceived. 

The  first  lesson  over  the  local 
television  station  Tuesday,  in  form 
of  a  lecture,  dealt  with  the  era 
up  to  1066  under  Anglo-Saxon 
turlnciples,  then  followed  through 
to  1400  and  touched  on  vital  de- 
velopments  of  that   period. 

Dr.  Monroe,  who  said  he  was 
"very  well  pleased"  with  the  first 
lesson,  discussed  the  "Colonial 
Heritage"   in  his  second  program. 

Lectures  will  be  given  over  the 
station  each  Tuesday  and  Thur.s- 
d-ny  night,  through  February  7. 
1957.  from  8:45  to  9:30  p.m. 


4  Students 
Represent  UNC 
At  Union  Meet 

Tom  I..ambeth,  Warren  Miller, 
Lloyd  Shaw  and  Mike  Strong  will 
depart  from  Chapel  Hill  on  Thurs- 
day morning  to  attend  the  seventh 
annual  conference  of  region  four 
of  the  Association  of  College  Un- 
ions at  Tuskegee  Institute,  Ala. 

The  conference  will  be  of  a 
three-day  duration,  tomorrow 
through  Saturday. 

Lambeth  will  chair  a  meeting 
for  the  discussion  of  student-fac- 
ulty relations. 

Shaw  will  serve  as  a  member  of 
the  Conference  Constitution  Com- 
mittee, and  Miller  and  Strong  will 
attend  as  delegates  from  the  Uni- 
versity. 


anization,  tlie  National  Merit 
Scholarship  Corporation  provides 
more  than  a  million  dollars  a  year 
for  the  grants. 

Business     organizations'     offers  j 
of  funds  to  the  program  are  mat-  I 
ched  from  additional  funds  avail- 1 
able    from     the    scholarship    pro-  j 
giam.  The  \ialue  of  the  four-year 
scholarships   awarded  last  year  is 
estimated  at  about  two  and  three- 
quarter  million  dollars. 

Conry,  who  ranked  third  in  a 
class  of  61  at  Rockwell  High 
School,  lists  his  main  academic  in- 
terests as  chemistry  and  mathe- 
matics. 

Jones,  who  was  graduated  from 
the  Flat  Rock  High  School,  first 
in  a  class  of  55,  will  major  in 
transportation  in  the  School  of 
Business   Administration. 

Also  top  man  in  his  gr'aduating 
class,  Happer  ranked  first  among 
103  seniors  at  Lenoir  High  School. 
Holder  of  a  Morehead  Scholarship 
for  study  at  UNC,  Happer  will  ma- 
jor in  physics.  Last  spring  he  won 
first  place  in  the  19.56  state-wide 
High  School  Mathematics  Contest, 
competing  with  1,385  othar  stu- 
dents. 


Ratledge  Represents 
UNC  At  AK  Psi  Meet 

Bob  Ratledge.  senior  from  Guil- 
ford, represented  the  Alpha  Tau 
chapter  of  .\lpha  Kappa  Psi  at  the 
recent  national  convention  in  De- 
troit, Michigan. 

Ratledge  is  president  of  the  lo- 
cal chapter  of  the  business  fra- 
ternity. 


UNC  Offers 
Only  O.K'd 
Dent.  Course 

The  University  offers  the  only 
correspondence  course  for  dental 
assistants  in  the  United  States  that 
meets  the  educational  require- 
ments of  the  Americacn  Denial 
Assistants  Association. 

This  and  other  facts  conperning 
the  course  being  offered  by  the 
UNC  School  of  Dentistr>-  and  ^he 
UNC  Extension*  Division  was 
brought  out  in  a  recent  article  ap- 
pearing in  "The  Dental  Assistant,* 
the  journal  of  the  ADAA. 

The  article  is  written  by  Mrs. 
Mira  Lindeman  of  Spring  Lake, 
Mich.  She  was  one  of  the  original 
seven  students  who  enrolled  in  a 
course  for  certification  for  dental 
assistants  when  the  course  was  in- 
augurated in  1954.  The  course  con- 
sists of  25  assignments. 

When  Mrs.  Lindeman  had  com- 
pleted her  correspondence  work, 
she  came  here  to  take  the  exam- 
ination for  the  course  at  the  UN^^ 
School  of  Dentistry.  "No  student 
has  been  given  a  more  heart 
warming  welcome  than  I  was  given 
at  the  School  of  Dentistry.  AH 
this,  plus  being  the  first  person 
to  take  the  examination  made  my 
trip  complete,"  she  said.. 


Just   Bought    In! 
A  small   library  of 

Books  About 
Drama 

You'll  find  them  displayed 
in    our    Old    Book    Corner. 

The  Intimate 
Bookshop 

205    E.  FRANKLIN   ST. 
^    OPEN   TILL    10   PM. 


^TUtRMiirktMeSteryir 
MRetbl 


VITTOMO  Ot  SICA'S  GtEA-TEST  I 


Persons  who  still  are  interested 


course    in 
summer. 

Generally,  there  was  an  atmos 
phere  of  enthusiasm  over  this  la- }  in  tha  course  are  urged  to  write 
test  full-credit  course  being  offer-  j  immediately  to:  Correspondence 
ed  through  the  University  Exten- 1  and  TV  Courses,  University  Ex- 
sion  Division.  i  tension  Division,  Chapel  Hill. 


1^ 


207  E.  Franklin  St. 


DAILY 

ACROSS 

1.  Distant 
4.  High  priest 

7.  A  cavity 

8.  Unable 
to  And 
one's  way 

10.  Tribunal 

11.  Burrowing 
animals 

13.  Minstrel 
showman 
(2  words) 

15.  Back  of 
the  neck 

16.  Tribe  of  the 
Naga  Hills 
(Assam) 

17.  Present 
time 

19.  Fresh 

20.  Snare 
23.  Place  for 

growing 
flower* 
25.  Any  coin 
of  trifling 
value 
( colloq. ) 

27.  Spawn 
offish 

28.  Enclosure 
on  ranch 

31.  A  manger 
for  feedings 
animals 

34.  Girl's  name 

35.  Any  split 
pulse  (Ind.) 

■  37.  State 
(abbr.) 
38.  Measure 
40.  Snout 
beetle 
43.  Sweetening 

45.  Attempted 

46.  Sheer 

47.  Hastened 

48.  Habituar 
drunkard 


CROSSWORD 

49.  Conclude  21.  Ad- 

justs 
DOWN  22.  Com- 

1.  Cross  a  river         mon 
by  wading  level 

2.  Astringent       24.  Fabu- 

3.  Re-equip  lous 
with  men               bird 

4.  Tree  26.  Tablet 

5.  Aquatic  bird    28.  Crowns 


[ar=!H     HOD"  an 

Hi^naiiiaa  oan 

F§ua  HQgca 

asaDQ  eagmB 

aflfj'aa  aaauc 
Nana  aaun 


Sir    Issac    Newton.    Roger    Bacon,  |  although   he   instructed    a   shorter 
the  Nazarene  of  the  first  century,    course    in    political    science    last 
and    a    now    respectable    host    of 
others  were  at  one  time   branded 
as  heretics." 

In  protecting  academic  freedom, 
trustees  must  "refrain  from  any 
attitude  which  has  the  appearance 
of  spying  or  methods  which  smack 
of  intimidation.  If  su^h  would  hap- 
pen it  would  properly  be  resented 
by  the  faculty,"  Br>-ant  said. 

In  regard  to  higher  education  in 
general,     Bryant     suggested     that  ^ 
"too  » many    of    our    students    are  j 
coming    to    our    University    poorly  i 
prepared  and  without  a  clear  un- ' 

derstanding    of    why    they    come."  .  have  been  invited  to  attend.  YDC 

He  further  questioned  "whether  or    INDOOR  POOL  The  YDC   is   planning   an   open 

not  the  intellectual  efforts  in  our  |      The    indoor    swimming    pool    us  ,  house   especially   for   coeds.   They 
universities  are  being  subprdinated  j  open    for    recreational    swimming  i  will  serve  punch  accompained  by 


i8^ 


SUSAN  H/nrWARD 

RtCHAEDCONTE 
EOME  ALBERT- 10  VAN  Hin 


"BRILLIANT! 
FAULTLESS!" 

"A  ma*l«rpi«c«rj 


"ONE  9f  THE 
YIAD'SBEST!'^ 


THE  BiSTOF  DE  SICA'S 
GREAT  PICTURES!" 

—  Crow«»(w,  N.y.  Timm 

"EXCELLENT! 
PERFECT 
ARTISTRY!* 

— Wjmran,  N.Y.  pMf 

"A  BEAUTIFUL 
PICTURE!" 


NEW  YORK 

FILM  CRITICS 

AWARD! 

"Best  Foreit^^n  tanouaoe 
film  Of  the  Year'" 


— ZiMuvr, 
N.V.  H»ro/d  Tril 


vinomo  DE  sicas  g«£atesti 


NOW    PLAYING 


HERE  ARE  YOUR  OLD  GOLD 


PHARMACY  WIVES  faculty  of  the  Dental  School.  The 

The  Pharmacy  Wives  will  meet ;  reception  will  he  at  8  p.m.  Sunday 
tonight  at  8  p.m.  at  the  Institute  ;  and  refreshments  will  be  served 
of  Pharmacy.  All  Pharmacy  wives  ;  and  refreshments  will  be  served, 
have  been  invited  to  attend. 


to  the  social  and  extra  curricular  |  Mondays  through  Fridays  from   4 

to  6  p.m..  Saturdays  from  2  to  6 
p.m.  and  Sundays,  2  to  5  p.m.  Wo- 
men swimmers  may  wear  their  own 
bathing  suits,  but  men  swimmers 
are   required   id  wear  the  special 


activities  of  the  students. 

"I  do  not  exceed  my  preroga- 
tives as  a  tru.stee  when  I  insist 
that  this  University  be  dedicated 
to  excellence  in  teaching,  the  high- 


6.  Native  of 
an  island 

7.  Fame 

9.  Conical  * 

tent 
10.  Deed 
12.  Stitched 
14.  Strong  ale 

(Kng.i 
19.  Conflict 


29.  Hatred 

30.  Legal 
pro- 
fes- 
sion 

32.  Covered 
with 
Ivy 

33.  Destitute 
of  hair 


YestMday'a  Aacwcr 

36.  Underworld 
river 
(Myth.) 

39.  Edible 
rootstock 

41.  Ireland 

42.  Contended 
44.  Steep  flax 


est  in  scholarship,  and  the  best  in  ;  .suits  i.ssued  by  the  gym. 


research,"  Bryant  said.  "My  ambi- 
tion for  the  University  of  North 
Carolina  is  that  it  will  justly  earn 
a  reputation  for  being  the  gr^at 
liberal  university  of  the  South." 


DENTAL   DAMES 

Jhe  Dental   Dames  will   have   a 


the  rhythm  of  a  combo  from  7:30 
to  9  p.m.  tomorrow  evening  in  the 
Rendezvous  Room,  GM. 
COED  SWIMMING 

The  Women's  Physical  Education 
Dept.  will  give  swimming  and  ten- 
nis tests  tomorrow  from  3  to  4 
p.m. 

All   women    students    must    sue- 


\  <:  t' ;"  r  '  . 

WIN 
A  TOUR 

FOR 

TWO 
AROUND 

THE 
WORLD 

START 
NOW! 


PUZZLES 


fr.,.  .   i^     »•'.».■  ft  "1   ■  ■    • 


SHIRTS-19C 


reception  in  the  Main  Lpbby  of  j  cessfully  complete  a  course  m 
Graham  Memorial  for  dental  stu-  j  swimming  and  an  indivdual  sport, 
dents,   their  wives   or   dates,   and  j  or  pass  the  above  tests  in  order  to 

graduate. 
VETS 

The  Veterans  Office  has  asked 
that  all  Korean  veterans  who  have 
not  filed  their  Monthly  Certificate 
of  Training  forms  for  the  month 
of  September  should  do  so  imme- 
diately. 


PUZZLE  NO.  4 


CLUE:  Organized  by  Congregational ists 
and  Presbyterians  in  territory  opened  by 
the  Black  Hawk  War,  this  coeducational 
college  is  noted  for  courses  in  anthropology. 

ANSWER 

Addrexs 

City StaU 

CoUcne 

Hold  until  you  have  complPt<Ki  all  24  puzzl(« 


PUZZLE  NO.  5 


CLUE:  This  Florida  college  stresses  a  con- 
ference plan  and  individualized  curricu- 
lum. It  was  founded  by  Congregationalista 
and  chartered  in  1885. 

ANSWER 

Address 

Ciiy StaU 

College 

Hold  until  you  have  complpted  all  24  pu2:z!o8 


EA. 


\mmtU^ 


m  hnndle 


uiithMRE 


With   or  Without 
Starch 

Prompt  Service 


Glen  Lennox  Laundromat 


CLASSIFIEDS 


BLACKBURN'S  MARKET 
(acrosiS  from  ice  plant).  Open  7 
days  a  week,  7  a.m.  to  8  p.m. 
Fresh  £ruit  and  vegetables.  Also 
beer. 


STUDENTS  EXPERIENCED  ON 
Linotype  or  open  presses  may 
obtain  part  time  work  at  Colon- 
ial Pres's.  Phone  333-6. 


ANNOUNCEMENT:  THERE  IS 
room  for  two  more  men  at  the 
campus  cooperative  House,  208 
W.  Franklin  St.  Interested  per- 
sons leave  their  name,  address, 
nnd  telephone  niimlwr  at  the 
'V"  or  come  by  the  house. 


YOU'LL  GO  FOR 
OLD  GOLDS 

Either  REGULAR,  KING  SIZE  M 
the  GREAT  NEW  FILTERS 

Old  Golds  taste  terrific!  The  reason:' 
Old  Golds  give  you  the  best 
tobaccos.  Nature- 
ripened  tobaccos . . . 

SO  RICH, 
SO  LIGHT, 
SO  GOLDEN 
BRIGHT! 


BEST  TASTE  YET 

IN  A  FILTER  CIGARETTE 

fMrrifht  1950.  HuriT  R.  Ilelllcu* 


*CLUE:  Chartered  in  colonial  days  by 
George  III.  this  university's  name  was 
later  changed  to  honor  a  Revolutionary 
soldier. 


ANSWER. 
Ka  nif 

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PAGE  FOUR 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


WEDNESDAY,  OCTOBER  3,  1954 


I 

Dodgers  And  Yanks  Square  Off  Today  In  Series  Opener 

*♦•  *••  *««  ••*  ♦♦• 

Totum  Terms  Tar  Heels  'Mystery 


Minor  Sports  All  But  Forgotten 

In  all  the  hustle  and  bustle  over  Jim  Tatum's  football  team, 
the  minor  sports  such  as  soccer,  cross-country  and  even  freshman 
football  have  been  relegated  to  the  background. 

All  of  these  get  rolling  this  weekend,  and  all  of  them  are  looking 
forward  to  banner  seasons. 
SOCCER  SQUAD  SHOULD  BE  STRONG 

The  soccer  team,  ably  coached  by  Marvin  Allen,  is  the  strongest 
outfit  fielded  by"  Carolina  in  years,  and  should  be  Maryland's  chief 
riva?  for  the  conference  title.  The  Terps  have  become  known  as  the 
New  York  Yankees  of  Atlantic  Coast  Conference  soccer,  because  every 
year  since  the  formation  of  the  league  in  1953,  they  have  won  the 
conference  crown.  No  one  has  yet  been  able  to  hand  the  Terps  a  loss 
in  loop  play. 

This  year's  Tar  Heel  team  is  loaded  with  talented  sophomores  and 
seasoned  veterans,  but  whether  they  have  enough  to  cope  with  Mary- 
land is  a  question  that  will  be  answered  Nov.  17  when  the  two  teams 
meet  at  College  Park,  Md. 
HARRIERS  PLAGUED  BY  INJURIES         , 

Coach  Dale  Ranson's  harriers,  with  Jim  Beatty  leading  the  pack, 
figui-ed  to  be  odds-on  favorites  for  championship  honors  a  few  days 
ago  when  practice  began,  but  recent  developments  have  cast  an  air 
of  pessimism  over  the  UNC  camp. 

Sophomore  star  Wayne   Bishop,  of  whom  much  was  expected, 
took  a  spill  during  time  trials  yesterday  when  an  old  trick  knee 
gave  out  on  him.    Although  no  official  word  has  been  released,  it 
is  feared  that  he  may  be  lost  for  the  entire  season. 
Other  men  on  the  squad  are  rounding  into  shape  very  slowly,  and 
with  the  opening  meet  against  Virginia  only  two  days  away,  the  situ- 
ation is  critical.  As  of  now,  only  Beatty  and  lanky  soph  Dave  Scurlock 
arc  in  peak  form. 
FROSH  PIGSKIN  SQUAD  OPENS  FRIDAY 

The  widely  publicized  freshman  football  team  will  debut  Friday 
night  under  the  lights  in  Greensboro  against  Wake  Forest.  Little  is 
known  aboat  the  frosh  footballers,  but  the  word  is  that  Coach  Tatum 
has  done  his  u.sual  superb  job  of  recruiting. 

No  less  than  seven  of  the  squad  mentbers  tip  the  scales  in  ex- 
cess of  230  pounds.   The  starting  Tar  Baby  line  averages  well  over 
200,  with   a   pair   of   230   pound   tackles   leading   the   way.    Cor^ch 
Tatum  put  forth  a  special  effort  this  year  to  bring  in  some  rough 
tough   linemen,  and  from  the  looks  of  the  Tar  Baby  tackles  and 
guards,  he  attained  his  goal. 
The  trend  toward  recruitng  out  of  state  boys  was  reversed  if  the 
starting  backfield  is  any  indication.  All  four  starters  are  from  North 
Carolina,  strange  as  it  may  seem. 
LEAVING  SATURDAY,  A  BUS  TO  COLUMBIA 

Any  student  who  doesn't  have  a  ride  to  the  game  Saturday  may 
still  get  one  if  he  hurries.  A  charter  bus  will  leave  Woollen  Gym  at 
7  a.m.  Saturday  for  the  game  at  Columbia  that  afternoon. 

Although  only  a  few  seats  are  left,  you  may  be  able  to  get  a 
spot  if  you  call  radio  station  WCHL  at  8-484  here  in  Chapel  Hill. 
The  trip,  which  takes  approximately  4  hours  each  way,  costs  a  to- 
tal of  $14.00.  The  fee  includes  a  round  trip  bus  ticket  for  one,  a 
ticket  to  the  game  and  a  box  lunch. 

The  bus  is  expected  to  arrive  back  in  Chapel  Hill  about  midnight 
Saturday. 
A  BRIEF  CALL  FOR  HELP 

In  closing,  we  would  like  to  issue  one  more  pl^a  to  any  and  all 
Carolina  freshman.  The  soccer  and  cross-country  freshman  teams  are 
desperately  in  need  of  more  participants,  and  anybody  who  has  any 
interest  or  desire  in  either  sport  is  urged  by  the  coaches  to  come  on 
out.   You  may  have  a  lot  of  fun. 


Bishop  Injured  In 
Harrier  Time  Trials 


Time  trials  were  held  for  both 
the  Carolina  varsity  and  freshman 
cross-cauRtry  runners  yesterday. 
And  the  trials  may  prove  rather 
costly  to  varsity  coacR  Dale  Ran- 
son.  j 

Sophomore  star  Wayne  Bishop,  j 
number  one  man  on  last  season's 
frosh  squad,  had  to  be  carried  off 
the  course  on  a  stretcher  after  a 
trick  knee  had  given  out  on  him 
while  running.  The  seriousness  of 
his  injury  has  not  yet  been  de- 
termined, but  it  looks  like  he  may 
be  lost  to  the  squad  for  the  en- 
tire season. 

Only  four  of  the  thirteen  run- 
ners that  started  the  race  in  the 
varsity      division      finished.      Jim 


Beatty  led  the  way,  finishing  in 
19:25.  Perrin  Henderson  was  sec- 
ond in  22:35,  Alec  Coffin  third 
in  23:08.  and  Jim  Hunter  was 
fourth  v/ith  23:25. 

In  the  freshman  division,  Cowles 
Liipfert  led  the  pack  with  a  time 
of  ":42  over  the  2.3  mile  course. 
Fick  Arthur  was  second  in  12:05. 
Friedburg  and  Green  finished  in 
12:50,  John  Richardson  was  next 
in  12:57,  and  Pakcard  was  next 
in  13.26.  Sirianni  and  Funderburg 
also  finished. 

Opening  meets  for  both  squads 
are  scheduiled  for  Friday,  The 
varsity  runners  will  meet  Virginia 
here,  while  the  frosh  will  go  a- 
gainst  the  Duke  yearlings. 


Ford  And 
Maglie  Go 
On  Mound 

By  JACK   HAND 

BROOKLYN,  Oct.  3.  (i^)— Sal 
Maglie.  Brooklyn's  39  -  year  -  old 
"comeback  kid."  faces  Whitey 
Ford,  the  New  York  Yankees,  left- 
handed  ace,  in  the  opener  of  the 
seventh  Dodger-Yank  World  Se- 
Hps  today  at  Ejbets  Field  with 
I*resident  Eisenhower  in  a  box 
near  tne  home  dugout. 

Although  the  Yanks  finally  were 
beaten  by  the  Dodgers  last  fall  in 
seven  games  and  must  play  the 
first  two  games  in  enemy  terri- 
tory, the  oddsmakers  rate  the 
American  League  champions  3  to 
2  favorites  to  win  the  best-of-sev 
en  series.  The  opener  is  6  to  5 
and  take  your  pick. 

Fair  weather  with  temperatures 
around  65  was  forecast  for  game 
time  at  1  p.m.  (ESYT)  with  a 
throng  of  between  34.000  and  36,- 
000  m  the  ancient  stands.  The 
game  was  to  be  beamed  on  net- 
work radio  (Mutual)  and  television 
(NBC). 

Maglie,  rescued  from  the  scrap 
heap    when    he    was    acquired    on 
waivers    from    Cleveland    in    mid- 
May,  had  been  a  doubtful  starter 
because  of  a  stiff  arm.  When  he 
'  told    Manager    Walter    Alston    he 
!  was  ready  at  today's  final  workout 
■  old  Sal  got  the  nod. 

'My  shoulder  is   a   little  stiff, " 
said  Maglie.  "But  I  am  sure  it  will 
I  be  okay  tomorrow." 

Maglie  (13-5),  will  be  working 
with  only  three  days  rest.  How- 
ever he  has  done  the  same  thing 
in  his  two  most  recent  starts  in- 
cluding the  no-hitter.  .\  cunning 
curve  ball  pitcher  with  sharp  con- 

1  trol  and  an  uncanny  ability  to 
cash    in    on    a    batter's    weakness, 

i  Maglie  is  a  real  "old  pro." 

In  Magglie's  only  series  start 
j  against  the  Yankees  he  lasted  five 

innings  for  the  New  York  Giants 
i  in  the  fourth  game  in  1951.  He  was 

charged  with  the  defeat. 

Ford    (19-6)    beat    the    Dodgers 
twice  last  year,  both  times  at  Yan- 
kee Stadium,  and  lasted  only  one 
;  inning  in  1953  at  Ebbets  Field.  Al 
j  though  the  Brooklyn   park  is  sup- 
posed to  be  a  graveyard   for  left-' 
banders,  Johnny  Antonelli   of  the  j 
Giants    and    Joe    Nuxhall    of    Cin- 
cinnati  beat  the  Dodgers  in  their 
j  own  cozy  park  with  its  handy  left 
I  field  stands  this  year. 

Manager  Casey  Stengel  de- 
scribed Ford  as  "a  big  league 
professional  pitcher"  as  he  sat  in 
the  dugout  at  Yankee  Stadium  be- 
fore today's  final  workout.  "I  cant 
rest  my  No  1  because  they  say 
!  it's  a  bad  park  for  him.  Between 
i  you  and  me,  he  has  pitched  the 
j  best  ball  on  the  team.  If  I  wait 
:  for  the  right  park,  the  series  will 
be  over.' 

I  Stengel  indicated  Don  Larsen, 
j  (11-5)  will  be  his  second  ga.me 
I  pitcher  although  he  added  this  res- 
I  ervation.  'If  we  win  the  first,  I 
j  might  change  my  mind."  Alston 
said  Don  Newcombe  (27-7)  would 
I  be  Brooklyn's  second  game  start- 
er. 

I  The  Yank-Dodger  series  com- 
petition is  top  heavy  in  favor  of 
the  Yanks  with  a  5-1  edge  in  pre- 
vious    series.      The     1955     world 


£/fjoy  Longer  Holidays 

For  Fast,  Convenient  Service 

Bristol-Kingsport 
Johnson  City 

LOUISVILLE 
CINCINNATI 

and  many  other  points 


Call  5160  (Raleigh)  or  Your  Travel 
Agent  For  Reservations,  Information 


the  National's  19th  to  33  by  the 
American.  ' 


Coach  Jim  Tatum  admitted  yes-  [       'The   biggest   prouiem   we   face 
terday  that  the   Carolina  football   going     into     this     game     is     not 
team,    one    sided    losers    for    two 
games   in   a    row,   is   "a   complete 
mystery  to  me.'" 


strengthening  our  offense  or  de- 
the  ball  game  with  all  we've  got, 
fense,  but  getting  the  boys  up,"  he 
said.  "If  we  go  out  there  and  pla> 


back.  Tatum  said  Vale  would  be 
used  at  either  halfback  or  fullback 
to  make  best  use  of  his  talented 

toe. 


Speaking   at    a    press   luncheon  !  ^^e  rest  will  take.^  care  of  itself." 
here  yesterday,  the  Tar  Heel  head    TERRIBLE  SHAPE 


mentor  said  he  was  unable  to  put 
his  finger  on  just  why  the  squad 
has  done  so  poorly  this  season.  "I 
don't  understand  it,"  he  said.  "We 
have  two  good  backfields  and  a 
number  one  line  thk  potentially 
could  be  a  great  one.  And  I  still 
say  Ed  Sutton  is  just  as  good  a 
right  halfback  as  I've  ever  had.  We 


Tatum  described  the  Tar  Heels 
as  being  in  "terrible  shape"  after 
their  bruising  battle  with  the 
Sooners.  Ends  Larry  Muschcamp 
and  Vince  Olen,  guard  Don  Kem- 
per and  center  George  Stavnitski 
are  all  laid  up  with  injuries,  and 
j  their  status-  for  Saturday's  game 
is  doubtful. 

i  Stavnitski,  who  suffered  a  se- 
I  vere  head  injury  on  the  second 
have  no  apparent  weaknesses,  but  ^  half  kickoff  against  the  Sooners, 
we're  still  losing.  j  will  definitely  be  lost  to  the  squad 

"Tu    K    t  .u-       .u  .        u  u        for  the  remainder  of  the  season. 
The  best  thmg  that  could  hap- '    ,      ^      ,,    , 

I  The  Tar  Heel  co-captam  was   un- ! 
pen  to  us  right  now  is  winning  a  |  conscious  for  an  hour  after  bemg  \ 
football  game,"  he  went  on  to  say.  |  struck  in  the   face  by   Oklahoma  I 
"Whenyou'relosing,  it  seems  like  I  ^f-ter    Jerry    Tubbs    on    a    hard  | 
„    ^     ,       ,  block.   He  is  presently  confined  m 

all  the  breaks  go  against  you.  We  I  ^^  Oklahoma  City  hospital,  but  is 
still  have  great  hopes  despite  the '  reportedly  doing  well.  | 

bad  start  we're  off  to."  j      Kemper   is    out   with    a    broken 

__.       xp<T  '  nose,    while   both    Muschamp   and 

I  Olen  have  bad  ankles..  Muschamp, 

Tatum  is  looking  forward  to  this !  a    starter,   has    been    replaced    by 

week's  game  with  South  Carolina !  Charley   Robinson   on   the  number 

^u         .Li-r  .c    .    ,       L-     ,^     !  one  unit, 
as   another  stiff  test  for  his  Tar ; 

Heels.    "If    South    Carolina    plays       Wally  Vale,  the  team's  best  pun- 
like they  did  against  Duke  and  we   t^r    who     booted     one    84    yards 

.       ,  ,     .         .J  against   the    Sooners,   was   shifted 

play   like   we  ve   been    playing,    it.,     ,    ,,,     ,    ,  •♦»,     +   i,:.^ 

*^    ■'  *     -^     *'  to  halfback  because  without  him, 

will  be  a  sad  day  for  us,"  said  the  j  ^^ere  would  be  no  kicker  in  the 
big  man.  The  Gamecocks  upset  lineup  when  recently  returned 
Duke,  7-0,  two  weeks  ago.  Last  Dave  Reed  was  playing  quarter- 
week  Coach  Warren  Giese's  tean 
lost  a  one  touchdown  decision  to 
Miami. 


ar  baby  Marter  At  uuarterbacK 

Nelson  Lowe,  former  North  Wilkesboro  schoolboy  star,  will  be  di- 
recting the  Carolina  Tar  Babies  from  the  important  signal  calling  post 
when  they  take  the  field  Friday  night  against  Wake  Forest  in  the 
season's  opener. 


Frosh  Starting  Unit 
Announced  For  Opener 


Freshman  football  coach  Fred 
Tullai  yesterday  announced  the 
starting  lineup  for  Friday's  op- 
ener with  the  Wake  Fores*  frosh 
in  Greensboro. 


while   the   backfield    will    average 
a  shade  over  190. 

The  two  tackles  lead  the  squad 

weightwi.se.    Furjanic    weighing    in 

!  at  235  while  Butler  tips  the  scales 


Starting  at  end  will  be  John  I  at  230 
Stunda  from  Monessen,  Pa.  and 
Ed  Furjanic  from  Bressler,  Pa. 
The  tackles  will  be  Earl  "Moose" 
Butler  from  Massey  Hill.  N.  C. 
and  Mike  McDade  of  Rochester. 
Pa.  The  guards  are  Ellis  Wool- 
ridge  of  Cuyahoga  Falls.  Ohio  and 
Fred  Jueler  from  Iselin.  N.  J. 
The  center  post  will  be  manned 
by  Jim   Davis   from   Elco,   Pa. 

Interesting  to  note  is  that  the 
starting  backfield  consists  entire- 
ly  of   North   Carolinians. 

Getting  the  nod  at  quarterback 
will  be  Nelson  Lowe  from  North 
Wilkesboro.  At  the  fullback  slot 
will  be  Jim  Stevens  of  Hazelwood. 
Right  halfback  will  be  Cornell 
Johnson   from    High    Point   and   at 


Deacs  Work  On 
Passing  Game 
In  Workout 


WINSTON-SALEM,  Oct.  2  — 
(AP)  —  Wake  Forest's  football 
team  concentrated  on  its  passing 
game  today,  quarterbacks  Charlie 
Carpenter  and  Pete  Barham  both 
looking  good  in  the  throwing  de- 
partment as  the  Deacs  prepped 
for  Saturday's  game  at  Virginia. 

Second-string  end  Jack  Ladner 
stood    out   among   the   receivers. 

Play-timing  and  defenses  against 
Virginia's  offensive  also  came  in 
for  attention  in  the  long  session, 
which  was  devoid  of  heavy  contact 
work. 


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Athlete  Of  The  Week 


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named  Athlete  of  the  Week  for 
his  outstanding  performance 
agaiist  the  Oklahoma  Sooners 
Saturday.  Koes  took  'over  when 
starter  and  co-captain  George 
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second  half  kickoff,  and  played 
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WEATHER 

Light  rains  over  th*  state  today. 


2r()c30aityS3rarHccl 


VOL.  LVIII,  NO.  12 


Complete  (/P)  Wire  Service 


CHAPEL  HILL,  NORTH  CAROLINA.  THURSDAY,  OCTOBER  4,  19S6 


Offices   in   Graham   Memorial 


UNSURE    GOP 

Th»    Editor    comments    on    tho 
OOP'S  talk,  see  Page  2. 


FOUR  PAGES  THIS   ISSUE 


Dormitory   Men 
Choose   Officers 
For    Next   Year 


In  what  Interdormitory  Council  President  Sonny  Hallford  called  the 
"smoothest  run"  election  in  some  time,  dormitory  officers  for  1956  57 
were  named  Tuesday. 

Dormitories,    which    named    presidents    and    vice    presidents    last 

/Spring,  elected  secretaries,  treasur-  ♦ 

ers,  IDC  representatives  and  intra- 


CAMPUS 
i^EEN 


Hi'il 


mural  managers  in  the  election. 

The  new  staggered  electoral  pol- 
icy was  voted  into  the  IDC  by 
laws  in  action  taken  last  spring. 

Newly  elected  officers — secre- 
taries, treasurers,  IDC  representa- 
tives and  intramural  managers,  in 
that  order — are  as  follows: 

Manl«y:  Alec  Coffin,  Bill  Yates, 
Leon  Rooke  and  Rex  Moser; 
.  Everett:  L.  R.  Colclough,  run-off, 
between  Bob  Jones  and  John  De- 
voe  for  treasurer's  post.  Ruddy 
Edwards  and  George  Stetzer. 

Winston:  Tom  Clark.  Dan  Hil- 
I'.ard,  Jimmy  Sullivan  and  R.  Burl- 
son. 

Mangum:  Robert  Pendergraph, 
Ed  Evans.  Lou  Hardee  and  Doug 
Bayliff. 

Old  East:  Frank  Gibbs,  Tommy 
Davis,  Paul  Carr  and  Mason  Wil- 
kins. 

Connor:  Donald  Ross,  Barkev 
Sirobnian.  J.  R  Afigne  Jr.,  floor 
representatives.  Benjamin  Mast, 
Allan  Dickenson,  Earl  Diamond, 
Floyd  Smith. 

OA  West:  Robert  Cowan,  Jamrs 
James,     run-off     between     Julius 


Phi  Favors 
Free  Market 
For  Farmers 

The  Philanthropic  Literary  Sio- 
ciety  passed,  10-5.  a  bill  "to  re- 
store a  free  market  for  agricultural 
products." 

Speaker  Lawrence  Matthews 
called  the  Phi  to  order  and  later 
turned  the  gavel  over  to  Parlia- 
mentarian John  Brooks.  Rep.  Jim 
Montieth  was  the  speaker  of  the 
evening  and  introduced  the  bill. 

He  argued  that  price  supports 
were  getting  the  United  States  in- 
to deeper  de\)t  and  that  large 
farms  were  more  efficient  than 
many  small  ones. 

Rep.  James  Duval  said  farmers  j 
were  producing  themselves  out  of  | 
business. 

Other  members  of  the  Phi  said 
the  farmers  could  not  survive 
without  the  supports. 

During  -the  course  of  the  meet- 
ing, candidate  for  conditional 
membership   Don    Jacobs    of    High 


Nice-sized  roaches  observed 
fxawling  aronmd  in  water  fmm- 
tain  at  Scliool'^of  Public  Health. 

«         *         * 

Fall's  first  bit  of  red:  Bril- 
liant bunch  of  leaves  on  back- 
side   of   Bivjghxim    Hall. 

•         «         * 

Two  nice  little  Indies,  pound- 
ing drink  machines  in  Graham, 
Memorial,  demanding  their  vion- 
ey  back. 


'Reading  Day'  Approved  Next  Year; 
Cut  In  bate  Tickets'  Cost  Probable 


V  1  t 


Banzpt  and  Bill  Kins  for  IDC  rep-  j  Pojnt      delivered      his      qualifying 


resentative.  Joe  Creekmore. 

Steel<>:  Jerrj-  Shields.  Tom  Long. 
GcTif  Weathers  and  Charles  Reed. 

Whitehead:  Eli  Afteyek.  run-off 
for  treasurer.  Bob  Baucom,  no  in- 
tramural manager. 

Batrle  -  Va»ce  -  Pettigrew:  B*»rt 
Warren.  Dave  Mundy,  Jim  Merritt  i 
and  Rick  Orr.  j 

Graham:  P^tn'fy  Ogl*»f!l>y.  D^n  f 
Owens.  Bill  Burress.  Tom  Hettle-  , 
maw. 

JovTipr:  .John  Alexander,  treas- 
urer, other  officers  already  #ipct- 
ed. 

SoTTip  dormitories  lost  the  «;erv- 
ice  of  vice  presidents  elected  la.st 
sorinfT.  fir  variojin-  reasons.  Th?sp 
dormitories  and  their  vice  presi- 
dents are: 

Mangum:  Ted  Smith;  Whitehead, 
Wayne  Martin. 

Old  Ea.<;t  Dormitory  elected  a 
social  chairman  in  addition  to  the 
regular  officers.  He  is  Randall 
Shelton. 

President  Hallford  praised  what 
he  called  a  "good  turn-out"  of 
voters.  'We  have  an  apparently 
capable  group,"  he  said,  'and  we 
expect  a  big  year." 

Hallford  also  extended  a  "cor- 
dial invitation"  for  all  dorm  pres- 
idents and  IDC  representatives  to 
attend  the  IDC  banquet  in  the 
Carolina  Inn  Oct..  10. 


Di  Commends 
Veep  Nixon 
For  Service 


speech   entitled    "I  Speak   for   De- 
mocracy." 

To  becom''  a  member  of  the  Ph' 
one  must  attend  two  consprutivc 
meetings  and  makea  qualifying 
speech  at  one  of  them 


Vack  FKefo  Schethjf© 
Takes  Turn  Tomorrow 

Today  and  tomorrow  offer  fin- 
al opportunities  for  freshman, 
fourth  year  medical  stu'^ents  and 
nursing  students  to  have  Yackety- 
Yack  pictures   made. 

Deadline  for  seniors  was  yes- 
terday. 

Yack  officials  requested  that 
girls  wear  dark  sweaters  and 
pearls  for  the  photos.  Men  will 
wear  dark  coats,  ties  and  white 
shirts. 

The  remainder  of  the  photo 
schedule: 

Oct.  8-12  —  sophomores,  pharm- 
acy, dental  and  dental  hygiene 
students. 

Oct.  15-19 — Juniors,  law  stu- 
dents, medical  students  and  grad- 
uate students. 


Professor 
Leaves  For 
Triangle' 

Dr.  George  L.  Simpson  Jr.  be- 
gan his  leave  of  absence  on  Oct  1 
from  the  University  to  take  over 
the  directorship  of  the  Governor's 
Research   Triangle   Committee. 

Before    beginning    his   work    in 
Raleigh.  Dr.  Simpson  said  the  pur- 
I  pose  of  the  program  is  to  seek  to 
I  increase  the  industrial  side  of  the 
I  state's   economy   through    the    use 
of  "The  concentration  of  research 
facilities    and    people   at    the    Uni- 
versity   of    North    Carolina,    State 
College  and  Duke  University." 

'"It  is  realized."  he  said,  "that 
the  thrre  institutions  (UNC,  Duke 
and  State  College)  have  their  ma- 
.ior  interest  in  basic  research  and 
the  research  triahgle  hopes  to  be 
of  aid  to  th^t  sort  of  research." 
He  stressed  that  the  committee 
is  interested  in  being  of  service 
to  industry  already  located  in  the 
state  as  well  as  attracting  new 
concenw. 


Commiftee  Unanimously 
Approves  Reading  Day 

students  will  have  a  pie-exam  "reading  day"  next  year.  They  also 
':  stand  a  chance  of  getting  half-priced  date  tickets  for  football  games 
scheduled  with  conference  members. 

student  body  President  Bob  Young,  announcing  the  new  policies, 
said  the  reading  day  plan  will  go  into  effect  between  the  last  day  of 
classes  and  the  first  day  of  examinations  for  the  1957-58  school  year. 
He  said  reduced-price  date  tickets  will  be  available  contingent  upon 
approval    of    the    "visiting    team'i^ 


Thf^  Dialectic  Senate  has  passed 
a  bill  commending  Vice-President 
Richard  M.  Nixon  "for  his  excel- 
lent ser\'ice  to  the  nation." 
.  In  introducing  the  bill  Tuesday 
night  President  Pro-Tem  Pat 
Adams  called  Nixqp  "an  example 
of  the  American  dream  in  poli- 
tics." He  said  that  Nixon  has  as- 
sumed and  effectively  carried  out 
more  duties  than  any  other  vice- 
president." 

Sen.  Ervin  Avery  attacked  the 
bill  and  called  Nixon  "too  young," 
too  immature  and  too  incompe- 
tent." President  Stan  Shaw  de- 
scribed Nixon  as  "the  ultimate 
embodiment  of  lack  of  principle." 

Supporting  the  bill.  Senator 
Nancy  Rothschild  said  Nixon  is 
is  "oTif  of  the  few  men  with  the 
courage  to  say,  to  believe,  to  do." 


GM'S  SLATE 


Activities  scheduled  for  Gra- 
;ham  Memorial  today  include: 

Pan  Hellenic  Post  Office,  5-6 
p.m.,  Grail  Room:  YRC,  7-9:30 
p.m.,  Roland  Parker  1,  2;  YDC 
reception,  7-9:30  p.m.,  Rendex- 
vous  Room. 


Four  Students  Depart 
For  Union  Conference 

Four  student  leaders  depart 
campus  this  morning  for  Tuskegee 
Institute,  Ala.,  to  attend  the  sev- 
enth annual  region  four  confer- 
ence of  the  Association  of  Col- 
lege Unions. 

They  are  Tom  Lambeth,  Warren 
Miller,  Lloyd  Shaw  and  Mike 
Strong.  The  conference  will  con- 
tinue until   Saturday. 


DR.  GEORGE  SIMPSON 

.   .   .    heiid.^  for  Raleigh 

"There  is  great  support  for  this 
program  throughout  the  state,"  he 
added,  "and  it  Ls  hoped  that  the 
most  essential  element,  namely 
faculty  interest  and  support,  will 
be  forthcoming." 

Dr.  Simpson  is  an  associate  pro- 
fessor of  sociology  and  research 
associate  in  the  Institute  for  Re- 
search in  Social  Science  at  UNC. 

The  committee  was  registered 
last  week  as  a  non-stock,  non- 
profit corporation  by  Gov.  Luther 
Hodges,  retired  banker  Robert  M. 
Hanes  and  former  state  treasurer 
Brandon  Hodges. 


WITH  NO  FANFARE 


j  Graduate  Students  Plan  Get-Togerner 

Four  UNC  students  meet  to  plan  programs  of  special  interest  to  graduate  students,  programs  that 
will  vary  from  hiking  to  discussion*  6f  existentialsm.  Shown  (above,  left  to  right)  are  Misses  Jo  Dea- 
son  of  Ensrt^ee,  S.  C,  Barbara  Battle  of  Miami,  Fla  ,  Pat  Dixon  of  Richmond,  Va.,  and  Colleen  Crenshaw 

I     of  Asheville.    These   programs  they  are   planning   w  II   be  formed    in   accordance   with   particular   gradu- 

j     ate  student  preferences.  (Photo  by  Norman  Kantor) 

Grad  Group 
Planned  By 

;ym,  YW 

The  YW-YMGAJoday  issued  an 
o5?fFiH?P??'^'*^?TMtitM'S'  s^iident'^ 
and  undergraduates  over  21  con- 
corninR  the  formation  of  jntpro^i 
groups  under  the  sponsorship  of 
»V  Y. 

Signed  by  eight  Y  offirinl.-;.  thr 
lettrr  states:  "Realizing  the  lack 
of  organized  activities  fnr  gradu- 
ite  students,  we  have  planned  a 
'get-together'  which  will  be  an 
opportunity  for  you  to  join  an  in- 
terest group  that  will  meet  regu- 
larly. These  groups  will  vary 
from  hiking  to  a  discussion  of  ex- 
i.stcnlialism  and  will  be  formed  in 
accordance  with  your  particular 
preferences. 

"If  you  are  a  graduate  student 
or  an  underg'-aduate  over  21.  you 
are  welcome.  Even  if  you  are  not 
interested  in  joining  a  group  per- 
manently, come  this  Sunday  and 
over  coffee  and  doughnuts  enjoy 
the  entertainment  of  Pee-Wec 
Batten   " 

The  letter  was  signed  by  Misses 
Dixon,  Eleanor  Riggins,  Colleen 
Crenshaw,  and  Bill  White.  Prest- 
wood  Browning  and  Bob  Rennick. !  ~  '  ~ 

The   organizational   meeting  will  ;      ^^  /n  liwi  ^"1  li  •  i 

be  hold  Sunday  from  5  to  6  pm  j     ^011   t    ParK     NCOr     !  HG     HOSPltal 
'n    th'-    RenHpzvous   Room    of   Gra-  • 

ham  Memorial.  j      ^]]    students    not    having    staff  ~    Thousand.-'    of   tickets   have   been 
i  parking  permits  on  their  automo-    given    out.    I    hate    to    take   their 

biles  are  not  allowed   to  park  on  ,  ,  .^4u;„„         . ...  „ 

,       ..  ...  ,      money   for  .somtnmg  so   unneces- 

the     Memorial     Hospital     grounds,  '  „  - 

according  to  Mrs.  Barbara  Howdy,    ^^^^' 

clerk   eg  the  town   traffic   Bureau,  \      The    re.>;nlutir)n    restricting    stu- 
"Unless     they     have     stickers,"    dent     parking     on     the     hospital 
she   said,   "they   will    get   tickets. '  grounds  was  passsd  July  10. 


rO  PHaANTHROPlC  SOCIETY- 

Elvis  Admitted 

Th?  Philanthropic  Literary  Society  has  passed  a  resolution  ad- 
mit ing  F.lvis  (the  Pelvis)  Presley  to  its  membership. 
>i-    HtJt  .Hl'"t^y  ^rg***y.^.,^*'  ''•*<*^*^*>.n  wbicji  yfjts  e^sed  by  a 
large  majority.  ,-   -       - 

In  discussing  the  resolution.  Sen.  Muna>-  said  the  "gSTations  of 
Presley"  reminded  him  of  sfcme  of  th"  "  Representativps  of  the  Phi." 

Sen.  Stan  Shaw  of  the  Dialectic  LiK-rary  Society  presented  the 
resolution  to  the  Phi  shortly  after  it  had  adjourned,  but  hefore  it 
had  vacated  Phi  Hall. 

"Shaw  made  Presley  gyntions  himself  in  trjing  fo  get  the  resolu- 
tion read,  so  the  Phi  let  him  read  it,"  commented  Lawrence  Mat- 
thews, speaker  of  the  Phi. 


athletic  office." 

I  Young  listed  both  plans  as 
achievements  of  his  administration, 
voted    into   office   at    campus-wide 

j  elections  last  spring. 

Concerning  the  reading  day, 
Young  met  with  the  Committee  on 
Instructional  Personnel,  which  was 
considering  the  University  calen 
dar    lor    1957-58.     The    committee. 

i  according  to  Young,  voted  unani- 

I  mous  approval  to  a  motion  insti- 

:  tp'  "e  th<»  reading  day. 

In  a  Statement  yesterday.  Young 
said  the  committee  discussed  the 

;  icasiblity    of   instituting   the    one- 

\  ^ay  break  this  spring,  but  found 
it  impractical  at  this  time. 

]    ♦•'Academic      standards      require 

i  that    each   class   meet   at   least  45 

j  times  each  semester,"  "There  was 
no  way  that  we  could  avoid  com- 
ing under  this  number  without  re 

I  moving  one  day  from  the  spring 

I  recess  period. 

"The  committee  then  voted  that 
the  calendar  (for   1956-57)   remain 

I  as    it     had     previously    been     an 

1  nounced." 

1     The  committee  did.  according  to 


Bums  Win 
1st  Game 
Of  Series 


Young,  feel  such  a  reading  da^ 
wruld  be  feasible  in  1957-58.  and 
its  insti 


'Tobacco  Road'  Stcrts  Slate 
Of  GMAB  Movies  Tonight  At  8 

"Tobacco  Road,"  the  movie  ver-        Starring    m    the   production   are 

sion    of    the    play    which    was    the    oene  Tierney   and   Charlie  Grape- 

longest-running    production   in   the    ^^^     ^^^^    ^^,,j^    ^n,,     pj^y    ^.^re 

history  of  Broadway,  will  be  shown    ^  ,        ,  ..  ,   u     t-    i  • 

.„  ..        .      ^        ,,,,,,;  taken   from   the   novel   by  Erskine 

at  8   p.m.    today   in   Carroll   Hall. 

.,      ...  u     *u     f     .  ■     »u  ,      Caldwell. 

It  will  be  the  first  in  the  year  s 

Graham  Memorial  Activities  ^"^'•'^"'^  ''^"^^'^^  ^"'"  "'^  ^^"^^ 
Board  Scries  of  domestic  and  for  wiH  bo  available  for  .S2  at  the 
eign  films.  ;  door. 


BROOKLYN  'jP— The  Brooklyn 
Dodgers  shelled  lefty  Whitey  Ford 
for  six  hits,  including  two  homers, 
in  the  first  three  innings  Wednes- 
day and  went  on  to  beat  the  New 
York  Yankees,  6-3.  in  the  World 
Series  opener. 

A  crowd  of  34,479.  including 
President  Eisenhower  and  several 
Cabinet  members,  watched.  Gil 
Hodges'  homer  with  two  on  base 
in  the  third  sewed  up  the  decision. 

Sal  Maglie.  39-year-old  Dodger 
pitcher,  recovered  from  a  shaky 
start  in  which  Mickey  Mantle's 
first  inning  homer  sent  the  Yanks 
off  in  front,.  =ind  tamed  the  Yan- 
kee bats  the  re.st  of  the  way. 

The  Yanks  used  four  pitchers  as 
^ord  was  lifted  for  a  pinch  hitter 
after  giving  up  five  runs  in  the 
first  three  innings.  Johnny  Kurks, 
Tom  Morgan  and  £!ob  Turle^,  all 
i-^flbt  handers.  followed  Ford  on 
the  mound  but  their  solid  relief 
work  rame  too  late. 

Maglio  frequently  was  in  diffi- 
culties as  the  Yanks  got  men  on 
base  in  nearly  every  inning,  but 
he  got  some  good  fielding  support 
and  was  invincible  in  the  tight 
spots.  He  struck  out  10,  walked 
only  four  and  yielded  nine  hits. 

The  Dodgers  made  nine  hits  off 
♦  he  four  Yankee  hurlcrs.  including 
a  homer  bv  .Jackie  Robinson  in 
addition  to  Hodges"  big  blow. 

Th"  Yanks  got  off  to  a  2-0  lead 
in  the  first  inning  when  Mantle 
oowercd  a  home  run  over  the  right 
field  screen  into  the  parking  lot 
across  the  .street  after  Enos 
Slatghter  had  singl^^d. 

The   Dodgers   tied   it    no    in   the 
second  when  Robinson  led  off  with 
a  homer  into  the  lower  left  field 
(See  SERIES.  Page  4) 


State  Celebrates 
67th  Anniversary 


RALEIGH  (ilV— Without  fanfare, 
North  Carolina  State  College  cele- 
brated its  67th  birthday  yesterday. 

No  formal  program  was  held, 
but  an  informal  luncheon  was 
given  in  the  College  Union  Build- 
ing in  honor  of'  two  graduates  of 
the  institution's  first  class,  the 
cla.ss  of  1893. 

On  hand  for  the  luncheon  were 
W.  .1.  Mathews  of  Goldsboro,  the 
first  student  to  register  when  the 
college  opened  its  doors  Oct.  3. 
1889;  and  Sam  Young  of  Raleigh, 
a  member  of  the  original  class. 
H.  W.  (Pop)  Taylor,  director  of 
alumni  affairs  at  the  college,  pre- 
sided over  the  luncheon. 

Among  those  in  attendance  were 
deans  of  the  major  schools  of  the 
college  and  other  officials  of  the 
institution. 


both  Young  and  Mathews  related 
experiences  during  their  college 
courses  and  expressed  pride  in  the 
growth  of  the  college  since  that 
time.  Young,  a  Raleigh  hardware 
merchant,  is  83  years  old,  and 
Mathews,  a  retired  Wayne  County 
contractor,  is  86. 

Only  72  students  enrolled  with 
Young  and  Mathews  as  freshmen 
during  the  college's  first  year.  A 
group  of  19  graduated  four  years 
later.  Only  five  members  of  the 
original  class  are  still  living. 

Since  1889,  the  college's  physi- 
cal plant  has  grown  from  one 
building  to  67  modern  buildings 
valued  in  excess  of  $303,000,000. 
The  student  body  has  surpassed 
5.500  students  representing  all  of 
the  state's  100  counties.'  44  other 
states,  the  District  of  Columbia, 
three  U.  S.  possessirgis  and  39  for- 


In 


brief  talks  at   the   luncheon, '  eign  countries. 


Hodges  Wants  Measure 
For  Naming  Guardians 

ASHEVILLE  —  (A?)  —  Gov. 
Hodges  Wednesday  called  for  leg- 
islation to  allow  appointment  of 
guardians  for  certain  welfare  re- 
cipients. 

He  .said  something  should  be 
don?  about  mothers  who  have  il- 
legitimate children  and  then  de- 
pend on  public  welfare  funds  for 
support. 

In  a  speech  to  the  southeastern 
regional  conference,  American 
Public  Welfare  Association.  Hod- 
ges said  he  had  been  "gravely 
concerned,  over  federal  legislation 
which  has  mad?  it  impossible  to 
make  payments  to  needy  people 
through  guardians  who  could  .su- 
pervise the  wise  expenditure  of 
public  funds." 


WRC,  IPC  Offices 
Now  In  Same  PUce 

In  a  move  towards  efficiency, 
the  Woman's  Residence  Council 
has  relocated  its  headquarters  in 
the  Interdormitory  Council  offices 
in  New  East  Annex. 

In  announcing  the  move,  head.s 
of  both  organizations  said  the  re- 
locatidn  was  a  .-^tep  in  the  right 
direction. 


FULBRIGHT,  BUENOS  AIRES: 


Graduate  Scholarships 
Still  Can  Be  Obtained 


One  month  remains  in  which  U. 
S.  .students  may  apply  for  awards 
iind?r  Fulbright  and  Buenos  Aires 
Convention  programs  for  the  1957- 
58  academic  year. 

Competition  for  government 
grants  for  graduate  study  abroad 
clo.ses  Nov.  1.  according  to  an  an- 
nouncement from  New  York  by 
the  Institute  of  International  Ed- 
ucation. 

Scholarship  application  blanks 
are  available  in  the  offices  of  Ful- 
bright advisers  on  college  tind 
university  campuses. 

The  programs,  part  of  educa 
ticnal  exchange  activities  of  the 
State  Dept.,  offer  almost  1,000 
Americans  th?  chance  to  study  a 
broad  during  the  coming  year. 


Morp  than  S.-'iOO  Americans  have 
received  such  grants  since  the 
program   was   established   in   1947. 

Grants  for  .study  in  the  follow- 
ing countries  are  g;v:n  under  the 
Fulbright  Act: 

Australia.  Austria.  Belgium. 
Luxembourg.  Burma.  Chile.  Den- 
mark. Finland,  France,  Germany, 
Greece,  India,  Italy,  Japan,  the 
Netherlands.  New  Zealand,  Nor- 
way, th?  Philippines  and  the  Un- 
ited Kingdom. 

Countries  participating  in  the 
Buencs  Aires  Convention  program 
are  Bolivia,  Brazil,  Chile,  Colum- 
bia, Costa  Rica.  Cuba,  the  Dom- 
inican Republic,  Guatemala.  Hai- 
ti, Honduras,  Nicaragua,  Panama, 
Paraguay,    Peru   and  Venezuela. 


voted  without  dissent  for 

tution. 

THANKS 

*  Let  me  publicly  express  thanks 
to  Dean  Spruill  and  the  entire 
committee  for  considering  and  ap- 
proving this  idea."  Young  said. 

Concerning  reduction  in  date 
ticket  prices.  Young  stated  in  his 
release: 

"Selling  date  tickets  to  Carolina 
students  at  half-price  will  be  con- 
tingent UDon  the  approval  of  the 
I  visiting  team's  athletic  office  .  .  . 
j  and  will  nprtain  only  to  conference 
I  games  at  the  University  of  North 
I  Carolina." 

I      This     means     that     date     ticket 
j  prices  for  the  Maryland  and  Wake 
j  Forest  games  this  fall  will   be  .$2 
!  and  $1.75.  respectively,  if  the  di- 
!  rectors    of    athletics    at    Marj-land 
and  Wake  Forest  approve  the  idea. 
According    to    Young,    this    ar- 
rangement   is    for    the    benefit    of 
students   and    student   dates   only. 
"If  students  abuse  the  privilege," 
he  said,   "the  chancellor  and  the 
director    of    athletics    reserve    the 
right    to    withdraw    this    arrange- 
ment at  anv  time." 
•OPTIMISTIC 

Young  said  he  was  "optimistic" 
•hat  the  Wake  Forest   and    Mary- 1      Tonight    is    the    last    night    of 
land    directors    of    athletics    will  i  scheduled    parties    in    the    current 
3gree    to    the    proposed    arrange-  j  fraternity  rush  season. 
ment.  j      Parties  will  last  from  7  to  8:30 

"Regardless  of  their  decision."  p.m. 
he  said,  "let  me  express  sincere !  Tomorrow  is  scheduled  as 
•hanks  to  Chancellor  House  arid  |  shake-up  day.  when  men  may 
Mr.  Erickson  (C.  P.  Erickson,  come  to  a  "gentleman's  agree- 
WC  director  of  athletics)  for  their  ^enr'  concerning  the  fraternities 
nterest  and  cooperation  in  the  ^.hi^h  ru9hees  will  pledge. 
■^^^*^"  '  Fraternity  rules  hold  that  stnct 

silence  will  be  observed  from  9 
p.m.  Friday  until  Monday  noon. 
Rushees  will  pick  up  their  pledge 
cards  Monday  in  Gerrard  Hall 
from  9  a.m.  to  1  p.m..  and  will 
take  the  cards  to  the  fraternity 
house  of  their  choice  from  noon 
on. 


rroternities 
Ending  Rush 
With  Parties 


NROTC  Unit 
Commander 
Starts  Work 

A  veteran  of  the  Philippines 
Liberation  and  the  Asiatic-Pacific 
Campaigns  of  WWII,  is  the  new 
comnrander  of  the  University 
NROTC  unit. 

He  is  Capt.  Alex  M.  Patterson 
a  native  of  Raeford  and  a  gradu- 
ate of  the  V.  S.  Naval  Academy, 
class  of  1927. 

He     succeeds     Col.     Robert     C. 
Burns,  who  has  been  named  chief 
j  of  staff  of  the  Second  Marine  Di- 
vision, Camp  Lejeune. 
Capt.    Patterson    'holds,    among 
I  other     decorations,     the     Bronze 
j  Star,  the  American  Defense  Med- 
I  al,    the    Asiatic-Pacific    Campaign 
I  Medal    with    one   silver   and   four 
bronze  stars,   and  the  Philippines 
Liberation  Ribbon  with  two  bronze 
,  star$. 


IN  THE  INFIRMARY 

Students  In  the  Infirmary  yes- 
terday included: 

Misses  Ruby  Batten,  Jane 
Palmer,  Linda  Hall,  Beatrice 
Gilliam,  Julia  Black,  Mary  Ann 
Keeter,  Patricia  Barlow,  Mary 
Williams,  Eleanor  German,  Mary 
Jo  Douglas,  Ingrid  Clay,  Jean* 
ette  Johnson,  and  Carol  Coving- 
ton, and  Doug  Mollis,  James 
Furr,  Herndon  Thompson,  Bud- 
dy Sasser,  Douglas  Clark,  Hugh 
Price,  Creighton  Smith,  Craig 
White,  John  Beale,  Wayne  Ven- 
tress,  Robert  Ketler,  Alvin 
Smith,  James  Cadiev,  Enn«  Rick- 
cnderf,  and  Normap  Smith. 


Mdl  TWO 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


THURSDAY.  OCTOBER  4,  19S6 


GOP  Can't  Stick  Together 
On  Behefs,  ideas.  Plans 


THERE  ARE  BENEFITS  IN  OUR  HONOR  SYSTEM: 


How  President  F.isenhower  pio- 
jx)ses  to  |)ro\  iilc  "<><MKl-pa\  iiijJj 
j()l>s  {or  70  million  Anieritans" 
that  lie  promised  in  Lexington. 
Kv..  last  Moiulav  is  a  mvsterv.  F  hat 
would  be  a  m<)\e  to  better  labor, 
aiui  its  a  mystery  how  and  why 
won!(i  he  do  that  alter  he  has  al- 
ready: 

1.  Bat  ked  rfovt-ii  on  1ms  promises 
to  amend  the  iaIt-Hartiev  Ait. 
whii  h  has  l.>een  .'-'  da;j[,<<er  in  labors 
b.j(  k.  sinie  its  passage. 

'1.  Stat  ked  the  National  I.al)t)r 
Relations   Boatd   against    labor. 

;}.  Opposeti  the  Demot  rats'  li<rht 
loi    a  detent    mininnim    wage. 

J.  .\es»lected  aieas  ot  \\  ides])read 
linemplovmeni. 

.\nd.  t<M).  ht)W  tt)idtl  he  do  this 
when  his  Secretary  ol  I.alMir  Feels 
"that  a  lelatixelv  bi^j  nnemplov- 
ment  total  is  ...  a  good  thing,  a 
sign  ol  e(«»nt)niit  health  and  prog-  • 
ress?"  riiai's  wiiat  l.alx)r  Set  re- 
tarv  lames  P.  Mitchell  saitl.  bank 
in    «().'» |.  ^ 

The  Presitlent  also  saitl  gi\e  him 
loin  move  years  in  the  White 
Hon>e  and  he  'tan  see  an  Ameri- 
la  in  whith  every  man  tan  eat  his 
t)^\n  bread  in  peaie.  raise  his  own 
l.nnily  iti  seiniitv  and  strengthen 
his   own   mint!   anti   spirit    in    dig- 


W'e  see  that  .\merita  n(»w  and 
ha\e  seen  it  lor  many  years.  But 
it  has  not  been  the  administration 
now  in  powei  that  matle  these 
j)ri\ileges  set  tire.  We  owe  onr  gr.i- 
tiinde  lor  them  to  the  previous 
Five   administiatit)tis. 

Kisenhowei  saitl  he  wonltl  "re- 
tnrn."  il  re-elettetl.  to  the  un- 
finishetl  biisiness  t)f  Congress." 
Wh.t  about  his  unfinished  busi- 
ness? ^\'ho  is  going  to  return  to  it? 
Noboilv. 

'■"Htnv  toifltl  he  blame  C.tmgress 
for.taiUne  to  gi\e  "  lurther  help 
to  small  business"  when  one  ol  his 
lo[)  atlministrators  said.  "In  a  dv- 
namit  eionomy.  sut  h  as  ours  .  .  . 
nt)t  everyone  is  siute.sslul.  There 
aie  business  Failures  e\en  in  times 
oF  great  prosperity.  It  is  j)art  and 
j:)art  el  oF  our  Ameritan  wav  oF  liFc 
untler  whith  om"  lountry  h;w 
grown  strong.  I  do  not  think  we 
\voidtl  want    it   tUFIerent.' 

Ibe  (iOP  apparently  tant  agree 
ami  make  its  beliels  tointide  be- 
tause  it  isn't  sure  what  it  belie\fs 
Avhat  it  plans  to  tlo  and  ht)W^  it 
hopes  to  go  about  tloing  all  the 
things    it    promises.  ^^^^ 

The  present,  shakv.  ram-shac- 
kle a  Iministration  remintls  irs  t)F  a 
tla»hshund.  Its  head  isn't  sure 
where  its  tail  is  going. 


New  Moves  To  Unify  Europe 


Harold  Callender 

In    I'hr  .Vrie  York    Times 

P.ARIS— Tile  Sue/  crisis  has 
causetl  a  new  buist  t)f  activity  to 
unite  Western  Europe  intt)  what 
is  tailed  a  "third  lorte"  between 
and  independent  t)F  the  I'liited 
States  and  tlie  I'nitm. 

(.uv  Mollet.  Premier  of  France, 
at  teti  l.iNi.  He  lonlerretl  here  last 
week  with  Pii:ne  .Minister  Eden 
to  ;'.i\antf.  or  .11  least  tt)  empha- 
size and  ad\e)'i>e,  /vhat  he  tails 
French-British  solidarity.  Twti 
tlavs  later  he  met  Dr.  Kt>nratl  .Ad- 
enauer. West  Cerman  Chaniellor, 
in  litJim  to  weltl  a  similar  st)lidar- 
iiy  with  West  (.rrmany. 

Si>lidarity  between  natitms  is 
never  more  th  iii  lel.itivc.  though 
the  ternj  UM)kN  g  'xl  in  print,  no- 
i.iblv  i:  I  ,  {Utc.  whith  has  lately 
loncied  lor  gi  eater  backing  by  her 
al'io  u»  the  Middle  E.ast  antl 
North  Africa, 

European  unitv  still  is  more 
relatixe  and  will  l)f  slow  to  atli- 
ifve.  \  et  it  is  noteworthy  that  late- 
ly theie  ha^e  been  these  lorms  ol 
stinuilus  lor  moves  towaitl  some 
sut  h   unit\. 

The  two  months  ol  dist  ussion 
t)F  the  Sue/  t  risis  wt-ie  regartletl  by 
the  IreiK  h  and  to  some  extent  by 
the  British,  as  amounting  to  a  dip- 
lomatit  tIeFeat.  It  appeared  that 
Frante  antl  P>iiiain,  bent  on  a 
stKjng  j*»lity.  hatl  been  heltl  in 
f  het  k  by  the  I'liitefl  States.  Ihis 
led  to  the  tout  lusion  that  Europe 
wouki  be  more  ta'pable  ol  afting 
independently  if  it  w^re  more  ini- 
iteti.  .nid  better  able  to  meet  tri.ses 
in   the   Middle  East. 

Chanielloi  Atlenauer  was  etpial- 
Iv  annoNed  with  Washington  o\er 
armaments.  He  Fearetl  the  Tnited 
States  was  abt»ut  to  retluce  its 
troops  in  Europe.  He  consideied 
this  possibility  a  threat  to  West 
(;erm:vny's  setmity.  He  suspet  tetl 
the  British,  too.  wuultl  like  to  re- 
dute  their  trtuips,  but  his  appre- 
hension was  mainly  directed  at 
Washington,  whose  leported  inten- 
tions hatl  F)een  mtue  witlely  advei - 
tised  by  the  press  t)F  the  Tnitetl 
States. 

Britain  showctl  new  signs  ^A 
etlgiiig  t  loser  t(»  Europe  Un  eto- 
nomit  ieast)ns.  She  Itmg  had  op- 
posctl  the  tonmitm  market  f)r  ens- 

the  Daily  TarHeel 

The  official  student  publication  of  the 
PiiblicatioiLi  Board  ol  the'  University  of 
North  Carolina,  where  it  is  published 
daily  except  Monday  and  examination 
and  vacation  periods  and  summer  terms. 
Entered  a.s  .second  class  matter  in  the 
post  office  in  Chapel  Hill.  N.  C,  under 
the  Act  01  March  8.  1870.  Subscription 
rates:  mailed,  S4  per  year,  S2.50  a  semes- 
ter; delivered,  $6  a  year,  $3.50  a  semes- 
ter. 


Editor   FRED  POWLEDCE 

Managing  Editor      CHARLIE  JOHNSON 

News  Editor     .ZlZH.    RAY  LINKER 


Bu.<«iness  Manager 


BIL^  BOB  PEEL 


Advertising  Manager  Fred  Katzin 

BUSINESS  STAFF:  Rosa  Moore,  Johnny 
Whifaker,  Dick'Uavitt,  Peter  Alper. 


touts  union  projet  tetl  bv  West 
(iermany.  France.  Ii;iK.  Belgium, 
the  Netherlantis  and  Euxembt)ing. 
She  Fearetl  it  \vould  Ji.inn  her 
trade. 

On  the  piinciple  that  iF  vou  tan 
not  beat  theih  ytiu  tan  join  them. 
Britain  suggested  tentatively  in  Ju- 
ly that  pt)ssibly  she  might  take 
part  in  the  tommon  maiket  il 
there  were  a  Free  trade  /one  in 
addition  to  the  customs  union. 
The  theory  was  that  she  might  le- 
tain  her  imperi.il  j)relerente  tai- 
iFIs  while  joining  a  Free  trade  /one. 
which  she  toultl  nf)t  do  in  a  t  us- 
toms  union. 

While  this  was  only  an  itlea,  it 
represented  a  complete  t  hange  t)F 
appn)ach    bv   oFFicial    Britain. 

Iliis  was  apjilaiided  by  the  Lib- 
eral and  some  oi  the  C'.onservatixe 
press,  whith  said  British  tratle 
woultl  suFler  as  against  West  (Ger- 
man tiade  iF  Britain  remained  is- 
olatetl.  Ihe  tlanger  For  Britain  oF 
a  (oinmon  m.u  ket  without  Britain 
now  .seemetl  greater  than  that  t)F 
a  (ommon  market  with  liiitain  in 
it. 

W.  .Mollet  was  pet  iiliarlv  litted 
to  .sei/e  upon  these  lientis  to  try 
to  re\i\e  the  mo\e  towarti  Euro- 
jjean  union  on  a  new  basis. 

llie  Erentla  Premier  long;  hatl 
been  an  artlent  suppcMtei  oF  what 
might  be  tailed  the  fean  Monnet 
type  oF  letleral  union— that  basetl 
on  a  supranational  ainht)iity.  sut  h 
as  the  I.urt)pean  Cloal  and  Steel 
(iommunitv  tieatetl  by  M.  Mon- 
net. 

Ewo  years  ago,  when  Britain  re- 
sisted a  Einopean  letleral  ntiion. 
Former  Premier  Pierre  Mentles- 
Frante  thought  he  had  to  abandon 
the  Federal  union  oF  the  six  nations 
pre\iously  meiitionetl  to  seek  some 
union  that  Britain  woiiitl  entei. 
The  Feeble  Western  Eurtjpean  I'n- 
ion.  purely  military  and  non-Fed- 
eral, was  the  result. 

Foflav.  when  Biiiain's  hostility 
to  a  Federal  union  appears  tt>  ha\e 
been  modiFietl.  .M.  MolTet  aspires 
to  make  the  ret  out  iliation  that 
seemed  im|)t).ssible  to  .\E  .Mentles- 
Frante— the  reconciliation  between 
Britain  antl  a  Federally  united  Eu- 
Kipe.  This  means  recont  iliation 
between  Britain  antl  Frante  and 
between  France  antl  West  Ger- 
many at  the  same  time. 

Ihis.  again,  is  only  an  idea, 
though  the  Frent  h-(.erman  agree- 
ment on  the  Saar  wa's  a  terrible 
beginning.  Bcliind  the  idea  lies 
the  lK)|)e  that  a  really  united  Eu- 
rope might  become  a  great  power 
oF  somewhat  the  j)ro|)ortions  o^ 
the  I'nitetl  States  ami  the  .Soviet 
Tnion.         , 

This  hope  is  mt)re  charat  teris- 
tit  oF  the  Continent  than  oF  Bri- 
tain. Ever  since  the  enti  oF  Work! 
War  H  Brjtain  has  t  lung  to  what 
the  British  tall  ','the  Anglt)-.Ameri- 
tan  alliante"  as  the  basis  oF  her 
h)reign  polity.  For  Britain  this 
was  a  "setond  Force"  tapable  oF 
Fating  the  .Soviet  I'nioji,  and  no 
"third  Force"  was  Foie.seen  t>r  de- 
sired. 


Promoting  Honor  In  Positive  Way 


Jim  Exum 

Periodically  throughout  the 
year,  articles  concerning  the 
Honor  System  and  the  work  of 
our  student  courts  will  appear 
in    The    Daily   Tar   Heel. 

The  Student  Council,  Men's 
Council  and  Womens  Council 
plan  this  .vear  to  keep  the  stu- 
dent informed  at  least  twice  a 
week  about  what  the  members 
of  these  bodies  are  thinking 
along  the  lines  of  general  stu- 
dent attitude  toward  the  system, 
responsibilities  under  the  sys- 
tem and  basic  philosophies  of 
the  sy.steni. 

Included  in  these  articles  will 
be  reports  ot  council  cases,  in- 
vestigations, trials  and  final  de- 
cisions. Names  of  all  defendants, 
of  course,  will   be  confidential. 

These  articles  will  be  part  of 
our  efforts  this  year  to  promote 
the  Honor  System  in  the  minds 
of  the  students  in  a  positive  way. 
The  councils  believe  that  sitting 
as  courts  and  trying  violators 
is  only  the  negative  aspect  of  our 
work. 

We  think  we  should  d.)  much 
as  elected  representatives  of  the 
student  body  to  insure  in  the 
minds  of  all  students  the  bene- 
fits gained  under  the  Honor 
System  as  well  as  the  demands 
which  the  sy.stem  places  upon  us. 

This  can  be  positively  done, 
we  believe,  through  dorm,  fra- 
ternity and  sorority  discu.ssions 
led  by  members  of  the  councils, 
conferences  with  faculty  and  ad- 
ministration, talks  to  various 
groups  on  campus  and  articles 
such  as  those  we  are  here  plan- 
ning. 

RESPONSIBILITY 

Today,  in  the  first  installment, 
I  want  to  remind  us  all  of  our 
responsibility  to  the  group  which 
is  inherent  in  any  right  concept 
of  the  Honor  System. 

Group  responsibility  means 
that  under  the  Honor  System  we, 
as  students,  are  responsible  not 
only  for  our  own  actions  but  for 
the  actions  of  the  entire  group, 
which  in  our  case  is  the  whole 
student  body  of  UNC. 

We  have  this  responsibility 
larg?ly  becau.se  in  the  early  days 
of  the  University  we  a.sked  for 
it.  It  was  delegated  to  us  by 
the  faculty.  It  is  only  as  we  un- 
derstand and  accept  this  idea 
of   responsibility   for   the   actions 

YOU  Said  It: 


of  the  group  that  we  can  under- 
stand why  it  is  imperative  that 
we  report  others  known  to  be  vio- 
lators of  the  group  ideal  as  well 
as  ourselves,  should  we  become 
violators. 

Phillip  G.  Hammer,  a  student 
of  this.  University  in  1936.  said 
on  the  subject: 

"We  cannot  adopt  an  Honor 
System  which  demands  that  we 
report  violators  of  the  commun- 
ity standard  of  conduct -unless  we 
conceive  of  tiie  s.\stem  as  the 
natural   effort   of   3    sincere   stu- 


dent body  to  officially  recog- 
nize  the    group   responsibility. 

"The  Honor  System,  which  de- 
mands that  violators  ...  be  re- 
ported .  . .  does  not  mean  to 
punish  such  offenders.  If  at 
tempts  to  educate  them  to  help 
them  realize  the  error  of  dishon- 
esty . . .  Keep  burning  bright  one 
thought  . . .  individual  honesty 
is  a  group  responsibility  at  Caro- 
lina because  we  have  asked  for 
the  privilege  of  maintaining  it 
as  such." 

In  order  that  there  might   not 


be  any  confusion  as  to  whom 
violators  should  be  reported,  the 
following  is  a  list  of  the  mem- 
bers of  the  student  courts.  If 
you  see  or  know  of  any  violation 
of  the  system,  report  it  immed- 
iately to  one  of  these  students: 

Jim  Exum,  chairman  of  the 
Men's  Council,  Sigma  Nu,  8-9077; 
Luther  Hodges,  chairman  of  the 
Student  Council,  Pi  Kappa  Al- 
pha, 8-9024;  Miss  Pat  McQueen, 
chairman  of  the  Women's  Coun- 
cil. Chi  Omega.  8-9005,  or  to  any 
member  of  the  councils. 


'All  Right,  Men-We'll  Outbid  Them' 


Editor  Accused  Of  J  umbling  Parking  Problem 


Editor: 

Your  ridiculing  of  the  Colum- 
bia St.  parking  bill,  unanimously 
passed  by  the  Student  Legisla- 
ture, was  very  clever.  So  many 
people  have  come  up  to  me  and 
said,  "Did  you  read  the  edi- 
torial?" What  did  he  say?" 
"There's  nothing  concrete  in  it." 
I  must  say  I  do  agree  with  them. 

The  most  glaring  fault  in  your 
whole  editorial  is  that  you  did- 
n't offer  any  real  reason  for  the 
two-hour  parking   limit. 

You  made  the  statement  that 
there  is  plenty  of  parking  space 
available  west  of  Big  Fraternity 
Court.  After  examining  this  area 
and  seeing  all  the  cars  parked 
there,  I  am  forced  to  assume  that 


you  mean  for  the  boys  to  park  in 
Carrboro.  I  do  think  thjs  might 
be   a   trifle   inconvenient. 

That  bit  about  the  boys  leav- 
ing their  car  in  one  space  all 
week  was  so  childish.  This  is  a 
big  problem,  so  lets  discuss  it 
like  big  b:)ys. 

You  said  that  the  men  living 
up  on  Columbia  St.  don't  like  to 
walk  more  than  15  yards  to  their 
cars.  Under  the  prevailing  cir- 
cumstances, please  tell  hie  where 
the  boys  can  park,  on  the  street, 
that  comes  anywhere  near  the 
di.stance  of  750  yards  to  their 
residence. 

It    is    evident    that    these   men 

now  have  no  place  t,)  park  at  all. 

Taking  away  their  parking  rights 

has  not  solved  a  thing.  The. boys 
i«f* 


in  the  court  and  surrounding 
houses;  have  as  much  right  to 
park  in  front  of  their  residences 
as  does  a  resident  of  Victory 
Village  or  any  other  residential 
area  in  Chapel   Hill. 

If  a  person  is  coming  into 
town  to  park  for  less  than  two 
hours  and  can't  find  a  place  on 
Franklin  St.  then  he  can  park  in 
the  lot  on  the  northeast  corner 
of  Columbia  and>  Rosemary 
Streets.  Why  should  a  man  living 
on  Columbia  St.  relinquish  the 
right  to  park  in  front  0^  his  resi- 
dence so  that  someone  coming 
into  town  from  an  outlying  dis- 
trict can  park  there  instead?  Is 
this   equitable?  * 

Just  so  that  there  will   be  no 


misunderstanding,  I  wish  to 
clarify  my  personal  position.  I 
live  on  Rosemary  St.  where  park- 
ing was  completely  eliminated 
last  January-  I  have  been  asked 
.  by  the  boys  in  my  house  to  try 
to  do  something  about  our  park- 
ing while  I  was  working  on  the 
Columbia  St.  ploWIem.  I  told 
them  that  I  felt  I  couldn't  con- 
scientiously work  for  parking  on 
Rosemary  St..  since  it  is  too  nar- 
row to  accommodate  both  its  traf- 
fic flow  and  parking 

In  the  future,  Mr.  Editor, 
please  don't  refer  to  my  meas- 
ures as  reflecting  ignorance  of 
the  situation  unless  you  can  back 
up  your  statements. 

Michael  Weinman 


Pogo 


By  Walt  Kelly 


^rg^  IP      /  vou  IT  iNj 

Mg  Tt^AT  >    you  WOutrN'T 


Tizue. 

T(ZU6.' 

/AT  ugA'&T, 

vr?u  \^ 

RIflHT  If* 


AN' If  re?     > 

T0u5  iTiKjTJg 
\    C-  hAP  no 


Li'l  Abner 


By  Al  Capp 


'^'^/'^^^♦^' 


tiAVvrNF-D  ro  TH'  IKItOMPARAB4t 

STANILFW  STRONCjNOSE    AN'  TO 

HIS  INCOMPARAbUt 

^^(\    PHIZ  ZEEK.I'' 


.^' 


REACTION  PIECE 

Three  Groups  Of 
Campus  People 

David  Mundy 

A  persion  has  a  lot  to  choose  from  in  Chapel 
Hill. 

Most  of  the  students  are  "just  here,"  which  isn't 
to  call  them  existentialists.  On  occasional  Saturday 
afternoons  they  do  a  little  drunken  bellowing  down 
in  Kenan,  sit  in  the  card  section,  and  thus  fulfill 
their  obligations  to  one  of  the  finest  "iastitutions 
of  higher  learning"  in  the  South. 

Incidental  to  drinking  (otherwise  known  as  gittin' 
di-unk),  playing  cards,  talking  about  sex,  sports  and 
occasionally  a  professor,  this  segment  of  the  campus 
gathers  up  its  necessary  quota  of  quality  points  and 
credits,  and  passes  on  after  four  or  more  years  at 
the  university.  For  the  rest  of  their  lives  they  may 
be  members  of  the  Alumni  Assn.  and  identify  the 

fortunes  of  the  university  with  its  football  team. 

*  *  * 

Some  other  students  splurge  madly  in  36-plus 
"extra-curriculars,"  and  take  up  half  a  page  in  the 
yearbook  when  they  graduate.  Durisg  their  four 
years  at  the  University  they  are  either  actively  cam- 
paigning for  office  or  quietly  laying  their  plans  for 
future  campaigns. 

By  the  time  they  get  to  law  school  they  have  al- 
ready mapped  out  their  careers  up  to,  and  includ- 
ing, the  Presidency  of  the  United  States.  "Someday 
the  Democratic  Party  will  have  an  internal  situation 
demanding  the  nomination  of  a  Southerner.  Who 
could  be  a  more  likely  candidate  than  a  good  sound 
liberal  from  North  Carolina?" 

Admittedly,  only  the  more  ambitious  have  de- 
signs on  the  Presidency.  Most  of  them  have  learned 
that  they  have  little  chance  of  being  elected  to 
anything,  but  that  doesn't  keep  them  from  belong- 
ing to  forty-eleven  organizations  and  being  as  politi- 
cally active  as  a  bumble-bee  in  a  matchbox. 

Someday  the.se  people  may  be  our  "best"  citi- 
zens, if  they  don't  cut  each  other's  throats  first. 

Then  there  is  a  third  group  which  operates  al- 
most independently  of  the  other  two.  These  are  the 
students  who  managed  to  escape  the  intellectually 
deadening  process  of  our  public  .schools  antl  select- 
ed the  University  of  North  Carolina  from  the  morass 
of  cow  colleges  in  the  South  attended  by  the  ma- 
jority of  our  high  .school  graduates,  be  they  bright, 
dumb  or  just  plain   stupid. 

The  lot  of  these  students  isn't  a  pleasant  one. 
The  university  ostensibly  exists  for  their  type  of 
student.  Excellent  professors  are  there;  so  is  a 
library. 

And  in  between?  Thousands  of  students  who 
don't  give  a  hang  for  any  mental  activity  not  con- 
nected with  just  'maintaining  an  av^age,"  and 
working  crossword  puzzles.  Hardly  an  intellectual 
atmosphere. 

*  *  ♦ 

But  it  isn't  all  bad.  As  a  matter  of  fact  there  has 
been  improvement  over  the  past  year. 

People  are,  horror  of  horrors,  studying.  For  the 
first  time  in  history,  outside  of  exam  week,  the 
library  runs  out  of  social  science  books.  People 
have  even  been  observed  studying  on  Saturday 
nghts,  at  the  beginning  of  the  semester. 

The  "professional  politicians"  on  campus  are 
still  numerous,  but  appear  to  be  dying  out  as  a  race. 
No  longer  can  one  go  from  meeting  to  meeting  and 
keep  seeing  the  identical  faces,  and  hearing  the 
identical  speeches.  What  happened?  I  don't  know, 
unless  there  was  just  too  much  "politicking"  to  suit 
the  tastes  of  the  student  body.  Good  government  is 
nice  to  have,  and  we  should  enjoy  it  while  we  have 
it. 

Maybe  the  new  entrance  examinations  will  help 
the  "scholarly"  group  of  students  along. 

*  *  « 

That  such  a  plentitute  of  choices  for  the  student 
exists  is  in  most  respects  complimentary  to  the 
university.  There  is  indeed  something  for  everyone, 
from  the  super-sophisticate  from  "up  North"  to  the 
boy  from  'Chitlin'  Switch"  and  "Heathin"  Holler." 
(The  last  is  just  over  the  hill  from  my  home.) 

What  a  Super-sophisticate,  an  "aig-head"  in  com- 
mon parlance,  might  receive  from  a  few  years  in 
Chapel  Hill  is  outside  my  field.  But  the  boys  from 
the  backwoods  have  little  to  lose  and  everything  to 
learn. 

As  one  from  the  aforementioned  settlement,  and 
as  one  who  has  wallowed  in  "European  culture" 
for  a  year,  I  can  truthfully  say  that  I  appreciate 
the  choices  possible  for  a  student  in  Chapel  Hill. 
As  one  who  has  tried  them  all:  No  recommendations. 

THE  NEW  REPUBLIC: 


Stevenson's  Wit 
Getting  Sharper 

We  have  been  writing  copy  with  a  seat  belt  strap- 
ped around  us  this  past  week.  We  flew  up  to  New 
York  to  watch  the  last  of  the  Steven.son  regional 
conferences,  and  then  on  to  Harrisburg  to  see  the 
kick-off  of  the  Democrats'  official  campaign. 

Democratic  cliantes  certainly  have  perked  up 
after  the  Maine  victory.  We  were  amused  to  note 
in  New  York  Democratic  leaders  telling  each  other 
•not  to  be  complacent!"  The  fact  is  that  it  now 
looks  like  a  Democratic  Congressional  victory  in 
November. 

But  we  would  still  soberly  estimate  that  Eisen- 
hower has  the  edge  for  the  Presidency. 

We  watched  Stevenson  make  his  speech  in  New 
York  and  again  in  Harrisburg,  Pennsylvania,  last 
week  with  the  deep  interest  we  always  bring  to  the 
matter.  In  some  ways  he  is  enormously  gratifying 
as  a  popular  leader;  in  some  ways,  we  think,  disap- 
pointing. 

On  the  credit  side  are  the  speeches  themselves. 
These  are  well  and  often  brilliantly  written  One 
thing  can  be  said— the  GOP  is  not  likely  to  pooh- 
pooh  Stevenson  for  his  wit  any  more. 

He  is  using  it  now  as  a  powerful  weapon;  this 
IS  not  quippmg  or  wisecracking  any  more'  but 
devasting  satire,  hilted  with  a  kind  of  urbanJ  sav- 
agery. It  is  funny  in  a  way— but  it  is  fun  with  the' 
slash  of  a  cutlass. 


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THimSOAV.  OCTOBER  4,  1956 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEU 


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Covering  The  Universify  Campus 


YDC 

The  Young  Democrats  Club  will 
hold  an  open  house  today  especial- 
ly for  coeds  from  7:30  to  9  p.m. 
in  the  Rendezvous  Room  of  Gra- 
ham Memorial.  A  musical  combo 
will  play,  and  punch  will  be  serv- 

Oil 

CHRISTIAN  SCIENCE 

The  Christian  Science  Society 
will  hold  Sunday  services  at  11 
a.m.  in  Carroll  Hall.  Sunday  school 
will  be  held  at  930  a.m.  * 

INTERNATIONAL    HOUSE 

The  University  of  North  Caro- 
lina is  one  of  the  few  universities 
which  has  a  considerable  number 
of  foreign  students  and  no  Inter- 
national House. 

A  few  students  have  already  set 
up  a  cooperative  house,  and  are 
interested  in  combining  the  better 
elements  of  a  co-op  house  an-d  an 
International  House,  it  was  an- 
nounced  yesterday. 

All  persons  interested  in  this 
project  are  asked  to  leave  their 
names  and  addresses  at  the  YMCA 
and  specify  a  time  at  which  they 
could  meet. 
•Y   NIGHT"  CHORUS 

There  will  be  a  rehearsal  of  the 
"Y-Night"  Chorus,  a  group  that 
will  sing  at  "Y  Nights'  throughout 
the  year,  at  2  p.m.  today  in  Hill 
Hall. 

The  group,  now  numbering  30 
members,  will  sing  popular  and 
sacred  music.  Mrs.  Jean  Vavoulis, 
choir  director  at  the  Presbyterian 
Church,  will  be  the  director. 
WEINER    ROAST 

There  will  be  a  weincr  roast  at 
the    new    Baptist    Student    Union 


Building   Saturday   at    6   p.m.   All 
Baptist  students  have  been  invited, 
along    with    girls    from    Meredith 
College. 
VRC 

The  Youug  Republicans  Club 
will  meet  tonight  at  7:30  in  Ro- 
land Parker  lounges  1  and  2.  on 
the  second  floor  of  Graham  Ma- 
morial.  The  speaker  will  be  Irwin 
Porterfield,  chairman  of  the  pub- 
licity committee  of  the  Tar  Heel 
YRC. 
W.  A.  A.  COUNCIL 

The  Women's  Athletic  Assn.  will 
hold  its  first  meeting  tomorrow  at 
7  p.m.  in  the  Woodhouse  Confer- 
ence Room  in  Graham  Memorial. 
All  dormitory  and  sorority  repre- 
sentatives have  been  urged  to  at- 
tend. 
ART  CLASS  MODELS 

Students,  male  and  female,  can 
make  extra  cash  by  being  a  model 
for  art  classes,  according  to  an  an- 
nouncement frwn  Person  Hall.  This 
is  not  a  regular  job  for  one  per- 
son, but  for  several  who  will  be 
called  as  needed.  Pay  will  be  $1 
an  hour. 

Interested    students    have    been 
invited  to  call  Miss  Lynette  War- 
ren in  Person  Art  Gallery  at  2801. 
ARMY    RESEARCH    AND 
DEVELOPMENT   UNIT 

The  first  fall  quarter  meeting  of 
the  local  (Carolina-Duke)  Army  Re- 
search and  Development  Unit  will 
be  held  in  101  Medical  School 
Building,  tomorrow  night  at  7:30. 
Maj.  Emil  Chanlett,  a  member  of 
the  faculty  of  the  School  of  Public 
Health,  will  present  an  analysis  of 
certain  public  health  problems  oc- 


QaC^r^ 


wth 

MocShukn 


(Aulktr  el  "Barefoot  Bn^  With  Ckttk,"  §tej 


THE  SEARCH  FOR  BRIDEY  SIGAFOOS 

It  was  a  dulli.sh  evening  at  the  Theta  house.  Mary 
Ellen  Krumbald  was  sticking  pins  in  an  effigy  of  the  house 
mother;  Evelyn  Zin.smaster  was  welding  a  manhole  cover 
to  her  charm  bracelet ;  Algelica  McKeesport  was  writing 
a  letter  to  Ehns  Presley  in  blood.  Like  I  say,  it  was  a 
dulli.sh  evening. 

Suddenly  Dolores  Vladnay  stood  up  and  stamped  her 
foot.  "Chaps,"  she  said  to  her  aorors,  "this  is  too  yawn- 
making  I  Let's  do  .something  gay  and  mad  and  wild  and 
different  and  gasp-making.   Anybody  got  an  idea?" 

"No,"  said  the  sorors,  shaking  their  little  sausage 
,  curls. 

"Think,  chaps,  think!"  said  Dolores  and  passed  Philip 
Morris  Cigarettes  to  everybody,  and  if  there  ever  was  a 
th  ink-making  smoke,  it  is  today's  fresh  and  zestful  and 
yummy  Philip  Morris.  Things  come  clear  when  you  puff 
a  good,  clean,  natural  Philip  Morris  —  knots  untie,  dilem- 
mas dissolve,  problems  evaporate,  cobwebs  vanish,  fog 
disperses,  and  the  benevolent  sun  pours  radiance  on  a  new 
and  dewy  world.  Oh,  happy  world !  Oh,  Philip  Morris  1 
Oh,  regular !   Oh,  long-size !   Oh,  get  some  already ! 


^"^  One.  two.  Three,  ^ 


Now  Geraldine  Quidnunc,  her  drooping  brain-cells 
revivified  by  a  good  Philip  Morris,  leapt  up  and 
cried,  "Oh,  I  have  a  perfect  gasser  of  an  idea!  Let's 
hypnotize  somebody!" 

"Oh,  capital !"  cried  the  sorors.  "Oh,  tingle-making!" 

"Yes,"  said  Dolores  Vladnay,  "it  is  a  splendid  idea, 
but  hypnosis  requires  a  pliant  and  malleable  mind,  and 
we  are  all  so  strong  and  well-adjusted." 

At  this  point,  in  walked  a  joung  pledge  named  Alice 
Bluegown.  "Excuse  me,  mistresses,"  said  she,  "I  have 
finished  making  your  beds,  doing  your  homework,  and 
ironing  your  pleats.   Will  there  be  anything  else?" 

"Yes,"  snapped  Dolores  Vladnay.  "When  I  count  to 
three,  you  will  be  hsrpnotized." 

"Yes,  excellency^"  said  Alice,  bobbing  a  curtsey. 

"One,  two,  three,"  said  Dolores. 

Alice  promptly  went  into  a  trance. 

"Go  back,"  said  Dolores.  "Go  back  to  your  fifth  birth- 
day, back  to  your  birth,  to  before  your  birth,  to  your  last 
incarnation Now,  who  are  you?" 

"My  name  is  Bridey  Sigafoos,"  said  Alice.  "The  year 
is  1818,  and  I  am  in  County  Cork." 

"Coo!"  said  the  sorors. 

"How  old  are  you  ?"  asked  Dolores. 

"I  am  seven,"  said  Alice.  •. 

"Where  is  your  mother?"  asked  Dolores. 

"She  got  sold  at  the  fair  last  year." 

"Coo!"  said  the  sorors, 

"Tell  us  about  yourself,"  said  Dolores. 

"I  am  five  feet  tall,"  said  Alice.  "I  have  brown  eyes, 
and  weigh  3200  pounds." 

"Coo!"  saicf  the  sorors. 

"Isn't  that  rather  heavy  for  a  girl?"  said  Dolores. 

"Who's  a  girl?"  said  Alice.  "I'm  a  black  and  white 
guernsey," 

"Coo!"  said  the  sorors. 

"Moo!"  said  Bridey  Sigafoos. 

OMax  ShnhMB.  iei« 

TWf  column  i»  pre$ented  by  the  nuthtra  of  FhUip  MorrUt 
who  don't  hold  uith  hypnoaU.  Wm  want  you  tUdm  mwmkm  mhen 
you  try  Philip  Morri*'*  nmturtd,  goUtn,  trum  tobmceot 


t> 


^ 


12:45 
1:00 
1:30 
2:00 
2:30 
5:44 
5:45 
6:00 
6:15 
6:30 
6:45 
7:00 
7:15 
8:00 
8:45 
9:30 
10:00 
10:05 


curing  after  atomic  attacks. 

Any  army  reserve  officer  inter- 
ested in  research  has  been  invited 
to  attend.  For  further  information, 
students  may  contact  Col.  K.  M, 
Brinkheus  at  9-9921. 
WUNC-TV 
12:44    Sign  On 

Music 

Today  on  Farm 

Music  in  View 

Your  Child 

Sign  Off 

Sign  On 

Music 

Magic  Lantern 

Sports  Clinic 

News 

Sports 

Mental   Gym 

Bible  Course  ^  . 

Dr.  Shivers  /~  ' 

State  Govt. 

I.£cture  Hall  '.  <  • 

Final  Edition     .;  ;    '^ 

Sign  Off  , 

COED  SWIMMING 

The  Women's  Physical  Education 
Dept.  will  give  swimming  and  ten- 
nis tests  today  from  3  to  4  p.m. 

All  women  students  must  suc- 
cessfully complete  a  course  in 
swimming  and  an  individual  sport, 
or  pass  the  tests,  in  order  to  grad- 
uate.        ,  ■  • .  ^ 

WUNC 

7:00  p.m.  Intermezzo 

7:15  Chalkdust 

7:30  Voices 

7:45  French  Press  Review 

8:00  American  Music  Festival 

9:00  Seventh  Continent 

9:30  Masterworks   from   France 
10:00  News  at  Ten 
10:05  Evening  Masterwork 
11:30  Sign  Off 
Y  NURSES  ASSN. 

There  will  be  a  supper  meeting 
today  at  5:30  p.m.  in  cafeteria  1  at 
the  hospital  for  all  persons  inter- 
ested in  planning  a  Y  Nurses  Assn. 
The  purpose  of  this  group  is  to 
briug  the  nurses  into  the  campus 
aetivitie.';.  Weekly  meetings  will  be 
held  to  discuss  and  plan  picnics, 
dances  and  study  groups. 

Treasurer  Blasts  GOP 
As  Too  Little,  Late' 

SPINDALE  —  (AP)  —  State 
Treasurer  Edwin  Gill  Wednesday 
-lambasted  the  Republican  Party 
as  the  "too  little,  too  late  party." 

Gill  said  the  Soil  Bank  program 
came  too  late  to  be  of  real  help 
to  farmers.  He  called  a  textile 
agreement  recently  negotiated 
with  Japan  "obviously  rushed 
through  at  the  last  minute  for 
political  reasons." 

Gill's  talk  was  prepared  for  de- 
livery at  an  11th  congressional 
district  Democratic  rally,  one  of 
12  to  be  held  in  the  state  as  a 
prelude  to  the  Nov.  6  general  el- 
ection. 

Gov.  Hodges  and  other  top  state 
party  officials  attended. 


PATRONIZi  YOUR 
•    ADVERTISERS   • 


New  Officer 

Lt.  Col.  Franklin  W.  Swann 
(above)  of  Lakeland,  Fla.,  has 
bean  named  new- assistant  pro- 
fessor of  air  science  and  execu- 
tive officer  to  the  UNC  Depf.  of 
Air  Science.  He  holds  four  battle 
stars,  and  participated  in  the 
Berlin  air  lift.  Lt.  Col.  and  Mrs. 
Swann  and  their  three  children 
live  at  44  Oakwood  Dr. 


Dance  Set 
After  Game 
Saturday 

Carolina  students  will  have 
their  after-the-game  dance  this 
weekend,  even  though  the  game 
is  in  South  Carolina. 

Graham  Memorial's  Dance  Com- 
mittee will  sponsor  a  combo  in 
the  Rendezvous  Room  of  the  stu- 
dent union  Saturday  from  8  to  II 
p.m. 

Bob  Noal.  freshman  from  Hen- 
derson, will  lead  his  combo,  the 
Rams.    Admission    will    be    free. 

The  Dance  Committee,  chaired 
by  Chuck  Flack  and  Ed  Myers, 
yesterday  announced  it  hopes  to 
have -similar  dances  every  Satur- 
day during  the  football  season 
when  there  is  no  home  game. 


Waltenborn 
Is  Named  By 
Music  Dept. 

Robert  Wallenborn,  well-known 
pianist  and  lecturer  on  music, 
will  join  the  faculty  of  the  Uni- 
versity Music  Dept.  as  visiting 
professor    for   the   fall    semester. 

While  here  Wallenborn  will 
teach  a  graduate  seminar  in  nausic 
history,  undergraduate  courses  in 
music  appreciation,  and  will  offer 
private  instruction  in  piano  to  ad- 
vanced students. 

Wallenborn  made  his  profes- 
sional debut  with  the  Chicago 
Symphony  Orchestra  and  has  sub- 
sequently played-  with  this  and 
other  major  orchestras  through- 
out  the  country. 

In  addition  to  wide  range  of 
concert  activities  he  has  taught 
as  professor  of  music  history  here 
and  at  Texas  University. 


DAILY    CROSSWORD 


ACROSS 
1.  Ivfasta 

6.  Defraud 

11.  Kind  of  cat 

12.  Dwelling 

13.  Near  (poet.) 

14.  Eagle's  nest 

15.  Linger* 

17.  Water  god 
(poss.) 

18.  Wise  men 
20.  Tablet 
23.  Toward 
34.  OrieittAl 

nurae 
2t.  NimM» 
30.  Small  plug 
91.  A  jumping 

stick 

32.  Cry  of  p«in 

33.  Moisture 

34.  Dlacloees 
37.  Arithmetic 

problem 
40.  Often  seen 

t>]r  an  old 

fireplace 
44.  Ascend 

46.  Vampire 

47.  Girl's  name 

48.  Each 

49.  Poorly 

50.  Sandy  tracts 
(Eng.) 

DOWN 
1.  Begone! 

3.  Pineapple 
(So.  Am.) 

.    3.  Affirm 

4.  Raises  up 

6.  Mark  with 
striae 

e.  roHow 

7.  Garden  tool 

f .  Kuropeaa 
fivir 


9.  Largest 
continent 

10.  Golf 
mounds 

16.  Self 

19.  Weaken 

20.  Invalid's 
food 

21.  Past 

22.  Excavate 

25.  Middle 

26.  Malt 
beveragt 

27.  Cut,  as 
Umber 

39.  Bowl 
under* 
hand 


30.  Re- 
moved 
the 
outer 
husk 

32.  Coin 
(Swed.) 

39.  Monas- 
tery 

36.  Bonds- 
man 

37.  A 
strike 
breaker 

.  38.  Fore- 
arm 
bone 
39.  Intellect 


Yesterday's  Aaswer 

41.  Portent 

42.  Metal  cord 

43.  Speaks 
45.  Military 

(abbr.) 


•r 


4* 
47" 


%l 


)• 


tz 


^9 


T 


n 


4S 


th 


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76 


J% 


\Z 


\*^ 


10 


4ft 


SO 


^4 


M 


25 


41 


M 


41 


10 


t1 


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THURSDAY,  OCTOBER  4,  1?55 


Offensive  Series 

Offense  has  domioated  the  53- 
j^ftr  old  football  rivalry  between 
Carolina  and  the  University  of 
South  Carolina.  In  the  last  12 
games,  both  teams  have  scored  in 
10  of  them,  with  UNC  being  shut 
out  twice. 

CLASSIFIEDS 


BLACKBURN'S  MARKET 
(across  from  ice  plant).  Open  7 
days  a  week,  7  a.m.  fb  8  p.m. 
I^Yesh  fruit  and  vegetables.  Also 
beer.  , 

STUDENTS  EXPERIENCED  ON 
Linotype  or  open  presses  may 
obtain  part  time  work  at  Colon*^ 
ial  Press.  Phone  333-6.  ..    ■. 


PAPERBACKED  BOOKS  —  G<js4 
used  novels,  detective  yams  and 
non-fiction  at  3  for  25c  in  the 
stand  by  our  front  door.  The 
Intimate  Bookshop. 


Tar  Heels  In 
Last  Stiff  Drill 

Tackle  John  Bilich,  among 
North  Carolina's  injiured  of  yester- 
day, was  the  only  Tar  Heel  with- 
held from  today's  workout,  the 
last  heavy  drill  before  the  team 
takes  on  South  Carolina  at  Colum- 
bia Saturday. 

Bilich,  second  team  member, 
has  _^a-  sprained .  shoulder  which 
trainers  hope  will  heai  sufficiently 
for  him  to  play. 

The  squad  followed  its  usual 
routine  of  alternating  on  offense 
.ap4;iftefe^  and  had  a  long  re- 
hearsal on  its  kicking  game. 

>W«Hy-  Y«l«.  Lartry.  Muschamp,. 
Dave  Reed  and  Curt  Hathaway  did 
Ttttosf  Of  the  kicking. 


Maglie   Is   Difference   In   Series   Opener 

Dodger  Hurler  Baffles  ^     Series 


Yankees  With  Sinker 


By  WILL  GRIMSLEY 

BROOKLYN.  Oct.  33.  WV-Sal 
Maglie,  Brooklyn's  39-year-old 
pitching  whiz,  had  the  Yankees  so 
dizzy    in    the    first    World    Series 


LOST— NEW    K    &    E    LOG    DU- ' 
plex  decitrig  slide  rule  in  black 
leather  case.  Finder  please  call 
Frank  Inman  Chi  Phi  House. 


UNC  To  Have 
No  Gym  Team 
Jhh  Season 

By  JIMMY  HARPER 


tTEVEKt  ~  SHBPHBIU) 

SLACKS  N'  SHORTS 


•n^ 


SM-i-a 


•  Madt  1ik«  Exp«n«ivt  Stoclct 

•  T«ilerfd  with  SHm  Leek 

•  i«ck  Strap  and  Adjustable 
•wckle 

o  iew  Nip  Wt       "  -»    4,  ^»^  i|^^^ 

•  lett  Talen  Zippers  *  k 

e  QiNrfity  Pobftet         X  J    I   f 


WAIST  SIZIS  2M« 
AltlADY  CUPFEO 
XMXkHA  2V.34 


$4.  95 


^vi^hi'^i%-*\.  ■'. 


"There  will  be  no  participation 
in  intercollegiate  gymnastics  at 
the  University  this  year."  This 
statement  was  made  yesterday  by 
Athletic  Director  C.  P  Erickson  in 
response  to  inquiries  made  by  stu- 
dents interested  in  the  sport. 

Erickson  explained  that  the  deci- 
sion was  not  made  by  him  or  by 
any  other  individual.  The  move 
was  made  by  the  Athletic  Council 
whose  members  include  students, 
faculty  members  and  alumni.^ 

Recently  there  has  been  a  move- 
ment afoot  by  returning  members 
of  last  year's  squad  to  have  the 
sport  reinstated  on  an  intercolle- 
giate basis..  The  squad  was  left 
without  a  leader  when  last  year's 
coach.  Bill  Meade,  left  the  Uni- 
versity last  summer  to  coach  and 
teach  at  Southern  lyinois  Univer- 
sity. 

The  reason  given  for  gymnastics 
being  dropped  was  that  no  other 
schools  in  this  area  participate  in 
the  sport  on  an  intercollegiate 
basis. 

Erickson  said  that  in  order  for 
the  team  to  compete  last  year,  the 
squad  had  to  travel  such  distances 
as  tn  make  it  impractical  to  con- 
tinue the  program.  ' 

The  UNC  athletic  dir^rtor  point- 
ed out  that  much  effort  has  been 
concentrated  toward  creating  in- 
terest in  the  sport  in  this  area. 
Last  year  the  Swedish  Olympic 
squad  staged  an  exhibition  and  the 
NCAA  Gymnastics  Tournament 
was  also  held  here. 

Erickson  said  that  the  Athletic 
Council's  action  in  no  way  will 
prevent  exhibitions  from  being 
i»held  and  that  individual  perform- 
ers may  participate  in  AAU  meets. 


T^it^  Ofa^^li^o^^ 


.'I 


"^ORtri  G\ROLINA  has  everything  that  many  in- 
Justries  need  for  successful  operatibn. 


t 


-■> 


%0  s:  S  -  i  ^ 


-Tr 


*Vaiit^pociehriais  remain  vktually  untappfcd,"  sayi  Gov> 
tmor  Hod.ges,  "I  believe  our  future  is  practically  unlimited 
if  ««  acccpc  cbe  opportuoiciei  b«fic)K  |i«." 

/    Ncv  ami  opaodiag  iiiJimij  ii  dbc  ifif^  19  Nortii 
Canlnt't  (peeicat  tmnnnir  injhk^    P^iJrh  ii  \o!'^  per 
Ai»42odMr 


game  today  that  they  were  seeing 
"dots  before  their  eyes." 

Billy  Martin,  Yankee  second 
baseman,  said  when  he  came  to 
bat  in  the  second  inning  he 
thought  h.e  saw  a  black  dot  on  the 
ball. 

"I  asked  the  umpire  to  look  at 
it,"  Martin  said.  "He  did — and 
threw  it  out." 

In  the  fourth  inning,  Martin 
blasted  a  home  run  but  Maglie  con- 
tinued to  get  stronger  and  won. 
6-3,  striking  out  10  Yankees  during 
the  afternoon. 

Martin  was  asked  if  he  thought 
Maglie  was  using  some  sort  of  im- 
proper pitch. 

'Tm  not  accusing  him  of  any- 
thing." said  the  pugilistic  infield- 
er.  "It  might  have  been  dirt — it 
might  have  been  anything.  I 
wasn't  taking  chances." 

Martin  said  for  the  rest  of  the 
game  he  had  the  ball  checked  as 
the  Yankees  took  the  field. 
NO  COMPLAINT 

"Naw,  I'm  not  making  a  formal 
complaint,"  he  said.  'It  could 
have  been  dirt  or  anything.  I  know 
some  pitchers  who  pull  stuff  like 
that."  ' 

Martin  was  asked  how  many 
times  the  umpire  took  the  ball  out 
of  play  after  examining'  it. 

"Just  that  once,  I  guess,"  he 
sad.  "Anyhow,  that's  not  what 
beat  us — it  was  Maglie's  sinker  and 
our  failure  to  hit." 

Other  Yankees  paid  tribute  to 
Maglie  when  blaming  their  defeat 
on  failure  to  come  through  with 
men  on  base. 

'That  fellow  Maglie  was  just  a 
better  pitcher,  that's  all,"  said 
Casey  Stengel,  the  manager.  "Our 
fellow  (Whitey  Ford)  wasn't  very 
hot. 

"But  there  was  no  excuse  for  us. 
We  had  their  man  in  a  lot  of 
trouble  and  should  have  delivered. 
How  many  men  did  he  get  on 
base?  Ten?  How  many  were  left 
!  on  ba.se?  Nine?  Well,  there's  your 
answer." 

Stengel  was  asked  if  he  would 
gamble  with  Ford,  a  lefthancier, 
again  in  the  tight  Ebbets  Field 
park  if  the  series  went  that  far. 

"You  can  call  it  a  gamble  if 
you  want  to,"  Stengel  replied 
gruffly.  "I  don't.  Our  Ford  just 
wasn't  pitching  as  well  as  he  is 
capable  of  doing." 
LARSEN  TO  PITCH 

He  said  he  would  pitch  Don  Lar- 
sen  in  the  second  game  tomorrow 
against  Brooklyn's  Don  Newcombe 
but  added,  "I  may  change  my 
mind  overnight." 

Ford,    pulled    out    for   a    pinch- 
hitter  after  giving  up  six  hits  and 
five  runs  in  three  innings,  dressed 
i  quickly  and  left  the  dressing  room 
before  the  game  ended. 

"I  have  no  excuses,"  he  said. 
I  "I  just  couldn't  do  it.  I  threw 
^  Jackie  Robinson  a  fast  ball  in  the 
I  second  inning  when  Jackie  hom- 
,  ered  and  that  was  a  high,  hard 
I  one  I  gave  Gil  Hodges  in  the  third 
I  when  Hodges  homered  with  two 
j  on  base. 

j  Jim  Turner,  Yankees'  pitching 
coach,  said  Ford  couldn't  get  the 
ball  where  he  wanted  it.  "He 
made  too  many  mistakes  and  you 
can't  make  a  mistake  in  a  small 
ball  park  like  this,"  he  added. 


(Continued  from  Page   1) 

stands,  Hodges  singled  and  Carl 
Fiu'illo  brought  him  home  with  a 
double,  before  a  man  had  b«en 
retired.  Ford  got  the  next  three 
out  and  escaped  further  trouble. 

Hodges  sent  Brooklyn  into  a  5-2 
lead  in  the  third  when  he  belted 
the  third  homer  of  the  game  into 
the  left  field  stands  with  Peewee 
Reese  and  Duke  Snider  on  base. 
They  both  had  nicked  Ford  for 
singles. 

After  Billy  Martin  connected  for 
another  Yankee  homer  in  the 
fourth  with  the  bases  empty.  Ford 
was  lifted  for  a  pinch  hitter  and 
Kucks  came  in  to  pitch  for  the 
Yanks.  The  Dodgers  got  to  him 
for  a  run  in  the  fourth  on  a  dou- 
ble by  Roy  Campanella  and  a  sin- 
gle by  Sandy  Amoros. 

That  ended  th«  scoring  but  it 
took  a  lot  of  pitching  by  Maglie  to 
protect  the  Brooklyn  lead.  The 
Yanks  got  men  on  base  in  every 
inning  from  there  to  the  end  of 
the  game  but  couldn't  score. 

The  box: 
New  York  (A)      Ab 
Bauer,  rf  5 


Aged  Castoff  Asked 
To  Be  Left  In  Game 


Slau^-.ter.   If 

Mantle,  cf   

Berra,  c       

Skowron,  lb 
McDougald,  ss 
Martin.  2b-3b 


Carey,  3b  3 


q-Collins  ... 
Turley.  p  ._ 
Ford,  p  ..._. 
a-Wilson  .... 
KuckSi^  p  .._ 

b-Cerv    .. 

Morgan,  p  .. 
d-Byrne 
G.  Coleman. 

Totals 


2b 


.35     3     9  24  12     1 


By  TED  SMITS 

BROOKLYN,  Oct.  3.  (An— When 
the  chips  were  down  in  the  dra- 
matic opening  game  of  the  1956 
World  Series,  Sal  Maglie,  the  aged 
castoff,  asked  to  be  left  on  the 
mound — and  went  on  to  vindicate 
Manager  Walt  Alston's  confidence 
in  him. 

It  was  the  top  of  the  fifth.  The 
score  was  6-3.  Hank  Bauer  led  off 
with  a  single  to  center.  After  Enos 
Slaughter  flied  out,  Mickey  Man- 
tle drew  a  walk.  That  brought  up 
Yogi  Berra  with  only  one  out  and 
two  on.    A  homer  would  tie  it  up. 

Out  to  the  mound  went  Alston. 

"Maybe  I'm  not  as  sharp  as  I 
might  be,  but  let  me  pitch  to  Ber- 
ra," Maglie  told  him  . 

And  Berra  promptly  flied  out  to 
Sandy  Amoros,  as  did  Moose 
Skowron. 

TURNING  POINT 


■■^  iL 


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05'J! 


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t*.-;- 

u 


pwdkabk  kv  inAiirrtrt,  brge  uA  ttpaSL,  in  t|ie  Scaet. 
Klaaj^  pnwi— niriri^  we  already  Ming  ^ffx  i^qaicficji  d 
dtdr  peywili.  B«  ike  gteacesc  cask  lies  ahcMi.  Stiocess  <b> 
pcfKls  ttpoo  ibe  uoderscaixiing  aod  cSotts  of  all  North 
Caifoliniam     i     ■ 

■  'The  Dept.  of  Conservation  k  Devclojmienc  in  Raleigh 
wiH  aen<i  its  booklet  on  Community  Organization  for  In- 
^u^ial  Development  free  upon  reque^^ 


STATE  OF  NORTH  CAROLINA 

DEPARTMENT  OF 
CONSEftVATION  AND  DEVELOPMENT 

Thn  H  ajwihcr  in  die  aetits  at  a<ivcni*«mcaa  publitlied  by  this 
newspaper,  a  member  of  the  North  Caroliiui  Pnu  AiiociatiM,  u 

a  public  service  in  the  int  rcit  of  the  Jtati'l  indu'irial  develop- 
meat  program- 


^V* 


Breekiyn  (N)        Ab  R  H    O    A 

Gilliam.  2b  .         3  0  0    3     1  0 

Reese,  ss    4  12     110 

Snider,  cf     3  1  1     10  0 

Robinson,  3b        4  1  1     2     2  0 

Hodges,  lb       4  2  2     4     0.  0 

Furillo,  rf              4  0  12     0  0 

Campanella,  c       4  1  1  11     1  0 

Amoros,  If   3  0  13     0  0 

Maglie,  p  3  0  0     0     0  0 

Totals     323     6     9  27     5     0 

a — Struck  out  for  Ford  in  4th. 

l> — Singled  for  Kucks  in  6th. 

c — Struck  out  for  Carey  in  8th. 

d — Fouled  out  for  Morgan  in  8th. 
New  York  (A)  200  100  000—3 

Brooklyn  (N)         .    023  100  OOx— 6 

RBI— Mantle  2,  Robinson,  Furil- 
lo, Hodges  3.  Martin,  Amoros.  2B — 
Furillo,  Campanella.  HR — Mantle, 
Robinson,  Hodges,  Martin.  SB-- 
Gilliam.  DP — Skowron.  McDougald 
and  Martin;  Gilliam,  Reese  and 
Hodges.  Left — New  York  (A)  9, 
Brooklyn  (N)  4.  BB — Maglie  4 
(Berra,  Mantle  2,  Martin),  Morgan 
2  (Gilliam,  Snider).  SO— Maglie  10 
(Skowron,  McDougald  3,  Carey, 
Ford,  Mantle,  Wilson,  Collins, 
Bauer),  Ford  1  (Maglie).  Kucks  1 
(Reese),  Turley  2  (Hodges,  Cam- 
panella). HO— Ford  6  in  3,  Kucks 
2  in  2,  Morgan  1  in  2,  Turley  0  in 
1.  R— ER— Ford  5-5.  Kucks  1-1, 
Morgan  0-0,  Turley  0-0,  Maglie 
3-3.  W— Maglie.  L— Ford.  U— 
Pinelli  (N)  plate.  Soar  (A)  first 
base,  Boggess  (N)  second  base, 
Napp  (A)  third  base,  Gorman  (N) 
left  field,  Runge  (A)  right  field. 
T— 2:32.  A— 34,479. 


That  was  the  turning  point  of 
the  game. 

"He  wasn't  real  loose,"  said  Al- 
ston afterwards.  "He  didn't  get 
loose  until  about  the  sixth.  I 
thought  a  bit  about  taking  him 
out,  but  he  felt  he  could  do  it  and 
he  did." 

"When  I  went  out  there  I  want- 
ed to  find  out  how  he  was  feeling. 
I  knew  he  wasn't  feeling  too  good. 
I  asked  him  all  the  usual  things 
He  wanted  to  stay  in." 

-After  the  inning,  Maglie's  arm 
was  massaged  while  he  sat  on  the 
bench,  and  he  seemed  to  grow 
perceptibly  stronger  toward  the 
end  of  the  game. 

"I  lucked  it  out,"   was  the   way 

the    big,    39-year-old    right-hander, 

g  I  who  had  been  let  go  both  by  the 


Soccer  Squad 
Topples  Frosh 

The  Carolina  varsity  and  fresh- 
man soccer  teams  staged  a  scrim- 
mage yesterday  on  Fclzer  Field 
with  the  varsity  emerging  trium- 
phant, 7-1. 

Ted  Yohana,  Iranian  transfer 
student,  was  the  game's  leading 
scorer,  racking  up  five  of  the 
seven  goals.  Coleman  Barks  and 
Charlie  Covell  also  scored  for  the 
varsity.  A  goal  by  Dick  Tannebaum 
was  the  only  yearling  tally. 

The  varsity  hooters  open  their 
season  Monday  against  Lynchburg 
College  here  on  Fetzer  Field. 


A  GREAT  LOVE  STORY 

KMnAYCD  »r  A  D4STINGUISM[D  C4JT 

COLBERT  •  JONES 

•  •M»"  taiiiiT 

GOTTEN  •  TEMPLE 

wooTlet  *  lAiiViieRE 

WALKER  •  MADISON 

"SINCE  YOU 
WENT  AWAY' 

Ootnrt  h,  tOHH  CaOMWtLL 
t«->alMt*<l  by  Th«  Salinicli  Co 


New  York  Giants  and  the  Cleve- 
land Indians,  described  it.  This 
was  his  first  World  Series  victory. 
He  tried  twice  before  as  a  Giant, 
and  lost  once. 

"Alston  thought  I  wasn't  as 
strong  as  I  had  been  and  I  knew 
he  was  right.  But  I  felt  I  could 
get   Berra   nut." 

CENTIR  OF  ATTENTION 

Maglie  was  the  center  of  all  the 
jubilation  in  the  Dodger  dressing 
room,  although  Jackie  Robinson 
and  Gil  Hodges,  the  home  run  hit- 
ters, came  in  for  plenty  of  back 
slapping. 

Alston  was  subdued  and  unsmil- 
ing as  he  opened  up  his  shirt  and 
puffed  on  a  cigarette  in  his  little 
office. 

"We'll  go  tomorrow  with  Don 
Newcombe,"  he  said.  "After  that 
I  cant  say.  We  will  need  to  play 
this  series  the  way  we  played  it 
down  the  stretch  in  the  National 
League  —  making  the  pitching 
choices  from  day  to  day." 

The  big  question,  of  course,  is 
whether  Maglie,  who  virtually 
pitched  the  Dodgers  into  the  pen- 
nant, can  come  back  for  another 
good  game  with  only  three  days  of 


NOW    PLAYING 


"IRILLIANTf 
FAULTLESSr 


"A  iiNNi*f^i«<«rj 

"ONE  OF  THE 
YEAR'S  lESTr 


"THI  BEST  OF  DESICA'S 
iSREAT  PICTURES!'* 

'Cmtktr,  M.r.  rtoM 

EXCELLENT  1 
PEKFECT 
ARTISTRY  1- 

'WiMlM.  N.Y.fut 

"A  BEAUTIFUL 
PICTURE!" 


LAST 

TIMES  TODAY 


NEW  YORK 

FILM  CRITICS 

AWARD! 

Best  Fori'ioq  Lmm^ 
•P4linOfTheYeai!' 


N.r.  MmroU  Trlhuim 


EmO  PI  SICA'S  OEATtST) 


W*  H*ve  Just  Bought  In 
Somm  Old   Books   On 

MEDIEVAL 

FOLK-LORE  AND 

RELIGION  -  -  • 

Com*  Treasur*-Hunting 
in  our  Old  Book  Corner 

THE  INTIMATE 
BOOKSHOP 

205  E.  Franklin  St. 
Op«r.  Till  10  P.M. 


rest.  Most  pitchers  in  their  30's — 
to  say  nothing  of  men  at  the  edge 
of  40 — can't  do  it. 

"I  think  he  can"  said  Alston. 
"After  all,  he  has  pitched  the  last 
three  or  four  times  with  only  three 
days  ht  rest." 

As  a;  matter  of  ia0.  Maglie  has 


Bernie  Blaney  Misses 
Blue  Devil  Workout 

DURHAM,  Oct.  3.  W'-— Halfback 
Bernie  Blaney  missed  Duke's  third 
day  of  preparation  for  Tennessee 
today  as  he  had  to  sit  out  the 
workout  due  to  a  virus  condtion. 

Blaney,  who  was  being  countf»d 
on  for  heavy  action  against  the 
Volunteers,  became  ill  after  yos. 
terday's  drill.  Trainer  Bob  Cham- 
bers did  not  term  Blaneys  con- 
been  'called  on  to  pitch  13  times  dition  serious.  » 
during*  the  past  season  with  only  Meanwhile,  fullback  Harold  Mc- 
three  days  between.                            Elhaney  returned  to  heavy  work. 


F 
R 

E 
E 


WIN  AN  ENGUSH  BIKE 
OR  MOTOROLA  TABLE  RADiO 

STUDENTS  ONLY! 

ALL  YOU  HAVE  TO  DO 

IS  BRING  THIS  AD  INTO 

OUR  STORE  AND  REGISTER 

NOTHING  TO  BUY! 


F 
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PHONE  6981 


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and  frr 


FLAIRS        sS^Mi-'ea  Giini-THER 


SHOWS  —  7:45  &  10:15 


SHOWS 


Raleigh  Memorial  Auditorium 

15 


RESERVED  SEA'  ADMISSION 
$2.00-$2.50-$2.75-$3.00  $3.50 

MAIL  ORDER  AND  TICKET  SALE 

THIEM'S   RECORD   SHOP 

HAMLIN    DRUG   CO. 

Only    Date    In    Eastern    N.    C. 


ONE  NITE   ONLY 
MONDAY     EVE 


Cocktai 
1-5 


12  oz.  Cans 
16  oz.  Cans 


NATIONALLY 

ADVERTISED 

BRANDS 


PraMlMtf  »|r  CPWMO  NMWICON 


The 


I  jjwu 


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'"¥' 


Ssrlals  Dept. 
Chapel  Hill.    N.    t» 
8-31-49 


WEATHER 

Light  rains  ever  th«  state  today. 


STar  Heel 


VOL.  LVIII,  NO.   13 


Complete  (^  Wire  Service 


CHAPEL  HILL,  NORTH  CAROLINA.  FRtDAY,  OCTOBER  5,  1956 


Offices   in   Graliam   Memoruil 


ADLAI 

•    His    HBomb    9rop«sal   it   iMd. 
te«  editeriai,  pa««  2. 


FOUR   PAGES   THIS    ISSUE 


736  M^omen  Students 
Receive  Sorority  Bjds 


A  total  of  136  wamen  students 
has  pledged  sororities  on  campus, 
according  to  an  announcement 
yesterday  from  the  dean  of  wo- 
men's office. 

Bids  were  -issued  between  7 
and  8  p.m.   Wednesday. 

Alpha  Delta  Pi  sorority  gained 
20  pledges;  Alpha  Gamma  Delta, 
17;  Chi  Omega,  25;  Delta  Delta 
Delta,  28:  Kappa  Delta,  20  and  Pi 
Beta  Phi,  28. 

The  complete  list  of  pledges  is 
as  follows: 

Alpha  Delta  Pi:  Molly  Adams, 
Wimington:  Barbara  Hope  Brown, 
Carthage;  Emor>-  Burkhardt.  Bal- 
timore, Md.;  Mary  Jane  Fisher, 
Bristol.  Va.;  Karen  B.  Hansen, 
Washington.  D.  C;  Mary  Ann  Hof- 
ler.  Gatesville;  A*n  Elizabeth 
Holt.  Sanford;  Mary  Waldo  House, 
Hamilton;  Betty  Carolyn  Huffman, 
("atawba; 

Pat  Messer.  Canton;  Claudia 
Milham.  Hamlet;  Patricia  M.  Mil- 
ler. Kinston;  Martha  Isborne, 
SmithfieJd;  Elizabeth  Nicholson, 
High  Point;  Jill  O'Donnell,  Camp 
Hill.  Pa.;  Mary  Lewis  Rountree, 
Sunbury:  Nancy  Royster,  Lexing- 
ton; Margaret  Bradford  Sherrod, 
Enfield:  Anne  Stallings.  Shelby: 
and  Mary  Susan  Whitely,  Towson, 
Md. 

.Alpha  Gamma  Delta:  Susanne 
Caroline  Blackwelder,  Lenoir; 
Patricia  R.  Carter,  Wallace;  Ingrid 
Clay,  Cobleskill,  N.  Y.;  Ann  In- 
man.  Greensboro;  Phillis  Kraift. 
River  Forest.  111.;  Ella  Frances 
.McKnight,  Asheville;  Jennie  Mar- 
garet Meador,  Charlotte;  Ruth 
Neisler.  Concord; 

Pearla  Ann  Revelle,  Conway; 
Deborah  Hunt  Sink.  Mooresville; 
Katherine  Smith.  Chapel  Hill; 
Emily  Somers.  WiUcesboro;  And- 
rea Stalvey,  Charlotte;  Mary  Eli- 
zabeth Straughn,  Fayetteville;  | 
Frerfriee  Louise  Trull.  Canton  and 
KatWe  'Webster.   l»T?n^tbh,  T<.   J.  1 

Chi  Omega:  Jane  Bradford.  Ma-' 
rion:  Mary  Louise  Biaell,  Golds- 
boro:  Gather  hie  Brown,  Charlotte; 
Margaret  Brunson,  Albemarle;  Ca- 
rol Campbell,  Raleigh;  Roberta 
Chapin,  Asheville;  Katherine  Coe. 
Washington,  D.  C;  Mary  Lewis 
Craig.  Gastonia;  Martha  Derr,  Ra- 
leigh; Daryl  Farrington,  Short 
Hills,  N.  J.;  Katherine  Anne  Han- 
nan.  Lumberton;  Elizabeth  High- 
tower,  Winston-Salem; 

Sarah  Hudson,  Atlanta,  Ga.: 
Alice  Jane  Johnson,  ^pindale: 
Hannah  Boone  Kirby,  Louisville, 
Ky.;  Marianna  Miller,  Pineville; 
Mary  M.  Martocia,  Daytona  Beach, 
Fla.;  Priscilla  Norman.  South  Dart- 
month.  Mass.;  Nells  Purrington. 
Raleigh;  Eleanor  Ann  Ruffin, 
Greenville;       Margaret       Sanders. 


Dorm  Thievery 
Rosh  Reported 

Dormitory  residtnis  have  report- 
ed a  rash  of  stolen  articles,  il  was 
learned  yesterday. 

Rey    Jefferies,    assistant    to    the 


Charlotte;    Martha    Ruth    Starling. 

Raleigh;       Elizabeth       Thompson, 

Rocky  Mount;  Ruth  Watkins,  Hen-  , 

derson  and  Jane  Ward  Westbrook.  \  d^«"  «^  ^^"d^"^  ''"^''''  ^''^^^  ^he 

articles  which  had  been  reported 

missing  to  him. 

John  F.  Sharpe  has  reported  thai 

two  shirts  and  two  pairs  of  pants 

were  taken  from  his  room  in  Cobb 


Dunn. 

Delta  Delta  Delta:  Elizabeth 
Barnes,  Wilson;  Martha  Ann  But 
ler,  Dunn;  Deborah  Conner,  Char- 
oite;  Belle  Corey,  Atlanta,  Ga.; 
Julia  Ann  Crater,  Raleigh;  Mar- 
tha Virginia  Dawson,  Snow  Hill; 
Marian  Dickens,  Thomasville;  Pa- 
tricia Ann  Dillon,  Statesville;  Bar- 
bara Doar,  Raleigh;  Genny  Lou 
Garrou,  Snow  Hill; 

Florence   Fearrington.    Winston- 
Salem;     Martha    Fowler,    Greens- 
boro;   Ruth    Starr    Lukens.    Birm- 
ingham,   Ala.;    Eve    Leah    McClat- 
[  chey,  Atlanta.  Ga.;  Elizabeth  Mac- 
j  Kay,,  Ocala,    Fla.;    Elaine    Louise 
Meldahl,  Mexico  City,  Mex.;  Susan 
]  Lee  Mayhue.  Ft.  Lauderdale,  Fla.; 
!  Nancy     Macys     Milan,     Baltimore, 
[  Md.;    Ina   Gee    Ridley,    Courtland. 

Va.; 
j      Louise       Barnwell       Robertson, 
I  Matthews;    Nancy   Jo   Rush,   Long- 
I  view.   Mass.;    Mary   Ellen    Sample, 
'  Asheville;    Roberta    Heam    Simp- 
;  son,      Wilmington,      Del.;      Peggy 
'  Byrd    Swarington,    Salisbury,    Vir- 
i  ginia  Walser,  High  Point:  Eleanor 
i  Williamson,  Winnsboro.  La.;  Mar- 
tha    Williford,     Fayetteville     and 
Carolyn    H.    Wise,   Asheville. 
Kappa  Delta:  Frances  N.  Allen, 
I  Louisburg;  Elizabeth  Gore  Barnes, 
Washington,    D.    C;    Norma    Joan 
Gulp,    Elkins,    W.    Va.;    Elizabeth 
.  Lloyd    Dougherty,    Cincinnati,    O.; 
Alice    Eller,    Winston-Salem;    Bar- 
.  bara    Kay   Honey,    Charlotte;    Bar- 
bara Ann  Jackson,  Elm  City;  Mary 
I  Elizabeth    Kiliian,    Gilkey;    Char- 
lotte I/uella  Ledford,  Durham. 
,      Barbara     Jean     Moore,     Crown 
j  Point,    Ind.;    Jane    Patten.    Char- 
I  lotte;   Josephine   Payne,   Washing- 
''  ton,  D.  C;  June  Potter,  Wallace; , 
Betty   Ricbards.   Montclair.   N.   J.;' 
1  Sally     Simpson,     Richmond,     Va.; 
Eleanor   Stephens,    Asheville;    Bet- 
I   y     Rene    Webster,     Madison     and 
Connie  Whittaker,  Whittier,  Calif. 
Pi  Beta  Phi:   Mary  Beth  Acker- 
son.    Louisville,    Ky.;    Billie    Rise 
Britt,  Lurabertin;  Nancy  Jean  Car- 
penter, Hillsboro;  Betty  Sue  Clark, 
Willianxston;    Kitty    Corr,    Bronx- 
vJlle,  N.  Y.;  Nancy  Davis,  Moores- 
ville;   Carol    Dennis,    Essen    Falls. 
N.    J.;    Susan   Mary    Donald.    Nas- 
sau.   Bahamas;    Susie    Fagen,    Mi- 
imi,  Fla.; 

Elizabeth  Fenwick,  Winston-Sa- 
lem; Mary  Arnold  Garvin,  Aiken; 
S.   C;   Pat   Gregory,   Benson,  Jae- 


basement  Sunday  night. 

The  shirts  were  plaid,  one  with 
a  predominate  yellow  background 
and  the  other,  a  blue  background. 
One  pair  of  pants  was  charcoal 
brown  and  the  other  pair  was  light 
brown. 

Nightwatchmen  have  been  a.sk- 
ed  to  be  en  the  lookout  for  anyone 
carrying  clothes   across  canipu.s. 

A  $60  watch,  an  Elgin  Shock- 
master  belonging  to  Lewis  San- 
ders, has  been  missing  since  Sun- 
day night.  The  watch  was  left  m 
the  rest  room  of  third  floor  Lewis. 

Three  passbooks  have  been  taken 
Irom  boys  in  Alexander  Dorm. 

Jefferies  has  suggested  that  stu- 
dents lock  their  doors  when  leav- 
ing rooms  even  if  they  will  be 
gone  for  a  short  period  of  time. 
This  precaution  should  be  observ- 
ed especially  on  weekends,  he 
said. 

,  StiHlenls  finding  lost  articles 
have  been  asked  to  turn  them  in 
immediately    to    the    ftwner,    the  ^'^^ian  Dickens  and  Barbara  Moor 

YMCA  office,  or  Graham  Memorial. 


Men's  Dormitory  Phones  May  Be 

.'■■■../:_ 

Removed-  Traffic  Judiciary  Body 
Appointed  By  President  Young 


...r# 


7  Member 

l  '•  S(9'Sa»M«e«<t*«f^.?I; 

Board  Headed 

i    ^J 

By  Matthews 

t    > 

1       4    ^       ^;^..;- 

Members  of  the  student  govern- 

ment Traffic  Committee  have  been 

announced      by      President      Bob 

Young. 

the  Committee,  established  last 

year  concurrent  with  the  in.stitution  | 

of    new    regulations    dealing    with  j 

car  ownership,  will   have  jurisdic-  ! 

tion  oyor  violation  of  these  regu  ! 

lations. 

The  seven  members  are: 

Chairman  Lawrence  Matthews. 
B^b  Jacobus,  jerry  Oppenheimer, 
David    Parker.    Jim    Rose.    Missc-s 


Two  Profs  To  Attend 
Pathologists  Meeting 

'  Dr.  K.  M.  Brinkhous.  professor 
and  chairman  of  the  Pathology 
Dept.,  and   Dr.   Walter  R.   Benson, 

I  assist. .at  p/ofessor  of  pathology, 
both  of  the  University  School  of 
Medicine,  will  attend  two  meetings 
in  Chicago  this  Sunday  through 
Thursday. 

The.se  are  meetings  of  the   Col- 

lege  of  AiDfcrican  Pathologists  and 


According  to  Young,  "the  mem- 
bers of  this  committee  have  been 
screened  and  considered  very 
carefully." 

The  new  regulations  which  the 
Committee  will  have  jurisdiction 
uver  concern: 

(1)  Registration  of  automobiles. 

(2)  Prohibition  of  freshmen  from 
retention  of  cars  on  campus  and 
sophomores  without  the  necessary 
"C"  average. 

"Tile  University  administration 
will  stand   behind  any  decision  of 


(PtMte  oy  J.   B.  Clay) 

Herbert  Greenblatt  is  shown  making  a  local  call 
is  a  sign  v/hich  raads  "For  Local  Calls  Only." 
bl*  with  students  placing  long  distance  calls  on 
•d  If  this  continues.       (Photo  by  Norman  Kanter.) 


from  a  phone  in  Winston  Dorm,  while  on  the  wall 
The  phone  company  reports  there  has  been  trou- 
these  phones  and  that  the  phones  will  be  reniov- 


the  American  Society    of  Cttrrtcal  rthls  cnmmttte'er' Young  said. 


■Z'j*?^^^^^ 


UNC  To  Celebrate  163rd 
Birthday  Next  Week 

The  University  of  North  Carol ini, 
will  celebrate  its  163rd  birthday 
next  Friday  with  traditional  camp 
us  exercises  recalling  the  founding- 
of  Carolina,  the  nation's  olde8> 
.state  university. 

The  annua!  observance  is  called 
University  Day  and  will  feature 
pageantry  and  pantomine  re-enact- 
ing the  laying  of  the  corner-stone 
of  Old  East,  oldest  campus  build- 
ing. Special  music  will  be  supplied 
by  the  University  Band  and  the 
-Men's  Glee  Club. 

Classes  and  offices  on  campus 
will  be  closed  from  10:50  a.m.  to 
12  noon  to  permit  students,  facul- 
ty and  administrative  personnel  to 
take  part  in  the  celebration,  ac- 
cording to  an  announcement  by 
Chancellor  Robert  B.  House.  | 

The  observance  will  be  held  on  j 
the  south  steps  of  South  Building  '\ 
and  will  conclude  at  Davie  Poplar  ; 
with    the    singing    of    "Hark    the 
Sound." 


Pathologists.  Dr.  Brinkheus  will  he 
attending  the  latter  meeting  as 
councilor  for  North  Carolina.  Dr. 
Benson  will  be  participating  in  a 
"work.vhop"  on  studies  of  bron- 
chial, endometrial  and 
cytologic   preparations. 


The  Committee  may  suspend 
students  from  school,  remove  the 
privilege  of  keeping  a  car  on  cam- 
pus for  upper-cla.ssmen,  or  enforce 
any  fines  that  may  be  levied  by 
cervical  I  Chapel  Hill  officials,  according  to 
I  Young. 


By    WOODY    SEARS 


queline  Haithcock,  Kannapolis;  effective"  state  department  had 
Roberta  Ashby  Hastings,  Orange,  been  'utterly  careless"  in  its 
Va.;  Margaret  Head,  Wilmington;  j  handling  of  the  problem  of  Jap- 
Bettie  Melton  Kejl.  Bristol.  Va.;  anese  textile  imports. 
Anne  (Nancy)  Llewellyn.  Bronx- 1  'Many  textile  companies  have 
ville,  N.  Y.;  Barbara  Madison,  gone  out  of  business  and  many 
Washington,  D.  C;  Doris  Peter,  i  more  will  go  out  of  business  if  they 
Orlando.  Fla.;  |  do   not   get    the   proper   attention 

Susan     Saunders,    Chapel     Hill;    on  this j)roblem."  declared  Hodges 
lane     Sawyer,     Wallace;     Cynthia    in  an  adrfress  prepared  for  deliv- 


Yest^'rday  Harvard  University 
Athletic  Director  Tom  BoUes  an- 
nounced that  the  Harvard  faculty 
committee  on  athletics  has  cancell- 
ed a  Chri.stmas  vacation  trip  south 
for  its  basketball  team.  This  has 
obviously  been  done  in  protest  to 
racial  discrimination. 

Harvard's  wording  of  its  cxpla 
nation  is  as  follows: 

"Acting    in    its    belief    that    Har- 
CHARLOTTE,  (.Pi  —  Gov.  Hodges  i  gress.  He  described  Douglas  as  an  j  vard  alone  must  decide  on  the  eligi- 
yesterday  asserted  a  "bungling,  in- 1    intelligent,  hard-working  man  oflbility  of  its  student.s   to  compete, 


Hodges  Terms  State  Dept. 
'Ineffective^  And  'Careless' 
In  Japanese  Textile  Problem 


Harvard  Cancels  Tour 

the  Tar  Heels  here  Jan.  2.  the  first 
game  for  the  home  team  after  the 
Dixie  Classic  contest  in  Raleigh. 

Coach  Frank  McGuire  said  that 
he  had  seen  a  letter  from  Harvard 
which  Athletic  Director  Chuck 
Erikson  had  received  several  days 


Chapel  Hill 
Man  Issues 
Biogrd 


Long  Distance 
Tie-Ups  Cited 
By  Officials     ' 

T'nere  is  eminent  danger  that  all 
non-pay  phones  may  be  removed 
from  men's  dormitories,  according 
to  student  government  officials. 

The  reason  for  this  threatened 
removal  is  that  dorm  men  are  plac- 
mg  long  distance  calls  from  non- 
pay  phones,  tieing  up  lines  and  • 
causing  general  confusion  at  thi 
Durham  switchboard,  Bell  Tele- 
phone Company   officials  say. 

The  men  are  not  able  to  com- 
plete the  calls,  but  are  causing 
much  confusion  and  time  consump- 
tion, telephone  company  officials 
say. 

Interdormitory  Council  officials, 

,  President  Bob  Young  and  Director 

of  Operations  J.  S.   Bennett   have 

expressed  concern  over  the  threat- 

j  ened   removal. 

I      The  Bell  Company  started  instal- 
lation of  pnones  on  the  second  and 
;  fourth  floors  of  men's   dorms  re- 
cently, but  has  stopped  as  a  result 
of  the  above  incidents. 

Dorm  men  are  supposed  to  place 

[  iong-distance  calls  from  pay  phones 

,  only,  and  removal  of  all  non-pay 

phones  is  eminent   if   use  of  hoU. 

pay  phones  for  such  calls  is  con- 

Unued. 

IDC   JPresnJmt   ^nny    Halltord 
said: 

"Each  dorm  officer  must  be  re- 
sponsible for  seeing  that  dorm  men 
place  long-distance  calls  only  from 
pay  phones,  usually  located  on 
dormitory  first  floors." 

Dorm  men  are  evidently  not 
placmg  tht  calls  in  an  attempt  to 
avoid  payment,  but  merely  because 
ihey  are  not  aware  that  only  local 
and  collect  calls  are  to  be  placed 
from  non-pay  phones.  Hallford  said. 
President    Bob    Young    made    it 


•Jane  Segraves,  Jacksonville,  Fla.; 
Sarah  Jane  Shaw,  St.  Petersburg, 
Fla.;  MoUie  Williams  Spruill, 
Rocky  Mount;  Sarah  Ann  Van 
Weyk,  Winnetka,  111.;  Susan  Greg- 
ory Warburton,  Williamsburg,  Va. 
and  Patricia  Davis  Wilston,  Char- 
lottesville, Va. 


ery  at  a  Democratic  rally  in  the 
highly  textile-conscious  10th  Con- 
gressional District. 

In  his  speech  Hodges  sought  to 
win  support  for  Democrat  Ben 
Douglas  in  his  bid  to  unseat  Repub- 
lican Charles  R.  Jonas  as  the  10th 
District's    representative    in    Con- 


great  experience." 

Hodges  said  Democrats  of  the 
10th  and  particularly  in  Mecklen- 
burg County  should  "get  back  in 
the  Democratic  Party  and  stay 
there"  and  "straighten  it  out  where 
it  need.s  to  be  straightened  out  and, 
above  all,  put  good  men  in  office 
at  all  levels." 

The  governor's  speech  climaxed 
a  full  day's  program  for  10th  Dis- 
trict Democrats.  Earlier  today, 
luncheon  meetings  were  held  by 
citizens  for  Douglas  and  women 
for  Douglas.  Gov.  Hodges  spoke  to 
the  citizens  group  and  his  remarks 
were  piped  by  wire  to  the  women 
for  Douglas. 


the  Harvard  faculty  committee  on 
athletics  had  withdrawn  its  ap- 
proval of  the  trip  which  had  in- 
cluded two  games  in  locations, 
where,  under  present  conditions, 
this  control  of  eligibility  would  not 
be  possible." 


i  ago.  He  said  that  he  was  unaware 
of  their  reasons  for  canceling  the  '      Phillips    Russell,    editor    of    the 
game,   and    that    he   had    no    com- ;  ^^em'-weekly     Chapel     Hill     Ne^t•s 
'  inent  to  make.  Leader    and    retired    professor    of 

Eiikson  could  not  be  reached  as  .  Journalism  in  the  University,  is  the    clear  that  University  officials  were 
he  has  alroadv  left  for  South  Caro-  ,  ^"^''^'"      °^    ^     ''"«*^-     •••''^fft''s<  n. 
jj^g  I  Champion     of     the     Free     .Mind," 

I  which  will  be  published  Oct.  15  by 
Dodd  Mead  &  Co.,  a  New  York  pub- 
i  iishing  firm. 


Athletic  Director  Dodd  of  Georgia 
'  Coach     Bobby     Dodd     of    Georgia 

Tech    had    received   a   letter   from 
i  Harvard  a  day  or  two  ago  inform- 
i  ing   him   of  their  decision   to  can- 
!  eel  the  Jan.  3  date  in  .\tlanta. 
^     ■  Ini  sorry  that  Harvard  has  seen 

fit   to  cancel   the  game,"   he  said. 


not  filing  the  complaint,  but  tele- 
phone  company   officials. 


The  games  on  the  four  included  ; 
Quanlico  Marines,  North  Carolina,  i 
Georgia  Tech,  and  Loyola  of  New 
Orleans. 

The  state  of  Louisiana  has  ban-  j 
ned  interracial  athletic  competition  ; 
by    law.    As    a    state-supported    in- ! 


"We    would    like    to 
them." 

The  Georgia  board  of  regents, 
the  governing  body  of  the  univer- 
sity system,  adopted  th?  racial 
policy  in  Dec.  of  1955  following 
Gov.    Griffin's  opposition   to  Tech 


His  biography  is  bas»Hi  on  a  now  ; 
conception  that     Jefferson  was  noi  \ 
a    radical    or    subverter    or    idol-  ! 
smasher,  but  that   he  was  an   up  | 
holder  of  ancient  British  libert?e«;  , 
have    played  i  and  that  Jefferson  had  wish^^d  to  I 
I  see  these  ancient  liberties  extend- 
ed  and    brought    up   to   date  in    a 
new  setting  in  a  fresh  and  vigorous 
America." 


stitution,  Georgia  Tech  comes  un-,  playing  a  mixed  race  football  team 


der    the   heading   of   state    schools 

igainst  which  Negroes  cannot  play. 

Harvard  was  scheduled  to  play 


in    last    year's    Orange    Bowl.    The 


The  well-known  Chapel  Hill 
writer  and  teacher  added  that  in 
all  Jefferson's  writings,  the  early 
president    used    the    word     'demo- 


Gov's  opposition  sparked  student  k^^^y..  ^^    .democratic'-  only  three 


demonstrations  at  Tech. 


PROFESSOR  SAYS: 


;  times  and  that  all  the  evidence  in- 
'  dicated  that  Jefferson  was  primari- 


""K: 


-:.'^_ 


'Accounting  Teaching  Methods  Are  Wrong 


IN  THE  INFIRMARY 

Mrs.  Ruby  Battan,  Misses  Har- 
ritft  Schafer,  Linda  Hali,  Sua 
dilliam,  Julia  Black,  Mary  Ann 
Kacter,  Patricia  Barlow,  Mary 
Ben  Williams,  Nancy  Davis,  Mar- 
vin Harless,  John  Parkarson, 
Thomas  Kearns,  Charlie  Ayceck, 
John  Wilbor,  Charlos  Cox,  Hugh 
Price,  John  Boale,  Wayne  Ven- 
r»rs,  Robort  Katlor,  James  Ca- 
diou,  Croig  Whito,  Bobby  Braw- 
loy,  Charlos  Harrin«ton,  Alvin 
Smith,  Misses  Eleanor  German, 
Mary  Douglas,  Stophanio  Sparger, 
Carol  Covington,  and  Norman 
Smith, 


By  BUCK  PAYSOUR 

A  bombshell  has  been  explod- 
ed in  business  and  scholastic  cir- 
cles by  a  UNC  professor  and  a 
colleague  from  De  Paul  Univer- 
sity. 

The  sensation  was  created  by 
a  paper  written  by  Dr.  Harold 
Q.  Langenderfer  of  the  UNC 
School  of  Business  Administra- 
tion and  Dr.  Ernest  H.  Wein- 
wurm.  of  De  Paul.  Entitled 
"Bringing  Accounting  Curricula 
Up-to-date,"  the  article  appear- 
ed first  in  "Account  Review", 
and  has  been  widely  reprinted  in 
academic  and  professional  jour- 
nals, including  The  Cost  Ac- 
countant, published  in  Lon-don. 

The  professol's  charge  that  in- 
structors of  accounting  are  us- 
ing outmoded  methods  of  teach- 
ing. 

They  also  say  that  accounting 
curricula  is  set  up  as  if  every 
student  were  studying  to  be  a 
Certified   Public   Accountant. 


They  added  that  this  close  con- 
tact between  college  accounting 
instruction  and  the  profession  of 
public  accounting  has  resulted 
in: 

1.   Inadequate   training   of    ac- 
caunting  teachers   toward   meet- 


ing the  needs  of  business. 

2.  Failure  of  most  writers  and 
publishers  of  accounting  text- 
books to  provide  the  needs  of 
business,  and 

3.  Lack  of  training  of  students 
in  the  solution  of  actual  busine.ss 
problems  and  the  proper  analysis 
of  more  complex  business  situa- 
tions. 

As  a  result  of  these  conditions, 
the  writers  said,  the  accounting 
curricula  in  most  colleges  and 
universities  "tend  to  reflect  the 
requirements  of  the  CPA  exam- 
inations to  the  di.sadvantage  of 
other  accounting  applicatiop.s." 

"This  seems  to  be  so  despite 
the  fact  that  .  .  .  only  27  out 
of  each  100  business  adminstra- 
tion  majors  are  accounting  ma- 
jors and  of  these  27,  only  five 
or  six  will  go  into  public'  ac- 
counting,* they  asserted. 

Many  accounting  teachers  are 
not  prepared  to  teach  accounting 
properly  because  of  this  orienta- 
tion of  courses  toward  the  CPA 


exam.    Professors    Langenderfer 
and  Wcinwurm  declared. 

"Far  too  many  are  merely 
technicians  who  know  how  to 
perform  particular  assignments 
but  show  little  concern  with 
their  background,  significance 
and  usefulness  to  business  man- 
agement .  .  . 

"We  submit  that  before  ac- 
counting curricula  will  be  chang- 
ed in  terms  of  current  business 
requirements,  the  teachers  will 
first  have  to  be  trained  to  think 
and  teach  in  terms  of  tho.se  needs 
.  .  .  Too  many  doctoral  candi- 
dates, aspiring  to  be  accounting 
teachers,  take  Httte  or  no  ac- 
counting work  after  their  typical 
undergraduate  curriculum  in  ac- 
counting. 

The  profes.sors  also  charged  that 
textbooks  are  inadequate. 

"The  emphasis  is  upon  tech- 
niques, on  how  .to  do  the  job 
rather  than  why  the  job  should 
be  don«.  in  a  particular  way." 
they   declare. 

Ttie  authors  state  further  that 


because  accounting  instructors 
"drill"  students  on  procedural 
aspects  of  accounting,  students 
can  not  properly  express  them- 
selves either  in  writing  or  verbal- 
ly. 

•In  order  to  bring  accounting 
curricula  up  to  date,  the  profes- 
sors suggest,  it  will  be  necessary 
to: 

1.  Free  the  accounting  curricu- 
lum from  the  present  orientation 
toward    the   CPA   examination. 

2.  Give  more  attention  to  the 
needs  of  non-accounting  majors 
who  want  a  broad  understanding 
of  accounting  methods  and  their 
applications   in  business. 

3.  Adapt  the  curriculum  to 
meet  the  needs  of  students,  and 

4.  Supplement  students'  tech- 
nical accounting  training  with 
subjects  which  will  give  them  a 
broader  perspective  of  business 
problems. 

The  paper  was  developed  obt 
of  a  round  table  meeting  at  the 
Annual  Convention  of  the  Ameri- 
can Accounting  Association. 


PHILLIPS  RUSSELL 

iy  a  republic-man — that  is,  be  wi.sh- 
ed  to  see  America  cut  itself  off 
from  a  decaying  European  feudal- 
ism and  strike  out  on  new  but  well 
indicated  paths  that  would  lead 
the  civilised  world  upward  to  a 
new  stage  of  life. 

While  the  book  gives  due  atten- 
tion to  Jefferson  as  a  statesman, 
Mr.  Russell  said,  it  has  more  to 
say  about  the  intimate  side  of  Jef- 
ferson's  life  than  any  previous 
work. 


U.N.C.  ALUMNI  -  »  . 

SO  copies  of  today's  Daily  Tar 
Heel  will  be  distributed  tonight 
to  the  Columbia,  S.C.  Alumni  of 
UNC.  They  are  meeting  at  8  p.m. 
at  the  Columbia  Country  Club. 

State  Education  Board.  . 
Gets  Revamped  Setup 

R.\LEIGH.  (AP)— A  revamped 
committee  setup  was  approved  to- 
day by  the  State  Board  of  Educa- 
tion. 

The  changes  and  assignments 
were  submitted  to  the-  board  by 
A.  S.  Brower  of  Durham,  new 
board  chairman. 

Under  the  plan,  finance  claims 
and  insurance  committees  are  com- 

j  bined    into   one    group    and   curri- 

I  culjni.    professional  service    and 

i  college  standards  approval  commit- 
tees are  merged  into  the  profe.s- 
sional  services  and  standards  com- 
mittee. 

'  .New  committee  chairmen  in- 
clude Gerald  Cowan  of  Asheville. 

I  athletics;  Dallas  Herring  of  Rose 
Hill,  professional  services  and 
standards;  and  Barton  Hayes  of 
near  Lenoir,  school   buildings. 

John  Pritchett  of  Windsor,  vice 
chairman  of  the  board  and  chair- 
man of  the  public  lands  committee, 
also  heads  finance,  insurance  and 
claims.  Oscar  Richardson  of  Mon- 
roe is  chairman  of  the  remaining 
committee,  transportation. 

In  other  action,  the  board  ap- 
proved an  insurance  bid  bvT'on- 
tingental  Casualty  Co.   of  Chicago 

•  of  approximately  $28,600  over  the 
next  three  years  for  additional  cov- 

!  erage  on  state  school  plants. 


GM'S  SLATE 


The  following  activities  are 
schoduied  for  Graham  Memorial 
today: 

Pan  HelUnic.  5-«  p.m.,  Cratt; 
YRC.  7-9:30,  Roland  Parkac 
L>unges  1  and  2;  YDC  7:34-f 
p.m.,  Randtxvous  Room. 


?AGE  TWO 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


FRIDAY,  OCTOBER  5,  1«« 


H-D  Bomb  Plan  Sounds 
Good  For  Nov.  6,  Mankind 

"The  reniiyninliou  oj  Hydroii^cu  Homh  h'.^ls  i>  a^.sh'j?  icliiih  I 
think  the  girat  jxnccrs  are  now  -willing  to  fnkf—if  ih'crc  /a  Ic/idcy 

shi^  in  this  diycition.  It  i.s  a  step  that  can  be  safely  taken,  joi  no 
one  can  exjAode  a  liydrogen  bomb  in  secret,  and  each  other  icnnid 
knoic  whether  the  others  n'ire  arfin;j^  in  good  faith.  It  wonid  he  a 

stefj  along  a  new  path  toward  fjeace."—.\d\Ai  Stevenson   in   jxjlitiial 

speedi  at  Teanetk.  N.  j..  this  week. 
.Ste\ens<)n"s  , statements  on  endini; 
H-Botnl)  tests  now  ha\e  developed 
into  one  of  tlic  Presidential  cam- 
paigns  hottest  issues.  President 
^i^enho^\er  has  (ailed  the  idea  a 
"theatvieal    national    gesture. 

For  Stevenson,  it  was  a  sioti  that 
his  forces  ha\e  come  of  age.  1  ni- 
Ijarrassed  by  the  petty  intra-pariy 
nuidslingino  that  lanie  with  the 
ei\  il  1  ights  platform  and  the  nomi- 
nations at  Chicagii.  he  recentlv  lias 
shown  great  wisdom  on  the  matter 
of  atomic  blasts. 

Foi  one  thing,  he  has  hint  the 
Rej)ublican"s  claim  that  they  are 
the  'pariv  of  peace."  .Vnd  he  has 
inflanu'd  the  President  oji  an  is- 
sue that  the  President  is  ob\i<)usly 
on  the  wrong  side  of. 

Stcven.sons"  plan  is  good  from 
the  «noial  viewjK)int.  He  said: 

"Sinelv  there  must  he  sufficient 
\i>i(in  to  sa\e  the  luniian  race  from 
(ontaminatitvj;  its  own  air,  from 
filling  the  upper  atmosphere  with 
malign  elements  which  may  have 
in^alcuable   effects   cm    humanitv." 

.And  it  was  good  from  the  prat- 
tit  al  point  of  view.  For  the  I'nited 
States,  in  calling  for  a  ban  on  H- 
liomb  tests,  would  be  calling  the 
Soviet's  bluff  at  the  same  time. 
The  Inited  Stales,  bv  initiating 
sue  h  a  practice  and  carrving  it  out. 
would  erase  millions  of  words  of 
Russian  propaganda  in  the  little 
countries  of  the  world. 

If  Russia  werr  to  violate  the 
aureement.  she  would  suffer  great- 
ly  in  terms  ol  prestige. 

But  Ste\ensons  gieatest  point, 
and  one  whicli  \'.ill  not  win  him 
anv  votes  in  this  mad  world  of  wai, 
should  be  remembered  al>ove  all 
others: 

'■.  .  .  in  the  h\(lrogcn  age,"  he 
warned.  "disaTniament  becomes 
not  a  matter  of  convenience,  but 
a  matter  of  necessity  .  .  „' 

Adl-i's  Draft  Plan  Is  Bad 


PRESIDENTIAL  CAMPAIGNS 


hi 


THE   HYDROGEN    BOMB 

. .  .  iwio  long? 
.  Hcrblock 


I  (.iv.ulate  Stevenson,  while  he 
]);c^ses  the  issue  of  a  hvdrogen 
bomb  l>an.  is  also  keeping  mighty 
tjuiei  c)n  the  matter  of  reducing 
the   I  nited  States  dralt. 

Farlier  in  the  campaign,  he 
said  (in  the  mcjst  j^olitic  cd  terms) 
the  governmein  should  Ic'jok  into 
the  possibilitv  of  cutting  the  dralt 
and  sidjstituting  a  specialized  ca- 
reer-tvpe  armv  that  <ould  operate 
the  hydrogen  ages'  ctmtplicated 
weapons. 

Ihe  candidate  implied  that  the 
common  old  foot-soldier  should  be 
led  even  further  out  to  pasture. 

This  mav  get  a  lot  of  votes  from 
American  mothers  and  fathers  and 
men  finishing  their  senior  years 
in  college.  But  it  just  ain't  so. 

Neither  the  United  States  nor 
anv  other  coimtry.  in  the  hydrogen 
or  any  other  age,  can  afford  to 
develop  an  armv  lull  of  airplanes 
and  missiles  and  giant  bcjmbs.  and 
at  the  same  time  cut  the  numbers 
of   men    with    rifles   and   grenades 

and  mortars. 

• 

No  wat— unless  it  is  the  war  to 
end  all  wars— could  be  concluded 
Avithout  tile  common  old  tcwt-sol- 
diers  to  mop  up.  liberate  and  oc- 
cupy. 

Candidate  Stevenson  knows  that, 
and  he  knows  he  made  a  bad  cam- 

The  Daily  Tor  Heel 

The  official  student  publication  of  the 
Publications  Board  of  the  University  of 
North  Carolina,  where  it  is  published 
daily  except  Monday  and  examination 
and  vacation  periods  and  sumnf>er  terms 
Entered  as  second  class  matter  in  the 
post  otticc  in  Chapel  Hill.  N.  C,  undei 
the  Act  ot  .March  8,  1870.  Subscription 
rates:  madcd.  S4  per  year,  S2.50  a  semes- 
ter; delivered,  $6  a  year,  $3.50  a  semes- 
ter. 


Editor   FRED  POWLEDGE 


Managing  Editor      CHARLIE  JOHNSON 
_  .    RAY  LINKER 


News  Editor 


Business  ManageiN BILL  BOB  PEEL 


Advertising  Manager        Fred  Katzin 

BUSINESS  STAFF:  Rosa  Moore,  Johnny 
Whitaker,  Dick  Leavitt,  Peter  Alper. 


paigii  statement  Avhen  he  advocat- 
ed cutting  the  dtaft  at  this  time. 

One  of  the  leading  pro-Ste\en- 
son  opinion  journals,  attempting 
to  somewhat  explain  the  candi- 
dates statemem,  ga\e  this  inter[)re- 
taiioii: 

Stexenson  heard  that  President 
Fiseiihowei  was  plainiing  to  drop 
a  last-minute  egg,  cutting  the 
draft  a  few  da\s  beh)re  the  Ncn. 
()  election.  Stevenson  had  to  do 
scjmething  last. 

This  may  or  mav  not  be  the 
reason.  But  either  wav.  we  hope 
Stevenson,  if  he  is  elec  ted.  will  lov- 
get  all  aboin  his  campaigti  jjromise 
concerniug  cutting  the  draft.  It  was 
a  dangeiotis  piomise.  It  would  be 
e\en  moe  dangeicjifs  it  iit  were 
carried  out. 


Gracious 
Living: 
Number  1 


Graham  Memorial  Student  \n- 
ion.  which  alwiiys  has  a  cIo.se  eye 
on  possible  impro\einetits  for  tlte 
students,  has  struck  .i  mightv  blow 
fcjr  Ciiacious  Fixing  in  (hapel 
Hill. 

File  building  has  installed  a 
pastiy  machine. 

The   machine   is   right    harcL  by 
the    coffee    machiiu*.    xvhich     dis- 
penses neithei   gracious  nor  li\ing 
colfee.  but  xvhich  fills  a  need,  some-' 
how. 

Tlie  pastry  machine,  however, 
dispenses  lixing,  edible  pastry-type 
things  for  hungry-type  people  to 
eat.  The  pastries  are  fresh,  tnilike 
the  .sandwiches  that  u.sed  to  be 
served   from   machine  in  CM. 

.\  .salutatioi!  to  Giaham  Memtn- 
ial  and  her  officers  lor  this'^wise 
move,  (wracious  Fixing  in  ("hapel 
Hill  is  not  dead,  after  all. 


Battle  Of  The  Press  Secretaries 


William  H.  Stringer 

/«    Christian    Science   Monitcn- 

WASHINGTON— It  can  be  set 
doxvn  that  both 'President  Eisen- 
hoxver  and  Democratic  contend- 
er Adlai  E.  Stevenson  have  able, 
tough-minded,  experienced  pre^s 
chiefs  functioning  at  their  el- 
bows. To  match  seasoned  James 
C.  Hagerty.  White  House  "press 
secretary  extraordinary."  Mr. 
Stevenson  has  appointed  Cla\*lon 
Fritchcy.  since  1952  editor  of 
the  pungent,  pugnacious  Demo- 
cratic Digest,  the  Democratic 
Party's    monthly    magazine. 

Both  men  are  "old  pros'  at  the 
gai.ie.  Both  men  know  their  xvay 
around.  Borth  have  been  journ- 
alists and  /well  understand  nexv.s- 
raen's  profclems.  Both  knoxv.  and 
are  knoxxTi  by.  all  the  important 
politicians  of  their  own  parties, 
and  by  the  politicians  of  the  op- 
posite party. 

On  occasion,  from  here  on 
during  the  campaign,  we  may  ex- 
pect 1o  see  the  sharks  fly  as  they 
match  xvits.  Even  as,  just  now. 
Hagerty  singled  out  a  nexvspaper 
story  which  appeared  to  show 
Stevenson  finding  that  patches  oI 
unemployment  in  the  nation  xvere 
"good  news"  and  Fritchey  quick- 
ly replied  that  txvo  xx-hoUy  un- 
related statements  had  been  "tel- 
e.<»cop€d"  to  produce  a  false  im- 
pression. 

•*  •  • 

'  A  press  secretary  can  have 
immense  impact  on  the  public 
impression  which  a  President  or 
a  candidate  make.s.  Washington 
reporters  xvould  generally  !»grce 
that  Jim  Hagarty.  the  Northern 
Irishman  with  the  genial  man- 
ner but  the  low  boiling  point,  is 
one  of  the  ablest  White  House 
press  chiefs  in  many  a  moon. 

Probably  no  pre.ss  secretary  in 
many  decades  has  developed 
such  a  close  and  confidential  re- 
lationship xvilh  his  chief  or  has 
been  entrusted  with  so  much  in- 
dependent authority  to  speak 
out  on  significent  subjects.  It 
was  Jim  xvho  skillfully  managed 
the  ''public  presentation"  of  both 
of  the  President's  illnesses  in 
such  a  manner  as  to  earn  maxi- 
mum public  confidence  in  the 
White  House  bulletins  and  to 
5tir  minimum  public  apprehen- 
sions   over   the   outcome. 

Not  always  is  a  White  House 
press  secretary  a  member  of  the 
executive  "big  team."  But  Jim 
Hagerty,  by  his  political  astute- 
ness and  by  the  fact  that  his  ad- 
vice has  almast  alxvays  been 
shrexvd  and  effective,  stands  in 
Mr.  Eisenhower's  esteem  along- 
side Presidential  Assistant  Sher- 
man Adams.  Appointment  Sec- 
retary Bernard  M.  Shanley.  and 
Deputy  Presidential  Assistant 
Maj.  Gen.  Wilton  B.  Persons. 

On  the  Democratic  side,  as  the 
campaign  moved  into  high  gear, 
the  presence  of  a  top-ranking 
press  chief  xvith  plenty  of  poli- 
tical savvy  on  the  Stevenson 
team  seemed  necessary.  This  is 
not  to  say  that  press  chief  Rog- 
er Tubby  has  not  been  a  capa- 
ble and  excellent  press-relations 
man.  But  it  has  not  ahv'ays  been 
easy  to  lasso  Stevenson's  fast- 
mox'ing  intellect  and  bring  it 
down  to  consider  the  needs  and 
necessities  of  proper  journalis- 
tic contacts. 

Stevenson  held  no  authentic 
press  conference  during  the  Chi- 
cago Democratic  convention.  He 
gave   a   sidexx'alk    interviexv   to   a 


television  newsman  on  the  vital 
subject  of  civil  rights  and  then 
neglected  to  tell  Tubby  about  it. 
Clayton  Fritchey,  as  the  new 
press  chief,  besides  giving  poli- 
tical advice,  has  the  task  of  pre- 
xenting  such  forgetfulness  in  the 
future. 

Fritchey  enters  the  Stevenson 
entourage  xvith  a  long  history 
of  past  newspaper  experience  on 
the  Pittsburgh  Pre.<s.  the  Cleve- 
land   Press,   as   managing   editor 


of  the  Baltimore  Post,  and  as 
editor  of  the  New  Orleans  It- 
em. An  "idea  man"  like  his  op- 
posite number.  Hagerty,  Fritchey 
is  largely  responsible  for  the  wit 
and  breezy  irony  xvhich  have 
gone  int-o  the  thoroughly  politi- 
cal Democratic  Digest  since  its 
founding   in  1953. 

•  •  * 

President  Eisenhower  enters 
the  autumnal  fray  xvith  a  highly 
competent    political    team,    from 


GOP  National  Chairman  Leonard 
W.  Hall  to  Vice-President  Rich- 
ard M.  Nixon  to  Press  Secretary 
Jim  Hagerty.  Stevenson  goes  to 
bat  with  a  political  team  xastly 
improved  over  its  1952  counter- 
part. He  has  moved  his  political 
headquarters  to  Washington.  Ife 
has  appointed  as  campaign  man- 
ager James  Aloysius  Finnegan, 
the  expert  xvho  steered  him  to 
a  first-ballot  nomination  at  Chi- 
cago. 


'They  Talk  As  If  I  Were  Responsible  For  My  Administration' 


CAROUNA  CAROLEIDOSCOPE 


Big  Changes  In  What  Is  Important 


Frank  Crowther 

.\  point   in  Social  Science. 

"You  know,"  said  the  profess- 
or, 'when  I  was  in  college  some 
twenty  odd  years  ago  they  told 
me  quite  briefly  about  .Africa. 
We  xvere  told  that  it  was  the 
second  largest  continent  located 
below  the  Mediterranean  Sea  and 
that  it  was  large,  underdevelop- 
ed,   and    relatively    unimportant. 

'Just  knoxv  where  it  is,'  said 
my  instructor,  and  forget  about 
it.' 

Well,  just  a  fcxv  years  ago, 
President  Harry  Truman  said 
that  he  had  taken  an  imaginary 
map  of  the  world  and  had  draxvn 
an  imaginary  line  on  said  map. 
If  the  Russians  decided  to  step 
across  that  line,  he  said  that  xve 
would  just  have  to  swat  "em. 

This  was  immediately  live  bait 
for  reporters.  They  pried  at  him 
and  pressed  him  to  reveal  the 
exact  location  of  his  "no  tres- 
pa.ssing"  line. 

One  day.  one  of  the  reporters 


a.skfd  him.  Is  that  line  drawn 
acro.ss  the  Mediterranean,  Mr. 
President?' 

'Yes,'  he  replied. 

'You  mean.'  said  the  reporter, 
•that  xve  would  fight  for  .\frica?' 

'Yes,  we  xvill  fight  for  .\frica,' 
said  the  President. 

Why,  we  may  ask? 

Because  in  the  central  and 
southern  parts  of  this  continent 
they  had  found  one  of  the  world's 
largest  known  deposits  of  uran- 
ium— xvhich  just  happened  to  be 
an  element  that  my  Chemistry 
teacher  had  told  me  was  of  no 
importance. 

And,  you  know,  they  told  me 
to  forget  about  Africa  when  I 
went  through  college  and  today 
xve  have  to  tell  students  that  they 
may  be  going  to  xvar  in  defense 
of  it!" 

•  •  • 

One  of  the  best  places  to  re- 
lax on  the  campus  .seems  to  be 
on  the  grass  in  front  of  the  li- 
brary. 

The  ominous  trees  convenient- 
ly  blot   out   enough   of   the   sun 


to  keep  yffU  from  squinting  or 
becoming  uncomfortable  and  the 
only  break  in  the  quietness  is 
made  by  the  screeching  squirrels 
playing  tag  and  the  unending 
shuffle  of  feet  plodding  up  and 
down  the  library's  steps. 

From  a  distance,  it  appeared 
as  if  the  library  were  a  large 
ant  hill  and  the  book-toting  pat- 
rons were  the  clan  of  ants. 

There  are  all  types:  some  on 
their  bikes;  a  boy  and  girl  on  a 
study-date,  several  professors  in 
a  group  with  briefcases;  a  red- 
headed boy  by  himself  carrying 
xvhat  appeared  to  be  his  dinner 
in  a  paper  bag;  two  girls  stag- 
gering out  with  enough  books 
for  an  entire  dorm:  and  a  little 
boy  xvith  his  dad  carrying  him 
home. 

They  all  apparently  hax'e  one 
thing  in  common — a  collective 
yearning.  They  are  seeking  some- 
thing, and  hope  that  the  "ant 
hill"  contains  some  of  the  an- 
swers. 

Up  and  down  ...  in  and  out 
...  on  and  on. 


Pogo 


By  Walt  Kelly 


A^Ak:e  It  A  /X6ty 

open  eift^i^'" 
M^  <H  prrcH  AM' 


Lil  Abner 


By  Al  Capp 


A  NORTHERN  VIEW 

Plans  Are  Subject 
To  Imagination 

Woody  Sears 

Every  so  often  someone  asks  about  your  future 
plans  and  xvhat  you  plan  to  do  x^'hen  you  get  out 
of  school.  Many  of  us  have  a  ready  answer  for  the 
inqu^itive,  saying  doctor,  lax«ryer,  uierchant,  etc. 

But  many  of  us,  on  the  other  hand,  still  have  no 
idea  what  were  going  to  do.  There's  no  particular 
discredit  in  this  indecision,  for  many  x^lio  know 
what  they're  going  to  do  get  out  and  find  they 
don't  like  it  after  all. 

For  many  of  us  it  will  oe  a  number  of  years  be- 
fore we  know  for  sure  xvhat  we  xvanl,  and  some  of 
us  will  unfortunately  never  know.  Those,  however, 
are  the  breaks  and  the  chances  we  must  take. 

.\mbition  is  a  good  thing  xxhen  it  is  guided  in 
the  right  directions,  but  many  of  us  let  our  ambi- 
tions run  away  from  us,  along  xvith  a  galloping 
imagination. 

The  reason  for  mentioning  this  is  the  popular 
misconception  that  many  college  students  get,  that 
their  degrees  really  mean  something  and  that  there- 
fore the  "world  owes  them  a  living, '  or  something 
to  that  effect. 

T'aint  so.  It  just  isn't  in  the  general  scheme  of 
things.  But  surprisingly  enough,  a  lot  of  people 
leave  here  with  just  that  idea  in  mind.  They  are 
truly  to  be  piticni,  for  that  mistaken  idea  will  bring 
them  no  end  of  misery.  For  so  long  as  they  believe 
that,  they  will  be  discontented  with  their  own  sta- 
tion, and  be  resentful  of  the  less  educated  people 
or  those  with  the  same  background  who  advance 
quicker  than  they. 

'  As  an  example  of  this,  a  student  from  the  Busi- 
ness School  went  out  from  here  for  a  job  interview 
with  a  national  concern  in  a  neighboring  city.  Dur- 
ing the  course  of  the  interview  the  employer  asked 
the  student  if  he  had  had  any  experience  in  sales. 

The  student  promptly  replied  that  his  major  was 
sales  management,  not  sales.  He  probably  never 
understood  xvhy  he  wasn't  hired.  Nor  did  he  ever 
know  just  how  ridiculous  his  statement  was  to  a 
man  who  made  his  lix^ing  first  in  sales,  then  in  sales 
management. 

Probably  if  the  truth  were  known,  there  would 
be  many  such  ridiculous  statements  made  by  our 
students  as  they  leave  to  face  the  problem  of  mak- 
ing a  living.  It's  truly  a  shame,  for  they  are  de- 
feated before  they  ever  get  started. 

Therefore,  in  the  counseling  of  students,  those 
who  counsel  should  make  this  known  to  the  profes- 
sional hopefuls  before  they  go  out  to  cut  their 
own  throats. 

Poteat:  Needed 
More  As  Teacher 

Cortland  H.  Edwards  U 

In  the  past  few  days  I  have  heard  faint  rumblings 
of  a  petition  grinding  into  ge«r  to  put  MViUicm  P*i^" 
teat  in  for  the  Chancellor  of  the  Greater  University 
of  North  Carolina. 

1,  and  I  speak  for  others  as  well,  don't  want  Bill 
Potcatas  Chancellor.  It  is  not  because  he  is  un- 
qualified. On  the  conlr'ary.  I  think  that  he  would 
ma^e  an  excellent  one.  In  fact,  it  is  his  calibre  of 
men  that  this  universty  needs  in  its  top  positions. 

I  don't  want  Poteat  as  Chancellor  because  he  is 
much  more  capable  and  better  qualified  to  hold 
the  job  he  noxv  has  as  a  professor  of  philosophy. 
He  is  much  more  important  to  the  University,  the 
State,  and  even  the  United  States  in  his  teaching 
capacity. 

You  have  no  doubt  heard  the  comment  that  you 
have  not  lived  until  you  ifkx^e  -had  religion  under 
Boyd,  or  history  under  Godfrey  or  Leflcr.  Well  I 
say  your  formal  education  won't  be  complete  until 
you  have  had  a  philosophy  course  under  Poteat. 
(pronounced  like  petite). 

Whom,  may  I  ask,  could  possibly  fill  his  shoes  in 
,  teaching  'Philosophy  of  Religion"  for  instance.  I 
am  afraid  that  without  Bill  Poteat.  the  philosophy 
department  would  go  down  quite  a  fexi-  points.  I 
say  keep  him  teaching  where  he  is  happy  and  is 
needed.  Keep  him  where  his  knowledge  may  be 
shared  by  others  and  not  buried  by  other  duties. 

In  passing,  who  then  would  I  suggest?  Why  there 
is  Godfrey,  Leflcr,  Douglas,  Wallace,  Maekie, 
Boyd,  Geer,  and  many  more,  feut  these  are  all  men 
who  are  very  devoted  to  their  work  and  are  tops  in 
their  field,  and  furthermore,  should  be  left  there. 
To  change  them  now.  would  be  to  stagnate  them. 
Who  then?  I  would  suggest  drawing  new  blood 
from  the  West,  or  New  York,  o-r  Pennsylvania. 
What  we  need  is  new  ideas  and  a  man  to  push  them 
thru  the  red  tape. 

Although  Frank  Crowther  wrote  an  excellent 
article  on  behalf  of  3*11  Poteat,  I  xvish  that  he  too, 
would  reconsider  his  proposal,  and  hope  fervently 
that  Dr.  Poteat  be  alloxved  to  continue  his  teachings. 

They  Had  Those 
Problems  Then 

.   Thomas  Wolfe 

The    Tar  Heel,    1919 

Two  weeks  ago  we  published  an  editorial,  un- 
hcaded,  that  dealt  xvith  the  present  need  of  nexv 
buildings.  In  this  editorial  we  mentioned  the  fact 
that  three  students  to  the  room  was  the  usual  oc- 
currence now  and  that  completely  successful  liv- 
ing conditions  could  not  be  realized  until  this  con- 
gestion xvas  relieved  by  "new  buildings,  more  of 
them  and  soon." 

The  past  week  a  committee  of  the  trustees  has 
met  here  and  authorized  the  immediate  erection  of 
two  modern,  fireproof  dormitories,  behind  the  South 
Building,  capable  of  housing  175  students. 

This  is  a  good  start  and  a  speedy  one;  it  speaks 
well  for  the  promptitude  of  the  trustees.  But  let 
there  be  no  forgetting  the  fact  that  over  600  of  our 
1,300  student  body  are  forced  to  room  in  town  and 
that  this  is  a  condition  that  must  be  relieved. 

The  action  of  the  trustees  in  authorizing  these 
new  buildings  will  be  received  here  with  sliouts  of 
joy,  but  our  building  committee  must  real  ire  now 
that  they  will  have  to  work  hard  and  fast  to  ke^'P 
abreast  of  the  fastebl  growin?  student  body  in  the 
South.  ^ 


FRIDAY, 


Co 


CAREER  Mj 

The  lirst 
meetings  b^ 
Service  wilT 
at  7:30  in 
a  get  acquaj 
ed  by  Jae  g) 
Placement 

christian! 

The  Chrisj 
hold  Sundax 
Carroll  Hal 
be  held  at 
CO-OP  HOU| 

The    Unix 
that  has  a 
foreign    stu(j 
tional  House 
already  set 
and  are  intej^ 
better  eleml 
and  an  Intl 
dents    interJ 
have  been  a| 
dresses  at 
a   time   th<. 
&-2471. 

WEINER  R( 

A  weinerl 
the  nexv  B| 
building  tor 
Baptist  stu( 
ed,  along  xvi| 
College. 
WAA  COUI 

The  WomJ 
hold  its  fiH 
p.m.  in  the 
Room    in 
dormitory  a  J 
lives  have 
ART  CLASi 

Students. 
make  'Xtra 
for  art  class 
nouncementj 
is  not  a  rei 
son,  but  foj 
called  as  n| 
per  hour. 

("IWON'l 
I  BUT  T01 


•CMM  M  ' 

12-0  seaso*! 
out  2i  hMiej 
Sot.  a  local  j 
m  Hobhs'  •■ 
^Ixe  occai^ 
fmt  post  I 

T*H» 

Oewl 


DA 

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PersI 

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JO.  Shal< 

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volvir 

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25.  A  vi 

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46.  Thrc 

DOI 
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5,  Y95« 


Ct 


FRIDAY,  OCTOBER  5,  1956 


TH«  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


rAGE  THREV 


future 
kct  out 
for  the 
etc. 

lave  no 
Irticular 
know 
id   they 

?ars  bs- 
somc  o£ 
lowcver, 

iided  in 
jir  ambi- 
[alloping 

popular 
let,  that 
it  thcre- 
fmcthing 

icmc  of 

people 

they  are 

Jill  bring 

i  believe 

|o\vn  sta- 

people 

advance 

jhe  Busi- 
Interview 
jity.  Dur- 
ler  asked 
in  sales, 
lajor  was 
jy   never 

he  ever 
ras   to   a 

in  sales 

re  would 
by   our 
of  mak- 
are  de- 
Its,   those 
[e  profes- 
:ut    their 


er 


Iruniblings 

JMrm  Pa> 

Jniversity 

[want  Bill 
le    is   ue- 

\e  would 
:alibre  of 
Ipositiuns. 
ise  be  is 

to  hold 
lilosophy. 
Irsity.  tha 

teaching 

that  you 
Ion  under 
Ir  Well  I 
[lete  until 
k   Poteat. 

shoes  in 
stance.  I 
hilosophy 
points.  I 
y  and  is 
may  be 
duties. 
\  hy  there 
Mackie, 
e  all  men 
re  tops  in 
left  there. 
nat&  them, 
new  blood 
nnsylvania. 
pu-,h  them 

excellent 
hat  he  too, 
e  fervently 

s  teachings. 


len 


ditorial,  un- 
erd  of  new 
cd  the  fact 
:he  usual  oc- 
iccessfui  liv- 
ntil  this  con- 
igs,   more   of 

trustees  has 
e  erection  oi 
:nd  the  South 
;nts. 

)nc:  it  speaks 
btees.  But  let 
rer  800  of  our 
I  in  town  and 

relieved, 
borizing  these 
HTith  shouts  of 
1st  realize  now 
d  fast  to  keep 
kt  bt)»ly  ill  the 


Covering  The  Campus 


CAREER  MEETINGS 

The  tirst   in   a  series  of  career 


RESEARCH   UNIT 


j  The  first  fall  quarter  meeting  of 
meetings  by  the  UNC  Placfement  the  local  (Garolina-Duke)  Army  Re- 
Ser\  ice  will  be  held  Tuesday  night  j  search  and  Development  Unit  will 
at  7:30  in  Gerrard  Hall.  It  will  be  ■  be  held  in  101  Medical  Sch^oJ 
a  got  acquainted  meeting  conduct-  j  Building  toniglil  at  7:30. 
ed  by  Joe  Galloway,  director  of  the 


riacement  Service.  , 

CHRISTIAN  SCIENCE 

The  Christian  Science  Soeety  will 
hold  Sunday  services  at  11  a.m.  in 
Carroll   Hall.    Sunday    school   will 
be  held  at  9:30  a.m. 
CO-OP  HOUSE 

The  University  is  one  of  few 
that  has  a  considerable  number  of 
foreign  students  and  no  Interna- 
tional House.  A  few  students  have 
already  set  up  a  cooperative  house 
and  are  interested  in  combining  the 
better  elements  of  a  co-op  house 
and  an  International  House.  Stu- 
dents interested  in  this  project 
have  been  a.sked  to  leave  their  ad- 
dresses at  the  YMCA  and  specify 


WUNCTV 

Today's  schedule  for  WUNCTV. 
the  University's  educational  tele- 
vision^ station,  Channel  4: 

12:45— Music 

1— Today  On  Farm 

1:30— Notes  On  Music 

2 — Magic  Window 

2:30— Sign  Off 

5:45 — Music 

6 — Children's  Corner 

6:30— News 

6:45— Sports  ■. 

1 — Science  Fair  .1' 

8— WT  Founders'  Day 

9-— Know  Your  Schools 

9:30— Drop  of  Coin 

10— Final  Edition 

10:05— Sign  Off  -     . 


a   time    they    could   meet,    or   call    j„,,»._ 
q-2471  WUNC 

Todays  schedule  for  WTNC.  the 
WEINER  ROAST  \  University's  FM  radio  station.  91.5 

A  weiner  roast  will   be  held  at  |  -negacycles: 

7 — Intermezzo 


the    new    Baptist    Student    Union 
building   tomorrow   at   6   p.m.    All  ! 
Baptist   students   have  been   invit- 
ed, along  with  girls  from  Meredith 
College. 
WAA  COUNCIL 

The  Women's  Athletic  Assn.  will 
hold  its  first  meeting  today  at  7 
p.m.  in  the  Woodhouse  Conference 
Room  in  Graham  Memorial.  All 
dormitory  and  sorority  representa- 
tives have  been  urged  to  attend. 
ART  CLASS  MODELS 

Students,  male  and  female,  can 
make  extra  cash  by  being  a  model 
for  art  classes,  according  to  an  an- 
nouncement from  Person  Hall.  This 
is  not  a  regular  job  for  one  per- 
son, but  for  several  who  will  be 
called  as  needed.  Pay  will  be  $1 
per  hour. 


"I  WON'T  WEAR  A  THING 
BUTTOWNEANDKINSr 


f  01JSH  LEACVE.  OiOA,  Sqil.  M>1^ 
•tMW  M  talk  mmiot  teatnes  arc  M^iiac  for 
«hc  MTvices  «f  yoMf  HoMm  Ac  ifMiiwrt 
rifM-Mid-lch-liMHi  pitdMr  vho  l«iili*<  • 
tl-9  vtmKO*  for  his  coOetc  Vt»m  aatf  «s«et 
•u«  M  bMen  ia  IM  Ual  ffm  far  ttc  Paffli 
Sox.  a  local  «aw#i«  wMiL  Seoatt  aic  MMScA 
•I  Hobte'  aMMy  10  rt  Mi  aMw  mm  *• 
^Mc  occa>ie«aliy  wick  ciilMr  bM4.  fct^ 
«MK  (KM*  mortm  riMwi  Michor  vwrtat  kto 
•c«  TAK  «DMara«  piM-emt. 
\  TAK't  ••■  Mead  of  iMportatf  Xtmht 
tMMlr.  aev  Cafifoow  aaion:  3t-4( . ..  OJf 
1   0«*lM«liMal»MMlt;l«»-l}^lJ» 

I  TOWNK  AND  KlM«.  iMw  1 
L  C«M«MMtfMhN«r  1 


7:30— The  People  Lead 
S — Horizons  in  Music 
8:30— Vienna  Calling 
9 — American  Adventure 
9:30 — Folk  Music 
10 — ^News  at  Ten 
10:15 — E^'ening  Masterwork 
11:30— Sign  Off 


GMAB  Schedules 
Rams  For  Dance 

The  Rams,  a  local  combo,  will 
play  for  a  dance  in  the  Rendez- 
vous Room  of  Graham  Memorial 
tomorrow  night  from  8  to  11  p.m. 
The  combo,  led  by  Rob  Neal  of 

I  Henderson,  will   play  under  spon- 

j  soiship   of   the   Graham   Memorial 

i  Activities   Board. 

1  GMAB  plans  to  have  a  combo 
to   play   in   the  Rendezvous  Room 

;  every  Saturday  during  football  sea- 
son  when  there  is  no  home  game, 
according  to  GMAB  Dance  Commit- 

j  tee  officials. 

I      The  Dance  Committee  also  hopes 

;  to  provide  music  for  dancing  in 
the  Rendezvous  Room  on  as  many 

i  Saturday  nights  during  the  school 

\  year  as  possible,  according  to 
Chuck  Flack  and  Ed  Myers,  co- 
chairmen  of  the  committee. 


Tomorrow's 

Housecleaning 

Sale 

Covers 

History 

Biography 

and 

Philosophy 

THE  INTIMATE 
BOOKSHOP 

205   E.   Franklin  St. 
Open  Till   10  P.M. 


New  AFROTC  Man  Named  Here 


Lt.  CoL  Franklin  W.  Swann  (laft)  is  shown  during  ceremonies  officially  wolcoming  him  to  his  new 
post  on  the  Dept.  of  Air  Science  Staff  hero  at  the  U  niversity.  Shown  with  him  is  Dr.  F.  Carlyle  Shepard, 
military  coordinator  for  the  University.  Col.  Swann  has  just  recently  returned  from  Japan.  He  will  serve 
as  assistant  professor  of  air  science  and  executive   officer  to  Detachment  590  AFROTC. 


Camp  Moon-Elon  Scene 
Of  YW-YMCA  Retreat 


The  joint  cabinets  of  the  YMCA ' 
and    "i'WCA   are   having   a  retreat ' 
this  weekend  at  Camp  Moon-Elon. 
near    Burlington.    The    discussion 
will  be  centered  around  the  topic 
The  Nature  and   Purpose  of  the  j 
Student    Christian    Movement    and : 
How    It    Can    Be    Applied    to    the 
Campus." 

The  members  of  the  cabinets 
will  also  evaluate  the  present  cam- 
pus YM-YWCA  program. 

"We  hope  to  establish  in  the 
cabinets  a  sense  of  Christian  c€«n- 
munity  that  can  be  interpreted  to 
each  member  of  our  associations 
whatever  his  or  her  job  may  be," 


said  Miss  Martha  Richardson  and  j 
Gerry  Mayo  in  a  joint  statement. 
Miss  Richardson  and  Mavo  are  the 
respective      presidents      of     t  h  e  | 
YWCA  and  YMCA.  j 

The  cabinet  members  will  leave  j 
for  the  retreat  at  1  p.m.  on  Satur-  i 
day  and  will  return  Sunday  after-  ; 
noon.  The  retreat  precedes  the  ! 
Monday  afternoon  membership  i 
meeting  to  be  held  on  campus.        ' 

Miss  Kathy  LeGrand  and  Bud  j 
Stalnaker  are  making  the  arrange- ! 
ments  for  the  retreat,  with  assist- ; 
ance  from  Miss  Ginger  Floyd  and  I 
Stuart  Colson,  who  are  handling 
the  worship  area.  The  retreat  is 
under  the  leadership  of  Presidents 
Richardson  and  Mayo. 


losf  Doy 
for  f  rosfi 
Yack  Pictures 

Today  is  the  last  day  for  fresh- 
man, fourth  year  medical  students 
and  nursing  students  to  have  Yack- 
ety-Yack  pictures  made. 

Yack  officials  requested  girls 
wear  dark  sweaters  and  pearls  for 
the  photos.  Men  have  een  asked 
to  wear  dark  coats,  ties  and  white 
shirts. 

The  remainder  of  the  photo 
schedule  is   as  follows: 

Oct.  8-12  —  sophomores,  phar- 
macy, dental  and  dental  hygiene 
students. 

Oct.  15-19  —  Juniors,  law  stu- 
dents, medical  students  and  grad- 
uate students. 


2,504  Attend 
WC  This  Fall 

GREENSBORO,  Oct.  3  (AP)  — 
Classes  at  Woman's  College  for  the 
fall  semester  are  being  attended  by 
a  total  of  2,504  students,  according 
to  Rollin  E.  Godfrey,  college  regis- 
trar. 

A  count  completed  today  shows 
2,064  undergraduate  students  who 
are  enrolled  for  bachelor  of  arts 
and  bachelor  of  science  degrees. 
The  number  includes  407  seniors. 
377  juniors,  580  sophomores  and 
700  freshmen. 

The  one-year  commercial  class 
has  an  enrollment  of  216  students 
and  there  are  38  special  students. 

Some  35  graduate  students^  are 
included  in  the  list  and  151  addi- 
tional graduate  students,  many  of 
them  teachers  an-d  principals,  are 
attending  Saturday  classes  working; 
toward  advanced  degrees. 

The  enrollment  this  year  is  131 
above  the  1955-56  regular  session 
count  of  2.373  students. 


Top  Writers 
f  nfer  Scripts      j 
In  Contest  __     I 

Thirteen  of  the  top  writers  in  j 
the  country  have  written  scripts 
for  the  latest  radio  series  of  the ! 
University,  Earl  Wynn,  director  of  | 
the  Communication  Center,  has  an- ' 
nounced.  The  series,  titled  'Listen  i 
America,"  is  to  be  released  na-  j 
tionally  on  100  radio  stations  this  ] 
week.  ' 

Each   author,   among   them   five ' 
North    Carolinians,    was    asked    to  \ 
choose  any  theme  and  develop  it 
as    he    pleased,    with    the    idea    of ; 
.saying  to  the  American  people  at  J 
this  time  what  he  thought  it  most 
important  for  them  to  hear.  There 
were    no   restrictions    imposed    by 
the  University. 

Produced  by  John  Ehle  and  di- ' 
reeled  by  John  Clayton,  (he  series 
will  open  with  the  program  of  Carl 
Sandburg,  and  will  continue  with 
the  programs  of  Arthur  Miller, 
Paul  Green.  Robert  Frost,  Randall 
Jarrell,  Archibald  MacLeish.  Nor- 
man Corwin,  Pearl  Buck,  Noel 
Houston,  Conrad  Richler,  John 
Gunther,  Betty  Smith  and  William 
Saroyaa. 

Broadcasts    on    WUNC.    Chapel 
Hill,  will  begin  Thursday  evening 
I  at   9  o'clock. 


MISS  I^AT  BROWN,  LEFT,  AND  BARRY  FARBER 

.  .  .  to  addrtws  scliola^lic  press  group 


High  Schooi  Newspapermen 
Meet  Here  Today,  Tomorrow 


High   School   students   and   pro- , 
fessional  newsmen  will  pool  their 
knowledge     of    publications    here ' 
this   weekend   at   the    15th   annual 
North  CarQlina  Scholastic  Press  In-  ; 
stitulc,  which  gets  under  way  this 
afternoon.  ! 

High    school    editors    who    have 
worked  out  the  program  and  will  j 
preside    at    the    meetings    include  i 
Miss  Pat  Brown,  Goldsboro,  presi- 
dent;   Miss    Linda    Diggle.    Char-  j 
lote,     vice-president;     Miss     Bette ' 
Woodbury,  Wilmington,  secretary:  '■ 
and    Miss    Theresa    Pelone,    Char- 
lotte, treasurer. 

Othed  high  school  students  who 
will  lead  discussions  on  editorials.  | 
sports,  makeup,  advertising,  photo-  : 
graphy,   and  yearbook  editing  are  I 
George    Earl     Davis     of    Hickory,  : 
Frank    Bulloch     of    O.xford,    Miss 
Patsy  garter  of  Kannapolis.  David  . 
McSwain    and    Robert    Kirkpatrick 
of  Charlotte,  Miss  Betty  Parker  of  : 
High  Point,  .Bob  Denham  and  Miss  j 
Kay  Swaim  of  Winston-Salem.  Miss  , 
Janice  Parker  of  North   Mecklen- 1 
burg,   Miss  Sella  Ann  Overton   of  j 
East   Mecklenburg,    Miss   Kay   Na-  \ 
hers  of  Statesville.  Miss  Betsy  Wil-  \ 
.son  of  Charlotte,  Will  Lou  Gray  of 
Whiteville,    Wayland    Johnson    of  i 
Roxboro,    Miss    Jane    Parkins    of  i 
Greensboro      and      Miss      Marilyn  ' 
Markell  of  Chapel  Hill. 

The  professional  newsmen  on  the 


program  will  be  Mark  Rhridge  Jr. 
of  Raleigh  on  'Editorial  Writing," 
Tom  Wicker  of  W'inston-Splem  on 

"Sports  Wiiiting,"  Charles  Cooper 
of  Durham  on  'Photography,  '  Bill 
Justice  of  Goldsboro  on  "News 
W^riting,"  Miss  Jane  Rogers  of 
Charlotte  on  "Feature  W'riting," 
Mrs.  Dan  McMillan^of  Fayetteville 
on  "Advertising,"  and  Roland 
Giduz  of  Chapel  Hill  on  rMakeup." 
High  school  advisers  taking  part 
in  panels  are  Chris  Folk  of  Char- 
lotte, Miss  Mary  Humphrey  of  Wil- 
mington, and  Mrs.  Ruth  Barfield 
of  Ji»6rth  Mecklenburg.  An  address 
on  "Yearbook  Procedure"  will  be 
given  by  Joe  Phelps  of  E4wards 
and    Broughton    Company    in    Ra- 

eigh. 


PATRONIZE  YOUR 
•    ADVERTISERS    • 


We   Have   Just   Bought   In 
Som/>  Old   Books  On 

MEDIEVAL 

FOLK-LORE  AND 

RELIGION  .  -  • 

Come  Treasure-Hunting 
in  our  Old  Book  Corner 

THE  INTIMATE 
BOOKSKOP 

205  E.  Franklin  St. 
Open  Till  10  PJM. 


DAILY    CROSSWORD 


ACROSS 

1.  Store 
5.  Ruler  of 

Peraia 
9.  Form 
10.  Shakes-        -^ 

pearean 

character 

( poss. ) 

12.  A  thin 
meUl  disk 

13.  Outer 
garment 

14.  Let^eled 

16.  National  god 
(Tahiti) 

17.  Guided 

18.  Large 
volume 

21.  Gold  (Her.) 

22.  Troop 
(abbr.) 

23.  Pursuit 
of  art 

25.  A  wing 

26.  Miscellany 

27.  An 
argument 
in  writing 

30.  Italian 
river 

32.  Rhode 
Island 
(abbr.) 

33.  Line  of 
junction 

34.  Queen  of 
the  faries 

35.  To  make 
choice 

37.  Essence 
30.  Think 
42.  Stories 
4^.  Beg 

44.  Goddess 
of  peace 

45.  Units  of 
work 

46.  Throw 

DOWN 
1.  Youngster 
.l<ii*l.) 


3.  Detested 

3.  Unroll 

4.  Pierce 

5.  Little  gill 

6.  Legal 
right 

or  claim 
(India) 

7.  Exchange 
premium 

8.  Fear 

9.  A  wheat 
11.  Tale 

15.  Speck 
10.  NOKiottt 
20.  Serf 
(Anglo* 
Saxon) 

23.  Excla- 
mation of 
sorrow 

24.  Tantalum 
(sym.) 


25.  Symbol 
^       in 
%       Lloyd's 

Reg- 
ister 
17.  Group 

of 

Boy 

Scouts 
i6.  Ruffle 

the 

surface 

of 

water 
20.  Man's 

name 

30.  A 
father 
or 
mother 

31.  Fat 
34.  Quarterless 

slippers 


'W  V 

ll-l 

f^T'JJtli    ] 

cnci 

'TJ 

ar^i.-^n 

^^'.^r^ 

z-.n 

m:M4"(: 

("jn 

ffj!^.          :iM 

ni'.n 

~lt 

JH7j-:iT!-; 

I'XIT 

-^  ' 

:itJ;li-iMu 

a\i}.'^ 

U'jrr 

:-:Nm 

w::i 

:■■::    [HM'sii 

Iir':i^L'ii'^M     "(3Mi 

[::n. 

D'^n   Tfj 

Iriill 

ii:i 

.^irjo-^^i 

•[:.:(  3 

LJii 

Jl^Uii 

Teftcrdsjr'i  Aaswer 

36.  One  of 

many  layers 
38.  Ancient 

capital  of 

Ireland 

40.  Scold  per- 
sistently 

41.  Man's 
nickname 
(poss.) 


Response  To  Shots  | 

Fair,  Doctor  Says  [ 

Dr.  E.  McG.  Hedgpeth,  UNC  t 
physician,  stated  today  that  re- 
sponse to  the  announcement  of 
Salk  Polio  shots  available  to  stu- 
dents at  the  infirmary  has  been 
fair  but  not  up  to  the  expectations 
of  the  infirmary. 

Dr.  Hedgpeth  urged  that  stu- 
dents avail  themselves  of  the  op- 
portunity to  get  the  shots  at  a 
charge  of  $1  per  shot.  The  vaccine 
may  be  obtained  in  the  infirmary. 

Rhodes  Blanks 
issued  To  3 
UNC  Students 

Three  students,  Luther  Hodges 
Jr.,  Jim  Exum  and  George  Rags- 
dale,  have  obtained  applicaton 
blanks  from  the  office  of  Dean  C. 
P.  Spruill  to  apply  for  the  Rhodes 
Scholarships. 

In  addition  to  these.  Dean  Spruill 
announced  that  application  blanks 
have  been  mailed  to  80  other  inter- 
ested students. 

Juniors  and  seniors  interested  in  ! 
the  two-year  scholarship  offering  { 
study  at  Oxford  University  may  j 
obtain  application  blanks  and  in» 
formation  from  303  South  Build- 
ing and  must  turn  them  in  by  Oct.  '■ 
10.  I 

Eligibility  memorandum  of  the  j 
scholarship  states  that  candidates 
must  have  attained  at  least  junior 
standing  at  "some  recognised  de- 
gree-granting university  or  college 
in  the  United  States."  They  must 
also  be  unmarried  male  students 
between  the  ages  of  19  and  25. 


Playmakers  Selling 
Tickets  For  Shows 

The  Carolina  Playmakers,  UNC 
dramatic  group,  have  announced 
season  ticket  books  are  on  sale  at 
Abernathy  Hall  and  at  Ledbetter- 
Pickard's  I 

One  thousand  ticket  books  have 
been  placed  on  sale  for  the  Play- 
makers' 39th  season,  for  which  six 
plays  have  been  scheduled. 

On  the  program  will  be  "An- 
j  astasia,"  a  recent  Broadway  sue- 
j  cess;  "'Androcles  and  the  Lion," 
a  comedy  by  Sh.Tw;  'Desire  Under 
;  the  Elms,'"  an  American  classic 
{  by  O'Neill;  "Brigarioon."  musical 
I  comedy  to  appear  at  Memorial 
.  Hall:  a  new  play  in  its  first  pro- 
I  duction;  and  'Peer  Gynt."  by  Hen- 
!  rik  Ibsen,  adopted  for  outdoor 
!  production  in  the  Forest  Theatre. 


HAPPY-JOE-LUCKY  presents  STICKLERS! 


STUCK  FOR  MONEY?  DO  A 

'•\\// 


Psychology  Professors 
Co-Edit  New  Book 

Drs.  George  S.  Welsh  and  W. 
Grant  Dahktrom  of  the  Dept.  of 
P.sychology  are  co-editors  of  a  book 
published  last  week  by  the  Uni- 
versity of  Minnesota  Press  entitled: 
"Basic  Reading  on  the  Minnesota 
Multiphasic  Personality  Inventory 
in  Psychologj'  and  Medicine." 

This  is  the  first  comprehensive 
work  devoted  to  this  widely  used 
diagnostic  instrument.  The  book 
contains  a  critical  appraisal  of  the 
selections  as  well  as  several  chap- 
ters specially  written  for  this  vol- 
ume, including  some  written  by 
the  editors  themselves. 


Four  Campus  Problems 
To  Be  Discussed  Today 


•  Members  of  the  Student  Govern- 
ment Executive  Council  will  meet 
Friday  with  members  of  the  ad- 
ministrations  Council  on  Student 
Affairs  in  the  South  Building  to 
discuss   four  campus   problems. 

The  problems,  which  were 
agreed  upon  at  a  meeting  Wednes- 
day 'oy  members  of  the  council 
headed  by  Student  Body  President 
Bob  Young,  were  as  follows: 

1.  The  parking  situation,  as  it 
confronts  members    of  the  Inter- 


traternity  Council. 

2.  The  need  for  a  sttidcrit  group 
to  coordinate  campus  activities. 
3.   Compulsory  physical  education 
for  veterans. 

4.  Allocation  of  men's  dormitory 
vending  machine  profits. 

The  purpose  of  the  joint  meet- 
ing, according  to  President  Young, 
'is  to  familiarize  the  student  af- 
fairs council  with  what  we  feel 
are  the  problems  which  confront 
student  government." 


STICKLEKS  ARE  TICKLERS  and  a  mighty  soft  way  to  make  money! 
Just  write  down  a  tample  riddle  and  a  two- word  rhyming  answer.  For 
example:  What's  a  h<aU  player  who  gets  a  raise'.'  (Answer:  richer 
pitcher. )  Note:  both  words  must  iiave  the  same  number  of  syllables 
—  bleak  freak,  jolly  dolly,  vinery  finery.  Send  your  Sticklers,  with 
your  name,  address,  college,  and  class,  to  Happy -Joe- Lucky,  Box 
67A,  Mt.  Vwnon,  N.  Y.  Don't  do  drawings!  We'll  pay  $25  for  every 
Stickler  we  use  in  our  advertising— and  for  himdreds  that  never  see 
print.  And  remember— you're  bound  to  Stickle  better  when  you're 
enjoying  a  Lucky,  because  Luckies  taste  better.  Luckies'  mUd,  good- 
tasting  tobacco  is  TOASTED  to  taste  even  better.  Fact  is,  you'll  say 
Luckies  are  the  bfist-tasting  cigarette  you  ever  smoked! 


"IT'S 
TOASTED 

to  taste 
b«tter! 


SEND  IT  IN  AND 

MAKE 


Luckies  Taste  Better 

CLEANER,    FRESHER,    SMOOTHER   ! 


©A,  r.  Cj. 


rstfiovcj  OF 


c-m^  <,  '¥mit  *ugan.  <Jv^iueec^-<:!^^ryi^n^ 


AMERICA  S    LXAOINQ    MANUFACTCREF    Or    CICARCTTKt 


PAGE  FOUR 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HFBL 


FRIDAY,  OCTOBER  4,  19^6 


Tar  Baby  Football  Team  And  Harriers  Will  Debut  Today 


Big  Four  Football— Another  Sad  Saturday 

It  looks  like  a  rough  weekend  for  the  Big  Four. 

All  four  schools  with  the  possible  exception  of  Wake  PorMt, 
have  drawn  tough  Saturday  afternoon  assignments,  and  three  of  the 
local  aggregations  are  ticketed  for  underdog  roles  by  the  oddsmakers. 

Duke's  comeback  Blue  Devils  face  the  strongest  foe  when  they 
entertain  the  country's  ninth  ranked  team,  Tennessee,  in  Duke  Sta- 
dium. State  meets  the  ACCs  only  unbeaten  squad,  Clemson,  under 
the  lights  in  Raleigh;  Carolina  travels  to  Columbia,  S.C,  where  they 
will  challenge  the  South  Carolina  Gamecocks;  and  Wake  Forest, 
surprise  of  the  year  in  the  ACC  so  far.  tangles  with  lowly  Virginia. 

TAR  HEELS  SEARCH  FOR  WINNING  COMBO 

Carolina,  off  to  one  of  their  worst  starts  in  years  under  new 
Coach  Jim  Tatum,  will  be  looking  for  the  key  to  a  winning  combina- 
tion tomorrow  when  they  clash  with  the  Gamecocks.  And  if  early 
season  resdlts  are  any  indication,  it  may  be  a  sad  day  for  the  Tar 
Heels. 

Coach  Warren  Giese,  former  pupil  of  Tatum  at  Maryland,  has 
moulded  a  powerhouse  in  his  first  year  at  Columbia.  The  Gamecocks 
have  a  2-1  record  for  the  season,  losing  to  Miami  while  winning 
from  Wofford  and  Duke.  On  the  other  hand,  the  old  master's  Tar 
Heels  have  had  rather  rough  sledding,  losing  to  both  State  and 
Oklahoma  by  decisive  margins. 

Tar  Heel  fans  are  hoping  their  mystery  team'  will  click  tomor- 
row for  the  first  time  this  year.  Tatum  says  there's  no  reason  Why 
the  shouldn't.  And  yet,  we  intend  to  remain  on  the  skeptical,  "wait 
and  see'  side  of  the  fence  until  the  Tar  Heels  show  something  be- 
sides promise  to  back  up  their  coach's  optimistic  words. 

LONG  ROAD  TO  SEASON'S  END 

The  power  of  positive  thinking  has  done  wonders  in  the  past, 
and  can  do  no  harm  at  any  time.  And  certainly  we  think  no  coach 
should  be  without  it,  unless  he  happens  to  have  the  material  of  Bud 
Wilkinson.  But  let's  face  it  Carolina  has  a  losing  football  team 
now,  and  unless  something  can  be  done  to  improve  the  situation, 
it's  going  to  be  a  long,  long  season  for  our  Tar  Heels. 

South  Carolina  has  a  slick,  sharp  ball  club  and  an  energetic 
young  coach.  They  have  a  porent  split-T  offense  built  around  vet- 
eran signal  caller  Mackie  Prickett  and  a  pair  of  sophomore  half- 
backs, Alex  Hawkins  and  King  Dixon. 

Carolina  has  a  ball  club  that  has  admittedly  shown  some  poten- 
tial, although  it  has  seldom  been  realized.  One  big  factor  that  may 
result  in  an  improved  showing  by  the  Tar  Heels  is  the  return  of 
quarterback  Dave  Reed  to  the  lineup. 

TEAM  PERFORMANCE  DEPENDS  ON  LINE  PLAY 

Reed  is  backed  up  by  a  backfield  that  could  go  if  the  blocking 
was  available  up  front.  Ed  Sutton  is  a  top  flight  halfback  in  any- 
body's league  and  the  rest  of  the  backs  are  capable  performers. 

The  main  problem  seems  to  lie  up  front.  The  forward  wall  just 
hasn't  jelled  yet,  and  without  a  strong  line,  both  the  offense  and 
oefense  will  continue  to  suffer. 

Although  the  Gamecocks  rate  the  edge  on  paper,  the  game  could 
develop  into  a  real  dogfight.  We  believe  the  Tar  Heels  are  ready  for 
their  best  effort  of  the  season,  but  whether  or  not  it  will  be  enough 
to  carry  the  day  remains  to  be  seen.  South  Carolina  14,  Carolina  6. 

A  BRIEF  LOOK  AROUND  THE  CIRCUIT 

Briefly  let's  take  a  look  around  the  remainder  of  the  Big  Four. 
The  Duke-Tennessee  scrap  shapes  up  as  a  rock  em,  sock  em  battle 
of  the  Wallace  Wade-Bob  Neyland  tradition.  Both  squads  have  an 
abundance  of  talent.  The  Vols  are  ranked  higher  in  the  nation,  but 
don't  let  this  fool  you.  Duke  proved  last  Saturday  against  Virginia 
that  they  have  completely  recovered  from  their  shocking  loss  to 
South  Carolina,  and  are  now  a  force  to  be  reckoned  with. 

But  when  all  is  said  and  done,  the  Blue  Devils  must  play  a  very 
good  football  team  today.  And  with  ace  quarterback  Sonny  Jurgen- 
sen  available  for  only  limited  duty  at  best,  the  Vols  must  be  picked 
to  take  their  first  win  over  a  Duke  team  since  1951.  Tennessee  20, 
Duke   14. 

State's  up  and  down  Wolfpack,  still  in  a  state  of  shock  after  last 
week's  VPI  debacle,  will  find  themselves  grabbing  a  Tiger  by  the 
tail  tomorrow  night  when  Clenwon  invades  Riddick  Stadium.  Coach 
Frank  Howard's  Tigers  have  established  themselves  as  prime  candi> 
dates  for  the  January  1  Orange  Bowl  date  in  Miami,  and  we  don't 
believe  they'll  let  State  stand  in  their  way.  Another  down  for  the 
Pack.  Clemson  27,  State  7. 

Wake  Forest  is  the  only  Big  Four  squad  with  a  better  than  even 
chance  of  emerging  victorious  from  tomorrow's  pigskin  wars.  The 
surprising  Deacons,  who  lost  to  Maryland  by  only  one  touchdown 
luSt  Saturday,  should  be  able  to  ride  to  victory  i£  the  churning  legs 
of  Bullet  Bill  Barnes,  the  nation's  leading  ground  gainer,  hold  up. 
And  if  they  can  stop  the  Plunging  Persian,  Cavalier  fullback  Jim 
Bahkatiar.  Wake  Forest  19,  Vrginia  7. 


Yearling  Soccer  Team 
Improving,  Says  Coach 


Freshman  coach  John  Wiennatz  ' 
got  his  first  look  at  the  Carolina  ; 
freshman  soccer  team  Tuesday  and  i 
appeared  to  be  very  pleased.  Speak-  I 
ing  of  their  scrimmage  with  the  J 
varsity,  Wienatz  stated  that  the ' 
squad  looked  good.  "They  do  need 
e.xperience,  however,"  he  added. 

Some  of  the  outstanding  per- 
formers thus  far,  are  inside  front 
John  Ghanen,  center  forward  Alike 
Thomson,  halfbacks  Tate  Robert- 
son and"  Hugh  Goodmore,  and  full- 
backs Merritt  Mitchell  and  Gor- 
don Street. 

The  freshmen   hooters   open   the 
season    against   N.C.   Slate   in   Ra- 
Itigh,  Oct.  n. 


The  schedule: 
Oct.  17~N.C.  State 
Oct.  26— N.C.  State 

Nov.     1 — Duke  „ 

Nov.    9— N.C.  State 
Nov.  15 — Duke  


away 
home 
home 
away 
away 


Footballers  To  Meet 
Wake  Forest  Tonight 


By  BILL  KING 
D4iiy  Tar  Heel  Sports  Writer 

Carolina's  freshman  football 
team  makes  its  1956  debut  in  Sen- 
ior High  Stadium,  Greensboro,  to- 
night as  they  go  against  the  Wake 
Forest  Frosh  at  8:00  p.m. 

Tonight  also  marks  the  initial 
start  for  coach  Fred  Tullai,  ex- 
lineman  from  Maryland  in  his  first 
year  with  Carolina.  Tullai  played 
under  Jim  Tatum  at  Marjiand  last 
season  and  made  the  switch  with 
the  Tar  Heel  mentor  from  Mary- 
land. 

Tullai  sent  the  Tar  Babies 
through  a  final  workout  at  Navy 
Field  yesterday  in  preparation  for 
tonight's  opener.  The  main  empha- 
sis was  on  defense  with  very  little 
contact  work. 

Physically,  the  Tar  Heel  Frosh 
should  be  in  top  shape  as  there 
hav»  been  only  a  few  minor  in- 
juries thus  far.  Coach  Tullai  com- 
mented yesterday  that  injuries 
would  not  handicap  the  squad  at 
all,  and  that  he  felt  that  his  club 
would  be  ready  for  the  Baby  Deacs 
tonight.  Wake  Forest  defeated  the 
South  Carolina  yearlings  6-0  last 
week  in  their  season  opener. 

The  Tar  Babies  will  have  an  all- 


I  North   Carolina    backfield    in   the 

I  starting  lineup,  and  a  line  averag- 

I  ing  210  pounds.  Nelson  Lowe,  192 

j  pounder  from  Wilkesboro  will  start 

at  quarterback  for  the  UNC  Frosh. 

Halfbacks   Wade   Smith   of  Alber- 

marle    and    High    Point's    Cornell 

Johnson,  along  with  fullback  Jim 

Stevens  of  Hazelwood   round   out 

j  the  starting  backfield. 

In  the  line,  Tullai  will  go  with 
I  John  Stunda  at  left  end.  Earl  But- 1 
}  ler  at  left  tackle,  Ellis  Woodridge 
j  at  left  guard  and  190  pound  Jim 
Davis  at  center.  On  the  right  side, 
j  the    Tar    Babies    will    have    Fred 
Mueller  at  end,  Mike  McDade,  tack- 
le; and  Ekl  Furjanic  at  right  guard. 

Tullai  is  very  pleased  with  his 
team's  showing  in  pre-season  prac- 
tice and  has  a  lot  of  confidence  in 
his  young  squad.  "We  lopk  better 
every  day,"  he  said.  "So  far  the 
boys  have  shown  a  lot  of  spirit 
and  hustle.  They  seem  to  have  that 
desire  to  win."  The  Tar  Baby  { 
coach  concluded,  "We  want  to 
i  start  off  right  and  continue  on  the 
winning  track  throughout  the  sea- 
son." 

Next  Friday  the  Tar  Babies  play 
host  to  Maryland  in  Kenan  Stadium 
at  2:00  p.m. 


Cross-Country  Squad 
Tangles  With  Virginia 


Starts  For  Tar  Babies 

Mike  McDade,  235  pounder  from  Rochester,  Pa.,  will  hold  down 
the  starting  right  tackle  slot  tonight  when  Coach  Fred  Tullai's  Caro- 
lina Tar  Babies  take  the  field  against  the  Wake  Forest  Baby  Deaclets. 


Tar  Heels  Go  Through  Concluding 
Drill;  McMullen  Replaces  Varnum 


Carolina's    varsity   cross-country  i 
squad  makes  its  initial  start  of  the  ■ 
reason    here   this    afternoon   at   4 
p.m.   on  Fetzer  Field   against  thej 
Cavaliers   from   the   University   of 
Virginia.  ■  \  ■  ' 

Coach  Dale  Ranson's  team,  last 
year's  state  champions,  will  be  pac- 
ed by  senior  co-captain  Jim  Beatty, 
the  defending  ACC  champ.  He  will 
be  capably  backed  up  by  junior  1 
letterman  Everett  Whatley  and  co- 
captain  Marion  Griffin  in  the  ex- 
pected number  two  and  three  spots. 

Other  runners  on  the  eight  man 
official    team    include    sophomore 
whiz  Dave  Scurlock,  Ben  Williams,  ! 
Perrin  Henderson,  Alex  Coffin  and  I 
Doug  Henderson.   Running   unoffi- 
cially  will  be  Walt  Mills,  Howard  ! 
Kahn,  Jim  Hunter,  Baily  Liipfert, ! 
Nick  Palmer  and  Bill  Luesing.        i 

Wayne  Bishop,  number  one  man  j 
on  last  season's  frosh  squad,  will 
miss  the  meet  due  to  a  leg  injury. 
It  is  not  known  how  long  he  will 
be  out  of  action.  It  is  feared  that 
he  may  be  sidelined  for  the  entire 
campaign. 

Although  the  squad  showing  in 

I  recent  time  trials  has  been  disap- 

•  pointing,    Coach    Ranson    expects 

I  performances  to  improve  under  the 

pressure  of  competition. 

The  Tar  Heels  walloped  Virginia 
by  a  wide  margin  last  season,  and 
will  be  favored  to  turn  the  trick 
again  in  today's  meet.  Little  is 
known    about    the    Cavaliers,    but 


JIM    BEATTY 


tJiey  are  not  expected  to  be  a 
threat  to  the  powerful  Carolinians. 
The  squad's  condition  is  rather 
poor.  Besides  Bishop,  seveual  other 
men  have  been  slow  in  rounding 
into  shape.  Sophomore  Howard 
Kahn  has  been  hampered  by  a 
knee  injury,  and  Whatley  was  both- 
ered by  a  virus  condition  earlier 
this  year. 


FOUR 

OREED-MAO  MEN 

fighting  for 
treasure 
-and  a 
womani 


Coach  Jim  Tatum's  Tar  Heels 
Went  through  final  drills  here  yes- 
terday afternoon  in  preparation  for 
their  game  with  the  University  of 
South  Carolina  in  Columbia  tomor- 
row. 

There  has  been  only  one  major 
lineup  change  for  the  winless  Tar 


Varnum  on  the  first  team.  Varnum  a 
won  the  halfback  post  from  Mc- 1 
Mullen  when  he  turned  in  a  fine  i 
performance  in  the  Tar  Heel's  sea- 
son opener  with  N.C.  State.  } 
The  Tar  Heels  were  dressed  in  I 
sweat  pants  and  shoulder  pads  yes-  i 
terday    and    went    through    signal  ] 


Heels  making  their  third  start  of   drills  and  sharpened  up  on  defense 


the  season  tomorrow.  Left  Halfback 
Larry  McMullen  has  replaced  Jim 


Newcombe, 
Larsen  Go  In 
Series  Today 


Tatum  never  sends  his  squad  on 
the  practice  field  on  the  day  be- 
fore a  game,  so  the  Tar  Heels  will 
rest  today. 


Trainer  John  Lacey  has  announc- 
;  ed  that  the  entire  team  is  in  good 
;  shape  and  that  forty  two  players 
will  make  the  trip  to  South  Caro- 
i  Una.  The  Tar  Heels  will  be  missing 
I  the  services  of  co-captain  and  cen- 
I  ter  George  Stavnitski  who  suffered 
a  brain  concussion  in  the  Okla- 
BROOKLYN,  Oct.  4  (AP) — ^Big  homa  game  and  is  still  in  a  hos- 
Don  Newcombe,  Brooklyn's  27-  j  pital  in  Norman, 
game  winner,  faces  the  New  York  j  Doctors  at  the  hospital  say  that 
Yankees'  Don  Larsen  today  in  the  i  big  George  is  coming  along  "very 
rain-delayed  second  game  of  the  nicely"  and  may  be  able  to  leave 
World  Series  with  an  extra  24-  j  for  home  this  weekend.  Stavnitski 
hours  rest  after  the  gruelling  Na-  i  was  injured  on  the  first  play  of 
tional  League  pennant  race.  the  second   half  last  weekend    in 

Commissoner  Ford  Ftick  wisely  !  the  Tar  Heel's  36-0  loss  to  the  num- 
ordered  yesterday's   postponement  i  her  one   ranked  Sooncrs. 
two  hours  before  game  time  with  I     The  Tar  Heels  are  scheduled  to 
heavy   showers   beating   down   on  i  leave  the  Raleigh-Durham  Airport 


Baseball  Team 
Finishes  Week 
Of  Workouts 

Sunny  weather  and  a  lively  two 
and  one-half  hour  practice  and 
scrimmage  session  brought  to  a 
close  the  first  week  of  fall  base- 
ball practice  at  UNC  Wednesday. 

I^abb  was  very  enthusiastic  a- 
bout  the  Wednesday  practice  and 
said  that  the  boys  were  shaping, 
up  very  nicely.  The  congenial  Tar 
Heel  coach  said  that  he  was  par- 
ticularly pleased  with  some  of  his 
pitcher.s. 

Lack  of  pitching  depth  proved 
to  be  a  real  headache  ^o  Rabb 
last  year,  as  the  Tar  Heels  had 
only  a  couple  of  front-line  hurl- 
ers.  Rabb  is  hoping  that  the  sit- 
uation will  be  different  this  year 
and  has  expressed  much  enthus- 
iasm   about    that    department.    '"I 


Eibbets    Field    and    a    "very    bad"  I  tonight  at  8  o'clock  and   are   due    believe  we'll  have  depth  this  sea- 


weather  forecast  for  the  rest  of  j  to  arrive  in  Columbia  at  8:55  p.m. 
the  day.  At  game  time  the  rain  '  Game  time  is  2:30  p.m.  and  the  Tar 
still  was  pouring  down  on  the  in- 1  Heels  will  return  to  Chapel  Hill 
field  covering. '  !  tomorrow  night. 

According  to  the  weather  man,  j 

the  rain  was  to  stop  in  early  morn- 1  NAVY  ALL-AMERICAN 

ing.  The    forecast   for   today   was       Stewart  Pell,   the   huge  Univer- 

clear  and  cool  with  the  tempera-  i  sity  of  North  Carolina  tackle,  was 


son,"  said  Rabb.  "It  looks  as 
though  we  have  some  good  pros- 
pects coming  up."  he  added. 

Practice  will  continue  at  Emer- 
son Stadium  for  the  next  week 
or  ten  days.      '' 


ture  in  the  60s. 


Frosh  Runners 
Entertain  Imps 

Carolina's  freshman  cross  coun- 
try team  opens  the  1956  season  at 
Fetzer  Field  this  afternoon  against 
the  Duke  University  freshmen. 

The  Tar  Baby  runners  have  a 
tough  row  to  hoe  if  they  expect  to 
live  up  to  last  year's  yearling  team 
which  went  undefeated,  but  coach 
Boyd  Newnam  has  an  outstanding 
group  of  runners  to  work  with. 

Pacing  the  Tar  Baby  tracksters 
will  be  Cowles  Liipfert,  last  year's 
state  high  school  mile  champ  from 
Winston-Salem.  Running  behind 
Liipfert  will  be  Fick  Arthur,  John 
Green,  Ray  Bagwell,  Larry  With- 
rop,  John  Richardson,  James  Pack- 
ard and  Frank  Siriann. 


an  All-Navy  selection  when  he  per- 
formed for  the  Naval  Air  Station 
in  Norfolk,  Va. 


Nothing 
could  stop  it 
from  coming 
.   through! 


Remembrance 

By  U.N.C/s  Own 

Jessie  Rehder 

autographed 
copies 
$3.50 
at 

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Bookshop 


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VOL.  LVIII,  NO.  14 


Complete  {JP)  Wire  Servict 


CHAPEL  HILL,  NORTH  CAROLINA,  SATURDAY,  OCTOBER  6,  1956 


Offices  in   Graham  Uemvnal 


FOUR  PAGES  THIS   ISSUE 


Young   Vetoes   Columbio  Street  Bill; 


Winless  Tar  Heels 
Meet  Gamecocks 

In  Columbia  Today  Hos    Strong   Case    Ready 


!•!''-! 


!.;i'i 


COLl'MBIA.  S.  C.  ()(t.  <)— The  virtorv  hunory  Caro- 
lina Tar  Hc'c(s  will  be  making  their  third  attempt  to  hring 
home  the  h;  .on  for  (loac  h  |im  Tatuni  this  afternoon  when 
thev  go  against  the  I'liivcrsity  ol  South  Carolina  (iamecocks 
in  a  game  slated  to  get  underway  at  2:30  p.m.  in  Carolina 
Stadium. 

For  Coath    I  alum,  the  famine  has  been  a  long  one.  The 

man  who  built  powerhouses  at  Ok- 
lahoma and  Maryland  in  years  past 
is  now  tasting  the  most  bitter  po- 
tion of  his  career — that  of  a  vic- 
tory drought. 

But  the  season  is  young  and  the 
Tar  Heels  are  becoming  more  ex- 
perienced with  each  passing  Satun 
day.  Certainly  last  week's  game 
with  Oklahoma  was  a  devastating 
one — a  type  of  devestation  that 
brings  inspiration. 

When  the  Tar  Heels  take  the 
field  this  afternoon  they  will  as- 
sume a  role  quite  unfamiliar  to 
Sunny  Jim.  That  of  an  everything 
to  gain,  nothing  to  lose  team. 

The  Gamecocks,  under  Tatum's 
ex-assistant  at  Maryland,  Warren' 
Giese,  have  proven  themselves  an 
opponent  to  be  reckoned  with  in 
early  season  games.  They  received 
national  recognition  two  weeks  ago 
'when  they  pulled  a  major  upset  in 
defeating  the  Duke  Blue  Devils. 
7-0;  a  game  that  many  considered 
a  'fluke'  and  one  that  must  have 
been  won  more  on  courage  than 
anything  else.  The  Gamecocks  turn- 
ed back  tiny  Wofford  in  their 
opener,  but  dropped  a  one  touch- 
down decision  to  Miami  last  Friday 
night. 

Carolina,  on  the  other  hand,  is 
due  for  a*  big  day.  Their  two  one- 
sided losses  to  State  and  Oklahoma 
cannot  be  attributed  to  bad  breaks, 
but  the  Tar  Heels  certainly  haven't 


TWO  MEN  OUT  OF  JAIL  ON  BOND: 


*h- 


Cheating  Ring    Partially 


Broken 


»>' 


fty   FRED    POWLEDGE 

Student  government  officials 
partially  broke  up  a  widespread 
cheating  rmg  during  the  past 
summer. 

This  was  announced  yesterday 
by  Student  Body  Alty.  Gen.  Sam 
Wells.  He  said  investigations  are 
still  underway.  Two  people — one 
summer  school  student  and  one 
graduate  from  Durham  —  are 
out  on  bond  and  awaiting  court 
action. 

The  summer  Honor  Council, 
Student  Body  President  Bob 
Young  and  the  State  Bureau  of 
Investigation    (SBI)   participated 


in      the     investigations.      Wells 

said. 

TWO   NAMES 

The  cheating  ring  allegedly 
made  a  business  of  stealing  and 
selling  examinations  and  quizzes 
from  University  professors. 
VVnile  several  students'  names 
have  been  involved  in  the  ring. 
Wells  declined  to  disclose  any 
but  the  two  men  charged  during 
the  summer. 

They  are  Max  Icenhouer,  pres- 
ently a  senior  living  here,  and 
Herbert    .\ndrews,    Durham. 

It  was  learned  that  Andrews 
was    suspended    from    the    Uni- 


KING  DIXON 

flashy  Gamecock  halfback 


Coed  taking  radio  to  clasi;  to 
hear    World   Series   game. 

Student  walking  in  heaviest 
rain  tcith  paper  bag  over  head; 
that'i,  all  ...  no  raincoat,  just 
the  beg. 


(See  GAMECOCKS,  Page  4) 


♦ 


Cars  Not  Registered 
Are  Now  Being  Traced 


LfAWReNCE  MATTHEWS 

. . .  heads  ■>  traffic  committee 


More  Time 
Given  For 
Yack  Photos 

The  period  for  freshmen,  fourth- 
year  medical  students  and  nurs- 
ing students  to  have  their  pic- 
tures made  for  the  1937  Yackety- 
Yack  has  been  extended  for  three 
more  days.  Editor  Tommy  John- 
son announced  yesterday. 

These  people,  who  have  not  had 
their  pictures  made,  may  "do  so 
Monday  through  Wednesday  of 
next  week  at  a  cost  of  $1  per  stu 
dent. 

The  $1  charge  is  to  cover  the 
extended  contract  of-  the  photog- 
rapher. 

Pictures  will  be  made  in  the 
basement,  of  Graham  Memorial 
from  1  to  6:30  p.m.  Yack  officials 
have  requested  that  girls  wear 
dark  sweaters  and  pearls  for  the 
photos.  Men  have  been  asked  to 
wear  dark  coats,  ties  and  white 
shirts. 

The  remainder  ci  the  photo 
schedule  is  as  follows: 

Oct.  8-12 — sophomores,  pharm- 
acy, dental  and  dental  hygiene  stu- 
dents. 

Oct.  15-19  —  juniors,  law  stu- 
dents, medical  students  and  grad- 
uate students. 

Approximately  900  senior     pic- 
tures were  made,  reported  Editor, 
Johnson. 


The  student  government  Traf- 
fic Committee,  having  Control  of 
car  ownership  at  the  Uiiiversity, 
has  learned  that  a  number  of  stu- 
dents have  no  registration  stickers 
diplayed   on   their  automobiles. 

The  commitee  chairman,  Law- 
rence Matthews,  said  yesterday  that 
the  committee  would  like  to  im- 
press upon  ever>'  student  the  ser- 
iousness of  this  violation  of  the 
traffic   regulations. 

Under  the  traffic  regulations,  an 
automobile  registration  sticker 
must  be  displayed  within  48  hours 
after  receipt  by  the  student,  the 
committee  reported.  The  Office  of 
Student  Affairs  has  received  long 
lists  from  campus  policemen  of 
license  numbers  of  cars  parked  on 
campus   bearing  no   slicker. 

These  numbers  are  being  pro- 
.cessed  in  Raleigh,  and  the  ex- 
posed violators  will  be  asked  to 
appear  before  the  traffic  commit- 
tee. 

Students  receiving  as  many  as 
three  parking  tickets  during  one 
semester  will  receive  a  warning 
from  the  committee:  those  receiv- ; 
ing  as  many  as  five  parking  tickets 
will  be  summoned  before  the  com- 
mitte  for  a  hearing,  Matthe^vs  said. 

Copies     of     traffic     regulations 
have    l>een    distributed    to    dormi- 
tories,   fraternities    and    sororities.  ^ 
Copies    may    also   be   obtained    at 
the   Office   of   Student    Affairs   or ; 
at    the    Student   Body    President's 
Office.   All  students     have     been 
urged    by   the  committee   to   read ' 
carefully  these  traffic  regulations:  ' 

Any  student  who  so  desires  may  , 
bring  a  car  to  the  University  for 
the    Germans    weekend.    However, 
a  car  must     not     be     brought  to 
school    before    Oct.    26,    nor    kept 
at    the    University    after    October  I 
28._  If   students     co-operate     with  1 
the    committee    in    this    Germans 
weekend   permission,  an  endeavor  1 
will  be  made  to  allow  further  priv- 
ileges   of    this    nature,    Matthews 
said.  j 

The  traffic  committee,  under  j 
the  direction  of  chairman  Matt-  ' 
hews,  will  begin  its  regulatory ' 
functions  in  a  meeting  scheduled  | 
for  next  Wednesday.  Other  mem-  j 
bers  of  the  committee  are  as  fol-  1 
lows:  Bob  Jacobus,  Jerry  Oppen- 
heimer.  David  Parker,  Jim  Rose,  I 
and  Miss  Marian  Dickens  and  Bar-  { 
bara  Moore. 


inny 


UNC   QUARTERBACK   DAVE   REED 


._^ — 

Fhsf  Senior  Meet  Set 
By  Placement  Service 


versity   in  the  spring  of   1955. 

Atty.  Gen.  Wells  gave  details 
ol  the  cheating  ring  at  a  joint 
luncheon  meeting  of  the  student 
government  E.xecutive  Committee 
and  the  administration's  Coun- 
cil on  Student  Affairs.  One  stu- 
dent member  described  the 
meeting's  climate  as  that  of  an 
"era  of  good  feeling"  between 
students    and    administration. 

In  addition  to  Wells'  report 
on  the  cheating  ring,  students 
talked  with  administrators  about: 

1.  Other  facets  of  Carolina's 
Honor  System. 

2.  The  parking  problem  as  it 
affects  owners  of  automobiles  in 
Big  Fraternity  Court. 

3.  The  need  for  coordination 
of  campus  events  to  pr?vent  sev- 
eral events'  happening  on  the 
same  night  and  at  the  same 
time. 

4.  Compulsory  physical  educa- 
tion for  veteraas. 
OBSERVATION 

It  was  the  second  such  joint 
meeting  within  recent  months. 
Last  spring,  shortlv  after  camp- 
us-wide elections,  the  same  two 
groups  got  together  over  Lenoir 
Hall  food  and  traded  observa- 
tions on  major  campus  prob- 
lems. 

Atty.  Gen.  Wells  told  the 
groups  the  investigation  of  the 
cheating  ring  came  after  a  stu- 
dent made  an  unreasonably  high 
^rade  oa  an  examination  last 
spring.  T^e  investigation  pro- 
«-4hir«d  no  pvidenre,  though,"*  t» 
said. 

Honor  Council  personnel  start- 
ed looking  for  a  lead,  he  said, 
and  were  rewarded  last  summer. 

A  student  (Iconhouer)  wh'> 
made  a  high  grade  on  a  quiz 
was  observed  doing  practically 
nothing  while  the  quiz  was  given, 
Well.<  reported.  \  check  showed 
the  student  was  closely  a.snocia- 
ted  with  a  Durham  man  (.An- 
drew.!;) who  had  been  suspended 
from  .school  in  1955. 

Ai  this  point  the  SBI  entered 
the  investigation.  Subsequently 
the  two  men  were  charged  with 
breaking  and  entering  and  steal- 
ing examinations. 

Wells  said  after  the  meeting 
yesterday  that  the  investigation 
produced  considerable  excite- 
ment.  "There  were  guns  flying 


The  Placement  Service  will  hjld 
its  first  meeting  for  all  seniors 
Tuesday  at  7:30  p.m.  in  Gerrard 
Hall. 

This  meeting  will  present  Mau- 
rice W.  Lee,  the  new  Dean  of  the 
School  of  Business  Administra- 
tion, who  will  be  the  guest  speak- 
er. 

Dean  Lee  is  a  native  of  Chicago 
and  comes  to  us  from  Washington 
State  College.  He  received  his  B.S. 
in  1933  from  the  Illinois  Institute 
of  Technology  and  his  Ph.D.  in 
lfl39  from  Chicago.  He  has  taught 
at  the  University  of  Chicago,  the 
Illinois  Institute  of  Technology, 
and  Utah  State  Agricultural  Col- 
leg?.  The  topic  for  Dean  Lee's 
speech  will  be  "Careers  After 
Graduation." 

J.  M.  Galloway,  Director  of  the 
Placement  Service,  will  descri'oe 
the  operation  of  the  Placement 
Service  and  conduct  a  question 
and  answer  period.  All  seniors 
and  graduate  students  who  will 
seek  employment  in  business,  in- 
dustry, or  government  have  been 
invited    to    attend    this    meeting. 

Each  year  approximately  300 
local  and  nation-wide  companies 
send  their  representatives  to  the 
campus  to  interview  students  for 
prospective   employment. 

Only  through  registering  with 
the  Placement  Service  is  it  possi- 
ble for  students  to  be  notified  and 
have  interviews  with  these  com- 
pany representatives.  Whether  or 
not  military  service  lies  between 
graduation  and  the  beginning  of 
students'  careers,  these  interviews 
add  contacts  should  prove  invalua- 


ble in  the  future.  Once  registered 
with  the  Placement  Service,  stu- 
dents are  on  permanent  file  and 
may  u.se  the  Placement  Service's 
facilities  at  any  time  to  secure  ip- 
formation  and  contacts  for  employ- 
ment. 


around  m  cars,  and  things  were 
happening  all  ovfer,"   he  said. 
OTHER  PROBLEMS 

Here  •  are  the  other  campus 
problems  presented  by  members 
01  thf  student  governnr.ent  Exec- 
utive Committee,  along  with  re- 
plies from  administrators: 

1.  On  parking,  Interfraternity 
Council  Presdent  E^d  Hudgins 
said  most  fraternity  men  in  the 
vicnity  of  Big  Fraternity  Court 
lelt  they  were  being  "discrimi- 
nated against"  when  the  town 
Board  of  Aldermen  voted  to  limit 
parking  to  two  hours  on  S.  Col- 
umbia St.  between  Franklin  and 
Cameron. 

The  town  has  been  unable  to 
give  a  satisfactory  explanation 
for  the  ordinr.nce,  he  said. 

University  Housing  Officer 
James  Wadsworih  said  he  felt  the 
fraternities,  as  town  tax-payers, 
should  be  given  parking  rights 
along  wth  all  other  taxpayers. 

Director  Edwin  Lanier  of  the 
Cfniversity's  Office  of  Central 
Records  asked  that  students  not 
condemn  the  Board  of  Aldermen 
"too  much."  The  board,  "like 
all  such  boards,  is  completely 
baffled  as  to  what  to  do  about 
the  car  problem,"  he  said. 

"You   cannot   put   a   gallon    of 
water  into  a  quart  jar,"  he  re- 
minded the  students. 
HONOR  SYSTEM 

2.  On  the  Honor  System,  stu- 
dent government  Secreti^ry  Jack- 
Aldridge  reported  the  Honor 
CoftimTssion,  a  20-irHident  body 
recently  established,  had  done 
a  good  job  in  its  atteftipti?  to  "in- 
doctrinate the  freshmen  and 
transfers  in  the  Honor  System." 

Chairman  Luther  Hodges  Jn 
of  the  Student  Council  explained 
recenty  changes  in  the  student 
Constitution. 

.Arnold  Perry,  dean  of  the 
School  of  Education  and  tem- 
porary chairman  of  the  Division 
of  Student  Affairs,  congratulated 
students  on  the  'mature  way 
you've  approached  these  prob- 
lems." 

3.  Stan  Shaw,  National  Student 
Assn.  coordinator  on  the  cam- 
pus, gave  th'e  case  against  com- 
pelling armed  .services  veterans 
to  take  physical  education.  The 
administrators  appeared  to  side 
with  Shaw. 


rmen 

Traffic  Commission 
Will  Handle  Problem 


fM 


.i^'** 


Student  Body  President  Bob  Young  yesterday  vetoed  a 
bill  to  establish  a  student  government  commission  to  act  on 
the  Columbia  St.  parking  situation. 

At  the  same  time  he  announced  a  siudent  government 
Trr-rfic  .\dvisory  Commission  of  five  students  to  study  the 
overall   traffic   problem. 

Young  said  he  vetoed  the  measine,  passed  by  s|>ecial  or- 
der   of    business    at   the   Sept.    27  ♦  ~  ~ 
meeting    of    the    Stud-ent    Legisla- 1  .,  ,. 
ture,  because     the     Columbia  St. 
area   was   an   "isolated  case"   and 


Di,  Not  Phi,  Admitted  Presley 


The  Daily  Tar  Heel  wishes  to 
call  attention  to  a  misleading  re- 
port  in  its  Oct.  4  edition. 

It   was   erroneously     reported 


MAURICE  W.  LEE 

...  neir   BA    School   Dean 

■  Job  hunting  i.s  not  an  easy  task 
for  those  who  have  no  special  in- 
terest and  have  given  no  serious 
thought    and    study    to    their    own 

1  abilities,    a    spokesman      for      the 

I  Placement  Service  said.  Thou^s- 
ands  of  different  types  of  jobs  are 

;  available  today  both  in  and  out 
of  the  United  States. 

There    are   numerous    ways   and 

,  people  ready  to  help  in  making 
decisions,    the    Placement    Service 

.  reported,  including  their  testing 
service,     professors,  the     Library-. 

,  business  men,  and  countless  others. 


I    Oct.  15  Is  Deadline 
'    For  Student  Insurance 

I  Oct.  15  is  the  deadline  for  UNC 
students  to  onroll  in  the  Student 
I  Insurance  Plan,  provided  this  year 
I  for  the  second  time  by  the  Pilot 
I  Life  Insurance  Company. 
j  Application  blanks  for  the  policy 
I  may  l)e  obtained  from  the  Student 
j  Government  Office,  at  the  Y  and 
m  the  Graham  Memorial  Informa- 
I  tion  Office. 

Fee  for  one  year's  coverage  is 
$0  50.  payable  by  check  or  money 
order  to  Pilot  Life  in  Raleigh. 

A  student   government     official 
yesterday  asked  students  who  have 
paid  the  fee  to  come  by  the  Stu-  : 
dent   Government   Offices    in   Gra-  j 
ham   Memorial   and   pick   up   their ! 
insurance   indcntification   cards.       . 

IN  THE  INFIRMARY 

Mrs.  Ruby  Batten,  Misses  Mary    I 
Ben  Williams,  Elizabeth  McCord,    I 
Janet    Ellzabath   Thompson,   and    | 
Marvin  Harless,  Thomas  Koarns, 
Richard   Satterwhita,   Charlas   F. 
Cox,    Bennett    Whisenant,    Huqh 
Price,      Robert      Ketltr,      Craig 
White,  Charles  Harrington,  Alvln 
Smith,  Misses    Eleanor   German, 
Mary      Jo      Douglas,      Stephanie 
Sparger,  Elizabeth  McCraw,  John 
William    Johnson,    Walter      Ray, 
John  Owens,   Kennoth   Willit. 


that  the  Philanthropic  Literary 
Society  had  passed  a  resolution 
admitting  EHvis  (the  Pelvis)  Pres- 
ley to  its  membership. 

It  was  the  Dialectic  Literary 
Society  that  jestingly  introduced 
the  resolution  that  was  passed 
by   a   large  majority.  Sen.  Stan 


I  "could  lead  to  the  establishment  of 
I  innumerable  groups  wtih  very  lit- 
tle responsibility  qv  influence  ac- 
i  corded  to  any  one  of  them." 

I  The  advisory  eomnaission  study- 
ing the  whole  problem  will  meet 
I  with  the  board  of  Aidermea  next 
j  Monday  night.  Young  said  "'We 
j  will  have  a  strong  case  to  present 
(  to  them  at  that  time." 

He  said  "For  the  benefit  of  the 
I  student  concerned  with  the  Co- 
I  lumbia  St.  situation,  this  particul- 
ar problem  will  be  number  one 
;  on  tile  (commission's)  agenda  for 
'>  discussion  and  for  action. 

Members  of  the  committee  are 

Clark   Hinkley,   Darwin   Bell,   Bill 

Pruitt,   Ed   Hudgins   and   Wilbum 

Davis,  chairman. 

'■      The    Board    of    .\ldermen    last 

summer    passed    a    resolution    re- 

j  stricting.     two-hour     parking     on 

i  Columbia    St.     between     Franklin 

j  St.  and  Cameron  Ave.  The  Board 

'  also    banned    qjarking    on    all    of 

!  Rosemary   St. 

I  Uoiversit^  Party  Chairrfian 
;  Mike  Wcinnian  last  w«ekr  Intro- 
'  duced  a  bill  calling  for  the  esfab- 
lishiment  of  a  student  government 
I  commission  to  act  on  the  Colum- 
bia St.  parking  situation  because: 

1.  "Calurabia  St.  is  not  a  com- 
i  mercial  street  between  Franklin 
'  St.  and  Cameron  Ave. 

2.  '"There  is  no  need  to  limit 
parking  on  a  street  which  is  not 

I  commercial  as  this  limit  serves  no 
,  obvious  purpose. 

3.  "It  is  the  aim  of  student  gov- 
ernment to  loak  out  for  the  int^ar- 
ests  of  all  students. 

.  4.  ■  Then  parking  limit  recently 
ei"fectPd  on  Columbia  St.  works 
great  hardsiiip  on  those  students 
who  live  on  Columbia  St,  and  the 
Student  Legislature  feels  that  this 
hardship  has  been  invoked  un- 
necessarily." 

Weinman  said  the  committee, 
Lf  appointed  by  the  student  body 
president,  should  "be  empowere<A 
to  act  in  ijccord"  with  a  similar 
commission  from  the  Interfratern- 
ity Council. 

The  commission's    aim,    he   said  ' 
was  to  "obtain  tne  removal  of  the 
...  two    hour    parking    limit    on 
Colmnbia    St.    between     ffranklin 
St.  and  Cameron  Ave." 

I      Youn?'8    complete  statement    i.< 

i  as  follows: 


I  have  vetoed  A  Bill  To  Estab- 
lish A  Student  Government  Com- 
mission To  Act  On  The  Columbia 
Street  Parking  Situation.  I  would 
like  to  state  my  reasons  for  taklog 
this  action.  I  have  not  vetoed  it 
for  partisan  reasons.  The  bill 
passed  the  Student  Legislature 
unanimously.  Therefore,  this  is 
not  a  politi<;al  action.  My  reasiHis 
are  as  follows: 

"1.  This  bill  stipulated  that  a 
committee  be  set  up  to  study  one 
isolated  case,  namely  the  Colum- 
bia St.  situation.  This  bill,  if  pass- 
ed, wouid  give  any  other  group  of 
students  the  right  to  ask  that  a 
committee  be  set  up  to  study  any 
one  area.  This  could  lead  to  "the 
establishment  of  innumerable 
groups  with  very  little  responsibil- 
ity or  influence  accorded  to  any 
one  of  them.  ' 

"2.  The  establishment  of  this 
particular  committee  would  cause 
much  duplication  of  work  and  dis- 
cussion on  the  part  of  students 
and  members  of  the  Board  of  Al- 
dermen. If  this  committee  ap- 
proached the  Board  of  Aldermen 
;  and  had  only  as  its  responsibility 
I  —that  of  clearing  up  the  Columbia 
St,  problem,  th«n  other  committees 
woi'ld  h-ave  to  appr>'^ch  the  Boiard 
of  .Aldermen  on  other  problems. 
Therefore.  I  am  consolidating  the 
responsibility  of  all  the  problems 
under  one  commission.  This  I  feel, 
will  expedite  work  on  the  Colum- 
bia St.  situation,  and  also  the  over- 
all  problem. 

"3.  I  am  announcing  a  Student 
Government  Traffic  Advisory  Com- 
mission composed  of  live  stu- 
dents representing  all  areas  and 
viewpoints  of  the  campus.  This 
commission  will  function  through- 
out the  y;ar.  It  will  be  responsibl* 
for  studying  the  overall  traffic 
.situation.  For  the  benefit  of  the 
students  concerned  with  the  Co- 
lumbia St.  situation,  this  particul- 
ar problem  will  be  number  on€ 
on  their  agenda  for  discussion  and 
for  action.  The  Board  of  Alder- 
men meet  Monday  night,  Otc.  8 
We  will  have  a  strong  case  to  pre 
sent  to  them  at  that  time. 

"Other  problems  that  this  com- 
mission will  consider  are  as  fol 
loVt's: 

"1.  Making  plans  for  use  of  th« 
registration  fee  for  parking  facili- 
ties. 

'"2.  Studying  the  possibility  of 
utilizing  present  space  on  campus. 

"3.  Studying  the  parking  situa- 
tion in  down-town  Chapel  Hill. 


Germans  Will  Have  Rock  'A/'  Roll 
Man  This  Month  For  First  Time 


The  first  rock  'n'  roll  man  in  the  history  of 
the  Germans  will  be  here  next  month  when  Fats 
Domino  comes  to  Carolina  for  a  concert  and  a 
dance. 

With  Fats  and  his  band  will  be  the  Billy  May 
Band  conducted  by  Sam  Donahue. 

The  concert,  from  3  to  5:30  p.m.  and  the 
dance,  from  9  p.m.  to  1  a.m.,  will  be  held  on 
Friday,  October  26. 

Fats  is  believed  to  be  the  first  and  only 
rythm  and  blues  performer  to  play  on  the  Caro- 
lina camnus,  according  to  George  Ragsdale,  Ger- 
man Club  head. 

Fats  started  his  sh-o>w  business  career  in  bis 
home  town  cf  New  Orleans.  He  played  piano  and 
sang  with  many  local  bands  while  stUl  in  his 
teens.  Soon  becoming  a  local  favorite,  he  played 
one  nisht  engagements  throughout  Loutsianp, 
Texas  and  Arkansas. 
FATS  RECORDS 

Imperial  Records  heard  of  Fats  through  their 
Histrihuter  in  New  Orleans,  and  flew  from  the 
West  Coast  to  cut  a  session  on  the  young  perform- 
er. The  tune,  "Goin'  Home/'  became  a  success, 
and  before  long  the  rock  'n'  roll  fans  of  the  en- 
tire South  knew  of  the  "Little  Fat  Man  From  New 
Orleans.' 


As  the  rock  'n  roll  craze  grew,  so  did  Fats' 
popularity  as  he  began  the  first  of  his  highly 
successful  national  tours.  Many  Carolina  students 
have  seen  Fal«  in  his  concerts  throughout  the 
state. 

Fats  has  just  recently  returned  irom  Holly- 
wood where  he  was  in  a  movie. 

Some  of  Domino's  latest  recordings  are  "When 
My  I^reamboat  Comes  Home,"  "Blueberry  Hill" 
and  "Honey  Chile." 

DONAHUE  STARTED  Y0UN6 

7 

Sam  Donah'iie  also  started  his  career  in  his 
teens.  After  much  experience  as  a  tenor  sax  man 
with  such  bands  as  Benny  Goodman,  Gene  Krupa 
and  Harry  Jajnes,  he  form<ed  his  own  band.  Later 
he  was  assistant  director  with  Tommy  Dorsey. 
As  a  result  of  this  experience  he  was  asked 
to  lead  Billy  May's  already  famous  band.  May 
had  elected  to  stay  with  Capitol  llecords  in  Los 
Angeles. 

An  added  attraction  will  be  Debbie  Brown, 
a  pretty  little  vocalist  featured  with  the  Billy 
May  band. 

Donahue's  last  appearance  in  N<H-th  Carolina 
was  at  the  Raleigh  Terpsichorean  Club's  1958  Deb- 
utante Biall,  held  last  month. 


'    -t"  . . . '"'^  -  .      i-'   i-y' 


PAOi  TWO 


THE  DAILY  TAft  HEIL 


SATURDAY,  0CT6bER   *,   lf56 


Follow  The  Instructions 
And  The  Phones  Will  Stay 


A  NORTHERN  VIEW 


At  first  j^laiue,  il  would  appear 
that  (Carolina's  male  donrntory 
residents  ha\e  been  abusing  their 
privileges. 

This  vear  they  got.  lor  the  first 
time,  telephones  on  all  three  or 
four  floors  ol  theii  dormitories, 
instead  of  the  one  (entrai  and  o\- 
cnvoiketl  teleplione  on  the  second 
ll<)(»i . 

.\nd  now.  three  weeks  after 
M  hool  has  started.  Bell  Telephone 
(  (J.  offiea'ls  are  thveateninij;  to  pull 
the  telephones  off  the  walls. 

I  hev  aren't  p.n  phones,  offic  ials 
say.  and  dormitory  men  are  snarl- 
ijVg  up  the  works  by  plac  ing  long- 
distance calls  from  them.  I  his 
(ant  be  done. 

We  iiope  the  first  glance  is 
wrong. 


('.(jllege  students  are  not(jrious 
foi  !iot  reading  the  instructions. 
They  get  in  lots  of  trouble  that 
way.  but  someho^\  thev  usiuully 
plod   through. 

We  hope  tlie  dormitorv  men 
ha\e  just  forgot  to  lead  the  rules. 
Atle<]iiaie  publicity  has  been  given 
to  the  telephone  company's  threat 
now.  so  anyone  who  ties  up  the 
switchboards  will  l>e  doing  ii  eith- 
er out  ot  pure  ignori.iKe  or  wilHuI 
negle<  t. 

Meanwhile,  the  dormitorv  men 
should  treat  their  new  telej)honeN 
as  pie(it)us  animals.  I'he  Intei- 
dormitcnv  Comi(il,  student  gov- 
ernment, I'liiversity  and  the  men 
themsehes  have  worked  hind  lor 
telephones  on  all  dormiir)rv  floois. 
Obeying  the  rules  ^vili  keep  them 
thete. 


Dorm  Leaders  Do  Matter 


The  men  who  were  elected  ot- 
fiters  of  IWC-  dormitories  this 
A\eek  ha\e  perhaps  the  haide^t 
job*  on  the  campus. 

I  heir  jobs  are  hard  because 
they,  ittore  than  any  other  students, 
lia\e  to  deal   with  apathy. 

The  men's  dormitories  are  cen- 
ters of  apr:hv  on   this  campus. 

By  this,  we  do  not  mean  to  coji- 
demn  the  men's  dormitories.  It  is 
merely  tlie  lac  t  that  dormitories  are 
piimaiilv  p!ace<^  to  sleep  and  bathe 
and  <?tudv.  sometimes,  that  makes 
them  the  centers  of  apathv.         • 

This  ^teed  not  be  tlie  case.  Two 
oi  the  mens  doiniitories  —  (lobb 
and  the  Battle  -  Wince  -  Peitigrew 
chain — have  sho^vn  in  past  years 
that  doiniitorv  lite  can  be  an  ex- 
citing and   stimulating  thing. 

In  the  case  of  those  two  build- 
ings, it  was  the  dormitory  officers 
whc)  made  the  difference. 

So.  to  the  new  presidents,  vice 
presidents,  secrcrnries.  treasurers. 
Jnterdornniti  ' -^^^  j 'iMK  il  men  ,m<\ 
intrainur.I  niaii.igers,  we  ask  for 
liaici  A\    •  ic. 

We  ask  that  you  spend  time 
sfudvnig  the  needs  of  your  dormi- 
tories, and  that  vou  plan  more  than 
the  usual  spring  beer-bust. 


l)ormiior\  social  rooms  are  bet- 
ter and  bigger  than  ever  The  fresh- 
men, without  ( ars  for  the  first  time. 
ha\e  more  lime  to  spend  in  the 
dornjitorv. 

.Vow's  the  time  for  the  elected 
officers  to  plan  piograms  that  will 
dispell  some  of  the  apathv  that 
floats  through  the  halls  oj  the  ITii- 
xersity's  dormitories. 


The  Vaccine 


Now  that  the  Salk  polio  \accine 
has  passed  all  the  tests  of  cloiditing 
s<  ientists,  it  would  appe.u  that  stu- 
dents would  be  lined  up  behind  the 
hypcxicniiits.  F.speciallv  if  the  shots 
were  going  for  a  bu<  k  eac  h. 

But  that  isn't  the  case,  according 
to  the  Universitv  Infirmary,  whicli 
bought  lots  of  the  \accine  whole- 
sale and  is  offering  the  vaccine  at 
cost. 

Polio  ran  strike  people  of  all  ages, 
not  just  those  inuUv  iq  and 'or 
pregnant.  It  can  strike  college  stu- 
dents, and  it  can  postpone  or  de- 
stroy a  college  career. 

Tile  vac<  ine  is  at  the  Infirmarv. 
The  hypodermics  are  ready.  .\11 
vou  need  is  a  dollar  to  start  with. 


Here's  The  New  South  Inc 


A  vear  agf>.  the  goxernor  and 
other  important  men  of  this  state 
were  pretty  worried. 

■"What  will  happen. "  thev  won- 
dered, "when  the  tobacco  leaf 
doesn't  mean  as  much  as  it  does 
light  now?"  Ihev  had  the  vision  of 
North  ("arolinas  receding  crop  ol 
cotton  to  lend  their  wonderings  an 
air  ot  terror. 

Tlie  governor  and  other  import- 
ant men  got  to  work  on  the  prob- 
lem. Thev  formed  a  development 
corj>oration.  started  hanging  around 
Congress  halls  and  asking  about 
federal  plnits"  hxating  within  the 
Tar  Heel  boundaries. 

Thev  put  a  North  Clarolina 
statesman,  ('.apirs  Waynic  k.  to  work 
on  the  problem  of  small   industry. 

-And  in  this  weeks  news  comes 
tlie  announcement  ol  a  brand-new 
industrv.  It  is  the  Carolinas  \'ir- 
ginia  Nuclear  Power  .Assn..  and 
its  aims  are  "to  discover  and  study 
eciniomit  ways  to  prcxluce  and  uti- 
lize   nuclear    material    and   atomic 

The  Daily  Tar  Heel 

The  oftieial  student  publication  of  the 
Publications  Board  of  the  University  of 
North  Carolina,  where  it  is  published 
daily  except  Monday  and  examination 
and  vacation  periods  and  summer  terms 
Entered  as  second  class  matter  in  thc 
,  post  office  in  Chapel  Hill.  N.  C.  undei 
ihe  Act  oi  March  8.  1870.  Subscription 
rates  mailod.  .S4  p'?r  yiar,  S2  50  a  semes- 
ter; delivered.  S6  a  year,  $3.50  a  semes- 
ter. 


Editor 


FRED  POWLEDGE 


Managing  Editor 


News  Editor 


CHARLIE  JOHNSON 
_ RAY  LINKER 


Business  Manager BILL  BOB  PEEL 


Advertising  Manager Fred  Katzin 

BUSINESS  STAFF:  Rosa  Moore,  Johnny 
Whitaker,  Dick  Leavitt,  Pgjer  Alper. 


energv    primarily    for   the   genera- 
tion  ol    Usable   energv.  .   .   .  " 

This,  not  poorer  cpialitv  tobacco, 
is  the  -New  South.  The  Tar  Heel 
stale  is  locjking  the  right  way. 

Just  Needed 
Someone  To 
Start  Work 

Finally,  the  reading  dav  plan 
has  been  appro\ecl.  Plans  to  reduce 
cost  of  dates'  tickets  fcjr  C^arolina 
football  games  are  in  the  works. 

The.se  are  signal  accomplish- 
ments tor  the  ^'oung  acUninistra- 
tion.  They  are  even  more  im|M)rt- 
ant  because  student  government 
presidents  h)i  the  past  several 
years  have  been  promising'  both 
reforms,  and  they  have  bc-en 
promptlv  ignoring  their  promises 
upon  assuming  offiic-. 

1  he  reading  day  is  valuable  be- 
cause if  gives  the  students  an  op- 
portiniity  to  do  .soi'nething  thev 
should  ha\e  been  doing  all  along: 
Read  the  day  before  final  examina- 
tions start. 

The  L'niveisity  has  been  idiotic 
in  not  having  tlie  reading  day  a 
long  time  ago.  IJut  maybe  a  student 
btxly  offic  ia I  ne\ei  took  the  trouble 
to  ask  for  it. 

Likcuise.  the  I'nixeisity  should 
have  done  something  long  ago 
about  reducing  the  ticket  prices  for 
students'  dates  at  football  games. 
-No  matter  how  badly  Woollen 
(ivmriasium  needs  outsiders  money 
in  its  ticket  receipts.  Woollen  Gym 
has  another,  more  important  duty: 
To  serve  the  students  who  attend 
this  I'niversiiy.  Serving  the  stu- 
dents' weekend  guests  is  included 
in   this  responsibility. 


Reincarnation   &  Benches 


Cortland  H.  Edwards  II 

A  past  roommate  of  mine  had 
become  interested  in  reincarna- 
tion by  reading  The  Search  for 
Briyey  Murphy.  But  even  after 
reading  this  best  seller  he  wasn't 
quite  sure  what  it  was,  so  he 
asked  hLs  friend  Frank. 

"Reincarnation  is  when  you 
(Tie  and  come  back  to  this  earth 
in  some  other  form,"  explained 
Frank. 

My  roommate  still  looked  a  lit- 
tle dubious. 

"Let  me  give  you  an  illustra- 
tion." Frank  said.  "Suppose  you 
were  to  die.  Then  you'd  be  re- 
born as  a  blade  of  grass.  While 
you're  a  blade  of  grasss  waving 
away  in  the  meadow,  a  cow  come.s 
along  snd  eats  you." 

My  roommate  was  lieginning  to 

Campus 
Activity 

Tom  Byron  Saunders 

The  woods  around  Chapel  Hill 
are  glinted  by  approaching  au- 
tumn now.  like  the  frosh,  the 
soph  or  the  upperclassman  is 
with  a  new  school-year  outlook. 
It  is  the  perennial  turnover  of 
spring  dankness  and  summer 
humidity-  into  the  'let's  live 
again"  freshness  that  pervades 
campiuses  every  fall  and  stirs  up 
the  collegian. 

And  our  Cl>«pel  Hill  world  is 
a  gigantic  consolidation  of  an- 
other start  of  interest  in  the  arts, 
the  sciences  and  the  professions. 
The  gamut  of  a  year  is  begun 
again,  and  promises  to  keep  on 
being  radiant  with  the  infusion 
of  the  autumnal  sparkle  of  a 
diamond  dyed  all  the  bright 
colors  of  energy.  It  is  an  aca- 
demic tackle — that's  what  it  is 
with  .'ocial  and  other  extra-cur- 
ricula aspects. 

Two  weeks  ago  even  Rip  Van 
Winkle  would  have  known  that 
the  fail  semester  was  beginning 
It  was  a  "Hello  there."  "There 
he  is"  and  'Glad  to  .se  you  back, 
old  boy"  nearly  everywhere  about 
the  campus,  along  with  the  en- 
thusiastic handclasps  of  old  bud- 
dies. 

And  there  was  the  "What  did 
you  do  this  summer?  Work?  Make 
any  money?"  All  that  was  part  of 
the    greetings    everj-vihere. 

"Yes.  I  worked  for  my  uncle. 
Made  a  few  hundred,  but — but 
didn't  save  too  much  of  it".  But 
that  didn't  make  too  much  dif- 
ference as  he  answered  his  bud- 
dy's question.  Then.  "But  did 
I  have  me  a  time  at  the  beach 
at  the  end  of  the  summerl  Boy. 
of  boy.  what  a  time  I  had  me!" 
And  that  was  over,  loo — and  he 
seemed  glad.  He'd  had  his  sum- 
mer, and  it  was  the  usual  thing 
to  tell  the  crowd  about  back  at 
Carolina  in  the  fall.  All  refreshed 
for  a  fresh  fling  at  the  academics 
he  was. 

Two  weeks  later  all  the  greet- 
ings are  said,  and  classes  serious- 
ly   begun. 


see  the  light.  (.\o  pun  intended) 
"In  due  time  you  pass  through 
that  cow  and  come  out  in  a  neat 
little  pile  in  the  middle  of  the 
meadow.  One  day  I  come  walk- 
ing through  the  meadow  and  al- 
most step  into  the  neat,  round 
pile. 

"But  I  see  you  just  in  time,  so 
I  draw  back,  look  down  at  the 
pile     and   say,    'Hello.     Roomie. 


You  ain't  changed  much!'  That's 
reincarnation." 

*         * 

I  wonder  why  the  benches 
have  all  been  taken  away,  (pre- 
sumably by  the  University)!  I 
for  one  have  enjoyed  the  mo- 
ments when  I  could  sit  down  in 
front  of  BVP  and  watch  the  pass- 
ing parade. 

Would   it  be  asking   too  much 


for  the  responsible  persons  to 
at  least  leave  the  benches  until 
Thanksgiving?  Up  until  the  day 
they  took  them  away  the  benches 
always  had  people  sitting  on  them 
under  the  trees. 

Some  were  studying,  some  cogi- 
tating, some  sleeping,  some 
waiting,  resting,  and  others  were 
— shall  we  say — pining.  Bring 
back  the  benches! 


'Good  Thing  They  Didn't  See  The  G.O.P.  Convention' 


On  Something  Else  Of  Value 


Stan  Shaw 

The  Daily  Tar  Heel  and  numer- 
ous people  on  campus  have,  for 
several  years,  been  concerned 
with  condemning  any  sign  of 
big-time  athletics  in  the  football 
team. 

At  the  same  time  the.se  same 
people  have  noted  the  apathy  on 
campus,  most  particularly  they 
have  eritized  the  lack  of  leachcr- 
ship  and  ultimately  deadening  ef- 
fect that  this  lack  will  have  on 
the  University.  While  this  was 
going  on  an  old  Carolina  grad, 
Robert  Ruark.  was  writing  a  book 
called  .Something  of  Value. 

We  believe  that  the  proverb 
from  which  the  title  came  is  ap- 
plicable to  the  present  situation 
as   it  was  to  his.   It  went  "If   a 


man  does  away  with  his  tradi- 
tional way  of  living  and  throws 
away  his  good  customs,  he  had 
better  first  make  cerain  that  he 
has  something  of  value  to  replace 
them.  "  Robert  Ruark  wrote  a 
fine  volume  of  several  hundred 
pages  to  show  how  this  applies 
to  the  race  question  in  Africa. 
We  hope  to  show  how  it  may  just 
as  well  apply  to  the  apathy  at 
Carolina. 

The  Daily  Tar  Heel  did  a  very 
good  job  in  discrediting  big  time 
athletics  at  .Chapel  Hill.  In  fact 
it  was  one  of  the  most  intelli- 
gently carried  out  negative  cam- 
paigns that  we  have  seen.  It  is 
now  difficult  for  many  people  to 
see  how  a  school  can  be  top- 
notch  scholastically  and  still 
have  a  good,  big-time  team. 


The  fact  that  we  had  a  few 
bad  seasons  at  the  same  time 
that  the  campaign  was  going  on 
didn't  hurt  their  cause  either. 
This  brings  us  to  the  point  that 
we  must  realize  that  the  spirit 
and  enthusiasm  that  was  created 
by  a  big  team  playing  big  op- 
ponents didn't  remain  just  in 
Kenan  Stadium,  nor  was  it  re- 
stricted   to    the    football    season. 

That  very  spirit  that  brought 
about  the  card  stunts  and  the 
cheers  spilled  over  into  student 
endeavors  of  every  kind  and  pro- 
vided a  central  core  of  pride  in 
the  school,  for  both  alumni  and 
students.  It  was  one  of  our  good 
customs  and  part  of  our  cherish- 
ed way  of  life. 

We  have  seen  that  part  of  the 
Carolina  Way  of  Life  destroyed. 


Pogo 


By  Walt  Kelly 


%^l 


Li'l  Abner 


By  Ai  Capp 


GF-T  HM  Of  1  .'.' 
ru.  PICK  "MK 
E>E.AUriFUl 
OF  19  SG 


THE  PAID  PLAYER 

College  Sports: 
Hypocrisy  And 
Gate  Receipts 

Woody  Sears 

Lets'  have  big-time  athletics  here  at  UNC.  And 
why  shouldn't  we?  The  students,   the  faculty,  the 
alumni,  and  the  general   public  keeps  yammering 
for  it,  so  let's  give  it  to  them.  • 

Contrary  to  the  opinion  of  certai.i  newsmen  from 
neighboring  towns,  this  young  map  is  neither 
scholarly  nor  bespectacled.  And  he.  is  in  favor  of 
big  time  athletics,  football  in  particular. 

Naturally,  there  is  always  a  question  raised 
about  how  is  this  possible.  The  solution  is  si.Tiple: 
Pay  athletes  and  buy  the  good  ones. 

JNO  SLAM  AT  TATUM 

This  is  in  no  wise  to  be  construed  as  a  slam 
at  the  present  football  team  or  its  coach,  Mr. 
Tatum.  It  is.  in  fact,  written  with  the'  hope  that 
some  serious  thought  will  be  given  to  the  problem. 

Every  few  months  or  so  some  one  is  kicking  up 
a  ruckus  about  athletics  and  its  participants,  and 
there  is  always  the  rumor  that  such  and  such  a 
school  has  paid  so  much  to  this  player  or  that.  ACC 
officials  are  continually  being  called  upon  to  check 
on  some  player's  eligibility  and  the  methods 
which  were  used  to  get  him  to  go  to  which  ever 
school  is  involved.  This  never  fails  to  create  a  lot 
of  adverse  comment,  and  it  is  conceivable  that 
little  or  no  good  can  ever  come  of  it. 

Therefore,  in  lieu  of  all  this  useless  controversy 
and  investigating,  why  not  open  athletics  up  and 
go  professional?  ; .     -  ;    ■  ■ 

SCHOOL  SPIRIT  PROPAGANDA 

People  like  to  scream  and  raise  cain  everj-  time 
they  hear  of  college  athletes  getting  paid,  but 
that  is  a  natural  result  of  a  lot  of  propaganda  about 
school  spirit  and  rah-rah  for  the  home  team,  etc. 

Why,  people  ask,  should  you  pay  athletes?  This 
is  a  valid  question,  and  the  answer  is  simple.  These 
boys  have  a  talent,  just  as  a  musician  has  talent. 
People  have  no  objection  to  seeing  a  kid  work  his 
way  through  school  playing  in  bands  and  doing 
whatever  other  kind  of  work  an  "amateur  "  musician 
can  get.  So  why  not  with  football  and  other  sports? 

TO   RECRUIT  ABILITY 

These  boys  have  ability,  and  that's  what  the 
colleges  are  trying  to  recruit.  They  have  a  com- 
modity to  sell  just  as  much  as  anyone  else  -who 
holds  something  for  which  there  is  a  great  demand. 
It  is  ridiculous  to  even  think  that  college  athletic 
departments  send  men  out  with  pockets  full  of 
scholarships  to  seek  out  good  personalities  and 
potential  Rhodes  scholars.  Again,  this  is  not  to  be 
interpreted  as  a  derogatory  statement  about  ath- 
letes as  individuals  or  collectively. 

The  point  is  that  the  colleges  are  paying  with 
-scholarships  for  beef  and  muscle,  speed  and  passing 
accuracy,  and  All-American  potential.  The  boys  who 
possess  these  qualities  are  very  much  in  demand, 
and  they  are  not  being  sought  to  further  the  cause 
of  higher  education.  They  are  being  sought,  bought, 
and  brought  to  the  respective  colleges  with  the  in 
tention  of  using  them  and  their  albilities  to  win  ath- 
letic contests. 

BIGGER  GATE  RECEIPTS 

Winning  athletic  contests  means  bigger  gate  re- 
ceipts. This  means  more  money  ^to  operate  athletic 
programs  and  physical  education  departments.  Since 
the  ball-players  are  being  used  as  the  means  to 
an  end  that  is  seemingly  mercenary,  it  wi^uld  seem 
that  they  deserve  a  share  of  the  "bacon, '  so  to 
speak. 

This,  people  will  say.  would  ruin  the  fibre  of 
the  red-blooded  American  Youth.  But  the  practice 
of  subsidizing  athletes  has  been  going  on  for  a 
long  time,  and  there  seems  to  be  no  secret  about 
it.  There  is  no  way  to  control  the  handouts  from 
enthusiastic  alumni  which  some  players  at  some 
schools  allegedly  receive. 
There  seems  to  be  no  way  to  keep  alumni  enthu- 
'  siasts  from  lending  care  to  some  ball-players  at  some 
schools.  There  are  many  aspects  of  the  general 
problem   that  appear  to  be  uncontrolable. 

A  MONSTER     " 

Big  Time  Athletics  in  colleges  has  become  a 
monster  cifcated  by  the  great  dieties— public  demand 
and  gate  receipts.  The  Monster  should  be  fed  or 
killed.  It  should  not  be  left  to  languish  in  the  midst 
of  Its  inadequacies,  trying  desperately  to  main- 
tain the  expected  display  of  strength  and  prowess 
on  an  insufficient  diet.  It  should  be  nurtured  mag- 
nanimously and  encouraged  to  bloom  and  flourish, 
or  It  should  be  quickly,  quietly,  painlessly,  and 
positively  denuded  to  the  station  of  intercollegiate 
intramurals  or  eliminated  completely. 

Such  action  as  any  of  the  alternatives  mentioned 
above  would  eliminate  the  need  for  hvpocrrey  and 
underhanded  recruiting  tactics  which  have  report- 
edly been  used. 

The  question  of  sche'astics  is  conspicuouslv  ab- 
sent as  there  seems  to  b^  little  correlation  bet  reen 
athleticism  and  scholastici  n.  A  few  dollars  here 
and  there  would  net  appreciably  alter  that  problem, 
one  way  or  another. 

It',s  long  past  time  to  pull  the  wraos  off  the 
problem  and  fry  being  honest  about  it,  with  the  «;fu- 
dents  as  well  as  tiie  faculty,  aluruni  and  the  paying 
public. 


SATURDi 


WITH 

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Sla 

Thr  Vrei 
s.er\-e  wJ 
Sunday  to] 
9:45  a.  m. 

Rev.  Va 
on  the  SI 
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will  meet 
the  hut.  Tl 
Rev.  Barrd 
lead  a  dis| 
Your  Godi 


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have    holyl 
a.   m.   SGr\| 
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lues  in  tM 
the  6  p. 
Lutheran 
Campbell, 
will   lead 
"Docs  It 

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hold   regu| 
10  a.  m.. 
rard  Hall. 

THE    El 
THE   CROJ 

communioj 
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Cantcrbut 
p.m.  tomol 


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write  a  1; 
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Grad 
To  A1 

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SATURDAY,  OCTOBEl^  6,   195« 

WITH  THE  CHURCHES: 


THE  OAfLY  TAR  HEEL 


PAGE  THREl 


World's  Communion 
Slated  For  Tomorrow 


Tho  Presbyterian  Church  will  ob-  j 
serve     World   Wide     Cwnmunion 
Sunday  tomorrow  with  services  at 
9:45  a.  m.  and  11  a.  m.  ! 

Rev.  Vance  Barron  will  speak ' 
on  the  subject  "Loyalty  is  Sing- 1 
ular.'  The  Westmister  Fellowship  ; 
will  meet  for  supper  at  6  p.  m.  in  ! 
the  hut.  The  program  will  feature  j 
Rev.  Barron  who  will  speak  and  t 
ii-ad  a  discussion  on  "How  Bfg  Is  ' 
Your  God?"  j 


THE  BAPTIST  CHURCH  wUl 
have  Sunday  School  at  9:45  a.  m. 
and  morning  worship  at  11  a.  m. 
with  a  sermon  "A  Living  Faith." 
The  B  S  U  Supper  will  meet  at 
6  p.  m.  Also  there  will  be  a  stu- 
dent-sponsored worship  service  at 
7:30  p.  m. 


THE  LUTHERAN  CHURCH  will  \ 
have  holy  communion  at  its  11  | 
a.  m.  service  tomorrow.  The  ser- 1 
mon  is  entitled  "Secondary  Va  i 
lues  in  the  Holy  Communion."  At 
the  6  p.  m.  dinner  meeting  of  the 
Lutheran  Student  Asso.  Jerry ; 
Campbell,  senior  in  Law  School, ; 
will  lead  discussion  on  the  topic  I 
"Docs  It  Matter  What  I  Believe?"  : 


THE  CHRISTIAN  SCIENCE 
CHURCH  will  hold  Sunday  School 
at  9:30  a.  m.  and  worship  service 
at  11  a.  m.  in  the  lecture  room  of 
Carroll  Hall. 


THE     SOCIETY   OF     FRIENDS 

(Quaker)  will  conduct  church  ser- 
vices at  11  a. -m.  in  the  Grail  Room 
of  Graham  Memorial. 


THE  CATHOLIC  CHURCH  will 
hold  regular  services  at  8  .a.  m., 
10  a.  m..  and  11:30  a.  m.  in  Ger- 
rard  Hall. 


THE  METHODIST  CHURCH  will 
have  two  communion  services  to- 
morrow at  9  a.  m.  and  11  a.  m.  with 
Sunday  School  at  9:45  a.  m.  The 
Wesley  Foundation  wll  meet  at 
5:45  p.  m. 


THE  EPISCOPAL  (CHAPEL  OF 
THE  CROSS  will  have  a  student 
communion  at  9:30  a.  m.  in  addi- 
tion to  their  regular  service  at  7:30 
a.m.  Communion  and  morning  pray- 
er will  be  held  at  11  a.m.  The 
Cantcrbun.-  Club  will  meet  at  6 
p.m.   tomorrow  night. 


THE  COMMUNITY  CHURCH  will 
hold  a  non-denominational  church 
service  Sunday  at  11  a.  m.  in  Hill 
Hall. 


THE  UNITED  CONOREGATION- 
AL  CHRISTIAN  CHURCH  will  be 
gin  Sunday  School  at  10  a.  m.  and 
church  services  at   11  a.  m. 


Deadline  For  Prix  De  Paris 
Contest  By  Vogue  Is  Oct.  15 


Two  weeks  in  Paris  or  Sl.OOO  in 
cash  is  being  offered  by  Vogue  Ma- 
gazine to  the  college  senior  who 
proves  her  fashion  capabilities  in 
the  Vogues  22nd  Prix  de  Paris 
contest. 

The  Prix  is  open  to  all  those  with 
a  yen  for  a  career  in  writing,  pub- 
lishing, advertising,  merchandising, 
or  decorating.  Contestants  will  be 
judged  on-  writing  ability,  grasp  of 
subject  matter,  general  intelli- 
gence, originality  and  demonstra- 
tion of  special  talents. 

Using  Vogue  as  their  textbook 
Prix  competitors  must  complete 
two  quizzes  of  four  questions  each, 
based  on  actual  editorial  problems. 
Those  who  satisfactorily  answer 
both  quizzes  will  be  eligible  to 
write  a  1500-word  thesis  on  one  of 
the  topics  in  V^ogue's  Americana 
issue  of  February  1.  1957. 

A  first  prize  of  SI  ,000  cash  or 
two  weeks  in  Paris,  flying  both 
ways  with  all  expenses  paid,  will 
be  awarded.  Second  prize  is  $500 
cash  and  the  ten  Honorable  Men- 
tion Winners  will  receive  $25  cash. 
Each  of  these  winners  will  receive 
lop  consideration  for  jobs  on  Vo- 
gue. Glamour.  House  &  Garden.  Vo- 
gue Pattern  Book,  and  Vogue  Knit- 

Grad  Students  Urged 
To  Attend  Meet  Here 

All  graduate  Jtudents,  undergra- 
duates over  21  and  graduates  of 
the  university  living  n  Chapel  Hill 
have  been  urged  to  attend  the  or- 
ganizational meeting  of  the  YW- 
YMCA  sponsored  activities  for  gra- 
duate students  from  5-6  p.m.  Sun- 
day in  the  Rendezvous  Room,  Bob 
Rennick  of  the  Y  announced  today. 


ting  Book,  all  Conde  Nast  Publica- 
tions. 

Other  top  contestants  will  be 
recommended  to  stores,  advertising 
agencies,  and  other  magazines. 

Enrollment  blanks  may  be  se- 
cured from  the  Prix  de  Paris  Dir- 
ector. Vogue,  420  Lexington  Ave- 
nue. New  York,  or  contestants  may 
fill  in  the  coupon  in  the  current 
issue.  The  deadline  for  entering  is 
Oct.  15. 


Youth  Writers' 
Opportunities 
Described  Here 

•'The  ancient  mistrust  and  mis- 
understanding of  the  creatively 
talented  boy  or  girl  may  be  said 
to  have  died  out,"  writfer  Manly 
Wade  Wellman  told  the  opening 
session  here  Friday  of  the  N.  C. 
Scholastic  Press  Institute. 

Wellman,  author  of  books  for 
both  juveniles  and  adults,  said 
that  'never  before  has  a  really 
young  writer  had  so  much  encour- 
agement as  today.  Publishers  are 
looking  for  young  writers  in  their 
teens  who  may  speak  and  write  for 
their  age  group." 

The  annual  institute  is  sponsor- 
ed for  the  state's  high  school  edi- 
tors by  the  University  of  North 
Carolina  School  of  Journalism,  The 
Daily  Tar  Heel,  and  the  UNO  Ex- 
tension Division.  It  is  directed  by 
Walter  Spearman,  UNC  professor 
of  journalism. 

Wellman  told  the  young  journal- 
ists that  "it  is  hard  to  give  advice 
that  doesn't  sound  obvious.  All  I 
can  say  is  to  work — write,  get  your 
words  down  on  paper;  think  about 
your  writing,  polish  it  and  make 
it  better  and  better.  Get  the  best 
critical  help  you  can.  And  read! 

"Read  a  lot."  Wellman  said. 
"Read  especially  the  sort  of  thing 
you  hope  to  do  as  a  writer,  and 
beyond  that  read  everything.  S^ 
why  it  is  good,  why  it  is  publish- 
able.  learn  to  critize  it  construct- 
ively. And  then  learji  to  criticize 
your  own  work  constructively." 

Included  in  the  hooks  that  Well- 
man  has  written  for  younger  read- 
ers are  "Gray  Riders."  "The  Wild 
Dogs  of  Drowning  Creek,"  "The 
Mystery  of  Lost  Valley."  and  "Flag 
on  the  Levee."  His  book  for 
adults,  "Rebel  Boast."  will  be  pub- 
lished by  Henry  Holt  and  Co.  this 
fall.  It  is  a  study  of  five  Confed- 
erate  soldiers   from    Enfield. 

Second  guest  speaker  at  the  in- 
stitute will  be  Barry  Farber.  form- 
er editor  of  The  Daliy  Tar  Heel, 
who  has  just  returned  from  a  two- 
month  trip  to  Europe.  He  will 
speak  at  the  closing  banquet  Sat- 
urday night  at  Carolina  Inn,  giving 


Pledge  Honor  Parties  i  Marine  Major 
Highlight  Social  Scene    ^m  Appear 

As  Play  maker 


25  Special  Students 


CO-OP  HOUSE 

The  University  is  one  of  few  | 
that  has  a  considerable  number  of 
foreign  students  and  no  Interna- 
tional House.  A  few  students  have 
already  set  up  a  cooperative  house 
and  are  nterested  in  combinig  the 
better  elements  of  co-op  house  and 
an  International  House.  Students 
interested  in  this  project  have  been 
asked  to  leave  their  addresses  at 
the  YMCA  and  specify  a  time  they 
j  could  meet,  or  call  9-2471. 

I  YACK  CONTRACTS 

I      All  organizations  desiring  space 

i  in  the  Yackety  Yack  must  sign  con 
tracts  in  the  Yack  office  in  the 
basement  of  Graham  Memorial  by 
next  Wednesday,  accordiuij  to  Edi- 
tor Tommy  Johnson. 
WEINER  ROAST 

I  A  weiner  roast  will  be  held  at 
the  new  Baptist  Student  Union 
building  at  6  p.m.  today.  All  Bap- 

j  tist  students  have  been  invited  to 
attend,  along  with  girls  from  Mere- 
dith  College   in   Raleigh. 


DAILY    CROSSWORD 


ACROSS 

1.  Distant 
4.  High  prieit 

7.  A  cavity 

8.  Unable 
to  find 
one*  way 
Tribunal 
Burrowing 
animals 
Minstrel 
showman 
( 2  words ) 
Back  of 
the  neck 
Tribe  of  the 
Na^a  Hills 
( Assam ) 
Present 
time 
Fresh 
Snare 
Place  for 
growing 
flowers 

.  Any  coin 
of  trifling 
value 
( coUoq. ) 

.  Spawn 
offish 
Enclosure 
on  ranch 
A  manger 
for  feeding 
animals 
Girl's  nam* 
Any  spht 
pulse  (Ind.) 
State 
(abbr.) 
Measure 
Snout 
beetle 
Sweetening 
Attempted 
Sheer 
Hastened 
Habitual 
druiUcArd 


10. 

11. 

13. 


15. 
16. 

17. 

19 
20. 
23. 

25. 

27 
28 
31 


34. 

35. 

37. 

38 
40 

43 
45 
46 
47 
48 


49.  Conclude         21.  Ad- 
justs 
DOWN  22.  Com- 

1.  Cross  a  river        mon 
by  wading  level 

J.  Astringent      24.  Fabu- 

3.  Re-equip  lous 
with  men               bird 

4.  Tree  26.  Tablet 

5.  Aquatic  bird    28.  Crowns 
«.  Native  of         29.  Hatred 


ART  CLASS  MODELS 

Students,  male  and  female,  can 
make  extra  cash  by  being  a  model 
for  art  classes,  according!  to  an 
announcement  from  Person  Hall. 
This  is  not  a  regular  job  for  one 
person,  but  for  several  who  will 
be  called  as  needed.  Pay  will  be 
$1  per  hour. 
GM  DANCE 

The  Rams,   a   local   combo,  will 
play  for  a  dance  in  the  Rendezvous 
Room  of  Graham  Memorial  tonight 
from  8  to  11  p.m. 
Y  RETREAT 

The  joint  cabinets  of  the  YMCA 
YWCA  are  having  a  retreat  this 
weekend  at  Camp  Moon-Elon  near 
Burlington.  They  will  leave  at  1 
p.  m.  today  and  will  return  to- 
morrow afternoon. 
WUNCTV 

Today's  schedule  for  WOJNC-TV. 
the  University's  educational  tele- 
vision station.  Channel  4: 

6:30    World.  Weather.  Man 

7  Your  Child 

7:30     Frontiers  of  Heaven 

8  Renaissance  on  TV 
8:30    American  Politics 

9  Sign  off 
WUNC 

Today  s  schedule  for  WUNC,  the 


I  By  PEG  HUMPHREY 

I  And   NANCY   HILL 

Parties  to  honor  the  new  pledges 

will  highlight  the  social  calendars 

of  the  campus  Greek  groups  next 

week. 

j      St.  Anthony  Hall  has  planned  a 

I  banquet  in  the  Pine  Room  of  the 

j  Carolina   Inn    for   Monday     night. 

I  Last  night   they  had  a  stag  party 

j  for  Brooks  Gardner.  Philadelphia. 

!who  is  marrying  Beth  Lloyd.  Chapel 

■  Hill,  today. 

!  Tupsday  night  the  sororities  are 
I  holding  open  houses  for  their  new 
pledges.  Dorm  men  and  fraternity 
i  activities  and  pledges  have  been 
I  invited. 

i  Pi  Kappa  Alpha.  Phi  Delta  The- 
.  ta,  Pi  Kappa  Phi,  ZBT,  and  SAE 
I  are  among  the  fraternities  having 
;  beer  parties  for  their  new  pled- 
I  ges   Monday   night. 

Sigma    Nus    will    have    a    cabin 
party    at    Honig  s    cabin    next    Sa- 
;  turday.  Bruno's  combo  will  supply 
music. 

Tho  Lambda  Chi"s  will  entertain 
the   Kappa    Deltas    Monday    for    a 
i  black  and  white  tacky   party. 

The  Chi  O's  will  honor  their  pa- 
I  vents  and  alumnae  next  Saturday 
i  at  a  luncheon.  They  will  be  enter- 
;  tained  by  the  SAE's  on  Oct.  16. 

A  racoon  hunt  is  on  the  agenda 
of  Kappa  Sigma  for  this  Saturday 
night.  Zcta  Psi  and  Kappa  Sig  will 
;  give  a  cabin   party  next  Saturday. 
The    ADPis    are    having    brunch 
'  on  Oct.   14.  for  their  national  of- 
ficers after  which  they  will  have  a 
dedication  of  the  new  house.  Open 
house  for  all  alumnae,  parents  and 
other  guests  will  follow  the  dedi- 
cation. 
Last  week  it  was  erroneously  re- 


impressions    of   lif^   in    Russia   as  i 
observed  on  his  trip.  { 

Other  Saturday  sessions  will  in- : 
elude  talks  and  panel  discussions  j 
on  news  and  feature  writing,  ad- 1 
vertising.  editorials,  sports,  make- ' 
up.  yearbook  procedure  and  pho- 
tography. 

A  panel  on  prize-winning  news- 
papers will  be  composed  of  rep- 
resentatives of  Charlotte  Central 
High  School:  Chris  Folk,  faculty 
adviser;  David  McSwain.  newspaijer 
editor;  and  Robert  Krikpatrick. 
managing  editor. 

A  year  book  panel  will  include 
Miss  Mary  Humphrey,  adviser  at 
New  Hanover  High.  Wilmington; 
Miss  Betty  Parker,  High  Point 
High;  Bob  Denham  and  Miss  Kay 
Swaim.  Gray  High,  Winston-Salem; 
and  Mrs.  Ruth  Barfield  and  Miss 
Janice  Parker.  North  Mecklenburg 
High.  Charlotte. 


I  ported  that  Chi  Phi  Jim  Smith  mar- 
I  ried  Midge  McMahan. 


Rendezvous 
Room  Dance 
Is  Tonight 

A  dance  will  be  held  in  the  Ren- 
dezvous Room  of  Graham  Mem- 
orial tonight  from  8  to  11  p.m.  The 
Rams,  a  local  combo,  will  provide 
music. 

The  combo,  led  by  Rob  Neal  of 
Henderson,  will  play  under  spon- 
sorship of  the  Graham  Memorial 
Activties  Board. 

GMAB  plans  to  have  a  combo 
play  in  the  Rendezvous  Room  every 
Saturday  during  football  season 
when  there  is  no  home  game,  ac 
cording  to  GMAB  Dance  Commit- 
tee officials. 

The  Dance  Comniil'ice  also  plans 
to  provide  music  for  dancing  in  the 
Rendezvous  Room  on  as  many  Sa- 
turday nights  during  the  .school 
year  as  possible,  according  to 
Chuck  Flack  and  Ed  Myers,  co- 
chairmen  of  the  committee. 


University's  FM  radio  station,  91.5 
megacycles: 

7:00    Paris   Star   Time 

7:30     Showtime 

8:00    This  Is  Jazz 

9:00     Encore 

10:00  News  at  Ten« 

10:15  Evening   Masterwork 

11:30  Sign  Off 


Planetarium 
Fixes  Special 
School  Shows 

Nine  programs  specially  adapted 
for  school  children  will  be  present- 
ed at  the  Morehead  Planetarium 
here  between  now  and  next  June, 
it  was  announced  by  JVIanager  A. 
F.  Jenzano. 

The  programs,  planned  with  the 
cooperation  of  H.  A.  Shannon, 
jciencc  supervisor  of  the  N.  C. 
Dept.  of  Public  Instruction,  are 
presented  every  Wednesday  and 
Thursday  at  11  a.  m.  and  2  p.m. 
Advance  reservations  are  neces- 
sary. 

Commenting  on  the  special  pro- 
grams, which  are  designed  to  in- 
terest children  in  all  sciences. 
Shannon  said,  'I  know  that  we 
shall  find  that  the  school  children 
who  attend  will  get  a  great  deal 
from  these  various   programs." 

The  first,  "Our  Sun,"  to  be  pres- 
ented from  now  through  Oct.  22. 
is  designed  for  chldren  in  grades 
7  through  12.  Others  to  follow  will 
be^'ALister  Moon."  Oct.  23  tv.  Mov. 
19,  for  grades  4-9,  "The  Christmas 
Story."  Nov.  19-Dec.  31.  for  all 
grades;  1957  Celestial  Preview," 
Jan.  1-Jan.  28,  for  grades  4-12;  "Sa- 
tellites," Jan.  29  to  Feb.  25,  for 
grades  7-12;  •Weather  Whys."  Feb. 
25  to  March  27,  grades  4-12;  "Eas- 
ter, the  Awakening.  '  March  28  to 
April  29.  all  grades;  and  "Signals 
from  the  Stars,"  April  30  to  May 
27,  grades  7-12. 

An  overlapping  demonstration 
for  youngsters  in  grades  1  through 
3,  titled  "Sun.  Moon.  Earth,"  will 
be  given  Tuesdays  and  Fridays  at 
11  a.  m.  and  2  p.  m.  from  Feb.  5 
to  22. 


U.  S.  Marine  Maj.  Vinson  Mc- 
Neill, Retired,  now  a  Chapel  Hill 
resident  and  UNC  student,  will  ap 
pear  in  the  opening  production  of 
The  Carolina  Playmakers  Oct.  17- 
21. 

His  role  as  the  sleigh  driver  in 

the  drama  "'Anastasia"  makes  him 

i  automatically  a  Carolina  Playmak- 

i  er. 

Major  McNeill,  studying  history 
and  Diglish,  entered  UNC  after  his 
!  retirement  in  1955  following  30 
1  years  in  the  Marine  Corps.  His  du- 
j  ties  during  that  time  took  him  to 
I  Nicaragua,  the  South  and  West 
I  Pacific,  Guadalcanal.  New  Guinea, 
!  New  Britain,  Okinawa  and  Japan 

He  has  been  an  amatAur  and  pro- 
fessional boxer  and  has  had  consi- 
derable success  as  a  trainer  of  pro- 
fessional boxers. 

In  the  Playmakers'  production  he 
plays  a  peasant  who  knew  the 
Prince.ss  Anastasia  before  her  sup- 
posed death,  and  he  is  called  upon 
to  identify  the  girl  who  claims  to 
be  Anastasia. 


By  PRINGLE  "PIPKIN 

The  25  students  of  the  accelerat- 
ed course  for  freshmen  and  their 
professors  attended  a  picnic  at 
Camp  New  Hope  last  Thursday. 

The  students  broke  up  into  soft- 
ball  teams,  the  Plato's  Playboys 
and  the  Socrates's  Sad  Sacks,  and 
played  a  game  with  the  Playboys 
winning,  14-11. 

Professors  Everett  Hall  of  phi- 
losophy. E.  A.  Cameron  of  math- 
matics,  Richmond  P.  Bond  of  Eng- 
lish, E.  C.  Markham  of  chemistry, 
and  G.  V.  Taylor  conduct  the  ac- 
celerated course  this  year  with  the 


i  exception  of  Professor  Hall,  who 
I  will  t'^ach  the  25  in  their  sopho- 
j  more  year.  These  men  provided 
I  transportation  and  gave  the  picnic 
;  for  the  students. 

The    professors    had    the    picnic 
'  so  the  students  and  teachers  could 
I  become   better   acquainted   accord- 
ing to  Dr.  Bond. 

The  accelerated  course  program, 
now  entering  its  third  year,  is  con- 
ducted on  a  more  advanced  level 
than  regular  freshman  work.  Ad- 
mittance to  the  course  is  based 
on  entrance  tests,  the  advance- 
ment on  one's  work  and  one's  past 
school  record. 


GM  To  Continue  Jazz 

I    Programs  On  Monday 

I 

!  Linda  Mann,  director  of  Graham 
'.  Memorial,  announced  yesterday 
!  that  requests  for  the  Monday  night 
( jazz  hour  in  the  GM  Main  Lounge 
I  will  be  taken  in  the  Information 
I  Office. 

I      The  jazz  hour  is  scheduled  for  7 
to  9  p.m.  on  Mondays. 


Members  of  the  special  freshmen  scholastic  group  shown  above, 
left  to  right  around  the  table,  are  Hugh  Patterson,  Jack  Spain, 
Webb  McCracken,  Bruce  Berryhili,  Bryan  Roberts  and  Ian  McBride. 


Don't 

Miss  the 

Bargains 

In 

History 

Biography 

And 

Philosophy 

Today 


at 


THE  INTIMATE 
BOOKSHOP 

205   E.   Franklin   St. 
Open  Till   10  P.M. 


Of  course.  Most 
ever)'one  does— often. 

Because  a  few  moments 
ever  ice-cold  Coca-Gsla 
refresh  you  so. 

Its  sparkling  with  natural  goodness,  pure  and 
wholesome— and  naturally  friendly  io  your  figure.") 

feel  like  having  a  Coke? 

BOniEO  UNDER  AUTMOHITir  OF  THE  COCA-COLA  COMPANY  BY 

DURHAM  COCA-COLA  BOTTLING  CO. 


•  t*.     .  ^      ......   ' 

iMf  IIVSTON  heads  the  class  on  flavor! 


an  island 
7.  Fame 
9.  Conical 
tent 
10.  Deed 
12.  Stitched 
14.  Strong  ale 

(Eng.) 
18.  Conflict 


30.  Legal 
pro- 
fes- 

.«ion 

32.  Covered 
with 
ivy 

33.  Destitute 
of  hair 


Ye«terday'«  Aaiw^r 
36.  Underworld 
river 
(M>th.) 
39.  Edible 
rootstock 

41.  Ireland 

42.  Contended 
44.  Steep  flax 


State  Dept. 

Careers  To 

.  Be  Discussed 

A  representative  of  the  U.  S. 
Dept.  of  State,  will  visit  the  cam- 
pus next  Wednesday  _to  present  to 
interested  students  information  on 
career  opportunites  in  the  U.  S. 
Foreign  Service. 

Students  can  meet  with  the  rep- 
resentative, Richard  Roy,  Selby, 
Wednesday  at  2:30  p.  m.  in  211 
Gardner  HaTl.  He  will  also  speak 
to  two  political  science  classes  that 
morning. 

A  written  examination  for  the 
Foreign  Service  applicants  will  be 
held  Dec.  8. 'Candidates  must  be 
between  20  and  31  years  old  and 
must  have  been  a  U.  S.  citizen  for 
at  least  nine  years.  Applications 
1  for  the  one-day  written  examina- 
tion must  be  received  by  the  Board 
of  Examiners  in  Washington  before 
midnight,  Oct.  26. 

Successful  candidates  will  be  ap- 
pointed as  officers  to  serve  in  any 
of  the  268  embassies,  legations  and 
consulates  abroad,  as  well  as  in  the 
Dept.  of  State  in  Washington.  Start- 
ing salaries  are  scaled  accordmg 
to  the  officer's  qualifications,  ex- 
perieiicn  and  age.  and  range  from 
$4,730  to  $5,350  per  year. 


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SATURDAY,  OCTOBER   6,   1956 


PAGE  FOUR  THE  DAILY  TAR  MEEL  aMiw.v>^»-> w,    ■  .^, 

Dodgers  Go  2  Up  In  Series' With  13-8  Win  Ovei^Yanks 


Bums  Rally  To  Take 
Free  Scoring  Contest 


BROOKLYN,  Oct.  6  (yP)— New 
York  blew  a  6-0  early  lead  yester- 
day as  the  battling  Brooklyn  Dod- 
gers fought  back  to  grab  the  sec- 
ond game  of  the  World  Series,  13- 
8,  in  a  wild  contest  that  gave  tl%' 
National  League  champions  a  2-0 
edge  in  the  series. 

A  crowd  of  36,217  including  Ad- 
iai  Stevenson,  I>emocratic  candi- 
date for  president,  watched  the 
hectic  contest,  as  the  Yankees 
sent  a  record  total  of  seven  pitch- 
ers to  the  mound. 

The  subway  series  shifts  to  Yan- 
kee Stadium  for  the  third  game 
today,  with  Clem  Labine  or  Carl 
Erskine  ihe  probable  starting  hur- 
lers  for  Brooklyn  and  either  Bob 
Grim  or  Whitey  Ford  for  New 
York. 

A  big  second  inning  by  both  the 
Yankees  and  then  the  Dodgers 
highlighted  today's  contest,  played 
under  sunny  skies  and  in  the  rec- 
ord elapsed  time  of  3  hours  and  26 
minutes  for  a  9-inning  game. 

Yogi  Beira  was  tlic-  Yankee  hero 
in  the  top  half  of  the  second,  as 
his  400  foot  homer  over  the  screen 
in  right  with  the  bases  loaded  put 
New  York  ahead  6-0. 

However,  the  Dodgers  bounced 
right  back  and  tied  the  score  with 
six  runs  in  the  bottom  half,  high- 
lighted by  Duke  Snider's  three- 
run   blast    over   the   scoreboard. 

Don  Larsen  started  for  New 
York,  was  knocked  out  in  the  sec- 
ond, and  Johnny  Kucks,  Tommy 
Byrne,  Tom  Sturdivant,  Tom  Mor- 
gan, Bob  Turley,  and  Mickey 
McDermott  followed  in  order. 
Morgan  was  the  loser. 

Don  Bessent.  third  Dodger  hur- 
ler  who  came  on  in  the  third  in 
ning  and  held  the  Yankees  to  sev- 
en hits,  iinisted  the  game,  allow- 


ing  only  two 

runs 

as 

he  earned 

his  first  World 
'NEW  YORK 

Ser 

les 

Vic 

tM"3 

f. 

A 

Ab 

R 

H 

O 

A 

E 

McDougald,  ss 

3 

1 

1 

1 

0 

0 

Slaughter,   If 

2 

2 

1 

0 

0 

Mantle,  ef 

1 

1 

2 

0 

0 

Berra,  c 

1 

2 

10 

0 

0 

(Collins,  lb 

0 

1 

3 

0 

1 

1  Bauei",  rf 

0 

1 

2 

0 

1 

I  Martin,  3b-2b 

1 

1 

3 

2 

0 

G.  Coleman.  2b 

2 

0 

0 

2 

2 

0 

d  Skowron 

1 

0 

0 

0 

0 

0 

1  Carey,  3b 

0 

0 

0 

0 

1 

0 

1  Larsen,  p 

1 

1 

1 

0 

0 

0 

:  Kucks,  p 

0 

0 

0 

0 

0 

0 

,  Byrne,  p 

0 

0 

0 

0 

0 

0 

Sturdivant,    p 

0 

0 

0 

0 

0 

0 

'  Morgan,  p 

1 

1, 

1 

0 

0 

0 

Turlev,  p 

0 

0 

0 

0 

0 

0 

:  b  Siebern 

1 

0 

0 

0 

0 

0 

!  McDermott,  p 

1 

0 

1 

0 

0 

0 

1      Totals 

35 

8 

12 

24 

5 

2 

BROOKLYN 

H 

Ab 

R 

H 

O 

A 

E 

Gilliam.  2b 

3 

1 

1 

5 

3 

0 

Reese,   ss 

6 

1 

1 

2 

5 

0 

!  Snider,  cf 

4 

3 

2 

6 

0 

0 

Robinson.  3b 

4 

2 

2 

0 

2 

0 

Hodges,  lb 

3 

2 

3 

6 

0 

0 

Amoros,  If 

4 

1 

0 

0 

0 

0 

c  Jackson 

1 

0 

0 

0 

0 

0 

Cimoli,  If 

0 

0 

0 

1 

0 

0 

Furillo,   rf 

4 

2 

2 

2 

0 

0 

rampanella.  c 

3 

1 

0 

5 

0 

0 

Newcombe,  p 

0 

0 

0 

0 

1 

0 

Roebuck,  p 

0 

0 

0 

0 

0 

0 

a  Mitchell 

1 

0 

0 

0 

0 

0 

Bessent,  p 

2 

0 

1 

0 

0 

0 

Totals 

35 

13 

12 

27 

11 

0 

Harriers    Whip    Va.,    26-31;    Frosh    Lose 


^  ♦ 


Jim  Beatty  Leads  Tar 
Heels  To  Narrow  Win 


Tenn.  Court  Upholds  Integration 


Dependable  Tar  Heel  Line  Plunger 

GiUs  Gaca,  Carolina's  leading  ground  gainer  against  Oklahoma, 
iwiil  give  the  Tar  Heels  depth  at  the  fullback  slot  this  afternoon 
when  they  meet  the  South  Carolina  Gamecocks. 


Tar  Babies  Drop 
First  Game  14-12 


a-Fouled  out  for  Roebuck  in  2nd. 

b-Flied  out  for  Turley  in  6th. 

c-Struck  out  for  Amoros  in  7th. 

d-Struck    out    for    G.    Coleman    in 

8th. 
New    Ycrk      A        150     100     001—8 
Brooklyn     N       061     220    02x— 13 


Band,  New  Uniforms 


The  North  Carolina  Tar  Babies 
lost   their  first  game  of  the   1956 
season  to  the  Baby  Deacs  of  Wake  > 
Forest  14-12  last  night  in  Greens- 
boro. 

It  was  the  second  win  for  the  ; 
Baby  Deacs.  They  defeated  the  I 
University  of  South  Carolina  ! 
freshmen  6-0  last  week.  • 

The  Tar  BabiCvS,  not  having  ex- 1 
perienced  a  game,   looked  a   little  ! 
ragged.      Fumbling      prevailed  i 
throughout  the  game.  Carolina  lost 
four  and  Wake  Forest  three.  I 

W^ake  Forest  got  the  first  blood  I 


Praised  After  Game      Newcombe 

In  Scrap 


Students  who  have  noticed  some-  ested  to  know  that  it's  the  biggest 
thing  different  about  the  UNC  i  since  1950,  in  the  days  of  Charlie 
Marching  Band     may     be     inter- ;  "Choo  Choo"  Justice. 


Gamecocks 

(Continued  fromi    Page    1) 

gotten  an  overly  abundant  amount 
of  good  breaks  either. 

The  Tar  Heels  are  reported  to 
be  in  top  physical  shape  with  the 
exception  of  center  George  Stav- 
nitski,  who  suffered  a  brain  con- 
cussion in  the  second  half  of  the  ; 
Oklahoma  game  and  will  be  side- 1 
lined  for  the  remainder  of  the  sea- 
son. 

The  loss  of  the  big  Tar  Heel 
center  will  be  felt  by  Coach  Ta- 
tum's  club,  but  the  return  of  quar- 1 
terback  Dave  Reed  to  action  and  , 
the  fine  performance  turned  in  by  j 
sub  pivot  man  Ronnie  Koes  in  the  | 
Sooner  tilt  are  indications  that  the  j 
slack  left  by  Stavnitski  will  be  J 
taken  up.  | 

Reed  was  running  at  first  string 
quarterback  prior  to  his  injury,  and  j 
if  the  Tar  Heels  receive,  he  will 
be  the  starter  at  the  signal  calling 
slot  today.  Should  the  Tar  Heels 
kickoff,  sophomore  Curt  Hathaway 
will  get  the  nod.  j 

Jim  Varnum,  who  won  himself  \ 
a  starting  halfback  post  with  a  j 
line  performance  against  N.  C.  I 
State,  will  start  .at  left  half  today.  ; 
Senior  speedster  Ed  Sutton  will  go  j 
at  right  half  and  Don  Lear  will 
start  at  fullback. 

Coach  Tatura  -.will  have  a  good 
supply    of   backfjeld   reserves    on 
hand  this  afternoon.  Wally  Vale, 
Buddy  Sasser  and  Larry  McMulleni 
will  be  ready  for  duty  at  the  half-  f 
back    slots,    and    Giles    <5aca,    the ! 
team's      leading     ground      gainer  I 
against  Oklahoiha,  will  give  Lear  j 
capable  backing  at  the  line  plung-^-j 
ing  post.  j 

In  the  line,  the  Tar  Heels  will  \ 
go  with  Dick  Smith  and  Jim  Jones  j 
at  guards,  Stu  Pell  and  rugged 
Phil  Blazer  at  tackles.  Buddy  Payne 
and  Larry  Muschamp  at  ends,  and 
Koes  will  be>at  center. 

The  Gamecocks  will  be  paced  by 
sophomore  flash  King  Dixon,  the 
current  rage  of  the  Palmetto  state 
and  an  all-america  high  schooler. 
Dixon's  running  mate  at  halfback 
will  be  another  soph,  hard  running 
Alex  Hawkins.  Pile  driving  full- 
back Wade  Barrett  and  flashy  sig- 
nal caller  Mackie  ft:ic|ett,  i^^ui^ 
out  t'ae  Gamecock  backfield. 


Also,  brand  new  uniforms  give 
the  band  that  "new  look"  Caro- 
lina's  bandsmen  are  so  enthusias- 
tic about.  Those  beautiful,  new 
blue  and  white  uniforms  dress  up ' 
the  University's  fine  band  in  de- 
serving style,  according  to  specta- 
on  hand  for  the  band's  first  ap- 
pearance at  the  State  game. 

They  are.  incidentally,  »he  first 

entirely  new  set  of  uniforms  since 

1930.  The  Student  Legislature  ap- 

I  propriated  $1,800  of  the  better  than 

$6,000    expenditure   for  the  band, 

the    remainder   being    donated    by 

I  the     Athletic    Assn.    Included    in 

'  that  figure  is  the  cost  of  repairing 

and  reconditioning  University-own- 

I  ed  instruments  —  eight  tubas,  ten 

I  drums,   four   baritone   horns,   and 

I  various  other  smaller  horns. 

The  band  drew  much  praise  after 
its  excellent  half-time  show,  put 
on  after  a  minimum  of  rehearsal, 
at  the  State  game.  Drum  Major 
Don  Jefferson  put  his  large,  well- 
dressed  band  and  four  majorettes 
through  their  paces  with  precision. 

Only  one  complaint  concerning 
the  band  was  voiced:  "Couldn't 
hear  'em,  sitting  down  at  the  front 
like  that."  In  1954,  the  band  sat 
at  the  top  of  the  card  section,  af- 
fording Carolina  students  plenty  of 
easily-heard  spirited  music. 

Any  musicians  who  were  unable 
to  audition  for  the  band  during 
the  first  week  have  been  invited  to 
contact  Mr.  Herbert  W.  Fred  at 
Hill  Music  Hall  for  information 
about  the  band.  Band  officers  for 
1956-57  are:  Don  Jefferson,  presi- 
dent; Eddie  Bass,  vice  president; 
and  John  Hamp,  secretary-treasur- 
er. Artie  Sobel  is  business  manag- 
er, and  Dale  Glover  holds  the  po- 
'sK;ion.<^of  quartermaster.  Herbert 
W.  Fred,  conductor,  formulates  the 
plans  for  all  band  formations,  and 
Bert  Davis  and  Calvin  Huber  are 
his  assistants. 


NEW  YORK,  Oct.  5,  (AP)— 
Dodger  pitcher  Don  Newcombe. 
knocked  out  of  the  World  Series 
game  by  a  Yankee  onslauj^ht,  was 
reported  today  to  have  become 
involved   in  a  rhubarb  with  a   fan. 

There  were  several  versions  as 
to  what  happened,  but  neither 
Newcombe  nor  the  fan  was  im- 
mediately available  for  comment. 

One  eyewitness  account  had 
Newcombe  hitting  the  fan,  parking 
lot  attendant  Michael  Brown.  37. 
Others  said  they  just  exchanged 
a  few  hard  words. 

There  was  no  police  action  in 
the  case. 

The  incident  was  supposed  to 
have  taken  place  outside  Ebbets 
Field. 

According  to  one  eyewitness. 
Brown  taunted  the  downcast  New- 
combe with  '"What  happened?  The 
Yanks  took  good  care  of  you  to- 
day, didn't  they?" 


at    the    beginning    of    the    second 
quarter    by   scoring   on    a   46-yard  I 
drive.    The    all  -  important    extra' 
point  was  good.  j 

Carolina  came  right  back  into 
the  ball  game  v,hen  Jim  Stevens, 
of  Hazclwood.  ran  60  yards  right  i 
up  the  middle  to  the  Baby  Deacs' 
one-foot  line  on  the  second  play 
after  the  kickoff.  He  scored  on  the 
ne.\t    play. 

The  Tar  Babies  could  not  hold 
the  charging  Baby  Deacs  at  the 
extra  point  and  the  k,iek  wus 
blocked. 

Behind  7-6  at  the  half.  Carolina  '• 
was  sot  up  fo  their  next  TD  by  a 
Wake  Forest  fumble  on  their  own 
33-yard  line,  .\fter  two  play.s  Nel- 
son Lowe  kept  the  ball  on  a  pitch 
or  keep  play  and  went  around  right 
end  to  score.  Again  the  kick  was 
blocked. 

Wake  could  not  make  any  pro- 
gress until  the  last  five  minutes 
when  hard  running  Ralph  Conrad 
scored  from  the  nine  yard  line. 
Again   the   Wake   kick   was   good. 

Robert  Jackson  ol  Wake  Forest 
was  the  man  who  blocked  Caro- 
lina first  kick  to  give  the  Deacs 
the  break  they  needed. 

Nelson  Lowe,  Wake  Smith  and 
Jim  Stevens  all  looked  good  for 
Carolina's  offense. 

Halfback  Con. ell  Johnson  and 
Earl  "Moose"  Butler,  left  tackle, 
looked  good  on  defense. 


By  CHARLEY  HOUSON  i 

Daily  Tar   Heel   Sports  Writer      | 

Carolina's   varsity    cross-country  i 
runners  registered  its  first  victory  j 
of  the  season  yesterday  on  Fetzer 
Field   by  defeating  a  surprisingly 
powerful     University     of  Virginia 
team,  26-31. 

Jim  Beatty,  Tar  Heel  defending 
ACC  champion,  streaked  to  an  easy 
victory  by  completing  the  three  and 
nine-tenths  mile  course  in  the  bril- 
liant time  of  19:46.4.  Carolina's 
Dave  Scurlock,  freshman  star  of 
last  year,  eked  out  a  second  place 
fini.^hed  when  he  defeated  Virginia 
speedster  David  Bloor  by  one-tenth 
of  a  second. 

Cavaliers  Bill  Farrier,  Bobby 
Borsody  and  Charlie  Riddle  finish- 
ed in  fourth,  fifth  and  seventh 
places  respectively  and  had  times 
of  21147,  21:56.5  and  22:28.5. 

In  addition  to  Beatty  and  Scur- 

lo^,  four  other  Tar  Heel  runners 

also  finished  in  the  top  ten.  They 

were  Everett  Whatley,  Marion  Grif- 

'  fin,     Perrin   Henderson   and     Ben 

'  Williams  in  sixth,  eight,  ninth  and 

I  tenth    places    respectively. 


A  scant  crowd  of  some  50  spec- 
tators watched  the  meet. 

The  Tar  Keels  next  meet  will 
come  one  week  from  yesterday 
when  they  travel  to  Columbia,  S. 
C,  for  a  four-way  meet  with  State, 
Clemson  and  South  Carolina.  High- 
lighting the  occasion  will  be  an 
expected  running  duel  belwesn 
Carolina's  Beatty  and  Mike  Shea 
of  State. 

The  summary:  1— Beatty,  C,  19: 
16.4  2— Scurlock,  C,  21:41.  3— 
Bloor.  V,  21:42.  4— Farrier,  V,  21: 
47.  5— Borsody.  V,  21:56.5.  6— 
Whatley,  C,  22:15.  7— Riddle,  V. 
22:28.5  8— Griffin,  C,  22:44.  9— 
Henderson,  P.,  C,  22:48.  10— Wil- 
liams, C,  22:56.  11— Coffin,  C,  23: 
24.  12— Comper.  V,  24:14.5  13— 
Gaudry,  V,  25:00.  14 — Sampson, 
V,  25:40. 


KNOXVILLE,  Tenn.,  Oct.  5—(JP) 
The  Tennessee  Supreme  Court  to- 
day struck  down  all  state  laws 
dealing  with  public  school  segre- 
gation.   1?,^  .I^^ii'^    ^ 

The  court  said  all  such  laws 
were  swept  aside  in  1954  when  the 
U.  S.  Supreme  Court  ruled  that 
public  school  segregation  was  un- 
constitutional. 


The  high  tribunal  made  its 
sweeping  decision  in  refusing  to 
interfere  with  racial  integration  of 
the  previously  all-white  high 
school  at  Clinton,  20  miles  north- 
west of  here. 

Frosh  Golf 

All  freshmen  golf  candidates  are 
to  meet  in  304  Wollen  Gym  on 
Monday,  October  8,  4:30  p.  m. 


Liipfert  Takes 
First  Position 


The  Carolina  freshman  cross 
country  team  dropped  it's  first 
meet  of  the  .season  yesterday  to 
the  Blue  Imps  of  Duke  University, 
24-37. 

Though  Carolina  runners  placed 
in  the  first  and  third  positions, 
Duke  superiority  down  the  line 
proved  to  be  the  downfall  of  the 
UNC  harriers. 

Tar  Baby  Cowles  Liipfert  placed 
first  with  a  time  of  11:46.  Second 
to  finish  was  Blur  Imp  Gary  Weis- 
iger  who  finished  in  11:58.5. 
Rounding  out  the  top  three  was 
Fick  Arthur  with  an  elaped  time 
of  12:15:5. 

The  summary: 
I       1— Liipfert.  C,   11:46;   2— Weis- 
i  iger.    D.     11:.58:5;    3— Arthur,    C, 

12:15:5;     4.— Menaker,     D.    12:20; 

5._Boyd.     D.     12:28;     6.— Shields, 
j  D,    12:35;    7— Basemer,    D.    12:41; 

8— Bagwell.    C,    13:03;    9.— Pack- 
j  ard,    C.    13:12;     10.— Withrow,    C. 

13:17. 


FELICIA  i 

LAST  TIMES  TODAY 


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days  a  week,  7  a.m.  to  8  p.m. 
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LOST:  DARK  BROWN  WALLET 
Monday  night  somewhere  on 
north  campus  or  in  town.  Con- 
tained American  and  foreign 
currency,  and  some  personal 
cards.  Contact  Ronald  C  Yuen. 
303  Connor  Dorm. 


STAMMC 


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says  "Jockey  brand  underwear's  the  most!" 

"Dissonance  in  the  coda  is  great  at  Birdland,"  says  Clare 
Nett,  campus  dance  band  virtuoso,  "but  harmony's  what  I 
want  in  the  underwear  section.  I  always  wear  Jockey  briefs 
on  the  stand,  so  there'll  be  no  fidgeting  to  upset  the  beat." 

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REVIEW 

tM  the  editorial  w#»kly  TVi\mi 
•A  page  2. 


VOL.  LVII     NO.  15 


Complete  (^)  Wtr«  Sermct 


CHAPEL  HILL,  NORTH  CAROLINA,  SUNDAY,  OCTOBER  7,   1956 


Offices  in   Graham   Mejimiai 


FOUR  PAGES  THIS   iSSUf 


Student  Advisory 
Board  Will  Meet 
Aldermen  Monday 

Parkihg  Restrictions 
Are  To  Be  Discussed 


Monday  Meeting  Set;    .  ,. 

Class-Cuts  To  Be  Discussed 
By  Student-Faculty  Group 


I'll! 


UP  To  Air  Parking 
Problem  Tuesday 


By  GRAHAM  SNYDER 

A  student  government  Advisory  Commission  will  meet 
Kith  the  lioard  ol  Aldermen  Monday  night  to  present  the 
case  of  the  student  government  against  the  parking  restric- 
tions imposed  on   Rosemary  and  C.ohmibia  Streets. 

The  commission,  announced  Friday  by  Student  body 
President  Bob  Young,  was  set  up  for  the  purpose  ot  study- 
ing the  overall  traffic  problem  and  of  formulating  a  solution 

» 

Yack  Gives 
More  Time 
For  Photos 

The  period  for  freshmen,  fourth- 
year  medical  students  and  nurs- 
ing students  to  have  their  pictures 
made  for  the  1957  Yackety  Yack 
has  been  extended,  according  to 
Editor  Tomfny  Johnson. 

Students  falling  into  these 
groups  can  have  their  pictures 
made  tomorrow  through  Wednes- 
day at  a  cost  of  $1.  Johnson  said. 
The  $1  charge  is  to  cover  the  ex- 
tended contract  of  the  photogra- 
pher. 

The    pictures    will    be    made    in 
the   basement  of  Graham   .Memor- ; 
ial  from   1  to  6:30  p.m.  Yack  of- ; 
ficials   have    requested    that    girls 
wear  dark  sweaters  and  pearls  for 
the  photos.  Men  have  been  asked 
to  wear  darJc  coats,  ties  and  white  { 
shirts. 

Th«  remainder  ol  ifrif  schedule 
tor    taking   Yack    pictures    is: 

Oct.  8-12 — Sophomores,  Pharm- 
acy. Dental  and  Dental  Hygiene 
students; 

Oct.  15-19  —  Juniors,  Lnn-  stu- 
dents. Medical  students  and  Grad- 
uate students. 


An  open  discussion  of  the  park- 
ing problem  will  be  held  at  the 
first  fall  meeting  of  the  Universi- 
ty Party  at  7  p.m.  Tuesday  on  the 
second  floor  of  Graham  Memorial. 
Party  chairman  Mike  Weinman 
said,  "In  view  of  our  President's 
veto  of  the  Columbia  St.  parking 
bill,  new  action  may  have  to  be 
taken." 


By  GRAHAM  SNYDER 

A  Student  -  Faculty  Committjo 
will  meet  tomorrow  night  to  dis- 
cuss the  present  class-cut  policy 
system  and  possibilities  for  revis- 
ion of  the  rule. 

As  a  result  of  a  suggestion  by 
Dr.  Hugh  Holman  of  the  Elnglish 
Dept.,  Student  body  President  Bob 
Young  appointed  a  special  siudent 
committee  two  weeks  ago  to  m^it 
with  the  committee  appointed  by 
the  F'aculty  Council.  ^ 

In  ills  suggestion.  Dr.  Holi||an 
said  a  discussion  would  be  holrijiil 
in  apprai.sing  the  degree  of  sfudlnt 
and  faculty  dissent  in  regard  to  ti^c 
attendance  policy,  and  the  reason.'; 
advanced  for  revising  it. 

Thi.s  will  be  the  second  conf»;r- 
ence  of  a  student-faculty  committee 


attendance   poUcy' 


concerning  the 
of  the  University.  Last  spring  a 
bill,  advocating  revision  of  the 
class-cut  policy  and  spansored  0 
the  committee  on  attendance  regf- 
I  lations,  was  passed  by  the  Student 
i  Legislature  but  rejected  by  the 
Faculty  Council. 

i      The  bill  provided  for  unlimited 
I  cut   for  juniofs  and  seniors,  with 
'  a  lo.ss  of  one  quality  point  per  cut 
I  for   unexcused   absences   two  days 
.  before  and  after  regular  holidays. 
'  Freshmen   and   sophomores,   under 
the  bill,  would  have  still  been  un- 
der the  present  rule  of  three  un- 
excused absences. 

'  The  Faculty  Council  rejected  the 
bill  on  grounds  that  the  use  of 
quality  point  deductions  for  ex- 
cessive absences  was  academically 
unsound. 


Birds  Gain  14-0  Win 
ToHand  Tar  Heels 
Third  Straight  Loss 

Carolina  Geh  To  One 
Bui  Birds  Stop  Threat 


Class  Ring  Salesman 
To  Be  Here  Thursday 


A  representative  of  the  Balfour 
Company,  which  handles  UNC 
class  ring  sales,  will  be  in  Y* 
Court  this  Thursday  from  9  a.m. 
to  4:30  p.m.  to  assist  the  Order  of 
Holy  Grail  in  selling  class  rings. 

This  will  be  the  last  sale  that 
will  enabe  the  rings  to  be  deliver 
ed  before  Christmas,  according  to 
ing  to  Bob  Hornik,  class  ring 
Bob  Hornik,  class  ring  chairman. 


for  it. 

The  members  of  the  committee 
who  will  attend  the  Aldermen 
meeting  are  Clark  Hinkley,  Dar- 
w;in  Bell,  Bill  Pruitt,  Ed  Hudgins, 
and  Wilburn  Davis,  chairman. 

Young  will  also  attend  the  meet- 
ing, as  a  representative  of  the 
student   government. 

A  member  of  the  Board  of  Al- 
derman, William  Alexander,  said 
that  'we  would  be  happy  to  have 
the  Commission  meet  with  us.  If 
they  come  up  with  any  new  ideas 
or  proposals,  we'll  be  glad  to  lis- 
t?n  to  them." 

The  Traffic  Commission  is  a  re- 
sult of  a  bill  passed  by  the  Stu- 
dent Legislature  at  its  last  meet- 
ing Sept.  27  and  vetoed  by  Young. 
The  bill,  presented  to  the  Legisla 
ture  by  Mike  Weinman,  if  estab- 
lished, would  have  set  up  a  stu- 
dent government  commission  to 
act  on  the  Columbia  St.  parking 
situation. 

Young  said  he  vetoed  th?  bill  | 
because  it  was  an  isolated  case. ' 
At  that  time  he  appointed  the , 
Commissiofl  aftd  proposed  that  \ 
they  meet  with  th?  Aldermen.        i 

The  two  streets,  Rosemary  and 
Columbia,  have  been  the  point  of 
much  discussion  since  the  parking 
bans  wer?  placed  on  them  by  the 
Board  uf  Aldermen.  ' 

The    no-parking-an^"t!mo    ban    in  | 
effect  on  Rosemary  St.  was  acted  ^ 
upon  this  summer,  while  the  twc- 
hour   parking    limit   on    Columba 
St.  was  just  rrcently  enacted. 

Fr2t?mitv  men  we-e  the  first  to 
nise  protests  against  the  park- 
ing regulations.  Students  of  the 
Tiu  E'isilon  Phi  and  Sigf^-^  .\lnha 
Eosihn  Fratern'tiei  —  the  t -v  o 
more  directly  affected  by  the  reg 
■j'/ations — ri'sed  t'lc  arsjiiment 
that  the  bans  v'e"e  leaving  th'^ 
students  **'n  a  hole"  and  '"crowd- 
ing fraternity  men." 

Alderman  Alexand-r  cxnressed 
the  point  that  th»  bans  were  not 
imposed  on  students  hv  th*^  Board 
for  any  roas'^ns  of  discrimination, 
but  were  actions  taken  as  a  re- 
sult of  a  one  y^ar  study  by  a 
S"pciali<t  in  traffic  managemert 
Th's  expert.  W.  F.  Babrock,  sub- 
mittpd  a  lengthy  report  to  the 
Boerd  June  19  after  a  year's  st'- 
dv  of  the  Town's  traffic  problems 
T!i°  plan  was  adopted  by  th- 
Pia'-d  and  its  suggestions  acte:' 
un^n. 

In  addition  to  Abxander,  other 
members  of  the  Board  attending 
the  meeting  Monday  night,  wil' 
be  Obie  Davis,  Dr.  Paul  Wager 
Cene  Strowd.  Kenneth  Putnam 
and  Hubert  Robertson. 


Chapel  Hill  Concert  Series  Will  Open  Here  On  Wednesday  With 
Miss  Eileen  Farrell;  Other  Top  Stars  To  Appear  At  Later  Dote 


WITOLD  MAYCUZYNSKI 

....  will  appear   later 


Eileen  Farrell,  sai#  to  possi-is 
one  of  the  •greate'/  voices  tliis 
country  has  ever  pioduced,"  will 
appear  in  a  concert  ,iere  Wi?dnes- 
day.  ^ 

She  will  perform  |at  8  p.m.  JBt 
.Memorial  Hall  undee-  sponsorslyp 
of  the  Chapel  Hill  C|)ncert  Serifcs. 
which  will  sponsor  th.ee  more  ap- 
pearances of  well  known  musiia! 
artists  this  year.  • 

.Membership  tickets  for  the  oopi- 
plete  series  can  be  obtained  at 
the  Information  Office  of  Graham 
Memorial  at  a  total  cost  of  S7.60 
for  reserved  membersh  ps,  $6.|0 
for  unreserved  memberships  afld 
$5  for  students  and  students"  wiv- 
es (unreserved  memberships). 
Tickets  can  also  be  obtained  at 
Kemp's   and    Danziger's.  , 

It  was  in  the  1950-51  season  that 


Mi.ss  Farrell,  to  quote  the  New 
York  Review  of  Permanent  Music, 
•came  into  her  own  as  a  thrill- 
ingly  great  dramatic  soprano."  In 
October  of  that  season  she  made 
her  New  York  debut  before  a  ca- 
pacity  house   in   Carnegie   Hall. 

Although  her  talents  'were  al- 
ready well  known  to  metropolitan 
critics  and  audiences  through  her 
many  local  engagements  with  or- 
chestras and  on  radio,  her  recital 
proved  one  of  the  overw'helming 
triumphs." 
OTHER  CONCERTS  -         "  s* 

The  three  other  series  concerts 
this  .school  year  will  include  the 
Chicago  Opera  Ballet  with  a  com- 
pany of  4.0,  including  soloists, 
corps  de  ballet,  complete  sceneVy, 

(Coutinncd   (m   Page  3) 


By  BILL  KING 
0«i4y  T#r  Ht«l  Sports  Writer      '  ""' 

COl.rMBIA,  S.  C— South  Carolines  C.ame<«Kks  uji- 
leased  a  torrid  .second-half  nutninj^  attack  feamrin'.^  .sopho- 
more Halfback  King  Dixon  to  send  the  Carolina  Tar  Heels 
down  to  their  third  straisfht  defeat,  14-0,  before  some  20.000 
rain-soaked  fan.s  at  Carolina  Stav-Iium  here  yesterday. 

The  hard  running  Dixon,  along  with  quarterback  Mackie 
Pricketi  and  Dixon's  running  mate  .\lex  Hawkins,  complete- 
ly pulverized  the  Carolina  defense*  - — 
in  the  final  two  quarters.  |  from  "  his  own  28  to  the  South 
The  Gamecocks  used  a  sustain.  Carolina  42.  Successive  carries  by 
ed  drive  of  94  yards  to  score  their    Don  Lear    and    Curtis    Hathaway 


EILEEN    FARRELL 

.  .  .  here    Wednesday 


GM  Barbers  To  Charge 
$1  Now  For  Haircuts 

It'll  cost  a  buck  to  get  a  haircul 
m  Graham  Memorial's  barbechop 
from  now  on. 

The  slud.nl  union's  officials  vi  s- 
vesterday  said  they  had  raised 
prices  from  85  cents  to  $1,  effecive 
immediately. 

The  reason,  according  to  .Assis- 
tant Director  Dan  Turner,  is  a  gen- 
eral price  rise  in  barber  shops 
downtown.  Chapel  Hill  barbers  this 
week  uniformly  agreed  to  raise 
their  prices  from  $1  to  $1.25. 

Graham  Memorial's  two  barbers, 
Pittman  Cul^reth  and  Tom  Hearn- 
don,  have  been  cutting  hair  at  the 
rate  of  200  heads  per  week,  said 
Turnor. 

Turner    now   hopes   to   add    an- 
other barber  to  its  shop   "if  this  i 
business  continues." 

The  student  union  can  afford  to 
charge  less  per  haircut  than  most 
■"stoblishments  because  the  build 
•ng  pays  all  upk  -op  costs.  Turner 
aid.  This,  plus  ihe  fact  that  the 
University  is  cl<issified  as  a  "pri- 
'ate"  organization  by  barbers'  lic- 
'^nse  men,  allows  the  student  union 
to  charge  less. 


cye-caiching  uNC  M^ioreftes  Help  To  Beaufify  The  Gridiron 


first    touchdown    with    13:45    left 
in  the  fourth  quarter. 

Dixon  bore  the  brunt  of  the  car- 
rying and  put  the  Gamecocks 
ahead,  6-0,  when  he  slashed  off 
left,  tackle  from  the  Tar  Heel 
two.  Hawkins  made  it  7.0,  with 
the  extra  point.  j 

South  Carolina  tallied  again 
with  0:57  remaining  in  the  game  | 
when  Priekett  dived  over  from  j 
the  1  to  put  the  Gamecocks  out ! 
front,  13-0.  Hawkins  added  his  j 
second  straight  extra  point  and  j 
the  Gamecocks  had  their  winning! 
margin  of  14-0.  Carolina  moved  to  j 
the  Gamecock's  21-yard  Hne  be- ' 
fore  the  horn  sounded  epdijag  the  I 
game.  j 

Until  Dixon  and  maies  made ) 
theri  big  move  in  the  third  and 
fourth  quarter,  the  two  tlubs  had. 
battled  x>n  almost'  *v«n  grounds. 
In  .th«^  first  ^sM  both  (eam»  were 
in  enemy  territor\'  several  times. 
Each  timQ.  though,  the  two  de- 
fenses were  able  to  haft  the  drives. 

The  Tar  Heel's'  deepest  thrust 
or  the  game  came  just  minutes 
foil  ving  the  end  of  the  fi.st 
quarter   when  ■  Ed    SuUoh    carriad 

Billiards  Kir^g 
Will  Be  Here 
Starting  Mon. 

An  internationally- known  bi  1- 
iards  «.vpert,  Charlie  Peterson, 
wiil  be  in  Graham  Meraoriai'i 
I'aoi  Room  tomorrow  to  begin  a 
.veek  of  stud<?nt  instruction  and 
billiard  instructions. 

For  a   number  of  years,   Peter- 
-.on    has    given    Carolina   student.s 
;)ersona!    instructions    along    v.iih 
eye-opening"    exhibitions. 

GM   olticials  say  plans  for  the 
coming    week's    prcgrajti    indicate , 
this    to    be    the    "most    extensive  • 
billiards   week   Carolina   has  ever  | 
seen."  Details     as     to     the  exact 
hours  he  will  give  instructions  and* 
exhibitions     will     be     announced 
later,  GM  officials  say. 

Sporvsored  by  the  Graham  Mem- 
oral  Activities  Board.  Peterson's 
trademark  is  "Show-me-a-shot- 
I-can't-make."  He  will  appear  here 
t:morrow  through  Saturday  in  his 
25th  annual  tour  of  colkges  and 
universities.  \ 


moved  the  Tar  Heels  to  the  Game- 
cock's 30  for  a   first  down. 

Lear  then  went  over  left  taekl« 
to  the  South  Carolina  19  for  an- 
other first  down.  Sutton  got  two 
to  the  17  and  Hathaway  went 
around  left  end  down  to  the  nine- 
yard  line. 

Hathaway  got  two  more  araund 
left  end,  and  Lear  carried  to  the 
five.  Larry  McMullen  tried  the 
left  side  again  and  got  to  th« 
three.  With  four  down  and  three 
to  go  for  the  score  Hathaway  was 
smothered  at  the  Gamecock's  one- 
yard  line  to  end  Ihe  threat. 

Just   thirty   seconds   before   the 

«nd  of  the  first  half,  the  Tar  Heels 

had   the   ball  at  the   South   Caro- 

Una  20,  as  the  result  of  a  15-yard 

I  peijalty  against     the     Gamecocks. 

1  Hathaway  dashed  arouivd  left  end 

j  to  the  twelve  with  0:12  remaining. 

I  The   Tar   K«el    quarterback    th«n 

j  p'tched      out      to      3fcMuIlen    who 

flipped  a  short  pass  to  Sutton  at 

the   use   four  and   a   first   down. 

But  the  Tar  Heels  were  not  able 

to    run    another    play    before    the 

half  end^d. 

Sju:h  Carolina's  94-yard  mar^b 
to  their  first  score  was  hlghlightad 
by  a  29-yard  pass  plaj  from  Hawk- 
ins to  Dixon  that  carried  to  the 
Tar  Heel's  42.  Soiit|i  Carolina  was 
|>ena;ized  back  to"  the  47  and 
i^rickett  and  Hawkins  moved  the 
oall  to  tho  43.  Hawkins  then  went 
around  left  end  to  the  33  and  Di.v- 
on  ran  the  oppcs  te  end  to  tlie 
XT.  Fullback  Don  Johr^son  and 
Hawkins  moved  the  ball  into  scor- 
ing position  with  successive  runs 
that  put  the  Gamecocks  on  the 
Carolina  7.  Di.xon  carried  around 
around  rig'it  end  to  the  five,  then 
off  right  tackle  to  the  3.  Dixon 
tried  the  right  end  again  and  was 
smeared  by  J'm  Vamum  at  the 
Ca  olina  1.  From  there  Dixon 
went  ov:r  for  the  score. 
In  the  third  pericii,  Carolina 
(See  FOOTBALL,  Page  4) 


STATISTICS 

NC 

SC 

First  Downs                    14 

14 

Rushing  Y«rd«9e        150 

233 

Passing    Yardage          76 

«1 

(*ass«s                          6-16 

3-4 

PMses  Intercaptad  by  0 

i 

PonH                         3-40.5 

4-26.3 

Furaklas                            t 

0 

Yards  Panalitad           10 

65 

The  UNC  Marching  Band,  in  addition  to  having  tneir  uniforms 
♦  -  »'*H  t"  its  attrartiveness,  also  has  four  eye-catching  majorettes 
that  beautify  the  gridiron.  Their  high-stepping  antics  lend  color  and 


enjoyment  to  the  spirit  of  the  crcwd.  From  left  to  right,  are:  Jo  Car- 
penter, chief,  of  Thomasville;  Mary  Anne  Nelson  of  Mebane;  Jane 
Brock  of  Atlanta,  Ga.,  and  Carolyn  Meredith  of   Raleigh. 


Di  Wilt  Deixite  Bill  Condeiririii^ 

Demociidls  Fdi^GtirWpafgft^ciys  Majorettes  Add  Beauty  To  UNC  Marching  Band 


'Representative  Government' 
Will  Be  Discussed  By  Phi    >. 


A  resolution  condemning  the 
Democrats  for  their  "scurrilous 
Conduct  in  the  campaign"  will 
be  debated  by  the  Dialectic  Sanate 
Tuesday- rn^hr.  ' 

The  resolution  will  be  intro- 
duced by  David  Mundy,  who  said 
he    promised   to    "skin   the   Demo- 

IN  THE  INFIRMARY 

Those  in  the  Infirmary  yester- 
day Included: 

Miss  Elizabeth  Parrish  McCord, 
M^ss  Janet  Elixaboth  Thomas, 
Marvin  Douglas  Harless,  Paul  Coe 
Clark,  Charles  Forroll  Cox,  Char- 
les Harrington,  John  B.  Owons, 
Larry. Kent  Jackson,  Alvin  Ward 
Smith,  Miss  Stophani*  Sparger, 
Jdhn  Jackson;^ 


j  crats    with,  hell-fjf(£»     and     brim-, 
stone." 

\  Tho  resQiution  itself  declares 
I  that  the  "Democrat  Party, is  con- 
ducting one  of  the  vilest,  dirtiest, 
'  most  innuendo-filled,  and  devious 
I  campaigns  in  modern  political  his- 
tory." 
'  Members  of  the  Young  Demo- 
.  crats  and  Young 'Renublicans  on 
rcamnus  have  especially  been  in- 
j  vfied  to  attend  and  participate  in 
i  the  debate,  according  to  Mundy, 
j  Di  parlimentarian.  He  said,  how- 
j  ever,  that  speeches  would  be  limit- 
i  ed  to  five  minutes. 
I  The  debate  will  tnke  pla^-e  at  8 
j  n  m.  on  the  th'rd  floor  of  New 
I  West.  Di  officials  said  an  execu- 
■  tive  st?ssion  of  the  senate  would 
I  be  held  immediately  following  the 
I  debate.  •  ;-•••.••■       ■  •     ■  ■ 

—r       h'-^A-^f'f f*** •^•- 


By    BOS  MYERS 

If  the  University  band  is  the  lar- 
gest since  the  "Choo  Choo"  Justice 
era  and  sparkles  in  tho  fii-st  s-t 
of  ntw  uniforms  in  26  years,  what 
more  <?culd  add  luster  to  this  ag- 
gregation? 

Th.'  an.-,wer  is  four  pretty  major- 
ettes v,ho  closely  resemble  Santa  s 
reindeer  in  their  white  costumes 
and  at  the  height  of  exhaustive 
routines. 

Raves  and  praise  showered  this 
year's  edition  of  the  band  on  its 
initial  outing  before  37,000  Kenan 
Stadium  giid  enthusiasts  two  werks 
ago.  if  mention  »f  $6,000  appropri- 
ated for  hand  improvements  fails 
to  justify  the^e  laurels,  the  three 
native  Tar  Heel  lovelies  and  the 


Southern  beauty  queen  who  lead  ii 
will. 

These  would  be  Jo  Carpcntrr, 
chief  majorette,  of  Thomasville; 
Mary  Anni*  Nelson,  of  Mebane, 
both  returnees;  and  newcomers, 
Carolyn  Meredith,  of  Raleigh,  and 
Ian?  Brock,  of  Atlanta,  the  reign- 
ing   'Miss  Atlanta  of  1956.  " 

Figures  and  looks  arm',  the  on 
ly  requirements  of  Band  Director 
herbcrf  Fred,  however.  Experience 
is  an  essential.  And  previous  mem- 
bership on  high  .school  bands  has 
guaranteed  this  element. 

Miss  Carpenter,  20  -  year  old 
brown-haired  daughter  of  Mr.  and 
Mrs.  James  Carpenter,  is  a  195.5 
graduate  of  Thomasville  High 
School,  and  was  a  majorette  there. 
She's  not  only  one-fourth  of  the 
eye     appeal,     but    is     continually 


teaching  new  routine.^  f.i  the  oth- 
ers. 

Ani  ;hcr  sonirr.  an  English  ma 
jo.,  is  20-year  old  Miss  Nelson, 
brun?t;e  daughter  of  Mr.  and  Mrs. 
John  Nelson.  She  strutted  at  .Me- 
bane High  four  years  and  thinks 
the  band  is  'really  shaping  up  this 
yea:-."  literally  and  figuratively. 

Miss  Meredith,  freshman  nurs?, 
performed  a  year  with  the  large 
Wee-lham-Broughton  High  Band  at 
Raleigh.  She's  18  and  the  daughter 
of  Mr.  and  Mrs.  R.  K.  Meredith. 

Miss  Brock,  only  blonde  member 
of  the  foursome  and  the  only  out- 
of-slater,  suppresses  illusions  that 
ail  Gr-orgia  peaches  come  in  bush- 
els, and  that  blonde  bombshells 
lack  ability.  Jane,  studying  dentai 
hygiene,  high-stepped  with  Atlan- 
ta's Bath  High   School   band  lour 


yea'-s.  and  attended  Georgia  Stale 
Colls:  e  two  years.  The  daughter  of 
Mrs.  Frances  Brock,  the  20-ycar  old 
shapely  miss  won  the  beauty  title 
over  17  other  candidates..  Lasl  ; 
summer  she  toured  Far  Fast  mili- 
tary instaU:tions  with  the  "Miss 
Atlanta  Show,'"  a  group  of  amateur 
entertainers.  .  • 

Enthusiastic  freshmen  swelled  ' 
the  size  of  the  band  to  90  members  | 
this  year.  Why  the  enthusiasm?  . 
S."m«»  .«ay  that  the  outcome  of  the  ! 
first  three  Tar  Heel  football  games  j 
is  no  indication  of  what  may  come  ; 
before  their  tenure  here  expires.    I 

And  if  Jim  Talum  and  his  foot- 
ball forces  wind  up  in  the  Orange  : 
Bowl  within  the  next   four  years. 


The  Philanthropic  Literary  So- 
ci:ty  will  debate  a  bill  Tuesday  sU 
8  p.m.  on  the  top  floor  of  New 
East  urging  "true  representative 
government." 

The  bill  provides  that  "the  el- 
ected should  i'?preSent  the  opin- 
ion of  the  electors  rather  than 
some  private  preconceived  opin- 
ion on  natr.'^nal,  state,  local  and 
campus  levels." 

Jim  Monleith,  chairman  of  the 
Ways  and  Means  Committee,  will 
introduce  and  defend  the  bill.  He 
will  make  his  defense  on  the 
grounds  that  true  democracy  can 
exist  only  when  the  representa- 
tives speak  the  will  of  the  people. 

James  Duval,  critic,  will  att'tck 
the  bill,  reportedly  on  the  grounds 


so  will  the  band  .  .  .  and  the  fresft-  1  that  it  is  impossible  to  know  the 
men  .  .  .  and  at  least  one  of  the  ;  will  of  all  the  electors  at  all  times, 
easy-to-look  at  majorettes.  1     "The  Phi  may  have  a  censMre  oa 


the  Di  for  the  absurd  action  of 
last  werfc  (i.?.,  the  conferring  by 
the  Di.of  an  honorary  membership 
in  the  phi  on  Elvis  Presley)"  Mon- 
teth  said.     

GM'S  SLATE 

The  following  activities  are 
scheduled  tor  Graham  Memorial 
today; 

YMCA  reception,  4:30-6  p.m.. 
Dental  Dames  reception.  7:30- 
t:30  p.m..  Main  Loungo;  Frionds 
meeting,  10-11  a.m.,  Grail;  Pras- 
bytorianV  9:30-11  a.m.,  Roland 
Parlcer  Lounges  1  and  2;  Discus- 
sion  group  on  philosophy,  t-10 
p.m.,  Roland  Parker  Lounge  3; 
SP  Advisory  Eoard,  9-11:30  p.m.. 
Woodhouso  Conference  Room; 
YM<A  and  YWCA,  3-6  p.m.,  Ren- 
doivotis  Room;  Presbyterians, 
9:  dlbr]\:QO  »m^  A.P.O.  Roonv 


/ 


i    y 


PAGI  TWO   A"^  ■ 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEtC 


SUNDAY,  OCTOBER  7,  195« 


SUNDAY 


Week  In  Review:  Another  Game  Lost 
And  Presidential  Campaigns  Carry  On 

The  State:    Adenauer  Seeks  European  Umty; 
A 'Power  fi!  ^°"^'^^*®^^''^^®  Verbal  Blows 


Voting  And  Rush  Parties 
Marked  Week  On  Campus 

I  he  SuuUmu  Pavrv  held  its  sccoiul  incttin'^  of  the  ye;ir 
on  Moiulav  e\cnin<>.  (.haisnuyi  of  the  j;ioup,  Tom  I.ambcth. 
spoke  on  the  state  of  the  party  and  a  new  bill  imroc|uccd 
b\  John  Br(K)ks  the,  week  before.    . 

The  bill  asks  that  ballot  boxes  be  plated  in  each|dorini- 
torv  durin«  an  election. 

f  he  part?  also  filled  two  enipfy  seats  in  the  stiident  legis- 
lature, (.arv  (ireer:  freslunaii  from  Spiiuiale.  represents 
Donn  Meji>»  II.  and  Fverett  James,  freshaian  from  Rober- 
sonville.  Dorm  Mens  \'.  The  remaining  seat.  Donn  Men  s 
HI.  was  not  filled  at  the  meeting,  but  held  over  for  next 
time. 

The  Film  (.onnnittec  of  the  (.MAIi  announced  the  [)ro- 
grain  of  both  foreign  and  domestic  lilms  which  Avill  be 
shown  ijj  Carroll  Hall  each  Thursday'  at  8  p.m. 

The  first  of  the  series,  which  includes  "Alexander  Ne\- 
sky."  "The  Belles  of  St.  Trinians."  M.  "  FlameiKo."  'I.ife- 
boat."  "Incorrigible"  and  "Arsenic  and  Old  Fate."  is  "  Fo- 
bacco  Road."  Selected  short  subjects  will  be  shown  with 
the  feature  films. 

(iraham  Metnorird  began  its  2r,th  vear  last  week.  During 
its  time  on  cantpus.  (rM  has  served  as  a  bit  of  "home  away 
from  home"  fc^r  soldiers  passing  through  C'.hajX-l  Flill  dui- 
ing  World  War  II.  and  now  it  houses  a  barbershoi).  student 
pilblications  offices,  a  modern  dark  room,  pingpong  and 
billiard  tables  as  well  as  a  lounge  and  the  Rendezvous 
Room." 

Student  leaders  met  with  represetuatives  from  South 
Buildings  administration  Friday  to  air  campus  problems 
comerning  the  parking  situiiion.  the  need  for  a  group  to 
coordinate  campus  activities,  allocation  of  men's  dormitory 
vending  mac  hine  profits  and  < t)m])ulsc)ry  phvsical  education 
for  veterans. 

A  total  ol  four  scholarships  was  handed  oiu  to  uni\ersiiv. 
men  this  week.  Three  freshmen  men  won  the  National 
Merit  Sc  holarships.  which  are  given  to  those  who  have  dem- 
onstrated the  abilitx  and  promise  to  benefit  from  a  ccllege 
education.  Fhose  receiving  the  Merit  awards  were:  Mm- 
phv  B.  Conrv  of  Rockwell.  William  Harper  Jr.  of  Lenoir, 
and  Otis  W  .  J- Mies  of  Zirconia.  .     ; 

Leonard  Rlr.ne  Jr.  was  selected  as  this  vear's  recipient 
of  the  Lnion  (  iibide  and  (larbon  C'x>rporation  Scholarship 
at  r.NC.  "Fhe  (.astonia  senior  was  active  throughout  his 
years  at  the  Iniversity  in  sports  as  well  as  academitalJv. 
The  scholarship  carries  the  costs  of  total  tuition  plus  $2oo 
for  the  i9'>r»-r,7  academic  year. 

Flections  were  held  on  Tuesday  for  men's  dormitory  of- 
ficers for  the  insuing  school  year.  Those  positions  filled 
were  secretar\.  tre.ssuvcr.  IIX".  representative.  3'nd  intramur- 
al manager  \u  "^'iiilv.  F.vcrei'.  ^Vinsion.  Mangcnn,  Old  Fast, 
Coimcji.  f  id  West.  Steele,  Whitehead.  Battle-Vance-Petti- 
-  cw.  (-Mham.  and  Joyner.  Mangum  and  Whitehead  donn- 
itorir>  elected  a  vice-president  in  addition  to  those  meii- 
licmed.  and  Old  Fast  elected  a  social  chairman  to  compli- 
ment the  regidar  officers. 

IDC:  presideiH.  .Sonnv  Hallford.  described  the  balloting  as 
the  •  sn>(M)thesi  run"  election  in  some  time. 

In  the  debate  tcrrner  last  week: 

1  he  Di  |jassed  a  bill  commending  \'ice-President  Rich- 
ard .M.  Nixon.  .Nixcju  was  eulogized  by  "President  Pro- 
Tem  "  Pat  Adams,  who  called  the  veep.  "an  example  of  Lhe 
.American  dream  in  politics."  In  opposition  to  this,  Sien. 
Frvin  .\verv  stated  tliat  Nixon  was  "too  voung,  too  imma- 
ture and  t<x)  iiKonipeteni.  ■  1  he  gentleman  was  redeemed 
when  Sen.  Nancy  Rothchild  said  that  he  was  "one  of  few 
men  with  the  courage  iosav.  to  believe,  to  do. 

\  bill  "to  restore  a  free  market  for  agrieidture"  was  pass- 
ed bv  a  lo--,  uiajoritv  at  the  meeting  of  the  Phi.  Rep.  Jim 
Montieth  intnjduted  the  bill,  stating  thai  'price  su])fH)rts 
were  getting  the  Lnited  States  into  deeper  debt  and  that 
large  fanns  were  more  efficient  than  many  small  ones." 
Othej  members  of  the  society  declared  that  farmers  toidd 
not  su.r\i\e  withoiu  supports, 

Don  Jatolis  ol  High  Point  delivered  his  qualifving  speech 
I  Spe?k  for  Democracy"  during,  the  couise  of  the  meeting. 

Fraternity  rushing  tontiiniwi  throughout  the  A\eek  and 
ended  on  Fridav  with  shake-uj:%  night.  .\  strict  silence  uill 
l)e  obser\ed  all  weekend,  contiiuiing  initil  .Monday  at  noon, 
lhe  men  may  pick  up  their  bids  in  Cerrard  Hall  between 
the  lioius  of  cj  a.m.  and   i  p.m.  on  Monday. 

Sorority  bids  went  out  to  i'}(>  Carolina  coeds  on  Wednes- 
day evening  between  7  and  8  p.m.  .According  to  the  Dean 
of  Womens  office.  Alpha  Delta  Pi  gained  20  pledges.  .Al- 
pha (.amma  Delta.  i7:  Chi  Omeg-a.  '2y.  Delia  Delta  Delia, 
kS;   Krppa  Delta  20.  and  Pi  Beta  Phi,  2H. 

Piesident  cif  the  student  bcxlv  Bob  Young  aimouiued 
mend>ers  of  the  newh-formed  student  government  Traffic 
Ccmnnittee.  which  consists  of  seven  men.  has  the  power  to 
suspend  studenis  from  school  (over  a  violation  of  traffic 
committee  ndes..  remove  the  privilege  of  keepinj^  a  car  on 
campus  for  upjx-rclassmen,  and  enforce  lilies  levied;  by  Cha- 
pel  Hill  officials.  .  c 


MooMhifie 

Last  w^ek  gresidertt  Eisenhow- 
er named  Duke  University  Pres- 
ident Hoi  lis  Ekiens  to  a  commit- 
ter of  distinguiahcd  educators 
and  other  leaderji.who  will  seek 
answers  to  the  national  prohjems 
in  higher  education. 

North  Carolina  had  the  most 
illicit  distillers  caugfiit  during 
the  month  of  August.  The  Intern- 
al Revenue  Service  seized  261 
stills. 

Governor  Hodges  sig^naled  the 
start  of  the  Democratic  campaign 
in  North  Carolina  by  predicting 
that  the  DemtKrats  will  give 
Stevenson  and  Kefauver  a  ma- 
jority of  a  quarter  of  a  million 
votes  in    November. 

In  .4sheville  Wednesday,  Gov- 
ernor Hodges  said  it  is  time  to 
do  something  albout'the  problem 
of  illegitimate  children,  especial- 
ly the  Negroes. 

He  said  some  Negroes  regard- 
ed the  welfare  funds  as  a  '"re- 
ward" for  having  an  illegitimate 
child.  Kcxlges  spoke  before  the 
Southeastern  Regional  Confer- 
ence of  the  American  Public 
Welfare    Association. 

It  was  a  week  of  violence.  On 
Tuesday  a  berserk  tenant  farmer 
killed  his  six  children  with  an 
ax  and  then  went  into  the  woods 
and  shot  himself. 


The  Suez  Canal  User'.s  .-^s.-^ocia- 
tion  wa.s  formally  inaugurated  in 
London  Monday.  It  was  declared 
to  have  come  officially  into  exis- 
tence by  Selwyn  Lloyd,  British 
Foreign  Secretary. 
.  He  presided  at  the  opening 
session  of  the  association's  or- 
ganizational conference  before 
he  left  for  the  Unit?d  States  to 
attend  the  United  Nations  Se- 
curity Council  debate  on  the 
Canal  is*sue  which  convened  Fri- 
day. 

Wednesday.  Soviet  Foreign 
Mini.<;ter  Dimitri  Shepilov  ar- 
rived at  United  .Nations  express- 
ing a  belief  that  the  United  Na- 
tions Security  Council  can  find 
a  ."reasonable  solution"  to  the 
Suez  controversy. 

In  Bonn,  Germany,  Chancellor 
Konrad  Adenauer  called  for  a 
vitalized  Western  European 
Union  with  broader  scopes  and 
stronger  authoritv  ''so  that 
Europe  still  remains  -of  some  im- 
portance to  the  world." 

Dr.  Adenauer's  central  idea 
was  that  individual  European 
nations  no  longer  could  go  it 
alone  in  a  world  dominated  by 
the  United  .Stat?s,  the  Soviet 
ITnion.  and  the  rising  powers  of 
Asia  and  the  Middle  East. 

Secretarv  of  State  John  Foster 
Dulles  said  Tuesday  that  the  na- 
tions of  Western  Europe  should 
become  a  third  great  power  in 
world  affairs.  He  called  it  un 
thinkable    that    they    .should    be 

INTERPRETING  THE  NEWS 


neutral   towards    Soviet   Commu- 
nisrn.^ 

Elsewhere   in   the   news   there 
seems  to   be   a   deadlock   in   the 
talks  of  President  Tito  of  Yugo- 
slavia   and    Soviet    Party    Chief 
Nikita  Khruschev. 

Informed  sourtes  say  that 
th?  Yalta  talks  have  been  cen- 
tered about  the  recent  Russian 
soft  pedaling;  01  the  deStaliniza- 
tion  campaign  in  the  Satellites. 
These  informants  say  that  Titas' 
campnisn  for  independence  cf 
the  satellite  coiintries'  Commu- 
nist Parties  from  the  Kremlin 
has  run  into  opposition  from 
Soviet  Party  Chief  Nikita 
Khnischev. 

Russia  has  accepted  the  B'd 
of  the  United  States  to  send  ob- 
servers to  th's  country  to  ''view 
at  first  hand"  the  American  Polit- 
ical campaign  and  election.  The 
State  Deoarfment  also  announced 
Wednesday  the  Soviets  agreed  to 
welcome  American  observers  to 
their  next   b  2  elcf^tion   in    19.i8. 

On  the  political  front  Presi- 
dent Eisenhower  in  Lexington, 
Kentucky  attacked  .Adlai  Steven- 
son, the  Demorratic  Party  a"d 
the  Tnihian  administration.  He 
charged  the  Democratic  Pirty  in 
Congress  had  hf^pn  solely  re- 
sponsible for  killing  Federal  aid 
to  school  construction  this  year. 
The  world  series  opened  Wed- 
nesday with  President  Eisenhow- 
er tossing  the  first  pitch  to 
Dodger  Catcher  Roy  Campanella. 


Ike  And  Adiai:  Two  Approaches 
To  The  Meaning  Of  Peace 


In 


James  Reston 

The    New    York    Times 


The  official  student  publication  of  the  Publications  Board  of  the 
University  of  North  Carolina,  where  it  is  published  daily  except  Mon- 
day and  examination  and  vacation  periods  and  summer  terms.  Entered 
as  second  class  matter  in  the  post  office  at  Chapel  Hill,  N.  C.  under 
the  act  of  March  8.  1870.  Subscription  rates-  Mailed,  $4  a  year,  $2.50 
per  semester;  delivered,  S6  a  year,  S3.50  a  semester. 


Editor     ._ 

/ 

FRED  POWLEDGE 

Managing  Editor 

CHARUE  JOHNSON 

News  Editor ... 

RAY  LINKER 

Business  Manager  

~- - 

m.h  BOB  PEET, 

THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL  WEEK  IN  REVIEW 

Editor       -  . CHARUE  SLOAN 

Staff  Writers-  .v.  i—i.  .-..-■■  GEXmG&-t^mGSX  axyd  INGRID  CLAY 


WASHINGTON  —  The  election 
debate  on  foreign  policy,  which 
President  Eisenhower  resumed 
last  week  in  Cleveland,  is  making 
little  progress  because  the  two 
Presidential  candidates  are  talk- 
ing about   different  things. 

President  Eisenhower  is  talking 
about  peace  and  security  as  if 
these  things  were  merely  the  ab- 
sence of  open  warfare.  On  this 
basis,  he  is  contending  that  he 
,  produced  "peace"  and  charging 
the  Democrats  with  "fooling  the 
people"  when  they  say  he  did  not. 
Adlai  E.  Stevenson,  in  contrast, 
is  talking  not  only  about  the  ab- 
sence of  m.ilitarv-  combat,  but  also 
about  the  wider  war  of  economic, 
politcal,  and  intellectual  subvers- 
ions that  the  Communists  are  now 
conducting  all  over  the  world. 

Mr.  Stevenson  is  charging  that 
we  are  losing  this  war.  He  is  a.s- 
sening  that  we  are  losing  it  part- 
ly because  of  the  Admini.stration's 
inept  tu'tndling  of  the  Commun- 
ists, the  allies  and  the  neutrals. 
And  he  is  arguing  that  Presi- 
dent Eisenhower's  Administration 
should  be  rejected  by  the  voters 
because  it  has  shown  little  capaci- 
ty for  precisely  this  new  and 
subtle  kind  of  bloodless  war  that 
is  certain  to  be  waged  between 
Washington  and  Moscow,  Wash- 
ington and  Peiping  for  at  least  the 
next  four  years. 
ADVANTAGE  TO  G.O.P. 

The  Republicans  have  had  the 
better  of  this  debate  so  far  be- 
cause they  are  dealing  with  events 
and  facts  that  took  place  in  the 
past  while  the  Democrats  are  deal- 
ing with  opinions  and  interpreta- 
tions of  the  world  situation  as  it 
is  now. 

It  is  a  fact  that  two  wars  were 
,  in  progress  when  General  Eisen- 
hower took  office  on  Jan.  20. 
1953:  one  in  Korea  and  another 
in  Indochina.  It  is  also  a  fact  that 
the  blood  -  letting  has  stopped. 
These  arc  the  most  effective  Re- 
publican arguments  of  this  cam- 
paign. 

The  *'war"  with  the  Communists, 
however,  continues.  Korea  and 
Indochina  have  been  divided  with 
the  Communists  as  the  price  for 
ending  the  fighting,  but  what  we 
have  is  an  armistice,  not  a 
"peace." 

The  Communists  still  arc  trying 
to  achieve  the  conquest  of  Korea 
by  other  means.  They  ?re  still 
working  night  and  day  to  take 
over  the  Indochina  peninsula. 
And  they  certainly  have  not  given 
up  their  objective  of  taking  over 


Taiwan  and  the  Penghu  Islands. 

Meanwhile,  they  have  made 
startling  gains  in  the  Middle  East. 
They  have  gained  a  political  ancf 
economic  foothold  in  Egypt.  They 
are  influencing,  if  not  directing, 
what  may  well  turn  out  to  be  the 
formation  of  a  vast  .4rab  confed- 
eration stretching  from  the  east- 
ern Mediterranean  to  the  Persian 
Gulf,  And  no  development  of  the 
last  decade  has  more  serious  im- 
plications for  the  security  of  the 
whole  Western  world. 

President  Eisenhower  has  done 
certain  things  in  the  field  of  for- 
eign affairs  that  probably  could 
not  have  been  done  by  any  other 
United  States  politician.  He  per- 
suaded the  right  wing  of  his  par- 
tj',  which  was  yelling  for  more 
aggressive  military  action  in  Ko- 
rea and  Indochina,  to  acquie.scc  in 
the  division  of  those  countries 
and  in  a  cease-fire. 

If  Mr.  Stevenson  had  tried  to 
u  ike  the  same  kind  of  agreement 
with  the  Communists,  the  chances 
are  that  the  right-wing  Republi- 
cans would  still  be  picketing  the 
White  House. 

For  this  reason,  the  President 
is  entitled  to  take  what  political 
credit  he  can  get  out  of  ending 
the  actual  fighting.  But  by  the 
samo  token,  the  Democrats  are 
entitled  to  argue  that  he  must 
also  take  responsibility  for  the 
policies  followed  by  his  Admin- 
istration during  the  Communist 
gains  in  Indochina  and  the  Mid- 
dle East. 

This  record  is  not  impressive. 
The  President  urged  the  British 
to  get  out  of  Suez.  He  first  back- 
ed King  Farouk  of  Egypt  as  the 
best  possible  symbol  of  unity 
there,  then  Colonel  Naguib,  then 
Colonel  Nasser. 

The  President  refused  to  be- 
lieve that  President  Nasser  was 
negotiating  an  arms  deal  with  the 
Communists  after  the  United 
States  refused  to  sell  him  the 
arms  he  tried  to  buy  here.  The 
Administration  operated  on  the 
assumption  that  Nasser  was  a 
loyal  nationalist  seeking  only  na- 
tional aims.  .\nd  at  the  famous 
meeting  with  Khruschev  and  Bul- 
ganin  in  Geneva  last  year,  the 
President  did  not  even  raise  the 
arms  question  with  the  Commu- 
nist leaders. 

RECORD  ON  EGYPT  ASSAILED 
The  record  on  the  handling  of 
the  high  .\swan  Dam  and  the 
Suez  Canal  crisis  is  also  being 
sharply  criticized  here,  not  alone 
by  "anguished  politicians."  as  the 
President  called  his  foreign  poVcy 
critics  today,  but  by  many  of  the 
most    distinguished    and    exper- 


ienced diplomats  stationed  in  tho 
Capital. 

It  is  highly  unlikely  that  an  in- 
telligent and  objective  debate 
will  come  out  of  Octobers  wrang- 
ling on  this  subject,  or  that  any 
argument  about  the  present  or 
•future  will  overcome  the  fact  that 
"Ike  ended  the  Korean  war."  But 
one   point   is  unmistahable: 

Tnere  has  never  been  a  time 
since  the  outbreak  of  the  Korean 
war  when  there  was  such  a 
marked  contrast  between  the  ap- 
prenension  of  detached  and  well- 
informed  experts  here  and  the 
general  complacency  in  the  coun- 
try about  the  present  trend  in 
world  affairs. 

There  is  no  genuine  issue  in  the 
election  about  Korea.  Neither  the 
President  nor  Mr.  Stevenson  is 
proposing  to  reopen  the  fighting. 
The  question  is  which  candidate 
and  which  party  is  more  likely 
to  deal  with  the  new  and  more 
intricate  kind  of  war  that  is  now 
being  waged  by  the  Communists 
for  the  same  ends. 

Who  has  a  policy,  a  plan  for 
going  on  from  here  to  turn  the- 
truce  into  a  real  peace?  The  an- 
swer to  that,  if  we  are  to  judge 
by  the  campaign  debate  so  far. 
is  that  nobodv  has. 


1     Tu 


CAROLINA  QUARTERLY  EDITOR  MARCELLINE  KRAFCHICK 

. . .  right  nov;  ^he's  busy        \     j 


GIRL  WITH  MANY  TITLES 


Quarterly  Editor  Keeps  Occupied 
With  Wide  Collection  Of  Activities 


George  Pfingst 


Miss  Marccilinc  Kratchick,  editor  of  the  Carolina 
Quarterly,  is  a  young  lady  of  many  titles. 

At  the  present  time  she  is  publicity  director  for 
the  Playmakcrs,  part-lime  hat  check  girl  at  a  local 
restaurant,  member  of  the  Publications  Board  and 
is  working  towards  receiving  her  Masters  Degree  by 
the  end  of  next  summer.  '' 

Miss  Krafchick  came  to  the  University  on  the  rec- 
omoiendation  of  Dr.  Hubert  Hcffner,  a  former  Play- 
maker,  who  was  lecturing  at  the  University  of  Bris- 
tol, England  at  the  time.  Miss  Krafchick  was  attend- 
ing Bristol  on  a  Fulbright  Scholarship. 

,  Through  this  scholarship  she  saw  a  great  deal 
of  Europe  and  found  herself  in  many  unusual  situ- 
ations, including  falling  into  a  canal  in  Venice  and 
finding  herself  the  only  .American  in  a  large  crowd 
of  Germans  visiting  tho  tomb  of  Germany's  unknown 
soldier  of  the  second  world  war. 

During  the  summer  of  1955  she  lived  with  an 
Italian  family  in  Venice  while  attending  the  Uni- 
versity there.  Her  trip  through  Europe  included 
such  places  as  Dublin,  London,  Paris.  .Munich,  Milan, 
Venice,  Rome  and  Athens. 

While  traveling  from  Greece  to  Italy,  she  recalls, 
she  took  passage  on  a  non-scheduled  steamer  and 
found  herself  the  only  woman  on  board. 

She  won  the  scholarship  after  her  graduation 
from  Beaver  College,  a  school  not  far  from  Phila- 
delphia, in  1954. 

On  her  return  to  Ainerica,  she  came  to  Chapel 
Hill  and  soon  -found  herself  active  in  several  fields. 
She    was    promotion    manager    of    the    Chapel    Hill 


Concert    Series,   and   she   appeared    in    a    production 
(  f  William  Saroyan's  play   "Hollo  Out  There"  pre- 
en ted  on  WUNC-TV. 

.\lways  occupied  with  one  or  more  activities, 
"Marcy  ■  Krafchick  was  editor  in  chief  of  Beaver's 
literary  magazine,  literary  editor  of  the  year  book, 
writer  and  director  of  the  annual  musical  comedy 
and  president  of  the  Beaver  chapter  of  Pi  Delta 
Epsilon,  the  national  honor  fraternity  in  Journalism. 

In  addition  to  this  s'ne  tutored  Latin  and  English 
grammar,  served  as  a  waitress  in  the  college  dining 
hall,  and  worked  on  Saturdays  as  secretary  to  the 
advertising  manager  of  the  Philadelphia  Evening 
Bulletin. 

Her  job  as  publicity  for  the  Carolina  Playmakers 
also  keeps  her  busy.  She  must  make  use  of  tele- 
vision, radio  and  newspapers  in  publicizing  the 
plays,  and  the  coordinating  and  arrangements  for 
these  ads  is  a  complicated  thing. 

In  the  Quarterly  office  she  keeps  busy  sorting 
out  the  many  manuscripts  submitted  daily  to  the 
magazine  and  deciding  which  ones  are  of  the  quality 
she  and  the  editorial  board  want.  She  also  is  con- 
cerned with  assigning  suitable  art  to  different  ar- 
tists and  building  up  the  magazine's  circulation. 

An  article  on  the  modern  Greek  theatre  which 
Miss  Krafchick  wrote  after  her  trip  to  Europe  is 
due  to  be  published  in  the  Educational  Theatre 
Journal  this  month. 

Summing  up  her  feelings  on  her  many  activities, 
she  says  simply,  "Sometimes  I  like  to  be  very  busy, 
sometimes  I  like  to  be  very  unbusy — but  right  now 
I'm  keeping  busy.  ' 


Pogo 


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QBAO  WHAT 

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Li'l  Abner 


By  Al  Capp 


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The  fall 
Tuesday 
opened  h^ 
ta  recitsl 
chord  1st. 
▼iolinist. 

These 
Other  Ti 
Music  Ha 
Dept.  of 
the  publ^ 

Oct.   1( 
Robert 
lenborn 
at  UNC 
iy,    but 
Hill  audij 
former  a] 
decade, 
cert  tour! 
Europe, 
known  f| 
able  to 
an  increj 
tions  frc 

univerI 

On  Oci 
Quartet 
violinist. 
make 
team  of  I 
has  devi 
instructiJ 
school  si 

Mrs. 
Political! 


A  pap| 
cd  in 
al  Nov( 
Prof  Wj 
opening! 
Club  or 

The 
7:30  p. 
the  .Mor 
ulty    mj 
dents  wl 
invited  I 

The 
monthly 
for  prej 
with  lar 
fields. 

Prof el 
of  the 
Literati 


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SUNDAY,  OCTO&'ER  7,  f95« 


THl  DAILY  "TAIt  HfetL 


PAOI  TMKfea 


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in. 

Production 

here"  pre- 

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■    .K'tivities, 

ol   Beaver's 

\ear  book. 

cai  comedy 

f   Pi    Delta 

Journalism. 

; 

ind  FZnghsh 

K'ee  dining 

- 

tary   to  the 

!a    Evening 

i' lay  makers 

ISC   of   tele- 

icizing    the 

■ements   for 

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iailv  to  the 

f  the  quality 

V 

also  is  con- 

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culation. 

,v 

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nal    Theatre 

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nv  activities. 

b 

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HAT 

frfj 

TueS.  Ev&}ing  Cqnc^ti    I  %!«s^5*""9«ng  Opera  Balkt,  Cliildren's  Choir,  Pianist  To  LfNC 

Serms  h  Now  dmtphte 


The  fall  semester  schedule  of  the 
Tuesday  Evening  Series,  which 
opened  here  last  week  with  a  sona- 
ta recital  by  Yella  Pressl,  harpsi- 
chordist, and  Mtscba  Mischakoff, 
violinist,  is  now  complete. 

These  concerts  are  given  every 
other  Tuesday  at  8  p.m.  in  Hill 
Music  Hall,  sponsored  by  the  UNC 
Dept.  of  Music.  They  are  open  to 
the  public  without  charge. 

Oct.  16  will  bring  a  recital  by 
Robert  Wallenborn,  pianist.  Wal- 
lenborn  is  a  visiting  music  lecturer 
at  UNC  for  this  fall  semester  on- 
ly, but  is  well-known  to  Chapel 
Hill  audiences  as  being  a  guest  per- 
former almost  yearly.  For  the  past 
decad':',  he  has  made  yearly  con- 
cert fours,  particularly  in  northern 
Europe.  The  pianist,  internationally 
known  for  his  European  tours,  is 
able  to  play  at  a  moment's  notice 
an  incredible  number  of  composi- 
tions from  all  periods. 

UNIVERSITY  QUARTET 

On  Oct.  30,  the  University  String 
Quartet  will  .>lay.  Edgar  Alden. 
violinist,  and  Dorothy  Alden,  viola, 
make  up  the  husband-and-wife 
team  of  the  quartet.  Mrs.  Alden 
has  developed  a  program  of  string 
instruction  in  the  Chapel  Hill 
school  system. 

Mrs  Jean  Heard,  wife  of  USC 
Political   Science    Prof.   Alexander 


Heard,  divides  her  time  betwe«ti 
being  housewife  and  musician.  MLss 
Mary  Gray  Clarke  is  an  instructor 
in  cello  and  firist  cellist  in  the 
LT*fC  Syinphony  Orchestra.  She  has 
appeaired  as  soloist  on  various  oc- 
casions in  the  five  years  she  -has 
been  in  Chapel  Hill. 

Miss  Lilian  "Pibernik,  pianist, 
will  give  a  recital  on  Nov.  13.  She 
is  a  graduate  student  from  Long 
Island, 'N.  Y.,  in  her  third  year  in 
the  Dept.  of  Music.  She  is  complet- 
ing work  on  her  Master  of  Arts 
degree  in  musicology. 

On  Nov.  27  the  University  Sym- 
phony Orchestra  is  scheduled. 
Prof.  Earl  Sloeum  has  conducted 
the  town-and-gown  orchestra  for 
over  20  years.  Its  members  are 
made  up  of  students,  faculty  and 
townspeople.  The  orchestra  normal- 
ly numbers  between  60  and  80  in- 
strumentalists. 

Dr.  Wilton  Mason  has  assumed 
dirlction  this  fall  of  the  annual 
Christmas  concert  to  be  given  Dec. 
18  by  the  University  Chorus.  Ap- 
proximately 50  vocalists  have  been 
selected  so  far  from  this  singing 
group. 

Dr.  Mason's  piano  recital,  to  be 
given  Jan.  15.  has  been  a  regular 
feature  for  the  Dept.  of  Music  each 
year,  except  last  year  when  he  was 
on  a  Ford  Foundation  leave  in  It- 
aly. 


(t6ntirhiecl  from  Page  1 ) 
costumee  and  ordiestra  on  Jan.  22. 

They  will  be  followed  on  Feb. 
24  by  the  Obernkirchen  Children's 
Choir.  The  singing  of  the  30  girls 
and  six  boys  is  "evocative  of 
Grimm's  Fairy  Tales  and  the  fan- 
tasies of  Haas  Christian  Ander- 
son." 

Witold  MaycuzjTiski.  pianist  and 
the  most  celebrated  protege  of 
Paderwski,  will  play  for  the  series 
on  March  20.  He'  is  known  as  one 
of  tpday's  most  gifted  virtuosos 


When  Miss  Parrell  appears  h^ 
Wednesday,  local  patrons  will 
hear  what  critics  call  "one  of  Am- 
erica's warmest  concert  personal- 
ities." 

Critics  praised  her  astonishing 
total  of  61  sol^  performances  in 
5  separate  engagements  wit!,  the 
New  York  Philharmonic  Sym- 
phony in  1950-51. 

This  is  more  performances  and 
engagements  in  a  single  season 
than  any  other  artist  has  had  in 
the    113    of   this    orchestra    That 


same  season  saw  her  perform  solo 
engagements  with  11  other  ma- 
jor symphonies,  including  two 
with  thfe  Philadelphia  Orchestra, 
•f  Her  appearance  as  soloist  in  the 
Beethoven  Ninth  Symphony  with 
the  NBC  Symphony  under  the  ba- 
ton of  Arturo  Toscanini  was  high- 
ly praised  by  music  critics.  „ 

Pittsburgh  newspapers  have 
called  Miss.  Farrell  "a  singer  of 
the  most  amazing  range  of  moodiS, 
styles  and  schools." 

Other  newspapers  in  major  cit- 


ies have  said  of  MKs'Tafrell:  "A 
superb  voice  and  a  first-class  vo- 
calist in  the  grand  manner,"  "One 
of  the  greatest  dramatic  soprancs 
of  our  time."  "Magnificent  voiee,'" 
and  "T^e  voice  is  one  of  the  great 
ones." 

Miss  Farrell's  concert  seasons 
have  been  crowded  with  engage- 
ments— in  recitals  across  the  con- 
tinent, as  soloist  with  leading  or- 
chestras, at  summer  festivals,  on 
"The  Telephone  Hour"  and  other 
radio   ami   television  prcfgrams. 


V?.^r: 


Paper  WfW  fie  Presented  Tuesday 
At  Phtbgicd  Club  First  Meet 


A  paper  on  "Australia  as  ReveaP  I 
ed  in  Some  Historical  and  Region- 
al Novels"  will  be  presented  by 
Prof.  Werner  P.  Friederich  at  the 
opening  meeting  of  the  Philological 
( lub  on  Tuesday. 

The  meeting  will  be  held  at 
7:30  p.m.  in  the  faculty  lounge  of 
the  Morehead  Planetarium.  All  fac- 
ulty members  and  graduate  stu 
dents  who  are  interested  have  been 
invited  to  attend. 

The  Philological  Club  meets 
monthly  during  the  academic  year 
tor  presentation  of  papers  dealing 
with  languages  and  literature  in  all 
fields. 

Professor    Friederich.    chairman 
of  the  Curriculum  of  Comparative  ' 
Literature  at  UNC.  has  recently  re- 1 


turned  from  a  visiting  Fulbright 
professorship  to  eight  Australian 
and  Tasmanian  universities. 

Professor  of  German  and  com- 
parative literature  at  UNC,  Dr. 
Friederich  has  in  recent  years  giv- 
en lectures  on  comparative  litera- 
ture in  Switzerland,  France,  Spain 
and  Italy. 

He  is  the  founder  of  the  Com- 
parative Literature  Section  in  tht 
Modern  Language  Association  of 
America,  and  through  two  publi- 
cations founded  by  hJm,  the  journ- 
al. •"Comparative  Literature."  and 
the  "Yearbook  of  Comparative  and 
General  Literature."  he  is  able  to 
keep  close  contact  with  all  the 
American  scholars  devoted  to  the 
study  of  international  trends  and 
influences  in  literature. 


Van  Heusen  asks: 
WHICH  MAJOR  IS  SAGER? 


Here's  how  students  in  dif- 
ferent majors  describe  Van 
Heusen : 

Biology  Major:   Van  Heusen 
w  ill  survive,  because  it  fits. 
Psychology    Major:     Van 
Heusen  is  well-adjusted  to  me. 
Physics  Major:  E  =  VH*. 
Economics  Major:  Nobody 
can  coiTipete  with  Van  Heusen. 
English  Major:  Oh  that  this 
too,  too  solid  flesh  would 
always  wear  Van  Heusen. 
History  Major:  Van   Heusen 
is  great  for  dates. 
Archeology  Major:   Dig   that 
Van  Heusen!  Makes  you  lick 
your  Cheops. 
Yes,  friend,  from  N.Y.U.  to 

*Elegance=Van  Heusen. 


the  College  of  the  Pacific, 
there's  complete  agreement 
that  Van  Heu^n  has  a  know- 
ing Way  with  men's  wear.  In 
shirts,  pajamas,  sport  shirts, 
shorts,  ties  and  handkerchiefs, 
Van  Heusen  advances  your 
style  with  casual,  comfortable 
good  looks.  Look  for  Van 
Heusen.  In  fact,  demand  Van 
Heusien.  And,  mind  you,  htiy'n. 
At  better  stores  everywhere, 
or  write  to  Phillips-Jones 
Corp.,  417  Fifth  Avenue,  New 
York  16,  New  York.  Makers 
of  Van  Heusen  Shirts  •  Sport 
Shirts  •  Ties  •  Pajamas 
Handkerchiefs  •  Underwear 
Swimwear  •  Sweaters. 


Van  Heusen  ProfliKts 


I 


ti 


OBERNKIRCHEN  CHILDREN'S  CHOW 

.  .  .  bring-mg  30  gtris  and  6  boys' 


CHICAGO  OPERA  BALLET 

. .  toiil  perform  Merpy  Wido^o 


Covering  The  Campus 


DAILY  TAR  HEEL 

The  Daily  Tar  Heel  will  hold  a 
general  staff  meeting  in  the  news- 
room Tuesday  at  4  p.m. 

ST-UDENT  INSUWANCE 

Oct.  15  is  the  deadline  for  UNC 
students  to  enroll  in  the  Student 
Insurance  Plan,  provided  this  year 
by  the  Pilot  Life  Insxtfance  Com- 
pany. Application  blanks  may  be 
obtained  from  the  Student  Govern- 
ment .office  in  Graham  Memorial, 
at  'the  'Y  -and  in  GM's  Information 
Office. 

JAZZ  HOUR 

Graham  Memorial  will  continue 
its- jazz  program  tomorrow  night  in 
the  Main  Lounge.  Miss  Liuda  Mann, 
GM  director,  said -requests  for  the 
jdzz  hour  will  be  taken  in  the  In- 
formaton  Office  of  GM.  This  Spec- 
ial program  will  be  held  every 
Monday  from  7  to  9  p.m. 

YACK  CONTRACTS 

All  organizations  desiring  space 
in  the  1957  Yackety  Yack  must 
sign  contracts  in  the  Yack  Office 
in  the  Basement  of  Graham  Memor- 
ial b}'  next  Wednesday,  according 
to  Editor  Tommy  Johnson. 


WUNC 

Today's  schedule  for  WLTNC,  the 
University's  FM  radio  station, 
91.5  megacycles  : 

7:00  —  Great  Church  Music 

7:30  —  Let  There  Be  Light 

7:45  —  Organ  Hour 

8:00  —  Organ  Room 
10:00  ^  News  at  Ten 
10:15  —  Evening  Master  work 
11:80  —  Sign  Off 

New  Bulletin  issued 
Here  fn  Hunranities 

"The  Industrial  South  Challenges 
The  Hutnanities"  is  the  theme  of  a 
new  bulletin  issued  here  last  week 
by  the  Southern  Humanities  Con- 
ference, headed  by  Dr.  Sturgis  E. 
Leavitt  of  the  UNC  Romance 
Languages  Dept. 

Four  papers  presented  at  the 
ninth  annual  meeting  of  the  confer- 
ence, held  in  Atlanta  last  spring, 
are  included  in  the  publication. 
They  cover  such  topics  as  "Admin- 
istrators Look  at  the  Humanities," 
"Are  the  Humanities  Relevant?", 
and  "Can  We  Recruit,  Train,  and 
Fully  Use  Great  Teachers  in  the 
Humanities?" 


>^MaaM«WHHMMa«»*Mu«M*Mtia«iM       -fV.-i«r.-- ' 


vt 


Congratulations 

Actives  &  Pledges  —  UNC  Sororities 

YOU  ARE  TO  BE  CONGRATULATED  ON  SELECTION  OF  PLEDGE  S  AND  SORORITIES,  AND  FOR  THE  WARM  AND  ALL-OUT  WEL- 
COME EXTENDED.  WE  HAVE  REASON  TO  KNOW  HOW  HARD  YOU  GIRLS  WORKED  AND  WE  CONSIDER  IT  A  PRIVILEGE  TO 
COMMEND  AND  CONGRATULATE  YOU. 


CHI  OMEGA 

J.\NE  BRADFORD 
MARY  LOUISE  BIZZELL 
CATHERINE  BROWN 
MARGARET  BRUNSON 
CAROL  CAMPBELL 
ROBERTA  CHAPIN 
KATHRINE  COE 
MARY  LEWIS  CRAIG 
MARTHA  DERR 
DARYL  FARRINGTON 
KATHRINE  ANN  HANNAN 
ELIZABETH  HIGHTOWER 
SARAH  HUDSON 
ALICE  JANE  JOHNSON 
HANNAH  BOONE  KIRBY 
MARIANNA  MILLER 
MARIA  M.  MARTOCIA 
PRKCILLA  NORMAN 
NELLA  PURRINGTON 
ELEANOR  ANN  RUFFIN 
MARGARET  SANDERS 
MARY  RUTH  STARLING 
EUZABETH  THOMPSON 
RUTH  W  ATKINS 
JANE  WARD  WT:STBR00K 


^■-iji 


ALPHA  DELTA  PI 

MOLLY  ADAMS 
BARBARA  HOPE  BRO'VST^ 
EMORY  BURKHARDT  ^ 

MARY  JANE  FISHER 
KAREN  B.  HANSEN 
MARY  ANN  HOFLER 
ANN  EIJZABETH  HOLT 
MARY  WALDO  HOUSE 
BETT\'  CAROLYN  HUFFi\L\N 
PAT  MESSER 
CLAUDIA  MILHAM 
PATRICIA  M.  MILLER 
MARTHA  OSBORNE 
EUZABETH  NICHOLSON 
JILL  ODONNELL 
MARY  LEWIS  ROU'NTREE 
NANCY  ROYSTER 
MARGARET  BRADFORD  SHER- 

ROD 
ANNE  STALUNGS 
MARY  SUSAN  WHITELEY 


DELTA  DELTA  DELTA 


j» 


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;-  it;^      ■*.'■- 


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"•.,'» 

'"'  '  '"^                           ■  • 

..           EUZABETH  PACE  BARNES 

•"^ 

.  ■                          » 

MARTHA  ANN  BUTLER 

:'•■{.  -^ ■            "    ■;     . 

DEBORAH  CONNER              , ,        . 

..  * 

BELLE  COREY                       '       ' 

• 

-• 

JLT.IA  ANN  CRATER          x 

;     1  KAPPA  DELTA 

MARTHA  VIRGINL\  DAWSON 
MARIAN  DICKENS 

■ 

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PATRICIA  ANN  DHXON 

FR.\NCES  N.  ALLEN 

•',-''■■                            , 

BARBARA  DOAR 

EUZABETH  GORE  BARNES 

.  .'■'•.  •'■■•' 

GENNY  LOU  GARROU 

■  .      ■  -',     - 

NORMA  JOAN  CUPP 

■:-'A-      '■         ■         ' 

»-          FLORENCE  FEARRINGTON 

I?1LIZABETH'LL0YD  DOUGHERTY 

MARTHA  FOWLER 

••'■  "■'-  -."  .    ' 

ALICE  ELLER 

■•■■''^^. 

RUTH  STARR  LUKENS 

'     ■*'• 

BARBARA  KAY  HONEY 

E\^  LEAH  McCLATt^HEY           .     - 

r.         ■,•:•'     . 

BARBARA  ANN  JACKSON 

'•»,  •■■     »   • 

EUZABETH  MacKAY                       ■   .V 

V      ^.  • 

MARY  ELIZABETH  KILLLVN 

.  <  .,     .. .,           .. 

SUSAN  LEE  MAYHUE 

f     ;.'^'^' 

CHARLOTTE  IrUELLA  LEDFORD 

•■?*''         •                  .  .   v" 

ELAINE  LOUISE  MELD AHL 

i  tf:^ 

BETSY  LYON 

■'.,>■■                         ^ 

NANCY  MACYS  MILAN                      ^ 

-.  •       v^ 

EDITH  MacKINNON 

.-  -\^-'..               ,    :r 

INA  GEE  RroLEY 

•  •  #• ' 

BARBARA  JEAN  MOORE 

,-   ■  •- » 

l.            LOUISE  BARNWELL  ROBERTSON 

JANE  PATTEN 

•  ^v  "-     -  ^, 

NANCY  JO  RUSH 

JOSEPHINE  PAYNE 

>  .      U.i-    , 

MARY  ELLEN  SAifPLE 

'. 

JUNE  Y.  POTTER 

.<• :  ^' 

^    ,           ROBERTA  HEAM  SIMPSON 

BETTY  RICHARDS 

,-.\..^    ■  -   .     '-■- 

PEGGY  B'i'RD  SWARINGEN 

SALLY  9IMPSON 

'    ':     ■'        •  .  "  ' 

VIRGINIA  WALSER 

ELEANOR  B.  STEPHENS 

•  -*^-'i-  •-   ■•. 

r          ELEANOR  WILLIAMSON 

BETTY  REPTE  WEBSTER 

■f 

MARTHA  WTLLIFORD 

,             ..^ 

CONNIE  WHTTAKER 

> 

CAROI^YN  H.  WISE 

,•  PI  BETA  RHI       ^  ' 

MARY  BETH  ACKERSON  "T 

BELLIE  ROSE  BRTTT  ' 

NANCY  JEAN  CARPENTER 
BETTY  SUE  CLARK  ^ 

KITTY  COIXR  j."" 

NANCY  DAVIS 

C.4KOL  DENNIS  S 

SUSAN  MAJiY  DONAU)  i 

SUSIE  FAGEN       " 
EUZABETH  FENTVICK 
MARY  ARNOLD  GARVIN 
PAT  GREGORY 
JACQUELINE  HAITHCOCK 
ROBERTA  ASHBY  HASTINGS 
MARGARET  HEAD 
BETTIE  MELTON  KELL 
ANNE  (NANCY)  LLEWELL\'N 
BARBARA  MADISON 
DORIS  PETER  .  ' 

SUSAN  SAUNDERS 
JANE  C.  SAWYER         ' 
CYNTHIA  JANE  SEGRAVES 
SARAH  JANE  SHAW 
METJLIE  WILLIAMS  SPRLTLL 
SARAH  ANN  VAN  W^EYK 
SUSAN  GREGORY  WARBUTITON 
MILDRED  HOPE  WHTTOIURST 
PATRICK  DAVIS  WILSON 


-V.;, 


ALPHA  GAMMA  DELTA 

SUSANNE  ATCHISON 

MARY  CAROLINE  BJ-ACKWEL- 

DER 
PATRICL\  R.  CARTER 
INGRH)  CLAY 
ANN  INMAN 
PHILUS  KRAFFT 
ELLA  FTIANCES  McKNIGHT 
JENNIE  MARGARET  MEADOR 
RUTH  NBISLER  '^^ 

PERLA  ANN  REVELLE  ^ 

DEBORAH  HL'NT  SINK  ;  ' 

KATHERINE  SMITH 
EAHLYSOMERS  :    .  -.     ' 

ANDREA  STALVBY 
MARY  ELIZABETH  STR.\UGHN 
FREDRICE  IXKJISE  TRLT-L 
KATHIE  WEBSTER 


WE,  TOO,  TRY  HARD  TO  MERIT  YOUR  APPROVAL  AND  EXTEND  TO  YOU  AN  INVITATION  TO  MAXE  OUR  SJpMf  OUR  HEAD- 
jaiUARTEkS  AND  A  STOPPING  OFF  AND  MEETING  PLACE  WHE  N  DOWNTOWN.  -*"^  ^  *  '  ^  ^r    '     '     ' 


Campus  Specialists  in  Women's  Apparel 


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PACE  POUR 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


SUNDAY,  0CT02Ef?  7,  1954 


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Yanks  Whip  Bums 
For  First  Victory 

NEW  YORK.  i.'P)— Enos  Slaugh-  [  right   center     and     Hank     Bauer 
tor.    40-year-old    veteran    of    the'  made  a  fine  catch.  Robinson  scor- 
baseball    wars,   slammed    a   three- 1  ing   easily   after   tagging   up. 
run  hom«r  in  the  sixth  inning  to- 1      The  Yankees  got  it  back  quidc- 
day   to   provide  a  5-3  victory  for    ly  in  their  half  when  Billy  Martin 


UNCBooters  To  Meet  Lynchburg 

Season's  Opener  Set| 
Here  Tomorrow  At  3 


the  New  York  Yankees  in  the  third 
game  of  the  World  Series  today 
and  put  the  Bombers  back  into 
contention  after  they  had  dropped 
the  first  two  games  to  the  Brook- 
l>Ti  Dodgers. 


drove  his  second  homer  of  the 
Series  into  the  lower  seats  in  left. 
Brooklyn  again  dented  Ford  for 
a  single  tally  in  the  top  of  the 
sixth  to  go  ahead,  2-1,  as  Pee  Wee 
Reese  ripped  a  triple  past  Mickey 


Intramural  Tag 
Football  Action 
Starts  Monday 


Intramural  tag  football  play  will 


Coach  Marvin  Allen's  soccer 
team,  primed  and  ready  for  an  all- 
out  assault     ou     the     conference 


begin  tomorrow  on  the  intramurai  ^h^n^Pio^ship.  opens  its  1956  sea- 

son    tomorrow    afternoon    against 


Whitey  Ford,  who  lasted  three  Mantle  in  ^ont  of  the  scoreboard, 
innings  as  Brooklyn  won  the  first  Duke  Snider,  who  failed  to  get  a 
game  last  Wednesday,  pitched  {  hit  and  fanned  three  times,  then 
steady  ball  ,  this  time,  aillowing  j  lifted  a  deep  fly  to  Mantle,  who 
eight  hits.  The  loser  was  Roger  j  didn't  eVen  bother  ta  throw  home 
Craig.  j  as  Reese  loped  across  the  plate. 

The  fourth  game  will  be  played  [  Slaughter  then  provided  the  old 
tomorrow     at     the   Stadium,   and    Yankee    punch    that    had   brought 


Yankee  Manager  Casey  Stengel 
said  Tom  Sturdivant  would  pitch 
for  the  Yankees  in  an  attempt  to 
pull  the  teams  even.  Manager  Walt 
Alston  said  Sal  Maglie,  winner 
of  the  opener.  Carl  Ersklne,  or 
perhaps  Clem  Labine  who  finished 
today's  contest,  would  hu*l  for 
Brooklyn. 

The  crowd  of  73,977  saw  a  ding- 
dong  pitchers'  duel  for  five  inn- 
ings between  Ford  and  Craig,  who 
started  for  Brooklyn  but  left  for  a 
pinch  hitter  after  Slaughter  slam- 
med his  thfee-run  blast  in  the 
sixth. 

A  single  run  by  Brooklyn  open- 
ed the  scoring  in  the  top  of  the 
second  inning.  Jackie  Robinson 
walked,  and  moved  to  second  on 
Gil  Hodges"  single,  then  to  third 
on  Carl  Furillo's  fly  Ball.  Roy 
Campanella  drove  a  long  shot  to 
the  front  of  the  Yankee  bullpen  in 


them  16  world  championships  as 
he  parked  one  of  Craig's  slants 
into  the  paying  customers  in  the 
last  of  the  inning  with  two  men 
on. 


Manager  Casey  Stengel  of  the 
New  York  Yankees  was  asked  be- 
fore today's  World  Series  game 
with  the  Brooklyn  Dodgers  if  he 
thought  the  friendly  confines  of 
j  the  Yankee  Stadium  would  help 
I  his  club . . .  'Our  place  is  larger," 
'  conceded  the  professor . . .  "but  the 
Brooklyn  place  was  just  as  big 
for  us  as  it  was  for  the  Dodgers 
in  the  first  two  games  .  .  .  no, 
I'd  say  what  we  need  in  a  hurry 
is  a  well-pitched  game". .  .Whitey 
Ford  must  have  been  eavesdrop- 
ping ...  he  did  everything  but 
stand  th?  Brooks  on  their  heads 
in   his   5-3   conquest. 


STAUUNO 


JEFF  CHANDLER  DOROTHY  MALONE 

CO-SUtUNO 

WARD  BOND  KEITH  ANDES  LEE  MARVIN  SYDNEY  CHAPUN 

«k  FLOnrD  SIMMONS   MICHAEL ANSARA  bwcctcs  it  GEORGE   MARSHALL 


'^'  NOW 

PLAYING 


DAILY    CROSSWORD 


ACROSS 

1.  Played  on 

links 
5.  Mimics 
9.  Melody 

10.  Occupy 
completely 

11.  Biblical 
name 

( poss. ) 

12.  Adduce 
14.  Tough 

16.  Perform 

17.  Old  times 
( archaic ) 

18.  Frozen 
water 

19.  Strange 

20.  French  coin 

21.  Norwegian 
snow  shoe 
(var.) 

22.  Commence 

25.  Capital 
(Egypt) 

26.  Persfk 

27.  Full  of 
metallic  rock 

28.  Young  fish 

29.  Epoch 

30.  Vigor 

33.  Music  note 

34.  Withdraw 
36.  Gaze 

fixedly 

38.  Mends,  as 
a  bone 

39.  Metal 

40.  Nobleman 

41.  Mold 

42.  Italian 
actress 

DOU'N 

1.  Presiding 
offlcer't 


2.  Mountain 
nymph 

3.  Fluff 

4.  Style 

5.  Ablaze 

6.  Like  a 
conifer 

7.  Sprite 

8.  Arctic 
driver 

11.  Malt 

beverage 
13.  A  roundup 
15.  Shield 

19.  Symbolism 
(Am.  Ind.) 

20.  Transgress 

21.  Speak 


22.  Whacks 
<  slang ) 

23.  Ec- 


cen- 
tric 

24.  Merry 

25.  Frac 
tured 

27.  Open- 
ings 
(anat.) 

29.  Oc- 
cur- 
rence 

30.  Couples 

31.  Aim  (Scot.) 

32.  FooUike 
organ 


nana  hwhij 

oa     nacD  aLic 

aaaa  aesaaya 

tjtaa  aau 

aaaaaH"  ay  an 
uan  HUH  ar}\ 
Qncsa  ziaaaiiii, 

aao  Qcaa 


Smtmrimj'*  Aaawar 

34.  God  of  love 
(Gr.) 

35.  Two- toed 
sloth 

27.  Constel- 
lation 


Held. 

The  schedule: 

4;00— Field  1— Sigma  Chi  vs. 
DKE:  Field  2— AK  Psi  vs.  Delta 
Sigma;  Field  3  —  TEP  vs.  ATO; 
Field  4 — Sigma  Nu  vs.  SAH;  Field 
5 — Phi  Delt  vs.  Beta. 

5:00— Field  1— Zeta  Psi  vs.  Chi 
Phi;  FiteM  2— Phi  Gam  vs.  Pi  Kap- 
pa Sig;  Field  3 — SPE  vs.  Lambda 
Chi;  Field  4— SAE  vs.  Pi  KA;  Field 
5 — Pi  Lambda  vs.  Kappa  Psi. 

Intramural  fall  tennis  play  will 
begin  Tuesday.  Players  have  been 
asked  by  the  intramural  office  to 
reserve  their  own  courts.  They 
may  reserve  courts  by  calling  9- 
1426.  Reservation  cards  may  be 
picked  up  at  the  basket  room,  L- 
16,  Woollen  Gym. 

Each  contestant  or  doubles 
team  has  been  asked  to  bring  three 
new  balls  to  each  first  match. 
Elach  piayer,  to  determine  his 
first  match,  may  do  so  by  con- 
sulting the  bulletin  board  at  the 
Varsity  tennis  courts  or  by  calling 
9-424. 


Frosh  Swimming 

All  beys  inter*st«d  in  p«rt!ci- 
pating  en  the  freshman  swim- 
ming squad  should  meet  with 
freshman  coach  Buddy  Baarck 
next  Tuesday.  The  meeting  will 
be  held  at  4  o'clock  in  room  303 
of  Wool  Ion  Gym. 

Baarck  stated  that  experience 
is  not  necessary.  Many  of  Caro- 
lina's varsity  swimmers  had  no 
experience  prior  to  their  fresh- 
man swimming.  The  squad  will 
also  need  some  fancy  divers. 

Coach  Baarck  reminded  that 
none  will  be  cut  for  the   squad. 


Lynchburg  College  in  a  game  slat- 
ed to  get  under  way  at  ,3  p.m.  on 
Fetzer  Field. 

(>oach  Allen  has  moulded  what 
is  expected  to  be  one  of  the  strong- 
est aggregation  of  Carolina  hoot- 
ers in  history  around  eight  letter- 
men  and  a  host  of  promising  soph- 
omores. A  talented  junior  college 
transfer,  Ted  Yohanna  from  Iran, 
has  been  added  to  give  the  squad 
extra  strength.  Yohanna  scored 
five  goals  against  the  freshmen 
in  a  practice  game  last  week. 

Lynchburg,  afthough  a  small 
school,  fields  a  strong  soccer  team 
every  year.  Soccer  is  the  fall  .sport 
at  the  litttle  Virginia  institution 
rather  than  football.  Carolina  and 
Lynchburg  met  one  common  op- 
ponent last  season,  Roanoke.  The 
Tar  Heels  dropped  their  game 
with  the  Virginians,  while  Lynch- 
burg beat  them. 

Coach  Allen  has  announced  his 
starting  lineup  as  follows:  Chuck 
Hartman,  goalie;  Harvey  Jones  and 
Mike  Galifinakis,  fullbacks;  Bill 
Blair,  Bob  Borden  and  Dave 
Corkey,  halfbacks;  John  Foster 
and  John  McCormick,  wings;  Cole- 
man Barks,  inside  right;  Ted  Yo- 
hanna, iriside  left;  and  captain 
Grover  Brown,  forward.  j 

The   first  conference  game   for 


Vols  Dump  Duke,  33-20 
On  Single-Wing  Power 


GROVER   BROWN 

. . .  UNC  soccer  captmn 

the  Tar  Heel  hooters  will  be  with 
State,  here,  Oct.  24.  Allen, -who 
has  said  that  this  team  'is  better 
than  last  years,  hopes  to  improve 
on  the  three  wins,  one  loss  and 
two  ties  conference  record  of  last 
sea.son.  He  especially  hopes  to 
hand  the  powerful  Maryland  Terps 
their  first  loss  in  conference  com- 
petition in  the  history  of  the  ACC. 


Tabbed  As  Texans 


Tar  Heels  Arrived  In 
Ten-Gallon  Tatum  Hats 


By  BILL  KING 

The  Tar  Heels  were  scheduled 
to  Itave  the  Raleigh-Durham  Air- 
port at  8  o'clock  Friday  night,  but 
due  to  weather  condition.s,  were 
delayed  30  minutes.  The  team  ar- 
rived in  Columbia  at  9:30  p.m. 
....  The  trip  down  was  a  bit 
"bumpy"  but  othenviis  unevent- 
ful.. .  Sports  Publicist  Jake  Wade 
and  Athletic  Director  Chuck 
Erickson  left  Raleigh  -  Durham 
Thursday  afternoon  but  were 
stopped  in  Charlott?  by  plana 
trouble  and  had  to  rent  a  car  to 
make  the  rest  of  the  trip .... 

The    University   of   South   Caro- 
lina Stadium  is  located  adjacent  to  j 
the   State   Fair  Grounds.   This   al- 
leviates   th?    traffic    problem    at 

S.  C.  to  a  great  extent There  , 

was  a  gjod  deal  of  apprehensi.nl 
around   Columbia   Saturday   morn- 
ing about  the  weather.   Rain   fell 


fairly    hard    all    morning    but    by 
game  time  the  sun  was  out .... 

Prioi  to  the  start  of  the  game, 
the  early  arrivals  at  Carolina  Sta- 
dium got  a  play-by-play  of  the 
World    Series. 


By  REESE  HART 

DURHAM,  N.  C.  Oct.  6  (/P)— The 
knife-like  running  of  tailbacks 
Johnny  Majors  and  Al  Carter 
slashed  Dukes'  defenses  today  as 
ninth-ranked  Tennessee  mauled 
the  Blue  Devils,  33-20,  in  the 
highest  scoring  game  irt  the  21- 
year  series  between  the  schools. 
Majors,  a  162  -  pound  fireball 
j  from  Huntland,  Tenn.,  scored  two 
I  touchdowns  in  the  opening  period 
on  brilliant  runs  of  18  and  28 
yards  and  rolled  105  yards  in  the 
first  half  in  seven  plans  to  lead 
Tennesseels  sharp  offense.  He 
didn't   play   in   the   second   half. 

A  rain-soaked  crowd  of  22.000 
saw  Duke  come  back  in  the  second 
quarter  to  score  two  touchdowns, 
but  the  Blue  Devils  were  no  match 
against  the  Vols  who  looVed  like 
the   Tennessee   teams  of   old. 

Carter,  a  junior  from  Sarasota. 
Fla.,  scored  in  the  third  period 
from  the  2,  and  completed  a  60- 
yard  pass  play  to  wingback  Bill 
.Anderson  for  another  third  quar- 
ter score.  The  other  Tennessee 
touchdown  came  in  the  second 
period  when  fullback  Tommy  Bron- 
son  of  Gainesville,  Fla.,  dived  ov- 
er from  the  1,  climaxing  a  71- 
yard  drive. 

Duke's    offense    got    movinf-    in 
the  second   period   and   rolled   62- 
yards  with  quarterback  Bob  Brod- 
head  scoring  from  the  1-ioot  line. 
Broadhegd    filled    in   for   the   first 
string  quarterback   Sonny  .lurgen- 
son,   sidelined    with     an     injured 
knee. 
j      Duke  scored  ag.iin  in  the  second 
I  quarter  on  a  7-yard  run  by  sopho- 
more     halfback      Bab    Honeycutt. 
I  The  Blue  Devils'  other  touchdown 
I  came  in  the  fourth  quarter  when 
.sophomore       quarterback       Pryor 
Millner    went    over    from    the    2. 
Tennessee  12      7     14      0—33 

Duke  0     13       0       7—20 ' 

Tennessee   Scoring — Touchdowns: 
I  Majors  2  (18,  run;  28,  run).  Bron-  : 
■son    (1,  plunge).   Carter   (2.   run).' 
Anderson  (16,  pass  from  Carrter).  ; 
Conversions:    Smithers,   Cantrell.     j 


Tigers  Top 
N.  C.  State 
By  13-7 

RALEIGH   —   Clemson    College 

last  night  spotted  N.  C.  State's 
Wolfpack  a  7-0  lead  early  in  the 
fourth  quarter  and  then  roared 
back  to  remain  undefeated  by  win- 
ning,   13-7. 

State  took  the  lead  on  the  first 
play  of  the  final  period.  Clemson 
halfback  Joel  Wells  then  starred 
in  a  51-yard  touchdown  march 
which  tied  the  score. 

The  winning  score  came  as  a  re- 
sult of  a  State  fumWe  deep  in 
their  own  territory.  Clemson  re- 
covered afld  went  on  to  put  the 
game  on  ice  with  less  than  six 
minutes   left. 


Read 
The  New 
POGO 
Boo/c  Yef? 
Come  SeC: 

THE  INTIMATE 
BOOKSHOP 

20S    E.    Franklin    St. 
Open    Till    10    P.M. 


Football 

{C(mi.inued  Irom  Page  1) 

center  Ronnie  Koes  suffered  a 
back  injury  and  was  taken  off  the 
field  on  a  stretcher.  The  extent  of 
Koes'  injury  was  not  known  but 
it  was  learned  that  he  would 
spend  the  night  in  a  Columbia 
hospital.  Koes  was  filling  in  for 
George  Stavnitski  who  was  injur- 
ed in  the  Oklahoma  game  last 
week. 

Fullback  Don  Lear  was  the  anly 
other  Tar  Heel  who  was  injured 
to  any  extent.  Lear  went  out  in 
the  second  quarter  with  a  leg  in- 
jufy  and  did  hot  return.  The  big 
Tar  Heel  fullback  ^is  not  thought 
to  be  seriously  hurt. 

Both  clubs  looked  good  on  de- 
fense today,  but  when  the  Game- 
cocks pushed  over  their  initial 
tally,  their  defense  seemed  to 
sharpen  up  and  the  Tar  Heels 
were  no  longer  able  to  move  the 
ball  effectively. 

The  leading  ground  gainer  for 
the  Tar  Heels  was  Ed  Sutton  whe 
picked  up  57  yards  on  six  carries 
for  an  average  of  9.5. 


WILBU2  JUST  WOKE  UP  TO 
THB  FACT  THAT  HE?  IN  CLASS! 


KEEP  ALERT  FOR  A 
BETTER  POiNT  AVERAGE! 

Don't  let  that  "drowsy  feel- 
ing" cramp  your  style  in  class 
...  or  when  you're  "hitting 
the  books".  "Take  a  NoDoz 
Awakener!  In  a  few  minutes, 
you'll  be  your  normal  best. . . 
wide  awake  .  .  .  alert!  Your 
doctor  will  tell  you — NoDoz 
Awakeners  are  safe  as  coffee. 
Keep  a  pack  handy! 
15  TABLETS,  35c 


35  tablets 
in  liandy  tin 

69c 


mpoz 


/' 


20tti  Cwturyf  ox 
prts«nt> 


M/IRILYN 
MOHROE 

BUS  STOP. 


coiMbrKuin 


OnbmaSooP£ 


Virginia  Tops 
Deacons,  7-6 

CHARLOTTESVILLE,  Va.,  Oct. 
6  [JP) — An  aroused  Virginia  *foot- 
ball  team,  performing  for  12,000 
homecoming  faithful,  finally  reg- 
istered an  Atlantic  Coach  Confer- 
ence football  victory  today  b;' 
whipping  Wake  Fore.st's  Deacons 
7-6. 

Just  when  it  appeared  the  Cava-  i 
liers    might    have    to   settle    tor   a  I 
ti?.  Center  Jim  Keyser  jumped  up  | 
in  front  of  quarterback  Pete  Bar- 1 
ham's    extra    point    attempt    after 
the   Wake   Forest   touchdown   and 
deflected  the  ball  low  of  the  cross- 
bar. 

Virginia  rolled  49  yards  with 
tim?  running  out  in  the  first  half 
for  its  lone  touchdown.  With  quar- 
terback Nelson  Yarbrough's  eight- 
yard  pass  to  end  Bob  Gunderman 
the  key  play  on  the  drive,  quarter- 
back Whitey  Clark  sneaked  into 
the  end  zone  from  the  two  yard 
marker. 


CLASSIFIEDS 


DON 
MURRAY 

■«  MTTHM  eCOMCU 
HmFKLO 

ufntKeiuuiT 


NOW  PLAYING 
ADULTS  .65c 


PAPER-BACKED  BOOKS  —  Good 

used  novels,  detective  yarns  and 

non-fiction   at  3  for  25c  in  the 

stand    by    our    front    door.   The 

-Intimate   Bookshop. 


LOST:  DARK  BROWN  WALLET 
Monday  night  somewhere  on 
north  campus  or  in  towui  Con- 
tained American  and  foreign 
currency,  and  some  pei-sonal 
cards.  Contact  Ronald  C.  Yuen. 
303   Connor  Dorm. 

FOR  RENT:  SMALL  HOUSE.  UN- 
furnished,  electric  stove,  hot  wat- 
er heater,  and  refrigerator. 
Available  Oct.  15  or  Nov.  t  Rent 
$50.  Telephone  624i,  Mrs.  Bcrry- 

,   hill.  i 


NEW 
rUP-TOf  BOX 

Pirin  to  keep 

Cicarattaa  from 

cruafainK. 

^o  tobacco  io 

^our  pocket. 


This  Marlboro  is  a  lot  of  cigarette.  The  easy-drawing  f  Iter  feels 
right  in  your  mouth.  It  works  but  doesn't  get  in  the  way. 
You  get  the  man-size  flavor  of  honest  tobacco.  The  Flip-Top  Box  keepa 
every  cigarette  in  good  shape  and  you  don't  pay  extra  for  it. 


%-  «' 


^***TS"^ 


pt»^tmii 


^,1<I.C«  Llbfary 
Serials  Deptu 
Chapel  Hill,  N.  C. 
8-31-49 


'  WEATHER 

f^lr  Md  a  littU  warmer. 


Complete  (Jf)  Wire  Service 


CHAPEL  HILL,  NORTH  CAROLINA,  TUESDAY,  OCTOBER  9,  1956 


Offices  in  Graham  Memorkd 


BEST  PROFS 

Save  tham  for  tha  frosh.  See  p* 


FOUR   PAGES  THIS    iSSUB 


12  Men  Tapped 
Into  IDC  Order 


Twelve  men  were  tapped  early 
t*i3  morning  into  the  Order  of 
the  Interdormitory  Council. 

The  order,  which  recognizes  men 
who  have  made  sizable  "contri- 
butJons"  to  all  phases  of  dormi- 
tory life,  tapped  eight  students 
and  conferred  honorary  member- 
ship on  five  University  officials. 
it  Was  the  organization's  first  tap- 
ping. 


Student  Group 
To  Help  Select 
New  Chancellor 


A  student  committee  has  been 
appointed  to  help  select  a  Chan- 
cellor to  succeed  retiring  Chan- 
cellor Robert   House. 

Heading  this  committee  as  chair- 
man is  Sonny  E\'ans,  with  mem- 
bers Martha  Barber  and  Tom 
Lambeth.  The  committee  will 
jffveet  Wednesday  and  Thursday 
from  3  to  5  p.m.  in  Graham  Me- 
morial. The  group  has  as  its  pur- 
pose to  air  student  views  on  the 
chancellorship. 

Evans  suggests  that  if  a  stu- 
dent wishes  to  present  a  name  for 
consideration,  either  from  th^  fa?- 
ulty  or  the  outside,  he  should  in- 
terview his  choice  in  regards  to 
background,  past  history  and  ac- 
tual views  toward  the  job  of 
Chancellor. 

"In  order  for  this  report  to  re- 
flect true  student  opinion,  we 
urge    every    interested    student    to 


The  eight  students  tapped  into 
the  order  are: 

Edward  Ulysses  Hallford  Jr.. 
Rocky  Mount;  Wesley  Neil  Bass, 
Spring  Hope;  William  Edward 
H-ouser.  Cherryville;  Charlec  Jer- 
ome Dunn  Jr.,  Alioskie;  Robert 
William  Carter,  Selma;  Thomas 
Noble  Walters,  Tarboro;  Robert 
Terry  Young,  Asheville.  and  Ivey 
Gray  Rogers,  Oxford. 

Honorary  members  taken  into 
the  society  are: 

Chancellor  Robert  B.  H^use; 
James  C.  Wallace,  former  director 
of  Graham  Memorial:  James  E. 
Wadsworth.  University  housing  of- 
ficer, and  Raymond  Jefferies  Jr.. 
assistant  to  dean  of  student  af- 
fairs. 

Thf  order  was  founded  this  fall 
to  afford  a  vehicle  of  recognition 
to  men.  students  and  University 
officials,  who  have  made  "out- 
standing" contributions  to  dormi- 
torv  life  at  the  University. 

Tappecs.  according  to  declara- 
t'ons  presented  them  at  early 
mornins  ceremonies,  mii?:t  have 
exemplified  those  qualities  of 
''leadership  and  service"  which 
are     a     prerequi^it*-     to     efficient  j  ]„  UNC's  IfiSrd  birthdav. 


Parking  Bar^S^p 
Not  To  Be  lifted 


WILLIAM  DAVIE 

.  .  .  founding  falln-r 

Players  Will 
Enact  Founding 
Of  University 

One  of  the  handsomest  and 
'•mo.<it  civilized"  North  Carolinians 
will  be  characterized  here  Friday 
when  the  Carolina  Playmakers  de 
pict  the  founding  of  the  Univers- 
ity. He  is  General  William  Rich 
ardson   Davie. 

The  pantomine  of  the  corner- 
stone laying  of  Old  East  Building 
wjll  call  for  the  talents  of  a  larg? 
number    nf    actors    and    musicians 


dormJtrirv    govprnment    and    well- 
rounded  social  programs. 


Girl  Wants 
Purse  Returned 


A   coed  yesterday  reported   the 
present  his  suggestion  to  the  com-  j  apparent  theft  of  a   purse  during '  including  student  choruses,   band 


TTie  annual  ceremony  will  be 
conducted  at  11  a.m.,  beginning 
»t  South  Building,  and  ending 
with  the  cornerstone  ceremony  at 
th?  oldest  state  university  .struc- 
ture in  the  nation — Old  East. 

('h!»ncellor  Robert  B.  House  will 
fweside  at  initial  ceremonies.  This 
will  be  Chancellor  House's  final 
time  of  being  master  of  ceremon- 
ies at  a  University  Day:  he  retires 
at  the  end  of  this  school  year. 

The  pageantry  will   be  colorful. 


CQl^i^rlbia  Street 

Mayor, 
4nd  Hudgins 

Later  Meeting  Urged 
Of  All  Those  Involved 

By.  CLARKE  JONES  ,  same  letters  that  were  sent  to  the 

The  Chapel  Hill  Board  of  Alder-  j  Rosemary   and  Columbia   St.   resi- 

men  last  night  refused   a  student    dents  " 


Youhg,  Hudgins  Speak  For  Students 


mittee  for  its  consideration,"  stat- 
ed Evans. 

Student     Body     Pnesident     Bob 
Young  and  this  committee  wilj  «p-  j 
pear  before  the  Trustee  Commit-', 
tee  on  Oct.  27.  to  present .  its-  re- J 
povt.  T 

Evans    said.   "This   is    a   student  1 
committee,  and  to  .succeed  we  need 


a  fraternity  party  last  weekend,    i 

Miss  Joan  Wender.   of  211   Al- 
derman Dormitory,  .said  the  purse  j 
eontiajned  a  cigarette  lighter  that! 
was  of  greet  sentiment&I  value  to 
her. 

No  identification  wa^  in  the; 
purse,  she  said,  and,  th<b;]40{ter 
the  support  and  the  cooperation  ;  was  inscribed  "Joan.''  .;/•  r  ;< 
of  every  individual  who  feels  that  j  ^iss  Wejider  said  tti«  puV^w^as 
they  truly  have  a  man  whom  they  j  jpft  for  a  short  whWenn  the  social 
would  like  to  see  in  the  Chancel-  room  of  a  fraternity.  She  declin- 
iMr-s  chair."  ^^  ^o  name  the  fraternity. 

I      Several    nrven    and    thrir    dates 

j  were  there,  she  added,  and  there 

were   a    few   nrven   without   dates. 

Miss  Wender  said  the  purse  was 

of    brown    leather.    She   said    her 


Sorority  Open  Houses 
Will   Honor  Pledges 


ROTC  uniformed  units,  and  the 
co.'itumed  rppres«ntatives  of  I>avie 
and  the  others. 

Davie  is  regarded  «.«  the  "father 
«f  the  University,"  and  In  Jiis  da^ 
be  w»5  «  *rla*in?  an^  sr>ry:t^<;3«J0" 
fi^xirr  in  the  state.  Born  in  Kfitf-  . 
land,  he  came  tn  North  Car.iUna. ' 
livert  in  Halifax  County,  was  grad- 
uated from  Princeton  University 
tnt\  returned  to  active  life  in  this 
srtate'.  He  wns.  nct^ording  to  people 
who  knew  him,  "tall,  elceant  in 
person,  graceful,  and  affable  in 
manner." 

By  h'm  eloquence  and  his  influ- 
ence he  got  the  Legislature  to 
authorize  the  University  and  to 
appropriate  funds.  He  personally 
selected  the  site,  and  announcerl 
his  choice  under  a  huge  tree,  now 
called  the  Davie  Poplar. 

His  interest  continued.  He  help- 


Bob  Young,  left.  Student  Body  Prosidont,  and  Ed   Hudgins,   IFC    Prtsidont   spefi*  on   bohalf  of.  tht 
stvitonts  last  night  at  a  mooting  pf  the  Town  Aldorn>en,  coliod  to  discuss  Columbia  Street  parking. 

(Photos  by  Norman  Kant^r) 


Carolina  Homecoming  Queen  To  Be  Chosen 
MyVofe^Of  Stuihnts  Here  Tomorrow 


students  will  vote  tomorrow  for 
Carolina's  Homecoming  Queen. 

Each  coed  dormitory  and  each 
.sorority  and  fraternity  will  select 
a  repre.sentative  today,  and  a 
queen  will  be  selected  tomorrow 
to  be  presented  at  the  homecom- 


ing game  this  weekend  when  UNC  i 
plays  Georgia.  j 

Fraternities    and    sororities    will 
vote  at  their  regular  meetings  to- 
morrow night,  and  dormitory  rcsi-  j 
dents  will   vote  by   ballots  to  be 


)  main    interest    in    recovering    the 

AH  six  UNC  sororitks  will  hold  ;  purse  was  the  sentimental  value 
open     houses    tonight    from    9-11  !  of  the  cigarette  lighter. 

p.m.  in  honor  of  their  Jiew  pled- 1      She  said  the  purse  and  lighter  j  ed  to  select  the  first  faculty.  He 
S^s  i  could    be    returned    to    her.    with    helped  establish  th?  courses  to  be 

Invitations  have  been  sent  outj  no  questions  asked,  by  mail.  It  al- 
to all  men's  dormitories  and  all  so  could  be  left  for  her  at  Gra- 
frateroities.  ham  Memorial,  she  said. 


Yanks'  Larsen  Hurls 
No-Hit,  Perfect  Game 


taught.  And  in  the  years  that  fol- 
lowed he  sometimes  dropped  into 
Chapel  Hill  and  asked  questions 
of  the  students  to  determine  what 
Und  how  much  they  were  learn- 
ing. He  was  frequently  a  "one 
man  visiting  committee." 

Following  the  ceremonies  Fri- 
Dialectic  Senate  will  de- .  anthropic  Literary  Society  will  si-  day  morning  the  Annual  Alumni 
bill   at  8   p.m.   today  con-    multaneously    discuss    a    bill   urg-t 'Luncheon  will   be  held  at   Lenoir 


Di  To  Debate  Democrat  Bill; 
Phi  Also  Will  Meet  Tonight 


The 
bate  a 

demning  the  Democratic  Party  for 
its  "scurrilous  conduct  in  the  1956 
presidential   campaign."  The  Phil- 

Careers  Will  Be  Topic 
Of  First  Placement  Talk 

"Careers  After  Graduation" 
will  be  the  topic  for  the  first  in 
a  .series  of  Placement  Service 
ta-lks  to  be  given  tonight  for  Uni- 
versity, of  North  Carolina  seniors 
and  graduate  students. 

Dr.  Maurice  W.  Lee,  new  dean 
of  the  Business  Administration 
Scbool,  will  be  the  guest  speak- 
er at  the  session  at  7:30  p.m.  at 
Gerrard  Hall. 

The  operation  of  the  Placemen-t 
Service  will  he  described  by  Di- 
rector J.  M.  Ga-lloway.  Some  300 
local  and  national  organizations 
send  interviewing  personnel  to  the 
campus  each  year  to  meet  pros- 
pective employees  through  the 
Placement  Service. 

IN  THE  INFIRMARY 

Students  in  the  Infirmary  yos- 
lerday  included: 

Miss  Janet  E.  Thomson,  Miss 
f^tnt  W.  Geddie,  Marvin  D.  H«r- 
loss,  Paul  C.  Clark,  Jr.,  Morton 
T.  Baggett,  Simon  S.  Flythe, 
Charles  F.  Cox,  Edward  W.  Bui 
chart,  Evereh  H.  Ellinwood, 
Frederick  J.  Coyle,  Alvin  W. 
Smith,  George  J.  Stavnitski,  and 
iohn  W.  Johnson. 


Hall.  Cla.sses  will  be  dismissed  at 
11  o'clock  and  will  resume  again 
at  noon. 

Sophs  Now 
Having  Yack 
Photos  Taken 

The  period  for  freshmen,  fourth- 
jr.ear   medical   students   and   nurs-  j 
ing  students  to  have  their  pictures 
rli^iij'niade  for  the  1957  Yackety  Yack  j 
has   been   extended,  'according   to  i 
Editor  Tommy  Johnson.  [ 

Students      falling      into      these  | 
groups    can    have    their    pictures 
Jim  Monteith,  ChairmaW  of  .)li€  |-piad€    today   and  tortiorrow   at   a 
Ways    and    Means    Comnvittfee' -at*  «ost  of  SI,  Johnson  said.  The  $1 


ing    "true    representative   "govern- 
ment." 

In  the  Di,  Dave  Mundy  will  in- 
troduce the  resolution  and  prom- 
ises to  "skin  the  Democrats  with 
hell-fire   and   brimstone." 

Th?  resolution  declaims,  "the 
Democratic  Party  is  conducting 
one  of  the  vilest,  dirtiest,  most 
innuendo-filled  and  devious  cam- 
paigns in  modern  political  his- 
tory." 

The  Young  Democrats  and  the 
Young  Republicans  have  been  in- 
vited to  participate  in  the  deb^tft, 
according  to  Mundy.  Di 
mentarian.  ^^M.*  K^'  ; 

The  Di  officials  plan  an  execu- 
tive seesion  immediately;  aftpr  the 
adjournment  of  the  meeliftil,- 


the  Phi,  will  ir.troduce^nd  dfieiid 
a  bill  thi»'  provides  "the  electsS' 
should  repr*i4ent  the  opinion  "of 
the  electors  rather  than  some  piri- 
vate  preconceived  opinion  on  na- 
tional, state,  local,  and  campus 
levels." 

*1^e  Phi  may  have  a  censure 
on  the  Di  for  the  absurd  action 
of  last  week  (i.e.,  the  Di's  con- 
ferring of  an  honorary  member- 
ship in  the  Phi  on  Elvis  Pres- 
ley)." Montieth  said. 

Several  conditional  representa- 
tives will  give  qualifying  speeches. 
The  Phi  will  discuss  the  inaugu- 
ration of  officers  and  plans  for 
the  Di-Phi  readying  night. 


Yankee  righthander  Don  Larsen 
mowed  down  every  Dodger  he  fac- 
ed and  achieved  the  "impossible" 
yesterday  by  hurling  a  no-hit,  per 
feet  game  against  the  Brooklyn 
Dodgers  in  the  Yankees'  2-0  vic- 
tory. 

Larsen's  Uyai  has  been  accom- 
plished only  once  before  in  base- 
ball history,  and  his  no-hitter  is 
the  first  in  World  Series  history. 

Bill  Bevans  of  the  Yankees  came 
the  closest  to  the  no-hitter  in  1947 
against  the  same  Dodgers.  But 
Cooku'  Lavagetto's  double  in  the 
ninth  lost  him  the  no-hittor.  and 
the  game. 

The  Yankee  victory  gave  the 
team  an  important  3-2  lead  in  the 
scries. 


Maglie,  pitched  a  fine  game  him- 
self, giving  the  Yankees  only  five 
hits  including  Mickey  Mantle's  sec- 
ond home  run  of  the  current  serie.-. 

Mantle  was  the  offensive  and  dc- 
sensive  star  of  the  day  due  to  his 
home  run  and  his  back-handed 
catch  of  Gil  Hodges'  blow  in  deep 
left  center. 

Tomorrow's  contest  will  be  held 
in  Ebbcts'  Field,  with  Don  New- 
combe  possibly  going  for  the  Thidg- 
ers  against  Johnny  Kucks  of  the 
Yankpes. 

The  Yankees'  3-2  lead  over  the 
Dodgers  is  identical  to  the  lead 
the  American  League  champions 
had  last  year.  The  Dodgers  bounc- 
ed back  last  year  and  defeated 
their    annual    opponents    for    the 


pa.Nsed  out  tomorrow. 

The  identity  of  the  queen  will 
not  be  revealed  until  she  is.  pre- 
.scnf  d  at  the  game,  according  to 
Joe  Clapp,  University  Club- presi- 
dent. Pictures  of  the  12  contest- 
ants  will  be  in  tomorrow's  Daily 
Tar  Hee!  to  let  students  see  who 
they  ar?   voting  for. 

Saturday's  festivities  will  also 
include  homecoming  di^plaj'S 
spons.rod  by  dormitories,  fratern- 
ities and  sororities. 

Clapp  yesterday  urged  a  1 1 
darms.  fraternities  and  sororities 
to  enter  a  display  in  the  competi- 
tion. A  winner  will  bo  chosen  in 
each  of  the  four  groups — fratern- 
ities, sorr>ritics,  women's  dormi- 
tories and  men's  dormitories.  Tro- 
phies will  be  awarded  the  four 
winners. 

Org-inizations  planning  display's 
have  been  urged  to  send  their  $2 
entrance  fee  no  later  than  Thurs- 
day night  to  Joe  Clapp,  122  Mal- 
lette  St..  or  call  him  at  9-3251. 
Displays  will  be  judged  Saturday 
morning   beginning  at   10   o'clock. 


request  to   "temporarily    remove' | 
the  two-hour  parking  restriction  on  ' 
Columbia    St.    between    Cameron 
Ave.  and  Franklin  St. 

Student     body     President     Bob 
Young  and  Interfraternity  Council 
Presdent  Ed  Hudgins  appeared  be-^ 
fore  the  aldermen  to  make  the  re- 
quest. I 

Mayor  0.  K.  Cornwell,  howeve**, 
urged  Young  and  his  student  traf- 
fic commission  —  Clark  Hinkley, 
Darwin  Bell,  Bill  Pruitt.  Hudgins 
!md  Wilburn  Davis,  chairman  —  to 
Hieet  with  him  again  on  the  matter  | 
when  all  the  parties  (students.' 
townspeople  and  merchants)  can 
get  together.  | 

■Hudgihs  gave  four  reasons  for} 
asking  the  group  to  "reconsider" ! 
their  action.  He  .said:  \ 

"1.  The  restrictions  on  Columbia 
St.  were  placed  this  summer  and 
the  students  were  not  given  a 
chance  to  be  heard. 

"2.  Most  of  the  cars  (in  the  area) 
arc  fraternity  cars.  There  are  sev-i 
en  fraternities  close  to  the  strept 
and  we  do  not  have  adequate  park- 
ing spaoe.    •  .  • 
,     "3.  The  fraternities  at  UNC  aH  | 
i>ay  property  taxes  to  the  town  of 

"4. Ther^  is -up. place  of 'justness 
•>n  the  stfeet  except  Barclay's  (ex- 
ITNC  ..tpotb»U  conch  George  Bar- 
etay)  firifng'  station 


When  Hudgins  asked  if  the  re- 
striction could  possibly  he  "sus- 
pended for  30  to  60  days,"  Corn- 
well  said,  "We're  not  going  to 
rescind  the  ordinance  until  we 
meet"  with  Young's  traffic  com- 
mittee "and  the  matttr  is  thor- 
oughly  investigated.' 

After  the  discussion.  Young, 
who  was  "disappointed"  about 
the  meeting,,  and  his  traffic  com- 
mission made  plans  to  meet 
Thursday  at  4:30  p.m.  with  a  sim- 
ilar group  from  the  IFC. 

A  decision  will  then  be  mads 
as  to  when  they  will  discuss  the 
subject  again  with  Mayor  Coro- 
weil  and  the  aldermen. 


Ys  Hold  = 
Membership 
Meeting 

1  The-  YW  and  YMCA  held  a 
:  membership  meeting  yesterday 
und?r  the  leadership  ol  Miss  Mar- 
I  tha  Richardson  and  Gerald  May5, 
I  Y^V  and  YMCA  presidents. 
I  Tile  meeting  was  the  first  6t 
Tdting  said  student  government ,' ^^^«   meetings   of   the   eight   study 


was  vcorkine  to  "alleviate  the  over 
all  problem."  At  present  we  have 
a  five-mah  student  traffic  commis- 
sion ^o  look  into  the  problem. 

"I  feel."  he  said,  "if  we  could  get 
vou  to  reconsider  your  action  w? 
could  work  out  a  more  effective 
Srthition." 


groups  sponsored  by  the  YW  and 
YMCA.  The  study  group  leaders 
and  their  advisors  were  introduc- 
ed by  Miss  Nancy  Shuford  a-nd 
Doug   CantrCi'I. 

Gerald   Mayo   said    the   YW   and 

YMCA  are  "infornTal  and  open  to 

all  denominations  and  faiths."  He 

j  described  the  piirpcs'.'  nf  the  Chris- 


NOTICBS  SENT 

Concerning    the    first    point    in  j  tian  Associations  as  "study,  action 
Hudgins'  request.  Mavor  Cornw^H  j  and  worship." 

said.   "We   sent   a   notice   tn   overv  ; 

r'^sidcnt  on  Columhia  St.  (before  ^ 
the  restriction)  and  also  one  to ; 
every  resident  on  Roscmarj'  St. '   | 

Parkin?  on  Rosemary  St.  was  re- ! 
cently  banned   altogether   after   a  J 
trial  period  of  one  year  when  only  • 
one  block  of  the  street  was  restrict- 
ed. 

Hudgins  r^ied  to  Cornell.] 
''During  the  'summer  there  were  ; 
not  too  many  (fraternity  men)  I 
here  with   responsibilltj'."  I 

Alderman  William  L.  Alexand- ; 
er.  assistant  to  the  general  man- ' 
ager  of  fadio  station  WCHl..  said  ! 
he  got  the  "addresses  of  all  the  ! 
fraternity  presidents  and  sent  the  j 


UP  To  Discuss  Parking 
Problem  Here  Tonight 

An  open  discussion  of  fh* 
parking  problem  will  be  held  at 
the  first  fail  meeting  of  the  Uni- 
versity Party  at  7  p.m.  tonight  en 
rhe  second  floor  of  Graham  Me- 
morial. 

Party  chairman  Mike  Weinman 
said,  "in  view  of  our  President's 
veto  of  the  Columbia  St.  parking 
bill,  new  action  may  have  to  be 
taken." 

Weinman  also  invited  all  in- 
terested students  to  attend  the 
meeting. 


Larsen's  pitching  opponent,  Sal  i  world  championship. 


Eileen  Farrell  To  Appear  ^ 
Tomorrow  In  Coricert  Opener 


YDC  Prexy  Doesn't  Want 
Campus  Wide  Straw  Vote 


r^harge  is  to  cover  the  extended 
contract  of  the  photographer. 
. ,  The  pictures  will  be  made  in  the 
Wsement  of  Graham  Memorial 
from  1  to  6:30  p.m.  Yack  officials 
have  requested  that  girls  wear 
dark  sweaters  and  pearls  for  the 
pihotos.  Men  iNive  been  asked  to 
wear  dark  coats,  ties  and  white 
shirts. 

Sophomores,  pharmacy  s  t  u  - 
dents,  dental  and  dental  hygiene 
students  can  have  pictures  made 
this  week. 

The  photos  of  Juniors,  law  stu- 
dents, medical  students  and  grad- 
Vate  students  will  be  taken  Oct. 
l5-ie. 


By  HIL  GOLDMAN 

"Wc  don't  feel  that  a  straw  vote 
is  the  proper  way  to  poll  the  stu- 
dent body,  since  the  results  can  be 
made  to  pome  out  anyway  the  poll- 
taker  desires." 

George  Miller,  president  of  the 
Young  Democratic  Club,  issued  this 
statement  Monday,  following  his 
return  from  the  state  YDC  conven- 
tion in  Raleigh. 

Miller,  noticeable  optimistic 
after  the  three  day  weekend,  con- 
tinued, saying  that  the  young  dem- 
ocrats activelv  endorse  the  idea  of 


view.  Miller  offered,  "I  question 
the  veracity  of  his  (Snyder's)  state- 
ment and  the  results  of  the  poll, 
although  knowing  Keth  personally. 
I  have  the  highest  respect  for  him. 
and  hope  that  he  will  not  permit 
himself  to  follow  the  tactics  of 
his  senior  party.  I  think  that  they 
(the  Young  Republican  Club)  just 
want  to  mak.?  it  known  that  every 
are  on  campus,  and  if  a  university 
election  were  held  tomorrow.  Ste- 
venson would  win." 

When  asked  what  he  based  his 
assumption  on,  the  prexy  attribut- 
ed it  to  the  fact  that  the  students 


having    a    campus    wide    election,!  have  become  aware  of  Eisenhower's 
conducted  by  a  neutral  group.  "The  j  failure  to  make  campaign  promis- 
es good,  and  have  come  to  recog- 
nize the  Democratic  Party  stands 


president  quoted  Keith  Snyder 
YRC  leader,  as  having  said.  "The 
YDC  is  obviously  afraid  that  Ike 
would  beat  Adlai  worse  this  year 
than  he  did  in  lPf»2.  when  Ike 
won  the  campus  wide  straw  vote 
by  3  to  1  over  Stevenson." 
Then,     following    up     tiie     YRC 


for  the  youth  of  America.  Miller 
had  concurred  at  the  convention 
with  Senator  John  Keneddy  of 
Massachusettes. 

The  Youns  Democrats  now  boast 
a  membership  erf  over  .^00. 


Eileen  Farrell  will  be  presented 
in  concert  tomorrow  night  as  the 
first  of  four  musical  groups  and 
artists  to  be  sponsored  here  this 
year  by  the  Chapel  Hill  Concert 
Series. 

Miss  Farrell.  said  to  possess  one 
of  the  "greatest  voices  this  couin- 
try  has  ever  produced,"  will  per- 
form at  8  pjTi.  ii!  Memorial  Hall. 

Membersbip  tickets  for  the  com- 
plete series  csn  be  obtained  at  tihe 
Information  Office  of  Graham  Me- 
morial at  a  total  cost  of  $7.50  for 
reserved  memberships.  $6.50  for 
unreserved  memberships,  and  $5 
for  students  aTid  students'  wives 
(unreserved  meml>ersh*ips).  Tick- 
ets may  also  be  obtained  at  Kemp's 
and   Danziger's. 

Tickets  for  the  single  concert^ 
will  be  available  at  the  doer  a<nd 
at  GM  Information  Office  at  a  cost 
of  $2.50. 

It  was  in  the  1950-51  season 
that  Miss  Farrell,  to  quote  the 
New  York  Review  of  Permanent 
Music,  "came  into  her  own  as  a 
thrillingly  great  dramatic  sopra- 
no." In  October  of  that  season  she 
made  her  New  York  debut  before 


EILEEN  FARRELL 

.  .  •  here  tomorrow 

a  capacity  house  in  Carnegie  Hall. 
Although  her  talents  "were  al- 
ready well  known  to  metropolitan 
(Yitics  and  audiences  through  her 
many  local  engagements  with  or- 
chestras and  on  radio,  hsr  recital 
proved  one  of  the  overwhelming 
triumphs." 


Class  Ring  Salesman 
To  Be  Here  Thursday 

A  representative  of  the  Balfour 
Company,  which  handles  LTNC 
class  ring  sales,  will  be  in  Y-Court 
this  Thursday  from  9  a.m.-4:39 
p.m.  to  assi.st  the  Order  of  the 
Holy  Grail   in  selling  class  rings. 

This  will  be  the  last  sale  that 
will  enable  the  rings  to  be  de- 
livered before  Christmas,  accord- 
ing to  Bob  Hornik.  class  ring 
chairman.  Hornik  may  be  reached 
for  details  at  the  ZBT  house,  tele- 
phone 5241. 

GM^S  SLATE 

The  following  activities  are 
scheduled  for  Graham  Memorial 
today:  « 

Order  of  the  Holy  Grail,  6-11 
p.m.,  Grail  Room;  Debate  Squad, 
4-4:45,  Roland  Parker  Lounges  1 
&  2;  Chess  Club,  8-11  p.m.,  Ro- 
land Parker  Lounge  1;  University 
Party,  7-11  p.m.,  Roland  Parker 
Lounges  2  &  3;  Women's  Resi- 
dence Council,  7-8:30  p.m..  Wood- 
house  Conference  Room;  f4onor 
Council,  7-11  p.m..  Council  Room; 
Dance  Class,  6:30-8  p.m..  Ren- 
dezvous Room;  APO,  7-9  p.m., 
APO  Room. 


.-i 


*<«toV 


FAGC  TWO 


THl  DAILY  TAR  HEEt 


TUESDAY,  OCTOBER  9,  1954 


TUESDAY 


The  Old  Masters  Can  Teach 


PROSPECT  &  RETROSPECT 


REACTION  PIECE 


Those  Who   Need   Them       Young  Has  Made  2  Accomplishments      Laudatory  Words 


) 


"J'hf  idfd  of  eduailion  nouuuhiys  is  for  I  he  shulcnls  lo  (oiucn- 
t,alc  on  two  lhini:;.s:  I'hc  in.\/ni(  fov's  Icitiire  (nui  the  lexlhook.  The 
instructor  is  ex/if ( ted  to  ask  the  questions  and  then  answf^r  fhcni  and 
the  student  is  supposed  to  ii^o  home  and  study  tlie  questions.  And 
tlien  the  instructor  is  expected  to  ask  those  same  questions  on  the 
quiz  and  the  student  then  ans.rers  them.  What  this  really  is  is  no 
education  at  all." — Arts  and  St  ieix  es  proressor.  lle;M  iii.^  his  lecture 
t<)|)i(    \in  a  Few  mi  mites. 


VUc  pnifessor  who  made  that 
statement  yesterday  was  not  tryina 
to  shotk  his  students  in  to  pavinj» 
attention.  He  was  ncit  making  anv 
Avild   de(  laration. 

He  was  sayiiif?  what  honest  edu- 
cators hr.^e  been  savino  for  a  Ions: 
time:  Our  educatiotial  svstcm  is 
.si(  k. 

Tlie  witole  theme  of  highei  ed- 
ucation on  most  United  States 
campuses  is  the  tlieme  ol  the  f^racie 
hook.  For  tlie  prolesscM  witli 
<  Kisses  so  bio  be  can't  see  the  back 
row  loi  the  smoke,  the  yrade  book 
is  ihi-  onh  way  to  conduct  his  lec- 
tures. Me  resorts  lo  the  objec:ti\e- 
i\pe  (jui/.  and  gives  a  linal  exam- 
ination that  can  be  graded  in  lixe 
»uinuie>   j>er  student. 

For  the  studeiu,  the  grade  book 
i>  o!*\i(>usIy  the  simplest  way  to 
get  through  college.  The  grade 
book  keeps  a  carelul  record  of 
absences.  7>oth  excused  and  unex- 
c  used,  and  it  keeps  a  lecord  ol  the 
objei  ti\e-iype  c]ui//ts.   The  student 


cause  us  to  \iew  with  alarm,  'riiis 
is  a  continuing  facet. o!  the  I'ni- 
\ersitv's  comjxisition.  one  that  has 
l)een  with  us  a  hmg  time.  Hui  some- 
thing else  does  cause  us  to  won \ . 

Most  ol  the  exciting  piolessois 
teach  juniors  and  .seniors.  Most  ol 
those  ^vho  ri-re  relatixely  Iresh  at 
the  job  ol  teaching  ate  charged 
with  exc  iiing  the  Ireshmeii  and 
sophomores — a  job  thai  isn't  done 
well. 

We  suggest  to  tlie  polit  vniakers 
ol   this  I'niversity  three  things: 

I.  Dexote  a  good  deal  ol  time 
to  a  study  of  what  prolessois  teach 
wliai  students. 

li.  Shift  some  of  the  more  ex- 
perienced jjrolessc^rs  to  the  unex- 
j)erienced  students— the  freshmen 
and  sophomores. 

•J.  let  some  of  the  grachiate 
insmuiors  teach  some  of  the  irp- 
per  c  lasses. 

riiis  way.  the  freshmen  and 
sophomores  woidd  gaiji  increased 
knoAv  ledge.    I  he  old  masters  of  the 


iflftn 


fj 


GRADUATION 

,  .  .  iiith  oradc  book  }o}  a  sheepskin/ 

who  shows  up  well  <ui  the  profes.s-  teaching    profession     could     wotk 

or's  grade  Ixtok  i>  the  stucicnt  who  their  echication-magicon  those  stu- 

is  a  success.  dents  just  as  they  intoxit;ate  some 

His  famib  .iiid  roommates  adore  of   tfie   minds  of  the  juniors  and 

himj      his     pro>ji  (tive     employer  seniors  today. 


]>rags  :.'.!'u:  .'..'::.  He  is  a  self-made 
m:m. 

Will  he  knows  notliing. 
'  As  the  Arts  and  Sciences  pro- 
fessor said  a  httle  later,  the  leal 
object  ol  education  is  to  get  stu- 
dents todouf)t.  Fo  get  thetn  to  pur- 
sue their  courses  oiUside  the  class- 
room, outside  the  textbook.  'I"cj 
get  them  to  want  lo  read,  on  their 
own  and  with  no  promise  of  extra 
ciedit.  books  allied  with  their 
c«»iuses. 

To  get  them  to  talk,  with  the 
s:une  vigoi  with  whic  h  they  discuss 
women  and  automobiles,  in  their 
leisin'e  time  af)out  tiieir  (N)urses. 

We  are  conyfmed  that  most 
piolcssors  at  this  imixersity  want 
that  kind  of  education.  That  is 
win  most  piofessors  give  u|)  highei  - 
paying  jol)s.  f)iggcr  automobiles 
and  f>etier  f(MKl  to  devote  their  li\- 
es  to  teaching. 

liut  to  give  students  this  kind 
(jf  ediKation.  the  kind  th.at  laises 
fKiriilifuli  doubts,  the  professor 
imist  have  experience.  The  avera'ge 
graduate  instruc  tor  has  a  lot  to 
learn  af)out  jieople.  especially  col- 
lege people.  f>t4ore  he  can  excite 
his  students  with  a  teal  desire  io 
learn. 

Therefore,  this  rniversity  and 
most  otiieis  ha\e  a  continuing 
problem.  Carolina  has  a  certain 
number  of  professors  who  excite 
their  studems  and  a  laige  number 
who  haven't  yet  leatiied  the  tricks 
of  the  profession. 

Ihis  aicme  is     not    enough     to 

The  Daily  Tar  Heel 

The  official  studont  publication  of  the 
Publications  Board  of  the  University  of 
North  Carolina,  where  it  is  published 
daily  except  Monday  and  examination 
and  vacation  periods  and  summer  terms. 
Entered  as  second  class  matter  in  the 
post  office  in  Chapel  Hill,  N.  C,  under 
the  Act  01  March  S.  1870.  Subscription 
rates:  mailed,  S4  per  year,  $2.50  a  semes- 
ter; delivered,  i;3  a  year,  $3.50  a  semes- 
ter. 


J  his  way,  the  juniors  and  sen- 
iors would  not  lose  a  thing.  Those 
who  aie  educationally  excitable 
woidd  have  f)een  stimulated  dur- 
ing their  first  two  vears  hete. 
(iraduatc  iirstructors  would  ha\e 
far  less  troid)le  teaching  people 
who  already  had  buckled  down  to 
studying  and  paving  aitemion  in 
c  ki's.ses. 

I  he  l'ni\eisity  would  lose  far 
less  freshmen  .ind  .s(»phomores  to 
the    most    dread    disease      on      this 


Editor 


FRED  POWLEDGE 


Managing  Editor      CHARLIE  JOHNSON 


News  Editor  .      RAY  LINKER 


Business  Mana(;er 


BILL  BOB  PEEL 


Advertising  Manager  Fred  Katzin 

BUSINESS  STAFF:  Rosa  Moore.  Johnny 
Whitaker,  Dick  Leavitt,  Peter  Alper. 


STUDYING  ^r 

.  .  .  just    the    lexlhook/'      ^ 

campi^.s— the  sickness  that  comes 
when  ;i  student  tties,  and  mi.sses, 
and  panics,  and  then  stops  study- 
ing. 

A  couple  of  years  ago  C.ai'olina 
initiated  a  program  of  spec  ial  edu- 
cation to  2r)  freshmen.  The  old 
masters  in  several  depaitmems  of 
the  I 'Diversity  taught  special 
comses  just  for  tJiose  freshmen. 

The  results  were  excellent,  ac- 
cording to  South  liiu'lding,  the  pro- 
lessors  in\()j\ed  and  the  students 
themseKes. 

It  wouldnt"  take  much  of  a 
change,  and  we  believe  the  p2"<>ft'ss- 
ors  themselves  would  lelish  the 
idea. 

We  know  the  students  would 
profit    from    such    a    maneuver. 

I'ntil  the  I'tiiversity  does  t:ike 
an  appraisal  of  itself  in  such  a 
manner,  as  the  .\ris  and  Sciences 
piofessor  said  yesterday,  we  will 
have  a  lot  of  "no  education  at 
all." 


Neil  Bass 

Two  signal  accomplishments 
have  been  made  manifest  by  the 
present  Student  Party-dominated 
administration. 

Th;se  are,  of  course,  the  estab- 
lisiiment  of  a  reading  day  be- 
tween the  last  day  of  classes  and 
the  first  day  of  exams,  and  poss- 
ible lowering  of  date  ticket  prices 
for  conference  football  games. 

There  may  be  some  haggling 
as  to  whether  or  not  the  present 
administration  is  SP-dominated. 
It  is  true  that  the  University 
Party  has  a  one-man  majority  in 
th'5  student  Legislature. 

But    the    Legislature — the    21st 
assembley — is  still  in  the  embry- 
onic stage     and     hasn't     settled 
down  to  busine.ss  yet. 
EXECUTIVE 

Thus  these  two  accomplish- 
ments have -been  promulgated  al- 
most entirely  out  of  the  execu- 
tive branch.  More  specifically, 
these  two  "achievements'"  have 
been  promulgated  by  President 
Youjig. 

True,  Young  didn't  originate 
the  ideas.  Both  have  been  thrown 
in  and  out  of  the  legislative  hop- 
per for  several  years.  Even  the 
Fowlpr-Reid  administration  last 
year  negotiated  with  the  athletic 
depart  nrvent  to  seek  low -ring  of 
date  ticket   prices. 

But  Young,  who  has  a  co.v 
scientous  advi.<5Tr  in  the  person 
of  Toir^  Lambeth,  SP  chjef.  has 
proved  that  he  doesn't  shy  away 
from  leg- work  or  any  otflrr  ac- 
tion nece.=sary  to  carry  out  any 
specific  proposal. 

A  tip  of  the  homburg,  mortar 
board,  or  ten-gallon  Sunny  Jim 
■  lid  to  Ynuns,  not  the  most  orig- 
inal president  ever  to  head  stu- 
dent government,  but  certainly 
the  most  conscientous. 
DATE   TICKETS 

The  idea  of  lowered-half-price- 
date  tickets  Is  still  somewhat  ne- 
bulous and  indefinite  .  There 
are  a  lot  of  "ifs  "  involved: 

If  the  visiting  t?am's  athletic 
director   approved: 

If  it  is  a  conference  game,  etc.. 

But  still,  a  foot  has  been  put 
forward   in   the   righj.  direction. 

A  MOfttHERN  VIEW 


The    foot    which    Fowler    and^ 
Reid   invited   students  lo   put   on 
their  desks    has   been   taken    off 
the   desk   by   Young   and   put   to 
work. 

President  Young  has  found  the 
key  to  success  for  student  govern- 
ment. That  is,  not  passing  a  ser- 
ies of  high-fbwn  resolutions  and 
making  pretty  orations  but  leg- 


work      to     South     Building   and 
subsequent     earnest     talks     with 
the   officialdom    in    South    Build- 
ing. 
WEINMAN-THOMAS 

There  is  talk,  and  from  reput- 
able sources,  that  the  Universi- 
ty Party  may  b?  losing  one  of  its 
dormitory  stalwarts. 

Benny  Thomas,  who  has  fought 


long  both  in  the  dorms  and  in 
the  Legislature  hall  to  keep  the 
tag,  "Fraternity  Man's  Party." 
off  the  UP  is  being  rebuffed  by 
Chairman  Mike  Weinman. 

Some  havs  it  that  Tiiomas, 
member  of  the  |nterdormitory 
Council,  is  tiring  of  Weinman's 
attitude  and  ready  to  cross  party 
lines. 


'You  Said  It,  Pal-We  Both  Got  A  llight  To  Poison  The  Air' 


u 

.ii^i 

■    -^ 

e 

.  '^- 

? 

''^■'  '  "■ 

'    :,   itJ 

•    •  ,   A 

■:     -,   , 

lyr*  T-»*«  uJk** «''*<r-»«/M  rorj-<*' 


mill 


Thoughts  On  fhiiAndlh^it  And  Kissing 


Cortland  H.  Edwards  III 

McKeon  finally  made  it  thi-u 
the  barage  of  petty  selfishness, 
ignorance,  and  bland  uprightous- 
ness.  However,  he  did  not  get 
thru  unscathed.  His  sentence  is 
down  to  three  months,  his  rank 
remains  as  a  private,  and  he  will 
be  able  to  stay  in  the  Marines. 

He  commented  on  the  new  out- 
come by  saying  that  he  planned 
to  stay  in  the  Corps  and,  further- 
more, he  would  b?  the  best  Ma- 
rine ever.  Anyone  want  to  bet 
that  he  won't  be  promoted  to 
Sergeant  within  four  months? 
•  •  • 

Last  night  as  I  was  waJkiag  by 
the  Planetarium,  I  saw  i  Tery 
I>eculiar  thing.  Well,  I  guess  act- 
ually it  was  more  unexpected 
than  it  was  peculiar.  The  time 
was  just  after  dusk.  The  sun  had 
sunken  behind  Harry's  and  the 
moon  had  yet  to  ariz. 

Out  of  the  corner  of  my  oye. 


which  was  transfi.xed  on  the 
blonde  and  a  half  in  front  of  me, 
I  saw  a  shapeless  glob  shoot 
down  from  the  top  of  the  needle 
to  the  base  of  the  sundial.  Then 
a  few  seconds  later  I  saw  an- 
other. Am  I  seeing  things;-      / 

I  considered  illusions,  halo  ef- 
fect, and  E.S  P..  but  i»till  I  jfiiw  a 
globs  shooting  down  the  ..sijiwlial 
every  ."SO  seconds.  So  to  satisfy 
my  curiosity  I  walked  over  cau- 
tiously to  view  tliis  phenonaena 
more  closely  \ 

And  do  you  know  what  I  saw? 
It  was  two  little  ten-year-<l)ld  girls 
climbing  up  the  needle  and  slid- 
ing down  one  after  the  other. 
I  thought  of  telling  them  to  watch 
out  for  the  slivers  of  time,  but 
they  were  having  too  much  fun. 
So.  I  left. 

•  •  • 

Is  kissing  a  mortal  sin  for  the 
unmarried?  According  to  Time 
magazine,   the    kiss   that   started 


the  discussion  was  confessed  to 
his  priest  by  a  15-year-old  Italian 
village  boy.  One  priest  vsaid  it 
was,  so  he  went  to  another.  The 
second  one  said  no,  it  was  only 
a  venial  sin. 

Torn  between  these  two  an- 
swers the  boy  wrote  4o  "La  Pal- 
estra del  Cler.)",  Romes'  clerical 
monthly,  and  asked  for  guidance. 

The  answer  came  back  th;it 
th'.Te  were  two  fundamental 
church  documents  on  kissing,  one 
by  the  Council  of  Vienne  in  1311- 
12  A.D.,  and  one  by  Pope  Alex- 
ander yil,  whc^  reigned  from 
le.'iS  to  1667. 

B-oth  agree  that  if  two  unwed 
people  kis^  with  intent  to  forni- 
cate, they  commit  mortal  sin. 
whether  or  not  fornication  fol- 
lows. But  if  there  is  no  such  in- 
tention, if  the  kiss  is  only  a 
"carnal  delight  limited  to  the 
act  of  kissing  ...  if  further  con- 
sequences   are    neither    indulged 


in  nor  thought  of,  the  sin  is  on- 
ly a  venial  sin."  Kissing  that  be- 
gins venial  may  turn  mortal, 
warned  "La  Palestra". 

The  thing  that  I  would  like  to 
know  is  whether  or  not  this  can 
be  considered  an  example  of  Cul- 
tural lag? 

A  *  * 

In  passing  there  was  the  story 
of  a  guy  from  Brooklyn.  As  you 
know  Brooklynese  is  a  language 
all  its  own.  Only  the  residents  of 
Brooklyn  seem  to  be  able  to 
speak  it  proficiently  and  are  al- 
ways running  up  against  persons 
who  are  trying  to  correct  their 
pronunciation. 

Witness  the  following  dialogue 
between  the  two  men  sitting  on 
a  park  bench: 

"Ghee,  de  boids  choip  pretty," 

"Those  aren't  boids,'  they  are 
birds." 

"No  foolin,  chee,  dey  choip 
just  like  boids." 


for  l/sec/  Targets 

David  Mundy 

In  the  past  three  yedrs  people  have  had  very 
little  practice  in  saying  nice  things  about  the  Daily 
Tar  Heel.  As  one  of  those  people  I  have  stormed, 
fumed,  gagged,  retched,  refused  to  read,  and  other- 
wise reviled  that  revile-  worth  "news"  paper. 

But  times,  and  editjors,  and  newspapers  have 
changed.  •Wfl^j 

At  last  there  is  an  editor  who  knows  what  he  if 
about  when  it  comes  to  the  newspaper  business. 
The  editors  DTH  heritage  to  the  contrary,  we  have 
an  editor  whose  primary  interest  is  the  publishing 
of  a  newspaper  that  belongs  to  the  students. 

I,  for  one,  have  long  resented  having  a  student 
newspaper  which  was  operated  as  a  propaganda 
organ  for  the  particular  "liberal"  or  statist  opin- 
ions of  the  editors,  the  ADA,  and  the  left  wing  of 
the  Democrat  party. 

As  long  as  the  students  are  forced  by  the  uni- 
versty  to  pay  for  the  Daily  Tar  Heel,  they  should 
have  one  which  offers  them  something  besides  the 
intellectualized  "garbage  of  the  left"  that  have 
characterized  the  past  few  years. 

That,  I  believe,  has  passed.  It  isn't  to  say  that 
the  political  views  of  the  present  editor  are  any  dif- 
ferent from  those  of  his  predecessors.  As  far  as  I 
can  tell,  they  aren't  very  different.  He  still  squawks 
about  those  nasty  Republicans,  reactionaries,  Mc- 
Carthyites,  isolationists,  et  cetera  into  absurdity. 

But,  as  one  can  easily  see  from  the  editorial  page 
of  the  DTH,  the  editor  fhows  no  overbearing  desire 
to  propogandize  the  students  for  his  own  point  of 
view.  Apparently  he  doesn't  classify  himself  as  the 
leading  light  of  the  campus  "intelligentsia"  and/or 
.,the  "saviour  of  the  world"  in  the  second  half  oit 
the  twentieth  centrury.  Some  of  our  past  editors 
have. 

The  distinction  between  presenting  a  point  of 
view  as  the  view  of  the  editor,  and  the  presenting 
of  the  identical  point  of  view  as  an  absolute  god- 
'  given  truth  which  mujt  be  subscribed  to  by  every 
living  human  being  if  he  is  to  be  classified  an  in- 
telligent being,  is  admittedly  not  easy  to  clarify.  But 
the  present  editor  appears  to  make  that  distinction, 
and  I  appreciate  it. 

In  turning  his  interest  from  operating,  a  left-wing 
propaganda  organ  to  the  matter  of  improving  the 
piakeup  and  content  of  the  paper,  the  present  editor 
has  done  a  real  service  to  the  university.  No  longer 
is  news-gathering  one  of  the  "incidentals."  There 
are  even  enough  reporters  to  go  out, and  cover  meet- 
ings! How  the  editor  has  managed  to  improve  the 
quality  and  "quantity"  of  the  staff,  I  don't  know. 
But  it  is  something  to  be  appreciated.. 

The  editorial  page,  re  my  interest  in  not  being 
so  steadily  propagandized  for  the  "liberal"  point  of 
^  view,  is  the  most  pleasant  DTH  surprise  in  yeat;s.  . 
ii|l  i$  nice  to  W£J^yp  in  the  morning  and  not  find 
'DreWd  Pearson,  ti.?  Aisop  Sisters,  or  Doris  the  Flea- 
son  lying  in  front  of  the  door.  Sometimes  I  do  read 
them,  but  I  prefer  paying  a  nickel  for  a  commercial 
n(^wspaper  of  my  own  free  selection. 

All  editors,  as  a  matter  of  policy,  have  extended 
an  invitation  for  people  of  varying  points  of  view 
to  express  their  views  in  the  DTH.  While  declaring 
the  pages  open  to  such  expression,  they  have  never 
encouraged  it.  Here  again  the  present  editor  differ* 
from  his  predecessors. 

Now  all  one  has  to  do  is  corner  the  editor  in  one 
of  his  free  moments  and  "volunteer  one's  services". 
This  student  opinion  scarcely  compares  with  the 
professional  journalism  of  the  nationally  syndicated 
columnists. 

The  actual  makeup  of  the  editorial  page  has 
even  been  improved.  So  on  yet  another  count,  let's 
appreciate  the  present  editor. 

The  Daily  Tar  Heel,  propaganda  organ  or  not, 
has  long  been  known  as  an  outstanding  student 
newspaper.  Even  asid^  from  maintainng  the  quality 
of  the  writing  found  m  the  DTH,  only  a  very  few 
universities  in  the  United  States  are  able  to  Supply 
the  bare  staffing  necessary  for  such  a  newspaper. 

Anywhere  else  in  the  world,  even  in  the  Soviet 
Union,  such  an  undertaking  by  students  would  be 
considered  monolithic,   if  not  impossible. 

We  can  afford  to  be  proud  of  the  Daily  Tar  Heel, 
not  just  for  its  national  reputation,  but  for  what  it 
has  begun  to  do  for  the  students  under  the  present 
editor. 

Cheers  for  the  DTII. 

A  barrel  of  beer  for  Powledge.  "* 

YOU  Said  It: 


Pogo 


By  Walt  Kelly 


Li'l  Abner 


tr  •'f^W 


By  Al  Capp 


A  Correction  On 
Phi's  Senator 

Editor: 

It  is  ironical  to  note  that  during  the  height  of 
National  Newspaper  Week,  when  the  nation  is  ren- 
dering to  the  press  some  of  the  reward  it,  for  the 
most  part,  so  justly  deserves,  that  The  Daily  Tar 
Heel  should  on  Wednesday  blatantly  display  on  page 
one  an  error  of  the  type  that  would  be  inexcusable 
in  a  high  school  publication. 

The  error:  that  the  Phi  Society,  as  old  as  the 
University  itself  and  with  as  an  astute  tradition  as 
the  University,  did  vote  Elvis  Presley,  a  contem- 
porary singer,  into  its  membership 

This  could  not  have  possibly  been  the  story 
gathered  by  The  Daily  Tar  Heel.  The  original  story, 
and  the  correct  one,  was  that  the  Dialectic  Senate 
had  voted  Elvis  Presley  into  the  membership  of  the 
Phi.  From  both  standpoints  of  legality  and  good 
taste  this  action  is  roughly  equivalent  to  the  Senate 
of  the  United  States  electing  Fats  Domino  lo  the 
House  of  Representatives. 

Someone  in  The  Daily  Tar  Heel  office,  allegedly 
no  less  a  person  than  our  esteemed  editor,  read 
the  story,  decided  that  it  did  not  make  sense,  and, 
displaying  remarkable  faith  in  his  own  invincibility, 
changed  the  story  without  consulting  a  source! 

This  error,  committed  in  a  professional  newspa- 
per, would  result  in  severe  reprimand  and  tempor- 
ary career  retardation  if  not  outright  dismissal. 

None  of  us  expects  The  Daily  Tar  Heel  to  be  a 
professional  newspaper  in  every  sense,  but  at  least 
can  we  not  have  a  little  more  common  sense  when 
it  comes  to  veracity? 

Fr*d  Crawford 


a> 

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PHARMAC 

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PHILOLOG 

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THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


^AGE  THREI 


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lad   very 

[he  Daily 

[stormed, 

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?rs    have 

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we  have 

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list  opin- 

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[oving  the 
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syndicated 

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play  on  page 

inexcusable 

old  as  the 
tradition  as 
.  a   contem- 

n  the  story 
riginal  story, 
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n  sense  when 

'r*d  Crawford 


Charles  Peterson  Here: 


Covering  The  University  Campus   \  gm  Has  Instructor 


SKETCH  CLASS 

A  second  section  %l  the  Evening 
Sketch  Class  has  been  scheduled 
for  Thursday  evenings  from  7  to  9 
p.m.  in  the  Person  Hall  Art  Gal- 
lery. The  class  will  meet  13  times 
during  the  fall  semester.  Persons 
interested  in  joining  have  been  in- 
vited to  come  to  the  class  meeting 
Thursday  at  7  p.m. 

co^^Mu^^lTY  work 

The  YMCA  and  YAVCA  will  have 
an  explanatory  meeting  for  people 
interested  in  community  work  to- 
day at  4  p.m.  in  Gerrard  Hall,  ac- 
cording to  Miss  Dottie  Wood. 
PHARMACY   SENATE 

Tl.-    Pharmacy  Senate  will  meet 
today  at  7  p.m.  in  113  Howell  Hall. 
.\11  members  have  been  urged  to 
attend. 
PHILOLOGICAL  CLUB 

The  Philologcial  Club  wi'.I  have 
its  first  meeting  of  the  year  today 
at  7:30  p.m.  in  the  Faculty  Lounge 
of  the  Morehead  Planetarium.  Pro- 
fessor Werner  P.  Friederick,  chair- 
man  of  comparative   literature   at 


UNC  will  present  a  paper  entitled 
"Australia  As   Revealed   in  Some 
Historical    and    Regional    Novels." 
SCIENTIFIC  SOCIETY 
The  Elisha  Mitchell  Scientific  So- 

j  ciety  will  meet  today  at  7:30  p.m. 
in  206  Phillips.  Appearing  on  the 

i  program  will  be  W.  A.  Bowers  of 

i  the  Physics  Dept,  and  G.  R.  Mac- 

j  Carthy  of  the  Geology  Dept.  Busi- 

j  ness  will  include  election  of  mem- 

i  bers. 
METHODIST  YOUNG  ADULTS 

!  The  Young  Adult  Group  of  the 
Methodist  Church  will  meet  to- 
morrow  night  at   8. 

I  WESLEY   CHOIR 

The  Wesley  Choir  will  hold  re- 

,  hearsal  at  the  University  Methodist 
Church  tonight  from  7  to  8.  All  in- 

;  terested  persons  have  been  urged 

I  to  attend. 
FOLK  DANCE  GROUP 

1  The  Wesley  Folk  Dance  Group 
will   hold   its  regular,  weekly  get- 

;  together  Friday  at  7:30  p  m.  in  the 

I  basement  of  the  Universty  Metho- 

i  dist  Church.  All  persons  interested 


SPSCfAL  STOCmG-  OFFEl^  / 


^^fcof  $  Kf'gftf  L94\9^\  With  Every  SPfP I 
Two  Pair  You  Ge#  Two  Spares . .  ▼  f\^^/ 

Hfr«'j  a  rare  opportunity  to  get  a  real  long-lasting  supply  of  fine 
nyion  hosiery  for  far  less  than  you  c\rr  imagined?  A  rrgular  $1.2') 
value  for  only  $1.00 — p'"'  *  spare.  When  you  buy  this  package  of 
two  pairs  and  two  spares,  you  are  actually  getting  three  pairs  of  fine 
nylon  hose.  Take  advantage  of  this  offer  NOW.  ^  Chp  and  mail  the 
coupon  below  for  fast  delivery. 

DENISE  HOSIERY  Tv^BOX  227,  READLNG,  PA. 

P!eas«  send  me  two  pairs  and  two  spam  of  Denise  Hosiery. 
For  this  I  am  enclosing  $2.00. ' 


Nomc- 


Addrns. 


4 


City- 


-Stole- 


Size  Length 

Business  Sheer  □ 

Dress  Sheer  Q 

D  Beige      D  Toupe 


in  the  art  of  the  folk  dance  have 
been  invited  to  participate  in  the 
weekly  meetings. 
DAILY  TAR  HEEL 

The   Daily   Tar   Heel    will    hold 
a    general    staff    meeting    in    the 
newsroom  today  at  4  p.m. 
STUDENT  INSURANCE 

Oct.  15  is  the  deadline  for  UNC 
students  to  enroll  in  the  Student 
Insurance  Plan,  provided  this  year 
by  the  Pilot  Life  Insurance  Com- 
pany. Application  blanks  may  be 
obtained  from  the  Student  Govern- 
ment Office  in  Graham  Memorial, 
at  the  Y  and  in  GM's  Information 
Office.  Students  have  t>een  asked 
to  pick  up  their  insurance  identi- 
licaton  cards  in  the  Student  Gov- 
ernment office. 
YACK  CONTRACTS 

All  organizations  desiring  space 
in  the  1957  Yackety  Yack  must 
sign  contracts  in  the  Yack  Office 
in  the  basement  of  Graham  Me- 
morial by  tomorrow,  according  to 
Editor  Tommy  Johnson. 
WUNC-TV 

Today's  schedule  for  WUNC-TV, 
the    University's   educational    tele- 
vision station: 
12:44  Sign  On 
12:45  Music 

1:00  Today  on  Farm 

1:30  Music  in  Air 

2:00  Science  Si  Nature 

2:30  World  Mission  Conf. 

3:00  Sign  Off 

5:44  Sign  On 

5:45  Music 

6:00  Magic  Lantern 

6:15  Sports  Clinic 

6:30  News 

6:45  Sports 

7:00  Books  &  People 

7:15  Bible  Course 

8:00  Dr.  Shivers 

8:45  State  Government 

9:30  Notes  on  Music 
10:00  Final   Eklition 

10:15  Sign  Off 


In  Billiard  Room 


Giving  free  Instruction  'o  both 
male  and  coed  students  in  the 
fundamentals  of  billiards,  Charles 
Peterson  is  back  again  in  the  Bil- 
liard Room  in  the  basement  of 
Graham  Memorial  every  day  this 
week  from  1-5  p.m. 

WednjJsday  at  8  p.m.  there  will 
be  a  free  exhibition  of  Peterson's 
skill.  The  expert  will  demonstrate 
the  use  of  his  cards  '-howing  'the 
geometry  of  angles  on  a  pool  ta- 
ble and  i>erform  other  tricks. 

On  date-night,  starting  at  8  p.m. 
Friday,  there  will  be  a  short  tour- 
nament with  three  prizes.  The 
boys    will   shx>ot   rotation   but    the 


Campus  Unit 
Will  Sponsor 
Study  Groups 


girls  will  not  be  required  to  shoot 
the  balls  in  any  order. 

The  master  will  be  here  till  Sat- 
urday. 

Peterson  is  paid  by  the  Nation- 
al Association  of  Student  Unions 
which  in  turn  is  paid  a  fee  by  the 
GMAB.  He  spends  the  entire  col- 
legiate year  giving  instruction  and 
exhibitions  at  the  various  colleges. 
Last  week  the  expert  was  at  N.  C 
State;  next  week  he  will  go  to  the 
University  of  South  Carolina. 

"This  game   is  coming  back   as 
well  as  I  can  see,"  comments  Pe- 
terson. He  feels  that  the  game  will 
continue  to  grow  in  popularity  as 
long    as    there   are    decent   places 
such  as  the  Graham  Memorial,  in 
which  the  students  can  play, 
i      Peterson  believes  that  UNC  has 
i  a  good  chance  of  having  an  out- 
I  standing  billiards  team  this  year. 
I  Three    students    are    selected    by 
i  tournament  play  in  the  spring  for 
!  the  team.   The   team's   scores   are 
j  submitted  to  the  Billiard  Congress 
!  of    America.    The    highest    scorers 
j  selected    from    entrants    from    43 
'  colleges   and   universities   meet   in 


Debate  Squad  Initial  Meeting 
Scheduled  For  GM  Tonight 


3  On  Police  Blotter 

Students  on  the  Chapel  Hill 
police  blotter  from  Oct.  1  to  Oct. 
8  are  as  follows:  Wiilam  Connelly 


The   deoate  aquad   will  hold  its    intercollegiate 
first  meeting  of  the  year  today  at 
4  p.m.  in  Roland  Parker  2  in  Gra- 
ham Memorial,  according  to  Dave 
Lieberman,  president. 

The  topic  for  this  year  will  be 
"Resolved:  That  the  United  States 
-should  discontinue  direct  econ- 
omic aid  to  foreign  countries." 
Dr.  Shepard  Jones  of  the  UNC  Po-  { 
litical  Science  Dept.  will  speak 
briefly  on  the  background  of  this 
topic. 

Lieberman  invited  all  interest- 
ed students  to  come  and  partici- 
pate on  this  year's  team.  Experi- 
ence is  not  necessary,  he  said. 

"The  squad  never  droi>s  those 
who  are  interested,"  he  said,  "and 
everyone  is  invited  to  come  and 
participate  this  year." 

Anyone  not  able  to  attend  the 
meeting  at  the  specified  time  may 
call  Lieberman  at  8-9007. 

Last  year  the  squad  debated  in 


tournaments  i  n 
Pittsburgh,  Tallahassee  and  At- 
lanta as  well  as  ether  contests  in 
the   Carolinas   and   Virginia. 


passing  stop 
assault  with 
and  Arnold 
mufflers. 


sign;  Ida  Brewer, 
a  deadly  weapon; 
Vickers,     improper 


This  semestei  campus  denomi- 
national groups  are  sponsoring  12 
study  groups,  meeting  for  an  hour 
each  week. 

The  groups  and  meeting  times 
are  as  follows:  '  the    Intercollegiate    Men's    Pocket 


CLASSIFIEDS 

PAPER-BACKED  BOOKS  —  Good 
used  novels,  detective  yarns  and 
non-fiction  at  3  for  25c  in  the 
stand  by  our  front  door.  The 
Intimate  Bookshop. 


PENISE  HOSIERY     .:.     BiDX  227.  READING.   PA. 


FOR  SALE  BY  ORIGINAL  OWN- 
er— '55    Pord    2-door,    R   &  H. 

white    walls.     Excellent    condi- 
tion, low  mileage.  Phone  91691. 


Prayer:  Friday,  7-8  p.m.,  Epis- 
copal Prayer  House; 

Faith,  Sex  and  Love:  Group  A, 
9-10  p.m.,  BSU  Lounge;  Group  B, 
Wed.,  7-3  p.m.,  Episcopal  Parish 
House;  Group  C,  Thurs..  7-8  p.m., 
V.MCA  Library. 

Christianity  and  Other  World 
Religions:  Mon.,  8-9  p.m.,  at  Y  Li- 
brary. 

Contemporary  Theology:  Mon., 
7-8  p.m.,  Y  cabinet  room. 

Science  and  Religion:  meeting 
time  to  be  announced  later. 

Contemporary  Novels  and  Plays: 
Mon..  9-10  p.m.,  Anne  and  Harry 
Smith's  apartment. 

The  Christian  Student  and  So- 
cial Problems:  Mon..  7-8  p.m.,  Y 
library. 

Understanding  the  Christian 
Faith:  Wed.,  5-6  p.m.  at  BSU 
Lounge. 

The  Nature  of  ^4ri:  Thurs.,  9-10 
p.m.,  Wesley  Foundation   Loungs. 

The-  Christian  Student  and  the; 
University:  Thurs..  5-6  p.m.,  Y  Li- 
brary. 


Billiards    Tournament. 


GMAB,  IDC 
To  Hold  Dance 

A  free  dance,  sponsored  by  the 
GMAB  and  IDC,  will  be  held  in 
the  basement  ot  Cobb  Dormitory, 
Friday  from  8  p.m.  to  12  p.m. 

Bruno's  Combo  will  provide  mu- 
sic for  this  homecoming  dance  to  j 
which  everyone  is  invited.  j 

Linda  Mann.  Director  of  GMAB, ' 
stated   the  dance  will  be  held   in 
Cobb  because  previously  the  Ren- 
dezvous Room  had  been  unable  to 
accommodate    all    wishing    to    at- ; 
tend  the  dance. 

After  the  football  game  Satur- 
day there  will  be  a  free  reception 
=ifith  coed  hostesses  and  refresh- 
hiiSnts  in  the  basement  of  Cobb 
Dormitory.  Bruno's  Combo  will 
provide  the  music  for  this  affair 
sponsored  'Jointly  by  the  GMAB 
and  the  IDC. 


IDC  Social 

Comm/ffees 

Organized 

The  Interdormitory  Council  has 
organized  its  social  committee  for 
the  coming  year. 

Bennett  Thomas  has  been  nam- 
ed to  head  the  commrttee  by  IDC 
president  Sonny  Hallford. 

Dormitories  have  been  divided 
into  groups  with  an  overall  social 
chairman  who  will  assist  the  group 
in    planning  social  functions. 

Group  I,  consisting  of  the  fol- 
lowing dorms:  Winston,  Connor, 
Cobb,  Alexander  and  Joyner,  is 
under  the  leadership  of  Steve  Ly- 
on. 

Group  n,  consisthig  of  the  fol- 
lowing dorms,  Lewis,  Everett, 
Stacy,  Aycock  and  Graham,  is  un- 
der the  leadership  of  Craig  Gib- 
bons. 

Group  III,  consisting  of  Grimes. 
Manley,  Mangum,  and  Ruffin,  is 
under  the  leadership  of  Lew  Har- 
dee. 

Group  IV,  consisting  of  Old 
West,  Old  East,  Battle-Vance- 
Pettigrew  and  Whitehead,  is  head- 
ed by  Bob  Smith. 


SttTOU  LATER   +t^c|yUM^T'^ 


N/IY   PRA.Yfc,R' 


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Teenagers 


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wddu  JOHNSONg^cBi:^ 


~;        rihe FLAIR9        >5l«iHeij  QUIWTHER 


SHOWS  —  7:45  &   10:15 


SHOWS 


Raleigh  Memorial  Auditorium 

15 


RESERVED  SEA?  ADMISSION 

$2.00-S2.50-$2.75-$3.00  $3.50 

MAIL  ORDER  AND  TICKET  SALE 

THIEM'S   RECORD   SHOP 

HAMLIN   DRUG   CO. 

Only    Date    In    Eastern    N.    C. 


ONE  NITE  ONLY 
MONDAY     EVE 


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DEADLINE 

TO  ENROLL  FOR 


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STUDENT 


SURGICAL  SICKNESS  INSURANCE 
OCTOBER  15 


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»*         ".  j.     I 


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WE   ARE   PLEASED   TO   HAVE   BEEN   SELECTED   BY  THE 
STUDENT   GbVtRNMENT  AND  THE   UNIVERSITY   ADMINIS- 

f RATION  TO   PROVIDE   THIS   PROTECTION 
FOR  THE   STUDENTS  OF  THE   UNIVERSITY. 

PILOT  LIFE  INSURANCE  COMPANY 

GREENSBORO,    NORTH    CAROLINA 


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PAGI  FOUR 


THl  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


TUESDAY,  OCTOBER  %  IfSS 


iJNCBooters  Take  5-0  Win  Over  Lynchburg  In  Opener 


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SUITS  754 


CLEANED 
AND  PRESSED 


TROUSERS  40c  SWEATERS  40c 

SPORT  SHIRTS  40c      • 

Cith  And  Carry  Only 

CAROLINA  CLEANERS 

IB  YEARS  EXPERIENCE 
Opposite  But  Station — Noxt  to  Shorwin-Wllliams 


SPORT 
COAT 


JULIAN'S 
^pLLEQ^ 


in  hnnd'WOTmn,  imporimd 
Shetland  iahtiea 

"Natural"  $tyling  alt  tho 
woy.  This  jacket  reflects  Hy 
mood,  the  look,  the  casual 
attitude  of  today's 
"Country  Gentieman"! 

Natural,  too,  is  the  fabric 
—soft,  supple  Shetland 
. .  .hand-woven  in  handsome 
exclusive  patterns. 

And  with  its 

'J  'r5''i^''*'?^**»>«o«"ce  and 
J  inspired  fashion  fioir,  makes 


u!*iii 


this  Shetland  jacket  look  so 

liW^Vil^'ilittva:mstfiU!;Uli!iit;i 


Which  ojF  these  swell  new 
Bodks  will  You  Enjoy? 


\ 


'0    ';''^ 


1^ 


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Nice  bawdy  kidding  of  the  Navy 
publicity  boys.  $3.95 

A   CERTAIN   SMILE 
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her  way  around!    $2.95 

THE  LAST  HURRAH 

Politics     in     Yankeeiand,     and 

lively  reading. $4.00 

A  SINGLE  PEBBLE 
Sensitive  tale  of   love  and    be- 
trayal, by  John  Horsey.        $3.00 
CALEB,  MY  SON 
Local     gal     name     of     Daniels 
corties  through  with  a  topnotch 

fir»t  novel.      $2.75 

EISENHOWER:     THE     INSIDE 

STORY 

Meat     for     political     gab-fests. 

Controversial.  $4.95 

ARTHRITIS  AND  COMMON 
SENSE 

There's  more  in  the  old  ioint 
than  meets  the  eye.  .  $3.95 
ROOSEVELT:  THE  LION  AND 
THE  FOX 

How  to  win  friends  and  influ- 
ence politicians.  _ $5.75 

TOYNBEE  — HISTORIANS  AP 

PROACH   TO   HISTORY. 

f^r.  Big  of  Historical  mysticism 

speaks.  * $5.00 

THE  ULTIAMTE  VIKING 
The  world  of  the  Vikings  view- 
ed through  modern  scholarship. 

$5.75 

HOW  TO  PICK  A  WEDLOCK 
More  ^  nonsense    by   the   author 

of  Hopalong  Freud $2.95 

DO  I  MAKE  MYSELF  CLEAR? 
Timely  key  to  political  double- 
talk.  Goo«H    ^._:^_..    .  $1.50 

SILLYNYMS 

Carolina's  Dave  Morrah  at  hU 

preposterous  best. $T.50 


Youll  Find  them  all  in 
That  Friendly  Browsery 

THE  INTIMATE  BOOKSHOP 


205  E.  Franklin  St. 


Open  Till  10  P.M. 


Tar  Heels 
Sparkle  In 
First  Start 

By   JIM   PURKS 

Coach  Marvin  Allen's  hustling 
UNC  seccer  «quad,  scoring  in 
every  quarter  vexcept  the  third, 
trounced  Lynchberg  yesterday 
aftern(»oi),  5-0,     . 

Carolina  gave'  Lynchburg  little 
time  to  rest  before  scoring  its  first 
goal.  Thirty  seconds  after  play  had 
begun  left  wing  Johnny  Foster,  tak- 
ing a  perfect  pass  from  Ted  You- 
hanna,  booted  the  first  goal  to 
give  Carolina  an  early   lead. 

Lynchburg  then  took  the  offen- 
sive, but  failed  to  capitalize  on 
several  scoring  opportunities,  in- 
cluding three  corner  kicks  on  the 
Carolina  goal.  Fine  defensive  play 
by  Dave  Corkey,  Bob  Borden,  and 
goalie  Chuck  Hartman  prevented 
Lynchburg  from  scoring. 

Carolina  held  a  scoring  spree  in 
the  second  quarter,  scoring  three 
goals  within  nine  minutes.  Captain 
Grover  Brown  scored  the  second 
goal  with  an  "impossible  angle" 
shot  from  the  deep  right  corner. 

Four  minutes  later  right  inside 
Coleman  Barks  drove  a  pass  from 
John  Foster  into  the  nets  to  give 
UNC  a  3-0  lead. 

Rigiit  winger  Rick  Grausman 
then  added  another  tally  three 
minutes  later  with  a  shot  into  the 
corner  of  the  Lynchburg  goal.  The 
half  ended  with  Carolina  on  top, 
4-0. 

Lynchburg  dominated  play  in  the 
third  quarter,  keeping  the  ball 
mainly  in  the  Carolina  end  and 
threatening  several  times  to  score. 

Carolina's  defense  tightened  up, 
however,  and  held  Lynchburg 
scoreless  again.  Carolina  failed  to 
score  for  the  first  time^ 

Carolina  added  one  more  goal  to 
its  total  when  Tom  Rand  drove  a 
hard  shot  into  the  Lynchburg  goal 
from  beyond  the  18  yard  line  at 
the  10  minute  mark.  This  proved  to 
be  tne  final  tally  and  the  score 
ended  with  Carolina  the  victor 
5-0. 

Carolina's  next  contest  will  be 
with  a  tough  Washisfiton  and  Lee 
squad  on  Oct.  16  in  Virginia.  ;  •/ 


Rod  And  Gun 
Field  Day  Is 
Slated  Nov.  7 


The  second  annual  Rod  and  Gun 
Field  Day  meet  is  tentatively 
scheduled  for  Thursday,  Nov.  1  at 
the  Durham  Wildlife  area.  This  is 
a  co-recreational  event  under  the 
supervision  of  the  Intramural 
Dept. 

Four  activities  will  be  held  and 
trophies  will  be  awarded  to  the 
team  winner  and  individual  win- 
ners. The  four  events  are  archery, 
trap  shooting,  target  rifle  shoot- 
ing, and  bait  casting. 

Four  students  may  compose  a 
team  in  the  competition.  The  team 
does  not  have  to  represent  any 
specific  organization.  Eighty  stu- 
dents participated  in  last  year's 
Rod  and  Gun,  and  the  Intramural 
Dept.  hopes  to  have  a  bigger  turn- 
out this  year. 

Entry  blanks  may  be  obtained 
at  the  Intramural  office  in  Room 
314  of  Woollen  Gym. 


PATRONIZI  YOUR 
•    ADVERTISERS    • 


Want  Your 
OLD  SUIT 

Ivy 

Leagueized 

We  take  out  pleats,  Re- 
cut  Shoulders,  convert 
to  3  button,  put  belt  in 
the  back. 

Fast  and  Efficient 
Service 

Pete  the  Tailor 


Tar  Heels  Prep  For  Bulldogs 


Koes  Out;  Jones 
Moved  To  Center 


Carolina's  Tar  Heels,  still  look- 
ing for  their  first  win  of  the  sea- 
son after  three  losing  efforts, 
launched  preparations  yesterday 
for  Saturday's  homecoming  game 
against  the  University  of  Georgia. 

Seventeen  players  who  saw  ac- 
tion in  Saturday's  Iriss  to  South 
Carolina  took  it  easy  in  the  work- 
out. The  starters,  plus  six  others, 
worked  out  lightly  for  an  hour  in 
sweat  clothes,  then  the  remainder 
of  the  squad  retired  behind  the 
caBvas  screen  for  more  work. 

Missing  from  the  practice  ses- 
sion was  Ronnie  Koes.  soph  cen- 
ter who  remained  in  a  Columbia, 
S.  C,  hospital  with  a  back  injury. 
Koes,  who  was  making  h;.s  first 
start  as  a  replacement  for  injured 
George  Stavnitski,  suffered  a  p.iin- 
ful  injury  during  the  second  half 
of  the  South  Carolina  game,  and 
was  carried  off  the  field  on  a 
stretcher. 

The  extent  of  Koes'  injury  has 


not  yet  been  determined,  but  it  is 
known  that  he  will  be  definitely 
lost  for  Saturday's  game  with  the 
Bulldogs. 

Guard  Jim  Jones,  a  center  on 
last  year's  club,  has  been  moved 
back  to  the  pivot  post  to  fill  the 
vacancy.  Working  with  Jones  in 
yesterday's  practice  session  were 
Bill  Hardison,  Fred  Swearingen 
and  Donnie  Smith. 

Stavnitski,  injured  in  the  Okla- 
homa game,  returned  to  Chapel 
Hill  over  the  weekend  and  is  con- 
valescing at  Memorial  Hospital. 
The  UNC  co-captain  received  a 
concu.ssion  in  the  Sooner  contest 
that  put  him  out  for  the  season. 


WUNC    ,   ... 

Today's  schedule  for  WITNC,  the 
Universty's  FM  radio  station,  91.5 
megacycles:     ,.  ^    *%    j^,.-;      / 

7:00  Intermezzo 

7:15  Over  the  Back  Fence 

7:30  Vistas    of   Israel 

7:45  Variations  of  Theme 

8:00  Horizons  in  Music 

9:00  Adventures  in  Song 
10:00  News  at  Ten 
10:15  Evening  Masterwork 
11:30  Sign  Off 


Mural  Tag  Football  Begins 


Intramural  tag  football  in  the 
fraternity  division  got  under  way 
yesterday  with  10  games  being 
played.  An  encounaging  note  was 
that  all  teams,  showed  mp  and 
•there  were  no  forfeits. 

At  4  o'clock,  play  began  on  all 
five  fields.  Several  games  were 
high-scoring  contests  like  the  Sig- 
ma Nu,  St.  Anthony  contest  which 
Sigma  Nu  won  by  a  lopsided  total 
of  46-0. 


In  the  other  contests  played  ai 
4,  DKE  defeated  Sig  Chi,  7-2;  Del 
ta  Sigma  defeatec'  AK  Psi,  7-6; 
ATO  defeated  TEP.  32-0;  SAE  de- 
feated Pi  Kappa  Alpha,  30-12,  and 
Beta  defeated   the   Phi  Delts,  7-6. 

Several  close  games  were  play- 
ed at  5  o'clock.  Phi  Gam  edged 
out  Kap  Sig,  6-0;  SPE  narrowly 
beat  Lambda  Chi,  9-6;  Pi  Lamb 
defeated  Kappa  Psi,  7-0,  and  Zet^ 
Psi  defeated  Chi  Phi,  31  to  0. 


ESSOGAS 

Reg.29.9  H.T32.9 

-CASH  - 

Whipple's  Esso  Service 

ACROSS   FROM  CHAPEL   HILL   NURSERY— DURHAM   HWY. 

BUY   EARLY— SAVE— NATIONALLY  ADVERTISED 

PERMANENT   ANTI-FREfZE    $2.75   Gal. 


EXTRA! 


EXTRA! 


EXTRA! 


Bring  this  ad  and  receive  one  c»nt  par  gallon  off  on  gas,  and 
fiva  cents  par  quart  off  on  oil.  This  makes  ESSO  gas  28.9  and 
31.9.  Good  Oct.  9  Thro  Oct.  15.  1956. 


What  Price 
Sharpness 

You  don't  have  to  buy  a 
suit  or  sport  coat  every 
week  (we'll  love  you  if 
you  do)  to  be  smartly 
dressed.  A  new  shirt, 
tie  or  shoes  can  do  won- 
ders with  sprucing  up 
your  ensembles.  Take 
advantage  of  our  enor- 
mous selections  for 
dress  and-casual  wear. 
Let  Milton's  put  that  dis- 
tinctive touch  into  your 
wardrobe. 

Cloti)tns  CupboarH 


J 


LAST  TIMES  TODAY 


NOW  PLAYING 


All  Premiums  And  Draft 


T.  V  —  Good  Place  To 

Watch  Boxing  &  Football 

Bring  Your  Date 


WEST  FRANKLIN  STREET  LUNCHEONETTE 

Next  to   Bui  Stftion 

Phone  9-2846 


SHIRTS^  19c 


EA. 


With   or   Without 
Starch 

Prompt  Service 


Glen  Lennox  Laundromat 


You  see  more 
of  Autumn's  beauty 
-  -   from  a  ;  •     ■  'V 

Trailways  Bus 


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Unlike  motorists,  you 
don't  have  to  keep  your  eyes 
glued  to  the  road  and  passing 
traffic.  You're  free  to  drink  in 
the  flaming  colors  that  flank 
the  highways  mile  after  mile. 
You  can  sit  back  without  a 
care  in  the  latest  type  con- 
toilr-shaped  seat  and  view 
the  scenery  through  your  big 
picture  window. 


311  W.  FRANKLIN  ST.  PHONE  4281 

UNION  BUS  TERMINAL 

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From   Chapel   Hill  to 

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6  trips,  3  without  change 

RALEIGH    

9  departures  daily 

NEW   YORK       

8  trips  daily;  thru-lin«r  servic* 
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2  trips,  direct  rout*,  plwt  «dd1  Mndce 

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6  departures,  5  thru 

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2  departures,  1  without  change  enroute 

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us  tax) 

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TRAILWAYS 

The  rpMte  of  the  Thru-Lfnersi 


'K^ 


i«* 


tJ.H.^C,   Lit>i*ary 

Serials      Dept, 
Chapel  Hill,   N,   C. 
8-31-49 


MEETING 

It's  time    for   tha<    meeting.   $•• 
editorial,  pag«  2. 


NAN   SCHAEFFER 


GAIL   WILLINCHAM 


H'Coming  Queen 

Will  Be  Elected 
In  Voting  Today. 

^,  Stiuknts.,wiU,  :vt»te  today  for^-Carolinn's  Homecoming 
Queen  lor  tht  hoineioming  g;ime  to  be  plaved  here  this  Sat- 
urday Willi  Georgia.  Fraternities  and  sororities  will  vote  at 
their  regular  meetings  tonight,  and  dormitory  residents  will 
vote  by  ballots  to  be  passed  out     in  the  djninitories  today. 

The  identity  ol  the  <)ueen  will  not  be  reveu'led  Until 
she  is  presented  at  the  game,  aeoerding  to  Tniversitv  T'.lid) 
president,   joe  Cilapp. 

Saturday's    festivities    will    also* 

include  homecoming  displays  spon- 
sored by  dormitories,  fraternities 
and  sororities.  Clapp  urged  all 
dorms,  fraternities  and  sororities 
to  enter  a  display  in  the  competi- 
tion. 

A  representive  will  be  chosen 
in  each  of  the  sororities  and  wo- 
men's dormitories. 


Billiards 
Exhibition 
Set  Today 


Organizations  ptanning  displays  |  Charles  Peterson,  "Father  of 
have  been  urged  to  send  their  S2  |  Inter-collegiate  Billiards,"  will 
entrance  fee  no  later  than  tomor- 1  give  a  free  exhibition  tonight  al 
row  night  to  Joe  Clapp.  122  Mai- ;  eight   o'clock   in   the   basement   ol 


lette  St..  or  call  him  at  9-32.51. 

Displays  will  be  judged  Satur- 
day morning  beginning  at  10  o'- 
clock. 


Public  Health 
School  Gets 
Large  Grant 

The     UNC     School     of     Public  j 
Health  has  received  part  of  a  mil- 1 
lion     dollar     grant     awarded     to 
schools  and  individuals  by  the  U.  i 
S.  Public  Health  Service.  i 

The  school  rsceived  two  grants  j 
totaling  $39,115.  | 

Six  of  the  grants,  totaling  $19,  j 
940,  are  being  used  for  trainee-  j 
ship  grants  in  the  Department  of  I 
Public  Health  Nursing  of  the  ■ 
UNC  School  of  Public  Health. 

The  remaining  $19,175  will  cov- 
er five  traineeship  grants  for  oth 
er  public  health  work  within  the 
UNC  school. 

This  program  was  authorized 
by  Congress  on  July  23.  Since  that 
time  the  Public  Health  Service  has 
sent  notice  to  the  schools,  receiv- 
ed applications  and  notified  re 
cipients  of  awards  in  order  that 
the  program  could  get  underway 
during  the  current  semester. 


Graham   Memorial. 

Peterson  has  ben  appearing 
each  afternoon  this  week  from 
1-5  p.  m.  in  GM's  basement.  The 
billiards  expert  has  been  giving 
free  instruction  to  both  men  and 
women   students. 

The  instruction  will  continue 
through  Friday  afternoon.  Friday 
night,  "date  night,"  there  will  be 
a  short  tournament  held  and  three 
prizes  will  be  awarded  the  win- 
ners. 

Peterson  has  said  he  thinks  that 
UNC  has  potential  as  far  as  or- 
ganization of  a  billiards  team  for 
national  competition  is  concerned. 


Says  Parking 
Plan  Needed 

By   CLARKE   JONES 

University  Party  Chairman  iviike 
Weinman  last  night  said  "there 
is  no  reason  in  the  world"  for  the 
two-hour  parking  restriction  in 
front  of  Big  Fraternity  Court. 

At  the  party's  first  meeting  of 
the  year  held  last  night,  he  said 
"Were  tryng  our  best  to  get  the 
parking  areas  back."  He  called  ufv 
on  party  members  to  form  a  'littlo 
group"  to  do  something  about  the 
matter. 

The  restriction,  put  into  effect 
late  last  summer  by  the  Chapel  Hill 
Board  of  Aldermen,  limits  parking 
to  two  hours  on  Columbia  St.  be- 
tween Cameron  Ave.  and  Franklin 
St. 

Weinman  also  spoke  of  the  meet-  j 
ing    Student    body    President    Bob  j 
Young  and  Interfraternity  Council 
Presdent  Ed  Hudgins  had  with  the  ! 
aldermen    Monday    night.  i 

He   said    to   get    anything    done 
'You've  got  to  come  through  with 
a  plan.  Those  people  (Young  and 
Hi^ClaiA?)  didn't  have  any  plan  " 

Young  and  Hudgins  bad  request- ' 
ed    the   aldermen    to   "temporarily 
remove"    the    restriction    while    a 
more   satisfactory    plan   was   being 
worked  out. 

The  aldermen  refused  but  Mayor 
O.  K.  Cornwcll,  who  is  chairman 
of  the  UNC  Physical  Education  de- 
partment, urged^  another  meeting 
when  all  the  parties — students, 
townspeople  and  merchants — could 
get  together. 
McWER  LAWN 

Weinman  suggested  using  half  of 
the  lawn  in  front  of  Mclver  dormi- 
tory for  parking  cars.  He  said  it 
would  make  a  "nice  parking  lot" 
for  about  100  cars. 

Both  Weinman  and  UP  member 
Benny  Thomas  denied  a  report  say- 
ing Thomas  was  about  to  l(*ave  the 
party  because  of  differences  with 
each  other. 

Daily  Tar  Heel  reporter-columnist 
Neil  Bass  stated  in  a  column  in 
yesterday's  paper  that  Thomas, 
"who  has  fought  long  both  in  the 
dorms  and  in  the  Legislature  hall 
to  keep  the  tag.  Fraternity  Man's 
^arty,'.  off  the  UP  is  being  rebuf- 
fed  by  .   .   .Weinman  " 

Bass  got  his  information,  he 
said,   "from   reputable   sources." 

Thomas  said  he  was  a  "dorm 
man"  and  would  be  "until  he  got 
out.  But  I  am  also  a  UP  man.  he 
said. 


BROOKLYN  iJTi  —  Jackie  Robinsotfs  single  wth  two  out  and  two 

on  base  in  the  tenth  inning  brought  in  junior  Gilliam  with  a  run  that 

.  gave  the  Brooklyn  Dodgers  a  1-0  victoi^'  over  the  New  Yark  Yankees 

yesterday  and  tied  the  World  Series  at  'three  victories  for  each  team. 

The  seventh  and  deciding  game  will  be  played  at  Ebbets  Field  to- 
da>.  I 

Robinson's  hit  broke  up  a  brilliai|l  pitching  duel  between  Bob 
Turley  of  the  Yanks  and  Clem  Labinef  of  the  Dodgers.  It  was  only 
the  fourth  hit  off  Turley,  who  was  in  ^occasional  trouble  because  of 
wildness  but  struck  out  11.  Labine.  touched  for  five  hits  in  the  first 
four  innings,  yielded  only  seven  in  all. 

Walks  to  Gilliam  and  Duke  Snider,  the  latter  intentional,  paved 
the  way  for  Robinson's  winning  blow,  which  sailed  over  the  head 
of  left  fielder  Enos  Slaughter  and  hit  t^e  left  field  wall. 

A  crowd  of  33,224  thrilled  as  Labine  and  Turley  battled  through 
nine  scoreless  innings  of  brilliant  pitching  with  hardly  a  scoring  threat 
by  either  team.  The  Yanks  got  two  men  on  base  in  the  sixth  inning 
and  again  in  the  eighth  but  failed  to  get  a  runner  past  second. 

The  Dodgers  didn't  get  a  man  as  far  as  second  until  the  sixth  in- 
ning, when  they  drew  two  walks.  In  the  eighth  Labine  got  a  ground 
(See  BASEBALL,  Page  4) 


Six  Students 
In  BA  School 
Win  Grants 


Six  senior  accounting  students 
at  Carolina  have  been  awarded 
scholarships  given  for  the  1956- 
57  year  by  the  N.  C.  Association  of 
Certified  Public  Accountants  and 
four  CPA  firms  in  this  state. 

The  winners,  selected  for  their 
scholastic  achievements,  character, 
leadership'  and  need,  are:  Thomas 
S.  Brickhouse.  Rocky  Point;  Ray 
E.  Crouse,  Winston-Salem;  Fred 
G.  Eidson.  Elkin;  Arthur  R.  Price 


The  prices  of  date  tickets  to 
the  conference  gamA^s  with  Mary- 
land and  Wake  Forrest  have  been 
reduced  to  half-price. 

The  price  of  guest  tickets  will 
remain  as   before. 

•'Date    tickets    only    will    be   re- 
duced," announced  Vernon  Crook,  \ 
UNC    business    manager   of    alhle- , 
tics.    "Guest   tickets   will    bo   avai- 
lable  at   the   full   price,"   he   said. 

The  price  cf  date  tickets  for  the 
Maryland  contest  Oct.   20  will   be  j 
two    dollars.    The    full    price    for  I 
guest   tickets   is   four   doliars. 

Date  tickets  for  the  Wake  For- 
est game  Oct.  27  will  be  $1.75, 
while  the  price  for  guest  tickets 
will   remain  $3.50.  | 


GRACE    BONEY 


J.^XNE    BROCK 


Farrell  Concert  Tonight 

Eil««n  Farrell  will  be  present- 
ed In  a  concert  tonight  at  8  p.m. 
in  Memorial  Hall. 

Tickets  for  the  concert  will  be 
available  at  the  door  and  at  GM 
Information  Office  at  a  cost  of 
$7.50.  Season  tickett  may  also  be 
used. 


English  Ciub  To  Meet 
In  Library  This  Friday 

Prof.  Norman  E.  Eliason  of  the 
UNC  faculty  will  be  the  featured 
speaker  Friday  at  7:30  p.  m.  when 
the  English  Club  meets  ^  the 
Assembly  Room  of  Wilson  Library 
Building. 

Using  'as  his  topic  the  resur 
gence  of  interest  among  American  j 
scholars  in  the  study  of  Old  Eng- 1 
lish  and  related  languages.  Dr.  j 
Eliason  will  answer  questions ' 
from  the  audience  after  his  re- 1 
marks.  j 

In  his  discussJion  of  the  resur  I 
gence,  he  will  center  his  talk  I 
around  the  career  of  Prof.  Ke.iip 
Malone,  Old  Engli.sh  scholar  who, 
recently  retired  from  teaching  at  j 
Johns  Hopkins  Umversity,  where  j 
Eliason  was  associated  with  him  [ 
while  completing  his  doctoral 
work.  I 


Speakers 
List  Problems 
Ir}  Education 

Education  leader  Charles  G  i 
Rose  Jr.,  in  an  address  here  yes  I 
terday  afternoon  before  the  re  j 
gional  School  Board  Work  Con-  j 
ference,  enumenrated  major  pro-  j 
blems  faced  by  North  Carolina 
"in  moving  forward  toward  con- 
tinued progr,V:s  and  advance-  • 
ment  in  our  public  schools."         i 

Speaking  on  "Preservina. 
Strengthening  and  Improving  our  i 
PubHc  Schools,"  The  Fayetteville  j 
attorney  S'aid  that  'the  enthusia  i 
Stic  vote  for  the  Pearsall  Plan  i 
ftnrendment  was  also  a  resoundins  | 
vote  of  confidence  for  public  i 
school  officials  throughotit  th-"  j 
State  for  the  fine  work  they  are  : 
doin«."  I 

Main    speaker    of    last    night'*;  j 
procram  was  Chancellor  Carey  H  ! 
Bostian    of    N.    C.    State    College 
who   spoke  on   "The   Role  of  the 
University  as  a  Part  of  the  Pub- 
lic  School   System." 


L.   P.  WHEELER  JR. 

.    .    .loins    $300    grant 

Marion;  John  M.  Sewell.  Murfrees 
boro;  and  Lucius  P.  Wheeler  Jr.. 
Washington. 

Price  and  Wheeler  were  eaih 
awarded  $500  scholarships,  given 
by  the  Strand,  Skees,  Jones  and 
Company  of  Greensboro  and  Char 
lotte,  and  by  the  Haskins  and  Sells 
of  Charlotte,  respectively. 

The  four  nther  awads,  value 
at  $300  each,  were  given  as  fol- 
lows: Peat,  Marwick,  Mitchell  and 
Company  scholarship  to  Bri  k 
house;  Williams,  Urquhart  and 
Ficklin  of  Raleigh  scholarship  to 
Crouse:  and  two  scholarships 
from  the  N.  C.  Association  of 
Certified  Public  Accountants  to 
Eidson  and  Sewell. 


■  Student  nmtting  f-iUl  blast  irv- 
to  barbed  wire  fence  near  end 
of  Stacy  Dormitory.         ■>     . 

*         *         * 

Girls  of  Mclver  Dornn  holding 
pep  rtUly  on  roof  on  night  of 
eliectricity    breakdown. 

Chancellor  Suggestion 
Committee  Meets  Today 

The  student  committee  appoint- 
ed to  help  select  a  chancellor  to 
uicceed  retiring  Chancellor  Ro- 
)?rt  House,  will  meet  in  the  Coun- 
•il  Room  of  Graham  Memorial  to- 
lay  and  Thursday  from  3  to  5 
.).  jn. 

With- Sonny  Evans  as  chairman, 
;he  grrvup  has  as  its  purpose  to 
lir  student  views  on  the  chan- 
.-ellorship. 

Student  Body  President  Bob 
Y)unK  and  this  committe  will  ap- 
pear before  the  Trustee  Commit- 
tee Oct.  27  to  present  its  report. 


Last  Day 
For  Frosh 
Yack  Pix 

Today  is  the  last  day  for  fresh- 
men, fourth-year  medical  students, 
and  nursing  students  to  have  their 
pictures  made  for  the  1957  Yac- 
kely  Yack,  according  to  Editor 
Tommy    Johnson. 

The  cost  for  this  late  service 
will   be  $1. 

Scphomores.  pharmacy  stu- 
dents, dental  and  dental  hygiene 
students  may  have  pictures  made 
this  week. 

The  photos  of  juniors,  law  stu- 
dents, medical  students  and  grad- 
uate students  will  be  taken  Oct. 
15-19. 

The  pictures  will  be  made  in 
the  basement  of  Graham  Mem- 
orial from  1  to  6  p.  m.  It  has 
been  requested  that  girls  wear 
dark  sweaters  and  pearls  and  the 
men,  dark  coats,  ties  and  white 
shirts.  ^J--*i' 


Class  Cut  Group  f 
Mum  On  Meeting 

The  rcsuii.s  ol  tiie  FacuitV'iiiudem  C-oinnuttec  meeting 
which  disc  ussed  the  cla.s.s-cut  |m)1uv  system  Moii(i;v\  afternoon 
probably  \\;ill  uqt  l)e  tlisclostd  until  the  .Noxemhcr  meeliing 
of  the  Faculty  Council.  ^ 

Dr.  Hii.ifh  Hobnail  oT  the  Kni»frsri  Depr."  nho  is  chair- 
iiian  of  the  facuhv-studeni  iiieci in,i>.  said  that  "any  rejxjrt 
issued   now  ini'.'ht    be   inisleadinii;." 

Dr.    Holman   expressed   the   po-* — • 

sition  of  the  faculty  committee  as    man  as  being  "pleasant  and  help- 
being   in    -a   state   of   e.xperimen-    ful.   both    to   the   faculty   and   the 


tation    and    formulation    of    a    re- 
port." 

He  said.  "Our  tentative  date  fcr 


student   members." 

He  e.xplained  further.  "The  stu- 
dents expr?ssed  their  frank  views 
submitting  a  report  will  be  at  the  q,,  .^^  ,^,bjoct  of  class  regulations 
November  meeting  of  the  Faculty    ^^^    ^.^     .^^^    faculty)    advanced 

C""n<^i'-"  our  ideas." 

The   atmosphere   of   the   discus- 


sion  was    described    by   Dr.    Hcl- 

Rhodes  Blanks  To  Be 
Turned  In  To  Spruill 


Emphasizing  the  relative  posi- 
tions of  the  committee.  Dr.  Hol- 
man said,  "I  wish  to  absolve  Bob 
Youngs  Committ?e  of  any  respon- 
sibility in  regard  to  the  rei>ort 
Application  blanks  for  Rhodes  the  faculty  presents  to  the  coun- 
scholarships  must  be  handed  in  :  cil.  The  student  leaders  whom  Bob 
today  to  Dean  C.  P.  Spruill  at  Young  appointed  acted  in  an  ad- 
303  South  Building.  visory  p.-:sition.  rather  than  in  the 

Thirty-two  Rhodes  Scholarships  strict  capacity  of  a  committee." 
are  given  annually  for  two  years  The  members  of  the  siudent 
study  at  Oxford  University,  En^  committee  which  met  with  the  fa- 
land.  Tlie  scholarships  are  vai-  culty  were  Jim  Hughes,  Miss  Su- 
ued  at  600  pounds,  approximately  sie  Walker,  Jerry  Oppenheimer 
$1,800.  \  Tom   Lambeth  and   Bob  Young. 


Davie  Poplar  Tells  Of  UNC  Founding 


Film  Series 
Starts  Thurs. 

The  first  of  the  film  series  put 
on  by  the  Film  Committee  of  Gra 
ham  Memorial  Activities  Board 
"Tbacco  Road,'  will  be  presented 
Thur.=;day. 

To  be  shown  in  Carroll  Hall, 
the  film  series  will  be  seen  on 
Thursdays  at  8  p.m. 

Selected  short  subjects  will  be 
shown  with  most  of  the  films  in 
the  series, 


Chapel  Hill  haS  a  talking 
trcel 

Under  the  proper  circumstan- 
ces the  Davie  Poplar  will  talk, 
and  will   tell   all. 

The  ancient  tree,  the  oldest  of 
the  natural  landmarks  of  UNC 
University  of  North  Carolina, 
not  only  can  talk,  but  is  gar- 
rulous to  a  fault. 

The  Poplar  won't  shut  up 
once    it   gets   started. 

A  tre  surgeon,  a  professor  of 
philosophy.  a  psychoanalyst, 
and  a  history  professor  were 
quiently  singing  'Hark  the 
Sound'  while  walking  arross  the 
campus  the  other  night,  when 
there  came  a  distinct  sound  of 
spoken  words  from  the  Davie 
Poplar.  The  voice  had  a  rust- 
ling sound,  combined  with  a 
sort  of  bark.  Tfie  tone  was  re- 
sonant and   deep  timbred. 

The  tree  said,  "Say  fellows, 
come  over  hear  a   minute." 

Th?  men  were  astonished,  but 
.stranger  things  than  that  have 
happened  in  Cha-pel  Hill,  so 
they  walked  over  to  the  Davie 
Poplar  and  stood  there  respect- 
fullv.  h'ats  off.  at  attention, 
chests    out.    stomachs    in. 

"Do  you  know  what  next  Fri- 
dav    is?"   said    the    tree. 

"October  12.  the  163rd  anni- 
(Ste  DAVIE,  Page  3) 


Poplar  Tree  Saw  It  All 


This   is  the  scene  of  General  William  Richard 
lunching  there,  and  decidng  to  make  it  the  site  of 


Davie   stopping    in   the   forest   under   a   poplar 
the  Univorsity  of  North  Carolina. 


tr»«. 


'-<-*. 


PAGE   TWO 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


WEDNESDAY,  OCTOBER  10,  1956 


Npw,  Mayor  Cornwell,  Lef  s 
Get  That  Meet  Underway 


INDUSTRY  &  EDUCATION 


Mondav  niglit's  Board  of  Alder- 
men meetinjT  was  an  exa-niple  o\ 
the  right  way  to  do  tilings. 

Student  body  President  Bob 
Young  and  IniertratA'nity  (oun- 
cil  President  Kd  Iludgins  appear- 
ed before  the  aldernifcn.  Thev  re- 
quested that  tlie  town  temporari- 
ly remove"  a  two-hour  parking  re- 
striction in  from  of  Big  Fraternii\ 
Ck)urL.» 

While  the  town  refused  to  re- 
scind its  restriction  innnediately 
there  was  indication  it  may  do  so 
after  the  a'ldermen  meet  with  a  stu- 
dent traffic  committee.    . 

At  Iseast.  Mayor  ().  K.  (lornwell's 
replies  to  questions  indicated  that 
it  wasnt'  an  open-and-shut  maneu- 
vet  of  the  town. 

Hudgins'  constituents,  wlu;  were 
talking  \erv  hot-headedlv  a  week 
or  so  ag<j.  shoidd  be  happv  about 
the  outcome  of  Motiday  nights 
meeting.  I  hey  didn't  get  what  they 
waijiied,  but  thev  did  get  the  town's 
pmmise  to  reconsider  the  restric- 
tion. 

This  is  the  wav  it  should  be. 
>  7  he  students  and  the  town  are 
no  kmger  two  independent  IxKlies. 
existing  withoiu  help  from  one  ati- 
other.  Thev  depend  largely  on 
eacj)  other — the  men  hants  depei>d 
on  the  students  for  a  large  part  ol 
their  income,  although  they  have 
constantly  abtised  their  monopoly 
on  studeni  mcmcy;  the  students 
nnist  biM  clothes  from  the  town, 
thev  must  cat  their  food  dowjuown. 

I  he  onlv  practical,  legal  and 
peaceful  way  for  the  fraternity  res- 
idents and  the  townsjjcjeple  to  set- 
tle their  argument  o\ei  parking 
is  tor  the  students  and  the  towns- 
peojile  t()  get  lo^eilicr  and  talk  it 
o\er. 

.Mayor  Com  well  has  urged  Pres- 
idetn  Voiuig's  >iudent  traffic  com- 
mission to  meet  with  him  at  a  later 
date    h)r   discussion    of    the    prob- 


lem. In  doing  this,  he  has  slujwn 
that  at  least  he  recogtii/es  t'«e  in- 
terested students'  side  of  the  argu- 
ment. 

It  ifcw  remains  for  the  meeting 
to  f)e  held.  It  should  be  well  a;l- 
\erti.sed  in  advance,  so  interested 
students  can  get  their  arguments 
before  the  student  traffic  coimniss- 
ion.  It  should  be  held  in  a  large 
room,  so  obserxers  can  come  and 
speak  if  they  feel  like  it. 

Ma'vor  Cornwell  should  call  the 
nieeting  as  s<><»n  as  possTble.  Stu- 
dent sentiment  against  the  parking 
restrictio-.j  is  building  up  cpiite  a 
head  of  steam.  The  toAvn  and  the 
students  should  act  right  awav.  be- 
fore the  boiler  bursts. 


Queens  Not 
Neecje^  Now 

Lets  cjuii  choosing  homecoming 
cjueeirs. 

Homecoming  cpieus  h;  ve  died 
oiu.  They  no  longei  mean  any- 
thing except  an  added  bit  of  beautv 
on  the  football  field  during  halt- 
time  ceremonies  at  the  homecom- 
ing game. 

They  are  chosen  half-heartedly, 
feted  luke-warmly,  forgotten  very 
(juickly. 

The  only  argument  for  home- 
coming queeirs  is  that  Carolina  has 
so  ma'ny  pretty  coeds  that  there 
isn't  rcM)m  in  all  the  beauty  c<»n- 
tests  for  them.  .\nd  that's  not  a 
\erv  gocHi  argument. 

I  here  aie  enough  gcK)d-looking 
majorettes  and  c  heerleaders,  not  to 
mention  the  cLttes  in  light  fall 
dresses,  at  football  games.  H(»me- 
coming  cjueens  may  as  well  give  up. 


Cast  Your   Ballot   In   GM 


h:     "\'ou"\e   got    a    chance    to    help 
ii^.naTne  the   next    C^hancellor  of   the 
■  /Uiiiversitv. 

Xot  .1  ■  •«l  \oie,  however;  just 
a  (h^-^-  '•  tu  give  yom  recoramen- 
datio's  to  the  people  who'll  help 
pick  him. 

The  trusiee  group  that  is  look- 
n'4  for  a  new  chancellor  to  replace 
R<tl)crt  House,  who  will  retire  at 
the  end  of  this  year,  has  asked  the 
students  to  help  in   the  selection. 

Last  vear.  the  students  got  a 
similar  opportunitv  to  give  recom- 
mendations about  the  new  Consoli- 
dated L'ni\ersitv  presdient.  a  post 
that  is  yet  unfilled.  \'erv  few  stu- 
dents t^ave  theii    opinion. 

()I)ser\ers  figme  this  happened 
because  most  students  here  don  t 
care  who  their  Consolidated  I'ni- 
\ersitv  president  is.  They  have  lit- 
tle deali)igs  with  him,  scj  they 
weren't  particulaily  eager  to  par- 
ticipate in   his  selec  ticju. 

fiut  the  c  haucellc^rship  presents 
an  entirely  different  case. 

The  chaticellor  is  a  man  who 
deals  very  directly  Avith  the  stu- 
dents. He  is  a  man  who  is  res|>on- 
sible  lor  making  statements  U)\  the 
I'niversitv  at  Chaepl  Hill  when 
statements  are  in  order.  He.  after 
consultation  with  the  trustees  and 
the  president,  sets  the  policy  ol  the 
I'niversity  at  (Ihai^xl  Hill. 

Therefore,  students  shoidd  take 


The  Daily  Tar  Heel 

The  oliicial  student  pubhcation  of  the 
Publications  Board  of  the  University  of 
Xorth  Carolina,  where  it  is  published 
daily  except  Monday  and  examination 
and  vacation  periods  and  slimmer  terms 
Entered  as  .second  class  matter  in  the 
post  office  in  Chapol  Hill.  N.  C,  undei 
ihe  .\ct  oi  March  8.  1870.  Subscription 
rate-s:  mailed.  .$4  per  year,  .$2.50  a  semes- 
ter: delivered,  S6  a  year,  $3.50  a  semes- 
ter. 

Editor  T~~~r  FRED  POWXEDGE 

Managing  Editor   .        CHARLIE  SLOAN 

News  Editor  RAY  LINKER. 

Business  Manager  BILL  BOB  PEEL 

Sports  Editor LARRY  CHEEK 

Advertising  Manager  -  Fred  Katzin 

Coed  Editor                       Peg  Humphrey 
Subscription  Manager Dale  St^'ey 

EDITORIAL  STAFF  —  Woody  Sears, 
Frank  Crowiher,  Barry  Winston,  David 
Mundy.  George  Pfingst,  Ingrid  Clay, 
Cortland  Edwards. 

Proof  Reader  Larry  Cheek 

Night  Editor , Woody  Sears 


an  active  interest  in  the  choosins 
ol  their  new  chancellor. 

Rec  (jnnnendaticjus  from  the  stu- 
dent body  may  not  do  any  good — 
it  has  never  been  pioxed  that  the 
tiiistees  really  consider  what  the 
students  want  and  think — but  .some 
reccjmmendations  are  better  than 
none.  None  woidd  indicate  thai  the 
student  ImxIv  is  immature,  doesn't 
reallv  care  who  its  new  chancellor 
is. 

It's  ea.sv  to  reconunend  a  new 
chancellor.  Just  do  a  lot  o(  think- 
ing. Then  clrop  by  (iraham  .Mem- 
orial between  {  and  -,  j).m.  todav 
ov  tomorrow  and  let  the  student 
committee  know  ;\lio  v(ju  want 
and  why. 

Suggestions 
About  Polls: 
Watch  Out 

I  he  \'oiing  DemcK  rats'  presi- 
dent had  a  good  idea  the  obiter  dav 
when  he  said  political  straw  bal- 
lots are  no  good. 

"We  don't  feel  that  a  straw  vote 
is  the  proper  way  to  p»l|  the  stu- 
dent bod\.'.'  .said  (ieorge  Miller, 
"since  the  results  can  l)e  made  to 
come  out  anv  way  the  j)oll-iaker 
decides.  " 

.Miller  was  talking  about  soine- 
fhiiig  thai  has  come  to  be  a  plague 
on  modern  elections — tlie  profess- 
ional poll-taker,  either  partisan- 
himself  or  hired  by  a  pcjiitical  in- 
terest to  make  sure  the  |)oll  will 
come  out   "'right." 

While  we  doubt  that  any  such 
tactics  woidd  be  used  on  this  camp- 
us, the  disease  of  partisan  perils 
has  made  itself  a  inajor  headache 
through  the  nation. 

Polls  can  be  \eiy  effective' prop- 
aganda. Vi)V  voters  who  want  to  hv 
(j!i  the  wiiming  side,  a  biased  pc^ll 
can  swing  a  lot  of  ballots.  Polls 
can  be  swung  in  prettv  nearly  any 
w;!'v  the  |X)ll-taker  decides:  the  ty|>e 
of  cjuestions  can  be  used  to  bring 
out  a  desired  straw  vote. 

For  the  student  voters  in  the 
next  month,  we  have  this  sugges- 
tion: Don't  pay  much  attention  to 
the  jjolls.  History  has  pioved  that 
thev  don't  mean  much.  And  don't 
vote  the  way  the  jw>ll-taker  tells 
you  to  vote.  ^^^ 


An  Afterthought  Appropriation 


Woody  Sears 

North  Carolina  mads  a  signifi- 
cant advancement  in  the  cause  of 
higher  education  last  .year,  even 
though  it  was  done  as  an  after- 
thought. 

When  the  1955  session  of  the 
General  Assembly  was  in  its  last 


days  and  had  balanced  the  state's 
budget  for  the  bienium,  the  legis- 
lators found  that  they  had  S39,- 
632  left  over.  This  money  was 
then  given  to  three  community 
colleges  in  the  slate  which  had  re- 
quested state  aid. 

C'ertainly  this  amount  is  almost 
insignificant    when  compared  to 


allocations  made  to  the  state's- 
raajor  educational  plants  —  UNC, 
State,  and,  WC.  The  size  of  the 
gift  is  even  smaller  when  you  re- 
alize that  this  amount  was  divid- 
ed between  three  schools  for  -a 
period  of  two  years.  Yet  there  is 
no  doubt  that  it  was  gratefully 
accepted. 


'What  Ever  Came  Of  All  That  Talk  Of  Atomic  Power?' 


The  three  schools  involved  were 
Asheville-Biltmore  in  Asheville, 
Wilmington  College  in  Wilming- 
ton, and  Charlotte  College  and 
her  Negro  subsidiary.  Carver,  in 
Charlotte. 

There  is  speculation  that  the 
allocation  for  the  1957-58  bienium 
will  be  10  times  as  large  as  the 
original  gift.  This  means  that 
these  three  junior  colleges  and 
other  community  colleges  that 
might  get  state  aid  can  expand 
their  facilities.  They  could  accom- 
odate their  programs  for  ,prepar- 
ing  local  high  school  graduates 
for  work  at  a  four-year  school  or 
provide  them  with  vocational 
training.  If  the  grants  are  made, 
the  Legislature  will  be  spendng 
that  money  very  wisely. 

I  say  that  this  would  be  a  wise 
move,  because  it  will  serve  two 
purposes.  It  will  provide  educa- 
tional opportunities  for  more  of 
the  state's  young  people,  and  it 
will  provide  added  incentive  for 
industries  to  come  into  North 
Carolina. 

Let  me  qualify  this  last  state- 
ment. While  talking  to  an  offical 
at  Raleigh's  Westinghouse  plant, 
I  learned  that  one  of  the  big  fac- 
tors in  Westinghouse's  decision  to 
locate  in  North  Carolina  was  the 
educational  level  of  the  people. 
I  was  told  that  the  average  educa- 
tion of  the  so-called  "working 
class"  was  higher  in  North  Caro- 
lina than  in  the  northern  states. 

Therefore  wo  see  that  money 
spent  on  education  and  its  re- 
turns are  factors  which  were 
heavily  considered  by  at  least  one 
industrial  firm  before  it  located 
its  plant  in  a  given  area.  The 
more  "educated"  North  Carolina 
has  to  offer  to  interested  indus- 
tries, the  better  are  her  chances 
for  greater  industrialization. 

At  any  rate,'  our  progressive 
state  is  about  to  take  another 
step  forward,  with  each  step 
drawing  North  Carolina  further 
"away"  from  the  "backward 
South."  I 


SICKENING  CINEMA 


ri- 


/ 


I. 


Bus  Stop'  Was  Better  As  A  Play 


Paul  McCauley 

William  Inge  sold  his  birth- 
right as  a  plaj-wright  when  he 
sold  the  movie  rights  to  his  play 
"Bus  Stjp".  There  is  no  com- 
parison between  the  play  and 
the  movie.  Th?  play  is  far  super- 
,  ior  in  plot,  action,  and  character 
portrayal. 

The  movie  cuts  out  two  of  the 
most  interesting  characters  that 
appear  in  the  play — the  college 
profes.sor,  who  is  by  far  the  best 
wTittcn  and  most  entt»rtaining 
character;  and  the  sheriff,  who 
in  the  play  is  given  the  duty  of 
defending  "Cherry's"  somewhat 
debatable  "honor".  The  duty  of 
chastising  big,  bad  Bo  is  palmed 
off  on  the  bus  driver  in  the 
movie. 

Marilyn  Monroe  has  finally 
proved  beyond  a  .shadow  of  a 
doubt  th.it  she  cannot  act.  In 
the  "Blue  Dragon"  bar  she  ".sang  " 
something  that  resembled  "That 
Ole  Black  Magic",  which  turned 


red  in  the  middle  of  the  song 
along  with  .Miss  Monroe,  both 
probably  from  embarrassment. 

After  she  finally  gets  to  bed, 
where  '"MM"  inevitahky  ends  up, 
'big,  bad  Bn,  the  naive,  "just- 
turned-voting-age-and-never-seen- 
a-girl"  cowboy,  roars  into  her 
bedroom,  does  a  .swan  dive  into 
bed  with  her  and.  after  several 
hundred  feet  of  film  have  been 
wasted  on  various  angles  of 
"MM's '  bed  time  gyrations,  be- 
gins reciting  the  "Gettysburg 
Address'.'  with  narry  an  apology 
to  "Honest  Abe". 

The  movie  wastes  65  minutes 
bringing  you  up  to  the  point 
where  th?  plan  begins  and  still 
doesn't  take  care  of  the  exposi- 
tion that  was  covered  in  the  first 
act  of  the  play. 

I  .saw  this  movie  at  the  late 
show  and  was  more  entertained 
by  the  better  quality  of  the  im- 
promptu dialogue  that  came  from 
some  of  the  members  of  (he  au- 
dience who  had  just  had  time  to 


stop  in  Sp?ros'  and  sniff  up     a 
short  one. 

"MM's  "  accent  was  at  differ- 
ent times  Southern  (too  much 
ham  hocks  and  turnip  greens). 
Western  ( hawg-tie  me.  Tex),  and 
Hill-Billy  (my  apologies  to  Ten-- 
nessee  Ernies  pea-pickers).  In 
throe  or  four  words  it  was  in- 
consistent  and  sickening. 

Kiloen  Eckhart,  whom  you  will 
probably  remember  for  her  other 
major  alcohol-consuming  role  of 
the  pathetic  mother  of  the  drown- 
ed bo.N^in  "The  Bad  Seed."  once 
again  hits  the  bottle  with  the 
best  of  them  in  the  role  of  Mari- 
lyn's understanding  side-kick  at 
the  "Blue  Dragon" — a  role  which 
was  created  for  the  movie.  Her 
accent  was  as  bad  as  Marilyn's. 

The  role  of  Virgil,  Ba's  guitar- 
playing  guardian,  is  portrayed 
by-Arthur  O'Connell.  It's  cheaper 
to  hirr  one  actor  who  t-an  furnish 
the  background  nusic  in  addi- 
tion to  his  acting  duties,  than  it 
is  to  hire  an  orchestra  at  Petril- 
lo's  rates.  "Virgie"  philosophizes 


while  not  telling  Bo  how  to  act. 
or  furnishing  backgroljnd  music. 

Grace,  who  runs  the  "Bus 
,  Stop",  and  Elma.  her  pretty 
young  employee,  are  just  there. 
The  young  lady  who  plays  Elma 
is  obviously  being  trotted  back 
and  forth  in  front  of  the  cameras 
so  we  can  get  a  glimpse  of  her. 
Be  looking  for  her  in  bigger  and 
better  things  to  come. 

Top  honors  for  the  best  per- 
formance of  the  movie  should  go 
to  Hsns  Conreid  who  was  on  the 
screen  a  total  of  about  two  mon- 
utes  in  the  role  of  the  '"Life"  ma- 
gazine photographer  who  caught 
Marilyn  with  her  most  prominent 
asset  filling  the  Cinemascope 
screen  with  a  breathtaking  close- 
up  .Hans  captured  the  Carolina 
audience  with  his  rare  display  of 
taste  and  timing. 

If  you  think  you've  got  troubles 
— forget  '  them  and  see  "Bus 
Stop".  It's  the  eighth  wonder  of 
the  world.  It's  the  biggest  egg 
that's  been  laid  in  Chapel  Hill 
since  the  Stale  game. 


Pogo 


By  Wait  Kelly 


If  I  CANY  reji  YOU 

60i€lgr>Pt/r£U 


AJNt  fiONNA  tr 
Vt?J  1^11,  ME  It. 


Li'l  Abner 


By  Ai  Capp 


( 

(DH,  NO' SHORE 
S.    IS.SWEET- 
\    HEART  OF  \ 
^TH'  PIANO.  J 

^ —            > 

ALTHCXXbH  1  AM 
THE  IDEAL  OF    < 
EVETW  UPSET    , 
AMERICAN   _-^ 
GIRL-   -^       ] 

J^^ 

PvM^ 

^^21 

fN^ 

tt^hC 

V\l^ 

REACTION  PIECE 


Demo  Weapons: 
False  Charges 

David  Mundy 

The  charge,  by  sundry  and  assortea  Democrats, 
that  "the  President  is  not  master  of  his  own  house" 
is  one  of  the  most  ludicrous  items  in  this  presi- 
dential campaign. 

The  charge  was  patently  designed  to  create  the 
voter  attitude  that  certain  "reactionary"  and  "big 
business"  elements  in  the  Republican  .party  really 
pull  the  strongs  on  puppet  "Ike."  This  is  at  one 
fell  swoop  an  attem>t  to  stigmatize  as  "bad"  the 
conservative  elements  in  the  Republican  party  by 
proclaiming  that  they  are  against  the  best  in- 
terests of  the  "little  man",  'and  at  the  same  time 
to  create  the  illusion  that  these  cohorts  of  "big 
business"  instead  of  the  president  are  really  run- 
ning the  party. 

Some  Democrat  orators  even  go  so  far  as  to  de- 
clare that  Nixon  will  finish  taking  over  control  of 
the  party  as  soon  as  Eisenhower  is  elected.  Some 
even  confess  suspicions  that  the  vice  president 
will  slip  the  president  a  dose  of  arsenic. 

DEAAOCRATIC  AOMiSSlON 

By  the  vejry  nature  of  these  charges,  the  Demo- 
crats are  admitting  that  the*  majority. of  the  popu- 
lace respects  what  the  Republicans  are  calling  the 
"Eisenhower  Record."  It's  just  those  'sinister  fig- 
ures in  the  background'  that  the  I>c-mocrats  are 
attempting  to  exploit.  -  *     .    .  < 

The  Democrats  have  good  reason  for  their 
charges,  operating  on  the  theory  that  people  fear 
most  what  they;  cannot  see  and  understand. 

The  spectaciUar  fialseqess  of  the  charge  is  evi- 
dent not  only  in  the  public  record  of  the  admin- 
istration, but  in  the  conflicting  techniques  which 
the  Democrat  Party  is  employing  in  the  campaign: 
i.e..  some  wish  to  make  the  President  personally 
responsible  for  everything  from  the  drought  in  the 
Texas  Panhandle  to  the  political  unrest  in  Nepal. 

CONCENTRATED  FIRE 

Others  want  to  concentrate  their  fire  on  high  ad- 
/  ministration  officials,  the  Republican  party  itself, 
or  these  'sinister  background  figures.'  Each  of 
these  techniques  has  a  different  assumption  of  the 
degree  in  which  the .  president  is  "ntastefjOf  his 
house."  '  ■         ; 

The  falsfehefes  of  the  charge  is  well-proved  by 
an  examination  of  the  Ei^nhower  (or;  Repijblipan. 
if  you  w'ill)  administration..  To  get  a  parallel  ejjam- 
pie  of  a  president  exercising,  or  attempting  toj  ex- 
ercise, his  personal  influence  and  pwwer  we  must 
go  back  to  the  late  thirties  and  the  late  FDR. 

ATTEMPTED  PURGE 

Roosevelt  attempted  t  purge  from  the  party 
some  of  those  politicians  who  had  been  opposing 
some  of  his  policies  in  Congress.  He  failed  in  most 
of-  the  inrportant  instances,  such  as  his  campaign 
against  Sen.  George  of  Georgia.  In  a  few  other  in- 
stances he  suceee^ed  :i?i  rfitdkingi  suc|i  people  as 
Terry  Carpenter,  the  Democrat  now-turned-Repub- 
lican  who  wanted  to  nominate  "Joe  Smith"  in  San 
Francisco.   ■      *{«"<'»'    •!  n  v?C  ij< 

But  none  of  the  Roosevelt  successes  can  com- 
pare with  the  finality  with  which  Sen.  McCarthy 
had  his  political  guts  stomped  cut.  The  fact  that 
Eisenhower  employed  "high  level"  Madison  Ave. 
techniques  and  disdained  to  even  associate  himself 
with  the  McCarthy-Army  investigations  docs  not 
hide  his  role  in  the  affair. 

The  timely  demi.se  of  Sen.  McCarthy  is  not  the 
only  instance  of  important  administration  influence. 
I  am  not  the  first  to  harbor  the  suspicion  that  it 
was  not  cold  legal  reasoning  which  persuaded  the 
Supreme  Court  of  the  United  States  to  change  dec- 
ades of  rulings  on  segregation  in  tl\e  public  schools. 

CHANGE  IN  COURT 

It  is  quite  plausible  that  the  court  could  change 
or  slowly  modify  its  ruling  over  the  years  as  new 
.justices  join  the  court.  But  such  a  complete  and 
sudden  reversal  of  so  many  previous  court  decis- 
ions? No  other  president  except  Eisenhower  could 
have  had  so  much  influence  on  the  courj. 

Attorney  General  Brownell  seems  to  have  noted 
the  failure  of  the  Roosevelt  court-packing  scheme 
and  worked  out  a  little  shell  game  of  his  own. 
For  this  he  deserves  the  Political  Order  of  Merit. 
First  Class. 

It  is  interesting  to  speculate  upon  the  degree 
of  mastery  which  Mr.  Stevenson  could  exercise  in 
his  own.  household,  should  he  be  elected.  Assum- 
ing the  election  of  a  Democrat-controlled  congress, 
which  :s  more  likely  than  Stevenson's  own  election, 
it  will  have  to  be  noted  that  the  important  com- 
mittee chairmanships  will  be  in  the  control  of 
such  sterling  Democrats  as  Eastland,  Stennis.  El- 
lender,  Russell,  Byrd. 

THE  "BIG  SAY" 

Who  will  have  the  'big  say"  on  defense  policio 
Stevenson  or  Sen.  Russell  as  chairman  of  the  Arm 
ed  Services  Committee?  Russell  certainly  wont  bow- 
to  any  presidential  wishes  when  he  believes  his 
years  of  experience  place  him  in  the  right. 

What  about  Sen.  Ellender  of  Louisiana,  the  Sen 
ate  Agriculture  Committee,  and  his  opposition  to 
hgh.  rigid  price  supports?  What  about  the  ex 
pendituras  for  the  "New  America"  and  Sen.  BjTd 
of  the  Government  Expenditures  Committee? 

Who  is  going  to  call  the  tune  oft  civil-rights'' 
Northern  New  Dealei-s  or  the  Southerners  who  con- 
trol the  organization  in  congress?  Whose  opinions 
will  prevail,  Stevenson's.  Eastland's,  Talmadgess? 

Considering  the  size  of  the  opposition  which  hi* 
"-New  America"  will  receive  from  the  leaders  of 
his  own  party,  Mr.  Stevenson  should  do  more  than 
privately  pray  for  the  election  of  a  Republican 
coogress,  " 


WEONEi 


Grai 
Will 


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will  hold 
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WEDNESDAY,  OCtOBER  10,  1^56 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


PAGE  THRER 


Grad  Student  Planning  Group 
Will  Hold  Second  Meet  Today 


By   JOAN   MOORE 

A  group  planning  activities  for 
the  Graduate  Sludent  Fellowship 
will  hold  Its  second  meeting  today 
at  3:30  p.m.  in  the  YMCA  Cabinet 
Room. 

All  interested  persons  have  been 
invited  to  atteni)  and  help  plan 
activities  for  the  fellowship,  a  new- 
ly organized  group  sponsored  by 
the  YMCA-YWCA.  The  first  meet- 
ing of  the  fellowship  was  held  last 
Sunday,  and  the  planning  group 
met  for  the  first  time  yesterday. 

Approximately  130  persons  at- 
tended the  Sunday  meeting.  En- 
tertainment in  the  form  of  folk 
ballads  and  popular  songs  was  pre- 
sented by  Pee  Wee  Batten,  a  mem- 
ber of  Kappa  Delta  Sorority. 

Pat  Dixon  and  Prestwood  Brown- 
ing presided  at  this  organizational 
meeting.  Questionnaires  •  were  dis- 
tributed and  members  expressed 
the  desire  to  jparticipate  in  certain 
areas  of  study. 

Interest  was  shown  in  art,  music, 
literature,  drama,  religion,  race  re- 
lations, political  relations  and  a 
film  forum. 


The  projects  of  the  fellowship 
were  further  discussed  at  the 
planning  group  meeting  yesterday. 
The  group  will  sponsor  many  so- 
cial activities  and  hopes  to  include 
programs  with  Duke  and  N.  C. 
State  graduate  students. 

According  to  Bob  Rennick,  the 
group  plans  to  work  on  social  prob- 
lems, such  as  housing  for  gradu- 
ate students  and  closing  hours  for 
graduate  women. 

They  hope  also  to  encourage  a 
more  extensive  orientation  pro- 
gram. 


CARbLINA  POLITICAL  UNION 

The  Carolina  Political  Union  will 
meet  tomorrow  at  4:30  p.m.  m  the 
Grail  Room  of  Graham  Memorial. 
The  meeting  will  be  a  roundtabls 
discussion  of  current  events  and 
controversial  issues.  All  interested 
students  have  been  invited  to  at- 
tend, according  to  Gerry  Mayo, 
president. 


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Oppoclte  Bus  Station — Next  to  Sherwin-Williiini>s 


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Ladies  tennis  shoes  —  all  colors. 

We  Give  S.  &  H.  Green  Stamps 


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ii    II 


BERMAN'S  DEPT.  STORE 

Open  All  Day  Wednesday 


rlio:    fi 


Which  of  these  swell  new 
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l-l  "U 


—  DONT  GO  NEAR  THE  WATER 
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lively  reading.  M.OO 

—  A  SINGLE  PEBBLE 
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DAVIE 

(Contintied  from  Page  1) 

versary  of  the  laying  of  the 
cornerstone  of  Old  East  Build- 
ing," answered  the  history  pro- 
fessor. 

"Right,"  said  the  Poplar, 
"You're  sharp  and  on  the  ball. 
You  look  like  Chancellor  ma- 
terial to  me." 

"Thank "  .vou,"  said  the  pro- 
fessor. 

'•There's  been  a  lot  of  loose 
talk  about  how  General  William 
Richardson  Davie  pidjed  this 
place,"  said  the  Poplar.  "And 
it's  time  you  got  the  straight 
story." 

"Speak  freely, "  said  the  psy- 
choanalyst. 

"Well,  it  was  about  160  or 
170  years  ago,"  said  the  tree, 
"I  dont  recollect  exactly.  I 
was  a  young  tree,  had  plenty  of 
branches,  more  leaves  than  I 
do  now.  and  I  provided  more 
shade  than  any  other  tree  in  the 
woods,  if  I  do  say  it  myself." 
"Go  on,"  said  the  tree  sur- 
geon. 

"All  of  a  sudden  here  comes 
a  party  of  men  through  the  for- 
est. They  are  riding  horses  and 
they  look  tired.  The  man  at 
the  head  of  the  column  reined 
up  his  horse,  looked  up  at  my 
branches  and  said.  'How  about 
here?'  " 

*•  'Good,  said  a  tall,  good-look- 
ing man  I  later  found  was  Gen- 
eral Davie,"  went  on  the  tree. 
"He's  the  man  I  got  my  name 
from." 

The  tree  then  told  that  the 
Davie  party  rested  there,  had 
lunch,  drank  from  a  jug  and 
walked  around  through  the 
trees,  looking  at  the  lay  of  the 
land. 

Finally  Davie  said,  "This 
looks  like  the  place.  We  can 
put  a  building  up  over  there  on 
the  level  ground,  rather  than 
on  this  slope.  Later  on  we  can 
build  a  parking  lot  to  relieve 
any  congestion  if  we  get  too 
many  students  at  one  time." 
So  it  was  done.  Davie  came 
back  in  1793  to  lay  the  corner- 
stone of  Old  East— on'  Oct.  12. 
•'I  watched  the  whole  ceremony 
from  right  here,"  said  the  Da- 
vie  Poplar. 

"All  this  is  very  fine,"  said 
the  philosophy  professor.  "But 
there  are  a  few  things  we'd  like 
to  know.  What  is  the  secret  of 
your  old  age.  How  aro  you  alive 
and  talking  at  your  age,  much 
beyond  163  years. 

"Well,  I'll  tell  you,"  said  the 
Poplar.  "I  don't  have  any  bad 
habits.  I  work  hard  and  relax 
well.  I  don't  bother  other  peo- 
ple nor  poke  my  nose  in  their 
business.  Besides  this,  the  land- 
scapers  slioot  my  roots  full  of 
liquid  fertilizer  every  year.  I 
am  patched  up  with  cement  and 
other  stuff.  Wire  cables  are 
holding  me  up.  I'm  good  for 
many  more  years." 

As  the  professors  walked 
away  towards  the  Old  Well, 
they  could  hear  the  Davie  Pop- 
lar still  talking.  The  philosophy 
professor  said  he  thought  he 
heard  the  tree  moaning.  But 
the  psychoanalist  said  the  tree 
was  clearly  whistling  in  the 
dark. 

The  history  professor  pointed 
out  that  the  parking  lot  Gen- 
eral Davie  spoke  of  still  hasn't 
been  built. 


Playmakers  To  Soon  Present  'Anastasia' 

The  Carolina  Playmakers  first  production  of  the  season,  "An- 
astasia,"  will  be  presented  Oct.  17  through  21  in  the  Playmakers 
Theater.  Leading  players  in  the  UNC  version  of  the  recent  Broadway 
success  are  shown  above:  Joe  Whiteeker  portraying  Princ'e  Paul  and 
Rusti  -  Rothrock  as  Anna.  Both  are  graduates  of  the  University  of 
Arkansas.  Whiteaker  is  from  Pine  Bluff,  Ark.,  and  Mrs.  Rothrock  is 
from  Anniston,  Ala.  Tickets  for  the  production  can  be  obtained  at 
214  Abernethy  Hall,  at  Ledbetter-Pickard's,  or  by  mail  from  Box 
1050,  Chapel  Hill.  All  season  tickets  have  been  sold,  but  single  tickets 
at  $1.50  will  go  on  sale  today. 


Covering  The  Campus 


YM-YWCA  MEETING 

There  will  be  a  meeting  of  the 
VW-YMCA  Art  and  Publicity  staff 
today  at  5  p.m.  in  the  Y  Cabinet 
Room.  Students  interested  in  pub- 
licity and  public  relations  but  un- 
able to  attend  the  meeting  have 
been  asked  to  leave  their  names 
and  addresses  at  the  Y  office  or 
phone  6761. 


Prp^ram  Sellers  Meet 

All  people  interested  in  selling 
programs  at  Saturday's  football 
game  have  been  requested  to 
com*  to  a  meeting  at  5  p.m. 
Thursday  in  304  Woollen  Q/^m. 


OUKE-UNC  PHYSICS 
COLLOQUIUM 

There  will  be  a,  joint  Duke-UNC 
Physics  Colloquium  today  at  p  pim. 
in  205  Phillips  Hall.  Dr.  Jack'L^it- 
I  ner  of  Duke  will  spe^k  on  "Ufjita- 
'  bio     Particle     Production     at     1.5 
Bev  " 
;  FOLK  DANCE  GROUP 
I      The   Wesley   Folk   Dance   Group 
I  will    hold    its    regular   weekly   get- 
!  together  Friday  at  7:30  p.m.  in  the 
j  University  Methodist  Church  bfeije- 
'  ment.  I 

All  persons  interested  m  the  art 
I  of    the    folk   dance   have   been   in- 
j  vitcd  to  participate  in  the  weekly 
I  meetings. 
j  SKETCH  CLASS 

I      A  second  session  of  the  Evening 
J  Sketch   Class   has   been    scheduled 
!  for  Thursday  evenings  from  7  to  9 
j  p.m.   in   the   Person  Hall   .Art   Gal- 
lery.   The  class  will  meet  13  times  ' 
i  during  the   fall   semester.   Persons  \ 
interested  in  joining  have  been  in-  j 
vited    to   class    meeting    tomorrow  i 
;  at   7  p  m.  ; 

METHODIST  YOUNG  ADULTS         i 
I     The  Young  Adult  Group  of  the  j 
j  Methodist  Church  will  meet  today 
1  at  8  p.m. 

STUDENT  INSURANCE    ■ 

I      Oct.  15  is  the  deadline  for  UNC 

j  students   to  enroll   in   the   Student 

I  Insurance  Plan,  provided  this  year 

j  by    the    Pilot    Life    Insurance    Co. 

I  Applcation  blanks  may  be  obtained 

from   the  student   government    of- 

j  fice   in   Graham   Memorial,   at   the 

I  Y  and  in  GM's  information  office. 

Students  have  been  asked  to  pick 

up    their    insurance    identification 

cards    in   the  student   government 

]  offico. 

i  YACK  CONTRACTS 
'      All  organizations  desiring  space 


i 


in  the  1957  Yackety  Yack  must 
sign  contracts  in  the  Yack  office 
in  Graham  Memorial's  basement  by 
today,  according  to  Eklitor  Tommy 
Johnson. 
WUNC-TV 

Today  s  schedule  for  WUNC-TV, 
the  University's  educational  televi- 
sion station  Channel  4: 
12:44 — Sign  On 
12:45— Music 

1:00— Today  on  Farna 

1:30— ^lay  Period 

2:0a— C^eer  forYou 

2:30Tn^ign  Off 

5^44 — Sign  Or. 

5:45 — Music 
'  6:00 — Magir  Lantern 

6:15 — Sports  Clinic 

6:30— Newi 

6:45 — Sports  '  "' 

7:00 — Industrial  Artisan 

7:30-k-Raleigh  Oratorio  Society 

iS.OO — Earthquake?   ^  "^  : 

8:30 — Living  Together*         *^  '■ 

9:00— Mental  Gymn. 

9:30 — American  Politics  >_ 

10:00— F'inal  Edition      ' 

10:05-^ign  Off 

WUNC 
Todays  .schedule  for  WUNC,  the 

University's  FM  radio  station,  91.5 

megacycles. 

7:00 — Intermezzo 

7:15 — Messages  and  Men 

7:30— Songs  of  France 
7:45 — Curtain  Going  Up 


Anthropologist! 
Back  From  Trip  \ 

Prof.  John  P.  Gillin  oi  UNC  has  j 
returned  to  Chapel  Hill  after  sev- 
eral months  of  travel  and  teaching  ! 
in  Latin  America  and  the  Hawai- 1 
ian  Islands.  I 

The  Anthropology  Dept.  profes- ' 
sor  was  among  experts  this  sum- 1 
mer  who  participated  in  a  Seminar  j 
of  Social  Integration  in  Guatemala  > 
at  the  request  of  President  Carlos  j 
Castillo  Armas.  j 

After  the  Guatemalan  confer-  j 
ence  in  June,  Castillo  Armas's  ad- ; 
ministration  began  setting  up  a  ' 
permanent  center  for  social  inves- 1 
ligation  as  an  advisory  arm  of  the  i 
government. 

"This  is  the  first  time  in  histofy  I 
that  I  know  of  that  a  national  gov-  j 
ernment  has  recognized  social  j 
science  as  an  essential  part  ot  its  I 
.iperation,"  declared  Professor ! 
Gillin.  I 

Following     his     return     to     the ! 
United  States  from  Guatemala,  Pro- 
fessor Gillin  joined  his  family  and 
flew   to   Honolulu,   Hawaii,    where ! 
he    taught    six   weeks    in    summer 
sesson.    He   also   gave    lectures    at  : 
Hilo  on  the  island  of  Hawaii.  j 

Mrs.  Gillin  also  had  traveled  in  ; 
South  America  during  the  spring,  j 
addressing  w^omen's  groups  under  j 
the  auspices  of  the  Dept.  of  State  j 
and  the  Carrie  Chapman  Catt  ; 
Fund,  a  subsidiary  of  the  League  j 
of   Women   Voters. 

Returning  from  Hawaii.  Dr.  Gil-  I 
Im  conferred  in  Boston  for  two . 
days  with  officials  of  United  Fruit  , 
Co.,  a  corporation  he  is  "studying  | 
for  the  National  Planning  Associa-  | 
tion  of  Washington.  D.  C,  in  colla-  ; 
boration  with'  former  President  { 
Galo  Plaza  of  Ecuador  and  econo-  ' 
mist  Stacy  May.  j 

His  study  demanded  a  33-day  i 
trip  to  UPC  installations  in  Ek-ua-  j 
dor,  Colombia,  Panama.  Costa  Rica. 
Honduras  and  Guatemala.  During  j 
that  period  he  conferred  with  pro-  > 
minent  leaders  in  public  opinon. ! 
and  visited  with  presidents  of  j 
some  of  the  states.  j 

Upon  his  return  to  Chapel  Hill, 
Professor  Gillin  resum-^d  his  duties 
as  research  profes.sor  in  the  UNC 
Departmenr  of  Anthropology  and 
Sociology. 


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nylon  hose.  Take  advantage  of  this  offer  NOW.  Clip  and  maii-  the 
coupon  below  for  fast  delivery. 

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Please  send  me  two  pairs  and  two  spares  of  Oenise  Hosiery. 
For  this  I  am  eiKkwin;  (2.00. 


Nome- 


Today  is  the  lime  for  you.  the 
coUege  undergraduate,  to  think 
about  your  future— and  then  to 
</osoinethJng  about  it.  Check  now 
on  your  eligibility  for  the  Marine 
Corps  Platoon  Leaders  Clas». 

Six-week  training  periods  take 
place  duting  part  of  two  summer 
vacations,  but  there  are  no  mili- 
tary requirements  during  the 
academic  year.  All  members  are 
granted  military  deferment. 

Graduation  from  college  is  fol- 
lowed by  a  commission  as  a  sec- 
ond lieutenant  in  the  Marine 
Reserve.  During  i  tour  of  active 
duty,  you'll  have  the  opportun- 
ity 10  earn  »  rcguku'  Marine 
commission. 

For  more  details  on  the  M^yine 
Corps  Platoon  Leaders  Class  whte 
the  Commandant  of  the  Marine 
•Corps  (Code  DfC).  Washington 
25,  D.C.orseethc  Marine Oflicer 
Procurement  Officer  the  next  time 
he  visits  the  campih. 

^  , _ •*■ 

Captam  Charles  jS.  Redman,  U.  S. 
Marine  Corps  Officer  Procurement 
j  Officer  will  be  on  our  campus  \9- 
I  cated  in  Hie  Naval  Armory  en 
10-11  October  for  in^rvews  in  cor»- 
I  nwtion  with  earning  a  coipoiission 
I  m  the  U.  S.  Marine  Corps.~ 


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A  Campus-to-Career  Case  History 


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1 

Roger  Lindblom  (left)  discussing  a  construclion  job  with  J.  K.  Young,  IFire  Chief  of  Huiuii,  b.U. 

"I'm  learning  more  every  day-and  like  it" 


Roger  Lindblom.  B.S.  in  General  Engi- 
neering. Iowa  Stale  College.  '49.  is  today 
District  Plant  Superintendent  for  the 
11.000  square  miles  of  the  Huron,  South 
Dakota,  district. 

'"The  openings  are  there.*'  says  Roger, 
"and  the  telephone  company  trains  you 
to  fill  them.  I  joined  Northwestern  Bell 
in  1950  and  spent  one  year  learning  pole 
line  and  cable  construction.  This,  plus 
short  periods  in  other  departments,  gave 
me  a  good  telephone  background. 

"My  experience  really  grew  when  I 
became  an  installer-repairman,  then  a 
construction  crew  foreman,  and.  in  1952, 
Wire  Chief  at  South  Sioux  City,  Ne- 
braska. There  I  was  responsible  for  the 
3500  dial  phones  that  served  the  town. 


In  March  of  1954  I  went  to  Grand  Island, 
Nebraska,  to  help  supervise  dial  conver- 
sion projects  in  that  district.  Everything 
I'd  learned  to  date  came  in  handy  on 
that  job. 

"A  year  later  I  went  to  Omaha  on  a 
staff  assignment,  and  in  March.  1956,  I 
moved  up  to  my  present  position. 

"I  head  a  group  responsible  for  ini;tall- 
ing  and  maintaining  Plant  equipment  in 
the  Huron  di.strict.  We  sujjervise  ordering 
and  distributing  supplies,  and  I'm  re- 
sponsible for  |)er5onnel  and  employment. 
I  work  with  other  department  heads  in 
the  administration  of  our  district. 

"Each  assignment  I've  had  has  been 
broader  than  the  last,  and  believe  me,  the 
more  I  learn,  the  better  I  like  it." 


Address^ 


City. 


5tote_ 


Size  Length 

Business  Sheer  □ 

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D  Beige      Q  Toupe 


CLASSIFIEDS 


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L.-.. 


Roger  Lindblom  h  one  of  many  young  men  who 
are  finding  rewarding  careers  in  Bell  Telephone 
C/ompanies,  Bell  Telephone  Lalioralories.  \^'e8t- 
em  Eleetric  and  Sandia  Corporation.  See  your 
placement  officer  for  more  information  on  career 
opportunities  in  the  Bell 'Telephone  System. 


PAGE  FOUR 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


WEDNESDAY,  OCTOBER  10,  1954 


UNC'Georgia  Scrap  Could  Be  Key  Game 


Tennessee  Moves  To  Sixth 


Oklahoma  Retains 
Top  AP  Ranking 


By  The  Associated  Press - 

Oklahoma,  still  on  top  of  the 
college  football  world  comes  up 
to  its  big  game  this  week — only 
this   time   it   doesn't   look   so   llig. 


Bat  Texas,  soundly  beaten  by 
Southern  California,  a  one-point 
winner  over  Tuiane  and  loser  by 
the  same  margin  to  West  Virginia, 
doe&n't   appear  to  have  the  man- 


Tatum  Shifts  Lineup 
For  Bulldog  Contest 


After  establishing  a  modern  j  P<^ver  to  give  the  Sooners  a  bad 
major  college  winning  record  time.  Texas  hasn't  beaten  Okia 
with    their   32nd    straight   victory  \  Jioma  siince  1951  and  that  was  the 


— a  66-0  walkover  against  Kansas 
State — the  Sooners  remained  on 
top  of  the  Associated  Press  rank- 
ing poll  of  sports  writers  and 
broadcasters  by  a  comfortable  but 
by  no  means  unanimous  margin. 
It  was  Oklahoma  1,183  points 
and  runnerup  Michigan  State  1,065 


only  time  in  the  past  eight  years. 
With  a  couple  of  eicceptions.  the 
other  top  10  teams  apparently 
have  comparatively  easy  assign- 
ments this  week-end.  After  Okla- 
homa and  Michigan  State,  they're 
rated  this  way  in  a  close  ballot: 
Georgia    Tech,      Texas    Christian, 


Harriers  Prep 
For  Four  Way 
Contest  Friday 


on  the  usual  basis  of  10  points  for  j  Ohio  State,  Tennessee,  Mississippi, 
each  first  place  vote,  nine  for  sec- 1  Southern  California,  Texas  A  &M 
ond,   etc.    No   one  else   was  even    and  Baylor. 

close  to  these  two.  The  Sooners  I  Ohio  State,  pushed  back  to  fifth 
drew  76  of  the  130  first-place  votes  '  place  by  Texas  Christian's  rise  in 
and  Michigan  State's  Spartans  got  i  Spite  of  the  Buckeyes'  convincing 
32.  j  32-20  victorj'  over  Stanford,  takes 

Next     Saturday     Oklahoma  en-  j  on   Illinois   in   the   first   Big   Ten 
counters  Texas  in  the  annual  game '  game  for  both  teams, 
at  Dallas.  This  is  traditionally  one  I      Mississippi,  which  also  dropped 
of  the  toughest  and  most  import-    a   place   in  the  rankings,   encoun- 
ant   of  the   year  for  both  teams,  j  ters    unbeaten    Vanderbilt.    which 

!  polled    107.  points   for   13th  place. 

The    only   other    game    which    in- 
volves teams  ranked  in  the  f'rst 
20   is    Michigan,    12th,   vs.    Army, 
15th,  at  Ann   Arbor.  Mich. 

0th ?r  top-10  pa?rin£rs  are  Michi- 
gan   State    vs.    Indiana,      Georsia 
Tech  vs.  Louisiana  State,  possibly 
The    varsity    cross-country   team  I  a    ^^ard    one:    Texas    Christian    vs. 
went  through   an  extensive  work-  j  Alabama.    Tennessee    vs.    Chatta- : 
out   yesterday   in   preparation   for  |  "<^"a-      Southern   California      vs.  i 
their  quadrangular  meet  this  Fri-    Washington,     Texas    A    &    M    vs.  | 
day  irf  Columbia.  S.  C.  '  Houston  and  Baylor  vs.  Arkansas.  I 

The  four  teams  competing  in  ^iumi  of  Florida,  at  the  top  of  the 
the  meet  are  UNC,  N.  C.  State, '  second  division,  encounters  Mary- 
Clemson   and    South   Carolina.        I J^"^- 

Jim   Beatty,   Carolina's  top  har- 1      Texas  A  &  M  and  Baylor  moved  j 
rier,    will    encounter    his    stiff  est   into  the  first  10  in  this  week's  vot- ; 
competition  in  State's  Mike  Shea,  I  i^g  after  Michigan  and  Pitsburgh 
Shea  is  the  only  cross-countr>'  run-    were  beaten  and  dropped  out. 

ner  to  defeat  Beatty  in  ACC  com-  j 

petition. 

Yesterday  afternoon  Coach  Dale  i 
Ranson  was  undecided  as  to  who 
would  be  the  eighth  runner  on  t.he  I 
squad   for  Friday's   meet.   Ranson 
said      that    his    first    seven      men 
wx>uld    be    Jim    Beatty,      Marion  j 
Griffin,    Perrin    Henderson,    Dave 
Scurlock,    Everett   Whatley.     Ben  > 
Williams  and  Reaves. 


Frosh  Runners 
Meet  Deaclets 

The  UNC  freshmen  harriers 
will  attempt  to  rebound  from  last 
Friday's  defeat  by  the  Blue  Imps 
of  Duke  when  they  meet  the  Deac- 
lets of  Wake  Forest  in  Winston- 
Salem    this    afternoon. 

Coach  Boyd  Newman  said  yes- 
terday tbat  the  squad  is  in  good 
physical  condition  for  the  con- 
test. '  •' 

Making  the  trip  will  be  Cowles 
Liipfert,  Pick  Arthur,  John  Green, 
Frank  Packard,  Frank  Siriani 
and  Larry  Withrow.  Coach  New- 
nam  said  that  he  was  not  certain 
as  to  who  the  eighth  squad  mem- 
ber would  be. 

Newnam  noted  that  his  chief 
handicap  this  season  has  been  the 
lack  of  squad  depth.  He  once 
again  said  that  any  freshman  run- 
ners would  be  welcome  to  try  out 
for  the   squad. 


Baseball 

(Vontimied  from   Page    1) 
rule  doubW  oh  a  hat  tWt  bounced 
into  the  stands  and  Snider  was  in- 
tentionally  passed,    but   they    also 
were  left  stranded. 

Big  Don  Newcombe  (27-7)  is 
Brooklyn  Manager  Walt  Alston's 
choice  for  the  seventh  and  decid- 
ing game  today.  Yankee  Manager 
Casey  Stengel  did  not  disclose  his 
pitcher  immediately. 
New  York  (A)     Ab  R    H    O 

Bauer,  rf  _..  5    0    2    2 

Collins,   lb  - 5     0     2     4 


By  LARRY  CHEEK 

Carolina  and  Georgia,  two  vic- 
tor>-  starved  gridiron  giants  of  old, 
square  off  Saturday  afternoon  in 
what  could  be  a  'make  or  break' 
battle  for  both. 

Both  the  Tar  Heels  and  the  Bull- 
dogs have   been   in  the  throes  of 
losing  seasons  ever  since  the  days 
of  the  two  Charleys:  Justice  and 
Trippi.    This  year,  despite  the  Jim 
Tatum    new  look'  here  at  Carolina 
and    a   potentially   great   squad   at 
Georgia,   neither  of  the  two   have 
I  been  winning  consistently. 
j      Between  the  two  of  them,  Tatum 
I  and  Waliy  Butts  at  Georgia  have 
j  won  a  total   of  one  game  out  of 
I  six.  On  that  occasion,  the  Bulldogs- 
stopped  lowly   Florida   State,   3-0. 
j  In   two  other  starts,   Georgia  lost 
to     Vanderbilt      and     Mississippi 
State. 

The  Tar  Heels  have  shown  con- 

I  sistent    improvement    since    their 

opening  debacle  against  State.  Still, 

they    have    remained    winless    in 

.  three  starts,  dropping  decisions  to 

I  Oklahoma   and    South   Carolina    in 

their  last  two  outings. 

I  KEY  GAME  FOR  BOTH 

This  week's  game  shapes  up  as 
an  even  steven  affair  between  tv/o 
squads  just  about  ready  to  explode. 
As  Coach  Tatum  said  yesterday  at 
his  weekly  press  conference,  "The 
game  should  be  beneficial  to  one 
ot  us."  Just  which  one  remains  to 
.  be  seen. 

Coach  Tatum  and  his  Tar  Heels 
are  not  underrating  Georgia. 
"They're  better  than  the  scores  so 
far  would  seem  to  indicate,"  said 
Tatum.  "In  their  first  three  games, 
they  looked  a  lot  like  us.  They ' 
stopped  their  own  offense.  Nobody 
else  stops  Georgia. 

"They  move  well  between  the  20 
yard  lines,"  Tatum  said,  "but  bog 
down  when  they  gef  close  to  the 
goal.    They  always   seem   to  stop ! 
themselves  with  a  penalty,  fumble  , 
or  intercepted  pass."  j 

INJURIES  CAUSE  CHANGES  j 

The    increasing    number    of    in- 
juries  suffered   by   the  Tar   Heels 
in  recent  ganie.s  has  been  reflected 
i  in  a  number  of  lineup  shifts.    The 
I  starting  backfield  unit  has  imder- 1 
'  gone  considerable  change  since  the  : 
Oklahoma  contest  with  only  right ; 
halfback  Ed   Sutton   remaining  atj 
his  post.  j 

Biggest   and   most    vital   change  i 

xTwo  out  in  10th  when  winning 
run  scored.  I 


I  was  the  r?tui-n   of  Dave  Reed  to 

the  important  quarterback  slot  in 
1  place  of  soph  Curt  Hathaway.  Reed 

saw  action  against  South  Carolina, 

but  was  not  in  peak  form  for  the 
,  contest. 
j     Wally  Vale,  long  punting  junior 

who  broke  the  ACC  record  with  an 
!  84-yard  boot  against  Oklahoma, 
i  has  been  moved  back  to  fullback 

from  halfback  to  replace  Don  Lear. 
■  Lear  is  plagued  by  a  trick  knee 
j  that  has  given  out  on  him  in  each 
j  of  the  last  two  games. 
I  The  other  backfield  shift  finds 
I  big  Larry  McMullen  regaining  his 
j  starting  left  halfback  spot  from 
I  Jim  Varnum.  McMullen  will  start 
I  Saturday  if  the  Tar  Heels  receive, 

while  Varnum  will  get  the  call  if 

Carolina  kicks  off. 

JONES  REPLACES  KOES 

Biggest  "shift  in  the  forward 
wall  is  at  center  where  former 
starting  guard  Jones  will  take  over 
in  place  of  injured  Ronnie  Koes. 
Jones  will  be  seeking  to  escape 
the  jinx  that  has  landed  co-cap- 
tain George  Stavnitski  and  Koes  in 
hospitals  on  successive  weekends. 

Stavnitski  is  still  hospitalized 
with  a  serious  head  injury  suffered 
in  the  Sooner  clash,  while  Koes  re- 
ceived a  painful  back  injury  in  the 
Sotith  Carolina  tilt  that  will  side- 
line him  for  an  indefinite  length 
of  time. 

Junior  Howard  Williams  will  fill 
Jones'  shoes  at  one  vacated  guard 
slot,  while  veteran  Hap  Setzer  will 
be  his  running  mate  at  the  other 
guard.  Don  Kemper,  who  probably 
would  have  received  the  starting 
nod  at  one  guard  spot,  broke  his 
nose  for  the  second  time  this  year 
in  practice  Monday,  and  will  miss 
the  Bulldog  game.  Sub  end  Bernic 
Donatclli  has  been  shifted  to  guard 
to  take  up  the  slack  left  by  Jones 
and  Kemper.  ,^- 

The  tackles,  as  usual,  will  be 
Stu  Pell  and  Phil  Blazer,  while 
the  ends  will  be  Buddy  Payne  and 
Charley  Robinson.  Robinson  was 
moved  up  to  replace  Larry  Mus- 
champ  after  his  fine  showing  in 
the  Gamecock  game. 

This  week's  game  with  the  Bull- 
dogs will  be  the  25th  in  a  long 
and  colorful  rivalry  between  the 
two  schools.  The  series  now  stands 
all  even  with  each  team  having 
won  eleven  games  each.  There 
have  been  two  ties. 


Bums  Celebrate 
Important  Win 
Over  Yankees 

By  TED  SMITS 

BROOBQiYN,  Oct.  10.  (^^— For  an 
agonizing  moment  yesterday  after- 
noon Jackie  Robinson  thought  the 
ball  he  smashed  to  left  field  in  the 
10th  inning  of  the  sixth  World  Se- 
ries game  was  headed  straight  for 
Enos  Slaughter's  glove. 

"Then  it  seemed  to  fak^  off, 
over  his  head,"  said  Jackie,  grin- 
ning broadly.  "So  I  just  trotted  to 
first  because  I  knew  if  it  was  in 
th*re  we  had  the  game  won." 

"I  knew  I  hit  it  well,  like  a  shot. 
It  was  a  low  fast  ball.  And  I  sure 
hoped  it  would  take  off." 

So  did  all  the  other  Dodgers, 
who  cut  loose  in  their  dressing 
room  after  their  10  inning  1-0  vic- 
tory over  the  New  York  Yankees. 
It  was  by  far  the  noisiest  demon- 
stration to  date. 

Now  that  the  series  stands  3-all 
with  today's  game  the  decider. 
Manager  Walt  Alston  said  he 
would  send  to  the  mound  his  27-, 
game  winner,  Don  Newcombe,  who  I 
so  far  has  run  into  bad  luck  in  I 
the  series.  ,         | 

Robinson  and  all  the  other  Dodg-  '■ 
ers  had  warm  praise  for  Bob  Tur- ' 
ley,  the  Yankee  starter  who 
pitched  a  masterful  shutout'  game  I 
for  nine  innings.  j 

"I  thought  he  was  just  as  fasti 
as  Larsen  but  he  didn't  have  as! 
good  a  curve,"  said  Robinson.         | 

That  is  a  superlative  compli-  \ 
ment,  for  Don  Larsen  pitched  a  I 
perfect  no-hit  game  Monday  in  i 
beating  the  Dodgers  2-0  at  Yankee  ' 
Stadium. 

"Now  we're  in  a  pretty  good  po- 
siton,"  Robnson  exulted.  "Of 
course  we're  not  hitting  too  well, 
but  all  we  want  is  another  chance 
at  'em."  j 

"You  know,  I'm  most  happy  for  I 


USED 
SEMI-TEXTS 


Wind  Dictates 
Yank  Strategy 

By  WILL  GRIMSLEY 

BROOKLYN,  Oct.  10.  iJPi—The 
direction  of  the  wind  dictated  the 
defensive  strategy  that  backfired 
for  the  New  York  Yankees  yester- 
day— and  neither  Manager  Casey 
Stengel  nor  losing  pitcher  Bob  Tur- 
ley  offered  any  apologies. 

"We  had  to  walk  Snider  and 
pitch  to  Robinson,"  Stengel  said. 
"There  was  no  other  way  to  do 
it." 

Twice  with  men  in  scoring  po- 
sition— in  the  eighth  and  again  in 
the  10th,  Turley  walked  Duke 
Snider  intentionally  to  get  to  Jack- 
ie Robinson. 

The  first  time  Robinson  popped 
weakly  to  third  base.  The  second 
time  he  lined  a  hit  to  left  field 
with  two  out  to  score  Junior  Gil- 
liam with  the  run  that  beat  the 
Yankees  1-0  and  carried  the  World 
Series  into  the  climactic  seventh 
game  today. 

"First  of  all,  I  didn't  want  Tur- 
ley pitching  to  that  left-hander 
Snider,"  Stengel  said,  "but  'the 
main  thing  was  the  wind.  It  was 
blowing  out  toward  right  field  and 
in  toward  home  plate  from  left. 
So  the  odds  were  with  us." 

Turley,  beaten  despite  a  mag- 
nificent performance,  said  "I'll 
have  to  go  with  the  manager  all 
the  way  on  that." 


-  NOW  SHOWING  - 

'^White  Witch 
Doctor'' 

In  Technicolor 

Starring 

ROBERT  MITCHUM 
SUSAN  HAYWARD 


LATE  SHOW  SAT. 
SUN.-MON.-TUES. 

"High  Hilarity! 

First  Class  Comedy! 

Enjoyable    Relief!" 

— M.  Carten,  The  New  Yorker 


Clem  Labine.  He  did  a  wonderful 
job  for  us  all  season  and  he  de- 
served to  win." 


S.HUROK'     «'"'™^''^™« 


7HISISTHE 
FUNNIEST 
MOVIE  OF 
THE  YEAR!' 


A  Riotous,  Mad-Cap 

Military  Mx-Up,ThaHtoekt 

Th»  Kanh  Of  The  Army. 

The  BOUITING  BROTHERS  fVej».ii 

mm 
mmss 


B  O  8  and  M  O  N  K 
of 

TOWN& 
CAMPUS 

SALUTE 
Athlete  Of  The  Week 


Il'j  powerful  drauia 
turgiiig  itcr»«fr 
tke  tctft* . . . 
ilt  gk>ri«u» 

PHMic  iHUlf  by 

grp«l  voi«M . . . 
AU>.\  i«  tb«  film 
rvMit  of 
our  fie'. 


Mantle,  cf 

Berra,  c .„ 

Slaughter,  If 
Martin,  2b 
McDougald,  ss 
Carey,  3b 


A  E 

0  0 

1  0 
0  0 
0  0 


New  York  (A) 
Brooklyn  (N) 


000  000  000  0—3 
000  000  000  1—1 


Turley,  p .  .  4 


S  0  0     2 

4  0  2  12 

3  0  0     110 

4  0  13     10 
4  0  0     3 
4  0  0     2 

0  0     0 


0  0 
0  0 
2     0 


Totals    .._ 

Brooklyn  (N) 
Gilliam.  2b  . 
Reese,  ss    .^.- 
Snider,  W 
Robinson,  3b 
Hodges,  lb 


36  0  7x29  5     0 

Ab  R  H    O  A    E 

3  110  7     0 

4  0  0     2  3     0 

2  0  1     4  0.  0 
4  0  1110 

3  0  0  14  0     0 


Amoros,  If  3'  0  0  2  0  0 

Furillo,  rf  4  0  0  2  0  0 

Campanella,  c      4  0  0  5  0  0 

Labine,  p  4  0  1  0  3  0 


Totals    .  31     1     4  30  14    0 


Attention  Men! 

-»■  ■    * 
WHY    BUY    INFERIOR    MERCHANDISE,    WHEN 
FOR  A  FEW  PENNIES  MORE,  YOU  CAN  PUR- 
CHASE "NAMt  BRANDS",  v;** 

Fruit  of  the  Loom  Shirts     white  and  colors  $1 .99 
Fruit  of  the  Loom  Shorts  _  3  for  $2.05 

Fruit  of  the  Loom  T-shirts     :: 3  for  $2.05 

Fruit  of  the  Loom  Athletic  Shirts         3  for  $1.45 
Men's  tennis  shoes  (white  and  blue)  $2.98  and  up 

Sweaters  by  Rugby '     _         $5.95  and  up 

Cresco  jackets  —  washable  suede, 

gabardine,  and  heavy  quilted  nylon 
Crosby  Square  Shoes  —  loafers, 

plain  toe  and  wing  tip 

We  Give  S.  &  H.  Green  Stamps 

BERAAAN'S  DERI.  STORE 

Open  All  Day  Wednesday 


E— None.    RBI— Robir.son.    2B— 
Berra,    Collins,   Labire.    S — Reese  [ 
DP — Gilliam.    Reese    and    Hodges. ' 
Left— New   York  (A)   8,   Brooklyn! 
(N)    10.    BB— Labine   2    (Slaughter, 
Mantle,  Turley  8  (Hodges,  Robin- 
son, Gilliam  2,  Snider  3,  Amoros).  j 
SO— Labine      5      (McDougald      3,  | 
Bauer,  Turley),  Turley   11   (Reese,  j 
Furillo  2,  Campanella  3,  Labine  2,  j 
Snider    Anioros,    Gilliam).    R-EHl— 
Labine  o-O,  Turley  1-1.  W — ^Labine. 
L— Turley.     U— Soar     (A),     plate,  I 
Bogges    (N)    first    base,   Napp    (A)  I 
second  base,  Pinelli  (N)  third  base, 
Runge  (A)  left  field,  Gorman  (N) 
right     field.      T— 2:37.      A— 33,224 
(paid).  Receipts  (net)— 5221,792.10. 


Freshman  Footballers 
Prep  For  Maryland  Tilt 

Freshman  Coach  Fred  Tullai 
ran  his  Carolina  Tar  Baby  foot- 
ballers through  a  brisk  workout 
yesterday  in  preparation  for  Fri- 
day's contest  with  the  freshmen 
of  Maryland.  The  squad,  with  last 
week's  lass  to  Wake  Forest  in 
mind,  is  looking  for  revenge  at 
the    expense    of    the    Baby    Terps. 

Varsity  Coach  Jim  Tatum  stat- 
ed yesterday  that  he  was  not  dis- 
appointed in  the  Tar  Babies' 
showing  against  Wake  Forest  and 
that  he  expected  much  impwove- 
ment  to  be  shown  against  Mary- 
land. 

Tatum  noted  that  the  worst  de- 
fect uncovered  in  the  Wake  For- 
est game  was  the  lack  of  team 
play. 


Modct-n  Library  books  $100 

Everyman's  Library  books        SLOO  ! 

Cpliage  Odtlines    „  4(k 

Pfc^er  Modern  Libi-fery  ..•..'....•.„  40e 

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i 
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THE  INTIMATE 
BOOKSHOP 

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Chapel   Hill 
Open  Till   10   P.M. 


IT'S  FOR  REAL! 


by  Ch«sfer  Fisid 


OAiRIIL  DOOM 


Once  every  month  Gabriel  Doom 

Locked  himself  up  in  a  sound-proof  room; 

Then  he  laughed  out  loud  and  rocked  with  glee 
At  a  life  that  was  fiirniy  as  life  could  be! 

He  laughed  at  the  wither,  sunny  on  Monday 
.  .  .  rainy  on  Saturday,  rainy  on  Siuiday.  y 

He  lauf^ied  at  the  news  so  loaded  with  grief 

that  an  ax  murder  came  as  a  pleasant  rel^f? 

He  cried,  "what  with  worry,  hurry,  and  strife 
you  couldn't  ask  for  a  funnier  life! " 

MOiAii  In  this  fast-moving  world 
it's  good  to  sit  loose,  relax  and  enjoy  the 
real  ntisfaction  of  a  real  smoke  ...  a 
Chesterfield.  More  real  flavor,  more 
satisfaction  and  the  smoothest  smoking 
ever,  thanks  to  Accw-R«y. 

Take  your  pleasure  6^.'       **^''      "** 

I  Smek*  Hr  real  .  .  .  smoke  Chesterfflelrf! 

'-  ■     ■ 


It's  smart  to  he  cninfortahle 


Di.uuctlvc  .  .  .  (Oh  perish  that  overdone  won 
Yet  Clarks  is  apart  from  the  everyday  herd 
Tis  smart  to  be 
comfortable  .  .  .  casual  too 
And  what  is  more  casual 
than  Clarks'  i 

Desert  shoe? 


mniMTHAT 
ISRISKCmiUY 

KDKAnDTO 

AU  THOSE  WHO 

GOT  AWAY  Wrm  IT! 


S=: 


,^ 


1  >ii 


nauiBATnNMnuGH    . 

,         MUNIS  MHa 

*  J  Is      ntlf  THOMAS 

dCft      k   ~    UNCAMUaUH 


PATRONIZE   YOUR 
•    ADVERTISERS    • 


JIM  BEATTY 

Jim  Beatty  veteran  Carolina 
cross-country  star,  has  been 
named  Athlete  of  the  Week  for 
his  sparkling  display  of  running 
ability  in  last  week's  2631  Tar 
Heel  win  over  Virginia.  Beatty, 
defending  ACC  cross-cocntry 
king,  paced  his  team  to  victory 
by  sweeping  first  place  honors 
with  ease. 

We  want  him  to  drop  by 
rOWF  &  CAMPUS  and  pick  out 
a  shirt  to  his  liking— complf- 
ments  of  the  house. 

'-    !■ 

We  want  the  old  and  young 
alike  of  Chapel  Hill  to  make 
TOWN  &  CAMPUS  their  head- 
quarters for  the  finest  in  men's 
clothing.   Drop   in    today. 

TOWN  & 
CAMPUS 


SHIRTS -19c 

"  '"""""((meWtitt  (  T^r^j   V 


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With   or  Without     '^i  '-'^\  , 

Starch  /        ,^5r=#4j 

Prompt  Service 


Gtefn  Lennox  Laundromat 


DA.^ 


^OSSWORDi 


Desekt®  Boot 

(Saod  or  Browa) 
PUntatiofl  crepe  »ole 
Ma<le  ia  Eacl>n<l 
M^  $12.95 


Of  ENOIANO 


v-^n 


Julian* 


tWm 


ACROSS 

1.  A  food  fish 
5.  Flaps 
9.  Antlered 

animal 
10.  Adage 

12.  Little 
sprites 

« Myth. ) 

13.  Bishop's 
headdress 
( var. ) 

14.  Evening 
( poet. ) 

15.  God  of 
pleasure 

16.  Sun  god 

17.  Mocks 

20.  Enclosure 

21.  Islet 

22.  Shaded 
walk 

23.  Celerity 

26.  Flower 

27.  Coil 

28.  Coin 
(Peru) 

29.  Large 
worm 

30.  Colonizer 
34.  Close  to 
35. 

Palace 

36.  Ostrichlike 
bird 

37.  Entire  sum 
39.  Natives  of 

the  Near 
E:ast 

41.  Quench, 
as  thirst 

42.  Harass 

43.  Prosecutes 
judicially 

44.  Coffin  and 
stand 

DOWN 
1.  Find  the 
aoluUon  «( 


2.  Lid 

3.  Employ 

4.  Footlike 
organ 

5.  Domesti- 
cates 

6.  Deer 

( India) 

7.  Morsel 

8.  Plants 

9.  Token  o( 
merit 
(obs.) 

11.  Poorly 
15.  Tunisian 
title 

18.  Frosted 

19.  Father 

20.  God  of 
flocks 


22.  Im- 
port- 
ant 
in 

brew- 
ing 

23.  Exudes 
mois- 
ture 

24.  SmaU 
fire- 
arms 

IS.  Half 
ems 
26.  Kettle 
28.  Stitch 


1 

A 

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o 

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F  Ia!? 

ES 

A 

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1^ 

1 

L   L 

V 

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KJ 

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14 

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L  e 

A 

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8 

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■or  Y 

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A.11E  V 

mlRe 

SC  IJA 

T  E- 

■k  N  1 

t|s 

1  aaao  sbisii 

to* 
Yeat«rdm]r's  Answer 

33.  Reddish 
coating  on 
metal 

35.  A  dessert 

30.  Bottoms  of      38.  Greek  letter 
feet  39.  Warp-yarn 

31.  Rent  40.  Biblical 

32.  Burning  coal        «ame 


V^-JSSf 


v.*-":  '■ 


tt.m.C.  Library 
Serials   Dept. 
Cliapel  Hill.   N.   C. 
8-51-49 


WEATHER 

Fair   and    cool    with    chance    of 

fro$t. 


^IbcDattuSSrarKccl 


VOL.    LVII    NO.  18 


Complete  (/P)  Wire  Service 


CHAPEL  HILL,  NORTH  CAROLINA,  THURSDAY,  OCTOBER   11,   1956 


Offices  m  Graham  Memorial 


PLAN 

Thf   editor  talks  about   Paarsalf 
Plan  on  page  2. 


SIX  PAGES  THIS  ISSUE 


Cobb  Dorm  Basement 
Evacuated  By  Men 


By  EDITH  MACKINNON 

The  basement  of  Cobb  Dormitory  is  no  longer  being  used  as  living 
quarters  for  men  students. 

James  Wadsworth,  housing  officer,  announced  yesterday  that  the 
trowdert  housing  situation  has  been  somewhat  relieved  following  fra- 
ternity pledging. 

An  appeal  was  issued  over  radio  for  any  rooms  in  or  around  Chapei 

Hill  which  could  be  rented  by  stu  ♦ 

dents.  All  town  rooms  w  ithin  walk- 
ing distance  of  the  campus  are  now 
filled.  A  few  rooms  in  outlying 
districts  of  Chapel  Hill  are  still 
vacant  and  have  been  offered  for 
rent. 

Cobb  basement,  which  previous- 
ly housed  75  men,  was  offered  by 
the  University,  rent-free,  in  an  ef- 
fort to  alleviafc  the  crowded  situ- 


UWC  MEETS 

The  Univitfrsity  Woman's  Club 
will  meet  at  the  Morehead  Plan 
etarium  from  4  to  6  p.m.  today. 


Parity  Raid  Last  Night 
On  2  Women's  Dorms 


ation.   Wadsworth   stated   that   the 
basement  had  served  a  useful  pur- 1 
pose    in    provding   space   for   men 
until  adequate  rooms  could  be  lo- } 
cated.  ] 

At  the  present  time  there  is  no  ! 
such  interim  place  for  undergrad- ' 
uate  women,  who  must  live  in  the  | 
dormitories.  Graduate  women  are  j 
allowed  to  live  in  town  only  if  they  | 
are  24  years  old  or  older. 

All  rooms  on  campus  in  both  the  ' 
mens'  and  womens'  dormitories  are  | 
filled.  Approximately  55  girls'  I 
dorm  rooms  are  being  used  as  tri-  j 
pie  rooms,  and  there  are  2,000  | 
men  sharing  three-man  dorm 
rooms. 

Married  students  face  the  same 
housing  difficulties,  as  waiting 
lists  in  both  Victory  Village  and 
Glen  Lennox  lengthen.  In  order 
for  married  students  to  gain  an 
apartment  in  these  locations  they 
must  ^e  regularly  enrolled  in  the 
University. 

Those  who  plan  to  enroll  may 
enter  their  names  and  will  be  put 
on  a  pending  list.  Preference  is 
^iven  to  married  couples  with 
children  ahd  to  veterans,  Wadf- 
worth  said.  ' 


Between  titree  and  four  hun- 
dred men  staged  a  so-called 
"panty  raid"  here  last  night  just 
around  closing  hours  for  girls' 
dorms. 

The  crowd  was  broken  up 
within  a  half  hour  after  the 
melee  started,  and  the  police 
made  no  arrests. 

Only  two  dorms  were  visited* 
Mclver  and  Carr,  and  no  gar- 
ments  were  taken. 

The  event  originated  in  lower 
quad,  according  to  Interdermi- 
tory  Council  President  Sonny 
Hallford,  about  10:40  p.m.  and 
the  group  picked  up  followers 
and  moved  to  Mclver.  They  min- 
gled around  there  for  a  few  min- 
utes and  then  moved  to  Carr. 

By  the  time  the  noise-making 


group  reached  Carr,  student 
body  President  Bob  Young  ap- 
peared on  the  scene. 

Young  mad*  hit  way  to  the 
steps  of  Carr,  and  said  a  few 
words,  encouraging  the  men  to 
return  to  their  dorms. 

Thtfy  immediately  left  the 
front  of  the  dorm  ahd  began  to 
disperse.  A  few  mingled  around. 

Young  walked  around  to  the 
back  of  Carr  and  said  a  few  more 
remarks  to  the  waning  crowd  as 
it  broke  up.  Two  local  policemen 
were  on  the  scene. 

By  this  time,  the  crowd  had 
all  but  dispersed.  The  ones  hang- 
ing around  seem«d  to  be  just 
waiting  to  see  if  anything  else 
was  going  tohappen. 

By  11:15  p.m.  t  was  all  over. 


Columbia  St.  Parking, 
New  Elections  Law 
Scheduled  For  Airing 


It  Happens  Every  Year 

Re-enactin9  the  laying  of  the  cornerstone  of  Old  East  Dormitory, 
shewn  above,  is  a  traditional  part  of  exercises  held  here  every  year 
to  celebrate  the  University's  birthday.  The  exercises  will  be  held 
Friday  at  11   a.m.  on  the  steps  of  South  Building. 


ON  PRICE  CONDITIONS: 


Bob  Young  To  Talk 
To  Business  Firms 


PHYSICS  CLUB  \  speaker  tomorrow  at  7:30  p  m.  it 

The  Physics  Club  will   meet  to-  i  the   English  Club   meeting   in   the 
day  at  7  p.m.  in  250  Phillips.   A  [  'i^^ary  assembly  room. 


p.m. 
movie  will  be  shown.  I 

ENGLISH  CLUB  j 

Prof.  Norman  EL  f^iaaon  of  tlje.i 
UNC  faculty  will  be  the  feattired 


Vets    Phy.   Ed.   List 
Has  500  Signatures 

A  petition  calling  for  elimination!  to  take  four  hours  of  phy.<ical  ed- 
of  required  physical  education  for   ucation  per  week,"  Bell  >aid. 
veterans    has    approximately    500 1      -xhe   majority    of   veterans    are 
signatures,  according  to  its  origi- 1  working  and  have   family  respon- 
sibilities. Thus  most  of  them  are 


^OLK  DANCE  GROUP 

The  Wesley  P'oJk  Dance  Group 
will  hold  its  regular  weekly  gath- 
ering tornnrro*'  at  7:3t}  p.m.  in  the 
University  Methodist  Churcti  base- 

I  mcnt.  All  interested  students  have 

I  been  invited  to  attend. 

SKETCH  CLASS 

A    second    session    of    Evening 

i  Sketch   Cla.ss    has   been    scheduleH 

j  for  Thursday  evenings  from  7  to 

I  9  p.m.  in  the  Person  Hall  Art  Gal 

lery.    The  class  will  meet  13  times 

during  the  fall   semester,  and   all 

person.s  interosted  in  .ioining  hav' 


There  is   unrest   on  campus  concerning  certain    "unjustified   situa-  j 
i  tions"   prevalent   in   dJwntown   business  firms.  President   Bob  Young 
announced  yesterday: 

Specific  complaints  fical  with  price  conditions  and  cost  of  parking 
in  the  mrrchanl.-^"  parkmg  lot  located  on  the  corner  of  Rosemary  and 
Columbia  Streets. 

Young  said  he  plans  to  confer  with  the  Chapel  Hill  Merchants'  As- 
sociation Friday  toward  "clearing  up"  these  "situations." 

"I  will  be  happy  to  talk  with  students  between  now  and  Friday 
morning  about  any  matter  that  they  feel  should  be  brought  to  the 
attention  of  the  Merchants'  Association,"  Young  said. 

According  to  the  presidential  statement,  Younj;  lia;  already  con- 
tacted Ed  McG'nty.  president  of  the  rhapd  Hill  Merchants'  .Associa- 
tion, and  arrangements  have  been  made  to  noeet  with  it  Friday  morn- 
ing at  11  o'clock. 


nators 

The  petition  will  be  forwarded 
to  D?an  of  General  College  Cecil 
Johnson  for  appropriate  action  af- 
ter it  has  amassed  at  least  1.000 
signatures,  originators  said  yester- 
day. 

Originators  of  the  petition  are 
Darwin  Bell  and  Benny  Huffman. 

'"We  feel  th?  average  veteran 
can  more  wisely  utilize  his  time 
for  studying  than  to  be  required 


Fre«hrr"^n  Fellowship  To  Sho^^  Game  Films' 


Films  showing  last  Saturday's 
U.NC-USC  footb.ill  gam?  and  for 
mer  UNC  All-Amcrican  Charlie 
'ust^ce  in  action  will  be  shown  to- 
:iight  at  6:30  in  the  Libra-y  As- 
sembly R  om  under  the  sponsor- 
ship of  the  YMCA  Freshman  Fel- 
'owship. 

Coach  Mike'  Ronman.  who  made 
fhe  movies  of  the  USC  g.-mie  and 


(See  COVERING  CAMPUS,  p.  4)Lif  Justice,  will   narrate. 


,AI1  freshmen  hive  been  invited 
to  attend  the  movie  free  of  char;;c, 
and  to  mer^t  with  member.^  of  the 
Freshman  Fellowsh  p  in  the  ur-- 
stairs  of  Lenoir  Hall  for  supper 
at  5:25 

Details  on  Fellowship  plans  for 
the  near  future  will  be  discussed 
at   {onighfs   meeting. 

Lawr?nce  Wilson  of  Mount  01i^e 
will   preside. 


required  lo  have  part-time  jobs," 
Huffman  said. 

"Veterans  who  have  completed 
requirements  should  think  of  fu- 
ture veteran  students  and  preve'nt 
them  from  being  subjected  to  thi.s 
orc4eal,''  the  student  originators 
said  in  joint  statement. 

The  petition  will  be  in  the  Y 
secretary's  office  today,  Friday, 
Saturday  and  .Mondaj',  Bell  said. 


Frank  Graham  Portrait  Now  In  Building 
That  Is  Memorial  To  Edward  K.  Graham 


By  CLARKE  JONES 


Charlie  Sloan  Named 
DTH  Managing  Editor 


the  students  while  he  was  here  it 
should   be   placed   in   Graham    M-^ 
The  portrait  of  f.-rmer  Consoli-    ^^^rial    where    they    could    see    it 
'  dated   University   President  Frank    even.'day. 

'  P.  Graham  was  moved  info  Edward  xhe  faculty  lounge  was  rarely 
I  Bidder  Graham  Memorial's  main  visited  bv  the  students,  some  said. 
'Uiunge  late  yesterday,  according  to  i      Chancellor  House,  because  of  so 

iMi-  Linda  Mann,  director  of  GM.    "!«">   P'''--'^""^  ''^''"^  "''  '"  '*^*'  f'"" 

about  it.  apparently  decided  to  let 
The     painting,     located 
Morthcad   Building's 


Dr.  Graham,  reached  in  New 
York  by»  telephone,  said  "I'm  vco' 
happy  for  it  to  be  wherever  peo- 
ple want  it.  The  placing  of  it  is 
in  the  hands  of  the  University 
and    whatever    they    want    pleases 


me. 


Dr.   Graham   lelt   the  University 


Charlie  Sloan,  sophomore  from 
Arlinglon,  Va..  has  been  nimeJ 
managing  editor  of  The  Dai  y  Tar 
Heel. 

Sloan's  appointment  was  con- 
firmed at  a  meeting  of  the  student 
Public  ?ti ens  ftoard  this  week. 

H?  replaces  Charlie  Johnson, 
-eni.or  from  Lenoir,  \\ho  res'gned 
after  serving  as  managing  editor 
for  part  of  two  semesters. 

Edit:r  Fred  Powledge.  in  nam- 
ing Sloan  to  the  number  two  news- 
paper  position,  said: 

"Sloan  has  shown  for  a  long 
time     that     he     understands     the 


Lounge  since  la.st  spring,  wili  re- 
place a  smaller  one  of  Dr.  Virah.mi 
already  in  the  lounge. 


m     the    things  settle  down  for  awhile  b?-    in  1343  to  become  a  U.  S.  Senator. 
Faculty    fore    deciding     wher.-     l)     put     it    He  currently  is  serving  as  United 
pcrm;incntly. 


Nations  mediator  to  Pakistan. 


The 
turned 

ate. 


smaller    portrait    will     be 
over   to  the   Dialectic   Sen- 


UNC  Chancellor  Rot>ert  B.  House 
last   week   sent   letters   to  Luther 
1  Hodgr-E   Jr.,  chairman   of   the  stu- 
dent   committee    on    the    Graham 
portrait    and    to   .Anthom   Jenzano. 
:  manager  of  Morehead  Planetarium 
[  informing  them  of  the  move. 

I  Dialectic  Senate  President  Stan 
Shaw  also  received  a  letter  from 
He-use. 

HoMse  made  it  clear  in  the  let- 


CHARLIE  SLOAN 

.  ne>n  Majtaging  Editor 


IN  THE  INFIRMARY 

Thot*  adnfittod  to  th«  infirm- 
ary yesterday  included: 

Carol  McGoe,  Janet  Thompson, 
Anna  Geddie,  Margarita  Cook, 
Sally  Payton,  Joseph  McKinsey, 
William  Jackson,  Charles  Cox, 
Kestel  Huffman,  Bruce  Hight, 
Edward  Butchart,  Joseph  Perry, 
Roland  Cremmons,  Richard  Hud- 
sen,  Alvin  Smith,  John  Johnson, 


ne'.vs    function   of   The   Daily   Tar  '  ^^rs  the  large  and  sm..ill  portraits. 

Heel.  He  has  done  v/ell  in  all  th-  j  althonah  having  been  turned  over 
'Vork  h?  has  done,  and  I  feel  surs    *»   Graham    Memoral    and    the   Di 

Senate,  respectively,  were  still  the 
"pronerty  of  the  University  of 
North   Carolina." 

"The  University  rCser\es  the 
Tight  as  with  all  other  portraits  in 
its  pos.ses.sion  to  change  the  place 
from  time  to  time  as  it  sees  fit. " 
he  said  in  his  letter  to  Hodges. 

The  portrait  raised  con.siderablc 
controversy  when  It  was  first  un 
veiled  last  spring  in  Hill  Music 
Hall,  then  moved  to  the  Faculty 
Lounge  in  the  Morehead  Building. 

Many  persons  immediately  pro- 
tested this  action  saying  since  Dr. 
Graham  was  such  a  ^ood  friend  of 


he  will  di  well  as, managing  edi- 
tor." 

Po'vledg?    Cited    former    manag- 
ing Ed'tor  Johnson  for  his  "'months 
of  hard  ser\nce."  and   noted  that 
i  Johnson  will  continue  on  the  staff 
as  a  general  repr>rt:r — "a  sort  of 
I  floater  who  will  help  other  staff- 
;  ers   and   work   on   special   stories 
and  features." 


PROGRAM  SELLERS 

Students  interested  in  selling 
programs  at  Saturday's  football 
game  have  been  requested  to  at- 
tend a  meeting  at  5  p.m.  today  in 
904  Woollen  Gym. 


THE  PORTRAIT 


Solans  Debate 
Elections  Law 
In  Meeting 

By  GRAHAM  SNYQER 

A  bill  advocating  revision  of  tht 
Elections  Law  will  be  the  primary 
topic  of  debate  tonight  at  tht 
meeting  of  the  Student  Legisla- 
ture. 

Introduced  at  the  last  session 
of  the  legislature  by  John  Brooks 
the  Student  Party  sponsored  bill 
!.f  passed  will  provide  for  the  re 
tention  of  ballot  boxes  in  the  dor- 
mitories during  t.  general  election 

Another  subject  under  the  con- 
sideration of  the  legislature  wili 
b?  the  approval  of  three  members 
of  the  Board  of  Directors  of  Gra- 
ham Memorial  appointed  by  stu- 
dent body  President  Bob  Young. 
At  the  same  time  the  Legislature 
will  select  three  other  members 
for  the  Board,  a  senior,  junior, 
and  sophomore,  their  tenure  of  of 
fice  to  be  one,  two  and  three  years 
respectively. 

The  Elections  Bill  has  been  the 
main  point  of  contention  between 
the  two  campus  parties,  the  Uni- 
versity and  Student,  since  last 
year.  At  that  time,  before  the  last 
general  .student  elections,  the  UP 
introduced  a  bill  providing  that 
ballot  boxes  b?  removed  from  all 
dorms  and  place^  only  m  certain 
districts  over  the  campus. 

A!th.-»ugh  opposed  by  the  SP  and 
«omo  members  of  the  UP,  the  bill 
was  pa.ssed  by  the  Legislature. 
Adhering  to  the  election  rule*, 
the  act  could  not  be  effected  in 
time  for  the  spring  elections,  be 
cause  its  passage  came  less  than 
30  days  prior  to  the  elections. 

Thus,  the  purpose  of  the  SP 
bill  to  be  debated  Thursday  night 
will  bo  to  negate  the  act  of  the 
UP  bill  passed  last  spring,  there- 
fore leaving  individual  ballot  box- 
es in  every  dorm. 

Two  major  members  of  the  SP 
explained  their  views  concerning 
the  biH.  President  of  student  body 
Bob  Y"iung  remarked  on  the  pur- 
pose of  the  bill,  "My  concern  is 
to  make  it  possible  for  as  man\ 
people  to  vote  as  we  can,  and  I 
think  that  the  proposal  we  (the 
Student  Party)  have  endorsed, 
certainly  provides  for  increased 
voting." 

Sonny  Evans.  Vice-President  of 
the  student  bcdy  and  Speaker  o' 
the  Lpgislatare  commented  that 
h^  hone-^  for  an  understanding  of 
the  problem  by  all  i>eople  con- 
cerned and  a  realiration  and  scooe 
of  the  number  of  oeople  it  (th  • 
bill)  .effects.  H?  added.  "For  mv 
p.-»rt.  T  hooc  that  the  legislature 
vill  Rct  for  the  b?nef't  of  the  stu- 
dents and  the  campus  as  a  whole." 

Mike  Wei'iman.  ohiirmyn  of  ih^ 
UP.  "as  M-iavai'abI"'  for  co.mment 
c'l  t'l*^  bill.  M  Goldsm-th.  vice- 
chairman,  declined  comment  on 
the  grounds  that  he  would  not  b» 
in  a  position  to  speak  for  the 
party.  , 

!  '    .     ' 

An"  reno""'!  at  the  le^'s'at've 
I  meeting  of  the  problem  of  park- 
I  ing  restrictions  and  the  results 
I  rf  th"  nrro'xsal  reieet'.'d  by  the 
Board  of  Aldermen  last  Monda" 
was  unforeseen  by  President 
Young.  How°ver.  Young  explain- 
'»d  hi"  vie"'  on  anv  ne'v  oroposal- 
brought  before  ^h"  legislatu'^e  b 
saving.  "It  would  be  dangerous  if 
a  bill  were  introduced  and  passed 
on  this  narking  problem.  b5cau"e 
the  student  government  traffic 
commission  has  rcsponsibilitv  o* 
thi<;  situation  and  any  ne-  bills 
would  only  entangle  that  situa- 
tion." 

The  legislature  will  also  con- 
sider the  approval  of  the  traffic 
cmm'ssion  and  will  swear  in  sev- 
pral  student  legislators  in  other 
topics  to  be  undertaken  at  the 
i))«eting. 


Rose  Says 
Car  Issue 
Not  Towns' 


By   FRANK  WAM.^LEY 

"Lack  of  parking  space  in  Chap- 
•1  Hill  is  a  problem  belong;  |  to 
the  University  and  not  the  town," 
Town  Manager  Thomas  D  Rose 
,aid  recently  in  commenting  on 
he  town  and  campus  parkmg 
situation. 

Rose,  a  University  student  some 
50  years  ago,  said  that  the  biggest 
source  of  trouble  is  "most  people 
afe  too  lazj'  to  walk."  He  strongly 
recommended  that  students  dt 
more  walking.  Chapel  Hill,  he  de- 
clared, is  not   so  huge    as   to  re- 


Traliic  Group 
Asks  UP  To  Be 
At  Meeting 

By  CLARKE  JONES 

Wilburn  Davis,  chairman  of  the 
student  Traffic  Advisory  Com- 
mittee, announced  yesterday  the 
committee  will  meet  t.^day  at  4:30 
p.m.  in  Roland  Parker  1  in  Gra- 
ham Memorial  lo  discuss  the  Co- 
lumbia St.  parking  situation. 

He  challeng3d  all  "students,  fa- 
culty and  townspeople  who  are  in- 
terested and  have  suggestions'  as 
to  the  problem's  solution  to  be 
present. 

He  especially  urged  members 
of  the  University  Party  "with  their 
'little  group'  to  be  present  at  this 
meeting." 

The  committee  was  appointed 
last  week  by  student  body  Presi- 
dent Bob  Young  to  look  into  the 


luire  an  automobile. 

Nearly  75  per  cent  of  the  cars  '  overall  traffic  stuation.  The  Co- 
crowding  Chapel  Hill's  streets  are  !  lumbia  St.  situation  stems  from  a 
either  student  or  faculty  owned.  I  two-hnur  parking  restriction  put 
There  a  •  over  2,100  student  cars  I  on  the  street  in  front  of  Big  Fra- 
Uone.  Rose  explained  that  the  •  ternity  Court, 
city  has  very  little,  control  over  The  committee,  along  with 
student  automobiles.  j  Voung    and    Int^rfraternity    Coun- 

It  is  no  secret  that  the  Univer-  cil  President  Ed  Hudgins,  met 
sity  is  "big  busines.s"  in  Chapel  j  ^jth  the  Board  of  Aldermen  Mon- 
HUl,  he  said.  It  owns  and  controls  ^ay  n:ght  and  requested  a  "tem- 
roost  of  the  utilities.  j  porary  removal"  of  the  ban  while 

Being  stat^-o>»TJefi.  these  <ntir.,'  i  ^  ^ore   satisfactory  plan  was  be- 
holdings  are  tax  free  and  do  not  I  j^g  worked  put. 
contribute,  in  this  way,  to  the  sup- 1      j^^  Aldorme/t  refused,  but  Ma- 
port  oi  the  community.  )  y^,.  q   ^   Corn  well,  who  also  serv- 

Th^  University  is,  of  course,  :  gj.  ^^  chairman  of  the  UNC  Pby- 
muchlargerthanthetown.  In  viewlgjpg,  E^ju^ytion  Dept.  urged  the 
of  this,  it  is  not  difficult  to  un- 1  students  to  meet  with  the  town 
dcrstand  why  the  town  feels  that  ^^^.^  ^j^^^  ^j,  ^^^  p^^^ies  involv- 
the  University  should  "care  for.^^  _  ,t„denf.s  townspeople  and 
its'  own"  in.  this  problem.  Rose  j  ^^^^^g„^^_^^^^  together, 
said. 


The  merchants  of  Chapel  Hill 
have  relieved  downtowti  conges- 
tion somc%yhat  by  building  a  park- 
ing lot  at  the  corner  of  Rosemary 
and  North  Columbia  Streets.  Park 


At  th?  University  Party  meet- 
ing Tuesr^ay  night,  party  chair- 
man Mike  Weinman  urged  the 
party  members  to  form  a  "little 
group"  to  do  something  about  the 


ing  is  free  for  the  first  hour  for '  P"^",        '.  ^      ,^     ,  .    . 

He    said.    "You've    got    to    come 


customers  of  merchants  belonging 

to  the  association.                                 .  ,,  j  tt  ^  •     ^    jj  -* 

T        ,             .    _        4     u-     .•        j  Die  (Young  and  Hudgins)    didn  t 

In  reference  to  recent  objections    F'^  >  i    un^  a  u           <, 


through   with   a   phn    Those   peo- 


havp  anv  plan. 

Weinman    introduced    a    bill    to 


to  the  two  hour  parkiog  limit  on 
South  Columbia  St.,  Rose  said. , 
"The  streets  are  not  public  ga- '  *»>«  Student  Legis'ature  Sept  27 
rages."  He  admitted  that  the  fra- 1  calling  for  the  establish.ment  of 
ternities  located  there  have  their ,  a  student  goxernmrnl  commission 
'ights  as  taxpayers.  However,  they  i  to  look  into  the  Columbia  St.  s-.^ 
have  no  special  claim  to  a  public  !  u^'tion.  Pres  dent  Young  vetoed 
street  in  a  congested  area,  Rose  I  the  bill  and  later  appointed  a  five- 
a(j(je(j_  j  man  committee  to  study  the  over- 

Last  vear  the  town  collected  the  I  all  problem, 
qum    of  SIO.OOO   from   SI    parking!      Oth^r  members  of  the  commit- 
flnes.   Students  contributed  a  large  \  tee  besides  Davi^  .ire  Clark  Hmk- 
^hare  of  this  sum.  i  (Set;  TRAFFIC.  Pa^e   4) 


The  My  Fair  Lady  Look  Sets 
Fashion  Trend  Fcr  Weekend 


By  PEG  HUMPHREY 

Carolina  weekends  call  for  a 
fransformalion  from  the  rugged 
t\veeds,  cashmeres  and  loafers 
that  reign  for  daily  campus  w-ear. 

Today's  young  lady  will  look 
pretty;  not  sophisticated,  smart  or 
chic,  but  simply  pretty.  Folks  in 
Ihc  fashion  business  call  it  the  My 
Fs'"  Lad'-  Look 

The  narrow  line  still  prevails, 
but  this  Season  it  isn't  nearly  as 
rigid.  Gentler  tailoring,  the  soft- 
ness of  the  blouson  and  the  em- 
jire  look  all  add  up  to  a  prettier 
'.h^n  ever  pose. 

Knit  creations  filling  the  st'^r«->; 
are  particularly  practical  for  Uni- 
versity coeds.  Jeanne  Campbell  is 
responsible  for  a  slim  red  wool 
knit  which  would  look  well  in  any 
fraternity  house.  It  has  a  slightly 
scooped  neckline  and  the  height- 
ened waistline. 

A  mink-collared  suit  by  Kasper 
which  is  actually  a  dress  with  a 
cropped  jacket  ending  just  above 
!  he  hipline  is  especially  designed 
for  the  coed  with  an  eye  for  lux- 
ury'- 

A  bit  on  the  dramatic  side  is  a 
black  orlon  and  wool  jersey  by 
Donald  Brooks.  Below  the  empire 
waistline  the  dress  boasts  a  multi- 
vUde  of  tiny  flattened  pleats. 


Back  panels,  pleats,  and  folds 
are  being  proir.ored  by  Anne  Fo- 
garty.  The  blous:n  look  appears 
f-veryvvhere.  Box  jacket  suits  now 
have  clastic  along  the  bottom  of 
the  jacket  to  create  the  bloused 
effect.  Blou.sps.  tailored  and 
d^es•^y,  may  be  elasticized  or  tied 
at    thf   hips    in    accord    with    this 

I  new  look.  Dip-lacked  sheaths  are 

i  in  abundHni'e. 

GM'S  SLATE 

I  — 

I  The     folkwing     activities     are 

'  scheduled  for  Graham  Memorial 
today: 

!  Carolina     Political     Union,     3- 

'  4:30  p.m.,   Grail    Room;   Student 

'■■  Council,   6-11    p.m.,   Grail    Room; 

I  Student      Government      Associa- 

I  tion     Traffic     Commission,    3:30 

j  p.m.,   Roland    Parker    Lounge    1; 

!  University  Club,  8  9:30  p.m.,  Ro- 

i  land     Parker     Lounges    1     &    2: 

■  Legislative  Finance  Commission, 
1-2  p.m.,   Roland   Parker   Lounge 

,  3;  Young  Republican  Club,  7:30- 

I  8:30  p.m.,  Roland  Parker  Lounge 

'  3;    Sttudent    Entertainment   Club, 

I  3:30  p.m..  Wood  House;  Tri  Otos, 

'  1011     p.m..    Conference    Room; 

I  Committee  for  selection  of  Chan- 
cellor,  3-S   p.m..   Council    Room; 

I  TraftFic     Commission,     8:15-8:30, 

I  A.P.O.  Room. 


PAQi  TWO 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


THURSDAY,  OCTOBER  11,  1W6 

-        •    -  ■■    -   ■    1  n  - 


It  Wasn't  Confidence  Vote: 
Just  A  Great  Deal  Of  Fear 

••.     .     .     tht'  eHlhusidsIn  vole  jot  ihr  PcarsiiU  Plan  nineiuhnent   * 
WHS  (ii.\(>  a  re.soundin^i^  vole  of  cuHjideiKf  fin   piihlii   school  oflicial.s 
tlnoKti^hout  the  y fate  for  thf  fine  icork  they  are  doin^."—\^u>^x^c\ 
Charles   (i.    Rose    )r.,   speaking   hefoic  "the   reoi«)nal   Siliool    Boartl 
\\'(»vk  Conforeiut". 


Perhaps  Rose  was  rij^fit:  perhaps 
the  Pearsall  Plan  \oie  was  also  a 
\ote  ot  (onHdeiue  Un  Tar  Heel 
s<  hool  ()Hi(ials. 

lint  we  iie\er  thoir^ht  ol  it  thai 
wa'v.  We  tigured  it  was  merely  the 
ballots  of  a  stared  state,  a  state 
thai  Iiad  Ix^eii  led  to  believe  se\- 
eral  things,  all  ol   thenj   untrue: 

I.  The  Pearsall  Plan,  whith  pro- 
\ides  tor  the  elosin^  <'f  the  public 
s<hools  in  <  ase  of  intolera'hle  ' 
situations  (inieoraiion  t.  would  not 
mean  the  end  ol  the  states  system 
of  free  pnblU"  s(hools.  Rather,  its 
proponents  said,  it  woidd  strength- 
en  the  system.    This   is   initrue. 

'J.  The  I  ar  Heels  who  \oted 
a;;ainst  the  Pearsall  Plan  would 
l)e  \(»tin4  lor  immediate  inte.t>ia- 
tiod  ill  the  j)ub!i(  s(  hools.  Thev 
W(»ul<l  be  liiK'<l  lip  \yu\i  the  N.itiijii- 
al  AsMi.  lot  the  Ad\aincmeiu  ol 
Colored  Petiple  in  asking  lor  dese;^- 
rej»ation.  Wliile  iiewsp;r|>er  ad\er- 
iisement>  said  this,   it   is  initrue. 

•{.  There  was  no  iniellitjent  op- 
positi<m  to  the  Peaisall  Plan.  This 
w  untrue,  arid  here  is  how  the 
jK'0|)le  were  led  to  beliexe  wroninlv: 

(iov.  Hodges,  with  all  the  jk)- 
litital  know-how  <>l  a  seasoned 
vote-getter,  lined  up  the  states 
(ieneral  As>embl)  lonjj  before  it 
met  in  speiial  .session  last  summer. 
The  bill  whieh  earried  Fhomas 
Pearsall's  name  was  atlually  passed 
ill  seeiet  sessions  of  the  (ieneral 
.A.vsendjlv  in  ("untrv  cabins  and 
private  homes  l'nouL;hout  the  state. 

I  he  ^taie  us.il  many  of  its  re- 
sou  r<es  in  di  iftin'4  the  Peais.ill 
Plan,  ihen  used  its  television  sta- 
tion (WCNO  l\i  to  explain  the 
plan  to  tlie  people.  Then  the  gover- 
nor asked  his  opponents  to  de- 
liver a  better  pl.iu  or  quit  criti- 
ri/inti   him. 

The  oji^>t>ii«'ius  didn't  stand  a 
chance.  Tliose  ujio  were  iarpi'e. 
enough  iti  iiiiin'u-r  to  orani/e 
tliemscl\'  wtic  either  too  skepti- 
cal o:  i(.o  scared  to  organize.  A 
iiw  !.:rong,  honest  men,  like  Win- 


ston-Salents  lr\ing  Carlyle.  s])oke 
in  opjMisiiion  to  the  plan,  then 
(juieted  down  l)eh)ie  the  election 
last  month,  but  most  of  the  op- 
jioneins  were  too  scared  to  speak. 

[he  stale,  on  the  whole,  wa.s 
stated.  Iis  white  peo[)le  were  afiaid 
that  Noting  a-^ainst  the  Pearsall 
Plan  woidd  mean  their  children 
would  be  going  to  .school  with 
\egr(»es.  In  real  it  \.  they  weie  Not- 
ing their  pitblic  s<  hool:  svstem  d«)wn 
the  drain. 

.\o.  we  doubt  that  the  |)eople 
weie  <4i\ing  their  ptiblit  school  ol- 
ficials  a  Note  of  confideiKe  when 
thev  voted  for  the  Pearsall  Plan. 
riuv  Nseie  Noting  out  of  lear,  a 
Icai  of  what  iheii  slate  officers 
had  loUl  them  would  happen  if 
they  didn't  vote  for  the  plan. 

Now  the  pe(»jile  have  something 
else  to  fear. 


For  Charlie: 
Installation 
In  The  Hall 


(.o<mI  oltl  Charlie  Peterson  has 
come  back  to  Carolina. 

Charlie,  if  you  aient  a  bilMards- 
sluM)ter.  is  the  nite  gentlema'ti  Nvho 
drops  by  (iraham  Memorial's  pool 
loom  a  (ouple  times  every  year.  He 
makes  lanty  shots,  does  a  lot  of 
talking,  and  instrutts  Carolina 
(.entlemen  in  the  art  of  pinting 
Knglisft  on   I)t11iard   balls. 

Charlie  is  getting  to  be  a  tra<li- 
tion  at  C^arolina.  Hes  getting  to  be 
like  Polgar.  who  is  pratticallv  a 
student.  Its  no  longer  a  >urprise 
Avhen  we  see  Charlie  Peterstm 
walking  around  the  student  union  s 
halls. 

The  Daily  -Tar  -Heel  Dominates 
C!i  :  les  Peterson,  Billiards  Kxpert 
Tremendous,  as  a  member  of 
Chapel  Hill's  hall  ot  tradition.  He 
looks  £J(kk1  here. 


A  Split  Would  Be  Ruinous 


I  iiiNfisity  party  Chairman  Mike 
W'einitian  is  geltin.L;  himsell  in 
liouble. 

He  has  tailed  on  the  members  of 
his  paitN  t<»  form  a  "little  gioup"' 
to  deal  with  the  tinrent  parking 
and  tialiic   problem. 

.XotJUiilK.  this  woultl  be  gootl. 
Hut  student  goveriniient  already 
has  a  gi(>u[jr  to  handle  sut  h  a  |>rt»b- 
lem — the  student  tr.dfit  tommiss- 
it>n.  It  is  the  group  appointed  l)v 
stiulent  ImkIv  Piesideni  Hob  \'oinig. 
and  it  is  the  group  whi(h  is  now 
dealing  with  the^  town  of  Chapel 
Hill  on  the  problem. 

The  Daily  Tar  Heel 

The  oflicial  studi-nt  publication  of  the 
Publications  Board  of  the  University  of 
North  Carolina,  where  it  is  published 
daily  except  Monday  and  examination 
and  vacation  periods  and  summer  terms 
Entered  as  second  class  matter  in  the 
post  office  in  Chapel  Hill,  N.  C,  undei 
the  Act  Ol  March  8,  1870.  Subscription 
rates:  mailed,  $4  per  year,  $2.50  a  semes- 
ter: delivered.  S6  a  vfar,  $3.50  a  semes- 
ter. 


Editor 

FRED  POW-LEDGE 

Managing  Editor 

CHARUE  SLOAN 

News  Editor  ... 

RAY  LINKER 

Business  Manager 

BILL  BOB  PEEL 

Sports  Editor 

LARRY  CHEEK 

Advertising  .Manager 
Coed  Editor 
Subscription  Manager 
Staff  Artist 


Fred  Katzin 

Peg  Humphrey 

Dale  Staley 

Charlie  Daniel 


EDITORI.\I.  STAFF  —  Woody  Sears, 
Frank  Crowther.  Barry  Winston,  David 
Mundy.  George  Pfingst,  Ingrid  Clay, 
Cortland  Ed\*-ards. 

NEWS  STAFF— :Clarke  Jones,  Nancy 
Hill,  Jean  .Moore,  Pringle  Pipkin,  Anne 
Drake,  Bobbi  Smith,  Jerry  Alvis,  Edith 
MacKinnon,  Wally  Kuralt,  Ben  Taylor, 
Graham  Snyder,  Billy  Barnes,  Neil 
Bass,  Jim  Creighton,  Hil  Goldman, 
Phyllis  Maultsby. 

BUSINESS  STAFF  —  Rosa  Moore,  Jonny 
Whitaker,  Dick  Leavitt,  Peter  AJper. 

Night  Editor  Jim  Creighton 

Proof  Reader Ben  Taylor 


I  he  situation  appeals  to  be  this: 

W'ciinnan.  and  sludeins  who  Hnc 
ill  l)ig  Ktaternity  Court,  are  <lis- 
satisfied  with  the  oiutome  tjf  last 
.Mondays  I'own  B<»ard  of  .Mtlei- 
maii  meeting.  Weinman  wanted 
the  altlermen  to  iej>eal  an  order 
limiting  paikin;^  on  pait  t>l  S.  Co- 
lumbia .St.  to  two  hours.  Ihey 
ditln't. 

\ow,  Weinman  N\;vnis  a  small 
portion  of  the  stiulent  body  to  loiin 
a  "little  group"  to  tlo  what  the 
.\londav  meeting  'ditint*  tlo. 

Thi.s  meairs  trouble.  The  stu- 
tlents  coiiltln't  do  anvthing  tight 
now  that  woulfl,  lessen  tlieii  effet  - 
tiNcness  with,  the  Hoard  of  .\ltlei- 
men  moie  than  to  split  up  into 
small  gioujxs.  The  aldermen  wtmld 
notice  the  confused  tampus  condi- 
tion, then  piomptiv  ii^nore  all  stu- 
dent sentiment. 

HowcNei,  if  the  stutleiHs  ,  stick 
together  behind  the  student  traf- 
fic ci)nnnission,  they  will  have  a 
louder    Noite    at    futine    lioard    of 

.Mdermen  meetings. 

*  *  * 

Weinmans  suggestifMi  that  part 
of  .\It  her  lawn  be  nsetl  for  p;»rk- 
ing  aiuomobiles,  howcNer,  does 
have  valitlitv. 

We,  like  manv  oigani/ations  and 
indiNirliials  on  ihe  (am|>us,  would 
hate  to  see  a  beautiful  place  like- 
.Mclver's  lawn  torn  up  and  re- 
placed Nvtih  shiny  tar-tops.  Bin  the 
time  istoming  when  sui  h  .sacrifices 
Avill  haNc  to  be  made  for  studeixt 
parking. 

Further  lestrictitMi  of  automobile 
priNileges  Nvill  not  do  the  trick; 
more  parking  spates  Nvill. 

But  the  .Mcher  lot.  attt^rtling  to 
W^einman's  f)wn  wortls.  would  hold 
only  abt)ni  too  automt)biles.  That 
wouldn't  l)e  much  f)f  a  solution  to 
a  prt)blem  in  which  thou.sands  of 
tars  are  involved, 

Perhn'ps  we  should  use  theVIt- 
Iver  lot.  But  we  also  shotdd  start 
looking  to  other  parts  of  the  camp- 
us for  parking  space. 

The  future  is  not  far  away. 


Prospect  & 
Retrospect 


Neil  Bass 

So  you'd  like  to  know  the  dif- 
ference between  the  Student  and 
University  Parties. 

Or  to  put  it  more  aptly,  so 
you'd  like  to  know  if  there  is  any 
difference  between  the  SP  and 
the  UP. 

Are  the  ba-sic  philosophies  of 
the  two  parties  different,  or 
do  they  stand  for  basically  the 
same  things? 

ANSWER 

Some  feel  that  the  tNvo  politi- 
cal groups  implant  themselves  on 
practically  the  same  foundation, 
but  this  is  a  fallacy.  Here,  in  the 
words  of  a  battered  ol'  political 
reporter  is  the  an.swer  to  the 
above, question  concerning;  sim- 
ilarity or  difference. 

The  University  Party  is  com- 
posed primarily  of  fraternity  men 
while  the  Student  Party  has  a 
membership  composed  primarily 
of  dormitory  residents. 

Both  parties  will  probably  de- 
ny that  they  represent  any  par- 
ticular segment  of  the  campus 
which  is  g(K)d.  The  campus  shouKi 
not  be  compartmentalized.  Tiiere 
.should  be  unity  of  action.  Not 
unity  of  thought,  mind  ya' 
(Heaven  forbid)  but  unity  of  ac- 
tion. 

But  the  fundamental  remains 
that  the  SP  tailors  its  doctrines 
to  fit  the  dorm  man's  needs, 
while  the  UP  patterns  its  actions 
to  suit  the  needs  of  the  fraterni- 
ty man. 

(But,  UP  Chief  Mike,  youd 
better  not  put  all  your  eggs  un- 
der the  pledge  classes  and  look 
for  an   abundant   incubation.) 

The  success  of  a  campus  po- 
litical party  lies  in  its  ability  to 
have  intercourse  with  the  entire 
campus  community  and  conceive 
diverse  ideas  and  opinions. 

Then  it  must  take  the  diversi- 
fied opinions  and  crystallize  them 
into  a  comprehensive  policy 
which  will  be  satisfactory  to  all 
segments  of  the  campus. 

DORM  ELECTIONS 

Dorm  men  turned  out  in  .svir- 
prijsingly  low  numbers  to  pick 
their  officials  for  the  coming 
year. 

How  can  efficient  government 
and  .social  facilities  be  acquired 
and  maintained  without  thriving 
and  prolific  interest? 

RUSH 

Hand  pumping  was  the  order 
of  the  day  for  one  solid  week. 
So  were  strained  smiles.  But 
what  the  heck!  Can  n-ou  blame 
fraternities  for  smoothing  off 
the  rough  edges  for  just  one 
week?  No  tidy  hou.sewife  likes 
for  visitors  to  see  dirty  pots  and 
pans. 

It  is  ooly  hoped  that  freshman 
prospects  looked  in  the  pantry 
too  before  they  sat  down  to  the 
table    permanently/ 

INTEGRATION 

There  is  t>robably  no  student 
on  campus  who  doesn't  advocate 
the  type  of  integration  Nvhich 
took  place  on  campus  the  first 
of  this  week. 

(The  Independent  Women'.s 
Council  packed  its  draNvers  and 
filing  cabinets  and  moved  into 
the  Men'.s  Interdormitory  Coun- 
cil office.) 


'I  Don't  Know  if  He's  Running  Scared,  But 
He's  Not  Running  Sacred  Any  More' 


^^  e^  fit  S  «_  ^<r  >c^ 


THE  IIVESPIKE: 


Hillsboro,  Road  For  Relaxation 


Fred  Powiedge     ' 

About  this  time  of  year,  stu- 
dents need  a  balm.  Fraternity 
and  sorority  rushing  is  over,  first 
quizzes  are  im- 
pending. We 
are  getting 
tired  of  staying 
up  until  2  a.m., 
then  getting  up 
for  8  a.n>.  clas.s- 


POWLEDGE 

90  percent     of 


Lenoir  Hall 
food  has  lost 
its     flavor,  and 


drinking  mid-morning  coffee  in 
Y-Court  isn't  as  pleasant  as  it 
seemed  Sept.  21. 

I  needed  a  balm  last  Sunday, 
so  I  went  to  Hillsboix). 

Hillsboro,  y;.u  may  know,  is 
the  seat  of  Orange  County.  It 
isn't  a  very  modern  place;  the 
new  courthouse,  with  pink  and 
blue  walls,  is  about  as  modern 
as   Hillsboro   gets. 

Hillsboro  is  the  palitical  cen- 
ter of  the  county,  seconded  only 
by  Chapel  Hill.  It  also  is  the 
prettiest  place  in  Orangs  Coun- 
ty. 

Part  %f  the  beauty  of  Hillsboro 
is  the  trip  over  there.  Fall  is 
coming  to  the  dairy  farms  and 
the  cornfields  of  Orange  County. 
The  trees  have  turnetl  a  rust 
color  in  some  places,  and  in  some 
places  they  have  just  turned  a 
deep,  translucent  green.  There 
are  many  dead,  brown  leaves  on 
the  ground   under  the  trees. 

North  Carolina's  red  mud  heri- 
tage doesn't  Look  as  bad  in  th? 
fall  as  it  does  in  the  late  spring. 

~7 


There  are  some  fields  between 
here  and  Hillsboro  Nvhere  the 
earth   is  nearly  black. 

The  ftighway  twists  and  rolls 
between  here  and  Hillsboro,  but 
somehow  you  don't  seem  to  inind 
it.  You  drive  40  and  45,  not  55 
and  60,  becai;s3  the  scenery  is 
worth  slowing  down   to  see. 

In  quiet  Hillsboro  there  is  a 
church,  a  red  brick  church  that 
has  a  quiet  graveyard  behind  it. 
There  are  large  oak  tr^es.  with 
leave.s  still  green,  in  the  grave- 
yard. The  autumn  sun  shines  at 
a  low  angle  through  the  -  oak 
leaves  and  makes  the  Nvhole 
church  and  graveyard  take  on  a 
greenish  cast.  It  ali  looks  calm 
and  meditative. 

Some  of  the  tombstones  are 
old.  and  they  tell  the  story  of 
the  Civil  War  silently,  yet  poNv- 
erfully.   Some  of  them   are  new; 

A  NORTHERN  VIEW: 


they  complete  a  family  chain  that 
started  under  a  short,  now  crum- 
bling  headstone. 

A  17-year-old  boy  is  buried 
there.  He  fought  in  Wheeler's 
Cavalry  during  the  Civil  W^ar. 
Under  his  name  are  the  simple 
letters,  "'C.S.A."  He  belonged  to 
an  army  that  no  longer  exists. 

The  numbers  on  a  tiny  head- 
.«tone  record  the  birth  and  death 
of  a  three-year-old.  Below  the 
numbers  there  is  the  inscription, 
"Thy  will  be  done." 

Th&re  were  tiny  children  play- 
ing in  the  graveyard  last  Sun- 
day. They  were  having  fun,  run- 
ning up  and  doNvn  the  gravel 
.Walks  between  the  graves.  They 
were  aware  that  fall  is  coming 
to  Orange  County,  and  they  were 
having  as  much  fun  as  possible 
before  it  gets  too  cold  to  play 
outside. 


Women  In  News  Pages 


Cortland  Edwards 

Just  ran  across  an  item  that 
might  be  of  interest  to  Carolina 
Coeds  .  .  .  who  aspire  for  bigger 
and  better  things.  It  .seems  that 
Alice  Denhani.  a  Phi  Beta  Kap- 
pj  graduate  from  Carolina  a  few 
years  ag),  has  finally  mad?  the 
front  page.  Well,  not  exactly  the 
front  page ....  for  she  was  se- 
lected as  Miss  July  in  the  Play- 
boy magazine.  In  the  addition  to 
making  a  three  page  spread  in 
the  nude,  she  also  had  a  short 
story  published  in  the  same  mag 
azino.   This    is    the   kind    of   sex- 


cess    story    I    like    to    see    more 
often.  That's  the  July  issue  men. 


The  other  day  I  ran  across  two 
very  interesting  news  items.  One 
tells  about  a  woman  in  New  Jer- 
sey who  was  granted  $50  damages 
from  a  man  who  broke  three  of 
her  ribs.  In  Los  .\ngeles,  a  heart 
balm  suit  was  settled  out  of  court 
far  $25,000.  The  moral  is  ob- 
vious: if  you  want  to  break  off 
with  a  girl,  don't  break  her  heart, 
kick  her  in  the  ribs.  It's  cheap 
er! 


Pogo 


By  Walt  Kelly 


COHflPiHCeTj  • 


Li'i  Abner 


By  Al  Capp 


DOl'T  BE  NERVUSS."- 
THIS  WILL  APPEAL  O 
/'Ri  MAN,>«DMAN, 


OMINOUS  RUM6UNG5:  ,  ,,. 

-.^    ".  tj.| 

Unity  Big  Factor 
In   Movement  " 

Woody  Sears 

Rumors  are  hard  to  pin  down.  '- 

They  ooze  ab^ut  like  droughts  of  cold  air  seep- 
ing under  doors  and  working  their  way  through  in- 
conspicuous spaces  in  -windONr  sills.  They  go  Irom 
person  to  person  in  whisnered,  secretive  undertones, 
mushrooming  like  a  column  of  smoke,  rising  often 
from  almost  insignificant  sources.  i        :  •  i 

And  rumors  are  running  across  the  canjpus  now, 
and  they  have  passed  the  stage  of  being  secretive. 
What  has  been  an  ominous  whisper  is  now  a  muf- 
fled roar. 

And  it  is  good!  For  the  voice  you  hear  is  that 
of  the  student  body.  The  voice  you  hear  is  that 
of  several  thousand  students,  talking  together, 
thinking  together,  willing  together  the  end  of  a 
series  of  oppressions. 

And  the  voice  may  grow  and  get  louder,  until 
it  becomes  the  sound  of  the  entire  .student  body. 
And  it  will  be  a  fearsome  sound  to  the  oppressors. 

Froni  all  these  rumblings,  one  word  is  clearly 
distinguishable  . . .  Boycott! 

The  word  boycott  bears  evil  connotations  to 
many  due  to  the  recent  splashes  of  unfavorable 
publicity  in  which  this  word  has  been  used  to  the 
point  of  becoming  hackneyed. 

But  as  with  all  other  words,  the  connotation,  Ls 
derived  from  the  usage. 

POWERFUL  WEAPON 

The  boycott  is  a  powerful  weapon,  for  it  re- 
flects the  opinions  of  many  if  it  is  successful.  "If , 
on  the  other  hand,  it  is  the  action  of  only  a  f^-, 
it  will  go  unnoticed  and  die  of  its  own  impotericy. 
Strength  is  in  numbers,  and  th?  potential  -for 
strength  to  serve  the  purpose  at  hand  is  here.  - 

If  this  once  the  student  body  could  pull  itself  to- 
gether to  work  for  a  common  goal  which  wo^ld  ben- 
efit every  single  man  and  woman  on  his  tampus, 
it  would  be  a  memorable  occasion  indeed. 

There  is  a  problem  to  be  confroiUad,  to  be  met 
in  a  head-long  rush.  Everyone  is  aware  of  it  and 
everyone  feels  its  pressure  where  it  hurts  the  ma- 
jority of  us  the  most. 

Each  of  us  is  to  some  degree  responsible,  for 
we  have  stood  idly  by  and  watched  this  malignant 
growth.  We  are.  quite  literally,  paying  for  our  years 
of  reticent  passivism. 

Something  should  have  been  done  a  long  time 
ago.  but  a  lack  of  unity  of  purpo.se  or  any  type 
of  unity  has  kept  the  student  body  helpless  against 
the  onslaughts  of  any  and  every  type  of  oppression 
that  the  students  can  be  subjected  to. 

We  are  constantly  eating  crow  for  loosing  bat- 
tles which  we  never  wage. 

If  we  were  told  that  from  here  on  out  all  lab 
courses  would  hold  Saturday  night  labs  we  would 
moan  and  groan  and  gripe,  but  that's  as  far  as  it 
would  go.  If  we  woke  up  one  morning  and  found 
out  that  cigarettes  Nvere  fifty  cent5  per  pack  and 
that  we  could  not  appear  on  Franklin  St.  during 
certain  hours  of  the  day  to  accommodate  the  hoards 
of  people  who  commute  from  out  of  town  to  do 
their  shopping,  we  would  cuss  and  fu.ss  and  yam- 
mer at  each  other,  but  that's  as  far  as  it  would  go. 

How  long  must  this  continue.  There  is  no  dis- 
grace in  losing  a  battle,  but  it's  positively  shameful 
not  to  try.  It  is  jfunny  to  hear  the  students  com- 
piaiti,  but  they  never  do  anything  about  the  source 
of  their  complaints. 

It  is  laughable  except  for  the  fact  that  those  who 
can  see  the  ironic  humor  are  caught  in  the  same 
mesh  of  circumstances. 

One  of  the  hardest  working  men  on  this  camp- 
us at  this  time  is  Student  body  President  Bob 
Young.  He  is  doing  everNihing  that  anyone  could 
po.«sibly  do  to  serve  thi  students  and  defend  their 
rights,  such  few  as  remain  unquestioned. 

He  and  those  who  are  working  with  him  are 
laboring  under  the  assumption  that  Student  Govern- 
ment is  a  working  proposition.  They  belive  in  unity 
of  purpose,  and  they  are  working  under  the  name 
of  and  in  behalf  of  the  Student  Body  .     .; 

SUPPORT  NEEDED 

It  is  therefore  necessary  that  they  get  the 
support  of  the  student  body.  It  should  not  be  so 
much  a  question  of  necessity  as  a  question  of 
gratitude  for  a  job  that  is  being  done  well.  If  they 
succeed  in  their  endeavors  every  student  on  the 
campus   will    benefit   from   their  efforts. 

If  they  don't  succeed,  the  fault  will  r^t  largely 
on  the  shoulders  of  the  people  they  are^  working 
for.  ; 

Think  of  what  seven  thousand  determined  peo- 
ple could  accomplish  under  the  calibre  of  leader- 
ship w?  have.  Think  too  of  the  precedent  that 
could  be  .set,  and  the  power  which  would  be  vested 
in  the  student  body  and  its  government*  as  a  re- 
sult. 

To  think  of  these  things  is  nice,  but  doing  them 
is  altogether  something  else.  To  be  filled  with  en- 
thusiasm is  a  beginning,  but  there  must  be  th° 
fortitude  to  persevere  to  the  end,  whether  it  be 
victory  or  defeat. 

Therefore,  bef:re  the  rumors  get  everj'one  in- 
flamed with  crusading  zeal,  it  must  be  established 
that  the  fight  will  continue  to  the  end.  For  if  the 
students  go  off  half-cocked  and  start  something 
they  cannot  or  will  not  finish,  it  will  destroy  com- 
pletely any  good  that  President  Young  and  his 
co-workers  have  accomplished,  and  the  "esprit  de 
corps "  of  the  student  body  will  be  reduced  to  an 
even  lower  ebb.  It  will  reduce  the  power  of  the 
stundents  to  nothingness. 

Student  unity  tor  the  lack  of  it,  will  be  the  de- 
cisive factor. 


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THUtSDAY,  OCTOBER  11,  IfM 


THi  DAILY  TAR  HllL 


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il  be  the  de- 


Big  Weekend  Planned 
By  Activities  Board 


GMAB  is  sponsoring  several 
events  this  weekend. 

Charlie  Peterson,  billiards  pro- 
fessional, is  now  giving  exhibi- 
tions in  Graham  Memorial  Pool 
Room.  Tomorrow  night  has  been 
ptoclaimed   "Date   Night." 

mr'A  free  movie,  "W^e  Not  Mar-j 
ried,"  with  Fred  Allen  and  Ginger] 


UNC  Health  Official 
'talks  Today  In  Raleigh 

The  one-day  meeting  of  the 
hinth  annual  State  Rural  Health 
Conference  h:ld  in  Raleigh  today 
Will  feature  as  speaker,  Dr.  Hen- 
ry T.  Clark,  administrator  of 
UNC  Division  -sf  Health  Affairs. 

This  meeting  is  being  sponsor-  j 
ed  by  the  Medical  Society  of  i 
North  Carolina.  Approximately 
500  community  and  professional ! 
health  workers  are  expected  to  at- ' 
tdnd  the  conference.  I 

,';  "Together      We      Build      Better' 
Health"  is  the  theme  of  the  con- 
ference. 


PATRONIZE  YOUR 
•    ADVERTISERS    • 


Rogers,  will  be  shown  in   Carroll 
Hall  tomorrow  night. 

There  will  be  two  showings,  at 
8  and  10  p.m. 

Bruno's  Combo  will  play  for  a 
dance  in  Cobb  basement  tomorrow 
night  from  8-12  p.m.  This  is  a  free 
dance  co-sponsored  by  GMAB  and 
the   Interdormitory   Council. 

A  reception  will  be  held  in  Cobb 
basement  Saturday  following  the 
Georgia  game.  This  reception,  co- 
sponsored  by  GMAB  and  the 
I.D.C.,  wiH  last  until  6:30  p.m. 
Bruno's  Combo  will  be  present. 
There  will  also  be  coed  hostesses 
and  free  refreshments. 

Stvdenf  Chancellor 
Committee  Meets  Today 

The  studept  committee  appoint- 
ed to  help  select  a  chancellor  to 
succeed  retiring  Chancellor  Rob- 
ert House,  will  meet  again  today 
in  the  GM  Council  Room  from 
3  to  5  p.m.  The  committee  met 
for  the  first  time  yesterday. 

With  Sonny  Evans  as  chairman, 
the  group  has  as  its  purpose  to 
air  student  views  on  the  chancel- 
lorship. 

Student  Body  President  Bob 
Young  and  this  committee  will  ap- 
pear before  the  Trustee  Commit- 
tee on  Oct.  27  to  present  its  re- 
port. 


PLAY  OPENS  WEDNESDAY: 


'Anastasia'  Draws  Its  Cast 
From  Six  Different  States 


!)i. 


On  Campus 


with 


1 


ii 


(Anther  •/  "Bnrthtt  B»y  tvith  Chttk,"  ttt.) 


'MARKING  ON  THE  CURVE... 

/^  AND  WHAT  TO  DO  ABOUT  IT 

'"  ii  .'•''^  .  ■  . . 

V  '.  Twonkey  Crimscott  was  a  professor.  Choate  Sigafoos 
"t^-as  a  sophomore.  Twonkey  Crimscott  was  keen,  cold, 
tM'illiant.  Choate  Sig'afoos  was  loose,  vague,  adenoidal. 
Twonkey  Crimscott  believed  in  diligence,  discipline,  and 
marking  on  the  curve.  Choate  Sigafoos  believed  in  elves, 
Jayne  Mansfield,  and  thirteen  hours  sleep  each  night. 
Yet  there  came  a  time  when  Twonkey  Crimscott  — 
mentor,  sage,  and  savant  —  was  thoroughly  out-thought, 
out-foxed,  out-maneuvered,  out-ployed,  and  out-witted 
by  Choate  Sigafoos,  sophomore. 

It  happened  one  day  when  Choate  was  at  the  library 
studying  for  one  of  Mr.  Crimscott's  exams  in  sociology. 
Mr.  Crimscott's  exams  were  murder  —  plain,  flat  murder. 
They  consisted  of  one  hundred  questions,  each  question 
having  four  possible  answers— A,  B,  C,  and  D.  The  trouble 
was  that  the  four  choices  were  so  subtly  shaded,  so  in- 
tricately worded,  that  students  more  clever  by  far  than 
Choate  Sigafoos  were  often  set  to  gibbering. 

So  on  this  day  Choate  sat  in  the  library  poring  over 
his  sociology  text,  his  tiny  brow  furrowed  with  concen- 
tration, while  all  around  him  sat  the  other  members  of 
the  sociology  class,  every  one  studying  like  crazy.  "What 
a  waste!"  he  thought.  "All  this  youth,  this  verve,  this 
bounce,  chained  to  musty  books  in  a  musty  library !  We 
should  be  out  singing  and  dancing  and  smooching  and 
cutting  didoes  on  the  greensward!" 

Then,  suddenly,  an  absolute  gasser  of  an  idea  hit 
Choate.  "Listen !"  he  shouted  to  his  classmates.  "Tomor- 
row when  we  take  the  exam,  let's  all  —  every  one  of  us  — 
check  Choice  'A'  on  every  question  —  every  one  of  them." 

"Huh?"  said  his  classmates. 

"Mr.  Crimscott  marks  on  the  curve.  If  we  all  check 
the  same  answers,  then  we  all  get  the  same  score,  and 
everybody  in  the  class  gets  a  'C'." 

"Hmm,"  said  his  classmates. 

"Let's  get  out  of  here  and  have  a  ball!"  said  Choate. 

So  they  all  ran  out  and  lit  Philip  Morrises  and  had 
a  bail,  as,  indeed,  you  v/ill  too  when  you  light  a  Philip 
Morris,  for  if  there  ever  was  a  cigarette  to  lift  the  spirit 
and  gladden  the  heart,  it  is  today's  new  Philip  Morris- 
firm  and  pure  and  fragrant  and  filled  with  true,  natural, 
golden  tobacco,  lip  end  to  tip  end. 


\.:^e  should  be  Oat  iimmsM^cmM/^^cocW^^ 


Well  sir,  the  next  morning  the  whole  class  did  what 
Choate  said  and,  sure  enough,  they  all  got  "C's,"  and  they 
picked  Choate  up  and  carried  him  on  their  shoulders  and 
sang  "For  He's  a  Jolly  Good  Fellow"  and  plied  him  with 
sweetmeats  and  Philip  Morris  and  girls  and  put  on 
buttons  which  said  "I  DOTE  ON  CHOATE." 

But  they  were  celebrating  too  soon.  Because  the  next 
time  shrewd  old  Mr.  Crimscott  gave  them  a  teat,  he  gave 
them  only  one  question -to  wit:  write  a  30,000  word 
essay  on  "Crime  Does  Not  Pay." 

"You  and  your  ideas,"  they  said  to  Choate  and  tore 
off  his  epaulets  and  broke  his  sword  and  drummed  him 
out  of  the  school.  Today,  a  broken  man,  he  earns  a  meager 
living  as  a  camshaft  in  Toledo. 

'SiMmx  Sbulman.  1966 

At  the  top  of  the  curve  of  amoking  pleasure,  you'll  find  today's 
meie  Philip  Morri*.  So,  confidently,  aay  the  makera  of  Fhtl^ 
Morris,  who  bring  you  thii  column  each  week. 


"Anastasia,"  opening  production 
of  the  season  for  The  Carolina 
Playmakers,  drama  group  at  UNC, 
draws  its  cast  of  13  from  six  dif- 
ferent states. 

The  recent  Broadway  success, 
adapted  from  the  French  of  Mar- 
ccllc  Maurctle  by  Guy  Bolton, 
will  begin  a  five  day  run  next 
Wednesday  at  the  Playmakers  The- 
atre. 

Acting  the  title  role,  as  the  girl 
involved  in  a  plot  to  prove  her 
the  heir  to  the  Russian  Romanoff 
dynasty,  will  be  Rusti  Rothrock, 
Anniston,  Ala.  Mrs.  Rothrock,  wife 
of  a  UNC  graduate  assistant,  has 
acted  with  several  community  the- 
atres, at  Cherokee  in  "Unto  These 
Hills,"  and  at  the  University  of 
Arkansas.  Formerly  a  high  school 
speech  teacher,  she  is  now  a 
speech  therapist  for  Durham  Coun- 
ty. 

FITZ  SIMONS  AS  EMPRESS 

Marion  Fitz-Simons,  veteran 
Chapel  Hill  Playmaker,  will  por- 
tray the  formidable  Dowager  Em- 
press, grandmother  of  the  sup- 
posedly-massacred princess  and 
strongest  challenge  to  the  success 
of  the  plan.  Mrs.  Fitz-Simons,  wife 
of  a  UNC  professor  and  mother  of 
four  sons,  has  appeared  in  a  long 
list  of  Playmaker  productions,  in- 
cluding "Macbeth,"  "Medea,"  "Ar- 
senic and  Old  Lace,"  "Dark  of  the 
Moon,"  "Lysistrata"  and  last  year's 
"Blood  Wedding." 

Morgan  Jackson,  of  Charlotte, 
will  play  Prince  Bounine,  exiled 
Russian  nobleman  who  trains  Anya 
for  her  pretense  and  presents  her 
to  those  who  must  be  convinced. 
Jackson,    a    Korean    veteran,    has 


Oxford  Prof 
Talks  Here 

An  Oxford  University  professor 
will  give  the  second  of  two  ad- 
dresses here  tonight. 

Dr.  Alfred  Ewert.  a  professor 
of  romance  langueges,  will  talk 
on  "Judas  Iscariot  in  Medieval 
French  Literature"  at  8  p.m.  in 
the    Library   Assembly    Room. 

The  lecture  is  open  to  the  pul>- 
lic. 

Ewert,  who  was  born  in  Canada 
and  once  taught  at  the  University 
of  Texas,  gave  his  first  talk  yes- 
terday afternoon  to  graduate  stu- 
dents in  romance  languages.  He 
talked  on  "The  Strasbourg  Oaths 
and  the  Eulalia." 


acted  wtli  the  Paris  American  The- 
atre Group  in  Paris  and  the  Weis- 
baden  Theatre  Guild  in  Germany, 
the  University  of  Alabama  The- 
atre, and  "Unto  These  Hills." 

Joe  Whitaker,  of  Pine  Bluff, 
Arkansas,  wno  was  active  with  the 
University  of  Arkansas  theatre 
group,  will  aopcar  as  Prince  Paul, 
Anastasia's  childhood  sweetheart. 

MINISTER  HAS  ROLE 

Rev.  W.  Robert  Insko,  Chaplain 
to  Episcopal  Students  at  UNC, 
will  take  the  role  of  Dr.  Serensky, 
who  has  known  the  pretender, 
Anya,  in  another  identity  from 
that  of  a  princess. 

Russell  Link,  of  Jamaica,  N.  Y., 
and  Gene  Duke,  of  Oxford,  will 
play  Chernov  and  Petrovin,  com- 
rades of  Bounine.  Others  in  the 
cast  are:  Peter  O'Sullivan,  of  Val- 
halla, N.  Y.,  as  Counsellor  Drivin- 
itz;  Betty  Jinnette,  of  Goldsboro, 
as  the  Charwoman;  Hope  Sparger, 
of  Scarsdale.  N.  Y.,  as  Varya;  Frank 
Rinaldi,"-  of  Watcrbury,  Conn., 
as  Sergei;  John  Sneden,  of  Tena- 
fly,  N.  J.,  as  the  Sleigh  Driver: 
and  Eve  Janzan,  of  Durham,  as 
Baronet  Livenbaum. 

"Anastasia"  will  be  under  the 
direction  of  Samuel  Seldcn,  chair- 
man of  the  UNC  Dept.  of  Dramatic 
Art.  Stage  Manager  will  be  Dick 
Newdick,  of  Augusta,  Maine,  and 
the  set  is  designed  by  Tommy  Rez- 
zuto,  of  Asheville,  technical  direc- 
tor of  the  Playmakers. 


Business  Fraternity 
Names  1 8  Pledges 

Eighteen  students  were  pledged 
to  Alpha  Kappa  Psi,  professonial 
fraternity  in  business  administra- 
tion, at  ceremonies  held  Friday 
night. 

Pledged  were  Denver  E.  Bird, 
Charleston,  W.  Va.;  Hugh  Camp- 
bell, Laurinburg;  Joseph  Mark 
Clapp.  Greensboro;  James  F.  Dix- 
on, Clinton;  Billy  Green,  Concord; 
Jimmy    Hunter.    Raleigh; 

Dwight  Jenkins,  Charlotte; 
Ralph  Johnson,  Winston-Salem; 
Jerry  Leonard.  Charlbtte;  Alex 
Lewis.  Morehead  City;  Donald 
Paris  Moore,  Asheboro;  Robcrl 
Pendcrgraph,    Durham; 

Alton  Pons.  Valdcse;  Dona'd 
Lacy  Pugh,  Ashelxiro:  John 
Reaves,  Charlotte;  Theodora  Roo- 
.■^evolt  Smith,  Sea  Cliff,  N.  Y.; 
Gerald  Suddrcth,  Granite  Falls, 
and  L.  P.  Wheeler,  Washington. 
D.   C. 


HALL  NAMED  COMMANDER: 


Naval  ROTC  Names 
New  Battalion  Officers 


G.    Brad   Hall   of   Evanston.    Illi- 
nois   has    been    named     Battalion  i 
Commander    of    the    UNC    Naval 
Reserve    Officers    Training    Corps 
for  the  fall  semester. 

Hall  is  a  member  of  St.  Anthony 


Chemistry  Club  Holds 
Tuesday  Open  House 

The  Chemistry  Club  entertain- 
ed members  and  visitors  at  an  op- 
en  house   Tuesday   night. 

The  meeting  featured  demon- 
strations by  the  Chemistry  De- 
partment. 

The  program  showed  the  work- 
ings of  the  infra-r?d  spectrome- 
ter, the  emission  spectrometer,  the 
recording  polarograph,  the  X-ray 
machine  and  the  research  appara- 
tus of  Dr.  Rydolph  Schmidt,  re- 
search associate  in  chemistry. 

The  meeting  closed  with  a  re 
freshment    get-acquainted    period. 


Hall,  Phi  Beta  Kappa,  and  Phi 
Eta  Sigma. 

Another  top  post  went  to  Don- 
ald E.  Kcnlopp  of  East  Orange, 
N.  J.  He  was  named  Battalion 
Executive  officer  of   the   NROTC. 

New  Battalion  Operations  offi- 
cer of  the  unit  is  Luther  H.  Hod- 
ges Jr.  of  Leaksville  and  Raleigh. 
Hodges  is  a  member  of  Pi  Kappa 
Alpha,  social  fraternity  and  Phi 
Et.T  Sigma  and  Phi  Beta  Kappa 
hon->rary   fraternities. 

Carter  G.  Mackie  of  Point  Pleas- 
ant. N.  J.,  was  named  Battalion 
Communications  officer.  He  is  a 
members  of  Pi  Kappa  Alpha. 

David  L.  Ward  Jr.  of  New  Bern 
was  named  Battalion  Supply  offi- 
cer. He  is  a  member  of  Delta 
Kappa  Epsilon,  Phi  Eta  Sigma  and 
Phi   Beta  Kappa. 

New  Battalion  Mustering  Petty 
officer  is  Larry  R.  Williams  of 
Concord.  He  is  a  member  of  Kap- 
pa Alpha  social  fraternity. 


OW  West  Seeks  To  Have 
More  Girls  Walk  By  Dorm 


The  men  in  Old  West  Dorm 
are   reportedly    unhappy. 

Very  unhappy,  in  fact,  their 
president  says. 

Why?  It  seems  that  the  girls 
on  campus  fail  to  walk  by  the 
dorm.  President  Teddy  Jones 
says. 

The  dorm,  one  of  the  oldest 
buildings  on  campus,  is  located 
on  East  Cameron  Ave.  across 
the  street  from  Gerrard  Hall 
and  beside  the  Old  Well. 

Jones  didn't  know  whether 
the  allegedly  unwalked-upon- 
by-girls  walks  near  the  dorm 
were  the  result  of  geographical 
circumstances  or  the  fault  of  the 
inhabitants  of  Old  West. 


"As  President  of  Old  West,  I 
should  like  to  rectify  this  mat- 
ter."   Jones    said. 

"The  men  of  Old  West  are 
men  of  outstanding  character 
capable  of  conducting  them- 
selves in  gentlemanly  fashion," 
Jones   added. 

Jones  has  extended  to  all  co- 
eds a  "cordial"  invite  to  walk 
by  the  dorm.  "TTjey  will  be  wel- 
comed and  well  received,"  he 
said. 

In  making  a  last  plea,  Jones 
said,  "Girls,  give  the  "boys  a 
chance  to  show  their  true  ap- 
preciation   of   the    female    six." 

Girls!  Go  West! 


OUl  97tl  ANNIVERSARY  riATUHES  STOREWIDE  SAVINGS  I  LOOK  AT  THESE .. . 


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VEAL  CUTLETS 

Excelsior *pS  59c 


A&P  Limas  2c35c  A&P  Spinach  2  v...  23c 
A&P  Sliced  Strawberries  -  -  2  '^  39c 


WAFFLES 


DowRyfla!c6  2i%'^,29c 


Strongheart 

DOG    FOOD 

2  f.f;''.  19c 


STARCH 

Niagara 

12-Oz.      1 Q^ 
Pkg.       •  ^^ 

Linit  Starch 

2  ?S;  29c 


Argo  Starch 


80*.      7^ 


Cheer 


Pkg.     J^C     Pkg,      IJQ 


Spic  &  Span 


Vg:  27c 


Crisco 


SHORTENING 

1-Lb.      Dr_      34JS.     Q3-. 
Can     J^t      Can     ^^^ 


Bab-0  Cleanser 

2  ?S,  25c 


GERBER'S  BABY  FOOD 

Chopped  2  J*"  29c 
Strained  3'*"  31c 


All  Sweet 

MARGARINE    ' 

iLb.   27r 

Pkg.    ^'C 


10-Oz. 

_       Pkgs. 

•    SAVE  M.ONEY  WITH  A&P'S    • 

SUPER-RIGHT"  QUALITY  MEATS 

"Super-Right"  H^avy  Western  Gram  Fed  Beef  —  WHOLE  TRIMMED 


FULL  LOIN 


45  TO  60 
LB.  AVG. 


Lb. 


75 


"Super-Right"  Heavy  Western  Grain  Fed  Beef  — 

T-Bone  Steaks  -  -  ^  89' 

"Super-Right"  Old  Foshioned  Pure  Pork 

Sausage  «°^69< 


••Super-Righr  AH  Meat 

Franks  ....  'i^,,  39c 

Cap'n  John's  Standard 

Ojslers ^lir*  96e 

SAVE  MONEY  WITH  A&P'S   •  ^^hy 

FRESH  FRUITS  &  VESETABLES 


Fresh  Cranberries 


Lorge 
Size 


Large    29c 


Ca«lif lower     -.  Head 

SLAW  MIX    Cello  Pk.  19^ 

Carrots ceut^Bag  19c 

FRESH  NEW  CROP  —  U.  S.  No.  1  WHITE 

Potatoes 


10-Lb. 
Bog 


33 


Campbell's 
r.    ,        ,  ^  0  1  iw  r-„„o  n-7u      GAUCHO 

Baked  Beans    ^  ^-^^  Cans  27^  OIIDDV     OAAI^ICC        '^■^-  OTji' 

Franco  American  DUnlll        UUUIVltu      *    ^^      OfC 

Spaghetti      IS^-Oz.  Can    ]5c    crisp 

rari  ~c»    ,9<  STRIETMAMHZESTAS-27C 

#  UBBY  MEATS  •       SUNSNINE  VANIUA  «'<°"'^^3re 

DEVILEDHAM...  'c?„    17c   HAWAIIAN  PUNCH  ..    ^n'    35e 
CORNED  BEEF  HASH''c°^  29c 


POTTED 

MEATS 


2  3V4-OZ.  \  7-^    5-Oz. 
Cans    '  "v    Can 


13c 
VIENNA  SAUSAGE  2  cZ  35c 

VIFMMA    SAUSAGE    With    5-Oz. 
WICnnH       B.B.Q.  Sauce       Can 


19c 


CORNED 


BEEF c.^  45c 


STORE 
ADDRESS 


210  W.  FRANKLIN  ST. 


Prices  This  Ad  Effective  T1iro«<h  Sat..  Oct.  13tb 

AMItKAt    WMMOSf    WOO    iriMUt  .  .  .  MNC*    <u* 


2uper  l^arlcets 


JANE  PARKER 

Potato  Chips 


8-oz.  Bag  39^! 


4, 


PA6B  FOUR 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


THURSDAY,  OCTOBER  11,  1956 


Ovet  400  Men  Pledge   UnCs  24  Social  Fraternities 


Over  400  men  students  were 
plecfeed  during  formal  rush  by 
UNC's  24  social  fraternities. 

Pledged  were: 

Alpha  Tau  Omega:  George  Shu- 
ford  Abernathy  Jr.,  Hickory;  John 
Dunning  Adams  Jr.,  Staunton,  Va.; 
Theodore  Neal  Boden,  New  Or- 
leans, La.:  Joseph  Coverhouse  Bos- 
song,  Asheboro;  John  Griffin  Bur- 
gwyn,  Jackson;  David  Richard  Carr, 
Auburn,  Mass. 


Curtis  Gay  Champlin,  Summit, 
jN.  J.;  William  Crutchfield  Jr., 
Lookout  Mountain,  Tenn.;  Vartan 
Ambar  Davidian  Jr.,  Smithfield; 
I  Clyde  0.  Draughon  Jr.,  Spring 
Hill,  Ala.;  Francis  Logan  Eagles, 
Wilson;  Spencer  Houston  Everett 
Jr..  Baltimore,  Md. 

Thomas  C.  Fisher  IH,  Salisbury; 
James  Norwood  Holmes,  Goldsboro; 
Thomas  McClasky  Howerton,  Ma- 
dison, Fla.;  Thomas  Hereford  Jor- 


SPSC/M  STOCKING-  OFfEl^/ 


^^haf's  Right  Ladies!  With  ^^^^imJUfi 
Two  Poir  you  Ge*  Two  Spares .  .fr\^^  f 

Here's  a  rare  opportunity  to  get  a  reaf  long-lasting  supply  of  fine 
nylon  hosiery  for  far  less  ihan  you  ever  imagirted!  A  regular  $1.23 
value  for  only  $1 ,00 — P'^*  *  spare.  When  you  buy  this  package  of 
two  pairs  and  two  spares,  you  are  actually  getting  three  pairs  of  fine 
nylon  hose.  Take  advantage  of  this  offer  NOW._  Clip  and  mail  the 
coupon  below  for  fast  deliv-ery. 

'"""""'""""  ^t^         "'  "•^  •^ 

DENISE  HOSIERY^?T  BOX  227,  READING,  PA 
Please  send  me  two  pairs  and  two  spares  6L  DenJse  Hosiery. 
For  this  I  am  enclosing  $2.00.  ' 


Name. 


A<lcJr0SS- 


t 


Six*  Length 

Business  Sheer  Q 

Oress  Sheer  Q 

D  Beige      Q  Tcupe 


DENISE  HOSIERY     .:.     BOX  227.  READING.   P^. 


City. 


-State.. 


dan,  Wilson;  Alfred  Ray  Marley, 
Erwin;  Frederick  Wood  McCollum, 
Tenafly,  N.  J.;  Malcolm  Hector  Mc- 
Lean in,  Lumberton;  Tlobert  Lee 
Morrison,    Atlanta,   Ga. 

Ralph  Michael  Pittman,  Atlanta, 
Ga.;  Walter  Rand  IH,  Garner;  Rich- 
ard Beverly  Raney  Jr.,  Chapel  Hill; 
Gharles  G.  Reeder,  Laurel,  Miss.; 
Lawrence  Vernon  Robertson  Jr.. 
Tuson,  Ariz.;  Charles  Allen  Ro.ss, 
Chapel  Hill;  Hoke  Smith  Simpson 
Jr.,  Larchmont,  N.  Y. 

Kennon  Davis^tone.  Bailey;  Gor- 
don Parkhurst  Street  Jr.,  Chatta- 
nooga, Tenn.;  William  B.  Suttle, 
Charlotte;  Gale  Frank  Wallace,  Ips- 
wich,  Mass. 

BETA  , 

Beta  Theta  Pi:  William  Ross  Bon 
ner,  Greensboro;  Milton  Clyde 
Campbell,  Chapel  Hill;  James  R. 
Cunningham,  Charleston,  W.  Va.; 
Madison  Howell  Crum,  Durham; 
William  Brown  Deal,  Morganton; 
James  Hugh  Dugan,  Charlotte; 
Thomas  Coats  Guiles,  Charlotte. 

Richard  D.  Hager,  Winston-Sa- 
lem; Wyndham  Duncan  Hewitt. 
Asheville;  Clauston  Levi  Jenkins 
Jr.,  Baleigh;  Steven  Keutzcr,  West 
Hartford.  Conn.;  Donald  James 
Kroe,  Baltimore,  Md.;  Jack  Lee 
Lawing,  Marion;  Cowles  Liipferl, 
Winston-Salem;  William  Jefferson 
Mathias  Jr.,  Wilmington;  William  i 
Courtney  Mills,  Shreveport,  La.        i 

Ashmead  Pringle  Pipkin,  Reids- 
ville;  Charles  David  P*urnell,  Ocean 
City,  Md.;   Paul   Glenn  Stoner  Jr.,  I 
Lexington;  Wesley  Asbury  Trotter, ' 
Reidsville;  James  Lynch  Williams,  j 
Asheville. 
CHI  PHI 

Chi  Phi:  Charles  Baldwin,  Bald- 
win, N.  Y.;  Tommy  Lloyd  Breeland,  I 
Wilmington;  Al  Cole,  Rocky  Mount; 


r     \ 

Joseph  Powell  Creekmore,  White- 
ville;  DeWitt  Dowdle,  Asheville; 
Frank  Gilliam,  Burlington. 

Thomas  Alexander  Grant,  Staun- 
ton, Va.;  Kermit  Guthrie,  New 
Bern;  Philp  Haire,  West  Jefferson; 
David  Lee  Hale,  Ralegh;  Sanford 
James  Jarrell,  Norfolk,  Va.;  Bobby 
Ray  Mauldin,  China  Grove. 

Torstan  Johan  Nykopp,  Wash- 
ington, D.  C;  Stewart  Phinizy,  Au- 
gusta, Ga.;  John  Gale  Riley,  Salis- 
bury; Richard  Joseph  Somers,  Clif- 
ton Forge,  Va.;  Jame.  Moody, 
Southern,  Asheboro;  James  Timo- 
thy Stevens,  AUentown,  Pa.;  Carl 
Holland  Thomas,  Charlotte;  Wris- 
ton  Augustus  Thompson,  Asheville; 
James  Milton  •  Villas.  Charlotte, 
Ralph   Willoughby,   Ahoskie. 

CHI  PSI 

Chi  Psi:  Jerry  Adams,  Pleasant- 
ville,  N.  Y.;  Terry  Carmody,  Jeri- 
cho, N.  Y.;  Larry  Graver,  Winston- 
Salem;  Fred  Harris,  Rocky  Mount; 
George  Jackson.  Belhaven;  Cornell 
.Johnson,  High  Point. 

Hinkle  Livengood.  Winston-Sa- 
lem; Vince  Lowe,  Chadbournc; 
Tom  Marks,  Hudson,  Ohio;  Sandy 
Mendenhall.  High  Point;  David  My- 
ers, Elkin;  Bob  Myse,  Arlington. 
Va.;  Tommy  Saintsing,  Thomas- 
ville;  Art  Schwerzel,  Summit,  N.  J.; 
Joel  Vickers,  Durham. 
DKE 

Delta  Kappa  Epsilon:  Silas  Walk- 
er, Blanton  Jr.,  Marion;  George 
Thomas  Cochrane  III,  Fayetteville; 
Edward  Wilson  Crow  Jr..  Hancs; 
Carl  Thomas  Hicks  Jr.,  Walston- 
burg;  Frank  Walker  Lockett,  Sum- 
mit, N.  J.;  Donald  Clark  McMillan. 
Charleston,  W.   Va. 

Yates  Shuford  Palmer  Jr.,  Val- 
dese;  Mack  Braswell  Pearsall. 
Rocky  Mount;  George  Pfingst.  Phil- 


adelphia, Pa.;  Bernhard  Albert 
Sack  IX  Ithan,  Pa.;  Edmund  Harri- 
son Schenck,  Greensboro. 

Robert  Bowden  Shepard  Jr.,  Ra- 
leigh; Al-thur  Ward  Sims,  Orange, 
Va;.  Richard  Curry  Stoker,  Clare 
mont,.Cal.;  Pearce  Roberts  Weav- 
er, Asheville;  Charles  Aurelius 
Webb,  ^sheville,  John  C.  Jester, 
Greensboro. 

ST.  A 

Delta  Psi  (St.  Anthony):  Alan 
George  Atwell,  Greensboro;  Paul 
Coe  Clark,  Candor;  John  Taylor 
Doggett,  Greensboro:  Harry  Shields 
Flynn,  Tryon;  George  Hill  Gwinn, 
Alderson,  W.  Va.;  Edgar  Turley 
Higgins,  Summit.  N.  J.;  Wallace 
Hamilton  Kuralt,  Charlotte;  Reg- 
maid  Mallctt  n.  South  Bend,  Ind.; 
Robert  Neal.  Henderson;  Jamc^ 
Ambrose  Packard,  I*rovidence,  R.  I. 

Tate  McEwen  Robertson,  Phila- 
delphia, Pa.;  Raymond  Wilson  Rus- 
sell, Lima,  Peru;  Richard  Stone,  Ra- 
leigh; William  Harvey  Wearmouth, 
Greenville,  S.  C. 
DU 

Delta  Upsilon:  Robert  Gray  Mc- 
Donald III,  Fort  Bragg;  Robert 
Leonard,  Hendcrsonville;  Alvin 
Rankin  Jr.,  Mt.  Holly;  Andrew 
Vanore,  Robbins;  Robert  M.  Wil- 
son, Asheboro. 
KA  • 

Kappa  Alpha:  William  Wallace 
Anderson.  Washington.  D.  C;  Fred- 
erick H.  Bardin,  Durham;  Char- 
les Frederick  Clark,  Asheville;  Wil- 
liam Gayle  Dorroh,  Wilson;  Hugh 
Collins  Embry,  Fredericksburg, 
Va.;  William  Claude  Fitzgerald  III, 
Albermarle. 

Willam  Cochran  Highsmith,  Fay- 
etteville; John  Kenneth  Kavenagh, 
Salisbury;  Wade  Hampton  Lefler 
Jr.,  Newton;  Frank  Haddock  Lowe 


Why  Colonial  offers  you 
two  grades  of  Beef 

TWO  GRADES  OF  BEEF  TO  SOIT  YOUl  BUDGET.  YOUR  NEEDS.  YOUR  METHOD  OF  COOKING! 


'^(^Jt'lend^^ 


Two  grades  of  beef  let  you  buy  to  suit  your  budget.  A  wide  variety  of  • 
cuts  are  carefully  selected  to  meet  all  your  needs  .  .  .  finest  beef  for 
Sunday  best,  festive  meals,  party  treats  ...  or  hearty-fiavored,  nutri- 
tious beef  for  everyday  good  eating.  With  two  grades  of  meat  to  choose  NAJUMENOER  ill  Filer  Bet!  AH!W8tl{ 
from  you  can  plan  your  meals  to  your  own  preferred  method  of  cook-  im\\  BEEf  Ni  Bittir  liy . . .  AKTWBESE 
ing.  Broil,  roast  or  cook  with  moist  heat  .  .  .  you  know  what  you're 
getting  for  your  money.  Hence,  two  grades  of  beef:  Natur-Tender, 
U.  S.  Choice  or  better;  Budget  Beef,  low  in  cost,  but  just  as  nutritious! 


Jr.,  Baxley,  Ga.;  John  DeVine  Mc- 
Gee  n,  Lookout  Mountain,  Tenn.; 
Robert  Crocker  ]VIurry,  Hendcrson- 
ville; Malcom  Franchot  Palmer,  Al- 
bemarle. 

Robert  Evan  Palmer,  Florence, 
S.  C;  William  Francis  Palmer, 
West  Long  Branch,  N.  J.;  Wallace 
Hinton  Plyler,  Salisbury;  Allen 
Williams  Post  Jr.,  Atlanta,  Ga.; 
Jasper  Andrew  Reynolds  Jr.,  Chat- 
tanooga, Tenn.;  John  Edward 
Shields,  Winston-Salem. 

Henry  Clay  Simpson  Jr.,  Lexing- 
ton, Ky.;  Clayton  Bernard  Smith, 
Elizabethtown;  Ralph  Thomas 
Steele,  N.  Wilkesboro;  Julian  Hud- 
son Tolbert,  Macon,  Ga.;  Thedore 
Clemens  Wohlbruck,  Charlotte; 
Jerald  Thomas  Young  Marion. 

KAPPA  SIG 

Kappa  Sigma:  Al  Cope,  Elizabeth 
City;  Richard  Taylor,  Caracus,  Ven- 
ezuela; Dick  Frazier,  Goldsboro; 
Marshall  Happer,  Kinston;  Pete 
Thompson,  Raleigh;  Dugal  Clark, 
Fayetteville. 

Jack  Finegan,  Hickory;  Jim  Furr, 
High  Point;  Ira  Hardy,  Raleigh; 
Tommy  Jackson,  Kinston;  Leonard 
Shaw,  St.  Petersburg,  Fla.;  Craig 
Gibbons,  Charlotte;  Johnny  Jon- 
ston.  Concord,  Mass. 

Earl  Marshall,  Raleigh;  Hugh 
Pritchett,  Louisville,  -  Ky.;  Pat 
Wright,  Kinston;  John  Griffin, 
Murfreesboro;  Knox  Jenkins, 
Goldsboro:  Bill  Ballew.  Hickory. 
LAMBDA  CHI 

Lambda  Chi  Alpha:  Frank  Eu- 
gene Beaver,  Statesville;  Joseph 
Biggs.  Lillington;  .Horton  C.  Calla- 
han Jr.,  Graham;  Donald  Morris 
Dries,  Wyomissing,  Pa.;  Curtis 
Muse  Fields  Jr.,  Thomasville. 

Charles  C.  Howerton,  Cuero, 
Tex.;  R.  Bruce  Hoyle,  Rutherford- 
ton;  George  T.  Kaloyannides.  Ra- 
leigh; Donald  Ned  Koontz,  Elkin; 
George  Andrew  Maydonis,  Char- 
lotte. 

James  Alfred  Moss  H,  Fayette- 
ville; Vincent  A.  Mulieri,  An- 
napolis, Md.;  Earl  Welsh  Tolin  Jr., 
New  Holland,  Pa.;  Perry  Mack 
White,  Spindale;  Johnny  Bryan 
Whittley,  Thomasville;  John  Vin- 
cent Wilber,  EUmira,  N.  Y. 
PHI  DELT 

Phi  Delta  Thet;i:  Jerry  Wofford 
Amos,  Charlotte;  Donald  Ray  An- 
drews, New  Bern;  Marvin  Bradley, 
Whitkers;  Dixon  Wallace  Christian. 
Vicksburg,  Miss.;  Robert  Congdon, 
Hingham,  Mass. 


Our  Pride  Chocolate 

Loyet  Coke 

29c 


•  REG   35c 
12-OZ    SIZE 


STEAKS 
ROAST 


BUr>CET  BEEF 
SlHI.t)l,N.  CI.VB 
RIB  OR  ROL'NU 


NATtJB-TENDEH 
v.    S.   CHOI<:C 


59 
45 


:^i 


F.i-OBomit  ul    Buftxrt    BrrI    C:ii«rk 

ROAST 

IB     33c 


Jenie   Jewell   froM^m 

.  FRYERS 

1%  LBS    f  A.        79c 


Chrf's   Pride   Tr^pie^ 

FRUIT  JEIX 

u-oz    33c 


Chef»  Pridm 

RJIM  SALAD 

8-oz.    43c 


CHEESE   FESTIVAI.   SPECIAL!    .Vlll.D    AMERICAN 


t  "- 


cHsse 


SNACK 

SF.ALTEST   COTTAGE  

CHEESE 

C  SfFBOIEN   ORANGE 

Juice   2 

(  Of^OREO  OIJABTEHS    MARGARINE       

NUTREAT 

SUMFBUAI t    EHOZEN    BABY    GREEN 

LIMAS   2 

i»tH    (>\%N    GOLD    1  ABF.L 

TEA  BAGS 

IS    Al.l     GBEFN 

ASPftRAGUS 

PEPPER 


Special . . .  Sate  4c !  American 

SARDINES 

'.:     ^      ''"'      A  9*^ 


16-OZ. 
CAN 

12-OZ 
CUP 

6-OZ. 
CANS 


1-LB. 
PKG 

lOOZ. 
PKGS 

PKG 
48 

NO  300 
CAN 


1-OZ 
CAN 


39< 
25> 
35- 
2L 
39< 
49 
45 
10 


Special   Price 


Save  20c!  Swift's  Jewel 


SHORTENING 

55c  ■■■o; 


34.B. 
CTK 


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.   Save   He!  Holiday   Pro»en 

CHICKEN  pSS 

4 "°'  ^9« 


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thon  ahy  oth«r  pianl 

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FREE  wllih  SAV-A-STAMPSI 

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At  Colonial  Today! 

Our  Own  Silv0r  Label 

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TOMATOES 

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EXTRA  FANCY  RED  WINESAP 


LBS.      VlP 


USED 
SEMI-TEXTS 

Modern  Library  books  $1.00 

Evtryman's  Library  books     ..  $1.00 

College  Outlines 40< 

Paper  Modern  Library  . _.  40$ 

Others  at  similar  reductions 

It  Pays  To  Try  Used  Books 
^        ;  First. 

THE  INTIMATE 
BOOK^OP 

205   E.   Franklin   St. 

Chapel    Hill 
Open   Till   10  P.M. 


Louis  Glascock.  Greensboro; 
Boyd  White  Harris,  Durham;  Hen- 
ry Wood  Harris,  Winston-Salem; 
Tommy  Little,  Raleigh. 

Charles  Wood  Pittman,  Colum- 
bia, S.  C;  Gray  Poole,  Raleigh; 
John  Smith,  Sylva;  George  Weaver 
.\rlington,  Va. 

PHI  GAM 

Phi  Gamma  Delta:  Wayne  Clark 
Anderson,  Kinston;  Sidney  Sawyer 
Campen,  Edenton;  Marshall  Emorj- 
Daniel,  Charlotte;  Andrew  Polk 
Denmark,  Raleigh;  Robert  Anthony 
Furtado,  Garner;  Henry  Thomas 
Greene,  Lexington;  Rufus  Henry 
Knott,  Washington;  Nick  Madison, 
Asheville;  George  Matthews,  Palm 
Beach,  Fla. 

Richard  McAllister,  Chicago,  111.: 
William  Robert  McCain,  High 
Point;  Abbott  Green  Morris,  Wash- 
ington; Hugh  Lester  Patterson,  Ed- 
enton; Richard  Campen  Pattisall, 
Clintwood,  Va.;  Frederick  Pearsall 
Smith,  Wilmington:  Jack  Holland 
Spain  Jr.,  Greenville;  James  Nor- 
man Thomas,  Cherry  Point;  Ben 
Utley,  Kinston;  and  Wayne  Burn- 
ette  Venters,  Jacksonville. 
PIKA 

Pi  Kappa  Alpna:  Joseph  Ham 
nior.d  Alexander,  Short  Hills,  N.  J.; 
Charles  Allen  Avera,  Wilmington; 
George  Bunnell,  Miami,  Fla.;  Bruce 
Herbert  Ellis,  Shelby;  William 
Thire  Farrell,  Troy;  James'  Lee 
Ferrell,  Tarboro:  Kenneth  Tinsley 
Hall,  Durham;  James  Dugan  Hath- 
way,  Elizabeth  City;  John  Kendrick 
Horney,  Greensboro;  Carter  Ran- 
dolph Jones,  Durham;  James  Lee 
Kerr,  Jamestown;  Sherrill  Mundy 
Lineberger.   Shelby. 

Robert  Pierre  Livingston,  Wil- 
mington; Ernest  Jackson  Mann,  Ra- 
leigh; Franklin  Edwin  Martin,  Fay- 
etteville; David  Norfleet  Parker, 
Raleigh;  Andrew  Jackson  Ponton, 
Warwick,  Va.;  Richard  Hill  Robin- 
son, Greensboro;  John  Bonner 
Sams,  Winston-Salem;  Samuel  Ed- 
win Scott,  Burlington;  Robert  Ste- 
wart, Miami,  Fla.;  Charles  Walter 
Thomas,  Tilsonburg,  Ontario.  Can- 
ada; Granville  Myers  Tilghman, 
Dunn;  David  Wible,  Greensboro; 
and  Mark  King  Wilson,  Chatta- 
nooga, Tenn. 
PHI  KAPPA  SIG 

Phi  Kappa  Sigma:  Jerry  Hedrick 
Aman,  Jacksonville;  Anthony 
Creem,  Sands  Point,  N.  Y.;  Guy 
Pointer  Davis,  Roxboro;  Walter  Mc- 
Lendon  Everett,  Arlington,  Va.; 
Charles  Nathan  Hpxkey,  Charlotte; 
Herbert  Hawkins,  Quantico,  Vs.; 
Harvey  George  Knox,  Greensboro; 
Patrick  Joseph  Marnane,  Arlington, 
Va. 

Merritt  Kellogg  Mitchell,  Rye,  N. 
Y.;  Hector  Newton,  Parkton;  Ralph 
Edward  Parramore,  Charlotte,  -Don- 
ald Ray  Patrick,  Greenville;  Albert 
Edward  Proescher,  Gary;  Sanford 
Holland  Shoaf,  Durham;  Leslie 
Stewart  Sutorius,  Manhasset,  N.Y.; 
Harry  Christopher  Williamson, 
Manhasset,  N.  Y. 
PI  KAPPA  PHI 

Pi  Kappa  Phi:  Gib  Barbee  Jr., 
Southport;  Pete  Fortner,  Anderson, 
I  S.  iC;  Emmett  Griffin.  Monroe; 
I  Robert  Jones,  Anderson,  S.  C;  Sam 
McKenzie,  Candor;  Larry  Redmond, 
Asheville;  and  Ronnie  Tjman,  Dur- 
ham. 
PI  LAMBDA  PHI 

Pi  Lambda  Phi:  Peter  Jonathan 
Alper,  Great  Neck,  N.  Y.;  Alan 
Harris  Davis,  Winston-Salem;  Sig 
mund  Davidson,  Greensboro;  Jerry 
Farber,  Greensboro;  Joseph  Fried 


berg.  Great  Neck.  N.  Y.;  Melvin 
i  Garr,  Raleigh;  Steven  Girard,  Gas- 
'  tonia;  Fredrick  Hirsh,  Charlotte. 
I  Lewis  Kellert,  Silver  Springs. 
Md.;  Larrj'  Kramer,  Whiteville, 
Stanley  Kernfield,  Rocky  Mount; 
!  Arthur  Kurtz,  WinstonSalem;  Arn- 
i  old  Leder,  Goldsboro;  Kenneth 
j  Michalove,  Asheville;  Lawrence 
j  Schwartz,  Winston-Salem;-  Bernard 
I  Shuiimson,  Asheville;  Alan  Solo- 
j  mon,  Conway,  S.  C;  Richard  Tan- 
j  nenbaum,  Great  Neck,  N.  Y. 
;  SAE 

j  Sigma  Alpha  Epsilon:  Lee  San- 
j  ford  Ainslie  Jr..  Huntington,  West 
Va.;  Thomas  McCollum  Bost,  Char- 
I  lotte;  Edward  Procher  Brunson  Jr., 
j  Albermarle;  Robert  Cameron 
I  Cooke,  Durham;  Marion  Eugene 
]  Costello  Jr.,  Roanoke,  Va.;  William 
I  Finley  Davis,  Morganton;  Richard 
j  Alexander  Dennis,  Coral  Gables, 
I  Fla. 

1  David  Vernon  Fox,  Webster 
j  Grove,  Mo.; "William  Louis  Gautier, 
Coral  Gables,  Fla.;  James  Bryan 
;  Grubbs  Jr.,  Columbia,  S.  C;  Mich- 
:  ael  Winder  Haley,  Greensboro;  Pey- 
{  ton  Samuel  Hawes  Jr.,  Elberton 
iGa. 

i      John    S.    Hill,    Smithfield;    Hall 
'  Morriston  Johnston  Jr.,  Charlotte; 
Bennette  Eugene  Geer  Keys,  Green- 
ville,  S.   C:   Thomas  Towles   Law- 
son,  Roanoke.  Va.;   Benjamin  Vic- 
tor May  Jr..  Burlington. 
:      Jame?:  William   McGee.  Raleigh; 
,  John    Nash    Mcintosh,    Savannah. 
I  Ga.;  Robert  Raincy  Sellars,  Greens- 
;  boro;   Carter  Braxton   Smith,   Mar- 
tinsville,    Va.;     William     Michael 
I  Thompson  Jr..  Augusta,  Ga.;  Char- 
I  les  Younce,  Greensboro. 

SIGMA  CHI 
'      Sigma  Chi:   Buck  Adams.  Wins- 
;  ton-Salem;  Ray  Ade.  Winnetka,  111.; 
!  Frank  Armstrong,  Winchester,  Va.; 
!  Buck   Batchelor,  Greensboro;   Gor- 
j  don    Christian,   Charlotte;    Tommy 
1  Collins,   Myrtle  Beach,   S.  C. 
j      Monty  De  Witt,  Charlotte;  Holra- 
I  es  Harden.  Burlington;  Monk  Mon- 
I  cure,    Charlotte;    Jimmy    McNairy, 
j  Greensboro;  Giles  Nicholson,  Bur- 
'  linjton;    Bob  Stanton,  Churchland. 
Va.:    Don    Webster,    Longmeadow, 
Mass. 
ilGMA    NU 

Sigma  Nu:  Richard  Clarence 
Brake  III,  Henderson;  John  Robert 
Crawford  III,  Salisbury;  Lyle  Ellis 
Grumpier,  Rocky  Mount;  Ashe  Bost 
Exum,  Snow  Hill;  Richard  Bryant 
Hayes,  Sanford;  Victor  Graham 
Jamison  Jr.,  Dover,  Del. 

Arthur  Lawrence  Kilpatriek,  An- 

(See  PLEDGES,  Page  5) 


DAILY    CROSSWORD 


WEST  FRANKLIN  STREET 


GLEN  LENNOX  SHOPPING  CENTEit 


1. 

5. 
9. 

10. 

12. 
13. 
14. 

15. 

17. 
18. 

22. 

23. 
24. 

25. 
28. 
30. 

32. 
34. 

37. 

4L 

42. 

4S. 

(4. 

47. 

4f. 

50. 

51. 


ACROSS 

Fellow 
Questions 
Portion 
Breed  oT 
dog  (pi.) 
Overpower- 
ing fright 
French 
painter 
Indefinite 
article 
Cutting  tool 
Epoch 
City  in 
New  York 
One  of 
an  Indian 
caste 
Female 
deer 
Steam- 
ship 
(abbr.) 
Place 
Plead 
Public 
notice 
Fold  over 
Arabian 
garment 
Raised  from 
the  dead 
Evening 
(poet) 
Affirmative 
vote 

Ruthenium 
(«ym.) 
Potassium 
nitrate 
Remains  of 
a  city 
Place  of 
worship 
Uttle 
island 
Indefinite 
quantity 
Lamyreya^ 


DOWN 

1.  Opportunity 

2.  A  Chinese 
dynasty 

3.  Stand  up 
i.  Nut 

5.  Air  Co- 
ordinating 
committee 
(abbr.) 

6.  Sure  (dial.) 

7.  Oriental 
country 

8.  Weapons 

9.  Involuntary 
muscular 
contraction 

11.  Remains 
16.  Marry 
19.  A  twining 
vine 


20  Male 
swan 

21.  Letter 
of 

alpha- 
bet 

26.  Bskim 
knife 

27.  Sailor 
(Brit.) 

29.  Gun 
(slang) 

30.  Sphere 
of 
action 

31.  Satanic 
beings 

33.  Lever 
35.  Capital  of 

Switzerland 

( poss. ) 


BS]f30C)    !3!!]9{lli 

SQs  Qoa  aos] 
asmBB 


Ye*t«rday'i>  Aaiiwer 

36.  Burnt  or 
scored 

38.  A.  bout 

39.  Weird 

40.  Reason 

45.  Male  sheep 

46.  Before 
48.  Sick 


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( Continiicd  from  Page  1) 

ley,  Darwin  Bell,  Bill  Pruitt  and 
Hudgins. 

Following  is  Davis'  complete  an- 
nouncement: 

"I  would  like  to  challenge  stu- 
dents, faculty,  and  townspeople 
who  are  interested  and  have  sug- 
gestions regarding  the  parking 
problem  on  Columbia  Street  to  be 
present  at  the  Traf::ic  Corhmittee 
meeting  on  Oct.  11,  at  4:30  p.m. 
in  Graham  Memorial,  Roland  Par- 
ker  1." 

"I  would  especially  urge  mem- 
bers of  the  University  Party  with 
their  "little  group"  to  be  present 
at  this  meeting.  My  committee  is 
strictly  a  non-partisan  group, 
working  for  the  betterment  of  the 
parking  conditions  on  Columbia 
Street  and  the  campus  as  a  whole. 
We  can  only  be  successful  if  all 
I  groups  can  work  with  us  and 
through  us  in  solving  the  prob- 
I  lem,"  he  said. 

j      "Student  body  President  Young 
and    President    of  ^  Interfraternity 
Council  Ed  Hudgins,  did  not  have 
a  solution  to  the  problem,  as  has 
I  already  been  stated,  but  were  ap- 
!  pealing  to  the  Board  of  Aldermen 
j  Monday  night  to  lift  the  ban  per- 
j  manently  or  to  lift  it  until  a  work- 
able   plan    agreeable  to   all   could 
j  be  worked  out.  We  must  have  one 
plan  acceptable  to  all  involved  and 
approach   the  Board   of  Aldermen 
and   Merchants'   Association   as    a 
student    body    standing    together, 
rather  than  a  multitude  of  "little 
groups."  he  said. 

TRANSPORTATION 

The  UNC  Chapter  of  the  Nation- 
al Defense  Transportation  Associa- 
tion will  hold  its  first  meeting  to- 
day at  four  o'clock  in  108  Gardner 
Hall,  President  Steve  Hayworth  an- 
nounced yesterday. 
CPU 

The  Carolina  Political  Union  will 
meet  today  at  3  p.m.  in  the  Grail 
Room  of  Graham  Memorial.  There 
will  be  an  introduction  to  the 
C.P.U.  and  a  business  reorganiza- 
tion. The  CPU.  has  roundtable 
discussions  of  current  events  and 
controversial  issues. 

All  interested  students  are  re- 
quested to  attend  the  meeting,  ac 
cording  to  Gerry  Mayo,  chairman. 


G 
U 


NEW! 
If  colU 
be   ford 
.«utlot 
end  w< 

The 
lahomal 
Tech  a| 
safe  er 
find  tl 
bracket 

Prize 
•  Penns>1 
over 
ginia 
.733,   Oi 

The 

Ok-la^l 
Sooner 
Texa« 
perier 

MichI 
Wolvei 
depth. 
cau.se 
Army' 

Westi 
Mickc\-| 
give 
edge 

Notrl 
Fightii 
passing 
Len  DJ 

Duk< 
The  BH 
two  e£ 
on  thel 

Ohiol 
eye  suj 
Clack 
along 

Tcxal 
This  ml 
to  com| 
Jim   S\ 

Micl 
the  frol 
fy  Daul 
makes 

Gtor 
Race he 
strong 

PrinI 
victorj 
that  tl 
tory. 

Mis: 


been 
"meeti^ 

STUI 

Oct! 
dents 
surani 
may 
gover 
morij 
formt 
so    bd 
insurl 
the  s| 

YRC 

•     The 

will 

land 

■Mem^ 

live 

All  cd 

to 

Smoc 

WUI 

(he 
sion 


6: 

6; 


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phai 
giei 
my 


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mec 
stu(i 


f 


THURSDAY.  OCTOBER  11,  195« 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


PAGE  Five 


By  20-6  Score 


Mvin 
Gas- 
ktte. 
ings, 
ille. 
|unt; 
irn- 
leth 
fnce 
lard 
Solo- 
ran- 


san- 
^est 
fhar- 
Jr.. 
;ron 
jene 
iiam 
lard 
)les, 

ster 
Itier, 
ryan 

ich 
|Pey 
rton. 

iHall 

)tte; 
reen 

.aw 
[Vic 

Mgh; 
knah. 
jen-s- 
LMar- 
mael 
I'har- 


fins 
111.; 

jVa.; 

iGor- 
imy 

lolra- 
Mon- 
lairy, 
JBur- 
land. 
Idow. 


rence 

>bert 

Ellis 

Bost 

Jryant 

rabam 

,  .^- 


and 

te  an- 

stu- 
jople 

sug- 
rking 
to  be 
uttee 

p.m. 

Par- 

mem- 
with 
resent 
tee  is 
group, 
of  the 
lunbia 
whol«. 

if  all 
and 

prob- 

Young 
ternity 
t  have 
as  has 
re  ap- 
ermen 
n  per- 
work- 
could 
ve  one 
ired  and 
ormen 
as  a 
?f^th*r, 
little 


V. 


Yanks  Top  Dodgers  To  Win  World  Series 


Grimsley  Chooses 
UNCToWhipGa. 


By  WILL  GRIMSLEY 

NEW  YORK,  Oct^lO  —  (JP)  — 
If  college  football  weekends  could 
be  forecast  like  the  weather,  the 
outlook  for  the  forthcoming  week- 
end would  be  "'fair  and  formful." 

The  top  teams. , headed  by  Ok- 
lahoma, Michigan  State,  Georgia 
Tech  and  Texas  Christian,  appear 
safe  enough.  Upsets  will  have  to 
find  their  places  in  the  lower 
brackets. 

Prize  picks  last  week  were 
Pennsylvania.  loser  of  19  in  a  row, 
over  Dartmouth  and  West  Vir- 
ginia over  Texas.  Score  33-12  for 
.733.  Overall:  100-27  for  .789. 

The  picks: 

Oklaftioma  35,  Texas  12:  T^ie 
Sooners,  the  eountrj-'s  best,  find 
Texas  still  struggling  with  inex- 
perience. 

Michigan  21,  Army  14:  The 
Wolverines,  with  great  ends  and 
depth,  won't  be  at  mental  loss  be- 
cause of  last  week's  defeat,  but 
Army's  line  is  too  thin. 

West  Virginia  14.  Syracuse  13: 
Mickey  Trimarki  and  a  stout  line 
give  the  Mountaineers  a  slight 
edge  here   in   another   upset.  j 

Notre  Dame  28.  Purdue  7:  The 
Fighting  Irish  get  better  with  each 
passing  week.  They  should  stop 
Len  Dawson's  passing  attack.  j 

Duke  20,  Southern  Methodist  14:  i 
The  Blue  Devils  get  sore  from  their  i 
two  early  lickings  and  take  it  out  j 
on  the  Mustangs.  I 

Ohio   State  28,  Illinois  6;   Buck- 
eye supporters  are  saying  that  Don  I 
Clack  is  a  ^better  back  than  Hop-  j 
along  Cassady.  j 

Texas  Christian  33,  Alabama  12:  i 
This  may  be  one  ot"  the  great  teams  i 
to  come  out  of  ihe  Southwest,  with  ; 
Jim  Swink  a  terror. 

Michigan  State  14.  Indiana  0:  If 
the  front  cover  jinx  can't  stop  Duf-  j 
fy  Daugherty,  nobody  can.  Indiana  j 
makes  it  a  good  game. 

Georgia   Tech  28.   Louisiana   14:  j 
Racehorse     backs     break    LSU's 
strong  defenses.  | 

Princeton  20.  Penn  13:  No  easy 
victory  for  the  Nassau  Tiger  now 
that  the  Quakers  have  tasted  vie-. 
tory.  Good  chance  for  upset.  | 

Mississippi     14,     Vanderbilt     7:  , 


Don  Orr,  Vandy's  ace  quarterback 
reportedly  injured.  Otherwise  we 
might  vote  for  a  Commodore  vic- 
tory. 

UCLA  19,  Washington  State  7: 
The  Washington  Staters  have  back- 
field  speed  but  not  enough  to  crack 
UCLA's  firm  defenses  for  more 
than  a  touchdown. 

The  o-*.ers: 

Friday  night — Miami  27,  Mary- 
land 14;  Richmond  14,  The  Cita- 
del 12. 

Saturday 

East— Brown  13,  Dartmouth  6; 
Yale  25,  Columljia  7:  Cornell  32, 
Harvard  0;  Penn  State  20,  Holy 
Cross  7;  Colgate  21,  Rutgers  0; 
George  Washington  14,  Boston  U. 
6. 

South— Florida  18.  Rice  7;  Ken- 
tucky 14,  Auburn  12;  North  Caro- 
lina State  20.  Florida  State  6;  Ten- 
nessee 35,  Chattanooga  7;  Virginia 
Tech  21,  William  &  Mary  12;  South 
Carolina  20,  Virginia  6;  Clemson 
14,  Wake  Forest  7;  North  Carolina 
20.  Georgia  6. 

Southv^fest  —  Texas  A  &  M  25, 
Houston  6;  Baylor  13.  Arkansas  7; 
Texas  Tech  20,  Western  Texas  0. 

Middle  West  —  Kansas  18.  Iowa 
State  14;  Minnesota  21.  Northwes- 
tern 0;  Missouri  27.  North  Dakota 
State  13;  Nebraska  32.  Kansas 
State  7;  Iowa  14.  Wicconsin  6;  Tul- 
sa 20.  Oklahoma  A  &  M  14;  Boston 
College  14.  Marquette  0;  Detroit 
20.  Wichita  7;  Colorado  14,  Colo- 
rado A  &  M  13. 

Far  West— Stanford  28,-San  Jose 
State  0;  Washington  20.  Oregon 
13;  Wyoming  14.  New  Mexico  0; 
California  14.  Oregon  State  7;  Utah 
State  24,  Montana  12. 


Johnny  Kucks  Pitches 
Three  Hitter  For  Win 


Intramurals 

Here  are  the  results  of  today's 
intramural  football  action:  Kappa 
Phi  27-ZBT  0;  Delta  Sig  19— The- 
ta  Chi  0;  Beta  13 — KA  0;  Phi  Gam 
13— SIJE  2;  SAE  28  —  TEP  0; 
Lambda  Chi  9— Chi  Phi  0;  ATO 
14 — Kappa  Sig  13;  Sigma  Nu  15— 
Phi  Delt  7;  Sigma  Chi  48 — AKPsi 
0;    Zeta    Phi    29 — Phi    Lam    0. 


BROOKLYN  (i^— The  New  York 
Yankees  became  the  1956  Baseball 
World  Champions  here  yesterday 
afternoon  as  they  roared  to  a  9-0 
win  over  the  Brooklyn  Dodgers  be- 
hind the  three  hit  pitching  of 
young  Johnny  Kucks. 

The  Yankees  thus  duplicated 
Brooklyn's  1955  feat  of  winning 
a  seven-game  series  after  losing 
the  first  two  games.  It  was  tV 
Yanks'  17th  World  Series  victory 
in  22  attempts  since  1921  and  their 
sixth  in  seven  series  against 
Bi-ooklyn. 

The  Dodgers  took  the  first  two 
in  Ebbets  Field,  then  the  Yanks 
won  the  next  three  in  their  sta- 
dium and  then  Brooklyn  squared 
ihe  scries  yesterday  in  their  home 
park.  Today's  game  was  the  first 
break-through  by  the  visiting 
team. 
BERRA  SLUGS 

Berra.  who  clubbed  a  bases — 
loaded  homer  off  Newcombe  in 
the  second  game,  hit  over  the  right 
field  wall  the  first  two  times  he 
came  to  bat  against  Newk  today, 
each  time  with  a  man  on  base.  Aft- 
er that  he  was  intentionally  pass- 
ed and  one  of  those  walks  set  up 
Skowron's  bases-full  blow  off 
Roger  Craig,  the  third  Dodger 
pitcher.  Elston  Howard  belted  the 
other  Yankee  homer,  with  New- 
combe as  the  victim. 

The   seven-game   series    drew   a 
paid    attendance    of    345.903    with 
33.782    fans     watching     the    final 
game. 
HOMERS  SET  RECORD 

The  four  Yankee  homers  set  a 
record  of  12  by  one  club  in  a  se- 
ries, breaking  the  mil-k  of  10  set 
by  the  1952  Yanks.  Berra,  with 
10  runs  batted  in  during  the  se- 
ries, smashed  another  record. 

The  box: 


(Continued  from  Page  I) 

been   invited   to   attend   the  class 
meeting  today  at  7  p.m. 

STUDENT  INSURANCE 

Oct.  15  is  the  deadline  for  stu- 
dents to  enroll  in  the  Student  In- 
surance Plan.  Application  blanks 
may  be  obtained  from  the  student 
government  office  in  Graham  Me- 
morial, at  the  Y  and  in  GM's  In- 
formation Office.  Students  have  al- 
so been  asked  to  pick  up  their 
insurance  identification  cards  in 
the  student  government  office. 

YRC 

-«"-The  Young  Republicans  Club 
wil  meet  today  at  7:30  p.m.  in  Ro- 
land Parker  Lounge  1  of  Graham 
Memorial  to  select  a  representa- 
tive for  the  Yack  Beauty  Contest. 
All  coed  members  have  been  lurged 
to  attend,  according  to  Dave 
Smoot,  publicity  chairman. 

WUNC-TV  , 

Today's  schedule  for  WUNC-T\^ 
the  University's  educational  televi- 
sion station,  Channel  4: 

-  12:44— Sign  On 
„,  12:45— Music      . '.. 
,,i— Today*  on  Farm 
.J  1:30 — Music  in  View 
...  2— Your  Child 
.,  ?:3»'-Sisn  Off 
;j^..  9:44 — Music 
jj,  ft— Magic  Lantern 
.^    8:15— Sports  Clinic  \ 

.,,  6:30— News 
..'^  6;45^-Sports 
'  7— ElecUon,  1956 


7:15 — Bible  Course 

&-»-Dr.  Shivers  N 

8:45— State  Govt. 

9:30 — Lecture  Hall 

10 — Final  EdHlon 

10:05— Sign  Off 

WUNC 

Today's  schedule  for  WUNC,  the 
University's  FM  radio  station,  91.5 
megacycles: 

7 — Intermezzo 

7:30 — Voices 

7:45 — French  Press  Review 

8 — Music  Festival 

9 — Listen  America 

9:30 — French  Masterworks 

10 — ^News  at  Ten 

10:15 — Evening  Masterwork 

11:30— Sign  Off 


New  York  (A) 

Ab 

R 

H 

0 

A 

E 

Bauer,  rf 

5 

1 

1 

0 

0 

0 

Martin.  2b 

5 

2 

2 

2 

6 

0 

Mantle,  cf     . 

4 

1 

1 

0 

0 

0 

Berra.  c    

3 

3 

2 

1 

1 

0 

Skowron.  lb 

5 

1 

1 

16 

1 

0 

Howard.  If 

5 

1 

2 

^2 

0 

0 

McDougald.  ss 

4 

0 

1 

3 

3 

0 

Carey.   3b 

3 

0 

0 

2 

2 

0 

Kucks,  p 

3 

0 

0 

1 

2 

0 

Totals 

37 

9 

10  27 

15 

0 

Brooklyn   (N) 

Ab 

R 

H 

0 

A 

E 

Gilliam,  2b 

4 

0 

0 

6 

2 

0 

Reese,  ss 

2 

0 

0 

2 

5 

1 

Snider,  cf  

4 

0 

2 

1 

0 

0 

Robinson,  3b 

3 

0 

0 

0 

1 

0 

Hodges,  lb      .. 

3 

0 

0 

10 

2 

0 

Amoros,  If 

3 

0 

0 

0 

0 

0 

Furillo.  rf  

3 

0 

1 

0 

0 

0 

Campanella,  c 

3 

0 

0 

8 

0 

0 

Newcombe,  p 

1 

0 

0 

0 

1 

0 

Bcssent,  p 

..   0 

0 

0 

0 

0 

0 

a-Mitchell 

1 

0 

0 

0 

0 

0 

Craig,  p   

0 

0 

0 

0 

0 

0 

Rcebuck,  p 

0 

0 

0 

0 

0 

0 

b-Walker 

1 

0 

0 

0 

0 

0 

EIrskine,  p 

0 

0 

0 

0 

0 

0 

Totals    28    0    3  27  11     0 

a — Grounded  out  for  Bessent  in 

6th. 
b — Grounded  oul  for  Roebuck  in 

8th. 

Now  York  (A)  202  100  400—9 

Brooklyn   (N)  000  000  000—0 


IK  8i<;ni  ST 


W^/'i*' 


Sophomore  Yacic  Photos 
:  Will  Be  Made  This  Week 

Yackcty  Yack  pictures  will  be 
made  this  week  of  .sophomores, 
pharmacy,  dental  and  dental  hy- 
giene students,  according  to  Tom- 
my Johnson.  Yack  editor. 

The  pictures  will  bo  made  in  the 
basement  of  Graham  Memorial 
from  1  to  8  p.m.  It  has  been  re^ 
Rested  that  girli  we  r  dark  swea- 
ters and  pearls  and  the  men,  dark 
coats,  ties  and  white  shirts. 

Photos  of  juniors,  law  students, 
medical  students  and  graduate 
students  will  be  taken  Oct.  15-19. 


^LLP^ 


BERinr 


,       \  'irc^t  fiD'>'  L^t^'"- 


2  —  SHOWS  —  7:4$  &  10:15  —  2  —  SHOWS 


Raleigh  Memorial  Auditorium 

15 


REfiRVED  SEA"?  ADMISSION 
S2.00-S2.50-$2.75-$3.00  $3.50 

MAIV  ORDER  AND  TiCKEI  SALE 

THIEM'S  RECORD  SHOP 

HAMLIN  DRUG  CO. 

Only   0«t*   In   Eastorn  N.   C. 


ONE  NITE  ONLY 
MONDAY    EVE 


RBI — Berra  4,  Howard,  Skowron 
4.  2B— Mantle,  Howard.  HR— Ber- 
ra 2,  Howard,  Skowron.  SB — Bauer. 
S — Kucks.  DP — Kucks,  Martin  and 
Skowron;  McDbugald  and  Skow- 
ron. Left— New  York  (A)  6,  Brook- 
lyn (N)  4.  BB— Newcombe  1 
(Carey),  Bessent  1  (Berra),  Craig 
2  (Mantle,  Berra),  Kucks  3  (Reese 
2,  Robinson).  SO — Newcombe  4 
(Martin,  Mantle  2,  Skowron),  Bes- 
sent 1  (Kucks),  Roebuck  3  (Carey, 
Martin,  Mantle),  Kucks  1  (Robin- 
son). HO — Newcombe  5  In  3  (faced 
one  batter  in  4th).  Bessent  2  in  3, 
Craig  3  in  0  (faced  five  batters  in 
7th),  Roebuck  0  in  2,  &skine  0  in 
1.  R — EIR — Newcombe  5-5,  Bessent 
0-0,  Craig  4-4,  Roebuck  0-0. 
Fj-skine  0-0(  Kucks  0-0.  WP— 
Craig.  W — Kucks.  L — Newcombe. 
U — Boggess  (N)  plate,  Napp  (A) 
first  base,  Pinelli  (N)  second  base. 
Soar  (A)  third  base.  Gorman  (N) 
left  field,  Runge  (A)  right  field. 
T— 2:19.  A— 33,782  (paid).  Re- 
ceipts (net)— $223,82«.80. 


-Pledges- 

(CovlinmA  from  Page  1) 

sonia,  Conn.;  Willam  Knox  Kinlaw 
Jr.,  Lumberton;  Walter  Bryan  La- 
tham, Bethel;  Robert  Andrew  Park' 
er,  Henderson;  Louis  Alfred  Whe- 
less  Jr.,  Louisburg. 
SPi 

Sigma  Phi  Epsilon:  Robert  Allan 
I  Akin,  Raleigh;  J.  Wells  Ashley, 
I  Jr.,  Hickory;  Willard  Ray  Bagwell, 
I  Raleigh;  Robert  M.  Bori-oughs, 
}  Charlotte;  William  Henry  Burnside 
!  Jr.,  Raleigh;  Robert  Kenneth  Co- 
I  fod.  New  York,  N.  Y. 
I  Robert  Edward  Lee  (^Jprrell  Jr.. 
I  Laurinburg;  Robert  James  Coving- 
I  ton,  Raleigh;  Fred  Vaden  Fonville, 
j  Raleigh;  Hall  Eugene  Furr,  Con- 
I  cord;  John  David  Garver.  Manhas- 
I  sett;  • 

i      Jerry  Marshall  Gunter,  Gastonia; 

Howard  John  Harvey  Jr.,  Sanford; 
!  Timothy   Leighton   Harris,  Dallas; 

Joe     Anderson     Hewitt,      Shelby; 
I  James  Elgan  Hillman  Jr..  Raleigh; 
j  Robert  Walker  Jones,  Durham; 
j      John    Mwin    Lofkin,    Florence, 

S.    C;    Ian    Cameron     MacBryde, 
i  Asheville;     John    Delabar    Minter 


• 
Ramsey, 


Gayle  Edward  Ramsey,  Brevard; 
I  Richard  Gaddy  Rhynes,  Morven; 
j  Carl  Kenneth  Styers,  Gastonia; 
!  Charles  Heal^t  Westbrook,  Sanford. 

TEP 


Newton  Centre,  Mass 
in  Jr.,  Atlanta,  Ga.; 

Howard  Edward  Goldman,  Balti- 
m.ore,  Md.;  Michael  William  Hotch- 
kiss,  Newark,  N.  J.;  Benjamin  Jack 
Levy,  Petersburg,  Va.;  Mwin  Levy 
Tau  Epsilon  Phi:  Gary  Balkind,  I  J'-  New  Orleans,  La  : 
Charlotte;   David   Evans,    Fayette- 1      Peter  Calvin  Liman  Hewlett,  N. 
ville;   Alan  Finklestein,  Brooklyn, !  Y.;  Michael  Andrew  Ro^en,  Wood- 
N.  Y.;  Paul  Hilton  Goldman,  Eliz-  j  bridge.  Conn.;  Herbert  Allen  Ross, 
\  abeth,  N.  J.;  Phillip  Victor  Moss,  i  South  Orange,  N.  J.;  Louis  M.  Ter- 
i  I^w  Gardens,  N.  Y.;  Robert  Ney,  '\  rell,  Baltimore,  Md. 
1  South   Orange,    N.   J.;    Donald    H.  '  ZETA  PSI 


Leon  Frosh-  Loughlin,  Henderson;  LawTcnce 
Anderson  Moye  Jr.,  Maury;  Harvey 
Cloyd  Philpott,  Lexington;  William 
Converse  Stem,  Chattanooga, 
Tenn.;  James  D.  Tyler,  Durham; 
Watkins  Goodwyn  Young,  Hender- 
son. 


George  L.  Coxhead 

U.N.C.  '42 
Campus  Rspresentativa 


Vinnick,    Raleigh. 

THETA  CHi 

Theta  Chi:  John  Harding  Bare- 
foot, Benson;  Frank  Theodora 
Bowen  Jr.,  Washington,  N.  C; 
Roger  Kent  Brehm,  Newhall,  Iowa; 
Kenneth  Rigby  Brimmer,  Char- 
lotte; William  Chears,  Danville, 
Va.; 

Jon  Quentin  Clark,  Gaithers 
burg,  Md.;  Douglas  DeBank, 
Northport,  Long  Island,  N.  Y.; 
James  Miller  Hudson,  Jefferson; 
James  W.  Summey  III,  Gastonia* 
Dick  Urwick,  Charlotte;  Jesse  D. 
Ward,  Westfield.  N.  J. 
ZBT 

Zeia  Beta  Tau:  Terry  S.  Barkin, 

Winter  Haven,  Fla.;  Jerome  Bruce 

Jr.,  Raleigh;  Clifton  Waldo  Fader-  i  Blumenthal,  Atlanta,  Ga.;  Henry  J. 

ick,  Kinston;  Roy  Thomas  Phillips, .  Bodenheimer,    New    Orleans,    La.; 

Kinston;  Edward  Arnold  Erbesfield,  Atlan- 

WaUer  Roy  Poole  Jr.,  Kinston;   ta,  Ga.;  Michael  Herbert  Fleisher, 


Zeta  Psi:  Albert  Gaskins  Byrum 
Jr.,  Edentt  n;  Edward  Willis  Car- '. 
ter,  Winston-Salem;  Stephen  Cam- . 
breleng    Cowper,    Kinston;    Oscar 
Willam  Cranz,  Knston;   Paul  Wil-| 
son  Elam  Jr.,  Louisburg;  | 

Radford  Garrett  Folger,  Green- 
ville; Walter  LaFayette  Johnston 
Jr.,     Statesville;     David     Castello 


NEW  YORK  LIFE 

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versal human  values  that  link  scholars,  statesmen,  scientists, 
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that  will  be  most  popular  with  the  average  Digest  reader? 

You  may  find . .  .you  know  more  about  people  than  you  think! 

Here's  ail  you  do.  Study  the  deecriptions  (at  right)  of  the  articles  in  the 
October  Reader's  Digest— or,  better  still,  read  the  complete  articles  in  the 
issue  itself.  (But  you  are  not  required  to  buy  The  Reader's  Digest  to  enter 
the  contest.)  Then  simply  list  the  six  articles— in  order  of  preference— that 
you  think  readers  of  the  magazine  will  like  best.  This  will  be  comfMired  with 
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FoUow  the  directions  given  below.  Fill  in  the  entry  blank,  paste  it  on  a 
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Ail  entries  must  be  postmarked  not  later  than  midnight,  October  25, 1956. 
Don't  delay.  In  case  of  ties,  the  entr>'  with  the  earliest  postmark  will  win. 


Just  pick  in  order  tlie  six  articies 
you  tliinit  most  readers  of  October 
Reader's  Digest  wili  liiie  tite  best. 


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In  the  space  opposite  the  word  "FIRST"  write  the  number 
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Ouj^te  the  word  "SECOND"  wriU  the  number  of  the 
article  you  think  will  rank  second  in  popularity.  List  in  this 
way  the  numbers  of  the  si^'  top  articles  in  the  order  of  their 
popularity.  (Note:Use  only  the  numbera  of  articles  you  choose. 
Do  not  write  the  title  of  any  article.)  Clip  and  paste  this  cou- 
pon on  a  GoiT/  nment  'poat  cord. 


Firit«_ 

SiCMtf. 

TUrt. 

Ftntli. 

FifA. 


J 


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at  your  college  bookstore. 

FOLLOW  THESE  EASY  RULES 

1.  Read  ihe  description*  in  this  adver- 
tisement of  the  articles  that  appear  in 
October  Reader's  Digest.  Or  better, 
read  the  complete  articles.  Then  select 
the  6  that  you  think  most  readers  will 
like  best. 

2.  On  the  entry  blank  at  left,  write  the 
number  of  each  article  you  select.  List 
them  in  what  you  think  will  be  the 
order  of  popularity,  from  first  to  sixth 
place.  Your  selections  will  be  judged 
by  comparison  with  a  national  survey 
which  ranks  in  order  of  popularity  the 
6  articles  that  readers  like  best.  Fill  in 
and  mail  the  coupon.  All  entries  must 
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Reader^ 
^Digest 

i    Ite  papuiarity  and  ir.fl.^srxe  are  uwld'Wide 


m 


■J^K. 


Which  six  articles  will  readers 
of  the  October  Digest  like  best? 

1.  Norfolk's  fri«nd  to  Irewblcd  l««n-«gtrf.  Story  of  the  sr- 
thritic  cnpple  to  whom  youngsters  floclr  for  advice. 

3.  Tha  graot  Piildown  hoax.  How  this  famed  "missing  link" 
in  htimantvotution  has  been  proved  a  fraud  from  the  start. 

S.  H»w  to  •horpan  your  |iMlgin*Rt.  Famed  author  Bertrand 
Russell  offers  six  rules  to  help  you  form  sounder  opinions. 

4.  My  mast  untortattoM*  charadar.  Fond  memories  of  Con- 
nie  Mack — who  led  the  Athletics  for  50  years. 

5.  How  to  mako  poeco  at  tha  Panlogon.  Steps  to  end  ruin- 
ous rivalry  between  our  Army,  Navy  and  .Air  Force. 

6.  Book  coiMtansotion:   "High,  Wid«  and  Lonosemo."  Hal 

Borland's  exciting  story  of  his  adventurous  boyhood  on  a 
Colorado  prairie. 

7.  Madicina's  animal  pionoors.  How  medical  researchers 
learn  from  animals  new  ways  to  save  human  lives. 

S.  What  tha  mast  in  Moscsaw  moons.  Evidence  th&t  the 
Communist  system  is  as  unworkable  as  it  is  unnatural. 

9.  Mastar  brid«a  kuildar.  Introducing    David    Steiaman, 

world  leader  in  bridge  desagn  and  construction. 

10.  Cellaga  two  yaers  soenar.  Here's  how  extensive  experi- 
ments proved  a  bright  lOth-grader  i«  ready  for  college. 

11.  Lawflhtor  tMo  bast  madicina.  Amusiii^{^a^>eriences  from 
everyday  life. 

12.  What  hoppan*  whan  wa  pray  for  atiMwV^oo  often  we 
pray  only  for  ourselvett.  Here's  bow  we  gain  true  rewards 
of  prayer  when  we  pray  for  others. 

13.  Ewropaen  vs.  U.  S.  boewHos.  Why  European  women  are 
more^lamorous  to  men. 

14.  Trading  stamps— bonus  or  bunkumf  How  much  of  their 
coot  is  included  in  the  price  you  pay? 

15.  Living  mamoriols  instead  of  Sowars.  A  way  to  honor  the 
dead  by  serving  the  living. 

16.  It  pays  fo  incraosa  your  word  power.  An  entertaining 
quiz  to  build  your  vocabulary. 

17.  Are  wo  loo  soft  on  young  criminals?  Why  the  best  way 
to  cure  juvenile  delinquency  is  to  punish  first  offenders. 

IS.  Madicina  man  an  tha  Amexon.  How  two  devoted  mis' 
sionaries  bring  medical  aid  to  jungle  natives. 

19.  Craatwras  in  tha  night.  The  fascinating  drama  of  naturt 
that  is  enacted  between  dusk  and  da-vn. 

M.  What  your  sansa  of  humor  tails  about  you.  What  the 
jokes  you  like,  the  way  you  laugh  reveal  about  you. 

21.  Tha  sub  that  wouldn't  stay  down.  Stirring  saga  of  ths 
U.S.S.  Squahu'  rescue  from  a  depth  of  40  fathoms. 

22.  Madame  Bultarfly  in  bobby  sax.  How  new  freedoms  Itave 
changed  life  for  Japanese  women;  what  the  men  think. 

23.  Doctors  should  tall  patients  tha  truth.  When  the  doctor 
Ofierated,  exactly  what  did  he  do?  Why  a  written  eecord 
of  your  medical  history  may  someday  save  your  life. 

24.  "How  wonderful  you  ora  . . .  "  Here's  why  affectioO 
and  admiration  aren't  much  good  unless  expressed;  why 
locked-up  emotions  eventually  wither. 

25.  Harry  HoH  and  a  haartfol  af  children.  Story  of  a  farmer 
-  who  single handedly  jnds  homes  for  hundreds  of  Korean 

war  orphans. 

26.  Our  tax  laws  moka  us  dishonest.  How  unfair  tax  laws 

are  causing  a  serious  -noral  deterioration. 

27.  Vanaraoi  disease  now  a  throat  to  youth.  How  V.D.  is 

spreading  among  teoij-agers— and  saue  advice  to  victims. 

2S.  Sacy.  Sanson's  faith  in  tha  American  formar.  Why  ho 

feels  farmers,  left  alone,  can  .ften  solve  their  own  prob- 
lems better  tiian  Washington. 

29.  Your  brain's  unreolixad  powers.  Sev^en  new  findings  to 
help  you  use  your  brain  more  efficiently. 

30.  Britain's  indastructibta  "Old  Man."  What  Sir  Winston 

Churchill  is  doing  in  retirement. 

31.  Ara  (urias  giving  away  loo  much  monayf  Fantastic 
awards  juries  hand  out  because  they  confuse  compassion 
wiih  common  sen.se. 

32.  My  last  best  days  on  oarth.  In  her  own  words  a  youn^ 
mother,  learning  she  had  cancer,  tells  how  she  decided  to 
make  this  the  '"best  year  of  her  life."' 

33.  Foroiga-aid  mania^Row  the  billions  we've  given  hav* 
brought  mainly  disapnointment  and  higher  taxes. 

34.  Out  whara  fat  pianos-  ara  bom.  Story  of  Edward  .\ir 
Force  Base,  where  10,000  men  baitWwind,  sand  and  speed 
barriers  to  keep  us  supreme  in  the  sky. 

35.  Life  in  those  United  States.  Humorous  anecdotes  revesl« 
ing  quirks  of  human  nature. 

36.  Man's  most  playfol  ftiand:  Itta  Land  Ottar.  Intefesting 
facts  about  this  amusing  animal. 

37.  Why  nol  a  faroitn-sorvica  careorT  How  our  Stato  De. 
partment  is  making  foreign  service  attractive  tc  young  men. 
3S.  A  naw  doal  In  rtio  old  firohousa.  How  one  town  got 
lower  taxes,  freater  protection  combining  fire  and  police. 

39.  Crazy  man  on  Crasy  Horse.  Meet  the  man  whoas 
statue  of  an  Indian  will  be  the  largest  in  history. 

40.  Thoir  business  te  dynamilo.  How  the  manufacture  of 
this  explosive  has  been  made  one  of  the  safest  indiMtries. 

41.  Hte  bost  castamors  aro  babies.  How  a  kitchen  strainer 
and  a  pint  of  mashed  peas  became  the  Gerber  Products  Co. 

42.  Smoky  Mountain  magic.  Why  this,  our  moat  ancient 
mountain  range,  has  more  visit<H^  than  any  other. 

43.  Call  for  Mr.  tmargoncy.  Meet  the  Emergent-y  Police, 
who  gel  8  million  New  Yorkers  out  of  trouble. 

44.  Boouty  by  tha  mite.  How  landscape  rngineers  prova 
roadside  planting  is  lifesaving  as  well  as  beautiful. 

45.  Humor  In  uniform.  True  storiea  of  tlie  funny  side  of 
I  iie  in  our  .\rmed  Forces. 

46.  Sevan  economic  faMaclos.  The  American  Economic 
Foundation  explodes  misconceptions  about  our  economy. 

47.  Admlrol  of  Itis  Oieak  Cil  Float.  Stor>-  of  Stavros  Kiar- 
ckss,  who  has  won  a  igrtuBt  boctuig  •&— aa4  carryiof— cil. 

MM  -^ 


i»AM  im 


THE  DA?LY  TAR  HIIL 


THURSDAY,  OCTOBER  11,  195S 


tic 

^s^ 

aift 

^Car^eel 

s 

P 

o 

RTS 

.Lar 

ry  C 

heek, 

Spcn%  Editor 

Tor  Babies  Work  For  Scrap  With   Terps 


Freshmen  Lost— But  Don't  Give  Up 

Many  Tar  Heel  football  followers  were  Ijitterly  disappointed  when 
the  Carolina  freshman  football  team  went  down  to  defeat  before  Wake 
Forest  ;*i  their  opening  game  of  the  year  last  Friday  night. 

To  some,  this  initial  less  meant  that  the  cry  'wait  'til  next  year' 
h»d  lost  its  nteaning.   They  were  afraid  that  Jim  Tatum  had  failed 
in  his  effort  VI  recruit  top  flight  material  for  future  varsity  use. 
We  don't  believe  the  situation  is  as  bad  as  these  pessimistic  fans 
think.    Contrary  to  what  the  score  of  last  Friday  V  game  might  seem 
to  Indicate,  there  is  a  wealth  of  material  on  the  Tar  Baby  squad.   The 
linemen  are  big,  strong  and  fast,  and  the  backs  have  all  the  earmarks 
of  future  greatness. 
DEACON  FROSH  HAVE  STRONG  SQUAD 

Why  did  they  lose?  Several  factors  played  a  part  in  the  game's  out- 
come.  One  important  one  that  everybody  seems  to  have  Overlooked  is  | 
the  high  calibre  of  the  Wake  Forest  team.  The  Deaclets  Tiave  a  sharp  : 
aggressive  bunch  of  footballers  who  will  be  hard  to  handle  in  future 
years.  j 

V^aVe  Forest  operated  better  as  a  team.    They   are  a  smooth 
working,  well  coordinated  unit.    For  most  of  the  evening,  they  con-  , 
trolled  the  ball,  never  giving  the  Tar  Babies  a  chance  to  make  a       j 
break. 
The   Tar   Babies   themselves   displayed   several   glaring   faults   that  i 
apparently  arose  from  a  lack  of  team  coordination.  Fumbles,  penalties 
and  defensive  lapses  were  the  order  of  the  day.   This  poor  team  play 
is  nt)t  surprising  when  you  realize  that  the  frosh  have  practiced   to-  ^ 
gether  very  little  as  a  team.    Most  of  their  time  so  far  this  season  i 
bais  been  spent  working  with  the  varsity,  playing  the  role  of  guinea  [ 
pig. 

The  prime  purpose  of  a  freshman  team  is  to  help  iT."U  varsity  and  i 
to  prepare  for  the  years  aheatl.  Freshman  teams  tend  to  be  assorted  ! 
groups  of  individuals  rather  than  a  cohesive  squad.  W-e  all  like  for  ; 
freshman  teams  to  win,  but  its  the  years  ahead  that  really  count.         | 

A  Struggle  For  Revival  ' 

Gymnastics  at  Carolina  is  struggling  for  revival,  but  the  cause  seems  | 
doomed.  In  tH^  words  of  Athletic  Director  Chuck  Erickson,  'There  i 
will  be  no  intercollegiate  g>-mnastics  at  Carolina  this  year."  I 

Some  people  have  seen  fit  to  criticize  the   UNC   Athletic   De-       j 
partment  for  letting  a  young  but  growing  sport  like  gymnastics  go 
by  the  boards.    But  the  reasons  behind  the  move  are  sound,  and 
the  decision  was  unavoidable. 
It  '^ould  have  been  a   long  time  between  stops"  for  a  Carolina  gym 
team  this  year.    The  mainstays  on  the  Tar  Heel  schedule  in  the  past  , 
have  been  such  schools  as  Army.  Navy,  S>Tacuse,   the   University  of  ■ 
Illinois    at    Chicago   and    Georgia    Tech..     .\s    anyone    can    see,    these  I 
schools  are  pretty  well  scattered,  and  the  expense  and  travel  time  in- 
volved make  it  almost  impossible  to  arrange  a  schedule. 

Another  important  factor  is  the  loss  of  Bill  Meade  as  coach.  Meade 
built  the  sport  here  at  UNC,  and  without  him,  things  have  come  to  a 
standstill.  With  no  coach  and  a  list  of  opponents  that  stretches  from 
the  northeast  to  the  midwest  to  the  deep  south,  the  o'ostacles  were  too 
great  to  overcome.    Hence,  no  gymnastics  at  Carolina  this  yea; .  | 

Briefs  From  The  Spori-s  Beat  | 

Athletic    Director    Erick.son    has    confirmed    reports    that    Harvard 
University  has  cancelled  its  basketball  game  with  the  Tar  Heels  sched- 
uled here  Jan   2.  I 
H»ryard  apparently  called  off  its  entire  southern  trip  because      j 
of  segregation   regulations   in  Georgia   and   Louisiann   where   they 
were  scheduled  to  play.  Although  the  northern  school  doesn't  have 
a  Negro  on  Its  roster,  they  apparently  were  not  willing  to  compete 
against  Georgia  Tech  and  Loyola  of  New  Orleans  as  a  matter  of 
principle. 
NEW  ASSISTANT  COACH  ADDED  , 
A  new  addition  to  the  football  coaching  staff  here  -^  .lark  Hcnne-  . 
mier.  who   for  several  years   wa^  a   key   man   on   Coach  Jim   Tatum's  ^ 
staff  at   Maryland.   Heiyiemier  is   being   hired  by  Tatum   personally,  I 
and  is  living  with  the  Tar  Heel  head  mtntor.  ^ 
Hennemier,  one  time  star  Duke  center,  left  Tatum's  fAaryland      \ 
staff  two  years  ago  to  coach  the  Calgary  team  in  the  Canadian      j 
League.    He  was  recently  dismissed  after  a  losing  streak.  j 
Floyd  "Chunk"  Simmons,  former  UNC  track  and  football  great  now 
making  a  bid  for  fame  and  glory-  in  HollywooH.  appearod  in  the  big- 
gest role  of  his  movie  career  last  Sunday  and  Monday  at  the  Varsity 
Theater.    The  picture  was  'Pillars  In  The  Sky'  starring  .Jeff  Chandler 
and  Dorothy  .Malone.. 


Stevens  To  Start 

Husky  Jim  Stevens,  210  pounder  from  Haielwood,  will  be  In  the 
starting  lineup  at  fullback  tomorrow  when  the  Carolina  Tar  Baby 
footballers  play  host  to  Maryland.  Game  time  is  2  p.m.  in  Kenan 
Stadium. 


Yank  Skipper  Takes  Win  In  Stride  •   . 

Stengel  Praises 
Kucks  And  Berra 


Tar  Heels  Go  Against 
Freshmen  In  Workout 


Coach  Jim  Tatum  borrowed  ths 
stoutest  freshman  offensive  play- 
ers and  shaved  the  varsity  against 


Frosh  Runners 
Top  Deaclets 

Carolina    freshman    cross    coun- 1 
try  runners  chalked  up  their  first 
win  of  the  season  ye.-iterday  after-  i 
noon  wh:n  they  defeated  the  Wake 
Forest     frosh     in     Winston-Selem, 
22-33.  *       I 

Carolina    harrier-  Cowles    Liip- 1 
fert    ^et    a    new    record    for    the  i 
course    vith    an    elapsed    time    of 
11:33.  Placing  second  to  his  team- 
mate was  Fick  Arthur  who  logged 
a  time  of  11:50  for  the  2.3  mile  ^ 
course.  i 

This   was   the   first   win   of  the 
season  for  the  Tar  Babies  who  lost , 
their  opening  match  to  the  Duke  < 
frosh  here  last  week. 

The  summary: 

1  —  Cowles  Liipfert,  C,  11:33; 
2— Fick  Arthur,  C,  11:50;  3  — 
Kennedy.  WF.  12:10;  4— Green.  C. 
12:14:  5— Whedee,  WF,  12:18;  6 
-^pflan,  WF,  12:25;  7— Baifwell, 
C.  .Jl2:i8:  8— Packard,,  C,  12:31; 
9  *rr-  BroadTvell,  WF,  12:^;  10— 
Cox.  WF.  12:42;   ll—Withrow,   C. 


them  in  a  spirited  defensive  scrim- 
mage here  yest?rday  as  the  Tar 
Heels  prepared  for  the  Georgia 
game  here  Saturday. 

The  def2ns:ve  work  was  in  the 
"cage"  of  canvas  nn  one  portion 
of  the  field,  and  not  open  to  the 
public.  Coaches  reported  a  gjod 
workout.  '  , 

Co>rh  Tafum  spent  most  of  th" 
t-me  on  the  outside  in  offensive 
work,  directed  by  quarterbac 
Dave  Reed.  Running  with  Reed 
in  the  No.  1  backfield  were  Ed 
Sutton  and  Larry  McMullen  at 
halfback  posts  and  Wally  Valg 
who  is  leading  the  nation  in  f>unt 
ing.  at  fullback. 

There  vas  cnntfnued  exr>erimen 
tat'on  in  the  back  line  with  Bill 
Hardison  at  center  and  .Jim  J^ne 
back  at  his  left  guard  slot.  End 
Paul  Pulley  of  Durham  turn°d  u- 
with  a  charleyhorse  and  was  ii 
light  gear.  He  is  expected  to  bf- 
ready  for  Saturday's  2  p.m.  kick 
off. 


By   WILL   GRIMSLEY 

BROOK.IYN.  Oct.  U.  i^n— Cru.sty 
Casey  Stengel  took  his  sixth  World 
Series  championship  in  stride  yes- 
terday, praising  Yogi  Berra  and 
pitcher  .Johnny  Kucks,  and  hintid, 
with  a  sly  wink,  he'll  be  back  to 
try  for  No   7  next  year. 

Joe  McCarthy,  also  of  the  New 
York  Yankees,  is  the  only  man- 
ager to  win  seven  world  baseball 
championships. 

"Well,  as  you  fellcws  know,  my 
contract  was  for  two  years  and  it 
ends  this  year,"  the  stumpy,  grey 
haired  skipper  said  in  the  hu  ^bub 
cf  the  Yankees'  victorious  dressing 
room. 

I'm  n')t  lalkin'4  nhont  next  year 
yet.  but  I'll  let  you  in  (m  a  secret 
— I'm  not  worried  about  '  where 
I'll   be  next  spring." 

Co-  wncrs  Del  Webb  and  Dan 
Toppping  and  General  Manager 
George  Weiss  were  among  the  first 
to  elbow  their  way  through  the 
throng  of  newsmen  and  photogra- 
phers to  shake  Casey's  hand. 

"We  haven't  talked  about  ;  yet. 
but  I  feel  sure  Casey  will  be  back 
in  1S57,"  said  Weiss. 

"The'  job  is   his  as-  long   as   ho 

Allen  Pleased 
With  Play  In 
Opening  Meet 

Varsity  coach  Marvin  Allen  saif! 
yesterday  he  was  "very  pleased' 
with  the  soccer  squad's  showing 
T.:ain>^t  Lvnr-hb'irg  Monday.  Caro- 
lina trounced  the  Hornets.  .5-0,  i'^  j 
its  fir.st  t3.st  of  the  season.  | 

"The  shooting  was  very  g  -od 
We  shot  wihen  we  had  a  chin?  | 
instead  of  trying  to  tee  the  ball  i 
•10,"  Allen  said.  "The  f-jrward  line, 
does  nee'tl  more  co:)rdination.  h^  j 
said. 

A'len  Slid  h»  fnind  some  "wea'c-  j 
nesses"    wh'?h    he    vnuld    try    t'j 
iron    out    bofore    the    Washirgt   n } 
inrl    Lee   game  on   Oct.   16  in    Vir- 
ginia. 

"I'd  like  t-)  see  the  halfbnck'? 
ighten  I'n  mnro  ^r\(\  ri^t  back  m 
'pfense  faster."   he  said. 

•'I'd  also  Ji''"  to  see  the  full- 
Sacks  get  a  I'ttle  more  afc"gr?.s'--ive 
They've  been  onllinc;  hack  too 
'"ar  "    Al'rn    added. 

The  Carolina  soccer  squad  is  ex- 
oprt?d  to  give  Maryland  tough 
fompstition  for  the  conference 
'•rr-vm  this  year.  Maryland  has 
had  a  virtual  "monopoly"  on  tihe 
title  for  several  years. 


wants  it."  added  Topping.  'I  feel 
sure  Casey  will  be  back." 

Stengel,  independently  wealthy 
with  more  oil  wells  than  baseball 
players,  has  indicated  several 
times  he  may  retire  from  ba$eball 
t,o  meet  his  wife's  request. 

The  centers  of  attention  in  the 
Yankee  quarters,  whore  bedlam 
was  rampant,  were  Berra,  the 
sturdy  little  catcher  whose  pair  of 
two-run  homers  put  the  9-0  victory 
over  Brooklyn  on  early  ice,  and 
Kucks,  the  23year-olrl  right-hander 
who  pitched  a  magnificent  three- 
hit  shutout. 


Squad  In 
Top  Shape 
For  Game 

By  BrLL  Kll<k» 

Carolina's  frssfajnan  fbotball 
team  stepped  up  preparations  on 
Navy  Field  yesterday  for  their 
clash  with  the  University  of  Mary- 
land yearlings  Friday  in  Kenan 
Stadium  at  2:00  p.m. 

Co.Hch  Fred  Tullai  sent  the  squad 
through  offensive  and  defensive 
maneuvers  yesterday,  and  for  the 
past  three  days,  has  been  drill- 
ing the  offense  as  a  unit  rather 
tiian  individually. 

The  Tar  Babies,  14-12  victims 
to  Wake  Forest  last  Friday,  should 
be  in  almost  top  physical  shape 
for  their  tilt  with  Maryland.  End 
John  Stunda  was  tihe  only  casual- 
ty from  the  Wake  Forest  gam? 
and  is  expected  to  be  ready  to  go 
Friday.  Stunda  suffered  a  slight 
knee  injury  and  has  been  taking 
it  easy  this  week. 

TULLAI  PLEASED 

In  reviewing  the  Wake  Forest 
game.  Coach  Tullai  said  that  he 
was  very  pleased  with  his  team's 
performance.  "We  made  mistakes 
and  we  fumbled  a  good  deal,"  said 
Tullai,  "but  of  course  that  was 
the  first  time  the  boys  had  play- 
ed together.  We've  seen  pictures 
of  the  game  and  the  hoys  know 
their  mistakes,"  he  added.  "I  think 
we'll  be  better  this  week  against 
Maryland.  I  don't  believe  the  team 
will  make  as  niany  mistakes  as 
tihey  did  agaimst  Wake  Forest." 

Tullai.  also  commended  the 
Wake  Ftrest  team.  "They  have  a 
good  club,"  he  said.  They  beat  us 
by  capitalizing  on  our  mistakes 
and  not  making  many  themselves. 

The  Tar  Baby  coach  d<-clined 
to  point  out  any  outstanding  play- 
ers in  the  Wake  Forest  game.  "I 
think  they  all  looked  good,"  said 
Tullai.  "T^ere  weren't  any  indi- 
vidual stars." 

TERPS  TOUCH 

Asked  what  he  thought  abojt 
the  Maryland  .squad,  Tullai  said: 
"1  don't  know  too  much  about  thorn 
I  but  1  think  they  have  a  pretty 
1  good  ball  club.  I  know  that  fic- 
havf»  two  go->d  ends  and  a  fine 
fullback,  but  other  than  that  ' 
don't  know.  I  think  we'll  do  okay 
Friday." 


Sutton  Paces  Squad 
In  Rushing^  Figures 


The  UNC  Office  of  Sports  In- 
formation made  available  yester- 
day statistics  concerning  the  ef- 
forts of  the  varsity  football  team 
and  of  individual  players. 

Leading  the  Tar  Heels  in  rush- 
ing Is  Ed  Sutton  with  an  average 
of  7.€  yards  per  carry.  His  total 
yardage  for  the  season  now  stands 
at  165  yards  in  22  attempts.  Trail- 
ing Sutton  is  Giles  Gaca  with  a 
5.3  average  per  carry. 

The  top  Carolina  passer  is  Ron 
Marquette  with  a  record  of  3  com- 
pletions in  twelve  attempts,  for  a 
total  yardage  of  69  yards. 

Leading  performer  in  the  punt- 
ing department  is  Wally  Vale.  He 
is  also  the  top  punter  in  the  At- 
lantic Coast  Conlerence.  The  jun 
ior  fullback  is  sporting  a  40  yard 
average  despite  having  a  kick 
blocked  by  N.  C.  State.  Helping 
to  keep  up  his  average  is  the  tre- 
mendous 84  yard  boot  he  made 
against  Oklahoma. 


Sutton  leads  the  team  and  also 
the  conference  in  kickoff  returns 
having  run  back  6  for  a  total  yard- 
age of  101.  In  addition,  Sutton 
has  snared  3  aerials  for  31  yards. 

In  team  performance  the  Tar 
Heels  lead  their  opponents  in  on- 
ly one  department.  Carolina  punt 
ers  have  an  overall  average  of  38 
yards  as  opposed  to  their  oppon- 
ents' 35. 

UNC  has  run  up  24  first  downs 
in  the  first  three  games  while 
their  opponent^  have  totaled  44 
Carolina  has  gained  161  yards 
passing  and  461  rushing.  Their  op 
ponents  have  rolled  up  885  yards 
on  the  ground  and  have  covered 
205  yards  through  the  air  lanes. 
i  Total  offense  on  UNC  is  622 
yards. 

The  Carolina  gridders  have  al- 
lowed 76  points  to  be  scored  while 
scoring  only  6. 


Dodger  power  was  so  throttled 
in  the  finnl  three  games  that  the 
defeated  vCiild  champs  were  able 
to  get  only  seven  hits  and  one  riin. 

Berra  disclosed   that   he   hit   his 

two    home    runs    for    his    mother,  ^^^.^             ^^  ^„,^^ 

Mrs.  Paulme  Berra,  m  a  S  .  Lou.s  f  >.    ^^^^^   ^^.J  ..^^   ^    .^^^    ^^^^ 

hospital    after    havmg    a    leg    re-  ^^^^    .^    ^j^^^^    ^„    ^j,.. 

"''''^-  way. 

"I      talked      to      Mom      Monday 

night,"    the   Yankee   catcher   said.  'After  we  got  that  4-0  lead  on 

She  asked  mo  to  hU  a  home  run  Yogi's   two  home  runs   I   was   able 

yesterday.  I  tried  my'darndcst,  but  to  relax  a  little,  hut  I  didn't  want 

I  couldn't  do  it.    So  I  got  two  to-  to    take    any    chances.   Ca.sey    and 

lay"  Jim      Turner      (\ankee      pitching 

Somebody    asked    if   Yogi    knew  coach)  kept  telling  me  to  keep  the 

that    the.se    home    runs    gave    him  ball  low.  Today  I  did."^    « 

the  record  of  runs-batted-in  for  a  The  young  pitcher  said  his  wife, 

■iingle  series— a   total  of   10,  brat  Barbara,  and  a  brother-in-law  were 

ng  the  nine-run  mark  set  in  1928  in  the  stands. 

,y  I.ou  Gehrig.  "My  dad,  a  retired  meat  packing 

"Gosh,  is  that  rifTlt?"  Yogi  ex-  foreman,   wasn't   here,"  he   added, 

•'uimed.    "Naw.   I   didn't   know   it.  'He's   64   and   I   wouldn't   let    him 
Why.  I'm  right  proud  of  that."         I  come— I   was    afraid    he'd   get   too 

Kucks,      a      boyish,     23-year-old  I  excited." 
from   Jersey    City.   N.   J  ,   said    he  I      The  Yankees,  old   hands  at   this 

was    fnolins    the    Dodgers    with    a  business,    took    their    latest    cham- 

fast  ball  that  sank  and  a  .slider.  'Morship   ralmlv    and    without   any 

"I  knew  Casey  had   a  bunch  of }  sophomoric   yelling   and   shouting. 


BNOMFKROr 
LIONEL 


.cuni   I 
TklEVORl 


r«^!iV^^^ 


NOW  SHOWING 


LATE  SHOW  SAT.  NITE 
RlGULAR  SHOWING  STARTS  SUNDAY 

r  THE         ^^''- 

FUNNIEST  / 
f 


NOW    ' 
PLAYING 


^^i?S^  nf-  -  -  ^^Z^^      "«  BUSSED  miEF! 


4  WONDERFUL  STARS  IN  AN  EXCITING  SUCl  OF  LIFE! 

;x-x.«.-.:*<::.:  ..X  ;.:.,;..v;Kjji3>.:;:r;.'S¥Sij;f>j(>. 

.....  BE TTE   DAVIS 
ERNEST  BORGNINB 
DEBBIE  REYNOI.DS 


THP 

CATERED 

AFFAIR 


Prom  M«0-M 


BARRY   FITZGERALD 


t  .•»»<«<.*.■;.■»>; 


"VERf  FUNNY!  A  FULL 
BA8  OF  BRITISH 
COMIC  CHARACTERS!" 

— Winslfn   Post 

"A  NILARiOUS. 
SATIRICAL  COMEDY!  A 
HOWLING  DELIGHT!' 


PffflV  P/l06Ji§, 


.   GET  POSTHASTE  TO 

\  THE  GHIlOr 

4  — r.p»th,i  i,„,, 

|"NtGHir  COMICAL! 
I  WEIRD  AND  WONDER- 

^    FIIL!"   — Cjmeron.  N«v»» 

"A  MUST!  FDNNiER 
TNAN  NO  TIME  FOR 
SERSEANTS'  AND 
INFINITELY  MGRE 

CLEVER  !"-<;'tti»n.  M.I  iM 


'^ 


Net  Squad  Is 
Working  For 
Cavalier  Meet 

Due  to  the  return  of  favorable 
weather  this  week,  fall  tennis 
practice  is  now  in  full  swing.  The 
recent  seige  of  bad  weather  lo- 
cally had  brought  the  sessions  to 
a  standstill. 

Coach  Ham  Strayhorn  said  yes- 
terday that  since  the  resumption 
of  practice,  the  squad  has  becyi 
rounding  into  shape  nicely. 

Returning  veteran.s  include  Cap- 
tain Bob  Bortner,  Ed  Hudgins. 
Steve  Bank,  John  Foster,  and 
Frank  Livingston.  Also  to  appear 
with  the  varsity  is  Geoff  Black, 
a  sophomore,  number  one  man  on 
last   year's    freshman    .squad.  ' 

3trayhorn  expfc.sscd  optimism  j 
about  his  freshman  .squad.  He  said  i 
'.hat  he  believed  that  the  squad  i 
vill  be  w?ll  above  average.  A- 1 
mong  the  fro<h  candidates  are  I 
Marshal  Happer  of  Kinston.  Stale  | 
High  School  champ,  and  Bennett" 
Keys.  South  Carolina  High  Srhool 
champion. 

The  varsity  i.s  workins;  o"!  in 
preparation  for  the  traditional 
match  with  Virginia  preceding  t-ic 
UNC-Virginia    football    game. 


Monogrammers  AAeet 

John  Bilich  has  announced  that 
there  will  be  a  meeting  of  the 
Monogram  Club  tonight  at  8:00  in 
the  Monogram  Club.  All  members 
must  be  present. 


Lovelies 

from  our 

Lady  Milton 
Shop 

V»ry  complete  assortment  of 
worsted  flannel  skirts,  rich 
tsweeds  in  sport  coat  patterns, 
ail  In  ivy  model,  lined  in  the 
seat     $12.95 

Everything  you  like  in  Bermuda 
length  shorts  from  $5.95 

Complete  assortment  of  famous 
Braemer    cashmere    sweaters 
in  pullovers   and  cardigans 
from  $29,50 

Our  imported  tartan  skirts,  in- 
dividually tailored  in  Scot- 
land   from  $22-50 

Add  spice  to  your  wardrobe 
from  our  unique  coTiecton. 

CUt!)in8  Cupboard 


CLASSIFIEDS 


PAPERBACKED  BOOKS  —  Good 
used  novels,  detective  yarns  and 
non-fi^.'tion  at  3  for  25c  in  the 
stand  by  our  front  door.  The 
Intimate   Bookshop. 

FOR  SALE:  UPRIGHT  PIANO  IS 
fair  condition.  Tel.  2236. 


:jr 


The  famous  La  Coste  shirt  —  imported  from  France  — 
widely  enjoyed  by  golf  and  tennis  players  (perfect 
unrfcr  sport  jackets).  Featured  are  the  fashioned  collar 
find  cuffs  —  which  never  lose  their  shape  in  washing 
—  the  Bx\ra  long  tail  makes  it  secure  —  Washable 
Zephyr  wool,  long  sleeve,  in  light  oxford  grey,  navy  white, 
Carolina  blue,  red,  and  tan  heather. 


FOR  SALE  B'V  ORIGINAL  OWN- 
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Suiinw  and  warmer.  High  today 


tJ.!!.?.   '  LTBRARt 
SERIALS  BEPT. 
BOX  870 
CHAPEL  HILL.    N.C. 


MERCHANTS 

The  students  are  getting  hot.  Seo 
editorial,  page  2. 


VOL.    LVII    NO.    19 


Complete  (JP)  Wire  Service 


CHAPEL  HILL,  NORTH  CAROLINA,  FRIDAY,  OCTOBER  12,  1956 


Offices   in   Graham   Memorial 


FOUR   PAGES   THIS    ISSUE 


Bryant  Says  Committee  Is  Ready  To  Name  CU  President 


Cornerstone  Layinq 

Above  is  an  artisf  s  conception  of  the  layng  of  the  cornerstone  of 
Old  East  Building.  It  was  October  12,  1893,  that  General  William 
Richardson  Davie  presided  at  the  cornerstone  ceremonies  for  the  first 
state  university  building. 


UlStC  Founding 
Wifl  Be  Shdwn 
At  11  Today 

The  founding  of  the  University 
by  General  William  Richardson 
Davie  will  be  depicted  in  pageant- 
ry and  pantomine  today  at  11  a.m. 
under  supervision  of  the  Carolina 
Playmakers. 

Numerous  actors  and  musicians 
will  be  called  upon  to  pantomine 
the  cornerstone  laying  of  Old  East 
Building — oldest  state  university 
structure  in  the  nation. 

The  procession  will  assemble  at 
the  steps  of  South  Building,  where 
the  University  Band  and  The  Men's 
Glee  Club  will  entertain. 

The  pageant  will  then  proceed 
to  Old  East  where  the  cornerstone 
laving  and  pantomine  will  take 
place.  From  there  the  assembled 
group,  led  by  the  band,  will  march 
to  the  Davie  Poplar.  The  program 
will  then  conclude  with  the  sing- 
ing of  "Hark  the  Sound." 

The  163rd  annual  event  will  be 
the  last  one  as  official  master  of 
ceremonies  for  Chancellor  Robert 
B  House.  He  retires  at  the  end  of 
this  school   year. 

The  AFROTC  and  NROTC  will 
provide  color  guards  for  the  event. 

Pictures  of  the  campus  will  be 
taketi  from  a  helicopter  by  photo 
lab  personnel  during  the  cere- 
monies. 


WILLIAM  FRIDAY 
.  .  .will  he  get  it 


Traftic  Groujj 
Continues  On 
Car  Problem 


By  NEIL  BASS 


Committee  Will 
Tell  Decision 
On  Thursday 

RALEIGH,   i/P)  —  A   committee 
^  charged  with  recommending  a  new 
•  president     for    the     Consolidated 
•[University  of  North  Carolina  will 
;  •  make  its  report  to  the  Executive 
Committee  of  the  University  trus- 
tees next  Thursday. 

Gov.  Hodges  yesterday  called 
'  »  special  meeting  of.  the  Execu- 
1  live  Committee  to  be  held  in  his 
»  office   Thursday   at    10:30   a.m. 

Th?  Governor  called  the  meet- 
1  ing  after  Victor  S.  Bryant  of  Dur- 
!|  ham  chairman  of  the  selection 
:  committee,  notified  him  it  is  ready 
to  make  its  recommendation. 
Many  sources  close  to  the  Uni- 
i  versity  b?lieve  the  one  to  be  rec- 
■'  ommended  for  the  post  will  be 
!  William  C.  Friday  who  has  served 
.[  as  acting  president  of  the  Uni- 
'  versity  since  last  March. 

Actual  election  of  a  University 


Ballot  Boxes  Voted 
Back  To  All  Dorms 


Big  Parade,  Pep  Rally  To  Start 
Homecoming  Festivities  Tonight 


Homeconaini^' festivities  will  be- _ 
gin  t«night  at  6:45  p.m.  in  the 
form  of  a  parade,  which  starts  in  ; 
froiit  of  Woollen  Gym,  and  will  1 
feature  th«  UNC  band,  majorettes 
and  cheerleaders. 

At  7:15  p.m..  immediately  af- 
ter the  parade,  a  pep  rally  will  b? 
staged  at  Memorial  Hall,  at  which 
time  Coach  Jim  Tatum  will  intro- 
duce the  Carolina  team  and  Chan- 
cellor Robert  House  will  entertain 
participants  with  a  few  numbers 
on  his  harmonica. 

In  regard  to  tomorrow's  game 
with  Georgia,  Head  Cherleader  Jim 
Bynum  issued  this  statement  to 
members  of  the  student  body: 

•'You   will   notice   elsewhere    in 


this  paper  statements  by  Ed  Sut-* 
ton    -and    Bob    Young.    Both    have  1 
expressed  concern,  and  rightly  so,; 
at  the  lack  of  spirit  which  has  pre- 
vailed on  the  campus  this  fall. 

'Quite  naturally,  this  has  had  an 
effect  on   the  Carolina   team.   Our 
boys    aren't    superhuman;    neither 
is  our  coach.  They  need  rur  sup-  ■ 
port.  All  the  coaching  and  all  the  | 
practice    in    the    world    can't    take 
the   place   cf   inspiration,   and   the  i 
only  way  our  team  can  be  inspired 
,  Is   through   you.   their  supporters. ! 
"Do    you    really    want    them    to '. 
win?    How   can    they   know   unless 
you    tell    them?    For   one   time,    if 
never   again,   lets   bring    back    the 
true   'Carolina    Spirit.'  "  | 


Students:  Not 
Getting  Mail? 

Many  students  have  not  been 
getting  their  mail  beacuse  it  is 
not  addressed  properly,  according 
to  Ray  Jefferies,  assistant  to  the 
dean  of  student  affairs. 

Jefferies  said  yesterday  that  his 
office  has  received  much  mail 
which  was  not  properly  addressed. 
This  will  mean,  Jefferies  said,  that 
students  will  not  get  this  mail  un- 
til he  and  his  staff  have  had  time 
to  put  the  proper  addresses  on  the 
mail. 


I      Student  government  Traffic  Ad 

I  visory  Commissions  principal  ob- ;  pre.sdi?nt  will  be  done  by  the  full 
jective  is  to  "get  the  merchants  gj^rd  of  Trustees.  If  the  Execu- 
bchind  the  students"  in  attempt  ;  tive  Committee  accepts  the  se- 
to  lift  parkin«  restrictions  on  lection  committee  report,  a  special 
Columbia    Street.    Chairman    Wil-    meeting  of  the   full   board   is   ex- 

1  burn  Davis  said  yesterday.  ;  p^^tgd    to    follow    within    a    few 

!      The  commisson  met   at   4:30  in'   we^^^s. 
Graham  Memorial.  '      The     Consolidated     University. 

'  "We  intend  to  solve  the  problem  '  «hich  is  composed  of  the  Universi- 
in  the  very  near  future,  Davis  i  »>'  at  Chapel  Hill,  North  Carolina 
said.  i  State  College  in  Raleigh  and  Wo- 

1  i  man's  College  in  Greensboro,  has 

Concerning  probable  response  j  been  headed  by  an  acting  presi- 
from  the  merchants,  Davis  said,  j  jent  since  June  of  1955  when  Gor- 
"We  are  expecting  full  coopera- ;  don  Gray  was  given  a  leave  of  ab- 
tion  and  support."  |  sen^e  to  become  Assistant  Defense 

DrVERT  ACTION  '  Secretary  in  Washington. 

The  Commission  intends  to  di- 1  Cray's  resignation  was  accepted 
vert  its  action  Id  the  general  park- 1  ^y  ^^e  Executive  Committee  last 
ing  problem  on  campu.s  after  the  |  November  and  Dr.  J.  Harris  Purks 
pi-esent  Columbia  Street  "problem  '    *■*  continued  as  acting  president 

-4s-!M>lv«hiecording'to  Davis.        -  *«f  thv  University.   Friday  became 

acting    president    la.st    March    when 


Seek  To  Nominate  Chancellor 

Sonny  Evans,  left,  and  Miss  Martha  Barber,  center,  are  two  mem- 
bers of  the  student  committee  to  hear  student  views  on  the  nomina- 
tion of  a  new  chancellor.  Frank  Crowther  is  the  student  being  inter- 
viewed. (Photo  t>y  Norman  Kanton) 

Chancellor  Committee  Will 
Hear  More  Nominees  Today 


Commission  members  are: 

Chairman  Davis.  Ed  Hudgins.  In- 

terfraternity  Council  president;  Bill 


Purks  became  the  State's  Director 
of  Higher  Education. 

Friday.  36.  a  Raphine,  Va..  native. 


Pruett.    Clark    Hinkly   and    Darwin    ^ad  served  since  1951  as  assistant 
Bell. 


Davis    will    appear,    along    with 


to  the   president  and   later  as  sec- ' 
rotary  to  the  Consolidated  Univens- 


Th(- Student  comiHittOe  appointed  know  the  details  of  the  report 
to  help  .select  a  chancellor  to  from  this  committee  before  we 
succeed  retiring  Chancellor  Rob-  meet  with  the  trustees  on  Nov.  3. 
ert  House?  met  yesterday  for  the 
second   consecutive    day. 

The    report    of   the   group,    with 
Sonnv   Evans     as     chairman     and 


By    CLARKE    JONES 

The  Student  Lesislature  last 
night  passed  a  bill  restoring  ballot 
boxes  to  every  dormitory  during 
campus  elections. 

The  Legislature  also  pas.sed  an 
amendment  to  the  bill  designating 
each  dormitory  "as  an  election 
sub-district  with  the  president  of 
the  dormitory  serving  as  admin- 
istrator of  the  sub-district." 

Defeated  was  a  measure  calling 
for  the  establishment  of  a  campus 
coordinating  committee  designed 
to  prevent  conflicts  of  important 
events  of  interest  to  the  students 
The  bill  concerning  th?  ballot 
box  restoration  was  strongly  de- 
bated before  it  came  to  :•  vote.  The 
main  is^uc  was  whether  or  not 
boxes  in  each  dormitorj-  would 
bring  more  vrtes  th?n  having 
them  in  centralized  districts  on 
the    campus    during    elections. 

University  Party  Chairman  Mike 
Weinman,  who  said  the  UP  would 
not  gain  anything  politically  by 
defeating  the  bill,  stated  "In  na- 
tional and  local  elections  the  vot- 
ers do  not  have  a  ballot  box  in 
every    apartment" 

He  also  said  "We  could  get  a 
better,  cleaner  and  more  repre- 
sentative   vote"    by    having    ballot 

boxes    in    central    districts. 

Studetit     Party     member     John 

Brooks   was  of   the   opinion  there 
1  would    be    more    voting    if    boxes 

were   in   each   dormitory.   He  said 
1  he    "wanted    the    girls    in    Smith 

(dormitory    to    vote   in   Smith,    the 

grls    in    Kenan    ti    vote    in    Kenan. 

etc.  The  s.^me  thing  is  true  for  the 

boy.s." 
In   other   matters,    the      Legisla- 


President  Bob  Young,  before  a  'l>-  "<^  ^'^s  reared  at  Dallas,  N.  C. 
Chapel  Hill  Merchant's  Association  a"^'  ^^^  educated  at  Wake  Forest 
meeting  this  morning  at  eleven  College.  State  College  and  the  Un- 
o'clock.  iversity  where  he  took  hi,-;  law  de-  < 

gree  in  1913.  j 

The    commission    chairman    will        The  selection  committee  to  rec- j 
submit  a  plea  to  merchants  to  back  ,  ommend  a  university  president  was 


I'm  sure  every  interested  .student 
realizes  his  responsibility  in  let- 
ting his  opinions  be  known  before  ture: 

the  committee."  i.  Elected  John  Brooks.  Sonny 
Procedure  sugge-^iti-'d  by  Evans  Evans  and  Sonny  Hallford  to  a 
for  bringing  a  name  before  the  three-year,  a  two-year  and  a  one- 
presented  before  a  trustee  com- j  committee  is  that  the  student  de-  year  seat,  respectively,  to  the 
mittee  on  Nov.  3  b^'  President  Bob  ;  cide  on  the  nominee  he  wishes  to  Grah.am  Memorial  Board  of  Direct- 


.Martha  Barber  and  Tom  Lainbcth 
as    committee    members,    will    be 


Informal  Opening  Planned 
By  Institute  Of  Government 


students  in  presenting  a  request  to 
the  town  board  of  alderman  for 
lifting  of  the  two-hour  parking  re- 
striction on  Columbia. 

Next  commission  meeting  wll  bo 
hold  Monday  afternoon  at  four 
o'clock. 

"Everyone    is    invited    to   attend 


appointed  shortly  after  Gray's  res- 
ignation was  accepted  last  No- 
vember. In  addition  to  Bryan,  its 
menyb?rs  are:  Kemp  D.  Battle. 
Rocky  .Mounty;  Hortrtn  Doughton, 
Statesville;  Dr.  Henry  Mann,  En- 
glehard;  Rudolph  Mintz,  Wilming- 
ton: Mrs.  Albert  H.  Latrop,  Ashe- 
ville:  Dr.  Shahane  Taylor.  Greens- 
the  meeting,  "  Davis  said.  Sugges-  bcro;  W.  Frank  Taylor,  Goldsboro: 
tions  and  discussion  are  welcomed,  and  Mrs.  Charles  W.  Tillett,  Char- 
he  said.  .  lotte. 


Young    and    the   student    selection 
committee   members. 

Chairman  Evans  said,  "We  are 
very  pleased  with  the  turnout  for 
yesterdays'  meting,  but  the  com- 
mittee of  course  hasn't  arrived 
at  any  conclusions  vet.  We  assure 


present,  and  that  he  find  out 
•something  about  his  backgiound, 
past  history  and  experience. 

Evans  stressed  that  idoas  con- 
corning  the  type  of  individual 
who  would  make  a  g  :od  chancellor 
as  well   as  actual   names  are   wel- 


you    that    the    student    body    will    comed. 


2.  Passed  by  special  order  of 
business  a  resolution  by  Wein- 
man to  "nd^^rse  the  student  govern- 
n^ent  Traffic  Advisory  Commiss- 
ion. 

3.  Acclaimed  Miss  Martha  Bar- 
ber as  rules  committee  chairman. 


IDC  Holds  First  Meeting 
At  Carolina  Inn  Banquet 


An  informal  opening  of  the  In- 
stitute of  Government  Building 
will  take  place  today. 

The  building  is  being  opened  to 
the  public  for  the  first  time  in 
connection  with  "University  Day," 
celebrated  today  as  the  anniversary 
of  the  1893  cornerstone  laying  of 
Old  East,  the  oldest  building  on 
Campus. 

Formal  dedication  of  the  build- 
ing will  be  next  spring.  The  build- 
ing will  be  open  all  day  today  for 
public  inspection. 

Although  it  has  an  offical  name, 
this  larg?,  three-winged  structure 
of  Georgian  Colonial  architecture 
has  none  of  the  familiar  wrought- 
iron  letters  proclaiming  its  name. 

R  is,  at  present,  being  called  a 
variety  of  names:  the  Institute  of 
Government  Building;  State  High- 
way Patrol  Headquarters;  "that 
new  building  down  by  Woollen 
Cyrix  wtjh  all  the  top  cars  by  it." 

However,  this  new,  million-dol- 
lar building  is  officially  known  as 
the  Joseph  Palmer  Knapp  Build- 
ing, named  for  the  New  York  in- 
surance exeputive  and  magazine 
publisher.  The  building  was  made 
possible  by  a  gift  of  $500,000  from 
the  Knapp  Foundation  and  an 
enual  amount  from  the  1953  sess- 
ion of  the  General  Assembly. 

The  Knapp  Building,  now  being 
occupied  by  the  Institute  of  Gov- 
ernment,  is   at   the   east   gateway 

(See  OPENING,  Page  3) 


Young,  Sutton  Express 
Concern  Over  Spirit 


Informal  Opening  Today 


Mrs.  Joseph  P.almer  Knapp  stands  in  front  of  th*  building  which 
was  named  for  her  husband.  The  building,  whic>i  hoUMS  the  Insti- 
tute of  Government,  is  planning  to  have  an  informal  opening  today 
for  the  public. 


Student  Body  President  Bob 
Young  and  Football  Co-captain 
Ed  Sutton  have  expressed  con- 
cern over  the  University  students 
school  spirit,  or  the  lack  of  it, 
displayeci  at  the  throe  football 
games  to  date. 

Stutton  said  in  a  statement 
yesterday.  "How  can  you  expect 
oui'  ioam  to 
pull  itself  up 
f«r  a  ball  game 
week  in  and 
week  out  all  b> 
itself  when  the 
team  members 
hear  wry  com- 
ments and  deri- 
sions from  yoi 
who  should  be 
the  backbone 
and  the  heart 
of  their  strength." 

Statements  by  President  Young 
and  Sutt(m  follow. 

Young  said: 

"I  do  not  feel  that  the  Caro- 
lina spirit  is  dead.  All  it  needs 
is  some  encouragement.  I  chal- 
lenge each  student  to  respond 
wholeheartedly  to  the  words  of 
football  captain,  Ed  Sutton. 

"I  am  sure  we  have  one  of  the 
best  coaching  staffs   in   the  oa- 


SUTTON 


tion.  1  am  sure  that  our  Tur 
Heels  could  be  among  the  best 
in  the  nation.  For  three  weeks 
we  have  sat  back  and  hopefully 
expected  the  coaches  and  the 
team  to  win  without  our  suppi)rt. 
This  can  never  be.  If  the  Tar 
Heels  are  to  win.  we  must  all 
support   their  very  effort. 

"It  is  not  just  Tatum's  Tar 
Heels.  It  is  not  "a  professional 
team."  Although  they  have  been 
branded  as  such,  they  are  our 
Tar  Heels  —  yours  and  mine. 
Let's  prove  that  to  them.  Re- 
member that  victories  and  do- 
feats  can  fade  with  time,  but 
the  Carolina  spirit  should  and 
must  go  on  forever." 

Sutton   issued  the  following: 

"Listen  to  me,  my  Carolina, 
as  if  I  were  a  dying  man  begging 
for  that  one  more  precious 
breath  that  you  could  give  that 
would  make  me  well  again.  We 
ar^"  dying  hero  at  Carolina,  nit 
intellectually,  but  in  spirit.  It 
has  been  a  gradual  process,  but 
it  is  about  over,  or  is  it?  Only 
you  have  the  answer.  It's  in 
your  hands  now. 

"Did  I  ever  think  that  the 
Carolina  spirit  that  once  was' 
could  ever  fade  away?  Did  I  ever 
(See  YOUNG.  Page  3) 


The  Interdormitory  Council 
opened  academic  year  meetings 
with  a  banquet  Wednesday  night 
in  the  Carolina  Inn. 

President  Sonny  Hallford  op.en- 
ed  the  banquet  with  a  welcoming 
message  to  dormitory  presidents 
and  IDC  representatives,  admin- 
istration officials  and  stiident  gov- 
ernment leaders.  .Administration 
officials  and  student  government 
leaders  were  guests  invited  to  at- 
tend by  the  Council. 

Af'.er  the  meal.  Council  Vice 
President  Neil  Bass  administered 
oath  to  recently  elected  IOC  rep- 


resentatives. 

Administration  guests  were  in- 
tr.^duced  by  Council  Treasurer 
Bob  carter.  These  were: 

Dean  of  Women  Kathcrine  Car- 
michaol.  Director  of  Housing 
James  Wadsworth,  Director  of  Stu- 
dent Activities  Sam  Magill  and 
Mrs.  Richard  Neill,  personnel  ad- 
visor to  women. 

Sti'dent  government  leaders 
were  introduced  by  Council  Sec- 
retary Tom  Walters.  These  were: 

President  of  the  Student  body 
Bob  Young:  Vice  President  Simny 
Evans:  sccretarv.  Miss  Jackie  Md- 


ridge;   Treasurer  John   Kerr: 

Miss  Elaiiio  Burns,  president. 
Independ?nt  Women's  Council; 
Mi>s  Linda  Mann,  acting  director, 
Graham  Me^iorial;  Tom  Lambeth, 
president,  Graham  Memorial  Ac- 
tivities Board:  T.m  Synder.  IDC 
summer  school  president. 

Presentation  of  awards  was 
mad?  by  President  Hallford. 

Outstanding  dormitory.  1955-56 
— Mangiim,  .Al  .Mphin,  president: 
Second  place  dormitory — Everett, 
Whit  Whitfield,  president:  Third 
olace  dorm  tory  —  Cobb.  Steve 
Lycn.  president. 


IDC  Oath  Administered 

Interdormitory.  Council  Vice  President  Neil  Bass  is  shr.wn  administering  cath  to  recently  elected 
IOC  representatives.  The  oath  was  edmir^stered  at  a  Wednesday  night  banquet  held  by  the  IDC  in  the 
Carolina  Inn. 


Mk%9  TWO 


THE  tifiny'tAR  HtEL 


FRIDAY,  OCToii*  12.  1f$«'^'^  "'  ^*!?^ 

„ '     t  — •  "■' 


TTq  Thf|  Milking  M§rchan|s: 
the  kumbiings 


FOR  MOltE  MARRIAGE  COURSES 


CAROLEIDOSCOPE 


\j   a/vi 


ToAvn  Manajicr  I  oni  Rose  was 
technically  correct  when  he  said 
'  l.ack  of  parking  space  in  Chapel 
Flill  is  a  problem  belonging  to 
the  University  and  not  the  town. " 

Bm  he  also  was  reflecting  the 
sentiment  of  a  large  portion  ol 
town  hall  and  ot  the  merchants  of 
Chapel  Hill— a  sentiment  which 
says: 

'To  heck  with  the  students. 
Ihev  are  here.  1  hcv  tan't  leave. 
AVe  have  a  monopoly  on  their 
money.' 

This  is  a  bad  sentimeiu.  This  is 
quite  a  bit  like  biting  the  hand  that 
feeds  you. 

For  several  vears  now  several  of 
the  townspeople— niostlv  merchants 
— ha\e  been  milLing  the  students 
indistriniinatelv.  It  has  been  an 
eas\   process. 

F  he  student  generation  here  is 
four  \ears.  A  freshman  in  this  town 
is  much  too  quiet  to  say  anything 
about  high  pritcs  of  food,  clothing 
and  gasoline.  He's  Cjuiet  about  it 
AN  htn  lie ;»  a  sophomore,  too.  And 
iu  his  1:  t  two  vears,  when  gradua- 
tion is  in  sight,  he  figures  he'll  be 
gone  soon.  So  he  does  nothing  about 
it. 

Mcanwljile.  back  on  Franklin 
Street,  the  merchants  are  taking 
ad\antage  of  the  students. 

"[  hev  a'lwavs  ha\e.  Thev  alwavs 
will,  imlcss  the  studewts  do  some- 
thing about  it. 

riiere  is  rumor  ol  a  student  boy- 
cott. 1  he  irnnor  is  growing  everv 
day.  Prtttv  scxn.  if  things  go  the 
w:.A  the\  are  1  leaded,  the  Inibblc 
will  burNt.  and  the  students  will  be 
going  to  Duiliim  to  buy  gasoline 
and  slsirb.  .\.     -• 


Perhaps  the  buble  won't  burst. 
But  inditatrnns  arc  now  that  it  will. 

in  a  way,  the  idea  of  a  siu<lein- 
led  and  executed  boycott  would 
be  a  good  one.  The  students  could 
canv  it  oiU  Avith  all  the  pret  ision 
of  a  good  panty-raid  and  perhaps 
thev  could  accomplish  tfveir  goal. 

Ihe  merchants  would  learn  a 
lesson— a  bitter  one.  but  a  deserVed 
one. 

But  tlieres  another  side.  A  boy- 
cott is  usually  bad.  It  is  close  to 
\iolcnfe.  And  violence  should  be 
used  only  as  a  last  resort. 

It-  is  time  the  merchants  paid 
attention  to  these  growing  rimib- 
lings  from  the  students.  A  student 
l>oycott  could  be  prevented  bv  the 
merchants,  and  no  near-violence 
would  be  necessan. 

The  fanner  has  milked  long 
enough.  The  cow  is  getting  restless. 

}, 

Panty  Raids 
Are  Going:; 
WeV^  Glad 

Well,  Carolina  had  another 
pant\"  raid. 

It  was  a  pretty  sick  one,  ac- 
cording to  all  obseivers. 

•Maybe  panty  raids  are  on  the 
way   out.   They   should   be. 

In  the  paist  five  or  six  pantv 
raids,  Carolina  Gentlemen  have 
garnered  about  five  or  six  trophies. 
1  hal's  a  bad  average. 

Tlie  tradition  is  dying,  but  we 
don't  mourn.  *        '  •  •,  r  a- 


Le^'s  Don  t  Botch  N^xt  Oni 


The  L'niversitvs  handling  of  the 
Frank  Ciraham  jrortrait  was  typical. 

It  was  slow.  ;incl  it  was  painful. 
The  portrait  hung  in  ihc  More- 
head  Plane  ^T  fiftfi.  out  of  the 
.sight  of  vijcl'n.s  and  admirers  of 
Di.  Fr  n.':.  tor  several  months. 
Fin.i']%.  the  University  decided  to 
put  the  portrait  where  it  belonged 
—in  C»raham  Memorial. 

The  matter  of  tiie  portrait  is  in- 
cidental to  the  controversy  that 
came  ^vith  the  presentation  of  the 
painting  last  spring.  It  is  the  prin- 
ciple of  the  matter  that  is  so  dis- 
gusting. 

Typicallv.  the  University  himg 
the  painting  in  the  Planetarium 
■temporarily"  Students  who  want- 
ed to  see  the  picture  in  its  natural 
enviroimient  (Ciraham  Memorial) 
soon  found  that  "temporarily ' 
t  an  be  a  long,  long  word.  The  por- 
trait stayed,  and  stayed. 

It  is  understood  that  Chancellor 
Robert    House,    who    ga\e    the    "O 


The  Daily  Tor  Heel 

The  official  student  publication  of  the 
Publications  Board  of  the  University  of 
Korth  Carolina,  where  it  is  pubhshed 
dailj'  except  Monday  and  examination 
and  vacation  periods  aifd  summer  terms 
Entered  as  second  class  matter  in  the 
post  office  in  Chapel  Hill,  N.  C,  undei 
:he  .\ct  oi  March  8.  1870.  Subscription 
rates:  mailed,  $4  per  year.  $2.50  a  semes- 
ter; delivered,  $6  a  year,  te.50  a  semes- 
ter. 

Editor  _ FR^TPOWLEDGE 

Managing  Editor  CHABLIE  SLOAN 

Xews  Editor  RAY  LINKER 

Easiness  Manager  BILL  BOB  PEEL 

Sports  Editor       LARRY  CHEEK 

^Advertising  Manager Fred  Katzin 

Coed  Editor Peg  Htimphrcf 

Subscription  Manager  .    Dale  Staley 

Staff  Artist  Charlie  Daniel 

EDUORLVL  STAFF  —  Wood^  Sears, 
Frank  Crowther,  Barry  Winston,  David 
Mundy.  George  Pfingst,  Ingrid  Clay, 
Cortland  Edwards. 

NEWS  STAFF— Clarke  Jones,  Nancy 
Hill,  .Joan  Moore,  Pringle  Pipkin,  Anne 
Drake.  Bobbi  Smith,  Jerry  Alvis,  Edith 
MacKinnon.  Wally  Kuralt,  Ben  Taylor, 
Graham  Snyder,  Billy  Barnes,  Neil 
Bass.  Jim  Creighton,  Hil  Goldman, 
Phyllis  Maultsby. 

BUSINESS  STAFF  —  Rosa  Moore,  Jonny 
Whitaker.  Dick  Leavitl,  Peter  Alper. 

SPORTS  STAFF:  Bill  King.  Jim  Purks, 
Jimmy  Harper,  Dave  Wible,  Charley 
Houson. 

Nght  Editor  : Woody  Sears 

Proof  Reader ..-_>. Larry  Cheek 


signal  for  the  portrait's  moving  to 
Graham  Memorial,  prut  off  his 
duty  until  the  controversy  had 
simmered  douTj. 

Ill  liie  uieaiuiuie,  people  were 
betcomii^ '  aroused  o\%r  the  j*)r- 
trait.  Students  and  alumni  who 
contributed  money  so  the  portrait 
could  be  painted  were  wondering 
what  was  going  to  become  of  it. 
They  were  getting  disgusted. 

The  controversy  must  have  both- 
ered Dr.  Frank,  who  is  now  ser\- 
ing  the  world  at  the  United  Na- 
tions. It  bottered  Chancellor  House*, 
who  had  the  responsifjilrty  of  hang- 
ing the  portrait. 

The  question  about  the  whole 
matter  is  this: 

Whv  wasn't  the  portrait  handled 
efficiently?  Why  wasn't  it  plated 
in  Graham  Memorial  immediateh 
after  it  was  unveiled?  Why  did  the 
University  turn  such  a  beautiful 
thing  into  a  thing  of  controversy? 

We  don't  know  the  specific 
answers.  But  the  matter  of  the  Cira- 
ham  portrait  xvould  Nbe  a  gocni 
thing  to  remember  in  the  future, 
when  the  I'nivcrsitv  is  honoring 
those  who  gave  part  of  their  lives 
to  the  University.  .w":" 


Gracious 


Number  2 

Gracious  Living  in  Chapel  Hill 
is  being  trampled  upon. 

The  president  of  that  disting- 
ui.ihed  dormitory.  Old  West,  i|j 
complaining  thaf^ioeds  don't  w&lk 
by  his  residence  like  they  uster*to. 

Old  West  inh.abitants  are  rejxii  t- 
ed  growing  uneasy  about  the  situa- 
tion. Once  treated  to  the  obvi<ius- 
ly  beautiful  spectacle  of  dozens  of 
beautiful  coeds  a  dozen  times  a 
day,  the  boys  are  now  missing  a 
^eat  part  of  Life  in  Chapel  Hill. 

President  Teddy  Jones  of  the 
donnitory  lias  said  his  residents 
■'are  men  of  outstanding  ch^ratter 
capable  of  conducting  themselves 
in  gentlemanly  fashion.*' 

This  is  a  serious  breach  of  Grac- 
ious Living  in  Chapel  Hill,  not  to 
mention  Gracious  Living  in  Old 
West  Dormitory.  Coeds,  please: 
Let's  start  waiting  by  Teddy  *nd 
his  bovs. 


Demand  Exceeds  Capacity 


Woody  Sears 


How  many  people  on  this  camp- 
us would  like  to  take  Sociology 
62?  That's  a  real  good  question. 

The  numerical  answer  would 
probably  run  close  to  five-thous- 
and. 

Sociology  €2  is  the  marriage 
course  that  we  hear  so  much 
about,  and  that  everj'one  pre- 
rcgisters  for, .  and  that  everyone 
sets  cut  out  of.  People  hopefully 
hang  around  Hanes  basement  for 
hours  during  registration  trying 
to  pick  up  a  82  drop  ticket. 

This  is  a  serious  situation,  be- 
cause this  is  one  of  the  most 
beneficial  courses  offered  on  this 
campus. 

The  general  concensus  of  tlie 
people  who  have  taken  it  is  that 
everyone  should  have  the  course 
before  leaving  the  University. 
And  a  glance  at  the  appalling  '■t.i- 
tistics  regarding  the  divorce  rat? 
in  this  country  reaffirms  the 
need. 

The  ideal  situation,  of  course, 
would  be  to  have  a  Uiarriage 
course  inserted  into  the  curricula 
as  a  required  course  for  all  un- 
dergraduate degrees.  However, 
this  is  impractical  since  there  are 
probably  a  lot  of  people  who 
would  have,  Serious  objections  to 
taking  the  course. 

6ut  if  it  cannot  be  a  required 
course  due  to  the  subject  mat- 
ter, then  it  should  certainly  be 
expanded  to  accommodate  more 
of  the  students  who  want  it. 

At  present,  there  are  only  134 
students  enrolled  in  the  course, 
and  if  there  is  a  change  in  the 
number  who  take  it  next  semes- 
ter it  will  probably  be  a  reduc- 
tion. 

Therefore,  we  can  safely  esti- 
mate that  only  about  250  students 
will  have  the  opportunity  to  get 
formal  in.struction  in  courtship, 
marriage,  and  family  living  this 
year. 

<  According  to  Dr.  E.  William 
"Noland,  Chairman  of  the  Depart- 
ment of  Sociology  and  Anthro- 
poIo<gy.  the  need  to  expand  Socio- 
logy 62  to  accommodate  more 
students  has  been  recognized  and 
is  being   acted   upon. 

Dr.  Noland  said  he  aivl  Dr. 
Reuben  Hill  (Prof,  of  Sociology) 
have  an  appointment  with  Dean 
Sitterson  of  the  School  of  Arts 
and  Sciences  next  week  at  which 
time  they  will  make  an  official 
request  for  an  assistant  professor 
of  Sociologj-  who  is  qualified  to 
do  marriage  counseling. 

Dr.  Xoland  said  that  the  course 
grew  so  popular  several  years 
ago  that  they  got  Mrs.  Ethel 
Nash  to  come  in  as  a  part-time  in- 
striictor. 

At  that  time  there  was  some 
extra  money  with  which  they 
could  hire  the  additional  instruc- 
tor. Dr.  Noland  said,  but  now 
they  need  someone  else  and  they 
dont  have  the  money. 

After  the  request  is  made  Dr. 
Noland  said  it  would  only  be  a 
guessing  matter  as  to  whether 
or  not  a  new  man  could  be  ob- 
tained. 

'  "The  Department  is  giving  the 
same  amount  of  emphasis  to 
Sociology  62  as  it  is  to  its  two 
main  courses,  Sociology  51  and 
52, '  said  Dr.  Noland,  speaking 
of  the  number  of  sections  taught 
and  the  number     of     instructors 


.used. 

Dr.-  Noland  said  that  this  need 
has  also  been  recognized  by  many 


of  the  University  officials.  This 
is  encouraging,  for  maybe  some- 
one who  is  in  position  to  do  so 


The  Family  Circle' 


will  see  that  Dr.  Noland  gets  the 
money  he  needs  to  give  the  stu- 
dents   the   course   they   need. 


THE  LIGHTED  WINDOW 


r*'.  •  .  I;'- 


Television  Drugs  Habitual  Viewer 


Charlie  Daniel 

Those  of  you  who  saw  jiho  movie.  '"The  Man 
With  the  Golden  Arm"  no  doubt  felt  sorry  for 
Frank  Sinatra  witli  tlnit  forty  pound  monkey  on 
his  back.  Well,  I  had  a  seventy  pound  television 
set  on  m>  back.  I  was  a'TV  slave.  The  man  with 
the    blood-shot   eyeballs. 

I  watched  every  program  from  "Ding  Dong 
School"  in  the  morning  to  the  late,  late  show  at 
night.  That  was  two  years  ago.  Since  then  I've 
broken  the  habit,  and  it  is  a  habit. 

As  one  who  wa.s  hooked  I  wisli  to  warn  you  of 
the  dangers  in  television.  It  is  truly  amazing  ju.st 
what  a  marked  change  television  has  made  upan 
our  entire  pattern  of  entertainment  and  social  in- 
tercourse. We  no  longer  read:  we  watch.  We  no 
longer  di.scuss:  we  watch.  The  family  ciri:!e  is  be- 
coming a  .semi-circle  around  the  television  set.  We 
are   becoming  a   nation   of  spectators. 

Televisioi;  has  most  seriously  effected  the  area  of 
conversation.  This  is  a  tragedv  because  this  art  in 


itself  is  essental  in  the  expression  of  thought,  ex- 
change of  ideas  and  the  understanding  of  our 
neighbors  and  fellow  men. 

.\dmittedly,  TV  offers  some  fine  ahd  excellent 
entertainment.  Unfortunately  for  every  good  pro- 
gram there  are  twenty  bad  ones.  TV  is  an  in- 
sidious habit.  It  is  sometimes  just  as  easy  to  watch 
a  bad  show  as  to  call  upon  our  flabby  and  softened 
muscles  to  pull  us  from  our  easy  chairs  to  cut  the 
set  off. 

Here  is  the  key  phrase.  Cut  the  set  off.  In  this 
phrase  lies  the  difference  between  master  and  slave. 
You've  got  to  learn  to  turn  the  set  off.  Learn  to 
pick  your  programs.  There  are  some  fine  and  worth- 
while productions.  Choose  wisely  and  with  restraint. 
When  company  comes,  even  in  the  middle  of  your 
favorite  program,  turn  it  off.  Don't  rely  on  tele- 
vision  to  do  your  entertaining. 

I  feel  that  television  is  a  monster  that  must 
he  controlled  before  our  culture  suffers  irreparable 
damage  as  we  all  become  slaves  to  the  lighted  win- 
dow. 


Pogo 


By  Walt  Kelly 


ill)'    'i^*itkt** 


l\'\  Abner 


By  At  Capp 


A 
H 

>3 


Religion, BusinesSj  > 
TaleOf  A  Revolt   ^, 

Frank  Crowther  -   " 

Normally  I  can  just  brush  lightly  over  Norman 
J^incent  Peale's   meanderings   and   not  become   too 
perturbed.   But,   I   suppose   that   his   past   Sunday's 
piece  happened  to  rub  me  the    vrong  way,  so  I'm        ' ' 
exercising    my    right    of    tub    thumping    and    foot  ''• 

stamping. 

His  article  was  capped,  "Our  Greatest  Resource 
Of  All  Is  God."  He  started  off  reminiscing  about         '  ' 
his  youth  and  how  smart  a  man  his  uncle  was.  He 
related  how  hi^  uncle  would  buy  a  plot  of  unim- 
proved  land  and,  in  order  to  sell  it,  would  walk  ' 
down  the  main  street  of  town  proclaiming  that  he         ''" 
was  going  to  give  aw'ay  a  $10  gold  piece  on  the 
corner,  at  2  o'clock  that  afternoon. 

This  was  his  way  oi  advertising  that  his  lot  was 
for  sale  and  he  usually  made  a  nice  profit  from 
it.    * 

Mr.  Peale  also  remembered  how  his  uncle  had 
lent  him  enough  money  to  get  through  college,  and 
that  he  had  paid  back  every  penny,  with  interest. 
"And  if  you  had  money,  you  used  it  to  help  others 
get  ahead." 

His  uncle  died  last  year,  and  Mr.  Peale  said 
that  he  would  always  remember  him  as  a  wonder- 
ful man  who  made  the  most  of  his  abilities  and 
was  a  great  inspiration  to  him  and  to  others. 

In  conclusion,  he  wrote:  "Have  respect  for  your 
resources  and  never  forget  the  greatest  resource  of 
all— God.  He  will  help  you,  and  with  his  help  noth- 
ing is  impossible.' 

His  uncle  wasn't  anything  but  a  good  business' 
man    who    knew   how,    where    and    when    to   fend  "^ 
money.  It  was  apparent  that  his  uncle  was  lending 
his  money  to  make  money,  because  Mr.  Peale  paid 
it  back  "everj'  penny,  with  interest." 

As  f^  as  using  the  money  to  help  others  get 
ahead,  he  was  again  distorting  the  view.  Do  we 
think  that  big  banks  lend  money  specifically  to  • 
help  people  get  ahead?  le  the  Easy  Loan  Company 
or  the  Friendly  Finance  Company  in  business  sole- 
ly for  benefaction?  I  doubt  it. 

Business'  primary  aim  is  to  make  money.  And 
1  can  only  see  his  uncle  as  a  businessman,  not  a  •■ 
philanthropic  missionary. 

The  whole  article  gave  me  a  bad  taste;  it  seemed' 
to  reek  with  the  flavor  which  always  pictures  God 
as  the  "cosmic  bell-boy  for  whom  we  can  press  a  ^ 
button   to  get  things."  The  correlation  was  a   bad 
one  .  .  .  word  twisting  of  the  first  degree. 
*  •  • 

Occasionally  I  read  something  in  a  novel  or 
short  story  which  I  somehow  wish  e\'eryone  could 
read  and  enjoy  (that's  an  assumption). 

Such  was  a  portion  of  Eugene  Burdick's  Th^ 
Ninth  Wave  in  which  two  of  the  main  characters 
were  discussion  principles. 

The  two  boys  were  in  their  last  year  of  college 
and  one  was  trying  to  expound  on  his  formulated 
principles  of  Fear  and  Hate,  With  the  pripciples  I 
don't  agree:  but  the  illxistration  was  w^.l  worth 
reading:  '  "'^ 

"And  your  two  principles  do  make  sense?"   . 
Hank  asked. 

"Majbc  they  do,"  Mike  replied.  •  I'm  not  sure. 
But  just  take  a  look  at  the  heads  that  were  be- 
ing carried  around  on  the  tips  of  pikes  during 
the  (French)  Revolution.  At  first  they  were 
the  princes  and  the  landlords  and  the  mayors. 
The  mob  chopped  their  heads  off  and  put  them 
on  pikes  because  everyone  hates  the  people  in 
charge.  I  don't  know  why,  but  they  do.  Then 
after  this  has  gone  on  for  a  while  the  people 
in  charge  who  made  the  revolution,  the  real 
revolution  arise,  decide  that  things  have  gone 
far  enough  and  tell  the  people  to  stop.  Then 
a  strange  thing  happens.  They  discover  that 
the  people  hate  them,  too.  They  find  out  that 
overnight  the  people  can  transfer  their  hate 
from  the  old  regime  to  the  new  regime.  That's 
what  they  mean  when  they  say  that  old  revolu- 
tionaries always  die  first.  The  successful  rev- 
olutionaries are  the  ones  that  are  able  to 
make  the  people  transform  their  hatred  into 
direct  action.  But  then  orders;  execute  opposi- 
tion; pass  edicts:  take  over.  They  wind  up  with 
a  guy  like  Napoleon  ...  the  most  precise 
contradiction  of  the  revolution.  And  they  love  ' 
him.  Because  now  they're  looking  for  a  way  to 
escape  tht'ir  fear.  The  hate  is  pushed  below  the 
surface:  now  they're  scared.  And  because  Na- 
poleon will  take  over,  because  he'll  ease  their 
fears,  they  rush  to  die  in  his  armies,  freeze  in 
Russia,  bum  in  Africa,  starve  along.side  every 
»oadside  in  Europe  .  .  .  with  a  great  big  flow 
"  of  pride  and  love  in  their  eyes  as  they  stare 
at  the  Little  Corporal  riding  off  without  them. 
Jesus!" 

■  '  :*t  y^^i-    -,-•■■  '  ■   '  '. 

Political  Review 
^nd  Speculation 

''       '  Tfce  Chnstyan  Science  Monitor 

The  American  political  campaign  is  in  high 
gear  all  right,  but  the  air  is  filled  with  speculation. 
On  the  one  hand.  Democratic  morale  is  very  high. 
It  is  apparent  that  Mr.  Stevenson  is  running  more 
strongly  than  in  1952.  Independent  observers  say 
the  race  is  close,  and  that  the  RetAiblicans  will  have 
to  campaign  «^ith  renewed  intensity  if  they  are  to 
reelect  the  President. 

On  the  other  hand,  the  most  reliable  national 
polls  show  Mr.  Eisenhower  still  a  strong  popular, 
favorite.  Perhaps  it  is  the  weakness  of  \jarious  state 
Republican  tickets — including  candidates  for  Gov- 
ernor and  for  both  houses  of  Congress — ^w^hich  has 
helped  induce  the  current  defeatist  wave. 

The  Republican  campaign,  thus  far,  ias  been 
more  restrained,  more  "high  level,"  keyed  to  the 
positive  note  of  an  administration  running  on  its 
record.  The  Democrats,  unlike  1952,  are  attacking 
with  the  aggressiveness  typical  of  the  Republicans 
then.  And  yet,  as  the  pace  quickens,  it  is  certain 
that  both  sides  will  hit  with  all  their  might. 


$50i 

Dr.    Reubei 
Dept  of  Socio| 
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UNC  Sociology  Professor  Awarded 
$500  By  Social  Problems  Society 

nr     Rpiihf>n     Will     of    ♦h«     ttxt/-       -  ' 


Dr.  Reuben  Hill  of  the  UNC 
Dcpt.  of  Sociolcrgy  and  Anthropolo- 
jrj-  has  been  awarded  a  $500  prize 
by  the  Society  for  the  Study  of 
Social  Problems. 

Dr.  Hill,  also  a  professor  of  the 
Institute  for  Research  in  Social 
Science,  received  the  Helen  L.  De- 
Roy  award  for  his  research  work 
on  family  structure  and  fertilty 
in  Puerto  Rico.  It  is  one  of  the  top 
awards  offered  in  the  social  scienc- 
es in  the  United  States. 

Two  men  who  assisted  Dr.  Hill 
in  his  project  also  shared  in  the 
award.  They  are  Kurt  Back,  who 
has  just  joined  the  UNC'  School 
of  Public  Health,  and  J.  Mayone 
Stycos.  who  was  in  the;  Institute 
two  years  ago. 

Dr.  Hill's  capacities  at  the  Uni- 
versity include  teaching  and  re- 
search in  marriage  and  the  family, 
and  supervision  of  the  marriage 
counseling  service. 

A  graduate  and  later  professor 
at  the  University  of  Wisconsin,  Dr. 
Hill  has  taught  isarriage  and  fam- 
ly  relation  courses  at  several  uni- 
versities throughout  the  country. 

Author  and  editor  of  several 
books  related  to  the  subject  of 
family  relations.  Dr.  Hill  is  associ- 
ate editor  of  "Social  Forces" 


Tomorrow's 

Housecleaning 

Safe 

Features  '^. 

Essays 

Criticism 

Poetry  ! 

and 

Drama 

THE  INTIMATE 
BOOKSHOr* 

205  C.  Franklin  St. 
OPEN  TILL  9  P.M. 


DR.   REUBEN   HiLl 

.    Avins  $500  prize 


Di  Senate  Defeats  Measure 
To  Condemn  Democrat  Conduct 


The  Dialectic  Senate  defeated  a 
resolution,  12-6.  to  condemn  the 
Democratic  Party  for  its  scurrilous 
conduct  in  the  1956  presidential 
campaign  Tuesday  night. 

Just    before    Stan    Shaw,    Presi- 
dent of  the  Di,  had  adjourned  the 
meeting,  Montieth  and  Stribling  of 
I  the  Phi  entered  the  Di  hall.  Mon- 
[  tieth  was  recognized  by  the  Di  and 
j  proposed  that  the  Di  and  Phi  have 
I  a  joint  meeting  two  weks  hence  at 
j  which  they  would  debate  the  mer- 
1  its  of  the  Republican   and   Demo- 
cratic parties  with  the  Phi  defend- 
ing the  I>emocrats. 
I      President  Shaw  objected  on  the 
i  grounds  that  the  challenged  should 
have  the  choice     of     whom     they 
would  defend. 
The  meeting  was  adjourned  be- 


Vhe 

J 

' 

■  -^ 

Z)empo 

t 

•  Lounjre  Chi 

•  Beer  and  S 
■  Hors  d'oean 

•  Potato  Chip 

lira 
oft 
*t 
s  A 

Drinks 

Pretzel* 

<^ 

\oont 

fore  Montieth  could  say  anymore. 
:  No  vote  was  taken  on  the  matter. 
!      According   to    Stan    Shaw,    -We 
I  (Di  and  Phi)    will  probably  have 
I  a  debate  in  the  Di  Hall  with  the 
:  Phi    speaker   presiding.      The      Di 
i  will   defend   the   Republicans    and 
i  the  Phi  the  Democrats.   " 
I      Senator     David     Mundy     intro- 
duced the  resolution  and  claimed 
the    Democrats    were    committing 
crimes   against   the   conscience   of 
the  American  people.  He  labeled 
Stevenson    as    the    "chief    truth 
twister." 

Senator  Larry  McElroy  stated 
"the  right  to  suffer  was  implicit 
of  the  Republican  tactics." 

Smith,  a  guest,  said  the  Demo- 
crats were  runbing  a  disgraceful  ^ 
campaign  and  were  trying  to  ruin  I 
Ike's   reputation.  \ 

George  Miller.  President  of  the 
Young  Demorcats,  lauded  his  par- 
ty, j 

The  Di  passed  a  resolution  com- 
mending  The    Daily   Tar   Heel.    A 
copy  of  the  resolution  is  to  be  sent  1 
to  Fred  Powledge,  editor.  ' 


Young 

Issues 

Comment 

(Cimtimted  front  Page  I) 

think  that  Carolina  could  die? 
No.  and  I  myself  will  never  give 
up  nor  will  the  other  party  of 
fifty  men  who  are  in  the  real 
position  of  stress  at  this  particu- 
lar fime.  I  am  talking  about  the 
Carolina  football  team,  frientls. 
It's  your  Carolina  team.  They  are 
Care)Iina  men.  But  do  they  know 
it?  Do  you  show  it?  Do  you  even 
care? 

"It's  these  Carolina  men  that 
have  to  suffer  when  we  lose.  It 
is  these  men  that  spend  horn- 
after  hour  of  blood,  sweat,  and 
toil  to  try  to  give  you  something. 
You  who  on  the  most  part  don't 
really  "give  a  damn"  or  if  you  do 
you  haven't  shown  them.  Believe 
me,  they  feel  it.  Take  a  look  at 
your  ownp  selves  and  miybe 
you'll  see  what  I  mean.  These 
Carolina  men  are  beginning  to 
feel,  "for  whom  or  what  am  I 
batting  my  head  against  a  stone 
wall?"  When  it  comes  to  this,  my 
Carolina,  it  is  your  fault. 

"How  can  you  ask  or  how  can 
you  expect  our  team  to  pull  it- 
self up  for  a  ball  game  week  In 
and  week  out  all  by  itself  when 
the  team  members  hear  wry  com- 
ments and  derisions  from  you 
who  should  be  the  backbone  and 
the  heart  of  their  strength? 
You  are  failing  us  too  and  we 
need  you.  You  have  to  give  us 
something  extra  to  fight  for.  You 
must  give  us  a  cause.  You  must 
supply  the  spark.  Only  you.  my 
Carolina,  can  give  as  this.  How 
can  'you  expect  our  team  to  play 
inspired  ball  all  the  time  when 
this  lethargy  or  lack  of  spirit 
exists  within  you  and  they  are 
subjected  to  it  day  in  and  day 
out. 

"It  is  the  week  of  homecoming, 
but  I  have  yet  to  feel  that  under- 
current  or   tinge   of   excitement 
that    should    be    here.    This    is    ; 
something     that  '  should     come    I 
spontaneously     from     you,     my    j 
Carolina,  with  no  prodding.  I  re-   ! 
member  when  I  was  a  kid  I  used    | 
to  come    to  ball   games   in    our 
beautiful  Kenan  Stadium  and  it 
was   not   so   much    the   winning    j 
teams  that  inpressed  me — i^  was 
the  Carolina  spirit.  This  is  what 
made  me  want-  to  come  to  this    ' 
University  and  be  a  part  of  it.        ' 
"Have  we  lost  this  time-honor-    ! 
ed   tradition   for  which  we  once 
were  known  world-wide?  I  don't    i 
believe   it   is   lost   yet,   Carolina,    ; 
but  we  are  going  to  have  to  fight    j 
extra  hard  for  it  now.  Let's  get    | 
united.    Let's    have    some    fun,    I 


f#fpf  TMKIA 


^^prosentatiye(^py0mt^,^M 
nil  Defeated,  9^5,  By  Phi 


Ul 


Opening 

(Contirvued  from  Page    1) 


The   Philanthropic   Literary   So-#- 

ciety  Tuesday  night  tabled,  »-5,  a  ' 

,  bill  which  resolved  that  "the  elect-  j 

I  ed   representatives   of   the   people  j 

I  strive  with  all  diUgence  to  reflect 

!  the  will  of  the  electorate  in  their ' 

I  several   dealings  with  mankind."    '  ♦-  ,1.     -t  ♦        .... 

to  the  University,  at  the  intersec- 

Representative  Tolbert  introduc-  ;  ^io"  of  the  Raleigh  Highway  and 
ed  and  defended  the  bill,  stating    Country  Club  Road, 
that  the  United  State  should  have  \      The  building  is  in  three  wings 
govermnent  "of  the  people,  by  the  |  with   classrooms,    laboratories,   an 
people  and  for  the  people. ' 


Representative  Stribling  claimed 
that  the  bill  would  "create  chaos 
;  in  the  government"  Representative 
i  McHughes  felt  that  if  it  were  pos- 
•  sible  to  know  the  will  of  the  peo- 
ple  there  would   be  no  need  for 
any  representative.s. 

Bob  Hill,  who  made  his  qualify- 
ing speech,  said,  "the  common  peo-' 
pie  have  done  a  good  job  of  gov- 
'  erning   the  United   States,   and   1 
I  would  like  to  see  it  continued." 

Sibert,  former  speaker  of  the 
Phi,  said  "the  bill  cannot  be  pass- 
ed, the  Phi  does  not  want  to  go  on 
record  as  not  having  confidence 
in  the  will  of  the  people."  He  mov- 
ed that  the  bill  be  tabled  and  sug- 


International  Relations  Meetinq  Secheduled 
T^  RlaplUpJJed  Nja^ons  Day  Observ^ote 

'  Ali'ktUdlent^  mtvfelt^  ^n  inMr^  ^  ■    -      ■  '   -^  -        '     > 

'  national  relations  have  been  in- 
vited to  attend  a  meeting  this  after- 

;  noon  to  help  plan  the  observance 
of  United  Nations  Day  on  campus 

;  later  this  month. 

;      Today's  meeting  will  be  held  at 

I  2  p.m.  in  the  Cabinet  Room  of  the 

I  Y  Buildng. 

i      Miss  Polly  Clarenbach,  co-chair- 

j  man  of  the  International  Relations 

'  study  group,  will  convene  the  meet- 
ing. 

I  This  year  marks  the  11th  anni- 
versary of  the  founding  of  the 
United  Nations  organization.  Cele- 


gtsted  that  the  Phi  debate  a  bill  {  P^^^i^y"  through  next  spring,  with 
comitiending  the  Democratic  party 


auditorium,  staff  offices,  a  library 

conference  room   and   the   Knapp    

reception  room,  wh-ch  is  furnished  j  hrations  "will  be'  heidThroughout 
with  antiques  from  :  the  Knapp  [  the  nation  on  Oct.  24.  Chapel  Hill 
home  at  Mackey's  Island  in  Curri- 1  Mayor  O.  K.  Cornwell  has  appoint- 
tuck  County.  ;  ed   ^r.   Ken    Mdntyre   as   general 

"There  is  a  bedroom  section  [  chairman  of  the  community -wde 
which  has  accomodations  for  125  \  observance. 

people,  a  total  of  €5  rooms  wtih  I  Student  body  President  Bob 
either  connecting  or  private  bath*,  j  Young  has  asked  representatives  of 

Including  basement,  it  is  a  three-  j  student  government,  APO,  Intcr- 
story  building.  The  bedroom  sec-  fraternity  and  Pan-Hellenic  Coun- 
tidn  has  an  additional  story.  \  cils,  YWCA  and  YMCA  to  work  on 

A  "crime  lab"  on  the  basement    the  campus  observance. 

floor  will  be  a  training  and  dem-  j  

onstration  center  for  e.xperimenta  i 
and  investigations  in  areas  of  law  ' 
enforcement  and  other  phases  of  i 
local  government.  j 

The   building  is  "booked   to   ca 


'    Informal   Photography 
(By  appointment  at  your  home) 
Wedding  Photos 
A  Specialty 

PRESS  PHOTO  SERVICE 

POLAND  GIOUZ 

Ofc. — New*  Building, 

iMa;n   St..,  Carrfoer* 


After  much  disagreement  about 
debating  this  bill,  it  was  concluded 
that  the  merits  of  the  Democratic 
and  Republican  parties  should  be 


many  groups  .scheduling  confer- 
ences, schools,  or  short  courses. 
Joseph  Palmer  Xnapp  was  pub 
lisher  of  a  number  of  national 
magazines:  Colliers,  American, 
Woman's    Home    Companion,    and 


J  u  .  J  •         •  .     —  woman  s    rtome    companion,    an 

nJl^f-  '"  A  ^^'"*J«"°°  '^t**  *»»«    Country  Home.  He  was  ako  a  4 


Dialectic  Assembly  two  weeks 
hence.  The  Phi  would  defend  the 
Democratic  party  as  the  consensus 
in  the  Phi  was  that  the  Di  is 
strongly  Republican. 

At  its  next  meeting  the  Phi  wlU 
ha\'e  initiation  and  debate  i  bill  to 
discontinue  foreign  aid. 

A  specal  session  of  the  Phi  will 
be  called  to  discuss  the  merits  of 
a  new  constitution  for  that  body. 


Show  us  you  want  us.  Give  us 
something  besides  our  own  in- 
testinal fortitude  to  carry  us 
through. 

"W-e  are  fighting  men  on  that 
baltclub,  but  we  need  that  Caro- 
lina spirit  to  carry  us  through. 
We  need  somethings  to  fight  for 
besides  our  own  pride  and  re- 
fusal to  give  up.  You  can  give  us 
this,  my  Carolina.  Give  us  an 
ide^.  Give  us  a  cause.  This  is 
my  fippeal.  This  is  my  plea. 

"Only  you  can  save  us  now. 
It  is  la  your  hands.  It  is  your 
responsibility  and   our  duty. 


rector  of  the  Metropolitan  Life  IIm 
surance  Co. 

He  first  came  to  North  Carolina 
in  1916.  hunting  and  fishing,  and 
he  built  a  home  in  Currituck  Coun- 
ty. Knapp  took  an  interest  in  the 
fishermen  and  farmers  of  Cur- 
rituck and  aided  them  in  produc- 
ing and  processing  their  resources. 
He  financed  a  marketing  exchange, 
an<J  encouraged  farmers  to  di- 
versify crops. 

After  Knapp's  death.  Mrs.  Knapp 
continued  his  works  in  Currituck  j 
County.  He  had  already  become  in-  j 
terested  in  the  Institute  of  Gov-  j 
emment  at  Chapel  Hill,  and  Mrs.  j 
Knapp  was  instrumental  in  in-  ] 
fluencing  the  Knapp  Foundation 
to  give  the  $500,000.  for  the  build- 
ing. 


SCIENTIFIC  SESSION  SERIES 

Dr.  Edwin  P.  Hiatt,  President  of 
the  Durham-Orange  County  Heart 
Association  announces  that  Dr. 
Jack  D.  Myers,  Professor  of  Medi- 
cine   at    Pittsburg    University,    will 

address    the    first    lecture    of    the 

XT    tu    /-,      ,•  ..       ,.       {Scientific  Session  being  sponsored 

North    CaroUna    was    the    furstk^.  ,j,^  Association  thi.s  evening  at, 
state   m  the   nation   to   approve  g  ^..i^,,,  j„  ^^e  Memorial  Hospital 
he  use  of  public  funds  for  geo-L^ditorium.  Dr.  Daniel  L.  Donovan  I 

logical  studies, ^^  ^^^^  University   Medical   School  i 

j  faculty  will  preside.  The  public  is 


Covering  The  University  Campus 


invited  to  attend. 


DAILY    CROSSWORD 


ACROSS 

1  Pant  for  air 
5.  Crust  on 

a  sore 

9.  French 

'  annual 

-■  incom* 

10.  Harmonized 

12.  Follow 

13.  Come  in 

14.  Guides 

15.  Ablaze 

16.  Uke 

17.  Eskimo 
knife 

18.  Compasa 
point 
<abbr.> 

19.  Corwie^ 
23.  SalvatiflM 

Army 
<abbr.) 

25.  Literary 
compoaitioA 

26.  Inheritors 

29.  Greek  letter 

30.  Kind  of 
hound 

81.  Society  of 

Jesus 

(abbr.) 
33.  Aegean 

island 

35.  Prepositien 

36.  Disemkarks 
38.  A  dervish 

41.  On  the  left 
Bide   (naut.) 

42.  Girl's  name 
«.  Oral  (Law) 

44.  Revolves 

45.  Back  of 
the  neck 

4«.  Apportion 
DOWN 
IBeok  of 
the  Bible 
lA  handle 


3.  Ornamen- 
tal nail 

4.  Bills  of 
anchor* 

5.  Pilfer 

€.  Perplexes 
T.  Against 
(prefix) 

8.  Malt 
beverages 

9.  Tell 
11.  Hauled 
17.  Personal 

pronoun 

20.  Viper 

21.  Picnic 
spoiler 

22.  Affirmativa 


24.  Sloths 

26.  Ex- 
clama- 
tion 

37  System 
of 

lines 
in  an 
optical 
instru- 
ment 

28.  Shops 

::0.  Small 
boy 

31.  Strike 

32.  Oriental 
country 

34.  A8;ave 
coadago 


acaaarg  Pimans 

as  Ban     r^ao 

111^3     [53Li  sa 
ann  sag 

GL»:    BUS        QRQ 

□noHm  sno'sg' 

CiluCC3    QQ^aQO 


l'Mt«r4*jr'*  Am»wr 

37.  Girl's  name 

38.  Land  under 
cultivation 

39.  Fragrant 
wood  (E.  I.> 

40.  Highland 
skirt 


l3-i2 


GRAD  CLUB  | 

The  "Grad  Club"  planning  meet-  i 
ing,  which  is  scheduled  for  4  p.m.  | 
today  in  the  YWTA  office,  is  open  : 
to  all  who  have  suggestions  for  i 
the  club  program.  1 

CAMPUS  CHEST  .  ! 

The  Campus  Chest  Board   meet-  ^ 
ing  will  begin  at  4  p.m.  in  the  Y-  ■ 
Cabinet  Room  today. 
STUDENT  WIVES  CLUB 

The  Student  Wives  Club  will  j 
meet  Tuesday  at  8  p.m.  at  the  main  I 
entrance  of  the  library.  A  tour  of  J 
the  library  is  scheduled.  Rides  will  | 
be  available  to  those  desiring  them  I 
and  will  leave  the  Victory  Village 
Nursery  at  7:30  p.m.  All  student  1 
wives  are  invited  to  attend. 
WESLEY  FOLK  DANCE  GROUP      ; 

The  Wesley  Folk  Dance  Group ; 
will  hold  its  regular  weekly  get-  i 
together  tonight  at  7:30  p.m.  in  the  j 
basement  of  the  University  Metho- 
dist Church.  All  persons  who  are  I 
interested  in  the  art  of  the  folk  | 
dance  are  invited  to  participate.  I 
WUNCTV  I 

Today's  schedule  for  WUNC-TV, ' 
the  University's  educational  tele-  j 
vision  station,  Channel  4:  I 


10:30  Wake  Forest  Dedication 
12:00  Travelogue 

1:00  Today  on  Farm 

1:30  Notes  on  Music 

2:00  Pipeline 

2:30  Sign  Off 

5.45  Music 

6:00  Children's  Corner 

6:30  News 

6:45  Spoi-ts 

7:00  Science  Fair 

7:30  Arts  Around  Us 

8:00  Aluminum  ' 

8:30  Prelude 

9:00  UNC  Founders  Day 
10:00  Final  Editon 
10:05  Sign    Off 
WUNC 

Today's  schedule  for  WUNC.  the 
University's  VM  radio  station,  M.5 
megacycles: 

7:00  Intermezzo 

7:15  Assignment  Middle  East 

7:30  The  People  Take  the  Lead 

8:00  Highlights  From  "Boris 
Gobounoff" 

9:00  American  Adventure 

9:30  Folk  Music  of  the  World 
10:00  News 

10:15  Evening  Master  work 
11:30  Sign  Off 


I  ENGLISH  CLUB 

Prof.  Norman'  K.  Eliason  of  the 

I  UNC  faculty  wil  be  the  featured 

'■  speaker  today  at  7:30  p.m.  at  the 

English    Club   meeting    in   the   li- 

I  brary  assembly  room. 

STUDENT   INSURANCE 

Oct  15  is  the  deadline  for  stu- 
dents to  enroll  in  the  Student  In- 
surance   Plan.    Application   blanks 
;  may  be  obtained  from  tnc  student 
government  office  in  Graham  Me- 
I  morial,  at  the  Y  and  in  GM's  in- 
!  formation    Office.   "Students    have 
j  also  been  asked  to  spick  up  their 
insurance    identification    cards    in 
the  student  govemment  office. 
I  W.A.A. 

[      Entries   for  the   W.A.A..   volley 

1  ball  tournament  are  due  in  the  Wo- 

j  men's  Gym  by  4  p.m.  today.  Joan 

Willsey,  Volley  ball  manager,  lists 

I  the   following   dates   for  practice: 

next     week.     Monday-Friday     4-6 

p.m.;    Tuesday  and  Thursday   7-8 

p.m.  All  girls  participating  in  the 

tournament  must  practice  at  least 

once. 

SPLASH  CLUB 

The   Splash   Club,  the  women's 
synchronized  swimming  club,  will 


hold  try-outs  for  club  membership 
Monday  at  7  p.m.  at  tlje  pool.  Club 
President  Ann  Gillettee  would  like 
to  meet  with  all  old  members  at 
6:15  pm. 


i  Bates 


CAMPUS      EN 


Honor  Winners 
for  Collegiate  Fashion 


eaiiHM<«  aral» 

liMiMr 


Awarde<1195S'Keyof 
Achievement  Award"  by 
Student  Marketinf  Institute. 
Fashions  that  are  authentic. ,« 
comfort  that  is  leiuiiit. 

Most  styles  $11.95  to  $19.95. 

iipp«r-fre«  Whir*  Your  Foot  ttnU 
^»^\*■tot\t«^l^«  toaminn*  , 
term*  th^  ball  «f  Hit  fo»0 
t£6  TMEM  W 


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PATRONIZE  YOUR 
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POURITONBOYSl... 


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MANY  BEAUTIFUL  GEISrfA  GI»tS!    , 


^<*i^M  tal   ■.J...^ 


nuuD 


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(ASTMAN 


tME  HUMAN  SroiY  BE  HMO  THE  (MAMA  Of 

THE  KOMAN  WAt  AS  TOU>  ANO 

ACTED  IT  THOSE  WHO  WEM  THEIEI 

Oi.*r<ed  \>r  iACOOtS  0UK3H1 
IS.*cMt  al  WiMoyplit  HENtI  0€CAI 


THIS  UTTU  KOKEAK    MASCOT 
WANTED  TO  U    ONE  OF 
THE  SOTS  ! 


TODAY 
ONLY 


LATE  SHOW  SAT.  NITE 
REGULAR  SHOWING  STARTS  SUNDAY 

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• 

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FUNNIEST  f 
MOVIE   I 

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YEAR! 


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IAS  OF  BRITISH 
CBWCCIIAMeTERS!" 

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SATimCU  COMEDY!  A 
KOWLINfi  OaiSHI!" 

— Zur»«i   Cut  Mt|(r"i( 


mm  mmL 


■'*  BlfSSro  RftlFff 
^  fifT  POST  HASTE  TO 
\THE  fiUIlD!" 

f-HICNLY  COMICAL! 
f  WEIRD  AND  WONDER- 

"A  MOST!' FUNNIER 
TNSN  NO  TIME  FOR 
SERGEANTS'  ANO 
INFINITELY  MORE 

CLEVER  !"-Cibert.M.rrw 


m^f^ 


'i'ww^fr'^^^^9 


.■  ■  !P  Ji  9 


PAGE  FOUR 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


FRIDAY,  OCTOBER  12,  1956 


Tar  Babies  Engage  Terps;  Harriers 


Four  Way  Meef 


Freshmen 
Look  For 
First  Win 

I 

j  By   JIMMY    HARPER 

I  The  Carolina  freshman  football 
I  team  will  go  on  display  before  the 
'•home  folks  for  the  first  time  to- 
i  day  when  they  encounter  the  Uni- 
;  versify  of  Maryland  frosh  at  2:00 
p.m.  in  Kenan  Stadium. 


Black  Day  For  The  Big  Four 

Local  football  stock  took  a  nosedive  toward  rock  bottom  last  Sat- 
urday as  all  members  of  the  Big  Four  went  down  to  bitter  defeat. 
And  if  the  oddsmakers  are  to  be  believed,  another  shutout  may  be 
in  store  for  the  Big  Four  this  weekend. 

Only  one   Big   Four  squad   rates   the   nod   in   pre-game   calcula- 
tions, and  that  one  could  go  either  way   if  comparative  scores  are 
any  indication.  State  entertains  Florida  State  tomorrow  night  in  Ra- 
leigh, and  although  the  Wolf  pack  is  favored,  the  contest  is  just  about 
a  tossup. 

Other  contests  around  the  local  circuit  are  Georgia  at  Carolina,  an 
even  steven  bet  at  the  moment;  SMU  at  Duke,  with  the  Mustangs  a 
slight  favorite;  and  Clcmson  at  Wake  Forest,  with  the  Tigers  picked 
to  win.  • 
SILVER  ANNIVERSARY  FOR  TAR  HEELS  AND  BULLDOGS 

The  Georgia-Carolina  scrap  is  the  silver  anniversary  of  a  long  and 
colorful  series  between  two  southern  aristocrats  of  the  gridiron.  In 
twenty  four  previous  meetings  of  the  two  schools,  each  won  11  and 
there  have  been  two  ties. 

Tomorrow's  game  could  mark  a  turning  point  in  the  sagging 
football  fortunes  cf  one  team  or  the  other.  Each  has  been  losing, 
and  losing  consistently  this  season  and  for  the  past  few  seasons.  The 
Tar  Heels  this  year  have  an  0-3  mark  while  the  Bulldogs  have  a 
modest  1-2  record. 

The  Tar  Heels  have  been  picking  up  momentum  slowly  but  surely 
^ince  their  opening  loss  to  State,  and  the  time  for  them  to  demon-  '         uc^tTRh 
strate  their  new  found  -maturity  is  just  about  here.  If  t"hey  can  stop  '     ''"""  Stunda.  star  Tar  ^^by  end 
the  Bulldogs,  we're  willing  to  go  out  on  a  limb  and  predict  wins  over    ^'^"   ^^^   ^   starter  against   Wake 
Marvland  and  Wake  Forest  in  the  two  games  following.  .  Forest    re-aggrav-ated    a    knee    m- 

■jt's  been  a  long  time  since  a  Carolina  football  team  beat  Georgia,  i  J"';>'  ^"^f"^,^  '"  the  Deac  game  and 
The  last  happy  occasion  was  in  1949  when  the  Carl  Snavely  led  Tar  •  *'"  probably  see  little,  if  any  ac- 
Heels  spanlfed  the  Bulldogs,  21-14,  behind  the  twin  touchdown  duo  of  .   '°"' 

Charlie  Justice  and  .\rt  Weiner.  We  think  the  drought  will  end  to-       Don  Stallings,  an  All  State  tacl^k? 
morrow.  Carolina  13.  Georgia  7.  i  last  year  from  Rocky  Mount,  has 

A  LOOK  AROUND  THE  CIRCUIT  *  -  been    named    as    Stundas    replace- 

I  ment  at  end. 
Over  on  the  Methodist  Flats,  Duke's  Blue  Devils  will  be   out  to  j 
prove  to  football  experts  all  over  that  they  are  better  then  their  1-2  '      The  probable  starting  lineup  for 
record  so  far  this  year  would  seem  to  indicate.  But  the  Blue  Devils  i  the  game  has  Stallings  and  Ed  Fur- 
have  chosen  a  tough  opponent  in  SMU.  The  Mustangs  are  two  up  and  I  janic  at  the  end  posts.  Earl  (Moose) 
ore  down  for  the   season,   having   lost   to   Georgia  Tech   and    beaten  I  Butler     and     Mike     McDade,     230 


This  will  be  the  second  start  of 
the  season  for  the  Tar  Babies  who 
lost  a  14-12  squeaker  to  the  Wake 
Forest  frosh  last  week. 

I  Coach  Fred  Tullai  has  said  that  he 
i  expects  a  performance  much  im- 
proved over  the  showing  of  last 
Friday  night.  The  so.uad  has  been 
working  hard  all  week,  correcting 
weaknesses  uncovered  in  the  Waki 
Forest  game.  The  main  fault  found 
in  the  opener  was  the  lack  of 
team  play,  resulting  in  costly  er- 
rors. 

i  Tullai.  a  graduate  of  Maryland, 
I  is   expecting  strong   resistance  on 

the  part  of  the  Baby  Terps.  Mary- 
I  land  is  reported  to  be  strong,  par- 
j  ticularly  on  the  ends  and  at  the 
j  fullback  post.  The  Baby  Tarps  hold 
I  one  victory,  a  26-13  decison   over 

the  Virginia  frosh  last  week. 


Beatty  To 
Lead  Team 
Into  Meet 

By  DAVE   WIBLE 


Starting  Tar  Baby  Halfback 

Wade  Smith,  170  pound  flash  from  Albemarle,  will  be  in  the 
starting  lineup  at  halfback  this  afternoon  when  the  Carolina  Tar 
Babies  play  host  to  the  Maryland  frosh  in  a  game  scheduled  to  get 
under  way  at  2  )n.m.  in  Kenan  Stadium. 


NDtre  Dame  and  Missouri. 

Duke  demonstrated  a  potent,  driving  offense  last  Saturday  in 
their  two  touchdown  loss  to  Tennessee,  and  should  be  able  to  give 
the  Mustangs  son>e  anxious  moments.  We  think  they're  good  enough 
to  win.  Duke  27,  SMU  21. 

Wake  Forest's  Deacons,  unpredictable  as   always,  face  their  stif- 
fest  test  of  the  season  so  far  when  they  tangle  with  unbeaten  Clem-  j  quarterback  post  will  be  Jack  Cum- 
soa  m  Bowman  Gray  Stadium  in  Winston  Salem.  The  Deacs  turned  in    mings,  the  team's  best  punter, 
superlative  performances   in  their  first  two  games  against  William  &        At    the    halfback    slots    will    be 
Mary  and  Maryland,  then  lo.st  a  close  one  to  lowly  Virginia  last  week.    Morehead  scholar  Wade  Smith  and 
If  Coach  Paul  Amen  can  get  his  boys  sufficiently  up  for  this  one,    the    much   disputed    Cornell    John- 


bruisers  will  occupy  the  tackle 
spots.  At  the  guards  will  be  Ellis 
Woolridge  and  Fred  Mueller.  Little 
(190  pound)  Jim  Davis  will  assume 
ball  snapping  chores. 

Replacing   Nelson    Lowe    at    the 


Defaults  Mar  Early 
Mural  Football  Play 


they  might  turn  the  trick.  But  the  Tigers  will  be  inspired^  by  the 
scent  of  orange  blossoms,  and  we  don't  think  they're  to  be  denied  by 
the  EJeacs.  Clemson  20.  Wake  Forest  6. 

State,  w4m>  gave  Clemson  a  bad  time  of  it  last  week  before  suc- 
cumbing, should  win  the  Florida  State  tilt.  This  has  been  the  case 
several  times  in  the  past,  however,  in  pre  ganne  speculation,  and 
somehow  it  never  quite  happened  that  way.  The  Seminoles  appear 
to  have  a  jinx  over  the  Pack,  and  could  be  trouble  if  State  lets  down. 


By   CHARLEY    HOUSON 

The  following  list  contains  Tues- 
day's Intramural  results; 

Cobb  No.  1  12,  Lewis  0;  Ruffin 
No.  2  13,  Mangum  No.  1  8;  Grimes 
No.  2  1,  Cobb  No.  3  0;  Ruffin  No. 
1  20.  Winston  0;  Everett  No.  3  1, 
.Mangum  No.  2  0;  Joyner  8,  Med. 
School  No.  2  0;  Law.  School  No.  1 


son.   Rounding   out  the  back  field    19,  Victory  Village  0;  .Med.  No.  1 


at  fullback  will  be  Jim  Stevens. 

The  line  will  average  210  pounds 
while  the  ^ackfield  average  will  be 
190  pounds. 

Students  may  see  the  game  by 
presenting  their  passbooks  and  ID 
cards  at  the  gate. 


1,  Stacy  No.  1  0;  Manley  13,  Stacy 

No.   2    12;    Med    School    No.   3    14, 

(ir;iham  Xo.   1  0. 

Here  are  Wednesday';*  results: 
Fraternity  division:  Delta  Sigma 

19.    Theta    Chi    0;    Simga    Chi    48. 

AK  Psi  O;  Beta  13;  KA  0;  Sigma 


Nu  15,  Phi  Delt  7;  Lambda  Chi  9 
Chi  Psi  0;  Kappa  Psi  27,  ZBT 
0;  Zeta  Psi  29.  Pi  Lambda  0;  Phi 
Gam  13.  SPE  2;  ATO  14.  Kappa 
Sigma    13;   SAE  28.  TEP  0. 

This  afternoon  on  the  intra- 
mural field  Cobb  No.  2  lost  its 
first  game  of  the  season  by  losing 
to  Aycock  by  default  1  to  0.  Ever- 
ett No.  1,  Mangum  No.  2,  Med.  Sch.. 
and  Joyner  all  won  their  games  by 
default  over  Cobb  No.  3.  Graham 
No.  2.  Old  West,  and  Grimes'  No 
2  respectively. 

The  closest   game   of   the   after- 
noon was  between  Mangum  No.   1 
and    Cobb    No.    ' .    An    early    first 
period  score  gave  Mangum   the  6 
to    0    victory.    .A.lthough    defaults 
were  numerous  in  the  afternoon's 
activities,  a  few  other  games  were 
played.  The  scores  of  the.se  games  [ 
are  as  follows:  BVP  14,  Alexander  j 
0;   Ruffin   No.    1    13,  Everett  .No  2  j 
I  0;  Dent.  Sch.  28.  Grimes  No.   1  0;  j 
Law  Sch.  9.  Ruffin  No.  2  0;  '■ 

All   officials   of   the   games   this  j 
I  afternoon    were   very   disappointed  ! 
at   the    number   of   defaults.   They 
said  that  dormitories  and  fraterni- 
ties    should    try    to    prevent    this 
from  happening  in  the  future.        | 

Tomorrow  there  are  five  games  | 
scheduled.  They  are  as  foliows:  | 
At  4:00  on  field  I:  DKE  vs  Psi:  | 
Field  2.  Chi  Psi  vs  Pi  Lambda;  i 
Field  3.  S.\E  vs  Phi  Delt;  Field  5,} 
PIKA   vs  TEP.  I 

At  5:00:  Field  I.  Law  Sch  No.  1  i 
vs.  Winston;  Field  2,  Med.  Sch.  No. ' 


Carolina's  varsity  cross-country 
squad,  one  up  and  none  down  for 
the  season,  face  their  stiffest  lest 
of  the  year  so  far  this  afternoon 
when  they  tangle  with  N.  C.  State, 
Cleuison  and  the  University  of 
South  Carolina  in  Columbia,  S.  C. 
The  Tar  Heel  harriers,  winners 
over  Virginia  last  Friday  in  their 
season's  debut,  will  be  looking  to 
State  for  their  strongest  competi- 
tion. The  Pack  edged  Carolina  in  a 
dual  meet  last  season,  and  in  that 
same  meet.  State's  Mike  Shea  hand- 
ed Tar  Heel  Jimmy  Beatty  the  only 
loss  of  his  ACC  cross-country  car- 
eer. Realty  is  the  ACC  individual 
champion.  » 

South  Carolina  and  Clemson, 
though  not  to  be  forgotten,  are  not 
expected  to  be  a  match  for  the 
powerful  Big  Four  rivals.  Carolina 
easily  conquered  both  the  Game- 
cocks and  Tigers  last  year. 

Assistant  Coach  Joe  Hilton  said 
yesterday  that  the  early  season 
muscle  soreness,  the  stigma  of  any 
athletic  team,  has  been  worked  out, 
and  the  squad  should  be  in  top 
condition. 

Leading  the  blue  and  white  le- 
gions into  battle  will  be  Beatty,  co- 
captain  Marion  Griffin,  letterman 
Everett  Whatley  and  soph  Dave 
Scurlock,  second  place  finisher  be- 
hind Beatty  in  the  meet  with  the 
Cavaliers  last  week. 

Backing  up  the  front  runners 
will  be  Doug  Henderson,  Perrin 
Henderson,  John  Reaves  and  Ben 
Williams. 

It  W3s  learned  yesterday  that 
soph  Wayne  Bishop,  who  re-injured 
his  knee  in  the  first  time  trial  of  i 
the  season,  will  not  run  at  all  this 
year.  This  means  that  Bishop  will 
have  an  extra  year  of  eligibility. 
Bishop  was  the  number  one  man 
on  last  year's  undefeated  frosh 
<;quad,  and  had  been  counted  on  for 
heavy  duty  this  season. 


Tar  Heels  Stage 
Concluding  Drill 

Carolina's  Tar  Heels,  w;nless  in  i  Dave  Reed,  junior  quarterback 
three  starts  to  date,  got  in  their  |  who  was  injured  on  the  first  day 
last  preparatory  licks  yesterday ,  of  practice,  is  rapidly  approach- 
for  tomorrow's  homecoming  game  \  ing  peak  form  and  should  be 
with  Georgia.  1  ready   for    heavy  duty    tomorrow. 

.  ^.  J    Reed   saw  his   first   action   of  the 

Coach  Jim  Tatum  sent  his  squad  ,  ^^^^^^  ^  ^^^  Gamecocks  last 

through   a   typical   Thursday   drill  ,  g^^^^^^y    ^^^j  j^  ^^g  evident  thai 

he  was  hampered  considerably  by 


as  they  tapered  off  on  all  phases 
of  the  game. 

All  hands  who  participated  in 
the  14-(J  loss  to  South  Carolina 
last  Saturday  were  in  fair  physical 
shape  except  center  Ronnie  Koes. 

Koes.  sophomore  pivot  man  who 
started  the  South  Carolina  game, 
is  out  of  the  hospital,  but  still 
convalescing  from  a  painful  back 
injury  suffered  against  the  Game- 
cocks. He  will  not  be  available  for 
action  tomorrow,  but  is  expected 
to  be  back  with  the  squad  -ext 
week.    I 

Bill  Hardison  and  Donnie  Smith, 
both  sophomores,  were  running  at 
center  on  the  top  two  teams  yes- 
terday. Jim  Jones,  who  had  been 
shifted  to  center  to  replace  Koes, 
has  been  ijioved  back  to  his  old 
guard  spot,  and  will  start  in  that 
position   against   the   Bulldogs. 


his  lack  of  practice. 

Reed's  running  mates  in  the 
starting  Tar  Heel  backfieW  should 
be  Ed  Sufton  and  Larry  McMullen 
at  the  halves,  and  Wally  Vale  at 
fullback.  Sutton  is  the  squad's 
leading  ground  gainer  through  the 
first  three  galnes,  and  Vale  is  the 
nation's    leading   punter. 

Georgia's  Bulldogs  will  arrive 
Friday  morning  and  make  their 
headquarters  at  a  Raleigh  hot?l. 
It  has  not  been  learned  whether 
or  not  they  will  st^ge  a  wojrkout 


here. 


Vffc 


\ 


.^  z 


PATRONIZE   YOUR 
•    ADVERTISERS    • 


Deacons  Whip 
Through  Final 
Brisk  Workout 

WINSTON-SALEM,  OCT.  12,  UPi . 
— The  Wake  Forest  Demon  Deac- 
ons put  the  finishing  touches  on 
their  plans  for  tomorrow's  ACC 
clash  with  Clemson  here  yesterday 
with  their  final  tough  workout  of 
the  week. 

Coach  Paul  Amen  put  the  em- 
phasis on  offense  throughout  the 
week  in  hopes  that  the  Deacs  will 
improve  over  last  week's  perfor- 
mance against  Virginia  in  which 
they  netted  only  54  yards  rushing. 

The  Deacs  have  scored  only  one 
touchdo'wn  in  their  last  two  ball 
games  after  rolling  to  a  39-0  win 
over  William  and  Mary  in  the  sea- 
son opener. 

Amen  plans  only  a  short  limber- 
ing up  workout  on  the  Bowman 
Grav  Stadium  turf  this  afternoon. 


USED 
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made  in  England  compare  with 
any  domestic  $27.00  shoe,  avail- 
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1  vs.  Graham  No.  2;  Field  3,  Manley 
vs.  Graham  No.  1;  Field  4.  Zeta 
Psi  vs.  AST;  and  finally  on  field 
5,  Theta  Chi  vs.  Sigma  Nu. 

All  teams  are  requested  to  re- 
port promptly  at  the  designated 
times. 


Alurol  Night  Set  Each  Monday 


Beginning  Monday  night,  Oct. 
16,  and  continuing  every  Monday 
night  thereafter,  the  intramural 
department  will  hold  open  house 
from  7.00  to  9:00  p.m.  in  Woollen 
Gym. 

Students  and  their  dates,  mar- 
ried students,  faculty  members 
and  their  wives  are  all  welcome. 
Equipment  will  be  available  for  a 
variety  of  activities  including  bad- 
minton, table  tennis  (see  above 
photo),  fencing,  squash,  handball 
and  shuffleboard. 

All  the.se  activities  will  be  held 
in  the  Gym.  Archery  and  bait  cast- 
ing will  be  conducted  in  the  Tin 
Can.  Instructors  and  supervisors 
will  be  available  in  each  group  to 
teach  beginners. 


According  to  intramural  official 
Rufus  Hackney,  last  year's  recrea- 
tional program  was  very  success- 
ful, "nie  picture  above,  taken  dur- 
ing a  heated  session  of  ping-pong, 
should  testify  to  this. 

Anyone  wishing  additional  in- 
formation on  the  program  is  ask- 
ed to  call  4424. 

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MERCHANTS 

The  students  are  getting  hot.  $•• 
editorial,  page  2. 


VOL.  LVII     NO.  20 


Complete  (/P)  Wire  Service 


CHAPEL  HILL,  NORTH  CAROLINA.  SATUROAY.  OCTOBER  13,  1956 


Offices   in   Grah<im    Memorial 


SIX  PAGES  THIS   ISSUE 


Carolina's  Homecoming  Game  Pits 
l^fui's  Tar  Heels  With  Bulldogs 
In  Kenan  Stadiutn  This  Afternoon 


IWC  Members  Meet 

The  members  of  the  IWC,  shown  at  their  first  meeting,  art  left  to  right,  first  row,  Misses  Harriet 
Schafer,  Carolyn  Greni,  Babs  Moore,  Mary  Frances  Hough,  Joyce  Holland,  Betty  Dent,  Elaine  Burns;  sec- 
ond row,  Linda  Schoof,  Sally  Peter,  Jo  Ann  Sowers,  Ellen  Brauer,  Geri  York,  Harriet  Horney;  third  row, 
Gail   Wrights,   Dot   Pressly,   Betsy  McKinnon,   Barba  ra  Miles,  Betsy   Farmer,  and   Carol   Jones. 


Town  And  Gown 
Traffic  Meeting 
Set  Next  Week 


By    NEIL    BASS 

A  joint  meeting  of  the  Board 
of  Aldermen.  Merchants'  Associa- 
tion and  student  government  Traf- 
fic Advisory  Commission  will  be 
held  the  first   of  next  week. 

The  combined  group  will  dis- 
cuss: 

(1)  The  Columbia  Street  parking 
restriction. 

(2)  The  general  traffic  situation 
downtown. 

(3?  Prices  in  local  establishments. 
HANDS  OFF 


lie  Relations  Committee  "wel- 
comes" hearing  student  grievances 
concerning  general  attitudes  or 
specific  actions  of  or  by  local  mer- 
chants, President  Young  said  it  was 
Uated  at  yesterday's  meeting. 


Queen  Will  Be 
Crowned  Today 

The  name  of  UNC's  homecoming 
queen  will  be  announced  at  half- 
time  of  today's  UNC-Georgia  game 
by  President  of  the  Alumni  Asso- 
ciation Mayne  Albright  of  Raleigh. 
Bob  Young,  president  of  the  stu- 
dent body,  will  present  the  queen 
with  flowers,  and  she  will  be  es- 
corted off  the  field  by  NROTC  men. 
The  queen  will  be  one  of  the  fol- 
lowing candidates: 

Misses  Mary  Louise  Bissell,  spon- 
sored by  Chi^Omega  Sorority;  Gail 
Willingham,  Spencer  Dormitory, 
Grace  Boney,  Pi  Beta  Phi;  Isabel 
Alderman  Dorm  Thursday  at  5:30  Madry.  Mclver  Dorm;  Jackie  Ald- 
p.m.  i  ridge,   Alpha   Gamma   Delta;    Nan 

Schaeffer.    Kappa    Delta;    Barbara 

E'.aine  Burns,  president,  report-    noney.  Alderman  Dorm;  Jean  Sou- 

ed  that  the  IWA  is  looking  forward -therland,   School   of  Nursing;    Pat 

to  an  active  coming  year.  Dillon,  Tri-Delt;  Janet  Bennerman, 

The  executives  of  the  men's  In-    Carr   Dorm:   Libby  Nicholson,   Al- 


IWCHolds 
First  Meet 

Th?       Independent       Woman's 
Council   held   it*   first   meeting  in 


terdormitory    Council    were    intro- 
duced to  the  new  representatives, 
and    plans    for   a   dinner   meeting 
APPROVAL    ■  !.with  the  IDC  W?dn€sday  were  dis- 

Five  students  will  be  appointed,    cussed. 


''  in  the  very  near  future,  to  "study" 
general    policies   of  downtown   es- 

:  tablishmcnts  toward  students,  ac- 
cording to  Young. 

i     The  appointed  students  will  then 

;  either  place  a  sign  of  approval  in 


Martha  Decker,  assistant  to  the 
director  of  student  activities,  talk- 


pha  Delta  Pi  and  Jane  Brock,  Smith 

Dorm. 

UNIVERSITY  CLUB 

The  University  Club  is  sponsor- 
ing the  contest.  Jeff  Corbin  and 
Miss  Nancy  Suitt  are  co-chairmen. 

In   conjunction   with  the  beauty 


ed  about  a  project  for  the  coming  contest.  The  University  Chib  is 
year.  Committees  wer?  set  up  to  '.  .spon.-ioring  a  display  contest.  Th" 
work    on    projects,    entertainment 


President  Bob  Young  and  Traf- 
fic Commission  Chairman  Wilburn 
Davis  met  with  the  Merchants'  As- 
sociation yesterday  morning  to  seek 


and  the  revision  of  the  Constitu- 
tion. 

The  IWA  is  made  up  of  coeds  on 
camiHis  who  ar?  not  members  of, 
sororities,    ft's    memberrhip    ton- 


cellor    Selection    Committ'>e   "was 
n't    as    overwhelming    as    we    had  | 
hoped,"  committee  chairman   Son- 
ny Evans  stated  'ast  night. 

Evan.s     said.      The     committee 
Concerning  hike  in  haircut  pric-  !  hopes  to  get  the  opinion  of  many 
es.  Young  said  the  Merchants'  As-    niore  classmen   before   submitting 


winners  of  each  division  will  be 
Announced  immediately  before  the 
game  today. 

There  is  a  trophy  for  wipners  in 
the  fraternity,  men's  and  women's 
dormitory  divisions  and  sorority 
division.  If  posnible,  the  trophJe<< 
will  l>e  awarded  today,  aceordintj 
-  ;  to  University  Club  President  Joo 
I  Clapp. 

j      Nine  fraternities,  six   sororities, 
I  13  nutn's  dormitories,  two  women's 
I  dorms  and  the  Nurses*  Dorm  will 
be  competing. 

Last  year  trophies  went  to  Col»b 

Response  to  the  Student  Chan- [  chancellor  to  the  trustee  commit- ;  E^"'-'":/"'';^^'^^";'"-  ^'^^^^  J}"'' 

I  ^^^  '  Sorority  and  Phi  Kappa  Sigma  Fra- 

j    '  ternity.    If    an    organizaftion    wins 

its  division  trophy  three  years   in 

^    ,         .     ,      .    ,         »u      »T        o    succession,   it   retires  the  trophy, 
student    body    before    the    Nov.    3 


the   merchant's  window  or  refuse 
to  exhibit  an  approval  sign. 
Exact   time  'and  plaee   for   the 
_  _  _  joint      aldermen-merchants-student 

strpport    in    lifting  lhe7e'strict]on    '"<***»»S  *'*^'   ^  announced  later^  stitute*  55  per  jwnt  _«f ,  the  >oed 
on  Columbia  SU-eet.  ',  Young  said.  population. 

But,  according  to  Young,  the  As-  i 
sociation  made   it  clear  its  policy  . 
was  "hands  off  with  regard  to  traf- 
fic problems. 

Young  said  he  and  Davis  "made 
it  clear."  in  turn,  that  students 
felt  traffic  problems  were  the  re- 
sponsibility of  merchants,  alder- 
men. University  administration  and 
students. 

"No  one   involved   should   main- 
tain a  strictly  "hands  off  policy," 
Young  said. 
HAIRCUT  PRICES 


E^ans  States  Respons^tp 
Group  'Not  What  Wi^iHophd' 


Game  Marks 
25th  Playing 
For  UNC,  Ga. 


* 


By  LARRY  CHEEK 

Carolina's  Tar  Heels,  losers  of 
three  games  in  a  row  so  far  this 
xason.  will  be  put  to  snap  back 
before  the  home  foi^s  here  this 
afternoon  when  they  tackle  an  old 
lival  from  the  University  of  Geor- 
gia in  their  annual  "homecoming 
game. 

The  game,  scheduled  to  get  un- 
derway at  2  p.m.  in  Kenan  Stadium 
under  crisp  cloudless  skies,  marks 
the  silver  anniversary  of  a  south- 


The 

Starters 

UNC 

Pas.              Georgia 

Payne 

L5               Wilkins 

Blazer 

LT              Gunnels 

Jones 

LG      Cushenberry 

Hardison 

C                  Brown 

Setie.' 

RG                     Dye 

Pell 

Rr     Meather'ham 

Robinson 

R3                  Hearn 

Reed 

QE               Roberts 

McMullen 

LHB                 Davis 

Sotton 

RHB                     Orr 

Vale 

FB          Culpepper 

tee. 

Evans   stated    that   he    plans 
interview  a   large  Segment  of  the 


meeting. 


sociation  contended  that  some  lo- 
cal merchants  supported  the  bar- 
bers' action  and  some  didn't. 

Members  of  the  Association  said 
they  had  "absolutely  no  control " 
over  haircut  prices,  according  to 
Young. 

The  Merchants'  Association  Pub- 


its  report  Nov.  3  to  a  Trustee  Se- 
lection   Committee". 

Th?  Student  Chancellor  Selec- 
tion Committee  was  appointed  by 
Student  Government  President  Bob 
Young  to  recommend  possible 
candidates     for     the     position  of 


Written  Exams  Slated  Monday 
For  State  Student  Legislature 


IN  THE  INFIRMARY 

Those  in  the  infirmary  today 
included: 

Misses  Janet  Thompson,  Mar- 
garita Cook,  Alma  Godsey,  Hel- 
en Dickson,  and  Willi«m  Jack- 
son, Charles  Gray,  John  Stunda, 
Herman  Schutz,  Tommy  Ali- 
red,  Kestel  Huffman,  Bruce 
Hight,  Leonidas  Betts,  Tawfik 
Hasson,  Joseph  Perry,  John 
Johnson,  George  Stavttitski  and 
Kenneth  Weaver. 


INSPECTION 

i  The  judges,  Ed  Lanier  of  thr 
:  Student  Aid  Office,  Miss  .Martha 
i  Decker,  assistant  director  of  stu- 
dent Affairs,  and  Frederick  Cleave- 
land  of  the  political  science  de- 
partment, will  inspect  displays  a- 
round  10  a.m.  today. 
YOUNG   REPUBLICANS 

After  the  game.  Young  Republi- 
cans are  urged  to  drop  hy  the  sec- 
ond floor  of  Len.»ir  Hall  for  coffee 


JIMMY  JONES 
lege,   Duke  and   UNC,   will   aticnd 
the  meeting.  ,\fterwards.  the  gnuii) 
will   a(lj(Mirn   to  Hogan's  Lake  for 
a   picnic. 
RECEPTION 

There  will  also  be  a  reception 
after  the  game  sponsored  by  Gr;i 
ham  Momorial  Activities  Board  and 
the  Mens  Intordormitory  Counii?. 

The    reception    will    be    held    in 
Cobb    Dormitory    tiasenvent 
4:30  to  6:30  p.m. 

It  will  be  open  to  the  entire  cam 
pus  and  alumni,  according  to  IlK 


\!TFJ{  BULLDOGS 


UNG  Cardboard  Will  Present 
Six  Special  Stunts  At  Game 


"Exercises  in  Motion  and  Color" 

is    the    name    of    the    UNC    Card 

board's    sp?cial    six    stunts    which 

fi'«nrj'\vill   be   peViormed   in   addition   t 

j  I  he  rpgufar   program    at   the  half 

lime  today.' 


and    doughnuts,    according   to   the   Social  Chairman  Benny  Thomas. 
UNC  Young  Ropublic.ins  Club.  Free  re  frcshments  will  be  served 

The  YRC  College  Council,  com-  ny  coed  hostesses,  and  music  will 
posed  of  representatives  from  Wo-  be  provided  by  Bruno's  Combo, 
mans   College,   Wake   Forest  Col-  '  Thomas  said. 


The  special  program  represent^ 
a  new  type  of  stunt.  Tho  trick, 
will  feature"  motion  and  flashes  o 
color.  "The  success  is  fully  dc 
pendent  on  the  cooperation  of  the 


Students  interested  in  attending 
the  State  Student  Legislature  musi 
take  written  examinations  Mondax 
nii^ht  at  9  o'clock  in  Carroll  Hall 
according  to  B:>b  Harrington. 

Harrington  and  Shirley  Eger 
ton  are  UNO  members  of  the  Leg 
islature  Interim  Council.  Tht 
Cduncil  conducts  business  which 
transpires  between  yearly  legisla 
tive  sessions. 

.-Vfter  taking  the  written  exam 
prospective  representatives  must 
bo  interviewed  by  a  non-partisan 
selections  board  Wednesday 
th-ough  Friday  in  Graham  Memor- 
ial. 

The  selections  board  will  con 
duct  interviews  2:30-5  each  after- 
noon in  the  Woodhouse  Confer 
er.ce  Room. 

Any  UNC  student  is  eligible  to 
represent  the  University  at  the  leg- 
islative convening,  according  to 
Harrington.  ■*- 

Village  Day  Care  Center 
Ooen  This  Afternoon 

The  Victory  Village  Day  Care 
Center  will  continue  to  remain 
open  Saturday  afternoons  throu- 
ghout the  football  season  for  the 
I^^rpose  of  providing  b*by-»it- 
♦'">9  service  for  children  of  'ttu 
'  '••nts,  faculty  members  and  Uni- 
*"»'♦»   employees. 


The  Legislature  will  meet  in  Ra-  ^ 
eigh:    Nov.    15-17,   Harrington    of 
.he    Legislature    Intorim    Council 

said- 
Delegates  will  debate  and  pass  j 
bills   dealing   with   issues   of  edu-  i 
?ational,    state,    national    and    in-  i 
ternational  importance,  he  said. 

Criteria  for  selecting  delegates 
Harrington  said,  is: 

Interest,  presentation  and  ac- 
tuality of  answers  posed  by  the 
selections  board  and  scores  on 
written  examination. 


Putting  Ballot  Boxes  In  Dormitories 
Was  Political  Move,  Weinman  Says 


student  body  in  the  Card  Sec- 
ion,  says  Snyder  Pate,  president 
f  the  UNC  Cardboard. 

For  performance  of  these  dis 
.jlays  the  Cardboard  gives  these 
■nstructions:  "Beside  easct  number 
>n  the  students*  instruction  card 
vill  be  found  the  name  oi  a  color. 
When  this  number  is  called,  t^e 
student  will  hold  up  the  correct 
"olor  card  according  to  inslructicn 
>n  his  card.  The  student  wil'  hole! 
up  the  card  until  he  gets  further 
directions.  Pate  .said. 

Pate  said  'If  thase  who  sit  in 
he  card  section  are  sure  itie\  g?t 
the  right  color  each  time,  this  ex- 
periment should  be  a  fine  sue 
cess." 


Time  Extended 
For  Pictures 
On  Annual 

Sophomores,  pharmacy,  dental 
and  dental  hygiene  students,  have 
been  given  an  extension  of  time 
alotted  for  having  Yackety  Yack 
pictures  made.  At  the  cost  of  $1 
per  student  pictures  can  be  made 
on  Mon.,  Tues.,  and  Wed.  in  the 
basement  of  Graham  Memorial 
from  1-6  p.m. 

It  has  been  requested  that  girls 
wear  dark  sweaters  and  pearls  and 
the  men,  dark  coats,  ties  and 
white  shirts.  .    .     . 

Photos  of  juniors,  law  students, 
.medical  students  and  graduate 
j  Sudents  will  be  taken  Oct.  IS-lfl. 


University  Party  Chairman  Mikr 
Weinman  said  yesterday  "putting 
ballot  boxes  in  each  dormitory 
was  a  purely  political  move  b. 
the  Student  Party." 

He  explained  in  a  statement 
•'several  SP  leaders  served  notice 
that  they  intended  to  use  the  bal 
iut  boxes  as  a  campaign  issue  in 
the  next  election  whether  they 
4ot  boxes  in  each  dorm  or  not." 

The  Student  Legislature  Thurs 
day  night  passed  a  bill  to  change 
the  Election  Laws  concetning  the 
placing  of  ballot  boxes.  Ttie  SP 
favored  restoring  them  to  each 
dormitory  in  o/der  to  encourage 
an  increase  in  the  voting  percent- 
age. 

The  UP,     which     sponsored  an 


"Putting  ballot  boxes  in  each 
I ormitorv-  was  a  purely  politica 
nove  by  the  SP.  Several  SP  lead 
•rs  served  notice  that  they  in- 
ended  to  use  the  ballot  boxes  as  £ 
campaign  issue  in  the  next  elec 
I'lons  whether  they  got  boxes  in 
•arh  dorm  or  not. 

"S»  it  boils  down  to  this,"  hi 
>aid.  'If  the  SP  lost  the  fight  to 
nut  the  boxes  in  the  dorms  then 
th?y  would  rant  and  rave  abou< 
how  they  had  tried  to  get  back 
the  ballot  boxes  for  the  boys  in 
the  dorms. 


'oiitics  before  what  you  know  i.^^i 
uo.  We  voti'd'  agjinst  pultini  j 
Mixes  in  each  dorm  because  do 
ng  so  makes  an  efficient,  fair  ■ 
•ompn^hensive  plecti.)n  impossi  I 
)U',"   he   said.  ' 

"It  is  impossible  to  get  a  suf  j 
icient  number  to  poll  tenders  lo!  ] 
he  fantastic  n  imber  of  boxe.<  i 
which  the  SP  voted  f'ir.  Statistic"  I 
orove  that  an  iricrea.se  of  less  ! 
than  eight  -  tenths  of  one  percent 
was  gained  by  increasing  the  num  : 
her  of  ballot  boxes  130  percent. 
These  slati.stics  are  based  on  , 
spring  elections  when  all  ^he  vot- : 


"If  they  won  the  fight,  and 
they  did,  then  they  could  say  they  i  ers  are  voting  fof  one  of  two 
got  the  box"s  back  for  the  boys  j  men.  This  is  the  only  way  to  get 
in  the  dorms,"  he  said.  I  creditable  statistics. 

"The  UP  had  nothing  to  gain  or  ;  -The  SP  really  lowered  itself 
Election  Laws  bill  Ust  spring  j  lose  politically  by  voting  for  or ;  bv  putting  ballot  boxes  in  each 
calling  for  boxes  to  be  placed  in  j  again.'t  mitting  boxes  in  each  ;  dorm.  They  were  willing  to  sacri- 
central  districts,  held  the  restora- 1  dorm.  Therefore,  we  were  in  a  fice  good  clean  efficient  campus 
tlon  would  not  increa»«  the  per- '  position  to  vote  intelligently  which  j  elections  to  gain  a  petty  campaign 
centage  enough  to  make  it  worth- 1  the  SP  was  not.  I  issue,"  he  said, 

while.  "Many   UP    members     felt     we  1      Bill    McLean,    former    Elections 

The  bill   was   passed   tOd   went  i  would     be     committing     political    Board    chairman,    presented     the 
into   effect   in   last  tpiing's   elec- 1  suicide  by  voting  against  putting    following  statistics  at  the  Legisla- 
tions, j  a  poll   in  each   dorm.  Maybe  this    ture    meeting    concerning    voting 
Weinman's  complete  statement  is '  is  so  but  I  don't  think  m.  It's  -*    percentages   both    befoirp   and   af- 
as  follows:  I  sad   day    when   you    have  4o   F"*    ter    the    placing    of    balldt    boxes 


■1  Cf-ntral  fli.-^tricts  Ia.<t  spiing.        ' 
In  1952  and  19.i4  (records  of  the 
9,33    election    were    nrt    available  ; 
ip   staled),   b  th   with    12   polling' 
)!aces.  the  \  iting  ptMcentag?  was 
i0.5     and     53  4,     r,  spectively.     In 
9.Tn  a'lri   I9.i6.  both  with  33  poll- 
n'4"p'aces.   the   voting    percenlagi 
Vas  54.4  and  53.5. 

In  sprinjj  presidential  flections 
n  1954.  with  9  polling  places  the 
recorded  percentage  was  62.  In  j 
1955  with  27  polling  places,  vot- 
ing percentage  was  67,  and  in 
1956.  63.  he  pointed  out. 

"To  me  this  record  shows  you 
couldn't  get  out  an  increase,  es- 
pecially when  you  consider  the 
number  of  polls."  he  said,  adding 
"we  didn't  compute  fall  election 
returns  because  it  wasn't  a  camp- 
us-wide   election." 

UP  man  Benny  Thomas  crossed 
party  lines  by  supporting  the  re- 
turn of  boxes  to  each  dorm.  He 
backed  his  .statement  "that  it  is 
only  wise  to  have  a  polling  place 
in  every  dorm*'*  with  the  following 

See    WEINMAS.   Page  4) 


ern  football  rivalry  that  goes  back 
to  1895.  This  is  the  rubber  game 
of  the  series  so  far,  as  each  school 
has  captured  11  victories.  There 
have  been  two  ties.  Last  year,  the 
Bulldogii  handed  Coach  Gc-orge  Bar- 
clay's  Tar  Heels  an  emharraastiig 
29-7  lacing  in  Athens. 

■■  ^  7'his  year's  conlest  matches  two 
squads  who  seem  just  about  ready 
ty. explode  despite  their  poor  rec- 
;>rds.  Coach  Jim  Tatum.  in  the  first 
year  of  his  new  reign  at  UNC, 
has  seen  his  enigmanc  squad  go 
d  )wn  to  defeat  three  straight  times 
this  year.  Despite  their  below  par 
♦  lerformances  to  date.  Coach  Tatum 
las  confidence  in  his  boys,  and 
believes  that  this  could  be  a  key 
;ame.  In  his  own  words,  "It'll  be 
I  game  that  could  help  one  of  us 
•jn  awfii!  lot." 
•GEORGIA  LOST  THREE 

Georgia  Coach  Wally  Butts  is  in 
iomowhat  the  same  .situation  as  Ta- 
'um.  According  to  pre-.season  bal- 
'y-hoo.  the  Bulldogs  were  headed 
for  their  best  season  since  the  days 
of  Charley  Trippi.  but  somehow 
this  prediction  has  yet  to  pan  out. 
Georgia  has  dropped  two  of  its 
irst  three  starts,  losing  to  Missis- 
sippi Slate  and  Vanderbilt  while 
stopping  little  Florida  State  on  a 
field  goal. 

General  concensus  of  opinion  is 
ihat  the  team  that  w.ns  this  game 
will    be    in    a   g(!od   spot   to   go   on 
to   greater   things   thfs   season   de- 
spite  a   poor   start.   The    Bulldogs 
have    been    beating   themselves    in 
their  first  few  games,  according  to 
''alum,   and    if   they   can    iron    out 
the   kinks,   they   could    be   trouble 
from  here  on  out.  The  Tar  Heels 
lemseives  have  yet   to   live  t|p  to 
re-so;ison      expi?ctati(ms      despite 
■aving  a  sound  football  team  veith 
^w  apparent   weaknesses.   One  of 
hose  mystery  squads  may  mature 
his  afternoon. 
.OSS  TO   S.   C. 
The  Tar    Heels   turned    in    their 
est  performance  of  the  season  so 
ir  last  Saturday  in  their  14-0  loss 
)  South  Carolina.  Durins  the  first 


Dorms  Have 
Till  Monday 
In  Contest 

Dormitories   have    until    Monda\  j 
to  turn   in  entries  for   the  Sweet- 
heart  of  UNC  Dftrmk  Contest.  |  "^'f'  '^^'""""^  outplayed  their  sou- 

'hern  rivals  on  offense  ann  defense. 

At  present  only     four     or    five  j  but  lacked  a  scoring  punch  when 


dormitories  have  turned  in  con- 
testants' names,  according  to  In- 
lerdormitory  Council  President 
Sonny  Hallford. 

Each  dormitory  may  enter  a  tot- 
al of  four  contestants,  he  said. 


hey  got  within  goallinc  territor>'. 
The  second  half  was  a  different 
story,  however,  as  the  Tar  Heels 
■"altered  both  offensively  and  de- 
fensively to  lose  the  decision. 
The  Carolina  pass  defense,  tra- 
i  ditionally  weak,  will  get  a  stiff  test 


The  contest  winner  will  be  pre- 
.eented  a  loving  cup,  roses  and 
gift*  at  an  IDC  meeting  around 
Nov.  1.  Her  picture  will  appear 
in  the   1956-57  Yackety  Yack. 


'his  afternoon.  Georgia,  known  for 
their  potent  air  arm.  will  trot  out 
»wo  hullseye  pitching  quarterbacks 
in  the  Zeke  Bratkowski  tradition, 
plus  a  pair  of  pass  receivers  de- 
luxe. Billy  Hearn  is  slated  to  get 
.  Eight  by  ten  glossy  phr.tognips ,  the  starting  nod  at  the  signal  call- 
of -contestants  must  be  forwarded  er's  post  with  Joe  Comfort  operat- 
to  the  IDC  office  in  New  East  An- j  ing  as  his  chief  understudy.  Jim 
nex  by  Oct.  31.  The  pictures  are '  Orr,  junior  right  halfback  who  led 
non-returnable.  «  I  (See  VNC-GA,  Page  5) 


I 


WVWiV^PV^PI 


f  A«|  TWO 

». . 

irjcin  Prestig^:  It'si 
lowei^.  Thanks  To  The  GOP 

--  ■      '•'. . .  wr  ^re  assured  that  all  is  well,  the  Communists  are  ou  the  run 

f    and  our  hrinknjanshil)  Is  briltiant  .  .  .  J  don't  think  the  Americ<iyi 

-    people  like  this  deception."— (^.2ind\ddiXe  Adlai  Stevenson,  coniineiit- 

ing  on  the  Eisenhower  adniinisiration's  handling  of  foreign  relations. 

The  question  of  whether  Ameri-  soil   that    foreigners  genevallv   dis- 

tan  prestige  has  suffered  as  a  re.suh  fryst    him    ^He  u;is  a   nucavthyite 

of  the    Fisenhower  administration  back  wlien  it  uas  go<jd  and  nice  to 

is  a  strarMi^  one— no  one  can  really  be  a  m«:(;arthvi«;<  remciiiber.)j.  •'»   '• 
amH^v   it.   although   everyone;  has  The  AN'hiie  House  has  showji  in, 

■an  opinion  on  the  inafter.  the  past  fmir  years  that    it    iv  in- 

It    is-ouT    opinion    that    other  capable  ol   doino   anything  at.  the 

countries  do   not  resb« t   America  appiop^-ate  tmie   (witness  the ^c.rn 

asmudvasthevfoi-meilvdid.  to  the  Nfiddle  Kast).  and  our  pub- 

,  ,  '  ,    ,  ,  he    relations    people    abroad    have 

I  s  nut  a  rnatter  ot  hou   nuich  .,^  ^^^^^  ^^^J  f^j,^.^j  miserablv  m 

aid' jve. have  been  sending  to  op-  ^^eir  attempts  to  picture  the  Uiiit- 
pressed  lotions,  his  largely  a  mat-  ^^  ^^^^^^  \^^  {]/ good  side,  the 
ter  of  uho  the  tnen  are  who  rep-  ,^^,^^^3,,^  ^,  ^j,^.  j^^j  ,jj,,  (Remem- 
resent  the  I  mted  States  on  tor-  ,^^^  ^j^^  ^^^ ^^  ^^j^.  .^,  j.^^.^^^  ^^^^^^ 
eign  soil.  »  Russian  displays  contained  wool- 
John  Foster  Dulles,  who  has  1^.,^  underwear,  ^^■here  the  Anlcri- 
bcen  holding  the  brink  down  when  ^.j^n  display  consisted  of  one  Ford 
he  wasn't  ell  route  to  a  distant  air-  Thr.nderbird?) 
ix>vt,  has  not  gained  the  I'nited  \Ve  believe  Candidate  Steven- 
States  very  much  prestige.  ^y,^  \^  y\^\^x  The  Fisenho\ver  ad- 
\'icc  President  Nixon.  x\ho  is  ministration  has  been  spending 
i\cli -received  in  the  Latin  Ameri-  too  much  time  on  assuring  the  peo- 
caii  countries,  has  made  such  a  p!c  that  all  is  well,  and  too  little 
fool   out  of  himself  on  his  native'  effort  on  makin^  it  good. 

Aft^f  Game:  iust  Meditate 

,'  It's  Saturday   morning,  and  it's  tiees'  leaves  are  browner  and  led- 

the   morninj  ot   the   homeconiin<J  ^^^  ^"^  vellower. 
football  game.                                   ^         After  th€  game,  people  will  wan- 

'  "  .      .  der  of f  into  their  separate  categor- 

Autiimn  arid  }>crfume  are  in  the  i^^'   ^^^^   t^   cat   supper,   some   to 

air.  Dates  are  heie  in  their  tweed  ^i'"^-  '^^»"<^  to  walk  down  Frank- 

and   nvlon.  and  Carolina  Gentle-  ^"1  ^t.  with  their  dates.  Some  will 

men      are     happier      than     usual,  meditate. 

There's  the  feeling  diat  we  prob-  ^^'^  rcconnncnd.  for  the  minutes 
ablv  will  win.  even  though  the  l^etween  the  end  ot  the  game  and 
results  ot  re-rnt  football  games  ^'^^  beginning  of  supper,  a  few 
havf  t.iken  the  etige  off  betting  "unutes  m  the  .\iboretum,  of  m 
j^d^  "  the  Forest  IJieaier.  or  on  the  lone- 
-,  .  ,  Iv  roads  around  Chapel  Hill.  For 
•  For  niost  sfidents.  who  ha\c  this  is  the  time  of  the  year  when 
had  their  noses  stuck  in  books  dur-  meditation  means  most,  when 
iiig  the  week,  iliis  morning  will  be  thoughts  come  quickest,  when  hu- 
ll wonderful  exj.xTience  in  nature,  man  beings  are  closest  to  their 
They  will  have  a  chance  to  lOok  Maker.  *^ 
around  them  and  see  aiitumn's  pro-  "IVIiile  the  Bell  Tower  is  pouring 
gress.  The  treses  did  not  have  this  thp  alma  mater  over  the  campus, 
color  last  week  this  time.  The  grass  take  a  shoft.  Slow  walk — and  mcdi- 
ippcars  greener,     now     that     the  tate. 

Tifttfc  Hdu$%- Warming 

T'i..    aexv    Institute  of  Govern-  Ck)lldct    information    on,    spon.^Hjr 

men:   building  is  evidence  of  the  discussion  of,  and  search  for  good 

fact  f^ft^  Nofth  Carolina  is  one^ of  govei'nxfteht.' 

the  most   prfigressive  states  in   the  ^^  ■•  » 

The  building,  whidi  w.i5  opened  ^•^*-**«'  ^"i"  ■«  ■  i^ifi  1 

to  ihe   publit    yesterday,   xvon't   be        _  m.  a  •  i 

Usilcd  bv  the  students  vei7  riiuch.  j||C|       AA  |  C  CQfi    ♦ 

But  alread\  it  is  the  center  for  oih-  •^  WO  ■       lTll^0^y# 

er  ■"students" — Irom  businessmen  to  ^^^  _    ^^m 

Highwav  Patrolmen  -  representing  C^f\r\r\  I      ri  A  n^*^ 

all  North  Carolina's  100  counties.  V^ V/WVl  V«l  101  M\0%S 

In  past  vears.  under  the  deVoted  :p,^  jj^^,^,^„^   l.egislature  passed 

eadership   of    .Mbert    Coates     the  ^         ^  opportunitv   the  other 

Institute  ot  Government  has  t)een  n\aUt 

j><'Tforming  jreat   services   for   the         "j^    defeated    a    bill    to    establish 

people  of,  this  state.  .  ■  a  campus  coordinating  commmec. 

The     Institute     has     conducted  -j-^^  c:ommiitee   would  attempt  to 

senw^arsonptacticaHveveryMina-  ^^^^^^j     ^j^^    ^.^  ^^^^^    f^„^^ 

niable  subject.  It  has  brought  bus-  ^^^^,-  j-^^  ^-^^^^  ^  ^^,^^   ^^.,^^,^  ^^^.. 

mess  executives  here  from  a-ll  over  eral   important  campus  events  are 

the  state  to  compare  notes,  to  ask  i^^dverfantly     planned  '  lor     die 

questions,   to  Jiear  ansi\er5.   It   has  ,  ,,      „•  1  .  <  ^  -.v^      - 

L         I         1-  ii-.il  same  night.  ' 

brought  policemen  and  high  school  ,-.  j  «  1  ♦.. 

,^K  ,  "      ,.  Fhe  need  lor  such  a  committee 

students  here  to  learn  more  about  •    _^„.         1  .u-    .  1      •  j     1 

J  IS  great,  and  this  year  is  the  ideal 

jfovernmcnt,  g^ood  ijovernment.  •         .       .     .  t     i 

*»  -..,  1      v-       ^  ,    A         1.1     •  t'^Tit^    to   start    one.    Such    agencies 

\V  hen   the  (jeneral  Assembly  is  i   .  ^  »  ^  «      ^  .   *  v      .    j     .  ^ 

*       -       •  ha\e  been  created  f>v  student  gov- 
meetmg,   the   Institute  gets  out   a  ...  i    .  .1  n 

,   .,       «^  I    11     ■      '  1,    •       1  ernment   m  the  past.   t>ut  thev  all 

dailv  progress  bulletin — all  in   the  ,      ^  l     .    j  1  .         4   n    i     .1 

•  r    •«    J  have  been  doomed  to  a  dull  death 

interests  ol/gboa  government.  .,  ,     .       ,  .    i-  1   •. 

i^-  ■  ^  J    L-     f  11  —the  people  m  charge  lust  didn  t 

Director -Coates  and   his   fellow  r 

workers  are  no't  politicians.  If  thev  «       .1  i  11 

,     ,     '     ,  t      •       M  But   this  vear   wc   ha^e  an   able 

liad    a-   chame    to    do    11    ail    over,  j         1     1  j  1 

V  jL'j         I    n    J      u  L-  student   bodv    president,   one  wlio 

tneT«  probablv  do  the  .same  thing:  ,  ,  :    '  ..  , 

;     •    ,   '       ■  .     °  would    appoint    coordinators    who 

i|^       1^      "I-     qj*  U         I  ^^ould  coordinate.  If  the  job  were- 

I  P^  i^Qlly    l€IP;ffi^Gl  nt  done,  he  woiild  get  it  done. 

Tp  official  suideot  publication  of  the  According    to  .  members    of    the 

Pubfeitions  Board -of  die  Unittersity  of  Student   Legislature,   their   prijici- 

Nor^ Carolina,  wttire  it   i£  pttblisbjd  pat  objection   to  tlie   bill  was  the 

daiijVexcept   Monday   and    examiaatioc  fkct   that   the   propo.sed  committee 

and  vacation  periods  and  summer  terms  wouldn't  hive  enough  power. 

Entered  as  second  class  matter  in  the  .       The'bill  provided  for  a  commit- 

post/fl^fice  in  Cbapel  ffill,  N. C.  undei  ^^^  ..^^  coordim^te  and  assist  in  the 

Che  Act  oj  March  8,  1870.  Subscription  ^,,,duling  of  all  important  camp- 
rates;  mailed.  $4  per  year,  $2.5Q  a  semee-  1  r   "  " 

ter;.  il^vered,  $6  a  year,  $S.50  a  semei-  "'  ^^<^"^  ^"^  ^»     f"^"™     ^     ^^^^^ 

ter.  schedule  to  prevent   time  conflicts 

_- ^ _ —  of  these  events." 

^^^°'-  FREDPOWLEDGE  j^,,.^^   ^^xer   ^^as   aiiv   need   for 

Managing  Editor CHARLIE  SLOA^^  a  committee  with  poAver  to  sched- 

^ — -',': ■ ; — ^TTTT^r^^^  u^c  or  refuse  to  schedule  campus 

News  Editor  RAY  LINKER  „.      4ii  »i  1    i-       _  *^ 

.    ,     , . : events.  All  that  is  needed  is  a  gtoup 

Bur.ines3  Mantfu:  BILL  BOB  PEEL  to    maintain    a    master    sthedule. 

Spirts  Eoitor  ^ LARRY  CiffiBK  ^^'^'^"    ^"   organization    started    to 

-.--.! , — r      ,      .   ■  ,^ — L-, —  plan  an  event,  it  could  consult  the 

Advertising  Manager  _ Fred  Katzin  master  schedule  first. 

9^^  Editor        Peg  Humphrey  Perhaus   such    a   calendar   miild 

EOrrORlAL    STTAtF  -  Woody    Sears.  ^  ^^^^'^^ps   such    a   calendar   could 

m^UtCtowlher.  Birr*  Winston,  David  ^^    maintained    without    the    ap- 

Mimdy.  G«or^  ^fiflfst,  Ingtid  Clay,  P"^^^**  ^^  ^^^  Student  Legislature. 

Cortland  Edwards.  If  heads  of  organizations; arc  tv9r: 

Night  Editor  _..._   Clarke  Joii*s"   ried  enough  about  attencfance.  they 

Proof  Reader  .^ .._..  Bei  taylot  _  A^fi.  get  the  calendar  drawn  up. 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEIt 


$ATUIU>AY,  OCT^Ift  It,  ItU 


CAKOltlDOSCOPr 


■■PT 


mr' 


Jazz  Is  Back  On  WUNC- 


Frank  Crowth«r 

Jazz  has  come  into  its  own 
again  on  the  University's  Freq- 
uency Modulation  radio  station, 
91.5  on  the  FM  dial. 

■"Flip"    Latham,    who   was   the 
hardiest   proponent   (ft  the  sboW  * . 
which  was  "fixed"  la|t  Jf^M^  ^fta-;; 
aUy   h^is  hcet   affotd^i  ji^i^^^' 
■chance  to  air'his  hour'loii|^^6«iw"'' 
of  "America's  own  music.  Jazz." 
■   The   initial    progrian}    last   Sat- 
urdaj*  was  divided  into  four  sec- 
lions  in  trying  to  pltise  all  tastes 
by   devoting  only  one   fourth  of 
the   show   t3   a   particular  artist 
or  particular  type  of  music.r  ■ ' 

Benny  Goodman's!  1938  'Clar-  ' 
negie  Hall  concert  opened  the 
show«nd  featured  juch  renouned 
artists  as  Lionel  Hampton.  Harr>' 
James,  Gene  Krupa,  and  Teddy 
Wilson. 

Next  came  the  instrumental 
jazz  group  of  Mitchell-Ruff. 
Dtright  Mitchell  was  on  the  pi- 
ano with  Willie  Rufl  playing  the 
Bass  and  French  Horn. 

Th3  third  portion  featured  Cal- 
vin Jackson,  the  Canadian  pian- 
ist, who  Ls  said  to  r.^nk  with  such 
greats  as  Oscar  Peterson.  Art 
Tatum,    and   Marion   McPartland. 

The  final' "quarter  was  devoted, 
to  "Mr.  Co'ntrcversy."  Stan  Ken-. 
tea.  The  arguments  pro  and  con 
concerning  this  man's  talents 
never  sease  in  the  world  if'  mus- 
ic; but  it  is  not  to  be  denied 
that  many  composers  and  artists, 
after  having  been  associated 
With  "Stan  The  Man."  h^v'e  come 
into    their    own    mUiical    right. 

Jarvis  (Flip>  Latham,  the 
show's  originator,  is  a  senior 
from  Eastern  Carolina  who  was 
seemingly  weaned  on  a  Saxa- 
phone.  His  major  is  RT\'MP— 
Radio.  Television,  and  Motion 
Pictures — and  he  is  looking  for- 
ward (?)  to  an  indefinite  period 
in  the  U.  S.  Air  Force  at  the  end 
of  this  year. 

1.  for  one.  will  be  looking  for- 
ward to  .tile  forthcoming  Satur- 
day night  shows  this  semestef', 
and  ,  I  hope,  next  semester. 

Tonight  he  well  feature  music 
of  Duke  Ellington;  Dave  Bru- 
beck.  ShortV  Rogers,  and  Woodj 
Herman.  Bend  an  ear  from  8  p.m. 
to  6  p.m..  and  I'm  .sure  you'll  en 
jot  yourself  ...  if  you  appreciate 
jazz. 

*  •  • 

In  this  time  of  'iynch  Tatum" 
and  "those  bums  in  football  uni-. 
forms,"  I  was  pleased  to  hear, 
and  from  a  man  in  Dook  town 
(Durham),  a  few  words  of  praise 
for  the  "men  in  blue." 

We  (stopped  in  a  little  diner 
for  a  bowl  of  Chile,  and  started 
a  conversation  with  the  "maitre 
d' "  of  the.  establishment.  This 
was  la.sl  Saturday,  after  every 
one  of  the  Carolina  teams  had 
been  beaten  soundly. 

"You  know,"  he  began,  "this 
is  the  time  when  a  ball'  player 
feels  the  lowest  and  receives  the 
most  tongue  lashings.  He  got  out 
on  the  field  and  plwyed  his 
best,  but  lo.st.  So,  everybody 
from  the  alumni  to  the  professors 
and  students  is  down  on  him. 

"I'll  tell  you;  I  think  that  every 
boy  who  goes  do'wn  on  that  field 
is.  a  ball  player  and  should  be 
respected  for  that  fact  alone.  He 
has  the  spunk,  energy,  and  initi- 
ative to  get  out  there,  train  for 
many  long,  hard  weeks,  and  play 
himaelf  into  tile  ground  trying 
to   win   for  old    U.U.U.'   If  they 

win.  he's  a  big  hero;  but,  if  they 


lose,  he  couldn't  be  a  bigger 
bum.  The  mob  in  the  stands  has 
no  mercy  .  . .  they're  just  a  self- 
ish mob." 

Win    or    lose    toda.v.    ddn't    be 
just  a  "mob;"  be  the  backers  of 


gtt  down  on  the  g^^en  once  and 
look  up  when  the  days  sweat  is 
still  thick  on  your  skin  and  your 
energy  has  long  since  been  drain- 
ed. Scowls  and  insults  are  a  hard 
diet.  ■■*^'  -:" 

'Holding  Him  Up?  )1m  Holding  Him  Backf     . 


your  own  boys  whether  they  win 
or  lose...  after  all.  they're  try- 
ing to  win.  And  should  they  lose, 
don't  call  them  bums;  it's  easy 
when  vou  sit  in  the  stands,  but 


i^ANt^iL. 


Av»— i 


MV.   ,'  ,t^].4^r 


'  ti. 


■^^:V:'i^-:,:0'^  .; 


^VVi.; 


y*iyyr-n^^p- 


^s' 


Eileen  Farrell  Sang  Varied  Program 


Jay  Zimmerman  Jr. 

Th«  following  critique  was 
guest  written  for  this  column  by 
Mr.  Jay  Zimmtrman  Jr.,  world 
traveller,  artist,  creative  genius 
•nd  raconteur  extraordinary. 
.'  '  ,  ^  Barry  Winston 

Eileen  Farrell  was  received 
with  something  more  than  en- 
thusiasm at  Lhe  Chapel  Hill  Con- 
cert series'  opening  program.  The 
audience  which  nearly  filled 
Memorial  Hall  on  Wednesday 
night  enjoyed  thems?lves  thor- 
oughly, and  any  concert  at  which 
everybody  has  a  good  time  is  a 
good  concert. 

The  magnificence  of  Miss  Far- 
rolls  voice  i.s  undeniable,  and 
the  program  gave  her  ample  op- 
portunity to  display-  the  range 
of  her  ability. 

The  selections  covered  a  span 


from  Bach^o  Menbtti  with  heavy 
stress  upon  contemporary  \frorks 
after  intermission. 

Of  special  interest  vrerc  the 
following  numbers:  Aria —  Ern- 
ani  Involami,  from  Verdi's  opera 
'Ernani.'  a  difficult  aria  with  a 
long  coloratura  passage  which 
Miss  Farrell  handled  beautiful- 
ly. 

Aria — Ozean!  Du  Ungeheuer, 
from  'Oberon'  by  von  Weber 
which  required  the  artist  to  cov- 
er a  tremendous  range  in  fastest 
possible  time. 

Aria — to  This  We've  Come  from 
'The  Consul'  by  Menotti.  an  emo- 
tionallly  moving  piece  of  excep- 
tional  quality  and   impact. 

Among  the  shorter  songs  '"C" 
by  Poulenc  and  "Hickory  Hill" 
by  Paul  Sergenl  appeared  to  be 
popular. 

.\s  encores  Miss  Farrell  sang 
'The  Stars'  by  Brne.st  Charles, 
'Vocalize'  from  the  film  'Athena.' 
Youman's  'Through  the  Years.' 
and  'The  Dream'  by  Gvieg. 

My  only  adverse  criticism  con- 


cerned the  lack  of  familiar  se- 
lections in  the  program  and  the 
insertion  of  'Linstead  Market', 
a  calypso  song  which,  though  en- 
joyable, seemed  a  "little  out  of 
place,  being  more  along  Bcla- 
fonte's  tine  than  Parrell's  In 
addition,  the  choice  of  Vocalize 
seemed  a  definite  drop  in  quali- 
ty. ■    ■;,; 

The  artist,  relatively  unfamil- 
iar with  the  new  program,  was 
forced  to  begin  one  selection 
twice,  but  her  comment  at  the 
time  put  the  theater  at  ease. 

Although  tired  by  her  long 
trip.  Miss  Farrell  was  glad  to 
greet  the  press  and  a  few  individ- 
uals after  the  performance.  "This 
was  a  wonderful  audience,"  she 
told  me,  and  went  on  to  comment 
favorably  on  Chapfel  Hill  and  her 
visit. 

Miss  Farrell  and  her  excellent 
accompanist .  George  Trovillo 
made  a  lasting  impression  which 
will  demand  encores  in  the  fut- 
ure. ■  ^ 


Pogo 


By  Walt  ketly 


Jumdicfioh  Ok 


In  order  il  ecqwainif  the  studeflt  hoity  «Hth  flinb 
Hfdiciary  brMKh^«f  tttNtont  #<yf7t«m«nt.  Article  II 
•f  riU  ^»y4#nV  CiNistlhMi  ^  'pipi^t  in  t1ii» 
i^vnMi  Inffire*  p«rt»;'^^^  ;^*'-  :"^'-;-:  .^.^"^■ 

>  <%!«!  i«irlsdicff«n  •#  HH^.«iri««t  fwhU 


-   r   : 


ARncii&  a 

judiciary 


<:-^. 


.:  ^tr^il  1.  Judiciary  Bodies  E$t;|blisbed.  Tbe  jo- 
dieii^  jpbwer  shall  M  vested  in  a  Student  Council, 
a  M#ii><^iincil,  a  Women*s  Council,  A  Law  Seiiooi 
Co^,  a. Medical  SchoolCourt,  i  Men's  Interdonnl- 
toy;£bu^cU  Coutti  an  IntarCriternity  Council  Corlrt, 
th<*  wijman's  House  Cofoncil's,  Daxice  i^ommiitee, 
and  «  SftudclM^Pacttlty  C^^         -'■ ' 

■  .   i    "     ••<.''?     '-"'■"•.  ^    '     '"  ;' 

Section  2.  Student  Responsibility  and  Respoosi- 
bllity  of  Judicial  Officers.  Primarily,  it  shall  be 
the  res^nsibility  of  these  chaimen  to  initiate  ac- 
tion in  all  cases  or  circumstances  wHere  thfre  ap- 
pears to  be  a  possibile  Molgtloa  of  thie  codes.. 
'  iJection  3.  Jurisdictidn.  ?    ^ViT*^*^^';      J-i^r 

.5^-^^.J;  ■'■:>,>.v  ,-■-  ^;;4^^^^  ■     -' 

•  tA)  SttJbENf  COUlSFCtt.  the  Student 
Countil  shjill .  ha|ire  , original  jurisdiction/^  in  Sll 
cases'  involving  \hA  constitutionality  of  any  legis- 
lative or  executive  action  and'  all  cast?  in  wjMch 
^  violation  by  ,naea  .of  the  CatftjpW  Coflf  | has 
been  '  coiAmitted.  In  addition,  tiis  court  -hall 
heSr  appeals  concerning  the  elections  laws. . 

V   ■'^■'^'f^i'tf:  ■Vr'iX^i/y    ■-iffi^.U^'^^  -i-l-^  ■')"  *^'i^i-'  ';  ••- 

(B)  WOMEN'S  CtKJkCIL.  The  Women's  Conn- 
cil  shall  ha\'e  original  jurisdiction  in  all  cases  of 
violation  by  women  of  the  Honor*  Code,  the 
Campus  Code,  and  all  rules  except  those  cases 
properly  under  the  jurisdiction  of  the  Student 
Council,  House  Councils,  and  Dance  Commit- 
tee. It  shall  hear  appeals  from  House  Council 
decisions. 


(C)  MEN'S  COUNCIL.  The  Men's  CouncU 
shall  have  original  jurisdiction  in  all  cases 
of  violation, by  men  of  the  Honor  Code,  and  aU 
rules  except  those  cases  properly  under  the 
jurisdiction  of  the  Student  Council,  Men's  In* 
terdormitory  Council  Courts  and  Dance  Cotn- 
mittce.. .'  -    i  •     -    ." '  ': 

\Lt  ;  .•■■•.  .V      .         '  ..Jj,    -    •■(  '^ 

•  (D)  MEN'S  INTEJtI>OR3irrORY  COUNCIL 
COURT.  The  Mens  Interdormitory  CouncU  Court 
shall  have  originfl  jurisdiction  lH-.  all  ea^^Siln- 
volvin^  infraction  of  dormitdty  rules  of  con- 
duct as  outlined  in  the  by-laws  of  the  Men's  In- 
.tirdormitory  Couirt.  and  as  stipulated  on  etch 
individual  door,  and  in  all  cases  involving  dam- 
age to  dormitorj'  property. 

i  I. ■>:'  ^    -■'•'';.:  ^"-r  :.  ,,     :  J  :.■--■       ...        ..<•  S 

(E)  WOMEN'S  HOUSE'  COUNCILS.  Each 
Wdme'n's  House  Council  shall  have  ori^nal  jur- 
isdiction in  air  cases  involving  infractions  of  the 
house  rules  by  residents  of  the  h6use.     * 


(F)  LVTBRFRATERNITy  COUNCH^  COURT. 
The  Intcrfraternity  CouncU  shall  h»ve  the  power 
to  try  all  cases  of  fraternity  violations  of  Inter- 
fraternity  Council  Rules. 

(G.)  DANCE  COMMnTEE.  The  Dsttce  Com 
mittce  shall  have  original  jurisdiction  in  ail 
cases  of  violations  of  the  rules  governing  cpn- 
diict  at  dances.  It- shall  refer  all  cases  beyond 
its  jurisdiction  to  the  appropriate  student  judic- 
ial t>ody.    .  .  ,,  ^ 

(H)  The  Law  School,  the  Medical  School 
Court,  and  the  Dental  School  Court  shall  have 
original  jurisdiction  in  all  cases  of  violation  of 
the  Honor  Code  perpetrated  by  a  student  in 
tlwir  respective  schools.  They  determine  their 
own  by-la\(^  '  which  shall  be  subject  io  the  ap- 
proval of, the  Student  Legi9lft«are.  ■ 

■*^V(l')  LEMITATION.  N6  court  except  the  Mens 
CouBcil;  Women's  Coin*cil;  Student  Council,  Law 
School,  court.  Dental  School  Court,  and  Medical 
School  Court  shall  ha ve^  original  jurisdiction  in 
any  cases  involving^'  Hmor  Systen^  dr.  Campus 
Code  offenses.      i'    •   ^  '■ -'X  % 


■'%  t^ 


Reader 


Up 


m  Abner 


ByAicapp    Fof  Pdnnect  Fljclc 


wi»7tamcou!d 

ftE  THET  CLOSE  T' 
-j'fiH.iy-  U>/ERftOVNtK 
6UT-$Ob^-AH  (SOT 

AcufiaftONME.: 

ftOh/LESS  AM  VUAS 

50RN,  AST 
BOVLESS  AH'UL 


<aa.  c«f«y»  " 


Editor:  ^ 

I  found  'Bus  Stop'  to  be  an  enjoj-able  satire 
and  was  pleasantly  surprised  by  Marilyn  Monroe's 
si/btle  performance.  I  woald  be  surprised  to  find 
that  the  film's  humor  and  appeal  Went  totally  un- 
appreciated by  an  intelligent  bein^. 

In  comparison  to  the  "avera^  Marilyn  Monroe 
movie",  'Bus  Stop'  was  refreshingly  entertaining. 
For  these  reasons  I  fqund  your  viewer's  consistent- 
ly derogatory  tone,  to  say  nothing  of  bis  lack  of 
sensitivity,  unpii^antly  nrisleadiiu:.    '    '    '  if       i 

W.  C.  Meiiderv  Jr. 


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5>^TURDAY,  OCTOBPR  13,  1956 


THE   DAILY   TAR  HIBL 


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Mbd  Society 
To  Meet  Here 

The  annual  meeting  of  the  Sixth 
District  Medical  Society  will  be 
held  Wednesday  in  the  Clinic 
Auditorium  of  Memorial  Hospital. 

I 

This  announcement  was  made 
yesterday  by  Dr.  Leonard  E.  Fields 
of  Chapel  Hill,  president  of  the 
J?c«<?ty,  ,  .     j 

Registration  for  the  meeting  will 
bpgin  at  the  Clinic  Auditorium  at 
2:30  p.m.  The  scientific  program 
will  begin  at  3  p.m.  i 

Lectures  will  be  given  by  Dr.  J. 
Lafnar  Calla-way  and  Dr.  William 
M.  XichoKs-in  of  the  Duke  Uni- 
'  •A-ersitv  Medical  School.  Dr.  John 
'S.  Rho<les  .if  Raleigh  and  Drs. 
Charles  K.  Burnett.  Kenneth  M. 
Bnnkhous  and  Richard  M.  Peters, 
all  of  the  UNC  Medical  School. 

Aside  from  Dr.  Fields,  officers 
of  the  Sixth  District  Medical  So- 
..  cety  are  Drs.  Lillard  F.  Hart. 
Apex,  vice  president;  Seth  G.  Ho- 
bart,  Durham.  sec^etary-lpeaiiLir- 
er:  George  W.  Paschal  Jr..  Ral- 
eigh, councilor  and  Rives  W.  Tay- 
lor,   Oxford,    vice-councilor. 


Tt 


TST 


Covering  The  Universify  Caijipus 


STUDENT  WIVES  CLUB  SPLASH  CLUB 

The  Student  Wives  Club  will  Splash  Club,  the  women's  syn- 
meet  Tuesday  at  8  p.m.  at  the  main  chronized  swimmipg  club,  will  hold 
entrance  of  the  library.  A  tour  of  try-outs  for  club  membership  Mon- 
the  library  is  scheduled.  Rides  will ,  day  at  7  p.m.  at  the  pool.  Club 
be  available  to  those  desiring  them    president  Ann  Gillett  would  like 


Peterson  Lost  In  World  Championship 


The  above  is  a  photograph  made  at  the  1922  baik-line  Champion- 
ship of  the  World  play-off  in  the  Astor  Hotel  in  New  Yori<.  The 
inset   shows   Charles   C.    Peterson,   currently   teaching   billiarcte   and 


giving  exhibitions  in  the  GM  Billiard  Roonv  Peterson  was  defeated 
in  the  balk-line  finals  by  Willie  Hoppe.  Petersen  will  be  here  througn 
today. 


and  will  leave  the  Victory  Village 
Nursery  at  7:30  p.m.  All  student 
wives  are  invited  to  attend. 
W.A.A.  CLUBS 

The  Woman's  Athletic  Associa- 
tion is  sponsoring  five  clubs  this 
week.  Hockey  Cliib  will  meet  on 
Tuesday  at  4  p.m.  An  organization- 
al meeting  of  the  Square  Dance 
Club  will  be  held  Tuesday  night  at 
7  pjn.  at  the  Woman's  Gym.  On 
Wednesday  at  7  p.m.  the  Modern 
Dance  Club  will  meet  in  the  Dance 
Studio  of  the  Women's  Gym.  Those 
interested  in  tennis  can  play  with 
the  club  on  Thursday  at  4  p.m. 
Volleyball  teams  may  practice 
Monday  through  Friday  from  4-6 
p.m.,  and  Monday,  Tuesday  and 
Thursday  at  7-8  p.m. 
COMMUNITY  WORK  SHOP 

There  will  be  a  meeting  of  the 
Community  Workshop  at  5  p.m. 
Tuesday  at  the  Y  Building. 


to  meet  with  all  old  members  at 
6:15  p.m. 

STUDY  GROUP 

The  Study  Group  on  Christian- 
ity and  Other  Religions  will  meet 
this  coming  Monday  night  at  8 
p.m.  in  the  Y  library  on  second 
floor  of  the  Y  building.  A  film, 
"The  Major  Religions  of  the  World" 
will  be  shown,  and  a  brief  discus- 
sion will  follow.  Sponsored  by  the 
Campus  Christian  Council,  this 
study  group  is  open  to  all  who  are 
interested  in  the  subject,  it  was 
stated. 

FACULTY  CLUB 

The  UNC  Faculty  Club  will  hear 
Coach  Jim  Tatum  at  the  regular 
semi-monthly  faculty  luncheon  on 
Tuesaay.  Tatum  will  speak  on  "Col- 
lege Football." 
YMCA  STUDY  CROUP 

The    YMCA    Study    Group     on 


"Race  Relations"  will  meet  on 
Monday  afternoon  from  5-6  in  301 
Hanes  Hall.  All  students  are  wel- 
come. The  Rev.  Charles  M.  Jones 
of  the  Community  Church  of  Cha- 
pel Hill  will  lead  a  discussion  on 
"The  Christian  Position  on  Segre- 
gation." 

WUNC-TV 

Today's  ^hedule  for  WUNC-TV, 
the  University's   educational  tele- 
vision station,  Channel  4: 
6:29    Sign  On 

World,  Weather  Man 
Your  ChUd 
Frontiers  of  Health 
Renaissance  on  TV 
American  Politics 
Sign  Off 

WUNC-FM  '^       '^ 

This  is  the  WTTNC-TV-FM  radio 
station  schedule  for  today: 
7:00    Paris  Star  Time 

Showtime 

This  Is  Jazz 

Encore 

News  At  Ten 

Evening  Masterworks 

Sign  Off. 


6:30 
7:00 
7:30 
8:00 
8:30 
9:00 


7:30 

8:00 

9:00 

10:00 

10:15 

11:30 


Chapel  Hill  Choral  Group 
To  Begin  Rehearsals  Monday 


.r. 


1 


The  Chapel  Hill  Choral  Club  morial's  Mozart  Festival  will,  be 
will  begin  rehearsals  for  the  1956- '  the  first  performer  of  this  sea- 
57   season   next   Monday   night   at  i  son. 

Last  season  Choral  Club  mem- 


•»j<; 


7:30  in  Hill  Hall. 

-This  group,  under  the  director- 
ship of  Joel  Carter,  is  sponsored 
•by  the  University's  Department  of 
•  Music.   It   is   open   to   any  person 
who  has   had   experience   in   sing- 
ing. 

There  is  no  limitation  on  the 
size  of  the  club,  but  it  usually  con- 
tains from  60  to  75  singers.  Mem- 
bers mainly  consist  of  townspeo- 
ple, faculty  or  staff  members,  and 
fingers  from  the  surrounding 
community. 

Miss^  Brevis.  to  be  presented  iA 
December  as  part  of  Graham  Me- 


bers  presented  a  varied  concert 
in  the  fall.  They  sang  Mozart  Re- 
quiem with  the  University  Glee 
Clubs  and  Orchestra  in  February. 
They  also  gave  the  annual  Com- 
mencement   Concert   in   June. 

Officers  for  this  year  are:  Dr. 
Charles  Fulghum.  pre.<;ident:  Mary 
Nies.  secretary,  and  Gene  Stnss- 
ler.  librarian.  .Mrs.  John  Shannon, 
graduate  assistant  in  the  music  de- 
partment, will  be  the  accompanist. 

Rehearsals  will  be  held  each 
Monday  evening,  according  to  Di- 
rector Carter. 


Special  Planefarium 
Weekeiid  Shows 


For  the  next  three  Saturdays, 
Kenan  Stadium  Avill  not  be  the 
only  exciting  place  on  the  campus. 

Because,  Morehoad  Planetarium 
technicians    have    included    color-  i  ies  this  month 
ful   and  thrilling  effects,   one  be- 
ing  a   simulated  explosion   of   an 
atomic   bomb,     for     the     special 


free    exhibit    on    atomic    cne 
prepared  by  the  Museum  of  Atomic 
Energy   at   Oak    Ridge,   Tenn..   for 
the    Planetarium's    science    galler- 


^  football  matinee  presentations  oi 
"Our  Sun"  and  "Mister  Moon." 

They  will  be  given  at  11  a.m. 
and  5  p.m..  before  and  after  the 
games  with  Georgia.  Maryland  and 
Wake  Forest.  These  matinees  are 
in  addition  to  the  regularly  sched- 
uled nightly  shows  at  8:30  o'clock. 

Some  of  the  electrical  and 
lighting  eficcts  tie  closely  to  the 


In  addition,  the  Planetarium's 
spacious  sundial  garden  now  is 
beautifu!  with  fall  blo-ssoms  on  21 
varieties  of  roses  and  other  flow- 
ers. The  giant  sundial,  largest  of 
its  kind  in  the  world,  and  the 
garden  are  now  popular  with  foot- 
ball fans  who  carry  cameras  to 
record  their  stay  in  Chapel   Hill. 

The  Planetarium  opens  at  10 
a.m.  Saturdays,  at  1  p.m.  Sun- 
days, and  at  2  p.m.  on  other  days. 


Grad  Student 
IsS.  Carolina 
Cotton  Mdid 

Prom  AP  Wire  Reports 

A  22-year  old  UNC  graduate  stu- 
dent. Miss  Jo  Ann  Deason,  last 
night  won  the  South  Carolina  title 
in  the  Maid   of  Cotton  contest. 

Miss  Deason.  who  won  the  title 
over  21  other  entrants,  said  she 
was  "thrilled"  to  win  and  vowed 
"to  do  my  best  to  win  (the  national 
finals)    for   South   Carolina." 

A  "graduate  student  in  dramatics 
at  UNC.  she  starred  in  one  of  the 
Playmaker  productions  this  sum- 
iner. 

She  was  "almost  breathlessly 
happy"  tht»t:  she  won,  almost  "tak- 
en off  my  feet  when  the  judges 
announced  I  was  the  winner." 

The  daughter  of  Mr.  and  Mrs.  W. 

H.   Deason   of  Enoree.    S.    C,  she 

visited    with    them    before    flying 

back  to  Chapel  Hill  late  yesterday. 

"f         S'le^'s  a,  graduate  of  Winthrop. 

UNC  Prof 
Back  From 
Mexico  Trip 


Campus  Chest  Sets  $1500 
As  Goal  For  Nov.  Campaign 


ftfi-k*-'*^"- 


"I'm  Told  Varley's 

Men's  Shop  is  the 

place  to  trade 

in  Chapel  HilU'i 


-'■A 


/■••  ■ 


The  indu.strial  expansion  now 
underway  in  Mexico  means  new 
opportunities  for  businessmen  and 
technicians  from  the  United  States* 
a  University  professor  reports  6n 
returning  from  an  extended  trip 
to   the  South. 

Dr.  Bierck.  recently  promoted 
;  to  professor  of  history* traveled  in 
Louisiana,  Texas  and  Mexico  un- 
der a  Ford  grant.  He  conducted 
a  survey  of  .sociological  and  an- 
thropological literature  pertaining 
to   Latin   America. 

In  several  parts  of  Mexico,  he 
I  reports,  industry  is  expanding 
rapidly  and  is  anxious  to  obtain 
American  capital.  A  large  number 
of  American  businesses,  many  of 
them  in  merchandising,  are  build- 
ing  plants   and   retail   stores. 


By  JOAN  MOORE 

The  Campus  Chest  will  conduct 
a  drive  Nov.  4-10.  A  goal  of  $1500 
has  been  set  up  for  this  campaign. 

At  a  meeting  of  the  Board  of 
Directors  Friday,  it  was  decided 
that  60  per  cent  of  the  money  col- 
lected should  go  to  the  World  Uni- 
versity Service.  This  is  an  inter- 
national voluntary  agency  which 
gives  mutual  aid  to  other  univers- 
ity communities  throughout  the 
world. 

The  Gocttingcn  Student  Ex 
change  will  be  given  20  per  cent. 
This  student  exchange  provides  for 
two  UNC  students  to  study  in  Ger- 
many, and  also  for  a  German  stu- 
dent to  come  to  this  campus.         • 

CARE  will  receive  13  per  cent  of 
the  money.  CARE  is  responsible 
for  carrying  on  such  pAjJfets'ias 
providing  food  and  sugp^jvi'lor 
needy  families  throuuhnut  the 
world.  i 

■    This  year,  money  will   be  MiV'C" 
to    the    Cancer    Fund.    Seven    per' 
cent   will   be  devoted  to  seeking  a  : 
cause  and  cure  for  this  dread  dis-  [ 
ease.  j 

A  member  of  each  fraternity  and  j 
sorority  and  at    least   three  repre- ' 
sentatives    from    each    dorm    will 
make  person  to  person  solicitations.  , 
The  board  hopes  that  all  students 
will  contribute   a   minimum   of  50 
cents.  Letters  asking  for  co|itribu-  ; 
tions  will  he  sent  to  faculty  mem-  i 
hers.  Kick-off  drives  for  this  cam-  j 
paign  will  bcgn  at  the  various  Cha- ! 
pel  Hill  churches.  j 

A  committee  has  been  establish- 
ed to  make  plans  for  a  dance  fea- 
turing Briuios  Combo  to  be  given 
durinji  the  middle  of  November. 
Girls  from  W.  C,  Averetle  College  ^ 
and  Meredith  College  will  be  pres-  i 
ent.  I 

j  The  Campus  Chest  Fund  was  e.s-  i 
[  tablished  here  in  1951.  The  Student  i 
i  Legislature  passed  a   bill  to  do  a- 1 


way  with  the  many  drives  which 
were  held  and  instead  to  combine 
them  all  into  this  single  drive. 

The  Board  of  Directors,  of  the 
Campus  Chest  Fund  wll  hold  an- 
other meeting  FYiday  to  make  fur- 
ther plans  for  their  drive. 

University  Students  Listed 
In  Recorder's  Court  Tues. 

students  in  Recorder's  court 
Tuesday  were  as  follows:  C.  H. 
Baucom,  wrong  way  on  one-way 
street,  nol.  pros.;  Charles  Albert 
Ross,  speeding  $5  and  costs; 
Fred  Marshall  Daniel,  speeding,  $5 
and  costs;  David  Richard  Dean, 
wrong  way  on  one-way  street, 
costs. 


Post  Game  Festivities,  Pa  jama  Parties,  Banquets 
Are  Inclu4^djd$^i0i  Calendar  ^hhW^Bfkehil^ 


Post  game  parties,  pajama  par- ; 
ties,  coffee   breaks,  festivities  for 
new   pledges,   teas,   and    banquets 
have    been    posted   on   "the   social 
calendars   of  Carolina  students. 

Pi  Phis  were  entertained  by 
the  Phi  Gams  at  the  School  House 
while  the  Chi  PsLs  played  host 
to  the  Kappa  Deltas  at  a  Last 
Roundup  picnic  and  party  Thurs- 
day night. 

Sorority  houses  held  open  house 
Tuesday  night  for  dorms  and  fra- 
ternity men  in  honor  of  new 
pledges.  The  Alpha  Gams  had  a 
slumber  party  last  weekend  for 
their  pledges. 

Chi  Psis  are  instituting  date 
night  at  the  lodge  for  Tuesday 
evening  dinners.  They  plan  a  pa- 
jama party  for  SatuMay  night 
with  a  combo. 


Pee  Wee  Batten,  Mt.  Gilead,  and 
ukelele  provided  the  entertainment 
at  the  semi-annual  banquet  given 
by  the  Merchants  Association- 
Chamber  of  Commerce  Tuesday. 

St.  Anthony  Hall  gave  a  ban- 
quet at  the  Carolina  Inn  for  new 
pledges  Monday  at  which  Dr. 
William  Poteat  spoke.  He  is  the 
first  of  a  series  of  speakers  who 
will  speak  at  chapter  dinners 
once  a  month. 

AfPis  will  give  a  tea  in  honor 
of  tneir  new?  house  Sunday  after-   break  by  the  ATOs  last  week. 


noon.  The  Betas  plan  a  party  at 
the  house  tonight. 

A  cocktail  party  was  given  by 
the  Sigma  Chis  yesterday  after- 
noon and  they  will  party  at  the 
house  aftei  the  game.  Sigma  Chi 
David  Mich«ux,  Jacksonville,  has 
given  his  pin  to  Sissy  McNinch, 
Charlotte. 

Chi  Omega  Liz  McGraw,  Omaha, 
h.'iS  been  pinned  by  Jerry  Smith, 
Zeta  Psi  from  Edenton.  The  Chi 
Os   were   entertained   at  a   coffee 


TJL 


5«^' 


Tif 


J 


ZJentpo 


Lounge  Chairs 

Beer  and  Soft  Drinki 

Hors  d'oeuvre 

Potato  Chips  &  PretzeU 


J 


^. 


oom 


LOSANNE: 

Skirt  Sale! 

LOVELY  WOOL  SKIRTS,  IN  TWEEDS, 

FLARES -SrZES     10-16. 
REGULAR  $10.98  AND  $12.98  VALUES 

Now    $7.84 

Friday  And  Saturday 


,.,..•?,. 


Losanne,  Inc.  't' 

Glen  ^.ennox  Phone  8-0521 


CAHCnilK 


NOW  PLAYING 


CLASSIFIEDS 


SPf^/M  STOCKING-  OFFER/ 


q 

•5*r»«»'s  U9M  Lodits!  Wirt  tvery  JTBTXI 

r*"^  *  '  Hfrr's  a^r^'^porturuty  to'grt  a  reat  fong-lasting  ^upply  of  fine 
nyton  hosiery  for  far  less  than  you  ever  imagined'  A  regular  $1  25 
value  for  only  $1.00 — P'"»  »  'pare.  When  you  buy  this  package  of 
two  pain  and  two  >pare«,  ytm  are  actually  getting  three  pairs  of  fine 
«y!on  hose.  Take  advantage  of  this  offer  NOW.  Clip  and  jnaij  iKe 
coupoa  ticlow  for  fast  delivery. 


PAPER-BACKED  BOOKS  —  Good 

used  nuvels,  detective  yarns  and 

non-fiction   al   3   for  25c   in   the 

stand    by    our    front    door.   The 

j       Intimate    Bookshop. 

:  FOR  SALE:  UPRK'.HT  PIANO  Tn 
I       fair  condition.  Tel.  2236. 

•'  FOR  SALE— COLLECTORS!  COLT 
'  single  action  •Frontier"  .44-. 40. 
I      Gall.  Jim  Potter.  116  King  Street, 

,!..at  8-0893  after  4:30 

WARNER  Wffls'JJJJ         ','•■■■■ 

COURlMARnAL 
OFBlUYMnCHELi: 


Thundering 

air  adventure  I 


M-G-M  presents    '"^^ 

SPKNCKK        IRKNK 

TRACY 'DUNNE 


in  VICTOR   FLEWlNGi 
Productiofi  of 


DEVISE  HOSIERY    .•-    BOX  227,  READING,  ?A. 

Please  lend  me  two  pairs  and  two  spare*  of  Dcnice  Hosiery. 
For  dm  I  am  enciating  |2  00. 


Nom4 


City- 


Si7«  L«rtgth 

Bu&incss  Sheer  □ 

Dress  Sheer  O 

n  B«'9«      □  Toupe 


^=-^="» 
'/_^ 


VAN  JOHNSON -ESTHER  WILLIAMS 


Ml 


lATE  SHOW  SAT.  NIGHT 
SUN.-MON.-TUES. 

r  ronn  the  best- 
seller of  young 
love  in  warl 


"This  Is  The  Funniest  Movie  Of 
The  Year 


v'Yr  ■''> 


EXCEPTIONAL  COMEDY  .  .  .  SURE  AND  SOPHISTICATED 
HUMOR  AT  ITS  BEST!"      —Zinsser,  Herald  Tribune 


"A  must!  Funnier  than  'No  Time  For  Sargeants'  and 
infinitely  more  clever!" 


Gilbert,  Mirror 


CinemaScOP^  •  WAi»NeRCouOR 

cHisBiCKFORD  MiniBElUMY 
mSIEIGERfuuBETHiiONisoiiiEn 

t 


mi  mi 

•  HIUI  situs  NC1ll(Sr-«..D. 


..,oi!sri[Miitir 


NOW  PLAYING 


DEMISE  HOSIERY      ...      BO)f-227    READING^,   PA. 


.♦* 


.4- 


"HIGH  HILARITY! 
FIRST  GLASS 
COMEDY!  ENJOY- 
ABLE RELIEF!'' 

—  McCjfrfen,  th*  New  Yorktr 

"A  must!  fK&n  sopliliti- 
cptttd  and  clever  than  'No 
Time  For  Sergeants*  and 
what's    more,  infinitely 

funnier!"  —  Gi(ber»,  Mirror 

"Highly  comical!  As  weird 
and  wonderful  a  troop  as 
ever  went  to  war!" 


/IV 


Ir 


n\ 


''A  FULL  BAG  OF 
BRITISH  COMIC  CHARACTERS! 

Delightful : . .  Very  funny . . .  ScHre  Htes 
to  finest  heights . . .  Beoutifuf  anc!  blithely  ^ 
mode  ...  A  fresh  breexe!''    ~wjm«**».  fo** 


The   BOULTING  BROTHERS  present 


\\ 


Robert  WAGNER 
Teny  MOORE 
Broderick  CRAWFORD 

.. -c BUDDY  EBSON 
.........  o«vB  misswi 

..>...<  mcHMO  itriscHfi 

COUNkyDEUin 

OnbmaScoPE 


mm  pffOGREss 

RICHARD  ATTENBOROUGH  •  OCNNIS  PRICE  •  TERRY  T:ffiMAS  •  MM  CARMMXACl 

ica  LATE  SHOW  TONIGHT-SUN.-MON.-TUES. 


"A  MERRY  CHASE 
.  MILITARY  MATTERS! 
-<;ALE  of  HIGH  GLEE  .  .  . 
SHARP  SATIRE  .  .  ,  ONIY 
LARCENY  AND  -SOLID 
LAUGHTER  .  .  .  THE  IDEA 
IS  SIMPLY  TO  KEEP  AN 
AUDIENCE    t^AUGHING!" 

Cook,  WerW-re^egrem  t  Sua 

"A  delightful  spoof  .  .  . 
Chuckling  tongue-in-cheek 
humor  .  .  .  One  hilarious 
incident    after     another!" 

—  PetiavKi:.  .fournaf'Amcrkofl 

"A  hilarious,  satirical 
comedy!    A    hovrling 

delight!"  -2u"(er,  Cu«  AAog«sm« 


n 


Emeettre 


'*-*>(. 


* •  .♦'.g ■»»■»»•■'>*>?■  >i>>>'#ihii  V*-tr <^(*% 'i 


t^i'M  •«  V  •  •■.♦  *_•  »«  *  -1^  - 


TTTTT- 


Trrr 


#*«■  pmm 


THl  OAtLY  TAt  HIIL 


SATURDAY,  OCTOBER  13,  \9U 


w    ;'*^f' 


SATl 

•'  -- 

T 

H 


The  Cj 
coofltry 
gold   mi 
^  eame    thi 

Carolina,) 
SUte.  CI 
line    to 

«eason. 

*  The   ni^ 
^  ■,  quadra 

»  ^n   some 

-.  and  rc-iu\ 

included 

*  The  ofl 
three  wai 
angular. 
Carolina,  I 
Carolina 

•  points,  lo^ 
follows. 
Tafolina 

•  Carolina 
took  Cler 

■  Carolina 
clarify. 
The  thred 

•"tired   i  n 
the  combi 

Marion 
Jning  fact! 

■  first  placi 
1>ast  Stat^ 
only  100 


iVrtTH  THE  CHURCHES; 


Variety  Of  Subjects 
Scheduled  For  Sunday 

Th«  following  is  a  list  of  ser- ,  at  B  p.ra.  tomorrow,  followed  by. 


▼ioes  being  conducted  by  Chapel 
Hill  churches  tomorrow. 

THE  PRESBYTERIAN  CHURCH  | 
will  conduct  morning  services  at  I 
9:46  aju.  and  11  a-m*.  tomorrow.  | 
Jfr.  Harry  E.  Smith,  Minister 
to  Students,  will  deliver  th>>  ser- 1 
mon.  His  topic  will  be,  "The  Jtarks  ! 
of  aa  Idol.**  J 

The  Westminister  Fellowship 
will  meet  for  supper  at  6  p.m.  to- 1 
morrmr.  in  the  hut  The  program  { 
wilt  considt  of  small  group  dis- 1 
cussions  of  "Jesus  Christ:  Man| 
and/ or  Idol."  ♦     | 

THE  LUTHERAN  CHURCH  will  | 
have  regular  services  at   11   a.m. 
tomorrow.  Rev.  Wade  Hook's  topic 
will  be:  "The  Human  Problem."     j 
At   the   6   pan.   Sunday  dinner^ 
meeting  of  the  Lutheran  Student  I 
Association,  Mary  Ann  Heeter ,  sen- ' 
ion  in  tte  School  of  Nursing,  will  j 
speak  on  "The  Luthtfan  Student 
fitted  Integration." 

THE  CATHOLIC  CHURCH  will 
hold  mass  in  Gerrard  Hall  at  8 
a.m^  10  a.m.  and  11:30  a.m.  to- 
morrow. 

THE  CPtSCOPAL  CHURCH  fOiJi- 
pel  of  the  Cross)  wUI  haire  Holy 
Commimion  at  7:30  a.m.  tomorrow,  j 
Family  Services  will  be  held  at 
9:15  a.m.  Student  Eucharist  will 
be  held  at  9:30  a.m.  Sunday  in  the 
small  chapel. 

TTie    morning   worship    services 

will  be  held  at  11  a.m*  Sunday  and 

the  serihon  topic  will  be:  "Whose 

Favor?" 

The  Canterbury  Club  will  moet 


Evening  Prayer  at  8  p.ra. 
THE    BAPTIST    CHURCH    wUl 

have  Sunday  School  at  9:45  mm. 
and  morning  worship  at  11  a.m.  to- 
morrrow.  Dr.  Habel's  sermon  will 
be  titled  "Christ  Whom  We 
Preach." 

The  BSU  Supper  will  be  at  6 

p.m.  tomorrow.  The  student-«pon- 

sored  evening  service  will  be  at 

7:30  pjn.   Clayton  Stalnaker  ,will 

i  be  in  charge  of  me<ktiRtion.      ^ 

THE  METHODIST  CHURCH  will 
hold  morning  worship  services  at 
9  a.m.  and  11  a.m.  tomorrow.  The 
sermon  will  be  delivered  by  Mur- 
ray Unruh,  director  of  the  Wesley 
Foundation.  His  topis  is  "Amos." 

Church  School  will  be  held  at 
9:45  a.m.  Sunday.  The  Wesley 
Foundation  will  meet  at  5:45  p.m. 

Vespers  are  said  each  afternoon, 
Monday  through  Friday,  at  5:45. 

THE  CHRISTIAN  SCIENCE 
CHURCH  will  hold  Sunday  School 
at  9:30  a.m.  and  worship  service 
at  1*  a.m.  Sunday  in  the  lecture 
room  of  Carroll  Hall. 

THE     SOCIETY     OF     FRIENDS 

CQuaker)  Will  conduct  church  serv- 
ices at  11  a.m.  tomorrow  an  the 
Grail  Room  of  Graham  Memorial. 

The  Community  Church'  will 
hold  a  non-denominational  church 
service  Sunday  at  11  a.m.  in  Hill 
Hall. 

The  United  Congregational 
Christian  Church  will  begin  Sun- 
day School  at  10  a.m.  and  church 
services  at  11  a.m.  Sunday  in 
Carroll   Hall.  V 


Studenf  Fdify  Fills  TWp 
Legislature  Seat  Vacancies 


The  Student  Party  has  filled  two 
Legislature  seat  vacancies. 

Don  Kroe  was  elected  from 
Dorm  Men's  I,  and  Ed  Brown  from 
Dorm's  Men's  III.  The  party  will 
recommend  :th^ie  two  to  student 
body  President  Bob  Young,  who 
makes  appoititments  to  ffSl'  -legis- 
lative vacaii^itfjs. 

Gardner  Foley,  chairman  of  the 


Advisory  Board,  announced  the  ap- 
pointment of  Ed  Proescher  as 
chairman  of  a  conunittee  to  recruit 
rei^esentatives  in  each  dormi- 
tory, fraternity  or  sorority.  Their 
jobs  will  be  to  coordinate  the 
campaigns.. 

Pfoesci^  htts  1  «f|i6i|Ktc4^  Naiky 

Turner  aid' iStil^  Tallies  to  the 

■•:;..»i     ■ 
committee; M    ,;■ 

uOli,- 


Weiiitimn  S/cfsfs  SP 


(Conmutd  frtHk  PiMirr  1) 

computations  oi  spilnf-fa^  voting 
percentages: 

tt  the  spring  of  '34  a  24  percent 
voliii'  intrease  of  the  previous 
fall  etoctions  was  recorded.  Voting 
in  the  <aU  of  1954  showed  an  in 


East.  The  Ejections  Board  shall  be  i 
responsible  for  placing  a  ballot  box  i 
in  each  dormitory,"  the  amend- 1 
ment  states. 


ing  $1,350,  acconfiitg  to  Homer 
Winchester,  regional  manager  of 
Vita  Craft  Sales,  Inc. 

The  scholarships  are  presented 
in  addition  to  commissions  and 
allowances  allowed  on  sales  the 
students  have  made. 


Nlii^'SH^^Hti  Are  Wiiirier$ 

Ninet  UnlveF^ity   students  -teve       The  students  are:  Charles  Bunch, 
won  Vita.Ci^aft's(^1l[f^hips  total-    awarded  $230     for    $7,788.30    in 

sales;  Lee  Phillips,  $200  for  $6,- 
008.80;  Robert  Spencer,  $200  for 
$6,980.10;  Richard  Von  Biberstein, 
$150  for  $5,288.60;  Harley  Gille- 
land,  $150  for  $5,063.05;  Eugene 
Maloney,  $10G  lor  $4,240.45; 
Joseph  Clapp,  $100  for  $4,190.80; 
Billy  Sessoms,  $100  for  $4,101.10; 
and  Frederick  Isenhowcr,  ^100  for 
$4;003.65  in  sales. 

Vita     Craft     scholarships     are 

awarded  specifically  for  tuition  and 

school  expenses  and  are  based  on 

the  total  sales  from  June  3  to  Sept 

U  15.  ' 


WELCOME 


'iijt' 


M*.^. 


Olid  To  Have  Yov  Back  : 


At 


Hlti 


T»! 


wr 


for  the  finoit  qw^lApf  ^*^^  Rn4  workman-, 
ship  in  mon's  clotiiinji,  drop  by  STEVEN^SHEP. 
HERD  -and  browse  around.  We  are  proud  of  our 

selociion  and  welcome  the  opportunft^j 

■  *  ( I.  ■■     .    ■ 

tending  ot^  hospslality  to  youJ .  . 

' '         -  ♦"  ■-.  -,  "■  -  ■ '] 

vVT.^  'The  best  dressed  men  shop  at: 


of 


ex- 


I. 


'J 


STEVBKS-  SHBPHiSRD 


DTH  Staffer  Writes 
Story  For  Escapade 

Kxpected  to  be  on  sale  ^ny  day 
now  at  local  newstands  is  the  Oc- 
tober issue  of  Escapade,  magazine 
for  men.  With  a  story  written  by 
a  UNC  student. 

.  Jimmy  Purks* ,  sephomoce  jf i 
Raleigh  and  .son  of  former  Acting 
Consolidated  University  President 
J.  Harris  Purks,  wrote  the  story 
this  summer  and  won  $100  for  his. 
task. 

The  story,  "Country  Body 
Guard,"  is  about  a  "'couple  of  coun- 
try hicks>that  go  to  the  big  city." 
according  to  Purks.  "It's  a  new 
twist  to  an  old  storj."  he  said. 

Purks  entered  the  story  in  a 
monthly  creastive  contest  for  col- 
legians sponsored  by  Escapade, 
published  by  Dee  Publishing  Co. 
of  California.  Young  Purks  plays 
on  the  UNC  soccer  team  and  is 
also  a  member  of  The  Dally  Tar 
Heel  staff. 


Thomas  Wolfe  Collection 
On  Display  In  Library 

A  special  exhibit  from  the 
Tliomas  Wolfe  cSUection  is  now 
on  display  in  the  library. 

The  exhibition  is  being  made  in 
connection  with  the  publication 
of  the  "Letters  of  Thomas  Wolfe" 
by  Elizabeth  Nowell.  Much  of  the 
material  for  this  book  eas  gather- 
ed from  the  Thomas  Wolfe  Collec- 
tion at  the  UNC  librarj'. 

In  the  exhibition  are  manu- 
scipts,  photographs,  first  editions, 
foreign  editions  and  other  mater* 
ials  relating  to  Wolife.  Several 
letters  written  by  Wolfe,  while  a 
student  at  UNC,  are  shown. 


Weinman  indicated  the  amend- 
ment was  not  the  party's  doing.  As 
Thomas  assumed  the  roster  to  in- 
..     -V,  1.  ^  ..      .,^|troduce  the  amendment,  Weinman 

^^^rt  ^T?\r2L!f*  ?*!;'«^s&«ed  to  him,  "You're'  speak- 

vi«tt^ii^,  aaa  fall  ^ticms  rfn       ^^  y«^if .^ 

ISM  4&|fMi<M  a  ei  percent  increase!    *     ■  '' 

ov^  fl^  of  19SS.      -  •^  I     A  question   was   raised   at   one 


Laziness  Not  Reason 
For  Cars  On  Campus 

Town  Manager  Thomas  D.  Rose,  ]  Howard  Weise,  who  dc<fes  not 
commer.ting  on  the  town  and  j  have  a  car  here,  stated  that  there's 
campus  parking  situation,  said  i  no  reason  for  riding  to  cla^.  The 
the   biggest   source   of   trouble    is  i  only    reason   a   car   is    needed   at 


to  point  otit  that  McLean's  jstate- 
ment$  were  nohpairtisan,  and  that 
SP  representative  Andy  Mitoer 
had  "biclted  this  thing  all  the  wiy 
last  spfltte",        • 

Milner  challenged  Weinman  to 
produce  ,^fviitixt .  Va  tv^tgatt  Ms 
claim.  .  ^:^K^f^i^  ^^'^^^'^ : 

Weinman  stated  that  he  could 
not  prodube  evidence,  but  that  he 
remembered  the  incident  "very 
cletrly."  Weinman  was  temifided 
at.this  point  bjr  JOP  wprcsentt^ve 
iih%  Martha  Bafb^r  ^«t  the  s^ 
retary's  records  would  reveal  Mil- 
ner's  stand  on  the  iss\ie.  ] 


Weinman  conceded  the  point  and 
went  on  to  slate,  "Statistics 
don't  prove  there  is  enough 
crease  of  votes'*  to  warrant  re* 
placing  ballot  boxeis  in :  evert 
dotm.  .^    ..  »-.;./ -:v-;v  ■     ■■■  j 

Thomas  asserted.  ''I'm  sure  we ! 
can  get  ballot  boxes  back  in  the  j 
dorms."  I 


meeting  over  the  seating  of  a  Leg- 
islature member.  Ted  West,  who 
was  endorsed  by  both  parties,  had 
dropped  out  ,of  the  Legislature  and 
wantM  the  SP  to  fill  the  vacaney. 
Darwin  Bell  was  chosen. 

,  The  problem  was  whether  or  not 
West  was  authorized  to /say  which 
party  could  fill  the  vacant  seat. 
Article  Xn,  section  4  of  the  Elec- 
tions Law  settled  the  matter.  It 
said,  "In  case  of  resigning  officer 
who  was  plurally  endorsed,  the 
said  officer  shall  have  the  privi- 
lege to  state  which  of  the  endors- 
ing parties  shall  be  allowed  to  ap- 
prove his  successor." 


"Most  people  are  too  lazy  to  waUc." 
In  regard  to  his  statement  The 
Daily  Tar  Heel  conducted  a  poll 
and  came  up  with  the  following  re- 
sults: Most  people  dpn't  consider 
laziness  as  being  the  main  reason 
students  want  to  keep  cars  on 
campus. 

Darrell  Armstrong,  who  does  not 
own  a  car.  thinks  that  driving  saves 
time,  and  he  would  like  to  know 
why  parking  fines  given  on  the 
campus  are  collected  by  the  town. 
He  said,  "Why  can't  the  University 
collect  the  fines  and  build  its  own 
parking  lots?" 

Miss  Barbara  Stockton  says  that 
it  may  be  true  that  people  are  too 
lazy  to  walk,  '.'Ut  that  there  is  a 
security  in  having  a  car  at  your 
disposal  here  at  UNC.  Barbara 
does  own  a  car.  but  thinks  it's 
mighty  nice  to  be  able  to  ride 
when  she  does  feel  lazy. 


'^■\  Many  New  Members  Attend 
Meeting  Of  Debate  Squad  ? 


The  first  meeting  of  the  debate 
squad  was  held  Wednesday  in 
Graham  Memorial,  with  a  noted 
membership  increase  of  15  to  20 
freshmen  and  transfers  attending. 


Dean  Of  B A  School 

Meeting 

*I*idc'i  job  that  presents- a  chal-   job  will  mean  25  years  from  now 


lenglfr— one  that  is  bigger  than  you 

of  the  UNC  School  ^  Business 
Administration,  told  (Senior  a4d 
^r^a|»  students  mst  night  |n 
t}#*^iil  of  the  ytptrS  series  of 
Placement    Service   meetings. 

Dean  Lee  emphasized  that  to- 
day'6  graduate  has  a  choice  of 
jobs,  and  abould  Consider  what  a 


DAILY    CROSSWORD 


ACROSS 

1.  Pish 
5.  Refuse  of 
grapes 

9.  Clayey 
10.  Apart 
12.  Overhead 
13. City  (Ala.) 

14.  Cornered 

15.  Prophets 
IC  Bxclama- 

tion 
17.  Whether 
If.  Perched 
20.  Happens 

Main 
24.  From 

(prefix) 
25.Be^B 
27.  Type  of 

tAnker 

29.  Bxclama- 
tkm 

30.  CMifirm 
32:  Grampus 

34.  At  home 

35.  General 
Practitioner 
4abbr.) 

ST.CtvU 

wrongs 
40.  Variety 

of  gimin. 

yieMtaff 

sorglHMa 

43.  Harden 
(vwr.> 

44.  Gombi-  . 
nation 

45.  An  ox 

40.  Antiquated 
47.1UB'sname 

41.  >raaecntes 
-JudiciaUy 

H&WH 
I.AIMCM 
■uke 


2.  Fragrant 
wood  iB.  I.) 

3.  Rant 

4.  Foretells 

5.  Magnitude 
f.  Toward  the 

sheltered 
side 

7.  Parts 

8.  Fellow 
f.lVaterfer 

cleaning 
11.  Quicker 
13.  Prefecture 

(CSiin.) 

20.  Sun  god 

21.  Epoch 

22.  Rodeos 


23.  Title  of 

respect 
as.  Young 

hogs 
26.  Canad- 
ian 

city 
23.  French 

article 
31.  Chines* 

river 
33.  A 

caster 
35.  Not  delicate 
S«.  Part  of 

a  window 
33.  Allowance 

for  waste 


angg 

saQE 

uraaoa 

o&][ani2} 

r^HHOon 

aaoRra 

(laaEU 

nranati 

Uv".           H'P^Jl    '•^^■'1 

anaQDH  hd     1 

r^Baon 

QL^aQB 

Ida  Haaaau] 

EH    TnS           llta! 

ranTiwR 

Hf:3I3CI5 

rjr^Hr^D 

Haiir^a 

a.'rosni 

aa»oic5 

inaii 

:ri^nii 

T«at«raar**  Aaawcr 

3t.  Serum 
(eomK 
fontt> 
41.TWo^toed 

sloth 
-42.  Lift  ■ 


: 


SPECIAL 

FOR 

SATURDAY 

AND 

MONDAY! 


S.V.E.  Skyline 

300  W.  Automatic 

Projector 

With  Case  And 

Aireguipt  Changer 

Reg.  Price  $64.95 

Radiant  Q.  B. 

Projection 


^ 


Screen 

40"  X  40" 


Reg.  Price  $16.95 

Both 

FOR 

$64.95 

Saturday  And  Monday 
Only 

POiSiEft'S 

CAAAERA  STORE 


-^whether  the  company  offers  op- 
portunity for  advaneemeift^  or 
whether  the  position  is  a  "dead 
end  job.'* 

In  considcriits  what  kind  of 
job  he  is  best  suited  for,  Lee  id- 
vised  the  graduate  to  "take  inven- 
tory of  yourselves."  He  pointed 
out  that  while  some  companies  are 
interested  in  grades  alone,  many 
also  consider  activiti^,  honcra, 
and  the  health  of  the  applicant  in 
offering  him  a  position. 

Lee  counseled  graduates  to 
choose  a  company  interested  in 
developing  yonng  talent.  "Don't 
think  you  have  ended  your  study 
when  you  gratluate,"  he  stated. 

In  order  to  advance  in  the  busi- 
ness world,  Lee  stated  that  a  per- 
son must  always  be  on  a  project 
to  broaden  himself.  "All  top  bus- 
iness executives,  according  to  a 
recdnt  national,  poll,"  he  said, 
"liked  classical  music,"  pointing 
out  that,  top  business  executives 
must  -be'  well-rounded. 

J.  M.  Galloway,  director  of  the 
Placement  Service,  urged  seniors 
and  graduate  students  to  register 
with  the  Placement  Service  as 
soon  as  possible.  "If  you  will  reg- 
ister now,"  he  stated,  "you  will 
get  in  on  early  interviews  which 
you  would  otherwise  miss." 


In  reply  to  Weinman's  statement 
that  in  national  and  local  elections 
ballot  botes  "are  not  placed  in 
every  apartment  house,"  SP  repre- 
sentative Ji3  Holmes  said,  "this 
business  of  eomparing  us  with  peo- 
ple not  here  on  campus  has  ho  I  quite  a  mature  squad, 
relevancy.  We  are  we  and  they  are 
they  and  let  it  be. 


Dave  Lieberman,  president  of 
the  squad,  remarked  that  the  in- 
terest in  debating  which  the  group 
exhibited  at  the  meeting  indicated 


"I  remember  my  first  year  in  this 
Le^slature  when  Jim  Montieth 
(SP)  got  up  and  said  'Anything  that 
helps  one  man  on  this  camtnis 
helps  every  man  on  this  Cam|m$'." 

An  amendment  to  the  EHections 
Law  bill  was  also  introduced  and 
passed.  The  amendnient,  brought 
up  by  UP  member  Btony  Thomas, 
provided  for  each  dormitory  to  be 
"designated  as  an  election  sub>  dis- 
trict with  the  president  of  the  dor- 
mitory serving  As  administrator  of 
the  sub-district  district;     < 

The  amendment  also  states  th^ 
"dormitory  president  shall  be  re- 
sponsible for  providing  poll  tehd- 
era,  for  supervising  the  polls  ahd 
for  providing  a  rostef  of  dormitory 
residenta  Which  must  be  /eaiitents 
before  voting.  •-'  •' 

"Residents  of  dormitories  shall 
vote  only  in  their  respective  dor- 
mitories. Residents  ot  Emerson  Sti- 
dium  idiall  vote  in  Ruf fin  dormi- 
tory and  residents  oT  all  other  Uni- 
versity owned  buildings  not  men- 


New  Library  Handbooks 
Are  Now  Available 

Copies  of  a  new  library  hand- 
book are  now  available  for  stu- 
dents and  visitors. 

The  handbook,  the  first  of  its 
type  here,  is  designed  to  serve  as 
an  introduction  and  guide  to  the 
library. 


Dr.  Shepard  Jones  of  the  UXC 
Political  Science  Dept.  spoke  brief- 
ly en  the  background  of  the  de- 
bate squad's  central  topic  for  this 
year.  The  topic  is  "Resolved:  That 
the  United  States  should  discon- 
tinue direct .  economic  aid  to  for- 
eign countries." 

Lieberman  invited  all  interested 
students  to  participate  in  the 
squad's  activities;  he  emphasized 
that  experience  is  not  necessary. 


Chapel  Hill  is  to  po  home  every 
weekend  or  so.  he  says. 

Jim  C«$«r  remarked  that  "every 
student  should  have  a  helicopter." 
Jims  owns  no  car.  no  helicopter. 

Miss  Eve  AAcCiatchey,  who  does 
not  own  a  car,  bemoans  the  fact 
that  she  has  to  walk  two  or  three 
miles  in  the  course  of  the  day,  and 
when  her  classes  are  on  diametri- 
cally opposite  sides  of  the  campus 
it's  certainly  not  a  matter  of  being 
lazy. 

Norman  Gerrard  agrees  With 
Rose,  saying  that  most  people  art 
not  willing  to  look  around  for  a 
parking  place  for  10  or  15  min- 
utes when  they  could  get  where 
they're  going  on  foot  in  five. 
'PRIVILEGE  TAKEN  AWAY' 

Lou  Rosenstock  thinks  the  man 
problem  is  that  the  boys,  "those 
on  Columbia  St.,"  have  had  a 
privilege  taken  away  from  them. 
Lou  does  not  own  a  car.  but  he 
says  the  parking  lot  across  from 
the  police  station  is  seldom  full 
and  wonders  why  town  people 
can't  park  there. 

"It's  not  necessarily  going  to 
class."  says  Eleanor  Williamson. 
"What  if  it's  raining  or  you  have 
errands  to  run  "  Eleanor  has  no 
car. 

"I  definitely  think  a  boy  needs 
a  car."  .says  Mary  Ruth  Mitchell, 
who  has  no  means  of  transporta- 
tion on  campus. 

Joel  Chadabe  has  no  car  but 
thinks  it's  a  person's  right  to  keep 
a  car  in  front  of  his  home,  and 
does  not  think  its  a  matter  of  be- 
ing too  lazy  to  walk. 


The  book  explains  the  functions' 
of  the  many  library  departments. 
It  also  contiuns  a  complete  floor 
plan  of  the  building  and  the  most 
recent   campus    map   available. 

Mr.  I.  T.  Littleton,  assistant"  1I-'t'tar> 
brafian,   and  Mrs.   Oliver  Orr  of  j  p^ru 
the  reference  staff  prepared  the 
booklet.     Mr.     John   Spnint   Hill, 
Cltss  of  .li89;.made  the  publish- 
ing possible. 

The  authors  feel  that  this  book- 
let will  en^le  students  to  use  to 
greater  advantage  the  rapidly 
growing  and  increasingly  complex 
library. 

Copies  may  be  obtained  at  any 


UNC  Sanitary  Engineer 
To  Speak  In  Pittsburgh 

Dr.  Marvin  I.  Granstrom,  asso- 
ciate prefessor  of  sanitary  engi- 
neering, School  of  Public  Health, 
wiir  present  a  paper  in  Pittsburgh 
next  Thursday.   -    ; 

Dr.  Granstrom  will  speak  be- 
fore a  joint  meeting  of  the  Sani- 
tary Enginering  Division  of  the 
American  Socie<ty'  of  Civil  Engi- 
neers and.  Jhe  United  States  Se.q- 
tion  of  th^  5Btfeif-'.^merican  .Associ- 
ation of  Sanitary  Engineers. 
♦  -The  title  of  bis  •  paper-  will-  «e 
Technical  Assistance  in  Sani- 
Engineering  Education  in 
The  paper  will  explain  the 
work  done  in  Peru  by  the  UNC 
School  of ,  Public  Heaba,  ifi  ■  estab- 
lishing  aA  aidiiqu^te  "program  in 
sanitary  engineering  in  that  coun- 
try. 


Library  Science  Staff     { 
Attending  Conference  ■. 

Six  UNC  faculty  and  staff  mem- 
bers of  the  School  of  Library 
Science  are  attending  the  '  South- 
eastern Library  Association  cdn- 
•ference  in  Roanoke,  Va.,  this  wedc. 

Those  planning  to  attend  tlpis 
seventeenth  biennial .  conference 
are  Dean  Lucile  Kelling;  Carlyle 
J.  Frarey  and  Margaret  E.  Ka|p. 
associate  ptofessors;  Robert 
Miller,  assistant  professor: 
garet-  Allmaiir  intmetojr  And  librar> 
ian;  and  Jean  Freeman,  admissions 
officer  and  assistant  to  the  dean. 
'  Robert  E.  Lee  of  Greensboro, 
who  is  now  consultant  for  ipe 
American  Library  Association  with 
headquarters  in  Chicago,  HI.,  will 
sum  up  the  panel  discussion  of 
the  Public   Libraries  Section. 


t    A. 
M|r« 


tioned  in  this  bill  shall  vote  in  Old  |  public  service  desk  in  the  library. 


Religious  Prints  From  Durer 
To  Roualt  Now  On  Exhibit 


TTie  Person  Hall  Art  Gallery  is 
currently  exhibiting  "Religious 
Prints  from  Durer  to  Rouault,"  a 
travelling  exhibition  selected  from 
the  George  Benet  Print  Collection. 

Included  are  50  prints  by  major 
and  minor  artists  of  the  last  450 
years.  The  exhibition  affords  a 
wide  range  of  religious  subjects 
and  an  even  greater  variety  of 
techniques  and  styles. 

Through  the  exhibition  one 
mo\"es  from  the  precise  and  incis- 
ive line  of  a  Durer  engrav'ng  to 


the  broad  and  luminous  forms  of  a 
Rouault  lithograpih;  from  the  pro- 
found spiritual  qualities  of  a 
Rembrandt  to  the  etnotionally  com- 
pelling Rouault,  according  to  a  re- 
lease by  Person  Hall. 

Less  well  known  artists  rep- 
resent the  flamboyant  Baroque 
art  of  the  17th  century,  the  pastor- 
ial  quietness  of  the  18th  century, 
French  Classicism  and  various  as- 
pects of  art  m  the  19th  and  20th 
centuries,  the  release  stated. 

The  exhibition  will  continue 
through   Oct.   28. 


Editorship  Of  Mademoiselle 
To  Go  To  Contest  Winner 


<.i«i.«.i«  ■«■■■'*■■•-•   1    I   itg,,  I,  I,  ,,,iniiii|- -...-....-..-..-.....-..-.. 


The  Carolina  Inn 


4'. 


li^.- 


^-:5-.:; 


A  good  place  <o  stay,  to  dine;  Id  -^Utertain  or  just  to  visit  and  enjoy  the  congenial 

llomelike  atmosphere.  _    . , 


:fi 


\ 


:% 


For  ypur  convenience  and  pleasiflri  ve  offer  clean  and  comfortable  guest  rooms,  and 
appetizing  JUid  wholesome  meals  in  oor      v'  -  ..   ^ 


v 


CAFETERIA 


,^, 


7  to  9 


11:45  to  1:36 


and  in  our  main  dining  roonr> 


5:45  t»  7:30 


•  to  10 


THE  HILL  ROOM 


U  lot 


i  to  • 


DINING  RESERVATIONS:  The  Hill  Room  and  private  dining  rooms  are  available  for 


parties,  banquets,  meetings,  dances,  etc. 


CALL  CATSRE31  ^  4011 


- By  PEG   HUMPHREY   I 

Editorship  on  a  national  fashion  j 
magazine  may  be     yours     for     a 
month   if  you  are  one  of  the  20 , 
winners  in  Mademoiselle's  annual  | 
College  Board  Contest. 

Any    undergraduate    coed    may 
enter  by  submitting  a  1500  word 
critique    of   the   editorial    section 
in     Mademoiselle's    August     1956 ' 
College  issue  or  any  later  issse.    1 
The  critique  should  include  the 
entrant's    likes    and    dislikes,   sug- 
gested   changes      and      additions. 
i  with    concentration    on    the    par- 1 
;  ticular    phase    of    magazine    work  i 
!  in  which  she  is  most  interested.    ' 
I      Trjouts    are   dtie    by    November 
30,  and  successful  candidates  will 
be  notified   of  acceptance  on  the 
College    Board    before    Christmas. 
The  first  of  two   assignments  for 
these  members  will  appear  in  the 
Januar>-  issue. 

Twenty  students  will  be  selected  ; 
on  the  basis  of  these  assignments 
to  serve  for  one  month  as  a  guest ; 
editor  of  the  magazine.  They  will ' 
rece|wf  ■  a    saj&mi:   and    rouhd^trip^ 
transportation  to  Ne«'  Yoric  City. 
While  in  New  York,  the  giiest 
editors   wCi   help  write,  edit   and 
illustrate    the    August    issue    and 
will  have  an  opportunity  to  inter- 
view   celebrities    in    their   chosen 
fields  and  visit  newspaper  offices, 
.fasten  workrooms,  stores  and  ad- 


vertising agencies. 

Further  information  on  the  con- 
test may  be  obtained  in  the  office 
of  the  Dean  of  Women.  The  Daily 
Tar  Heel  office  or  any  issue  of 
Mademoiselle. 

. \ 

»  i 
f 

Delta  Sigma  Pi  Names - 
Fall  Pledge  Class  Of  25J 

Alpha  Lambda  Chapter  of  Delta 
Sigma  Pi.  international  profess- 
ional business  fraternity,  has  an- 
nounced the  fall  pledge  class,  t>f 
25. 

The  pled.-^es  are:  Tommy  Am- 
mons.  Red  Springs;  Loy  Arney. 
Valdese:  Bob  Barber,  Erwin;  Her- 
man Bunch,  High  Point;  Don 
Buckley.  Lincolnton;  Mac  Carter. 
Madison;  Norman  Cogins,  Kanna- 
polis;  Bill  Craig,  Charlotte;  Brent 
Dorrity.  Carrboro;  Roger  EUer. 
Purlear;  Gene  Ellington,  Mt.  Holly: 
Jim  Glass.  Mt.  Airy;  Fred  Isen- 
hower,  Conover;  Joe  Kaminsik, 
Norco,  Calif.;  John  Mason,  New 
Bern;  J5iir..  Mathews,  Rockwell; 
Tony  .N'orungolo,  Sandford;  Bob 
Patterson,  Winston  -  Salem;  Jim 
Shreve.  Mayodan;  Lloyd  Smith, 
Shelbj-';  Don  Stanford,  Burlington; 
Dave  Stanton,  Lumberton;  Don 
Starling,  Burlington:  Perry  Turn- 
er. Hickory;  and  David  Veasy, 
Durham. 


»•»»**»»••»»*•»•*•■•■■ 


it  STEAKS   ,  •  .      *•  CHOPS 

it  SANDWICHES  it  BEVERAGES    ' 

I . 

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.     -     -      -       :      THE 

GOODY  SHOP 


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every 

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copter. 
10  does 
the  fact 
three 
lay.  and 
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Kith 

>ple  ar* 

for  a 

15   min- 

whcre 

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those 

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but   he 

from 

lorn    full 

l>eople 

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i«msen. 

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has  no 

r  need.^ 
litchell. 
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rar  but 
to  keep 
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ce 

f  mem- 
Library 
South- 
on  cin- 
s  we^. 
•nd  His 
nference 
Carlyle 
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Dbert    A. 

librar* 

mission? 
p  dean, 
nsboro, 
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of  Delta 
proi'ess- 
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class,  of 


SATURDAY,  OCTOtER  T3,  195ft 


THi  DAILY  TAR  HER. 


PAGE  riVI 


■»,,_..fi-^.^^. 


Tar  Babies 


Jim  Beatty  Paces 
Harriers  To  Win 


The  Carolina  Tar  Heel  cross- 
country team,  led  by  perennial 
gold  medal  winner  Jim  Beatty, 
came  through  with  another  vic- 
tory yesterday  at  Cplumbus.  South 
Carolina,  as  they  outran  N.  S. 
Slate.  ClerasoQ,  and  South  Caro- 
lina to  remain  undefeated  this 
season. 

The  meet  was  scheduled  to  be 
a  quadrangular  affair  but  Clem- 
son  some  how  was  not  informed 
and  refused  to  have  their  points 
included  in  t^  four  way  scoring. 

The  officials  figured  the  scoring 
three  ways.  t\V'o  duel  and  one  tri- 
angular. Carolina,  State  and  South 
Carolina.  Carolina  and  Clemson. 
Carolina  and  South  Carolina.  The 
points,  low  team  winning,  went  as 
follows.  In  the  triangular  scoring 
Carolina  33,  State  33  and  South 
Carolina  71.  In  the  duel,  Carolina 
took  Clemson  21  to  41,  and  South 
Carolina  went  down  19  to  48.  To 
clarify,  only,  one  rare  was  run. 
The  three  combinations  were  fig- 
ured in  respect  to  the  schools  in 
the  combinations. 

Marion  Griffin  was  the  determ- 
ining factor  that  kept  State  out  of 
first  place.  He  managed  to  kick 
past  State's  Herman  Walker  with 
only  100  yards  to  go  to  finish  11th 


and  give  Carolina  enough  to  edge 
State.  I 

Beatty  led  all  the  way  to  finish  • 
90  seconds   ahead   of   Mike   Shea.  I 
Beatty's  time  was  18:34,  Shea's  was 
19:08.  South  Carolina's  Bill  Lath- : 
'  am    followed  with    a    19:49.    Next 
i  came    State's    Fred    Walker    and ' 
I  then  Tar  Heel  Dave  Scurlock.  | 

Bringing  in  the  valuable  points  , 
j  next  were  Everett  Whatley,  ninth,  | 
'  Ben  Williams,   Wth,   Griffin,   Per- 
!  rin    Henderson,    14th,   Doug   Hen-  j 
I  derson,    15th,    and    John    Reaves, 
18th.  ! 

i  This  was  the  first  time  the  3.7 
mile  coHrse  had  been  usfed,  so 
Beatty's  time  was  the  course  rec- 
ord. 
;  If  the  meet  had  been  quadrang- 
ular the  scoring  would  have  gone  ^ 
follows:  Carolina  33,  State  37.  \ 


Tally  In 

Cummings 
Hurls  For 
Two  IDs 


•  as 

;  Clemson  74  and  South  Carolina  87. 
(  Last  week  the  Tar  Heels  over- 
'■  powered  the  University  of  Virgin- 
I  ia  Cavaliers  26-31.     Next     week's 

meet  will  be*  the  big 
j  year,  with  Maryland. 

Maryland  has  dominated  the 
ACC  in  the  last  few  years  and 
this  j'^ars  team  will  be  no  excep- 
tion. Wake  Forest  was  beaten  by 
Carolina  last  year.  Next  weeks 
meet  should  reveal  the  true 
strength  of  the  Carolina  squad. 


By  JIMMY   HARDER     , 

The  Carolina  Tar  Babies  brought 
the  sounds  of  victory  again  to  the 
campus  when  they  defeated  the 
Maryland  frosh  yesterday,  21-0. 

Two  of  the  tallies  came  as  a  re- 
sult of  passes  by  Jack  Cummings 
while  the  third  marker  came  on  a 
one  yard  sneak  by  Nelson  Lowe. 

The  first  half  ended  wth  the 
teams  in  a  scceless  deadlock,  bav- 
in? seen  the  Tar  Babies  penetrate 
Marylahd  territoi-y  several  times 
On  one  instance,  the  Tar  Babies 
reached  the  Terp  15.  On  another 
occasion,  they  penetrated  to  the 
16  before  the  drive  faltered. 

The-  first  touchdown  was  set  up 
late  in  the  third  quarter  when 
quarterback  Jack  Cummings  sent 
halfback  Dave  Leffler  into  the  line 


CAROLINA    CAB 

FOR  PROMPT,  COURTEOUS  SERVICE 
CALL       9481        OR       6611 


IT  WILL  BRIING  YOU  A  CAROLINA  OR  HOLLY- 
WOOD  CAB.  ALL  CARS  ARE  EQUIPPED  WITH 
TWaWAY  RADIOS  TO  GIVE  YOU  THE  QUICK- 
EST SERVICEMN  TOWN.  ^i^^  r 

"CALL  US  AND  COUNT  THE  MINUTES" 


on  two  successive  plays  and  then 
pitched  a  perTect  strike  tp  end 
Ben  Smith  who  wa&  all  alone  in 
the  end  zone.  Leffler  converged 
one.  of  the    and  the';  score  ;tpd(}  ^(  ?t<>-;  ?  »'  i 

I  The  second  score  came  in  the 
fourth  period  and  climaxed  a  drive . 
beginning  on  the  Carolina  20.  Two  i 
successive  plays  netted  minus  yar- 
dage and  on  the  third  down  Cor- 
nell Johnson  reeled  off  a  19  yard 
run  which  had  the  fans  on  their 
feet  ?nd  the  majority  of  the  Mar>- 
land  players  on  their  backs.  Fol- 
lowing Johnson's  run,  Cummings 
-and  fullback  Jim  Stevens  shoulder- 
ed the  load  and  carried  the  Tar 
Babies  to  the  Maryland  45.  At  this 
point,  Cummings  once  again  fell 
back  and  this  time  passed  to  John- 
son on  the  15  yard  line  who  then 
entered  the  end  zone  unscathed. 
Stevens  added  the  point  after 
touchdown. 

The   final   marker  came   shortly 
after  the   second  when   the  Baby 


wn  Maryland,  21-0 


Vtinsiiy  Boosters  Turn  Back  Fired 
Up  Frosh   In  Spirited  Scrimmage 


i- 


JIM  ^URKS 


Th€,v*r«ty,«eccer  team  defeat- 
ed a:  fir(id-iip  freshmah   squad  in 

MitrS  Fbbf  ball 
Corners  To  Close 


the  second  freshman-varsity  scrim- 
mage of  the  year,  3-0.    ' 


straight   quarters    until   Ted   You- 

{  hanna's  , talented  foot   booted   one 

t        .      .      ,  .        .     '  .    i  late  in  the  second  quarter. 

T^e  freshman.'  keyed-up  for  the  1 

!  contest,  outplayed  the  varsity  dur- '     Minutes  later,  the  varsity  scoi-ed 

I  ing   the   first   quarter   and   almost    again  on  Grover  Brown's  kick  from 

'  held  the  varsity  scoreless  for  two  :  the  18  yard  line.  The  half  ended 

. '  with  the  varsity  leadifig  2-0. 

J  ,    n,.-    i»    ■  i      ^"^  more  goal  was  added  to  the 

f^«fl»'f#»  !•  I  varsity    total    in   the   seeoftd   half 

KiadKK Stadium i^'"'^  ?'f'^if^^  pjaytng  feft^ 

1  inside,  tallied.  Neither  team  threal- 
-      _^  _^l  I  ened   seriously    after   Oyer's   god 

Is  DUSV  f   IOC6  ^  *"**  ^^^  ^*""*  ended  with  the  var- 


Ye9t«pd4j'  afternoon  the  first 
week  of  inttiamuril  footbill  cam? 
to  a  close.  By  comparison  to  the  ' 
five  default*  on  Thursday  only  j 
two  occured  yesterday.  Bothj 
scores  were  in  the  fraternity  div-  j 
>is:on  and  the  scores  of  th^e  giihes  ! 
are  as  follows:  DKE  1,  AK  Psi  0;  i 
iPika  1,  TEP  0.  I 

•      ^  u  1 

The  other  teams  that  emerged 


R.\LEIGH,  Oct.  12  fvP}— Riddick 
Stadium,  home  field  for  N.  C. 
State's  football  team,  was  a  mighty 
busy  piece  of  turf  yesterday. 

At  2:30  p.m.  the  University  of 
Georgia's  gridders.  who  play  at 
Chapel  Hill  today,  worked  out. 

At  5:30  p.m.  Florida  Stat?,  which 
plays  N.  C.  State  today,  held  its 
workout. 


victorious  in  yesterday's  competi-i 

tion  won  bjr  overwhelming  mar-'  ^^^^  "^^ht  the  .stadium  was  the 
gins.  Law  S<Sbool  No.  1  registersd !  «-^<?  ^^  ^  -=*'"«  ^^^^'^'^^  ^he  Uni- 
its  second  consecutive  win  without  n'«''^*^>  "^  Virginia's  frosh  and  the 
a,  loss  by  trouncing  Winston  21-6. 


Wolfpack    frosh. 


9487 


Or 


6611 


McMullen  To  Start 

Larry  McMullen,  strapping  senior  halfback  from  Lumb*rton,  will 
be  in  the  starting  lineup  this  afternoon  when  the  Carolina  T»t  H*els 
take  the  field  against  the  University  of  Georgia. 


one  unsuccessful  attempt,  Nelson 
Lowe  sneaked  over  for  the  touch- 
down. Lowe  also  Ridded  the  extra 
point  to  complete  the  scoring  for 
the  afternoon. 

Maryland  never  penetrated  Caro- 
lina t«»rritt)ry  deeply.  The  only  ser- 


Terps  tried  unsuccessfully  to  sneak  >  ious  Terp  threat  came  early  in.  the 
for  a  first  down  on  their  42  yard  ;  second  half  when  quarterback  Dick 
line  and  Carolina  took  over.  Leff-  '  Scarbath  threw  two  successive  pas- 
ler  hit  the  line  for  two  amd  then''  bcs  to  end"  Ron  Shaffer,  only  to 
Cummings  passed  to  Charlie .  Cot- :  have  the'  big  fiankman  drop 
ton  who  made  a  great  one  ha'nded  thefrt'.'  On  both  occaslofi^  'Shaffer 
catch  on  the  Marvland  20.  On  the  wa&  behind  the  Carolina  defenders 
next  play  the  Baby  Terps  wore  <.  and  in  all'  probability  vvould  have 
penalized  fifteen  yards   and   after,  gone  all  the. way. 


«v'   ■.11"'   »•■?;.< 


\hri  %:'.<i7  .?-dt  n.ii-. 


S  !  '  b<,nM«* 


A  Dining  Room 
Bubbling  With 


Hospitality 


Everybod/s  Going  For: 
Relaxation!        v 
Good  Food!  ""   ^    ' 
Reunion  With  Friends! 

m 

This  Weekend . . .  Don't  Miss 


The 


n^viLitX 


\,^1avw>  f./!i«^.  •»kf«.'TCiai«^  bM  5si&;^/ 


<<v  K,  ■-h'icr 


Monogram  Club 


DINING  ROOM 


u 


Far  and  away  the  most  outstand- 
ing Carolina^  player  was  Cornell 
Johnson.  In  addition  to  snaring  a 
touchdown  pass,  he  also  was  a  pil- 
lar on  defense  and  ran  exception- 
ally well.  Johnson  has  tHe  uncanny 
knack  of  continuing  to  gain  yardl- 
age  after  being  tackled  several 
times.  ,  ',  , 

Besidea  passing  ,  £or .  two  tou<hr 
downs,  Cummihg^  c6niintially.ke|>t  j 
the    Terps    in    the    hole    with    his 
booming  punts^'  », 

Thoug|i  iHc  ieiyaT  .scdlri^ii.  fcani^ 
on  the  long  pitches,  the  mosfef' 
feclive  weapon  in  this  dcpartnMdt 
was  the  jump  pass  which  worlred 
on  every  occasion  in  which  it  was 
employed. 

The  Carolina  victory,  shower! 
great  improvement  In  team  play. 
This  was  one  of  the  deficiencies  ill 
last  week's  Wake  Forest  game.  Yes- 
terday the  Tar  Babies  perfofmexi 
as  a  unit  with  substitutions  bei^ 
made  largely  by  squads.  ,,  :, 

Little  more  needs  to  be  said  a- 
bout  the  defense  than  to  meotiqn 
that  the  Baby  Terps  were  held 
scoreless.  Much  of  the '  credit  iat 
this  is  due  the  Tar  Heel  linemefli. 
Time  and  again  Mar>'land  passjeiS 
would  have  to  throw  wildly  wheii 
being  pursued  by  the  Carolina  for- 
ward wall.  One  of  the  deeper  Car- 
olina penetrations  came  as  a  result 
of  a  Maryland  punt  being  blocked. 


Med.  School  Ko.  ^  kept  a  clean 

slate  also  by  defeating  Graham  No 
2  31-0.  Matiley  handed  Graham  its 
second  straight  lo^is  V)y  drubbing 
them  39-6.      _     -. .    ,     n:    , 

In  the  fraternity  division  three 
other  teams  <ron  by  shut-out 
scores.  PHi  D^lt  evened  its  season- 
al record  at  1-1  by  murderiitg  SAE 
21-0.  SAE  previously  had  boasted 
a  3  and  0  record.  To  ke^p  in  the  | 
ffv^ing  of  things  Zeta  Psi  boosted 
its  record  to  3  and  0  by  register- 
ing a  25-0  win  over  ZBT.  Zeta  Psi 
has  held  the  opposition  to  no  tal- 
^es  and  M-<^ar  this  season  have 
set  the  :leagu|»  oni  (it^  )biyi  im^s- 
ihg  a  thre*  Igame'lotil'of  85  Ots. 

To  complete  yesterdays' ^ight 
gama  sched^lll  ^igi^  '€iii  notched 
its  second  wii}  against  onfe  defeat 
ty  beating  Theta  Chi  2^-0. 


The  Wolfpack  varsity,  which 
usually  holds  its  workout  in  the 
stadium,  was  forced  to  a  nearby 
practice   field   yesterday. 


sity  winning,  3-0. 

Coach  Marvin  Allen's  varsity 
squad  will  hold  one  more  scrim- 
mage before  leaving  for  Virginia 
to  meet  Washington  and  Lee  on 
Tuesday,  Oct.  16.  The  team  will 
then  have  a  two-day  "rest"  before 
meeting  Davidson  Oct.  19  in  Cha- 
pel Hill. 

Th?  freshman  team  played  a 
hard  game  against  the  varsity, 
showing  great  improvement.  In  the 
first  scrimmage  between  the  two 
squads  the  varsity  romped  oVer 
the  freghftien,  T-L         "^^^  •*"  *  fVf^ 

The  freshmen  will  have  their 
first  game  with  N.  C.  State  in  Ra- 
leigh, Wednesday,  Oct.  17.  Last 
year's  freshman  team  beat  State 
twice  and  had  an  undefeated  sea- 
si  n.  This  year's  team  shows  prom- 
ise to  continue  the  streak. 


Housecleaning 
SALE      ^ 

SHOPWORN  BOOKS  AND  DROPPED 

TITLES  IN  ESSAYS,  CRITICISM, 
^     I   -MTI^tr.ANDDRAMy^.    I^^i 


THE  INWmaTE  Bodfe^ 

205  E.  Franklin  St.  Open  Till  10  P.M. 


i 


UNC,  Georgia 
j  Battle  Today 

(Continued  fronn  Page.  I)    . 

I  the    Southeastern    Conference    in 
[  pass   receiving   last   fall,   and   6-2 
end  Roy  Wjlkins  will  be  the  fav- 
I  orite  Bulldog  targets. 
I      Carolina's  offensive  machine  wjll 
\  be  greatly  strengthened  by  the  r«- 
turn  of  ace  quarterback  Dave  Reed 
I  to  full  duty.  The  165  pound  junior, 
j  who  had  been  counted  on  to  spark 
1  the  Tar  Heel  T,  saw  action  for  the 
'  first  time  this  year  last  Saturdajf 
i  against  the  GBmecocks,  but  was  'i;ibt 
I  able  to  go  at  fuil  .■^peed.  Reed  pi-, 
i  jured  his  knee  on  the  first  dayiiOt 
practice    and    has   been  ,sid^lin0df 
ever  since.  "  ,•; 

Scheduled  to  go  with  Reed,  iiif 
the  starting  backfeld  are  EA  Sut- 
ton at  right  halfback,  Larry  Mc- 
Mullen at  left  half  and  Wally  Vale 
at  fullback,  McMullen  and  Vale  re- 
place Jim  Varnum  and  Don  Lear 
respectively  in  the  starting  unit. 

Coach  Tatum  has  been  shifting 
his  forward  wall  lineup  all  yreek 
in  an  effort  to  find  an  adequate 
replacement  for  injured  Ronnie 
Koes  and  George  Stavnitski.  Guard 
Jimmy  Jones  was  moved  t»  the 
center  slot  earlier  this  we^k,  bur 
later  was  moved  back  Iq  guard  with 
sophs  Bill  Hardlson  and  tfoiuuC 
Smith  taking  over  the  ball  snip- 
ping chores.  These  two  will  iii  idl 
probability  split  time  at  the  pivot 
post  this  afternoon. 

Approximately   20.000  fans   ar« 

expected  to  turh  out  for  the  2  p.m. 

ki^off.  This  is  far  below  the  37.- 

000  enthusiasts  th^t  turned  Mit  for 

.the  season's  opener  against  StJrte 


'^■e-"*^. 


rii    .C>.4 


I 


r*"* 


> 


.<- 


BACK 


•rj*-..i 


'^■\ 


■'  s'^m*^ 


ALUMNI! 


IV 


t~  •" 


-m^ 


1' 


' .■':  ■•..;v- 


■vt  »^»-  -VM.*" 


;:\,4?:i.ri4r^t^^V^ 


•"«•; 


'.  .-s  ou 


^* 


f'a 


"-t    f> 


'"T-^i**; 


fk^'^'i 


A  COMPLETE  LINE  OF 


i.^ 


Men's  Clothing 


.  trt^*-  V3* 


TOWN 


r 


\ 


■■In} 

1  :■  I 


AND 


'■    !tiji»Il.* 


•^ 


^ 


CAMPUS 


Bob  Cox,  '48 


Monk  Jennings,  '49 


.!        T*f.»»«r>*»*.«-(*>.v 


FAGi  Sl»  ""^ 


SIX  PAGES  THIS  ISSUE 


SATURDAY,  OrTOBFR  13^1953? 


IT'S  THE  SAME 


^^%f^   V 


^  •'    -It  *      * 


•JJ 


*ilJ.y 


^^o..j.,vi.OMU  Hj^'  p^i:mL$-  \ut'    ^ 


WELCOME    BACK    ALUMS! 


.;■     &.    ■»    ■  '. 


'-'  \ 


iiehnett  &  Blocksidge,  Inc. 

105  E;  Franklin  Street 

Berman's  Department  Store 

Est.  Since  1914 

Carolina  Barber  Shop 

131  E.  Franklin  St. 

• 

Carolina  Coffee  Shop 

• 

Carolina  Sport  Shop,  Inc. 
ChapeJ  Hill  Tire  Co. 

'^-  -""^-  f    ■•     ■  /J:    >■-"     :• 

College  Shu-Fixery 
Colonial  Motors,  Inc. 

*  Buick  Dealer 

Crowell-Little  Motor  Co. 

rv>i  Ford  Dealer iv'^^i 

Dairyland  Farms,  Inc. 

Glen  Lennox  —  Home  of  Fine  Ice  Cream 


f    ;  'f 


iarr/s  Ba  &  Grill 

PMrham  RoikI  By-P^ass 

Ledbetter  -  Picka>d 


Lloyd  Electric  Company 


Main  Street,  Carrboro 


Sloan  Drug  Company 
Sutton^s  Drug  Sfdre 


-.  ■^•i^-f' 


<n 


^^i^ 


^  \       Fitch  Lumber  Company 


■"',.  .*;A      _v  ^  t ,-.; 


*^10\S7V2  E.  Franklin  Street,  J  J  )^ 


Tar  Heel  Cleaners 

ThelPs  Bake  Shop 

University  Barber  Shop 

W  E.  Fuinklin  Street 

Village  Barber  Shop 

Across  From  Post  Office 


■k '1 


f    '4 


^y'  -M' 


Vittage  Laundry  &  Cleaners,  Inc. 

II  mm  t 


¥ 


if       Sk    « 


riss-Conners  Chevrolet  Co.,  Inc. 


Wentworth  &  Sloan,  Inc. 


i 

54 


••/,       Ihl"'      •  t 


v#YatesMoto^CoP^|fc  '^  '^^        '      ^'     ^ 

41^  W.  FrkiikKn  Street;--bodd#lvnJSth  OibU 


We  Are 


s;.  „.   .    ^,.  --.  ,r.rt, 


*  <?1 


»«r.- 


^•»''      -.sS^ 


WEATHER 

Clear  and  Warmer. 


■suniHaBMiBn^Hi 


U.t!.C.  •  LIBRARY 
SERIALS  DEPT. 
BOX  870 
chape;. ^HILL,  N.C 


Star  Mtti 


REVIEW 

Se«  the  Week  In  Review  on  page 


VOL.  LVii     NO.  21 


Complete  (A*)  Wire  Service 


CHAPEL   HILL,  NORTH   CAROLINA,  SUNDAY,  OCTOBIR   14,   1956 


Offices   in   Graham   Memorial 


FOUR   PAGES   THIS    ISSUE 


Bulldogs   Spoil   UNC   Homecoming 
To   Hand   Tar   Heels   Fourth   Loss 
After  Spotting   Carolina   One  TD 

Georgia  Wins,  26-12, 
As  Carolina  Bites  Dust 


Old  East  Wins  In  Dorm  Division 

Old  East's  Homecoming  display,  abpve,  won  the  prize  in  the  University  Club  sponsored  contest  in 
the  men's  dormitory  division.  Judging  also  took  pi  ace  in  the  women's  dorm,  sorority  and  fraternity 
divisions. 


Homecoming 
Winners  Are 
Announced 


Homcco.ming  displays  by  Old 
East  Dorm.  Smith  Dorm.  Phi  Kap- 
pa Sigma  P'ralernity  and  Tri-Deil 
Sorority  won  top  honors  in  the 
University  Club's  annual  display 
contest  held  yesterday. 

Old  East's  exhibit  pictured  Ken- 
an Stadium  with  'Welcome  UNC 
Alumni'  spelled  out  by  the  card 
section.  On  a  miniature  piaying 
fieid  were  the  ram  and  bulldog 
and  overhead  f'ow  a  model  plane 
drawing  the  familiar  red  Jesse 
Jones   trailer.  { 

The  Smith  Dorm  display  featur- 
ed Uncle  Remus  sitting  on  a  log 
and  telling  a  recorded  story:  "The 
bulldogs   thought   that   they   would  '^ 
win;    instead    they    got    their    face  I 
pushed   in  ■' 

Phi  Kappa  Sigmas  orize-winner 
told  a  story  of  a  new  best-seller 
written  by  Jim  Tatum,  entitled 
"The  Rout  of  Georgia" 

Bcok-review  pamphlets  handed 
out  to  passersby  said  of  the  book. 
"A  Feat  which  took  Sherman 
months  to  complete,  Tatum  accom 
plishes  in  a  single  day." 

Over  the  book-review  scene  a 
plane  advertised  "Rameses  Pure 
Pork  Sausage"  with  an  outline  of 
a  bulldog  instead  of  the  Jones  pig. 

Tri-Delfs  scene  depicted  a  huge 
Georgia  Peach  being  shattered  to 
bits  by  a  UNC  football.  Pennants 
of  Carolina  Blue  bearing  the  UNC 
and  Tri-Dclt  symbols  were  protrud- 
ing from  the  peach. 

A  large  banner  on  the  sorcrity- 
house  roof  road  "Tar  Heels,  split 
'em  open." 

Runrers-up  in  the  annual  con 
test  were  Cobb  Dorm,  Carr  Dorm. 
Alpha  Gamma  Delta  Sorority  and 
Beta  Theta  Pi  fraternity. 


HOMECOMING  SIDELIGHTS: 


U' 


Old  Grads  Set  Mood; 
Picknickers  Are  Seen 


By    BILLY    BARNES 

1      Old   grads   with    over  coats  and 
,  cameras  set  the   mood   for  an   m- 
formal  homecoming  parade  yester- 
day morning  on  the  UNC  campus. 

'  Lenoir  Hall  was  unusually  crowd- 
ed. Explorer  Scouts  were  every- 
where in  green  uniforms  with  white 
spats  and  merit  badges.  A  lone 
Georgia  cheerleader  wandered  by 
i  Winston  Dorm  with  that  "lost" 
look  on  his  face. 

Young  men  in  their  homburgs 
and  wives  in  their  furs  stood  out- 
side fraternity  houses  displaying 
that  prosperous-recent-g»ad  look. 

Older  folks  on  the  Carolina  Inn 
lawn  pulled  benches  out  into  the 
sun  and  read  morning  newspapers. 

Lower  Pittsboro  St.  was  loaded 
with  picknickers  of  all  ages  draw- 
ing chicken-legs  from  triin!:s  of 
shiny  new  cars. 

Aabout  two  p.m.  the  same  people 
gathered  in  a  different  setting. 
This   time   the    object   was    to   see 

I  rather  than  be  s^en. 

I  Two  unpatriotic  campus  canines 
barked  fiercely  at  Rameses  while 
the  band  played  the  national  an- 
them. Sleepy  Rameses  noticed 
neither  anthem   nor  dogs. 

I  The  ice  cream  boys  were  do- 
ing a  thriving  business,  proving 
that  fall  isn't  as  well  underway  as 

I  coed  fashions  would  have  us  be- 
lieve. 

i  A  Good  Year  blimp  floated  over, 
causing  a  half-moment  of  darkness 

;  on  the  playing  field. 

A  Chapel  Hill  policeman  attempt- 
ed to  eject  a  trouble-making  pup 
from  the  stadium.  The  dog  resist- 
ed  arrest   and   bounced    back   onto 

!  the  field,  followed  bv  the  law  of- 


ficer with  empty  leash  in  hand. 

The  band  played  Dixie.  And 
there  must  have  been  a  lot  of 
Yankees  in  section  15  because  only 
five  or  ten  people  stood   up. 

The  half-time  show  featured  the 
band  in  a  sundial  formation,  card 
stunts  with  only  a  couple  reds  that 
should  have  been  whites  and  pret- 
ty contenders  for  the  title  of  Home- 
coming Queen. 

One  in  every  crowd:  When  the 
guy  with  the  mike  said  "1-2-3  up," 
a  .ijlecful  student  cast  his  big  red 
card  up  in  the  direction  of  the 
presa   box. 

At  the  playing  of  the  Alma  Ma- 
ter;  alumni   Could    be   »eeh   rising 
in  the  stands  on  the  far  side.  Bless  I 
"em. 

Students  began  leaving  with  ten  | 
minutes  left  in  the  ball  game.  They  I 
missed  a  rousing  student  yell  for 
Dr.  Frank  Graham,  seventy  years  ; 
old  today,  who  was  watching  and  ' 
listening  from  the  guest  box. 

Last  and  most  unhappy  impress-  , 
ion  of  the  day:  Bus  rolling  down  ' 
Pittsboro  Rd.  with  children  from  j 
Apex  High  School  singing  "Poor  I 
ole  Carolina,  she  ain't  what  sho  ' 
used  to  be  ..." 


,  By  LARRY  CHEEK 

(iCDii'iiis  scarlet  shirtcd  IJulldogs  spotted  .North  Oii.o- 
lina  an  carl\  first  period  toucl)do\vn.  then  eanie  roaring  honi 
l)ehind  to  spoil  the  Tar  Heel's  honieeonjing  eelebratitMi.  26- 
1'.'.  heie  yesterda\  alternoon  at  Kenan  Stadium  in  a  game 
j)la\ed  inidei  ideal  ionditions  belove  an  estimated  trowd  ol 
i().(>oo  Fans. 

Coach  jim  Tatums  colprfully  clad  warriors,  shooting 
lor  their  first  win  ot  the  .season  after  .tiiree  leversals,  were 
ne\er  in  (ontention  after  tlu'ir  opening  score  in  the  initial 
moments  of  the  game.   Kor  the  remainder  of  the  alternoon 

the  Bulldogs  of  Coach  Wally  Butts 
dominated  play  completely,  run- 
ning almost  at  will  through  the 
sieve-like    Carolina    line. 

The  Bulldogs,  held  in  check  by 
their  cwn  mistakes  through  the 
first  quarter,  ran  three  second 
string  backs  into  the  game  in  the 
secjnd  period  and  racked  up  two 
game  clinching  scores.  They  put 
the  decision  on  ice  in  the  last 
half  with  a  lone  touchdown  in 
each  of  the  last   two  quarters. 

The   statistics   tell   the  story   of* 
just  how  completely  the  Bulldogs  ! 
controlled    the    situation.    Georgia 
racked   up  24  first  downs  to  only  ^ 
7  for  Carolina,  and  picked  up  265  j 
yards    along    the    ground    as    com-  1 
pared  to  88  for  the  Tar  Heels.  For  ^ 
the    first    half,    the    margin    wa>. 
even  greater  a.?  the  Bulldogs  had 
15  first  downs  to  Carolina's  1  and 
187    yards    rushing    to    Carolina's 

24^    \...   ..    ■     .^. I 

A  supposedly  potent  air  arm  was 
seldom  brought  into  play  by  the 
Bulldogs  as  they  stuck  to  a  sav- 
age grinding  ground  attack  that 
had  Carolina's  defenders  going  in 
.Miss  Jane  Brock  of  Atlanta.  Ga..  circles.  Before  today's  perform  | 
was  crowned  UNC  Homecoming  anw.  the  Bulldog  offense  had 
Queen  yesterday  at  tae  half-time  flonc  I'ttle  in  the  way  of  point 
of  the  Georgia-UNC  game.  Miss  producing.  In  their  first  three 
Brock,  the  entry  from  Smith  Dor-  games,  the  Bulldogs  chalked  up 
•nitory,    was    crowned    by    student    only    one    touchdown    in    addition 


Payne  Sets  Up  TD 


Carolina   end    Buddy   Payne   is  shown   as   he   gat  hers   in   a   Dave    Reed   aerial   on   the   Georgia   2   yard 
line  in  the  first  quarter  of  yesterday's  game.  Photo   by    Norman    Kantor 


MISS   JANE    BROCK 
.  .  .  homecoming    queeti 

Brock  Crowne 
Game  Queen 


^ 


Reception  Today  Honors 
New  B.A.  School  Dean 

A  reception  honoring  the  new 
dean  of  the  Business  School.  Mau- 
rice Lee,  formerly  of  Washington 
State,  will  be  held  today  at  3  p.m. 
in    Carroll    Hall    lounge. 

The  reception  for  the  dean  and 
faculty  cf  the  Business  School  is 
sponsored  by  ttie  Alpha  Tau 
Chapter  of  .\lpha  Kappa  Psi,  na- 
tional business  fratcrnitv. 


body   President   Bob   Young. 

Following  her  presentation  by 
.Maync  Albright,  president  of  the 
Alumni  Assn..  Miss  Brock  was 
presented  with  flowers  and  escort- 
ed  off  the   field  by   NROTC  men. 

Other  contestants  were  Misses 
Mary  Louise  Bisscll  of  Chi  Ome- 
ga; Gail  Willingham  of  Spencjr: 
Grace  Boncy  of  Pi  Beta  Phi;  Isa- 
bel Madry  of  Mclver;  Jackie  Al- 
dridge  of  Alpha  Gamma  Delta; 
Nan  Schaeffcr  of  Kappa  Delta; 
Barbara  Honey  of  Alderman;  Jean 
Southerland  of  School  of  Nursing; 
Pat  Dillon  of  Tri-Delt:  Janet  Ban- 
nerman  of  Carr;  and  L'bby  Nich- 
olson of  Smith. 


to   a   field   goal. 


ClontzTalks        \ 
Here  Tuesday 

By  GRAHAM  SNYDER 

Ralph  C.  Clontz.  a  practicing  at- 
torney from  Charlotte,  will  deiviur 
an  address  here  at  8  p.m.  Tuesday 
in  the  courtroom  of  Manning  Hall.. 

Appearing  under  the  sponsor- 
ship of  the "Stnttents'  Law  School 
Association.  t:iontz  v/ill  give  a 
speech  entitled  "The  Communist 
Party  in  the  United  States:  A  Le- 
gal Entitv  or  A  Criminal  Conspira- 

cy.'" 

The  public  has  been  in^  ited.  ac- 
cording to  Jerry  Campbell,  chair- 
man of  the  Law  School  .^ssn.. 
which  is  responsible  for  the  law- 
yer's a"i">(>arance  here. 

A  graduate   of  Duke   University 


GAME  SIDELIGHTS: 


Squad  Sees  Red; 
More  Next  Week 


Calk  For  Breakdown  By  S^^tes: 


UNC  Professor  Questions  Gallup  Poll 


GORDON  CLEVELAND 

.  i  halli'if^r.s    1)1.    (.fflUul) 


By   BUCK    PAYSOUR 

I  A  UNC  political  scientist  has 
challenged  Dr.  George  Gallup  to 
make  a  state-by-state  breakdown 
of  the  popular  vole  because  he 
does  not  believe  "Galfup's  1956 
poll  shows  the  whole  picture." 

Gordon  B.  Cleveland,  University 
political  science  instructor,  mad:' 
the  challenge  after  compiling  fig- 
ures which  he  says  show  that  there 
is  a  good  chance  the  Democrats 
will  win  the  Presidential  election 
through  the  electoral  college  even 
if  they  do  not  get  a  majority  of 
the  popular  vote. 

\\\  1.943.  Cleveland  predicted  that 
Truman  would  be  .elected,  and  he 
picked  four  of  the  five  states  which 
went  Democratic  but  which  experts 
said  would  go  Republican.  Gallup, 
the  man  against  whofti  Cleveland 
is  directing  his  challenge,  was  one 
of  the  poll-takers  who  failed  to 
forecast  the  outcome  of  the  1948 
election, 

'I  do  not  question  Gallup's  poll- 
ing methods  or  that  they  produce 
results  with  a  high  degree  of  ac- 
curacy," Cleveland  said.  "But  I  do 
question  the  implicaticjns  that  will 


be  drawn  from  the  results  as  he 
sees  fit  to  release  them." 

The  political  science  instructor 
bases  his  challenge  on  the  fact  that 
Gallup's  figures  "disregard  the  el- 
ectoral vote,  which  after  all,  is  tiow 
a  President   is  elected." 

Cleveland  has  made  a  compari- 
son of  the  1952  Presidential  elec- 
tion returns  and  the  1954  guber- 
juitorial  and  senatorial  returns  in 
20  stales  which  went  Republican  in 
1952.  According  to  his  figures,  the 
Democrats  in  those  states  picked 
up  1,180.000  votes  between  the 
1952  Presidential  election  and  Ih  : 
1954  mid-term  eleciions,  while  the 
Republicans  lost  7,151,000  votes. 

He  says  this  is  particularly  sig- 
nificant since  voting  in  mid-term 
elections  is  usually  lighter  than  in 
Presidential  eleciions. 

"It  is  also  significant  that  these 
voles  were  cast  before  President 
Eisenhower  suffered  either  one  of 
his  illnesses  and  does  not  reflect 
any  reaction  to  the  health  i.ssue.' 
Cleveland  declared. 

He  said  he  did  not  include  the 
traditional  solid  Democratic  Sou- 
{Sae  CLEVELAND.  Page  3) 


REED   IMPRESSES  I 

Dave    Reed    returned    to    action  I 
before  the  home  folks  for  the  first  | 
time    this    year    against    the    Bull   | 
dogs,    and    directed    the    Carolina 
split-T    offense    with    smooth    pre 
cision    while    in    the    line-up.    Thr 
clever  junior  .signal   caller  spear- 
headed  both   Tar  Heel   TD   drives 
sett  P'.l  up  the  .scores  with  bull.seyc 
passing  and  tricky  running. 

Carolina's  first  score  came  af-  l 
t.'r  only  four  m'nrtes  and  35  sec-  j 
onds  had  elapsed  in  the  opening  | 
period.  After  center  Bill  Hardison  , 
starting  his  fir  t  varsity  game,  re- 1 
covered  a  Build  g  fumble  on  the 
Georgia  35,  it  took  the  Tar  Heels 
only    five    plays    to    hit    paydiTt. 

The  vital  blow  came  when  Reed 
pitched  a  perfect  27  yard  strike  | 
to  rangy  end  Buddy  Pavne  on  the  I 
Georgia  two  yard  line.  The  touch- 
down came  three  play.s  later  when 
Ed  Sutton  bulled  his  way  into  the 
end  zone.  Phil  Blazer  muffed  the 
oxtrn  noint  try  and  the  Tar  Heels 
led    6-0. 

FUMBLE   STOPS  DRIVE 

Georgia  served  notice  of  things 
to  come  on  the  next  series  of 
downs  as  they  took  the  kickoff 
and  drove  down  the  field  to  the 
Carolina  four  yard  line  befcre  be 
ing  stopped  by  another  fumble, 
this  one  recovered  by  Tar  Heel 
halfback    Jim    Varnum. 

After  this  false  Bulldog  threat, 
the  two  teams  batted  on  even  , 
t?rms  for  the  remainder  of  the 
first  |tanza  until  Georgia  began 
their  second  thru.=t  tcward  TD 
territory  in  the  closing  minutes. 
(See   BULLDOGS,  Page  4) 


RmLPH    CLONTZ 

.  .  .  tnika  on  Coniviunis)n 
law  school.  Clontz  was  i;ne  of 
three  prominent  witnesses  testify 
ing  for  the  federal  government  in 
the  trial  of  Junius  Scales  in  April, 
1955. 

In  the  trial,  Scales  was  convicted 
of  advocating  violent  overthrow  of 
the  U.  S.  Government  through  his 
position  as  chairman  of  the  Com- 
munist Party  in  the  Carolinas. 

CIjiUz  appeared  in  the  trial  a.s 
a  surprise  governnunt  witness, 
testalying  that  he  had  been  an  un- 
ocrc(-\cr  agent  lor  the  FBI.  and.  in 
that  position,  had  wqrked  under 
Scales  in  the  Communist  Party  up 
m.Al  1951. 


STATISTICS 

"  o«. 

#  UNC 

FirM  Downs               24 

7 

Rushing  Yardage     265 

98 

Passing  Yardage        66 

63 

Passes                       4  11 

3-9 

Passes  Intercept,  by     1 

2 

Punts                         S34.4 

9-366 

Fumbles  L«st                2 

1 

Yards  Penalized        100 

22 

Educator 
Lists  N.C 
Problems 


Education  leader  Charles  G. 
Rose  Jr.,  in  an  address  this  week 
before  the  regional  School  Board 
Work  Conference,  enumerated 
n»ajor  problems  faced  by  North 
Carolina  "in  moving  forward  to- 
ward continued  progress  and  ad- 
vancement in  our  public  schools. ' 

The  regional  conference  got  un- 
derway at  2;30  p.m.  Tuesday,  with 
Jchn  R.  Foster  of  Greerdsboro, 
presiding.  Foster  is  vice-president 
of  the  N.  C.  State  .School  Board.s 
Association. 


'  ■  W   BILL    KING 

Rt-d  seen>s  10  be  a  real  Hcniesi.- 
to  the  Carolina  Tar  Heels  this  sea- 
son. 

The  Georgia  Bulldogs  were  the 
fourth  straight  red-shirted  team 
the  Tar  Heels  have  played  this 
season.  Next  week  they  go  against 
the  "big  red"   from   Maryland. 

Memories  of  the  Tar  Heels  26-6 
!os?  tj  State  three  weeks  ago  linger- 
ed on  in  Kenan  Stadium  yesterday. 
Some  of  the  "boys"  from  West  Ra- 
leigh had  used  gras>i-killer  to  in- 
scribe "NCS  26,  UNC  6"  in  the  mid-  ' 
die  of  the  playing  field.  j 

Yesterday's  game  must  have  been  I 
uncomfortable  for  the  fans  weath-  I 
cr-wise.  It  was  too  warm  for  winter  1 
attire    and    loo    cool    for    summer 
clothes. 

Wally  Vale's  26  yard  kick  in  the  1 
first  quarter  of  the  game  was  his 
shortest    of    the    season.    Prior    to  ■ 
yesterday's    contest.    Vale    led    the 
nation  in  punting  average.  ' 

The  proverbial  "dog  on  the  field 
story"  got  a  new  twist  yesterday. 
In  the  first  quarter  two  hounds 
(not  Bulldogs)  invaded  the  Georgia 
huddle.  The  Bulldogs  fumbled   on 

Ga.  Slammed    \ 
Tackles  Says 
Coach  Butts 

By  DAVE  WIBLE  I 

"We  stuck  to  a  plan  of  slam- 
ming into  the  Carolina  tackles.  ' 
r.eorsia  Coach  Wallace  Bulls  stated 
after  yesterday's  game.  i 

"Our  running  was  the  best  it 
has  been  all  season  and  our  ground 
deiense  looked  good.  Carolinas 
piissing  attack  gave  us  some 
trouble." 

Bulls  was  not  pleased  with  his  j 
f  wn  passing  attack.  He  said  that  ■ 
finding  a  good  passing  quarter-  ( 
back  has  been  his  biggest  persona!  j 
pioblem. 

The   winners  dressng  room   was  I 
quiet   as   the  players  entered.    E.x- 1 
austed.   the    Bulldogs   appeared    to 
want  only  to  sit  and  rid  themselv- 
es of  the  tension  of  the  game. 

As  the  wearyness  faded  singing 
and  congratulation's  spread  through 
the  room. 

The  reality  of  a  second  win  this 
early  in  the  season  put  the  thought 
of  a  winning  season  into  their 
minds. 

Wearling  their  traveling  uni- 
forms, blue  sport  coals  with  Bull- 
dogs on  the  pockets  and  grey  pants, 
the  victors  made  their  way  to  the 
buses  for  a  return  trip.  I 


•*i«»  n»'Xt  nlay. 

WHY  NOATH   SIDE? 

Many  of  the  fans  wondered  why 
the  Tar  Hccis  were  sitting  on  the 
north  side  of  the. playing  field.  Evi- 
dently Coach  Tatum  was  trying  to 
change  his  luck.  The  Tar  Heels 
were  also  minus  their  ten-gallon 
hats  which  the  coaching  staff  usu- 
ally  wears. 

Late  in  the  fourth  quarter, 
Georgia  had  the  ball  on  their  own 
40  with  fourth  d(;wn  and  fifty-four 
yards  to  go  for  a  first  down.  The 
Bulldogs  elected  not  to  gamble 
and  kicked  to  the  Carolina  40. 

The  UNC  band  really  looked 
sharp  as  it  wen'  'through  several 
intricate  formstions  during  the  in- 
termission: an.'!  what  about  those 
majorettes?   WOWl! 

One  of  the  majorettes,  Jane 
Brock,  was  circled  Homecoming 
Queen.  Jane  is  a  junior  from  At- 
lanta, Ga.  majoring  in  dental  hy- 
giene. She  was  Miss  Atlanta  of 
19.55. 
MEAN  GEORGIA  BULLDOG 

About  the  meanest  looking  spec 
ta'ior  in  Kenan  Siadium  was  sitting 
down  by  the  G30!gia  bench  yester- 
day. It  was  the  Georgia  bulldog  all 
decked  out  in  a  bright  red  sweater. 

With  ten  minutes  remainng  in 
the  game  yesterday,  some  of  the 
less  optimistic  Tar  Heel  fans  had 
already  started  filing  out  01  the 
stadium.  With  a  minute  to  go,  prac- 
tically everybody  decided  it  was 
lime  to  start  talking  about  next 
weeks  game  with  Maryland.  Very 
few  fans  saw  th.:  last  minute  of  ac- 
tion. 

len  minutes  after  the  game  was 
over,  there  were  more  people  walk- 
ing around  en  the  playing  field 
than  there  were  in  the  stands.  The 
Carolina  fans  strolled  sadly 
through  Kenan  woods  listening  to 
the  beil  tower  chimes  play  "St  ind- 
ing  en  the  Corner." 


Study  Groups 
Map  Out  Plans 
For  Semester 

Twelve  study  groups  sponsoied 
by  campus  denominational  groups 
met  throi'ghoui  last  weelc  to  map 
out  discussion  plans  for  the  se- 
mester. 

The  groups  met  to  orient  new 
members  and  to  plan  a  series 
of  discussions  for  the  five  suc- 
ceeding weeks.  Discussions  on  10 
topics  will  he  hpld  for  one  hour 
each  week. 


M^l  TWO 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEIL 


SUNDAY,  OCTOBER  14.  IfM 


SUNDAY,  DC 


The  Week  In  Review:  MoreOnSuez 
And  Tar  Heels  Nipped  By  Bulldogs 

Canal  Napes  Dm,  VampaigflS  Hat     Fratemitles  Pledge  Over  400 

And  University  Has  A  Birthday 


Ai  the  United  Nations  this 
week  the  big  issue  was  the  Suez 
Canal  dispute.  Britain  urged  the 
United  States  to  take  immediate 
action  to  prevent  American  ships 
from  pajing  tolls  to  the  Egj'ptian 
contrrlled  Suez  Canal  Authority. 

In  a  ninety  minute  meeting 
between  British  Foreign  Secre- 
tary Selwyn  Lloyd  and  Secretary 
of  State  John  Foster  Dulles,  the 
United  States  was  asked  to  act 
in  line  with  the  other  SCUA  na- 
tions to  influence  secret  negotia- 
tions  in  the  Security  Council. 

The  United  States  feels  that 
the  same  results  would  be  ac- 
cr-raplished  by  speeding  up  the 
establishment  of  the  Suez  Canal 
User\<  Association. 

International  operation  of  the 
Sur'Z  Canal  was  rejected  again 
by  the  foreign  ministers  of  Rus- 
sia and  Egypt.  They  told  the  Se- 
curity Council  that  Egjpt  must 
contiai'e  to  operate  the  canal 
but  that  tht>re  is  rcom  for  an  un- 
defined amount  of  international 
participation. 

Dr.  Mahmoud  Fawzi,  the  Egyp- 
tian foreign  Minister,  charged 
that  Britain  and  France  were 
trying  to  "see  to  it  that  the  Suez 
Canal  be  finally  amputated  and 
severed  from  Egj'pl.  He  also  at- 
tacked Dulles  _Jor  "cancellation 
of  a  United  States  offer  to  help 
finance  the  Aswan  High  Dam,  a 
Nile  Valley  development  project. 

Sov-iet  Foreisn  .Minister  Dmitri 
T.  Shepilov  charged  Britain  and 
France  brought  the  canal  issue 
l>eff>re  the  .S'n'urity  Council 
merely  to  obt;i'n  an  excuse  for 
sub=e<ju?nt  aci:on  c-utsidp  the 
United   Nations. 

Foreign  mini  ters  of  Britain. 
France  and  Egj  it  met  in  at- 
tempts to  hammer  out  a  compro- 
mise settlement  of  the  Suez  ques- 
tion. 

Egypt  remains  adamant  against 


permitting  an  international  body 
to  impkose  'autcmatic"  sanctions 
in  case  of  discrimination  against 
users  of  the  canal.  The  British 
said  they  will  consent  to  nothing 
lels. 

Dr.  Fawzi  indicates  that  h« 
is  willing  to  negotiate  with  the 
user's  association.  Egypt  was  de- 
termined to  retain  full  operation- 
al control  including  the  hiring  of 
pilots  and  the  determination  of 
polls. 

In  Poznan.  Poland,  a  packed 
courtroom  tensed  ior  the  worst 
relaxed  perceptibly  as  Judge 
Wreslaw  Celinski  sentenced  three 
youth.s  to  prison  terms  of  less 
than  five  years  for  the  brutal 
beating    of    a    corporal. 

The  youths  had  been  accused 
of  having  murdered  a  member 
of  the  secret  police  during  last 
June's  rioting.  The  prosecution 
asked  that  the  youths  be  tried 
under  the  emergency  criminal 
code  by  which  they  could  have 
been  sentenced  to  death.  A  min- 
imum sentence  of  10  years  im- 
prisonment would  have  been 
mandatory.  Judge  Celinski  did 
nat  think  the  action  of  the 
youths  was  serious  enough  for 
this  code. 

Marshall  Tito  returned  from 
the  Yalta  talks  with  Nikita  S. 
Khrusehev  and  other  Sonet  par- 
ty bosses  last  week.  He  was  re- 
puted with  having  rejected  Mos- 
cow's appeal  for  "closer  coordi- 
nation" between  Soviet  and  Yu- 
goslav Communist  parties. 

Borba.  the  Yugoslav  party 
newspa{>er  cited  a  difference 
'•primarily  of  an  ideological  char- 
acter" had  been  raised  during 
the  Tito-Khruschev  talks. 

Pravada,  the  organ  of  the  So- 
viet Community  Party  said  that 
Mosco^w  was  satisfied  with  the 
outcome  of  the  taUis. 


President  Eisenhower  launch- 
ed a.  broad  new  program  of  farm 
drought  relief  today  and  prom- 
ised to  visit  Western  drought 
areas  alter  the  Nov.  6  electicms 
to  see  what  else  n?eds  to  be  done 
to  help  drought-stricken  farmers. 

Eisenhower  also  said  he  would 
use  his  personal  efforts  to  settle 
the  Suez  dispute  if  he  believes  it 
would  do  gcod.  He  said  that  he 
would  go  bsfpre  the.  United  Na- 
tions provided  it  would  help 
solve   the  Suez  controversy. 

Adlai  E.  Stevenson  propo£ed 
that  the  Federal  governroent  sub- 
sidize a  national  program  of 
health  insurance,  but  declared 
he  was  opposed  to  socialized 
medicine  in  any  form.  He  also 
charged  that  the  administration 
had  cut  back  defense  expendi- 
tures wtihout  consulting  military 
leaders  while  the  Democrats  in 
Congress  had  voted  almost  a  bill- 
ion dollars  to  the  Air  Force  over 
administration    opposition. 

Vice  President  Nixon  said  he 
would  be  surprised  if  he  learned 
the  administration  had  postponed 
fur  political  reasons  any  basic 
decisions  on  the  military  budget 
for  the  next  fiscal  year. 

Adam  Powell  Jr.,  Harlem's 
Democratic  Congressman,  an- 
nounced he  will  support  Presi- 
dent Eisenhower  for  reelection 
because  he  is  pleased  with  Blisen- 
hower's  attitude  on  civil   rights. 

The  Negro  house  member  told 
reporters  at  the  White  House 
he  feels  Adlai  Stevenson  "snub- 
bed the  whole  integration  liberal 
group — Republicans  and  Demo- 
crats" on  the  civil  rights  is.sue 
this  year. 

Hand  to  hand  battling  l)etifteen 
communists  and  anti-communist 
Chinese  killed  thirty  workers  in 
the  Hong  Kong  mainland  factory 
village  of  Tsun  Wan   last   week. 


INTERPRETING  THE  NEWS 


Pofiticai  Cdmpaign  Speeches 
PiiiiXihg  The  Confused  Voters 


c'^vir 


James  Retton 

111  The  Seie  York  Ti-mes 
WASHINGTON  —  What  this 
Presidential  election  campaign  ■ 
needs  is  a  good  reliable  box 
score  to  go  at  the  end  of  the 
candidates'  speeches  showing 
earned  runs,  hits  and  especially 
errors.  , 

If  space  permitted,  wild  pitches 
and  stolen  bases  could  also  be 
tabulated,  .so  that  the  voter 
could  know  from  week  to  week 
who's  ahead. 

This  has  become,  as  it  usually 
does  about  this  time  in  the  politi- 
cal season,  a  serious  problem.  So 
many  things  are  being  said  that 
are  half-true  and  misleading— if 
not  openly  false — that  the  spec- 
tators have  no  means  of  keeping 
up  with  the  players. 

President  Eisenhower  made  a 
good  effort  in  Pittsburgh  last 
week  to  correct  some  of  the  im- 
pressions given  by  his  previous 
speeches.  This  was  a  conscious 
effort,  for  it  had  been  brought 
to  his  attention  that  his  party 
was  talking  so  much  about  peace 
that  it  was  encouraging  complac- 
ency and  building  problems  for 
hUns>elf  in  the  future. 

Consequently,  he  declared:  *'l 
will  not  promise  that  winning  a 
peace  based  on  justice  will  be 
cheap  and  easy." 

And  h?  added: 

"(Korea)  marked,  not  the  end, 
but  the  beginning  of  our  strug- 
gle for  peace.  For  though  the 
guns  are  stilled,  yet  true  peace 


*  *  *  means    much    mcH'e    than 
this." 

In'  any  political  box  score, 
these  would  have  to  be  scored 
at  least  as  "sacrifices"  if  not 
clean  hits.       •' 

$ome  'Wild  Pitches' 

His  description  of  the  educa- 
tion bill,  however^  would  have  to 
be  listed  in  another  category. 

'What  are  the  facts?"  he  asked. 
"."Vot  once  but  twice,  in  my  State 
of  the  Union  messages — in  1955 
and  again  in  1956 — I  urged  swift 
action  by  Congress  *  *  *. 

'I  refuse  to  repeat  anything  so 
extravagant  as  the  opposition's 
implied  charge  that  one  party  in 
this  country  is  for  education, 
another  against  it.  But  one  fact 
is  quite  clear  amd  simple:  The 
Administration  urged  action,  and 
the  opposition  controlling  the 
Congress  produced  nothing.*  *  *" 

This  is  not  a  "clear  and  sim- 
ple" "fact"  at  all,  It  is  no  more 
clear  and' simple;  than  Adlai  E: 
Stetenson's  charge  that  the  Re- 
publicans in  Congress  and  the 
President  were  responsible  for 
the  failure  of  the  education  bill. 
Both  were  misleading  statenients 
md  should  b^  scored  as  wild 
pitches." 

There  is  a  serious  problem 
here.  The  candidates  are  making 
more  and  more  speeches  every 
week.  They  are  followed  by 
scores  of  honest  reporters  who 
serve  primarily  as  transmission 
belts  for  what  the  candidates  say. 

These    iactual     accouitts  vare 


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Editor 


-^    FRED  POWLEDGE 


Managing  Editor 


CHARUE  JOHNSON 


News  Ek]itor  

Business  Manager 


RAY  LINKER 


BILL  BOB  PEEL 


THE  DAILY  TAt  H^fit  WEEK  IN  REVIEW 

^i*"r  _  CHARLIE  SLOAN 

Staff  Writera _.  GGOROE  PFINGST  and  JNGRID  CLAY 


telegraphed  on  the  run  and  print- 
ed on  the  front  pages  of  the 
newspapers  and  blared  out  over 
the  radio  and  television  to  the 
voters.  And  while  some  attempt 
is  made  eventually  to  place  the 
facts  on  record  in  relation  to  the 
assertions,  the  analysis  almost 
always  comes  afterward,  and  is 
overwhelmed  by  new  front-page 
charges  and  counter-charges  the 
next  day. 

The  "truth  squads"  have  not 
corrected  this  situation.  The  Re- 
publicans have  a  "truth  squad" 
on  the  road  which  Is  serviced  by 
an  elaborate  organization  here  in 
Washington.  Mr.  Stevenson  is  a 
self-appointed  "truth  squad  "  of 
his  own,  but  he  started  the  wild 
pitching,  and  the  trouble  is  that 
there  Is  no  adequate  "truth 
squad"  k.r  the  people. 

It  is  not  that  the  candidates 
are  telling  downright  lies.  They 
are.  however,  proclaiming  their 
devotion  to  truth,  while  leaving 
out  essentia.',  parts  of  the  story 
that  mislead  the  people,  and 
charging  each  other  wtih  .false- 
hood. •  ;  •■  f  If'  r. 
This  has  been  the -case  in  a 
great  deal  of  Mr.  Stevenson's 
talk  about  this  Administration's 
policies  on  labor,  social  security, 
and  the  cost  of  living. 

It  also  has  been  the  case  in 
the  misleading  accounts  the  Ad- 
ministration has  given  of  its  for- 
eign policy  and  the  state  of  the 
world  today.  Another  glaring  ex- 
ample is  the  President's  account 
of  his  role  in  "ending  segrega- 
tion in  the  armed  forces" — a 
role  that  was  remarkably  differ- 
ent from  the  facts. , 

This  is,  of  course,  the  oldest 
complaint  of  the  people  about 
American  politics,  and  accounts 
for  the  low  reputation  of  poli- 
ticians in  America  today.  A  com- 
mittee of  distinguished  ahd  dis- 
interested citizens  may  in  some 
election  be  created  to  umpire  the 
play,  publishing  their  findings 
weekly,  and  printing  an  honest 
box  score. 

But  meanwhile,   let   the   voter 
beware. 


In  .spile  of  miintTous  hotiiecomiiis;  displays  in  hont  of 
(lornis,  Irattriiiiics  and  sororiiics  advising  the  \  i-siling  (ieor- 
j;ia  team  that  'Vou  .Ain't  .Xoihin'  liut  .\  Houn'  l)o<^,"  tiio 
Bulldo<;.s  nipped  CI;  .olina  lor  its  romih  deleat  in  as  many 
irips  to  the  gridiron. 

.\i  half-time  .\hmnii  .X.ssn.  President  .\laync  .Mbrijjht 
lold  the  ( rowds  at  Kenan  Siadimn  that  .Miss  jane  lirotk 
had  been  elected  hometomini;  (jueen  :n  Ijali-iimc. 

Stndent  liodv  President  Pioh  Yonn,4  presented  an  arm- 
lull  iiH  tlouers  to  liie  new  (pieen.  who  w;is  selec  ted  Irom  a 
<  om  t  ot    12  tandidates. 

The  I'niversity  (elehraied  its  ifi'^rd  birthday  Krid;ty 
atiernoon  with  ;i  paniomine  re-enactment  ol  tlie  hiying  oi 
Old   Kast's  corner  stone. 

I.;ist  week.  s;»w  more  (onwnein  ;in(l  dix  ussiou  on  a 
pioblent  (.eneral  Davie  never  h;ul  to  de;<l  with  when  he  was 
plannint;  lor  a  state  univevsiiv  in   i7<);v 

Wedne.sdav  I'owu  Man;i!4er  Tom  Rose  de(l;ned  the 
lack,  of  j)arkin;4  spa<e  in  Chapel  Hill  is  a  pn»l>lem  of  the 
I'niversity  rather  titan  the  town.  Rose  s;  id  the  l>i.<i,uest  trou- 
ble is  "tnost  people  are  too  la/v  to  w;dk. 

Monday  ni<>ht  liob  N'oimj;  ;ujd  IIC  Presideiu  \(\  Mud- 
ij;ins  spoke  on  l)ehalf  of  tlie  students  l)erore  the  town  alder- 
men in  an  effort  4o  have  the  two-hour  parking  re.stricti()n 
on  C:olun)bi;i  St.  between  Clamcion  A\e.  and  Franklin  St. 
tem|)orarily  lifted. 

Tlie  lio.'  d  of  .Mdermen  refused  the  re(piest.  H<nve\er 
Mayor  ().  K.  Cornwell  urj^ed  Voimj;  and  his  Student  Tral- 
fi(   Commission  to  m  .i  with  him  a.u,;iin  on  the  matter. 

.\  jfroup  of  about  ;v')<>  C;n<>lina  C.entlemen  took  a  studv 
break  Thur.sday  ni.nht  and  attempted  a  pani>  raid  on  M< - 
Iver  Slid  Can-  Dormitories.  .After  a  lot  of  shout ing  and  mill- 
ing around  the  "roup  broke  up  a  half  honr  after  the  first 
shout  went  nip.  No  arrests  were  m;ide. 

llousin<4  Officer  lames  Wadswoivth  reve;iled  last  week 
th;u  the  last  student  has  been  moved  fr«>m  the  basement  ol 
Cobb  Dorm.  When  st  hool  opened  this  fall  75  men  were 
housed  in  the  basement  d;ie  to  overcrowding.  Manv  stu- 
dents, men  and  wo'.nen  alike.  ;ue  still  living  in  three  unit 
r4M>ms. 

<;raham  Mem(Mi;il  became  the  fin;il  vesting  place  ol 
former  Consolidated  I'liiversity  President  Frank  P.  (oahani  s 
|K)rtrait  last  week.  I  he  painting  was  temiTorarily  hung  in 
the  faculty  loinige  of  .Morehi  id  Phaeiarium.  after  its  dedi- 
cation, but  on  recpiest  of  the  students  ;md  friends  c»l  Dr. 
C.raham  who  helped  pay  i(.i  the  ponr:iit  it  was  moved  to 
its  present  resting  |)la<e.  (.iah;im  Memorial  is  n.imed  lor 
another  (iiaham.  Fdward  Kidder. 

After  a  heciu  week  of  rush  Carolina's  24  social  fra- 
ternities took  in  over  joo  new  pledges.  More  men  will  be 
added  to  the  rolls  of  many  houses  throughout  the  year 
through  informal  rush  progi;ims  carried  on  by  individual 
groups. 

Charles  Peterson,  Father  ol  I  men  ol  legist  e  liilliards.  " 
returned  to  the  (iM  billiard  room  last  week  for  a  short  slay. 
Peterson  apjx-ared  each  afternoon  last  week  giving  deinon- 
straticHis  and  instruction  to  patrons  of  the  billi;ird  uiimi. 


'^■^'■-  'Xi^'-jjcmtt- " 


\t4-rtte 
PRO  Si- E'^ 


\i* 


SPORTS 


l~ARSFAf. 
Ho 


STUDENT  PARTY  CHAIRMAN 


Tom  Lambeth  Chairman  Of  GMAB 
And  Many  Other  Organizations 


Ingrid  Clay 

Tom  Lambeth  is  chairman  of  the  Graham  Me- 
morial Activities  Board. 

Besides  presiding  over  GMAB,  Lambeth's  main 
interests  have  been  in  the  fields  of  politics  and 
journalism. 

During  his  freshman  year  at  Carolina,  he  includ- 
ed track  among  his  activities. 

A  senior  majoring  in  history.  Lambeth  has  de- 
voted time  during  all  his  four  years  at  the  Univers- 
ity to  work  with  the  Student  Party,  and.  under  the 
SP  endorsement,  ran  for  editor  of  The  Daily  Tar 
Heel  last  spring.  After  his  defeat  he  went  on  to  win 
the  chairmanship  of  his  party. 

Lambeths  freshman  year  found  him  already  en- 
{.'aged  in  his  favorite  fields  of  endeavor.  He  was 
elected  to  the  Student  Legislature,  debated  in  the 
Dialectic  Senate  and  wrote  for  The  Daily  Tar  Heel. 

The  following  fall  Lambeth  again  took  a  seat 
in  the  legislature,  and  served  as  treasurer  of  the 


Peterson  expressed  his  belief  that  I'NC  h;is  j)otenti;vl  for    Publications  Board. 


cngant/ing  a  billiaids  team  lor  national  comix'tition. 

The  iirst  joint  ^■\\'-\'.\IC.\  meeting  in  the  history  of 
the  I'niversiiv  was  held  \b)ncl;iv  night  with  over  a  hundred 
members  of  the  recently  (ombined  organi/ations  on  hand. 

Studv  groups  for  the  nest  fi\e  weeks  were  oigani/.ed 
during  the  meeting. 

Madges  Hails  Pragress 


Governor  Luther  H.  Hodge.s  de- 
picted North  Carolina  as  an 
ideal  place  for  industry  to  es 
tablish.  He  told,  the  New  York 
Society  of  Security  Analysts,  'the 
state  is  in  very  good  shape  and 
moving    fast." 

He  listed  it.s  major  attractions 
as  "A  good  tax  package",  power, 
.numerous  university  research 
.'facilities  and  scientists,  a  good 
highway  system  and  "the  greatest 
pool  of  good,  intelligent  labor 
in  America." 

•  Governor  Hodges  revealed  that 
a  committee  to  help  guide  state 
planning  in  Atomic  Energy  de- 
velopment will  soon  be  appoint- 
ed, in  remarks  prepared  for  de- 
livery at  a  session  of  the  state 
B.')ard  of  Conservation  and  De 
velopment.  The  committee  will 
include  leaders  from  "agricul- 
ture, industry,  busincs.s,  educa- 
tion, medical  science  and  other 
fields." 

The  next  legislature  is  expect- 
ed to  let  the  people  vote  on  a 
constitutional  amendment  to  in- 
crease the  power  of  the*  gover- 
nors' of  North  Carolina  by  allow- 
ing them  to  appoint  at^  many  as 
six  of  the  top  executive  head.s 
of  the  state  government. 

This  recommendation  was 
dmwn  up  by  a  standing  study 
coriimission  composed  of  leading' 
legislators  and  private  citizens 
and  is  expected  to  be  considered 
by  the  Committe  on  Reorganiz.n- 
tion  of  the  state  g.ovenrment. 

The  proposal  has  been  infornv 
ally  discussed  among  .scmie  leg- 
islators but  not  yet  called  upon 


During  his  spare  time 
he  continued  to  write  for 
The  Daily  Tar  Heel  and 
added  the  Carolina  Forum 
to  his  rapidly  growing  list 
of  activities. 

His  reportorial  talents 
were  put  to  work  during 
the  summer  of  1955  when 
he  joined  the  staff  of  the 
Winston-Salem   Journal. 

When  fall  rolled  around 
again,  Tom  Lambeth  re 
turned  to  UNC  and  be 
came  chairman  of  the  Car 


by  the  commission  to  allow  the 
people   to   vote   on   a   change   in 
the   North  Carolina   con.stitution. 
Bridge  players     in     10     North 
Carolina  cities  have  given  nearly    olina  Forum.  His  string  ot 
$2,000    during    the    past   year    to   chairmanships     continiieii 
help    rehabilitate    crippled    chil-    to  stretch  when  he  was  ai 
dren.  the  .North  Carolina  Society    pointed   to  that  office  on 
for  Crippled  Children  and  Adults    the  Publications  Board. 
Inc.    reported    in    Chapel    Hill.  While  Lambeth   was 


LAMBETH 

.  chairman  many   times 


serving  as  chairman  of  the  Publications  Board,  the 
recall  election  of  Daily  Tar  Heel  co-editors  Louis 
Kraar  and  Ed  Yoder  was  held. 

Although  there  was  speculation  at  the  time  that 
Lambeth  might  run  against  the  incumbents,  he  put 
down  rumors  of  his  candidacy  by  reminding  the  stu- 
dents that  his  office  required  that  he  remain  un- 
biased. 

Last  summer  he  again  returned  to  the  Winston- 
Salem  paper  to  add  to  his  journalistic  experience. 

During  their  school  careers  Lambeth  and  Bob 
Young,  president  of  the  student  body,  have  moved 
through  corresponding  offices  of  student  govern- 
ment together. 

The  two  first  met  at  Boy's  State  in  1952,  at  which 

time  they  were  roommates.  They  didn't  .see  each 

other  again  until  they  both  entered  the  University 

as   freshmen.   Since  then,   each   has    moved   up  the 

.  Carolina  ladder  to  -success  in  his  own  way. 

Lambeth  recently  attended  a  Student  Union  con- 
ference for  .schools  in  the  southeastern  states  in  Ala- 
bama. 

He  said  that  all  the  students  who  attended  the 
conference  were  surprised  at  the  small  amount  of 
discipline  needed  at  a  school  where  the  students 
were  allowed  so  much  freedom.  He  also  noted  the 
va.st  differences  in  Carolina's  philosophy  and  those 
of  the  other  representative  schools.  They  seemed 
to  believe  that  it  was  necessary  to  completely  co- 
ordinate activities  on  campus  and  also  that  it  was 
incorrect  to  let  people  who  are  just  beginning  to 
participate  in  the  student  union  programs  to  have 
much  authority. 

Lambeth  feels  that  'student  activities  have  the 
same  end  as  all  other  types  of  ecJucation  here  on 
campus;  that  they  teach  individuals  to  become  good 
pleaders,  at  the  same  time  allowing  the  greatest  pos- 
sible number  of  people  to  participate  in  the  pro- 
grams." 


Pogo 


&y  Wait  Kelly 


Li1  Abner 


LOOK  AT  THAT  CROWD.'.^- 
ANGElIC  BEAUTV  ANJD 
ANIMAL  STRE^XiTH 
COMB4MATION  MO  MAN, 
WOMAM,  OR  e>EAST 
CAM  RESIST.':''- 


H£RE  COME  THE  SCfifAGGSf/' 


By  Ai  Capp 


TO  THE       '     S- WHVN'T  ><0'  SIAV 
LOVERBOVNIK  j  AM'-c'^K't.'-WOO 
CONCEPT .'.' 1-^  DOGBOiTCH 
STVLE-WIF 


SHE  1   HfcRt  COME   1  TO     \  CUi><^ 

GOT  \'NOTH£R    <THE  ^.KIM."?] 

AWAy.TyONE.f-WHAR  Jlover  \  HE  \ 

'^O'  T-f  bovnik/got 

goim;  s>  con-  yua 

e ,    V  HONEv ? j ycLRirr) all" ] 


JazzI 
Bein 


■'-^SI^&^T^f^ 


^^..V^M-<««' V 


Gene  Hy^ 
i«L  to  listen 
such  artists  I 


lnst( 


Yardley  produ 
tocmulae,  con 


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■A' 


M.  19M 


SUN5AY.  OCTOBER  14,  lls« 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


#'A8«  THRH 


ird,  the 
\s  Louis 

le  that 

he  put 

I  the  stu- 

Min  un- 

■Inston- 

lerience. 

ind    Bob 

moved 

govern- 

u  which 

se   each 

liversity 

up  the 

ion  COB- 

in  Ala- 

ided  the 

jount  of 

students 

loted  the 

id  those 

seenned 

?tely  co- 

kt  it  was 

Inning  to 

to  have 

Ihave  the 

here  on 

^me  good 

Jtest  pos- 

the   pro- 


Jazz,  A  Typical  Collegiate  s  Like, 
Being  Sorely  Neglected  At  Carolina 


Cleveland  CfiaZ/enges 

(Continued  from  Page  1)  i  CaWornia,  New  Jersey,  Massachu- 

them  states  in  the  20  states,  with    setts,    Connecticut,    Michigan,    and 
the    exception    of   Tennessee    and    Missowi. 

Texas.  He  included  Tennessee  and       "Alttough   I»  have  not  included 

Texas,  he  added,  because  those  two   them  in  my  breakdown,  I  feel  that 

Jazz,  one  of  the  typical  college  j  states  went  few  Eisenhower  in  the  ;  many  of  these  states  are  hanging 


By  WALtY  KURALT 


studens'  likes,  is  being  sorely  neg- 
lected at  Carolina. 

This,  in  the  opinion  of  many  jazz 
enthusiasts,  is  a  crying  shame. 
Clearly,  something  must  be  done. 


1952  election. 

BASIS  OF  PREDICTION 

The  political  scientist  "bases  his 
prediction  that  Stevenson  may 
win  the  election  even  if  he  does 


Graham  Memorial  has  an  excel-  j  not  carry  a  majcwity  of  the  popu- 
lent    high    fidelity    system.    Every 


in  the  jaalance,"  he  said.  "In  fact, 
any  one  of  these  states  w  a  com- ! 
bination  of  them,  may  weil  decide 
the  election." 

He  added  that   he    would   even 
go  so  far   as  to  say  that  if   the 


New  Jazz  Records  At  GM 


Gene  Hyde  flips  the  switch  on  the  hi-fi  system  at  Graham  Memor- 
ial to  listen  to  one  of  the  latest  faiz  albums,  some  of  which  feature 
such  artists  as  Shorty  Rogers,  Stan  Kenton  and  Dave  Brubeck. 


Monday  from  7  to  9  p.m.  there  will 
be  jazz  coming  from  those  bass- 
refle  cabinets,  and  any  interested 
students  have  been  invited  to  give 
a  listen  to  the  sounds. 

Perhaps  a  note  of  explanation 
should  be  injected  at  this  point: 
This  jazz  is  modern  jate,  contem- 
porary music,  progressive  jazz  — 
not  Dixieland. 

Shorty  Rogers,  Stan  Kenton, 
Dave  Brubeck.  and  the  Australian 
Jazz  Quartet  have  been  featured 
to  date. 

Requests  for  tunes  may  be  given 
at  the  GM  Information  office.  One 
of  the  local  music  stores  is  suppie- 


said,  because  the  Byrd  machine  in 
this  state  is  not  supporting  Eisen- 
hower in  this  election  as  it  did  in 
the  1952  campaign. 


tions  have  for  the  Electoral   Col- 
lege vote  in  1956." 

Gallup's  headquarters,  when  ask- 
ed this  week  if  they  planned   to 


By  apDointment  purveyors  ot  soap  to  the  late  Kin(  George  VI,  Yardliy  4  Co.,  Ud.,  Londoo 


menting  the  GM  record  collection,    its  place  in  the  'Solid  South'." 


^    > 


.so  students  may  not  have  to  wait 
until  the  record  can  be  obtained 
from  the  store. 

Last  Monday,  25  men  showed  up 
for  the  record  session,  according 
to  GM  officials. 

Tentative  plans  are*  being  laid 
for  a  Jazz  Club  and  for  live  jazz 
.sessions,  depending  on  the  re- 
sponse to  the  present  project.  Also 
being  planned  is  an  instruction 
group  which  will  comment  on  ihe 
music  for  the  benefit  of  the  un- 


"With   Byrd   supporting  Steven-   make  a  state-by-state  poll,  replied 
sr      in    this    election,"    Cleveland  1  that  they  did  not, 
said,  "I  feel  Virginia  will  resume 


In  these  15  states,  Cleveland  de- 
clared, Stevenson  needs  only  slight- 
ly over  a  million  switch  votes,  plus 
the  states  he  carried  before,  to  get 
267  electoral  votes,  or  one  more 
than  is  needed  for  election. 

"Indeed,  if  the  vote  in  the  other 
states  remains  essentially  the  same 
as  it  did  in  1952,  Eisenhower  might 
receive  a  53  per  cent  majority 
of  the  popular  vote  and  still  not 
win  the  election,"  the  political  sci- 
entist declared. 


initiated  and  explain  what  is  hap- 1      With  the  exception  of  Pennsyl- 
pening.  vania  and  Ohio,  he  is  not  includ- 

Jazz  has,  finally,  been  given  that }  ing  in  the  Democratic  column  such 
inch.  Now  for  miles.  I  "pivotal  key  states"  as  New  York, 


Iffisfant!   Yardley  Shaving  Foam 

-  *■"     •  super-wetting  lather  at  the  push  of  a  button 

•  stays  extra  moist— doesn't  dry  on  the  skin 

•  ^V;]%*  remains  firm  until  your  shave  is  complete  .    "        • 

•  leaves  face  feeling  smooth,  fresh 

Cuts  normal  shaving  time  by  half!   \  ^  ''  . 

At  your  campus  store,  $1 

Yardley  products  for  Anerlca  are  created  in  England  and  finished  in  the  U.S.A.  from  the  original  English 
formulae,  combining  imported  and  domestic  ingredients.  Yardley  df  London,  Inc.,  620  Fifth  Ave.,  N.Y.C. 


STUDY  GROUP 

The  YMCA  Study  Group  on 
"Race  Relations"  will  meet  tomor- 
row at  5  p.m.  in  103  Hanes  Hall. 
All  students  have  been  invited  to 
attend  and  hear  the  Rev.  Charles 
M.  Jones  of  the  Community  Church 
lead  a  discussion  on  "The  Christian 
Positions  on  Segregation." 

STUDENT  WIVES 

The  Student  V/ives"  Club  will 
meet  Tuesday  at  8  p.m.  at  the  main 
entrance  of  the  library  for  a  tcur 
of  the  library.  Rides  will  be  avail- 
able and  will  leave  the  Victory 
Village  Nursery  at  7:30  p.m.  All 
student  wives  have  been  invited  to 
attend. 

W.A.A.  CLUBS  FRESHMAN  CAMP  PICTURE 

The  Woman's  Athletic  Associa-  j  The  Freshman  camp  pictures  are 
tion  is  sponsoring  five  clubs  this  i  here  at  the  YMCA  Information  Of- 
week.  Hockey  Club  will  meet  on  ^'^^^-  Those  who  placed  orders  may 
Tuesday  at  4  p.m.  An  organization-  \  P»ck  the  pictures  up  between  8:30 
al  meeting  of  the  Square  Dance  a'"-  and  4:30  p.m.  There  are  five 
Club  will  be  held  Tuesday  night  at  1  pictures  for  sale  at  $1.50  each  on 


tomorrow  at  8  p.m.  in  the  Y  li- 
brary on  the  second  floor  of  the 
Y.  A  film,  "The  Major  Religions 
of  the  World"  will  be  shown,  a 
brief  discussion  following. 
FACULTY  CLUB 

The  irNC  Faculty  Hub  will  hear 
Coach  Jim  Tatum  at  the  regular 
semi-monthly  faculty  luncheon  on 
Tuesday.  Tatum  will  speak  on  "Col- 
lege Football." 
CHORAL  CLUB  ' 

The  Chapel  Hill  Choral  Club  will 
begin  /ehearsals  for  the  1956-57 
season  tomorrow  at  7:30  in  Hill 
llall.  The  club,  directed  by  Joel 
Carter,  is  sponsored  by  the  Dept. 
{  of  Music  and  is  open  to  any  person 
who  has  had  experience  in  singing. 


7  p.m.  at  the  Woman's  Gym.  On 
Wednesday  at  7  p.m.  the  Modern 
Dance  Club  will  meet  in  the  Dance 
Studio  of  the  Women's  Gym-  Those 
intereated  in  tennis  can  play  with 
the  elub  on  Thursday   at   4    pjn. 


a  first  come  first  serve  basis. 
CCF  MEETING 

i  The  Carolina  Christian  Fellow- 
ship will  mQct  on  Monday  at  S  pjH. 
I  jn  the  recreation  room  of  the  Nurs- 
[  es*   Dorm.  Supper  will  be  served. 


YAr^DLEY  PRODUCTS  AVAILABLE 

at 

SUnON'S  DRUG  STORE 


DAILY 

ACBOSS 

I.  Spiny 
everifreen 
shrub 

<.  Gorgf 

11.  Near 
(poet.) 

12.  Kniffht'* 
wempon 

13  South 
American 
•nima.1 

14.  Pungent 
vegetable 

15.  CapiUl 
(Peru) 

}«.  Unde- 
veloped 
flower 

17.  Music 
note 

18.  All  correct 
(colloq.) 

l».Turl 

20.  Perennial 
herb  (E.I.) 

21.  Founder  of 
Methodism 

24.  Fasten 
with  flue 

II.  Instructor 
27.  Woody 

perennial 
29.  Rowing 

32.  Amateur 

33.  Pig  pen 

34. Gold    (Her.) 
33.  Public 
notice 

36.  Perched 

37.  Volcanic 
rock 

2».  City  (Fla.) 

41.  Washes 

42.  Artist's 
stand 

43.  Unrolls 

44.  Cabbage 
salads 

it.  Attempt 


CROSSWOR 


DOWN 

1.  Pale-yellow 

2.  Dissimilar 

3.  Quantity 
of  paper 

i.  Ancient 
town 
(N.  Afr.) 

5.  Epoch 

6.  Dark  spot 
tn  marble 

7.  Part  of 

.   the  body 

8.  Keel-billMl 
cucki>9 

9.  Scotland 
(paet.) 

10.  Subservient 
16.  Withhold 

buatacss 
19.  Body  of 

water 


s^'nra  cf333 


'It     au     wr^n 


20.  Persian 
fairy 

22.  Branch 

23.  Shelter- 
ed side 

24.  Var)rtng 
weight 
(Ind.) 

26.  Grass 
cured 
for 

fodder         8«»«»d»r'»  A«iw«r 

27.  River  (Eng) 

28.  Arranged        ««  Merganser 


Ithe  rAys 

30.  Nine  days 
devotion 
(E-C  Cti.) 

31.  Covered 
with  grass 

33.  Extents  of 
canvas 


37.  Folds 
over 
88.  Birds  as 

aclMa 

40.  Man's 
nam« 

41.  African 
worm 


Volleyball  teams  may  practice  ;«"'*  M"^-  C.  Stacey  Woods,  general 
Monday  through  Friday  from  4-6  secretary  of  the  Inter-Varsity  Chris- 
p.m.,  and  Monday,  Tuesday  and  I  tian  Fellowship,  will  speak.  The 
Thursday  at  7^8  p.m.  regular  Tuesday  night  meeting  will 

COMMUNITY  WORK  SHOP  "o^  be  held  this  week. 

There  will  be  a  meeting  of  the  j 

Community    Workshop    at    5    p.m. 
Tuesday  at  the  Y  Buildmg. 
SPUASH  CLUB 

Splash  Club,  the  women's  syn- 
chronised swimming  club,  will  hold 
tryouts  for  elub  memberehip  to- 
morrow at  7  p.m.  at  the  pool.  AU 
old  members  have  been  a.sked  to 
meet  with  President  Ann  Gillett 
at  6:15  tomorrow. 
STUDY  GROUP 

The  Study  Group  on   Christian- 
ity and  other  religions  will  meet 


Veterans,  Village 
Advis«r«  Meet  AAonday 

The  Veterans'  and  Victory  Vill- 
age Advisory  Commission  will  meet 
Monday  at  7  p.m.  in  the  student 
government  ofHce.  Bccording  to 
Chairman  Darwin  Bell. 

Commission  members  are  Cal- 
vin Belt,  Ted  Reynolds,  Al  Al- 
pbin,  Rob  Morgan.  Benny  Huff- 
man, Parwin  Bell  and  Dick  Spi 
vey. 


PFC/AL  SrOCfCING-  CFfER! 


^^Tfcof  s  K\qM  Ladles!  With  ^^^^Y  tWp^f 
Two  Fair  You^ef  Two  Spares . .W  f\mm  | 

Here'*  a  rare  opportunity  tp  g«t  a  real  long-la«tin$  svppiy  •{  fine 
nylon  hosiery  for  far  lew  than  you  ever  imagined!  A  icgular  $1.2.5 
value  for  only  $1 ,00 — P'"*  *  ^pare.  When  you  buy  this  packagr  of 
two  pain  and  two  spares,  yoy  •>«  actually  getting  three  pttin  of  fine 
nylon  ho«.  Take  advantagr  oi  this  offer  NOW.  Q^  jjid  anil  ihc 
coupoo  below  for  fast  delivery. 

DENISE  HOSIERY  "iT  BOX  Zp.  READING,  PA 

Ple««  »end  me  two  pain  and  tw»  a^aics  «f  Deuiie  Hosiery, 
for  (hk  I  am  encloting  ^IW. 


Nome      m- 


AddrMS. 


Oty- 


OENISE    HOSIERY 


Six*  Length 

Business  Sh««r  Q 

Drtss  Sheer  Q 

O  3«i9«      D  Toup« 


BOX    227.   READING.    PA 


Study  Groups 
Of  Y  Will 
Meet  Monday 

The  study  groups  sponsored  by 
the  YMCA  and  YWCA  wiU  meet 
tomorrow  at  5  p.m. 

The  group  in  "Coavparative  Re- 
ligions" will  meet  in  108  Hanes 
for  a  study  of  Christianity,  Hin- 
duism, Judaism  and  Mohammedan- 
ism. Representatives  of  the  differ- 
ent faiths  will  speak  at  the  meet- 
ing. 

"Contemporary  Literature  and 
Religious  Thought"  will  be  discuss- 
ed in  the  cabinet  room  of  the  Y. 
This  will  be  a  study  of  contem- 
porary plans  and  novels  related  to 
religion,  including  "Death  of  a 
Salesman,"  'Cateher  in  the  Rye," 
and  "Lust  for  Life  " 

Lectures  and  movies  on  "Court- 
ship and  Marriage"  will  constitute 
the  study  of  a  group  in  the  library 
assembly  room. 

"Current  Events,"  a  discussion  of 
the  current  polttical  c;irapaign, 
will  be  held  in  107  Hanes. 

A  group  on  "International  Re- 
lations" will  meet  in  300  Carroll 
Hall  for  a  discussion  of  present 
world  tensions  and  the  role  of  the 
United  Nations. 

"Prayer  and  worship"  will  be 
discussed  in  the  Y  library.  This 
wil  include  study  of  the  nature 
of  worship  both  in  personal  and 
group    life. 

The  "Race  Relations  group"  will 
meet  in  104  Hanes  for  a  discuss- 
ion of  pronouncements  made  by 
the  churches  concerning  race  re- 
lations and  psychological  and 
social  pressures. 

"Science  and  Religion"  will  be 
studied  in  103  Hanes  and  will  in- 
clude diacussion  of  the  relation 
of  seifntific  thought  to  religion. 

Co-chairmen  of  the  YM-YWCA 
Program  Council  are  Doug  Can- 
trell  und  i/liss  Nancy  Shuford. 
They  said  126  persons  came  to  the 
membership  meeting  held  last 
week. 


WinstprvSalem  Artists 
Will  Be  Shown  At  UNC 

A  collection  of  paintings  by  19 
Winston-SaI»m  artists  will  be  on 
exhibition  in  the  Morehead  art 
gAlleries  «£  the  Morehead  Plane- 
tarium   through    Oct.    31. 

Eight  native  North  Carolinians, 
now  members  of  Associated  Art- 
ists of  Winston-Salem,  are  rep- 
resented in  the  exhibition.  They 
are  Ann  ChipJ^y  of  Rocky  Mount, 
•Leonard  H.  Jones  of  Sanford.  Su- 
san Moore  of  Williamston,  Ed 
ShewniaJi«  of  Davidson,  and  Jean 
Simons,  R<iiford  Porter,  Ann  Car- 
ter Pollard,  and  Ann  Mercer  Kes- 
ler,  all  of  Winston-Salem. 

Other  Winston  -  Salem  artists 
showing  are  George  Arnold,  J.  T. 
Diggs  Jr.,  Rosemary  Jones,  Ern- 
est M.  lUman,  Vern  Mock,  Ann 
Northup,  Metzi  Shewmake,  Lor- 
ing  W^Hoq.  Ai  Webb,  and  Fran- 
ces K.  Efird, 

Debato  Squad  Meets 

There  will  be  a  meeting  of  the 
Debate  Squad  at  4  p.m.  tomor- 
row in  Roland    *arker  3. 

The  discusion  will  be  on  argu- 
mentation and  debate.  All  inter- 
ested persons  have  been  invited 
to  attend. 

CLASSIFIEDS 


2  Movies  Scheduled  By  GMAB 


lar  vote  on  a  breakdown  of  elec- 1  Democrats  carry  New  York,  they 

toral  votes  in  13  of  the  20  states  i  will  carry  the  election.  j 

"in  which  the  Democratic  trend  is       In  speaking  of  Gallup's   failure  I 

most  pronojnced."  to  make  a  state-by-state  iM'eakdown  i 

He  added  Virginia  and  Kentucky  ^  of  the  popular  vote,  Cleveland  said  ! 
in  this  breakdown,  bringing  the  to-   that  "Gallup,  himself,  has  seen  fit 
tal  number  of  states  in  the  clec- ;  in  the  past  to  point  out  that  Presi- 
toral    vote    breakdown    up    to    15 !  dentiai  elections  are  not  necessar- 
states.  ily  decided  by  the   popular  vote. ' 

He    included    Virginia    in    this   I  do  not  see  how  he  can  ignore  the 
breakdown   of  electoral    votes,  he !  implication   which   the   1054  elec- 


PAPER-BACKED  BOOKS  —  Good 
used  novels,  detective  yarns  and 
non-fiction  at  3  for  25c  in  the 
stand  by  our  front  doer.  The 
Intimate  Bookshop. 

FOR  SALE:  UPRtGHT  PIANO  IN 
fair  condition.  TeL  2236. 


Two  movies  and, the  publication  The  GMAB  Fall  Calendar  is 
of  the  Fall  Calendar  are  scheduled  scheduled  for  publication  the  first 
for  this  week  by  the  Graham  of  the  week,  it  was  stated  by  the 
Memorial  Activities  Board.  j  board. 

The  second  in  the  GMAB  FiJm  i 

series,  "Alexander  Nevsky,"  will  I 
be  shown  Thursday  night  in  Car-  i 
roll  Hall.  I 

A  Russian  production,  the  movie 
will    feature    the    players    of    the 
Moscow  Art  Theater,  and  the  nius-  | 
ic  of  Sergei  Prokofiev.  j 

The  film  is  in  two  sections.  The  j 
first,    entitled     "Jubilee"     satires  I 
the  practices  of  bank  officials  and 
bureaucrats.    "Hie    second,    "Mar- ; 
riage,"  is  a  satire  on  the  marriage 
customs  of  Chekhov's  day. 

Friday  night  the  GMAB  will 
sponsor  "The  Southerners"  as  this 
week's  Free  Flick.  The  film  stars 
Zachary  Scott,  Betty  Field,  J. 
Carroll  Nash  and  Beulah  Bondi. 
Showings  will  be  at  8  and  10  p.m- 
in  Carroll  Hall. 


The  Calendar  will  list  all  major 
campus  activities  for  the  fall  term. 

GMAB  publishes  a  calendar 
twice  a  yeai-,  in  the  fall  and  spring. 


Cosmopolitan  Club  Holds 
Meeting  Today  At  4  P.M. 

Today  and  every  other  Sunday 
at  4  p.m.  the  Cosmopolitan  Club 
will  meet  in  the  Library  Assembly 
Room.  These  meetings,  which  are 
very  informal,  are  open  to  every 
st^ent  who  desires  to  make  ac- 
quaintances with  students  of  var- 
ious countries  with  their  different 
social   and  cultural  backgrounds. 


If  You  ■ 

Havei^'t 
Read 

The  Southern 
Part  Of 
Heaven 
You  Have 
A  Treat 
Coming  Up 


FREUD  FRAUD? 


y/;\ 


Jim  was  so  conceited  that  he 
had  cold  lips  from  kissing 
mirrors.  Until  one  day  he 
asked  himself,  "Am  I  truly 
superior?  Do  not  girls  turn 
me  down  daily?  Twice  on  holi- 
days? Am  I  not,  in  actuality, 
profoundly  inferior?" 

So  he  decided  to  consult 
the  famous  psychiatrist.  Dr. 
Hy  Pertensive.  "My  boy," 
said  Pertensive,  "your  Rohr- 
schach  test  shows  you  are  going 
batty  from  collar  wrinklosis. 
It  is  incurable.  In  fact,  you  are 
incurable.  Nothing  I  can  do 
for  you.  $10,  please." 

Then  Jim  read  an  ad  for  a 
Van  Heusen  Century  Shirt.  He 
read  ho.w  its  soft  collar  won't 
wrinkle  ever  .  .  .  how  you  can 


maltreat  it  like  a  maniac  and 
it  still  won't  wrinkle  .  .  .  how 
without  a  bit  of  starch  it's 
impossible  to  wTinkle  it.  "Gee 
whiz,  I  am  saved,"  said  Jim, 
and  he  ran  to  his  haberdasher 
to  buy  one.  "$3.95  please," 
said  the  clerk. 

Today  Jim  is  as  popular  as 
money.  And  he  still  has  his 
Van  Heusen  Century  shirt  be- 
cause it  lasts  twice  as  long  as 
ordinary  shirts. 

See  it  at  better  stores  every- 
where,  or  drop  a  line  to 
Phillips-Jones  Corp.,  4 17  Fifth 
Avenue,  New  York  16,  N.  Y. 
Makers  of  Van  Heusen  Shi»-ts 
Sport  Shirts  •  Ties  •  Pajamas 
Handkerchiefs  •  Underwear 
Swimwear   •  Sweaters. 


Special  $2.49 


at 


The  Intimate 
Bookshop 

205    E.   FRANKLIN   ST. 
OPEN   TILL   10  P.M. 


Exclusive  at 
Van  Heusen  Products 


HERE  ARE  YOUR  OLD  GOLD 


4.  ■  't--" 


PUZZLES 


HOW 

TO 

PLAY 

Rean^nge 

the  letters 

in  each 

puzzle 

tofonn 

the  name 

of  an 
American 
College  or 
University 


PUZZLE  N 

O.  7 

=1^ 

P 

IInI 

1^® 

CLUE:  Founded  by  two  missionaries,  this 
college  pioneered  in  coeducation.  It  has 
given  degrees  to  women  since  1837.  It  was 
also  one  of  the  first  colleges  to  admit 
Negroes. 

ANSWER 

Nam* , — . 


.Slatt. 


College . -■ 

Hold  until  you  have  completed  all  24  puzzles 


PUZZLE  NO.  8 


CLUE:  This  university  was  founded  in 
1636  by  a  grant  of  the  Massachiisetts  Bay 
Colony.  It  includes  numerous  famous 
graduate  schools.  Sports  rivalry  is  tradi- 
tional with  Yale. 

ANSWER 

Name , 

Address . 

Citji StaU 

College 

Hold  until  you  have  completed  all  24  puzzles 


YOU'LL  GO  FOR 
OLD  GOLDS 

Eiiher  REGULAR,  KING  SIZE  or 
tiM  GREAT  NEW  FILTERS 

Old  Golds  tasl^  terrific!  The  reason: 
Old  Golds  give  you  the  best 
tobaccos.  Nature- 
ripened  tobaccos . .  • 

SO  RICH,     /Qto 
SO  LIGHT, 
SO  GOLDEN 
BRIGHT!      ,      . 


BEST  TASTE  YET 

IN  A  FILTER  CIGARETTE 


PUZZLE  NO.  9 


CLUE:  Opened  as  a  Baptist  seminary  in 
1820,  this  university  was  renamed  in  1890 
for  a  soap  manufacturer  and  philanthro- 
pist. Individualized  education  and  survey 
courses  are  given  here. 

ANSWER 


Name 

Address. 


.SUiU. 


City 

College 

Hold  until  you  have  completed  all  24  puzzle 


NEED  BACK  PUZZLES?    RULES? 

Send  five  cents  for  each  puzzle;  five 
cents  for  a  complete  set  of  rules.  Enclose 
a  self-addressed,  stamped  envelope.  Mail 
to  Tangle  Schools,  P.  O.  Box  9,  Grand 
Central  Annex,  New  York  17,  N.  Y. 


MOl  P9U% 


THE  DAILY  TAK  HIIL 


SONDAY,  OCTOBER  14,  1T54 


Basketball   Practice   Gets   Under  Way   Here  Tomorrow 


Rosenbluth 
Will  Lead 
Tar  Heels 

By   LARRY   CHEEK 

Although  King  football  still 
reigns  supreme  on  the  Carolina 
athletic  scene,  that  long-awaited 
1956  basketball  season  is  just 
around  the  corner. 

Tomorrow,  the  15th  of  October, 
is  red  letter  day  around  the  At- 
lantic Coast  Conference  for  eight 
basketball  teams,  for  that  is  the 
day  that  practice  officially  gets 
underway  for  the  brand  new  cam- 
paign. 

Here  in  Chapel  Hill,  Coach 
Frank  McGuirc's  Tar  Heels,  rated 
as  high  as  third  in  the  nation  in 
some  pre-season  polls,  start  sharp- 
ening their  sights  for  the  coming 
season  in  a  workout  scheduled  to 
get  under  way  at  7:30  p.m.  in 
Woollen  Gym.  Earlier  in  the  af- 
ternoon, at  3:30  to  be  exact. 
Coach  Buck  Freeman  will  roll  out 
the  welcome  mat  for  all  freshman 
basketball  candidates. 

CLOSED  PRACTICE  ' 

Closed  varsity  practice  sessions  j 
will  be  held  nightly  in  the  Gym  \ 
until  the  season's  opener  agains't  | 
the  McCrary  Eagles  in  early  De- ' 
cember.  Coach  Freeman  will  work  ' 
his  reportedly  powerful  yearling 
.squad  in  the  afternoons. 

This  year's  Tar  Heel  team  will  i 
be  paced  by  everybody's  All- 1 
American,  lanky  Lennie  Rosen-  j 
bluth.  Rosenbluth.  who  has  bust- ! 
ed  just  about  every  existing  Cai- 
olina  scoring  record,  will  be  re- ! 
turning  for  his  last  campaign  un- 
der the  blue  and  white  colors.        • 

Also  on  hand  for  opening  sess- 
ions will  be  seven  other  lettermen 
returnees  from  last  year's  squad 
which  tied  State  for  the  regular 
season  ACC  championship.  Bob 
Young,  a  6-6  center  who  sat  out 
the  closing  portion  of  last  year 
due  to  scholastic  difficulties,  and 
Tony  Radovich,  sharp  shooting 
guard,  are  the  only  other  return- 
ing seniors.  Radovich  will  only  be 
eligible  for  the  first  semester  be- 
cause he  entered  school  at  the  j 
start  of  the  second  semester  as  a  > 
freshman.  j 

BUILT  AROUND  JUNIORS 

Forming  the  backbone  of  the 
team  will  t>e  a  quintet  of  juniors,  I 
ready  and  raring  to  go  after  one 
year  of  seasoning.  Leading  this , 
group  are  a  pair  of  starters  from  ' 
last  year's  club,  center  Joe 
Quigg  and  forward  Pete  Brennan. 
These  two  give  the  Tar  Heels 
needed  height  under  the  boards 
as  Quigg  is  6-9  and  Brennan  is  6-6. 

Tommy  Kearns.  a  5-11  pepper-" 
pot  guard,  sure-fingered  Bob  Cun- 
ningham and  consistent  Roy  Sear- 
cy are  the  other  returning  letter- 
men.  ' 

Lending  depth  and  scoring 
punch  to  this  years'  team  will  be 
a  group  of  rising  youngsters  from 
last  season's  flaming  freshman 
learn.  Harvey  Salz  and  Stan  Groll. 
a  pair  of  6-1  backcourt  men  from 
Brooklyn,  were  the  top  scorers  _ 
on  that  team  which  lost  only  two 
decisions  all  year  long.  Bill  Hatha- 
way, a  skycraping  center  stand- 
ing 6-11.  and  Danny  Lots.  6-5  for- 
ward, will  supply  a  valuable  front 
line  rebounding  strength.  Gehr- 
mann  Holland  and  Dave  Scurlock 
are  two  other  sophs  who  should 
aid  the  cause. 

In  addition  to  the  above  men- 
tioned, several  other  boys  are  ej^- 
pected  out.  These  include  Ken 
Rosemond,  a  top  flight  reserve  last 
year.  Frank  Goodwin,  transfer 
student  who  missed  all  last  sea- , 
son  with  a  back  injury,  and  Jimmy 
Kdley.  another  promising  sopho- 
more. I 


Frosh  Harriers  Lose 
Second  To  Myers  Park 


From  the  h<».<tt-seiling  navel  of  YOung  lovein  war! 


The  Carolina  freshman  cross- 
country team  suffered  its  second 
dual  meet  loss  of  the  current  cam- 
paign at  the  hands  of  Myers  Park 
High  School  by  the  score  ol  27  to 
29  here  yesterday.  ; 

Tar    Baby    Cowles    Liipfert   fin- 
ished first  for  the  third  consecu-  j 
live  time  in  as  many  meets   with  ' 
a  time  of  11:41.  Liipfert  met  stifl" 
competition  from  Myers  Park  jun-  j 
ior  Dayid  Gilmour     who     ran     a  j 
close  second  in  completing  the  two 
and    three-tenths    mile    course    in 
11:42.  I 

j      Another    Carolina    runne?,    Fick ! 


Arthur,  finished  third  behind 
Liipfert  and  Gilmour  with  a  time 
of  11:52. 

1.— Liipfert.    UNC,     11:41;    2.— - 
Gilmour,  M.  P.  11:42;  3.— Arthur, 
UNC,  11:52;  4.— Boles.  M.P.,  12:11; 
5.— Carr,  M.  P.,   12:37;   6.— Green, 
UNC,    12:47;    7.  —  Powell,   M.    P., 
12:48;  8— Packard,  UNC.  12:57;  9. 
—Stockton,     M.P.,      12:58;      10.— 
Burns,  m!p.,   12:59;   11.— Withrow, 
UNC.    13:06:    12.— Bagwell,    UNC, 
13:17;    13.— Johnston,   M.P.,    13:30;  < 
14.— "Porter,     UNC,     14:07;     15.— I 
Messerley,  M.P.,   15:17;   and  Sirri-  j 
anni  of  UNC. 


RoiKit  WAGNER  Teny  MOORE  Broderick  CRAWFORD 


Plus 
Cartoon  —  News 
NpW    PLAYING 


Sutton  Goes  For  Score 

Ed  Sutton,  (falling)  drags  three  Georgia  players  with  him  as 
he  scores  from  the  five  yard  line  on  a  handoff  from  quarterback 
Dave  Reed  in  the  last  quarter  of  yesterday's  26-12  toss  to  the  Bull- 
dogs. Photo  by  Norman   Kantor 

Bulldogs  Stop  Carolina  • 


■'I  WON'T  WEAR  A  THING 
BUT  TOWNE  AND  KING! " 


tntramurals 


Monda)''s    Intramural   Schedule: 

At  4:00  n  the  fraternity  division 
KA  will  meet  Sigma  Nu  on  field 
No.  1.  Field  x\o.  2  will  have  Chi 
Psi  facing  Phi  Gam;  field  No.  3, 
Kappa  Sig  vs.  SAE;  field  No.  5. 
Delt  Sig  vs.  Sig  Chi.  On  fieH  No. 
4.  Cobb  No.  2  will  encounter  BVP. 

At  5:00  in  the  dormitory  divis- 
ion, the  Dent.   Sch.   will   face   Ay- 
cock  on  field  1.  On  field  2,  Grime.s '. 
No.   1   will  take  on  Alexander.        I 

At  the  game  time  in  the  fratern- 
ity division  Kappa  Psi  plays  Zeta 
Psi  on  field  No.  3.  On  fields  4  and 
5  respectively.  AK  Psi  tangles  with 
Theta  Chi  and  Pi  Lambda  facps ' 
ZDT.     .  I 


(Conttnu-ed  from   Page   1 ) 

This  payoff  Bulldog  drive  got 
underway  on  the  Georgia  27  and 
carried  73  yards  in  12  plays  with 
second  string  fullback  Wilbur 
Lofton  cracking  over  for  the  score 
from  7  yards  out.  Sub  halfbacks 
Carl  Manning  and  George  Whitton 
bore  the  brunt  of  the  Bulldog  at- 
tack. 

After  Carolina  failed  to  move 
with  the  ensuing  kickoff.  Georgia 
took  posession  on  their  own  44 
and  went  to  the  Tar  Heel  28  be- 
fore being  halted.  Lofton,  kicking 
from  the  Carolina  43  after  a  15- 
yard  penalty,  put  the  Tar  Heels 
in  a  deep  hole  with  a  punt  to  the 
UNC  5  where  Varnum  called  for 
a   fair  catch. 

From  this  point,  the  Tar  Heels 
lost  five  yards  on  two  plays,  and 
were  forced  to  kick  out  on  third 
down.  Manning  returned  Wally 
Vale's  kick  from  the  UNC  34  to 
!  the  21.  and  the  Bulldogs  were  in 
business. 

WJiitton  picked  up  a  to  the  16. 
three  more  plays  put  them  on  the 
nine,  and  from  there.  Whitton 
burst  through  right  tackle  for 
the  score.  Ken  Cooper  added  the 
point,  and  Georgia  led  14-6  at  the 
halfway  mark. 
SECOND  HALF 

Georgia  wasted  little  time  get- 
ting started  in  the  second  half  as 
they  took  the  kickoff  and  drove 
straight  down  the  field  for  their 
touchdown.  Lofton.  Whitton  and 
Manning  racked  up  yardage  dur- 
ing the  drive  to  set  up  the  score 
and  first  string  fullbfick  Kntox 
Culpepper  went  over  from  the  3  for 
the  tally.  Buddy  Payne  blocked 
Cooper's  try  for  the  point,  but 
the  damage  had  been  done. 

With  only  a  few  minutes  remain- 
ing in  the  third  stanza,  the  Tar 
Heels  initiated  their  second  and 
last  touchdown  march  of  the  day. 
From  their  own  37  yard  line,  they 
moved  63  yards  for  a  score  in  11 
plays  with  Reed  at  the  controls 
once  more. 

The  big  break  for  the  Tar  Heels 
in  this  series  came  when  soph  Moe 
DeCantis  cut  loose  on  a  16  yard 
end  sweep  from  his  own  44  to  the 
Bulldog  40.  From  here  Reed  whip- 
ped a  pass  to  Vince  Olen  on  the 
28.  DeCantis  got  into  the  act 
again  with  an  11  yard  jaunt  to  the 
Georgia  17.  Reed  carried  the  ball 
on  four  straight  plays  and  moved 
to  the  Bulldog  5  for  a  first  down. 
On  the  next  play,  Sutton  scored 
his  second  touchdown  of  the  day 
by  slicing  over  left  tackle  for  the 
counter.  Hathaway  fai'Ied  to  con- 
vert, and  the  Bulldogs  led.  20-12, 
with  13:39  left  to  play. 
ORR  SCORES  ON  PUNT  RETURN 

Georgia  took  the  kickoff.  but 
couldn't  move  and  were  forced 
to  kick.  The  Tar  Heels  took  pos- 
session of  the  ball  on  their  own 
20,  but  three  passes  failed  to  click 
and  they  elected  to  punt.  Wally 
Vale,  the  nation's  leading  punter 
going  into  the  game,  booted  one 
far  down  the  field  to  the  Georgia 
34  yard  line.  Left  halfback  Jeff 
Davis  fielded  the  ball,  handed  off 
to  Jimmy  Orr  on  a  reverse,  and 
Orr  .scampered  66  yards  for  the  last 
score  of  the  day. 

Subs  took  over  for  both  teams 
at  this  point  and  mopped  up  what 
was  left.  The  Tar  Heels  .«rtaged  a 
brief  flurry  toward  the  end  as  they 
moved  to  the  Georgia  25  before 
being  halted  by  a  pass  intercep- 
tion. 

Tlie  hapless  Tar  Heels  got  the 
breaks  today  but  couldn't  do  any- 


!  thing  with  them  as  they  recover- 
j  ed  two  Georgia  fumbles  and  inter- 
cepted two  Bulldog  passes.  In  ad- 
j  dition.  Georgia  was  penalized  an 
I  even  100  yards,  while  the  Tar 
Heels  had  only  22  marked  off 
;  against   them. 

Carolina  Coach  Jim  Tatum.  who 

stood    by    as    his    boys    absorbed 

i  their   fourth   .straight    licking,   had 

:  only  nice  things  to  say  about  his 

:  conquerors    from   down   south.    "I 

1  thought    Georgia    was    as    fine    a 

;  team  as  we've  played  all  season — 

I  outside  of  Oklahoma."  he  said.  "I 

believe   the   Georgia       team     was 

'made'   today." 

In  reference  to  a  slight  injury 
suffered  in  the  opening  half  by 
Reed.  Tatum  said,  "The  game 
might  have  been  different  if  Reed 
hadn't  got  knocked  out." 

The  Georgia  team  apparently 
•found'  themselves  for  the  first  time 
this  season  in  the  colorful  con- 
fines of  Kenan  Stadium.  Up  un- 
til yesterday,  the  Bulldogs  had 
•  won  only  one  game  out  of  three, 
j  and  rumor  has  it  that  the  axe  was 
out  for  Coach  Wally  Butts.  But 
yesterday,  the  Bulldogs  vindicat- 
ed their  old  master  in  a  big  way. 
Despite  the  inglorious  defeat, 
there  were  a  few  individual  stars 
in  the  Tar  Heel  crown.  Dave  Reed 
proved  that  the  Carolina  quarter- 
back problem  is  solved.  Stu  Pell 
was  a  pillar  of  strength  in  the 
forward  wall.  Ed  Sutton  was  his 
usual  dependable  .self,  and  Moe 
DeCantis  turned  in  a  sparkling 
display   of   running  skill. 

Next  week.  Coach  Tatum  will 
send  his  charges  against  his  form- 
er pupils,  the  Maryland  Terps.  in 
a  game  that  has  all  the  flavor  of 
old  h^mc  week.  Game  time  is  2 
p.m.  in  Ke.ian  Stadium. 


"This  Is  The  Funniest  Movie  Of 
The  Year 


EXCEPTIONAL  COMEDY  .  .  .  SURE  AND  SOPHISTICATED 
HUMOR  AT  ITS  BEST!"       —Zinsser,  Herald  Tribune 


Jurgensen, 
Duke  Beats 
SMUBy14-6 

By    REECE    HART 

DURHAM.  N.  C.  Oct.  14  i^  - 
Ailing  quarterback  Sonny  Jurgen 
sen  came  off  the  bench  yesterday 
to  provide  the  spark  as  twice  beat- 
en Duke  defeated  Southern  Metho- 
dist University  14-6  in  an  inter- 
sectional  football  thriller  m;;rked 
by  11  personal  fouls  and  a  total  of 
210  yards  in  penalties. 

A  crowd  of  25.000  and  sunny 
weather  saw  SMU  go  ahead  6-0 
midway  in  the  second  period  when 
quarterback  Charlie  .\rnold  of  Dal- 
las scored  from  the  two. 

A  54-yard  run  by  halfback 
Charles  Jackson  set  tip  the  touch- 
down at  the  two. 

The  red-headed  Jurgensen.  out 
of  action  the  past  two  weeks  with 
an  injured  knee,  entered  the  game 
late  in  the  second  period  and  gave 
the  Duke  offense  a  shot  in  the 
arm. 

The  Blue  Devils  stormed  98 
yards  for  a  touchdown,  a  38-yard 
pass  play  from  Jurgensen  to  half- 
back Eddie  Rushton  setting  it  up 
on  the  two.  On  second  down.  Rush- 
ton  went  over  from  the  one  as  the 
clock  ended  the  half. 


Tigers  Top  Deacs 

Clemson's  unbeaten  Tigers  took 
another  giant  step  toward  a  Jan.  j 
1  Orange  Bowl  date  in  Winston-Sa-  ] 
lem  yesterday  as  they  downed  the  I 
Wake  *"orest  Demon  Deacons.  170. 


says  FRANK  AUGUST,  kith  hurriltr 

MOSCOW.  IDA..  August  28  -The 
Soviet  track  coach  choked  on  his  caviar 
when  told  of  Frank  August's  sensa- 
tional form  in  tryouts  for  Olympic  high 
hurdles.  In  the  2-milc  event,  over  6-ft. 
hurdles.  Frank  finished  the  race  with- 
out ever  leaving  the  ground.  Long- 
legged  Frank  has  a  "king  size"  stride. 
"Ever  since  I  was  6  ft.  high','  he  says. 
"I've  had  trouble  getting  sweaters  long 
enough.  Now  I'm  all  set!  T&K's  KING 
Size  fit  like  they're  made  to  order:* 

Exclusive  ...  KIAMA-CAPE  im- 
ported lambs*  wool...  long  sleeve 
V-neck  puUovcr;  California  colors. 
KING  Size,  for  tall  men  (40-46)... 
13.95.  Regular  sizes  (36-46)  ...  1 1.95 

TOWNE    ANO    KING,  LTD. 

Coordinated  Knitwear 
595  Broadway,  Redwood  City,  Califomim 


"A  must!  Funnier  than  'No  Time  For  Sargeants'  and 
infinitely  more  clever!'' 

Gilbert,  Mirror 


''HIGH  HILARITY! 
FIRST  CLASS 
COMEDY!  EM  JOY- 
ABLE  RELIEF!" 

—  /McCor»en,  The  New  Yo.-k»r 

"A  must!  More  sophisti- 
cated and  clever  than  'No 
Time  For  Sergeonts'  and 
what's     more,  infinitely 

funnier!"      ^      —GUbert.  Mirror 

"Highly  comical!  As  weird 
and  wonderful  a  troop  as 
ever  went  to  warl" 

—  Comfom,  N0wt 


<\ 


"A  FULL  BAG  OF    ^ 
BRITISH  COMIC  CHARACTERS! 

D«lightfui .  .  .  Very  funny  . . .  Satire  rises 
to  finest  heights . . .  Beoutiful  and  faiithety 
made  ...  A  fresh  breeze!"     -  wiM«w.,  ^ o«» 


Ue   BOULTING  BROTHERS  present 


mm  nmm 


n 


del 


RCHAfiO  AntNBOnOUGM  •  0£NNiS  W»lC£  •  TfRRr  THOMAS  •  IAN  CARMlCHAEl 

NOW  PLAYING 


"A  MERRY  CHASE  OF 
MILITARY  MATTERS!  A 
GALE  OF  HIGH  GLEE  .  .  . 
SHARP  SATIRE  .  .  .  ONLY 
LARCENY  AND  SOLID 
LAUGHTER  .  .  .  THE  IDEA 
IS  SIMPLY  TO  KEEP  AN 
AUDIENCE     LAUGHING!" 

—  Cool:,   World- re/egrom  g  Sun 

"A  delightful  spoof  .  .  . 
Chuckling  tongue-in-cheek 
humor  .  .  .  One  hilarious 
incident     after     ano'iher!" 

—  P«/twict,  Journal- Amerkan 

"A  hilarious,  satirical 
comedy!     A     howling 

delight!" -^•"'le'.  Cut  Magazine 


There  once  lived  a  crazyj 
mixed-up  old  giant.  He  lived  at 
the  top  of  a  beanstalk  and  he  got 
his  kickis  out  of  a  little  red  hen. 
Of  course,  that  wasn't  bad,  because 
that  chicken  laid  golden  eggs. 

Now  down  at  the  bottom  of 
the  stalk  lived  our  boy,  Jackson. 
Our  boy  was  low  on  loot  and  his 
mother  . . .  man,  she  wasn't  making 
it  at  all.  ITie  fe^bag  was  M.  T. 
So  Jackson  started  thinking  of  a 
way  to  get  loot  fast:  "How," 
said  he  to  himself,  "could  I  get 
that  frantic  chicken  away  from  that 
character  upstairs?"  He  looked 
around  the  hut  for  something  to 
trade — How  about  an  old  piano 
roll?  Mom's  bifocals? 


Uncle  Looey's  plectrum  banjo?  Wait  a 

minute!!!  In  the  cistern  was  a  six-can 

carton  of  Budweiser!  So  he  gets  the 

Bud  and  sashays  up  the  stalk.  Weil, 

citizens,  there's  no  use  dragging  this 

Budweiser  bit  out:  The  giant  buys  the 

Bud,  gives  Jackson  the  hen,  mom's 

doing  great  and  so  will  you  if  you're 

up  to  date.  Get  Budweiser,  man  . . . 

it's  the  world's  favorite  beer! 

All  cisterns . . .  and  brothems,  too, 
for  that  matter .  .  .  should  discover       ' 
that  there  is  a  difference  in  beers. 
This  Budweiser . . .  it  is  the  most. 


KINO  OF  BEERS  -t 

\ 

ANREUSER-BUSCH,  INC.  .  ST.  LOUIS  .  NEWARK  .  LOS  ANGEI.KS 


#.. 


T!.!f.C.    Llb!»apy 
Serials      Dept. 
Chapel    Hill,    N.    C. 
8-31-49 


WEATHER 

Cie9r  and  Warmer. 


VOL.  LVII    NO.  22 


3r()c  llaltu  ilSrar  Keel 


Complete  (JP)  Wire  Service 


CHAPEL  HILL,  NORTH  CAROLINA,  TU^DAY,  OCTOBER  16,  19M 


Offices   in   Grahnm   Memorial 


ASSISTANCE 

Not  from  Franklin  St.  Sea  pa9« 


FOUR   PAGES  THIS    ISSUE 


Carolina  Student 
Robert  L.  Ellerbe 
Killed  In  Crash 


Controversial  Will  Of  William  bfayes  Ackland 


Robert  Lee  Ellerbe  Jr.,  a  senior  at  the  University,  was  fatally  in- 
jured in  a  three-car  collision  n#ar  Burlington. 

Wiliana  F.  Yost,  another  UNC  student  is  recovering  from  injuries 
in  the  infirmary. 

Elllerbe  and  Yost,  traveling  eastward  on  route  70  about  12:15  p.m. 
in  Yost's  car,  were*  struck  by  a  pick-up  truck  operated  by  Mrs.  Alice  j  taniP"s 
Jones,30,  negro  of  High  Point.  Stie^ 
was  moving  in  a  westerly  direction.  ' 


By   PAGE    BERNSTEIN 

Sixteen  years  ago,  1940  to  be 
exact,  William  Hayes  Acklaod  died. 
His  death  opened  the  door  to  a 
long  series  of  court  debates  which 
later  and  finally  landed  at  the  step.'" 
of  the  Supreme  Court  of  the  United 
States. 

The  reason  was  the  gentleman's 
will.  It  concerned  the  students 
here  at  Chapel  Hill,  becau.se,  in 
the  final  decision  of  the  courts,  if 
was  to  add  another  stately  marble 
building   to  an    already   beautiful 


Caravan  Set 
For  Va.  Game, 
Nov.  9,  /O 

Carolina's  annual  Oaravan 
Weekend  has  been  set  for  Nov.  9 
and  10.  when  the  Tar  Heels  play 
the  University  of  Virginia  in 
Charlottesville. 

Saturday  classes  will  not  meet 
Nov.  10  so  students  can  make  the 
trip,  which  is  being  sponsored  by 
the  University  Club.  University 
Club  President  Joe  Clapp  said, 
"All  indications  are  that  this  one 
will  be  the  greatest   yet." 

This  year,  for  the  first  time,  stu- 
dents of  Woman's  College  in 
Greensboro  will  also  be  invited  to 
make  the  trip,  Clapp  .said. 

Students  will  travel  on  the 
Southern  Railway's  regular  train 
that  leaves  Durham  at  6:55  p.m. 
Friday  and  arrives  in  Greensboro 
at  8:50.  After  a  stopover,  when 
Yackety  Yack  pictures  for  -Medi- 1  WC   girls   will   get  on   board,   the 


According  to  police,  Mrs.  Jones  was 
in  the  left  hand  lane  at  the  lime. 

A  third  car,  driven  by  Luther 
.Marsh  of  Marshville  then  hit  Yosts 
•car  from  the  rear.  Braddy  Jones, 
Mrs.  Jones's  husband,  and  two  of 
Marsh's  passengers  were  also  hurt. 
Latei,  Jones  said,  "I  was  almost 
asleep,  and  didn't  see  what  hap- 
pened." 

Ellerbe  was  removed  from  the 
wreck  as  quickly  as  possible  in  an 
effort  to  save  his  life,  but  died 
on  the  way  to  Chapel  Hill  Mem- 
orial Hospital.  Funeral  services  wUl 
be  held  at  3:30  today  in  the  Vion 
.Methodist  church,  Rockingham.  The 
body  will  lie  in  state  for  one  hour, 
and  burial  will  be  in  the  church 
ccmetary. 

The  two  students  with  Marsh 
were  Cloyd  Bookout  and  George 
Wrape.  Bookout  has,  a  possible 
fractured  collar  bone.  Both  are 
reported  in  good  condition  in  the 
Infirmarv. 


V*-.  .\rkland  wns  an  art  fan  dur- 
ing his  span  of  life  and  was  great- 
»y  iiueresied  in  increasing  the  art 
culture  of  the  South.  Ho  chose 
Duke  University  to  help  furty.ir 
this  by  erecting  on  its  campus  the 
museum  and  classrooms. 

The  university  was  to  receive 
some  $1,700,000,  of  which  $300. 
000  would  be  spent  for  the  actual 
con.struction. 

However,  Duke  was  not  interest- 
ed in  accepting  the  terms  of  the 
will,  which  were: 

(1)  That  the  estate  would  be 
handled  by  trustees  appointed  by 
.\ckland. 

(2)  That  .^ckland's  body  was  to 
be  entombed  within  the  actual  mu- , 
seum  itself.  { 

This  rejection  caused  oontrover- 1 


2.  Being  just  eight  miles  from 
Ackland's  first  choice  of  Duke. 
Carolina  was  still  in  tjie  center  of 
southern  culture.         ] 

3.  UNC's  characteristics  are  the 
same  as  Duke  as  far  as  financial 
sbility,  total   enrollmj^nt,   etc. 

4.  Carolina  has  an  i^cellent  me- 
dium for  the  publication  of  worth- 
while work.<  including  art  whereas 
Rollins   has    none. 

5.  Carolina  has  a  graduate  school 
in  the  field  of  art  which  Rollins 
does  not  have. 

The  judge  of  the  court  ruled 
.n  favor  of  Rollins.  Again  Caro- 
lina lawyers  appealed  this  time  to 


Lambeth  Refutes 
UP  Charges  Of  ^ 
Political  Move   I 


student  Party  Chairman  Tom 
Lambeth  yesterday  denied  a  charge 
by  University  Party  Chairman 
.Mike  Weinman  "putting  ballot  box- 
es in  each  dormitory  was  purely 
s   political  move  by  the  SP.' 

Lambeth  said  "No  leader  of  the 


to  amend  the  election  law  reslor- 
mg  ballot  boxes  to  every  dormi- 
tory' during  a  campus  election. 

He  said  Friday  the  restoration 
was  a  ■'.  .  .purely  political  move  by 
the  SP"  and  ^'several  SP  leaders 
served  notice  that  they  intended 
SP  ever  told  Weinman  the  SP  \  to  use  the  ballot  boxes  as  a  cam- 
Ihe  Supreme  Court  of  the  United  j  ^,^,1^}  ^j.^  {^e  elections  revision  paign  issue  whether  they  got  boxes 
States.  After  hearing  the  findings  jjjjj  j^j.  political  gain  whether  it  '  in  each  dorm  or  not." 
of  the  trustees  for  the  second  time,  i  passed  or  was  defeased.  His  sUte- 
the  court  reversed  the  lower  court    ^p^^   ,„    t^at    effect   is   absolutely 

untiuthful." 

Weinman's    statement    follov/ed    a 
Student  Legislature  vote  Thursday 


Future  Site  Of  Museum 

Pictured  above  inspecting  the  fptu{e  site  of  Ackland  Museum 
of  Art  art!,  left  to  right,  David  Checkner,  Rieherd  Eisenburg  and 
Butch  Rosenthal.  Engineers  report  that  the  structure  will  be  com- 
pleted  by  October  of  1957. 

in  an  earlier  will  as  possible  reci-    school  which  could  best  carry  out 
pients  of  the  donation,  these  two    the  spirit  of  the  will. 


Yack  Photographs  Med, 
Law,  Grad  School  Today 


sial  court  sessions  for  some  12 1  schools  were  interested  in  the 
years.  The  heirs  of  Ackland  felt  money,  for  they  felt  they  could 
they  should  receive  the  money,  carry  out  the  requirements  of  the 
However,    during    the    first    court '  will. 

.■session  it  was  proven  that  the  part  ■  The  District  Court  of  the  United 
of  the  estate  which  concerned  States  for  trfe  Di.strict  of  Colum- 
Duke  was  to  be  used  for  "advanc-  j  bia  entered  judgement  then  and 
ing  the  cause  of  art  in  the  South."  stated  that  the  trustees  of  the  es- 
Because  Ackland  had  mentioned    tate  should   investigate    I'NC   and 


The  order  was  carried  out  and 
the  trustees  reported  that  UNC 
was  best  suited  as  the  place  of 
erection  of  the  museum.  The  fol- 
lowing   reasons    were    given: 

11.  As  UNC  is  a  state  institute 
and  therefore  receives  financial 
support  of  the  state  of  North  Car- 
olina, it  would  be  able  to  insure 


cal  School,  Law  School,  Graduate 
School,  and  Juniors,  will  be  taken 
^day  through  Friday,  October  19, 
'n-the  basement  of  Graham  Mem- 
arial  from  1  toTrSO'  p.  m.,-  wecord- 
'ing  to  editor  Tom  Johnson. 

.\iso  other  students'  pictures  will 
be  taken  through  Wednesday,  Oct- 
ober 17:  however  for  those  stu- 
dents there  will  be  a  late-fee  of  $1. 

G.rls  are  requested  to  wear  dark 
sweaters  and  single-strand  pearls. 
Dress  for  boys  is  a  white  shirt  and 
dark  coat  and  tie. 


Blacicweli's  Paper 
Slated  For  Conference 

Dr.  Gordon  W.  Blackwell,  Kenan 
professor  of  sociology,  yesterday 
participated  in  a  conference  in 
Roanoke,  Va.,  on  Reintegration  of 
the  Mental  Patient  into  the  Com- 
munity. 

The  meeting  was  held  at  Vet- 
erans Administration  Mental  Hos- 
pital in  Roanoke.  Dr.  Blackwell 
presented  a  paper  on  "Communi- 
ty Processes  and  Mental  Health." 


UNC  and  Rollins  College  in  Florida    Rollins  to  see  which  would  be  the    purpose  and  permanence. 


ruling  in  favor  of  UNC. 

The  art  building  will  be  located 
in  the  first  block  of  S.  Columbia 
St.  The  804  million  dollar  structure 
will  bring  all  the  Art  Dept.  under 
one  roof  with  the  pr^^ejit  building, 
Person  Hall,  to  be  used  as  an  aux 
iliary  building. 

The  new  building  will  be  spaced 
so  as  to  give  the  museum  the  front 
part  and  the  Art  Dept.  the  rear. 
The  museum  will  contain  the  gal- 
lery and  a  white,  Italian  marble 
sarcophagus,  or  tomb  to  Mr.  Ack- 
land. The  ground  floor  of  the 
school  will  contain  the  classrooms 
while  the  sculpture  divsion  will 
be  located  in  the  basement.  Includ- 
ed in  the  school  will  be  art  his 
tory,  the  art  library  and  a  lecture 
hall.  E!ngineers  report  that  the 
structure  will  be  completed  by  Oct- 
ober 1957. 


SP  Nominates 
Whitfield  For 
Jr.  Class  Head 


Weinman  said  "the  UP  had  no- 
thing to  gain  or  lose  politically  by 
voting  for  or  against  putting  boxes 
in    each   dorm." 

The  bill  to  amend  the  elections 
law  caused  considerable  debate 
when  it  came  to  the  floor  Thur.s- 
day  for  discussion.         « 

The  SP  favored  restoring  ballot 
boxes  to  all  the  dormitories  in  or- 
der to  encourage  a  greater  voting 
turnout    during   camnus   elections. 

The  UP,  sponsor  of  an  Elections 
Law  bill  passed  last  spring  calling 
for  boxes  to  be  placed  in  central 
districts   on  the  campus,   held  the 


By    CLARKE   JONE.S 
and   NANCY   HILL 

The    Student    Party    last    night  restoration  would  not  increasr  the 

nominated  Whit  Whitfield,  junior  percentage      enough    to    make      it 

from    Durham,    for    junior    class  worthwhile, 

president.                                *  Lambeth's     complete     statement 

Running    on    the     ticket    with  is  as  follows: 
Whitfield,  who  will  face  the  Uni- !      "The  Student  Party  does  not  in- 


tend  to  spend  this  academic  year 
m  a  battle  of  statements.  We  feel 
Pat    Adams.    Asheboro;    secretary,    the  campus  neither  enjoys  nor  pro- 


versity  Party  nominee  in  the  Nov. 
13  fall  electicn,  are  vice  president. 


train    will    leave    for    Charlottes- 
ville and  arrive  there  at  4:05  a.m.  ' 
Saturday. 

.    ..Stud.cnts  can  stay  or  tb«  train  j 
until  7:30  a.m.  Saturday.  After  the 
game,  they  can  board  tlve  train  at  j 
10  p.m.,  but  it  will  not  leave  for] 
I  Greensboro  until  1:38  a.m.  Sunday.  I 
I      The  train  will  arrive  in  Greens- 
!  boro  at  5:40  a.m.   Sunday   and   in 
j  Durham  at   7:55   a.m.  ( 

'      "For    students     who     have     no 
I  .specific  plans  for  entertainment  in 
Charlottesville     Saturday     night," 
Clapp    said<    "the    Virginia    foiks 
I  are  sponsoring   an  open  house  in 
I  their  student  union.  Madison  Hall." 
!    'Dancing  and  other  activities  sim- 
ilar  to    those    foun(\  in    Graham 
Memorial  will  be  available  there," 
Clapp  said. 

Cost  of  the  trip  will  be  cut  con- 
siderably, according  to  Clapp,  by 
eliminating  the  need  for  secur- 
ing overnight  accomodations  in 
Charlottesville  since  students  may 
sleep  on  the  train.  However,  he 
said,  students  desiring  a  place  to 
stay  in  Charlottesville  can  get  one. 


mm 

SEEM 


UP  MEETS  TONIGHT: 


Attorney  Talks 


Miss  Dot  Johnson,  Harrells;  treas- 
urer, Jim   Merritt,   Mt.   Airy   and 
social     chairman     Miss 
Meador,  Charlotte. 


fits  by  such  an  exchange. 

"I  would  be  untrue,  however,  to 

Margaret    my    responsibilty   to   the   party    if 

I  did  not  answer  the  attack  made 


All  five  candidates  were  chosen !  upop    it    and    the    integrity    of    its 


Pianist  Robert  Walienborn 
Plays  In  Hill  Hall  Tonight 


Bewildered  student  standing 
by  stiiek  of  "wr6ng  tfolorfed" 
cecals  T*hile  his  ig  being  used  for 
the  seventh  time  tor  "Vack  pfc- 

tures. 

•  ♦         * 

Chapel  Hill  cop  with  writers 
cramp  looking  hopelessly  at  lot 
full  of  illegally  parked  cars, 
giving   up   and   heading   for    Y- 

Court. 

*  *         * 

Tearful  first  reunion  of  fresh- 
man with  his  family. 


UP   Nominations  Start  On  Communists 

iVtext  Week-TW^ihrtiaf^^  t/:5.  TofitsrArf 


Univeriity  Party  Chairman  Mike   tion  at  a  later  date  will  immcdiate- 
W<;iuman  yesterday  announced  no     ]>•  be   able  to  vote,"   he  said, 
minations  will  begin  next  Mondav  j      Weinman   stated    "If  you    are   a 
and   Tuesday   nights   for   the    Nov.    representative  of  a  dorm,  fraterni- 
13   campus   election.  ,  ty   or   sorority   bring   an    affadavit 

He  urged  all  party  members  to    confirming  your  representation,  if 
be  present  at  the  UP  meeting  to-    possible." 


'  by  acclamation. 

In    other    matters    the    SP    also 
'  chose  nominees  for  Student  Legis- 
^  lature  districts  3,  4  and  5. 
I       Ed    Brown,    junior    from    Ashe- 
;  ville,  •  was  ■  nominated   by   acclama- 
'  tion  for  one  of  two  seats  in  Dorm 
Men's   3.   Nominations   for   the   re- , 
maining  seat   w^re   postponed  un- 
til next  week's  meeting. 

Sophomore    Bob    Carter    of    Sel- 
ma   was   nominated   as    the   candi- 
A  practicing  attorney  from  Char- '  dale  for  the  Dorm  .Men's  4  seat,    i 


With  the  theme  of  Communism 
as  his  subject,  Ralph  C.  Clonlz 
speaks  tonight  at  8  p.  m.  to  an  in- 
vited public  in  the  courtroom  of 
Manning  Hall. 


Reception  Fetes 
New  B.  A.  Dean 


night    at    7:30    in    Roland    Parker  | 
lounges  "to  have  their  names  va- 
lidated   on  the  rolls  so  that   they 
may   vote    nckt    v/eek    on    the   UP 
nominees.  | 

Any  person  not  having  "his  or 
her  name  validated  will  not  be  el- 
egible  to  vote,"  he  said.  I 


The  nominations  will  continue 
on  the  following  Monday  and  Tues- 
day nights,"  he  said.  "This  will 
.illow  all  candidates  at  least  two 
weeks  to  campaign"  before  the 
election. 

Miss  Bobbitt  will  be  at  Graham 
Memorial    from   6:45  p.   m.    on   to 


!otte  and  former  undercover  agoni 
for  the  FBI.  Clontz  will  deliver 
a  speech  entitled  "The  Communist 
Party  in  the  United  States:  A  Le- 
gal Entity  or  a  Criminal  Conspir-  i 
acy?"  j 

Clontz     is   speaking  under     the  i 
sponsorship    of    the    students    law 
school  a.ssociation.  i 


The  new  dean   of  the   Busino*^, 
School,    Maurice  Lee,   formerly   of 


Weinman  said   in  his  announce- ,  check  on  validations.    "Please  come 
ment    "All    dormitories,    fraterni-  j  early  to  check  with  her  about  hav- 
ties   and   sororities    ^re    urged   to  j  ins  your  name  on  the  roster,"  he 
have  their  representatives,  at  least    said, 
two  from  each,  present  at  the  vali- 
dation meeting.  All  petition  mem- 


By  FRANCES  WITHINGTON 

A  pianist  who  keeps  three  com- 
plete programs  at  his  fingertips, 
literally,  will  give  the  second  con- 
cert of  the  Tuesday  Evening  Series 
m  Hill  Music  Hall  tonight  at  8 
p.m. 

Robert  Walienborn,  internation- 
ally known  for  his  European  tours,. 
is  serving  on  the  University  of 
North  Carolina  faculty  this  fall  in 
the  Department  of  Music.  His  con- 
cert is  open  to  the  public  without 
charge. 

The   program   includes   Mozart's 


After     graduating    from     Duke 

University  Law  School,  Clontz  en- 

terad  the  Atmy.  While  serving  his 

enlistment  Clontz  related  to  Army 

Weinman   also  said    "Remember  ,  officials     information     concerning 

Washington     State,  was     honored,  ^ers  should  check  with  the  sccre  ^"  ^^'^^  ^^^  P^''*^  ^^^^  P"^^  good  ,  Communist   Party   activity   in   and 
Sunday  by  a  reception  ^iven  f or  i  ^^^y    (yii^f^    Harriette    Bobbitt)   to    government  before  petty  politics."  around  Chapel  Hill. 

him  by  the  Alpha  Tau  Chapter  of    be  "sure  their  names  are   included!  ' • '■ — = "^ "      '■  . — 

Alpha  Kappa  Psi.  national  business  ^„  ^he  roster.  r\  I  |  /^*1  f%  t   t        I  i         hM  ^ /^  t  f       « 

Tsfo  0.  raciry "- .»e  Bf*i>,  J  ;s^^^^  s  Costume  Room  Holds  Many  Ghosts 


Tom  Long,  sophomore  from 
Thomasville,  and  Everett  James, 
freshman  from  Robersonville, 
were  nominated  for  s?ats  in  Dorm 
Men's  5. 

Doug  Elsley,  liashman  from 
Statesville,  was  elected  to  serve 
on  th?  party's  Advisory  Board  un- 
til the  election  about  a  month 
from   now. 

In  next  week's  meeting,  the  SP 
will  choose  nominees  for  Legisla- 
ture seats  in  Dorm  Men's  1.  2  and 
3;  Town  Men's  1,  2,  3  and  4  and 

Dorm    Women's   seats.    Candidates    legislators  under  dorm   ballot  box 
for  freshman  class  officers  will  al-   systems  increased  69  percent  in  the 
i  so  be  ohosen.  |  areas  affected. 


i  legislative    caucus    last    SaturdJky. 

THREE  POINTS  -^,. 

•1.  No  leader  of  the  Student 
Party  av«ir  tt*ld  Weinman  the  SP 
would  use  the  elections  revision 
bill  for  political  gain  whether  it 
passed  or  was  defeated.  His  sfate- 
m'^nf  to  thnt  effect  is  absolutely 
untruthful."    he   said. 

"2.  The  basis  for  unanimous  sup- 
port of  tne  elections  revision  bill 
by  SP  legislators  was  a  leeling 
which  the\  all  shared  that  under 
the  other  box-per-district  provis- 
ions hundreds  of  voters  would  be 
severely  penalized.  We  never  once 
have  voted  against  any  proposal 
to  make  voting  in  town  districts 
more    convenient,"     he    said. 

'Here  I  think  it  should  be  point- 
ed out  under  the  old  provisions 
.lher°  would  have  been  five  h.'^xes 
for  900  town  voters  and  only  sev- 
en boxes  for  more  than  2,200  dor- 
mitory voters." 

"3.  I  challenge  anyone  to  dis- 
prove the  statistics  offered  bv  SP 


ness  School  along  with  about  80 
other  people  attended  the  gather- 
ing, in  Carroll  Hall  lounge  at  3 
p.  m.,  according  to  Tom  Blow,  pub- 
licity director  of  AKPsi.  State  Sen- 
ator Arthur  Kirkman,  former  Grand 
President  of  the  AKPsi,  and  L. 
R.  Jordon,  Grand  Vice-President 
of  the  fraternity,  were  at  the  meet- 
ing. 


though  anyone  bringing  in  a  peti 

YDC  Schedules 
Fund  Drive 
Here  Today 


ROBERT   WALLENBORN 

.  .  .  plays  tonight 


"Variations   on   a   Minuet    of    Mr.  i 

Duport,"  Bach's  "Partita  in  B  Flat,"  and  the  University  of  Texas;  as  < 
.Schumann's  "Kreisleriana,"  six  lecturer  on  modern  music;  as  so- 1 
etudes  of  Chopin  and  the  "Mir-^  loisj  with  leading  orchestras  both  j 
oirs"  by  Maurice  Ravel.  [  here  and  abroad.  j 

Mr.   Walienborn     calls  Chicago.  1      Mr.    Wellenborn    came    back   to  i  «'«,  professional  group  is   respon- 1 


Blackwell 

Addresses 

Conference 


The  Campus  YDC  will  hold  a 
"Dollars  for  Democrats"  campaign 
here  today. 


to  their  wide  assortmeni  of  cloth-   and  earlier,  and  bathing  suits  from 
ing  and  properties  donated  to  them '  the  turn  wf  the  century, 
over  the  years.  |     A  white  fringed  dress  worn  on 

The  bag  they   .selected   held    its   a  state  occasion  by  Tallulah  Bank- 
original   contents,   they    found,   as   head's     mother,   wife   of     Senator 
pictured    above — lipstick,    perfume  |  Bankhead,  is  in  the  collection.   A 
(?)  flask,  blonde  hairpins  in  a  gold   set  of  calling  cards,  yellowed,  but 
,    This   is   part  of  the   nationwide    ca.se,  rouge  and  puff,   and  a   note   legible,  was'  found  in   an  evening 
campaign  sponsored  by  the  Young    referring  to  an  appointment  at  46th  ;  vest  dated  about    1900.  From  this 
Democrats  to  raise  funds  to  finance    Street    off   Broadway — all     thirty-   period,   too/ are  complete  sets  of 
schedu'ed  appearances  on  T.  V.  of    live  years  old.  |  pantaloons,    petticoats,   and   night- 

candidates   Stevenson    and    Kefau-       The  owner  of  the  bag.  probably  j  gowns,  many  of  them  from  trous- 
ver.  I  an  actress,  is  unidentified,  but  she  i  seaus,  handmade  of  finest  lace  and 

100     students    will    make      the     is  only  one  of  the  many  "ghosts"  ;  embroidery   trim.    As**   result   of 
rounds  of  the  campus  tonight  seek-    that  linger  in  the  racks  and  shelves    havitlg   all   this    underpinnings    at 
ROANOKE,   Va.  — AP —  No    sin-  j  ,ng  contributions.  of  the  Playmakers  Costume  Shop,  j  their  disposal,  the  PJaymakers  are 

_  Charlie  Dean,    Chairman   of  the        According    to    Miss   June   Craft,    often      authentically    dressed      on 

Munich  (Germany) — and  now  Cha-   North  Carolina  this^ast  summer  to  j  S'ble  for  the  care  of  people  with  .  camplis  drive,  said  that  he  hoped    costume  assistant  from  Pfafftown,    stage  to  a  further  extent  than   is 
pel  Hill — home.  Baggage  problems    play   at   the   Brevard   festival.   On  |  psychological    difficulties,    a    Uni- ,  that  this  year  the  YDC   could   at    the  stock  includes  an  entire  trous-    /isible  to  the  audience, 
being  what  they    are,   the  pianist    his  return  to  Chicago,  he  stopped!  versify   of   North   Carolina   sociol- 1  least  equal  the  club's  quota  of  $2,    seau  in  black,  dating  back  to  1890,  |      An    original    Empire-style    silk 
has  to  leave  caches  of  music  and    over  in  Chapel  Hill  to  vist  friends,  i  ''Si-''t  declared  Monday.  ;  ooo,  set  during  the  1952  Campaign,    which  was  never  worn.  All  its  ela- ;  gown  which  perfectly   fits  a  slim 

hooks  in  his  various  "ports  of  "Apparently  somebody  got  the  ^^-  Gordon  W.  Blackwell,  head  when  the  campus  ciub  set  the  re-  borately  embroidered  contents  were  e'2"  woman  is  among  the  more 
call"  both  in  the  United  States  and  idea  that  I  might  be  available  for  I  of  ^^^  University's  Institute  for  cord  for  being  the  number  one  col-  made  in  France  for  a  New  England  novel  items,  as  well  as  a  pioneer 
Europe.  teaching  this  year,"  he  smiled.  Ac-  |  Research  in  Social  Science,  spoke    lege  club  in  the  nation  in  the  size    woman   whose   long-planned    wed-   woman's  bonnet  worn  on  a  cover- 

He  made  his  professional  debut    tually,  he  taught  at  UNC  in  1938  !  »^   a   conference   on    reintegration    of   its   contribution   to   the   Demo-    ding  never  took  place.  Also  in  the   cd-wagon  journey,  and  a  gold  lace 
with  the  Chicago  Symphony  Orch-    and  1939  and  during  summer  terms  ,  of   the   patient   into  the   commun-   cratic  Party 
estra.  A  student  of  Rudolph  Ganz    until  1942.  Then  he  served  during  |  ity-  The  group  met  at  -the  Veter- 1 
snd  of  Hugo  Tieckelmann  in  Chi     Worid  War  U  with  the  U.  S.  Air  '  ans'    Administration    mental    hos- 
caL'o,   and    of   George   Bertram   in    Forces  in  North  Africa,  Italy,_and  1  P»tal  in  Roanoke.  { 

Beriin,  Mr.  Wellenborn  has  had  a    Austria.  I      "Mental  health  is  a  product  as 

varied    career:   as   assisting    artist       Along  the  way,  the  multi-lingual  ;  well    as    a    problem    of    the   total 
to  such  musicians  as  Mary  Garden,    Mr.    Walienborn    has    acquired     a  !  community,"  Dr.  Blackwell  assert- 

Helen  Jepson  and  Richard  Bonelli  collection  of  Etruscan  art  objects  ed.  He  said  the  carefully  planned  scheduled  a  second  section  for  loading  ladv,  and  an  original  Colon-  ing  fwalures.  There  are  cartons  of 
in  New  York,  Elizabeth  Joengen,  and  a  personal  library  with  branch- 1  coordination  of  many  community  Thursday  evenings  from  7  to  9  ial  coat  in  green  satin  trimmed  jewelry,  fans,  swords,  masks,  bust- 
Willy  Boskowsky  in  Vienna;  as  es  in  Chicago,  Munich,  and  Chapel]  resources  is  needed  to  deal  with  p.m.  in  the  Person  Hall  Art  U«l- j  with  gold  braid,  are  among  the  les,  spats  for  both  men  and  wo- 
professor  of  music  history  at  UNC    Hill.  mental  health  prohiems.  i  lery,,  j  more      interesting      contributions  men,  period   gloves  and  stocking. 


When   the   Carolina    Playmakers  i  from     all   over  the  country.     The  i  hoops,    parasols,    bosom    and      hip    ing  its  contribution  toward  the  pro 
need  a   period  costume   or  acces-  ]  Playmakers    also   have   collections 
sory,  such  as  a  handbag  from  the '  ol  lace  and  satin   parasols   dating 
1.920"s  to  be  carried  by  the  exiled  '  back  to   1870,  Syrian  and  Oriental 
Empress    of   Ru.ssia    in    their   pro- 1  costumes,  grass  skirts   from    1920. 

duction  of  "Anastasia,"  they  turn  j  dolls  and  baby  clothes  from  1900   the  handbag,  part  of  the  Playmak 

'  living   museum,  will   be   mak 


pads,    and   artificial    "pot-bellies." 

When    "Anastasia"    appears     av 

the  Playmakers  Theatre,  tomorrow 

through  Sunday  evenings  at  8:30, 


duction's  authenticity.  The  uniden- 
tified owner,  who  thirty-five  years 
ago  had  reason  to  set  aside  the 
handbag  and  its  contents,  probably 
never  guessed  that  its  career  be- 
fore the  spotlight  would  outlast 
hers. 


matrimonial   line   is    a   white   silk  evening  gown  from  the  1930's  sty- 
wedding   dress  trimmed  with  wax  led  a  la  Carole  Lombard, 
orange    blossoms,    lace,    loops    of  The  long  rows  of  shelves  hold- 
seed  noarls,  and  satin  ribbon,  made  ing   the    costumes   and    properties 
Second   Section  Meeting  i  '"  ^^^^  ^""^  divided  according   to  ccnturj- 

A   black    velvet  girdle  worn   in  or    era,    country,    sex.    profession. 

The   Evening   Sketch   Class   has  ,  1880,   the  costume  of   a   showboat  social  class,  and  other  distinguish- 


Sketch  Classes  Set 


PROPERTY   ROR  "ANASTASIA" 

.  .  .   bag  of   unhnowti  migin 


PAGE  TWO 


THE  DAILY  TA^f  HEEL 


TUESDAY,  OCTOBER   16,  1956 


Auto  Help  Won't  Come 
From  Chapel  Hill  Merchants 


PROSPECT  &  RETROSPECT 


C.lhairinan  W'ilbuni  Davis  of  the 
.student  TraHu  Advisoiy  Coinnii.>s- 
ion  hacra  j^ood  and  just  tlionsijht 
the  other  dav  wlien  he  s,\\d  his 
ihici  <)l>jecti\e  is  to  "j'et  the  nur- 
(  h.ihts  behind  ihe  students.  "  11  that 
could  he  done,  he  reasoned,  the 
town  may  lift  its  two-hour  parking 
restriction  on  S.  Columbia  St. 

Davis  used  2f<;»o(l  reason iiif;.  As 
in  most  towns  the  si/e  of  Clhapel 
IFiii.  the  merchants  here  are  hi.^hly 
iiiflueiTtial  in  the  Avav  the  town 
cariies  on  its  business.  It  would 
be  .i>ood  to  have  them  on  the  stu- 
dent>'  side. 

r»ut  we  doidn  that  Chaittnan 
Da\is"  goal   will    be  re^ili/ed. 

The  merchants  have  no  reason 
to  i^ct     Ix'hind  the  students." 

Many  of  the  merchants  of  this 
town— not  allof  them  In  anv  means 
—fell  they  owe  the  students  noth- 
ing. At  le..^t.  thats  the  impression 
one  i;ets  horn  (heckin<^  the  pi  ices 
ol  e\c!\«hing.  The  students  make 
up  the  bulk  of  the  merchants"  in- 
conte. 

liut  in  ((tlle'.'e  towns  tlie  mer- 
(hanis  \ery  seldom  operate  by  the 
rules  of  lealitv.  They  have  a-  semi- 
monopoh  on  the  studeiu  tiillfoid. 
ami  thev  aren't  leliin«;  go.  The 
monopolv  is  even  moie  pronounced 
this  vear.  what  with  almost  all 
freshmen  prohil)ited  from  po>sess- 
iiig    automof>il  s    bere. 

.\o.  (Ihaitinni  D.t\is.  we  douf)t 
that  vouil  tici  much  sincere  help 
from  the.  merch.isits  in  vour  aiuo- 
mobile  problems.  You  11  get  even 
less    help    from    those    nieichanis  • 


who  exercise  inllueme  o\er   town 
politics. 

\'ou'd    better    stick    to    tiR"    stu- 
dents   themseKcs.     " 


Needed: 
Greener 
Pastures 


\\  bile  freshmen  are  lii'inin<4  out 
how  to  secrete  an  aiuomobile  in 
town  and  get  awav  with  ii.  and 
while  students  and  townspeople 
are  cu.ssing  the  j>arkin,i;  situation, 
the  Tniversity  should  be  looking 
toward  !L;reener  pa>ilurcs— to  park 
cars  in. 

Talk  ol  a  rniveisity-built  and 
m.vintained  parkincj  lot  for  stu- 
dents' cars  has  dropped  to  a  mini- 
numi  while  everyone  iii^hls  the 
(■.olinrif)ia  St.  liattle  and  the  Rose- 
marv  St.  Skirmish.  Meanwhile,  the 
student  enrollment  i*^  risint»  everv 
year. 

\\'ith  ilie  risiu''  enrollmeiu. 
more  automobiles  are  poining  into 
(Impel  Hill.  The  town  is  growing 
at  the  same  time,  and  so  is  the 
h<)S})ilal  and  the  p.svchiatric-  wing 
;;iid  the  Institute  of  (io\vM  innent 
and   the   facidtv. 

lUu  no  paikin<if  lots  are  beini^ 
built.  At  its  present  rat:  ol  pro- 
i^ress.  b\  the  time  South  Building 
lias  connnissioned  an  architect  to 
plan  parkiny  lots  the  automobile 
enrollment  will  ha\e  <;rown  lai  too 
f)ig  lor  the  blueprint. 

The  I'nivcrsfty  shoidd  be  pic  k- 
\u[i,  out  a  site  right  now.  The  Tni- 
\ersitv  should  !)e  comuing  its  mon- 
ev  and  lookinj»  for  sourc  es  of  more. 
There  is  a  lon<4.  Ion<i  trail  of  au- 
tomobiles, winding  into  Chapel 
Hill. 


Sorry:  No  Opinions  Today 


Theie  ivitf*1>e  a  great  viewing 
with  A'lafin  iSl^  yeui  when  the  pc»- 
litically-imerested  (  ''/ens  of  this 
coinitry  figure  out  how  lew  people 
vote  in  ilr-  .\o\ .  G  election. 

C-ries  <  .  apathy  "  will  rise,  and 
the  L.  ;  toral  college  svstem  will  be 
blaiiicd.  and  the  newspapers  will 
be  blamed,  and  the  people  them- 
seUes  will   be  blamed. 

Bin  in  four  years,  the  people 
still  won't  ha\e  anv  more  enthus- 
iasm   about    xoting. 

The  I'niversiiy  of  North  (iaro- 
liuH  student  bocfy  is  not  exempt 
from  the-  charge  <»f  i^ross  apathy, 
either. 

Of  the  .ilmost-7,000  students  on 
this  catnpus.  a  little  over  a  do/en 
t(»ok  the  tinif  and  enert>y  tf)  walk 
over  to  (.ralwm  .Memorial  aiid 
tell  a  student  commilte  who  thev 
wanted  lor  next  chancellcjr  ot  ifiis 
institution. 

.V  little  more  than  a  do/en  peo- 
ple wanted  to  have  a  say  in  the 
chocising  of  the  man  to  replace  re- 
tiring (hancellcjr  R.  B.  House. 
7  hose  pecjple.  for^  the  part,  were 
what  is  commonlv  called  "student 
leaders.  "  Thev  were  exjjec  ted  to 
give  opinions  on  the  matter. 

I  he  great  lack  of  opinion,  as 
(cudd  have  been  expected,  came 
from  the  indi\iduals  on  this  camp- 
us —  the  students  who  have  fjeen 
here  for  at  least  one  academic  year, 
who  understand  the  campus  fairly 
well,  who  ob\icjusly  have  opinicjns 

The  Daily  Tar  Heel 

Tfie  official  student  publication  of  the 
Publications  Board  of  the  University  of 
North  Carolina,  where  it  is  published 
daily  except  .Monday  and  examination 
and  vacation  periods  and  summer  terms 
Entered  as  second  class  matter  in  the 
post  office  m  Chapel  Hill,  N.  C,  undei 
the  Act  oi  March  8.  1870.  Subscription 
rates:  mailed,  S4  per  year,  $2.50  a  senses- 
ter;  delivered,  $6  3  year,  $3.50  a  semes- 
ter. 


Editor _ 

FRED  POWLEDGE 

Managing  Editor  . 

.  .  CHARUE  SLOAiN 

News  Editor 

RAY  T.TOICKR 

Business  Manager  . 

BILL  BOB  PEEL 

Sports  Ekiitor 

LARRY  CHEEK 

Advertising  Manager  Fred  Katzin 

Coed   Editor  Peg  Humphrey 

EDITORIAL     STAFF  —   Woody     Sears, 

Frank  Crowther,  Barry  Winstcn,  David 

Mundy.    George    Pfingst,   Ingrid    Clay, 

Cortland  Edwards.  i 

Night    Editor _     Woody   Sears 

Proof  ReadP-<   ^^ Cortland  Edwards 


as  to  who  their  chancellor  slioi-Kl 
be. 

'The  boys  in  the  Lower  Quad 
didni  \oie.  Xeitiur  ch'd  the  men 
in  Whitehead  Dormitory,  or  the 
girls  in  Aldernian  and  Smith.  Ac- 
cording to  one  member  of  the  stu- 
dent (onmiitte.  several  represeiua- 
tives  of  student  thought  actu.dK 
had  to  be  asked  to  deliver  their 
opinioirs. 

rhat  memlier  of  tlie  committee 
said  he  wasn't  t(Kj  disappointed 
with  the  turnout.  "It  avhs  a  lot  fiet- 
ter  than  similar  connnittees  had 
turned  out. "  he  said. 

Tfiat  is  true.  .\  little  moie  than 
a  dozen  students  is  cpiite  a  lar^e 
fi<4ine  for  something  like  this.  Uut 
I  hat  doesn't  take  the  blame  from 
the  man  in  the  Lower  Quad  or 
the  coed  in  .Smith. 

Lhe  trustees  of  this  Lnixersity 
are  lookin<^  for  a  new  (ha'ncellor. 
I  hey  were  kind  enough  to  inxite 
student  opinion  on  the  matter 
and  thev  turned  over  to  a  student 
committee  the  lesponsibility  for 
gathering  that  opinion.  liut  the 
oj)inion  is  not  b>rthcouiin;4. 

Lnless  the  students  rej^ister  their 
feelings  atiout  the  new  chancellor, 
the  trustees  can  think  only  one 
thing — that  the  students  don't  care. 

They  may  f)e  right. 

Like  Parties? 
Then  Sign  Up 
For  The  SSL 

If   you    like   a   good    party    and 
Avant  to  meet  women   (or.  if  yon'rd* 
a  c:oed,  if  you  want  to  meet  men) 
then  you'd  better  liinry  over  to  the 
State  Student   Legislatme. 

The  .SSL  holds  a  l)eerl)ust  year- 
Iv  "in  Ralei<4h.  Included  with  the 
refreshments  and  good  limes  is 
legislation,  if  there  are.  enough 
didl  dele<;ates  who  can't  ^et  dates. 

\'ery  little  good  comes  of  the 
meetings,  uidess  you  coinit  the  par- 
tying and  dating  as  good  liaison 
among  I  ar  Heel  educational  in- 
stil utiotis.  Tcjuchy  cpiestions  will 
come  up  —  cpiestions  like  integra- 
tion—and thev  will  l)e  defjated 
and  a  resolution  will  f)e  passed, 
but  the  state  wil  liardly  notice  ^ 
resolution  j)as.sed  bv  a  bunch  ot 
kid.s. 

So  hop  on  the  bus.  Party,  starts 
Nov.  ij.  and  il  lasts  two  day:*. 


Parking  And  Economic  Harmony 


Nell  Bass 

The  Columbia  Street  parking 
restriction  imposed  by  the  Chap- 
el Hill  board  of  aldermen  brings 
one  idea  to  a  head: 

It    is    now   or   never   for   stu- 
dents to  assert  their  rights. 
CONTROL 

It  is  understood  that  the  Al- 
dermen  and   the  Merchant's  As- 

On  Chapel  Hill's 
Vienna  Natives 
And  Marriage 

Frank  Wamseiy 

Wamsley  has  just  returned 
from  three  years  in  Europe, 
part  of  which  was  with  the 
army.  He  was  a  member  of 
The  Daily  Tar  Heel  advertising 
staff  before  his  graduation  in 
1951  with  a  BS  in  Business  Ad- 
ministration. Wamsley  is  pres- 
ently working  towards  his  mas- 
ter's degree    in   Journalism.     -""' 

Vienna  is  a  wonderfully  ro- 
mantic and  colorful  city.  Anyone 
who  has  ever  been  there  will 
back  me  up  on  that — and  add 
many  more  superlatives  to  Yny 
description. 

Right  here  in  Chapc-i  Hill  there 
are  many  natives  of  Vienna  in 
addition  to  our  old  friends,  the 
Danzigers.  Just  the  other  dayl 
met  a  charming  exchange  stu- 
dent from  Vienna — Lisa  Rehor. 
Her  English  i.s  terrific,  but  her 
nati\e  Viennese  dialect  is  me- 
locJious  and  flowing  like  a  song. 

One  other  is  Gretl  LeGwi.n. 
Her  husband.  Jim,  School  of 
Dentistry,  courted  and  married 
her  during  the  course  of  a  three 
yoar  .stay  in  Vienna  Gretl.  a  pert 
brunette,  loves  it  here  in  the 
states  but  would  like  to  return 
to  her  home  someday  for  a  visit. 

Jim  LeGwin,  an  interesting 
character  in  his  own  right,  was 
engaged  in  work  of  a  "sensitive 
nature'"  in  Vienna.  Without  vio- 
■  latiBg  any  .security  regulations, 
he  can  .spin  many  a  tale  of  in- 
trigue about,  the  former  four 
power  city.  What. is  most  amai- 
ing  about  him  is  hi.s  -ilmost  per- 
fect ability  to  .speak  Uje  Viennese 
duilcct. 

Jim  and  1  were  roonlmates  for 
some  six  month,s  in  Vienna. 
When  Jim  and  Gretl  were  mar- 
ried. I  gq{  my  first  look  at  real 
•'Red  Tape."  With  all  the  com- 
plications involved,  it  is  a  won- 
der that  anyone  over  there  ever 
gets  married. 

A  few  interesting  points  about 
the  procedure  turned  up  though. 
The  marriage  licen.se  is  actually 
a  tax  in  Austria  and  the  groOm 
pavs  according,  to  his  annual 
salary.  Also  it  is  compul.sory  to 
be  first  married  by  a  Justice  of 
the  Peace.  A  church  wedding 
thereafter  is  optional. 

Immediately  after  the  cere- 
mony it  is  customary  for  the 
bride  and  groom  to  have  their 
pictures  taken  at  some  photo 
studio.  Transportation  after  the 
ceremony  many  times  consi.sts 
of  an  oh!  fashioned  carriage 
pulled  by  tv.o  white  horses  and 
driven  by  a  formally  outfitted 
coachman. 

There's  no  roaring  away  in  a 
hail   of  rice  in  a  rig  like  that! 


sociation  control  the  town.  This 
is  democratically  sound. 

But  it  must  also  be  recognized 
that  7.000  students  play  a  pri- 
mary role  in  the  towns  economy. 
Thus  they  are  entitled  to  a  little 
respect.  They  are  definitely  .en- 
titled to  a  voice  in  the  town's 
affairs. 

The   student's   voice   has  been 
disregarded   too   long  already. 
TAXES 

Fraternities  pay  town  proper- 
ty tax  and  certainly  shouldn't 
be  denied  the  right  to  parking 
space  in  front  of  their  proper- 
ty. 

The  move  which  culminated  in 
pas.sage  of  a  two-hour  parking 
restriction      on      Columbia      was 


spearheaded  by  the  Merchant's 
Association  which  asked  for  an 
even  shorter  time  llimitation — 
one  hour. 

If  was  a  commercial  move. 

Merchants  want  Columbia 
parking  space  for  customers.  But 
it  is  sound  logic  that  fraterni- 
ty men  will  not  relinquish  the 
§0-odd  spaces.  They  will  circum- 
vent the  restriction  in  any  way 
possible. 
BOYCOTT 

.An  organized  boycott  of  local 
merchants  would  hrrdly  be  feas- 
ible. But  you  must  fight  fire  with 
fire. 

The  tragedy  is  that  the  boy- 
cott idea  has  to  even  be  sug- 
gested. 


Merchants  and  students  mut- 
ually benefit  each  other.  They 
live  in  a  snug  little  community 
together.  Thus  each  should  com- 
mand respect  for  the  other  and 
work  together  in  close  harmony. 

The  tendency  in  the  past  has 
been  to  '  consider  all  actions 
which  appear  before  the  alder- 
men in  the  light  of  how  it  will 
affect  the  local  firms  and  towns- 
people. 

The  students  must  be  consider- 
ed as  an  important  weight  upon 
the  ,  balance  of  successful  com- 
munity relations  and  commercial 
exchange. 

If  this  isn't  taken  into  consid- 
eration: 

Fight  fire  with  fire. 


'I  Said,  'Say  Hello  To  The  Gentleman' 


UNLEASHED  INHIBITIONS 


From  Parity  Raid  To  State  Fair 


^Woody  Sears 

It  was  gratifying  to  read  in 
Thursday's  Daily  Tar. Jlecl  that 
no  arrests  were  made  in  the 
"Panty-Raid"  distutbancc  Wett- 
nosday  night.  u 


I's    trial  jftf    th( 


Last  fiaU's  trial  pi  the  boys 
who  had  allegedly  led  a  panty- 
raid  the  previous  spring  was  ri- 
diculous. It  seems  cyiila-ualikcJy 
that  a  few  people  courTcF  ^ad'  a 
panty-raid,  ^nd  rccriii^^l  the 
willing  participants  in  irifispace 
of  less  than  an  hour. 

Those  things  just  l|gg||gbn  at 
random,  sparked  possibly  by  a 
careless  remark  made  by:,  some- 
one in  the  lower  quad.  It  is  un- 
likely   that    those    who    are    ar- 


rested at  panty  raids  are  the  real 
leaders. 

However,  as  in  days  of  old. 
public  opinion  calls  for  a  cruci- 
fixtion,  whether  the  right  per- 
son is  smeared  or  not. 

■Real'  leaders.  Are  there  anv 
such'  Or  do  such  actions  arise 
spontaneously  from  a  mid-week 
.stagnation  and  a  resulting  desire 
on  the  part  of  the  students  in- 
volved to  get  out  for  five  or  ten 
minutes  of  uninhibited  lung- 
stretching.  Would  this  not  come 
under  the  heading  of  good,  cleai^ 
!  tun? 

If  the  powers  that  be  ques- 
tion the  intention  of  these  groups, 
perhaps  a  good  hymn-sing  man 
could  be  rushed  to  the  spot  next 
time. 

•  •  • 


With  the  first  cool  weather  of 
fall  come  the  county  fairs,  those 
little  splotches  of  violent  colors 
and  bright  lights.  Then  early  in 
October  the  big  State  Fair  opens 
itjs  gates  for  five  days  of  delic- 
ious excitement.  There  is  some- 
thing there  for  every  taste  and 
every  interest,  from  stock  and 
home  ec.  displa\'s  to  the  more 
sensual  pleasures  of  hot  food 
odors  mingled  in  the  saw  dust  at 
mosphere   and    "hootch"  shows. 

To  anyone  who  has  never  been 
to  the  North  Carolina  State  Fair, 
it  is  highly  recommended  that 
you  get  over  to  the  Fair  Grounds 
on  the  Chape'i  Hill-Raleigh  road 
sometime  this  week.  You'll  be 
glad    you  did. 


Ppgo 


By  Walt  Kelly 


w\ 


Vi^U  AL^O  \Siti  Te>lN6 


Vf  41,  A  i'Sey  ^(/Hf4$  UfYALf  Y  AMP  TMAr'f  £Yf/f  \ 


Aeg  mrio0iroio, 


NOT  MfANT  10  0f  fOUP 
9uT  1Hgy  AXB  f^BMf  T<5« 

i\^rfiWfO"'^oQ9at\. 


LiM  Abner 


By  Al  Capp 


THE  JUDICIAL  BRANCH 

Judiciary  Divided 
into  Four  Bodies 

This  is  th«  second  part  of  Artielt  II  9f  the 
student  constitution.  Article  II  establishes  the 
Judicial   Branch. 

Section  4  Composition  Of  The  Judiciary  Bodies. 
Each  judicial  body  herein  established  shall  have 
the  power  to  determine  its  own  composition  subject 
to  the  approval  of  the  Student  Legislature,  with 
the  exception  o€  the  Men's  Council,  the  Women's 
Council,  and  the  Student,  Council  The  composition 
of  these  courts  is  thusly  specified: 

A.  STUDENT  .COUNCIL.  The  Student  Council 
shall.be  composed  of  one  member  from  the  Mens 
Honor  Council,  the  Interfraternity  Council  Court, 
the  Interdormitory  Council  Court,  the  Law  School 
Court,  the  Dfental  School  Court,  and  the  Medical 
School  Court  to  be  elected  by  and  from  the 
judicial  bodies  in  the  spring  election  and  six 
male  students  elected  from  the  student  body  at 
large;  Three  rising  seniors  in  the  spring,  two 
juniors  and  one  sophomore  in  the  fall.  Three^ 
women  shall  be  appointed  to  the  Student  Coun- 
cil to  serve  in  cases  involving  constitutional  pro- 
cedure. These  three  special  members  of  the 
Court  shall  be  appointed  by  the  Chairman  of 
the  Student  Council,  the  Chairman  of  !he  Wo- 
men's Residence  Council,  and  the  President  of 
the  Student  Body  at  the  beginning  (jf  each  Stu- 
dent Government  administrative  year. 

All  members  shall  serve  terms  of  one  year. 
If  a  member's  term  on  the  Council  from  which 
he  was  elected  should  expire  before  the  expii-a- 
tion  of  his  term  on  the  Student  Council,  it  shall 
not  affect  the  completion  of  his  term  on  tb«! 
Student  Council.  If  the  term  of  the  person  elect- 
ed to  the  chairmanship  in  the  spring  shall  ex- 
pire at  the  following  Fall  Elections,  il  shall  be 
expended  until  the  following  Spring  Elections. 
No  officer  of  the  Student  Body,  no  member  of 
the  Student  Legislature,  and  no  chairman  of  a 
standing  executive  committee  shall  be  a  mem- 
ber of  the  Student  Council. 

i.li.i  B.  WOMEN'S  CdLTVClL.  I^hc  women's  Coun- 
cil shall  be  composed  of  three  seniors,  four 
juniors,  one  graduate  student  and  one  student 
nurse.  The  junior  members  shall  be  elected  an 
nuaUy  at  Fall  EUections.  If  the  term  oi  \\ie 
person  elected  to  the  chairmanship  in  the  spring 
shall  expire  at  the  following  Fall  Elections,  it 
shall  be  extended  unt^  ^  tj^e;:folowing  Spring 
Elections.  '      »'  -^■r^ ''  '*■    • 

C.  MENS  COUNCIL.  The  Men's  Council  shall 
be  composed  of  four  seniors,  four  juniors,  three 
sophomores,   one  freshman,  one   pharmacy  stu- 
dent, and  one  graduate  student,  elected  by  the 
men  students  for  terms  of  one  year.  Four  seniors, 
one  junior,  one  sophomore,  the  graduate  student. 
and  the   pharmacy  student  shall    be  elected  at 
Spring  Elections.  Three  juniors,  two  sophomores, 
and  the   freshman  member  shall   be  elected  2^ 
Fall  Elections.  If  the  term  of  the  person  elected, 
to  the  chairmanship   in   the  spring  shall  expire ^ 
at  the  following  Fall  Elections,  it  shall   be  ex-' 
tended  until  the  following  Spring  Elections.        ^ 

THE  MISSING  5,000 

University  Day:  ■ 
Free  Cut  Or  Not?; 

f 
;   '^  Don  Gray  ? 

It  was  11  a.m..  Oct.  12,  Columbus  Day  and  also; 
the  day  on  which  this  hallowed  institution  was* 
founded  many  years  ago.  The  Glee  Club  had  been, 
practicing,  the  Band  was  playing  a  few  numbers,, 
and  all  11  o'clock  classes  had  been  cancelled.  J 

The  opening  bars  of  the  Star  Spangled  Banner  J 
were  sung  and  the  ceremony  was  underway.  The. 
students  had  gathered — all  KXH)  of  them. 

What  about  the  other  5000  students  who  hadj 
no  11  o'clock  classes  Friday?  Well,  after  all,  tha*' 
class  had  been  cancelled  for  the  day,  and  it  would  > 
be  an  ideal  time  to  gel  in  that  extra  hour  of  studi  | 
ing,  or  to  catch  up  on  some  much-needed  sleep,  or» 
just  to  loaf.  '  *  J 

• 

Considering  the  purpose  for  which  the  classes' 
were  cancelled,  a  pitifully  small  percentage  of  stu-j 
dents  had  appeared.  Where  were  they?  \ 

Dr.    Habel    pronounced  the  invocation,   the   few  • 
students  sang  the  University  Hymn,  and  Chancellor 
House  for  his  last  time  as  Chancellor  led  the  con- 
gregation in  the  traditional  responsive  reading. 

Next  on  the  program  was  a  one-minute  period 
of  silence,  in  memory  of  the  great  men  who  f  irst  i 
laid  the  foundation  of  the  University.  One  short 
minute  of  .  .  .  silence?  PYom  nearby  Y-Court  came 
the  usual  loud  sounds  of  students  enjoying  a  raid-  j 
morning  coffee  break,  too  busy  to  walk  100  yards 
to  attend  the  festivities.  ] 

The  Glee  Club  sacg  a  few  numbers,  and  the ' 
ceremony  was  closed  by  the  singing  of  Hark  Thej 
Sound  under  Davie  Poplar  by  the  all-too-few  stu-  * 
dents  who  had  cared  enough  to  take  the  less  than  ♦ 
an  hour  set  aside  for  the  purpose  of  altending  the  * 
celebration.  f 


TUCSDAY, 

Gradi 

Of  Lii 

I        1 

\A  grsduatj 
of    Library 
Pearl    Newi 
the  recipient 
Grey  Akers 
Science  for 
year  by  th( 
brary    Scienc 

Opeh   to  s| 

suing  cours< 
ter's  degree| 
the  winner 
sis  of  defir 
fessional  pre 
ities  of  lead« 
astic  achiev( 

■  The  Greej 
tended  W^ 
Greensboro 
completed  h< 
at  Cardinal 
received  a 
education  wj 
Ush. 


in  The  Re^ 
College  Co^ 
wita,  too, 
colleges  acr 
liet,  in  ordj 
October  ReJ 
readers  wilj 
there  is  to 
big  cash  pj 
scholarahipj 
lege. 

Better  ac\ 
contest  clc 
25. 

Get  an  er 
college  bookl 


J 


Ch( 


THI 

V  205  Ei 


A  sad  situation,  don't  you  thinks 


14,  1954 


ed 


9f   th« 

Bodies. 

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tne  Mens 
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and    six 
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elected   at 
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son  elected, 
shall  expire! 
hall    be  ex-' 

lections. 

f 

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ay: 
slot? 


Day  and  also' 
ititution  was* 
lub  had  been* 
ew    numbers, 

celled. 


\ 
t 

ngled  Bannerl 
nderway.  The^ 
em.  ? 

?nts  who    had! 
after  all,  that* 
and  it  would  I 
hour  of  studi^- 
eded  sleep,  or] 


ch  the  classes] 
rentage  of  stu-j 
!y?  j 

ation,  the  few » 
ind  Chancellor! 
'r  led  the  con-" 
ve  reading.        i 

minute  period 
men  who  first  i 
ty.  One  short ; 
Y-Court  came  ' 
'joying  a  mid-  "; 
valk  100  yards  ^ 

i 

ibers.   and  the? 

of  Hark  The  I 

ill-too-few  stu-  * 

the  Icis  than  t 

attending  the  • 


TUESDAY,  OCTOBER  16,  1956 


THt  DAILY  TAR  HtCL 


^ACI  THRf  t 


Graduate  Coed  Is  Recipient 
Of  Library  Science  Award 


♦  A  graduate  coed  in  the  School 
of  Library  Science,  Miss  Bobbie 
Pearl  Newman,  has  been  named 
the  recipient  of  the  second  Susan 
Grey  Akers  Scholarship  in  Library 
Science  for  the  1956-57  academic 
year  by  the  UNC  School  of  Li- 
brary  Science   Alumni  Assoc. 

Opeh  to  students  who  are  pur- 
suing courses  leading  to  a  mas- 
ters degree  in  Library  Science, 
the  winner  is  selected  on  the  ba- 
sis ot  definite  evidence  of  pro- 
fessional promise,  character,  qual- 
ities of  leadership  and  high  schol- 
astic achievement. 

The  Greensboro  coed,  who  at- 
tended Woman's  College  in 
Greensboro  before  entering  UNC. 
completed  her  undergraduate  work 
at  Carolina  in  June.  1956,  and 
received  a  degree  in  secondary 
education  with  a  major  in  Eng- 
lish. 


DONT  DELAY 

You  may  win  $5,000 

in  The  Reader's  Digest  $41,000 
College  Contest.  You  can  match 
wit«,  too,  with  other  students  in 
colleges  across  the  country.  Just 
list,  in  order,  the  six  articles  in 
October  Reader's  Digest  vo/i  think 
readers  will  like  best!  That's  all 
there  is  to  it — and  you  can  win  a 
big  cash  prize  for  yourself  plus 
scholarship  money  for  your  col- 
lege. 

Better  act  fast,  though  .  .  .  the 
contest  closes  at  midnight,  Oct. 
25. 

Get  an  entry  bfank  noiv  at  your 
college  hookstore. 


Phi  To  Debate    i  A  D  Pi  House 
Foreign  Aid  Bill '«  dedicated 

At  8  Tonight 


The     AJpha  Delta   Pi     Sorority 
!  formally  dedicated  thieir  new  bouse 
I  Sunday  at  2:30  p.  m.  and  then  had 
i  an   open   house  frona  3  to  6  p.m. 
I      The  new  house   is?  at  411    East 
j  Rosemary  St.  beside   the  old   one. 
Sept.  15  the  girls  m<»ved  into  the 
house,  which  has  room  for  26  stu- 
dents, two  to  a  room. ' 

At  the  dedication  Sirs.  Howard 
Jim  Montieth,  chairman   of  the  |  Halberstadt.  province  [president  of 


The  Philanthropic  Literary  So- 
ciety will  debute  tonight  at  8  p.m. 
on  the  fourth  floor  of  New  East 
a  bill  to  abolish  foreign  aid. 


MISS   BOBBIE   NEWMAN 

.  ivins  Akfr.s  Scholarship 


Ways  and  Means  Committee,  is  | 
expected  to  introduce  and  defend  j 
the  bill  with  Jim  Tolbert  aiding  i 
him.  i 

James    Duval    and    Jesse    Strib- 1 

ling   will   lead   the   attack    on   the  j 

bill.  I 

i 
At   the   meeting  those  qualified  j 

for   Phi    membership   will    be    in- 

I  ducted  into  the  society.  The  final 

!  details   of  the   Di-Phi  debate  con-  | 

;  cerning  the  national  political  par-  j 

30,' 


During    the    summer    of    1955 
Miss    Newman   qualified    to    parti 

eipate    in    the-  Experiment   in   In- 1  ^'^s.   tentatively    set    for   Oct. 
ternational    Living    and   spent    ten  :  will  be  worked  out. 
weeks   in  Sweden  where  for  four  ' 
weeks   she   lived   with   a    Swedish  ! 


AD  Pi;  Miss  Katherine  Carmichael, 
dean  of  women;  and  Mrs.  H.  C. 
Cranford,  President  <*  the  Beta 
Upsilon  Foundation  foe  Education 
Incorporated;  gave  sH^rt  talks. 
Then  Mrs.  Cranford  priisented  the 
keys  to  the  new  hoiiise  to  Miss 
Shirley  Williams,  president  of  the 
sorority.  About  200  pec>|ile  attend- 
ed the   open  house. 

The  interior  decoratioa  was  done 
by  Otto  Zenke  of  Greensboro,  N. 
C.  James  M.  Webb  of  Ciapel  Hill 
was   the  architect. 


State     Supreme     Court 


IOC  COMMITTEE 

The  Interdormjtory   Council  ex- 
Justice  I  ^cutive  committee  will    i»eet  this 
afternoon  at  4:15. 


fomM,.     ♦,.o„„i«,4    f^,.    <■„..-    ...  »i,.i  William     Rodman,    former    Attor- :      _,,^ _...  .     .     , 

family,    traveled    for    four    weeks  ]  The  committee  is  comprised  of 

with  a  group  of  Swedes  and  Am- 1  ne>'  General   will  make  an  address  |  an  council   officers.   It  wSl   meet 

ericans.    and   then    traveled    inde-    at  the  inauguration  of  the  Phi  of- 1  m  the  IDC  office  in  New  Bast  An- 

pendently  for  two  weeks.  I  ficials,  Oct.  23.  •  J  nex. 


"l/^-'-i  -   '*-  -'-""."'■■in K 

Covering  The  University  Campus 


COMMUNITY  WORK  SHOP 

.  There  will  be  a  community  ■ 
workshop  meeting  at  5  p.m.  today  j 
at   the   Y  Building. 


Just  Out! 


JEFFERSON 

,  Champion  of  the  Free  Mind 


J* 


i  ♦f 


by 


CHAPEL  HILL'S  OWN 


PHILLJPS  RUSSELL 
Come  took  It  Over!  » 
THE  INTIAAATE  BOOKSHOP 

205  E.  Franklin  St.  Open  Till  10  P.M. 


STUDENT  WIVES 

The    Student    Wives'    Club    will 
meet  today  at  8  p.m.  at  the  main  j 
I  'entrance  of  the  library  for  a  tour' 
I  of  the  building.  Rides  to  and  from  . 
the  tour  will  be  available  and  will  '■ 
leave  the  Victory  Village  Nursery  i 
i  at  7:30  p.m.  All  student  wives  have 
j  been  invited  by  the  club  to  attend. 

WOMAN'S    ATHLETIC    CLUB 

The  Woman's  Athletic  Assn.  is  I 
sponsoring  five  clubs  this  week.  I 
Hockey  Club  will  meet  today  at 
4  p.m.  An  organizational  meeting ' 
of  the  Square  Dance  Club  will  be  ; 
I  held  at  7  p.m.  today  at  the  Wo- ; 
'  man's  gtm.  Those  interested  in ! 
tennis  can  play  with  the  club  on  i 
Thufsday  at  4  p.m.  Volleyball  ! 
teams  may  practice  through  Friday  j 
from  4-6  p.m.  and  today  and  Thurs-  j 
day  at  7  and  8  p.m.  j 

FACULTY    CLUB  j 

The  tJNC  Faculty  Club  will  hear  j 
Coach  Jim  Tatum  at  the  regular' 
.Jiemi-monthly   faculty  luncheon  to- ' 

■  ddy.  Tatum  wiU  speak  on  "College  , 
Foo.tball."  ,  I 
FRESHMAN  CAMP  PICTURES         , 

Freshman     camp     pictures     are 
available    at    the     YMCA     office. 

■  Those  who  ordered  may  pick  up 
'  the  pictures  between  8:30  a.m.  and 
;  4:30  p.m.  In  addition,  there  are 
:  five  pictures  for  sale  at  $1.50  each 
:  on  a  first  come,  first  serve  basis. 

i  WUNC-TV 

Today's  .schedule  for  \\TJNC-TV, 


ihe    University's    educational    tele- 
vision station,  Channel  4: 
10:00  State  Fair 

11:00  Mr.    O'Flynn. 
:2:00  State  Fair 
12:30  4-H  Club  Congress 
1:00  Today  On  The  Farm 
1:30  Music  In  The  Air. 

2:00  Science  and  Nature 

2:30  Green  Light 

3:00  State  Fair 

3:30  Sign  Off  ' 

5:45  Music  ' 

6:00  Magic  Lantern 

6:15  Sports   Clinic  t  .-  , 

6:30  News  ,'*''■ 

6:45  Sports 

7:00  Books  and  People 

7:15  Bible  Course  ' 

8:00  Dr.  Shivers 

8:45  State  Oovernment 

9:30  Passing   Notes   on   Music 
tO:00  Final  Edition 
WUNC 

The  schedule  for  AVUNC,  the 
University's  non  commercial  FM 
radio  station,  which  is  operated  on 
a  frequency  of  91.5  megacycles  and 
power  of  12,000  watts: 

7:00  Intermezzo 

7:15  Over  the  Back  Fence 

7:30  Vistas  of  Israel 

7:45  Variatons  of  Theatre  Theme 
•  8:00  Hill  Hall  Concert 

9:30  Music  Program 
10:00  News 

10:15  Evening  Masterwork 
11:30  Sign  Off 
UNIVERSITY   CLUB 
The  University  Club  will  meet 


Resolution  On 
Constitution 
Is  Di  Debate 

The  Dialectic  Senate  will  de- 
bate tonight  at  8  p.m.  on  the  top 
floor  of  New  West  a  resolution 
to  change  the  state  constitution 
as  recommended  by  the  commis- 
sion on  the  reorganization  of  state 
government. 

"The  bill  criticizes  the  lack  of 
the  governor's  power  to  initiate 
and  carry  out  a  program,"  said 
Pat  Adams,  chairman  of  the  Ways 
and  Means  Committee. 

The  proponents  of  the  bill  are 
expected  to  say  the  constitution 
was  written  in  post  Civil  War  days 
and  is  not  fit  for  the  present  age. 

Opponents  are  expected  to  rea- 
son that  the  present  system  has 
done  its  job  well  and  that  the 
governor's  programs  need  to  be 
checked. 

Ervin  Avery  will  introduce  the 
resolution;-^  *"--  -v' 


Med  School  Professor 
Back  From  Washington 

Dr.  George  C.  Ham.  professor 
and  chairman  of  the  Dept.  of  Psy- 
chiatry, has  returned  from  a  Wash- 
ington. D.  C.  meeting  of  the  Se- 
lection Committee  for  Senior  Re-  i 
search  Fellowships  of  the  National 
Institutes  of  Health. 

Th©  committee  reviewed  re- 
quests from  throughout  the  United 
States  and  assisted  the  Department 
of  Health,  Education,  and  Welfare 
in  awarding  Senior  Research  Fel- 
lowships. These  fellowships  will 
support  investigators  between  the 
completion  of  training  and  eligi- 
bility for  permanent  higher  aca- 
demic appointments. 


Duke  Psychiatry  Profs' 
Will  Speak  Here  Thurs. 

"Your  Future  Years — Research 
Reappraises  Your  Prospects"  will 
be  presented  Thursday  in  the  Un- 
iversity Library's  Assembly  Room 
at  7:30  p.m. 

Miss  Frances  C.  Jeffers  and  Dr. 
Claude  R.  Nichols,  both  of  the 
Psyahiatry  Dept.  of  the  Duke  Un- 
iversity School  of  Medicine  and 
members  of  the  Geriatrics  Re- 
search team  at  Duke,  will  be  the 
featured  speakers  on  the  program 
sponsored  by  Chapel  Hill's  Asso- 
ciation for  the  Aging  and  Com- 
munity Relationships. 

The  public  has  been  invited  to 
this  and  suhf^equent  monthly 
meetings  of  the  AACR. 

Committee  structure  and  work 
plans  for  the  year  will  be  pre- 
sented during  the  business  ses- 
sion following  Thursday  evening's 
program. 

Dr.  Swalin  Speaks  At 
Phi  Mu  Founders  Eanquet 

Dr.  Benjamin  Swalin.  director 
of  the  Ncyth  Carolina  Symphony, 
was  the  guest  speaker  of  the  Phi 
Mu  Alpha  Fraternity  at  the  Foun- 
ders Day  banquet. 

Dr.  Swalin  stated,  'Our  coun- 
try demands  absolute  perfection 
in  science  and  absolutely  nothiag 
in  the  arts. 

"Only  through  good  music  and 
other  humanities  can  we  ever 
hope  to  achieve  any  international 
understanding,"  he  further  stat- 
ed. 

Dr.  Swalin,  before  his  work 
with  the  North  Carolina  Symph- 
ony was  associated  with  the  mu- 
sic   department    here. 


Biography  Of  Coker  Family 
Scheduled  For  Release  Soon 


"The  Cokers  of  Carolina,"  a 
biography  of  one  of  the  Ibouth's 
most  famous  and  distinguished 
families,  written  by  Dr.  George 
Lee  Simpson  Jr.,  of  Chapel  Hill, 
is  scheduled  for  release  by  the 
University   Press,   next  month. 

In  the  .pew  publication,  the  au- 
thor has  combined  the  story  of  a 
family  which  has  distinguished  it- 
self in  many  fields  for  over  five 
generations  and  portrayed  one  as- 
pect of  Southern  life,  showing 
significant  family  traits  and  acti- 
vities in  their  changing' physical 
and  social  environment.  For  the 
most  part  the  book  follows  the 
Cokers  in  name  and  place. 

Its  author.  Dr.  Simpson,  lived 
for  two  years  in  Hartsville,  S.  C, 
carrying  on  research  on  famlJy 
members  who  had  lived  in  the 
Darlington      County      community. 


Additional  work  was  completed  at 
Chapel  Hill,  through  the  coopera- 
tion of  several  members  of  the 
family. 


»  *  COJimY  FOX 
P'isents 


COLOR  by  OE  L'JXC 

CINemaScoPE 

WITH 

ROBERT   WAOlNER 

TERRY  MOORE 

LAST  TIMES  TODAY 


Carolina 


tonight    upstairs     at     the    YMCA 
Building  at  7:30.  A  picture  for  the 
Yackety    Yack    will    be    taken    at 
the  meeting. 
WESLEY  CHOIR 

The  Wesley  Choir  will  hold  reg- 
ular rehearsal  tonight  at  7  p.m.  at 
the  University  Methodist   Church. 
WAA  HOCKEY 

The    W.A.A.    Hockey    Club    will 
meet  today  at  4  p.m.  at   the  gym. 
AI*"  Intdfestfed   hockey   players  are 
invited  to  come  out  and  play. 


Statistics  Coloquium 
Hears  Bose  On  Designs 

Prof.  R.  C.  Bose  of  the  Statis- 
tics Department  gave  a  public  lec- 
ture here  yesterday  in  Phillips 
Hall. 

His  talk  on  "Fractionally  Re- 
plicated Designs  and  a  Problem 
in  Abelian  Groups'*  centered 
around  designs  for  industrial  ex- 
periments that  combine  economy 
with  accuracy. 

•  Professor  Bose,  a  native  of  In- 
dia, is  a  member  of  the.lijtei^na- 
tional  Statistics  Institute  .and'  Has 
received  numerous  honors  from 
statistical  organizations  in  various 
parts   of  the  world. 


Coca-- Coat  oo^  AoyAjitSuiMCL 


ff  l^'Ov 


f      "THIS  IS  THE  FUNNIEST  MOVIE  Of  TttE  YEAI!' 


-  ZiKKH   N(r  Trib  %    ^ 

I     "k  MESSED  HUEF!  BET  POSTHASTE  Tl  THE  8Baor-c,c.,h^  r ,.«      t , 
I 


DRINK 


Vou  feel  so  new  and  fresh  and 
good— all  over  — when  you  pause 
for  Coca-Cola.  It's  sparkling  with 

quick  refreshmtnt  .  .  .  and  its  SO 
pure  and  wholesome— naturally 

friendly  to  your  tigurc.  Let  it  do 
things— good  things  — for  you. 
iOTTLEO  UNDER  AUTHORITY  OF  THE  COCA-COIA  COMPAMY  IT 

DURHAM  COCA  COLA  BOTTLING  CO. 


/■ 


p^SHOP  WITH  CONFIDENCE 


THE  PRICE  IS  RIGHT 


mmmmm"^-^ 


I    i. 


t     f 


6'  •  r-r^^JV^ 


Yes  .  .  .  You  can  shop  with  confidence  at  Belk-Leggett-Horton  .  .  .  With  complete 
assurance  that  you  are  getting  the  most  for  your  money  .  .  .  This  we  guarantee. 

Shop  and  Compare  .  .  .  Comparison  proves  you  get  the  best  (the  best  in  style,  the  best 
in  value,  the  best  in  qu^ll»y)  for  less  at  Belk-Leggett-Horton  of  Chapel  Hill. 


—  *  QUAUTY 


it  SERVICE 


it  ECONOMY 


I 


QiifelMI's  krmi  kpariment  Skre 


t? 


.1 


PAOE  FOUR 


•r,,,?^i^ 


;,ivujCi.Ou>a 


THE  DAILY 'TAR  H€EL 


TUESDAY,  OCTOBER  16,  1W«- 


Frosh  Booters 
Face  Wolf  pack 
In  Debut  Today 

The  freshman  soccer  team  op- 
ens its  season  tomorrow  when  it  [ 
travels  to  Raleigh  to  encounter! 
the  freshman  booters  from  N.  C. 
State.  I 

Coach  John  Wiennatz  said  yes-  j 
terday  that  he  was  pleased  with  I 
the  results  of  recent  practice  ses-  j 
sion^.  The  frosh  have  scrimmjig- 1 
ed  the  varsity  on  several  occas- 1 
ions  and  have  been  showing  rapid  j 
improvement.  ' 

Wiennatz  declined   to  name  his 


The  New  Look:  Fact  or  Fancy 


Robertson.  Bill  Stem.  Peyton 
Hawes,  Gordon  Street,  and  Dick 
Tannenbaum. 


PATRONIZE  YOUR 
•    ADVERTISERS   • 


It's  smart  to  be  comfortable 


What's  WTong  with  the    new  look"  Carolina  football  team? 

Even  before  last  Satiu-days  one  sided  trouncing  at  the  hands  of  a 
supposedly    mediocre    Georgia   team,   this    question  was   makitlg    th 
rounds   of  the  UNC  campus.    And  afier    the    Bulldog  debacicij  loyal 
starting  team    for   the   State  con- j  Carolina  students  could  be  heard  expressing  their  sentiments  in  no 
test,  stating  that  his  decision,  woBld  I  uncertain  terms.  .»  «        .         . 

hinge  on  how  his  injured  men  re  \  What  were  they  saying?  Many  things,   and   few  of  them  compli- 

sponded  to  treatment.  He  did, !  iiientary.  Most  thought  the  Tar  Heel  footballers  Vvt-re  laying  down  on 
however,  name  performers  who  tlie  job,  not  giving  their  all  as  their  opponents  seemed  to  be  doing, 
have  been  standouts  in  practice.  ■  The  general  opinion  was  that  the  UNC  grid-iron  rcpreschtatives  had 
Among  these:  John  Ganhim,  Mike ;  listened  to  a  little  too  much  rosy  propaganda  from  their  esteemed 
Thompson,     Hugh  Goodman,    Tate  .  coach,  Sunny  Jim  Tatuni,  and  as  a  result,  had  lost  their  fighting  spirit. 

Is  this  the  way  the  situation  really  i.s?  Yours  truly  has  watched 
the  Tar  Heels  in  three  of  four  games  thi.s  season,  and  we  are  inclined 
to  agree  with  the  majority  of  the  student  body.  Judging  from  last 
Saturday's  game  and  the  ones  preceding  it,  the  Tar  Heels  are  not  a 
btll  club  with  a  ravenous  desire  for  a  taste  of  victory;  rather  they 
appear  to  be  a  complacement  club  with  no  keen  fighting  epge  such  as 
Georgia  displayed  on  the  Kenan  turf  Saturday. 
WHERE  IS  THE  WILL  TO  WIN? 

The  will  to  win,  that  intangible  quality  that  can  make  a  good 
team  a  great  one,  is  absent  from  the  Carolina  football  team.  The 
;  general  attitude  seems  to  be.  "It  we  win,  fine.  If  we  lose,  why  worry." 
I  With  this  spirit  prevailing  on  the  football  team,  how  can  the  student 
j  body  be  expected  to  whip  up  a  torrent  of  enthusiasm  come  Saturday 
i  afternoons? 

i  Evidence  of  this  lackadaisa^al  'esprit  de  corps'  could  be  found 

j  in  the  Tar  Heel's  performance  against  the   Bulldogs  Saturday.   After 
the  first  five  minutes  of  the  game,  Georgia  was  in  complete  control. 
Carolina  demonstrated  only  brief  flurries  of  good,  hard,  fighting  foot- 
j  ball,  and  most  of  these  came  when  Dave  Reed  was  calling' th«  shots 
j  at  quarterback. 

.  Georgia,  on  the  other  hand,  trotted  out  a  hard  charging,  vicious 

j  squad  that  never  gave  up.  The  Bulljlogs  gave  it  all  they  had  for  the 
I  entire  contest  and  the  final  score  points  out  the  real  game  story. 
j  REED,  DeCANTIS  SHINE  IN  DEFEAT 

I  Only  a  very  few  of  the  Tar  Heels  displayed  the  fighting  instinct 

!  that  wins  games.  Reed,  out  for  most  of  the  season  with  an  injury,  was 
j  lull  of  ginger  while  in  the  lineup,  and  even  managed  to  carry  the 
;  rest  of  the  squad  with  him  on  occasion.  Sophomore  halfback  Moe  De- 
I  Cantis  ran  like  a  deer  when  called  upon,  and  looked  as  if  he  were 
I  playing  with  the  wrong  team.  But  these  few  sterling  performances  can't 
j  detract  from  the  listless  and  flat  team  piay  as  a  whole.  Carolina  just 
doesn't  have  that  indefinable  "it,"  and  until  they  find  it,  they're  not 
going  to  win  a  football  game,  or  even  come  very  close. 

In  response  to  co-captain  Ed  Sutton  s  rah-rah  pep  talk  in  a  recent 
i.^sue  of  this  paper,  we  say:  I^;  tne  football  team  set  the  examtJle.  Your 
Carolina  student  body  will  follow. 


The  newest  Clarks 
original .  .  .  Desert  Khan 

. . .  stylishly  contoured 
for  comfort  in  hand  antiqued 
French  Calf  with 

microcellular 
soles. 


Soccer  Squad  Goes  After 
2nd  Win  Against  Generals 


JULIAN'S 

COLLEGE 

SHOP 


REMEMBRANCE 

By  Chapel  Hill's  Own 

'JmsKi  itehder 


^'ttil 


A  sensitive  story  of  a  North 
Carolina  adolescence.  You'll 
want  to  own  it — you'll  want  to 
give   It  to   a   friend. 

$3.50 

at 

THE  INTIMATE 
BOOKSHOP 

205    E.   Franklin   St. 

Chapel    Hilt 
Open   Till   10   P.M. 


Help  Wanted 

This  is  the  tfxt  of  a  sign  post- 
ed on  th«'Weolen  Gym  byiiftin 
bd«r|f.  .1^  Is  :se|^  isxi»iaMfei'y.<  ' 

WANTED:  November  1,  24 
clean-living-American  boys.  For 
varsity  wrestling.  No  experience 
needed,  ho  talent  necessary.  BUT 
— 1.  no  smoking,  2.  no  drinking 
3.  regular  practice.  WE  SUPPLY 
EVERYTHING  BUT  THE  GUTS. 
Also  WANTED:  24  clean-living 
American  boys  for  freshman 
wrestling,  (same  generous  terms). 


The  Carolina  soccer  team,  sup- 
posedly one  of  the  strongest  ever 
fielded  ai  UNC,  goes  after  its  sec- 
ond win  of  the  season  this  after- 
noon, meeting  the  Washington 
and  Lee  Generals  in  Alexandria, 
Va.,  at  3  o'clock. 

The  Tar  Heel  hooters  won  their 
first  game  of  the  season  with  an 
impressive  5-0  victory  over  Lynch- 
burg last  Tuesday.  Carolina  white- 
washed Washington  and  Lee  last 
year  3-0,  but  is  expected  to  experi 
ence  more  trouble  from  the  Gen- 
erals this  afternoon. 

Coach  Marvin  Allen  was  cau- 
tious in  making  predictions  about 
today's  game.  "You  can  ruin  a 
season  by  going  up  their  and  loaf- 
ing," he  stated.  "They've  always 
given  us  a  fight  no  matter  haw 
weak   or  how  stron?  they  were." 

The  probable  starting  lineup  for 
the  Tar  He^l  booters  has  Harvey 
Jones  and  Mike  Galifinakis  at  full 
backs,  Bill  Blair.  Bob  Borden  and 
Dave    Corkey    at    halfbacks,   John 


JOHNNY  FOSTER 

starts  a^rainst  Generals  today 


Basketball  Squad  Ruris 
Through  Opening  Drill 


By  BOB  NER 

Today  marked  the  beginning  of 
Carolina's  long  anticipated  basket- 
ball season.  Both  the  freshnven 
and  varsity  squads  held  their  ini- 


gym,  about  45  freshmen  gathered 
to  begin  tryouts.  This  squad  will 
be  reduced  to  from  twelve  to  fif 
teen  members  by  October  26,  ac- 
cording   to  coach   Buck   Freeman, 


tial  practices  in  the  afternoon  and     the    first    cut    being    October    19 

evening   respectively.  I  Heading  the  list  are  five  boys  on 

In     the   afternoon     at   Woollen  j  basketball  scholarships:  John  Crot- 

— , _ — _ I  ty,    5-11    from    St.    Peter's     High 

School  in  Bayonm?,  New  Jersey; 
Dick  Kepley,  6-9,  from  Roanoke, 
Virginia;  York  Larese,  6-4,  from 
St.  Artn's  in  New  York  City;  Lee 
Shaffer.  6-7,  from  Manlius  High 
School  '  in  Pitt.sburgh:  and  Mike 
Steppe,  6-3.  from  All  Halldws 
Hlifh  School  in  New  York  City. 
Thies?  five  will  form  the  oueelus 
of  Ihiii  year's  freshman  team,  but 

Sig^i  Sig^Clv  ?2.  P^t^Sig  0;  Th&b  '  f,  "' "TkJ*;""  "  """  ind'cation  as 

chg2i.:AK%<j>  il!driK.L;n^iZ;  ^^''*'.!  ^^''^''^  '''''''?  «''^*^ 


Intramurals 

"This  afternoon  in  intramural 
football  competition  Zeta  Psi  made 
it  four  in  a  row  by  defeating  Kap- 
pa Psi  47-0.  Other  victories  in  the 
Fraternity  division  were  the  fol- 
lowing: Sigma  Nu  .32",  kk  0;  Ptii 
Gam  I,  Chi  Psi  0;  SAE  14.  Kappa 


Tatum  Makes 
Line  Changes 
For  Terp  Tilt 

Coach  Jim  Tatum  made  some 
changes  in  the  first  string  line 
yesterday  and  retained  the  same 
backflield  as  the  Carolina  Tar 
Heels  opened  drills  for  the  game 
that  Tatum  "intends  to  win"  — 
against  his  former  Maryland  club 
here  Saturday. 

The  line,  which  underwent 
lengthy  defensive  drills  behind 
the  Navy  Field  canvas,  consisted 
of  Ronnie  Koes  at  center,  Don 
Kemper  and  Jim  Jones  at  guards, 
Leo  Russavage  and  Don  Redding 
at  tackles  and  Buddy  Payne  and 
Charlie    Robinson   at  ends. 

The  backs  were  quarterback  Da- 
vid Ree^,  Ed  Sutton  and  Larry 
S'^.^ffl^^'?^  ^^ •  ^^fJ^^^s  a;»d . .Wal^j 

i?WB ! fit ' ; f uiibAck.™*  '  i  ^'^ I  i  *  I } !  I  HTi 

Koes,  injured  in  the  South  Car- 
olina game,  worked  in  light  gear, 
but  should  be  able  to  go  full 
.speed  today  and  will  play  Satur- 
day. 

Don  Lear,  second  team  fullba<:k 
last  weekl  was  returned  to  guard 
in  yesterday's  drill.  .    , 


McCormick  and  Joha  Foster  atj 
the  wing  positions,  Coleman  Barks, ' 
inside  right;  Ted  Yohanna,  inside 
left;  and  captain  Grover  Brown 
at  forward.  Veteran  Chuck  Hart- 
man  will  probably  get  the  call  as 
goalie. 

The  Tar  Heels'  next  gan;e  will 
be  in  Chapel  Hill  Friday  against 
Davidson.  Davidson  is  a  newcom- 
er to  the  Carolina  schedule,  hav- 
ing adopted  soccer  as  a  school 
sport  just  this  year. 

The  initial  conference  test  for 
the  Tar  Heels  will  be  here  Oct. 
24  when  the  booters  go  against 
North  Carolina  State. 


Want  Your 
OLD  SUIT 

Ivy 

Leagueized 

We  take  out  pleats.  Re- 
cut  Shoulders,  convert 
to  3  button,  put  belt  in 
the  back. 

Fast  and  Efficient 
Service 

Pete  the  Tailor 


WHY  SHOULD  I  BUY 

A  SUIT  OR  SPORT  COAT 

FROM  MILTON'S? 


Most  of  our  suppliers  make  our 
suits  and  sports  coats  specially 
for  us  and  give  us  the  exclusive 
Oh  the  patterns,  in  this  way 
you  get.  exclusive  clothing  at 
popular  prices.  Many  of  our 
suits  have  rich  foulard  linings, 
they  all  have  narrow  unpleated 
trousers,  mostly  with  back 
buckle  straps. 

Our  two  main  suppliers  have 
licked  the  problem  of  excessive 
alterations  for  proper  fit,  and 
we  can  truthfully  say  we  carry 
the  best  fitting  ivy  clothing  ob- 
tainable. 

Sport  Coats 
<  from  $42.50 

£ii".     Suits      ■ 
from  $59.95 


Clott)tng  Cupboarb 


MAKE  YOUR  NEXT  AAOVE-A  FRIENDLY  BUSI- 
NESS CHAT  WITH  THE  NYLIC  MAN.  YOU'LL 
FIND  THAT:  (^  .  k''  -^     •     -•-      •   '^ 

THE  NEW  YORK  LIFE  AGENT 

ON  YOUR  CAMPUS 
IS  A  GOOD  MAN  TO  KNOW 

George  L  Coxhead 

UNC   '42-CAMPUS    REPRESENTATIVE 
PO  BOX  1065  PHONE  82331 


Swim  Practice  Begins 

Coach  Ralph  Casey  has  announ- 
ced that  all  varsity  swimming 
candidates  are,  to  report  to  room 
303  Woollen,  Thursday  at  7:30 
pjn. 


Frosh  Swimmers 

The  freshman  swimming  squed 
needs  more  members.  No  ex- 
perience is  necessary.  Those  in- 
terested should  report  to  the 
pool  at  4  either  today  or  tomor- 
row. 


j  In  the  evening  Coach  FYartlC  Mc 

Guire  sent  hi.«!  highly  ranked  var- i 
s^ty  through  their  ^ first  formal] 
workout.  Included  in  the  group  re- 1 
porting  to  Coach  McGuire  were  I 
All-American  licnnie  Rosenbluth,  j 
and  Icttermen  Joe  Quigg,  Pete ' 
Brennan,  Bob  Young.  Tony  Rado- 1 
vich.  Bob  Cunningham,  and  Tom- 1 
my  Kearns.  In  addition,  last  year's  I 
In  the  Fraternity  division:  field  '  ^^°^^  whizzes  Bill  Hathaway.  Dan-  [ 
-ATO  vs   Sig  Nu.    (W);   field  2    "-^    ^^^'    Harvey    Salz,    and    Stan 


12.  ZBt  0 


In  the  Dormitor>  division  the 
scores  are  as  follows:  BVP  I, 
Cobb  No.  2—0;  Dental  Sch.  32, 
Ayeock  0;  and  Alexander  1. 
Grimes  No.   1 — 0. 

Tomorrow's  schedule  is  as  fol- 
lows: 


CLASSIFIEDS 


SPU/M  STOC/CING- OmJ^  f 


PAPER-BACKED  BOOKS  —  Good 
used  novels,  detective  yarns  and 
non-fiction  at  3  for  25c  in  the 
stand  by  our  front  door.  The 
Intimate  Bookshop. 

LEFT  IN  TAR  HEEL~SANDWICH 
Shop — Black  suede  pocket  book 
with  handles — Please  return  to 
1000  E.  Franklin  or  call  87701. 


FOR  SALE— COLLECTORC!  COLT 
single  action  "Frontier"  .45. 
Call  Jim  Potter,  116  King  Street, 
at  8-0893  after  4:30 


1- 

— Sig  Chi  vs  Kappa  Sig  (W); 
field  3— Beta  vs  Phi  Delt  (W); 
field  4— SAE  vs  SPE  (W);  field 
5-^Cbi  Phi  v9  DKE  (W). 

At  5:00  on  fields  1  and  5  re- 
spectively, in  the  Fraternity  di- 
vision, Delt  Sig  plays  Phi  Gam 
(W),   and   ATO   plays  Pika   CB), 

i^so  at  five  o'clock  the  (6U0W; 
ing  dormitories  play:  field  2  -- 
Stdcy  N6.  2  vs  Graham  No.  1; 
fieid  3— Everett  Nq.  8  V6  Med 
Sch-1;  and  on  flel^  4 — Ruffin-1 
vs  Med  Sch-7. 


Dance  Club 

Anyone  intereifted  in  ftxrmmg 
a  square  dance  club  is  asked  to 
attend  a  meeting  tonight  at  7:30 
in  the  dance  studio  of  the  Wo- 
men's Gym.  The  club  will  be 
sponsored  by  the  Women's  Ath- 
letic Association,  and  will  be  di- 
rected by  Miss  Ruth  Price. 


We    Have    Just    Bought    In    A 
Small    Library   Of 

AMERICANA 

(1840  to  1390) 
Exceptionally   Good   Condition 

THE  INTIMATE 
BOOKSHOP 

205   E    Franklin  St. 
CHAPEL   HILL 


^^hari  Right  Lodies/  With  Every 
Two  Fail'  Yow  Gef  Two  Spare$ . . 

Here's  a  rare  opportunity  to  grt  a  real  long-lasting  supply  of  fine 
nylon  hosiery  for  far  less  than  you  ever  imagined  I  A  regular  $1.20 
value  for  only  $1.00— plus  a  spare.  When  you  buy  this  package  of 
two  pairs  and  :wo  spares,  you  are  actually  getting  three  pairs  of  fine 
aylon  hose.  Take  advantage  of  thk  offer  NOW.  Clip  and  mail  ti»e 
coupe*  below  for  fatt  delivery. 

DEMISE  HOSIERY*!?'  ■OX  2*7,  READING,  PA 
Pleate  ktmI  we  two  pairs  and  two  spara  o^  Oanife  Hotiery. 
for  dik  I  am  enc>a»in|  |2.0O. 


Nam«L. 


Address. 


City 


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Size  Length 

Buslr^&s  Sheer  Q 

Dress  Sheer  Q 

D  Beige      D  Toupe 


OENI§k  HOSIERY       :      BOX  227.  READING,  FA. 


SHIRTS -19c 


EA. 


We  handle 


ujith  CARE 


\i^(yka 


With   or  Without 
Starch 

Prompt  Service 


Glen  Lennox  Laundromat 


Groll   were    in   the   group. 


All  Premiums  And  Draft 

-  -  T.  V.  —  Good  Place  Te  .  , 

'^  Watch  Boxing  &  Football 

Bring  Your  Date       ''i,;l''     I    ;    L 

)imk  FRAMKLIN  STREET  LUNCJ;|EONETTE 

Next  to  Bus.  Station       y 

Phone  9-2846 


college  man's  choice  — 

"IVY  LEAGUE" 
tuxedo    ' 


This  fraternity  favorite 
features  a  straight 
hanging  coat  with 
natural  minimum 
padded  shoulders  — 
Skinner  satin  lapels— 
flap  pockets— center 
vent— and  plain  front 
unpleated  trousers. 
Imported  lightweight 
worsted  in  Black 

$62.50        v'l 


See  Our  Comt>lete 
Line   Of   Accessories 


by  Cheft«r  Field 


'/iECtiT  YEARNINGSI    ,:>^^: 

Oh,  why  must  I  be  avilized  instead  of  being  me? 

I'd  like  to  be  a  beast  and  kiss  each  pretty  gnl  I  see 
I'd  like  to  kick  that  brain  next  door, 
it's  been  my  favorite  dream 
And  whm  I'm  low  I'd  like  to  he 
upon  the  floor  and  scream! 


MOtAii  When  you  want  to  let  go,      -  -*■ 
enjoy  the  real  thing 
Relax  and  enjoy  a  Chesterfield  King! 
The  King  of  them  all  for  flavor  thats  real 
.    F(Mr  deep  satitfaxAion  you  honestly  feri . . 
Made  to  smoke  smoother  by  Acsw-tojr 
B^ . . .  borrow ...  or  buy  'em, 

but  try  'em  today!  # 

Take  your  pleasxire  big ... 
Smeke  fer  reeri . . .  smeke  ChesterfleMI 


CHAPE^.   HILL'S   FORA^L  WEAR   HEADQUARTERS 

STl^VBKS-  SHEPHERD 


DAILY    CROSSWORD 


t.iv.t^e«£i6 


ACROSS 

1.  Oily 

substances 
5.  Scottish 

caps 
9.  Christmas 

song 
10.  Subside 

12.  Sheeplike 

13.  Philippine 
island 

14.  Small 
handbill 

16.  Hasten 

17.  Doctor 
(abbr.) 

18.  Ministers 
21.  Russian 

river 

24.  Body 

of  water 

25.  Cheeses 
27.  French 

seaport 
30.  Pshaw! 

32.  Biblical 
name 

33.  Represented 
Zt.  United 

Nations 
(abbr.) 

37.  Trouble 

38.  Covet 
41.  Lucid 

44.  Shipworm 

45.  Run 
away 
and 
marry 

46.  External 
seed  ' 
coverings 

47.  Break 
suddenly 

48.  Anarchists 

DOWN 

1.  Gifted 


3.  Secret 
society 
(Chin.) 

4.  Slumber 

5.  Spigot 

6.  Arabian 
garment 

7.  Passage- 
ways for 
Art  Carney 

8.  Step 

9.  Pamper 
11.  Organs 

of  sight 
15.  Knock 

19.  Weep 
convulsively 

20.  Ripped 

22.  An  emperor 
of  France 


23.  Egyp- 
tian god 
(var.) 

26.  Habitual 
drunk- 
ard 

28.  Caran- 
goid 
fLshes 

29.  TV 
devices 

31.  Nour- 
ished 

33.  (Confront 

34.  Very 
small 
brooks 

35.  E^xclude 
39.  Painful 

spot 


Tc«ter4fty't  Aaawer 

40.  Any  plant  of 
the  family 
Iridaceae 

42.  The  wallaba 
(Braz.) 

43.  Tv^illed       ■■. 
fabric  .  <;-;* 


\ 

\ 

i 
•  i 

.  i- 
a 


\i 


••** 


tJ.r.C.  *  tIBHAHT 
SERIALS  DEPT. 
BOX  870 
CHAPEL  HILL,  N.C 


I 


WEATHER 

Rain  moci«rate  to  heavy. 


3r()  cDaity  Mar  Keel 


VOL.    LVII    NO.    23 


Complete  (A^)  Wire  Service 


CHAPEL  HILL.  NORTH  CAROLINA.  WEDNESDAY,  OCTOBER  ^7.  1954 


Offices   in    Graham   Memorial 


CONFORMITY 

See   Editor's  comments  on  Page 


FOUR   PACES   THIS    ISSUE 


Hard  To  Pronounce  'Anasfasid 
Starts  PI  ay  makers  Run  Tonight 


NO  FALL  SHOW: 


Piay  Starts  Tonight 

Above  is  a  scene  from  the  Carolina  Playmai<ers'  production  of 
"Anastasia,"  appearing  at  the  Playmakers'  Theatre  tonight  through 
Sunday.  Featured  as  the  Dowager  Empress  of  Russia  is  Marion  Fitz- 
Simons,  left,  veteran  Playmaker  actress  from  Chapel  Hill.  As  the 
mysterious  pretender  to  the  Romanoff  dynasty,  Rusti  Rothrock  of 
Anniston,  Alabama,  right,  plays  the  title  role. 


DTH  Editor 
To  Question 
Vice  President 

The  DaiJy  Tar  Keel  will  get  a 
chance  lo  toss  questions  at  Vice 
President    Richard    Nixon    tonight. 

Fred  Powledge,  editor  of  the 
campus  daily  newspaper,  left  yes- 
terday for  Carnell  University,  It- 
haca. N.  Y..  for  an  intercollegiate 
press  conference  wit'h  the 
president,   currently   stumping  the    ^^^^  ^^^^  discussions  this  year  will 


Educational  Panel  Will 
Include  UNC  Professor 

Dr.  David  G.  Monroe  of  the  Po- 
litical Science  Dept.  will  be  among 
pane!  members  today 'during  the 
annual  convention  of  the  Natiorfal 
Asso.  )f  Educational  Broadcasters 
in  Atlanta,  Ga. 

He  will  be  among  a  number  of 
specialises  from  other  major  uni- 
v?rsities  wh^  have  engaged  in  ed- 
ucational programs  over  televis- 
ion stations. 

Edward  Wegener,  director  of  ed- 
ucational TV  at  Alabama  Poly- 
technic     Institute,    Auburn.     Ala 


In  facing  the  problems  of  pro- 
ducing a  play,  a  director  rarely 
thinks  about  the  title. 

With  the  play  "Anastasia,"  how- 
ever, which  opeas  toni^t  at  8:30 
for  five  performances  at  The  Play- 
makers  Theatre,  Samuel  Selden, 
Director  of  The  Carolina  Play- 
makers,  discovered  some  strong 
differences  of  opinion  as  to  the 
pronunciation  of  the  title  name. 
Upon  consulting  UNC  graduate 
students  Dana  Quade  and  William 
O'Sullivan.  who  have  studied  Rus- 
sian, Selden  learned  that  the  Rus 
sian  pronunciation  is  "AnastahSE 
Eya."  Since  the  action  of  the  play 
takes  place  in  Berlin,  where  the 
characters  have  been  living  for 
ei^ht  years,  several  interested 
people,  including  Dr.  Clemen- 
Sommer.  UNC  Art  Professor, 
thought  the  German  pronunciation. 
■■.\nastahzia,"    more    suitable. 

Derived  from  Greek,  the  name 
was  pronounced  in  the  German 
manner  in  the  Broadway  produc- 
tion of  {he  play.  Research  in  the 
Library  proved  that  both  pronun- 
ciatioas  are  correct.  Many  tele- 
phone calls  confirmed  the  fact 
that  the  split  in  opinion  was  close- 
ly balanced,  and  it  was  reported 
that  members  of  the  cast,  taking, 
sides  in  the  issue,  were  nearly 
coming  to  blows.  Finally,  it  wa. 
Mr.  .Seldcn's  decision  that  although 
the  royal  Russians  were  away 
^  from- their  homeland,  they  would 
I  probably  use  the  original  pronun- 
i  ciations  of  their  names  when 
[  .speaking  among  themselves. 
i  Therefore  the  verdict  was:  '"Ana 
!  stahSEEya." 

Theatre-goers  buying  their  tic- 
kets in  Abernathy  Hall,  however. 
will  find  that  John  W.  Parker, 
business  manager,  and  .Mrs.  Helen 
House,  his  secretary,  continue  to 
sell  ficRot.s,  with  a  cordial  dra>»l 
to     ".Anastaysha." 


^ 


'Sound  And  Fury'  Planning 
Big  Production  For  Spring 


Graham    Memortal's   student-run ♦ 
musical,   Sound   &.   Fury,    will    not 
put  on  a  show  for  the  fall  semes-  ' 
ter,    according    to    Director    John 
Lutiwig,     but     hi 
said  work  has  al 
ready    begun    or 
a    "'gigantic    pn 
duct  ion"     foi 
:;pring. 

No     show     for 
I'all    r  e  s  u  1 1  e  d 
from     no     script         LUDWIG 
being  written  for  the  show  during 
the    past    summer,    which    is    the 

tsual  practice,  he  said. 

"Since  we  arc  not  planning  to 
spend  our  budget  for  the  fall 
show,  we   will    be  able  to    have    a 

nuch    more    exfrava;4ant    show    in 

he    spring.     From    the    looks    of 
A'hat  work  has  already  been  done, 

he    spring    show    will    provide    a 
lot   of   fun    for   the   audience   and 

he  cast,"  Ludwig  said. 


Carolina  Forum 
Gives  Slate 
Of  Speakers 

The  Carolina  Forum  has  an- 
nounced its  tentative  schedule  of 
speakers  for  the  academic  year 
1956-57. 

Among  the  speakers  tentatively 
scheduled  to  visit  the  University 
this  year  are: 

Senator  Harry  P.  Cain,  former 
senator  from  the  state  of  Wash- 
mgton;  Senator  Paul  Douglas  of 
Illinois;  V.  K.  Krishna  Menon, 
chairman  of  Indian  delegation  to 
j  the  United  Nations; 

Vice  President  Richard  Nixon; 
Senator  Strom  Thurmond  of  South 
Carolina;  Walter  Reuther.  vice 
president  of  the  newly  merged 
American  Federation  of  Labor- 
Congress  of  Industrial  Organiza- 
tions. 

Senator  Douglas  is  recognized  as 


Traffic  Group  Will  Meet 
Town  Officials  Thursday 


;C; 


Parity  Raiding  Definitej 
Violation  Of  UNC  CocJe 

i 

Chairman  of  the  Student  Council  Luther  Hodges  said  yesterday 
that  panty  raiders  were  "definitely"  violating   the   Campus  Code. 

Hodges  said  that  not  only  "instigators"  of  panty  raids  would 
be  subject  to  judicial  action,  but  anyone  who  participates  in  them. 

The  Campus  Code  puts  students  on  their  honor  to  behave  in 
a  gentlemanly  fashion  at  all   times.  j 

Hodges  also  tistrd  members  of  the  Student  Courtcil  to  whom 
violators  may  be  reported.  These  are: 

Rick    Coker,    PiKA    House;    Charles    Dunn,    Stacy;    Haywood    Ed-     i 
munson,   Zeta  Psi   House;   Perky   Hayes,   DKE    House;  Jim   Long,  Chi 
Psi   Lodge.   Chuck   May,    Beta    House; 

Greg  Poole,  Phi  Delta  Theta  House;  Ed  Pullen,  319  McCauley 
St.;  Forbes  Ramsey,  Beta  House;  Gordon  Taylor;  and  Luther  Hodges, 
PiKA  House. 


For  the  spring  snow,  students 
will  soon  be  needed  to  help  sew 
*>ackdrops,    build    sets    and    paint  ■  !>  leading  economist  in  the  Senate. 


country  for  reelection. 

Powledge  and  editors  of  appro- 
ximately 30  other  college  news- 
papers will  question  Nixon  over 
a  coast-to-coast  television  show 
tonight.  The  show  will  be  carried 
by  Columbia  Broadcasting  System 
and  can  be  viewed  from  8  to  8:30 
p.  m.  EST. 

While  in  Ithaca,  Powledge  also 
will  participate  in  a  seminar  in  | 
which  members  of  the  nations 
press  covering  Nixon's  campaign 
will  discuss  methods  of  reporting 
national  politics.  > 


center  around  "^faculty  thirk'ing 
on  the  matter  of  using  television 
as   a   teaching   tool." 

Also  to  be  considered  are  cour- 
ses which  can  effectively  be 
taught  on  TV,  producer-teacher 
relations  and  other  topics  which 
will  be  suggested  before  the  tele- 
casters  meet  in  Atlanta,  Wegener 
said. 

Among  othr  persons  to  appear 
on  the  panel  are  Dr.  Burr  Roney. 
biologist  at  the  University  of  Hous- 
ton. Tex.,  and  Dr.  James  Woodall 
of  the   English    Dept.   at   Auburn. 


Injured  Boys  Are 
Getting  Along  Fine 


George  V.rapc  was  discharged 
from  the  'University  Iniirmary 
yesterday  and  Cloyd  Bookout  and 
William  Yost  wire  -getting  along 
all  right"  according  to  University 
Physician    Edward    Hedgpeth. 

The  students  were  in  an  auto 
wreck  early  last  Monday  morning, 
which  was  fatal  to  Robert  Lee  El- 
l?rbe,    senior    pf    Rockingham. 

Wrape  suffered  brusie.s.  and 
Y.jst  fractured  his  right  arm  and 
will  be  discharged  from  the  In- 
firmary in  about  a  week,  along 
•vvith  Bookout,  who  injured  his 
right  shoulder. 

The  accident  occured  when  the 
car,  in  which  Ellerbe  and  Yost 
were    traveling    east    on    Highway 


Professor  To  Moderate 
Michigan  Conference 

Miss  Margaret  B.  Dolan.  associa- 
te professor  of  public  health  nurs-' 
ing,  University  of  North  Carolina 
School  of  Public  Health,  is  attend- 
ing a  Conference  on  Field  Instruc- 
tion and  Experience  in  Public 
Health  Nursing  this  week  at  Ann 
Arbor,   Mich. 

She  is  representing  the  Depart- 
ment of  Public  Health  Nursing  of 
the  UNC  School  of  Public  Health 
at  the  University  of  .Michigan  meet- 
ing.   During   the    five-day    meeting 


SSL  Exams 
Given  To  31 
Students  Here 

Written  examinations  were  giv- 
en .Monday  night  to  31  students 
who  applied  to  represent  UNC  at 
the  State  Student  Legislature  Nov. 
15-17. 

Of  the  30  students  who  may  at- 
tend, approximately  18  will  be 
voting  representatives.  Delegation 
selections  will  be  announced  Sun- 
day. Prospective  representatives 
will  be  interviewed  by  a  non-par- 
tisan selections  board  Wednesday 
through  Friday  in  Graham  Memor- 
ial. 

The  Legislature  will  meet  in 
Raleigh.  Delegates  will  debate 
and  pass  bills  dealing  with  issues 
of  educational,  state,  national  and 
international    importance. 

Criteria  for  .selecting  delega'es 
includes  interest,  presentation 
and  actuality  of  answers  posed  by 
the  selections  b.iard  on  the  writ- 
ten examinations. 

Students  who  failed  to  take  the 
examination  Monday  night  may 
take  it  this  afternoon.  Thursday 
and  Friday.  It  will  be  adminis- 
tered in  student  government  of- 
fices in  Graham  Memorial. 


Irops,  sets  and  props.  Students 
wishing  to  apply  for  the  job  of 
construction  chief  or  to  work  on 
he  sets  have  been  asked  to  con- 
act  Bill  Wcarmouth,  .scenic  de- 
;igner.  or  Director  Ludwig.  Both 
may  be  reached  at  the  Graham 
Memorial  Information  Office  or  at 
;t.  .\nthony  Hall. 

Tryouts  for  the  show  will  be 
open  to  all  students,  and  an- 
nouncements of  them  will  come 
ater.  Studen*'^  who  want  to  help 
vrite  eith  .iiiisic  or  lyrics  for 
he  show  i.jve  been  asked  to  con- 
tact Cecil  Hartsoe  or  Ludwig. 

The  show,  now  in  "the  scenario 
stage,"  will  have  nine  leading 
narts  and  about  fen"  offier  part.s, 
according  to  Ludwig.  There  will 
also  'be  k  chorus  with  several 
'speaking  parts,  a  small  orchestra 
and  a  ballet  group. 


;■     Senator  Cain  is  recognized  as  an 
advocate   of  civil  liberty. 
Senator   Thurmond    is   the   only 
!  man  in  history  who  won  an  elec- 
tion  to   the  United  States  Senate 
'  on  a  write-in  vote. 
j     Since   its   founding,   the  Forum 
,  has    brought    three    presidents    of 
I  the   United  States  to  the  campus, 
I  several   ambassadors  to  the  U.  S.  ' 
,  from    Europe   and    Asia,«senators, 
I  representatives  and  justices  of  the  ' 
I  Supreme  Court.  { 

;  IDEAL  I 

I      Forum    Chairman    Jim    Holmes 
I  said  of  this  year's  schedule:  I 

j  "The  Forum  believes  that  in 
j  this  array  of  speakers  we  have 
j  achieved  this  year's  fulfillment  of 
!-♦♦«  peri»^tial  ideah-^"to  "bring  to 
[  the  campus  of  the  oldest  slate  uni- 
versity in  the  nation  the  political, 
I  educational,  and  economic  leaders 
!  of  the  world." 


Commies  Not  Playboys, 
Clontz  Tells  UNC  Group 


A  key  witness  in  the  Greens- 
boro trials  last  year  of  Junius 
Scales,   admitted   Communist,   told 


hlL± 


TT 


Mouza  Says 
'Dreams  Come 
All  O.  K.' 

Miltos  Tassos,  wealthy  restau- 
ranteur  and  former  proprietor 
of  the  "Mouza,"  has  returned  to 
his    beloved    Greece. 

Tassos,  who  waf,  affectionate- 
ly known  by  students  as  "Mou- 
za," thus  fulfilled  a  long-time 
dream. 

In  a  p<jst  card  to  a  student 
this  week,  "Mouza  '  said  in  his 
broken    English. 

"I  am  write  you  a  lew  lines 
to  tell  you  that  am  pver  here 
and  my  dreams  come  all  0.  K. 
.  .  .Have  write  you  on  this  eard 
to  remind  the  Glorious  days  of 
Agropoulis  and  Greece  which 
the  world  is  teaching  today  and 
always  the  fri-edom  of  man  and 
the  love  of  all  peoples.  "Give 
al!  the  boys  my  best  regards." 

Mouza  returned  to  his  beloved 
horn?.   Athens.    Greece. 


Eight  BA  Students  Win 
Foundation  Fellowships 


y 


Eight   candidates   for   Master  .of  j  mise  for  future  leadership  in  the 
Business    Administration    degrees    business   world." 
al    UNC    have    received    Business  i 
Foundation   Fellowships   for  study  ' 


ROBERT  ELLERBE 

.    .    .   Killed  in  Accident 

70,  was  struck  by  a  pick-up  truck 
operated  by  a  Mrs.  Alice  Jones, 
30,  of  High  Point.  Bookout  and 
Wrape  were  in  a  car  operated  by 
Luther  Marsh,  another  U.NC  stu- 
dent, and  this  car  ran  into  the 
car   operated    by   Yost. 

Ellerbe  died  on  the  way  to  Cha- 
pel Hill  Memorial  Hospital.  Fun- 
eral services  were  held  for  him 
yesterday  in  the  Vion  Methcd'st 
Church  in  Rockingham.  It  was  re- 


she  will  moderate  a  panel  discus-  i  ported    that    about    eight   carloads 
sion   on   "New   Patterns     of   Field  <  of  UNC  students  attended  the  fun- 
Teaching."  eral. 


here. 

They  were  awarded  the  one-year 
grants  by  Director  G.  A.  Barrett 
of  the  Master  of  Business  Admin- 
istration Program  at  UNC.  Dr.  M. 
W.  Lee  is  dean  of  the  School  of 
Business    Administration. 

Receiving  the  fellowships  were: 
Ed  Burch,  Charlotte;  B.  W.  Miller 
of  Morganton;  H.  D.  Seaton. 
Chattanooga,  Tenn.;  Robert 
Porter.  Louisville,  Ky.:  Don  Wam- 
pler,  Crockett.  Va.;  Charles  D. 
Trexler.  Asheville;  Robert  A. 
Erown,  Robersonville:  and  B.  L. 
McKenzie,   Winston-Salem. 

According  to  MBA  Director  Bar 
rett,  the  recipients  were  selected 
on  basis  of  their  "outstanding  re- 
cords" in  undergraduate  school 
and  for  holding  "considerable  pro- 


Barrett  said  the  Business  Foun 
dation  is  supported  by  North  Ca; 
rolina  firms  interested  in  business 


IDC  To  Hold 
Second  Meet 
'  Tonight  At  7     \ 

The  Interdormitory  Council  will  ; 
hold  its  second  meeting  ol  the  sc-  | 

'  niester  tonight   at  seven  o'clock.      | 

I      The    Council    Will    meet  sn    the  i 

Phi  Assembly  Hall   on  the  fourth 

lloor  ot  New  East  Building.  j 

AGENDA  I 

Tentative  agenda  for  the  session  ! 

]  as  announced  by  President  Sonny 

!  Hallford  include*:  j 

(1)  Appointment     of     committee  ' 

I  heads. 

I  (2)  Election  of  IDC  Court  for  | 
the  coming  academic  year.  * 

(3)  Discussion  of  pertinent  prob- 
lems   including    telephones,    vend- 

i  ing   machines  and  other  itcm^.        j 

I  TELEPHONES 

I      The-     telephone    discussion    will 

I  coii^ern  the  recent  problem  oi 
dorm   mens   placing    long-distance 

I  calls  from  non-pay  phones  and 
sub.-e<iuent    t.\ing-up    <>[    the    Dur- 

I  nam   exchange.  | 

I  ins  piooii-in,  according  to  Pres- 
ident Hallford,  is  virtually  solved. 
But  discussion  will  be  held  and 
action  taken  to  prevent  its  re- 
currence, he  said.  i 
IDC  COURT  I 
The  IDC  Court  will  be  complete- 

'  iy  revitalized,  Hallford  said.  A  new- 
chairman  will  be  ni^ned  and  sev- , 
eral  members  to  the  'Court,  ac- ' 
cording  to  the  president.  | 

The  Court  handles  violations  of 

;  University  regulations  in  men  s  ' 
dormitory  such  as  violation  of  the 
quiet  hours  rule.  , 

The  Council  meets  on   allernat- 


Thomas  Says 
UP 'Right' On 
issue  Charge 

By  NANCY    HILL 

Denny  Thomas.  L^niversity  Party 
representative  in  Student  Legis- 
lature, stated  in  a  UP  meting  last 
night  that  .Mike  Weinman,  "was 
right"  in  stating  that  t!ie  Student 
Party  will  use  the  Election  Law 
as  a  campaign   issu^. '•J  '        j 

Commenting  on  a  statement  by' 
SP  chairman  Tom  Lambeth  in  re- ' 
l)ly  to  Weinman's  statement  in' 
The  Daily  Tar  Heel  lait  weeK,  I 
Thomas  said,  "I  hope  that  is  all  ] 
that  is  said,  because  the  more  is  | 
said,  the  more  it's  going  to  hurl 
us. 

•  "I  don't  think  the  SP  can  use  it  j 
too  much,  though,  because  the  UP 
did  have  something  to  do  with  the 
law."  , 

In  reply  to  a  question  about  a 
current  rumor  of  a  rift  between 
himself  and  Weinmaiif.  Thounas 
stated,  "I  believe  the  main  reason 
for  the  rumor  is  b?cau.se  Mike 
lives  in  a  fraternity  house  and  I 
in    a   dorm." 

He  said  the  rumor  'probably 
got  around"  because  of  his  stand  i 
on  the  election  law  issue.  Thomas  | 
voted  with  the  SP  on  the  elections  j 
law  amendment  which  last  week,  i 
restored  ballot  boxes  t,)  all  dorms 
during    campus    elections. 

Thomas  told  UP  members  "Just 
forget  about  it.  I'd  rather  any- 
way." 

Weinman  announced  at  last 
night's  meeting  that  he  will  give 
up  his  post  as  acting  UP  floor 
leader  because  "I  want  tj  devote 
more  time  to  the  campaign." 

A  new  floor  leader  will  b?  sel- 
ected in  caucus  before  Thursday 
night's  meeting  ol  the  Lp.ijislalurL\ 
he   said. 

•  i  '    t  -'        


a  Chapel  Hill  audience  last  night  i 

that    "Communists    are    not    play- , 

boys;    the   undergr.iund    party   op- 1 

crating    in    the    United    States    is  ' 

made  up  of  dangerous  people  who 

are   ambitious    in    their    objective 

— the      violent    overthrow    of      the 

.American    form    of    government."] 

I 
Attorney      Ralph   Clontz     Jr.     f 

Charlotte    gave    a    public    address 

in  Manning  Hall,  sponsored  by  the 

University  Law   School. 

Speaking  oJi  his  announced  top- 
ic. "The  Communist  Party  of  the 
United  States — a  Legal  Entity  or 
a  Criminal  Conspiracy'.'"  Clontz 
said  that  the  Communists  in  this 
country  are  organizing  a  criminal 
conspiracy,  that  they  are  banded 
together  and  dcdicaled  to  their  ob- 
jective. 

The  speaker  emphasized  three 
major   points   in    his   spech: 

(1)  Arguing  with  a  Communist 
is  a  complete  waste  of  time,  for 
his  thoughts  are  already  dictated, 
as  are  his  manners  of  expression. 

(2)  You  cannot  use  logic  with 
a  Communist. 

(3)  Unite!  States  Communists 
are  l.yal  to  the  Soviet  g:)vernment. 

Clontz  talked  about  his  finding? 
in  th?  Communist  party  which  led 
in  part  to  the  conviction  of  Jun- 
ius Scales  last  year.  While  attend- 
ing Duke  University  School  of  Law 
in  1948.  the  speaker  volunteered 
his  services  to  penetrate  *he  Com- 
munist Party  in  .N'orth  and  South 
Carolina.  He  worked  as  a  part- 
time  undercover  agent  for  the 
FBI  from  1948  until  1951.  at  which 
time  he  undertook  full-time  ac- 
tivity which  look  him  to  New  Yo-'k 
City  and  lasted  until  about  Feb- 
ruary,   1953. 


By   NEIL    BASS 

Student  govern  ments  Traffic 
.Advisory  Commission  will  meet, 
with  town  aldermen  and  the  Mer- 
chant's Association  Thursday,  ac- 
cording to  Commission  Chairman 
Wilburn    Davis. 

Davis  said  he  anticipates  a  so- 
lution to  the  Columbia  Street 
parking  problem  "in  the  near  fu- 
ture." 

The  Board  of  aldermen  has  im- 
posed a  iwo-hour  parking  restric- 
tion on  Columbia. 

The  restriction  brought  a  chorus 
of  protests  from  fraternity  men 
whose  houses  are  located  on  the 
street. 

A  earlier  meeting  with  the  al- 
dermen which  Davis,  student  body 
President  Bob  Young  and  Inter- 
fraternity  Council.  President  Ed 
Hudgins  attended  failed  to  yield 
any  action  on  the  "problem." 

In  a  meeting  with  the  Mer- 
chants" Association  last  Friday  at 
which  the  Commission  sought  eh- 
dorsement  of  the  Association  to- 
ward lifting  the  Columbia  Street 
restriction,  it  was  stated  that  the 
merchants  maintained  a  "hands 
off"  policy  toward  parking  pro- 
blems. 

The  Association  did  agree,  how- 
ever, to  meet  with  the  Traffic 
Commission  and  aldermen  and 
discuss: 

(1)  The  Columbia  Streot  restric- 
tion. 

(2)  General  parking  problems. 

(3)  Prices  in  local  establish, 
ments. 

The  primary  objective  of  this 
Thursdays  meeting  will  be  solu- 
tion of  the  Columbia  Street  re- 
striction "problem,"  Chairman 
Davis  said. 


I    Juniors  Have  Until 
Friday  For   Yack   Pics 

Juniors  and  sfudenfr;  in  .Medi- 
cal, Law  and  Graduate  School, 
have  until  Friday  to  have  their 
pictures  made  for  the  19.57  Yack- 
cty  ,Yack.  according  to  Editor 
Tommy  Johnson. 

The  pictures  are  being  made 
daily  from  1  to  7:30  p.m.  in  the 
basement  of  Graham  Memorial. 

Today  is  the  last  day  for  stu- 
dents not  classified  in  the  regular 
schedule  to  have  their  pictures 
made  at   a  cost  of  SI. 

G'rls  have  been  requested  to 
wear  dark  sweaters  and  single- 
strand  rearls.  Boys  ha'e  been  re- 
quested to  wear  a  white  shirt  and 
tie  and  a  dark  coat. 


Official  Confirmation 
Of  Readinq  Day  Given 

Official  confirmation  for  the  in- 
auguration of  a  Reading  Dav  into 
each  semester  of  the  1957-58 
school  year  was  announced  by 
Dean  C.  P.  Spruill. 


research,    service    programs     and    '"^   Wednesday  nights  throughout 
preparation     of    future     business 


the  academic  vear. 


world  personnel.  It  also  is  aimed 
i  at  turning  out  men  to  instruct  stii- 
j  dents  in  schools  of  business  ad- 
'  ministration. 

"The   organization    represents   a 
jj.^  j  significant      activity     as   part     of 
J  !  North    Carolina    business    interes- 
ted in,  and   appreciating,   the  im- 
portance   of   training    fcr     future 
leadership,"    Barrett    declared. 

According  to  Dean  Lee.  the  eight 
recipients  are  among  57  students 
in  U.NC's  graduate  .school  of  Bus- 
iness Administration.  The  awards 
this  year  mark  the  fourth  year 
the  fellowships  have  been  provid- 
ed. 


Med  SchooJ  Freshmen 
Class  Officers  Named 

James  H.  M.  Thorp,  chairman 
of  the  Honor  Council  of  the  UNC 
School  of  .Medicine,  has  announced 
the  officers  of  the  freshman 
class   of   the    Medical   School.  i 

The  new  officers  are:  President,  i 
William  S.  Gibson  Jr.,  Go'.dsboro; ' 
William    H.    Morris  Jr..   Charlotte, 
vice  president:  Elizabeth  B.  Vance, 
Macon,    Ga.,    secretary:    James    R. ' 
Harper,      Snow    Hill;      Whitehead 
Society    reporter    and    Robert    B. 
Payne.  Gastonia.     Honor     Council 
representative. 


Career  Program  Slated 
Today  For  WUNC-TV 

iJiuh  school  juniors  and  seniors 
have  the  opportunity  to  ask  ques 
lions  about  various  professions  in 
a  TV  series  from  WUNC-TV, 
Channel  4  today. 

At  2  p.  m.,  Miss  Barbara  Butler 
and  Ralph  Mackljn,  Chapel  Hill 
High  School  seniors  will  inter- 
view Miss  Bobbie  Pearl  Numan 
and  Robert  .Miller  of  the  Univer- 
sity of  .North  Carolina  School  of 
Library  Science  on  the  subject  of 
"A  Career  in  Library  Science." 

The  program  is  one  of  a  series  '  *"° 
sponsored  by  the  University  to  al- 
low teenagers  to  question  author 
ities    in    various    professions. 

The  topic  for  next  week's  "A  ca- 
reer For  You,"  will  feature  C.:rl 
N.  Ellington,  a  Carrboro  contrac- 
tor. -; 


Maid  Of  Cotton 

Jo  Ann  Deason,  22,  of  Enore«,  S.  C,  will  represent  South  Caro- 
lina in  the  1957  Maid  of  Cotton  finals  at  Memphis,  Tenn.,  in  January. 
Miss  Deason,  a  drama  student  in  the  UNC  graduate  school  succeeds 
Betty  Lane  Cherry  of  Orangeburg.  Representing  Spartanburg 
County,  she  won  the  South  Carolina  title  Thursday  night  at  Clemson 
College. 


FAoe  rwo 


-  ?..M«n  •» 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HBBL 


WEDNESDAY,  0CT06ER  17,  19S« 


That  Right  To  Gripe 
Is  A  Powerful  Weapon 


Mrs.  Rbdsevdit  And  Integration 


Ol  all  the  Ireedonis  in  which 
C.aiolina  stiulenis  mr-  allowed  to 
indulge,  the  most -Uicd  i>  piobablv 
ihf  Riyiu  to  (iiipe. 

Inmnufrable  txan\|)les  of  this 
ticcdom  in  atiion  art  to  he  "cen 
e\eiy  dav  as  students  li\e  out  tlieir 
taiecis  M  Chapel  Hill.  Instnutors. 
a>si;;nn)enis.  ^■-C.olut  and  (..\F  eol- 
lee  .'nd  I.cnoir  Hall  food  aie  old 
tar;4ets  tov  the  iMihed  tonmies  «>l 
the  >tudent  body.  In  fact,  the  (ur- 
leiitly  fashionable  liberal  aj)plita- 
lion  of  the  pointed  remark  is  out- 
stajidiuif  (iroof  that  student  ap- 
atliv  i>  not  a  totalitarian  thiny,. 

riu*  fact  that  the  entire  campus 
tiom  Ijij)  fraternity  court  to  the 
li>wer  quad  has  from  time  to  time 
ri-cn  as  one  to  imoke  this  ri-jht. 
the  Ri^ht  to  (.ripe,  to  one  event  or 
Nituaiion  should  be  something  to 
Avhich  the  students  can  |K)int  with 
])ride. 

IJut  when  one  of  these  swells  of 


euK^tion  lomqs  to  a'  head.  mImx* 
hapj^ens?  Ilie  j^ripino  (ontinues, 
but  It  remains  oral  (()ni|)Iaints 
against    actual    problenrs. 

rius  is  not  at  all  good.  Ihe  stu- 
dent bodv  h.rs  a  |Jo\\erfid  wca]x)n 
in  the  .dmighty  gripe,  but  used 
alone  it  is  only  a  starting  tool.  Ac- 
tion nnrst  billow  or  rumbling.s  in 
^'-C'»)lwt  appear  as  flisgruntled 
grumblini^s.  .»  sta'te  crt  affairs  de- 
seixing  onlv  scorn  from  th(»se  on 
the  outside  looking  in. 

Ihe  students,  then.  h.i\e  some- 
thing to  learn.  Ihev  should  profit 
bv  the  memories  of  what  hapjjened 
to  their  complaints  when  Satur- 
day classes  were  inaugurated  when 
thev  sit  in  front  of  the  SdUtlebmt 
aiui  ( urse  the  poweis  who  put 
jiarking  restiictions  on  Columbia 
Si. 

Having  the  Right  to  (iri|>e  is  one 
thing,   kn.jwing  how    to  Jjandle  it 


IS  anotuer, 


'.,..-   *, 


A  Tradition  Is  Fading 


ii 


1  ralition  is  a  line  thing,  bm, 
unfortunatelv.  it  catniot  continue 
lujder  itN  own  ^lower  without  aid 
Irom  the  c»utside. 

While  there  aie  some  incono- 
<  lasts  who  would  do  awav  with  tra- 
ditions just  because  thev  are  pro- 
ducts of  semimentality.  cjr  cause 
some  inconx .  nieiue.  tnost  people 
find  <i  scUNe  <>!  security  and  com- 
foii  in  h.ixiiig  things  the  dead 
past  didn't  manage  to  take  with  it 
around. 

Of  comse  sfjme  traditions  can  be 
downright  nm omfortable.  Gravel 
^valks  for  iiistance.  Maily  old  alums 
can  still  remember  <  ursihg  tlie 
gra^eJ  in  their  slioes  and  the  cuffs 
of  their    froij.:  ■  s. 

The  ■  lil-\  dorms  probablv  still 
rc\  .  -^rate  with  the  echo  of  ghosts 
!>(  lid  grads  sAvearing  ghostly  blue 
Nt realms  when  thev  hang  up  their 
:^hostl\  jiants  foi  the  da\  and  ha\e 
;iho>tlv  :^ ravel  [>our  Irom  the  cuffs, 
covering  thejr  ghostly  bare  feet 
with  a  ghostly  but  abrasive  sensa- 
tion. 

Most  campus  paths  aie  now  cov- 
ered with  brie  k.  and  uoIxkIv  seems 
to  feel  nostalgic  icmorse  for  the 
loss   ol    the   gravel. 

riiere  is  another  tradition,  or 
mcjie  at  ( iiraiely.  heritage  irom  the 
past  at  (.arolina  which  is  not  un- 
pleasant, vet  is  rapidly  going  down 
tlie  drain. 

We  sjjtak  of  the  ..two  vcneiable 
debating   scxieties. 

These  groups  were  c^nce  gieat 
p)owers  on  campus,  so  powerlul 
that  they  could  control  and  direct 
the  activities  of  their  members  in 
thtlr  evervdav  life.  Ihev  were  the 
first  rudimc-ntarv  forms  of  student 
sell  goverinnent  and  were  lespon- 
sible  for  many  improvement*  in 
the  I'niversity. 

But  these  scxieties  are  failing. 
Ihey  have  lost  theii  overwhelming 
power  as  groups  c^f  studeius  carry- 
ing bills  and  recpiests  to  the  town 

The  Daily  Tar  Heel 

The  official  student  publication  of  the 
^  Publications  Board  of  the  University  of 
North  Carolina,  where  it  is  published 
ddily  except  Monday  and  examination 
and  Vacation  periods  and  summer  terms 
Entered  as  second  class  matter  in  tht 
post  office  in  Chapel  Hill.  N.  C,  under 
;h»  Act  01  March  8.  1870.  Subscription 
rates:  mailed.  .S4  per  year,  $2.50  a  semes- 
ter; delivered,  S6  a  year,  $3.50  a  semes- 
ter. 


Editor  - _ 

FRED  POWLEDGE 

Managing  Editor     . 

CHARUE  SLOAN 

News  Editor 

- RAY  LINKER 

Business  Manager 

Bn.T.  BOB  PEEL 

Sports  Editor       .  .. 

LARRY  CHEEK 

Advertising  Manager  Fred  Katzin 

Cued  Editor  Peg  Humphrey 

EDITORIAL    STAFF  —  Woody    Sears, 

Frank  Crowther,  Barry  Winston,  David 

Mundy.   George   Pfingst,  Ingrid   Clay, 

Cortland  Edwards. 

Night    Editor _ Woody   Sears 

Proof  Reader  Chal  Schley 


^^\ul  administraiicjii.  I  hat  has  been 
taken  over  by  the  student  go\ern- 
ment. 

And.  having  lost  real  power  as 
giouj)s  of  actions  thev  have  come 
to  the  point  where  thev  bicker 
with  each  other.  Kac  h  consideis  the 
other  a  corrupt  rib  of  itself  inste.cd 
c»f  a   sister  societv. 

Iheiefore  both  shall  be  here  tni- 
named.  h)r  if  they  were  called  by 
their  projHM  titles  one  woidd  have 
to  come  beh)ie  the  other,  and  the 
Other  would  no  iloubi  say  it''wiw' 
discriminated  against. 

While  the  meinbcrs  are  c  arrying 
on  diis  playful  but  often  i(')o-sin- 
cere  feud,  the  groups     are  loiilig,. 
prestige  and  meipbership.      >;  -Mi-  1 

Ihe  .senators,  foi;  Uij\l,.if>.,UH"j.ffpi 
tie  of  the  members.  '  HeriH'  Wfi'^' 
nite  benefits  from  their  experien- 
ces in  working  with  the  societies. 
Fxpeiience  in  -public;  speaking, 
parliamentaiy  procedinc  and  cipen 
del)ate  is  a  valuable  thing,  and  all 
too  often  lost  to  the  majoritv  ot 
tlie  students. 

Although  there  is  a  tendency  to 
sjx)tlight  the  loolish  bills,  such  as 
restricting  the  L'niversitv  to  males 
or  a.dmitting  Klvis  Preslev  to  the 
scnietv,  l>oih  groups  discuss  topics 
of  c mrent  interest  and  impM)rlance. 
And  for  this  ihev  both  deserve  to 
be  commended. 

It  is  an  imlortunate  lat  t  that 
both  societies  have  .something  less 
than  capacity  crowds  at  their  meet- 
ings. Perhaps  it  would  be  well  if 
the  present  senators  in  both  grou}  s 
would  sto|)  sitting  (»n  tiieir  fine 
traditions  ;.;id  -^et  out  and  wot  k 
lor  more  members. 


Woody  Sears 

Mrs.  Eleanor  Roo.sevelt.  one  of 
integration's  most  outspoken  pro- 
ponents, has  announced  a  three- 
point  plan  for  implementing  in- 
tegration of  Negroes  and  whites. 

Her  plan  calls  for  desegrega- 
tion of  housing  as  preliminary 
to  integration  of  .schools,  pro- 
tection of  rvery  citizen's  right  to 
vote,  and  elimination  of  Senate 
Rule  22  which  permits  fillibust- 
ering. 

This  three-point  program  v\as 
announced  by  Mis.  Roosevelt  at 
a  speaking  appearance  in  Column 
bus,  Ohio.  At  the  same  meeting.  ' 
»hc  criticized  President  Eisen- 
hiHver  for  not  calling  together 
northern  and  southern  leaders  to  ' 
discuss  school  integration. 

What  good  could  come  from  a 
meeting  of  the  northern  and 
southern  school  leaders  is  ques- 
tionable. Ther-e  seem  to  be  two 
different  problems  all  together. 
The  North  has  a  bull  dog  by, 
the  tail,  and  doesn't  know  how 
get  rid  of  it.  while  the  South 
doesn't  want  anything  at  all  to 
do  with  the  beast. 

It  has  become  increasingly  ap- 
parent     that    the     Sout      is    not 
ready  for     integration     on     any 
V 

Conformity 
Maligned? 

Stan  Shaw 

It  ^eems  that  some  people  on 
campus  are  more  than  ordinarily 
interested  in  the  problem  of  con- 
formity, and  the  deleterious  ef- 
fects that  it  has  on  individual- 
ism. 

We  are  told  that  unless  we  rid 
ourselves  of  these  evil  influences 
will  begin  to  show  the  horrible 
effects  of  our  belittled  minds. 

We  don't  intend  ttjAobject  tc) 
the  statement  that  nwntal  con- 
formity is  a  bid*  thinj^.  bufl**^' 
.  do  think  it  is  a  little  ridiculoqs 
to  heas  that  buckles  qij. the. backs 
.  of-  Qur  slacks,  mean  conformed 
n)ental  attitudes,  and  (hat  by. 
reading  Time  we  arc  actually 
brainwashing   our.selves- 

All  this  we  have  heard  from 
..  ^  people  who  sub.scribe  tq  the  cglt 
..,,(^1  jii)^]«()fiformity.     They'    must 


level,    much    less    integration   in 
housing. 

The   question    of   desegregated 
housing  has  been  one  of  the  hot- 
test issues  confronting  real  estate 
interests  in   the   past   few   years. 
One  of  the     best     real    -estate 
■games  "  now  i.-^  move  a  colored 
family  into  a  white  section,  and 
then  btiy  up  the  devaluated  prop- 
erty for  Negro  housing- 
Call  this  unfair  j^  .you  vlill,  yet 
r  it  is  .the  situation  thai  prevails.  , 
Call, it  undemocratic,  discrimina- 


tory, anything  you  want,  because 
it's  just  a  waste  of  breath. 

This  is  a  social  problem  of 
great  magnitude.  It  envelops  a 
large  number  of  people  in  a  fold 
of  deep-seated  fear  of  something 
which  runs  against  all  the  mores 
of  Southern  society  - 

The  advocators  of  social  up- 
heaval are  dreamers.  They  think 
in  terms  of  that  which  isn't,  and 
won't  be  until  some  later  date. 
This  is  good,  for  it  is  the  "stuff" 
the  future  is  made  of,  but  it  is 


not  today.  And  the  dreams  of  to- 
morrows to  come  cannot  be  im- 
posed of  the  people  of  today 

without  martyring  a  large  seg- 
ment of  humanity. 

The  unhappy  truth  is.  as  evi- 
denced in  Mississippi.  Texas,  and 
Kentucky,  that  the  martyrs  v»ill 
be  those  for  whom  the  changes 
will  be  made. 

Dream  on.  Mrs.  Roosevelt,  et 
al,  for  you  may  be  remembered 
as  a  great  humanitarian  with  aa 
eye  for  the  futui*e. 


lo's  Running  And  Who's  Been  Caught?' 

^ ,.     mm: 

"    till     fv       1.0 
lUI 


iflgii'C 


Small-time 
Football  & 
Soft  Grass 

(iollegc   is  a.wondeihjl   thing. 

Whcre  else  can  young  men  from 
the  couiurv  who  know  wide  fi^'lds 
and  plowed  furrcjws  mingle  with 
young  men  fiom  the  coinurv  v\  ho 
are  more  acc]nainted  with  vacant 
lots  and  trash  mingled  with  weeds 
<>et  to*>ether  h)r  an  evening  gante  ■ 
crt  touch  h)otbaIl  on  a  carefully  »>• 
mn lined    lawji? 

(.iving  vent  to  acc^umulated  linig 
jMjwer  and  stietching  muscles  siil- 
fetied  from  loni;  fjours  spent  seal- 
ed on  a  hard  chair  at  a  wobbly 
desk  over  a  dull  book  is  a  healthy 
deed. 

Ha\ing  tine  greensward  on 
which  to  accomplisk  thi  <j;reat 
blowing  off  of  steam  is  truly  an 
honor,  so  students  on  their  way  to 
classes  in  the  mornings  should 
keep  one  thing  in  mind. 

Constant    tredding   across    thiitsC 

lawns,  packs  down   the  earth,  and 

makes  a  mighty  haicf  spot  for  some 

studv  fatigued  student  to  land  on 

during  a  hard-played  study  break. 


l.5(ifyii'fekifW'<eak  mentally  that  they 
cannot  display  their  individual- 
ism in  any  other  manner  than  a 
public  display  of  their  non-con- 
formity, and  the  sad  fact  is  that 
they  end  up  by  following  a  ""at- 
tern  so  rigid  that  their  "liberal- 
ism" extends  only  so  far  as  their 
own   thoughts  are  concerned. 

It  behooves  us  all  to  under- 
stand that  there  are  various 
sorto  of  conformity  and  not  all 
of  them  are  bad.  Our  whole  edu- 
cational program  is  based  on  two 
years  of  strict  regimentation  in 
the  courses  that  we  arc  allowed 
to  take. 

This  attitude  is  considm.>d  to 
be  one  that  will  eliminate  just 
that  mental  conformity  which 
none  of  us  desire.  .\nd  yet  we 
find  these  same  nonnconform- 
ists  in  th?  fpj:efront  of,  the  un- 
specializedi  a^d >:geHer»},  :«du^a- 
fion.      •»        ■    .; ;.    ]' y'^--\\    •    ■ 

We  have  no  intentions  of  ask- 
ing these  persons  lo  stop  cdn- 
forming  to  this  strict'  and  very 
unlibcral  pattern,  but  we  would 
request  that  they  be  slightly  less 
vocal  or  at  least  a  little  more 
consistent. 


Bhnde  Majorette  Routs  Rioters 


C.  5.  Ycung 


Well,  Georgia  flipped  up  and 
beat  us  Saturday,  but  at  least  we 
didn't  lo.se  our  goal-posts.  I  guess 
a  lot  of  people  remember  how 
the  boys  from  State  College  went 
down  on  the  playing  field  at  dear 
old  Kenan  to  pull  down  the  posts 
after  our  first  game  of  the  .sea- 
son. It  was  quite  a  spectacle. 

I  had  started  down. to  the  field 
too.  but  my  only  purpc)5e  was  to 
get  where  I  coulcl  get  a  better 
l(M)k  at  that  blonde  majorette 
who  had  been  prancing  around 
with  the  Carolina  band  at  half- 
time.  Now  I  have  nothing  against 
our  other  three  majorettes,  but 
well,  they're  sorta  like  old  hat. 
and  this  fourth  one.  well  she  was 
'•cw  hat,  or  something  like  that. 

.\ny\vay,  I  got  down  on  the 
field,  and  was  watching  tlic  gial- 
po>ts  come  down  when  all  of  a 
.sudden  a  big  bunch  of  cops 
(highway  patrolmen^  strode  up 
to  the  crowd,  and  demanded  with 
great  authority  that  the  boys  dis- 
burse   and    leave    the    goal-posts 


alone,  like  good  up. landing  col- 
lege men.  It  seemed  like  a  rea- 
sonable request  to  me,  but  it 
ddin't  look  as  if  anybody  else 
thought  so. 

One  boy  was  up  on  the  cross- 
bar, making  li!:c  Tunto,  and  hav- 
ing a  great  time.  He  said  some- 
think  to  one  of  the  cops,  and 
the  cop  reached  up  to  grab  his 
leg.  but  the  boy  dodged  and 
slipped.  He  grabbed  on  to  the 
bar  in  an  effort  to  keep  from  fall- 
ing, but  something  got  fouled  up. 

As  he  swung  djjwn.  the  cop's 
(ace  got  in  the  way  of  the  boy's 
foot.  It  really  got  rowdy  around 
there  then.  It  had  the  makings  of 
a  free-for-all.  but  then  .somebody 
yelled,  "Let's  go  get  the  other 
oncl"  Everybody  turned  toward 
t'le  other  end  of  the  field,  and 
by  that  time  they  had  a  real 
gathering,  but  they  dicln't  go  far. 

Tlicre  she  was.  You  know,  the 
blonde  majorette.  She  was  walk- 
ing across  the  field.  I  guess  to 
get  out  of  the  crowd.  I  dont 
think  she  was  helping  with  the 
goal  posts. 


Well,  when  all  these  reckless 
boys  saw  her.  right  in  their  path, 
they  jusf  stopped  dead.  I  almost 
died  myself.  It  took  all  tJie  fight 
out  of  everybody. 

They  didn't  bother  going  to  the 
other  end  of  the  field.  The  girl 
didn't  even  break  stride,  ana 
she  acted  as  if  she  didn't  even 
know  what  was  happening.  (She 
undoubtedly  did,  for  it  was  quite 
noisy.  But  I've  been  told  that 
girls  act  that  way  sometimes). 

Anj-way  she  kept  v^alking  to- 
ward the  exit,  and  then  the  pro- 
cession started.  It  was  all  very 
orderly.  That  girl  led  them  all 
right  out  of  the  stadium.  What 
a  way  to  end  a  riot,  or  start  one, 
whichever  you  choose. 

The  patrolmen  all  kioked  hap- 
py and  relieved,  and  they  were 
shaking  each  others'  hands,  and 
congratulating  themselves  for 
breaking  up  the  crowd,  and  there 
was  one  who  kept  saying.  'All 
right,  all  right,"  but  I  couldn't 
tell  whether  he  was  trying  i  to 
keep  the  crowd  moving,  or  just 
expressing  his  appreciation  for 
UNC's  platinum  piper. 


Pogo 


By  Walt  Kelly 


»>» » 


Li'l  Abner 


By  Al  Capp 


MEAAfV^HILE  ATT»E 


IS  IT  TRUE,  DR 
MOOSEHEAD.TVUVr  IT 
IS  NO  UOMGER 
NECESSARY  PCDR 
PEOPLE  TO  GO 
AROUND  LCDOKING 
LIKE  ANTEATFR^' 


M/U  /CA/S.  f(£-X A-^OC^£»EAD. 


THE  SPECTATOR  PAPERS 

Wandering  In 
Coffee  Houses 

Roger  Wilk  O'Horse 

"Whatever  Tarheel  Eds  and  Coo-Eds   do   (is)   the 
subject   of   otir   writing." 

Though  the  other  colyumns  which  are  published 
for  the  use  of  the  good  people  of  (The  Daily)  Tar- 
heelia  are  laudable  in  their  particular  kinds,  they 
require  of  the  reader  the  necessitie,  if  not  the  im 
possibilitie,  of  Thinking,  which  is  of  itself  reaction- 
arie  and  contrarie  to  the  precepts  of  at  leasi  one 
School  of  Education,  and  possibly  of  two  or  three 
thousand  suoi  .  •  • 

The  end  and  purpose  of  these  my  papers  is:  I 
shall  from  tifBe  to  time  report  and  consider  all  mat- 
ters of  whatsoever  kind  that  shall  occur  to  me. 
and  publish  such  my  advices  and  reflections  every 
Wednesday  and  Saturday  for  the  convenience  of 
those  with  time  to  Think,  but  without  the  v^its  to, 
do  so.  "  .,         '■?'  ^ 

All  accounts  of  Gallantry,  Pleasure  and  Enter- 
tainment shall  be  under  the  article  of  Will  Pine- 
room's  Chocoate-house;  Poetry,  under  that  of  Ye 
English  Clubbe's  Coffee-house;  Learning,  under 
the  title  of  The  Grecian  Lenore's  Hall  (known  to 
the  rabble  as  Lenoir's  Hall);  Foreign  and  Domes- 
tic News,  you  will  have  from  Captain  Richie's  Poop- 
Deck  Coffeehouse,  hard  by  the  Y-Court:  and  what 
else  I  shall  on  any  other  subject  offer,  shall  be 
dated  from  my  own  apartment. 

Divination,  with  which  I  am  generously  credited, 
I  shall  use  very  sparingly  and  shall  speak  of  but  few 
things  until  they  are  passed,  for  fear  of  divulging 
matters  which  may  enlighten  our  superiors,  un- 
likely though  such  a  circumstance  may  be. 

I  present  in  this  issue,  -gratis,  a  sampling  of 
my  reflections  and  reports; 

THE  GRECIAN  LENORE'S  HALL 

To-night  v^-ill  be  presented  on  the  boards  of  Ye 
Campus  Play-makers,  for  benefit  of  us  all,  the  poetic 
beauty  of  the  voice  of  Marian  Fitz-Simons  in  th« 
gripping  Broad-way  drama,  'Anastasia,"  assisted 
by  a  stellar  cast. 

I  was  interested  to  learn,  by  the  unusual  meth- 
od of  listening,  that  the  correct  Muscovy  pronun- 
ciation of  this  proper  noun  is,  On-avv-staw-SEE-yah; 
and  further  aural  attendance  upon  the  words  of  a 
spirited  erudite  academician  (whose  i*edness  of 
face,  I  would  like  to  believe,  is  the  result  of  his 
zeal  for  teaching)  informed  me  that  to  have  a 
Muscovite  drama  following  immediately  upon  th« 
recent  vocal  renditions  of  that  Irish  thrush,  Eileen 
Farrell.  has  a  classical  significance  not  fo  be 
found  in  such  poetics  as  Paradise  Lost  ...  for 
the  savant  at  the  coffee-table  next  to  mine  own  re- 
vealed that  the  Irish  word  for  'water'  is  uisge  (pro- 
nounced whis-ky):  while  the  MusJbovfte,  or  Russ, 
term  for  'little  water'  is  vodka,  which  is  to  b«  pro- 
nounced wodka. 

Both  distillations,  the  zealous  savant  said,  carae 
from  the  same  basic  source,  uisige  being  made 
from  the  peel,  or  skin,  of  the  Irish,  of  Common, 
potatoe.  while  vodka  is  made  from  ttee  core,  or  meat 
of  the  Russ,  or  Red.  potatoe. 

The  consensus  of  opinion  of  the  other  savants 
at  the  adjoining  table  was  that  either  distillation 
led  to  the  same  desired  end-result,  which  is  the  Pro- 
motion of  The  Imagination  and  Heightened  Social 
Activity. 

Truly,  one  learns  much  of  practical  usage  in 
Grecian  Lenore's  Hall  .  . 

POOP-DECK  COFFEE  HOUSE 

An  eminent  Historian  was  heard  to  conjecture, 
ovxr  sips  of  his  coffee  substitute,  that  some  dara- 
yankees  once  made  .a  Marching  Through  Georgia 
only  because  the  Georgians  of  that  dav  were  March- 
ing Through  Carolina-of-the-North. 

It  is  time  that  this  practice  ceased  (the  Eminent 
Hjis.torian  said),  albeit  he  felt  the  loss  of  a  pig- 
skin duel  to  be  a  trifle  when  we  gain  such  a  peac'o- 
skin  as  Miss  Atlanta.  Chanc?ellor  B..  Senator  L..  and 
Captain  R..  who  were  in  the  company  of  the  Emi- 
nent Historian,  voiced  cautious  agreement. 

YOU  Said  It: 


Students  Tired: 
No-Spirit  Team 

Editor: 

Saturday's  (or  was  it  Fridays)  Dailv  Tar  Heel 
carried  a  statement  by  Ed  Sutton  in  which  he  be- 
moaned the  lack  of  student  spirit  in  support  of  the 
varsity  football  team. 

I  have  just  witnessed  one  of  the  sorriest  dis 
plays  «f  effort  on  the  part  of  any  football  team  T 
have  ever  seen,  high  school,  college  or  professional 
I  am  speaking  of  our  team's  magnificent  showing  in 
losing  by  just  two  touchdcwns  to  the  University  of 
Georgia. 

As  usuaK  only  a  few  of  the  team  showed  any 
spirit  or  desire  to  win;  1  n^ed  not  name  them  since 
they  and  the  rest  of  the  campus  know  who  they 
are. 

The  vait  majority  of  the  players  got  their  ex 
ercise  from  running  on  and  off  the  field,  while  the 
students  and  alumni  sat,  and  watched,  and  got  dis- 
gusted. The  fact  that  the  team  did  not  win  does 
not  matter  nearly  so  much  as  the  fact  that  the 
team  played  as  if  it  did  not  care  to  win. 

So  mj'  reply  to  Ed  Sutton  is  that  if  he  want.' 
the  students  to  show  some  spirit  and  cheer  and 
support  the  team,  the  team  will  first  have  to  s>how 
j«om?  spirit,  some  ''fight,"  aud  a  desire  to  win. 

HolUnd  M<&wain 


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lo    (is)    the 


|e  published 
Daily)  Tar- 
Ikinds.  they 
[not  the  im- 
?lf  reaction- 
It  lea^t  one 
fo  or  three 


:>apers  is:  I 
Jder  all  mat- 

fur  to  me. 
ttions  every 
fvenience   of 

the  wits  ta 


and  Enter- 
Will  Pinc- 
that   of  Ye 
ling,     under 
(known  to 
and  Domes- 
[ichie's  Poop- 
and  what 
T.   shall  be 


^^Jy  credited, 

kk  of  but  few 

of  divulging 

iperiors,   un- 

be. 

sampding  of 


}oards  of  Ye 
\\\.  the  poetic 
Imons  in  the 
Ma,"    assisted 


Inusual  meth- 
covy  pronun- 
Itaw-SEE-yah; 
|e  words  of  a 
I'edness    of 
[result  of  his 
\\    to   have    a 
fl:^   upon   the 
irush,  Eileen 
not     to    be 
^\>t     ...  for 
[mine  own  re- 
lis  uisge  (pro- 
file,   or   Russ. 
is  to  be  pro- 


iint  said,  came 

being    made 

of  Common, 

core,  or  meat, 

other  savants 
rrr  distillation 
ich  is  the  Pro- 
jhtened  Social 

tical    usage   in 


to  conjecture, 
hat  some  dam- 
rough  Georgia 
ay  were  March- 


d  ( the  Exnineni 
loss  of  a  pig* 
n  such  a  peach- 
Senator  L..  and 
ny  of  the  Emi- 
eiTient. 


red: 
leam 


Daily  Tar  Heel 
in  which  he  be- 
n  support  of  the 

the  sorriest  dis- 
f  foot'vall  team  I 
p  or  professional: 
ficent  ;>howing  io 
the  University  ol 

leam  showed  any 

name  them  since 

i  know   who   they 

ers  sot  their  ex- 
le  field,  while  the 
*ed,  and  got  dis- 
lid  not  win  does 
he  fact  that  the 
0  win. 

thai  if  he  wants 
t   and  cheer   and 
irst  have  to  show 
dciirc  to  win. 
Holland  Mc&wAin 

9 
1 


WiDNESDAY,  OCTOBER  17,  1?5« 


TH#  DAILY  TAH  HItL 


»Adl  THIIII 


Lqt6  Book  By 
UNCLdwAAon 
Up  For  A>yarci 

in^fc  law  student  H.  A.  Sieber 
is  being  considered  for  this  year's 
National  ftook  Award  in  Poetr>' 
for  his.  "Something  the  West  Will 
Remeihber,"  which  was  published 
earlier  this  year. 

Tlie  announcement  was  made 
by  National  Book  Publishers  Coun- 
cil, sponsors  of  the  contest. 

Also,  the  State  Literary  and  His- 
torical Association  of  North  Caro- 
lina has  announced  that  Sieber's 
collection  of  t>oems,  published  by 
Old  Well  Publishers  here,  is  eli- 
gible    for    the     Roanoke-Chowan 


I  Third  Year  Law  Student 
I    Gets  Vita  Craft  Gr^nt 

A    $250   Vita    Craft   Scholarship 

has    been    awarded    to    Jerry    A. 

Campbell   of  Taylorsville,   a   third 

year  UNC  law  student. 
Notice  of  his  recognition  came 
I  to  Dean  Henry  Brandis  Jr.  of  the 
I  Law  School  from  the  Vita  Craft 
I  company's  southeastern  regional 
I  manager. 

Campbell,  who  is  among  53  scho- 
I  larship  winners  in  six  southeastern 
i  states,  was  recipient  of  the  grant 
I  for  his  sales  work  during  the  past 
i  summer,  when  his  sales •■  totaled 
;  $7,005. 

\  The  company's  college  plan  was 
i  developed  by  its  president  where 
j  by  college  students  may  earn  an 
j  income  in  the  summers,  gain  sales 

experience  and  devote  their  full 
I  time  to  college  wwk  at  the  same 
I  time. 


Text  By  Two  UNC  Professors 
Will  Come  Off  Presses  Soon 


Two  UNC  political  science  pro- 
fessors have  wTitten  a  book,  "Gov- 
ernments of  Latin  America,"  which 
will  come  off  the  presses  of  Mc- 
Graw-Hill in  New  York  in  time 
for  second  semester  classes. 

Written  by  William  VV^.  Pierson 
and  Federico  G.  Gil.  the  book 
presents  problems  of  Latin  Ameri- 


'Caleb  My  Son'  Heads  List 
Of  Fiction  Best-Sellers 


.4. 


Morehead  And  His  Scholars 


':;;.i;u/ 


John  Motley  Morehead  sits  on  the  floor  with  the  freshm«n 
Morehead  Scholars  of  the  University  after  giving  a  dinner  for  all 
of  his  scholars,  an  annual  October  event.  Thirt/-five  freshmen  wtro 


chosen  this  year,  each  receiving  $1,250  stipends.  Graduate  student 
scholarships  are  worth  $1,500  a  year. 


'    Interest  In  Old  English 

Covering  The  University  Campus     ''^M^^!T^ H!^^ 

i '  '  mone    American    scholars    in   the 


VARLEY'S  Mens  Shop 


has  what  you  want  at  the  price 
you  can  afford  to  pay. 

Established    1938 


nr.i. . 

no" 


;.-»n».,  i; 


2  HI 
tt'Jo 


Just  Out! 

JEFFERSdN 

Champion  of  the  Free  Mind 

by 
CHAPEL  HILL'S  OWN 

PHILLIPS  RUSSELL 
.   Come  toofc /f  Over.' 
TH£  INTIMATE  BOOKSHOP 

205  E.  Franklin  St.  Open  TilM  0  P.M. 


DAILY    CROSSWORD 


'.lb  . 

"  ^  ■ 
'-to.. 

'.0    ;' 


VOL 


ACROSS 

1.  Ciishions 
5.  Cup  and 

11.  Measure 
of  land 

12.  Come 

13.  Stuff 

14.  Makes 
cloth 

15.  Boundary 

17.  Siberian 
river 

18.  Man's 
nickname 

19.  Name  for 
l^randma 

22.  Sesame 

23.  Resembling 
the  rynd  of  a 
millstone 
iHer.) 

25.  New 

Testament 

( abbr. ) 
2«.  Not  fresh 
28.  Hauls 

30.  Land- 
measure 

31.  Group 
of  nine 

33.  Ignited 

55.  Afternoon 
receptions 

36.  Low  Dutch 
(abbr.) 

38.  Philippine 
trees 

40.  A  light, 
fleecy  wrap 
worn  over 
the  head 

42.  Marriage- 
able 

45.  Skating  area 

44.  A  pseudo- 
nym 

47.  Old  Norse 
work 

48.  Worsted 
fabrics 

49.  Scorch 


DOWN 

1.  A 

twin 

crystal 
2  Sharp 

to 

the 

taste 

3.  Streetcar 
(Eng.) 

4.  American 
Indian 


16.  Ability 

20.  Nickel 
(sym.) 

21.  Like 
the 
Andes 

23.  Mas- 
urium 
(sym.) 

24.  Rubbed 
out 
spots 


SQEIS 

DHua- 

ayiiiaw 

r^'UfJOf^ 

Sk'iOffl!^ 

a^isyn 

[5SSH3(: 

\     innfi 

r»3ili        HQMEi'SiaRI 

HBsin   (■3'5^'JT'     1 

:^x'3iia 

^j^i^ao 

.'dsaa  L=t-i'3[!i| 

uaisfflDHLij     aai 

DOH        [• 

irmnids 

HB^Uy 

raayaa 

I^RHH'i^ 

'jfiJiiflg 

H5]fJI;J 

(d^'ikj 

♦MAGAZINE  SELLS 

The  annual  magazine  "Bargain 
Days"  are  scheduled  for~  today. 
Thursday  and  Friday.  Members  of 
Alpha  Phi  Omega,  service  frater- 
!  nity  on  campus,  will  be  on  duty 
in  Y-Court  and  Lenoir  Hall  during 
I  these  three  days  to  sell  subscrip- 
i  tions  to  students.  The  subscrip- 
'  tions,  obtainable  at  a  reduced  rate, 
.  are  offered  for  "Life,"  "Time," 
j  "Sports  Illustrated"  and  "For- 
I  tune."  There  is  also  a  special  rate 
if  all  four  are  purchased.  . 
PHARMACY  WIVES 

The  Pharmacy  wives  are  ha<'ihg 
a  supp^rwarc  partV  today  at  8  p.m.  I 
at     the     Pharmacy     Institute.     AH  j 
mcnlbers    have     been    invited    to  I 
bring  a  guest.  ' 

FRESHMAN  CAMP  PICTURES  I 
Freshman  cartip  pictures  arc 
available  at  the  YMCA  office. 
Those  who  ordered  may  pick  up 
the  pictures  between  8:30  a.m.  and 
4:30  p.m.  In  addition,  there  arc 
['.vc  pictures  for  sale  at  $1.50 
each  on  a  first  come,  first  served 
basis. 
BRIDGE  CLUBS 

The   UNC   Bridge   Club  will   en- 
gage the   Duke   Bridge   Club  in    a 
match  Thursday  night  in  Durham. 
All   persons   interested    in    partici- 
pating   in    the    match    have    been 
asked    to   call   Al   Deal— telephone 
8-9004.   Members   of  the  club  will 
leave  Graham  Memorial  about  6:15 
p.m.  and  will  be  back  on   campus 
I  by  11  p.m.,  according  lo  a  spokes- 
I  man  for  the  club. 
I  YM-YWCA  j 

I  The  following  meetings  are ! 
scheduled  for  this  afternoon  by  j 
the  YW-YMCA:  Intercollegiate  Re 
lations  Committee,  "V  Office,  1  j 
p.m.;  Campus  Christian  Council  J 
Elxecutive  Committee  meeting.  \ 
\  John  Riebcl's  office.  "Y"  Build-  i 
\  ing,  1:30  p.m.;  Y.M-YWCA  Faculty  ! 
Visitation  Report  Meeting,  Ger- 
rard  Hall,  6:30  p.m. 

CLASSIEJEDS 


mong  American  scholars  in  the 
study  of  Old  English  and  related 
languages  was  discussed  by  Pro- 
fessor Norman  E.  Eliason  at  the 
last  meeting  of  the  English  Club. 

His  discussion  centered  arouiid 
the  career  of  Professor  Kemt>  Ma* 
lone.  Old  English  scholar  who  re- 
cently retired  from  teaching  at 
Johns  Hopkins  University,  where 
Eliason  was  associated  with  him 
while  completing  his  doctoral 
work. 

\  member  of  the  UNC  faculty 
since  1946,  Eliason  is  the  author 
pf:;an  up-coming  book,  "Tarheel 
Talk.'  a  language  history  of  the 
state.  Last  spring  he  was  a  Ful- 
bright  Visiting  Professor  in  the 
Univcrsitv   of    Innsbruck.   Austria. 

The  English  Club,  headed  by 
graduate  student  John  Crabtree, 
will  also  sponsor  during  this  a^-J 
mestcr  a  panel  discussion  oh 
teaching  of  freshman  English,  a 
joint  meeting  with  the  Duke  Eng- 
lish Club  and  papers  by  members. 


French  Bibliography 
Released  By  Syracuse 

.  A  critical  bibliography  of  French 
literature  of  the  16th  century  col- 
laborated upon  by  five  UNC  facul- 
ty members  and  31  other  scholars, 
has  just  been  published  by  the 
Syracuse   University  Press. 

Those  from  UNC  contributing  to 
the  work  were  Dr.  P.  Macon  Cheek 
and  Dr.  J  Coridcn  Lyons  of  the 
English  Dcpl.,  Dr.  Werner  P.  Frie- 
dcrich  of  the  Germanic  Languages 
and  Literature  Dcpt.,  and  Dr.  Ster- 
ling A.  Stoudemire  and  Dr.  W. 
Leon  Wiley  of  the  Rgmance  Langu- 
ages Dcpt. 

Titled  "A  Critical  Bibliography 
of  French  Literature,"  the  book 
is  a  second  volume  and  deals  With 
various  Frcni-h  literature  publish 
ed  during  the  16th  century. 


"Caleb,  My  l^,"l>y  tiicy  Dan- 1 
lels  of  RaleighV  lieid  first  place ; 
last  *eek  as  fi'dtion  best-seller  in  I 
the  Bull's  Head  B'obkjhop  in  the  | 
libi-ary.  ' 

Arnold  Toynbee's    "An    Histor-! 
iafts'  Approach, To  Religion"  Was  j 
best-seller  among  Jion-liction.  An- 
other book  in  demand  last  week 
Vt'as     Anne  .  Morrow    Lindbergh^  ! 
"Ifhe  Unicorn  and  Other  Poems."  j 

Featured  this  week  in  the  foyer  I 
of  the  UNC  Libi^ry  is  "The  Let  | 
ters  of  Thomas  Wolfe"  as  book-  j 
of  -  the  -  week.  Elizabeth  Nowelt,  i 
Wolie's  lit^ttn'  agent  from  1934 ' 
until  his  death  in  1988,  collected  i 
and  edited  the  work.  | 

III  the  preface,  Miss  Nowell  ac-  i 
knowledges  assistance  given  by ! 
the  t7ftite*sit:f  of  North  Carolina! 
Librar;^  b>  making  available  ma  I 
tefial  In  its  possession.  The  copy  i 
exhibited  v.  iiVBcribed  to  members  \ 
of  tihe  staff  with  thanks  for  their 
help. 


'•^.-.^i'W. 


The  book  consists  of  a  brisk 
correspondence  carried  on  for  the 
five  yoars  or  more  while  Miss  No- 
well  was  working  on  tl.e  book  and 
involves  mainly  identification  of 
the  letters.  Among  the  friehds  of 
Wolfe  with  whom  Miss  Nowell 
talked  when  she  was  in  Chapel 
Hill  last  spring  were  Deans  Car- 
roll and  Spruill,  Paul  Green  and 
Archibald    Henderson. 

Menno  Hertbberger's  "Diction- 
ary for  the  Antiquarian  Book- 
Trade."  published  this  year  in  Pa- 
ris, has  been  presented  to  the 
UNC  Library  by  William  Henry 
Hout,  whose  generosity  is  well 
known,  according  to  members  of 
the  library  staff. 

Although  the  key  language  Ls 
French,  there  are  a  series  of  col- 
umns across  the  page  with  the  eq- 
uivalent word  given  in  EInglish, 
German.  Swedish,  Danish,  Italian. 
Spanish   and    Dutch. 


poetry  award  for  1956. 

"In  This  the  Marian  Year,"  an 
earlier  book  which  first  appeared 
in  1954.  brought  forth  consider- 
able comment  from  such  writers 
as  Randall  Jarrell.  Richard  Wal- 
ser  and  Paul  Green. 

Walser.  author  of  "North  Caro- 
lina Poet,"  said,  "The  voice  of 
H.  A.  Sieber  is  ''.le  latest  and  most 
important  in  the  more  than  200 
years  of  poetry  in  North  Caro- 
lina." 

.  B'efore  entering  law  school, 
Sieber  managed  the  Ranch  House 
in  Chapel  Hill  and  was  a  regular 
Sunday  book  reviewer  for  Durham 
and  Winston-Salem  papers'  book 
pages.  He  is  married  and  has  one 
son.  A  younger  brother.  Arvid,  is 
a  student  in  the  UNC  Med  School. 


can  government  as  the  Latin 
Americans  see  them. 

Dealing  with  the  form  of  organ- 
ization, functions  and  operations 
of  the  20  Latin  American  republics, 
the  book  devotes  considerable 
space  to  interpretative  data  and 
gives  special  attention  to  the  actu- 
al trends  and  spirit  of  government 
in  an  effort  to  explain  the  causes 
being  Latin  American  political  in- 
stitutions. 

Pierson,  who  recently  took  over 
the  duties  of  actin?  chancellor  at 
Woman's  College  in  Greensboro, 
came  to  UNC  in  1916.  A  specialist 
in  the  fields  of  Hispanic-American 
history  and  political  theory.  Pier- 
son has  been  dean  of  the  UNC 
Graduate  School  since  1930. 

Here  since  1943.  Gil  recently  re- 
ceived a  grant  from  the  Rockefel- 
ler Foundation  to  enable  him  to 
spend  the  coming  year  in»  Chile, 
studying  the  development  of  politi- 
cal parties  there. 

In  1944-45  he  held  a  similar 
grant  to  .study  Latin  American 
government.  He  became  a  full  pro- 
fessor of  political  science  at  UNC 
last  year. 


Two  UNC  Profs  Attend 
Annual  Oak  Ridge  Meet 

W.  M.  Whyburn,  acting  provost 
and  head  of  the  IfNC  Mathematics 
Diept.,  and  Dr.  dharles  D.  Van  j 
Cleave,  assistant  professor  of  an- 
atomy, were  ara^ong  those  attend- 
ing the  loth  annual  meeting  of 
the  oak  Hidge  Institute  of  Nu- 
clear Studies  at  Oak  Ridge.  Tonn., 
yesterday. 


We   Have   Just    Bought   In    A 
'  Small    Library   Of 

AMERICANA 

(1840  to  1890) 
Exceptionally   Good   Condition 

THE  INTIMATE 
BOOKSHOP 

205  E.  Franfclin  St. 
CHAPEL    HILL 


Attention  Men! 

WHY  BUY  INFERIOR  MERCHANDISE,  WHEN 
FOR  A  FEW  PENNIES  MORE,  YOU  CAN  PUR- 
CHASE "NAME  BRANDS^ 

Fruit  of  the  Loom  Shirts  white  and  colors  $1 .99 
Fruit  of  the  Looni  Shorts  and  T-Shirts  3  for  $2.05 
Fruit  of  the  Loom  Athletic  Shirts  3  for  $1.45 

Men's  tennis  shoes  (white  and  blue)  $2.98  and  up 

Sweaters  by  Rugby $5.95  and  up 

New  Shipment  Of  Ivy  League  Sport  Shirts 
ROTC  Khaki  Pants,  Socks,  And  Shoes 
Cresco  jackets  —  washable  suede^ 

gabardine,  and  heavy  quilted  nylon 
Crosby  Square  Shoes  —  loafers, 

plain  toe  and  wing  tip  ^ 

We  Give  S.  &  H.  Green  Stamps 

BERMAN'S  DEPT.  STORE 

Open  All  Ddiy  Wednesday 


Yc*ter4»y'»  Aasvcv 


5.  Cutting  tool     26.  Salt 

6.  Part  marshes 


of 
"to  be" 

7.  River 
(Russ.) 

8.  Catlike 
animal 

9.  Nif  httime 
10.  Seasons 

•gain 


27.  Roman 

magris* 

trate 
29.  Public 

notice 
32.  Compa-ss 

point 

(abbr.) 
34.  Small  drum 


36.  Girl's 
name 

37.  African 
seaport 

39.  Warble 
41.  Wait 

43.  A 
lixivium 

44.  Type 
measures 


PAPER-BACKED  BOOKS  —  Good 
used  novels,  detective  yarns  and 
non-fiction  at  3  for  25c  in  the 
stand  by  our  front  door.  The 
Intimate   Bookshop. 


WANTED:  ONE  ENGLISH  BIKE, 
3  gears.  Call  Stuart  Shelby  at 
8-9014  Law  School   or  8-0981. 


NROTC  Bugle  Corps 
In  Angier  'Programa' 

The  UNC  Naval  ROTC  Drum 
and  Bugle  Corps  was  one  of  15 
bands  participating  in  the  "Pro- 
grama"' (Progress  celebration),  at 
Angier  last  week. 

The  corps  is  under  the  command 
of  Midshipman  Lieutenant  (juhior 
grade)  F.  C.  Byrum.  Byrum,  a  sen- 
ior majoring  in  Business  Adminis- 
tration is  the  son  of  Mr.  and  ^rs. 
J.  R.  Byrum  of  Edenton. 


SHIRTS -19c 


EA. 


|q0U/teiMtt£O 


a/e  handle 


uiith  £ABE 


With   or  Without 
Starch 

Prompt  Service 


Glen  Lennox  Laundromat 


'09  Grads  at  the  Penn  Relays? 


No  tii!i  !flA*t  A  new  kind  of  relay  race  for  the  old 
rinierfl.  It's  the  ^miliar  scene  of  passing  the  flag 
•o  tig^ml  th*  o«h«lp  lane  to  come  through  a  road  build- 
ing  pfoj«ct.  It'a  ■  time  for  horn  blowing  and  top  blow- 
ing. Yet,  ibM*  d«l*ffl  ar*  far  shorter  than  they  used  to  be. 

IVen  widi  the  eaorMoas  highway  building  programs 
fldw  bwiljl  «A<M#tKken  by  state  and  federal  authorities, 
ydtt  lose  I^c  time  m  detours.  Why?  Because  today's 
roid  building  machinery  gets  more  done  in  one  8*hour 
sbift  than  tt*»d  to  get  done  in  two  days. 

Tdday's  road-building  machinery  works  around  the 
ctock  to  hurl  high-speed  roads  across  a  whole  state. 
AAd  th*y  seldotB  break  down.  They're  built  for  hea\7 
work— And  they  do  it— hour  after  hour— day  after  day. 

Helping  these  mirade-makir^g  machines  of  today 
nict  tne  heainr  loads  imposed  on  them,  keeping  them 
on  the  go  arc  Timken*  tapered  roller  bearings.  Timken 
b^AriAgS  arc  made  to  last  the  life  of  the  machine  they're 


in.  Ther  rirtually  eliminate  friction.  Mean  longer  life, 
less  maintenance.  They  keep  the  machines  rolling  that 
keep  America  on  the  ^  ?.' 

The  vital  role  Timken  bearings,  steel  and  rock  bits 
play  in  making  America's  machinery  better  keeps  us 
moving  up.  And  because  up  is  a  good  way  to  go,  you  may 
be  interested  in  what  the  Timken  Company  can  offer 
college  graduates.  For  details,  write  for  our  booklet: 
"Career  Opportunities  at  the  Timken  Company". 
The  Timken  Roller  Bearing  Company,  Canton  6,  Ohio. 


TIMKEN 

TRAOC-MARK  RC«.  U,  •.  PAT.  OTT. 

rAP£/f£D  ROLLER  BEARINGS 


Timken*  beorings  keep  Americo  on  the  GO .  ^ .  ond  V 
yfiil  keep  going  up  when  you  go  with  the  Timken  Compony 


V 


ijiiiiH ' 


PAILY  TAK  heel 


WEDNESDAY,  OCTOBER  17,  1956 


'ACi  FOUR  .  '  ■iOllliHM^H^  PAILY  rite  HEEL  WEDNESDAY,  OCTOBER  17,  195« 

Footballers  Work  For  AAaryland;  Booters  Whip  Generals 


2  Players 
Are  Axed 
By  Tatum 


Harriers  Prepare 
For  Strong  Terps 


Hardwood  Campaign  Is  Underway 

North  Carolina's  basketball  Tar  Heels,  varsity  and  freshmen  alike, 
tipped  off  six  long  weeks  of  practice  Monday  in  Woollen  Gym.  And 
all  over  the  campus  student  attention,  until  now  focused  on  Coach 
Jim  Tatum's  winless  but  highly  publicized  footballers,  began  to  shift 
and  briefly  spotlight  the  latest  edition  of  Coach  Frank  McC.uire's 
cagers. 

Advance  publicity  on  Coach  McGuire's  squad  has  been  highly 
favorable.     In    one    national    ntagazine    that    has    already    hit  'the 
stands,  the  Tar  Heels  are  rated  third  in  the  nation  behind  Louis- 
ville  and   Kansas    respectively.     Lennfe   Rosenbluth,    high   scoring 
ace  who  needs  no  introduction  to  Carolina  fans,  was  selected  as  a 
member  of  the  all-America  dream  team  as  picked  by  the  nrugazine. 
Whether  or  not  all  this  optimistic  forecast  will  hold   true  or   not 
remains  to  be  seen.    But  from  all  indications,  it  should   be  a   banner 
year  for  Carolina  basketball. 

Most  students  who  saw  the  Maryland-Carolina   freshman  game 
last  Friday  know  that  the  current  crop  of  football  rtcruits  is  the 
best  to  represent  Carolina   in  a  long  time.   And   in  a  few  weeks. 
Coach  Buck   Freeman  -will   trot  out  a  group  of  rookie  basketball- 
ers  that  should  compare  favorably  with  the  two  most  recent  frosh 
aggregations  assembled  by  Coaches  McGuire  and  Freeman. 
FYeshman  squads  are  always  unpredictable  until   they   get  a  taste 
of  competition,  and  this  current  band  of  yearling  cagers  is  no  excep- 
tion.   But  judging   from   high  school  performances,  the  boys  on  this 
squad  are  the  cream  of  the  schoolboy  crop.    But  only  time  will  tell. 


A  Day  For  Stavnitski 


Lets  make  Saturday  George  Stavnitski  day.  This  is  the  gist  of  a 
movement  that  has  now  taken  hold  on  campus.  The  Carolina  football 
squad,  along  with  their  Coach.  Jim  Tatum,  is  backing  the  movcmen! 
to  dedicate  Saturdays  game  with  Maryland  to  Stavnitski.  center  and 
co-captain  who  was  badly  injured  in  the  Oklahoma  game. 

The  real  story  of  Stavnitski  has  never  been  told.  Stav,  as  he  is 
known  to  his  teammates,  suffered  a  severe  brain  injury  against  the 
Sooners,  and  for  days  after  the  game,  could  remember  very  little 
of  the  past.  Only  just  recently  has  his  menwry  begun  to  return. 
Wed  like  to  see  the  Carolina  student  body  and   the  UNC  football 
team  unite  in  a  common  effort  to  reach  a  common  goal:  a   win  for 
Stav  over  Marjland. 

And  Jet's  have  a  big  enthusiastic  turnout  at  the  pep  'rally  Fri- 
day night.    For  the  past  few  weeks,  neither  the  team  nor  the  stu- 
dents   have    been    particularly    pepped    up.    We    want   everybody   to 
be  hopping  when  time  comes  for  the  pep  rally.  Maybe  this  is  what 
the  Tar  Heels  need  to  get  started  on  the  winning  track. 
UNC  soph  halfback  Moe  DeCantis  received  an  honorable  mention 
nomination  for  ACC  sophomore  of  the  week.    DeCantis  turned  in  an 
impressive  performance  against  Georgia. 

Statistics  tell  the  sad  tale.  According  to  latest  figures,  the  Tar 
Heels  »rc  last  in  the  ACC  In  four  different  departments:  total 
offense,  total  defense,   rushing  offense  and  rushing  defense. 


Team  Effort  And  Less 
Mistakes  Bring  Win 


By   JIMMY    HARPER 

'We  won  Friday  because  we 
were  making  less  mistakes."  This 
was  the  main  point  stressed  by 
freshman  football  Coach  Fred  Tul- 
lai  yesterday,  in  recapitulation  of 
last  week's  21-0  victory  over  the 
University  of  Maryland  frosh. 

Tullai  said  that  picking  indivi- 
dual standouts  would  be  difficult 
because,  'The  victory  came  as  a 
result  of  team  effort."  Supporting 
this  statement  is  the  fact  that 
three  different  men  scored  touch- 
downs. Ben  Smith,  Cornell  John- 
son, and  Nelson  Lowe  tallied  for 
the  Tar  Babies,  with  Smith  and 
Johnson  receiving  long  passes 
from  Jolyi  Cunningham. 

After  the  opening  loss  to  the 
Wake  Forest  frosh,  it  was  appar- 
ent that  much  attention  was  need- 
ed in  the  defensive  department. 
Not  only  were  the  Terps  held 
scoreless,  but  they  never  seriously 
threatened  Carolina  payairt. 

A  large  part  of  the  time  spent 
in  practice  has  been-  devoted  to 
the  defensive  pJiase  of  the  game, 
Tullai  said,  explaining  that, 
■"When  the  offense  makes  a  mis- 
take, it  usually  results  in  a  loss 
ol  down.  A  defensive  error  might 
easily  cost  si^i  points." 

The  Tar  Babies  have  open  dates 
for  the  next  two  weeks  preceding 


!  the    Virginia    gagme.    Tullai    said 

i  that  he  didn't  expect  the  squad  to 

i  "go  stale"  during  this  period  due 

to  the  fact  that  there  v/ill  be  both 

intersquad  scrimmages  and  scrim- 

j  mages  with  the  varsity. 

I      Tullai  noted  that  the  squad  has 

been      improving      steadily      and 

should    continue   to   do   so.    "They 

have    improved    but    they    haven't 

yet   reached   the    full    measure    of 

'  their  capabilities." 


Coach  Jim  Tatum  and  his  aides 
yesterday  set  Carolina  defenses 
for  the  all  important  Atlarttic 
Coast  Conference  game  with  Mary- 
land here  Saturday  and  rehearsed 
all  teams  alternately  on  offense 
and  defense. 

Coach  Tatum  earlier  in  the  day 
in  a  talk  to  the  University  faculty 
reiterated  confidence  in  his  squad 
despite  four  consecutive  defeats, 
and  said  it  would  go  all 
beat  Maryland,  the  team  he  ooach- 
ed  for  nine  years  before  coming 
here  last  January.  "I  still  say  we 
are  better  than  we  have  shown," 
says  Tatum,  "and  I  believe  we 
will  come  through  this  week.  This 
one   we've   got    to   win." 

He  revealed  last  night  that  two 
players  had  ben  dismissed  from 
the  squad  for  "disciplinary  rea- 
sons." They  are  Howard  W^illiams, 
second  string  guard  from  Hert- 
ford, and  Dickie  Darling,  a  promis- 
ing halfback  reserve  from  Eliza- 
beth   City. 

Both  boys  are  juniors.  Tjie  Caro- 
lina head  mentor  did  not  amplify 
on    the    reported    infractions. 

Emil  DeCantis,  sophomore  speed- 
■;ter  who  ran  31  yards  in  three  car- 
ries against  Georgia,  bad  his  whirl 
vith  the  first  team  yesterday, 
"iant  Leo  Russavage  and  Don  Red- 
ding were  again  runnng  in  the 
top    tackle   positions. 


Carolina's  varsity  cross-coinitry 
runners,  fresh  from  a  trio  of  wins 
in  an  unorthodox  four  way  meet 
last  Friday,  test  their  unblem- 
ished 4-0  record  here  Saturday 
when  they  entertain  Wake  Forest 
and  the  defending  conference 
champs  from  Maryland  in  a  tri- 
angular jneet. 

The  Tar  Heels,  who  stopped 
Virginia  in  their  season's  debut, 
whipped  Clemson  and  South  Caro- 
out  to  ^"'^  i"  ^^^^  meets  Friday,  and  won 
a  triangular  decision  from  South 
Carolina  and  N.  C.  State.  Onl>  one 
race  was  run,  but  the  scoring  was 
figured  differently  for  each 
'meet.' 

Despite  the  Tar  Heel's  unbeaten 
record  so  far,  Coach  Dale  Hanson 
is  looking  forward  to  this  week's 
Maryland  meet  with  a  feeling  of 
apprehension.  "Maryland  has  a 
well  balanced  team  with  plenty  of 
depth,"  he  said.  "It  should  be  the 
toughest  meet  on  our  schedule." 

The  Terps  have  at  least  two 
topnotch  runners  who  will  give 
Carolina  star  Jim  Beatty  a  tough 
battle.  As  a  freshman,  lanky  Burr 
Grim  ran  a  4:09  mile,  and  has  al- 


ways been  one  of  Beatty's  chief 
rivals.  Another  Terp,  Garl  Party, 
is  th^  cuisent  ACC  champ  in  the 
880-yard  run,  and  should  mtake  his 
presencfitfelt  jcome  Saturday. 

Carolina  will  counter  with  sev- 
eral other  dependable  runners  in 
addition  to  Beatty.  These  include 
Everett  Whatley,  Dave,  Scurlock, 
Marion  Griffin  and  Ben  Williams, 
who  together  with  Beatty  form 
the  probable  top  five. 

Coach  Ranson  was  very  pleased 
with  the  team's  wnning  perform- 
ance in  South  Carolina  last  Fri- 
day, but*  thought  improvements 
would  have  to  be  made  for  the  big 
one  with  the  Terps.  "We've  got 
to  work  on  grouping  our  runners 
more,"  said  the  Tar  Heel  head 
mentor.  "In  order  for  the  team  to 
keep  up  with  the  Maryland  run- 
ners, they  will  have  to  finish 
closer  fogether  rather  than  in  a 
sperad  out  fashion  like  they  have 
been  doing."  ■ 

Wafcii  forest,  a  relative  pew- 
comer  tOf  ACC  cross-cduntry ;  cir- 
cles, is  expected  to  provjc^e  little 
competitidn .  for .  either :  of ;  thQ !  two 
pf renftjal , t)oWer^.' ' .  Jj * l :  ; ' ' M ) • 


Rod  And  Gun  baiySk 


The  second  annual  Rod  and  Gun 
co-recreational  Field  Day  meet  is 
scheduled  for  Thursday.  Novem- 
Ronnie  Koes  was  again  running  i  bcr  1,  at  the  Durham  Wildlife  ar- 
it  full  speed  at  center.  Injured  in  j  ea.  The  Field  Day  is  a  joint  pro- 
the  South  Carolina  game,  he  is .  ject  sponsored  by  the  intramural 
expected  to  start  Saturday  after  j  department  and  GMAB. 
missing   the   Georgia   contest.  Four  activities  will  be  held  and 

The  heaviest  advance  sale  of  j  trophies  will  be  awarded  to  the 
tickets  for  any  game  here  to  date  team  winner  and  to  individual  win- 
was   reported.    Between  2,000  and  I  ners.  The  four  events  are  archery, 

3,000   Maryland   students   will   at-. 

tend  as  part  of  the  Maryland  car- '  ^^^^,^^^^^^^^^^^,^,^^^^^^^ 
a  van. 


frosh  Booters 
Meet  WoUlets 


MURALS 


trap  shooting,  target  rifle  shoot- 
ing,  and  bait  casting. 

Four  students  mav  compose  a 
team  in  the  composition.  The  team 
does  not  have  to  represent  any 
specific  organization.  Eighty  stu- 
dents participated  in  last  year's 
event,  and  the  intramural  depart- 
ment and  GMAB  hope  to  have 
a  bigger  turnout  this  year. 

Entry  blanks  and  detailed  infor- 
mation may  be  obtained  at  the 
intramural  department  office  in 
314  Woollen  or  at  the  information 
desk  in  Graham  Memorial. 

Harriers  Work 


'Soccermen 

Take  2nd 

In  A  Row 

By  JIM  PURKS 
Daily   Tar  Heel   Sports  Writer 

LEXINGTON,  Va.,  Oct.  17.— The 
UNC  soccer  team  took  Us  second 
win  of  the  season  here  yesterday 
afternoon  by  whipping  the  Wash- 
ington &  Lee  Generals,  4-1,  on 
Smith  Field.  It  was  the  first  time 
in  history  that  a  Carolina  soccer 
team  has  defeated  W  &  L  on  Smith 
Field. 

Grover  Brown  was  the  first  to 
score  for  UNC  with  a  shot  from 
eighteen  yards  out.  Ten  minutes 
later  Coleman  Barks  took  a  nice 
feed  from  Ted  Youhanna  and 
scored  to  put  Carolina  ahead  2-0. 
A  few  moments  after  that  Cole- 
man Barks  rammedh  home  a  goal 
on  a  pass  from  Johnny  Foster. 

Washington  and  Lee  held  the 
Tar  Heels  scoreless  for  the  next 
two  quarters  with  some  fine  de- 
fensive play.  Dave  Corkey,  Ted 
Jones  and  Mike  Galifianakis,  play- 
ing at  fullbacks  for  the  Tar  Heels 
countered  with  some  fine  defen- 
I  sive  efforts  of  their  own  and 
spoiled  several  General  bids  for  a 
score. 

In  the  fourth  quarter,  the  Gen- 
erals scored  their  first  goal  on  a 
penalty  kick  by  Beldon  Butter- 
field.  Nine  minutes  later,  You- 
hanna gave  the  Tar  Heels  some 
breathing  space  by  scoring  from 
his  left  inside  position.  The  game 
ended  with  Carolina  on  top,  4-1. 

The  Tar  Heel's  next  engagement 
comes  Friday  afternoon  when  they 
play  host  to  Davidson's  Wildcats 
here  on  Fetzer  Field. 


YESTERDAY'S  GAMES 

.  p.m.— Field  1,  Sigma  Nu  (w) 
12.  ATO  0;  Field  2,  Sig  Chi  (wj  3.      ■  ^""^^^    «">  '^    Newman's      fresh- 
.  ,  I  Kappa  Sig  vw)  2;  Field  3,  l^hi  Delt  1  "--a"      cross-country      team      went 

The  freshmdn  soccer  squad  I  (^■)  g  Beta  (w)  7;  Field  4.  SAE  (w)  ]  through  a  brisk  workout  yesterday 
makosjits-  first  ,appf^an<;ei  pf  the  i  SPE  (w)  0:  Field  5,  We  (w)  ;  in  preparation,  for  their  p;i|ly  tri- 
year  t6.iai'  when  it  meets  the  N. '  27.  Chi  Phi  (w)  0.    ,       .    ,,  !  angular  met  of  the  scaison  against 

5  p.iii.-^Fidld  I,  belt  ^ig  7*Ph| 
Gam  (w>  8:  Field  2.  Stacy  No.  2— i  ^^^^   "'^h 
21,  Graham  No.  1-6;  Field  3,  Mfd  i  turday. 


C.   Slate  freshmen  at   Raleigh. 

The  squad  has  looked  very  good 
in  several  scrimmages  with  the 
varsity.  At  one  scrimmage  they 
held  the  varsity  to  only  three 
field    goals. 

Keeping  State  from  scoring  will 
be  goalie  George  Batchelor.  Back- 
ing him  up  will  be  fullbacks  Joel 
Dimme'tte  and  Mitchell  Merritt. 
At  halfbacks  will  be  Tate  Robert- 
son, Bill  Stem  and  Hugh  Good- 
man. All  three  looked  good  at  the 
varsity  scrimmages.  The  wings  will 
be,  Charles  Whitfield  and  Ian 
MacBryde.  John  Ghanim,  an  out- 
standing hooter  from  Jordan,  and 
Curt  Champlin  will  be  the  insides. 
The  center  forward  post  will  be 
held  by  Mike  Thompson. 


Forest    and    East    Mecklen- 
here    this   coming   Sa- 


Fencing  Club 

The  Carolina  Fencing  Club 
will  hold  its  first  practice  of  the 
season  this  tfternoon  at  3:00 
p.m.  on  the  East  terrace  of 
Wobllen  G/m. 

The  squad  has  several  veter- 
ans of  last  year's  squad  return- 
ing. Coach  Pebley  Barrow  has 
urged  all  persons  interested  in 
fencing  to  attend  the  session. 
Practices  will  be  held  on  Mon- 
days at  7:00  p.m.  and  on  Wed- 
nesdays and  Fridays  at  3:00  p.m. 


Sch.  No.  1—20.  Everett  No.  3—0; 
Field  4.  Law  Sch  No.  1—19,  Ruffin 
No  1—0.  Field  5,  Pika  iB)  14.  ATO 
(B)  6. 

TODAY'S  GAMES 

4  p.m. — Field  1.  LewLs  vs.  Man- 
gum — 1;  Field  2,  Vic  Village  vs. 
Winston:  Field  3,  Stacy — 1  vs. 
Graham — 2;  Field  4,  Aycock  vs. 
BVP;  Field  5,  Grimes— 1  vs.  Cobb 
—2. 

5  p.m.— Field  1.  Law  Sch— 2  vs. 
Cobb— 1;  Field  2.  Med  Sch— 2  vs. 
Grimes— 2;  Field  3,  Everett— 1  vs. 
Joyner;  Field  4,  Old  West  vs.  Man- 
iey;  F'ield  5.  Dent  Sch  vs.  .\Iex- 
ander. 


.  A  list  of  the  remaining  meets 
scheduled  is  as  follows:  Oct.  20, 
Wake  Forest  and  East  Mecklen- 
burg High:  Oct.  24,  N.  C.  State  at 
Chapel  Hill;  Oct.  31.  N.  C.  State 
at  Raleigh:  Nov.  12,  State  Cham- 
pionships at   Raleigh.  | 


PATRONIZE   YOUR 
•    ADVERTISERS    • 


Volieybail  Officials 

The  Intramural  Office  has  an- 
nounced that  officials  art  need- 
ed for  intramural  volleyball. 
Persons  interested  have  been 
asked  to  apply  at  Woollen  Gym, 
room  315.  Volleyball  entries  in 
both  fraternity  and  dormitory 
divisions  must  be  in  by  tomor- 
row. 


**FciSt  ai^d  Sophisticated!" 

y^/Y^  N.  Y.  OoUy  nXt 


^nn  KAY  KENDALL 
PETER  FINCH 


Golw  by  TtCHNICOlOK 

HI  vistaVsion 


WOMAN'S  ATHLETIC 
ASSOCIATION 

Those  interested  in  tennis  can 
play  with  the  club  on  Thursday 
at  4  p.m.  Volleyball  teams  may 
practice  through  Friday  from  4-6 
p.m.  and  Thursday  at  7  and  8  p.m. 


Mfa 


Attention  Ladies! 

Sweaters  By  Mademosielie  $3.98  and  up 

Dresses  —  nevy  shipment 

Hosiery,  white  plain,  and  mesh  $1,00 

regular  mesh  and  seam  $1.00 

Ladies  tennis  shoes  —  Keds.  —  All  Colors 
Uniforms:  White  Angel,  all  nylon 

five  different  styles  $5.95  up 

We  Give  S.  &  H.  Green  Stamps 

BERMAN'S  DEPT.  STORE 

Open  All  Day  Wednesday 


FROM  THE 

SENSATIONAL 

STAGE  SUCCESS! 


^S0^' 


IN   HER  ARMS 
HE  PROVED   HE    \A'AS 
A    MAN' 


Mi'irocolor 


Sjmpathj 


Deborah  Kerr 
John  Kerr 

OPENS  TODAY 


IJ 


B  O  B  and  M  O  N  K 
of  • 

TOWN& 
CAMPUS 

;    SALUTE 
Athlete  Of  The  Week 


DAVE  REED 

Tar  Heel  quarterback  Dave 
Reed  has  been  named  Athlete 
of  the  Week  for  his  brilliant 
play  against  the  Georgia  Bull- 
dogs Saturday.  Reed  injected 
spirit  and  spark  into  the  Tar 
Heel  attack  while  in  the  lineup, 
and  set  up  both  Carolina  scores 
with  his  running  and  passing. 

We  want  him  to  drop  by 
TOWN  &  CAMPUS  and  pick  out 
a  shirt  to  his  liking — compli- 
ments of  the  house. 

We  want  the  old  and  young 
«>like  of  Chapel  Hill  to  make 
TOWN  &  CAMPUS  their  head 
quarters  for  the  finest  in  men's 
clothing.   Drop   in    today. 


TOWN  & 
CAMPUS 


Yellow  Jaundice  Hit^ 
Terp  Football  Squad 


COLLEGp  PARK,  Md.,  Oct.  17 
(JP) — Doctors  debated  yesterday  | 
whether  to  give  the  entire  Uni- 1 
versity  of  Maryland  football  squad  j 
gamma  blpbulin  as  a  precaution  | 
against  the  spread  of  yellow  jaun-  j 
dice  which  has  stricken  two  play- 1 

.     i 
The   doctors   at   the   University 

Hospital    in   Baltimore   considered  i 

the     wholesale  injections  of     the , 

blood,  derivative  after  Ronald  La-  j 

neve,   a   sophomore   second-string 

center  from  Pittsburgh,  was  sent 

there    with   the    ailment. 

Howie  Dare,  second-string  half- 
back   from    Baltimore,    previously ! 
had  contracted  it.  I 

gamma   globulin   as   a   precaution  j 
known  as  infectiious  hepatitis,  dis-  | 
ables  the  liver  and  saps  the  ener-  i 
gy.  It  can  be  fatal.  It  gets  its  com- 
mon name  from  the  yellowish  tint 
which     shows  up   the  eyes     and 
flesh  as  a  symptom. 

The  virus  which  attacks  the  liv- 
er may  enter  the  bloodstream  di- 
rectly or  be  picked  up  oraJly  from 
food  or  drink. 

The   yellow    jaundice    epic'emic 


threat  is  the  most  serious  in  a 
succession  of  player  losses  on  the 
succession  of  player  losses  n  the 
Maryland   squad   this   season. 

Tommy  Mont,  in  his  first  year 
as  head  coach,  reported  that  end 
Ed  Cooke  and  fullback  Tom  Selep 
will  not  be  able  to  play  Saturday 
against  North  Carolina. 


REMEMBRANCE 

WAY  ^ 

By  Chapel  Hill's  Own      ~** 

Jessie  Rehder 

A  sensitive  story  of  a  North 
Carolina  adolescence.  You'll 
want  to  own  It — you'll  want  to 
givov  .'t  to   a   friend. 

$3.50 

at 

THE  INTIMATE 
BOOKSHOP 

205    E.   Franklin    St. 

Chapel   Hill 
Open   Till    10   P.M. 


i 


^     . 


by 


Smartest  coat  going .  . .  in  any  iveather! 
PLAID-LINED  COTTON  POPLIN  XRUISER ' 

LONDON  FOG 

:       ..    n  ...  the  one  coat  you  need  — 

Bright  look  for  a  gray  day  .  .  .  right  look  for  any 
day !  The  coat,  the  under-collar,  the  pocket  flaps  are 
all  lined  in  the  same  exclusive  tartan  plaid.  The 
"Cruiser"  keeps  out  wind  as  well  as  rain,  stays 
wrinkle-free  and  crisp  looking  through  real  rugged 
wear.  Natural.  Sizes  36  to  46.  Regular,  Long. 

COAT  $29.50     MATCHING  CAP  $3.95  ,' 


Julian 


e  &i)op 


U  H   C  LTK?ARY 
SERIALS   DEPT. 
CHAPEL  HILL,    N.    C. 
8-31-49 


WEATHER 

Partly  cloudy  and  mild,  with  oc- 
casional rain  cr  driule. 


^h  t  Dallij 


VOL.    LVII    NO.    24 


Complete  (JP)  Wire  Service 


aTatlHCccl 


*. 


BOMBS 

The  editor  dlscussof  H-bombc  en 
page  2.  , 


CHAPEL   HILL,   NORTH   CAROLINA,  THURSDAY,   OCTOBER   18,   1956 


Offices   in    GraJiam   Memorial 


FOUR   PAGES  THIS   ISSUE 


% 


Coordination  Bill    |  Severo/ r/ie/fs 
Comes  Up  Tonight 


A  resolution  uro,in<^  c;oof>eiation  in  .scheduling  events  on 
( ivuipus  w  ill  ( onie  up  lor  a  voie  tonight  before  the  Student 
Lec-islatine.  speaker  Soiuiy  F.vaiis  said  yesterday.  i 

liie  resolution  was  introduced  last  week  bv'  I'niversity 
Party  representative  .\l  C;old.smith  following  the  dclcat  ot  a  I 
bin  by  the  Student  Partv  to  provide  for  a  committee  to  ro-i 
ordinate  campus  events. 

Other  measures  to  come  before* ■ 

tonight's  session  include:  (DA  bill  i  ment   passed   last   week   replacing! 
to  appropriate  $125  to  the  sopho-    ballot  boxes  in  all  dorms, 
more  class;  (2)  A  resolution  to  set  ;      Weinman  charged  that  the  Stu- 
aside   Oct.    24   as    United    Nations  |  dent  Partv  would  use  the  passage 
Day  at  UNC:  (3)  A  bill  to  appropri-  j  ^f  j^e  bill  for  propaganda  in  the 
ate  $300  to  the  Debate  Council.       |  coming     campaign,     a     statement 

The   Debate    Council    appropria-  {  .^hich  Lambeth  later  refuFed. 


tions  bill  was  introduced  last  week 
by  SP  representative  John  Brooks 
and  will  also  be  voted  on  tonight. 

Goldsmith's  resolution  on  co- 
ordination of  campus  events  states: 

'"AH  presid^'nts,  chairmen  and 
heads  of  Campus  organizations  be 
hereby  urged  by  the  student  Leg- 
islature of  the  University  of  North 
Carc^ina  to  schedule  insofar  as 
possible  all  events  which  will  be 
of  interest  to  the  students  of  the 
University  so  as  not  to  conflict 
with  other  events  previously  sche- 
duled. 

■'So  as  to  insure  orderly  sche- 
duling of  events,  all  groups  be 
urged  to  schedule  their  event 
through  the  Office  of  the  Director 
of  Student  .affairs  which  has  pow- 
ers to  deal  with  such." 

Goldsmith  stated  that  the  main 
reason  for  the  defeat  of  the  bill 
last  week  was  that  such  a  com- 
mittee would  not  have  sufficient 
power  to  be  worthwhile 


Evans  stated.  "Those  who  voted 
for  the  Elections  Law  Amendment 
as  well  as  those  who  voted  against 
it  had  adequate  reason,  and  I  feel 
that  the  Legislature  acted  for  the 
good  of  the  campus  as  a  whole." 


Reported  Here 
Since  Thursday  , 

Numerous  thefts  occurring  since 
last  Thursday  have  been  reported  . 
to  Ray  Jeficries.  assistant   to  the 
dean  of  student  affairs. 

Police  believe  that  there  is  an 
organized  ring  operating  on  cam- 
pus. 


The   greatest    number   of   thefts 
have   taken    place   in   Cobb   Dorm, 
officials    said.    During    the    game 
Saturday,  one  room  was  robbed  of  j 
seven  sweaters,  an  electric  shaver 
and  a  class  ring.  According  to  oc- ! 
cupants  of  the  room,  although  the  ! 
room  was  locked,   a   key   was  left  I 
over  the  door.  i 


DEAN  CARMICHAEL 

.  .  .  busy  speechmaker 


Johnson  Heads 
Press  Club 

Charles  Johnson,  senior  of  Len- 
oir, was  elected  president  of  the  j 
UNC  Press  Club  at  its  first  meet-! 
ing  of  the  year  held  last  Tuesday. : 

Also  elected  were  Robert  Ged-  j 
ney,  vice  president;  Mrs.  Mary 
Vann  Finley,  secretary,  and  Sher- . 
wood   Canada,  treasurer.  ; 

The  club  decided  to  meet  month- 
ly on  Monday  at  7:30  p.m.  Which 
Monday  of  each  month  the  meet- , 


Saturday,  another  Cobb  student ! 
left  his  room  unlocked  while  tak-  \ 
ing  a  shower.  During  his  absence  : 
$3  was  taken  from  his  wallet  and  \ 
a  waich  was  stolen.  A  pair  of  j 
trousers  and  a  sweater  were  stolen! 
from  a  room  in  Vance  Dorm  last : 
week.  Also,  a  bicycle  was  taken 
from  Vance  last  week,  but  was 
discovered  by  its  owner  the  next  i 
day  at  the  gym.  ' 

Jefferies  has  urged  students  to 
lock  doors  when  leaving  the  room, 
if  only  for  a  short  time.  Also,  he 
asks  students  not  to  leave  keys 
over  the  door.  In  the  event  some- 
thing is  stolen,  students  should  re 
port  immediately  to  the  dorm 
manager,  Jefferies  said. 


Speeches  By 
Women's  Dean 
Scheduled  Here 


ing  will  be  held  on  will  be  decid-  j 
In    explaining    the    introduction  j  ^^  later.  Dues  were  set  at  $1  per , 
of  his  resolution.  Goldsmith  .stated  i  semester,  the   same   as    last   year. , 


"It  was  too  good  a  bill  to  throw 
out  completely  and  we  (UP)  fel< 
that  a  compulsory  committef 
would  be  impractical.  The  resolu- 
tion was  introduced  hoping  it 
would  do  some  good  in  arousing 
student  leaders  to  the  necessity  o* 
cooperation  in  coordination  of 
scheduling  of  events." 

Sonny   Evans,   vice   president   o 


Johnson  succeeds  Davis  Merritt  ■ 
Jr.  as  president.  At  the  meeting,  j 
Merritt  and  Norval  N.  Luxon,  dean  ; 
of  the  Journalism  School,  discus- ' 
sed  the  workings  of  the  club  and 
possibilities  of  chartering  a  chap- ' 
ter  of  a  national  professional 
Journalism  fraternity  here.  i 

All  students  majoring  in  Journ- ' 
aU.sm    or     planning    to    major     in 


the  student   body   and   speaker  o*     loumalism   have    been    invited   to 


the    lefiislature,     commented    yes- 
terdav  on  the  recent  statements  is 


beth  and  W  Chairman  Mike  Wein 
man  on  the  Elections  Law  Amend 


join  the  Press  Club,   according   to 
•Johnson.      Prominent     newspaper- 


sued   by   SP   Chairman   Tom  Lam-    men   from   all  over  the  stat?  will 


speak     at     the    various     meetings ; 
during  the  year,  he  said.  I 


Alderman  Will  Sponsor 
Dance  Tomorrow  Night 

Alderman  dormitory  will  spon- 
sor a  dance  to  be  held  Ftiday 
night  from  9  to  12  in  the  dormi- 
tory parlor. 

•'A  Roman  Holiday"  Ls  to  be  the 
theme    of   the   semi-formal    dance.  ' 
Music    will    be   furnished    by    Bill 
Lan^ley's  combo,  and  Gayann  Tan- i 

ncr    will    entertain     with     a    pan-  j 
tomirre   act   during    intermission.      ) 
The    dance     is    planned    by    the 
Alderman   Social    Committee,  with 
Linda  School  as  chairman,  lor  the 
girls    living    in     the    dorm,    their,' 
dates,  and  specially  invited  guests,  i 


Dr.  Katherine  Carmichael.  Dean 
of  Women,  is  busy  making  speec- 
hes this  week  to  various  organi- 
zations. • 

She  will  address  the  Eta  chap- 
ter of  Delta  Kappa  Gamma  Ed- 
ucation Society  at  its  annual  in- 
itiation banquet  at  the  Student 
Union  Building  of  Duke  Univers 
ity  Friday  at  6:30  p.m.  Her  sub- 
ject is  "The  Outlook  of  the  Pro- 
fessional Woman." 

Dr.  Carmichael  will  speak  at  a 
meeting  of  the  North  Carolina  As 
sociat'on  of  Deans  of  Women  at 
"Wake  Forest  on  Tuesday.  She  will 
gii'e  an  account  of  her  research 
project  concerning  the  office  of 
the  dean  of  women,  which  she 
completed  recently. 

At  a  meeting  of  the  Pan  Hellen- 
ic Council  yesterday.  Dr.  Carmi- 
chael spoke  on  "What  Pan  Hel 
could  do  for  the  Campus."  She  al- 
so addressed  Delta  Delta  Delta 
sorority  yeatecday.  Her  subject. 
was  "The  Sorority  Woman  of  th<' 
World  .\head." 


High  Court's 
Rule  Favors 
Highway  Dept. 


RALEIGIX  <if)  —  The  Supreme 
Court  held\jf€sterday  that  failure 
of  the  State  Highway  Commission 
to  repair  a  hole  in  the  road  thus 
causing  a  fatal  accident  does  not 
constitute  a  negligent  act. 

The  Court's  ruling  came  in  a 
case  in  which  Mrs.  Ethel  Agnes 
."^lynn  sued  for  compen.sation  un- 
ler  the  law  which  allows  persons 
injured  by  the  negligent  acts  of  i 
^Ulo  employees  to   sue  the  state,  i  GMAB  'Free   Fllck'  Will 

Mrs.    Flynn  s    four-year-old    son, ;      ,        ...  •    i  u    ii 

Terry    Eugene    Flynn,    was    killed  |  "I^Y  I"  Memorial  Hall 
n  an  accident  on  the  Cane  Creek  i      GMAB's    "free    flick"    will    be 
Rd.  in  Buncombe  County  on  July  i  shown    Friday    night   in   Memorial 
15,  1954.    She  claimed  in  her  suit  \  Hall,  instead  of  the  usual  location, 
hat  a  pickup  truck  driven  by  her    Carroll    Hall. 


Bryant's  Committee 
To  Recomhriend  New 


CU  PresI 


*f^. 


>.' 


lusband  wrecked  because  of  a 
hole  in  the  asphalt  paving  of  the 
road.  She,  her  husband,  another 
man  and  her  four  children  were 
•njured  in  the  wreck. 

The  State  Industrial  Commission 
refu.sed  to  grant  compensation  in 
the  ca.se  and  its  decision  was  up- 
held in  Buncombe  Superior  Court. 
The  Supreme  Court  affirmed  these 
rulings. 

Said  the  Court  in  its  opinion: 

"Is  a  failure  to  repair  a  hole  in 
the  highway  caused  by  the  ordi- 
nary public  travel  a  negligent  act? 
The  requirement  of  the  statute  is 
not  met  by  showing  negligence, 
for  negligence  may  consist  of  an 
act  or  an  omission. 

"Failure  to  act  is  not  an  act. 
We  think  it  was  the  intent  of  the 
legislature  to  permit  recovery  on 


The  filth  film  of  the  "free 
fick"  series  will  feature  "The ! 
Southerner,"  starring  Betty  Field 
and  Zachary  Scott.  Its  theme  cen- 
ters around  the  modern  south  and 
its  problems. 

The  first  show  will  begin  at  ap- 
proximately 8  p.m..  as  soon  as  the 
pep   rally    is    over.    The    10    p.m. , 
showing  will  go  on  as  usual. 


Hudson  Back 
From  Trip 
To  Illinois 


ay 

Friday  May  Receive 
Endorsement  For  Job 

% 

The  I'liixcrsity  rinsiecs'  (ommittfc  f<n  rcc  <»niiiit'n(liiip; 
a  new  Consolklaiecl  l'i)i\ersiiv  [Resident  will  rcNeal  its  \on^- 
auaited  dedsioii  lodav  at   loi-^o  a.m. 

The  report  will  he  made  helore  (iov.  H<)d<>es  and  the 
rnistees'  K\e(Hti\e  ("ommittee  in   the  (.ovenior's  oflue. 

Todav's  report  will  not  (oin  lusixely  name  a  president. 
If  tlie  report  is  a((cpted  hv  the  Fxeeutive  Committee  it  will 

— ♦be  submitted  to  a  vote  by  the  full 

_  /     ^         L     T     ni  I  Board  of  Trustees  at  a  later  date. 

brunp  s  Combo  To  Play 
At  Indian  Summer  Swing 


Dr.  A.  P.  Hudson.  Kenan  pro- 
fessor of  English,  has  returned 
from  a  trip  to  Chicago  and  Evan- 
ly  for  the  negligent  acts  of  state  j  ston,  III.,  for  a  conference  with 
employees  for  the  things  done  by  i  Pi'of-  John  T.  Flanagan  of  the  Uni- 
them,  not  for  the  things  left  un-  j  versity  of  Illinois,  and  Row,  Pe- 
(jone."  i  itTson   &    Company,    publishers   of 


The  University  has  been  without 
an    active    president    since    June, 
Bruno's  combo  will  play  for  the    1955      ^^.^en     Gordon     Gray     was 

final    Indian    Summer    Swing    this  ,    .      1  „        r  „u .     <-  „ 

granted  a  leave  of  absence  to  serve 
Fridav   night    at   8  p.m.    in   Hanes  *  _^  ,  ^  , 

Parking    Lot    between    "Y"    Court    ^«  Assistant  Secretary-  of  Defense 

and    .Memorial    Hall. 

Special    enterlainmenl-    will    in- 


in  Washington. 

The  trustees'  Executive  Commit- 
tee accepted  Gray's  resignation  last 
November.  Shortly  afterwards  the 


elude  surprise  acts  and  an  impor- 
tant guest.  One  of  the  many  acts 
will  feature  Hoke  Simpson  and 
Spencer  Everrett  who  will  sing  | 
in  the  Calypso  style  made  popular 
by  Harry  Belafonte. 

It  has  been  reported  that  some 
3,000    tickets    have    been    sold    to 

Maryland    students.     This    is     the    aeparture     for     VV'ashinglon.     The 

s^iuoi  s     caravan     weekend     anu  [  present  acting   president,  William 

which  they  are  preparing  to  pub-    they  are  expected  to  invade  Cha-    C.    Friday,    was    appointed    when 

1  pel  Hill  Friday  afternoon.  Purks  resigned  the  post  to  become 


Evanston,    concerning    a    book    on 
folklore     in     American     literature 


present  selections  committee  was 
chosen  to  recommend  a  new  presi- 
dent. 

Dr.  J.  Harris  Purks  first  served 
as    acting    president    after    Gray's 


Adlai  Has    Flaw'  In  Plan 
To  Ban  H-Bombs,  Nixon  Says 


By  FRED  POWLEDGE 
Special    to   The   Daily    Tar    Heel    1 

CORNELL  UNIVERSITY,  Ithaca, ' 
N.  Y.— Vice  President  Richard  M. ' 
Nixcn  Wednesday  night  pointed  to  i 
a  "flaw"  in  Democratic  candidate 
Adlai  Stevenson's  plan  to  ban  H- 1 
bomb  tests.  I 

Nixon  also  said  the  federal  gov- ; 
ernmcnt  should  act  to  force  racial 
desegregation    only    if    the    states 
and   municipalities  fail   to   do   the. 
job  themselves. 

Nixon  was  questioiied  by  40  Col- 
lege newspaper  editors   here   dur- ! 
ing  and  after  a  nationally-televis- 


ed "intercollegiate  press  confer- 
ence." 

The  vice  president  said  the 
"flaw "  in  Stevenson's  H-bomb  the- 
ory was  the  idea  that  the  United 
States  could  resume  Hydrogen 
bomb  tests  immediately  upon 
learning  that  the  USSR  had  brok- 
en any  test  prohibition. 

The  United  States'  last  H-bomb 
took  "over  a  year'  to  construct, 
he  said. 

"We  cannot  afford  to  .  wait  a 
year,"  Nixon   told   the   editors. 

Asked  what  the  Eisenhower  ad- 
ministration had  done  to  carry  out 


Di  Senate  Posses  Resolution 
For  Constitutional  Change 


The  Dialectic  Senate  passed,  10- 
4.  Tuesday  night,  a  resolution  "fa- 
voring the  constitutional  changes 
in  the  executive  department  as 
recommended  by  the  Commission 
on  Reorganization  of  the  State 
Government  "  * 

Senator  Ervin  Avery  introduced 
the  resolution  and  claimed,  "it  is  j 
appalling  that  North  Carolina  does  < 


IN  THE  INFIRMARY 

Those  in  the  infirmary  today 
included: 

Misses  Ester  Ballentine,  Billy 
Collins,  Helen  Dickson,  Martha 
Dickson,  Martha  Dawson,  Jean 
Westbrook,  Lorna  Lutes,  Mary 
Ackerson,  Susan  Edmonson, 
Alma  Gedsey,  and  Charles  Gray, 
George  Stavnitski,  Claude 
Moore,  Wesley  Smithson,  Roy 
Campbell,  Hall  Johnston, 
Charles    Shoe,    Williams    Hicks, 


Abe  Walston, 
John  Gentry, 
John     Johnson, 


James  Bryant, 
Clinton  Jones, 
Cloyd     Bookout, 


William  Yost,  Julian   Stiig,  and 
James  Connely. 


not  give  the  governor  any  veto 
power." 

Opposing  the  bill,  Senator  Pat 
Adams  stated  that  the  recom- 
mendation, which  would  abolish 
the  electing  of  the  state  attorney 
general,  the  superintendent  of 
public  construction,  the  coiitnis- 
sioner  of  insurance,  the  commis- 
sioner of  agriculture  and  the  sec- 
retary of  state,  gave  the  gover 
nor  too  much  unchecked  power. 

Senator  Joel  Fleishman  said  the 
present  state  ballot  is  too  lengthy 
and  the  large  number  of  different 
candidates  clouds  the  issues.  He 
felt  that  the  governor  was  denied 
any  real  power  to  influence  legis- 
lation by  not  having  the  veto. 

The  Di  moved  to  have  a  repre 
sentation  of  that  body  meet  with 
an  equal  number  from  the  Phi  in 
order  to  discuss  the  terms  of  the 
pending  debate  concerning  the 
Democratic  and  the  Republican 
parties. 

The  Di  now  has  the  portrait  of 
Dr.  Frank  Graham  which  former- 
ly hung  in  Graham  Memorial..  It 
will  be  hung  before  the  next  meet- 
ing. 


the  Supreme  Court's  1954  decision 
outlawing  racial  desegregation  in 
the  public  schools,  Nixon  replied 
that  the  administration's  main  job  1 
is  to  build  a  climate  of  favorable 
opinion  toward  integration,  not  to 
force   it. 

One    college    editor    asked    the 
vice   president    why    the   "change  " 
in  the  way  he  conducted  this  and  \ 
his    1952   campaign.   The    implica- 
tion was  that  Nixon  has  been  act-  1 
ing  more  like  a  gentleman  during 
this   campaign    than    he    did    four  i 
years  ago. 

Nixon's  answer  was  that  in  1952  i 
his  job  was  to  get  the  American 
people  to  vote  the  Democrats  out 
of  office.  Now.  he  said,  his  job 
is  to  help  keep  the  GOP  adminis- 
tration in. 

In  answer  to  the  question,  "Are 
you     writing     off     the     South     in 
1^6?"'    Nixon    promised    a    "sur- 
prise."  One   of   the   important   as-  j 
peels    of    the    Eisenhower    admin- , 
istration   "has   been  a  strengthen-  j 
ing  of  the   two  party   system"   in  1 
the   South.  I 

He    predicted    Republican    gains  | 
in  Texas  and  Virginia.  j 

The  college  editors  had  gathered  j 
here  for  a  one-day  field  les.son  in 
reporting  politics.  They  met  Nix- 
on when  he  came  in  yesterday  af- 
ternoon, listened  to  the  nation's 
reporters  run  the  vice  president 
through  a  mid-afternoon  press 
conference,  talked  and  ate  with 
the  reporters  and  got  a  chance  to 
fir^  questions  at  Nixon  himself. 

After  the  30-minute  television 
show  was  over,  the  vice  president 
answered  questions  from  the  edi- 
tors for  more  than  half  an  hour. 

The  press  conference  was  spon- 
sored by  Cornell  and  the  Cornell 
Dally  Sun,  campus  newspaper. 


Second  In  Film  Series 
Will  Play  Here  Tonight 

The  second  in  a  scries  of  for- 
eign films  will  be  presented  today 
at  8  p.m.  in  Carroll  Hall  by  the 
GMAB  Foreign  Film  Committee. 

A  Russian  film.  "Alexander 
Nevsky."  was  produced  in  1939  to 
serve  as  a  propaganda  tool  again.^^t 
the  Germans  and  their  early  at- 
tacks on  Russia. 

A  short  subject,  ""Cadet  Rou- 
selle,"  will  be  shown  in  addition 
to  the  main  feature. 

Tickets  for  the  series  may  still 
be  obtained  from  Graham  Me- 
morial, the  Yack  Office,  Aber- 
nathy  Hall,  Ledbetter-Pickard,  and 
at  the  door  of  Carrol  Hall  tonight. 


The   Court    handed    down   opin- 
ions in  eight  cases. 

In  another  case  it  ruled  that   a 
narfial   npw  trial   must  be  hold   m    Ush  early  in  1958. 
parnai  ne*   iriai  mu.si  or  ne.o  ^^^  ^7^^    designed  primarily  as        Come  stag  or  drag  for  this  fin-    North  Carolina's  Director  of  High 

a  textbook  in  courses  in  American  j  al   Hing  before    the    big   Carolina-    er  Education, 
literatiu-e,     American     civilization.  1  ^^^ryland  game 
folklore,  and   other   related   fields.  


a  case  from  Lenoir  County  where 
Mrs.  Adair  Lieb  sued  Dr.  Jerwmo 
Mayer  for  damages  as  the  result 
of  an  auto  accident  and  a  jur>- 
nwar'tTe'd  her  $ff:250  In  damages 
The  Suorcme  Court  ruled  that  th'' 
iury  did  not  have  sufficient  evi- 
dence to  make  a  finding  as  to 
damages  to  Mrs.  Lieb's  car  and 
said  the  new  trial  would  be  on 
the  issue  of  the  amount  of  dam- 
ages only. 


GM  Sponsor  Ensemble 
On  Campus  October  23 


hut  Itkcb*  tlsO  to  be  «f  iflt^rest  1o 
'hi'  trade,  will  consist  of  examples 
of  the  artistic  u.se  of  originally 
folk  material  by  outstanding 
.\nicrican  authors  and  others  less 
well  known,  with  introductory  and 
critical  matter,  biographical 
sketches  of  autHors,  and  bibliog 
raphies. 

Professor  Flanagan,  on  the  Eng- 
lish staff  at  Illinois,  is  a  specialist 
in  19th  century  American  litera- 
ture of  the  Middle  West.  Ameri- 
can   drama,    and    such    authors    a;. 


Graham       Memorial       has      an 
nounced  the  sponsorship  of  Solisti  '  Emerson  and  James  Hall 


Asian  Expert 
Will  Speak 
Here  Friday 

A  leading  expert   in  the  field  ol 
Southeast    Asian    affairs    will    de- 
liver  an    address    tomorrow    at    8 
p  m.  in  the  Assembly  room  of  the 
Library. 
I      Dr.      Amry     Vandenbosch     will 
I  speak   to   an    invited    public   on    i 
j  topic  entitled  "Political  Trends  ir 
!  Southeast      Asia,  "      according     t(; 
i  Andy    Milnor.    publicity    chairmai 
'  of  the  sponsoring  organization.  Pi 
j  Sigma  Alpha. 

j  Vandenbo.sch's  achievements  i 
political  science  and  Asian  affair.- 
range  from  a  Ph.D.  in  internation 
j  al  relations  received  from  the  Un' 
I  versity  of  Chicago  to  the  chair 
i  manship  of  the  Dept.  of  Politica 
I  Science  at  the  University  of  Ker. 

tucky. 
I  He  was  employed  by  the  Stat 
j  Dcpt.'s  Office  of  Strategic  Serv 
ices  as  a  Southeastern  Asia  expel 
during  World  War  II  year*  an 
was  a  member  of  the  U.N.  Secit 
tariat  during  the  founding  confc 
ence  of  the  U.N.  at  San  Francise 
in  1945. 

Difring  the  past  summer  Van 
denbosch  served  as  "tour  guide"- 
at  the  request  of  the  State  Dep* 
— to  a  group  of  scit-ntists  stud; 
ing  the  possibilities  of  exploitin 
peaceful  uses  of  atomic  energy  i 
Asia.  ■  ■  ^..,— ■■> 


di  Zagreb,  a  string  ensemble, 
which  will  make  the  initial  ap- 
pearance of  a  premiere  .American 
tour  in  Hill  Hall.  The  perform- 
ance wiy  begin  at  8  p.m.  on  Oct. 
2o.  Admission  for  sttidents  will  be 
free  and  student's  wives  $1  anrl 
others  $2. 


Dr.  Hudson,  author  or  editor  of 
books  and  articles  on  folklore  and 
other  .\merican  literature,  is  ex- 
ecutive secretary  of  the  UNC  Folk 
lore  Curriculum,  chairman  of  the 
UNC  Folklore  Council,  and  secre- 
tary-treasurer of  the  North  Caro- 
lina Folklore  Society. 


Acting    President    Friday    is    re- 
garded by   many  trustee  member.s 
as    (he    most    likely    choice    of   the 
I  committee     reporting     in     Ralei^iii 
.today. 

Since  1^1  Friday  has  served 
first  as  assistant  to  the  president 
and  later  as  secretary  to  the  Con- 
solidated University.  He  wa-  ap- 
pointed to  the  acting  presidency 
last    March. 

Friday.  36.  is  a  native  of  Virgin- 
it  and  was  educated  at  Wake  For- 
However,     the     big     exposition    est   tnd   at    the   University,   where 


Steady  Rain 
Cuts  Crowd 
At  State  Fair 

RALEIGH  'Jf^—A  steady  down- 
pour of  rain  cut  attendance  at  the 
North  Carolina  State  F'air  yester- 
day to  an  estimated  60.000. 


Persone!  In-Training 
Pro^fam  Set  Tonight 


The  first  meeting  of  the  year 
or  the  in-service  training  program 
lOr  dormitbry  and  sorority  per- 
•ionnel  will  be  hold  today  in  Car- 
roll Hall. 

The  meeting  is  scheduled  to 
start  in  Room  2  at  4:30  p.m. 

About  50  people  have  been  in- 
vited to  attend. 

Dr.  Claiborne  Jones,  who  has 
■lerved  as  a  faculty  member  on 
)oth  the  Administrative  Board  of 
student  Welfare  ^and  the  Faculty 
Executive  Committee,  will  start 
;he  program,  which  will  hav'e  as 
t  central  theme:  "The  .  Honor 
"ode  and  Campus  Code,  As  Ap- 
)licable  to  Group  Living." 

Invited  to  the  meeting  are 
Chairman    of  'the    Women's    Resi- 


kept  up  a  busy  pace.  The  grand- 
stand show  scheduled  for  this  att- 
jinoon  was   rained   out. 

The  exhibit  halls,  which  arc 
permanent  structures,  were  crowd- 
ed throughout  the  day.  Fair  offi- 
cials noting  Thursday's  forecast 
lor  clearing  weather  predicted  the 
attendance  will  pick  up  and  may 
yet  top  last  year's  record  of  600.- 
000. 

Shari  Lewis  of  Baykin.  Neb.. 
1957  American  Dairy  Princes.-*, 
visited  the  fair  and  helped  spot- 
light attention  on  the  state's  dairy 
industry,  which  is  being  featurcri 
at  the  fair  this  year. 

Highlights    of    tomorrovv"s    pro- 
PANEL     *^^>" '^ ''^   **  I  gram    will    include   harness   racing 

A  panel  will  be  held  with  .sev-  at  2  p.m.,  Holstein  and  Jersey  ent- 
eral students  and  members  of  the  tie  judging  in  the  arena  at  9:30 
administration  talking  on  various  i  am.  -  and  the  "Midwestern  Hay- 
pha.scs  of  the  honor  system.  ;  ride,"   starring   Pat   Boone,    in    the 

Jim   Exum  will  lead   off  with   i    arena  at  8  p.m. 
discussion  of  "Is  the   Honor  Code        At  noon  tomorrow  the  fair  will 
the  sane  for  group  living  and  for    dedicate  its  modern  dairy  bar  and    ciety      accepted,      10-3.      Tuesday 


he  obtained  his  law  degree  in  1948. 

The  selection  committee  report- 
ing today  is  headed  by  Victor  S. 
Bryant  of  Durham.  Other  commit- 
tee members  are:  Kemp  D.  Battle, 
Rocky  Mount:  Horton  Doughton. 
Statesville;  Dr.  Henry  .Mann,  En- 
glchard;  Rudolph  Minlz,  Wilming- 
ton; Mrs.  Albert  H.  Latrop.  Ashe- 
ville;  Dr.  Shahane  Taylor,  Greens- 
boro; W.  Frank  Taylor.  Golds- 
boro;  and  Mrs.  Charles  W.  Til- 
lett,  Charlotte. 


Phi  Votes  Stop 
Of  Foreign  Aid 
To  All  Nations 

The    Philanthropic    Literary    So- 


classroom?  "    .Miss  Jackie   Aldridgc 

of    the    Honor    Cotnmission    will 

speak  on  the  same  subject. 

j      Next  on  the  panel  Dr.  Katherine 

'  Carmichael,   dean    of    women,   and 

Miss  Pat  McQueen  of  the  Women '.s 

j  Council  will  discuss  "the  relation- 

,  ship    between    the    Campus    Code 

;  and  the  Honor  code. 

MAGILL 


milking   parlor.    Speakers   will    be    night,   a   bill   that   stated.   ".All   fi- 
•Agriculture    Commissioner    L.     Y.  ■  nancial    aid   to   foreign    nations   be 
Ballenline  and   Melvin  Cording  of    discontinued." 
Wallace,    president    of    the    North 


Carolina     Purebred     Dairy     Cattle 
.\ssn. 

The  biggest  free  program  tomor- 
row will  be  the  ninth  annual  folk 
festival. 


Representative  Jim  Montieth  in- 
troduced and  defended  the  bill. 
He  exclaimed.  "The  nations  of  the 
world  ask  for  pride  and  self-re- 
spect, and  we  give  them   dollars.  ' 

Making     a      qualifying     speech. 


j      More  horses  will  be  starting  in 
Sam  Magill.  director  of  student    tomorrow's    harness    races    at    the  i  Conditional     Representative    Louis 
activities,   will  speak   next    on   the    grandstand  than  ever  before  in  the    Coston  proclaimed  that   the  finan- 
pancl   about  rules   versus  code   of    history  of  the  fair.    Ben  T.  Frank  '  cial  aid  makes  the  foreign  markets 
lence  Council,  Women's  dormitory    behavior    and     how    the    Campus    oi    Paducah.    Ky..    race    secretary    strong  to  buy  U.  S.  products, 
iresidents,      sorority      presidents,    c^de  is  similar  for  men  and  wom-    and    presiding    judge,    said    there 


orority     house     managers,     house    gn  students. 

•ouncil  members  from  sororities,  pr.  Jones  will  be  asked  to  dis- 
:'.d  women's  dormitories,  women's  p,i<=s  drinking  and  the  Campus 
iormitory   hostesses,   sorority   and    Code. 

raternity  house  mothers  and  rep- ,      Luther  Hodges  Jr.,  chairman  of 
esentatives    from    the    following    the    panel    and    chairman    of    the 
ampus    offices:    Placement    Serv-    Honor  Council,  will  summarize  the 
ce.    YMCA.    YWCA,    Student    Ac-    discussion  of  the  panel   and  audi- 
ivities.  Office  of  Student  Affairs,    ence  discussion  is  expected  to  last 
office     of     Activities,     School     of    for  about  a  half  hour. 
«fursing,  Dept.  of  Dental  Hygiene,  i      Miss    MacLeod    will     greet    the 
Mrs.    Bessie    Buchanan,    hostess    group  and  introduce  Hodges,  who 
f  Spencer  dormitory,  is  chairman    will  take  over  the  panel. 
f  the  meeting.   Miss  Isabelle  Mac- 1      These    in-service    training    pro- 
.eod,   executive   secretary    in   the ,  grams  will  be  held  once  a  month 
lean  of  women's  office,  is  coordi-   during     October,     November,     De  ' 
uator  for  the  program.  '  cember,  January  and  February. 


will  be  32   horses  starting  in   the 
seven  heats. 'including  nine  in  the 
free-for-all  trot  for  the  Governor' 
Cup. 


Durham  Theater  Guild 
To  Present  'Stagedoor' 

The  Durham  Theater  Guild  will 
present     a    play    entitled    "Stage- 


Conditional    Representative    Da- 
vid  Matthews  said   that   the   U.   S. 
was  olaying  Santa  Claus  and  try- 
I  ing  to  buy  friendship. 

I      Several  other  people  gave  their 
views  on  the  bill. 

There  was  no  inductiem  of  new 
!  members  as  a  quorum  wasn't  pres- 
ent.   At    the    next    meeting.    Wil- 
liam   Rodmah.    present    .\.sse)ciate 


door"  Friday  and  Saturday  at  8:30  Justice  on  the  State  Supreme 
p.m.  in  the  Durham  High  School  ■  Court  and  former  state  attorney 
Auditorium.  i  general,    will    give    an    address    at 

The  play  is  directed  by  Jane  i  the  inauguration  of  Phi  officers. 
Hayes.  Its  cast  includes  Honey  A  Yackety  Yack  picture  will  be 
Barnes,  of  Chapel  Hill.  J  taken  ol  the  group. 


^A«i  rwo 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


THUI^SDAY,  OCTOiiR  li  lf5« 


Adiai  Has  Right  M^a 
On  H-Weapons  Issue 


The  nuist  siginlicaru  pledge 
brought  out  in  the  presidential 
campaign  so  far  is  Adlai  Ste\cn- 
soiis  promise  to  strive  to  curb  hy- 
drogen bomb  tests. 

Fcai  of  atomic  ^\-eapons  is  great 
in  this  atomic  age,  and  this  dec- 
laration of  StevenscMi's  may  well 
decide  whether  or  not  he  is  elect- 
ed. 

It  s  about  lime  someone  decid- 
ed to  do  something  about  the  grea- 
test of  devastating  weapons,  in- 
stead of  just  sitting  around  and 
talking  about  how  scared  e\eryone 
is  of  it. 

Stevenson  said  he  was  prepared 
to  seek  agiecment  with  the  So\iet 
I'liion  and  Britain  and  other  at- 
omic jx>wcrs  by  conference  or 
consultation  "at  whatever  Ie\el.  in 
whatever  place"  thai  gave  promise 
of   success. 

In  answer  lo  suggestions  that 
other  countries  might  get  the  jump 
on  us  if  we  stopped  the  tests.  Ste- 
\en>on  has  said  we  could  resume 
the   tests  if  other  countries  did. 


America  could  easily  do  this.  An 
agreement  of  the  kind  he  suggests 
is  not  one  that  other  countries 
could  violate  without  us  knowiii'* 
it.  There  is  probablv  no  plate  on 
earth  that  atomic  weapons — es- 
pecially such  an  enormous  we;vj)on 
as  the  H-Boml>— could  be  tested 
in  secret. 

The  I'nited  States  could  agree 
to  stop  the  tests  along  nith  other 
countries,  strengthening  the  faith 
in  human  existence  ol  many  |>eo- 
ple. 

However   if    other   countries    in 
.  the   agreement    resumed    the   tests, 
we  would  know  it  apd  resume  ours. 
Its  as  simple  as  that. 

President  Eisenhower  said  re- 
^centlv  he  had  said  his  "last  word' 
on  the  subject.  How  right  Steven- 
son is  when  he  sa-id  there  is  no  la>i 
word  on  this  subject.  The  last 
word  on  this  subject  will  come  just 
before  the  first  livdrogen  bomb  is 
dropped,  if  that  should  happen. 

We  hope  through  the  efforts  of 
Stevenson  that  this,  will  ne\  er  hap- 
pen. 


Time  To  Sfop  Prodding 


I  wo  of  the  most  o\crworked 
words  in  acti\e  university  circles 
todav  are  conformity  and  ap..ihy. 
College  editois  seem  to  take  de- 
ligin  in  be^ruc^ing  students  theii 
belts-in-f>a(  k  and  their  ri^ht  to  sit 
back  and  do  nothing. 

Yet  in  spite  of  all  this  attention 
and  fatherlv  advice  mobs  of  buckle- 
backed  individuals  continue  to 
commute  between  their  rooms, 
c  lasses  and  local  esiablishmeuts  of 
gojd  beer. 

The  vast  majo  it\  ol  stnc^cnts 
will  do  on'-  If. 'J  thing's  in  their 
four  -  ve.r.  iojourn  at  the  Utiivers- 
itv;  ill.,  uliich  they  have  to  do  to 
get  passing  grades  and  that  which 
they  feci  like  doing  at  a  given  in- 
stant. 

And  apparently  no  amouiu  of 
prodding  from  rvnvl>ody  will  do 
anv  more  towards  getting  them  in- 
volved in  other   activities. 

The  section  ol  the  student  bodv 
that   is  more  active  in  campus  af- 

The  Daily  Tar  H«el 

The  official  student  publication  of  the 
Publications  Board  of  the  University  ol 
North  Carolina,  where  it  is  published 
dailT  except  Monday  and  examinatioc 
and  vacation  periods  and  summer  terms 
Entered  as  second  class  mttter  in  the 
post  office  in  Chapel  Hill.  N.  C.  undei 
the  .\ct  01  March  8.  1870.  Subscription 
rates:  mailed.  $4  per  year.  $2.50  a  semes- 
ter; delivered,  $6  a  year,  $3.50  a  semei- 
ter. 

Editor  FRfU  POWLEDGE 

Managing  Editor  CIL\RLIE  SLOAN 

News  Editor  RAY  LENXER 

Business  Manager  BILL  BOB  PEEL 

Sports  Editor    LARRY  CHEEK 

Advertising  Manager Fred  Katzin 

Coed  Exlitor Peg  Humphrey 

KDITORLAL  STAFF  —  Woodir  Sears, 
Frank  Crowther.  Barry  Winston,  David 
ilundy.  George  Pfingst,  Ingrid  Clay, 
Cortland  Edwards. 


Staff  Photographer 


Norman  Kantor 


BUSINESS  STAFF  —  Rosa  Moore,  Jonny 
Whitoker.  EHck  Leavitt,  Peter  Alper. 


NE\VS  STAFF— Clarke  Jonti.  Nancy 
Hill.  J  Jan  Moore.  Pringle  Pipkin,  Anne 
Drake.  Bobbi  Smith.  Jenr  AlviS:  Elditfa 
MacKinnon.  Wally  Kuralt,  Ben  Taylor, 
Graham  Snyder.  Billy  Barnes,  Neil 
Bass.  Jim  Creighton,  Hil  Goldman, 
Phyllis  Maultsby. 


SPORTS  STAFF:  Bill' King.  Jim  Purk5. 
Jimmy  Harper,  bave  Wible,  Charley 
Uouson. 


Subscription  Manager  . Dale  Stale> 

Staff  Artist . Charlie  Daniel 

Nigjit  Editor  ^.-^     Cortland  Edwards 
Proof  Reader ..  Cortland  Edw'ardb 


fairs  continually  finds  itself  o\er 
a  barrel  because  most  activities  re- 
({uire  a  collection  ol  people. 

People,  student  people  at  least, 
are  not  ahvaas  available  just  for  the 
sake  of  showing  a  crowcl  to  a  visit- 
ing speaker  and  hoping  the  individ- 
uals in  the  crowd  might  benelit 
through  a  form  of  oral  osmosis. 

Perhaps  if  prodding  won't  do 
any  good  for  arousing  a  lively  in- 
terest in  activities  in  these  student 
apathists  someone  could  utilize  the 
herd  instincts  of  the  masses  and 
channel  whole  audiences  into  audi- 
toriums instead  of  building  a 
roomfull  of  people  spectator  by 
spectator. 

It  Has  Been 
A  Long  Wait 
For  A  Pres. 

This  morning  th«  committee 
charged  with  recommending  a 
new  president  for  the  Consolidat- 
ed Uni\ersity  nill  reveal  its  choice 
to  the  Board  of  Trustees'  Kxecu- 
tive  Committee. 

-Although  it  \vill  be  another  two 
or  three  Aveeks  before  the  Trustees 
have  a  session  to  elect  a  presideiu, 
there  is  a  feeling  that  the  days  of 
our  headless  I'niversity  are  at  an 
end. 

Describing  the  phenomena  ol 
universitA  admini'Jtration  which 
has  existed  here  since  i9.-,5  as  a 
headless  institution  is  not  quite  ac- 
curate. Two  fine  aicting  prcsideins 
ha\c  ghost-run  the  schools,  and 
ha\e'done  a  good  job  of  it. 

The  trouble  with  just  being  an 
acting  head  arises  when  a  major 
decision  has  to  be  made.  While 
both  I^r.  Purks  and  William  Fri- 
day ha\e  fjeen  exceedingly  cautious 
in  proceeding  on  such  alfairs,  they 
ha\e   usually  done  well. 

F.Aeryone  concerned  with  the  se- 
lecting is  keeping  quiet  cojitern- 
ing  exactly  ,  who  will  be  their 
choice.  .Naturally  this  has  giv- 

en rise  to  a  great  deal  of  specula- 
tion concerning  the  new  president. 

Acting  President  William  Fri- 
day and  several  otu  of  state  ad- 
ministrators had  been  f)rought  up 
a's  potential  presidents. 

In  addition  to  being  as  anxious 
as  anyone  as  tar  as  finding  out  who 
will  be  selected,  we  are  looking 
forward  to  again  ha\ing  a  full- 
time,  duly-elected  head  on  our 
consolidated  shoulders. 


PROSPECT  AND 
RETROSPECT 

Be  Yourself, 
And  Student 
Retaliation 

Neil  Bass 

Most  will  agree  that  an  at- 
mosphere of  pseudo-intellectual- 
i.sm  is  prevalent  in  some  campus 
quarters. 

Students  just  aren't  themselves. 

That  is  to  say.  some  students 
shed  their  natural  air  when  they 
hit  the  campus,  stifle  their  na- 
tural propensities  and  inclina- 
tions, and  twist  into  a  robe  label- 
ed: 

"I  am  a  brain  now. 

••I  must  impress  any  and  every- 
body wtih  whom  I  come  into  con- 
tact. 

"1  know  the  ropes.       •• 

•I,  I  I.  i:::' 

FRESH  AIR 

Ifs  like  a  breath  of  fresh  air 
lo  most  to  meet  a  student  who  is 
just  plain  old  whoever  he  is. 

If  you  are  a  scrounge,  act  a 
scroungc's  part. 

If  you  are  a  wheel,  act  a  wheel's 
part. 

But  never  get  the  two  confused. 
Forgr.t  where  in  the  hell  you  arc 
and  just  be  your.self. 
ON  THE   FENCE        ♦  j  , 

Concerning  a  minor  haggle 
which  this  ol'  reporter  got  into 
with  Benny  Thomas  of  the  Uni- 
versity Party  about  crossing  par- 
ty lines: 

(1)  The  reputable  source  men- 
tioned was  Thomas  himself  who 
said  he  would  turn  his  back  on 
the  UP  if  Party  Chairman  Mike 
Weinman  stressed  fraternity 
membei-^rip  more  than  dormitory 
menrbership. 

(2)  Weinman  had  acknowl- 
edged the  fact  that  fraternity 
pledge  classes  would  primarily 
make-up  new  membership  for  the 
party.  , 

(3)  But  now  Weinman  has 
talked  with  Thomas  and  agreed 
to  work  for  the  dorm  man  too, 
Thomas  said. 

That's  that.  .    ^  ,•' 

DRAWERS   RAID 

,  Prexy  Bob  Young  is  to  ho  com- 
mended for  quickly  and  quietly 
.stifling  the  britchcii  raid  last 
Wednesday  night. 

Men  in  quest  of  britches  are  to 
be  chastized  for  lack  of  organi- 
zation. 

BOYCOTT 

There's  an  air  of  boycott  in  the 
air. 

Barbers  have  hiked  pri-ces  to 
a  buck  and  2,5  pennies. 

The  Merchants  Association  has 
refused  to  lift  the  parking  re- 
striction  on  Columbia  Street. 

Students  just  aren't  getting  a 
fair  shake  from  the  sellers  down 
the  street,  .some  say. 

An  organized  boycott  may  be 
in  the  air. 

VETERANS 

Veterans  on  campus,  about  1.- 


''By  GoUy,  If  I  Had  A  Part  In  This  Campaign  -' 


Ti;->' 


\ 

800  strong,  haven't  ever  realized 
their    potential  strength. 

They  can  be  a  big  force  around 
election  time. 

They  have  a  number  of  cap- 
able leaders,  particularly  Dar- 
win* Boll  and  Benny  Huffman, 
who  are  workini;  admirably  to 
keep  vets  from  being  required  to 
take  phys.  ed. 

They've  done  a  great  big  job 
for  Uncle  feam.  and  niany  have 
family  responsibilities  and  should- 
n't be  required  to  don  shorts  at 
Woollen. 

Here's  fertile  ground  in  which 
political  parties  are  failing  to 
sow  vote-seeds.  .  . 

"BUNCH  OF  KIDS"  ■  -.-:  - 
Some  might  contend  that  this 
paper's  editorial  columns  show 
a  definite  lack  of  confidence  in 
.student  government  and  the  right 
of  students  to  govern  themselves. 
A  clear-cut  statement  to  sub- 
stantiate such  a  contention  is 
found  in  Tuesday's  paper  'in  an 
editorial  labeled: 

"Like  Parties?  Then  Sign  Up 
for  The  SSL." 

In  this  piece  it  was  stated  about 
the   state    student   Legislature: 

"The  SSL  holds  a  beerbust 
yearly  in  Raleigh  .  .  .  Touchy 
questions  will  come  up — questions 
like  integration — and  a  resolution 
will  be  passed,  but  the  state  will 
hardly  notice  a  resolution  pass- 
ed by  a  bunch  of  kids." 

This  statement  certainly  is  a 
moot  point.  Doe.s»  its  writer  feel 
that  students  should  sit  back  on 
their  haunches  and  not  make 
manifest  an  expression  on  im- 
portant questions,  social  and  oth- 
erwisep 


Certainly  the  student  Legisla- 
ture will  have  no  authority  to 
pass  laws,  but  the  stimulation  of 
student  opinion  which  will  nat- 
urally evolve  from  the  convening 
is  invariable   and    indespensable. 

And  who  is  to  say  whether  or 
not  any  resolutions  passed  will 
be   entirel\    disregarded? 

The  alumni  committee  select- 
ing a  successor  for  Chancellor 
House  requested  that  student 
opinion  be  voiced.  It  would  not, 
in  all  fairness,  have  made  the 
request  if  it  wasn't  planning  to 
take  the  student  selections  into 
thoughtful    consideration. 

And  editorial  writer,  editorials 
are  not   laws. 

But  they,  if  they're  up-to-par, 
certainly  help  stimulate  opinions 
— constructive  opinions. 

If  you  say  the  state  student 
^X'gislature  is  all  wet,  and  opin- 
ions and  resolutions  which  will 
be  formed  there  are  all  wet,  what 
good  are  editorials?  They  pass  no 
laws. 

Mull  it  over. 

The  Oktober 
Fest;  Songs, 
Fun  And  Beer 

Frank  Wamsley 

According  to  the  latest  news 
reports,  Munich's  annual  "Oktob- 
er Fest"  set  a  few  new  records 
this  year.  Visitors  (around  4 
million)  drank  more  beer  than 
ever  befoic  (one  million  gallons) 


and  stole  more  beer  mugs  (20,- 
000)  than  in  any  other  festival 
held  to  date. 

Now  Munich  is  a  large  city  and 
it  has  some  even  larger  bee-r 
halls.  But,  man  that's  drinking 
beer — even  for  the  Germans.  As 
only  say  that  the  tourists  are 
more  accomplished  now  than 
when  I  tried  for  one  of  those 
prized  souvenirs. 

The  "HofbraeuJiaus"  located 
there  is  probably  th*  largest 
beer  iNirlor  in  the  world.  It  has 
three  floors  and  at  least  that 
many  bands.  The  tables  are  bare 
wood — the  band  is  dressed  in 
Bavarian  costumes — and  beer  is 
served  in  foot  high  mugs. 

Never  will  I  forget  how  I  stood 
there  in  the  main  hall,  a  buck 
Private  in  the  rear  ranks,  and 
couldn't  believe  what  I  saw.  Back 
in  North  Carolina  people  just 
didn't  stand  on  chairs  and  tables 
and  sing  at  the  top  of  their  voices 
and  all  the  time  wave  an  enorm- 
ous mug  through  the  air. 

And  back  there  they  didn't 
have  any  Helga's  either.  How- 
ever, my  Army  Language  School- 
German  saw  me  through  admir- 
ably and  Helga  and  I  became  good 
friends.  Never  saw  her  again  but 
she  really  showed  me  Munich 
that  night. 

That  was  October,  1953.  I  saw 
the  town  many  more  times  there- 
after during  my  throe  year  stay 
in  Europe,  but  that  first  time 
really  stands  cut:  beer  gardens, 
happy  people,  laughing  and  sing- 
ing, dancing,  the  night  fireworks. 

That  was  Munich.  That  was  the 
"Oktober  Fest. "  That  was  a  first 
taste  of  Germany — on  a  weekend 
pass. 


Pogo 


By  Walt  Kelly 


l\'\  Abner 


By  A!  Cupp 


Short  Lives 
For  Texts 


Q 


>i 


For  the  first  time  in  five  years,  I  tiied  to  scir 
some  textbooks  today.  All  the  time  I've  been  hear- 
ing the  complaints  and  gripes  of  otfiers  about  the 
situation,  I've  just  dismissed  it  as  typical  grous- 
ing, for  lack  of  something  else  to  do.  Now  I  know 
better. 

It  seems  that  the  English  language  is  advancing 
so  rapidly  that  a  new  text  is  needed  every  three 
weeks  to  keep  up  with  the  innovations.  This  goes 
double  for  foreign  languages.  I  wanted  to  get  rid 
ol    a    brand-new,    nevcr-be^n-in-a-classroom-bcfore 

French      book, 
that's  being  used 
_^___„     ™___^_^^_^.^  ^^'*  semest-er.  No 

sa!erit's'^^l™e!"'There's  a  new  edition  of  it  com-' 
ing  out  next  semester. 

And  apparently  Pythagoras'  theories  are  aU  wet, 
now.  At  least  that's  the  impression  I  got.  They've 
discovered  so  many  new  things  in  algebra  lately 
that  another  edition  had  to  be  run  off  to  cover 
them  all.  Has  somebody  proved  that  2x2  no  longer 
equals  four?  Or  maybe  they  found  out  that  the 
square  root  of  minus  one  isn't  really  i.  Anyway; 
My  algebra  book  isn't  worth  the  matches  it  would 
take  to  put  it  to  its  best  use. 

And  World  History  .  .  .  well,  from  all  indications 
I'm  beginning  to  doubt  that  ole  Abe  really  did 
write  the  Gettysburg  Address,  while  riding  thru 
Pa.  on  the  back  of  an  envelope.  At  least  there've 
been  three  new  printings  of  that  text  since  I  tool%„ 
the  covu-se,  three  semesters  ago. 

Anyhow,  when  I  left  the  house  this  A-M.,  I  had*, 
tucked  under  my  arm  thirteen  books,  ranging  in. 
value  (in  my  uninformed  mind)  from  two  bucks  to 
five.  Hoo  Ha!  I'd  have  been  better  off  selling  fur 
mittens  to  billiard  balls.  Twenty  minutes  later,  and 
eight  books  lighter,  I  mustered  the  proceeds  from 
this  gala  sale  and  bought  a  pack  of  cigarettes. 

The  remaining  five  books  got  such  withering 
looks  that  I  checked  them  for  hieroglyphics  when 
I  got  in  the  car,  just  to  make  sure.  With  a  1W9 
copyright  in  them,  they've  been  out  of  print  for  so 
long  that  I'm  going  to  try  to  sell  them  to  the  Rare 
Book  Room  of  the  Library. 

Now  I've  heard  many,  many  so-ealled  justifi- 
cations for  this  system  of  quick-henry-a-new-edition- 
for-next-semester,  and  just  betwixt  thee  and  me, 
I  think  they  all  have  about  them  the  aroma  of  a 
goat  farm.  Sure,  we  need  to  keep  abreast  of  the 
newest  teaching  methods.  Sure,  unheard  of  things 
are  discovered  every  day. 

The  Lord  above  may  mark  the  fall  of  every 
sparrow,  but  do  the  publishers  have  to?  Is  it  really 
necessary  to  bring  out  a  new  edition  every  time 
a  national  figure  sneezes?  l>oes  all  this  higgledy- 
piggledy  printing  serve  any  functional  purpose? 
Besides  lining  somebody's  pockets,  I  mean.  I  real- 
ly doubt  it. 

The  tragedy  is  that  nothing  can  be  done  about 
it.  As  long  as  the  various  departments  see  fit  to 
decree  a  new  text  in  use  everj^  semester,  just  be- 
cause somebody  wrote  one,  we'll  keep  on  buying 
them  and  storing  them  in  the  attic  *til  we  run  out 
of  space. 

And  as  long  as  students  keep  on  buying  them, 
their  authors  will  continue  to  wTite  new  ones.  And 
as  long  as  new  ones  are  written,  the  departments 
will  use  them  just  as  fast  as  they  come  off  the 
press.  ■  ■     "  **  , 

Vicious  circle,  isn't  it?         *   . 

OTHER  NEWSPAPERS  SAY: 

*.  *^  -  af  .  jM-'  -.  «wt*9  jf      mt         -It  *»». 

Using  Hindsight 
In  Suez  Crisis 

"In  the  long  range  of  history,"  our  United  Na- 
tions correspondent  wrote  recently,  "the  fact  that 
the  Soviet  Union  is  obtaining  a  deep  foothold  in  the 
Mediterranean  may  be'  the  most  significant  result 
of  the  whole  Suez  dispute." 

Within  only  a  few  months,  as  diplomatists  in 
Washington  have  remarked.  Soviet  citizens  have 
burst  into  an  area  that  was  denied  to  them  for  200 
years.  They  have  sent  military  advisers  and  techni- 
cians into  Egypt  in  connection  with  arms  purchases. 

Russian  pilots  now  are  learning  the  intricacies 
of  the  Suez  Canal.  Egyptian  cotton  has  been  pledged 
to  Moscow  for  the  munitions.  President  Nasser  for 
a  time  consulted  daily  with  the  Soviet  Ambassador 
in  Cairo,  and  now  Soviet  delegate  Sobolev  has  pre- 
sented the  Egyptian  case  in  the  UN  Security  Coun- 
cil. 

Any  settlement  of  the  Suez  issue  in  the  Security 
Council  is  subject  to  a  possible  Soviet  veto.  And 
the  Communist  government  in  Moscow  has  built 
itself  up  as  a  friend  of  the  Arab  bloc  in  the  Middle 
East. 

To  ask  how  this  situation  could  have  been  pre- 
vented, one  must  go  back  over  a  series  of  decisions 
which  not  many  Americans  would  have  made  dif 
ferently  in  their  time  and  which  can  hardly  be 
reversed  now.  , 

For  instance,  there  is  the  existence  of  the  veto 
power  in  the  UN— without  which  there  would  have 
been  neither  Soviet  nor  American  participation  nM" 
a  LT>r. 

Then  there  is  the  existence  of  the  Republic  of 
Israel,  largely  a  creation  (rf  the  UN  under  impul- 
sion from  the  United  States,  for  which  America 
bears  a  great  burden  of  Arab  iU  will. 

There  is  the  reluctant  withdrawal  of  Britain  from 
its  great  Suez  military  base,  which  American  diplo- 
macy urged  in  the  interests  of  good  feeling.  Would 
it  have  been  wiser  to  have  encouraged  the  British 
to  stay? 

More  recenUy  there  is  the  withdrawal  of  the 
offer  to  h61p  finance  the  Aswan  Dam.  This  could 
have  been  done  more  tactfully,  but  would  the  effect 
have  been  different  and  would  Americans  now  be 
eager  to  go  through  with  the  plan? 

These  are  questions  which  it  may  seem  late  to 
raise.  But  they  are  the  starting  points  for  an  cx- 
ploratioc  which  American  statecraft  must  under- 
take with  great  vigor  and  seriousness:  How  is  the 
position  of  the  West  with  reference'  to  the  Middle 
East  to  be  improved? 


thursdayI 

Law 
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Top  hats 
order  of  the 
North    Care 
tending     th| 
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Richmond 
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THE  OAILY  TAR  HIIL 


Law  AlufT!ii>i  Vyrtl  CPHY^ne 
On  Campus  This  Weekend 

Top  hats  and  canes  will  be  the  ■  T.  Hamilton,  Smithfield:  L.  Poin- 

dexter   J\'atts    Jr..    Charlotte;    and 


order  of  the  day  for  University  of 
North  Carolina  law  students  at- 
tending the  Carolina  -  Maryland 
football  game  at  Chapel  Hill  Sat- 
urday, October  20. 

A  special  section  in  UNC's  Ken- 


Ted  K.  West,  Lenoir. 

The  fifth  annual  meeting  of  the 
Law  Alumni  Assn.  will  be  held  on 
Saturday  morning  at  11  o'clock  in 
the  courtroom  of  Manning  Hall,  the 
an  Stadium  has  been  reserved  for  I  UNC  Law  building.  The  secretary- 
the  law  students  who  will  be  I  treasurer  will  give  a  report,  the  an- 
celebrating  "Law  Day,"  according  j  nual  budget  will  be  passed  on,  and 
to  Dean  Henry  Btandis  of  the  Law  '  new  officers  and  directors  will  be 
School.  The  observance  will  be  a  elected, 
time    of    reunion    for   law  alumni,  ^ 

1'nr"/th'''''^''"°?  ^.^^^^  '  A(teino»V  H.  Elmore  WSII 

dents  IB  their  special  attirp..     -^''      «!  >ii^4TV  ^  ii 

Preceding    'Law   Day,"    on    Pri-  [     "•«'«OTC  COfTimander 

i^-'   ""W.^ia-   '°    ^'^^''    ^^"°^''!      ^^^'"ory    H-    Elmore   will' serve 
dm.ng  ha  11.  the  annual  dinner  will  ,  as   commander   of   the  Air   Fortre" 
b?  held,  to  which  are  invited  all  ;  rqtc    unit    at    UNC    during    the 
former  editors  and  staff  meipbers  |  1956-57  school  vear 
of   The    N^rth    Carolina   Law  Re 


PAGI 


MAGAZINE    SELLS 

The  annual  magazine  "Bargain 
Days '  are  scheduled  for  today  and 
Friday.  Members  of  Alpha  Phi 
Omega,  service  fraternity  on  camp- 
us, will  be  on  duty  in  Y-Court  and 
Lenoir  Hall  during  these  two  days 
to  sell  subscriptions,  obtainable  at 
a  reduced  rate,  for  -Life."  "Time." 
"Sports  Illustrated"  and  "For 
tune."  There  is  also  a  special  rate  i 
if  all  four  are  purchased.  | 

TENNIS  CLUB  ' 


9:00  Listen  Americii 

9:30  Masterworks  from  France 
10:00  News 

10:15  Evening  Masterwork 
11:30  Sign  Off 
WUNCTV 

Today  s  schedule  for  WUNC-TV, 
the  University's  educational  tele- 
vision station,  Channel  4: 

9:59  Sign   On 
10:00  State  Fair 
10:30  Castle 


11:00  Hi^ways  &  Byways 
The    W.A.A.    Tennis    Club    will,,  12:00  State  Fair 
meet  today  at  4  p.m.  at  the  gym.    12:30  The  Land 


.'IL 


view. 

Speaking  at  the  dinner  will  be 
.Judge  L.  Richardson  Preyer.  of 
the  North  Carolina  Superior  Court. 
Richmond  G.  Bernhardt,  Jr.  of 
Lenoir,  tlie  present  editor-in- 
chief  of  The  Review,  will  preside. 
Present  associate  editors  are  Jack 


Elmore,  who  has  been  named 
cadet  colonel,  is  a  senior  major- 
ing in  psychology  from  Shelby.  He 
was  designated  from  among  38 
seniors  to  head  the  corps  by  a 
board  of  Air  Force  officers  on 
the  staff  of  Col.  George  J.  Jmith, 
Professor  of  Air  Science  at  UNC. 


Y  SCHEDULE 

Activities  scheduled  for  the  Y 
,  today  are  as  follows: 

2  p.m. — Student  Exchange 
j  Scholarship  Committee.  Y  Cabinet 
{  Room.  Bill  Wible,  chairman. 

3  p.m.— YWCA    Cabinet    meet- 
__....                          I  ing.  Y  Cabinet  room. 

Truth  m|y  have  it  so,  but  not  j  4  p.m.-YMCA-Hillel  Film  For- 
m  a  collection  of  ancient,  spnght- 1  um  Committee,  Y  library  room, 
ly  tales,  which  the  Spanish  called  1  Holland   McSwain.  chairman 

I      5  p.m.— YWCA-YMCA  Publicity 


Women's  Wiles  Disclosed 
In  New  UNC  Press  Book 

Have  women  revamped  their 
ways  of  trickery  and  deceit  in  700 
years? 


"Libro  de  las  enganos." 

In  a  recent  translation.  Dr.  John 
E.  Keller  of  the  Dept.  of  Romance 
Languages  using  the  modern-day 
approach  has  come  up  with  a  more 
appropriate  title.  'The  Book  of 
Wiles  of  Women." 


Committee,  Y-library  room. 

5  p.m.— Race  Relations  Commit- 
tee. Y  library  room. 

6  p.m. — Y-Nurses     Association 
Committee.  Hospital  Cafeteria. 

6:30      p.m.— Faculty      Visitation 
Report  Meeting.  Gerrard  Hall. 


OnCsmpni 


with 
MotSMmam 

(Author  of  "Barefoot  Bn^  WitK  Cketk,"  ote.) 


New  members  are  welcome 
W.A.A.  VOLLEYBALL 

W.A.A.      volleyball      practice 
comes  to  a  close  Friday  afternoon. 
Teams    may    practice    this    after- 
noon- 4-6  p.m..  tonight  7-8  p.m.  and  ; 
Friday  4-6  p.m.  Only  those  women 
who  have  practice  will  be  eligible  ; 
to    play    in    the    tournament    next  : 
week.   A   double   elimination   tour  i 
nament  will  begin  Tuesday.  Oct.  23  ' 
at  5  p.m.  I 

FRESHMAN   CAMP   PICTURES 

Freshman  camp  pictures  are  j 
available  at  the  YMCA  (rffice.  I 
Those  who  ordered  may  pick  up  j 
the  pictures  between  8:30  a.m.  and  I 
4:30  p.m.  ) 

RULES    COMMITTEE 

The  Rules  Committee  of  the  Stu- 1 
dent  Legislature  will  meet  at  4  j 
p.m.  today  in  the  Council  Room  of  j 
Graham  Memorial.  | 

WUNC-FM  I 

The    schedule    for    WTJNC,    the  | 
University's     non-Commercial     FM  ' 
radio  station,  which  is  operated  on  | 
a    frequency    of    91.5    megacycles , 
and  power  by  12,000  watts: 
7:00  Intermezo 
7:15  Chalkdust 
7:30  Voices 

7:45  French  Press  Review 
8:00  Encore 
8:30  Folk  Music  of  the  World 


1:00  Today  on  Farm 
1:30  Music  in  View 
2:00  Your  Child 
2:30  How  to  Win 
3:00  State  Fair 
3:30  Sign  Off 
5:44  Sign   On 
5:45  Music 
6:00  Magic  Lantern 
6:.15  Sports  Clinic 
§:30  News 
6:45  Sports 
7:00  State    Fair 
7:15  Bible  Course 
8:00  Dr.   Shivers 
8:45  State  Gov't. 
9:30  Lecture  Hall 

10:00  Final  Edition 

10:05  Sign  Off 


»t; 


M«i*, 


■5c'k 


STUDYING  CAN  BE  BEAUTIFUL 

Is  studying  bugging  you?  Do  you  have  trouble  re- 
membering names,  date.s,  facte,  figures,  and  the  location 
of  the  library?  Dear  friends,  it  need  not  be  so.  All  you 
have  to  do  is  master  the  simple  art  of  mnemonics. 

Mnemonics,  as  we  all  know,  was  invented  by  the  great 
Greek  philosopher  Mnemon  in  526  B.C.  Mnemonics,  in- 
cidentally, was  only  one  of  the  many  inventions  of  this 
fertile  Athenian.  He  i.s  perhaps  best  known  for  his  in- 
vention of  the  staircase,  which,  a.s  you  may  imagine,  was 
of  inestimable  value  to  mankind.  Before  the  staircase, 
people 'who  wished  to  go  from  floor  to  floor  had  to  leap 
from  springboards.  Thi.s  meant,  of  course,  that  aged  and 
infinn  persons  v.ere  forced  to  live  out  their  lives,  willy- 
nilly,  on  the  ground  floor,  and  many  of  them  grew  cross 
a.?  bear.s.  Especiall.v;  Demosthenes,  who  was  elected  con- 
sul of  Athens  three  times  but  never  served  because  he 
was  unable  to  get  up  to  the  office  of  the  commissioner 
of  oaths  on  the  third  floor  to  be  sworn  in. 

But  after  Mnemon's  staircase  was  invented,  Demos- 
thenes got  up  to  the  third  floor  easy  as  pie  and  took  the 
oath— to  Athens'  .sorrow,  as  it  turned  out.  Demosthenes, 
his  temper  shortened  by  years  of  confinement  to  the 
ground  floor,  soon  embroiled  his  countrymen  in  a  series  of 
senseless  and  costly  wars  with  the  Persians,  the  Visigoths, 
and  the  Ogallala  Siou.x.  He  was  voted  out  of  office  in 
517  B.C.,  and  Mnemon,  who  had  made  his  accession  pos- 
sible, was  pelted  to  death  with  fruit  salad  in  the  Duomo. 


...  n(iewon'^a'^^eLTed-Xo.de^th-ni}i.{mt'^il^.- 


But  I  digrress.  We  were  di.scussing  mnemonics,  which 
are  nothing  more  than  aids  to  memory  —  catchwords  or 
jingles  that  help  you  to  remember  names,  dates,  and 
places.  For  example,  any  student  of  American  history 
surely  knows  the  little  jingle: 

Colnmbtis  sailed  the  oce<in  blue  1 

In  fourteen  hundred  ninety  two. 

You  see  how  simple  a  nmemonic  is?  There  is  no  rea- 
son why  you  can't  make  up  your  own.  Say,  for  instance, 
that  you  are  proceeding  with  American  history. 

The  Pilgrims  landed  on  Ply^nonth  Rock 
In  sixteen  hundred  twenty,  doc. 
(This  jingle  is  especially  useful  to  medical  students.) 
The  next  important  event  is  the  Boston  Tea  Party. 
Let  us  compose  a  rough-and-ready  couplet  about  that: 
Samuel  Adams  flung  the.  tea 
Into  the  briny  Zuyder  Ze^. 

You  can  see  how  simple  and  useful  they  are  —  not 
only  for  history,  but  also  for  current  events.  For  instance. 
In  nineteen  hundred  fifty  six 
It's  the  cigarette  that  clicks! 

What,  you  ask,  is  the  cigarette  that  clicks?  Why, 
Philip  Morris,  of  corrisi  And  why  shouldn't  it  click? 
Could  any  cigarette  be  more  plea^ung  to  the  palate  ?  No ! 
Could  any  cigarette  be  more  tempting  to  the  taste  buds? 
No!  A  thundering,  thumping,  resounding  no!  Get  some 
todav,  hey.  You'll  see. 

<S,U*x  Sbulman.  1958 
« 
'  You  uion*l  need  mnemontea  to  remember  the  wonderful  natu- 
rat  flavor  of  PhiUf/  Morrit  dgaretlei,  whoM  mukert  are  de- 
lighted  to  bring  }ou  thi$  column  every  iveek. 


I  or 
pr 


YM,  YW  Seek 
Bigger  Budget 

A  Faculty  Fund  Drive  is  being 
conducted  through  today  under 
the  joint  supervision  of  the  YMCA 
and  the  YWCA. 

The  purpose  of  this  campaign  is 
to  increase  the  budget  of  the  YM- 
YWCA.  About  130  people  are 
working  on  the  Finance  Commit- 
tee under  the  direction  of  Curtis 
Daughtiy  and  .Miss  Lee  Ann  Cur- 
tis. Y  treasurers. 

A  banquet  in  the  Episcopal  Par- 
ish House  Monday  at  6:15  p.m.  be- 
gan the  drive.  Dr.  Willard  Graham 
of  the  School  of  Business  Admin- 
istration addressed  the  group. 

The  YM  and  YWCA  are  financed 
by  contributions  from  the  Uni- 
versity Administration,  facility 
members,  interested  students,  par- 
ents and  citizens  of  Chapel  Hill. 
The  budget  of  the  Y  is  approxi- 
mately $14,000.  The  students  con- 
tribute over  half  the  above  amount 
and  the  faculty  about  one-eighth. 

The  YM  and  YWCA  plan  camp- 
us wide  events  for  men  and  wo- 
men. These  include   study  groups 


Positions  Are 
Open  On 
Debote  Squa4 

The  Debate  Squad  still  has  posi- 
tions open  for  interested  students, 
according  to  Dave  Lieberman,  pre- 
sident of  the  Debate  Squad.  Plans 
(  are     now   underway   for     tourna- 
I  ments   throughout   the     year,     he 
I  said. 

!       \o   forma!    debating   experience 
j  is  necessary.  According  to  Lieber- 
I  man,  the  majority  of  college  stu- 
1  dents  begin  debating  with   no  ex- 
perience. Debate  keys  are  award- 
j  ed   on   the   basis   of   participation, 
interest,  and   excellence  as   a   de- 
bater. ,' 
At    the    Debate    Squad    meeting  ' 
Monday,  plans  were  discussed  for 
the    novice    tournament    at    Wake 
Forest    on    Oct.    26-27.    This    tour- 
nament,  which  features  top  south-  j 
ern   schools,   is  op'jn  only   to  stU-  j 
dents  who  have   never  participat-  ■ 
ed    in    a   college   tournament.           ; 
The     next   tournament    is     the  i 
Southern    Conference    Invitational  j 
Tournament  at  Columbia    S.  C  oB  ' 
Nov.  8.  9.  and  10.                                 | 
In     addition   to     a   number     af  I 
others,    UNC    will    participate    ito  I 
the    annual   Southern    Universities , 
Forensic  Tournament   at   New  Of- 1 
leans  in  the  spring.  Six  Universi-  < 
ties — Emory,    Vanderbllt.    Tulant. ! 
Rice,  Texas  and  North  Carolina-*-  { 
are  in  this  tournament. 

Tournaments  on   the   UNC  cam- 
pus   will    probably    be   scheduled 
with  Wake  Forest  and  Duke,  Lie  j 
berman  said.  •  | 

Next  week  the  Debate  Squad  | 
will  meet  on  Monday  and  Tuesdm?  j 
at   4   p.    m.   in   Graham   Memorial  { 


on  social,    religious    and   personal 

oblems.  The  Y  brings  outstand-  j  to  discuss  the  forthcoming  tourn»- 
ing     religious     and     educational' ment.     At   the  Monday     meeting. 


leaders  to  the  campus.  It  also  pro- 
motes church  attendance  and  con- 
ducts conferences  in  Christian 
leadership. 


Yack  pictures  will  be.  taken.  All 
male  members  have  been  request- 
ed to  wear  ties  and  coats  for  the 
pictures. 


Convention  Weekend  Hectic 
For  Carolina  YD^  Delegates 


Tired  delegates  from  the  Caro- 
lina YDC  are  recovering  from  a 
hectic  weekend  at  the  Stale  YDC 
Convention  in  Winston-Salem  "e- 
cently. 

Although  the  Campus  Club  did 
not  sponsor  a  candidate  of  their 
own  for  state  office  this  year,  un- 
der the  leadership  of  President 
George  Miller  from  Spencer  and 
th  guidance  of  politically  .seasoned 
Herb  Toms  of  Concord,  the  Caro- 
lina YDC  participated  widely  in 
the  elections  of  several  of  the 
winning  candidates. 

Miller  nominated  and  rallied 
support  for  Johnny  Ray  Hendren 
of  Statesvile,  and  a  senior  at  Wake 
Forest  Law  School,  who  was  elect- 1 
ed  to  the  position  of  State  Secre- 
tary by  acclamation.  I 

Toms  managed  the  campaign  of 
Miss  Betty  June  Hayes,  Hillsboro, 
register  of  deeds  for  Orange  Coun- 
ty, who  was  elected  to  the  office 
of  National  Committecwoman  by 
acclamation. 

The  Carolina  delegation  played 
more  than  a  small  role  in  the  ex- 
citing victory  of  Attorney  William 
Z.  Wood,  Winston  -  Salem,  candi- 
date for  National  Committeeman, 
over  William  Smith  of  Charlotte. 

Of  those  presently  affiliated 
with  the  Carolina  YDC  attending  f ice. 


the  convention  were:  George  Cog- 
gnis,  R.  B.  Dawes,  Earl  Dawkins. 
Charlie  Dean,  Joel  Fleishman.  Tom 
Garner.  Miss  Harriet  Holt.  Miss 
Eula  Hux,  Miss  .Vancy  Lattimore, 
Miller.  Marian  M  .ze,  Jack  Ogburtt, 
Buck  Ramsdell,  Miss  Anne  Shat, 
R.  J.  Sales,  Jim  Streves,  Toms,  Toil 
Warlick.  Charlie  White  and  Mrs 
Sally  While.  *; 


GMAB  Hjs  Combo 
Information  Service 

Graham  Memorial  Ac^^'ities 
Board  is  now  maintaining  a  combo 
information  service  as  assistance 
to  both  campus  musical  groupis 
and  organizatioijs  interested  ill 
providing  musical  cntcrtainmcat 
fur  social  affairs.  " 

The  GMAB  office  will  maintaio 
a   file   listing  combos,  their  busl 
ness  managers  and  the  telephone  j 
number  of  those  handling  arrang#>  j 
ments  for  the  group.  " 

This  service  will  be  available  to  | 
any  group  calling  the  GMAB  of- 
fice. I 


Combos  who  are  interested  i|i 
having  their  group  listed  in  thjfe 
file  should   also   contact    the   ol 


THIEI 


Covering  The  Campus    I 


Own  All  Purpose 

OIL 


dexola 
29c 


Pint 
Bottle 

Quort 
Bottle 


53 


<^^»N^^^<^^^^^^^^^^^^^» 


A6P  MARKS  ITS  97tk  ANNIVERSARY  ALL  THIS  MONTH  WITH 


ANNIVERSARY 

1859  -  19Se 


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Pork  &  Beans 
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4 


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29 
39 

ans    J9C 


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MARCAL 

I     •    PAPER  PRODUCTS    • 

/  Waxed  Paper  _.   ^^-^     22c 
i   Dinner  Nopklns  2  ^-^^  29c 
/   Poster  Napkins      %-^      10c 
i    Toilet  Tissues    3     hoiis    29c 
C    Sondwich  Bogs       *;^     1  Oc 

/    REGULAR  PAPER 

I  Napkins    TS  10c 


^»^^^^^<M>0^rf^rfMMMM»rfM^^^^MMMM^> 


TIN^ 
GREEN 


LIMAS 


—  ARMOUR'S 

I  Treet    ^^^^^    "^^    35c   / 
f    Chopped  Ham       "^    49c    I 
*    Potted  Meat  __.  *^^    13c    I 
/   Corned  Beef  __.    'I^*-    45c    I 
/  Beef  Stew ^•-.^"    35c    i 


MEL-O-BIT 
PROCESSED 

Green   Giant 


8-Oz. 
Pkg. 


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_.  303 

16-Oz. 

Con 


25c  CORN  ^^  2'^'"'33 


FRESHLY  BAKED  JANE  PARKER  ENRICHED 


I  C 


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CHERRY  PIE 

A&P'S  OWN  BRAND  CRESTMOh 

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15 


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21c 
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A^P  s  Dependably  Delicious  "Super-Right"  Meats! 


"Super-Right"  All  Meet 

1-Lb. 
Pkg. 


Franks 

Morrell's  Yorksh 

Bacon 

"Super-Right" 

Liver 


Morrell's  Yorkshire  Sliced 

1-Lb. 
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Lb. 


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i 

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STEW  -  -  -  59c 


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2  ^  29c 


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WHOLE  or  HALF      SHANK  PORJTlON       CENTER  SLICES 


COMPLEXION 

Woodbury  Soap 


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2  lat  25c 


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2  "S'"  17c 


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7c 


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Bar 


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10c 


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Bar 


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3  «°"^  23c 


45 


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33 


Per  Lb. 


89 


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2  l:S  25c 


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lona  Tomatoes 


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25c 

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UNCLE  BEN'S '^"^if/^^^sS   17c 
CLOROX  BLEACH  ..   b^o^    17c 

SPECIAL!  CRISPO  QUALITY 


4<;oz. 
Can 

No  2 
20-Oz.Can 

12-02. 
Can 

280z 
Box 

'/2  C.al. 
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27c 
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2J0  W.  Franklin  St. 


STORE 

ADDRESS 

These  Prices  Effective  Throogh  Saturday,  October  2«h 

■"^^^^"^  AMHicAt  nw en  ttm  wimm  . . .  tma  iMt 


f^pi  Super  l^arkets 


T 


U>-' 


tlFIGeARS.  ...  .-. 2  Lb.  Pkg.  43c 


>A6t  FOUt 


THl  DAILY  TAR  HiiL 


THURSDAY.  OCTOBgR  18.  1956. 


Tatum  Is  'Unhappy  But  Not  Discouraged'  Over  Tar  Heels 

Win  Over  Generals  Satisfies  Soccer  Team 


RICHARD  CONTE 
'  LEE  J.  COBB 
|!£LEN  WALKER 


TODAY 
ONLY 


1  .  .  M  much  more  difficult  than  it  looks. 
Lon^  experience  and  great  skill  are 
needed  to  make  a  suit  with  an  authentic 
natural  (minimum  padding,  slightly 
«  sloped)  shoulder.  The  famed  H.  Freeman 
"-  tailors  have  had  more  than  two  decades 

of  iBastery  in  9oft>constructing  this 
clataie.  That's  why  their  •"Naturalaire" 
has  such  authoritative  perfection  and 
quiet  iiood  taate. 

T  A 1 1  o  t  E  •  «  1I*TUSMAN  A  SON  r  H 1 1 A  0 1 1  p  H I A 

Handsem*  €«ll*ct'ien  of  worsted  saxony  suits  in  olive/charcoal, 
lovat  brown,  and  grey  heather. 


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DAILY    CROSSWORD 


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11.  Sultan's 
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11.  Kitchen 
utensil 

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t^nuine 

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15.  Destruction 
^;       19.  Snare 

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%       18.  Female 
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calendar 
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dirt 
23.  PeriiMi   ' 
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V^    M.Exdls.;^! 


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waves 

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DOWM 
1.  Name 
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weapon 

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9.  Basket 
for  ftsh 
T.  Cue 

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9.  Insect 
organs 

10.  Wandering 
14.  American 
,  clergyman 

and 

antiquarian 


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architec- 
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Ypcterdmy'i  Aniwrr 

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37.  Foumla- 
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43.  Dip 


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26.  Shaping  tpol , 

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Garolini 
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a  leaf 

38.  Indefinite 
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43.  Vice-presi- 
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I  44.  Drupelets 

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Better  Days  Ahead' 
Says  Tar  Heel  Coach 


By  BILL  KING 

"Unhappy  but  not  discouraged,'* 
was  the  way  coach  Jim  Tatum 
oxpros.sed  his  feelings  about  ihe 
Carolina  Tar  Heels  at  his  weekly 
press  conference  here  Tuesday 
night. 

Speaking  to  local  newspaper- 
men at  the  Carolina  Inn,  Tatum 
declared  that  he  was  not  at  all 
happy  about  the  situation,  but 
Ihat  ho  was  not  discouraged.  "'I 
came  hero  to  do  a  job  and  al- 
though wo  are  off  to  a  slow  start, 
I  feel  that  there  are  better  days 
ahead." 

The  Tar  Heel  mentor  continued 
preparations  for  the  clash  with 
Maryland  Saturday,  with  few  line- 
up changes.  The  major  changes 
had  L^o  Russavage  and  Don  Red- 
ding running  at  the  tackle  posi- 
tions and  Emil  DeCantis,  an  out- 
standing back  in  the  Georgia 
game,  working  at  fullback. 

Coach  Tatum  was  concerned 
with  the  condition  of  sophomore 
center  Ronnie  Koes  who  was  in- 
jured in  the  South  Carolina  game 
and  missed  the  Georgia  contest. 
It  was  thought  that  Koes  would 
be  available  for  full  duty  Satur 
day,  but  the  husky  center's  back 
collapsed  in  practice  Tuesday.  Ta- 
tum stated  that  he  is  still  hoping 
that  Koes  will  be  able  to  start  at 
center  Saturday;  if  not  he  will  go 
with    junior  Fred  Swearingen. 

Asked  about  the  dismissal  of 
second  string  guard  Howard  Wil- 
liams and  reserve  halfback  Dickie 
Darling,  Tatum  said  that  they  had 
been  dropped  for  "disciplinary 
reasons."  Darling  was  dropped 
last  Friday  and  Williams  on  Sun- 
day. 

Coach  Tatum  wa.^-  asked  if  he 
had  any  kind  of  time  table  set  up 
which  he  thought  would  bring 
Tar  Heel  teams  to  the  top  in  the 
near  future.  To  this,  Tatum  re- 
plied that,  "we  don  t  have  any 
special  table;  We're  just  going  to 
orogress  as  rapidly  as  possible. 
Im  certainly  not  giving  up  on  any 
of  my  boys  this  season  or  next." 

UNC  athletic  director  Chuck 
Frickson  told  the  press  confer- 
ence that  the  advance  sale  of 
tickets  for  the  Maryland  game  is 
the  best  of  the  season.  This  is  the 
University  of  Maryland's  football 
caravan  weekend  and  Erickson  is 
expecting  between  two  and  three 
thousand  students  from  Maryland 
to  attend. 

The   Marjiand  team  will  arrive 


RECENT  AND  GOOD 


PAPER-BACKS 


in  Durham  Friday  and  will  make 
its  headquarters  at  the  Washing 
ton  Duke  Hotel.  Tatum  will  carry 
the  Tar  Heels  to  Durham  Friday 
night  and  they  too  will  stay  at  the 
Washington  Dtike  to  get  aWiay 
from  the  pre-game  -  tension  '  oh 
campus. 

Elrickson  added  that  he  expect- 
ed 25,000  or  30,000  at  the  game 
Saturday  and  possibly  more.  "Otir 
people  have  stuck  with  the  ball' 
club    this    year,"    he    said,    "and* 
they're  hungry  to  see  some  foot- J 
ball."  I 

Tatum  was  very  enthusiastic ! 
about  the  Maryland  game.  "It  j 
ought  to  be  a  very  fine  game  with 
a  lot  of  good  football,"  he  said. 
"Maryland  is  looking  on  it  t:>  get 
into  the  win  column  and  they'd 
like  nothing  better  than  to  beat 
me,"  he  smiled.  They've  given  us 
some  hope  since  they've  had  a 
rather  poor  season  also."  he  con- 
tinued, "I  guess  you  could  say 
that  they  are  in  oiu*  bracket  now." 
Tatum  added  that  "I  sure  would 
like  to  beat  them.  A  victory  would 
certainly  help  us  a  lot  right  now." 


The  varsity  soccer  teams  4-1 
win  over  the  Washington  and  Lee 
Generals  Tuesday  afternoon  was  a 
soiu*ce  of  satisfaction  for  Coach 
Marvin  Allen  and  his  squad  in 
more  ways  than  one. 

The  victory  not  only  signified 
Carolina's  second  straig^it  victory 
this  season  in  as  many  games,  but 
it  also  was  the  first  time  a  UNC 
soccer  team  has  beaten  Washing- 


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BECKETT:  Waiting  for  Godot 
(Evergreen)  ^1.00 

BECKETT:   Mslone   Dies. 

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COHEN:   A  Preface  to  Logic 

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DILL:    Roman   Socisty   From   Nero 
to   Marcus   Auralius  $1.95 

DAWSON:  The  Making  of  Europ* 
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Drams.    9Si 

FRY:  Vision  and  Dasign 

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(Harvest) 95# 

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Writers.  ,. $1.55 

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KRUTCH:  The  Modern  Tempar 
(Harvest)       .  _    _v 95< 

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(Evergreen) $1.45 

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YOU'LL  ALWAYS  FIND  THE 
BEST   NEW    PAPER-BACKS  AT 

The  Intimate 
Bookshop 

205   E.  FRANKLIN  ST. 
CHAPEL   HILL 


Monogrammers  Meet 

The  Monogram  Club  will  meet 
tonight  at  7  p.m.  in  the  Mono- 
gram Club.  Yack  picturos  will 
b«  takon,  and  all  membors  ara 
requested  to  wear  shirts,  tie  and 
their  ntonogram  sweater. 


I  MURALS  I 

Due  to  inclimate  weather  yes- 
terday, all  intramural  football 
games  were  postponed.  These 
games  will  probably  be  inserted 
into  next  weeks  schedule. 
TOMORROW'S  SCHEDULE 

At  4:00  p.m.:  Field  1,  DKE  vs. 
Theta  Chi;  field  2, "Bet a  vs.  Sigma 
Nu;  field  3,  SAH  vs.  XA;  field  4, 
the  scheduled  game  between  Phi 
Gam  and  Lambda  CM  has  been 
postponed  until  next  week;  field  5, 
Phi  Kappa  -Sig  vs.  Chi  Psi. 

At  5:00  p.m.:  field  1,  Chi  Phi  vs. 
ZBT;  field  2,  ATO  vs.  SAK;  field 
3,  Pika  vs.  Kappa  Sig;  field  4,  2ota 
Psi  vs.  Phi  Gam  (W);  field  5,  Chi 
Phi  vs.  Delt.  Sig  (W). 

The  Intramural  department  is- 
sued a  final  reminder  i:o  all  dormi- 
tories and  fraternities  that  today 
is  the  la.st  day  that  volleyball 
team  entrances  would  be  accepted. 


Rhodes  Applicants 
Approved  By  House 

Chancellor  R.  B.  House  has  an- 
nounced the  approval  of  recom- 
mendations by  a  faculty  commit- 
I  tee  nominating  representatives 
j  from  the  University  of  North  Car- 
:  olina  to  compete  in  the  Rhodes 
j  Scholarships  this  year. 
I  The  committee,  under  the  chair- 
i  manship  of  Dean  J.  C.  Sitterson, 
selected  the  following: 
i  James  Gooden  Exum  Jr.,  Snow 
'  Hill,  N.  C;  Luther  HartweJl 
j  Hodges  Jr.,  Leaksville.  N.  C;  and 
Robert  Bingham  Jacobus,  Raleigh, 
N.  C. 

I      The   State   Committee  of   selec- 
tion   will    meet    on   December    12, 
1956,  and  the   District  Committee 
j  will  make  final  awards  on  Deccm- 
;  her  15. 


toy . . . 
'  UndnrttaniUng 


'Oman  I 


M-G-M  prcKnU  in  CLNKJUaSCOPE 
»nd  METROCOLOR! 

Tea  and 
Sympathy 


Deborah  Ken- John  Kerr 

NOW  PLAYING 


/«s:»-i  n-.i^>,-„^^  ^ 


CLASSIFIEDS 


PAPER-BACKED  BOOKS  —  Good 
used  novels,  detiective  yarns  and 
non-fiction  at  3  for  25c  in  the 
stand  by  our  front  door.  The 
Intimate   Bookshop. 


CONFUSION— WENT  TO  THURS- 
day  night  show  with  brown 
zipper  jacket  and  left  with  grey- 
blue  tweed  sport  jacket.  Will 
gladly  exchange  or  ij^tum.  Cor\ 
tact  C.  Howerlon,- •iiam'bda  Cii. 
Alpha  House.  >  ' 


ton  and  Lee  on  Smith  Field  where 
the  game  was  played.  I 

"This  field  gives  me  the  willies" 
a  relieved  Coach  Alien  exclaimed 
after  the  final  quarter  had  endtsi,  j 
'We've  never  beaten  them  here."  j 

Carolina  wasted  little  time  in  its  \ 
successful  effort  to  break  the  j 
Smith  Field  jinx,  exploding  for  | 
three  quick  goals  in  the  first  quar- 1 
ter.    Capiain  Grover  Brown  boot- 1 


ed  the  first  goal  and  Coleman 
Barks  added  two  more  minutes 
later  to  put  the  Tar  Heels  ahead 
to  stay,  3-0. 

Carolina's  forward  line  was 
halted  by  the  Washington  and  Lee 
defense  for  the  next  two  quz^rters. 
Washington  and  Lee  had  several 
shots  on  goal  but  filled  to  capital- 
ize on  the  opportunities. 

A  penalty  kick   by   Washington 


and  Lee's  Beldon  Butterfield  in 
the  fourth  quarter  gave  W  &  L 
its  first  goal,  and  spoiled  goalie. 
Chuck  Hartman's  bid  for  a  second 
straight  shutout. 

The  varsity's  next  contest  will 
be  with  the  Davidson  Wildcats 
Friday  afternoon  at  3  p.m.  on. 
Fetzer  Field.  This  will  be  the  first 
meeting  between  the  two  as  Da- 
vidson   adopted   soccer   this   year. 


"Chapel  Hill's  Shopping  Center 


Plenty  Of  Free 

PARKING 


i.  V- 


Shop  And  Compared  fl 


if  COMPARE  FOR  STYLE 
if  COMPARE  FOR  QUALITY 
if  COMPARE   FOR  PRICE 


■  1 

.^o^^l 

1 

''  ->  A 

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^^^M 

1 1 

:-*-^ 

^^^1 

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ftf'tj***"  .wf> 

»•    .  ^     r 

■.-' 

u.  .—.-' 

.'5- 

';1;; 

l^':";} 

■-•' 

ivy  League 

Black  Cottons 

Ivy  league  blacks  that  are  full  cut 
and  sanforized  for  long  com- 
fortable   wear.    Size    28  38. 


MAIN   FLOOR 


Jelk-  Leggett^orton  Go. 


OPEN  TILL  8:30  FRIDAY  NITE 


CHAPEL  HILL 


''>^ 


\ 


Cfetpal  HIIX,  !•  €• 
8-31-49 


WEATHER 

F«ir  and  cooler  with  «n  axpect 
ed  high  6f  S2. 


©IC 


aTarXcel 


PRESIDENT 

We're  geHin^f  a  very   9»«<1 
See  oditoriai,  peg*  2. 


VOL.    LVII    NO.  25 


Complete  (/P)   Wire  Service 


CHAPEL  HILL,  NORTH  CAROLINA,  FRIDAY,  OCTOBER   19,  19M 


Oifices  in   Graham   Memorial 


FOUR   PAGES  THIS    ISSUE 


PRESIDENT: 


COMMITTEE    APPROVES     FRIDAY 


Traffic  Commission    . 
Says  'No  Decision' 
On  Problem  Reached 


By  NEIL  BASS 

"No  decision"  was  reached  yes- 
terday in  a  joint  student  govern- 
ment Traffic  Commission-Board  of 
Aldermen-Merchants"  Assn.  meet- 
ing, accoiding  to  commission  chair- 
man Wilburn  Davis. 

The  meeting,  held  to  discuss  the 
Columbia  St.  parking  restriction 
imposed  by  the  Board  of  Alc'er- 
men,  was  declared  'closed  to  the 
press"  by  Chairman  Davis. 

Chairman  Davis  said  the  meet- 
ing was  'closed"  because  repre- 
sentatives from  the  three  groups, 
^udents.  aldermen  and  merchants, 
vmitP'i  to  exchange  "personal 
views." 
RESTRICTION 

The  two-hour  restriction  imposed 
b>-  the  aldermen  applies  to  Colum- 
bia St.  between  Cameron  Ave.  and 
Franklin   St. 
.  Fraternity  men  living  in  houses 


on  Columbia  have  complained  that 
the  restriction  causes  much  incon- 
venience to  them. 

The  meeiing,  which  was  held  in 
Graham  Memorial's  director's  of- 
fice at  4:30,  was  the  last  held  be- 
tween the  three  groups,  accord- 
ing to  Chairman  Davis. 

"We    will    await    final    decision 
from     the     board     (of     aldermen), 
whicn    IS    expected    soon,"    Davis 
said. 
REPRESENTATIVES 

Present  at  the  closed  meeting 
were: 

Whit  Powell  and  Miss  Elizabeth 
Branson  from  the  Merchants'  As- 
sociation; Paul  Wagner  and  Ken- 
neth Putnam  from  the  aldermen 
and  Chairman  Davis  and  Clark 
Hinkley  from  the  Traffic  Commis- 
sion. 

Roland  Giduz,  "unofficial  rep- 
resentative from  the  merchants," 
also  attended  the  meeting. 


Sttuient  itsing  typemiter  for 
short  answer  qui^  tkcring  8  a.m. 
Education  41  cUvs. 

V  V  t 

Broken  record  fouivd  on  grass 
iinth  label  "Student  Govern^ 
ment." 


Yugoslavian  Ensemble 
To  Play  Here  Tuesday 

The  Sol'sti  di  Zagreb,  a  13-inan 
Yugosla\ian  chamber  music  en- 
semble,   will    2'vc   a    contM-t    Tues-  | 

I  dav  evening  at  8  o'clocy  in  Hill 
H.nll  under  sipoosorshlp  of  Graham 
Memorial. 

>iow  in  its  pi-eniier?  .\aiierican 
tour,  the  en.<emble  is  condiicted  by 

I  .\ntonio  Jang^x).  who  's  also  'cello 
soloist. 

!      The   concei"*    is    free   for    Univer- 

!  sity  students.    .Admission  of  $1   for 

'  students  wives  aaid  $2  to  tlie  geu- 
oral   puiwic    will    be    eliarged. 

I      Ticket's    are   on    sale   in    GriOia^n) 

i  Memorial. 


Nomination    Of   Friday    Is 
Endorsed   By    Le 


Committees  Recommendation 
To  Be  Weighed  By  Trustees 
At  Raleigh  Meet  Next  Friday 

By  CLARKE  JONES; 

:'■■''''     .         Special  to  The  Daily  Tar  Heel 

R.\LEIGH— It   is   virtually   certain  William    Friday  will  be  the  next  Consolidated  University  pres- 


dent. 


day 


ure 


The  Student  ^Legislature  last 
night  commended  the  Executive 
Committee  of  the  Board  of  Trus- 
tees for  its  nomination  of  William 
C.  Friday  for  Consolidated  Uni- 
versity president. 

The  nominating  committee  head- 
ed by  Victor  S.  Bryant  Sr.  of 
Durham  was  also  commended. 

A  bill  calling  for  the  endorse- 
ment of  the  committees'  action 
was  introduced  by  Whit  Whitfield 
iSP)  and  passed  by  special  order 
of   business. 

The  measure  also  stated  "Fri- 
day is  a  man  uniquely  aware  of 
the  needs  of  the  University  com- 
munity" and  ■'.  .  .  demonstrated 
his  ,devotion  to  the  concept  of  stu- 
dent freedom  at  the  University." 
Under  old  business  the  legisla- 
ture last  night  considered  the  fol- 
lowing measures: 

(DA  resolution  urging  coopera- 
tion among  organizations  in  sche- 
duling events  on  campus: 

(2)  A  bill  to  appropriate  money 


to  the  Sophomore  Class:  1 

(3)  A  bill  to  appropriate  money  j 
to  the  Student  Council;  (4)  A  bill  | 
to  appropriate  money  to  the  UNC  ' 
Debate   Council.  | 

The  resolution  urging;  coopera- ' 
tion  among  campus  organizations, ; 
introduced  by  UP  member  Al  ^ 
Goldsmith  last  week  after  the  de-  j 
feat  of  a  bill  providing  for  a  co- ; 
ordinating  committee,  was  carried 
at  last  night's  session. 

The  measure  provided  all  heads 
of  campus  organizations  be  urged 
to  schedule  all  events  of  interest 
to  UNC  students  so  as  not  to  con- 
flict with  previously  scheduled 
events.  It  urged  all  groups  to  sche- 
dule their  events  through  the  Of- 
fice of  the  Director  of  Student  Ac- 
tivities. 

In  introducing  his  resolution 
last  night  Goldsmith  stated,  'This 
is  a  milder  "way  of  urging  coopera- 
tion" th?.n  the  bill  defeated  in  last 
week's  session.  » 

The  legislature  also  passed  a  bill 


appropriating  $125  to  the  sopho- 
more class  to  supfileonent  lunds 
already  appropriated  the  class  for 
a  Carolina-Woman's  College  Soph- 
omore Dance.  The  bill  was  intro- 
duced by  SP  member  Don  Furta- 
do  and  UP  member  All  Golds- 
mith. 

The  legislature  also  passed  a 
measure  appropriating  $18.60  to 
the  Student  Council  to  cover  the 
cost  of  extra  printing. 

A  bill  to  appropriate  $300  to  the 
UNC  Debate  Council  was  defeated 
on  the  grounds  the  $1500  approp- 
riation last  spring  to  the  Debate 
Squad  was  sufficient  to  defray  de- 
bating   expenses. 

Two  measures  were  introduced 
last  night  and  will  come  up  for  vote 
before  next  week's  session: 

(1)  A  bill  to  provide  funds  for 
the  maintenance  of  men's  domi- 
tory  television  sets; 

(2)  A  bill  to  form  a  commit- 
tee to  investigate  the  expenditures 
of  the  debate  council. 


ACTING   PRESIDENT   BILL   FRIDAY 

a   pentuivevt   job  nxnc 

Friday's  JMaming 
Has  CU  Approval 


Reception  For 
AFROTC  Here 

The  AFROTC  held  a  reception 
on  Tuesday  at  Graham  .Memorial 
fur  the  nominees  lor  sponsors  o. ) 
the  six  air  force  squadrons  on 
campus. 

Fifteen  coeds  were  invited  to 
m^et  the  senior  cadet  officers  and 
the  commissioned  air  force  officers 
and  their  wives. 

The  nominees  will  be  interview- 
ed next  ■  Tuesday  and  five  girls 
will  be  chosen  as  sponsors. 

There  are  20  sponsors  who  aci 
as  hostesses  for  the  squads  at  all 
social  functions. 

The  coed  nominees  were  received 
by  Susan  Walker,  honorary  cadel 
colonel:  Major  George  Smith  of 
the  Air  Force  Department  and  Ma- 
jor J.  Gabbus. 


The  news  of  Friday's  recom- 
mendation has  met  with  approval 
on  the  campuses  of  UNC.  N.  C. 
State  and   Woman's   College. 

Following  are  some  representa- 
tive comments: 

XJfiC      Chancellor      Robert      B. 
House:    'Bill  is  the  best  qualified  , 
man  for  the   job."  | 

Dr.  J.  L.  Godfrey.  Faculty  Coun- 
cil chairman:  "As  far  as  I  know 
the  faculty  will  be  well  plea.scd 
with  the  selection.  It  has  great 
confidence  in  Friday." 

Dr.  Carey  H.  Bostian.  N.  C. 
State  Chancellor-  "We're  greatly 
pleased.  We  consider  Friday  very 
understanding  and  one  who  is 
aware  of  the  educational  needs  of 
North  Carolina.  We're  pleased  to 
have  someone  who  understands  N. 
C.  State  Jollege  as  well  as  he  does. 
We  feel  he  has  a  great  deal  of 
vision  and  a  desire  to  maintain 
high  acad?mic  standards  and  pro- 
vide a  form  of  higher  education 
uhich  North  Carolina  needs.  We 
look  forward  very  much  to  serv 
ing  under  his  administration." 

W.  W.  Pierson,  Woman's  Col- 
lege acting  chancellor:  "I'm  initi 
a'lly  pleased  that  he  has  been  nom 
inated.  He  was  my  personal  choice 
and  \  have  everj  confidence  that 
he  will  have  dist  nguishcd  sue 
cess.  I  think  in  person  and  ad- 
ministrative ability  he  is  an  ad 
mirable  choice."  * 


Bob  Young,  student  body  presi- 
dent: 

."Congratulations,    Mr.    Friday!! 

'•I  feci  that  .students  al  the  Uni 
versity  of  North  Carolina  at  Cha- 
pel Hill  are  very  pleased  with 
the  announcement  from  Mr.  Bry- 
ant's committee.  Student  govern 
mcnt  has  backed  William  C.  Fri 
day  from   the   very   beginning.   It 


Pep  Rally  Scheduled  For 
Tonight  In  Parking  Lot 


is  very  gratifying  to  see  that   the 
matter  has  been  settled. 

"I  am  sure  that  Friday  will  have 
the  interests  of  students  at  all 
three  branches  of  the  Consolidat- 
ed University  in  mind  as  he  as- 
sumes his  duties.  His  work  as  act- 
ing president  has  been  most  .sat- 
isfactory; now,  in  an  official  po- 
sition, I  feel  that  he  will  show 
a  more  dynamic  and  responsible 
type  of  leadership  for  this  great 
university,  in  one  of  its  most  try- 
ing times. 

"Students  should  be  proud  of 
the  recommendation  of  Friday.  On 
behalf  of  the  student  body,  let  me 
pledge  the  cooperation  of  student 
government,  student  government 
leaders  and  the  individual  stu- 
dents. We  "arc  all  looking  forward 
to  working  with  Friday 
the  days   ahead." 

No  More  Thefts 
Sirtce  Thursday 
Says  Jefferies 

There  are  no  further  develop 
ments  concerning  thefts  which 
have  taken  place  on  campus  since 
last  Thursday,  according  to  Ray 
Jefferies,  assistant  to  dean  of  s(u- 
j  dent  affairs. 

Police  believe  there  is  an  or- 
^ani^cd  ring  operating  on  campus, 
hut  have  no  new  leads  toward 
identifying  the  ring,  a  police 
spokesman  said. 

Cobb  Dorm  seems  to  be  the  main 
targ.t  of  the  t!iieve.<,  as  the  great- 
.st  numlwr  of  thefts  have  taken 
place  there.  | 

Students  have  been  urged  by 
Jefferies  to  lock  doors  when 
'caving   their  rooms. 

In  the  event  something  is  stolen  | 
Indents     should     report     immed- 
ately     to     their     respective   dorm  . 
manager,  Jefferies  said.  ) 


The    Executive    Committee  of    the   UNC   Board  of  Trustees  yesterday   unanimously  approved   Fri- 
for  the  presidency  . 
The  full  Board  will  hold  a  special  meeting  next  Friday  at  2  p.m.  in  P.aleigh  to  act  on  the  commit- 
tee's approval. 

The   Executive  Committee,   meeting  in  special  .session   in  Gov.  Hodges'    office    in    Raleigh,    first 

■ ♦heard  a  report  from  a  special  trus- 

I  tee  committee  to  pick  a  new  presi- 
I  dent. 

:  The  report  of  the  committee, 
headed  by  Victor  S.  Bryant  Sr.  of 
Durham,  contained  a  unanimous 
recommendation  for  Friday.  The 
Executive  Committee,  after  hear- 
ing the  recommendation  and  some 
discussion  on  the  matter,  appro\-ed 
Friday. 

The   Executive   Committee   thettl 
calicj    a    special    meeting    of    the^ 
full   100-man   Board  for  next  Fri- 
day. The  meeting  will  be  heW  in 
■  the   Hall   of  the   House  of  "Repre- 
I  sentatives. 

The  CoosoJidated  University, 
consisting  of  UNC  at  Chapel  Hill, 
Woman's  College  in  Greensboro 
and  N.  C.  State  in  Raleigh,  has 
been  '  without  a  permanent  presi- 
j  dent   since   June.    1955. 

Gordon  Gray,  then  president, 
was  granted  a  leave  of  absence  at 
that  time  to  serve  as  .\ssistant 
\  Secretary  of  Defense  in  Washing- 
]  tos.  He  later  offered  his  resigna- 
1  tion,  accepted  by  the  Executive 
;  Committee   last   November. 

Dr.  J.  Harris  Purks  first  served 
as  acting  president  after  Gray's 
appointment  'o  Washington.  Fri- 
day was  appointed  to  the  position 
when  Purks  resigned  to  become  di- 
rector of  the  State  Board  of  High- 
I  er  Education. 

Friday  said  he  would  make  no 
comment  until  after  the  special 
meeting  of  the  full  board  next 
Friday. 

Members  of  the  selection  com- 
mittee, in  addition  to  Br.vant, 
are:  Kemp  D.  Battle.  Rocky  Mount; 
Horton  Doughton,  Statesville:  Dr. 
Henry  Mann.  Englehard:  Rudolpi^ 
Mintz.  Wilmington:  Mrs.  .\Ibert 
j  H.  Latrop,  Asheville:  Dr.  Shahane 
i  Taylor,     Greensboro:     W.     Frank 


W.  C.  Friday  Will  Be 
Youngest  President 

If  William  Clyde  Friday.  36  year  old  native  of  Dallas.  N.  C. 
is  named  President  of  the  University  by  the  Trustees  next  week, 
he  will  be  the  youngest  man  ever  to  serve  as  head  of  the  Consoli- 
dated University. 

Born  on  July  13,  1920.  Friday  attended  Wake  Forest  College  as 
an  undergraduate,  but  transferred  to  State  College  where  he  gradu- 
ated with  a  B.S.  in  textile  engineering  in  1941. 

Following  service  in  the  Navy  during  WW  H,  Friday  entered- 
the  law  school  ^l  Chapel  Hillv  receiving  his  aw  degree  in  194«. 

At" State  College  he  was  president  of  the  19*1  senior  class,  presi- 
dent ol  the  North  Carolina  Federation  of  Student  Gi-vernments  and 
a  member  of  the  .Golden  Chain. 

He  served  as  president  of  the  Law  School  Association  while  at 
UNC  and  was  a  member  of  the  Golden  Fleece,  highest-ranking  honor 
organization. 

Upon  graduation  from  the  Carolina  law  school.  Mr.  Friday  was 
immediately  named  as  assistant  to  the  dean  of  students. 

H"  was  chosen  by  President  Gordon  Gray  as  his  personal  as- 
sist? in  1&51.  and  was  later  appointed  as  Secretary  to  the  Con- 
soli  <«ied  University 

On  March  1.  1956.  Friday  succeeded  Dr.  J.  Harris  Purks,  who 
had  held  the  office  of  actin-g  president  since  the  resignation  of  Mr. 
Gray. 

Friday  is  the  son  of  Mr.  and  Mrs.  Latham  Friday  of  Dallas.  Hf 
is  married  to  the  former  Ida  Willa  Howell  of  Lumberton,  and  they 
have  two  daughters,  Frances,  age  tour  and  Mary  Howell,  age  eight 
weeks. 


Playmakers  Continue 
'Anastasia'  Tonight 

The   first   play  of   the   Carolina 

Playmakers,     "Anastasia,"     which 

opened    Wednesday    night    al    the 

Playmakers      Theatre,      will      run 

during    through  Sunday. 

The  play  begins  at  8:30  p.m. 
Marion      Fitisimmons.      veteran 


IDC,  WRC 
Hold  Fete 


The  Interdormitory  Council  and 
Women's  Residence  'Council  held 
a  .ioint  supper  Wednesday  night  in 
Lenoir  Hall. 

The  two  groups  discussed  plans 
for  joint  socials  to  be  held  be- 
tween men's  and  women's  dormi- 
I  Playmaker  from  Chapel  Hill,  plays  ;  iorie>s  during  the  1956-57  academ- 


one  of  the  leads,  that  of  the  Do- 
wager Empress  of  Russia.  The 
other  lead,  played  by  Rusti  Roth 
rock  of  Anniston.  Alabama,  is  that 
of  .\nast3sia. 


i*MP 


MIbAU  cheerleader    JIM  BYNUM 

U'uibi   niliy   Ktniglit 


A  pep  rally  will  be  held  tonight 
at  8  p.m.  in  Hanes  Parking  Lot 
between  "Y", Court  and  Memorial 
Hall. 

Bruno's  combo  will  provide  mu- 
sic for  this  get<togethcr.  There 
will  be  special  entertainment  in  ,  ^^^  football  team  by  turning  ou- 
eluding  surprise  acts  and  impor-  j  in  a  gigantic  mass  for  this  pep 
tant  guests.  Also,  there  will- be  j  rally  before  the  t'arolina^Vlarylanf' 
much    yelling    and    singing.    Jim    game. 


Bynum.  head  cheerieader.  has  ur 
ged  that  "everybody  come  out  and 
have  a  big  time." 

Bynum  asks  that  Carolina  coed.'- 
and    Carolina    gentlemen    support 


IN  THE  INFIRMARY 

mmmmmmmmmtinmitmmmm   m        I'l  "•   i   ii 

Those    In    fhc    Infirmary    yes- 
terday  nieludMi: 

Misses    Alma    Gedsey,     HeUn 
Dixon,     Martha     Dawson,     Jenc 
Westbroek,   Lerna    Lutes,   Susan 
Edmunseit,     Pauline     Sims    «nd 
Joan   Ashley,  and   Charles   Gray,    , 
George       Stanvnitski,       Stephen    | 
K«utzer,  Johnny  Johnson,  Claude  ^ 
Moore.     Hal     Johnson,     Charles    [ 
Shoe,     William     Heck,     Chilton    i 
Jones,    James    Crumpler,    Frank 
Bynum,  John  Johnson,  Abe  Wals- 
ton,     Cloyrf      Beokout,     William 
Yost,  Jam*s  Cenoly  and  William 
.Willis. 


ic   year,    according  to   Council   of- 
ficials. 

Present  from  the  WRC  were: 
Misses     Harriet    Horney.    Betsy 
Farmer,   Jeanne  Sill  ay.   Betsy   Mc- 
Kinnon,    Gail    Wright.    Joy    Earp.- 
Je- '-1    Ruffalo<': 

Carolyn  Greene,  Babs  Moore. 
LinUj  ochoat.  Sally  Peter,  Joyce 
Holland,  Jean  Peay.  Has^riet  Scha- 
fer.  Elaine  Burns  and  Ellen  Brau- 
er. 
Present  from  the  IDC  were: 
.^uii.iy  Hr^liford,  Neil  Bass.  Tom 
Walters.  Bob  Caijter,  Lew  Har- 
dee, Jimmy  Womble,  Whit  Whit- 
field and  Benny  Thomas. 


Taylor,  Goldsboro  and    Mrs. 
les   W.   Tillett.   Charlotte. 


Char- 


P.rvant  said  that  his  committee 
had  .screened  124  names.  He  said 
this  list  had  been  reduced  to  11 
last  May  and  had  been  further 
reduced  until  it  went  before  the 
executive  committee  today  with 
only  one  name. 


GM'S  SLATE 

TrrairJ?3^^W^5ucl»rToardr 


Roland  Parker  Lounoe  3,  5-6:30, 
IDC  end  IWC;  Woodhouse  Con- 
ference Room,  2:30-5,  State 
Student  Legislature. 


DTH  Errs  In  Reporting 
Phi  Society's  Actions 

The  Pnilanthropic  Literajj-  So-  j 
'•iety  defeated  a  measure  this  | 
.•<.pW  «-h»rh  cal'«»d  for  an  end  to  I 
U.  S.  foreign  aid.  i 

The  Daily  Tar  Heel  erroneously  j 
"eported  yesterday  that  the  group 
approved  the  bill  by  a  vote  of  10- 


Resolution  On  Ellerbe 
Passed  By  Legislature 

A  resolution  concerning  the  recent  death  of  Robert  L.  Ellerbe,  Jr. 
was  passed  by  special  orders  in  last  nighf  s  Student  Legislature  meet- 
ing. 

Ellerbe,  a  student,  was  killed  in  an  automobile  accident  early 
Monday  morning  near  Burlington. 

A  copy  of  ttte  Resolution,  Introduced  by  John  breoits,  will  be 
sent  to  Eilerbe's  parents. 

Members  of  the  Student  Legislature  said  in  the  Resolution,  "we 


3.  Actually.  th<-   Phi   defeated   the      deplore   the  untimely  accident"  i 
nea.sure,  .10-3.  I«st   K^ertday. 


in   which    Ellerb*    was   killed   early 


Town  Girls'  Assn. 
Choose  Representatives 

Representatives  to  various  cam- 
pus organizations  were  seCected 
by  the  Town  Girls'  .Association  al 
their    initial    meeting   Wednesday. 

Kay  Proctor  was  selected  to 
;  represent  the  group  in  the 
j  Women's  Athletic  .Association; 
i  Miss  Harriett  Horney,  TG-\  past 
president,  and  Miss  Ellen  Brauor 
j  to  the  Independent  Women's  As- 
sociation; and  Eliie  Cowing  to  the 
■  rWA  and  the  University  Club. 

Carla  .Smith.  TG.A  president,  ap- 
pointed    Nancy    Jane    Royster    as 

j  membership  chairman  and  Ellie 
Cowing  gs   publicity  chairman. 

The  next  meeting  of  the  TGA 
is  slated   for   Oct.  24  at  6:45  p.m 

!  in  the  TGA  room  located  on  the 
second  floor  of  the  Y  buHding. 
Ml  interested  persons  are  invited 

:  to   attend   this^  meeting,   at   which 

1  new  officers  jjrijl  be  elected. 


PAGE    TWO 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HIBL 


FRIDAY,  OCTOBER  19,  1956 


fridayI 


William  Friday  Will  Bring 
The   Era  Of  Good  Feeling' 

Thr  rnl\eisity's  exerntive  trus-  ministrators.  He  does  not  phut- 
tee  (oinmittee  did  tlie  best  jxissi-  the  value  ot  the  vi<  h  almuniis 
hie  ihiiio;  yesterday.  above   the   standards  of    ediuation 

It    iinanintoush    aj^reed    to    the  lor   the   people  of    this  state.   I'n- 

selettion    ot     William     Friday     as  like    many    eolle|S>e    presidents,    he 

president  ol  the  Coilsolidated  I'ni-  will   not  j>«>  out  of  his  way  to  sell 

vcrsity.  his   university   down   the   river  for 

Now.  we  hope,  Friday's  endorse-  a  handful  ol  ^tAd. 

ment  bv  the  whole  Hoard  of  Trus-  Friday     is    not    too    steeped    in 

tees  next  week  will  be  little  more  atademit     tradition    to    lor<>ei    ihc 

than   a   fVirmal   and  official   ajijree-  practical,  economit    problems  of  a 

ment    to   the     Trustees'    F.xecutive  }Hi<»e       Consolidaicil        rni\ersiiv 

Committee   adion   yesterdav.  siu  h  as  ours. 

Friday's    nomination    had   extra  lu   shoit.    he    takes   the    l'ni\er- 

force  because   it  was  unanimously  sitvs  scales,  so  often  (MU  of  kilter, 

aoreed  to  bv  nine  of  the  Consoli-  and   balames  them  ne.itlv. 

{lated      University's     most     distin-  Thf-re  is  one  other  thing  about 

giiished  trustees.  And  nmiors  from  William    Friday    that    needs    men- 

ilie  Consolidated  I'niVersity's  thiee  tionin".    He   has  a  quality   that   is 

campuses  have  it   that  the  majori-  alm(ist    lost    nowadays    in    educa- 

lies  (»l    all   three   faculties  were  in  tional  ( ircles.   He  is  honest. 

fa\<ii    ot    Friday    for    tlie    position  William    Friday    is    luinest    with 

he  <l(^erves.  himself,    with    his   co-wot kers.   his 

Fiiila\'s    appciintment.     we    be-  fatidty  membets  and  his  students, 

lieve  uill  be  the  siu;nal  foi  a  total-  He  does  not  figiue  om  the  admin- 

Iv    new— and    definitely    good— era  istratively     coriect     answer     to     a 

in    the-   history   of  .North   Carolina  (juestion;    be    answers    with    what 

biglm    education.    He    is    a    man  he  believes. 

born   .md   bred  in  Tar  Heel  edit-  Not    long    ago,    a    student    here 

cation:     lie    knows     by    heart     the  voiced    the   opinion    that    Carcjiina 

problems      that      the      rniversity.  had  embarked  this  vear  on  an    "eia 

State   C<»llege    and    the    Woman's*  df  go^Kl  feeling."  The  student  was 

College  must  cope  with,    'ay  after  talking    primarily    about    relations 

dav— ind  be  knows  how  to  haiidle  between  students  and  '.acuity.  Hut 

those    problems   effectively.  liis  c|uoiation  woidd  fit  well  liere. 

Willi. nn    Friday   has   the   respect  The    Daily    Tar     Heel    believes 

of  most  ol  the  people  of  this  I'ni-  that    an    '"era    of   g<M)d    feeling  "    is 

versitv   and  of  this  state.   He   wilf  being  approached  bv  the  Consoli- 

l)e    able    t(»    deal    effectively    and  datefl     I  University  —  gcxxl     feeling 

lionestiv   with   the  Noith  Carolina  based  on  good  lelationships  among 

(ieiieral  Assembly,  the  agency  that  administration,     latidtv.     students, 

confirms  din    trustees   .nid  dictates  alumni    and    the   taxpaying   people 

our  builmt.  Iridav   is  ;   j  cxcelleiu  of   this  state. 

man  to  ha\e  in  Niich  a  position.  President    \Villiam    Friday    will 

Fiidav    is    not    a    business    ujan  jyromote  and   be  responsible  Icm    a 

fike    nian\     Anu  rican    college    ad-  grtat   deal   of  that  gocKl   feeling. 

They  Bypassed  Democracy 

Student      TrafHc      Commission  This  can't  l>e  done   if  meetings 

Cha-irman    WilhihfB   Davis  has   no  aie  held  in  "executive  session." 

right  to  hold  a  <  losed  meeting.  Chairman    Davis,    his    counnis- 

He  did  pist  that  yesterday.  "o^  ^^^  aldermen  and  the   mer- 

Chair.nan  Davis,  ^^•hose  commit^  ^.^"^^    ^^^0"!^      be      condemned, 

tee  was  meeti.r^  with  the  town  al-  T^hey  have  missed  democracy  com- 

dermen  and  -lie  Chapel  HiU-Carr-  P'f'^^'y- 
Ikmo  .Men  ;  :.:i  s'  .\ssn.,  told  a  Daily 

Tar    li.rl    reporter    yesterday   the  A---        ^ rvx^ ^^r\ 

meeting  would*  be  a  closed  one.  AWv  «      ^IM   ^^M! 

Davis  aTtd  the  aldermen  and  the 
meichants  have  no  moral  or  ethical  |i'^        Ilie4-       ^ 
right    to    close    their   deni>erations  ||    S      JUST      A\. 
to  tlie  ptd)lic    or  the  public's  rep- 
resentatives. D^^wifc.       D«%ll%« 

The   business  befote    the   traffic  f^SD       1^.911  y 

commission,     the     toun     alid    the  '^                         ' 

merchants   is   the   publics   business  ,.,,j,^,^^   ^.^..^„^   ,^^,^    ,^^^,    ,.,^^   j,^^ 

-the     campus     |)arking     probleui.  (Vj^olina   spirit.    When    a   reporter 

rhe   students   and    the    townspeo-  ^„„,,,^.^^^,    ^ead    Cheerleader    |im 

pie    deserve    to    know    what    their  j^^^^^^^^^    ^^^  ^^^  .^   ^^^^^.^,    ^^^^    ^^^^^^^,^ 

elected  and  appomted  representa-  _     ^,^„^    jjy,^^,^,^  ^^^,^j  j,^^  ^.^^     ^i^. 

lives  are   discussmg.   a-nd    m    what  ^^   th^^t    he    (Bvnum)   didn't    want 

context    then    de<isions  are  reach-  .,„y,,,i„,.  j,,   \^^^  ,j„,y   ,,,.„    ,,.,,„,,i 

*■''• .  indicate  that  the  event   v,as  going 

ThO  Daily  Tor  n66l  lUnum     told     the     reponer    to 

Tlie  official  stucient  publication  of  the  "»ake  it  look  like  a  dance,  a  little 

Publications  Board  of  the  University  ol  soci:'.!    event,    but   not    tc»    mention 

North   Carolina,   where   it   is   published  that   it   woidfl  end  up  being  a  pep 

daily    except    Monday    and    examinatiot  rally, 

and  vacation  periods  and  summer  terms  ,.      ^,^     ^^^j^j     j,^^     reporter     to 

Entered   as  second  class  matter  in  tm  i       •,   i      i     ii           ,                 i-..i 

.     ,,       .     „.       ,  „.,,    .,   f,    .,„A^,  make  it    f)ok  hke  a  dance,  a  little 

post  office  in  Chapel  Hill,  N.  C,  undei  ■    ,                   , 

the  Act  ox  March  8.  1870.  Subscription  s^><  «al   event,   but   not    to   mention 

rates:  mailed,  S4  per  year,  $2.50  a  semes-  that  it  would  end  up  being  a  pep 

ter;  delivered,  $6  a  year,  $3.50  a  semes-  rally, 

ter,  He  told  the  reporter  if  the  siu- 

Editor   FRED  POWLEDGE  ^'<^'»s  knew  it  was  a  pep  rally,  they 

wouldn't    come. 

Managing  Editor           CHARLIE  SLOAN  r-i      -  j      i       i  i         i-                 i     . 
The    deplorable    thing    is    that 

News  Editor  . RAY  LINKER  liyuum    is   right. 

Business  Manager          BILL  BOB  PEEL  Hit'  students  won  t  go  to  a  pep 

rally.   Less  than  200  out  of  a  stu- 

^P"'-^^  ^'^»'-                    LARRY  CHEEK  ^^^^^^]    j^^,^,^   ^^,.    ,  ^^^^    ^,^^^^^^^    ^,,^ 

Advertising  Manager              Fred  Katzin  rally  before  the  (Georgia"  game. 

Coed  Editor                -.     Peg  Humphrey  -y,,,^.    ,,^i^    -^    ,,,^    ,.^..^,    Carolina 

EDITORIAL    STAFF  —  Woody    Sears,  spiiit.     The     students    just     don't 

Frank  Crowther,  Barry  Winston,  David  care,    to   put    it    mildly.    And    this 

Mundy.  George  Pfingst,  Ingrid  Clay,  attitude  of  indifference  isn't  doing 

Cortland  Edwards.                               ^  ,),<>    Cniversity,    the   football    team 

St^fT Photographer  T  ^Norman  Kanlor  ^*^  •»•»>  individuals  any  good  at  all. 

Z.T^^Ti^ZTiZ:^:.  :..^.l^ ;; r. ^ "  I'XC".  is  going  to  have  a  team. 

BUSINESS  STAFF  —  Rosa  Moore,  Jonny  ,             ,             ,       i  ,                    •       . 

i.'u  *  1        T^  „!,  T  „o„;*.   t>«««..  Ai«o-  the  students  should  support  it  all 

W  hitaker,  Dick  Leavitt,  Peter  Alper.  ,           .         •  ■         . 

- the  way — and  not  just  when  it  gtts 

NEWS    STAFF— Clarke    Jones.    Nancy  inside  the  opixMient's  lo-yard  line. 

Hill.  Joan  .Moore.  Prinde  Pipkin,  Anne  o            »  .1         •                          .     . 

Drake.  Bobb.  Smith.  Jerry  ^vis,  Edith  ,    ^''Pf"'  ^''^"   '\  ''''>.   ""P^'tant. 

MacKinnon.  Wallv  Kuralt.  Ben  Taylor,  '"'.  .'^   '^    •^;""    ^'o^''"  «  .''^^^   «"V 

Graham    Snvder,    Billy    Barnes.    Neil  baf^king     l)efore     that     time,     it'll 

Bass,    Jim    Creighton^  Hil    Goldman,  "f^er  get  aiiywheie  near  the  goal. 

Phyllis  Maultsby.  1  his   is    one    game    Coach    Jim 

■sF^RTO^Ai^^^iTKhi,  Jim  Purks.  X*^'"'."  '^^'  ^"^  T^"'  ''^"I'  "*  'H"' 

Jimmy  Harper,  Dm  Wible,  Charley  »"»    '»t^   ^^n  t    do    it    without    the 

Houson.  help  of  the  Carolina  student  body. 

silbsJrimrorM^na'^r—D^St^  ^"^    ^'^^^    support    could    best 

Staff  Artist  .  _. Charlie  Daniel  >^^^^^  tonight  with  a  good  turnout 

Night    Editor  :,•/  Cortland  Edwards  at   the  "pep  rally"   in  the  parking 

Prodi  Reader Cortland  Edwards     lot  ©ear  the  Y  Building.       


Voodoo  Mistakes  Save  Georgia 


Courtland   Edwards 

Arousing  my.self  from  a  sound 
sleep  early  last  Saturday  morn- 
ing, I  looked  out  my  window 
across  to  Graham  Memorial  and 
thought  th^t  this  would  be  a 
wonderful  day.  To  make  it  real- 
ly   perfect,    I    figured.    Carolina 

must  win  the  lootball  game.  I  was 
sure  that  today  was  our  day  to 
win.  I  even  put  a  sign  out  my 
window  —  "Vance  Dorm,  Wel- 
comes U  Georgia." 

This  belief  of  mine  in  Jim  Tat- 
um  and  his  team  was  not,  as 
yet.  one  of  fact,  i.e.,  built  upon 
empirical  evidence,  but  rather 
one  built  X)n  pure  faith. 

After  talking  to  other  stu- 
dents that  morning  my  outlook 
began  to  dim  and  fade.  Just 
slightly  at  first,  but  more  and 
more  later  on — until  finally  1  de- 
cided I  didn't  even  want  to  go 
to  see  Carolina  get  slaughtered. 

At  elevea  o'clock  my  whole 
outlook  changed  for  the  second 
time  that  day.  I  had  just  come 
from  the' Post  Office  and  in  my 
clammy  little  hand  I  held  a  pack- 
age post  marked  Pittsburgh.  Pa. 
I  had  waited  a  long  time  for  this 
to  arrive  and  today  couldn't  have 
been  a  better  time. 

I  snuck  up  to  my  room — 
locked  all  the  doors  behind  me 
and  hastily  opened  my  package. 
Ah,  there  it  was.  My  VQODOO- 
IT-YOURSELF  kit.  With  this  I 
knew  that  Georgia  didn't  have  a 
chance  against  the  team  and  me 
both. 

A  few  minutes  before  the  game 
was  to  start  I  took  the  straw- 
voodoo  doll  out  of  the  burlap 
bag  and  tied  a  piece  of  red  and 
black  crepo  paper  that  an  ardent 
Georgia  fan  had  dropped  outside 
of  the  dorm  around  the  neck. 
The  recipe  called  for  an  eyebrow 
of  one  of  their  footballers,  but 
I  figured  the  school  colors  would 
be  enough.  Just  to  make  sure  4ho, 
I  typed  out  •GEORGIA"  and 
taped  it  on  the  doll's  head. 

The  gam?  wa-s  about  to  begin, 
so  I  had  to  hurry.  I  repeated  the 
correct  chant  five  tinles  while 
standing  on  one  foot,  and  then 
rammed  the  black  needle  with  a 
green  feather  into  (he  left  auri- 
cle of  the  doll.  As  soon  as  I  did 
this  Georgia  fumbled,  Carolina 
recovered  and  ran  the  ball  over 
for  a  touchdown.  The  vockIoo  hex 
was   actually  working. 

To  really  do  this  thing  up 
right  I  decided  to  put  a  double 
hex  on  Georgia  and  rammed  the 
white  needle  into  the  right  vent- 
rical. This  was  my  mistake  for 
Georgia  then  started  to  march. 
I  couldn't  understand  what  was 
happening. 

By  half  time  I  had  almost 
decided  to  §end  the  blasted  doll 
back  to  the  factory.  The  second 
half  had  started  and  Carolina 
was  doing  miserably. 

Then  I  just  happened  to  look 
over  the  directions  once  more  and 
all  of  a  sudden  it  dawned  on  me 
what  was  wrong.  Of  all  stupid 
things  to  do.  I  put  the  white 
needle  in  which  signifies  cur- 
ing or  aiding. 

This  nullified  the  power  of  the 
black   needle   which    represented 
black   magic.   I   pulled   it  out  as 
quickly    as    possible  . .  .  and    yt>u 


know  what  happened?  That'.s 
right,  Carolina  rap  for  another 
f.ouchdown.  I  figured  everything 
was  squared  away  now  and  we 
would  come  back  to  win  the 
game. 

I  left  the  doll  on  my  desk  and 
went  .nto  the  other  room  to  get 


a  paper.  Meanwhile  my  room- 
mate came  back  from  the  game 
and  came  into  the  room.  He  had 
not  seen  the  voodoo  kit  and 
while  I  was  not  looking  he  walk- 
ed over  to  it. 

Then,  of  all  the  .stupid,  idiotic, 
imbecilic.  moronish  things  to  do. 


he  picked  up  the  doll — pull«d 
out  the  needle  and  said  with  his 
you  -  know  -  what  -  kind  -  of  smile, 
"Whats  this  for?" 

That  did  it.  He  ruined  the  hex. 
And  this  is  how  my  .roommate, 
the  cur,  lost  the  football  game 
for  Carolina  last  Saturday. 


PLhU  AIHS 


J 


w 


-n- 


1^* 


? 


«pi»<rfc    TH*    wJ^,»M/«i^-rc»AJ    fioSt- 


'ANASTASIA' 


./. 


Playmakers  Make  Good  Showing 


Paul  McCauley 

The  Carolina  Playmakers  got 
their  thirty-ninth  season  pff'  to 
a  start  Wednesday  night  with  a 
spotty  presentation  of  Guy  Bol- 
ton's adaptation  of  Marcelle 
Maurette's  "Anastasia".  Opening 
night  jitters  in  the  form  of  muf- 
fed lines,  back  -  stage  noises, 
poor  pacing  in  spots,  and  trouble 
pronouncing  'Anastasia'  marred 
an  otherwise  overall  good  per- 
formance. 

The  high  spot  of  the  evening 
came  in  the  second  act  in  which 
occurred  the  recognition  scene 
between  Anastasia,  beautifully 
portrayed  by  Rusti  Rothrock,  and 
the  Dowager  Empress,  incom- 
parably c^ne  by  Marion  Fitz- 
Simmons.  This  was  one  of  the 
best  scenes  that  has  graced  the 
Playmaker  stage  in  a  long  time. 
Director  Sam  Selden's  subtle  but 


masterful  hand  was  apparent  all 
through  the  show,  but  more  so 
in  this  scene  in  which  two  fine, 
sensitive  actresses  held  the  ap- 
preciative opening  night  audience 
in  the  palms  of  their  hands.  Wit- 
nessing this  scene  was  a  grati- 
fying,  rewarding   experience. 

The  male  part  of  the  cast  was 
a  production  anchor.  Prince 
Bounine  was  played  by  Morgan 
Jackson,  who  gave  a  spotty  per- 
formance which  sagged,  as  did 
his  costume,  in  the  third  act. 
His  cohorts,  Chernov  played  by 
Russell  Link,  and  Petrovin  done 
by  John  Sneden.  left  something 
to  be  desired.  Joe  Whitcaker  as 
Prince  Paul  was  a  victim  of  not 
infrequent  Playmaker  miscasting. 

Betty  Jinnette  gave  an  under- 
standing    performance     as     the 


Charwoman.  A  couple  of  well- 
timed,  much  needed  laughs  were 
provided  by  Eve  Janzan  as  Ba**- 
oness  Livenbaum.  Hope  Sparger, 
Frank  Rinaldi,  Peter  O'Sullivan, 
and  Vinson  McNeill  gave  ac- 
ceptable performances  of  other 
supporting  characters. 

Tommy  Rezzuto  designed  a 
very  appropriate  setting  which 
was  expertly  lighted — as  usual — 
by  Lewis  Goldstein,  Excepting 
Bourine's  uniform,  the  costumes 
were  excellent. 

In  summing  things  up,  I  would 
like  to  say  that  overall,  I  enjoy- 
ed the  play.  My  major  criticisms 
are:  lack  of  balance  in  the  cast; 
dropping  of  accents  by  leading 
male  characters,  or  lack  of  same; 
and  poor  pacing  in  spots,  i  don't 
believe  anyone  that  sees  "Anas- 
tasia" will  regret  having  done  so. 


Pogo 


By  Walt  Kelly 


IV\  Abner 


By  Al  Capp 


MV.'/-LEM  DOJE    j 
,  CHANGEP//  ^ 

HOOh^m/f-  JBi 

HOLD  IjOVt-KbOVNlK^ 
PiCTUKt  SrrADV  —      ^ 
A^4D  VOO  -HA^.|D  MEL 
THAT  DlMPLt  DRILL.*:'- 

m. 

i„ATER  -  ^H£^  e>A/\/i>^><^C5  ARE  f^CMOl^BO - 


EX.ACKLV  LlKt 

loverboVnik- 

bUT,  EF  THASS 
/TK'  FACE  YO' 
.^WANJTS.CHILE- 
^.tJ^AR  IT  IM 
-GOOD  HFAlJH.r 


'^      < 

CRUEU 

ON       "^ 
HUMA\/IT1&-^ 


THE  JUDICIAL  BRANCH  : 

Prosecution  Ahd: 
Triai  Procedures^ 

Ihn  is  the  last  of  three  parts  of  Article  II  of  -- 
the  Student  Constitution.  Offenses  end  corrective  '_ 
action  teken  by  the  various  councils  are  defined  - 
below.  ~ 

Section  5.  GENERAL  PROCEDURE  ~ 

A.  RIGHTS  OF   REVIEW.    A   Student  -  Faculty  • 
Judicial   Council  shall  be  established   to  hear  ap-l: 
peals   from    all    courts   of    original  jurisdiction  in- 
Student  Governmeat.  It  shall  consist  of  the  Chair- 
men of  the  Men's  Honor  Council,  the  Women's  Hon- 
or  Council,   and   the    Student   Council,   plus  three 
faculty   members  who  shall  be  designated  by  th.c . 
faculty  executive  comipittee.    This     Council    shall^ 
hear  those  appeals  which  are  referred  to  it  by  theT 
Chancellor.  The  Chairman  of  this  Council  shall  be;; 
elected  from   the  faculty  membership.  ^ 

B.  OFTENSES  AND  PUNISHMENTS.  Except 
vuhere  the  Student  Legislature  shall  have  fixed  the 
offense  and  limitations  to  punishment,  the  Men's 
Council,  Women's  Council,  Law  School  Council, 
Dental  School  Council,  if  established,  and  Medical.. 
School  Council  shall  have  discretionary  authority.; 
providing  that  they  shall  take  full  cognizance  of  the 
traditional  offenses  and  punishments  heretofore  en- 
forced at  this  Universtiy. 

C.  RIGHTS  OF  THE  ACCUSED.  Tlie  accused 
person  in  anv  judicial  hearing  shall  have  the  fol- 
lowing rights: 

(1)     The     presumption    of    innocence    until 
^  guilt  is  proven. 

■    ^       (2)     The  right  to  due  notice  and  a  fair  hear- 
ing. 

(3)  The  right  to  face  the  accuser.  ' 

(4)  The  privilege  of  assistance  by  a  mem- 
ber of  the  judicial  body,  if  requested. 

No  person  presenting  testimony  for  or  against 
the  accused  shall  sit  in  judgement  of  the  accused. 
The  Council  shall  inform  each  accused  person  of 
his  rights  guaranteed  under  this  sec* ion  at  the 
time  he  is  notified  of  the  charges  against  him. 

D.  LIMITATION  OF  MEMBERSHIP  ON  COUN- 
CILS. No  student  shall  be  a  member  of  more  than 
one  judicial  body  except  that  he  be  a  member  of 
the  Student  Council  elected  from  a  lower  judicial 
body. 

E.  ELECTIONS  OF  OFFICERS.  The  Student" 
Council,  the  Men's  and  Women's  Councils,  and  the 
Dance  Committee  shall  elect  their  own  officers  from, 
their  respective  memberships. 

PROSPECT  a  RETBOSPECT  '. 

Changing  Sides' 
And  Parking  Ban 

Neil  Bass 

It  appears  that  an  old  politician  may  be  getting, 
back  into  the  mad  merry-go-round  of  Carolin» 
politics. 

This  same  politician  whom  upperclassmen  re-: 
member  as  a  capable  Legislature  member  undef 
the  Student  Party  label  will  no  longer  be  a  SP 
man. 

As  some  already  know,  the  .id  war  horse  o£ 
whom  we  speak  is  Bill  Baum. 

Baum  was  extremely  active  In  several  fi^ldi 
during  his  freshman  year  here,  but  withdrew  from 
politics  last  year  to  serve  as  president  of  the  North 
Carolina  Conference  of  Methodist  students. 

He  said  this  was  a  full-time  job,  and  thus  he 
didn't  have  time  to  fight  the  political  current. 

But  he  will  be  an  active  candidate  for  a  Legisla- 
ture sctat  in  Dorm  Men's  V  in  the  fall  elections  and 
will,  in  all  probability,  hook  his  wagon  to  a  higher 
campus-wide  star  in  the  spring  and  under  the  Uni- 
versity Party  label. 

TRAFFIC   COAAMiSSION 

Monk  Jennings  of  Town  and  Campus  made  a 
suggestion  to  the  student  government  Traffic  Ad- 
visory Commission  last  week  concerning  the  Co- 
lumbia Street  parking  restriction. 

Monk  answered  to  a  statement  that  the  re- 
striction was  a  "commercial  move"  predicated  on 
the  assumption  that  more  customers  would  flow 
downtown  if  there  was  more  rotation  on  Columbia: 

"I  don't  think  it  makes  tJiat  much  difference." 

Monk" also  said  that  he  felt  other  merchants  felt 
the  same  way  and  thought  fraternity  men  should 
be  allowed  to  park  in  front  of  their  property. 

He  then  suggested  that  the  Traffic  Advisory 
Commission  poll  loca'  merchants  to  determine  their 
feelings  on  the  subject. 

Thus  the  Commis,sion  should  grab  the  sugges- 
tion. It  appears  unlikely  that  merchants  would  ex- 
press approval  of  the  restriction  to  the  face  of  a 
prospective  custormer.  And  the  poll  concensus 
could  prove  valuable  ammunition  to  fire  at  the 
board  of  aldermen. 

Chairman  Mike  Weinman  of  the  Universtiy 
Party  is  to  be  complimented  for  his  interest  in 
lifting  the  restriction. 

Weinman  appeared  before  a  meeting  of  the 
Advisory  Commission  and  o'fered  suggestions  to 
the  group. 

The  SP  chairman  might  do  well  to  do  the  same. 
The  restriction  is  no  light  matter.  If  students  yield 
to  this  commericial  move,  it  will  only  pave  the 
way  for  more  limitations  on  students  by  the  alder- 
men. ♦ 

It  is  often  asserte-J  that  the  UP  is  the  fraternity 
man's  party  by  SP  leaders.  It  might  as  well  be 
stated  that  the  SP  shows  little  interest  in  fraterni- 
ties if  its  chiefs  don't  demonstrate  a  little  interest 
in  the  Columbia  Street  fiasco. 

Both  parties  ^ould  work  for  the  entire  campus. 
The  SP  says  it  is  a  "campus-wide"  party.  Thus  it 
should  sink  its  teeth  into  the  Columbia  Street  prob- 
lem. 


,-*#V 


Dr 
original  I 
"Career! 
a  rare 

Pril 
In 


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Univcrsitv 
1904,    are! 
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Prints.  ho| 
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The  rarl 
Rem  brand! 


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19,  1956 


hd 


FRIDAY,  OCTOBER  19,  1954 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


PAGE    THREE 


[l«  II  of  -. 
Irrtctiv*  '~ 
IdcfifMd  ^ 


|-  Faculty  — 
I  hear  ap-lT 
liction  in~* 
\ie  Chair-— 
?n's  Hon-~ 
|us  three — 
by  the  II 
cil  shalh;^ 
|it  by  Lhe^ 
shall  be~ 

,  Except 
I  fixed  the 
ihe  Men's 
Council, 
MedicaL. 
[authodty,; 
jce  of  the 
lofore  en- 


accused 
the   fol- 

H-e     until 

t'air  hear*  ■ 


|y  a  mem- 
luested. 

>r  against 
accused. 

person  of 

in   ^t    the 

him. 

h'  COUN- 

lore  than 

1  ember  of 

?r  judicial; 

!e   Student 
and  the- 
ficers  front! 


an 


be  getting. 
Carotin* 

issmen  re^ 
iber  unde^ 
ir  be   a   SF; 

horse   o£. 

/eral   fi^ld». 

idrew  fronf 
\t  the  North- 
►nts.  ! 

^nd  thus  fae 
;urrent. 
>r  a  Legisla- 
lections  and 

to  a  higher 
ler  the  Uni- 


|pus  made  a 
Traffic  Ad- 
ding the  Co- 
hat  the  re- 
redicated  on 
would  flow 
n  Columbia: 
difference." 
erchants  felt 
men  should 
operty. 
tic  Advisory 
'termine  their 

the  sugges- 
ts would  ex- 
the  face  of  a 
11  concensus 
5   fire    at    the 

Universtly 
is   interest   in 

eeting   of    the 
uggestions    to 

}  do  the  same. 

students  yield 

only    pave   the 

by  the  aWer- 

the  fraternity 
ht  as  well  be 
est  in  fraterni- 
I  little  interest 

entire  campus. 

party.  Thus  it 

>ia  Street  prob- 


Dr.  W.  P.  Jacocks,  Chancellor  House,  and  Andrew  H.  Horn,  Librarian,  are  shown  examining  an 
original  etching  by  Corot.  In  the  middle  of  the  exhibition  case  is  one  of  Piranesi's  large  etchings  of 
"Carceri,"  imaginary  prison  scenes.  To  the  left  is  Durer's  famous  "Melancholia,"  and  to  the  right  is 
a  rare  print  by  Rembrandt,  "The  Descent  from  the   Cross   by  Torchnght." 


Prints  Now  Displayed 
In  Foyer  Of  Library 


TOM    BYRD 

Some  rare  and  original  prints 
presented  by  Dr.  W.  P.  Jacocks.  a 
University  graduate  of  the  class  of 
1904,  are  now  on  display  in  the 
foyer  of  the  library. 

These  prints  by  famous  artists 
are  additions  to  the  Jacocks  Col- 
lection of  American  and  European 
Prints,  housed  in  the  Graphic  Arts 
Room. 

The  rarest  item  in  this  group  is  i  "Souvenir  d'ltalie 
Rembrandt's  etching.  "The  Descent  I  Corot. 


from  the  Cross  by  Torchlight." 
made  in  1654.  Other  rare  prints 
are:  Durer"s  famous  '"Melancholia." 
a  1514  copper  engraving;  and  one 
of  Piranesi's  series  of  •Carceri," 
a  very  !arge  etching  of  an  imagin- 
ary prison  scene. 

Also    included    are:    Canaletto's 
"Pra  della  Valle,  Padua,"  an   im- 
pression  of   a   rare   etching;    "Ca- 
price," an  etching  by  Piepolo;  and 
an  etching  by 


boy ... 
Understanding 
Woman  I 


.  Other  prints  in  the  group  are: 
"Les  Paysagistes  en  Hiver,"  a  litho- 
graph   by   Daumier;    "Une    Mare," 

i  an    etching    by    Adolphe    Appian; 

'  "II  Cristo  di  Caprarola,"  an  etch- 

I  ing  by  Annibale  Carracci;  and 
Cezanne's   lithograph   of   the   "Ba- 

i  thers." 

The  donor  of  the  prints.  Dr. 
Jjcocks,  has  long  been  recognized 
as  a  friend  of  the  library.  In  addi- 
tion to  prints  he  has  presented  the 
librarv  with  manv  rare  books  and 
maps.  ^ 

While  a  student  at  UNC,  Dr. 
Jacocks  was  a  member  of  the  track 
and  football  team.  He  has  remain- 
,,^..  ^  j  ed  an  enthusiastic  supporter  of  the 

Deborah  Kerr   John  Kerr    i  university  s    athletic   program     He 

I  is  now  retired  and  lives  in  Chapel 

j  Hill- 

I      The  current  exhibit  will  not  re- 
j  main  on  display  long.  The  prints 
I  may  be  seen  in  the  Graphic  Arts 
Room  ^fter  this  week. 


.MG-M  presents  in  Cl.NE.\l..\SCOPE 
»n<l  .MLTROCOLOR ! 

Tea  and 
Sympathy 


NOW  PLAYING 


Town  Girls 
Select  Campus 
Representatives 

Representatives  to  various  camp- 
us organizations  were  selected  by 
the  Town  Girls'  Association  at 
their  initial  meeting  Wednesday. 

Kay  Proctor  was  selected  to  rep- 
resent the  group  in  the  Women's 
Athletic  Association;  Harriett  Hor- 
ney  and  Ellen  Brauer,  TGA  past 
president,  tot  he  Independent  Wo- 
men's Association;  and  Ellie 
Cowing  to  the  IWA  and  the  Uni- 
versity Club. 

Carla  Smtih,  TGA  president,  ap- 
pointed Nancy  Jane  Royster  as 
membership  chairman  and  Ellie 
Cowing  as  publicity  chairman. 

The  next  meeting  of  the  TGA 
is  slated  for  Oct.  24  at  6:45  p.m. 
in  the  TGA  room  located  on  the 
second  floor  of  the  Y  building. 
All  interested  persons  are  invited 
to  attend  this  meeting,  at  which 
new  officers  will  be  elected. 


UNC  Prof 
Gets  State 
Attention 


Throughout  the  nation  atten- 
tion has  been  focused  on  a  UNC 
political  science  instructor  who 
said  Saturday  that  the  Democrats 
stand  a  good  chance  of  winning 
even  if  they  do  not  get  a  majority 
of  the  popular  vote. 

Gordon  B.  Cleveland,  coupled 
his  prediction  with  a  challenge 
to  Dr.  Georje  Gallup,  political 
i  pollster. 

In  challenging  Gallup,  Ceveland 
;  called  on  the  pollster  to  make  a 
state-by-stale  breakdown  of  the 
popular  vote. 

Eisenhower  has  consistently 
been  ahead  of  Stevenson  accord- 
ing to  the  Gallup  poll.  However, 
Cleveland  has  compiled  figures 
which  he  says  show  that  Gallup 
must  make  a  state-by-state  break- 
down if  his  poll  is  to  have  real 
significance. 

The  instructor  feels  that  by 
carrying  certain  states,  the  Demo- 
crats will  win  the  election  through 
the  electorial  college,  even  if 
they  do  not  get  a  majority  of  the 
popular  vote  from  the  nation  as  a 
whole. 

Cleveland's  prediction  is  built 
around  a  comparison  of  the  1952 
presidential  election  returns  with 
the  1954  gubernatorial  and  sena- 
torial returns. 


Covering  The  Campus 


lOU'  CENTURY  FffX  oi^esents  , 

-HUMPHREY       f  ^, 

BOGART  ^ 

_     GENE         -    -'m 

TiERNEY     \J% 

3  50  Starr. ng  / 

LEEJ.  COBB  J. 


IFfTH^1> 

OF^dD 

DnemaScop£ 


I  STiKonwitc : 


AGNES    MOOREHEAD 


TODAY 
ONLY 


DAILY    CROSSWORD 


i*     ACROSS 
1.  African 
antelope 
<var.  > 

8.  Resorts 

9.  Wildly 
10.  Gateway 

(Jap.) 

12.  A  voided 
eacutcheon 
(Her.) 

13.  Cup's  plate 

14.  Hint 

15.  Deep  hole 

16.  Girls 
nickname 

17.  Masculine 
pronoun 

18.  Bottom 
of  a  river 

19.  God  of 
pleasure 

20.  Nocturnal 
lemur 

23.  Band  for 
the  waist 

24.  Acknowl. 
edges 

26.  A  sunk 

fence 
26.  Meetings 
31  Shoulder 

(combining 

form) 

32.  Chest 

33.  Excla- 
mation 

34  Chinese 
measure 

35.  Friars  title 

36.  Center 
38.  Run  away 

40.  Employed 

41.  Nasal  noise 

42.  Asterisks 

43.  Hastened 

44.  MackereU 
Itkegamefish 


DOWN  21.  Rever- 

1. Grain  berate 

2.  Not  working  22.  Constel- 


AC 


BA 


I 


3.  Killed 

4.  Affirma« 
tive  vote 
(var.) 

5.  Sedate 

6.  Sulk 

7.  Curved  line 

8.  Sifting 
devices 

9.  Kind  of 
coffee 

11.  Hibernians 

13.  Motorists' 

concern 

18.  Secondary 

19.  Game  fish 


lation 
23.  Pig 
pen 

25.  Vex 

26.  Con- 
tains 

27.  French 
city 

29.  Bull- 
fighter 

30.  I..ean-tos 
32.  Fortified 
35.  Price  of 

passage 
36  Coy 
37.  Eskers 


mma  [DBii  mma 


□na  nisB  mum 
Qis  [DEIS  aama 


«*p^i'   ^J||.™J.  N  «^  Nil 
SldMll  |CMB|A|K|Ef 


Yritrrdsy's  Antwrcr 

39.  Police- 
man 
(slang) 

42.  South 
Carolina 
(abbr.) 


History  Prof 
Delivers  Talk 

Prof.  Hugh  Lefler,  in  a  talk  be- 
fore ?  historical  society  in  Golds- 
boro  on  Thursday,  declared  that 
local  histories  were  prerequisites 
to  writing  comprehensive  and  ac- 
curate state  and  national  histories. 

The  Carolina  historian,  in  ad- 
dressing the  Wayne  County  His- 
torical Society,  cited  some  diffi- 
culties in  compiling  good  local 
histories.  He  listed  the  common 
occurrence  of  county  court  house 
fires  destroying  valuable  docu- 
ments, and  the  tendency  of  county 
historians  glorifying  local  promi- 
nent families,  instead  of  writing 
unbiased  history. 


'Androctes  And  The  Lion' 
Tryouts  Begin  Monday 

Tryouts  for  the  Carolina  Play- 
.makers'  production  of  Beriiard 
Siiaw's  "Androcles  and  the  Lion" 
will  begin  Monday  at  4  and  7:30 
p.m.   in   the   Playmakers   Theatre. 

Director  Harry  Davis  extended 
an  invitation  to  all  students,  facul- 
ty members  and  their  wives,  and 
townspeople  to  read  for  the 
twenty  parts  in  the  famous  come- 
dy to  be  cast. 

It  will  appear  in  the  theatre 
November  14-18.  Following  the 
Chapel  Hill  performances  the 
company  will  tour  the  Carolinas 
and  Georgia  from  November  26 
to  Deceml)er  8. 


Reading  Association 
Meets  Over  Weekend 

A  zone  meeting  of  the  Interna- 
tional Reading  Association  will 
bring  some  500  people  here  Fri- 
day and  Saturday. 

Delegates  will  include  school 
teachers  and  administrators  from 
throughput  North  Carolina,  ac- 
cording to  Dean  Arnold  Perry  of 
the  UNC  School  of  Education. 
The  Education  School  is  sponsor- 
ing the  event. 


Reference  Librarian  Here 
Speaks  At  Convention 

Mi.ss  Georgia  Falcon,  reference 
librarian,  participated  in  a  panel 
discussion  at  the  recent  South- 
eastern Library  .Association  Con- 
vention in  Roanoke,  Va. 

Miss  Faison  read  a  paper  titled, 
"Teaching  Wtih  Books." 

Members  of  the  UNC  Library 
staff  attendinjg  were:  Andrew  H. 
Horn,  0.  B.  Cook,  Georgia  Faison, 
William  R.  Pullen,  Charlotte 
Georgi,  Frances  Yocom,  Mary 
Lou  Lucy,  Angele  Avizonis  and 
Beatrice   Montgomery. 

The  convention  is  held  every 
two  years  to  discuss  current 
problenfs  and  practices  of  libra- 
rians. 


Carroll  Kail  Will  Be 
Scene  Of  Free  Flick 

"The  Southerner,"  this  week's 
free  flick,  will  be  shown  tonight 
in  Memorial  Hall  instead  of  the 
usual  showing  place.  Carroll  Hall. 

The  first  showing  will  begin 
just  after  the  pep  rally  at  about 
9  p.m.,  with  the  second  show 
slated  to  start  at  11  p.m. 

Betty  Fields  and  Zachary  Scott 
star  in  this  film  about  economic 
\  problems  in  the  modtrn  South. 


Committee  Heads  And  Members 
Chosen  At  IDC  Court  Meet 


The  Interdormitory  Council  ap- 
pointed committee  heads  and  elect- 
ed members  to  the  IDC  Court  at 
a  meeting  Wednesday  night. 

Elected  to  serve  on  the  court 
were: 

Frank  Brown,  Bob  Noble,  Neil 
Bender,  Paul  Kerr  and  Mike 
Hayes,  chairman. 

Gene  Weathers,  elected  last 
spring,  will  also  serve  on  the  coiirt. 

Named  to  the  court  investigating 
committee  were: 

Teddy  Jones,  Julius  Banzet,  Pat 
Leonard    and   Ruby    Edwards.     ' 


Y   SCHEDULE 


Committee  Heads 

The  Council  also  approved  Presi- 
dent Sonny  Hallford's  appointees 
to  head  various  committees  dur- 
ing 1956-57.  These  were: 

Blazer  Committee,  Bob  Carter^ 
Social  Committee,  Benny  Thomas- 
Dorm  Improvements,  Stan  Garris^ 
and  Frank  Brown; 

Publicity  Committee,  Neil  Bass; 
Intramural  Coordinating  Commit- 
tee, Jimmy  Womble;  Rules  Com- 
mittee, Neil  Bass; 

Contest  Committee,  Whit  Whit- 
field and  J)on  Matkins;  Vending 
Machine  Committee,  Bill  Pruett 
and  Julius  Banzet;  Elections  Com- 
mittee, Tom  Walters. 
Memorial 

The  Council  also  appointed  a 
three-man  committee  to   purchase 


fhe  following  meetings  are  sche- 
duled for  the  Y  Building  today: 

230  p.m.— U.N.  Day  Committee 
Work    Session,    Y    Cabinet    room,  I  a  book  to  place  in  the  library  as  a 
Mi.ss  Polly  Ciarehbach,  Chairman.    ]  memorial  to  Carolina  student  Bob 

4    p.m. — Y-Nite    Planning    Com-    Ellerbe,  who  was  killed  last  Sun- 
rniltee,  Y  Cabinet  room.  Miss  Nan-  j  day. 


cy  Shuford  and  Jim  Raugh,  Co- 
chairmen. 

4  p.m.  -^  Campys,  Chest  Board 
meeting,  Y  library  room.  Miss 
'Jackie  Aldridge  and  Jess  Stribling 

Co-chairmen. 


Ellerbe  was  a  resident  of  Steele 
Dormitory. 

The  Council  will  meet  again 
Wednesday  night  after,  |j|iext.  It 
meets  on  alternating  1ijl||hesday 
iiights.  *'■  ! 


The  WestTiinster  Fellowship  will 
meet  for  supper  Sunday  at  6  p.m. 
.'\fteirw'8rds,  the  Reverend  Fred 
Stair  of  Hickory  wiU  speak  on  "The 
Bible:  Word  or  Words?  "  Everyone 
interested  h<i.s  been  invited  to  at- 
tend. 
MAGAZINE  SALES 

"Members  of  Alpha  Phi  Omega, 
ser\ice  h'aternity  on  -?mpus,  will 
be  on  diity  in  Y-Court  and  Lenoir 
Hall  today  to  sell  subscriptions,  ob- 
tainable at  a  reduced  rate,  for 
"Life",  "Time,"  "Sports  Illustrat- 
ed" and  "Fortune."  T!iere  is  also 
a  special  rale  if  all  four  are  pur- 
chased. 

W.A.A.  VOLLEYBALL 

W.A.A.  Volleyball  practice  will  be 
held  today  4-6  p.m.  Only  those 
women  who  have  practiced  will  be 
eligible  to  play  in  tlie  tournament 
next  week.  A  double  elimination 
tournament  will  begin  Tuesday  at 
5  p.m. 
FRESHMAN  CAMP   PICTURES 

Freshman  camp  pictures  are 
available  at  the  YMC.A  office.  Those 
who  ordered  mdy  pick  up  the  .pic- 
tures between  8:30  a  m.  and  4:30 
p.m. 
ORDER  OF   DEMOLAY 

The  UNC  chapter  of  the  Order 
of  DeMolay  \^ill  have  a  meeting 
iB  the  first  lloor  reception  room  of 
Cobb  Dorm  today  at  7:15  p.m.  All 


Pre-Medl  Honor  Society  Plans 
Freshman  Orientation  Program 


Cordon  Begins 
Fourth  Season 

Norman  Cordon,  Nofth  Caro- 
lina's first  and  only  Metropolitan 
Opera  star,  will  begin  hi.s  fourth 
season  of  concerts  today  at  8  p.m. 
over  the  University  FM  radio  sta- 
tion, WUNC. 

"Let's  Listen  to  Opera,"  as  the 
program  is  titled,  will  initiate  the 
season  with  Ponchielli's  "La  Gio- 
conda."  Since  the  program  was 
first  presented  on  Oct.  5,  1953,  Mr. 
Cordon  has  presented  one  hun- 
dred and  six  high-fidelity,  full- 
length  performances.  Robert  Bur- 
ton House,  Chancellor  of  the  Uni- 
versity, will  appear  on  the  first 
program  of  the  1956-57  series, 
along  with  Mr.  Cordon. 

Before  joining  the  Metropoli- 
tan Opera  Company,  Mr.  Cord<^ 
sang  wtih  the  Chicago  and  Si.  Lou- 
is Opera  Companies. 


I     The    U.\T   fha:>ter    of   the   Order  ; 
;  of  DeMol^HV  will  have  a  meeting  in  i 
the    first    fJoor    reception    room    of  i 
Cobb  Dorm  today  at  7:15  p.m.   All  j 
members   or    prospective  members  i 
'  are  invited   t'>  attend. 
I  COBB   RECEPTION 
j      \   reception    will    be   held   in   the 
\  Cobb    basement    lounge    after    the 
[  football  game  tomorrow  from  4:30- 
,  6:30    p.m.    Music    will    be   provided 
1  by    Wally    Kuralt    and    his    Modern 
I  Jazz   Group   and   refreshments    will 
'  be  served  by  coed  hostesses.   This 
,  affair  is  co-sponsored  by  the  Dan<fe 
I  Committee  of  GM.\B  and  the  IDC. 
1      The  schedule  for  WUNC.  the  Uni- 
versity's      non-commercial       radio 
station  is  ?3  follows: 
WUNC-FM 
7 :  00 — Intermezzo 
7:15 — .Assignment  .Middle  East 
7:30— The  People  Take  the  Lead 
8:00— Special   Music   Program 
9:00— Music    Program 
9:30— Folk  Music  of  the  World 
10:00— News 

10:15 — Evening  Masterwork 
11:30— Sign  Ofi 
WUNCTV 

Today's    .schedule   for   WUNC-TV, 
the    Univer.9it.v's    educational    tele- 
vision  station,    Channel   4: 
9:59— Sign  On 
10:00— State  Fair 
10:30— Phone  Courtesy 
1 1 :  00 — Koe  wa>-tinook 
ll:30~Chef;apeake 
12:00— State  Fair 
12:30— Building  Dreams 
1:00— Today  On  Farm 
1:30— Notes  On  Music 
2:00— Crackers 
2:30— Crystiil  Clear 
3:00— State  Fair 
3:30— Sign  Off 
5:45 — .Music 


Alpha  Epsilon  D:lta,  the  nation- 
al pr<?-medical  honor  society  on 
campus,  is  presenting  -a  freshman 
orientation  program  open  to  all 
pre-medical  and  pre-dental  stu-  i 
dents. 

The  meeting  is  being  held  at 
7:30  p.m.  Tuesday  in  Carroll  Hall,  j 

This  meeting  is  directed  primar- 
ily at  freshmen,  as  Alpha  Epsilon 
Delta  feels  it  will  solve  many  of 
their  problems  concerning  their 
pre-medical  or  pr'^-dental  program. 

However,  the  Society  urges  the 
attei\dance  of  all  pre-medical  and 
pre-dental  students  who  are  in- 
terested   in   joining    this   society. 


Faculty  Members  Present 
Technical  Health  Papers 

Two  faculty  members  of  the 
U.NC  School  of  Public  Health  will 
present  technical  papers  in  Wash- 
ington, D.C.  this  week. 

Dr.  James  D.  Thayer  and  Dr. 
Charlotte  P.  McLeod.  both  assist- 
ant professors  of  experimental 
medicine  at  UNC,  will  appear  be- 
fore the  Fourth  Annual  Antibiotic 
Symposium. 


6:00— Children's  Corner 
6:30— News 
6:45— Sports 
7:00— Science  Fair 
7:30— State  Fair 
8:00— Political  RaUy 
9:00 — Hawaiian  Incident 
9:30— Santa  Barbara 

10:00— Final,  Edition 

10:  OS— Sign  Off 


Liason  Team  To  Visit 
UNC  Campus  Next  Week 

An  Air  Force  ROTC  liason  team 
will  make  a  two  day  visit  to  UNC 
on  Oct.  25  and  26  to  observe  the 
operation  of  the  AFROTC  detach- 
ment stationed  on  the  campus. 

The  two  members  of  the  team. 
Col.  A.  C.  McDonald' and  Lt.  Col. 
S.  K.  Lauler,  from  AFROTC  head 
quarters  in  Montgomery,  Ala.,  will 
make  their  observation  with  the 
purpose  of  viewing  and  offering 
suggestions  to  improve  the  effic- 
1  iency  of  the  unit 


Lt.  Edward 

Shain 
Jefferies 

U.  S.  Army,  Res. 

COMES  TODAY 
Speaks  Tomorrow 

On  Bald  Eagles 

At  School  House 

11;55P.M. 


This  meeting  is  being  held  in  con- 
junction with  several  rush  meet- 
ings this  semester  before  new 
members  are  taken  in. 

Guest  speakers  will  include  Dr. 
C.  S.  Jones,  associate  professor  of 
zoology  and  ad\isor  in  the  Gen- 
eral College;^  Dr.  W.  W.  Demeritt, 
assistant  dean  of  the  School  of 
Dentistry;  and  Dr.  E.  McG. 
Hedgpeth,  Universtiy  physician 
and  chairman  of  the  Board  of  Ad- 
missions at  the  UNC  medical 
school. 


RECENT  AND  GOOD 

PAPER-BACKS 

BECKETT:  Waiting  for  Godot 
(Evergreen)    $1.00 

BECKETT:  Malone  Dies. 

(Evergreen)    $1.25 

COHEN:  A  Preface  to  Logic 
(Meridian)  $1.25 

DILL:   Roman  Society   From   Nero 
to   Marcos   Aureiius   $1.9$ 

DAWSON:  The  Making  of  Eurepa 
(Maridan)    $1.35 

ELIOT:   Essays  on   Elizabathan 
Drama.   95^ 

FRY:  Vision  and  Design 
(Meridian) $1.35 

FORSTER:  AspacH  of  the  Nevol. 
(Harvest)    95* 

JAMES:     Stories    of    Artists    and 
Writers.  $1.55 

JENET:  Tha  Maids $1.25 

KRUTCH:  Tha  Modern  Temper 
(Harvest) 95* 

LINDER:    Rabat    Without    a 

Causa.   _ _    $1.45 

LOMAX:   Mister  Jelly   Roll 
(Evergreen)  $1.45 

MELVILLE:  White  Jacket  ._  $1.45 

NORRIS:  Tha  Pit %\JS 

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THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


FRIDAY,  OCTOBER  1>,  n:* 


Soccer  Team  Takes  On  Davidson  Today 


Students  Vs.  Teacher  In  Kenan  Stadium 

ABother  'make  or  break'  game  lies  ahead  of  the  Carolina  Tar 
Heels  this  week,  and  this  partcular  contest  has  a  special  flavor  all 
its  own.  Visiting  Kenan  Stadium  tomorrow  afternoon  will  be  Jim 
Tatum's  former  football  team,  the  Maryland  Terps.  It  goes  without 
saying  that  the  Terps  would  like  nothing  better  than  to  turn  the  tobies 
on  their  former  tutor. 

If   th*   locals  come   up   with   another    piiiful    showing    like    last 
wook's  against  Goorgia,  tho  Maryland  boys  and  their  coach.  Tommy 
Mont,  should  have  little  trouble  with  Tatum's  winless  wonders.  The 
big  quostion  is:  Will  the  Tar  Heels  start  living  up  to  their  advance 
billing  after  disappointing  their  audiencn  for  four  weeks  in  a  row? 
Jim  Tatum  doesn't  have  the  answer  and  neither  does  anyone  else. 
One  thing  s  for  sure.  Marj'land,  despite  their  1-3  record  will  be  a  tough 
customer  to  handle.  This  is  caravan  weekend   tor  the  Maryland  stu- 
dents, and  they  w^ill   be  here  in  force  to  back  their  team. 

On  top  of  this,  the  Terps  would  like  to  prove  to  one  and  all  tha? 
they  aren't  a  helpless  ball  club  without  the  old  master  at  the  con- 
trols. This  extra  added  incentive  means  Maryland  will  be  up  for  the 
contest,  and  the  Tar  Heels  will  have  to  be  fired  up  for  the  game  if 
they  hope  to  stay  on  the  same  field. 
TERPS  IN  BAD  PHYSICAL  CONDITION 

On  the  purely  physical  side  of  the  picture  as  distinguished  from 
the  psychological  angle,  the  Terps  arc  in  worse  shape.  Injuries, 
disease  and  Uncle  Sam  have  all  taken  iheif  toll  of  what  was  once  sup 
posed  to  be  on-e  of  the  country's  best  teams. 

Frank    Tamburollo,    an    All-America    candidate    at    quarterback, 
was  called  to  the   colors  earlier   this  year,   and   an   untested   signal 
caller,  John   Fristch,  was  forced  to  take  over  for   him.   Needless  to 
say,  he  hasn't  sparked  the  team  like  Tamburello  would  have  done. 
Injuries  have  sidelined  several  of  the  Terps  key  players.   Latest 
casulty  was   Ed  Cooke,   big  end   who  dislocated    his  shoulder    in   the 
Miami  game  last  week.  To  add  to  Terrapm  miseries,  yellow  fever  hos- 
pitalized two  of  their   second  stringers,    and   forced    the    rest    of   the 
squad  to  take  injections  of  gamma  globulin. 
TATUM  STILL  HAS  CONFIDENCE  IN  SOUAD 

Tatum  reemphasized  his  faith  in  the  Carolina  ball  club  at  liig  week- 
ly press  conference.  Also,  on  a  radio  broadcast  earlier  in  the  week, 
the  Tar  Heel  mentor  came  out  and  flatly  predicted  a  win  over  Mary- 
land. Still,  all  this  doesn't  mean  much  until  the  Tar  Heel  team  walks 
out  on  the  field  and  actually  wins  a  football  game,  or  at  least  gives 
some  indication  that   they    might   win   one   someday. 

Squad  morale  and  student  morale  seems  to  be  at  a  low  ebb 
right  now  just  when  a  lot  of  enthusiasm  is  needed  most.  Although 
tkis  isn't  Stanvnitski  day  as  was  originally  reported  in  this  column, 
w*'d  like  to  see  a  large  turnout  at  the  pep  rally  tonight.  Approxi- 
mately 2500  Maryland  students  are  going  to  be  on  hand  for  the 
rally,  so  at  least  that  many  Carolina  students  should  be  there.  It 
might  help  the  team  win  tomorrow,  and  any  help  they  can  get 
would  certainly  be  appreciated. 

Personnel  wi^^Q,  the  Tar  Heels  are  in  as  good  a  shape  as  eved.  Dav3 
Reed,  one  of  the  few  who  played  football  as  it  .snould  be  played  last 
week,  will  be  in  there  at  quarterback  to  direct  the  team.  Soph  half- 
back Moe  DeCantis,  who  showed  his  heels  to  the  Bulldogs  on  more 
than  on«  occasion,  looks  like  a  starter  at  halfback,  and  changes  have 
i>een  made  in  the  forward  wall.  In  addition,  Tatum  took  action  last 
weekend  and  dismissed  two  men  from  the  squad  for  disciplinary 
reasons,  and  it  is  rumored  that  one  or  two  others  also  got  the  axe. 

Is  all  this  enough  to  beat  big  bad  Maryland?  Not  by  a  long  shot 
unless  the  Tar  Heels  add  a  little  psychological  seasoning  to  make  l^e 
mixture  complete.  We  pick  Maryland  20,  Carolina  6. 
A  SWING  AROUND  THE  CIRCUIT 

The  rest  of  the  Big  Four  schedule  finds  Duke  away-  from  home 
at  Pittsburgh,  Wake  Forest  traveling  to  Florida  State  and  N.  C.  State 
visiting  Dayton. 

It  could  be  another  shutout  afternoon  for  the  Big  Four,  but  we 
don't  think  so.  Duke  draws  a  toughie  in  Pitt,  but  frpm  what  they 
showed  against  SMU,  they  can  handle  the  job.  Also  the  Blue  Devils 
will  be  looking  for  revenge  after  last  year's  trouncing  at  the  hands 
of  the  Panthers.  Duke  20,  Pitt  14. 

Wake  Forest  heads  for  the  sunny  southland  to  do  battle  with 
Florida  State,  last  week's  conquerors  of  State.  The  Seminoles  are 
strong,  and  playing  on  their  home  grourtd,  will  be  hard  to  beat. 
Florida  Stafe  adds  another  Big  Four  victim  to  its  list,  this  time  by 
14-7. 

State's  up  and  down  Wolfpack  travel  to  Dayton,  Ohio  to  meet  the 
Dayton  Flyers,  and  a  quick  check  of  the  calender  shows  this  to  be 
an  up  "weekend  for  the  West  Raleigh  warriors.  So  far  this  season,  the 
Pack  has  been  on  and  off  on  alternate  weekends.  And  if  last  week's 
Florida  State  game  is  any  indcation,  the  Flyers  just  might  be  grounded. 
State  20,  Dayton  19. 


Booters  Go 
For  Third 
In  A  Row 

By    JIM    PURKS 

Tl:e  UXC  s>ccer  .toa.r  will  seek 
its  third  straight  win  of  the  season 
today  whpn>  it  faces  t'le  Davidson 
Wildcats  at  3  p.m.  on  Fetzer  Field. 

Ti.e  team  has  .set  a  phenomenal 
stwring  pc.fe  so  far,  si-oring  nine 
goals  in  two  g^mie.s  foi-  an  average 
of  bett-r  tliaii  four  goals  per  game. 

Coa:  h  .M.inin  .\l!t'ns  squad 
romped  o\< '•  Lynciib;  r^  in  its  in- 
itial tea  of  the  s<-asr>n.  5-0,  and 
then  tiavelkvi  to  Lexiu'.Hon.  Va.  to 
defeat  a  Sv-j-appy  Wa^liiugton  and 
Lfc  team.  4-1. 

The  scoring  luis  Ijeen  pretty 
evenly  distributed  among  the  play- 
ens  on  the  forward  line.  Coleman 
Barks  is  the  leading  scorer  with 
three  goals,  with  Captain  Grovgr 
Brown  next  with  two.  Johnny  Fos- 
ter. Tom  Rand.  Rick  Grausman, 
and  Ted  Yjuhanna  all  have  scored 
once. 

On  clcfen'X'.  the  team  has  proven 
to  be  equall.v  adept,  allowing  only 
one  goal  in  two  games.  The  one 
goal  was  scored  by  Washington 
and  Lee  Tujsday  due  ta  a  penalty 
kick.  Goalit  Chiuk  Martman  had 
succeeded  in  stopping  all  shots  on 
goiU  until  \V  &  L's  fourth  quai'ter 
sc^'ore. 

Hartman  lias  received  excellent 
protection  from  the  three  fullbacks, 
.Mikf  Galiiicjnakis.  Da\  t  Corkey. 
and  Ted  J(>nes.  and  two  hustling 
halfbacks.  Bob  Borden  and  Bdl 
Blair. 

The  forward  line  has  sharpened 
its  pa.>isin^  attack  tonsiderablv 
since  the  Lvnchburg  contest.  John 
Foster  and  Pat  McCormick  hold 
down  the  wing  .positions,  while 
Coleman  Barks.  Ted  Y:>uhanna.  and 
Gixjver  Bi-o\\n  represent  Carolina's 
scoring  pun;'ii  in  the  tenter. 

.\tter  the  Davidson  game  the  Tar 
Heels  will  fa'fe  a  tough  N.  C.  State 
team  at  Chape'  Hill  on  October  24. 
Ci^rolina  de.cated  State  once  last 
year  and  lieJ  them.  3-.3.  in  the  sec- 
ond meeting  between  the  two. 


Varsity,  Freshman  Rur\ners 
In  Three  Way  Meets  Here 


Two  triangular  cross  country . 
meets  will  be  held  here  tomorrow  j 
morning  at  11:45.  The  varsity^  will  j 
encounter  Maryland  and  Wake  j 
Forest  while  the  frosh  harriers  J 
meet  Wake  Forest  and  Eiast  Mec-  j 
klenburg  High  School.  j 

Yesterday,  both  squads  held  j 
heavy  workouts  in  preparation  for 


the  meets.  Supervising  practice,  in 
the  absence  of  Head  Coach  Dale 
Ranson,  was  Freshman  Coach  Boyi 
Newnam. 

Highlighting  the  practice  sess 
ion  was  the  discovery  and  exterm- 
ination of  a  reptile  by  varsity  run 
ner  Dave  Scurlock.  The  serpent 
was  encountered  on  the  varsity 
course. 


Bulwark  Defense  For  Booters 

Above  are  the  three  starting  fullbacks  for  the  UNC  soccer  team.  They  are,  left  to  right:  Mike  Gali- 
fianakis,  Dave  Cqrkey  and  Ted  Jones.  These  three  wiM  be  In  the  starting  lineup  this  afternoon  when 
the  unbeaten  Tar   Heel   booters  take  on   Davidson. 


WEEKLY 
SPECIAL! 

CHOCOLATE 

NEWPORT 

SUNDAE 


30<^ 


Carolina-Maryland  Tilt 
Marks  Dads  Day  Here 


MURALS 


'  TODAY'S    INSULTS 

At  4:00:  field-1,  DKE  45— Theta 
Chi  O;  field  -2,  Sigma  Nu  14— Beta 
0:  field-3.  KA  1— SAH  0;  field-4 
no  game  schceduled;  field-5,  Phi 
Kappa  Sig  13— Chi  Psi  Q. 

At  5:00:  field-1,  ZBT  7— Chi  Phi 
6  (in  'overtime);  fieId-2,  SAE  20— 
ATO  8:  field-3,  Pika  8— Kappa  Sig 
0:  field-4,  Zeta  Psi  24 — Phi  Gam 
(w)  0;  field-5,  Chi  Phi  6— Delt  Sig 
0. 

TOMORROW'S    SCHEDULE 

At  4:00;  field-1.  Beta  vs  SPE 
(w);  fieId-2,  SAE  vs  Phi  Delt  (w); 
field-3.  ATO  vs  Kappa  Sig  (w); 
field-4  Sig  Chi  vs  Sig  Nu  (w);  field- 
5,  Stacy- 1  vs  Everett-3; 

At  5:00:  field-1,  Manley  vs  Med 
Sch.-3;  field-2,  Everett-2  vs  Vic 
Vill;  field-3.  Dent  Sch  vs  BVD; 
field-4.  Lewis  vs  Law  Sch-2;  field- 
5,  Med  Sch-2  vs  Everett-1. 


It  will  be  "Dad's  Day"  here  Sat- 
urday when  the  Carolina  Tar 
Heels  entertain  Maryland's  Terps 
and  go  out  in  quest  of  their  first 
victory  of    the  season. 

This  will  be  in  honor  of  the 
players'  fathers  and  Tar  Heel  sup- 
porters are  hopeful  the  occasion 
will  be  an  inspiration  to  the  team 
to  turn  in  its  finest  performance 
of  the  year. 

Coach  Jim  Tatum  today  dis- 
patched special  invitations  by  wire  I 
to  the  poppas  and  they  will  have 
reserved  seats  on  the  field.  The 
plan  also  is  to  introduce  them  as 
part    of   half-time   ceremonials. 

The  Terps,  like  the  Tar  Heels, 
have  had  their  bumps  this  year 
and  have  come  up  with  only  one 
victory,  despite  their  high-pre- 
season ranking.  Both  teams  have 
been  plagued  by  injuries  to  key 
men. 

It  is  expected  to  be  one  of  the 
liveliest  contests  of-  the  season, 
however,  from  the  2  p.m.  kickoff 
to  the  finish,  and  witnessed  by  a 
top  notch  crowd. 

Maryland  will  have  plenty  of 
support  in  the  seals.  It  will  be 
Maryland's  football  caravan  week- 
end with  students  descending  on 
Chapel  Hill  en  masse.  It  is  estimat- 
ed that  approximately  3,000  will 
be  here,  including  Maryland's 
band. 

Halftime  ceremonials,  in  addi- 
tion to  the  Dad's  Day  cermonials, 


will  include  a  show  by   bands  of 
th.e  two  schools. 

Maryland's  squad  will  arrive  Fri- 
day and  make  headquarters  in  a 
Durham  hotel.  Definite  word  has 
not  been  received  as  to  whether 
Maryland  will  work  out  Friday. 
Ordinarily  neither  North  Carolina 
nor  Maryland  hold  a  Friday  drill  i 
athough  Coaches  Jim  Tatum  and 
Tommy  Mont  broke  that  custom 
last  week  and  directed  their  squads 
through  brief  warming  up  exer- 
cises. ' 


Old  Book  Week 

October  20th  Through  October  26th 


Bargains  on  old  Encyclopaedias 

Nice  Old  Sets  at  Reduced  Prices 

Odd  Volumes  at  19^  Each 


Hurt  Books  at  Low  Prices 
25%  Off  on  all  Pamphlets 
Carolina  Attic-Trash  cheap 


CLASSIFIEDS 


PAPER-BACKED  BOOKS  —  Good 
used  novels,  detective  yarns  and 
non-fiction  at  3  for  25c  in  the 
stand  by  our  front  door.  The 
Intimate    Bookshop. 


HI-WAY  SERVICE  STATION,  ON 
the  curve  in  Carrboro,  has  "U- 
WASH-IT' — 600.  Premium  gas 
31.9tf,   regular  gas   29.90. 


Have  Fun  With  Us  During  Old  Book  Week 

The  Intimate  Bookshop 


Open  Till  10  P.M.  -  205  E.  Franklin  St.  -  Chapel  Hill 


Gives  y&u  rnorfe  to  enjoy 


Frosh  Booters     ' 
Edge  By  State, 
4-3,  In  Debut      , 

Carolina's  freshman  soccer  team 
opened  its  seajson  yesterday  with 
a  4-3  win  over  undermanned  N. 
C.  State  in  a  rain-delayed  match 
played  in  Raleigh. 

The  game  was  originally  sched- 
uled to  be  played  on  Wednesday, 
but  due  to  inclement  weather,  was 
set  back   until  yesterday. 

Inside  forward  John  Ghanim 
paced  ths  Tar  HeeLs  to  a  3-0  lead 
at  halftime  with  goals  in  each  of 
the  first  two  periods.  Another  in- 
side forward,  Curt  Champlin, 
booted  in  a  second  quarter  mark- 
er. 

Carolina's  domination  of  the 
game  came  to  a  halt  in  the  sec- 
ond half  as  the  Wolfpack  booters 
racked  up  three  goals  to  the  Tar 
Babies'  one.  Mike  Thompson  was 
the  only  Carolinian  to  score,  ram- 
ming one  home  in  the  third  quar- 
ter. 

The  second  half  turning  point 
came  when  (wo  fresh  men  enter- 
ed the  Pack  lineup  and  provided 
them  with  enough  spark  to  allow 
the'ni  to  pitk  up  three  goals.  For 
most  of  the  game,  the  State  team 
had  only  11  n»en  available  for 
duty.  I 

Tar  Baby  Peyton  Hawes  suffer-  i 
ed  a  knee  injury  in  the  fray,  and 
is  confined   to  the  University   In- : 

firmarj-.  ' '• 


Real  Filtration 


Fylj  King  Siz^ 


uee 


AFTER   SHAVE 
LOTION 


RefreshinQ  antiseptic  oction  h«olt 
razor  nicks*  hdps  keep  your  skin 
in  top  condition.         1.00  ptu.  to. 

SHULTON       N*w  York  •   Tereiit» 


*\«<»5»',e  too, 


FILTER  TIP 

TAREYTON 


CICARETT 


BS 


fi 


thigfqsre^    great! 


*««l>eRK  SI2B 


FILTER  TIP 


L 


♦V 


-^'^-e-^^m^Mx^ 


^^jKsaayCTiir'fetffiRtBghiMafc 


WEATHER 

Cookr,  with  scattered  showers 


VOL.  LVII  NO.  26 


owe  L1B!^ARY 
SERIALS  DEPT. 
CHAPEL  HILL,  N.  C. 
8-31-49 


OThe 


'.x 


STar  Mtd 


MUDSLI  NGING 

Brothei|  Nixon    gives   tht   rwl«». 
Sec  p«9«  2... 


Complete  UP)  Wire  Service 


CHAPEL  HILL,  NORTH  CAROLINA,  SATURDAY,  OCTOBER  20,  1956 


Offices   in   GraJiam   Memorial 


FOUR   PAGES  THIS    ISSUE 


Draft  Test    Troup  Thwarted 
Dates  Set     By  Turtle  Trap 
For  1956 


Dates  have  been  set  for  the  Se- 
lective Service  System  College 
Qualification  tests  to  be  given  for 
the  1956-57  school  year,  according 
to  Gen.  F.  Caryle  Shepard,  advisor 
t.)  veterans. 

Information  regai-ding  these 
tests  has  been  received  at  the  lo- 
cal board  office  and  students  have 
been  asked  to  apply  immediately 
if  they  wish  to  take  the  test. 

Applications  for  the  test  on 
Nov.  15  must  be  postmarkel  not 
later  than  midnight.  Oct.  30.  and 
those  far  the  test  on  April  18. 
1957.  miLst  be  postmarked  no 
later  than  midnight.  March  5. 
1957. 

Students  who  have  completed  as 
much  as  one  year  of  college  work 
(two  completed  semesters)  and 
have  been  admitted  for  tjie  next 
following  year  are  eligible  for  de- 
ferment, upon  their  request,  pro- 
vided they  meet  th  following  min- 
imum  requirements: 

(1)  Rank  in  the  upper  50  per 
cent  of  the  first  year's  class,  hav- 
ing carried  a  full  load  and  or 
having  made  a  score  of  70  or  above 
on  the  SSS  College  Qualification 
Test  that  is  given  twice  annually  j 
during  the  college  year. 

(2)  Deferments  are  for  not  more 
than  one  year,  but  may  be  renewed 
from  year  to  year  upon  request 
until  graduation. 

The  student  in  his  second  year  j 
muf^i  rank  in  the  upper  two-thirds  I 
of  his  class  to  be  eligible  for  a  de- 1 
ferment  for  his  third  ye«r.  the! 
student  in  his  third  year  must  rank  1 
In  the  upper  three-fourths  of  hii.  J 
class  to  be  eligible  for  a  defer- 
ment for  his  fourth  year. 

Continued  study  in  the  medical 
or  dental  school  requires  that  the 
student  rank   in  the  upper  50  per 
cent  of  his  class  for  the  last  yearj 
prior  to  entering  those  schools  or  j 
attain    a   score   of   70  on    the  SSS  j 
test, 

Graduate  school  students  itjnsjt  i 
be  in  the  upper  25  per  cent  of  the  ■ 
class  for  the  last  undergraduate  | 
year  or  attain  a  score  of  80  on ! 
the  test.  i 

Law  students  are  considered  un- 1 
dergraduate  students  taking  seven , 
or  eight  years  to  graduate.  They , 
must  have  made  70  on  the  test  or: 
have  been  in  the  upper  75  per , 
cent  of  their  class  during  the  pre- 
ceding year.  j 

For  any  further  information,  stu- 
dents have  been  asked  to  stop  by  i 

)d    see.  Gen.    Shepard      at      315, 

>uth  Building.  I 


By  CHARLIE  SLOAN 

An  intrepid  group  of  Carolina 
gentlemen  returned  to  Chapel  Hill 
this  morning  empty  handed  after 
an  all-night  attempt  to  statue-nap 
the  University  of  Maryland's  terra- 
pin. 

The  unsuccessful  attempt  was 
the  culmination  of  two  weeks'  pre- 
paration during  which  routes,  ren- 
dezvous, and  time  schedules  were 
arranged  in  the  greatest  possible 
detail. 

Near  the  gymnasium  on  the  Mary- 
land campus  is  a  statue  of  a  tur- 
tle, the  terrapin.  One  reconnaisance 
trip  earlier  last  week  the  statui-s 
dimensions  were  taken  along  with 


I  300  pounds,  the  metal  statue  was 
I  filled  with  cement,  and  that  it  was 
.located    right    under    the   windows 
of  students'  living  quarters. 

When  they  tried  to  pry  the  ani- 
mal from  its  concrete  base,  they 
bent  the  crow  bar.  They  found 
some  heavier  metal  rods  lying 
about  but  these  too  bent  without 
moving  the  statue.  After  repeated 
efforts  they  gave  up  and  looked 
about  for  another  item  of  value  to 
bring    back    to    Carolina. 

Other  than  a  big"M"  at  the  base 
of  the  statue  they  didn't  find  an- 
other  souvenier,  so  Maryland 
students  on  their  way  to 
class     yesterday    morning     found 

..    ,       ,.             .,  ^,  .       their     turtle   covered   with     foam 
its  location,  available  escape  routes  _,  ,.  ...  ,   . 
"from  a  fire  extinguisher  and   two 

signs,     one     reading     "Trip     The 


Caroiina   Footballers   Seek   First 
Victory  Of  Year  Against  Maryland 
In  Kenan  Stadium  This  Afternoon 

Jim  Tatum  Vs.  Former 
Pupils  In  Grid  Scrap 


Terps. "  and  the  other  "We  Tried, 
But  We  Couldn't  Get  It—  The  Ca 
folina  Bovs" 


Yack  Gives  Extra  Week 
To  Get  Photos 


and   estimated  weight.. 

Friday,  the  eve  of  the  great  tur- 
tle robbery,  a  WLENC-TV  ncwscas-  [ 
ter  sgned  off  his  show  with  "Sa-  : 
turday  the  terrapins  wll  be  here.  .  j 
in  more  ways  than  they  know."      { 

About    fifty    students    who    had  < 
gotten  wind  of  the  plans  were  on  ' 
hand  to  see  the  seven  chosen  men  i 
off.  Three  cars,  one  of  them  a  sta- 
lion  wagon,   pulled   up  to   the  de-  | 
parture  point  and  amid  cheers  and  ' 
good  wishes   the  adventures  clim- 
bed in. 
COLLECT   CALL 

According  to  plan.s.  the  leader 
of  the  group  was  supposed  to  call 
collect  when  the  turtle  was  in  ; 
their  hands.  The  individual  taking  i 
the  call  was  to  refuse  it  since  there  j 
would  be  no  call  if  somethng  had  | 
gone  wrong.  I 

But  no  call  came.  .'M  7:30,  when  ' 
the  triumphant  return  was  expect- 
ed.  no  one  drove  up  with  a  heavy-  j 
laden  station  wagon. 

By  9:30  yesterday  morning  con- 
versation   was   turning    to    morbid 
thoughts  of  shaved  beads  and  mem- 
ories  of  the   days  when   Carolina !      About   3,800  pictures  had   been 
haiTa  HeM  Week.  "    "  '  "jlftado  through  .vesferday,  Yack  of 

A  rumor  circulated   around   the    [icials  said, 
campus    early    yesterday    morning 

that  the  turtle  had  been  taken  and 

was    being   panted   a    bright    Cai'O- 
lina  Blue.  j 

At    noon,  the    tired    li'.lle    little ! 
group  arrived — wthout  the  turtle. 

Over  a  cup  of  coffee  the  ring-, 
leader  explained  what  had  happen- 
ed. They  arrived  at  College  Park 
on  schedule  and  found  that  a  dum- 
my letter  sweater  that  one  of  the 
men  had  made  with  a  white  sweat- 
er and  red  felt  "M"  served  its  pur- 
pose well.  According  to  a  member 
of  the  group  the  people  they  ran 
into  seemed  to  suspect  nothing 
when  they  saw  the  sweater. 
PROBLEM 

Their  real  problem  and  worst 
moment  came  when  they  found 
that  instead  of  the  estimated  250- 


:  Students  who  have  not  had 
their  pictures  made  by  the  Vack 
can  have  them  made  for  $1  next 
week  if  they  are  not  seniors. 

Pictures  will  be  taken  from  1  to 

7  p.m.  Monday  through  Friday  in 

\  the    basement  of  Graham    Memor- 

i  ial. 

i 

I      All   students  other  than  seniors 
j  can  have  their  pictures  made. 

j  The  printers  have  already  start- 
I  ing  processing  and  laying  out  the 
'  pages  with  seniors  on  them.  Yack 
,  officials  said,  and  it  is  therefore 
i  not  possible  for  seniors  to  have 
their   pictures   made.  j 


By  LARRY  CHEEK 

Coach  Jim  Tatums  battered  and  bruised  Carolina  Tar  Heels,  still 
looking  for  their  first  win  of  the  season  after  four  fruitless  Saturdays, 
face  another  AXC  tough  luck  team  here  this  afternoon  when  they  go 
against  Maryland's  disappointing  Terrapins  in  a  scrap  that  has  all 
the  makings  of  a  real  grudge  battle.  ■^.. 

Kickolf  time  is  2  p.  m.  in  Kenan  Stadium,  witl^'some  25.000  fans 
expected  to  sit  in.  Included  in  the  crowd  will  be  tll9'~  fathers  of  the 
Carolina   football   players   in  addi-    ^,^^^  ^  ^^^.^^  wH(«  the  two  squads 


tion  to  approximately   2,500.  Mary- 
land students. 
This  is  'Dad's  Day*  here  at  UNC 


get  together,  latum  was  for  nine 
years  head  coach  at  .Maryland  be- 
fore  switching    to   UNC    last   Feb- 


and  the  players'  fathei-s  will  bo  1^.^^^.^.  ^^^^  jj^^.  j^^^^.^  j,,,^.  p^.j.f arming 
further  brightened  by  the  appear-  ^^^^  ^^^  rj.^^.^^  ^.^^.^  recruited  and 
ance  of  the  Maryland  students  who    ^..ained  bv  the  old  master.  It  goes 


are  down  on  their  annual  caravan 
weekend  trip. 
GRUDGE   BATTLE 

This  afternoon's  game  has  .sev- 
eral interesting  angles  that  should 
draw  the  fans.  For  one  thing,  it 
will  be  a  sort  of  'old  home  week" 


Head 
rally  held 
stage. 


Bynum  Leads  Pep  Rally 

cheerleader  Jim  Bynum  is  shown   leading    a   cheer   as   the   crowd    rises   to    join    him   at   the    pep 
last  night  in   Memorial  Hall.  A  combo  which   pro\ided   music   is   shown   on   the   right  of  the 


Dean  Of  Women's  Interview 
Service  Starts  Here  Oct.  24 


Jazz  Band  Wili  Appear 
At  Post-Game  Reception 

A  local  modern  jazz  band  will 
perform  at  today's  post-game  re- 
ception  in   Cobb  Basement. 

The  reception,  at  which  coed 
hostesses  will  serve  free  refresh- 
menls,  will  be  held  from  4:30  to 
6:30. 

All  students  are  invited,  '"slag 
or  drag,"  according  to  Benny 
Thomas.  Interdorniitory  Council 
social  chairman. 

The  reception  is  being  co- 
sponsored  by  the  IDC  and  the 
Graham   Memorial  Student  Union. 


'rS'S*^  '!5<v:  "^x't' 


The  interviewing  program  of  the 
Offi<'e*of ■  tTie  Ueah  oT  tf omen,  Se- 
signed  as  a  service  to  undergrad-  ' 
uate    wymen    students   on   campus.  I 
begins  Oct.  24.  i 

During  the  first  semester,  fresh-  j 
man    and    new    transfer   .students  i 
receive  a  card  specifying  a  date  be- 1 
fore   which    they   are  to   make   an 
appointment. 

Juniors  who  entered  as  fresh- 
man students  are  also  asked  to 
come  in  for  an  interview  to  con- 
tinue their  personnel  folder.  De- 
parture interviews  are  scheduled 
in  the  spring  for  graduating  sen- 
iors. 

The  prefatory  interview  is  val- 
uable, according  to  the  Dean  of 
Women's  Office,  in  providing  an 
opportunity  to  begin  a  personnel 
folder  which  contains  a  back- 
ground record  of  sciiolarshio  ac- 
tivities  and   interests,   and   a   rec- 


j_^rdof_  experience,  in .  th5..Univ.er*- 

'  it y  The  student  is  asked  to  provide 

'  this   infonnation. 

I  At  this  time,  she  also  receives 
the  results  of  the  Kudir  Prefer- 
ence Test  and  the  Ohio  State.  Un- 
iversity Psychological  Examina- 
tion which  were  given  during  the 
Orientation  period  to  new  stu- 
dents. 

Before  the  senior  woman  leaves 
th?  campus,  the  departure  inter- 
view is  .scheduled.  This  consists  of 
bringing  the  personnel  rect>rd  up 
to  date,  by  obtaining  an  over-all 
picture  of  the  period  spent  at  the 
University. 

This  service  continues  a!i?r 
graduation  when  these  records, 
combined  with  those  in  the  Cen- 
tral Office  of  Records,  are  used 
as  a  basis  for  recommendations 
and  for  other  informative  pur- 
poses. 


Students  Urged  To  Be 
I     Ready  For  Election 

!       .Mrs.    Richmond    P.   Bond,    presi- 
j  dent  of  the  Chapel  Kill  League  ot 
,  Women    VotorSj.    made    an    appeal 
Thursday    to    all    eligible   Carolina 
'  stud:nts   to   make   preparations  to 
.  vote  in   the  fall   Presidential  elec- 
tion before  the  cut-off  date  of  Oct. 
27 

In   order  to  be  eligible  to   vote 

in  the  fall  election,  persoijs  must 

be  21   years  of  age   prior   to   Nov. 

I  6.   voting   day.    and    must    be   reg- 

I  istered.    Those    students    who    are 

!  attending  school  away  from  home 

and    have    f;iund    it    impo.ssible    to 

register   may   request   an   absentee 

rjgi.ster  and  may  also  vote  an  ab- 

se:itee  balkt. 

Married  students  who  are  perm- 
anent residents  of  Chapel  Hill  and 
the  surrounding  area  and  have 
not  regi.^tered  are  requested  to 
cont:ict  Mrs.  Robert  Sager,  League 
member,  at  8-2679  for  information 
pertaining  to  precinct  and  poll  lo- 
cations. 


1,000 

For  Rally 


without  saying  that  his  former  pu- 
pils would  like  nothing  belter  than 
to  give  him  a  lesson  in  football  tac- 
tics. 

The  Terp  coach  is  Tommy  Mont, 
for  years  a  top  assistant  to  Tatum. 
Mont  took  over  when  Tatum  left 
for  his  alma  mater.  Carolina,  and 
under  his  guidance,  the  Terps  have 
faltered  considerably  from  their 
last  year's  standard.  To  date.  Mary- 
land has  salvaged  only  one  victory 
out  of  four  starts. 

Carolina  has  fared  even  worse 
in  the  first  year  d#  the  Tatum  re- 
gime. The  Tar  Heels  have  yet  to 
come  close  to  winning  a  game,  los- 
ing to  State.  26-6;  Oklahoma.  36-0: 
South   Carolina.    14-0  and   Georgia 


The    Carolina    spirit    seems    to 
have   picked  up  a  little  last  night 
as    about     1,000    fans    turnied    out    26-12. 
for    the    pep    rally    before    today's        j^   .^„  pffo,.,   ^^,  ^hake  his  »«tvafi 
game   wtih    Maryland's   Terps.  ^i,,  ^f  the  doldrums.  Coach  Tatum 

The  tally  took  place  in  -Meraor-  (jjsm.ssed  .wo  players  from  the  team 
ial  Hall  and  lasted  for  about  an  jor  disciplinary  reasons  earlier  in 
'^"i"'-  '  the  week   and   made  some  drastic 

Besides  cheering,  there  were  changes  in  the  lineup  which  will 
.several  acts.  Jerry  Farber's  piano  open  against  the  Terps  this  after- 
playing   and   comedy   was   the    act    noon. 

best  received  as  he  was  called  en        Second  string  guard  Howard  Wil- 
for  two  encore  numbers.  liams  and  sub  h^jlfback  Dick  Dar- 

The  crowd  was  enthusiastic,  as  lins  were  cut  from  the  squad  last 
the  fans  responded  loudly  to  the  weekend  due  to  curfew  violation, 
cheerleading  of  .lim  Bynum  and  And  the  chief  lineup  changes  found 
crew.  There  were  two  cheers  that  sop'^"^  I^»n  Redding  and  Leo  Rus- 
erupted  spontaneously  from  the  savage  moving  into  first  string  tac 
audience,  incuding  the  -We're  1*'^  s''^*s  to  replace  Stuart  Pell  and 
from    Carolina"    veil,    which    was    P^''    B'azcr. 


Mann  Discovers  Wedistribution 

^ 

Of  Landmarks  In  Pop  Map  Quiz 


Dig  Those  Crazy  Rocks 

.      predric*  Trull,  left,  and  Dale  Whitfield  look    over  somo  rocks  in  a  Geolofy  41   laboritery.  In  one 
class   recently.  Dr.   Virgil  Mann   surprised   t  he    class     with    a    geography     examination,    and     it 


lectu"-* 


J  w.rv  embarrassing  to  almost  all  of  tht  stud  ents  (Photo  by  Hal  Hondtrson) 


By  JIMMY   PURKS 

Did  you  know  Atlanta  is  lo 
caled  in  the  state  of  Mississippi 
or  that  Salt  Lake  City  is  in  Ida- 
ho'/ 

Also.  Toronto  is  in  Utah  and 
the  .-Vdirondacks  are  mainly  in 
South   Dakota. 

Foitunalcly  for  the  tranquili- 
ty of  the  national  and  staU-  gov- 
eininents,  the  above  fac's  are 
not  true,  but  they  are  examples 
of  the  many  wrong  answercs  a 
geology  class  of  87  students 
gave  their  profcss>ir.  Dr.  Virgil 
Mann,  on  Monday  when  he  sur- 
prised them  with  one  of  his  an- 
nual geography  tests. 

Di.  Mann  gave  each  student  a 
large  map  of  North  America  and 
asked  them  to  mark  or  write  on 
the  map  the  approximate  places 
where  they  beliyed  certain  geo- 
graphic   sites    were    located. 

Dr.  Mann  asked  the  students  to 
Iccaic  10  cities,  among  them 
Asheville,  Miami,  Salt  Lake 
Ciiy.  Toronto,  and  Vancouver.  He 
also  asked  for  th''  location  of 
4  mountain  areas  and  four  rivers, 
all   in  the  United  Slates. 

He  gave  the  tests  for  his  own 
personal  information.  He  did  not 
allow  the  students  to  sign  their 
names  to  the  maps  and  didn't 
grade   them. 

Of  the  87  maps  he  examined, 
Dr.  Mann  found  only  two  almost 
perfect  ones.  The  rest  Dad  ser- 
\eral  conspicuous  errors  on  them. 
He  singled  out  two  maps  parti- 


DR.  VIRGIL  MANN 
...  a  surprixe 


"the 
ver\' 


ci'larly.   classifying  one   as 
worst  "  and   the   other  as 
poor." 

Some  of  the  most  noticeable 
errors  were  locating  Chicago 
where  Milwaukee  is.  marking 
the  Colorado  River  as  being 
near  the  Canadian  border,  and 
plac-ing  Toi^oiitu  in  the  alale  of 
Utah. 


.Mann  found  several  commcn 
ini.slakes  on  all  the  maps.  .AH 
but  two  of  the  students  failed  to 
locale  Tori'ttto.  and  very  few 
put  Vancouver  in  the  correct  lo- 
cation. 

"It  pointed  up  the  same  thing 
as  every  year."  Dr.  Mann  com- 
mented, "tnce  we  gel  iiut  of  the 
United    State*   we   are    lost." 

All  the  sludvnts  correctly  lo- 
cated ihc  Gulf  of  .Mexico  and  the 
majority  knew  the  southern 
cities  very  well. 

\  noticeable  feature  was  that 
except  for  one  student,  every- 
one Was  able  to  correctly  mark 
.'Asheville.  N.  C.  The  one  guilty 
student  placed  Asheville  in  Ten- 
nessee. 
► - 

Fall  Germans  Open  Fri. 
With  Concert  And  Dance 

'       Next    Friday     will     witnes.s     the 
!  opening    of   Fall    Germans   with   a 
!  concert    from   3  to  5:30   p.m.    and 
I  a  dance  from  9  p.m.  to  1  a.m. 
'      Fats  Domino,  known  throughout 
!  the    land   as   "ITi?    Little   Fat    Man 
I  from  New  Orleans,"  and  Sam  Don- 
ahue with  the  Billy  May  band  ^ill 
be  on  hand.  The  bands  will  share 
honors    at    both    the    concert    and 
the  danc?. 

Debbie    Brown    will    appear    as 
vocalist    wtih    the    May    organiza 
*tion. 

A  photographer  will  be  pre.>»eni 
•  to  take  photos  for  a  nominal  fee. 


executed  loudly  and  vigorously. 

Several  rolls  of  toilet  tissue  were 
thrown  around  in  tiie  auditorium, 
and  one  roll  went  sailing  toward 
an  alleged  Maryland  student  who 
appeared  in  a  window  waving  a 
red-lighted    latcrn. 

About  eight  or  10  Carolina  blue 
ten  gallon  hats  were  in  eviflence. 

Less  than  a  dozen  cheers  were 
dene  in  the  hour,  but  the  crowd 
was  entei"tained  by  the  various 
acts  and  a  combo  which  was  on 
hand  to  provide  music. 

The  enthusiasm  went  out  of  the 
auditorium  with  the  crowd,  as 
cheers  couPd  be  heard  echoing 
across  campus  along  with  the  sound 
of  several  fire  crackers  going  off. 

Police  reported  no  trouble  from 
the  Maryland  students  down  on 
their  caravan  weekend.  Every- 
thing was  quiet,  they  said. 


<Scv   FOOTBALL.    Page  4) 


IN  THE  INFIRMARY 

Those  in  the  infirmary  yester- 
d<.y    included: 

Misses  Alma  B.  Godsay,  Caro- 
lyn Y.  Meredith,  Helen  P.  Dixon, 
Daryl  Farringtoiv  Lorna  L.  Lu- 
tes, Susan  M.  Edmundson  and 
Pauline  W.  Sims,  and  Charles 
Gray  ill,  George  J.  Stavnitski, 
Stephen  H.  Keutzer,  Giles  G.  Nic- 
holson, Claude  R.  Moore  Jr., 
Charles  R.  Shoe,  Peyton  S.  Hawes 
Jr.,  James  A  Blakely,  William 
E.  Heck,  James  S.  Grumpier  Jr., 
Frank  K.  Bynum  Jr.,  Horace  C. 
White  Jr.,  James  H.  Epps  IV, 
Frederick  L.  Linville,  John  Wil- 
liam Johnson,  Abe  Walston,  Wil- 
liam S.  Yost  James  H.  Conoly 
and  William  A.  Willis  Jr. 


UNC,  Terp  Bands  To  Unite 
For  Halftime  Election  Show 


The  forthcoming  election  will  be  ! 
the  theme  of  a  halftime  show  by 
the  combined   bands  of  UNC  and 
the    University    of    Maryland    Sat- 
urday. 

UNC  Band  Director  Herbert  W.  j 
Fred,    in    announcing    the  ^how'>| 
theme  yesterday,  said  "The  bands 
will    play    appropriate    music    and 
form :  t 

"1.    A    double  -  faced    calendar , 
spelling  the  election  date.  j 

"2.  The  heads  of  the  party  mas- 
cots (donkey  and  elephant)  which  i 
attack'   each   other. 

•■3.   A  top  hat  and   derby  v.hile 
playing   musical   answers   to  ques- 
tions posed  to  a  "soap  box  politic  ■. 
ian.' 

••4.  A  ballot  flanked  by  quesiion 
marks  which  move  into  the  ballot 
to  'x'  it. 

•'5.    The   'American    Eagle,"    the  I 
national  symbol."  i 

In  the  pre-game  activities,  the 
inarching  bands  of  the  two  institu- 
tions   will    also  join    forces.    After , 

/ 


independent  fanfares  and  en- 
trances pkying  their  respective 
fight  songs,  the  bands  will  com- 
bine to  spell  ".Maryland",  play  the 
Maryland  alma  mater,  spell  "Caro- 
lina." and  play    'Hark  the  Sound" 

After  the  notional  anthem,  which 
follows  th?  U\C  Alma  Mater,  the 
bands  will  leave  the  field  playing 
•'Marching   Along  Together." 

Directing  the  Maryland  ba.nd 
will  be  Hugh  Hender.son.  a  form- 
er assistant  director  of  the  UNC 
band  and  graduate  of  the  UNC 
.Music  School. 

Staff  memt>ers  of  the  UNC  band. 
in  addition  to  Fred,  are  Calvin 
Huber  and  Bert  Davis,  assistant 
direi^tors:  Don  Jefferson,  drum 
major:  .Miss  Jo  Carpenter,  head 
majorette  and  Misses  Mary  Ann 
Nelson.  Jane  Brock  and  Carolyn 
Meredith,  majorettes. 

Fred  and  Huber  serve  as  the 
music  arrangers.  Warren  Miller 
will  do  the  public  address  an- 
nouncing tor  the  show. 


II 


PAGE  TWO 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


SATURDAY  OCTOBER  20,  1956 


From  Old  Pro  Dick  Nixon: 

« 

When,  How  To  SHng  Mud 


OPEN  LETTER  TO  SOUTH  BLDG. 


\'iir  Piesidfju  Ric  hard  (t  h  c 
Kindheaitfd)  Nixon  has  taught 
othtr  polititians  a  valuable   trick. 

In  a  meeting;  this  week  uiili 
college  newspaper  editors,  the 
vice  president  ^ot  hit  witli  the 
question: 

'How  do  yon  explain  your 
(hange  in  taiupaigning  taictics  this 
vear?  Whv  aie  people  saving  you're 
now  (ondiuiing  your  eanipaign  on 
a  nuuh  higher  level  than  four  years 
ago?  ' 
Nixon,  show- 
ing a  line  ><  i 
ol  .\ll-.\inen- 
lan  teeth  to  hi> 
telex  ision  aud- 
ieiKf.  allowed 
as  hoA\  he'<l  be 
ni  ore  t  h  a  ii 
h;  ,)py  to  an- 
swer that  tute 
Jiitle  (ptestion. 

]  he     diller-  _ 

ent  e.  t  h  e  \  it  e  New  Republic 

j»resident    said,    iS  this: 

In  I  <».")-•.  when  he  and  the  Re- 
jnd>lieans  uere  trving  to  get  the 
l)eino(rais  out  ol  olfiee,  they  were 
li'^ht  ill  waging  an  alI-stop.s-j)iilled 
( Minpaign. 

This  year.  h(nve\er.  .\iXon  wants 
to  keep  the  Republicans  in  office. 
Such  violent  tactics  woidd  be  out 
i>f  place  this  year. 

So.  We  understand.  We  always 
wondered  why  Nixon  traveled  the 
(ouutiA.  smearing  e\erv  Deincxrat 
in  sight    with    his   loid    c  harges   of 


('oininunisni  or  near  Coinmuirisin. 
We  tetently  have  been  wondering 
why  he's  tinned  into  a  soft-.sjX)kcn. 
kindly  little  gentle  man  who  onlv 
wants  to  see  that  That  Nice  Mister 
I'.isenhower  gets   back   in   olliie. 

We  wondered  whv  it  was  The 
New  .Nixon,  tlve  Daughieis  of  the 
.\nieri(;ui  Re\oluiion-type  Nixon 
who  has  been  tomiiig  the  countrv 
this  yea;,  instead  of  the  American 
l,egion-type  Nixon  who  slopped 
mud  all  o\er  the  country  four 
years  ago. 

We  ne\er  heaicl  such  a  good  ra- 
tionalization for  the  art  of  politi- 
cal  iiHidslinging   and    slander. 

The  Pelvis 

I  l\is  has  arrived. 
The  well-ktiown  Mr.  Presley, 
idol  of  teenagers  (and,  we  suspect, 
cpiiie  a  lew  college  coeds),  got  in  a 
fight  the  other  da\  with  a  ser\ice 
station  owner. 

The  PcK  is  gave  the  station  op- 
erator a'  blac  k  eye  and  put  a  knot 
in  the  jaw  of  another  man  when  he 
was  .isked  to  t;tke  his  white  l.in- 
cohi  and  get  out. 

This  coidirnrs  our  suspicions 
about  Presley.  He  has  really  ar- 
rixed  at  what  Holywood  calls  star- 
dom. 

Now.  how  long  will  it  ta'ke  him 
to  make  Confidential  Magazine? 
How  lonu.  o  how  lon«»? 


The  New  Draft  Plan's  Good 

Now.  Adlai  Su\enson  h;is  hit  on  spend  a  specific      period      in      the 

Something  giK»cl.  aimed  fones."' 

This  wet  k  he  substituted  a     pro-  This  is  perhaps  the  most  intelli- 

posal   I'  !   •.;reniJi!\enin<;  our  armed  i;ent     suggestion     concerning;     t  h  e 

forces'  leu   his  c  i\liei— and  less  in-  armed  forces  to  be  offered  during 

telligent  —  su;i5iest}c>ns  .  tha^     the  the  present  campaign. 

I'nited    States   take   a   general    cut  Surely   the   Ignited 'States   needs 

in  its  draft.  more  intelligent,  more  spec  iali/ecl 

Saiti  the  nciiKnr.uic  presidential  men  in   its  armed   forces.   It    needs 

candidate:  men   who    can    operate    advanced 

We  need  more  P"id  more  tcxiav  machinery  and  \veapons.  but  it  al- 

a  type  ol   miliiuy,  personnel — ex-  so  needs  the  men  in  the  foxholes 

perienced  and   p   >fe<?siona'— A.hirh  and  f>n  the  front  lines, 

om   pitv       iiralt  system  does  not  Shevenson's      proposal.      even 

give    u.     the   draft    means   a  tre*  though  it  needs  a  lot  of  expanding, 

mcndoas  iurno\er  in  our  military  appears  to  be  headed  in  the  right 

personnel     and    a     residtant    higli  directicm.  It  would  not  cut  out  the 

pro|)ortion   of   isiexperienced    per-  foot-soldier. 

Nonnel.    .And    tliere    is   ample    e\i-  h  would  offer  an  education    to 

deuce  that  this  inexperienced  per-  students  who  would  be  willing  to 

sonnel       is      not      meeting   today's  sign    up    for  a   sttctch    in    the   sei - 

needs.  ■  vices,  much  like  the  present  .NRO- 

So   does   Stevenson    pr()|)ose    an  T(,    muI     ROIC.    progTa:ms.     But. 

.armv    made    up   of    scientists    aiid  wf    trust,    it    woidd    not    be    com- 

highl\-skilled  tec  hnic  iaps?  No.  He  pulsory  in  any  way. 

suggests:  Ste\enson's  earlier  bald  proposal 

".     .     .     univcMsity      scholarships  j,,   ,,,„    j|,^.   ,|,.3,j    .^^^j    ,.^.,y  ,^„    j,,^ 

which      will      provide     specialized  services'     scientists     frightened     us 

training  in  conjunc  tion  with  a  lib-  (oiisiderablv.    Now.    he    seems    to 

eral  education  to  a|>plicants  other-  1,^^^  ,evi.secl   his   plank   and   made 

wise  cpialified   who   will    agree   to  something  healthy  of  it. 

The  Daily  Tar  Heel  the  new  republic: 

The  official  student  publication  of  the  -^"i^^^—^-^B^B^B^—i—i 

Publications  Board  of  the  University  of  |^      •             *         I        ^ 

North    Carolina,    where    it    is    published  ff^ni^dl^l^^ 

daily    except    Monday   and    examination  r^            * 

and  vacation  periods  and  summer  terms 

Entered   as  second  class   matter  in  the  Secretary   Benson,     as     everyone 

post  office  in  Chapel  Hill,  N.  C,  undei  knows,  is  a  man  of  principle,  and 

the  Act  01  March  8,  1870.  Subscription  he  is  very  busy  these  days  applying 

rates:  mailed,  $4  per  year,  $2.50  a  semes-  ;,n   old    principle:   elections  should 

ter;  delivered,  $6  a  year,  $3.50  a  semes-  |,^.  ^^.f„, 

ter. 

— ;;;,;rrT,^  x^^„rT  ^^r,^  ''  '^  t^^'<^>  months  past  since  Ben- 
Editor   ..    FRED  POWLEDGE  .     ,              i  i     i       1    i                      ■ 

son  s  boss  told  the  delegates  at  the 

Managing  Editor           CHARLIE  SLOAN  Clow  Palac  e  to  reject  expedienc  v  in 

N^^i*^  EdU^r~ „:  RAY  LINKER  ^^^}''"^    ^^"'i     the    farm   problem, 

and  that  people  who  talk  alxjut  do- 
Business  Manager         BILL  BOB  PEEL  i„g  something  in  a  hurry  .  .  .    "at 

Sports  Editor   .  „..  LARRY  CHEEK  ''«<;    •'''•^   <>'•    making   our    problem 

twice  as  bad  next  vear — just  so  we 

Advertising  Manager       .    -    Fred  Katzln  ,.,.    .i..,       i     .i  •                          i 

r^    J  r-j  *              .           T>      «        u  S<^'   through   this  year  .  .  .  c O  not 

Coed  Editor    •. Peg  Humphrey  '^           i               •      •    i            .     .          , 

. 1  care  about   principle,  and  they  do 

EDITORLU.     STAFF  —  Woody     Sears.  not  know  the  farmers.  " 
Frank  Crowther,  Barry  Winston,  David 

Mundy,  George  Pfingst,  Ingrid  Clay.  Secretary      Benson     knows     the 

Cortlaifd  Edwards.  farmers  well  enough  so  that  he  is 

Staff  Photographer  Norman  Kantor 

iuSINESS  STAFF  -  Rosa  Moore,  Jonny  ,    ^^"^'"8     '^''     '"i",'""    P"""^*^    "^ 

Whitaker.  Dick  Leavitt,  Peter  Alper.  hamburger  to  satisfy  the  long-time 

demand  of  cattlemen   to  put  beef 

NEWS    STAFF-Clarke    Jones,    Nancy  ;„  ,he  school  lunch  piogram; 
Hill  Joan  Moore,  Pringle  Pipkin.  Anne  p„„i        ,,,,^    ^^p^^^^    f,,^    ^^,^,^,^^, 
Drake,  Bobbi  Smith,  Jerry  Alvis,  Edith  ,   ,       r     T  n                         ■  -i- 
MacKinnon,  Wally  Kuralt,  Ben  Taylor,  ^'!''  "'  .^'^^'"   ^"fr^»  '"  stabllt/.e  sag- 
Graham    Snyder.    Billy    Barnes,    Neil  "'"«  pnces; 
Bas.s,    Jim    Creighton,    Hil    Goldman,  Purchasing  «-  to  21-pound  froz- 

Phyllis  Maultsby. ,.„    ^^^^^.^^.^    f^^  <l,aritable    institu- 

SPORTS  STAFF:  Bill  King,  Jim  Purks,  tions,  to  help  avoid  price  disaster: 

Jimmy  Harper,  Dave  Wible,  Charley  Purchasing    a    whopping    potato 

Houson.  crop  for  starch  and  feed  diversion: 

si^scTipti^n  Manager  .*         Dale  Staley  ^Vithholding    from     the    market 

Staff  Artist  Charlie  Daniel  government  -  stored    deteriorated 

Night  Editor  Woody  Sears  corn  so  as  to  hold  prices  up,  at  least 

Proof  Reader  . Woody  Sears  until  Nov.  7. 


Solution  Suggested  To  Aid   Carolina  Spirit 


Gentlemen: 

By  now  it  seems  pretty  evident 
to  everybody  that  the  ole  Caro- 
lina spirit,  "taint  no  more.  From 
Carboro  to  WCHL  and  from  the 
police  station  to  the  hospital,  the 
heartbeat  of  Carolina  is  .suffer- 
ing a  cornary.  .  .and  the  only 
hope  for  survival  is  a  rapidly  ap- 
plied oxy.gcn  tent.  .  .a  tent  of 
re-evakiation. 

Before  I  continue,  may  I  as- 
sure the  few  readers  whose  eyes 
have  wandered  from  Pogo  to  this 
vital  message,  that  what  follows 
is  not  a  support  your-team  pica, 
or  a  cry  of  impeachment  of  edi- 
tors. But  rather,  it  is  several  hun- 
dred words  that  may  jolt  the  bell 
loose  from  its  perch  atop  South 
Building. 

There  are  many,  many  reasons 
or  possibly  excuses — for  the  de- 
cline of  ■•school  spirit,"  but  I 
feel  that  a  under-fed  finger  should 
be  pointed  at  South  Building. 
Here  in  the  hub  of  Carolina's 
campus,  somebody  is  reaching  out 
and  letting  the  air  out  of  our  en- 
thusiasm. The  only  Carolina  spirit 
left  comes  in  a  bottle.  .  .and 
that's    questionable. 

Were  you  at  the  Georgia  pep 
rally?  Only  three  and  a  half  per- 
cent of  us  can  say  we  were,  and 
what  was  seen  may  he  considered 
a  funeral  to  a  familiar  campus 
activity  that  has  been  a  tradition 
since  that  day  Davie  Poplar  en- 
tered as  a  freshman.  But  when 
the  blue  and  white  nested  on  the 
Georgia  side,  of  the  pastuiK?  Sa- 
turday afternoon  because  Big 
Jim  declined  to  recognize  Caro- 
lina as  supporters  of  "our"'  Tar 
Heels  the  situation  reached  a  cru- 
cial point.  But  that's  just  football 
games. 

What  about  after  the  games 
when  state  troopers  were  obser- 
ved in  Kenan  Woods  and  four 
more  badge  boys  in  a  group  of 
bushes  in  the  arboretum? 

What  about  the  two  boys  who 
were  yanked  out  of  the  Boat  State 
Parade  by  Scrapncl  Hill  cops  for 
throwing  rolls  of  toilet  paper? 

Every  day  such  examples  of  un- 
reasonable treatment  is  afforded 
Carolina  students.  The  days  of 
pep  rallies  con.sisting  of  thousands 
of  shouting  students,  the  days  01 
political  campaigns  consisting  of 
loud-speaker,  bonfire,  and  combo 
rallies,  or  more  generally.  .  .the 
days  of  spirited  individualism  art- 
gone,  man.  .  .gone!  Who  could 
possibly  dream  of  risking  arrest 
by  creating  a  bonfire  or  loud 
speaker  rally'  Or  what's  more, 
who  would  risk  participation  in 
a  pop  parade  for  fear  of  being 
caught  with  toilet  tissue  in  hand? 

The  only  media  of  expression 
left  is  with  voice  and  pen.  .  .and 
that's  a  major  risk  now. 

As  long  as  South  Building  en- 
forces or  supports  police  watch- 
dogs hiding  in  the  Arboretum  and 
Kenan  Woods:  as  long  as  there 
can  be  no  hell-raising  before  or 
after  games:  as  long  as  there 
can  be  no  self-expression,  Caro- 
lina and  our  spirit  has  run  the 
course. 

What  it  amounts  to  is  fairly 
plain.  South  Building  has  to  make 
a  decision  as  to  whether  they 
want  to  continue  operating  Caro- 
lina as  that  institution  where 
men  and  women  learn  to  live  with 
their  fellow  men,  establish  ideals, 
form  opinions,  and  express  these 


main  purposes  of  college  is  the 
acquisition  of  that  skill  which 
enables  one  to  get  along  with 
others  and  make  decisions. 

If  South  Building  continues  un- 
der their  present  diciplinary  po- 
opinions  through  all  outlets  as 
well  as  actual  book  learning.   A 


licy,  Carolina  will  slowly  turn  in- 
to a  boardng  school  for  Little 
Lord  Fauntlaroys.  .  .of  no  benefit 
to  the  solutions  of  life's  adjust- 
ments. 

So  South  Building,  a  re-evalua- 
tion is  requested.  Not  today  or 
necessarily  this  week,  but  a  per- 


petual one  from  this  day  forth. 
Natu^ally  I'm  not  suggesting  that 
we  turn  the  campus  into  a  big 
gym.  but  we  don't  want  a  mona- 
stery either.  Give  us  a  chance  to 
make  a  few  decisions  and  draw 
a  few  lines, 

Warrtn  Miller 


'If  At  First,  You  Don't  Succeed.  .  / 


• '  ,VT^»«rT<'T" 


The  Spectatler  Papers 

In  Coffee  Houses 
Around  Campus 

Edited  By 
Roger  Witk  O'Horse 

No.  2  Saturday,  Oct.  20,  1^ 

Garrit  aniles,  Ex  re  fabellas 

Horace,  Satires,  2,  vi,  77 

"He  tells  an  old  wafe's  tale  very  pertinently." 
WILL  PINEROOM'S  CHOCOLATE    HOUSE 

Great  astonisment  was  being  expressed  by  the 
supporters  of  our  Jousting  Knights,  who  each  Sa-  ?" 
tum'sday  meet  with  coteries,  or  Teams,  of  rival 
Jousters  either  on  Kenan's  Fields  in  our  environs, 
or  at  foreign  jousting  places,  because  of  the  abor- 
tively mismanaged  spirit-display  (pep-rally,  to  coin 
a  word)  traditionally  calendar  red  for  the  eves  ' 
of  such  Kenan's  Fields  jousis.  the  which  spirit-dis- 
plays are  usually  perfornaed  in  Ye  Memorial  Barn. 

More  jousters  than  supporters    presented   them-   • 
selves  on  the  eve  of  the  tourney  with  the  Georgian 
jousters,   so   that   the   meeting  resembled    mere  a 
secret   conclave  than  an   universal   convocation  of 
supporters  of  our  Jousting  Knights. 

With  a  view  to  being  of  assistance  in  future  such  ■- 
Carolina-of-the-North  spirit-displays  (non-alcoholic, 
in  contrast  to  usage  at  the  joustings)  Mr.  Spectator 
made  offer  of  his  services  and  those  of  others  of 
his  ken  and  enthusiasm,  all  being  of  the  belief  that 
such  Memorial  Barn  convocations  had  little,  if  any, 
thought  and/or  planning. 

Be  advised  that  Thor  Himself.  .  .He  who  evokes 
Thunder  from  the  Supporters'  Stalls  at  Kenan's 
Fields.  .  .stated  himself  Alone  to  be  solely  responsi- 
ble for  such  spirit-displays  even  unto  if  there  would 
or  would  not  be  any  such. 

But  in  display  of  speefl  and  wits  He  has  not  yet 
made  evident  in  His  slooooooooooooooow  thunder- 
evoking,  which  same  He  plays  at  when  not  cavort- 
ing gaily  with  His  coo-ed  evokcrs,  Thor  laid  tc  the 
anonymous,  if  not  mythical,  doors  of  un-named  help- 
ers. 

He  added  that  so  aduous  was  His  work  that  He 
even  might  (to  coin  a  word)  flunk-out. 

This  latter  information  caused   no  astonishment; 
nor  does  the  lack  of  attendance  at  The  Memorial 
Barn  convocations,  any  longer. 
YE  ENGLISH  CLUBBE'S  COFFEE-SHOP 

At  the  last  assembly  of  tJiis  club  in  Ye  Librarie's 
Assembly  Room,  on  October  12,  that  learned  and 
gentlemanl  Grammarian,  Doctor  Norman  Ellsworth 
Eliason.  addressed  the  assemblage  on  Grammar. 

His  prediction  that  Grammar  is  here  to  stay  wasT"" 
received  with  good  cheer  and  politeness,  albeit  jji 
his  added  comments  to ^ the  effect  that  it  was  ii,'|j 
Living  Grammar  and  thus  wouW  npt  stay  ia  ojjeijj 
plaoe  caused  groans  among  ^  least  One  Hiindrealil 
Seventy  students  present.  "'I  ' 

All   were  aWe,  however,   to  partake   of  Refresh^ ;^j 
ments  when  they  were  recovered  from  their  .shook.   ' 
Indeed,   they   looked    real   gocid   (New.   or   Mobile, 
Grammar)  as,  they  took  their  departures. 
AT  MY  OWN  APARTMENT  -       - 

Looking  forward  to  an  unusual  dinner  this  ev^  « 

that  of  Mashed  Terrapin,  graciously  provided  Cart^  7^ 

lina-of-the-North  gourmets  by  some  visiting  Jaary*-  ^ 

landers.  We  offer  this  maxim  to  our  Jousters:  L!  ^.T 

./M.  F.  T.      If^n-S  SINK  MARYLAND  FOR  TATUM!  '^ 

PROSPECT  &  RETROSPECT  ^ 


1- 


Haircuts,  Reds 


We,  A  Dangerous  Asioc!aft6h        ^„j  5;,^^,  5^^ 


WOODY  SEARS 
"WE-ISMS.  .  . 

We  are  going  to  this,  we  did 
that,  or  we  will  win  this  ball  game 
today  are  familiar  phrases  that 
everyone  hears  and  uses.  And  it's 
always  we. 

This  is  the  chief  method  by 
which  one  can  identify  himself 
with  a  specific  group  of  people, 
whether  it  be  a  case  of  "name- 
dropping"  or  identification  with 
athletic  organizations. 

To  be  sure,  a  certain  amount 
of  this  identification  is  necessary 
for  the  well-being  of  the  individu- 


al. However,  when  used  to  excess 
it  becomes  an  effective  personal- 
ity opiate.  This  business  of  'wc- 
ing'  a  conversation  to  death  is 
deadly.  Habitual  use  of  this  ag- 
gregate pronoun  reduces  a  per- 
son to  an  interchangeable  cog  in 
machine  shop-type  society,  where 
he  assumes  no  individuality  but 
merely  associates  himself  with  a 
number  of  entities. 

The  use  of  the  pronoun  we  al- 
lows a  person  to  allude  to  close 
association  without  ever  being 
closely  allied  to  the  group  or 
party  in  which  he  includes  him- 
self. There  seems  to  be  no  way 


10  control   this   extravagant   am- 
biguity. 

However,  maybe  everyone  does 
not  believe  in  we,  and  perhaps 
in  their  own  minds  they  question 
the  expansive  associations  of  the 
we-ers. 

At  any  rale,  it  should  be  recog- 
nized that  the  pronoun  is  over 
used  and  over-emphasised.  More 
thought  should  be  given  to  its  use 
and  more  caution  should  be  exer- 
cised when  saying  we  instead  of 
they,  because  it  is  so  often  evi- 
dent that  it  is  just  a  brace  for 
sagging   personality. 

Are  you  a  we-er? 


Pogo 


By  Walt  Kelly 


^ 


MANWP  1Hl^J<5  IN  Kl  ANY 
OkOH^'.  $0^A  PAV4-' 
CMOAfSP'-CHOMF. 


Li1  Abner 


By  Al  Capp 

w 


NEIL  BASS 

Ever  thought  of  calling  off  the  mad  academic 
rush  and  going  into  the  wool-shearing  business? 

II  you  haven't,  you  probably  haven't  set  foot  in 
any  of  the  local  hair-whacking  establishments  lately. 

Here's  the  routine: 

(1)  You  pass  the  little,  stripped  pole  and  enter 
the  door. 

(2)  Then,  if  you're  lucky,  you're  hustled  into  a 
pivotal  chair. 

(3)  The  guy  in  the  white  coat  fondles  and  gaps 
your  hair  for  ten  to  fifteen  minutes. 

(4)  You  spring  from  the  chair  and  yank  one  hun- 
dred and  twenty  five  pennies  from  your  flat,  little 
wallet. 

That's  one  hundred  and  twenty  five  brownies 
CHOICES 
This  leaves  the  harassed  student   three  choices: 

(1)  Let'  er  grow. 

(2)  Keep  pourjng  the  lott  to  local  scissor-chislers. 

(3)  Head  for  the  Graham  Memorial  barber  shop. 
This  last  choice  has  its  advantages  and  disadvan- 
tages, but  all  in  all.  it's  to  be  preferred. 

The  chief  advantage  is  a  little  matter  25  saved 
coppers. 

The  chief  disadvantage  is  lack  of  adequate  per- 
sonnel. 

But  the  two  GM  barbers  are  in  scalp  surgery 
every  day  from  8:30  a.  m.  till  5:30  p.m.,  so  give 
them  a  try. 

More  barbers  can  alwiys  be  hired  if  business 
booms. 

And  the  scalpers  downtown  might  come  to  terms 
if.  barbership  door  hinges  accumulate  a  little  rust. 
SttBNT  S^JM 

Raleigh  News  and  Observer  news  hounds  have 
finally  sniffjd-up  a  "solution  "  to  the  "Confederate 
statuary  puzzle." 

They've  decided  that  'twas  01'  Silent  Sam  that 
the  yankee  posed  for,  and  not  the  confederate  sta- 
tue on  capital  square. 

The  N&O  then  went  on  to  say: 

'Irreverent  Carolina  students  long  ago  christened 
the  Lniversity's  bronze  soldier  Silent  Sam '  It  is 
said  he  derived  that  name  from  the  traditional  si- 
lence of  his  niasket  " 

Muph  to  the  dismay  of  thinking  people  all  over 
the  state,  the  triple  K's  called  a  meeting  in  Robeson 
County  last  Friday  night. 

But  this  time,  t'he  triple  K's  announced  that  "To- 
day Communism  is  our  Enemy  " 

-foTfl^'^l!''  ^^^  ^^'P  ^'^   and' Nell   Battle  Lewi^•s 
lat  toider    on  communism  in  Chapel  HUl,  the  com- 
mies just  don't  stand  a  chance. 


f 


Co\ 


COBB   R 

\  recel 
Cobb    ba] 
football 
6:30  p. 
by   a   m( 
freshmei 
hostcsscsl 
sored  b\ 
GMAB  ai 

RENDEZi 

GMAB 
Rendezvol 
when  )l 
room's   j| 
11  p.  m. 
drop  the 
night    anj 
drop  in  fo| 
choices. 
Lambeth 
budget 
every   we| 
to   provif 
vous  atm(| 
students. 

BABY  SI1 

Coeds 
have  beer 
(telephon^ 
names  ani 
hours  will 

WESTMII 

The  Wc 
meet  for 
Afierwarr 
Hickory 
Word  or 

SPLASH 

Final    tj 
will  bo  hi 
Club  nic 
for    the 
mfoiin;?. 
STUDY 

The   CI 
Religi<tus 


'I  WON 
BUTT 


\ 


uyt  Di 


HANOI 
manuscrii 
Blue  Suhl 
Coed  Pr«| 
grabs, 
personal!^ 
IB  1942, 
to  his  cri| 
Korean 
photograd 
ti!>ted  on  { 
TAK's  ne 

(NOTI 
imported! 
favorite 

Town! 

5PJ  Broodi 


D 


8 

10.  Cl 

11.  l( 

12.  J^ 
14. 
15  S| 
16 
17 
20. 
21 
22 
23. 
24 


28 

2y 
31 


54 
35 


41 

4: 

4  : 

44 


20,  1956 


SATURDAY,  OCTOBER  20,  1956 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


PAGE    THREE 


ses 

US 

fct.  20,  1956 

b,  2,  vi.  77 
|inently." 
SE 

Pd    by    the 
each  Sa- 
B,   of  rival 
environs, 
the  abor- 
[ly.  to  coin 
the    eves 
spirit-dis- 
mal Barn, 
ited    them- 
Georgian 
Id    more    a 
rocation    of 

future  such 

-alcoholic. 

Spectator 

others  of 

[belief  that 

[tie.  if  any, 

r'ho  evokes 

U    Kenan's 

|y  responsi- 

lere  would 

|ias  not  yet 
thunder- 
Inot  cavort- 
llaid  tc  the 
lamed  help- 

Irk  that  He 

|onishment; 
Memorial 


Librarie'a 
Earned  and 

Ellsworth 
fammar. 
lo  stay  was 
less,    idl^ei^ 

it  w^M   » 
tiy   iaott 
Huni^ 


)f  Refr^ 

^heir  shof^. 

or    Vtobilf^ 


*r  this  eve, 
Jvided;  OffPr    , 
jiting  ^Ufl^ 

)R  TATUlltfH 


S 

am 


ad    academic 
)usiness? 

set  foot  ia 
ments  lately. 

Ic  and   enter 

ustled  into  a 

les   and  gaps 

ank  one  hun- 
>ur  flat,  little 

brownies. 

hriH-  choices: 

rissor-chislers. 
barber  shop, 
and  disadvan- 
rred. 
tter  25  saved 

a<l(qu.ite   pef« 

scalp   surgery 
p  III .  so  give 

d   if   business 

romt-  to  terms 
a  little  rust. 

hounds  have 
Confederate 

lent  Sam  that 
'nfiderate  sti- 


ago  christened 
nt  Sam.'  It   is 
traditional  si- 
tes nt  fire! 

leople  all  over 
ing  in  Rol>eson 

need  that  "To- 

Battle  Lewis's 
I  HUt,  the  com- 


Covering  The  Campus 


wr^' 


COBB  RECEPTION 

.\  reception  wiU  be  held  in  the 
Cobb  basement  lounge  after  ti^e 
football  game  tomorrow  from  4:30- 
6  30  p.  m.  Music  will  be  provided 
by  a  modern  jazz  group  and  re- 
freshments will  be  served  by  coea 
hostesses.  The  affair  is  co-spon- 
sored by  th,e  Dancie  Committee  of 
CMAB  and  the  IDC. 

RENDEZVOUS  ROOM  MUSIC 

tIMAB  will  offer  an  inovation  in 
Ilindezvous    Room    Music    tonight 
when  it  supplies  free  music  in  the 
rooms   juke    box   between  8   and 
1 1  p.  m.  A  G.  M.  staff  member  will 
drop  the  nickles  in  throughout  the 
night    and    let    the    students    who! 
drop  in  for  dancing  make  their  own  j 
choices.     GMAB     President     Tom  1 
Lambeth  pointed  out  that  GMABs  ' 
budget     won't  pay    for   a     combo  I 
every   weekend   but   GMAB   wants 
to   provide    the    weekend    Rendez- ' 
vous  atmosphere  without  charging 
students. 

t 
BABY  SITTERS 

Coeds  uiterested  in  baby  sitting 
have  been  asked  to  contact  the  "Y  " 
(telephone  6761)  or  leave  their 
names  and  a  list  of  their  available 
hours  with  the  "Y"  secretary. 

WESTMINSTER   FELLOWSHIP 

The  Westminster  Fellowship  will 
meet  for  supper  Sunday  at  6  p.  m. 
Afterwards.  Rev.  Fred  Stair  of 
Hickory  will  speak  on  "The  Bible. 
Word  or  Words?" 

SPLASH  CLUB 

Final  tryouts  for  Splash  Club 
will  be  held  Monday  at  6:45  p.m. 
Ciub  members  will  meet  at  7  p.m. 
for  the  regular  Monday  evening 
meeting. 
STUDY  GROUP 

The  Christian  and  Comparative 
Religious   Study    Group   will    meet 


in  the  "Y"  Library.  Eh^eryone  in- 
terested is  invited  to  attend. 
WUNCFM 

The    schedule    for    WUNC,    the 
University's  non-commercial  radio 
station  is  as  follows: 
7:00  Paris  Star  Time. 
7:30  Showtime. 
8:00  This  is  Jazz. 
9:00  Encore. 
10:00  News. 

10:15  Evening  Masterwork. 
11:30  Sign  off. 
WUNC-TV 

Today's  schedule  for  WUNC-TV, 
the   University's   educational    tele- 
vision station,  Channel  4: 
10:00  State  Fair. 
10:30  Dearborn  Holiday. 
11:00  Sentiment. 
11:30  American    Road. 
12:00  State  Fair. 
12:30  Sign  off. 
6:30  World,   Weather,    Man. 
7:00  Your  Child. 
7:30  Frontiers  of  Health. 
8:00  Renaissance  on  TV. 
8:30  American  Politics. 
FACULTY  CLUB 

The  Faculty  Newcomers  Club 
will  meet  today  a  8  p.  m.  in  Roland 
Parker  Lounges  1  and  2.  in  Graham 
Memorial. 


.■<kit)t. 


WITH  THE  CHURCHES: 


Local  Churches  Plan 
Services,  Events  Sun. 


SILENT  SAM 

. . .  /lOA-n't  fired  his  gun  yet 


A  Confederate  Yankee 
In  McCorkle's  Court? 


1  WON'T  WEAR  A  THING 
BUT  TOWNE  AND  KING!" 


Pate  Commends  Students 
For  Cardboard  Stunts 

Snyder  Pate,  president  of  the 
UNC  Cardboard,  today  issued  a 
statement  praising  students  fior 
their  participation  in  cardboard 
stunts  at  the  Georgia  game  last 
week. 

The  text  of  Pate's  statement  is 
as  follows: 

"Students,  you  did  a  fine  job 
of  the  color  in  action  stunts  at  the 
U.N.C.  -  Georgia  game  Saturday. 
Reports  from  the  spectators  varied. 
Some  spectators  did  not  like  the 
stunts  wtihout  a  central  theme, 
while  others  found  them  fascinat- 
ing. 

The  theme  for  this  week's  game 
is  the  Presidential  Election.  Mem- 
bers of  the  Cardboard  have  done 
a  great  deal' of  work  and  have  pro- 
duced some  excellent  stunts. 

If  the  students  would  remajin 
in  the  Card  Section  and  follo^  in- 
stractions,  the  stunts  would  be 
mufcfimore  effective.  Let's  do  Vur 
be.«?t  'to  create  "^ome  good  stjno'd!' 
spirit  and'ln  hold  our  record  of 
the  1d^^esf  and'  best  card  section 
in  this  East."    •  ^.     ;,. 


un  DU6ALD  McTAVISH,  MtlMr 
k  Mtf  var  vtttn* 

'  HANOVER,  N.H..  Aug.  3 1 -Dug's 
manuscript.  "The  Prof  ia  the  Shiny 
Blue  Suitr  has  just  been  accepted  by 
Coed  Press;  movie  rights  are  up  for 
grabs.  Well  known  as  a  get-ahead 
personality.  Dug  tried  to  join  the  Navy 
IB  1942.  but  his  nurse  handcuffed  tiim 
to  bis  crib.  At  18,  he  came  out  of  the 
Korean  War  a  full  corporal.  When 
photographed  for  this  news  item,  he  in- 
tisted  on  posing  in  his  favorite  sweater. 
T&K's  new  crew  neck  pullover. 

(NOTE:  This  crew  neck,  of  mgaed 
imported  wool  yams,  comes  in  your 
favorite  colors;  sizes  38-46 . . .  12.95.) 

TowNE  AND  King,  ltd. 

Coordinated  Knitwear 
595  Broadway,  Redwood  City,  Calif onio 


kappa  Deltas  Observe 
Founders  Day  Tuesclay 

Forty  thousand  Kappa  Delta 
sorority  members  will  be  wearing 
green  and  white  ribbons  Tuesday 
as  part  of  its  Founders'  Day  cele- 
brations. 

On  the  UNC  campus,  Beta  Chi 
chapter  will  hold  its  Founder's 
Day  cereinony  at  5  p.m.  at  the 
Kappa  Delta  house.  Immediately 
after  the  ceremony,  the  chapter 
will  honor  their  housemother, 
Mrs.  Mary  Graham  at  a  tea. 

Kappa  Delta  was  founded  Oct. 
23,  1891  at  Longwood  College, 
Farmville,  Va.,   by  four  students. 


By  MARY  ALYS  VOORHEES 

A  Confederate  Yankee  guards 
the  Carolina  campus. 

So  advises  the  Raleigh  News  and 
Observer. 

The  object  in  question  is  UNC'S 
"Silent  Sam, "  who  stands  with  his 
musket  high  at  McCorklc  Place 
near  Graham  Memorial. 

Erected  at  Chapel  Hill  by  the 
North  Carolina  division  of  the 
United  Daughters  of  the  Confede- 
racy and  UNC  alumni  as  a  mem- 
orial to  Carolina  students  who 
fought  in  ihe  Civil  War.  the  bronze 
statue  received  its  name  when  "ir- 
reverent CaroliTia  students  long  ago 
christened  the  .  .  .soldier  Silent 
Sam.  It  is  said  he  derived  that 
name  from  the  traditional  silence 
of  his  musket,"  according  to  Thurs 
day's  News   and  Observer. 

The  puzzle  concerning  the  '"Con- 
federate Yankee"  arose  this  past 
week  when  Harold  V.  Langlois  of 
Boston  was  in  Raleigh  looking  for 
the  statue  for  which  he  had  posed 
many  years  ago. 

Thinking  that  his  likeness  could 
b'e'fotifld  in  the  city.  Langlo"  wont 
to  Capitol  Square  whore  he  ex- 
amined the  monument  to  Henry 
Lawson.Wyatt  and  decided  that  was 
the  correct  statue. 

But  from  information  he  furnish- 


ed the  Raleigh  paper,  they  feel 
"all  the  evidence  points  toward 
"Silent  Sam'  as  the  Confederate 
soldier  foi  which  Yankee  Langlois 
was  the  model.  It  is  strong  enough 
to  eliminate  the  possibilii  '  that  he 
posed  as  .  .  .Wyatt.  the  North  Ca- 
rolina private  who  was  the  first 
to   die   in   the   Civil   War." 

Langlois  remembered  that  he  had 

posed  for  a  John  Wilson,  and  Bor- 

glum,  not   Wilson,  signed  the  Ca 

pitol   Square   statue. 

j      However,      "Silent  Sam"     bears 

j  the  signature  of  John  Wilson.  And 

I  library  records  show  that  a  Cana- 

!  dlan  sculptor  by  the  name  of  John 

I  A.  Wilson  was  commissioned  to  do 

1  the  .job. 

i  Other  items  connected  with  the 
j  story  include  the  fact  that  I>ang- 
I  luis  thought  he  posed  "about  1912 
or  1913,"  a  time  which  wpuld  point 
to  the  Carolina  statue  as  it  was 
dedicated  on  June  2,  1913,  where- 
as the  Capitol  Square  statue  y/as 
unveiled  on  June  10,  1912.        t 

Although  the  statues  are  similar, 
Langlois  recalled  that  th^i  statue 
"was  to  be  placed  on  the  Ctt^Vis 
of  one  oT  fhe  colleges  in  the  Soyth. 
.  .  in  memory  of  the  younk  iJl^n 
who  left  college  to  go  to  war." 

So,  if  the  Raleigh  people  are  Cor- 
rect, we  have  a  Confederate  Yan- 
kee in  our  midst. 


Alumni  Of  Local  Pi  Lambdas 
To  Be  Weekend  Guests  Here 


DAILY    CROSSWORD 


ACROSS 

1.  Grate 
5.  Edible 

mollusk 
9.  Assam 

Bilkworm 

10.  Ow-n 

11.  Irate 

12.  Near   (poet  ) 

14.  Cry  of  a  cow 

15.  Splicing  pin 

16.  Thus 

17.  Small  heron 

20.  Not  young 

21.  Gold  (Her.) 

22.  Constellation 

23.  Purchase* 

24.  Sharp- 
cornered 

26.  Dip  into 
coffee 

28.  Fuel 

29.  Toward 

31.  Finish 

32.  Twitter 
(dial.) 

34.  Music  not* 

35.  Head 
coverings 

36.  Sick 

37.  Couches 
39.  Nethke 

fabric 

41.  African 
river 

42.  Wavy  (Her.) 

43.  Places 

44  Coffin  and 
stand 
DOWN 

1.  French 
painter 

2.  Cant 

3.  Term  of 
respect 

4.  'Wages 

$.  Mttal  Unk« 


6.  Disembark 

7.  Hail! 

8.  Contempti- 
ble (slang) 

11.  L.arge  desk 
13.  Poles 
15.  Laden 

18.  Armored  car 

19.  Unit  of  work 

20.  Belonging 
to  us 

23.  Woody  fibers 
from  the 
linden 

24.  Conjunction 

25.  Medieval 
type  of 
short  tat* 


26.  Political 
party 
(coUoq.) 

20.  Coali- 
tions 

29.  Bank 
em- 
ployee 

30.  A  voided 
es- 
cut- 
cheon 

32.  Packing 
boxes 

33.  Diacritical 
mark  over 
"n"  (Sp.) 

35.  Stop 


sur^ian  n^tiiiiii 
aaaa  MaaiagEj 

rag     mas  bhb 
ctiaa  i-iLta     an 

BO    aQQ    aS[:i[§ 


Y«*terd»y'*  AMW«r 

38.  Excla. 
mation 

39.  Vat  ; 

40.  Btriycan 
goddess 


By   PEG  HUMPHREY 

Alumni  of  the  local  chapter  will 
be  guest  of  the  Pi  Lambda  Phis  this 
weekend.  The  formation  of  an  al- 
umni   chapter    will    be    discussed. 

Other  Pi  Lam  events  of  the  week- 
end will  include  a  cocktail  party, 
banquet  and  a  party  at  the  house. 
The  new  social  room  in  the  base- 
ment will  be  dedicated  Sunday  af- 
ternoon. 

The  Sigma  Nus  plan  a  cabin 
party  tonight  and  the  Chi  Psis  wiii 
have  their  house  party  next  week- 
end, the  theme  of  which  will  be 
"The    Roaring   Twenties." 

Alpha  Gam  Ann  Gillett,  Enfield, 
has  become  engaged  to  John 
Burke,,  Enfield.  Beta  Jim  Gay  has 
pinned  Thornie  Hartlie,  W.  C.  stu- 
dent. 

Officers  of  the  Pi  Lam  pledge 
class  include  Fred  Hirach,  presi- 
dent; Jerry  Farber,  vice-president; 
Larry  Schwartz,  secretary;  Mel- 
vin  Garr,  treasurer;  and  Alan  Da- 
vis, Sgt.-at-arms. 

Kappa  Sigs  entertained  the  Tri 
Deltas  Tuesday  with  a  banquet  at 
the  house  and  a  cabin  party  at 
Beulah's  cabin.  They  plan  a  party 
at  the  Elbow  Room  tonight. 

Lambda  Chis  entertained  their 
Yack  Beauty  Court  sponsors  Tues- 
day night.  Sigma  Chis  had  a  party 
at  the  house  Thursday  night  and 
will  play  host  to  the  Pi  Phis  Mon- 
day with  a  dinnej  and  dance  at 
Hartman's. 

Bev  ■  Heaton,  Carolyn  Nelson, 
Patsy  Poythress,  and  Robie  Simp- 
son, who  are  being  sponsored  for 
the  Yack  Beauty  Court  by  the  St. 
A's,  were  the  guests  of  honor  at 
a  St.  A   banquet  Thursday. 

Sigma  Chi  Pete  Parker,  Charlot- 
te, has  given  his  pin  to  Mary  Shaw,  | 
Chi  O  from  Charlotte    SAE  Son- 
ny Kincey,  Charlotte,  is  pinned  to 

UNC  Graduate  Sumner 
At  Va.  Inauguration 

Mark  R.  Sumner,  UNC  graduate  j 
in  dramatic^  art,  was  the  official 
representative  of  the  University 
yesterday  at  the  inauguration  of 
Grellet  Collins  Simpson  as  Chan- 
cellor of  Mary  W^ashington  Col- 
lege of  the  University  of  Virginia, 
Fredericksburg,  Va.  Professor 
Su47iner  is  a  member  of  the  faculty 
of   MaTy  Washington. 


Hannah  Kirby,  Chi  0  pledge  from 
Louisville.  The  SAEs  will  entertain 
the  Maryland  chapter  at  a  party 
tonight.  ,, 

SPEs  had  a  big  party  with  two 
combos  last"  Saturday  and  played 
host  to  the  Kappa  Deltas  at  a  ship- 
wreck .party  at  Honigs  Thursday 
night. 


The  following  is  a  list  of  services 
being  conducted  by  Chapel  Hill 
churches  tomorrow. 

THE  PRESBYTERIAN  CHURCH 
will  conduct  morning  services  at 
9:45  a.  m.  and  11  a.  m.  tomorrow. 

Mr.    Vance   Barron    will    deliver  i 
the  sermon.  His  topic  will  be  "A 
Warning  to    Casual   Christians." 

The     Westminister     Fellowship  i 
will   meet   for   supper  at   6   p.   m.  ' 
Rev.  Fred  Stair,  guest  speaker,  will 
talk     on   "The     Bible:   Word     or 
words." 

THE  LUTHERAN  CHURCH  Sun- 
day morning  student  discussion 
group  will  meet  at  10  a.  ni.  Regular 
services  will  be  hold  at  11  a.  m. 
Rev.  Wade  F.  Hook  will  deliver  a 
sermon  on  "The  Doctrine  of  the 
Church."  Approximately  20  new 
members  will  be  received  at  the 
morning  service. 

Frances  Reynolds  and  Lawrence 
Lohr  will  be  guest  speakers  at  the 
6  p.  m.  meeting  of  the  Lutheran 
Student   Association. 

THE  CATHOLIC  CHURCH  will 
hold  mass  in  Gerrard  Hall  «t  8  a. 
m.  and  11:30  a.  m.  tomorrow. 

THE  EPISCOPAL  CHURCH  (Cha- 
pel of  the  Cross)  will  have  Holy 
Communion  at  7:30  a.  m.  tomor- 
row. Student  Eucharist  and  the 
sermon  will  be  at  9:30  a.  m.  At 
11  a.  m.  the  Morning  Prayer  and 
sermon  will  be  held.  The  Right 
Rev.  Bravid  W.  Harris,  Bishop  of 
Liberia  and  native  North  Carolin- 
ian, will  speak  at  11  a.  m.  on  "The 
Church  in  Lberia."  He  will  also 
speak  at  the  Canterbury  Club  sup- 
per at  6  p.  m.  Evening  prayer  will 
be  held  at  8  p.  m. 

THE  BAPTIST  CHURCH  will 
have  Sunday  School  at  9:45  a.  m. 

Rodman  will 
Address  Phi 

Assoel«te   Justice   of   the   North 
Carolina    Supreme   Court,  William 
B.   Rodman,  will  speak  at  the  in- 
auguration of  Philanthropic  Litera-  i 
ry   Society  officers,   Tuesday  at    8  | 
j^.m.  on  the  top  floor  of  Old  East.  : 
f>  His   topic   will   be   "The  Proper 
inunctions     of     Appellate  Courts."  ' 

The  Phi  has  invited  the  public,  I 
according  to  Jim  Montielh.  Phi  , 
Hall  can   hold  200  people.  I 

Lawrence  Matthews  will  he  in- 
Stalled  as  the  .Speaker.  Jim  Mon- 
tieth  will  become  Speaker  pro  tern,  i 
The  Clerk  will  be  Miss  Elizabeth 
Dent,  and  Hill  Johnson  will  be  the 
Treasurer.  Parliamentarian  -  elect 
John  Brooks  and  Sergeant-at-Arms- 
elect  Ethan  Tolman  will  be  inaug- 
urated. James  Duval,  critic,  and 
Jesse  Stribling,  representative  of 
the  Carolina  Forum,  will  oflicial- 
ly  assume  their  positions. 

There  will  be  an  executive  sess- 
ion of  Phi  members  only  from  7-8 
p.m.  A  Yackety  Yack  picture  will 
be  taken  of  the  Phi  membership  at 
the  meeting. 


and  morning  wdiTship  at  11  a  m 
tomorrow.  Dr.  Samuel  T.  Habel's 
sermon  will  be  titled  "A  Church 
Worthy  of  Our  Support." 

The  BSU  Supper  Forum  will 
meet  at  6  p.  m.  and  the  BSU  spon- 
sored evening  worship  service  will 
be  held  at  7:30  p.  m. 

THE  METHODIST  CHURCH  wiM    ^ 
have    worship   services    at    9   and 
11  a.  m.  Rev.  Charles  Hubbard  will 
deliver  a  sermon  on  "Stcwartship  " 

Church  School  will  open  at  9  45 
a,  m.  and  the  Wesley  Foundation 
supper  and  progi-am  will  be  held 
at  5:45  p.  m.  with  Dr.  Percy  Yang 
of  Tiapeh,  Taiwan  speaking  on  the 
Far  E^ast  situation. 

THE  CHRISTIAN  SCIENCE 
CHURCH  will  hold  Sunday  School 
at  9:30  a.  m.  and  worship  service 
at  1  a.  m.  Sunday  in  the  lecture 
room  of  Carroll  Hall. 

THE     SOCIETY     OF     FRIENDS 

(Quaker)  will  conduct  church  ser- 
vices at  11  a.  m.  tomorrow  in  the 
Grail  Room   of  Graham   Memorial. 

THE  COMMUNITY  CHURCH  will 

hold  a  non-denominational  church 
service  Sunday  at  11  a.  m.  in  Hill 
Hall. 


Students  Reherse  For  Play 

Baptist  Students  practice  for  the  play  to  be  presented  tomorrow 
night  as  kick-off  for  the  Listen  Ernphasis  Week,  which  is  all  next 
week. 

Emphasis  Week  Play  To  Start 


THE  UNITED  CONGREGATION 
AL     CHRISTIAN     CHURCH     Lay 

men's  Fellowship  will  lead  the  en- 
tire Sunday  worship  at  11  a.  m. 
in  keeping  with  the  nation-wide 
observance  of  United  Nations 
Week   and   Laymen's   Sunday. 

Robert  W.  Whitener,  M.  D.,  will 
give  the  sermon  using  the  national 
theme  "The  Truth  Shall  Make  You 
Free." 


"Voice  of  Tears,"  an  original 
drama  by  Leon  Rooke.  will  be  pre- 
sented tomorrow  night  to  open 
this  semester's  Baptist  Student 
Union   Listen    Emphasis   Week. 

,The  play  will  follow  a  Supper- 
Forum  at  the  Chapel  Hill  Bap- 
tist Church  at  6  p.m.   Sunday. 

"Listen  Emphasis  Week"  is  spon- 
sored twice  a  year  by  the  campus 
BSU.  During  the  week  representa- 1 
fives  of  BSU  will  call  on  Baptist 
Students  for  financial  contribu- 
tions. 

The    contributions,    advance    in-  \ 
formation    on     'Emphasis    Week" 


states,  are  to  "go  for  providing 
agricultural  equipment,  education- 
al facilities,  medical  aid  and  miss- 
ionaries for  impoverished  areas." 

The  money  will  be  distributed 
through  the  Christian  Rural  Over- 
seas Program  to  India.  Brazil,  Alas- 
ka and  other  areas. 

The  week's  slogan.  "Listen," 
stands  for  "Love  Impels  Sacrifice 
Towards  "very  Need". 


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»A9i  POUK 


THt  VAfLY  TAR  HIEL 


SATURDAY  OCTOBER  20,  1'56 


Booters  Defeat  Davidson  Wildcats 

yom  Rand  Paces  7eom '™°5"*^5°''"'^= 


2-0 


Carolina  Caravan 


Br  Jalt«.W«d« 

For  the  Tar  Heels,  under  their 

new  coachng   admiaistration,  this 

has  been  a  seasoft  of  "angles,"  the 

kind  wbich  oonnaUy  stir  interest 

and   provide    a   big   boost   at   the 

box  ofiice. 
But  nothing  is  a  substitute  far 

a  winner^  when  it  comes  to  luring 

crowds.   The  Tar  Heels   thus  far 

haven't   located  the   spark.   Until 

they  do,  90  matter  how  engaging 

the   attraction,  there  will   always 

be  some  empty  seats. 
On  a  radio  show  Coach  Jim  Ta 

turn  came  out  and  flatly  promised 

a  triumph  this  week  over  Marj- 

land.  Whether  he  can  deliver,  re- 
mains to  be  seen.  He  won't  be  able 

to  do  so  unless  his  athletes  move 

faster  and  make  up  their  minds  to  j  team  he  once  coached  and  a  buddy 

win,  manifesting  a  burning  desire  j  coach  who  served  as  his  assistant 

which  thus  far  critics  suspect  has  !  at  that  time. 

been  lacking.  '     In  South  Carolina,  he  was  meet- 

Jim  stll  backs  them  loyally  as  a  i  ing  a  team  handled  by  the  fellow 
potential  winner  and  needing  onl:.  j  who  was  his  top  assstant  at  Mar>- 
ta   get  straightened   out   "psycho-]  land,  another   interest  ins  angle. 

logically."   He    has   publicly  criti- ;  ♦  •  • 

zed  them  only  for  the  strange  stu- ; 

per  which  apparently  seized  them  {     THIS  WEEK  the  drama  centers 

on -Georgia's'  pCint.  returns.    Most ;  around  the  fact  that  Tatum's  Tar 

of  their  troubles  he  has  generously  i  Heels  will  be  playing  against  Maiy- 

attributed  to  superior  and  inspired  f  land,  from  whence  Tatum  depart- 


v'ersxty  oi  iNorlh  Carolina  but  for 
assorted  other  teams  of  the  area! 

They  were  in  evidence — these 
goodies  for-  the  publicists^  to 
pounce  ,on-:-as  early  as  the  open- 
injf  ganle  with  N.  C.  State. 

History  said  State  had  always 
.been  a  nemesis  for  our  big  Tatum. 
As  an  undergraduate  player — his 
buddies  recalled — the  usually  po- 
tent tackle  Tatum  faltered  enough 
to  yield  a  touchdown  to  the  Wolf- 
pack  smack  through  his  territory. 

.Tn  h.'s  first  year  as  head  coach, 
at  Nortlj  Carolina  in  1942.  State 
beat  his  Tar  Heels  in  an  upset. 
Earlier  the  same  Tar  Heels  had  up- 
set Wake  Forest  and.  for  the  sea- 
son, finished  with  a  creditable  3- 
2-2-  record. 

In    Oklahoma.      Tatum    faced    a 


To  Third  Straight  Win 


By   JIM   PURKS 

The  UNC  soccer  team  scdred 
two  goals  in  the  second  half  to 
finally  defeat  a  surprisingly  strottig 
and  spirited  Davidson  team,  2i-0. 
yesterday  at  Fetzer  Field.  The  W7n 
was  the  third  straight  for  the  Tar 
Heels  and  the  second  game  in 
which  they  have  held  the  opposi- 
tion  scoreless. 

UNC  experienced  difficulty  fronti 
the  beginning  due  to  the  loss  of! 
its  ace  shooter  and  passer.  Ted. 
Youhanna.  Youhanna  was  ejected 
irom  the  game  by  the  referee  for 


play  by  the  opposition. 

AlOUT  THE  ANOLiS  of  a  season 
attended  by  heartbreaks  and  disa- 
ppointments not  only  for  the  Uni- 


Football 


ed  last  year  following  nine  years 
of  as  succes.sful  football  coaching 
as  the  game  has  known. 

And  once  again  Tatugi  will  be 
contesting  one  of  his  old  working 
comrades.  Tommy  Mont,  the  Terp 
coach  who  was  left  behind  to  be 
elevated   to  Tatum"s   top   job. 

Ironically,  the  game,  a  Kenan 
Stadium  .spectacular  at  2  p.m.  Sa- 
turday, does  not  shape  up  now 
anything  like  it  did  before  the  sea- 


SHIFTS  MADE 

Other  shifts   from  last     week's 
arrangement  found  soph  Don  Kem-  j  son  opened. 

per  taking  over  at  one  guard  op  '  Maryland,  with  many  of  the  great 
posite  Jimmy  Jones,  and  Ronnie  I  stars  of  Tatum's  big  winners  .still 
Koes  resuming  his  duties  at  the  \  around,  was  supposed  to  be  one 
pivot  post.   Koes  was    injured-  in  i  oi  the  nation's  best  again  this  year. 


thtr  South  <!!arolina  game  anfd  didn't 
sec  action  against  Georgia  last 
Satoi'day. 

The  remainder  of '  the '  f  orwwM 
wall  is  tb^  same  as"  last     Week's 
wilh'Jotiesi  goinig  ^t  guard  and  Btid- 
fl3^'"*^yii*  'and  Charley     Robinson 
holding-  do^tn  the-flank  positions. 
"Oie  IJackfTeld  i*  at  peak  strength 
for  the  game  with  Dave  Heed  "back  j 
for  I'uU  time  duty '  at  the  impw- 1 
taiit  quarterback  slot.  Teaming  with  ■ 
Reed  in  the  starting  unit  will  be  1 
Larry  McHolIen  and  Ed  Sutton  at 
the  halves  and  Wally  Vale  at  full- 
Lack. 


The .  Terps  generally  were  picked 
to.fij^ish   in  the  top  ten. 

The  Tar  Heels,  on  the  other 
hand,  in  the  eyes  of  fhe  July  sooth- 
sj^yers,  did  not  belong  in  the  same 
league.  Still,  under  Tatum's  magic 
touch,  it  was  whispered  they  might 
rise  to  the  occasion  in  this  drama- 
tic .settng.  Not  very  likely,  but 
just  might.  (,.  ^.y^.j  ,,' 

*     '■     ♦       "  •• 

BUT  LOOK  what's  happened! 
Maryland  lost  its  quarterback, 
great  J'rank  Tamburello,  to  the 
service.  Injuries  to  key  men  have 


Reed  seemed  to  provide  a  much  |  plagued  the  squad.  Instead  of  crui- 


needed  spark  while  he  was  in  the 
game  against  Georgia.  The  Tar 
Heel  offense  clicked  better  with 
the  tricky  junior  at  the  controls, 
although  his  understudy,  sopho- 
omore  Curt  Hathaway,  turned  in  a 
creditable  performance. 


sing  in  the  stars,  as  predicted.  the\ 
have  had  the  very  dickens  of  a 
time  in  coming  up  to  the  Carolina 
game  with  a   1-3  record. 

The  Tar  Heels,  who  were  ex- 
pected to  have  a  couple  or  three 
wins  by  this  time  and  on  the  way 


Soph  Emil  DeCantis  served  no-  \  to  even  better  things  in  the  stretch 
tice  on  McMuUen  and  Sutton  iast !  drive,  are  still  see'king  their  first 
week  that  he  will  be  hard  to  kuep  ^  one.  They.  too.  have  been  hit  hard 
put,  of  the  starting  lineup  from !  by,  injuries  to  key  men,  including 
now  on.'  The  Pennsylvania   speed-    top    quarterback    Dave    Reed    and 


ster  romped  for  31  yards  on  three 
cirries  against  the  Bulldogs,  and 
should  see  plenty  of  action  this  af- 
t«fnoon. 

HARD  LUCK  CLU» 
Maryland  has  been  a  hard  luck 


top  centers  George  Stavnitsk  and 
Ronnie  Koes. 

That's  the  way  it  is — a  picture 
a  little  different  from  what  had 
been  expected  but  still  alluring 
A  fine  crowd  will  be  here  and,  be- 


insr  what  is  going  to  happen, 
telling  at  all. 


No 


CLASSIFIEDS 


PAPER-BACKED  BOOKS  —  Good 

used  novels,  detective  yarns  and 
non-fiction  at  3  for  25c  in  the 
stand  by  our  front  door.  The 
Intimate    Bookshop. 


ball  club  from 'the  word  go  this  ;  tween  me  and  you.  there  is  no  tell- 
year.  The  Terps  were  unanimously 
rated  in  the  top  ten  in  pre-season 
polls,  but  so  far  have  failed  to  live 
up  to  expectations.  Baylor,  Miami 
and  Syracuse  have  all  dealt  Mary- 
land setbacks,  while  their  only  win 
has  come  over  Wake  Forest. 

First  of  the  hard  luck  blows  to 
strike  the  Maryianders  was  the  in- 
duction of  star  quarterback  Frank 
Tamburello  into  the  armed  services 
before  the  season  started.  Then 
the  injury  jinx  hit.  and  several 
front  line  performers  were  side- 
lined for  the  season.  To  top  it  off, 
fhe  yellow  jaundice  bug  bit.  and 
two  second  string:  players  were^ 
lost.      -•    ^-  .  '    I 

Despite  the  flood  of  bad  luck,  [ 
Ibfr"  Terps  appear  tp«  be  rounding 
into  ^apei  Last  week  against  Mia- 
mi, the  powerful  Maryland  for- 
ward Wall  was  immovable,  -and  the 
Hurric^ahes  were  forced  to  the  air- 
lanes  to  win  the  decision.  And  the 
backfi^ld,  led  by  John  Fritsch  anjd 
Dick  Lewis  at  quarterbacks,  will 
be  hard  to  stop. 


THE  STARTERS 


UNC 

Payne 

RusMvage 

J»fMS 

KaM 
Kem^r 

RftbffMon 
Rm4 


LE 

LT 

LG 

C 

RG 

RT 

RE 

QB 


McMull*n  LHB 

Sutton  RHB 

Vale  FB 


Maryland 

•••rd»l*r 

Wharton 

Kriarac 

Ald*rton 

Oavis 

Sandusky 

HMiring 

Fritach 

Ktrthnar 

HealY 

Hamilton 


JAMES  G.  CROUCH  JR. 
B.  S.  of  A. 

CLAUDE  L  EFIRD 
Ens.,  USNR 


LT. 


and 

EDWARD  SHAIN 
JEFFERIES  JR: 
U.  S.  Army  Res. 


ARE  HERE  TODAY 


So*  them  today  straight  from 
tho  70th  trip  around   •   world. 

Seo  thom  today.  Will  speak 
at  11:55  tonight.  Straight  from 
Bald   Iggle  Farm.' 

RETURN  ENGAGEMENT 
POSSIBLE 


Sutton  Leads 
Tar  Heels  In 
4  Departments 

Approaching  tlie  half  way  point 
of  the  '56  football  season,  the  I 
Carolina  Tar  Heel  accuanulative 
football  statistics  find  senior  half- 
back Ed  Sutton  leading  the  team 
in  four  departments:  rushing,  pass 
receiving,  kickoff  returns  and  scor- 


The  speedy  halfback  lead  in-  j 
dividual  rushing  with  a  net  gain  j 
of  186  yards  in  29  carries  for  an  i 
average  of  6.4  yards.  F\illback  j 
Giles  Gaca  follows  with  an  average  | 
of  5.3  yards  in  12  carries.  | 

In  pa.ss  receiving  Sutton  has ' 
gathered  in  four  for  a  total  of  55  j 
yards.  He  has  taken  9  kickoffs  for , 

a  total  of  183  vards.  i 

I 

Daily   Goff   follows   in   kick   off, 

returns  with  121  yards  in  5  carr-  '■ 

ies.  j 

j 

Sutton  is  the  only  Tar  Heel  that  I 

has   scored.   He  has   hit   pay    dirt! 

three  times.  No  extra  points  have  i 

been  kicked  by  Carolina.  I 

Ron      Marquette     continues  •    to  1 
lead   in  the  passing   field.   He   has 
completed  4  out  of  11  attempts  for 
a  total  of  54  yards. 

Dave  Reed  has  completed  4  in  [ 
14  throws  for  54  yards. 

Wally  Vale  is  the  master  in  the 
punting  field  averaging  42.7  yards  j 
in  14  punts.  I 

In  the  team  statistics  Carolina's  j 
offense  has  moved  the  ball  783 
vards.  Their  opponents.  1421.  The  ; 
Tar  Heels  have  28  frist  downs  com- ! 
pared  to  62  by  their  opponents.  | 
102  points  have  been  scored  | 
against  Carolina  this  season.  ' 


charging  the  goalie  in  the  first 
quarter.  The  soccer  rules  call  for 
the  immediate  ejection  of  a  player 
without  wiaming  if  he  charges  the 
goalie. 

In  the  first  quarter  Carolina  had 
several  opportunities  to  score,  but 
could  never  capitalize  on  them. 
The  team  could  not  get  a  clear 
shot  on  goal  and  the  Davidson 
goalie  Fred  Butler  bro]i€  up  sev- 
eral UNC  attempts. 

This  pattern  was  repealed  in  the 
second  quarter,  with  the  forwards 
passing  brilliantly  but  never  be- 
ing able  to  score. 

The  ball  remained  in  the  David- 
son end  of  the  field  most  of  the 
first  half.  The  Wildcats  could  not 
get  their  own  defense  moving  and 
the  Carolina  fullbacks  rarely  al- 
lowed them  to  penetrate  past  the 
midfield  stripe.  The  half  ended 
with  the  teams  in  a  scoreless  tie. 

in  the  third  quarter,  left  inside 
Tommy  Rand  took  a  pass  from 
right  wing  Pat  McCormick  and 
scored  the  first  Caroliifta  goal, 
bringing  his  teammates  from  the 
depths  of  discouragement.  Rand 
almost  scored'  two  other  times, 
but  his  goal  proved  to  be  the 
turning  point  of  the  game. 

After  Rand  had  broken  the  ice 
Carolina's  offensive  play  im- 
proved, but  they  were  unable  to 
tally  again  and  add  to  the  1-0  lead. 

Then  in  the  fourth  quarter,  right 
wing  Rick  Grausman  took  a  per- 
fect pass  from  Johnny  Foster  and 
put  the  ball  into  the  corner  of  the 
Davidson  goal  to  put  Carolina 
ahead  by  2-0. 

No  more  goals  were  scored  de- 
spite several  good  opportunities 
and  the  game  ended  with  the  soc- 
cer team's  undefeated  record  still 
intact. 

.The  Carolina  de^BiiM '  iHfas  par- 
ticularly sharp  during  the  game, 
keeping  the  ball  in  the  Davidson 
end  most  of  the  time  and  allowing 
Davidson  but  thr«e  shots  against 
UNC  goalie  Chuck  Hartman. 

The  team's  next  coqtest,  will  be 
with^..,C.JSl»tp  l^,.o|i  Qeiciftt 


HUMAN  EMOTION  STRIPPED  TO  THE  RAW! 


fTCHUM-WRlSf 

WILLIAM  A.  WELLMAN'S 


JIL 


.I-i.l.' 


ir 


Officials  Needed 


Intramural  volley  ball  officials 
are  badly  needed.  Anyone  who  is 
interested  may  sign  up  at  the  in- 
tramural office  in  room  315  Wool- 
len Gym  between  the  hours  of  12 
and  5  p.m.  A  volley  ball  officials 
clinic  will  be  hed  at  4  p.m  Monday 
in  room  301  of  Woolen  Gym. 


AS  ADVERTISED  IN  THE  CURRENT  ISSUE  OF 
THE  NEW  YORKER! 


^?(u 


•  h«tlan«  ol«a«'|«  trow  en^tan^ 

A  handsomt  cr«w  n«clc  shcttand  puffpy^   ^ 
Alan  Pa»n«  of  Godalminf ...  full 
fashioned  for  comfort  and  mascultn* 
good  teoks.  Made  for  us  in  England 
in  an  Mpeciatly  pleasing  rang«  of  odors. 

STEVEhfS  -  SHEPHERD 


Cross  Countrymen 
Meet  Terps  Today 


The  most  important  meet  of  the 
cross  country  season  will   be  held  { 
here  this  morning  when  both  vars- 1 
ity    and   freshman    teams  run    in  1 
triangular    meets.  } 

The  varsity  will  encounter  Mary-  j 
land   and  Wake  Forest  while  the 
frosh    engage    Wake    Forest    and  j 
Blast  Mecklenburg  Hign  School. 

The  varsity  squad  is  undefeated  1 
this  season  having  downed  Vir-  j 
ginia.  Clemson,  South  Carolina,  i 
and  State.  The  freshmen  have  com- 
piled a  1-2  record,  beating  Wake 
Forest  and  losing  to  Duke  and 
Myers   Park   High   School. 

Varsity  coach  Dale  Ranson  said 


MURALS 


Yesterday  all  intramural  foot- 
ball games  were  rained  out.  These 
games  will  be  inserted  into  next 
week's  or  the  following  week's  sc- 
hedule. 

MONDAY'S    SCHEDULE 

At  4:00:  ficld-1,  Chi  Phi  vs  Pi 
Lambda:  field-2.  Pi  Kappa  Sig  v.s 
SPE;  field-3,  Stacy-2  vs  Old  West; 
field-4.  Delta  Sig  vs  DKE  (w);  field 
5,  Zeta  Psi  vs  Chi  Phi(w). 

At  5:00:  field-1,  Med  Sch-1  vs 
Mangum-2;  fieldl2.  Beta  vs  Sac  (w); 
field-3.  Aycock  vs  Grimes-2:  field-4 
ATO  vs  Sig  Chi  (w);  field-5.  Kappa 
Sig  vs  Sigma   Nu   (w). 

Fraternity  and  Dormitory  com- 
petition will  begin  Wednesday  af- 
ternoon with  four  games  scheduled 
at  4:00  and  5:00.  The  schedule  will 
be   in   Wednesday  s  Tar  Heel. 

\^aroUna 


yesterday  that  this  should  be  a 
particularly  good  meet.  He  is  ex- 
pecting strong  opposition  from  the 
Maryland  team.  The  Terp  squad 
has  good  depth  and  is  led  by  Burr 
Grim  and  Carl  Party,  two  of  the 
top  harriers  in  the  ACC. 

Laading  the  Tar  Heels  will  be 
Co-captain  Jim  Beatty,  ACC  champ. 
Rounding  out  the  squad  are  Co- 
captain  Marion  Griffin,  Dave  Scur- 
lock,  Everette  Whatley,  Ben  Will- 
iams. Howard  Kohn,  John  Reeves. 
Perrin  Henderson,  Aiec  Coffin  and 
Doug  Henderson. 

Freshman  Coach  Boyd  Newnam 
has  said  that  he  expects  strong 
competition  in  the  freshman  meet. 

"Wake  Forest  has  shown  much  ' 
improvement    since     we    defeated 
them."   Newnam    also    noted    that  | 
East  Mecklenburg  has  a  fine  team 
led    by   Fred   Wilson,    one   of   the  | 
state's   top   prep   runners.  j 

Carrying    the    Carolina    banner  | 
for    the    Tar    Babies    will   be    ace ' 
Cowles  Liipfert,  Fick  Arthur,  Ray 
Bagwell.  John  Green,  John  Kenne- 
dy, James  Aycock.  James  Packard 
and  William  Porter. 

Both  squads  are  in  top  physical  j 
condition   for  the   mtet  which  be- 
gins at  11;45,  according  no  conflict  , 

witli   the  afternoon  football  game.  | 

______^__^_^_.^_  i 

T9»n'ag0     •*<.>    | 

boy . . . 
Und0rstandlng 
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Orj)  c  Dally  ftSTar  Keel 


MUDSLINGiNG 

Brother    Nixon    gives    the    rules. 
See   page   2.. 


VOL.     LVII     NO.     27 


Complete  {A*)  Wire  Service 


CHAPEL   HILL,  NORTH  CAROL|NA,  SUNDAY,  OCTOBER  21.  1956 


Ofiices   in   Graham    Memorial 


FOUR   PAGES  THIS    ISSUE 


TAR  HEELS  TRAMPLE  TERPS 


McMullen  Returns  A  Maryland  Punt 


UNC  left  halfback  Larry  McMullen,  No.  27,  runs  over  one  would-be  Maryland  tackier  in  the  first 
quarter  yesterday  in  returning  a  punt  40  yards  be  fore  being  stopped  by  Terp  quarterback  John 
Fritsch,   No.    14,  on  the  Maryland   24  yard   line. 


Associate  Justice  Rodman 
Addresses  Phi  On  Tuesday 


By    GILBERT    RUTHSTEIN 


The  meeting  will  take 
8  p.m.  on  Ihe  top  floor 
East,  and  aT'Thaf^  trtne"Mr 


place  at 
of  New 
Riulmaii 


The    Phiiantbropic    Literary  .  So- 
ciety will  hold'  its  inauguration  of    ^^,„   ^^^^^  ^^  ^^^   „,.^^,p   ^^   ..^^^^ 
officersTuesday  evening  with  Wil-.p^^p^^      Function      of      Appellate 
liam  B   Rodman  Jr  ,  Associate  Jus 


SP  Starts 
Nominations 
On  Monday 


;<vill 


tice  of  the  North  Carolina  Su- 
preme Court  delivering  the  main 
address. 


'Anastasia'  Ends  Tonight 
Before  Packed  House 

The  Carolina  Playmakers  will 
present  a  final  performance  of 
"Anastasia"  tr*  a  standing-room- 
only  audience  tonight  at  8:30  in 
the  Playmakers  Theater. 

The  cast  has  played  to  a  full 
house  each  night  since  last  Wed- 
nesday's  opening  performance. 

Dr.  Samu?l  Selden.  Playmakers' 
Direcior,  said  yesterday  it  is  very 
unlikely  that  the  play  will  be  held 
over  although  all  performances 
have  been  sellouts. 


Courts." 

I 
Mr.  Rodman,  who  is  a  native  of; 
'  Washington.  N.  C,  and  who  holds 
an  A.B.  Degree  from  I'NCt  and 
was  a  member  of  the  Phi,  was  jus^l 
recently  appointed  by  C'lvcnor 
Luther  Hodges  to  serve  on  I  lie 
slate's   highest    court. 

Rodman  was  until  then   *ttorney 

General   of   the   State,  an  1    in    thi.-! 

capacity  he  represented  UNC  in  a 

,  number    of  cases,   including  somi? 

I  of  the  ones  on  segregation. 

After  serving  as  Mayor  of  Wash- 
ington. .Mr.  Rodman  was  sent  to  Ra 
leigh  to  serve  as  a  member  of  the 
House  of  Representatives.  During 
that  time,  he  served  as  a  member 
of  the  State  Budget  Commission. 

The  Phi  has  invited  the  public 
to  attend  this  meeting. 


,  .  .  i  eitdtus 
nomihatft5fi.<'tdf  th^  fall  campus 
election  \\9{^dpy  qjght. 


Beginning  at  7:30  p.  m.  the 
party  wiil  nam?  candidates  for 
legislative  se«ts  in  Dorm  Men's 
Districts  I  and  U;  Dorm  Women's 
District  and  all  Town  Districts. 


Candidates  for  Freshmen  Class 
Officers  will  also  be  chosen.  Par- 
ty Chairman  Tom  Lambeth  an- 
n.unc:d  yesterday  that  at  the 
.M.)nday  meeting  th?  party  would 
make  an  important  declaration  of 
principle  in  regard  to  the  Colum- 
bia St.  parking  situation. 


Carolina  Scores  4  vf  Ice 
In  Early  Mhufes,  Go 
On  To  FirJt  Vkiory 

By  LARRV  CHEEK 

Carolina's  heretofore  woefullyj  inept  offense  opened  up  for  twj 
quick  touchdowns  in  the  early  miiutes  of  the  first  quarter  in  Kena.i 
Stadium  yesterday,  and  the  Tar  Heels  went  on  from  there  to  roll 
up  a  fantastic  34-ti  victory  over  theionce  mighty  Maryland  Terps. 

The  win  broke  a  four  week  drought  for  the  Tar  Heels  and  brought 
their  season's  record  to  a  1-4  reaiing.  It  was  Also  Maryland's  fourth 
setback  compared  to  one  win.  ThelTar  Heel  triumph  marked  the  fi)"st 
Carolina  victory  over  a  Maryland  ^eam  sinct  the  1948  season. 

Carolina  chalked  up  a  pair  ojf  quick  .scores  the  first  two  time." 
they  got  the  ball,  both  times  on  jbreaks.  Guard  Jimmy  Jones  drew 
first  blood  when  he  picked  a  defledled  pass  out  of  the  air  and  rambled 
23  yards  for  a  score.  Jones  also  set  up  the  second  tally  by  recovering 
a  Maryland  fumble  on  the  Terp  id  The  Tar  Heels  scored  in  eight 
plays  with  Moe  DeCantis  going  ov^r. 

Carolina  added  another  TD  inj  the  second  quarter  and  picked  up 
a  lone  tally  in  each  of  the  last  iwp  periods  to  wind  up  their  scorin;^. 
Maryland's  only  touchdown  came  jn  the   third  quarter. 

The  Tar  Heels,  led  by  a  spirited  group  of  sophomores  and  veteran 
quarterback  Dave  Reed,  took  advantage  of  every  break  that  came  their 
vv?y  and  exploited  Maryland's  weak  points  to  turn  the  game  into  a 
rout.  In  addition,  the  Tar  Heels  sprung  an  excitingly  different  offen- 
sive formation  on  the  Terps  that  utilized  Reed's  running  and  passing 
abilities  to  the  utmost.  .  ,    ,    .  ,        . .-  •        ' 

NEW  FORMATION       .  \>  . '    w  .;'vi^^;'.;C'^iJ  "*         . 

The  new  formation  was  a  short  punt,  winged  T  or  spread,  which 
ever  one  you  want  to  c.-ill  it,  and  it  worked  to  perfection  again.st  the 
befuddled  Terps. 

Statistically  speaking,  the  gan^e  was  fairly  even.  Carolina  picked 
>up  IS  first  downs  to.  Maryland's  1^  and  gained  197  yards  rushing  to  I! 
113  for  the  Terps.  •  ■ 

Carolina's   first    tally   came    after    only   2:45   had    elaps«d    in    the  | 
game.  Halfback  Larry  McMuUen  set  up  the  score  by  taking  a  handoff  ' 
from  Ed  Sutton   on    a   Maryland   punt  feturn,   and   scooting  down  the 
sidelines   from   his  own  39  to  the  M.^ryland  24.  From  hero   it  todk  • 
only  two  plays  to  reach  paydlrt  with  Jones  going  across  for  the  score 

on  a  freak  pa^s  play.      -.» . — — .. 

The  Terps   t/ook   the    following   kickoff   and   fumbled   on    the   first 
play  frortj.  scrimmage  with  Jones  recovering  ttr  Carolinii  oh  Miryland's 
26.  Suttof),  moved  the  ball  to  the  23,  Roed   picked  up  6  yards  on  twio  I 
plays   to   the    17,   and   Sutlon   went    for   4   to  the    13   where   it   was   fzril  > 
and   10. 

Reed  then  pulled  h  beautiful  booties  play  that  carried  for  8 
yards  to  the  5  and  Suiton  picked  up  a  lirst  down  on  the  2.  After 
Sutton  was  stopped  for  no  gain,  DeCantis  took  a  pitchout  from  Reed 
on  the  option  play  and  swept  end  for  the  score.  Phil  Blazer  added 
the  point  after  and  the  Tar  Heels  led   13-0.  - 

..•■•'.•  ■  ^ti  ,tiV"?  \*  «■-■;■-■;     I 

also  the  key  play  th  setting  up 

THE  STATISTICS  I 


Speaking     of 
Lambeth  said: 


the     nominations 


Extensive  Observation 
Planned  UN  Week  Here 


By  PRINGLE  PIPKIN  ^ 

The  YM-YWCA,  student  govern-  '■ 
ment   and   APO  service   fraternity 
plan    an    extensive   observation    of ' 
United    Nations    Week,   which    be- 
gins today.  ! 
At    the   Carolina-.Maryland    foot- 
ball game  yesterday,  the  UN   flag 
v/as    flown    and    the    UNC    Card- 
board did  a  stunt  spelling  out    'UN 
Week  ■   and   showing   a   picture   of  ] 
a  dove  of  peace.  | 
Tomorrow,  the  library  will  have  ! 
a  display  in  one  of  the  exhibition 
cases  in  the  main  lobby.  There  will ', 
be  material  published  by  the  L'N,  i 
models   of   UN    Headquarters   and 
some  UN  stamps.  At  least  30  coun- 
tiies     will      be     represented      by  ' 
stamps. 

■Wednesday  will  be  observed  as 
L'N  Day,  with  many  special  events 
planned.  On  WCHL.  Ty  Boyd  will 
have  with  him  Dr.  Riath  Haider  of 
the  School  of  Public  Health  of 
Iraq  during  'Breakfast  with 
Boyd,"  from  8:30  -  9  a.m. 

Also  on  Wednesday,  a  color  mo- 
vie will  be  shown  continuously  in 
the  Y  lobby.  The  movie,  which 
lasts  about  15  minutes,  covers  the 
UN   agencies  and    their  work. 

Foreign  students  will  attend  a 
tree  ceremony  at  the  Chapel  Hill 
Elementary  School  at  2:30  p.m. 

In  Hillel  House  at  8  p.m.,  there 
will  be  a  pageant  in  which  various 
foreign  countries  will  be  repre- 
sented. The  Cosmopolitan  Club  is 
cooperating  with  the  Y  on  putting 


on  this  program.  The  script  for 
the  pageant  was  written  by  John 
Clayton,  assistant  professor  in  the 
Dept.  of  Radio,  TV  and  Motion 
Pictures.  Mrs.  Ephraim  Rosenzweig 
will  direct  the  pageant. 

WTJNC-TV  will  present  a  pro- 
gram from  their  Raleigh  studio 
which  will  feature  foreign  students 
from  N.  C.  State  College  from  "7-8 
p.m.  At  8  p.m.,  a  film.  "Assign- 
ment Children,"  will  be  shown.  It 
stars  Danny  Kaye  and  emphasizes 
the  UN. 
FOREIGN  DISHES 

During  the  day  Wednesday,  Le- 
noir Hall  will  have  a  menu  featur- 
ing special  foreign  dishes.  The  UN 
flag  will  be  flown  from  the  flag 
pole    behind    South    Building. 

At  the  YMCA  Freshman  Fellow- 
ship at  6:15  Thursday  in  Lenoir 
Hall,  there  will  be  a  program  on 
the  Suez  Crisis.  A  film  on  the  sub- 
ject will  be  shown,  and  Jimmy 
Kinney  will  conduct  a  panel  dis- 
cussion featuring  Dr.  Shepard 
Jones  of  the  Political  Science 
Dept.  and  Dr.  Zawahry  of  Egypt. 

Miss  Polly  Clarenbach,  chairman 
of  the  Y  study  group  of  interna- 
tional relations,  and  a  committee 
consisting  of  Miss  Jackie  Aldridge, 
=tudent  governm?nt  repre.«entative; 
P.  H.  Craig  and  Bob  Dawson,  Y 
membens:  and  George  Brice.  Bill 
Jones,  Jim  Chamblee  and  Bill 
Johnson,^  APO  service  fraternity 
men,  made  the  plans  for  the  UN 
Week    celebration. 


"The  naming  of  candidates  for 
any  campus  position  is  the  most 
important  function  of  U.NC's  po- 
litical parties.  For  that  reason,  i\ 
is  vitally  important  that  as  many 
SP  members  and  supporters  as 
possible  be  present  for  this  final 
nominating  ses.sion.  Student  Gov- 
ernment will  be  as  responsibk  and 
effective  as  we  make  it  through 
these  candidates." 

Lamheth  said  today  the  Student 
Party  is  the  most  open  political 
gro'up  on  campus.  Our  only  re- 
quirement for  membership  is  in- 
terest and  work.  Everyone  who 
has  those  qualities  to  offer  is 
urged  to  join  the  SP  team  in  the 
days  ahead." 


McMULLEN  RETURNS  PUNT 

A  punt  return  by  McMullen  wa 
the  third  Tar  Heel  TD.  This  time* 
the  biir  halfback  ran  44  yards  from 
the  Carolina  37  to  the  Maryland 
24.  It  took  the  Tar  Heel.s  only  five 
plays  to  score  with  R?ed  scoring 
on  a  quarterback  jump  over  the 
middle  of   the   line. 

With  3:44  remaining  in  the  first 
half,  the  Terps  started  their  only 
drive  of  the  opening  half.  From 
their  own  44,  they  moved  to  the 


Statistics 

Md. 

UNC 

First  Downs 

13 

15 

Rushing    Yardage 

113 

197 

Passing  Yardage 

134 

133 

Passes 

919 

6-17 

Passes  Intercepted 

By     1 

1 

Punts 

8-37.4 

4.40 

Funtbies    Lost 

7 

1 

Fumbles  Lost 

2 

1 

Yards   Penalized 

73 

105 

Chamber  Music  Group 
To  Appear  Here  Tuesday 

A  Yirgoslavjan  chamber  music 
ensemble  on  its  first  American 
tour  will  present  a  concert  in  Hill 
Hall  Tuesday  night  under  the 
sponsorship  of  Graham  Memorial 
Student  Union. 

The  Zagreb  Soloists  Ensemble, 
foutided  and  conducted  by  An- 
tonio Janigro,  will  play  at  8  p.m 
The  pr::gram  is  free  to  UNC  stu- 
dents, with  a  $1  admission  fee  for 
student  wives  and  a  $2  charge  for 
others. 

Widely  praised  for  their  con- 
certs in  Paris,  London,  Rotterdam, 
The  Hague.  Vienna  and  other 
European  cities,  the  ensemble  in- 
cludes some  of  Europe's  finest  in- 

,  .strumental  soloists. 

Vladimir  Ruzdjak,  a  distinguish 
ed  Yugoslav  baritone,  will  appear 
with      the      performers.     Janigro, 

I  known  in  the  Western  Hemisphere 
through  his  recordings,  is  a  'cello 
soloist,   having   appeared   often  in 

'  Europe  and  South  America. 


All  Game  Photos 
By  Norman  Kantor 

Pa-zne  Snags  Re*d  Pass 

Tar  Heel  end  Buddy  Payne  pulls  in  a  pat%  from  quarterback 
Dave  Reed  in  the  third  quarter  of  yesterday's  ganM  vith  Maryland. 
The  connection  was  9«od  for  •  25  yard  fain.  


Co-Captain  Ed  Sutton  Moves  The  Bail 


-  Tar  Heel  Ed  Sutton  is  shown  in  the  second  ((uarter  of  the  UNC  win  over  Maryland  as  he  picks 
up-20  yar.ds  to.  the  Maryland  IS.  Curt  Hathaway',- Mo.  12,  anS  Jim  Varnum,  No.  24,  are  shown  getting 
ready  to  bieck  out  Maryland  line  men. 

TATUM  TOTED: 


s  Day 
Labeled 
A  Success 


Team  Like  One  Big  Happy 
Family  After  First  Win 


By    BILL    KING 


.-,.^w^:i 


Early  arrivals  at  the  game  yes- i 
terday  must  have  wondered  wheth- 
er th-c'v   were  attending  a   foclball 
game  or  tho  Mafdi  Gras. 

About  1:30  p.m.  a  band  of  red- 
jer.^eyed  play9r8,  whith  many  of 
the  fans  tliought  to  be  the  .Mary- , 
land  team,  came  trotting  out  on 
the  field  and  ran  through  a  "mock" 
warmup.  Then  they  went  through 
a  few  humorou.s  plays  that  marked 
Ihem  definitely  as  fakes.  j 

The  team  was  composed  of 
pledgs  and  brothers  from  ATO 
social   fraternity  here  on  campu.s.  i 

Dads  Day  proved  to  be  a  suc- 
cess yesterday.  About  25  fathers 
M'ore  s?ated  dD«"n  behind  the  Caro- 
lina bench  with  the  numbers  of 
their  sons  on  their  back. 

Although  the  Tar  Heels  and 
Terps  were  fierce  in  battle  and 
the  fans  were  split  in  partiality, 
there  was  one  moment  when 
everybody  was  in  accord  and  all 
thoughts  of  rivalry  w?re  momen- 
tarily .set  aside.  Th's  moment  came 
just  prior  to  the  start  of  the  game 
when  the  Carolina  and  Maryland 
bands  joined  together  in  playing 
th?  alma  mater  of  the  two  schools, 
then  the   national  anthem. 

Remark  heard  in  vicinity  of  Car- 
njim  student  gate  prior  to  the 
game:  "Hey,  do  you  suppose  the 
team  will  sit  in  the  end  zone  this 
afternoon?"  The  Tar  Heels  were 
back  on  the  south  s'de  yesterday.  ! 

It's  an  unusual   feat   for  a  lino-  > 
man  to  score  a  touchdown  but  this  ! 
trick   com:s   as  nothing     new     to  j 
Carolina    guard    Jim    Jone.s.    Last 
year   against    the    Terps    big    Jim 
t'»ok   the  ball  out  of  the  hands  of 
Maryland  quarterback  Frank  Tam- 
burello   and   raced   to   paydirt    for 
Carolina's    only    score.    He   turned 
the  trick  again  yesterday  when  he 
intercepted   a    deflected    pass   and 
went  over  for  th?  Tar  Heel's  first  ! 
tally.  I 

Whon  Ph'l  Blazer  booted  the  ex- 1 
tra  point  after  the  Tar  Heel's  sec-  j 
nnd  ta'lv  y3st?rdav,  it  marked  the! 
first  time  th's  season  thai  Caro- 1 
Una  hns  added  a  point  after 
touchdown.  I 

Alaiyland's    Initial   running   first' 
down  yesterday   was   long  coming.  | 
The  Terps  were  able  to  move  for  ; 
•th'>   H'pcecsary   ten    in   four  do\^■ns 
for    the    first    time    with    6:10    re- 
ma'ni"S  in  the  *;econd  period. 

A   big   round   of   applause   went 
to   the     Carolina     and     Maryland 
bands  which  performed  during  in-  j 
termission     yesterday.     This     was , 
(See  DAD'S  DAY,  Page  4)        \ 


By  DAVE.WIBLE 

The.se  Carolina  boys  really  do 
like  to  win  a  ball  game,  contrary 
to  the  thoughts  of  some  members 
of  the  student    body. 

It  wa.s  a  great  big  happy  family 
as  the  virtors-  got  off  the  backs  of 
the  students  who  carried  them  to 
the  dressing  room  and  congratu- 
lated each  other.  UNC  Coach  Sun- 
ny Jim   Tatum    walked  right   into 

Mont  Unhappy 
Abdut  Jones' 
Scoring  Play 

By   JIMMY    HARPER 

"We  jusf  got  beat,  and  I  mean 
beat.  That's  all  I  can  say.  You  can 
look  at  the  scoreboard  and  tell 
that." 

So  said  Coach  Tommy  Mont  of 
his  Maryland  team's  loss  to  an  ag- 
gressive and  unmerciful  Carolina 
squad. 

The  turning  point  came  early 
in  the  contest  when  Carolina  guard 
Jim  Jones  grabbed  a  juggled  pa.ss 
and  legged  it  over  for  the  first 
.score. 

Mont  said  that  the  score  came 
after  the  referee's  whistle  had 
blown.  Several  Maryland  players 
backed  up  his  charge. 

"The  new  spread  offense  .sur- 
prised us.  We  didn't  start  prepar- 
ing for  it  "until  this  morning." 

Mont   noted    that    'Carolina   ex- 

(See  MARYLAND,  Page  4) 

Di  To  Air 
Rili  Mout 


the  dressing  room  and  received 
■  cheers  from  the  team.  A  group 
of  "sung  hot"  students  staged  an 
af:er-the-gam?  pep  rally  out  side 
ihe  locker  r';oni  door. 

Tatiun  told  the  press,  "this 
game  was  just  like  eating  steak, 
sometimes  you  hav?  to  eat  it  and 
sometimes  you  are  real  hungry  for 
it.  We  were  real  hungry  for  vic- 
tory. We  had  the  good  breaks. 
Maryland  did  nut.  We  installed  the 
spread  to  get  ar  ,und  their  big 
tjjkles.  The  unbalanced  line 
pla:":d  the  bail  cairiers  away  from 
Maryland's  .strong  left  side.  Mary- 
land could  not  got  used  to  our 
defense.  We  took  a  chance.  I  was 
;i'ed  oi  boing  nailed  to  the  cross, 
rf  I  was  g:ing  to  be  shot.  I  wanted 
it  tj  be  quick." 

"The  boys  paved  agressive  ball 
all  the  way  tnroug.7. '  Tatum  said. 

Ed  Sutton,  who  asked  for  the 
pljyers'  eye  v.ew  ol  the  game, 
said,  'We  were  awake.  We  have 
been  playing  conser\aiive  ball  up 
to  now.  Every  one  played  well. 
The  backs  ran  well,  the  line 
hustled.  1  can't  single  out  any  one 
player  that  looked  bstter  than  the 
rest.  ■ 

Jim  Jones  was  the  most  alert 
ball  player  out  there.  He  recover- 
ed a  fumble,  blocked  a  kick  and 
intercepted  •  a  deflected  pass  to 
score  the  first  Tar  Heel  touch- 
down. 

He  said.  "When  I  caught  the 
pass  I  didn't  think  about  it.  1  just 
ran." 

Asked  about  the  line  plan,  Jones 
said  "1  tljink  the  whole  line  played 
well.  A  !at  of  credit  should  be 
given  to  Don  Rec'ding  and  Leo 
Russavag'i.  This  was  the  first  start 
for  both  of  them  and  they  played 
an  excellent  gam?. " 

it  was  a  lot  easier  for  the  Tar 
Heels  to  walk  through  town  last 
night. 


Merchants    [pjerpont  Dies  I 


A  resolution  that  the  Dialec 
tic  Senate  go  on  record  'as  con- 
demning the  merchants  tf  Chap- 
el Hill  for  their  actions,  attitudes 
and  miserly  interpretation  of  the 
student  Fair  Deal."  will  be  de- 
bated by  the  Di  Tuesday  at  8  p.m.  : 
in  New  West. 

If  passed,  copies  of  the  resolu- 1 
tion  will  be  sent  to  the  president 
of  the  student  body,   president  of  1 
the  IFC,  president  of  the  IDC  and  ' 
the  editor  of  The  Daily  Tar  Heel, 
according  to  Di  officials.  j 

All  interested  •  students  have , 
been  invited  to  attend  and  par  I 
ticipate   in  the   debate.  i 


(.^» — Yesterday  a  University  pro- 
fessor died  of  a  heart  attack  dur- 
inr  the  North  Carolina-Maryland 
football   game.  »  - 

He  was  identified  as  Andrew 
W.  Pierpont,  50,  associate  pro- 
fessor of  business  administration 
and  assistant  to  the  dean. 

Survivors  include  the  wife,  the 
former  Glendine  Stuart  of  Waco, 
Texas  and  a  daughter,  Mrs.  J.  C. 
Robinson    Jr     of    Greenville. 

The  funeral  will  be  at  3  p.m. 
Monday  at  the  Chapel  of  the 
Cross   Episcopal   Church,  here. 


PAGE    TWO 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


SUNDAY,  OCTOBER  21, 19St 


The  Week 
Elvis  And 


In  Review:  Campaigning, 
Carolina's  First  Win 


SOUTH  BUILDING 

.  . .  Friday's  in   the  front   office   noic 

It    will    l)t'      President"  William   C   Friclav   horn   now 


<»n. 


Friday,  who  was  named  acting  president  last  March  i.  is 
viituallv  certain  to  be  inianinioiislv  aaepied  as  president 
next  Krida\.  At  that  time  the  full  Board 
ol  Trustees  will  meet  to  consider  his  nom- 
in;  ;ion.  served  up  by  the  board's  exet  utive 
(onunittee  last  week. 
\.  V^HB  Fridav  is  ^^Ci  years  old.  His  nomination 

was  received  with  eniluisiasni  bv  other 
members  of  the  C.onsolidated  University 
stall,   the  governor  aiid  students. 

It  will  be  the  liist  time  since  June.  195;,, 
GRAY  that    the    I'niversity  has  had   a    full-dress 

president,  li  was  then  that  Gordon  Gray 
kit  tile  |)res:denc\  to  become  assistant  sec- 
retary; ol  delense  lor  international  securi- 
tv  alfijirs— a  Pentagon  }oib.      ■ 

I'li^versity  Provost  J.v Harris  Pinks  was 
naineii  acting  president  initil  March  1, 
w  lien  'Jje  Jeft  to  Recome  l»ead  of  the  State 

BoarcJ  of  flighcr  FAvc.iwjn: 

*  *  # 

The   tr;  '        i)r.)blau  wasn't  solved  last  FRIDAY 

wce'^.    r    1  indications  were  it  Avouldn't  be  for  quite  some 
.   ti::i-l 

The  student  government  Traffic  Gcjnnnissicjn,  an  ap- 
|)ointed  group,  met  with  the  Town  Board  of  Aldermen  and 
the  Chapel  Hill-Garrlxjro  .Merchants'  Assn.  to  talk  o\er 
the  pr.)I)letn.  wliic  h  centers  around  a  town  law  against  park-  , 
ing  more  than  two  hours  on  one  block  of  S.  ('olunil)ia  St.. 
across  the  street  ftom  liig  Fraternity  Gourt. 

Those  at  the  closed  meeting  reported  "no  decisicjn  ' 
had  l>een  reached  on  the  traffic  situatUm.  Chairman  Wil- 
burn  Daxis  of  the  student  group  said  j)arlic  ipants  just  wanted 

to  exchange  '  perscjual  \  iews." 

*  *  * 

Hard  dri\ing  Tar  Heels  broke  their  lour  game  losing 
streak  yesterday  in  a  game  which  saw  them  })laying  heads-up 
l>all   Un    four  full  cpiarters. 

Bright Iv  paiined  cars  sjK>tted  the  parking  lots  as  the 
spirited  M.irvland  ^tucients  arri\ed  for  their  caravan  week- 
end. The  traveling  terps  found  Chapel  Hill  skies  gray,  and 
as  the  game  ended  a  synipathetic  dri^/le  started  falling. 

*  *  * 

A  Carolina  senior  was  killed  early  last  Mondav  morning 
when  the  car  in  which  he  was  a  passenger  collided  with  a 
truck  driven  f)y  a  woman. 

Robert  FJlerbe  jr.  of  Rockingham  died  on  his  wav 
to  Memoiial  fiospiial.  Two  studeiUs  riding  with  him  were 
reported  doing  well  on  last  report     from     the      I'niversity 

infiimary. 

»  *  * 

riie  Carolina  F(»rMm.  which  brmgs  speakers  of  world, 
national  and  local  impottaiue  to  the  campus  e\erv  vear, 
annoimced  its  slate  for  the  present  academic  year.  Speakers 
visiting  the  campiis  will  include: 

\'ice  President  Richard  Nixon.  Senators  H.  P.  Cain, 
Paul  Douglas  and  Strom  Fhinniond;  \'ice  President  Walter 
Reuther.  and  Chairman  \'.  K.  Krishna  Metujon  of  the  In- 
dian delegati()n  to  the  rniied, Nations. 

♦  *  * 

Fhe  Carolina  Pla\ makers  started  up  their  dramatic 
seavm  last  week  with  Anastasia.,"  Rusti  Rothroek  and  .Mar- 
ion Fit/-Sinnnons  led  the  cast,  which  wr.'s  directed  by  Dr. 
Samuel  Selden. 

l:i)e  Bail^  l^r  Seel 

The  official  student  publication  of  the  Publications  Board  of  the 
University  of  North  Carolina,  where  it  is  published  daily  except  Mon- 
day and  examination  and  vacation  periods  and  summer  terms.  Elntered 
as  second  class  matter  in  the  post  office  at  Chapel  Hill,  N.  C,  under 
the  act  of  March  8.  1870.  Subscription  rales:  Mailed.  $4  a  year,  $2.50 
per  semester;  delivered.  $6  a  year,  $3.50  a  semester. 

Editor - - FRED  POWLEDGE 

Managing~Editor   _ OTARUE  JOHNSON 

News  MUor ._ _.  - RAY  LINKER 

Business  Manager  ._     "•-.:. BILL  BOB  PEEL 

T»4E^AILY  TAR  HEEL  WEEK  IN  REVIEW 

Editor  CHARLIE  SLOAN 

Staff  Writers : GEORGE  PFINGST  and  ][NGRID  CLAY 


Fair  Week 
Opened  Up 
In  State 

The  biggest  ne-.vs  in  the  state 
last  week  was  the  opening  of  the 
89th  N.  C.  State  Fair  in  R?leigh. 

The  theme  of  this  year's  fair 
\va«  'Dairying  on  Parade." 
There  were  15  dairy  exhibits  to 
emphasize  the  importance  of  the 
dairy  and  its  industry  to  the  life 
and  economy   of  the   State. 


In  Grecnstwro,  attorneys  for 
10  Negroes  who  were  refused 
golf  privileges  on  a  "private" 
course  filed  suit  in  Federal  Mid- 
dle District  Court,  challenging 
the  city's  right  to  "side-step  in- 
tegration by  leasing  public  lands. 

The  suit  asks  for  an  immed- 
iate injunction  "forever  restrain- 
ing" the  City  of  Greensboro  from 
denying  Negroes  "the  use  and 
enjoyment  of  any  golf  course  or 
park  established  or  operated  or 
maintained  by  the  City  of  Greens- 
boro on  account  of  race  or  color." 

This  is  the  first  suit  aimed  at 
tearing  down  North  Carolina 
race  laws  in  connection  with  the 
U.  S.  Supreme  Court's  .ruling 
against  forced  segregation  of 
public  parks. 


On  The  National  Scene, 
Issues  Are  Getting  Solid 


IKE,  DICK,  ESTES  A  ADLAI 

.  .  .  just   16  da-'is  h'U 


Harold  V.  Langlois  went  to 
Raleigh  last  week  and  identified 
the  figure  of  Confederate  hero 
Henry  Lawson  White  in  Capitol 
Square  as  the  one  he  posed  for 
back  in  1911.  The  Yankee  ex- 
policeman  from  Ro.vbury.  Mas.s.. 
worked  as  a  model  for  John  Wil- 
son, who  sculptured  the  .statue 
of  Silent  Sam  here  at  he  Univers- 
ity. 


At  a  Klu  Klux  Klan  meeting 
in  Shannon  Friday  the  news- 
papers resi>onsible  for  sending 
Klan  leaders  into  prison  or  ob- 
scurity several  years  ago  werie 
labeled   "smear  sheets." 

The  chief  speaker  described 
the  Klan  as  "a  patriotic  non- 
violent organization  which  wel- 
comed investigation." 


Adlai  Stevenson  and  President 
Dwight  Eisenhower  appear  to 
have  agreed  on  two  things — and 
they  are  opposed  on  both  of 
them. 

They  have  agreed  that  the 
draft  and  the  H-Bomb  make  good 
campaign   issues. 

Yesterda}-,  with  17  campaign- 
ing days  left  before  the  Nov.  6 
national  election,  the  two  candi- 
dates were  still  battling  the  two 
issues  out. 

Stevenson,  who  let  his  H-bomb 
fall  early  last  week  in  a  major 
addres.s.  wants  to  put  a  ban  on 
testing  of  such  weapons.  He  also 
would  attempt  to  stop  the  draft 
in   the  not-too-distant    future. 

The  President,  reflecting  on 
both  Stevenson's  proposals,  re 
plied:  "The  road  to  surrender  is 
paved  with  good  intentions."  The 
choice  between  Republican  and 
Democratic  in  the  election,  said 
Eisenhower,  is  "one  between  hard 
sense  and  experience  versus  pie- 
in-th-.sky  promises  and  wishful 
thinking." 


Singer 
off  by  a 


PRESLEY 


Elvis  Presley  was  let 
Memphis.  Tenn.,  judge 
with  a  lecture 
after  he  took  a 
poke  at  a  ser- 
vice station 
operator  who 
nought  to  have 
"t  h  e  Pelvis" 
moved  from 
the  premises. 
Presley,  who 


was  signing  autographs  for  teen- 
aged  admirers,  was  quoted  as 
saying: 

"I'll  take  ridicule  and  slander, 
but   when   a  guy  hits   me,  (hat's 

INTERPRETING  THE  NEWS 


too  much."  'Hie  operator  alleged 
ly  slapped  Presley  on  the  back 
of  the  head  after  asking  him  to 
leave. 


Russia  and  Japan  last  we.k 
signed  a  treaty  ending  an  11- 
year  state  of  war  between  the 
two  courtrios.  The  pact,  signed 
in  the  Kremlin,  ended  almost  a 
year  and  one  half  of  negotiations. 
•  Japanes?  Premier  Ichiro  Hato- 
yama's  top  negotiator.  Agricul- 
ture Minister  ^chiro  Kono,  said 
the  final  agreement  involved  con- 
ce.ssions  on  both  sides.  He  did 
not  disclose  whether  Russia  had 
handed  back  the  disputed  islands 
of  Habomai  and  Shikotan,  off 
north  Hokkaido. 


The  Council  of  Europe  Gen- 
eral Affairs  Committee  reported 
a  solution  to  the  Suez  Canal  dis- 
pute is  possible  if  the  United 
Nations  establishes  a  special 
court  to  rule  on  international 
agreement  operations. 

The  council  also  reported  a 
satisfactor\'  solution  would  be 
possible  if  an  international  body 
would  be  set  up  within  the  terms 
of  the  1888  Suez  Convention  to 
permit  effective  international 
control  of  the  canal,  if  backed 
by  such  a  court.  j     ,  ^ 

*         *         •  "^ 

Iraqi  troops  were  reported  not 
plannirq  to  enter  Jordan  after 
all.  A  Jordanian  government 
spokesman,  after  two  days  of  dis- 
cussion in  Amman.  Jordan's  cap- 
ital, said  the  troops  would  not 
enter  Jordan  now  but  would  re- 
main ready  on  the  border  for  im- 
mediate aid  in  the  event  of  an 
attack  on  Israel. 


Adlai,  The  Draft,  The  Bomb: 
It's  Time  For  A  Clearing-Up 


Joseph  C.  Harsch 

III    f'hr  Christ iini 
Science  Monitor 

WASHINGTON— Adlai  E.  Stev- 
enson is  not  the  only  person  who 
thinks  that  the  danger  of  cum- 
ulative radiation  from  atomic 
weapons  tests  is  so  great  that  we 
should  be  doing  everything  po.s- 
sible  to  find  an  early  basis  for 
an  end  to  these  tests.  Many  lead- 
ing physicists  in  this  and  other 
countries  agree  with  him. 

The  same  is  true  about  the 
manpower  draft.  An  end  to  it 
has  long  been  discussed  among 
nonpolitical  militarj-  experts  as 
an  eventual,  logical  by-product  of 
changes  in  the  technique  of  wea- 
pons and  war.      « 

A  nonpolitical  case  can  be 
made  for  the  Stevenson  views  on 
both  of  these  subjects.  Yet  the 
Stevenson  position  on  these  two 
matters  failed  to  catch  on  as  a 
vital  political  issue  in  the  cam- 
paign prior  to  his  Chicago  speech. 

REASON 

Th^re  is  a  reason  why  this  was 
the  case.  In  one  respect  Steven- 
son was  trjing  to  do  with  the 
atomic  tests  and  the  draft  pre- 
cisely what  t)wight  D  Eisenhower 
did  four  years  ago  with  the  Ko- 
rean   war. 

In  both  cases  a  political  candi- 
date for  high  office  held  out  to 
the  public  the  hope  of  achieving 
something  which  most  people 
would,  other  things  being  equal, 
like  to   see  happen. 

But  in  1952  an  end  to  the  Ko- 
rean war  was  only  one  step  away 
from  achievement.  The  ground- 
work, the  preparations,  the  nego- 
tiations, even  the  ultimate  form 
of  the  truce  had  all  been  worked 
out.  The  truce  was,  in  fact,  al- 
ready in  existence.  All  that  was 


required  was  the  final  formaliza- 
tion of  the  document. 

NOT  TRUE 

The  same  is  not  true  today 
of  the  draft.  It  will  be  ended 
someday.  But  several  difficult 
steps  must  be  taken  before  that 
day  comes.  And  the  same  step.s, 
relating  to  the  future  of  the  cold 
wai.  are  involved  in  the  question 
of  atomic  testing. 

The  question  now  is  whether 
there  can  be  an  end  to  atomic 
tests  and  the  draft  before  there 
is  something  more  nearly  ap- 
proaching a  true  settlement  'o[ 
the  cold   war  than  yet  exists. 

Months,  perhaps  even  years, 
of  negotiation  lie  ahead  before 
there  is  a  settlement,  "fhe  im- 
mediate steps  ahead  are  unifica- 
tion of  Germany,  a  settlem<$nt 
between  the  United  States  and 
Communist  China,  and  stability 
in  the  Middle  East. 
NOW 

Stevenson  proposed  that  the 
end  of  thermonuclear  testing  be 
negotiated  now  as  a  prelimiaary 
to  resohing  the  issues  of  th?  cold 
war.  He  hope^  this  will  speed  the 
remainder  of  the  negotiating 
process. 

The  President  has  made  it 
plain  that  he  does  not  think 
such  a  step  can  come  logically 
at  the  present  time,  and  that  it 
must  be  negotiated  as  an  organic 
part  of  the  process  of  reducin;? 
the  cold  war.  Thus  the  issue  is 
better  joined  now. 

It  is,  I  think,  because  the  issue 
had  not  become  clear  that  most 
people  were  paying  little  atten- 
tion to  it. 

Now,  having  put  his  proposal 
in  it.s  best  light.  Stevenson  will 
be  asked  to  go  further.  Indeed, 
he  could.  I  venture  to  think,  stir 
the  most  lively  public  interest  if 
he  felt  fr^e  to  explain  how  he 


would  handle  the  great  and  dif- 
ficult steps  which  must  be  related 
to  the  suspension  of  tests  if  such 
a  move  is  to  be  fruitful  and  not 
wa.sted. 

These  steps,  however,  are  mat- 
ters whi(;h  both  Republicans  and 
Democrats  so  far  have  preferred 
not  to  discuss  in  thi.<;  campaign 
for  the  practical  reason  that  the 
winner  will  have  to  cope  with 
them  immediately  after  the  elec- 
tion. Perhaps  they  now  can  be 
discussed  with  benefit  to  all. 


Dr.  Mohammed  Abdel  Moniem  El-Zawahry 

.  .  .OH  Jtis  dei>-k — A'a.s.sci-,  Egyptian  FUig 


OR.  ZAWAHRY 


E  gy ptian  S  tudent  O  n  U  N  G  rant 
Likes  Nasser  And  Un  ited  States 


Woody  Sears 

Dr.  Mohammed  Abdel  Moniem  El-Zawahry  comes 
to  the  Carolina  campus  from  Cairo.  Egypt. 

Dr.  Zawahry  is  here  to  do  post-graduate  work 
in  the  field  of  public  health  on  a  scholarship  pro- 
vided by  the  International  Co-operation  Administra- 
tion which  is  a  branch  of  the  United  Nation's  World 
Health    Organization. 

At  present.  Dr.  Zawahry  is  working  for  the 
Egyptian-.\merican  Joint  Committee  on  Public 
Health.  He  is  one  of  pigbt  Egyptian  M.D.'s'  who  are 
studying  in  tliis  program.  Also  in  the  same  pro- 
gram are  eight  engineers  and  ten  other  specialists 
in  some  phase  of  public  health  work.  /     '  '   "      \ 

When  he  returns  to  Egypt.  Dr.  Zawahry  will 
work  for  the  Egyptian  Ministry  of  Public  Health  as 
an  instnictor  at  the  High  Institute  of  Public  Health 
which  is  located  Alexandria  University. 

Dr.  Zawahry  is  one  of  the  many  Egyptians  who 
are  dedicating  themselves  to  the  improvement  of 
living  conditions  and  standards  in  their  home 
country. 

"The  people  of  Egypt  look  up  to  the  United 
States, "  said  Dr.  Zawalin,'.  "We  see  the  United 
States  as  a  leader  in  independence  and  freedom," 
h^  continued. 

This  is  because  Egypt  is  a  colony  as  the  United 
States  was  at  one  time,  and  Egypt  has  basically  the 
same  problems  as  were  overcome  by  the  U.  S.  "They 
look  to  the  United  States  for  help,  but  it  does  not 
always  come."  he  observed. 

The  biggest  fault  that  Dr.  Zawahry,  in  his  role 
of  new-comer,  finds  with  the  .A-merican  people  is 
that  they  don't  have  enough  interest  in  other  peo- 
ples and   their  problems.     "The"    Americans     have 


ever>i,hing  . . .  they     feel     safe     and     secure  ....  as 
though  they  don't  need  anyone  else.'' 

"But  it  dosn't  work  that  way,"  he  said,  "because 
they  need  us  and  we  need  them."       '   ' 

■  ■■;  I-.  , , ,  •'*■'  1  •  ■    ■'■' 

Dr.  2awhry  aaid  that  the  U.S.  doesn't  live  u, 
to  its  publicity  in  a  lot  of  instances.  He  said  that 
over  half  the  world  is  made  up  of  colonies  and 
that  they  look  toward  the  U.  S.  for  help  in  emanci- 
pating themselves.  "Diey  recognize  the  complete 
freedom  of  America  as  an  ideal  way  of  life  and 
they  would  all  like  (o  model  themselves  after  our 
example. 

"Nasser,"  he  said,  "doesn't  like  Russia,  but  he 
has  been  pushed  to  seek  Riwsian  aid  when  he  could- 
n't get  it  from  any  other  source.  Nasser  is  working 
for  a  free  Egypt." 

But  on  the  other  side  of  the  ledger.  Dr.  Zawahry 
said  that  he  was  very  much  impressed  by  the 
friendliness  of  the  American  people,  saying  that 
it  exceeded  by  far  his  expectations. 

"I  think  almost  all  of  the  boys  have  come  down 
to  talk  to  me  and  to  try  to  understand  me.  And  it 
has  been  so  helpful  to  me  in  understanding  them." 
he  said,  speaking  of  his  dorm-mates  in  Connor.  "It 
is  self-evident  that  they  want  to  learn  about  other 
people  and  the  way  they  live."' 


"The  students 
and  they  want  to 
students. 


here   seem 
learn,"  he 


to    be   very   sincere, 
said  of  the  Carolina 


SUNDAY, 


Prof.  H[ 
volume  Hil 
lina.  publii 
Lewis  Histj 
of  New  Yc 
number  of  I 
or  edited  ij 
half  and 
lishing  a  nl 
for  a  faculi 
versify. 

The  thre 
out   during 
"North   Cai 
a    Southerr 
writt?!      i 
the      late 
an    enlarge 
Carolina  Hj 
temporanej 
the  Old   S( 
which  ProfI 
tor. 

The  two I 
North  Carl 
and  most 


WORLD  0F| 

S.  Sheparc 
Political  Sci^ 
Suez  Crisis' 
morrow  nigl 
CALENDAR! 

The    GM; 
placed  in  all| 
dents  who  d( 


"I  like  your  country  and  your  people."  he  said,  ' 
"and  I  think  there  is  a  great  future  for  our  two 
countries.  Our  peoples  think  very  much  alike." 

People  like  Dr.  Zawahry  add  a  great  deal  to 
the  cosmopolitan  atmosphere  of  the  campus.  It  is 
he  and  others  like  him  who  are  doing  a  big  job 
of  creating  international  understanding,  the  foun- 
dation of   a  better  future. 


P090 


By  Walt  Kelly 


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LiM  Abner 


By  Al  Capp 


BONTr  CNANGE  MY  fMCf^Tr 

'T'S  PERFECT  THE  WAV  IT  IS.'/- 
ASK  ANY  WOMAN  IH  AHERfCA.^ 


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I  1956 


SUNDAY,  OCTOBER  21,  1956 


THE  DAILY  Ti^R  HEEL 


PAGE    THREB 


1 


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as 


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>ccause 


r-  !,r/ 


hV€  tfir 

lid  that 
les  and 
jcmanci- 
[omplete 
life  and 
Iter  our 


but  he 
could- 

lorking 

'.awahry 

by    tli€ 

ing    that 


e  down 
And   it 

;  them." 
^nnor.  "It 
lut  other 


sincere, 
Carolina 


he  said, 
ir  two 

ilike," 

t    deal    to 

pus.  It   is 

big   job 

thi'    foun- 


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i 


Capp 


History  Professor  Hugh  Lefler  Nears  UNC  Faculty  Publication  Record 


Prof.  Hugh  T.  Lefler's  two 
volume  History  of  North  Caro- 
lina, published  recently  by  the 
Lewis  Historical  Publication_Co. 
of  New  York,  brings  to  four  the 
number  of  books  he  has  written 
or  edited  in  the  last  year  and  a 
half  and  comes  close  to  estab-  ' 
lishing  a  new  publication  record 
for  a  faculty  member  of  the  Uni-  • 
versity.  ^ 

The  three  other  books  turned 
out  during  this  period  are: 
"Xorth  Carolina,  the  History  of 
a  Southern  State."'  a  textbook 
writt??  in  collaboration  with 
the  late  A.  R.  Newsome: 
an  enlarged  edition  of  "North 
Carolina  History  as  To!d  by  Con- 
temporaries": and  "Travels  in 
the  Old  South.  1600  -  17a9."  of 
which  Professor  Lefler  is  co-edi- 
tor. 

The  two  volume  "History  of 
North  Carolina"  is  the  longest 
and  most  detailed  history  of  the 


sUte  in  print.  It  contains  about 
500.000  words  and  3.000  foot- 
notes. The  volumes  differ  from 
other  histories  of  tlie  state  in 
that   about  one-fifth   of  th«  ac- 


PROFESSOR  LEFLER 

. . .  uis^ies  four  booka 


count  is  devoted  to  events  since 
1900.  Devoting  attention  to  sO' 
cial  history  and  profusely  illus- 
trated, they  represent  about  four 
years'  work  on  Professor  Lef- 
ler's part. 

The  Lefler-Newsome  history 
of  North  Carolina  is  a  standard 
text  book.  About  half  as  long  as 
the  more  recent  two-volume  his- 
tory, it  won  the  Mayflower  Cup 
in  1954.  This  award  is  given 
annually  by  the  State  Literary 
and  Historical  Association  to  the 
author  of  the  best  non-fiction  ♦ 
book  produced  by  a  North  Caro- 
linian. 

Professor  Lefler's  North  Caro-    \ 
Una    History    as    Told    by    Con-    i 
temporaries,  a  documentary  col-    j 
lection,   was    first    published    in 
1934.   The   ^hird   revision,   to  be    ^ 
published     soon,     will     include, 
among  other  things,  the  Pearsall 
Plan   and   editorials   relating  to 
it.  an  account  of  the  Art  Museum 


in  Raleigh,  and  documents  re- 
lating to  the  National  Associa- 
tion for  the  Advancement  of 
Colored  People  and  to  The  Pat- 
riots of  North  Carolina. 

Professor     Lefler's     contribu- 
lion  to  Travels  in  the  Old  South, 
1600  -   1789.   is  a  critical  bibli-, 
ography   of   travel   accounts   re- 
lating  to  the  southern  cok)nie^ . 
between  1600  and  1750.  Describ- 
ing  about   300    narratives.    Pro.-;, 
fessor  Lefler.  ijd^iitifies  the  tr«l^ ; 
ellers,     fRdi^&tes     when    liiip'lt 


where  they  travelled,  and  gives 
a  critical  summary  of  their  work. 

Some  time  next  year  the  Mac- 
millan  Company,  of  New  York, 
will  publish  a  new  history  of 
colonial  America  written  by  Pro- 
fessor Lefler  in  collaboration 
with  Professor  Oscar  T.  Barck, 
of'  Syracuse  University. 

jAlthoi^gh  no  formal  attention 
has""  been  given  to  publication 
records,  it  is  estimated  that 
ftjfttessor:'  Leflteic^  record  has 
been'  equalled  or  surpassed  only 


by  Archibald  Henderson.  Kenan 
Professor  of  Mathematics,  and 
by  the  late  Edgar  W.  Knight, 
Kenan  Professor  of  Education. 

Appointed  Kenan  Professor 
of  History  last  year,  Professor 
Lefler  taught  at  State  College 
from  1926  to  1935  and  at  the 
University  of  North  Carcjiina 
from  1935  to  the  present.  He 
estimatss  that  about  12,000  stu- 
dents have  pTlssed  through  his 
classes  during  his  teaching  ca- 
reer. 


Covering  The  University  Campus 


WORLD  OF   MAN 

S.  Shepard  Jones  of  the  Dcpt.  of 
Political  Science  will  discuss  "The 
Suez  Crisis"  over  WUNC-TV  to- 
morrow night  from  8:30  to  9  p.m. 
CALENDAR 

The  GM.\B  calendar  is  being 
placed  in  ?11  the  dorms.  Those  stu- 
dents who  do  not  get  them  or  who 


TUXEDOS 

FOR  RENT 
Single  or  Double 


Breasted 


1 


1 


arieys 

Mens  Shop 


do  not  live  in  a  dorm  can  pick  up 
EDUCATION  FRATERNITY 

Phi  Delta  Kappa,  professional 
educational  fraternity  for  men, 
will  hold  its  regular  monthly  meet- 
ing Tuesday  in  Lenoir  Hall  at  6 
p.m.  in  the  upstairs  dining  room. 
The  guest  speaker  will  be  Dr.  An- 
drew H.  Horn,  professor  of  Library- 
Science  and  University  Librarian. 
STATE   STUDENT  LEGISLATURE 

The  LTMC  Selection  committee 
of  the  State  Student  Legislature 
announced  that  the  final  decision 
for  delegates  and  alternates  to  the 
State  Student  Legislature  in  Ra- 
leigh Nov.  15.  16  and  17  will  be 
announced  Tuesday, 
their  calendar  at  Graham  Memori- 
al information  office  or  in  the  Y 
office. 
SPLASH  CLUB 

Final    tryouts    for    Splash    Club 
will  be  held  Monday  at  6:45  p.m. 


Wash  Away  Blackheads! 


I  Club  members  will  meet  at  7  p.m. 
'  for    the    regular    Monday    evening 
meeting. 

WOMEN'S  RESIDENCE  COUNCIL 
The  Women's  Residence  Council 
will  meet  in  the  Grail  Room  of 
Graham  Memorial  Tuesday  at  8 
p.m. 
BABY   SITTERS 

Coeds  interested  in  baby  sitting 
have  been  asked  to  contact  the 
"Y"  (telephone  6761)  or  leave  their 
names  and  a  list  of  their  available 
hours  with  the  "Y"  secretary. 
WUNC-TV 

Today's  schedule  for  WUNC-TV, 
the  University's  educational  tele- 
vision station,  Channel  4: 

9:45  Back  to  God 
10:00  Sunday  School 
10:30  The  Pastor 
10:45  Organ  Prelude 
11:00  Church  Service 
12:00  This  is  Life 
12:30  Sign  Off 

6:29  Sign  On 

6:30  Big  Picture 

7:00  California 

7:30  Shakesi- -;,re 

8:15  UNC  vs.  Maryland 


Van  Heusen  asks: 

DO  YOU  GO  WITH  YOURSELF? 


Helena  Rubinstein's  new 
Medicated  Beauty  Treatment 

395 
plus  tox 

Helena  Rubinstein, 
whose  studies  in  medicine 
led  her  to  specialize  in 
correcting  disturbed  skins, 
now  shows  you  how  to 
conquer  oily,  plugged  skin 
problems.  Your  skin  will 
become  clearer  before 
your  very  eyes  after  one 
15 -minute  treatment!  In 
two  weeks'  time  black- 
heads, coarse  pores,  clogging  oiliness  will  give  way  to  the 
smoother,  mat,  even-textured  complexion  that's  your  dream. 

Here  are  the  3  simple  medically  tested  steps: 

1 .  'Sterile'-Cleanse  with  Deep  Cleanser. 

2.  Help  heal  and  clear  with  Medicated  Beauty  Mask. 

3.  Tighten  pores  with  ''Water  Lily"  Skin  Lotion. 

Start  tonight  to  prove  for  yourself  what  clinical  teats  have 
proven-HELENA  Rubinstein's  Medicated  Beauty  Treat- 
ment can  give  you  clear,  lovely  skin.  And  Helena 
Rubinstein  guarantees  thrilling  results  when  you  uae  these 
products  a»  directed -with  complete  satisfaction  or  your 
money  back.  4  wedss'  supply  only  3.95  plus  t«*-^^_ 

Store  Name 
Please  send  me 


-Helena  Rubinstein  Medicated  Beauty 


Treatments  at  3.95  each  plus  federal  tax. 

Charge  Q  Check  or  Money  Order  O 

Na  ir.e — ■- ■■ 


Address- 
Citv 


_Zt»ne State- 


pl«iie  include  cost  of  }nigl*ti«  «'«'  «"«*  '«"  *'»*"^«  nete»»ary) 


High  vs.  Medium  Heels 

The  smartness  of  the  high  haelad  dress  sho«  is  shown  contrasted  with  the  medium  heel  pump  which 
is  becoming  increasingly  more  popular  bocaust  it  is  comfortable  and  because  it  does  not  accentuate 
height. 

Carolina  Coeds  And  Gentlemen  Give  Their 
Opinions  On  The  Merits  Of  The  High  Heel 


//  was  an  ancient  haberdasher 
And  he  ittoppeth  one  of  three, 

"By  thy  long  grey  beard  aitd 

glitiering  eye, 

Whuff o  thou  stoppest  me?". 

"Your  hOnkieK  don't  match 
your  shirts,  my  friend, 

Your  ties  clash  with  your  eyes. 
And  your  short.'iare  simply 
awful,  sir, 

— Wrong  color  for  your  thighs." 

Familiar  story,eh?  This  kind 
of  thing  happens  eftsoons.  Don't 
let  it  happen  to  you.  Just  go 
down  to  your  Van  Heusen 
dealer  and  have  him  show 
you  our   harmonized,   in- 


tegrated wardrobes.  In  these 
handsome  wardrobes,  shirts, 
ties,  handkerchiefs,  sport  shirts 
— even  shorts  and  pajamas — 
are  co-ordinated  perfectly. 
There  are  checks,  plaids, 
solids,  stripes  to  pick  from. 
All  fine.  And  they  give  you 
that  well-matched  look  at  a 
surprisingly  moderate  price. 

At  better  stores  everywhere, 
or  write  to  Phillips-Jones 
Corp.,  417  Fifth  Avenue,  New 
York  16,  New  York.  Makers 
of  Van  Heusen  Shirts  •  Sport 
Shirts  •  Ties  •  Pajamas 
Handkerchiefs  •  Underwear 
Swimwear   •  Sweaters. 


By  PEG   HUMPHREY 

Heels  are   coming   down. 

According  to  the  views  of  both 
Carolina  coeds  and  gentlemen  high 
heels  are  dwindling  in  popularity. 
They  are  still  worn  by  many,  but 
the  number  of  coeds  switching  to 


THIS  IS  IT! 


STUDENTS! 


$1 


A  WEEK 

Nothing  Down 


The  REMINGTON  Qea&^^i^ 


LEDBETTER  -  PICKARD 

NO  DOWN  PAYMENT 
Payments  of  $1  a  Week  Begin  Next  February 


Phone  9-8781 


DAILY 

ACROSS 

1.  Throw 
5.  Applaud 
9.  Skm 
disorder 
10  Elevations 

12.  Antelope 
(Afr.) 

13.  Propel 
14. Born 

15.  Work 
steadily 

16.  Latvian 
river 

17.  Armory 

20.  Question 

21.  Cooling 
device 

22  Liberate 
23.  Plunder 

26.  Green 
herbage 

27.  Taverns 

28.  Narrow  inlet 
( geol. ) 

29.  A  charge 

30.  Deep  valleys 

34.  Gold  (Her.) 

35.  Timid 

36.  Hawk  parrot 

37.  Way 
39.  Injures 

11.  Quarterless 
slippers 

42.  Fragrant 
woods   (E.I.) 

43.  Stitches 

44.  Principal 
part 

DOWN 

1.  Apple  juice 

2.  Mountains 
(So.  Am.) 

3.  Body  of 
water 

4.  Impost 

5.  Cool 


CROSSWORD 

24 


6  Like  a 
citrus  fruit 

7.  Lofty 
mountain 

8.  Gratifies 

9.  African 
river 

11.  Quenches, 
as  thirst 

15.  Type 
of  cake 

18.  Lizards 

19.  Negative 
vote 

20.  Macaw 
( Braz. ) 

22   Ravel 
23.  Having  two 
shapes 


Burden 
some 

25.  Single 
unit 

26  Alco- 
holic 
liquor 

28.  Beam 

30  Game 
of 
skill 

31  Buck- 
eye 
state 
(poss.) 

32.  City  (Fr  ) 

33.  Sauce  (dial, 
form) 

35.  Boil  slowly 


as  Bracj  fnane 

iflmraia  hf^  oh 
nisB  BBnaaaB 


Saturday'*  Aaawrr 

38.  Rubber   tree  • 
(Mex.)  .1 

39.  Indian  of  an ) 
important 
Mayan  tribe 
(Mex  ) 

40.  Wing 


^ 

• 

1 

J 

4- 

5 

fc 

7 

9 

^ 

9 

\i' 

M 

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^ 

13 

14 

^ 

^ 

T^ 

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> 

•7 

i» 

it 

^ 

20 

^ 

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31 

71 

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34 

3* 

37 

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26 

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31 

32 

3S 

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i 

3* 

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3* 

17 

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f^f 

^' 

42. 

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Xi' 

— 

u 

i 

-.rV**'-l 


low  pumps   is  increasing  for  rea- 
sons of  comfort  and  height. 

Sharing  this  desire   for  comfort 
are   Betsy   Lyon   and  Liz  Gar^^r^ 
although    they    admit    thfi|ti  |  j  tti*" " 
heels  looTc   dressier.   LiZjppt^h* 
dislikes  flats.   I'll  ineveijijivear 
other  pair,"  she  declardi<    |;i!    j|J 

Melba  Remig,  June  t>o^ter,   and 
Jane    Patter    wear    low   Beels  "Be- 
cause of  their  height.  ^Ih^  saya( 
she     'gets    tired    of    looiiiig    oft^t^. 
people,"    when    she    weirs    hi^h  W?  .i^ 
pumps. 

Nelson  Lavergne,  Chi  Psi  from 
Puerto  Rico,  a  member  of  the  male 
population  who  prefers  seeing  his 
date  in  high  heels,  claims  "they 
make  her  look  more  distinguish- 
ed." 

Disagreeing  is  Jim  VanderZan- 
den.  grad  student  from  Wisconsin, 
who  "hates  to  see  young  ladies 
walk  in  those  high  skinny  heels 
because  it  makes  me  uncomforta- 
ble to  see  them  uncomfortable." 

Evalyn  Hosterman  likes  high 
heels  because  "they  flatter  more 
legs,"  but  Nancy  Graham  definite- 
ly feels  "little  heels  are  cuter." 
Dickey  Pickerrel  admits  she 
should  wear  medium  heels  but 
claims  she  feels  like  a  cow  in 
them"  and  that  "high  heels  make 
a  girl  look  more  graceful  and  flow- 
ing. ' 

Bobbie  Jackson  wears  spiked 
pumps  for  a  reason.  She  figiu-es 
that  if  you  want  to  meet  tall  men, 
you  should  wear  high  heels  because 
short  men  will  not  approach  you 
then. 

Others  preferring  high  heels  are 
Betty  Rene  Webster  who  says  they 
"make  my  legs  look  better."  Nan 
Schacffer  because  "I  started  wear- 
ing them  when  I  was  shorter."  and 
Dot  Coplan  because  "I'm  a  mid- 
get." 

Advocating  low  skinny  heels  are 
Carolyn  Thompson  because  "they 
are  easier  to  walk  in  and  they 
look  better  with  the  type  of  cloth- 
es I  wear,"  and  Jerry  Dixon  be- 
cause "boys  say  you  look  more 
comfortable." 

Some  like  Isabel  Madrey  and 
Rosa  Moore  will  wear  high  heels 
only  for  ver>'  dressy  occasions.  B. 
A.  Mihm  definitely  prefers  the 
Louis  heel.  Kathy  Woodard  also 
swears  by  her  wardrobe  of  slim 
medium  heels. 

Anne  Norman  feels  that  lower 
heels  are  much  more  attractive  on 
certain  people,  but  Ruth  Rush  and 
Carolyn  Seytfert  declare  they  look 
and  feel  better  in  high  heels.  Ma 
rion  Hobeck  admits  that  she  much 
prefers  medium  heels  for  comfort 
although  she  usually  dons  the 
higher  pump. 

Most  Carolina  gentlemen  seem  to 
prefer  seeing  their  dates  in  medi- 
um   heels.   Neil   Bass   says    "those  { 
high  things  make  us  men  look  un-  j 
dernourished."  "Medium  heels  run  i 
a  ramrod  up  a  girl's  spine,  and  she  : 
looks    much     straighter,"     asserts 
Wally  Kuralt;  i 

Tom  .Lambeth    believes    it     de  I 
pends  on  the  girl,  but  Woody  Sears 


is    definitely   opposed   to    medium 
heels.   "They  look  cheap,  and  the 
girl  looks  like  either  a  street  walk- 
er or  an  old  maid  school  -teacher." 
Whit  Whitfield  feels  high  heels 
k  more  sophisticated,  but  Stan- 
Shaw  says  it  depends  on  the  out- 
He  particularly  likes  high  heels 
ith  formal  gowns  dyed  to  match 
e  dress. 

Billy    Bost    expressed    a    popular 
view  in  saying  he  feels  "girls  don't 
much      in      medium 
heels."  Bob  Morris  believes   it  de- 
pends on  "how  high  the  girl  is." 

And  then  there  are  some  who 
feel  as  Stan  Kilpatrick  does.  'Id 
just  as  soon  see  them  barefooted," 
he  declares. 


WE  ARE  THE  EXCLUSIVE 


VAN  HEUSEN 


DEALER  IN  CHAPEL  HILL 


HERE  ARE  YOUR  OLD  GOLD 


PUZZLES 


PUZZLE 


CLUE:  This  western  university,  boasting 
a  campus  of  9.000  acres,  was  named  for  an 
American  railroader  and  V.  S.  Senator, 
who  endowed  it  as  a  memorial  to  his  pon. 
Hert>ert  Hoover  was  a  famous  graduate. 


L 


ANSWER- 

Name 

Address 

City 


.StaU. 


Coll^g^ . 

Hold  until  you  have  completed  all  24  puzzlea 


WIN  A 

WORLD 

TOUR 

FORTWO 

Reaiirange 
the  letters 

in  each 

puzzle 

to  form 
the  name 

of  an 
American 
College  or 
University 

YOU'LL  GO  FOR 
OLD  GOLDS 

Either  REGULAR,  KING  SIZE  or 
the  GREAT  NEW  FILTERS 

Old  Golds  taste  terrific!  The  reason: 
Old  Golds  give  you  the  best 
tobaccos.  Nature- 
ripened  tobaccos . 

m        so  RICH, 
r     so  LIGHT, 
L    so  GOLDEN 
k    BRIGHT! 


PUZZLE 


CLUE:  Opened  by  Quakers  in  1885,  this 
nonsectsrian  college  for  women  is  in  a  resi- 
dential suburb  of  one  of  America's  largest 
cities.  An  early  president  was  famed  edu- 
cator and  feminist  Martha  Carey  Thomas. 

ANSWER— — 

Name ______ 

Address^ ■ 

City SUiU 

Collete - — . 

Hold  uatil  you  have  completed  mil  24  puzzlea 


.,*«• 


PUZZLE 


CLUE:  This  midwestem  college  is  named 
for  an  American  clergyman  and  abolition- 
ist, to  whom  Horace  Greeley  said:  "Go 
West,  young  man.  Go  West!"  It  is  located 
in  a  town  of  the  same  name. 

ANSWER 

iV««?K__ - 

Addreu . — — 

City. 
College. 


.StaU.. 


Hold  until  you  have  completed  all  24  puzzle* 


BEST  TASTE  YET 

IN  A  FILTER  CIGARETTE 


CowrlCM  I9i*,  Huiy  a-BetllUW 


Al  ■    *..■*.  J^ 


NEEB  BIK:K  PUZZLES?        RULES? 

Send  five  cents  for  each  puzzle;  five 
cents  for  a  complete  set  of  rules.  Enclose 
a  self-addressed,  stamped  envelope.  Mail 
to  Tangle  Schools,  P.  O.  Box  9,  Grand 
Central  Annex,  New  York  17,  N.  Y, 


PACE  FOUR 


THCtCAilLY  TAR   HEEL 


SUNDAY,  OCTOBER  21.  1956 


Mdryland  Topples  Tar  Heel  Harriers  In  Triangular  Meet 


Cross-Country  Squad 
Absorbs  Initial  Loss 


By   JIMMY    HARPER 

The  varsity  cross  country  team 
suffered  its  first  defeat  of  the  sea- 
son here  yesterday,  being  downed 
by  the  strong  harrier  squad  of 
Maryland. 

The  setback  came  in  a  trian- 
gular meet  which  also  included 
Wake  Forest.  Maryland  had  a  to- 
tal of  26  points,  Carolina  logged 
37.  points,  and  Wake  Forest  round- 

Frosh  Runners 
Take  3rd  Win 

By  CHARLEY  HOWSON 


ed  out  with  76  points. 

Carolina  star  Jim  Beatty  led  the 
pack  all  the  way  and  finished  far 
ahead  of  the  field,  but  five  Mary- 
land runners  placing  in  the  first 
nine  proved  the  difference. 

Finishing  order  behind  Beatty 
were  Terp  runners  Carl  Party, 
Fred  Hansen,  and  Charles  Fleming. 
■  Einshing  fifth  was  Tar  Heel  Eve- 
;  rett  Whatley  and  the  seventh  spot 
I  was  occupied  by  teammate  Dave 
,  Scurlock. 

The  race  was  held  on  the  fresh- 
man course,  the  circuit  being  com 
!  pleled    twice.    The    varsity    course 
j  was  not   used  because  of  obstruc- 
!  tions.   Soggy  ground  afforded   bao 


footing  and  the  pace  suffered  ac 

The  Carolina  Freshman  Harriers  '.  <^ordingly. 

The   meet    was    witnessed    by    a 
small  group  of  students,  both  col- 


registered  their  third   win  of  the 
season  against  one  loss  by  defeat 


Md.,   21:01;    3-Hansen.   Md..   21.03. 
4-Fleming,    Md.,   21:42;   5-Whatley 


ing  East    Mecklenburg    High    and '  '^8^  ^"'^  ^'^^  ^^h°°' 

Wake    Forest    Frosh    26-51-53    re- 1      The  Summary: 

spectively  here  yesterday  morning,  i      IBeatty,  U.N.C,  20:17  5:  2  Party 

A  scant  crowd  watched  the  tri- 
angular meet  where  Carolina  run-i.,,,  _  ^.  ,„  „  ,.    ,,      „.  „    „,  __ 
ners     Cowles    Uipfert     and     Fickl^-^';:^';^:^^^^'^^-^}:^^ 
Arthur  placed  first  and  second  re- 
spectively. Their  respective   times 
were  11:35  and  11:52. 

Carolina  also  placed  four  other 
runners  in  the  first  ten  positions. !  ,^  ^  p 
They  were  John  Green,  James  Pac-  \ ,,  „/„ 
kard,  Ray  Bagwell  and  Larry  With 


Panthers  Claw  Devils 
In  Oyster  Bowl,  27-14 


By  HUGH  FULLERTON  JR. 


Volley  Bail  Begins 

AJ]  intramural  volleyball  action 
will  begin  Wednesday  afternoon 
with  games  at  4  and  5  p.m.  A 
schedue  of  these  games  will  be  in 


NORFOLK,  Va.,  Oct.  21  iJP)— 
Big  Joe  Walton,  tabbed  for  two 
seasons  as  the  best  end  in  eastern 
football,  made  two  great  catches 
of  passes  yesterday  and  led  Pitts- 
burgh to  a  27-14  victory  over  Duke  ^^^'■'  grabbed  one  on  the  four-yard 
in  the  tenth  and  perhaps  the  most!  "^^^^^^  ^nd  slashed  his  way  across 
exciting  of  Norfolk's  Oyster  Bowl    ^^^  ^°^^  t«  P"^  the  Panthers  ahead. 

Just  a  couple  of  minutes  later  he 


most  valuable  player,  it  was  Wal- 
ton's   catching   that   provided   the  i  Wednesday's   Tar  Heel 
deciding    points    and   the   biggest  ,  — 
thrills  for  a  sellout  crowd  of  27,- 
000  at  Foreman  Field. 
Walton,  son  of  an  old-time  Pitt 


games. 
Although   Corny  Salvaterra  was 


made   a   beautiful  catch  and    fake 
on  the  Duke  46  and  left  the  Blue 


row    in  fifth,   seventh,   ninth   and 
tenth  places  respectively. 

The  summary: 

1-Liipfert,  U.N.C,  11:35;  2-Ar- 
thur.  U.>f.C.,  11:52;  3-WiIson, 
E.MJI.,  12:00:  ■  4-Fincher,  E.M.H.. 
12:07:  5-Green,  U  N.C.,  12:14;  6- 
Kennedy,  W.F..  12:46;  7-Packard, 
U.N.C.  12:48.5;  8-Jordan,  W.F.. 
12:53:  9-Bagwe!l,  U.N.C,  12:54;  10- 
Withrow,  U.N.C,  12:55;  11-Little, 
E.M.H.,  13:00;  12-Whedbee.  W.  F.. 
13:01;  13-Co.\.  W.  F..  13:02;  14- 
BroadwelK  W.F..  13:14;  15-Stevens, 
WJF..  13:14;  16-Bentley,  E.M.H., 
13:24;  17-King.  E.MJL,  13:26;  18- 
Porter,  U.N.C 
W.  F.,  14:32. 


7-Scurlock,  U.N.C,  22:16;  8-Ram.- 
Md.,  22:20;  9-West,  Md..  22:21;  10 
Williams,  U.N.C,  22:25;  U-Wagner 
Md.,  22:33;  12-Carlisle.  Md.,  22:47 
i  13-Frazier,  W.F.,  22:54;  14-Griffin 
22:57;  15-P.  Henderson 
U.N.C.  23:03:  16-Ferrel,  W.F 
23:06:  17-D.  Henderson,  U  N.C 
23:13. 


MURALS 


TOMORROW'S   SCHEDULE: 

4:00— field  1.  Chi  Phi  vs  Pi 
Lambda;  field  2.  Pi  Kappa  Sig  vs 
SPE;  field  3.  Stacy  2  vs  Old  West: 
field  4.  Delt  Sig  vs  DKE  (w). 
field  5.  Zeta  Psi  vs  Chi  Phi  (w). 

5:00— field  1.  Med  Sch  1  vs  Man 

gum  2;  field  2,  Beta  vs  SAE  (w): 

field  3,  Aycock  vs  Grimes  1;  fiek 

13:30;.   19-Cooke,  i  4,   ATO  vs   Sig  Chi    (w);   field  5, 

Kappa  Sig  vs  Sigma-  Nu   (w). 


Tar  Heels  Romp  Over  Marylaiid 


awarded  the  trophy  as  the  game's  j  Devils    defense    almost   f  latfooted 

I  as  he  raced  down  for  the  deciding 
touchdown. 

Duke,  dominating  the  game 
through  most  of  the  last  half,  got 
its  two  scores  on  long  runs  then 
yielded  a  final  insurance  touch- 
down in  the  last  period  as  Pitt 
smashed  its  way  75  yards  down 
the  field  in  a  belated  display  of 
power. 


State  Wins 

DAYTON,  Ohio,  Oct.  21  iJP)— 
North  Carolina  State's  multiple  of- 
fense, which  hadn't  functioned 
through  three  straight  losses, 
flashed  effectively  here  yesterday 
for  a  20-0  football  victory  over 
the  Dayton  Flyers. 


Dad's  Day 


:arolina  23  before  the     clock  ran  .  McMullen   set    up  the   score  with  ,  were  so  numerous  that  some  would 
ut.  I  some    hard    running.   Blazer   once  j  have  to  be  left   out.  Up   front   in    j[^g 

Carolina  took  the  second  half  |  again  added  the  point,  and  the 
ickoff  and  drove  down  the  field'  Tar  Heels  led,  27-0,  with  8:48  left 
J  the  Tcrp  24  before  being  stop- '  in  the  third  period. 

Maryland   took  the   kickoff  and 
blasted    their   way    to   their   only 


perhaps    the    best    halftime    show 
seen  in  Kenan  Stadium  in  a  long 


Seminoles  Tie 
Deacs  In  Mud 


!ed  by  a  missed  f*eld  goal  attempt 
V  Reed  to  Buddy  Payne  pass  play 


nain  blow   in   this  thrust. 
The  Tar  Heel's  fourth  score  was 


iiat    cevered    25    yards    was    the    touchdown    of    the    day,    covering 

68  yards  in  10  plays.  Quarterback 
Fred  Petrella  was  the  Terp  spark- 
et  up  bv  another  Maryland  fum- 1  P'"^  as  he  riddled  the  Carolina 
)ie.  Don  Redding,  sophomore  tack- 1  secondary  wtih  his  passing.  This 
e  who  was  a  tiger  in  the  line  all  i  ^'^^^  ^^^  score  27-6  with  4:49 
ifternoon.  pounced  on  a  fumble  by  j  '^^^  '»  P'^-^'  '"  ^^^  ^^ird  quarter. 
Maryland  halfback  Ralph  Hawkins  i  LAST  MINUTE  SCORE 
;)n  the  Terp  21  to  put  the  Tar'  For  most  of  the  last  period,  the 
Heels  in  position,  and  it  took  on-  two  squads  battled  on  even  terms 
ly  five  plays  to  push  across  the  with  neither  threatening  .seriously, 
score.  I  Then  Carolina,  with  only  1:49  left, 

The  payoff  punch  came  on  a  exploded  with  a  lightning  thrust 
Heed  to  Charley  Robinson  pass  i  that  brought  them  a  touchdown  in 
play  that  covered  18  yards,  larry  I  '>n'y  four  plays  from  their  own 
■    'i-  I  27. 


the  line,  Jimmy  Jones,  Done  Redd 

ing  and  Don  Kemper  played  hard  |      The  entirely  nevi  spirit  that  was 

heads-up    football.    Ends    Charley  j  so  prevalant  on  the  Carolina  side 


Robinson,  Buddy  Payne  and  Bill 
Ellington  all  did  their  part  in 
bringing  about  the  win. 


yesterday  was  exemplified  by  the 
team  several    times  when  the  en- 


Every  man  in  the  baekfied  seem- 
j  ed  to  come  up  with  his  best  per- 
'  formance  of  the  season.  Co-captain 
i  Ed  Sutton   was   the   day's  leading 


TALLAHASSEE,    Fla.,    Oct.    20 

(;p) -Ipiorida      State       University 

marched  64  yards     in    the     final 

period  for  a   14-14  tie  with  Wake 

Pprest   tj^n    a    rain-soaked    footfcall 

field   today.    A    last  minute   field 

r,  .u     1.       I.        J  ■  Soal   attempt     by     Florida     State 
tire  squad  was  off  the  bench  and   jgjjgj 

on  the  sidelines.  j      ^^^^    p^^^^^,^     ^^„_^^^    ^^^^^ 

Dave  Reed's  touchdown  pass  toj  fullback  Bill  Barnes,  gave  the  Dea- 
Charlie  Robinson  in  the  third  ^  cons  a  14-7  halftime  lead  with 
quarter  yesterday    was     the     first    touchdowns  in   the   first   two  per- 


Old  Book  Week 
And         %       r ' 
The  Intimate ;, 
Bookshop 
IsFullOf 
Dusty  Gems, 
You  Haven't. 

V 

Seen  Before! 


ground    gainer.    Larry    McMullen  i  touchdown  pass  play  of  the  season 
flashed  the  form  that  he  has  often  !  for  the  Tar  Heels. 


displayed  on  the  practice  field. 
And  Dave  Reed  kept  the  Maryland 
defenders  guessing  all  afternoon 
with  his  shrewd  ^nel  calling. 


An   almost   unknown   sophomore 

named   Danny    Droae    was    instru- 

i  mental    in   the   drive   a.";    he   reeled 

'•  off  two  nice  runs  of   five  and  22 

j  yands    respectl"ely   to  set   up   the 

j  score.  .A.fter  Droze  had  carried  to 

I  the  UNC  32  on  the  first  .scrimmage 

•  play,  DeCantis     took     a     p'tchout 

from   quarterback   Ron   Marquette 

and   whipped    a    Ions   nass    to  end 

Mac  Turlington  for  a  first  down  on 

the  Terp  30. 

Then  Droze  went  22  yards  to 
the  eight  .from  which  point  De- 
Cantis picked  up  his  second  TD 
of  the  day  with  an  8  yard  jaunt 
around  right  end.  Wally  Vale  add- 
ed the  point,  and  the  fireworks 
were   concluded. 

Many  standouts  could  be  men- 
tioned for  the  Tar  Heels,  but  they 


The  cheer  "welcome  home  Sun- 
ny Jim"  finally  became  applicable 
yesterday    and    the   Carolina    stu- 
,  .  ,.    J    J       ,  I  dents  weren't  long  in  making  this 

N^itiW*^,  tHi;-+^r  i6e«u!!i>ifiy1:fact  known.  In  the  third  quarter 
their  itjhird  home  gairje  in  as  many  the  student  section  came  forth 
weeM'  thig.4ime  against  the  Wake  with  the  cheer  led  by  some  fellow 
Forest  Demon  D(gato^%f  dre^4_in   a   sheepskin   coat. 


iods.  He  ran  four  yards  for  Wake 
Forest's  first  touchdown  ^to  cli- 
max the  39-yard  march. 


CLASSIFIEDS 


'  DeCantis  Scores  For  Tar  Heels 

Emil  DeCantis,  No.  21,  is  shown  as  he   plunges    across  the  goal  line  from  three  yards  out  for  Caro- 
lina's   second   touchdown    in   yesterday's   34-6   rout   of  the  Maryland  Terps. 

Maryland 

ploited  our  weaknesses.  They 
knew  our  key  men  and  directed 
play  away  from  them." 

'We  thought  we  had  their  de- 
fense solved.  We  did  well  just 
before  the  half  and  in  the  third 
quarter.  Our  pass  defense  was  bad, 
our  line  play  good,"  he  said. 

Mont,  his  squad  injury-laden  all 
season,  said.  "They  really  worked 
over  our  ends.  By  the  end  of  the 
game  we  were  down  to  our  fifth 
and  sixth  stringers." 

Mont  expressed  the  opinion  that 
the  victory  might  be  the  making  of 
the  Caiolina  squad. 

"They  have  excellent  material, 
especially  in  the  backfield,"  he 
said. 

In  the  game's  closing  minutes 
it  began  to  rain,  dampening  al- 
ready dismal  Maryland  spirits. 
Some  of  the  players  ran  quickly 
to  the  showers,  others  were  too 
tired  to  hurry. 

As  the  Mary-land  team  filed  off 
the  field,  some  of  the  players 
showed  signs  6t  despair.  Some 
were  limping,  some  bleeding* 
Tackle  Mike  Sandusky  was  talk- 
ing jovially  with  some  friends.  His 
arm  was  in  a  sling. 

Some  Carolina  players,  not  for- 
getting preceedJn^'  Saturdays, 
stopped 'by  to  shake  a  hand  and 
flap  4  back. 


J.  Paul  Sheedy- 

♦^  Was 

A  Lone 

Wolf  Till 

Wildrcol  (Team- 

-Oil  Gave  Him 

Confidence 

^B 

I 

Wr^^^SKi 

f^M 

^^^M 

I 

m^M 

^Sst^^mK^^B^B^KKsk  ^'B  «> 

iWm*^ 

^  mMI^ 

M 

i^ 

HHHHII 

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Intimate   Bookshop. 


IN  A  WORLD  OF  CHANGING 

MORALS,  THEIR  LIVES  CROSS. . . 

a  girl  with  a  past  crashes  a 
perfect  society  romance  \      \ 

M  GM  p.««.ts  m  Cinemascope 
THB 


JLKJy  THE 


Robert  Taylor  •  Burl  Ives  •  Charus  Coburn 
Sir  Cedric  Harijwkke  •  Mary  Astor 

.>«iNT.o«,o^.EuSABETH  MlEIXER- ". 


M-ti-Vt 
Itclurr 


NOW  PLAYING 


Carolina 


HE 


bet  his  life  he'd 
be  convicted 
of  murder 


SHE 


bet  her  love 
she  could 
set  him  free 


"I'm  itarvad  for  aflettion",  wailed  Sheedy,  "but  the  girls  think  I'm  just  a 

cur.  Whenever  I  paws  to  talk  to  one  she  makes  tracks  for  the  tall  timber 

and  hides."  Poor  old  Sheedy  felt  so  lousy  he  wanted  to  pack  up  and  flea.     { 

"Don't  be  sucha  shaggy  dog",  said  his  Den  Mother.  "Get 

yourself  some  Wildroot  (]ream-Oil  and  spruce  up." 

Now  J.  Paul's  the  most  popular  wolf  in  the  forest, 

because  his  hair  looks  healthy  and  handsome,  the  way 

Nature  intended  .  .  .  neat  but  not  greasy !  Try  Wildroot 

Cream-Oil  yourself,  in  the  bottle  or  handy  tube.  You'U 

soon  be  a  howling  success  with  the  girls. 

*»/l3t  So.  Harris  Hill  Rd.,  WilliamstiUe,  N.  Y. 

Wildroot  Cream-Oil 
gives  you  confidence 


BEYOND  A  REASONABLE  DOUBT 


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srAteettre^ 


Because  of  the 

terrific  suspense 

please  don't  tell 

anyone  how  this 

picture  ends. 


NOW  PLAYING 


BIG  BLANKET  MAN 

makes  date  with  Jockey  brand  underwear 

•Whether  I'm  on  a  FaU  picnic,  or  a  Spring  test  of  the 
college  golf  course.  I  like  to  feel  comfortable,"  says  Roamer 
A.  Ktnsey  That's  why  I've  been  going  steatiy  with 
Jockey  briefs  for  years."  j-        w" 

should  know  about  underwear-there's  nothing  JSe  thi 
comfort,  and  casual,  at-ease  appearance  that  comes  from 
wearing  Jockey  briefs!  Better  drop  into  your  dealer's  soon 
...buy  a  supply  of  Jockey  briefs  and  T-shirts  and 
feel  as  good  as  you  look! 


i,      \ 


it's  in  style  to  be  comfortable 


in 


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If 

Inc.,  Kenosha,  Wiiconsin 


COME   TO 

VARLEY'S  MEN'S  SHOP 

For   Your 

COOPER'S  PRODUCTS 


n 


«  W  C  Library 
Serials  Dept. 
Chapel  HU:.   N. 


*■  .> 


WEATHER 

Partly   cloudy   and    mild.   High 
today:   73-83. 


©)  c  Daily  TOat  Xecl 


VOL.    LVII    NO.    28 


Comptete  (JP)  Wire  Servict 


CHAPEL  HILL,  NORTH  CAROLINA,  TUESDAY,  OCTOBER  23,  1956 


Offices   in   Grahxim  Memorial 


FREEDOM 

It's  almost  dead   in    Texal.   S«« 
P.  2. 


FOUR   PAGES   THIS    ISSUE 


SP  To  Support  Young 
On  Parking  Situation 


By  CLARKE   JONES 

And   NANCY   HILL  [ 

I 
The    Student    Party    last    night ' 

pledged     its    support    to    student  I 
body  President  Bob  Young  in  re- 
gard to  the  Columbia  St.  parking 
situation. 

The  party   also   gave  support   to  ^ 
the    "fraternities    and    fraternity ' 
residents  directly  concerned"  about 
the  situation  in  the  hope    'a  more  ' 
reasonable  parking  arrangement  in 
this  area"  would  be  worked  out.      j 

The  Columbia  St.  situation  re- 
sulted from  a  two-hour  parking 
restriction  placed  in  front  of  Big 
Fraternity  Court  last  summer  by 
the   town    Board   of  Aldermen.        < 

Young  appointed  a  Traffic  Ad- 
visory Committee  recently  to  study 
the  overall  problem,  the  study  of 
(he  Columbia  St.  situation  being 
part  of  the  committee's  job. 

Chairman  Tom  Lambeth,  in  mak- 
ing the  party  s  statement,  said  the  ; 
SP  is  supporting  Young  "in  his 
efforts  to  remove  these  restrict- 
ions and  gain  renewed  recognition 
of  the  righb;  of  students  ...  in 
Chapel   Hill."  i 

Lambeth   also   stated   the    party 
'"affirms    its    support    for    contin- ' 
ued    negotiation  with   Chapel   Hill 
officials   and   merchants   to  devei-^ 
op    on    the    part    of    townspeople,  i 
a  more  realistic  and  generous  at- 
titude towards  the  7,000  Univers-  i 


ity  students  who  annually  pour 
into  tlie  coffers  of  Chapel  Hili 
business  more  than  $4,000,000."       , 

The  following  nominations  were  ] 
made  for  legislature  seats  to  come 
up   for  election  Nov.    13: 

Dorm  Men  I;  Edwin  Fuller, 

Dorm  Men  II;  Whit  WhiU'ield, 
Gary  Greer,  Doug  Ei^ele.  and 
Frank  Brown.  i 

Dorm  Men  EI:  William  Happer. 

I>orm  Women;  Misses  June  Mea- 
dows. Babs  Moore,  Martlia  Poin- 
dexter,    Betty    Huffman. 

Town  Men  I:  John  Honeycutt, 
Charles   Huntington.    Paul    Clark. 

Town  Men  IV:  Darwin  Bell.  Ben 
Peele. 

Town  Men  HI:  Jim*  Johnson. 
Richard  Eisenberg,  Robert  Hodges, 
Chuck   Howerton. 

Nominated  for  freshmen  class 
officers  were  president.  David 
Evans;  vice  president.  Everett 
James;  treasurer,  John  Wilbur. 
Nominations  of  secretary  and  so- 
cial chairman  were  postponed  un- 
til Sunday  night,  when  the  Advis- 
ory Board  of  the  party  will  meet 
to  complete  nominations  for  leg- 
islature seats. 


Di  Will  Debate 

Condemnation 

Of  Local  Merchants 


Meeting  Monday  On 
Columbia  St.  Parking 


Les  Petltes 
Musicaies  Will 
Start  Sunday 

Six  pnusicai  presentations  and  a 
one-act  play  have  been  scheduled  j 
by    the    GMAB    Music    Committee  j 
for   the   fall  series   of   Les   Petites . 
Musicaies.  j 

The  informal  Sunday  night  con-' 
certs    will    l^e    held    in    the    main '; 
lounge  of  Grah.im  Memorial  at  8 
P  m.   No  admission  will  be  eharg- ! 
ed.  ! 

"Aria  Da  Capo,"  a  one-act  play  ; 
by    Edna   St.    Vincent   Millay.   will  \ 
open  the  series  this  Sunday.  The 
play    will    be    under   the    direction 


Wife  Of  Former  UNC 
BA  Dean  Dies  Here 

:Sfrs.  R.  J.  M.  Hobbs.  64.  died 
here  yesterday  of  a  heart  ailment. 

She  was  the  wife  of  the  former 
acting  dean  of  the  UNC  business 
school. 

Funeral  arrangements  were  in- 
complete late  yesterday. 

In  addition  to  her  husband,  she  j 
is  survived  by  three  sons.  Richard  I 
M.      Hobbs.  ^Bridgeport,      Conn.: 
Grimsley     T.     Hobbs.     Richmond. 
Ind.;    L.    Lyndon    Hobbs,    Shelby; 
one    brother,    Charles    B.    Taylor,  | 
Miami  Springs.  Fl».;  and  a  sister. 
Mrs.    George   R.    Dawson.   Jamaica. 
L.L.  N.  Y. 


SOLISTI  DI  ZAGREB 

.  .  .  plays  here  tonight 

Music  Group 
Will  Perform 
Here  Tonight 

Solisti  di  Zagreb,  chamber  nui-  • 
sic  ensemble  from  Yugoslavia, 
which  according  to  the,Pari.s  Press 
made  Paris  "sit  up  and  take  no- 
tice," will  {present  a  concert  to- 
night at- 8  p.m.  in  Hill  Hall. 

Spons^ored  by>Ciraham  Memorial 
Student  Union,  the  concert  will 
be  free  to  UNC  students,  with  a 
$1  admission  fee  for  student  wiv- 
es and  a  $2  charge   for  others. 

Coming  to  Chapel  Hill  in  its 
premiere  American  ti)ur,  the  en- 
semble is  founded  and  conducted 
by  the  world-famous  'cellist.  An- 
tonio Janigro.  Janigro  is  known 
in  the  United  States  and  Canada 
through  his  recordings  and  has 
appeared  as  soloLst  with  great  or- 
chestras in  Europe  and  in  South 
America. 

Composed  of  some  of  Europe's 
finest  instrumental  soloists  and 
the  distinguished  Yugoslav  bari- 
tone, Vladimir  Ruzdjak.  the  group 
has .  been  widely  acclaimed  for 
their  concerts  in  Fai-is.  London, 
Rotterdam,  the  Hague,  Vienna 
and  other  European  cities. 


The  Dialectic  Senate  will  debate 
a  bill  today  at  8  p.m.  in  New  West,' 
concerning  whether  the  bodv 
should  resolve  "to  condemn  the^ 
Chapel  Hill  merchants  for  their 
actions,  attitudes  and  miserly  in-J 
terpretations  of  the  student  Fair' 
De-il."  ^\ 

The  preface  of  the  resolution 
states,  "the  merchants  of  Chapel 
Hill  have  somewhat  of  a  monopoly! 
on  student  trade,  and  . .  .  the  mer-i] 
chants  of  Chapel  Hill  have  organ  ; 
ized  this  monopoly,  created  un-  i 
usally    high    prices,    aijd    constant- 


ly shown  more  interest  in  the  stu 
dent  dollar  than  in  student  wel 
fare;  and  ....  Chapel  Hill  has  be 
come  the  most  expensive  college 
town  in  North  Carolina:  and  . . .  . 
the  students  ....  are  upset  over 
general  conditions  existing  in  the 
town  of  Chapel  Hill  . .  ." 

Bill  Sabiston.  former  chairman 
of  the  UP.  will  introduce  and  de- 
fend the  bill. 

The  Yack  Yack  will  have  a  pho- 
tugrapher  to  take  a  pictur.*  or  the 
Di  membership  at  8  p.m.  sharp. 

The  Di  has  invited  all  interested 
students  to  attend  the  debate. 


of  Anastasia  Christ 

John  Hanks,  tenor,  will  be  fea- 
tured on  Nov.  4.  Hanks  is  the 
choral  director  at  Duke  Univers- 
ity. 

On  Nov.  11  a  piano  recital  by 
Willis  Palmer  of  Salem  College 
is  scheduled.  A  recital  by  Jan  Sax- 
on, colorati'ra  soprano,  accompan- 
ied by  Walter  Golde.  pianist,  will 
be  presented  on  Nov.   18. 

Excerpts  ^rom  Mozart's  opera, 
"The  Magic  Flute,"  featuring  Nor- 
man Cordon  and  the  University 
Glee  Club,  under  the  direction  of 
Joel  Carter,  will  be  performed  in 
Hill  Hall  on  Dec.  2. 

On  Dec.  16.  the  Duke  Madregal 
Singers  will  present  a  Christmas 
program.  The  concluding  concert 
of  the  present  series  will  feature 
Martha  Fouse  on  Jan.   13. 

Students,  faculty  members,  and 
the  g-jnera!  public  are  invited  to 
attend  the  concerts. 


Campus   Elections 
Slated   Nov.    13 


On  November  13.  the  UNC  Stu- 
dent  Body  will    particip-  le   in   the 
first  campus  wide  election  of  the 
I  year,    the    officers    to    be    elected 
are: 

Freshman  class  officers.  Junior 
class  officers.  Student  Legislature 
(25    members    for    1    year).    Wo- 
men's Council  <4  juniors).  Student 
j  Council     (1     mens     seat),     Men's 
Council   (3  juniors.  2  sophomores, 
1  1  freshman),  and  all  officers  nec- 
I  essary   to   replace   resignations   ei- 
ther    filled     or     vacant     occuring 
prior  to  the  Fall  Elections, 
j      In    case   the   need   for  a   runoff 
election    occurs,    it    will    be    held 
Nov.  20. 
j      The     student     constitution     re- 
/quires  that  all  nominations  for  of- 
I  fice   be    made    in    writing   and- be 
presented   to  the   Elections   Board 
not  later  than  nine  days  prior  to 
tile  established  date  for  elections. 


University  Party  To  Start 
Nominations  At  Meet  Tonight 


The  University  Party  will  have  ! 
its  first  night  of  nominations  fori 
the  No*-,  i'3  election  at  the  party! 
meeting  tonight.  UP  Chairman ; 
Mike   Weinman    said   yesterday. 

The    meeting    will     take     place  { 

at    7:30    p.m.    today      in      Roland  | 

I 

( 

)N  THE  INFIRMARY       I 

Thos*   listed   in   the   infirmary    j 
yesttrday  included:  { 

Misses  Mary  Jo  Douglass,  Mary  | 
Louise  Tomlin,  Helen  P.  Dixon, 
Susan  Edraundson,  Hannah  B. 
Kirby,  Shirley  Ann  Co9g)ns, 
Louisa  AntKony,  Carolyn  F.  Rob- 
erts and  Nancy  A.  Noble; 

George  J.   St.9vn!tski,  Stephen    ; 
H.   Keutzer,  Giles  G.  Nicholson,   | 
Max  B.  Connor,  Frank  BT  Greer, 
Claude   R.  Moore  Jr.,  Charles  R. 
Shoe,  Peyton  S.  Hawes  Jr.,  Trau-    ! 
fik   A.   Hassan,  Laonard   B.  Car-    \ 
penter,  William  E.  H«ek,  James    I 
H.    Epp«    Iff,     Isaac    L.    Marrill,    j 
Joseph     B.     Alala,     Douglas    M.    | 
Young,  Robert  M.  Stanton,  John    | 
W.    Johnson,    William     F.    Yost, 
•nd  William  H.  Willis  Jr. 


Parker  Lounges  of  Graham  Memor- 
ial. 

The  offices  up  for  nomination 
are  all  Men's  Dorm  and  Women's 
Dorm  Student  Legislature  seats 
and  junior  class  officers. 

AVeinman  said  that  the  party 
would  try  to  get  nominations  for 
all  these  offices  in  the  meeting 
tonight. 

Weinman  said  he  felt  the  UP 
"is  in  an  excellent  position  to 
gain  a  large  majority  in  legisla- 
ture this  election." 

"The  UP  is  confident  of  winning 
the  coming  jelection  because  we 
have  so  many  qualified  people  to 
nominate  for  office,"  Weinman 
said. 

Weinman  said  he  would  like  tc 
remind  all  petition  members  that 
their  yearly  dues  of  $1  are  diie 
tonight. 

Weinman  gave  Benny  Thomas 
who  was  elected  UP  legislatun 
floorleader  in  party  caucus  Thurs 
day  night,  a  vote  of  confidence 
and  said  that  Thomas  "will  con- 
tinue to  keep  up  the  high  level  o' 
UP  activity  and  participation  in 
the    legislature,'' 


Any  student  (»f  the  University  may 
become  a  candidate  foi*  any  office 
provided  that  he  submit  a  petition 
signed  by  2.5  qualified  voters  and 
by  himself. 

Any  candidate  must  meet  cer- 
tain scholast'c  qualifications  also. 
He  must  have  scholastic  average 
of  "C"  or  higher  for  the  semester 
preceding  nomination,  if  he  has 
been  in  residence  here  for  only 
one  semester.  If  he  has  been  in 
residence  here  for  longer  than 
that,  he  must  have  an  overall  "C  " 
or  higher  average.  The  nominee 
must  also  have  a  total  of  27  semes- 
ter hours  for  the  two  semesters 
preceding  nomination. 

All  those  interested,  or  those 
who  may  have  any  further  ques- 
tions, should  contact  Andy  Mil- 
ner.  Chairman  of  the  Elections 
Board. 

Yack  Pictures  Can  Be 
Made  This  Week  For  $1 

All  students,  except  seniors, 
who  have  not  had  their  pictures 
made  for  the  1957  Yackety  "Vack 
can  do  so  this  week  for  .$1. 

Pictures  will  be  taken  from  1 
to  7  p.m.  tomorrow  through  P'ri- 
day  in  the  basement  of  Graham 
Memorial. 

(The  Yack  printers  have  already 
started  ^processing  and  laying  out 
the  senior  pages,  Yack  officials 
said,  and  it  is  impossible  for  sen- 
iors to  have  their  pictures  made 
now  and  be  included  in  this  year's 
Yack. 

First  Year  Law  Schoolers 
Have  Choseh  Officers 

The  first  year  class  of  the  Law 
School    has    elected    class   officers. 

Nick  MiUer  of  Charlotte  is  the 
president  and  Theodore  Reynolds 
if  Wrightsville  Beach  the  Vire- 
President. 

Richard  Neill  of  Chapel  Hill 
;nd  Fred  Battle  of  Greensboro 
vere  elected  secretary-treasurer 
ind  Honor  Court  Justice,  respec- 
tively. 

Law  School  Association  Legis- 
lature representatives  will  be  Rob- 
ert Soles  of  Tabor  City,  George 
Coggin  of  Star  and  Heiuy  Higgins 
of  Shelby. 


Carolina  Forum  Brings 
Speakers   To   Campus 

A  top  labor  leader,  India's  chief  t  sponsorship  of    the   Carolina    For- 
delegate  to  the  U.\,  and  the  Vice-  ;  um. 

President  of  the  United  States  are  '      f^'""""!  Chairman  James  Holmes 
„      „     .,  ,  .      .   .-      1    ■  ha.s    released    the    following    tenta- 

among     the     speakers     tentatively  t  ..        ....  ^         .    " 

,  tive    list:    Harrv    P.    Cam,    former 
scheduled    to    visit    the   University  :  ,^„^(,„.    j^^^,    {^^    ^^.^^^   ^f   ^y^^^^, 

campus  during    1956-57   under  the    ington  and  advocate  of  civil  liber- 
ties; Senator  Paul   Douglas  of  Illi- 
Archaeology  Lecture  '  ""'■''•    '^-ading    Midwestern    liberal 

Planned  Here  Wednesday 

The    North    Carolina    Society   of 


WILLIAM    B.    RODMAN 

.   .  .   Phi  speaker 


in    th«?   Senate   and   noted    econom- 
ist:   V.    K.    Krishna    Menon.    chair- 
man   of   the    Indian    delegation    to 
the.  United    Nations:    Vice    Presi- 
the     Archaeological      Institute     of    ^^.^j    Richard    M.    Nixon:    Senator 
America   will   present   an   illustrat- 
ed   lecture   here    on    Early    Roman 
Architecture    Wednesday. 

Dr.     Frank     E.     Brown,     who     is 


Rodman  To  Speak  Here 
To  Phi  Society  Tonight 


Strom  Thurmond,  leader  in  States' 
Rights  and  only  senator  ever  el- 
ected on  a  write-in  vote:  and  Wal- 
ter Reuther,  vice  president  of  the 


Thacher    professor     of     Latin     «f^e^^^formed    AFL  CIO. 

Y*le-tTnfVe«Tty:-^'in -be  the  sOfaP-  -phc    Forum?   speaker    presenta- 

er  al  8  p.m.  in  room   105  of  Gard-  tion   agency    of   the   UNC    Student 

ner  Hall.  The   public  is  invited.  Government,  attempts  to  bring  to 

A  former  Fellow  of  the  Ameri-  the  campus  "a  cross-section  of  the 
can  Academy  in  Rome.  Dr.  Brown  various  philosophies'  abroad  to- 
served  as  field  director  of  the  Yale  day." 

Archaeological  Expedition  to  Dura  Three  Presidents  of  the  United 

in  Asia   Minor  in    1936-37.   During  States,    several    ambassadors    from 

World  W^r  II,  he  served  with  the  European    nations    and    Asia,    and 

Office   of   War  Information   in   Da-  various  Congressmen  and  Supreme 

inascus  from  1943-45  and  as  direc-  Court    Justices    have    appeared    in 

tor  of  antiquities  for  the  Republic  past  years, 

of  Syria  from   1945-47.  Dr.   Hollington  K.  Tong.  ambas- 

He  joined  the  staff  of  the  Amer-  sador  of  the  Chinese  Republic  to 
ican  Academy  in  Rome  in  1947  as  the  United  States,  made  a  Forum- 
director  of  the  Cla.ssical  School  sponsored  talk  here  during  Sep- 
where  he  worked  until  1952  when  ^  tember,  as  first  speaker  for  1956- 
he  rejoined  the  Yale  facuj^v.  57. 

Last  Rites  Held  Here 


For  Warren  Pierpont 


Funeral  services  were  held  yes 
lerday  from  tiie  Chapel  of  the 
Cross  fjr  Andrew  Warren  Pier- 
pont, meml)er  of  the  School  of 
Business  Administration  faculty, 
wiio  died  suddenly  at  Memorial 
Hospital   Saturday   afternoon. 

The  rites  were  followed  by 
burial  in  Memorial  Cemetery.  Mr. 
Pierpont.  50.  complained  of  feel 
in-,'  had  during  the  second  quarter 
of  the  Carolina-Maryland  game 
which  he  was  attending  with  Mrs. 
Pierpont  and  .some  other  friends. 

They  drove  him  to  Memorial 
Hospital,  where  he  died  a  few  min- 
utes later  in  the  emergency  room. 
Although  he  had  never  previously 
suf^red  from  any  heart  ailment, 
his  death  was  attributed  to  a 
coronary  condition. 
MEMORIAL    SCHOLARSHIP 

Mr.  Pierpont's  cojleagues  in  the 
School  of  Business  ..\dministiatio!  ' 
have  established  a  scholarship  ii 
his  name  for  the  coming  schoo' 
year.  It  was  suggested  that  per 
sons  wishing  to  make  tributes  ii 
his  memory  might  send  their  giftc 
to  Mrs.  Mary  Lee  Cooper  at  th' 
School  of  Business  Administration 

A    native    of    Pensacola,    he    at 
tended   Washington    and   Lee   Uni 


State    Associate   Justice   William 
Blount    Rodman    will    address    the 
Philanthropic    Literary    Society    at 
its    inauguration    of    new    officers. 
Tuesday  at  8  p.m.  on  the  top  floor  ; 
of  New.East*.     .    , 

Rodman,  a  controversial  figure 
during  the  segregation  hearings 
in  1955  while  he  was  Attorney 
General  of  North  Carolina,  will, 
speak  to  the  society  on  'The  Pro-t 
per  Function  of  the  Appellate 
Court.'* 

Honor  Society  Holds 
Freshman  Orientation 

Alpha  Epsilon  Delta,  the  nation- 
al premedical  honor  society  on 
campus,  will  hold  a  freshman  or- 
ientation program  to  all  premedi- 
cal and  predental  students  Tues- 
day at  7:30  p.m.  in  Carrol]   Hall. 

This  meeting  is  "directed  pri- 
marily for  freshmen,  for  Alpha 
Epsilon  Delta  feels  tt  will  solve 
many  of  their  problems  concern- 
ing their  premedical  or  pr?dental 
nrograrri  '■  a^c^rding  to  President 
Ferrell  Shuford. 

However,  ail  premedical  and 
predental  students  who  are  inter 
ested  in  joining  this  sc^iety  have 
been  urged  to  attend  the  meeting, 
which  is  held  in  conjunction  with 
.s"voral  rush  meetings  before  new 
members  are  taken   in   this  sem°s- 

t'.M". 

'•■.-■<    «naai-n-K   ■■11]   inc'hifle  Dr. 
C.  S.  Jones,  associate  professor  of 
zoology   and    General    College    ad- 
viser; Dr.  W.  W.  Demerritt.  assist- 
ant dean  of  the  School-  ol  Dentist 
ry.  and  Dr.  E.  McG.  Hedgneth.  Un- ; 
i\ersity  physician  ,-nd  chairman  of, 
the    board    of    admiss.ons    of    the; 
UNC  Medical  School.  I 


Rodman  was  born  in  Washing- , 
ton.  N.  C.  and  when  he  attended 
UNC,  he  was  a  member  of  the 
Phi.  ! 

The  Phi  has  invited  all  interest- 
i  ed   peeple   to  attrnd  tJie   meeting. 
According    to    Jim    Montieth.    the 
Phi   Hall  can  accommodate  around 
200  people. 

There  will  be  an  executive  sess; 
jion  of  Phi  meinbers  onh|f  from  "-ft-' 
p.m.  A  Yackety  Yack  pfcture  will 
be  taken  of  the  Phi  membership  at 
the  meeting. 


Phi  Kappa  Sigma  Will 
Celebrate  Anniversary 

TIk'  Lambda  Chapter  of  the  Phi  ' 

I 
Kanpa    Sigma    Fraternity    is    cele- : 

brating  its   100th  anniversary. 

.\  series  of  social  ev?nts  will  J 
be  held  throughout  this  week.  ; 
These  activities  will  include:  op- 1 
en  house  for  sorority  women,  in- 
dependent women,  and  dormitory ! 
and    fraternity  officers.  I 

The    faculty    of    the    University  i 
was    entertained    Monday    by    the 
fraternity  in  the  first  of  their  "OP- ' 
en   house"   series    held    from   4    to  I 
6  p.m.  at  203  W.  Cameron  St.  ! 

The  highlight   of  the  week   long; 
celebration    will   be   the  returning 
of   the   alumni   th's   weekend.   The 
men^bers  of  the  fraternity  and  the 
alumni   w  ijl  be  feted  at  a  banquet , 
this    Friday    which    wiU    be^  given  ^ 
by   the   Chapel    Hill    alumni.   They 
will     also     attend     the     Carolina- 
Wake    Fore.st    football    game    as   a 
climax    to    the    weekend    actjvitie-;. 
.\  tribute  will  be  paid  to  the  fra- 
ternity bv  the  baiid   and  the  card 
.section  during  half-time  ceremon- 
ies. 


>  'By    NEIL    BASS 

The  Chapel  Hill  Board  of  Alder- 
men will  pass  final  decree  on  the 
Columbia  St.  restriction  next  Mon- 
day night,  according  to  student 
body  President   Bob  Young. 

The  aldermen  set  a  two-hour 
parking  restriction  on  Columbia 
St.  between  Cameron  Ave.  and 
Franklin  St.  during  the  summer. 

Concerning  the  outcome  of  the 
Monday  night  meeting  Young 
said: 

"I  am  hopeful  the  buard  will 
give  us  a  chance." 

Wilburn  Davis,  Traffic  Advis- 
ory Commission  chairman,  told  a 
reporter  he  "understood"  the 
board's  final  decree  would  not  be 
passed  until  Nov.  10. 

Young  said,  however.'  that  the 
board  would  drfinitely  meet  Moii- 
day  night,  and  that  he  and  Davis 
would   meet  with  aldermen. 

Concerning  a  meeting  which  the 
Commission  held  jointly  with  rep- 
resentatives from  the  aldermen 
and  the  local  .Merchants'  Associa- 
tion last  Thursday.  Davis  said: 

■"The  meeting  was   a   success." 

Davis  declined  to  release  de- 
tails of  the  meeting.  It  was  de- 
clared an  executive  session,  clos- 
,  ed  to  the  press,  by  Davis.  Other 
1  representatives  present  at  the 
i  convening  consented  to  his  deci- 
.'  sion. 

Davis  said  the  meeting  was  clos- 
-  ed    b?cai;se    representatives    from 
the    three    groups    wanted    to    ex 
change    "personal    opinions"   free- 
J.v.'  ' 

The  Commission  chairman  told 
a  reporter  he  would  release  a  full 
statement  on  the  Commission's 
transactions  in  ""the  near  future." 


UN  Flag  Flies 
Behind  South 

The  UN  Flag  will  fly  dunng 
this  week  from  the  flagpole  be- 
hind South  Building,  according  to 
P.  H.  Craig,  a  soph'-more  naval 
science   student. 

When  the  question  of  flying  the 
UN  F'lag  came  up.  P.  .H.  Craig 
was  appointed  to  find  out  the  rul- 
ing. He  went  to  the  NROTC  .\rra- 
ory  in  order  to  find  out  the  regu- 
lations   governing   this    matter. 

-Although  the  flagpole  can  ac- 
commodate two  flags  at  once,  the 
rules  do  not  permit  the  flying 
of  the  UN  Flag  above,  beside,  on 
the  same  pole  or  below  the  Un- 
ited States  Flag.  The  United  States 
Flag  must,  however,  be  flying  on 
the  campus,  and  it  will  be  in  front 
of  the  Naval  Armory. 


Pledge  Class  Officers 
Elected  By  BA  Fraternity 

The  fall«pledge  class  of  the  Al 
pha  Lambda  Chapter  of  Delta  Sit' 
ma  Pi,  international  professiona' 
fraternity  in  Business  Adminis- 
tration and  Commerce,  has  elect 
ed  officers. 

They  are  president,  William  D. 
Matthews.  Salisbury:  secretary. 
Tony  Norungolo.  Sanlord:  and  so- 
cial chairman,  Fred  N.  Isenhow- 
er,  Conovcr, 


WARREN   PIERPONT 

.    .    .   (lied   SatiinUiii 

v'ersity,  from  which  he  received  an 
\.B.  degree.  Harvard,  where  he 
received  the  MA.  degree,  and  the 
University  here  where  he  received 
lis  Ph.D.  The  Pierponts  moved  to 
hapel  Hill  in  the  early  '40's  after 
vhich  he  joined  the  School  '>f 
ommcrce  faculty.  During  World 
'<'ar  II  he  was  an  official  with  the 
OPA  iu  Florida. 

He  was  a  member  of  Phi  Gamma 
)elta  social  fraternity,  and  Omic- 
>n  Delta  Kanoa  and  Phi  Beta 
Kappa  honorary  societies.  Since 
•40  he  had  been  associate  profess- 
or of  busines  administration  and 
Vssistant     to     the     Dean     of     the 

"ehool. 

Surviving  are  Mrs.  pierpont,  the 

"•mer   Gl«*ndino    Sl"^»-l    of   Waco. 

Texas;  a  daughter,  Mrf  James  C. 

•'^'n««n     ir..    (»f    Gre«»nvillo:    his 

mother,    Mrs.   J.   H.    Pierpont    of 

'ensacoU  and  Miss  iSlarjorie  Pier 

.»>nt  of.  Saratoga  .Springs,  N.  Y. 


Durham  Company  Unhappy 
Over   Telephone    Situation 


By  GRAHAM  SNYDER 

The*  possibility  of  removal  of  all 
non- paying  telephones  in  the  dorm- 
itories, because  v{  students  non 
compliance  with  the  telephone  pol 
icy    rules,    has    not    been    reduced 

:  to  a  satisfactory  degree,  according 

I  to   Durham  telephone  officials. 

I  The  Southern  Bell  Telephone  Co. 
in  Durham  reported  ytsterday  that 
it  was  not  "happy  with  the  situa- 
tion as  it  existed."  Mrs.  Edith 
Knowles.  chief  telephone  opera- 
tor, said  that  the  company  would 
wait  for  a  solution  of  the  problem 
from  University  officials  in  Chapel 

I  Hill.  Mrs.  Knowles  emphasized 
that  Southern  Bell  Co.  had  no  di- 

i  rect  connection  with  the  telephone 
situation,  but  that  tne  unabated 
persistence  of  long-distance  calls 
being   made   from   the   non-paying 

I  telephones  in  the  dorms  was  creat- 
ing  confusion    and    tie-ups    at    the 


switchboard  in  Durham,  and  tha' 
here  appeared  to  be  no  marke^ 
liminishment  in  the  practice. 

J.  S.  Bennet,  Director  of  Opera 
Lions,  declared  that  the  situation 
as  it  now  is,  cannot  continue  an; 
ihat  .some  feasible  solution  mus 
be  worked  6ut.  He  said  that  tht 
•onimittee  working  on  the  prohlen 
—composed  of  university  and  stu 
dent  officials — wa^  in  the  proces. 
of  formulating  a  solution. 

Student  government  officials  an 
presently  engaged  in  seeking  a  so 
lution  to  the  problem  by  means  of 
oelitiim  letters  being  sent  to  al 
dormitories. 

Student  Body  President  Boh 
Young  announced  that  an  appoint 
ed  member  of  his  cabinet.  Bill  Tul- 
ioeW  and  IDC  president  Sonny 
Hallford  were  di-afting  a  letter, 
copies  of  which  will  be  sent  to 
all   dormitory   presidents    The   let 


er  will  contain  a  petition  to  bi 
osted  in  the  dorm  and  to  be  sign 
d  by  all  students.  The  petition 
vill  state  that  if  tiie  placing  of 
elephnnes  on  every  floor  in  every 
iorm  i.s  a^ain  continued  —  a  pro- 
ess  halted  because  of  the  telephone 
•roblem — the  students  will  agree 
o  make  long  di-^tancc  calls  from 
•oin-t\pe  telephone  boxes,  only. 


GM'S  SLATE 


Grail  Room  —  4  5,  Debate 
Squad;  7-9:30,  Women's  Resi- 
dence Council;  Roland  Parker 
Lounge  1 — 8-11,  Chess  Club,  Ro- 
land Parker  Lounges  2,  3 — 7-11, 
University  Party;  A. P.O.  Un**rt\ 
7-9,  A.P.O.,  Council  Room— 7-11, 
Men's  Honor  Council;  Rende- 
zvous Ro6^  —  6:30  8,  Dance 
Class. 


PAGE  TWO 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


TUESDAY,  OCTOBER  23,  19S6 


There  Used  To  Be  Freedom 
But  Why  Bother? 

■7///'  I'nii'ersity  (of  Ttxas)  is  icHling^  to  make  a  niec/infj^  fticrr 
availohle  on  the  camfms  to  the  .  .  .  Yojuh^  Ref}iihlit:nn  Cluh  f/ro- 
vided  there  is  no  joiul  spon.sorshij)  with  any  outside  ftolitirnl  o);j;(ini- 
mtion.  and  fnox>ided  that  the  a^roiif)  to  he  fyresented  is  limited  to 
members  of  the  student  ota^anizations  and  the  fjersonally  invited 
jiuests.  The  prinnny  reason  loi  these  stijiuhitions  is  that  it  is  contiory 
to  the  ^yo//o'  (>l  the  l'nix!eisity  of  i'exas  to  provide  on  University 
premises  an  often  fornm  for  partisan  ftolitieal  disenssiotis."--Vn\\eYS- 
itN  oi  Texas  President  l.<)<»;an  Wilsons  staienjcni  (»n  use  of  l' T  la- 
(ililies   tor  political   purposes. 

The  man  speaking  those  Avords 
was  on<  e  ai.ideniit  viie  piesident 
of  the  rniveisity  ol  North  Caro- 
lina. I.o<^an  XVilson  is  the  satne 
man  who  told  the  I'N'd  Faenlty 
CAuh  five  years  ago: 

"(A  primary  use  of  the  unixers- 
*^tv  administration)  is  to  a<  t  as  a 
<ata'lv(  tic  agent  in  firiiv^ing  togeth- 
er a  diversity  of  elements  into  (me 
effeiti\e  whole.  In  a  demotratic 
s(Hietv.  leadership  can  iiave  no 
more  hasii   fuiution." 

President  Wilson's  wo. (In  make 
stiangv  soinids,  coming  as  they  do 
from  a  modern  iniiversity  in  a 
n»odorn  lountrv  where  people's 
minds  aie  »iupposed  to  he  fiee. 

I  he  souikIs  are  strange  hetause 
the  Ameritan  iniiversity  is  com- 
nionlv  thought  of  as  a  m?r?.et  place 
lor  ideas.  Ideas  ate  traditionally 
free  at  a  univer«»itv.  Aviieiher  its 
president  or  its  trustees  or  its  state 
legislarine  likes  them  or  ixa. 

But  at  the  I'liixersitv  t>f  I  exas. 
where  men's  minds  are  5'.»p{x»sed 
to  he  free,  freedom  is  strict!)  lim- 
iied.  It  is  all  right  to  he  free  thi>e 
so  long  as  vou  aren't  an\  freer  than 
ex-Tar  Heel  Wilson  waiiis  vou  to 
he. 

The  ironv  ol  WilM)n's  siatemeJil 
is  that  on  the  -^ame  dav  The  Daily 
Texan  puhli>lietl  it  in  whole,  the 
newsp.ijK-r  tarriccl  the  stoin  of  a 
very  partisui  speech  by  Sen.  John 
Sparkman  of  Alahania — delivevtd 
on  the  (  anipus  .  nd  sponsored  h\ 
the  I'liiversiiy  ot^Texas,  Logan 
Wilson,  president.  ^' 

^V'hy.  one  woidd  naturally  a«k, 
are  (olleges  and  universities  afraid 
to  permit     any     paiiisatl     activiiy 


GOEnils/GEN  LETTER 


DR.  LOGAN  WILSON 

...  don't  get  partisan 

(thai  is,  act i\i lies  thev  theinselves 
dont  supfx>it)  on  their  campiLses? 

The  answer  is  very  simple. 
.American  (olleges  and  universities 
are  no  longer  run  by  educators. 
Fhey  are  run  by  businessmen.  .And 
the  businessmen  are  run  by  state 
legislatures  and  boards  of  trustees 
are  nioney-minded  alumni. 

I'nisersities  Avhidi  ome  had  a 
tradition  of  freedom  of  speech  are 
now  just  another  j)art  o(  the  state 
(IT  the  trustees'  budget.  Thev  dart- 
not  spei'.'k  out.  and  now  thev  dcni'i 
even  want  to  let  others  speak  out 
on  their  property— unless  their  go\- 
ernoi   or  trustees  happen  to  agree. 

One  of  the  largest  and  most  re- 
spected reservoirs  of  freedoru  Of 
the  mind  is  springing  a  leak.  .And 
there  are  very  few  little  Dutch 
boys  with  the  courage  to  plug  up 
the  dike. 


Poland  Poses  A  Question 


This  :nav  «<,ome  as  a  shock  to 
souje  of  the  more  rabid  F.isenhow- 
eritcs  and  Sit-veUMJuians.  hut  there 
;-.e  events  taking  -place  in  the 
world  u!>iil)  are  of  much  greater 
signiliiance  than  whether  Wf  be- 
gin showin;^  gO(Kl  failh  in  dcahng 
with  the  Russians  o\eyt;fi  -  bo»nb 
tests  o)  whether  we  b.isc  oiir'nuii- 
tar\  manpower  stitu^ifi  on  (bailees- 
01    on   volunteers. 

II  we  wanli  lanful'  we  (  ut  ei;- 
joy  a  ringside  scat  tuvotigh  our 
morning  newspapers  ai  tlu  most 
serious  (ra.k  in  the  moiut'iihii 
(!ommuni>t  hkn  k  that  has  yei  raken 
pla<e. 

The  Daily  Tar  Heel 

The  official  student  publication  of  the 
Publications  Board  of  the  University  of 
North  Carolina,  where  it  is  puijlished 
daily  except  Monday  isnd  examinatiot 
and  vacation  periods  and  bumoior  terms 
Entered  as  second  class  matter  in  tht 
post  office  in  Chapel  Hiil,  N  C,  undei 
the  Act  oi  March  8,  187U.  Subscription 
rates:  mailed,  $4  per  yeai ,  $2  50  a  semes- 
ter; delivered.  $6  a  year,  $3  50  a  semes- 
ter. 


Editor   ._ 

FRED  PO%T.EDGE 

Managing  Editor    .  . 

CHATiUE  SLOA^ 

News  Editor    . 

RAY  LINKER 

Business  Manager   . 

Bn.T,  BOB  PEEL 

Sports  Editor 

LAPRY  CHEEK 

Advertising  Manager 
Coed  Editor    

Fred  Katzin 
.  ...  Peg  Humphrey 

EDITORLAL  STAFF  —  Woody  Sears, 
Frank  Crowther,  Barry  Winston,  David 
Mundy,  George  t'fingst,  Ingrid  Clay, 
Cortland  Edwards. 


Staff  Photographer 


Norman  Kaotor 


BUSINESS  STAFF  -  Rosa  Moore,  Jocrny 
Whitaker,  Dick  L»'avitt,  Peter  Alper. 


NEWS  SJAiT— Clarke  Jones,  N»ncy 
Hill,  Joan  .%oore.  Pringle  Pipkin,  Anne 
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Graha.nj  Snyder,  Billy  Barnes,  Neil 
Bass.  Jim  Creighton,  Hil  Goldman, 
Phyh.    Maultsby. 


SPORTS  STAFF:  Bill  King,  Jim  Purks, 
Jjmmy  Harper,  Dave  WiWe,  Charley 
Houo*>a. 


Subscription  Manager  .  _.        Dale  Staley 

Staff  Artist  Charlie  Daniel 

Night  Editor Woody  Sears 

Proof  Reader Woody  Sears 


Poland  is  making  a  valiant,  de- 
termined and  so  far  successful  ef- 
fort to  break  free  of  the  Russian 
yoke  whidi  has  been  chafing  it  for 
so  long. 

Jf  Poland  wins  its  battle  to  riui 
its  own  affairs  free  of  Soviet  med- 
fjling,  even  more  encouraging 
events  apj)ear  to  lie  ahead  h)r  the 
West.  Poland  not  only  will  serve  as 
a  sh(»t  of  adrenalin  tor  its  neigh- 
bor satellites  in  F.astern  F.inope; 
it  will  stand  as  a  physical  buffer 
between  Russia  a-nd  three  key 
(lommunisi  totmtries:  Hungary, 
C-r/ecluJslovakia  and  Fast  (iermany. 

We  would  hate  to  see  lives  los^ 
through  a  sh(K)ting  war  in  F.astern 
F.urope  or  any  other  part  of  the 
woi  Id,  but  it  is  conteiv;ible  tliat 
there  is  .s<mieihing  more  important 
than  human  1  fe.  We  believe  hu- 
man freedom  lits  this  quafification. 

If  Poles  must  die  fo;  their  free- 
dom, we  feel  sure  Poles  will  die 
willii^gly.  .\t  the  same  time  they* 
die  to  prote(  t  their  borders  against 
the  invirtion  of  Soviet  ti()oj)s  from 
Fast  (iermany,  they  will  divert 
Russia's  soldiers  and  her  attentiim 
to  such  an  extent  that  the  other 
satellites  will^lind  it  nmch  easier 
to  settle  their  own  giievaiues  wiiii 
the  Kremlin. 

"The  turbulent  situation  in  F.ast- 
ern F.tnope  may  soon  pc^se  to  tlie 
I'nited  States  a  question  that  will 
f)e  difficidt  to  answer:  If  the  Com- 
munist satelites  ask  for  help— arni.s. 
amnumition  and,  ves.  maybe  even 
men— will  the  I'.S.  rise  to  the  oe- 
casioti  or  Avill  it  burv  its  head  in 
-  the  sands  of  Peace,  Prosperity  and 
Progress  and  pretend  tha-t  what  is 
going  on  in  F.urope  is  none  of  its 
affair? 

The  question  might  be  asked 
prior  to  the  November  elections. 
Naturally  it  will  not  be  answered 
before  the  elections. 

The  answer,  to  (ome  after  the 
voting,  will  depend  on  whether 
President  F'isenhower  is  retained 
in  ()ffi(  e  or  is  replaced  by  Steven- 
sun. 

If  the  winner  is  F.isenhower,  we 
h^ve  good  reason  to  believe  we  will 
licar  fhe  silky  voice  of  John  Fos- 
ter Dulles  coming    over     the     air 

waves  telling  n<!  not  to  i«'orry,  that 
"moral  forces  will  prevail."       -^^^ 


Studenfs  Learning  Diplomacy 


John  Raper 


I  left  New  York.  August  18th 
on  the  S.S.  Zuiderkruis,  a  lesser 
ship  of  the  Holland-American 
Line.  It  took  me  nine  days  from 
New  York  to  Rotterdam,  where 
I  landed.  For  those  of  you  who 
come  over  next  summer  to 
Europe  and  would  like  excellent 
food,  service,  and  cabin  accom- 
modations at  an  inexpensive 
price,  1  would  highly  recommend 
the  Holland  -  American  Line  to 
you.  On  the  line's  three  smaller 
ships,  the  Zuiderkruis  and  its 
two  sister  ships,  you  have  only 
tourist  class  and  so  have  full-run 
of  the  entire  ship. 

In  Rotterdam  I  spent  a  day 
sighl.seeing.  From  the  Rotter- 
dam Chamber  of  Commerce  I 
learned  that  this  wealthy  port 
city  is  now  second  only  to  New 
York  as  a  shipping  center  (the 
London  C.  of  C.  has  yet  to  con- 
firm this  statement). 

The  city's  "Center",  an  area  of 
two  or  so  square  miles,  was 
bombed  out  during  the  last  war 
and  has  been  almost  complete- 
ly rebuilt,  in  what  is  one  of  the 
most  modem  business  districts  I 
have  seen  in  the  United  States  or 
Europe. 

It  boasts  the  "Fifth  Avenue" 
of  Europe,  a  street  of  very  exclu- 
sive and  cosmopolitan  shops  in 
the  "Center."  The  street  is  for 
pedestrians  only  with  wide  side- 
walks and  a  garden  in  the  mid- 
dle. Holland'.s  tallest  skyscraper 
— 14  stories  tall — is  also  there. 

The  city  is  on  land  reclaimed 
from  the  sea.  It  is  very  expensive 
to  build  tall  buildings  as  they 
must  be  erected  on  concrete 
piles.  I  was  told  that  a  third  of  a 
building's  cost  was  underground. 

While  I  was  in  Rotterdam,  the 
350th  Rembrandt  Anniversary 
Art  Exhibition  was  in  progress. 
The  Rembrandt  originaLs  had 
been  collected  from  all  over  the 
world,  half  of  which  were  on  ex- 
hibition there  and  the  other  half 
in  Am.sterdani.  I  felt  it  was  an  ex- 
cellent beginning  to  my  cultural 
education  in  Europe;  but,  as  I 
am  only  beginning  the  course,  I 
can  not  offer  you  Rembrandt  ad- 
mirers any  profound  statements 
of  description  or  criticism. 

From  Rotterdam  I  travelled  by 
train  to  Goettingen.  I  spent  a 
week  in  Goettingen  getting  eve»'y- 
thing  straight  for  my  study  this 
winter.  Then  I  camo  by  train  here 

THINK  IT  OVER 


to  Kochel.  For  you  who, might 
be  planning  to  travel  by  train  in 
Europe,  don't.  It  cost  me  about 
$35  to  travel  600  miles  second 
class,  which  means  you  might 
have  to  stand  up  the  whole  day. 

Dan  Southerland.  the  other 
Goettingen  Exchange  Student, 
and  I  are  now  in  a  language 
course  here  in  Kochel,  a  small 
resort  village  in  the  Bavarian 
Alps   below   Munich. 

Among  the  fifty  .students  at 
the  Goethe  Institute  are  i-epre.sen- 
tatives  of  many  countries:  Indo- 
nesia. Thailand.  India.  Pakistan, 
Lebanon.  Saudi  Arabia.  Iran, 
Iraq,  Egypt,  Greece,  Italy,  France, 
Belgium,  England,  Ecquador,  Pe- 
ru, Paraquay,  Uraguay.  Mexico, 
and  the  U.  S. 


When  the  Suez  question,  Cyp- 
rus, the  Palestine  situation,  Kaslw 
mir,  or  other  international  polit- 
ical questions  come  up,  I  take  les- 
sons in  diplomacy.  One  does  not 
make  point  blank  statements  for 
or  against  and  have  many 
friends. 

Everyone  prefixes  his  opinions 
with:  "I  believe".  For  example, 
the  Egyptians  here  are  just  as 
sure  that  Nasser  is  in  the  right 
and  is  a  great  man  doing  much 
for  Egypt  as  the  English  students 
believe  he  is  a  despot,  usurper, 
and   in  the  wrong. 

But  when  the  Suez  question 
comes  up  both  sides  present 
their  arguments,  listen  politely 
to  the  other  side's  arguments, 
and   never  call   each   other   ugly 


names.  Everyone's  prime  pur- 
pose here  is  to  learn  to  speak, 
write,  and  understand  German. 
Political  and  philosophical  dif- 
ferences do  not  stand  in  the  way 
of  friondship.  I  have  found  it 
very  interesting  to  hear  the  op- 
posite views  and  attitudes  that 
peopJ^  from  other  parts  of  the 
world  hold. 

It  seems  funny  that  you  are  in 
the  midst  of  school  and  football 
season,  while  our  University  does 
not  start  until  the  first  of  No- 
vember. It  would  be  really  great 
to  sit  in  Kenan  Stadium  now  for 
one  of  the  games.  I  guess  I  will 
have  to  be  satisfied  with  seeing 
an  occasional  soccer  game  or  an 
opera — the  most  popular  German 
amusements. 


'Gosh,  What  A  Frightening  Creature!' 


Poteat  Still  Not  The  Man  For  Chancellor 


Paul  McCauley 

The  Consolidated  University  of 
North  Carolina  and  Robinson 
Crusoe  have  something  in  com- 
mon— we  both  have  -our  man 
Friday.  It  is  only  a  matter  of 
time  and  formality  before  Mr. 
William  Friday  officially  fakes 
over  the  helm  as  President.  One 
of  his  first  and  most  important 
duties  will  be  to  appoint  a  new 
chancellor  from  a  list  of  three 
names  given  him  by  a  Trustees' 
Advisory  Committee. 

I  am  sure  the  matter  will  be 
given  the  utmo.st  consideration  by 
all  those  directly  concerned  with 
the  selection,  but  I  feel  that  those 
of  us  .who  will  be  affected  most 


by  the  choice  should  have  some 
say. 

There  is  a  movement  at  pres- 
ent under  the  direction  of  some 
well-meaning  faculty  members 
and  students  to  railroad  Dr.  Will- 
iam Poteat  of  the  Philosophy  De- 
partment into  the  office  of 
Chancellor.  I  have  no  doubts  as 
to  Dr.  Poteat's  qualifications — 
he  is  a  brilliant,  dynamic,  proi 
greSvSive  young  man  who  is  re- 
spected and  lik<ed  by  all  those 
who  know  him  or  have  had 
classes   under  him. 

This  is  exactly  why  I  feel  that 
it  would  be  a  mistake  to  take  a 
man  with  talents  that  are  found 
in  few  classrooms  and  sterilize 
the  effectiveness  ol  many  of  these 


talents  by  putting  him  in  an  ad- 
ministrative position.  Another 
reason  I  would  not  like  to  see  Dr. 
Poteat  as  Chancellor  is  that  the 
administrative  machinery  of  this 
University  has  long  needed  oil- 
ing with  some  new  blood  from 
the.  outside. 

At  the  rate  knowledge  is  in- 
creasing today,  education  cannot 
alford  to  maintain  the  status  quo 
as  it  has  on  this  campus  for  a 
number  of  .vears — evidenced  by 
the  number  of  profs  still  on  the 
faculty  who  should  have  already 
retired. 

I  sincerely  feel  that  the  man 
appointed  Chancellor  of  this  Uni- 
versity should  be   ?.   young,  pro- 


gressive educator  from  some 
other  area  of  the  nation  who 
could  bring  with  him  some  fresh 
ideas.  With  a  president  that  came 
up  through  the  ranks  here  it  is 
almost  imperative  to  have  an  out- 
sider for  the  Chancellor  if  we 
are  to  keep  abreast  of  other  lead- 
ing educational  institutions  of 
this  nation. 

Getting  a  man  from  the  outside 
to  be  Chancellor  would  also  show 
that  the  trustees  have  finally 
realized  that  the  primary  func- 
tion of  this  university  is  as  an 
instrument  of  higher  education 
and  not  as  a  political  vehicle. 

Think  it  over;  it's  your  Uni- 
versity. 


Pogo 


By  Walt  Kelly 


FLIT'S  ^Oft\iO  Mi  you.  6MN'  Am  oug 

■    OWN  HASP'WCN  ff^e^uCCe^  TO 
SJ/M9,  WHAT  (bWiCj  tug  COUNTev  A 
-^  HAP  NAME. 


Li'l  Abner 


By  AI  Capp 


BAD  WEATHER  &  BOOTS 

Boondockers 
vs.  Ivy  Styles 

Woody  Sears 

Rainy    weather   brings  a   refreshing   change   to , 
the  campus.  In  ^e  few  short  days  of  the  monsoon 
season,   which  eontes  about  twice  monthly   during 
the  winter  months,  the  deviant  personalities  show 
themselves. 

These  deviants  are  the  hardy  souls  who  dare  to 
defy  campus  opinion  and  risk  social  ostracization 
by  letting  their  common  sense  overrule  their  sense 
of  propnety. 

These  intrepid  warrioors  are  the  ones  who  will 
shuck  their  slavish  conventions  and  wear  some 
sensible  clothes  to  class  when  the  weather  tiurns 
foul. 

Who  ever  heard  of  a  Carolina  student  wearing 
jeans  and  boots  to  class?  The  very  idea!  It's  prob- 
ably the  next  thing  to  heresy. 

But  it  does  happen,  and  it's  most  refreshing  to 
see  some  vestiges  of  good  sense  in  the  realm  of 
campus  fashions.  Somehow  it's  almost  funny  to  see 
our  campus  dandies  puddle-jumping  down  the  brick 
walks  trying  to  miss  the  treacherous  pools  that  wait 
to  inundate  an  unwary  black  loafer  or  dirty-white' 
buck.  It's  nearly  as  funny  as  watching  them  sit 
in  class  and  try  to  remove  the  mud  flecks  from 
their  belt-in-the-back  ivy  flannels. 

The  appearance  of  boondockers  on  the  campus 
does  help  to  break  the  woeful  monotony  of  the  ivy 
uniform.  Even  certain  of  the  professors  will  re- 
linquLsh  their  comfort-worn  teaching  shoes  for 
something  more  practical.  These  are  good  signs. 

It  is  unfortunate  that  so  much  stress  is  placed 
upon  such  a  relatively  unimportant  thing  as  one's 
dressing  habits.  There  are  few  things  which  are 
less  important  in  determining  a  person's  character 
and  background. 

This  does  not  mean  that  cleanliness  and  neat- 
ness ai-e  to  be  ignored,  but  it  does  mean  that  a" 
three-button,  belt-in-the-back  society  is  an  assiniv 
organization. 

The  requisites  for  membership  are  simple:  Con- 
forn! 

The  prejudices  of  small  minds  will  manifest 
themselves  anywhere  there  is  leeway  given.  TTiis 
way  they  may  take  their  stand  and  look  down  their 
noses  at  those  who  can  still  think  and  choose  for 
themselves. 


THE  LIVESPIKE: 


4 


Nixon  Has  Talent 
For  Not  Reply ing\ 

Fred  Powledge  V 

There  were  some  people     who     thought     Vice 
President  Richard  Nixon  was  brave  to  throw  him- 
self before  a  college  press  conference  last  week. 
He  wasn't.  He  was  merely  taking  a  slight  gamble. 
His  gamble  paid  off  well 

Nixon,  you  see,  was  obviously  attempting  to 
make  a  i>oliacal  speech,  or  a  bunch  of  little  politi« 
cal  speeches,  at  the  expense  of  40 
college  newspaper  editors.  He  was 
relying  on  the  editor's  lack  of  ex- 
perience in  interviewing  vice  pres- 
idents of  the  United  States,  plua 
his  experience  with  answering  hot 
political  questions  without  any  ad- 
vance  warning. 

The  editors,  and  I  can  vouch  for 
at  least  one,  were  slightly  scared. 
Just  before  the  show  went  on  the 
air.  a  director  estimated  the  television /audience  at 
'one  to  15  million." 

Nixon  had  his  All-American  Boy  makeup  on, 
complete  with  compatible  color  eyes  and  ultra  white 
teeth. 

I'd  estimate  that  at  least  80  percent  of  the 
college  editors  in  Ithaca  were  rather  hostile  to- 
wards the  vice  president.  Some  disagreed  with  him 
on  his  previous  campaign  statements.  Others  were 
jokingly  plotting*  his  assasination  when  he  walked 
into  the  meeting  hall.    . 

Nixon  and  his  campaign  workers  knew  this,  or 
they  should  have  known  it.  They  gambled,  however, 
and  it  appeared  to  me  that  they  won. 

Nixon  dodged.  He  dodged  every  conceivable 
question  that  could  have  been  termed  "controvers- 
ial." 

^\^len  a  "controversial"  question  charged  down 
on  him,  he  adroitly  stepped  from  behind  his  cape  as 
the  question  whizzed  by. 

The  editors  tried  as  hard  as  they  could  to  pin 
Vice  President  Nixon  down,  but  he  used  the  simp- 
lest dodging  technique  known  to  modern  man:  He 
just  glossed  over  the  question,  then  went  on  to 
make  a  point  all  his  own. 

Thus  the  answer  to  the  question  about  the  farm 
problem  would  turn,  before  our  eyes,  into  a  trib- 
ute to  President  Eisenhower. 

The  Daily  Tar  Heel  asked  Nixon  what  he  and 
the  President  had  done  to  enforce  the  Supreme 
Court's  desegregation  decision.  Most  of  the  answer 
was  taken  up  with  a  statement  that  he  and  Ike 
wanted  to  produce  a  favorable  climate  of  opinion 
toward  the  decision.  He  failed  to  convince  me  that 
the  administration  had  done  anything  specific. 

It  was  an  effective  maneuver,  undoubtedly 
planned  in  advance  by  Nixon  and  his  campaigners. 
The  "open"  press  conference — and  it  was  advertised 
as  open;  editors'  questions  were  not  submitted  to 
the  vice  president  beforehand — turned  out  to  be  a 
nice  little  television  show,  narrated  by  Nixon  with 
college  editors  in  the  straight-man  roles. 

You  have  to  give  the  vice-president  credit.  He 
took  a  slight  gamble,  and  it  paid  off — attout  one  to 
15  million  to  one.  , 

But  it's  a  pity  that  the  vice-president  didn't 
answer  the  questions  that  were  put  to  him.  As  a 
result  of  his  -dodging,  most  editors  were  convinced 

♦^.-.f  r.«o   n..vo-  v^n-",:  whjt  Dlckie's  goIng  to  do, 
b"!'"""  in  ry  «!av  n*»vt. 

tvjb  ,.«.,'ii  5,m.o«  !c  nr,f  ♦»,„  ^cst  kind  of  vice- 
president  for  a  country  to  have. 


tuesdayI 

Two  Fj 
Here 

Fire  sin 
Chapel  Hii 
Chief  J.  S 
both  cases  I 

The  first 
p.m.,  Satul 
of  the  Vill( 
St.  A  matt 
janitor's 
the  fire  w^ 
ly  dopped 

The  secc 
son  Circk'l 
2:08  a.m. 

Robert 
was    not 
discoverec'l 
who  smelH 
the  alarm. 
short    in 
There  wasi 
ator  and 
was  damas 


to  enH 
$41, 

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you  knc 
lure  tha 
order,  tl 
Reader"! 
will  likel 
—  and 
for  yoi 
arshipsi 
Havel 
F.ntrj 
midnigi 
Entri 
college 


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|3,   1956 


TUESDAY.  OCTOBER  23,  1956 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


PAG<    THREE 


at 


ige  to 
lonsQon 

during 
fs  show 

]are  to 
Mzation 
sense 

\o  will 
some 
turns 

rearing 
;  prob- 
ing to 
aim  of 
to  see 
brick 
wait 
(•-white 
em   sit 
from 

'ampus 
le  i\T 
nil  re- 
»s  for 
■iigns. 
placed 
one's 
Ich  are 
laracter 

neat- 
that   s 
issinin^ 

le:  Con- 

manifest 
This 
m  their 
>ose  for 


nt 


It     Vtca 
him- 
5t  week, 
gamble. 

ipting    to 
tie  poUti« 
of  40 
He  was 
of  ex- 
vice  pres- 
iites.   plu« 
lering  hot 
It  any  ad- 


Lck 


irouch  for 
ly  scared, 
nt  on  the 
idience  at 


jt  of  the 
lostile  to- 
with  him 
hers  were 
le  walked 

w  this,  or 
however, 

onceivable 
:on trovers- 


Two  Fires  Reported 
Here  Over  Weekend 

Fire  struck  on  two  occasions  in 
Chapel  Hill  over  the  weekend.  Fire 
Chief  J.  S.  Boone  reported  that  in 
both  cases  the  damage  was  slight. 

The  first  fire  broke  out  at  12:50 
p.m.,  Saturday,  in  the  basement 
of  the  Village  Apts.  on  E.  Franklin 
St.  A  mattress  caught  fire'  in  the 
janitor's  room.  Officials  believe 
the  fire  was  caused  by  a  careless- 
ly dopped   cigarette. 

The  second  occurred  at  183  Jack- 
son Circle  in  Victory  Village  at 
2:08. a.m.  Sunday. 

Robert    Fleming,    the    occupant, 
was    not    at    home.    The    fire    was 
discovered  by  the  people  upstairs, ' 
who  smelled  smoke  and  turned  in 
the  alarm.   It  was  attributed  to  a  j 
short    in    the    refrigerator  system. ; 
There  was  damage  to  the  refriger  ! 
ator  and   wall  and   the  apartment 
was  damaged  somewhat  by  smoke,  i 

LAST  CHANCE! 

fo  mntmr  keader's  Digesf   ' 

$41,000  CONTEST     ! 

It's  fun  to  do — and  you  may  find 
you  know  more  about  human  na- 
ture than  you  think!  Just  list,  in 
order,  the  six  articles  in  October  j 
Reader's  Digest  you  think  readers  ' 
will  like  best.  Couldn't  be  simpler 
— and  you  may  win  $5,000  cash 
for  yourself  plus  $5,000  in  schol- 
arships for  your  college. 

Htive  yoH  sent  in  your  entry  yet? 

Entries  must  be  postmarked  by 
midnight,  Thursday,  October  25. 

Entry  blan\s  available  at  your 
coiiege  bookstore. 


Cosmopolitan  Club  Is  Active 


Gillin  Declares      Herbert  Fred  Made  Full  Instructor  In  Music 


Social  Organization  On  Campus  Test  Shows  No 

Race  Superior 


By  PRiNGLE   PIPKIN 

How  many  people  know  an  Aus- 
trian, a  Dane,  a  German,  or  an 
Egyptian? 

In  the  Cosmopolitan  Club  each 
of  these  nationalities  and  many 
others  are  represented. 

The  Cosmopolitan  Club,  a  social 
organizaton  composed  of  foreign 
students  and  an  almost  equal  num- 
ber of  Americans,  meets  every 
other  Sunday  afternoon  in  the  as- 
embly  room  of  the  library.  The 
next  meeting  will  be  a  week  from 
today.  Refreshments  are  served  and 
the  club  breaks  up  into  small 
groups    and    chats    for    about    45 


mem 


PATRONIZE  YOUR 
•    ADVERTISERS    • 


M-G-M  presents  in  CINEMASCOPE 


THE 
POWER  AND  THE  PRIZE 

starring  and  introducing 


NOW  PLAYINd 


Carolina 


minutes.    Then    one    of   the 

bers   gives   a   program   sometimes 

illustrated  with  slides  of  films. 

The  conversations  and  programs 
at  the  meetings  are  conducted  in 
English.  "The  club  gives  American? 
a  chance  to  meet  delightiul  peo- 
ple from  abroad. 

"We  would  very  much  like  to 
have  more  students,  especially 
Americans,"  says  John  Wible.  pub- 
licity chairman.  The  dues  are  $1.50 
per  semester. 

Dick  Carter  of  Chapel  Hill  is 
president  of  the  organization.  The 
vice-president  is  In  Hyun  Song  of 
Korea.  The  secretary  is  Miss  Rose- 
marie  Fussenegger  of  Austria. 
Miss  Josephine  Verdonner.  trea- 
surer, was  formerly  of  Holland  and 
is  now  a  naturalized  American 
citizen.  Ken  Yang  rff  Formosa  is 
the  program  director  and  an  Aus- 
trian. Liselotte  Rehor,  is  in  charge 
of  refreshments. 

In  connection  with  UN  day  the 
club  is  Sponsoring  a  program  in 
Hillel  House  at  8  p.m.  Wednesday. 
About  30  members  of  the  Cosmo- 
politan Club  will  participate  in  the 
program. 

Last  year  about  40  foreign  stu- 
dents made  a  trip  to  aebulon.  The 
club  co-operated  with  the  YM- 
YWCA  in  making  this  trip  possi- 
ble. Other  off-campus  visits  were 
made  last  year  also. 

There  are  31  countries  ret)resent- 
ed  in  the  organization.  Asia  has 
the  .largest  majority  of  members. 

Before  World  War  n  there  was 
a  Cosmopolitan  Club,  but  with  the 


"Science  has  not  yet  devised  a 
test  capable  of  determining  the 
superiority  of  one  race  over  an- 
other," said  John  Gillin.  professor 
of  Anthropology  at  UNC,  in  a  talk 
before  the  Interracial  Fellowship 
for  the  Schools  Thursday  evening. 

"As  for  equality,  the  only  case 
in  which  science  could  speak  of 
true  equality  between  two  individ- 
uals— of  whatever  race — would  be 
that  of  identical  twins.  .In  view  of 
this,  there  seems  nothing  to  be 
gained  by  starting  from  a  racial 
premise  when  undertaking  social 
reforms. 

"What  is  important."  Prof.  Gil- 
lin continued,  "is  the  individual. 
Society  should  be  concerned  with 
providing  the  opportunity  for  each 
individual,  regardless  of  race,  to 
develop  to  the  limits  of  his  own 
capacity — whatever  it  is." 

The  speaker  said  there  is  no 
proof  of  any  significant  difference 
in  intellectual  capacity  between 
Negroes,  Monguls  and  whites. 

"Successive  waves  of  immigrants 
to  this  countr\"  have  proved,"  said 
Mr.  Gillin,  "that  though  looked 
down  on  as  inferior  when  they 
first  arrive,  given  a  chance,  they 
succeed  in  becoming  a.ssimilated 
into  our  culture — and  contribute 
withdrawal  of  foreign  students, }  richly  to  it.  What  makes  the  Sou- 
Ihe  club  became  inactive.  It  was  \  thern  .situation  unique  and  diffi- 
not  until  1949  that  the  group  was  '  cult  is  that  the  South  is  one  of  the 
reorganized  with  the  aid  of  the  ,  few  places  in  the  world,  so  far  as 
YMCA  and  YWCA.  Although  the  i  I  know,  where  there  is  only  one 
Y  has  a  representative  in  the  club,  culture  with  two  groups  practicing 
the  club  is  independent.  it   in   parallel   fashion." 


By    TOM   BYRD 

Herbert  W.  Fred  hag  been  ap- 
pointed as  the  University's  Direc- 
tor of  the  Bands  and  has  been 
made  a  full-time  instructor. 

He  is  succeding  Dr.  E.  A.  Slo- 
cum,  who  is  retiring  after  23  years 
to  work  with  the  University  Sym- 
phony Orchestra. 

Fred  ha.s  been  with  the  Univer- 
sity as  a  graduate  assistant  since 
1953.  He  is  nationally  known  as 
a  conductor,  composer  and  arrang- 
er. 

His  original  works  published  for 
j  bands  include:  "Fantasy  on  an 
j  American  Air,"  "Spaixico."  "Moods 
I  Interlude"  and  "Cavalier  Over- 
I  ture.  ' 

j      "Skip  To  My  Lou,"  "Poor  Way- 
j  faring    Stranger"    and    "LU"    Liza 


HERBERT  FRED 

.  .  .  full  time  job 


Graduate  Student  In  Math  Wins  Grant  of  $3,000 

Marion  B.  Smith  Jr.,  a  graduate    North  Carolina's  high  schools  and 
student  in  mathematics,  has  been    colleges 
named  winner  of  The  Internation- 
al   Nickel    Company,   Inc.   Fellow- 
ship. 

The  announcement  was  made  by 
the  Institute  of  Natural  Science  at 
UNC. 

Smtih  entered  the  Graduate 
School  at  UNC  in  1952  and  since 
1953  has  held  part-time  teaching 
positions.  He  plans  to  enter  teach- 
ing and  research  after  complet- 
ing his   graduate   work. 

The  International  Nickel  Fellow- 
ship, newly  established  at  UNC, 
provides  a  stipend  of  $3,000  to 
the  recipient.  Under  terms  of  the 
three-year  grant,  an  additional  $1,- 
000  a  year  is  provided  for  "such 
purposes  of  the  University  as  may 
be  determined  by  its  appropriate 
officers." 

The  $1,000  has  been  allotted  to 
the  Institute  of  National  Science 
for  u.se  in  its  program  of  improv- 
ing science  and  math  teaching  in 


Jane"  are  among  his  arrangements 
of  popular  folk  songs. 

Freds  "Finnish  Rhapsody"  was 
released  during  this  past  summer. 
His  arrangement  of  "Pop  Goes  the 
Weasel"  has  been"  accepted  for 
publication  next  year. 

Fred  is  working  on  his  Ph.D.  de- 
gree in  musicology  at  the  present. 
He  received  his  B.M.E.  and  M.M. 
degrees  from  Northwestern  Uni- 
versity. 

A  native  of  Minn.,  Fred  served  as 
Director  and  Commander  of  an 
Air  Force  Band  during  World  War 
n.  He  has  served  as  band  director 
and  instrumental  teacher  in  the 
E\'anston  (111.)  Public  Schools. 
1946-'49. 

Other  positions  include:  Director 
of  B^nds.  Ball  State  Teachers  Col- 
lege, 1S49-53.  and  visiting  profes- 
sor of   music.   University   of   Mis- 


souri, during  the  summers  of  1951 
and  1952.  > 

In  addiii(m  to  't.eaching.  compos- 
mg  and  arranging,  Fred  has  serv- 
ed as  a  guest  comluctor  at  clinics 
and  festival  concerts  in  several 
states. 


Covering  The  University  Campus 


FOR  THE 

BEST 

IN 

IPIZZA 


IT'S 


Harry's 


THANKS 
SO  MUCH! 

Your  response  has  been 
so  great  that  we  are 
snowed  uncfer  with 
work. 

PLEASE  BEAR  WITH  US! 

PETE 
THE  TAILOR 


I  GLAMOUR'S 

\  'GREAT 

I  DATE 

I  CONTEST 

I  You  can  win 

I  ©A  trip  to  New  York 

I  'A  date  with  the 

■  bachelor  of  your*choice 

{  wA  dazzling  outfit 

'  chosen  just  for  you! 

j  It'seasy...  It's  fun! 

I  £nter  today! 

I  Fu3l  details  In 

I  NOVKIMBER 

!  GLAMOUR 

I  No^NT  on  sal* 


ailor^Ebtig 

STARRING  ^^ 

JEFFREY  HUNe  •  MICHAEL  RENNIE  •  WENDY  HILIER 


TODAY 
ONLY 


DAILY    CROSSWORD! 


11 


ACROSS 

I.  Apart 

6  Projecting 
ends  of 
churches 
City 
(Ga.) 

12.  Any  worth- 
less thing 
(slang) 

13.  Affirm 

14.  Pilfered 

15.  Part  of 

"to  be" 
16  Pad 

17.  Symbol  for 
manganese 

18.  Price  of 
passage 

19.  Strikers' 
lament 

22.  Openings 

(anat. ) 
25.  Capital  of 

the  Saar 

28.  Timid 

29.  Man's  name 
( poss. ) 

30.  At  liberty 

32.  Music  note 

33.  Light- 
weight 
boatj 

36.  Exclama- 
tion 

38.  A   quantity 

39.  Cut  of  meat 

II.  Figured 
fabric 

t2  Condition 
of  antique? 

43.  Sailors 
(CoUoq.) 

44  Thick 

DOWN" 

1.  Wine  cup 

2.  P.iver  (Ga  ) 

3.  One  who 
mixes  icing 


4.  French 
illustrator 

5.  Half  an  em 

6.  Oil  of  rose 
petals 

7.  Seirch  for 

8.  Part  of  a 
windov/ 
frame 

9.  Fencing 
sword 

10.  Dispatched 
14.  Most 

sparkling 

ej^es 

17.  State  of 
disorder 

18.  A  white  lie 

20.  Girls  name 

21.  Land 
measure 


22.  Turk- 
ish 
weight 

23.  Res- 
cues 

24.  Handle 
(Rom.) 

26.  Employ 

27.  Calcium 
(sym.) 

30.  A 
fountain 

31.  Lets 

33.  Cro\*'ns 

34.  The 
hog 
plum 
(India) 

35.  Knot  of 
short 
filler 


c 

L 

A 

H 

1 

L 

i>«tcrd>y't  Aii*w'«r 

36.  Fragrant 
wood   ( E.  I. ) 

37.  Wind 
instrument 

40.  Brood  of 
pheasants 

42.  War 

Department 
?m         (abbr.) 


EDUCATION  FRATERNITY 

Phi  Delta  Kappa,  professional  ed- 
ucational  fraternity  -  for  men,  will 
hold  its  regular  monthly   meeting 
tonight  in  LeniOr  Hall  at  6  o'clock,  j 
The  guest  speaker  will  be  Dr.  An- 
drew H.  Horn,  professor  of  Library  I 
Science   and  University   Librarian,  i 
WOMEN'S  liESIOENCE   COUNCIL! 

The  Women's  Residence  Coun-  \ 
cU  will  meet  in  the  Gjail  Room  of  j 
Graham  Memorial  today  at  8  p.m.  ' 
BABY  SITTERS 

Coeds  interested  in  baby  sitting 
have    been    asked    to   contact    the 
"Y"     (telephone     6761)     or     leave  \ 
their   names    and    a    list    of    their 
available  hours  with  the  "Y"  sec-  i 
retary. 
TOWN    GIRLS'    ASSOCIATION        ! 

An  organizational  meeting  of  the  ' 
Town  Girl's  Association  will  be] 
held  tomorow  at  6:45  p.m.  on  the  j 
second  floor  of  the  "Y"  Building. 

Election  of  officers  will  be  con- 
ducted   at    the    meeting.    All    old 
members  and  interested  town  girls 
have  been  urged  to  attend. 
YM-YWCA— PUBLICATION 
INTERVIEWS 

Interviews  for  co-editors  of  the 
YM-YWCA  publication  will  be  held 
Thursda^f  from  4-6  p.m.  in  the 
"Y".  Application  forms  ,are  avail- 
able at  the  "Y."  Those  interested 
who  are  unable  to  be  present  for 

Six  Students  Listed 
On  Police  Blotter 

students  on  the  Chapel  Hill  po- 
lice blotter  from  Oct.  17  to  Oct. 
22  are  as  follows:  James  William 
Woodard,  speeding;  John  Hill,  ob- 
structing traffic;  David  Spencer, 
stop  sign  violation;  Edgar  Higgins, 
speeding;  Robert  Francis  Young, 
disorderly  conduct,  interfering 
with  an  officer;  John  McLaughlin, 
passing  on  a  bilL 


interviews   at  this   time   may    call 
Jeff    Corbin,    8  9114,     or    Carolyn 
Seyffort,  8-9005. 
METHODIST  CHURCH   SUPPER 

Thcrte  wi!f  bo  a' Halloween  Hobo 
Supper     Tarty     at     the     Methodist 
Church  in  the  Wesley  Foundation 
Room  tomorrow  at  6:15  p.m. 
PHYSICS  COLLOQUIUM 

Dr.  Rolfc  E.  Glover  HI,  of  the 
University  of  California,  will  be 
spcjiker  tomorrow  night;,  .at  the 
joint  V'NC — Duke  Physic^  Collo- 
quium. Dr.  Glover's  topic  will  be, 
■"Same  Roce.it  Elxperimcnts  on  Su- 
perconductors."  The  meeting  will 
take  place  at  8  p.m.  on  the  Duke 
campus. 
PHARMACY   SENATE 

The  Pharmacy  Senate  will  meet 
tockiy  at  7  p.m.  in  room  113  of  Ho- 
well Hall. 
WESLEY   CHOIR 

The  Wesley  Choir  will  hold  its 


•    Y  SCHEDULE 

The  following  activities  are 
scheduled  for  the  "Y"  today. 

1:30  p.m.  —  "Y"  Publications 
Board  meeting,  2nd  floor  of  "Y" 
Building,  Miss  Carolyn  Seyffert 
and  Jeff  Corbin,  co-chairmen. 

2  p.m.,  Speakers-forum  Commit- 
tee meering,  "Y"  office,  John 
Brooks  and  Miss  Maria  Hunter,  co- 
chairmen. 

2:30  p.m.  —  Hospital  Service 
Committee  workers  tour  Memorial 
Hospital.  The  group  will  meet  at 
the  information  desk  at  2:13  p.m.. 
Miss  Dottie  Wood  and  Bill  Tucker, 
co-chairmen. 

5  p.m. — YMCA  Community  Ser- 
vice Committee  meeting,  Cabinet 
Room  of  "Y,"  Bill  Tucker,  chair- 
man. 

5:30  p.m.  —  YMCA-YWCA  Ad- 
visory Board  meeting  at  the  home 
of  Mr.  Shotts. 
5» 


regular   rehearsal   today   from   7-8 
p.m.    at   the   University    McUiodist 
Church.  All  interested  persons  have 
been  invited  to  attend. 
WAA  AtfNOUNCECENTS 

The     following     announcements, 

1  have  been  i.ssucd  by  the  -Woman's 

I  Athletic  A.ssociation: 

I      The  games  to  be  played  tonight 

I  in   the  volleyball  tournament  are 

\  as    fullows: 

j     5  p-m.  -7-  Pi  Phi's  vs.  Nurses. 

I      7  p.m.  —  AD  Pi's  vs.  Mclver 

I      8  p.m.  —  Chi  0  vs.  Alpha  Gam 

I  Kalhcrinc  LeGrand,  tennis  tour- 
nament chairman,  announces  that 
all  first  round  matches  must  be 
played  by  Thursday.  Both  singles 
and  doubles  are  posted  in  the  Wo- 
raaa's  Gym. 

The    Modern    Dance    Club    will 
meet  tomorrow  at  4:30  p.m.  in  the 
dance    studio.     Men     and    women 
have  been  invited  to  attend. 
LATE  PERMISSION 

Permission  to  stay  out  until  2 
a.m.    has    been   granted    to   coeds 

I  for  Friday  night  by  the  Women's 
Residence  Council  and  the  Office 
of  the  Dean  of  Women. 
GRADUATE  STUDENTS 
FELLOWSHIP 

The  Graduate  Students  Fellow- 
ship will  hold  a  supper  meeting 
today  at  5:30  p.m.  in  the  upstairs 
dining  room  of  Lenior  Hall. 


Zi ''.  -^^ 


Anthrop6logy  Club  Will 
Meet  Wedr^ssday  Night 

"The  Study  of  Values  in  An- 
thropology" is  the  topic  for  a 
journal  seminar  meeting  of  the 
Anthropology  Club  Wednesday  at 
7:30  p.m.  in  the  staff  lounge,  407 
Alumni   Building. 

Articles  dealing  with  the  semi- 
nar subject  are  on  over-night  re- 
serve in  the  Sociology-Anthropolo- 
gy Library. 


Graduate  Assistant  In  Dramatic  Art  Writes 
Article  On  Theater,  Her  Travels  To  Greece 


For  about  the  price  of  eighty 
good  cigarettes  or  seventy-five 
cents,  a  resident  of  Athens, 
Greece  can  watch  the  perform- 
ance of  what  one  theatre  critic 
from  .UNC  calls  "fresh  and  sin- 
cere interpretatioiT  but  unreal- 
istic drama." 

The  critic  is  Miss  Mareelline 
Krafchick,  who  holds  a  graduate 
assistantship  in  the  Dept.  of  Dra- 
matic Art. 

She  has  recently  written  an 
article  "Theatre  in  Athens  To- 
day" telling  of  her  nine-day  trip 
to  Athens  "to  see  what  is  going 
on  in  their  theatre  world — now." 

The  article  appears  in  the  Oc- 
tober issue  of  the  Educational 
Theatre  Journal  published  by 
the  American  Educational  Thea- 


MARCY  KRAFCHICK». 

.'.traveler,  voriter 


tre  Association.  In  it.  Al'iss  Kr.if- 
chick  described  Athen's  eigiij 
theatres  which  perform  for 
more  than  one  million  people 
who  live  in  and  around  the  city. 
Each  theatre  gives  11  perform- 
ances every   week. 

Miss  Krafchick  spent  a  year 
of  study  in  the  English  and 
Drama  Dept.  at  Bristol  Univers- 
ity, England,  on  a  Fulbright 
Scholarship.  She  is  publicity  di- 
rector of  The  Carolina  Playmak- 
crs  and  is  editor  of  The  Carolina 
Quarterly,  student  literary  mag- 
azine. 

According  to  Miss  Krafchick. 
the  modern  Greek  theatre 
.•stresses  drama  in  a  mature  and 
independent!  way  but  still  resem- 
ble* the  Frjench  theatre  in  man- 
ner of  prfSf^UUon  and  acting. 


V  You  see  more 
of  Autumn's  beauty 
,  from  a 

Trailwavs  Bus 


UNl^lKE'motorists,"  you 
don't  have  to  keep  your  eyes 
glued  to  the  road  and  passing 
traffic.  You're  free  to  drink  in 
the  flaming  colors  that  flank 
the  highways  mile  after  mile. 
You  can  sit  back  without  a 
care  in  the  latest  type  con- 
tour-shaped seat  and  view 
the  scenery  through  your  big 
picture  window. 

311    W.    FRANKLIN    ST.    PHONE   4281 

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Or  call  your  iMorcsf  TraHwayi  Ag«ncy/ 


FROM  CHAPEL  H!LL  to  1-way 

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2  departures,  1   without  change 

•  MEMPHIS  $15.90 

6  trips,  3  without  change 

•  WILMINGTON  ^  $  4.25 

2  trips,  direct  route,  plus  eddl  service 

•  RALEIGH  $     .85 

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-j^fi;^'^!>;iuijiiiffg|i^%?i^(j{%^^i/^i^  -i '  '-^mm  'rr:mktm}mm:i\ 


f»Aal  POUR 


'    ?  \i 


THE  DAILY  TAft  HEEL 


x:^\'. 


TUESDAY,  OCTOBER  23,  1956 


Tar  Heels,  Deacs  Have  Light  Workouts 


After  Terps,  The  Road  Leads  Up 

Some  21,000  deliriously  happy  fans  sat  in  Kenan  Stadium  Sat- 
urday and  watched  the  impossible  happen.  Carolina  finally  won  a 
football  game  after  foiu*  straight  lickings,  and  they  did  it  in  almost 
unbelievable  fashion,  stomping  the  big  but  bewildered  Maryland  Terps, 
34-6. 

It  was  an  entirely  different  T»r  Heel  team  on  the  field  Sat- 
urday front  the  one  that  lest  to  Georgia  by  a  one  sided  margin  on 
the  Saturday  before.  This  team  was  a  fighting  team,  a  high  spirited 
■nrtgation  with  an  intense  will  to  win.  The  same  boys  were  on 
the  field,  with  •  few  notable  exceptions,  but  the  attitude  was  chang- 
ed drastically.  This  made  the  difference. 

For  Coach  Jim  Tatum,  nothing  could  have  been  more  satisfying 
than  to  see  his  down  trodden  squad -rise  up  and  smash  Maryland,  the 
team  he  built  into  a  national  powerhouse.  This  year's  Terp  team  was 
assembled  by  Tatum.  and  turned  over  to  Tommy  Mont  when  the  cur- 
rent Tar  Heel  coach  left  Maryland.  Mont,  who  probably  thought  he 
had  a  soft  touch  before  the  season  started,  has  had  just  about  every 
unlucky  break  imaginable  and  is  one  up  and  four  down  at  the  season  s 
halfway  pomt. 

TAJt  HEELS  ON  UPGRADE 

Tliii*  is.tKe  identicfd  mark  that  has  been  posted  by  the  Tar  Heels 
so-'far.  but  there  is  a  distinct  difference.  Carolina  is  apparently  on 
the  upgrade  judging  from  Saturday's  score,  while  the  Terps  seem  des 
tilted  fOr  a  long  dr>-  spell  jrhile  the  new  regime  gets  adjusted  to  the 
old 'master's  abseiv^e.     -    ' 

Tetum  said  before  «the  gante  last  week  that  this  was  one  that 
he  wras  yoing  to  win  somehow.  And  win  it  he  did.  Several  factors 
played  a  vital  role.  The  big  one,  of  course,  was  the  vastly  improved 
morale.  Another  was  the  insertion  of  some  new  blood  Into  the  ttart- 
ing  lineup.  And  a  third  was  some  shrewd  football  strategy  on  the 
part  of  the  Tar  Heel  braintrust  that  had  the  Terps  going  in  circles. 

Now  that  the  Tar  Heels  have  apparently  found  themselves,  what 
lies  ahead  for  the  remainder  of  the  season?  First  and  foremost  is 
the  Wake  Forest  game  Saturday  here  in  Kenan.  Then  come  Tennessee, 
Virginia.  Notre  Dame  and  Duke  in  rapid  succession. 

TAR  HEELS  FAVORED  IN  TWO 

Carolina  will  be  slightly  favored  over  both  Wake  Forest  and 
Virginia,  while  Tennessee.  Notre  Dame  and  Duke  all  rate  the  nod 
over  the  locals.  But  from  performances  of  last  week,  victories  over 
Nptre  I^me  and  Duk^.are  definitely  within  the  realm  of  possibility. 
,  Ca^.the  Tar  |Ieeis.k^^  it  up?  only  time  will  tell.  They've  shown 
they  hay^  .wUat  it,, takes,  whep,  they.  w*uit  to  play  football;  all  that 
remains  is  to  go  out  and  win!  We  believe  the'll  do  just  that. 

Chaff  From  Here  And  There 

Maryland  Coach  Timmy  Mont  was  hopping  mad  over  the  of- 
ficials "muff'  on  Carolina's  first ,  scoring  play.  The  Terp  head  mentor 
claimed  the  official's  whistle  had  already  blown  when  Dave  Reed 
threw  the  touchdown  i  pais  4iat  iiWmy 'ionBs  jifdked  out  of  the  air. 
"They  just  didn't  have  the  guts  to  call  it  back,"  he  said. 

Sophomore  tackle  Den  Redding  was  the  unsung  hero  of  the 
win  ewer  Maryland.  Redding,  starting  his  first  varsity  contest,  was 
all  oyer  the  field  nuking  tackief  throughout  the  game. 

Coach  Dale  Ranson's  previously .  undefeated  cross-country  squad 
was  knocked  out  of  the  ACC  title  Saturday  when  Maryland  whipped 
them,  26-37.  The  champitfhship  is  decided  on  a  dual  meet  basis,  and 
there's  nobody  from  here  on  out  to  stand  in  the  Terps  way. 

Another  basketball  mag  is  ho^  off  the  press,  and  in  this  one, 
Carolina  is  rated  fourth  behind  Louisville,  Kansas  and  Dayton  re- 
spectively. The  Tar  Heels  were  originally  scheduled  to  tangle  with 
the  Cardinals  from  Louisville,  but  the  deal  fell  through. 

There's  still  one  undefeated  team  left  on  campus.  The  soccer 
team  has  won  three  straight,  and  .seems  headed"  for  a  showdown 
battle  with  Maryland. 


Morale  Is 
Raised  In 
UNC  Carnp 

Light  work  was  the  order  of  tiv* 
day  as  North  Carolina's  Tar  Heels 
began  a  week's  practice  wi^h  a. 
win  behind  them  for  the  first  time , 
this  fall.  -    >  .       .  -I 

Morale  was  high  as  the  Tar 
Heels.  34-6  victors  over  Maryland 
Saturday,  began  preparations  for 
the  battle  with  Wake  Forest  here 
Saturday,  the  last  home  showing 
for  UNC  before  the  finale  with 
Duke  Nov.  24. 

A  first  team  composed  of  the 
same  players  who  started  Satur- 
day's game  worked  as  a  unit  to- 
day. The  backfield  had  Dave  Reed 
at  quarter,  Ed  Sutton  and  Larry 
McMuIlen  at  halves  and  Wally 
Vale  at  full.  Up  front,  Charlie 
Robinson  and  Buddy  Payne  were 
at  ends,  Don  Redding  and  Leo 
Russavage  at  tackles.  Jim  Jones 
and  Don  Kemper  at  guards  and 
Ron  Koes  at  center.  Coach  Jim 
Tatum  praised  their  play  in  the 
Maryland  game. 


Ranson  Blasts  Runners 
After  Maryland  Defeat 


MURALS 


Yesterday,    like    Friday,    all    in- 
tramural football  action  Y;a^s  can- 

The  cross  country  team  held  a,  law,  saying.  "From  now  on,  we're !  celed  because  of  rain  '.^o^ked 
business  meeting  at  practice  yes-  j  running  as  a  team."  He  pointed  j  grounds.  As  a  result,  |dl  these 
ferday.    The    topic    of    discussion  \  out    that    a    goed    cross    country   ^^^^^  ^.jj  j^^  ^^^^^.^^^  ^^^  ne^t 

vras   Saturday's  loss  to   Maryland,    team  does  not  result  from  individ- 1        

The  team's  effort  was  described 
by  Coach  Dale  Ranson  as  resem- 
bling "an  old  ladies'  convention." 

Coach    Hanson    laid    down    the 


Bianey  Kickoff  Return 
Is  ACC  Record  Breaker 

GREENSBORO,  Oct.  23— (;Pt— 
When  halfback  Bernie  Bianey  of 
Duke  gathered  in  the  opening 
kickoff  at  Norfolk.  Va..  Saturday 
against  Pitt  and  ran  it  back  97 
yards  for  a  touchdown,  he  did 
more  than  give  the  Blue  Devils  a 
one-touchdown  lead. 

The  runback,  according  to  ACC 
Service  Bureau  records,  is  the 
longest  scoring  kickoff  return  in 
the  young  history  of  the  Atlantic 
Coast  Conference. 


George  Marinkov  of  North  Car- 
oling State  held  the  record  before 
The  Tar  Heels  whipped  feirough  j  Blaney's    journey,    having    set     it 
loosening  up  drills  and  then  went    with  a  93-yard  return  against  Vir- 

behind  the  canvas  for  secret  work    ginia  Tech  in  1954.   ^^ 

on  offense  and  defense.  ^^^_^^^__^^^^^^^^__^__^ 

Wake  Forest      | 
Wary  Of  UNC    \ 

/  \ 

WINSTON-SALEM.  Oct.  22-{JP) 
— Wake  Forest  players  who  saw 
action  in  the  14-14  tie  with  Flor-  | 
ida  State  Saturday  participated  In  ■ 
a  short  workout  today  wearing  on-  j 
ly  sweat  clothes,  but  Coach  Paul  | 
Amen  promised  plenty  of  drilling) 
this  week  before  the  ^ame  at  Cha-  \ 
pel  Hill.  'I 

Assistant  Coach  Ken  Wable.  who  I 
scouted  the  Carolina  •  Maryland 
game,  gave  the  Deacons  an  im-  [ 
pressive  report  on  the  Tar  Heels.! 
"If  we  play  our  best  and  Carolina  j 
its  best.  It  should  be  a  topnotch 
game."  he  said. 

Amen  said  he  thought  the  Tar 
Heels  caught  fire  in  the  Maryland  j 
trilimph.  "It  should  give  them  the  | 
momentum   to   be   tough  the  rest  i 
of  the  year,"  he  added. 


team  does  not  result  from  mdivid  ,        , ,        .     .  , 

.       _r  V  *       ♦u^     r-^™,  + weeks  schedule 

ual  performance  but  rather  from' 

teamwork.  • 

Ranson  said  that  in  the  future 
the  team  will  run  as  he  directs. 
He  left  no  doubts  as  to  his  pur- 
pose when  he  concluded,- '/We're 
going  to  win  the  conference 
meet." 

Maryland's  victory  in  Saturday's 
meet  virtually  sews  up  the  con- 1 
frence  championship  for  the  Terpw. ! 
Marjiand  placed  its  first  five  run- 
ners in  the  first  nine,  while  Tar 
Heel  scorers  finished  as  far  back 
as  fourteenth. 

Ranson  said  that  in  the  future, 
the  front  runners  will  be  used  to 
pace  the  other  squad  members  in 
order  to  bring  them  up  in  the 
field.  By  doing  this  the  overall 
score  w\\\  improve  and  results  will 
be  better. 

The  next  meet  for  the  harriers 
will  be  again.st  State,  here  Wed- 
nesday. This  will  mark  the  sec- 
ond engagement  between  the  two 
squads.  Carolina  won  the  first 
30-33. 


TOMORROWS   SCHEDULE: 

4:00— field-1,  Delta  ^ig  jvji  p^E; 
field-2,  Phi  Delt  vs  KA;  field-3, 
Beta  vs  SAH;  field-4,  TEIP  vs  Kap- 
pa Sig;  field-5,  Phi  Gam  vs  Lamb- 
da Chi. 

5:00— field-1,  SPE  vs  Phi  Delt 
(w);  field-2,  Delta  Sig  vs  Zeta  t'si; 
field-3.  Phi  Gam  vs  DKE  (w); 
field-4,  Vic  Village  vs  Everett-2; 
field-5,    Mangum-1    vs    Law   Sch-2. 


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Long  sleeve,    ^12^° 


Siztt:  S,  M,  L,  XL 


|-fi|rt*rj.t   n 


Julian' 


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UNBEATEN  AFTER  3  STARTS 


Booters  Loom  As 
Threat  To  Terps 


By   JIM   PURKS 

With  four  weeks  remaining  in 
the  season,  Coach  Marvin  Allen's 
varsity  soccer  team  looms  as  a 
definite  threat  to  take  the  con- 
fecence  title  away  from  Maryland. 

The  team  has  won  all  three  of 
its  games  without  experiencing  too 
much  difficulty.  The  hardest  con- 
test was  with  a  spirited  Bavidson 
squad  which  held  the  Tar  Heels 
scoreless  until  the  second  half  be- 
fore losing,  2-0. 

Carolina's  other  two  victims 
were  Lynchburg  and  Washington 
and  Lee  who  bowed  before  the 
team's  scoring  power,  5-0  and  4-1, 
respectively. 

The  squad  ran  through  a  bri^k 
scrimmage  with  the  freshman  soc- 
cer team  yesterday  and  won;  6-2. 
The  two  teams  have  met  three 
tin^AK  this -year,,  wit}i  fjhe  .varsity 
wiD^ing  4ll  three  gaineis.   . 

6ae  of  the  principal  reasons  fat' 
Carolina's  great  success  so  far  this 
year  is  a  top  first  string  and  a 
strong  bench  in  reserve.  The  team 
is  a  man  deep  in  almost  every  po- 
sition. 


Several  sophomores  from  last 
year's  freshman  team  have  broken 
into  the  starting  lineup.  Dave  Cork- 
ey,  playing  at  center  fullback,  is 
one  of  the  main  reasons  the  de- 
fense has  allowed  only  one  goal 
in  three  games.  Bob  Borden,  a 
workhorse  at  left  halfback,  has 
been  playing  excellent  ball  for 
Coach  Allen.  At  right  inside,  soph- 
omore Coleman  Barks  is  presently 
leading  the  team  in  scoring. 

The  roughest  part  of  the  season 
u  vet  to  come,  however.  The  team 
will  face  its  initial  conference  test 
of  the  season  tomorow  against  a 
tough  N.  C.  State  team  on  Fetzer 
Field  at  3  p.m. 


Milton's 
Shirt  Story 

Whether  you  buy  a 
shirt  because  your  laun- 
dry is  late  or  because 
you  want  to  add  spice 
to  an  ensemble,  Mil- 
ton's unlimited  selec- 
tions can  quickly  solve 
your  problem.  We  have 
1  5  0  assortments  in 
shirts  in  only  three  col- 
lar styles— 2  in  the  Eng- 
lish tab  and  one  in  the 
ivy  button-dov^^n.  Plen- 
ty of  36"  sleeve  lengths 
available  in  even  our 
casual  shirts,  in  neck 
sizes  13y2  to  17  —  we 
literally  have  every- 
thing from  soup  to  nuts. 

ClottjinB  Cupboarb 


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Rod  And  Gun 

All  students  who  are  interested 
in  participating  in  the   co-recrea- 1 
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held  Nov.  1 .  are  urged  to  fill  out  j 
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The  entry  blanks  phis  complete 
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THE 


UNIVERSITY  RESTAURANT 

^  "Chapd  Hill's  Finest" 


It's  German  Time  Again 


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CORNELL 

Tht  sickness  has  hit  th»re.  St* 
page  2. 


VOL.   LVII     NO.   29 


Complete  (/P)   Wire  Service 


CHAPEL   HILL,  NORTH  CAROLINA,  WEDNESDAY,  OCTOBER  24,   1956 


Offices   in   Graliam   Memorial 


FOUR   PAGES   THIS    ISSUE 


Domino, 
May  Play 
For  Dance 


SAM   DONAHUE 

.  and  May  .^deman 


FATS   DOMINO 

.  .  .  rock  u'  roller 


The  German  Club  will  sponsor 
its  fall  concert  and  formal  dance 
Friday  with  the  bands  of  Fats  Do- 
mino and  Billy  May  providing  the 
music. 

This  is  the  first  time  a  rock  and 
roll  band  has  played  for  Germans. 
German      Club      Vice      Prcsidtnt 

— — ^  George   Ragsdale  said  the  conceit 

j  will  be  held  from  3  to  5:30  p.m. 

Mrttf4   O/   Cr\fi^r%      Veteran    UNC   Employee     '"   Memorial  Hail.  The  dance  will 
fFIUlU    \^l    \^VJn%Jit       _      .  .    ,  ."^      '     .    1  be  from  9  p.m.  to  1  a.m.  in  Wool- 

len   Gymnasium.    Both    orchestras 
will  play  at  the  concert  ar.J  dance. 
A  photographer  will  be  on  hand 
to    malte    pictures    at    the    dance, ' 
according  to  Ragsdale.  ' 

Coed  closing  hours  Friday  night  ' 
will  be  2  a.m.  Freshmen  and  soph- , 
ornores  Will   be  able  to  keep  cars 
on  campus  this  weekend. 


Retires  At  End  Of  Month 


Contest  Open 

The  contest  to  choose  the  1957 
Maid  of  Cotton  is  now  officially 
open. 

To  be  eligible  for  this  contest, 
a  girl  must  be  between  the  ages 
of  19  and  25.  at  least  5"  5"  tall 
and  must  never  have  been  mar- 
ried. •  She  also  must  have  been 
bom  in  one  of  the  18  cotton-pro- 
ducing states. 

In  1957,  the  Maid  of  Cotton  will 
travel  more  than  30,000  miles  in 
a  coast-to-coast  tour  of  the  United 
States. 

Anyone  interested  in  entering 
this  contest  has  Ixjen  asked  to  con- 
tact Student  Body  President  Bob 
Young  before  Nov.  15. 


Veteran  UNC  employe.  Miss 
Ruby  Ross,  will  retire  the  last  of 
this   month   after   nearly  30  years 

I  of  service. 

j  Miss  Ross  first  went  to  work 
for  the  University  in  1927  in  the 
School    of   Law.    After   a   year   in 

I  this    position   she   worked   for   the 

'  town  of  Chapel  Hill  for  a  short 
time  as  city  clerk. 

She  returned  to  the  University 
in  1929  as  secretary  to  the  dean 
of  the  School  of  Engineering, 
which  since  has  moved  to  Stafb 
College  in  Raleigh.  For  the  past 
20  years  Miss  Ross  has  been  work- 
ing with  the  University  School  of 
Public  Health.  At  present  she  is 
registrar  of  the  school. 


Merchant  " 
Parking  Not 
Problem  Now 


Mock  Election 
To  Be  Sfaged 

NextWeekO 

.-■  ",*    ■  .- 

UNC  students  will  get  a  chance 
to  vote  for  Eisenhower  or  Steven- 
son regardless  of  their  age  in  a 
special  student  mock  election  to  be 
Jield  Nov.  1. 

The  election  w^ill  be  sponsored 
by  the  Polls  Committee  of  GMAB, 
John  Brooks,  committee  co-chair- 
man,   announced    today. 

Eisenhower  and  Stevenson  with 
their  vice  -  presidential  running 
mates  will  appear  on  a  printed  bal- 
lot along  with  the  Democratic  and 
Republican  candidates  for  Gover- 
nor and  U.  S.  Senator  from  North 
Carolina. 

Luther  Hodges  (D)  and  Kyle 
Hayes  (R)  are  the  nominees  for 
Governor,  and  Sam  Ervin  (D)  and 
Joel  Johnson  (R)  for  U.  S.  Sena- 
tor. 

AH  UNC  students  are  eligible 
to  vote.  Balloting  will  take  place 
during  hours  to  be  announced  nex»  I 
week.  Polls  attended  by  GMAB; 
members  will  be  set  up  in  Gerrard 
Hall.  To  prevent  voting  more  than 
once,  student  names  will  be  check- 
ed off  directory  rolls. 

Brooks  said  he  hoped  both 
Young  Democrats  and  Young  Re- 
publicans would  staee  lively  cam 
paigns  for  their  candidates  in  an 
effort  to  promote  the  best  possible 
student  participation  in  the  elec- 
tion. 

In  a  Polls  Committee  postcard 
vote  held  last  spring,  Stevenson 
defeated  E.stes  Kefauver  and  NY 
Governor  Averell  Harriman  fo. 
the  Democratic  nomination,  \j'hile 
Eisenhower  was  the  overwHehning 
choice  for  the  GOP  nomination. 

The  polls  showed  that  57  per 
cent  of  the  student  body  consid 
ers  itself  Democratic:  22  per  cen* 
call  themselves  Independents;  and 
21  per  cent  classify  themselves  a.*^ 
Republicans. 

A  1952  campus-wide  election  re 
suited  in  a  Stevenson  victor; 
among  both  students  and  faculty. 


AFROTC  Liaison  Team 
To  Visit  UNC  Campus 

An  Air  Force  ROTC  liaison 
team  will  make  its  first  visit  of 
the  school  year  to  the  UNC  cam- 
pus  tomorrow   and  Thursday. 

Members  of  Che  te«in  ar*  Col. 
A.  C.  McDonald  and  Lt.  Col.  S. , 
K.  I^uler  or  liieadquarters  AF- 
ROTC.  Montgomery,   Ala. 

They  will  ob.serve  the  operation 
of  Detachment  590  for  two  days 
before  making  their  report  to 
headquarter*^  ;  ■        >:r    r   ••")!•" 

Liaison  teams  miuntain  working 
contact  between  the  commandant 
of  AFROTC  and  the  188  detach- 
ments scattered  throughout  the 
nation.  Their  main  fvmction  is  to 
observe  and  report,  but  occasion- 
ally they  offer  suggestions  to  im- 
prove efficiency  in  the  unit. 

While  they  are  on  campus  Col. 
McDonald  and  Col.  Lauler  will  be 
guests  of  Col.  George  J.  Smith, 
professor  of  Air  Sciences  at  the 
University  and  commander  of  De- 
tachment 590  AFROTC. 

Board  Of  Aldermen  Not 
To  Meet  Until  Nov.  10 

The  Chape!  Hill  Board  of  Alder 
men  will  not  pass  final  decree  on 
the  Columbia  St.  parking  restric- 
tion until  Nov.  10,  contrary  to  a 
story  in  yesterday's  Daily  Tar 
Heel. 

The  erroneous  statement,  to  the 
effect  that  aldermen  would  pass 
final  verdict  this  Monday  night, 
was  the  result  of  a  "misunder- 
standing" between  President  Bob 
Young  and  Traffic  Commission 
Chairman  Wilburn  Davis. 

Young  said  he  thought  the  meet- 


Kerr  Is  UP 
Choice  For 
Jr,  President 

The  University  Party  last  night 
nominated  John  Kerr  by  acclama- 
tion to  run  for  the  presidency  of 
the  junior  class. 

.\bout  150  members  of  the  par- 
ty met  in  Graham  Memorial  to 
nominate  Kerr  and  other  party 
members  to  run  in  the  election 
Nov.   13. 

George  Ragsdale  and  Miss  Jack- 
ie Haitbcoek  were  nomttnttef!  for- 
vice  president  and  secretary  of 
the  junior  class,  r'jspectively, 
while  Bill  Deal  was  chosen  by  ac- 
clamation to  run  for  junior  class 
treasurer  on    the    UP   ticket. 

Running  for  junior  class  social 
chairman   will   be   Dot   Pressly. 

Nominated  for  .seats  in  Dorm 
Mei.  districts  were: 

Dorm  Men  I — for  one  esat:  Jim 
Beatty,  by  acclamation. 

Dorm  Men  II — for  four  seats: 
Jim  Alford,  Mike  Weaver,  Peter 
Brooke  and  Dave  Fox. 

Dorm  .Men  111 — two  seats:  Larry 
McMullen,  by  acclamation,  with 
other  nominations  to  be  made  next 
week. 

Dorm  Men  FV— for  one  .seat: 
John  Mintor. 

Dorm  Men  V — for  two  seats. 
Bill  Baun  and  Ken  Hall,  by  accla- 
mation. 

All  dorm  men's  seats  are  for 
one  year. 

•Mi.sses  Kitty  Corr  and  Arnold 
Garvin  were  nominated  to  run  on 
the  UP  ticket  for  the  two  two-year 
seats  in  Dorm  Women's  District. 

Misses  Margaret  (Tog)  Saunders 
and  Julia  Ann  Crater  were  nom- 
inated to  seek  the  two  six-months 
seats  in  Dorm  Women's  di.strict. 

ing  was  to  be  held  Monday  night, 
while  Davis  stated     the     meeting 
wouldn't  come  off  until  .Nov.   10. 
Davis  proved  corrrect. 


Participants  In  UN  Day  Activities 

Cosmopolitan  Club  members  who  will  participate  in  today's  United  Nations  Day  activities  are  front 
row,  left  to  right:  Purobi  Bose,  India;  Kenny  Yang,  Formosa;  and  Sipra  Bose,  India.  Back  row,  left 
to  right,  Kyaw  Myint  Burma;  Piyasena  Ganewatte,  C  eyion;  Tetsuo  Tanaka,  Japan;  Dr.  Krisna  Naraini, 
India;    Asghar    AM,    Pakistan;    Inez    Belleza,    Phllippi  ,es;   and  Ana  Marie  Ortiz,  Costa   Rica. 

UN  Day  Observed  Today 
With  Variety  Of  Events 


By  MARY  ALYS  VOORHEES 

Today  is  United  .Nations  Day. 

.And  before  the  day'.s  end  Caro- 
lina students  will  have  partici 
pated  in  a  large  variety  of  events. 

Jointly  spmisored  by  the  YM 
YWCA,  student  government  and 
.\P0  service  fraternity,  events  to- 
day highlight  UN  week,  which  's 
being  observed  here  in  conjunc-^ 
tion  with  .milar  celebrations 
throuKhout  the  world. 

Highlighting  the  day'.s  activities 
W.iU  be  tiM'UN  Day  Fa 
Folk  Festival  at  8  p.m.  in  Hillel 
House,  at  which  refreshments 
v.ill  be  served  and  students  will 
narticipale  in  folk  dancing  and 
the  singing  of  folk  tunes. 

The  sponsors  have  invited  all 
UNC  students  to  attend. 

Other  events  included  in  the 
day's  schedule  are 
gram,  a  continuous  movie  about 
the  UN,  a  tree  planting  ceremony 
v,'iih  foreign  students  dressed  in 
their  native  attire,  and  an  inter- 
national dinner  at  Lenoir  Hall. 


Starting  off  todays  itinerary, 
WCHL's  Ty  Boyd  will  interview 
Dr.  Riath  Haider  of  the  School  of 
Public  Health  of  Iraq  during 
'Breakfast  with  Boyd." 

At  the  Y  Building,  '"Defense  ol 
the  Peace,"  a  continuous  movie 
put  Out  by  UM  Films,  will  be 
shown,  describing  overall  organi- 
talipns  and  portions  of  various 
branches  of  the  UN. 

A  tree-planting  ceremony  at  the 
Chapel  Hill  Elementary  school  on 
St.  ^i!T  be  staged  at  3 
p.m.  Foreign  students  are  a.»;ked 
to  attend  the  rites  in  their  native 
costumes. 

Over  at  Lenoir  Hall  from  5  to  7 
p.m.,  students  can  take  a  trip 
around  the  world  for  40c. 

For  the  celebi'ation,  Lenoir  will 


Fnkadeller— similar  to  meatballs 
— from  its  native  Denmark.  Vege- 
tables, which  will  be  included  on 
the  meal,  are  arrez — a  form  of 
rice — a  Nicaraugan  dish,  and 
humita — corn,  cheese  and  toma- 
toes— from  Spain. 

Tomorrow  the  library  will  have 
a  display  in  one  of  the  exhibition 
cases  in  the  main  lobby.  There 
will  be  Oiaterial  published  by  the 
UN,  models  of  UN  Headquarters 
and  some  L^N  stamps  featured 

I  Mis«^  Polly.  Clarenbachj  vice 
oresident  of  the  YW  and  chairman 
of    the    Y    .study    group    on    inter- 

;  national   relations,   is   chairman   of 

'  the   UN   Day   committee. 

Others  working  on  the  variou."^ 
activities  of  the  day  are  John  Rie- 

I  bel  and  Mi.ss  Anne  Queen  of  th«? 
YM-YW    staff:     Miss    Jackie    Aid- 


By   GARY    NICHOLS 

Parking  is  no  longer  a  problem 
in  downtown  Chapel  Hill,  accord- 
ing to  a  local  merchant  speaking 
for  the  Chapel  Hill  Parking  Assn. 
The  Chapel  Hill  Parking  Assn.  de- 
cided Monday  night  to  extend  the 
free  parking  in  their  customer  lot 
to  two  hours.  There  will  be  a 
charge  of  25c  an  hour  after  the 
two  hour  period,  with  a  maximum 
I  charge  of  $1  a  day. 
I  The  lot  is  located  on  the  corner 
'  of  E.  Rosemary  St.  and  N.  Colum- 
I  bia  St.,  diagonally  across  from  the 
j  police  station.  It  consists  of  84 
parking  spaces  and  a  small  attend- 
ant booth. 

In  order  to  take  advantage  of 
the  two  hour  free  parking  provi- 
sion a  customer  merely  takes  a 
ticket,  which  he  is  given  by  the 
attendant,  and  has  it  stamped  by 
one  of  the  members  of  the  asso 
ciation. 

There  has  always  been  adequate 


far  less  than  could  be  using  it. 

Several  members  of  the  associa- 
tion have  also  made  available  a 
storage  lot  on  which  parking 
spaces  may  be  rented  at  a  rate  of 
S5  a  month.  .Arrangements  for  tlie 
use  of  this  150-snace  lot  can  be 
made  with  Huggins  of  Huggins 
Hardware,  or  Harvey  Bennett  of 
Bennett  &  Blocksidge. 

The  Chapel  Hill  Parking  Assn. 
is  a  non-profit  organization  con- 
sisting of  the  following  members: 
Andrews  -  Henninger.  Bank  of 
Chapel  Hill.  Bennett  &  Blocksidge, 
Berman's  Department  Store,  Caro- 
lina Barber  Shop.  Carolina  Sport 
Shop,  Chapel  Hill  Weekly,  College 
Cafe,  Danziger's.  Electric  Con- 
struction Co,  Eubanks  Drug  Co., 
Foister's  Camera  Store,  Foushee- 
Olsen  Realty  Co.,  Huggin.s  Hard- 
•vare,  Dr.  Wiliam  T.  Kohn,  Led- 
better-Pickard,  N.  C.  Cafeteria, 
J.  C.  Rob'oin's,  Rose's.  Service  In- 
surance &  Realty,  Shield's  Food 
Store,  Sloan   Drug  Co..  Smith-Pre- 


space    in     this    lot    since    it    was  vost  Cleaners,  Sutton's  Drug  Store, 

opened  in  midsummer.  An  average  The  Little  Shop,  Town  &  Campus, 

of  about  135  cars  a  day  have  been  University    Florist,     University 

parking    there.    According    to    Vic  Service   Plants   and   Wentworth   &. 

Huggins,    local    merchant,    this    's  Sloan. 


CwHoits  soccer  squad  irutpt-ct- 
ing  copperhead  brought  in  by 
cross  cmmtry  team. 


a    radio    pro-  \  be    brightly    decorated    with    flags    ridge,    student   government    repre- 


from  all  countries  represented  in 
the  UN,  and  the  special  menu  will 
feature  dishes  from  other  lands. 

"fhe  main  course  of  the  dinner, 
which    is    priced    at    40c,    will    be 


tentative;  P.  H.  Craig  and  Bob 
Daw.son,  Y  members:  and  Georg,- 
Biice,  Bill  Jones.  Jim  Chamblee 
ind  Bill  Johnson  of  the  APO  serv- 
ice fraternity. 


Dr.  Pierpont  Bauded 
For  Service  To  UNC 


Pharmacy  Awards  Competition  Young  Asks 
Open  To  UNC  Pharmacy  Grads,  Observance 

Of  UN  Day 


IN  THE  INFIRMARY 


Students  in  the  infirmary  are: 
Alma  Godsey,  Mary  Tomlln, 
Catherine  Huff,  Helen  Dickson, 
Shirley  Coggins  Carolyn  Roberts, 
Sally  Simpson,  George  Stavnit- 
ski,  Stephen  Keutz,  Giles  Nich- 
olson, Frank  Greer,  Julius  Han- 
ner,  Claude  Moore  Jr.,  Charles 
Shoe,  Peyton  Hawes,  Tawfik 
Hiffan,  Leonard  Carpenter,  Wil- 
liam Heck,  James  Epps  III,  isac 
Merrill,  Douglas  Young,  George 
McNwil,  John  Johnson,  Nancy 
Noble,  Joel  Caldwell,  William 
Sherrill,  Gary  Re«d,  William 
Willis  Jr. 


By   JIM   PURKS 

Students  who  knew  him,  co- 
v/orkers,  and  top  administrative 
officials  were  greatly  saddened 
by  the  loss  of  Dr.  Andrew  W. 
Pierpont  of  the  School  of  Bus- 
iness   Administrat'on. 

"More  than  with  others,  you 
felt  like  he  really  wanted  you 
to  get  through,"  a  business  ma- 
jor commented,  "he  was  just  like 
a  father..  I  don't  think  a  single 
person  was  held  in  higher  regard 
and  esteem  by  more  people 
than  he,"  the  student  added. 

The  feelings  expressed  by 
that  one  business  major  concern- 
ing Dr.  Pierpyont  typify  the  gen- 
eral feeling  held  by  all  the  stu- 
dents who  knew  him.  Dr.  Pier- 
pont was  never  too  busy  to  help 
a  striving  student  with  his  work 
and  problems  and  was  the  in- 
spiration behind  many  a  stu- 
dent's  acomplishments. 

"He  was  very  well  liked  by 
his  students  and  co-workers,"  a 


member  of  the  School  of  Busi- 
ness Administration  commented. 
"He  had  a  very  diplomatic  way 
of  working  with  everyone.  I 
never  saw  him  ruffled,"  he  add- 
ed". "We'll  miss  him  greatly." 

"I  thought  very  well  of  him," 
William  Friday,  President  of 
the  Consolidated  University  com- 
mented, "Dr.  Pierpont  was  a 
very  splendid  man.  We  have  lost 
a  very  valuable  teacher  and  ad- 
ministrator."  Friday  added. 

Dr.  Pierpont  died  Saturday 
afternoon  in  Memorial  Hospital. 
He  was  rushed  to  the  hospital 
after  complaining  of  chest  pains 
during  the  second  quarter  of  the 
Carolina-Maryland  game.  He  died 
a  few  minutes  later  in  the  emer- 
gency roonk. 

Dr.  Pierpont  had  been  in 
Chapel  Hill  since  the  early  40's 
and  v/as  only  50  years  of  age  at 
the  time  of  his  death.  He  is  sur- 
vived by  Mrs.  Pierpont.  and  one 
daughter,  Mrs.  James  C.  Robin- 
son Jr.  of  Greenville. 


Senior  and  graduate  pharmacx 
students  at  Carolina  are  eligible 
to  take  part  in  this  year's  nation 
wide  Lunsford  Richardson  Pliarm- 
acy  Awards  competition.  E.  L.  Ma 
bry.  President  of  Vick  Chemica' 
Co.  disclo.sed  t  .)day  in  announcing 
the  opening  of  the  program. 

.Aimed  at  stimulating  greater  in- 
terest    in    professional     pharmacy 
the  Awards  program  features  loui  ! 
individual    cash    awaids   of   Sl.OO;  ! 
each  to  winning  students,  and  th    I 
same    amount    to    their    pharmac:  ' 
colleges.  Specific  objectives  of  th 
program    are    the    encouragemen  \ 
of  students  to;   1.  Explore  and  in 
vestigate    current    p'    .ioacy    prob 
lems:    2.    SummarLo    and    presen 
their   findings   for   the   benefit   o' 
other    students    and    investigators: 
and  3.  Broaden  the  scope  of  their 
interest  in  the  profession  of  phar 
macy. 

The  awards  are  given  for  th 
best  papens  submitted  from  th 
four  major  regions  of  the  natior 
on  either  of  two  general  subject.^ 
Pharmacy  and  Pharmaceutica 
Chemistry. 

Inaugurated    in     19.14    as    a    tr' 
bute    to    V'ck's    pharmacist-fourd 


er,  Lunsford  Richardson,  and  his 
son,  the  Awards  also  commemor- 
;ite  Vick's  50-year  association  with 
the  profe.ssio  i  of  pharmacy.  In 
making  the  announcement,  Mr. 
Mabry  noted  that  the  program  had 
been  well  received  both  in  aca- 
■iemic  and  professional  circles.  He 
idded  that  the  number  of  entries 
ind  the  numbei*  of  schools  repre-  ' 


Bob 
stu- 


Student     Body     President 
Young    yesterday    urged    all 
d3nts  on  campus  to   take   part  in 
the   UN   Day  activities. 

He  said  "All  students  are  here- 
by urged  to  accept  the  responsi- 
bilities   thrust    upon    us,    as    stu- 


■iented    by    manuscripts    submitted  j  dents   in    this    pai  ticular   time,    b\ 
n   1955-56  were  buth  higher  than  j  the    dc'cisions    of    the    United    Na 

in   previous  years.  '  tions." 

Deadline   for   all    entries    is    De- ,       Following    is    Young's    complete 
•ember  15.   1956.  while  all   manu- '  statement: 


Yack  Will  Photograph 
Two  Groups  This  Week 

Dance  Committee  and  Germai 
Club  pictures  will  be  taken  toda> 
and  tom:)rrow  in  the  basc-ment  o 
Graham  Memorial  from  1-7:30  p.m 
according  to  Yack  editor  'fomm 
Johnson. 

All  other  students  except  sen- 
iors who  have  not  had  their  pic 
tures  made  for  the  1957  Yacket 
Yack  may  do  so  tVirough  Friday 
of  this  week  for  a  late  fee  of  $1 
Johnson  said. 

Yack  officials  slated  that  it  i 
impossible  for  .seniors  to  havi 
their  pictures  made  now  for  th 
1957  annual,  as  printers  haVt  a! 
ready  begun  work  on  processing 
and  layout  of  the  senior  pages. 


'Cripts  must  be  received  by  March 
?,  1957.  Complete  details  concern- 
ing the  .Awards   may   b:>  obtained  ^ 
It    the    School    of    Pharmacy,    and  I 
he  papers  will  be  judged  on  lit- ' 
?rary    quality    as    well    as    subject 
matter. 

Musicoiogical  Society  To{ 
Meet  Today  In  Hill  Hall    j 

The     Southeastern     Chapter     ol  ; 
the   American   Musicoiogical   Soci  \ 
'ty  will  meet  today  at  8:00  p.m.  in 
Hill    Hall,    according    to    President 
^eilh  Mixter.  I 

Dr.  Wilt:m  Mason  of  the  Musi.' 
Department  will  present  a  paper  j 
itled,  "Musical  Experiences  of  a  j 
Vear  in  Italy."  Dr.  Mason  studied  i 
ast  year  in  Italy  on  a  Ford  Foun-  j 
iation  grant. 

Officers  for  the  1956-57  yeai 
•il!    be   elected. 

The  meetings  are  h?ld  monthlv. 
VII  interested  persons  are  invit 
•d,  Mixter  said. 


Dr.  Sigurdur  Jonsson 
Receives  Cancer  Grant 

Dr.  Sigurdur  Jonsson.  associate 
>rofe.ssor  of  pharmaceutica!  chem- 
stry  at  the  School  of  Pharmacy, 
'as  received  a  grant  of  $500  from 
he  American  Cancer  Society.  Dr 
'onsson  will  use  the  money  as  ; 
esearch  aid  to  continue  synth:- 
■'is  of  antimetabolites. 


Whereas:    Pres.    Dwight   D.   Eis 
enhower   has   declared    Oct.  24  a 
{J>i    Day    throughout    the    United 
States,  and 

Whereas:  Students,  faculty  ami 
administrative  personn?l  at  UNC 
have  planned  a  day-long  pro- 
gram in  commemoration  of  thi^ 
day,   and 

Whereas:  Students,  in  particu 
lar.  in  this  day  of  Internationa 
tension  should  be  more  a-vare  o 
the    significance    of    the   UN.    and 

Whereas:  Many  students  Iron 
throughout  the  world  will  be  par 
ticipating  in  the  local  program 
and 

Whereas:  Students  should  tak« 
cognizance  of  and  have  respect  fo 
the  work   of  fellow  students,   an( 

Whereas:  Students,  on  this  day- 
should    pledge    themselves    to    b< 
more    concerned    about    the    wor 
of  the  UN,  and 

Whereas:  This  program  is  ex 
emplary  of  the  interest .  of  man 
students,  and 

Now-  therefore,  be  it  resolvec 
by  the  president  of  the  studen 
body  at  UNC,  that: 

Article  1.  Oct.  24  is  hereby  de 
:lared  UN  Day  on  the  UNC  cam 
ous. 

Article  2.  All  students  are  here 
"\v  urged  to  participate  in  the  ac 
Mvities    planned   for  this   day. 

Article  3.  All  students  are  here 


Dr.  Gallup 
Ignores 
I  Challenge 

The  UXC  political  scientist  who 
predicted  that  the  Democrats  have 
»  good  chance  of  capturing  the  na- 
tional election,  and  challenged 
Pollster  George  Gallup  to  disprove 
his  prediction,  jias  as  yet  received 
no  answer  from  Dr.  Gallup. 

Gordon  B.  Cleveland,  in  voicing 
prc'diction  that  Democrats  may 
win  the  election  even  if  President 
Eisenhower  gets  as  much  as  53 
per  cent  of  the  popular  vote,  chal- 
lenged Gallup  to  make  a  stale-by- 
state  break-dcwn  of  voter  opinions 
in  order  to  reveal  a  true  picture 
of  voting  trends. 

Although  Cleveland's  prediction 
has  not  produced  a  direct  an.swer 
from  Gallup,  it  has  evoked  con- 
siderable interest  from  the  Demo- 
cratic Party  and  from  newspaper 
reporters  and  radio  newscasters 
all  over  the  country, 
scientific  interests  have  been  con-  '  '^^  heart  of  Cleveland's  study 
eerned  with  the  physiology  of  free-  j  '^  a  comparison  of  the  1953  presi- 
living  and  parasitic  protozoa,   will  j  dential    election    returns    with    the 


Funeral  Services  Set 
For  Mrs.  R.  J.  M.  Hobbs 

Funeral  services  for  Mrs.  R.  J. 
M.  Hobbs.  64.  will  be  conducted 
at  the  Chapel  of  the  Cross,  Epis- 
copal Church  here,  tomorrow  af- 
ternoon. 

Mrs.  Hobbs,  wife  of  the  former 
acting  dean  of  the  UNC  Schopl  ol 
Business  Administration,  died 
Monday  following  a  heart  ailment 

Professor  From  Stanford 
Studies  In  Zoolooy  Here 

A  professor  of  physiology,  on 
sabbatical  leave  from  Stanford 
University,  has  come  to  the  Dept. 
of  Zoology  at  UNC  for  a  period 
of  study  and  writing. 

Dr.  J.   F.  Oliphant,  whose  chiel  \ 


be  working 
during  the 
Nov. 


in   the   Zoology   Dept 
months    of    Oct.    and 


1954  mid-term  elections  in  2C 
states  which  went  Republican  in 
1954. 

On  the  basis  of  this  study. 
Cleveland  contends  that  the  Dem- 
ocrats stand  a  good  chance  of  get- 
ting a  majority  of  electoral  votes, 
thus  giving  them   the  election. 


SSL  Delegates 
Announced 
For  Meeting 

The    local    Selections    Board    of 


UNC  Professor  Returns 
From  Census  Session 

Prof.  Daniel  0.  Price  of  the  Un- 
iversity of  North  Carolina  recent- 
ly returned  from  a  meeting  of  the 
Council  of  Population  and  Hou.s- 
ng  Census  Users  held  in  Wa.sh- 
ington,  D.  C  This  Council  is  made 
up  of  representatives  of  profes- 
sional and  public  organizations 
vhbs?  memberi?  use  a  great  d^al 
of  statistical  data  from  the  Bur- 
eau of  the  Census. 
The  Bureau   of  the  Census  has    the  State  Student  Legislature  has 

announced  its  selections  for  this 
year's  Raleigh  meeting. 
Delegates  named  were: 
Ed  Roland.  Gardner  Foley.  John 
Kerr,  Charlie  J)ean,  Jim  Holmes, 
Tim  Tolbert.  Nancy  Rothschild. 
Joel  Fleishman,  Whit  Whitfield; 

Tom  Lambeth,  John  Brooks. 
Shirley  Egerton.  Jim  Montei-th, 
Sonny  Evans,  Jim  Armstrong,  Bill 
Sabiston,  Larry  .Matthews,  Bob 
Harrington. 
Alternates  named  are: 
Pat  Adams.  David  Matthews, 
Stan  Shaw.  Ethan  Tolman,  Tom 
Long.  Jennie  Meador,  Brandon 
Kincaid.  Benny  Thomas,  Marian 
Harris,  Phil  Haire,  Miss  Alice  El- 
ler  and   Gary  Greer. 

Th?  Legislature  will  meet  in  the 
Capitol  Building  in  Raleigh  Nov. 
15l,  16  and   17. 

The  proceedings  may  be  viewed 
over  WUNC-TV  beginning  Nov.  15, 
according  to  Interim  Council 
Member  Bob  Harrington. 


•nvited  this  group  to  meet  from 
•ime  to  time  while  plans  are  be- 
■ng  d?veloped  for  the  1960  Cen- 
sus in  order  to  advise  on  the  sorts 
>f  stati.stical  data  that  would  be 
if  most  use. 

Professor   Price    is   official    reo- 
•esentative  on  the  Council  for  the 
"Population    Association   of   Ameri- 
1    of  "htrh  h**  is  &SPr°t'»rA--trea.s- 
urer.   He   is  also   a   member  of  a 
committee   of   the    Association    set 
up   to  advise   the   Census   Bureau 
n   the  sorts  of  data   most   useful 
or  scientific    research    in    denaog- ' 
aphv.    Price    teaches   statistics   in 
he  Department   of   Sociologv   and 
\nthropolog:v   and    is    Director    of  ^ 
he  Social  Science  Statistical  Lab-  i 
^rator\'    of   the    Insstitute   for    Re- 
search in  Social  Science. 

' i 

Sv  urged   to  accept  the  responsi- 1 
bilities  thrust  upon  us.  as  students  | 
in  this  particular  time,  by  the  de- 
cisions of   the   United   Nations. 


PAGE    TWO 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


WEDNESDAY,  OCTOBER  24,  19$« 


W£DNC] 


More  fear  On  The  Campus: 
A  Right  \s  Draining  Away 


REACTION  PIECE 


\«^; 


The  same  titmble  that  is  strik- 
iiisj;  the  I'niversity  oi  Icxas  is 
strikiii<»  all  <ncr  tiie  (oumrv.  Aca- 
demic Irecdoiii  is  cominjj;  to  nr.^an 
the  hcedoom  to  sa-y  what  the  uni- 
versity's controllers  want  you  to 
sav. 

Ai  C^ornell.  where  \'ice  Presi- 
dent Richard  Nixon  held  a  press 
conierence  with  college  editors  last 
week,  there  was  a  j;reat  llurrv. 
Woidd  it  appear,  tlie  university's 
administrators  wanted  to  know, 
that  Cornell  Avas  endorsing  Nixon 
as  a  candidate? 

Cornell  I'niversity.  a  seat  of 
learning  set  among  beautifid 
gorges  in  western  New  V'ork  .State, 
nwde  sine  the  American  people 
wouldn't  think  it  liked  Tricky 
Dickie.  The  I'niversity  warned 
"onlv  registered  undergjaduatc 
and  ji-raduate  students  will  be  j)er- 
mitted  to  attend  the  press  conier- 
ence .  .  .  riiere  will  be  no  jjoliii- 
r.  !  rallies  c»r  deinonstrations  pei- 
mitted  once  the  vice  president  ar- 
ri\es  on  c.unpus."* 

And.  to  make  doublv  sure,  the 
I'niversitv  required  that  this  silly 
little  message  be  read  tot  he  tele- 
\isic:)n  audience: 

"Ciornell's  role  as  host  (to  Nix- 
on) in  no  way  implies  endorse- 
ntent  bv  the  I'niversity  or  it>  stu- 
dents of  anv  political  jjarty  or  can- 
didate. Nor  does  the  presence  of 
the  reprcsemati\es  of  other  in- 
stitutioirs  implv  anv  political  en- 
dorscmcm  bv  these  institutions." 


:..:*!• 


i:.» 


WcUtndcrsCaiiiltwhy  Cornell  Cni- 
vevsiiy  a«»d  the  University  of  lexas 
antt  manv  other  institutions  ol 
higher  learning  are  too  scared  to 
allow  freedom  of  speech  on  their 
campuses.   It's  verv  simple: 

The  iniivei'sfties  and  colleges  of 
tliis  country  are  run  by  trustees 
and  boards  and  regents  and  Vegisla- 
tures  which,  ainvjst  by  defin  tion, 
are  ven'  <  :r'^r\a:ivc.  The  ccm- 
trolliui;  .t^,:iries  see  no  need  to 
all<  \>  ;  .ussion  of  controversial 
que  ■':  ns  on  their  campuses.  It  is 
nmrh  ea-sier  to  say  nothing;  then 
ncJxidv  .i^ets  an-^ry. 

.Ml  iniiversities  and  colleges  have 
such  people  on  their  governing 
boards.  The  I'nixeisitv  of  North 
Carolina  has  its  John  Washington 
Clark,  a  loud-voiced  con.ser\ative 
who  fiy;hts  anv  libera-l  change  that 
is  proposed  for  the  I'niversitv.  But 
here.  h)rtunate!v.  men  like  John 
Washington  Claik  are  rare.  They 
are  outweighed  and  outvoted  by 
the  liberals  and  middle-roaders. 

We  will  be  <>;ifted  this  week  with 

a    Consolidated    University    presi- 

^ 

The  Daily  Tar  Heel 

The  official  student  publication  of  the 
Publications  Board  of  the  University  of 
North  Carolina,  where  it  is  published 
daily  except  Monday  and  examinatiot 
and  vacation  periods  and  summer  terms 
Entered  as  .second  class  matter  in  the 
cost  office  in  Chapel  Hill,  N.  C,  undei 
the  Act  oi  March  8.  1870.  Subscription 
rates:  mailed,  $4  per  year,  $2.50  a  semes- 
ter; delivered.  $6  a  year,  $3.50  a  semes- 
ter. 


Editor  

FRED  POWXEDGE 

Managing  Editor 

CHARUE  SLOAN 

News  Editor    ..    

RAY  LINKER 

Business  Manager     . 

Bn.T,  BOB  PEEL 

Sports  Editor  . 

.      LARRY  CHEEK 

Advertising  Manager 
Coed  Editor  

Fred  Katzin 

.. ._    Peg  Humphrey 

EDITORIAL  STAFF  —  Woody  Sears, 
Frank  Crowther, 'Barry  Winston.  David 
Mundy,  George  Pfingst,  Ingrid  Clay* 
Cortland  Edwards. 


Staff  Photographer 


Norman  Kanlor 


BUSINESS  STAFF  —  Rosa  Moore,  Jonny 
Whitaker,  Dick  Leavitt,  Peter  Alper. 


NEWS  STAFF— Clarke  Jones,  Nancy 
Hill.  Joan  Mrtore,  Pringle  Pipkin,  Anne 
Drake.  Bobbi  Smith,  Jerr>-  Alvis,  Edith 
MacKinnon,  Wally  Kuralt.  Ben  Taylor, 
Graham  Snyder,  Billy  Barnes,  Neil 
Bass.  Jim  Creighton,  Hil  Ckildman, 
Phyllis  Maultsby. 


SPORTS  SIAFF:  Bill  King,  Jim  Purks, 
Jimmy  Harper,  Dave  Wible,  Charley 
Houson. 


Subscription  Manager 

Staff  Artist 

Night  Editor 

Proof  Reader , 


Dale  Staley 

Charlie  Daniel 
.  Woody  Sean 
Ben  Matthews 


LEARNING 

. . .  through  opinion^  from  all  sides 

dent  \vho  is  not  .scared  to  be  hon- 
est, and  Avho  probably  will  keep 
men  like  John  Washingtcm  Clark 
r.'i  bav.  liut  on  other  campuses- 
down  in  .\ustin  and  up  in  Ithaca 
— tlie  situation   is  not   as  nice. 


The  blame  dcjes  not  lie  on  the 
rolleee  administrators.  It  lies  in 
two  })Iaves: 

1.  The  lx)aicls  of  control  who 
allow  a  university  to  emasculate 
itself,  who  demand  that  the  luii- 
versitv  shy  away  from  anything 
"contrcnersial.  " 

2,  The  people  of  America,  who 
do  not  deniand  that  their  institu- 
tions of  hit^her  learnin<;  a:;ain  Ixr- 
eome  market  places  of  cpiesti(jn,  of 
doubt,  of  wonder,  of  freedom  m 
induljije  in  "partisan  activity." 

The  people  nowadavs  want  their 
opinions  sei  \ed  up  to  them.  .\  gieat 
nit»n,y  of  them  are  afraid  to  ex- 
periment, to  try  to  tovm  tlieir  own 
opinions  from  the  primary  sources. 
These  are  the  people  who  this  weqk 
will  turn  to  the  news  magazines 
antrihe  Journals  of  ~  (^pillion  for 
their  ideas,  rather  than  listen  to 
political  candidates'  speec'ics  as 
they  are  made,  rather  than  consult 
the  records  of  the  two  political 
parties. 

The  people  have  decided  that 
their  iniiversities  and  colle<;es 
shoidd  serve  up  ready-made  opin- 
ions, too.  .\nd  the  people  beliexe 
that  suclt  a  miracle  can  be  per- 
hjrmcd. 

The  people  seem  to  ha\e  for- 
gotten that  one  "objec  tive"  stream 
of  "information"  (such  as  the  one 
Time  Maga/ine  so  neailv  pius  out) 
is  nece.ssarilv  bi^vsed.  The  people 
want  the  American  imiversity  and 
college  to  present  the  objective 
facts,  neatly  sorted  and  ready  '^or 
assembly,  to  the  student. 

And  it  can  t  be  dcme. 

Rather,  the  job  of  teaching  jk-o- 
ple  to  think  is  best  done  through 
exposure— exposure  of  the  student's 
mind  to  opijiions  on  all  sides.  Then 
the  student  can  make  uj)  his  own 
mind. 

If  the  people  have  faith  in  de- 
mcKiacy.  or  the  Democratic  Party, 
or  the  Repid>lican  Partv,  then  they 
shouldn't  be  afraid  that  exposure 
will  'brainwash'  the  student.  If 
democracy  or  Democrats  or  Re- 
publicans are  all  they  are  alleged 
to  be.  they'll  stand  up  well  inider 
cpiCAtioning. 


But  the  people  don't  feel  that 
way.  They  art  afraid  to  allow  their 
institutions  of  higher  learning  the 
right  of  doubt,  jjossiblv  becau.ve 
the  people  aren't  too  sure  that 
their  traditional  beliefs  will  stand 
iij)  imder  strain. 

1  hey  will  stand  up,  we  are  cer- 
tain. 

lUit  something  even  more  basic, 
even  more  imjKwtant.  is  beginning 
to  crumble.  It  is  the  people's,  the 
students',  the  nation's  right  to  ques- 
ticm,  to  doubt,  to  wonder. 

If  that  precious  right  goes  from 
the  institiuibn  of  higher  learning 
— as  it  is  going,  through  shallow 
fear,  from  the  l^niversity  of  Texas 
and  Cornell  I'niversity — it  will  be 
gone  from  this  nation. 

Doubt*  you  will  remember,  is 
what  built  the  United  States  of 
Ameiita,    ' 


Consistency  Lost  By  Politicians 


Dave  Mundy 

No  one  is  consistent  all  the 
time:  few  are  consistent  most  of 
the  time;  politicians  don't  know 
what  the  word  means.  If  consist- 
ency were  an  ingrained  human 
characteristic  we  could  expect 
life  ta  be  dull:  but  without  some 
consistency  things  can  become 
rather  confusing.  Politics  cer- 
tainly provide  the  best  example. 

Roasevelt  was.  and  still  is.  de- 
fied by  some  Democrats.  This  the 
Republicans  always  denounce  and 
ridicule.  But  now  Eisenhower, 
even  before  bis  re-election,  is 
being  made  the  "God  of  the  Mod- 
•erates."  It  seems  that  someone's 
views  on  political  deification 
have  been  altered. 

On  the  other  side  of  this 
spiked  political  fence  is  the  'lib- 
eration of  Communist  countries" 
theme  which  persuaded  many 
people  to  vote  for  Eisenhower  in 
1952.  For  four  years  those  state- 
ments have  been  ridiculed  by  the 
Democrats  as  impossible  to  full- 
fill. 

Many  of  the  party  leaders  have 
even  suscrib^d  to  the  Kennan 
views  that  we  need  only  to  wait 
until  Communism  fails  from  its 
internal  weaknesses. 

But  then  Mr.  Stevenson  comes 
out  with  his  'liberation  of  Po- 
land' remarks.  It  seems  that  he, 
too.  is  interested  in  the  Polish 
vote. 

The  Stevenson  position  on  farm 
price  supports  is  a  similar  ease. 
Before  the  campaign  got  under 
way  he  declared  repeatedly  that 
high,  rigid  farm  supports  were 
not  the  aaswer  to  the  problem. 

If  he  doesn't  favor  flexible 
price  supports,  and  if  he  doesn't 
favor  the  Brannan  Plan,  and  if 
he  was  correct  back  in  the  days 
wheu  he  didn't  favor  rigid  sup- 
ports, then  he  isn't  left  with 
any  farm  proposal  at  all.  Such 
Mould  have  been  the  price  of 
being  consistent. 

It  all  just  about  boils  down  to 
the  fact  that  in  a  campaign  po- 
litical leaders  tailor  ther  propos- 
als to  fit  the  audience  they  are 
talking  to.  In  the  North  and  West 
one  is  supposed  to  vote  Demo- 
crat because  the  party  doea  more 
about  providing  racial  equality, 
etc. 

In  •  the  South  one  is  supposed 
to  vote  Democrat  for  exactly  the 
opposite  reason,  so  that  the 
Democrat-controlled  Congress  can 
stall  off  an  civil  rights  legisla- 
tioTi. 

Both  parties  have  nice  words 
to  say  about  free  trade  and  re- 
ciprocal trade  agreements.  That 
is.  they  favor  these  policies  as 
long  as  it  doesn't  hurt  their  con- 
.stituents.  Sen.  Scott  is  for  free 
trade,  except  when  it  involves 
peanuts  or.  at  present.  Japanese 
textile  products. 

This  fickleness  of  political 
leaders  may  to  a  large  extent  be 
caused  by  the  fickleness  of  the 
voters.  Labor  union  members,  for 
example,  continue  to  vote  Demo- 
crat despite  the  fact  that  their 
real  wages  (wages  with  an  al- 
lowance made  for  cost  of  living 
increase)  have  risen  more,  and 
faster,  under  Republican  admin- 
istration. 

They  continue  to  vote  Demo- 
crat despite  the  fact  that  the 
country  is  not  in  a  "hot  war"  as 
the  last  three  Democrat  admin- 
istrations provided. 


They  continue  to  vote  Demo- 
crat despite  the  fact  that  they 
have  scldomly  been  obliged  to  go 
on  strike  under  the  present  ad- 
ministration. 

They  continue  to  vote  Demo- 
crat despite  the  fact  that  the 
unions  have  enjoyed  greater 
freedoms  under  Republican  ad- 
ministration th.3n  they  did  un- 
der the  last  administration.  (Un- 
der the  Truman  NLRB.  presum- 
ably not  "'stacked  in  favor  in  big 
business",  workers  were  in  sev- 
eral occasions  either  ordered 
back  to  work  or  even  threatened 
withtbeing  drafted  into  the  army 
and  forced  ta  perform  their 
work. ) 

Southern  Democrats  have  been 
consistent    in    only    one    respect. 


voting  a  one-party,  straight-party 
ticket,  just  because  their  ances- 
tors did.  This  at  present  places 
them  in  the  strange  position  of 
supporting  a  party  which  in  the 
other  portions  of  the  country  is 
completely  out  of  sympathy  with 
their  beliefs.  Even  stranger,  it 
places  some  of  the  most  reaction- 
ary southern  senators  and  repre- 
sentatives in  charge  of  congress- 
ional committees  whenever  north- 
ern liberals  elect  enough  con- 
gressmen to  provide  a  piarty  ma- 
jority. 

How  these  people  so  twist 
their  "voting  consciences"  is  one 
of  the  modern  mysteries.  How- 
can  a  rabid  Talmadge  "white 
supremacist"  vote  for  a  Tal- 
madge, a  Stelinis.  or  a  Thurmond, 


and  at  the  same  lime  vote  for 
two  "racial  integratidnisls "  like 
Stevenson  and  Kefauver? 

How  can  a  rabid  exponent  of 
"states'  rights",  say  a  Texan  in- 
terested in  the  tidelands  oil  oase» 
vote  for  a  presidential  candi- 
date whose  entire  philosophy  is 
the  antithesis  of  "states'  ri^ts?" 

How  can  a  Democrat  who 
favors  curtailment  of  govern- 
ment expenditures,  in  the  same, 
election,  vote  a  ticket  includ- 
ing such  a  wholesale  economizer 
as  Sen.  Harry  F.  B\Td  and  the 
proponent  of  the  new  welfare- 
state  of  the  "New  America?" 
For  that  matter,  how  does  Sen. 
Byrd  manage  to  be  able  to  en- 
dorse Mr.  Stevenson? 


'Where's  The  Fellow  Who  Used  To  Live  Here?' 


4(,«,^A|\>lftjL-.^ 


"^IfU^m^ 


YOU  Said  It: 


Rebels  Need  Wider  Courses 


Editor: 


I  fear  your  columnist  has, miss- 
ed the  point  of  the  charge  of  ex- 
cessive conformity  leveled  at 
the  student  body  by  the  non- 
conformists and  allegedly  luna- 
tic fringe  on  campus.  Certainly 
nobody  has  tried  to  argue  that 
there  should  be  no  conformity 
whatever  among  students — that 
idea  is  just  as  ridiculous  to  me 
as  to  Mr.  Shaw. 

Sjyeaking  for  non-conformists — 
if  anyone  can  speak  for  people 
who  prefer  to  speak  for  them- 
selves— I  would  say  that  our  com- 
plaint is  that  there  are  too  few 
real  rebels  on  campus. 

I  mean  fellows  who  would  lare 
say  to  their  room-mate.  "Thanks 
for  the  invitation   to  drink   beer 


tonight,  but  I'm  reading  Emer- 
son's "Essays".  Not  that  I  have 
to  read  them,  but  I'm  just  enjoy- 
ing myself."  Or  the  chap  on  a 
Saturday  afternoon  who  would 
say.  "My  radio's  on.  but  I  don't 
know  how  our  team's  doing  away 
this  weekend.  I'm  listening  to  the 
Metropolitan  Opera,  even  though 
I'm  not  a  music  major." 

This  sort  of  non-conformity 
would  be  heavily  penalized  in  any 
dorm  on  campus.  Not  only  would 
the  offending  party  be  henceforth 
known  as  a  creep  and  never  in- 
vited out  again  to  go  a-beering, 
but  he  would  likely  have  his  fra- 
ternity paddle  taken  away  from 
him. 

The  kind  of  rebels  we  need  are 
those  who  dare  to  be  non-con- 
formists  even    when    thev    know 


that  they  will  be  stigmatized  for 
it.  And  this  has  nothing  to  do 
with  the  courses  one  is  taking — 
a  real  rebel  should  have  interests 
far  wider  than  the  narrow  courses 
he  is  taking. 

Of  course,  the  trouble  is  that 
students  are  willing  to  rebel  in 
only  one  very  limited  direction 
— against  the  moral  law.  Funn.v, 
isn't  it,  that  students  want  to  re- 
bel at  this  point  when  they  are 
so  dreadfully  conformist  in  eyerj' 
other  part  of  life — their  clothes, 
interests,  recreation,  beliefs  con- 
cerning religion,  politics  .edu- 
cation, and  just  plain  living. 

I'll  be  non-conformist  and  let 
you  figure  out  why  this  should 
be  for  yourself. 

Lloyd   Menton 


Pogo 


By  Walt  Kelly 


^  *Ay  OuZ  WIMNIM'  ^ 

fO  Srr  S5%  OF  If. 


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"      NOW  COuiP  I  von  1^ 
I  PiN'T  >^A\|  NOBOITy 
10  0^  A6AiN^^ 


By  Al  Capp 


THE 

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I'M  LOVERBOVNIK, 
SWEETHEAFCT  OF 
THE.PlAhJO.*:' 


SURE.».''-AND  I'M      T, 
F^UL  WHITE  MAN, 
KING  OF  JA'ZZ.I' 


THE  SPECTATifR  PAFEtS 

Kenan  Knights,  ~ 
And  Mercenaries  :^ 

Edited  By 
Roger  Wilk  O'Morse  .Z 

No.  S  October  24,  195^^  t 

Interdutn  vulgus  rectum  videt. 

— ^Horace,  Epistles,  1.  ii,  63.!,,. 

"Sometimes  the  vulgar  sec  and  jud£c  aright."  -• ^' 

AT  MV  OWN  APARTMENT 

It  has  grieved  live  during  my  travellins'  about  _.^ 
the  Tarheelian  Campus,  to  overiiear  our  Kenan  "^^ 
Knights  footballors,  to  coin  a  word— spoken  of  in  ,„ 
terms  of  utmost  derogation. 

"They  are  paid  to  play;  why  don't  they  pla.y?'*  .V. 
more  than  one  non-footballer  said  airily.  "They  dk) 

not  pay  their  own  way  here  at  anything  else. " 

■  • 

Now,    let   us    maintain    a   judiciously    objective     * 
raien  and  examine  the  validity  of  the  implication  » 
that  all  other  students,  save  Educational  Foandees,   '. 
pay  their  way  here  at  our  beloved  Carolina-of-the*    * 
North: 

Do  sons   and   daughters  of  paying-parents  pay 

their  way,  and  do  they  work  hard  and  bniisingly 
at  Study  and/or  Spixlive  Muscularities  (of  the  ap-    ^ 
proved  sort)?  Pish-tush!        '  '  •   • 

Do  our  GI-BiUers  pay  ttaeir  way?  Pfaugh!'-     r  \ 
Do  our  MorehMdians  pay  their  way?  Phap! 
Do  our  Fulbrighters  and  MarstiaUers.  here  and^, 
abroad,  pay  their  way?  Phooey! ,,,..,.,...,  .„ 

To  be  sure,  they ,  reuider ,  sonwtJjing  of  a  'QuidL,_ 
pro  quo',  a  'somethii^  iPo^itidrrtethiittg  else',  vrhidrtlt 
same  may  be  anything  ra'Uging  from  Keeping  Out 
of  Pater's  Periwig  to  writing  DissertatioBs  on  1^ 
Sex  Life   of  One-Legged  Centipedes   At  Absolu1t«- 
Zero,  or,  Q.  E.  D.,   Zero-Zero. 

And  in  like  manner,  our  Educational  Foundees 
render  an  arduous  Quid  pro  quo,  and  a  most  pleas- 
ing one  it  was  this  past  Saturn's  Day. 

If  these  be  mercenaries — our  Kenan  Knights 
who  have  known  some  nol-so-keen  days — then  with 
few  exceptions  we  are  mercenaries  all  and  nothing 
to  brag  of  save  w^here  we  are  not  known.  ■• 

AT  THE  GRECIAN  LENOiRE'S 

The  ruddy-faced  (from  teaching  zeal,  I  prefer 
to  believe)  savant  was  drinking  (coffee,  at.the.tiajeff 
when  I  mentioned  my  protest  to  the  word'  '•Merce- 
naries' in  connection  with  our  Kensn  Knights.  He 
said,  "HarrUmph!  Mercenaries!  Ah,  yes  .  .  .  A.  5» 
Houseman.  Quite  so,  quite  so."  B.i9ii"eeq '  ^Iti^JJi^^ 
of  his  eof'feCi  he  favored  me  with:  : 

''Epitaph:  on  an  Army  of  Mercenaries.'' 

-   ■    ' ' '        '»  i 
Th^se>  in  the  day  when  heaven  w^  felling;'    * 
The  hour  When  earth's  foundations  fled, 
followed  their  mercenary-  calling  ■  f'l 

And  took  ^heir  wages  and  are  d4ai:     « 1 U  •»  J 

Their  shoulders  held  the  sky.  suspended;    ,    ^, 
They  stood,  and  earth's  found^twrs  f4a:p^  |  {j^ 
WTiat  God  abandoned,  these  defended, 
And  saved  the  sum  of  things  for  pay. 

Nobody  has  abandoned  nobody  nouhow.  (New, 
or  Mobile,  Grammar.)  It's  a  new  season,  from  now. 

OTHER  NEWSPAPERS  SAY: 

Battle  In  Poland 
Needs  Support 

Ihe  New  York  Times 

Not  »inoe  the^days  when  the  Cominfonn  under 
Stalin  sought  to  destroy  the  Tito  regime  in  Yugo- 
slavia has  the  world  seen  such  a  naked  example  of 
Soviet  intervention  in  the  affairs  of  another  Com- 
munist state  as  has  tak«n  place  with  respect  ta^. 
Poland.  Only  a  crisis  in  Poland  and  in  Polish-Sovief** 
relations  could  explain  these  aouzing  events  which 
make  an  open  mockery  of  the  oft-repeated  sancti- 
monious Soviet  claim  that  Moscow  never  interferes 
with  the  internal  affairs  of  another  country. 

WTiat  else  but  naked  interference  can  explain 
this  latest  sequence  of  events?  Last  Friday  the 
Polish  Workers  (Communist)  party  Central  Commit- 
tee opened  i;s  meeting  at  which,  it  had  earlier  been 
announced.  Wladyslaw  Gomalka  was  to  be  restored 
to  membership.  Earlier  reports  had  also  suggested 
that  Mr.  Gomulka  might  be  named  First  Secretary' 
of  the  Polish  Communist^.  Unexpectedly  there  ar- 
rived in  Warsaw  from  Moscow  the  most  dazzling 
delegation  of  top  Soviet  political  «nd  military 
dignitaries  ever  to  visit  a  foreign  state  at  one  time: 
Messrs.  Kruschchev,  Mikoyan,  Molotov,  and  Kugano- 
vich.  Marshals  Ehukov  and  Konev,  and  General  An- 
tonov.  The  Polish  Ontral  Committee  meeting  was 
disrupted  while  Polish  and  Soviet  officials  were 
conferring. 

Reports  frorti  Warsaw  tell  of  Soviet  troop  move- 
ments into  Poland  and  of  a  dash  between  Polish 
troops  and  Soviet  troops  who  tried  to  enter  Poland. 
Saturday  Pravda  broke  its  long  silence  on  the  fer- 
ment in  Poland  and  accused  part  of  the  Polish  press 
of  seeking  to  end  Communist  rule  in  Poland,  using 
language  not  heard  toward  other  Communists  since 
Tito  was  excommunicated. 

What  we  seem  to  be  witnessing  is  the  lastest 
chapter  in  the  long  polish  struggle,  going  hack  for  - 
more  than  a  centurj-,  for  freedom  fr6m  Russian 
enslavement.  The  Polish  struggle  for  freedom  has  al- 
ways |net  with  sympathy  and  understanding  from 
the  American  people.  Today,  in  this  time  of  hope 
that  triie  Polish  independence  may  be  restored,  we 
believe  we  speak  for  the  American  people  in  ex- 
pressing our  complete  moral  support  for  the  forces 
in  Poland  which  woold  end  its  past  subservience  to 
Moscow  and  establish  a  Poland  ruled  by  Poles  for 
the  benefit  of  the  Polish  people.      . 


W 


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TOWN  Gil 

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today  at 
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Electior 
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members 
have  beer 

YM-YWC> 
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THE  DAILY  TAR  HIEL 


fAGE    TMKei 


r  ~ 

/es 


24,  196«,c 

1.  ii.  63!'.. 
jright."  -    • 

1^'  about 
Kenan 
ten   of  14  .  „ 


?y  play?"  .,. 
They  So 
else." 

objective 
1  plication  • 
■"oundces, 
ina-of-the-    ~ 


rents   pay 
iruisingly" 
)f  the  ap- 

iugh! 
lap! 
her^  and. 


Foundees 
lost  pleas- 
Knights 
-then  with 
id  nothing 


\,   I  prefer 

.th«,tiol€dr 

lights.  He 

.  .  A.  B.- 


led, 
kded;    , 


jow.    (New,   . 
from  now. 


md 
brt 


fonn  under 
ac  in  Yugo- 
example  of 
other  Corn- 
respect  tOa 
'olish-Sovie'T' 
eats  which 
sated  sancti- 
er  interferes 
ntry. 

can   explain 

Friday    the 

tral  Commit- 

earlier  been 

be  restored 

o  suggested 

rst  Secretary 

Uy  there  ar- 

lost   dazzling 

tnd    military 

at  one  time: 

and  K<^gano- 

General  An- 

meetiog  wa3 

ifficials   were 


troop  roove- 
ftween  Polish 
enter  Poland, 
e  on  the  fer- 

Polish  press 
Poland,  using 
muni&ts  since 

is  the  lastest 
oing  back  for 
fr6ni  Kussian 

edom  has  al- 
tanding  from 
time  of  hope 

restored,  we 
people  in  ex- 
for  the  forces 
abservience  to 

I  by  Poles  for 


Covering  The  Univ^rsify  Campus 


BABY  SITTERS 

Coeds  interested  in  baby  sitting 
have  been  asked  to  contact  the 
•Y*  (telephone  6761)  or  leave 
their  names  and  a  list  of  their 
available  hours  with  the  "Y"  sec- 
retary, -'i      '•'      "     'H!'?. 

TOWN  GIRLS'  ASSN. 

An  organizational  meeting  of 
the  Town  Girls'  Assn.  will  be  held 
today  at  6:45  p.m.  on  the  second 
floor  of  the  "Y"  building. 

Election  of  officers  will  be  con- 
ducted at  the  meeting!  All  old 
members  and  interested  town  girls 
have  been  urged  to  attend. 

YM-YWCA   PUBLICATION 
INTERVIEWS 

Interviews  for  co-editors  of  the 
YM-YWCA  publication  will  be  held 
tomorrow  from  4-6  p.m.  in  the 
"Y'\  Application  forms  are  avail- 
able at  the  "Y".  Those  interested 
who  are  unable  to  be  present  for 


PATRONIZl  YOUR 
•   ADVERTISnS   • 


Carolina 
Attics 
Pour  Out 


interviews  at  this  time  may  call 
Jeff  Corbin,  89114.  or  Carolyn  Sey- 
«ert,  8-9605. 

METHODIST  CHURCH  SUPF€R 

There  will  be  a  Hallowe'en  Hobo 
Stfpper  at  the  Methodist  Church  in 
the  Wesley  Foundation  room  to- 
day at  6:15  p.m. 

PHYSICS  COLLOQUIM 

Dr.  Rolfe  E.  Glover  III,  of  the 
University  of  California,  will  be 
speaker  tonight  at  the  joint  UNC- 
IJUke  Phy8i(^  Colloquim.  Dr. 
Glover's  topic  will  be  "Some  Re- 
cent Elxperiments  on  Supercon- 
ductors." The  meeting  is  sched- 
uled for  8  p.m.  on  the  Duke  camp- 
us. 

LATE  PERMISSION 

Permission  to  stay  out  until  2 
a.m.  has  been  granted  to  coeds  for 
Friday  night  by  the  Women's  Resi- 
dence Council  and  the  Office  of 
the  Dean  Of  Women. 

ANTHROPOLOGY  CLUB 

"The  Study  of  Values  in  An- 
thropology" is  the  topic  for  a 
journal  seminar  meeting  of  the 
Anthropology  Club  today  at  7:30 
p.m.  in  the  staff  lounge,  407  Alum- 
ni Building. ' 

OIL   COMPANY   INTERVIEWS 

■  Students  who  will  receive  ad- 
vance d«|[^<e6s  in  •  chemistry  from 
the  University  in  1957  will  be  in- 
terviewed .on  the  campus  Oct.  31 
by  representatives  of  Humble  03 
and  Refiniag  Co. 

The  interviews  will  be  for  per- 
manent emplojinent  with  the  com- 
pany. For  additional  information, 
applicants  may  contact  J.  M.  Gallo- 
way, director  of  placement  ser- 
vice. 


WUNC 

I  Following  is  a  listing  of  the  pro- 
I  grams  today  at  the  University's 
I  FM  radio  station. 

7:00    Intermezzo 

7:15     Messages  and  Men 

7:30    Songs  jof  France 
I      7:45    Curtain  Going  Up 

8:00    I  Hear  America  Singing 
!      8:30    Georgetown  U.  Forum 

9:00    Debussy    The    Master 
I    10:00     News 
!    10:15    Evening  Mastei-work 

WUNC-TV 

'  WUNC-"n'.  the  University's  edu- 

.  cational  television  station,  chan- 
i  nel  4:  ' 

12:45  Music 

1:00  Today  on  the  Farm 

1:30  Play  Period 

2:00  Career  for  You 

5:45  Music 

6:00  Draw  Me  A  Story 

6:15  Sports  Clinic 

6:30  News 

6:45  Sports 

7:00  Industrial  Artisan 

7:30  Salute  To  UN 

8:00  Assignment    Children 

8:30  Living    Together 

9:00  Mental  Gymn. 

9:30  American    Politics 

10:00  Final  Edition 


Treasure 
FprYpM,    ,  , 
During 

Week 


KD's  ElMt  Pledge  Officers 

The  following  girls  have  been 
elected  as  pledge  officers  of  the 
Kappa   Delta   Sorority: 

President,  Nancy  Lyon;  vice 
president,  Jane  Patten;  secretary, 
Edith  MacKinnon;  treasurer,  Con- 
nie Whittaker. 

The  oficers  were  chosen  in  elec- 
tions last  Tuesday. 


The  Intimate 
Bookshop 

205   E.  FRANKLIN  ST. 

CHAPEL   HILL 
OPEN  TILL   10   PM. 


Sociology  Fraternity 
Sponsors  Discussions 

Alpha  Kappa  Delta,  honorary 
sotiology  fraternity,  recently  an- 
nounced the  sponsorsh^fitfji- pan- 
el discussion,  "Changai^  ^  Sodal 
Stiructure  and  the  Americ^lt  ^l«3i- 
dential  Elections^'  whiick  itiil  be 
presented  tomorrow  at  8  ii>ri.''ln 
Cirroll  H^li:     '  ^        V    i 

Members  of  the  panel  wiU  be: 
Dr.  Rupert  Vance,  Defkartment  of 
Sotf iology.  Moderator;  Ik-.  Fletcher 
Green.  Department  of  Histoty; 
Dr.  Robert  Agger,  Department  of 
Political  Science;  Dr.  William  Cat- 
ton  Jr..  Department  of  Sociology; 
Dr.  Rashi  Fein,  Department  of  Ec- 
onomics. 

At  the  completion  of  the  round 
table  discufision  questions  from 
the   floor  will  be  answered. 

FOR  SALE  —  instant,  toothing  r«^ 
lief  in  th«  form  of  REYNOLDS 
RUB,  th*  modern  rub  to  many 
4frfUr,fpr^ch»9  and  paint  atfoci- 
atod  with  stronuous  intramural 
Ocfivity',  household  choros,  etc. 
Drop  a  doilM-  bill  in  an  onvolopo 
and  tond  to  Roynofdt  Products 
Inc.,  Babylon,  L.  I.,  N.  Y. 


DAILY 

ACHOSS 

1  Kind  ot 

appl« 

•  5.  Genitive  of 

••Cetua" 
•  Detest 

10.  BtbUeal 
name  ^• 

11.  Carried 
through 

12  Banquet 

14  Keel- 
billed 
V       cucWoo 
▼1^  Bog        ► 

16.  Tantalum 
(»ym.). 

17.  J«p«n«a« 
dancmg :«»" 

•  20.  Weifht 

1Ati«> 
22  Young  goat 
2.3  River 

{ Ruts. ) 
24.  Bedim 
27.  Gonf«ction 
28  Cry  of 
a  wolf 
29.  Exciomo* 
Hon 
'     30  A  bun 

31  King  of  t** 
fonts 
(Folklore) 
'     35.  Neuter 
pronoun 
3«.  Container 

38.  River  itxtg 

39.  Part  of 
ft  flow*r 

41.  Changed 
potition. 
^3  Tears 

.44  Comply 

45.  TOlef*^** 
"46  MeMWt  t>f 

di3iar.ce 

I.  Backbone 


CROSSWORD 


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14 
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4.  Piece  oC      ^ 
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Coflocahop 
To  come  out 
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II.  Children* 

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Civil  Service 

Announces 

Examinations 

The  United  States  Civil  Service 
Commission  in  Washington.  D.  C. 
has  announced  that  applications 
are  now  being  accepted  for  th* 
following  positions: 

Highway  engineer  trainee.  $3,415 
and  $4,480  a  year,  and  highway 
engineer,  $4,480.  for  duty  in  the 
Bureau  of  Public  Roads  and  other 
Federal  agencies;  and  chemist, 
electronic  scientist,  engineer, 
mathematician,  metallurgist  and 
physicist,  $4,480  to  $11,6' 0.  for 
duty  in  activities  of  the  Potomac 
River  Naval  Command  in  and 
near  Washington,  D.  C.  and  in 
the  Engineer  Center,  U.  S.  Army, 
Ft.   Belvoir,  Va. 

The  Commi.ssion  is  also  seeking 

applications  from  persons  interest- 

!  ed  in  a  career  in  the  Federal  ser- 

i  vice    through    its   Federal   Service 

Entrance  Examination. 

This  examination,  which  covers 
a  wide  variety  of  occupational 
fields  is  open  to  all  college  sen- 
iors and  graduates  regardless  of 
their  field  of  major  study  and  to 
people  who  have  had  equivalent 
experience. 

The  next  written  test  will  be 
held  Nov.  10  for  tho.se  who  file 
by  Oct.  25.  Additional  written  tests 
will  be  given  Jan.  12,  Feb.  9,  April 
13,  May  11,  July  13  and  August  10, 
1957. 

Further  inform^ation  and  appli- 
cation forms  may  be  obtained  at 
the  post  office. 

CLASSIFIEDS 

PAPER-BACKED  BOOKS  —  Good 
used  novels,  detective  yarns  and 
non-fiction  at  3  for  25c  in  the 
stand  by  our  front  door.  The 
Intimate  Bookshop. 


PHILLIPS   RUSSELL 

.  .  .  discvsscs  neio  book 

Russell  To  Talk 
About  Book 

The  well-known  author.  Phillips 
Russell,  will  discuss  "Jefferson," 
the  subject  of  his  recent  book,  at 
the  first  Bull's  Head  Bookshop  Tea 
of  this  season. 

The  tea  will  be  held  this  after- 
noon at  3:45  p.m.  in  the  Assembly 
Room  of  the  Library  . 

Prof.  Walter  Spearman  of  the 
School  of  Journalism  will  introduce 
the  speaker.  Mrs.  Henry  Chaney 
and  Avery  Russell,  daughters  of 
Russell,   will   serve   tea. 

Russell,  a  native  of  N..Q.  and 
graduate  of  the  University,  is 
noted  as  a  professor,  biographer, 
novelist,  historian,  columnist  and 
newspaper  editor. 

He  retired  from  the  University 
last  summer  after  serving,  as  a 
professor  of  journalism  for  24 
years.  At  present  he  is  editor  of 
the  Chapel  Hill  News  Leader. 

Among  his  books  arc  biographies 
of  Franklin,  Emerson.  John  Paul 
Jones,  William  the  Conqueror, 
Cornelia  Phillips  Spencer  and  Jef- 
ferson. 

In  describing  this  afternoon's 
event,  a  library  spokesman  stat«id, 
"Considering  that  we  h^e  botb 
Phillips  Russell  and  Walter  S^^l^r- 
man  on   the   program. 


^•e    sfaffld 


Self-Help 
Scholarship 
Is  Awarded 

David  Ricker  Tino,  of  Gastonia, 
has  been  awarded  a  $200  Student 
Government  Sclf-Help  Scholar- 
ship. 

The  award  was  established  by 
the  UNC  Student  Government  last 
y?ar  for  the  freshman  student  of 
1955-56  who  attained  the  highest 
academic  average  while  maintain- 
ing a  self-help  job. 

Tino,  son  of  Mr.  and  Mrs.  E. 
R  Tino,  worked  last  year  in  the 
Library  after  coming  to  UNC  with 
an  outstanding  record  at  Gastonia 
High  School. 

While  in  Gastonia,  he  played 
varsity  football  three  years,  was 
sports  editor  of  the  school  paper, 
was  thrice  president  of  his  class 
and  served  one  year  as  president 
of  the  student  body. 

Tino.  who  still  is  working  in  the 
library  here,  last  year  made  three 
As.  seven  B's  and  one  C  on  34 
hours  of  class  work. 

To  be  eligible  for  the  Student 
Government  award,  a  student 
must  "satisfactorily"  maintain  a 
part-time  job  awarded  by  UNC's 
Student  Aid  Committee  and  equal- 
ing at  least  ten  hours  a  week. 


have  a  very  entertaining  as  well 
as   informative  afternoon." 

Bull's  Head  teas  are  held  sev- 
eral times  each  year.  Noted  auth- 
ors are  present  to  discuss  their 
recent  books. 

The  public  has  been  invited  to 
attend. 


TUXEDOS 

FOR  RENT 

Single  or  Double 

Breasted 


•1 


Mem!(  Shop 


DAVID  TINO,  LEFT,  AND  DR.  C.  O.  CATHEY 

.  .   .  loinner  and  Aid  Committee  Chairman 


YMCA-YWCA  ACTIVITIES 


The     following     activities     are^ 
scheduled  for  the  '"Y"  today: 

12:00  —  "Y'~  Night  Committee 
meeting,  Y  office.  Miss  Nancy 
Shuford  and  Jim  Raugh,  co-chair- 
men. 

12:30  p.m. — Intercollegiate  Re- 
lations Committee,  Y  Cabinet 
Room,  Miss  Kathy  Legrand,  Dick 
Frank,  Bob  Cowan,  co-chairmen. 


It  was  listed  incorrectly  in  yes- 
terday's Daily  Tar  Heel  that  Hos- 
pital Service  Committee  workers 
would  tour  Memorial  Hospital  at 
2:30.  The  tours  will  instead  be 
held  on  Tuesday,  Wednesday  and 
Thursday  of  next  week  from  4:30 
to  5:30,  according  to  Chairman 
Dotty  Wood. 


UNC  Graduate  Club  Has 
Meeting  Tonight  At  9    . 

!  The  UNC  Graduate  Club  will 
i.ieet  tomorrow  from  9  to  10:30 
p.m.,  according  to  club  officers. 

The  meeting,  which  will  be  held 
in  Roland  Parker  Lounge  in  Gra- 
ham  Memorial,    will    consist    of    a 
i  social  hour  followed  by  discussion 
,  groups.. 

j      Discussion    groups    will    include 
the  follov.ing  topics: 
'      Drama,    literature,     art,     music, 
'  current  affairs,  political  question.^, 
:  racial  relations  and  sports. 

A  temporary  executive  board  and 
!  officers  were  elected  at  the  last 
!  club  meeting.  These  were: 
j  Bill  Deaton,  chairman;  Preston 
I  Browning,  study  groups  chairman; 
i  Miss  Barbara  Battle,  social  chair- 
man: Tom  Wakefield,  publicity 
chairman: 

Miss  Colleen  Crenshaw,  secre- 
:  tary:  Bob  Rennick,  treasurer. 
j  Board  members  approved  were: 
'  Bill  Kirkman.  Herb  Shellans.  Miss 
I  Jo  Deason,  Miss  Pat  Dixon.  Miss 
j  Judy  Wilkes,  George  Cervar.  Miss 
Eleanor  Riggins  and  Bob  Grain. 


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with 
WINSTON 


LOST— BLACK  WALLET  &  AD- 
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pers. Contact  Mike  Martin,  325 
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single  action  "Frontier"  .45. 
Call  Jim  Potter,  116  King  Street, 
at  8-0893  after  4:30. 


LOST:  CLASS  OF  1956  CLASS 
ring  with  blue  stane  bearing  in- 
scription "Sam  H.  Elliote".  A 
reward  is  offered.  Please  con- 
tact the  Business  Office  of  The 
Daily  Tar  Heel. 


LOST— A  WALLET  CONTAINING 
valuables  and  no  money  on 
Tues.  evening  between  or  in  Le- 
noir Hall  or  Librarj'.  Contact 
Tom  Hettl«man,  118  Graham. 


■  What's  all  the  shouting  about?, Flavor! 
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THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


--■    jJ 


WEDNESDAY,  OCTOBER  24,  1956i 


Undefeated  Booters  Seek  Fourth  Win  Against  Tough  Pack 


Dad's  Day  Was  Incentive 

Lcfs  have  a  mother's  day  for  the  Carolina  football  team.  If  what 
happened  last  Saturday  against  Maryland  is  any  indication,  it  might 
not  be  a  bad  idea. 

Saturday  was  Dad's   Day   and   ail   the   fathers   of  the  Carolina 
footbaljers  were  on  hand  seated  on  a   bench   right  behind  their 
sons.   With   their   proud   poppas   looking   on,  the   Tar    Heels    went 
out  and  racked  up  their  Maryland  foes  in  a  big  way. 
Victorious  coach  Jim  Tatum  thought  the  father's  presence  had   a 
lot  to  do  with  what  happened  on  the  field.  "It  really  gave  the  boys 
a  lift,"  he  said  yesterda>   at  his  weekly  press  conference.  '"We  used 
to  have  them  at  Maryland,  and  we  never  lost  a  game  when  we  did." 
To  Tatum  and  the  Carolina  football   team,  the  victory   Saturday 
was  like  a  godsend.  "I  never  felt  like  a  victory  was  more  necessary,  " 
said  the  Tar  Heel  head  mentor.  Going  into  the  Terp  scrap,  the  Tar 
HeeLi'  had  lost  four  in  a  row  and  seemed  well  on  their  way  to  a  dis- 
mal season.  'The  squad  seemed  to  have  a  lot  more  fun  in  practice 
Monday,"  he  went  on  to  say.  "They  didn't  look  any  better  on  actual 
footbal  mechanics,  but  they  sure  were  in  better  spirits." 

Tatum  was  ploased  as  punch  with  the  way  his  young  and  in- 
experienced sophomores  performed.  "That  new  blood  had  a  lot  to 
.  do  with  our  winning,"  he  said.  "Don  Kemper  was  simply  great  at 
guard,  and  so  were  Redding  and  Russavage  at  tackles."  Kemper 
mms  shifted  to  guard  from  fullback  in  pre-season  manipulations, 
•nd  due  to  injuries  had  seen  very  little  action  in  previous  games 
this  year. 

The  Tar  Heel  coach  also  paid  tribute  to  several  other  newcomers 

who  shone  in  the  Terp  conquest.    Others  mentioned  were  halfback 

^Emil  DeCantis,  who  scored  two  touchdowns,  center  Fred  Swearengen 

and  end  Mac  Turlington,  who  set  up  the  Tar  Heels  last  TD  by  snag 

ging  a  loijg  pass  from  DeCantis. 

This  week's  game  with  Wake  Forest  should  be  another  toughie. 
The  Deacons  have  the  nation's  number  two  ground  gainer  in  Blasting  I 
Bill  Barnes,  and  a  sharp  passing  attack  spearheaded  by  quarterback 
Charlie  Carpenter  that  has  the  Tar  Heel  brain  trust  worried. 

DeHaven;  Harriers;  The  Hardwood  Sport 

Added  inspiration  for  the  Carolina  footballers  Saturday  was  the 
presence  in  the  sunds  of  glamorous  Gloria  DeHaven,  Hollywood  star 
and  TV  performer.  Miss  DeHaven.  a  close  friend  of  Coach  Tatum' s, 
flew  in  from  Las  Vegas  Friday  and  left  following  the  game  after  a 
visit  with  the  Tatums. 

A  check  of  late  developments  on  the  cross-country  front  shows 
•    that  Maryland  doesn't  yet  have  the  ACC  championship  salted  away 

after  all.  It  was  learned  yesterday  from  Tar  Heel  Coach  Dale  Ran- 

smti'that  tlie  team  titte  will  be  decided  Nov.   19  in  Raleigh  when 

Hie  ACC  Meet  will  be  run  off; 

'WHat  winter  Xirae  monarch  King  BasketbalJ  will  tipoff  tonight  for 
on©  Tarr  sHeel  eager.  Lencie  Rosenblirth,  a  consensus  all-America  in 
pre-season  ■  picks,  will  be  playing  for  the  Eastern  Collegiate  All-Stars 
when  they  tangle  with  the  U.  S.  Olympic  team  in  a  special  benefit 
game  to  be'  played  in  Washington.  Also  playing  for  the  all  stars  will 
be  Cliff  Hafer  and  John  Maglio  from  State  and  Joe  Belmont,  former 
Duk«  star. 


Tist  League 
Outing  For 
Soccermen 

J  By  JIMMY   PURKS 

Coach     Marvin     Allen's     varsity 
soccer  team  will  go  after  its  fourth 
j  straight   victory   without   a   defeat 
I  today  when  it  faces  a  tough  N.  C. 
State    eleven    here    at    3    p.m.    on 
Fetzor  Field. 
I      The  State  game  marks  the  initial 
conference  te.st  for  the  Tar  Heels 
I  who    have    easily    defeated    three 
I  non-conference     foes,    Lynchburg, 
Washington    and    Lee,    and    David- 
son. 

Coach  .\llen  would  make  no 
predictions  about  the  outcome  of 
the  game.  |"I  think  this  game  will 
be  our  toughest  one  so  far,"  Allen 
said.  "They  have  quite  a  number 
of  foreign  players  on  the  team," 
he  added. 

"We're  improving  all  along, 
however,"  he  said,  "the  fullbacks 
continue  to  do  a  good  job,  and  the 
offensive    passing    is    very    good." 

The  Carolina  offense  has  scored 
a  total  of  II  goals  in  three  games. 
The  Tar  Heel's  lowest  scoring  to- 
tal was  against  Davidson  when  the 
team  was  held  to  two  tallies. 

The  forward  line  is  sparked  by 
several  returning  lettermen,  led 
by  Captain  Grover  Brown,  Pat  Mc- 
Cormick.  and  John  Foster,  and  a 
host  of  sophomores  from  last 
year's  freshman  team.  The  sopho- 
mores wHo  have  made  a  particu- 
larly good  showing  are  Rick 
Grausman.  Tom  Rand.  Pete  Kel- 
linger.  and  Coleman  Barks,  who 
tops  the  team  in  scoring. 

The  forward  line's  chief  play- 
maker  is  a  ti'ansfer  student  from 
Campbell  College,  Ted  Youhanna. 
Youhanns  has  set  up  seve!;al  goals 
and  his  talented  foot  makes  him 
a  constant  scoring  threat. 

The  defense  has  done  particu- 
larly well,  allowing  only  one  goal 
in  three  games.  Washington  and 
Lee  was  the  only  team  to  mar  thr' 
defense's  record  by  scoring  on  a 
penalty  kick.  Goalie  Chuck  Hart- 
man  will  be  trying  for  his  second 
shutout  against  State  tomorrow. 
Carolina  shut  out  State  in  their 
first  contest  last  year,  3-0. 

The  squad's  next  contest  will  be 
with  Roanoke  on  Nov.  1  in  Roa- 
noke, Va. 


¥rosh  Runners  Meet  State 


Talented  Sophomores 


Above  are  five  big  reasons  why  the  Carolina  soccer  team  is  unbeaten  after  three  starts.  The  boys 
»r9  all  sophomores  and  they  are  left  to  right:  Pete  Kellinger,  Bob  'Borden,  Dave  Corkey,  Coleman 
Barks  and  Rick  Grausman. 


Carolina's      freshman      harriers 
will  be  out  to  capture  their  third  j 
win  of  the  season  today  when  they  j 
meet    the   freshman    crosp-country 
squad  of  N.  C.  State.  The  Carolina  | 
squad  now  holds  a  season  record  j 
of   two   wins   against    two   losses,  i 
State  defeated  Wake  Forest  fresh- 
men in  their  only  meet  to  date.        I 

Leading    the    harriers    will    be : 
Cowles     Liipfert.     The     Winston-  i 
Salem    speedster    has    been    unde- 
feated   in    freshman    competition. 


*  I 

George  L.  Coxhead  i 

U.N.C.  '42  j 
Campus  Representative 


NEW  YORK  LIFE  | 

INSUi?AMCE  COtAPANY  t 


Fick  \uthur  who  has  been  beaten 
only  three  times  by  men  other 
than  Liipfert,  will  back  up  the  Tar 
Baby  ace  along  with  the  vastly 
improved  foursome  of  John 
Greene,  Ray  Bagwell,  Brose  Pack' 
ard  and  Larry  Withrow. 

The  freshmen  will  start  the  2.3 
mile  race  at  4:15  oh  Fetzer  field. 


Harriers  To  Meef 
State  Here  Today 


The  Carolina  varsity  cross  coun- 
try team  went  through  a  light 
workout  yesterday  in  preparation 
for  their  dual  meet  with  N.  C. 
State  this  afternoon  at  4:15  on 
Fetzer  Field. 

A  large  turnout  is  expected  to 
watch  the  meet  because  it  is  the 
last  time  Ail-American  distance 
ruqner  Jim  Beatty  will  run  the 
local  course  before  a  home  crowd. 

The  varsity  harriers  will  be  out 
to  capture  tJieii:  fifth  win  ^gainst 
one  loss  which  was  -^uiteifey  last- 
Saturday  at  the  hariSs  jof  Mary-i 
lanQ. 

■  The  Wolfpack'  Tiafrier.s'  t)oas\ 
three  fine  runners  all  of  which 
placed  in  the  first  ten  positions 
in  a  quadrangular  meet  earlier  in 
the  season.  They  are  Mike  Shea, 


Spartans  Replace 
Okla.  In  Top  Slot 


By  WILL  GRIMSLEY 
The  Associated   Press 

Oklahoma's  Sooners,  on  the  wave 
of  a  record  34-game  winning 
streak,  had  a  new  incentive  today 
tor  their  game  Saturday  with  No- 
tre Dame — they  want  to  win  back 
their  position  as  the  country's  No. 
1  college  football  team. 

Apparently  only  a  decisive  vic- 
tory over  the  battered  Fighting 
Irish,  beaten  in  three  of  their  four 
starts,  can  do  it. 

It  was  mainly  on  the  strength 
of  a  thorough  47-14  walloping  of 
Notre  Dame  last  weekend  that 
I^Iichigan  State  moved  into  the  top 
position  of  the  weekly  Associated 
Press  poll,  pushing  the  Sooners 
down  to  the  runnerup  position. 

It  marked  the  first  time  this 
year  that  mighty  Oklahoma,  un- 
beaten since  Notre  Dame  turned 
the  trick  in  the  opening  game  at 
Norman  in  1953,  had  failed  to  top 
the  poll.  In  1953  Notre  Dame  won 
28-21.  Oklahoma  was  tied  the  fol- 
lowing week  by  Pittsburgh.  Then 
the  present  streak  began. 

Georgia  Tech  continued  in  a 
strong  challenging  position  for  nar ! 
tional  honors,  holding  third  place 
with  a  comfortable  lead  over  Ten- 
nesec,  in  f ouFt||»  and  other  -mem- 
bers of  the  top  10  including,  In 
order,  Michigan,  No.  5;  gouthern 
— — ' '       ' .  ,  , 

Demon  Deacons  In  Top 
Shape  For  UNC  Game 

WINSTON-SALEM,  Oct.  23  — 
i/P) — Wake  Forest  College's  foot- 
ball squad  ran  through  a  full-scale 
offensive  practice  today  in  prep- 
aration for  the  game  against  North 
Carolina  at  Chapel  Hill  Saturday. 

The  squad  canxp  out  of  the  Flor- 
ida State  14-14  tie  in  top  physical 
shape. 

Halfback  Bill  Pegram  took  part 
in  full-  speed  work  for  the  first 
time  since  injuring  his  elbow  on 
Sept.  15.  He  alternated  with  Bus- 
ter Ledford  at  the  right  halfback 
spot  in  the  No.  2  backfield. 

The  first  and  second  units  al- 
ternated in  offensive  drills  against 
the  freshmen. 


California  No.  6;  Texas  A&M  No. 
7.  Baylor  No.  8,  Ohio  StjAe  No.  9 
and  Mississippi  and  Texas  Chris- 
tian, tied  at  No.  10. 

Of  the  first  10  teams,  only  the 
four  leaders  plus  Southern  Cal  and 
Baylor  are  unbeaten  and  untied. 

This  week  Michigan  State  which 
has  waded  through  a  tougher 
schedule  than  that  of  Oklahoma, 
drew  96  of  the  156  first-place 
votes  cast  by  sports  writers  and 
broadcasters.  The  Spartans  amass- 
ed a  total  of  1.459  points  on  the 
basis  of  10  for  a  first  place  vote, 
nine  for  a  second,  etc. 

Oklahoma,  which  whipped  Kan- 
sas 34-12  without  pushing  itself, 
gained  44  first  place  votes  and  a 
total  of  1,356  points.  Georgia  Tech 
i.s  the  only  other  team  in  the 
1,000-plus  point  bracket,  with 
1,182. 


Tar  Heels  Go 
Through  Long 
Drill  Yesterday 

Concentrating  on  stopping  Wake 
Forest's  Bill  Barnes  and  cracking 
the  tough  Deacon  line,  North  Car- 
olina's Tar  Heels  went  through  a 
long  drill  here  yesterday  after- 
noon. 

Both  offense  and  defense  came 
in  for  full  work  as  UNC  stepped 
up  preparations  for  the  game  that 
will    be    played    here    Saturday.      | 

At  least  one  more  day  of  heavy 
work  is  slated  for  Coach  Jim  Ta-  , 
turn's  club. 

The  squad  was  at  full  strength 
after  Monday's  relatively  light  ■ 
work.  The  same  eleven  that  start- 
ed against  Maryland  in  last  week's 
win  worked  as  a  unit  today. 

Saturday's  game  will  have  add- 1 
ed  color  by  the  appearance  of  over  , 
5,000  high  school  and  college  mu- ! 
sicians  who  will  participate  in  the 
annual  band  day.  A  total  of  69 
bands  are  scheduled  to  take  part 
in  the  gigantic  half-time  show.       j 


Murals  I 

YESTERDAY'S  RESULTS 

4:00— Field  1.  DKE  43,  Delta 
Sig  0;  field  2,  Phi  Delt  17.  KA  0; 
field  3,  Beta  48,  SAH  0;  field  4, 
Kappa  Sig  8.  TEP  0;  field  5.  Phi 
Gam  21.  Lambda  Chi  0. 

5:00— field  1.  SPE  6,  Phi  Delt 
(w)  2;  field  2,  Zeta  Psi  (w)  19. 
Delta  Sig  0;  field  3.  DKE  (w)  19, 
Phi  Gam  0:  field  4,  Victory  Vil 
iage  1,  EXrerett  2,  0;  field  5.  Man- 
gum  1,  Law  Sch  2,  0. 


Fred  Walker  and  Bill  Greazzo.  The 
most  dangerous  of  these  three  is 
Shea.  Shea  holds  the  distinction 
of  being  the  only  runner  ever  to 
beat  Beatty  in  dual  competition. 
This  rarity  happened  during  last 
year's  harrier  campaign.  j 

In  the  quadrangular  meet,  which 
was  held  at  Columbia,  South  Car-  j 
olina,    Beatty    defeated    Shea    by  ] 
some     thirty     seconds     as     Shea  i 
placed  second  b^l)il{d^him.  ' 

*•  In   today's'  meet   the   team  will' 
be-  led  by  Jim  Beatty,  who  will  be 
backed    up    by    co-captain   Marian  j 
Griffin.    Coach  Ranson  hopes  that 
jfyerett    Whatelt,     Ben     Williams,  ' 
Pefrin  Henderson, '  Dave  Scurlock, 
Doug      Henderson      and      Howard 
Kahn,  who,  by  the  way  is  partici- 
pating in  the  first  meet,  will  put 
out  as  much  as   possible  in  what  , 
he   thinks   will    be    a   very   close  \ 
meet.  '■  t 


Open 

ALL   DAY 
WEDNESDAY 

Berman^s 

DEFT.   STORE 


^  college  man's  choice- 

^IVY  LEAGUE'' 
tuxedo 


BOB  and  MONK 
of 

TOWN& 
CAMPUS 

SALUTE 
Athlete  Of  The  Week 


This  friiternity  favbr't-a . 
features   a   straight 
hanging   coaf  with 
naturskl    minimum 

gadded  s.hjulders  — 
kinher_  satin  iap^l? — 
fljap  pppkets— center 
veiit— and  plain  ifro'i>t 
unpleated  trousers. 
Iniported  lightweight 
worsted  in-     Black.,' 

$62.50 
S«e  Our  Complete 
Lint  Of  Accessories 


CHAPEL   HILL'S   FORMAL   WEAR    HEADQUARTERS 

STEVEKS^  SHEPHERD 


JIMMY  JONES 

Jimmy  Jones,  Carolina's   sen- 
sational high  scoring  guard,  has 
been     nanoed     Athlete     of     the 
Week  for  hiv  brilliant  line  play 
in  last  week's  34-6  victory  over 
Maryland.  Jones  scored  the  Tar 
Heel's  first  TO  on  a  freak  pass 
play,  and   later   managed   to   re- 
cover   a     fumble    and     block     a 
kick     to    round    out    his    day's 
woilc. 

We  warjt  him  to  drop  by 
rOWN  &  CAMPUS  and  pick  out 
a  shirt  to  his  liking— compli- 
ments of  the  house. 

■  f 

We  want  the  old  »ni  young 
^iike  of  Chapel  Hill  to  make 
TOWN  &  CAMPUS  their  head 
quarters  for  the  finest  in  men's 
clothing.    Drop    in    today. 


TOWN  & 
CAMPUS 


ANNOUNCINQ 

Effective  Nov.  1 ,  1 956,  The  HI-FU  SERVICE  ST  A- 

YIQN  located  on  the  Durham-Chapel  Hill  Boule- 
vard will  be  operated  by  the  Sun  Oil  Co.  better 
known  under  the  TRADE  nanne  of  BLUE  SUNO- 
CO. We  wish  to  thank  the  STUDENTS  for  their 
PATRONAGE.  For  a  short  while  after  Nov.  1 ,  the 
station  will  be  closed  while  extensive  remodel- 
ing is  being  made.  We  hope  the  students  will 
see  fit  to  patronize  the  new  station  after  comple- 
tion of  its  remodeling.  Sun  Oil  Co.  has  a  very 
good  national  reputation  and  we  feel  that  their 
method  of  operation  and  price  line  of  products 
meet  the  needs  of  the  student. 
We  still  have  a  few  new  tires  left  which  we  are 
placing  on  sale  AT  COST.  Again  we  wish  to 
thank  you  for  your  patronage  and  express  our 
desire  that  you  will  continue  totrade  at  the  same 
location  with  SUNOCO. 


,i3^^:-  V;r1/ 


SPECIAL  NOTICE  TO 


UNIVERSITY  EMPLOYEES 


.,.-,  i 


Hospital  Care  Association's  Blue  Cross  group  for  University  Em- 
ployees will  be  reopened  for  the  addition  of  new  members  Wed- 
nesday, October  24.  If  your  family  is  not  protected  by  Blue 
Cross,  don't  miss  this  opportunity  to  get  Comprehensive  hospital 
and  surgical  care  at  low  group  rates,  on  a  payroll  deduction 
basis.  '         . 


FOR  FURTHER  INFORMATION  WITHOUT  OBLIGATION 
SEE  OUR  REPRESENTATIVE 


HIFLI  SERVICE 
L.  W.  Gardner  . 


STATION 
.  .  Mgr. 


Mr.  John  Chapman 
YMCA  Lobby 


Wednesday,  Oct.  24 
11:00  A.M. -3:00  P.M. 


Perfect  in  style     ,   ,|_:;  ^; 
''      -,  .  as  well  as  comfort..". 


^^aSSglijmwAsisiii^ijaiMKi**^^ 


FLORSHEIM 

»■  ^^^    Tassel  Slip-ons 


m    Hospital  Care  Association 


DURHAM,  N.  C. 


•        Serving  UNC  Employees  Since  1933 


These  carefree  sUp-one  arf  handsomely  pr,)p«.r  for  alt 
round-theKjloek  octawons.  Thanks  to  the  spe«>ial  lasts 
dewgoed  by  Florsheim  just  for  these  shoeg,  th-v  fit 
*nugly  all  over  without  shpping  or  binding.  Shp  into 
a  pair  soon. 

BLACK  FOR  FORMAL  WEAR! 

ALSO  IN   HANDSOME  CORDOVAN 


Julian' 


e  ^{)op 


U.N.C.    Library 

S-rials      Dept. 
Chapel   Hill»   N.    C. 
8-31-49 


WEATHER 

Fair   and   cooler  with   expoctsd 
high  of  70. 


VOL.    LVII    NO.    30 


m  t  Daily  S  ^Tat  Keel 


NOSIRR 

Nope,   it   isn't  solved.   See  p«9e 


two. 


Complete  (iP)  Wire  Service 


CHAPEL 


Di  Blasts  Merchants 
For  Their  Attitude' 


HILL,   NORTH   CAROLINA,   THURSDAY,  OCTOBER   25,   1954 

-r 


Offices   in   Graham   Memorial 


FOUR   PAGES   THIS    ISSUE 


The  Dialectk  Senate  passed  a 
resolution.  9-8.  Tuesday  night  that 
•  condemned  the  Chapel  Hill  Mer- 
chants for  their  actions,  attitudes 
and  miserly  interpretations  of  the 
student  Fair  Deal." 

Senator  Bill  Sabisbon  introduced 
iind  defended  the  resolution  by  say- 
ing Chapel  HiU  was  the  most  ex- 
pensive college  city  in  Nwlh  Caro- 
lina and  that  the  merchants  were 
milking  the  'student  body  cow" 
dry. 

Senator  Erx-in  Avery  claimed  the 
merchants  were  "friendly  and  gave 
credit  to  people  under  21." 

He    said    the    merchants    did    not  \ 
have  a  monopoly  on  student  trade 
a?  one  could  get  to  Durham  or  Ra-  '■ 
!eigh. 

Senator  Jim  Holmes  called  the 
iiierchant.s  on  Franklin  St.  "leeches" 
and  e.vpi-essed  his  opinion  that  the 
merchants  had  a  virtual  monopoly 
OR  student  trade. 

Senator    Joel     Fleishman     stated  ' 
that    haircuts   in   Chapel   Hill   were 
no  higher  than  those  in  Raleigh  or  ! 
Durham.  ; 

Feeling  that  the  laundr>'  had  no  I 
.seirse  of  respon.sibility  and  that  gas 


1  prices  were  too  high,  Senator  Jerry 
I  Boudreau  favored  a  boycott. 
I     Senator  John  Barto  claimed  that. 
j  if  one  realiy  wanted  to  avoid  buy- 
ing in  Chapel  HiM,  he  could  get  to 
Raleigh  or  Durham  even  if  he  had 
to  hitch-hike. 

Senator  Nancy  Rothschild  said  the  i 
students  did  not  give  the  Chapel ! 
Hill  merchants  all  their  business,      j 

iNorman  Smith,  a  guest,  said  th« 
Merchants  Association  worked  for  j 
tl.e  students*  benefit,  many  stores  j 
were  owned  or  operated  by  U.VC  i 
graduates  and  the  tnisiness  estab- 1 
rishments  supported  the  Yackety  i 
Vack  and  The  Daily  Tar  Heel. 

Senatcw  Eugene  Whitehead  asJted 
that   the   students   not   be  extorted  ' 
and    that    the     merchants     should  ' 
know   the    way    the     students     feel  | 
rbc-ut  the  matter. 

Offering  statistics.  Senator  Dan 
Vann  said  the  Chapel  HiU  prices . 
were  lower  than  those  at  Princeton;  j 
-New  York;  Evanston,  III.;  and! 
PhUadelphia.  He  explained  the  j 
Chapel  Hill  situation  in  terms  of 
the  law  of  supply  and  demand.  i 

Stan  Shaw,   President  of  the  Di, 
brcke  an  8-8  tie  when  the  final  vote  , 
was  taken.  i 


Columbia  St. 
Lifted  If  Frat 


Parking 


rnities  Are 
Action  To  Help  Alleviate 


Restriction 
Willing 
Parking 


WILLIAM  B.   RODMAN 

-  • .  ^lore   tke  Phi 

Trustees  Will 
Meet  Students 
Here  Today 

The  Visiting  Committee  of  the 
L'NC  Board  of  Trustees  will  meet 
in  Chapel  Hill  today  under  chair- 
manship of  William.?.  Saunders 
of  Raleigh.  The  committee  met  at 
VVCUNC  at  Greensboro  yesterday, 
and  meets  at  State  Colelge  tomor- 
row. 


Chancellor  Robert  B.  House  will 
present  members  of  the  faculty 
and  administration  at  10  a.m.  in 
the  faculty  lounge  of  the  More- 
head  Building.  The  committee 
will    have    lunch   with    twenty-one  i  other 


.-epresentative  students  at  12:30  in 
Lenoir  Hall. 


Rodman  Spells 
Out  Appellate 
Court  Functions 


By  PRINGLE  PIPKIN 

State   Associate  Justice  William 
B.    Rodman   addresed   the    PBlan- 
thropic   Literary   S(x;iety   Tuesday  i 
night,  on  "The  Proper  Function  of  ' 
the  Appellate  Court." 

Before  a  crowd  of  about  35, 
Justice  Rodman  said,  'I  will  ex- 
press my  views  but  no  opinions  on 
any  specific  judicial  questions." 

After  expounding  his  views  on 
the    court,    the    speaker   said    the 
♦  iudges  of  the  courts  must  do  thei. 
{  t)est  to  make  wise  decisions,  and 
1  the   people   of   the    United   States 
j  must  respect  the  laws  as  handed 
down  by  the  courts. 
I      Rodman    defined    the    appellate 
court    as    the    judicial    booy    that 
deals  with  average   ordinary   mat- 
ters of  human  life.  With  vigor  and 
heat  the  relationship  of  the  Judi- 
cial society  had  been  debated  the 
past  30  years  he  said. 

The  speaker  explained  how  the 
N.  C.  State  Court  was  given  the 
power  to  set  aside  acts  of  the  leg- 
islature by  the  Act  of  1789.  In  de 
scribing  the  court,  the  former  Phi 
member  said  shortly  after  the  con- 
litution  of  Conn,  was  set  up,  the 
precedent  of  the  court  cannot  pro- 
nounce a  law  invalid  because  it 
believes  it  unjust  but  only  be- 
cause the  law  is  cpotrary  to  the 
established  constitution.  He  gave 
historical   examples   of   the 


Legislature 
To  Air  Debate 
Council  Case 

Dave   Liebermann,   chairman  of 
the    Debate   Council,    will    appear 
before  tonight's  session  of  student 
legislature    to    explain    the    func- 
tions of  the  debate  council  in  ref- 
erence to  a  bill  defeated  last  week 
;  asking    for    a    $300    appropriation 
j  for  the   council's   activities. 
j      Following  the  defeat  of  the  ap- 
1  propriations     bill     introduced     by 
!  student  party  representative  John 
Brooks  last  week,  SP  member  Bill 
McNaull  introduced  a  measure  to 
investigate    debate   council   expen- 
ditures.  McNaull's   bill    will   come 
up  for  a  vote  tonight. 

Liebermann  stated  yesterday  in 
reference  to  McNaull's  bill,  which 
calls  for  a  committee  to  investi- 
gate council  expenditures.  'If  they 
do  that,  the  Student  Audit  Board 
has  lost  its  purpose." 

The  Student  Audit  Board,  Lie- 
bermann pointed  out,  is  responsi- 
ble for  investigation  of  student 
organization   finances. 

Also  slated  to  come  before  to- 
night's session  is  a  bill  introduc- 
ed last  week  by  University  Party 
floorleader  Benny  Thomas  pro- 
viding for  a  committee  to  investi- 
gate the  possibility  of  maintain- 
ing men's  dormitory  television 
sets  from  sources  other  than  dor- 
mitoiy  social  funds. 


Will  Be 

To  Take 

Problem 

Commission,  Aldermen 
Hold  Private  Meeting 


Will  Open  Petites  Musicaie  Sunday 


Pictured  above  are  Miss  Mary  Johnston  and  Lloyd  Skinner,  who  head  the  cast  of  Edna  St.  Vincent 
Millay's  verse  play,  "Aria  Da  Capo",  to  be  presented  Sunday  at  8  p.m.  in  the  main  lounge  of  Graham 
Memorial.   Under   the  sponsorship:  of   Les   Petites   Musicaie,    the    play    is    directed    by     Anastasia    Christ. 

(Photo   by   Hal   Henderson) 


Those  appearing  before  the  com- 
mittee will  be  Dean  of  the  Faculty  ; 
C.    P.     Spruill,    Director    of    the ' 
Health  Affairs  Division,  Dr.  Henry 
T.  Clark  Jr.,  Acting  Dean  of  Stu- 1 
dent  Affairs  W.  D.  Perry.  Director 
of  Athletics  C.  P.  Erickson,  Busi- 1 
ness   Manager   Claude    E.   Teague,  i 
and      Director      of      Development 
Charles  M.  Shaffer. 

Besides  chairman  Saunders, 
other  members  of  the  committee 
are  Mrs.  Rosa  B.  Parker,  Albe- 
marle; Victor  S.  Bryant,  Durham; 
J.  Hampton  Price,  Leaksville;  H. 
L.  Riddle.  Morganton;  Floyd 
Crouse,  Sparta;  Hill  Yarborough, 
Louisburg;  Mrs.  Mebane  Burgwyn, 
Jackson;  Robert  M.  Hanes,  Win- 
ston-Salem; Mrs.  Ed  M.  Anderson, 
West  Jefferson;  John  D.  Larkin, 
Trenton;  D.  L.  Ward,  New  Bern. 


courts  growth  and  fights,  both  en 
state  and  national  levels. 

The    lecturer   said    the    gravest 
duty  of  judges  was  that  of  declar- 
ing  amendments   to   the   constitu- 
tion or  laws  invalid,  and  he  con- 
tinued   to    say    the    judges    must 
make   interpretations   of   the  laws 
in  order  to  fix  the  meaning  of  ihe 
written  words. 
J      He    said    the    court    should    in- 
jterpret  the  law  in  relation  to  the 
!  common   law.    Justice  Rodman   il- 
!  lustrated  his  point  by  describing 
a  case  against   the  United  States 
j  concerning  the  gold  standard  and 
j  the  impairment  of  an  obligation. 
!  The  court  declared  that  the  plain- 
I  tiff   should    be   paid    in   silver   or 
I  currency  as   gold   was   a   medium 
j  of  exchange  rather  than    a   com- 
I  modity. 

j     Rodman  said  if  the  people  did 
j  not  like  the  laws  it  was  up  to  them 


Victory  Villagers  Will 
Beat  Bushes  For  Adiai 

A  group  from  Victory  Village 
will  be  beating  the  campaign  trail 
for  Adlai   Stevenson   this  week. 

According  to  Mrs.  John  Critten- 
den of  246A  Jackson  Circle,  sev- 
eral students  will  go  from  door  to 
door  in  the  married  students' 
housing  center  thi*  week.  They 
will  speak  on  the  Democratic 
candidate's  behalf  and  will  solicit 
funds  for  television  appearances 
for  their  candidate. 

Mrs.  Crittenden  invited  "any- 
body who  wants  to  help"  to  con- 
tact   her    for    instructions. 


graduate  drama  student  from  Newark,  N.  J. 

Millay  Verse  Drama  Is  First 
Petite^  Musical€[^Production 


Legislature  Rules 
Committee  Meets 

The  Rules  Committee  of  the 
Student  Legislature  will  meet  to- 
day at  .5  p.m.  in  the  Council  Room 
of  Graham  Memorial.  Miss  Martha 
Barl)er,  chairman,  urged  all  mem- 
bers to  be  present. 


By    EDITH    MACKINNON 

".\ria  Da  Capo,"  Edna  St.  Vin 
cent  .Millays  verse  play  of  war 
and  peace,  will  be  the  first  pres- 
entation sponsored  by  Les  Petites 
Musicaie  at  8  p.m.  Sunday  in  the 
main  lounge  of  Graham  Memorial. 

Presented  by  GM.AB.  the  play 
is  directed  by  Anastasia  Christ  of 
Newark.  N.  J.,  a  graduate  student 
in  drama. 

Heading  the  ca.st  of  characters 
will  be  .Mary  Johnston  as  Colum- 
bine. Lloyd  Skinner  as  Pierrot, 
and  John  Whilty  as  Cothurnus. 
Mask  of  Tragedy.  Al  Gordon  and 
Les  Ca.sey  will  be  seen  as  Thyrsis 
and  Corydon. 

Using,    the    characters    of     the 
Commcndia   DelArte,   Edna   Millay 
wrote    the   satirical    piav    for    pro- 
duction in  New  York's  tamed  Pro- 
;  vincctown  Playhouse,  where  it  was 
I  first  presented   in   1919.   The  pro- 


mi.sing  young  playwright,  was  la- 
ter to  become  .America's  leading 
woman   poet. 

Piano  music  for  the  play  will 
be  furnished  by  Christopher  Rey- 
nolds. Costumes  for  the  produc- 
tion are  designed  by  June  Craft, 
and  settings  are  by  .Al  Gordon. 
Stage  managinii  will  be  done  by 
Page  Williams.  All  students  tak- 
ing pari  in  the  presentation  are 
members  of  the  Dept.  of  Dramatic 
Art. 

Licia  Albanses,  prima  donna 
soprano  of  the  .Metropolitan  Op- 
era A.ssociation.  will  be  presented 
in  concert  Nov.  1  at  8  p.m.  in 
Memorial  Hall. 

The  concert,  sponsored  by  the 
Student  Entertainment  Commit- 
tee, is  free  to  UNC  students  upon 
presentation  of  l.D.  cards. 

A  SI  admission  will  be  charged 
to  student   wives  and  a   S2   fee   to  | 
faculty  and  townspeople  after  7:40 
p.m.  Doors  will  be  open  at  7  p.m. 


FORMOSAN  THREATENS  BIRD'S  NEST  SOUPr 


Co'Ofy  House 
High  Campus 


Members  Beat 
Living  Costs 


Sy  BILLY  BARNES 

Twelve  UNC  students  are  beat- 
ing the  high  cost  of  campus  living 
with  a  do-it-yourself  organization 
in  a  rented  house  on  W.  Franklin 
St. 

The  men  are  the  "second  gen- 
eration" of  a  co-op  group  formed 


here  last  year.  But  this  fall  they 
and    their   legislatures    tp   change  moved  into  a  different  house  and 


IN  THE  INFIRMARY 

Students  in  the  Infirmary  yes- 
terday  included: 

Misses  Alma  Gedtey  Cathe- 
rine Hux,  Helen  Dickson,  Shir- 
ley Coggins,  Carolyn  Roberts, 
Sally  Simpson,  Patrica  Haughton, 
Sally  Patterson,  Grace  Boney, 
Nancy   Noble. 

George  Stavnitski,  Stephen 
Keutzer,  Frank  Greer,  Claude 
Moore  Jr.,  Charles  Shoe,  Tawfik 
Haffan,  Leonard  Carpenter,  Wil- 
liam Heck,  James  Eppt  Hi,  Isaac 
Merrill,  Douglas  Young,  Joel 
Caldwell,  William  Sherrill,  Gray 
Reed,  John  Saunders,  Gordon 
Hall,  William  Oetten,  Thomas 
Haiziip. 


the  laws,  not  the  court. 


Hodges  Says  N.C.  Needs 
More  Local  Industries 

RED  S'PRINiiS  -~{JP,~  North] 
Carolina  needs  "locally  financed, 
locally   operated   industries   which! 


added  some  new  members  to  thi 
roster. 

Under  the  co-op  system  all  the 
members  work  together  to  prepare 
meals,  keep  records  and  keep  the 
iiouse  clean  and  in  good  repair. 

Five  evening  meals  are  served 
each  week.  Two  members  prepare 


will    utilize  the   many   farm    peo-  a  day's  meal;  then  those  two  are 
pie  who  must  supplement  their  in-  i  free  until  it  comes  their  time  to 
come  or  go  under,"  Gov.   Hodges   serve  again, 
said  here  yesterday.  i     At  the  time  of  their  recent  move 


"At  the  same  time."  he  declar 
ed,  "We  want  to  encourage  as 
many  of  our  farm  people  'as  pos-  j 
sible  to  continue  to  live  on  the , 
farm  or  in  rural  areas  so  that  they  | 
may  enjoy  the  benefits  of  our  j 
great    rural    state    with    its    good 


the  guys  were  faced  with  the  prob- 
lem of  fiu-nishing  the  new  house. 
Word  got  around  the  town  and 
campus  and  interested  people  be- 
g-.n  to  raid  their  attics. 

Two  professors'  wives  gave  them 
a  refrigerator,  stove  and  handsome 


roads,  good  schools,  rural  church-  j  mahogany  drop-leaf  table. 

es,  etc."  i     Now  the  house  is  furnished  with 


the  bare  nececscsities  but  there  is 
still  a  need  for  crockery,  beds, 
chairs  and  drapes. 

The  new  house  boasts  eight  spa- 
cious    rooms,     with     three     ftiore 
j  available  in  a  backyard  cottage. 
j      Since    sleeping    space    has    been 
increased    by    their    recent    move, 
'  the  co-op  members  would   like   to 
talk  to  any  men  who  would  be  in- 
terested    in    their    share-the-work 
plan  of  college  living, 

Charlie  McCaw,  unofficial 
spokesman  for  Ihe  co-op  house, 
says  there  is  no  formal  process  for 
selection  of  new  memluTS.  He 
says  it  is  rather  a  matter  of  a 
man's  selecting    the  c-oop   system. 

McCaw  also  said  the  group  plans 
to  have  some  "boarders"  who  will 
live  elsewhere  but  take  their  turns 
in  preparing  the  co-o0  meals,  re- 
ceiving in  turn  the  five  low-cost 
meals  per  week  plus  use  of  the 
hou.se's  recreational  and  study  fa- 
cilities. 

When  the  co-op  house  was  first 
begun  last  year,  many  of  the  mem- 
bers were  advanced  students  from 
foreign  countries.  Now  the  only 
foreign  member  is  Formosan  Krn- 
uelh    C.    Yang.    When    it    comes 


I  Yang's  turn  to  prepare  the  evening; 
I  meal  the  members  can  usually  ex- 
'  pcct  rice,  plus  a  special  semi- 
oriental  dish.  The  guys  report  that 
i  Yang  s  meals  have  so  far  been  ex- 
!  cellcnt.  However,  he  keeps  threat- 
ening to  treat  them  to  bird's  nest 
soup. 

Although  only  five  formal  meals 
are  served  each' week,  food  is  on 
hand  for  optional  breakfasts  and 
lunches.  If  a  member  eats  an  egg 
for  breakfast  and  a  ham  sandwich 
for  lunch,  he  checks  off  those 
items  on  a  nearby  list.  At  the  end 
of  the  month  he  is  billed  accord- 
ing to  his  appetite. 

Room  rent  at  the  co-op  house  is 
set  according  to  prevailing  dormi- 
tory rents.  But  the  do-it-yourself 
system  makes  meals  cost  only  35- 
50  cents. 

Spokesman  McCaw  says  the  food 
i.s  "great"  and  compares  favorably 
to  that  of  almost  any  place  in 
Chapel  Hill. 

As  for  the  success  of  the  system 
— he  says  the  gang  has  yet  to  find 
J  "goof-off"  in  their  midst.  No 
<»ne  in  the  ^co-op's  past  has  ever 
failed  to  prepare  a  meal  at  his 
appointed  time. 


UN  Week 

Cefehrcttion 

Continues 


The  Freshman  Fellowship  will 
continue  the  observation  of  Unit- 
ed Nations  Week  with  a  program 
tonight  focu.sed  on  the  Suez  sit- 
uation. 

The  meeting  win  begin  with 
supper  at  6:15  on  the  second  floor 
of  Lenoir  Hall,  followed  by  a  mo- 
vie on  the  Suez  Canal  at  7  p.m. 
A  panel  discussion,  moderated  by 
James  Kinney,  will  conclude  the 
meeting  promptly  at  8  p.m. 

Panelists  for  the  discussion  an 
Dr.  Shepard  Jones,  a  Burtor 
Craigc  Prolessor  of  Political  Sci 
ence,  and  Dr.  Zawahry,  an  Egypi 
ian  public  health  student  at  the 
University  of  North  Carolina. 

Dr.  Jones,  who  has  been  at  the 
University  for  two  years,  was  with 
the  State  Department  from  1942 
to  1952  as  Public  .Aflair.s  Advise: 
for  Near  Eastern.  South  Asiah 
and  African  Affairs:  and  from 
1952  to  1954  as  Public  Affairs  Of 
ficer  for  Pakistan  and  Jordan.  He 
was  a  member  of  the  staff  of  the 
United  Nations  Conference  in 
194.=i. 

Dr.  Zawahry  is  a  medical  doc- 
tor from  Cairo.  Egypt.  He  ha^ 
worked  with  the  World  Health  Or 
ganization,  which  is  a  part  of  the 
United   Nations. 

Dr.  Jones  will  discu.ss  develop 
ments  in  the  Suez  picture  .sine* 
the  completion  of.  the  film,  and 
Dr.  Zawahry  will  discuss  the 
m?aning  of  these  developments 
for  the  Egyptian   people. 


By    NEIL    BASS 

Representatives  from  the  local 
Board  of  Aldermen  have  agreed  to 
lift  the  parking  restriction  on  Co- 
lumbia St.  for  60  days  provided 
fraternities  take  some  action  to  al- 
leviate their  own  problem.  Chair- 
man Wilburn  Davis  of  the  Traf- 
fic Advisory  Commission  disclosed 
yesterday. 

Davis  made  the  announcement 
before  a  joint  meeting  of  repre- 
sentatives from  fraternities  on  Co- 
lumbia   St.    and    the    commission. 

Chapel  Hill   Aldermen   placed   a 

Iv.o-hour    limit    restriction    on    Co- 

I  lunibia    St.    between    Franklin    St. 

I  and  Cameron  Ave.  during  the  sum- 

j  mer. 

I  Davis  laid  the  matter  in  the 
I  Columbia  St.  fraternities'  laps  by 
I  requesting  a  report  from  them  by 
next  Friday. 
j  The  report,  which  is  supposed 
J  to  contain  suggestions  from  frater- 
nities toward  solving  their  parking 
'  fiasco,  will  be  conveyed  to  the 
!  aldermen,  according  to  Davis. 
I  If  the  Columbia  St.'  fraternitios 
involved  promise  concrete  action 
in  the  report,  the  board  of  alder- 
men will  lift  the  restriction  for  60 
days  in  order  to  allow  them  to 
implement  such  action. 

If  the  fraternities  fail  to  pro- 
mise concrete  action,  then-  alder- 
men will  close  the  case  and  leave 
the  restriction  in  force.  Davis  dis- 
closed. 

The  restriction,  if  lifted  at  all, 
will  only  be  lifted  to  provide  park- 
ing space  for  fraternities  involved 
while  they  provide  space  for  them- 
selves. 
FRATERNITIES 

Representives  from  three  of  the 
seven  fraternities  involved  express- 
ed dubious  opinions  concerning 
v.hether  or  not  their  respective 
tratcrnities  could  provide  addi- 
tional parking  space. 

Thoy  promi.sed.  however,  to  con- 
vey   Davis's    request    for   a    report 
iiom  each  individual  fraternity  to 
their  respective  fraternities. 
Chairman    Davis   expressed    con 


cern  that  only  three   of  the  seven 
involved    fraternities    sent    repre- 

I  scntatives  lo  the  session.  All  seven 

I  v/ere  notified,  he  said. 

Fraternities  represented  were. 
Beta  Theta  Pi,  Delta  Kappa  Ep:.i- 
lon  and  Sigma  Nu. 

I  Fraternities  which  failed  to  send 
representa'ives    were: 

,  Pi  K-appa  Alpha.  Pi  Lambda  Phi, 
Sigma  Alpha  Epsilon  and  Sigma 
Chi. 

The  meeting  at  which  repre- 
sentatives from  the  Board  of  Al 
dermen  pledged  to  lift  the  re 
striction  for  60  da.vs  provided  fra- 
ternities take  .some  action  during 
the  period  to  solve  the  parking 
problem  was  held  last  Thursday. 

The  session,  chaired  by  Davis, 
was  closed  to  the  press.  Repre- 
sentatives from  both  the  Mer- 
chants' Assn.  and  the  Board  of 
Aldermen  were  present. 
FINAL  STATEMENT 

Chairman  Davis  made  a  final 
statement  on  the  restriction  by 
saying: 

"The  Traffic  Commission  has 
received  much  cooperation  from 
the  Merchants'  A.ssn.  and  alder- 
men concerning  the  Columbia  St. 
parking  restriction. 

I  'It  is  now  up  to  people  living 
on  Columbia  St.  to  show  some  ac- 
tion." 

Concerning     the     Commission's 

future  Davis  .said;  ,,„ 

"After    the    fraternities'    report, 

•  the  ca.se  is  closed:  and  the  com- 
mission will  divert  its  effort  to 
the  entire  campus  parking  prob- 
lem. '  ■  T 

Germans  Club  Concert 
Will  Be  Held  At  4 

The  Germans  Hub  fall  concert 
will  be  held  Friday  from  4  to  6 
p.m.  in  Memorial  instead  of  3  to 
5:30   p.m.   as   reported   yesterday. 

The  bands  of  Fats  Domino  and 
Billy  May  will  provide  the  music 
at  both  the  concert  and  the  dance, 
held  from  9  p.m.  to  1  a.m.  in 
Woollen  C.vni!ia>iiiim. 


Book  List  Is  Released 
By  University  Press 

The  University  Press  here  hay 
released  a  list  of  books  it  .says  will 
provide  "a  guide  to  the  buildinj. 
of  a  good  North  Carolina  shelf  in 
every    individuals    library." 

Prepared  by  Richard  Walser. 
professor  of  English  at  N.  C.  Stat 
College.  Raleigh,  and  Hugh  T.  Lef 
ler,  UNC  professor  oi  history,  the 
list  includes  only  volumes  in  print 
and  available  through  regulai 
book   stores. 

I  Th<'  University  Press  said  it  also 
has  "h.iped  in  publishing  this  lis 
to  encourage  all  publishers  of 
books  about  the  state — in  and  out 

I  of  North  Carolina — and  the  book 
stores  that  serve  the  communities 

I  of  North  Carolina. 


Campus  Chest 
Meeting  Set 
For  Tonight 

The     meeting     of     the     Campus 
'best  donation  chairman  and  their 
ommittees    will    be    held    at    7:30 
p.m.  today  in  Gerrard  Hall. 

Miss  Jackie  Aldridge,  co-chair- 
nan  with  Jess  Stribling,  announc- 
d  the  selection  of  chairmen  yes- 
erday. 

The  meeting  is  the  only  one  that 
.'ill  be  held,  and  Miss  Aldridgo 
irged  that  all  chairmen  and  com- 
iiitteemen  attend.  Materials  and 
nstructions  for  the  coming  cam- 
)aign  of  Nov.  4  to  10  will  be  given 
.ut. 

Speakers  will  be  Miss  Aldridge 
.nd  Stribling,  pep-chairman  Grady 
;.  Pririgen  and  Jean  E.  Warner. 
.Vorld  University  Service  repre- 
sentative. 

The  World  University  Service  is 
he  largest  benefitting  agency 
hrough  the  Campus  Chest,  receiv- 
ng  60  per  cent  of  the  proceeds. 
Jthers  receiving  aid  are  the  Goet- 
ingen  Exchange,  Care,  and  "The 
\merican  Cancer  Society. 

Residence  chairmen  for  dormi- 
tories, fraternities,  and  sororities 
ire:  Bill  Acker,  John  Alexander, 
Jay  Bagwell,  Benny  Baucom,  Ger- 
y  Baynes,  John  Bridges.  Pres 
3rowning.  Jewel  Buffaloe.  Frank 
iurgess.  Bill  Burress,  J^ian  Canas, 
Jill  Christian,  Barry  Clark.  Bob 
'oford,  Dave  Connor.  John  Curtis, 
lim  Dunn.  Joy  Earp.  Reuben  Ed 
vards.  Sonny  Evans,  Bob  Ferrell, 
)ave  Floyd.  Hilly  Goldman.  Ed 
loodman,  Wally  Graham,  Larry 
Harris,  Jim  Hillman,  Lewis  Hol- 
land. Bill  Horner.  Jim  Howey, 
Frank  Humphrey.  '»arah  Hum 
)hrey,  -Pat  Hunter.  Hill  Johnston, 
(See   CAAWUS.   page   3)  ' 


Dr.    Everett  W.   Hall 

Dr.  Everett  W  Hall,  chairman 
of  the  Philosophy  Dept.,  was 
elected  president  of  the  N.  C. 
Philosophical  Society  at  a  meet- 
ing last  weekend,  succeeding 
Father  Cougan  of  Belmont  Ab- 
bey College.  Or  Hall,  who  joined 
the  UNC  faculty  in  1952  from 
the  State  University  of  Iowa,  is 
a  Kenan  Professor  of  Philosophy. 


GM'S  SLATE 


The  following  activities  »r% 
scheduled  for  Graham  Memorial 
today: 

GraiJ  Room — 4-6,  GM  Board  of 
Directors,  6-11,  Student  Council; 
Roland  Parker  1 — 4-6  Polls  com- 
mittee, 7  9,  YDC,  9-11,  Grad 
study  group;  Roland  Parker  2 — 
7-9,  YDC,  9-11,  Gred  study 
group;  Roland  Parker  3 — 6-7:30, 
SP  Caucus,  7:30  9,  YRC.  911, 
Grad  Study  Group;  Woodhouse 
Room — 4:30-6,  IDC-IWC,  9-11, 
Graci  study  group;  Council 
Room  —  5  6,  Rules  Committee; 
Rendexvous  Room  —  6:30-7:30, 
UP  Caucus;  APO  Room — 9:30- 
11,  Grad  Study  group. 


PAGE    TWO 


THfe  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


THURSDAY,  OCTOBER  25,  1»M 


THURSDAY. 


No,  Fellows,  The  Parking 
Problem  Is  Far  From  Over 


TKE  EXPENSIVE  STICK 


irJi.O: 


Finding  A  Use  For  The  Sun  Dial 


The  Chapel  Hill  Parkin«  Assn. 
got  <jiiite  a  bit  of  free  pnblit  itv 
the  other  (iav  uiieii  it  annoumed 
that  douiitown  parking  is  no  lung- 
er a  problem. 

It  is  a  problem,  and. it  will  con- 
tinue to  be  a  problem  initil  tratfic 
patterns  are  made  better  and  adc- 
<|naie  parking  spa(e  is  proxided 
for  pan  of  the  >i,o(m)  people  who 
maintain  permanent  residence  here. 

It  is  true  that  the  parking  asso- 
(iatit»n's  lot  downtown  is  not  fill- 
ed. Thats  whv  the  assfxiation 
agreed  to  extend  the  free-parking 
time  in  its  lot.  That's  why  the  a,s- 
s(Niation  official  said  downtown 
parking  is  no  longer  a  problem.  ', 

lint  some  pecple  don  t  want  to 
get  tickets  validate<l  at  local  stores 
in  order  to  park  free.  Scmie  people 
don"i  want  to  pav  to  park.  Evident- 
ly the  town  fathers  dont  waiit  peo- 
ple to  pa\  to  park;  thev  have  re- 
jected peiitxlical  efforts  to  install 
parking   meters  here. 

Some  people  want  to  park  on 
the  street,  for  a  specified  length  ol 
time,  as  near  as  possible  lo  the 
store  or  stores  thev  want  to  \isit. 
And  the  laci  is  that  thev  cant. 

Kspecially  they  tan'i  park  during 
1  ush  hoins  near  the  Post  Office. 
Laws  .say  people  can  park  there 
li\e  miniues  as  the  stretch,  but 
pet)ple  jjark  there  as  long  as  they 
want.  People  park  in  from  of  auto- 
mobile m.iil  boxe.s.  but  the-  town 
doesn't  enforce  its  no  parking  laws 
there  \erv   well. 

No.  the  answer  i'>  (Ihapel  Ilill's 
"non-e\isteni"  pnking  problem 
docs  not  He  in  tiic  merchant's  pai  k- 
ing  lot.  It  lies  in  better  traffic  pat- 
terns, mo.e  strictly  enforced  park- 
ing regulations,  and  more  attempts 
at  establishing  parking  areas  just 
for  shoppers. 

The  Tcnvn  lioard  of  Aldermen 
has  sucked  its  thumb  lor  a  long 
time  without  doing'  veiy  much 
inudi  about  the  park'in^;  and  traf- 
fic problem.  4^  h^^^jjcen  more  than 

THE  "  :W  REPUBIIC: 


a  year  since  a  .State  College  engi- 
neei  presented  his  plan  for  helj>- 
ing   ('ha|>el    Hill   congestion. 

Behjie  long,  it  will  be  too  late  to 
suck  thumbs.  The  Boaid  ol  \ldei- 
men  should  act  right  awa'v.  before 
the  problem  is  loo  big  for  it  to 
(Ope   with. 


Satellites 
Need  Help 
Immediately 


^\"c  are  proud  that  (.)ui  brothers- 
over-the-sea.  the  Hungarian  stu- 
deiHs.  are  demanding  freedom 
from  Russian  ■"leadershiji."'  It  is  a 
gootl  sign  lot  the  West,  a  bad  one 
for  the  Rirssians.  and  also  a  sign 
that  studeius  aren't  apathetic  the 
world  over — just  in  the  L'tiited 
States. 

But  the  next  question,  the  one 
that  starts  cold  chills,  is  this:  What 
will  Russia  do  about  the  party  bolt? 
How  will  she  react  to  her  satellites' 
moving  out  of  the  C.S.S.R.  orbit? 

\Ve  predict  RiLssia  won't  use 
force.  It  is  a  little  t<x>  late  in  the 
cold  war  for  that.  If  she  used  vio- 
lence, she  would  use  it  at  the  ex- 
pense of  Iier  prestige  in  places  like 
India  and  Egypt. 

But  just  what  Russia  will  do  is 
a  mvsteiA. 

Piesident-  tiscnlu^wer  jinnped  on 
the  b.  !1  cpiic  kly  and  with  itJtelli- 
gcnce  when  he  indicated  this  week 
that  the  United  States  may  offer 
economic  aid  to  the  Polish  people. 

Nothing  could  be  f>etter  for 
American  prestige  abroad  than  sue  h 
a  move.  But  such  action  shoidd  be 
taken  now.  The  longer  we  wait,  the 
less  force  our  offer  would  have.   ',i,,,^jf^i 

It  is  no  time  for  the  usual  State 
Depi.  red  tape.  ^    <;..        .•     . 


Roy  Talley 


Wednesday  afternoon  I  took 
my  lirst  look  at  the  Morehead 
sun  dial.  It  is  an  impressive  cre- 
ation with  its  golden  'sunburst, 
cool  marble,  and  its  air  of  exact- 
ness. The  impression  did  not 
strike  me  fully,  in  spite  of  all ' 
this,  witil  I  wad  leaviag  "the 
rocket  launch." 


A  group  of  apparent  visitors  to 


Chapel  Hifl,  two  men  and,  I  pre- 
sume, a  lady,  approached  from 
the  direction  of  Alumni.  The  af- 
ternoon was  cloudy  and  quiet, 
so  their  voices  drifted  on  ahead 
of  them.  The  Wonderer  in  the 
small  party  spoke  louder  than 
the  others. 

"You  mean,"  he  said  incred- 
ul)usly  to  his  companions,  "that 
that  stick  cost  thirty-five  thous- 
and dollars?" 


"Thirty-five  thousand  dollars 
for  that  stick."  His  emphasis  on 
the  first  four  words  was  epic, 
and  I  noticed  he  had  called  it  a 
stick  again.  And  they  passed  en, 
shaking  their  head  in  wonder- 
ment at  such,  an  expensive  stick. 
It's  no  stick;  it's  a  rocket  launch. 

The  point  is  this.  Sticks  are 
common.  Rocket  launches  ai-e 
not.  Yet,  anyway.  If  a  purpose 
can   be   seen    in    Mr.    Morehead's 


'.  .  .  And  We  Promise  You  That,  If  Not  Convicted,  We 
Will  Cwry  Forward  Our  Great  Program  .  .  / 


White  House:  Dead  Center 


K\etits  thunder  in  Poland  just 
a>  .\(l!ai  Ste\enson  turns  the  di- 
rection of  his  final  campai^jn  tcj 
foreign  affairs.  Here  the  White 
House  i>  most  complacent.  Fisen- 
Iiower  has  not  produced  one  new 
ide.i  since  Stalins  death— the  event 
Avhi(  h  made  tlie  world  situation 
fluid  and  prepared  the  way  for 
Polisii  resurgence. 

1  he  Kisenhower  record  is  as 
sterile  c»f  ideas  as  a  prophylactic 
waid  of    germs.    Each    diplomatic 

The  Daily  Tar  Heel 

The  official  student  publication  of  the 
Publications  Board  of  the  University  of 
North  Carolina,  where  it  is  published 
daily  except  Monday  and  examinatioL 
and  vacation  periods  and  summer  terms 
Entered  as  second  class  matter  in  the 
Dost  office  in  Chapel  Hill,  N.  C,  undei 
the  Act  oi  March  8.  1870.  Subscription 
rates:  mailed.  S4  per  year,  $2.50  a  semes- 
ter; delivered,  56  a  year,  S3.50  a  semes- 
ter, y 


Editor 


FRED  POWLEDGE 


Managing  Editor 


CHARUE  SLO^\^' 


News  Editor        RAY  LINKER 

Business  Manager  ...      BILL  BOB  PEEL 


Sports  Editor 


LARRY  CHEEK 


Advertising  Manager 
Coed  Editor     . .  


-  -    Fred  Katzin 
Peg  Humphrey 


EDrrORL\L  STAFF  —  Woody  Sears, 
Frank  Crovitther,  Barry  Winsr;on,  David 
Mundy,  George  Pfingst,  Ingrid  Clay, 
Cortland  Edwards. 


Staff  Photographer    ....  Norman  Kantor 

BUSINESS  STAFI-'  —  Rosa  Moore,  Jonny 
Whitaker,  Dick  Leavitt,  Peter  Alper. 

NEWS  STAFF— Clarke  Jones,  Nancy 
Hill,  Joan  .Moore.  Pringle  Pipkin,  Anne 
Drake.  Bobbi  Smith,  Jerry  Alvis,  Edith 
MacKinnon.  Wally  Kuralt,  Ben  Taylor, 
Graham  Snyder,  Billy  Barnes,  Neil 
Bass,  Jim  Creighton,  Hil  Goldman, 
Phyllis  Maultsby. 


SPORTS  STAFF:  Bill  King.  Jim  Purks, 
Jimmy  Harper,  Dave*  Wible,  Charley 
Houson. 


Subscription  Manager Dale  Staley 

Staff  Artist   Charlie  Daaiel 

Night  Editor  Cortland  H.  Edwards 

Proofreader Cortland  H-  Edwardscenier  on  the  H-bgnib. 


setback  is  hailed  as  a  \i(  tory.  Last 
week  the  Presideiu  used  a  paid 
(iOP  broadcast  to  try  to  make 
political  capital  from  the  Suez 
crisis,  brightlv  annomuiitg  he  had 
■good  news.  " 

Well,  it  wasn't  so  good.  .\nd 
basically  the  news  there  is  bad- 
weakening  of  .NWro.  disillusion- 
ment of  our  allies,  and  establish- 
»'ient  of  C>)mminiist  intlucnce  in 
.'an  area  that  the  C/ars  sought  for 
centuries  to  penetrate  in  vain. 

In  India,  the  woild's  second  most 
|^)pulous  country  and  frecjuent 
spokesman  for  tree  .Vsia.  the  ad- 
ministration hasn't  even  bothered 
to  have  an  ambassador  for  almost 
six  uKiiuhs.  It  is  a  synd>ol  of  leth- 
aigy  and  lack  of  imagination. 

New  ideas  worrv  Kisenhower. 
The  onlv  cjuestion  at  issue  in  the 
Stevenson  atomic  proposal  is,  al- 
tei  all.  the  super^H-bonvb.  Why  is 
its  testing  necessary  lor  nuclear  re- 
search? 

Ihjt  the  idea  is  new.  .\F,C  Com- 
missioner Strauss  and  his  fellows 
seem  to  be  trying  to  shield  the 
public   from  the  radiation  of  facts. 

In  the  eyes  of  the  world.  Amer- 
ica—not Russia  —  lias  blocked  H- 
bomb  disarmament  ta'lks.  Kisen- 
howers  position  has  seemed  to  be 
all  or  nothing,  and  on  one  octas- 
i<^n  he  stiffened  conditions  for 
negotiations  after  .Moscow  agreed 
to  an  earlier  set. 

Stevenson  has  pointed  this  out. 
But  it  does  not  help  him  to  have 
Bulganin  jump  in  on  his  side  in 
the  climax  of  a  fiery  elec  tion.  IJul- 
ganins  open  letter  to  Kisenhower 
.scoi^es  a  propa.ganda  c  oup  for  Mos- 
cow  in  the  world,  perhaps,  but  it 
raises  deeper  doubts  aboiu  the  So- 
viet's  sincerity. 

Now  Republican^  gleefully  seek 
lo  equate  Bulganin's  bad  manners 
with  Stevenson's  sensible  ptopos- 
als.  Vet  somehow  somebody  must 
pull  the  White  Ht>use  off  its  <lead 


ji^i*  '  -  -  ^     i>r 


YOU  Said  It: 


""mm:  ..r.  ^., 


How  To  Treat  Football  Players 


Editor: 


•As  a  former  Carolina  football 
player  and  as  a  former  President 
of  the  U.N.C.  Alumni  Associa- 
tion, may  I  express  to  you  a 
personal  opinion  bearing  on  our 
football    situation? 

Wc  have.  I  believe,  our  finest 
student  body— At  least  potential- 
ly. Certainly  there  are  more  stu- 
dents than  ever  before.  Perhaps 
the  large  number  is  a  handicap 
in  the  getting  together  is  more 
difficult.  Siu-ely  we  have  a  won- 
derful     faculty.      Our      campus. 


buildings,  and  equipment  arc  at 
a  new  high.  We  have  an  outstand- 
ing Administration.  Our  football 
coach  has  produced  championship 
teams  elsewhere. 

Lately  when  1  have  visited  the 
campus  I  have  heard  the  team 
discussed  and  cu.s.sed — mostly  Uie 
latter — as  if  it  were  a  representa- 
tive of  Mars,  or  some  far  away 
University.  Could  it  be  that  the 
team  reflects  a  considerable  stu- 
dent attitude? 

I  would  bo  most  happy  to  sc-e 
your  publication,  the  President 
of  the   Student   Bodv,   and   other 


campus  leaders  undertake  to 
really  get  behind  the  team — let 
it  feel  that  you  think  it  is  your 
team — that  you  are  very  anxious 
to  be  proud  of  it  and  believe  that 
it  can  anfl  will  make  UNC  once 

again  a  football  leader.  Meet  the 
players.  Tell  them  that  you  are 
behind  them  and  mean  it  when 
you  say  it  by  your  vocal  support 
7  days  per  week  on  the  campus 
and  at  the  games. 

How  about  giving  it  a  try  and 
see    what   happens? 

R.  Arthur  Spaugh 


^ 


Pogo 


gift,  perhaps  it  is  nothing  more 
than  the  simple  impulse  it  incites 
in  one  to  turn  bis  eyes  skyward, 
and  think.  If  thought  does  not 
come,  at  least  a  relaxed  attittide 
towards  thirty-five  thmisand  dol- 
lars does. 

There  are  seven  thousand  stu- 
dents at  UNC.  That  adds  up  to 
seven  thousand  book  battered 
heads  sooner  or  later.  I  don't 
suggest  a  mass  meditation  on  the 
sun  dial.  However,  it  is  there.  It 
can't  be  moved.  Can.  you? 

Sam  &  Davie 
Talk  Over 
The  Sun  Dial 

C.  S.  Young 

■i":'s  very  quiet  in  Cobb  base- 
ment these  days.  There  are  no 
lights  burning  at  night.  1  see  peo- 
ple with  more  cheerful  looks  in 
class  and  on  the  campus  so  I 
guess  most  of  them  have  a  place 
to  live  now. 

Not  so  a  couple  of  weeks  ago. 
It  seems  that  it  was  about  that 
time  when  I  overheard  this  con- 
versation late  one  night  down 
toward  Franklin  Street: 

Davie:  Hey,  Sam,  you  asleep? 
Sam:    Are    you    kidding?    You 
know  I  never  sleep. 

Davie:  Yeah,  well  they  say  you 
never  talk  either.  How  do  I  know? 

Sam:  W'ell,  I  don't  say  much, 
but  I  do  say  something  now  and 
then.   What  d'you   want? 

Davie:  I  was  just  wondering  if 
you  knew  about  all  those  boys 
who  don't  have  any  place  to 
sleep.  It's  really  a  shame  fo  put 
them  in  a  basement.  It's  so  damp 
and  musty,  and  Tve  heard  some 
say  there're  rats  too.  You  ever 
hear  anything  like  that? 

Sam:  Well.  I  don't  know  how 
much  of  that  is  true.  You  know 
how  .«3me  people  exaggerate. 
.\n\-\vay,  if  it  were  really  bad, 
I'm  sure  there  would  be  a  coun-, 
cil  of  some  kind  to  investigate  it. 

Davie:  Yeah,  .1  ^ess  you're 
right.  I  ju.st  worry  too  much.  But 
I  couldn't  help  thinking  about  it 
after  I  heard  those  boys  talkiiig 
last   night. 

Sam:  Wh«t'd  they  say,  Davie? 

Davie:  Well,  I  don't  know  if 
I  remember  all  of  it.  I  remember 
that  they  were  feeling  pretty  low 
because  they  had  to  sleep  out- 
side. I  don't  blame  them.  It  was 
raining.  Anyway,  most  of  what 
they  said  had  something  to  do 
witli  a  sun-dial. 

Sam:  Sun-dial?  You  mean  our 
exquisite  new  time-piece?  The 
beautiful  addition  to  our  campus? 
The  much  needed  construction 
that  is  treasured  by  the  student- 
body  and  faculty  alike,  that  only 
took  money  which  some  foolish 
people  thought  should  have  been 
spent  on  new  dormitories  to 
house  all  these  homeless  students? 
Is  that  the  one?  What'd  they  say, 
Davie? 

Davie:  Mostly  what  you  said, 
Sam. 


By  Walt  Kelly 


rumf  AN'  Ol'  HWHVO&  an 


VOU,Ai5  "yOUe   CAMPAKS'N  MANA^fC, 
CAMPIA/6N  AiAMA6e09f 


(f'/f^Z^ 


600Q  AP>/iCif  rt'i  100 
?AP  ID  y^A^rA  6ST  ZO  0^ 

vou?  ^Si?  100  s\u:»  10  60 


IV\  Abner 


By  Al  Capp 


Under  the  face  of  the 

SWEETEST  BOy  Ol  EARTH 

(jLOiy/Sftsoyyvz/x-)  is  the. 

NASTIEST  eOV  ON  EARTH 


Oh,  uOVEReoVNlK.?'-A 

MESSO'BOOTIFUL 

IS  A-TR^^IN'  rSUST  TH' 


VOCATIONAL  FRUSTRATIONS 

On  Finding  Ones 
Life's  Profession 

Woody  Sears        , 

There's  a  whole  lot  to  this  business  of  studying 
what  makes  peofile  tick.  It's  probably  the  most 
fascinating  tiding  in  the  world  to  some  of  us,  and 
at  least  extremely  interesting  to  the  rest  of  us. 

One  of  the  more  serious  aspects  of  this  study  is 
vocatio'hal  mdtiyation,  or  why  we  do  what  we  do 
for  a  living.  Vhat  sort  of  person  should  a  doctor 
be.  or  more  important,  how  do  we  know  who  will 
make  a  good  doctor  ...  or  lawyer,  school  teack- 
er  or  what  ever  else? 

These  are  extremely  difficult  questions  to  an- 
swer, and  most  of  us  here  at  the  University  have 
given  a  lot  of  thought  to  the  question  at  one  time 
or  another.  In  this  era  of  mass  everything  where 
specialization  is  so  predominant  we  wcmder  just 
where  to  turn. 

Also  we  have  to  wonder  who  to  believe.  Certain 
interests  extoU  the  virtues  of  a  specialized  tech- 
nical education,  and  at  the  same  time  others  arc 
saying  that  'ib«rfil  arts  is  the  only  field  to  enter. 
What  do  you  do  and  where  do  you  turn? 

Of  course,  there  is  always  the  University  Test- 
ing Service  to  which  a  befuddled  stu<ient  can  turn 
in  his  quest  for  vocational  guidance.  But  w^hat  they 
can  tell  you  is  only  the  same  thing  that  most  of  us 
already  know  about  ourselves.  So  that  still  leaves 
the  bulk  of  the  decision  to  the  individual. 

Let  me  digress  for  a  moment  and  drop  the 
impersonal  tone  with  which  a  columnist  should 
write  to  defend  my  previous  statement. 

Once  when  I  was  attending  another  school  and 
found  myself  becoming  unhappy  with  my  curricul- 
um, et  al,  I  decided  I'd  better  go  take  one  of  those 
fancy  tests  that  tell  you  wtiat  you*r^  best  suited  to 
do.  So  I  went  to  see  the  folks  tha*  gave  the  tests 
and  took  about  thi-ee  hours'  worth  over  a  period  of 
three  days  and  had  two  intcniews  TXith  a  rt%\  nice 
feilo\v  who  asked  «  lot  of  questions  which  seemed 
pretty  irrelevant  to  the  subject  at  hand. 

W>11.  to  boil  the  thinx  down  for  the  sake  of 
brevity,  I  finallj'  jot  a  sheet  of  paper  with  a  lot 
of  confusing  and  nearly  undecipherable  figures  that 
said  I  was  best  suited  to  be  president  of  a  business 
firm. 

That  sonashow  didn't  sound  exactly  right  to  me 
so  I  looked  at  the  alternative  choices  and  found  that 
I  could  also  be  (If  I  wanted)  a  musician,  forest 
ranger,  mechanic,  preacher,  and  a  few  other  things 
which  escape  me  at  the  moment. 

So  I  figured  that  I'd,  better  come  on  over  here 
and  hunt  around  for  something  to  do  and  (you 
guessed  it)  I  found  it.  But  newspapering  wasn't 
even  on  my  alternative  list.  A^  it  turned  out,  it's 
something  I  stumbled  into  in  a  rather  haphazard 
manner,  but  that's  ?iy  usual  way. 

The  whole  point,  of  thjs  discpurse  is  this:  if  you 
don't  know  w*at  }-i>u'r<?  going  to  do  when  .ron  get 
out  of  school,  don't  sweat  it.  You'll  stumble  onto 
something.  I  was  lucky  that  1  left  where  I  was 
and  came  to  Carolina,  and  certainly  I  took  a  big 
step  in  changing  my  major  from  Agriculture  to 
English. 

Without  preaching  heresy.  I  am  a  firm  believer 
in  the  maxim  that  a  change  is  good.  If  you're  not 
happy  here,  and  you  can't  find  what  you're  looking 
for.  then  go  someplace  else.  The  therapeutic  value 
is  tremendous,  for  there  are  probably  a  lot  of  people 
who  didn't  want  to  come  here  in  the  first  place. 

K  luch  a  person  leaves  for  another  school,  or 
anyone  for  that  matter  who  is  undecided,  he  will 
find  that  the  new  faces,  the  atmosphere,  and  the 
change  in  general  will  open  his  mind  to  a  whole  new 
perspective. 

The  thing  that  brings  all  this  to  mind  is  the 
grossly  unhappy  person  who  is  trapped  in  an  oc- 
cupation which  he  despises.  We  all  know  such 
people,  and  I  almost  was  one  of  them. 

How  about  you? 

CAROLEIDOSCOPE 


Discussing  Prices 
With  Merchant 

Frank  Crowther 

Quoting  Thomas  Wolfe's  The  Tar  Heel  of  April 
16,  1920: 

The    overall  movement'  started  some  weeks 
ago  by  a  group  of  Birmingham  business  men 
has  spread  swiftly  and  spontaneously  without 
organization.   Here  at  the  university  it  seems    " 
that  the  student  body  in  its  entirety  will  put     • 
on. the  blue  uniform  and  join  with  those  who 
wish   to   bring   the   clothing  profiteers   several 
rounds  down  the  ladder  of  high  prices. 
Here  we  are  ...  an  ouUet  for  the  sufferings 
of  the   maltreated   suckers   who   haven't   anj-where 
else   to   buy.   If  they   resorted   to   it  in    1920   and 
succeeded,  just  why  can't  we  do  the  same. 

Yes,  I  know,  this  is  the  day  of  the  I\'j-League 
gentleman  and  Rep  ties  and  Harris  Tweed,  and  vou" 
ju«t  couldn't  let  your  "place  in  the  sua '  be  jeo- 
pardized or  even  tarnished.  You  couldn't  let  your 
best  girl  see  you  out  of  uniform.  And,  anyhow^ 
what's  the  use.  I'm  alreary  sony  I  mentioned  it. 

I  suppose  we  might  as  well  let  the  town  merch-' 
ants  go  on  playing  their  little  chess  game  with  the , 
students. 

As  one  of  them  said  last  week,  "Why  you  know 
vcr5'  well  that  I  always  have  the  students'  best  in-' 
tercsts  in  mind!" 

•  "You  mean,"  was  the  quer?-,  "that  you  are  not' 
here  to  make  money  but  to  look  out  for  the  stu- 
dents?" 

•'I  always  tr>-  my  best  to  sell  my  things  at  lower 
prices  to  help  them  out." 

Sure  you  do.  You  don't  seU  them  at  lo.vcr  prices 
specifically  so  that  the  studenU  will  fill  your  kitty 
and  not  someone  else's  . .  you're  here  to  watch  over 
us! 

"HoH-  long,  Oh  how  long?  " 


YDC 
AtCal 


The   campul 
Club  has  invitj 
tend   the   Yl 
which  organir^ 
nouncc  plans 
the  Orange  C^ 

Tlie  meetii 
land  Parkei-j 
Memorial  at 

Plans   will 
get  out  the  v< 
tion  on  camp 
ha%'e  an  oppoT| 
choice    of    r 
gardless    of 
enough  to  \'ot| 

llie  elect  ior 
the  Polls  Cor 

A  YDC  vf^X 
the  club  wise 
dents  old  en| 
aational  elec 
register. 

TTiose  stud* 
home    towns 


Al 

Busir 


in\ 


DAJ 

* 
1 

Youn 

5 

Stuffi 

10 

Melo< 

12 

Spur 

13 

Book 

th«0 

Test! 

14 

Cons( 

15 

Malt 

b«ver 

1< 

Unco 

18 

Ev«r| 

shrut 

19 

Dirti. 

21 

Coun 

d«vic 

24 

EJvei 

Eng 

2« 

Whw 

29 

Proo 

ers  r 

SO 

Mere 

31 

Unas 

ingly 

32 

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41 

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45 

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46 

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<: 

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E>l« 

*«-J 

19M 


THURSDAY,  OCTOBER  25,  1956 


THl  DAILY  TAR  HItL 


PAOI    THRU 


n 


Itudying 
most 
|us,  and 
)f  us. 

study  is 
we  do 
doctor 
iho  will 
teach- 
to  an- 
y  have 
le  tini« 
where 
just 

I  Certain 

tech- 

|ers  are 

enter. 

|ty  Test- 
in  turn 
It  they 

St  of  us 
leaves 

rop  the 
should 

lool  and 

fcurriciil- 

>f  thoac 

luited  to 

tests 

iriod  o£ 

il  nice 

seCTned 

I  sake  of 

b  a  lot 

res  that 

>usiness 

^t  to  vat . 

md  that ; 
forest 
things 

?er  here 
ad  (you 
wasn't 
I  out,  it's 
[p-hazatd 

if  you 

jrou  get 

)l€  onto 

I   was 

>k  a  big 

klture   to 

believer 
ju're  not 

looking 

Itic  value 

)f  people 

place. 
;hool,  or 

he  will 

and  the 
thole  new 

id  is  the 
I  in  an  oc- 
i->w    sucb 


ht 


|l  of  April 

ae  weeks 
less  men 

u'ithout 
lit   seems 

will  put 

lose  who 

several 


•«» 


YDC  To  Announce  Rally  Plans 
At  Campus  Meeting  tonight 


The  campus  Yeung  Democrats 
Club  has  invited  all  members  to  at- 
tend the  YDC  meeting  toni^t,  at 
which  organization  members  will  an- 
nounce pians  for  a  joint  rally  with 
(he  Orange  County  \T>C. 

The  meeting  will  be  held  in  Ro- 
land Pai-ker  lounge  in  Grahain 
.Mentorial  at  7  P.M. 

Plans  will  also  be  made  to  help 
get  out  the  vote  for  the  Nov.  1  elec- 
tion on  campus,  when  students  will 
ha\e  an  opportunity  to  express  their 
choice  of  national  candidates  re- 
gardless of  whether  they  are  old 
enough  to  vote. 

The  election  will  be  sponsored  by 
the  Polls  Committee  of  G>L\B. 

.\  YDC  representative  also  said 
the  club  wishes  to  remind  all  stu- 
dents old  enough  to  vote  for  the 
national  election  to  be  sure  to 
register. 

Those  students  registered  in  their 
home    towns    should    write    to    the 


chairman  of  the  county  elections 
board  for  absentee  ballots,  the 
YDC  said. 

New  Planetarium  Show 
Will  Run  Until  Nov.  19 

An  entirely  new  demon.stration 
entitled  "Mister  Moon,"  opened 
Tuesday  night  at  the  Morehead 
Planetarium. 

The  new  show  will  be  presented 
through  November  19.  nightly  at 
8:30  p.m.  and  at  matinees  at  11 
a.m.  and  2  p.m.  on  Wednesdays 
and  Thursdays.  The  school  version 
is  recommended  for  grades  four 
through  nine.  Advance  rasen'a- 
tions  are  necessary. 


LIBRARY  STAFF  MEETS 

Dr.  Lawrence  Clatk  Powell,  Li 
brarian  UCLA,  will  speak  at  a 
special  staff  meeting  at  3  p.m.  to- 
day in  the  Library  Assembly 
Room.  His  topic  will  be,  "Purple 
Sage  and  Western  Stars." 


Telephone' 

\Vork . . . 


A  Call  to  Graduates 

in  Engineering, 
Business  Administration,  Social  Sciences, 
Physical  Sciences,  Arts 

for  work  in  tho  fields  of: 

,     Engineering  telephone  buildings,  switching 
•-:  T     facilities,  transmission  facilities,  expansion 
programs — Building  and  maintaining 
systems  and  facilities — Developing 
operating  methods  and  practices — Accounting 
and  finance,  personnel  relations — Customer 
relations,  sales  engineering,  advertising, 
development  of  markets— 

in  an  atmospkioro  of: 

Achievement  of  professional  objectives— 
Advancwnent  and  promotional  recognition — 
Security  in  retirement  and  emergendes — 

•  Southern  Bell  Telephone  and  Telegraph  Co. 

•  American  Telephone  and  Telegraph  Co., 

Long  Lines  Department 

•  Western  Electric  Company 

•  Bell  Telephone  Laboratorie§ 
o  Sandia  Corporation 

See  our  representative  on  the  campus 
on  Octob^er  29,  1956 


DAJLY    CROSSWORD 


►      ACROSS      ^ 

1.  Younr  fheep 
5.  Stuffs 
10.  Melodies 

12.  Spur  wh««| 

13.  Book  of 
the  Old 
Testament 

14.  Consciouf 

15.  Malt 
beverag* 

16.  Uncooked 
18.  Evergreen 

shrub 
19  Dlrtiei 
21  Counting 

device 
34  Elves  (Dial. 

Eng) 

28  Whiskers 

29  Proofrt«d« 
er's  mark 

SO  Mere 

31.  Unassum* 
ingly 

32.  Entir* 
34.  aty 

(Pruas  ) 

17.  Leather 
u  orker'f 
tool 
Part  of 
•  to  b^- 
Subject 
matter 
Live  coal 

45  MeUllie 
sound 

46  Songs  for 
two  peoplt 

47.  Flocks 
18  Merriment 
DOWTJ 

1  Tibetan 
priest 

2  External 
»<.a  coaling 


|.  Small 

rod«nt#     ," 
4.  Cry  of       \ 
t     a  lamli      « 
t  Creep       - 
$.  Propel  a 

rowboat 

7.  Off 

8.  Absolute 

9.  Killed 

11.  A  winding 

sheet 
17.  Sloths 

19.  Twist 

20.  Disgrace 
21  Warp-yam 
22.  Giri'a 

nickname 
J3.  Swias  river 


S9.  Sphere 
g«.  Chief 
"       deity 

(Babyt.) 
ST.  Pit 

pen 
29.  Pieked 

out 
31.  In 

what 

manner 
33.  Cuts 
.       irregu- 
'      larly 
|4.  Engrave 
»      with 
*       corrosives 
15.  Burrowing 

animal 


:"5  ji.'t  3 

atano 

i:''|j'i 

F.'ni  Mi^ 

rjni'.i!:'. 

[j'^t-zm* 

■J  TO         tJ 

r^::;  nn 

'or^iipjcar^ 

iiMr.:<i^ 

cjni' 

;   w^':,fB 

3.'»''«:t»i;'j 

aPTRn 

u.i>:.TJt»    onn        1 

asnn  i 

jroauHC! 

au   ar-^r      ay^^l 

a.^:i-a>"i 

..ISBpf^: 

^•Ul;^cJ 

litjt^n 

BKHW 

SIOBL^ 

36.  Mast 

38.  Biblical 
character 

39.  Plexus 

40.  Gaelic 
42- India  (poet.) 
44.  Cup  1 


88 


41 


43 


Chemistry  Award  Given 


Sophomore  Lawrence  L.  Lohr 
Jr.,  above,  has  won  the  top 
prize  in  the  National  Chemistry 
Contest  held  last  spring  for 
freshmen  and  sophomores.  Stu- 
dents from  more  than  80  schools 
in  five  southern  states  competed 
for  the  award.  The  Chemical 
Rubber  Company  of  Cleveland, 
Ohio,  which  presented  the 
award,  also  gave  $100  worth  of 
scientific  books  to  the  UNC 
Chemistry  Dept. 


Parker  Named 
To  Carolina 
Economic  Staff 

Chancellor  Robert  B.  House  has 
announced  the  appointment,  fol- 
lowing approval  by  the  Board  of 
Trustees  and  Acting  President 
William  C.  Friday,  of  Dr.  William 
Nelson  Parker  as  associate  pro- 
fessor of  economics  in  the  Uni- 
versity. 

Dr.  Parker  replaces  Dr.  Daniel 
H.  Buchanan,  professor  of  econom- 
ics, emeritus.  Currently  doing 
work  on  a  Ford  Foundation  grant- 
in-aid,  Dr.  Parker  will  begin  his 
actual  teaching  duties  in  the  spring 
semester,   opening  in  January. 

He  was  born  in  Columbus,  Ohio, 
and  received  his  B.A..  M.A.,  and 
Ph.D.   degrees  from   Harvard. 

He  has  taught  at  Williams  Col- 
lege at  Williamston,  Mass.  for  the 
last  five  years. 

Dr.  Parker  is  a  member  of  the 
American  Economic  .Association, 
the  Royal  Economic  Society,  the 
Economic  History  Association,  and 
the  American  Association  of  Uni- 
vel^sity  Professurs.  He  is  also  a 
member  of  Phi  Beta  Kappa. 


Caravan  Plans 
Progressing 

The  UNC  caravan  committee 
met  yesterday  with  the  caravaa 
committee  of  Woman's  College  in 
Greensboro  to  formulate  plans  for 
.'.he  joint  UNC-WC  Caravan  to 
Charlottesville   Nov.   10. 

Committee  chairman  Harry 
House  announced  the  following 
details  after  yesterday's  meeting: 
transportation  will  be  by  busses 
to  leave  Chapel  Hill  at  6:15  a.m. 
Nov.  10.  Bus.ses  will  stop  qff  at 
Greensboro  for  W.C.  girls,  and 
will  arrive  in  Charlottesville  at 
1:30  p.m. 

Busses  for  the  return  trip  will 
leave  Charlottesville  at  12:00  p.m. 
Saturday  and  at  3  p.m.  Sunday. 

Tickets  will  go  on  sale  tomor- 
row morning  in  "Y"  Court,  and 
will  be  $7  from  Chapel  Hill  to 
Charlottesville,  and  $5.75  from 
Greensboro    to    Charlottesville. 

A  block  of  seats  has  been  re- 
served in  the  Virginia  stadium, 
and  tickets  sold  here  and  at  W.C. 
will  come  within  the  block  regard- 
less of  number. 

House  stated  that  room  accowi- 
modations  in  Charlottesville  are 
under  study  by  the  committee  and 
that  details  of  their  findings  will 
be  publicized  as  soon  as  possible. 

House  urged  those  students  who 
plan  to  travel  to  Charlottesville 
by  bus  to  purchase  their  tickets 
as  soon  as  possible. 


Campus 
Chest 

(Continued  from   Page    1) 

Don  Kentopp,  John  Kerr,  Paul 
Kerr,  Jim  Kimzey,  Nancy  Latti- 
more.  Margery  Lindeman,  Jim 
Martin,  Sandy  Moffet,  Dave  Mont- 
gomery. Barbara  Moore,  Cliff 
Moore,  Bill  Morgan.  Elizabeth  Mc- 
Graw.  John  McKee,  Daniel  Par- 
ker, Jean  Peay,  George  Ragdale, 
Bill  Redding,  Jack  Reed,  George 
Reese,  Frances  Reynolds,  Jim 
Reynolds,  Dick  Rhynes,  Walt  Rose, 
Joanne  Saunders,  Doug  Schach- 
ner.  Jim  Setzer,  Fuller  Shuford, 
Jeanne  Sillay,  H.  G.  Snipes,  Woody 
Spedden.  Marjorie  Staub.  Inna 
Steinhards.  Fred  Swcaringen,  Jim 
Warren,  Charles  Westbrook,  John 
Wilbur,  Lawrence  Wilson,  Walt 
Wilson.  Roy  Wood,  Chris  Wood- 
burr,  Tacker  Yates  and  B©bbiP 
Zwahkn. 


Covering  The  Campus 


BABY  SITTERS 

Coeds  interested  in  baby  sitting 
have  been  asked  to  contact  the 
"Y"'  (telephone  6761)  or  leave 
their  names  and  a  list  of  their 
available  hours  with  the  "Y"  sec- 
retary. 


Carolina 
Attics 
Pour  Out 
Their 
Treasure 
For  You 
During 
Old  Book 
Week 


The  Intimate 
Bookshop 

205    E.  FRANKLIN   ST. 

CHAPEL   HILL 

OPEN  TILL   10   P.M, 


YM-YWCA  PUBLICATION 
JNTERVIEWS 

Interviews  for  co-editors  of  YM- 
YWC.-^  publication  will  be  held  to- 
morrow from  4-6  p.m.  in  the  "Y." 
Those  interested  who  are  unable 
to  be  present  for  intcr\'iews'  at  this 
time  may  call  Jeff  Corbin.  89114, 
or  Carolyn  Seyffert,  8-9005. 
LATE  PERMISSION 

Pcrmiss.on  to  stay  out  until  2 
a.m.  has  been  granted  to  coeds  for 
Friday  night  by  the  Women's  Res- 
idence Council  and  the  Office  of 
the  Dean  of  Women. 
OIL  COMPANY  INTERVIEWS 

Students  who  will  recehc  ad- 
vance degrees  in  chemistry  from 
the  University  in  1957  will  be  in- 
(erviewed  on  the  campus,  Oct.  31, 
by  representatives  of  Humble  Oii 
and  Refining  Co. 
WUNC 

Following  is  a  listing  of  the  pro- 
grams today  at  the  University's 
FM  radio  station: 

7:00 — Intermezzo 

7:15— Chalkdust 

7:30 — League  of  Women  Voters 

7:45— French  Press  Review 

8:00— Encore 

8:30— Folk  Music  of  the  World 

9:00 — ^Listen  America 

9:30 — Masterworks   from   FYaacc 

10:00— News 

10:15 — EN^ening  Masterwork 

11:30— Sign  Off 

Y  SCHEDULE 

4  p.m. — Race  Relations  Commit- 
tee, Y  library  room,  Joe  Phillips, 
Chairman. 

4  p.m.— YWCA  Cabinet  meet- 
ing, C^inet  room  of  Y. 

4  p.m.  to  6  p.m. — Y  Publica- 
tions Board  interviews  for  staff  of 

Y  newspaper,  Y  library  room. 
Miss  Carolyn  Seyffert  and  Jeff 
Corbin  co-chairmen. 

6:15  p.m.  —  YMCA  Freshman 
Supper,  Lenoir  Half,  2  floor,  back 
room. 

7  p.m.  to  8  p.m. — Freshman  Fel- 
lowship meeting,  Lenoir  Hall.  2 
floor,  b^ck  room.  Program:  Film 
and  discussion  on  the  Suez  Cri- 
sis, Panel:  Dr.  Shepard  Jones,  Dr. 
Zawahry,  James  Kinney,  Modera- 
tor. 

7:30  p.m.— Campus  Chest  solici- 
tors meeting,  Gerrard  Hall,  Miss 
Jackie  Aldridge  and  Jess  Strib- 
ling,  co-chairmen. 


TO  THE  THRIFTY  MILLIONS  WHO  HiLPEI>  MAKE  OUR  97t1t 

ANNIVERSARY  A  HUGE  SUCCESS  ...  \ 


^Qf^F    Texize  Liquid  Starch  bI,',^  1 9c    Texize  HoHselioM  CiMRser '^"^  39c 
ANNI^RSARY   Twize  Uqaid  Bleach  ^^  ISc    TMizePiMOilCicaascr   |^,'  43e 
1 8  s  9 .  i  9  s «       f  „| J,  p|„p,  Cleanser  K  69c    Terize  TraiisparMi  Siarch  b1  23c 


SPECIAL  LOW  PRICE!  A&P 


SPECIAL  LOW  PRICE!  WELCH'S 


PINEAPPLE  Grape  4uice  ^^33 


GRAND  VALUE  —  AUSH^nX 


JUICE 


SLICES 


46-Oz. 
Can 


No.  2 

20-Or. 

Con 


93c  Chili  &  Beans  °co^25 

mM%0    '         YFi  I  ow  ri  iN^  HAi  VES  OR  <;LirFn 

27o 


YELLOW  CLING  HALVES  OR  SLICED 

lona  Peaches!l27e 

WESTOVER  BUCKEYES  2    »"  27c 


MILD  AND  MELLOW 


8  O'CLOCK  COFFEE  e^  89c  a^  s2ei 


MEL-O-BIT  PASTEURIZED  PROCESSED 

CHEESE  '^' 

Stri«tin«nn  Cinnamon  Crisp    i«^-oz.  Pkg.  39c 

lurry  V«niii«  Wafers «-ox.  pk«.    21c 

Nabisctt  Rits  Cr«ck«rs i-Lb.  Pkg.    35c 

Sunshin*  Hydrex  Cookies  ..._ 1-Lb.  Pkg.    49: 

Dcl-Monte  Fruit  Cocktail  __    w-om.  cm    23c 
Dol-Monte  Sliced  Peockat        u-ot.  on    23c 

Dei-Mont*  Sw«ct  Pms 17-Ox.  Can    21  c 

Libby  Kraut  Juice  _^ 2    i6-o«.  cm    23c 

A*P  Sliced  Peachts No.  IVt  Can    29c 

Heinx  faked  Beant 2    i-u>.  c«iu    37c 

"Franco"  Prepared  Macaroni       iva-xh.  cb  19c 

"Franco"  Prepared  Spegketti       i«4-or  c.  15c 

Angelus  Morskmallows  ___    le-o^  pkc    19e 

Cklcken  Of  The  Sea  Tuna  Bites  «H-ot.  c«n29c 


JANE  PARKER  CHOCOLATE  CHIFFON 


CAKE 


SPECIAL     ^°T9® 
PRICE        l^^l 


45 


^^^^^^»^^^^>^^^^^^^^^^^»^»^^^»^^yMVM^MMMMM^'»i'»'<^^'^> 


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JANE  PARKER 

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BREAD 


l-Lb. 
Loaf 


25 


'irrrir  -  ^t^\-  ---■--■■^-■----^■■■-■^■^--^■^■'i-'  '■t-  -inririr  'urm-iiri  n  rii_n_i. 


<MMMMM^ 


Snowdrift 

^oi  33c  ^iJ-  87c 


^Pi\  w 


hatVALUE 


On  Famous 


Wesson  Oil 


Bot  3^c   Bot.  57c 


Wrisley  Soap 
X  "iSr  56c 


Kleenex 


IIT  25c 


Delsey  Tissues 
4  Rolls  49c 


LIQUID 


Vel  Detergent 


""^l  39c 


OOC   FOOD 

Red  Heart 
2  J:!.".  27c 


'Supet-Right"  Meats 

Ciibetf  SteaksM^cv.sc  65c 


"Super-Righf  All  Meot  Franl<si'^.-S9c  • 
Morrell's  Canned  Picnics .    ^ci"'  99c 


Boldgna 
39c 


"Super-Right" 

AU  Meat  1-Lb. 

Sliced    Pkg. 


Grode  'W  Young  Government  Inspected  —  Dressed  &  Drown   TOM 


TURKEYS 


16-20 
LB.  AVG. 


see  what  VAIOC! 


On  A&P's  Fresh 

Fruits  &  Vegetables 


Golden  Yellow  Onions-  Bag   19c   jredtokay 

i9c  [Grapes    "  I2c 


Fresh  Regclo  Slow ^Jjj^ 


Red  Ripe  Juicy  Delicious 


APPLES 


% 


4-Lb. 
Bog 


43 


TRICK  or  TREAT 

FRESH  HALLOWEEN  CANDIES  FROM  A&P 

Worthmore  Candy  Magic  'kx  29c 
Worthmore  Candy  Corn  .  ^t^  25c 
Worthmore  Harvest  Mix  .  Vi:  29c 
Party  Pac— Tootise  Rolls  '^^'-  20c 
Crystal  Pure  Tot  Pops  .-..  %il  25c 

BOX  SALE— ASSORTED  BRANDS  CHEWING 

GUM--x59c 


210  W.   FRANKLIN   ST. 


MtNKAH   WMMOn   WM  MtMtN  . .  .  IMCt    ■• 


ioper  Markets 


Prices  This  Ad  Enective  Througb  Saturday,  October  2;Ui 


FROZEN 


Dulany  Green  Peas 2  'A^l:  35c 


FROZEN 


Dulany  Cut  Corn  -,. 2  IJ^S.  37c 

Green  Giant  Green  Peas  .-.  ''c.n'  19c 


Campfire  Marshmallows  .-   pl^;  33c 


Swift's  Meats  For  Babies 


5^.*^  23c 


Kotex  Sanitary  Napkins  .  (S°i  $1.49 


Modess  Sanitary  Napkins  2  ^^^^  85c 

12  Oz.     ' 
Pkg,  _ 


Elastic  Starch 


12  oz.  ,2c 


Quick  Elastic  Starch ^^  25c 


/«  f 


PAGE  WOUn 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HCEL 


THURSDAY,  OCTOBER  25,  1954 


Booters  Defeat  State,  7-2 

Foster  Scores  Three 
Goals  To  Spark  Win 


DeCantis  Named  Soph  Of  Week 


RALEIGH.  Oct.  25— (/P)—  The 
honor  of  being  named  Associated 
Press  Atlantic  Coast  Conference 
Sophomore  of  the  Week  goes  to 
North  Carolina  halfback  Emil  De- 
Cantis for  his  showing  in  the  34- 
6  win  over  Maryland. 

DeCantis.  178-pound  speedster 
of  Scranton.  Pa.,  carried  the  ball 
only  three  times,  but  scored  two 


-  NOW  SHOWING  - 


touchdowns    and    uncorked    a   39- 
yard  pass  to  end  Mac  Turlington. 

Close  behind  in  the  nomination 
was  Tar  Heel  tackle  Don  Redding, 
who  was  a  demon  on  defense  a- 
gainst  Maryland.  He  set  the  stage 
for  a  third  period  touchdown  by 
recovering  a  Maryland  fumble  on 
the  Terps'  21. 

DeCantis  went  over  from  the 
two  for  a  first  period  tojchdown 
and  scored  from  the  eight  in  the 
final  period  to  climax  a  68-yard 
drive. 

Two  other  Tar  Heel  sophomo-es 
who  looked  good  were  center  Ron- 
nie Koes  and  guard  Don»Kemper. 


fiARY 

COOPER 

SUSAN 

HAYWARD 

MCHAm 

WDMARK 


CinemaScoPc 


By  jrM  PURKS 

Sparked  by  left  wing  Johnny 
Fo.'iter's  three  goals,  the  UNC  var- 
sity soccer  team  won  its  fourth 
straight  victory  by  overwhelming 
the  N.  C.  State  Wolfpack  here 
yester)day,  7-2. 

The  Tar  Heels  were  very  im- 
pres.sive  in  their  initial  conference 
test  of  the  season,  scoring  in  ev- 
ery quarter  and  tightening  up  on 
defense  whenever  State  threat- 
ened. 

Foster  put  the  Tar  Heel's  ahead 
nine  minutes  after  play  had  begun 
in  the  first  quarter  when  he  boot- 
ed in  a  penalty  kick  called  against 
State.  A  few  minutes  later,  Cole- 
FOR  SALE— COLLECTORS'  COLT    man  Barks  scored  his  fourth  goal 


CLASSIFIEDS 


Omsss 

MtrkfTECIMMLlI 


CMUUS  OKMn 


toHitin«4wi 
*n>a.  Hieti/ioaiTT 
STCKomoJiic  som 


LATE  SHOW  SATURDAY 


SUN.-MON. 


•5j& 


0 


The  Story  of  a  Man       , 

like    SHANE        i'^^fl^"!.^, 

with  the  su$p»ns*  of  :  *  - 
HIGH  NOON 

A    NEW   AND    DIFFERENT 
KIND  OF  MOTION   PICTURE 


single  action  "FYontier"  .45. 
Call  Jim  Potter,  116  King  Street, 
at  8-0893   after  4:30. 

BE  POPUL.\R  —  20  MINL\TURE 
portraits  $1.00.  Size  2  1-2x3 
1-2  inches  with  border,  photo 
copied  from  your  favorite  Pho- 
tograph. Pertect  to  exchange 
-with  friends  and  use  for  appli- 
cation photos,  crder  from  Click 
Photos,  Union  City,  Indiana. 


PAPER-BACKED  BOOKS  —  Good 

uSed  novels,  detective  yarns  and 

non-fiction   at  3  for  25c  in  the 

.  itand    by    oiir    front    door.   The 

Intimate  Bookshop. 


HI-WAY  SERVICE  STATION, 
the  curve  in  Carrboro,  has 
WASH-IT"— 60f.  Premium 
31.9p,  regular  gas   29.9f. 


0\ 
"U- 

gas 


LOST— BLACK  WALLET  &  AD- 
dress  book,  contained  no  mon- 
ey but  had  many  valuable  pa- 
pers. Contact  Mike  Martin,  325 
Winston.    Reward    offered. 


LOST.     CLASS    OF     1956    CLASS 

ring  with  blue  stone  bearing  in- 
scription "Sam  H.  Elliote".  \ 
reward  is  offered.  Piease  con- 
tact the  Business  Office  of  The 
Daily  Tar  Heel. 


of  the  season  on  a  pass  from  right 
wing  Pat  McCormick  to  put  Caro- 
riina  ahead  2-0. 

!      With  a  minute  left  in  the  qusr- 
I  ter,  another  penalty  kick  was  call- 
ed against  State  and  Foster  again 
j  tallied  to  give  UNC  a  S-O  lead  at 
the  end  of  the  quarter. 

1  In  the  second  quarter,  center 
forward  Pete  Kellinger  scored  his 
first  goal  of  the  season  to  give 
Carolina  a  four  goal  lead.  Four 
minutes  later.  State  broke  into  the 
scoring  column  due  to  a  shot  by 
Joaquin  E.scobar.  The  half  ended 
with  Carolina  ahead,  4-1. 

In  the  third  quarter,  Elscobar 
gave  the  Tar  Heels  a  temporary 
scare  by  scoring  on  a  "screen 
shot  ■    from    18   yards    out    which 

I  goalie  Chuck  Hartman  never  saw. 
Tommy  Rand  and  Coleman 
Barks  then  took  the  pressure  off 
by  combining  in  a  fine  pass  play 
for  UNC's  fifth  goal.  Rand  slipped 
the  ball  past  the  State  fullback  to 
Barks  who  scored  his  second  goal 
ol  the  game. 
Carolina  added  two  more  goals 


to  its  total  in  the  fourth  quarter. 
Another  i>enalty  kick  was  called 
against  State  and  Johnny  Foster's 
reliable  foot  scored  again  for  his 
third  goal.  With  i  minute  remain- 
ing Pete  Kellinger  got  his  second 
of  the  day.  The  game  ended  with 
Carolina  victorious,  7-2. 

Coach  Mar\in  Allen  was  very 
pleased  with  his  team's  showing 
and  was  able  to  use  his  second 
string  players  often.  "If  the  first 
string  had  stayed  in  there  we 
would  have  added  more,"  he  said. 

Carolina's  next  game  will  be 
with  Roanoke  on  Nov.  1  in  Roa- 
noke, Va. 


Beatty  Tops  Shea  As  UNC  Runners 
Wallop  N.  C  State;  Freshmen  Win 


By  JIM  HARPER  and 
CHARLEY  HOUSON 

Both  the  varsity  and  freshman 
cross  country  teams  scored  victory 
over  the  squads  from  State  here 
yesterday,  the  varsity  winning  21- 
41  while  the  freshmen  gained  a 
19-37  decision. 

Jim  Beatty  once  again  led  the 
Tar  Heels  to  victory,  with  an 
elapsed  time  of  20:17.5.  This  time 
was  identical  to  that  logged  by 
Beatty  last  Saturday  again.st  Mary- 
land, -r    ^ 

One  of  the  highlights  of  the 
meet  was  a  nip  and  tuck  battle  be- 
tween Dave  Scurlock  and  State's 
Furman  Walker  for  fourth  place. 


Scurlock  caught  Walker  in  the  last 
25  yards,  beating  him  by  one  sec- 
ond to  the  finish  line. 

The  freshman  race  was  high- 
lighted by  a  battle  for  first  place 
between  two  Carolina  nmners. 
Cowles  Liipfert  and  Fick  Arthur 
came  into  the  home  slretch  al- 
most neck  and  neck.  Liipfert 
poured  on  the  coal  and  crossed 
the  finish  line  in  11:51,  4  seconds 
ahead  of  Arthur.      _:^: 

The  summaries: 

Varsity: 

1— Beatty,  C,  20:17.5;  2— Shea, 
S,  21:04;  3— Whatley,  C,  21:59.5; 
4— Scurlock,  C,  22:20;  5— Walker, 
S,  22:21;  6— Williams,  C,  22:51; 
7— P.   Henderson.   C.   23:02.5;    8— 


FOR  RENT  .  .  .  NICE  ROOM  FOR 
rent  to  student  or  working  man. 
Call  Mrs.  Haithcock.  9-8482,  302 
Pritchard  Ave. 


Mural 


[[[  nCMMB*  w 


HI-FI  SET  FOR  SALE  —  BELL 
lOW  amp.  RCA  AM-FM  tuner. 
VM  changer  —  2  diamonds  — 
Karlson  enclosure.  Bell  12"  co- 
ax speaker.  George  Grant. 
8-9105,  312  Alexander. 


Otfil*  rtsp«ctobl«?  1.^ 

$•  d«l*ctabl«. 

Amd  she's  omly  21  years  o/d  ! 

A  neiif  ki9h  in  dsriri),  risque 
and  seamlfllotts  eomedy! 
ADULT  ENTERTAINMmT 

NOW  PLAYING 


Carolina 


MURALS 

4:00— Field    1.    Lewis    12.    Man- 
giAm-1,  0;  field  2,  Vic  VU  1.  Win- 
ston  0;   field    3,   Stacy-1,    1,   Gra- 
:  ham-2.  0;  field  4,  BVP  20.  J^ycock 
0;  field  5,  Sigma  Chi  191  DK£  14.    ' 
I      5:00~Fiekl    2,    Law    Sch-2,    27, 
!  Cobb-1.    0;    field    2,    Gciroes-Z.    X. 
Med   Sch-2,  0;   field   3,  Joyner  37, 
I  E\'eretl-1.  0;  field  4,  Manley  0,  Old 
I  West   0,    (no   team    could    fiu-nish 
1  seven  players  on  the  field);  field 
'  5,  Dent  Sch  22.  Alexander  0. 

TOMORROW'S    SCHEDULE 

j  4:00— Field  1,  SPE  vs.  Chi  Psij 
field  2.  Lambda  Chi  vs.  Pi  Kappa 
Sig;  field  3,  Phi  Gam  vs.  Chi  Phi 

!  (w);  field  4,  Graham-2  Vs.  Everett-  i 

]  3;  field  5,  BVP  vs.  Grime.s-1.  j 

5:00— Field  1,  Kappa  Sig  vs.  Chi  | 

Phi;  lield  2,  Zeta  Psi  vs.  Pi  Lamb-  1 

da;    field    3.    Ruffin-2    vs.    Lewis;  \ 

'  field  4.  DKE  vs.  Zeta  Psi  (w);  field  [ 
5,  Med  Sch-3  vs.  Stacy-2. 


Enemy  Now  Student 

If  basketball  fans  of  a  few  years 
back  stop  and  stare  at  a  dark- 
haired  student  striding  across  the 
UNC  campus  these  days,  it  will  be 
because  it  is  Sammy  Ranzino,  for- 
mer N.  C.  State  Ail-American 
eager  who  is  now  a  grad  student 
here. 


Made  this 
discovery  yet? 

Yott  combine  some  very  ba«ic  elements  when 
you  slip  into  this  Arrovvi  Par  White  shirt. 
lu  medium-spread  collar  and  handsome 
broadcloth  fabric  give  you  an  extra  measure 
of  style.  And  because  it's  a  soft  collar  (with 
stay*) ,  you're  assured  of  comjort  a-plentj. 
.  Add- the  fingiish  block  print  rie  for  a  perfect 
tinil  touch. 
Siiirt,  $3.95;  tie,  $2.50. 

ARROW-- 

-^f Irst  in  fashion 

SHIRTS  •  TIIS 


ARROW   SHIRTS 

AVAILABLE   AT 


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IWmrlBIU  DOGGETTI^^ '72r///  hutti' 

RICHARD 

«c  .a^W  --GREAT  ORCHESTRA^^JI 


SH.\KC  A 
HANI)' 


FAYE 
ADAMS 

.•J*.*---':4i. 

THE 
FIVE 
KEYS 


mi  TURNER3!l^ 


Z.5H0WS  7:45-10:15 


MEMOIIAL  AIMTOIIIM 

I    MAO.  OHOUUi  AND  TirKET  SAI-L 
TtUeM'SlaCOKD  SKOP  _ 

tmrtnvitAtmMHonmciAoLat.     SZ>00    t       $2*50   ■ 


WEDNESDAYBf 

»N0V.7 


itieMOONGlOWS 


ETTA 

^  JAMES  THE  5  SBllA^i 

iHe  ROBINS   t^  JOHMYTORRES 

TOMMY   BROWN     ^ 

BIG  JAY  NcNEELYx: 

AMDHis  GREAT  WCI^IKHi  Orchestfo^^ 


Kahn,  C,  23:09;  &— Walker,  S,^ 
23:34.5;  10— D.  Henderson,  C,  23: 
39;  ll-<}riffin.  C,  24:02.5;  12— 
HajA^'orth,  S,  24:41.5;  13— Taylor, 
S.  25:32.  Unofficial:  Reeves,  C, 
23:15.5;  Coffin,  C,  24:24. 

Freshman: 

1— Liipfert,  C,  11:51,  2— Arthur. 
C,  11:55:  3— Green,  C,  12:20;  4— 
Keeling,  S,  12:37;  5 — Emmerke,  S, 
12:38;  6— Packard,  C,  12:50;  7— 
Sirianni.  C,  12:51;  &— Walker,  S, 
13:00;  &— Denning,  S,  13:01;  10— 
Withrow,  C,  13:02;  11— Horton,  S, 
13:11;  12— Bagwell,  C,  13:15;  13— 
Porter,  C,  13:19. 


Rod  And  Gun  Entries 
Will  Close  On  Tuesday 

Entries  close  Tuesday  for  the 
second  annual  co-recreational  Rod 
and  Gun  Day.  Thus  far  there  have 
been  only  a  small  number  of  en- 
tries and  students  interested  are 
urged  to  fill  out  their  entry 
blanks  immediately. 

Detailed  information  concern- 
ing the  event  may  be  obtained  a- 
long  with  entry  blanks  at  the  in- 
formation desk  in  Graham  Memor- 
ial  and   room  315  Woollen   Gvm. 


THANKS 
SO  MUCH! 

Your  response  has  been 
so  great  that  we  are 
snowed  under  with 
work. 

PLEASE  BEAR  WITH  US1 

PETE 
THE  TAILOR 


Watch  For 

42nd 
Anniversary 

SALE 

Starting 
Fri.,  Oct.  26 

Watch  For  An 
Ad  In  This  Paper 

BERAAAN'S 

.  DEPT.   STORE 


Save  MORE  on  Food  at  Colonial  Stores! 


HOBS   OLD   FASHiONF.U   MINT 

STICKS  c^<  49c 

rOtUI^  C.A.N DY 

CORN    ''r..  29c 

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U.r.C.   *  LIBRARY 
SERIALS   DEPT. 
BOX  870 
CHAPEL   HILL,    K.C. 


WEATHER 

Fair   and   cooler   with    expected 
high  of  70. 


VOL.   LVII   NO    31 


Complete  (JP)   Wire  Service 


SrtjcDailuMarKccl 


HALFWAY 

That's    where    the    to-wn    is.    Soe 
page   2. 


CHAPEL  MILL,  NORTH  CAROLINA,  FRIDAY,  OCTOBER  26.   1956 


Offices   in   Graham   Memorial 


FOUR   PAGES   THIS    iSSUi 


TRUSTEE  SAYS: 


UNCs  Acting  Titles 
Being  Filled  Rapidly 


The  University's  major  probJem 
is   lack   ot   permanent   administra-  ! 
tors,    a     prominent    trustee    said  ; 
Thursday. 

But,  added  Victor  Br>'ant  of 
Durham,  ''acting"  positions  with- 
in the  Universtiy  are  being  filled  : 
rapidly.  Today,  for  example,  Wit ; 
Ham  C.  Friday  is  scheduled  to  be 
elected  president  of  the  Consoli- 
dated University.  i 

Bryant    indicated    that    "acting"  j 
positions    may    be    filled   quickly, ' 
now    that    the    University    has    a 
permanent    president    after    more 
than  a  year  without  one.  i 

Bryant  was  answering  a  report* 
er's  question  after  a  luncheon 
meeting  between  student  leaders 
and  members  of  the  Board  of 
Trustees'  Visiting  Committee.  The 
Visiting  Committee  met  here 
Thursday  after  a  day  at  Woman's 
Colleg?  in  Greensboro.  It  will 
travel  to  r»^.  C.  State  College  in 
Raleigh  today. 

The  committee  will  take  time 
off  to  attend  a  meeting  of  the 
full  Board  of  Trustees  today  in 
Raleigh.  Friday  is  expected  to  be 
elected  Consolidated  University 
president  at  the  full  board's  meet- ' 
ing.  I 

Earlier,    at    the    student-trustee! 
luncheon,  Bryant  told  the  .student ' 
leaders    "Don't    be   impatient"    for 
a   new  chancellor  here  to  replace 
retiring    Robert    House. 


can  transform  even  last  season  .s 
dress  into  a  gown  with  vitality. 
The  addition  of  a  long  flowing 
sash  or  a  cumberbund  with  a 
flower  pinned  to  it  will  make' 
you  My  Fair  Lady  of  Woollen 
Gym. 


German  Club  Sponsors  Named 

Sponsors  for  the  German  Club's  fall  danca  fc night  are,  left  to  right,  (top  row)  Miss  Diana  Ashley, 
Greenwood,  Miss.,  with  Keith  Palmer,  Timmonsville,  S.  C,  Kappa  Sigma,  German  Club  President;. 
Mias  Maltssa  Peden,  Raleigh,  with  George  Ragsdale,  Raleigh,  Delta  Kappa  Epsilon,  vice  president;  Miss 
Mary  Burgwyn,  Jackson,  with  Mark  Cherry,  Mt.  Clive,  Phi  Delta  Theta,  secretary;  Miss  Elizabeth  Hart, 
Winston-Salem,  with  Gordon  Brown,  Durham,  Beta  Theta  Pi,  treasurer;  (second  row)  Miss  Patricia 
Lee  Poythress,  Chapel  Hill,  with  Sam  Yancey  Jr.,  Marian,  ATO;  Miss  Pat  Everton,  Columbia,  S.  C,  with 
Julian  Winslow,  Hertford,  Pi  Kappa  Alpha;  Miss  Carol  Campbell,  Raleigh,  with  Jonh  McKee,  Morgan- 
ton,  Zeta  Psi;  Miss  Helen  Arendell,  Raleigh,  with  David  Watson,  Raleigh,  Delta  Kappa  Epsilon;  (third 
row)  Miss  Bettie  Grant,  Jackson,  with  John  H.  Patreson,  Wilson,  *Phi  Delta  Theta;  Miss  Elizabeth  M. 
Oden,  Washington,  with  George  Wray,  Charlotte,  Kappa  Sigma;  Miss  Patricia  Howard,  High  Poi.Vt,  with 
Erie  Haste  Jr.,  Edenton,  Phi  Gamma  Delta;  Miss  Kay  Musgravs,  Lexington,  with  Robert  S.  TimberlaUe, 
Lexington,  Sigma  Chi;  (fourth  rcw)  Miss  Carolina  P  rovinc.  Greenwood,  Miss.,  with  DavlH  »«ov»  <iir^^^ 
Nu;  Miss  Mary  Lou  Brinke'ho^f,  Louisville,  Kv.,  with  Kelly  '^aness  Jr.,  Greensboro,  Beta  Theta  Pi;  Miss 
Beverly  Ann  Heaton,  Westfield,  N.  J.,  with  Charles  Walker  Oyer,  Walcott,  N.  J.,  St.  Anthony;  Miss 
Edna   Wardlaw,   Atlanta,   Ga.,   with    Donald   McMillian,  Charlotte,   Sigma   Alpha    Epsilon. 

Cocktail  Dresses,  Formals 
Will  Be  Seen  This  Weekend 

By  PEG  HUMPHREY 

Coeds  will  have  a  chance  to 
slip  out  of  Bermudas  this  week- 
end    and     sparkle     in     cocktail 

Goocf  Conduct  | 
At  Concert,  i 
Dance  Asked     \ 

German    Club    President    Keith 
Palmer  and  UNC  Dance  Commit- ; 
tee    Chairman    Donald    Miller   re-  j 
leased    statements    yesterday    con- 
cerning conduct   at  the   Fall   Ger- ; 
mans   this   weekend.  ! 

Palmer  said,    'The  German  Club  j 
has  spent  much  time  and  prepara- 1 
tion   to   bring   these   two  contrast-  j 
ing  bands  to  our  campus.   J   hope 
that    the    German    members    will 
conduct    themselves     in     such     a 
manner  as  to  make  this  a  success-  i 
ful  weekend  and  make  a  perform- 
ance  such    as    this    possible   again 
in  the  future. " 

Miller  slated.   "The  Dance  Com- 
mittee will   be  in  full  strength  at  , 
the  danc?  and  concert  to  enforce 
the    following    rules: 

"1. — No  one  will  be  allowed  to 
leave  the  dance  or  the  concert 
with  the  intention  of  returning. 

•2. — Any  one  showing  any  signs 
of   drinking    or   othsr   misconduct 
shall  be  dealt  with  at  the  discre- 
tion    of     the     University  Dance  \ 
Committee  Court, 

"3. — Anyone  bringing   intoxicat- 
ing  beverages   within    the   concert 
hair  or  on  the  dance     floor     will 
automatically   be   suspended    from  ; 
Carolina   dances   indefinitely."  \ 

Miller  also  pointed  out  that  the 
Dance  Committee  members  will 
wpar^blu?  and  white  rosettes  and 
doormen  will  wear  white  rosettes. 


Rock 'N  Roll 
Men  Play  Here 
Twice  Today 


dresses  and  formal  gowns  for  the 
many  festivities  connected  with 
Germans. 

This  is  a  weekend,  too,  when 
they  can  let  their  individuality 
shine.  The  most  basic  suit  or 
wool  sheath  can  Ijlossom  on  the 
bleachers  with  a  dramatic  pin 
placed  in  just  the  right  spot. 

Pins  may  be  worn  in  quite  a 
variety  of  places  such  as 
the  neckline,  at  hiplenglh,  any- 
where on  the  bodice  and  even 
perched  on  the  cuff  of  a  long- 
sleeved  suit   or  dress. 

At  cocktail  parties,  imaginative 
flairs  have  even  more  opportuni- 
ty to  run  rampant.  In  accord 
with  the  My-Fair-Lady  look,  a 
touch  of  the  feminine  and  beau- 
tiful i.s  calied  for.  Even  the  most 
tailoreG  wool  dresses  can  assume 
a  festive  appearance  wilh  the  ad- 
dition of  a  gala  flower  or  a 
satin  cumberbund.  Pearls  by  the 
yard  which  are  in  vogue  again 
this  year  and  long  gjld  chams 
can  be  used  to  dramatize  a  dark 
dress. 

Satin  and  chiffon  covered 
shoes  are  becoming  pcp*.!ar. 
Many  are  jewelled  or  equipped 
with  pins.  Plain  dyed-to-match 
vciur  dresi;  dancing  slippers  can 
be  sparked  effectively  with  the 
addition  of  a  big  rhinestone  pin 
or  buckle. 

The  big  news  in  fabrics  for 
after  dark  dressing  this  fall  is 
satin,  chiffon,  and  velvet — alone 
or  in  combinations.  Vibrant  red, 
black-white  combinations,  black, 
and  ol'f-beat  browns  reign  colour- 
wise. 

Just  a  touch  of  this  newness 


Two  rock  'n  roll  artists  and 
their  organizations  will  arive  in 
Chapel  Hill  today  for  the  annu-' 
ai  Faii  Germans. 
ficially  this  afternoon  with  a 
concert  in  Memorial  Hall  from 
46    p.m. 

Fats  Dominno  and  Billy  May 
will  play  tonight  in  Woollen 
Gym  for  the  dance  from  9  p.m. 
to  '   a.m. 

Women  have  been  granted 
permission  by  the  Women's 
Ilesidence  Council  and  the  Of- 
f,ce  of  the  Dean  of  Women  to 
stay  out  tonight  until  2  a.m. 

Lawrence  Matthews,  chair- 
man of  the  Stuiont  Gov.  O" 
ment  Triffic  Committee,  stated 
any  student  who  so  desires  may 
have  a  car  on  campus  this 
weekend    for  the   Germans. 

Cars  were  not  to  be  brought 
to  the  campus  until  today,  how- 
evjr,  and  must  not  be  on  cam- 
pus after  Sunday,   he  says. 

George    Rng-sdale.    vice    presi- 
dent of  the  German  club,  stated 
yesterday    the    figure    will    take 
place  tonight   at   10:15.  and   pho- 
tographers will    bo   on   hand   at 
the  dance. 


provost,  a  man  who  works  closely 
with  the  Consolidated  University's 
three  chancellors.  The  provost 
would  be  of  help  in  "selecting  the 
right  men  for  chancellors,"  Bry- 
ant  said. 

Bryant  has  served  on  the 
Board  of  Trustees  for  several 
years.  He  was  a  member  of  the 
special  committee  which  selected 
Gordon  Gray  for  president,  and 
also  helped  place  Friday's  name 
in  nomination  for  the  presidency 
this  year. 

Members  of  the  Visiting  Com- 
mittee who  ate  with  the  students 
included  H.  L.  Riddle  Jr..  Bryant, 
Hill  Yarborough,  Mrs.  Rosa  B. 
Parker,  Mrs.  Mebane  Burgwyn. 
D.  L.  Ward  and  Chairman  Wil- 
liam P.  Saunders. 

Before  and  after  the  student 
meeting  the  committee  consulted 
on  the  state  of  the  University  with 
administrators,  members  of  the 
Consolidated  Office  and  Chancel- 
lor House.  They  talked  about  aca- 
demic affairs,  health  affairs,  ath- 
letics, .student  affairs,  develop- 
mental affairs  and  business  with 
heads  of  various  University  offi- 
ces. 

Outcome  of  the  committee's 
consultations  will  not  be  known 
for  several  months,  when  the 
group  will  submit  its  report  to 
the  full  Board  of  Trustees  in 
booklet  form. 

2  Students 
Badly  Hurt 
In  Wreck  | 

Two  Carolina  students,  seriously 
injured     in     a     motorcycle  wreck 


Fraternities  Report 
No  Action  Taken  Yet 
On  Aldermen's  Offer 

I  Sigma  Chi  Proposes 
Working  Through  IFC 


Tickets  For 
Caravan  Are 
Now  On  Sale 

Tickets  sales  begin  today  for 
the  weekend  caravan  to  the  Uni 
versify  of  Virginia  on   Nov.   10. 

Tickets  may  be  bought  in  "Y" 
Court  and  will  be  $7  from  Chapel 
Hill  to  Charlctt^sville,  and  $5.75 
from  Green.sboro  to  Charlottes- 
ville. 

Busses  will  leave  Chaf)el  Hill  at 
6:15  a.m.  Nov.  10.  The  caravan 
will  stop  at  Greensboro  for  Wo- 
men's College  girls,  and  will  ar- 
rive in  Charlottesville  at  12:30 
p.m. 

Students  who  plan  to  travel  to 
the  University  of  Virginia  by  bus 
should  get  their  tickets  soon,  by 
Wednesday  if  po.ssible,  according 
to  Harry  House,  Chairman  of  the 
Caravan  committee.  ; 

Return  busses  will  leave  Char-  i 
lottesville  at  midnight  Saturday 
and  at  3  p.m.  Sunday. 

The  University  of  Virginia  has 
reserved  a  block  of  seats  for  WC 
and  UNC  students.  All  will  sit  in 
this  block  regardless  of  ticket 
number   indications. 

Plans  for  overnight  accommoda- 
tions are  not  complete.  House  said 
earlier  this  week  plans  will  be  re- 
leased as  soon  as  possible. 


(ioDsensiis.  ol  rcspoiLse  by  liic  sc\eii  liaterniiies  involv- 
ed in  the  Board  ol  .\ldennen's  promise  to  lilt  the 
Clohinihia  St.  paikiii<;  rcstri(  tion  lor  Go  days  11  Iraternities 
take  action  to  alleviate  tlieir  parking  problem  indicates  that 
no  po.sitive  a(  tion  has  as  yet  been  taken.  J     ^  . 

Hreak-down  ol  individual  response  is  as  lollou's. 

Beta  Theta  Pi  has  taken  no  ac-* ■       -  • 

tion,  vice  president  Gordon  Brown  j  ory    Commission,    that    Sigma    Nu 
ggjjj  i  and    Beta    convert    a    vacant    area 

jointy  owned  by  them  into  a  park- 
Delta  Kappa  Epsilon  has  organ-    jj,g  ]oi. 

ized    a    committee    to    study    the 


problem,  a  spokesman  said. 

Sigma  Nu  has  taken  no  action 
yet,  but  President  Bill  Morgan 
said:  "There  isn't  a  whole  lot  we 
can  do.  In  four  or  five  months  we 
plan  to  enlarge  the  space  behind 
our  house  to  hold  20  cars." 

Pi  Lambda  Phi  has  taken  no 
action,  and  President  Dick  Sirkin 
said:  "We're  right  back  where  we 
started  with  no  place  to  go." 

Sigma  Alpha  Epsilon  has  taken 
no  action.  '  .    i 

PROPERTY 

President  Pat  Hunter  said,  how- 
ever, concerning  a  sugestion  made 
by  representatives  from  the  Board 
of  Aldermen  at  a  meeting  last 
Thursday   with  the  Traffi*   Advis- 


to  jte#n  •g.wif'W*dn«sd«y  at  3-,35  p.m..  were  re- 
ported "resting  well"  in  the  hos- 
ptial    yesterday. 

The  two  boys.  Richard  Urwick 
and    Harold    Lusk.    both    of   Char- 

'  lotte,  were  carried  to  Memorial 
Hospital  for  treatment  for  lacera- 
tions and  injuries  received  as  a  re- 
sult of  colliding  with  a  telephone 

I  pole. 

Unvick  was  quoted  by  the  in- 
vestigTting  rfficor,  C.  L.  Byrd,  as 
sav'ng  ho  was  drivin  "a  little  too 
faet."  P:!trolman  Byrd  said  that 
Pat'ick  Dooley.  student  and  own- 
er of  the  vehicle,  was  considering 
filing  tcmporarv  larceny  charges 
against   fie   two  boys. 

The    accident    ocurred    as    the 
riders    were    rounding    the    .sharp 
curve   of  East   Franklin  St..   head-  ! 
ed   nut    of   tov^n.    .According   to  a 

!  witness,  the  motorcycle  missed  \ 
the  curve,  swerved  far  to  the  left 
to  avoid  an  oncoming  car,  and 
tried  to  go  between  the  car  and  a 
telephone  pole.  The  motorcycle 
slid  down,  and  the  riders  hit  the 

{  pole. 


Student  Legislature  Defeats 
Financial  Investigation  Bill 


Good  Sportsmanship  Asked 
For  Wake  Game  Tomorrow 


Good    conduct     at     the     football  ■ 
game  here  tomorrow  has  been  the  i 
j  subject    of    several    meetings    re-  j 
I  cently    between    officials    of    both  [ 
j  Wake   Forest  and   Carolina.  [ 

I  Bob  Young,  UNC  student  body  j 
i  president,  has  issued  a  challenge 
for  the  UNC  student  bndy  "to  ac-  \ 
!  cept  the  responsibilities  as  host  j 
for  the  game"  and  to  accept  the  | 
outcome  of  the  game,  whatever  it 
may  be.  'with  the  best  po.ssible  at- ' 
titude."  I 

I      Dave  Hirano.   Wake   Forest  stu- 
dent  body   president,  has  suggest-  ! 
cd  that  the  mishaps  so  fa»-  be  for- ' 
gotten  and  thrt  students  "look  for-  , 
ward   t.T    a    keenen     and     cleaner 
j  rivalry  in  the  future." 
i      A    meeting     on     Tuesday     also 
!  dealt  wtih  the  problem  of  sports- 
i  manship. 

On  hand  from  UNC  at  the  meet- 
ing were  Chancellor  R.  B.  House, 
i  Claude  Teague,  UNC  business 
,  manager;  Jim  Bynum.  head  cheer- 
I  leader.  Young.  Ray  Jefferies,  as- 
;  sistant  to  the  dean  "f  student  af- 
j  fairs;  Sam  Magill.  director  of  stu- 
I  dent  activities;  C.  P.  Erickson,  ath- 
I  letic  director:  and  Jake  Wade, 
sports   publicist    for  UNC. 

Hirano,    Athletic    Director    Bill 

Gibson  and  head  cheerleader  Brun- 

j  son    Salley,    were    among    the    of- 


ficials repre.senting  the  Deacons 
jt  the  Tuesday  meeting. 

The  complete  text  of  Young's 
statement    follows: 

"With  the  intense  rivalry  that 
usually  surround.s  the  Wake  For- 
ost-Carolina  game,  I  feel  that  we 
.'i'lould  become  aware  of  some- 
thing niviro  important  than  victory. 
I  hope  that  Carolina  will  win — 
I'll  be  pulling  and  yelling  all  after- 
noon for  a  victory.  But  this  is  not 
the  most  important  thing  about 
the   up-coming  game. 

"During  the  past  few  years,  tem- 
pers have  fared  unnesessarily 
during  the  Wake-Carolina  games. 
'F  lis  has  been  due  to  .several  fac- 
tors— poor  cheering  on  the  part 
of  fans,  outbursts  on  the  part  of 
the  players  them.selves,  and  in 
some  instances,  the  pfficiating  ha^ 
intited  both  playors  and  fans. 
However,  thes?  displays  should  be 
a  thing  of  the  past! 

"Roth  studr-nt  bwlics  are  proud 
of  their  teams.  Both  groups  of 
fans  will  probably  yell  their  hearts 
out  for  th-ir  plavers.  Both  teams 
will  be  giving  the  game  their 
very  best.  In  other  words,  from 
the  prospects  ntm-,  the  game  will 
be  most  outstanding  in  every  way. 
I  challenge  each  individual  stu- 
dent to  accept  the  responsibilities 


as  hosts  for  the  game. 

"The  plays  will  do  their  part.  It's 
up  to  you.  as  an  individual  and  a 
Tar  Heel  supporter,  to  do  youi 
part,  Regaidless  of  which  team 
wins,  let's  accept  the  outcome  will. 
the  best  possible  attitude.  Let's 
be  proud  of  our  team's  effort,  n^ 
matter  what  the  score  may  be.  I 
each  student  displays  good  sports 
man.ship,  then  each  school  will 
gain  a  victory  in  its  own  way.  Let's 
make  this  a  hard  fought  game  with 
high  .goals." 

The  complete  text  of  the  state- 
ment  by  Hirano  is  as   follcws: 

"For  years  Carolina  and  Wake 
Forest  have  played  each  other  in 
hundreds  ot  sports  events.  In  all 
these  many  contests  we  have  had 
inly  two  mishaps  that  mar  our 
long  clean  rivalry.  Let's  forget 
these  two  unfortunate  incidents 
and  look  frrward  to  a  keener  and 
cleaner  rivalry   in   the   future. 

"We  here  at  Wake  want  our 
team  to  win  just  as  much  as  you 
want  your  team  to  win. 

"I  am  personally  looking  forward 
to  our  contest  at  Chapel  Hill.  And 
to  whoever  wins  the  game,  I  hope 
I  can  sincerely  say,  'that  w'as  a 
clean,  hard-founght  game.'  I  hope 
that  after  our  game  I  can  be  justly 
proud  of  our  rivalry. 


By    CLARKE    JONES 
And    NANCY    HILL 

The  Student  Legislature  lasi 
night  defeated  a  bill  calling  for 
estchlishment  of  committee  to  in- 
vestigate the  expenditures  of  the 
UNC  Debate  Council. 

Opposition  to  the  bill,  introducjci 
last  week  by  Bill  McNaull  (SP). 
Cume  mainiy  from  UP  members 
.Mike  Weinman  and  B.-nny  Thomas. 

Bath    representatives    concurred 
the  student  Audit  Board  should  dc 
'h;'  mvcstigating  of  how  the  Coun- i 
eil   spends  its   money. 

Dave  Liebermann,  chairman  of 
'.hp  Debate  Council,  appeared  bc- 
tore  Legislature  members  and  urg- 
od  defeat  of  the  bill  because  of  the 
publicity    involved. 

He  said  the  council  "had  nobb- 
ing to  hide  and  was  not  afraid"' 
ol  being  investigated  but  the  j 
publicity  would  hurt  debating" 
which  is  valuable  to  the  school 
and  student  government.  | 

A    bill    concerning    maintenance! 
of  men's  dormitory  television  sets, ' 
introduced   at    last    week's   session 
by    UP    floorleader    Thomas    was ' 
tabled   for   revision    following   dis- 
cussion  and  amendment  last  night,  j 

An  amendment   was  first  called . 
•"or  to  provide  for  a  committee  ap- 


pointed by  the  speaker  of  the  Leg- 
islature and  including  the  presi- 
dents of  the  Women's  Residence 
Council  and  the  Intcrdormitory 
Council  to  investigate  financial 
provision  for  maintenance  of  tele- 
vision sets  in  men's  and  women's 
dormitories. 

The  bill  was  then  tabled  for  dis- 
cussion and  revision  until  next 
week. 


"It  is  an  unreasonable  request. 
We  don't  e.xpect  them  to  give  up 
their   property."  ' 

Sigma  Chi  has  taken  no  action, 
but    President    Claude    Cumberly 


It  was  erroneously  reported  in 
yesterdays  Daily  Tar  Heel  that 
Sigma  Alpha  Epsilon  fraternity 
was  not  represented  at  a  meet- 
ing between  Columbia  St.  frater- 
nities and  the  Traffic  Advisory 
Commission   yesterday. 

The  fraternity  had  two  repre- 
sentatives at  the  closed  meeting. 


said  he  favored  "fraternites  get- 
ting together  and  working  through 
the  Interfraternity  Council." 

The  vacant  lot  between  the  Beta 
and    Sigma    Nu    Houses    is   owned 
i  primarily  by  the  Betas. 

A  representative  from  the  Beta 
House  coniended  a(  a  Wednesday 
meeting  with  the  Traffic  Commis- 
sion that  conversion  of  the  vacant 
area  into  a  parking  lot  would  "de- 
tract from  the  beauty  of  the 
house." 


IN  THE  INFIRMARY 

Students  in  the  Infirmary  yes- 
terday included: 

Misses  Alma  Godsev,  -Cath 
erine  Hux,  Helen  Dickson,  Shir- 
ley Coggins,  Carolyn  Roberts, 
Salli  Simpson,  Sally  Patterson, 
Grace  Boney,  Nanc/  Noble,  Ann 
Mitchell,  and  Patricia  Gregory, 
and  George  Stavnitski,  Frank 
Greer,  Claude  Moore,  Tawfik 
Haffan,  William  Heck,  Isaac  Mer- 
rill, Douglas  Young,  Joel  Cald- 
well, William  Sherrill,  Gray 
Reed,  John  Saunders,  Gorden 
Hall,  Thomas  Haiilip,  James 
Damis,  Harry  Smith,  Shu-sing 
Cheng,  Ernest  Briggs,  John  Rol- 
lins, Thomas  Green,  Carl  O'Dell, 
James  Merritt,  and  Albert  Sum- 
merlin. 


Directories  Go 
On  Sale  Wed. 

The  1956-57  Student  Directory 
»vi'l  go  on  sale  Wr'dne.sday,  Oct.  31 
at    the    YMC.-\    and    Lenoir    Hall. 

The  directory  will  be  a  two- 
tone  green  this  year  and  will  in- 
clude the  names,  addresses  and 
tel? phone  numbers  of  all  univer- 
sity affiliated  personnel  and  an 
alphabetical  I'sting  of  all  students 
with  their  hometown  and  Chapel 
Hill    addresses. 

Director  editor  Jon  Dawn  ex- 
pressed his  desire  to  make  the 
directories  available  in  dormito- 
ries for  students  who  might  not 
otherwise  get  a  chance  to  buy 
one. 

Copies  will  be  available  for  35 
cents  and  can  b?  used  for  a  num- 
ber of  purposes.  Home  town 
friends  and  service  buddies  can 
be  located  easily  with  a  flip  of  a 
page  and  a  telephone  call. 


Chancellor  Greets  New  Naval  Science  Professors 

Chancellor  House,  center,  is  shown  In  front  of  the  Old  Well  as  he  greets'  four  new  members  of  th* 
Dept.  of  Naval  Science.  They  are,  left  to  right,  Lt.  (j.g.)  J.  G.  Albert,  USN;  Maj.  L.  C.  Norton,  USMC; 
Chancellor  House;  Capt.  A.  M.  Patterson,  USN;  and    Lt.  H.  R.   Humphrey,  Supply  Corp,  USN. 


PAGE  r^o 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


FRIDAY  OCTOBER  2«,  1»5« 


FRIDAY, 


Now  The  Town's  Half-way; 
Greeks  Have  Got  60  Days 


PRESIDENT  HAS  BIG  JOB 


riic  louii  Board  of  Aldermen 
showed  good  sense  wliefi  it  a<>reed 
to  suspend  the  S.  Cohiinhia  St. 
pj.rkini?  restriction  for  fio  days. 

Now.  it  retnains  for  the  fra- 
ternity houses  along  that  street 
to  find  a  means  for  easing  their 
own  parking  pioblems. 

It  won't  he  an  casv  ioh.  But  it 
(an  he  done  if  the  fjpaternities  will 
agree  to  gi\e  up  just  a  little  hit 
ol    li'4urati\e— and    literal— ground. 

The  Board  of  Aldermen's  .stipu- 
lation is  this:  If  the  fraternities  will 
<lo  something  to  alleviate  the  park- 
ing problem  around  Big  Fraterni- 
t\  (lourt.  the  town  Avill  lelax  tiie 
two-hour    resirittion. 

So.  things  don't  look  as  hhu  k 
for  the  fraternity  men  as  thev  did 
a  few  weeks  ago.  If  they  find  a 
pi.  ;e  and  a  way  to  alleviate  the 
problem.  thev'U  get  more  park- 
\ni  Npa<e  oti  thc.streef. 

Past  experience  would  lead  one 
to  e\p{(  t  bnlTneadedtiess  from  the 
fraternit\  men  on  the  handling  of 
this  situation.  Kd  Hudgins.  head 
<?t  the  Interfrateinitv  Council,  re- 
<entlv  said  fraternitv  men  who 
own  cars  ha\e  been  leavin<r  them 
on  S.  Columbia  St.  despite  the 
I.iw.  Thev  ha\e  been  sending 
pledges  out  to  shift  cars  around, 
he  said,  and  thev  have  been  eras- 
ing tell-tale  blue  chalk  marks 
placed  on  automobile  ties  bv  po- 
licemen. This  is  bullheadedness.  we 
Ijeliexe.  It  is  not  an  exccllem  way 
to  solve   parking  prroblenis. 


Leaders  in  Big  Fraternitv  C.otn  t 
houses  who  really  want  to  retain 
their  right  to  park  on  S.  Columbia 
St.  should  get  to  wt)rk  immcfiiately. 
Thev  tannot  very  well  afford  to 
keep  on  c)em:tnding  that  the  Boaid 
ol  Aldermen  lift  its  restriction 
without  demotistrating  they  aic 
willing  to  make  some  .s;urifices. 

It  is  not  tii»€  for  bulllicadedness. 

Gracious 
Living: 
Number  3 

(.raham    Memoiiii'l's  <offee   ma- 
(iiine  didn't   know   it,   but   it   was 
contril^uting    to    Gracious    Living 
in  Chapel  Hill. 

Ihe  machine,  foul  deamon  that 
it  is.  regularlv  dispenses  bad  <<)f- 
Ice  from  a  metal  mixing  bowl  deep 
in  its  bowels  It  drips  forth  powder- 
ed "coffee."  fla\ored  \\ith  powder- 
ed sugar  and  powdered  "dairv 
prod  tut.  " 

The  mrj;hine  usually  dii|)S  forth 
for  a  dime  a  cup. 

But  yesteidav,  the  ma(  hine  turn- 
ed chit  ken.  Or  it  felt  that  Living 
in  (Chapel  Hill  w.is  becoming  un- 
gnu  ious. 

Anywav.  it  started  sellitig  coJ- 
fee  for  a  ni<  kef  a  cup. 

How  sjracious! 


Baccy 's  Crown  Is  Slipping 


Tar  Heel  larmers.  the  small- 
farm  type,  should  pav  close  atten- 
tion   to    their   governor. 

(•o\.  Luther  Hodges  said  this 
week  that  the  s'ate  needs  "locally 
financed,  locallv  operated  indus- 
tries whith  will  utilise  the  many 
tarm  people  who  must  supplement 
tlieir  income  or  go  under."' 

He  was  .seeins.in'iO  t1^"  future — ■ 
we  fear,  into  the  noi-t<x»-di.stant 
fuiiue — <  '  Ills  state,  and  Jie  was 
iryin  •  •  do  something  about  it 
bcfo-  e  it  s  too  late. 

\orth  Carolina's  small  farmers 
are  doomed.  They  are  linding 
themseKes  decreasing  in  number, 
and  thev  are  finding  that  thev  must 
lean  more  and  more  on  the  fedeial 
govennnent  for  enough  nionev  to 
li\e. 

State  or  fedeial  aid  is  not  the 
ansAver  to  the  small  farmei's 
plight.  He  can  lean  just  so  far, 
and  then  he  will  fall  over.  The 
only  answer  for  this  state  is  in- 
dustrv.  "'hHally  financed,  locally 
operated"  as  the  governor  sug- 
gests^  

The  Daily  Tar  Heel 

The  official  student  publication  of  the 
Publications  Board  of  the  University  of 
North  Carolina,  where  it  is  published 
daily  except  Monday  and  examinatiot 
and  vacation  periods  and  suninner  terms 
Ejitered  as  second  class  matter  in  the 
Dost  office  in  Chapel  Hill,  N.  C,  undei 
the  Act  01  March  8,  1870.  Subscription 
rates:  mailed,  $4  per  year,  $2.50  a  semes- 
ter; delivered,  S6  a  year,  $3.50  a  semes- 
ter. 

Editor  FRED  POWLEDGE 


North  Carolina  should  get  to 
Avovk.  .Mieailv  tobacco  is  losing  its 
iiown. 


You  Know 
Sundials 


Are  Nice 


Managing  Editor 


CHARLIE  SLOAN 


News  Editor 


RAY  LINKER 


Business  Manager 


BILL  BOB  PEEL 


Sports  Editor 


LARRY  CHEEK 


Advertising  Manager  ...     .    Fred  Katzin 
Coed  Ekiitor  .   Peg  Humphrey 

EDITORIAL  STAFF  —  Woody  Sears, 
Frank  Crowther,  Barry  Winston,  David 
Mundy,  George  Pfingst,  Ingrid  Clay, 
Cortland  Edwards. 


Staff  Photographer    Norman  Kantor 


BUSINESS  STAFF  —  Rosa  Moore,  Jonny 
Whitaker,  Dick  Leavitt,  Peter  Alper. 


NEWS  STAFF— Clarke  Jones,  Nancy 
Hill.  Jodn  Moore,  Pringle  Pipkin,  Anne 
Drake,  Bobbi  Smith,  Jerry  Alvis,  Edith 
MacKinnon.  Wally  Kuralt,  Ben  Taylor, 
Graham  Snyder.  Billy  Barnes,  Neil 
Bass.  Jim  Creighton,  Hil  Goldman, 
Phyllis  Maultsby. 


SPORTS  STAFF:  Bill  King.  Jim  Purks, 
Jimmy  Harper,  Dave  Wible,  Charley 
Housop. 


Subscription  Manager  Dale  Stdley 

Siaff  Artist Charlie  Damiel 

Night  Editor  Cortland  H.  Eflward.s 

Proofreader  ^_.— -Cortland  H.  E<iw3rd9 


The  Morehead  Sundial,  object 
dart  and  of  much  comroversy,  is 
a   pretty  thing  after  all. 

We.  tf)o.  wondered  if  Morehead's 
money  couldn't  better  be  spent  on 
such  things  as  dormitories,  class- 
rooms, textbooks  for  those  who 
can't  stand  the  Book   F.x  prices. 

But,  u|X)n  reflet  tion  iniderneath 
the  huge  dial's  wing,  we  have  de- 
cided a  sundial  isn't  a  biKl  idea 
after  all. 

For  what  lunversitv  can  boast  of 
such  an  attraction  for  visiting  high 
sihool  students?  What  luiiversitv 
(ould  be  boring  and  dull  when  it 
has  ^  mouatrous  simdial  on  its 
campus? 

.Seriously,  donor  Morehead  has 
a  perfect  right  to  build  his  simdial. 
or  anything  else  he  wants  to  build, 
so  long  as  the  Board  of  Trustees 
okays  it.  He  has  given  the  l^ni- 
\ersity  and  the  slate  thousands  of 
dollars  in  .Morehead  Mholarships. 
grants  which  equal  the  .\ngier  Bid- 
die  Duke  scholarships  that  are 
handed  out  acro.ss  the  hollow  in 
Durham. 

He  has  given  the  l'ni\ersitv  a 
thing  of  beautv,  e\en  though  it  is 
monstrous  in  si/e  and  hardly  use- 
ful. The  sundial  has  betome  a 
meeting  place,  nnich  like  the  Old 
Well,  for  alinnni,  parents  and 
friends  here  on  weekends.  F,\en 
students  are  startina;  to  stand 
around  under  the  shadow. 

Now.  it  Avduld  be  extremely  nice 
it  Morehead  would  be  satisfied 
with  his  gifts  of  luxury  to  the 
campus,  and  il  he  would  help  the 
I'niversity  out  in  one  of  its  most 
serious    problems:    Housing. 

(;haepl  Hill  is  full  to  the  brim 
with  inadequate  housing  for  stu- 
dents, marrieci  and  single.  The 
married  students  are  in  much 
worse  shaiH"  than  the  single  ones, 
and  the  single  ones  are  li\ing  and 
studying  in  substandard  tonditions. 

So,  a  suggestion  x6  C;irolHia's 
controversial  contributet :  Wc  all 
would  be  thankful,  Mr.  Morehead. 
if  you'd  help  the  Cniversity  out 
wtih  a  new  dormitory.  While  less 
spectacular  than  a  sundial  or  a 
bell  tower,  it  would  do  a  great 
deal  towards  helping  your  felltiw 
North  Carolinians  get  better  edu- 
cations— something  your  scholar- 
ships have  been  doing  h»r  .several 
years.  


Friday  Ready  For  Funds  Fight 


Jay  Jenkins 

In   The   Charlotte   Observer 

It  is  going  to  be  interesting  to 
watch  young  Bill  Friday,  the  next 
president  of  the  University  of 
North  Carolina,  when  he  tries  to 
wrangle  money  out  of  the  legisla- 
ture next  February. 


|^api»^^ 


This  is  one  of  the  most  exact- 
ing, tiresome,  irritating  —  and 
most  important  —  chores  of  the 
university  president. 

Memories  of  Frank  Gra-ham's 
technique  and  the  methods  em- 
ployed by  Gordon  Gray  come  to 
mind. 

As  president  during  the  1930- 

'Cindereila  .  .  .!' 


1949  period.  Graham  had  the 
toughest  assignment.  He  had  to 
wheedle  for  the  green  stuff  when 
it  was  scarce. 

In  addition.  Graham  was  not 
going  through  a  year  in  par  un- 
less He  became  involved  in  some 
controversy  or  other.  And,  it 
should  be  added,  it  was  a  healthy 


FRIDAY'S  DUTIES 


Responsibilities  Of  UNC  Chief 


Below  ar*  some  of  the  duties 
of  the  president  of  The  Univer- 
sity of   North   Carolina. 

The  principal  executive  officer 
of  The  University  of  North  Car- 
olina shall  be  the  President.  He 
shall  exorcise  complete  execi|tive 
authority  over  the  in.stitutions 
comprising  the  University  of 
North  Carolina  subject  to  the 
direction  and  control  of  the 
Board  of  Trustees. 
(a)  General  Relationships  and 
Duties  oi  the  Pres-ident 
The  President  shall  have  and  ex- 
ercise full  executive  powers  over 
the  institutions  of  The  Univers- 
ity of  North  Caro'ina  and  shall 
be  the  spokesman  and  interpret- 
er of  The  University  of  North 
Carolina  to  the  alumnae  and 
alumni  as  a  whole,  the  press, 
the  educational  world,  and  the 
general  public. 

The  Presdient  shall  personally 
represent,  before  the  State,  the 
region,  and  the  nation,  the  ideals 
and  the  spirit  of  The  University 
of  North  Carolina. 

In  addition,  he  shall  determine 
policies  to  govern  The  Universi- 
ty's programs,  speak  for  The 
University  as  its  official  head, 
and  coordinate  all  activities  of  the 
institutions  of  The  University  of 
North  Carolina. 

As  the  chief  executive,  he  shall 
be  responsible  for  the  pre.senta- 
tion  of  all  University  policies 
and  recommendations  to  the  Gen- 


eral .Assembly,  the  Governor,  the 
B;>ard  of  Trustees.  State  budget 
officers  and  commi.^sions,  and 
the  Federal  Government. 
(b>  Relation  of  the  President  to 
the  Board  of  Trustees 

The  President  as  the  chief 
executive  officer  *  of  The  Uhi- 
verstiy  of  North  Carolina  shall 
formulate  the  educational  and 
administrative  policies  of  The 
Univcisity,  and  he  shall  perform 
all  duties  prescribed  by  the 
Board    of  Trustees. 

He  shall  be  responsible  to  the 
Board  of  Trustees  for  the  prompt 
and  effective  execution  of  all 
laws  relating  to  The  University 
of  North  Carolina  and  of  all  res- 
olutions, policies,  rules  and  reg- 
ulations adopted  by  the  Board 
for  the  ordering  and  operation 
of  The  University  of  North  Car- 
olina and  for  the  government  of 
any  and  all  its  institutions. 

His  di.scretionary  powers  shall 
be  broad  enough  to  enable  him 
to  meet  his  extensive  responsibil- 
ities .... 

(c)   Relation  of  the  President  to 
th<e  University 

The  President  .shall  be  the 
leader,  coordinator,  and  consoli- 
datnr  of  all  the  institutions  of 
The  University  of  North  Caro- 
lina in  accord  with  the  principle 
of  allocated  functions;  and  he 
shall  promote  the  general  wel- 
fare and  development  of  The 
University  in  its  several  parts 
and  as  a  whole. 


The  President  ^shall  be  a  mem- 
ber of  all  faculties.  He  shall 
have  authority  to  decide  all 
questions  of  .iurisdiction,  dis- 
agreement, and  appeals  not  olh- 
envi.se  specifically  defined,  be- 
tween the  several  institutions, 
councils,  faculties,  officers,  and 
student   bodies. 

The  faculties,  staffs,  or  stu- 
dent bodies  or  any  member 
thereof  may  have  the  right  of 
appeal  from  the  Chaneclor  to  the 
President,  and  from  the  Presi- 
dent to  the  Board.  The  appeal  is 
to  be  submitted  through  the 
Chancellor   and    the    President. 

The  channel  for  official  com- 
munications between  the  Presi- 
dent and  the  several  institutions 
in  such  matters  shall  be  through 
the  Chancellors. 

The  President  shall  assume, 
and  retain  at  all  times,  control 
over  all  budgets  of  The  Univers- 
ity. He  shall  approve  revisions  of 
budgets  including  reallocations 
of  unexpended  funds,  and  he 
shall  approve  expenditures  un- 
der the  budget.  . . 

In  carrying  out  his  duties  and 
responsibilities,  the  President 
may  delegate  to  subordinate  of- 
ficers portions  of  those  duties 
with  the  required  authority  for 
their  fulfillment.  However,  this 
shall  not  reduce  the  President's 
overall  responsibility  for  these 
portions  of  duties  which  'he  may 
delegate. 


thing   for   North   Carolina   Grah- 
am did  not  avoid  fights. 

Anyway  Graham  would  appear 
before  the  legislators  and  lay  out 
his  money  requests.  The  conserv- 
atives had  a  time  combatting  the 
able,  smiling  little  man. 

After  Graham  had  spun  his 
magic,  the  opposition  always 
warned  the  legislators  not  to  be 
carried  away  by  his  arguments. 
Often,  it  seemed  the  opposition 
felt  it  had  the  role  of  snapping 
its  fingers  to  waken  solons  hyp- 
notized by  Dr.  Frank. 

The  picture  of  Graham  seated 
in  the  gallery,  his  smiling  face 
resting  upon  his  arms  on  the  rail, 
is  sharply  etched  in  memory.  He 
was  a  good  fighter,  an  able  and 
cnurageous  spokesman  for  the 
University,  as  he  pleaded  for 
money  in  his  soft  voice. 

GRAY  MORE  LOGICAL 

Gordon  Gray,  Giaham's  suc- 
cessor, was  from  another  cut  of 
cloth.  Unlike  Dr.  Frank.  Gray 
never  let  sentiment  enter  his 
arguments.  He  built  his  case  with 
cold  logic,  step  by  step. 

One  factor  which  added  great- 
ly to  Gray's  effectiveness  was 
his  experience  in  the  General 
.Assembly.  He  had  sat  where 
many  of  his  listeners  were  sit- 
ting. He  had  heard  all  the  ar^ti- 
ments.  and  he  knew  legislative 
reasoning  on  money  matters. 

Besides  that.  Gray  always  was 
perfectly  Irank  in  his  presenta- 
tion. He  nexer  tried  to  dispute 
a  fact  or  dodge  a  reality.  He 
served  up  his  arguments,  course 
by  course,  and  not  picnic  style. 


Friday  will  hold  his  own  here. 
He  has  the  first  requirement  for 
a  presidential  joust  with  the  leg- 
islature: a  firm  grasp  and  knowl- 
edge  of   university   affairs. 

ALLIED 

And  in  1957,  for  the  first  time, 
the  Universitv  president  will  have 
potent  allies  to  help  him  plead 
his  case.  They  will  be  members 
of  the  State  Board  of  Higher 
Education. 

This  board  receives  money  re- 
quests of  the  University  as  it 
does  for  all  other  state-suported 
institutions  of  higher  learning. 
Once  the  board  screens  the  re- 
quests and  approves  them,  board 
members  go  to  bat  for  the  final 
figures. 

This  will  mean  Friday's  com- 
batc  team  will  include  Dr.  J.  Har- 
ris Purks,  b6ard  director,  and 
such  veterans  of  past  frays  as 
D.  Hiden  Ramsey  of  Asheville 
and  L.  P.  McLendon  of  Greens- 
boro. 

To  doubting  legislators,  the 
board  will  report  it  lopped  about 
.seven  million  dollars  from  orig- 
inal requests  of  the  institutions. 
Then  it  will  unfurl  charts  and 
statistics,  including  the  indisput- 
able facts  of  this  state's  spiral- 
ing  birthrate. 

Also,  the  board  will  meet  the 
legislators  with  the  full  blessings 
of  Gov.  Hodges,  who  described 
the  board's  presentation  to  the 
Advisory  Budget  Commission 
with   words  like  "excellent." 

Bill  Friday,  embarking  upon 
his  tough  job.  undoubtedly  will 
welcome  his  allies. 


Pogo 


By  Walt  Kelly 


Li'l  Abner 


By  Al  Capp 


—  : Ts,  i'    II  \\\f  c*^uCK(.f.»-TME^  NEVER 

■ " ^-^  HAD  IT  SO  GOCOrf- 

BUT,  lOVERBQ/KJIK/.'   >  open  Tk-I' window .T 

VO'  DONE  MISSED  65     /  T1-IAR'S  "HMO  MORE. 

CONCERTS.'.'  VO'  IS 

DEPRI VIN'  TH"  PUBLIC 

a  >OF^  MOOSIC 


OTHER  NEWSPAPERS  Say: 

State  Papers  O.K. 
Friday  s  Selection 

THE  RALEIGH  TIMES 

Bill  Friday  measure  up.  At  36,  he  has  youth  but 
feels  the  steadying  influence  of  matiirity  .  .  .' 

CHARLOTTE   NEWS 

We  firmly  believe  that  the  University,  under 
Mr.  Friday,  will  continue  to  be  an  outstanding  force 
in  the  development  of  the  state  and  the  region. 
Certainly  it  will  be  a  place  which  will  off  or  con- 
sistent hospitality  to  fresh  thinking  and  new  think- 
ers. 


FRIDAY 

. . .  unannnousty    endorsed 

THE  CHARLOTTE  OBSERVER 

Ordinarily,  we  think,  the  needs  of  universities 
are  best  met  by  presidents  who  are  primarily  edu- 
cators, rather  than  administrators.  But  the  siti^tion 
with  respect  to  the  University  of  North  Camlina 
has  changed. 

The  State  Board  of  Higher  Education  has  taken 
over  much  of  the  broad  planning  and  direction  that 
once  was  the  sole  task  of  the  President  of  the  Uni- 
versity. It.  has  altered  the  nature  of  that  position 
and  removed,  we  foel,  what  would  have  been  the 
chief  obstacle  to  the  appointment  of  Friday. 

The  new  president  will  be  left  his  share  of  pro- 
blems, however.  At  the  moment  one  of  the  big- 
gest is  the  threat  of  low  salaries  to  the  faculties 
of  his  three  schools.  That  is  a  problem  Friday  has 
recognized  and  is  attacking  vigorously. 

WINSTON-SALEM  JOURNAL  ' 

Mr.  Friday"  experience  has  been  largely  on  the 
administrative  side.  This  may  be  his  greatest  wcak- 
nes.  But  he  seems  to  be  in  close  contact  with  every 
phase  of  University  life,  and  has  been  strongly  en- 
dorsed by  the  student  government,  other  administra- 
tion officials,  and  the  faculty  members. 

THF  OURHAM  SUN 

Perhap.s  his  outstanding  general  characterisitic, 
one  alumnus  feels,  is  that  'Bill"  Friday  is  a,  diplo- 
mat. He  gets  along  with  people. 

THE  NEWS  AND  OBSERVER 

He  has  a  clear  conception  of  the  true  function 
of  the  University  and  the  responsibility  of  the  man 
who  heads  it  to  see  to  it  that  the  function  is  per- 
formed. 

DURHAM  MORNING  HERALD 

It  is  always  a  satisfaction  to  see  an  institution 
have  within  its  organization  a  p^son  qualified  for 
promotion  to  its  top  position.  It  is  evidence  of  the 
high  quality  of  personnel  the  institution  attracts 
to  its  service.  For  that  reason,  it  is  especially  grati- 
fying to  see  the  trustees  find  within  the  university 
administration  the  new  president  of  the  consoli- 
dated university.  They  are  getting  a  person  they 
know,  a  man  the  faculties  of  the  constituent  in- 
stitutions know,  a  man  the  alumni  know.  By  select- 
ing a  man  from  within  the  organization  they 
strengthen  public  confidence  in  the  university  ad- 
ministration. 1*""     '    •> 

May  we  add  our  endorsement  of  Mr.  Fridays 
selection  to  that  of  the  Bryant  Committee  and  the 
executive  committee  of  the  university  trustees  with 
the  hope  that  the  full  board,  at  an  early  meeting, 
will  add  its  final  blessing  to  the  nomination. 
DURHAM  SUN 

In  addition  to  his  awareness  of  the  delicate  ed- 
ucational problems  facing  a  great  university,  Mr. 
Friday  has  that  deep  understanding,  of  the  people 
of  North  Carolina,  without  which  no  great  leader 
Df  the  university  can  excise  his  full  potential.  This 
quality  of  understanding  cannot  be  instilled  in  a 
brief  time:  any  outsider  taking  over  the  top  job  in 
the  Consolidated  set  up  would  have  inevitably  grop- 
ed his  way.  Mr.  Friday  is  well  fitted  for  that  end 
of  the  presidency. 

In  the  field  of  his  greatest  weakness,  academic 
degree  and  seasoning,  the  president  of  the  Con- 
solidated University  will  fortunately  have  ample  op- 
portunity to  balance  his  adminitration  through  wise 
selection  of  provost  and  chancellors  for  the  individ- 
ual unit^^  at  Raleigh,  Chapel  Hill  and  Greensboro— 
the  obvious  answer  is  to  fill  them  with  men  of  out- 
standing academic  background. 

GREENSBORO  DAILY  NEWS 

All  ol  the  people  of  the  State  wilj  join  those 
connected  directly  with  the  University  in  the  hope 
that  under  the  Presidency  of  Mr.  Friday  the  days 
of  the  University's  greatest  leadership  will  lie  in 
the  tuhuf — not  m  the  ji.t-.t. 


PICNIC 

The       StI 
Committee 
lie   Health 
for  School 
dents  and 
ternoon    at| 


You-  rel 
so    gre< 
s  n  o  vy 
work. 

please! 


THI 


i 


1 


Vittrie^. 


26,  195« 

K. 
on 

>uth  but 


i'.  under 
^ng  force 
region, 
[far  con- 
\v>   think- 


FRIDAY,  OCTOa»»  U,  WS^ 


THt  0AI4.Y  TAR  HCEL 


PA&f    THIIE6 


liversitics 

iriiy  edu- 

situation 

Carolina 

Ihas  taken 

:tian  that 

the  Uni- 

position 

been  the 

lay. 

fre  of  pro- 
♦he  big 
faculties 

"riday  has 


tly  on  the 
Itest  weak- 
■  ith  every 
rongly  en- 
kdministra* 


Covering  The  University  Campus 


PICNIC 

The  Student  Organizational 
Committee  of  the  School  of  Pub- 
lic Health  is  sponsoring  a  picnic 
for  School  of  Public  Health  stu 
(icnts  and  their  guests  Sunday  af- 
ternoon   at    the    Umstead     State 


I 


Iracterisdic, 
is  a  diplo-        iS 


po  function 
)i  the  man 
lion  is  j)er- 


in?titution 
ualificd  for 
?nce  of  the 
on    attracts 
cially  grati- 
?  university 
he   consoli- 
lerson   they 
slituent   in- 
■.  By  select- 
zation    they 
liversity  ad- 
Mr    Friday's 
tee  and  the 
Tuslees  with 
irly  meeting, 
lation. 

delicate  ed- 
liversity,  Mr. 
f  the  people 
great  leader 
otential.  This 
instilled  in  a 
be  top  job  in 
evitably  grop- 
fur  that  end 

es<.  academic 
of  the  Con- 
ivc  ample  op- 
through  wise 
H*  the  iadivid- 
Greensboro — 
h  men  of  out- 


ilj  join  those 
f  in  the  hope 
iday  the  days 
ip  will  lie  in 


THANKS 
SO  MUCH! 

Your  response  has  been 
so  great  that  we  are 
snowed  under  with 
work. 

PLEASE  BEAR  WITH  US! 

•    PETE 
THE  TAILOR 


I  Park.  The  pirtiib' will  be  held  ffom  ; 

2-6  p.m. 
I  BLAZERS  I 

!      The  Interdormitory  Council  will  I 
I  sponsor    a    blazer    sale    Thursday. : 
!  Fittings  for  the  coats  will  be  held 
j  in   Roland   Parker  Lounges   by   a ' 
representlative    from    the    Robert 
I  Rollins  Co.  ! 

I  PROFESSORS  MEET  ' 

!      Dr.  Ralph  F.  Fuchs.  general  sec- ; 
I  retary  of  the   American  Assn.   of 
j  University  Professors,  will  address  ; 
j  the    Ehike    chapter    in    the    Music  I 
'  Room  of  the  East  Duke  Building 
Tuesday  at  8  p.m.  Members  of  the 
Chapel  Hill  chapter  have  been  in- j 
vited  to  attend. 
j  KOREAN  VETS  ' 

I      All  Korean  veterans  should  sub- 1 
j  mit  their  monthly  certification  of 
'  training  form  to  315  South  Build- 1 
I  ing  by  Thursday,  according  to  an 
announcement    from    Gen.    F.    C 
Shepard's  office. 

This  is  required  by  Public  Law 
550,    according   to    the   announce- 
ment. 
INTRA-PREXY   MEET 

All  men's  dormitory  intramural 
managers  and  presidents  will  meet 
tonight    in   301-A.   Woollen    Gym. 


The  meeting  is  required,  ac- 
cording to  Interdormitory  Council 
President  Sonny  Hallford.  Discus- 
sion will  be  held  on  the  intra- 
murals  program  with  Coach  Wal- 
ter Rabb  of  the  physical  educa- 
tion department. 


Research  Grants  Awarded  To 
Three  University  Professors 


English  Club  Discusses 
Fresh  Problems  Tonight 

A  panel  of  two  professors  and 
graduate  instructors  of  the  Depart- 
ment of  English  will  discuss  prob- 
lems in  the  teaching  of  freshman 
English  tonight  in  the  Library  .\s- 
s?mhly   Room  at  7:30 

The   panel    menrbers   are   George 
V.    Hcrncr.    Chairman    of    the    De- 
partment  of  Freshman  and   Sopho- 
n'ore  English;  James  Gaskin;  Miss  i 
.Mison  Preble  and  Richard  Calhoun,  i 
frsehman  instructors  and  memibers  < 
of  the  English   Club.   .\  number  of 
.specific  problems  will  be  consider-  j 
ed  by  the  panel.  Questions  by  the  1 
audience    will    be    answered    after  ' 
U'.e    formal    panel    discussion.    Re-  | 
(resJiments  will  be  served.  i 


Three  University  professors  have 
received  grants  to  aid  basic 
research  in  their  respective  .science 
fields  here.  J.  C.  Morrow..  HI,  as- 
sociate profes.eGi  of  chemistry,  was 
awarded  a  grant  from  Research 
Corp.  for  imagnetochemical  and 
crystallographic  investigations  of 
transition  metal  complex  com- 
pounds. For  studies  in  ether  clev- 
cige  in  aromatic  substitution  reac- 
tions.    J.    F.     Bunnett,     a&sociate 


Lenoir  Hall  Scene  Of 
Disappearing  Articles 

A  number  of  articles  ranging 
from  topcoats  to  eyeglasses  have 
been  disappearing  from  the  stu- 
dent   dining    halls. 

G.  W.  Pri^laman.  director  of 
student  dining  halls,  urges  stu- 
dents lo  safeguard  their  person- 
al belonging  as  much  as  possible 
while    eating. 

Most  items  arc  picked  up  by 
students  who  mistake  them  for 
their  own.  Of  the  items  reported 
lost,  95  per  cent  are  eventually 
returned  to  their  owners  and  all 
persons  are  required  to  identify 
their   property. 


professor  of  chemistry,  was  award- 
ed $14,000  by  the  National  Science 
Foundation.  The  third  professor. 
Donald  P.  Costello,  Kenan  professor 
of  zoolog>-.  was  awarded  $6700  for 
research  in  methods  for  obtaining 
and  handling  marine  eggs  and  em- 
bryos. His  grant  was  from  the  Na- 
tional Science  Foundation. 


Friday  Will  Become 
CU  President  Today 

Consolidated  University  Acting 
Pre.sident  William  C.  Friday  is  ex- 
pected to  be  named  as  president 
today  by  the  full  Board  of  Trus- 
tees. 

The  100-man  board  is  holding 
a  special  meeting  in  Raleigh  at 
2  p.m.  in  the  Hall  of  the  House 
of  Representatives.  The  meeting 
was  called  last  week  following  the 
Executive  Committee's  recom- 
mendation of  Friday  as  president. 


PATRpNIZI  YOUR 
•    ADVERTISERS    • 


Saturday  Designated 
NROTC  Day  By  House 

In  recognition  of  Navy  Day, 
traditionally  observed  on  Octob- 
er 27,  University  Chancellor  Rob- 
ert B.  House  has  designated 
Saturday  as  Naval  Reserve  Of- 
ficers Traning  Corps  Day  at  the 
University. 

In  connection  with  this  the 
NROTC  drill  team  will  make 
its  first  public  appearance  of  the 
year  in  a  brief  exhibition  drill 
in  the  stadium  just  before  the 
Carolina-Wake  Forest  game. 


Last  Day  For 
Yack  Beauties 

Deadline  for  entries  iu  the  Yack 
Beauty  Contest  'is  tomorrow,  ac- 
cording to  Tommy  Johnson,  edi- 
tor. All  organizations  wishing  to 
sponsor  entries  have  been  asked 
to  tujia  their  entries,  into  the 
Yack  office  in  the  Graham  Me- 
morial basement.  | 

The  contest  will  be  held  Thurs^j 
day,  Nov.  8,  in  Memorial  Hall.         j 


'13  Rue  Madeleine'  Is 
GMAB  Free  Flick  Tonight 

Tonight  at  8  and  10  p.m.  in 
Carroll  Hall,  "13  Rue  .Madeleine" 
;will  be  shown  as  part  of  the 
Graham  Activities  Board-spon- 
sored   "Free   Flick"    series. 

Starring  Jimmie  Cagney  and 
Annabella,  the  film  is  based 
on  the  story  of  espionage  dur- 
ing World  War  IL 

There  will  also  K  a  short  feat- 
ure. 


HIPIEtff BIU  DQGGEn^«^  ^'Mi  rmi' 


Ml 


ofU 


f  AIL.  "'''' 

ADAMS 

THE 
FIVE 
KEYS! 


-^**UTTIE 


-•-GREAT  ORCHESTRA^SgJ 

mi  TURNER^ 


MEMOIIAL  MMTDtllM 


ZSHOWS  7:45-10:15 

IWEDNESDA 


MAIL  ORDEBS  AND  TICKET  SALE 

TUKMS  RECOKD  SHOP 

H4i>iu\  nm  i:  roMPi  vr  •'  -^*^  "  "  adhi-ion 

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lESDAYRV 

NOV./ 

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AMOMis  GREAT  IOCf{»K)U  Orchestra ^^^ 


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SHIRTS     . 

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SALE -$1.00 


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69c  ea. 


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"WE  GIVE  S&H  GREEN  STAMPS' 


PHONE  6921 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


FRIDAY  OCTOBER  26,  1956 


IT'S  GREAT  TO  BE  IN  STYLE 
WITH 


CREW  NECK 


SWEATERS 


...  A  WONDER  FOR 

WARMTH  AND  GOOD 

LOOKS  THIS  FALL. 

BEAUTIFULLY  "BULKED"  . 


•     •     • 


$11.95 


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SAAART  NEW 


FALL 

SPORT  COATS 


SURE  TO  WIN 
ADMIRING  GLANCES  ON 
EVERY  CASUAL  OCCASSION. 

$33.50  up 


Murals 


YESTERDAYS 
FOOTBALL  RESULTS: 

4:00— SPE  1.  Chi  Psi  0;  Pi  Kap- 
pa Sig  26.  Lambda  6;  Phi  Gam  1, 
Chi  Phi  (w);  E^^erett-3  12.  Graham- 
2.  7;  BVP  1,  Grimes-1.  0; 

5:00— Kappa   Psi    1,   Chi  Psi  0; 

Zeta  Psi  28,   Pi  Lambda  0;  Lewis 

13,  Rufin-2  2    Zeta  Psi  (w)  13,  DKE 

I  7;  Med  Sch  vs  Stacy-2  (Canceled). 

WEDNESDAY'S 
I  VOLLEYBALL  RESULTS: 
I      4:00— -Kappa  Sig    1,   Chi   Psi  (J; 
I  Sigma  Nu  over  Phi  Delt.  1  5-5,  15- 
I  3;    ATO   over   DU.    15-7.    15-0;   Pi 
I  Lambdo  Phi  over  Phi  Kappa  Sigma. 

1-0. 
5:00— Sigma  Chi  over  ZBT,  15-4, 

15-8;  Zeta  Psi  over  Delta  Sig,  15-6, 

12-15,  15-13;  SAE  over  SPE  15-1, 
i  15-3;  Beta  over  AK  Psi,  15-8,  8-15, 
;  15-3. 

I  YESTERDAY'S 
I  VOLLEYBALL  RESULTS: 
j     4:00— Old  West  and  Alexander-2 
'  both  forfeited;    Vic   Vil   vs   Cobb 
(canceled);  Manley   1,  Winston  0; 
SAE  (w).  Pika  0; 

5:00 — ^Dent  Sch  over  Alexander- 
1.  13-3.  8-6;  Beta  (w)  over  Kappa 
Sig  15-10,  11-15,  15-7;  BVP  over 
Law  Sch-2,  4-15,  15-8,  15-5;  Grimes 
and  Mangum  both  Forfeited. 

No  volleyball  or  football  games 
are  scheduled  for  today. 


Frosh  Booters  Play 


The  freshman  soccer  team  goes  ] 
for  its  second  win  of  the  season  ' 
today  when  they  meet  the  Wolflets  | 
of  N.C.  State  here  at  3:00. 

Coach  John  Wienants  said  yes- 
terday that  the  team  is  in  good 
physical  condition  with  the  ex- 
ception of  fullback  Peyton  Hawes. 
Hawes  was  injured  last  week  and 
will  not  play.  Wienants  considers 
Hawes  one  of  his  key  players. 

The  starting  lineup  will  include 
George  Bachelor,  goalie;  Joel  Di- 
mette.  right,  fullback;  Gordon 
Street,  left  fullback;  Ian  Mac- 
Bryde,  right  halfback;  Bill  Stem, 
center  halfback;  Tate  Robertson, 
lift   halfback;   Co-captain  Charles 


Tomorrow's 
Housecleaning 
Sale  Offers: 


Whitfield,  right  wing;  Co-captain 
Mike  Thompson,  right  inside;  Co- 
captain  Hugh  Goodman,  left  in- 
side: John  Ghanim,  right  inside; 
Curt  Champlin,  left  wing. 


The  Perfect 
Garment  For  This 


Changeable   Weather! 


LATE  SHOW  SAT. 
SUNDAY-MONDAY 

A  New  And  Different 

Type  Of  Motion  Picture 

Wherever  he  rode 
his  past  wa,s  alv^ays 
ahead  of  him 


Tigers  Top  Gimecocks 

COLUMBIA.   S.C,    (AP)— Clem- 


Dropped  titiM  from  th*  Dollar 
Tablo.  Wo'ro  pulling  all  tho  slow 
soilort  to  make  room  for  a  swell 
new  sot  of  bargains.  Pick  your  dis- 
card for  only  S9t. 

Dropped  Serio*  Books — Everyman, 
Ponquin  and  other  series  have 
been  combed  'for  sleepers.  Dis- 
cards will  go  out  at  half  prke. 

,     _,  Nature  and  Hobby  books— To  fill 

son  s   Tigers  scored  a  quick  first    ^„,   ^,  ^.t,,,^    ^^.^,    .j^.j   ^^^ 

period  touchdown  after  recover-  j^^^j^^  „y^^„  ,„„  ^^  N.ture 
ing  a  fumble  and  then  made  it  I  ,^  Do-lt-Yourself  ease.  Only  a 
stand  the  rest  of  the  way  to  defeat !  f^^  ^j^^^  ,^j  ^^od  ones,  and  they 
South  Carolina  7-0  in  the  annual  {  .^^  y^„„  .»  ,harp  reductions. 
State  Fair  football  game. 


HAVE  YOU  LIVED  BEFORE? 
WlkUOU  LIVE  AGAIN? 


.''^•^ •Y--!^-""^  II  ,^ — r^--  \       \^^r  •<^ 

^^  The  whole   J^ 
l^  startlinE  story  if...|l 

FOR 

Brldey 
j  Murphy 

NOW  PLAYING 


Carolina 


CLASSIFIEDS 


PAPER-BACKED  BOOKS  —  Good 
used  novels,  detective  yarns  and  | 
non-fiction  at  3  for  25c  in  the  I 

I      stand    by   our    front    door.   The ! 

{      Intimate  Bookshop.  I 

j  LOST:  CLASS  OF  1956  CLASS 
j  ring  with  blue  stone  bearing  in-  i 
I  scription  "Sam  H.  EUiote".  A 
1  reward  is  offered.  Please  con- 
I  tact  the  Business  Olfice  of  The 
!      Daily   Tar  Heel. 

'  HI-WAY  SERVICE  STATION,  ON 
i  the  curve  in  Carrboro,  has  "U- 
j  WASH-IT"— 60C.  Preixiium  gas 
I      31.9(^,  regular  gas  29.9c. 


Come  Join  The  Fun! 

THE  INTIMATE 
BOOKSHOP 

205  E.  Franklin  St. 
CHAPEL   HILL 

OPEN  TILL  10  P.M. 


jackets  keep  you 

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in  any  climate f 

'12« 


Shttrt 
Jmikrt 


THE  magic  Milium  interlining 
captures  your  body  heat... 
reflects  it  back  to  keep  you  cozy 
the  scientific  weiprht-free  way! 
Airman-tailored  in  luxurious 
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Available    In  Six   Colors! 


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'-r-  c. 


Just  out  and  Just  wondeiful ! 


3 

'^ TT? — ■ — 

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^.  ^•'X.U^  "^^^^.  a-^aiiSik. 

\ 

^■. 

J^^^*"^*^  ^"^1^^ 

'4*     *  • 


.^..-.■:-,^. 


:tV 


Tllmakeyouadeair 

Kemp  has  done  it  cgoin!  But  don't 
worry  if  you  missed  the  last  sale.  Here 
is  another,  bigger  and  better  than  the 
last.  Starting  for  Germans  -TODAY- 
and  continuing  thru  Oct  31. 


. .-  v 


.' 


• ;  .  / 


■: 


t  i 


a  iJ^Vr   > 


207  E.  FRANKLIN 


D  00-' 


>.:<»  **>»•!> 


SEE  THE  'm  CHEVROLET  TODAY ! 
irs  SWEET,  SMOOTH  AND  SASSY! 

Cthevy  goes  *em  all  one  better— with  a  daring  new  departure       -         . 
in  design  (looks  longer  and  lower,  and  it  is!),  exclusive  new  .; 

Turboglide  automatic  transmission  with  triple  turbines,  a  new  V8 
■     and  a  bumper  crop  of  new  ideas  including  fuel  injection!       ■    n 


:^;,- 


3\:\ 


rlv«  • 


ill!^ili4)i 


lUSA 


•270-h.p.  ©ngine  olso  ovatl- 
able  at  extra  cost.  Atso 
Ramjet  (u.<  iniection  en- 
gines witl<  up  to  283  h.p.  in 
Corvelt.  ood  pas(«ngar 
cor    model*. 


New  right  down  to  the  wheels  it  rolls  on— 
that's  the  '57  Chevrolet! 

By  now  you  know  it's  new  in  style.  But 
Chevrolet's  new  in  lots  of  ways  that  don't 
show  up  in  our  picture.  It's  new  in  V8 
power  options  that  range  up  to  245  h.p.* 
Then,  you've  a  choice  of  ttoc  automatic 
drives  as  extra-cost  options.  There's  an 
even  finer  Powerglide-and  new,  nothing- 
like-it Turboglide  that  brings  you  "Triple- 
Turbine  take-off  find  a  new  flowing  kind  of 
going.  It's  the  ortly  one  of  its  kind! 

C<Mne  see  the  new  car  that  goes  'em  all 
one  better-the  new  1957  Chevrolet! 


••L^  •■.^^hr:-i 


Tfce   new  6«/  Air  4-Door  Sedort— one   o/ 
20   striking   i»ew  CMevies. 


Only  Jranchised  Chevrolet  deaiers  /ig«i:i  Jjjjo^^l^  display  this  fanwus  trademark 

See  Your  Authorized  Chevrolet  Dealer 


I.. 


"^ 


U: 


9  If  C  LIBRAHY 
SERIALS  DEPT. 
CHAPEL  HILL,  N.  C. 


MR.  AND  MRS.  FRIDAY,  AFTER  THE  ELECTION 

. . .  hundreds  shook  their  luwds 


PRESIDENT  FRIDAY  DELIVERS  ACCEPTANCE  SPEECH 
...  a  yiev  Consolidated  University  era  starts 


WEATHER 

Mostly  cloudy  today  with  scat- 
tered light  rain  or  drizzle.  Expect- 
ed  high,  64-74. 


OThc 


^>» 


^OL.   LVII   NO    32 


Complete  (JP)  Wire  Service 


CHAPEL  HILL,  NORTH  CAROLINA,  SATURDAY,  OCTOBER  27,  1956 


SarlHtccl 


TRUST 

We     don't    have    to    worry.     See 
page  2. 


Offices    in    Graham    Memorial 


FOUR   PAGES   THIS    ISSUE 


Consolidated    University    Gets    Its    New    President; 
Trustees    Unanimously    Elect    William    C.    Friday; 
He  Seeks  Higher  Faculty  Pay,  Increased  Research 

Resources,  Liberty 


Tar  Heels  To  Meet 
Deacons  In  Kenan 

.\(irtli  (Carolina  s  ]  ai  Heels  ,i^o  lor  their  setoiul  win  ol 
the  senstni  in  Kenan  Stadium  this  altcintMin  when  they  s<|uare 
i)!l  against  Wake  K(»ie>i  iu  the  3Jtl>  renewal  ol  a  long  and 
sonieiinieb  heated  rivalry. 

^  Jj<^.ukjL>n  lime  i>  set  lor  li  j>.m.  uifh  *ii.(><j«>  laiis  eMHH:U:tl 
In  sit  in  on  tlic  Ui<.;  Voui  .iiul  A( '.( '.  sc  r.i|».  Also  on  li.ind  lor  ilu- 
Ol  (  asion  wdl  he  some  fj.ooo  liij^h  st  hool  mnsic  ians  represenlinjj, 
(k|  s<  liools  horn  all  o\ei  tin-  stale  who  will  perlorm  as  |>an 
of   Band   Day.   .As  an  extra   addecK 


attraction,  the  LNC  NROTC  drill 
team  will  perform  before  the  kick- 
off. 

Coach  Jim  Tatum's  new  look 
Tar  Heel  squad  dcmcnstrated  last 
.Saturday  against  Maryland  that 
tiiev  are  now   a  'new  life'  club  a.s 


UNC 

Payne 

LE 

Russavage 

LT 

Jones 

LG 

Koes 

C 

Kemper 

R3 

Redding 

RT 

Robinson 

RE 

Reed 

03 

McMullen 

LHB 

Cutton 

RHB 

Vale 

FB 

tie.  After  opening  wjth  a  39-0 
rout  of  William  &  .Mary.  t!;e  Deacs 
have  run  afoul  of  some  sir i  my  , 
weather,  having  lost  to  Maryland, 
Virginia  and  Ciemson  whi'.e  tieing 
Florida  State. 

The  Deacs  have  exhibited  a  po- 
tent offense  led  by  Bill  Barnes,  a 
bruising  fullback  who  is  the  na- 
tion's second  leading  ground  gain- 
er. In  addition.  Wake  has  a  strong  | 
passing    attack    with    quarterback 


WF 
Lee 

Horn 
Smothers 

Moore  I  Charlie    Carpenter   doing    most    of 
Claxton  I  the    throwing.    Carpenter    was    the  j 
Johnsor  j  key  man  in  last  year's  Wake  For- 
Bre<wster  j  est  win  over  Carolina. 
Carpenter '      The     Chapel     Hillians     have     a 
Dalryntplel  healthy  edge  in  the  .series  overall,] 
Daniels ,  having  won  36  times  to  only  16  for 
Barnes  j  the  Deacs.  Five  of  the  Wake  vie  | 
■■i"|"|"""""""  I  tories    hav^  come    in    the    last    10  j 


GOV.   LUTHER    HODGES,   PRESIDENT   AND  MRS.   FRIDAY 

...the  tnuslees  voted  iimvumoiisly 


Trustee  meeting  photos  by  Fred  Powledge-Chal  Schley 


PRESIDENT  FRIDAY  SEES. 


-tiVA 


well.  In  that  contest,  the  Tar  Heels  ]  years,  however.  The  initial  ^ame  of 
came    to    life    after    four   straight '  the   long  series   in    1888   was   the 
losses    to   hand    the   Terj)S   a    34-6  i  first  football  game  ever  played  in  j 
pasting.  I  this  state.  ' 

Sophomores  plus  a  nucleus  of ,  Starting  for  tiie  Tar  Heels*  this 
veterans  led  by  Ed  Sutton  and  week  will  be  the  same  lineup  that 
Dave  Reed  played  a  large  part  in  opened  the  Maryland  game  last 
the  win  over  Maryland.  Other  Saturday.  F(  ur  of  the  sophs  who 
vital  factors  included  a  new  type  gave  the  squad  such  a  lift  last  Sat-' 
spread  formation  designed  to'urday  vill  be  back  on  the  firing 
counteract  the  big  Terp  linemen,  line  facing  the  Deacs.  the  four 
and  a  decided  improvement  in  are  guard  Don  Kemper,  transplant 
spirit  and  morale.  I  ed     fullback     who     drew     special 

The    Demon    Deacons    of   Coach    praise    from   Tatum    for    his    work 
I'aul  .\men  will  also  be  looking  for    against  the  Terps:  tackles  Leo  Kus-  j 
their  second  win  of  the  campaign    savage  and  Don  Redding,  and  cen 
as    against    three    losses    and    one    ter  Ronnie  Koes. 

MUSIC  EN  MASSE 

The  annual  radiant  color  of  fall  in  Chapel  Hill  and  a  football 
.Saturday  gel  a  tremendous  lift  today  as  over  5,000  band  members 
in  their  bright  uniforms  perform  at  halftime  of  the  Wake  Forest- 
University  of  North  Carolina  football  game. 

The  annua!  Band  Day.  an  event  eagerly  awaited  by  fans  and 
musicians  will  feature  69  bands  and  over  5,000  musicians.  The  bands 
will  blanket  Kenan's  green  turf  with  field-wide  lines  every  2V2 
yards, for  the  entire  length  of  the  gridiron.  In  addition,  the  UNC 
Naval  ROTC  drill  team  will  put  on  its  first  exhibition  of  the  year 
before  the  game  and  the  UNC  and  Wake  Forest  Bands  will  perform. 

LATE  BULLETIN 

Three  highly  ranked  UNC  basketballers,  two  of  them  lettcrmen, 
have  been  lost  for  the  season.  Coach  Frank  McCuire  said  Friday. 

The  lettermen,  both  dismissed  from  the  squad  for  "disciplinary" 
reasons,  are  Robert  Frences  Young,  6-6  center-forward  from  Queens, 
N    Y.,  and   Frank  Goodwin,  62  guard  from  Bellville,  N.  J.  Both  are 

seniors. 

Harvey  Salz,  a  star  "back  court"  artist  on  last  year's  brilliant 
freshman  team,  from  Brooklyn,  has  been  suspended  because  of  "scho- 
lastic  difficulties,"   McGuire    said. 


'A  Challenging  Opportunity 


Here  is  the  complete  text  of 
Friday's  acceptance  speech  to 
the  Board  of  Trustees: 

"Twenty-five  years  ago.  in  a 
special  m;ssage  to  the  General 
Assembly  on  the  proposed  legis- 
lation providing  for  the  consoli- 
dation of  our  three  institutions. 
Governor  0.  .Max  Gardner  ob- 
served that  this  act  could  make 
possible,  ultimately,  the  united 
support  of  North  Carolina  be- 
hind one  great,  unified,  coordi- 
nated and  intelligently  directed 
educational   enterprise.' 

•"That  was  his  dream  for  our 
University.  These  twenty  -  five 
years  have  been  a  time  of  pro- 
gress and  accomplishment.  Our 
instituticns  have  achieved  a  high 
degree  of  coordination.  They 
have  had  intelligent  direction. 
In  thinking  back  over  these 
twenty-five  years,  the  names  of 
many  men  come  to  mind:  Frank 
Graham,  Gordon  Gray.  Charles 
Woollen.  William  Carmichael. 
Logan  Wilson.  Harris  Purks, 
Wiliam  Whyburn.  Julius  Foust, 
W.  C.  Jackson.  Edward  Graham, 
W.  W.  Pierson.  John  Lockhart, 
R-bert  "House.  L.  B.  Rogerson, 
Claude  Teague,  E.  C.  Brooks. 
John  Harrelson.  Carey  Boslian. 
Finn  Bowen  and  XJraves  Vann. 
From  their  minds,  their  hearts, 
and  their  hands  we  have  gotten 
unselfish  and  devoted  leader 
.ship. 

"We  must  be  mindful  of  the 
hiir.dredb  of  c.evottrd  faculty  and 
.sti-lf  members  who  by  splendid 


teaching,  scholarly  research  and 
administrative  service,  have  es- 
tablished for  our  institutions 
the  world-wide  reputation  they 
enjoy."  he  .said. 

".-\nd.  we  must  recall  the  spirit 
and  enthusiasm  of  our  student 
tif.Morations  that  have  eontribut- 
ed  much  to  the  progress  we  have 
made. 

"It  is  fitting  that  on  this  day. 
and  at  this  occasion,  we  look 
back  to  'review  and  appreciate 
anew  all  that  has  been  done  for 
us. 

"You.  as  Trustees."  he  said, 
"have  giithered  again  tci  set  a 
course  for  our  future.  You  are 
here  to  fulfill  your  responsibili- 
ty, under  the  law.  of  eleeting  a 
president  and.  thereby,  placing 
in  his  hands  the  administration 
of  our  Univer.-tiy  under  the 
guidance  and  direction  of  your 
general  policy  declarations.  You 
have  chosen  to  invite  me  to  as- 
sume this  great  and  important 
responsibility,  and  I  humbly  ac- 
cept your  election  pledging  you. 
in  so  do-ng.  my  full  strength  and 


capabilities  in  working  in  the 
interest    of    the.se    institutions. 

"In  accepting  this  position.  I 
di)  so  with  the  understanding 
that  you  are  joining  with  our  fac- 
ulties, staff  nu'inbers  and  with 
me  in  actively  wurkinu  for  the 
eontinued  growth  and  develop- 
ment of  these  instituiions.  You 
hold  a  position  of  public  trust 
given  you  by  the  people  of  our 
state,  through  the  General  As- 
sembly, to  see  to  it  that  these 
instituiions  meet  their  obliga- 
tions, their  challenges,  and  their 
cpportuntiies.  We,  in  the  Uni- 
versity, have  the  delegated  duty 
to  carry  forward  the  work  of 
these  institutions  and  to  insure 
the  greatest  k'vel  of  excellenee 
attainable.  Together,  we  have  a 
duty  to  all  of  the  people  of  North 
Carolina  to  meet  these  responsi- 
bilities .squarely  and  without 
hesitation,"  he  said. 

"This  means  that  we  must 
keep  always  an  atmosphere  of 
freedom  —  responsibile  freedom 
— in  which  our  faculty  and  stu- 
dents mav  studv  and  work.   A.s 


Tax  Men  Hit  Fats     For  Some  Box  Office 


"Fats"    Domino's    appearance    in 
^'emorial  Hall  yesterday  afternoon 
j  \vas  delayed  about    10  minutes  by 
I  two   internal    revenue   agents   serv- 
ing  a   notice   for  back   taxes. 
i      Bernard     Dunn,     who     handles 
j  the    finances   for   the  rhythm   and 
I  blues   group,   said   he   "got  d  little 
behind.  "    lie    later    explained    that 


some   payments   have   b.en  delinq 
uent  since   1953. 

Dunn  did  not  reveal  exactly  how 
much  the  band  owed,  but  he  ex- 
pressed his  eagerness  to  "get  hom** 
and  check  up."  The  taxes  will  be 
payed,  along  vvitih  the  fines  cover- 
ing thf  Hf-]in<iTi'nei'<  he  cxpliiin- 
ed. 


Governor  Hodges  said  recent- 
ly. The  University  of  .North  Car- 
olina has  a  great  tradition  and 
reputation  for  defending  the 
rights  of  all  the  people  to  ex- 
press their  views  however  much 
they  may  differ.  That  tradition 
must  be  kept  alive  in  all  its 
glory.'  To  th  s.  I  wholeheartedly 
subscribe."    he   said. 

"We  must  work  to  provide 
adequate  resources  for  our  in- 
stitutions. We  need  increased 
s:dary  funds  to  retain  our  dis- 
tinguished faculties  and  to  at- 
tract new  faculty  members  to 
meet  enrollment  demands.  We 
must  greatly  strengthen  our 
libraries.  We  must  stimulate  re- 
search and  provide  the  equip- 
ment and  material  needed  by  our 
fiiculties   and  .students. 

"In  all  our  endeavors,  we  must 
.seek  the  highest  levels  of  ex- 
cellence. Finally,  the  University 
must  deserve  the  positive  and 
constructive  support  of  all  the 
people  of  North  Carolina. 

"We  have  a  challenging  op- 
portunity before  us.  We  are  en- 
tering an  era  of  great  acomplish- 
ments  if  we  but  pot  our  minds. 
our  hearts  and  our  hands  to  the 
task.  With  your  willingness  to 
work,  your  support  of  our  daily 
etforts.  your  continuin'.r  dedica- 
tion as  trustees,  and  with  God's 
help.  I  am  confident  that  our 
great  three-fold  University  will 
continue  to  lead  our  people  to 
happier  liv:»rho(»ils  ;ind  nobh^r 
lives,"  he  coiichuled. 


Said  UNCs  Needs 

By  CLARKE  JONES 
Special  to  The  Daily  Tar  Heel 

Il.\LEIGH — William  C.  Friday  yesterday  dificially  took  over  as 
(  onsolidated  University  presided. 

He  was  -unanimousl\-  elected  to  the  position  by  (he  full  Board 
of  Trustees,  which  met  in  special  session  in  the  Hall  of  the  House  to 
;:ppro\e  his  nominalicdi. 

The  36  year  old  former  acting  president  was  recommended  for 
the  job  last  week  by  a  special  selection  committee.  The  committee, 
headed  by  Victor  S.  Bryant  Sr.  of  Durham,  turned  in  its  recommenda- 
tion to  the  Executive  Committee,  which  ga\e  Friday  a  unanimous  en- 
dorsement. 

A  special  meeting  nf  thi-  full  Bcaici  was  then  called  by  the 
Executive  Committee  to  act  c.n  the  it  ooniniencialion. 

Frida\.  in  accepting  the  presiilency.  said  salaries  for  University 
faculty  numbers  must  be  rai.-ed,  re;>o;iich  stimulated  and  libraries 
strengthened. 

He  also  said  We  mu.si  ke.  p  always  an  atmosphere  of  freedom — 
responsibile  fivedom —  iu  which  (  ur  faculty  ai;;i  students  may  study 
;  nd  work   "  _  .         . 

'NO  MISTAKE' 

Gov.  Hodges.  chairuKin  of  the  hoard  told  trustee  members  "We 
have  made  no  mistake  today"  in  electirg  Friday.  "The  past  8  months 
of  dealing  with  Friday  have  been  of  unusual  plea.sure  for  me.  ' 

Friday  was  nominated  yesterday  by  Bryant,  who  reported  on 
the  screening  committees  work  in  selecting  a  candidate  for  the  job. 

Bryant,  talking  about  his  committee's  delay  in  presenting  its 
choice,  mentioned  the  1054  Supreni."^  Court  desegregation  decision, 
•  the  I'niversity's  "poorly  competitive  position  due  to  inadequate  fa- 
culy  salaries."  uncertainty  as  to  where  the  University  stood  under 
the  State  Board  of  Hiuher  KducaUiui  and  an  "accumulation  of  in- 
ternal troubles." 

The  question  of  whether  the  University  w^nild  bo  deconsolidated 
or  not  was  also  spoken  of  by  Bryajil.  He  said  "that  problem  is  now 
to  some  extent  solved  and  I  hope,  permanently." 

Hodges  highly  pra^ieii  Br\ant".s  committee,  which  chose  Friday 
out  (if  124  names  considered.  He  point cfl  out  Bryant  also  chaired 
c!  special  committee  which  selected  Gordon  Giay.  whom  Friday  sue 
coeds,  as  president. 

Seconding   the    nomination    were    Mrs.    O    Max   Gardner   Jr..   in 
behalf  of  her  hus.;and:  Federal  Judge  .1  -hn  J.  Parker  of  the  fourth 
circuit  court  of  Appeals;  Kemp  Nixon  of  Lincoln  County:  Sam  White- 
hurst  of  Craven  I'ouniy  and   John   U-m.-lead  of  Chapel   Hiii. 
YOUNGEST   FOR  CU 

Kridav  is  tlie  youngest  pre.-id<  nl  t ver  to  head  the  Consolidated 
I  niversit.v.  eonsistinj:  ol  th:.'  University  at  Chapel  Hill,  N.  C.  State 
College   in    Haleigh    and    Woman's   College    in    Greensboro. 

Three  other  nun — David  Swain,  Joseph  Caldwell  and  Harry 
Chase  were  younger  university  presiiients  but  Ihey  were  in  office 
before  consolidation  took  place,  about  25  years  ago. 

Gordon  Gray,  presuienl  in  1955,  was  granted  a  leave  of  absence  at 
that  time  to  .serve  as  Assistant  Secretary  of  Defense  in  Washington. 
lie  later  oflered  his  resignation,  acccpied  by  the  Executive  Com- 
mittee last  November. 

Di-.  J.  Harris  Purks.  provost  at  that  time,  was  appointed  as  acting 
president.  Friday  was  api>ointed  to  the  position  when  Purks  resigned 
several  months  ago  to  become  director  ol  the  Stale  Board  of  Higher 
F^ducation. 

Friday,  a  native  of  Viiginia.  was  reared  in  Dallas.  He  attended 
Wake  Forest  College  as  an  undergraduate  but  transferred  to  State 
College  where  he  was  graduated  with  a  B.  S.  in  textile  engineering 
in  1»41. 
STATE  COLLEGE  ' 

.\t  State  he  was  president  of  his  senior  class,  president  of  the 
North  Carolina  Federation  of  Student  Governmenls'and  a  member  of 
the  Golden  Chain. 

Following  service  in  the  Navy  during  World  War  II.  Friday 
entered  the  UNC  Law  School  and  was  a  member  of  the  Order  of  th<» 
Golden  F'lee^cc.  highest  mens  honorary. 

Upon  graduation  from  the  law  school,  he  was  named  assistant  to 
the  dean  of  students.  Gray  selected  him  ys  his  personal  assistant  in 
1951  and  he  was  later  appointed  Consolidated  University  secretary. 
Friday  then  succeeded  Purks. 

H(  i^  ni;<iTie(i  '..;  iju  foi  uipr  Ida  Willa  TJnw,  !l  of  I.umlu-rton.  Tliey 
have  two  daughters,  Frances,  4  and  Ma.y  Howell,  age  nine  weeks. 


PAGE    TWO 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


SATURDAY,  OCTOBER   27,    19S6 


SATURDAY 


University's  Public  Trust 
Is  Now  In  Very  Good  Hands 


THE  LIVESPIKE 


THE  SPECTATLER  PAPERS 


f  

^  THE   NEW  PRESIDENT,  INSPECTING  SILVER   DOLLAR 

. . .  thr  public  tntst   is  secure 

W'liilf  ilu-  Ho.iid  ol  Trustees  was  jobs,  and  he  can  do  tlieni  well, 

r-lediivj    William    Friday     to     the  He  has  proven   in  the  past   that 

presideiuA      ol      the     ('onsolidated  he  (an   do  them.    Ilie   liiime   will 

I '!ii\ersitv  yesterday,  the  new  pres-  onlv    show    tjiat    he   <aii    do    them 

idiiii   was  >ittin4  alone     in     (.o\.  l)ttter. 

I.nih.ei    nod<ie»>'   office,  waiiinii,   to  \  esterdav   was  a    happv   day   for 

Ik-  (.died   upstairs.  the   l'ui\ersiiv  of  \oiih   (larolina. 

\\illiain    Kriclav    w.»s    flijjpino;   a  Tomorrow  will  he  e\(ii  happier, 
(oin.  It  was  a  S})-\  ial  coin,  a  siher 
dollar   minted   i  i    \HH^.   "\   friend 

of  mine  ;.i.i\e  it   t)  me'  todav,'"  said  •    D*ll       T      *   _| 

1-ridav.     Ik-  said  it  was  (oined  in  Dill       iriQay 
the    same    M-ar    ('.rover    Cileveland 

.said      X    piibli(    Hire   is  a   pid)lic  ^^^          f"                      ■ 

vJn  rreedom: 

W  ilham  1-ridav  was  al)out  to  en- 
ter one  i»f  this  st   tes  most  import-  I  J_ '              I    I 
anr  pu/>Ji(   (»JH«  (S.Tnr'as  mesident  i  |    S         ll^^r^^ 
<jf  the  Consolidi r-d    l'tii\e]si»\    he 

will  be  perf  j^TTiin^    a    job    much  'HV;,  in  the   L'nwerstiy,  finx>e 

more  mm.  ti^Jcidt,  more  exasper-  the  delegated  duty  to  carry  for- 

atin^    ..ml    more   tout  In    than    any  -uard  the  xi'ork  of  these  institn- 

other  olfi(e   in   the  state's  go\ern-  tions  and  to  insure  the  greatest 

ment.  level     of    exeellenee    altiiinahle. 

Ill-  will   be  res|K»nsible  for  edu-  Together,  we  have  a  duty  to  all 

<ation  in    the   state's    three   hi|>her  the    fwofde    of    Xorlh    Cfircdina 

edu(ati<»n  instittui(»ns.  His  respop-^-  /"     meet      these     resfjonsibililies 

sil)ilit\    iiu  hides    molding;    to'^cther  s(jiiinel\  and  iri'hoiit  hesitation." 

all  the  dillireu!  parts   that  maU  up  wp,esidein     William    Friday    of 

this    (;on.sol!dat((l    Tniversitv.    He  jlu-  Ccmsolidated  I'liixersity,  ac- 

nuist   jwA   atteiuir)u     lo     the     ludl  ^tprin:^   his   appoinimcuL. 
bains  at  State  Collejie.  the  student 

union  at  W<.mans  College  ainl  llie^^  ^j-^,  ,^,,  .j,;^  ^^j,,            •^.^.  ,^„^  ^„,,^. 

1..  .,:nv    sta(k>   here.                          -  ^  ,^,,.^.^,j    ^,^._,,   ,,f   ^^.^^^^     ,^,,^    .^,  ^.^^^^_ 

He  nn.st   veie.ve  .ruu  ism   from  ,„|iaated  Iniversity  president  who 

the  nme-worn  n.tus  ol  the   In.-  j,;^,^^.,,   ^^.-^^  ..„,^^.^  „\^.^^.  responsi- 

versitv.  tht*  people  \\i)o  are  lealous       ,  ;i;, •  ,.    , i       .1         1        .    , 

,.   .       ,      ,   I       '               .          '         .  oihties  s(iuarelv  and  \\iihout  iiesi- 

ol   It.  And   he  must   take  the  crit-  t  ,ti,„,  " 

i(  isn,  with  di.^iiitv  and  with  a  toi.oh  '  xve'knew  all  alon^  William  Fri- 

hide.  ,                  ^,                     '  ,                111 

,,                           ...  day  was  the    man    \vho"(()uI(l    do 

H(    must   stei'   into   siuiatioirs —  ,1  •      i     »             .1  •        ■      \  ■              \ 

...        .                 '   ,..           .     ..  ,,  t'l's.   but  somethinj'    ni   his  spee(  h 

like   the  one  at    Woman  s  (.olleiJe  ,     .^ ...  .,      i,.     ^    .v            •       ' 

,                       ,  ,                      ,.          '^  vesietflav    dro\c    the    point     even 

last  vear— ci'iui  he  nurst  mediate,  ai-  \  ^,1    ,.  i             1 1        •  i 

,  .                  ,    ,•      ,,       .     ■  .  lurther  home.  Fie  said: 

bitiaie  ajid.  tinallv.  de(  ide.  ..-r'  •                 .1    .                 .1 

,...,,.         .-  ■  ,     ■           ,       ,,    ,  I  nis  means  that  xve  must   keei: 

W  liliam   hndav  can  do  al    these  ^                    .           ,             1    r        i 

^ [ always  an   atmosjjhere  ol    lieedom 

^1           _^      ,1        _,           _  _           I  — i,j'spoivsibIe  freedom  —  in  whi(h 

Tn©  UQIIV  Tor  riGGI  "^"^  ladiltv  and  students  may  study 

„.       „      .        .           ...        ,  ..  'ind   work.    .As    (.o\.     Hodyes  said 

The  official  student  publication  of  the  ,      .-^.       ,.    .                  7  x-       i 

_,,...  „  J  r  .u  IT  •«  „«  ie(entlv,  I  lie  I'niveisitv  o  Not  ill 
Pubhcations  Board  of  the  University  of 

North  Carohna.  where  it  is  published  ,  (:;"<'l"ia  has  a  oreat  tradition  and 
daily  except  Monday  and  examinatioi  reputation  lor  deletulmj;  the  rij-hts 
and  vacation  periods  and  summer  terms  <>f  all  people  to  exirress  their  views 
FIntered  as  second  class  matter  in  tht  howexer  niiK  h  thev  mav  differ, 
nr.st  office  in  Chapel  Hill,  N.  C,  undei  I  hai  tradition  must  be  kept  alive 
the  Act  0.  March  8,  1870.  Subscription  ;„  ;,|i  ,(«,  j,|,,vv.'  Fo  this.  I  whole- 
rates:  mailod.  S4  per  year,  $2.50  a  semes-  heartedlv   subscribe  " 

ter;  delivered.  S6  a  vear,  $350  a  semes  ',1       ,        1  ■             .    .1            •  .  •  .. 

Iiida\  has  hit  upon  the  most  im- 
ter.  '                .         . 
poitain    part   of   this    l'ni\eisity — 

Editor         . FRED  POWLEDGE  ;rnd  the  part   ttiat.  in   this  dav  and 

Ma^a^E^f;i^rr::'^H^^^rE'^E()^  time,  stands  fiist   in   line  h.r  those 

^^'ho  wish   to  destroy  the   I'niversi- 

News  Editor RAY  LINKER  ^v. 

Bliski7sr~Maiiager          BILL  BOB  PEEL  Freedom  is  a  nice  thin;.,'  to  fioht 

. |,,i-  i,,  ,|,(.  <  l.jssroom  and  on  a  phiv- 

Sports  Editor                   LARRY  CHEEK  i„„   (j^.,^,     ,,„,   ^^.,,^„   ^,   rniversity-s 

AdA^crtising  Manager              Fred  Katzin  freedom   is  in  danoer,   the  playiiv.; 

Coed  Editor   1 — Peg  Humphrey  o^ts  dirty.   It  takes  a  strong  presi- 

EDrrORFAL     STAFF  -  Woody     Sears,  ^'^"'   ^"  ''S'lt  '>»   'hose  who  would 

Frank  Crowther,  Barry  Winston,  David  <lfstroy  the   Iniversity  s   iiee/lom. 

IVTundy,   George   Pfingst.  Ingrid  Clay,  ^"Vf  believe  Friday  is  that  sort  of 

Cortland  Edwards.  iTian.  We  belie\e  he  will  work  ov- 

rr, ,  _.    .          r              r;;            ..     ^  ertime  to   insure  responsible   free- 
Staff  Photographer    Norman  Kantor  ,         ,         ,              ,       '          1,1 

■ .  dom  lor  the  students  and  la(uliy, 

BUSINESS  STAFF  —  Rosa  Moore,  Jonny  administration    atid    other    emplo- 
Whitaker,  Dick  Leavitt,  Peter  Alper.  vees,  of  tliis  I  ni  versitv. 
SPORTs"sTAFF:  Bill  King.  Jim  Purks,  T'le    University   must   never   re- 
Jimmy   Harper,  Dave   Wible,   Charley  •;•"<  't">  eHoi  is  to  maintain  freedom. 
Ho-ason.  (ihapel  Hill  is  one  of  the  last  oul- 

^~r  ~'~T-      '^'ZZZ~1            TC^    TTT""  post.s  for  academic  freedom.  W'ith 

Subscription. Manager Dale  Staley  r"          ,•.      ,^  ■  ,       ■     c-        1     n     1  i 

staff  Artist  ._. Charge  Daniel  ^  man  like  ^rIday  m  South   liuild- 

Night  Editor    .^..__';_~.  '  Fred  Powledge  ing.   we   needn't   worry   about    los- 

Proof  Reader Jane  Edwards  ^'^g  it. ^ 


T  V  Format  Not  For  State  Falf 


Fred  Powledge 

The  North  Carolina  State  Fair 
died  a  little  last  week. 

It  wa.s  suffering  from  the  same 
thing  that  was  blamed  for  Ring- 
ling  Brothers'  failure  as  a  tent 
show:  It  was  trying  too  hard  to 
be  too  much  like  television. 

It  was  the  Hollywoodization  of 
the  Big  Top  that  caused  the  can- 
vas to  fold  last  summer  ahead  of 
time."  and  that  caused  John  Ring 
linj:  North  I0  say  "the  tented  cir- 
cus. .  .has  become  a  thing  of 
tHe  past."  The  circus  started  con- 
centrating on  •'stars'  and  pre- 
senting its  audiences  with  acts 
that  could  be  seen  in  far  greater 
comfort  back  ^  home  in  front  of 
a  television   set. 

Ringling  Bros,  and  Barnum  & 
Bailey  Combined  Shows  tried  to 
cut  out  the  sawdust,  the  holes  in 
the  tont.  the  trained  bears  and 
the  elephants,  the  clow-ns  and  the 
jugglers,  the  people,  animals  and 
acts  that  gave  the  Big  Top  its 
name  and   its  reputation. 

The  State  Fair  is  headed  in  the 
same  direction. 

George  .■\.  Hamid.  who  also  runs 
the  steel  pier  at  .Atlantic  City, 
N.  J.,  usually  has  the  night-time 
grandstand  attraction  at  the  fair. 
This  year  Hamid  might  as  well 
have  put  his  show  on  television. 

There  were  two  aerial  acts,  one 
trained  seal  and  not  a  single  un- 
icyclist,  no  jugglers,  no  trained 
bears,  no  dog  actsi  .  .Just  modi- 
fied TV  stunts. 

At  the  State  Fair  Arena  (some- 
times called  the  Hog  Palace)  peo- 
ple were  standing  in  line  to  see 
a  man  named  Pat  Boone,  who  is 
making  his  fortune  via  television, 
radio  and  the  recording  indus- 
try. No  rodeo,  no  trick  riders 
just   "stars." 

It  was  pitiful.  A  great  deal  of 
the  state  fair  aroma  had  been 
lost,  although  a  little  of  it  was 
saved  when  the  weekend  rains 
wet  the  sawdust  and  turned  it 
into  a  beautiful  stinking  mess. 
That,  1  was  happy  to  observe,  you 
cant   gel    on   television. 

On  the  midway,  my  faith  in  car- 
nivals was  revived  a  little.  The 
men  who  roae  motorcycles  around 
the  circular  walls  weren't  affect- 
ed by  television's  influence  in 
the  least.  Neither  were  the  girls 
in  the  strip  shows,  or  the  freaks. 

Cotton  candy,  candied  apples 
and  caramel  p<>pcorn  were  still 
huge  undigestible  batches  of  su- 
gar. Roustabouts  were  still  mean 
as  the  devil,  and  the  pickpockets 
were    still    picking    pockets. 

But  there  were  signs  of  decay 
even  on  the  midway.  Some  engin- 
eer had  constructed  a  Ferris 
wheel  that  was  not  really  a  Ferris 
wheel,  but  two  wheels,  one  on  top 
of  the  other.  And  the  old  cats 
game,  in  which  you  try  to  knock 
a  weighted  "cat  '  of  a  wall  with 
a  baseball,  had  been  modified. 
Now  you  just  have  to  tip  the  cats 
over,  not  knock  them  completely 
down. 

*  •  » 

The  managers  of  the  North  Ca- 
iolina  State  Fair  should  take  a 
little  advice  from  Ringling  Bros. 
and  shy  away  from  the  new  trend 
in  showmanship. 

While  television  is  proving  fo 
be  one  of  the  fastest-growing  and 
richest  forms  of  American  enter- 
tainment, its  principles  can't  be 
applied  to  the  outdoor  show — car- 


nival,   midway,  circus  or  county 
fair. 

The  people  always  will  have  a 
place  in  their  hearts  for  the  mud, 
the  stinking,  wet  .sawdust,  the 
leaking  tent,  the  lewd  neon,  the 


sugary  food  and  the  plain  old  dirt 
of  the  outdoor  show.  The  people 
always  will  pay  for  the  privilege 
of  giving  up  their  living-room 
comfcort  to  become,  for  a  few 
hours,  part  of  the  real,  barking, 

'Small  World,  Isn't  It?' 


hollering,   screaming  show   busi- 
ness. 

Class  B  comedians  and  flash-in- 
the-pan  singers  are  not  the  out- 
door shows  answers.  Television 
has  enough  of  them  already. 


Three  Current  Campus  Diseases 


Neil  Bass 

Is  there  an  epidemic  of  dormi- 
toryitis  on  campus? 

Some  might  contend  there  is, 
while  others' would  contend  the 
opposite. 

People  in  student  government 
are  lauding  this  year's  freshman 
cla.ss  as  a  hustling  one; — <inc 
which  participates  in  extra-cur- 
ricular activities  with  a  vim. 

The  Student  Party  had  an  over- 
a'oundance  of  talent  vieing  for 
freshman  class  offices;  and  The 
Daily  Tar  Heel,  though  percnially 
understaffed,  has  a  couple  of 
promising  first-year  staffers. 

But  the  fact  remains,  some  say. 
that  too  many  students,  consider- 
ing the  student  body  as  a  whole, 
are  afflicted  by  dormitoryitis  and 
fail  to  leave  their  cozy  rooms  to 
plunge  into  the  extra-curricular 
stream. 

Nor  is  this  disease  limited  to 
one  type,  but  branches  out  to  in- 
clude fraternityitis,  Goodyshop- 
itis,  Temporoomitis  and  other  va- 
riations. 
NOT  FATAL 

A  slight  touch  of  Goodyshopi 


lis  or  Temporoomitis  is  not  fa- 
tal, some  authorities  say,  and  may 
even  be  stimulating  to  the  .system. 

But  chronic  types  of  the  four 
diseases  listed  above  are  lethal 
to  the  well-being  of  student  gov- 
ernment and  extra-curriculars  in 
general. 
ELECTIONS 

Functions  are  just  around  the 
corner — Nov.  13 — and  some  con 
tend  the  Student  Party  has  a  de- 
finite advantage.* 

That  is  to  say,  the  SP  has  con- 
trol of  student  government's  ex- 
ecutive branch. 

Such  control  comes  by  virtue 
of  owning  three  of  four  campus- 
wide  executive  offices.  And  with 
the  excellent  record  President 
Bob  Young  has  chalkcd-up  as  am- 
munition to  fire  during  the  cam- 
paign, this  control  can  prove  a 
definite  advantage,  capturing-of 
-office-wise. 
TELEPHONES 

Probably  the  most  overafed 
"problem  '  on  campus  concerns 
telephones    in   men's  dorms. 

The  Durham  switchboard  of  the 
Southern  Bell  Co.  has  raised  a 
tremendous    row    because      dorm 


men  have  inadvertantly  placed 
long-distance  calls  from  non-pay 
phones,  causing  some  inconveni- 
ence. 

The  calls  aren't  completed,  but 
lines  are  temporarily  tied-up 
while  operators  inform  men 
they'll  have  to  place  their  call 
from   a   pay  phone. 

As  a  result,  tlvreat  has  been 
made  to  remove  phones,  and  in- 
stallation of  phv)nes  on  the  sec- 
ond and  fourth  floors  of  dorms 
without  them  has  been  halted. 

Certainly  this  inconvenience  to 
Durham  operators  should  be  stop- 
ped. And  action  has  been  begun 
by  President  Bob  Young  and  the 
Interdormitory  Council  to  cease 
it. 

That  is  to  say,  the  IDC  will  cir- 
culate petitions  throughout  dormi- 
tories which  dorm  residents  must 
sign — petitions  stating  that  dorm 
men  pledge  not  to  make  long-dis- 
tance calls  from  non-pay  phones. 

This  petition  signing  seems  a 
little  unnccesary. 

And  some  would  contend  that 
the  frustrated  chief  Durham  op- 
erator has  made  a  mountain  out 
of  a    "toll  bill." 


Pogo 


By  Walt  Kelly 


♦0  v/etu^arft^gyMisHT 
NOT  fmrMMmit  u  wjn't 
wauW  /  <jvvrrcH-TH!y:« 
fZ'ihi^yf  1  perrry 


ttWX^  9>^U  ^0  )  WfU  ^Wl'CH  ^ACii  «0\\ 
*WltCHIW&"'/'&W(tCHIN6  T(5    ^0r 

Trt«''i.u  pool  >^  _ — ,    swraxvA 


QOOP" 

NOW  Doi^  That 

reUHPLV   OS 


l\'\  Abner 


By  Al  Capp 


Coffee  Prophets 
At  Lenoir  Hall 


Edited  By 
Roger  Wllk  O'Horse 


i: 


. . .  M-usaeo  contvnJgere,  cuncta  lepore, 
"To  teach  each  subject  with  enlivening  wit." 

Lucretius,  1,  933. 
AT  TIJIE  GRECIAN  LENOIR'S 

I  went  abroad  yestermorn  at  the  fashionable  hour 
known  &s  The  Breaking  of  the  Coffee,  arid  being  in 
a  broken  condition  as  to^  coin  of  the  realm,  I  be- 
thought myself  to  visit  at  this  Coffee-House  where 
Learning  is  to  be  gained  for  the  listening,  and 
where  replenishments  of  the  Javanese  brew  are  gra- 
tis. 

The  anticipation  with  which  I  entered  was  en- 
hanced by  my  espying  a  space  vacant  at  a  table  ad- 
joining that  of  a  group  of  erudimicians  held  in  high 
regard  by  even  the  more  loutish  of  our  students, 
for  their  enlivening  wit  in  teaching.  But  my  ela- 
tion was  tempered  with  sober  reflection  when  I  gave 
ear  to  their  conversations  one  among  the  other. 

The  gist  of  their  pronouncements  was  to  the  ef- 
fect that  the  Tories  would  be  returned  to  Govern- 
ment in  the  highest  posts  while,  paradoxically,  the 
Whigs  would  win  a  signal  victory  in  both  Houses. 

Squire  Stevenson— the  belief  among  the  sav- 
ants was — had  completely  and  courageously  effect- 
ed his  defeat  by  suggesting  a  Christian  approach 
to  The  abolishment  of  a  most  un-Christian  weapon: 
the  Hydrogen  bomb.  Surely  a  Democrat  should  know 
that  Christianity  is  the  last  preachment  to  be  tol- 
erated in  a  Christian  Democracy! 

General  Eisenhower  and  hi^  unmentionable  heir- 
apparent,  aided  and  abetted  by  General  Moors,  and 
all  of  them  suitably  attired  in  Charcoal  Grey,  will 
preside  over  our  doubtful  destinies  for  another 
four  years. 

Another  four  years -of  keeping  secret  high  golf 
scores,  while  simuHaneously  printing  in  the  periodi- 
cals and  the  journals  of  their  empire  every  jot  and 
tittle  of  information  on  secret  weapons  .  .  . 

Their  characteristic  Cabinet  of  Nine  Millionaires 
and  One  Plumber,  the  latter  for  Labor,  could  well 
extend  the  invitation  voiced  by  the  immortal  W.  H. 
Auden: 

"Come  to  our  well-run  desert. 
Where  anguish  arrives  by  cable, 
•  And  the  deadly  sins  ;    '• 

May  be  brought  in  tins  ? 

With    instructions    on    the    label." 

When  we  got  to  Hell,  it  will  be  via  a  production 
line,  and  neatly  packaged. 
WILL  PINEROOM'S  COFFEEHOUSE 

The  gallants  of  this  spirited  coffee-house,  and 
their  lovely  lady-coffeyers,  are  looking  forward  to 
another  pleasant  afternoon  of  watching  Sir  James 
Tatum's  jousters  gig  the  bandicoots  and  assorted 
Marsupialia  of  Wake  Forest  at  Kenan's  Fields,  to- 
day, s. 


WHY  POTEAT7-PART  3 


The  Chancellor 
Is  Before  You 


Stan  Shaw 

Columnist  Shaw  presenVs  a  third  case  in  the 
choica  of  a  new  chancellor  to  replace  Robert  B. 
House  on  his  retirement  next  spring.  In  the  past 
issues  of  The  Daily  Tar  Heel,  columnists  Frank 
Crowther  and  Cortland  Edwards  have  presented 
arguments  for  and  against  William  H.  Poteat's 
filling  the  position. 

We,  as  students,  are  faced  with  the  problem  of 
making  up  our  minds  as  to  exactly  whom  we  de- 
sire "Ss  Chancellor  of  this  University.  Some  of  us 
ha\'e  already  made  the  decision,  both  positively 
and  negatively.  We  hear  numerous  students  saying 
that  they  don't  want  so  and  so,  or  that  another 
individual   is  the  perfect  choice    for   the  job. 

This  is  a  fine  thing  for  it  at  least  indicates  that 
some  people  are  interested  in  things  other  than 
beer-bibbling  and  party-hopping,  but  we  would  re- 
alize that  now  is  the  time  to  investigate  the  persons 
mentioned  and  make  up  our  minds  as  to  the  person 
and   the  qualifications. 

Several  local  individuals  have  been  mentioned, 
and  in  as  much  as  we  do  not  have  the  facilities  to 
run  about  the  country  and  investigate  the  others  it 
is  proper  for  us  to  limit  our  considerations  to  those 
persons  whom  we  know. 

Probably  the  one  name  that  has  received  more  in- 
terest and  discussion  than  any  other  is  Dr.  Poieat 
of  the  Philosophy  Department.  We  have  seen  .sev- 
eral pieces  telling  us  why  we  should  or  shouldn't 
support  Dr.  Poteat*^or  this  job. 

The  only  objections  that  have  been  raised  against 
him  are  that  he  is  from  here  and  that  he  shouldn't 
be  taken  from  the  classroom.  We  imagine  that  these 
are  the  same  objections  that  were  raised  against 
Dr.  Frank  Graham  back  in  1931  when  he  took  over 
as  President. 
HAD  POTEAT 

We  have  had  Dr.  Poteat  for  a  course  and  we 
admit  that  his  leaving  the  classroom  would  be  a 
great  loss  to  the  University,  but  we  also  know 
that  his  taking  over  as  Chancellor  would  so  far 
outweigh  this  loss  that  an  objection  based  on  it 
tends  to  be  naive. 

The  students  of  the  University  need  a  dynamic 
and  enthusiastic  symbol  in  the  administration. 
.Someone  to  whom  they  can  look  as  a  friend  and  a 
person    who   understands   their   problems. 

With  the  position  of  the  President  coming  to  mean 
more  and  more,  it  will  be  hard  for  Bill  Friday  to 
fulfill  this  net'd.  That  leaves  us  with  just  one 
place  where  it  can  be  done,  and  that  is  the  Chan- 
cellor's Office. 

We  wish  that  Dr.  Poieat  could  continue  to  teach 
and  still  be  Chancellor,  but  if  the  decision  has  to 
be  made  we  think  that  be  must  belong  to  all  of 
the  students. 


Co 


FACULTY  Cl 
There  wrill] 

ing  of  the 
day  Oct.  30 
lina  Inn. 

Captain  aJ 
sor  of  Nav 
manding  Ofi 
unit,  wili  spl 


Wn  CoiKt-faa  ri 


Ate 


LATE  SI 
Sun. 


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LAI 


h   I9S6 


ts 


SATURDAY.  OCTOBER  27,  1956 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


PAGE    THREfc 


wit." 
1.  933. 

\\e  hour 
nng  in 
I  be- 
where 
ig,   tnd 
jre  gra- 

vas  en- 
lable  ad- 

in  high 

tudents, 

|my   ela- 

I  gav€ 

ler. 

the  ef- 
I  Govern- 
Illy,  the 
(Houses. 

le    sav- 
effect- 

)proach 

reapon: 
Id  know 

be  tol- 

)le  heir- 

)rs,  and 

»y,  will 

I  another 

Ugh  golf 
periodi- 
jr-t  and 

lionaires 
lid  weU 
i\  W.  H. 


roductioa 


luse.  and 
rward  to 
\\v  James 
assorted 
tields,  to- 


or 
u 


in  the 
ob«rt  B. 
the  p«st 
$  Frank 
resented 
Petcat's 


oblem  of 
m  we  de- 
fine of  us 
positively 
Its  saying 
t   another 

job. 
cates  that 
ther  than 
would  re- 
e  persons 
he  person 

^ntioned, 
acilities  to 

others  it 
>s  to  those 

d  more  in« 
Dr.  Poteat 
seen  sev- 
shouldn't 

sed  against 

shouldn't 

that  these 

ed  against 

took  over 


'se  and  we 
^ould  l>e  a 
2tUo  know 
)uld  so  far 
Jased   on   it 

a  dynamic 
linistration. 
riend  and  a 

IS. 

linn  to  mean 

11  Friday  to 

ju.st    one 

the  Chan- 

lup  to  teach 
tsion  has  to 
ig  to  ail  o£ 


Covering  The  University  Campus 


FACULTY  CLUB 

There  will  be  a  luncheon  meet- 


iing  Importance  of  the  United  States 
Navy." 
PICNIC 

mg  of  the  Faculty  Club  on  Tues-  j     The  Student  Organizational  Corn- 
day  Oct.  30  at  1  p.  m.  in  the  Caro- 1  mittee     of   the   School  of .   Public 


Una  Inn. 

Captain  A.  M.  Patterson,  Profes- 
sor of  Naval  Science  and  Com- 
manding Officer  of  the  NROTC 
tmit.  wiil  speak  on  "The  Increas- 


LATE  SHOW  TONIGHT 
Sun.— Mon.— Tue 

Carolina 


Health  is  sponsoring  a  picnic  for 
School  of  Public  Health  students 
and  their  guests  Sunday  afternoon 
at  the  Umstead  State  Park,  l^e 
picnic  will  be  held  from  2-6  p.m. 
BLAZERS 

The  Interdormitory  Council  will 
sponsor  a  blazer  sale  Thursday.  Fit- 
tings for  the  coats  will  be  held  in 
Roland  Parker  Lounges  by  a  rep- 
resentative from  the  Robert  Rollins 
Co. 
PROFESSORS  MEET 

Dr.  Ralph  F.  Fuchs,  general  sec- 
retary of  the   American   Assn.   of  ]  NEWMAN  CLUB 


Room  of  the  East  Duke  building 
Tuesday  at  8  p.m.  Members  of  the 
Chapel  Hill  chapter  have  been  in- 
vited to  attend. 
KOREAN  VETS  I 

All  Korean  veterans  should  sub- 1 
mit  their  monthly  certification  of  ' 
training  form  to  315  South  Build-  1 
ing  by  Thursday,  according  to  an  i 
announcement  from  Gen.  F.  C.  She-  [ 
pard's  office.  | 

This  is  required  by  Public  Law  ' 
550,    according    to   the    announce- 
ment. 
IWC  MEET  i 

The  Independent  Women's  Coun- , 
cil   will   meet   at   5   p.m.,   Monday 
Oct.  29  in  the  Grail  Room  of  Gra- 1 
ham  Menrorial. 


No  Clear  Cut  Issues 
In  Campaign:  Panel 

By  ALICE  RE  AVIS  cratic  as  it  has  been  traditionally. 

There  are  no  clear  cut  political :      Dr.  Agger  repeatedly  added  hu- 
issues  in  the  forthcoming  election. !  nii^r  to  the  discussioi^  In  making 


Frats  Turn  Creative  Wheels 
Planning  Germans  Events 


This  seemed  to  be  the  consensus  of 
five  faculty  members  who  partici- 1 
pated  in  a  panel  discusion  held  in 
Carroll   Hall   Thursday   night. 

Alpha  Kappa  Delta,  honorary 
Sociology  fraternity,  presented  the 
panel  on  "Changing  Social  Struc- 
ture and  the  American  Presidential 
Elections." 

Members  of  the  panel  were:  Dr. 


some  general  stateinents  about  the 
"independent"  voter,  he  said,  "He 
is  not  so  wealthy  as  the  Republi- 
can, and  yet  not  so  poor  as  the 
Democrat." 


Caravan  Tickets  Now 
On  Sale  In  Y  Court 

Tickets  for  the  coming  Nov. 


10 


Rupert.  Vance,  Dept.  of  Sociology, !  weekend  caravan  to  Charlottesville, 


University  Professors,  will  address 
the   Duke    chapter    in    the    Mus\c 


•f- 


He 


.^' 


JANE  KYAH .  «YNE  MOftRtS  •  WALTER  BREWIAN 
DElMER  DAVES  V  JERRY  WALO  -.:i«. 


NOW  PLAYING 


Carolina 


On  £om/  Ca/r^us. . .  Cofkge,  Men 

Viceroys 

ore  Smoother 


BECAUSE  ONLY  VICEROY 
HAS  20,000  FILTERS 

Twice  As 
Many  R Iters 

AS  THE  OTHER  TWO 
LARGEST-SELLING  FILTER  BRANDS 


COMPARE! 

How  many  f  iltort  in  /eur 
filter  tip?  (R«m«mb«r 
— rti*  mcr*  filters  th« 
smoother  the  taste!) 


The  Newman  Club  will  meet 
Sunday  at  7  p.  m.  in  Roland  Par- 
ker Lounge  of  Graham  Memorial. 
Yack  pictures  will  be  made,  and 
all  members  and  those  interested 
in  becoming  members  have  been 
inv.ited  to  attend. 
WUNC 

Following  is  a  listing  of  pro- 
grams today  from  the  University's 
FM  radio  station. 

7:00    Paris  Star  Time 
7:30     Showtime 
8:00    This   Is   Jazz 
9:00    Horizons  in  Music 
10:00    News 

10:15    Evening  Masterwork 
11:00    Sign  Off 
FREE  JUKE  BOX  MUSIC 

GMAB  will  sponsor  free  juke 
box  music  in  the  Rendezvous 
Room  of  GM  again  today  from  8 
p.  m.  to  11  p.  m.  A  GM  staff  mem- 
ber vill  supply  the  nickle.s  and 
let  the  couples  in  the  room  pick 
the  music. 


moderator;  Dr.  William  Catton,  Jr., 
Dept.  of  Sociology;  Dr.  Fletcher 
Green,  Dept.  of  Historj';  Dr.  Rashi 
Fein,  Dept.  of  Economics;  and  Dr. 
Robert  Agger,  Dept.  of  Political 
Science. 

Dr.  Fein  stated  that  except  for 
the  farm  issue  both  parties  are  sup- 
porting essentially  the  same  things. 
Dr.  Catton  pointed  out  that  the 
farm  issue  is  not  being  clearly  de- 
fined by  either  party. 

A  conflict  of  values  is  in  evi- 
dence in  regard  to  the  farm  ques- 
tion. The  conflict  is  between  the 
economic  values  of  the  farm  and 
the  farm  as  a  way  of  family  life, 
Dr.   Catton  said. 

The  West  Coast  area  has  gained 
political  significance  in  recent 
years  due  to  rapid  growth  in  popu- 
lation. Many  Westerners,  according 
to  Dr.  Catton,  are  gaining  insight 
into  race  problems  because  of  re 
cent  Negro  migrations  Westward. 

Dr.  Green  seems  to  think  that 
changing  political  policies  in  the 
South  may  be  a  result  of  a  greater 
freedom  for  the  Negro. 

This  may  help  to  account  for  the 
South's  not  being  so  solidly  Demo- 


Campus  Chest  Committeemen 
Plan  Drive  To  Raise  $1500 


By  MARY  ALYS  VOORHEES 

The  chest  is  entpty. 
"And  we're  depending  on  you 
to  fill  it  with  $1,500,'  representa- 
tives to  the  Campus  Chest  were 
t{rfd  Thursday  evening  by  Miss 
Jackie  Aldridge,  co-chairman  of 
the  chest  drive  with  Jeff  Stribling. 
Meeting  in  Gerrard  Hall,  chair- 
nven  and  their  committees  from 
each  dorm,  fraternity  and  sorority 
assembled  to  receive  materials  and 
iiljtr.uctipns  concerniiu;  the  forth- 
cdihtng  Campus  Che.st  Drive  which 
will  be  staged  Nov.  4  to  Nov.  10. 
Highlighting  the  meeting  was  a 
talk  by  Miss  Jean  Warner  of  the 
Atlanta  divisioti  of  the  World  Uni- 
versity Service,  largest  benefitting 
agency  of  the  chest,  receiving  60 
per  cent  of  the  funds  raised. 

"This  is  particularly  a  student 
activity,"  she  told  the  group,  going 
on  to  explain  that  "we  are  con- 
cerned with  the  development  of 
the  students'  international  under- 
standing." 

"And  this  is  just  one  of  the  40 
different  countries  receiving  aid 
from  WUS,"  she  added. 

In  conclusion  she  asked  repre- 
sentatives to  keep  in  mind  thai 
"the  proceeds  from  the  chest  which 
go  to  the  WUS  will  be  a  medium 
through  which  students  at  UNC 
can  help  educate  students  at  fore- 
ign lands  who  will  be  the  leaders 
of  tomorrow." 

Another  agency  of  Ihe  chest,  the 
American  Cancer  Society,  was  re- 
presented by  Rex  Reckincord  of 
Chapel  Hill.  Other  agencies  receiv- 
ing aid  from  the  chest  are  CARE 
and  the  scholarship  tund. 

After  instructions  were  given  to 
representatives,  the  co-chairmen 
announced  that  a  Campus  Chest 
Dance — to  which  the  entire  campus 
is  invited,  will  be  given  Nov.  16. 
G.  C.  Pridgen,  chairman  of  the 


dance,  is  making  plans  f6r  the 
event,  along  with  his  co-chairman, 
Bob  Jacobus. 

While  announcing  plans  for  the 
dance  Pridgen  asked  representa- 
tives to  get  behind  the  drive  and 
not  only  to  reach  the  goal,  but  to 
surpass  it. 

"We  hA'e  nearly  7.000  students 
here,  and  if  each  student  only  gave 
50  cents  wc  would  have  liearly 
$3500.  Lets  not  just  try  to  reach 
our  goal,  let's  try  to  double  it,"  he 
urged. 

The  Campus  Chest  drive  begins 
Monday  with  headquarters  in  the 
Y  Building  and  is  the  only  campus 
drive  this  year,  according  to  the 
chairmen. 

In  addition  to  the  chairmen, 
members  of  the  Campus  Chest  com- 
mittee are  Misses  Ginger  Floyd, 
Nola  Hatten  and  Judy  Davis  and 
Chet  Davis,  Paul  Carr.  Roy  Taylor 
and  Tom  Dixon. 


Va.  will  go  off  sale  on  Wednesday, 
Oct.   31. 

Tickets  will  go  off  sale  then  in 
order  that  Trailways  officials  can 
make  final  arrangements  for  the 
journey. 

Tickets  may  be  purchased  at  the 
Y  Court.  They  are  $7  for  the  trip 
from  Chapel  Hill  to  Charlottesville, 
and  $5.75  from  Greensboro  to 
Charlottesville. 

Game  tickets  may  be  .^bought  at 
Woolen  Gym  for  $3.50  each  or  at 
the  gate. 

Busses  will  leave  Chapel  Hill  at 
6:15  a.  m.  on  Nov.  10.  After  a  stop- 
over at  Greensboro  to  pick  up  WC 
girls,  ths  busses  will  arrive  at 
Charlottesville  at  12:30  p.  m. 

Return  busses  will  leave  Charlot- 
tesville at  midnight  Satiu-day  and 
at  3  p.  m.  Sunday. 


Creative  wheels  have  been  turn- 
ing all  week  in  the  fratemtiy 
houses  planning  themes  for  the 
parties  last  night  in  connection 
with  this  season's  Germans  week- 
end. 

The  Roaring  Twenties  was  re- 
vived in  the  Chi  Psi  Lodge  for 
their  houseparty  festivities  this 
weekend.  A  French  costume  party 
will  be  given  by  the  Sigma  Nu's  to- 
night at  Honig's  Cabin  with  Bru- 
no's combo  providing  music. 

Tau  Epsilon  Phi  is  holding  its 
32nd  annual  houseparty  this  week- 
end which  included  a  dinner  dance 
last  night  in  honor  of  their  pledges 
and  a  Halloween  Ball  tonight. 

Masquerade  balls  will  be  given 
by  the  St.  A's  and  the  Pi  Lams  to- 
night. Tuesday  evening  Pi  Lam 
alumnus  Barry  Farber  entertain- 
ed the  Yugoslavian  musicians  at 
the  house  after  their  concert  in 
Hill  Hall. 

The  Phi  Gams  and  the  Kappa 
Sig's  plan  a  joint  cabin  party  to- 
day while  the  Pikas  will  enter- 
tain their  dates  at  Lloyd's  Bar 
with  Frank  Wright  and  combo.  A 
Pika  brunch  will  be  held  at  10  a.m. 
tomorrow. 

The  Dekes  will  party  at  the 
Washington-Duke  Hotel  in  Durham 
today  as  will  the  Sigma  Chis.  The 
Sig  Eps  are  entertaining  at  the 
house  today. 


After  the  gaiie  the  KA's  plan  a 
cocktail  party  to  be  followed  by  a 
foreign  party,  at  the  American 
Legion  Hut  in  Durham. 

Lambda  Chi's  will  entertain  at 
the  Elbow  Rodm  after  the  game. 


IDC  And  GM  To  Sponsor 
Dance  Following  Game 

The  Interdormitory  Council  and 
Graham  Memorial  Student  Union 
will  co-sponsor  a  dance  in  Cobb 
basement  following  tx)day's  game, 
according  to  GM  officials. 

Music  for  the  dance  will  be  pro- 
vided by  the  Five  Diminsions,  lo- 
cal combo.  The  function  will  last 
from   8:30  to   11:30  p.m. 


„_ ^ 

The  'Story  .of  a  man  like     SHANE,  with  the  suspooso  of 
NOON!  A  >tory  with  real  plot,  real  dialogue  and  real  people. 

♦ 

A  NEW  AND  DIFFERENT  KIND  OF  MOTION  PICTUREi 


HtGM 


Playmjicer  Productioh 
'  Tryouts  Held  Sunday 

Trj'outs  for  roles  in  "Esther 
Wake."  a  melodrama  of  Colonial 
North,  set  in  New  Bern  and  Hills- 
toro,  will  take  place  at  the  Play- 
makers'  Theatre,  Sunday,  from  4 
to  6  under  the  direction  of  Nancy 
Henderson,  Carolina  Playmakers 
graduate  student  director. 

The  play,  containing  iparts  for 
two  women  and  twelve  men.  was 
written  by  Professor  Adolphe  Ver- 
nnont.  visiting  profes.sor  in  Educa- 
tion in  1911.  It  was  staged  on  July 
4  pf  that  year  on  the  portico  of 
what  is  now  the  Playmakers'  Thea- 
tre. 

The  Playmakers  have  been  cam- 
missioned  to  present  a  revival  of 
this  play  by  The  North  Carolina 
Literary  and  Historical  Societies  at 
their  annual  meeting  in  Raleigh, 
Dec.    6. 


This  Week^s  Housecieaning 

SALE 

Dropped  Dollar  Dropped  Nature  Jnd  Hob- 

Titles    -  -^  59<      by  Books      -One  third 

bropped  Series  or  more  off. 

Titles       _    'Half  Price 

The  Intimate 


The  exclusive  Vic«»roy  filter  is  made 
from  pore  ceHukwe— soft,  snow-white,  qotoral. 


205  E.  Franklin  St. 


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The  after-shave  lotion  he  rubs  on  his  chin  . . .  her  cosmetics  so  kind  to  feminine  hands  .  . . ' 
thp  akohoh  for  bracinp,  rub-dotvns  or  antiseptic  needs  .  .  .  many  depend  on  a  chemical  ingredient 
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THt  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


SATURDAY,  OCTOStR  27,  1754 


For  the  third  straight  week.  Coach  Jim  Tatum's  Tar  Hee* 
'must"  game.  This   time   it's  the   Wake   Forest    Demon   Peace  «    ' 
judging  from  past  performances  of  both  squads,     its  strictly    i    ' 
o:  anj-thing  goes. 

Each  team  will  be  looking  for  victory  numbor  two  of  tho  pr  *i 
campaign.   The   Tar   Hools  dropped   thair   first   four   games   bi  ft 
trouncing  Maryland  last  week,  while  the  Deacs  have  only  a  winn'i^ 
William.  A  Mary  and  a  tie  with  Florida  State  to  show  for  their  .  Ii^ 
outings. 

This- game  will  be  a  big  test  ior  Carolina.  Last  week  the  Tar  Hf  ^i 
surprised  friend  and  foe  alike  with  their  amazing  win  over  the  Terp  « 
Now  all  they  have  to  do  is  prove  it  Vvas  no  fluke  by  stopping  the  Deac-  X 
BARNES  AND  PASSES  ARE  CHIEF  PROBLEMS 

Several  things  stand  in  their  way.  not  the  least  of  which  is  blast- 
ing Bill  Barnes,  Wake's  rampaging  fullback  who  has  been  tearing 
opposition  defense  to  shreds  all  year  long.  Another  important  factor 
is  the  throwing  arm  of  Charley  Carpenter.  Deacon  quarterback  vfho 
fiddled  the  UNC  pass  defense  almost  at  will  last  year  in  the  25-0  Wako 
conquest  of  the  Tar  Heels. 

Also,  the  Oeacs  have  a  powerful. forward  wall  that  has  proved 
to  be  almost  Impenetrable  all  year  long.  But  the  Tar  Heels  demon- 
strated against  Maryland  that  they  could  move  in  the  face  of  a  stout 
line. 

On  the  bright  side  of  the  picture  for  Carolina  is  the  high  morale 
aad  enthusiasm  which  can  be  evidenced  on  every  hand  in  the  UNC 
camp.  Last  Saturday  produced  a  decidea  change  in  Tar  Heel  spirits, 
snd  if  the  same  sort  of  attitude  is  brought  into  play  against  the  Dea 
roos.  the  result  might  be  similar  to  last  week's. 
TAR  HEELS  IN  TOP  SHAPE 

As  far  as  personnel   is   concerned   Carolina   seems   to   be    sitting 
pretty.  The  same  lineup  that  started  the  IVIaryland  game  is  set  to  go 
against    the   Deacs.    No   .<>erious    injuries    were    suffered    in    the    Terp  ' 
game,  and  the  Tar  Heels  appear  to  be  in  top  physical  shape. 

Forming  Hte  nucleus  today  will  be  a  pair  of  old  hands  in  > 
the  backfield,  Dave  Reed  and  Ed  Sutton,  and  a  corps  of  blazing  i 
sophomore  talent  that  played  a  large  part  in  the  win  over  Mary- 
land. Sophs  who  will  get  the  starting  nod  include  Don  Redding  and 
Leo  Russavage  at  tackles,  Ronnie  Koes  at  center,  and  Don  Kemper 
at  guard.  Also  slated  for  heavy  duty  is  the  ACC  Sophomore  of  the 
Week,  shifty  halfback  Moe  DeCantis.  , 

The  game  shapes  up  as  a  thriller  and  one  that  could  go  either  way. 
Both  squads  seem  to  have  the  knack  of  being  able  to  rise  to  the  oc-  , 
casion,  and  can  be  tough  in  the  clutch.  From  here  it     looks  like  th? 
victwy  nod  will  go  to  the  team  with  the  more  hustle.  And  we  think  ' 
that  team  will  be  UNC.  Carolina  20,  Wake  Forest  13. 
BLUE  DEVILS  OVER  PACK 

In  another  scrap  matching   Big  Four   rivals.   Dukes   Blue   Devils  1 

tangle  with  N.  C.  State  in  Durham.  These  two  teams  have  had   their  ' 

ups  and  downs  this  year,  but  the  Blue  Devils  have  displayed  a  little  ■ 

more  football  savAy  and  punch.  Last  Saturday  was  just  one  of  those  ; 

days  for  the  Blue  Dukes,  however,  as  they  dropped  a  game  thty  should  • 

have  won  to  Pitt.  1 

State,  on  the  other  hand,  managed  to  survive  a  last  minute  slug-    i 

fast  and  take  a  20-0  win  ever  Dayton.  The  caliber  of  opposition  faced    i 

by  the  two  squads  was  vastly  different,  however.  | 

With  Sonny  Jurgenson  at  the  controls,  the  Blue  Devils  arc  hard  to  j 

stop,  provided   they  can  avoid   mental  lapses.  Just  ask  SMU.   We  pick  | 

Duke  to  win  on  their  home  ground,  2^12.    * 

Tar  Heel  Basketbafler  Lennie  Rosenbluth  unofficially  opened 
th#  'M  hardwood  camfMign  for  the  locals  Wednesday  in  Washington 
as  he  participated  In  an  Olympic  benefit  All-Star  game.  Rosey,  play- 
ing for  a  team  of  Eastern  All-Stars  against  the  U.  S.  Olympic  team, 
racked  up  10  points  for  a  lost  cause  as  the  Olympians  handed  the 
collegians  an  82-62  defeat.  Lloyd  Sharrar,  6-8  center  from  West  Vir- 
ginia, took  high  scoring  honors  for  the  Stars  with  11  points. 

TNC  Fullback  Wally  Vale  is  currently  the  fifth  ranking  punter 
iu  the  country.  Vale  is  averaging  42.6  yards  per  boot  after  16  kicks. 
Kirk  Wilson  of  UCXA  is  the  country's  top  punter  with  a  45.8  average. 


UNC  Freshman  Soccer  Team 


Notre  Dame,  Oklahoma  Clash  Today 


EnGarder 

Don  Corbin,  left,  and  Stuart  Marder  get  in  ■»  little  practice  in 
fencing.  They  are  wearing   the  uniforms  provided  by  the  gym. 

fencing  Not  Major  Sport 
iVut  There  Is  Much  Interest 


Blasts  N.  C.  State,  5-0 


An  impressive,  hustling  UNC 
freshman  soccer  squad  whitewash- 
ed the  N.  C.  State  freshmen  here 
yesterday,  5*,  for  the  Tar  Babies' 
second  win  of  the  year. 

State  held  Carolina  scoreless  in 
the  first  quarter,  but  Mike  Thomp- 
son scored  on  a  pass  from  John 
Ghanin  at  the  five  minute  mark  in 
the  second  quarter  to  break  the 


ice  and  put  Carolina  ahead.  1-0. 

Six    minutes    later    center    for- 
ward   Ghanin    took    a    pass    from 
right    wing    Charlie    Whitfield    to 
score    for    Carolina's    second    goal. 
Ill  the   third   quarter,   the  Caro- 
lina freshmen,  led  by  Ghanin  and 
I  Mike  Thompson  held  a  saoring  on- 
t  slaught,  scoring  three  goals  within 
I  12  minutes. 


V  By  DAVE  WIBLE 

'A  n  Garde!"  is  the  cry  as  the 
UNC'  fencers  pair  off  and  face 
each  »other.  "Touche!"  is  the  cry 
heard  when  one  breaks  through 
the  o  tilers  defense  to  score  a 
touch.  The  fencing  squad  has 
started  '  another   season. 

The  Carolina  fencing  squad 
has  a  iM'cll  qualifi.cd  ooach  in 
Pebly  :5arrow.  He  ha.s  studied 
fencing  under  CostellD,  tl»e  Ame- 
rican  miaster   in  fencing. 

Fenci3ij4  was  dropped  .here  dur- 
ing the  war  and  was  no(t  revived 
until  1|949  when  Barrow  «nd 
Franz  Roiss  stimulated  cnou^  in- 
terest to  organize  a  squayl.  Jt  has 
been  a  growing  sport  around 
Jiere   ever  since. 

Although  the  squad  has  been 
very  successful,  it  is  not  recog- 
nized as  a  minrnr  varsity  sport 
by  the  athletic  firpartment.  Bc- 
<.VdUi^v  of  this  tha  squad  cannot 
c.Trapete  in  NCAA  meets.  ' 

Hicre  is  a  thumniil  sketch  of 
the  I'port.  There  are  three  basic 
weapons  used  in  fencing.  The 
first  basic  wcapcin  is  the  foil. 
This  is  the  weapon  you  sec  in 
movies.  Along  this  liiie.  the  fenc- 
ing yon  have  seen  in  movies 
comlpared  to  collegjc  fencing  is 
as  different  as  TV  and  college 
wrestling.  Back  to  the  weapons 
The  epee  or  duelinjg  sword  and 
the  saber  are  the  other  two. 

When  two  teatns  meet^  it  is 
called  a  bout.  E^cb  teaim  has 
throe  representatives  for  each 
weapon.  The  team  winnjn*g  two 
of  the  three  duels  in  one  wtapon 
wins  that  weapon.  The  teaiti  that 
wins  two  of  the  three  wdapons 
wins  the  bout. 

In  the  duels  the  scoring  is  ba- 


sed, <>n  touches.  The  touch  is  eqiii- 
vblent  to  a  wound  in  the  old-time 
duel,  and  the  rules  governing 
iipt'ordplay  in  all  weapons  are  bas- 
ed   upon    these   principles. 

In  the  foil  the  target  is  limited 
to  the  trunk.  The  dueling  sword 
has  an  enlarged  target  of  the 
whole  body.  The  sabar  scores  on 
everything  above  the  legs.  Five 
touches  are  needed  to  win  a  duel 
in  the  foil  and  sabar  while  only 
three  are  needed  in  the  dueling 
sword. 

Ir.  the  past  Carolina  has  met 
Stic  h  teams  as  N.  C.  State,  V.M.I., 
Jrt>hns  Hopkins,  Vanderbilt,  the 
(University  of  Virginia.  Lincoln 
"Memorial  University  and  a  team 
of  service  men  from  Fort  Bragg. 
This  year's  schedule  is  not  com- 
plete. However  it  is  known  that 
the  first  meet  will  be  a  triangular 
afOair  on  Dec.  8.  Carolina  mect- 
inrg  Stale  and  V.M.L 

Pacing  this  year's  squad  will 
be  Jerry  Mayo  and  Don  Corbin 
in  the  foil,  Eric  EJlliot  in  the  duel- 
ing sword  and  Bob  Clay,  Stewart 
Marder  and  Steve  Mlrman  in  the 
saber.  .  \ 

Since  it  is  not  varsity  sport 
freshmen  can  be  on  the  .squad. 
Coach  Barrow  has  invited  those 
interested  to  try  for  the  team. 
Elxperience  is  not  necessary. 
Practices  are  held  Monday  from 
7:00  to  9:00  p.m.  and  on  Wednes- 
day and  Friday  from  3:30  to 
5^30  p.  m.  .       -    .     . 

The  practices  held  on  Monday 
nights  are  in  conjunction  with 
the  Woolen  Gym  open  house. 
Barrow  has  invited  everyone  to 
watch  the  practices  then  and  use 
the  equipment  if  they  wish. 


.By  HUGH  FULLERTON  JR.. 
The  Associated  Press  I 

IVbout   this   time   of   the   season  j 
<;ollege      football      players      a'ndj 
coaches  begin  dreaming  of  roses, 
cotton  and  oranges  and  of  games 
to    be    played      more      than      two ' 
months   hence.    And   some   of   to-  j 
day's    games    may    determine    the] 
teams  that  will  be  playing  in  those 
New   Year's   Day   bowl   games. 

But  the  one  that  is  attracting  i 
the  most  attention  brings  tog?th-  j 
er  a  team  that  can't  go  to  a  bowl , 
this  season  and  one  that  wouldn't ! 
if  it  could — Oklahoma  and. Notre! 
Dame.  | 

Oklahoma,  seeking  its  33th  con- 
secutive victory  in  a  record  string 
and  the  place  at  the  top  of  the 
national  ratings  it  lost  to  Michigan 
State  last  weekend,  is  barred  from 
the  Orange  Bowl  by  the  Big  Seven 
rule  stating  a  team  can't  go  two 
years  in  succession. 

Otherwise  the  Sooners  would  be 
a  cinch.  They've  outclassed  two 
conference  foes  and  likely-will  out- 
class the  re.st.  Although  this  is  the 
perfect  setup  for  an  upset,  it's  hard 
to  imagine  them  losing  to  a  batter- 
ed Notre  Dame  team  that  may 
not  have  the  services  of  Paul  Hor- 
nung  at  quarterback. 

Hornung  has  been  troubled  by 
a    painful    dislocated    thumb    and 


Coach  Terry  Brennan  says  he'll 
wait  until  game  time  before  decid- 
ing whether  to  start  Paul  at  quar- 
terback or  s'lift  him   to  half. 

Oklahoma's  ineligibility  lends 
considcable  importance  to  the 
clash  between  Colorado,  the  Big 
Seven  leader,  and  Nebraska,  the 
kind  of  team  which  could  make 
trouble  for  the  Buffaloes.  If  Colo- 
rado (3-9)  wins  today,  it  only 
needs  to  g-^t  past  Missouri  to  earn 
the  bfjwl  bid. 

Clemson  took  a  big  step  toward 
the  other  side  of  the  Orange  Bowl 
when  it  downed  South  Carolina,  7- 
0,  Thursday  to  remain  the  only  un- 
beaten team  in  the  Atlantic  Coast 
Conference. 

Other  games   which    may  mean  j 
a  lot  to  bowl-minded  teams  include 
Baylor-Texas  A  &M.  Iowa-Purdue. 


Georgia  Tech  Tulane  and  Stanford 
SoUihcrn  California. 

With  Michigan  State,  the  na 
tio'is  No.  1  team  in  the  Associated 
Press  poll,  ineligible  to  return  to 
the  R)s:  Buwi  and  Ohio  State  jus 
ineligible,  Iowa  now  stands  firs' 
in  the  line  of  Bg  Ten  candidates. 
But  the  Ilawkeyes  aren't  given 
more  than  an  c.  en  chance  against 
Purdue.  Michigan,  the  favorite, 
runs  into  tied  but  unbeaten  Minne 
sota  today. 

Stanford  is  the  only  one  of  the 
Pacific  Coast  Conference  leaders 
eligible  for  the  Rose  Bowl  and  ii 
John  Brodie's  passing  prevails  ovei 
Jon  Arnett's  running,  the  Indians 
should  find  their  way  pretty  clear. 

The  Southeaiitern  Conference 
has  no  bowl  hookup,  but  its  lead- 
er  almost    invariably   gets    an    in- 


ritatioit.  Georgia  Tech.  No  3  na- 
tionally, has  to  get  past  spright 
!y  Tulane  tpam  which  whipped 
.Mississippi  last  week  in  stay  on 
top.  Runner-up  Tennessee  meets 
"jumbling  Maryland. 


FOR  SAL^  —  instant,  soothing  re^ 
lief  in  the  form  of  REYNOLDS 
RUB,  the  modern  rub  so  many 
prefer  for  aches  and  paijis  associ 
ated  with  strenuous  intramural 
activity,  household  chores,  etc. 
Drop  a  dollar  bill  in  an  envelope 
and  send  to  Reynolds  Products 
Inc.,  Babylon,  L.  I.,  N.  Y. 


CLASSIFIEDS 


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U.r.C.   '  LIBRARY 
SERIALS   DEPT. 
B'OX  870 
CHAPEL  HILL,    N.C. 


WEATHER 

Cloudy  and  cool,  with  expected 
high  of  68. 


VOL.  LVII     NO.  33 


STh  e  Daily 


WEEKiNREVIEW 

On    the    campus,    in    the    state 
and  around  th«  world.  Sec  page  2. 


Complete  {/P)  Wvre  Service 


CHAPEL  HILL.  NORTH  CAROLINA.  SUNDAY,  OCTOECll  31,  19M 


Offices   in   Graham   Memorial 


FOUR   PACES  THIS    ISSUE 


Wake  >f  or  est  Rallies  In  Fourth  Quarter  To 
Gain  f -6  TM  With  UNC  Tar  Heels;  Barnes 
Sparks  96  Yard  Drive  For  Tying  Touchdown 


LLOYD  SKINNER 

. .  .as  Pierrot 


Musicale  Is  Tonight 

The  fall  series  of  '  Les  Petites  .Musicales"  will  get  underway 
tonight  with  a  one-act  play.  'Aria  Da  Capo,"  by  Edna  St.  Vincent 
!Millay  to  be  presented. 

Set  for  8  p.m.  in  Graham  Memorial  main  lounge,  the  play  will  be 
directed  by  Mi.ss  .\naslasia  Christ,  graduate  student  from  Newart, 
.\.  J.  Five  students  of  dramatic  art  will  form  the  ca.st. 

Students,  faculty  members  and  the  general  public  has  been  in- 
vited to  attend  the  "Petite  Musicales."'  which  are  free  of  charge, 
sponsored  by  the  Music  Committee  of  the  Graham  Memorial  .Activi- 
ties Board. 

Six  musical  presentations  have  also  been  scheduled  for  the  fall 
series,  most  cf  them  to  be  given  on  later  Sunday  evenings. 


Duke  Beats  State  42-0 

DURHAM  (;P)  —  Duke  turned .  Pryor  Millner  „t  the  controls, 
loose  a  sophomore-studded  set  of  j  functioned  wtih  devastating  effec- 
fleet  backs  and  threw  up  a  sturdy!  tiveness. 

defense  yesterday  to  w  .Hop  NortJi  |      Hr„y   Carlton,    a    driving   sopb 

halfback,    scored    twtce    and    led 


Cjirolina  Slat*,  42-0,  in  an-  Atlantic  ' 
Coast  Conference     football     game 
that  was  hardly  a  contest. 

Star  quarterback  Sonny  Jurgen-  j 
sen,  nursing  a  leg  injury,  left  the 
bench  only  long  enough  to  direct 
the  third  touchdown  drive  late  in 
the  second  period.  But  the  Blue 
Devils,  with  Jurgensen's  soph  re- 
placements   Bob    Broadhead    and 


the  Duke  ^pree  wtih  77  yards  in 
13  rushes.  Going  into  the  game  he 
had  gained  only  80  yards  for  the 
season.  Carlton's  total  was  match- 
ed by  another  soph,  George  Dut- 
row,  who  had  77  in  10  carries. 
Duke  amassed  412  yards  on  the 
ground. 


Tatum  Is  Sick 
Over  Tie  Game 

By    JIM    HARPER 

After  the  game  yesterday  the 
Carolina  dressing  room  wa.s 
quiet.  There  was  no  tumult  and 
shouting,  there  was  no  weeping, 
wailing,  or  gnashing  of  teeth.  It 
was  almost  as  if  thi.s  had  been 
another   practice   session. 

About  the  only  person  who 
was  emotionally  affected  was  Jim 
Tatum.  He  said.  "We  never  had 
so  many  scoring  opportunties, 
we  can't  complain  about  that. 
We  sure  had  them  but  couldn't 
take  advantage  of  them.  I'm  sick 
as  1  can  be  that  we  didn't  win." 

Tptum  paid  tribute  to  his  op- 
ponents. 'Wake  Forest  played  a 
wonderful  game.  Amen  did  a 
line  job  of  preparing  his  team 
for  the  game." 

Of  Bill  Barnes,  the  Deac's  hard 
running  fullback.  Taluin  said,'! 
thought  before  the  game  that 
Barnes  was  a  great  runner.  Now 
1  know  he  is.  He's  as  good  as 
any.  He  ran  well  late  in  the 
game.  Our  boys  were  tired  then 
and  didn't  hit  as  hard." 

Tatum  said  of  his  passing  at- 
tack. '.'If  we'd  cau«lrt  the  ball - 
we'd  have  been  all  right."  The 
Tar  Heels  passing  accuracy  was 
perhaps  the  best  this  year,  how- 
ever the  wet  ball  time  and' again 
.  eluded    the   Carolina    receivers. 

Sunny  Jim  was  left  in  his 
grief  lo  meditate.  He  was  no 
doubt  plotting  the  destruction  of 
Tennessee. 


\\'ak( 


By  LARRY  CHEEK 

iterc'd  and  hiiiised  Denion  Deacons  (ainc  olf  the  rope  in  \he  final  per- 
iod here  yesterday  to  jrain  a*ti-ti  tie  with  North  Carolina  in  a  rock  em  sock  'em  Bis  F^^^r 
battle  plaved  on  a  sogoy  [ieJd  before  27.000  rain  soaked  fans. 

Ulasiinn  Bill  fiarnes,  Wake's  ace  in  the  h  »le  at  fullback,  was  the  game's  individual  hero 
as  lie  sparked  a  9<>-yard  Wake  drive  in  the  last  period  that  bronrrht  the  Deacons  a  tie  with 
ihcir  lono  time  rivals. 

Barnes  personally  assountcd  for  fio  y.  rds    in  the  Wake  drive.  The  conference's  leading 
'  '    '  "        '  59  yards   to  the  Wake  Forest   13 

STATJSTICS 


ground  gainer  and  the  second  rank- 
ing rusher  in  the  entire  nation 
shook  loose  for  one  30  yard  dash 
that  highlighted  the  drive  and  went 
over  from  four  yards  out  for  the 
all-important  score.  The  extra  point 
that  would  have  won  the  game  for 
the  Deacs  was  missed  by  halfback 
Larry   Brooks. 

The  Tar  Heels  completely  dom- 
inated the  game  for  the  entire  first 
half  and  most  of  the  second  up 
until  the  Wake  Forest  score.  On 
two  different  occasions  in  the 
first  half  the  Carolinians  drove 
deep  into  Wake  territory,  but  both 
times  were  turned  back  by  a  big 
-Stubborn  Deacon  line. 

It  was  not  until  the  third  quarter 
that  the  Tar  Heels  were  able  to 
push  across  their,  only  marker  of 
the  day.  The  break  came  when 
soph  guard  Don  Kemper  pounced 
on  his  third  fumble  of  the  day  to 


WF 

UNC 

First   Downs 

14 

14 

Rushing   Yardage 

203 

245 

Passing  Yardage 

S3 

14 

Passes 

3-13 

Ml 

Passes    Inter.    By 

2 

2 

Punts 

4-35.5 

•  40.3 

Funtbies  Lost 

3 

0 

Yards   Penalized 

45 

70 

give  the  Tar  Heels  possession  on 
the  Wake  Forest  27  yard  line. 
From  here  it  took  Carolina  only  3 
plays  to  score  with  Ed  Sutton  go 
ing  over  from  10  yards  out. 


Buddhism 
Discussion 
Here  Mon. 


Capacity  Crowd  Turns  Out  To  Hear  Concert; 
Fats  Domino,  Sam  Donahue  Are  Well  Receiyed 


By   JIMMY    HARPER 

The  bands  of  Billy  May,  directed 
by  Sam  Donahue,  and  Fats  Domino 
initiated  the  Fall  Germans  with  a 
concert   performance  in   Memorial ; 
Hail  Friday. 

The  performance  was  witnessed 
by  a  near  capacity  crowd  which 
was  quite  responsive  and  often 
highly  enthusiastic.  In  addition, 
quite  a  number  of  students  not 
having  a  bid  en.)oyed  hearing  the 
bands  through  the  open  auditori- 
um window. 


ance  with  a  blast  designed  to  sum- 
mon stragglers  and  arouse  those 
already  present.  It  served  the  pur- 
pose. 

After  the  first  number,  the  band 
settled  down  to  playing'  typical 
Billy  May  arrangements,  featuring 
the  wailing  of  saxes  interjected  by 
sharp  trumpets  and  moaning  trom- 
bones. Another  prominent  feature 
of  the  .May  styling  was  the  ending 
of  most  numbers  in  a  crescendo. 

After  presenting  two  of  their 
better  numbers  of  the  show,  "Un- 


Donahue    opened    the    perform- ,  forgettable,"    and    "Night    Train, ' 


Licia  Albanese  Coming 
Here  For  Show  Thurs. 

Licia  Albanese,  prima  donna  so-l  the  stage  manager  called  for  her. 


prano  o'  the  Metropolitan  Opera 
Assn..  vvill  present  a  concert 
Thursday  at  8  p.m.  in  Memorial 
Hall. 

She  has  been  hailed  by  one  of ; 
.New   York  s   leading   music  critics  \ 
as  a  nominee  for  the  musical  "Os- 
car." 

"1  feel, "  Louis  Biancolli  wrote 
in  the  .Vew  Yark  World-Telegram 
and  Sun,  "that  Licia  Albanese's 
work  this  season  raised  the  general 
level  a  few  notches.  For  this  girl 
was  a  symbol  of  Metropolitan's 
best." 

Born  in  the  little  village  of  Bari, 
on  the  Adriatic  in  southern  Italy, 
Licia  Albanese  always  hoped  that 
one  day  she  might  learn  to  sing. 
After  years  of  study,  •  her  big 
chance  came  in  an  operatic  debut 
that  was  as  unexpected  as  it  was 
.successful. 

She  was  attending  a  perform- 
ance in  Milan  of  ".\ladame  Butter- 
fly," when,  at  the  last  moment,  the 
leading  soprano  was  taken  ill. 
Learning  that  there  was  a  young 
girl  in  the  audience  by  the  name 
of  .Ubanese  who  knew  the  role,   sings." 


And  Licia  Albanese  was  literally 
yanked  from  the  audience  to  a 
public   performance. 

After  more  hard  work,  she  was 
booked  (or  performances  through- 
out Italy.  She  made  her  formal  de- 
but at  the  Royal  Opera  in  Parma, 
then  followed  with  La  Scala  in 
Milan;  Covent  Garden  in  London; 
Spain;  and  Paris.  Licia  Albanese 
is  also  one  of  the  very  few  women 
to  have  sung  at  the  Vatican  ft^ 
Pope   Pius   XI. 

Finally  came  the  call  to  the 
Metropolitan  in  1940.  Since  join- 
ing the  "Met,"  she  has  won  ac- 
claim for  her  performance  in  such 
works  as  "Madame  Butterfly."  "La 
Boheme,"  "La  Traviata,'  and 
"Carmen.'  ' 

"The  most  important  thing  about 
here,"  said  Director  Edward  John- 
son on  Albanese's  entrance  in  the 
Met,  "is  her  unlimited  promise  for 
the  future."  With  each  new  role, 
she  has  gained  new  acclaim,  and 
now  has  the  sort  of  following 
which  buys  tickets  at  the  box 
office  not  for  any  special  opera, 
but   "for  the  next  time  Albanese 


the  latter  featuring  Donahue  on  the 
sax,  the  band  played  several  selec- 
tion from  its  new  album,  "Naugh- 
ty Operetta,"  after  which  vocalist 
Ernie  Bernhart  sang  a  medley  of 
tunes. 

Probably  the  most  productive 
feature,  response-wise  —  aside 
from  Donahue's  rendering  of  the 
band's  theme  song  —  was  the  ap- 
pearance of  vocalist  Debbie  Brown, 
whose  entrance  was  heralded  by 
impromptu  wolf  call  and  related 
whistles.  Miss  ^Brown  increased  her 
popularity  considerably  by  acknow- 
ledging some  out-of-doors  admir- 
ers. 

The  Donahue  aggregation  con- 
cluded it.s  part  of  the  program 
with  "The  Suicide  Leap,"  a  musi- 
cal marathon,  once  again  featuring 
Donahue  on  the  sax.  Donahue 
challenged  the  all  time  endurance 
record  for  sax  players,  belting  out 
three  choruses,  pausing  to  remove 
his  coat,  and  knocking  out  two 
more  for  good  measure.  This  num- 
ber was  by  far  the  best  played  and 
left  no  doubts  as  to  Donahue's  abil- 
ity to  blow  a  horn. 

The  inlermi«sron  followed  and 
then  entered  Fat>i  Domino.  The  au- 
dience signified  its  pleasure  by 
prolonged    applaue. 

Domino  led  off  with  "When  My 
Drpa^mhoat  Comes  Home,"  follow- 
ed by  "Blueberry  Hill."  The  quali- 
ty of  Domino's  voice  was  impaired 
af  the  first  of  his  performance  by 
faults  in  the  amplifying  system, 
but  they  were  erased  after  the 
curtain  "'ns  pulled  and  adjustments 
were  made. 

The  curtain  re-opened  to  the 
strain.?  of  that  old  standard,  "My 
Blue  Heaven."  Following  this  was 
"I'm  in  Love  Again"  which  proved 
to  be  the  biggest  crowd  pleaser  of 
the  afternoon,  as  exemplified  by 
the  spontaneous  bursts  of  apnlause. 

Without  a  doubt,  the  portion  of 
the  program  featuring  the  little  fat 
man  was  the  better  received  0/ 
the  two,  not  -because  Donahue  was 
less  Ijlced,  but,  rather.  Domino 
more. 


What  do  you  know  about  the 
religious  beliefs  of  a  great  num- 
ber of  people  who  live  in  the  Asi- 
atic region  of  the  world? 

Opportunity, is  available  to  ob- 
tain a  quick  survey,  to  isk  ques- 
tions and  to  discuss  the  Buddhist 
faith  tomorrow  from  8  to  9  p.m.  in  , 
the  Y  library,  on  the  second  floor 
of  the  Y  Building.  , 

This  study  gn  rp,  called  "Chris- 
tianity and  Other  World  Relig- 
ions," is  chaired  by  Leon  Holt. 

Monday  night's  discussion  will 
feature  a  short  talk  by  Piyasen3 
Ganewatte  from  Colombo,  Ceylon. 

Ganewatte    Is    a    Buddhist,    and 
he  will  have  with  him  several  oth-  | 
er  Buddhists  who  come  from  dif-  1 
ferent  sects  of  Buddhism.  | 

A  film-strip  will  present  pic 
tures  and  basic  comments  on  which 
the  discussion  of  the  evening  will 
be  focu-ssed. 

Sponsored  by  the  Campu.s  Chris- 
tian Council,  comprising  all  the 
denominational  church  groups  on 
campus,  this  program  is  open  to 
all  interested  students  who  wi.sh  to 
attend. 


TAR  HEELS  DOMINATE 

The  halftime  statistics  demon- 
strate just  how  completely  Caro- 
lina controlled  the  ball  for  the 
first  30  minutes.  The  Tar  Heels 
.^licked  up  11  first  "downs  to  only 
2  for  the  Deacs,  and  had  184  yards 
rushing  to  48  for  Wake. 

It  was  late  in  the  second  period 
before  the  Deacs  managed  to  chalk 
up  a  first  down  as  a  stout  Tar  Heel 
line  forced  them  to  punt  on  near- 

^  J^^y  '^m  ?f  ^o»^  The  Cvo-   4Mffmb^theremunA^^ 

lina  offen.se,  meanwhile  was  grind-  half  with  neither  tKreatr 
ing  out  yardage  in  huge  ebuDk» 
with  Sutton.  Larry  McMullen  and 
Wally  Vale  doing  the  damage. 
Whenever  the  Tar  Heels  got  with- 
in striking  distance  distance  the 
offense  always  stalled,  however. 

Carolina  wasted  no  time  show- 
ing they  meant  business  as  they 
took  the  opening  kickoff  and  drove 


Klan  Hits  Newspapers 
In  Rally  At  Concord 

CONCORD  <iPi  —  Following  the 
pattern  of  other  recent  Ku  Klux 
Klan  meetings  in  the  Carolinas,  a 
red-robed  and  hooded  speaker  de- 
nounced "these  smear  sheet.s  call- 
ed newspapers"  at  a  Klan  rally 
near  here  last  night. 

Some  800  to  J, 000  per.sons  gath- 
ered in  an  abandoned  drive-in 
theater  lot  for  the  rally,  which  was 
climaxed  by  burning  a  25-foot 
cross.  i 

The   main   speech  came  from   a ' 
purple-robed    figure    with    tas.sels  j 
on   his  hood.   In   addition   to  lash- 
ing   newBpapers    in    general,    he 
struck  out  at  "honky-tonk  school- 
teachers"    and     "cocktail-sipping , 
Sunday  school   teachers." 


before  being  stopped  by  an  inter- 
cepted pa.ss.  Sutton,  Vale  and  Mc- 
.MuUen  alternated  carrying  the 
ball  for  short  gains  down  to  the 
Wake  38.  McMullen  then  went  for 
ten  to  the  28  and  Reed  rolled  out 
for  aa  11  yard  jaunt  to  the  17  with 
the  help  of  a  key  block  by  end 
Buddy  Payne. 

McMullen  and  Sutton  went  for 
short  yardage  on  the  next  two 
plays  before  a  Reed  pass  was  inter- 
cepted by  Wake  Forest  quarter- 
back Charley  Carpenter. 
KEMPER  RECOVERS 

The  next  golden  opportunity  for 
the  TJar  Heels  came  only  a  few 
moments  later  when  Don  Kemper 
recovered  a  Deacon  fumble  on  the 
13  yard  line.  On  the  first  play. 
McMullen  circled  right  end  for  five 
yards  to  the  Deacon  8  yard  line. 
Then  Vale  went  over  right  guard 
to  the  7.  McMullen  carried  within 
inches  of  a  first  down  on  the  3, 
and  on  the  next  play,  Reed  was 
topped  for  no  gain  on  a  quaster- 
back  .sneak,  and  the  ball  went  over 
to  WakeForest. 
The  two  teaini  battled  up  and 
the  first 
reatning.  ^ 
Early  in  the  second  half  the  Tar 
Heels  got  another  break  when 
Kemper  picked  a  Wake  fumble  out 
of  the  air  artd  carried  for  eight 
yards  down  to  the  Deacon  39 
Three  plays  carried  to  the  30  where 
Sutton  was  stopped  just  short  of  a 
first  down  on  fourth  and  one. 

On  the  first  Wake  play  from 
*  icrimmage  quarterback  Charlie 
Carpenter  futnbled  once  again,  and 
again  it  was  the  alert  Kemper  who 
fell  on  the  ball  on  the  27.  Wally 
Vale  (gained  3  to  the  24,  Reed  hit 
Payne  with  a  bullseye  pass  on  the 
10.  and  Sutton  then  topk  a  pitch- 
out  from  Reed  and  went  around 
left  end  for  the  score.  Phil  Blazer's 
try  for  the  extra  point  was  block- 
ed by  halfbiick  Dick  Daniels.  The 
.score  came  with  7.30  remaining 
in  the  third  quarter. 

Following  the  kickoff,  the  two 
.squads  exchanged  punts,  giving 
the  Deacons  possession  on  their 
own  four  after  a  beautiful  kick  by 
Curt  Hathaway  had  rolled  dead  at 
that  point.  ,«    : 

WAKE  STARTS  DRIVE 

It  was  from  this  point  that  the 

(See    DEACONS.    Page    4} 


Caravan    Plans    Progressing; 
Club    Clears    Up    Questions 


Several  explanatory  remarks 
concerning  aspects  of  the  caravan 
weekend  to  Virginia  Nov.  10  have 
been  made  by  Dave  Jones  of  the 
committee  planning  the  trip. 

The  Caravan  Committee  of  the 
Univj?rsity  Club,  sponsors  for  the 
event,  has  comr'eted  the  details 
of  .  the  trip,  chairman  Henry 
House  has  reported. 

"It  has  become  apparent  that 
there  are  several  questions  about 
the  caravan  rrrangements  in  the 
minds  of  many  interested  stu- 
dents," Jones  said. 

The  first  problem  was  that  of 
choosing  a  mode  of  transportation, 
Jones  said.  The  train  was  immed- 
iately suggested  and  the  prelim 
inary  plans  were  fomocd  by  a  com- 
mittee appointed  by  the  Univers 
ity  Club  with  the  idea  of  working 
out  train  schedules  and  accommo- 
dations. 

A  quick  look  by  the  committee 
at  the  problems  involved  in  get- 
ting from  Chapel  Hill  to  Green.s- 
boro  to  Charlottesville  almost 
ruled   it  out  immediately. 

It  would- have  been  aeceuary  to 


travel  by  bus  or  car  to  Durham  to 
meet  the  train,  which  would  leave 
Durhapi  early  Friday  evening  and 
arrive  about  an  hour  later  in 
Greensboro  for  a  thwe  hour  lay- 
over. Then  it  would  have  arrived 
in  Charlottesville  at  about  4:30 
a.m.  Saturday. 

The  return  trip  would  have  been 
as  tedious  and  the  time  of  de- 
parture of  12:30  p.m.  Sunday 
would  not  have  been  to  the  best 
interests  of  everyone  on  the  trip, 
the  committee  reported. 

"Another  factor  against  the 
train  wa.s  the  price,"  Jones  said. 
"The  first  cla.ss  round  trip  fare 
is  in  the  neighborhood  of  $14,  and 
thp  coach  fare  about  .S9.50." 

"We  found  that  busses  were 
avaiable  at  reasonable  rates  and 
that  schedules  were  flexible 
enough  to  allow  for  a  split  return 
partv."  Jones  said. 

This  will  allow  ♦hose  who  do 
not  wish  to  stay  over  Saturday 
ni^t  a  chance  to  return.  It  will 
also  give  the  others  an  opportunity 
to  enjoy  their  parties,  dances,  ex- 
cursions  ta  M«nticello,  etc.   until 


early  morning,  get  a  good  night's 
sleep  and     then     return,     leaving  | 
Charlottesville  at  3  p.m.  Sunday, ! 
according  to  Jones.  I 

A    point    in   debate    before    the , 
committee  was   the  route   for  the 
busses,  Jones  said.  Since  this  car- 

j  avan  is  being  operated  in  coopera- 1 
tion  with  Women's  College  in  ■ 
Greensboro,  the  committee  decid- 1 
ed  to  route  the  busses  through 
Greensboro  to  give  Carolina  gen-  j 
tlcmen  a  chalice     to     meet     their  j 

j  dates  and  to  ride  together  to  the  j 
game. 

"This  also  will  afford  the  gen- 
tlemen who  ar€  going  stag  a 
chance  to  make  some  last  minute  j 
arrangements  for  themselves  at , 
Greensboro  before  heading  north." 
Jones  added.  The  difference  in 
mileage  cost  about  $1.25  per  per 
son.  but  it  proves  to  the  girls  at 

'  WC  that  we  are  sincerely  interest- 
ed in  their  participation  in  this 
event, '  Jone«  «lid.  1 

Jones    al.so    stated    that    tickets 

i  must  go  off  sale  Wednesday  in 
order  for  Tfallways  officals  to 
make  final  Arranfments. 


The  Fans  Braved  The  Weather; 
Musicians  Perform  In  Kenan 

By    BILL    KING 

The  6-6  tie  between  the  Tar  Heels  and  Deacons  yesterday  wa.s 
only  the  second  tie  of  their  long  rivalry. 

In  1932  the  two  teams  played  to  a  .scoreless  deadlock.  Caro- 
lina is  ahead  in  the  won-lost  column  35-16. 

The  bands  were  th?re«  en  masse  for  the  fifteenth  annual  high 
school  Band  Day.  Some  5,000  musicians  comprising  the  largest  band 
ever  assembled  in  North  Carolina  were  lined  up  from  goal  line 
to  goal  line  for  the  half  time  show.  UNC  "oand  director  Herbert  W. 
Fred  conducted  the  perform.ance. 

The  rains  came,  but  so  did  27.000  stout  hearted  fans  who 
wanted  to  see  some  football  regardless  of  the  weather.  They  saw 
a  great  football  game  and  very  fev/  left  before  the  final  horn. 

Precipitation  was  sparse  during  (he  first  quarter  but  mid-way 
the  second  period  it  bagan  to  pour.  Vv'ith  the  first  few  drops,  a 
gigantic  wave  of  unbrcilas  opened  up— a  sight  that  would  have 
done  credit  to  any  halftime  show  in  splendor. 

Spotted  in  the  stands:  Little  groups  of  fans  silling  conforiably 
under  tremendous  beach  umbrella  on  top  row  of  temporary  bleach- 
ers. 

Scene  on  the  sidelines:  Little  boy  about  ten  wearing  raincoat 
that  was  about  two  feet  too  long.  He  wjKn't  getting  wet,  though. 

The  Deacon  team  earned  a  tie  in  yesterday's  contest,  but  their 
mascot  deacon  didn't  fare  quite  as  well.  In  the  third  quarter  he 
mounted  on-?  of  the  goal  posts  and  implored  his  ball  club  to  move 
that  ball.  Seconds  later  he  was  spravied  in  the  mud  with  part  of 
the  goil  post  lying  beside  him.  A  little  group  of  fans  had  decided 
that  he  shouldn't  be  there,  and  had  promptly  shaken  him  off  the 
post.  Moments  later  the  Deacs  were  in  Carolina  territory  and  the 
deacon  was  on  his  knees  praying  for  a  touchdown.  This  time,  though, 
he  was  on  the  ground. 

The  wet  turf  played  havoc  with  the  Tar  Heels  passing  game, 
but  did  little  to  deter  their  punting  Number  one  hooter  Wally  Vale 
got  away  kicks  of  54,  59.  and  60  yards  and  second-string  quarter- 
back Curt  Hathaway  unleased.a  Su^jard  quick  kick. 

The  NROTC  drill  ream  -Ceceiveri  a  weli-deserved  round  of  ap- 
plause from  the  fans,  but  during  the  middle  of  the  drill  team's 
performance,  Ihe  Carolina  majorettes  made  their  appearance  at  the 
east  end  of  the  field  and  the  fans  did   a  snappy    •eyes   right." 

Bullet  .Bill  Barnes,  the  vaunted  Deacon  fullback,  never  even 
carried  the  bail  yesterday  until  two  minutes  after  the  start  of  the 
.•second  quarter.  Barnes'  longest  run  of  the  day  was  a  thirty  yard 
jaunt  early  in  the  third  quarter. 

The  Tar  Heels  were  in  complete  control  of  the  ball  game  during 
the  first  quarter  and  the  Deacons  didn't  get  a  first  down  until  atfer 
four  minutes  of  the  second  quarter. 

How  about  the  speed  of  the  Wai-e  Forest  line.  The  Tar  Heel 
safety  men  didn't  have  a  chance  on  Wake  Forest"  punts.  The  big 
Deacon  line  was  always  right  there  with   the  kick. 

Wonder  how  many  of  the  fans  who  trugged  up  the  rugged 
Kenan  woods  hills  made  it  without  slipping  in  the  mud? 

Deac  Coach  Says  Team  Effort 
'Best  Of  The  Entire  Season' 


By    DAVE    WIBLE 

"We  didn't  come  ncre  lo  have 
a  tie  ball  game.'"  Wake  Forest 
coach  Paul  Amen  said  after  yes- 
terday's game.  'Tie  games  leave 
you  flat.  However  it  gives  you 
the  greatest  satisfaction,  alter 
being  down,  to  be  able  to  come 
back.  1  do  think  that  this  was 
our  best  effort  of  the  year  along 
with    Maryland." 

Amen  was  quite  pleased  with 
the  way  quarterback  Charlie 
Carpenter  handled  the  atttack. 
Especially  the  Deac  95-yard 
drive  in  the  fourth  quarter. 
"Carpenter  used  Barnes  on  the 
outside  up  to  that  drive,  then 
he  began  fpVino  to  him  and 
pitching  to  the  halfbacks." 

The  Deacon  bai  ivs  were  re- 
sponsible for  blocking  Caro- 
lina's extra  point.  Instead  of 
holding  back  to  watch  for  a 
pass,   they     vaulted     the     line. 


Peac  halfback  Dick  Daniels  was 
the  man  that  blocked  that  all 
important   kick. 

It  is  interesting  to  note  the 
fact  that  Wake  extra  point  kick- 
er Larry  Brooks  had  put  15  in 
a  row  through  before  yester- 
day's game  only  to  lose  the 
range  when  it  counted. 

.\s  a  final  compliment  to  his 
squad  Amen  said,  "Although 
our  record  is  rot  the  most  ini- 
pressive  in  the  conference  1  am 
as  proud  of  this  team  as  any 
group  of  boys  1  have  ever  coach- 
ed." 


Jazz  Meet  Is  Monday 

Graham  Memorial  .Activities 
Board  is  sponsoring  a  meeting 
Monday  at  8  p  m.  in  the  APQ  room 
of  Graham  Memorial  to  organize 
a  jazz  club  among  UNC  students 
and  other  interested  music  fans. 


Special  Nominating  Session 
By  Student  Party  Is  Tonight 


The  Student  Party  will  hold  a 
special  session  tonight  in  the 
Woodhouse  Conference  Room  of 
Graham  Memorial  to  finish  nomi- 
nations for  fall  elections. 

Monday  night  the  party  will 
hold  a  campaign  kickoff  meeting 
in  Roland  Parker  Lounge.  The  45- 
minute  session  will  feature  adop- 
tion of  a  fall  platform  and  brief 
talks  by  President  Bob  Young. 
Vice  President  Sonny  Evans  and 
Party  Chairman   Tom   Lambeth. 

Lambeth  said  yesterday,  ".Mon- 
day will  begin  tke  Student  Party 
efforts  to  increase  its  control  over 
the  Student  Legislature.  The  plat- 
form we  adopt  Monday  night  will 


be  the  one  which  we  stand  on  in 
seeking  a  successful  end  to  those 
efforts. 

"All  SP  memlJers  and  supporters 
are  urssed  to  attend  this  brief 
meeting  and  give  the  party  can- 
didates an  enthusiastic  sendoff 
down  the  campaign  trails." 

In  the  fall  electi  >n  the  SP  will 
be  seeking  to  increase  its  margin 
in  the  legislature  to  a  clear  ma- 
jority. Today  the  assembly  is  tied 
25-25  with  Speaker  Sonny  Evans 
giving  the  party  a  majority.  Lam- 
beth said.  The  SP  will  have  10  seats 
'•on  the  line"  in  the  fall  voting 
compared  lo  17  foi  .he  Universi- 
ty Pa:-ty. 


PAGE    TWO 


THC  DAILY  TAR  HItL 


SUNDAY,  OCTOBER  28,  ^9Si 


The  Week  In  Review:  Tatum'slstTie, 

Elected,  Hungarian  Revolts 


Friday 


William  Frida/s  Position 
Officials  As  Of  Last  Friday 

The  Consolidated  I'niversity  oF  Norih  Carolina  has  a 
new  |)residcni.  William  C.  Friday  uas  unanimously  elected 
to  tlie  post  by  the  Board  ol  Trustees  last  Fi  idav  after  serving 
as  acting  president  for  less  than  a  year. 

In  accepting  the  p<»siiion 
Kridav  said.  "We  nnisi  kcej) 
ahvavs  an  atmosphere  ol  tree- 
don— responsi  bile  freedom — in 
which  oin  lacidt\  and  students 
may  st»idy  ;  :id  work. " 

Vv'ith  relercnie  to  the  ele(  - 
tion  ol  the  Consolidated 
rniversitvs  voungest  presi- 
dent. Cio\.  Hodijes  said,  "We 
have  made  no  mistake  t(»day. 
The  past  8  months  ol  dealing 
with  Fridav  have  been  ol  un- 
usual pleasure  for  me." 
Bryant  Sr.  of  Durham,  diairman  of  the  se- 
recouunended    Fridav.   explaitied 


BILL   FRIDAY 

.  note  it's  official 


\in(.r   S. 
lection    (oinmittee 


whit 


t!iat  the  delaN  in  selet  tins  a  president  was  due  to  the  i<)">  1 
Supleme  Cvourt  desegreujation  decision,  the  Cnixersitys 
■'poorly  <(>mpetitive  posititm  due  to  inadetpiate  lacultv  sal- 
aries. '  lUKcrtaintv  as  to  where  the  I'niveisity  stood  ini- 
cler  the  State  Board  of  Higher  Fdiuation  and  an  a';<umida- 
tion  ol   internal   troubles." 

*  *  #  ■ 

A  cohi  fall  drizzle  soaketl  C^arolina  ladies  and  gentlemen 
as  they  wound  their  way  to  Kenan  Stadimn'for  the  Far 
Heels'  t  lash  with  the  Deacons  of  Wake  Forest  vesterdav. 

()\er  -,.ooo  musicians  representing  <«(  l)ands  entertained 
the  Irns  in  Band  Day  (cremonies  following  the  scoreless  first 
half  of  the  game.  In  spite  of  the  threatening  weather  the 
bands  ))laved  .such  song.s  as  "Somewhere  Over  the  Rainbow" 
and     Look  For  the  Silver  Lining." 

It  was  a  lie  b:  Hgame,  the  first  since  Jim  Tatinn's  ar- 
ri\al  on  the  Hill.  Carolina  scored  the  first  touchdown,  but 
the  Deacs  \e\i^  d  in  ihe  last  period  and  scored  alter  a  cjrt- 
vard  (bi\e  to  the  end  zone.  Neither  team  was  able  to  make 
the  con\cv>ion   ind  the  game  ended  with  the  score  standing 

at    (i-C). 

*  •  * 

()ji    Fuesdav  evening.  Slate  Assfxiate  justice  William 
.\.  Rodman  addressed  the  Philanthropic  Society.  He  spoke 
on     The  Proper  Function  oi 
the  .\ppelate  Court". 

Roclnv.m  expressed  his  views 
on  the  court  and  a 'so  stated 
the  various  res|>onsihi.i.;e>  of 
a  couit  jud-,'. 

He  coi;  iiul.d  his-*peech  by 
,s;iyin"  :!.it  if  the  people  did 
!iot  like  their  b"ivs.  it  was  up 
to  tliini  and  their  legislature 
t()chan'.ie  them,  not  the  courts. 
.\  gioup  of  iniiversity  men 
has  solved  the  housing  piob- 
km  by  setting  up  a  co-op 
linu  se.  Ihey  take  turns  ccx)k- 
ing  the  main  meals,  but  each 
|)erson  \>  responsible  for  get- 
ting his  own  l)reakfast  and 
huich.  Meml>ers  are  charged 
according    tcj    the    amount   of 

food  thev  consmnc.  ^ 

No  positive  action  has  been  taken  lor  the  lifting  of  tiie 

parking   ban   as  yet.   However,   the   Board  of  .Mdermen  has 

promised  to  lilt  the  ban  for  Go  davs  it  fraternities  lake  ac- 

ticjn  to  alleviate  their  own  parking  problems. 

It  is  now  up  to  the  fraternity  men  to  try  and  find  a 
solution  to  the  problem  other  than  parking  in  the  street. 

Fhe  merclK-'ius  ha\e  extended  free  parking  time  in  a 
privatelv-owned  downtown  lot  to  two  hours,  .\fter  the  limit, 
there  will  be  charge  of  2->  cents  per  hour,  with  a  maxinuim 
iliargc  of  Si  a  day. 

It  was  (.erijians  weekend,  and  the  Carolina  scene  was 
made  i)p  largely  of  parlies  and  dances.  Billy  .May  and  Fat-, 

Domino  were  the  featured 
bands,  Domino's  apj>earance 
marking  the  first  time  a 
rhythm  and  blues  gioup  has 
appeared    for   (.ermans. 

Uncle  Sugar  soured  on 
Domiito  before  the  concert 
Fridav  atfernoon.  and  the 
rhythm  and  blues  artists"  ap- 
pearaiKC  \vas  delaved  while  he 
and  his  buiness  manager  talked  to  tAvo  re pre.senta lives  ot 
tlic  Dept.  of  Internal  Revenue  about  back  taxes. 

I  iit;  matter  was  straiglitened  up  and  Domino  went  nu 
late  but  imabashed  bv  the  incident.  Bernard  Dunn,  the 
bands  business  manager,  said  the  back  taxes  and  luies 
wouUi  be  payed  as  soon  a.s  he  got  his  books  up  to  date. 

'  The  official  stydent  publication  of  the  Publications  Board  of  the 
University  of  North  Carolina,  where  it  is  published  daily  except  Mon- 
day and  examination  and  vacation  periods  and  summer  terms.  Elntered 
as  second  class  matter  in  th€  post  office  at  Chapel  Hill,  N.  C,  under 
the  act  of  March  8.  1870.  Subscription  rates:  Mailed.  $4  a  year.  $2.50 
per  semester;  delivered,  $6  a  year,  $3.50  a  semester. 


The  State: 
Autos  And 
Industries 

Monday  and  Tuesday  in  Asho- 
ville  of  North  Carolina  League 
of  Municipalities  held  its  47th 
convention. 

The  convention  approved  an 
11  point  program  of  its  own  that 
aims  towards  better  housekeep- 
ing practices,  and  which  princi- 
pally calls  for  amendments  to 
motor  vehicle  registration  stat- 
utes to  require  listing  of  vehicles, 
for  ad  valorem  taxes  as  a  con- 
dition precedent  to  issuance  of 
licence  plantes,  joint  city-state 
vehicle  purchases  ajid  permissive 
legislation  to  establish  capitol 
reserve  fund.s  for  necessary  capi- 
tol improvements. 

Six  panel  speakers  spoke  to  the 
North  Carolina  municipal  lead- 
ers on  the  topic  "Industrial  De- 
velopment Is  Municipal  Busi 
ness."  The  leaders  were  told  the 
pitfalls  of  not  seeking  stable  in- 
du.stries    for    their    communities. 

The  Ku  Klux  Klan  seeking  a 
revival  in  Piedmont  North  and 
South  Carolina  announced  plans  ' 
for  a  cross  burning  and  rally  at 
Concord  Saturday  night.  The 
rally,  which  featured  two  min- 
isters, one  from  Charlotte  and 
the  other  from  South  Carolina, 
taught  the  "Bible  teachings" 
about  segregation  of  the  races. 

In  Red  Springs.  Governor  Hod 
ges  saiid  that  North  Carolina 
needs  '"locally  financed,  locally 
operated  industries  which  will 
utilize  the  many  farm  people  who 
must  sopplement  their  income  or 
go  under." 


Rioting  ki  Red  Satellites; 
New  Rglitingin  Middle  East 


RODMAN 

up  to  the  people 


DOMINO 

UyicU'  Sugar  soured 


Editor  _ 

Managing  Editor 


FRED  POWLEDGE 


CHARLIE  SLOAN 


News  Ekiitor 


RAY  LBIKER 


Business  Manager   .  I BILL  BOB  PEEIL 


This  has  been  a  tense  week, 
wtih  the  eyes  of  the  world  for  the 
m:ment  turning  from  Egj'pt, 
Palestine  and  Tunisia  to  the  S^ 
viet  satellites. 

In  East  Germany  60,000  police 
have  been  mobilized  to  keep  the 
wave  of  anti-communist  unrest 
now  sweeping  eastern  Europe 
from  spreading  across  its  borders. 
The  new  Communist  leaders  in 
Poland  have  set  up  workers"  -mi-, 
litia  units"  in  plants  and  Q.fgsni- 
zations  throughout  the  country 
to  help  deal  with  Anti-Russian 
demon.stratious. 

In  Builapest.  Hungary,  .students 
had  Ven  demanding  the  with- 
drawal of  Soviet  troops  from 
the  country  and  the  release  of 
Cardinal  Mindszenty  and  the  re- 
turn of  Imte  Nagy  as  Premier. 

In  Southern  Hungary  Imre 
Nagy.  {ortn^r  premier,  announced 
that  hq  will  soon  form  a  new  gov- 
ernment "of  the  peoples'  front" 
which  will  deal  with  the  country's 
problems. 

The  Unittd  State?  was  reticent 
on  the  niost  part  about  the  hap- 
penings in  Europe.  President 
Ei.senhower  denounced'  the  use 
of  Russian  troop.s  to  quell  the 
anti-Moscow  revolt  in  Communi.st 
Hungary.  He  hinted  that  he 
might  favor  taking  the  conflict 
before  the  United  Nations. 
«        «        « 

A  calm  that  had  existed  on  the 
Egyptian-Israel  border  was  ended 
Sunday.  Three  Israeli  soldiers 
were  reported  killed  and  27  were 
reported  wounded  in  mine  blasts. 

j<ew  fighting  in  Tunisia  broke 
out  Thursday  between  the  French 
and   Tunisian   troops     near     the 


Algeria    border,    Premier    Habid 
^ourguiba  announced. 

Egyptian  urgings  for  a  new 
conference  on  the  Suez'  Canal 
transmitted  through  the  United 
Nations  to  Britain  and  France 
were  rejected. 

After  a  three  hour  conference 
between  Christian  Pinau.  French 
Fofeign  Minister.  Prime  Minister 
Eden  and  Foreign  Secretary 
Sclwyn  Lloyd  of  England.  Chris- 
tain  Pineau  said  that  no  proposal 
put  forward  bv  the  Egyptian 
Government  could  be  "seriously"' 
considered    by    the    French    and 

British  Govcrnmpnts. 

*         *         * 

In  the  political  scene  here  at 
home, the  two  candidates  for  the 
presidency  exchanged  views 
about  the  ,aj)nlitinn  of  Hydrogen 
Bomb  tests.  President  Ei.senhower 
answered  .\rilai  Stevenson's  state- 
ments that  the  curbing  of  the 
Hydrogen  Bomb  was  the  key  to 
world  peace  wit^  the  rebuttal 
that  it  \vo;ild  be  illusory  without 
insnpction. 

There  were  differences  of 
opinion  concerning  Siviot  Pre- 
mier NlkoL^i  A.  Bulganln's  note 
to  the  White  House  urging  an 
end  of  the  nuclear  tests. 

The  President,  in  one  of  the 
most  strongly  worded  diplomati'' 
communications  in  recent  years, 
told  Marshall  Bulganin  that  his 
letter  departed  from  internation- 
al practice  in  a  number  of  re- 
spects. 

Stevenson  condemned  the 
WTilte  Hou.se  for  not  giving 
enough  consideration  to  the  So- 
viet proposals  for  the  abolishing 
of  Hydrogen  Bomb  tests. 


To   wha^ 
alignment 


u 


YMCA  And  Church  Activities 
Keep  Mayos  Son  Mighty  Busy 


Adlai's  New  Campaign  Tactics 
Causing  Campus  Disenchantment 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL  WEEK  IN  REVIEW 

Editor   _  ^ „ _.„.  CHARLIE  SLO.\N 

Staff  Writers ^_-  GEORGE  PFINGST  aRd  LNGRID  CI.AY 

Night  Editor — FRED  POWLEDGE 


iames  Reston 

In  Ijht'  Xcxv  York  l'i)nt's 
CHAPEL  HILL,  N.  C. 
Tl>e  saddest  sacks  in  this  elec- 
tion are  the  liberal  intellectuals. 
Their  hearts  still  belong  to  Adlai, 
but  they  are  disappointed  in  his 
campaign.  Ho  has  their  votes, 
but  he  no  longer  has  their  en- 
thusiasm. 

A  reporter  for  The  New  York 
Times  had  to  argue  his  way 
across  the  campuses  of  America 
in  the  campaign  of  1952.  Then, 
as  now.  The  Times  was  endorsing 
Eisenhower,  and  the  man  had  to 
defend  himself  from  outraged 
faculty  members  at  every  lunch 
and  dinner. 

It  is  not  the  same  now.  At 
Cornell.  Wesleyan,  Yale  and  the 
University  of  North  Carolina  this 
week,  the  pro-Stevenson  intellect- 
uals were  still  protesting  that 
four  more  years  of  Eisenhower 
would  ba  bad  for  the  countrv, 
but  they  now  regard  Stevens^r. 
as  a  good  man  who  has  let  them 
down. 

What  excited  them  in  1952  was 
the  arrival  on  the  American  po- 
litical scene  of  a  new  Wilsonian 
figure,  intelligent,  eloquent,  high- 
minded,  courageou.s  enough  to  ex- 
press ideals  and  objectives  re- 
gardless of  what  the  party  bosses, 
the  labor-union  leaders,  or  the 
Legionnaires  thought. 

They  do  not  think  he  lo.st  in 
1952  becau.se  of  the  kind  of  cam- 
paign he  ran.  They  think,  so  far 
as  one  can  generalize  on  so  com- 
plex a  subject,  that  he  lost  be- 
cau.se  of  the  accumulated  griev- 
ances against  the  party  that  had 
been  in  power  for  twenty  years. 

Indeed,  they  believe — and  many 
professional  politicians  agree 
with  them — that  Stevenson  end- 
ed the  campaign  of  1952  much 
stronger- than  he  began,  and  that 
his  campaign  of  '52  was  so  much 
better  than  Eisenhower's  that  he 
probably  picked  up  several  mill- 
ion voters  between  the  conven- 
tion and  the  election. 
STEVENSON'S  CHOICE 

Nor  do  they  belive  that  it  was 

necessary  for  Stevenson  to  change 

the  whole  tone  of  his  campaign. 

indeed  the  whole  public  image  of 

his  personality  and  character,  in 

order  to  mobilize  the  strength  of 
the  Democratic  Party. 

The     party     orgdnizalion 


is  following  old-fashioned  city 
hall  tactics,  but  because  the  party 
workers  have  been  out  for  four 
years  and  don't  like  it.  and  be- 
cause the  party  now  controls  far 
more  state  and  local  governments 
than  it  did  four  years  ago. 

None  of  Mr.  Stevenson's  sup- 
porters in  these  university  com- 
munities was  against  his  effort* 
to  strengthen  the  party  by  identi- 
fying himself  with  the  other 
candidates  on  the  Democratic 
ticket.  They  merely  question 
whether  it  was  necesBar>-  or  wise 
for  him  to  adopt  his  present  tac- 
tics in  ocder  to  do  so. 

This  does  not  mean  that  they 
are  switching  to  Eisenhower. 
They  are  sticking  with  Stevenson 
for  a  variety  of  reasons. 

First,  they  are  no  fonger  re- 
strained by  the  thought  that  the 
Republicans  had  to  take  power  in 
order  to  learn  the  realities  of  the 
post-war  world.  This  bothered 
many  of  them  in  1952.  Like  Stev- 
enson himself,  they  had  doubts 
about  whether  it  was  good  for 
the  country  for  one  party  to  be 
in  and  the  other  out  for  twenty- 
four  years,  but  this  is  no  longer 
a  factor. 

Second,  many  people  in  these 
communities  are  troubled  about 
the  glorification  of  Eisenhower. 
They  think  t  is  not  only  fabe 
but  undemocratic.  They  believe 
it  is  not  dispelling  but  perpetual- 
ing  illusions  about  .American 
life.  And  they  are  deeply  disturb- 
ed about  the  application  of  mass 
advertising  techniques  and  per- 
sonality appeals  in  a  campaign  for 
the  political  leadership  of  the 
United,  States. 
AMERICA  IN  TRANSITION 

■Finally,  they  have  a  conviction 
about  the  United  States  at  this 
moment  in  its  history  which 
seems  to  differ  from  the  image 
widely  shared  in  other  oommuni' 
ties.  They  note  the  vast  changes 
in  America  in  the  last  four  years, 
created  by  a  population  rise  of 
over  eleven  million,  and  by  the 
new  industrial  revolution  brought 
about  by  automatic  machinery, 
the  development  of  atomic  ener- 
gy, and  the  vast  surpluses  of 
American   farms   and   factories. 

They  not 3.  too,     the     political 

revolution   naw   taking   place     n 

the  Communist  world,  the  neutral 

world  and  even  in  the  relations 

is    among    the   Allied    nations   at    a 


Charlie  Sloan 

The  son  of  Mr.  and  Mrs.  H.  B.  Mayo  has  come 
a  long  way  since  he  entered  the  University  of 
North  Carolina. 

Gerald  M.  Mayo,  more  popularly  known  as  Ger- 
ry, is  a  junior  now.  and  president  of  the  YMCA.  A 
Phi  Eta  Sigma,  he  received  a  two-year  scholarship 
awarded  annually  by  Burlington  Industries  \o  a  ris- 
ing junior  for  out-standing  .scholarship  and  leader- 
ship. 

Mayo  was  born 
i  n  Greenville. 
N'.C.  and  since 
then  has  lived  in 
Chocowinity,  N.C. 
and  Falkland. 
N.  C.  His  first 
experience  at  the 
University  was 
with  freshman 
camp  and  he  has 
been  active  in  the 
camp's  work  ever 
since.. 

When  asked 
about  his  major 
he  said  he  is 
specializing  in 
intsrnational  re- 
lations in  the 
Political  Science" 
D«pt.  He  added  that  it  is 
going  to  do." 

His  main  interest,  he  said,  lies  in  the  field  of 
international    relations,    but    it    is    not    missionary 


many  is  on  the  decline. 

And  their  conclusion  from  all 

this  is  that  the  United  States  has 

reached  another    one     of    those 

points  in   its   history   where   the 

major  problem  of  government  is 

not    to  consolidate   the  gains   of 

the   past   but  to  innovate,  to  go 

forward  wtih  new  ideas  and  new 

plans   to   meet   these   new   prob- 
lems at  home  and  abroad. 
This  seemed  to  many  people  in 

these  ^  university      communities 

preciseiy'J!Se    kind    of  problem 

Stevenson  would  have  articulated 

wtih  more  skill     than     anybody 

else  but  they  do  not  feel  that  he 

has  done  so. 

Frankly,    however,   they   don't    ^'©'"k   I"  fa<"t.  he  added,  "there's  not  any  such  thing 

expect  to  get  imagination.  Intel-    as   I'm    looking  for  yet." 

He  thinks  it  will  be  some  kind  of  overseas  so- 
cial work,  perhaps  in  the  United  Nations  or  some 
similar  organization. 

In  the  summer  of  1953  Mayo  went  to  Belgium 
as  an  exchange  student.  While  there  he  lived  with 
a  Belgian  family  and  said  he  learned  a  great  deal 
about  their  way  of  life.  • 

In  Belgium  he  won  his  glider  pilot's  license. 
He  recalled  having  to  land  in  a  hayfield  one  time 
and  being   forced  to  dismantle   the  plane  in   order 


MAYO 

international   relatiotis   stiuieyit 

'not    'efinite   what  I'm 


Icctual  persistence,  or  bold  exer- 
cise of  Presidential  pawer^  from 
Eisenhower.  They  think  his  Ad- 
ministration has  been  largely  a 
holding  operation,  which  was 
useful  for  a  time  but  has  been 
outmoded   by  evenL~. 

Consequently  they  are  sticking 
with  Stevenson,  but  they  are  not 
happy  and  not  very  hopeful. 


to  get  it  back  to  the  base. 

When  asked  what  the  farmer  thought  of  having 
a  sail  plane  land  in  his  hay  field,  Mayo  said,  "The 
farmers  are  used  to  it . . .  this  one  came  out  with  a 
little  screwdriver  and  helped  me  take  the  wings 
off." 

Last  year  Mayo  was  co-captain  of  the  fencing 
squad  and  number  one  man  on  the  foil,  a  sport  he 
learned  in  Belgium. 

Also  very  active  in  church  work.  Mayo  serves 
on  the  North  Carolina  Presbyterian  Synod  Council 
representing  Chapel  Hill's  Westminster  Fellow- 
ship. He  also  represents  the  U.  S.  Presbyterian 
C^urcli'  on  the  United  ''Stud'em^  tHiristian  Council  ' 
Planning  Committee  for  the  Southern  Regional  Con- 
ference. 

When  he  leaves  Carolina,  Mayo  intends  to  at- 
tend Yale  Divifiity  School  for  a  year  before  enter- 
ing the  air  force. 

He  is  presently  First  Sgt.  of  the  AFROTC  Drill 
Team.  When  he  enters  the  regular  air  force  he  ex- 
pects to  be  either  a  pilot  or  navigator.  He  plans  to 
stay  in  the  service  for  three  years. 

Last  summer  Mayo  attended  Union  Theological 
Seminary  in  New  York.  There  he  studied  contem- 
porary theology.  Christian  ethics  and  Christian  edu- 
cation. His  trip  was  sponsored  by  the  YMCA. 

In  New  York  he  lived  in  a  co-op  house  with  U 
girls  and  six  other  boys.  He  said  it  was  "quite  an 
experience." 

Asked  how  the  Y  has  changed  since  the  YM 
and^  YW^CA  started  working  more  closely.  Mayo 
said,  "There  is  a  renewed  interest  and  a  new  atti- 
tude towards  the  Y,  and  I'm  very  pleased  with  the 
way  the  students  are  cooperating  to  such  an  ex- 
tent." 

Speaking  on  student  apathy,  he  commented, 
"This  feeling  of  apathy  has  been  very  evident 
during  the  last  year  or  so,  but  I've  sensed  a  change 
in  the  past  three  or  four  weeks  because  of  a  more 
sincere  cooperation  between  students,  faculty,  the 
administration,  the  trustees  and  even  the  towns- 
people. 

"The  amount  of  activity  within  the  YM  and  YW 
itself  is  evidence  of  a  new  attitude  of  decreasing 
apathy  among  the  students  tow-ards  campus  activi- 
ties." 


Pogo 


1^  new  OffMNAl  PUN  wiuu 

0g  M  ij<5  rc?  eg/sRBs^fiay  JUT 


By  Walt  Kelly 


jr 


MgUP  IN  A  V&fYOJS' 


VY6  PQ  UN&e  ^^UCM  pgTtgg 
IN  OUR  ^JNtffy-'JU^OHf 

1V€  6u6CTlON'-'  NO0DPV  K5 
!N  POJ^ASlDWHOIDvOtg 


WMATP 


l\'\  Abner 


By  Al  Capp 


-AN'  THEV  IS/'/'-  ^ 

rms  IS  A  banquet; 

PP-BUT  fO'  SAID  THEV     A  HOrJORiM'  THE 
WAS  TH'  MOST  BEAUTIFUL  j  GRANDMOTHER 
BUNCH  a  GALS  IN  TH'  /  O^  TH' Y'AR.V 


WOrtl-D.1''- 


stronger  now  than   in   1952^  not  .time* when  the   political   leader- 
primarily  because  Mr.  SteveflijOO    ship  of  Britain,  France  and  Ger- 


Ne< 


,  ) 


Yardley  prodd 
larWDla*,  cori 


There  a^ 
the  fact 
A.  ArthtJ 
wear  t  h< 
shirt.  Tl^ 
Van    H< 
that  its  < 
Arthur 
enough,! 
keep  hi^ 
keep  hij 
purpose! 
Down 
wowed 
on  sight 
of  fine 

TodaJ 
Buttoni 
authent 


•    V 


SUNDAY,  OCTOBS*  If,  W5«. 


THi  DAILY  TA«  Mf^ 


PAGE   THRSfe 


Y  International  Relations  Group  Meets  Monday 

To  what   extent   is   the    present  ^  along  smoothly,   and  to  what  «x- 1  "tight?'  is  the   Bagdad  Pact?  The 
aligiment     of    countries     movicg    tent  are  they  breaking  up?  Ho#!  Warsaw  Pact'  The  Western  Euro- 

"^ *- ; — —— j  pean  Alliance?  NATO?  SEATO? 


By  ippointmeni  pwvsyors  of  soap  to  tin  lite  King  GMr|«  VI.  YartfMy  A  C«.,  Ltd.,  LeMM 


i>{  having 
laid.  "The 
rat  with  a 
ihe   wings 

fencing 
sport  he 

0  serves 
Council 
Fellow- 

^sbyterian 
Council 
lional  Con- 
ids  to  at- 
enter- 

(OTC  Drill 
rce  he  ex- 
plans  to 

lieological 
;d  contem- 
istian  edu- 
ICA. 

|sc  with  11 
"quite  aft 

the  YM 

'Ay.    Mayo 

new  atti- 

with  the 

ich   an  ex- 

tommentcd, 
Iry  evident 
(d  a  change 
of  a  more 
faculty,  the 
[the    towns- 

'M  and  YW 

decreasing 
ipus   activi- 


New!  Yardley  Pre-Shaving  Lotion 

for  electric  shaving 

*  tautens  your  skin 

•  eliminates  razor  burn  and  razor  drag 
;,.,-                •  counteracts  perspirotion 

,  •  makes  H  easy  to  whisk  away  your 

stubbornest  heirs 

Helps  give  o  smoother  e/ecfric  shovel 
At  your  capipus  store,  $1  plus  tax 

Vareltoy  products  for  America  are  created  in  Enfiand  and  finished  in  the  U.S.A.  from  the  orifinal  En|IUk 
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IS  THIS  THE  MAN 
WHO  STARTED  IT? 


elty 


There  are  some  who  dispute 
the  fact  that  President  Chester 
A.  Arthur  was  the  first  man  to 
wear  the  Oxford  Bufcton-Down 
shirt.  They  are  right,  he  wasn't. 
Van  Heusen  has  discovered 
that  its  originator  was  actually 
Arthur  A.  Chester,  who,  oddly 
enough,  used  the  button  not  to 
keep  his  collar  down,  but  to 
keep  his  shirt  up.  Whatever  its 
purpose,  the  Oxford  Button- 
Down  (or  Button-Up)  shirt 
wowed  Mr.  Chester's  crowd 
on  sight  and  has  been  a  staple 
of  fine  wardrobes  eVer  since. 
Today,  Van  Heusen *s  Oxford 
Button-Down  is  still  iA  the 
authentic  Chesterian  tradition 


.  .  .  but  with  a  wonderful  dif- 
ference. The  doth,  woven  of 
fine  long-staple  cotton,  is  as 
soft  as  a  co-ed's  smile,  yet 
exceptionally  long-wearins. 
Superbly  tailored  in  the  smart 
Van  Heusen  way,  this  Oxford 
Button-Down  enhances  your 
looks,  whether  you're  irivolved 
in  class,  tugs  of  war  or  mid- 
night brawls.  $0.00. 

At  better  stores  everywhere, 
or  write  to  PhiUips-Jones 
Corp.,  417  Fifth  Avenue,  New 
York  IS,  New  Yorft.  Makers 
of  Van  He\i3en  Shiirta  •  ^ort 
Shirts  •  Ties  •  Pajamas 
Handkerchiefs  •  Underwear 
Swiifiwear*  Sweaters.' 


!  What  is  the  significance  for  in- 
j  ternational  relations  of  the  upris- 
ings in  Holland,  and  Hungary;  and 
the  disturbance  in  Jordan? 

These  and  other  pertinent  ques- 
tions will  be  discussed  at  the  next 
meeting  of  the' International  Rela 
tions  Discussion  group  which  will 
meet  Monday  from  5  to  5:'55  p.m. 
in  room  300,  Carroll  Hall.  Dave 
-Mundy.  UNC's  first  Goettingen 
exchange  scholar,  will  preside  at 
the  meeting.  Dr:  Shepard  Jones. 
Burton  Craige  Professor  of  Politi- 
cal Science  and  for  20  years  with 
the  U.  S.  State  Dept.  in  tiie  Near 
Bast,  will  serve  as  resource  pet^ 
son. 

Students  from  10  different  coun- 
tries will  participate  in  the  dis- 
cussion. Students  from  tlie  United 
States  have  bc^n  particirtarh.-^  en- 
ouraged  to  attend  this  discussion 
ind  become  acquainted  in  a  first- 
hand fashion  wtih  some  of  the 
oroWems  of  international  rela- 
tions in  today's  complex  world. 

This  discussion  group  is  spon- 
sored by' the  YMCA-YWCA  as  part 
yi  its  study  program  for  campus 
members. 


Christian  Church  Gets 
New  Minister  Today 

Formal  installation  of  Marvey  L. 
Carnes  as  pastor  of  thfe  United 
Congregational  Christian  Church 
will  be  held  Sunday  at  4:15  p.m. 
in  Carroll  Hall. 

Presiding  minister  of  service 
will  be  the  Rev.  Carl  Wallace  of 
Fayetteville. 

The  sermon  will  be  delivered 
by  Rev.  Gaylord  Noyce  of  Raleigh. 

The  official  representatives  of 
the  Congregational  Christ  i.a  n 
Church,  Dr.  F.  C-  Lester  and  br-; 
John  G.  Truit,  will  attend  the  in- 
stallation along  with  4S  represen- 
tatives of  the  church  in  the  South- 
ern convention  covering  North 
Carolina   and   Virginia. 

The  clergy  of  Chapel  Hill  and 
Cafrboro  have  be?n  Intuited  as 
honorary  memt)«rs  of  the  installing 
council;  the  service  is  also  open  to 
the  public. 

At  the  11  a.m.  morning  service 
of  the  ■  Cdngregational  Christian 
Church,  pastor  Harvey  L.  Carnes 
will  deliver  a  Harmon  entttkd 
"Fire  in  a  Haystack"  commem- 
orating the  birth  of  the  foreign 
massions  of' an  agency  of  the  Con- 
gregational! Christian  Church.  The 
6  p.m.  meeting  of  the  United  Stu- 
dent Fellowship  will  feature  a 
film  program  and  devotionals. 


PqgWB-  MtU    .f" 


Qallup  Can't  Give  Br^cdcdowa 
Of  Votes  By  States,  Prof  Soys 


By  HIL  GOLDMAN 


Adcordiog  to  Dr.  Gordon  Cleve- 
land, UNC  profesor  of  political 
science,  George  Gallup,  national 
poll  taker,  has  admitted  he  can't 
make  a  state-by-state  breakdown 
of  voter  presidential  preference  be- 
cause he  doesn't  have  enough  in- 
terviews. 

Cleveland  told  members  of  the 
Young  Democratic  Club,  at  their 
last  meeting,  that  he  got  his  in- 
formation from  a  New  York  news- 
paper staffer  who  had  interviewed 
Gallup. 

Thfc  professor,  who  because  of 
his  -outspoken  contradiction  of 
Gallup>  poll  results  has  made 
headlines  throughout  the  country, 
declao-ed  that  only  9,000  opinons 
were  taken  and  that  probably  4,- 
000  of  them  were  valid. 

Gallup,  in  his  nationally  read 
column,  has  repeatedly  shown 
"evid^ence"  iotimatio^i   that  £i£en- 


PICNJC 

The  Student  Organizational  Com- 
mittee of  the  School  of  Public 
Health  is  sponsoring  a  picnic  for 
School  of  Public  Health  students 
and  their  guests  this  afternoon  at 
the  Umstead  State  Park.  The  pic- 
nic will  be  held  from  2-6  p.m. 
NEWMAN  CLUB 

The  Newman  Club  will  meet 
Sunday  at  7  p.m.  in  Roland  Park- 
er Lounge  of  Graham  Memorial. 
Yack  pictures  will  be  made,  and 
all  members  and  those  interested 
in  becoming  members  have  been 
invited  to  attend. 


hower  will  win  decisively  in  No- 
vember. 

Cleveland,  a  bit  skeptical  of  the 
results,  said,  'Certainly  he  does 
not  have  quantitive  ptoot  and  I 
think  not  enough  qualitative." 

He  noted  that  Gallup  was  pres- 
ent at  a  private  meeting  with  tbe 
President  when  it  ^as  not  certain 
that  Eisenhower  would  seek  re- 
election. At  that  time  the  chief 
executive  was  told  by  Gallup  the 
Republicans  needed  him  to  win. 
Cleveland  said  the  pollster  has  con- 
stantly shown  Republican  bias. 

In  1948,  the  famous  pollster  was 
brought  before  a  congressional 
committee  after  he  had  drastically 
miscalculated  the  results  of  the 
Dewey-T^-uman  election.  He  then 
picked  Dewey  by  a  landslide. 
Cleveland  concluded  his  statements 
concerning  Gallup  by  saying, 
"George  Gallup  docw't  know  any 
more  than  we  know." 

Moving  on  to  the  campaign,  he 
expressed  the  opinion  that  theowt'^ 
come  of  the  race  hinges  on  three 
or  four  states,  due  to  the  present 
electoral  college  system.  It  is 
Cleveland's  view  that  Stevenson ! 
can  win  by  picking  up  as  little  as 
900.000  popular  votes  over  his  '52 
total,  if  the  vote  come  in  the  right 
places.  Eisenhower  won  the  1952  { 
election  by   some   5,000,000  votes. 

The  professor  named  Illinois, 
Ohio  and  Pennsylvania  as  key 
states  for  the  Democrats. 

Cleveland's  remarks  were  made 
before  approximately  100  Young 
Democrats  at  the  meeting. 


1  Capp 


J 


WE  ARE  THE  EXCLUSIVE 

VAN  HEUSEM 

OEALEB  \H  CHAPEl  HIiL 


J 


Starting  Tomorrow 

SPECIAL 
SHOWING 

new^'fai.l 
bargains 

I 

Pal  -  They're  Honeys! 

The  Intimate 


IWC  MEBT 

Tke  Independent  Women's  Coun 
cil  will  meet  at  3  p.m.  Monday  in 
the  Grail  Room  of  Grabam  Me- 
morial. 

LANGUAGE  DB»»W>NSTIIAT10N 

.  Foreign  students  will  demon- 
strate^  their  lan.fuages  in  today  s 
meeting  of  the  Ctosmopolitan  Club 
ai  4  p.m.  in  the  assembly  room 
of  the  libraiy.  Tlhe  students  will 
give  examples  of  their  language  in 
written,  spoken,  land  song  forms. 
Books  in  Far  Ea:nern,  Near  East- 
«itvi,.'and  Eiutjpeiin  languages  will 
be  4lsplpyed.         i      [I     '      '.'  '* 

koiTEAN  VETS  , 

>A11  Korean  veternans  should  sub- 
mit th«ir  monthly  certification  of 
trainii^  form  to  '315  South  Build- 
ing by  Thursday, '  according  to  an 
anooaacement  from  Gen.  F.  C. 
Shcpard's  office. 

This  is  required  by  Public  Law 
550,  according  to.  the  announce- 
ment. .   i       h 


Bookshop 


*%»■•*■ 


205  E.  Franklin  St. 


Open  Tilt  10|^. 


'1W1IN7WEIk|Jl|p6 
lUnOWHEiNH 


Do  You  Graduate  THIs  Year? 


■'.I,'.  !.(..>  :tl 


!,'» 


o  n  •■• 


A  Bell  System  Interview 
May  Be  The  Key 
to  Your  Future  ... 


Majors  in  engineering,  accounting,  physical  sciences,  businei?s 
administration,  social  sciences  and  liberal  arts  have  a  definite 
place  in  the  BeU  Telephone  System. 
Administrative  development  is  part  of  your  training. 

Technical  management,  accounting,  public  relations,,  personnel, 
research,  manufacturing,  construction,  design  and  development 
all  are  important  phases  of  the  telephone  industry. 

See  your  placement  officer  today  for  complete  details.  Or  visit 
with  the  Bell  System  representative  who  will  be  happy  to  discuss 
your  future  with  one  of  the  world's  great  organizations. 


mH  ILMYFCVti  i«^i»ihililia 


WHrrSiiER.  ill..  Aug.  3t>-Wbai  . 
cwMKiimtiBWd  by  OMn,  A.  L;'MkL  j 

coerdtaMnM.  I  wm  jint  cMwdiM^  j 
*«  aonrky^tMM^  He  b«  Im  fefcr  in  1 
•¥MT  fit'  iii»«ye  ea  riit  (oHi  and  hii  | 
Ibm  «•  Ik*  Mder.  "Evfry  pt^Mna* 
ka«  t«  kave  a  tradt  markr  m>«.  he. 
*Mine't  coordiaatod  kaitwetr.  Get  • 
loMi  or  this  sM . .  r 

Coof4iiial««  Mt,  by  TOWNC  AND 
RING:  Long  ^tecve,  V-neck  pu>Iov«r; 
coarac  puge.  with  coatrastinf  ttripe; 
H-46. . .  I2.f5 

TAKti  oritinal  mOT  TAMrt* 
iMftch . .» IM 

Tkk't  oriciaal  -^NEKI^ER."  to 
■n<cb. .'.OS<  ..,  , 

*      C9tarMmmt4  Knkwtsr- 
99S  Broadway,  Re^wcad  City,  CatifonUa 


.?  ';:i 


BELL  SYSTEM  REPRESENTATIVES  WILL  BE  ON  THE  CAMPUS 
OCTOBER  29,  1956 
SeJe  YOUR  PLACEMENT  OFFICER  FOR  AN  INTERVIEW 

■     '■:*  Southern  Bell  Telephone  and  Telegraph  Co. 

!.  .   ?-  American  Telephone  and  Telegraph  Co-t 

\"'  <V *    Long  Lines  Department 
1         .^     A  .'-^ Western  Electric  Company 
I        s^J^i  i^'^\!m  Bell  Telephone  Lorboratoriea 
•  Sandia  Corporation  ■ 


)Nhal  young  p9PplB  or*  doing  at  Ci^nervl  Electric 


Young  mathematician 

helps  pace 
engineering  advances 

Recently  General  Electric  developed  a 
compact,  new  motor  for  industrial  use.  But 
before  the  motor  could  be  put  into  automatic 
production,  one  difficulty  remained:  to  de- 
sign a  protective  end  shield  that  would  con- 
line  any  possible  explosion  to  the  motor  itself. 

The  man  who  solved  the  tough  mathemat- 
ical problems  involved  is  R.  A.  "Pete"  Powell 
—  a  mathematical  analyst  whose  job  is  to  as- 
sist other  engineers  in  math  problems  which 
arise  in  any  number  of  difiFerent  projects. 

Powell's  Work  Is  Varied  and  Important 

Because  he  is  not  tied  down  to  any  one 
project;  Powell  seldom  has  two  similar  as- 
signments. Taking  established  engineering 
^nd  mathematical  principles,  soine  of  them 
extremely  complicated,  Powell  applies  them 
to  advanced  engineering  problems.  In  doing 
this.  Pete  is  able  to  make  such  calculations 
as  the  distortion  of  a  small  part  of  a  jet 
•ngine  caused  by  vibrations,  the  deflection 
occurring  in  a  turbine  part  when  it  runs  at 
operational  speeds,  or  the  forces  exerted 
upon  a  rotatijig  shaft  by  lubricants. 

27,00Q  GoHese  Sraduates  at  ftonorat  Electric 

t 

When  **Pete"  Powell  came  to  General  Elec- 
tric in  1933^  he  already  knew  the  kind  of 
work  he  wanted'  to  do.  Like  each  of  our 
27,000  college-graduate  empipyees.  he  is 
being  given  the  chance  to  grow  and  realize 
his  full  potential.  For  General  Electric  has 
long  believed  this:  T^Tiencver  fresh  young 
minds  are  given  freedom  to  make  progress, 
everybody  benefits  —  the  individual,  the 
Company,  and  the  country. 

Educational  Relations,  General  Electric 
Company,  Schenectady  5,  Xew  York 

■    -—i- * 1 


Progress  /s  Our  Most  fmpor^anf  Producf 


GENERAL  ^^  ELECTRIC 


f AGt  FOUR 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


SUNDAY,  OCTOBER  58,  195< 


Deacons  Come  From  Behind  To  Tie  Tar  Heels 


(CoTitimied  from  Page  1) 
drive  started.  A  personal  foul  call- 


and  fast.  R«ed  and  Buddy  Sas.ser^ 
both  snared  Wake  Forest  despera- 
tion aerials  in  the  dying  moments 
ed  against  Hathaway  on  the  first ,  ^^ile  Carpenter  stopped  a  Tar 
play  from  scrimmage  gave  the  [  Heel  threat  with  an  interception 
Deacs   running    room   from   their '  of  his  own.  Despite  all  the  fire- 


own  24,  and  on  the  next  three 
paiys,  Barnes  moved  the  ball  all 
the  w^ay  down  to  the  Carolina  31. 
After  a  Carpenter  pass  fell  in- 
complete, Barnes  drove  for  3  to  the 
28,  halfback  Jim  Dalrymple  blast- 
ed his  way  to  the  UNC  12,  and 
Barnes  went  to  10  where  it  was 
second  and  8.  Dalrymple  got  one 


works  there  were  no  real  threats 
and  the  game  ended  a  6-6  dead- 
lock. 

The  tie  brought  Carolina's  sea- 
son's reading  to  a  1-4-1  reading, 
while  Wake  Forest  has  a  1-3-2 
mark.  Last  Saturday  the  Deacs 
were  tied  by  Florida  State,  14-14. 

The  final  statistics  were  a  little 


MURALS 


to  the  9,  and  Dick  Daniels  picked  j  more    even    that    the    half    time 


up  five  to  the  four  as  the  fourth 
quarter  got  under  way.  Then  on 
the  next  play  with  a  fourth  and 
2  situation,  Barnes  smashed  off  the 
left  side  for  the  last  four  yards 
and  the  touchdown.  This  made  the 
score  &S  with  13.48  remaining. 

Carolina  couldn't  move  with  the 
kickoff  and  Vale  booted  a  59  yard 
kick  to  the  Wake  20.  From  this 
point,  the  Deacons  launched  a  last 
ditch  drive  that  carried  to  the  Car- 
olina 12  before  petering  out.  On 
this  thrust,  it  was  the  passing  of 
Charley  Carpenter  that  nearly 
turned  the  trick. 
LAST  MINUTE  FLURRY 

The  last  few  minutes  of  the 
game  were  wild  and  wooly  with 
pass    interceptions    coming    thick 


marks.  The  two  team  finished  all 
even  in  first  down  with  14  each, 
while  Carolina  came  off  the  big 
end  of  the  rushing  yardage,  gain- 
ing 245  to  209  for  the  Deacons. 

A  shining  light  in  the  Tar  Heel 
attack  all  afternoon  was  Wally 
Vale.  The  speedy  fullback  was  a 
wheelhorse  at  the  line  plunging 
post,  and  in  addition,  punted  five 
times  for  an  average  of  45.2  per 
kick. 

Next  Saturday  the  Tar  Heels 
face  one  of  their  toughest  assign- 
ments of  the  year  as  they  open  a 
three  week  series  of  road  games 
again?*  the  Tennessee  Vols  in 
Knox\'ille.  The  Vols  matched  Car- 
olina's of  last  week  yesterday  as 
they  clobbered  Maryland,  35-7. 


TOMORROW'S  TAG 
i  FOOTBALL  SCHEDULE: 

1  4  00— field  1.  Beta  vs  SPE  (w); 
I  field  2.  SAE  vs.  Phi  Delt  (w);  ttrid 
I  3,  ATO  vs  Kapp^  Sig  (w);  field  4, 
i  Sig  Chi  vs  Sig  Nu  (w);  field  3, 
i  Stacy-  1  vs  Everett-3. 

5:00— Manlev  vs  Med  Sch>2^ field 

- ^ Hi;::';V 


2,   E>verett-2   vs  Vic    Vil;   field  3, '     4:00  —  court-1,  Chi  Psi  vs  Zeta  I  Phi  Gam;  court-3,  Chi  Phi  vs  AK 
Dent  Sch  vs  BVP;  field  4,  Lewislpsi-2    (w).      court-2,   Delt   Sig   vs    Psi;  couri-4,  ATO  vs  Beta, 
vs  Law  Sch-2;  field  ^,  Med  Sch-2 1  Phi    Gam;    court-3.   KA   vs   TEP;  I     Tomorrow  evening  the  intramu- 
vs  Everett-l.  court-4.  Pika  vs  SAE.  |  ral   department   will   sponsor   the 

TOMORROW'S  !      5:00  —  court-1,    Chi    Psi-2    vs !  third    consecutive    Monday    night 

VOLLEYBALL  SCHEDULE:  !  sigma  Nu   (w);    court-2,    DKE  vsUpenhouse  from  7:00  to  9:00  p.m. 


WC  Speaker  Cites  Need 
For  Electoral  Refo^'m 

GREENSBORO    {/P)—A    change  j 
in    the    present    electoral    college! 
system  of  the  United  States  elec- 1 
tion  process  would  stack  the  cards 
against   the  Republicans,  "making 
the     election     of     a     Republican 
President  virtually   impossible,"  a 
Woman's     College    social    science 
forum  speaker  said  today. 

Dr.    Ruth    Silva,    associate    pro- 
fessor of  political  science  at  Penn- 
sylvania   State    University    and    a  I 
consultant  in  electoral  reform  for  | 
both    major   parties,   attacked   the 
proposed    Lodge-Gossett    plan    for ) 
revision  of  the  present  system. 


Rod  And  Gun  Day  Thursday 


Carolina  ladies  and  gentlemen 
who  fancy  themselves  as  real  out-  j 
doorsmen  will  get  a  chance  to  | 
prove  their  ability  and  have  a  great  I 
time  doing  it  Thursday. 

The  event  is  the  second  annual 
UNC  co-recreational  Rod  and  Gun 
Day  to  be  held    at    the    Durham ! 


Wildlife  Club  Area. 

The  event  is  this  year  sponsored 
by  the  Graham  Memorial  Activi- 
ties Board  and  the  intramural  de- 
partment, and  the  two  organiza- 
tions have  big  things  on  tap  for 
Carolina  students. 

Trophies    will    be   given    in    the 


STUDENTS: 

BUY  THIS  REMINGTON  PORTABLE  FOR 


$1  A  WEEK 

NOTHING  DOWN 

Payments  Will  Not  Start 
Until   February 

LEDBETTER-PICKARD 


FATE 
ADAMS, 

FIVEf' 
KEYS 


RALEljgHw^^liS 


munntcon  shot' 
mtwirt  •«  i.  (omnvt 


•S.M  a    t».5* 


.^M.  UTILE 
RICHAKD, 

—6MAT  ORCHESTRA" 

Vt  ETTA  SSSSE3V4'  - 

-JAMES|H|5siiiA^iii». 

♦♦•ROBINS   ^  «W TORRES    T        ; 

TOMMY    BROWM  '    y 

BIGJAYMcNEElY^f 

AmHis  6RiAT  HXK'WU  Orchestra  ^  ^ 


The  Story  of  a  man  like     SHANE,  with  the  suspense  of 
NOON!  A  story  with  real  plot,  real  dialogue  artd  real   people. 

A  NEW  AND  DIFFERENT  KIND  OF  MOTION  PICTURE! 


HIGH 


four   big     events,     archery,     trap  | 
shooting,  target  rifle  shooting  and  I 
bait  casting,  and  this  year  as  an  { 
added   attraction    there   will   be   a  j 
bass  and  bream  fishing  contest  with  ] 
individual  prizes  awarded  the  con-  j 
testants  who  catch  the  biggest  fish,  i 
All  students  except  those  on  the  j 
ROTC   rifle   teams   are  eligible   to  I 
participate.  Students  may  enter  as 
individuals    or    as   members    of   a 
four  man  team.  The  teams  do  not 
have    to    represent    a    specific   or- 
ganization,  such   as  dorm   or   fra- 
ternity, but  they  must  enter  men 
in  ail  four  events  to  constitute  a 
team.  Any  number  of  students  may 
enter  for  a  team  with  the  highest 
score    counting   toward    the    team 
total. 

The  equipment  will  be  furnish- 
ed, but  contestants  are  eligible  to 
use  their  own  equipment  in  all 
events  except  target  rifle  shooting. 
The  sponsors  have  urged  coeds 
to  enter  the  event,  their  slogan  be- 
ing, '.'certainly  their  must  be  some 
Annie  Oakleys  on  the  UNC  camp- 
us." Last  year,  coed  participation 
was  limited  but  a  larger  turnout 
is  expected  this  year. 

All  events  will  begin  at  2  p.m. 
Thursday  and  should  be  over  by 
5:15.  Instructors  and  equipment 
will  be  at  the  area,  at  1  p.m.  and 
contestants  are  ijivited  to  come  out 
early  for  practice. 

AH  entry  blaok.s  and  a  com- 
plete set  of  information  data  con- 
taining rules,  regulations  and  a 
detailed  map,  are  available  at  the 
information  desk  in  Graham  Mem- 
orial and  room  315  Woollen.  The 
deadline  for  entry  in  the  Rod  and 
Gun  Day  is  Tuesday  at  5  p.m.,  and 
all  students  are  urged  to  entfer 
immediately. 

CLASSIFIEDS        ~~ 

PAPER-BACKED  BOpKS  —  Good 
used  novels,  detective  yarns  and 
non-fiction  at  3  for  25c  in  the 
stand  by  our  front  door.  The 
Intimate   Bookshop. 


MO  (MM 

IKTuMS  mam 


She  Bra?^c>^^ 

H?M  Wrffi  A  LIE. 
THATGI^EWi^fro  A 

BN5iaKAr    ^^ 
TJfeliRScKl. 

,  STARRING 

iiWICiii 


JOHN  O'HARA'S 

FLAMING  PORTRAIT 

OF  THE  JAZZ  AGE 

and  the  guys  pnd 
gals  who  mad«  It 
rock  'n'  roll! 


The  Best 

Things  inlife 

Arefree 


a 


.  Sc;«n  Pl-iy  by  WINSTON  WUfR 

TECHNICOLOR     I^h^M  *»  CHASaS  MA^OUiS  WW!r.Lli  •  Kuiic  by  OiKilRl  WV.m 


TODAY  AND 


MONDAY 


/i 


GiriM      Ban       !ncst      Ston 
MacRAEDAIIiYB0R6NINE-N0l(TH 

eeLOM  by  »■  Luxa 
CiNkmaScoP^ 


/ 


NOW  PLAYING 


Carolina 


&■ 


HERE  ARE  YOUR  OLD  GOLD 


WIN  A 

WORLD 

TOUR 

FORTWO 

RMrraRft 
thtlrtten 

piizzi* 
'°  te  fWIR 

the  MM 
•f  aR 

(Mitftor 
IfaiivMiHy 


•i':' 

*  *  ■  riT/a.' 

*  -     \ 

,1  '    ■'•     '.'. 

-=av?'-  :• 

*     t 

♦  ^r", 

-'^i^    rf 

i-^h-"*- 

PUZZLES 


PUZZLE  NO.  13 


CLUE:  This  Baptist  college  for  women 
WM  chartered  and  opened  in  1S33.  In 
1937  Maude  Adams  became  a  professor 
in  its  famed  drama  department. . 

ANSW^., _, ^^ ,__ 


Name 

Addrsst. 


City 

CoUete. 


.State. 


HoM  until  you  have  completed,  all  24  pusztM 


PUZZLE  NO.  14 


CLUE:  Woodrow  Wilson  was  the  thirteenth 
president  of  this  university  for  men. 
Opened  in  1747,  it  was  the  fourth  colo- 
nial college. 

ANSWER ^^ 


Addrstt. 


CU%. 


.Staie^ 


College. 


Hcdd  until  you  have  eompleted  all  24  pntzict 


FAT  TO  SUM! 


Bettye  Arnold 
St  238  lbs. 


61  lbs.  lighter 
and  still  slimming! 


YOU'LL  aO  FOR 
OLD  GOLDS 


EltlMr  MEQULAR,  KING  SIZE  ar 
llw  QRCAT  NEW  FILTEfIS 

Old  Golds  taste  terrific!  The 
Old  Golds  give  you  the  best 
tobaccos.  Nature- 
lipened  tobaccos . .  • 


I 


so  RICH, 
SOUGHT, 
iK  SO  GOLDEN 

r     BRIGHT! 

1*. 

if    . 


v.»»- 


y^ 


PUZZLE  NO.  IS 


CLUE:  Named  for  a  British  earl,  this 
college  for  men  was  founded  by  Eleazar 
Wheelock  in  1769  by  royal  charter  from 
George  III.  A  famed  winter  sports  carnival 
is  held  here. 

ANSWER 


Name,^ 
Addreaa. 
CUp 


.Slate. 


C«lUge 

Hold  until  you  hav«  corapletad  all  24  puuic 


If  $  SO  easy  to  lose  weight  with 
Helena  Rubinstein's  Reduce-Aid! 


Too  fat»  If  TOOT  WtSONAl  KAN  fdfc 

I^es.'po-T.  WW-IEH  AND  MENI 

are  due  to  o»er.  With  RedsiceAid  you  get  free, 
eating,  take  Helena  Rubinstein'*  Reduce 
Helena  Rabin.  Book  with  four  medically  tested 
stein's  Reduce-  eating  programs.  You  eat  what 
Aid  tablets,  fol*  you /»&«  »nd  never  go  "hog-wild" 
low  her  special  with  appetite  frustrations.  You 
Reduce  Plan,  and  this  time  your  may  e»t  bedtime  snacks.  Sunday 
weight  will  be  under  control  brunches,  desserts,  and  never 
for  sure! 


MEDICALLY  FORMULATED 

Reduce-Aids  arc  safe,  formu- 
lated   in    the    famous    Helena 


even  think  of  counting  calories. 

WIN  YOUR  LOSING  BATTLE  I 

Reduce-Aids  will  work  wonders 

for  you,  when  used  as  directed,  or 


Rubinstein  labdratories.'  They  you  get  a  full  refund    Candy  or 

arc   packed  with  vitamins  and  Coffee  flavors.  140  tablets,  4.week 

minerals.  Their  exclusive  Appe-  supply,  2:^5.  Double  family  size, 

Curb*  helps  curb  your  desire  for  5.00.  Each  one  comes  with  a  gift 

food  and  cigarettes.  Purse  kit  for  a  day's  supply.  ,^  ^ 


>  BEST  TASTE  YET 

IN  A  FILTEH  CIGARETTE; 

<tapTlcM  1»S«.  HiMy  B.  BollMw  -^    , 


NEED  BACK  PUZZLES?    RULES? 

Send  five  cents  for  each  puzzle;  five 
cents  for  a  complete  set  of  rulra.  Enclose 
a  self -addressed,  stamped  envelope.  Mail 
to  Tangle  Schools,  P.  O.  Box  9,  Grand 
Central  Annex,  New  York  17,  N.  Y, 


.Send    Helena    Rubinstein's   Reduce-Aid 
Candy  D  Coffee  Q         2.95  Q  5.00  D 

Nain* — 

Address 

Zone .Stale- 


City 

rliarRf  D   Check,  Money  Order  D    C.O.D.  D 
PI»«,«  add  S«1m  T«x  where  ntcn—ay. 


SUTTON'S 

DRUG 
STORE 

Phone  9-8781 


^< 


.'■';»•-■? 


f  r  I  -f- 


li 


a 


.•^' 


■■.9i>'int\<^U 

i.  r'- 

-'vj     -. 

'n^\^t%' 

■  ■•  '■X 

'V,:Mi^i 

'■".    ~   'ir 

m-i.,^ 

>■-■«' 

■*^  n-i--- 

It 

»>■  r,t*J' 

or 

■)mi:: 

« 

'%-.-•--;.  . 

^.^_^-^- 


'%:  ^  k 


S2ae  asp  /ed  for  It 


Onoe  upon  a  time  there  was  a  snaxzy  aquab  named 
Cleopatm  living  in  Egypt.  She  came  from  a  very  good 
family  ypH  had  a  figure  like  a  million  bucka. 

One  day  she  met  JuUua  Caesar,  who  was  Roamin'  Egsrpt 
on  a  very  Hbttal  expense  account. 


•t.'-'- 


"Ah  ha.**  thinks  Cleo,  "here  is  whne  I  cr^ta  about  ^ 
pafies  for  The  Dedine  and  Fall  (rf  the  Roman  Empire.  When 
I'm  through  with  this  boy,  I'll  be  Queen  of  Egypt  and 
he'U  be  selling  his  memoirs  in  drugstoraa  for  two-bita 
a  copy.** 


-^^ 


So  she  went  for  the  full  cotmt  at  a  high-priced  beauty 
saloon  and  bought  several  quarts  of  MidrUg^  on  the 
Pyramids,  ^"— 

But  Caesar  wasn't  buying  the  pitch.  **Hmmm/*  thinks 
Cleo,  "I'll  finesse  the  Queenship  witli  my  ace." 

Whereupon  she  sauntered  in  with  aeyeral  tankards  of  thf 
fine  beer  that  Egyptians  had  been  brewing  for  thousands 
of  years.  (Let's  face  it — ^here  comes  tiie  commercial.) 

"By  Jupiter,"  said  Julie,  "this  is  good!  Sudi  clear,  spar- 
kling brilliance!  Such  refreshing  flavor!  Such  creamy  foam! 
Be  mine ...  be  Qtieen . : .  but  above  all  be  generous  with 
this  delightful  brew!  Wherever  did  you  learn  to  make  it?" 

"Why ; : .  my  mimuny  taught  me,"  she  answered  coyly, 
passing  him  a  pretzeL 

And  frx>m  then  on,  Cleo  clung  to  Caesar;  even  in  Rome 
where  she  heard  a  soothsayer  mutter  something  about 
the  Ides  of  March. 

"Ah,  the  Ides  of  March,"  exclaim^  Cleo,  "that's  Bock 

Beer  time  in  Egypt." 

Not  long  after,  Caesar  got 
rubbed  outt  and  Cleo  got 
herself  back  to  Egypt  where 
she  carried  on  with  Marc 
Anthony  until  Augustus 
upped  and  fixed  his  wagon. 
Anthony  did  himself  in  and 
Cleo  did  likewise  wbeai  her 
charms  failed  to  awe 
Augustus. 

"I'U  take  a  abort  bier,*'  said 
Cleo  as  she  lay  dying  bom 
the  asp's  sting. 

And  ao  ended  the  career  of 
one  of  the  best  salRsm^Rn  that 
beer  ever  had. 

moral:  You,  too,  can  make  social  conquest^ 
with  the  help  of  fine  beer.  Trecu  a  friend 
to  a  bottle  of  Budweiser.  And  (unless  he's  a 
tightwad)  he^s  sure  to  return  the  compliment. 


iA«II    BIEt 

aNHBUSBK-BUaCH,  INC.   •   ST.  LOUIS   •    MEWAJIK 


LOS  ANGBLBS 


^ 


If  II  C  Library 

Serials   Dspt. 
Chspel   Htl^-.    N. 


C. 


WEATHER 

Cloudy  and  cool,  with  expected 


high  of  68. 


VOL.  LVIi     NO.  34 


Complete  (yP)   Wire  Service 


CHAPEL  HILL,  HOUTH  CA 


Beloved  Skipper' 
Coffin  Dies  At  69; 
Ex  J-School  Head 


^h  t  Daito  War  Mt  1 1 


TU  HI  ON 

It  hurts  us.  See  editorial  pa^e  2. 


TUeSDAY.  OCTOBER  30,  19M 


Offices  in   Graham   Memorial 


FOUR  PAGES  THIS   ISSUE 


RALaCH,  {/P)— Oscar  Jackson 
(Skipper)  Coffin,  one  of  the  most 
colorful  and  'oeloved  leaders  in 
southern  journalism,  died  in  Rex 
Hospital    here    last    night. 

He  had  been  under  treatment  for 
serious  condition  for  several 
weeks.  He  was  69  years  old.  | 

Coffin  had  lived  with  a  relative  I 
for  a  few  months  since  his  retire- ' 
ment  from  the  University  of  North 
Carolina    journalism     faculty    last 
summer. 

He  was  for  many  years  a  colu- 
mnist and  editorial  writer  for  The 
Greensboro  Daily  News. 

Coffin  retired  from  the  Univer- 
sity faculty  last  June,  after  round- 
ing out  thirty  years  of  service.  He 
had  retired  as  Dean  of  the  School 
of  Journalism  in  1953.  About  200 
ot  his  former  students  gathered  in 
Chapel  Hill  to  do  honor  as  he  went 
into  private  life.  At  that  time  he 
made  a  brief  and  modest  speech, 
couched  in  his  customary  caustic 
humor,  in  which  he  seemed  to  im- 
ply that  his  life  was  nearing  its 
end. 

■  The  Skipper"  appeared  in  Cha- 
pel Hill  in  1926  to  head  the  in- 
fant Department  of  Journalism,  oc- 
cupying a  chair  vacated  by  Gerald 
W.  Johnson.  Under  him  the  de- 
partment expanded  greatly,  and  in 
several  moves  to  larger  quarters, 
became  a  full-fledged  school.  He 
turned  out  many  hundreds  of 
graduates. 

He  ip-.parted  a  sense  of  candor 
to  his  £tudenth  and  gave  them 
painless  introductions  to  North  Ca- 
rolina, its  history  and  the  workings 
of  its  modern  system,  particularly 
its  politics.  In  later  years,  especi- 
ally since  World  War  II,  he  had 
carried  ever-lighter  teaching  loads, 
and  was  aided  by  a  large  and  cap- 
aWe  staff.  He  had  for  many  yearg 
gone  it  alone,  and  for  even  longer 
worked  only  with  Walter  Spear- 
man. 

Coffin  was  born  in  Moore  County. 
N.  C  Feb.  4,  1887,  the  son  of  Alex- 
ander Hbrniey  and  Ida  Elizabeth 
Moring  Coffin. 

He  graduated  from  the  Univer- 
sity in  1909,  became  a  reporter  for 
The     Asheboro  Courier  in     1910,  j 
taught  in  public  school  for  a  year,  j 
and  in   1911   joined   The   Winston- 1 
Salem  Journal   as  a  reporter.  I 

He  was  news  editor  of  The  Char- 1 
lotte   Observer  from   1912-16;   city! 
editor  of  The  Raleigh  Times,  1916-  j 
18;   editor  of  The  Raleigh  Times,  j 
1918-26.  He  went  to  the  University  j 
in  that  year.  He  also  began  writ- 
ing his  Greensboro  Daily  News  Col- 
umn,   "Shucks    and    Nubbins,"    in 
1926. 

Coffin,  married  Gertrude  Wil- 
son in  1912,  and  leaves  one  on, 
Edwin  Wilson  Coffin,  a  Durham 
tobacconist. 


He  was  a  Democrat  and  a  leader 
of  Orange  County  politics.  He  was 
a  Methodist. 

Only  last  week,  apparently  re- 
covering from  his  serious  condition 
of  some  months  past.  Coffin  had 
visited  friends  in  Chapel  Hill,  im- 
proving. 

Funeral  arrangements  were  in- 
complete last  night. 


Aldermen  D'idh't  Make  Official  Promise 
To  Lift  Columpia  Sti  Limit ,  Says  Mayor 


"Skipper"  Coffin 
,  .  .died  last  night 


Caravan  Plans 
Almost  Done 

Plans  for  welcoming  the  UNC 
Caravan  by  the  University  of  Vir- 
ginia are  nearing  completion  as 
ticket  sales  here  enter  their  final 
week. 

The  UNC  Caravan  Committee 
has  been  informed  that  a  recep- 
tion will  be  held  Saturday  after- 
noon in  Madison  Hall  at  UVA.  This 
will  also  be  the  scene  of  a  danCe  ' 
that  night.  The  student  union  will  < 
features  combo  and   refreshments.  I 

In  addition,  many  of  the  fratern- 
ities at  UVA  which  have  chapters 
here  are  planning  parties  for  their } 
visiting  brothers.  The  arrange- 1 
ments  are  being  made  with  the  un- 1 
derstanding  that  the  party-goers  | 
need  not  return  home  until  three  j 
o'clock  Sunday  afternoon. 

Harry  House,  caravan  commit- 
tee chairman,  reports  that  hotel  j 
rooms  may  be  obtained  at  reason- 1 
able  rates  by  writing  or  wiring  | 
E.  R.  Smith.  Albemarle  Hotel,  615  j 
W.  Main  St.,  Charlottesville,  Vir- 1 
ginia.  With  four  men  in  a  room 
the  room  rent  will  be  approxi- ; 
mately  $2.50. 

Committee  Chairman  House  ad- : 
vises     Carolina   students   to     buy  j 
their  tickets  right  away  as  the  bus 
company    must    know    how   many ! 
seats  have  been  sold  by  Wednes- 
day. I 


By   NEIL    BASS 

No  official  promise  to  lift  the 
parking  restriction  on  S.  Columbia 
St.  for  60  days  has  been  made,  ac- 
cording 10  Mayor  O.  K.  Cornwell. 

It    was    reported    last    week    by  ' 
Chainnan    Wilbur n    Davis    of    the 
student  government  Traffic  Advis-  j 
ory  Commission  that     representa-  \ 
lives  from  the  Board  of  Aldermen 
had  tentatively  agreed  to  lift  the 
ban  for  60  days  if  fraternities  pro- ' 
mise  to   take  some   action    during  . 
that  period  toward  alleviating  theii*  [ 
parking  problem.  j 

But  Mayor  Cornwell  said  yester-  j 
day  that  aldermen  representatives 
were  acting  without  "authorization" 
if   they   suggested   temporary    lift-  { 
ing  of  the  ban.  ! 

Cornwell  also  said  Kenneth  Put-1 
nam,  one  of  two  representative*} 
from  the  Board  of  Aldermen  pre*'! 
ent  at  a  meeting  with  Chairman  i 
Davis  of  the  Traffic  Commission,  | 
denied  mentioning  lifting  the  ban  i 
at  the  session. 

Putnam  was  not  available  for 
comment  on  Cornwell's  statement. . 

Eh*.  Paul  Wager  of  the  UNC  Po- 
litical Science  Dept.,  other  repre- 
resentative  from  the  Board  of  Al- 
dermen present  at  the  session,  .said 
there  was  discussion  of  the  "pos- 
sibility" of  temporarily  lifting  the 
ban  while  S.  Columbia  St.  frater- ' 
nitie^  tried  to  work  out  some  solu- 
tion   to    the    parking   problem.        j 

"No  promise  was  made,  how- ' 
ever,"  he  said.  i 

Asked  if  he  would  support  lift- 
ing the  ban  for  00  days  if  frater- 1 
nitios  demonstrated  some  positive ' 
action     toward  solution   of     their  J 
parking   problem,   Dr.   Wager  .said 
he  would. 

"I  can't  speak  for  the  whole  | 
board  .  however,"  he  said.  | 

Dr.  Wajfer  mW  he  thought  $J 
Columbia  St.  fraternities  were  dis- ■ 
playing  an  "uncooperative  atti- 1 
tude"  at  present.  .1 

He  nientioned  speclflcallx  the  | 
closing  of  drives  so  that  to^i;|jjar- 1 
bage  triicks  could  not  enter  to  em- ' 
ply  garbage  cans. 

Wager  called  this  "spiteful"  and 
said  if  fraternities  displayed  an 
"uncooperative"  attitude,  it  would 
be  met  wiith  "uncooperative"  re- 
sponse by  the  board. 

S.  Columbia  St.  fraternities  are 
to  report  to  the  traffic  commis.sion 
by  Friday   as   to  whether   or  not 


i 

they  have  any  plan  which   would  ;;    Chairman  Davis  has  stated  ear-       As   of   last   Friday   S.   Columbia  ,  Ave.  and  Franklin  St.  during  the 
alleviate   their  congested    parking  lier  his  commission  was  drc^ping    St.    fraternities   involved   had,   for    summer, 
situation,  Chairman  Davis  said.       iihe  S.  Columbia  St.  situation  and-  the  most  part,  taken  no  action  on    PRAISE 

The  report  will  then  be  conveyed  Vould  move  on  to  a  study,  of  the   their  parking  problem.  j     Chairman  Davis 'of  the   Traffic 

to  the  Board  of  Aldermen  which  bverall  parking  problem  on  campus  The  Board  of  Aldermen  imposed  Commission  praised  the  aWermen 
will  discuss  it  at  its  Nov.  12  m^t-  |is  soon  as  the  fraternities'  report '  a  two-hour  parking  time  limit  on  and  Chapel  Hill-Carrboro  Mer- 
'"2.  I.ivas  conveyed  to  the  aldermen.       '  S.  Columbia  St.  between  Cameron    chants'   Association   for   their   co- 


operation in  his  announcement 
that  the  Commission  would  move 
on  to  other  problems  as  soon  as  the 
fraternities'  report  was  passed  on 
to  the  aldermen. 

He  emphasized  the  problem  was 
now  in  the  fraternities'  hands. 


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String  Quartet  Gives 
New  Composition  At  8 


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Here's  The  B«Hot  Stodents  WiU  Use 


Th»  tbov*  is  •  ««m^l«  of  Mi*  ballot  to  bo  um4^  Nov.  Tin  tnock  subornctoriai  AIhI  National  el*ctiens 
hore<  All  UNC  students  will  be  able  to  v*t»,  regard  less  of  ag*,  according  to  John  ir«bfc«»  «»<hairman  of 
the  GMAB  PoUs  Committe*.  Balloting  wiM  tokr  place  in  Gorrard  Hall,  with  GMAB  Members  attending 
the  polls.  .  I       . 


\N  THE  INFIRMARY 


Misses  Barbara  Smith,  Carolyn 
Roberts,  Ruth  Woodruff. 

George  Stavnitski,  John  Hunt, 
Jamos  Long,  James  Spears,  Ric- 
hard Gustafsan,  Robert  Southern, 
Jess*  Waft,  Alston  Cain,  James 
Woodard,  Joseph  Friedberg, 
Ernest  Briggs  and  Isaac  Merrill. 


^    *  Student  Party  Approves 
Proposed  Platform 


The  Student  Party  last  night  ap- 
proved unanimously  its  party  plat- 
form for  the  Fall  semester,  1956. 

In  the  declaration  of  policy,  ap- 
proved on  the  first  vote,  the  Stu- 
dent  Party  pledged: 

(1)  "to  work  towards  the  con- 
struction of  parking  areas  to  re- 
lieve traffic  congestion  and  allow 
the  eventual  removal  of  present 
automobile    restrictions." 


,      (2)  "to  work  through  the  execu- 
'  live  branch  of  student  government 
[for   better   student-merchant   rcla- } 
j  tions  including  the  re-appraisal  by 

Chapel  Hill  businessmen  of  prevail- 1 

ing  prices  in  certain  local  stores."  j 
(3)  'to  work  for  the  d€\'elopraent ; 

of  a  specific  student  proposal  for  | 
, additional  dormitory  space  on  the] 

campus."  ! 

Other    projects    pledged    in    the . 

statement  included:  a  complete  re- 1 


OVER  LENOIR  HALL  DINING  ROOM: 


il'»M' 


Students   And   Athletic    Director   Clash 


l%t- 


niA.  •4n^^':  i^*, ;, 


By  WALLY   KURALT 

•  "Which  is  more  important, 
the  Pi  Sigma  Alpha  or  the  foot- 
ball team?" 

This  question,  raised  by  Athle- 
tic Director  C.  P,  (Chuck)  Erick- 
8on,  came  during  an  interview 
concerning  the  lootball  team's 
"taking  over"  of  t.he  largest  up- 
stairs private  dining  room  in 
Lenoir  Hall. 

Since  the  first  of  this  semes- 
ter, gridmen  have  been  eating 
lunch  and  dinner  Monday 
through  Friday  ai  Lenoir  Hall, 
the  only  exception  being  on  Fri- 
days before  away  games.  In  pre- 
vious years,  the  team  ate  at  the 
Monogram  Club. 

Several  groups,  including  the 
YMCA'and  Pi  Sigma  Alpha,  hon- 
orary political  science  fraternity, 
have  protested  the  football 
team's  "taking  over"  the  room, 
according  to  G.  W.  Prilla'man, 
Lenoir  Hall  director. 
THREE  ROOMS 

In  Lenoir  Hall,  there  are  three 
private  dining  rooms  upstairs; 
the  bark  room  can  accomodate 
from  30  to  56  persons,  the  mid- 
dle from  20  to  40,  and  the  large 
tfront  room  can  serve  80  people. 
The  front  room  is  ued  by  the  50 
football  team  members  and 
coaches  from  nocn  to  1:30  p.m., 
and  from  6  to  7:30  p  m.,  '♦mak- 


ing it  impossible  for  any  other 
large  organization  to  have -a  sup- 
per meeting  there,"  Bob  Leonard, 
YMCA  director  of  freshmen 
work  said.  * 

Leonard,  adviser  of  the  Fresh- 
man Fellowship,  has  been  able 
to  get  the  room  one  time  "be- 
fore the  team  started  eating 
there"  for  the  large  Freshman 
Fellowship  group. 

"There  is  a  time  and  money 
angle  to  this,"  Leonard  said.  "It 
costs  too  much  to  eat  anywhere 
other  than  Lenoir,  and  if  we  met 
somewhere  else  we'd  have  to 
then  move  to  the  Library  for  our 
meeting,  a  loss  of  time  and  mem- 
bers." 

'We  need  the  room  for  the 
team,"  said  E^rickson.  'The  Mo- 
nogram Club  is  neither  large 
enough  nor  private  enough  for 
us.  After  the  boys  practice  a  few 
hours,  and  shower  and  dress,  it's 
almost  6:30." 

We  show  movies  and  have  dis- 
cussions during  the  meal,  so  we 
can  save  time,*'  explained  Ei-ick- 
son.  "These  boys  have  to  study 
and  keep  up  their  grades  just 
like  everybody  else." 
SPECIAL  FOOD 

The  football  team  is  served 
special  steaks  and  special  food, 
according  to  Prillaman.  "Do  they 
appreciate   this     special   food?" 


asks  John  Riebel,  YMCA  asso- 
ciate secretary.  "Does  all  the 
special  attention  they  are  receiv- 
ing help  any?" 

"There  is  a  medical  problem 
concerned  with  the  food,"  says 
Erickson.  "These  boys  are  phy- 
sically active  and  need  special 
food  to  help  build  them  up  and 
keep  them  going." 

"I  think  these  groups  are  show- 
ing a  v/jy**  childish,  'cry-baby" 
attitude,"  said  Eh-ickson.  "The 
dining  hall  agreed  to  let  us  use 
the  mom  so  we  could  sBVeftime?. 
We  a^ked  first  and  we  reserved' 
the  room.  This  is  merely  a  case, 
of  one  activity  versus  another," 
said  Erickson. 

"Six  years  ago,  the  YMCA  sug' 
gested  that  Lenoir  Hall  utilize 
the  second  floor  storage  space 
in  the  north  end  of  the  building," 
Leonard  said.  "It  was  suggested 
that  tables  be  put  in  so  students 
could  have  supper  meetings  for 
a  reasonable  price.  In  this  way, 
they  could  eat,  talk  and  be 
throuch   in  an   hour  or  so." 

"Erickson  and  Tatum  needed 
those  rooms,  so  they  took  them 
over,"  I.*onard  added.  "They 
went  to  Prillaman  and  mention- 
ed they'd  like  to  have  the  rooms. 
Prillaman  said  others  needed  the 
rooms. 

"I  referred  the  matter  to  the 


chancellor  and  UNC  Business 
Manager  Claude  Teague,"  .said 
said  Prillaman. 

Neither  Teague  nor  Chancellor 
House  could  remember  taking  ac- 
tion on  the  matter. 
HOUSE 

"Whether  •  anyone  asked  me 
anything  about  it  last  spring,  I 
can't  remember  at  this  tih>e,  nor 
up  pntil  this  afternoon  (Monday) 
liad  I  heard  there  was  any  con- 
troversy about  it,  but  on  the 
isstre  I  will  state  now  that  I 
(*Jf»o^ughly  approve  of  the  assign- 
ment of  this  room  to  the  football 
squad,"  said  House. 

"I  have  asked  Mr.  Ma^ill.  dir- 
ector of  student  activities,  to 
look  into  the  matter  and  report 
to  me,"  House  added. 

"Prillaman  knew  people  were 
being  deprived  when  he  let  them 
have  the  room,"  said  Riebel. 
"There  ^  is  no  other  reasonable 
room  to  have  supper  meeting^ 
in." 

"I  think  thi.s  is  a  very  a.sinine 
attitude,"  .said  Erick.son.  "True, 
thinss  are  crrwrled — eveythinc's 
crowded.  Most  of  this  was  built 
when  the  school  was  smaller. 
It's  highly  ridiculous  to  exnect 
us  to  move  out  for  .some  other 
srroup.  It's  like  each  child  want- 
ing the  same  bedroom.  Tliey  all 
can't  have  it,"  said  E>ickaon. 


"Other  groups  have  plenty  of    | 
time,"  Erickson  said.  "Our  boys 
hare    to    practice.     Tatum    only 
sees  them  on  the  field  about  two 
hours  a  day.  Then  we  study  other    ' 
teams  at  supper,"  he  said.  ! 

'Tho.ee  tkther  groups  can  use 
the  room  Saturday  or  Sunday  or 
Fridays     before   away     games,"    , 
said  Erickson.  "Besides,  there  are 
only   a  few  more  weeks  in  the    ! 
football  season.   Then  they  can    | 
eat  there  every  day,  and  sleep-  i 
in  it,  as  far  as  I'm  concerned," 
said  Erickson.  * 

IMPROVE  RtLATiONS  | 

"When  Tatum  came  here,  he    I 
said  he  wanted  to  see  one  thing 
improved.  That  was  the  feeling 
between     football   players     and 
students,"  said  Leonard.   "I  ap-    . 
prove  of  trying  to  improve  rela- 
tionships, but  how  much  can  he  ^ 
improve    them    by   taking    away    : 
ojher   students'    prfvileges?"  | 

"We  are  going  as  far  and  as   j 
hard  as  we  can,"  said  E>ickson.    | 

"I'll  not  consider  moving  out    ! 
now.  I'm  going  to  stick  to   my 
guns,  ril   carry   it   all   the   way 
to  the  chancellor,  if  necessary," 
said  Erickson. 

"If  they  have  some  big  crowd 

on  Saturday  afternoon,  tell  them 

to  come  on  over  and  we'll  move 

out  of  the  stadium  for  them,"  he 

•  eoaclud«d. 


view  of  book  and  supply  prices  in 
campus  stores;  to  work  for  addi- 
tional vending  machines  in  dormi- 
tories; to  work  towirds  the  achie- 
vement of  a  more  liberal  policy  on 
payment  of  student  workers  in  Uni- 
versity-operated eating  places;  and  j 
the  presentation   within   the   next  I 
few  months  of  i  student-originated  ; 
proposal  for  the  development  of  a  ' 
new  student  union. 

"We  have  had  excellent  co-op- 
eration in  fulfilling  the  planks  in  i 
our  platform,"  Bob  Young  told  the  ' 
assembly. 

"We'll  do  the  job  we've  always 
done,  whether  we  win  or  lose," 
said  SP  Chairman  Tom  Lambeth. 
"It'll  help  if  vfe  win,"  he  added. 

The   SP   has   decided   to   "show 
what  is  right  with  us,  rather  than 
what  is  wrong  with  the  other  par-  j 
t>,"  Lambeth  said.  i 


Kyle  Hayes 
Will  Speak 


A  new  composition  by  Amer- 
ican composer  William  Hoskins 
of  Jacksonville,  Fla.,  -will  be 
presented  to  Chapel  Hill  audi- 
ences by  the  University  String 
Quartet  at  8  p.m.  today  in  Hill 
Hall. 

It  will  mark  the  third  of  the 
Dept.  of  Music's  Tuesday  Even- 
ing Series,  which  are  open  to 
the   public   v.-ithout   charge. 

"The  new  'String  Quartet' 
composition  was  started  some 
years  ago,"  Edgar  Alden,  first 
violinist  for  the  University 
String  Quartet  said.  '"But  Mr. 
Hoskins  revised  it  this  summer 
for  presentation  at  Mars  Hill 
College's  first  American  Com- 
posers' Festival. 

"Strangely  enough,  the  revi- 
sion was  being  done  throughout 
our  rehearsals  here.  Mr.  Hos- 
kins would  mail  the  revisions. 
so  that  revision  and  rehearsals 
came  one  at  a  time,"  Alden  ex- 
plained. 

The  first  number  to  be  given 
will  be  Haydn's  Quartet  Opus 
76,  No.  4.  Thje  composer  fre- 
quently published  works  in  sets 
of  aix  or  even  12.  This,  the 
fourth,  is  well-known  as  the 
"Sunrise"  Quartet,  because  of 
rts  opening  ascending  phrase  ia 
the  first  vioMn.  j 

Beethoven's  String  Quartet  in 
E  Flat,  Opus  74,  will  follow  in- 
termission.  It  is  know^n  as  the  j 
"Harp"  quartet  with  reference  j 
to  the  pizzicato  passages  for  all  i 
instruments  in  the  first  move-  | 
ment.  i 

Other    members    of    the    Uni- 
versity   String    Quartet    include:    j 
Dorothy  Alden,  viola,  Mary  Gray    j 
Clarke,   cello,    and    Jean   Heard, 
violin. 

Alden  is  chairman  of  instruc- 
tion in  string  instruments  here. 


Mrs.  Alden  has  developed  a  pro- 
gram of  string  instruction  in  the 
Chapel    Hill    schaol    system. 

Mrs.  Heard,  whose  husband  Is 
a  profeslor  of  political  science, 
has  lived  in  Chapel  Hill  since 
1950  and  is  the  mother  of  four 
children.  She  w^s  graduated 
from  Juilliard  School  of  Music 
and  studied  with  Mischa  Mischa- 
koff.  internationally  known  vio- 
linist heard  at  the  first  concert 
of  the  Tuesday   Evening  Series. 

Miss  Clarke  is  an  instructor 
in  cello  and  first  cellist  in  the 
\jyiC  Symphony  Orchestra.  She 
has  appeared'  as  soloist  on  var- 
ious occasions  in  the  five  years 
she  has  been  in  Chapel  Hill. 

IDC  Sponsors  Sale 
Of  Blazers  Tomorrow 

The  Interdormitory  Council  will 
sponsor  a  blazer  sale  tomorrow  in 
Graham  Memorial's  Roland  Park- 
er Lounge. 

Fittings  for  the  coats,  which 
range  in  price  from  $19.95  to 
$30.95,  will  be  made  by  a  repre- 
sentative from  the  Robert  Blazer 
Co. 

The    fittings    will   be   held   from 
10  a.m.  to  5  p.m. 

Sample  coDts  are  currently  on 
display  in   the  Y  and  L>enoir  Hall. 


UP  Completes 
Slate  Tonight 
For  Elections 


Hodges  Pays  'Social' 
Call  On  J.  M.  Morehead 

RALEIGH  — (y!p)—  North  Caro- 
lina's travel-minded  governor  was 
in  New  York  Monday.^ 

The  governor's  office  reported 
that  Gov.  Hodges  flew  to  New 
York  yesterday  to  visit  at  the  Rye, 
N.  Y.,  home  of  John  Motley  More- 
head,  prominent  industrialist  and 
Tar  Heel  native.  The  governor's 
office  described  the  trip  as  "pure- 
ly  social." 

It  said  the  governor  planned  to 
return  to  the  state  by  train  Tues- 
day night  and  that  he  would  be  in 
his  office  Wednesday. 


'  Kyle  Hayes,  Republican  candi- 
date for  governor  of  North  Caro- 
lina, will  speak  In  Graham  Mem- 
orial's Main  Lounge  tonight  at 
7:30. 

"All  interested  citizens,  wheth- 
er students  or  townspeople,  are 
invited  to  attend,"  said  Keith  Sny- 
der, president  of  the  campus 
Young  Republicans  Club.  A  recep- 
tion will  honor  Hlyes  after  his 
talk. 

In  conjunction  with  the  talk, 
Luke  Corbett.  RYC  special  proj- 
ects chainnan,  s«ld: 

"Anyone    who    hasn't    got  hi^ 

"Ike"    button    may    drop    by  our 

table  in  Y-Court  Tuesday  and 
pick  one  up." 


Dec,  March 
Dates  Sef  For 
Entrance  Exam 

Dates  for  entrance  examinations 
to  attend  apy  branch  of  the  Con- 
solidated University  next  year 
were  announced  yesterday  by 
W.  D.  Perry,  director  of  the  UNC 
Testing  Service. 

Tests  will  be  held  simultaneous^ 
ly  across  the  state  Dec.  i,  and  15. 
1956,  and   March  23.   1957. 

Results  of  the  tests  will  be  used 
as  criteria  for  admission  of  stu- 
dents to  the  three  branches. 

Cities  and  towns  in  which  the 
tests  will  be  given  will  be  an- 
nounced wtihin  a  few  days.  Perr>' 
said. 

Perry  said  the  Testing  Service 
here  will  offer  the  same  entrance 
examinations  all  summer,  sched- 
uled each  Wednesday  at  9:30  a.m.. 
beginning  June  5  and  continuing 
through  Aug.  28. 

Rules  for  the  new  entrance 
examination  policy  were  passed  by 
the  executive  committee  of  the 
(INC  Board  of  Trustees  in  1956. 


^  The  University  Party  will 
iiieet  tonight  at  7:30  p.m.  in  Ro- 
land Parker  Lounges  1  and  2  to 
complete  its  nominations  for  the 
Nov.    13   election. 

Nominees  for  Freshman  Class 
officers  and  for  the  Town  Mens 
and  Women's  Legislature  seat  will 
be  chosen.  Thirteen  seats  are  open 
in  the  men's  division  and  two  in 
the  women's. 

Mike  Weinman,  UP  parly  chair- 
mai^,  feels  that  the  UP  slate  is 
one  of  the  finest  ever  presented. 
"I  am  confident,"  he  says,  "that 
the  quality  of  the  candidates 
nominated  tonight  willbe  as  high 
I  as  that  of  those  nominated  last 
Tuesday  night  La.st  Tuesday  we 
nominated  the  finest  slate  of  can- 
didates the  party  has  every  been 
priviledged    to    put    forward. ' 

"Our  Junior  Class  nominees  are 
the  finest  in  the  Junior  Class,, 
and  our  dorm  legislature  nominees 
are  unequaled  in  their  desire  to 
serve    and    capability,"    he   said. 

Weinman  also  predicts  that  the 
UP  will  take  both  class  office 
slates  and  gain  a  majority  in  the 
legislature. 

All  representatives  have  been 
reminded  to  bring  their  organiza- 
tion dues.  Petition  members  have 
been  urged  to  be  prepared  to  pay 
their  $1.00  yearly  dues  if  they 
haven't   already   done   so. 

Weinman  asks  that  members 
use  ash  trays  when  smoking  at 
party  meetings.  Last  week  the 
floor  was  burned  from  cigarettes 
and  similar  occurrences  will  cause 
the  party  to  lose  the  privilege  of 
using  Graham  Memorial  for  meet- 
ings. 


GM'S  SLATE 


The  following  activities  Are 
scheduled  for  Graham  Memorial 
today: 

Main  Lounge — 7:.30-8:30,  Rep. 
Party;  Grail  Room — 8-11,  Plan- 
ner's Forum;  RP  I — Chess  Club, 
8  11:  RP  I  &  II— UP,  7-11;  Coun- 
cil Room — Men's  Honor  Council 
7-11;  Rendexvous  Room— Dance 
Class.  6:30-8;  APO  Room—  APO. 
7-9. 


PAGE  TWO 


T|i|i'DAn.Y  TAt  HtEli 


TUESDAY  OCTOBER  30,  19M 


fUESQAY, 


Out  -  Of  -  State  Tuition  Hike 

Has  Been  Bad  For  Carolina 

"Otw  serious  delerrryit  to  out-of-state  graduate  students  is  the 

.  out-of-state  t\iition  differential,  which  often  sets  uf)  a  Imr  before 
desen'iug  and  excellent  .s/»f/«»//5."— Kenan  Professor  of  Knulisii  A.  P. 
Hudson  in  Report  on  Knj^Iish  Dept.  Auxilirtiy  Placement  Ser\i(e. 

Not  only  oraduate  students.  Dr.  scnjhly    to    repeal    its    hii>her    tui. 

Hudson.  The  test  of  the  I'uKersi-  ii(«>  rate  for  out-trf-staie  siudeuis. 

tys  7.000  studeius  are  hurt.  too.  I  he  material  ^r^in  from  the  hioh- 

.  er  rate   is  nothino   lompared   with 

And  not  onlv  are    neservuiQ  and  .         ,       ,•  .,  i       ..j      ...^n,>  ♦....! 

^,  the  educational     and     mteileitual 

excellent     students  kept  awav  from  ,          .       ,,    •         •.     •     .   i  •„ 

^„        ,   ,,.,,   ,       ,      /.  ,                  »■  loss  the  I  niveisiiy  is  takmg. 

Chapel   Hill  In   the  higher  cost  ot  '                 " 

tuition    for    oui-of-state    students. 

bin   the   Tar   Heels  enrolled   here      C  ■  ■  ■•  .^  .^^  .-*-    i^  !  J.^ 

also  suffer  CUrOpe    KlOtS 

It  is  gxxxl  to  see  criticisms  of  the  ^                j 

diffeieirtial  ccmie  from  within  tlic  jflkfO    |    #!^^C^n^ 

faculty.    liesides  f)eino   <^ood   for  a  \^         ,..   ■■^•^*^^^"  ■•^ 

healthy     university,    the    criticism  '^^                                 . 

points  up  a  l)elief  that  is  floating  l"^!^     I^AI'    KH^^lQ 

."  ound  the  campus    at     all     levels:  ■    ^'       ■   Ol      I    I^Wl^ 
That  the  tuiticm  differential  is  in 

n«)   wav   good   for   the    Tniversity.  Ilie  students  at  Humboldt  Ini- 

Thc  amount     of    extra     monev  it  \erstiy  in    Fast   licrlin  are  getting 

brings  in   the  states  coffers,  com-  icstiess..  according  to   news  stories 

paiea  with  the  discouragement  of  o>cr*ilie  weekend. 

out-(vf-state  students,  gives  a  very  Fherc  are  rumblings     ol     auti- 

one-sidcd  "answer.  (.ommunist    unrest    from    the   uni- 

...                   ,             ,     ,  versitv— so    manv    rumblings    that 

Oui-ol-state  students,  whether  or  •..  .   ,    ,.       ' 

,                 .11  an-  (ilticial   (.ommunist    newspaper 

not  thev  are  deserving  and  excel-  ,           ,                ,           ,       n-            j 

,                          ,   ,         u     .      •  devoted  a  six-coUnnn  headline  and 

lent,  are  gooil  lor  the  I  niveisuv.  ,                        ,              •       .1       . 

....          •         ,          I             ri  a  long  stoi  v  to  denouncing  the  stu- 

I  hev    give    this    place    a    flavor,    a  ,        '^.. 

,         ,  "       .    J       ^      ,                        <  dent      provocators. 

broader  mind.  .\~  other  points  01  '                                      •      r- 

view  that  vou  cant  -el  at  a  pro%in-  ^'   "^  «<>^'^'  ^''  -^^*'  "."'■*^^'  "'  f^^^ 

cial    institution    of   higher   educa-  <^'ermany.  It  is  especial Iv  good  to 

.j^jij  see  tiniest  come  from    a     «eat     of 

learning, 

it   is  the  violent  segregationalist  Kuropean     students    have     long 

fr.mi  Mississippi,  plus  the  extreme  ^|,j^.^^,  ^j..-,,,.  ^^^^^  .,^  j,,^.  political 

iMtegraiKmalist     from     \  ermont.  ji^g^,,,     „,     ,1,^.1^    countries.  The 

plus  ((.lice  and  doughnuts  and  talk.  present    Hungarian    revolt    got    a 

that   keeps  the    far  Heel  students  j^^^^  ^^.^  ^^f  -^^  ^j^,j  f,.„„,  students 

Irom  aaepting  as  the  l^^rd  s  truth  ^^,,^  ^^.^^.^  ^^^^j  ^,j  i^^;,,^  ,^,l^  ^^.,,.,f 

e\erything  tliat  Ins  parents.  s(  hool-  ^^^  think 

leathers  and  Icllow   Far  Heels  ha\e  ,.                         111    un    i 

,  ,  ,  .  Furopoan  students  have  lulu  lied 

told  lum.  ,     .       '              -,  .,.              ,,       -T-, 

their     rcs[X)nsibility     well.      Iliey 

Out-of-state  students,  like  gofKi  have  been  tariight  to  speak  up  when 

professois  and  good  textbooks,  lead  they    are    led   up.   'Fhey  do   speak 

the   student    to  inquire,   to  gather  up.  even  at  the  point  of  a  bayonet 

and  inspect  var) ing  points  of  view  or  the  ihrea-t  of  social  eXplusion. 

on  controxersial  issues,  sacred  be-  Jt  is  a  lesson  in  guts  for  students 

liefs  and  life  in  general.  at   the   University  of  North  Caro- 

We  are  sorry  that  Dr.  Hudson's  ""*•              ';.  ':. 
report  mentioi^s  only  graduate  stu- 
dents   from    out-of^tate.    Under-  I  *          f        ^\.       *       X 
graduate     students     from    beyond  J||Y1   S   ^kUIOT/ 
North  Carolin.i^  boitlevs  arc  move 

importvMtt. — H»«-»c     vital     and  more  |^          -      f    f            ■ 

helpful  i  I  keeping  his  institution's  Kll.|     ■|6'.rS 
(jii;;ii  .   up  than  are  graduates. 

Ijv  the  time     a     Tar     Heel  has  ^4^|ll    Tp%^^y^^ 

rcaihcil  graduate  sch(X)],  either  his  *^\  III      I   ll^?!^? 
mind  xs  made  up  or  it  isn't.  On  the 

otiier  hand;  an  undergraduate  liv-  Where,    oh    where,    has   jimmy- 
ing in  the  lo\\er  Quad  can  gain  a  fxn"  gone? 

years  semester  hours'  credits  from  Smileless   Jim  Hagertv  has  Ixren 

merelv   canning   on    conversations  conspiciouslv  absent  from  the  Pres- 

wnh  students    from    Arizona    and  idents  shoulder  of  late.     In     fact, 

''^"'^-  newspaper   readers   were  surprised 

The  (.eneial  Assemblv  plaved  a  ''it'    <>tlit.>r    dav    when    they  saw  a 

diitv  trick  on  out-of-state  students  statement  attributed  to  Kisenhow. 

who    were    alicadv    in    school    two  ^''^  P^^ss  secretary. 

years  ago  whtn  it  raised  the  tuition  ^hey    figured    Hagerty    was    on 

rate  effecti\c  right  awav.  It  destroy.  Natation,  or  fired,     or     Mmiething 

cd    its  good   faitJi    with    those  stu-  ''^^  that. 

dents  after  they  had  started  their  1  ^^^  ^^^^tli  "'  <'>e  matter.  Ave  be- 

academic  careers  here:  it  told  them  •'^'ve.  is  that  Hagerty  has  been  put 

to  pay  more  the  next  year  or  go  i"  the  f>ackground  until  the  polh 

somewhere  else.               .  t'<'se   next  Tuesday  night. 

x-        .1         If..-           .     •  The  pres.s  secretary  was  a  favorite 

Now  that  the  State    is     not     in  \  .^                     ,                  , 

,              .               ,   r                       •  target  of  DemcKrais  who  wanted  to 

such  a  crvmg  need  for  monev.  it  i_          n        •  1   1    • 

, J  ,             ,  r       1      r>           r  \  charge  Ike  with  being  a     part-time 

Avould  be  good  for  the  Ceneral  As-  „      r ,        ..   ,.       , .    ^^        '          , 

. 2 "  President,     vox  Hagertv  has  play. 

I— I          -1^      •!       Mi           u          I  ed   in   the  past    four  vear  a   va&lly 

TnG  Doily  Tor  H0GI  important  part   in  the  F.isenhowev 

Tx.      tt^    .  J    .      Ki  „„.;«-  «»  ♦K^  administration— more  so  than  anv 

The  official  student  publication  of  the  .... 

Publications  Board  of  the  University  of  "«''^'  P'"<-'^s  secretary  in  the  nation  s 

North   Carolina,   where   it   is   published  history. 

daily   except   Monday   and    examination  It  was  Hagerty     says     this     and 

and  vacation  periods  and  summer  terms  Hagertv  believes    that,    instead    of 

Elntered  as  second  class  matter  in  the  The  President  said  today  that.  .  .  " 

Dost  office  in  Chapel  Hill,  N.  C.  undei  Hagertv  did  carry  on  imuh  of  the 

the  Act  oi  March  8.  1870.  Subscription  nation's  business  for  the  President: 

rates,  mailed  .$4  per  year.  S2^50  a  semes-  ,,^,  ^^.^^  ^.,^^^,.  ^^  ji^enhoewr  than 

tor;  delivered.  $6  a  year,  $3.50  a  semer  ,^^,^^.  ^.^^^j,^^^  members. 

' I^ This  made  a  lot  of  voters — ^not 

Editor             -         FRED  POWLEDGE  just   Democrats— aiigrv.  AVh?.  they 

Managing  Editor CHARLIE  SLOAN  ^^^^^'  should  a  non-elected,  mm- 

r~  Cabinet  luenlber  of  the  Presidents 

News  Editor              RAY  LINKER  ^faff  ^^  ^,  powerful  in  interpreting 

Business  Manager    ..    BILL  BOB  PEEL  and  outlining  the  nation's  |>olicv? 

Sports  Editor _.. .  LARRY  CHEEK  j;'^^  f^P"blicans.  wisely  enoiv<i., 

_1 obMoiislv  have  caught  on  that  J.mi 

Advertising  Manager Fred  Katiin  Hagerty  may  be  a  liability  ii\  this 

Coed  Editor  Peg  Humphrey  can»paign.  So  they  apparently  have 

EDITORIAL    STAFF  —  Woody    Sears,  ,    shoved   him   aside    until   after    Ike 

Frank  Crowther,  Barry  Winston,  David  renen:s  his  lease     on     the     White 

Mundy.  George  Pfingst,  Ingrid  Clay,  House. 

Cortland  Edwards.  So,  a  reminder:  The  jim  Hagel- 

St^^h^t^pheT"  ...  Norman  Kantor  ^>  .'^'^»<»  '^^'^  ^!^  country  when  the 

(hief     executue     was     recovering 

BUSINESS  STAFF  -  Rosa  Moore,  Jonny  from    his    heart    attack,    who  took 

Whitaker.  Dick  Leavitt,  Peter  Alper.  ^^^^  a„ai„  afj^,.  Kienhowers  ilietis 

SPORTS  ST.\FF:  Bill  King,  Jim  Purks,  operation,  and  who  plavs  a  consirt- 

Jimmy  Harper,  Dave  Wible,  Charley  erable  part  in  running  the  country 

Houson.  even  when  the  President  is  well,  is 

i^ite^tron  Manager  1 Dal*  Staley  s"''   Eisenhowers  press  secretary . 

Staff  Artist Charlie  Daniel  }^  ^^^  «  reelected,   it   will   be  a 

^'igbt  Editor Woody  Sears  Jini  Hagerty-type  government  for 

Proof  Reader Page  Biemstein  another  four  vears. 


VANDALISM 


THE  PRESIDENTIAL  RACE 


Immaturity  On  The  UNCCam  pus        Popularity 


Woody  Sears 

We  hear  the  woid  "vandals" 
and  immediately  our  thoughts 
turn  to  dirty-faced  urchins  who 
go  around  scrawling  smutty 
epitbets  on  fences  and  restrooai 
walls  and  pterformiog  the  various 
other  little  tasks  that  are  pre- 
scribed for  this  nasty  and  mis- 
guided element. 

We  hear  this  word  and  think 
our  thoughts  and  smile  our  self- 
sati^ied  smiles,  tliinking  that  th« 
right  kind  of  people  don't  do 
things  like  that.  Or  maybe  we 
think  it's  a  shame  that  such  lit- 
erarj'  talent  is  wasted,  or  perhap.s 
that  it's  unfortunate  that  such  tre- 
mendous energy  is  not  utilized 
for  some  constructive  element. 

And  most  certainly  we  don't 
think  in  terras  of  such  things 
happening  on  the  University 
campus. 

And  most  certainly  we  are 
wrong. 

It's  disgraceful  the  way  some 
of  the  students  on  this  campus 
conduct  themselves.  The  things 
that  go  on  are  not  always  of  a 
destructive  nature,  but  the  ma- 
jority of  the  questionable  activi- 
ties are  strictly  from  grammar 
school. 

There  is  nothing  adult  about 
setting  off  firecrackers  in  the 
middle  of  the  night  in  the  cavern^ 
ous  halls  of  a  dormitory.  The  re- 
sulting noise  is  usually  eti«ugh 
to  wake  most  of  the  people  in 
the  dorm.  It  can  also  prove  nerve- 
wracking  if  you're  trying  to 
study. 

The  most  childish  thing  to  date 
is  this  business  of  loosening  the 
caps  on  salt  and  pepper  shakers 
in  Lenoir  Hall  and  the  Pine  Room 
so  that  the  next  person  who  uses 
them  will  get  a  sandwich  full  of 
pepper  or  salt.  This  is  not  always 
so  funny,  for  there  are  a  lot  of 
.students  on  the  campus  for  whom 
this  could  mean  no  lunch,  or 
whatever  the  meal  may  be.  That 
would  be  real  funny,  wouldn't  it? 

And  though  this  i.e  bordering 
on  tho  ludicrous,  it's  a  fact  that 
s  there  is  an  element  in  the  stu- 
dent body  w'aich  stoops  to  scrib- 
bling on  the  walls  in  heads  on 
campus.  The  pornographic  art 
and  literature  that  so  well  char- 
acterizes the  liij^hy,  smutty,  black 
mind  is  found  «11  over  the  camp- 

us..  n 

Things  have  indeed  reached  a 
sorry  state  when  such  people 
are  to  be  found  in  the  supposed- 
ly serious  atmosphere  of  a  great 
University. 

Tliough  there  arc  many  more 
such  incidents  which  occur  regu- 
larly, those  are  perhaps  three  of 
tho  worst ....  and  most  childish. 
Without  delving  into  the  psycho- 
logy of  people  like  this  and  their 
actions,  it  is  probably  safe  to 
a.ssume  that  they  must  be  in 
some  way  demented.  And  it's  a 
sure  bet  that  they  don't  belong 
here. 

It's  a  real  challenge  to  the  stu- 
dent courts  to  ferret  out  these 
people  who  .show  such  gross  dis- 
regard for  the  most  basic  of 
amenities.  They  should  be  found 
out  and  booted  away  from  here: 
either  back  to  their  respective 
homes  and  let  their  parents  make 
another  attempt  at  civilizing 
them.' or  to  some  appropriate  in- 
stitution where  they  may  either 
get  psychiatric  help  or  their 
backsides   burned. 


'Handwriting  On  The  Wall' 


-^^^^m 


CAROLINA  COMMENTARY 


Picking  A  Cabinet  For  Adiai 


Ken  Sanford 

In  the  event  that  .\dlai  Steven- 
son gets  the  opportunity  to  re- 
place the  general's  general  staff 
with  a  cabinel.  I  should  like  to 
propose  the  name  tf  Senator  W. 
<Kerr  Sibli  for  Secretary  of  Agri- 
culture. Scott  is  weD  qualified  for 
that  office.  ; 

•  .\s  governor  of  >iorth  Carolina, 
a  state  having  one  'of  the  largest 
proportions  of  rural  population, 
he  made  his  greatest  contribu- 
tions in  improving  the  lot  of  the 
farmer.  Before  becoming  gover- 
nor he  was  Commissioner  of  Ag- 
riculture. 

.\s  a  senator,  Scott  has  shown 
a  great  deal  of  concern  for  the 
nation's  farm  program.  This  ap- 
pointment would  be  an  opportun- 
ity for  Stevenson  to  express  his 
personal  gratitude,  becau.se  this 
.state,  which  has  been  "in  the 
bag"  for  the  Democrats  but  was 
not  necessarily  "in  the  bag"'  for 
Stevenson  as  a  candidate  for 
Democratic  nominee,  has  sup- 
ported him  from  the  beginning. 
»         *         « 

Wanted:  A  new  psnty  raid 
theory  to  replace  one  shot  full 
of  holes  by  that  recent  event  on 
campus.  The  old  theory  allowed 
for  the  prediction  of  such  phe- 
nomeija  by  the,  application  of  the 


following  formula: 

The  probability  of  a  panty  raid 
increases  directly  as  the  tem- 
perature, the  humidity,  and  the 
sap  rise,  and  as  the  increased 
conc'entration  of  perfume  from 
newly  blossomed  flowers  is  waft- 
ed on  the  spring  air. 

So  what  happened?  The  event 
occurred  on  a  chilly,  autumn 
evening  as  the  leaves  were  begin- 
ning  to  fall. 

*        »        * 

Let's  publicize  the  academic 
standing  of  colleges  and  univers- 


ities. If  this  were  done,  surely 
'alumni  ;aRc\' the  jstdte  legislature 
would  go  allViit'tb  provide  the 
best  academic  "coaches"  and  the 
best  physical  facilities  to  place 
U\C  in  the  "top  ten ". 

Although  ratings  are  generally 
known  in  academic  circles,  too 
often  the  public  rates  the  school 
by  the  success  of  its  athletic 
teams.  I  was  once  asked  which 
school  I  attended.  On  hearing 
the  answer,  the  inquirer  said, 
"That's  a  .sorry  school.  You  have- 
n't had  a  winning  team  in  years." 


What's  Cooking? 


(Carolina  Israelite) 

Today  when  the  rabbi  or  the 
Protestant  clergyman  sho^vs  you 
through  his  newly  constructed  edi- 
fice he  shows  you  the  kitchen  first. 
Kitchen?  In  a  church?  .\  caterer 
tells  me  that  the  new  churches  and 
temples  have  better  equipped 
kitchens;  than  some  of  the  ibiggest 
restaurants  in  town.  Some  insti- 
tutions can  serve  as  many  as  1.000 
people  within  a  half  hour.  They 
are  complete  with  steam  tables 
for  big  affairs,  "short  order" 
tables  for  tlie  (meetings  of  the 
Couples  Club,  Sisterhood,  Mr.  and 


Mrs.  Ciub  and  the  Women  of  the 
Church. 

Dr.  Mordecai  Kaplan,  the  Jewish 
philosopher,  has  said  that  when 
the  geologists  of  the  future  start 
digging  up  the  churces  and  the 
tetmples  built  durir»g  the  past  10 
years  they  will  conclude  that  this 
American  decade  was  the  most 
pious  era  in  world  history.  But  the 
steam  tables,  bakeries  and  barbe- 
cue pits  will  puzzle  them.  This 
may  send  tliem  off  on  a  brand 
new  line  of  research — ^to  find  out 
the  nature  of  tlie  sacrifices  prac- 
ticed in  tliese  huge  bake  o\'ens. 


By  Walt  Kelly 


10  Hi, 


^Uf  MCWC  I  CONY  iCNOvV 

wwyyoj  AIN'T  OrrCAM- 

(%^IN'  AN*  COUKTf  R-f^JcSNlN'. 


By  Al  Capp 


An  Important  Item 

Al  Lowensteln 

Lowenstcin  is  a  former  aMociate  editor  of  Tha 
Daily  Tar  Heel.  Ha  graduated  from  Carolina  in 
1949  and  went  to  work  for  Frank  Graham  when 
Graham  w*k  senator.  He  was  President  of  tha 
Unitod  States  Na1u»a«l  Stvdaat  Association  and 
in  1952  was  national  chairman  of  Students  for 
Stftvensen.  He  predicted  the  results  of  the  1950 
•nd  1952  elections  with  an  unusual  d*9rae  of 
accuracy.  He  is  presantly  working  in  Washington, 
D.  C,  hi  connection  with  the  presidential  cam- 
paign, and  has  agreed  to  write  an  analysis  of  the 
present  peiiticml  titualieii  for  The  Daily  Tar  Heel. 
The  first  invtailment  appears  below. 

WASHINGTON,  D.  C.  —  AdIai  Stevenson  prob- 
ably could  win  the  election  and  probably  won't:  that 
is  about  the  most  accurate  summary  of  how  things 
stand  with  the  Presidential  campaign  more  than 
half  over.  TTiis,  of  course,  is  a  great  improvement 
over  Democratic  prospects  four  years  ago  at  the 
same  point  in  the  campaign,  and  in  fact  it  is  a  far 
happier  situation  than  most  Democrats  had  antici-' 
pated  last  summer. 

Still  towering  over  everything  else  is  the  Presi- 
dent's personal  popularity.  Only  Franklin  Roosevelt 
in  1986  entered  a  race  for  re-election  as  affectionate- 
ly regarded  by  the  great  mass  of  American  voters. 
This  fact  in  itself  convej's  the  enormity  of  Governor 
Stevenson's  task  this  fall. 

In  the  face  of  the  general  Democratic  resurgence, 
it  is  widely  acknowledged  that  only  Chief  Justice 
Warren  other  than  the  President  could  give  the  GOP 
a  fighting  chance  against  Stevenson.  Many  informed 
observers  are  convinced  that  only  Ike  or  Warren 
would  have  defeated  Stevenson  in  1952.  but  at  any 
rate  it  is  hard  to  find  anyone  here  who  would  quar- 
rel with  that  proposition  in  this  election. 

This  is  so  because  of  the  strength  of  the  Demo- 
crats as  a  Party,  but  is  also  due  in*  no  small  part 
to  the  widespread  appeal  of  Stevenson  himself.  In- 
deed a  good  share  of  the  credit  for  the  unusual 
rapidity  with  which  the  Democrats  have  re-emerged 
as  the  majority  party  is  Stevenson's. 

For  whatever  the  merits  of  Harry  Truman's  sec- 
ond term,  it  had  become  necessary  for  the  Demo- 
cratic cause  to  be  identified  with  a  different  quality 
leadership  if  it  were  to  present  any  serious  chal- 
lenge to  a  Republican  Party  newly  bathed  in  whole- 
someness  and  moderation  by  General  Eisenhower's 
candidacy;  and  in  large  measure  Stev'enson  managed 
to  achieve  this  identification  during  his  first  cam- 
paign. 

But  Stevenson's  triumph  in  raising  the  Truman 
194«  poll  by  some  3,000.000  votes  in  the  face  of 
Korea,  Communism  and  corruption — and  Ike — 
should  not  obscure  great  weaknesses  in  his  appeal 
as  a  candidate  that  were  apparent  in  the  1952  re- 
sults and  have  been  confirmed  with  impressive  con- 
sistency, since.  Tliey  are  not  easy  weaknesses  to  deal 
with  sittce  they  derive  primarily  from  personal  man- 
nerisms, and  pierhaps  that  is  why  so  little  has  been 
done  abOfit  them. 

Gencralizatibtis  are  always  dangerous,  but  it  is 
generally  agreed  that  two  of  the  groups  least  en- 
chante(«  with  Stevenson  have  been  Middle  Western 
farm  voters  and  Eastern  Catholic  city  voters.  Both 
these  groups  are  of  critical^  importance  in  the  states 
In  which  they  are  most  numerous,  if  the  local  Dem- 
ocrats are  to  win:  and  in  a  national  election  one 
or  the  other,  if  not  both,  must  go  heavily  Demo- 
cratic or  the  cause  is  lost. 

Harry  Truman  carried  both  substantially  and 
that  was  enough  to  elect  him,  even  though  he  ran 
badly  among  many  other  normally  Democratic  and 
evenly-split  groups. 

Seen  in  this  light,  the  fierce  struggle  for  the 
Democratic  Vice  Presidential  nomination  will  per- 
haps make  more  sense:  In  general,  Middle  Western 
farm  state  delegations  faced  the  problem  of  sav- 
ing their  state  tickets  despite  the  antipathy  toward 
Stevenson  among  their  large  rural  constituencies. 

These  delegations  heavily  supported  Senator 
Kefauver,  whose  popularity  in  precisely  this  group 
had  earned  him,  among  other  things,  the  striking 
Minnesota  primary  victory  last  spring.  Delegations 
confronted  with  large  defecting  urban  Catholic  ele- 
ments jumped  to  Senator  Kennedy,  whose  presence 
on  the  ticket  seemed  the  strongest  conceivable  anti- 
dote to  the  distaste  for  Stevenson  which  had  im- 
peded their  state  efforts  in  '52  and  threatened  dis- 
a.ster  agiin.  Add  to  this  the  jealousy  and  the  un- 
reasoning hostility  to  Kefauver  as  a  "renegade"  that 
blurred  the  vision  of  many  Southern  politicians, 
and  the  confused  Chicago  lineup  in  the  running- 
mate  balloting  becomes  almost  comprehensible. 
(To  Be  Continued) 

YOU  Said  It: 


n 


On  High  Heel 
vs.  Medium  Heel 

Editor: 

Having  read  tho  arguments  pro  and  con  in  the 
Oct.  21  Daily  Tar  Heel  concerning  the  medium  heel. 
I  finally  got  some  logical  idea  as  to  why  girls  do 
wear  them.  I  found  the  comments  reasonable  on 
both  sides,  even  though  I  am  an  advocate  of  the 
high  heel. 

However,  there  was  one  statement  that  I  bad 
to  question.  "Medium  heels  run  a  ramrod  up  a 
girl's  spine  and  she  looks  much  straigihter." 

I  am  not  doubting  that  a  gu-1  would  have  a 
straighter  spine  by  wearing  the  medium  heel,  but 
has  the  person  who  made  this  statement  ever 
looked  at  a  girls  spine  real  closely? 

For  purpose  of  illustration  I  have  traced  a  pic- 
ture of  Jayue  Mansfield's  spine  from  my  anatomy 
lab  book.  She  is  wearing  high  heels  and  her  spine 
is  twisted  every  way  but  straight.  I  then  added 
medium  heels  and  a  ramrod  just  to  see  what  a 
straight  spine  would  look  like. 

I  submit  my  illustrations  for  individual  analysi^. 
If  anyone  likes  the  medium  heel  and  the  straight 
spine — bravo  for  Individualism!  That's  what  makes 
our  nation  great  and  free. 

Jim  Ayers 


PHYSICS  C| 

The    Phy« 
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Dr.  Kathe 
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Covering  The  University  Campus 


^ 


PHYSICS  CLUB 


t  Navy."  The  meeting  will  take  place  cational  television 
I  at  the  Carolina  Inn.  nel  4 

ACCOUNTimO  CLUB  • 

Any   student    in   the   School   6f 

Business  Administration  who   has 

selected  accounting  as  a  major  and 

I  is  interested     in  forming  an     ac- 

I  counting  club  is  invited  to  attend 

Kathenne  Carmichael.  UNC  i  a  meeting  Thursday  night,  Nov.  1 


station,   chan- 


The  Physics  Club  will  hold  a 
special  meeting  tod:^  at  7  p.m.  in 
room  250  Phillips.  A  movie  will 
be  shown  and  special  business  con- 
sidered. 
DEAN   SPEAKS 

Dr 
Dean  of  Women,  speaks  today  at 
the  afternoon  session  of  a  meeting 
of  the  North  Carolina  Assn.  of 
Deans  of  Women  at  Wake  Forest 
College.  She  will  give  an  account 
of  her  research  project  concern- 
ing the  office  of  dean  of  women, 
which  she  recently  completed. 
FACULTY  CLUB  LUNCHEON 

Capt.  A.  M.  Patterson,  professor 
of  Naval  Science  and  commanding 
officer  of  the  NROTC  unit  will 
speak  to  the  faculty  club  today 
at  1  p.m.  on  "The  Increasing  Im- 
portance    of   the  United     States 


in  106  Hanes. 
WESLEY  CHOIR 

The  Wesley  Choir  will  hold  its 
regular  rehearsal  today   from  7-8 
p.m.   at  the   University  Methodist 
Church. 
CHEMISTRY   CLUB 

The  Chemistry  Club  will  hold  its 
regular  meeting  today  at  7  p.m. 
in  room  207  Venable  Hall.  A  pro- 
gram of  demonstrations  has  been 
planned.  All  interested  persons 
have  been  urged  to  attend. 
WUNC-TV  •    ' 

WUNC-TV,  the  University's  edu- 


All  Premiums  And  Draft 

T.  V.  —  Good  Placo  To 

Watch  Boxing  A  Football 

Bring  Your  Dato 

SANDWICHES  OF  ALL   KINDS 

WEST  FRANKLIN  STREET  LUNCHEONETTE 

Next  to  Bus  Station 

Phone  9-2846 


'J 


Yoji  feel  JO  fic^  and  itish 
and  good  —  all  o+er  —  when  you 
pause  for  Coca-Cola.  In  ij-Hrklirtg 
with  quick  ■cfieshmer.t . .  .  aad 
it  s  so  pure  and  's^'holesome  — 
naturally  friendly  to  your  ?jii::e.' 
Let  it  do  things  —  good 
things  — for  you. 


•OTTlie  UNDCt  AUTHOIITY  OT  THf  COCA-COU  COM^ANT  IT 

DURHAM  COCA-COLA  BOTTLING  CO. 


'^•Ii**'  ••  •  r*9i«t«r»d  Iradv-moirk. 


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12:45     Music 

1:00    Today  on  the  Farm 

1:3(^    Music  in  the  Air 

2:00    Science  and  Nature 

2:30    Sign  off 

3:45     Music 

6:00    Magic  Lantern 

6:15    Sports  Clinic 

6:30    News 

6:45    Sports 
7:00    Books  and  People 

7:15    Bible  Course 

8:00    Dr.  Shivers  , 

8:45    State   Government 

9:30    Notes  On  Music 
10:Cia    Final  Edition 
10:05    Sign  Off 
WUNC 

Following  is  a  listing  of  pro- 
grams today  from  the  University's 
FM  radio  station: 

7:00     Intermezzo 

7:15    Over  the  Back  Fence 

7:30    Vistas  of  Israel 

7:45    Variations  on   a  Theatre 
Theme 

8:00    Hill  Hall  Concert 
10:00    News 

10:05    E\'ening  Masterwork 
11:30    Sign  Off 


Pi  Phr  Hedge  Class 
Elects  New  Officers 

The  Pi  Beta  Phi  pledge  i  class 
has  elected  the  following  girls  as 
officers:  president,  Arnold  Garvin; 
vice  president.  Kitty  Corr:  record- 
ing secretary,  Deedee  Feinurck; 
treasurer.  Roberta  Hastings;  acti- 
vities chairman.  Cynthia  Segraves; 
social  chairman,  Mollie  Sprtiill: 
scholarship.  Kit  Whitehurst;  his- 
torian. Anne  Llewellyn:  censor, 
Sarah  Jane  Shaw;  projects,  Pat 
Wason. 


Nurse  Unhurt  In  Wreck 
Yesterday  Morning 

Mrs.  Stanley  H.  Richards,  22.  a 
nurse  at  Memorial  Hospital,  was 
not  injured  yesterday  morning 
when  she  lost  control  of  her  1954 
Plymouth  on  the  Airport  Road 
near  the  Ranch  House. 

The  car  came  to  rest  in  soft 
ground  at  the  top  of  a  fifteen  foot 
embankment  to  the  left  of  the 
road. 

According  to  Mrs.  Richards  the 
car  ran  off  the  pavement  on  the 
right.  She  was  going  out  of  town 
and  lost  control  when  she  attempt- 
ed to  get  back  on  the  road. 

Mrs.  Richards  lives  in  the  Tar- 
heel Trailer  Court  on  the  Airport 
Road. 


'Androcles, 
CasI  Set, 
Says  Davis 

Cast  for  the  Carolina  Playmak 
•rs  production  of  Bernard  Shaw's  | 
Androclcs  and  the  Lion  has  been 
announced  by  Prof.  Harry  E.  Da- 
vis, associate  director  of  the  Play- 
makers. 

The  production  will  run  in  the 
Plajmakers'  Theater  Nov.  14-18 
before  going  on  tour  through  the 
Carolinas,  Virginia  and  Georgia. 

The  cast  includes: 

Dick  Newdick  of  Augusta, 
Maine,  as  Androcles:  Miss  Page 
Williams  of  Fort  Thomas,  Ky..  as 
his  wife  Megaera;  David  Small  of 
Morehead  City  as  the  lion. 

Others  in  the  cast  are: 

John  Sneden  of  Tenafly.  N.  J., 
as  Caesar;  Miss  Amanda  Meiggs  of 
Moyock  and  John  Whitty  of  New 
Bern  as  Lavinia  and  the  captain 
who  guards  her;  Frank  Beaver  ^of 
Statcsville,  Ted  Parker  of  Clin- 
ton, Bob  Hailey  of  Statesville  as 
the  martyrs,  Mettulus,  Spintho 
and  Ferrovius.  Harvey  Knox  of 
Greensboro  will  play  the  Centur- 
ion. 

Rounding  out  the  cast  are: 

Bill  Padgett  of  Shelby,  Phil 
Williamson  of  Wilson,  Bill  White 
of  Chattanooga,  Tenn.,  Darwin 
Soloman  of  Kernersville,  Miss  Su- 
zanne Davis  of  Chapel  Hill,  Bill 
Jones  of  Indianapolis,  Ind.,  Bob 
DuMeer  oi  Star  and  Misses  Anne 
Brooke  of  Staunton.  Va..  and 
Hope  Sparger  of  Scarsdale,  N.  Y. 

The  production  will  celebrate 
the  centennial  of  Shaw's  birth  in 
Dublin  in  1856,  as  well  as  the 
playmakers:'  silver  anniversary  of 
touring,  begun  in  1921. 


British  Medical  Journail 
tells  Of  UNC  Med  Sch^ 

The  teaching  of  psychiatry  dur- 
ing all  four  years  of  the  medical 
course  at  UNC  is  described  in  do- 
tail  in  the  current  issue  o£  the 
British  Medical  Journal. 

In  an  article  entitled  'The  Role 
of  Psychiatry  in  Medical  Educa- 
tion," Dr.  John  A.  Ewing  com- 
pares and  contrasts  the  teaching 
of  psychiatry  in  Britain  and  the 
United  States. 

After  obtaining  his  medical  ed- 
ucation in  Scotland.  Dr.  Eywing 
made  a  special  .^tudy  of  psychia- 
try there  and  in  England  before 
coming  to  this  country  five  years 
ago.  In  1954,  he  became  a  faculty 
member  of  the  UNC  School  of 
Medicine,  Dept.  of  Psychiatrj-. 

In  his  article.  Dr.  Ewing  de- 
scribes the  modern  movement  to- 
ward the  reintegration  of  psychia- 
try with  medicine  as  a  whole.  He 
states  his  belief  that  "this  process 
in  the  United  States  is  well  in 
advance  of  many  current  British 
practices." 


Caravan  Trip  Tickets 
On  Sale  Today  At  WC 

Tickets  for  the  caravan  trip  to 
The  University  of  Virginia  go  on 
sale  at  Women's  College  in 
Greensboro  today.  When  contact- 
ed by  telephone  by  Caravan  com- 
mittee member  Dave  Jones,  Dean 
Katherine  Taylor  of  Women's  Col- 
Ige  reported  arrangements  have 
been  completed  and  the  sales 
ready  to  go.  The  plans  were  spell-- 
ed  out  last  night  for  the  WC  girls 
in  meetings  held  in  every  dorm.,, 

,  Tickets  will  be  $5.75  round  trip 
from  Greensboro  to  CTharlottes- 
ville  and  the  stadium  tickets  will 
be  SS.SO.  AH  busses  will  lea>'e 
Greensboro  half  an  hour  after  the 
busses  from  UNC  in  Chapel  Hill 
arrive. 

Dean  Taylor  also  advised  the 
UNC  committee  she  expected  "En- 
thusiastic Support"  and  hoped  for 
the  same  from  Chapel  Hill. 


Law  Wives*  Fashion  Show 
To  Feature  Fall  Styles 

the  accent  W51l'  be  on  fall  aiyjl 
winter  fashions  tonight  at  8  in  the 
Hillel  House. 

The  Law  Wives,  who  are  spon- 
soring the  show  with  the  coopera- 
tion of  a  local,  clothier,  will  mod- 
el the  new  fashions.  Miss  Jb  St. 
Clair  will  narrate. 

During  intermission  entertain- 
ment will  be  provided  by  a  danc- 
ing group  from  a  local  dance  stu- 
dio. Refreshments  will  be  served. 

The  admission  charge  will  be 
50  cents. 


MeclalHc  Art  Collection  Now 
On  Exhibition  In  Library  Here 


medallic    art, 
M.    Lester    of 
is  now  on  display  in 


Y  SCHEDULE 

4  p.m.— YMCA  Freshman  Coun- 
cil, John  Riebel's  Office,  Bob  Leo- 
nard, ediaimum. 

4:  p.nL— YW-YMCA  Joint  Exec- 
utive Meeting,  Cabinet  Room. 

4  p.m.— YMCA  Hospital  Tour, 
Bill  Tucker,  chairman. 

4:40  p.m.  —  YWCA  Hospital 
Tour.  Dottie  Wood,  chairman. 

5  p.m.— V-Nite  Committee,  Cab- 
inet Room,  Nancy  Shuford  and 
Jim  Raugh,  co-chairmen. 

5  p.m. — YMCA  Community  Ser- 
vicp  Committee,  John  RietMJl's  of- 
fice.   Bill   Tucker,    chairman. 

5  •  m. — CCC  Publicity  Commit- 
tee. Y  Library,  second  floor  of 
Y  Building. 

5:30  p.m. — Nurses  Assn.  Supper, 
Planning  Committee,  Hospital 
Cafeteria. 


A    collection    of 
loaned    by    Robert 
Chapel  Hill, 
the  library. 

The  bronze  medals  of  the  dis- 
play depict  mostly  themes  from 
religion,  mythology,  nature  and 
famous  quotations.  Others  are 
commemorative,  honoring  such 
men  as  Charles  Lindbergh  and 
Mark  Twain. 

War  and  Peace  is  the  dominate 
t^eme  of  the  recent  issues.  The 
famous  World  War  U  flag-raising 
scene  on  Iwo  Jima  is  the  subject 
of  a  medal  by  Rene  P.  Chambel- 
lan.  '.'.    ' 

The  brotherhood  of  man  is  the 
theme  of  a  medal  by  Malvina 
Hoffman.  On  this  medal  the  GiSek 
Cross  frames  the  four  race  types. 
A  central  compass  indicates  North 
for  the  white  man.  East  for  the 
yellow  man,  West  for  the  red  man 
and  South  for  the  black  man. 


'y  Offic/o/s 
Attend  Meet 

YMCA  General  Secretary  Claude 
Shotts  and  YWCA  Director  Ann 
Queen  were  in  Atlanta,  Georgia, 
last  weekend  meeting  with  Y  rep- 
resentatives from  the  southern 
states. 

The  purpose  of  the  meeting  was 
to  make  plans  for  the  Southeast- 
ern area  student  conference  next 
June.  This  conference  has  been 
t.aditionally  held  at  Blue  Ridge 
Assembly  near  Black  Mountain, 
N.  C. 

The  Blue  Ridge  conference  is 
held  anni^lly  to  allow  student  and 
faculty  representatives  from  all 
over  the  $puth  to  get  ♦ogethcr  for 
the  discusiion  of  leadership  train- 
ing and  to  discuss  programs  for 
the  various  campus  associations. 


CLASSIFIEDS 


PAPER-BACKED  BOOKS  —  Good 
used  novels,  detective  yarns  and 
non-fiction  at  3  for  25c  in  the 
stand  by  our  front  door.  The 
Intimate  Bookshop. 


HI-WAY  SERVICE  STATION,  ON  | 
the  curve  in  Carrboro,  has  **U-  ] 
WASH-IT"— 60<?.  Premium  gas ! 
31.9<f,  regular  gas   29.9c. 


LOST— 4  MONTHS  OLD  DOBER- 
man  pincher  puppy.  Female, 
reddish-brown.  Answers  to  name 

of  Tayne.  Strayed  from  vicinity 
of  Mason  Farm  Rd.  Sunday.  Re- 
ward. This  dog  muit  be  found. 
CaN  9-2666. 


MEN! 

Would  you  like  to  sup- 
pliment  your  college  in- 
come by  as  much  as 
$200  a  month  for  work- 
ing only  two  nights  a 
week?  You  can  do  this 
if  you  become  a  campus 
representative  of  our 
British  textile  custom- 
tailoring  firm.  Write 
Sales  Manager,  A.  G. 
Kruse  &  Co.,  P.  O.  Box 
532,  Newport  Beach, 
California,  giving  a  brief 
personal  history. 


THANKS 
SO  MUCH! 

Your  response  has  been 
so  great  that  we  are 
snov^ed  under  with 
work. 

PLEASE  BEAR  WITH  US! 

PETE 
THE  TAILOR 


Lester  made  the  cpllection  over  I 
a  period  of  26  years  as  a  member ) 
of   the   Society   of  Medallist.  Two 
medals  are   issued   each   year   by 
the  society. 

Several  miscellaneous  plaques 
and  medallions  are  also  included 
in  the  display,  along  with  books 
on  the  subject  of  coins  and  med- 
als. 


UNC  Prof  Addresses 
Fanlily  Life  Group 

•'Techniques  of  Role  Playing  in 
the  Development  of  Interpersonal 
Competence,"  was  the  subject  of 
an  address  given  by  Thomas  L. 
Gillette  of  the  University  Sociol- 
ogy Dept..  to  the  North  Carolina 
Family  Life  Conference,  held  in 
Charlotte  this   past   weekend. 

Gillette  is  assistant  to  Dr.  Reu- 
ben Hill,  counselor  in  the  field 
of  marriage  and   the   family,  and 

!  a  research  assistant  for  commun- 
ity   Research    Associates    of    New 

'  York  City. 


ITS  FOR  REAL! 


by  Chester  Field 


THOUGHTS  FOR  TODAY  $1.98 

I  met  a  man  with  a  rather  large  head 
Who  looked  at  me  and  filially  said: 

"If  ever  you're  caught 
^     Without  any  thought 
Si     And  you  tMnk  that  you  ought 
jl     To  be  thinking  a  thought, 
n     Buy  one  firom  me  before  it's  too  late. 
1&    Tbcmghts  for  today,  only 
one-ninety-eight." 

''A  reasonable  price/!  I  said  and  bought 
^n>e  following  brainy,  thoughtful  thought 

rAINT  PLEASURE  AIN'T  PLEASURE  I 

Take  your  pleeuure  big!  Smoke  the  cigarette 
that  gives  you  more  of  what  you're 
smoking  for . . ..  more  real  enjojonent,  moro 
real  rich  flavor  . . .  more  smokbig 
satisfaction.  Smoke  a  Chesterfield  and     ' 
enjoy  it  to  the  hilt! 
Smoke  for  real . . .  tmoko  ChotterfleMI 


Ci  Utt«W  ft  «y«»«To>)MwO«. 


PRE-ELECTRIC 
SHAVE  LOTION 


to  get  a  better  shave  I 


Quicker  .  .  .  closer  .  .  .  smoother  .  .  . 


^  no  motter  whot  machine  you  use.  1 .00 

}  ^  -  .^  ^ 

SHULTON    NtwYork  •  TorOBte  ''*! 


Duk«  Professor  Speaks 
To  AAUW  Here  Tonight 

Dr.  Roma  Sawyer  Cheek,  pro- 
fessor of  political  science  at  Duke 
University  will  address  the  Cha- 
pel Hill  branch  of  the  American 
Association  of  University  Women,  j 
tonight  at  7:30  p.m.,  in  the  As- 
sembly Room  of  Wilson  Library.    | 

Mrs.  Cheek  will  speak  on  "North 
Carolina's  Number  One  Needs." 
She  has  published  three  studies 
on  various  phases  of  North  Caro- 
lina government:  "Pardons,  Par^ 
oles,  and  Commutations,"  1932;  i 
"Government  Management  i  n , 
North  Carolina,"  1950;  and  "Sleep- 
ing Tar  Heels,"  1958. 
.  A  graduate  of  Duke,  Mrs.  Cheek 
did  graduate  study  at  UNC,  Uni- 
versity of  Penn.sylvania  and  Col- 
umbia University.  She  has  taught 
In  the  state's  public  school  sys- 
tem and  woriced  for  city,  stale 
and  Federal  governments. 


SUDDENLY,  ITS  1960... 


1957  PLYMOUTH  —  NOW  ON  DISPLAY 

1        «  .  Dealer  License  No.  573 

YATES  MQTOR  COMPANY 


^fmfmlm^  i        Ml  ji 


PAGE  POUI{ 


'^t  DAILY  TAR  HBBL 


TUESDAY   OCTOBER   30,  1956 


UNC-Wake  Forest:  Nobody  Satisfied 

A  tie  football  game  usually  leaves  everyone  concerned  with  an 
unsatisfied  'we  should  have  won'  feeling,  and  last  Saturday's  Carolina 
V/ake  Forest  deadlock  was  no  exception. 

The  Tar  Heels  and  Deacons  battled  up  and  down  the  slippery 
Kenan  Stadium  turf  for  60  minutes  Saturday  only  to  finish  in  a  6-6 
stalemate,  much  to  the  despair  of  the  rival  coaches. 

Jim   Tatum   of   Carolina  declared   after   the   game   that   he  was 
"sklc,  just  sick  because  we  didn't  win."  Wake  Coach  Paul  Amen  was 
net  quite  as  em|>hatically  disappointed  but  still  said  he  felt  'flat.' 
Tatum  had  more  reason  to  cry  the  blues  than  did  his  Wake  Forest 
counterpart.  The  Tar  Heel  head  mentor  saw  his  squad  kick  away  at 
least  three  good  scoring  opportunities  in  the  first  half,  and  then  allow 
Wake  Forest  back  IHck  Daniels  to  break  through  and  block  the  extra 
point  that  would  have  won  the  game  after  Ed  Sutton  had  scored  in  the 
third  quarter. 
AMEN:     DISAPPOINTED  BUT  PROUD 

Amen,  although  admittedly  disappointed  because  his  squad  couldn't 
win,  was  proud  of  his  boys  for  the  way  they  came  from  behind  when 
the  chips  were  down  to  gain  a  tie.  The  Wake  coach  termed  the  team's 
effort  as  the  best  of  the  season  along  with  the  Maryland  game. 

One  sour  note  in  the  Deacon  camp  was  the  failure  of  haKback 
Larry  Brooks  to  ntake  the  all  important  copversion  that  would  have 
won  the  game  in  the  last  quarter.  Brooks  had  booted  IS  in  a  row 
through  the  uprights  in  pre-game  warnuip,  but  couldn't  come  through 
when  it  really  counted.  J 

Although  Carolina's  performance  was  not  up  to  their  play  against  > 
Mar>'land,  neither  was  it  as  bad  as  in  the  season's  first  four  games.  The  j 
Tar  Heels  played  good  hard  football  for  most  of  the  game,  but  a  few  \ 
costly  errors  and  a  lack  of  a  scoring  punch  nearly  cost  them  the  i 
decision. 

BARNES  AND  VALE:    A  RIVALRY  AT  FULLBACK  | 

There  were  numerous  stars  on  both  sides  of  the  fence  with  Wake  i 
fullback  Bill  Barnes  leading  the  way.  Barnes  almost  single  handedly  ' 
sparked  the  I>eacons  to  their  tying  touchdown  in  the  last  quarter  as  ! 
he  ran  through  the  tired  Tar  Keels  with  ease,  i 

The  Tar  Heels  came  up  with  a  fullback  find  of  their  own.  Wally 
Vale,  a  194  pound  junior  from  Ellerson,  Va.,  nearly  stole  the  show 
from  Barnes  as  he  picked  up  94  yards  rushing  and  averaged  a  boom- 
ing 46.2  yards  for  five  punts.  The  94  yards  rushing  gave  him  »n 
average  of  7.4  per  carry  for  13  trips.  ! 

Going  into  the  game.  Vale  was  little  known  as  a  runner  but  j 
ranked  among  the  nation's  best  in  punting.  Then  on  Saturday  afternoon  j 
he  blossomed  forth  as  a  serious  offensive  weapon  in  more  ways  than  | 
one.  His  carrying  was  supc.-b  as  he  displayed  speed  and  finesse  in  ad- ' 
('ilion  to  the  necessary-  power.  And  his  exhibition  of  punting  prowess  ; 
was  the  best  seen  in  Kenan  in  many  a  day. 
VOLS  AT  KNOXVILLE:  A  TOUGH  CHORE 

A  glance  into  the  future  is  enough  to  make  even  the  most  ardent 
Tar  Heel  fan  shudder.  Next  Saturday  it's  Tennessee  at  Knoxville.  fol- 
lowed in  quick  succession  by  Virginia,  Notre  Dame  and  Duke.  j 
The  Tennessee  game  is  by  far  and  away  the  roughest  test  left  for  j 
the  Tar  Heels.  Coach  Bowden  Wyatt's  Vols  have  rolled  over  all  opposi-  \ 
tion  with  ease  so  far  this  season,  and  are  supposed  to  be  the  best  Ten-  i 
nessee  team  in  10  years. 

Last   Saturday   the  Vols  wailopped   Maryland,   34-7,   and   earlier 
this  year  they  bombarded  Duke,  33-20.  This  observer  sat  in  en  this    * 
Oviro  game,  anrf  watched  a  foetbair  fam  in  action  that  rates  wItH    | 
the  best  we've  ever  seen.  i 

The  Vols  have  everything  including  a  practically  unstoppable  of- 
fense led  by  all-america  Johnny  Majors  at  tailback.   Duke's  big  and  ' 
powerful  line  couldn't  begin  to   hold  the  orange  shirted  Tennessee  ! 
backs,  so  Carolina  is  likely  to  have  trouble.  ! 

CLEANINGS  FROM  THE  SPORTS  BEAT: 

Coach  Tatum  has  been  named  as  one  of  the  coaches  in  the  annual 
Blue-Gray  football  game.  .\lso  representing  UNC  for  the  occasion  will 
be  veteran  letterman  Don  Lear  who  has  split  duties  at  guard  and  full- 
back this  season. 

Carolina's  basketball  team,  knee  deep  in  talent  at  the  beginning 
cl  practice,  is  growing  smaller  and  smaller  all  the  time.  Three  men 
have  been  lost  for  disciplinary  and  scholastic  reasons  so  far,  and  at 
least  two  promised  to  be  valuable  cogs  in  the  Tar  Heel  hardwood 
machinery.  The  three  were  Frank  Goodwin,  Bob  Young  and  Harvey 
Salz. 

Salz,  a  6-1  guard,  was  the  leading  scorer  on  last  year's  freshman 
team,  while  Young  was  a  top  varsity  reserve  at  center. 

The  cagers  have  been  drilling  on  fundamentals  ever  since  the 
practice  got  under  way  on  the  15th  of  October.  Sessions  .so  far  have 
been  closed  to  the  student  body,  but  Coach  McGuire  has  said  that  on 
a  few  occasions  when,  the  squad  scrimmages,  the  doors  will  be  opened. 

Frosh  Grid  Team  Returns  To 
Action  Against  Cavayearlings 


WAA  Volleyball  Play  logins 

In  the  first  games  of  the  WAA  (  ed  Kappa   Delta,  66-17;   and   Carr 
volleyball  tournament.  Alpha  Gam.  ;  blasted   AdPi,  67-21. 


Pi  Phi,  Carr  and  Smith  Dorms 
were  victorious.  Alpha  Gam  top 
ped  Chi  0.  33-30;  Pi  Phi  whipped 
the    nurses,    38-31;    Smith  4rounc- 


Games  scheduled  for  today  in- 
cludei  Pi  Phi  vs.  Tri  Delt  at  5 
p.m.,  Alpha  Gam  vs.  Carr  at  7 
p.m.    and    Mclver    vs.    AdPi    at    8 


'aNEM.3coPE       ='tt. 


LAST  TIMES  TODAY 


eardma 


//   V   / 


RAINY  DAY 

/    /     /    / 
-ANY  DAY 


/  /  /    /    //Z'S: 


The  picture 
everyone 
is  talking 
about! 


Rod  &  Gun  Contestants 

Contestants  for  the  Rod  and  Gun  Field  Day  shown  warming  up  art  (left  to  right).  Bill  Baily,  Rufus 
Hackney,  Fred  Young,  (official)  Ben  ;Hammett,  and   Tommy  Johnson. 


Rod  And  Gun  Entries 
Close  This  Afternoon 


Entries  for  the  second  annual 
co-recreational  Rod  and  Gun  Day 
to  be  held  Thursday  at  the  Dur- 
ham Wildlife  Club  Area  close 
this  afternoon  at  5  p.m.  and  all  in- 
terested students  who  have  not 
yet  entered  are  urged  to  fill  out 
their  entry  blanks  at  the  informa- 
tion desk  in  Graham  Memorial  or 
room  315  Woollen. 

TTie  event  is  sponsored  jointly 
by  GMAB  aYid  the  intramural  de- 
partment. Individual  and  team 
trophies  will  be  awarded  in  four 
big  events,  archery,  trap  shooting, 
target  rifle  shooting,  and  this 
year,  as  an  added  attraction, 
there  will  be  a  bass  and  brim  fish- 


team.  Any  students  may  compose 
a  team,  however,  they  mu.st  enter 
men  in  all  four  events  to  constitute 
a  team.  Any  number  of  students 
may  enter  for  a  team  with  only 
the  highest  score  counting  toward 
the  team  total. 

Equipment  will  be  furnished  by 
the  sponsors,  but  students  will  be 
allowed  to  use  their  own  equip- 
ments in  all  events  except  target 
rifle  shooting. 

Additional  information  concern- 
ing the  event  may  be  obtained 
with  the  entry  blanks,  and  on 
Thursday  the  Daily  Tar  Heel  is 
expected  to  run  a  map  containing 


I  directions  to  the  Durham  Wildlife 
ing  contest  with  a  prize  going  to  i  club  Area. 

the  contestant  who  catches  the  big- 1      in  the  event  of  rain,  the  meet 
gest  fish.  -  will  be  held  on  Tuesday,  November 

All  students  except  those  on  j  6.  A  notice  will  be  po.sted  in  the 
the  ROTC  rifle  teams  are  eligible  lobby  of  Woollen  Gym  by  12:(X) 
to  compete  and  students  may  en-  p.m..  Thursday  if  the  meet  is  to  be 
ter  as  individuals  or  as  a  four-man    postponed   because   of  weather. 


Gridders  Hold 
Brisk  Session; 
prepforVo/s 

The  Tar  Heels  wasted  no  time 
yes^rday  in  starting  preparations 
for  Saturday's  game  with  third- 
ranked  Tennessee. 

Almost  all  hands  who  partici- 
pated in  last  Saturday's  game  with 
Wake  Forest  reported  in  good 
physical  condition.  The  one  excep- 
rftion  was  starting  tackle  Don  Red- 
ding who  twisted  a  knee  in  the 
Deacon  battle.  Redding  worked 
out  in  sweat  clothes,  but  is  ex- 
pected to  be  available  for  heavy 
work   Saturday. 

Pass  defense  and  offense  were 
given  special  attention  during  the 
first  part  of  the  session  with  quar- 
terback Dave  Reed  doing  most  of 
the  throwing.  Later  the  squad  was 
divided  for  full  scale  defensive 
scrimmage  inside  the  canvas  en- 
closure, while  offensive  drills 
were  held  outside. 


The  freshman  football  team  re- 
sumes grid  warfare  this  week 
when  it  meets  the  University  of 
Virginia  frosh.  This  will  mark  the 
third  appearance  of  the  season  for  I 
the  Tar  Babies  who  have  lost  to  j 
Wake  Forest  14-12  and  defeated 
the  Baby  Terps  of  Maryland,  21-0.  | 

The  Tar  Babies  have  been  idle  j 
since     the     Maryland     game     two ' 
weeks  ago.  and  it  is  possible  that 
the    team   may   suffer   from    this ' 
long   layoff.    ITowever,   the   squad  I 


has  scrimmaged  the  varsity  on 
several  occasions  during  this  pe- 
riod and  will  probably  be  "up" 
for  the  Virginia  contest. 

End  John  Stunda.  who  missed 
the  .MaWland  game  because  of  a 
knee  injury,  reported  to  practice 
yesterday,  and  it  is  hoped  that  he 
will  be  in  top  shape  for  the  meet- 
ing with  the  Cavaliers.  Barring 
injuries  in  practice  this  week,  the 
Tar  Babies  will  be  in  top  physical 
condition. 


Why  Pay  High  Prices? 

IVe  Held  Them  Down  Since  July,  '55    - 

ASK  YOUR  BUDDY! 

Nationilly  Advertised  Anti-Freeze  $2.75  Gal. 

ESSO  GAS  YES!  ESSO  GAS 

Cash  Cash  Cash 

Reg.  29.9         H.T.  32.9 

Plus 

Bring  This  Ad  And  Get  1  Cent  Off  Per  Gal.  Gas, 

5  Cents  Per  Qt.  Oil 

?      WHERE      ? 

At  The  Students'  Friend 

WHIPPLE'S  ESSO  SERVICE 


JUST 
RECEIVED! 

A  New  Shipment 

Of  Those  Fine 

McGEORGE 

CREW-NECK 

SHETLANP 

SWEATERS 

Hand-fashioned  Shetlahds,  re- 
ceived "Air  Freight"  from  Scot- 
land, yesterday. 

Boeutifui  tones  to  fit  eny  en- 
semble: 


Charcoal 
Natural 
Oxford  Gray 
Char.  Green 


Char.  Blue 

Scotch  Heather 

Char.   Brown 

Scotch   Mist. 


Only  $12.50 
STEVBK*-  8HBPHBRD 


MURALS 

Today's   Football   Schedute: 

4:0Q— Field  1;  .Chi. Phi  vs.  Pi 
Lamb;  field  2.  Pi  Kap  Sig  vs.  SPE; 
field  3.  Stacy-2  vs.  Old  West;  field 

4.  Delt  Sig  vs.  DKE  (w);  field  5. 
Zeta  Psi  vs.  Chi  Phi  (w). 

5:00  —  Field  1,  Med  Sch-1  vs. 
Mangum-2:  field  2,  Beta  vs.  SAE 
(w);  field  3,  Aycock  vs.  Grimes-1; 
field  4.  ATO  vs.  Sig  Chi  (w):  field 

5,  Kap  Sig  vs.  Sigma  Nu. 
Today's  Volleyball  Schedule: 

4:00 — Court  1.  Cobb  vs.  Alex-2: 
court  2.  Lewis  vs.  Joyner;  court 
3.  Ruffin  vs.  Old  East;  court  4, 
Phi  Delt  vs.  Delt  Sig. 

5:00— Court  1,  Everett-1  vs  Vic 
Vil;  court  2,  Med  Sch-1  vs.  Ever- 
ett-2;  court  3.  Med  Sch-3  vs.  Law 
Sch-1;  i;ourt  4.  DKE  vs.  Sig  Chi. 

Swimming  finals  will  be  held 
at  7:30  p.m. 


There's 
A  New  . 
Fall 

Bargain 
Just  For 

You 

you  Lucky 
Thing  - 

The  Intimate 
Bookshop 

205    E.   FRANKLIN   ST. 
OPEN   TILL    10    P.M. 


Milton^s  Ivy 
Trouser  Story 

with  the  demand  for 
more  budget  priced 
trousers  that  do  a  good 
looking  sport  jacket  jus- 
tice, we  had  our  trous- 
er maker  fill  this  need- 
ed vacuum.  Now  our 
$13.95  flannels  and 
$14,95  worsted  flannels 
have  the  same  work- 
manship and  linings  as 
our  $1 8.95  trousers.  Siz- 
es from  28  to  38  in  most 
popular  shades. 

Cloti)ing  Cupboarb 


YouMI  be  smart  and 
comfortable  in  your 

LONDON  FOG 
All-Weather  Coat 

Smartest  coat  going  .  . 

in  any  weather! 

PLAID-UNED  COTTON 
POPLIN  "CRUISER" 

JULIAN'S 

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W™  HOLDEN 
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PLAYING 


TOM  TULLY  •  Dawn  Addamj 
Fortunio  Bonanova 

Produced  aiu  D^iKlfd  !>» 

OnO  PREMINGER 

WnltM  lot  the  iCiten  t>t 

F.  HUGH  HERBERT 
Music  by 
KERSCHQ.  BURKE  GILBERT 
•     A  PREMINGER  HERBERT 

Production 

Released  thru  United  Artists 


sr/teetrre' 


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BILL  DOGGETT--'^^^  ^'Ji^ffi  Fmi' 
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ADAMS 
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RICHARD  _ 

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Real  Filtration 


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ICO  PfJOOUCI    Of     «^'^&  t.'Jwt«4<e«'«^  C%^WteeC^*^?»^0<WM*-   AMCTICA'S  ttAOING  MAN^  \\ 


AiimLdu 


iiiuiilmu 


I 


WEATHER 

Rain   and   cool   today,  with   •*- 
pected  high  of  68. 


U.n.C.  •  LIBRARY 
SERIALS  DEPT. 
BOX  870 
CHAPEL  HILL,  N.'c. 


VOL.  LVII     NO.  35 


Complete  (JP)  Wire  Service 


m  t  Haily  iiSrar  Xccl 


SKIPPER 

Ht  'and   Chap»l    Htil   w*re   mm. 
Stt  page  2. 


CHAPEL  HILL,  NORTH  tt^ROLINA,  WEDNESDAY,  OCTOBER  31,  1956 


Offices   in   Graham    Memorial 


FOUR   PAGES   THIS    ISSUE 


GOP  Candidate 
Hayes:  N.C.  Must 
Become  Bipartisan' 


By  PRINGLE  PIPKIN  | 

The    Republican    candidate    for 


Governor  of  North  Carolina,  Kyle 
Hayes,  spoke  before  about  60  peo- 


■"North  Carolina  will  not  reach 
its  right  place  in  the  48  states 
until  we  have  a  two  party  system," 
claimed  the  speaker,  and  he  went 

,    ,    ,        ,     .     ^^    ,,  .     ,  !  on  to  say  that  he  had  been  trying 

pie  last  night  m  the  Mam  Lounse  i  .  ^u     j  ^    »■  •.     »*•*   j 

r  /^     I.         ».  ■  .  .  .        ^     to  overcome  the  defeatist  attitude 

of  Graham   Memorial  on  his  pro-    „,  ,u„  „„,».  ki:„o«.  ;„  *i,„    t^tn. 
,       ,_  *  "^     .    ol  the  Republicans  m  the  state, 

gram  for  the  coming  gubernatorial : 

election,  Nov.  6.  The  program  which  he  presen^d 

_,  ...  ,  '  included  three  years  of  education- 

The  speaker  said,  "we  (th(e  Re-    „,  „„„„„^:„„  :„  -vT^^fi,  o„„„i:„„    it 

, ,.  ,  al  expansion  in  North  Carolina.  If 

publicans)     have    got     to    educate  ,  ^,^^^^^    ^^  ^^^^^  ^^  ^^^  j^^  ^  ^^ 

people  and  let  them  know  we  have    ^-^^-^^   ^^jj^^   ^ond    issue   to   ex- 
I  believe  if   the  mes- ,  p^^^   ^^^    .^^^^^^   ^^^   ^^^^^,    j^. 

cilities.  The  candidate  hopes  to  be 
able  to  change  the  state  income 
tax  laws  to  give  full  deductible 
credit  for  some  medical  expenses, 
we  are  not  going  to  w'ln.  If  we  do    He  desires  a  minimum  wage   law 

of  Sl.OO  in  the  state.  "To  re-align 
congressional  and  state  senatorial 
districts"  is  part  of  his  plan. 


a  candidate. 

sage   is   put   across   to   them   (the 

people),  we  can  win." 

About  the  forth-coming  election 
he  said,  "'I  am  not  conceding  that 


not,  I  want  it  to  be  so  close  that 
they  (the  Democrats)  will  give  con- 
sideration to  state  issues  rather 
than  national  issues." 


Directories  Here 

The  1956-57  student  directory 
will  go  on  sale  today  at  the 
YMCA  and  Lenoir  Hall. 

The  directory  will  be  a  two- 
tone  green  this  year  and  will  in- 
clude the  names,  addresses  and 
telephone  numbers  of  all  univer- 
sity affiliated  personnel,  along 
with  an  alphabetical  listing  of 
all  students  with  their  home- 
towns and  Chapel  Hill  addresses. 

Copies  will  be  available  for  35 
cents. 


UNC  Quarterly 
Will  Come  Out 
November  9 

The  Carolna  Quartejlj^,  ,contia- 1 

uing  the  tradition  of  literary  mag- 1 

azines  begun  in  1844  at  UNC."  will ! 

♦  publish  its  first  1956  issue  on  No-  \ 

vember  9. 

The  magazine  will  contain  the 
first  publication  of  the  NBC  hour- 
length  radio  broadcast,  "Biogra- 
phy In  Sound,  "on  Thomas  Wolfe. 
The  broadcast,  produced  last  fall, 
presents  a  series  of  monologues 
by  those  who  knew  Wolfe  best: 
his  sister.  Mabel  Wolfe  Wheaton 
of  Asheville;  his  editors,  John 
Hall  Wheeiock  and  Edward  C. 
Aswell;  a  friend,  Mrs.  Clayton 
Hoagland;  and  a  former  student 
of  his,  now  Professor  Theodore 
Ehrsam  of  New  York. 


The  speaker  felt  that  the  state 
per  capita  income,  44  in  the  na- 
tion, could  and  would  be  raised  if 
the  Republican  Party  was  in  pow- 
er. 1 

Kyle  Hayes  is  a  native  of 
Wilkesboro  and  graduated  from 
frpm  Wake  Forest  Law  School  in 
1931.  He  is  the  first  Republican 
candidate  for  governor  to  conduct 
a  campaign  from  Manteo  to  Mur- 
phy. 

Hayes'  talk  tonight  was  spon- ' 
sored  by  the  Young  Republicans  ^ 
Club.  i 

Robeson  On 

Committee         | 

i 

Professor    Charles    B.    Robson. 
chairman  of  the  Dept.  of  Political 
Science.  Itaa  been  appointed  to  (he  '■ 
executive   committee    of   tfte    Am- 
erican   Political    Science    AssR. 

1 

A   second   member  of   the   staff  I 

of  the  Dept.  of  Political  Science,  i 

Prof.   Alexander  Heard,  is  also  a . 

member     of     the     council.     Prof. 

Heard    is    also    a    member   of    tha  j 
\  editorial    board    of    the    American  I 
I  Political  Science  Review,  which  is  , 
I  the  official  journal  of  the  associa- 
I  tion. 


BELOVED  JOURNALIST: 


Services 
Set  For  3 


For 
P.M 


Coffin 
. Today 


WHtRE  THEY  USED  TO  GATHER: 


His  Friends 
Say  Skipper 


At  The 
Loved 


Shack 
By  All 


Waitman  Named  Head 
Of  Hillel  Foundation 

Albert  Waitman  of  Fayetteville 
has  been  named  president  of  the 
Hillel  Foundation. 


The  cover  will  feature  a  draw-  i      ^'^s  Sue  Gischner,  Washington, 


ing  of  Wolfe  by  Chapel  Hill  artist 
William    Mangum. 

Also  appearing  in  the  Quarterly 
will  be  part  of  a  Pati  Hill  novel 
soon  to  be  published  by  Houghton- 
Mifflin;  a  section  of  young  North 
Carolina  poets:  a  Chekhov  mono- 
logue revised  in  English  by  Eric 
Bentley:  two  lithographs  by  prize- 
winning  Philadelphian  Benton 
Spruance;  a  story  by  last  year's 
fiction  contest  winner,  and  other 
features. 

The  Quarterly  published  three 
times  a  year  may  be  obtained 
from  Graham  Memorial  Informa- 
tion Desk,  the  Carolina  Inn,  local 
bookstores  and  the  Quarterly  Of- 
fice. There  is  a  charge  of  50  cents 
per  issue.  Yearly  subscriptions  are 
available  at  $1.25  from  Box  1117, 
Chapel  Hill. 

Miss  Marcelline  Krafchick,  edi- 
tor of  the  Quarterly,  has  said 
"There  is  still  a  need  for  addition- 
al staffers."  Also  she  has  stated 
"creative  work  done  by  students 
mav  be  turned  i'n  at  the  Quarterly 
Office." 


D.  C,  was  named  vice  president. 

Other  officers  are  Gary  Ball 
Kind  of  Charlotte,  secretary,  and 
Bob  Weinstein  of  Greensboro, 
treasurer. 

Committee  chairmen  were  ap- 
pointed by  the  president  at  the 
meeting  this  week. 


By  WALLY   KURALT 

"Yessir.  that  Skipper  was 
quite  i  man,"  said  T.  B.  (Brack) 
Creel,  speaking  of  Oscar  Jackson 
(Skipper)  Coffin,  who  died 
Monday. 

'Tve  known  the  Skipper  since 
1905,  when  we  played  on  rival 
high  school  baseball  teams." 
Creel  sai^d^'lle  was  alwayji  one 
for  a  joke  and  was  loved  by  all, 
especially  me." 

Creel,  speaking  admircbiy  with 
not  completely  dry  eyes,  related 
tales  of  the  late  journalism  pro- 
fessor in"  'the  Skipper's  second 
alma  mater." 

"He  usefd  to  walk  into  his  class 
at  the  first  of  the  year  and  he'd 
say,  "My  name  is  Oscar  Jackson 
Coffin,  and  so  there  will  be  no 
trouble  about  our  social  .stand- 
ing, my  uncle — that  I  was 
named  after — was  hung.  A  ter- 
ribly fine  fellow,  but  the  jury 
didn't  see  it  that  way.' 

"That's    how    he    was,"    said 
Creel.  "Nothing  at  all  fake  about 
him." 
'IRON  LUNG' 

One  of  the  favorite  stories 
concerning  Coffin  was  the  "iron 
lung."  A  former  student  came 
to  visit  Coffin,  and  was  told  by 
"Gertrude"  (Mrs,  Coffin)  that 
the  Skipper  was  in  the  "iron 
lung." 

"Oh,  I'm  sorry,'  said  the  for- 
mer student,  "I  didnt  even  know 
he  was  sick." 

"Don't  be  sorry,"  said  Mrs. 
Coffin,  "the  iron  lung  is  only  a 


place  called  The  Shack.  I  call  it 
the  iron  lung  because   he  can't  • 
breathe    for    30    minutes    away  . 
from  ^here."  ^ 

The  Shack,  a  small,  frame  ' 
building  which  exemplifies  its  j 
name,  has  long  been  a  favorite 


fans.  Just  below  the  City  Hall,  < 
it  was  patronized  by  Coffin  and  i 
.his  frieiwhu*-^-' 

Brack   Creel,   one 
closest  friends,  formerly  owhed 
the     establishment     before     his 
health  failed  and  he  had  to  sell. 

Creel  told  of  another  of  Cof- 
fin's classroom  speeches.  "La- 
dies and  gentlemen,"  Coffin 
would  say,  "I  don't  mind   your 


smoking  in  my  class,  but  1  would 
like  for  you  to  use  ashtrays  aft- 
er ypu  finish  your  cigaret.  Don't 
let  me  catch  you  throwing  your 
finished  cigaret  on  the  floor  and 
grinding  it  under  your  heel.  The 
people  that  clean  up  this  class- 
room are  perhaps  a  lot  smarter 
than  you  are,  but  haven't  had 
the  chance  to  got  an  education." 

..  .^^    -...t^Jk >a<wwe   ^ft'Of   Ooffitt's*^  closest 

of  Coffin's  friends  attended  a  valedictory 
parly  glvfcn  by  The  Shack  at  a 
Pittsboro  Rd.  diner  May  19.  At 
this  party  Coffin  read  his  vale- 
dictory, in  which  was  included  a 
.short  sketch  of  some  of  his 
friends  and  some  of  the  scenes 
at  The  Shack. 


Dr.  Carmichael  Talks 
To  Meeting  Of  Deans 

WINSTON-SALEM    — i^"* —    The    George  Colgin.  administrative  res- 
dean  of  women  is  still  an  imuort-  ■  ident  in  the  Dept.  of  Pastoral  Care 


Funeral  services  will  be  held  at 
3  p.m.  today  for'  O.  J.  (Scipper) 
Coffin  in  the  University  Methodist 
Church 

Rev.    Charles    S.    Hubbard*  will*' 
officiate.  Burial  will  be  in  the  Cha- 
pel Hill  Cemetery. 

Coffin,  one  of  the  most  color- 
ful and  beloved  leaders  of  south- 
ern journalism,  died  in  Raleigh 
Monday  night.  His  death  was  due 
to  pneumonia  and  was  the  end 
result  of  a  long-time  asthmatic 
condition. 

Active  pallbearers  will  be  J.  B. 
Linker,  Duncan  Neville,  Frank 
Umstead,  Joe  Page.  Norman  Cor- 
don and  Hugh  Wilson. 

Honorary  pallbearers  will  be 
faculty  members  of  the  School  of 
Journalism  and  former  members. 
They  include: 

Roy  Parker  of  Ahoskie,  Weimar 
Jones  of  Franklin,  Phillips  Rus- 
sell of  Chapel  Hill,  Jack  Riley  of 
Raleigh  and  Thomas  J.  Lassiter 
of  Smithfield. 

Others  included  are  UNC  Chan- 
cellor Robert  B.  House,  WC  Act 
ing  Chancellor  W.  W.  Pierson,  F. 
O.  Bowman.  Carl  P.  Durham,  John 
W.  Umstead,  Roland  W.  McClam- 
roch.  E.  B.  Jeffress.  Louis  Graves. 
Paul  Eubanks,  Brack  Creel  and 
Collier  Cobb  Jr. 

Coffin  retired  last  summer  from 
the  UNC  School  of  Journalism 
where  he  had  been  teaching  for 
the  past  30  years. 

Upon  his  retirement  he  was 
honored  by  a  party  given  by  for- 
mer students.  Several  hundred  of 

Tribute  Set 

Tk*  Univaraitv  wilt  s»*p  itt 
ciaascs   l*r   two   minutas   Thurt- 

d*nt«   tvh*  dlad   "at   a   result  of 
Soviet  trranny." 

Chanealler  Robert  Houm  an- 
nounced th»  Univorsity  is  ioin- 
ing  14  othar  univarsitias  in  the 
tribute  from  11:30  a.m  to  11:32 
a.m. 


the  students  from  all  parts  of  the 
state  attended  the  party  at  the 
home  here  of  journalism  Profes- 
sor Walter  Spearman. 


He  also  received  numerous  good 
will  messages  from  former  stu- 
dents throughout  the  United 
States  and  in  Europe. 


Members  Of  Community 
Express  Their  Sadness 


ant  college  official  despite  the 
fact  that  her  office  has  changed 
considerably  since  IMO,  a  Uni- 
versity of  North  CarolinA  official 
declared    here    Tuesday. 

Dr.  Katherinc  Carmichael,  UNC 
dean  of  women  in  Chapel  Hill, 
made  her  remarks  in  an  address 
before  the  fall  meeting  of  the 
North  Carolina  .\ssn.  of  Deans  of 
Women    at    Wake    Forest    College. 


of  the  North  Carolina  Baptist  Ho.s- 
pital. 


Tha  action  was  initiated,  the 
chancellor  said,  by  tho  American 
Committaa  for  Cultural  Frea- 
dom. 

The  silence  w<ll  t>«  observed, 
ho  said,  "in  cemmamoration  of 
tho  role  played  by  students  of 
Hvngary  in  their  struggle  for 
froodem." 


That  Stuff  Falling  From  Sky 
Will  Fall  A  Couple  More  Days 


^ainy  weather  will  be  with  us 
another  day  or  so,  according  to 
Raleigh-Durham     weather    observ- 


About  70   persons   attended   the   crs. 
all-day   session,    which    included    a        The    bureau    said    Tuesday    that 
morning      address      by      Chaplain    showers     will     probably 


A  GRAD  STUDENT  WITH  BLUE  EYES: 


We've  Got  Maid  Of  Cotton  Hopeful 


until  Friday. 

Showers  yesterday   were  due  to 
a    small,    low-pressure   storm    cen- 
tered  near  Lumberton,  they  said. 
Scattered    rain    the   rest   of    the 
continue    week   probably  will  be  the  result  \ 

of  a   cold   front   moving  eastward  '. 

across  the  Mississippi  River.  j 

I      Weather  observers  did  not  dls- 

!  credit  the  possibility  of  more  In- 

!  dian   Summer  weather  in  Novem-  j 

,  ber,   however.  ' 


Members  of  the  University  com- 
munity have  expressed  their  sad- 
ness at  the  passing  of  0.  J.  (Skip- 
per) Coffin,  formerly  dean  of  the 
School  of  Journalism  here. 

President  William  Friday  of  the 
Consolidated  University  said:  "Os- 
car Coffin,  one  of  the  most  be- 
loved men  in  Chapel  Hill,  was  a 
great  inspiration  to  his  students. 
lie  built  the  School  of  Journalism 
and  his  contribution  as  teacher 
and  dean  was  significant  and  far- 
reaching." 

•DEBT' 

Dean  Norval  Neil  Luxon  of  the 
school  said: 

"Hundreds  of*  alumni  of  the 
School  of  Journalism  mourn  the 
passing  of  O.  J.  Coffin,  who  in  his 
3Q  years  of  teaching  impressed 
upon  generation  after  generation 
of  students  the  need  for  good 
craftsmanship  in  writing.  North 
Carolina  journalism  and  journal- 
ism in  general  owe  him  a  debt,  ■ 
long  to  be  remembered  and  dis- 
cussed wherever  alumni  meet. 

"Our  sympathy  goes  out  to  'Miss 
Gertrude.'  We  shall  long  remem- 
ber the  homey  friendliness  of  the 
Skipper  and  her  to  students  and 
staff  alike.  " 

Phillips  Russell,  editor  of  the 
Chapel  HUJ  News  Leader  and  Jong 
coworker  and  friend  of  Coffin,, 
said:  "It  was  a  great  shock  to  me 
to  learn  about  the  death  of  an 
old  partner.  We  were  together  in 
journalism  at  Chapel  Hill  nearly 
25  years.  ..."  | 

Chancellor  Robert  House  said: 
"He  was  one  of  the  ablest  and 
most  loved  teachers  ever  to  be 
associated  with  the  University.  A 
life-long  friend,  he  and  I  started 
to  work  together  at  Chapel  Hill 
in  the  same  year  (1926).  We  were 
intimate  friends  in  a  professional 
and  personal  way,"  , 

Oscar  Jackson  Coffin  was  born 
Feb.  9,  1887,  at  Carter's  Mill,  now 
Robbins,  and  moved  to  Asheboro 
at  an  early  age.  After  graduation 
from  UNC  in  1909.  he  taught 
school,  and  worked  on  the  Ashe- 
boro Courier,  for  a  salary  of  SB 
per  week. 
EVOLUTION 

In  1911  he  became  sports  editor 
of  the  Winston-Salem  Journal,  but 


returned  to  the  Asheboro  paper  in 
1912,  when  he  married  Gertcude 
Wilson,  of  Haywood  County.  He 
later  worked  in  Chapel  Hill,  then 
for  The  Charlotte  Observer,  and 
in  1918  became  city  editor  and 
later  editor  of  The  Raleigh  Times. 
He  was  known  for  his  hard-hitting 
editorials,  and  especially  for  his 
support  of  education  in  North 
Carolina  against  the  "Monkey 
Bill  "  to  bar  the  teaching  of  evolu- 
tion in  the  public  schools. 

In  1926  he  succeeded  Gerald 
Johnson  as  the  only  teacher  of 
joiu-nalism  at  UNC.  and  from  then 
until  1936  constituted  a  one-man 
school  of  journalism.  He  was  dean 
of  the  journalism  school  until 
1953,  and  following  his  retirement 
as  dean,  taught  in  the  school  until 
June  30,  1956. 

Until  his  death  he  continued  his 
column,  "Shucks  and  Nubbins," 
and  editorial  writing  in  The 
Greensboro  Daily  News.  During 
his  last  three  years  at""  the  Univer- 
sity he  taught  classes  in  editorial 
and   feature  writing. 

Surviving  in  addition  to  his  wife 
are  one  son.  Wilson  Coffin,  of  Dur. 
ham,   and   three   grandchildren. 


IN  THE  INFIRMARY 


By   BOB   MYERS 

Pretty  Jo  Anne  Deason,  UNC 
graduate  student,  isn't  trying  to 
rush  the  season,  but  she's  antici- 
pating Christmas  with  so  much  en- 
thusiasm that  Santa  may  be  get- 
ting a  letter  any  day. 

And  the  letter  might  begin  like 
this: 


long  line  of  South  Carolina  beau- 
ties who  have  cornered  the  mar- 
ket by  winning  titles  ranging  from 
"Miss  America"  to  "Miss  Uni- 
verse" in  the  past  three  years,  is 
preparing  for  the  big  event. 

Trim     and     lithe     {5'7'4"),     Jo   South 
Anne,  who  won  the  "Maid  of  Cot- 
ton"  title   over   21    dther   contest- 
ants  in   a  recent  state  contest   at 


tradition     of    homespun     beauties  one  of  eight  students  from  a  stu-  | 

who  have  preceded  her  successful-  dent    body    of    1,100    to    graduate 

ly.  and  win,  she  would  leave  im-  with  an  A   average.  And  she  was  * 

mediately  for  New  York  City  and  a    member    of    the    Senior   Order, ! 

later  depart  for  an  extended  Euro-  Winthrop's    highest    honorary    so- 1 

pean  tour  before  returning  to  the  ciety,  and  listed  in  Who's  Who  in 

American    Colleges    and    Universi- 


"I   am   a   22-year-old.   blue-eyed   ^,j^^^^„    College,    is    planning 


Students  in  the  Infirmary  yes- 
terday   included: 

Misses  Barbara  Smith,  Caro- 
lyn   Roberts,    Ruth    Woodruff. 

George  Stavnitski,  John  Hunt, 
Richard  Gustafson,  Robert  South- 
ernland,  Joseph  Friedberg,  Ern- 
est Briggs,  Isaac  Morrill,  Elbert 
Jones,  Robert  Britt,  Donald  Bul- 
iard.  Charles  Harrington,  Bruce 
Caldwell,  Herman  Weaver,  Wil- 
liam Kendall,  Otis  Drake,  Henry 
Green,  Charles  Flack,  James 
Weodard,  David  Packard. 


blonde  from  Enoree,  S.  C,  and  re- 
cently I  was  judged  "South  Caro- 
lina Maid  of  Cotton'  for  1957.  On 
Dec.  27  and  28,  three  days  after 
your  globe-circling  trek,  I  will  rep- 
resent South  Carolina  in  the  na- 
tional 'Maid  of  Cotton"  finals  at 
Memphis,  Tenn.  And  what  a 
Christmas  present  winning  that  ti- 
tle would  be.  I  wonder  if  you're 
making  the  crown?" 

WON'T  RETURN 

And    when    Santa    is    informed 


for    her 


Tactful  and  friendly  with  a 
pleasant,  refined  personality,  but 
modest  about  her  good  looks,  Jo 
Anne  came  to  UNC  this  year  upon 
the  recommendation   of   her   Win- 


Banks  Roads 
Still  Flooded 

RALEIGH  — 'i*»—  Water  contin- 
ued td  cover  long  stretches  of 
highway  along  the  Outer  Banks 
Tuesday  as  the  result  of  a  storm 
that  has  raged  the  past  three  days. 


Students  Held 
After  Beating 
Of  Local  Man 

Three  men,  two  of  them  UNC 
students,  are  out  of  jail  on  bond 
today  following  the  serious  beat- 
ing of  Wade  Higgs.  33-year-old 
Chapel  Hill  resident. 

Higgs  was  beat?n  early  Sunday 
morning  after  the  three  men  broke 
into  his  one-room  apartment  in 
the  Sutton  Building  on  Franklin 
St.  and  assaulted  him.  police  said. 

Bobby  L.  Moore  of  Carrboro, 
Harry  Grasser,  and  Donald  T. 
Cheatham  were  charged  in  the 
beating. 

Grasser,  freshman  from  South- 
ern Pines,  and  Cheatham,  sopho- 
more from  Durham,  are  both  UNC 
students,  according  to  Patrolman 
Amos  Home  of  the   Police  De}tt. 

Moore  is  charged  with  aiding 
and  abetting  breaking  and  enter- 
ing, assault,  and  carrying  a  con- 
cealed weapon  (a  pistol).  Grasser 
and  Cheatham  are  charged  with 
breaking  and  entering  and  assault. 

All  three  men  were  freed  from 
jail  under  S500  bond. 

Patrolman  Home  said  Higgs  had 
"nothing  to  do  with  the  fight." 
He  was  in  his  room,  he  said,  when 

..,..,  the  men  kicked  down   part  of  the 

the  decision  for  WUNC-TV  to  pro-     Hnnr     «nf„r  w        ..a      .     »W     . 

^         uoor.    entered,    and    started    beat- 
ing him.   Police   believe  the  cause 


WUNC-TV  May 
Start  Shows 
For  Wide  Use 

A  two-day   conference   is   under- 
way   here    which    may    result    in 


$500    wardrobe  ^designed 
entry  at  Memphis. 

She's  getting  tips  from  Libba 
McGee.  the  only  South  Carolina 
maid    to   cop    national    honors   (in 

1950)  since  the  Palmetto  state  has  .       ■      ^^.   ^       ^     ,  , 

sponsored  a  contestant.  Both  Lib-    dramatics    in    high   school   or   col 
ba  and  Jo  Anne  are  from  Spartan-    '^^* 
burg  County. 

Jo  Anne,  seeking  a   masters   in 
dramatic   arts    here   after    a    four-    »^  ^'^^  «/  vocation, 
year  tenure  at  Winthrop  College  at        "I  am   not   at   all    interested    m 
Rock    Hill,    was    all    excited    when    professional  theater  because  there 


that  cotton  maids  representing  18  she  heard  that  last  years  "Maid  is  a  coopei-ative  spirit  and  certain 
cotton-producing  states  from 
around  the  nation  will  gather  at 
Memphis  for  the  post-Christmas 
affair,  he  may  not  return  to  the 
Arctic  Circle. 
I     Meanwhile,    the    latest    in    the 


of  Cotton,"  Myra  Lane  Cherry,  of   feeling  that  goe.s  into  community 
Orangeburg,  placed  second  in  the    productions    which     is    absent 
"Miss  World"  contest  held  at  Lon-    professional  work,  "  she  savs. 


ties. 

LIKES   COTTON 

A  fancier  of  cotton  fabrics,  the 

talented   young  lady   is  partial  to 

straight    skirts    (which     somehow 

throp  instructors,  many  of  whom    fail  to  retain  that  shape  when  she's 

were  former  members  of  the  Car-    wearing  one),  and  plans  an  assort- 

olina.  Playmakers.  ment  of  cottons  of  the  latest  styles 

Chiefly    interested    in    teaching    »n  her  elaborate  wardrobe. 

The   daughter  of   Mr.   and   Mrs. 
and    performing    in    commu-    William  IJ.  Deason  is  gratified  to    er  the  highway  slowly 
nity  theater  productions,  Jo  Anne    represent  South  Carolina  as  "Maid 
considers   dramatics    an    avocation    of  Cotton." 

"I  feel  honored  because  the  con- 
test is  held  on  a  high  level  and 
is  much  more  than  a  beauty  con- 
test. I  hope  that  I  can  continue  in 
the  best  tradition  of  the  South 
in  Carolina  girl.s  and  win  the  nation- 
al title,"  she  said. 


This  was  reported  by  Chief 
Highway  Engineer  W.  H.  Rogers 
Jr..  who  said  that  stretches  of  U. 
S.  158  totaling  about  five  miles 
were  covered  with  water  up  to 
14  inches  deep. 

He  said  traffic  was  moving  ov- 


I  duce  an  educational  .series  of  chil- 

I  dren's    health    and    dramatic    pro- 

j  grams   for  national  distribution  to 

j  educational  stations. 

j       Participating    in    the    conference 

I  are  Kenneth  Wright,  director  of 
radio    and    tele-ision    services    at 

;  the  Univorsity  of  Tennessee;  Ray 
Johnston  and    Emil   Young,   direc- 

,  tors  of  WUNC-TV  at  N.  C.  State 
College  and  WCUNC,  respective- 
ly; and  Earl  Wynn,  director  of  the 
Communication    Center    here. 

Wright  is  now  on  a  year's  leave 
of    absence    working   at    the    Edu- 

I  cational  Radio  and  TV  Center  in 
Ann  Arbor,  Mich.   He   is   program 

'  coordinator  for  the  Southern  Re- 
gion   of   educational   stations. 


Rogers  said  most  of  the  water 
covering  the  road  was  rain  water 
and  not  from  the  ocean,  since  it 
has  been  raining  in  the  area  since 
Monday.  •"'  \ 


Farmer  Sets  Talk 


Dr.  Thomas  W.  Farmer,  profes- 
sor   of    neurological    medicine    at 
the    School    of    Medicine,    will    be 
Island,  Rogers  said  a  long  stretch    speaking  before   the   Rowan-Davie    Roland  ^arker  3 — 7-9  p.m..  Music 
of  road  also  was  under  water   up  ,  County    Medical    Society    meeting    Study  Group;    Woodhouse  Confer^ 


South    of    Oregon    on    Hatteras 


of  the  beating  to  be  an  argument 
which    had    arisen    over    liquor. 

Higgs  was  taken  to  the  emerg- 
ency room  of  Memorial  Hospital, 
according  to  Home,  where  he  was 
treated  for  a  cut  over  his  left 
eye  and  brui.sed  ribs  and  arms. 
Three  stitches  were  taken  over 
Higgs'   left  eye. 

The  trial  is  scheduled  for  a  fu- 
ture meeting  of  Chapel  Hill  Re- 
corder's  Court. 

GM'S  SLATE 

The  following  activities  are 
scheduled  for  Graham  Memorial 
today: 

Grail  Room— 5-6  p.m..  Pan  Hel- 
lenic Council;  9-11  p  m..  State  Stu- 
dent Legislature;  Roland  Parker 
1-^-5  p.m..  Debate;  8:30-9  p.m., 
IDC;  Roland  Parker  2—8-9:30 
p.m..   Jeoha    Jehovah's    Witnesses; 


don  recently.  Active    in    theater   at   Winthrop       And  this  is  to  say  when  the  roll  |  to  six  inches  deep.  He  said  there 

TRADITION  *  from  where  she  received   a  B.A.    is   called    out    "yonder"    in    Mem-    had    b?en    some    damage    to    the 

Should  Jo  Anne  live  up  to  the   degree  in  1955,  Jo  Anne  was  alao   phis.  Sooth  Carolina  will'  be  there,    road  but  this  has  been  repaired. 


in  Salisbury  Thursday.  His  sub-  ence  Room.  4-5:30  p.m..  Chancellor 
ject  will  be  "Treatment  of  Cere-  Committee:  Rendezvous  Room,  8-11 
bral   Vascular  Disease."  I  p.m.,  GMAB   Party. 


rAGI    TWO 


THE  6A1IY  TAR  HtIL 


WEDNISDAY,  OCTOBEk  II,  1M«    •- 


CARQLEIDOSCOPE 


:-.|iU:i  : 


SPECTATLER  PAPERS: 


The  University's  Skipper:  aji  "   r-  '      ^ 

Man  Who  Was  Chapel  Hil|       Another  Challenging  Opportunity      Adlai  s  Camf^ign_ 

Time  Running  Out 


Ciiapel  Hill,  a  wise  alumnus 
ome  observed,  is  not  a  town  or  a 
unixerity  or  any  kind  of  place.  It 
is  a  group  of  f>eopIe. 

It  is  lacultv.  administration  and 
■..)wnspeople.  It  is  students  and  stu- 
dent leaders  and  janitors  and  taxi- 
xab  tri\ers  and  all  other  sorts  of 
people. 

One  tiling  distinguishes  tiiese 
peopiO  from  other  })eople  who  live 
in  (onnnunities  of  11.000  popula- 
tion. Tliey  have  a  Chapel  Hill 
.slant  on  life.  Thev  attack  problems 
with  a  CJnapcl  Hill  attitude:  they 
ask  qiiesticms  with  a  decided  trace 
of  Chapel    Hill   in  their  voice. 

One  of  the  }^>eople  wlio  was  most 
Chapel   Hill  w;js  Skipper  Coffin. 

Some  of  his  more  naive  students 
tailed  him  "Dr."  Coffin:  some 
called  him  Mr."  Coffin.  Most 
folks  (ailed  him  "O.  ].'  or,  better. 
"Skipper."'  But  all  people  thought 
of  Chapel  Hill  when  thev  men- 
tioned Skipj>er  Coffin. 

He  was  as  much  a  jxirt  of  this 
pl.Ke  as  McC'orkle  Place  or  Silent 
S;un  or  1  he  Shack,  whose  inile\el 
fl<M>rs  he  used'to  walk  with  the 
l)ovs  in  the  afternoon.  He  was  as 
integral  as  the  students  he  taught, 
taught  in  a  different  sort  of  way. 
because  Skiprper  Coffin  was  a  dif- 
ferent soit  of  teacher. 

C 'off in  believed  simply  in  good 
Avriiing.  and  his  students  refle(ted 


that  I>elief.  He  I>elieved  in  being 
homey,  and  he  walked  and  talked 
and  drank  fjeer  with  his  students 
l)ecause  he  enjoyed  it.  When  he 
was  named  dean  of  the  S(  hool  of 
)ournalism,  he  said  the  title  em- 
barrassed him. 

Like  the  chancellor  pushing  a 
baby-carriage  down  Franklin  St  , 
like  Louis  (iraves  parkittg  his  old 
greeit  car  in  front  of  the  Post  Of- 
fice, the  sight  of  Skipper  Coffin  in. 
Chapel  Hill  ineant  that,  no  matter 
how  the  rest  of, the  world  was  gv)- 
ing.  this  town  was  still  the  same. 

.And  (-hapel  Hill  belonged  to 
.Skipper  Coffin  just  ?•>  much  as  he 
belonged  to  her.  The  two  not  onlv 
coexisted:  they  depended  on  ea<  h 
other. 

So  it  was  wtih  a  great  sadness 
that  we  watched  Skipper  Coffin 
leave  this  town  earlv  last  summer. 
¥(n  we  knew  that,  in  addition  to 
<ihapel  Hills  losing  one  ol  the 
men  who  made  the  pla(,e  C-hapel 
Hill.  Skip|x*r  Coffin  was  losing 
something  ver\  dear. 

It  is  ni(e  to  know.  howe\er,  that 
a  k>t  (^f  Skiyjper  C.offin  will  stay 
with  us.  The  Shack  will  itmain. 
and  the  gteen  oval  of  grass  atid 
trees  will  .stay  in  front  of  the 
School  of  Journalism.  But  (best  of 
all,  there  will  be  a  lot  of  jj^ood 
newspapermen  and  women  who 
are  good  largely  because  Skipper 
Coffin   told  them  how. 


S.C.  Solons  At  It  Again 


The  South  Ciarolinians  are  at  it 
again,  onlv  this  time  theii  cause 
is   pitifullv   hojH'less. 

Led  bv  lormcr  f.»ov.  James  I". 
Byrnes,  a  group  of  independents  is 
trying  to  o\evthrow  the  Demotrats. 
They  reientlv  (ailed  for  a  "new 
de(  hnation  of  i:uiepetidencc. ' 

This  is  especially  ironic,  coming 
from  the  slate  wliere  the  I'.S.  Con- 
stituticm  isn't  e\en  recognized. 

Meanwhile.  South  Carolina 
Democrats  are  calling  for  solidari- 
tv  behind  Adl.ii  Stevenson.  A  Dem- 
(xratic  victoi\.  \ht\  siv.  i«  the  on- 
/y  way  thev  ran -*»e 'sure  o«  ^^rnw^ 
SoutJicr!!  •  .'u.,  in  the  seleciitai  iit 
federal  (..strict  judges. 


The  Daily  Tar  Heel 


The  official  student  pubhcation  of  the 
Publication.s  Board  of  the  University  of 
North  Carolina,  where  it  is  published 
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Entered  as  second  class  matter  in  tht 
Dust  office  in  Chapel  Hill.  N.  C,  undei 
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FRED  POAM.EDGE 

Managing  Editor 

-  CH.\RLIE  SLOAN 

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RAY  LINTCrai 

Business  Manager  .._ 

BILL  BOB  PLEI, 

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Night  Editor  

Proof  Reader Cortland  Eijwards 


Soutlv  Carolina  independents 
are  like  most  othei  South  C^aro- 
lina  people,  except  in  an  election 
year.  Thev  farm,  run  busine.sses. 
giipe  about  the  rain  or  the  lack 
thereof,  and  sleep  at  nights.  But 
let  an  election  vear  come  along, 
and  they're  disgrunted. 

The  Democratic  Party  hasnt 
done  enough  for  them,  they  argue. 
They  threaten,  raise  cain  at  the 
convention,  threaten  some  more. 
and  maybe  get  what  they  want. 

In  this  case,  they  didn't  get  what 
they  wanted.  So  they're  formin'^ 
their  own  party  to  represent  them. 
'  Thrriy^tJodT  and  "  fin^,-*»iWct*' 
.American.  But  this  year  it  just 
won't  work. 

1  hird  parties  alwavs  have  been 
laughing  matters  for  most  .\meri- 
tan  \()ters.  Professors  of  political 
science  say  their  <hief  cftec  tivetiess 
lies  in  their  putting  pres-sure  on  the 
two  major  parties.  Through  a  pro- 
cess of  ba'ck-scratihing.  a  third 
partv  can  gel  what  it  wants  frcmi  a 
major  party,  or  it  can  lasi  its  votes 
Avith  the  other  partv. 

This  is  the  way  politicians  go  to 
national  conventions  and  get  nomi- 
nated for  the  Presidencv.  The  melt- 
ing of  a  bunch  of  small  segments 
into  (me  has  l)ecome  an  essential 
part  of  the  democratic    prcness. 

But.  we  repeat,  the  South  (.aro- 
lina  indei>endent  movement  ap- 
pears to  have  little  real  force  be- 
hind it.  Rather,  it  seems  to  be  com- 
posed mainlv  of  people  who  have 
too  tnany  gripes  and  too  much 
honor  to  submit  to  the  will  of  .the 
Democratic  Party. 

We  doubt  that  the  independents 
will  have  either  major  party  fight- 
ing to  sec  which  ciin  incorjjorate 
the  independent  planks  into  its 
own  platform.  The  independents 
just  aren't    that  strcmg. 

South  Carolinians  were  kicked 
around  quite  a  bit  at  the  Demo- 
cratic .National  Convention  in 
Chicago  last  summer.  It  looks  as 
if  they  would  now  be  able  to  com- 
prehend where  wise  politics  leaves 
off  and  stubborness  starts. 


The  State 
Does  Have 
Something 


Wait  a  minute.  "VV'e  knew- 
there  was  something  nice  a^bout 
South  Carolina. 

The  .A.ss€Kiated  Press  says  on  the 
heads  of  South  Carolina  giils  'rest 
five  of  the  world's  top  fjeauty 
crowns— no  other  state  can  make 
that  claim. ' 

We   always   knew   the    Palmetto 

State  was  good  for  something. 


Frank  Crowther  . 

Now  thai  William  C.  Friday 
has  officially  taken  over  as  the 
Consolidated  University  Presi- 
dent, th^  South  Bldg.  focal  point 
has  become  the  ofiice  of  the 
Chancellor. 

Within  the  month  we  may  also 
have  a  new  Chancellor,  and  this 
new  man  may  be  the  key  to  a 
new  era  of  echication  at  the  Uni- 
versity. In  fact,  this  new  Chan- 
cellor could  mean  all  the  dif- 
ference in  "an  era  of  great  ac- 
complishments," as  Mr.  Friday 
'put  it. 

To  tho.se  of  use  whi  are  active- 
ly interested  in  the  outcome  of 
this  selection,  the  weeks  are  be- 
coming more  and  more  crucial 
and  we  have  less  time  in  which 
we  may  impress  or  influence 
those  people  who  hold  the  power 
of  selection. 

I  say  impress  and  influence, 
because  we  are  trying  to  do  pre- 
cisely that:  we  aspire  to  influ- 
ence, impress,  sway,  enlighten, 
awaken,  and  induce  them.  In  do- 
ing so,  we  feel  justified,  because 
we  are  vitally  concerned  with 
the  future  of  the  University  of 
North   Carolina.  ', 

Mr.  Friday  will  need  a  man  in 
the  Chancellor's  chair  whom  he 
can  trust,  whom  he  can  confide 
in,  who  is  honest,  sincere  and  as 
dedicated  as  he  himself  unques- 
tionably is.  With  this  new  Chan- 
cellor, he  will  control,  for  the 
most  part  the  University.  It  is 
with  this  new  man  that  he  will 
embark  on  our  new  era  of  edu- 
cation in  North  Carolina. 

And  we  have  a  man  on  this 
campus  who.  unreservedly,  can 
fill  the  position  with  the  same 
type  of  youth  that  our  new  Pres- 
ident has,  the  energy  necessitated 
by  the  position,  the  prestige  need- 
ed to  repre.sent  Carolina,  a  per- 
sonality that  literally  sparkles 
and  attracts,  and  finally,  and  of 
jiiost  importance,  the  educational 
competence  and  exeprience  that 
tboiXkancellar^must  possess. 

This  man  i.s  William  Hardman 
Poteat.  A.B..  .  1941  (Oberlin); 
B.b..  1944  (Yale);  Ph.D..  1951 
(DukQ). 

There  was  a  previous  com- 
msnt  in  the  Daily  Tar  Heel 
which  ^laimed  that  there  "was  a 
movement  to  ''railroad'*  Mr.  Po- 
teat into  office  by  some  "well- 
meaning  faculty  members  and 
students." 

That  was  an  infantile  attack  on 
a  .serious  and  sincere  effort. 

We  have  not  laid  any  tracks 
for  a  railroad;  we  have  been 
working  hard  for  the  man  whom 
we  think  can  help  the  University 
most  in  the  office  of  Chancellor. 
There  are  no  selfish  motivations 
attached. 

The  article  went  on  to  say  that 
Mr.  Poteat's  removal  from  the 
classroom  and  installation  into 
an  administrative  position  would 
"sterilize  the  effectiveness  of 
many  of  (his)  talents " 

I  don't  believe  that  this  is  a 
question  of  administrative  sterili- 


BILL  POTEAT 

.  .  .  teacher  or  administrator? 

zalion,  ii  there  is  such  a  malady, 
but  one  of  hesitance  for  fear  that 
the  man  would  lose  his  creative 
spark  and  be  sublimated  by  men- 
ial tasks. 

If  we  look  back  to  the  duties 


of  the  Chancellor  for  a  moment, 
we  will  see  that  his  talents,  can 
be  put  to  good  use  and  there 
would  be,  in  iact.  more  need  to 
exercise  them. 

Poteat'.s  logical  and  alert  mind 
would  be  just  what  is  needed  to 
act  in  screening  the  faculty  in 
his  position  as  Chancellor  where 
he  would  "recommend  to  the 
President  all  appointments  for 
terms  of  more  than  one  year, 
promotions  within,  and  removals 
from  the  faculty  and  other  posi- 
tiaas,  administrative  *  or  other- 
wi.se.  in  the  institutions  .  .  ." 

And  it  is  ridiculous  to  infer 
that  we  need  a  "progressive  edu- 
cator from  some  other  area  . . . 
with  .  .  .  fresh  ideas"  or  an  'out 
sider  ...  to  keep  abreast  of  other 
leading  educational  institutions 
of  this  nation." 

Do  we  suppose  that  Mr.  Poteat 
is  void  of  fresh  ideas? 

Contrarily,  here  is  a  man  who 
has  his  most  productive  years 
ahead  of  him. 

We  have  one  of  the  best  Uni- 


versities in  the  country,  and  I 
hope  it  remains  that  way.  We 
need  not  go  outside  our  own 
community  when  we  have  such  a 
wealth  within.  Let  us  dravt'  from 
ouf  own  resources,  not  someone 
else's  or  some  other  region's. 

It  is  only  in  the  interest  of 
keeping  the  Universtiy  on  a  high 
plain  and  to  continue  with  the 
same  or  even  higher  standards 
which  are  expjected  of  our  great 
University  that  we  have  given 
so  much  interest  and  contributed 
so  much  time  and  effort  to  this 
appointment. 

William  H.  Poteat  is  a  man 
whom  we  could  respect,  who 
would  work  diligently  with  our 
President,  and  who  would  flow 
smoothly  into  the  vein  of  Car- 
olina tradition  of  excellence, 
while  adding  the  type  of  youth 
and  vigor  to  the  position  that  no 
other  could. 

It'  is  without  hesitation  or  res- 
ervation that  we  recommend  Mr. 
Poteat  for  the  office  of  Chan- 
cellor. 


ftoger  Wilk  CHorse 


'&oy,  Have  They  Got  A  Personality  Cult  Over  Here!' 


A/ew  Facts  About  Appomattox 


Tb»  following  explanation  of  ^ 
the  North's  victory  was  slipped  I 
under  The   Daily   Tar   Heel   of- 
fice door  by  an  apparently  un- 
reconstructed Southerner. 
After  chasing  the  Union  Army 
all    over    the   map.    even    as   far 
.North   as  Gettysburg  way   up   in 
Pennsylvania,    the    Confederates 
and  General  Lee  were  very,  very 
tired. 
The    Southern    Army,    camped 


out  at  .Appomattox,  was  preparing 
to  wipe  out  the  Yankees  the  next 
morning,  march  victoriously  in- 
to Washington  and  raise  the 
Stars  and  Bars  over  the  White 
House. 

General  Lee  was  resting  at  the 
Court  Hous°  before  mapping  out 
the  strategy  for  this  final  cam- 
paign. Into  the  Court  House  walk- 
ed General  Grant  ready  to  sur- 
render.   Grant    was   such    an    in- 


conspicuous looking  man  that 
Lee  took  him  to  be  his  orderly. 
Naturally,  Lee  gave  Grant  his 
sword  to  polish.  Grant,  very  sur- 
prised, took  Lee's  sword  and 
actually  thought  that  Lee  had 
surrendered.  He  even  thanked 
Lee  for  surrendering  and  Gen- 
eral Lee,  being  a  true  Southern 
gentleman,  couldn't  go  back  on 
his  word. 


Pogo 


By  Walt  Kelly 


>  ««  Mti  rxw><«<w.  >•'' 


Li'l  Abn«r 


By  A!  Capp 


/ 


XE.PT 


KILL 


T 


fl 


With  Kefauver's  nomination,  hope  faded  for  a 
wholesale  swing  to  Stevenson  among  Ordinarily 
Democratic  groups  in  the  powerful  Northeastern 
states,  and  Democratic  strategy  turned  to  the  farm 
states.  If  economic  problems  are  pressing  enough, 
they  can  overcome  personality  factors  for  many 
voters.  Among  farmers  in  some  states  the  economic  ~  - 
recession  holds  promise  of  obscuring  strong  qualms 
about  Stevenson's  personality,  even  though  no  one  •• 
disagrees  that  the  Democrats  woul<|  run  more 
strongly  in  the  Middle  West  if  their  tickets  were 
reversed. 

On  the  other  hand,  it  seems  clear  that  more 
pro-Kennedy  voters  would  swing  to  Stevenson  if  - 
Kennedy  were  his  running-mate  than  Kefauver  is 
able  to  swing  as  the  second  man.  In  part  this  is ' " 
simply  because  many  pro-Kefauver  voters  are  go- 
ing Democratic  in  any  case  this  year,  for  economic 
reasons. 

But  there  is  increasing  doubt  among  Midwest-  .^ 
ern  observers  that  even  Kefauver  plus  the  farm 
slump  will  be  sufficient  to  turn  more  than  normal- 
ly Democratic  Missouri  and  Minnesota  to  Stevenson. 
And,  whatever  happens  in  the  Middle  West,  few  de- 
tached observers  presently  see  Stevenson  amassing 
an  electoral  majority  in  the  face  of  unwavering^ 
Eisenhower  sentiment  elsewhere. 

General  urban  prosperity  and  the  preference 
for  Ike  as  a  person  seem  destined  to  keep  Steven- 
son from  accumulating  as  much  of  the  big  city  vote  ' 
as  he  needs  to  win  in  the  populous  Northeastern 
states.  Consequently,  the  best  hope  for  salvaging 
some  of  these  states  lies  among  white  coUir  and 
professional  voters,  many  of  whom  live  in  suburbs  , 
and  many  of  whom  have  warmed  to  Stevenson  as 
they  have  to  no  other  Democrat  in  recent  times. 

These  people  tend  to  think  of  themselves  as  "in- 
dependents", but  undeterred  by  their  staunch   de- 
votion to  Stevenson,  they  continue  to  vote  Repub-    ^ 
lican  whenever  they  can.  This,  however,  they  can    * 
do  only  when  the  Republican  candidate  is  a  like-—* 
aWe   "liberar.   'internationalist",  or  "moderate" — 
i.e.  Wilkie,  Eisenhower,  Warren. 

TTierefore,  as  one  expert  with  a  reputation  for 
accuracy  has  explained,  against  such  Republicans,^ 
Stevenson  is  under  a  double  handicap:  He  loses' 
Democratic-oriented  voters  who  dislike  him  and  can 
accept  a  moderate  Republican,  but  is  not  able  to 
pick  up  the  votes  of  substantial  numbers  of  Steven- 
son admirers  who  dislike  his  party. 

Run  him  against  a  right-wing  or  personally  un- 
popular Republican,  this  argument  goes,  and  Stev- 
enson's strength  would  be  epic,  for  he  would  then 
hold  most  of  the  pro-Democrats  who  don't  like  him, 
and  would  in  addition  pick  up  an  unprecedented 
precentage  of  voters  in  the  group  which  constitutes 
a  major  bastion  of  GOP  strength.  New  Canaan, 
Scarsdale.  Evanston  ,and  their  counterparts  around 
the  country  might  then  be  found  arm  in  arm  with 
Brooklyn,  Harlem,  and  Jcftinston  County  in  the 
'Democratic  column. 

Hence  the  critical  importance  to  Stevenson  of  . 
the  Nixon  candidacy  and  the  President's  health  and 
age:  If  enough  of  the  pro-Republican  but  pro-Adlai 
voters  can  be  persuaded  that  a  vote  for  Ike  is  a  vote 
for  Nixon,  the  Democratic  big  city  defections  might 
be  offset  enough  in  the  suburbs  to  redeem  at  least 
some  of  the  large  Eastern  states  now  clearly  Ike's; 
one  or  two  of  these,  plus  California,  which  is  al- 
ways peculiar  and  where  Nixon's  unpopularity..has 
had  extra  years  to  grow,  plus  the  hoped-for  farm 
breakthrough,  plus  the  reunited  South— and  that's 
how  the  hopeful  gleam  gets  in  the  eye  of  the  ar- 
dent Stevensonite. 

The  trouble  with  the  gleam  is  that  so  far  there 
has  been  little  progress  in  persuading  the  pro-Re- 
publican independent  'moderate"  who  likes  Adlai 
that  Adlai's  opponent  in  the  race  is  Nixon.  The 
suburbs  are  still  15r'c  Dee's,  and  it  is  now  Oct.  3L 

THE  PRESIDENTIAL  RACE-PART  2 

Independent 
Goes  Republican 

Dave  Mundy 

Why  should  an  independent  or  a  "Jeffersonian 
Democrat"  vote  Republican  this  year? 

I  am  not  a  Democrat,  and  I  am  not  a  Republican. 
This,  as  far  as  my  local  registration  books  are 
concerned,  make  me  an  "independent."  This  puts 
me  in  that  large  group  of  people  who  votes  ac- 
cording to  issues  and  the  capabilities  of  the  candi- 
dates. It  is  from  this  context  that  I  can,  tvithout 
hesitation,  advise  any  and  all  to  vote  Republican 
nationally,  vote  Republican  in  North  Carolina. 

The  northern  wing  of  the  Democratic  Party, 
the  "big  labor"  leaders,  the  party  ADA  'intellect-, 
uals,"  the  big  city  machines,  to  all  effects  control 
the  national  party.  They  -are  pushing,  harder  than 
ever,  the  "shift  to  socialism."  More  government; 
economic  controls,  larger  expenditures,  the  'control 
of  the  masses'  through  larger  subsidies — guaran- 
teed cradle-to-grave  security  against  everything  ex- 
cept trench  mouth. 

A  Democrat  president  simply  means  the  loss 
of  more  individual  freedoms.  Blany  "states'  rights" 
Democrats  know  this,  yet  contiwue  to  vote  Demo- 
crat because  their  grandfathers  did  so  back  in  the 
days  when  their  party  still  retained  its  Jeffersonian 
attitude  toward  personal  freedom.  You  tr>'  to  figure 
out  why. 

Kyie  Hayes,  the  Republican  candidate  for  gov- 
ernor, Joel  Johnson,  candidate  for  the  Senate,  and 
Mr.  Storey,  candidate  for  education  commissioner, 
are  three  of  the  best  candidates  ever  offered  by  any 
party  in  North  Carolina.  I  invite  anyone  to  com- 
pare their  statements  over  important  issues — 
schools,  segregation,  taxes — ^with  the  now-tradition- 
al drivel  of  their  Democrat  opponents. 

So,  Democrat,  Republican,  or  Independent  in- 
terested in  preserving  your  freedoms — Vote  Repub- 
licah. 


^f<^ 


Co 


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The  Intc^ 
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Lounges 
which  rarif 
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The   fittil 
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Oct.  31. 


PACE    THREE 


can 


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Republican. 

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votes  ac- 

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Vote  Repub- 


Covering  The  Campus 


ART   COLLECTION 

A  collection  of  medallk  art. 
loaned  by  Robert  M.  Lester  of 
Chapel  Hill,  is  now  on  display  in 
the  Wilson  Library.  The  bronze 
medals  of  the  display  depict  most- 
ly themes  from  religion,  mytholo- 
gy, nature  and  famous  quotations. 
Others  are  commemorative,  honor- 
ing such  men  as  Charles  Lindbergh 
and   Mark  Twain. 

BLAZER   SALE 

The  Interdormitory  Council  will 
sponsor  a  blazer  sale  todaj-  in  Gra- 
ham Memorial's  Roland  Parker 
Lounges.  Fittings  for  the  coats,  |  of  University  College,  Oxford, 
which  range  in  price  from  $19.95  i  England,  to  *  held  in  the  Wood- 
to  $30.95.  will  be  made  by  a  rep- 1  h«use  Room  of  Graham  Memorial 
resentative  from  the  Robert  Blaz- '  at  4  p.m.  on  Monday.  Professor 
er  Co.  j  Hart's   topic  will   be   "Knowledge 

Th«  fittings  will  be  held  from !  and  Action." 


president  Tom  Lambeth  to  drop 
by  during  the  evening  for  a  break 
in  study  hours. 

FALL  FILM  SERIES 

The  Bells  if  St.  Trinian's  will 
be  shown  tomorrow  nigM  at  8  p.m. 
in  Carroll  Hall.  Starring  AJistar 
%ms,  the  movie  is  part  of  the 
Graham  Memorial  Activities  Board- 
sponsored  Fall  Film  Series. 

PHILOSOPHY  LECTURE 

The  Dept.  of  Philosophy  at  UNC 
and  Duke  will  jointly  sponsor  a 
lecture  by  ^ofessor  H.  L.  A.  Hart 


10  a.m.  to  5  p.m.  Sample  coats  arc 
currently  on  display  in  the  Y  and 
Lenoir  Hall. 

FELLOWSHIP 

The  Carolina  Christian  Fellow- 
ship will  meet  tonight  at  7  p.m. 
in  the  Choir  rehearsal  room  of 
Hill  Hall.  The  program  will  be  a 
Bible  study  discussion. 

HALLOWEEN  OPEN  HOUSE 

The  Graham  Memorial  Activities 
Board  is  sponsoring  a  Halloween 
Open  House  tonight  from  8  to  11 
p.m.  in  the  Rendez\'ous  Room. 
Free  refreshments  will  be  served 
by  coed  members  of  the  Receptions 
Committee  and  free  juke  box  music 
will  be  provided  for  by  GM.  All 
students  have  been  asked  by  GMAB 


TODAY    ONLY 


WUNC-TV 

WUNC-TV,  the  University's  edu- 
cational television  station.  Chamiel 
4: 

12:45  Music 

1:60  Today   on   The    Farm 

1:30  Play  Period 

2:00  Career  For  You 

2:30  Sign   Off 

5:45  Music 

6:00  Draw  Me  A  Stiry 

6:15  Sports  Clinic 

6:30  News 

6:45  Sports 

7:00  Industrial  Artisan 

7:30  College  Concert 

8:00  Tomorrow 

8:30  Living  Together 

9:00  Mental  Gymnasium 

9:30  American  Politics 

10:00  Final  Edition 

10:05  Sign  Off 

WUNC 

Following   is   a    listing   of   pro- 
grams today  from  the  Univci-sity's 
i  FM  radio  station: 
7:00    Intermezzo 

Messages  and  Men 
Songs  of  France 
Curtain  Going  Up 
I  Hear  America  Singing 
Georgetown    University 

Radio  Forum 
Debussy  the  Master 
News 

Evening  Masterwork 
Sign  Off 


Scholarship  Winner 

A.  B.  Craine  (left)  is  shown  above  awarding  $650  General  Elec- 
tric Corporation  Scholarship  to  UNC  Senior  Clayton  Davidson  of 
Moorasville  to.  further  his  eduction  in  accounting.  GE  alio  gava 
tha  University  $350  for  general  purposes. 

GMAB  Largest  Student 
Activity  Says  Lambeth 


By  MARY   JANE    FISHER 

Graham  Memorial  Activities 
Board  is  UNCs  largest  single  stu- 
dent activity,  with  over  500  stu- 
dents working  on  some  phase  of 
It,  according  to  Tom  Lambeth, 
president.  It  is  the  programming 
unit  of  the  student  union  and  is 
run  entirely  by  the  students. 

The    activities    which    it    offers 


sors  are  after-game  receptions 
with  combos  during  football  sea- 
son; "Les  Pelites  Musicales"  series 
on  Sunday  nights  during  the  fall; 
a  Rod  and  Gun  Field  Day  everj- 
year:  a  yearly  visit  by  the  billiard 
expert.  Charlie  Peterson,  who  giv- 
es free  in.structions;  and  calendars 
each  semester  listing  all  scheduled 
events. 

On  Oct.  4.  5,  and  6,  four  mem- 


for  the  students'  benefit  and  par-  i  bers  of  GMAB  attended  the  region- 


7:15 
7:30 
7.45 
8:00 
8:30 


r 

Ginger 

Rogers 


Barry 

Nelson 

Carol 

Channing 


f 


PATRONIZE  YOUR 
ADVERTISERS    • 


eo-$tsrrMf 

DAVID  BRIAN  JAMES ARNESS 


JANEWYMAN 
LEW  AYRES 


IHNNY 

■'CMW'L^BICKFORD 

AMES  MOOACHCAO       SrtPHCN  Mch*LL< 

NOW  PLAYING 


Carolina 


Chifdrens  Matinee 

Saturday  9:30  A.M. 

Our  Gang  Comedy 

And  Cartoons 


I  ticipation  are  numerous.  The  big- 
\  gest  single   project  it  sponsors  is 
i  the  production  of  the  musical  pa- 
geant   "Sound    and    Fur>-."    which 
will   be  given   in   the   spring   this 
year.   Along  the   same  line,  there 
will  be  a  talent  show  in  the  fall 
I  and  a   play  by  a  traveling  group 
in  March. 

In  connociion  with  the  coming 
national  election,  the  Polls  Com- 
mittee will  sponsor  a  student  poll 
next  week  on  presidential  prefer 
ences.  On  Nov.  6.  election  day,  all 
students  will  be  invited  to  the : 
Rendezvous  Room  to  keep  up  with  I 
the  election  returns. 

Throughout     the     school     year,  | 
GMAB    sponsors    free    movies    on  i 
Friday  nights,  series   of  art  films,  | 
weekend  entertainment  in  the  Ren- 
dezvous    Room,     and     discussion ' 
groups  such  as  the  Student-Facul- 
ty Forum,  which  helps  to  develop 
a    closer    student-faculty    relation- 
ship. 

Other   special   features  it   spon- 


al  conference  of  the  Association  of 
College  Unions,  which  met  at  Tus- 
kegee  Institute  in  Ala.  At  the  con- 
ference, recommendations  for  the 
improvement  of  student  unions 
were  made,  and  various  student 
unions  were  discussed. 

In  a  report  Lambeth  Vrote  on 
the  conference,  he  says.  "Our  stu- 
dent union  again  and  again  appear- 
ed in  discussion  as  a  unique  insti- 
tution which  used  the  most  stu- 
dent talents  in  an  expanding  pro- 
gram within  a  complex  activities 
situation."  He  sa^s  UNCs  basic 
needs  are  '"l.  Expanded  facilities 
to  house  meetings,  offices,  bowling 
alley,  and  a  larger  dance  area.  2. 
Expanded  program  to  double  stu- 
dent worker  participation." 

Besides  the  president,  the  GMAB 
is  composed  of  three  vice-presi- 
dents. Miss  Susan  Walker,  John 
Ludwig.  and  Bob  Staton;  Secretary. 
Pat  McQueen;  Treasurer.  Bill 
Christian:  12  permanent  commit- 
tees: and  other  committees  organ- 
ized when    necessary. 


DAILY    CROSSWORD 


ACKOSS 

I.  Native 
earth  oven 
(Polyn.) 
4.  Humor 
7  Handle  of 

a  whip 
8.€hin*d 
Id.  Bow#r 
II.  Approach** 
13.  Thrashinf 
15.  Perch 
le.  Man  s 

nicknamt 
IT.  Fuel 
18.  Girl's  name 
1».  Timid 

20.  iTiternal 
decay 
of  f  niit 

21.  Spurt 

24.  Pasaageway 
between 
aaata 
2S  Sharpen 

a  razor 
26.  Sphere 
27  Pood  scrap 
28.  Fairy  queen 
2t.  Covering  of 

faUe  hair 
22  Outcast 

claas  <Jap  ) 
33.  Musical  ^ 

inatnunent 
3S.  Outer 

gamnenta 

(India) 
3T  Piece  of   • 

furniture 
38.  Fruit 
39  Shoahonean 

Irtdiana 
40.  Goddess  of 

harvMta  % 
41  Indlaft 

weight      * 


DOWN 

1.  Relating 
to  a  city 

2.  Debate 
2.  Erect 

4.  Alae 

5.  Froxen 
water 

t.  Prickly 
-  herbs 
(var  ) 
7.  American 

Indian 
r  PMiishtaUc 
10.  Warp-yam 
12.  Condition 
24.  Negative 
vo4« 


19.  Girl's 

name 
to.  Apron 

top 
21.  Wear. 

mg 

ap. 

pare! 
22  Door 
S3.  A 

Great 

Lake 
24.  Flower 
2«.  Tree  < 
28.Tondera 
29.  Oemian 

phjrsieiat 
^.  Trooblea 


-1  •j'-iNf.'sy    :-.!  -yy^ 
y^«  t33a  'Jiiu 

yarn   Haaa 

23,;^    MLd^L    t:]a!i' 

iia  J.I   lifj^jju 


%\.  Exelama* 

tion  falang) 
S4.  Tardy  , 

M.  Mtachlevouf 
ehlld 


Mock  Election 
This  Thursday 

Polls  will  be  open  Thursday  in 
Gerrard  Hall  from  8  a.m.  till  6 
p.m.  to  determine  the  attitude  of 
the  student  body  toward  the  pres- 
idential election. 

GMAB  workers  will  maintain 
two  tables  and  use  several  ballot 
boxes  to  expediate  voting.  The 
actual  procedure  should  take  on- 
ly seconds.  GMAB  officials  have 
urged  that  the  entire  student  body 
participate   in   this   mock  election. 

The  YDC  and  YRC  have  become 
very  active,  posting  party  public- 
ity and  handing  out  campaign 
buttons  to  encourage  a  large  vote. 
"  The  results  of  this  voting  will 
be  tabulated  Thursday  night  in 
the  Rendezvous  Room  and  posted 
there.  Also,  these  results  will  be 
given  national  publicity. 

Similar  polls  have  been  con- 
ducted recently  at  State,  Georgia 
Teclj,  Davidson,  and  Oak  Ridge. 
The  Stevenson-Kefauver  ticket 
was  most  popular  at  all  these 
schools  except  Davidson.  Oak 
Ridge  had  a  turnout  of  95  per 
cent  of  the  student  body. 


UNC  Geology  Professor 
At  Geological  Meetings 

Dr.  Virgil  I.  Mann  of  UNC  is 
attending  the  meeting  of  the  Geo- 
logical Societies  of  America,  to 
be  held  in  Minneapoli.>.  Minn.,  to- 
day through  Friday. 


Fred  Replaces 
SJocum  As  Ui4C 
Bond  Director 

Herbert  -  W^-'#^e<i:■  ^cinductor. 
composer  and  arranger,  has  been 
named  director  of  the  90-piece 
UNC  Band,  succeeding  E.  A.  Slo- 
cum.  Tlie  announeement  was  made 
yesterday  by  Dr.  Glen  Haydon, 
head  of  the  UNC  Music  Dept. 

Director  of  the  band  for  the 
past  23  years.  Slocum  \i  retiring 
in  order  to  devote  hi«  time  to  tHe 
University  Symphony  and  a  heavy 
schedule  of  classes  in  music  the- 
ory and  apt>lied  music. 

Fred,  the  new  falUime  director, 
36-year  old  native  of  Eveleth, 
Minn.,  vs  currently  working  on  his 
Ph.D.  degree  '  in  musicoiogy.  He 
received  his  B.ME.and  M.M.  de- 
grees frbm  NdrtlWBestern  Umver^ !  O.    K.   Cormvell   of   the    Physical 


'  Veterans'  .Petition  Now 
Has  Almeat  600  Names 

lite  petition  recently  circulated 
on  campus  calling  for  the  aboN-' 
tion  of  required  physical  educa- 
tion for  veterans  has  approximate- 
ly 600  signatures,  according  to 
its  originators. 

Darwin  Bell  and  Benny  Huff- 
man, coK^hairmen  of  the  Veterans 
Affairs  Committee,  originated  the 
petition. 

It  is  now  licated  in  the  Veterans 
Affairs  Office  in  308  South  Build- 
ing. 

All  veterans  are  asked  to  sign 
the  petition  when  they  "sign  for 
monthly  government  checks,"  Bell 
urged.     * 

It  will  be  conveyed  to  Dean  of  j  of    years 
the   General    College   Cecil   John-  f  gravitate 
son  after  it  receives   1,000  signa- 
tures, according  to  Bell,  and  will 
be  duly  processed  by  Johnson  and 


A|oon  Eclipse 
Seen  tslqv.  J7 

The  eclipse  of  the  moon  on  -Nov. 
17  will  be  visible  in  this  section 

of  the  country,  according  to  A. 
F.  Jenzano,  manager  of  the  More- 
head   Planetarium. 

What  the  lay  observer  may  not 
understand  about  eclipses  of  the 
meon  is  explained  in  the  current 
Planetarium  demonstration  "Mis- 
ter Moon." 


it.v 

Fred  has  arranged  and  conduct- 
ed programs  for  formal  ai»p««r- 
ances  of  the  band  since  the  faO 
term  opened.  The  "band  is  the  lar- 
gest in  several  years  and  was  al- 
located $6,000  for  the  purchase 
of  the  first  set  of  uniforms  in  26 
years  and  for  improvement  of  in- 
struments. 

Since  1942.  Fred  has  directed 
prep,  military  and  college  bands: 
from  1942  1943.  he  was  command- 
ing officer  of  the  682nd  AAF 
Band:  from  1946-1949.  band  direc- 
tor and  instrumental  instructor  in 
the  public  schools  in  Evanston, 
III. 


NAACP  Suit 
Not  Framed 
Properly 

RALEIGH,  Oct.  30  — J*t_  The 
State  Supreme  Court  v.'zs  told  to- 
day that  a  suit  brdught  by  the 
National  Assn.  for  the  Advance- 
ment of  Colored  People  against 
the  secretary  of  stale  and  attorney 
general  was  not  properly  framed. 

Atty.  Gen.  George  B.  Patton 
argued  that  the  NAACP's  two 
causes  of  action  involving  separ- 
ate statutes  were  improperly  join- 
ed into  one  case.  For  this  reason, 
he  asked  the  high  court  to  uphold 
a  decision  of  Superior  Court 
Judge  Hamilton  Hobgood,  who 
dismissed  part  of  the  suit. 
"  The  NAACP  brought  the  suit 
to  seek  a  declarator>'  judgment 
that  it  not  be  required  to  comply 
with  two  North  Carolina  regula- 
tory statutes.  One,  a  civil  law,  re- 
quires foreign  corporations  to 
register  with  the  secretary-  of 
state  in  order  to  do  business  in 
North  Carolina.  The  other,  a  crim- 
inal law,  requires  an  organiration 
principally  engaged  in  the  activity 
of  influencing  public  opinion  or 
legislation  to  register  with  the 
secretary  of  state. 

The  suit  was  filed  after  Secre- 
tary of  State  Thad  Eure  and  for- 
hier  Atty.  Gen.  W.  B.  Rodman  Jr., 
now  a  member  of  the  Supreme 
Court,  called  on  the  NAACP  to 
comply  with  the  two  laws. 


Education   Department. 


Alumnus  Is  On 
Nuclear  Boardi 

Dr.  James  E.  Webb,  1928  grad- 
uate of  UNC  and  now  president 
and  general  manager  of  Republic 
Supply  Company  in  Oklahoma 
City.  Okla.  has  recently  been  nam- 
ed as  a  member  of  the  Oak  Ridge 
Institute  of  Nuclear  Studies  Board 
of  Directors. 

Webb,  formerly  of  Oxford,  N. 
C,  ^11  be  one  of  15  men  on  the 
board  which  manages  the  Insti- 
tute for  the  35  southern  universi- 
ties wSio  s|>onsor  OWNS.  The  GR- 
INS Council  is  cimposed  if  ine 
representative  from  each  of  the 
sponsoring  institutions. 

Webb  has  also  recently  been  ap- 
pointed a  member  of  the  Nation- 
al Advisorj'  Cancer  Council,  which 
is  a  12-member  body  appointed 
bj'  the  surgeon  general  of*  the  Pub- 
lic Health  Service. 

A  native  of  Grannllc  County, 
Webb  has  had  a  distinguished  ca- 
reer in  public  and  private  indus- 
try. The  UNC  alumnus  began  his 
work  in  Washington.  D.  C.  as  sec- 
retary to  North  Carolina  Congre.ss- 
raan  E.  W.  Pou,  1932-34. 

Later  he  "became  executive  as- 
sistant ti  .0.  Max  Gardner,  under 
secretary  of  the  treasury:  then 
director  of  the  Bureau  of  the  Bud- 
get; and  finally  under  secretary 
ol  state,  1949-52. 


An  exciting  climax  to  the  show 
is  a  spectacular  demonstration  of  ; 
the  theory  that  on  a  day  millions  j 
hence,    the    moon    may  j 
into   a    critical   distance  1 
from   the   earth   and   shatter  into 
millions  of  tiny  particles.  Accord- 
ing to  Jenzano.  "That  would  form 
circles    around   the   earth   similar 
to    the    rings    around    the    planet 

Saturn." 

i 

The  explanations  of  the  Nov.  17 : 
eclipse  of  the  moon  will  be  pre- ; 
sented  nightly  through  Nov.  19  at ' 
the  Planetarium  at  8:30  pjn.  with 
matinees  Saturdays  at  11  a.m.  and  ' 
3  p.m.  and  Sundays  at  3  and  4  i 
p.m.  I 


Campaign  Is  Underway 
To  Explain  Caravan 

An  extensive  campaign  is  un- 
derway to  acquaint  the  student 
body  with  details  of  the  Caravan 
Weekend,  according  to  a  state- 
ment made  at  Monday  night's  Un- 
iversity  Club  meeting. 

Caravan  Committee  Chairman 
Harr>-  House  made  the  anncunce- 
ment. 

The  campaign  includes  use  of 
The  Daily  Tar  Heel,  posters,  radio 
announcements  and  a  "Y"  Court 
booth,  according  to  House. 

Chairman  House  also  told  the 
club  a  report  would  be  forthcom- 
ing on  advance  ticket  sales.  "The 
report  will  be  published  in  The 
Daily  Tar  Heel."  he  said. 


Open 

ALL  DAY 
WEDNESDAY 

Berman's 

DEPT.  STORE 


Lester  Displays  Medal 
Collection  In  Library 


Robert  M.  Lester,  retired  edu- 
cator of  Chapel  Hill,  has  more 
medals  than  World  War  11  hero 
Audie  Murphy,  but  Lester  hasd't 
fought  any  battles  to  collect  his 
60  handsome  bronze  and  silver 
discs. 

For  the  first  time.  Lester  h^s 
his  collection  on  exhibit  at  the 
University  of  North  Carolina  Li- 
brary in  connection  with  the  Li- 
brary's United  Nations  Week 
theme.  For  26  years  the  former 
secretary  of  the  Carnegie  Founda- 
tion, has  been  collecting  medals. 

Most  of  the  Lester  medals  were 
obtained  through  the  American 
Society  of  Medalists,  of  which  he 
is  a  charter  member.  Since  1930, 
the  society  has  issued  two  medals 
per  year  for  the  benefit  of  col- 
lectors. The  medals.  2'i  inches 
in  circumference,  were  made  by 
some  of  the  most  famous  contem- 
porary sculptors,  commissioned 
by  the  society  to  choose  and  de- 
pict a  theme  for  each  at  their 
own  discretion. 

Medals  of  the  Lester  collection 
portray  as  many  as  five  specilic 
themes,    the    Bible,    World    Peace, 
War,  Love.  Wildlife,  and  there  are 
others  of  miscellaneous  character. 
One  handsome  bronze   disc,  en- 
titled "World  Peace  or  Oblivion," 
depicts    a    nuclear    blast;    another 
The   Phi   Hall    is  locted   on   the  j  symbolites   peace   in   the   form   of 
fourth   floor  of   New  East  Build- 
ing. 

Meeting  duration  will  be  approx- 
imately one  hoar. 


Legislature  Committee 
Holds  Meeting  Thursday 

The  Rules  Committee  of  the 
Student  Legislature  will  meet  to- 
monow  at  4:45  p.m.  in  the  Wood- 
bouse  Conference  Room,  accord- 
ing to  Miss  Martha  Barber,  chair- 
man. 


IDC  Holds  Third  Meet 
Of  Year  Tonight  At  7 

The  Interdormitory  Council  will 
hold  its  thir^  session  of  the  year 
tonight  at  7  o'clock  in  the  Phi  As- 
sembly Hall. 


a  woman  floating  over  the  world. 
Relief  on  the  obverse  side  of  the 
nuclear  blast  is  that  of  an  Al&eri* 
can  Soldier  giving  aid  to  a  wotind- 


ed  comrade,  further  sjinbolizing 
peace. 

Another  shows  the  historic 
raising  of  the  American  flag  by 
U.  S.  Marines  on  the  island  of 
Iwo  Jima,  patterned  from  the  As- 
sociated Press  photograph.  On  the 
obverse  side  is  a  skull  and  the 
inscription,  "War  is  Death."  The 
medal  was  sculptured  T>y  Berthold 
Nebel.    born    in   Switzerland. 

One  of  the  most  prized  is  an 
ash-tray  shaped  plaque  made  by 
the  American  sculptor  Paul  Man- 
ship  in  1927.  The  relief  is  an  em- 
bossed figure  of  a  mythological 
horse  of  inspiration.  Pegasus,  with 
his  hoofs  striking  the  top  of  a 
mountain  peak.  The  legend  origi- 
nates from  Greek  mythology. 

The  works  of  Man&hip,  Malvina 
Hoffman,  C.  Mascaux,  Mabonri 
Young.  Ivan  Mestrovic,  and  An- 
thony DeFrancisco  are  represent- 
ed in  the  Lester  collection.  I^Iost 
of  the  artists  live  in  America. 

Also  included  in  the  Library  ex- 
hibit, arranged  by  Mrs.  Myra  I>au- 
^erer,  are  books,  one  a  treatise  on 
famous  medailic  art  written '  dat- 
ing back  to  1697,  and  otiiers  of 
technical  content. 

The  owner,  now  a  prominent 
Chapel  Hill  resident,  is  Director 
of  the  Southern  Fellowship  Fund. 
Prior  to  retiring  from  the  Cirne- 
gic  Foundation,  Lester  was  a  for- 
,mer  member  of  the  faculty,  staff 
and  library  staff  of  Columbia  Un- 
iversity, and,  previbus  to  that,  a 
student  t>f  lanfuages  and  lidera- 
ture  at  lUidhigatt  and  Coluilibia 
tJniversitiet.  :; 


Scheidt  Claims 
Charges  'Made 
In  Bad  faith' 

RALEIGH,   'ct.  30— I*— Charges  I 
brought    by   a    discharged    patrol- 1 
man   against    Petrol    Capt.    W.    F.  ' 
Bailey    were    characterized    today 
as  "unfounded  and  made  in  bad 
faith." 

Motor  Vehicles  Commissioner 
Ed  Scheidt  said  this  today  at  the 
end  of  a  lengthy  news  conference 
in  which  he  related  details  of  an 
SBI  probe  into  tlie  charges  hurled 
by  former  patrolman  R.  A.  Callo- 
way. 

Scheidt  told  the  newsmen  he 
had  found  some  matters  in  the 
SBI  pribe  that  he  plans  to  "study 
again  from  an  administrative 
standpoint."  For  the  most  part 
Capt.  Bailey  'is  to  be  commend- 
ed" for  the  actions  he  took  in  the 
cases  in  which  Caloway  bad  com- 
plained. 

Calloway  was  fired  as  a  patrol- 
man by  Scheidt  several  weeks  ago 
after  he  refused  to  spell  out  in 
detail  his  charges  'made  against 
Bailey.  After  fu-ing  Callow«y, 
Scheidt  asked  the  SBI  to  make  a 
thorough  investigation  of  Callo- 
way's claim  of  "crooked  law  en- 
forcement being  rammed  down  the 
public's  throat." 

"I  have  complete  confijdence  in 
Capt.  Bailey,"  said  Scheidt  after 
relating  what  he  said  were  the 
SBI's  findings  on  a  long  list  of 
charges  made  by  Calloway.  Bailey 
has  been  with  the  ^patrol  since 
1931.  two  years  after  it  was  org- 
anized, and  has  been  commander 
of  Troop  D,  at  Salisbury  since 
1951.  ' 


Y  SCHEDULE 

12:30  p.m.  —  Intercollegiate  Re- 
lations Committee  meeting,  Y  Cab- 
inet Room.  Dick  Frank.  Bob  Cow- 
an, Kathy  Legrand,  co-chairmen.      : 

1:30  p.m.  —  Campus  Christian  / 
Council       Executive-      Committee 
meeting,   Y    Office  3,   Bill   Kane, 
chairman. 

2  p.m.  —  CCC  World  Religions 
Study  Group  planning  meeting,  Y 
office  3,  Leon  Holt,  chairman. 

4  p.m.  —  YMCA  Race  Relations 
Committee  meeting,  "Y  lilwary 
room,  Joe  Phillips,  chairman. 

4  p.m.  —  Y-Speakers  Forum 
Committee,  Cabinet  Room,  John 
Brooks,  Maria  Hunter,  co-chairmen. 

5  p.m.  —  Buildings  Arrange- 
ment Committee  meeting,  2ild 
floor  of  Y,  Cim  Daufhtry^  chair- 

'xaan. 


FOR  PRIVATE   PARTIES  IN  THE  COUNTRYI 


THE  ELBOW  ROOM 


HMy  fa*  reservad  exclusively  for  your  group,  large  or  small. 
FfoJfibI*  rates  for  small  groups,  'basa^  on  size  of  party,  »vr»g* 
fS.M  pT  ceuplo.  Maximum  rate  $30,  axceivt  football  Saturdays 
($4QK  Teiopbon*  9-3236. 


"WNY  do  the  gifU  act  so  stuck  up.-""  mosned  Sbe«dy.  "It's  quilling  me  the 

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and  scalp  conditioner.   Soon  all  the  dates  you  needle 

be  yours  tor  the  asking. 

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9ivos  you  confidenco 


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Real  Southern  style! 


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AEASONAftLE  PRICES 

^  ^jm.  —  1 1  p  '^ 


ALL  YOU  CAN  EAT! 


every  Tlrursday  night 

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SKUNSWiCK  STEW  __ 
eyety  Friday  night 

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Main  St.,  Carboro     Ph— 98712 
Call  us  for  special  orders  or  parties 

PLENTY  OF  PARKING  SPACE 


PAGI  FOUR      0f 


THI  DAILY  TAR  HEKL 


WEDNESDAY,  OCTOBER  31,  1956: 


Vols  Looking  For  Good  Single-Wing  Defense  From  Tatum 


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ports  Editor 
j 

A  Saturday  Date  In  Knoxvilfe 

"They've  got  a  great  team,  just  great,"  declared  scout  Pat  Preston 
yesterday  at  Carolina's  weekly  football  press  luncheon.  Minutes  later 
head  coach  Jim  Tatum  added  a  follow-up  comment.  "We're  just  going 
to  try  to  hold  the  score  down."  he  cracked. 

No,  it  wasn't  Oklahoma  ail  over  again  that  the  UNC  coaches 
were  referring  to.    This  time  it  was  the  number  three  team  in  the 
nation  and  the  scourge  of  the  Southeastern  Conference,  Tennessee. 
And  from  the  glowing  reports,  the  Sooners  couldn't  be  much  worse. 
The  cause  of  all  the  glowing  comment  was  a  Saturday  afternoon 
date  with  the  Vols  in  Knoxville  for  Coach  Tatum's  Tar  Heels.  And  in 
scout  Preston's  own  words,  "This  will  be  one  of  our  toughest  games 
of  the  season." 

Preston  went  on  from  there  to  back  up  his  statement  in  no  uncer- 
tain terms.  "They  use  an  exciting,  unorthodox  form  of  the  single  wing 
that  doesn't  look,  much  like  the  version  I  used  to  see,"  said  Preston. 
"I  believe  they  could  score  against  any  team  in  the  country,  including 
Oklahoma,"  he  went  on  to  say. 

VOLS  MAKE  THE  BREAKS 

According  to  Preston,  the  1956  Vols  are  a  typical  Tennessee  team. 
"They  give  you  the  ball  and  play  for  a  defensive  break.  And  when 
they  get  an  opportunity,  they  cash  in. 

'The  thing  that  impressed  me  most  about  Tennessee  was  their  team 
play  and 'hustle.   They  just  don't  quit,'  said  the  Tar  Heel  scout. 

Coach  Tatum  tipped  off  the  scribes  on  the  style  of  play  he  in- 
tends to  employ.  "Our  best  game  is  kicking,  so  every  time  they  kick 
at  us,  we're  going  to  let  Vale  (Wally)  kick  it  right  back  at  them. 
If  they  won't  take  a  chance,  we  won't  either,"  quipped  the  Tar  Heel 
mentor. 

Tatum  gave  a  brief  rundown  on  the  condition  of  his  personnel. 
Several  changes  have  been  made  among  the  substitutes,  while  injuries 
have  sidelined  at  least  two  men  for  the  season. 
VARNUM,  BILICH  ARE  PROMOTED 

In  the  key  changes,  Jim  Vamum  was  shifted  to  right  halfback  to 
replace  Daley  Goff  on  the  second  unit,  John  Bilich  was  moved  from 
his  third  string  tackle  post  to  a  second  line  slot  behind  Don  Kemper 
at  guard,  and  soph  Mac  Turlington  took  over  for  Bill  EUlington  at  a 
second  team  end  spot. 

Paul  Pulley,  second  string  end  from  Durham,  has  been  lost  for 
the  entire  season  due  to  a  calcium  deposit  in  his  leg.  Also  shelved 
indefinitely  is  fullback  Giles  Gaca  who  hurt  his  knee  in  the  State 
game  and  n*^v  fully  recovered. 
Starting  tackle  Don  Redding  was  the  lone  casualty   in  the  Wake 
Forest  scrap  as  he  suffered  a  slight  knee  injury.    He  is  expected  to 
resume  heavy  work  today,  however. 
MAJORS  LEADS  STAR  STUDDED  LINEUP 

The  Tennessee  lineup  features  an  array  of  outstanding  performers 
Sparking  the  attat'k  from  the  tailback  slot  is  Johnny  (Drum)  Major.** 
Majors'  miality  wfs  aptly  summed  up  by  Alabama  Coach  J.  B.  Whit- 
worth  after  the  Vols  and  Majors  swamped  his  team.  Said  Whitworth: 
The  only  way  to  stop  Johnny  Majors  is  with  a  shotgun." 

Backing  Majors  up  at  the  all  important  tailback  position  is  Al 
Carter  who  is  tenned  by  Preston  as  being  "just  about  as  good  as 
Majors." 

Pacing  a  smooth  working  forward  wall  is  Capt.  John  Gordy  at 
tackle  who.  according  to  observers,  outplayed  Maryland  All-American 
tackle  Mike  Sandusky  last  Saturday. 


Sunny  Jim 
A  Master 
At  Defense 

KNOXVILIi,E,  Tenn.  —  Tennes- 
see, undefeated  in  five  outings, 
this  Saturday  runs  into  a  North 
Carolina  Tar  Heel  team  whose 
coach  is  recognized  as  one  of  the 
nation's  outstanding  defenders  a- 
gainst  the  single-wing  type  of  of- 
fense. 

Jim  Tatum,  who  took  over  the 
helm  at  Carolina  this  season  after 
achieving  great  success  at  Mary- 
land, won  his  reputation  for  stop- 
ping the  single-wing  when  he 
coached  the  Terps  to  a  28-13  upset , 
#ctory  over  Tennessee  in  the 
1952  Sugar  Bowl. 

Maryland  that  day  did  a  mas- 
terful job  of  shackling  the  vaunt- 
ed Vol  ground  game  which  was 
spearheaded  by  All-America  tail- 
back Hank  Lauricella.  The  so- 
called  'Maryland  defense'  has 
since  then  been  copied  by  other 
coaches  as  a  means  of  combatting 
the  single-wing  as  used  by  Ten- 
nessee. 

Tatum  last  year  at  Maryland 
shut  out  a  great  UCLA  team, 
which,  like  Tennessee,  employs 
the  single-wing  formation.  Thus. 
Vol  Coach  Bowden  Wyatt  and  his 
staff  know  that  when  North  Car- 
olina comes  to  Knoxville  Satur- 
day, the  Tar  Heels  can  be  expect- 
ed to  provide  some  of  the  most 
rugged  opposition  to  the  single- 
wing  that  Tennessee  will  see  all 
season. 

\  measuring  stick  as  to  the  rel- 
ative  strength   of  Tennessee   and 

Carolina  can  be  found  in  com-  j  gram  has  advanced  at  a  rapid 
parative  scores  against  a  common  j  pace.  With  the  completion  of 
opponent.    Maryland.    Playing    the  |  Woollen  Gymnasium  in  January  of 


UNC  Soccer  Team  Faces  Rough 
Competition  In  Upcoming  Matches 


DeCantls  Sparkles  In  First  Year 

Above  is  sophomore  halfback  Moe  DeCantis,  hard  running  speed- 
ster from  Scranton,  Pa.,  who  has  seen  heavy  duty  in  the  Tar  Heel 
backfield  all  year  long.  After  the  Maryland  game,  DeCantis  was 
chosen  ACC  Sophomore  of  the  Week.  DeCantis  is  sure  to  see  a  lot 
of  action  Saturday  when  the  Tar  H«els  go  against  Tennessee  in 
Knoxville. 


The  hardest  games  are  yet  to 
ccome  for  the  UNC  varsity  soccer 
squad.  With  Slate  behind  them, 
the  Tar  Heels  still  must  face  Roa- 
noke, Duke,  Virginia,  and  Mary- 
land. 

Roanoke  will  be  the  team's  next 
opponent,  and  no  doubt  the  tough- 
est one  so  far.  Soccer  is  Roanoke's 
major  sport  and  they  have  prac- 
tically a  "UN"  team,  cocmposed 
principally  of  Russian-born  play- 
ers. Roanoke  defeated  Carolina 
last  year,  3-2,  in  Chapel  I^ill.  This 
year's  game  will  be  played  on 
Nov.  1  in  Roanoke,  Va.  and  re- 
venge will  be  difficult  for  the  Tar 
IJeels. 

Virginia  will  be  the  next  oppo- 
nent on  the  Tar  Heel's  schedule. 
The  game  will  be  played  here  on 
Nov.  8  and  will  be  the  team's  last 
home  appearance. 

The  team  will  then  play  Duke  in 


UNC  Intramural  Progrdm 
Is  Among  Best  In  Country 


By  CHARLIE  HOWSON 

UNC  possesses  one  of  the  most 
unique  and  widely  admired  intra- 
mural programs  in  the  country. 
The  date  of  the  first  intramural 
contest  is  unknown,  but  it  has 
been  established  that  some  sort  of 
athletic  participation  among  the 
students  has  existed  since  the  turn 
of  the  century. 

From  the  early   1920's  the  pro- 


Terps  on  successive  weekends,  the 
Vols  and  Tar  Heels  both  scored 
four-touchdown  victories. 

Vol  assistant  coach  Bunzy 
O'Neil  scouted  Carolina  and  re- 
ported that  Tatum  has  at  his  com- 
mand a  dandy  set  of  fast  and 
hard-running  backs  and  some  ends 
I  who  rank  with  the  best  in  the  At 
]  lantic  Coast  Conference.  Asked  to 
compare  Maryland  and  Carolina, 
O'Neil  said,  *"!1je  Ttr  Heds  are 
stronger  at  ends  and  in  the  back- 
field  than  Maryland  but  are  not 
as  strong  from  tackle  to  tackle. 
Carolina  possesses  more  team 
speed  in  the  line  from  tackle  to 
tackle  than  does  the  Terps." 


TIME 


7< 


"^ORTH  CAROLINA  has  everything  industry  needs 
for  profitable  and  successful  operation. 

But,  says  Governor  Hodges,  "We've  rocked  along  for 
too  long  without  paying  enough  attention  to  the  basic 
aeeds  of  our  economy,  and  the  basic  needs  of  our  people.** 

What  are  we  doing  about  it? 

The  Governor's  Plan  for  Industrial  Development  is  a 
formula  for  building  a  Greater  North  Carolina — for  action 
now  in  Jmp>roving  our  economic  position;  for  long-range 
action  to  maintain  our  position  when  we  are  i  State  of 
6,000,000  people  only  20  years  hence. 

Why  is  industrial  development  the  key  to  Building  a 
Greater  North  Carolina?  How  does  k  benefit  every  man, 
woman  and  child  in  the  State,  not  just  those  in  industrial 
coaununitics? 

Nrw  and  expanded  indrttiry  anywhere  ie  ihe  State  effcn 

better  opportunities  to  our  yoanK  people,  cipccially  o«r  }•«■( 

pcopir  teduucaUy  uaincd  in  ooi  college*  and  Mgli  Khoek.  k 

e<fen  greater  inducements  (or  tfaem  to  take  jobs  aitd  naMia 

ia  North  Carolina  after  graduation. 

ll  kelps  raiae  per  capita  income. 

k  create!  more  taxpayen   lo  sliarc  the  M^^CMe  « 

scrrkes. 

k   provides   revennes  for  more  tmi   bctw  ictiili, 

koapitab  and  parks. 

h  ipccda  devek>pmeM  of  electric  and  tclafkiiac  MrvkaVt 

k  itrcaaci  markets  lor  farm  prodncis. 

Wc  ought  to  get  together  and  get  ftioire  ibduacrv. 
LefM  Get  Rolling! 


1938.  there  began  a  new  era  if 
expansion.  More  activities  were 
added  to  the  intramural  curricu- 
lum in  order  to  satisfy  the  in- 
creasing wants  and  desires  of  the 
student  body.  Enthusiasm  seemed 
unbelievable  at  this  time  as  the 
students  realized  that  the  program 
was  set  up  for  their  benefit.  It 
became  a  part  of  their  daily  rou- 
tine and  it  was  not  an  ordeal  as 
tt  is  today  to  drag  oneself  to  at- 
tend intramural  commitments. 

During  the  last  ten  years  a  defi- 
nite change  has  taken  place.  It 
seems  as  though  the  trend  is  to- 
ward more  individual  athletics 
such  as  golf,  tennis,  badminton 
and  wrestling.  Also  a  definite  de- 
crease in  the  eyes  of  intramural 
officials. 

It  is  interesting  to  note  that  dur- 
ing the  depression  years  the  dorm- 
itories were  almost  the  only  sup- 
porters of  the  program  because  it 
was  too  expensive  to  live  in  a  fra- 
ternity. Now  the  situation  has  re- 
versed itself  and  the  fraterniites 
are  showing  the  most  interest. 

The  past  decade  has  indicated 
that  there  is  a  great  need  for  or- 
ganization and  administration  in 
order  ti  devise  some  method  or 
methods  to  assist  the  dormitories 
in  establishing  a  more  spirited 
group.  At  a  recent  dorm  meeting 
it  was  decided  that  the  only  way 
to  stimulate  interest  in  the  dorms 
is  through  the  work  of  the  dorm 
managers.  Their  work  is  most  vital 
and  they  have  contributed  much  to 
the  success  of  the  program.  They 
can't  do  this  work  alone.  It  nnust 
be  stressed  that  more  and  belter 
co-operation  should  exist  between 
the  student  body  and  their  respec- 
tive dormitory  and  fraternity  man- 
agers. 

The  purpose  of  the  intramural 
department  can  not  be  distin- 
guished by  a  single  statement.  The 
aims  of  a  program  of  this  nature 
cover  a  broad  area.  One  of  the 
main  objectives  of  the  program  is 
to  provide  the  student  body  at 
Carolina  with  the  opportunity  to 
select  a  recreational  pastime  from 
the  many  activities  that  arc  of- 
fered. Another  is  to  give  the  indi- 
vidual   the   opportunity   to   utilize 


the  knowledge  and  skills  which  he 
has  acquired  in  the  Physical  Edu- 
cation Program.  Students  are 
urged  to  explore  the  intramural 
set-up  and  try  to  discover  an  in- 
terest which  may  be  carried  with 
them  for  the  rest  of  their  lives. 

Participation  in  intramural  ac- 
tivities will  produce  not  only  phy- 
sical improvements  but  will  also 
help  the  individual  in  the  follow- 
ing aspects:  gaining  poise,  acquir- 
ing a  more  pleasant  and  respected 
personality,  meeting  new  acquain- 
tances an(}  obtaining  a  better  un- 
derstanding of  human  relations. 

Besides  the  fall,  winter  and 
spring  dormitory  and  fraternity 
competition,  the  intramural  de- 
partment sponsors  many  annual 
events  in  which  the  student  may 
take  part.  Each  spring  they  spon- 
sor Extra-Mural  Big  Four  Sports 
Day,  an  event  originated  in  1947 
which  has  been  a  continued  suc- 
cess there  after.  The  same  pro- 
gram is  also  scheduled  for  this 
coming  spring  and  as  the  set-up 
now  is  arranged  there  are  seven 
events  listed  for  student  partici 
pation. 

The  department  also  sponsors  a 
CO  -  recreational  openhouse  each 
Monday  night  from  7:00  to  9:00 
p.m.  In  past  years  it  has  been  a 
very  successful  program.  The  best 
turnouts  were  immediately  after 
the  war  when  all  the  veterans  and 
their  wives  sought  some  sort  of 
entertainment. 

At  this  young  stage  of  the  1956 
fall  semester,  the  turnouts  for  the 
openhouse  have  been  rather  lim- 
ited and  thus  discouraging  to  the 
many    intramural    officials    whose 


time  is  taken  up  in  planning  the 
fellowship  for  the  student  body. 

The  department  has  also  played 
an  important  part  in  starting 
swimming  and  badminton  clubs. 

Current  plans  are  in  the  making 
for  a  intramural  tag  football  all- 
slar  team  to  play  a  similar  team 
from  the  University  of  Virginia 
and  possibly  two  additional  games 
with  East  Carolina  College. 

The  present  Intramural  Admin- 
istration, a  division  of  the  Physi- 
cal Education  bureau,  is  directed 
by  Walter  W.  Rabb.  Rufus  R. 
Hackney  Jr.  is  the  graduate  as- 
sistant, William  G.  Bailey  the  un- 
der-graduate  assistant  and  Eklwin 
B.  Stewart  the  field  supei^^sor. 
But  the  real  administration  is  the 
student  body. 

The  department  welcomes  any 
suggestion  from  individuals  desir- 
ing a  new  activity  be  added  to  the 
current  program.  The  department 
makes  it  a  policy  to  try  and  add 
one  new  activity  each  yea.r  Last 
year  they  added  a  Rod  and  Gun 
field  meet  which  this  year  will  be 
held  tomorrow. 


Durham  on  Nov.  13  in  what  prom-4 •- 

ises  to  be  a  hotly  contested  game  j  Sch-2;  court  2,  DKE-1  vs.  Chi  Phi-2 


as  both  squads  have  high  scoring 
forward  lines.  Duke  put  on  its 
■biggest  scoring  display  this  year 
when  it  defeated  Davidson,  9-0. 


MURALS 

Unseasonable  weather  rained- 
out  all  Tag  Football  contests  yes- 
terday for  the  second  straight  day 
this  week. 

YESTERDAY'S  VOLLEYBALL 
RESULTS 

4:00 — Cobb  over  Alexander-2, 
1-0;  Joyner  over  Lewis,  1-0;  Ruf- 
fin  over  Old  East,  9-15,,  15-9,  15-0; 
Delt  Sig  over  Phi  Delt,  15-6  12-15, 
15-11. 

»  5:00 — Vic  Vil  over  Everett-1, 
15-3,  16-14;  Med  Sch-1  over  Ever- 
ett-2,  15-3,  15-3;  Med  Sch-3  over 
Law  Sch-1,  15-2,  3-15,'  15-12;  DKE 
over  Sig  Chi,  15-5,  13-15,  13-5. 
TODAY'S  VOLLEYBALL 
SCHEDULE 

4:00— Court  1,  ATO  vs.  SPE 
(W);  court  2,  DKE-2  vs.  Chi  Phi-1 
(W);  court  3,  Zeta  Psi  vs.  Sig  Chi 
(W);  court  4,  Kappa  Sig  vs.  Chi 
Psi-1. 

5:00— Court  1.  Graham  vs.  Med 


(W); 
(W); 
SPE. 


court   3,  Pika  vs.   Chi  Psi-2 
court   4,   Phi   Kap?a   Sig   vs. 


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B  O  B  and  M  O  N  K 
of       I 

TOWN& 
CAMPUS 

SALUTE 
Athlete  Of  The  Week 


WALLY  VALE 

Wally  Vale,  hard  running  Tar 
Heel  fullback  has  been  named 
Athlete  of  the  Week  for  his  all- 
round  brilliant  play  in  the 
Wake  Forest  game  Saturday. 
Vale  led  the  squad  in  rushing 
with  94  yards  in  13  carries,  and 
in  addition  averaged  45.2  yards 
for  five  punts. 

We  want  tiim  to  drop  by 
TOWN  &  CAMPUS  and  pick  out 
■  shirt  to  his  liking — compli- 
ments of  the  house. 

We  want  the  old  and  young 
'like  of  Chapel  Hill  to  make 
TOWN  &  CAMPUS  their  head 
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CAMPUS 


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Julian* 


t  &^op 


i-i'.-iir 


Serial 


US  Won't 

•British  And  French 
Planes  In  Air  Attack 


Compiled  by  Th*  Daily  Tar  H«el 
From  Radio  and  Short  Wav*  Reports 

President  Elisenhower  assured  the  nation  last  night  that  America 
wont  get  involved  in  the  present  Middle  East  crisis. 

Russia  condemned  what  it  termed  the  aggression  of  Britain.  France 
and  Israel,  and  said  the  United  Nations  Security  Council  should  im- 
n.ediately  order  the  countries'  forces  off  Egyptian  soil. 

In  Lebanon,  the  government  pledged  Egj-pt  its  support  against 
the  Israeli  aggression.  Syria  was  reported  taking  necessarj-  steps  to 
back  Egypt  in  the  crisis.  In  Jordan,  general  mobilization  was  ordered. 

Reporters  on  the  spot  said  bombs  were  falling  on  Cairo,  but  Bri- 
tish airmen  said  they  were  only  bombing  airfields  around  the  Egyptian 
capitol. 

In  Washington.  U.  S.  officials  were  wondering  if  precious  oil  lines 
irom  Egypt  to  the  rest  of  the  world  would  be  plugged  as  a  result  of 
the  Anglo-French  action. 


Capitol  officials  were  reported  shocked  that  Britain  and  France 
dill  not  consult  with  the  United  States  before  moving  on  Egypt. 

Radiomen  in  England  answered  Washington's  shock  this   way: 

Since  the  United  States  didn't  join  Britain  in  condemning  Eg}'pt 
for  I*remier  Abdel  Gamal  Nasser's  grabbing  the  Suez  Canal,  Sir  An- 
tnony  Eden  just  didn't  bother  to  ask  for  help  which  he  knew  wouldn't 
be  forthcoming. 

London  said  reservists  were  being  rounded  up  and  that  the  gov- 
f-vnment  had  imposed  a  partial  news  blackout. 


In  i^ideast;   UN  Meeting  Today 


Red  China  officials  called  the  Anglo-French  mo\e  an  act  of  armed 
aggression. 

A  radioman  in  Jerusalem  reported  Israeli's  accepted  the  British- 
French  action  with  a  sigh  of  relief.  President  Eisenhower's  announce- 
ment, he  said,  caused  disappointment  but  no  anger  on  the  Israeli'.^| 
tart.  ^^-^ 

The  Washington  correspondent  of  the  New  York  Times.  James 
Rcston,  filed  an  analysis  of  the  situation  from  the  capitol  for  this 
rjiiorning  s  edition  of  the  Times.  Reston's  article  said: 

"The  United  States  hss  lost  control  of  events  in  areas  vital  to  its 
security. 

"This  is  the  main  conclusion  of  serious  and  well-informed  men 
here  tonight  about  the  United  States'  role  in  the  Middle  Ea^t  crisis. 

"President  Elisenhower  talked  to  the  nation  tonight  as  head  of  the 
state,  Commander-in^'hicf  of  its  armed  forces,  and  candidate  lor  re- 
election, but  for  the  first  time  he  could  no  longer  speak  as  keeper  of 
the  peace  and  leader  of  a  unified  Western  alliance. 

"Within  the  short  space  of  less  than  tv.o  weeks  both  Washington 
ind  Moscow,  which  dominated  world  events  for  the  first  decade  ot 
the  postwar  era,  have  seen  their  wishes  and  policies  defied  by  nations 
heretofore  regarded  as  ther  most  cooperative 'allies. 

"Thus,  a  wholly  new  situation  now  exists,  with  Eastern  Europe 
iind  the  Middle  Elast  the  scene  of  momentous  events  which  may  very 
well  effect  the  future  influence  of  Washington  and  Moscow,  and  th? 
balance  of  power  in  the  world. 

"The  picture  is  not  without  its  hopeful  aspects.  The  official  atti- 
tude here  is  one  of  determination  to  make  the  best  of  a  bad  situation. 

"There  are  many  regrets  and  bitter  recriminations,  but  there  is 
a  conviction  that  a  major  war  can  be  avoided  and  a  hope  that  the 
Soviet  Union  can  be  persuaded  to  keep  volunteer  fliers  and  saboteurs 
away  from  the   all-important   oil   pipe   lines   and   the   Suez  Canal. 

"Beyond  that  is  a  genuine  belief  that  with  the  satellites  in  revolt 
in  Eiastem  Europe,  the  United  States  and  the  Soviet  Union  join  in 
cpposition  to  the  British-French  intervention   in   Egypt,  it   might   now 


I  he  possible   to  reopen  serious  negotiations   for   the  reunification  of  j 

Germany  and  an  all-European  security  pact,  backed  by  both  the  U.  S.  ] 

I  i'nd  the  USSR."  | 

He  said  surprise  action  of  Britain  and  France,  which  sent  an  air  ] 
I  Qffei^sive  to  Egypt  Wednesday  to  bomb  military  targets,  was  an  "er-  : 

'  lor."  i 

I 

Meanwhile,  reports  from  European  radio  stations  said  Eg>pt's 
;  capitol  city  of  Cairo  had  received  a  bombing  from  British  planes.  But 
I  British  foreign  ministers  denied  cserything  but  that  the  Egyptians 
!  had  betn  hit.  .\n  Egyptian  in  Cairo  called  the  bombinj>  'pure,  ugly 
'  :Mked  aggression. " 
I 

I  Ho  echoed  the  feelings  of  ijiany  nations  nnd  officials  around  the  : 

j  world  who  felt  Britain  and  France  had  no  business  starting  their   of- 
[  'onsive  against   Egypt.  The  Anglo-French   move  came  Tuesday   after 
Israeli  forces  had  plunged  deep  into  Egypt,  coming  close  to  the  con- 
,  '.ovcrsial  Suez  Canal. 

j  President  Eisenhower  delivered  the  United  States'  position  on  the 

I  Middle  East  last  night  in  a  nationally-televised  broadcast.  His  state- 
roent  followed  talks  between  him  and  important  U.  S.  officials  and  an 
t:cchange  of   messages  with  British  Prime  Minister  Anthony  Eden. 

The  .Security  Council  of  the  United  Nations  will  hold  an  emergen-  i 
i."  meeting  today  at  5  p.m.  to  consider  an  American  resolution  for  ! 
ending  the  fighting  in  the  Middle  East.  The  resolution  calls  for  a  I 
cease-fire  and  a  separation  of  the  Arabs  and  Israelis. 

Tuesday.   Britain   and   France   used  their  vetos  twice   in   the   UN 
Security  Council,  even   while  they  rushed   their  troops  to  the  Middle 
i  E;ist.  The  two  vetoed  resolutions  would. 

(1)  Call  on  Eg>pt  and  Israel  to  cease  fire  immediately,  for  Israel 
to  withdraw  from  Egypt  and  all  UN  members  to  avoid  using  force  in 
the  area  or  to  aid  Israel  in  her  operation.  Introduced  by  United  States. 

(2)  Call  for  a  cease-fire  and  withdrawal  of  Israeli  troops.  Intro- 
duced  by   the   USSR. 

There  was  concern  in  Washington  about  Britain's  and  France's 
positions  at  this  afternoon's  UN  meeting.  Last  night,  spokesmen  of 
l)oih  countries  said  the  emergency  meeting  probably  was  illegal. 


There  was  a  rumor  that  Britain  and  France  might  boycott  the 
meeting,  but  UN  observers  felt  no  such  fear. 

Early  this  evening,  it  was  not  exactly  known  where  Israeli  troops 
were  located  in  Eg>'ptian  territory.  Some  reports  placed  them  as  close 
as  five  miles  from  the  Suez  Canal,  now  controlled  by  Egyptian  Prem- 
ier Al>dal  Gamal  Nasser. 

One  report  from  the  Canadian  Broadcasting  Co,  said  the  Israelis 
were  ".striking  from  all  directions." 

There  was  also  a  difference  of  opinion  on  the  damage  done  in 
Wednesday's  fighting.  The  Israelis  said  they  had  shot  down  four 
Egyptian  jets,  but  Egypt  denied  this. 

Egypt  claimed  it  lost  two  jets  and  shot  down  ten  Israeli  planes. 

The  British  said  this  morning  they  had  sunk  an  Eg>ptian  frigate 
at  the  Red  Sea  end  of  the  Suez  Canal. 

Reports  from  Tel  Aviv  said  Israelis  had  not  clashed  with  the  Egyp- 
tir.ns  in  their  march  toward  the  canal.  And  British  pilots  said  they 
had   encountered  no  trouble  in  their  Iwrnbing  runs  over  Egypt. 

By  last  night,  more  than  1.800  Americans  had  been  evacuated  from 
Egypt.  Israel.  Syria,  and  Jordan. 


Radio  Moscow  Uses  Same  Old  Words; 
Consoles  Egypt,  Denounces  Israel,  West 

,f 'i  . ,' 

Dofly  Tar  H»el  reporters  ntonitoriiHi  short  .wave  broadcasts 
early  this  morning  heard  Radio  Moscow,  broadcasting  in  English, 
brand    Israel,   France,   and    Englafid    as   "hostile   aggressors." 

In  condentning  the  Anglo  French  ultimatum,  and  defending 
Egyptian  sovereignty.  Radio  Moscow  accused  the  three  countries 
of  "armed  intervention  incompatible  with  the  spirit  of  the  United 
Nations. 

"Deet>  sympathy  from  the  freedom-loving  people  of  the  world" 
was  extended  to  Egypt  by  the  Soviet  networlt.  Radio  Moscow  s^id 
that  it  had  "proof"  that  the  invasion  of  Egypt  had  been  »rrmnged 
by  previous  agreement  between   Israel   and  the  Western  powers. 


WEATHER 

Scattered  showers  and  mild  to- 
day. Low  tonight  near  60.  High 
today  73. 


3rhc 


aTarHcel 


CHILDREN 

They're  screaming.  See  editorial 
page. 


■  i^: 


_i'\,    -t;,- 


VOL.  LVII  NO.  36 


Complete  {/P)  Wiie  Servic* 


CHAPEL  HILL,  NORTH  CAROLINA,  THURSDAY,  NOVEMBER   1,  1956 


Offices   in    Graliam   iteviorial 


FOUR   PAGES   THIS    iSSUi 


Funeral  Services  Held    \  Soprano 
Here  For  O.  /  Coffin      Sings  Here 


Funeral  services  for  0.  J.  (Skip- 
per)   Coffin,    former   dean   of   the 
use   School   of  Journalism.,  were 
held   today   in   the   University   Me- 
thodist Church  at  3  p.m.  | 
Bev^-=rCi>arle»    S.    Hubbard    «m»-. 
ducted    the    service,    which    lasted  j 
about  fifteen  minutes.  He  said  "a 
generation  or  more  of  newspaper- 
men" were  there  to  pay  honor  to 
Skipper.  He  added  there  was  "none 
which  had  not  felt  his  (Skipper's) 
influence."    He    said    Skipper    had 
always  stressed    truth   in   journal- 
ism. 

About   250   townspeople,    faculty 

Hungarians  Are 
Honored 


Today 


By  University 

UNC  will  join  other  universities 
today  in  commemoration  of  the 
role  now  being  played  by  Hungari- 
an students  in  their  nation's  strug- 
gle for  freedom. 

Chancellor  House  has  called  for 
cessation  of  all  university  activi- 
ties at  11:30  a.m..  at  which  time 
the  university  bell  will  call  atten- 
tion to  "two  minutes  of  total  si- 
lence.' 

The  announcement  came  after 
Chancellor  House  received  a  tele- 
gram from  the  American  Commit- 
tee for  Cultural  Freedom,  com- 
mending the  students  of  Hungary 
for  their  "heroic  action"  in  their 
nation's  rebellion. 

The  telegram,  wired  to  presi- 
dents of  15  universities  "geograph- 
ically representative"  of  the  United 
States,  called  upon  each  to  set  an 
example  for  a  "nationwide  univer- 
sity demonstration  of  sympathy 
for  the  students  of  Hungary." 

The  Chancellor  quoted  and  call- 
ed the  attention  of  the  public  to 
an  Oct.  27  editorial  in  the  New 
York  Times  which  declared  Hun- 
garian people  worthy  of  freedom 
because  "They  alone  are  worthy 
of  freedom  who  are  willing  to  fight 
and  die    for  freedom." 

The  New  York  newspaper  said 
ihat  the  "Hungarian  people  have 
won  the  admiration  of  free  men 
everywhere  by  their  proof  that 
they  ftieet  this  stern  test." 


and  a   few  students  attended. 

J.  B.  Linker.  Duncan  Neville. 
Frank  Umstead.  Joe  Page,  Nor- 
man Cordon,  and  Hugh  WiJsoo 
a    newspaper  office   in    the   state 

wcye  oetwcTpallbeaTgrk.  '•-?,*<  -• 
The  honorary  pallbearers  were 
Roy  Parker  of  Ahoskic.  Weimar 
Jones  of  Franklin,  Phillips  Russell 
of  Chapel  Hill.  Jack  Riley  of  Ra- 
leigh and  Thomas  J.  LessHer  of 
Smithfield. 

Coffin,  who  retired  h'st  sum- 
mer from  the  School   of  Journal- 

I  ism.  died  in  Raleigh  Monday 
night  from   pneumonia  which  was 

I  the  result  of  a  long  asthmatic  con- 

i  dition. 

t  He  is  survived  by  his  wife.  Mrs. 
Gertrude  Coffin;  one  son.  Wilson 
Coffin  of  Durham;  a  sister,  Miss 
Bess  Coffin  of  Raleigh  and  a  bro- 
ther.  Will   Coffin  of   Asheboro. 

He  and  Mrs.  Coffin  moved  to 
Raleigh  last  spring  after  he  re- 
tired from  teaching. 


Board  Must 
OK  Candidates 

All  students  interested  in  be- 
coming a  candidate  for  Men's  Hon- 
or Council  in  this  fall's  elections 
must  be  approved  by  the  Bi-Parti- 
san  Selections  Board,  a  represen- 
tative of  the  board  stated  yester- 
day. 

The  board  will  meet  Monday, 
Tuesday  and  Wednesday  in  the 
Men's  Council  Room  of  Graham 
Memorial,    he   stated. 

Prospective  candidates  have 
been  asked  to  contact  Jim  Exum 
at  8-9077  for  an  appointment  to 
meet  with  the  board. 


At  8  p.m. 

Licia  >Ubanese,  prima  donna 
soprano  of  tlie  Metropolitan  Opera 
Association,  will  be  (eatureJ  in 
concert  tonight  in  Memorial  Hall 
at  8. 

Madame  Afbanese,  called  the 
"Mistress  of  the  bel  canto  school 
of  song,"  is  one  of  the  leading  so- 
pranos of  the  Metropolitan  Opera. 
Each  year  she  visits  the  San  Fran- 
cisco Opera  and  La  Scalft  in  Mi- 
lan, where  she  began  her  career. 
She  also  takes  time  each  year  for 
concert  tours,  giving  the  public 
she  has  acquired  through  her  an- 
nual broadcasts  from  the  Met  a 
chance  to  hear  and  see  her  per- 
sonally. 

Her    program    tonight    will    in- 
clude:  selections  from  the  operas 
"The  Marriage  of  Figaro"  by  Mo- 
zart,"   'Mefistofele"    by   Boito.   and 
"La  Traviata"   by   Verdi;    "Amar- 
illi"  by  Caccini;  "Cradle  Song"  by^ 
Tchaikovsky;  "Carnaval"  by  Four- ; 
drain;     "Midsummer "    by    Worth, 
and     compositions     by     Scarlatti, ' 
Rachmaninoff.  Szulc.  Dclibes.   Ma- 
lottc,  and  Bridge.  i 

The  concert,  sponsored  by  the 
Student  Entertainment  Committee, 
is  free  to  students  upon  presenta- 
tion of  I.  D.  cards.  There  is  a 
charge  of  $1  for  student  wives  and 
$2  for  faculty  and 
after  7:40. 


University  Party  To  Fight 
Columbia  St,  Parking  Ban, 
Work  For  Lower  Prices 


LICIA  ALBANESE 

.   gives  cortccrf   tonight 


Ike  Or  Adiai  ?  Mock 
Vote  Today  Will  Tell 


IN  THE  INFIRMARY 

Students  in  the  Infirmary  yes- 
terday included. 

Misses  Barbara  Smith,  Dura 
Methvin,  and  Isabelle  Masterton, 
and  Elbert  Jones,  GMrge  Ray, 
Marion  Mason,  Richard  Custaf- 
son,  Jesse  Wall,  Robert  Souther- 
land,  James  Woodard,  Pavid 
Parker,  Bruce  Caldwell,  AAonroe 
Srenson    and    Isaac    MerriH. 


Foreign  Films  Presents 
British  Movie  Tonight 

Tonight  at  8  in  Carroll  Hall  the 
GMAB  Foreign  Film  Committee 
will  present  the  third  in  its  series 
of  fine  films,  "The  Belles  of  Saint 
Trinians,"  a  British  film  based  on 
the  cartoons  of  Ronald  Searle. 

The  hilarious  comedy  is  the 
wacky  tale  of  an  English  girls' 
finishing  school  in  which  the  girls 
learn  love  of  animals  (betting  at 
horse  races),  fair  play  (hitting 
your  polo  opponent  over  the  head 
with  the  mallet  to  gain  a  point), 
and  chemistry  (how  to  make  a  gin 
stiin.  These  are  just  a  few  of 
the  ladylike  surprises  that  are  the 
terror  of  the  quiet  English  coun- 
tryside. 

Starring  in  the  flick  are  Alas- 
tair  Sim,  Joyce  Grenfell,  Hermi- 
one  Gingjld.  and  a  cast  of  thous- 
ands. Tickets  are  available  at  th«i; 
door, 


Mrs.  Roosevelt 
Speaks  On  UN 
Monday  Night 


The  attitude  of  the  student  body  [  lion.     The   two   groups    have    held 

toward     the    presidential    election    campaign    meeting,    posted     party 

towns-people    will  be  determined  today  by  a  poll    publicity    and    handed    out    cam- 

j  in  Gerrard  Hall.  '  paign  buttons  in  an  attempt  to  get 

I      The   polls' will   be  open   from   8    out  a  large  vote. 

a.m.  to  6  p.m.  GMAB  officials  Results  of  the  voting  will  be 
urge  that  the  entire  student  body  tabulated  tonight  in  the  Rendez- 
participate  in  this  mock  election,  vou.s  Room  and  posted  there. 
GMAB  workers  will  maintain  These  results  will  be  given  na- 
two  tables   and   use  several   ballot    tional  publicity. 


Durham,    (J^    —    Mrs.    Eleanor 
Roosevelt  has  accepted  an  invita- 
tion  to   appear   here   on    Monday ! 
night,  Nov.  26,   to  deliver  an  ad-  \ 
dress  on  behalf  of  support  of  the 
United  Nations. 

Announcement  of  her  acceptance 
was  made  today  by  Mrs.  Lucille 
Handler,  recently  named  chairman 
of  the  Durham  County  chapter  of 
the  American  Assn.  for  the  United 
Nation. 

Mrs.  Roosevelt's  appearance  here 
will  be  in  Duke  University's  Page 
Auditorium  and  will  be  under  the 
auspices  of  the  Durham  County 
AAUN  chapter  and  the  University. 

Her  lecture  is  set  for  8:15  p.m. 
and  will  be  open  to  the  public. 

Dan  K.  Eklwards  of  Durham  is 
chairman  of  the  state  chapter  (ft 
the  AAUN  and  is  working  closely 

with  Mrs.  Handler  in  arranging  for  |  boxes  to  expedite  voting,  and  tho  ^  _ 

the    program.    A    round    of    social  j  actual     voting     procedure     should    and  Oak  Ridge  have  all  held  simi- 
activities  also  i.s  being  planned  for  j  take  only  a  ntatter  of  seconds.  lar    poll.>;.    the   Ste\  cn.son-Kefauver 

the   former  first    lady    during    iiei-        The   YDV   and    VKC    have    been    ticket    being    most    p(»piilar   at    all 
.stay   in   Durham,  verv  active  in  publicizing  the  eifc-    llu-.-He  .sch.'ol.s  exeejit  Davifi.^^on. 


EISENHOWER  STEVENSON 

.  .  .   lure  f(i(/i  (illiri   in  .shaw  vole  ludnx 
State.    Geoi^ia    Tech. 


Davidson 


Field  Meet 
Postponed 
Till  Tues. 


Due  to  inclement  weather,  the 
Rod  and  Gun  Field  .\feet  jscheriul- 
ed  for  this  afternoon  at  2:00  has 
been  postponed  until  Tue.sday  af- 
ternoon at  2  o'clock.  The  grounds 
were  found  to  be  entirely  too  wet. 

The  sponsor  of  the  Rod  and 
Gun  Day  have-announced  that  en- 
tries will  hi*  e.vtended  until  Tues- 
day and  an.vone  who  has  not  yet 
entered  is  still  eligible  to  do  so. 
They  may  pick  up  their  entry 
blanks  plus  detailed  information 
at  the  information  desk  in  Gra- 
ham Memorial  or  at  the  Intramur- 
al   Office    in   .31.'S   Woollen   G.vm. 

Rod  .\mundson.  editor  of  Wild- 
life in  Xorth  Carolina,  has  been 
invited  to  attend  the  meet  along 
with  other  members  of  the  Wild- 
life Commission.  Pictures  will  be 
taken   of  the   winners. 

There  will  be  no  charge  for  the 
u.>;e  of  the  grounds.  Trap  shooters 
and  target  rifle  shooters  will  be 
charged  S3. 25  and  S.25  respective- 
ly which  will  cover  the  cost  of 
ammunition. 

Transportation  will  be  provided 
for  those  who  do  not  have  rides. 
EvcJ-yone  has  been  asked  to  meet 
in  front  of  Woollen  G.vm  at  1:00 
Tuesday.  Anyone  who  is  driving 
and  has  additional  room  in  his 
car  has  been  asked  to  check  by 
Woollen   Gym   before  departing. 

A  directional  map  will  appear 
in  the  Tuesday  morning  Daily  Tar 
Heel. 

Refreshments  will  be  served  by 
GMAB. 


Team  Telegram  Available 
For  Student  Signatures 

.\  team  telegram  for  the  Ten- 
nessee game  Saturday  will  be 
available  for  signatures  at  the  Y 
Caravan  desk  in  Y  Court  today 
and  Friday.  Y  officials  stated  yes- 
terday. 

Cost  for  a  signature  is  10  cents. 

Joe  Clapp.  president  of  Univers- 
ity Club,  stated.  "Let's  make  this 
the  longest  telegram  a  Carolina 
team   ever  received." 


Weinman  Predicts  UP  Clean 
Sweep  Of  All  Class  Offices 


The  University  Party  voted 
Tuesday  night  to  continue  the 
fight  against  the  Columbia  St. 
parking  r>an  and  to  work  to  gain 
lower  prices  in  Chapel  Hill  .stores 
as  planks  in  the  UP  platform  for 
Nov.  10  elections. 

Pai1y  chairman  Mike  Weinman 
stated  ctmcerning  the  parking  ban 
on  Columbia  St.: 

'"M'e  have  a  pwsitive  plan  for  so- 
luti«m  of  the  ban.  We  propose  to 
keep  the  restriction  from  the  new 
museum  (Ackland  Fine  Arts  Mu- 
-seum  cuiTently  under  construc- 
tion) driveway  on  the  ea.st  side  of 
S.  Columbia  St.  to  the  corner  ot 
Franklin  St.  and  on  the  west  side 
irom  (he  Beta  House  driveway  to 
the  corner." 

On  the  price  situatitm  in  Chap- 
el Hill  stores.  Weinman  said:  •"Tho 
onl.v  thing  we  can  do  is  to  appoint 
a  committee  to  meet  with  tho  Mer- 
chants .\ssn.  and  ask  them  to  com- 
pare their  prices  with  prices  in 
other  towns  of  similar  size  in  this 
area.  We  will  have  to  get  them  to  j 
see  our  side,  and  we  hope  to  at- 
tain a  gradual  lowering  of  prices. 
Thi.s  sort  of  thing  takes  steady 
pressure." 
OTHER  MEASURES 

Other  measures  to  be  included 
in  the  platform  are  as  follows: 

1)  To  build  a  student  parking 
lot  this  year  with  money  for  stu- 
dent  automobile  registration  fees. 

2)  To  end  as  soon  as  possible 
restrictions  on  freshman  cars.  j 

3)  To  make  an  effort  to  gain  a 
longer  spring  recess. 

4)  Continued  support  of  ah  un- 
limited cut  .system-  for  third  and 
iourth  year  students. 

5)  .\  class-free  weekend  in  thv 
spring  as  well  as  in  the  fall. 

6)  Washing  machines  for  men's 
dormitories. 

7)  An   effort   to   gain   privileges 
for  student  nurses  comparable  to ' 
those   enjoyed   by   regular   women ' 
students.  I 

Commenting  on  the  rest  of  the  , 
platform.    Weinman    said:    "Every- 
thing in  our  platform  can  l>e  ac- 1 
complished    and    wc    hope    before  i 
ne.xt  election.  Some  are  already  in  j 
the  process  and   we  are  reaffirm- 
ing   our    interest    in    these    mvus 
ures. 

•  Tf  We  get  student  parking  lots, 
we  will  be  able  to  have  freshman 
cars  hack  on  campus  s'Xtner.    The 


orij-inal  plan  was  not  to  limit 
Ireshmen.  but  to  alleviate  the 
parkinj;  problem.  If  we  can  get 
spaces  for  several  hundred  more 
cars  to  park,  wc  >hould  have 
ireshinan  cars  l)ack.'  he  said. 

•  We  will  probably  not  be  able 
to  act  washing  machines  in  every 
mens  dorm  at  first,  but  we  will  trj- 
to  gel  one  or  two  in  every  dorm 
district  such  as  Lower  and  Upper 
Quad." 

CANDIDATES  CHOSEN 

The  party  elected  the  following 
slate  of  candidates  at  'i  aesday's 
meeting:  Fre.shnian  cla.ss — presi- 
dent. Charles  Wilson:  vice-presi- 
dent. Cameron  Cooke;  secretary, 
Mary  Ruth  Starling;  treasurer. 
Peyton  Harris;  social  chairman, 
Rol>erta  Chapin. 

Town  Women's  I — Sheila  Cron- 
er.  .)an<^  Slickter. 

Town  Men's  I — Phil  Malone. 
Chuck  Ro.ss.  Wilson  Cooper.  Bill 
Robbins.  Ron  Beik.  Chuck  Cush- 
man. 

Town  Men's   II — Van  Waltz. 

Town  Men's  UI.  year  seats — Phil 
Haill.  Jerry  Openheimer.  Tom 
Kenan:  si.\  months  seat — Guff 
Miller. 

Town   Men's  U — Uoyd  Andrews. 

Dorm  Men's  IH — Charles  Mad- 
dre.v. 

'T  think  these  candidates  are 
the  best  the  Up  has  ever  put  for- 
ward." Weinman  said,  "and  I  think 
I  can  safely  predict  a  clean  sweep 
of  all  class  offices.  I  expect  we 
will  increase  our  majority  in  the 
legislature  by  8  .scats." 

Weinman  annoiuiced  that  the 
party  will  meet  next  Monday  at  8 
p.m..  due  to  national  elections 
Tuesday. 


GM'S  SLATE 


The  folo'Mfing  activities  ara 
schedule<i  for  Graham  Memorial 
today: 

Grail  Room  —  1-2,  Pan  Hellan- 
ic  Council,  A-6,  GM  Board  of  Di- 
roctors,  6  11  Student  Council;  Ro- 
land Parkor  1  —  4-5:30,  Debate, 
7-7:30  UP  Caucus;  Roland  Park- 
er 3,  —  «  7:30  SP  Caucus;  Wood- 
house  Conference  Room  —  4:45- 
5:30,  Rules  Committee,  9:45-1  T, 
Graduate  Study  Group;  Council 
Room  —  7-11  IOC  Court;  Ren- 
dozvous  Room  —  7-11,  Polls  Com* 
mittee. 


PA6I  TWO 


THE  tJAlLY  tit'  HilL 


THURSDAY,   NOVEMBER   1.   1956 


Athietics  &  Ui^oir  Hdii: 
Exfracurricular  Activity? 

•7  ////n^  //i/i  /a  a  vrry  tisinine  attitude It's  highly  ridintlous 

to  expect  (the  football  tennn  to  move  out  for  some  othet  group.  It's 
like  eoch  child  nwiuting  the  same  bedroom.  I  hey  all  can't  hax'e  it." 
— Athletics  Director  C.  P.  (C.huck)  Erickson.  rommentino  01.  charc^c 
from  Freshman  Fellowship  Ad\  isor  that  the  team  took  over"  l.enoir 
Hall  uf»tairs  room. 


X^OETTINGEN  LETTER 


It  is  ol)vioiis  whidi  (hild  «ot  to 
ilie  bedroom  first. 

The  h>otl>ff!l  team,  represented 
by  head  (oath  Jim  Tattmi  and 
Athletics  Director  Krickson.  "jot 
there  first.  And  now  the  diildren 
are  ani^iS. 

The  «  hildven  are  stanipinof  their 
feet  on  the  floor  and  hollering  that 
thev  i>(»t  there  first  and  they  ain't 
letting  nobody  else  irsc  their  bed- 
room. 

Managing  college  football  teams 
nowad.i'vs  is  prettv  trickv  business. 
Man\  reponsible  people  are  say- 
ing that  tollege  foorbau  is  no  long- 
er an   academic   byprodiut. 

'Fhese  people  are  saying  that 
college  fiMitball  players  are  not 
treated  like  reguJar  students;  they 
are  tutored,  their  tuition  is  paid 
for  them,  they  get  manv  special 
favors  Aud  thev  live  li\es  (juite  un- 
like those  ot  the  lest  of  the  stu- 
dent l)od\. 

So  it  would  appear  that  the 
people  responsible  for  Carolina's 
hM)tball  team  wotdd  be  eager  to 
pio\e  that  their  boys  are  just  like 
the  rest  of  us.  that  no  fullback  is 
treated  a'nv  better  than  a  student 
legislator  or  a  member  of  the  De- 
bate S<^|uad. 

The  situation  at  I.enoir  Hall 
tloes  not  reflect  any  such  eagerness. 

]  he  l.ut  that  the  football  team 
(which  theoretitally  is  an  extra(  in- 
riciilar  r-vtivitv.  like  jxilitics  or  de- 
bating or  the  Fre-hman  Fellowship) 
has  the  large  upstairs  dining  room 
in  I.enoir  Hall.  fi\e  days  a  week, 
at  luuth  ami  ai  dinner,  indicates 
that  the  f.  Kuball  team  is  getting 
extra-special   treatment. 

The  special  tr«  atnient  does  not 
come  from  the  fact  that  the  team 
eats  together.  The  Athletics  Dept. 
is  wise  in  feeding  all  the  players 
the  same  IoikI  and  at  the  same 
time.  But  tht-  ^sptiial  treatment 
comes  from  ilu  fact  that  other 
caaiipiis  org :i')i/a;;aiw.,  just  a*  im- 
portant ti>  the  atadc'mic  liife  of  the 
rni\ir  I'v  are  being  denied  a 
inecr iug-and-eating  room  in  Le- 
noir Hall. 

If    Athletics    Director  *  Frlckson 

The  Daily  Tar  Heel 

The  official  student  publication  of  the 
Publications  Board  ef  the  University  o( 
North  Carolina,  where  it  is  published 
daily  except  Monday  and  cxaminatiot 
and  vacation  periods  and  summer  terms 
Entered  as  second  class  matter  in  tht 
nost  office  in  Chapel  Hill,  N.  C,  undei 
the  Act  01  March  8.  1870.  Subscription 
rates:  mailed,  $4  per  year,  $2.50  a  semes- 
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Editor  _  ._ 

FRED  POWLEDGE 

Managing  Editor     . 

CILAJILIE  SLOAN 

News  Editor      .._ 

.       RAY  LINKER 

Business  Manager  ^.. 

.    BnJ,  BOB  PL*EI. 

Sports  Editor  L 

__  LARRY  CHEEK 

Advertising  Manager 
Circulation  Manager 

- Fred  Katzin 

Charlie  Holt 

EDrrORL\L  STAFF  —  Woody  Sears. 
Frank  Crowther,  Barry  Winston,  David 
Mundy.  George  Pfingst,  Ingrid  Clay. 
Cortland  Edwards,  Paul  McCauley, 
Bobbi  Smith. 


Staff  Photographer    Norman  Kantof 

BUSINESS  StAFF  -^  Rosa  Moore,  JMtny 
Whitaker,  Dick  Leavitt,  Peter  Alper. 


NEWS  STAFF— Clarke  Jones,  Nancy 
Hill,  Joan  Moore,  Pringle  Pipkis,  Anne 
Drake,  EdithMacKinnon.  Wally  Kuralt, 
Mary  Alys  Voorhees,  Graham  Snyder, 
Billy  Baines,  Neil  Bass,  Gary  Nichols, 
Page  Bernstein,  Peg  Humphrey  Phyllis 
Maultsby. 


^ORTS  STAFF:  Bill  King.  Jim  Purks, 
Jimmy  Harper,  Iftave  Wible,  Charley 
Howson. 


Subscription  Manager  __ 

Staff  Artist  

Night  Editor ~ 

Proof  Reader  — — . 


.. .  Dale  Staley 

Charlie  Daniel 

Cort  Edwards 

Ben  Tayior 


were  siinerelv  interested  in  pn>\- 
ing  that  the  football  team  doesnt 
get  s|>e(ial  hivors,  it  appears  to  us 
that  he  wouldnt  sav  such  things 
as: 

■■I'll  not  ioiisider  moving  out 
now.  I'm  going  to  sii(  k  to  my  guns. 
I'll  carry  it  all  the  way  to  tite  i  iian- 
cellor.   if  necessary." 

It  is  doubtless  that  in  the  places 
of  auth<»rity  on  this  (ampus  the 
football  team  is  mudj  more  im- 
portant than  the  Freshman  Fellow, 
ship,  the  group  whidi  inquired 
about  using  the  hwge  upstairs  din- 
ing room. 

.\fter  all,  the  Freshman  Fellow- 
.ship  doesnt  bring  money  to  the 
I'niversity  to  pav  <oa'ihes'  salaries 
and  expenses  of  the  other  sports. 

After  all,  the  Freshman  Fellow, 
ship  doesn't  excite  aluimii  to  the 
point  of  t ontributing  money  to  the 
\arious  foinidations  and  funds. 

But.  you  know,  the  Freshman 
Fellowship  really  is  an  important 
organization.  It  is  made  up  of  fresh- 
men, who  are  iniegial  parts  of  this 
college  community.  Without  them, 
we  wouldn't  even  have  a  footliall 
team. 

The  Freshman  Fellowship  does- 
ti't  make  headlines  in  newspapers 
aroinid  the  state  and  nation,  but 
it  serves  as  a  fonnn  for  first-year 
men  here.  It  promotes  fellowship 
and  scholarship  and  helps  {leople 
soke  their  a<ademit  and  other 
problems.  Ouietlv  a-nd  steadilv,  it 
does  a  g(HKl  job. 

I  he  Freshman  Fellowship  is 
just  us  important — more  import- 
ant— to  the  ;u"ademic  comnumiiv 
than  is  the  I'NC  football  team. 

But    the    officials    aroimd    here 

don't  think  so.  • 

*  ■* 

Athletics  Director  Eriikson's 
statements  about  what  he  is  and 
isn't  going  to  do  with  the  dining 
room  were  unfortimate.  "Fhev 
sei\ccl  to  exaggeraiLc  a  feeling  that 
had  "been  apparent  far  a  loYig  timt': 
That  the  football  team  and  the 
rest  of  the  student  body  are  t%vo 
separate  but  unequal  things. 

A  little  more  tolerancie  of  the 
rest  of  the  Tniversity — the  academ- 
ic side— might  be  useful,  .\fter  ;ill. 
the  I'niversitv's  lounders  had 
edu<:,'tion.  not  gate  receipts,  in 
their  minds  when  they  hitched 
their  hoises  inider  Da\ie  Poplar. 

Gracious 
Living: 
Number  4 

The  coffee  machine  in  (ira-ham 
Memorial  has  ears.  Or  eves. 

It  rebelled  against  us  yesterday. 

It  rebelled  after  it  read  Grac  ious 
living  in  Chapel  Hill:  \o.  ^.  The 
editorial  said  the  'foul  demon  ' 
coffee  machine,  which  sells  pseudo. 
( of  fee  for  a  dime  a  cup,  slipped  up 
and  diop|)ed  a  tup  for  a'  iVickle. 

So  yesterday,  wlien  we  went  down 
to  get  a  cup  of  the  mixture,  the 
machine  (back  on  a  lo-ceijt  sched- 
ule) took  our  dime.  It  delivered 
half  a  cup  of  coffee. 

In  the  interests  of  (iia<  ious  Liv- 
ing ill  Chapel  Hill,  CM  Coffee 
Machine,  were  for  calling  off  the 
battle. 

Thoughts 

For  Two 

Minutes 

While  students  are  sitting  silent- 
ly for  two  minutes  this  morning 
in  tribute  to  the  Himgarian  stu- 
dents who  died  in  their  fight 
against  Soviet  tyranny,  we  sug- 
gest the.se  thoughts: 

How  niuch  initiative,  how  much 
energy,  how  intich  guts  did  it 
take  lor  a  student  in  Hungary  to 
die  for  what  he  believed  was  right? 
It  is  true,  isn't  it,  that  there  are 
still  people — people  oiu'  age — who 
f)erieve  in  something  enough  to 
die  for  it? 

Would  you?       ___^____«.^...-^ 


Hard  Work  And  Hot  Discussions 


Ddn  Southerland 

The  Ecumenical  movement  is 
dedicated  to  unity  of  the  Chris- 
tian Church.  Ecumenical  Work 
Camps,  which  have  been  held  in 
all  parts  of  the  world,  attempt 
to  bring  about  more  understand- 
ing and  harmony  between  peo- 
ple's of  the  various  denomina- 
tions. 

Last  August,  in  Wiesbaden. 
Germany,  I  took  part  in  such  a 
camp  sponsored  by  the  World 
Council  of 
Churches.  Our 
twenty  -five 
campers  came 
from  the  Evan- 
gelican,  Angli- 
can, Coptic,  and 
Greek  Ortho- 
do.x  Churches 
among  others. 
We  helped  with 


SOUTHERLAND 


the  construction  of  homes  and 
built  a  300  meter  street  for  the 
families  of  nine  industrial  work- 
ers. 

Because  of  the  rift  between  the 
laboring  man  and  the  Church  in 
Germany,  an  important  purpose 
was  to  strengthen  the  relation- 
ship of  these  people  to  the 
Christian  Church. 

The  following  is  a  description 
of  what  took  place  during  a  day 
in  the  Ecumenical  Work  camp 
in  Wiesbaden: 

"Aufstehen!    Aufstehen!" 

At  6:30  a.m.,  just  waking  up, 
Les  Weiner,  U.S..  stuck  his  head 
out  of  the  small  opening  in  his 
mummy  .sleeping  bag.  It  was  cold   , 
in  August. 

IJurt  Abel,  camp  leader  from 
Cologne,  was  yelling  at  the  top 
of  his  voice,  '"Aufstehen!  Get 
Up!" 

Dietrich,  from  East  Germany, 
the  first  to  get  up,  with  towel, 
razor,  and  various  toilet  articles 
in  hand,  tripped  over  a  few  cots 
as  he  made  his  way  out  of  the 
room  where  six  others  were 
sleeping,  and  then  stumbled 
down   the  plank   from   the   front 

door,   or    opening,    of    the    bare. 


unfinished  cinder-block  house. 

The  Fruhstuck.  breakfast,  mar- 
melade  on  bread  and  tea,  was 
followed  by  morning  worship 
led  by  Chris,  an  exchange  stu- 
dent from  Iceland. 

Te  work:  Three  of  us  fed 
sand  into  a  grinding  cement 
mixer  wtih  wheelbarrow^.  The 
fresh  cement  was  then  hauled 
up  to  the  second  story  window 
of  a  house  by  pulling  buckets  up 
and  over  hand  on  a  pulley  and 
dumped  into  wooden  molds  which 
formed  the  inside  steps  of  the 
house. 

He  and  his  family  could  move 
into  the  house  in  another  year, 
hoped  Herr  Konrad.  like  most 
of  the  settlers  a  refugee  from 
Czechoslovakia.  He  worked  with 
us  in  the  day  and  ran  a  load- 
ing-crane on  the  night  shift  at 
the  Dyckerhoff  Cement  plant. 

Below  the  Konrads"  house,  was 
a  dirt  road  covered  partly  with 
stones  and  broken  blocks  of 
white  concrete,  the  scene  of  a 
great  deal  of  activity. 

Pete  of  the  British  RAF,  Tom 
from  Yale,  and  Ko,  an  engineer- 
ing student  from  Holland,  were 
having  a  contest  to  see  who 
could  be  the  first  to  break  a 
huge  slab  of  steel-reinforced 
concrete  with  a  sledge  hammer. 

Several  girls.  Swedish.  Dutch, 
and  German  were  making  the 
first  layer  of  the  road  bed  oiit 
of  the  rough  pieces  of  concrete. 

While  they  .shoveled  to  make 
a  flat  surface  for  the  road,  five 
campers  began  singing.  "Holli 
Hi,  Holla  Ho",  .some  in  very 
broken  German.  A  jet  black  Afri- 
can and  a  Dane  picked  up  the 
song  a<:  they  carried  dirt  away  in 
wheelbarrows. 

Some  boys  who  were  lugging 
150  lb.  curb  stones  to  the  side  of 
the  Strasse  joined  in,  and  soon 
everyone  was  singing. 

At  work,  we  had  a  real  sense 
of  unity,  however  in  the  Bible 
discussion  that  afternoon,  many 
of  our  differences  were  broiiaht 
to  light.  As  we  talked  about  the 


A  Reply  To  Erickson 


Editor: 

The  hyi^er-scholarly  inquiry  by 
University  Mentor  of  Mitscle.  C. 
P.  (Chuck)  Erickson  indeed  de- 
serves an  answer  from  the  aca- 
demic community.  We  wonder 
what  answer  a  majority  of  the 
community  would  give  if  the 
question  was  put  squarely  to  it. 

Which  is,  in  fact,  more  import- 
ant. Pi  Sigma  .Alpha  or  the  foot- 
ball team?  And  since  Pi  Sigma 
Alpha  exists  mainly  to  recognize 
achievement  in  the  field  of  po- 
litical .science,  it  might  well  be 
asked:  which  is  more  important, 
political  science  or  the  football 
team? 

One  need  not  speculate  long 
on  what  answer  Mr.  Erickson 
would  have  to  that  one.  Ventur- 
ing on,  since  political  science  is 
but  one  of  the  family  of  social 
sciences,  may  we  ask  "Which  is 
more  important,  t  h  e  social 
sciences  or  the  football  team?" 
And  it  i.s  but  one  step  to  the  ulti- 
mate question:  which  is  more  im- 
portant, athletics  or  academic 
life?  Mr.  Erickson,  your  move. 

Mr.  Erickson  was  good  enough 
to  point  out  the  real  estate  port- 
folio already  held  by  the  athletic 
department  and  its  satallites:  Ke- 
nan Stadium,  the  Monogram  Club, 


story  of  the  Prodigal  Son  in  the 
Book  of  Luke,  the  Germans  be- 
gan arguing  over  the  meaning  of 
words  such  as  "forgiveness." 

On  the  other  hand,  the  Ameri 
cans  in  the  group  strayed  from 
the  text  and  talked  more  about 
real   life  situations. 

More  dissension  arose  when 
Alexander  of  the  Orthodox 
Church  continually  made  it 
known  that  he  thought  that  An- 
gela, a  Presbyterian,  was  com- 
pletely in  the  wrong  with  her 
opinion. 

That  evening,  we  again  had 
disagreement  when  "Mac"  from 
Jerusalem  gave  a  talk  on  the 
Arab-Jew  disputes  in  Israel.  An 
American  girl  who  had  studied  a 
year  in  Lebanon  and  an  Ethio 
pian  from  Cairo  University  dis- 
agreed strongly  with  Mac's  analy- 
sis of  the  problem. 

After  this  discussion,  although 
our  differences  were  prominent, 
we*  had  grown  in  our  understand- 
ing of  one  another  so  that  we 
felt  bound  together,  not  as  an 
assembly  of  representatives  from 
various  denominations,  but  as 
members    of    one    Church. 

The  closing  prayer  that  even- 
ing was: 

"Oh  Lord,  grant  us  patience 
and  understanding  of  each  other, 
that  we  mjv  be  united  by  thy 
love  as  members  of  thy  one  fam- 
ily  on   earth." 

AT  GERMANS  CONCERT 


KKK  Returning  - 
To  North  Carolina 


Fred  Powledge 


Fats'  Impolite  Audience 


and    (though     he     neglected""  to 
mention    it)    Woollen    Gym. 

He  in.si.sts  that  these  ai'^  rtot 
sufficient  .to  house  the  many  so- 
cial services  of  an  expanding  ath- 
letic department.  What  will  his 
empire  need  next?  South  Build- 
ings Graham  Memorial?  Or,  heav- 
en  help   us.   the   Arboretum? 

We  .sympathize  with  the  plight 
of  the  Athletic  department  in  its 
effort  to  provide  for  every  facet 
of  the  athlete's  daily  life  and  to 
keep  him  separate  from  the 
common  herd  of  less  'physically 
active"  .students. 

We  recognize  that  athletes 
need  steaks  while  our  more  sed- 
entary existence  can  be  sustain- 
ed on  the  Student  Speciaf.  We 
are  willing  to  do  almost  anything 
to  ease  their  Saturday  afternoon 
ordeals. 

But  we  do  insist  that  the  mi- 
nority on  this  campus  who  find 
their  diversion  in  intellectual 
pursuits  be  allowed  separate  but 
equal  facilities  for  their  humble 
mealtime    gatherings. 

Phil  Meytr 

Margaret   Hunt 

Daniel    Goidrich 

Brad  Seasholas 

Andy  Milnor 

Jay  H.  Gat«f 


C.  S.  Young 

Friday  afternoon,  shortly  after 
the  performance  of  the  Billy  May 
Band,  a  large  man  walked  out 
on  the  stage  in  Memorial  Hall 
with  the  intention  of  whiling 
away  an  hour  or  so  running  his 
stubby  fingers  up  and  down  and 
through  the  ivory  surface  of  a 
piano  keyboard. 

Before  sitting  down  to  begin, 
this  man  glanced  out  at  the  ex- 
pectant faces  that  filled  the  hall, 
and  he  was  undoubtedly  assured 
from  what  he  saw  that  this  was 
an  enthusiastic  crowd.  He  was 
right.  Few  entertainers  rate  as 
high  with  the  Carolina  student- 
body  as  does  Fat.s  Domino. 

There  had  been  a  slight  delay 
in  beginning  the  second  half  of 
the  program,  and  certainly  the 
anticipation  had  mounted.  This 
was  to  be  the  day  when  the  in- 
comparable Fats  Domino  set 
Memorial  Hall  on  its  ear.  A  day 
to  remember  long  after  he  was 
gone. 

Well,  old  Fats  sat  down  at  the 
piano  and  started  working  on 
that  keyboard  straight  off.  He 
opened  his  mouth,  aitd  out  came 
those  golden  notes  of  "Blueber- 
ry-Hill." a  song  that  has  helped 
to  put  him  on  top  of  the  music 
world. 

What  followed  is  well  known 
by  now.  For  more  than  an  hour, 
everybody  in  Memorial  Hall  suf- 
fered mixed  emotions,  ranging 
from  utter  disgust  to  the  out 
and  out  assasination  of  some- 
body, anybody,  whomever  was  in 
charge  of  those  outdated,  out 
moded,  ancient,  and  archaic  rel- 
ics that  are  .set  up  on  the  stage 
for  the  sole  purpo.so  of  picking 
up  and  transmitting  to  the  au- 
dience that  which  transpires  on 
the  boards. 

It  is  unbelievable  that  a  state 


university  which  boasts  its  own 
independent  radio  and  television 
station  cannot  accomodate  an  en- 
tertainer of  such  stature  as  Fats 
Domino  by  furnishing  equip- 
ment that  will  do  him  justice. 

Many  people  were  very  dis- 
pleased when  the  large  group  of 
Carolina  folks  got  up  to  leave 
before  the  concert  was  ended. 
I've  heard  all  sorts  of  excuses, 
but  I've  yet  to  hear  one  that 
justifies  the  creation  of  such  a 
disturbance. 

But  1  am  not  mainly  concerned 
with  the  feelings  of  the  audience. 
I  wonder  how  many  people  real- 
ize the  effect  of  their  actions, 
while  in  the  audience,  on  the 
entertainer.  I  wonder  also  if 
they  know  anything  of  their  obli- 
gations to  the  person  on  the 
stage. 

It  was  plain  to  see  that  Fats 
was  suffering  while  he  was  up 
there.  He  was  doing  everything 
in  his  power  to  overcome  the  dis- 
traction, and  to  present  a  top- 
notch  program,  and  there  i.s  lit- 
tle doubt  that  had  the  micro- 
phones been  in  good  working 
order,  he  would  have  done  just 
that. 

Even  with  conditions  as  they 
were,  his  performance  was  very 
satisfying  to  many.  You  might 
say  that  Fats  came  through  when 
the  chips  were  down.  But  there 
were  many  people  who  appar- 
ently decided  that  it  wasn't  worth 
the  effort.  They  had  to  get  up 
and  saunter  out.  and  I  might 
add,  in  great  numbers. 

I  wonder  if  we  have  any  reason 
to  believe  that  Fats  Domino  was 
pleased  with  his  reception.  And 
I  also  wonder  how  long  it  will 
be  before  Fats  comes  back  to 
Chapel  Hill. 


Pogo 


By  Wait  Kelly 


VOBe  VOi  A^&AN  you  VM3U.P 


— ^- -> 

OU(5HT  rO  1W0^'  AVAY 
Hi$  VOT0. 


Li'l  Abn«r 


By  AI  Capp 


EXTRA! 


ui3Tv^-Tmx 


TtHLiffg^Xy 


40  WAITERS  AND  23  GRANDMOTHERS 
INJURED  BY  UOVERBOYNIK. 
SWEETHEART  OF  THE  PIANO 


Dinrusted  dariina  of  oniiliona  go®*  laerserl^.  f  • - 
Pol  ice  scour  city  for  wreckcer  off  auditorimn— 


THIS  MilST  BE  A  PREAM.rr  - 
HERE.  GOME.  riNV,  WIF  TH' 
BOV  AH  BIN  OREAMIN'  Of- 
AUU  MAH  EOVLESS  LIFE.?" 


So  the  North  Carolina  branch  of  the  Ku  Klux 
Klan  is  back  in  business. 

Reading  about  the  Klan's  activities  in  the  Tar 
Heel  state  last  week,  I  remembered  my  visit  to  a 
Klan  meeting  in  Camden.  S.  C. 

Chal  Schley,  a  religion  major  who  dabbles  in 
everything,  and  I  took  off  in  his  car  for  the  rally, 
one  warm  afternoon  last  summer.  We  didn't  exactly 
know  what  to  expect,  because  we  Tiad  heard  tales 
of  the  "new  Klan" — a  Klan  which  did  business  on 
a  high  plane,  sort  of  like  the  Patriots  of  North  Car- 
olina Inc. 

But  when  we  got  there,  it  was  the  old  Klan.  It 
was  the  old  cross-burning,  wild-talking,  emotion- 
appealing  Ku  Klux  Klan. 

It  was  a  Klan  which  was  afraid  of  reporters, 
especially  reporters  with  cameras  and  flashguns. 
And  it  was  a  Klan  which  was  afraid  to  show  its 
face,  afraid  to  reveal  its  identity.  ^ 

There  was  the  High  Priest,  or  whatever  the 
Klan  called  him,  with  his  fat  face  hidden  behind 
a  mask.  Standing  on  a  platform  behind  three  Con- 
federate flags,  he  assailed  just  about  everybody — 
Jews,  Catholics  and  most  of  all  Negroes. 

He  also  managed  to  get  in  a  few  swipes  at  the 
folks  who  were  too  lazy  to  join  the  Klan. 

Around  the  Grand  Ashcan  were  more  Klan.s* 
men,  their  faces  also  hidden  from  the  public  eye. 
And  around  them  were  a  couple  hundred  auto- 
mobiles with  people  inside. 

It  was  impossible  to  establish  how  many  peo- 
ple came  purely  to  observe  the  Klan  meeting,  and 


MAIN   ST.,  CAMDEN,  S.  C. 

. .  .  the  day  after  the  rally 

how  many  came  as  full,  Anglo-Saxon-blooded  par- 
ticipants, but  we  figured  most  were  just  watch- 
ing. 

In  the  middle  of  the  whole  affair,  which  was 
held  at  a  racetrack,  was  a  burning  cross  about  25 
feet  tall. 

(The  Ku  Klux  Klan  has  stolen  the  cross  from 
its  enemy,  Christianity.) 

After  the  Grand  Ashcan  got  through  assailing, 
the  Klan  announced  it  would  be  interested  in 
bringing  a  few  more  South  Carolinians  into  the 
folds  of  its  robe.  There  were  handy  application 
blanks  ready  for  you  to  fill  out,  and  the  gentlemen 
in  white  robes  could  change  bills  of  practically  any 
denomination  for  those  who  wished  to  pay  their 
registration  fees. 

When  the  rally  was  through,  South  Carolina 
Highway  Patrolmen  helped  direct  outgoing  traffic. 
It  was  like  folks  leaving  a  Kenan  Sodium  contest. 

Chal  and  I  stayed  overnight  at  a  local  hotel,  and 
checked  by  the  churches  the  next  day,  which  was 
Sunday. 

Sure  enough,  under  the  Methodist  Church  steeple 
were  several  of  the  men  who  were  leading  the  Klan 
meeting  the  night  before. 

*  ■  *  * 

If  I  have  made  this  account  seem  ridiculous,  it 
is  because  memories  of  a  Klan  meeting  are  quite 
ridiculous.  The  vision  of  fat  storekeepers  and  coun- 
ty officials  prancing  around  an  abandoned  race- 
track in  white  robes  while  their  customers  and 
constituents  watched  is  better  than  any  science  fic- 
tion movie  you  could  name. 

But  when  you  remember  the  words  that  were 
spoken,  the  secret  way  the  meeting  was  held,  you 
wonder  if  a  consequential  segment  of  the  South 
isn't  going  to  hell  after  all. 

The  Ku  Klux  Klan  stands  for  violence.  This  in- 
cludes the  "new  Klan,"  too.  The  Klan  intends  to 
bypass  the  law  whenever  it  /eels  like  it. 

It  depends  on  numbers  for  its  strength.  When 
a  flogging  is  scheduled,  the  ration  of  flogged  and 
floggers,  is  quite  one-sided. 

It  depends  on  secrecy  for  its  effect.  The  sight 
of  hooded,  robed  men.  with  holes  in  their  sheets 
only  for  their  eyes,  coming  toward  you  is  pretty 
alarming.  The  panic-like  fear  of  the  secret,  hidden 
Klan,  the  quiet  but  quickly-spreading  rumor,  are 
essential  to  the  Klao's  purposes. 

And  the  Klan  is  coming  back  to  North  Carolina. 

*  *  ♦ 

The  Ku  Klux  Klan  is  dedicated  to  only  one  thing: 
It's  members.  And  its  members  are  pure,  white, 
Anglo-Saxons,  they  say. 

In  reality,  its  members  are  the  offspring  of  a 
decayed,  depraved  race  of  inferior  people — peop'c 
who.  to  conquer  their  inferiority,  gather  in  corn- 
fields and  racetracks  under  white  robes  and  speak 
big  so  long  as  their  numbers  are  large. 

They,  not  the  people  they  assail,  are  the  scum  of 
the  earth. 


New 
Oi-gai 

New  cfl 
being  orj 
Night  Co- 
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day. 

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TMWRSCXAV.  NOVEMMR  »,  1^ 


THE  DjAllrV  TA*  HEEL 


«:  FAGB    THREE 


|g  - 

ina 

Ku  Klux 

the  Tar 

.isit   to   a' 

labbles  in- 
the  railx, 
t  exactly 
?ard  tales 
isiness  on 
lorth  Car^ 

Klan    It 
emotion- 

I  reporters, 

(tlashguns. 

show  its 

Itever    the 

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[hree  Con- 

^erybody — 

>es  at  the 

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it    walch- 

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Is  about  25 

(cross  from 

assailing, 

?rested     in 

into   the 

ipplication 

gentlemen 

:tically  any 

pay   their 

Carolina 

^ing  traffic. 

>m  contest, 

hotel,  and 

which  was 

irch  steeple 
12  the  Klan 


fdiculous,  it 

are  quite 

and  coun- 

lon^d    race- 

Itomers    and 

science  fic- 

that   were 

\s  held,  you 

the   South 

^ce    This  in- 
intends  to 

^ngth.  When 
flogged  and 

t    The  sight 

their  sheets 

3u   is  pretty 

ret,  hidden 

rumor,   are 

th  Carolina. 

ly  one  thing: 
pure,    white, 

f spring  of  a 
ople — people 
ler  in  corn- 
s  and  speak 

the  scum  ol 


New  Cbmmittees  Being 
Organized  For  Y  Night 

New  committees  M-e  currently 
being  organized  for  Y  Night,  Y 
Night  Co-chairmen  Jim  Raugh  and 
Nancy  Shuford  announced  yester- 
day. 

Applications  are  available  in  the 
Y  office  for  publicity,  talent,  pro- 
duction, receptimi,  arrangements 
and  program  committees.  Dead- 
line for  application,  it  was  stated, 
is  noon  Tuesday. 

Five  campus  "get-togethers"  are 
planned  for  this  year,  the  first  to 
be  a  "giant  talent  show,"  accord- 
ing to  Y  officials. 


Photographers'  Exhibit 
Displayed  In  Library 

An  exhibit  ol  portraits  and  ph»- 
tographs  of  North  Carolina  scenes 
made  by  members  of  -the  N.  C- 
Photographers  Assn.  has  recently 
gone  on  disiriay  in  both  the  North 
and  South  Art  Galleries  of  the. 
Morehead  Planetarium. 

The  exhibit  represents  the  best 
of  the  works  which  were  displayed 
at  the  recent  State  Fair  in  Raleigh. 
They  will  be  shown  here  until  late 
October.  I 

The   photographers   represented  j 
include    Homer    Ball,    Goldsboro;  i 
Bumie    Batchelor,    Raleigh;    Don 
Barber,     Hendersonville;      Byer's ' 
Studios,  North  Wilkesboro;  B.  A. '' 
Culberson,  Asheville;  John  David 
Studio,  Asheboro;  Eroeryivood  Stu- 
dios,   High    Point;    Flynt    Studio. 
Greensboro;  Hooks  Studio,  Smith- 
field;    Hord's    Studio,    Charlotte; 
,  Charles  Kraft,  Mt.  Olive;  Lavergne 
"^..?*5":.^"T^^*  .^!^^*  ^^  I  "^^  Clwpel  Hill;  Ed  T.  Simons.  Win- 

*t»n-Sal«m;  Ben  A.  Stimson, 
Statesville;  Hal  Tysinger,  Sanford; 
and  WiUis  Studio,  Shelby. 


Covering  The  Campus 


Fall  Bargains  In 

HUMOR 

Wake  Me  When  Ifs  Over,  by  Ab- 


drawings  about  Love  and  Life.  Pub- 
lished at  $2.95. 

Our   Special   $1.00 

The  Swiss  Family  Perelman,  by  S. 
J.  Perelman.  Wonderful  off-beat 
travel  book  to  end  all  travel.  Pub- 
li.shed  at  $2:95. 

Our  Special  $1.2f 

Bottoms  Up,  by  Cornelia  Otis  Skin- 
ner. The  beloved  monologist  takes 
us  to  a  dinner  for  obstetricians,  to 
a  whacky  health  bar,  to  Paris. 
Whatever  she  touches,  sparkles 
with  her  own  special  kind  of  mag- 
ic   Published   at   $3.00. 

Now  $1.25 

THE  INTIMATE       ' 
BOOKSHOP  j 

205  E.  Franklin   St. 
Open  TUI  10  P.M. 


Y  Schedule 

12:45  p.m.  —  Cosmopolitan  Club 
Executive  Committee,  Y  office. 
Dick  Carter,  president. 

4:30  p.m.  —  Membership  Coun- 
cil of  YWXA  YWCA  meeting  in 
Y  Cabinet  Room.  Miss  Troutmann, 
chairman. 

5  p.m.  —  Graduate  study  group 
on  religious  faith  organizational 
meeting,  Y  library  room. 

MONOORAMMIRS  MEET 

The  Monogram  Club  will  meet 
tonight  at  8  p.m.  in  the  Monogram 
Building.  All  members  are  urged 
to  be  present. 


OnCilafiifi 


(Author  •/  "Btrtfott  Bn^  With  Ck—k,"  tie.} 


LANGUAGE  MADE  SIMPLE:  No.  1 

In  this  day  of  swift  international  communications, 
like  radio,  television,  and  the  raft,  it  becomes  increasingly 
important  for  all  of  us  to  have  a  solid  grounding  in 
foreign  languages.  Accordingly,  1  have  asked  the  makers 
of  Philip  Morris  whether  I  might  not  occasionalty  forego 
levity  in  this  column  and  instead  use  it  for  a  short  lesson 
in  language. 

"Of  course,  silly !"  chuckled  the  makers,  tousling  my 
yellow  hair.  Oh,  grand  men  they  are,  the  makers  of 
Philip  Morris,  just  as  fuf^  of  natural  goodness  as  the 
cigarettes  they  make.  "Of  course,  fond  boy,  you  may 
occasionally  forego  levity  in  this  column  and  instead  use 
it  for  a  short  lesson  in  language !''  said  the  makers  and 
tossed  me  up  and  down  in  a  blanket  until,  rosy  with 
laughing,  I  bade  them  desist,  and  then  we  all  had  basins 
of  farina  and  smoked  Philip  Morrises  and  sang  songs 
until  the  campfire  had  turned  to  embers. 


CMCVCOX 


For  our  first  lesson  in  language,  let  us  take  up 
French,  which  ha.s  often  been  called  the  lingna  franca 
of  France.  We  will  approach  French  in  a  new  manner, 
because,  to  be  brutally  frank,  the  way  it  is  taught  in  our 
colleges  is  archaic  and  obsolete.  Why  all  this  emphasis 
on  grammar?  After  all,  when  we  get  to  France  does  it 
matter  if  we  can  parse  and  conjugate?   Of  course  not! 

So  for  the  first  exercise,  translate  the  following  real, 
true-to-life  dialogue  between  two  real,  true-to-life  French- 
men named  Claude  (pronounced  Clohd)  and  Pierre  (also 
pronounced  Clohd) : 

CLAUDE:  Good  morning,  sir.  Can  you  direct  me  to 
the  nearest  monk? 

PIERRE:  I  have  regret,  but  I  am  a  stranger  here 
myself. 

CLAUDE:  Is  it  that  you  come  from  the  France? 

PIERRE:  You  have  right. 

CLAUDE:  I  also.  Come,  let  us  mount  the  airplane 
and  return  ourselves  to  the  France. 

PIERRE:  We  must  defend  from  smoking  until  the 
airplane  raises  itaelf. 

CLAUDE :  Ah,  now  it  has  raised  itself.  Will  you  have 
a  Philippe  Maurice? 

PIERRE:  Mercy. 

CLAUDE :  In  the  garden  of  my  aunt  it  makes  warm 
in  the  summer  and  cold  in  the  winter. 

PIERRE:  What  a  coincidence.  In  the  garden  of  wf 
aunt  too ! 

CLAUDE :  Ah,  we  are  landing.  Regard  how  the  air- 
plane depresses  itself. 

PIERRE:  What  shall  you  do  in  the  France? 

CLAUDE :  I  shall  make  a  promenade  and  see  various 
sights  of  cultural  and  historical  significance.  What  shall 
you  do? 

PIERRE :  I  think  I  shall  try  to  pick  up  the  stewardess. 

CLAUDE:  Long  live  the  France! 

^*^  '  ®Uax  Shuhnan.  l»5f 

Et  vivm  muBtt  la  Philipp*  Maurice,  U  cigaretU  tris  bonne,  tria 
agreablm,  tret  magnifi§ue,  et  la  aponaor  da  eefta  eolumn4a. 


ACCOUNTING  CLUB 

Any  student  in  the  School  of 
Business  Administration  who  has 
selected  accounting  as  a  major  and 
is  interested  in  forming  an  ac- 
counting club  has  been  invited  to 
attend  a  meeting  tonight  in  106 
Hanes. 
RULES  COMMITTEE 

The  Rules  Committee  of  the  Stu- 
dent Legislature  will  meet  today 
at  4:45  p.m.  in  the  Woodhouse  Con- 
ference Room,  according  to  Miss 
Martha  Barber,  chairman. 
FALL  FILM  SERIES 

The  Belles  of  St.  Trinian's  will 
be  shown  tomorrow  night  at  8  p.m. 
in  Carroll  Hall.  Starring  Alistar 
Sims,  the  movie  is  part  of  the 
Graham  Memorial  Activities  Board- 
spensored  Fall  Film  Series. 
PHILOSOPHY  LECTURE 

The  Depts.  of  Philosophy  at 
UNC  and  Duke  will  jointly  spon 
SOT  a  lecture  by  Professor  H.  L.  A. 
Hart  of  University  College,  Oxford, 
England,  on  Monday  at  4  p.m.  in 
Graham  Memorial's  Woodhouse 
Conference  Room.  Professor  Hart's 
topic  will  be  'Knowledge  and  Ac- 
tion." 
WUNC-TV 

WUNC-TV,  the  University's  ed- 


ucational  television   station,  chan- 
nel 4: 
12:45 

IKM) 

1:30 

2:00 

2:30 

3:45 

6:00 

6:15 

6:30 

6:45 

7.00 

7:15 

8:00 

8:45 

9:30 
10:00 
19:05 
WUNC 

Following  is  a  listing  of  pro- 
grams today  from  the  University's 
FM  radio  station: 

7:00    Intermezzo 

7:15    Chalkdust 

7:30    Cosmopolitan  Interview 

8:00     Encore 

8:30    Folk  Music  of  the  World 

9:00    Listen  America 

9:30     Masterworks  From  France 
10:00     News 

10:15     Evening  Masterwork 
11:30    Sign  Off 


Music 

Today  on  the  Farm 

Music  in   View 

Medicine 

Sign  Off 

Music 

Magic  Lantern 

Sports  Clinic 

News 

Sports 

Election,  1956 

Bible  Cowse 

Dr.  Shivers 

State  Govt. 

Lecture  Hall 

Final  Edition 

Sign  Off 


Duke  Professor  Says 
We  lost  Democracy' 


Duke  University  political  scien- 
tist Roma  Sawyer  Cheek  told 
Chapel  Hill  members  of  the  Amer- 
ican Association  of  University 
Women  here  Tuesday  night  that 
"North  Carolina  citizens,  through 
inertia,  neglect  and  lack  of  infor- 
mation, have   lost  democracy." 

"Democracy  requires  majonity 
rule,"  Dr.  Cheek  said,  "by  the 
people  or  their  duly  elected  rep- 
resentatives, and  the  operation  ol 
government  by  persons  subject  to 
popular  control. " 

She  listed  as  causes  of  the  "pres- 
ent dilemna":  citizen  neglect  in 
voting  and  in  failing  to  participate 
in  other  mechanisms  of  popular 
control;  an  out-of-date,  ineffective 
state  constitution;  a  legislature 
which  defeats  majority  decision 
by  "stacking,"  "gag",  and  "secre- 
cy" rules'  a  n  d  a   "pseudo-parlia- 


AFROTC  Cadets  Take 
Orientation  Flights 

Forty-five  AFROTC  cadets  at 
UNC  have  already  logged  39  hours 
and  15  minutes  flying  time  this 
semester  on  orientation  flights  in 
Air  Force  aircraft,  it  was  an- 
nounced recently  by  Major  G.  D. 
Lynn,  Flight  Operations  Officer  of 
the  Dept.  of  Air  Science. 

Major  Lynn  added  that,  in  addi 
tion  to  local  orientation  flights, 
tentative  plans  have  been  made 
for  several  field  trips  during  the 
school  year  to  distant  air  bases  to 
see  the  Air  Force  in  action. 

Orientation  flights  and  field 
trips  are  planned  for  cadets 
throughout  the  year  to  familiarize 
them  with  the  basic  fundamentals 
of  an  Air  Force  Ba.se.  Major  Lynn 
is  assisted  in  flights-  operations  by 
Lt.  Colonel  Swann,  Capt.  Gerrity 
and  Capt.  Gatlin,  pilots,  and  Major 
Gabus,  navigator. 


FAU  BARGAINS  IN 

PSYCHIATRY  & 
STUFF 

The  Mill,  by  Victor  Chapin.  The 
personal  account  of  a  conscientious 
objector  who  served  in  a  mental 
hospital.  A  graphic,  realistic  pic- 
ture of  a  strange  world.  Published 
at  $3.00.  Ovr  Speical  $1.00 

The  Essentials  ^f  Abnormal  Child 
Behavior,  by  Dr.  Ernest  Harms. 
The  first  modern  book  to  evaluate 
and  relate  the  work  accomplished 
in  this  field.  Published  at  $5.00. 
Our  Special   ^.  . .  $2.39 

The  Philosophy  of  Psychiatry,  by 
Harold    Palmer,    M.D.    Qver    our 
bead,    but    perhaps    you'll    under- 
stand  it.  Was  $2.75 
Oor   Special  $1.29 

Fragments  of  mn  Analysis  with 
Freud,  by  Joseph  Wortis.  In  an 
analysis  that  rambled  all  over  tha 
place,  the  master  probed  his  own 
thinking  as  well  as  that  of  his  pa- 
tient. Published  at  $3.00. 
Now  only  ..  ■  _ 


$1.29 


THE  INTIAAATE 
BOOKSHOP 

205   E.   Franklin   St. 
Open  Till  10  P.M. 


mentary" 
ment. 


system  of  state  govern- 


North  Carolina's  number  one 
need  in  this  mid-twentieth  cen- 
tury. Dr.  Cheek  said,  is  "an  in- 
formed and  determined  citizenry 
dedicated  to  the  estaWishment 
and  operation  of  democratic  gov- 
ernment, using  modem  effective 
tools  of  government." 

Dr.  Cheek  cited  U  major  defects 
of  the  present  88-year-old  Consti- 
tution, as  well  as  a  number  of 
important  omissions.  She  gave  sta- 
tistics on  19  areas  of  economic, 
social  and  educational  well-being, 
showing  North  Carolina  to  be  near 
the  bottom  or  at  the  bottom. 

She  outlined  "serious  defects'^ 
in  the  executive,  legislative  and 
judicial  branches  of  state  govern- 
ment as  evidence  that  "North 
Carolina  is  far  behind  other  states 
in  governmental  reform. 

A  new  and  effective  State  Con- 
stitution, Dr.  Cheek  stressed, 
would  be  a  first  step  toward  other 
greatly  needed  governmental  re- 
forms and  toward  the  development 
of  North  Carolina's  rich  natural 
and    human   resources. 

Mrs.  Cheek  taught  in  the  North 
Carolina  public  schools  and  held 
various  government  jobs  before 
joining  the  Duke  University  facul- 
ty, where  she  serves  as  professor 
of  political  science.  She  was  grad- 
uated from  Duke  and  took  further 
training  at  UNC,  University  of 
Pennsylvania  and  Columbia  Uni- 
versity. 


Baskefballers 
Talk  At  Y  Meet 

Basketball  will  be  the  topic  for 
the  meeting  of  the  YMCA  Fresh- 
man Fellowship  tonight  in  the  back 
dining  room  on  the  second  floor  of 
Lenior  Hall.  The  Freshman  Supper 
will  be  held  at  6:15,  students  car- 
rying their  trays  from  the  cafe- 
teria line.  At  6:45  the  eveaing  pro- 
gram will  begin,  lasting  until  7:45. 

Lennie  Rosenbluth,  Carolina's 
AU-American  on  sevAiil  selections 
last  year,  and  a  candidate  for  AiU 
American  again  this  year»  wili  be 
present  to  answer  questioas.  Vine* 
Grimaldi,  captain  of  the  team  in 
1952-53  season,  and  presently  Asr 
sitant  Freshnun  Coach,  will  make 
general  comments  about  the  game, 
the  team  and  prospects  for  this 
year. 

One  of  the  highlights  of  the  pro- 
gram will  be  movies  of  last  year's 
game  with  Alabama. 

All  FVeshmen  have  been  invited. 

Danny  Allen,  freshman  from 
Forest  City,  will  preside  at  the 
meeting. 

.  ■    I.  J  .i 


Shrktian  $tudy  Q/OMp 
olds  Me«ting  Todiay 

A  study  group  on  the  Christian 
student  and  the  Universirjr,  spoa- 
sored  by  the  Campus  (Christian 
Council,  will  meet  at  5  p.m.  today 
in  the  YMCA  Library.  The  pur- 
pose of  the  meeting  is  to  discuss 
the  ways  in  which  being  a  Chris- 
tian has  a  distinctive  bearing  oo 
being  a  student.  All  students  havo 
been  invited  to  attend. 


Ymxt  MALtriim"  .Ci^p-fiAiiTf """ 


mm\ 


'^^^^M^^0^^0M0^0^0M^Si^^^^^^0^Mii^MM^^^^^^^^^^^^^MM^MwMM 


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Kraft  Caramels  ._ plc1£fe35c 


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THi  DAILY  TAt  MltL 


THURSDAY,  NOVEMBER  1  ^5^ 


Vols  And  Tar  Heels  Prep  For  Saturday  Clash  In  Knoxvillo 


Carolina  Caravan 


By  JAKE  WADE 

Back  in  the  last  week  of  Sep- 
tember. North  Carolina's  Tar 
Heels,  who  had  been  unexpectedly 
bumped  the  week  before  in  the 
season's  opener  by  a  fired-up  N. 
C.  State  football  team,  journeyed 
to  the  distant  land  of  Oklahoma. 

Their  date  was  with  Oklahoma's 
Sooner.*;,  a  pre-season  favorite  for 
top  national  honors,  although  at 
that  time  there  were  a  few  sooth- 
sayers who  had  different  choices 
for  the  1956  nation's  football  pin- 
nacle. 

The  Tar  Heels,  in  a  complete  re- 
versal of  form  from  their  debacle 
a^inst  the  Wolfpack.  looked  like 
a  real  football  team  in  the  early 
part  of  the  Oklahoma  game.  Five 
minutes,  ten  minutes,  fifteen  min- 
utes, twenty  minutes  and  up  to  24 
minutes  they  were  brave  an-d  gal- 
lant and  skilled  a^nd  indeed  a 
match  for  what  now  is  conceded 
to  be  the  greatest  college  football 
team  in  the  world  and  possibly 
the  greatest  of  all  time.  Nobody 
scored. 


of  their  devout  and  unwavering 
supporters,  the  Vols  can  do  no 
wrong. 

So  long,  chums!  We'll  be  back. 
Before  the  departure,  we'll  give 
you  a  little  clue.  The  Tar  Heel.s 
are  going  out  there  with  the  firm 
intention  of  winning.  Stranger 
things  have  happened  in  football, 
as  the  histories  will  show.  De- 
termination means  so  much. 

^  lit  lie 

PATS  ON  BACKS!  —  No  one 
player  has  stood  out.  head  and 
shoulders  above  his  mateS,  at  Car- 
olina as  they  have  at  some  schools. 
.  .  .  It's  Thomas  and  McDonald 
and  Tubbs  you  hear  most  about  at 
Oklahoma,  even  on  that  star- 
studded  squad  where  class  is  four 
and  five  deep  .  .  .  Its  Majors  at 
Tennessee,  and  they  say  he  will  be 
ready  for  the  Tar  Heels  this  week 
...  So  on.  all  down  the  line. 

With  the  Tar  Heels  frankly  with 
no  All-America  candidate,  honors 
have  been  pretty  generally  dis- 
tributed as  the  athletes  rise  and 
fall  in  what  has  turned  out  to  be 


UNC  Will  Field  Same 
Lineup  As  Last  Week 


Chuck  Hartman  Takes  The  Long  Stretch 


-,.         .  -  J  .  ,  hot  competition   for  berths.   .   .    . 

Then  the  roof  caved  m    as  you  jj^  j^^^,  j^j,  j^^^antis  and  Don 
■wUl  recall.    The  Tar  Heels  were  i».,jj;„„  u„.  „  k  •»  ^ 

ii»i.^    — .  -11  ^1.1  u         /      ""''Redding  have  been  cited  generous- 
Jicked.  as  all  Oklahoma  foes  have 

been   clobbered.    Licked    good, 


as 


ditto. 


THIS  WEEKI— Playing  the  na- 
tion's top  team  was  an  honor,  if 
not  at  the  end  precisely  a  pleas- 
ure, and  it  was  good  to  play  it  so 
well  at  least  flieetingly  until  the 
gas  ran  out  in  thinner  ranks. 

This  week,  as  it  happens,  the 
Tar  Heels  run  into  the  team  which 
ranks  third  in  the  nation.  It's  Ten- 
nessee's magnificent  Vols.  No 
strangers  in  these  parts,  the  Vols 
played  and  whacked  Duke  at  Dur- 
ham with  an  awesome  display  of 
speed  and  power.  Eyewitnesses 
are  still  talking  about  their  ex- 
traordinary superiority  over  a 
team  so  good  as  Duke. 

The  Tar  Heels  meet  them  in 
their  own  ballyard— over  the  hills 
at  Knoxville— where,  in  the  eyes 


ly  in  the  public   prints  for  their 

excellent  performances  and  so  has 

Wally  Vale,  the  superb  kicker  who 

j  last   week    also   turned  (Up    a.s    a 

:  great  running  star.  .  .  .  Vale  this 

'  week    is   fifth   in    the   nation   in 


One  of  th*  key  n>en  en  Carolina's  unbeaten  soccer  squad  is  goalie  Chuck  Hartman.   In  four  games 
this  season,  Hartman  has  held  the  opposition  scoreless  twice. 

Boater's  Match  With  Roanoke  Is 
Cancelled;  Cavaliers  Slated  Next 


Inclement  weather  prevented 
Coach  Marvin  Allen's  high-scor- 
ing   soccer    squad    from    seeking 


kicking  and  his  punting  perform- ;  revenge  over  Roanoke  College  this 
anee    against    Wake    Forest    must  I 
have  been  one  of  the  finest  of  all 
times  in  football.  | 

Ed  Sutton  continues  to  be  the  i 
team's  most  effective  runner.  .  .  . 
There  is  no  harder  playing  line- 
man on  the  field  than  Don  Kem- 
per, who  has  had  his  share  of  hard 
luck  in  the  way  of  injuries.  .  .  . 
While  Bill  Ellington  dropped  a 
pass  or  two  against  Wake  Forest 
which  some  thought  he  might 
have  caught,  the  old  High  Point 
family  man  can  take  a  bov  for 
coming  up  from  the  bottom  of  the 
ladder  to  be  rated  as  one  of  the 
team's  best  ends. 


year  for  a   3-2  loss  suffered  last 
year  in  Chapel  Hill. 

Thursday's  scheduled  game  with 
Roanoke  to  be  held  in  Roanoke, 
Va.   was  cancelled  yesterday   and 


Beatty  And 
Murphy  To 
Stage  Duel 

Saturday's     cross-country     meet 

between  N.  C.  and  Tennessee  pits 
1  two  of  the  south's  strongest  teams, 

and  in  addition,  two  of  Dixie's 
I  most  prominent  distance  runners,  j  The  department  is  frantically  try- 


MURALS 


More  rain  yesterday,  canceling 
out  all  tag  football  action,  brought 
more  headaches  to  the  intramural 
department.  Counting  Thursday 
and  Friday  of  last  week  and  the 
first  three  days  of  this  week,  five 
straight  days  of  intramural  foot- 
ball contests  have  been  rained  out. 


Tullai  Says  Tar  Babies 
Ready  For  Virgima  Tilt 


The  freshman  gridders  of  UNC 
will  battle  on  foreign  soil  Satnr- 
day  when  they  meet  the  Univers- 
ity of  Virginia  frosh  in  Roanoke, 
Virginia.  This  wUl  be  the  first 
out-of-state  appearance  for  the 
Tar  Babies  who  have  played  once 
in  Greensboro  and  once  in  Chapel 
Hill. 

The  Greensboro  engagement 
marked  the  season's  opener  and 
resulted  in  a  14-12  loss  to  the 
Baby  Deacs  of  Wake  Forest,  while 
the  second  game  saw  the  home 
standing  Tar  Babies  swamp  the 
University  of  Maryland  frosh,  21- 
0. 

Freshman  Coaeh  Fited  Tulll^i 
said  yesterday  that  on  the  whole, 
his  team  is  in  good  physical  con- 
dition for  the  scrap.  Only  one  in- 
jury stands  to  harm  the  Tar  Ba- 
bies. Tackle  Earl  (Moose)  Butler 
dislocated  his  elbow  in  practice 
recently  and  will  definitely  not 
play  Saturday.  It  is  hoped  that 
Butler  will  be  able  to  see  action 
against  the  Duke  frosh  on  Novem- 1 
ber  22.  j 

Practice    this    week    has    been '. 
greatly  hampered  by  the  fact  that  \ 
on  several  occasions  the  freshman  i 
squad  has  been  called  upon  to  run  : 
Tennessee-type   single   win  offen- 
sive plays  against  the  varsity.  This 
left  little  time  for  work  on  the 
spIit-T  formation  that  is  normally  j 
used  by  the  freshmen.  i 

Coach  Tullai  said  that  team . 
spirit  seemed  to  be  particularly  I 
good,  considering  the  long  layoff , 
period  since  the  Maryland  game ! 
on  October  12.  I 

Tullai  is,  to  say  the  least,  op- 1 
timlstic  about  his  team's  chances  i 
in  Saturday's  game.  He  said  »imp- 


The  two  highly  rated  harriers 
are  Jim  Beatty  of  Carolina  and 
Ed  Murphy  of  Tennessee,  a  strong 
finisher  in  the  1.500  meter  Olym- 
pic tryouts. 

Beatty,  a  diminutive  dandy  with 
a  swinging  stride,  has  only  lost 
one  dual  cross-country  meet  in  his 
career,  and  is  in  better  shape  than 
He  stated  his  rea- 1  ever  going  into  the  Vol  meet.  So 
far  this  season,  Beatty  has  romped 
to  victory  in  every  outing,  whip- 
ping such  smooth  stridors  as  Mike 
Shea   of  State  and  Carl   Party   of 


ly.  "We'll  win 

sons:    "We   have   good    teamwork 
and  the  boys  never  quit.  They  can 
be   far   behind    and   still    play    as 
hard  as  ever." 
The  team  will  leave  Chapel  Hill  \  Maryland  in  convincing  fashion. 


on  Friday  afternoon  and  will 
spend  the  night  in  Roanoke.  Kick- 
off  time  Saturday  will  be  .2:00. 


Frosh  Booters 

Coach  John  Wienants'  freshman 
soccer  team  will  face  the  Duke 
freshman   team   here   today   at   3 


Murphy  should  give  the  Tar 
Heel  pride  and  joy  a  real  battle 
if  past  history  is  any  criteria.  The 
Vol  runner  has  recorded  a  time 
of  4:10  in  the  mile,  just  barely  off 
Beatty's  pace,  and  last  summer, 
finished  6th  in  the  1,500  meter 
Olympic  tryouts. 

Backing  up  Murphy  for  the  pow- 


ing  to  reschedule  these  games  for 
future  dates. 

YESTERDAY'S  VOLLEYBALL 
RESULTS 

4:00— Chi  Psi-1  over  Kap  Sig 
(W).  15-9,  15-13;  Sig  Chi  (W)  over 
Zeta  Psi-1  (W).  15-6.  15-5:  SPK 
(W)  over  ATO,  15-10,  7-13,  15-7; 
Chi  Phil  (W)  over  DKE,  15-9.  IS- 
IS, 15-13. 

5:00— Phi  Kap  Sig  over  SHE, 
15-5,  10-15,  15-7;  Pika  over  Chi 
Psi-2  (W)  1-0:  Med  Sch-2  over  Gra- 
fc»m,  15-12,  5-15.  15-8;  DKE-1  (W) 
over  Chi  Phi-2  (W),  5-15,  15-3.  15-5. 

No  games  in  either  football  or 
volleyball  are  .scheduled  for  today. 


the  two  teams  will  not  meet  this 
I  season.  The  soccer  squad  will  not 
play  again  until  Nov.  8  when  it 
meets  another  conference  foe,  Vir- 
j  ginia,  in  Chapel  Hill.  The  Virginia 
I  game  will  be  the  team's  final 
I  home  contest. 

The  Tar  Heels  are  presently  rid- 
i  ing  high  with  a  string  of  four 
''■  straight  victories  and  a  phenom- 
'  enal  scoring  pace.  The  team  has 
I  scored  18  goals  in  only  four  games 
;  for  an  average  of  better  than  four 
;  goals  per  game. 

In  its  renriaining  three  sched- 
:  ulcd  games,  the  Tar  Heels  will 
i  face  a  trio  of  top-rate  opponents, 
I  all  conference  foes.  After  meeting 
i  Virginia,  Carolina  will  face  Duke 
on  Nov.  13  and  Maryland  in  Col- 
.,  lege  Park,  Md.  on  Nov.  17. 

Maryland,  the  conference  cham- 
pions   for    the    last    few    years    is 
I  having    another    good    year.    The 
I  team  has  beaten  all  its  conference 
opponent^  so  far,  and  held  a  scor- 
ing  onslaught  against  N.   C.  State 
last  week  in  beating  the  Wolfpack. 
j  12-0. 

The  Carolina  defense  has  been 
I  particularly  effective  this  year,  al- 
lowing a  total  of  only  three  goals 
I  in  four  games.  Goalie  Chuck  Hart- 
'  man   has   two  shutouts   under   his 
belt    and    will    be    trying    for    his 
third  against  Virginia. 


CLASSIFIEDS 


p.m.  on  Fetzer  Field.    This  game !  erful  Vols  will  be  a  pair  of  capa- 


marks  the  first  meeting  between 
the  two  squads.  They  will  play 
again  on  Nov.  15  in  Durham. 

After  the  Duke  game,  the  team 
is  scheduled  to  have  two  more 
games,  a  third  meeting  with  State 
on  Nov.  9  in  Raleigh,  and  the  sec- 
ond and  final  game  of  the  season 
with  the  Duke  freshmen.  . 


ble  distance  runners  who  have  re- 
corded 4:23  and  4:28  miles. 

Rounding  out  the  first  five  for 
the  once  beaten  Tar  Heels  will  be 
Everett  Whatley,  Dave  Scurlock, 
Ben  Williams  and  either  Perrin: 
Henderson,  Howard  Kahn,  I>oug~ 
Henderson  or  co-captain  Marion 
Griffin. 


MAKE  YOUR  NEXT  MOVE-A  FRIENDLY  BUSI- 
NESS CHAT  WITH  THE  ^rJ^  MAN.  YOU'LL 
FIND  THAT: 


THE  NEW  YORK  LIFE  AGENT 

ON  YOUR  CAMPUS 
IS  A  GOOD  MAN  TO  KNOW 

George  L  Coxhead 

UNC  '42— CAMPUS  REPRESENTATIVE 

PO  BOX  1065  PHONE  82331 


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DeCantis  Is  Mentioned 
For  Sophomore  Of  Week  I 

RALEIGH^iB— Duke  halfback ' 
Wray  Carlton  has  been  cliosen  as! 
the  Associated  Press  Atlantic  j 
Coast  Conference  Sophomore  of 
the  Week  for  his  fine  showing  in 
the  Blue  Devils'  42-0  win  over 
North   Carolina  State. 

Another  sophomore  who  ran 
well  was  North  Carolina  halfback 
Emil  DeCantis,  who  gained  88 
yards  in  nine  carries  in  the  6-6 
tic   with   Wake   Forest. 


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40.  God  of  war 
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47.  Anger 

48.  Male  sheep 


The  Carolina  Tar  Heels  stepped 
up  preparations  yesterday  for  Sat- 
urday's all  important  test  against 
powerful   Tennessee  in   Knoxville. 

Coach  Jim  Tatum  whipped  his 
squad  through  a  brisk  session  with 
all  hands  present  and  accounted 
for.  Defense  and  offense  each  got 
their  share  of  .  attention  as  the 
search  went  on  >lor  an  aqfciwer  to 
Tennessee's  potent  single  wing  at- 
tack. 

It  is  expected  that  the  startitig 
lineup  for  Saturday's,  tile  wiirt)e 
the  same  which  (>pened  the  Wake 
Forest  and  Maryland  games.  That 
unit  was  comprised  of  Buddy 
Payne  and  Charley  Robinson  at 
ends.  Don  Redding  and  Leo  Rus- 
savage  at  tackles,  Jim  Jones  and 
Don  Kemper  at  guards,  Ronnie 
Koes    at    center,    Dave    Reed    at 


Frosh  Runners 
Lose  To  State; 
Liipfert  Injured 

Carolina'*  freshman  cross-coun- 
try- squad  wa»  edged  yesterday  27 
to  28  by  the  freshmen  of  State 
College.  Tar  Heel  Cowles  Lippfert, 
undefeated  in  freshmau.  competi- 
tion, injured  his  ankle  during  the 
race  and  was  unable  to  finish.  He 
had  a  long  lead  built  up  when  the 
accident  occurred. 

The  Tar  Baby  harriers  now  have 
an  even  record.  3  wins  and  3  los- 
ses. Last  week  Carolina  met  State 
and  walloped  them  19  to  37. 

Though  Lippfert  was  out,  Caro- 
lina still  took  first  place.  Fick  Ar- 
thur did  the  honors  in  12:56  min- 
utes. Two  State  men  followed,  the 
closest.  Reeling,  20  seconds  back. 
The  order  in  which  the  Carolina 
ireshmen  finished  is  as  follows: 
Ray  Bagwell,  Bro  Packard,  Larry 
Withrow.  Frank  Sirlanni,  Bill  Por- 
ter, Jim  Aycock  and  John  Ken- 
nedy. 

Lippfert'a  injury  is  not  serious. 


Carolina 
Corsair 

By  Don  Tr#cy 

Here's  a  fine  bouillabaisc  of  love 
and  treachery  on  the  Carolina 
shore,  as  Edward  Teach  goes  his 
piratical  way.  You'll  enjoy  every 
adventurous   page! 

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quarterback,  Ed  Sutton  and  Larry 
McMullen  at  halfbacks  and  Wally 
Vale  at  fullback. 

The  team  will  leave  Raleigh- 
Durham  Airport  at  1:30  p.m.  to- 
morrow afternoon  and  will  return 
to  Chapel  Hill  immediately  after 
the  game. 

Tonneisee  Goes  Through 
Another  Light  Workout 

KNOXVILLE,  Tenn—  UPi  —The 
Tennessee  Vols  went  through  an- 
other light  workout,  characteris- 
tic of  the  week's  preparation  for 
the  North  Carolina  game  hei-e  Sat- 
urday. 

Coa<?h  Bowden  Wyatt  again 
stressed  defense  in  a  dummy 
scrimmage  against  the  Tar  Heels' 
varied  split-T  offense  as  run  by 
the  freshmen.  The  session  also  in- 
cluded a  drill  on  pass  defense,  a 
weak  point  in  the  Vols  game  this 
year. 

Johnny  Majors,  senior  tailback 
and  sparkplug  of  the  Tennessee 
attack,  watched  the  action  again 
from    the    sidelines,    but    trainer 


,  the 
3ym 


Wrestling  Tryouts 

Wrestling  coach  Sam  Ba  r  nes 
has  asked  that  all  veteran  wijsst- 
lers  and  those  interested  in  trj'- 
ing  out  for  wrestling  report  to 
wrestling  room  in  Woollen  « 
at  4:20  today. 

Mickey  O'Brien  said  he  ♦was 
'slightly  -improved."  He  suff  ;  red 
bruised  ribs  against  Maryland  Hast 
week,  but  is  expected  to  be*  in 
Saturday's  lineup. 


FALL  BARGAINS  IN 

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Egypt  Seizes  "Anglo-French  Oil  Wells;  UN  Meet  Starts 


Compiled  by  The  Daily  Tar  H«cl 
Prom  Short  Wave  and  Radio  Reports 

Premier  Abdel  Gamal  Nasser  has  seized  all  Brit- 
ish and  French  assets,  including  oil  wells,  on 
Egyptian  soil. 

Egypt  froze  the  two  countries'  assets  while  the 
world's  nations  were  gathered  at  a  special  session 
of  the  United  Nations  to  consider  an  American, 
proposal  for  a  ceasefire  in  the  Middle  Elast. 

It  was  reported  late  last  night  that  English  and 
French  forces  had  landed  in  Egypt  to  protect  the 
Suez  Canal  and  their  oil  interests  from  the  Egyp- 
tians. 

Meanwhile,  in  the  United  Nations,  countries  lined 
up  and  spoke   their  minds  about  the  situation  in 


Egypt,  where  this  week  British  and  French  forces 
moved  in  to  help  Israelis  in  their  push  toward  the 
Suez  Canal. 

Sir  Pierson  Dixon  of  Britain  told  the  United  Na- 
tions his  country's  action  was  a  "temporary  drastic 
intervention  in  a  most  grave  situation." 

The  UJf.  Seciu-ity  Council  did  not  have  the 
strength,  said  Dixon,  to  act  quickly  and  sufficiently 
enough  in  the  situation,  so  England  and  France 
went  ahead  in  an  "emergency  police  action." 

Britain  and  other  nations  were  commenting  on 
an  American  resolution  to  condemn  the  aggressors, 
call  for  cessation  of  land  and  air  operations  iniati-  ■ 
ated  by  Britain,  France  and  Israel  and  insist  on  the 
three  nation's  withdrawal  from 'the  area. 


From  Radio  Raperts  .  .  . 

President  Eisenffower  last  niglit  siid  Adiai  Stevenson's  plans  for 
decreased  draft  and  a  ban  on  H-bomb  testing  were  "no  plan  for 
peace." 

Rather,  the  President  said,  the  Democratic  candidate  had  ad- 
vanced a  "design  for  disaster." 

The  Republican  candidate  for  reelection  spoke  at  Philadelphia 
in  his  last  formal  political  speech.  Part  of  the  30  minute  talk  was 
devoted  to  Stevenson  and  the  turbulent  Middle   East. 

"We  cannot  and  will  not  condone  aggression"  no  matter  who  is 
involved,  said  Eisenhower,  obviously  referring  to  British,  French, 
and  Israeli  raids  on  Egypt  this  week.    ^ 

Even  though  the  United  States  may  disagree  with  the  British 
and  French,  he  said,  the  "bonds"  among  the  three  countries  "must 
grow  to  greater  strength"  in  the  future. 


Egypt  is  considering  virithdrawing  from  the  United 
Nations,  Radio  Moscow  reported  this  morning. 

Grounds  for  the  hinted  withdrawal  are  that  the 
U-N.  is  incompetent  to  stop  aggresion.  Egypt  al- 
ready has  severed  diplomatic  relations  with  France 
and  England. 

Other  nations'  sentiments: 

Russia  called  Britain  and  France  "aggressors"  and 
supported  the  U.S.  resolution. 

Egypt  called  the  situation  a  "plot"  among  Israel, 
France  and  England. 

Ceylon,  a  member  of  the  United  Kingdom,  was 
"shocked"  by  the  action  of  another  meml)er  of 
the  British  Commonwealth. 

S>Tia   said   it   was   a   "plot   contrived   (by   Israel 


with  Britain  and  France)  behind  the  back  of  their 
most   faithful  ally,  the   United   States   of  America 
...  This  aggression  was  carefully  plotted  and  pre- 
meditated by  two  powers  of  the  Council." 
The  United  Kingdom  described  as  "false"  charges 

;  that  it  had  plotted  with  France  and  Israel. 

I      Secretary  of  State  John  Foster  Dulle.s  presented 
the  American  resolution  calling  for  an   immediate 

I  ceasefire. 

Adlai  Stevenson,  Democratic  candidate  for  the 
Presidency,  said  the  Middle  Eastern  situatior  re- 
flects   bankruptcy     in     American    Foreign     Policy. 

I  Never  in  American  history  has  it  been  such  a  com* 

'  plete  failure,  he  said  in  a  political  speech  aimed  at 
President  Dwight  Eisenhower. 


•        WEATHER 

Clouds    and    drizzle   today,   with 
expected  high  between  72  and  80. 


2r()  c  3)aitu  m^x  Mtd 


PLATFORMS 

Whafre  they  for?   See  editorial 
page. 


VOL.   LVII   NO.  37 


Complete  (vP)  Wire  Service 


RIDAY,  NOVEMBER  2,  1956 


Legislature  Passes 
fll  On  Dorm  TV 


The  Student  Legislature  last 
night  passed  unanimously  a  bill 
concerning  the  maintenance  of 
men  and  women's  dormitory  tele- 
vision sets. 

The  bill,  revised  from  the  orig- 
inal bill  introduced  last  week  to 
include  the  maintenance  of  TV 
sets  in  women's  dorms,  calls  for 
the  setting  up  of  a  committee  to 
"investigate  the  possibility  of  fi- 
nancing the  maintenance  of  men 
and  women's  dormito|r\-  television 
sets  from  sources  other  than  the 
individual  dormitory  social  fund." 

Three  other  bills  were  intro- 
duced, all  of  them  by  University 


Trip 


Caravan 

To  Be  By  Train 

Committee  Says 

The  Caravan  Committee  Wed- 
nesday decided  the  caravan  to 
Charlottesville.  Va.  Nov.  10  will 
be  made  by  train  rather  than  by 
bus. 

The  change  was  made,  accord 
ing  to  romraittee  officials,  in  or* 
der  to  create  a  triendlier  atrttos 
phere  and  to  increase  the  schoo' 
spirit    of    those    participating. 

The  "Caravan  Special."  the 
same  train  on  which  the  band  and 
cheerleaders  will  travel,  will  be 
available  to  Carolina  Students 
for   the   entire    weekend. 

The  train  will  leave  Durham 
Friday.  Nov.  9,  at  6:55  p.m.,  and 
will  make  a  stop  in  Greensboro 
for  Woman's  College  students 
making  the  trip,  and  supper. 

Ticket  sales  will  continue  in  Y 
Court  from  9  a.m.  to  1  p.m.,  of- 
ficials said,  and  tickets  will  be 
mailed  to  the  holder  as  soon  as 
the  ticket  supply  is  received  from 
Southern  Railway. 

Ticket  prices  will  be  increased 
to  $9.20  for  coach  and  $14.60  for 
Pullman.  Tickets  already  sold  will 
be  reissued  by  the  comm-.ttee  for 
t^e  difference  in   price. 

Committee  chairman  Harry 
ftouse  announced  he  has  confer- 
red with  UNC  Band  Director  Her- 
bert Fred  to  work  out  problems 
arising  from  the  consolidation  of 
the  band  train  with  the  caravan 
train.  They  agreed  to  begin  the 
return  trip  from  Charlottesville 
to  North  Carolina  at  1:30  a.m. 
Sunday. 

Plans  in  Charlottesville  include 
an  open  house  following  the  game 
in  the  University  of  Virginia's 
student  union  building.  Madison 
Hall.  Officials  stated  that  a  dance 
will  probably  be  held  in  Madison 
Hall.  Officials  stated  that  a  dance 
will  probably  be  held  in  Madison 
Hall   Saturday  night. 

It  will  be  possible  to  board  the 
Caravan  train  at  10:00  p.m.  Sat- 
urday night,  it  was  stated.  The 
train  will  arrive  in  Greensboro 
before  7  a.m.,  and  in  Durham 
around  8:05  a.m.  Sunday  morn- 
ing. 


IN  THE  INFIRMARY 


Students  in  the  Infirmary  yes- 
terday included: 

Miss  Barbara  Smith,  Miss  Dura 
Methuin,  Miss  Elizabeth  Morris, 
Miss  Martha  Williford,  Elbert 
Jones,  George  Ray,  Marian  Ma- 
son, Larry  Ford,  Richard  Gustaf 
ton,  Jessie  Wail,  Robert  Souther- 
land,  Jessie  Miley,  William  Par- 
sons, James  Woodard,  David 
Parker,  Johnny  Purkerson,  L. 
John  Trot,  Harry  Brice,  Miss 
Isabelle  AAasterten,  MiM  Ruth 
Caldwell,  Benton  Beard,  Isaac 
Ounnagan  and  Isaac  Merrill. 


Party    Chairman    Mike    Weinman, 
during  the  25-minute  session. 

Two  of  the  bills  called  for  the 
■stablishment  of  two  separate 
committees  to  investigate  (1)  "al- 
tering the  site  of  the  Men's 
Honor  Council  meetings  and-  (2) 
building  parking  lots  with  money 
received  from  automobile  regis- 
tration. 

Weinman's  other  bill  called  for 
the  appropriation  of  $400  to  The 
Daily  Tar  Heel  "to  acquire  the 
services  of  The  Associated  Press' 
national  and  international  news 
wire." 

The  legislature  accepted  Speak- 
er Sonny  Evans'  appointments  of 
Gardner  Foley  to  the  Elections 
Board  and  Miss  .Martha  Barber  as 
secretary-  of  the  senior  class. 

Appointed  to  the  committee  to 
look  into  the  maintenance  of  TV 
sets  were  Benny  Thomas.  UP.  who 
introduced  the  bill;  Oliver  Alphin 
and  Roy  Peele.  The  bill  also  call- 
nd  for  the  president  of  the  Men's 
'nterd<»'mitory  Council  (Sonny 
Halllord)  and  the  chairman  of. 
♦he  ^omen's  "Residence"  Council 
(Peggy  Funk)  to  be  nteM^fft  Uf 
the   committee.  ,     >,  <      «. 

The  committee  has  three  weeics 
to  submit  a  report  of  fiodjpgf  to 
the  legislature.;       '  '  ,/    ;  ^^.. 

Wei,nman's  bill  on  parking  lots 
proposed  that  a  commission  be 
established  by  the  president  of 
the  student  body  "to  work  ex- 
pressly toward  obtaining  student 
parking  lots."        i 

The  bill  states  that  the  area 
beside  Mclver  dorm  and  "the 
area  between  Country  Club  Rd. 
and  E.  Cameron  Ave.  west  of  the 
Forest  Theatre  be  recommended 
as  suitable"  places  for  student 
parking  lots. 


Offices   in   Graham   Memorial 


FOUR    PAGES   THIS    ISSUE 


Candidates 
Must  Meet 
On  Monday 

A  compulsory  meeting  will  be 
held  lor  all  candidates  and  party 
chairmen  or  representatives  of 
parly  chairmen  at  Gerrard  Hall, 
.Monday  evening,  November  5tb. 

The  rules  of  conduct  and  the 
control  of  elections  will  be  read  by 
members  of  the  Elections  Boai'd 
and  copies  of  the  General  Elections 
Law  will  be  distributed  to  the  can- 
didates. 

Absence  from  this  meeting  will 
be  excused  only  for  internment 
in  the  infirmary.  Those  missing  for 


Attendance  Rules 
Go  Before  Faculty 
Meeting 


In 


Today 


By  NEIL   BASS 


PRESENT   RULE 

The  present  clas.s  attendance  reg- 
A    proposal    purported    to    be    a  ;  ^^^^^^^    ^^^^    .^^^    ^^^^^^    -^    j^e 

spring  of'  1955.  It  allows  students 


liberalization    of   the    class    atten-  j 
dance  regulation  will  be  deliberat- ' 
ed  upon  by  the  Faculty  Council  to- 
day. 

No  express  statement  has  been  . 
isued   verifying  the   new   proposal 
will  liberalize  the  class  cuts  rule, 
but  student  government  action  in 


a  maximum  of  three  cuts  per  class. 
Class  attendance  regulation 
which  governed  cuts  prior  to  in- 
institution  of  the  present  regula- 
tion allowed  professors  to  use 
their  own  discrimination  in  allow- 
ance of  cuts.   Unlimited  cuts  was 


other  reasons  not  approved  by  the  I  the  past  has  been  consistently  for  j  ^^^  ^^^^  ^^^^  ^^  describe  the  reg 


chairman   of   the   Elections   Board  i  liberalization. 


Campus  Chest  Committee 


The  Campus  Chest  Conuj|tiftee,  shown  ebevr.  works   on    publicity    for    t| 
whicli  begins  ^wndey  end  l«stt««t''tWn*.-Pte»t»r^««-»l!idw.  "^m^ 


will    be   dropped   as   candidates. 

Re-instatement  may  occur  by 
contacting  Andy  Milnor,  chairman 
nl  the  Elections  Baard,  within  48 
hours  of  the  meeting  and  paying 
a  ont.'  dollar  fine. 

The   election   will    be   held   No- 
vember  13th  and  will   be  campus 
wide.    The    polling    places    are    as 
follows:   Men's  Dormitory  District 
1:  Cobb;  Men's  Dormitory  District 
2:   Stacy,  Everett,  Graham,  Levi  is, 
Aycock;    Men's   Dormitory  District 
'  3:     Connor,    Alexander,    Winston; 
Campus   Chest   Campaign,    ,  Men  s  Dormiton'  District  4;  Joyner,  j  sions 
,*■  r<W^"Ca^ :  "'TCfSngu rii,  "M rfh ley ,  Gflmes:   Ruffin, 


A  presidentially  appointed  com- 
mittee met  with  the  council  and 
made  recommendations  for  em- 
bodyment  in  the  new  proposal. 

The  student  government  com- 
mittee was  composed  of: 

Miss  Susie  Walker,  Jerry  Oppen- 
heimer,  Tom  Lambeth,  Jim  Hugh- 
es and  President  Young. 

The  Faculty  Council  is  composed 
ol  approximately  70  memt>ers  in- 
cluding 33  ex-officio  members  and 
some  40-odd  elected  members 
from   the  various  University   divi- 1 


Jim    Exum,   Ginger   Floyd,   Lennie   Von   Wilier.   Note    Hatten.    Roy    Taylor,    Sarah    Crawford,    and 
Webster.  A  rpfrpber  in  the  ipwer  left  is  unidentified. 


Kathie 


Dorm  Speakers  Start 
Campus  Chest  Drive 


The  Campus  Chest  Fund  kicked 
off  this  year's  drive  Wednesday 
night  when  represeritatives  of 
Campus    Chest    Speaker's    Forum 

Pay  Phones  Will 
Be  Installed  In 
All  Men's  Dorms 


In  his  bill  on  the  Honor  Coun- 
cil meeting  site.  Weinman  stated 
that    "people    innocent,    guilty    or 
witness  should  not  in  fairness  Ise 
subject  to  such   public  notice"  as  i 
can  befall  them  presently,  due  to  j 
the  Council's  meeting  in  the  stu- ! 
lent  union  building. 


Eleven  representatives  were  ab- 
sent, five  from  the  SP  and  six 
from  the  UP.  SP  members  absent 
were  John  Brooks,  Bill  McNaull, 
\ndy  Milnor.  Leo  Wardrup  and 
Don  Kroe.  UP  members  not  pres- 
ent were  Mark  Cherry,  John  Kerr, 
Randy  Williams,  and  Misses 
Eleanor  Williamson,  Belle  Corey 
and   Sara  Ann   Van   White. 


Last  Day 

Today  is  the  last  day  to  sign 
the  team  telegram  for  the  Ten- 
nessee game  Saturday,  according 
to    Y  officials. 

All  students  who  wish  to  sign 
have  been  asked  by  the  Caravan 
Committee  members  to  come  by 
Y  Court.  Signatures  will  cost  10 
cents  e*ch. 

Beta  Theta  Pledges 
Name  Brown  President 


Pay  telephones  will  be  installed 
iff  all  mens  dormitories,  according 
fo-  an  announcement  made  at  Wed- 
nesday night's  Interdormitory 
Council  meeting. 

The  overall  installatioQ  of  pay 
telephones  in  place  of  non-pay 
phones  in  mens  dorms  is  a  re 
suit  of  the  recent  difficulties  which 
arose  when  dorm  men  placed  long- 
distance calls  from  non-pay  phon- 
es. President  Sonny  Hallford  said. 
The  Durham  switchboard  of  tlie 
Southern  'Bell  Telephone  Co.  com- 
plained that  although  such  calls 
were  not  being  completed,  switch- 
boards were  being  tied  up  while 
connection  between  parties  was 
made. 

Installation  of  pay   phones  will 
'oegin  in  the  near  future,  according 
to  Hallford. 
SPEECHES 

Two  student  government  officials 
addressed  the  Council. 

These  were  Miss  Jadkie  Al- 
dridge.  student  body  secretary  who 
outlined  the  Campus  Chest  Pro- 
gram, and  Andy  Milnor,  represen- 
tative from  the  Elections  Board 
who  explained  the  recently  passed 
Election  Law. 

120  coats  were  sold  to  students,  I 
Carter  said.  I 

j      He  also  announced  the  financial 
!  .statement  of  the  IRC  and  individ- 
■  ual  dormitories.  The  IDC  has  a  to- ; 
i  tal  of  $1555.90  in  its  coffers  while 
!  individual   dorms    have   a   total    of  i 
I  $1,724.  ! 

Charles  Wilson  of  Asheville  has '      The   council    also   passed    unani- 
)een  elected  president  of  the  Beta    mously    a    resolution    urging    that 
beta   Pi  pledge   class,   according !  dormitory     intramural     managers 
0  pledge  master  Gordon  Brown.      |  receive     some     compensation     for 
William  Deal,  of  Morganton,  was  [  their  work.  Such  move  for  r^ce'n- 


hosen    vice-president,    and    Jack 
iawing  of   Marion   secretary-trea- 


pense  for  intramural  managers  is 
being  acted  upon  by  the  Intramur- 
als  Department. 


visited    all    dormitories    and    fra 
ternity   and  sorority   houses. 

Representing  the  forum  were: 
Misses  Kathie  Webster;  Phyllis 
Kraft;  Irma  Steinhards;  Barbara 
Bennett;  Martha  Richardson;  Nola 
Hatten;  Frances  Reynolds;  Jackie 
Aldridge;^  and  chairmen  of  all 
men's  dormitories  and  fraternities. 

In  women's  dorms  this  year  do- 
jiations  will  be  received  by  do- 
nations chairmen,  while  in  men's 
dorms,  solicitors  will  visit'  pro- 
spective donors  .sometime  during 
the    Nov.   4-10   campaign. 

Two  donations  chairmen  have 
been  added  to  the  list  previously 
announced  for  dorm.s  and  houses. 
Nancy  Royster  will  head  the  cam 
paign  for  Town  Women,  while 
Rex  Reckindorf  will  head  the  Vic- 
tory   Village    campaign. 

Campaign  plans  this  year  in- 
clude a  thermometer  to  be  set  up 
in  front  of  the  library  to  measure 
the  amount  of  money  donated  as 
it  is  turned  in.  The  thermometer 
will   register  from  $5  to  $2000. 

A  campus  "horse  race"  will 
register  percentages  of  donations 
per  person  in  each  dorm  and 
hous?,  and  a  trophy  will  be  award 
ed  the  winner  at  a  Casual  Campus 
Chest  Dance  Nov.  16  in  Woolen 
Gymnasium. 

Donations  from  this  year's- 
drive  will  be  contributed  to  can 
cer,  CARE.  Goettlnger  Exchange 
Program  and  W(^rld  University 
Service  Funds. 

Cosmopolitan  Club 
Plans  Party  Tonight 

Today  at  8  p.m.  in  Roland  Park 
er  Lounge.  Graham  Memorial.  th( 
Cosomopolitan  Club  will  hold  its 
annual   Halloween    Party. 

Beth  Okun  will  lead  the  group 
in  folk  dancing. 

Barbara  Battle,  a  graduate 
Dramatic  Arts  major,  will  present 
a  reading  of  Poe's  by  candle  light 

"Genuine"  Swamis  imported 
from  IrWia  will  preform  astound 
ir.g  feats  of  "mind  magic". 

The  party  is  open  to  everyone 

Refreshments  will  be  served. 
Pictures  for  the  Yack  will  be  tak 
en  during  the  party. 


TimeNarhei 
Friday  As 
Peacemaker 

President  William  C  Friday  has 
been  featured  in  the  education 
.section  of  the  Nov.  5  issue  of  Time 
Magazine  as  the  "peacemaker"  in 
the  Consolidated  University. 

Time  stated  that  one  of  the 
.surest  ways  a  board  of  trustees 
can  anger  the  faculty  of  a  uni- 
vereity  is  tn  pick  as  president  a 
man  who  has  never  been  a  schol- 
ar, earned  a  Ph.D.,  or  taught  a 
class. 

On  the  resignation  of  Gordon 
Gray  last  March,  Friday  was  ap- 
pointed acting  president,  and  for 
oermanent  president  the  board  be- 
gan to  search  for  a  name  with  a 
»ood   doal    of   academic    prestige. 

According  to  Time.  Friday  re- 
stored th^  peace  by  mending  the 
rifts  which  had  split  the  three 
branches  of  the  Uni\rersity,  and 
jradual^y  it  became  obvious  that 
he  was  the  man  for  the  presi- 
dency. On  his  election,  not  a  single 
orofe.ssor  even  hinted  at  an  ob- 
jection. 


Emerson  Stadium;  Men's  Dormi- 
tory District  5;  Old  Ea.st,.OId  West, 
Battle- Vance-Pettlgrew,  Steele. 
Whilehaad.  Memorial  flail,  and  all 
rtlhei'  university  owned  buildings. 
Dormitory    presidents    will    be    re- 

j  sponsible  for  their  ballot  boxes. 

1      Women's    Dormitory    Di-strict    1 

i  will  be  all  those  residing  in  wo- 
men's dormitories  and  they  will 
\ote  in  their  respective  dorms. 
Town  Women's  District  1  will  in- 
clude all  those  living  in  sorority 
houses  or  those  not  living  in  uni- 
versity owned  buildings.  They  will 
vote  in  Gerrard  Hall. 

Men's  Town  District  1  shall  be 
composed  of  all  men  students  liv- 
ing   in    the    southern    section    of 

I  Chapel  Hill  south  of  Cameron  Ave. 
and   its    imaginary  extension"  east- 

'  ward  and  westward,  except  for  Vic- 
lory    Village.    They    will-  vote    in 

i  Gerrard    Hall. 

I  Men's  Town  District  2  shall  be 
composed  of  all  other  men  students 
except    those    residing    in    Victory 

I  Village    and       they    will    vote    in 

[  South  Building: 

Men's  Town  District  4  shall  be 
composed  of  those  residing  in  Vic- 
tory Village  and  they  will  vote  at 
the  polling  place  provided  for 
them  in  the  Village  by  the  Village 
Board  of  Directors.  All  otl^er  poll 
tenders  will  be  provided  for  by 
the  Elections  Board. 


Med  Profs 
Speak  Now 


Phi  Downs  Bill 
For  Democrats 


Three  UNC  Medical  School  doc- 
tors are  currently  appearing  at 
*tate  and  national  medical  meet- 
ings. ,^ 

Dr.  Ernest  Craige.  associate  pro- 
'essor  of  medicine,  will  speak  be- 
fore a  meeting  of  the  .\merican 
linical  Climatological  Association 
it  Skytop.  Pa.  The  meeting  is  be 
ng  held  today  and  tomorrow.  D 


The  Phi  defeated  by  a  vote  of 
6-4  "A  resolution. favoring  the  re- 
turn of  ai)emocratic  cohgress  and 
the  election  of  a  Democratic  presi- 
dent and  vice-president"  in  a  meet- 
ing Tuesday  night. 

The  measure  was  introduced  by 

Representative  Tolbert,  who  said. 

"The    Republicans    have    tried    to 

buy  friendship  all  over  the  world," 

in  support  of  his  bill. 

The  demerits  of  the  Republican 
party  were  set  forth  by  Condition- 
al Representative  Donald  Jacobs. 
'^  ■  who    elaborated    on    the    Truman- 


Craigc's  subject  is  "Phonocardio- 
(rapnic  Studies  in'  Mitral  Stenos 
s." 

Dr.  John  T.  Session,  assistant 
•rofossor  of  medicine,  will  address 
;  meeting  of  the  Southern  Medical 
Vssociation  meeting  in  Washing- 
'on.  D.  C.  Nov.  12-14.  His  subject 
wil   !h'  "Potassium  Depletion  with 


Renal  and  Neuromuscular  Dysfune-   mie  Proctor.  Thomas  Costen,  Rob- 


lion  Resulting  from  Habitual  Use 
I  A   Laxatives." 


MacArthur  controversy  in  1951. 
Jacobs  was  named  speaker  of  the 
evening. 

Following  the  regular  session, 
the  Society  initiated  ten  new  rep- 
resentatives into  membership. 
Those  initiated  were  Alton  Eve- 
rette  James,  Jr.,  Ben  Goodman,  Jr., 
Don  Jacobs,  David  Matthews,  Jim- 


ert   Hill.   Charles   HoWerton,   Tom 
Long  and  Don  Gray. 


Ike  Wins 

Carolina    likes    Ike. 

At    least,    (!wo    mor*    students 

liked  President  Eisenhower  over 

Democratic    candidate    Stevenson. 

Eisenhower  won  in  a  campus- 
wide  mock  election  yesterday. 
The  final  vol-e  was  Eisenhower 
880,  Stevenson  878  on  a  recount. 
There  were  13  write-in  votes 
and  two  ballots  were  ruled  in- 
valid. 

Service  League 
Heads  7th  Fund 

The  Junior  Service  League  of 
Chapel  Hill  will  hold  its  7th  an- 
nual Empty  Stoekins".  iKhjiid  drive 
to  provid*  Christftia^ftN'  the  needy 
families  of  Orange  Co*M»ty. 

Mrs.  Donald  Stanford,  chairman 
of  this  year's  campaign,  said  she 
expects  over  450  families  to  be 
on  the  list  this  year.  letters  have 
been  sent  to  civic  and  social  or 
ganizations  explaining  again  tht 
successful  "adopt-a-family"  plan 
which  has  been  used  for  the  pas. 
twa  years.  t 

Seven  years  ago  the  league,  in 
cooperation  with  the  county  Wei 
fare  DepJ.,  provided  food,  toys  anc 
clothing  and  money  for  numerou.' 
families  in  Orange  County  who 
would  have  had  no  Christmas  oth 
erwise. 

Each  year  the  project  has  growr 
and  improved,  Mrs.  S.tanford  said 
The  adoption  plan,  begun  in  1954 
by  which  organizations,  neighbor 
hood  groups  and  individuals  adopt 
a  family  and  provide  for  it.  will  be 
continued  this  year. 

The  only  major  change  will  b( 
the  elimination  of  clothing  from 
the  boxes.  Donations  of  clothing, 
are  still  wanted,  but  the  distr 
bution  will  be  done  by  the  Wel- 
fare Dept.  to  insure  the  needs  of 
each  individual  will  be  met,  she 
said. 

Mrs.  Stanford  has  urged  eve*^- 
one  to  start  their  Empty  Stocking 
planning  now  and  make  this  ? 
memorable  Christmas  for  Orange 
County. 

Members  of  her  committee  are* 
<«orrrespondenc?,  Mrs.*  William 
Tox-ner:  campus.  Mrs.  George  V 
Tavlor;  countv,  Mrs.  Jesse  Bas 
n'ght;  unadonted  fam'lies.  M"^ 
CharlPs  Johnston:  publicity,  Mrs 
David  Hawkins:  treasurer,  Mrs 
Charles  Gottschalk:  emergencies 
Mrs.  Dewev  Dorsett  and  advisor 
Mrs.  Frank  Klingberg. 


ulation. 

A  proposal  promulgated  from  a 
presidentially  appointed  Commis- 
sion to  Study  Class  Attendance 
Regulation  last  spring  was  defeat- 
ed by  the  Faculty  Council. 

The  proposal  had  been  endorsed 
by  the  student  Legislature. 

Primary  objection  to  the  propos- 
al as  put  forth  by  the  Commission 
last  spring  ^as  its  stipulation  call- 
ing for  taking  away  of  quality 
points  for  cuts  of  classes  immedi- 
^  ately  before  and  after  holidays. 

Otherwise    the    proposal    called 
j  for  unlim'ited  class  cuts  for  third 

!'and  fourth  year  students. 
COMMITTEE 
According  to  a  statement  by  Dr. 
:  James  L.  Godfrey   of  the  Division 
I  of  Social  Sciences  who  .serves  on 
j  the    Faculty    Council,    th?    council 
has    established    a    committee    to 

(See  CLASS  CUTS.  p.  3) 


Four  GMAB 
Members  At 
Conference 

Four  members  of  GM.\B  at- 
tended the  regional  conference  of 
the  Assn.  of  College  Unions  at 
Tuskegee  Institute  in  Alabama  on 
Oct.  4.  5.  and  6. 

The  conference  brought  togeth- 
er directors  and  students  from 
inions  on  campuses  in  Alabama, 
Virginia,  Florida  and  North  Caro- 
lina. 

Some  recommendations  ""  made 
at  the  conference  which  will  be 
uibmilted  to  the  National  Assn. 
vere  as  follows:  The  end  of  the 
jnion  program  is  that  of  all  cur- 
-icular  and  extra-curricular  col- 
legiate activities,  education  union 
urograms  should  attempt  to  meet 
the  needs  of  all  students,  special 
orogramming  efforts  must  be 
'urned     towards     increasing     and 

mproving  student-faculty  rela- 
'ions.     the     UNC     representation 

ecommended  that  no  program- 
•ning  aimed  at  creating  competi- 
tion on  a  fraternity  vs.  independ- 
3nt  basis  should  be  encouraged 
and  the  union  should  never  hesi- 
'ate  to  supplement  the  program 
if  other  campus  groups  nor  to  co- 
operate where  union  resources 
'?an  help  to  effectively  present 
worthy  projects.  ^    .      - 

The  representatives  from  the 
UNC  group  felt  the  governing 
■system,  the  relation  to  student 
government  and  the  place  within 
the  whole  of  student  activities  of 
the  student  union  here  is  superior 
to   anv   of   our   sister   institutions. 


GM'S  SLATE 


Activities  scheduled  for  Gra- 
ham Memorial  today  art  as  fol- 
lows: 

Cosmooolitan  Club,  Roland 
Parker  1,  1,  and  3,  6  11  p.m.;  Au- 
dit Board,  Woodhouse  Conference 
Room,  3:30-5:30  p.m. 


PA6I  TWO 


THI  DAILY  TAR  HEIL 


FRIDAY,  NOVEMBER   2,    195« 


Gather  Around,  Children: 
It's  Platform  Time  Again 


Students  wlio  vote  on  the  basis 
of  party  platforms  won't  have  much 
to  go  on  wlieii  they  vote  Nov.  i^. 

The  Student  and  l/niversity 
parties  will  be  trying  very  hard  to 
win  Student  Les2[islatine  seats  in 
the  (all  (ampus  election.  Presently, 
the  situatitm  is  tense:  The  SP  has 
2\  seats,  the  I'P,  23.  and  the  other 
man.  Darwin  Bell  of  Virtorv  Vill. 
a<Te.  is  theoretically  doublven- 
dorsed. 

tioth  paiiies  drafted  their  fall 
platforms  this  week.  And.  if  they 
iujld  true  to  form,  thev  won't  do  a 
great  deal  abtiut  carrying  oiu  their 
campaign  statements  once  the 
smoke  lias  lisen  from  the  Nov.  13 
balloting. 

Proof?  Look  at  last  spring's  cam- 
paign statements. 

Wheti  things  were  getting  tense, 
and  both  parties  were  trying  to 
elect  executive  officers  as  well  as 
representatives  to  the  Student 
I.egi>l<mne.  they  fired  out  planks 
lor  their  piriforms  like  machine- 
gulT  .shells. 

I  a^t  spring's  planks.  alono^Avith. 
a    record   of   what   the   parties  did 
aboiu  ihem.  followf 

Student  Party 

The  Student  Party  platform 
called  for: 

1.  "Possibilitv  "  of  free  student 
diret  tories.  Nothing  done. 

2.  ■Revitali/ation"  of  the  ab- 
sence svsteni.  President  Bof)  Voimg, 
a  Student  Party  meni-ber.  has  been 
woiking  on  this  with  faculty  mem. 
bers  cha-rged  witli  investigating  the 
absence  system. 

'i.  Readino  dav  before  exami- 
nations. A  rP  rcsohuion  last  vear 
first  called  for  the  reading  day. 
Vomig  has  est;il)lished  this  for  the 
academic    vear   i937-.'j8. 

4.  Rebate  svsteni  at  the  Book 
F.xcha'tige.   Nothing  done. 

3.  '  Fquitable  sohuion  to  iht 
student  auto  problem  rather  than 
having  all  cars  abolished  by  the 
trustees."  Most  of  the  members  o£ 
the  SP  faxcired  a  trustee  ruling 
that  prohibited  freshmen  from 
liaving  cars'iwrc,  vaihor  thaniuvM3).> 
out  cars  cniire'v.  as  was  iiint  1  bv 
some  tru-i'  ^.  I  h^'  p.Tty  as  a  ^yjiole 
did  noth  rig.  however.         '        Vr    , 

(>.  ■  financial  and  other  assist- 
ance for  improved  dormitory  social 
functions.  '   Nothing  done. 

7.  "Ontral  purchasing  system 
lor  fraternities  and  sororities,  en- 
abling discouius."  Nothing  done. 

S.  "F.stablishment  of  all-night 
study  xooms.  "   Nothing  done. 

<).  Lending  of  full  support  to 
the  proposed  new  fraternity  court. ' 
Nothing  done. 

10.  Retinn  of  fjallot  boxes  to 
dormitories.  The  Student  Party  re- 
iurncd  ihcm  this  fall. 

11.  'Kstalili^hnKnt  of  a  crjed 
visiting  agreement  in  scxial  rooms 
of  men's  dormitories."  Nothing 
done. 

12.  'Making  physical  education 
voluntary  Utv  veterans."  Nothing 
done. 

1;;.  "Hax  ing  the  oiudoor  swim- 
ming pool  open  before  exams.  " 
Nothiug  done. 

University  Party 

Here's  what  the  l'ni\ersiiv  Par- 
ty promised,  and  what  it  did  after 
the  spring  elections: 

1.  Coordination  oi  quizzes 
among  the  varicjus  departments. 
Nothing  done. 

2.  Attempt  to  ciu  out  restric- 
tions on  stucient  aiUomof)iles.  The 
party  as  a  whole  did  nothing  on 
this. 

;?.     Continue  support  of  a  lib- 

The  Daily  Tar  Heel 

The  official  student  publication  of  the 
Publication.s  Board  of  the  University  of 
North  Carolina,  where  it  is  published 
daily  except  Monday  and  examinatioE 
and  vacation  periods  and  summer  terms 
Entered  as  second  class  matter  in  the 
Dost  office  in  Chapel  Hill,  N.  C,  undei 
the  Act  oi  March  8,  1870.  Subscription 
rates:  mailed.  $4  per  year,  $2.50  a  semes- 
ter; delivered,  $6  a  year,  $3.50  a  semei- 
ter. 


Editor 

FRED  POWLEDGE 

Managing  Editor  - . 

CH.\RT.IE  SLOAN 

News  Editor    ._ 

RAY  LINKER 

Business  Manager  . 

...     BILL  BOB  PLJEl. 

Sports  Ekiitor 

...      LARRY  CHEEK 

Subscription  Manager 

Staff  Artist 

Night  Editor 

Proof  Reader  — ^.^.. 


._.   Dale  Staley 

Charlie  Daniel 

Woody  Sears 

Cort  Edwards 


eral   cut  system.   Nothing  definite 
done. 

4.  Immediate  improvement  ol 
scnial  facilities  for  men's  dorms  in 
order  to  facilitate  a  more  workaf>le 
visiting  agreement"  lor  dates  and 
paients.  .\  IT*  mem1)er  introduceci. 
and  the  Student  Legislature  pa.ss- 
ed.  a  resolution  placing  the  legisla- 
ture <m  record  as  '"favoring  coojkm- 
ation  between  the  Interdormitorv 
Comuil  and  the  adnniiistration  in 
the  pursuit  and  attainment  of  visit- 
ing privileges  for  mens  dormi- 
tories (»n  all  hc>me  lootf>aIl  week- 
ends." The  rescilution  stijjulated 
thai  copies  of  itself  he  sent  tcV  the 
dean  of  student  affairs.  IlKl  and 
presidents  ol  all  men's  dormitor- 
ics.  rhai's  all.  .Nothing  was  done 
to   improve   the   situation. 

5.  "Cairfcw  privileges  for  mus- 
ing students  consistent  with  those 
of  other  Carolina  coeds. "  1  he  UP 
has  done  nothing  about  this:  the 
same  plank  is  included  iti  the  par- 
ty's fall  platform. 

6.  'Definite  attempt  at  install- 
ing a  telephone  biiz/er  lor  each 
room  in  the  women's  dorms." 
Nothing  done. 

7.  Reducticjn  of  student  date 
tickets  prices  for  home  footlaall 
games.     Student     Bodv     President 

(SP)   was  instrumental   in  getting 
prices  reduced. 

8.  .Aid  to  .VPO  service  fratern- 
ity in  its  policv  oi  selling  books  at 
reduced  prices  at  the  end  and  be- 
ginning of  semesters.  Nothing 
done. 

9.  .Aid  to  X'ictorv  X'illage  Day 
.Nursery  for  facilities.  Nothing 
done. 

10.  Strict  enforcement  oi  speed 
limits  in  \'ic  tory  \illage.  .Nothing 

done. 

•  •  * 

rhe  totals:  University  Party 
made  10  promises.  It  was  good  on 
none  of  tbesrt. 

Stijdenit  Party  made  i'^  promises. 
It  has  backed  up  two  of  them. 

So,  you  .see  Ivby  it  isn't  wise  to 
vote  Recording  to  platforms. 
trrfeVp^^ty,  im^yt^  |4^pks  it  has 
ncj   idea   of   fidfilling.    last  spring 
it  nas  tlie  Student  Party's  claim  to, 
ri^^Tiver  fy'e'p  stiident  Hfrectorirt.  and  ' 
'the  University  Party's  promise  to' 
enforce    speed    limits    in    Victorv 
\"illage.    Karh    party   tries   to   ton- 
\ince  all  the  students  it  is  working 
for    all    of    them,    and    each    party 
tries  to  give  the  lie  to  c  laims  that 
it  is  the  party  of  the  few. 

The  I'niversity  Partv.  for  exam- 
ple, is  known  as  the  fraternity 
and  sororitv  party.  So  its  spring 
platform  contained  tAvo  promises 
to  students  who  live  in  dormitor- 
ies. The  Student  Party,  long 
known  as  the  dormitory  party, 
told  the  fraternitv  and  sorority 
people  in  two  planks  that  it  ^sould 
help  them. 

One  can  only  conclude  what  the 
spectator  at  tlie  Demwratic  Na- 
tional Convention  concluded,  af- 
ter watching  the  k>ng  battle  over 
the  civil  rights  plank  of  the  Demo- 
crats' platform: 

"\  platform  is  made  to  stand  on 
for    perhaps    three    months,    then 
tear  down  as  rapidly  as  possible." 
*     *     * 

Both  political  parties  have  come 
up  with  platforms  for  the  Nov.  i^^ 
election.  While  /he  platforms  are^^ 
n't  as  foolish  as  platforms  usually 
are.  they  hint  they  may  b.e  forgot 
al>out  sofjn  after  electic^n. 

There  is  something  the  indi- 
vidual student  can  do.  hoxvever,  to 
see  tirat  his  representatives  support 
their  parties'  platforms. 

The  individual  student  can 
question  his  candidate  about  the 
platform,  find  out  if  tlie  candidate 
leally  care  w;hat  his  platfcirm  savs. 
If  he  doesn't,  the  student  can  find 
somebodv  who  does  agree. 

-And.  after  the  election,  the  in- 
dividual student  can  cpicstion. 
heckle,  argue  with  and  bicker 
afjout  his  elected  representative  in 
StudeiH  Legislature.  He  can  re- 
mind his  representative  of  hi? 
party's  promises.  If  the  representa- 
tive forgets  his  prcjmises.  he  can 
be  unseated  at  the  next  election. 

Party  platforms  at  Carolina  are 
a  pretty  big  joke,  as  memorie*i  of 
last  spring's  election  testify.  Ntav- 
be  this  fall  things  will  be  diffeient. 
Only  the  individual  students  can 
make  them  different,  however. 

(Tomorroxc:   A   stiidx   of   the 
fall  platforms.) 


A  NORTHERN  VIEW 


YOU  Said  Ui 


Stevenson  Not  Fit  For   Top  Spot        Readers  Slam 


>  CORTLAND    EDWARDS    II 

The  other  day  the  boy  across 
the  hall  asked  me  if  I  believed 
in  'democratic  principles."  I  oi 
course  replied.  "Certainly."  He 
then  attempted  to  follow  this 
logically  by  saying,  "then  you 
are  going  to  vote  "  Democrtaic?" 
I  said  emphatically  "NO."  I  am 
voting  Republican. 

He   asked  why  and   I   replied 
using  the  same  poor  logic  as  he 
did — "because  I  believe  in  "Dem- 
ocratic principles." 

All  this  started  mc  thinking 
as  to  what  exactly  Stevenson 
has  to  offer  the  American  people. 
I  reviewed  his  qualifications  and 
have  come  to  the  conclusion  that 
Adlai  E.  Stevenson  is  unqualified 
to  be  the  next  president  of  the 
U.  S. 

Don't  take  my  word  lor  it,  let"s 
look  at  his  r(?cord. 

EDUCATION: 

Stevenson  graduated  from  a 
Bloomington  high  school,  and  ap- 
plied for  admission  t«.  Prince- 
ton. He  was  turned  down  be- 
cause of  a  very  poor  scholastic 
record.  He  then  went  to  prep 
school  to  help  correct  this  and 
afterward  went  back  to  Prince- 
ton. 

He  wanted  to  be  a  newspaper- 
man, but  his  father  talked  him 
into  going  to  Harvard  Law  School. 
He  flunked  out  of  Harvard  in 
his  second  year  and  finally  grad- 
uated at  Northwestern  Universi- 
ty when  he  was  26  years  old. 

HEALTH: 

Since  1952.  he  has  undergone 
two  separate  operations  and  has 
been  in  hospitals  four  different 
times.  In  1954  he  keeled  over  in 
church  here  in  North  Carolina 
and  was  taken  to  Duke  Universi- 
ty {fospital. 

His  doctors  say  that  Stevenson 
today  is  in  normal  good  health. 
So  is  Eisenhower. 

WELFARE: 

He  is  a  millionaire  by  inheri- 
tance and  has  never  had  to  labor. 
He  holds  many  industrial  stocks 
and  bonds,  city  real  estate,  and 
farm  propertie.s.  He  al.so  owns  '.i 
interest  in  a  new.spapor.  the 
"Pantagraph",  which  refused  to 
supjport  him  jn   1952. 

!,  He  speaks  with  an  Ivy  League 
accent,  wears  Brooks  Brothers 
suits,  button-down  shirts,  and 
Princeton  pin-stripes. 

He  prefers  a  bourbon  cold  tod- 
dy, on  the  rocks,  wtih  a  little  sug- 
ar and  water. 

Hfe  has  been  married  and  di- 
vorced. The  divorce  was  obtained 
by  his  wife  on  grounds  of  'mental 
cruelty'.* 

After  college  he  spent  his  time 
riding  with  the  hounds  at  the 
Lake  Forest  (Illinois)  Country 
Club,  and.attending  the  many  deb- 
utante balls  and  coming-out  par- 
ties. * 

GOVERNMENT: 

In  1933  his  first  job  was  as  a 
lawyer  under  Henry  Wallace. 
Then  he  worked  for  Alger  Hi.ss. 
Again  in  1945  he  worked  with 
Hiss  in  the  State  Depl.  and  ag^in 
in  1946,  1947. 

In  1949.  Steven.son  signed  a 
character  deposition  used  in  the 
Alger  Hiss  perjury  trial,  certify- 


'No,  No,  Men  —  Just,  The  One  On  The  End' 


ing  that  Hiss  had  a  good  reputa- 
tion for  loyalty,  truthfulness  and 
integrity.  Hiss  was  convicted'  any- 
way. 

The  only  elected  office  Steven- 
son has  ever  won,  was  that  one 
for  governor  fpr  Illinois.  Even 
so,  his  victory  was  generally 
viewed  in  the  .state  of  Illinois 
as  a  protest  vote  against  the 
corruptness  of  Governor  Green, 
incumbent. 

FINANCES:      ^ 

In  1951  Stevenson  showed  he 
had  outside  income  totaling  $54,- 
673.  including  46,000  in  dividends 
from  28  corporations.  This  is  in 
addition  to  his  $12,000  a-year 
salary  as  governor,  and  $3,100  in 
fees  for  serving  as  a  director  of 
the  Illinois  Central  Railroad.  He 
also  collected  $7,800  in  rent  for 
his  11-room  farm  house  at  Lib- 
ertyville,  111. 

Stevenson's  income  runs  at  lit- 
tle more  than  $100,000  a  year, 
and  his  total  holdings  in  real 
and  personal  property  are  over 
a  million  dollars. 

FARMER: 

.^agricultural  Secretary  Ezra 
T.  Benson  pointed  out  that  15 
acres  of  Adlai's  farm  this  year 
were  put  in  the  "soil  bank"'  gov- 
ernment subsidy  program  start- 
ed by  the  Republican  AdminLstra- 


tion,  so  that  the  farmer  would- 
n't have  to  go  broke.         ,,■       ■ 

Stevenson  is  running  :on  a 
platform  pledged  to  a  return  to 
the  Truman  QO^i  parity  farm- 
price-support  program,  although 
Stevenson  has  said  previously 
that  he  was  not  sure- that  rigid 
support  is  the  answer  to  the 
•farmer's    problems." 

This  is  the  picture  of  Adlai 
Stevenson.  Is  this  the  man  whom 
you  want  to  be  president ''  Do 
yo|i  want  to  entrust  your  future 
to  the  hands  of  this  playboy?  Is 
a  man  who  was  teethed  on  $1,- 
000  bills  interested  in  the  farm- 
er'.' The  laborer?  The  mill-hand? 

In  Stevenson's  speech  given  in 
New  York  City,  Oct.  23,  1956,  he 
said,  tn  regards  to  the  aggressor 
nation  Israel,  "I  say  that  the 
first  premise  of  any  Middle  East- 
tern  policy  is  that  Israel  is  here 
to  stay.  But  she -must  have  the 
arms,  the  economic  support  and 
the  diplomatic  guarantees  necess- 
ary to  assure  her  independence 
and  integrity." 

This  is  all  fine  and  dandy,  but 
what  about  the  treaty  we  signed 
pledging  our  support  against  any 
aggressor  nation?  .According  to 
thi.s,  the  U.  S.  will  be  obligated' 
to  declare  war  against  Britain, 
France,  and  Israel   for  the  pro- 


tection of  Egypt  who  has  been 
invaded  by  kl!  three.  The  pai'a- 
doxical  side  of  all  this  is^.that 
our  arch-enemy,  Russia,  will  be 
our  ally.  1  ,' 

,      I  I 
Where  will  all  Uiis  lead?"^^!^!' 

will  happen  next?  Does  this 
mean  World  War  III?  Only  time 
will  tell  my  friends,  only  time 
will   tell. 

In  regards  to  the  H-Bomb,  I 
am  quite  disappointed  in  Mr. 
Stevenson's  recommendations.  He 
wants  us  to  ^top  making  it. 

This  1  agree  with — if  it  were 
wise.  But  it  isn't,  it  is  fool-hardy 
even  to  consider  it. 

He  finishes  by  saying  when 
another  nation  breaks  faith  and 
tests  another  bomb,  we  will  know 
about  it  in  plenty  of  time  to 
start  rebuilding. 

You  damned  right,  we'll  know 
about  it — especially  if  this  na- 
tion picks  Washington,  New 
York,  Chicago,  or  L.A.  to  test 
their  new  bomb  on. 

Like  Mr.  Stevenson  said  in  his 
1952  campaign,  "Eggheads  unite 
— you  have  nothing  to  lose  but 
your  yolks."  But  without  your 
yolks,  you  will  cease  to  exist. 

VOTE  REPUBLICAN. 


Columnist  And 
UNC  Behavior 

\ 

Editor: 

I'm  speaking  as  an  individual  and  not  as  a 
clothier.  Knowing  of  Woody's  previous  school  af. 
filiation,  I  believe  he  would  like  the  Carolina  Gen- 
tleman to  dress  with  levis,  t-shirts,  flying  boots, 
suede  jackets,  and  any  motley  assortment  of  non 
descript  clothing  that  covers  one's  back,  Since  this 
state  is  primarily  known  as  an  argicultural  state, 
he  would  prefer  for  us  to  dress  the  part. 

I've  heard  many  tales  of  woe  regarding  the 
slovenly  dress  at  so, many  campuses  throughout  the 
country,  in  these  schools  there  is  no  school  spirit. 
no  great  interest  in  anything,  except  going  through 
the  motions  leading  to  some  academic  goal  called 
graduation. 

They  may  or  may  not  have  Saturday  classes  at 
these  institutions  but  since  I  don't  see  how  in  the 
world  this  can  tie  up  with  any  discussion  on  cloth- 
ing, I'll  pass  after -mentioning  this  point. 

I  guess  the  ictea  of  Cfarolina  and  Virginia  being 
the  two  best  dressed  campuses  in  the  entire  south 
must  be  distasteful  you.  Woody,  who  apparently, 
is  leading  a  one-man  campaign  for  sloppy  dressing. 

Now  I  guess  you're  wondering  what  my  point'- 
is  in  all  this  hog-wash. 

« 

Well,  when  you  start  dressing  smartly  and  tak-\ 
ing  an  interest  in  your  clothes  you  have  filled  an 
important  part  of  jour  character  training  regarding 
appearance  You  will  note  that  the  "'ivy'"  man  strides 
with  that  confident,  jaunty  air.  knowing  he  is 
sartorially  correct. 

Without  driving  his  folks  to  the  poor  house  he 
can   be   well    dressed   in   the   smart  circles  during    ; 
school   and   for   the   rest  of  his  life  after  gradua- 
tion. 

Now  what  has  good  dressing  got  to  do  with 
"ivy"  apparel  since  you  feel  you  can  be  well  dress- 
ed in  any  type  of  dress-up  clothes? 

There  is  no  other  st.vled  clothing  that  is  almost 

universally  complimentary     to     all     physiques.  If 

yoy'rt  ihort  iti  gives  you  a  trimmer,  taller  look— 

^il  ytou>e  iall  *it  gives  you  a  neater  look — if  you  re 

thin, it  doesn't. , stretch  you  out.  So  you  see.  it  im- 

]  proves '  alii  appearances  without  regard  to  frame. 

Milton  Julian 


Pogo 


By  Walt  Kelly 


VOU  AI^JT  aP  fNOUfiW  10 


vou^4e  wpv  IN  >oiii?  srsAP'-- 


IV\  Abn*r 


By  Al  Capp 


-^ 


MORE  PRESARVED 
TURNIF>S?-HEI-P 
VOP^SEOJ^.T— 
TMAR'S 
PUfcNTV 
ON  PAPPV'S 

plate:  . '.''- 


OLE  BUZZAJ^P 
/<^£^  AN  y^AS 
A  SC/^AGG  — 

etjooD  £i^f»r/__ 

TO  ACL  rK>KC»ii.f^ 


Editor:^  -       .         .  , 

Will  Rogers,  after  once  being  hissed  at  by  a 
member  of  hi*  audience,  retorted  with  something 
to  this  effect — "I  know  of  only  three  things  that 
hiss — a  leaky  radiator,  a  snake,  and  a  fool.  I  sec 
neither  a  leaky  readitor  nor  a  snake  in  the  audi- 
ence." 

The  campus  seems  to  have  more  than  its  share 

of  leaky  radiators,  snakes,  or .  Thursday  night 

at  a  local  theater  a  short  on  the  Eisenhower  story 
was  presented.  Each  lime  the  face  of  President  Eis- 
enhowef-,  Secretary  of  State  Dulles,  or  any  other 
member  of  the  President's  staff  appeared  on  the 
screen  there  was  so  much  booing  and  hissing  one 
could  not  hear  what  was  being  .said. 

I  realize  that  this  is  an  election  year  and  this 
distasteful  conduct  was  probably  done  in  levity, 
but  it  seems  to  me  at  least  the  office  of  the  Pres- 
ident of  the  United  States,  to  say  nothing  of  the 
man,  demands  some  respect. 

The  revolting  point  came  when  President  Eisen- 
hower was  shown  at  the  Summit  Conference,  only 
to  be  met  by  boos,  while  the  appearance  of  the 
Communist  leaders  brought  loud  cheers  from  the 
audience. 

Probably  not  a  one  of  the  ill-bred  characters  in 
the  audience  realized  the  gravity  with  which  the 
President .  approached  the  conference,  and  the 
weight  he  carried  on  his  shoulders. 

Probably  not  a  one  remembers  his  plea  to  the 
praj'ing  people  of  the  world  that  the  conference 
would  be  a  success  in  working  out  a  peaceful  so- 
lution to  the  world's  problems.  I'm  sure  that  all 
those  who  prayed,  believing,  are  convinced  that  the 
result  of  the  confferencc  is  an  answer  to  the  prayer. 

I'm  still  trying  to  figure  out  the  conduct  of 
those  attending  the  "free  flick"  Friday  night.  I 
don't  see  how  pre-election  fever  or  just  "raising 
cain"  can  explain  this  behaviour.  Everything  from 
the  American  flag  to  the  United  States  Armj'— even 
mention  of  Washington  brought  boos  and  hisses, 
while  Nazi  officers  were  cheered. 

It  makes  my  blood  boil  to  think  that  thousands 
of  Americans  gave  their  blood,  limbs,  and  lives  in 
order  that  these  "intellectual"  Carolina  students 
may  sit  and  cheer  the  very  ones  who  would  take 
this  same  free^m  away  from  them. 

In  the  first  place  there  is  no  p!ace  in  intelli- 
gent b3haviour  for  public  hissing,  but  the  object  of 
the  hisses  makes  the  situation  deplorable. 

How  long,  America,  oh  how  long?   • 

X    «  Jack  H.  GodI/ 


Thi 
Pn 
Rei 

The 
be    reprj 
member'i 
Rejsearcl 

Md.  todi 

Dr  Ml 
Dr.  Cha[ 
profcsso^ 
tema.  gr 
sent  pa[ 
event,  sj 
peake 
c?nter 
p'.'oductij 
of  river 

Dr.  Cj 
dealing 
in  o.vstel 
larvae  oj 
ner  audi 
liver  ref 
rine  .vnal 
Dr.  Jenil 
from  vai 
em    Seal 

While 
will  confl 
the   U 
vice,    spc 
search  pi 


5c/il 
For 

The  pr 
Assembly] 
School  hi 
ed  b> 
president] 
executive! 

Approji 
expected 
which   wi| 
17th  at 

Feature 
William 
Consolidai 
Foster.  o| 
of  th 
A.  S.  Bi 
state  ooai 
win   Gill. 

Registrsl 
a.m.  Nov« 
of  Carroll 


PATI 
•   Al 


FALI 


Cavalcade  I 
comedies 
A   "oig  hai 
enjoymenj 

Lyrics    byl 

Seventy-o/ 
during  hij 
lahoma.  ai 
at  $2.50. 

The  Lpugli 

er.  Sidcstf 
sound  re: 
our  great] 
lished  at 

The  ShakJ 

bert  P'arjJ 
glish    crilj 

Show  Bus) 
AJ  Hirscj 
has  plent] 
lunacies 
lished  at 

Our  Spec] 


20  j 


B 


2,    1954 


FRIBAY,  NOVEMMR  7,  i4m 


THi  OAlUr  TAR  HCIL 


PAOI    TNRC» 


d 

r 


I  not  as  a 
Ischool  af^ 
)lina  Gen- 
Ing  boots. 
It  of  non 
[Since  tbis 
iral  state, 

Irding  the 
jghout  th« 
[ool  spirit, 
Ig  through 
loal  called 

classes  at 
|ow  in  the 
on  cloth- 

linia  being 
ftire  south  ^ 
ipparentlyj 
•  dressing 

my  poini^ 

and  tak-i, 

filled  an 

regarding 

lan  strides 

he    is 

house  he 
Ics  during 
?r  gradua- 

do   with 
I  well  dress- 
is  almost 
|ysiques.   If 
look —   ' 
-if  you're 
see.  it  im- 
to  frame. 

ilton  JuliMt 


fd  at  by  a 
something 

I  things  that 

fool.  I  see 

In  the  audi-  ^ 

»n  its  share 

lay  night 

lower  story 

resident  Eis- 

any   other 

ired   on  the 

hissing  one 

;ar  and  this 
le  in  levity, 
I  of  the  Pres- 

tbins  of  the 

sident  Eisen- 
'ercnce.  only 
'a  nee  of  the 
?rs  from  the     , 

characters  in 
h  which  the 
>,     and     the 

plea  to  the 
c   conference 

peaceful  so- 
sure  that  aHLat^ 
need  that  the  ]~ 
.0  the  prayer. 

conduct  of 
iday  night.  I 
just  "raising 
rylhing  from 
Army — eved 

and   hisses, 

hat  thousands 
?nd  lives  in 
)lina  students 
10  would  take 


ace  in  intelli- 
thc  object  of 
able. 


Jack  H    Godi/ 


Three  Zoology 
Professors  At 
Research  Meet 

The  UNC  Dept.  of  Zoology  wiU 
be  represented  by  three  faculty 
members  at  the  Atlantic  Ef^tuarine 
Research  Society  in  Solomons, 
Md.  today  and  tomorrow. 

Dr.  Melbourne  R.  Carriker  and 
Dr.  Charles  E.  Jenner,  .associate 
professors,  and  Rudolph  Schel- 
tema.  graduate  assistant,  will  pre- 
sent papers  at  the  meeting.  The 
event,  sponsored  by  the  Chesa- 
peake Biological  Laboratory,  will 
center  around  "problems  of  the 
productivity  of  the  tidal  stretches 
of  rivers." 

Dr.  Carriker  will  deliver  papers 
dealing  with  the  use  of  narcotics 
in  o.vster  drilling  and  with  the 
larvae  of  the  hard  clam.  Dr.  Jen- 
ner and  Dr.  Scheltema  will  de- 
liver reports  concerning  the  ma- 
rine snail,  Nassarius  obsoletus. 
Dr.  Jenner  has  used  specimens 
from  various  points  on  the  East- 
ern Seaboard   in  his  studies. 

While  at  Solomons  Dr.  Carriker 
will  confer  with  representatives  of 
the  U.  S.  Fish  and  Wildlife  Ser- 
vice, sponsors  of  his  current  re- 
;»earch  project. 


Covering  The  Campus  \  '''""^  '^o*  Underway 


School  Board 
Sets  Program 
For  Assembly 

The  program  for  the  Delegate 
Assembly  of  the  North  Carolina 
School  Boards  has  been  announc- 
ed by  Dr.  Charles  E.  Jordan, 
president,  and  Guy  B.  Phillips, 
executive  secretary. 

Approximately  500  persons  are 
expected  to  attend  the  meeting 
which  will  be  held  on  November 
17th  at  U-NC. 

Featured  speakers  will  include 
William  Friday,  president  of  the 
Consolidated  University:  John  R. 
Foster,  of  Greensboro,  president 
of  the  Odell  Mill  Supply  Co.; 
A.  S.  Brower,  chairman  of  the 
state  board  of  education;  and  Ed- 1 
win   Gill,  state   treasurer. 

Registration  will  begin  at  10:30 
a.m.  November  17th  in  the  lobby 
of  Carroll  Hall. 


^ALL  FILM  SeRIES 

1:30 

Notes  on  Music 

The  Belles  of  St.  Trinians  will 

2:00 

Big  and  Basic 

be  shown  tonight  at  8  p.m.  in  Car- 

5:45 

Music 

roll    Hall.    Starring   AJistar   Sims, 

6:00 

Children's    Corner 

the  movie  is  part  of  the  Graham 

6:30 

News 

Memorial    Activities    Board  -  spon- 

6:45 

Sports 

sored  Fall  Film  Series. 

7:00 

Science  Fair 

PHILOSOPHY  LECTURE 

7:30 

Art  Today 

The  Depts.  of  Philosophy  at  UNC 

8:00 

Know  Your  Schools 

and    Duke  will   jointly   sponsor  a 

8:30 

Prelude 

lecture  by  Professor  H.L.A.  Hart 

9:00 

VA  Hosptial 

of     University     College,     Oxford, 

10:00 

Final  Edition 

at   4   p.m.    Monday     in     Graham 

Memorial's     Woodhouse      Confer- 

WUNC 

ence  room.  Professor  Hart's  topic 

WUNC.  the  University's  FM  ra 

will  be  "Knowledge  and  Action." 

dio  station: 

WUNCTV 

7:00 

Intermezzo 

WUNcVv.  the  University's  edu- 

7:15 

Assignment   Middle   East 

cational    television    station,    Chan- 

7:30 

People   Take  the   Lead 

nel  4: 

8:00 

Let's    Listen    to    Opera 

12:45    Music 

10:15 

News 

1:00    Today  on  the  Farm 

10:30 

Evening  Masterwork 

For  New  Dormitories 


Plans  for  the  building  of  three 
new  men's  dormitories  and  an  ad- 
ditional wing  for  Spencer  Donn 
are  underway. 

Raymond  Weeks  of  Durham,  ar- 
chitect for  the  Spencer  addition, 
died  last  week.  However,  according 
to  University  Business  Manager 
Claude  Teague,  "the  architectual 
plans  for  this  wing  along  with  the 
plans  for  the  men's  dorms  are 
practically  completed."    The  con- 


Lambda  Chi  Banquet 
Will  Honor  Love  Here 


The  Lambda  Chi  Alpha  will 
hold  a  banquet  tonight  in  the 
.Morehead  Planetarium  Dining 
Room  at  6  p.m.  in  honor  of  J. 
Spencer  Love,  chairman  of  Bur- 
lington Industries. 

After  the  conclusion  of  the 
banquet.  Love  will  be  initiated 
into  the  social  fraternity  as  im 
honorary  member.  Love's  initia- 
tion will  be.  according  to  Lambda 
Chi  Alpha  members,  a  tribute  to 
his  outstanding  contributions  to- 
ward the  betterment  of  education 
in  North  Carolina. 

A  Consolidated  University 
trustee,  Love  is  also  a  member  of 
the  Development  Planning  Com- 
mittee, and  has  been  a  contribut- 
ing donor  to  university  facilities, 
such  as  WUNC-TV,  the  Institute 
of  Government,  and  the  football 
team. 

Love,  attended  the  Harvard 
Business  School  and  left  it  in  1917 


PATRONIZE  YOUR 
»   ADVERTISERS   • 


FALL  BARGAINS  IN 

DRAMA 

Cavalcade  of  Comedy — 21  brilliant 
comedies  from  Jonson  to  Coward.  I 
A  'oig  handsome  volume  for  long  j 
enjoyment:   Published   at   $7.50. 

$4,491 

Lyrics   by   Oscar    Hammarstein    II.  { 

Seventy-one  lyrics,  from  such  en-  i 
during  hits  as  South  Pacific,  Ok- ; 
lahoma,  and  Show  Boat.  Published  i 
at  $2,50.  -      Our  Spacial  $1.29  | 

Tha  Laughten  Story,  by  Kurt  Sing- 
er. Sidesteps  filmdom  gossip  for  a 
sound  readable  picture  of  one  of 
our  great  actors.  Illustrated.  Pub- 
lished at  $3.95.  Our  Spacial   $1.29 

Tha  Shakaspaarean  Scana,  by  Her- 
bert Farjeon.  A  nice  book  of  En- 
glish criticism.  Our  Spacial  $1.29 

Show  Businass  Is  No  Business,  by 

Al  Hirschfeld.  The  artist-writer 
has  plenty  of  fun  with  Broadway 
lunacies — and  so  will  you:  Pub- 
lished at  $2.95. 


Our  Spacfal 


$129 


THE  INTIMATE 
BOOKSHOP 

205   E.   Franklin   St. 
Open  Till  10  F.M. 


Kattsoffs 
Book  Out 

"Lo^ie  and  the  Nature  of  Reali- 
ty." a  new  book  by  Dr.  Louis  O. 
Kattsoff  of  L'TS'C  has  been  releas- 
ed by  Martinus  Nijhoff.  Publisher, 
The  Hague. 

In  his  book.  Df.  Kattsoff.  Pro- 
fessor of  Philosophy  at  U.N.C., 
critically  studies  linguistic  move- 
ment and  attempts  to  lay  the 
foundation  for  a  metaphysic.  He 
seeks  and  finds  in  the  structure 
of  logic  a  key  to  the  structure  of 
reality. 

In  the  course  of  development, 
questions  of  the  nature  of  uni- 
versals,  negative  facts,  meaning, 
events   and   others   are   discussed. 

Dr.  Kattsoff,  a  U.N.C.  faculty 
member  since  1935,  completed 
his  A.B.,  A.M.  and  Ph.D.  degrees 
at  the  University  of  Pennsylvania. 

Another  one  of  his  borfks  is, 
"A  Philosophy  of  Mathematics." 
a  text  for  courses  in  logic  and 
the  foundation  of  mathematics 
published  in  1948  by  the  Iowa 
State  College  Press. 

CLASSIFIEDS 

HI-WAY  SERVICE  STATION,  ON 
the  ciirve  in  Carrboro,  has  "U- 
WASH-IT'— eoe.  Premium  gas 
31.90.  regular  gas  29.9^. 


to  serve  in  World  War  I.  During 
World  War  H  he  worked  on  the 
War  Production  Board  and  later 
on  t^e  Business  Advisory  Council 
of  the  Dept.  of  Commerce. 

In  recognition  of  his  accumu- 
lated experience  and  service  in 
the  business  field.  Elon  College 
in  1951  and  UNC  in  1953  bestow- 
ed honorary  Ph.D.'s  upon  Love. 

Invitations  to  the  banquet  have 
been  extended  to  "everal  Univer- 
sity officials,  including  President 
William  Friday,  Chancellor  Rob- 
ert House,  Dr.  Katherine  Car- 
michael,  Cecil  Johnson,  C.  E. 
Teague,   and   John    M.   Morehead. 

An  invitation  was  also  mailed 
to  former  President  Harry  S. 
Truman,  who  is  an  honorary  mem- 
ber of  Lambda  Chi  Alpha,  and  a 
personal  friend  of  Love. 


Y-Nighf  Committees 
Open  For  Membership 

According  to  Jim  Raugh,  co- 
chairman  for  Y-Night,  membership 
on  the  following  committees  is  still 
open:  production,  talent,  publicity, 
program,  reception  and  arrange- 
ments. 

Anyone  interested  in  organizing 
talent  and  helping  to  plan  the  pro- 
gram is  urged  to  fill  out  an  appli- 
cation in  the  Y  office  by  noon 
Tuesday. 


Duke  Univ. 
Tenor  Performs 
Sunday  Night 

John  Hanks,  tenor,  will  be  fea- 
tured soloist  in  the  second  pres- 
entation of  Les  Petites  Musicales 
Sunday  at  8  p.m.  in  the  main 
lounge  of  Graham  Memorial. 

•Assistant  professor  of  music  at 
Duke  University,  Hanks  received 
undergraduate  training  at  Okla- 
homa University  and  JuUiard,  and 
his  A.M.  degree  at  Columbia  in 
1950. 

Since  that  time  Hanks  has  sung 
in  opera,  concert,  radio.  TV,  and 
oratoria  in  New  York  and  other 
major  cities.  His  musical  career 
has  also  included  soloist  appear- 
ances with  the  Springfield,  Okla- 
homa University  and  Juilliard,  and 
New  Haven  Symphony  Orchestras, 
and  with  the  National  Symphony 
Orchestra   in   Washington.   D.C. 

This  Sunday  night's  Petites  Mu- 
sicales program  will  consist  of 
songs  in  English  and  Italian  for 
voice  with  harpsichord,  and  a 
group  of  twentieth-century  Eng- 
lish songs  for  voice  with  piano 
accompaniment.  The  soloist's  ac- 
companist will  be  Henery  M. 
Cook. 

Sponsored  by  GMAB,  the  con- 
cert is  presented  admission-free 
to  the  public. 


I  tract  has  not  yet  been  let,"  he  said. 
I      Teague  stated,  "It  is  hoped  that 
i  this  building  program  will  be  be- 
gun before  Christmas  and  will  be 
completed  in  about  a  year.'- 

The  new  wing  of  Spencer  will 
accommodate  75  additional  girls. 
Also,  the  dining  room  will  be  en- 
larged. 

The  men's  dorms  which  will  face 
Navy  Field  will  each  accomodate 
200  students. 

Last  fall,  the  building  project 
was  proposed  after  a  request  for 
a  2  million  dollar  government  loan 
was  granted  by  the  Federal  Gov- 
ernment s  Housing  and  Home  Fin- 
ance Agency.  The  loan  will  be  paid 
back  from  the  surplus  received 
from  a  $30  increase  in  dorm  room 
rent.  The  increase  went  into  effect 
last  .vear. 


FRIGIDAIRE--FLAT-TOP,  APART- 

ment  style.  Suitable  for  any 
room.  Chromium-trimmed  vinyl 
top.  Only  $100.  44"  Walnut  gate- 
leg table,  $45.  Also  large  radio 
eabinet,  $5.  Phone  9-7598. 


WANTCD--CARRIER  FOR  MORN- 
ing  newspaper  route.  Car  requir- 
ed for  route.  Call  3721  for  in- 
formation. 


-+ — ' — t- 


FUEL  OIL 
Gu|f  Sokn-  ^Ba^ 


Ptm 


BENNEH  9t  fiLOCKSIDOE 


ir^OllPoiATkp '     ' 
105  E.  Franklin  St! -^  PhtH  41«1 


Church  Plans 
Student  Supper 

Members  of  the  United  Student 
Fellowship  have  been  invited  to 
be  guests  of  the  United  Congrega- 
tional Christian  Church  at  a  cov- 
ered dish  supper  at  the  new  Par- 
ish House  at  6  p.m.  Sunday. 

At  the  supper  meeting  the  pro- 
posed 1957  budget  will  be  offered 
for  the  consideration  of  the  mem- 
bers of  the  church. 

The  proposed  budget  has  been 
prepared  by  the  Finance  Com- 
mittee, with  Philip  P.  Green  as 
chairman,  in  consultation  with 
representatives  of  each  of  the 
boards  and  comniittees  of  the 
church. 

Other  members  of  the  finance 
committee  are:  Mrs.  B.  A.  Hoft; 
Hugh  Hartshorn;  Thomas  Peyton; 
Eugene  Stewart;  Reid  Suggs;  and 
Preston  J.   Wisker.  * 

One  of  the  major  budget  items 
to  be  considered  is  the  continua- 
tion of  the  Capital  Improvements 
Fund. 

Mrs.  William  D.  Basnight  is  in 
charge  of  arrangements  for  the 
supper  sponsored  by  the  Women's 
Fellowship  of  the  church.  This 
'  will  be  the  first  church-wide  meet- 
I  ing  in  the  new  building,  now 
nearing  completion. 


Deadline  Is  Monday  For 
Sweetheart  Candidates 

Men's  dormitories  entering  can- 
didates in  the-  Sweetheart  of 
UNC  Dorms  Contest  must  turn  in 
8  by  10  glossy  photographs  of 
their  entries  by  Monday,  accord- 
ing to  Interdormitory  Council 
President  Sonny  Hallford, 

The  Sweetheart  will  be  crown- 
ed at  the  Nov.  14  meting  of  the 
IDC.    She    will    receive    a    loving! 
cup,    roses   and   a   ten    dollar   gift  | 
certificate. 

In  addition,  her  picture  will  ap- 
pear in  the  1957  Yackety  Yack. 

Judges  for  the  contest  are  Bob 
Cox  of  Town  and  Campus.  Mrs. 
Kay  Kyser  and  Dr.  William  Po- 
teat  of  the  Philosophy  Depart- 
ment. 


CLASS  CUTS 

(Continued  from   Page    1) 

j  draw  up  a  proposal.  The  commit- 

I  tee's     proposal,     supposedly,     will 

contain    recommendations    of    the 

student  government  committee. 

This  special  committee  will  re- 
port to  the  entire  council  this  af- 
ternoon at  the  meeing  in  Manning 
Ilall,   law   school   building. 

The  council  will  then  take  ac- 
tion, either  negatively  or  affirma- 
tively. 

YOUNG'S  STATEMENT 

Concerning  the  proposed  revis- 
ion of  the  attendance  regulation, 
President  Bob  Young  said: 

"Four  other  students  and  I  met 
with  the  committee  ...  to  discuss 
the  present  class  attendance  resu- 
lations  and  also  discussed  modifi- 
cations we  thought  necessar>'. 

"The  students  agreed  in  prin- 
ciple with  a  tentative  set  of  regu- 
lations that  the  committee  had 
drawn  up  to   discuss  with  us. 

"I  feel  the  Faculty  Committee 
gave  the  highest  consideration  to 
the  comments  we  made. 

'"I  would  like  to  urge  that  the 
council  approve  the  report  t"he 
committee  has  drawn  up. 

"If  the  council  should  not  see 
fit  to  approve  this  report.  I  feel 
we  have  done  all  within  our  pow- 
er as  responsible  student  leaders 
to  find  a  satisfactory  set  of  regu- 
lations." 


DR.   WARNER   WELLS 

.  .  .  Lectures  Next  Week 

last  Medical 
Lectures  Set 
For  Next  Week 

The  last  in  a  series  of  six  post- 
graduate medical  lectures  will  be 
given  at  Morganton  and  Ashcville 
Wednesday  and  Thursday  by  Dr. 
Warner  Wells  of  the  UNC  School 
of  Medicine. 

Dr.  Wells  will  lecture  in  Mor- 
ganton Wednesday.  At  4  p.m.  he 
will  speak  on  "Radiation  Sick- 
ness" and  at  7:30  p.m.  he  will  talk 
on  "Intestinal  Obstruction."  The 
same  two  talks  will  be  given  the 
following  day  in  Asheville  at  5 
p.m.  and  7:45  p.m. 

The  two  postgraduate  medical 
courses  are  being  sponsored  by 
the  UNC  School  of  Medicine,  the 
UNC  Extension  Division  and  the 
Burke  and  Buncombe  County  Med- 
ical Societies.  The  two  medical 
courses  began  in  September. 

Tlie  Morganton  lectures  will  be 
given  at  Grace  Hospital  and  at 
the  Mimosa  Golf  Club.  The  Ashe- 
ville lectures  will  be  presented  at 
Memorial  Mission  Hospital. 

Last  year  Dr.  Wells'  translation 
and  editing  of  "Hiroshima  Dairy"- 
caused  a  sensation  in  the  literary 
world.  The  book  was  a  Japanese 
physician's  account  of  the  atomic 
bombing  of  Hiroshima.  For  sev- 
eral weeks  the  book  remained  on 
the  nation's  be^t  seller  list*.  To 
date  the  book  has  been  translated 
into  seven  foreign  languages. 


Beta  XI  Elects 
Pledge  Heads 

The  Beta  Xi  Chapter  of  the 
Kappa  Psi  Pharmaceutical  Fra- 
ternity ye^erday  announced  the 
election  of  the  following  officers 
for  its  1956-57  Pledge  Class: 
President,  William  Whitaker 
Moose;  Vice  President,  Hugh  Mer- 
cer Clark;  Secretary-Treasurer. 
Joseph  Stevens  Ferrell;  Chaplain. 
James  David  Cooke;  Social  Chair- 
man. Clayton  Lyerly  Dean. 

Other  pledges  include:  Arthur 
Long  Bradsher,  Edward  Mc-Phail 
Britt,  Randall  Stuart  Brown. 
Thomas  Peete  Davis,  Edward  Gar- 
field Faulkner,  William  Ronald 
Freeman.  Charles  Edward  Hardy, 
Donald  Rich  Humphrey. 

Payton  Donald  Jackson,  Charles 
Glenn  Lasley.  Charles  Castello 
Loughlin,  George  David  Matthews. 
Gordon  Lee  O'Briant,  Robert 
Hunter  SheaVic,  Clinton  Lockwood 
Shuford.  Jean  Willard  McSwain, 
John  Parker  McNeil,  John  Caroll 
Smith.  Jesse  David  Wall,  William 
John  Weatherly  and  Bobby  Steve 
Wood. 


I  AFROTC  Honor  Squadron 
i    To  Select  New  Members 

The  Sabre  Air  Command,  a  re- 
i  cently  formed  honor  squadron  of 
:  the  Air  Force  ROTC.  is  beginning 
:  selection  of  new  members,  a 
:  spokesman  for  the  group  said  yes- 
■  terday. 

I  Membership  in  the  squadron  is 
I  oiren  to  freshman  and  sophomore 
!  cadets  with  an  acceptable  average. 
I  Pledge  chairman  for  the  group 
i  urged  that  all  cadets  "Look  their 
;  best  and  do  their  best  if  they  want 
to  be  accepted  into  the  honor 
I  squadron." 


The  Dolly  Sisters' 
Is  Tonight's  Movie 

The  GMAB  free  movie,  "The 
Dolly  Sisters,"  will  be  presented 
I  tonight  in  Carroll  Hall  at  o  and 
I  10  p.m.  This  gay  and  bouncing 
i  musical  starring  Betty  Grable 
I  and  June  Haver  is  the  true  life 
story  of  the  famous  dance  team 
!  that  was  the  toast  of  Europe  years 
i  ago. 


Group  Studies 
Press  Relations 

A  study  of  relationships  between 
the  press  and  the  medical  profes- 
sion in  North  Carolina  was  describ- 
ed Wednesdaj',  November  1st.  at 
the  weekly  luncheon  meeting  of 
the  Institute  for  Research  in  Social 
Science  at  the  University  of  North 
Carolina. 

The  audience  included  guests 
from  the  University's  Division  of 
Health  affairs. 

The  report,  presented  by  Dr. 
Roy  E.  Carter  Jr.,  of  the  UNC 
School  of  Journalism,  dealt  with 
a  project  aimed  at  improving  re- 
lations between  doctors  and  edi- 
tors by  studying  the  attitudes  and 
experiences  of  each  group  with 
respect  to  each  other. 


Carolina 
Corsair 

By  Don  Tracy 

Here's  a  fine  bouillabaise  of  love 
and  treachery  on  the  Carolina 
shore,  as  Edward  Teach  goes  his 
!  piratical  way.  You'll  enjoy  every 
adventurous  page! 

Published  «t  $3-50 
Our  Special 

$1.00 

THE  ULTIMATE 

^dOKSHOP 

20S   E.   Franklin   St. 
Opeh  Till  10  Km. 


Fall  Bargains  In 

HUMOR 

I  Wake  M*  When  If  s  Over,  by  Ah- 
ner  Dean.  Bitter-sw-eet  verses  and 
drawings  about  Love  and  Life.  Pub- 
lished at  $2.95. 

Our  Special   $1.00 

The  SwiM  Family  Perelmen,  by  S. 
J.  Perelnian.  Wonderful  off-beat 
travel  book  to  end  all  travel.  Pub- 
lished at  $2:96. 

Our  Special  $1.2f 

Bottoms  Ktp,  by  Cornelia  Otis  Skin- 
ner. The  beloved  monologist  takes 
us  to  a  dinner  for  obstetricians,  to 
a  whacky  health  bar,  to  Paris. 
Whatever  she  touches,  sparkles 
with  her  own  special  kind  of  mag- 
ic. Published  at  $3.00. 

Now  S1.2S 

THE  INTIMATE 
BOOKSHOP 

SOS    E.   Franklin    St. 
Open  Till  10  P.M. 


Hey,  everybody!  Here's  a  new  stack  of 


—FREE  FARKING— 


"i 


UNC  Student^lected 
To  Accounting  Group 

NEW  YORK  —  Richard  James 
Tuggle.  University  of  North  Caro- 
lina Student,  has  been  elected  a 
member  of  the  American  Institute 
of  Accountants.  This  is  the  na- 
tional professional  society  of  cer- 
tified  public   accountants.        , 

Tuggle  is  a  member  of  the 
North  Carolina  Association  of 
Certified   Public    Accountants. 


4'Year  College 
Chartered  At 
Fayetteville 

RALEIGH— (AP)— A  new  four- 
year  Methodist  college  at  Fayette- 
ville was  issued  a  charter  Thurs- 
day and  the  chairman  of  the  col- 
leges  board  of  trustees  said,  "we 
are  officially  in  business  now." 

The  charter  was  issued  at  a 
ceremony  in  the  office  of  Secre- 
tary of  State  Thad  Eure.  On  hand 
were  Terry  Sanford  of  Fayette- 
ville, chairman  of  the  new  col- 
lege's board:  Rev.  Vergil  Queen 
of  Durham,  trustee  and  president 
of  the  North  Carolina  Conference 
Board  of  Education,  and  Rev.  W. 
L.  Clegg  of  Raleigh,  vice  chairman 
of  the  college  board. 

The  24  members  of  the  board 
of  trustees  were  listed  as  Jhe  in- 
corporators for  the  institution. 
The  college  is  one  of  two  authoriz- 
ed last  spring  by  a  special  session 
of  the  North  Carolina  Conference 
of  the  Methodist  Church.  A  char- 
ter was  issued  recently  for  a  sim- 
ilar college  to  be  established  at 
Rocky  Mount. 

The  new  Fayetteville  college 
will  be  erected  on  a  700-acre  site- 
already  acquired,  three  mile.«i 
north  of  Fayetteville  on  the  Ba 
leigh   highway. 

Residents  of  Cumberland  Coun- 
ty have  pledged  to  raise  some  $2 
million  in  the  initial  capital  out- 
lay for  the  college,  and  another 
2^2  million  is  in  the  process  of 
being  raised  among  member 
churches  of  the  conference. 

Rev.  Queen  is  chairman  of  a 
committee  seeking  a  president  for 
the  college.  This  post  is  expected 
to  be  filled  in  the  near  future. 


WhIn  smoke  folk  get  together,  the  chatter 
matter  is  fine  tobacco.  Naturally,  that  means 
Lucky  Strike.  Luckies'  taste  is  worth  talking 
about  because  it  comes  from  fine  tobacco — 
light,  mild,  good-tasting  tobacco  that's 
TOASTED  to  taste  even  better.  As  for  the 
Stickler,  you  call  the  hiinutes  of  a  smokers'  con- 
vention a  lAght'Up  Write-up.  Speaking  of  light- 
ups,  have  you  tried  a  Lucky  lately?  You'll  say 
it's  the  best-tasting  cigarette  you  ever  smoked! 


"irs 

TOASTD" 

to  taste 
iMttorl 


STKKLEI  MAKE  ^25 


Sticklers  are  simple  riddles  with  two-word  rhyming 
answers.  Both  words  must  have  the  same  number  of 
syllables.  (No  drawings,  please!)  We'll  shell  out  $26 
for  all  we  imc — and  for  hundreds  that  never  see  print. 
So  send  staclcs  of  'em  with  your  name,  address, 
collie  and  class  to  Happy-Jbe-Lucky,  Box  67A, 
Mount  Vernon,  N.-Y. 


Luckies  Taste  Better 

CLEANER,    FRESHER,    SMOOTHER   I 


«lA.  T.  C«. 


>u9Tor    dv^  Jf9n»%U<»9^  CO^itetr^^^yBUi*^  America's  lejudimo  mahdfactubsb  or  cicASSTTxa 


r  ■  «  w  «l«  ■  1 


PAGE  FOUR 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


F<klOAY,  NOVEMBER   2,    1956 


Tar  Heels  Pin  Hopes  On  Kicking  Game  And  'Dream  Defense' 


Sutton  Paces 
Tar  Heels  In 
4  Departments^ 

Tar  Heel  co-captain  Ed  Sutton 
continues  to  lead  the  Carolina 
football  squad  in  individual  per- 
formance, as  he  has  done  all  sea- 
son. Sutton  has  dominated  four 
departments:  nishing,  pass  receiv- 
ing, kickoff  returns  and  scoring. 

The  senior  halfback  has  carried 
the  ball  286  yards  averaging  5.3 
yards  per  carry.  Wally  Vale  fol- 
lows, averaging  4.1  yards  a  carry. 

Sutton  leadf  the  kickoff  return 
department,  hauling  the  ball  183 
yards.  Daley  Goff  is  next  with  121 
yards. 

Sutton  has  scored  four  touch- 
downs. Next  in  line  is  last  week's 
ACC  sophomore  of  the  the  week, 
Emil  DeCantis.  He  has  hit  pay 
dirt  twice. 

Turning  to  the  air  lanes,  Sut- 
ton has  held  on  to  5  passes  for  74 
yard.  Right  end  Buddy  Payne  fol- 
lows, catching  three  for  a  total 
of  67  yards. 

On  the  other  end  of  the  line, 
quarterback  Dave  Reed  has  toss- 
ed 9  complete  passes  totaling  153 
yards.  Ron  Marquette  is  i^ext  with 
4  complete  for  93  yards. 

The  talented  toe  of  Wally  Vale 
has  booted  21  punts  averaging  43.4 
yards  per  kick.  Vale  is  one  of  the 
outstanding  punters  in  the  coun- 
try. 

The  Tar  Heels  have  moved  the 
ball  1353  yards,  their  opponents 
1930.  371  of  the  Tar  Heel  yards 
were  through  the  air.  Carolina  has 
scared  58  points,  their  opponents 
114. 


Council  Candidates 

\l\    students    interested    in    be- 
coming a  candidate  for  the  Men's 
Honor  Council  in  this  fall's  elec- 1 
tions    must    be    approved   by   the  > 
Bi-Partisan    Selections    Board,    ac-  ] 
cording    to    a    representiative    of 
the  board. 

The  board  will  meet /Monday. 
Tuesday  and  Wednesday  in  the 
Men's  Council  Room  of  Graham 
Memorial. 

Prospective  candidates  <:h»ve 
been  asked  to  contact  Jhn  Exum. 
cliainnan.  at  89077  for  an  ap- 
pointment to  meet  with  the  board. 


A  Dry  Spell  Since  '48 

Over  the  mountains  and  into  the  hills  of  Tennessee  go  the  Caro- 
lina Tar  Heels  this  week  to  face  an  old  and  dreauecl  nemesis:  "ine 
University  of  Tennessee  Volunteers.  It's  an  unenviable  task  the  Tar 
Heels  have  ahead  of  them,  for  the  Vols  have  one  of  their  most  power- 
ful teams  in  history,  and  are  ranked  third  in  the  nation  behind  Okla- 
homa and  Qeorgia  Tech. 

Seven  years  ago  in  1949  Caroline  hung  up  their  last  win  over 
a  Tennessee  team  on  the  football  field  as  Charley  Justice  and  Co. 
edged  by  the  Vols,  14-7,  on  their  way  to  the  Sugar  Bowl.  Since 
then  the  Vols  and  Ter  Heels  have  each  had  their  ups  and  downs 
under  a  series  of  different  coaches,  but  the  lads  from  Tennessee 
have  always  managed  to  walk  off  witti  a  win  each  year.  This  seven 
year  victory  string  has  enabled  Tennessee  to  run  up  a  16^  lead  in 
the  series  along  with  one  tie. 

Only  once  during  that  seven  year  period  was  the  game  a  close 
one.  Two  years  ago.  the  Tar  Heels  went  to  Knoxville  and  came  back 
only  a  six  point  loser,  26-20.  in  a  free  scoring  duel.  Last  year  Tennes 
see  caught  Coach  George  Barclay's  squad  with  their  pants  down  and 
ran  up  a  whopping  48-7  score. 
COACHING  STAFFS  CHANGED  FREQUENTLY 

Since   that    1948   date,   each    school    has   shuffled   and   reshuffled 
their  coaching  staffs.  At  Tennessee  the  General  Bob  Neyland  regime ! 
was  broken  up  a  few  years  ago  and  assistant  coach  Harvey  Robinson  ^ 
took  over  for  a  short  span.  Robinson  tailed  to  produce  in  the  good  i 
old  Xeyland  tradition,  however,  so  the  Vol  alumni  turned  their  eyes  i 
westward  and  came  up  with  another  former  Neyland  pupil,  Bowden 
Wyatt,  who  was  then  coaching  at   Arkansas.  Since  Wyatt  took  over  ! 
the  Vols  have  once  again  scaled  the  heights  with  this  year's  team 
being  rated  right  alongside  the  best  squads  ever  turned  out  by  Ney- ' 
land.  I 

Here  at  Carolina  the  story  is  essentially  the  seme  without  I 
the  happy  ending.  The  Old  Grey  Fox,  Carl  Snaveiy,  gave  up  the 
coaching  reins  in  1952  after  leading  the  Tar  Heels  to  natienal  pro- 
minence during  the  Justice  erM.  Former  UNC  all-american  George 
Barclay  then  stepped  in  in  1953  to  try  his  hand  with  the  faltering 
UNC  football  fortunes.  Barclay  had  little  or  no  success,  and  after 
three  losing  seasons,  was  given  his  walking  papers. 

Then  last  winter.  Carolina  came  up  with  their  answer  to  Bowden 
Wyatt  when  they  lured  Sunny  Jim  Tatum  back  to  Chapel  Hill  from 
Maryland.  Tatum  has  met  with  a  notable  Hick  of  success  in  his  first 
year  here,  but  signs  of  a  rosy  future  are  abundant. 
FOR  THE  TAR  HEELS:  A  LONG  WAY  TO  GO 

From  here,  it  looks  like  the  Tar  Heels  still  hav«  a  long  way  to 
go  before  they  catc;h  up  witjtj  Tennessee.  This  Vols  have  whipped 
through  five  straight  gan?es  ^  with .  hardly  an  anxious  moment. 

They  are  a  typical  Tjf^nesse^   fee^i   \t\  fi^^  thoY*^  |re  a   hard 
charging,  fighting  teem.wfll  schooled  In  >Kf  finej  afts  of  ^blocking 
and  tackling.  Also  they  have  a  habit  pf  giving  th^  ball  to  the  otlier 
team  and  waiting  for, the  bfeaks,  then  C8$hi|ig'  in  for  «  quick  TD. 
Carolina  is  apparently  pn  tlie  upgrade  gftpr.  foi|^  straight  losses 
at  the  beginning  of.  the  season.  In^  ^?ir . lis^j  two ' outipgs,  they  ,have, 
a  victory  ovjer  Maryland  and  a 'tie;  wit||  Wake;  ^^^psi.'to  Cheir  cf^it 
,    The  Tar  Heel  backfieid  doefn't  s«em  *^.^*^*^*  yfH^  P^'f*  Vif*^ 
Reed's,  querterbacking,  Vflc's,  punting  if pd ,  Sutton's  running  all  im- 
portant weapons.  Up  front  the  Tar.lleels  beve  •  ijiirited  lineup  of 
eager  youths  who  love  to  play  fpot|MJ|L   .  '     .,       ,.'-;•' 

Carolina  could  win  this  one  if  things  go  just  Tightf  But  the  odds 
against  it  are  practically  insurmountable.  We  pick  Tennessee  28,  Caro 
Una  13. 
DUKE  AND  WAKE  TO  WIN? 

Over  in  Durham  another  Big  Four  squad  has  the  misfortune  to 
run  into  a  Sdutheastem  Conference  poilrerhouse.  Duke's  Blue  Devils, 
3-3  for  the  season,  tangle  with  the  nation's  second  ranked  team, 
Georgia  Tech  in  the  24th  renewal  of  one  of  the  sbuth's  most  color- 
ful rivalries. 

Tech  has  rolled  to  five  straight  victories  without  a  loss,  their  last 
win  coming  over  supposedly  strong  Tulane  last  Saturday.  40-0.  Duke 
has  been  an  on  and  off  club  this  year,  but  last  week  showed  signs  of 
tadossoming  into  full  bloom  as  they  stomped  State,  42-0. 

The  Blue  Devils  are  in  good  shape  for  the  game,  while  Tech 
has  two  top  halfbacks  on  the  sidfeliMM.  Alioi,  the  Engineers  may  be 
looking  into  the  future  toward  ntnct  v#e«k's  gante  with  Tennessee. 
We're  picking  this  ohl»  A  tfUl-  upket  of  tHk  wbek.  Dbke  20,  Georgia 
Tech  14. 

Rounding  out  the  6?i  i^6\ir  attidH  t(Jthot+ow  will  be  a  family 
feud  between  State  and  Wake  Forest  att  Wifisttta-Salem.  Judging  from 
last  Saturday's  performances,  the  Deacons  rate  the  edge  in  this  one. 
With  Bill  Barnes  and  Co.  in  high  gear,  we  say  Wake  Forest  13,  State  7. 


Swimming  Co-Champs 

Ed  Nash  (left)  and  Charles  Reyner  (right)  finished  in  a  dead- 
lock for  top^  honors  in  the  intramural  50  yard  freestyle  race  held 
Tuesday.  Beth  recorded  times  of  25.0  seconds. 

Phi  Gam  Wins  Honors 
In  Mural  Swim  Finals 


By  CHARLIE  HOWSON 

In  the  finals  of  the  intramural 
swimming  meet  held  Tuesday 
night.  Phi  Gamma  won  top  honors 
by  defeating  all  other  opposition. 
Their  winning  score  was  53  points. 

The  meet  proved  very  exciting 
in  all  events  as  the  runner-up 
scores  indicate.  Phi  Delta  Theta 
took  second  place  by  compiling  a 
total  of  45  points.  Zeta  Psi  follow- 
ed next  to  the  leaders  with  a  total 
of  43.  Winston  tallied  24,  Pi  Lamb- 
da Phi  21  and  Dental  School  15.5, 
to  finish  in  fourth,  fifth  and  sixth 
positions    respectively. 

Individual  winners  were  as  fol- 
lows;'25  yard  freestyle,  Rsyner, 
Pi  Lambda,  10.9;  50  yard  breast- 
stroke,  Shapard,  Winston,  29.7;  50 
yard  backstroke,  Nash,  Zeta  Psi, 
30.2;  25  yard  backstroke,  Vaunts, 
Winston,  14.6;  100  yard  freestyle, 
Kirkmiin.  Phi  qam.  1:03.05;  50 
yard  freestyle,  Nash,  Zeta  Psi  and 
Reyner,  Pi  Lambda  tied,  25.0. 

In  the  diving  event  the  individ- 
ual scores  .  are  the  following:  1- 
Smith,'  Phi   Delt.   261.1   points;    2- 


Carolina  To  Meet  Vols  |  Health  Group 
Tomorrow  In  Knoxville 


Reynolds,  Phi  Gam,  254.8  FToints; 
3-Barber,  Zeta  Psi.  216.7  points;v 
4-Thompson,  BVP,  14«.6  points. 

In    the    75    individual    medley, 

Nash  of  Zeta  Psi  finished  in  the 

number  one   position  with  a  time 

of   46.7.   The   runners-up   finished 

in  the  following  order;  2-Shapard, 

Winston,  47.5;  3-Owens,  Phi  Gam, 

47.8;    4-Smith,    Phi    Delt,    4fl.6;    .5- 

}  Dann,  Dental  School,  51.6. 

I      Phi  Gam  took  top  honors  in  the 

j  150  yard  medley  relay  with  a  time 

I  of  1:30.2.  The  team  was  composed 

of   Smith,    Reynolds,   Owens    and 

I  Daniels. 

i  In  the  200  yard  freestyle  relay, 
,  Phi  Delt  captured  first  place  as 
j  Brenner,  Smith,  Cooper.  Barks,  and 
I  Pittman  teamed  together  to  finish 
I  in  1:51.9. 

Intramural  officials  expressed 
I  much  satisfaction  after  the  meet 
^  was  over.  They  wished  to  thank  all, 
those  who  competed  in  the  meet 
for  their  sincere  co-operation  for 
making  it  a  huge  success.  They 
also  wished  to  extend  their  con- 
gratulations to  all  trophy  winners. 


Runners  Leave    ""♦•^•■conference  Tiits 
Today  For  Big 
Meet  With  Vols 


Duke  Blue  Imps  Defeat 
Science  Frosh  Booters  By  2-1 

The  Intimate 
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By  DAVE   WIBLE 

The  Carolina  freshman  soccer 
I  squad  was  downed  yesterday  2  to 
j  1  by  the  Blue  Imps  of  Duke.  A 
I  muddy  Fetzer  field  gave  bad  foot- 
j  ing  to  both  teams  which  resulted 
j  in  a  low  score. 

The  game  ran  into  an  over  time. 
j  When  the  clock  ran  out  for  the 
;  regulation  game,  each  booters 
i  squad  had  a  score.  Duke's  David 
Ivey  scored  after  1  minute  and  20 
Iseconds  of  the  second  half  of  the 


IMTHtWORU>!"   £!'r^SS!i 
VICTOR 

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overtime    to    break    the    deadlock 
and  give  his  team  the  victory. 

Duke  got  off  to  a  great  start 
when  Ivy  Cooper  pushed  one  past 
the  Carolina  goalie  after  only  20 
seconds  of  play.  From  then  imtil 
the  third  quarter  it  was  a  defen- 
sive contest.  Tar  H^el  John  Ghanin 
broke  the  ice  at  7:30  of  the  third 
quarter- and  tied  things  up.  Again 
the  game  became  defensive  and  it 
stayed  that  way  until  the  end  of 
the  gSme.  A  ten  minute  overtime 
was  added.  The  first  half  Carolina 
kept  the  ball  well  down  in  Blue 
Imp  territory  but  could  not  find 
an  opening  to  the  goal.  The  last 
five  minutes  Duke  became  the  mas- 
ters. Ivey's  goal  occurred  late  in 
the  game  and  the  Tar  Heels  did 
not  have  enough  time  to  recover 
and  score. 


STATE  FAIR  ARENA  Raleigh,  N.  C. 

""^Hr  SUNDAY,  NOV.  11       ^^ 

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,  Mail   orders  and  tickets  new:    Kerr    Rexall   Drugs, 

CMoeran  Village;  Music  Bar,  26  W.  Hargett  St. 


Pack  Works 

RALEIGH,  i/P)  —  A  Two  hour 
general  review  in  the  rain  tind  mud 
his  afternOOB  wound  up  final  pre- 
•arations  for  North  Carolina 
State's  encounter  with  Wake  For- 
est in  Winston-Salem  Saturday. 

Coach  EJarle  Edwards  and  his 
staff  had  t|i9  Wolfpsck  vanity 
Lake  a  final  look  at  several  defen- 
sive assignments. 


UNC's  once  beaten  varsity  cross 
country  squad  will  leave  this  morn- ' 
ing  for  the  hills  of  Tennessee  in  [ 
preparation  for  a  meet  with  the 
Tennessee  Volunteers  tomorrow,  j 
The  meet  will  be  held  in  Knoxville  • 
before  the  Tar  Heel,  Volunteer , 
grid  contest.  j 

Carolina  has  not  met  with  a  bar-  j 
rier  squad  that  has  met  Tennessee  i 
so  it  is  hard  to  compare  the  stren^- ' 
th  of  the  two  teams.  | 

Although  last  year  the  Tar  Heels  ' 
defeated  the  Vols,  the  boys  from 
Tennessee  are  expected  to  be  much 
stronger.  As  an  example,  three  of 
their    harriers    can    run    the    mile 
under  4:30.  Their  number  one  man 
Eddie  Murphy  has  been  clocked  at  j 
4:10.  He  was  sixth  in  the  1500  me- 1 
ter  Olympic  trials. 

Jim  Beatty  has  had  a  little  I 
trouble  with  a  cold  this  week  but  j 
it  is  not  expected  to  bother  him 
tomorrow.  He  will  be  out  for  his 
sixth  win  of  the  season.  Wearing 
the  blue  and  white  with  him  will 
be  Everett  Whatley,  Dave  Scur- 
lock,  Ben  Williams  and  Per- 
rin  Henderson.  John  Reaves,  Doug 
Henderson,  Marion  Griffin  and 
Alex  Coffin  complete  the  squad. 


Head  Saturday  Slafe 

The  Associated   Press 

Oklahoma  turns  to  family  war- 
fare in  the  Big  St!ven  Conference 
Saturday  with  its  shiny  35-game 
winning  streak  and  its  No.  1  rank- 
ing in  the  nation  riding  against 
once-beaten  Colorado. 

The  trend  is  toward  conference 
and  league  competition  among  the 
major  r-ollege  football  teaifts  with" 
only  a  sprinkling  of  infersettloftal 
tests. 

Pittsburgh's  invasion  of  M»nrtii^ 
sotsi.  a  clash  between  the  No.  11 
andsNo.  8  teams  in  the  lirtes*  AP 
sociated  Press  .  poll,  should  pro- 
vide another  interestiing  test  of 
Eastern  vs  Western  football. 


All  the  resources  of  an  experi- 
enced coaching  staff,  four  days  of 
preparations,  a  dream  or  two  and 
a  lot  of  kicking  go  onto  the  line 
Saturday  afternoon  in  Knoxville, 
as  North  Carolina  and  undefeated 
Tennessee  clash  at  football  for 
the  26th  time. 

The  coaching  staff  is  Jim  Tatum 
and  friends  who  have  put  in  hours 
trying  to  defense  the  potent  Ten- 
nessee single  wing,  and  the  dream 
fits  in  here  too.  It  was  the  result 
of  a  night  of  snoozing  with  the 
defense  problem  by  assistant  coach 
Jack  Hennemier.  He  came  up  with 
what  he  thought  was  the  perfect 
defense  only  to  find  that  he  had 
diagrammed  with  twelve  players, 
a  habit  brought  with  him  from  a 
stint  with  the  Canadian  pros. 

The  kicking  should  be  on  the 
part  of  Tar  Heel  fullback  .Wally 
Vale,  and  is  slated  to  be  the  key 
to  UNC  hopes  of  an  upset  over 
the  nationally  third-ranked  Vols. 

Vale,  who  lias  footed  the  ball 
at  a  43.2  clip  so  far  this  year,  is 


Injured  Johnny  Majors 
May  Not  Play  Saturday 

KNOXVILLE,  Tenn.,  (/P)— Coach 
Bowden  Wyatt  said  today  Johnny 
Majors,  Tennessee's  ace  tailback, 
may  not  be  able  to  play  agajnst 
North  Carolina  in  their  intersec- 
tional  football  game  here  Satur- 
day. 

Majors  suffered  badly  bruised 
ribs  in  the  Maryland  game  a  week 
ago. 

"Johnny's  injuries  are  still  giv- 
ing him  some  trouble,  and  if  the 
game  were  being  played  tomor- 
row afternoon,  I  doubt  if  we  would 
be  able  to  use  him."  Wyatt  said. 
"But  he  wants  to  play  badly,  and 
if  he  thinks  he's  in  shape  Satur- 
day,'We  ^ight  use  him."; 

Trainer  Mickey  6*Brien '  fash-! 
ioned'  a-'bi>ace  for  the.  Huntlan4« 
Tenn'.,  flier  and  he  wore  it  today. 

The  Vols  took  a  brief  look  at 
Caiiolina,'s  split-T  and  wing-T  for- 
mations in  a  dummy  scrimmage, 
an^iC^l^ped  the  brief  practice  ses- 
M9n;wft4i  i^  review  of  their  owh 
single  wing  plays. 


di 


specially  good  with  the  quick  kick 
from  the  T  formation  and  has  help- 
ed the  Tar  Heels  considerably  with 
it  this  year. 

Early  in  the  week  Tatum  said 
he  planned  to  play  "give-away" 
with  the  Vols  in  the  Saturday  meet- 
ing. Tennessee  has  won  ball  games 
for  years  by  giving  tl^e  other  team 
the  ball  and  letting  them  make 
the  big  mistake,  then  caQitalizing 
on  it,  Tatum  theorized.  Therefore, 
he  plans  to  boot  it  right  back  into 
Tennessee  hands  and  wait  for  them 
to  make  the  errors.  That's  what 
he  said,  anyway. 

But  it  won't  be  all  kicking  for 
the  Tar  Heels  and  their  split-T. 
With  Dave  Reed  operating  the 
backfield  unit  of  Vale,  Larry  Mc- 
MuUen  and  Ed  Sutton,  UNC  plans 
to  make  a  little  offensive  noise  of 
its  own.  Tennessee's  defense  has 
not  been  impenetrable  this  year, 
with  two  teams  scoring  20  points 
in  a  losing  cause. 

Passing  might  come  in  for  a 
workout,  too.  The  short  punt 
spread  used  in  the  past  two  games 
by  UNC  may  be  used  to  try  to  off- 
set the  hard-charging  Tennessee 
line,  forcing  the  Vols  to  resort  to 
a  three  or  four  man  forward  wall. 

Almost   always   among   the    top 
clubs  in  the  nation,  the  Vols  lead  j 
the  series   16-8-1   since  the   clubs ' 
first  met  it  1883.  The  last  UNC' 
win    was    in    1948    when    Charlie  i 
Justice  and  Co.  forged  a  14-7  win.  i 
Tennessee    wins    since    that    time 
have   been   35-6.   16-0,  27-0,  41-14, 
20-6,  26-20,  and  48-7.  i 


Here  Tomorrow 

The  seventh  annual  meeting  of 
the  North  Carolina  Assn.  of  Health 
Educators  will  be  held  at  UNC  to- 
morrow. 

The  meeting,  to  be  held  in  the 
Health  Education  Workshop,  will 
begin  at  9  a.m.  and  end  at  4  p.m. 
Approximately  30  delegates  from 
throughout  the  state. are  expected 
to  attend. 

Speaking  at  the  meeting  will  be 
Dr.  Lucy  Morgan,  UNC  School  of 
Public  Health;  Mrs.  Annie  Mo<m^, 
School  Health  Coordinating  Ser- 
vice, Raleigh;  Dr.  Rosemary  ICent, 
UNC  School  of  Public  Health; 
Miss  Gaynelle  Hogan,  Robeson 
County  Health  Department,  Lum- 
berton  and  Mrs.  L.  L.  Bing  Miller, 
N.  C.  Legislative  Council,  Raleigh. 

The  election  of  officers  for  the 
coming  year  will  be  the  final  event 
on  an  afternoon  business  session. 


JUST  ARRIVED! 

Crew  Neck  Sweaters  cf  imported 
Australian  Lambs  wool. 
Colors:  light  tan,  light  grey,  and 
charcoal  in  men's  and  coed's 
sizes.  At  unbelievable  price  of 
$7.95. 

MILTON'S 
Clothing  Cupboard 


MURALS 


Today's    Tag    Football    Schedule 

4:00— field-1,  Phi  Delt  vs.  Beta; 
field-2,  Phi  Gam  vs  Pi  Kappa  Sig; 
field-S,  SPE  vs  Lambda  Chi;  field- 
4,  Sig  Chi  vs  AKPsi;  field-5,  Theta 
Chi  vs  Delt  Sig. 

5:00  —  field-1,  Zeta  Psi  vs  Chi 
Phi;  field-2.  Pi  Lambda  vs  Kappa 
Psi;  field-3,  ^Cappa  Sig  vs  ATO; 
fieid-4,  SAE  vs  TEP;  field-5,  ATO 
yf»  Sigfnar  Nu  (w). 

No  volleyball  games  are  sche- 
rftftetf  ftif  today. 


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in  o  GREATER*  rol«! 


A  story  of  thrMi 
people . . .  sinnors 
in  thoirownwoyl 

wHh  UNC  NOW).  JEANNE  MOREAU.  GEORGES 
CHAMARRAT  of  th«  Comedic  Francaisa 


FALL  BARGAINS  IN 

PSYCHIATRY  & 
STUFF 


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day, November  6,  from 
3  to  7:30  p.m.  or  Wed- 
nesday, November  7, 
from  10  a.m.  to,J  p.m. 
for  personal  interview. 


The  Hill,  by  Victor  Chapin.  The 
personal  account  of  a  conscientious 
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hospital.  A  graphic,  realistic  pic- 
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The  Essentials  of  Abnormal  Child 
Behavior,  by  Dr.  Eh'nest  Harms. 
The  first  modern  boolc  to  evaluate 
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in  this  field.  Published  at  $5.00. 
Our   Special 1_ $2.39 

The  Philosophy   of  Psychiatry,  by 
Harold    Palmer,    M.D.    Over    our 
head,    but    perhaps    you'll    under- 
stand  it.  Was  $2.75 
Our   Special   $1.29 

Fragments  of  an  Analysis  with 
Freud,  by  Joseph  Wortis.  In  an 
analysis  that  rambled  all  dver  th? 
place,  the  master  probed  his  own 
thinking  as  well  as  that  of  his  pa- 
tient. Published  at  $3.00. 
New  only  a      _ $1.29 

THE  INTIMATE 
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20$   E.   Franklin   St. 
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LAST 

TIME  TODAY 


DAILY    CROSSWORD 


Carolina 


Matinee  Sat.  9:30  A.M. 

Our  Gang  Comedy 

And  Cartoons 


ACROSS 

1.  Teller  of 
untruths 

5.  Baby's 
father 

9.  Species  of 
pier  (Arch.) 

10.  Jewiah 
month 

11.  Region 
of  Af  ricft 

12.  Lawful 

14.  Swiaa 
canton 

15.  Insect 

16.  Music  not« 

17.  Entertained 
sumptu- 
ously 

20.  Distress 
signal 

21.  Small 
flower 

22.  Pant 

23.  Citadel 
25.  Caresses 
28.  Sultan's 

decreea 
."^2.  Past 

33.  Inspect 

34.  Biblical  city 

35.  Cistern 
3S.  Grow  9i4 
37.  Pry 

39.  Swise 
dialect 

41.  NoMema* 

42.  Baking: 
chamber 

43.  Remain 

44.  Sport 

DOWV 

1.  Kind  of 

shrub 
2  Blut 

dye 


3.  Luzon 
native 

4.  Flowed 
(.  Removed 

(Print.) 
.4.  Toward  the 
sheltered 
side 

7.  Excavated 

8.  Texas 
mission 
(poss.) 

11.  Waves 
13.  Speak 

imperfectly 
15.  Between 
18.  Branch  of 

learning 


19.  A 

pope 

20.  Ea- 
rner, 
ium 
(sym.) 

22.  Unit 

of 

weight 
24  Epoch 

25.  Man's 
name 

26.  Accedes 

27.  Preposition 

29.  Coronet 

30.  Motor 

31.  Observed 
33.  Betimes 


rsQ  □□□'  umaa 
aanaa  aaaam 

CliSI^SlCI    niDQSS 


Yesterday's  Abbwct 

35.  Girl's  name 
38.  Large  tub 
39  Ship's 

record 
40.  The  hava 

(H.  I  » 


''  ^^ 


'*S 


L 


U.rr.C.  '  LIBRARY 
SERIALS  DEPT. 
BOX  870 
CHAPEL  HILL,  N.C. 


Egypt  Pushed  Westward;  Syria  And  Iraq  Pose  Danger 


\  Compiled  by  Th«  Daily  Tar  H««l 

I  1  From   Short  Wave   and   Radio    Reports 

!         The  Middle  East  situation  as  of  midnight: 

It  appeared  Egypt  had  lost  everything  east  of  the  Suez  Canal, 
with  the  exception  of  a  few  suicide  commandos. 

Danger  of  a  prolonged  war  increased  as  SjTian  troops  were 
reported  crossing  the  border  southward  into  Jordan.  Other  re- 
ports from  Tel  Aviv,  also  unconfirmed,  said  Iraq  troops  also  had 
crossed  the  border  into  Jordan. 

From  London,  analysts  said  the  British  and  FYench  forces  in 
the  Middle  East  wanted  to  convert  the  heretofore  Anglo-French- 
Israeli  campaign  into  a   United  Nations  "police  action." 

It  appeared  early  this  morning  that  British.  French  and  Israeli 
lorces  will  have  the  Suez  Canal  under  control  within  a  few  days. 


According  to  short  wake  broadcasts.  British  troops  were  poised 
at  both  ends  of  the  canai.  and  paratroopers  were  reported  ready 
to  drop  along  the  Egyptian  waterway. 

Most  reports  of  Soviet  troops'  entering  Hungary  were  un- 
confirmed this  morning. 

But  in  United  Nations  Security  Council  deliberations  last 
night  it  appeared  the  Big  Three — United  States,  Britain  and 
France — were  back  together  again,  all  condemning  Russia  for 
sending   troops   into    Hungary. 

French  soldiers  were  reported  ready  to  move  in  b«.;.i:.J  tl;c 
British.    Israeli   soldiers    who   had    captured    Gaza   were   reported 


withdrawing   there   voluntarily,   possibly   to  head   for   the  canal 

area. 

A  bulletin  late  last  night  said  ^gypt  had  accepted  the  cease- 
fire demand  passed  yesterday  by  the  United  Nations  only  if  Israeli, 
Britain  and  France  agree  to  cease  their  "aggression"  against  her. 
There  was  no  immediate  response  from  the  three  countries. 

Meanwhile,  the  British  ^Broadcasting  Corp.  announced  Prime 
Minister  Anthony  Eden  will  disclose  today  (Saturday)  whether 
England  and  France  will  accept  the  ceasefire  resolution. 

The  resolution,  introduced  by  the  United  States  in  a  special 
session  of  the  UN  General  Assembly,  calls  for  immediate  cease- 
fire in  the  Middle  East  and  withdrawal  of  all  aggressive  forces 
there. 


Early  la.st  week,  British  and  French  military  forces  joined 
with  I.sraeli  troops  in  descending  upon  the  Gaza  Strip  and  Suez 
Canal  area  in  Egypt. 

From  Tel  Aviv,  an  Israeli  spokesman  said  his  government's 
forces  had  penetrated  to  within  12  miles  of  the  Suez  Canal.  The 
Israelis  controlled  all  three  major  roads  to  the  west,  the  spokes- 
man said. 

From  Washington,  U.  S.  spokesmen  said  they  understood  Jor- 
dan and  SvTia  were  ready  to  declare  war  in  the  Mideast,  although 
the  countries  did  not  make  it  clear  whether  they  would  fight  Israel 
alone  or  Israel.  Britain  and  France. 

The  United  States  also  reported  evacuation  of  .\nierican  citi- 
zens from  the  troubled  area  was  "virtually  complete." 


WEATHER 

-X   Clouds    and    drizzle    today,  with 
expected  high  between  72  and  80. 


©)  c  Daily  »  STat  Keel 


PLATFORMS 

The     discussion     continues.     See 
page  2. 


VOL.  LVII  NO.  38 


Complete  (/P)  Wtre  Service 


CHAPEL  HILL,  NORTH  CAROLINA^  SATURDAY,  NOVEMBER  3,  1956 


Offices   in   Graham   Memorial 


FOUR   PAGES   THIS    ISSUE 


No  Cut  Action  Is 
Taken  By  Faculty 


action  on  the  new  regulation  until 
its   December  meeting. 

It  will  meet  again  on  the  first 
Thursday  in  December.  Godfrey  re- 
fused to  say  whether  or  not  he 
felt  the  newly  proposed  regulation 
would  be  dealt  with  favorably. 
"The  committee's  report  on  the 
new  regulation  is  still  executive," 
he  said. 

A  special  cpmmittec  established 
by  the  council  brought  the  new 
regulation  before  the  entire  coun- 

Three  Council      "I "" "'"'""'"" 

The    committee,    headed    by    Dr. 

Ca^^C  Aff^  ^^OAfl      ^"**^  Holman  of  the  EInglrsh  Dept. 

^^    ^  ^^f  C7  \^fJs7tlf   had  previously  listened  to  sugges- 

O  ^i»^M*  !  ^^''"^  offered  by  a  student  govern- 

OayS   \0 liCIIFfYiCin     I  mcntappolnted  committee. 

Three    seats    on     the    Student    COUNCIL  HEAD 
Council  are  now  open  to  men  stu-  J      ^^  Godfrey.  Faculty  Council  pre- 
dtnts.    Luther    Hodges,    chairman    ^^^'"^  officer,  refused  to  comment 
c:  the  Council,  announced  yesJer-  i  "*'°°  ^^^  ""*""  **'  ****  °®*''>'  P****- 


By    NEIL    BASS 

The  Faculty  Council  took  on  a 
reputed  liberalization  of  the  class 
attendance  regulations  at  yester- 
dijys  meeting. 

The  council,  in  executive  ses- 
sion, deliberated  upon  the  newly 
proposed  attendance  regulation  one 
hour,  from  4:45  until  5:45  p.m. 

The  council,  according  to  Chair- 
man  Gil   Godfrey,   postponed   any 


^()t43l>l«S*r.>^^ 


..i   V  Ol  I 


a»v  I  P08«d  regvAttttm  «r  upon  4t^  re- 

TWO  jhihior  seatr  are  vacat  and  1  f^^  WMeb ^e  council    offered 

one  senior  seat,  he  said.  i    o  t  . 

The  Bi-partisan  Selections  Com- 1 
mittee  will  meet  Monday.  Tuesday 
and  Wednesday  to  consider  can- 
didates for  the  positions. 

The  Student  Council  was  set  up 
last  year  as  a  court  of  appeals  and 
to  try  Campus  Code  violations. 
Hodges  said.  This  is  the  first  time 
that  three  seats  on  the  Council 
have  been  vacant. 

"We  would  like  to  have  as  many 
applications  as  possible  for  these 
three    positions,"    Hodges   stated. 


APO  inducts 
New  Pledaes 


"The  council  was  very  much  in- 
terested in  the  proposal  and  gave 
it   serious    consideration."  " 

Apparently,  however,  the  repu- 
ted class  attendance  liberalization 
was  somewhat  controversial.  The 
council  discussed  it  for  one  hour 
and  took  no  action  whatsoever. 

COMMITTEE  FAVORS 

According  to  Tom  Lambeth, 
member  of  the  student  government 
committee  which  pro|>osed  recom- 
mendations to  the  faculty  com- 
mittee, the  committee  favors  the 
reputed  liberlization. 

Unofficial  sources  reported  that 

the  new  proposal  b  practically  a 

replica  of  the  old  "unJimited  cuts'* 

•service  fr^ternitv.  Thursday  night    ""^gulation  which  wa$  in  effect  iin- 

inducted   17  pledges     and     seven ,  ^'^  ^^^  ^P""^  ^^  ^^5-  :, 

new  jjrothers.   according  to  presi-       Undertthis  regulation,  studtihts 

dent  John  Molter.  |  were  IJ-nited  in  cuts  only   by  the 

Brothers     inducted     v^ere     Jim  ,  professors  under  whom  they   had 

James,   Liberty;    Bill   White,  San- 1  clafses.  Professors  used  their  own 

ford:    Richard    Jennings.    Greens- 1  discretion   in   limiting  cuts. 

boro:    Avery   Thomas.    Burlington:  \      r^u     „^         .,  i  .  u-  u 

nin   v^,>A,u    cv,  IK      t>  u  /-  ^"^  "^^   regulation  which  went 

Hill   Kendall.  Shelbv;   Bob  Cowan.    ;„»       ,r  _.    •   °,  ,   .^,. 

^      „  u  I     A         „         1     '"to  effect  in  the  spring  of  1955 

Crreensboro;     and     Don     Howard,      n       j       i     ^..  .  , 

£,u_iu..  "*""•  I  allowed  only  three  cuts  per  class. 

The  only  exception  to  this  rule,  un- 


WUNC  Celebrates  Birthday 

.  Robert  Carrswell,  in  the  WUNC  control  booth,  puts  the  finishing  touches  on  a  program  of  classical 
music,  one  of  the  daiiy  presentations  of  the  FM  station  which  today  celebrates  its  birthday.  The  station 
has  ueen  many  advancements  since  its  modest  birth  i.i  WS2. 


WUNC-FMCelebrates 
Fourth  Birthday  Today 


By  GORDON  PAYNE 


The   Alpa   Phi   Omega,   campus 


Today,  one  of  UNC's  latest  ven- 
tures in  education  celebrates  its 
birthday.  The  celebration  marks 
the  successful  operation  of  the 
education  broadcasting 
WL'NC. 

Just  four  years  ago.  the  FM 
station  made  its  debut  broadcast 
ing  from  the  UNC  campus.  Since 
its  birth,  the  station  has  riiade 
constant  progress,  a  progress 
which  has  moved  WUNC  to  a 
prominent  place  in  the  area  it 
serves. 


it  on  an  equal  footing  with  non- 
commercial and  commercial  sta- 
tions. 


In  1955  a  transmitter  wa.s  given 
to  WUNC  by  the  Jefferson  Stand- 
station.  I  ard  Broadcasting  Co.  which  raised 
j  the  output  potential  to  15,500 
watts.  The  transmitter  wa.s  install 
ed  immediately,  but  many  diffi- 
culties stood  in  the  way  of  opera 
tion  at  full  power.  Finding  a  power 
s(nirce  this  large  wa.s  indeed  a 
problem. 


UNC  Endorses 
Ike  And  Dick 
By  Two  Votes 

Carolina  joined  State.  Georgia 
Tech,  and  David.son  in  support  of 
Dwight  Eisenhower  for  re-election 
as  President  of  the  United  States. 

The  attitude  of  the  Student  Body 
toward  the  November  6  election 
WiTs  determined  in  a  campus-wide 
mock  election  Thursday.  .\  report 
.showed  that  of  the  6.971  enrolled. 
1.773  votes  were  cast. 

The   President    polled    880    votes 


and    Democratic    candidate    Adlai 
Little    by    little    the    power    was  .  Stevenson  received  878  votes  on  a 
increased.  Bv  th*>  end  of  the  spring     recount.    In    th?    mock    state    elec- 


Shelby. 

Pledges,    who    are    beginning  a 


In     1949.     the     Communications    semester  of   1956  the  station  was.  tion.  Gov.  Hodges  got   1.271  votes 
Center  of  UNC.  of  which    WUNC  \  operating   at    12.000  watts. 


der    which   the   Univerity   is   now 


six-weeks    training    program,    are    operating,  is  for  students  on   the 
Alan    Atwell.    Greensboro:   Jimmy    Dean's   Ust.  ,  Such    students   may 


cut  25   per  cent   of   their  classes 
in  any  particular  course. 


Steele,     Dobson:     R.  S.  Matthews 
Hertford;  James  Clarence  McDon 

aid.    Southern    Pines:    John    Pratt.  

Durham:     Leonidas    Holt.    Julian;  i  ..,„-,   _        ,.  , 

Caleb     White.     Edenton;     Joseph    WRC  Candidates  MuSt 

Alexander,     Short    Hills:    Thomas 

Coleman.   Summit:   Shields   Flynn. 

Trvon:     Walter     Coenen.     Chapel 


Sign  Ust  Before  Men, 

All  junior  coeds  interested  in 
Hill;  Robert  Pearce,  Chapel  Hill;  j  •'""I'ing  ^^r  seats  on  the  Women's 
Jimmy  Scott.  Charlotte:  Ray  Mont- '  Residence  Council  have  been  ask- 
gomery.  High  Point;  Jimmy  Al- '  ^'^  ^^  sign  a  list  posted  on  the 
mond.  Albemarle;  Jimmie  Proc-  {  ^^^^  of  Woodhouse  Conference 
tor.  Fuquay  Sorings;  Stanley  Left- !  Room,  Graham  Memorial,  before 
wich.  Chapel  Hill.  |  ^  ?»"•  Monday. 

Charles  Bernard,  assistant  dean  '      ^h^  ^oard  will  hold  interviews 
of   admissions    of    the   University, !  Monday    from    1:30    to   3:15    p.m. 
was  inducted  as  advisor     of     the    ^^^  Tuesday  and  Wednesday  after- 
noons at  times  posted  on  the  con- 
ference room  door  on  the  second 
floor  of  GM. 


fraternity. 


IN  THE  INFIRMARY 

Students  in  the  lnfirnf>ary  yes- 
terday   included: 

Miss  Dorothy  Walters,  Miss 
Lee  Ann  Curtis,  Roy  Campbell, 
Robert  Gedney,  Harold  Lusk,  Den 
Milliard,  Miss  Dura  ktthy/tn, 
Mist  Elizabeth  Atorris,  Elbert 
Jones,  George  Ray,  Larry  Ford, 
Jessie  Wall,  Robert  Seutherland, 
Jessie  Miley,  James  Woodard, 
David  Parker,  Johnny  Purkerson, 
L.  John  Trot,  Harry  Brice,  Miss 
Isabella  Masterton,  Miss  Ruth 
Caldwell    and    Benton    Beard. 


Four  seats  on  the  Woman's 
Council  will  be  open  to  juniors. 
These  seats  will  be  filled  in  elec- 
tions Nov.  13. 


Rosewall  and  Hoad 
Win  Queensland  Title 

BRISBANE,  Nov.  2  (7P)  —  Ken 
Rosewall  and  Lew  Hoad,  Austral- 
ia's tennis  twins,  won  the  Queens- 
land doubles  championship  today 
by  defeating  Roy  Emerson  and 
.Malci'lm  Anderson,  6-3.  6-4,  (>-2. 


is  a  part,  purchased  a  1,450  watt 
FM  transmitter.  The  Station  was 
licensed  to  the  University  by  the 
Federal  Communications  Com- 
mission to  operate  on  91.5  mega- 
cycles as  a  non-commercial,  edu- 
cational station.  And  so  was  the 
modest  beginning. 

Personnel  for  the  project,  with 
the  exception  of  station  manager 
John  Young,  were  all  students. 
There  was  no  budget  set  aside  for 
the  station  by  the  Universtiy,  so 
time  and  efforts  were  contribu- 
tions  rather   than    paid   .services. 

Pledged  to  public  service  and 
the  exhibition  of  the  resources  of 
UNC.  WUNC  began  a  daily  broad- 
cast from  7  to  10  p.m.  with  news, 
music  and  a  few  dramatic  pro- 
ductions. The  music  came  from 
personal  records  and  those  donated 
to  the  station  library:  the  news 
came  from  the  news  bureaus  of 
UNC.  Duke  and  WCUNC:  dramat 
ii.  ^.•'•'liietions  were  native  to  the 
campus. 

in  1953  WUNC  acquired  the 
record  services  of  RCA  Vict  r  a' 
a  result  of  a  donation  by  Jenks 
Robertson,  a  journalism  student. 
Still  without  a  bud-Jet.  but  gain 
ing  momentum.  WUNC  advanced 
with  increases  in  power  and  pro 
gram  variety. 

The  Associated  Press  wire  .ser 
vice  was  acauired  in  1955.  makinr 
available  national  and  internation 
al  pe\*s  to  the  station,  and  putting 


At  last,  through  continuinij  ef 
forts  l^i'oughout  the  past  summer. 
WUNC  was  able  to  r:turn  to  the 
air  this  fall  with  full  power.  15.- 
500  watts,  increasing  the  original 
power  more  than  10  times  in  the 
first  five  .vears  of  operation. 


educational     FM     stat  on     in     the  ; 
Southern  United  States. 

The  growth  and  success  of  thi- 
station  is  sym-bolic  of  the  spirited  | 
and     enthusiastic     students     wh( 
have  given  so  freely  of  their  time 
and   efforts.  { 

WUNC  is   now   under  the  man  j 
agement  of  a  former  UNC  student 
of  the   Radio'  TV  and  Motion  Pic  i 
ture   department.  Joe   Young.    Ac  j 
cording    to    Youn;?.    the    main    ob   ; 
iective  of  the   future   ftr  the  sta 
tion   is   the   project   of  raising   the  ; 
antenna    from    its    present    height  i 
of  78  feet  to  heights  of  up  to  500  ; 
feet.  The  higher  the  antenna,  the 
i?r?ater  the  station's  range  will  be  ; 

"With  the  advent  of  televisior  ] 
it  was  sometimes  difficult  to  keei  j 
radio  en  th?  advance,  but  now  tha  j 
•t  has  been  determined  that  radii  j 
's  and  will  continue  t  >  b?  a  vita  | 
nart  of  the  media  of  communica  ^ 
ions.  WUNC  will  continue  t  ; 
•nove  forward."  said  Ear!  Wynr  i 
iirector  of  th 
Center  of  the 


Keith  Snyder<  president  of  the 
YRC.  was  especially  interested  in 
thanking  members  of  the  club  for 
the  part  the\  played  in  getting 
int  the  vote.  Snyder  also  said. 
"The  results  of  the  election  was 
indicative  of  the  young  people  of 
North  Carolina  thst  t.'iey  are 
••w:tchin,2  t^  the  Kepublican  party 
ind   President   Eisenhower." 

George  Miller,  president  of  the 
YDC.  .stated,  i  fe  •!  that  the  camp 
us  of  Carolina  is  still  Democratic 
•1  Mvt  there  wa^  such  a  definite 
majority  voting  for  Democrats 
"^-ov.  Hodges  and  Sen.  Ervin." 

Phi  Gamma  Deltas  Names 
^ledge  Class  Officers 

Wa>ne     .Anderson     of     Kinst  'n 

:is  jiain  d  president  of  the  Phi 
Gamma  Delta  pledge  class  in  elec- 
tions earlier  this  week. 

Bob  Furtado  of  Garner  was 
ice  president. 

Other  officers  electad  were  Nick 
Madison    of   Scotland    Neck,   secre- 


Tar  Heels  Go  After 
Upset  Win  O  ver  Vols 
In  An  Away  Game 


and  Kyle  Hayes   polled  452  votes.  ■ 
Sen.  Sam     Ervin     received     1.199 
votes    and     Republican     candidate 
loel  John.son  polled  513. 

B(  th  the  YDC  and  YRC  were 
very  active  in  publicizing  their 
lespeetive  candidat's.  In  an  at- 
tempt to  get  out  the  vote,  the  two 
larrups  held  campaign  meetings. 
Today.  WU.NC  is  the  second  ,  posted  party  publicity,  and  hand- 
most      powerful      non-commereial      'd  out  campaign  buttons.  ' 


1?    Communication       irv-^rca.surer:  and  Wayne  Venters.  I 
University.  '   if  Jacks.mvil'e,  social  chairman.      ' 


SP  Questions 
UP's  Parking 
Lot  Meosure 


By  RAY   LINKER  | 

"Why  set  up  a  committee  to  in- 
vestigate a  committee  that  is  in- 
vestigating?" Student  Party  Chair- 
man Tom  Lambeth  said  yesterday 
ot  a  bill  introduced  into  the  Stu- 
dent  Legislature   this  week. 

The  bill,  introduced  by  Univer- 
sity Party  Chairman  Mike  "Wein- 
«i]Mi.  galled  for  the  setting  up  of 
a  cnmmlfter  by  the  prt.sident  ot 
the  Kttfdent  body  "to  w«rtt  ;eJi|pl<ieKs- 
I>  toward  obtaining  student  paik- 
ing   lots.  ■ 

Lambeth  said  "the  traffic  com- 
mittee which  the  UP  approved 
alonK  with  the  SP  has  been  work- 
ing on  the  matter  for  two  months." 

The  bill  is  an  anti-climax  to  what 
has  already  been  d(mc.  Lambeth 
said. 

Weinman  said  he  didn't  think  the 
committee  set  up  had  done  any- 
thing, actually.  "I  dont  think  they 
are  really  concerned."  he  said. 

The     bill    calls    for    the    use    of 
m:mey     collected,  beginning     this 
past  fall  from  students  for  tiic  re- 
gistration of  automobiles. 
LARGE   A^iOUNT 

Weinman  said  a  large  amount  of 
money  has  been  collected  and  he 
"wants  to  see  immediate  action 
taken." 

He  said  he  thought  the  lots  could 
be   built    now.   this   year. 

"If  the  committee  (the  one  set 
up  previously),  is  doing  something, 
lets    hear   it, 'Weinman   said. 

The  bill  will  come  to  a  vote  at 
Thursdays  meetini;  of  the  legis- 
lature, along  with  two  other  bills 
introducteri   by  Weinman. 

A  bill  passed  unanimously  by 
the  legisla:ure  Thursday  concern- 
ing the  maintenance  of  TV  sets 
ir  dorms  also  sets  up  an  unneces- 
sary committee.  Lambeth  says. 

The  bill  set  up  a  committee  to 
investigate  the  p(Kssil>ility  of  fin- 
ancing the  maintenance  of  men 
and  v.'omen's  dormitory  television 
sets  from  .sources  other  than  the 
individual  dormitory  social  fund." 
A  bill  passed  last  fall,  introduo 

(See  SP  QUESTIONS.  Page  3) 


Board  Becking 
DTH  News  Wire 

The  PuDlications  Board  yester- 
day voted  to  back  the  acquisition 
of  an  international-national  news 
ivire   for   The    Daily   Tar   Heel. 

The  board's  vote  came  after  the 
Student  Legislature  Thursday  re- 
ceived a  ^111  to  appropriate  S400 
to  the  .student  newspaper  for  the 
wire,  an  .Associated  Press  machine 
which  would  bring  in  news  from 
all  over  the  world.  The  legislature 
is  expected  to  act  on  the  bill  next 
Thursday. 

The  Pifblications  Board's  action 
constituted  approval  of  the  idea, 
and  carried  no  legislative  weight. 

The  board  is  made  up  of  edi- 
tors of  Carolina's  .student  publica- 
tions,  facultv  members  and  mem- 


latum  Tries  To  Trip 
Tenn.  With  Passes 

By  LARRY  CHEEK 

,      ti      .■  Special  To  The  Daihj  Ta^  Heel 

K.NOW'n.l.K.  !tnn.  -Witli  lioi)c.s  ol  an  upset  fore- 
imKSt  in  tliriv  minds.  ('.;n<>lin;rs  lav  Hc-c!s  tiike  the  licld  here 
this  aftcvnoon  ni  Shiclds-W  atkins  Siaaiuni  to  do  battle  with 
the  third  vanke<l  team  in  the  nation,  the  rni\crsiiy  of  Ten- 
nessee N'olnnteevs. 

lennesjiee  has  bree/ed  by  live  uni^U  opix.nents  so  far 
this  season  \vitht»iu  even  wcMkin-  up  A  sweat,  and  only  two 

,  _. ^   ;   ..    ■ — - — i^  squads,     Oklahoma     and     Georgia 

!    -^  -    '      i  •"  I  '  T  '  Tech,  are  rated  higher  ir.  iHe  na- 

CaOPldateSTO      '  tional   grid   poUr. 


Have  Board  Ok 

Air  student's'  interested  in  be- 
coining  a  candidate  for  Men's  Hon- 
or Council  iri  this  falls  elections 
must  be  approved  by  the  Bi-Parti- 
san  Selections  Board,  according  to 
a   representative  of  the  board. 

The  board  will  meet  Monday. 
Tuesday,  and  Wednesday  in  the 
Men's  Council  Room  of  C.raham 
Memorial,  he  .stated. 

Prospective  candidates  have 
been  asked  to  contact  Jim  Exum. 
chairm.in.  al  89077  for  an  appoint- 
ment  to  meet   with   the  board. 


Carolitia  geikllemav  and  date 
preparing  to  drive  off  Thvraday 
night  in  nrrotig  car.  Their  oiivi 
car.  id^iiti-cal  to  the  one  viis- 
taJieti,  1IKLS  parked  two  spaces 
airay. 


Dukathon  Race 
To  Be  Staged 
In  Two  Weeks 

Plans  for  the  third  annual 
Dukathon  have  been  begun  here 
by  the  Delta  Upsilon  fraternity. 
The  date  for  the  event  has  been 
set  for  Saturday.  Nov.  17.  at  1:30 
p.m. 

The  Dukathon  is  a  yearly  race 
tiom  in  front  of  the  post  office 
in  Chapel  Hill  to  the  finish  line 
in  front  of  the  po.st  office  in  Dur- 
ham. The  distance  is  approximate- 
ly 11  miles. 

.An  innovation  this  year  in  the 
event  is  the  presentation  of  a 
Dukathon  queen.  There  will  be  a 
eampus-wide  election  for  the  hon 
or  on  Thursday.  Nov.  15.  Entries 
for  the  queen,  who  will  be  crown- 
ed .iu.st  before  the  start  of  the 
race,  are  due  on  or  before  Mon- 
day. 

.\  trophy  will  be  awarded  to  the 
runner  who  finishes  first  and  sur- 
vivor medals  are  to  be  given  to 
al!  who  finish  the  race. 

-Anyone  who  is  interested  in 
running  has  been  requested  to 
attend  a  meeting  in  the  Delta  Up- 
silon House  Thursday  at  8  p.m. 
Those  not  being  able  to  attend 
should    cont!«ct    Ernie    Kemm    at 


Cai«;ina.    uniivi   the    tutelage    of 
new   Coach   Jim   Tatiim.  has  stum- 
\Av.d  through   si.\  games  with  only 
one    win    and    a    tie    to    show    for 
their      efforts.    State.      Oklahoma. 
South    Carolina    and    Georgia    all 
romped   over   the   Carolina^,   while 
Wake  Forest  came  out  with  a  tie. 
Maryland  saved  the  Tar  Heels  from 
drawing   a    blank    by    succumbing, 
34-6. 

The  Vols  whipped  Maryland  by 
almost  the  same  score  last  Satur- 
day. ..-inning  out  34-7.  Other  wins 
on  the  Tennessee  record  were  scor- 
es! at  the  expense  of  .Auburn.  Duke. 
Chattanooua  and  .Alabama.  The 
Vv>ls  dispatched  Duke  with  rela- 
tive ease,  chalking  up  a  33-20  de- 
cision in  Durham. 
SINGLE  WING  POWER 

This  current  Tennessee  team  is 
one  m  the  old  traditi(m  of  single 
winj;  power.  With  sensational  .lohn- 
ny  Majors  leading  the  way  at  tail- 
back, the  Vol  offense  has  rolled 
through,  around  and  over  opp.'ising 
nefenses  with  almost  effortless 
ease. 

Backing  up  .Majors  at  the  impor- 
tant   tailback    slot    is   youthful    Al 
Carter.  Carter  in  ail  likelihood  will 
get  the  starting  nod  thi>  afternoon 
with    Majors   sidelined    because   of 
i  injuries    suffered    in    last      week's 
.Maryland  game.  The  Vol  flash  brui- 
I  sed  s'veial  ribs  in  the  Terp  scrap, 
I  and  is  a  doul)tful  participant  in  the 
I  .iaiiu    toda.v. 

I  Rounding  out  the  starting  back- 
I  'ield  lor  Tennessee  will  be  Tommy 
I  Bronson  at  fullback.  Stockton  Ad- 
kin.*--  at  bbK-kina  back  and  Doug 
■  .\nder>on  at   winyback. 

Up  front,  thi  typically  strong  and 

(See  TAR  HEELS,  Page  4) 


bcrs  from  the  Student  Legislature.  I  the  dU  house. 


Fals  Domino's  Band  Is 
In  Near-Riot  At  Dance 

FAVETTFVILLE.  (.-!'.— A  Negro 
musician  blamed  "thi'  mix  of  the 
beat  and  the  booze"  for  a  near- 
riot  at  a  rock  n'  roll  dance  here 
last  night  which  police  ended  with 
tear  gas.  Several  persons  were  in- 
jured, most  ol  them  not  .seriously 
except  for  two  .soldiers  who  suf- 
fered   knife   wounds. 

The  bandleader.  Fats  Domino, 
and  three  of  the  band  members 
received  minor  cuts  as  they  dodged 
the  tear  gas  by  going  through  a 
window.  A  hospital  here  said 
'scads'  of  persons  got  first  aid 
treatment. 

Police  .said  the  soldiers  were 
George  L.  .Ahumade  and  Roy  E. 
Wiliams.  both  of  Ft  Bragg.  Ahu- 
made suffered  krife  slashes  of  the 

-,  throat      and      Williams,      a  .  stab 

j  wound  in  the  back. 


PA6I  TWO 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HBfL 


SATURDAY    NOVEMBER   3,  'WSt 


The  SP  And  UP  Platforhis 
Maybe  they  Are  Serious 


Eastern  Germany  Revolt  Nearing 


Frank  Wamsley 


Botli  lanipus  political  partit?s 
have  ^<H^d  platforms  this  fall,  (om- 
pared  to  the  run-of-the-mill  plat- 
form '.vhich  promises  everything 
and  is  forgot  ou  election  night. 

liiiih  platforms  reflect  and  ni- 
terest  in.  or  at  least  cognizance  of. 
the  prohlcnis  that  have  l>eset  the 
crinpiis  this  year.  Both  promise  to 
do  something  af>out  those  pVoh- 
len». 

Both  may  not.  but  at  least  they 
are  promising. 

Here  are  the  platforms  that  arc 
iK-ing  used  in  fall  eletticms.  sche- 
duled Nov.    i;>: 

University  Party 

riie  I'niversitv  Patty  sa^s  it  will: 

I.  (loniinue  its  fight  against 
the  towns  two-hour  limit  in  S. 
Columbia  St.  parking. 

•J.  \\'<»rk  to  gain  lower  prices 
in  (ihapel   Hilt  stores. 

•».  Build  3'  student  parking  lot 
this  vear  with  monev  from  student 
autoiiiobilf  registration  fees,  col- 
lected  at    registration    time. 

|.  End  as  soon  as  possible  re- 
strictions on  freshman  ownership 
i»f  automobiles. 

-,.  Make  an  effort  to  get  a  long- 
ei    spring    (Faster)  recess. 

H.  ("ontinue  support  of  an  im- 
limitc'd  absence  system  for  junic^rs 
and  seniors. 

7.  Work  f<»r  a  class-free  week- 
end in  the  spring,  as  well  as  one 
in  the  fail,  when  (larolina  takes  a 
cara\au  weekend  to  watch  the  fcMit- 
b.ill  team  plav  an  awav  game. 

S.  Trv  to  establish  washing  ma- 
chines   i)i   mens  dormitories.       :■■••  • 

<).      M.ilvc  an  effort  to  get  privi- 
leges  loi    student   lunses  compara- 
t»le  '.viih   tlu»se.  f.:ni<&ved  bv  reffiil^u'  , 
coeds.  .; 

Student  Party 

The  Student  Partv,  on  ! the 'odler  '.: 
hand,   wants: 

1.     To  work  toward  parking  lot 
construction     '  t<»     relieve     traffic 
congestion  and  allow  the  eventtial 
removal  o!  rircvt.:it  automobile  rc^-  y 
ulation"^.  ° 

t:.  ■  I  o  work  through  the  execii- 
tivi  branch  of  studeni  government 
(President  Bob  Yoimg)  for  better 
studeiu-merc  ham  relations,  includ- 
ing the  reappraisal  bv  Chapel  Hill 
business  nu*n  of  prevailing  prices 
in    certain    Icnal    stores." 

■;\.  "ID  work  for  the  develop- 
ment of  a  s|>ecific  student  proposal 
for  additicHial  dornutory  space  on 
tlu"  fantpus."' 

|.  A  complete  review  of  lH»ok 
and  suppiv  prices  in  campus  stoies. 

-,.  Vlore  vending  mac'hines  in 
dormitories. 

h.     A  more  liberal  policy  of  pay- 

The  Daily  Tar  Heel 

The  official  student  publicration  of  th« 
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North  Carolina,  where  it  is  published 
daily  except  Monday  and  examinatiot 
and  vacation  periods  and  summer  terms 
Entered  as  second  class  matter  in  the 
nost  office  in  Chapel  Hill,  N.  C,  undei 
the  Act  or  March  8,  1870.  Subscription 
rates:  mailed.  $4  per  year,  S2.50  a  Remes- 
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ter. 

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News  Editor RAY  LINKER 

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Bobbi  Smith. 

BUSINESS  STAFF— Rosa  Moore.  Johnny 
Whitaker,  Dick  Leavitt,  Peter  Alper. 

NEM'S  STAFF— Clarke  Jones,  Nancy 
Hill.  Joan  Moore.  Pringle  Mpkin,  Anne 
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Mary  Alys  Voorhees,  Graham  Snyder, 
Billy  Barnes.  Neil  Bass,  Gary  Nichols, 
Page  Bernstein,  Peg  Humphrey.  Phyllis 
Maultsby. 

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Jimmy  Harper,  Dave  Wibl«,  Charley 
Howson. 

X4.Ji 

Night  Editor Ray  Linker 

Proof  Reader Ben  Taylor 


irrent   of  stiident  workers  in   Uni- 
\eisity-owned  eating  places. 

7.  Presentation  within  the  next 
few  months  of  a  student-originated 
proposal  for  the  developmciu  of  a 
new  student  union. 

What  They  Mean 

In  this  fall's  platforms  there  is 
a  nota'f>le  absence  of  promises  to 
((mstruct  bicvcle  lacks  in  front  of 
classroom  buildings,  to  open  ti»e 
swimming  jjooI  before  final  exam- 
inations and  other  stupid  (biu 
\ote-getting)  planks. 

lioth  parties  show  a  little  more 
maturity  than  usual  in  preseiuing 
their  platforms  to  the  \oiing  en- 
rollment. Bin  there  still  are  knot- 
holes in  the  planks. 

I'niversitv  Party  (Ihairman  Mike 
Weinman,  for  example,  has  sa'id 
"everything  in  mir  platform  cati 
be  accomplished  and.  we  hope, 
before   next  election." 

That  would  be  a  mighty  big 
ho|>e.  because  at  least  three  of  the 
partv's  nine  planks  woidd  require 
the  moving  of  heaven  and  eai  th  in 
order  to  be  effected  by  the  end 
of  the  year. 

Fnding  freshman  atito  restric- 
ticms  would  take  an  act  of  the 
Hoard  erf  Trustees.  The  boaid  put 
the  restrictions  into  effect  only 
last  summer.  It  is  not  very  easy 
to  change  the  boards  mind:  it 
couldn't  be  changed  by  the  end  of 
this  academic  year. 

1  he  I'P's  pl.'vnks  calling  for  a 
class-free  weekend  in  the  spring 
anci  a,  loiiger  .spring  recess  would 
take  at  least  another  year  to  put 
into  operation.  The  Tniversity's 
calendar  committee  alreadv  has 
^irhlk'u  up*  ihe  i;tlendat  for  this  ac»- 
dcmic  year. 

The  Student  Party  promised  to 
"tvork  for* *  Tnahr- things,  a  })hrase 
used  frequently  by  those  engaged 
in  politic^,"btrt-fai^d  td^hmke  too 
many  promises.  Most  of  the  SP's 
plajiks.  like  the  one  calling  for  a 
•student  proposal  for  more  dbrmi- 
itory  space,  are  not  definite  eriough 
for  the  student  voters  comfort. 

Outside  of  the  knotholes,  the 
planks  appear  to  be  well-thought- 
out.  Problems  like  the  .S.  Colum- 
bia St.  parking  situation,  dormitory 
facilities.  downtcMvn  prices,  aiuo- 
mobiles,  book  prices,  a  new  stu- 
dent ut)ion  and  self-help  students' 
pav  scales  are  the  campus'  major 
pioblems  this  year.  They  are  not 
merely  problems;  they  are  serious 
problems. 

The  fact  that  the  Student  and 
I'liiversity  parties  recognised  those 
problems  is  gcx)d  news.  It  indicates 
that  somewhere  within  the  work- 
ings of  the  two  political  parties 
there  exist  brains  that  want  to  do 
sontething  good  about  those  prob- 
lems. If  those  brains  exist,  maybe 
something  will   be  done  this  ye:tr. 

Student  goveinment  appears  to 
be  rimning  very  well,  although  <me 
is  likely  to  conclude  it  is  nmning 
better  than  it  really  is,  when  one 
compares  this  year  with  last  year's 
studem  government  chaos.  F.vcry- 
body,  even  many  of  the  University 
Party  'men.  is  happy  with  what 
President  Bob  Young  iif  doing. 

South  Building  is  sympathetic  to 
the  students'  needs  and  requests, 
far  more  so  than  in  most  compar- 
able  imiversities  across  the  nation. 

The  onlv  fly  in  the  oiiUment  so 
far  is  student  initir-'iive.  Students 
aren't  caring  enough  for  student 
government  to  work  for  it.  The  de- 
bating societies  are  nmaning  about 
lower  membership.  But  they  are 
reinembering  past  years  when 
apathy   was  even   more  evideiu. 

So,  no  matter  which  political 
party  gets  the  majority  in  Caro- 
lin.'"'s  50-seat  legislature,  some  good 
tfioughts  will  hit  the  flcMir— if  the 
solons  remember  their  campaign 
fKomises, 

The  most  the  students  can  do  tf> 
see  that  their  representatives  deal 
with  dormitories,  autos  and  a  stu- 
dent union  build^Df^  is  to  keep  re- 
minding their  representatives  of 
their  promises. 

Maybe  these  platforms  will  be 
left    standing   a    little    while    after 


Much  to  the  relief  of  Soviet  Russia,  developments 
in  the  Mid-East  have  taken  the  Hungarian  and  Pol- 
ish uprisings  from  the  limelight.  That  these  upris- 
ings will  have  their  effect  goes  without  saying.  How 
East  Germany  will  be  affected  is  a  question  of  con- 
siderable importanca. 

The  latest  news  reports  say  that  the  Soviets  have 
ringed  Berlin  with  .Armored  units.  There  is  also  un- 
rest among  students  at  East  Berlin's  Humboldt  Uni- 
versity. Organb.ed  communist  demonstrations  in 
East  Berlin  indicate  thai  the  Soviets  fear  another 
revolt  such  as  occurred   in  June,   1953. 

German  nationalism  is  strong  —perhaps  stronger 
than  that  in  Hungary.  Germans  today  would  lik» 
nothing  better  than  re-unification  and  they  are  pre- 
pared to  go  to  gi-eal  lengths  to  obtain  it.  However, 
it  is  very  doubtful  they  would  be  so  foolish  as  lo 
attempt  a  revolt  in  ihc  face  of  such  preparations. 

That  they  will  eventually  follow  Hungary's  lead  is 
almost  a  certainty.  Refugees  say  that  at  least  90'i 
ot  the  people  in  East  Germany  are  pro-West  but  are 
helpless  to   change   their   form   of  government. 

After  World  War  II  came  to  a  close,  Russia  be- 
gan a  systematic  "robbing"  of  East  German  assets. 
In  1948,  papers  in  the  United  States  were  praising 
their  adept  acquiral  of  war  reparations  in  this  man- 
ner. The  allies  generally  recognized  that  the  Rus- 
sians were  administering  their  occupation  zone  in 
the^most  orderly  fashion.  How  soon  this  theme  was 
to  change. 

The  end  result  of  this  cleaning  out  of  East  Ger- 
man assets  was  lo  leave  that  area  almost  completely 
devoid  of  Industry  and  unable,  even  to  this  day,  to 


persons  is  a  party  informant.  Persons  daring  to 
speak  up  are  soon  denounced  by  the  party  and  from 
then  on  that  person's  political  file  grows. 

Only  the  foolhardy  voice  their  private  convictions 
in  public.  All  too  often  such  persons  receive  callers 
late  at  night  and  disappear  never  to  be  seen  again. 

In  such  an  atmosphere,  the  Soviets  breathe  their 
propaganda  messages.  Enormous  sums  are  spent 
each  year  to  spread  the  Red  doctrines  and  to  block 
western  .propaganda.  Houses  are  decorated  with 
banners.  The  hammer  and  sickle  is  seen  everywhere. 

After  the  uprising  in  1953.  Soviet  Russia  realized 
it  must  do  something  drastic  if  it  was  to  hold  on  to 
East  Germany.  The  great  unre.st  among  the  people 
had  to  be  dealt  with.  Stiff  prison  sentences  were 
handed  out  to  those  who  participated  in  the  up- 
ri.Nings  and  stern  measures  adopted. 

Other  measures  consisted  of  sharper  restrictions 
of  the  East  German  People's  Police,  removal  of  jet 
aircraft  from  the  then  fledgling  East  German  Air 
Force  These  planes  have  never  been  restored  to 
them.  The  army  was  expanded  and  a  drafts  law  push- 
ed through. 

But  the  most  significant  restrictions  were  made 
through  the  communist  party  itself.  Political  orien- 
ta.iCKi  cla.sses  and  political  organizations,  both  for 
workers,  were  expanded  to  an  all  time  high. 

Perhaps  most  important  was  the  development  of 
Workers  Fighting  Groups.  Many  workers  were  pres- 
sured into  joining  the.se  groups  and  participating  in 
weekly  drills,  firing  exercises  and  demonstrations. 
All  of  these  measures  were  taken  to  prevent  or  de- 
crease the  likelihood  of  another  East  German  revolt. 

Should  another  uprising  occur,  these  groups  are 


Shadow  And  Substance 


support  itself.  Prices  there  have  reached  an  un- 
heard-of level.  Even  to  get  basic  commodities  such 
as  potatoes,  the  East  German  must  stand  in  line. 
Butter  is  scarce  and  sells  for  about  $3  per  pound. 

East  German-produced  products  have  a  notorious- 
ly low  quality  yet  the  people  are  prohibited  from 
purchasing  western  goods. 

Yet  it  is  not  primarily  because  of  the.se  economic 
reasons  that  refugees  flee  their  homes  at  the  rate 
of  over  17,000  a  month.  The  West  Berlin  refugee 
camp  at  Marienfelde  is  filled  with  people  who  will 
tell  you  that  they  fled  the  oppression  of  communist 
rule  with  its  fear  and  mental  anguish.  They  h^ve 
stood  over  11  years  of  poverty  but  too  many  have 
reached  their  mental   limit  of  endurance. 

Communism  reaches  into  the  very  homes  in  East 
Germany.   It    is   estimated   that    one   of   every   four 


M»r*"n*«»'*^**'*l*"™^  p«*r< 


under  orders  to  take  certain  actions  to  help  put  down 
the  rebels.  Such  groups  were  not  thought  to  be  nec- 
essary in  Hungary. 

A  great  disadvantage  of  having  these  groups  is 
that  arms  arc  thereby  placed  in  the  hands  of  citi- 
zens. To  be  sure  the  communists  believe  these  work- 
ers to  be  trustworthy  and  perhaps  some  of  them 
are.  However,  it  will  make  it  far  easier  for  the  East 
Germans  to  lay  their  hands  on  weapons  in  the  event 
of  another  uprising. 

Although  the  time  is  not  now  ripe  for  an  East 
German  revolt  look  for  it  to  happen.  East  Germans 
are  dissatisfied  and  unhappy.  They  have  lost  much 
to  Russia  and  gained  nothing  in  return.  They  are 
envious  of  the  prosperity  in  West  Germany  and  en- 
couraged by  successes  in  Poland  and  Hungary.  Look 
to  the  students  for  the  initial  break. 


iRevolt  Fires 
Rrstflamed 
In  E.  Germany 

Christian  Science  Monitor 

In  East  Germany  the  only  re- 
maining total  Stalinist  is  still  in 
power.  Walter  Ulbricht.  Also  in 
East  Germany  are  400,000  Red 
Army  veterans.  But  it  was  in 
East  Germany,  three  years  ago, 
that  the  fires  of  revolt  first 
flamed.  And  beneath  the  surface, 
among  the  East  Germans,  there 
are  flames  just  as  ardent  as  those 
in  Poland  and  Hungary. 

There  must  be  intense  temp- 
tation and  pressure  in  East  Ger- 
many. If.  it  breaks  forth,  what 
will  the  Soviets  do?  What  will 
the  West  Germans  do.  also?  What 
will  the  Western  powers  do?  If 
the  fires  of  rebellion  are  limited 
to  Poland  and  Hungary,  and  if 
national  Communist  regimes  re- 
store authority  and  cooperation 
with  Moscow  there,  then  the  men 
in  the  Kremlin  may  consider  they 
have  weathered   a  serious  crisis. 

But  can  these  flames  possibly 
stop?  Will  not  the  demands  for 
freedom  inevitably  spread? 

Meanwhile,  what  effect  are 
these  events  having  in  the  minds 
and  hearts  of  people  inside  the 
Soviet  Union?  Kow  much  do  they 
know  of  what  has  been  going  on? 
It  can  be  assumed  that  they  know 
a  great  deal.  The  Russians  have 
begun  jamming  the  news  pro- 
grams sent  out  by  the  BBC.  They 
have  permitted  these  programs 
unjammed  since  the  B-K  visit  to 
Britain  last  year,  though  they 
have  continued  to  jam  the  Voi<^ 
of  America  and  the  Voice  of  Free 
Europe. 

The  fact  that  they  are  again 
jamming  BBC  indicates  their  in- 
tense desire  to  keep  the  news 
away    from    the    Soviet    people. 

Boycotter 
Roughs  It  t 

Editor: 

This  here  ruggfed  individualist 
writing  you  has  become  a  ragged 
individualist,  and  1  figure  I  bet- 
ter tell  you  all  about  it,  cause 
you're  to  blame. 

Whei)  you  suggested  a  boycott^ 
of  local  merchants,  I  wasn't  going- 
to  wait  for  everybody  else.  Nop«« 
I  started  my  own  boycott,  ahd;J 
won't  to  tell  you  it's  rough,  real 
rough. 

First.  I  stopped  going  out  with 
Chapel  Hill  girls.  Or  rather.  I 
stopped  using  the  services  of  lo- 
cal dry  cleaners  and  now  look 
so  rumpled  that  local  girls  won't 
look  at  me.  This  was  enough  to 
drive  a  feller  to  drink,  except 
that  of  course  I  refuse  to  buy  lo- 
cal beer  sold  by  them  there  ras- 
cally Chapel  Hill  merchants.  Man, 
I'm  dry. 

What's  more,  if  a  fellow  doesn't 
have  a  car,  it's  hard  to  get  out  of 
town  to  do  your  shopping.  Need- 
less to  say,  I  refuse  to  patronize 
the  local  bus  services  and  taxis, 
and  have  to  hitch  hike  to  get  out 
of  town. 

Eating  at  Lenoir  Hall  three 
times  a  day.  week  in  and  week 
out,  gets  a  bit  rough,  but  you'll 
never  see  me  compromise  and 
patronize  local  eating  places.  No 
sir. 

But  it  ain't  nearly  as  rough  as 
it  would  be  at  Lenoir  Hall  if  the 
whole  student  body  was  as  stupid 
as  I  am. 

L.  Menton. 


Pogo 


lecn  I 


By  Walt  Kelly 


'    NOW  UgT'5  NOT  9i  eo 

PAceTioue-'-youNggc . 

IN  AN  gt-gCTlON'-aUT,  WHV 
U$gM0f?6  f  ONt^y  ONE  MAN 

r^^  ^=^"~^6ugcTga 


WHV  U5g  VHO  MSN  TO  8UN  >i 

poapppice  wHgN  ONE  wi^u  J 

PO  f"'  1T«  k  WASTg  OP  >* 

covNTmy 


1W/  ACSOii  Me^  INOU8  COuNTBy 

weijror  Twg?g  i$  ju$t  045? 

eOQO  AVAN  "'  AkP  Mg  '$  TH£    / 
ONE  ^g  IZUN  fOQ.  OPfCB  "• 

IN  THAT  WAV  we  A^Ak:e  IT  gA$y 

POa  THg  VOTEffe- 
l^gV  PON'T  gVgN 
wAVglO 


LiM  Abner 


By  Al  Capp 


Smeared  Slate 
Scraped  Clean 

David  Mundy 

The  past  few  years  have  provided  an  outstanding 
object  lesson  in  how  a  person  in  public  life  can  be 
smeared,   smeared,   and   smeared   some   more. 

By  "smear"  reference  is  made  to  the  generic 
name  for  spreading  untrue  "information"  for  the 
purpose  of  harming  some  individual  or  institution. 

The  smear  of  this  particular  individual  began 
back  in  1946  when  the  Un-American  Activities  Com- 
mittee, with  Rep.  Nixon  as  a  key  member,  hit  upon 
the  Alger  Hiss  case.  (This  after  Whittaker  Chambers 
had  spent  six  or  seven  years  trying  to  get  some  ad- 
ministration officials  to  take  his  story  of  the  Hiss 
spy  ring  seriously!) 

The  committee  listened  to  Chambers,  and  it  listen- 
ed to  Hiss.  One  was  an  admitted  ex-Communist,  the 
other  a  respected  former  U.  S.  Department  official 
with  impeccable  recommendations,  who  gave  an 
appearance  of  complete  candor  and  cooperation  with 
the  committee. 

Liberal  columnists,  the  ADA,  and  plain,  everyday, 
run-of-the  mill  eggheads  leaped  to  the  defense  of 
the  "slandered"  Hiss.  The  little  man  from  Missouri 
called  the  entire  investigation  a  'red  herring,"  an 
attempt  to  divert  attention  from  congressional  fail- 
ings. There  was  some  indication  that  the  Depart- 
ment of  Justice  was  going  to  indict  Chambers,  and 
not  Hiss. 

Yet  Nixon  pushed  the  investigation,  only  to  see 
Hiss  convicted  in  court,  and  to  earn  for  himself  the 
everlasting  opprobrium  of  the  "intellectuals"  and 
"liberals"  who  bad  defended  Hiss.  This  enmity  of 
the  "egg-heads"  may  indeed  be  the  thing  behind  the 
long,  thorough,  often  imaginative,  smear  of  Mr. 
Nixon. 

The  most  persistent  of  the  smears  on  Mr.  Nixon, 
the  allegation  of  dirty  campaigning,  really  got  un 
der  way  with  the  1950  campaign  for  U.  S.  Senator 
from  California.  This  was  a  wide-open  race  between 
Nixon  the  conservative  and  Helen  Gahagen  Douglas, 
a  radical,  who  supported  the  Truman  program  down 
the  line,  from  Yalta  to  China.  (She  had  however 
voted  against  aid  to  Greece,  Turkey,  or  China,  dur- 
ing their  struggles  against  military  Communist 
threats.) 

She  was  for  the  Brannan  Plan,  the  Truman  health 
plan,  and  all  the  other  "plans"  of  the  short-lived 
"Fair  Deal"  era. 

Perhaps  in  part  because  of  this  contrast  in  the 
candidates,  many  "liberals"  continue  to  smear  Ni.v- 
on  by  saying  that  he  called  Mrs.  Douglas  a  Com- 
munist. There  is  no .  evidence-  that  he  did  so,  al- 
though he  ciid  make  considerable  mention  of  her 
fellow  travelling  voting  record  in  the  House. 

The  biggest  smear  on  Nixon  is  in  regard  to  the 
famous  "Nixon   F*uhd'"   which   is  .sli)!' subjected   to 
so  much  unfavorable  commap.  on  tHe  part  of  the 
Nixon-haters.    The    fund    was  a   post-election  cam- 
paign fund  of  some  $18,000. 
_  As  Wa^ingfton.fo^mnist  happened  to  hear  of  the 
'^  UAii,  asked  Kixon'obout  it;  and  was  referred  to  the 
•  hje^d  of  the  fund  who  gsve  him  an  account  of  it. 
Thei    ^fy.\)ras  sent  out  to  some  eight     hundred 
clients.  It  caused  hardly  a  ripple  until  some  of  the 
"liberal"  newspapers   noticed  it  and  began  head- 
lining the     "Millionaire's  Fund  to  Keep  Nixon  in 
Style." 

The  Democrat  National  Chairman  demanded  Nix- 
on's resignation. 

Immediately  an  audit  of  the  fund  was  made  by  an 
auditing  firm,  and  the  largest  Los  Angles  law  firm 
was  asked  for  an  opinion  on  the  legality  of  the  fund. 

Both  showed  that  it  was  a  legitimate  campaign 
fund.  An  itemized  account  by  the  auditing  firm 
showed  expenditures  for  stationery,  newsletters, 
mailing,  printing  of  speeches,  radio  and  television 
time.  Nixon  received  not  one  cent  from  the  fund 
for  personal  use,  unless  there  be  something  sinister 
behind  a  $2.25  bookkeeping  error.. 

Many  of  these  politicar  expenses  could  have  been 
charged  to  the  taxpayer  as  is  the  congressional  cus^ 
torn.  (Vice  presidential  candidate  Sparkman  had  his 
wife  o^  the  payroll.  Nixon's  wife  worked  for  free.) 

Yet  Democrats  and  "liberals  "  continue  the  smear 
that  Nixon  was  supported  by  a  millionaires'  fund. 
The  greatest  contributor  gave  $1000. 

Shortly  after  this  it  was  disclosed  that  Stevenson, 
as  governor  of  Hlinois.  had  two  such  funds,  one 
which  was  exactly  $85  less  than  the  Nixon  fund.  To 
the  Stevenson  fund  one  contributor  gave  more  than 
$7100,  the  UAW  gave  $2500,  the  Steel  Workers 
$2500,  and  there  was  an  anonymous  item  of  $5000. 

This  fund  was  not  u.sed  for  conUnuing  campaign 
expenses,  but,  as  Stevenson  put  it,  "to  improve  the 
quality  of  public  administration  in  niinois."  The 
public  administrator  most  improved  was  William 
Flanagan.  Stevenson's  publicity  man,  who  received 
$7900. 

The  second  Stevenson  fund,  collected  from  firms 
doing  business  with  the  state,  has  never  been  ex- 
plamed. 

Sort  of  like  Gov.  Sootfs  income  tax  returns. 
(To  be  continued) 

Missouri  Is  Consistant 

St.  Louis  Post  Dispatch 

;'As  Missouri  goes,  so  goes  the  nation."  This 
political  proverb  should  of  course,  refer  to  Maine 
but  we  think  it  is  time  Missiouri  tried  it  on  for  size' 

Since  Maine  just  re-elected  its  democratic  Con- 
gressman, how  Maine  goes  is  of  courrent  interest  to 
the  Democrats.  But  the  fact  is  that  Maine  has  gone 
with  the  nation,  or  vice  versa,  only  about  half  the 
time  since  1904 .... 

But  Missouri— there  is  consistency  for  vou. 
Jfissouri  has  voted  for  the  winner  in  presidential 
contests  since  1904.  No  other  populous  state  can 
make  that  statement.  Only  Illinois,  Ohio  and  Cali- 
fornia among  the  larger  states  come  clo.se.  and 
they  have  missed  at  least  once  in  52  years. 

Missouri,  however,  has  swung  to  the  winning 
side  wtih  Teddy  Roosevelt  in  1904  and  Taft  in  1908, 
over  to  the  Democratic  column  with  Wilson  in  1912 
and  16,  then  reversed  its  field  to  the  Republican 
side  for  a  decade  and  back  to  the  Democrats  and 
the  New-Fair  Deal  for  almost  two  decades,  and 
finally  over  to  the  Republicans  again  with  Mr.  Eis- 
enhower four  years  ago. 


CANOSDATI 

A    compull 
held  for  all] 
chairmen  or 
ty  chairmen 
day  night, 
and  the  coi 
bci  read  by 
tions  Board 
era!  Ellectiod 
buted  to  th^ 

Y-NIOHT  C< 

According  I 
chairman  of| 
on  the  follo\ 
open:  produ^ 
program,  re 
ments.  Anyol 
iziag  talent  [ 
the  prograraj 
application  i| 
Tuesday. 

SweetheaI 

Men's  dorJ 
in  the  Sweel 


Cam{ 
Dano 

The  Camj 
is  sponsor!^ 
Dance,  "Frc 
held  on  No^ 
from  8:30  tc 

Music  for 
will  be  pro^ 
bb.  There  wi 
at  the  timej 
not  playing. 

A   $40   trc 
at   the   danc 
has  bad   the| 
ticipation    ir 
Drive,  and 
ured  on  a  pe| 

Girls    fror 
and  WC  havl 
dance.    Ad  ml 
will  be  $1   p| 


Pharma< 
Names 

Richard 
tive  of  Ri\ 
promoted  t^ 
caJ  Service 
Davis  &  Co| 

Carl  Johr 
dian  sales 
wide   pharr 
ly  announcel 
fective  imml 

Leukhart,] 
University 
veteran,   joil 
sales   repre/ 

The  medil 
under  the 
Swanson.  wi 
concentrate  | 
Durham -Chj 


PATR< 
•    AD^ 


WAXTED- 
for  Thai 
share  exf 
SLan   Ber 
9025. 


DA 

ACI 

1  Coud 
5  Ftu} 
9  Soor 

10  Tot^ 

11  Fete 
12.  Shut 
H  Com! 
16  Allo{ 

for 

17.  Pusa 

18  Alec 

I        liquc 

;  20  Nor« 

21   Micr 

orga^ 
23  Rehf 

fait  hi 
26  Presf 

28  Hig.l[ 
cnt 

29  <i\iic\ 
32  Trj 

(C&114 

25  Far 
anil 
3«  PublJ 
vehit 
38  Born  I 
39.  Raiai 
42  Frovil 
44   Mohi 

dan 
46  Shun) 

47.  Deep] 

48.  Ut« 

( rar«| 
49  Pack  I 

vehic 
DO! 

1  Proct 

2  One-1 

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3  Mem  I 

a 


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n 


SATURDAY,  NOVEMBER  3,  1956 


THE  DAILY   TAR  HElL 


PAGE    THREe 


landing 

can  be 

re. 

generic 
|for  Ihe 
titution. 
began 

?s  Corn- 
lit  upon 
lambers 

)me  ad- 
[he  Hiss 

|t  listen- 
ist.  ihe 
official 
^ave  an 

|on  with 

/eryday, 
fense  of 
Missouri 
^ng,"  an 
lal  faU- 
Depart- 
?rs.  and 

to  see 
liself  the 
\h"  and 
imity  of 
iind  the 
I  of     Mr. 

.  Nixon, 

got  un- 

Senator 

I  between 

)ouglas, 

^m  down 

Ihowever 

)na,  dur- 

imunist 

In  health 

lolt-Iived 

It  in  the 

?ar  Nix- 
a  Com- 
so,  al- 
of  her 

to  the 
lected  to 

of  the 
on    cam- 

ir  of  the 
>d  to  the 
nt  of  it. 
hundred 
le  of  the 
in  head- 
Hxon  in 

ded  Nix- 

de  by  an 
law  firm 
the  fund, 
campaign 
ing  firm 
irsletters, 
elevisitm 
the  fund 
sinister 

ave  been 
onai  cus^ 
had  his 
for  free.) 
he  smear 
es'   fund. 

tevenson, 

inds,  one 

fund.  To 

lore  than 

Workers 

of  S5000. 

campaign 

prove  the 

ois  '    The 

William 

received 


turns. 


ion  ■■    This 
tn  Maine, 
on  for  Fize. 
?ratic  Con- 
interest  to 
le  has  gone 
Jt  half  the 


1 


Covering  the  University  Campus 


CANDIDATES  MEETING 

A  compulsory  meeting  will  be 
held  for  all  candidates  and  party 
chairmen  or  representatives  of  par- 
ty chairmen  at  Gerrard  Hall.  Mon- 
day night.  The  rules  of  cohduct 
and  the  control  of  elections  will 
be  read  by  members  of  the  Elec- 
tions Board  and  copies  of  the  Gen- 
eral Elections  Law  will  be  distri- 
buted to  the  candidates. 

y-nighT  committees 

According  to  Jim  Raugh,  co- 
chairman  of  Y-Night,  membership 
on  the  following  committees  is  still 
open:  production,  talent,  publicity, 
program,  reception  and  arrange- 
ments. Anyone  interested  in  organ- 
izing talent  and  helping  to  plan 
the  program  is  urged  to  fill  out  an 
application  in  the  Y  office  "by  noon 
Tuesday. 

SWEETHEART  CANDIDATES 

.Men's  dorms  entering  canaidates 
in  the  Sweetheart  of  UNC  Dorms 


Campus  Chest 
Dance  Nov.  16 

The  Campus  Chest  organization 
is  sponsoring  a  Campus  Chest 
Dance.  "Frost  Time  Frolic,"  to  be 
held  on  Nov.  16  in  Woollen  Gym 
from  8:30  to  11:30  p.m. 

Music  for  the  Frost  Time  Frolic 
will  be  provided  by  Bruno's  Com- 
bo. There  will  be  intermission  acts 
at  the  times  when  the  combo  is 
not  playing. 

A  $40  trophy  will  be   awarded 
at   the  dance  to  the   dorm  which' 
has  -had  the  best  fter  capita  par- 1 
ticipation    in    the    Campus    Chest 
Drive,  and  the  award  will  be  fig- 1 
ured  on  a  percentage  basis. 

Girls  from  Meredith.  Averett, 
and  WC  have  been  invited  to  the 
dance.  Admission  for  the  event 
will  be  $1  per  couple. 


Contest  must  turn  in  eight  by  ten 
glossy  pJiotographs  of  their  entries 
by  Monday.  The  Sweetheart  will  be 
crowned  at  the  Nov.  14  mieeting 
of  the  IDC. 

STUDENT  CHURCH   SUPPER 

Members  of  the  United  Student 
Fellowship  have  been  invited  to  be 
guests  of  the  United  Congregation- 
al Christian  Church  at  a  covered 
dish  gupper  at  the  new  Parish 
House  at  6  p.  m.  Sunday. 

PHILOSOPHY   LECTURE 

The  Depts.  of  Philosophy  at 
UNC  and  Didce  will  jointly  spon- 
sor a  lecture  by  P)>ofessor  H.  L..  A. 
Hart  of  University  College,  Ox- 
ford at  4  p.m.  Monday  in  Graham 
Memorial's  Woodhouse  Conference 
■  room.  Professor  Hart's  topic  will 
'  be  "Knowledge  and  Action." 

FUTURE  TEACHERS 

The  Frank  Porter  Graham  Chap- 
ter of  Future  Teachers  will  meet 
at  8  p.m.  Monday  night  in  the  Cur- 
riculum Lab  of  Peabody  Hall.  A 
panel  of  high  school  students  from 
Southern  High  in  Durham  will  con- 
duct a  panel  discussion.  All  per- 
sons desiring  membership  in  the 
iVCEA  and  NEA  have  been  asked  to 
see  Dr.  Tarbet,  Mrs.  Ebert  or  any 
F.T.A.  officer  before  Monday. 

PLEDGE  OFFICERS 
The  pledge  officers  of  Chi  Ome- 


ga Sorority  were  elected  on  Oct- 
ober 30.  They  are  president,  Mar- 
garet Sanders  from  Charlotte; 
treasurer,  Jane  Johnson  from  Gaf- 
fney,  S.  C;  and  social  chairman, 
Margaret  Brunson  from  Albemar- 
le. 

GMAB  COMBO 

GMAB  will  sponsor  a  combo  in 
the  Rendezvous  Room  of  Graliam  , 
Memorial  tonight  from  8:00  to  11: 
00. 

Bob  Olson  and  the  Five  Dimen- 
sions wil  provide  music  for  the 
evening.  There  is  no  charge  for 
the  dance,  and  everyone  has  been 
invited. 

WUNC 

Following  is  a  listing  of  pro- 
grams today  from  the  University's 
FM  radio  station: 

7:00     Paris  Star  Time 
7:30     Showtime 
8:00     This   is  Jazz 
9:00    Horizons  in  Music 
10:00     News 

10:15    Evening  Master  work 
11:33     Sign   Off 

^UNC-TV 

6:30  Land  to  be  Free 

7:00  Report    to    People 

7:30  Frontiers  of  Health 

8:00  Renaissance  on  TV 

8:30  American  Politics 

9:00  Sign  Off 


High  School  FTA  Will 
Hold  Meeting  Today 


Di  Passes  Resolution 
To  Praise  Roosevelts 


Pharmaceuticaf  Firm 
Names  Local  Manager 

Richard  H.  Leukhart,  37,  a  na- 
tive of  Riverside,  IlL,  has  been 
promoted  to  the  Hospital  Medi- 
cal Service  Division  of  Parke, 
Davis  &  Company. 

Carl  Johnson,  U.  S.  and  Cana- 
dian sales  manager  for  the  world- 
wide pharmaceutical  firm,  recent- 
ly announced  the  appointment,  ef- 
fective immediately. 

Leukhart,  a  graduate  of  Purdue 
University  and  a  World  Wat  11 
veteran,  joined  Parke-Davis  as  a 
sales   representative   in   1953. 

The  medical  service  division  is 
under  the  direction  of  Donald  A. 
Swanson,  who  said  Leukhart  would 
concentrate  his  activities  in  the 
Durham-Chapel  Hill  areas. 


A  resolution  praising  and  ex- 
tolliiig  the  virtues  pf  Franklin 
Roosevelt  and  his  wife,  Eleanor, 
received  a  favorable  vote,  8-6. 
from  the  Dialectic  Senate  this 
week. 

Senator  Joel  Fleishman,  author 
of  the  bill,  introduced  it  and 
claimed  Roosevelt  was  attacked  toy; 
persons  who  felt  he  had  httrt* 
them  personally.  He  stated,  along 
with  other  points,  that  Roosevelt 
lobke'd  towards  the  future  rather 
than  the  past  as  Hoover  had  been 
doing,       ,..,„.„,,;.  ,     ,. 


PATRONIZl  YOtfft 
•    AOVERTISERS   • 


CLASSIFIEDS 


WANTED— RIDE  TO  KENTUCKY 
for  Thanksgiving  vacation.  Will 
share  expenses  and  driving.  Call 
Stan  Bershaw,  Pilam  House,  8- 
9025. 


State's  Taxes 
Ahead  Of  '55 

RALEIGH,  (;P}— North  Carolina 
tax  collections  continue  to  nm 
ahead  ot  last  year,  with  $10,832,- 
474  pouring  into  the  General  Fund 
during  October. 

Revenue  Commissioner  Eugene 
Shaw  gave  the  figure  today  in  his 
monthly  report  to  Gov.  Hodges. 
Shaw  said  the  amount  was  a  $447,- 
788  increase  over  October,  1955. 

The  first  four  months  of  the 
fiscal  year  have  brought  $55,228,- 
408  into  the  general  fund,  Shaw 
said.  The  amount  is  $4,340,990  over 
the  same  period  last  year. 

Increases  were  noted  during  Oc- 
tober for  all  taxes  going  into  the 
general  fund  with  the  exception  of 
inheritance,  privilege  and  gift 
taxes.  Show  pointed  out.  For  the 
fiscal  year,  only  gift,  freight  car 
line  and  insurance  taxes  are  be- 
,  low  last  year's  levels,  he  added. 


Senator  Nancy  Rothschild  called 
Roosevelt  a  man  of  dignity,  stat- 
ure, and  insight. 

Claiming  that  had  Roosevelt 
lived  there  would  be  no  cold  war, 
Senator  Dave  Mundy  said  Roose- 
velt' Would  have  pursued  friendly 
relations  with   the  Russians. 

^GiJest  Gary  Greer  wanted  the 
Democrats  to  return  to  Jefferson- 
ian  principles  from  which  Roose- 
velt had  diverged. 

Senator  Norman  Smith  called 
the  Roosevelt  era  "the  blackest 
in  American  history."  He  said  the 
Communists  were  welcomed  in  the 
Democratic  party. 

Expressing  the  bt^lief  that  Roose- 
velt "lifted  us  out  of  dispair  to 
the  heights  of  prosperity,"  Senator 
Dave  Reid  said  Roosevelt  always 
acted  in  the  interest  of  the  people. 

President  Stan  Shaw,  turning 
the  chair  over  to  Pat  Adams,  pres- 
ident pro  tern,  called  the  former 
U.  S.  President  "America's  own 
first  tyrant."  He  said  Roosevelt 
hoped,  skipped  and  jumped  from 
insanity  to  idiocy. 


DAILY    CROSSWORD 


ACEOSa 

l.Coofar 
S.  FelinM 
9.  Soon 

10.  To  touch 

11.  Fetch 

12.  Shut  out 
14.  Commotion 
1«.  A'Uowftncc 

for  we%ht 

17.  PUM 

18.  Alcoholic 
liquor 

70.  NoTK  god 
21:  Uieto- 

oii:ahiim 
23  Relif  ious 

fatth 
2S.  PiWtnt  tim* 
2t.filf}i. 

cr^^cy  hill 
2r^ttieli«r 
32  TrUh 

(coUOq  ) 
3S  Fanifi 

animal 
3«  Public 

vehiek 

38.  Bom 

39.  lUiae 
42.  Frowa 

44.  Mohatkihe< 
dan  Bibit 

46.  Shun 

47.  Deep  mud 

48.  Utenaiy 
(rare) 

4»  Pack  away 
50  Snow 
vehicle 
DOWN 

1  Procesaion 

2  One-homed 
animals 

3  Member  of 

ft  nunMUzir 


:n      J  <  ^   Tn 


;'-:j       'J:i  ' 
4:-     ifr'-^Jd"' 


Wrath  25.  Porch 

Bounder  furni. 

Aid  turc 

Muaical        •  27.  Spider's 

instrument  nest 

Die  of  29.  Group  of 

hunger  kindred 

Boast  people 

Underwater  30.  Truisms 

rocks  31.  Floor 

Small  cask  covering 

Encounc-  33.  Planted    \***t»*mr'»  Amitm 

ercd  34.  In  this  place 

YttUj  87.  TwUts  tl.  Edible 

aayteg  «0.  Partly  fused         rootatock 

Tennis  compound        43.  Elliptical 

iatroke  (Ofcramtcs)     45.  Fresh 


Fulbright  Scholarship 
Deadline  Was  Thursday 

The  application  period  for  Ful- 
bright grants  to  study  abroad  dur- 
ing  1957-58  ended   Thursday. 

The  Fulbright  awards  are  made 
on  a  National  competitive  basis. 
The  largest  number  of  grants  ever 
to  be  received  by  UNC  students 
were  awarded  last  year  to  nine 
recipients  who  began  their  studies 
this  fall.  Fe»  are  in  France,  three 
in  England,  «Be  in  India  and  one 
in  DenmaHc. 

Full  information  about  future 
Fulbright  grants,  including  the 
countries  in  which  they  are  avail- 
able, may  be  secured  from  the 
Chairman  of  the  local  Fulbright 
Committee,  Dr.  Sturgis  E.  Leavitt. 


The  fall  convention  of  the  High 
School  Future  Teacher  Clubs  of 
North  Carolina  will  be  held  here 
today  in   Memorial  Hall. 

Club  president,  Miss  Clyde  Tem- 
pleton  of  Olin,  N.  C.  will  preside 
over  the  meetings. 

The  sesions  begin  at  9:45  when 
Dean  Arnold  Perry  of  the  UNC 
Sthool  of  Education  will  welcome 
the  group.  Carol  Lucas.  1955-56 
president  of  the  Dept.  of  Future 
Teachers  of  The  North  Carolina 
Education  Asso.  will  talk  on  "What 
the  Future  Teachers  Asso.  Has 
Meant  to   Me. " 

A  demonstration  of  a  Future 
Teachers  Club  in  action  and  a  bus- 
iness session  will  end  the  morning 
session. 

Members  of  the  Frank  Porter 
Graham  FTC  wil  be  available  from 
noon  until  two  o'clock  to  provide 


tours  for  those  who  are  interested 
in  seeing  the  UNC  campus. 

Afternoon  sessions  will  include 
group  discussions  from  two  until 
three  followed  by- the  closing  busi- 
ness session. 

Of  the  more  than  4,500  mem- 
bers of  the  FTC,  approximately  1, 
000  are  expected  to  attend  the 
meetings  here. 

The  FTC  is  a  pre-profesional  and 
exploratory  structure  through 
which  a  state  or  community  may 
develop  a  strong  selective  teacher 
recruitment  program.  The  aim  of 
the  club  is  to  interest  the  members 
in  the  organization  of  the  N.  C. 
schools,  and  current  activities  of 
the  schools.  The  club  also  seeks  to 
build  qualities  of  personality  and 
character. 

Miss  Helen  Wells,  Field  Secre- 
lary  of  the  NCEA  is  coordinator  of 
the  Future  Teacher  Clubs. 


Caravan  Sales   Running  High 


Sales  of  train  tickets  for  the 
caravan  trip  to  Virginia  are  run- 
ning high,  according  to  caravan 
committee  chairman  Harry  House. 

He  stated  that  students  seem 
to  like  the  idea  of  traveling  to 
Charlottesvile  on  the  train  better 
than  on  the  bus. 

The  caravan  train  will  be  avai- 
lable for  students  to  join  until  the 
weekend,  House  said,  adding  that 
the  UNC  cheerleaders  and  band 
will   also  be  on  the  train. 

The  "Caravan  Special"  will  leave 
Durham  Friday  at  6:55  p.  m.  and 
arrive  in  Charlottesville  at  4  a.m.. 
Saturday,  with  an  hour  and  a  half 
layover  in  .Greensboro  Friday  night 
for  supper  and  to  pick  up  Women's 
College  students  making  the  trip. 
The    train  will   leave    Charlottes- 


XHticdl  time' 
Hcklges  Says 

WHITE  SULPHUR  SPRINGS, 
W.  Va.,  Nov.  2  (iP)— Despite  rapid- 
advance,  many  economists  believe 
the  South  "now  faces  an  especial- 
ly critical  time,"  Gov.  Luther 
lodges  of  North  Carolina  declar- 
ed )kere  tonight. 

"We  ^ave  started  late  industrial- 
ly wmI  we  must  strive  even  harder 
to  *keep  up  with  the  rest  of  the 
United  States,"  Hodg?s  said  in  a 
speech  prepared  for  delivery  at 
The  annual  meeting  of  th^  South- 
ern Furniture  Manufacturers  Assn. 

"The  hard  fact  remains  that,  in 
persMkal  tenns  of  daily  living,  on 
every  measure  the  average  South- 
erner receives  less  than  the  nation- 
al avrage,"  the  North  Carolina 
chief  executive  asserted. 


Health  Groyp- 
To  Meet  Sat 

The  seventh  annual  me*t«ng  of 
the  North  Carolina  Assn.  of  Health 
Educators  will  be  held  at  the  Uni- 
versity tomorrow. 

Attending  the  meeting,  <»cheduled 
to  begin  at  9  a.m.  and  end  at  4 
p.m.,  will  be  approximately  30 
health  educators  from  throrfghout 
the  state.  %»*' 

The  meeting  will  be  held  in  the 
Health  Education  Workshop  Build- 
ing. 

Among  the  speakers  will  be  Dr. 
Lucy  Morgan  of  the  UNC  School 
of  Public  Health  and  Mrs.  L.  L. 
Bing  Miller  of  the  North  Carolina 
Legislative  Council  in  Raleigh. 


ville  Sunday  morning  at  1:00  and 
will  arrive  in  Durham  at  7:30. 

Plans  are  being  made  in  Vir- 
ginia to  hold  an  after-the-game 
dance  in  the  Madison  Hall  student 
union  building,  to  which  UNC  stu- 
dents wil  be  invited. 

Athletic  officials  have  asked 
that  all  students  planning  to  attend 
the  game  get  their  tickets  early. 
Tickets  tJiat  have  not  been  sold  by 
Tuesday  night  will  be  returned  to 
Virginia,  they  said. 


SP  QUESTIONS 

(Continued  from  Page  1) 
ed  by  Lambeth,  set  things  in  mo- 
tion to  investigate  the  possibility  of 
.igetting  $500  from  vending  machine 
profits  to  "maintain  and  repair 
dormitory  television  sets  and  wash- 
ing machines." 

Student  body  President  Bob  | 
Young  reported  yesterday  the  com-  i 
mittee  investigating  would  have  a  : 
report    within    two    weeks. 

Weinman  said  he  did  not  have  | 
anything  to  do  with  the  measure  j 
passed.  I 

D  T  H  WIRE  I 

Another  measure  introduced  by  | 
Weinman  would  appropriate  $400 
to  The  Daily  Tar  Heel  "to  acquire 
the  services  of  The  Associated 
Press'  national  and  international 
news  service." 

Lambeth  said  he  felt  the  heads 
of  all  campus  organizations  would 
have  to  be  contacted  and  if  they 
felt  the  campus  news  was  being 
adequately  covered  he  could  see 
no  reason  why  the  wire  should  not  ' 
be  put  in. 

There  should  be  some  way  to  as- 
certain if  the  majority  of  students 
want  it,  Lambeth  said.  i 

"The  bill  is  one  of  the  best  ever 
introduced  in  the  legislature," 
Weinman  said.  He  said  the  campus 
news  would  not  suffer  and  added  ! 
the  world  situation  being  what  it 
is,  the  campus  certainly  ought  to 
have  the  wire. 

Weinman  said  he  has  had  many 
people  approach  him  concerning 
the  third  bill  introduced  by  him 
Thursday.  The  measure  called  for 
the  establishment  of  a  committee 
to  look  into  the  posibility  of  "al- 
tering the  site  of  the  Men's  Honor 
Council  meetings"  from  their  pres- 
ent Graham  Memorial  site. 

Most  people  he  has  talked  too, 
Weinman  said,  thought  the  bill  was 
one  of  the  best  evei*  brought  before 
the  body. 


Urban  Planning  Consultant  To 
Speak  Here  Tomorrow  Night 


Carl  Feiss,  city  planning  and 
urban  renewal  consultant,  will 
give  an  address  on  "English  New 
Towns"  at  7:30  p.m.  Sunday  in 
the  Morehead  Faculty  Lounge. 

The  address,  open  to  the  public, 
will  be  illustrated  by  slides  of 
Einglish  new  towns,  and  conditions 
in  other. countries. 


Feiss  is*president  of  the  Ameri- 
can Planning  and  Civil  Associa- 
tion. He  is  a  former  staff  adviser 
to  the  President's  Committee  on 
Housing  Policies  and  Programs. 

His  address  is  being  sponsored 
by  the  Planner's  Forum,  the  stu- 
dent organization  of  the  Depart- 
ment of  City  and  Regional  Plan- 
ning. 


CARL   FEISS 

speaks  here  tcnnorrow 


Y  NEWS 

Miss  Nancy  Suttlc  of  Charlotte 
and  Jerry  Gunter  of  Gastonia  were 
chosen  as  the  first  co-editors  of 
the  YW-YMCA  newspaper.  The 
new  ,  paper,  still  unnamed,  will 
take  the  lace  of  the  separate  Y 
publication.s.  The  Ek;ho  and  The 
Digest. 


Athletic  Women  Meet 
In  Winston-Salem 

The  annual  meeting  of  the 
American  Federation  of  College 
Women  is  being  held  at  Salem 
College,  Winston-Salem,  this  week- 
end. ' 

Representatives  of  all  the  col- 
lege womcli's  athletic  associations 
of  the  state;  ^r^  meeting  to  discuss 
problem^;  confronting  their  organ- 
Izatibhs.  A  panel  will  duscuss, 
"Broaden  .the  Plana  to  Include  all 
the  Fans."  Miss  Ellen  Griffin,  of 
the  Women's  College  faculty,  will 
give  the  keynote  address. 


UNC  Librarian  Talks 
To  High  School  Meet 

School  librarians  attending  a 
a  North  Carolina  High  School  Li- 
brary Assn.  meeting  here  yester- 
day heard  a  discussion  by  Miss 
Margaret  E.  Kalp  of  the  UNC 
School  of  Library  Science. 

Miss  Kalp  discussed  current  ac- 
tivities with  student  assistants  in 
high  school  libraries  in  North 
Carolina. 

Present  at  the  district  meeting 
were  the  high  school  student  li- 
brary assistants  who  had  come 
with  their  librarians. 


Will  Retire 
January  1, 
Shaw  Says 

RALEIGH,  OP)— Revenue  Com- 
missioner Eugene  Show  announced 
today  he  will  step  down  at  the 
end  of  his  present  term  on  Jan- 
uary 1.  ' 

Shaw,  who  has  served  as  the 
state's  chief  tax  collector  since 
1949,  made  public  a  let^r  to  Gov- 
ernor Hodges  in  which  he  stated 
he  plans  to  resume  the  private 
practice  of  law  in  Greensboro. 

Shaw  assembled  members  of 
the  Revenue  Department  staff  in 
his  office  yesterday  afternoon  to 
tell  them  of  his  plans. 

Shaw,  57,  was  appointed  com- 
missioner of  Revenue  in  1949  by 
Gov.  W^  Kerr  Scott  and  reappoint- 
ed in  June,  1953,  by  Governor  Wil- 
liam B.  Umstead. 

Governor  Hodges  recently  prais- 
ed Shaw  for  the  way  he  has  con- 
ducted his  office. 

Shaw  indicated  he  has  planned 
for  some  time  to  step  down  at  the 
end  of  his  present  term.  He  said 
he  rented  his  old  law  offices  in 
Greensboro  on  June  1. 


IN  ANSWER  TO  A  LONG  STANDING  NEED  FOR  A  PLEASANT 
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OPENING  Of  The 

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•  Ideal  For  Small  Social  Functions 

•  Two  Additional  Dining  Rooms  For  Coupi«s 

FOR  RESERVATIONS  CALL  83141  AFTER  4  P.  M. 


Come  Browsing  Today 


New  Fall  Bargains— Bushe4s  of  New  stuff  in  the 
Old  Book  Corner 

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:^A9I  FOUR 


THI  DAILY  'Tkk  HilL 


SATURDAY,  NOVEMBER  3,  T7SS 


Tar    Babies    Play   Virginia    Today 


Hy  JIM  hArpir 

The  Carolina  freshman  football 
team  goes  against  th«  Virginia 
yearlings  today  in  Hoanoke  in  the 
third  outing  for  the  Tar  Baby 
team. 

The  Tar  Babies  will  be  looking 
ior  their  second  win  of  the  sea- 
son'. 
KNOXVILLE,  TENN. — It's  Indian  Summer  here  in  the  beautiful        Coach     Fred   Tullai     yesterday 
state  of  Tennessee.  When  the  Carolina  Tar  Heels  stepped  off  their  '  "^med  the  starting  Uneup  for  the 
.     ,,         •,.      •        A       ^     J       ^u      r       J  xi.  1         game.  At  the  ends  will  be  Don  Stal- 

charter  plane  at  the  KnoxviUe  airport  yesterday,  they  found  themselves    f^^^  ^^^  ^^  j,^^.^^.^  ^j^^  ^^^^^^ 

will  be  Jim  Jenrett  and  Mike  Mc- 


in  a  land  of  sunshine  and  flaming  fall  colors.  As  far  as  the  eye  can 
see  there  is  only  a  mountainous  wtinderland  of  river,  lake  and  lux- 
urious autunm  foliage. 

Knoxvill*  is  a  city  of  iip%  and  downs.  The  main  buildings  of  th« 
University  of  Tennesse*  are  located  on  top  of  a  high  hill,  while  the 
rest  of  the  college  is  scattered  around  with  reckless  ebandon  ovor 
the  rolling  terrain. 

Despite  the'  grandeur  of  Knoxville  in  the  fall,  we  didn't  find  the 


Tennessee  campus  to  be  quite  as  lovely  and  breathtaking  as  Chapel  i  son  Lowe. 
Hill.  And  Shields-Watkins  Field,  home  of  the  football  Vols,  can't  be- 
gin to  compare  with  Kenan  among  the  pines. 

Contrary  to  what  you  may  have  been  led  to  believe,  there  is  « 
football  game  hero  today.  When  kickoff  time  rolls  around  a?  2  p.m. 
this  afternoon,  it  will  bo  strictly  business.  The  beauty  of  the  country- 
side will  become  completely  secondary  to  the  actions  of  22  men  on 
a  football  field. 

Carolina  and  Tennessee  should  stage  a  real  donnybrook.  Hopes 
are  high  in  Tar  Heel  hearts  for  an  upset  over  the  highly  ranked  Vols, 
while  Tennessee  fans  and  students  are  wishing  just  as  fervently  fw  f 
vvin  to  celebrate  homecoming  day.  The  Tar  Heels  are  in  good  shape 
both  mentally  and  physically,  and  this  factor,  along  with  some  shrewd 
strategy  by  the  old  tactician.  Jim  Tatum,  could  play  a  big  part  in  the 
cutcome  of  today's  scrap. 

Homecoming  activities  art  in  full  swing  on  the  Tennessoo  cam- 
pus. Sororities  and  ffatemities  are  busy  preparing  colorful  floats 
and  exhibits  for  the  festivities,  and  most  of  these  works  of  art  fea- 
ture slogans  and  themes  such  •*  "Tumble  Tatum's  Tar  Heels." 


Dade.  Slated  for  the  guard  slots 
f  re  Ellis  Woolridge  and  Fred  Mue- 
ller. The  center  post  will  be  man- 
ned by  Jim  Davis. 

In  the  backfield  Tullai  will  have 
as  halfbacks,  Cornell  Johnson  and 
Wade  Smith.  Jim  Stevens  will  oc- 
cupy the  fullback  spot,  and  once 
again,  the  quarterback  will  be  Nel- 


Backing  up  Lowe  in  the  signal 
calling  departm«nt  will  be  John 
Cummings  who  started  at  quarter- 
oack  in  thp  Maryland  game,  the 
Tar  Babies    last  contest. 

Another  squad  member  certain 
to  see  much  action  is  halfback 
Dave  Leifler  who  played  a  top- 
notch  game  against  Maryland. 

John  Stun  da,  an  early  season 
starter  at  end,  is  back  with  the 
squad  after  sitting  out  the  Terp 
tilt  with  an  injured  knee,  "nillai 
said  that  Stunda  has  regained  top 
form  and  will  probably  see  much 
action  against  the  Cavaliers. 


Harriers  Meet  Tennessee  In  Knoxville  Today 
Murphy  Offers  Stiff  Challenge  To  Jim  Beatty 


KNOXVILLE,  Tenn.  —  Caro- 
lina's cross-countr>'  team  steps 
outside  the  Atlantic  Coast  Con- 
ference for  the  first  and  only 
time  this  season  today  when  it 
tangles  with  the  Uiiversitv  of 
Tennessee  harriers  here  this 
morning. 

For  the  once-beaten  Tar  Heels 
and  their  ace  Jim  Beatty,  it 
will  be  a  stiff  challenge.  The  Vols 
have  their  strongest  team  in 
years,  and  in  Ed  Murphy,  have 


a  babble  distance  ^  runner  who 
sboiAd  give  Beattj-  a  battle  roy- 
al   for    individual    honors. 

Murphy,  injured  for  most  of 
last  season,  placed  sixth  in  the 
1,500  meter  Olympic  tryo«il5. 
and  in  addition,  has  recorded  a 
time  of  4:10  for  the  mik. 

Last  year  the  Tar  Heels  raced 
to  a  19-39  win  over  the  Vols  in 
Chapel  Hill  as  Murphy  could  do 
no  better  than  4th  behind  UNC 
runners  Beatty,  Bob  Banlen  and 
Glen  Nanney.  Barden  and  Nan- 
ney  have  since  graduated. 


The  Tar  Heel  harriers,  always 
slow  starters,  have  been  coming 
around  rapidly  since  tlieir  loss 
to  Maryland  and  should  be  at 
peak  strength  this  morning. 
^Beatty  has  been  troubled  by  a 
slight  cold  this  week,  but  is  ex- 
pected to  be  ready  to  go. 

Chief  Tar  Heel  threats  in  ad- 
dition to  Beatty  are  junior 
Everett  Whatley  and  sophomore 
Dave  Scurlock.  Whatley  hit  hia 
peak  of  the  season  in  the  State 
meet  last  week  as  he  finished 
third  behind  Beatty   and  Wolf- 


packer  Mike  Shea.  Scurlock, 
rangy  lad  from  Greensboro  who 
is  considered  one  of  Carolina's 
greatest  track  prospects  in  years, 
has  been  another  standby  with 
consistently  high  finishes  in 
every  race. 

Supporting  the  top  three  will 
be  Ben  Williams,  dependable 
veteran  who  specializes  in  the 
shorter  distances;  Howard  Kahn, 
co-captain  Marion  Griffin,  Per- 
rin  Henderson  and  Doug  Hen- 
derson. 


Gamtcocks  Meet  Furman 
At  South  Carolina  Today  | 


Carolina  students  are  few  and  far  between,  but  at  least  one  small 


Bus  Will  Take 
Students  To 
Rod-Gun  Event 

The  co-recreational  Rod  ahd 
Gun  Day  which  was  postponed  be- 
cause of  inclement  weather  TTiuts- 
day,  will  be  held  Tuesday  at  the 
Durham  Wildlife  Club  Area  starb: 
ing  at  2  p.m. 

The  intramural  department  has 
seciired  a  bus  and  will  furnish 
transportation  to  the  Wildlife  Club 
Area  for  the  entrants  who  do  not 
have  transportation.  The  bus  will 
leave  fr6m  in  front  of  Woollen 
Gym  at  1:45  p.m.  and  will  get  the 
contestants  there  in  plenty  of  time 
to  compete.  The  bus  will  return 
at  the  completion  of  the  meet. 

Students  who  wish  to  watch  the 


%ht  tarpaulin  i^^eiting  ovaty  i^ch.  Widently.lhe  nains 

gone.  *♦'  '***'  \ 


ery,    bait    casting,    trap    shooting. 


GREENVILLE,  SC,  0^— Heavi- 
ly favored  South  Carolina  meets 

contingent  of  lojal  supporters  will  be  in  the  stands.  The  Carolina  cross-  i  ^[""""'LSr  /^'S^^^"  ^^  t"/"* 
rounto'  team  is  scheduled  to  run  the  Tennessee  Harriers  here  this!  l\^''°^^  ILTT  ♦  r°'' 
morning,  and  Coach  Dale  Ranson  and  his  boys  will  stay  over  for  the  '  "i^^^Vo^K  n  i??      f 

grid  battle  this  afternoon  f*^^""    *°!'^!»«"    competition    far 

*  i  three  renuining  games. 

Although  the  skie,  were  blue  with  no  trace  of  rain  in  sight,  tlio  ^^.^^  ^^^^  ^,^^^^  Furham,  although 

Maying  fiold   was  l,attened   down  tight  as  a^drur^  wth  a  wotor-  ,jy  ^^^  ^^^^^     ^^     ^^^ 

*"^*  **"**^i:ohfertBce^  Udder,    has    been     a 
worthy  opponent  for  South  Caro- 
Cuff  Notes:  '*"*•  Th®  Gamecocks  lead  the  se- 

X ..  The  plane  ride  out  v.  as  almost  monotonously  smooth,  and  the  host- 1  ries  21-17,  with  one  tie  since  they 
esses?  Just  about, worth  the  trip.  ,  .Only  one  sports  writer  from  North  \  first  met  io  199S,  South  Carolina 
laroUna  made  the  trip  with  ,thc  team  (this  excludes  j^s).  .  .He  Mfas  i  trailed  |n  the  rivalry  until  it.^t«j|V 
Larry  Karl  of  The  Durham  Morning  Herald.  .  .On  hand  as  always  were  ed  a  six-year  victory  string  in 
Bay  Reeve  and  Bill  Curry  of  Tobacco  Sports  Network.  .  .Squad  mem- 1  1950.  •  (      The   inclement  weather  of  this 

bers  were  decked  out  in  Carolina  Biuc' Stetsons,  but  the  more  cuti-  !      I4}  39     previous     meetings     no  .  week  failed  to  dampen- thc<  lleter- 
;$eryative  coaching  staff  stu<^  to  the.j-c^uiar  hnands.  .  .Knoxville  re-!  South   Carolina  team  hi(t  iseoitd   ntihatioQ  of  Coach  Marvin  Allen's 
I  orters  and  photographers  were,  on  hand  to  greet  the  Tar  Heels  at  the  {  more  than  27  points  ag^iii^  th)6 
i-irport...  .Coach  Tatum  was  a  pppuliir.  subject  for  the  flash  bulb  snapn  ;  jflurricane.  Seyen  tiipea  tJieiy jre«^ 

PCTS.  .'.-.:         },        T.-.y.i   L-.'-.Vi.:V--j':     .  :.u-..   .;;;  i    .•  Cd  that  figUTc!  ^      y,   '•    ■.     ■    •    J     :v. 


Ceremony 
Puts  Torch 
On  Its  Way 

ATHENS,  W—The  Olympic  torch 
was  kindled  in  accordance  with 
ancient  ritual  yesterday  on  Mt. 
OUmpus,  and  started  on  its  12,- 
OQO-mile  trip  to  Melbourne,  where 
the  games  will  open  Nov.  22. 

A  relay  of  350  Greek  runners, 
each  carrying  the  torch  one  kilo- 
mete,  will  take  the  flame  to  Ath- 
ens for  a  ceremony  tomorrow  in 
the  stadium  where  the  first  mod- 


event  are  also  encouraged  to  meet    *™  O^Jlnpics  were  held  in  1396 
in  front  of  the  gjm  at  1:45. 

Entries  are  still  being  accepted 
at  Graham  Memorial  and  room 
315  Woollen.  The  events  are  arch- 


Then  the  flame  will  be  used  to 
light  a  miner's  lamp  which  will 
be  placed  aboard  an  airliner  and 
flown  to  Darwin,  Australia,  and 
then   to    Cairns   in  northern  Aus- 


Georgia  Tech  Invades  Duke 
Jurgenson  Is  In  Good  Shape 


The  omnipotent  rambling  wreck 
from  Georgia  Tech  invade  Dukp 
University  today  In  one  of  the 
top  intersectional  clashes  of  the 
afternoon. 

The  second-ranked  Engineers  are 
expected  to  bulldoze  the  Blue 
Devils  all  over  Duke  Stadium,  but  | 
Duke  coach  Bill  Murray  has  other  j 
plans.  The  filue  Devil  mentor  feels  | 
that  the  return  of  All-America  J 
quarterback  candidate  Sonny  Jur- 1 
genson  might  just  be  the  coin  to  • 
derail  the  Engineers. 

Jurgenson  has  been  injured  for 
the  past  three  weeks  and  has  not 
been  able  to  give  his  all  to  the 
signal-calling  chores,   but  this  af- 


ternoon the  red-headed  senior  from 
Wilmington  will  be  at  full 
strength. 


JUST 
RECEIVED 

A  new  Shipment  of  those  pop- 
ular: 

English  Tab  Collar 
Dress  Shirts 

Made  of  fine  Imported  Shirt- 
ings, usually  featured  at  $6.95 
and  $7.95. 

Only  $5.00 

Spice-up  your  wardrobe  with 
several  of  these  excellent  shirts. 


STEVBKS  •  8HBPHERD 


Id  you  baye  iiie  guts  to 
oiitt  a  ttiiger  at >  guy  and 

say;  CO  GET  KILLED! 

)iiii)jn)ihi^ ■ — 


Fime  lEATHCBMiCKS 

coio..yTECHNICOLOR.=— - 


target  4-ifle  shooting,  and  a  fishing  j  tnJia,  where  it  will  arrive  next  Fri 
<;oQtest.    •  {day.  ', '-      '-v-^ 

Soccer  Team  Meets  Virginid 
Nov.BfPmctkesitiJiain 


PATRONIZE   YOUR 
•    ADVERTISERS    o 


NOW 
PLAYING 


Eye 


Ji* 
I'f 


ms  eye  Bowl  Bids; 
Okla.  Meets  Colorado 


1 1 


From  The  Associated  Press         have  it  out,  to  the  West,  where 
Colorado  coach  Dal  Ward,  whose  j  Stanford  takes  on  UCLA. 
Buffaloes     face  Oklahoma     today, ! 

has  been  telling  his  lads  all  week  '  '^'^  meeting  between  starless 
that  the  Oklahoma  players  are  I  *^"^  surprising  Penn  State  and  Syr- 
only  human  in  spite  of  the  seem- 1  ^^"^'  ^"^  super-star  Jimmy 
ingly     inhuman     scores     they've  ;  ^'■°*"'     "^^^^     ^»"    ^^^cide     the 

made  against    some  opponents.  I '^^^'"P*^"^^^^   °^   *^«   ^*^^"»   ^^ 

dependents.  The  winner  might  be 

Even    if  beaten,  Colcnrado    will  j  in  line  for  a  bowl  bid.  Stanford, 

remain  the  No.    1   candidate   for  j  one  Pacific  Coast  team  still  elig- 

the  Orange  Bowl  bid,  with  the  win- 1  ible  for  the  Rose   Bowl,   has     to 

ner  of  today's  Blissouri-Nebraska  1  keep   winning  to.  stay   ahead   ol 

game   probably  No.   2.  Oklahoma  challenging  Oregon  State,    which 

isn't  eligible  this  season.  I  plays  Washington  today. 

There'U  be  a  lot  of  thinking  Unbeaten  Iowa,  the  Big  Ten 
about  bowl  prospects  in  connection  |  leader  and  seventh-ranked  nation- 
with  many  of  today's  games.  Most  ally,  puts  its  Rose  Bowl  hopes  on 
of  the  leading  candidates  engage  |  the  line  against  twice-beaten  but 
in  important  sectional  or  confer-  j  slightly  favored  Michigan  — ^tbe 
ence  competition,  from  the  East,  j  team  originally  expected  to  get 
where    Penn   State    and    Syracuse  j  the    nomination. 

Intramural  Wrestling 
Program  Begins  Monday 


ay  CHARLIE  HOWSON 

UNC's  intramural  wrestling  pro- 
gram is  slated  to  begin  this  com- 
ing Monday  at  7  p.  m.  on  the  main 
floor  of  Woollen  Gymnasium. 

A  sizeable  increase  of  partici- 
pants over  last  year  is  quite  evi- 
dent, as  there  are  130  entrants  for 
this  year's  tournament. 

There  are  eight  pound  classes  in 
which  students  will  take  part.  They 
are  the  foUow^g:  123,  137,  147, 
157,  167,  177  and  the  unlimited 
class.  Last  year's  winners  in  the 
fraternity  division  are  the  follow- 
ing: 123— Lawson  Zeta  Psi;  13t)— 
Woodhall.   ATO;.  137— Henderson, 


same  reason  as  indicated  in  the 
137  pound  class;  157— McGraw,  Ev- 
eret;  167— Hoke,  Stacy:  177— Rea- 
vis,  Lewis. 

The  winners  in  this  division  re- 
sulted in  a  tie  between  Joyner  and 
Stacy. 

In  thp  final  graduate  profession- 
al division  the  champion  was  the 
Dental  School.  The  individual  class 
finalists  are  listed  as  follov^s:  123 — 
Carpenter,  Dental  School;  130— 
Strange,  Rental  School;  137— Gre- 
gory, Law  School;  147 — Oldham, 
Dental  School;  157 — Granthum, 
Dental  School;  167— Ashby,  Den- 
tal School:  177— Weeks.  Medical 
School;     unlimited     class — Harris, 


The  Baylor-Texas  Christian  and 
Southern  Methodist-Texas  games  in 
the  Southwest  Conference  may  fig- 
ure in  Cotton  Bowl  selections.  And 
there  are  bowl  implications,  though 
no  hoc^ups,  in  the  George  Wash- 
ington-West Virginia  struggle  for 
the  Southern  Conference  lead  and 
in  almost  any  game  played  by 
Southeastern  Conference. leaders. 

Tennessee,  the  nation's  No  3 
team  in  this  week's  Associated 
'Press  poll,  likely  will  find  its 
game  with  North  Carolina  little 
more  than  a  tuneup  for  next  week's 
big  on«  against  Georgia  Teeh. 


^af^^y-foceer-squiri  in  thelteam) 
hair  Wen  holding  l^eral  spirited 
scriminagos. 


Ttwfi^^d^tkseyJtteiit  dai  tf^With  th/vS^a  Cavali 
practice  fen-  the  Tar  Heels  as  it 
was  pouring  down  rain  before  the 
players  took  tiie  field  for  practice 
and  the  field  was  already  more  like 
a  lake  than  a  soccer  field. 

Tuesday's  practice  Was  a  "must," 
however,  because  the  Tar     Heels 


misis,  RoanOk^  College  in  Roanoke, , 
Vt.'THursday.  The  game  a^'s  cal- 
led o£f  on  Wednesday.  I 
?  NoT»  tb6«^0iiAifeated  Tar  Heels  j 
are'  scrimliiagin^  hard  in  prcpara- 
ence  test 
trgima-  Cavaliers   here 
on  Nov.  8. 

In  this  week's  scrimmages,  the 
second  string  team  has  been  giving 
the  first  string  tough  battles,  thus 
putting  plenty  of  spirit  into  the 
team  which  is  essential  as  the 
tean^^must     soon  face     Virginia, 


■  'a.  Ci#  ini 
the  Nighti 


fn<tk»^T<o  arVVAItNI^R  BROS.  .-.*r,  i^ 
tOMOjIO.      ■    HUN        NATAltf 

rtidi  NOW  PLAYING 


LATE  SHOW  TONIGHT 
SUNDAY-MONDAY 


A  story  of  suspense 

I   fear! 


were  scheduled  to  meet  an  old  ne- 1  Duke,   and  finally,  Maryland. 

*      ■ — . — . ,. 

Tar  Heels  Meet  Vols  Today 


(Continued  jrom  Page  1) 
agile  Vol  line  will  be  sparked  by 
Captain  John  Gordo  at  tackle.  Gor- 
do was  a  tower  of  strength  in  the 
Vol  line  last  week  as  he  outplay- 
ed  Maryland's   all-America,   &like 

I  Sandusky. 

I  For  the  hopeful  Tar  Heels,  it 
will  be  the  same  jstarting  line- 
up that  has  taken  the  field  on  the 
last  two  Saturdays.  Featuring 
youth,  speed  and  spirit,  the  Tar 

I  Heels  will  be  directed     by  Dave 
Reed  at  quarterback.  Backing  Reed 


Michigan  State,   knocked   down   up  in  the  backfield  will  be  full- 
to  No.  4  by  last  week's  upset  loss   back  Wally  Vale,  possessor  of    a 
to     Uliaois,     tries     a     comeback   43.2   kicking   average;    Ed  Sutton 
against  Wisconsin.  Texas  A&M    5   at     halfback,  the  team's     leading '  nessee  defense, 
meets   improving  Arkansas.    Ohio  .  rusher  and  bruising  Larry  McMui-  i      The  Tar  Heels  arc  in  good  phy 
State  6  figures  to  spoil  Northwest-    len  at  the  other  halfback.  j  sical  condition  with  only  end  Paul 


going  to  boot  it  right  back." 

If  this  is  the  course  he  intends 
to  follow,  Tatum  certainly  has  a 
potent  weapon  to  put  it  into  action. 
Wally  Vale  at  fullback  is  currently 
ranked  fifth  in  the  nation  in  punt- 
ing, and  quick  kicks  from  the  T- 
formation  are  his  specialty. 
SPltEAD-MAY  BE  USED 

U  things  go  according  to  expec- ' 
tation,  Tatum  may  spring  his  sprea^  j 
formation  on  the  Vols  to  neutra- 
Uze  the  Tenn^see  advantage  in  the  { 
fbrwkrd  wall.  Only  three  or  four ' 
men  play  on  the  defensive  line 
against  the  spread,  and  the  spread  ' 
would  serve  to  open  up  the  Ten-  ! 


i'? 


C^iMm 


Children^  Matinee 

9:30  A.  M. 

Our  Gang  Comedy 

And  Cartoons 


;:^^'*.||f 


TECHNV 


couOR 


LATE  SHOW  TONIGHT 


WILLIAM 
HOLDEN 

J  ROCHtJ  PiLOJ    V  S.A 


UNKNOWN 

X  WarnerColor 

LLfDNOlAN'VIRGINIIiLEITH 
amtsm 


ESTHER  WILLIAMS 
GEORGE  NADER 


(jflGUAnOBO 


MOMENT 


and  its  sbocku^  adStermath! 

Co-starring  the  •xdfmg  now  persona  I'lfy  JOHN   SAXON 


M  EDWARD  ANDREWS  •  UES  TREAAAYNE  •  Directed  by  HARRY  KELLER 
Screenplay  l>y  HERB  MEADOW  and  lARRY  MARCUS  •  Produced  by  GORDON  KAY 


A  UNIVERSAL-INTERNATIONAL  PICTURE 


SAE;   147— Van  Winkle,  SAE;  157  |  Dental  School. 


— Blaire.  Zeta  I^i;  167— Atkinson, 
DKE;  177— Blades,  DKE;  unlimit- 
ed— Fountain,  DKE.  The  overall 
division  winner  was  DKE. 

The  dormitory  division  winners 
last  year  were:  123 — Jung,  Joyner; 


The  competition  is  run  on  a 
'■single  elimination  basis."  Two 
points  are  awarded  for  each  match 
won  through  the  quarter  finals. 
Three  points  are  awarded  for  all 
matches  won   in   the     semi-finals. 


em's  homecoming.  Bfinnesola  8 
takes  on  Pittsburgh  11  in  a  big 
intersectional  clash. 

Here's  how  other  games  look 
by  sections: 

Elast — Notre  Dame-Navy  should 
draw  the  East's  biggest  crowd  of 
80,000  in  spite  of  the  dismal  Irish 
record.  Colgate-Army  and  Holy 
Cross-Boston  U.  are  independent 
leaders  and  in  the  Ivy  League  it's 
Dartmouth-Yale,  Brown-Princeton, 
Ftenn-Harvard  and  Cornell-Colum- 
bia. 

South  — Virginia  Tech-Clemson 
and  Vanderbilt-Virginia  are  inter- 
conference  meetings  of  special  in- 
terest. Other  good  ones  include  Au- 
"burn-Florida,  Georgia-Alabama, 
Mississippi  State-Tulane,  Kentucky- 
Maryland  and  North  Carolina  State 
-Wake  Forest. 


The  line  will  onoe  again  be  made  !  PuHy  definitely  out  of  action.  Pul- 
■up  of  a  mixture  of  seasoned  vet- ,  ley  has  been  sidelined  for  the  rest 
erans  and  eager  youngsters.  At  of  the  season  with  a  leg  injurj-. 
ends    wUl  be  Buddy  Payne     and   FuUbaqk  Giles  Oaca  is  also  a  doubt- 


Charley  Robinson,  tackles  will  be 
Don  Redding  and  Leo  Russavage, 
the  two  sophomores  who  have  con- 
tributed so  much  to  the  Tar  Heels 
rapid  recovery;  guards  will  be  Jim- 
my Jones  and  Don  Kemper,  and 
the  center  will  be  Ronnie  Koes. 

Kemper  and  Jones  have  been  in- 
strumental in  the  team's  good 
showing  in  their  last  two  games,  as 
each  has  recovered  numerous  fum- 
bles. Jones  has  been  a  real  glory 
boy,  blocking  kicks  and  scoring 
touchdowns  with  astonishing  fre- 
quency. 
MEW  DEFENSE 

No  one  knows  what  Jim  Tatum 
has  up  his  sleeve  for  the  Vols,  but 
rumor  has  it  that  the  shrewd  tac- 
tician has  cooked  up  an  •  entirely 
different  defense  designed  to  stop 
the  vaunted  Tennessee  single  wing 
attack   cold.  Secret   sessions   have 


ful  participant.  Gaca  is  suffering 
from  a  knee  injury  that  may  also 
keep  him  on  the  sidelines  for  the 
remainder  of  the  campaign. 


Intramiiral  Director 
SmIcs  lost  Wallet 

Graduate     intramural     director  ^^en  going  on  all_week  in  thfe  Tar 


130 — Livingston.  Aycock:  137 — nojDyrm.  school  or  fraternity  winners 
winner  becaiwa.'^of  double  forfei-  i  in  their  respective  divisions  are  de- 
liue  b>  l).»th  ui.^hu  class  liuaii.^Ls;  '  lernuin.(l  l)\  llu'  hi„lif.>i  huiiiIhi  4U 
14- 


no     winner  heriiuxc   ul     ilic    jijiiii^. 


Rufus  Hackney  said  yesterday 
that  his  wallet,  containing  some 
very  valuable  papers,  was  lost  in 
the  dressing  room  of  Woollen  Gym. 
Hackney  urges  anyone  who 
might  find  the  wallet  to  please  call 
him  A  the  iDlramui'al  otlict.'  m 
315   Woollen,  telephone  9424. 


Dei^ons  end  Wolfpeck 
'Mm  in  Winston  Today   I 

A^'^TON-SALEM,  Nov.  3  {ff>)—  \ 
Wake  l^'orest  College's  first  home- 1 
coming  football  game  since  mov- 
ing   to    Winston-Salem    finds    the 
Deacons    playing    North    Carolina! 
State  today   in  the  50th  meeting 
of  the  Atlantic  Coast  Conference 
rivals.  | 

Both  tsams  have  received  rough  1 
treatment  to  date.  Each  has  three  j 
other  rugged  opponents  to  face 
after  this  game,  probably  the  last  j 
in  which  either  will  be  regarded  j 
as  having  more  than  an  outside 
chance  of  winning. 

Wake    Forest   has   tied    Flerida 


Heel  camp,  and  it's  a  sure  thing 
that  Coach  Bowden  Wyatt  of  Ten-  j 
nessee  is  in  for  some  surprises.  State  and  North  Carolina  in  it's 
Earlier  4n  the  week,  Tatum^  gave  M***^  ^^'o  starts  to  bring  it's  sea- 
an  indication  as  to  what  his  stra-i  so'^'s  record  to  1-3-2.  In  the  coo- 
tegy  might  be.  "We  have  a  strong  j  ferencs  the  Deacs  are  0-3-1.  North 
kicking  game,  and  we're  going  to  I  Carolina  State  dropped  to  1-2  in 
use  it  against  Tennessee.  Every  |  the  AfC  and  2-4  overall  with  it.-, 
limt   ihfv  kic-k  tlic  ball  at  us.  were    .42-0  loBs  to  Diikc  la.st  week. 


SHAMPOO 

FOR   MEN 

formulated  for  a  mon's  hair  and  scalp. 
Conditions  while  it  cleons.  1.25  pim  loi 


IN    UNBRSAKABLE 

av^         plastic  I 


SHULTON 

N«w  York  •  Toronto 


V      .  ' 


V.V.r.,   •  LTBRART 
SERIALS  DEFT. 
BOX  870 


BUDAPEST  FALLS   BEFORE    RUSSIA 


BULLETIN:  The  Russians  Kave  attacked  Hungary  in 
virtually  full  force. 

The  United  Nations  voted  this  morning  to  con- 
sider sending  a  'Police  Force'  into  Egypt.  , 

Compiled    by   The    Daily    Tar    Heel 
From  Short  Wave  and  Radio  Reports 

.One-fifth  of  the  Middle  Eastern  oil  supply  has  been  cut  off 
and  sabotage  has  further  diminished  the  supply  of  fuel  in  Syria  and 
Saudi  Arabia. 

Lsrael  agreed  last  night  to  a  ceasefire  if  Egypt  complied.  The 
declaration  was  met  with  applause  in  the  United  Nations  General 
Assembly. 


Britain  and  France  denied  attempting  a  landing  yesterday  after- 
noon, but  said  an  invasion  was  not  far  off. 

Numerous  oil  lines  have  been  blown  up  in  Jordon  and  northern 
Syria.  The  Arabian-American  Oil  Company's  main  line  from  Saudi 
Arabia  through  Jordan  and  Syria  has  been  cut  off. 

Propaganda  broadcasts  are  urging  Arab  employees  in  European- 
operated  oil  fields   to  sabotage   their  machinery. 

In  another  attempt  to  close  the  Suez  Canal.  Egypt  has  blown 
up  a  bridge  crossing  the  waterway.  Yesterday  the  Egyptians  sank 
six  ships  in  an  effort  to  close  the  canal. 

An  Israeli  patrol  has  reached  the  east  bank  of  the  Suez  Canal 
and  withdrawn.  Israeli  troops  are  reported  to  be  within  nine  miles 
of  the  canal,  a  mile  within  the  limit  set  by  a  British-French  ultima- 
tum. 

Sir  Anthony  Nutting,  England's  foreign  minister,  has  resigned 


his  post  because  of  disagreement  with  Sii   Anthony  Ellen's  policies. 

Winston  Churchill  came  to  Eden's  defense  yesterday  and  said 
the  United  States  and  Canada  soon  will  see  the  wisdom  of  Anglo- 
French  actions. 

Sir  Anthony  Eden  explained  the  reasons  for  England's  move 
in  a«speech  before  Parliament  yesterday  afternoon.  The  Prime  Min- 
ister said  France  and  Britain  moved  into  the  Middle  Eastern  fray 
because  it  would  have  taken  the  United  Nations  too  long  to  act. 

He  noted  that  when  a  fire  is  discovered,  it  should  be  put  out 
before  finding  the  cause.  The  speech  said  Britain  and  France  will 
withdraw  from  the  area  when  a  UN  {)oIice  force  is  established. 

Syria  and  Iraq  are  moving  troops  into  Jordan' ifi  preparation 
for  an   Israeli  invasion   expected  within  a  few  hours. 

Ai  convoy  of  ambulances  was  reported  to  be  gathering  in  the 
Israeli  sector  of  Jerusclum  last  night. 


EgApt  reported  it  has  sunk  a  Bfitish  troop  ship  and  repulsed 
an  attempted  landing  by  Anglo-French  troops  with  its  shore  ba- 
tteries. 

Jet  bombers  prepared  for  an  Anglo-French  troop  landing  last 
night  by  bombing  EIg>'ptian  highway^  and  railroads.  The   bombings 


Recently  released  Cardinal  Mindzenty  has  attacked  the  new 
government  of  Hungary,  saying  it  should  completely  abandon  com- 
munism. 


are  more  frequent  and  destructive  since  the  Egyptian  air  force  has 
been  virtually  wiped  out. 

Another  all-night  session  of  the  United  Nations  General  Assem- 
bly took  place  last  night  to  discus.s  further  resolutions  concerning 
the  Middle  East. 


•  WEATHER 

Clouds    and    drizzle    today,    with 
expected  high  between  72  and  80. 


VOL.    LVII     NO     39 


2r()  c  Daitu  eSTar  Keel 


WEEK 

It  was  turbulent.  See  page  2. 


Co?)ipicte  iJP)  Wire  Serviet 


CHAPEL   HILL,   NORTH   CAROLINA,  SUNDAY,   NOVEMBER* 4,   1956 


Offices   in    Graliam   Memorial 


FOUR   PAGES  THIS    ISSUI 


Powerful   Tennessee   Uses   Passes   To   Top 
UNC  Tar  Heels,  20-0,  At  Vol  Homecoming 


Planetarium  Guide  Views  Damage 


Pictured  above  is  Planetarium  guide  Preston  Browning  as  he 
looks  at  the  "Beat  Carolina"  sign  painted  Friday  night  on  one  of 
the  Morehead  Building's  columns.  Town  police  have  not  yet  deter- 
mined who  the  vandals  were. 

Vandals  Deface  Three 
Buildings  With  Paint 


By   ANNE   DRAKE 

"Beat  Carolina,"  "Duke  Univer- 
sity." and  three  triangles  were 
inscribed  with  black  paint  on  thj 
columns  of  Morehead  Planetarium 
Friday  night.  Similar  vandalism  oc- 
cured  at  the  Alumni  Building  and 
Graham  Memorial. 

Three  of  the  columns  and  the 
front  door  of  the  planetarium  were 
defaced  with  black  paint.  .Also,  the 
limestone  border  around  the  bot- 
tom of  the  building  was  marked 
with  a  heavy  type  black  pencil.  A. 
F.  Jenzano.  manager  of  the  plane- 
tarum,  regards  the  painting  as  a 
"very  low  grade  form  of  amuse- 
ment." 

One  column  of  Alumni  Building 
the  front  door  of  GM  were  painted. 
Miis  Linda  Mann,  director  of  GM, 
says,   "I  wish  we    could   find   the 

Candidates  For 
WRC  To  Sign 

All  junior  coeds  interested  in 
running  for  scats  on  the  Women's 
Kesidence  Council  have  been  asked 
to  sign  a  list  posted  on  the  door 
fif  Woodhouse  Conference  Room, 
Graham  Memorial  before  1  p.m.  to- 
morrow. 

Interviews  by  the  Bi  -  Partisan 
Selecticns  Board  wil  be  held  Mon- 
day from  1:30  to  3:15  p.m.  They 
also  will  be  held  on  Tuesday  and 
Wednesday  at  times  po.sted  on  the 
conference  room  door  on  the  sec- 
ond floor  of  GM. 

Four  seats  on  the  Women's 
Council  will  be  open  to  juniors. 
The  seats  will  be  filled  in  the 
Nov.  13  election. 


,  ones  who  did  it  jind  make  them  re- 
paint the  door  to  repair  the  dam- 
age. ' 

Giles  F.  Horney,  buildings  de- 
partment supervisor,  explained 
after  the  defaced  columns  are 
cleaned  with  solvent  thty  will  use 

I  a  steam  pressure  process  on  them. 

I  The  steam  treatment  will  probab- 
ly begin  next  week  after  the  .sol- 

t  vent   dries   throughly. 

According  to  Horney.  the  steam 

,  process  is  superior  to  sandblasting, 
which  removes  part  of  the  stone. 

•  Using    the    steam    under    pressure 

;  does  not  remove  the  stone  and  does 
not  necessitate  cleaning  the  whole 
column. 

AROUND  MIDNIGHT 

P.  L.  Birch  of  the  campus  police 
force  said  the  painting  occurred 
after  10  p.m.  and  probably  around 
midnight  Friday.  Although  the  pa- 
lice  are  making  every  effort  to  de- 
termine who  i.s  responsi'ole  for  the 
damage,  they  had  found  no  evi- 
dence as  of  Saturday. 

In  Jenzano's  opinion.  "It  is  dif- 
ficult to  find   the  culprit    in  such 
cases.   But   if  the   guilty   party   is 
!  found,    he   should    be   punished    n 
I  order  to  set  an  example  and  cur- 
f  tail  vandalism  in  the  future." 


Quarterly 
Has  Variety 
In  Fall  Copy 

The  Carolina  Quarterly.  UNO's 
literary  magazine,  will  appear  next 
w.ek  in  the  first  1956  issue  and 
will  reflect  variety  and  quality, 
according  to  editor  Miss  Marcel- 
line  Krafchick. 

The  Quarterly  has  obtained  per- 
mission from  NBC  in  New  York 
and  from  the  estate  of  Thomas 
Wolle  to  publish  in  full  the  NBC 
radio  broadcast.  "Biography  In 
Sound",  on  Thomas  Wolfe,  feat- 
uring monologues  by  people  who 
<  knew  the  writer  best.  Wolfe  was 
a  Quarterly  editor  in  1919  and 
1920. 

Part  of  a  nov^^  bf  Pat  HilI^iM>on 

fVin.  wiH  be  included  in  the  mau- 
\  agine,  as  well  as  a  short  story  by 
I  l«st' yeWff'ii' first  prize  fiction  con-! 
test  winner.  A  Chekhov  mono- 
IogW3  will  appear  in  a  new  English 
version  by  Eric  Bentley.  noted 
writer,  lecturer  and  theatre  critic. 
"Nereis",  a  first  published  story 
by  a  promising  New  York  writer, 
will  also  be  included. 

The  magazine  will  feature  a  sec- 
lion   of   North   Carolina   poets,  se- 
lected with  an  introduction  by  Roy 
I  C.  Moose.  UNC  English  instructor, 
I  former   Quarterly   editor   and   Ox- 
1  ford    scholar.   Two   lithographs   by  | 
e.x-Guggenheim       fellow       Benton  ' 
Spruance  and  a  cover  drawing  of ; 
;  Thomas  Wolfe  by  Chapel  Hill  art- 1 

ist    William    Mangum    will    consti 
1  tute  The  Quarterly's  art  work. 


*  Tar  Heels  Threaten, 
But  Can't  Get  Going 


Campus  Chest  Co-Chairmen 


Standing  in  front  of  the  campus  chest  are  Co-Chairmen  Jess  Stribling  and  Miss  Jackie  Aldridge, 
hoping  the  "money"  she's  holding  op  will  be  turned  into  $1500  by  Friday  afternoon.  The  drive  will  be 
kicked    off   today    by    Chapel    Hill    ministers. 


Foreign  Policy  To  Be  Subject 


Shaw  Centennial  To  Be 
Observed  On  Nov.  15 


The  foreign  policy  of  the  Unit- 
ed States  will  be  the  subject  for 
discussion  tomorrow  at  5  p^m. 
when  the  International  Relations 
discussion  group  meets  in  room 
300  of  Carroll  Hall.  I 


Edited    entirely    by    undergrad- 
uate and     graduate     students     at 
UNC.  the  magazine  will  be  avail-  \ 
able  on  the  campus  after  Friday. , 
Yearly  subscriptions  are  available  j  "''^^^  ^^"^  ^^^^^  Department  for  20, 
at    $1.25   from    Box    1117.    Chapel  j  .vears.  will  be  the  resource  person 


Dr.  Shepard  Jones  of  the  Politi- 
cal Science  faculty,   and   formerly 


Hill. 


for    this    discussion.    Dave    Mundy  |  said. 


and   Polly  Clarenbach  are  the  co- 
chairmen  of  the  group. 

With  the  foreign  policy  of  the 
U.  S.  up  for  debate  in  the  national 
election  campaigning  this  year, 
the  topic  is  particularly  timely,  ac- 
cording to  an  announcement.  Spon- 
sored by  the  Y.MC.A-YAVCA  Pro 
gram  Commission,  for  its  members 
who  are  primarily  intoretitcd  in 
international  relations,  this  dis- 
cussion group  is  open  to  all  who 
wish  to  attend,  the  announcement 


The  Friends  of  the  UNC  Library 
will  present  a  public  lecture. 
"George  Bernard  Shaw — Man  of 
the  Century."  by  .\rchibald  Hen- 
derson on  Thursday.  Nov.  15.  in 
connection  with  the  Shaw  cen- 
tennial year. 

The  lecture  will   be  given 
p.m.  in  Gerraril  Hall. 


Town  Ministers 
Launch  Campus 
Chest  Drive 

The  Campus  Chest  drive  started 
todav.  with  ministers  all  over  tho 
(.ity  giving  it  the  "kickoff"  from 
the  pi'.lpit.  Announcements  in 
Sunday  School  and  evening  youth 
rallys  will  add  impetus  to  the  • 
drive. 

Although  the  drive  started  to- 
day, move  than  $100  has  been  re- 
ceived. $62  from  the  DKE  Hou&e 
alaoc.  accordins  to  Miss  .Tackio  Al- 
dridge, co-chairman  along  with 
.less  ,Slii4)ling. 

The    hoirseracc    is    up    in    the    Y. 
Kach  dorm,  sorority,  and  fraternit\ 
is   represented   by  a   horse.  «vhich. 
after   a   donation,   will    race   down 
the   green   turf   toward   tho   horse- 
shoe of  ro.si's.  substituted  for  b>  *    down  in  each  of  the  last  two  per- 
huge    bronze    tn)phy.    The    hor.ses    iods  completed   the  scoring, 
will    move    according    to    the    per  ■      porward    pa.s.scs   led    directly   to 
capita  donation  of  the  residence.        ^„^^,a^K^^,a^^mm^^^i^m^^m^^m 

A  mannequin  dressed  as  a  pi- 
rate and  holding  a  sign  which  says 
Loot  your  pockot.s'  for  the  Camp- 
us Chest"  will  stop  students  as 
they  eat  in  Lenoir,  Miss  Aldridge  I  ■»  u 
said. 


By  {.ARRY   CHEEK 

Special  to  The  Daily  Tar  Heel 

KNOXVILLE.  Tenn.  —  Tennes- 
see's powerful  Vols  remained 
among  the  nations  undefeated 
elite  here  yest3rday  as  they  beat 
back  a  determined  challenge  by 
North  Carolina's  Tar  Heels  to  take 
a  20-0  decision  in  a  bruising  bat- 
tle reeled  off  before  a  homecom- 
ing crowd  of  27.000  fans  on  sun- 
swept    Shields-Watkins   Field. 

Tennessee's   ace    tailback,   John- 
ny Majors,  was  sidelined  for  nvost 
of   the    afternoon,   but   saw   action 
on    one    play    in    the    second    halt. 
In   his   absence,   second   and   third 
string  tailbacks  Al  Carter  and  Bob- 
by Gordon  filled  in  in  superb  fash- 
ion.   Carter    UiUicci    the    first    two 
Vol    toufhdovvn.s    and    Gordon    got 
the  third. 

Tile  first  period  was  scoreless 
but  the  Vols  broke  out  a  strong 
pa.ssing  game  in  the  second  to  take 
a  6-0  lead     at   halftime.  A  touch- 


THE  STATISTICS 


UNC  TENN 


DISPLAY 

There  will  be  an  educational  dis- 
play in  the  library,  containing  in- 
formation about  tho  four  benefit- 
ing agencies:  World  University 
Service.  60'-  ;  Goettingen  Hxchange 
at  8  Scholarship.  20S  :  and  CARE,  13'^c  . 
A    new   affiliation   of    the   Campus 


First  Downs 

12 

16 

1     Rushing  Yardage 

163 

193 

Passing    Yardage 

47 

111 

Passes 

5-14 

713 

Passes   Inter,   by 

0 

0 

Punts 

9-41 

6-44 

Fumbles    Lost 

0 

1 

Yards  Penalized 

40 

55 

IN  PETITE  MUSICALS 


Duke  Tenor  Sings  Here  Tonight 


Three  Student  Council 
Seats  Are  Now  Vacant 

Three  scats  (m  the  Student  Coun- 
cil are  now  open  to  men  students, 
according  to  Luther  Hodges,  char- 
man. 

Two  of  the  seats  are  open  to 
juniors,  he  said.  A  third  seat,  pre- 
viously reported  as  a  senior  seat, 
is  open  for  a  sophomore,  Hodges 
reported. 

The  Bi-Partisan  Selections  Board 
will  meet  tomorrow,  Tuesday  and 
Wednesday  to  consider  candidates 
for  the  positions.  .All  interested 
students  ha\o  been  a^^ked  to  con- 
l;Kt  Hodges  or  .liiu  Kxiiin. 


I  Nursing  School 
To  Present  TV 
Health  Program 

;  The  second  in  the  "Project 
',  Health"  television  shows  sponsor* 
1  ed  by  the  Division  of  Health  Af- 
I  lairs  of  UNC  will  be  seen  at  9  p.m. 
j  over  WUNC-TV,  Channel  4,  Fri- 
day. 

The  hour-long   program   will  be 
pri'sented   by  the  UNC   School   of 
j  .\ursing.  a  unit  within  the  Division 
of  Health  Affairs. 

This  program  will  include  high- 
lights of  the  four  year  course 
leading  to  the  degree  of  bachelor 
of  science  in  nursing. 

Also,  a  d ascription  of  the  grad- 
uate programs  leading  to  the  de- 
gree of  master  of  science  in  nurs- 
ing will  be  given. 

The  "Project  Health"  s?ries  be- 
gan Friday.  Oct.  26.  It  will  be  pre- 
sented by  some  unit  within  the  Di- 
vision of  Hsalth  .Affairs  every 
other  Friday  night  throughout  the 
xcur. 


JOHN  HANKS 

.  (iivi-s   sal  lis  Uiii'uilii 


A  program  of  vocal  selections  in  English  and 
Italian  will  be  given  by  John  Hanks,  tenor,  at  to- 
night's Petite  Musical  presentation  at  8  p  m.  in 
Graham  Memorial's   main   lounge. 

In  addition  to  tho  tlnglish  and  Italian  songs  with 
harpsichord.  Hanks  will  sing  a  group  of  twentieth 
century  English  .songs  for  voice  with  piano  accom- 
paniment. Hener\  M.  Cook  will  be  the  accompanist. 

i 

Hanks   is  assistant   professor  of   music  at   Duke 
University,  and  has  performed  extensively  in  opera,  i 
concert,  radio.  TV  and     oratoria     in     metropolitan 
areas.     . 

MUSICAL  CAREER 

His  musical  career  has  also  included  solo  appear- 
ances with  th?  Springfield,  Oklahoma  University. 
Juilliard  and  New  Havei;  S.vmphony  orchestras 
and  with  the  Natiunal  S\niphony  Orchestra  in 
Washington.  D.  C. 

Hanks  received  his  undergraduate  training  at 
Oklahoma  University,  and  Juilliard  School.  In  1950 
he  received  his  master's  degree  from  Columbia 
University. 

The  Petite  Musical  program  is  sponsored  by  the 
Graham  Memorial  .Activities  B.)ard  and  is  present- 
ed admission-frcj  to  the  public. 


Dr.  Henderson,  the  official  bi-  Chest  is  Cancer,  receiving  7'., 
ographer  of  G.  B.  Shaw,  is  Kenan  J  Miss  Aldridge  stated. 
profes.sor  of  mathematics,  emeri-  A  Cnmpus  Chest  with  a  thor- 
tus.  at  the  L'ni versify.  The  date  of  mometer  rising  out  of  it  will  mea- 
his  address.  Nov.  1.5.  is  also  the  [  sure  the  donations  of  ^he  campus, 
publication  date  of  his  new  book,  j  "At  the  moment,  the  Campus 
"George  Bernard  Shaw:  Man  of  i  Chest  is  empty,  but  we  hope  the 
the  Century".  thermometer,    by    next    week    this 

Following  the  centennial  lecture   time,  will  be  shooting  out  the  top!" 
the    Library    Friends    will    hold    a    she  .said. 

reception   marking  the  opening  of  i      Letters   have    been    sent    to   the 
an     exhibition:     "Selections     from    lacult.v.  administration,  and   presi 

oonts  of  all  residences,  and  many 
_  answering     checks     have     aireaciy 
been  received.   Over   1500  pamph- 
I  let.s  containing  educational  materi- 
I  al  on  the  benefiting  agencies  w?ii 
be   placed   under  dormitory   doors. 
1      Posters   made   by   Graham    Mem- 
orial,   the    "\"    publicity    depart- 
ment    and     the     Kpi.><copal    Parish 
House  will  publicize  the  event  on 
campus.   . 

DONATIONS   CHAIRMAN 

All  residences,  except  girls' 
dormitoiies.  have  a  donations 
chairman  and  usually  a  solicitor  on 
every  floor  who  will  visit  every- 
one in  the  residence  during  the 
w(^ek  for  his  contribution. 

Dnoalions  will  be  received  in  the 
girls'  dormitories  by  the  donatU)ns 
chairmen  on  the  individual  floors 

.All  donations,  when  they  have 
l>cen  received,  will  be  turned  in  to 
Miss  Aldridge  Tiiesday  through 
Friday  afternoons  on  the  second 
lioor  of  the  "Y". 

The  drive  will   become   inactive 


the  .Archibald  Henderson  Collec- 
tion of  George  Bernjird  Shaw,"  in 
the  Louis  Round  Wilson  Librar>-. 

Two  Professors 
To  Go  Abroad 
For  Year  Study 

Two  professors  in  the  UNC 
Dept.  of  Rnmance  Languages 
will  leave  Chapel  Hill  early  next 
year  for  studios  abroad. 

Dr.  S.  .A.  Stoudemire,  head  of 
the  Romance  Languages  Dept.. 
identified  the  two  as  Dr.  John  E. 
Keller,  associate  professor  of  Ro- 
mance Languages,  and  Dr.  W.  L. 
Wiley.  Kenan  professor  of  French. 

Dr.  Keller  will  be  on  Kenan 
leav?  beginning  February  1.  1957. 
for  a  semester's  study  in  Spain, 
and  Dr.  Wiley,  who  also  will  leave 
after  the  current  semester,  will 
rrmain   in    France     through     next 

summer  studying  beginnings  of  the    next  weekend  in  order  not  fo  con- 
theater  in  France. 

Dr.  Stoudemire.  in  announcing 
the  two  leaves  of  absence,  said  an 
increase  of  36  students  was  noted 
th's  year  over  the  number  who 
took  Romance  Language  courses  at 
j  I'.NC  in  tiio  fall  semester,  1955-56.  , 


the  Vols'  first  two  scores.  Each 
time  Tennessee  was  apparently 
stopped  when  Carter  reached  in- 
lo  his  bag  of  tricks  and  came  up 
with  two  perfect  pass  pla.vs.  one 
to  end  Buddy  Cruze.  who  played 
a  whale  of  a  game,  and  another  to 
wingbnck    Bill    .Anderson. 

In  the  first  half,  the  Tar  Heel 
tackling  was  hard  and  clean,  but 
in  the  .second  they  tired  and  al- 
lowed the  fleet  orange  shirted 
backs  to  slip  through  for  long 
gains. 

Not  once  during  the  game  did 
the  Tar  Heels  put  together  a  su- 
stained drive  that  carried  thera 
deep  into  Vol  territon.  On  several 
eccasiions  Carolina  threatened,  but 
alwa.vs  the  Vol  squad  rose  to  the 
challenge  and  turned  them  back 
on  crucial  fourth  down  plays. 
NO  OPTION 

Tho  famed  Tennessee  option 
play  was  rarely  used  a.«  Coach  Jim 
Tafum  of  the  Tar  Heels  came  up 
with  a  roving  linebacker  that  ef- 
fectively stopped  the  Vols.  The 
Tar   Heels    themselves    used    their 

(See    TENNESSEE,    Page    4) 


flict  with  the  caravan  weekend. 
Actual  solicitations  will  end  Nov. 
10.  but  the  Campus  Chest  dance. 
Frosty  Fall  FYolics.  will  be  held 
Nov.  16.  at  which  time  the  trophy 
wiU  be  awarded  to  the  winning 
residence. 


Board  Approval  Needed 
By  Council  Candidates 

.All  students  interested  in  becom- 
ing a  candidate  for  Men's  Honor 
Council  in  this  fall's  elections  must 
be  approved  by  the  Bi-Partisans 
.Selections  Board,  according  to 
Jim  Exum.  chairman. 

Prospective       candidates       have 
been  asked  to  contact  Exum  at  8- 
9077  for  an  appointment  to  meet 
I  with    the    board.    The    board    will 
'  meet  tomorrow.  Tuesday  and  Wed- 
nesday in  the  Mens  Council  Room 
,  of  Graham   Memorial. 


FAGt  TWO 


THi  DAILY  TAR  Hf  iL 


SUNDAY,  NOVEMBER  4,   1956 


SUNDAY 


WEEK  IN  RBVIEW: 


The  World  Erupted:  Egypt,  Hungary  &  The  Ballot-Box 


Americans  were  listing  to  eleventh-hour  claims  from  the  Re- 
publicans and  the  Democrats  last  week  when  the  big  news  came. 

The  big  news  came  quickly  and  in  huge  quantities.  It  came 
from  Hungary,  Vhere  Premier  Imre  Nagay  had  apparently  uc- 
cessfuUy  fought  off  the  Russians.  It  came  from  the  ever-tense  Gaza 
Strip  area,  where  Israeli  border  troops  started  pushing  the  Egyp- 
tian army  toward  the  west — and  didn't  quit. 

The  American  public  almost  dropped  the  Democrat-Republi- 
can issues  and  started  watching  Europe  and  the  Middle  East. 
Lenoir  Hall's  newspaper  rack  was  completely  sold  out  by  9  o'clock 
each  morning:  The  Daily  Tar  Heel  used  short-wave  radio  sets  to 
pull  in  early-mornins  news  of  the  new  bubble  that  had  burst. 

Here's  the  way  the  world  looked  la.st  night: 

REJECT  DEMAND 

Britain  and  France  had  rejected  a  United  Nations  demand 
for  an  immediate  ceasefire  in  the  Middle  Elast.  Anglo-French  ac- 
tion against  Egypt  will  continue,  the  countries  said. 

€n  Hungary,  where  rebels  had  more-or-less  gained   indepen- 
dence from  their  long-time  master,   ihe  U.S.S.R.,  Russian  troops 
were  reported  again  encircling  the  country,  trying  to  seal  it  off 
from  Austria.  Hungary's  case  was  being  considered  in  the  United 
Nations  yesterday. 

*  ♦  ♦ 

In  the  turbulent  Middle  East.  French  and  British  troops  had 
joined  Israel  in  its  drive  against  Premier  Abdel  Gamel  Nasser's 
government.  The  British  and  the  French  had  warned  Egypt  and 
Israel  to  stop  warfare  earlier  in  the  week;  when  fighting  contin- 
ued, bnh  countries  sent  troops  and  bombers  to  the  Suez  area. 

As  of  last  night,  the  British-French-Israeli  forces  appeared 
in  virtual  control  of  all  Egypt's  area  east  of  the  SU/ez. Canal,  the 
caiial  itself,  and  some  ai'eas  west  of  the  canal. 
They  were  looking  over  their  shoulders,  how- 
ever: 

Syria  and  Iraq  were  headed  toward  Jordan 
to  fight  on  Egypt's  side.  If  the  Middle  Eastern 
war  flames  again,  the  Israeli  forces,  along  with 
their  British  and  Fi-ench  friends,  will  be  fight- 
ing on  several  frofffe.  This,  observers  predicted, 
could  lead  to  a  prolcmged  war  in  the  Mideast. 

Meanwhile,  there  was  talk  in  London  that 
Soviet    Piemier   Nikita   S.    Khrushchev   may  be       KHRUSHCHEV 
piu-ged  from  his  government.  . . .  gtniig? 


Folks  had  a  lot  to  worry  and  wonder  about  last  week. 

♦  *  • 

The  world's  eruption  injection  injected  a  red-hot  issue  into  a 
U.  vS.  Presidential  campaign  that  was  getting  slow  on  issues.  Both 
President  Eisenhower  and  Democratic  candidate  Adiai  Stevenson 
seized  the  .Arab  Israeli  situation  and  milked  it  for  political  amuni- 
tion. 

After  the  President  told  the  nation  the  U.  S.  would  not  get 
involved  in  the  lighting,  candidate  Stevenson  charged  failure  of 
the  Republican  foreign  policy  has  given  Russia  "two  gieat  vic- 
tories" —  establishment  of  Russian  influence  in  the  Middle  East, 
and  breakdwn  of  the  Western  alliance. 

The  President  answered  that  Stevenson  wanted  a  "design  of 
disaster"  in  the  \Bddle  East,  and  that  his  adminitration  Had  chosen 
the  "path  of  honor.' 

The  na'.icn  4iU  decide  bcitween  Stevenson  and  fiisenfaower, 
and  their  ri(nnin%mates.  Democrat  Eates  Keiauver  and  Republican 
Richard  Ni.xon.  in  a  national  election-  Tuesday. 


i  This  Made 
News  Here 
Last  Week 

Students  expressed  their  prefer- 
ence   f jr    Dwight    Eisenhower    for 
J  President    in   a   campus-wide   vote 
:  held  Thirtsday.  The  President    re- 
]  ceivod  two  more  of  the  1.773  votes 
cast  than  Adlai  Stevenson. 

O.  J.  (Skipper)  Coffin,  former  i 
dean  of  the  School  of  Journalism,  j 
'  died  of  pneumonia  combined  with  j 
a  long  -  time  a.sthmatic  condition 
I  Monday  night.  "The  Skipper"  was  j 
I  one  of  the  most  colorful  and  belov-  j 
1  e<k  leaders  in  southern  journalism,  j 

j      On    the    Carolina    traffic    front,  i 
I  Mayor  O.  K.  Cornwell  denied  that 
;  an    official     promise     to    lift     the 
j  parking  ban  on  S.  Columbia  St.  for 
I  60  days. 

I      A  representative  of  the  Board  of 

Aldermen  said  there  was  discuss- 

I  ion  of  the  possibility  of  temporari- 

:  ly  lifting  the  ban.  but  "no  promise 

;  was  made." 

I 

Student  Traffic  Commission 
Chairman  Wilburn  Davis  said  sit- 
!  uation  is  in  the  fraternitie.s'  now. 
I  Because  -of  an  automatic  5:45  ad- 
i  journment  time,  the  Faculty  Coun- 
1  cil  took  no  action  on  the  class  cut 
program  Friday  afternoon. 

Unofficial  sources  reported  that 
the  new  proposal  is  practically  2i 
replica  of  the  old  "unlimited  cuts  " 
regulation  which  was  in  effect  un- 
til the  spring  of  1955. 


Different  Problems 
Face  Candidates 


i 


Covering  The  Campus 


TOWNS  TALK 

Carl  Feiss,  city  planning  and  ur- 
ban renewal  consultant,  will  give 
an  address  on  "English  New 
Towns  "  at  7*30  p.m.  today  in  the 
Morehead  Faculty  Lounge.  The 
talk  is  open  to  the  public  and  will 
b?  illustrated  by  slides  of  English 
new  towns  and  conditions  in 
other  countries. 
SWEETHEART  CANDIDATES 

Men's  dormitories  entering  can- 
didates in  the  Sweetheart  of  UNC 
Dorms  contest  must  turn  in  8  x  10 
inch  glossy  photographs  of  their 
entries  by  tomorrow.  The  sweet- 
heart will  be  crowned  at  the  Nov. 
14  meeting  of  the  Interdormitory 
Council.  "" 

STUDENT   CHURCH   SUPPER 

Members  of  the  United  Student 
Fellowship  have  been  invited  to 
be  guests  of  the  United  Congerga- 
tional  Christian  Church  at  a  cov- 
ered dish  supper  at  the  new  Par- 
ish House  today  at  6  p.m. 
CANDIDATES'  MEETING 

A  compulsory  meeting  will  be 
held  for  all  candidates  and  party 
chairmen  or  representatives  of 
party  chairmen  at  Gerrard  Hall  to- 
morrow at  7  p.m.  Rules  of  conduct 
and  the  control  of  elections  will 
be  read  by  members  of  the  Elec- 
tions Board.  Copies  of  the  Gen-  j 
eral  Elections  Law  will  be  distrib- 
ut?d  to  the  candidate.s. . 
PHILOSOPHY  LECTURE  | 

The  Departments  of  Philosophy  i 
at  UNC  and  Duke  will  jointly  | 
sponsor  a  lecture  by  Prof.  H.  L.  A. 


Hart  of  University  College,  Ox- 
ford, at  4  p.m.  tomorrow  in  Grah- 
am Memorial's  Woodhouse  Con- 
ference Room.  His  topic  will  be 
"Knowledge  and  Action." 

FUTURE   TEACHERS 

The  Frank  Porter  Graham  chap- 
ter of  Future  Teachers  of  Ameri- 
ca will  meet  at  8  p.m.  tomorrow  in 
the  Curriculum  lab  of  Peabody 
Hall.  A  panel  of  high  school  stu- 
dents from  Southern  High  in  Dur- 
ham will  conduct  a  panel  discuss- 


PHILOLOGICAL  CULB 

The  philological  Club  meets 
Tuesday  at  7:30  p.m.  in  the  Facul- 
ty Lounge  of  the  Morehead  Build- 
ing. Dr.  George  M.  Harper  of  the 
English  Dept.  will  present  a  paper 
this  week  entitled  ''Plato's  Theory 
of  Ideas  in  Blake's  Prophetic 
Books."  All  faculty  members  and 
interested  graduate  students  have 
been  invited  to  attend. 
WOMEN'S  AA 

The  Women's  Athletic  .Assn. 
council  will  hold  its  monthly  meet- 
ing Tuesday  at  7  p.m.  in  the  "Wood- 
house  Conference  Room  in  Grah- 
am Memorial.  All  sorority  and 
dorm  representatives  have  been 
urged  to  attend. 
RELIGION  STUDY 

The  Study  Group  on  Compara- 
tive Religion^,  which  meets  on 
Mondays  from  5-6  p.m.  at  107 
H^nes  Hall,  will  study  Buddhism 
tomorrow.  Anyone  interested  has 
been  invited  to  attend. 


UNC  Receives 
Three  Grants 

For  Research 

'.  ■         .  ■  I 

..l/JChree  ssnior  re.^earetijiifellclw- 
sl^ips  totaliq^  $164,000  ^klJ^  been 
'liiWardod  to  .tJNC  by  th^  ^^ijldnal 
Institutes  oi' Health  of -thflf: ib.  S. 
Public  Heal^  Servicer '4^ii;.i^.. 

ijr.  Reec^  BerryhiU,'  dp«h  of 
th*«  UNC  S^^ool  of  Medjdpe.  was 
notified^  of  the  awards  today.  The 
funds  are  to  be  used  to  support 
the  teaching  of  the  basic  sciences 
to  medical  and  dental  students,      i 

The  three  fellowships  are  for  a  I 
five  year  period  and  are  renew- ' 
able  at  the  end  of  that  time.  The 
money  will  be  used  for  salaries 
and  research. 

The  request  for  the  fellowships 
was  a  joint  one  from  the  UNC 
Schools  of  Medicine  and  Dentistry. 
The  School  of  Medicine  teaches 
basic  science  courses  to  dental 
students.  The  grants  become  ef- 
fective Jan.  1.  1957. 

The  three  named  for  the  awards 
are  Dr.  R.  D.  Langdell,  UNC  as- 
sistant professor  of  pathology, 
now  on  active  duty  as  research  of- 
ficer at  the  Walter  Reed  Army 
Hospital  Institute  of  Research;  Dr. 
Billy  Baggett,  now  instructor  of 
chemistry  at  Harvard  Medical 
School  and  assistant  in  medicine 
at  the  Biochemical  Research  Lab- 
oratory of  the  Massachusetts  Gen- 
eral Hospital,  Boston  and  Dr.  Ira 
Fowler,  UNC  assistant  professor 
of  anatomy. 


The  official  student  publication  of  the  Publications  Board  of.  the 
University  of  North  Carolina,  where  it  is  published  daily  except  Mon- 
day and  examination  and  vacation  periods  and  summer  terms.  Elntered 
as  second  class  matter  in  the  post  office  at  Chapel  Hill.  N.  .C,  under 
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Editor  - _ 

...  FRED  POWLEDGE 

Managing  Editor  ..            .   -    .. 

CHARLIE  SLOAN 

News  Editor  - ^ 

._. RAY  LINKER 

Business  Manager    

imj.  TWMi  WKRI. 

Hi                             .                .. — 

THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL  WEEK  IN  REVIEW 

Editor       CHARLIE  SLOAN 

Staff  Writers GEORGE  PFINGST  and  INGRTD  CLAY 

Night  Editor ._ FRED  POWLEDGE 


Math  Teachers 
Here  Nov.  16 

TeacJiers  from  700  high  schools 
and  50  colleg?s  and  universities 
have  been  invited  to  attend  the 
Mathematics  Teachers  Conference 
at  UNC,  Friday  and  Saturday, 
Nov.  16  and  17. 

The  conference,  which  will  get 
underway  with  a  welcome  at  Phil- 
lip^ Hall  at  3  p.m.,  has  for  its 
theme,  "Mathematics  in  Action." 
Open  discussions  contributing  to 
the  improvement  in  the  study  and 
teaching  of  mathematics,  critical 
problems,  and  solutions,  will  be 
held. 

Prof.  Ann  Lewis  of  Woman's 
College  will  preside  over  the  init- 
ial session  on  Friday.  Following  a 
word  of  welcome  by  Dr.  F.  Bur- 
ton Jones  of  the  UNC  Dept.  of 
Mathematics,  John  W.  Cell,  pro- 
fessor of  mathematics  at  North 
Carolina  State  CoHege  will  dis- 
cuss elementary  mathematics  and 
the  tremendous  need  for  .scientif- 
ically trained   personnel. 

Walter  J..  Seeley,  dean  of  the 
Duke  University  School  of  Engi- 
neering will  speak  on  the  "En- 
gineer and  Mathematics." 


Arthur  Krock 

//(    f'hr  \ew     York    1  iiiics 

WASHINGTON  —  The  Ameri- 
can citizen  who  will  be  inaugu- 
rated next  January  as  President 
of  the  United  States  will  be  faced 
with  decisions  graver  than  ever 
confronted  our  Chief  Magistrate 
because  war  has  returned,  and 
in  the  age  of  atomic  weapons,  as 
an  instrument  of  national  policy. 
These  decisions,  which  can  only 
begin  ^o  b?  formulated  in  the  re- 
mainder of  President  Eisenhow- 
er's current  term,  will  be  pre- 
cipitated by  the  uprisings  in  the 
Sovi:t  satellite  states  and  last 
weeks  British-French  act  of  war 
against  'Egypt. 

The  certainty  that  the  next 
President  will  have  to  bear  this 
shattering  responsibility  makes 
it  inevitable  that  this  will  be  one 
of  the  prime  considerations  of 
those  who  vote  at  the  polls  Tues- 
day. Wh?ther  or  not  it  will  over- 
.^  shadow  all  the  other  factors  in 
the  political  debate  between  the 
President  and  Adlai  E.  Steven- 
son, it  is  sur?  to  be  high  in  the 
minds  of  the  voters.  And  they 
will  cast  tJjeir  ballots  in  the  last 
echoes  of  the  Democratic  charge 
that  the  Administration  has  great 
culpability  for  the  Middle  East 
explosion  and  deserves  no  cred- 
it at  all  for  the  civil  and  armed 
demonstrations  in  Eastern  Eur- 
ope. 
IN  THE  BALANCE 

The  politicians,  therefore,  are 
asking  one  another  what  will  be 
the  effect  of  these  dynamic 
events  on  the  choice  of  the  voters 
for  President  and  the  members 
of  the  next  Congress.  (This  starts 
with  the  assumption  that .  the 
pollsters  are  right  in  reporting 
tliatUhe  Prc^sidfeat  has  a  long  lead 
•vei*  * .  Stevenison.)  The  answer 
■■ ;  will  '■  .bp;  determined  by  the  re- 
.;  spectJve  weight.s  of  the  following 
polittoal  assets  and  liabilities  of 
the  President  as  registered  on 
the  scales  of  the  international 
situation  that  suddenly  and  vio- 
lently has  become  perilous: 
The  Assets.  First  among  these 
■  is  the  great  advantage  of  incum- 
bency which  enables  the  Presi- 
dent to  act  and  speak  with  the 
authority  of  the  United  States, 
while  his  opponent  can  only  de- 
nounce, oppose  and  propose. 
Next  is  the  potential  of  the  Pres- 
ident's great  military  experience, 
which  was  crowned  with  victory, 
at  a  time  when  armed  force  is 
again  being  resorted  to  for  the 
settlement  of  disputes  among  na- 
tions and  peoples.  A  third  is  his 
prominence  as  a  world  statesman 
whose  devotion  to  the  attainment 
of  a  durable  peace  is  accepted 
everywhere.  A  fourtli  is  his  stand, 
though  it  proved  unsuccessful, 
against  the 'use  of  armed  force 
by  Great  Britain,  France  and 
Israel  in  the  Suez  dispute  with 
Egypt.  Other  assets  are  (5)  the 
ever-mounting  strength  of  the 
American  industrial  and  fiscal 
economy  during  his  term  that  is 
indispensable  to  the  defens^e  of 
this  country  and  the  free  world; 


ana  (6)  the  fortuitous  circum- 
stance that  his  rejection  of 
St?venson's  suggestions  touching 
H-bomb  tests  and  the  military 
draft  -was  quickly  followed  by 
armed  violence  abroad. 


Formosan  Will 
Talk  On  China's 
Three  Religions 

Dr.  P.  C.  Yang  of  Taipei,  Tai- 
wan (Formosa)  will  speak  on  Chi- 
nese philosophy  and  religion  to- 
morrow night  from  8  to  9  p.m.  at 
a  meeting  of  the  C.C.C.  study 
group  on  world  religions. 


JACKIE  ALDRIDGE 


The  meeting,  sponsored  joint- 
ly by  all  the  denominational  church 
groups  on  campus,  will  be  held  on 
the  second  floor  of  the  YMCA 
building. 


The  Liabilities.  First,  the  great- 
er than  usual  physiological  poss- 
ibility that  the  Vice  President ; 
may  be  President  in  the  course  ; 
of  the  next  four  years  if  Eisen- , 
hower  is  re-elected.  Next  is  the  l 
incontrovertible  fact  that  at  this  : 
point  in  the  President's  conduct  j 
of  foreign  affairs  the  United  I 
States  and  Soviet  R  u  s  s  i  a  ^ 
are  allied  in  the  U  n  i  t  e  d  i 
Nations  against  Great  Britain,  | 
France  and  Israel  on  the  initial  j  Dr.  Yang  is  currently  on  leave 
procedure  in  dealing  with  t  h  e  i  of  absence  from  his  position  as 
Suez  crisis.  A  third,  which  is  part    English  professor  in  Taiwan  Nor- 


Dr.  Yang  will  show  how  Budd- 
hism, Taoism  and  Confucianism 
combine  in  the  Chinese  philosophy 
and  religion.  A  film  strip  from 
Life  Magazine  will  also  be  shown 
in    connection    with    the    subject. 


of  the  second,  is  that  his  Secre- 
tary of  State,  on  whom  the  Pres- 
ident has  heavily  relied,  is  blam- 
ed in  every  Allied  capital,  and  in 
Israel  and  Egypt  as  well,  for  the 
deterioration  of  the  Middle  East 
situation.  These  charges,  though 
made  mostly  in  private,  are  that 
Secretar^'  uulles  has  been  shift- 
ing, hesitant  and  even  disingen- 
uous in  his.dealing  with  other  na- 
tions. And  the  fact  that  these 
Governments  center  their  attack 
on  Dulles  instead  of  the  President 
is  argued  as  proof  of  Stevenson's 
charge  that  Eisenhower  is  not  "in 
charge  of  the  store." 
A  DAMAGED  CLAIM 

Another  liability  of  the  Presi- 
dent is  that  the  Admi^stration's 
claim  it  has  effected  boh  'peace" 
and    "prosperity"   in   the   United 


mal  University  to  study  the  opera- 
tion of  extra-curricular  activities 
on  a  university  campus. 

He  chose  UNC  to  be  his  home 
base  and  said  "I  arrived  on  the 
day  Freshman  Orientation  began 
and  1  will  be  here  through  com- 
mencement   in   June." 

All  interested  persons  have  been 
invited  to   attend. 


Duke  Is  Awarded  Five 
Grants  For  Research 


DURHAM.  (/P)  —  Five  research 
grants  totaling  $142,431  have  been 
awarded  Duke  University  by  the 
Atomic  Energy  Commission  and 
the  National  Science  Foundation. 
The  AEC  has  renewed  a  nuclear 
States  has' implied  that  its  con-!  physics  research  grant  worth  $99,- 
tribution  of  'peace"  was  global.  1281.  with  Dr.  Henr>'  W.  Newson, 
This  implication  was  demolished  '  physics  professor,  as  the  principal 
bv    the    British-French    air    and    investigator. 


naval  bombing  within  Egypt  and 
the  invasion  of  Egy^t  by  the 
troops  of  Israel.         i. 

Nb  man  can  e^t^Hiu]^  as  a  fact 
that  he  will  Ut^ '  anfdther  four 
yeafs.  and  at  j^B  agiB  Hid  in  view 
of  4|s  medical  tiistory  this  is  par- 
ticularly true  of  the  President. 
Hence  the  weight  of  that  liability, 
whj^tever  it  is,  cannot  be  cancel- 
ed.-But  he  caft,  as  he  did  last 


Student  Body  Secretary 
Plans  Writing  Career 

At  present,  Jackie  Aldridge  is  the  co-chairman  of  the  annual 
Campus  Chest  Drive.  She  and  her  committees  have  been  hard  at 
work  for  some  time  now  getting  out  letters  and  otherwise  drumming 
up  interest  in  this  project  which  gives  to  the  Cancer  Society,  CARE, 
the  (ioettingen  Exchange  Program,  and  the  World  University  Fund. 

Miss  Aldridge  is  a  senior  and  is  majoring  in  English  education 
here  at  Carolina.  After  graduation,  she  plans  either  to  write  feature 
articles  for  a  newspaper  or  teach  high  school  English. 

During  her  college  career,  she 
has  held  positions  in  each  of  the 
three  branches  of  student  govern- 
ment: legislative,,  judicial  and 
executive.  At  the  Women's  Cpl 
lege,  from  which  she  tranferred: 
last  year,  she  served  on  the  house 
council.  At  UNC  Miss  Aldridge  haf 
been  on  the  Women's  Honor  Coun 
cil  and  on  the  executive  council  of 
the  YWCA. 

In  addition  to  student  govern 
ment  positions.  Miss  Aldridge  has 
written  for  a  college  newspaper, 
sung  in  the  Woman's  College  Glee 
Club,  participated  in  the  Wesley 
Fellowship  and  held  offices  in  her 
sorority.  Alpha  Gamma  Delta. 

The  summer  between  her  sopho 
more  and  junior  years  in  colleg'^ 
was  spent  touring  Europe.  She  war 
in  Switzerland  at  the  time  the  Big; 
Four  Conferences  were  being  h^eld] 
and  expressed  her  disappointment! 
at  not  seeing  "our  delegates"  but 
getting  a  good  look  at  the  Russia 
representatives. 

When  asked  aljout  the  Russian 
men,  she  replied   that  they    were 


WITH   CHANCELLOR   HOUSE 

,.  .free  student  government 


The   NSF  grants,     which     were 
made    to    support    basic    research  i 
in    the    .science     and     training     of 
science  teachers,  are;  worth  a  total 
of  ^43,130. 


Y  SCHEDULE: 


3  p.m.— YMfcA  and  Hillel  Film 
Forum  Committee,  Y  -  Cabinet 
week  and  will  tomorrow,  make  |  room,  Steve  Mirman.  chairman, 
a  case  against  the  critics  of  his  4  p.m.  —  Y  Newspaper  Staff 
foreign  policy  and  of  Secretary  i  meeting,  Y-Cabinet  Room.  Nancy 
Dulles.   Also,   there    is    plenty   of    Suttle    and    Jerrj-    Gunler,    co-edi- 


cvidence  that  he  is  "in  charge 
of  the  store,"  so  that  the  issue 
raised  by  Stevenson  is  merely 
ope   of  management.   The   Presi- 


tors. 

5  p.m. — Study  groups:  Compara- 
tive Religions,  108  Hanes;  Con- 
temporary  Literature    and    Relig- 


dent  cannot,  of  course,   keep   or.  ious  Thought,  Cabinet  Room  (YM- 


bring  back  the  support  of  voters 
who  believe  either  that  the  Unit- 
ed States  should  back  Israel  re- 
gardless of  any  of  its  acts  or  pol- 
icies or  that  the  provocations  by 
which  Israel  justifies  its  inva- 
sion of  Egypt  render  it  guiltless 
of  the  charge  of  being  the  "ag- 
gressor." 

He  can.  however,  act  and  speak 
in  the  context  of  the  power  of 
the  Presidency  and  his-  own  un- 
matched prestige  in  the  world. 
And  this  asset  is  probably  the  one 


CA  Bldg.):  Courtship  and  Marr- 
iage, Methodist  Church;  Current 
Events,  107  Hanes;  International 
Relations,  300  Carroll;  Prayer  and 
Worship,  Y-Library  room;  Race 
Relations,  104  Hanes;  Science  ajjd 
Religion,   103  Hanes; 

5:45    p.m.  —  Campus    Christian 
Council  meeting.  Lenoir  Hall,  2nd        The    Carolina    Playmakers    will 
floor,  back  room,  Bill  Kane,  chair-  j  perform    Bernard    Shaw's    comedy 

"Androcles.and    the   Lion"    in    10 


mainly  distinguished  from  Western  men  by  their  portly  stature  and 
the  clothing  they  wore.  The  latter  was  of  coarser  material  than  we 
usually  see  here  in  the  United  States. 

An  incidMit  of  the  trip  which  Miss  Aldridge  views  with  distaste 
is  the  jaunt  over  to  the  romantic  Isle  of  Capri.  She  had  a  bad  cold, 
and  while  all  the  other  tourists  bought  romantic  souveniers,  she  pur- 
chased a  tube  of  Vicks.  ;^ 

After  a  busy  junior  year  at  Carolina,  she  went  to  the  National 
Student  Association  meeting  which  ,was  held  in  CHicago  thig  past 
June.  She  was  impressed  by  the  amount  of  freedom  that  Carolina's 
student  government  has  in  relation  to  Others,  as  was  Tom  Lambelh 
when  he  went  to  the  Student  Union  Association  meeting. 

Over  320  universities  were  represented  at  the  conference.  Miss 
Aldridge  was  on  the  executive  council  of  the  national  body  and  report- 
ed that  few  student  governments  have  the  privileges  and  control  over 
money  that  ours  does. 

Of  the  conference  as  a  whole.  Miss  Aldridge  said,  "It  was  a  won- 
derful experience . . .  meeting  all  those  people  from  all  over  the 
United  States." 

Summer  1956  was  a  busy  season  for  Miss  Aldridge.  She  toured 
the  country  (31  of  the  United  States,  Canada  and  Mexico)  with  her 
parents  and  managed  to  do  feature  v.Titing  for  the  Winston^alera 
Sentinal  as  well. 

Right  now,  Jackie  is  on  the  executive  council  of  the  YWCA  and 
working  hard  at  her  job  as  .secretary  of  the  student  body.  However, 
her  main  objective  at  this  time  is  to  make  a  success  of  the  Campus 
Chest  Drive. 


Playmakers  Mark  25th  Year 
Of  Touring  With  Shaw  Comedy 


man 

8  p.m. — C.C.C.  Study  group  on 
"Confucianism  and  Taoism,"  Dr. 
P.  C.  Yang,  speaker,  2nd  floor  of 


by  which  the  question  of  his  sue- 1  YMCA  Bldg. 

cession  as  affected  by  the  Suez  9  p.m. — YMCA  Cabinet  meeting, 
crisis  will  be  settled  next  Tues-  Cabinet  room,  Gerr>'  Mayo,  presi- 
day.  1  dent. 


towns  in  the  Carolinas,  Virginia 
and  Georgia  after  their  perform- 
ances here  Nov.  14-18. 

The  Playmakers;  who  will  start 
theri  25th  year  of  touring,  will  al- 
so be  observing  the  centennial  of 


Pogo 


By  Waft  Kelly 


P^igN^,  I'M  dUP  VOU  cm  AtONS  AT  TWI5  TlMg  "•  tgT  /Mg  TgUW 
VOg  THAT  VOU  Vm  Alt WWMS  N  TH»  COlJNTeV'-  iM^^OAW^ 

Mvmfofij\maiiFC4JiMmfi 
77^ 


poN'T  woeev  0OUT 

''HOTHIHG  IS  HBUO 
0AC<  fsgfi  160 
XfiAl85-'Wg/,«3F5 

'mBcaggCTfom. 


•»,•«"<  •«< 


Li'l  Abn«r 


By  Al  Capp 


Shaw's  birth  in  Dublin  in  1856. 

Directed  by  Harry  E.  Davis  of 
the  staff,  the  25-man  troupe  of  ac- 
tors and  technicians  will  trawl  in 
a  chartered  bus  accompanied  by  a 
moving  van  carrying  seven  tons 
of  scenery,  lighting  equipment, 
and  switchboard,  costumes  and 
properties. 

They  will  be  touring  from  Nov. 
26  to  Dec.  1  and  Dec.  4  to  Dec.  7. 
Towns  in  which  they  will  appear 
^are  Augusta,  Ga.,  Rock  Hill,  S.  C, 
Wilmington,  Goldsboro,  Rocky 
Mount,  Raleigh,  Danville,  Va.,  Mar- 
ion. Lenoir  and  Greensboro. 

Touring  has  a  twofold  purpose 
for  the  Playmakers,  who  have 
made  fifty  tours  since  1921,  ac- 
cord to  an  announcement.  As  a 
state  •  university  dramatic  organi- 
zation they  take  their  entertain- 
ment from  Chapel  Hill  to  the  peo- 
ple of  the  state  and  region.  Also, 
the  tour  provides  'on  the  road" 
training  for  dramatic  arts  .students 
who  gain  valuable  experience  by 
working  "one-night  stands,"  said 
the  announcement. 

In  "Androcles  and  the  Lion," 
Androcles,  a  Greek  tailor,  helps  a 
lion  by  removing  a  thorn  from  his 
paw  when  they  meet  in  the  forest. 
Later,  when  Androcles  is  sentenced 
to  death  in  the  martyrs'  arena  by 
Emperor  Caesar,  he  faces  a  wild 
beast  fresh  from  the  forest,  the 
lion  whom  he  befriended  who,  for- 
tunately, has  a  memory  like  an 
elephant. 

Tickets  for  the  five  Chapel  Hill 
performances  in  the  Playmakers' 
Theatre  will  be  available  tomor- 
row to  season  ticket  holders  and 
Wedne.sday  to  the  general  public 
for  SI  .50.  at  214  Abernethy  HaU. 
Ledbetter-Pickard's,   or  Box  1050. 


4,   1956 


SUNDAY.  MOVEMBEJt  4,  1956 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


PA61    TMII5» 


ary 


ie  annual 
1  hard  at 
drumming 
ty,  CARE, 
ty  Fund. 

education 
(e  feature 


t   , 


HOUSE 

mmettt 

ature  and 
1  than  we 

th  distaste 

bad  cold, 

I   sbe  pur- 

:  National 
thi^  past 

Carolina's 
Lambetb 

?nce.  Misa 
ind  report- 
mtrol  over 

vas  a  won- 
over   the 

the  toured 
)  with  her 
»ton-Salem 


CA  and 
However, 
e  Campus 


lec/y 

in  1856. 

Davis  of 
oupe  of  ac- 
11  travel  in 
>anied  by  ft 
seven  toos 
equipment, 
tumes    and 

from  Nov. 
4  to  Dec.  7. 
will  appear 
Hill,  S.  C 
ro.  Rocky 
le,  Va.,  Mar^ 
;boro. 

old  purpose 
who  have 
e  1921,  ac- 
mcnt.  As  a 
latic  organi* 
r  entertain- 
to  the  peo- 
region.  Also, 
the  road" 
arts  students 
cperience  by 
;tands,"    said 

the  Lion," 
ilor,  helps  a 
orn  from  his 
in  the  forest. 
is  sentenced 
yrs"  arena  by 
faces  a  wild 
forest,  the 
ded  who,  for- 
>ory    like    an 

Chapel  Hill 
Playmakers' 

liable  tomor- 
holders  and 

eneral    public 

'rnethy   Hall. 

or  Box   1050. 


Us^ 


if*" 


,    -  « 


WHERE  ARE  YOU  GOING? 


1 


for  imitort  in  •l«ctric«l,  nMci$«aic<il 
or  a«ronautlcal  •nglnttring  anil 
r«latMi  Holds. 


Write  to:  Engineering  Recruiting 

Department  25'E 

General  Electric  Company 

Schenectady  5,  N.  Y. 


3 


For  fiMiorf  In  phytlw  or  onflnotr* 
Ing  physics* 


Opportunities  for 
PJiysics  Graduates 


wtmmmmm 


msam 


ismtt^^ 


EVEN  if  you  are  just  starting  college  in  the  *'Class  of  1960,"  we  suggest  that 
you  take  a  long  look  at  where  you  are  going.  Know,  don't  guess,  what  is 
offered  by  fields  like  engineering  and  science,  finar.ce,  marketing  and  relations. 
Too  often  young  people  discover  late  in  their  senior  year  that  they  can't  qualify 
for  the  career  of  their  choice.  Why  be  caught  sh6rt?  Selecting  a  career  and  knowing 
what  is  expected  will  make  it  possible  for  you  to  prepare  for  it  now.  Many 
graduates  will  find  their  place  with  industry. 

General  Electric  is  typical  of  many  large  industrial  concerns.  We  employ  over 
27,000  college  graduates  from  nearly  700  different  colleges  and  universities.  And 
,  our  future,  as  the  future  of  any  progressive  company,  hinges  on  these  people. 
Young  men  and  women  that  have  initiative,  analytical  and  creative  ability  will 
make  progress  with  industry.  If  you  are  interested,  write  for  information  about 
one  or  more  of  the  programs  listed  on  this  page.  These  are  the'principal  doorways 
to  success  at  General  Electric.  The  booklets  can  also  be  found  at  most  college 
placement  bureaus  in  a  binder  entitled  "Career  Information." 


"  iw 


^m 


4 


For  mafors  In  •nglnotring.  ^/^ 


II  (  IIMI    \l 


^1  \IIKI   IIM. 
i'ltlM.II  \>l 


'■^■>*N^^^^■■^>.^■$:s^ 


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THI  DAILY  TAX  Httt. 


SUNDAY,  NOVEMBER  4,  1956 


Tar  Baby  Foofballers  Stop 
Virginia  By  Score  Of  52-6 


The  Carolina  freshman  gridders 
vent  on  a  coring  spree  yesterday 
and  left  Tar  Heel  footprints  all 
tover  the  University  ©f  Virginia 
freshmen  as  they  stomped  the  Baby 
Cavaliers.  52-6,  in  a  game  played 
in  Roanoke.  Va. 

This  massive  offensive  display 
found  six  different  Tar  Babies  in 
the  scoring  column,  with  two  play- 
ers. Cornell  Johnon  and  Ron  Hop- 
man  tallying  twice  each. 

The  Carolina  score  tells  only 
half  the  story,  for  the  offensive  ef- 
forts of  the  Virginia  frosh  were 
smothered  throughout  the  game  by 
strong  defensive  play  on  the  part 
of  the  Tar  Babies. 

Coach  Fred  Tullai  said  of  his 
charges  after  the  game,  "The  guys 
looked  very  good.  They  hustled  a 


Navy  Tops  Notre  Dame 
With  Timely  Passes^  33-7 

BALTIMORE,  <iP)— Navy's  pent- 
up  scoring  punch  burst  its  bounds 
for  three  touchdowns  in  the  third 
quarter  and  witlr^tmely  passing  by 
quarterback  Tom  Forx«stal  beat 
Notre  Dame,  33-7,  yesterday  for 
the  first  time  since  1944. 

Navy  held  the  upper  hand  after 
the  first  few  minutes  and  got  1 
touchdown  near  the  end  of  the 
first  half  to  take  a  7-0  lead. 

The  crowd  of  57,773  was  treated 
to  an  explosive  third  quarter  with 
Notre  Dame  getting  its  only  touch- 
down on  a  27-yard  run  by  halfback 
Bob  Ward.  j 

The  teams  swapped  touchdowns  ,, 
in  the  first  4  minutes  of  the  s^- 
ond  half  on  the  damp  Memorial  | 
Stadium  gridiron,  and  Skvf  then 
pulled  away  for  its  fifth  victory ; 
in  six  games. 


lot.  In  fact  they  all  but  hustled  the* 
Virginia  team  right  off  the  field.'' 
Hopman  began  the  scoring  show 
in  the  first  quarter  when  he  cir- 
cled his  end  of  20  yards  and  the 
first    touchdown.  I  n    the    second  j 
quarter,  halfback  Cornell  Johnson  1 
took  a  pass  from  his  running  mate  ; 
Wade  Smith  and  raced  into  pay- 
dirt.   The   play   covered    8  yards. 
Shortly  afterward,  Hopman  took  a  i 
pass  from  quarterback  John  Cum- 1 
mings  worth  25  yards  and  his  sec- 
ond touchdown. 


To  open  the  second  half  TD  pa- 
rade, Johnson  plowed  into  the  and 
zone  for  his  second  score.  In  the 
same  quarter,  tackle  Mike  SfcDade 
capatilized  on  one  of  his  teammat- 
es errors  as  he  fell  on  a  Carolina 
fumble  in  the  Virginia  end  zone. 

Halfback  Jim  Crew  led  olf  in 
the  fourth  quarter  as  he  took  a 
pitchout  from  his  quarterback  and 
swept  his  own  Ipft  end  for  20  yards 
and  a  score.  Wade  Smith  added  his 
contribution  shortly  ;|fterw^d 
when  h*  punched  over  the  goal 
line  from  one  yard  out  for  the 
touchdown. 

Fullback  Jim  Stevens  completed 
the  Tar  Baby  scoring  with  a  four 
yard  line  buck  for  the  final  touch 
down. 

Virginias  lone  offensive  counter 
came  in  the  final  period  against 
Tar  Baby  reserves. 

Coach  Tullai  said  that  among  the 
defensive  players  of  Carolina,  end 
Ed  Furjanic.  fullback  George  Kirk, 
tackle  Jim  Jenrett.  and  center  Jim 
Davis  played  outstandingly. 

Tullai  used  his  entire  team,  over 
three  full  squads,  in  the  rout  and 
said  that  all  performed  exception- 
ally well. 


Tech  Tops  Devils,  7-0, 
Before  38,000  Turnout 

DURHAM.  N.  C,  1*1  —  Powerful  Georgia  T»eh  finally  brek*  th» 
•hackiM  against  a  stout  Duke  d*fMU*  yesterday  wHth  a  fourth  poriod 
touchdown  to  defoat  the  inspirad  Bluo  DoviU,  7-0.  and  maintain 
its  undofoat«d  record  before  a  choering  crowd  of  38,000. 

Fullback  Dickio  Mattison  of  CharfoHa  ptungod  over  from^tho 
1  oarly  in  the  fourth  quarter  to  prevido  the  winnin«  margin  in  a 
skin-tifht  fame.  Quarterback  Wado  Mitchell  converted. 

it  was  the  ninth  consecutivo  win  for  Coach  Bobby  Dodd's  team, 
raoked  socond  in  tho  nation  in  tho  current  Associatod  Press  football 
poll.  It  wa«  Duke's  fourth  loss  in  seven  starts. 

Duke,  playing  an  inspired  performance,  missed  a  gOod  scoring 
chance  in  the  second  quarter  when  a  drive  stopped  on  the  Tech  5. 
The  ^luf  Devils  had  moved  from  their  33  to  Tech's  3.  Tackle  Sid 
Deleet<|i>  a  senior  from  Roanoke  Rapids,  led  the  big  Duke  lino  that 
roiore  than  match^  Georgia  Tech  and  stopped  everything  Tech  could 
muster  until  tho  payoff  touchdown. 

That  c^ive  began  late  in  the  third  quarter  when  halfback  Paul 
Rotenberry  intercepted  a  pass  by  quarterback  Bob  Brodhoad  on 
Georgia  Tech's  38. 

Goorgia  Tech  was  threatoning  «t  the  end-  of  the  game  and  had 
poMefsion  on  Duke's  7. 

eCOitGIA  TECH  0        0        0        7  —  7 

IkUKC  0        0        0        0  —  0 

Geeegif  Tech  scoring:  Tpuchdown  —  Mattison  (1,  plunge)  con- 
version —  MIfchell. 


Cmrolina  Distance  Men  Top  Tennessee,  26-29, 
To  End  Vol  Win  Streak;  Beatty  Tops  M^^rphy 


By  LARRY  CHEEK 

*  Special  to  The  Daily  Tar  Heel 

KN03p(lLLE,  Tenn.— Carolina's 
powerftil  .cross-countr>'  team,  led 
by  Ail-American  Jim  Beatty,  end- 
ed  the 'IJ^niversity  of  Tennessee's 


DeoconsTurn  Fumble,  Steal 
Into  73-0  Win  Over  N.  C.  State 


WINSTON-SALiEM,  (JP)  —  Alert 
Wake  Forest  turned  a  fumble  and 
a  stolon  ball  into  first  half  touch- 
downs yesterday  to  whip  North 
Carolina  State  18-0  for  its  first  j 
Atlantic  Coast  Conference  Foot- 1 
ball  victory  of  the  season.  j 

Quick   scoring  thrusts  followed 
the  eariy  breaks  as  Wake  Forest 


Oklahoma  Comes  From  Behind 
ToTakeWin  Over  Colorado 

BOULDER.  Colo..  (7P)— Trailing,    for  only  a  period,  they  came  back 
19-6,  at  half  time,  Oklahpma's  top- 1,  after  the  half  time  rest  oh  touch- 
'  *     "    '      ■         down  drives  of  90  and  40  yards. 


rated  football  team  struck  for  two 
third  period  touchdowns  on"  the 
brilliant  runoing  of  /  halfbacks 
Tommy  McDonald  and  Clrtidon 
Thomas  to  def)^if  underdog  Colo- 
rado, 27-19,  h«re  yesterday. 


,  McDonald  and  Thqnias  delivered 
the  key  gains  behjnci  the  charged 
up  Oklahoma  lint.  ■    •  •    '* 

Midxvay  in  the  fourth  period,^  the 
Sooners  w/apped  it  up  with  a  mag- 
;  The  unranked  Coloradans  scorM  ]  nificeit  91-yard  parch  capped  fey. 
in  the  first  4  minutes  on  a  blocked  j  quarterback  Jin^my  Harris'  17-yard 
punt  and  sailed  for  two  second  i  pass  to  Thomas  in  the  end  zone, 
quarter  touchdowns  with  a  furious  Colorado  bolted  to  the  early  lead 
singl^-win«  assault.  The  twich-.  ^.^^.^^^^  j^^^  ^j^^j^  y^^j^^^ 
dQwn  trips  covered  55  and  '70|*^fliy.  Pricers  attempted  thu-d 
y^''*^-  i  down  quick  kick,  on  the  Sooner  10. 

That  shocked  the   Sooners,  fav- '  The    ball    bounced    into   the    end 
ored  to  win  by  four  touchdowns,    zone  wtih  Colorado  fullback  John 

Bayuk  recovering. 


Virginia  Los««  Close 
One  To  Vanderbiit,  6-2 

CHARI.0TI1CSV1W*,  Va.,  (^ 
— Vanderbilt  slogf^d  62,  yards 
throufTh  the  muek  lor,  a  second- per- 
iod touphdown  an4  then  slopped 
Virginia  a  yard  sli«^  of  the  goal 
in  the  fUal  quarter  tejr^o^  a,  6-2 
football  victory  y^^rday  in  rain'^ 
apatteiye4  Scott  ^aidUilDi 

Boyce  Smith,  peiaed  8oph*>™orc 
quarterback  ^taadifij|/jn  for  the 
iniUfed  Don  Orr,  sUq^  12  ya^ds 
over  right  taekle  tor  the  touchdown 
that  decided  the  ga^e/ 

Virginia's  only  dent. ii|  the  $cp:r- 
ing  column  came  «f|er  ^^.BiaFch 
that  die^  on  the  Vudy  1  with  le«s 
than  4  minutes  remaining.  On 
Vanderbilt's  first  play.  Smith  took 
the  snap  from  ccjjter  in  the  end 
zone  and  fell  on  tie  ball  to  give  the 
Cavaliers  a  safety. 


made  the  most  of  its  limited  scor- 
ing opportunities.  With  five  min- 1 
utcs  gone  in  the  first  period,  quar- 1 
terback     Charlie     Carpenter    and  I 
end  Ralph  Brewster  clicked  on  a 
55-yard  pass   play  for     the     first  i 
touchdown.      Carpecter      dropped 
back  from  his  45  and  found  Brew- 
ster all  alone  on  State's  25  from 
where  he  breezed  over. 

The  touchdown  had  been  set  up 
when  State  quarterback  Bill  Frank- 
Un  fumbled  -end  Wake  Forest  re- 
covered on  its  own  35.  Three 
plays  made  it  a  first  down  on  the 
45  preceding  the  touchdown  play. 
.Early  in  the  second  period,  Jim 
Uofn,  Wake  Forest  tackle,  stole 
the  ball  from  State  fullback  Tony 
Guerrieri  and  Wake  Forest  took 
aver  on  the  WoUpack  35.  On  ..tlvrd 
down  tiitt  aa  offside  penalty  cost 
Wake  Forest  five  yards.  Carpealer 
pHched  out  to  halfback  Dick  Dan- 
-jels  who  swept  wide  around  left 
end  and  raced  32  yards  to  cross 
thfr  goal  line  standing  up. 

Thereafter,  ^ost  of  Wake  For- 
est's attack  was  concentrated  in 
the  bull  like  rushes  of  fullback 
Bill  Barnes  who  led  all  ball  car- 
riers with  118  yards  in  20  caries 
to  set  a  new  school  season's  record 
of  756.  He  has  three  games  to  play. 


Kentucky  Tops 
Maryland,  14-0 

COLLEGE  PARK,  Md.,  (JP)— 
Billy  Mitchell  chugged  78  muddy 
yards  on  a  punt  return  and  little 
Ivan  Curnutte  slipped  9  yards  on 
aa  pitchout  for  Kentucky's  14-0 
victory  over  Ma^land  yesterday. 

Mitchell's  score  midway  in  the 
fourth  quarter  was  the  clincher  in 
the'  third  straight  victory  for  the 
rebounding  Wildcats. 

Curnutte,  a  5-6.  165-pound  half- 
back, started  the  once-mighty  Ter- 
rapins to  their  fifth  straight  loss 
with  his  sleek  rim  around  right 
end  90. seconds  before  the  end  of 
the  half. 

Quarterback  O  e  1  m  a  r  Hughes 
converted  after  both  touchdowns. 

Maryland,  virtually  paralyzed 
on  offense  throughout  most  of  the 
game,  frittered  away  ^  two  golden 
opportunities  after  end  Ben  Scotti 
recovered  a  pair  of  Kentucky  fum- 
bles in  the  opening  quarter. 

Stottl  trapped  one  by  Bob  Cra- 
vens on  the  28  and  another  by 
quarterback  Ken  Robertson  on  the 
19|  On  the  first,  Maryland  moved 
only  to  the''>$3  before  trying  an 
unsuccessful  field  goal.  On  the 
second  the  Tcrps  got  to  the  8  be- 
fore a  ij-j'ard  penalty  ended  the 
threat  ^l. 

iSl ^ 


four  meet  winning  streak  here 
yesterday  as  the  Tar  Heels  romp- 
ed to  a  close  26-29  win  over  the 
V.ols. 

Beatty  continued  his  all  winning 
ways  by  taking  first  place  by  a 
wide  margin  over  Tennessee  ace 
Ed  Murphy.  Beatty  toured  the 
picturesque  3.5  mile  course  in  17:- 
34,  a  mere  15  seconds  ahead  of 
Murphy.  Another  Vol,  Norman 
Stone,  grabbed  third  place  ahead 
of  Tar  Heels  Dave  Scurlock  and 
Everett  Whatley,  who  tied  for 
fourth. 

In  whipping  the  Vols,  the  Tar 
Heels  hurdled  one  of  their  stiffest 
obstacles  of  the  year.  Going  into 
yesterday's  meet,  Tennessee  was 
unbeaten  and  reigned  as  king  in 
the  Southeastrn   Conference. 

The  win  brought  Carolina's  sea- 
son's record  to  6-1.  The  next  out- 


Wo  Aro  NOT  Suppressiim 

PROUD 

SHOES 

By  Pauli  Murray 

A  courageous  young  woman  talks 
of  her  ancestors  —  both  black  and 
white  —  in  the  Chapel  Hill-Dur- 
ham area. 

Just  Out 

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THE  INTIMATE 
BOOKSHOP 

205  East  Franklin  Street 
Open  Till  10  P.M. 


ing  for  Coach  Dale  Ranson's  crew 
will  be  Tuesday  in  Durham  when 
th,ey  meet  the  Duke  Blue  Devils. 
The  summary: 

1— Beattj-,  C,  17:34;  2— Murphy. 
T,  17:49;  3— Stone,  T,  17:59;  4— 
Scurlock,  C,  and  Whatley,  C,  tie, 
18:49;  6— Kirtland,  T,  18:28;  Ben 
Williams,  C,  18:34;  ft— Taylor,  T, 
18:36;  9— -Perrin  Henderson,  C, 
18:38;  10 — Sims,  T,  18:47;  11— 
Reaves,  C,  18:58;  12 — Marion  Grif- 
fin, C,  18:59;  13— Doug  Henderson, 
C.  19:31. 


CLASSIFIEDS 


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for  Thanksgiving  vacation.  Will 
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(Continued  from  Page   1) 

[  spread  only  once  during  the  game, 
I    and  gained  no  yardage. 

The  Tar  Heels  and  Vols  battled 

I  on  even  terms,  for  most  of  the  first 

\  quarter.  Tennessee  took  the  open- 

i  ing  kickof f    and    couldn't    move, 

finally  punting  to  Ed  Sutton,  who 


returned  the   ball  to  his  own  22.    Ed  Sutton  took  Carter's  kick  and 


From  here  the  Tar  Heels  moved 
to  the  41,  where  numerous  penal- 
ties set  them  back  to  the  22  again. 
They  had  to  kick  from  there. 

Tenjiessee  put  the  Tar  Heels  in 
a  hole  on  the  heftr»orii»  ^^,-^1 
Carter  booted  to  the '  Ctfolina 


MURALS 


Monday's  Tag  Football  Schedule: 

4  p.m.  —  fieldl,  Beta  vs  SPE 
(w);  tield-2  SAE  vs  Phi  Delt  (w); 
field-3,  ATO  vs  Kappa  Sig  (w); 
field-4,  Sigma  Chi  vs.  Sigma  Nu 
(w);  field-5,  Stacy-1  vs.  &vecett-3. 

5  p.m.  —  field-1,  vs.  Med.  Sich.-3; 
field-2,  Everett-2  vs.  Vic  Vil;  field- 
3,  Dent.  Sch.  vs.  Zeta  Pat;  field-4, 
Lewis  vs.  Law  Sch.-l;  field-9,  Med 
Sch.-2  vs.  Everett-1. 

Monday's  Volieyball  Sditdulf: 

4  p.m.  —  court-1,  Vic  Vil.  vs. 
Cobb:  court-2,  Aycock  vs.  Old 
West;  court-3,  Graham  vs.  Clrimes; 
court-5,  ZBT  vs  Kappa  Sig. 

5  p.m.  —  court-1,  Joyner  vs. 
Everett-2;  court-2.  Phi  Gam  vs  Chi 
Psi;  court-3,  Sigma  Nu  vs.  TEP; 
court-4,  Pi  Lambda  vs.  SAH. 

/  Monday  Nighfs 

Wrestling  Schedule: 
7  p.m.  —  123  lb.  —  Hutton  (Sig 
Chi)-V3  Champlin  (ATO);  7:10,  123 
lb.  —  GilUam  (Chi  Phi)  vs.  Whe- 
less  (Sig  Nu);  7:20  —  130  lb.  — 
Bonnet  (Beta)  vs.  Young  (Zeta); 
7:30  —  130  lb.  —  Suttle  (ATO)  vs. 
Patseavorus  (Chi  Phi);  7:40  —  137 
lb.  —  Ellis  (DU)  vs.  Hager  (Beta); 
7:50  —  147  lb.  —  Suddreth  (AKPsi) 
vs.  Porter  (Sig  Nu);  8:00  —  147  lb. 

—  Nykopp  (Chi  Phi)  vs.  Perrj' 
(DKE);  8:10  —  157  ib.  —  Raymond 
(Sig  Chi)  vs.  Oakley  (Sig  Nu);  8:20 

—  157  lb.  —  Damerin  (Kappt  Sig) 
vs.  Balkind  (TEP). 

There  will  be  an  intramural 
ypenhouse  on  Monda.N-  from  7  to 
9  p.m.  and  the  Kud  ;uul  (>iiji  iiieul 
Tuo>iday   ;titernooa. 


returned  19  yards  to  the  Vol  28. 

Vale  got  3  to  the  25,  McMuUen 
picked  up  3  more  to  the  22  and 
on  the  next  play  Reed  went  to  the 
19  on  a  keep  play.  With  4tb  and 
one,^  McMullen  took  a  pitchout  and 
circled  left  end,  but  Vol  wingback 


PATRONIZI  YOUR 
•   ADVERTISERS   e 


where  Siutton  gji^heuei^  i^  iij  ^ndl^o^by  Sandlin  came  out  of  no- 
returned  to  the  9.  Tbe  Tar  HeiOs  f  ^here  to  throw  him  on  the  20. 
moved  to  the  28  behind  the  hard 
running  ^f  halfback  Larry  McMul- 
len.  When  the  drive  stalled,  full- 
back Wally  Vale  went  back  to 
kick  on  fourth  down.  Vol  right 
guard  BUI  Johnsqn  broke  through 
to  blod(  the  punt,  and  it  was  Ten- 
nessee's ball  first  and  10  on  the 
Carolina,  17. 

The  Vols  moved  down  to  the  9 
in  two  plays,  hut  an  offside  pen- 
alty moved  them  back  to  the  14 
where  two  passes  fell  incomplete 
and  UNC  took  over. 

After  Moe  DeCantis  gained  4  to 
the  18,  Vale  dropped  back  and 
booted  a  quick  kick  out  to  the 
Tennessee  44  were  Carter  fielded 
it  and  returned  to  the  Carolina 
36.  From  this  point,  it  took  the 
Vols  only  nine  plays  to  go  the 
neoessary  yardage. 
SjCORI 

Carter,  Bronsoa  and  wingback 
Doug  Anderson  alternate^  carrying 
the  ball  to  the  23  where  Carter, 
wtih  4  fourth  and  7  situation, 
broke  the  Tar  Heel  defense  open 
with  a  perfect  strike  to  end  Bud- 
dy CxuMi  00  the  10.  There  was  no 
stopping  the  Vols  from  here  as 
they  roared  over  the  goal  in  only 
two  plaj^s  with  Carter  doing  the 
honors  Irom  6  yards  out.  The 
score  came  with  2:03  gone  in  the 
second  quarter.  Bob  Smithers' 
try  for  the  extra  point  was  block- 
ed by  guard  Jimmy  Jones. 

Carolina  took  the  ensuing 
kickolf  and  couldn't  ipove.  Vale 
went  h9ek  to  kick  on  fourth  down 
and  his  66  yard  boot  rolled  dead 
on  the  Vole  ont  foot.  line.  Ten- 
nessee/look  Qu  chancud  witii  thcii° 
bstck!:  to  the  wall  and  kicked  out. 


«250 


value— 


flfio 


ytui  tail 


u 


HARltnET  HUBBARD  AYCR 

HAND  CREAN 

big  beauty  bai^ain  at 
}onr  fingertip*. 


Limitod  ttef  oaly 


Phone  9-8781 


^  Story  of  suspense 

.^^.  I  ...  and 

f    fear! 


AM  A 

ROCKKT  PlLOTt  U.9.A. 

IN 


ESTHER  WILLIAMS 
GEORGE  NADER 


(jHGUAnOlO 


MOMENT 


jum/  its  shocking  sAermathJ 

Co-5fornng  fho  oxdfing  now  pfsotKittty  JOHN   SAXON 


WIAN  •  lEITH  •  mS 
NOW  PUYING 


Carolina 


^  EDWARD  ANDREWS  •  LES  TREMAYNE  •  Directed  by  HARRY  KELLER 
Screenplay  by  HERB  MEADOW  wd  LARRY  MARCUS  •  Produced  by  GORDON  KAY 

A  UNIVERSAL. INTERNATIONAL  PICTURE 


TODAY  AND 
MONDAY 


Games  for  Two 

by 

Albert  Morehead     , 
and 
Geoffrey  Mctt-Smith 

Here's  a  treasure-house  of  amuse- 
ment    for     the     young     married 
couple,    or    the    student 
games-minded  room-mate 
ed  at  $2.50. 

Our  Special 

$1.00 

THE  INTI/WATE 
BOOKSHOP 

205  East  Franklin  Street 
Open  Till  10  P.M. 


with     a 
Publii^hr 


I 


EDIBLE  SPORT  SHIRTS? 


Among  the  sort  of  sport  shirts 
that  Van  Heusen  refuses  to 
make  are  the  following: 

Sport  shirts  thai  light  up  in 
iht  dark:  These  are  the  kind 
that  flash  messages,  like  "Hey, 
baby,  you're  a  honey,"  or 
"Pass  the  ashtray,  please." 
Useful  for  parties,  faculty  teas 
and  cotillion  balls.  But  they 
tend  to  commercialize  the 
graceful  art  of  conversation. 

Spori  shirts  with  road  maps 
m  thkm:  Too  dangerous.  Say 
you're  driving  from  campus 
to  the  big  city.  You  don't  know 
whether  to  turn  left  or  right 
at  the  tvu-npike,  so  you  look 
down  at  your  shirt  to  check. 
Crash! 

Edible  sport  shirts:  Too  mis- 
leading. You're  sitting  under  a 
shady  tree  vnth  your  favorite 
co-ed.  She  rests  her  head  gently 


on  your  chest.  You  think  she's 
fond  of  you.  Suddenly  you  hear 
"munch,  munch"  and  there 
goes  your  delicious  shirt!  It 
was  it  she  craved,  not  you! 

But  the  sport  shirts  that 
Van  Heusen  does  make  are 
fascinating.  Dashing  checks, 
interesting  plaids,  splendid 
stripes,  solids  in  some  very 
unusual  colors.  Their  cut  is 
free  and  comfortable  . .  •  their 
style  is  original  and  flattering. 
Thumb  through  the  collection 
that  your  campus  haberdasher 
proudly  displays. 

At  better  stores  every wliero, 
or  write  to  Pliillips-Jones 
Corp.,  417  Fifth  Avenue,  New 
York  16,  New  York.  Makers 
of  Van  Heusen  Shirts  •  Sport 
Shirts  •  Ties  •  Pajamas 
Handkerchiefs  •  Underwear 
Swimwear   •  Sweaters. 


WE  ARE  THE  EXCLUSIVE 


VAN  HEUSEN 


DEALER  IN  CHAPEL  HILL 


\ 


ACItOSft 

1.  Mops  up. 
aa  water 
S.A 

teaeoninf 
•.  Polish  city 

10.  Operatie       1 
melody 

11.  Mediterran. 
can  island 

12.  Plan«t 

14.  Marks  as 
correct 

15.  Substance 
used  in 
soap 
makinf 

17-  Greek  letter 

18.  Exist 

19.  Flar*  up 
for  ft 
moment 

21.  Kiny  of 

Bashan 

«Bib.i 
12.  Below 

(nftut.) 
tS.  Border 
25.  Permit 

27.  Ill- 
tempered 

28.  Glen 

t1».  Presently 
M.  Account 

(abbr.) 
SI.  Noise 
38.  Tantalum 

(sym  ) 
25.  Witty 

saying 
$7.  River 

bottom 

88.  American 
Indian 

89.  Trap 

41.  Personal 
ma^etikin 
(■lanr) 


45.  Surrender 

46.  Scatters. 
aa  lecd 

DOWN 

1.  Qumch. 

as  thirst 
2-  N'octurnal 

birds 
i.  Kettle 

4.  Bird 

5.  Keeps 
«.  Part  of 

•^to  be" 

7.  A  straight 
pencil  mark 

8.  Food  fishes 
11.  Crowd 

IX  Wise  me* 
18.  To  steer 

wild,  as 

a  boat 


19  Larf « 
masses 
of 

driftinf 

ie« 
20.  Kingr  of 

Judea 

(Bib.) 
22.  Entire 

amount 
24.  A 

fellow 

at  Oxford 
26.  U.  S. 

president 
26.  Concise 
37  Birds  of 

prey 

(So.  Am.) 
29.  Girl's 

nickname 
1:2.  Fat 


uiasca  nuBB 

TIBS    BSQ 

nnan  EnscsHe 
aamnn  f4£jLV»:[4 


11-5 

Sstsrday't  Aatwer 

33.  Bark  cloth 
<pl.) 

34.  Indian  tree 
J6.  Allowance 

A  for  weight 

(Comm.) 

%%.  Merg^anser 

40.  Fiee 

42.  Excla. 
mation 


♦i 


rSlbtifk 


W«S«««WVI 


r.r.r.  •  librahy 

SERIALS  DEPT. 
BOX  870 


Russia    Suggests    U.S.-Sovief   Alliance    For    Midwest 


it 


^-^^-4^- 


^'t<sf^^    .'^f^, 


'■•Ca 


*^*?) 


e  C:.  y  ?  \T 


THE  COOLING  MIDDLE  EAST 


Compiled  by  The  Daily  Tar   Heel 
From  Short  Wave   artd  Racfto  Reports 

Russia  suggested  last  night  that  she  and  the  Uhited  States  join 
forces  to  stop  the  fighting  in  Egypt. 

The  suggestion,  in  a  letter  from  Soviet  Premier  Nikolai  Bulganin 
to  President  Eisenhower,  was  killed  by  the  United  Nations.  When 
IJussia  attempted  to  place  the  suggestion  on  the  UN's  Security 
Council  agenda,  four  countries  voted  against  it — Britain,  France, 
Australia  and  the  United  States. 

Russia's  plan  would  send  US.S.R.  and  American  sea  and  air 
forces  into  the  Egyptian  area  to  settle  the  war  there. 

White  House  spokesmen  called  the  plan  "unthinkable." 

Meanwhile,  across  the  world,  Britain  and  France  have  agreed 
fo  stop  military  action  against  Egypt  as  soon  as  a  United  Nations 
truce  force  is  accepted  by  Egypt  and  Israel. 


Egypt  immediately  agreed  to  the  idea,  according  to  reports  from 
ttie  United  Nations. 

Israel  said  all  fighting  between  her  and  Egypt  in  the  Sinai  Desert 
ti'ea  has  ceased.  Britain  announced  she  had  ended  ail  bombing  on 
Egyptian  soil. 

The  White  House,  in  its  answer  to  the  Bulganin  letter,  said 
Russia  has  an  obligation  to  withdraw  her  troops  from  Hungary'  be- 
fore trying  to  settle  the  Middle  East's  problems. 

In  Egypt,  English  and  French  soldiers  were  reported  poised  off 
Port  Said.  The  port  itself  was  reported  taken  by  Anglo-French  para- 
troopers. * 

Arab  sabateurs  were  said  tc  have  cut  off  one-half  of  the  Middle 
Eastern  oil  supply.  Experts  said  one-fourth  of  the  world's  oil  pro- 
duction was  threatened. 


vr 


THE    SEETHING    HUNGARY    AREA 


WEATHER 

Partly  cloudy  and  mild  with  cx- 
p«ctcd   high   of  68. 


VOL.  LVII  NO.  40 


Complete  (/P)   Wire  Service 


2ri)  c  3)aitu  ffi  ^Tar  Heel 


BRINK 

Walk  to  it  and  vote.  See  page  2. 


UP  Fills 
Vacancies 
In  Slate 

The  University  Party  held  its 
last  meeting  before  the  coming 
elections  of  Nov.  13,  filling  four 
vacancies  caused  by  the  withdraw- 
al of  candidates  and  introducing 
three   new   bills   to   the   members. 

The  appointments  made  by 
Chairman  Mike  Weinman  to  fill 
the  vacancies  were  voted  on  and 
approved.  Weinman  appointed 
Henr>-  Bodenheimer  to  fill  the 
vacancy  in  Dorm  I,  Val  Von  Am- 
mon  in  Town  Women,  and  Jack 
Lewis  and  Jern-  Cole  in  Town  I. 

The  three   new   bills,   which  al- 
ready had  been  introduced  to  the  i 
Student   Legislature   by   Chairman 
Weinman  were:  I 

1.)  To  establish  a  committee  tot 
look    into    the    establishmirnt    <# 
parking  lots  for  the  students.        | 

2.)   To  establish  a  committee  to  J 
look  for  a  new  place  to  hold  the  , 

Honor  Council's  meetings.  i 

) 

3.)  To  provide  $400  to  the  Daily  j 
Tar  Heel  in  order  to  set  up  an  in 
lernalional  news  wire. 

Before  the  meeting  was  adjourn- 
ed. Chairman  Weinman  gave  the 
party  a  brief  "pep  talk"  in  prepa- 
ration for  the  elections  next  Tues- 
day. 

"If  you  work,  I  promise  you'll 
win.  but  if  you  don't  work  and  jwst 
put  up  posters  and  bulletins,  I 
promise  you'll  lose,"  Weinman 
said. 

After  the  meeting  was  adjourn- 
ed at  8:30  Weinman  made  some 
statements  concerning  his  recent 
withdrawal  as  floor  leader  in  the 
Student  Legislature,  attacking 
students  who  had  claimed  there 
was  ill  will  between  him  and  the 
new  UP  floor  leader,  Benny  ! 
Thomas. 

"The  charges  are  fantastic,  I 
"never  heard  of  such  a  thing," 
Weinman  said.  "The  talk  about 
there  being  a  riff  between  Benny 
and  me  is  ridiculous."  Weinman 
said.  "I  felt  wrong  about  being 
both  chairman  and  floor  leader," 
Weinman  added. 


CHAPEL  HILL.  NORTH  CAROLIK^,  TUESDAY,  NOVEMBER  6.  1954 


Offices   in   Graham   Memorial 


FOUR   PAGES   THIS    iSSUf 


IN  MEETING  LAST  NIGHT 


Last  Day 

For  Tickets!  ^^'"^"^  ^^^^^  ^^*^  ^f 
To  Va   Tilt  ^orm,  Greek  Trophies 


behind 

at    the 

Coker 


DUkathonHead 

i 

Wants  Pictures 
In  By  Tonight 

DUkathon  Chairman  Ernie 
Kemm  ha  asked  that  candidates 
for  the  DUkathon  Queen  submit 
pictures  by  tonight. 

Candidates  who  do  not  have 
pictures  available  may  have  pic- 
tures taken  at  the  Delta  Ui>silon 
House,  407  E.  Rosemary  St..  this 
afternoon.  All  pictures  should  be 
wallet  size.  | 

There  'vill  be  a  meeting  for 
DUkathon  runners  Thursday 
night  at  8  at  the  DU  House.  Kemn 
has  asked  all  interested  students 
who  are  unable  to  attend  the ' 
meeting  to  contact  him  at  the  DU 
House,   phone   9-1301.  I 

The  DUkathon  is  an  annual 
race  from  the  Chapel  Hill  Post 
Office  to  the  Durham  Post  Office,  I 
a  distance  slightly  greater  than 
11  miles.  I 

A  trophy  will  be  awarded  to  the 
winner.  The  second  and  third 
place  winners  will  be  awarded 
medals,  and  survival  medals  will 
be  presented  to  all  runners  finish- ! 
ing  ti^e  race. 


The  Waters  Of  Truth  Were  Cut  Off 

University  workmen  tore  down  and  hauled  away  the  old  Frank- 
lin St.  fountain  yesterday.  The  fountain  proclaimed  the  waters  of 
truth  "flow  freely,"  but  the  water  was  cut  off  long  ago.  In  upper 
picture,  workmen  are  securing  the  fountain  on  a  truck.  Above,  the 
truck  starts  down  Franklin  St.  toward  the  new  location. 

*'  (Photos  by   Fred   Powledge} 


Yack  Beauty  Queen  To 
Be  Selected  Thursday 


88  campus  beauties  will  compete 
for  the  title  of  1957  Yack  Beauty  I 
Queen  Thursday  at  8  p.m.  in  Mem- 
orial  Hall.  I 

The    1957  Queen   wil    be   chosen  j 
from   the   group   with   a   court   of  I 
14  princesses.  Entrants  are  judged  j 
on  symmetry  of  feature,  complex- 1 
ion,   hair,   figure   and   poise.   Each 
girl   has  ben  entered  in    the   con- 
test by  a  fraternity,  sorority,  dor- 
mitory, of  other  campus  organiza- 
tion. I 
CAPPS  I 

Jimmy  Capps,  well-known  radio 
announcer  from  Raleigh,  is  to  be 
master  of  cermonies  for  the  pro- 
gram. Judges  include  Ty  Boyd,  lo-  ; 
cal  radioman,  Monk  Jennings,  lo-  ^ 
cal  merchant,  and  Charlie  Cash, 
Durham   radio  announcer. 

Flip   Lathan's   combo    will    pro-  , 
vide  background  music  during  the 


program.  At   intermission  the  Phi 
Kappa   Sigma   combo    will   hold   a 
jam   session   a.s   special   entertain- 
ment for  the  audience.  ' 
A  compulsory  rehearsal   for  all  \ 
cntran'i.<j  will    he   held  Wednesday 
in  Memorial  Hall  at  7:30  p.m.  The 
girls   are    requested    to   wear   the  | 
shoes  which  they  plan  to  wear  in  ! 

the  contest.  i 

I 
CO-EDITORS  I 

Judy  Davis  and  Gene  Whitehead  ' 
are  co-editors  of  the  Yack  Beauty  • 
Section  and  are   directing  the  en- 
iire  program  for  the  Queen  selec- , 
lion.  I 

"We  hope  that  this  year's  con- 
test will  be  even  bigger  and  Bet- 
ter," stated  co-editor  Davis.  "There 
will    be  plenty  of  pretty  girls,  so  ; 
the  boys  ought  to  particularly  en-  ! 
joy  the  contest. " 


Landmark 
Moved  To 
Arboretum 


University  employes  yesterday 
hauled  away  the  horse  trough  that 
had  stood  unused  for  many  years 
before  the  University  Methodist 
Church  in  the  East  Franklin 
Street  business  district. 

It  was  nioved  to  a  site 
ihe  Chapel  of  the  Cross 
northwest  corner  of  the 
Arboretum. 

The  trough  was  erected  in  1918 
for  the  hundreds  of  horses  that 
came  through  Chapel  Hill  pulling 
wagons  and  carriages.  It  was  built 
as  a  memorial  to  Susan  Williams 
Graham,  wife  of  former  Univer- 
sity President  Edward  Kidder 
Graham. 

Mrs.  Graham's  son.  Edward 
Kidder  Graham  Jr.  until  recently 
chancellor  of  the  Woman's  College 
in  Grensboro,  is  now  dean  of  the 
College  of  Liberal  Arts  at  Boston 
University. 

As  horses  disappeared  from  the 
streets  of  Chapel  Hill  and  the 
number  of  cars  increased,  the 
watering  trough  stood  unused  and 
unnoticed  by  all  but  the  owners 
'of  automobiles  whose  front  fend- 
^ers  were  scratched  by  the  protrud- 
ing edge  of  the  monument. 

The  University  Buildings  and 
Grounds  Committoe,  headed  by 
Dr.  H.  R.  Totten  of  the  Botany  De- 
partment, decided  on  the  rear  en- 
trance of  the  Episcopal  Church 
as  a  new  location  for  the  trough. 
In  selecting  the  site,  the  commit- 
tee considered  Mrs.  Graham's  de- 
voted  services   to   the   church. 

Although  the  inscription  on  the 
monument  reads.  "The  waters  of 
truth  flow  freely:  drink  when  and 
where  you  may,'  no  animals  but 
birds  will  now  have  access  to  the 
trough,  and  even  they  will  have 
water  only  when  it  rains. 


j  Today  is  the  last  day  UNO  stu- 
dents may  buy  their  game  tickets 
for  the  Virginia  Game  on  Novem- 
ber 10th,  and  tomorrow  is  the 
last  day  of  sale  for  the  railway 
tickets,  according  to  Dave  Jones, 
carvan  commettee  member. 

Game  tickets  are  on  sale  today 
at  the  ticket  office  in  Woollen 
gymn.  All  tickets  not  sold  by  the 
close  of  business  today  will  be  re- 
twfncd  to  the  University  of  Vir- 
ginia, he  said. 

Jones  urged  all  Carolina  stu- 
dents who  are  planning  to  take 
pari  in  this  activity  to  dig  down 
detp  and  come  up  with  their  $3.50 
toiay. 

He  also  urged  everyone  going 
to  buy  their  train  tickets  from  the 
^orfimittee  at  reduced  rates  today  or 
toAiorrow.  The'  railway  will  con- 
tinue to  sell  train  tickets  after 
Wednesday,  but  t'ney  will  be  sold 
af  the  regular,  rate,  which  is  con- 
sirferably    higher    than    S9^0,    he 

said.  I 

i|^?^':g.a«van  SgBciar;  ^U^ 
leave  Durham  Friday  evening  at  j 
6:5.'S  and  wil  stop  in  Greensboro 
for  Women's  College  students  and 
for  supper.  The  return  trip  will 
begin  at  1:30  am.  Sunday  but  the 
train  will  be  open  to  students  aft#r  ^ 
ten  Saturday  night. 

Plans  in  Charlottesville  include 
an  onen  hou.sc  and  dance  in  Madi- 
son Hall  Saturday  evening  as  well 
as  individual  plans  by  UV.\  fra- 
ternities. 


The  Campus  Chest  executive 
committee  voted  last  night  to 
award  two  trophies — one  to  dormi- 
tories and  one  to  sororities  and 
fraternities — for  the  highest  per- 
centage of  money  per  person 
donated  in  the  current  Campus 
Chest  fund  drive. 


Plans  had  originally  provided 
for  the  awarding  of  only  one  tro- 
phy, with  sororities  and  fratsrni- 
ties  in  competition  with  dorms  for 
the  highest   percentage  donations. 

DANCE 

The  trophy  will  be  awarded  at 
the  Campus  Chest  informal  dance, 
"Frcsttimc  Frolics,"  scheduled  for 
Nov.  16  in  Woollen  Gym. 

The  committee  has  set  up  the 
trophy  as  a  rotating  award,  to 
become  the  permanent  possession 
of  a  residence  on  being  awarded 
to  that  residence  for  the  third 
consecutive  year. 


concernmg  the  change  in  plans 
j  for  the  trophy,  "I  feel  this  filan  is 
much  fairer  for  all  residential 
groups  concerned.  It  is  not  right 
for  fraternities  and  sororities  to 
compete   against   dormitories. 

j      '•!  think    that  both    groups   will 

I  have  a  much  better  chance  at 
winning  the  trophy.  I  feel  that 
the  idea  of  a  rotating  trophy  will 

'  stimulate  competition  and  will  also 
give  more  residences  a  chance  to 

!  possess    the    trophy    for    at    least 

I  one  year,"  he  said. 

"1  would  like  to  challenge  each 
dormitory,  sorority  and  fraternity 
to  cooperate  100  percent  in  this 
drive.  All  the  organizations  bene- 
fitting from  it  are  certainly 
worthy  and  this  is  our  one  oppor- 
tunity to  participate  in  all  these 
programs.  " 


Police  Find 
No  Clues 
OnVandals 

j      Local  police  as  of  yesterday  had 

I  not    determined    who    painted    up 

I  three    University    buildings    with 

!  black  paint  Friday  night. 

i      A  check  with  the  police  station 

I  last   night  at  7:30  revealed   there 

'  were     no     new    developments    in 

j  the  case. 

I      Sgt.  Coy  Durham,  who  is  work- 

:  ing    on    the    case,    stated    to    his 

;  knowledge  no  new  leads  had  come 

up.  He  also  said  no  more  acts  of 
I  vandalism     had     been     discovered 

other    than    the    paintings    on    iM 
I  three  buildings. 
j      The   vandalism   occurred   Friday 

night  around  midnight.  Painted  on 

the  columns  of  the  Morehead 
j  Building  were  'Beat  Carolina {' 
:  "Duke  University"  and  three 
j  triangles. 

I  Similar  damage  was  also  done 
i  to  the  Alumni  Building  and  Gra- 
I  bara  Memorial. 


"I   am   confident  the  drive  will 
more     than,   reach     its    .goal,"    he 


Student     body     President  -  said  ;  -said. 


Hurricane  Moves  Out  to  Sea; 
Now  Packs  Winds  Of  135  MPH 


MIAMI.  Fla.  (A^)  —  Sprawling 
Hurricane  Greta,  packing  winds  up 
to  135  miles  per  hour  near  the  ; 
center,  swept  northeastward  in  the  I 
open  Atlantic  yesterday,  far  from  I 
any  land  area. 


Di  Not  Meeting  Tonight  ; 
B«»cau«e  Of  Election 

The  Dialectic  Senate  will  not 
meet  tonight,  it  was  announced 
yesterday.  | 

The  cancellation  of  this  week's 
meeting  of  the  debarting  society 
was  made  because  of  national  elec- 
tions today. 

The  Plilanthropic  Assembly  will , 
meet  as  usuaL  > 


Seat?  Ooen  On  Honor 
Council,  Not  Residence 

.-Ml  junior  coeds  intcresled  in 
running  for  seats  on  the  Wom- 
en's Honor  Council  have  been  ask- 
ed t3  sign  a  list  posted  on  the 
door  of  Woodhouse  Conference 
Room.  Graham  Memorial  before  1 
p.m.   Wednesday. 

Interviews  by  the  Bi-Partisan 
Selections  Board  will  be  held 
Tuesday  and  Wednesday  from  1-3 
p.m. 

The  Daily  Tar  Heel  erroneously 
stated  previously  that  seats  on  the 
Women's  Residence  Council  were 
available. 

Brooks  Urges 
SP's  Victory 

John  Brooks,  legislative  cam- 
paign coordinator  for  the  Student 
Party,  yesterday  called  for  the 
election  of  SP  candidates  to  the 
Student  Legislature  on  the 
grounds  that  they  are  "The  peo- 
ple who  have  exemplified  a  de- 
sire for  service   to  the  campus." 

Brooks  said  SP  legislature  mem- 
bers have  an  "unmatched  record" 
of  attendance  for  past  sessions  of 
the  Student  Legislature. 

'Twice  this  session  SP  legisla 
tors  have  recorded  100  percent 
attendance,"  he  said. 

Brooks  said  '•You  can  be  sure 
when  you  elect  SP  candidates  to 
the  Student  Legislature  that  .<ou 
know  who  is  going  to  represent 
you."  He  explained  that  a  rela- 
tively small  number  of  SP  legis 
lators  has  been  elected  and  then 
resigned  posts. 


At  5  p.m.  EST  Greta  was  cen- 
tered about  450  miles  east-south- 
east of  Bermuda.  This  is  about  1,- 
300  miles  east-southeast  of  Cape 
Hattoras,  N.C.  » 

"Highest  winds  of  this  large  and 
dangerous  huricane  are  estimated 


to  be  135  m.p.h.  within  60  miles 
of  the  center  and  hurricane  force 
winds  75  miles  an  hour  and  up 
extend  140  miles  in  the  northern 
semicircle  and  200  miles  in  the 
southern  semicircle,"  said  the 
Weather   Bureau. 

Gales  extend  out  about  300  miles 
in  all  directions  from  the  seventh 
hurricane  erf  tne  season. 

Shipping  interests  were  advised 
to  exercise  caution  against  'this 
dangerous  hurricane." 


Morehead  Columns  Set 
For  Steam  Treatment 

According    to    Giles    F.    Homey, 
buildings    department    supervisor, 
the    defaced    columns    were    to    be 
cleaned    with    solvent    and    after 
wards    given    a    steam    treatment. 
The    steam    process    will    probably 
begin  sometime   this  week,   he  ex- 
plained,    after     the     solvent     has 
dried. 

Planetarium      Manager     A.      F. 
Jenzano  said,  shortly  after  the  in- 
cident occurred.  "It  is  difficult  to 
j  find  the  culprit  in  such  cases.  But 
it     the     guilty     par'.y     is     found, 
he  should  be  punished  in  order  to 
i  .set  an  example  and  curtail  vandal- 
I  ism  in  the  future." 


IN  THE  INFIRMARY 

Miss  Dorothy  Walters,  Miss  Isa- 
boll*  Masterton,  John  Sharpe, 
Hu0h  Murray,  Harold  Lusk,  Al- 
vin  Mustian,  Richard  Giersch, 
Leon  Martin,  Loran  Johnson,  Hu- 
bort  Roavos,  John  Trot,  Hugh 
Bryant. 


tpmtt 


il<M*>«H 


Q^  fm>por^ima  1) 


Scene  Of  Rod  And  Gun  Meet 

Shewn  above  is  the  seen*  of  the  second  annual   Rod  and  Gun 
Field  Meet  staged  today  f4om  2  to  5:30  p.m.  in  the  Durhanr  Wild 
life  Club  Aroa.  The  event  is  sponsored  by  the  intramural  dept.  and 
the   Greham   Memorial    Activities   Board.    In   the    lower    right-hond 
comer  is  Woollen  Gym,  not  entirely  shown. 


Second  Annual 
Field  Meet  Is 
Staged  Today 

The  second  annual  co-recreation- 
al Rod  and  Gun  Field  Meet  will 
be  held  today  at  2  p.m.  in  the 
Durham    Wildlife   Club   Area. 

The  event,  sponsored  jointly  by 
Graham  Memorial  Activities  Board 
and  the  intramural  dept.,  will  fea 
ture  four  events,  archery,  trap 
.shooting,  target  rifle  shooting  and 
bass  and   brim  fishing. 

Individual  and  team  trophies  will 
be  awarded  in  each  contest. 

F^quipment  will  be  furnished  by 
the  sponsor  but  students  entered 
in  the  meet  will  be  allowed  to  use 
their  own  equipment  in  all  event^ 
except  target  rifle  hooting. 

Rod  Amundson,  editor  of  Wild- 
life, in  North  Carolina,  has  been 
invit<Ki  to  attend  the  meet  along 
with  other  members  of  the  Wild- 
life   Commission. 

Transportation  will  be  provided 
for  those  who  do  not  have  rides. 
Anyone  needing  a  ride  has  been 
asked  to  meet  in  front  of  Woolen 
Gym  at  1  p.m. 

Anyone  who  is  driving  and  has 
additional  room  in  his  car  has  been 
asked  to  check  by  the  gym  before 
leaving. 
« 

GM'S  SLATE 

Gr?il  Room,  7-8:30.  Women's  Re- 
sidence Council;  Roland  Parker  1, 
8-11.  Chess  Club;  Roland  Parker  2, 
3,  7-11.  UP;  Woodhouse  Conference 
Room.  1-3,  Elections  Board,  7-8:30. 
WAA.  Council  Room.  3-5  Honor 
Council  Selections  Board  7-11, 
Men's  Honor  Council;  Rendezvous 
Room.  6:30-8.  Dance  Class,  8:30-11, 
GMAB;  APO  Room.  7-9  APO. 


PACE  TWO 


THt  DAILY  TAR  HEBL 


TUESDAY,  NOVEMBER  6,  19S6 


America's  Going  To  Vote 
Herself  Q^^  J\\e  Brink' 

Not  many  people  are  going  to— health  ot  the  President  ol  the  I'ltit- 
stay  up  all  night  tonight.  unlessBed  States,  it  is  essential  that  we  do 
its  to  check  on  L'nited  NationsBso.  fhe  Presidents  own  doctors 
prcx:eedings.  Hhave  not  shown  any  awful  (onipul- 

Hsion   to  a<qu"5int  the  public   with 

I  he  election  is  m  the  bag.  i»*>^tBt],^^,     President's     condition;     thev 
people  predict   Dwight    t«enhow-Bj^^-^j^^  ^^  ^^.^,„  ^^  ^,^,„p^|  members 
er  and  Richard  Nixon  will  be  re-"^^^f  ^j^^.  Republican  National  Cloni- 
tained   in   olfice   tor   another  f<»"» '^   ,||ittee 
vears.    Adiai    Stevenson    and    F-sies 

ketauver  will  start  looking  for  oth-  1  he   truth    is   this:    II   President 

ei  iol>s.  and  the  DeuKKratic  Party  Kisenhowcr  dies  in  office.  Richard 
will  start  seaiching  for  a  1960  Nixon  will  succeed  liini  as  Presi- 
candidatc.  dent..  .\nd   if   Richard      Nixon     is 

President   of   these    Tnited   States. 
.A  majoritv  of  the  national  polls      ^^.^  ^^^-^^^^^  ^^  ^^.^j,  ,^,.^,.j^.  p,^..^-    ,  .,,, 

, confirm  this.  Barbershop  talk  con-  |.p„,^n  and  Charles  Wilson  co^ec- 

firins   it.   and  radio   connnentat<ns  ^j^t;,,  ics  of  Stale 
and    newspaper   columnists    agtee. 
Franklin  St.  gossip  all   has  it  that 

lisenhowcM    will    win    bv   a    larger  T^|^rNr>rt rtOC 

majority  than  he  pulled  in  1932.  I  wl"-|i^ll%/llw^ 

There  has  been  a  large  shift  in  »                  ■■•             ■■ 

suj7i>it    from    Stevenson    to    Kisen-  £\VG      I    indllV      ^ 

how  in  the  p;v>t  few  days.  A  lot  of  '                     .   / 

it    (omes    from    people    who  don't  ^^         ■  ■  •                   I 

want  to  change  horses  on  thej^rink-  Cj^TlinO      lO 

who  would  think  it  highlv  unwise  V^^  ■  ■  ■■  "y       ■■  ■ 

10  put  Stevenson  in  while  the  world  So  Southern  Rell  Telephone  Co. 

is  bul>blini;  over  with   hatred  and  ],.,^  decided  to  put  pr.y  phcmes  in  ^ 

gunfire.    I  hose  people  will  not  ad-  „kmi's  dormitories, 
mil  that  Ikr's  apparent  inabilitv  to 

do  somethino  fast  when  something  f'^*"   >ituation.   which    the   com- 

needcd   doing   fast   is  partially   re-  P-'"^'^  Durham  switchboard  says  is 

sponsible   for  the  worlds  hanging  **"  ^>a<^-  t<»"'»'   ^'^^'^  ''^■^'"   if'>t^t^« 

on  the  brink  right  now.  two  months  ago  il  pav  phcmes  had 

been  installed  originally, 
riiere  has  been  a  steady  shift  in 

support   from  Stevenson   to   Fi.sen-  »>"'  ^'^^  company  put  in  paylcss 

hower  during  the  past  lew  months,  phones    and    expected    secoiuUand 

Stcnenson.  a-s  The  New  York  Fimes'  h»urth.floor  dormitcjry  residents  to 

fames  Resion  pointed  out  in  a  col.  ^^'''l^  *'"^^"-  "^    "pst^irs    to     make 

uinn   written    Inmi    Chapel     Hill.  <-'"'»  ^o  their  girlirieiids  and   jxir- 

has  lost  frvor  from  the  intellec  tuals  ems. 

•who   thumped    tubs   for   him    four  j  ],p     a,mpany     should     have 

\cars  ago.    Fhcv  still  will  vote  for  i^pown   lietter.  and   the  rniversitv 

him    today,    but    their    coffee-sboj)  should  have  advised   the  ccmipanv 

ari^uments  o\er  tlic  past  few  weeks  better.    \'erv    few    dormitorv    men 

ha\e  lost  enthu-iasni  and  energy.  3,^.  going  to  want  to  hike  up  and 

A  lot  ,=f  the  Nounger  voters  will  t^^^^n  stairs  to  make  long  distatue 

be    votinu    for    Fisenhower    todav.  telephone  calls.  As  long  as  the  tele- 

\  campus  mcx:k  election  last  week  ^  P^ion^''  "^^^re   being  installed,   thev 

♦howed  that  two  more  people  wain-  should  have  been  pav  phones  Irom 

Ike   than   Stevenson.  Two  votes  is  the  beginning. 

rutting  the  line  raffcer  thinly,  but  Chalk  up  another  checkmark  to 

think  what  such  a  narrow  margin  ,1^^    area's    inadequate    telephone 

would  have  mcini  h»uv  years  ago.  ^oiul). 

^\"e  don't  ...kJ)  know  why  liie 
shift  ha>  '<-inc-.  but  we  are  sorry  it         ^|    |  ■  f 

came.    I»    Fisenhower,    Nixon   and  ^JnOOT^^SV 

Li'4   iUisiness  win   today  on  sched-  * 

ule.  it  will  mean  another  four  years        ^^  a  A 

of  living  on  the  brink.  wBIl      AflOdn 

The   United  States  will  be  li\- 

iui;  on  the  brink  of  a  btisiness-run         Tm^^^^^\M^\.^ 

government.    It   will   l>e   living   on        I    wlvrVwl 

the  briirk  of  war  with  Soxiet  Rus-  -^,         ,       /^        i-      •  j 

Plans  lor  (-arolina  s  ne^^  dornii- 

tories  are  underway,  a  news  story 

And   the   l'nited  Stales   will    be      reports. 

living  on  the  brink  of  having  Rich-  That  would  be  wcmderful  news 

aid  Nixon  as  President.  if  thcjse  plans  hadn't  been    'under- 

,^„  ......  ,  '-J      way  "  for  more  than  a  veai\ 

While    It    IS      treacherous      and  ,  ,  ,  .u„., 

...  .  It  was  more  than  a  year  ago  when 

teiTibb   nastv  to  comment  cm  the       ,      ,,    .        .  1     1    ,       ".  i 

tiic-   I  niversitv   asked   lor  and   got 

.  .i^*!       w  II'        I  permission  to  ask  the  governmeiit 

Tn6   DOllV  Tor  HGGI  *"^  ^  ^"''*"  ^^•**'  which  to  construct 

'  three  new    men's  dormitories  and 

The  official  student  publication  of  the  ^^  ^^^.  ^^,        j^^,.  j^^^.,,^^.,.  ,,,„„ens 
Publications  Board  of  the  University  or  .  '^  ' 

North   Carolina,   where   it   is   publislied  "*"J.V'^"7/  •         •  ...  i 

daily   except   Monday   and   examinatiot  ^le    I  niversitv    asked    lor    and 

and  vacation  periods  and  summer  ter^ns  Rot    %2    million    from    the    federal 

Entered  as  second  class  matter  in  the  government.  That,  also,  was  a  year 

oost  office  in  Chapel  Hill,  N.  C,  undei  ago. 

the  Act  01  March  8.  1870.  Subscription  .    The  rniversity  started  work  on 

rates:  mailed,  $4  per  y^ar.  $2.50  a  semes-  pj^ps  for  the  dormitories.  At  one' 

ter;  delivered.  $6  a  year,  $3.50  a  semet-  j^,-,,,^   south    Building     said     con- 

• striK  lion   probably   would-  start  at 

Editor  FRED  POWLEDGE  Christmas.    That    was    last    Christ- 

Managing  Editor    ..  .  CHABLIE  SLOAN      "^^^     ,,,.,.,  , 
♦ A  shovel  hasn  i  hit    the  ground 

News  Editor  RAY  LINSER      yet' 

Business  Manager    .  .    BILL  BOB  PL^EL  V^^^^  '^P'"'^  P^''"**  f"''  '''*'  ^'«'"'"- 

—-—'■'  itories     were     "underway.'      South 

Sports  Editor                  LARRY  CH^  Building  was  exhibiting  proudly  a 

Subscription  Manager  ___ . .  Dale  Staley  scale  mcxlel  of  the  dot mitories.  and 

Advertising  Manager #red  Katzin  the  men  and  coeds  stacked  three-in- 

Circulation  Manager             Charlie  Hoi*,  a-room    were  close   to  seeing   that' 

Staff  Photographer    .....  Norman  Kant";;!  wonderful   day    when    they    could 

Staff  Artist  Charlie  Daniel  v  t'"""^  ^    '>^><>^  s    j>ages    without    el- 

• ' bowfng  their  rocmimates. 

EDITORIAL    f^AFF  -  Woody    Se«-,  Rut  today.  Nov.  fi.  19,6.  the  con- 

•  trank  Crowiher,  Barry  Winston,  David  .  ,                       ,          , 

„     .      ,-,           T«       .    T      -J  ^  tract  hasn  t  even  been  let. 

Mundy,   George  Pfingst,  lagrid   Clay,-  „..         ,                    »-  «  >*.i 

Cortland    Edwards,    Paul    McCauley,  f      Hie  plans  aren  t  even  complet- 
Bobbi  Smith.  i*^^' 
~ — ^ Wk     All    iii   this   goes   on    while    the 

^\!^.f^  ^l^^r^'""  T"'"'  •^?^°°^f  dormitories     are     getting     fuller. 

\^hitaker,  Dick  Leavitt,  Peter  Alper.    M      ,  -i      .u      x-    .  T.-n  •  - 
Awhile   the   \  k  tory  \  illage  waiting 

NEWS    STAFF— Clarke    Jones,    Nancy S  list     gets     ridiculously  Jong,     and 
Hj!).  Joan  Moore,  Pringle  Pipkin,  AnoeM  while    rrwm-rent    prices    in    town 
Drake.  Edith  MacKinnon,  WallyKuralt,  Mare  getting  hi<dter  and  hi^-her 
Mary  Alys  Voorhees.  Graham  Snfder.*     ^n     the     matter    of    d(7rmi'torv 
Billy  Barnes.  Neil  Bass,  Gary  Nicnbls, w,.  „         .t  ^    it    •         -.1         1.1 
„    •  ,  .     _.     „       u        T^u  11-    Msp^^-t',    the    I  niversitv   has     et    her 

Page  Bernstein.  Peg  Humphrey,  Phyllw  *   ^    ,  , 

Maultsbv  ^students  down  most.   I  he  situation 

'. ■  has  passed  the  point  when  it  could 

SPORTS  ffTAFF:  Bill  King.  Jim  Purks.Wbe  described, as  a    'crying  need:" 

Jimmy  Harjier.  Dave  Wible,  CharleyBjt    i,    i„    t|,e    screaming,    holleriii}; 

"°^»°"- _Kstage.  • 

Night  Editor   Woody  SearsS     And   nothing  keeps  being  done 

Proof  Reader  Ben  TayloiJBaboui  il. 


YOU  Said  It: 


Election  Day  Arguments  Pro  And  Con 


Editor: 

In  response  to  Cortland  Ed- 
wards* political  exhortation,  ar- 
rogantly entitled  "A  Northern 
View,"  permit  the  present  author, 
an  Ohioan,  to  make  reply. 

Education:  After  receiving  his 
B.  S.  from  West  Point,  Eisenhow- 
ers graduate  work  was  under- 
taken at  such  institutions  as  the 
"Infantry  Tank  School"  and  the 
".\rmy  War  College." 

Health:  The  probability  of  re- 
occurrence of  ileitis  and  of  heart 
failure  is  in  both  cases  greater 
than  50  |>ercent  for  a  man  of  Eis- 
enhower's  age.   Eisenhower's   of-; 


EISENHOWER 

Miiother  four  years  .  .  , 


ficial  doctors  have  repeatedly  de- 
ceived the  public  about  his 
health,  never  mentioning  his 
twenty-year  history  of  ileitis  at- 
tacks until  it  could  no  longer  be 
hidden. 

"Welfare"  and  Finances:  Eis- 
enhower is  a  richer  man  than 
Stevenson,  due  primarily  to  his 
profit  from  sales  of  Crusade  In 
Europe.  In  turn,  these  profits 
were  inci'eased  tremendously  be- 
cause Eisenhower  chose  to  re- 
port his  income  as  capital  gains 
rather  than  as  personal  income 
(on  which  taxes  are  much  great- 
er). 

Government:  Stevenson's  job 
with  Henry  Wallace  was  in  the 
AA.A  where  Wallace's  universally 
recognized  asricullural  achieve- 
ment was  being  wisely  utilized. 
(By  the  way,  Wallace  recently 
announced  he's  voting  for  Ike.) 
As  for  Hiss.  Stevenson  had  no 
choice  but  to  testify  that  Hiss' 
reputation  was  excellent.  It  is  an 
}in(ieviable  fact  that  it  was,  and 
to  have  to  have  testified  other- 
wise would  have  been  to  lie. 

Farmer  Stevenson's  farm  pro-, 
gram  is.  admittedly,  weak:  but 
so  is  the  Soil  Bank,  which  in- 
stead of  removing  fertile  land 
from  cultivation,  has  turned  in- 
to a  political  maneuver  to  give 
doles  to  farmers  Suffering  from 
drought. 

Enough  rebuttal:  now  for  the 
attack:  James  Rcston  wrote  last 


week  in  The  New  York  Times 
that  "the  United  States  has  lost 
control  of  events  in  areas  vital 
to  its  security." 

One  of  the  thrae  reasons  for 
the  breakdown  of  the  Western 
Alliance  is  "the  psychological  re- 
action in  Britain  and  France  to 
.  .  .  the  personality  and  diplom- 
acy of  Secretary  of  State  Dulles 
.  .  .  The  President  cannot  be- 
lieve it,  but  the  testimony  here 
(Washington)  of  well-informed 
men  is  alm<»st  unanimous  that 
.  .  .  there  have  been  incidents 
(of  policy  reversals)  that  have 
slowly  created  a  kind  of  crisis  on 
confidence  in  Western  Big  Three 
diplomacy  .  .  .  Reporters  have 
been  sending  reams  of  copy  out 
of  her?  for  many  months  about 
this  decline  of  United  States  in- 
fluence overseas,  while  the  Pres- 
ident has  been  proclaiming  that 
Washington's  influence  was  high- 
ec  than  ever  before  ...The 
plain  truth  is  that  the  British 
and  French  .  .  .  came  to  the 
conclusion  that  Mr.  Dulles'  poli- 
cy in  the  Middle  East  .  .  .  has 
been  a  failure  .  .  ." 

Dulles  and  Eisenhower  have 
brought  us  to  another  brink. 
Shallowly  they  try  to  cover  up  by 
elaiming  the  United  States  i> 
helpless  in  opposing  the  buildup 
of  Russian,  troops  now  reported 
encircling  Budapest,  just  as  it 
actually  had  no  control  over  the 
beginning,  continuing,  or  end  of 
the  revolt  there. 


Adlai  Stevenson,  over  a  year 
ago,  proposed  a  policy  for  main- 
taining peace  in  the  Middle  East 
and  was  ignored,  while  Eisenhow- 
er permitted  the  policy  01  alter- 
nate wooing  and  spurning  Nasser 
to  go  forth.  We're  reaping  ouf 
crop  now. 

Should  we,  in  this  crisis, 
change  horses  in  the  middle  of 
the  stream?  Yes,  if  the  horse, 
through  blindness,  through  lack 
of  direction,  through  unstable 
legs  (policies)  has  carriecl  us 
against  our  will  into  the  stream 
of  world  crisis.  Remember  this, 
today. 

Brad  Seasholes 


STEVENSON 

-.  .  or  loill  Democrats  return? 


The  Big  Republican  Golf  Game 


Editor: 

Actions  speak  louder  than 
words.  Nero  fiddled  while  Rome 
burned.  Eisenhower  practiced 
putting,  Wednesday,  on  the 
White  House  lawn  while  bombs 
were  falling  on  Cairo.  Alexan- 
dria, and  other  places  in  the  Mid- 
dle East. 

This  is  nol  a  condemnation  of 
President  Eisenhower  for  taking 
a  few  minutes  off  to  relax  dur- 
ing the  heat  of  this  crisis,  but  is 
rather  indicative  of  the  admin- 
istration's attitude  during  the 
past  four  years  when  Dulles  and 
Co.  were  out  'golfing,"  and  fin- 
aly  succeeded  in  getting  the  U.  S. 
in  the  hole. 

In  the  four  years  of  the  Eisen- 
hower administration,  the  Dept. 
has  Succeeded  in  alienating  the 
United  States'  closest  allies,  giv- 
ing the  Russians  the  initiative  in 
exploiting  the  resource-rich  Mid- 
dle East,  and  finally  succeeding 
to  align  itself  with  Russia  in  the 
UN  in  regard  to  Middle  Eastern 
matters. 

True,  the  situ-'tion  was  troub- 
led in  1952,  but  at  that  time 
there  was  no  crisis,  no  imminent 
war.  Perhaps  the  only  troubled 
area  was  Israel,  and  at  that  time 
the  U.  S.  was  firmly  unified  with 
Great  Britain  and  France  in  guar- 
anteeing the  territorial  integrity 
of  the  state  of  Israel  as  well  as 


a  neutral  status  toward  the  Arab 

group. 

The  situation  looks  different 
now.  The  U.  S.  no -longer  guar- 
antees territorial  integrity  for 
Israel  and  has  led  that  country 
to  pursue  a  rash  course  in  pro- 
tection of  its  territory  against 
the  encroachments  of  the  Arab 
nations. 

Moreover,  the  U.  S.  has  lost 
control  of  its  allies,  who  last 
week  stated  quite  unequivocally 
that  they  want  no  more  of  U.  S. 
advice  in  Middle  East  matters — 
this  coming  on  the  heeLs  of  a 
John  Foster  Dulles  announce- 
ment that  there  was  all  sweetness 
and  harmony  between  the  view- 
points of  Britain,  France,  and 
the  U.  S. 

Further,  the  U.  S.  has  lost  the 
initiative  in  Egypt.  It  is  Russian 
tanks,  planes,  and  ammunition 
that  are  now  annihilating  many 
Israeli  soldiers.  It  is  a  Russian 
alliance  with  Egypt  that  provided 
for  the  seizure  of  the  Suez,  and 
this  was  only  made  possible  by 
the  bungling  of  Mr.  Dulles  in  his 
dealings  with  Eg>-pt. 

.  II  is  no  longer  true  that  the 
U.  S.  is  the  guidepost  of  the  free 
nations  of  the  world,  and  this 
is  a  sorry  state  when  two  nations 
of  the  Communist  world  have, 
with  success,  struggled  to  attain 
a  measure  of  freedom  and  now 
can  look  to  no  one  for  guidance. 


It  is  probably  good  that  this 
happened  in  an  election  year,  be- 
cause it  is  now  up  to  the  people 
of  the  U.  S".  to  choose  between 
thn.se  policies  that  led  to  this 
conflict  and  loss  of  leadership, 
and  a  fresh  approach,  more  inter- 
national in  its  outlook,  one  that 
promises  to  utilize  to  the  fullest 
extent  the  UN  and  other  forms 
of   international   cooperation. 

Eisenhower  said  Wednesday 
that  the  U.  S.  will  "take  no  ac- 
tion" in  the  Middle  Eastern  sit- 
uation. This  is  a  characteristic 
statement  of  the  past  four  years 


of  Republican  administration, 
which  Adlai  Stevenson,  in  a  tele- 
vised speech  Thursday  night, 
called  "bankrupt"  of  ideas  to- 
wards the  Middle  East  situation. 
The  Republicans'  standard  of 
"Peace.  Prosperity,  and  Progress" 
has  been  changed  radically  to 
"strife,  inflation  and  ideological 
bankruptcy."  Now,  more  than  in 
1952,  its  time  for  a  change. 

But,  of  course,  if  the  electorate 
insists  we  will  continue  to  go 
"golfing"  with  the  rest  of  our 
allegiances,  our  national  status, 
and  most  important,  human  life. 
Curtis  B.  Gans 


Parking  Problems  Not 
Limited  To  Students 


By  Waliy  Kuralt 


The  Chapel  Hill  fire  depart- 
ment has  an  interesting  problem 
on  its  hands. 

In  1921  a  new  fire  truck  was 
purchased,  one  still  in  use.  It  is 
14  feet  long.  Then,  in  '42  a  19 
footer  was  added  to  the  unit.  In 
1953,  a  monsterous  21",  SIO.OOO 
truck  came  to  the  department. 
r.nd  a  new  16'6 '  1956  model  was 
added  last  year,  ?.  total  of  4 
trucks. 

The    14'    truck    is  .parked    be- 


hind the  21  fooler,  the  16>2  foot- 
er behind  the   19'  truck. 

The  problem  is  this:  The  gar- 
age in  which  they  are  parked 
is  35"  in  length.  A  little  quick 
arithmetic  shows  the  problem. 
The  front  bumper  of  one  truck 
is  extended  over  the  rear  bump- 
er of  another. 

There  is  no  room  to  get  "be- 
tween the  trucks,  and  little  room 
on  the  sides. 

Even  the  firemen  have  a  park- 
ing problem. 


Pogo 


By  Walt  Kelly 


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exPBCTBP  '"TfiBSMAtirfMHBY 

P^AyB0nJU9TmHT. 


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Li'l  Abn^r 


By  Al  Capp 


Vote  Will  Signify 
Satisfaction 

Editor: «. 

The  coming  national  election  has  not  only  the 
United  States,  but  the  entire  political  world  voic- 
ing varied  opinions  in  loud  and  determined  voices. 

Even  Russia's  Bulganin  has  tried  to  get  in  on 
the  Ike-Adlai  race  by  saying  that  Stevenson's  -No 
H-bomb  test"  plan  is  fine  with  him  in  a  somewhat 
nosy  note  from  the  Kremlin. 

He  is  nol  alone  in  his  external  interest  in  our 
internal  affairs.  This  serves  to  point  out  just  how 
vital  this  election  is  to  the  world,  and  how  important 
it  is  to  see  that  the  right  candidate  is  elected. 

Unfortunately,  for  the  Adlai  Democrats,  Bul- 
ganin's  note  will  count  but  little  this  fall  for  the 
loudest  voice  of  all  is  still  the  voice  of  the  people 
of  these  United  States. 

Experts  predict  a  less  than  large  turnout  at  the 
polls  this  year;  but  this  staying  away  is  a  voice  ot 
preference.  It  is  a  dissatisfied  man  who  goes  to  the 
polls.  The  contented  voter,  for  the  most  part,  tends 
to  let  his  '52  vote  ride— he  wants  no  change. 

This  expected  small  percentage  of  votes  shouts 
the  satisfaction  that  is  found  in  the  present  ad- 
ministration. 

The  anti-Ike  vote  which  does  not  turn  up  will 
be  primarily  composed  of  three  types  of  voters:  (1) 
the  man  in  the  South  whose  grandfather  voted 
Demorcat,  therefore,  he  will:  (2)  the  man  who  has 
swallowed  the  trite,  groundless  propaganda  against 
Nixon;  and  (3)  the  type  of  idealist  who  sees  Stev- 
enson's little  white  cloud  of  "end  the  draft  and  no 
more  H-bomb  tests"  as  a  solution  to  all  our  prob- 
lems. 

Of  the  first  type  we  can  say  nothing  any  better 
than  Emerson's  comment  that  "it  is  a  consistency 
that  is  the  hobgoblin  of  little  minds." 

The  second  type  of  Democrat  voter  mentioned 
is  one  who  is  an  intellectual  coward.  He  saves  his 
mind  a  little  work  by  simply  accepting  the  party 
line  of  Nixon  rather  than  seeing  the  facts,  or  look- 
ing for  them  and  then  forming  his  own  view  point. 

This  voter  can  very  rarely  say  just  why  his  is 
anti-Nixon,  because  all  he  knows  is  that  the  Demo- 
cratic party  says  so.  One  man  said  of  Nixon  recent- 
ly "He  just  looks  like  a  crook  to  me."  This  is  a 
prime  example  of  a  mental  midget.  He  neglects 
the  fact  that  no  one  has  yet  claimed  or  collecteci 
the  reward  offered  by  House  Minority  leader  Joe 
Main  for  proof  of  the  slander  being  spread  against 
the  Vice-President. 

As  to  the  third  type — well,  let's  hope  there  arent 
many  people  over  21  years  in  this  country  who  are 
unrealistic  enough  to  fall  for  that  line. 

The  military  leaders  who  have  long  protected 
us  and  planned  our  strategy  are  no  doubt  worriii 
about  this  vote-getting  scheme. 

Is  this  no-arms  idea  of  Adlai's  typical  of  the 
Democrat's  master  statesman?  Perhaps  such  schemes 
show  why  statesman  Stevenson  was  unable  to  car- 
ry his  own  home  slate  in  1952. 

The  only  Democrat  issue,  other  than  blaming 
everything  on  the  poor  man  G.O.P..  seems  to  be 
their  cry  "We  are  for  labor  and  the  poor  man  while 
the  Republicans  aje  the  friends  of  the  capitalists 
and  big  business, "  which  they  scream  from  their 
carnival  barker  soap  boxes. 

Let  me  say  here  that  Stevenson  filed  tax  on 
three  quarters  of  a  million  dollars  in  1952  and  has 
an  annual  income  of  over  $50,000.  Kefauver  has  in- 
herited generations  of  wealth.  Senator  Kennedy 
(Mass.)  is  a  millionaire — Harriman  is  the  richest 
man  ever  to  seek  nomination  for  the  Presidency. 
Are  we  to  believe  these  men  are  against  them.sehe?, 
big  business? 

Dick  Nixon  worked  his  way  thru  school.  His 
father  was  a  small  grocer.  Eisenhower  struggled  his 
way  off  a  small  farm  and  has  worked  for  every- 
thing he  has,  not  inherited  it.  These  men  know  the 
problems  of  small  business  ^d  the  little  man  more 
than  the  money  Democrats  ever  could  or  ever  will 

Even  Gov.  Hodges.  Democrat,  cries  out  in  the 
papers  daily  for  "big  business "  or  industry  to  come 
into  North  Carolina.  Is  this  a  contradiction? 

The  Democrats  are  still  trying  to  ride  on  their 
previous  claim  of  Utopian  prosperity  under  the  late 
regime.  In  1939.  the  Demoyats  had  increased  the 
National  debt  by  $23,000,000     of     deficit  spending. 

There  were  nine  million  people  unemplo.vcd. 
The  only  real  prosperity  they  gave  us  came  as  a 
result  of  the  2nd  World  War  boom;  and  wartime 
prosperity  is   not   prosperity. 

Ike  has  given  us  not  a  national  debt,  but  a  bal- 
anced budget.  Not  unemployment,  but  a  new  record 
high  in  employment.  Above  all,  this  administration 
has  curbed  inflation,  countermanded  Harry  Tru- 
man's comedy  of  errors  and  given  us  peace  time 
prosperit.v. 

The  Demos  and  Adlai  claim  that  small  business 
are  failing.  They  are,  but  there  is  a  simple  answer 
Prosperity  means  more  money  in  circulation  and 
more  money  for  all.  More  money  means  more 
small  businesses  are  begun.  Naturally  more  enter- 
prises mean  more  failures.  A  greater  number,  yes. 
but  not  a  greater  percentage. 

Adlai  is  unreliable  as  well  as  impractical  in  his 
policies,  both  foreign  and  domestic.  He  has  given 
no  valid  reasons  why  he  should  be  made  President 
of  the  United  States. 

Can  we  oust  our  great  leader  in  the  White 
House  in  favor  of  an  ex-governor,  known  to  be  un- 
popular in  his  own  home  slate-  Can  we  exchange 
a  millionaire  of  inherited  wealth  in  favor  of  a  self 
made  man? 

Can  we  trust  a  man  who  has  changed  even 
h:s  religion,  from  Unitarian  in  1952  to  Protestant  in 
1956.  for  his  political  career?  Can  we  oust  a  man 
with  many  years  of  military  service  and  a  glorious 
record  for  a  man  with  little  or  no  experiencc.to  lead 
us  in  these  troubled  limes? 

We  cannot  ...  The  President  of  the  United 
States  for  four  more  years  must,  and  will  be, 
Dwight  D.  Eisenhower. 

Nick   Smith 


Co 


PHARMAC^ 

The  Phar 
today  at  7 
Hall. 
YDC  OPEI 

The  Your 
hold  open 
to  12  p.m.  i^ 
of  Graham 
terested  in| 
returrks  ha\ 
tend. 
UNIVERSr 

The  Uni\ 
tonight  at  71 
of  the  Y.  S,\ 
stated  that 
meeting  ani 
bers  attend] 


r»o~  WarnI 
•~Warne 


LLOYD  N 
VIRGINIA 

CHARLES  Md 


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n 


only  the 
irld  voic- 
ed voices, 
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pon's  -No 
pomewbat 

1st  in  our 

[just  how 

important 

:ted. 
s,     Bul- 
for  the 

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>ul  at  the 

voice  of 

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tends 

Inge. 

^es  shouts 
esent    ad- 

up  will 
)ters:  (1) 
ler  voted 
who  has 
la  against 
sees  Slev- 
Ift  and  no 
pur  prob- 

^ny  better 
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?ntioned 

saves  his 

[the   party 

5.  or  look- 

iew  point. 

*'hy   his   is 

the  Demo- 

)n  recent- 

This  is  a 

neglects 

collected 

leader  Joe 

id  against 

lere  aren't 
who  are 

protected 
i{  worried 

:al  of  the 
schemes 

)le  to  car- 
blaming 

^nrvs  to  be 
I  man  while 

capitalists 

from   their 

.'d  tax  on 
>2  and  has 
/er  has  in- 
Kennedy 
llhe  richest 
[Presidency, 
(themselves, 

chool.    His 

niggled  his 
for  every- 

1  know  the 
man  more 

ever  will. 

out  in  the 
try  to  come 
tion? 

de  on  their 
der  the  late 
creased  the 
It  spending. 

inemployed. 

came  as  a 
nd   wartime 

.  but  a  bal- 
nc'w  recofd 
Iministratioo 
Harry  Tru- 
peace   timS 

nal!  business 
nple  answer, 
cuiation  and 
means  more 
more  entcr- 
n umber,  yes, 

actical  in  his 
■ie  has  given 
ide  President 

the     White 

wn  to  be  un- 

we  e.xchange 

»vor  of  a  self 

rhansed  even 
Protestant  in 
i  oust  a  man 
nd  a  glorious 
ric-nce.to  lead 

[  th«'  United 
nd     will     be, 

Nick   Smith 


TUESDAY,  NOVEMBER  «,  f9S6 


THI  DAILY  TAR  HElL 


PACe    THREi 


Covering  The  Campus 


PHARMACY   SENATE 

Tht>  Pharmacy  Senate  will  meet 
tdday  at  7  p.m.  in  room  113  Howell 
Hall. 
YOC  OPEN   HOUSE 

The  Young  Democrats  Club  will 
hold  open  house  tonight  from  7 
to  12  p.m.  in  the  Rendezvous  Room 
of  Graham  \lemorial.  All  those  in- 
terested in  viewing  the  election 
returns  have  been  invited  to  at- 
tend. 
UNIVERSITY  CLUB 


STUDENT   WIVES  CLUB 

The  Student  Wives  Club  will 
meet  Thursday  at  8  p.m.  at  the 
Victory   Village   nursery.   All   stu- 


Recent  Book  By  Norman  Eliason 
Traces  North   Carolina  Language 


By  BUCK   PAYSOUR 

If  your  girl  gossips  a  lot,  have 
you  ever  wondered  what  she  would 


dent  wives   havfc   been   invited   to  ;  have  found  to  talk  about  if  she  had 
attend. 


YOUNG  ADULT  GROUP 

The  Young  Adult  Group  will 
meet  tomorrow  night  at  7:45  at 
the   University   Methodist   Church. 

WESLEY  CHOIR 


lived  in  pre-Civil  War  North  Caro- 
lina? 

You  don't  need  to  wonder  any 
more. 

A  U'NC  professor  has  partly  an- 
swered that  question  in  a  recent- 
ly-published book,  Tarheel  Talk.  Al- 


1am     go   corn-shucking   with     the  '  phrases  as  "Scarce  as  hen's  teeth,'" 
boys.  This  started  him  to  groging  j  was  by  North  Carolinians, 
a  lot,  and  he  began  having  connip-  j      The     nation   as   a  whole     owes 
tions  and  as  I  say,  they  say  he's !  North  Carolinians  a  debt  of  grati- 
now  back  in  the  mud."  j  tude.  ^or  example,  what  would  bar- 

According  to  the  appendix  of  I  tenders  call  a  "Tom  and  Jerry" 
the  book,  these  words  would  be  j  if  some  Tarheel  had  not  given  the 
translated     into  atomic   age     talk    drink   a  name? 

UNC   CLAIM 


I      The  Wesley  Choir  will  hold  its  i  ^''""SlJ  the  author.  Dr.  Norman  E. 
the   Lmversity    Club  will   meet  j  regular  rehearsal  today  from  7  to !  ^^^^^n- <^*<^  ""»  w"te  about  gossip- 


lunigiit  at  7:30  on  the  second  floor  |  8  p.  m.  at  the  University  Metho- 
of  the  Y.  Secretary  Annette  Niven  :  dist  Church. 
>tated    that    this    is    an    important ' 
meeting  and  urged  that  all  mem- 
bers attend. 


FOLKLORf  GROUP 

The  Wesley  Folklore  Group  will 


ing  as  such,  you  can  read  the  book 
and  find  out  just  what  gossiping 
consisted  of  in  early  North  Caro- 
lina. ' 
Tarheel  Talk  is  devoted  to  trac- 


meet  Friday  at  7:30  p.   m.  in  the   ing  the  history  of  words  and  the 
University  Methodist  Church  base- !  contributions    which    North    Caro- 


WILLIAM 
HOLDEM 

AS  A 

tfocKST  Pilot,  u.s.a. 


THE 
yNKNOWN 

The  story  of  the 
incredible  handful 
of  picked  men 
who  ride 
the  space  "^j 
ond 


ment. 

OPENINGS 

There  are  still  openings  on  the 
Y-iNite  committees.  Anyone  who 
is  interested  in  working  on  the 
programs  has  been  urged  to  fill 
out  an  application  in  Eleanor  Rig 
gin's  office  by  4  p.  m.  today. 


linians  have  made  to  the  language  i 
of  today. 

According  to  the  book,  if  your  i 
wife  had  lived  in  early  North  Ca- 


something  like    this: 

Bleated — proposed.. 

Figuring — dancing. 

Boards — dance  floor. 

Boot-licking — apple-polishing,  ca- 
tering to. 

Conniptions — fits,    hysteria. 

Box — a   predicament. 

Corn-Shucking — a    party   where 
corn  is  ihucked. 

Gorging — drinking. 

In  the  mud — unmarried.    ' 
TRANSLATION 


In   other  words,    this    is     about 
what  your  wife  would   have  been  1  the  Negro  has  made,  explains  the 
saying  in  modern  language:  |  significance  of  the  various  dialects 

rolina  she  would  have  leaned  over  i  ,„7  ^^l  "wk  ^"!  *'  "'*'  '""'.""''  '  ""'^n  *'"'  ""^  *''"  '^^^'^g^^""^  "' 
the  rail  fence  and  said  something ,  Sn™n?'  1^^^^ ..l.^?l^^f.  *!  I  Ll""""^-  P""""^'«^»°°  ^°«^  ^^"^ 
like  this  to  her  neighbor: 


..rx     ..  »u-        u     .  •.   u  A  I  ^**®  dance-floor.  Before  lie  propos- 

Don  t  say  anything  about  it,  but    -h  t^  v,^,.    i.„  u     u  !.  T 

I  hear  Hank  Doe  is   back   in  the    "^.';  i*"':,*'^^^"'-;  *'%^«/*.  **T 

mud.  He  bleated  to  Saspirilla  while    2"  'f^.l.r  U/  ^^^^^^^^^'^.^'"8  *° 
*^  !  her  father  since  he  was  quite  wea- 

lthy. But  after  he  had  proposed 
to  Saspirilla,  he  found  that  he  was 
in  a  predicament.  She  wouldn't  ev- 
en let  him  go  corn-shucking  wfth 
the    boys.   He   started   drinking   a 


Saspirilla,    the'^'   were   dancing   on  j  mar. 

The  book  traces  the  use  of  these 
aspects  of  language  from  the  time 
of  North  Carolina's  settlement  in 


the 


Special  Sunday  Show 
i    Scheduled  By  WUNC 

I      The      University's 

I  radio  station.  WUNC,  will  present  |  "When  he  bleated  to  her  he  had  I  loV.  and  he  "pitched  Tlol' of  "fits. 


'  they     were     a   'figuring    on 
1  boards,  you  know." 
HAD  CONNIPTIONS 
Then     in    a    low,      confidential, 
educational   voice,     she     would     have     added 


I  a  special  Sunday  news  show  begin-  j  already  done  a  right  smart  of  boot-  ! 
ning  November  4  and  every  Sunday  j  licking   to   her  papa.   He   !s  right 


thereafter  at  10  p.m. 

"This  Week  .  .  .  North  Caro-  ; 
lina"  will  feature  a  review  of  the  I 
week's  news  in  North  Carolina ; 
with  special  emphasis  on  Chapel 
Hill  and  the  surrounding  area,  in- 1 
eluding  on  the  spot  recordings  of  ( 
significant    events,  i 

The  program  will  also  present  1 
a  brief  review  of  national  and  in-  \ 
ternational  news,  and  will  take  the  | 
listeners  back  into  North  Carolina  i 
History  with  the  narration  of  a  | 
historical  event.  I 

WUNC  broadcasts  at  91.5  mega- 
cycles on  the  FM  band. 


well  off,  you  know.  But  after  it 
was  done,  he  found  that  he  was  in 
a  box.  Saspirilla  wouldn't  even  let 


In  writing  Tarheel  Talk.  Dr.  Eli- 
ason examined  thousands  of  old 
ietters,  journals,  bills  receipt,  re- 
cord books  and  other  writings. 

He  found  that  North  Carolinians 
have  done  much  to  enrich  and  co- 
lor the  language  of  today. 

The     first  known  use  of     such 


Naval  Team 

To  Be  Here  I  ^'•"''^"iMoose 

For  2  Days 


More  UNC 
Tests  Used 
By  Schools 

The  number  of  schools  using 
testing  services  offered  by  UNC 
has  been  multiplied  by  more  than 
nine  in   the   past   three   years. 

And  the  scope  of  testing,  gene- 
rally, has  widened  to  include  men- 
tal ability,  aptitude,  preference, 
problem  check,  personality  and 
other   types  of  examinations. 

That  was  disclosed  by  Mrs.  Lou- 
ise PenVlergraft,  head  of  the  school 
Tests  and  Materials  Bureau  of  the 
UNC  Extension  Division,  who  said 
that  some  900  North  '  Carolina 
schools  are  "regularly  using"  tests 
from  her  bureau. 

That     number    compares     with 
about   100  in   1953   and  some  500 
in  1954,  she  said. 
BROADER  SCOPS 

According  to  Mrs.  Pendergraft, 
educators  are  "testing  on  a  much 
broader  scope"  l}ecause  they  have 
come  to  realize  "that  many  factors 
other  than  lazine^  enter  into  the 
failure  of  a  student  to  do  what  is 
expected  on  a  particular  level." 

And  they  have  broadened  this 
scope  "by  using  the  various  men- 
tal ability  tests,  aptitudes,  prefe- 
i  rence  records,  problem  check  lists, 
j  personality  and  interest  inventor- 
ies, as  well  as  the  old  standby,  ac- 
hievement tests  in  subject  matter." 

The  bureau  bead  said  that  tests 

help  the  student  "in  determining 

areas  of  study  and  activities  most 

interesting  to   him,"    and    to   the 

teacher   "in   helping  .the   student 

RALEIGH  (>P)— Tar  Heel  Demo-    P^^.  ^°^  courses  of  study  toward 

cratic  and  Republican  leaders  rest- '  P*>ssible  future  occupation." 

ed  their  case  Monday  and  left  the 


UNC  Glee  Club    °^**  ^°  ^'"^  """'*• 
Sets  Program 
For  1956-57 


Dr.  Eliason  also  indicates  that  it 
is  possible  that  residents  of  the 
state  might  have  been  the  first  to 
describe  the  person  who  has  had 
too  many  Tom  and  Jerries.  Th« 
word  "tight,"  Dr.  Eliason  said  in 
the  book,  may  have  first  been  used 
for  the  word  drunk  at  UNC. 

The  professor  also  explores  a 
number  of  other  interesting  ques- 
tions about  the  history  of  lang- 
uage. 

He  tells  of  the  contribution  that 


the  17th  Century  up  through  the 
middle  of  the  19th  Century. 

Tarheel  Talk  was  published  by 
the  University  Press. 


State  Leaders 
In  Two  Parties 
Await  Returns 


decision  of  Eisenhower  vs.  Steven- 
j  son  up  to  the  voters  in  tomorrow's 
I  general     election.     Polls     in     the 


Heads  Pledges  \  ^:y  "'"""  ''^'^''' ''"  °''" 


LLOYD  NOLAN 
VIRGINIA  LEITH 

CHARLES  McGRA.W    '^:^^Z^'^ 
woeucfai  HBCucaiweoBKcraBrMERVYN  IfROy 

ntrt.T..oi.*»RSnfi'«]S. 

NOW   PLAYING 


Carolina 


George  L  Coxhead 

U.N.C.  '42 
Campus  Representativ* 


NEW  YORK  LIFE 

INSURANCE  COMPANY 


A  Naval  Officer  Procurement 
Team  will  be  in  the  YMCA  build- 
ing Irom  9:30  a.  m.  until  3  p.m. 
today  and  tomorrow.   Members  of 

'  the  team  will  be  on  hand  to  assist 

I  itudents,  women  as  well  as  men, 
interested    in    becoming     commis- 

,  sioned  officers  in  the  Navy  or  the 

I  Naval  Reserve. 

Students  graduating  this  semes- 
ter  or  within -six   months  can   be  j 
enrolled  in  any  one  of  many  Navy 
Officer      Candidate    Programs      at 
ihis  time. 


at   6:30    a.m.    and    close   at 
6:30  p.m. 

The  tenter  of  attention  of  the 
eve  of  the  election  was  the  em- 
battled 10th  Congressional  Dis- 
trict, where  the  Democrats  have 
gone  all-out  in  their  fight  to  cap- 
ture the  seat  now  held  by  Repub- 
lican Rep.  Charles  R.  Jonas,  and 
Other  officers  are  Hugh  Mercer  I  where  the  Republicans  have  fought 


The  Beta  Xi  Chapter  of  the 
Kappa  Psi  Pharmaceutical  fra- 
ternity at  the  University  has  an- 
nounced the  election  of  William 
Whitaker  Moose  of  Mount  Plea- 
sant as  its  president  for  the  1956- 
57  pledge  class. 


Clark  of  Pinetops,  vice-president; 
Joseph  Stevens  Farrell  of  Eliza- 
beth City.  secretary-treasurer; 
James  David  Cooke  of  Hildebran, 
chaplain;  and  Clayton  Lyerly  Dean 
of  Charlotte,  social  chairman. 


HUWPHRET 


GART 

HITS  A  NCW  HIGH  IN  HIGH 
ADVENTURE  .'N  VVARNER  BROS: 
TOWERING  TRIUMPH' 


Line,  Supply,  and  Aviation  O.  C. 
S.  are  but  a  few  of  the  opportuni- 
ties open  to  the  male  college  gra- 
duate.   For    women,    there    is    the) 
Wave   O.   C.   S.   or   a   career   as   a    ^oro;    Charles   Edward   Hardy 


Other  pledges  include:  Arthur  mayor 
Long  Bradsher,  Roxboro;  Edward 
McPhail  Britt.  Concord:  Randall 
Stuart  Brown.  Mooresville;  Thom- 
as Peete  Davis,  Warrenton;  Ed- 
ward Garfield  Faulkner,  Monroe: 
William  Donald  Freeman.  Pitts- 
La 


just  as  hard  to  keep  Jonas  in 
Congress. 

Democrats  of  Mecklenburg 
County  held  a  big  rally  at  Char- 
lotte to  beat  the  drums  for  Ben 
E.  Douglas,  former  Charlotte 
who  is  running  against 
Jonas.  Rep.  Harold  D.  Cooley, 
chairman  of  the  House  Agricul- 
ture Committee,  was  the  principal 
speaker  at  the  rally. 

Gov.   Hodges,   who   is  seeking   a 


YRC  To  Hold  Victory 
Party  Tonight  At  8 

An  election-night  victorj'  party 
sponsored  by  the  campus  Young 
RepuWican  Club  will  be  held  in 
Michael's  Restaurant  across  from 
the  Post  Office  today  from  8  p.m. 
on,  according  to  Special  Projects 
Chairman  Luke  Corbett. 

"All  club  members  and  Friends 
are  urged  to  drop  by  and  celebrate 
Eisenhower  and  Nixon's  reelec- 
tion," announced  Corbett.  "The 
party  will  feature  music,  dancing, 
TV  and  no  speeches.  Refreshments 
will  be  on  lipnd.  Be  sure  to  come 
early,  before  Stevenson  concedes, 
in  order  to  get  in  on  the  victory- 
night  excitement." 


The     UNC     Men's     Glee     Club, 
under   the   direction   of   Dr.    Joel  i 
Carter,    yesterday    announced    its 
program  for  1956-57.  j 

The  Glee  Club,  wbich  made  its : 
first  public  appearance  at  the  re- 
cent Founders  Day  Program,  will 
go  on  tour  to  Virginia  Nov.  8-10 
and    will    perform   in    the    Mozart  , 
Festival  on  Dec.  2. 

In  March  it  will  join  with  the 
Women's  College  Glee  Club  in 
presenting  Dido  and  Aneas.  The 
club's  spring^tour  will  be  made  in 
April.  i 

The  following  men  have  been 
selected  as  officers  of  the  club 
for  the  year:  I 

President  Zane  Eargle,  Wax-  j 
haw;  Vice-President  Donald  C.  . 
Nance.  Charlotte;  Business  Mana-  j 
ger  Charles  R.  Shoe,  Fayetteville;  . 
Secretary  H.  Franklin  Brooks, ' 
Greenville:  Librarians  Jerry  Pur-  j 
gason,  Guilford,  and  Graham  | 
Matthews,  Greensboro  and  Publici- 
ty Chairman,  Dick  Peterson,  Ashe- 
ville. 


The  Daily  Tar  H*«l  will  gc  to 
press  tomorrow  morning  with 
lato  national  election  results. 

The  newspaper's  eiecton  night 
plans  caH  for  several  editions  as 
the  morning  progresses  and  re- 
turns come  in. 

Students  desiring  to-the-minute 
infemMitien  on  th«  election  can 
dial  88602,  9-3361,  9-3371  or  8445. 


Y  SCHEDULE  j 

2:00  P.  M.  Y-Nite  Planning  Com- 1 
mittee  Meeting,  Jim   Raugh     and  I 
Nancy  Shuford  co-chairmen,  Elea 
nor  Riggins's  office. 

4:00  P.  M.  Eixecutive  Committee, 
"Y"  Office. 

5:00  P.  .M.  Community  Sen'ice 
Committee,  Bill  Tucker  chairman. 
Cabinet  Room. 

7:00  P.  M.  Important  Graduate 
Club  EJxecutive  Board  Meeting, 
Bill  Deaton  chairman.  Pine  Room. 


Navy  Nurse  for  graduates  in  nurs-  \  Grange:    Donald    Rich    Humphrey, 


mg. 


IREASUREOFSIESMMM 


Medical  Schol  students  or  those  | 
accepted    and    within    six    months ' 
of   entering   Medical   School    may  I 
apply  for  the  Navy  Medical  Corps,  i 
This   program   allows   the   student  j 
to  complete  his  schooling  and  then  ' 
intern  at  a  Navy  Hospital  as  a  Lt. 
ij.g.)   with   full   pay   for   one   year 
followed  by  two  additional   years 
on  active  duty. 

Any  student  with  60  or  more 
semester  hours  may  apply  for  the 
Naval   Aviation   Cadet   program. 


Mooresville 

Payton  Donald  Jackson.  Dunn; 
Charles  Glenn  Lasley.  Draper; 
Charles  Castello  Loughlin;  Hen- 
derson; George  David  Matthews, 
Stoneviller  Gordon  Lee  O'Briant, 
Sanford;  Robert  Hunter  Shearin, 
Warrenton:  Clinton  Lockwood 
Shuford,  Roxboro;  Jean  Willard 
McSwain,  Shelby;  John  Parker 
McNeil,  Norwood;  John  Carroll 
Smith,  Holly  Springs;  Jesse  David 
Wall,    Greensboro;    William    John 


AED  Fraternity  Holds 
Siecond  Rush  Meeting 

Alpha   E}psilon    Delta,    honorary 
pre-medical  and   pre-dental   frater- 
full    four-year   term   in   the  of f ice  : nity.  will  hold  its  second  rush  meet- 
he   inherited   two   years   ago  upon    ing  tonight  at  7:30  in  105  Gardner 
the  death  of  Gov.  William  B.  Um-  j  Hall. 

stead,  had  been  scheduled  to  make  j  The  guest  speaker  will  be  Dr. 
a  final  appeal  to  the  voters  over  !  E.  E.  Peacock,  Jr.,  instructor  of 
a   TV  network   tonight.   However. !  surgery  in  the  School  of  Medicine 


ALTER  YOUR 
CLOTHES 

to  the 

IVY  LOOK 

Drop  by  today  and  let  us 
show  yoo   what   proper   altera- 
tions can  do  for  your  outdated 
wardrobe. 

Come  in  early  for  your  holiday 
alterations. 


PETE 
The  Tailor 

133'/2  E.  Franklin  St. 


Now  On    • 

Display  - 

Those 

Famous 

Nickle 

Christmas 

Cards- 

Plus 

r/nseWy 

Advent 

Callendars 

Come 

Quickly! 

\\    The  Intimate 
Bookshop 


205    E.  FRANKLIN  ST. 


his  appearance  was  canceled  at 
the  request  of  the  Democratic  Na- 
tional Committee  w^hich  said  it 
needed  the  time  for  a  national 
broadcast.  * 


here.  He  will  also  show   a   movie 
on  plastic  surgery. 

All  pre-medical  and  pre-dental 
students  have  been  cordially  in- 
vited. 


CAMPUS  CALENDAR 


The  University  Office  of  Deve- 
lopment in  cooperation  with  the 
Weatherly,  Mt.  Olive,  and  Bobby  j  University  News  Bureau  began 
Steve  Wood,  Sanford.  '  publication  yesterday  of  a  weekly 


DAILY    CROSSWORD 


ACROSS 

1.  Burrowing 

animal 
5.  Chief 
9.  African 

antelope 

10.  Standard 

11.  An  open  pie 

12.  Largest 
continent 

13.  Man's 
nickname 

14.  Land- 
measures 

16.  Carry 

18.  Guided 

20.  Exclamation 

22.  Erbium 
( sym. ) 

23.  Musical 
instrument 

2.5.  Speaks 

28.  Long,  loose 
overcoats 

30  Shakespear- 
ean tragedy 

32.  A  ship's 
small  boat 

35.  Whether 

36.  Evening  sun 
god   (Egypt) 

38.  Canton 

( Switz. ) 

39.  Journey 
42.  Vein  of 

a  leaf 
■  44.  And  (L.) 
45.  Little  island 
47.  African 

river 
,49.  Bud  of 

a  plant 

50.  Jog 

51.  Vipers 

52.  A  son 
of  Adam 
(Bib.) 

DOWN' 

1.  Parti- 
colored   . 


2.  Openings 
(anat.) 

3.  Constel|a» 
tion 

4.  Additional 

5.  Macaw 
(Braz.) 

6.  Reddish 
coating 
on  metal 

7.  Muse  of 
history 

8.  A  stove 
13.  Entire 

amount 
15.  Part  of 
.    a  camera 
17.  Bitter 

vetch 
19.  A  band 

instrument 


21.  De- 

voured 
24.  Old 

measure 

of 

length 

26.  Test 

27.  A  son 
of 

Isaac 
(Bib.) 

29.  Harden 

30.  Strike 

31.  A 
continent 

33.  Circular 
. band  of 

flowers 

34.  Ignited 
37.  Baseball 

gloves 


^-iBQH  anacr 
ai?H  ana    ioa 


^J3    HSHTIM    DQ 

liAQ  ijyw  i-iua 


I'eatcrdsy'i  Aaiwer 

40.  Egyptian 
goddess 

41.  Fall  into' 
water 

43.  Unadorned 
46.  Half  ems 
48.  Adverbial 
particle 


Multitudes  Of   'Chinches    Were 
First  University  Irihabitants 


By  THOMAS  BYRD 

Few  students,  but  a  multitude  of 
chinches'  inhabited  the  campu& 
during  the  first  years  of  UNC 
operation.  At  least  this  is  the  de- 
scription given  in  the  letters  and 
diaries  of  early  Carolina  students 
now  on  exhibition  in  the  Library. 

The  oldest  letter  in  the  exhibi- 
tion was  written  in  1795  by  John 
Pettigrew  to  his  father.  In  this 
neatly  written  letter  Pettigrew  ex- 


Part  Time 
Earn  $30 
Per  Week 

Must  be  able  to  work 
15  hours  per  week.  Car 
necessary.  Call  Mr.  Gar- 
ska,  Washington  Duke 
Hotel,  Durham,  Tues- 
day, November  6,  from 
3  to  7:30  p.m.  or  Wed- 
nesday, November  7, 
from  10  a.m.  to  1  p.m. 
for  personal  interview. 


!  plained  that  only  three  ^other 
j  "scholars"  were  then  attending  the 
j  University.. 

j      In  another  letter  two  years  later 
j  Pettigrew,  in  a  much  deteriorated 
j  handwriting,  expressed  his  desire 
j  to  leave  the  University.  He  explain- 
j  ed   his   decision    by   saying:    "The 
'chinches'  or  what  we  call  'Sabines' 
have  increased  and  multiplied  and 
become  so  numerous  that  in  recest 
engagements  they  have  quite  de- 
feated -Us  and  obligated  us  to  re- 
treat from  our  roon<  which  thejr 
hold  entire  possession  of  at'  night 
NO  SLEEP 

"None  of  my  roommates  have 
been  able  to  sleep  in  my  room  for 
upv/ards  of  three  weeks  and  it  is 
nearly  the  case  with  respect  to  all 
the  rest.  As  for  my  part  I  spread 
the  'table'  in  the  passage  and  pour 
water   around    its    feet,    by    which 


CLASSIFIEDS 


WANTED— RIDE  TO  KENTUCKY 
for  Thanksgiving  vacation.  Will 
■ihare  expense.«  and  driving.  Call 
Stan  Bershaw,  Pilam  House,  8- 
9025. 


means  I  escape  as  they  are  in  gen- 
eral bad  swimmers. 

"If  you  do  decide  to  continue  to 
send  me  to  college,  I  must  endeav- 
our to  board  in  the  village  as  I 
cannot  bear  the  thoughts  of  stay- 
ing in  college  where  there  is  no 
chance  oof  sleeping." 

Pettigrew  concludes  by  describ- 
ing the  general  college  conduct  to 
bis  father  He  mentions  the  wide- 
spread practice  of  swearing  and  in- 
difference on  the  part  of  some 
students.. 

A  diary  kept  by  William  S.  Mul- 
lins  (roni  June  to  October  1841 
is  *lso  exhibited.  The  diary  con- 
tains detail  accounts  of  his  classes, 
teachers,  fellow  students,  girls  and 
Phi  and  Di  Society  debates. 

A  diary  kept  by  George  N. 
Thompson  during  his  sophomore 
year   (1850^1)    is    also    shown.    It 


campus  calendar.  This  week's  cal- 
endai'  is  as  follows: 

Tuesday — Yack  Beauty  Contest 
practice,  7:30-11  p.m..  Memorial 
Hall;  Dorm  Advisors,  5  p.m.,  Ger 
rard  Hall;  Varsity  Cross  Country 
Dukj;  Freshman  Cross  Country, 
Duke. 

Wednesday — Yack  Beauty  Con- 
test practice,  7:30-11  p.m.,  Mem- 
orial Hall:   IDC  Meeting.  | 

Thursday — Yack  Beauty  Contest; 
6:30-11  p.m..  Memorial  Hall;  Gra- 
duate History  Club,  8  p.m.,  Carroll 
Hall;  Varsity  Soccer,,  Carolina  vs. 
Virginia,  here. 

Friday— Concert  8-10:30  p.m., 
Memorial  Hall;  Freshman  Soccer, 
N.  C.  State. 

Saturday — Varsity  FooU>all,  Vir- 
ginia; Freshman  football.  South 
Carolina. 

Sunday — nothing. 

Monday — State  Cross  Country 
Championships,  Raleigh;  Fresh- 
man Cross  Country.  Raleigh. 


Why  Pay  High  Prices? 


I've  Held  Them  Down  Since  July,  '55 

ASK  YOUR  BUDDY! 

Nationally  Advertised  Anti-Freeze  $2.75  Gal. 
ESSO  GAS  YES!  ESSO  GAS  . 

Cash  Cash  Cash 

Reg.  29.9         H.T.  32.9 

Plus 

Bring  This  Ad  And  Get  1  Cent  Off  Per  Gal.  Gas, 

5  Cents  Per  Qt.  Oil 

?      WHERE      ?  ^ 

At  The  Students'  Friend 

WHIPPLPS  ESSO  SERVICE 


IT'S  FOR  REAL! 


by  Chester  Field 


Delta  Upsilon  Elects 
Don  Gray  As  President 

Don  Gray,  Fort  Bragg.  N.  C. 
has  been  elected  president  of  Delta 
Upsilon  Social  Fraternity's  fall 
pledge  class. 


Other  officers   of   the   class   in- 
gives   a   detail    picture   of  collegelju^jg  ^ndy  Venore,  Bobbins,  N.C.. 


life  during  that  period 
TARHEEL  TALK 

The  interesting  and  amusing  ex- 
hibition is  being  made  in  connec- 
tion with  the  recent  publication 
of  "Tarheel  Talk"  by  Prof.  Nor- 
man E.  Eliason.  Eliason  is  a  UNC 
Professor  Of  English. 

Prof.  Eliason's  book  is  a  his- 
uirical  study  of  the  English  lang- 


FOR  SALE— MAGNECORD  TAPE 
Recorder — m-33  w  ith  tuner.  M!k«! 
on  floor  stand.  Used  less  than  i  uage  in  N.  C.  to  1860.  Most  of  the 
30  hrs.  Also  complete  Hi-Fi  sys  j  materials  for  the  book  and  for  the 
tern.  Chuck  "Nisbet,  Beta  HouAe.  [exhibition  came  from  the  Library's 
8-9068.  r-85^1  'Southern  Historical  Collection. 


secretary  and   Bob  Wilson,   Ashe- 
boro.  N.  C,  pledge  sgt.  at  arms. 

Four  On  Police  Blotter 

Sttidents  on  the  Chapel  Hill 
police  blotter  from  Nov.  1  to  Nov. 
5  are  as  follows: 

Joseph  Henery  Towe.  speeding; 
Stuart  Charles  Marder.  operating 
a  v<*hicle  without  lights;  Charles 
CovefU.  improper  use  of  dealer 
platA;  Pefer  Ypars  stop  digtt  vio- 
lation. 


MEMORIES 

She  looked  m  the  mirror  to  «ee  if  she 

Was  still  the  girl  she  used  to  be 
. .  .  Mias  Sanitation  '53. 

That  was  the  day  she  reigned  supreme. 

That  was  the  day  they  made  her  queen 
of  sanitation — and  sewers,  too! 

The  haiHNeBt  day  she  ever  knew! 

"Life,"  she  sighed,  "is  never  Um  same 
After  a  gurl  has  known  real  fame; 

After  a  girl  has  been  Iflie  me 
. . .  Miss  Saoitatton  '53." 

MOiAii  Onoe  you've  known  the  real 
,  pteasure  of  a  reai  smoke,  no  pcJe 
substkute  wiM  do.  Take  your  pleasure  &^/ 

Smoke  Choslerfield.  Enjoy  big  full     ■  ^  ^^/^ 
flavor  . . .  big  satisfectioa.  Packed 

more  smoothhr  by  AMi»*ft«v,  it's 


'  SfH^IC^  w9^  ff^^W  •  •  fc  RP^Wm^  ^^••■•^•••w  I 


•  tiMMAMrM 


ACe  FOUR 


THt  PAILY  TAR  MflL 


TUESDAY,  NOVEMBER  6,  1954 


Basketball  Team  Will  Feel 
Absence  Of  Salz,  Young 


Frosb  Harriers  Run 


By  Larry  Cheek 

Down  in  the  spacious  confines 
of  Woollen  Gym,  the  round  balls 
are  bouncing  as  Carolina's  fresh- 
man and  varsity  basketball  teams 
prepare  for  the  long  season  ahead. 

Workouts  have  been  going  on 
since  the  opening  of  practice  on 
Oct.  15,  and  already  some  startling 
developments  have  drawn  the  at- 
tention of  local  hardwood  enthusi- 
asts. The  first  surprise  was  the 
announcement  that  Bob  Young 
and  Frank  Goodwin  had  been  dis- 
missed from  the  team  for  dis- 
ciplinary reasons. 

This  in  itself  was  enough  to  dis- 
may any  loyal  Tar  Heel  fan.  But 
the  real  shocker  came  when  it 
was  disclosed  that  star  guard  Har- 
vey Salz  had  been  lost  to  the 
squad  until  next  year  due  to  "scho- 
lastic difficulties'.  Salz  was  the 
fair  haired  boy  of  last  year's  twice 


In  Knoxville,  An  Even  Break 

One  Tennessee  winning  string  was  snapped  and  another  contin- 
ued unbroken  Saturday  when  two  Tar  Heel  athletic  teams  crossed 
the  Blue  Ridge  Moutains  and  invaded  the  Volunteer  state. 

Th«  str*«k  that  was  brought  to  a  rude  halt  was  th«*Vol  cross- 
country team's  string  of  four  in  a  row.  Tha  UNC  harriars  took  cara 
of  that  situation  in  handy  fashion,  winning  26-29  over  the  ambitious 
but  untested  Tennessaa  runners. 

But  the  all  winning  Vol  football  team  kept  rolling  right  along, 
taking  a  2(M)  decision  oVer  the  game  Tar  Heels.  It  was  not  an  impres- 
sive win  for  the  number  three  team  in  the  nation,  for  Coach  Jim  Ta- 
tum's  charges  put  up  a  rugged  never  say  die  battle  that  m.ight  have 
payed  off  with  a  few  breaks. 

STATISTICS  CLOSER  THAN  FINAL  SCORE 

The  final  score  gave  the  Vols  a  three  touchdown  margin,  but  the 
final  statistics  were  much  closer.  In  rushing  yardage  the  two  squads 
were  relatively  close,  but  the  difference  in  the  final  outcome  comes 
in  the  passing  yardage  figures.  The  Vols  gained  111  yards  via  the 
airlanes,  while  the  Tar  Heels  picked  up  only  47. 

Two  of  these  completed  passes  might  have  meant  the  difference 
between  victory  and  defeat  for  the  Carolinians.  The  first  key  play 
came  in  the  second  quarter  on  the  Vol's  first  touchdown  drive.  With 
a  fourth  and  7  situation  on  the  Carolina  23,  Tennessee  tailback 
Al  Carter  dropped  back  and  fired  a  pass  to  end  Buddy  Cruze  who 
snared  it  on  the  Tar  Heel  10  yard  line  to  make  it  first  and  10.  This 
seemed  to  break  the  Tar  Keel  resistance,  for  it  took  the  Vols  only  j 
two  plays  to  score. 

In  just  a  matter  of  weeks,  fall 
athletics  at  UNC  will  become  his- 
tory. In  view  of  the  fact  that  the 
lootball  team  has  had  its  troubles 
oerson  gathered  in  the  perfect  flip,  shook  off  several  would  be  tacklers  f ^''"'^  '  relatively  tough  schedu- 
aud  rambled  down  to  the  4  yarS  line  where  Don  Lear  stopped  him  '  ''  '"Z  T'^,l°r  l"«nd  tZZt 
With  a  flying  tackle  from  behind.  Three  plays  later  the  score'^was  1^0.    T.  ^e^l^r  L'tJ'ZT. 

The  concluding  touchdown  was  so  much  icing  on  the  cake  for  the    athletics, 
triumphant  Vols.  They  had  consecutive  victory  number   six  already       ^^^   "^'^   ^^°^  '*°  father  than 
tucked  away   in  their  hip  pockets.  .  ,  the  records    of  Carolina's  so  call- 

D/^•rLJ  <-/xA<-LJEe  cA•...<^.^.^..  i  ed  minor  sports  to  completely  de- 

BOTH  COACHES  SATISFIED  \  j^^^  .^j^  ^^^^^^^    ^^  j.^^,  ^^^  „f 

Both  rival  coaches  were  apparently  salisfied  with  Ihe  performances  Caroliha's  varsity  teams  are  in  an 
of  their  teams.  Carolina  coach  Tatum  called  it  "the  best  game  we've  excellent  position  to  finish  in  first 
played  this  year,  while  Tennessee  head  mentor  Bowden  Wyatt  said  place  in  the  Atlantic  Coast  Con- 
he  was  -well  pleased."  ^^^^^^^  ^^^  ^^^  ^^^^  ^^  ^^e  fresh- 

man     athletics  in  several     sports 
give  signs  of  good  things  to  come. 
Coach  Marvin  Allen's  undefeated 
varsity  soccer  squad  is  in  a  very 
Wyatt  reserved  special  praise  for  his  ends  and  linebackers  who    good  position  to  capture  ACC  hon- 
piayed  such  a  big  part  in  stopping  the  Tar  Heel  option  plays  and  end  j  ors.   but   the   hooters    still   have   a 


heaten  freshman  team,  and  seem-| 
ed  assured  of  a  starting  berUl  on  i 
this  season's  varsity  squad.  i 

Some    called    Salz    the    second '. 
best    prospect    ever    brought    to  j 
Carolina  by  genial  Frank  McGuire,  j 
rating  him  second  only  to  Lennie  ' 
Rosenbluth.   McGuire   himself  ad- ! 
mitted  the  loss  of  Salz  would  hurt. 
"With  Salz  in  there,  the  defense 
couldn't    have    collapsed    around 
Rosenbluth  so  often.  Harvey  could 
have  torn  a  defense  that  concen- 
trated   on    Rosenbluth    to    pieces 
with    his     outside    shooting.     We 
could  have  had  a  great  combina- 
tion in  the  backcourt  with  Salz  and 
this  kid  (Stan)  Groll." 

The  loss  of  Salz,  Young  and 
Goodwin  leaves  the  Tar  Heels  with 
much  less  bench  strength  than 
had  been  anticipated.  Both  Salz 
and  Young  had  been  counted  on 
for  extensive  duty  this  season. 


Nine  men  now  form  the  back- ; 
bone  of  the  squad.  They  are  Rosen- 
bluth, Groll,  Tommy  Kearns,  Tony  | 
Radovich.  Joe  Quigg,  Bob  Cunning-  j 
ham,  Peter  Brennan,  Danny  Lotz 
and  Bill  Hathaway.  Radovich,  6-2 
guard  who  was  a  starter  last  sea- 
son, will  be  lost  to  the  squad  for 
the  second  semester. 

Nothing  like  a  starting  lineup 
has  been  decided  upon  by  Mc- 
Guire. Since  the  beginning  of 
practice  be  has  been  shifting  his 
personnel  and  working  with  dif- 
ferent combinations  on  all  phases 
of  the  game  in  an  effort  to  mould 
the  strongest  club  possible. 

Individuals  who  have  been 
particularly  impressive  in  sessions 
so  'far  include  Hathaway,  7  foot 
sophomore  center  who  is  probably 
the  most  improved  man  on  the 
team;  Groll,  a  smooth  ball  handler 
and    accurate  shooter  who   seems 


destined  for  a  starting  role  in  his 
first  season  as  a  varsity  member; 
and  Kearns,  stubby  junior  guard 
who  seems  to  have  found  himself 
following  a  dismal  sophomore 
year. 

Other  boys  currently  working 
with  the  varsity  are  sophomore 
Gehrman  Holland  an4  junior 
Ken  Rosemond  and  Roy  Searcy. 
Cross-country  runner  Dave  Scur- 
lock,  a  top  performer  on  last  year's 
frosh  basketball  squad,  is  occupi- 
ed with  the  hill  and  dale  sport 
now,  but  may  join  the  basketball- 
ers  later  on. 

Coach  Back  Freeman  has  pared 
his  freshman  squad  down  to  a 
working  nucleus  built  around  five 
scholarship  boys.  The  five  are  for- 
wards Lee  Shaffer  arid  York  La- 
Rese,  center  Dick  Kepley,  and 
guards  Mike  Steppe  and  John 
Crotty. 


Minor  Sports  Teams  Shoot 
For  League  Championships 


By    BILL    KING 


The  second  of  these  all  important  pass  plays  came  in  the  closing 
minutes  of  the  third  quarter.  The  Vols  were  on  the  Carolina  44,  second 
down  and  five  to  go.  Carter  once  again  faded  back  for  a  pass,  and 
spotted  wingback  Bill  Anderson  in  the  clear  on  the  30  yard  line.  An- 


Tatum  put  his  finger  on  Wally  Vale's  blocked  quick  kick  early 
in  the  game  as  the  turning  point.  Also  the  Tar  Heel  mentor  said  that 
the  hobbled  second  half  kickoff  was  anofher  important  factor. 


three   conference   games     left   to  j  and  completely  pulverized  Virgin- 
play.  Duke  and  Virginia  are  the    ia  Saturday,  52-6. 
first  two  opponents  for  Coach  Al-        Coach   Fred  TuUai,  in  his  first 
len's  club,  then  come?  the  really  j  year  with  the  Tar  Babies,  has  pro- 
big  one Mar>iand.  The  Terp  boot-  j  duced  one  of  the  finest  freshman 

ers  a'-e  also  undefeated  and  have  |  teams  that  the  school  has  had  in 
copped  the  ACC  soccer  title  3 ;  years,  and  the  freshman  gridders 
straight  years.  j  have  an  array  of  performers  who 

Although  Maryland  looms  as  the   will  br  bidding  for  starting  births 
biggest  obstacle  in  the  path  of  an    on  "^"1  year's  varsity  squad. 


ACC  title  for  the  Tar  Heels,  Duke 
and  Virginia  will  also  prove  a  de- 
finite threat.  The  Blue  Devils,  beat- 
en only  by  Mar>iand  in  conferen- 
ce competetion  will  probably  prove 
to  be  the  tougher  of  the  two. 

Led  by  all     america — speedster  j 
Jim     Beatty,  the  Carolina     cross-  j 
country  team  poses  as  a  definite  I 
threat  for  the  conference     cross- ' 
country  crown.  The  harriers  have 
won  six  and  lost  only  to  Mar>iand 
this      season    and    are     improving 
with  every  meet.  Coach  Dale  Ran- 


sweeps  cold.  "North  Carolina  tackles  as  good  as  any  team  weve  met  '  toUgh  road  to  travel  and  will  have    '^"  ^^^  expressed  great  enthuias- 
this  year,'  said  the  Tennessee   boss  Their  quarterback,  Dave  Reed,  i  lo  be  up  for  every  game  from  here    ""     ''''"   ^'^   ^^^™  ^   chances     to 


Old  a  great  job,  and  Id  sure   like  to  have  (Ed)  Sutton  on  my  team,     out 

The  hooters  have  a  4-0   record 
at  present  and  the  schedule  shows 


That  (Wally)  Vale's  kicking  was  lops,  too."  Wyatt  continued. 

AN  ALL  OUT  EFFORT  IN  A  LOSING  CAUSE 

Overall,  the  Tar  Heel  performance  was  certainly  a  good  one.  They 
played  a  good  sound  football  game  against  one  of  the  nation's  best 
teams,  and  although  they  came  away  on  the  losing  end,  the  phrase 
"we  might  have  won"  was  still  in  their  thoughts. 

Next  week  ifs  the  annual  caravan  weekend  game  mt  Virginia, 
the  week  after  faltering  Notre  Dame  at  South  Bend  and  the  con- 
cluding weekend  Duke  here  at  Chapel  Hill.  The  season's  record  now 
stands  at  1-5-1,  and  chances  of  sweeping  the  last  three  games  appear 
slim  indeed.  But  it  could  happen. 

CUFF  NOTES 

Saturday's  meet  with  Carolina  was  the  big  one  of  the  year  for 
the  Tennessee  harriers.  The  Vols  are^tbe  class  of  the  Southeastern 
Conlerence  and  would  have  been  a  sure  bet  to  wind  up  unbeaten  tf 
they  had  beaten  the  Tar  Heels. 

Ed  Sutton  dominated  individual  statistics  Saturday.  The  Cullo- 
whee  Comet  gained  61  yards  in  8  carries.  Dave  Reed  picked  up  40  in 
16  carries  while  Larry  McMullen  got  30  in  6  trips  before  leaving  the 
game  with  a  leg  injury. 

When  the  Tar  Heel's  charter  plane  arrived  at  Raleigh-Durham 
Airport  Saturday  night,  the  Georgia  Tech  team  was  waiting  to  board 
the  same  plane  for  their  homeward  flight  to  Atlanta.  During  the  gas- 
sing up  interval,  Tech  and  Tar  Heel  players  swapped  confidences  about 
future  opponents.  Tech  meets  Tennessee  Saturday  in  the  country's 
game  of  the  day,  while  Carolina  closes  their  .season  against  Duke,  the 
team  Tech  beat  over  in  Durham  Saturday. 


Frosh  Football 
Squad  Relaxes 
After  Big  Win 


Tullai  has  depth,  a  great  factor 
in  the  Tar  Babies  success  thus  far. 
The  yearling  boast  a  backfield  that 
is  easily  comparable  to  any  in  the 
Atlantic  Coast  Conference.  This  ad- 
ded to  the  fact  that  the  yearling 
have  a  tremendous  line  with  lots 
of  strength  make  the  Tar  Babies 
a  good  pick  to  finish  the  season 
without  another  loss. 

In  cross  countrj',  the  freshmen 
are  led  by  undefeated  Cowles  Liip- 
fert,  last  year's  state  high  school 
mile  champ  from  Reynolds  High  in 
Winston  Salem. 

The  freshman  harriers  have  a  3-3 
record  and  a  chance  to  finish  with 
a  winning  season  against  the  Duke 
Blue  Imps  this  afternoon.  The 
frosh  will  also  compete  in  the  state 
and  ACC  championship  and  should 


The  Tar  Baby  cross  country  i 
squad,  thrice  victorious  and  thrice  | 
conquered,  will  be  out  to  revenge  j 
a  previous  licking  received  by  the  j 
Duke  Blue  Imps  this  afternoon ' 
when  they  meet  the  Duke  yearl- ' 
ings  in  Durham. 

The  Duke  freshmen  came  to 
Chapel  Hill  for  their  first  meet 
of  the  season  and  spoiled  Caro- 
lina's debut  by  defeating  the  Tar 
Heels,  24  to  37.  I 

The   Duke  yearlings  have   gone  i 
on  to  greater  things  through  the  . 
season   losing   only  to   the   Mary- 
land frosh.  The  Tar  Babies  have 
not  quite  done  so  well,  but  have 
stedily  improved. 

Carolina  has  had  some  bad 
breaks  this  past  week.  Cowles 
Liipfert,  the  squad's  number  one 
man,  turned  his  ankle  Friday  in 
the   meet  with  State  and  has  not 


completely  returned  to  top  form. 
Also  number  three  man,  Mike 
Green,  dropped  out  of  school  to 
serve  his  countrj'  in  the  Marines. 
His  loss  will  be  greatly  felt  by 
the  squad. 

Liipfert  will  run  today  but  if 
his  ankle  bothers  him  he  w^ill 
probably  drop  out  of  the  race.  The 
eight  man  squad  wil  consist  ot 
Lipfert,  Fick  Authur,  Ray  Bag- 
well, Bro  Packard.  Bill  Porter, 
Frank  Sirianni,  Larry  Withrow 
and  a  newcomer,  Frank  Montgo- 
mery. 

Today's  meet  will  be  held  at  4 
this  afternoon  in  Duke  Stadium. 


bring  home  the  marbles  in  the  ACC 
championship  meet  in  Charlotts- 
ville,   Va.   November   19. 

The  Tar  Heel  harriers  unoffic- 
ally  won  the  ACC  title  last  year  j  be  one  of  the  top  threats  for  hon- 
but  the  title  went  to  Maryland  |  q^  jn  these  very  important  meets, 
which  won  dual-meet  honors.  This  j  The  freshman  soccer  team  also 
season  the  title  wiU  be  decided  by  1  jg  ahead  in  the  won-lost  column 
the  outcome  of  the  ACC  meet,  not .  ^^h  ^  g-l  record.  The  baby  boot- 
on  a  dual-meet  basis.  |  ^rs  have  defeated  N.  C.  State  twice 
The  harriers  only  have  one  re-  for  their  two  victories  and  have 
Yesterday  afternoon  saw  the '  g"^3'''>'  scheduled  meet  left  before  |  dropped  a  2-1  decision  to  Duke  for 
freshman  gridders  of  UNC  taking  i  '""""•"g  i°  'he  state  championship  their  only  defeat, 
a  much  deserved  rest  after  their  ;  '"  ^^^"'^^  November  12th.  They ,  The  frosh  will  be  trying  to  make 
route  of  Virginia,  Saturday  after- 1  "''"'^  ^"'^^  '"  Durham  this  after-  j  it  thiee  in  a  row  when  they  meet 
noon.  I  "°<^''-  i  State  again  November  9th  in  Ra- 
U-'  .  ...  ,.  .  ,.  The  Carolina  freshman  football  loigh.  The  freshman  harriers  close 
The  squad,  which  smothered  the    ^^^^  j^  ^^^  ^j  ^^e  high  spots  of    the  season  against  Duke  November 

Carolina's  fall  athletic  teams.  The 
Tar  Babies  dropped  a  41-12  decis- 
ion to  Wake  Forest  in  the  opening 
game  of  the  season  but  since  that 
time  have  run  over  Maryland,  21-0, 


MURALS 


Yesterday's  Tag  Football 
Results: 

4:00— Beta  19,  SPE  (w);  SAE  21, 
Phi  Delt  O  (w);  Kappa  Sig  8, 
ATO  7  (w);  Sig  Chi  9,  Sig  Nu  8 
(w);  EvereH— 3,  6,  Stacy— 1,  0. 

5:00— Med  Sch— 3,  33,  Manley 
0;  Vic  Vil  1,  Everett— 2.  0;  Zeta 
Psi  23,  Dent.  ^Sch.  0;  Lewis "  18, 
Law  Sch.  —  2,  6;  Med.  Sch.  —  2, 
20,  Everett,  0. 

Tomo»-row  Night's  Wrestling 
Schedule: 

7:00  —  147  lb.— Wallace  (ATO) 
vs.  Folger  (Zeta);  7:10  —  147— 
Pettman  (TEP)  vs.  ^Furtado  (Phi 
Gam);  7:20  —  157— Davis  (Phi 
Delt)  vs.  Rouse  (Zeta);  7:30  — 
157  _  Palmery  (DKE)  vs.  Mills 
(Beta);  7:40  —  157— Carr  (ATO) 
vs.  JattcU  (Chi  Phi);  7:50  —  147 
— Milligan  (IND)  vs.  Harris 
(Cobb);  8:00  —  147  —  Hodson 
(Stacy)  vs.  Oldham  (Dent.  Seh); 
8:10  —  167— Tliomas  (Chi  Phi) 
vs.  Hoard  (Sig  Nu);  8:20  —  167 
— R?.ston  (Phi  Delta)  vs.  Cambell 
(Beta):  8:30  —  177 — McCartney 
(Sig  Chi)  vs.  Hudson  (Theta  Chi); 
8:40  —  177 — Johnson  (Zeta)  vs. 
Andrews  (Phi  Delt);  8:50  —  un- 
limited pound  class — Ward  (DKE) 
vs.   Ettlehale   (ZETA). 


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was  working  out  light  in  today's 
drills,  but  trainer  John  Lacey  said 
McMullen  should  be  ready  for 
heavy  action  in  a  day  or  two. 


PATRONIZE  YOUR 
•    ADVERTISERS    • 


Harriers   Go  For   7tb 
Victory  At  Duke  Today 


Virginia  yearlings  52-6,  ran 
through  limbering-up  exercises 
and  participated  in  light  contact 
work. 

Saturday's  successful  head 
knocking  with  the  Cavalier  frosh 
left  the  team  in  high  spirits  and 
the  upcoming  tilt  with  South 
Carolina  is  being  looked  forward 
to  with  optimism. 

In  the  process  of  winning,  many  ,   .        ^        ^         ^    . ,  ,.     ^ 
new  stars  were  discovered  in  the  i  ^f "  f*"  ^^PP^*^   ^Ipha  Gam  39- 
Carolina    ranks.    Notable    among    ?f=  .  ^,^^^'"«     '^^"l    T^'     ^'" 
these  was   halfback   Ron  Hopman '  ^^"'^|''   ^^':^'   ^nd   Barbara    Mur- 

who  turned  in  a  stellar  perform- 1  |;?:'_A'P»:^t.?'":..Z^i__^V*'^„??' 
ance.  Hopman   scored   two  touch- 
downs; one  on  a  25  yard  pass  play 
involving  quarterback  John   Cum- 


15th. 


WAA  Volleyball 

Results  of  this  week's  W.A.A. 
volleyball  place  Carr  Dorm  and 
Tri  Delt  in  the  finals  next  Thurs- 


Carolina's  once  beaten  cross- 
country squad  goes  after  win 
number  seven  of  the  present  cam- 
paign this  afternoon  in  Durham 
when  they  go  against  the  Duke 
University  Blue  Devils. 


wms  over  such  notables  as  Carl 
Party  of  Maryland,  Mike  Shea  of 
State  (twice),  and  Ed  Murphy  of 
Tennessee. 

Beatty     will     receive     capable 
The  meet  will  get  under  way  at  |  backing    from    such    stalwarts    as 
4  p.m.  in  Duke  Stadium,  and  will  j  Everett   Whatley   and   Dave   Scur- 


mings  and  another  on  a  20  yard 
run,  doing  most  of  the  work  him- 
?*i'!'°°..*^'^^?^°"'.^.^.""^  scored  I  self,  save  for  a  few  key  blocks. 

Coach  Fred  Tullai  had  high 
praise  for  his  team  after  the  game, 
especially  concerning  the  good 
spirit   displayed.   Tullai  said   that 


be  run  over  the  newly  constructed 
Duke  golf  course.  The  finish  will 
also  be  in  the  Stadium. 

Carolina,  after  losing  to  Mary- 
land two  weeks  ago,  has  come  on 
rapidly  in  the  past  few  meets  and 


lock,   who  tied  for  fourth  in  the 
Vol    meet;    Ben   Williams,    Perrin 


he  believed  the  score  could  have  j  Thursday 
run    much    higher    if    there    had  | 
been   a    special   effort    to    do  so.  j 
Instead,  Coaeh  Tullai  chose  to  let ! 
some    of    his    subs    gain    valuable  I 


Tar  Heels  Prep 
For  Cavaliers 

North  Carolina's  Tar  Heels  be- 
gan preparation  for  their  Satur- 
day football  clash  with  the  Uni- 
versity of  Virginia  yesterday  on 
muddy  Navy  Field. 

The  Tar  Heels  concentrated  on 
an  offensive  'pattern  against  Vir- 
ginia defenses  in  the  two-hour 
drill.  The  team  also  spent  some 
time  behind  the  canvas  enclosure, 
working  on  a  defense  against  the 
Cavalier  attack. 

The  Tar  Heels  reported  in  fine 
Tuesday,  5  p.m.  Pi  Phi  vs.  KD,  7  j  shape  after  their  licking  at  the 
p.m.  Alpha  Gam  vs.  Chi  Omega:  |  hands  of  Tennessee  Saturday, 
the    finals    Carr    vs.    Tri   Delt   on  j  Halfback     Larry    McMullen,     who 

twisted  his  ankle  against  the  Vols, 


Diana  Ashley,  whipped  Pi  Phi, 
I  45-26  in  the  quarter-finHs  and 
{  topped  Smith  dorm  32-23  in  the 
1  semi-finals.  In  the  looser's  bracket, 
i  Pi  Beta  Phi  blasted  the  Nurses 
j  24-57. 

Games   for    next    week    include: 


We  Are  NOT  Suppressing 

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Today's   meet   is    the    last   reg- 


WIB'BIU.  JMaiTt'i^^^TtiftiFMiffr 


hit  a  peak  last  Saturday  in  their '  ularly  scheduled  dual  meet  of  the 
26-29  win  over  the  previously  un-  i  season  for  the  Tar  Heels.  Their 
beaten  Tennessee  Volunteers.  I  next  outing  will  be  Nov.  12  when 
Other  wins  have  been  at  the  ex- }  they  compete  in  the  State  Cham- 
pense  of  Clemson,  Virginia,  South  |  pionships  in  Raleigh. 
Carolina  and  N.  C.  State. 

Duke  has  its  strongest  team  in 
years,  but  still  is  not  expected  to 
provide  a  stiff  test  for  the  power- 
ful! Tar  Heels  of  Coach  Dale  Ran- 
som. The  Blue  Devils  have  also 
been  beaten  by  Maryland  this 
season.  In  that  meet,  Duke  ace 
Bill  Hotelling  put  on  a  superb 
showing,  finishing  in  the  top  five. 

Pacing  the  Tar  Heels  as  always 
in  today's  meet  will  be  ace  dis- 
tance man  Jim  Beatty,  Beatty  is 
undefeated  in   cross-country  cum- 


in the  fact  that  all  the  members 
of  the  squad  played  at  least  six 
minutes. 

The  Tar  Babies  are  favored  to 
win  against  South  Carolina,  but 
there  ha£  been  no  indication  that 
preparations  for  the  tilt  have  been 
slackened. 


GOU 


•fSf 


'THE  VMtil'OE  torn: 


Sl&tllSSs^&s 


mA 


nun  utom  shop 
moiu^  Mil  I.  comnM 

■»»«— naiiiil 


1^7  nc 


-  JAMK  Yi,  5  ifiMi 
TOMMY   SROWN 

m  m  McNEELY 

CMAilXHOU  Orchestra 


Skill  is  the  essence  of  experience.  Becau.se  we 
compound  a  large  volume  of  prescriptions,  our 
Registered  Pharmacists  acquire  a  rather  special 
skill.  To  this  skill,  we  add  ample  stocks,  quality 
ingredients,  uniformly  fair  prices.  And  with  these 
assets,  we  seek  your  "valued  patronage. 

sunoN's 

Phone  9-8781 


"Th«  Tar  Heel's  Prescription  Center" 


RERIALS   i/S?T. 


il^mp.NOn  The  Caravan  For. Virginia:  Get  Tickets   Now 


WEATHER 

Partly  cloudy  and  mild  wiHi  oc- 
casional light  rain  likely.  Expect- 
ed high  today  of  72. 


VOL.  LVII     NO.  41 


3r() c  Datlij  Mar  Keel 


PATRIOTS 

The    uptown    boys    have    fallen 
down.  See  page  2. 


Complete  (/P)  Wire  Service 


CHAPEL  HILL,  NORTH  CAROLINA,  WEDNESDAY,  NOVEMBER  7,  1956 


Offices   in   Grahcm   Memorial 


FOUR   PAGES   THIS    ISSUE 


BY    HUGE    MAJORITY: 


DWIGH T  EISEN H 0 W E R 

Britain,  France  And  Israel    \  Republican  Trend 
Agree  To  Cease   Shooting    |  A/ever  Sbws  Down 


Compiled  by  The  Daily  Tar  Heel   { 
From    Short   Wave  ' 

and   Radio  Reports  i 

British,  French  and  Israeli  gov- 
ernments last  night  agreed  to  cease  ' 
their  fire  in  the  Middle  East. 

Cairo  Radio  said  Egypt  will  keep  } 

2  Carolinians 
Go  To  Polls 
For  20th  Time  | 

ASHEVILLE    (iP)    —   Two    aged ' 
Western    North    Carolinians    cast 
ballots     Tuesday     in     their     20th  i 
Presidential   election.    Both   voted 
in    the   state's    12th   congressional 
district. 

Daniel  A.  (Uncle  Dan)  Mc- 
Crary,  who  celebrated  his  100th 
birthday  recently,  voted  an  ab- 
sentee ballot  this  time  and  his 
vote  was  recorded  at  Crab  Tree 
Precinct   in  Henderson   County. 

William  Riley  Tallent,  97.  went  j 
to  the  polls  at  S.vlva.  in  Jackson 
County.  Since  1880.  he  has  voted  j 
in  every  national,  state,  county 
and  naunicit>al  election  or  special  i 
election,  possibly  a  national  re- 1 
cord.  I 

McCrary's    a    staunch    Republi-  j 
onn,.im4  — ite  he  "trikeslfce'^itrst- 
,asJ)e   did  in   1952. 
,,:  Talleat's     ap»     lequally     fervent 
.^mocrat,  "I've  never  voted  noth- 
..  in'.,  but    the    straight    Democratic 
ticket   in   all    my   life.   Don't   ever 
intend   to  do  elsewise,  either."  he 
said   Tuesday. 


on  fighting  as  long  as  there  are 
aggressors  —  meaning  Britain  and 
France  —  on  Egyptian  soil.  Britain 
has  said  before  she  will  keep  her 
armed  forces  in  Egypt  until  they 
are  replaced  by  a  United  Nations 
truce  team. 

Meanwhile,  in  Soviet-dominated 
Hungary,  rebels  were  reported  still 
fighting  back  at  the  Russians,  who 
early  Sunday  turned  as  they  were 
leaving  the  country  and  took  it 
over  again  in  a  bath  of  blood. 

Men,  women  and  children  were 
fighting  the  Russians  with  every 
weapon  they  could  find.  The  situa- 
tion was  described  as  "utter  con- 
fusion and  chaos." 

Switzerland,  a  country  which  has 
long  maintained  a  strict  neutrali- 
ty, Tuesday  asked  the  Big  Five  na- 
tions, along  with  India,  to  bring 
Deace  again  to  the  Middle  East  and 
Europe.  The  nation  asked  the  Big 


Five  to  hold  another  Summit  Meet- 
ing, similar  to  the  one  held  a  year 
ago  at  Geneva. 

Caino  radiomen  reported  Tues- 
day was  the  first  night  in  a  week 
without  air  raids  from  British 
bombers. 

But    also    in    the    Middle    East, 

British  and  French  armed  forces 

were  reported  to  have  moved  into 

Ismalia,  an  Egyptian  city  halfway 

down  the  Suez  Canal. 

I      Cairo  Radio  reported  Saudi  Ara- 

I  bian  armed  units  had  moved  into 

[  Jordan.   Saudi   Arabia   has   broken 

I  diplomatic   relations    with    France 

'<  and  Britain,  the  report  said. 

j      Earlier  in  the  day,  Britain  and 

I  France  received  letters  from  Soviet 

j  Premier    Nikolai    Bulgain    calling 

j  for  an  immediate  ceasefire  in  the 

Middle  East. 

Shortly  afterward  Anglo-French 
I  action  ceased  in  the  Suez  area. 


Student  Fined  $50  On 
Case  Which  Originated 
Affair  Of  Vgly  Club' 

j^.  450   fine    on     tr«f"-<^    x^hargesl  «>utbward  An'C&hirrrtJlo'^..  atfdthitr 


aK«inflt  a  University  senior  from 
l>attvUle.  iVa..' has  brought  to  a 
close    the'    notorious    "Ugly    Club" 


it  .suddenly  made  a  U-turn  under  a 
red  li-crbt  signal  at  the  Cameron 
Ave.   comer   and   halted   where   the 


case    of    potk^    station    vandalism  [  police  car   had   blocked    its   return- 
here  last  spring.  I  inT   path. 


UNC  Glee  Club  Leaves 
Today  On  Concert  Tour 

The  UNC  Glee  Club,  under  the 
direction  of  Dr.  Joel  Carter,  leav- 
es today  on   its  fall  concert  tour. 

It  will  appear  at  Hillsboro 
School  this  atfernoon  and  at  Strat- 
ford College,  Danville,  Va.,  to- 
night. Friday  morning  it  will  sing 
at  Roxboro  High  School  and  Fri- 
day night  a  joint  concert  with 
the  University  of  Va.  Glee  Club 
will   be   held  at  Charlottesville. 

Sunday  morning  the  club  will 
sing  a  Chapel  service  at  Sweet 
Briar  College,  Va.,  and  present 
a   full   concert   that   afterno<in. 

Appearing  with  the  Glee  Club 
as  its  guest  soloist  will  be  Mrs. 
Donna  Patton,  a  soprano  and  mu- 
sic major  at  UNC.  Also  appear- 
ing on  the  program  are  "The  Four 
Flatters,"  a  quartet,  and  "The 
Baker's   Dozen,"  a   triple  quartet. 


Greta  Heads 
To  Northwest 

MIAMI  <iPi  —  The  season's  sev- 
enth tropical  storm  continued 
northeast  over  the  open  Atlantic 
last  night,  still  pummellng  ships 
in  her  path. 

The  U.  S.  Weather  Bureau  at 
Miami  said  Hurricane  Greta  prob- 
ably would  lose  intensity  and  trop- 
ical storm  characteristics  Wed- 
nesday, dropping  her  out  of  the 
hurricane   class. 

Late  Tuesday,  however.  Greta 
was  traveling  northeast  at  23 
miles  per  hour  and  battering 
ocean  craft  with  75-mile  winds  or 
worse. 


Judge  William  S.  Stewart  in 
Recorder's  Court  found  Rosea  Wil- 
son. 21.  guilty  of  reckless  driving, 
speeding,  and  making  an  improper 
turn,  and  fined  the  defendam  $30 
.and  court  costs  after  he  pleaded 
guilty  to  an  three  charges.  Wilson 
was  acquitted  on  a  drunken  driv- 
ing charge,  to  which  he  pleaded  not 
guilty. 

It  was  shortly  after  Wilson  was 
arrested  on  the  evening  of  last 
.Vpril  16  that  a  group  of  University 
fraternity  students  descended  on  the 
poilice  station  and  eonimitted  sev- 
eral acts  of  vandalism.  In  the  en- 
suing investigation  a  group  known 
as  the  "U'gly  Club"  was  disbanded. 
£nd  its  "Ugliest,"  Louie  Woodbury 
.V.  Wilmington  and  two  other  mem- 
bers, were  fined  for  the  police  sta- 
tion vandalism. 

In  the  WUson  case  Police  Patrol- 
man Howard  Pendergraph  testified 
that  he  ai>d  Patrolman  Amos  Home 
were  parked  on  E.  Franklin  St.. 
shortly  after  being  called  to  break 
up  a  "jungle  party"  staged  by  Uni- 
versity students  at  the  American  Le- 
•4\on  Hut.  The  time  was  shortly 
after    11    p.m. 

Patrolman  Pendergraph  told  the 
court  that  Wilson's  car  passed  them 
headed  west  on  E.  Franklin  St.,  go- 
ing at  a  high  rate  of  speed,  and 
narrowly  missing  several  collisions 
i.T  the  vicinity  of  the  postoffice.  He 
said  they  pursued  the  speeding  car 


Wilson  was  the  driver,  the  patrol- 
man said,  and  appeared  to  tie  under 
the  influence  of  an  intoxicating^ 
beverage.  There  were  three  other 
pas.sengers  in  the  car. 

Testifying  in  his  own  behalf.  Wil- 
.son  said  he  and  his  passengers  had 
just  left  their  date%  for  the  even- 
ing at  a  sorority  house  and  did  not 
know  they  were  speeding,  and 
thought  the  U-turn  would  be  all 
right  that  late  at  night.  Wilson  pre- 
.sented  the  Danville  pollc-e  chief  as 
a  character  witness.  . 


PROM  ASSOCIATED  PRESS  DISPATCHES 

President  I)ui.i;ht  F.i.senli<)\vcr  was  voted  hack  into 
oflice   Tuesday. 

The  .Aineritan  pnblu  jra\e  the  Repidjliepn  (Ihief  Kx- 
eeiitive  and  X'ire  President  Richard  .Nixon  a  tremendous 
vote  of  (onlidence  over  nemo<ratic  Presidential  tandidate 
Adlai  Stevenson  and  his  running  mate,  Elstes  Kefauver. 

It  will  be  Eisenhower's  second  term  in  the  White  House. 

It  was  a  shoo-in  for  Eisenhower  all  the  way.  The  Ike  tr^end 
started  early  yesterday  evening  when  Connecticut  turned  out  a  land- 
slide for  the  Republican  candidate.  By  8:45  p.m.  EST.  after  one  mil- 
lion votes  had  been  counted,  the  White  House  was  reported  "happj." 
It  continued  happy  until  the  counting  was  virttMilly  complete. 

Stevenson  cotvseCkd  Hit  election  to  Eisenhower  at  approxi- 
mately 1:'20  this  nwrning.  He  said  in  a  telegram  to  the  President 
"tonight  we  art  not  Democrats  and  Republican — we  are  all  Ameri- 
cans." 

Several  stales  startled  balloting  analysts  when  they  turned  more 
than  the  usual  number  of  votes  toward  Ei.senhower.  In  North  Caro- 
lina, with  more  than  one-half  of  the  precincts  reporting,  the  vote 
was  352.318  for  Stevenson,  and  295,822  lor  Eisenhower  —  an  un- 
usually close  margin  for  the  traditionally  solid  Democratic  Tar  Heel 
state. 

RALEIGH  '^ — Gov.  Hodges  and  olhei  state  officials  won  easy 
victories  over  their  Republican  opponents  as  returns  trickled  in  slow- 
ly last  night  from  Tuesday's  general  election. 

L  dications  wdre  that  fine  fall  weather  and  interest  in  the- 
presidential  race  had  broi|ght  out  a  big  vote  and  that  the  job  of 
counting  the  ballots  would  be  a  long-drawn-out  process. 

However,  the  early  returns  gave  lopsided  leads  to  the  governor 

and  other  Democratic  state  officials,  and  their  election  was  assured. 

„,__^  .^.   .......     j,^  t.. .   _. ...  ^3^-.>4uA».' •      -  -        ^- 

RALOGH  JP> — U.  S.  Sen.  Sam  J.  E^i-vin  Jr.  of  Morganton  .swept 
to  victory  ar,  expected  o*"er  Republican  Joel  Johnson  of  Four  Oaks 
in  Tuesday's  general  election. 

Caravan  Tickets  To  Be  Sold* c"' 
Again  Today,  Committee  Says 

The  Caravan  Committee  yester- 1 
day   announced    it    would    extend  ' 
the  sale  of  tickets  to  the  Virginia  : 
game  Saturday  due  to  an  increase 
in  sales  over  the  past  two  days,      i 

There     are     approximately     100 
tickets  left,  according  to  commit-  i 
tee    Chairman    Harry    House,    and  ] 
they  will  be  on  sale  at  least  for 
one  more  day.  i 


REELECTED 


Hodges  Wins  Easily 
Over  Hayes;  Thrives 
On  Lots  Of  Activity 


R  A  L  E I G  H,  IAS  —  Gov.  Luther 
Hodges,  who  was  elected  with  ease 
yesterday  to  a  full  four-year  term, 
is  a  man  who  thrives  on  activity 
and  likes  to  see  things  done. 

Now  rounding  out  his  first  two 
years  of  office,  Hodges,  59,  can 
look  back  on  a  score  of  achieve- 


KRESIDENT   EISENHOWER 

.  .  .  onot'ier  four  years 

Improvements 
Being  Made 
On  Building 

By  MARY  ALYS  VOORHEES       \ 

I 
A    pile    of    bricks,    flourescent  i 

lights,   steam   blasting   and   a    new : 

chimney  top  sums  up  the  building ' 

and  grounds  program  for  UNC  at  j 

the  present  time.  j 

Over    at    the    Morehead    Plane- 1 
tarium  the  steam  process  used  in 
cleaning    the    limestone    columns 
defaced    Friday    night   by   vandals 
was  begun  yesterday. 

**The  stdhe  cleaner  is  having 
considerable  difficulty  in  getting 
off  the  paint  as  readily  as  in  other ; 
cases.  He  worked  all  day  today  on 


Campaign 
Has  $300 
To  Date 


House  also  said  he  felt  the  co- 
eds would  be  willing  to  pay  for 
their  transportation  instead  ol 
having  their  dates  pay. 

A  check  with  the  ticket  office  in 
Woollen  Gym  yesterday  showed 
"several  hundred"  tickets  to  the 
game  had  been  sold  up  to  that 
time. 


Band's   Former  Director  Slocum 
Can   Watch   From   Sidelines  Now 


IN  THE  INFIUMARY 

Students  in  the  infirmary  yes- 
terday included: 

Miss  ls»b«lle  Maltcrten,  Miss 
Sylvia  McArthur,  Miss  Ann 
Mitchell,  Louis  Tatsoaveuras, 
Jesse  Wall,  James  Varnum,  Jim- 
mic  Morritt,  Harold  Lusk,  Alvin 
Mustisn,  Richard  Giersch,  Leon 
Martin,  Loran  Johnson,  Hubert 
Roavos,  John  Trot,  Hugh  Bryant. 


Johns  Hopkins  Prof 
Talks  On  Magna  Carta 

Prof.  Sidney  Painter  of  John , 
Hopkins  University  will  present  1 
an  address  Thursday  on  the  long-  j 
range  importance  of  the  Magna  j 
Carta. 

His   talk  will   be  given  in   Car- 
roll Hall  at  8  p.m. 

The   lecture   will    be   sponsored 
by  the  Graduate  History   Club  in 
association  with  Graham  Memori-  J 
al   Student  Union  and   Phi  Alpha  I 
Theta,   honorary    history    fraterni- 
ty. I 

Prof.  Painter  is  one  of  the  fore-  i 
most  authorities  on  the  political  i 
and  social  organization  of  the  { 
medieval  world.  In  his  lecture  he  j 
will  speak  of  the  idea  of  individ- 
ual  liberty,  which  grew  up  in  me- ! 
dieval  England  and  was  embodied 
in  the  famous  Magna  Carta.  I 


By  BOB  MYERS 

Whether  the  UNC  Band  is  going 
through  the  intricate  roiitines  of 
a  halltime  football  show  or  giving 
a  concert.  Professor  Earl  Slocum 
is  relaxed. 

For  the  first  time  In  23  years, 
the  veteran  director,  who  retired 
recently,  caii  sit  back  and  enjoy 
the  offerings  of  an  organization 
he  headed  for  so  many  years. 

Retiring  in  order  to  divide  his 
time  between  the  North  Carolina 
Symphony  and  a  full  schedule  of 
classes  in  music  theory  and  ap- 
plied music,  Slocum  has  turned  his 
versatile  baton  over  to  Herbert  W. 
Fred.  "Phe  new  director,  who  has 
arranged  programs  given  by  the 
marching  band  this  fall,  is  cur- 
rently working  on  a  Ph.D.  degree 
in  musicology. 

Through  the  efforts  of  Slocum, 
the  band  has  developetl  into  one 
of  the  finest  in  the  South.  It  is 
fitting  that  dn  his  retirement  this 
year  the  band  has  reached  a  peak 
in  membership  and  performance. 
The  marching  band  has  new  uni- 
forms, first  in  26  years  and  was 
alloted  $6,000  for  repair  of  instru- 
ments and  other  improvements. 

Completing  the  "new  look" 
cycle  is  Fred,  36-year-old  native  of 
Eveleth,  Minn,  whoe  qualifications 
have  been  recognized  by  Slocum: 
"I  have  had  many  happy  years 
with  the  University  Band.  I'm  so 
glad  to  see  it  in  the  hands  of  a 
man  as  capable  as  Mr.  Fred  is," 
the  outgoing  directdf  said.  I 

Professor   Slocum   recalls   many 


hours  of  preparation  which  go  in- 
to each  public  appearance  of  the 
marching  band,  and  the  experi- 
ences relative  to  his  long  tenure 
of  service. 

Although  a  show  for  an  athletic 
event  runs  only  eight  to  10  min- 
utes, as 'many  as  50-100  hours,  ex- 


clusive of  rehearsal,  may  be  spent 
preparing  for  the  production. 
Charts  for  each  formation,  indicat- 
ing the  position  of  each  bandsman, 
must  be  devised,  and  music  ar- 
ranged. Thus  the  director  is  not 
only  musician,  but  calculus  pro- 
fessor. 

And  out-of-town  engagements  al- 
ways  have   their  minor   problems 


j  as     the    retiring    director    knows  I 
well.  After  a  concert  in  New  York. 

I  Professor    Slocum    told    the    band 
members    to    check    their    inslru- 1 

j  ments  at  Penn  Station    before  go  j 
ing  downtown.  j 

Returning  to  Chapel  Hill,  the  di-  j 
rector  discovered  that  the  instru- . 
menfs  had  been  checked  at  the  | 
station  by  "leaving  them  on  the ; 
nearest  baggage   cart."   Fortunate- ' 

i  ly.   through   phone  calls   and  rail-  j 

I  road    management,    the    misplaced  i 

'  brass  found  its  way  back  home.     ; 
And     some     of     the     bandsmen 
found     the     novel     escalators     so 
fanciful    that    they    almost    missed 

I  the  return   trip. 

Ill  addition  to  other  duties,  Pro- ' 
fessor  Slocum  has  been  appointed 
director  of  instrumental  music  by 

I  Dr.    Glen    Haydon,    head    of    the 
LTMC  Music  Dept. 

Director  Fred,  assisted  by  Bert 
Davis  and  Calvin  Huber,  has  pub- 
lished several  works  and  is  an  out- 
standing compo.ser,  arranger,  and 
conductor. 

The     new     director,     associated 
with    military   and   college    bands 
since  1942  can  vouch  for  the  trials  j 
"Of   a    director   charged    with    the 
problems   of  90   people.    Fred   re- 1 
cajls    accompanying    the    band    to , 
last   year's    Oy.ster   Bowl   game    at ' 
Norfolk,  Va.,  and  the  one  member 
who  left   his  cap    at   Chapel   Hill.  | 
A  quick  phone  call  put  the  cap  on 
the  next  bus  and  it  arrived  in  time  | 
for  the  fellow  to  play  the  National  i 
Anthem  in  full  dress  and  without  i 
embarrassment.  I 


I  one  column  and  still 
ished  cleaning  it,"  Planetarium 
.Manager  A.  F.  Jenzano  aid  Tues- 
day in  regard  to  the  process. 

Explaining  that  limestone  was 
porous,  he  pointed  out  the  diffi- 
culty in  cleaning  and  added  that 
due  to  the  circumstances  he  could 
not  estimate  just  how  long  it 
would  take  to  remove  the  paint 
BRICKS 

A  pile  of  bricks  over  by  Carroll 
Hall  is  another  item  on  the  build- 
ing agenda. 

Silting  off  to  them.selves  at  the 
present,  the  bricks  will  be  used  to. 
build  walkways  to  replace  the 
gravel  walks,  according  to  J.  S. 
Bennett,  director  of  operations. 

"This  is  a  year-to-year  process," 
Bennett  reported,  "in  which  new 
brick  walks  replace  the  old  gravel 
ones,  completing  a  few  each  year." 

Fur  Old  East  the  new  semester 
means  a  new  top  on  the  chimney 
of  the  dorm.  The  old  top  is  being 
replaced  by  new  bricks  and  new 
cement. 

Students  coming  in  and  out  of 
the  Library  were  a  little  puzzled 
this  Week  to  notice  the  conglom- 
eration of  iron  rails  which  led  on- 
lookers to  believe  Kenan  Stadium 
was  being  expanded  and  later  aft- 
er the  rails  had  been  connected 
that  perhaps  the  library  was  going 
to  receive  a  steam  bath. 
NEW  NAME 

But,  on  looking  into  the  matter, 
Isaac  T.  Littleton,  assistant  librari 
an,  explained  the  rails  are  for 
workers  who  are  putting  the  li- 
brar>  8  name  on  the  building. 

Now  known  as  the  Louis  Round 
Wilson  Library,  the  building  was 
named  for  Dr.  Wilson,  who  was 
head  librarian  from  1901-1932  and 
is  presently  teaching  library  sci- 
ence here  and  writing  a  history  of 
the  University. 

Elsewhere,  flourescent  lights  are 
being  put  into  a  number  of  cam- 
pus buildings. 

Other  operation  plans  were  dis- 
cussed yesterday  when  operation 
officials  and  architects  met  to  dis- 
cuss final  plans  for  new  dormi- 
tories to  be  added  to  the  campus. 


Campus  Chest  Co-Chairmen 
Jackie  Aldridge  and  Jess  Strib- 
Img  were  jangling  more  than  $300 
in   donations    last    night. 

The  donations,  which  came  to 
approximately  $302,  were  collect- 
ed during  the  first  day  of  the 
all-week  Campus  Chest  drive,  an 
annual   affair. 

The  Co-chairmen  said  Delta 
Kappa  Epsilon  Fraternity  was 
leading  the  fraternity-sorority  div- 
sion  in  contributions.  Kappa  Al- 
pha Fraternity  was  in  second 
jDiare.   they  ^aid. 

In  .the  men'.s  and;  women's 
durmitwy  division,  Spencer  wo-, 
men's  dormitory  w?,s  leading,  fol- 
has  not  fin- 1 1 lo*ed    by    Cpri:    women's^   dormi- ! 


tory.  ,  ..,. 

The  campaign  leaders  remind- 
ed students  and  workers  that  the 
ehcsfs  collection  center  is  on  the 
second  floor  of  the  Y  building. 

In  a  joint  statement.  Miss  Al- 
dridge and  Stribling  said  "We 
have  really  been  pleased  with  the 
way  the  faculty  members  and  ad- 
ministration have  supported  the 
Campus  Chest.  We  look  forward 
to    their   continued    support." 

Goal  of  the  drive  is  $1,500,  and 
the  campaign  will  end  Friday 
afternoon.  A  Frosttime  Frolic 
dance  will  be  held  Nov.  16  at 
Woollen  Gymnasium,  with  admis- 
sion  $1. 

■•  •  "  ■  X '. 


ments,  including  his  successful 
campaign  to  get  the  Pearsall 
school   segregation   plan   adopted. 

The  dapper,  dignified  Hodges 
has  often  said  he  wou-'H  rather  be 
active  than  idle.  The  past  two 
years  attest  to  that.  During  the 
last  three  months  he  has  traveled 
thousands  of  miles  and  delivered 
35  speeches,  many  of  which  were 
in  behalf  of  his  candidacy  and 
other  Democratic  candidates. 

It  was  on  Nov.  9.  1954,  that 
Hodges,  then  lieutenant  governor, 
became  governor  following  the 
aeath  of  Gov.  William  B.  Umstead. 

His  business  career  was  marked 
with  the  success  of  a  Horatio  Al- 
ger story.  He  began  as  a  mill 
hand  and  retired  as  vice  president 
of  Marshall  Field  &  Co. 

His  major  accomplishment  as 
governor  has  been  his  vigorous 
campaign  for  adoption  of  the  Pear- 
sail  Plan  aimed  al  preserving  seg- 
regation in   the  public  schools. 

The  advisory  committee  on  edu- 
cation, which  studied  the  segrega- 
tion   issue    and   recommended   the 
Pearsall  plan,  was  created  by  the 
I  1955  Legislature  and  appointed  by 
'■■  Hodgss.      He     named     Thomas    J. 
'  Pear.^all   of  Rocky  Mount  to  head 

it. 
• '  An  of  ht  r  accomplishment  to 
which  Hodges  can  point  with  pride 
r  is  the  Notih  Carolina  Business  De- 
velopment Corp.  rie  was  '  instru- 
f  mental  in  organizing  it  to  make 
loans  available  to  aid  small  indus- 
try. 


Two  Students 
Are  Attacked 
By  Teenagers 


Two  UNC  Medical  Profs 
Attend  Philadelphia  Meet  ard 


Two  Chapel  Hill  teen-agers 
were  found  guilty  of  assault  and 
battery  on  two  Carolina  students 
in  Chapel  Hill  Recorder's  Court 
Tuesday. 

The  boys,  Johnnie  Vickers  and 
Pat  Bums  Jr.,  both  19.  were  con- 
victed after  a  four-hour  trial  be- 
fore   Judge    William    S.    Stewart. 

A  Halloween  affray  brought  the 
charges  from  two  University  stu- 
dents—Robert Ward  and  William 
Winters  —  against  Vickers  and 
Burns. 

Two  other  boys  involved  in  the 
fight.  Tommie  Burns  and  Ronnie 
Vick.  were  found  not  guilty. 

Sgt.  Coy  Durham  of  the  Chapel 
Hill  police  dept.  said  the  two  UNC 
students  told  him  they  were  walk- 
ing past  a  local  drug  store  through 
a  large  group  of  boys  when  one 
of  them  was  hit  by  a  wad  of  pa- 
per. The  students  were  "jumped" 
by  some  of  those  in  the  group. 
Sgt.    Durham    was    told.  ; 

Vickers  was  fined  $50  and  costs, 
and  Burns  appealed  to  Superior 
Court,   to  be   held    in    December. 

In  other  cases  heard  vesterdav 
involving  Carolina  students.  Rich-  i 


SP   Record 
Is   Praised 
By   Chief 


Student  Party  Chairman  Tom 
Lambeth  .said  in  a  statement  is- 
sued yesterday  on  tall  elections 
Tuesday  that  the  Student  Party 
is  running  "on  a  record  of  un- 
matched achievement  in Stu- 
dent Government ..." 

The  text  of  his  statement  read 
in  part: 

"We  (SP)  are  running  on  a  rec- 
ord of  unmatched  achievement  in 
the  administration  and  direction  of 
Student  government,  as  record  set 
by  Bob  Young  and  his  associates 
and  by  SP  leaders  in  the  Student 
Legislature.  It  is  a  record  that  has 
brought  real  —  tangible  and  im- 
portant— benefits    to    the   campus. 

"But  we  -aren't  content  with 
what  we  have  done.  The  SP  faces 
the  campus  with  a  pledge  that  it 
can  accomplish  in  the  months 
ahead  even  more  victories  for  stu- 
dent government  through  coopera- 
tion and  hard  work. 

"If  that  program  is  presented 
fairly  and  strongly  I  am  confident 
that  the  campus  will  give  its  ap- 
proval to  the  party's  record  of  the 
last  six  months  by  electing  all  of 
its  candidates  in  this  fall  election." 
The  Student  Party's  candidates 
for  the  Legislature  are  as  follows: 
Dorm  Men's  1,  Erwin  Fuller; 
Dorm  Mens  2.  Whit  Whitfield, 
Gary  Greer.  Frank  Brown.  Doug 
Eisele;  Dorm  Men's  3.  John  Ray, 
Dick  Gustavson;  Dorm  Men's  4, 
Bob  Carter;  Dorm  Men's  5,  Tom 
Long.  Everette  James;  Dorm  Wo- 
men's. Misses  Martha  Poindexter. 
Jennie  Margaret  Meador.  Babs 
Moore,  Betty  Carolyn  Huffman; 
Town  Men's  1.  Charles  Hunting- 
ton,  Dave   Byron:   Town    Men's   2. 


Dr.  Robert  Ross  and  Dr.  De- 
borah Leary,  both  of  the  UNC 
School  of  Medicine,  attended  the 
fall  meeting  of  the  North  Caro- 
lina Obstetrical  and  Gynecologi- 
cal Society  in  Philadelphia. 


Douglas  Hager  was  found 
guilty  of  driving  while  intoxicat-  Joe  Clapp;  ^own  Men's  3.  Church 
ed,  and  paid  $115.70  in  addition  Howerton,  Herb  Greenblatt.  Rob- 
to  having  his  driver's  license  re-  bert  Hodges.  Jim  Johnston;  Town 
voked  for  one  year,  and  Richard  ,  Men's  4.  Ben  Peele.  Darwin  Bell; 
Micheal  Leavitt  paid  $17.80  for '  Town  Women's,  Misses  BUlen 
parking  violations.  j  Brauer,  Nola  Hatton. 


FA6I   TWO 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


WEDNESDAY,  NOVEMBER  7,  1956 


WEDNESOJ 


For  The  Patriots  Of  N.C.: 
Suggestions/ On  Education 

'7  think  our  grouf)  ha.\  aciom\)lished  a  great  deal.  It  i.s  in  larj^ 
measure  due  to  our  efforls,  I  feel,  that  the  senfitne.nl  in  this  state 
on  the  integration  question  has  changed  so  materially.  Two  years 
ago  there  uuks  nothing  that  could  he  done  about  the  integration  order, 
ihat  feeling  is  not  so  prex>alent  toda\."—VSC  Medical  Sihool  In-  . 
stnutor  Dr.  W.  C.  Georse,  retiriiiij;  president  of  the  Patriots  of 
North  Canjiina   Im:. 

We  scrionsly  doubt  that  Dr.  valid  ars;inncnts  asrainst  stfiool  dc- 
Cieorges  ()rsani/ation  has  done  segregation.  What  the  Patriots 
anvthins   to  (onstriictivelv  chanoe      have  done  is  only  temporary. 

Anglo-French 
Stupidity 
Is  At  Fault 

If  a  third  '  World  War  results 
from  the  past  weeks  horrible  rev- 
olution, the  people  who  will  mourn 
their  dead  cani  turn  some  of  iJieir 
anjicv  on  Britain  and  Krantc. 

It  was  Britain  and  Kraute  who. 
seeiui*  tlie  Middle  Kastern  situation 
not  to  their  liking,  sent  troop.^  and 
airplanes  to  I'.jjypt  to  turn  a  loeal- 
i/ed  war  into  an  earth-shaking  ca- 
tastrophe. 

This  alone  w-as  bad  enough.  But 
the  two  annitries  pidled  their  stu- 
pid maneuver  at  a  time  when  the 
people  of  Hungary  had  within 
their  grasp  something  that  was  dear 
enough  to  die  for:  Fieedoni  front 
Russia. 

Ru.ssia,  seeing  that  the  .\ng]^(>- 
French  fones  had  entered  a  local- 
ized ^\ar  in  the  Middle  Fast,  did 
not  hesitate  to  turn  on  Hinigarv 
and   tear  her  people   to  shretls. 

Now.  freedom  is  lost  to  Hungarv 
for  .1  long  lime.  At  fault  are  tlie 
Uritish   anrl   the    Freuch. 

A  great  number  of  Hmigarian 
lives  must  hang  on  tlie  Anglo- 
French  conscience  now.  The  Brit- 
ish and  French  must  live  foreVer 
,wtih  the  teletype  message  sent  to 
the  rest  of  the  world  by  r;  name- 
j^ii'^i^X^-^j^^j^tht^hj  \jx ^  Hungarv: 


HEftE  AND  THERE 


North  Carolina's  feeling  al>om  in- 
tegration. 

Raiher.  the  Patriots  of  North 
Carolina  In<.  Ira^e  merely  lived 
up  to  the  name  that  was  yiven 
them  more  than  a  year  ago:  "  Ilie 
uptown  K.U  Klux  Klan."  Ihe 
group  lias  relied  hea\ilv  (^i  peo- 
ple's emotions  and  the  joining  na-- 
ture  of  people  faced  with  a  pro!^- 
lem.  It  has  not  cdu<;.ted  the  people 
at  al). 

.Meanwhile,  President  Cieorge 
lias  Ixeu  spreading  lus  views  on 
»lir  m>rter  of  desegregation— his 
f)cli(^f  that  the  Negio  race  is  bio- 
)<■  -i  'Iv  iiiferiujr  to  the  wh  e  race. 
l.)r.  (ieorge  and  his  Patriots  are  all 
members  of  the  white  race. 

Most  pressine  groups,  political 
and  f)t!Krwise,  lelv  on  their  educa- 
ti(»nal  powers  to  influeiue  people 
toward   their  views. 

Ptiunds  and  poinids  of  piopa- 
ganda  are  mailed  out  from  the 
Auitricans  for  Democratic  .\ctioii. 
the  Civil  Lif^erties  I'nion  and 
other  suih  organizations  .  The 
groups  state  I  heir  cases  subject  ive- 
Iv.  rrifl  gi\e  t^e  reader  credit  for 
hi\ing  enough  sense  to  make  up 
his  «>wn  mind. 

But  the  Patriots  work  in  other 
wavs.  rhe\  hold  meetings,  as  tliev 
did  last  vear  at  Hillsboro.  an  I 
\^i^n(\  their  audifn<e"s  ears  with  in- 
fhunmatory  s pee.  lies  calculated  to 
bring  out  }ieopl<"s  emotions,  nuich 
like  and  o!d-tin»e  revival  meeting. 
H  we  veuiember  correctly,  there 
were  f|i»»^v  *  f^^^  people  affected 
bv  the ,  rp>litv«^  ;mert.ings. .  But  .a  f?^y. . 
weef^  i  ^f|t^ ,  i\^  \  jtx;  VvMirJ^}  Ipreijhet' ;: 


iv.f.st 


T^.Yui'r(  ti 


about;it|i^MH!|Witr. 

weut    baci;    lo   ilu 
in   the  hollow. 

T"he  \>c-  -i.e  ot  tiiis  j»taie  will 
sof>n  I'^.T  ti  that  the  Patriots  of 
North  Carolina  and  their  presi- 
<\v:\\\  offer  very  little  in  the  w;ay  of 

THE  NEW  YORK  TIMES: 


K«'V 


th^i 


«^i  t^ie  treach- 


had   ii>Uuit{ias^!|f»pme^  ;..  r... 


arc  not  afraid  of  death.  It  is  only  a 
pity  that  we  can't  stand  for  long  .  .  . 
Don't  worri-  about  us.  We  are  strong, 
even  if  we  are  a  small  nation.  When 
the  fighting  is  over  we  will  rebuild 
our  unhappy  countrj'  .  .  .  ." 


Russia's  Foulest  Treachery 


^\'e  accuse  the  So\iet  govern- 
ment ol  njurder.  We  accuse  it  of 
the  foidest  trcathery  and  the  base^t 
deceit  known  to  man.  We  accuse 
it  of  ha\  ing  committed  so  mon- 
strou>  a  crime  against  the  Hungar- 
i;  n  pecjple  .  .  .  that  its  infamy  can 
never  be   forgiven   or   lorgotten. 

The  Daily  Tar  Heel 

The  official  student  publication  of  the 
Publications  Board  of  the  University  of 
North  Carolina,  where  it  is  published 
daily  except  Monday  and  examihatiot 
and  vacation  periods  and  summer  terms 
Entered  as  second  class  matter  in  tht 
oost  office  in  Chapel  Hill,  N.  C,  undei 
the  Act  (M.  March  8,  1870.  Subscription 
rates:  mailed.  $4  per  year,  $2.50  a  semes- 
ter: delivered.  58  a  year,  $3.?D  a  semet- 
ter. 


Editor  


FRED  POWLEDGE 


Managing  Elditor 


CHARLIE  SLOAN 


News  Editor 


RAY  LINKER 


Business  Manager    _       BILL  BOB  PLTl. 


Sports  Editor 


Subscription  Manager 
Advertising  Manager  .. 
Circulation  Manager   . 


LARRY  CHEEK 

Dale  Staley 

Fred  Katzin 

..     Charlie  Hoi*. 


Staff  Photographer 
Staff  Artist   


Norman  Kantor 
Charlie  Daniel 


EDITORIAL  STAFF  —  Woody  Sears, 
Frank  Crowther,  Barrj-  Winston,  David 
Mundy,  George  Pfingst,  Ingrid  Clay, 
Cortland  Edwards,  Paul  McCauloy, 
Bobbi  Smith. 


BUSDIESS  STAFF— Rosa  Moore,  Johnny 
Whitaker,  Dick  Leavitt,  Peter  Alper. 

NEWS  STAFF— Clarke  Jones,  Nan^ 
Hill,  Joan  Moore,  Pringle  Pipkin,  Anne 
Drake.  Edith  MacKinnon.  Wally  Kuralt, 
Mary  Alys  Voorhees.  Graham  Snyder, 
Billy  Barnes,  Neil  Bass,  Gary  Nichols, 
Page  Bernstein,  Peg  Humphrey,  Phyllis 
MauUsby. 

SPORTS  STAFF:  Bil^  King,  Jim  Purks, 
Jimmy  Harper,  Dave  Wible,  Charley 
Howson. 

Woody  Sears 

Bea  Taylor 


Night  Editor  

Proof  Reader 


Lenin  wrote  in  1900:  "The 
Clzarist  government  not  onlv  keeps 
our  people  in  slavery  fjut  sends  it 
to  suppress  other  peoples  rising 
against  their  slaverv  (as  was  done 
_in  1849  when  Russian  troops  put 
down  the  revolution  in  Hinigaryi." 
How  apt  these  words  sound  todav 
when  we  sidjsiitute  "So\iet"  for 
"Oarist,"  and   i9-,6  for   1H49. 

Hatred  and  pity,  mourning  and 
admiration,  these  are  our  emotions 
today:  Hatred  for  the  men  and  the 
svstem  which  did  not  hesitate  to 
shed  new  ri\ers  of  innocent  Hun- 
garian f)UKxi  to  reimpose  slaAery; 
pitv  for  the  Soviet  soldiers,  duped 
into  thinking  they  were  fighting 
"Fascists"  when  they  killed  de- 
fenseless or  ncarlv  defen-jrless  men. 
women  and  children:  mourntng 
and  admiration  for  the  heroic 
Hungarian  people  who  feared 
not  even  death  to  strike  for  free- 
thmi. 

(ione  now  are  the  last  illusiorys. 
.MoscoAN  ucjw  stands  self-exposed. 
Ihe  tcjnent  of  Soviet  bullets.... 
did  not  kill  only  Hungarv's  fice- 
don  and  Hinigary's  mnrtvrs.  Those 
bullets  killed  first  of  all  the  pictinc 
c»f  a  reformed,  penitent  Russia 
seeking  to  repudiate  Stalinism  and 
practice    coexistence. 

Clould  Stalin  ha\e  acted  inore 
barbarouslv  than  did  his  success- 
ors recently?  Can  we  have  anv 
doid)t  now  of  what  awaits  us  if  we 
e\er  relax  oiu"  vigilance  and  per- 
mit ouTselves  to  beccnne  prey  to 
Soviet  might,  as  was  Hungary'  re- 
cently? 

The  day  of  infamy  is  ended.  The 
foul  deed  is  done.  The  most  hetoic 
are  dead,  liut  the  cause  of  freedom 
lives  and  is  stronger  thru  ever,  nui- 
tured  by  the  blood  of  those  who 
fell  martyred  in  freedom's  catise. 
The  Hungariim  people  will  ne\er 
fcTTget.   We   shall   not    h)rget. 

.\nd  oiu  of  hatred  and  tears  is 
born  llie  resolve  to  c  arn*  forward 
tlie  struggle  till  freedom  is  tiium- 
pham.  


Reaction  To  Readers  Response 


Woody  Sears 

Now  that  we  (my  column  and 
I)  have  been  thorougly  castiga- 
ted by  one  of  the  local  merchants, 
it's  time  to  record  some  reaction. 

It  was  quite  a  surprise  lo  receive 
a  letter  from  a  disgruntled  read- 
er, or  any  reader  for  tha^  matter. 
I  must  confess  that  being  human, 
I  found  it  funny  as  you-know- 
how-somcthing-like-that-can  be. 

A*  any  rate,  he  and  I  talked 
things  over,  and  we  both  got  a 
laugh  out  of  it.  And  he  really 
doesn't  need  to  worry  about  me 
leading  a  one-man  campaign  fur 
sloppy  dressing,  for  I  keep  bear- 
ing little  bits  about  another  cam- 
paign that  a  whole  lot  of  people 
are  talking  about.  And  that  one 
won't  be  especially  against  him 
as  an  individual. 

But  enough  on  that  subject.  The 
rest  of  you  who  have  comments 
tc  make,  send  a  note  up  this  way. 
If  it's  in  good  taste  and  you  sign 
your  name  The  Daily  Tar  Heel 
will  print  it. 

That  way  lots  more  people  can 
get  their  two-cents   worth   in. 
*     * 

It  looks  as  though  a  lot  of 
folks  around  here  will  be  sweat- 
ing the  draft  again  in  the  near 
future.  So  far  most  of  the  com- 
ments come  jokingly,  but  that 
may  change  .shortly.  And  it  is 
very  evident  that  the  draft  is 
here  to  stay. 

Remember  when  we  were  kid.s, 
alon?  about  the  middle  and  end 
of  WWII  we  figured  we'd  never 
be  old  enough  to  go  get  in  a  war. 
And  with  som?  degree  of  pessim- 
ism, we  allowed  that  when  we 
did  get  old  enough  there  would- 
n't be  any  war  to  go  to. 

That  indicates  clearly  the  dif- 
ference in  the  way  we  look  at 
things  at  the  various  stages  of 
our  lives.  Now  we  sec  that  our 
pessimism  was  in  error,  we  wish 
that  we  had  been  optimistic  and 
been  right. 

And  in  the  same  trend  of 
thought,  it  is  gratifying  to  hear 
that  the  galleries  in  the  U.N. 
building  in  New  York  have  been 
full  these  past  few  hectic  days. 
Thi.'i  is  a  time  when  every  Aineri- 
can  should  be  vitally  interested 
in  what  folks  are  doing  in  the 
U.N.  meetings. 

PROSPECT  &  RETROSPECT 


It  is  a  most  gruesome  realiza- 
tion to  face  when  we  consider 
that  what  is  being  said  there  by 
a  group  of  verj-  serious  men,  in 
very  sane  and  undisturbed  voices, 
could  very  eaily  change  the  lives 
of  countless  millions  of  people. 

This  is  a  time  to  be  concerned. 
Going  across  the  campus  late  at 
night  you  can  hear  a  few  radios 


carr.ting  the  U.N.  meetings,  but 
there  are  too  many  silent  radijs. 
"i^hen  the  U.N.  is  on  the  air, 
it'slnot  a  time  to  be  listening  io 
your  favorite  disc  jockey  play 
rock  n  roil  music  or  your  favo- 
rite love  songs. 

VYithcut  being  dramatic,  it's  a 
tiin(p  to  listen  to  the  voice  of  the 
wojjld  and  comprehend  the  chaos. 
Then  even  the  most  casual,  blase 


person  among  us  will  have  oc- 
ccfsion  to  whisper  a  few  words  of 
prayer  before  turning  in. 

Frartcis  EUicon  wrote  in  an  es- 
say that  he  could  not  believe  that 
this  universe  did  not  have  a 
Mind.  Possibly  this  Mind  "is  not 
made  up'  as  to  how  things  are  go- 
ing to  work  out. 

Possibly  a  few  words  from  us 
could  help  It  decide. 


'See  YoO  Later,  Arbitrator!' 


'X       •^**<'" 


Gripes  On  A  Multitude  Of  Crises 


Neil  Bass 

Did  you  fail  to  cash  in  on  the 
half-price  date  tickets  at  the 
Wake  Forest  game  because  they 
ran  .short? 

Were  you  one  of  those  who  got 
pains  in  the  neck  from  wrench- 
ing and  straining  to  get  a  view  of 
Fats  behind  the  piano  at  the  Ger- 
mans Concert  because  the  piano 
.was   positioned   wrongly? 

If  you  were,  you're  in  the  same 
boat  with  this  old  reporter. 
DATE  TICKET 

It  is  certainly  a  feather  in  the 
cap  of  President  Bob  Young 
that  he  got  date  tickets  for  the 
Maryland  and  Wake  Forest 
games  reduced  to  half-price. 

This  reduction  was  in  order 
many  moons  ago. 

But  it  is  hoped  by  all  those 
who  missed  the  boat  on  the  re- 
duced     tickets      that      President 


You^ig  will  a.sk  for  more  half- 
price  tickets  than  1,000  when 
the  buke  game  rolls  around. 

Last  week's  thou.sand  were 
gobbled-up  by  12:30,  according 
to   Woollen    Gym's   ticket    seller. 

It  might  alfio  be  a  moot# point 
as  to  whether  or  not  the  Athletic 
Department  sold  a  full  thousand 
tickets  so  quickly— a  full  thous- 
and. 

At  any  rate,  all  those  who  had 
to  shellout  $3.50  for  date  tickets 
at  the  window  hope  more  will 
be  available  when  Dook  invades 
the  Kenan  gridiron 
RATS 

And  about  the  gripe,  on  the  pi- 
ano arrangement  for  the  Ger- 
mans concert. 

Watching  the  little,  rockin' 
man  behind  the  piano  was  half 
the  show,  but  those  sitting  in 
seats  on  the  front  half  of  the 
right-hand  section     of     seats     in 


Memorial  Hall  could  barely  see 
the  top  of  a  slick  head  bobbing 
up  and  down. 

It   seems  that  a   different   and 
more      far-sighted   *  arrangement 
could  have  been  made. 
WILLINGNESS 

Now  that  the  gripes  are  aired, 
it's  time  to  praise  student  gov- 
ernment and  the  Student  Party  in 
particular  for  displaying  a  def- 
inite willingness  to  work  with 
downtown  merchants — even  when 
the  merchants  are  apparently 
taking  little  cognizance,  as  far 
as  lowering  of  prices  is  concern- 
ed, to  student   protest. 

This  willingness  to  cooperate 
is  exemplified  by  a  plank  in  the 
recently  announced  SP  platform: 

•The  SP  pledjjes  to  work  .... 
for  better  student-merchant  re- 
lations." 

Merchants  just  won't  read  the 
handwriting  on  the  wall  even  in 


Pogo 


view  of  a  petition  calling  lor  bouf 
cott  of  local  firms  which  was  cir- 
culated on  campus. 

The  petition  got  55  signatures 
on  just  one  end  of  one  dormitory 
—Cobb. 
COLUMBIA   ST 

The  Columbia  St.  parking  re- 
.'^triction  fiasco  now  lies  in  the 
fraternities'  hands. 

The  presidentially  appointed 
Traffic  Commission  has  done 
outstandng  work. 

But  it  can't  act  for  fraternities. 

Fraternities,  even  though  iJiere 
is  little  they  can  do,  should  dis- 
play some  positive  action  toward 
solving   their  own   problem. 

Or  at  least  they  should  display 
a  constructive,  cooperative  atti- 
tude. 

Closing  driveways  to  town  gar- 
bage trucks  is  a  retributive  act 
which  doesn't  help  the  siluatiort 
one  way  or  another. 

By  Watt  Kelly 


']\\ 


i'?«C'in: 


',;  J  ■ 


Li'l  Abn^r 


By  Al  Capp 


CSAME  TMING  yO'RC  ^ ' 
DOIN',  AH'LL  ^EJff) 


YOU  Said  It; 

Poteat  Should 
Remain  A  Prof. 

Editor: 

In  last  Wednesday's  "Tar  Heel",  Frank  Crowther 
resumed  his  and  Stan  Shaw's  fight  in  the  "Poteat 
for  Chancellor"  movement.  Although  some  very 
good  points  were  brought  into  view.  I  feel  that  sev- 
eral important  points  were  missing,  which  may 
prove  influential  in  helping  the  students  decide 
whether  or  not  Dr.  Poteat  should  leave  the  class- 
room in  favor  of  the  position  of  chancellor. 

For  instance,  last  week  an  article  appeared  in 
the  Tar  Heel  about  why  Carolina  was  not  drawing 
the  students  from  out  of  state,  and  the  reason  given 
was  that  the  tuition  costs  too  much. 

-  This  is  no  doubt  true,  but  .it  alone  is  not  the 
reason.  The  administrative  positions  of  the  universi- 
ty are  almost  all  held  by  native  North  Carolinians, 
which  I  think  influences  the  decisions  of  many  pros- 
pective Carolina  students. 

I  appreciate  the  fact  that  Dr.  Poteat  has  many 
fresh  ideas,  but  I  feel  that  a  man  from  a  part  of 
the  countrj'  with  a  different  culture  than  ours  could 
also  have  the  fresh  ideas,  and  still  bring  with  him 
the  necessary  prestige  to  draw  the  out  of  state  stu- 
dents. 

All  of  us  have  been  concerned  with  the  fact 
that  our  faculty  has  dwindled  due  to  the  prospect 
of  more  money  at  another  school  or  in  industry.  In 
one  of  the  bulletins  that  is  sent  to  the  parents  of 
students,  I  read  that  several  of  our  professors  went 
to  schools  that  had  been  given  the  Ford  Foundation 
grant. 

It  is  not  in  our  place  to  make  the  financial  policy, 
so  at  this  we  are  powerless.  But  it  is  senseless  to 
take  from  the  classroom  th*  rest  of  our  professors, 
especially  such  an  outstanding  one  as  Dr.  Poteat,  lo 
fill  positions  that  though  important  indeed,  could 
be  handled  efficiently  by  someone  not  so  necessary 
to  the  classroom. 

As  for  the  classroom  being  a  waste  of  his  talents 
I  think  that  is  absurd.  Certainly  he  can  ac- 
complish more  lasting  good  through  his  teaching 
than  through  the  office  of  chancellor. 

Men  as  gifted  for  teaching  as  Dr.  Poteat  do  nol 
frequent  this  campus  with  any  regularity,  and  many 
share  with  me  the  hope  that  he  will  continue  in  his 
present  capacity.  He  is  one  of  the  few  professors 
here  who  has  students  discussing  today,  a  lecture 
that  he  gave  last  year. 

We,  the  advocators  of  the  "Keep  Poteat  jn  the 

Classroom"  movement,  have  been  called  selfish  for 

t^s  desire.  If  it  is  selfish  to  want  to  have  the  best 

eidMcation   possible,    accomplished   in    part   through 

keeping  the  best  possible  teachers  available,  then 

'1  say  Ihat  our  selfishness  is  n'df  a  slh  b'ut'a  virtue. 

.    The  decision  will  not  ultimately,  lie  with  us.  but 

I  am  sure  that  our  interests  wiU  ie  an  influence  itoj 

those  whose  responsibility  it  is  fo  rtiake  this  decis-' 

irtwi  w  if;>wi  i*fittt  your  best  educators  ringing  the-  . ' 

j^Ml^Sbk^'Building.  push' Poteat  for  Chancellor.      ' 

tpfit'Jfl'ydu  want  the  best  edlicati<;)n  possible,  let  all 

know, that  you  waijt  him  to  stay  iri  the  classr<)om. 

.     Ehvood  H.  Spedder  Jr. 

Reviewing  Adiai's 
And  Ikes  Records 

Editor: 

Having  read  much  of  the  leftist  garbage  that 
you  have  so  braeenly  printed  in  The  Daily  Tar  Heel, 
I  feel  that  it's  about  iime  that  I  put  forth  my  opin- 
ion, since  I.  too.  am  an  American  citizen. 

You  must  feel  pretty  darned  proud  of  yourself, 
sitting  back  in  your  comfortable  easy  chair  in  the 
DTH  office,  confident  that  you  have  a  free  hand  to 
air  your  pink-tinged  ideas  through  the  medium  of 
the  "bipartisan"  Daily  Tar  Heel. 

Your  philosophy  of  life  is  apparently  that  the 
Democrat  party  is  all  good  and  that  the  Republican 
party  is  all  bad.  You  have  effectively  illustrated 
your  warped  philosophy  by  denying  editorial  space 
to  the  Republicans. 

Well,  I'm  afraid  that  I  cannot  go  along  with  your 
ideas,  Freddy  boy.  Since  I  cannot  write  an  editorial. 
.1   am  writing  you  this  letter. 

In  1952,  Dwight  Eisenhower  and  Richard  Nixon 
were  elected  to  office  by  an  overwhelming  majority 
of  the  American  people.  These  people,  33.000.000 
of  them,  wanted  a  change  from  the  fumbling,  bumb- 
ling Democrat  ruling  class  which  had  idly  stood  by 
while  several  small  countries  in  eastern  Europe  and 
one  huge  country  in  Asia  fell  under  the  domination 
of  Russian  communism,  which  allowed  organized 
labor  to  g:t  a  stranglehold  on  the  working  man. 
and  which  permitted  post-war  inflation  to  run  ram- 
pant throughout  the  nation. 

I  need  not  mention  that  tlie  American  people 
got  the  change  they  desired  nor  do  I  need  to  men- 
tion the  great  accomplishments  that  brought  about 
this  change,  since  they  would  only  fall  on  the  deaf 
cars  that  accompany  a  narrow  mind. 

You  have  criticized  Dick  Nixon  time  after  time 
for  some  pretty  flimsy  reasons,  but  you  seem  to 
forget  that,  by  performing  a  great  deal  more  duties 
than  any  other  vice-president,  he  has  given  a  sense 
of  responsibility  to  an  office  in  which  Democrats 
formerly  delighted  in  placing  men  who  took  their 
time  in  doing  the  least  possible  amount  of  work. 

You  have  attacked  Ike  for  his  stand  on  the 
Democrat-inspired  H-bomb  issue.  Adlai  Stevenson 
has  said  in  his  proposal  to  end  H-bomb  tests  that  if 
the  Russians  do  not  go  along  with  his  proposal, 
we'll  know  soon  enough.  AND  HOW!!  But  what 
good  will  it  do  after  we  are  vaporized????? 

When  I  stand  the  impressive  4-year  record  of 
Dwight  Eisenhower  next  to  the  scandal-riddled  Illi- 
nois governorship  of  Adlai  Stevenson.  I  have  no 
d')ubt  concerning  who  wili  make  the  better  presi- 
dent  I  think  that  we  should  all  support  Ike  and 

Dick 

David  Suckow 


E| 


The  folio 
duled  for  th 
1:30  p.m 
Council 
meeting 
man. 

2  p.m..  C 
Religions  \i 
fice  3,  Leon 

4    p.m.. 
fice    No.    3, 
man. 

4-6     p.m 
meeting.     C 
Nancy    Suttl 
co-ed  :tor.s 

4:30  pm 
group.       Y-L 
YMCA    Bid- 
mar 

6  p.m..  Inl 
Lenoir  Hall. 
and    Bob   Co 


RAI 


ByJ< 

Tall  tales  anc 
about  North 
of   Washington 
O^ 

THE 
BOI 

205    E. 
Open  I 


t<W«ft 

WITM 
rASULl 


In  fiHirjt*i| 

in  one  qyid(  1 
your  hair  can  I 
softer,  shj 
brighter,  combl 
curl  more  e{ 
than  you've 
thought  possil 


Only  I 


WEI 

Adds 
lonR  . 

pocket 


17,  1956 


WEDNESDAY,  NOVEMBER  7,  1956 


THl  DAILY  TAR  HEBL 


PAGE    THRBI 


f. 


rowther 

'Polcat 

le     very 

lat  s€v- 

may 

decide 

ic  class- 

lared  in 
Irawing 
in  given 

[not  the 
iniversi- 
)linians, 
\y  pros- 


ks  many 
part  of 
rs  could 
[ith  him 
|ate  stu- 

Ihc  fact 
)  respect 
stry.  In 
rents  of 
ivs  went 
indation 


policy, 
?iess  to 
)fessors, 
)teat,  to 
could 
jcessary 

talents 

can  ac- 

teaching 

do  not 

id  many 

^e  in  his 

)fessors 

lecture 

It  jn  the 

Ifish  for 

[the  best 

through 

ble.  then 

virtue. 

us.  but 

liience  to 

»;s  decis- 

bring  the;,,^ 

lancellor, 

l«t  aU 

room. 

id«r  Jr. 


IS 

ds 


|>age   that 

Tar  H€el, 

I  my  opin- 

yourself, 
Jr  in  the 
hand  to 
[tedium  oi 

that  the 
lepublican 
Illustrated 
[rial  space 

I  with  your 
editorial, 

lard  Nixon 

majority 
1 33.000.000 
\ng.  bumb- 

siood  by 
^urope  and 
lomination 

orj^anized 
fking    man, 

run   ram- 

L-an  people 
?d  to  men- 
ight  about 
in  the  deaf 

alter  time 

^u    seem    to 

)re  duties 

kcn  a  .sense 

Democrats 

took  their 

of  work. 

Ind    on    the 

Stevenson 

[tests  that  if 

»»   proposal. 

I    But    what 

(r  record  of 
-riddled  Uli- 
1  have  no 
letter  presi- 
jort  Ike  and 

ivid  Suckow 


Y  SCHEDULE 

The  following  events  are  sche- 
duled for  the  YMCA-YWCA  today: 

1:30  p.m.  Campus  Christian 
Council  Executive  Committee 
meeting,  office  3,  Bill  Kane,  chair- 
man. 

2  p.m..  C.C.C.  Study  on  World 
Religions  illanning  meeting,  of- 
fice 3,  Leon  Holt,  chairman. 

4  p.m..  Freshman  Council,  of- 
fice No.  3,  Bob  Leonard,  chair- 
man. 

4-6  p.m..  Y  Newspaper  staff  ■ 
meeting.  Cabinet  Room,  Miss  i 
Nancy  Suttle  and  Jerry  Gunter.  { 
co-editors. 

4:30  p.m..  Race  Relations  study  i 
group.       Y-Libilary.      2nd      floor.  ' 
YMCA   Bldg.,   Joe  Phillips,   chair- 
man. V  i 

6  p.m..  Intercollegiate  Relations.  ! 
Lenoir  Hall.  2nd  floor,  Dick  Frank 
and    Bob   Cowan,   co-chairmen. 


RANDOM 


Nd  Entries 
For  Cotton 
Contest  Yet 


SHOTS 


By  John  Bragaw' 

Tall  tales  and  earthy  bits,  mostly 
about  North  Carolina,  by  the  sage 
of  Washington,  N.  C. 
Our   Special 

$1.98 

THE  INTIAAATE 

BOOKSHOP 

205    E.    Franklin    St. 
Open  Till  10  P.M. 


The  local  Maid  of  Cotton  con- 
test has  no  enfrants  yet,  according 
to  Bob  Young,  who  is  in  charge 
of  the  contest  on  campus. 

Young,  who  asked  earlier  that 
all  interested  people  contact  him, 
said  he  had  no  entries  since  the 
contest  opened  Oct.  24. 

Young  said  anyone  interested  in 
entering  the  contest  should  con- 
tact him  before  the  deadline  on 
Thursday,  Nov    15. 

To  be  eligible  for  this  contest, 
a  girl  must  be  between  19  and 
25  years  of  age,  at  least  five-feet- 
five-inches  tall  and  must  never 
have  been  married.  She  also  must 
have  been  born  in  one  of  the  18 
cotton-producing  states. 


Covering  The  Uni versify  Campus 


SAVETMf! 
SAV!  MONEY! 


Umme^^. 


your  own  name  and  address 
twautjfully  printed  in 
blue  ink  on  quality  gummed  paper.    frJLrr 
labels  in  handy  pad  form.  'H', , 

usf  rafiUM 


BOOKS 


a?* 


CHfCKS 


ASTOR    B.    TROGDON 

Box  311 

Star,   N.   C. 


Selections  Board  Meets 


The  Bi-Partisan  Selections  Board  will  conclude  three  days  of  in- 
terviews today  of  candidates  for  the  Men's  Honor  Council.  Shown 
interviewing  one  candidate  are,  left  to  right,  Ed  Hudgins,  Jim  Exum, 
Neil  Bass,  and  Ai  Goldsmith. 


Bi-Partisan  Board  Wilt 
End  Interviews  Today 


I  AD  Pi  Elects  Officers 
For  New  Pledge  Class 

Miss  Molly  Adams  of  Wilming- 
ton was  elected  recently  as  presb- 

I  dent  of  the  Alpha  Delta  Pi  pledg* 

}  class. 

Othere  officers  elected  were  sec- 
retary. Miss  Margaret  Sherrod  of 

!  Enfield;  social  chairman.  Miss 
Mary  Louis  Rountree  of  Sunbury; 
and  scholarship  chairman,  Miss  El- 
len Johnson  of  Raleigh. 


STUDENT  WIVES  CLUB 

The  Student  Wives  Club  will 
mee<  Thursday  at*  8  p.m.  at  the 
Victory  Village  Niu-sery.  The  club 
has  intited  all  student  wives  to 
attend. 

DAILY  TAR  HEEL  STAFF 

Members  of  the  Daily  Tar  Heel 
staff  will  meet  in  the  newsroom 
of  the  offices  in  Graham  Memorial 
Thursday  at  2  p.m. 

YOUNG  ADULT  GROUP 

The  Young  Adult  Group  of  the 
University  Methodist  Church  will 
meet  at  7:45  p.m.  today  at  tho 
church. 

WESLEY   FOLKDANCE  GROUP 

Hhe    Wesley    Folkdance    Group 
will  meet  Friday  at  7:30  p.m.  iil ' 
the    basefnent    of    the    University" 
Methodist  Church. 

f^HYSICS  COLLOQUIUM 

Dr.  S.  T.  Butler  of  the   Univer- 
sity of  Sydney  will  be  the  speaker  ; 
at   the   Duke-UNC   Physics   Collo- i 
quium  t'riday  at  8  p.m.  Using  as 
his  topic  "Quasi-Chemical  Equilib- 
rium Theory  of  Super-conductivi-  ; 


ty,'  Dr.  Butler  will  talk  in  Phiinps 
Hall,  Room  206." 

CHRISTIAN  FELLOWSHIP 

The  Carolina  Christian  Fellow- 
ship will  meet  at  7  p.m.  today  in 
the  choir  rehearsal  room  of  Hill 
Hall.  The  group  will  study  the 
15th  chapter  of  I  Corinthians. 

PHARMACY  WIVES 

The  Pharmacy  Wives  will  meet 
tonight  at  7:30  o'clock  at  the  In- 
stitute of  Pharmacy.  The  group 
has  asked  that  all  members  attend. 

BEAUTY  CONTEST  RE-HEARSAL 

A  compulsory  rehearsal  for  all 
entrants  in  the  Yack  Beauty  Con- 
test will  be  held  at  7:30  p.m.  to- 
day in  Memorial  Hall.  Contestants 


are  requested  by  Yack  officials  to 
wear   the  shoes  wftich    they   plan 
to  wear  in  the  contest. 
WAA  GOLF 

Pauline  Simms,  golf  manager, 
has  announced  the  extension  of 
time  for  the  first  round  of  the 
WAA  golf  tournament  to  Monday, 
Nov.  12. 
WAA  TENNIS 

All  first  round  matches  in  the 
WAA  tennis  tournament  must  be 
played  by  this  afternoon. 


We  Are  NOT  Suppressing 


PROUD 
SHOES 


VITAMIN 
Headquarters 


$3,89  Z 


iHo  'PRDBUH*  %it  li  -  -  -  — 


The  Bi  -  Partisan  Selections 
Board  for  naming  candidates  to 
the  Men's  Honor  Council  met  yes- 
terday afternoon  to  interview  pros- 
pective candidates. 

The  Selections  Board  also  met 
Monday  and  will  conclude  inter- 
views this  afternoon. 

Chairman  Jim  Exum  of  the 
Men's  Council  will  announce  ap- 
proved candidates  after  the  inter- 
views are  concluded  this  after- 
noon. 

Serving  on  the  board  yesterday 
were: 

Chairman  Exum.  Student  Party 
Chairman  Tom  Lambeth,  Univers- 
ity Party  Vice  Chairman  Al  Gold- 


smtih,  Interfraternity  Council 
President  Ed  Hudgins  and  Inter- 
dormitory  Council  Vice  President 
Neil  Bass. 

Chairman  Exum  commented  on 
the  "high"  caliber  of  candidates 
who  have  been  interviewed  to 
date.  ■  "■ 

Exum  said  he  was  "pleased" 
with    participation   so  far. 


WUNC  SCHEDULE 

7^— Intermezzo. 

7:15— Carolin^ootball  1956. 

7:30 — Poetry  in  Song. 

7:45 — Gilbert  Highet  Program. 

8:00— Music  from  the  Hollywood 
Bowl. 

8:30— Tales  of  the  Valiant. 

9:00 — Music  from  Interlodhen. 
lO.^Otf— News. 

10:15 — EJvening  Masterwork. 


Writer  To  Talk  To  Press  Club 


UbMM 


UNC  Nurses 
Will  Stage 
ty  Showing 


REMEMBER! 

BERAAAN'S 

IS  OPEN  ALL 

DAY  ON 
WEDNESDAYS 

BERMAN'S 

Dept.  Store 


By  Pauli  Murray 

A  courageous  young  woman  talks 
of  her  ancestors  —  both  black  and 
white  —  in  the  Chapel  Hill-Dur- 
ham area. 

Just  Out 

$3.50 

THE  INTIMATE 
BOOKSHOP 

205  East  Franklin  Street 
Open  Till  10  P.M. 


Kays  Gary,  feature  writer  and 
columnist  for  The  Charlotte  Ob- 
server and  winner  of  the  1955 
Ernie  Pyle  Award,  will  speak  to 
the  UNC  Press  Club  Monday. 


Funds  Received  To  Establish 
AAemorial  Fqr  Skipper  Coffin 


WITH 

FABULOUS 


In  inlnwl**««» 

In  one  qw*  rinse, 
your  hair  can  feel 
softer,  shine 
bri^ter,  comb  and 
curt  more  easily 
than  you've  ever 
thought  possible. 


MlUORlDE  Toothpaste  I  ij 


HARDENS  TOOTH  ENAMEL 
WORKS  ALL  DAY... 

to  d^hat  tooffc  dtayl 

Only  »<  and  «l.00  plus  tax.  i.».» 


Funds  to  establish  an  O.  J.  Cof- 
fin Memorial  Fund  withirt  the 
framework  of  the  Journalism 
Foundation  of  North  Carolina, 
Ince..  are  being  received,  An 
anonymous   donor   conlributcAl   $1,- 

000  in  his  honor. 

Since    Professor    Coffin's    death  j 

».O^t  29.  inquiries  about  the  project  j 

J  have    been    inade    by    friends    and  | 

'  ioi-mcr    .«;tudents.     John    W.     Urn- 1 

stead.    Chapel   Hill    resident.    1909 1 

UNC     Classmate,     and     long-time  j 

close  friend,  has  contributed  SlOO,  1 

and  The  Charlotte  Observer  gave 

$25  in  lieu  of  flowers.  j 

Contributions    may    be    sent    to 

1  the    School    of    Journalism    or    to 

,  D.  J.  Chipman,  treasurer,  Journal- 1 


Gary  won  $1,000  and  a  bronze 
plaque  based  on  "warrtith  and  gert- 
tlehess  and  understanding"  in  his 
feature  stories  about  l>eople.  His 
entry  was  a  collection  of  feature 
stories  hailed  as  "natural,  siinple, 
warm  and  beautiful  articles."  The 
award  was  pi^esented  by  the 
SfSripps  Howard  -  Ernie  Pyle  Me- 
morial Fund. 

The  Press  Club  meeting  will  be 
at  7:30  p.m.  at  the  home  of  Not- 
val  N.  Luxon,  dean  of  the  Journal- 
ism School,  on  the  Mt.  Bolus  kd. 
Gary  will  speak  and  then  cofl- 
rtuct  a  question  and  answer  t>*t- 
iod.  Refreshments  wijl  ^ls<>  b* 
served. 

Stutlents  desirinjj. transportation 
to  th*  meeting  h«Ve  b> en  aske^  \fi 
mtet  at  Byniim  Hall  at  7:15  p.'fh.  - 
"All  Journalism  majors  and 
prospective  Journalism  majors 
arc  invited  an  urged  to  attend  the 
meeting  and  aKso  to  join  the  Press 
Club,"  Club  President  Charlie 
Johnson  said. 


The  School  of  Nursing  will  stage 
"Project  Health,'"  a  one  hour  tele- 
vision show,  over  WUNC-TV, 
Chatinel  4,  Friday  at  9  p.m. 

This  is  the  second  in  the  series 
of  j>rograms  l>eing  sponsored  by 
the  UNC  Division  of  Health  Af- 
faifs. 

The  first  was  presented  Oct.  26 
by  the  \Mt  School   of  Dentistry. 
The  programs  will  be  presented 
j  every  other  Friday  night  through- 
i  out  the  academic  year. 

This  program  will  include  high- 
lights  of  the  four  year  course  lead- 
ing to  the  degree  of  bachelor  of 
I  science  in  nursing. 
'     Also,  a  description  of  the  gradu- 
j  ate   programs   leading   to   the  de- 
gree of  master  of  science  in  nutk- 
j  ing     service     administration  •  And 
;  teaching    in     psychiatric     nursing 
!  will  be  given.    '      .  A      ■■ 


Enjoy  Longer  Holidays 

For  Fast,  Convenient  Service 

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O    J.  COFFIN 

.  .  .  ]vt,nd.  set  i<p 

ism  Foundation,  Journal-Sentinel. 
Winsion-Salem,  officials  of  the 
foundation  said. 

One  of  three  scholarships  set  up 
last  spring  with  Journalism  Foun- 
dation funds  was  named  for  Coffin 
who  taught  journalism  for  30 
years. 


DAILY    CROSSWORD 


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ACROSS 

1.  Burrowing 

animal 
5.  Chief 
9.  African 

antelope 

10.  Standard 

11.  An  open  pi« 

12.  Largest 
continent 

13.  Man's 
nicknam* 

14.  Land- 
measure« 

16.  Carry 

18.  Guided 

20.  Exclamation 

22.  Erbium 
(sym.) 

23.  Mu.sical 
instrument 

25.  Speaks 

28.  Longr.  loose 
overcoats 

30.  Shakespear- 
ean tragedy 

32.  A  ship's 
small  boat 

35.  Whether 

36.  Evening  sun 
god   (Egypt) 

38.  Canton 

( Switz. ) 

39.  Journey 
42.  Vein  of 

a  leaf 

44.  And  (L.) 

45.  Little  island 
47.  African 

river 

49.  Bud  of 
a  plant 

50.  Jog 

51.  Vipers 

52.  A  son 
of  Adam 
(Bib.) 

DOUN 
1.  Parti- 
colored .' 


2.  Openinfs 
(anat.)' 

3.  Con8tel]a« 
tion 

4.  Additional 

5.  Macaw 
( Braz. ) 

6.  Reddish 
coating 
on  metAl 

T.  Muse  of 

history 
8.  A  stove 
13.  Entire  ' 

•mount 
15.  Part  of 

a  eamera 
17.  Bitter 

vetch 
19.  A  bancT 

instrument 


ai.De 

voured 
24.  Old 

measure 

of 

length 
26.  Test 
2t.  Ason 

of 

Isaac 

(Bib.) 

29.  Harden 

30.  StHk« 

31.  A 
continent 

33.  Circular 
band  of 
flowers 
S4.  Ignited 
37.  Baseball 
gloves 


Hsaa  Hoaa  i 
>ji2y  anri  fioa 

yaaaa  aeiaaa 

ys  i-3an3i>J  an 
aan  aaa  Haa 


V«at«rd*T'*  A««wer 

40.  Egyptian 
goddess 

41.  Fall  into 
water 

43.  Unadorned 
46.  Half  ems 
48.  Adverbial 
particle 


Don  Gunderstn  (right)  tUscussins  characteristics  of  a  transmitting  horn  on  a  radio  relay  tower. 

Young  man  on  a  mountain 


If  Don  Gundersen  isn't  in  his  office,  he's 
probably  on  a  California  mountaintop 
making  tests  and  purveys  prior  to  the 
raising  of  a  radio  relay  tower. 

That's  part  of  Don's  job  as  an  engineer 
with  Pacific  Telephone  and  Telegraph 
Company.  With  other  young  engineers 
he  makes  field  studies,  then  analyzes  the 
data  and  derides  where  to  locate  equip- 
ment for  mobile  radio,  radio  relay  and 
point-to-point  radio  linkfs. 

He  has  to  answer  a  lot  of  questions, 
Buch  as  "'How  high  must  the  towers  be? 
Hoa  much  will  acce5.s  roads  cost?  ^XTiat 
will  the  control  circuits  cost?   What  are 


the  chances  of  transmission  interfer- 
ence?" And  those  are  only  a  few. 

"The  answers  have  to  be  right,  too," 
says  Don.  "The  recommendations  we 
make  control  hundreds  of  thousands  of 
dollars'  worth  of  construction.  There's 
no  way  in  the  world  of  'burying"  a  mistake. 

'But  I  like  responsibility,  and  the 
chance  to  make  real  contribution*.  The 
telephone  business  is  growing  so  fa*t.  and 
technological  improvements  are  coming 
along  in  such  volume,  that  opportunities 
to  get  ahead  are  excellent.  If  the  business 
looks  remarkable  today,  think  what  it'll 
be  like  twenty  years  from  now!" 


r.f-  r 


"f 


Donald  L.  Gnndersen  graduated  from  the  UBivei^ity 
of  WashingJon  in  1949  witri  a  B.S,  in  Electrical  Engi- 
neering. Other  interesting  career  opportunities  exist 
in  all  Bell  Telephone  Companies.  Bell  Telephone  UI»o- 
ratories,  We«tern  Electric  and  Sandia  Corporation. 
Your  placement  officer  can  give  jou  more  information. 


BELL 

TELCPHONK 

SYSTEM 


1 


I    I 


AGE   FOUi 


TMl   PAILY   TA«   MBit 


WEDNESDAY,  NOVEMBER  7,  1956 


Tar  Heel  Coaches  Fear  Cavaliet!  Passing,  Jim  Bdhkfiar 


BECAUSE  OF  RED  ACTIONS 


Three  More  Countries 
Withdraw  From  Games 


Injuries  From  Vol  Tilt 
Sideline  Key  Personnel 


LAUSANNE,  Switzerland,  (*  — 
Holland,  Spain  and  Red  China 
withdrew  from  the  Melbourne 
Olympics  Games  today,  the  first 
two  because  of  Russia's  military 
action  in  Hungary. 

Spain  announced  its  wtihdrawal 
formally  through  Otto  Mayer, 
chancellor    of    the    International 


After  the  invasion  of  Egypt, 
Iraq  dropped  out  because  of  the 
unsettled  conditions  in  the  Mid- 
dle East.  Then  the  trio  of  with- 
drawals today. 

A  Spanish  Sports  Federation  of- 
ficial said  in  Madrid  after  Mayer's 
announcement  that  it  was  not  fit- 
ting for   Spanish   athletes  to  en 


decision  was  made  known  by  Dr. 
J.  Linthorst  Homan,  president  of 
The  Netherlands'  Olympic  Com- 
mittee in  The  Hague. 

Instead  of  traveling  to  Mel- 
bourne, where  the  games  are 
scheduled  to  start  on  Nov.  22,  the 
Dutch  donated  100,000  guilder 
($25,000)  to  Hungarian  relief. 

News  of  Red  China's  quitting 
came  from  behind  the  Iron  Cur- 
tain by  way  of  the  Peiping  radio, 
heard  in  Hong  Kong.  Neither  May- 
er nor  Melbourne  officials  had 
word  from  the  Chinese,  wl\o  said 

they    were    not   coming   to   the 

games  because  Nationalist  China 
had  accepted  a  bid. 

The  Reds  insisted  there  should 
bs  one  team  from  'their  country 
as  is  the  case  in  Germany. 

Originally.  74  nations  accepted 
invitations  to  compete 
bourne.  Now  five  haVe 
out  in  the  past  month.  Egypt,  long 
before  it  was  invaded  by  Israel, 
England  and  France,  withdrew  be- 
cause it  saw  no  prospects  of  win- 
ning medals. 


Olympic  Committee.  The  Dutch  gage  in  sports  of  Olympic  charac- 
ter "while  the  liberty  oi  peo- 
ples is  being  trampled  on." 

Ironically,  the  Hungarian  team 
left  Prague  today  in  a  chartered 
plane  for  the  games.  Advance 
parties  of  the  huge  Russian  team 
already  are  in  Melbourne.  The 
Hungarian  team  was  permitted  to 
leave  its  homeland  during  an 
Olympic  truce  last  week  and  spent 
the  time  since  then  training  in 
Czechoslovakia. 

Not  much  was  known  of  the  ath- 
letic caliber  of  the  92-man  Red 
Chinese  team.  The  Dutch  were 
strong  in  soccer,  women's  swim- 
ming and  bicycling. 

Among  the  members  of  the 
Spanish  team,  however,  was  Felix 
Frauzquin,  who  recently  perfected 
a  new  style  of  throwing  the  jave- 
at  Mel-  i  lin  and  who  threatened  to  use  it  at 
dropped  Melbourne  although  it  had  been 
banned. 

Devotees  of  the  Frauwiuin  style 
threw  for  prodigious  distances  but 
were  unable  to  control  the  flight 
of  the  spear. 


German  And  Japanese  Olympic 
Squads  Arrive  In  Melbourne 


By  MURRAY  ROSE 

1 
MELBOURNE     cTi— The     tempo  i 
of    Olympic    preparations    picked  j 
up  today  with  the  arrival  Of  th* 
first  contingent  of    Germans  and 
Japanese,    but   yiou    cotild   hardly 


Elast,  29  West — ^followed  soon  aft- 
er. Another  batch  of  71  Germans 
is  due  during  the  night. 

Planes  Will' be  coming  in  like 
subway  trains  al!  Tinies  Square 
starting  tomorrowwheri-grdiips  of 


iy  LARRY  CHEEK 

»  What  was  originally  supposed  to 
be  a  soft  touch  on  the  Carolina 
football  sch'>dule  has  turned  into 
another  potentially  rugged  assign- 
ment for  Coach  Jim  Tatum's  Tar 
Teels,  winners  of  but  one  game  in 
seven  starts  this  season. 

If  the  judgment  of  assistant 
coach  Jim  Hickey  is  to  be  trusted, 
Saturday's  renewal  of  an  old  south 
gridiron  classic  with  the  Virginia 
Cavaliers  in  Charlottesville  should 
prove  quite  a  test  for  the  Tar 
Heels.  Hickey,  speaking  at  the 
weekly  football  press  luncheon  in 
Lenoir  Hall  yesterday,  had  only 
good  things  to  say  about  the  Cav- 
aliers, and  his  boss,  Jim  Tatum, 
was  no  less  lavish  in  his  praise. 

"They're  a  lot  like  Wake  For- 
est," said  Hickey.  'They  have  a 
very  strong  first  team  line,  the 
best  passing  attack  in  the  confer- 
ence, and  a  iKruising  fullback  in 
Jim  Bahktier."  When  asked  to 
compare  Bahktlar  and  Wake  full- 
back Bill  Barnes,  mckey  replied, 
"Bahktiar  has  tremendous  power 
on  straight  ahead  plays  and  will 
kill  you. with  his  four  or  five  yard- 
ers.  Barnes  is  much  more  likely  to 
go  all  the  way,  however." 

Despite   Bahktiar's  well   known 


ability  as  a  line  cracker.  Coach 
Tatum  regarded  the  Virginia  pass- 
ing attack  as  his  main  worry. 
"They've  got  two  good  quarter- 
backs in  Clark  and  Yarborough, 
and  a  pair   of  mighty  fine  ends. 


Varsity  Harriets  Top 
16-48;  Beatty  Snaps 


Duke^ 
Mark 


By  DAVE  WIBLE 

Carolina's  varsity  cross  country 
squad  overpowered  the  Duke  Blue 
Devils  16  k>  48  yesterday  at  Dur- 


They  even  run  Cleveland  ^rown  j  l»am.     AIl-American     Jim     Beatty 
pass  patterns.  Looks  like  it  would  j  crossed  the  finish  a  quarter  of  a 


be  better  for  us  if  it's  raining  the 
way  they  throw  that  ball. 

'Virginia  is  sta<:ked  up  to  beat 
us  much  better  than  we  are  to 
beat  them,"  he  continued. 
"They've  got  a  better  line  than  we 
have.  Nobody  has  outplayed  their 
line  this  year,  not  even  Duke.  I've 
really  been  astounded  at  what 
I've  seen  of  the  Virginia  team  in 
pictures.  With  (Paul)  Amen  of 
Wake  Forest  and  (Ned)  Martin  of 
Virginia  in  the  conference,  it's  go- 
ing to  be  like  tobacco  road  in  bas- 
ketball." 


mile  ahead  of  the  flock  to  set  a 
new  course  record  for  Dukes  3.8 
mile  course. 

The  old  record  was  19:38.  Beat- 
ty's  time,  18:02  was  a  minute  and 
a  half  better:  terrific  running  in 
any  league. 
Aftar  Beatty,  Carolina  blue  con- 
,  tinned  to  flash  across  the  finish. 
Carolina's   Everitt   Whatley,   Dave 


Duke  Tramples 
Tar  Babies  As 
Liipfert  Loses 


According  to  latest  figures  re- 
leased by  the  AC5C  service  bureau,' 
the  Cavaliers  lead  the  conference  |  "^^  powerful  Duke  freshman 
in  passing  offense.  They  have  av-j<^'"°*s  country  squad  lashed  the 
eraged  102.6  yards  per  gamel*^"  Babies  23  to  38  yesterday  to 
through  the  air.  Their  two  ends,'  ^ive   the    Carolina    disUnce    men 


Scurlock  and  John  Reaves  fin- 
ished second,  third  and  fourth. 
Duke's  number  one  man.  Bill  Ho- 
telling,  was  fifth.  Tar  Heels  How- 
ard Kahn  and  Marion  Griffin  were 
next  across  followed  by  Duke's 
Nobel.  Tar  Heel  Marion  Griffin 
was  ninth,  Blue  Devil  Posthumus 
tenth,  and  Carolina's  Ben  Williahis 
eleventh. 

Carolina,  with  seven  of  the  first 
ten,  ran  as  a  team.  Coach  Ranson 
has  been  working  with  the  squad 


all  season  on  this  factor,  and*  it 
has  paid  off.  Although  a  team  HkOB 
a  few  runners  that  always  finish 
near  the  top,  if  they  do  not  have 
depth  they  will  not  be  successfujl. 
If  Carolina  can  run  as  a  team  at 
the  ACC  cross  country  champion- 
ship, they  will  be  tough  to  beat. 

Carolina  will  have  a  rest  until 
next  Monday  when  they  travel  to 
Raleigh  for  the  State  Champion- 
ships. N.  C.  State  wUl  be  the  Tat 
Heels   toughest   opponents   there. 


States'  Mike  Shea  is  the  only  ACC 
distance  man  to  beat  Beatty  in 
duel  meet  competition.  Carolina 
took  State  21  to  48  already  this 
season  and  should  take  them  and 
the  championship: 

Next  the  once  beaten  Tar  Heels 
will  go  to  the  big  one,  the  ACC 
championships.  It  will  be  held  in 
Charlottesville,  Virginia  Novem- 
j  ber  19.  Maryland,  the  only  team 
that  has  beaten  the  lar  Heels  this 
season  will  be  there.  The  Terps 
overpowered  the  Tar  Heels  26  to 
37  earlier  in  the  season.  If  Caro- 
lina can  knock  them  over  the  way 
will  be  clear  for  the  championship. 


BOttoe  ienwith  the  ^  citizenry  con' 1  Russian,   S6titli   Africans,  Italians 
c«tit»atifag:  on  ttie  MelbournerCup   and  T^iritish  ire  scheduled.  There 


— Australia's  KienUttky  Derby. 

Evening'  Peal,"an  Australian  4- 
yeaf-6td  liTiHHf  mite,  "Won  by  -haJt 
a  mffck-over  the  lAiNefv  inland 
f avbrtt^j  Red  Craze,'  in  <z  thrilling 
phota  finish  bdlcre  a  miUing 
tfro^krd  «f  100,000  at  Flemington 
Race  Track.       : 

/  Evening  Pial,' a  13-1  longshbt 
equalled  the  Alisfraliari  record  of 
3  minutes,  19.5  seconds  for  the 
iwo-mlle  handicap. 

Forty-one  Japanese  were  greet- 
ed by  a  flag-waving  Japanese 
crowd  on  arrival  at  the  atrpoft 
The  first  group  of  63  Germans — 34 


'nini 


or    iiiSii   ^   Hungarians 


Just  Bought  in  —  Sem*  Old 
P«nphl«H  Mid 

BOOKS  IN  GERMAN 

Displayed  In  Our  Old  Book 
Csrncr 

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BOOKSHOP 

205   E.  Franklin  St. 


may  <y)ffie  in  eaijly  ia  the  morning, 
bu^  officials,  could  rDot^^oi^irin  it. 

MeaA^Vlifle,  this  initial  )^intp  of 
Ru$siiii<S ' '^hb  fleW  In  'yesterday, 
appeaVed ''hjip]()y  'M  th^  Olyiiipie 
Village  they  share'  With  athletes 
of  the  virbrld.  TTie  Sbviets  were 
talking  as  'fr^Iy'  a^  language  bar- 
riers,  permitted  and  a  top  Soviet 
official  said  no  iron  curtain  will 
be  placed  around  his  charges. 

In  a  news  conference  Constantin 
Andrianov,  president  of  the  Rus-  , 
sian  Olympic  Committee,  said  the 
Soviet  athletes  would  be  permitted 
to  Wander  freely  around  the  vil- 
lage and  Melbourne  and  meet  peo- 
i  pie. 


Dixie  Classic  Tickets 

Athletic  Business  M«n«9er 
Vernon  Crook  announced  yester- 
day that  ell  Dixie  Classic  Bas- 
ketball tickeH  allotted  to  Caro- 
line have  boon  sold.  Anyone  de- 
siring tickets  ntay  obtain  tliem 
by  writing  the  Dixie  Classic, 
Reynolds  Coliseum,  Raleigh. 


FUEL  OIL 
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TYPEWRITING 

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FOR  NEW  CLASS 
November  1 2  —  January  1 8 


town   classes 


Chap^  Hill.  Mmrth  CmrmHitm 


WPP 


Oklahoma 
Tops  Poll; 
Tech  Next 

BY  THC  ASSOCIATED  PRESS 

Oklahoma  remained  the  No.  1 
college  football  team  in  the  land 
today  and  with  four  games  re- 
maining on  the  Sooner's  schedule 
it  doesn't  seem  possible  any  other 
club  can  stop  Coach  Bud  Wilkin- 
son's squad  from  becoming  na- 
tional champions  agaiA.  • 

The  seVenth  weekly  poll  of  The 
Associated  '  Press  showed  Okla- 
homa receiving  116  first  place  bal- 
lot's ovit  of  a  total  of  172,  although 
tHe  Sbohers  were  fbrcfed  to  come 
from  behind  last  Saturday  ta  beat 
ColOi'ado  2^-l9. 

On  the  basis  of  10  joints  for  a 
first  place  vote,  nln«  for  Second, 
etc.,  Oklahoma  rolled  up  1,554, 
compared  wtih  1,453  for  Georgia 
Tech,  the  No.  2  team. 

Georgia  Tech,  which  received 
30  votes  for  first  place,  and  Ten- 
nessee, No.  3,  meet  in  Atlanta  this 
Saturday  with  a  bowl  bid  and  tlic 
Southeaestern  Conference  cham- 
pionship probably  riding  on  the 
outcome. 

Actually,   there  was  no  change 
for  the  "first  five   places  in   this 
week's    rankings,    with    Michigan 
State  fourth,  and  Texas  A  & 
fifth. 

Minnesota  climbed  from  eighth 
to  No.  6,  while  Ohio  State  dropped 
one  place  to  seventh,  and  Miami 
of  Florida  advanced  from  ninth  to 
eighth. 

There  are  two  newcomers  to  the 
top  10  this  week,  Syracuse  taking 
over  No.  9,  and  Michigan,  No.  10. 
Michigan  handed  Iowa  its  first  de- 
feat Saturday,  17-14,  and  dropped 
the  Hawkeyes  from  seventh  to  No. 
15.  Stanford,  which  had  been  No. 
10  a  week  ago,  was  edged  by 
UCLA,  14-13,  and  skidded  to  a  tie 
fM-  No.  20  with  Pitt,  beaten  9-6  by 
Minnesota. 

Syracuse,  a  13-9  winner  over 
Penn  State,  Michigan  and  Oregon 
State  had  been  in  a  triple  tie  for 
17th  a  week  ago.  Oregon  State, 
winner  over  Washington,  moved 
up  to  14th. 

Oklahoma  plays  Iowa  State,  a 
team  Colorado  walloped  52-0  earli- 
er in  the  season,  Saturday  at 
Ames,  Iowa.  That  was  the  score 
Oklahoma  beat  Iowa  State  a  year 
ago.  The  Cyclones  haven't  even 
scored  on  the  Sooners  since  1951. 
Iowa  State  tied  Oklahoma  in  1936, 
but  hasn't  won  since  1931. 

After  Saturday,  Oklahoma  meets 
Mi&sourl,  Nebraska  and  then  Okla- 
homa A  &  M.  Nebraska  last  won 
over  Oklahoma  in  1952,  while  Mis- 
souri   and    the   Oklahoma   Aggies 
haven't  done  the  job  since  1945. 
VOTES  m  AP  POLL— 
.    The  t9|i  teama,  with  first  place 
vptes    fnd    wen-lost    records    in 
marentbeses: 

TOP  10 

1.  Oklahoma  r(lU)  (6-0)      U54 

J.  Ga.  Teeh  (30)  (4^)  1/453 

3.  TefHlMa«e  (11)  (44)   .1,252 

4.  m«h.  State  (7)  (5-1)        1,102 

5.  T*](4t  A«M  (1)  (44  1)  _  tn 
4.  H^inneeote.  (5-0-1)  _  .  490 
7.  Ohi«  State  (1)  (5-1)  ._  .  572 
t.  Miami,  Fla.  (1)  (5-0-1)  ..  453 
9.  Syr^use  (1)  (5-1)  225 

10.  Michigan  (4-2) 1W 


P  a  1  z  e  r  and  Gunderman,  have 
cacught  a  total  of  29  passes  in 
seven  games  this  year. 

The  Tar  Heels  were  hard  hit  by 
injuries  in  the  Tennessee  game, 
and  at  least  one  starter  will  be  on 
the  sidelines  for  the  Virginia  tilt. 
Halfback  I.^rry  McMullen  sustain- 
ed  an   ankle  injury  against    the '  ^^^^P*^^^***" 


their  worst  defeat  of  the  season. 
Duke's  Gary  Weisiger  took  top 
honors  by  edging  Tar  Heels  Fick 
Authur  and  Cowles  Liipfert  for 
the  first  position.  Weisigen  cov- 
ered the  2.6  mile  course  in  12:5^ 
He  is  the  first  man  to  defeat  Tar 
Heel  Cowles  Liipfert  in  freshman 


Vols,  and  will  see  little  it  any  ac- 
tion Saturday. 

Several  other  Tar  Heels  will  be 
limited  to  light  work  for  this 
week's  practice  sessions  but  are 
expected  to  be  ready  to  go  against 
the  Cavaliers.  Wally  Vale  and  Don 
Redding  each  have  leg  trouble, 
Don  Kemper  has  a  bad  shoulder 
and  Moe  DeCantis  has  sore  feet. 
In  addition,  halfback  Jim  Varnum 
is  in  the  infirmary  with  a  high 
fevT. 

It  was  also  learned  at  the  pr^ss 
conference  that  George  Stavnitski, 
UNC  c6-captaio  who  suffered  a  se- 
vere head  injury  in  the  Oklahoma 
game,  has  been  released  from  the 
infirmary  and  is  now  coaching  the 
freshman  centers. 

Coach  T^tum  paused  briefly  at 
the  end  of  tbe  luncheon  to  take  a 
Itfok  back  down  the  rough  rocky 
road  of  the  '56  football  season. 
•'It's  been  the  longest  scaon  I've 
ever  experienced,"  he  said..  "The 
most  cheering  thing  about  the 
whole  year  has  been  the  faithful 
support  I've  received  from  the 
alumni..  Their  loyal  support  under 
disappointing  conditions  has  been 
a  great  pleasure  to  me." 

The  jovial  Tar  Heel  mentor 
couldn't  resist  a  parting  shot  when 
the  world  situation  came  to  the 
attention  of  the  gathered  scribes. 
'I  don't  think  I'll  be  going  to 
MJwar,"  he  remarked.  "I've  got  a 
I  ruptured  disc  and  a  broken  heart, 
so  it  looks  like  I'm  4-F  in  every 
way,"  quipped  Sunny  Jim. 


Olympic  Plane 
is  Forced  Down 

LOS  ANGELES,  Of)  —  A  char- 
ter flight  taking  American  ath- 
letes and  officials  to  the  Olym- 
pic Games  in  Australia  had  to 
turn  back  today  shortly  after  tak- 
ing off. 

Pan  American  Airlines  said  the 
landing  gear  of  the  big  DC7 
couldn't  be  raised  due  to  a  minor 
malfunction.  The  plane  returned 
to    International    Airport. 

After  thc^  aircraft  was  checked 
over  the  64  athletes  and  officials 
were  airborne  again  two  hours 
and  54  minutes  later. 


Liipfert  had  a  string  of  six 
victories  until  he  sprained  his 
ankle  at  State  last  week.  He  was 
not  able  to  finish  then  and  al- 
though his  ankle  has  healed  he 
has  not  worked  out  for  several 
days  and  therefore  was  not  in  top 
shape   yesterday. 

Yesterday's  meet  was  a  replica 
of  an  earlier  meet  between  the 
two  squads.  Duke  was  the  victor 
then  23  to  47.  The  Blue  Imps 
have  been  very  strong  all  season 
and  should  be  the  team  to  take 
the  State  championship  which 
will  be  held  at  Raleigh  November 

■  The  Tar  Babies  will  rest  until 
n^xt  Monday  when  they  wil  per- 
ticipate  in  the  State  champion- 
ship. .  ,,  , 
_ ,  The  summary;  1-Weisiger.  D. 
12:55.  2Arthur.  C.  13:20.  3-Liip. 
fert,  C.  13:35.  4-Menaker,  D,  13:44. 
5-Bazemore,  D.  13:5L  6-Shields, 
D,  13:53.  7-Hurd.  D,  13:56.  8-Van 
Every,  D,  14:01.  9-Maloof,  D, 
14:04.  10-Packard,  C,  14:13.  11- 
Bagwell.  C.  14:21.  12-Sirianni.  C, 
14:39. 

WAA  Net  Club  To  Meet 
Duke  Tomorrow  In  Debut 

The  Women's  Tennis  Club 
opens  its  fall  schedule  with  Duke 
here  tomorrow  at  3  p.m.  on  the 
varsity  courts.  Duke  has  announc- 
ed they  are  bringing  nine  girls 
for  the  match. 

Probable  players  for  Carolina 
are  Pat  Wilson,  Betty  Webster, 
Marilyn  Strum,  Patsy  Smith, 
Mary  Ellen  Sample.  Pat  Brandt, 
Thelma  Ragland.  Flo  Davenport, 
Dar>i  Farrington,  Joyce  Holland, 
Katherine  Legeande,  Penny  Nor- 
man, Adelaide  Schnell  and  Neltie 
Sanders. 


We  Have  Just  Brought  In 
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it  Water  Repellent  ^  Sheds  Showers   * 

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Saunder's  Nu-Way  Cleaners 


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Only  Time  And  Experience 
Can  Create  A  Model  Like 


Tailoring  die  true  "natural"  model 
if  BO  tatk  for  an  amateur.  Because 
tki$  model,  of  all  elothini  models, 
takes  ttioie  and  experienct  to 
natter,   it  ean't  be  rushed!    Our 
Naturalaire' it  tailored  for  us  by 
craftanen  who  have  had   more 
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(vlifhdy  diofed) 

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Julian' 


B  O  B  and  M  O  N  K 
of 

TOWN& 
CAMPUS 

SALUTE 
Athlete  Of  The  Week 


ED  SUTTON 

Senior  halfback  and  co-cap- 
tain Ed  Sutton  has  been  named 
Athlete  of  the  Week  for  th- 
seeond  time  this  year  on  the 
basis  of  hii  performance  against 
the'  Tenhess'ee  Vols  last  Satur- 
day. Sutton  was  a  workhorse  for 
the  Ter*  Heels  all  afternoon, 
pTckiri^  Op  6V  'yands'  in  6  carries, 
and  drkwinii  special  praise  from 
Vol  Coach  <  Bo^*rden  •  WyaH  for 
h\t  effortsl  •!. 

We  want  him  'to'  di-op  by 
TOWW  &  CAMPUS  and  pick  out 
k  shirt  to  his  liking— compli- 
ments of:  the  house. 

We  want  the  old  and  young 
»like  of  Chapel  Hill  to  make 
TOWN  &  CAMPUS  their  head 
quarters  for  the  finest  in  men's 
clothing.    Oriy    in    today. 

TOWN  & 
CAMPUS 


f 


mEQ 


Hunters:  Attention! 

DUCK  And  GOOSE  SEASON  OPENS 

November  7 

WE  CARRY 
Shotguns  And  Rifles 

Browning,  Winchester,  And  Remington 

ALSO:  Hunting  Clothes,  Boots,  Calls, 

Ammunition  And  Other  Accessories. 

INFORMATION  ON  HUNTING  LOCALITIES 

Knight  &  Cambell  Hardware 

PHONE  8-3751 


W.  FRANKLIN  ST. 


^Wf< 


m' 


WEATHER 

Partly  cloudy  with  high  of  72. 
VOL.  LVII  NO.  42 


9rf)  c  Daily 


aTar  Mtti 


Complete  [JP)  Wire  Strvic* 


CHAPEL  HILL.  NORTH  CAROLINA,  THURSDAY,   NOVEMBER  8,  1W6 


Offices   in    Graham    Memorial 


MEETINGS 

The    place    should    be    changed. 
See  page  2. 


SIX  PAGES  THIS  ISSUE 


Final  Verdict  On 
Parking  Situation 
Expected  Monday 


By  NEIL  BASS 

The  town  Board  of  Aldermon 
will  pass  final  decree  on  the  S. 
Columbia  St.  parking  restriction 
at  Monday  night's  meeting. 

The  aldermen  will  hear  a  report 
presented  on  behalf  of  the  seven 
fraternities  involved.  Chairman 
Wilburn  Davis  of  the  student  gov- 
ernment Traffic  Advisory  Com- 
mission will  present  the  report. 

Dan  Clark,  Pi  Kappa  Alpha 
president,  will  compile  the  report 
under  direction  of  the  Interfra- 
ternity  Council.  He  will  convey  it 
to  Chairman  Davis. 
RECOMMENDATION 

Davis  said  yesterday  he  would 
also  present  a  recommendation 
formulated  by  his  commissi  n. 

Chairman  Davis  said,  conceniing 
the  work  of  his  group: 

"My  committee  appreciates  all 
cooperation  given  by  students,  and 
it  hopes  to  have  such  cooperation 
all  through  the  year  in  working 
on  the  general  campus  parking 
problem. 

"We  also  appreciate  the  coop- 
eration given  us  by  the  Merchants' 
Assn.  and  the  Board  of  Alder- 
men. " 

Davis  declined  to  give  his  opin- 
ion concerning  the  results  of  the 
meeting. 

The  Davis  commission,  appoint- 
ed by  President  Bob  Young,  will 
shift  its  attention  to  the  overall 
campus  parking  problem  after  the 
aldermen  pass  final  decree  Mon- 
day night. 


The  cnly  suggested  action  which 
the  aldermen  may  take  is  a  60- 
oay  lining  of  the  two  hour  re- 
striction if  the  fraternities'  report 
premises  action  to  alleviate  their 
parking  problem  during  this  pe- 
riod. I 

Chairman    Davis   earlier    report- ' 
ed  representatives  from  the  Board 
of  Aldermen  had  promised  tenta- 
tively to  lift   the  ban   for  the  60- 
aay  period. 

Mayor  0.  K.  Cornwell  after- 
wards told  a  reporter  the  two  rep- 
resentatives had  no  authorization 
to  make  any  type  of  tentative 
promise. 

Fraternities  which  are  affected 
by  the  two-hour  parking  restric- 
tion on  S.  Columbia  St.  between 
Frankjin  St.  and  Cameron  Ave. 
are: 

Beta  Theta  Pi,  Delta  Kappa  Ep- 
silon,  Sigma  Nu,  Pi  Kappa  Alpha, 
Fi  Lambda  Phi,  Sigma  Alpha  Ep- 
silon  and  Sigma  Chi. 


President  Alerts 
U.  S.  Defenses 

Frem  Radio  Ditpafchet 

WASHINGTON  —  President 
Eisenhower  has  put  the  entire 
American  defense  system  on  a 
round-the-clock  alert. 

Disturbed  by  Soviet  troop 
mo\'ement.s  in  Hungary,  the 
President  ordered  the  Atlantic 
Fleot  to  sea  under  sealed  orders. 
He  asked  America's  allies  to 
draw  back  from  crucial  areas  in: 
order  to  ward  off  a  possible  sec- 
ond Pearl  Harbor. 

Eisenhower,  who  was  reelect- 
ed to  office  by  a  powerful  land- 
slide in  Tuesday's  election,  call- 
ed Congressional  leaders  to- 
gether for  a  conference  Frirday. 
«     *     * 

UNITED  NATIONS,  N.  Y.— 
The  General  Assembly  voted 
64-0  Wednesday  for  a  ceasefire 
in  the  Middle  East.  There  were 
12  abstentions,  Israel  among 
them. 

*     *     * 

SEOUL,  Korea— Two  Russian 
MIG  fighters  were  reported  to 
have  attacked  South  Korean  air- 
planes over  South  Korea  Wed- 
nesday. 


MARTHA    DECKER 


MARTHA   RICHARDSON 


^nlKLcY    OOfcNinNliK 


4 


7 


Seniors, 
Into   Highest 

In   Pre-Dawn    Event 


Tapped 
Honorary 

Valkyries  Tap  Misses 


Honorary 
Womans 


DTH  Wire  Bill 

Richardson,  Guenthn  er.  Decker,  Earp,  McQueen  Coynes  Up  For 

Debate  Tonight 


Candidates  Absent  On 
Men.  Must  Meet  Today 

AH  Honor  Council  candidates 
who  were  unable  to  attend  the ! 
candidates'  meeting  held  last  Mon- 
day night  have  been  required  to  ' 
meet  in  Student  Government  of- 
fice in  Graham  Memorial,  today  at  j 
7  p.m.  I 

Any    candidate    who    is    absent : 


Weinman 
Says  UP 
Will  Win 


L  diversity       Party       Chairman 


98  Coeds  Compete 
Tonight  For  Yack 
Beauty  Queen  Title 


DR.  SIDNEY  PAINTER 

. .  .  Johns  HopkiTis  proj  speaks  tonight 

Noted  Historian  Talks 
To  History  Club  On 
Magna  Carta  Tonight 


from  this  meeting  without  contact-  \  Mike  Weinman  said  yesterday  the 
I  ing  Andy  Milnor  at  8-9105  will  be  '  UP  "is  now  finishing  a  most  suc- 
disqualified.  i  cessful    session    in   Student    Legis- 

lature, and  I  am  confident  will 
receive  a  larger  majority  in  the 
election  next  Tuesday." 
Weinman,  in  a  prepared  state 
ment.  alA>  said  "The  University 
Party  has  proven  by  tbl»  Wnn  in 
legislature  its  genuine  desire  to 
promote  the  interests  of  all  the 
students  on  the  University  camp- 
us. It  has  far  surpassed  the  Stu- 
dent Party  in  activity  and  inter- 
est in  the  legislature.  We  have 
attempted  more  and  better  legis- 
lation than  the  Student  Pttrty,"  he 
said. 

"I  think  it  should  be  brought 
out  that  th?  reading  day  before 
exams  was  initiated  by  VP  legis- 
lators in  a  past  session.  Bob 
Young  has  taken  credit  for  this 
measure,  but  let's  remember  it  is 
the  duty  of  the  executive  branch 
to  carry  out  the  legislation  initi- 
ated by  the  representative  body. 
"The  University  Party  has  done 
an  outstanding  job  this  term,  and 
our  record  will  prove  that,  and 
will  continue  to  do  so  when  con- 
tinued in  power  by  this  election. 
'We  are  confident  of  taking  sev- 
eral dormitory  seats  from  the  stu- 
dent party  this  election  because 
of  the  quality  and  desire  of  our 
dorm  district  candidates.  I  think 
they  are  the  most  interested  we 
have   ever  nominated."  he  said. 

"We    are    especially    privileged 
to   have   such    qualified   class   of- 
ficership  candidates  for  this  elec- 
tion.  Outstanding  among  these   is 
I  John    Kerr,    candidate    for   Junior 
I  Class  president.  He  has  been  trea- 
I  surer    of    the    student    body    and 
chairman    of    the    Student    Enter- 
tainment   Committee,   and    in   the 
Student  Legislature.  | 

"I  urge  all  student  voters  to  sup- ' 
port  the  UP,  for  when  you  do,  you 
cast  a  vote  for  good  student  gov- 1 
ernment   and   not    petty    politics." , 
he  .said. 


Four  senior  coeds  and  one  hon- 
orary were  tapped  for  membership 
into  the  Valkyries,  higest  women  s 
honorary  on  campus,  this  morning 
in    are-dawn   ceremonies. 

The  undergraduates  tapped  were 
Misses  Martha  .\nne  Richardson, 
Patricia    Grace    McQueen,    Shu'ley 

Lee    Gucnthner,    and   Joy   Frances  j  to  improve  campus  life 
Earp.  Mi.ss  Martha  Alice  Decker  of  I  kyrics   stated, 
the  Dean  of  Women's  Office  was 


ing  loader  have  been  a  constant 
source  of  inspiration  to  those  in 
her  major  field.'"  the  society  .said. 
Miss  Earp,  psychology  major 
from  Raleigh,  is  a  student  who,  "in 
her  sympathetic  understanding  and 
unselfish  service  seeks  persistent- 
ly to  aid  her  fellow  students  and 
the  Val- 


Elizabeth  Lloyd  Dougherty,  Alice 
Eller,  Bet.sy  Lyon,  and  .Nan  Schaef- 
fcr. 


One  ©f  the  nation  s  pre-eminent 
authorities  on  the  Middle  Ages, 
Prof.  Sidney  Painter  of  Johns 
Hopkins  University,  will  deliver  a 
public  address  at  8  p.m.  today  in 
Carroll   Hall. 

Prof.  Painter's  address  is  the 
second  in  a  series  of  three  public 
addresses  by  prominent  historians 
to  be  given  this  year,  sponsored 
by  the  Graduate  History  Club,  Phi 


!  Much  to  the  delight  of  the  dom- 
I  inant  male  population  on  campus, 
I  no  less  than  98  girls  will  vie  for 
I  the  title  of  -'1957  Yack  Beauty 
Queen"  at  Memorial  Hall  today  at 
I  7i30  p.m. 
I      The  annual  contest  is  staged  bv 

Lniversity  yearbook.  The  wlnnCT 
and  14  attendants  will  find  them- 
selves in  the  rotagravure  of  the 
i  b^'auty  section  when  the  publica- 
tion comes  out  in  the  spring. 

Entrants  will  be  judged  on  sym- 
metry of  features,  complexion, 
i  bar,  figure  and  poise.  Each  con- 
I  testant  has  been  ent?red  in  the 
contest  by  a  fraternity,  sorority, 
'  dormitory,  or  other  campus  or- 
I  ganizations. 
.  CAPPS  MC 

j  Jimmy  Capps.  Raleigh  disc  joe- 
'■  key.  will  act  as  master  of  cere- 
i  monies.  Judges  include  Ty  Boyd. 
I  Chapel  Hill  radioman;  Monk  Jen- 
I  nings.  Chapel  Hill  merthiant  and 
'  Charlie  Cash.  Durham  radio  an- 
I  nouncer. 

Special  entertainment  will  be 
provided  by  Flip  Latham's  stud?nt 
combo  and  the  Phi  Kappa  Sigma 
combo. 

Following  is  a  list  of  the  98 
candidates  and  their  sponsors: 

Delta  Delta  Delta:  .Misses  Ann 
Barber,  Anne  Marie  Miller,  and 
Nancy  Joe  Rush. 

Chi  Omcgra:  Mis.ses  Carol  Camp- 
bell. Ann  Norman,  and  Marianna 
Miller. 

Alpha  Delta  Pi:  Misses  Nancy 
Davis.  Jane  Little,  Doris  Peter, 
Nancy  Llewelyn,  Margaret  Head, 
and  Pat  Gregory. 

Kappa  Delta:  Misses  Elizabeth 
Gore    Barnes,    Norma   Joan   Cupp, 


"Hvr  strength  of  character,  en- 
Ihisiasm  and  ideals  of  deep  con- 
viction are  strongly  felt  in  the 
many  tasks  she  undertakes,"  they 
reported. 

Miss  Decker,   from   Miami,   Fla., 


;  tapped  by  the  organization  for  hon- 
j  orary  membership. 
j      Membership  is  based  on  charac- 
)er,   unselfish   leadership,   scholar- 
ship and  service  to  the  campus. 

Founded   in   1941,  the  Valkyries '  according  to   the    Valkyries,   is   "a 

replaced  Alpha  Kappa  Gamma,  na-    valuable    member    of    the    Dan    of 

Stray  Greeks:  Miss  Carol  Coop-    jjij^al  honorary  society,  and  con*es- 1  Women's     office     whose     creative 

wood  and  Edith  Moore.  ;  ponds   to   the   highest   local   men's '  capabilities   are  vital  in  this' area 

Alpha  Gamma  Delta:  Misses  Ann    honorary  society,  the  Order  ofi  Uve  ;  oC  eajnpus  .life."  '     ,     .  ^  ' 

Newsome,    Barbara   Fowler.   Li bby  ,  Golden  Fleece.  1      The   lorfamzatioyi^said,.   --exem- 

raw*  '      Mi.ss  Richardson,  a  sociology  ma-  '  pUfying  outstan^ng  qualities,  she 
;  f»n-d  and  Phyllis  Kraft.  jor   irom    Midlothian.    Va.,    is,   the    has    displayed    warm    and    sincere 

I  Kappa  Alpha:  Misses  .Margery '  Valkyries  said,  "one  whose  con-  in tere.st  in.  the  individual  student 
I  Lindeman,  .Martha  Williford,  Anne  structive  attitude  and  service  ha."?  and  devotion  to  the  campus  com- 
;  Melton,   Bobby   Love,   and  Robert;:    been  evident   in  several   phases  of.munity." 

Chapin.  campus  life."  ( :  j 

Lambda  Chi  Alpha:  .Mi.sjse.s  Sally        "She  is  one  who   has   expressed 
I  Patterson,     Hanna     Kirby,     Anne    the  aoility  to   awaken  in  others  a 
I  Smith,      Nancy     Milan.     Elaine    sensi'    of    leadership    and    fellow- 
Burns,  and  Elenor  Williamson.        t  ship,"  the  society  said. 
!      Phi    I>olta    Th?ta:    Misses    Mary  |      Mi»-*  McQueen,  a  primary  educa 
Shirley  Decs,  and  Grace  ;  'ion   major   from   Lumberton.    was 
hailed   as  "one  whose  devotion   to 
students'    interests    i.s     constantly 
lelt  by  her  active  participation  and 
cor.c'.:'rn   in   affairs   of   the  student 
judiciary." 

"She  is  a  leader  whose  convic- 


Burg'vyn 
Boney. 

Chi  Psi:  Misses  Mary  "Pee- Wee" 
Batten.  Jane  Brock,  .Marian  Dick- 
ens, Darryl  Farrington,  Dorothy 
Presley,  and  Bobbie  Brank. 

Delta  Psi:  Misses  Carolyn  Nel- 
son, Patsy  Poythress,  Beverly  Hea- 
ton,  and  Robie  Simpson. 

.Nurses  Dorm:  Misses  Barbara 
Miles,  Anne  Morgan,  and  Martha 
Deer. 

Sigma  Nu:  Misses  Barbara  Hon- 
ey, Susan  Walker.  Carolyn  Placak. 
and  Shirley  Cari>enter. 

Spencer  Hall:  Misses  Page  An- 
derson and  Sarah  Williamson. 

Pi  Lambda  Phi:  Miss  Barbara 
Prago, 

Kenan  Dorm:  Miss  Tita  White. 

Smith  Dorm:  Miss  Dickey  Picker- 
rell. 

Beta  Theta  Pi:  Misses  Val  von 
Ammon,  Ann  Morgan,  Lucinda 
Holderness,  and  Betty  Bell. 

Cobb     Dorm:     Misses     Barbara 

(See  BEAUTY  QUEEN.  Page  4) 


Tearing  Down 
Of  Posters  Is 
Honor  Offense 


The    tearing    down     of    campus 
camj):iign     posters     is     an    .Honor 
Council  offense.  Miss  Martha  Bar- 
ber ol  the  Women's  Council  pjint- 
tions   demand    respect    and    whose   cd  out  yesterday, 
sense  of  responsibility  begins  with  '•      Several   posters   have   been   torn 
definite  action,"  the  Valkyrie.s  said,    down  and  many  defaced,  she  said.  | 
Mis.^  Guenthner,  nursing  student    Defacing  the  posters  is  also  an  of- 
from  Washington,  D.  C,  "has  given   lense,  she  said, 
unseliishly   and   untiringly   of   her  j      Miss    Barber   said   she   felt   that 
time  and  efforts  for  the  betterment  j  perhaps  many  freshmen  and  soph-  i 
ol    dormitory    life."    the    Valkyries .  omores  did  not  know  that  this  de- ! 
.«aid.  strurlion    was    an    Honor    Council , 

"Her  capabilities  as  an  outstand-  :  offense.  , 


UNC   Has   $100,000 
From  Dorm  Rent  Hike 


The  Student  Legislature  will 
vote  tonight  on  a  bill  to  appropri- 
ate $400  to  establish  national  and 
international  news  wire  service 
lor    The    Daily    Tar   Heel. 

The  bill  points  out  The  Daily 
Tar  Heel  is  the  only  communica- 
tion with  national  and  internation- 
al affairs,  in  printed  form,  pub- 
lished  daily  in   Chapel   Hill. 

Sonny  Evans,  speaker  of  the 
Legislature,  in  giving  his  views 
on  the  bill,  said,  "The  Tar  Heel 
was  the  only  student  publication 
to  make  money  last  year  and  is, 
in  my  opinion,  entitled  to  some 
consideration.  However,  if  this 
means  that  campus  news  will  be 
suppressed,  tben  I  am .  not  In  fa- 
vor of  il."  _^'' 

Other  ""bills    to    be    voted    on    in- 
clude  one   to   establish   a   commit- 
tee   for    altering    the    site    of    the 
Honor  Cauncil   .meetings.    TTie    bill 
recommends     that     a     less     public 
meeting    place    be    found    for    the 
Council    than    the   present   one   on 
the  second   floor  of  GM. 

A  bill  to  look  into  the  feasibili- 
ty of  establishing  parking  lots 
with  auto  registration  fees  is  be- 
ing submitted.  The  southern  half 
of  the  area  in  front  of  Mclver 
Dorm  adjacent  to  East  Cameron 
St.  is  suggested  as  a  suitable  site 
for  a  student  parking  lot. 

A!l  three  bills  were  introduced 
List  v.cek  by  UP  Chairman  Mike 
Weinman. 

In  addition,  cups  will  be  pre- 
sented to  the  mens  and  women's 
dorms  and  frat?rnity  having  the 
h  ghest  scholastic  average.  They 
are:  men's  dorm.  Old  West  with 
a  1.631  average:  women's  dorm, 
Mclver.  having  an  average  of  1.- 
j  740:  and  fraternity.  Delta  Psi  (St. 
!  Anthony  Hall).  2.4747.  Recogni- 
{  tion  will  also  be  given  to  the  Pi 
j  Beta  Phi  Sorority,  which  had  a 
I  2.2238  average.  A  cup  is  present- 
i  ed  to  the  sorority  with  the  high- 
est scholastic  average  by  the  Pan 
I  Hellenic    Council. 


By  GRAHAM  SNYDER 


The   aggregation   of   funds   from 
the   330   dormitory   room   rent    in- 


dormitories,     has    ap- 
figure    approximating 


IN  THE  INFIRMARY 

Students  in  the  Infirmary  yes- 
terday included: 

Misses  Valerie  Van  Ammon, 
Barbara  CaWv/tay,  Isabel  Master 
son  and  Kinzo  Yamamato,  George 
McNeill,  Harold  Lusk,  Alvin 
Mu&tian,  Lecn  Martin,  James 
Vsrnum,  George  Myatt,  David 
McSraw,  Howard  Mills,  Jimmy 
Merrln,  David  Carr,  John  Trott 
and  Hugh  Bryant. 


Alpha  Theta  -  history  fraternity, 
'  and  the  Graham  Memorial  Student 
j  Union. 

i  TOPIC 

j  The  topic  of  Dr.  Painter's  add- 
1  ress,  "The  Magna  Carta,  and  Medi- 
,  eval  Ol  igins  of  Personal  Liberty",  I 
j  is  a  particularly  timely  one  today 
I  when  this  vital  principle,  the  foun- 
i  dation  of  American  democratic  so- ; 

ciety  and  our  republican  form  of  I 

government,  is  challenged  by  the ; 

principles    of    Communism.    Prof. 

Painter  will  discuss  the  origins  of  | 

the   principle  of  personal   liberty,  i 

as  expressed  in  the  Magna  Carta, 

famous  English  declaration  of  hu- 
!  man  freedom,  and  trace  their  long- 
range   importance.  j 
Prof.   Painter,   who   is  professor  j 

of   history   at    the   Johns  Hopkins 

University,  is  the  author  of  The 
;  History    of    the    English    Feudal  j 

Barony,     French     Chivalry,     The 
j  Scourge  of  the  Clergy,  and  Peter  <  N.  Y    and  Clay  Simpson  of  Lex 
1  of  Dreux,  Duke  of  Brittany.  '  ington,  Ky. 


Campus  Chest  Campaign  Hits 
$460  Total  After  Second  Day 

Campus  Chest  donations  yester-  j  tion  it.  young  Greeks  of  exception- 
day  pushed  the  total  of  funds  up  al  promise  whose  talents  would 
to  $460,  according  to  Co-Chair-  otherwise  have  remained  undevel- 
men  Miss  Jackie  Aldridge  and  Jess  j  oped  and  unrecognized.  You  have 
Stribling.  contributed   to    a   life-giving   pro- 

Contributions  for  the  second  I  gram  of  great  significance  to  this 
day,  though  smaller  than  expect- 1  valiant  and  strategically  located 
ed,  totalled  $160  by  5  p.m.  Only  14  I  little  countrj'  which  is  .struggling 
orgaiiizations  had  reported,  said  [  in  a  troubled  world  along  the  road 
the  io-chairmen.  j  to  economic  stability. 

$300  was  donated  Tuesday.  j      "During    the    past    year,    as    in 

The  caravan  trip  to  the  Univer-  j  previous  years,  over  half  of  our 
sity  of  Virginia  has  caused  one  \  one  thousand  students  were  schol- 
day  to  be  sliced  from  the  length !  ar^hip  beneficiaries  and  we  are 
of  thj  drive.  It  will  now  end  Fri- :  determined  that  next  year  we  will 
day  night  instead  of  Saturday.  j  not  be  obliged  to  refuse  the  oppor- 
The  co-chairmen  announced  yes-  [  tunitics  the  college  offers  to  any 
terday  that  Henry  Mclnnis  has  promising  boy  because  he  lacks 
been  appointed  drive  chairman  for    the   financial    means, "    the   letter 

stated. 
An  appeal  came  yesterday  from       ..^p  ^^^^  y^^  j^  ^^q^,  (hat  your 


three     new 

proached    a 

$100,000. 

,     ,  University      Business      Manager 

crease     effected     last     September,    p]„„^ 


1955,   to  be  used  for  the  purpose 
of    linancing   the    construction    of 


UNC  Debaters 
To  Attend  Meet 

Members  of  the  Debate  Squad 
will  leave  UNC  today  at  1:30  p.m. 
for  Columbia.  S  C.  for  the  South 
Carolina  Invitational  Debate  Tour- 
nament. 

During  the  first  inter-collegiate 
competition  of  the  year,  debaters 
will  argue  the  pro  and  con  of  the 
national  collegiate  debate  topic 
for  the  year,  which  is:  j 

Resolved,      that      the       United 
States    should    discontinue    direct    ^•"•^'«"  ^'"'""o'^' 
economic  aid  to  foreign  countries 

Debating  on  the  affirmative  will    Gree-e  solicitating  the  aid  of  UNC    uiieresl  in  the  education  of  Greek 
be  Phillip  Gerdes  of   Wilmington    students.    Greece,    which    receives    ^oyg    j^   ^^    American   sponsored 

{.id  from  the  Campus  Chest.  Sent    school  has  been  heartwarming  en 
a  letter  which  said:  |  coura.gement  in  a  challenging  task. 

"Your  participation  in  our  We  plead  for  your  continued  in- 
scholarship  program  has  helped  to  terest  and  support,"  the  letter 
make  it  possible  to  giv*  an  educa-    said. 


and  Randy  Oglesby  of  Greensboro. 

Taking    the    negative    side   will 

be    Harold    Stessel    of    Peekskill, 


SSL  Will  Start 
Next  Thursday 

RALEIGH  UP)— College  students 
from  throughout  North  Carolina 
will  gather  in  Raleigh  Nov.  15-17 
to  hold  the  annual  N.  C.  state 
student  legislature  in  the  state 
capitol. 

Plans  lor  the  mock  legislative 
assembly  were  reported  Monday 
by  Robert  .M.  Gunn  of  Charlotte, 
a  student  at  North  Carolina  State 
College  and  vice  president  of  the 
'  student  legislature's  intsrim  coun- 
I  cil.  '    .       i 

I  Bach  edn?ational  intrtitution 
represented,  Gunn  said,  will  pro- 
pose a  resolution  to  be  acted  upon  j 
by  the  student  senators  and  house 

j  members.  : 

j      Virginia     and     South     Carolina 

college  students  have  been  issued 

!  invitations  to  attsnd  the  session  as 

i  observers.  j 


e  Teague,  in  stating  the 
amount  collected  for  the  academic 
year  1955-56.  said  this  figure 
might  vary,  due  to  the  shift  of 
.<ludonts  moving  in  and  out  of 
dormitories  during  the  course  of 
a  year. 

Teague  staled  the  original  sum 
of  money  will  be  used  to  purchase 
the  furniture  for  the  new  dormi- 
tories; all  funds  accumulating 
Irom  the  room  increase  thereaiier 
will  be  used  to  pay  the  interest 
and  principal  on  the  2  million 
ooUar  loan  granted  last  fall  by  the 
Fed'^ral  Housing  and  Home  Ki 
nance  Agency. 

The  bill  authorizing  the  con- 
.^truction  of  the  new  dorms  wa.s 
passed  by  the  North  Carolina  Gen- 
eral As.sembly  on  May  23,  1955. 
The  lime  consumed  between  that 
date  and  the  tentative  building 
program  date  of  December,  1956, 
was  attributed  by  Teague  to  "the 
interminable  delays  of  architec- 
tural planning  and  approving." 

The  complete  building  plans  in- 
clude the  construction  of  three 
men's  dormitories  and  aji  addi- 
tional wing  for  Spencer  dorm.  The 
men's  dorms  will  be  built  facing 
Nav>'  Field  behind  Kenan  Sta- 
dium. 


Pledge  Officers  Elected 
By  Alpha  Gam  Sorority 

!      The   1956pledge  of  Gamma   Ep- 

'  siloii    chapter     of    Alpha    Gamma 

Delta  .sorority  has  announced  the 

elecMon    of     its     officers    for    the 

;  present  term. 

I      Miss    Phyllis    Kraft    heads    the 

group  as  president.   Miss   Ann   In- 

man   was  electced   vice   president. 

I  Miss     Ruth    Neisler    and    Andrea 

Stalvcy   were   selected   to   fill   the 

'■  secretary     and     treasurer     posts, 

■  while    Miss    Jennie    Margaret 

j  Meador      was      chosen      activities 

I  chairman. 

Mi.ss  Frances  McKnight  was  ap- 
\  pointed  scholarship  chairman  for 
I  'he  group  and  Miss  Ingrid  Clay 
I  was  appointed  house  chairman. 


GM'S  SLATE 


Student  Council,  6-11  p.m., 
Grail  Room;  UP  Caucus,  6-7:30 
p.m.,  Roland  Parker  1;  Tri-lo»»a 
Frat,  10-11  p.m.,  Roland  Parker 
2;  SP  Caucus,  6-7:30  p.m.,  Ro- 
land Parker  3;  IPC  court,  79 
p.m.,  Woodhouse  Conference 
Room;  Grad  Study  Group,  9:45* 
11  p.m.,  Woodhouse  Conference 
Room;  IDC  Court,  7  p.m..  Coun- 
cil Room. 


^A6I   TWO 


THi  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


THURSDAY,  NOVEMBER  8,  1936 


Legislature  Should  Move 
Horibr   Council   Chambers 


YOU  Said  It: 


The  Siiiflent  Lesislature  Kill 
consider  "^  bill  toui»ht  which 
Avould  •;ii|!^stis;ate  altering  the 
siie  ot  ihe*^Icns  Honor  Council 
meetings." 

Th^  thoiicjht  is  fine,  but  all  the 
action  is  unnecessarv. 


The  StiSlfl^ht  Legislature  sliould- 
n't,  have  to  name  a  commitree  to 
iinx'stigate  the  fjossibility  of  chati'jf- 
iiig  the  site  ^f  the  meeiiiigs  of  the 
Men's  Council  to  other  less  con- 
spicuous plates  on  the  campus  in- 
stead of  the  present  meeting  pKuc 
on  the  secofm  floor  of  the  student 
luiion  fjuilding." 

The  meeting  places  should  be 
«h  nijefl.  btit  a  mere  recommen- 
dation bv  the  Student  Legislature 
to  rhc  Mens  Honor  Council  shcjuld 
do  the  tri(k. 

lis  not  hard  to  recognize  a  siu- 
dciu  \\]u)\  fjeing  tried  f>v  the  Mens 


Honor  (^-ouncll.  He  sits  on  the  sec- 
ond-floor landing  in  (iraham  Me- 
morial, or  he  sits  in  the  cfjffee 
rfMmi.  smoking  and  looking  wor- 
ried. He  wears  a  tie.  and  is  im- 
mediatelv  re<ogni/e<l  as  someone 
who  is  waiting  around  for  tlie 
\erdict. 

As  the  I'niversitv  says,  siucients 
should  be  gi\en  a  chrince — at  least 
while  their  college  careers  are  fresh 
—to  make  a  (ouple  of  mistakes,  and 
their  names  should  l)e  covered  up 
if  their  crimes  are  (ommhted 
within  the  framework  of  the  camp- 
us. "I  heir  names  nia\  as  well  be 
published  bv  this  newspaper  if 
rhev  are  made  to  sit  and  a'\vait  trial 
while  the  rest  of  the  student  body 
walks  bv. 

A  more  secret,  less  ob\  ious 
meeting  place  should  be  selected 
))v  the  ( ouncil,  if  tor  no  other  rea- 
son than  to  proic'tt  the  identities 
of  the  innocent  witnesses. 


On   Political  Vandalism 


With  less  than  a  week  left  f)e- 
f.)re  fall  campus  electicms,  candi- 
dates are  reporting  defacegl  and 
renK)\ed   posters.  ,  ,^. 

This  isnt-nrre:  in  almost  every 
campus-wide  election  there  are 
scmie  students  wh«^  like  to  tear 
down  jMister*.  \'ery  few  of  these  stu- 
dents are  tandidaies  themselves,  cir 
e\en  care  alwut  the  elections  out-' 
come:  usuallv  thcv  turn  ouffo  be 
stupid.  t<»ward!y  l><M»rs— the  same 
kind  that  start  pantv  raids  and  set 
fire  to  mattnes^es. 

There  aA^*^  sever?!  reasons  why 
campai'^M  po^e.s  shouldn't  be  torn 
down:  For  (me  thing,  posters  co-t 
a  lot  of  iTutney  i  >  print.  Candidates 
are  working  under  tight  bidgets, 
and  every  poster  cojnus  vitally. 


Also,  defacing  and  removing 
campaign  material  is  a  \iolation 
of  student  laws.  The  I'nivetsiiv 
r'Jministration.  wjiich  teels  stu- 
dents are  matme  enouoh  to  con- 
duct and  "indge  themselves  j)roper- 
Iv.  has  gixeii  to  the  students  the 
powef*.  to  regulate  the  elec  tions 
which  choose  the  people  who  riui 
a^  large  part  of  the  Lniversity. 

It's  wrong,  anvwav,  to  go  aroiuid 
tearing  down  other  people's  work. 

We  urge  students  to  re[K)rt.  un- 
der [uovisions  of  the  honor  sys- 
tem, ariv  people  who  tear  down  or 
deface  posters.  And  Ave  urge  the 
honor  councils  to  dish  out  justice 
with  a  strong  hand  it  any  students 
are  found  guilty  ol  pre-electicm 
*'tun. " 


Electronics  Boys  Older 


^vistencfs  ""to  radio  and  viewers 
of  televisi«n^>»t-f>al»lv  A\-rre-«%h*- 
ly  surprised^u  f'av - niihr. 
'  The  n  :vcuks  showed  gieat  en- 
thusja n  in  reporting  the  nation- 
clec  )i)  and  in  interpreting  it  for 
the    listener  Jftewer. 

Lelevisionl  and  radir)  weren't 
rlways  that   way. 

There  was  a  time  when  they 
cfincentrated  on  what  is  common- 
ly called  "entertainment "  to  tlie 
extent  that  a  naiiotial  election  was 
little  more  than  a  medium-sized 
pHKltH  ii(»n.  Modern  electronic  de- 
vices were  ignored  to  save  more 
more  for  more  Jackie  Cileason- 
type  corn  to  sell  more  of  the  spon- 
sor's  prcjduc  ts. 

Rut  both  radio  and  television 
h  vc  shown  remarkable  interest 
in  reporting  the  news  in  past 
weeks. 

Perhaps  it  was  the  eruption  in 
tlie  .Middle  East,  coupled  with  the 
H«nigarian  revolt,  coupled  again 
with  the  ap|^)aching  I'.  S.  elec- 
tion. But  the  ele.c  tronics  boys  mov- 
ed in.  set  up,  cameras  and  micro- 
phones and  wein  hard  to  work. 

Thev  turiled  out  the  I'nited 
Naticms'  s)>ecial  sessions  wiih  skill 
and  keen  iniejprei.'-iion  from  stafl 
analysts.  Ihey  covered  the  world 
in  split-sec cmrfs  with  reports  from 
correspondents  and  commentators. 
They  did  i^/^H  up' in  neat  little 
packages  ih<ll  ntarle  the  fellow  sit- 
ting at  home  feel  he  reallv  knew 
what  was  goiny  on  around  him. 

\VhMe  ele<ti^)n  votes  were  being 
coimted.  tli'i'  -major  television  net- 
works ejnj)loved  the  latest  in  mod- 

The  Daily  Tar  Heel 

The  official  student  publication  of  the 
Publications  Board  of  the  University  of 
North  Carolina,  ^where  it  is  published 
daily  except  Ik^nday  and  examinatiot 
and  vacation  periods  and  summer  terms 
Entered  as  seowid  class  matter  in  the 
oost  office  in  Chapel  Hill,  N.  C,  undei 
the  \q\  oi  March  8  1870.  Subscription 
rates:  mailed.  $4  per  year.  $2.50  a  semes- 
ter; delivered,  ^  a  year,  $3.50  a  semei- 
ter.  f 


Editor  , FRED  POWLEDGE 

Managing  Editor  CHARLIE  SLOAN 

News  Editor   _  .^ RAY  LINKER 


Business  Managfr 


BILL  BOB  VVEL. 


Sports  Editor  - 

Night  Editor  

Proof  Reader  


..    LARRY  CBBEK 


Woody  Sears 
.Ben  Tayloi 


ern  electronics,  not  tor  show  but 
le  «et«f  h«  •ieotiaiiifetory  to^e  |)eo* 
pie  in  ?  hnn-\.  accurately.  The  ra-: 
dio  companies  did  jnst  as  good  a 
job.  even  without  the  visual  aids 
of  scorefjoards  and  pretty  1I»M 
machines. 

Both  segments  of  that  pha>c  of 
the  commuTiications  profession  did 
their  job  well,  and  they  did  it 
(juickly   and   simply. 

They  did  it  well  enough  to  pose 
a  threat  to  the  newspapers  of  this 
country.  For  mrny  newspapers, 
faced  with  a  threat  from  televi- 
sion, have  started  loading  their 
news  columns  with  what  they  call 
■"entertainment, "  l)Ut  what  is  call- 
ed, in  city-room  slang,  "garfjage.  " 
It  includes  more  news  from  Hol- 
lywood, serial  stories  nid  rex  i pes. 

While  a  small  ration  of  "gar- 
f)age "  is  good,  too  much  ol  it  is 
like  watching  Jackie  (.ieason  fi\e 
nights  in  a  row — you  want  tcj  call 
the  garbage  truck. 

We  hope  the  newspapers  will 
take  a  cue  from  radio  a.id  televi- 
sir;n.  and  start  going  after  the  news 
and  interprctaticjn  again.  'Knter- 
tainment  "   is  not  the  atiswcr. 

Gracious 
Living: 
Number  5 

Something  must  be  done  immed- 
iately. 

The  I'niversiiy  is  looking  too 
dignified. 

And  the  messv  wires  strung  up 
along  Ca'rolinas  brick  walks  ate 
fallen,  split  or  leaning  all  o\er  the 
ground. 

How  can  a  (-aroliua  (.'cntleman 
or  a  <>aroline  Coed  possibly  walk 
on  the  grass  with  the  messy  wires 
all  over  the  giound? 

To  the  Buildings  Dept..  we  is- 
sue an  urgent  plea:  Fear  the  wiies 
down,  before  winter  is  here  and 
people  no  longer  want  to  walk  on 
the  grass.  Don't  deny  the  students 
one  of  their  most  precious  rights 
—that  of  feeling  tfie  wet  grass  on 
their  ankles,  the  soft  ground  under 
the  soles. 

Gracious  Living  in  Chapel  Mill 
cannot  suffer  much  longer.  \N'e 
must  walk  on  the  grass. 


Pofeat  Well  Known  Candidate 


Editor: 

In  reference  to  an  article  by 
Mr.  Paul  McCauley.  I  would  like 
to  state  a  few  ambiguities  ex- 
pressed in  his  editorial  which 
might  have  confused  the  reader 
by  its  unrealistic  approach  and 
insensitive  statements. 

I  agree  with  Mr.  McCauley  that 
Dr.  Poteat  is  a  "man  with  talents 
that  are  found  in  few  classrooms."' 
but  do  not  feel  that  it  would  ^ 
''sterilize  the  effectiveness  of 
many  of  these  talents  by  putting 
him  in  an  administrative  posi- 
tion." 

I  feel  that  it  would  rather  in- 
crease the  effectiveness.  It  is  my 
hope  that  the  committee  who  in- 
tends to  make  the  selection  will 
consider  the  past  record  of  a 
per.son  who  has  dealth  directly  to 
.students,  faculty,  and  people 
from  all  sources  maintaining  the 
re.spect    of   all    concerned. 

You  say  you  have  'no  doubts 
as  to  Dr.  Poteat's  qualifications 
— brilliant,  progressive  youns 
man  who  is  respected  by  all  who 
know  him."  How  can  you  then 
make  the  obscurism  that  "the 
Chancellor  should  be  a  young, 
progressive  educator  from  some 
other  area  of  the  nation  who 
could  bring  with  him  fresh 
ideas."' 

Apparently,  you  are  not  fa- 
miliar with  the  influence  of  Dr. 
Poteaf  in  other  areas.  You  closed 
your  article  with  "think  it  over.'" 
This  remark  I  would  like  to  re- 
fer back  to  you. 

I  can  only  speak  from  my  ex- 
perience at  UNC  and  Cornell 
in  Ithaca.  New  York,  which  is 
limiting  and  doesn't  present  the 
whole  which  would  give  more 
credit  and  adequate  justification 
than  I  can. 

However,  outtanding  theolo- 
ians.  philosophers,  and  ministers 
are  not  only  aware  of  his  theor- 
ies  but   compliment   him   highly. 

A  visiting  minister  from  Trini- 
ty Chapel  at  Newark.  New  Jer- 
sey, whose  name  is  Reverend  Co- 
burn  was  speaking  at  Sage  Chap- 
el here  at  Cornell.   He  reflected 


Segregation 
Will  Not  Fit 
In  America 


that  at  an  international  confer- 
ence he  attended  that  Dr.  Po- 
teat was  considered  not  onli^  the 
theologian,  but  outstanding  fig- 
ure who  eould  give  a  framework 
to  that  which  is  needed. 

His  influence  at  Yale,  Prince- 
ton, Northwestern  (where  he 
spent  part  of  the  summer)  and 
other  schools  of  learning  he  has 
familiarized  himself  with  them 
and  to  them. 


"Knowledge  would  be  empty 
if  it  were  not  motivated  by  con- 
cern." This  man  penetrates  to 
the  core  and  transcends  m  an 
achievement  of  interpersonal 
unions. 

Integration  of  a  wider  context 
of  meaning,  understanding  the 
sense  of  significant  structure,  re- 
lating the  brotherhood  of  man. 
is    preceived    in    this    individual 


who  has  obtained  this  intrinsic 
meaningfulness,  bringing  it  to- 
gether in  an  untimely  framework 
for  existence  based  on  a  pro- 
found knowledge  of  the  funda- 
mental. 

Dr.  Poteat  is  possessed  with 
an  inner  strength  which  genuine 
productivity  gives  and  which  in- 
fluences wide  perspectives. 

Cornell     University 
Joan  Palmer 


r\\  B«  Glad  To  Restore  Peace  To  The  Middle  East,  Too' 


.  Ckk4#-V    t         ■»  tt      t 


Editor: 

I  shall  not  take  sides  in  the 
so-called  Segregation  Dispute. 
Instead.  I  shall  merely  try  to 
show  that  for  an  .American — 
white  or  Negro — there  shouldn't 
be  any  such  dispute  and  any 
such  issue  because  there  are  no 
alternatives  for  him  to  choose  be- 
tween. 

The  proof  is  simple,  in  fact 
childishly  simple.  An  American 
is  (supposedly)  some  one  who 
endorses  the  American  Consti- 
tution, the  democratic  way  of 
Kfe,  and  the  Christian  code  of 
ethics.  Now  each  one  of  thes? 
taken  .severally  or  collectively  is 
incompatible     with     segregation. 

Clearly,  then,  an  American 
cannot  be  a  segregationi.st.  and 
a  segregationist  cannot  be  an 
American,  though  of  course  a 
person  can  mbc  illogical  or  a 
pretender. 

All  this  follows  by  definition, 
ju.st  as  it  follows  by  definition 
that  you  can't  have  your  cake 
an  cat  it  loo. 

Jason  Xanakis 


Give   The   Quarterly   A   Chance 


Paul  McCauley 

I  wonder  how  manyt)sludents 
know  what  the  Carolina»Quarter- 
ly  is?  Not  many.  I  bet.  For  your 
edification,  it  is  a  literary  maga- 
zine that  was  founded  on  this 
campus  in  1948  and.viji.  \hit  words 
of  former  Quarterly  jlditor.  Bill 
Scarborough.  "The  magazine  en- 
deavors to  encourage  literary  ex- 
cellence in  new  writers  through 
publishing  the  best  contemporary 
efforts  in  a  matrix  of  high  quali- 
ty criticism  and  material  by  es- 
tablished writers,  such  as  Paul 
Green.  Cjnrad  Aiken,  and  oth- 
ers.'' 

I  was  inquisitive  as  to  why 
there  wasn't  more  material  in 
the  Quarterly  by  Carolina  stu- 
dents, and  I  was  properly.-  inform- 
ed by  Miss  Marcelline  Krafchick, 
editor,  that  you  can't  print  what 
you  don't  have. 


Out  of  two  hundred  contribu- 
tors for  the  first  issue,  only  four 
were  from  the  state  of  North  Car- 
olina. It  seems  rather  odd  lo  me 
that  a  school  that  has  producer, 
some  excellent  writers  —  amont' 
whom  are  Tom  Wolfe.  Paui 
Green.  Max  Steele,  John  Ehle 
and  Jesse  R?hder  —  cannot  get 
enough  suitable  material  from 
the  largest  student  body  it  has 
ever  had  to  fill  its  own  literary 
publication. 

Certainly  the  interest  in  writ 
ing  exists  on  this  campus,  as  is 
evi'Ur.ced  by  the  number  oJ 
creative  writing  courses  taught 
in  the  English.  Journalism.  Rad 
io.  Television  and  .Motion  Pic 
ture.  and  Drama  Departments 
On  the  other  hand,  there  .seemi 
to  be  a  definite  lack  of  interest 
on  the  part  of  the  student  body 
for  anything  that  has  the  slight- 
est air  of  culture  about  it. 


The  members  of  this  student 
body  will  flock  to  see  someone 
like  Fats  Domino  and  will  stay 
away  in  proportionate  numbers 
from  concerts,  lectures  by  visit- 
ing dignitaries,  or  anything  that 
suspiciously  sounds  cultural.  The 
Carolina  Quarterly  falls  into  this 
category,  judging  from  the  small 
number  (350)  of  subscriptions 
sold. 

Students  offered  this  as  their 
pet  cxcu.se  for  not  buying  the 
Quarterly — 'I  don't  have  time  to 
read  anything."  This  feeble  ex- 
cuse can  be  bla.sted  by  checking 
in  Spero's.  Harry's.  The  Tempo 
Room.  etc..  or  by  checking  the 
newstand  sale  of  "Playboy," 
"Swank,"  and  about  a  half-dozen 
other  slicks. 

The  first  issue  of  the  Carolina 
Quarterly  for  this  school  year  is 
coming  out  tomorrow.  At  least 
give  it  a  try. 


Pogo 


By  Walt  Kelly 


Li'l  Abnor 


By  Al  Capp 


WAL-HEF^  'TIS.':''— AN'  A-c'^u^^'-b'J- 
FAT  UDT  O'  GODD  IVLL  DO  SO' ff- 

i>oNT  LET  Go.rr^, 


Support  Team  ;^ 
Wherever  It  Eats 

Editor: 

I  have  hesitated  a  long  time  before  deciding  to 
write  this  letter.  This  concerns  the  football  team 
eating  in  one  of  the  upper  rooms  of  Lenoir  Hall. 

I  think  that  all  through  the  years  since  I've 
been  here  the  football  team  has  eaten  at  "the  train- 
ing table."  By  virtue  of  their  extensive  and  rigid 
training,  the  team  members  have  always  had  to 
follow  a  very  proper  diet.  It  has  happened  that  for 
the  past  several  years  they  have  arranged  to  eat 
in  the  Monogram  Club  and  thus  were  not  considered 
to  be  intruders.  This  year  they  have  had  to  chan^ 
that  arrangement.  '.'!:  1 

I  have  never  heard  of  the  Carolina  students^ 
minority  I'm  sure)  objecting  or  wishing  to  <iQ 
this  group  a  proper  place  to  sit  together  and  cat. 
On  the  contrary,  most  of  the  students  have  always 
wanted  to  do  anything  possible  to  aid  the  football 
team.  After  all,  this  is  "Our  Team." 
'  What  do  you  say  lets  make  the  team  KXaw 
that  we  are  on  their  side,  that  we  want  them  to  win, 
and  that  we'll  be  willing  to  eat  hot-dogs  by  tlie  side 
of  the  road  if  it  will  assist  us  in  defeating  Duke. 

J.  E.  Wadswortit 

WORLD  COMMENT 

Marrying  Habits 
Of  GIs  In  Europe 

Frank  Wamsley  ^  ^ 

At  coffee  break  in  Y-Cc>urt  a  few  days  ago.  1 
joined  a  small  group  of  "girl  watchers"  at  tiieir 
vantage  point.  Some  of  the  most  appreciative-a«4 
appraising  watchers  on  campus  were  present.  MucS 
was  to  be  learned  from  these  discerning  individuals 

It  was  inevitable  that  girls  of  foreign  &nds 
would  be  brought  up  for  consideration.  One  vote  of 
appreciation  was  cast  for  the  Japanese  fairer  sex 
Others  stood  strongly  for  their  own  personal  fav- 
orites. These  were  widely  travelled  men  and  event- 
ually consideration  centered  on  the  European  spe- 
cies. 

Why  American  men  perfer,  or  don't  prefer, 
European  wives  has  long  been  a  point  of  contention 
in  this  country.  Tlie  answer  I  think  is  fairly  simple. 
It  is  more  a  matter  of  time  and  place  than  the  var- 
ious advantages  and  disadvantages  of  American  and 
European  women!^ 

By  this  I  mean  that  when  a  man  reaches  the  a£e 
oV  time  of  life  when  he  wahtslo  marry,  he  marries. 
And,  dependent  upon  the  individual,  li?  mames 
whatever  is  available. 

Many  of  our  servicemen  have  returned  with  for- 
eign brides  and  are  justly  proud  of  them.  They  do 
make  wonderful  wives.  So  do  American  women. 

The  point  is  that  they  were  associating  with 
their  wives-to-be  at  a  susceptible  time  in  their 
lives.  They  were  at  the  marryin'  age  and  they  were 
far  away  from  home.  A  man  appreciates  attention 
and  kindness  at  this  time. 

Witness  two  other  facts.  The  age  at  which  a 
man  is  drafted  in  this  country  approximates  that 
marryin'  age.  Quite  a  few  men  marry  while  in  ser- 
vice, both  here  and"  abroad.  Then  look  at  the  average 
age  for  getting  married  here  in  the  states  Look 
further  at  the  number  of  elopements  of  young  peo- 
ple. 

These  things  all  indicate  something  about  the 
American  man  and  his  customary  ways.  He  marries 
as  a  rule  fairly  young  and  when  he  makes  up  his 
mind  to  do  it— he  does  it.  Selection  of  a  bride  thm 
depends  to  a  great  degree  upon  where  he  may  be. 
Thus  we  have  our  ingredients;  time  and  place. 

This  is  not  intended  to  discredit  the  European 
woman  in  any  way.  It  simply  points  out  one  very 
great  advantage  they  have,  to  a  serviceman  in 
Europe,  that  the  American  woman  cannot  have 
They  are  available. 

When  a  man  wants  to  get  married  h?  enters 
a  state  of  temporary  insanity.  The  spell  lasts  for 
quite  a  few  months  and  then  one  morning  he  wake;. 
up  and  realizrs  what  has  happened  to  him.  He  re 
turns  to  reality  once  more.  This  seems  to  bo  un 
versal. 

In  closing,  a  little  facet  of  European  custom 
The  unrestrained,  unfettered  moral  attitudes  (.f 
the  people  make  for  a  hcalthv  situation.  It  is  not 
nearly  so  difficult  in  Europe  to  meet  new  and  in 
teresting  people. 

Five  o'clock  tea  dances  on  Saturday  and  Sund  iv 
afternoons  provid?  many  opportunities.  Naturalh 
everyone  comes  stag.  The  men  select  their  dancing 
partners  and  in  this  way  they  get  to  know  each 
other.   An  admirable  custom. 

Lonesome  people  that  have  failed  in  other  w  .- 
to  find  the  kind  of  companionship  they  desire,  oftc  n 
advertise  in  th?  newspapers.  These  ads  make  vcrv 
interesting  reading. 

These  ads  usually  give  details  pertinent  to  the 
advertiser  and  the  desired  type  of  person  who  shoul'l 
reply  to  the  ad.  Pictures  are  usually  requested  with 
the  reply,  and  or  a  telephone  number. 

Had  a  friend  in  Berlin  who  was  fluent  in  G.t 
manman  that  made  good  use  of  these  ads.  It  wa.> 
his  practice  to  make  an  appointment  with  the  in 
tended  young  lady  and  give  instructions  as  to  a 
c?rta;n  color  she  should  wear.  This  facilitated  rcc 
ognition. 

At  the  appointed  time,  he  would  station  himself 
near  the  desgmited  meeting  point  and  watch  for 
a  girl  wearing  the  right  color.  Only  if  she  were  at- 
tractive would  he  approach  her. 

On  this  particnlar  day  no  girl  answering  the 
nght  description  showed  up.  My  friend  struck  up. 
m  the  meantime,  a  conversation  with  a  vouag  lad>- 
lojtanng  nearby.  As  it  turned  out  she  was  the  one 
he  was  looking  for.  Two  can  play  at  that  game. 


THURSDAY, 

KenanI 
Annui 

CKenan  DormI 
Dual  fall  dane 
12   p.m. 

All    graduate 
those  who  do 
and  all  men  hi 
attend.  Invitati 
issued  by  the 

Fall  decoratil 

Focu/f; 
On  Dei 

When   the 
next  Tuesd.iy, 
olinian   will   te| 
the    developme 
Carolina  Musci] 

The  muscur 
result    of   the 
a:' million  dolh 
to  build  a  pul 

^      Mf.     Robert 
*  Greenville,    wl 
part   in    gettinj 

2 -Will  delivei 
b  at  the  Caj 
Tuesday. 

^rth  Caroli 


PATROI 
•    ADVEl 


A  G 


R. 
finishec 
educatil 
failure^ 
(R.  L.'if 
is  a  fo| 
R.  L.S  I 
of  Rudl 

R. 
througl 


•J2.  .• 

<:,.=!'. 

,  t 

rJ 

dering 

•tiH' 

came  \ 

f.'*t 

Morri.' 

i-H 

exubei 

if*. 

a.s  you 

fi. 

counte 

R. 

voice  1 

Se; 

wi.^^py 

showi 

back  1 

sir,"  ! 

colleg: 

rheui 


one  I.* 
to  ge 

f  111  !U 

at  th) 

iVncij 

cias.s 

Gamij 

cuius! 

watei 

Orieif 

lab. 

le.<.-<o| 

wcntl 

At 

pien 

tea 

I  tut 

thn 

.<<hin| 

hi.« 
\vor| 

old 


Eats 

deciding  ^& 

tootball  t^aio 

|cnoir  Hall. 

rs   since   I^ve 

at  'the  trkiit- 

|ve  and  riglfl 

[ways    had  to 

F'ned  that  for 

langed   to  eat 

lot  considered 

iad  to  chantt 

students  ia 

ing   to  <Q 

|ther  and  eat. 

have  always 

the  foothaU 

[team   KNOiW 
them  to  win, 
gs  by  the  side 
ating  Duke. 

IE.  Wadswertii 


bit^ 
ope 


days  ago,  1 
Jers"  at  their 
>reciative-«ii4 
I  present.  Mucn 
ig  individuals. 

foreign    lands 

One  vote  of 

Js<?  fairer  sex. 

personal  fav- 

len  and  event- 

lEuropean  spe- 


don't  prefer, 
of  contention 
fairly  simple. 
than  the  var- 
.\mcrican  and 

[caches  the  age; 
rrv.  he  marries. 
il.    h?  marries 

irned  with  for- 
Ithem.  They  do 
[an  women. 

^sociating  with 
time  in  their 
and  they  were 

:iates  attention 

ge  at  which  a 
>roxiinate5  that 
y  while  in  scr- 
;  at  the  average 
le  states.  Look 
;  of  young  pco- 

hing  about  the 
ays.  He  marries 
makes  up  his 
of  a  bride  then 
ere  he  may  be 
and  place. 

[  the  European 
ts  out  one  very 
serviceman  in 
n    cannot   have 

rricd  he  enters 

spell   lasts  for 

orning  he  wakes 

to  him.  He  re- 

?ems  to  be  uni- 

uropcan  custom 
ral  attitudes  of 
uation.  It  is  not 
leet  new  and  in- 

rday  and  Sundiy 

nities.    Naturally 

ct  thsir  dancins 

ct   to  know  each 

led  in  other  W3.vs 
they  desire,  often 
ads  make  very 


TKURSDAY,   NOVEMBER   8,   1956 


?e 

11 


pertinent  to  the 
rion  who  should 
re<iu?sted  w'th 
iber 

ras  fluent  in  ^^^' 
these  ads.  It  ^'^ 
?nt  with  the  in- 
tructions  as  to  » 
facilitated  rcc- 

lid  .-^tation  himself 
nt  and  watch  for 
»h  if  she  were  at- 

;irl  answering  tb« 
friend  struck  up. 
with  a  young  1*^ 
t  she  was  the  ""' 
at  tiiat  game. 


THt  DAILY  TAt  HOH. 


Kenan  Dormitory  Will  Hold 
Annual  Fall  Dance  Tomonow 


CKenan  Dorm  will  present  its  an- 
nual fall  dance  Friday  from  8  till 
12  p.m. 

All  graduate  women,  including 
those  who  do  not  live  in  Kenan, 
and  all  men  have  been  invited  to 
attend.  Invitations  have  also  been 
issued  by  the  Kenan  women. 

Fall  decorations  wil  be  used  in 


the  parlor  of  Kenan.     A 
player  will  provide  music. 


record 


Social  chairman,  Miss  Ann  Shea, 
said,  "The  annual  Ull  and  spring 
dances  sponsored  by  Kenan  Dorm 
are  the  only  graduate  functions 
of  this  type  with  the  exception  of 
those  activities  sponsored  by  Con- 
nor Dorm."  She  said  she  would 
like  to  see  a  good  turnout  for  the 
event. 


Faculty  Club  Will  Hear  Talk 
On  Development  Of  Art  Museum 


When  the  faculty  club  meets 
next  Tuesday,  a  noted  North  Car- 
olinian will  tell  the  story  behind 
the  development  of  the  North 
Carolina  Museum  of  Art. 

The  museum,  in  Raleigh,  is  the 
result   of    the   state    appropriating ' 
a'inillion  dollars  of  public  funds; 
to  build  a  public  art  collection. 

Mr.     Robert     Lee     Huraber     of 
Greenville,    who    played    a    large 
part   in   getting   the   museum   set ! 
ua,  -Will  deliver  the  address  to  the  j 
dbibb  at  the  Carolina  Inn  at  1  p.m. ! 
Tuesday. 

I 

^rth  Carolina  is  the  frist  state 


PATRONIZE  YOUR 
»   ADVERTISERS   • 


to  make  such     an    appropriation 
from  the  tax  payers'  money. 

The  Tuesday  meeting  will  be 
presided  over  by  Dr.  Alexander 
Heard,  president,  who  is  in  the 
Dept.  of  Political  Science. 

Party  For  Pledges  Set 
By  Pi  Phi  For  Tonight 

Pi  Beta  Phi  sorority  will  give  an 
informal  party  for  all  sorority 
pledges  today. 

A  rustic,  fall  theme  will  be 
used  throughout  the  house.  In 
vitations  have  been  issued  and 
guests  are  invited  to  drop  in  be- 
tween 4:30  and  6  p.m. 

Miss  Molly  Spruill,  social  chair- 
man of  Pi  Phi,  said,  "This  is  a 
good  opportunity  for  all  sorority 
pledges  to  meet  again." 


BY  NATIVE  YUGOSLAV: 


Hungarian  Folk  Songs 
To  Be  Performed  Here 
Tuesday  In  Hill  Hall 


OaCsnfQS 


Mlh 


(Author  of  "Banfft  Bn^  if  it*  CKttk,"  ^U.) 


A  GUIDE  FOR  THE  UNMONEYED 


R.  L.  Sigafoos  w^as  a  keen,  ambitions  lad,  und  when  he 
finished  high  school  he  wished  mightily  to  go  on  with  his 
education.  It  seemed,  however,  a  forlorn  hope.  Crop 
failures  had  brought  his  father  to  the  brink  of  disaster. 
(R.  L.'s  father  raised  date  palms  which,  in  North  Dakota, 
is  a  form  of  agriculture  fraugrht  with  ritkJ  Nor  cbttld 
R.  L.'8  mother  help ;  she  had  grown  torpid  since  the  death 
of  Rudolph  Valentino. 

R.  L.  could  go  to  college  only  if  he  worked  his  way 
through.   This  was  a  prospect  that  dismayed  him. 


By  FRANCES  WITHINGTON 

The  music  of  two  Hungarian 
composers  who  went  out  into  their 
countryside  among  the  Magyar 
peasants  and  recorded  their  folk 
songs  is  to  be  presented  at  8  p.m., 
Nov.  13,  by  Miss  Lilian  Pibemik, 
pianist. 

Her  recital  will  be  the  fifth  of 
UNC's  Dept  of  Music  regular 
Tuesday  Evening  Series  peresenta- 
tions,  which  are  open  to  the  pub- 
lic without  charge  in  Hill  Music 
Hall. 

Miss  Pibernik  will  play  Bartok's 
Suite,  op.  14,  and  four  pieces  from 
'^Zongora  Muszika"  by  Kodaiy  be- 
cause of  her  interest  in  modern 
music. 

The  whole  character  of  this  mu- 
sic is  of  the  folk  type.  The  manner 
of  composition  itself  is  serious 
and  does  not  depend  on  the  folk 
music  for  its  appeal.  "The  air  of 


Art  Prints 
On  Exhibit 


A  collection  of  prints  by  Marc 
Chagall  is  now  on  exhibition  in 
Pearson  Hall. 

Among  the  prints  are  illustra- 
tions from  such  well-known  sourc- 
es as  "La  Fountaines  Fables"  and 
the  Bible.  Also  in  the  exhibition 
are  several  reproductions  of  Cha- 
gall's paintings. 

The  exhibition  will  continue 
through   Nov,  25. 


the  peasant  is  incorporated  within 
the  compositions,  rather  than  « 
literal  borrowing  of  material,"  the 
pianist  explains. 

Schubert's  Sonata  in  A  Major 
will  be  Miss  Pibernik's  first  pre- 
sentation. After  intermission,  she 
will  play  the  Toccata  in  D  Major 
by  Bach,  followed  by  the  Bartok 
and  Kodaiy  Composition. 

Miss  Pibemik  is  a  native  of 
Zagreb,  Yugoslavia,  where  she  en- 
tered the  music  conservatory, 
"When  I  very  very  little,  some  six 
years  or  so,"  she  smiled.  From 
1945  to  1950,  she  studied  at  the 
Mozarteum   in    Salzburg,    Austria. 

The  pianist  came  to  this  coun- 
try in  1950  to  enter  the  fall  term 
at  Vassar  College,  Poughkeepsie, 
N.  Y.,  where  she  received  an  A.B. 
degree,  class  of  1952.  Miss  Piber- 
nik then  taught  music  and  theory 
at  Miss  Walls  School,  Pittsfield, 
Mass.,    from    1952-54. 

She  came  to  Chapel  Hill  that 
same  year  as  a  graduate  assistant 
in  the  Dept.  of  Music.  Miss  Piber- 
nik expects  to  receive  a  Master's 
Etegree  in  Music  this  term.  Then 
she  will  continue  study  in  music- 
ology  for  her  Ph.D.  degree. 

The  petite  young  pianist  has  ap- 
peared as  soloist  at  recitals  in  Salz- 
burg and  in  Pittsfield.  She  played 
the  harpsichord  with  the  Colleg- 
ium Musicum  in  Chapel  Hill  last 
spring,  and  was  one  of  the  guest 
artists  to  play  at  a  series  of  radio 
broadcasts  sponsored  by  the  Ral- 
eigh  music  clubs. 

Her  appearance  at  Hill  Music 
Hall  will  be  her  debut  recital  in 
Chapel  Hill. 


■  m 


Five  UNC  Faculty  Staffers 
Tops  In  Health  Association 


Five  members  of  the  faculty  of 
the  UNC  School  of  Public  Health 
play  an  important  part  in  the  af- 
fairs of  the  American  Public 
Health  Association  which  meets 
next  week  in  Atlantic  City. 

The  meeting  will  be  held  Nov. 
12-16.  This  organization  is  the 
largest  association  of  professional 
public  health  workers  in  the 
world. 

This  will  be  not  only  a  meeting 
of  the  APHA,  but  of  several  al- 
lied organizations. 

Dr.  E.  G.  McGavran,  dean  of  the 
UNC  school,  is  national  presdient 
of  the  Delta  Omega  Society,  hon- 


lii^£  fe^cmkiioni  to  tklksr^afiftir^^.. . 


Racked  with  mi.sgivings,  R.  L.  paced  the  streets,  pon- 
dering his  dilemma.  One  day,  walking  and  brooding,  he 
came  upon  a  park  bench  and  sat  down  and  lit  a  Philip 
Morris.  (There  is  no  occasion,  happy  or  sad,  pensive  or 
exuberant,  when  Philip  Morris  is  not  entirely  welcome, 
as  you  will  discover  when  you  go  to  your  favorite  tobacco 
counter  and  buy  .some.) 

R.  L.  was  suddenly  interrupted  by  a  small,  quavering 
voice  which  said,  "My  boy,  you  are  troubled.  Can  1  help?" 

Seated  beside  R.L.  was  a  tiny,  gnafled  man  with 
wi.spy,  snow-white  hair.  His  skin  was  almost  transparent, 
showing  a  delicate  tracery  of  fragile  bones  beneath.  His 
back  was  bent,  and  his  hands  trembled.  "Do  you  think, 
sir,"  said  R.L.,  "that  a  boy  can  work  his  way  through 
college  and  still  enjoy  a  rich,  full  campus  life?" 

"Why,  bless  you,  son,"  replied  the  stranger  with  a 
rheumy  chuckle,  "of  course.   In  fact,  1  did  it  myself." 

"Was  it  very  hard?"  asked  R.  L. 
"Yes,  it  was  hard,"  the  stranger  admitted.  "But  when 
one  is  young,  all  things  are  possible.  I,  for  example,  used 
to  get  up  at  five  o'clock  every  morning  to  stoke  the 
furnace  at  the  SAE  house.  At  six  I  had  to  milk  the  ewes 
at  the  school  of  animal  husbandry.  At  seven  I  gave  a 
fencing  lesson  to  the  Dean  of  Women.  At  ei^t  I  had  a 
/•lass  in  early  Runic  poets.  At  nine  I  gave  haircuts  at  the 
Gamma  Phi  Beta  house.  At  ten  I  had  differential  cal- 
culus At  eleven  1  posed  for  a  life  class.  At  twelve  I 
watered  soup  at  the  Union.  At  one  I  had  a  class  in 
Oriental  languages.  At  two  I  exercised  the  mice  m  psych 
lab  At  three  I  gave  the  Dean  of  Women  another  fencing 
lesson  At  four  I  had  qualitative  analysis.  At  five  I 
went  clamming.  At  six  I  cut  meat  for  the  football  team. 
At  seven  I  ushed  at  the  movies.  At  eight  I  had  my  ears 
pierced  so  that  at  nine  1  could  tell  fortunes  in  a  yypsy 
Tea  room.  At  ten  I  had  a  class  in  astronomy.  At  eleven 
1  tucked  in  the  football  team.  At  twelve  I  studied  and  at 
three  I  went  to  sleep." 

"Sir,"  cried  R.  L.,  "I  am  moved  and  inspired  by  your 
shining  example!" 

"It  was  nothing,"  said  the  stranger  modestly,  ahaking 
his  frail  white  head.  "It  was  just  hard  work,  and  hard 
work  never  hurt  anybody." 

"Would  you  mind  telling  me,  sir,"  said  R.L.,  "how 
old  you  are  now  ?" 

"Twenty-two,"  .said  the  stranger.       ^^^  ^^^^  ^^^^ 

THe  maker,  of  Philip  Morri.  ,.*-  pU^ur.  ^'^^rou^ 
,HU  uncen^ora.  freewheeling  e^n  '^^^  ^^% 
school  rear -and  alu»  in  bringing  rou  updmr  •  "^  f^J^ 
M^.,packed^ihnaU.raltobaecogo^ne.,.Upendu»tipend, 


Trend  For  Students 
To  Study  In  English 

The  number  of  junior  and  sen- 
ior students  at  the  University  who 
elect  the  field  of  English  language 
and  literature  as  their  major  sub- 
ject has  taken  another  upward 
surge.  Dr.  Macon  Cheek  of  the 
English  faculty  reported  yester- 
day. 

This  year  303  students  in  the 
College  of  Arts  and  Sciences  and 
the  School  of  Education  have  se- 
lected English  as  their  field  for 
concentrated  study.  Of  these,  254 
are  students  in  the  College  of  Arts 
and  Sciences  and  49  are  in  the 
School  of  Education. 

The  mounting  numbers  of  Eng- 
lish majors  appears  to  be  part  of 
a  trend  at  the  University.  Last 
year  there  were  252  English  ma- 
jors. Three  years  ago,  in  1953, 
there  were  only  155  English  ma- 
jors. 


orary  public  health  society  estab- 
lished to  recognize  scholastic 
achievement  in  the  field.  Annual 
meeting  of  this  organization  with 
Dr.  McGavran  presiding  will  be  in 
connection  with  the  Public  Health 
Association  meeting. 

Dr.  John  J.  Wright,  professor 
and  head  of  the  UNC  Department 
of  Public  Health  Administration, 
is  chairman  of  the  American  Pub- 
lic Health  Association's  commit- 
tee on  eligibility  which  passes  on 
the  qualifications  of  all  applicants 
for  membership  and  fellowship  in 
the  organization.  Dr.  Wright  is 
also  secretary  of  the  American 
College  of  Preventive  Medicine 
whose  annual  meeting  will  be 
held  in  connection  with  the  as- 
sociation gathering  in  Atlantic 
City. 

Dr.  Bernard  Greenberg,  profess- 
or and  head  of  the  UNC  Depart- 
ment of  Biostatistics,  is  vice-chair- 
man of  the  Statistics  Section  for 
the  association  and  has  been 
nominated  to  serve  as  chairman 
for  the  next  year. 

Dr.  Lucy  Morgan  of  the  UNC 
Department  of  Health  Education 
and  Miss  Frances  MacKinnon,  on 
leave  from  the  Department  of 
Public  Health  Nutrition,  are  cur- 
rently serving  on  the  Governing 
Council  of  the  APHA. 

Dr.  Sidney  S.  Chipmart.  profess- 
or and  head  of  the  UNC  Depart- 
ment of  Maternal  and  Child 
Health,  has  been  nominated  to 
serve  as  a  five-year  member  of 
the  APHA  Section  Council  in  Ma- 
ternal and  Child  Health. 


Big  Beat  Dbok'  Day 
Scheduled  For  Nov.  20 


The  annual  "Beat  Dook"  parade 
will  be  staged  this  year  on  Nov. 
20,  according  to'  Herman  A.  God- 
win Jr.  Of  the  sponsoring  Pi  Kap- 
pa Alpha  fraternity. 

About  30  or  more  floats  are  ex- 
pected to  enter,  and  the  fraternity 
has  about  15  entrants  in  the  queen 
contest. 

The  queen  will  be  chosen  along 
(vith  six  attendants  Thursday,  Nov. 
15,  following  a  supper  of  the  con- 
testants at  the  fraternity.  The 
queen /and  court  will  not  be  an- 
nounced until  they  appear  in  the 
parade. 

Each  dormitory,  fraternity,  and 
sorority  were  eligible  to  enter  the 
queen  contest  if  they  had  entered 
a  float. 

Although    there    were    only    15 
entrants  in  the  queen  contest  late 
yesterday,  Godwin  said  he  expect- 
ed several  more  by  the  deadline 
late  last  night.   Several  more  en- 


tries in  the  float  contest  are  ex- 
pected, also. 

"This  will  be  one  of  the  major 
events  of  the  season  in  color,  in- 
terest and  participation,"  Godwin 
said. 

The  entrants  in  the  parade  in- 
elude  two  local  bands,  the  cheer- 
leaders, about  eight  students 
clowns,  the  AFROTC  and  NROTC 
marching  outfits^  and  floats  from 
four  main  divisions:  fraternity,  so- 
rority, men's  dorms  and  women's 
dorms. 

Trophies,  which  will  be  awarded 
to  the  floats  judged  the  best  in 
each  division,  are  now  on  display 
in  Y  Court.  The  trophies  will  be 
awarded  on  the  steps  of  the  g>'ni 
following  the  parade,  Godwin  said. 

The  floats  are  expected  to  be 
very  original  and  elaborate,  ac- 
cording to  Godwin.  Local  as  well 
as  out  of  town  prominent  people 
will  do  the  judging  of  the  queen 
contest  and  the  float  contest,  he 
said.  ,  .t»  w.- 


^'^  ;y*w>'-yv»y^'*'*»'^yy  *  *  •■^wgr'-*"'*  v   ^v^^^  ■>fv^-^ttr,i,j^f.'f^v    '^/ifi9i$!f^'^  ^^f*  ^^  ^^^^ 


BA.TBUM'TIiY   PRICED    FOR    SOLID    SAVINGS! 


PIE  APPLES^2%43 


No.  2 

20-Oz 

Cans 


PRUNES 


A&P 


LAR8E         -   -   - 


l-Lb. 
Pkg. 


Jane  Parker  Fje.3h'y  Baked  Orange 

Chiffon  Cake ^^  43c 

Jane  Parker  Delicious  —  %'s  of  E^rery  Cake  is  Fruits  and  Nuts 

Fruit  Calces '^^^  S1.35 


31' 

REDUCED!  Ann  Page  Pork  and 

Beans    rlQc 


SPECIAL  DEAL  PACK  -  A&P's  Own 


dexo  Shortening 


lOc    OFF   LABEL 
—  DEAL  — 


3-Lb. 
Can 


69c 


WISCONSIN  'DAIRY  WEEK'  PRESENTS— White  House  Evaporated 


MILK 


A&P  PRODUCT 
OF  WISCONSIN 


6  a  77« 


HEINZ  57  SAUCE  »^»  ^ot  29c 
HEINZ  KETCHUP  '♦-^^  ^ot  25e 
HEINZ  CHILI  SAUCE  '*  oz  boi  37^ 


LA-CHOY  BEEF  CHOP  SUEY  '  ">  ''"'SZc 
LA-CHOYch.w  Met. NOODLES'^'  ^an  |7j 
LA-CHOY  BEAN  SPROUTS  J-^""  can,5c 


, LIBBY ; 

f    —CANNED  MEATS—    ^ 

I  Roast  Beef "^^  ^.043^ 

Deviled  Ham  _.   '^-o^  can  17c 
'  Corned  Beef  Hosh  »-">  c.n  30c  | 
I  Potted  Meat  __   ^-^  *=*l4c  | 
Vienna  Sausage  2  *"***  ^"^^Ic 

,    VIENNA  SAUSAGE    ,' 


With  B.B.Q. 
Sauce 


5-Oz. 
Can 


20c   I 


Joy  Liquid  Detergent 


'bo?  30c 


Spic  &  Span  Cleanser ptt   27c 

Bab-0  Cleanser 2  lit  25c 

Lux  Toilet  Soap ..1  S:fi   17c 

Lux  Toilet  Soap  - 1 . . :  i ! :  2  r.S  25c 


Lifebuoy  Soap 3 


Reg. 
Bars 


28c 


Lifebuoy  Soap ^^Tr  14c 

Swan  Medium  Soap B"  9c 

Swan  Large  Soap »"  15c 

Octagon  Laundry  Soap ^f^  10c 

Crisco Shortening,  ^^l;  35c  ^c^,^„  93c 
Mrs.  Filbert's  Margarine  ..lI?  Pkg  29c 

AHsweet  Margarine Lb^pil  28c 

/   ^^  ^^  ^^  ^^ 

PUbbvry    Biscuits  "SSi"  -  2  f^>  25c 

Ballard's  Biscuits  'Sl^  -.  2  pk«»  25c 

Pillsbury  Cinnamon  Rolls  .2  m>  49c 

Pillsbury  Caramel  Nut  Rolls    pi^  39c 
Underwood  Deviled  Horn  ..'  '^Z  17c 


A&P'S  "SUPER-RIGHT"  Meats 


"Super-Ri^t"  All  Meat 

Franks  '^-  39e 

"Super-Right"  Pure  Pork 
Breakfast  LINK 

8-02. 


Sausage  >^^  |29c 

Swift's  Premium  4  to  8  Lb.  Avg. — Fully  Cooked 

PICNICS  -  35e 

'Super-Right"  Fresh  Loin  End  Pork  • 

ROASTS     29e 

Cap'n  John's  Fillet  of  Ocean         "Super-Right"    Center  Cut 

Rib  Pork 

Perch  »'  35c   Chops  "'■  49c 

I  Fresh  FRUITS  &  VEGETABLES  | 

Large  Size  Juicy  Florida  Fresh 

0RANGES^43e 

Brimful  of  Rich  Juice,  Florida  Fresh 

G'FRULT  '^  47« 


Large  Fresh  Cauliflower . .    "^   25c 
Juicy  Ripe  Cranberries .. 
No.  1  White  Potatoes  -.. 
Golden  Firm  Carrots  .-. 


-  ^"4  25c 

-  tit  79c 

-  '^,    19c 


Cut-Rite 


WAXED     125-Ft.    ---^^ 
PAPER         Rot!       ^aC 


25 


J 


20  Mule  T«am  Borax i-u*.  b<«  20c  »""  *»*  37c  i 

Boraxo  Powdered  Hond  Soap »-ot.  c«»  ]^q 

Clorox  Bleach  <»*-»•*•    ]7c^-<^^^d]c^ 


•WISCONSIN  DAIRY  WEEK  AT  A&P. 


INSTANT  WHITE  HOUSE  DRY  NON-FAT 

MILK  SOLIDS 

EXTRA  SPECIAL!  WISCONSIN  FRESH  AMERICAN 

MILD  CHEESE 

H8INZ  WORCESTERSHIRE  SAMCE  -  8o«  "o*  29c 

i  DOWNYFLAKE  FROZEN  WAFFLES  2 «  o^  •*''««  29c 

SUNSHINE  HYDROX  COOKIES  _— ^'^  o*  *'''«25e 

STRIETMANN  honey  GRAHAMS  .  •^'»  •*''«  35c 

■  NABISCO  WAVERLY  WAFERS  --  "-o*  p»«  25e 
BURRY  VANILLA  WAFERS t^  Pk«.  21c 


A  PRODUCT  OF 

WISCONSIN 

AMERICA'S    DAIRY    LAND 


9.6 
Ctn. 


r2a 


A  PRODUCT  OF 

WISCONSIN 

AMERICA'S  DAIRY  STATE 


^^^ 


Mi 


MKm 


TMt  DAILY  TAt  HttL 


THURSDAY,  NOVEMBER  t,  1f$< 


] 


VK^-Ml^Jw^  Brousht  In 

^PICm  KiN^tfMcl  Carious 

OiQ  Ilaw  books 

In  Our  Old  Book 

^miTIMATE 
MOKSHOP 

205   E.   Frarklin   St. 


Covering  The  University  Campus 


STUDENT  WIVES  CLUB 

The  Student  Wives  Club  will 
meet  today  at  8  p.m.  in  the  Vic- 
tory Village  Nursery.  The  club 
has  invited  all  student  wives  to 
attend. 

DAILY  TAR  HEEL  STAFF 

Members  of  the  Daily  Tar  Heel 
staff  will  meet  today  at  2  p.m.  in 


the   newsroom   of   the   offices   in 
Graham  Menlorial.  ! 

WESLEY  FOLKDANCE  GROUP 

The  Wesley  Folkdance  Group 
will  meet  tomorrow  ni^t  at  7:30 
in  the  basement  of  the  University 
Methodist  Church. 

PHYSICS  COLLOQUIUM 

Dr.  S.  T.   Butler  of  the  Univer- 


New  Harmony  trio 


V 


\  4 


;.  headlinars  all! 


I 


Style-wise  collegians  everywhere 
are  ap{^auding  Arrow  thi» 
year.  For  close  harmony  in  color, 
its  smart  button-down  Glen  ca:n't 
be  matched.  And,  the  Squire 
sport  model  has  style  to  ^are, 
with  its  trim,  s)K>rt-pornt  collar 
and  imported  cotton  flannel. 
Appearing  with  them:  an  eternal 
campus  favorite^  the  Unitoenky 
crew  neck  sweater. 

Glen,  t%3S  and  15.00;  5jKr*, 
^5.95;  l7»«/#rji/7  sweater,  II 1 .95 ; 
woTen  twill  ties,  ^l.SO^ 


sity  of  Sydney  will  be-  the  speaker 
tomorrow  night  at  8  p.m.  at  the 
UNC-Duke  Physicsc  Colloquium. 
Using  as  his  topic  "Quasi-Chemi- 
cal Equilibrium  Theory  of  Super- 
conductivity," Dr.  Butler  will  talk 
in  Phillips  Hall,  room  206. 

YMCA  CABINET  • 

The  YMCA  Cabinet  will Jtaeet 
today  at  4  p.m.  in. Aon  Queen's 
Office  in  the  Y.       "'■" 

WAA  GOLF 

Miss  Pauline  Simms,  golf  man- 
ager, has  announced  the  extension 
I  of  time  for  the  first  round  of  the 
WAA  golf  tournament  to  Monday, 
Nov.  12. 

WUNC-TV 

12:45— Music. 

1:00— Today  On  the  Farm. 

1:30— Music  In  View. 

2:00— Medicine. 

2:30— Art  Museum. 

5:45 — Music. 

5:45 — Music. 

6:00 — Magic  Lantern. 

6:15— Sports  Clinic. 

6:80— News. 

6:45 — Sports. 

7:00— Garden  Wall. 

7:15— Bible  Course. 

8:00— Dr.  Shivers. 

8:4,5 — State  Government. 

9:30— Lecture  Hall. 

10:00— Final  Edition. 


•  W~" 


i^iiifi 


ARROW 


—first  in  fashion 

TliS 


SHJITS 


SIACKS 

.A  inn.. 


w^ 


Gives  you  more  \o  enjoy 


Quality  Tobacco 
Real  Filtration 


Fyjj  King  Size 


PiLtiir  tip 

TAREYTON 


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the  taste  is  great !  U 
FILTER  TIpTAREYTON 


South  Africans  Stop  Here 
On  Tour  O^  U.  S.  Southland 


Now,  Hofd  Itf 

His  shrtwish  wife,  M«9««r«,  looks  on  rtluctantly  as  Androclos 
romovM  •  Hiem  from  a  lion's  paw.  Featured  in  The  Caroline  Play- 
makers'  production  of  "Andrecle*  and  the  Lion,"  Nov.  14  through 
18,  ere  Dick  N*wdick,  Augusta,  Me.,  as  Androcles;  Paige  Williams, 
Ft.  Thontes,  Ky.,  e*  Megaera;  end  David  Smell,  Mereheed  City,  es 
tho  lion. 

G.  B;  Show  Comedy  'Androcles' 
Will  Be  Given  By  Piaymakers 

Barbara/*  and  the  musical  adap- 
tation ("My  Fair  Lady")  of  "Pyg- 
malion." 

Besides  commemorating  Shaw's 
centennial  with  this  production, 
the  Piaymakers  are  celebrating 
their  25th  year  of  touring  in  tbe 
South.  At  the  conclusion  of  their 
Chapel  Hill  performances  they  will 
embark  on  a  two-week  tour  of  10 
towns  in  the  Carolinas,  Virginia 
and  Geori^a. 

Tickets  for  the  five  local  per 
formances  arc  available  at  214 
Abemethy  Hall,  Ledbetter-Pick- 
ard's.  and  Box  1050;  Chapel  IflU. 


The  Carolina  Piaymakers,  in 
their  forthcoming  production  of 
"An^i^ocles  and  The  Lion,"  Nov. 
14-18  at  the  Piaymakers  Theatre, 
will  be  presenting  the  Shaw  com- 
edy for  the  third  time  in  Play- 
maker  history. 

In  the  outdoor  Forest  Thea&e, 
aei^slt  f!^m  the  Monogram  Club, 
the  UNC  drama  group  produced 
the  play  successfully  ill  1987  and 
1989.  Both  productions  received 
wide  acclaim,  and  arc  recalled  by 
Chapel  Hillians,  including  Dr. 
Archibald  Henderson,  official  bi- 
ographer of  Shaw. 

Or.  Henderson  will  introduce 
the  plaj'  with  a  few  comments  be- 
fore the  performance  on  opening 
night,  next  Wednesday.  His  vol- 
ume, George  Bernard  Shaw:  Man 
of  the  Century,  will  be  released  by 
the  publisher  o^xjL^Tbursday. 

The  appearance  of  Dr.  Hender- 
son's book  is  part  of  an  interna- 
tional celebration  of  the  centen- ! 
nial  of  Shaw's  birth  in  1856  in 
Dublin.  In  New  York  there  are 
three  Shaw  plays  currently  run-[ 
niag:   'The  Apple   Cart,"   "Major. 


^  RANDOM 
-    SHOTS 

rt  By  John  Bragaw 

Tptl  tales  and  earthy  bits,  mostly 
•bout  North  Carolina,  by  the  sage 
of  Washington,  N.  C. 
Our  Special 

$1.98 

THE  INTIMATE 
BOOKSHOP 

205   6.   Franklin   St. 
Open  Till  10  P.M. 


English  Club 
Meets  Tonight 

Prof.  C.  Hugh  Holman  of  the 
Department  of  English,  will  read 
a  paper  entitled  "The  Unity  of 
Faulkner's  "Light  in  August' "  at 
the  regular  meeting  of  the  Eng- 
Ksh  Club  at  8  p.m.  today  in  the 
Library  Assembly  Room. 

Guests  for  the  meeting  will  in- 
clude members  of  the  Duke  Uni- 
versity Graduate  English  Club 
and  their  president.  Miss  Carolyn 
Herbert. 

Dr.  Holman,  whose  seven  years 
with  the  University's  English  staff 
have    recently   culminated    in   his 
promotion  to  full  professorship,  is  i 
author    and    co-author    of    several  j 
books   in   the   field   of   literature. 
His    recent     publications     include  | 
articles  on  Wolfe,  Steinbeck,  and 
James  T.  Farrell. 

As  is  customary  at  meetings  of 
the  English  Club,  the  audience 
will  be  invited  to  ask  questions. 
Refreshments  will  be  served  at 
7:30. 


By  FRAMCeS  STA^FOltO 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  Fred  van  Wyk 
from  the  Union  of  Soutk  Africa 
were  visitors  oo  the  UNC  campus 
from  last  Thursday  through  yes- 
terday. 

Van  Wyk  is  assistant  director  of 
the  South  African  Institute  of 
Race  Relations  at  Johannesburg, 
which  does  research  and  carries 
on  inter-racial  committee  work 
through  joint  white  and  native 
councils  which  are  scattered 
throughout  the  country. 

The  Institute  has  sponsored  a 
very  successful  progi^im  to  teach 
African  natives  to  read  and- write 
their  own  languages  in  only  a  few 
hours.  It  is  hoped  that  within  a 
few  years  the  amount  of  illiteracy 
among  natives  will  be  greatly  re- 
duced. 

Van  Wyk  is  on  a  leave  of  ab- 
sence to  tour  £>urope  and  this 
countrj',  where  he  is  imder  the 
auspices  of  the  Carnegie  Founda- 
tion of  New  York.  T^e  main  pur- 
pose of  his  trip  is  to  observe 
American  life  and  our  progress  in 
the  field  of  race  relations. 

According  to  Dr.  Guy  Johnson  of 
the  University  Sociology  Dept., 
Van  Wyk  was  quite  pleased  with 
the  rapid  progress  of  race  rela- 
tions in  this  country. 

The  present  government  of  the 
Union   of  South   Africa  tends   to>! 
favor  greater    segregation   of   the 
races,    favoring    division    of    the 
country   into  racial  ^eas.    How- 


ever, Van  Wyk  feels  that  there  is 
a  growing  understanding  and  co- 
operation between  the  races  which 
will  prevail. 

The  two  white  factions  in  the 
Union  lof  South  Africa  are  the 
English  speaking  and  those  of 
Dutch  descent,  who  speak  Afri- 
kaan.  The  English  are  more  lib- 
eral than  the  Afrikaans,  who  are 
someAvhat  reactionairy  and  advo- 
cate white  supremacy. 

During  his  visit,  Van  Wyk  spoke 
to  a  number  of  groups  and  classes 
here  and  at  Duke  University  and 
N.  C.  College  in  Durham.  He 
showed  a  great  interest  in  our 
presidential  elections,  sitting  up 
late  Tuesday  night  to  watch  the 
returns. 


Willis  Stevens  To  Play 
For  Muticales  Series 

Willis  Stevens,  piimist,  will  be 
presented  in  GMAB's  third  pro- 
gram of  Les  Petites  Itusicales 
Sunday  at  8  p.m.  in  the  main 
lounge  of  Or^am  Memorial. 

Stevens^  instructor  of  musie  at 
Salem  CoUef^  will  interp(«et  m- 
lections  by  Bach,  Beethoven,  Cho- 
pin, and  Schumann. 

Tliere  is  no  admission  cbargtf 
for  the  program,  and  studfents  and 
townspeople  have  been  invited  to 
attwwj.  .    '   '  ■     ■> 


RuUk  CprHm^tee  Mm» 
This  Affemoon  In  GM 

The  Rules  Committee  of  tbe 
Student  Legislature  will  meet  to- 
day at  4:45  p,rt.  iii  the  Woodhbuse 
Cgiferenbe'  Room,  iceordlflg'  to 
Miss  Martha  Barber, .  (^airman. 


BEAUTY  QUEEN 

(Catitimied  from  Page   1) 

West,  and  Marsha  McCord. 

Zeta  Beta  Tau:  Miss  Joan  Wen- 
der. 

Young  Republicans  Club:  Misses 
Penny  Norman,  Lib  Russell,  Sally 
English  and  Alvene  Williams. 

Mclver  Hall:  Miss  Luc  Cross- 
land.  " 

Sigma  Phi  Epsilon:  Misses  Anne 
Drake.  Doris  Adkins,  and  Ginger 
Walser. 

Delta  Kappa  Epsilon:  Miss  Sug- 
ar Dudley. 

2^ta  Psi:  Miss  Ruth  Parham 
Watkins. 

Phi  Gamma  Delta:  Misses  Celia 
Hahn,  Patricia  Howard  and  Car- 
olyn Wise. 

Alderman  Dorm:  Misses  Elaine 
Meldahl  and  Eve  McClatchey. 

Sigma  Chi:  Miss  Ina  Gee  Rid- 
ley. 

Alpha  Tau  Omega:  Miss  Mary 
Ruth  Divine. 

Carr  Dorm:  Misses  Barbara 
Ward  Maddison  and  Louise  Flet- 
cher. 

Theta  Chi:  Misses  Helen  White 
and  Jo  Ann  Deason. 

Mangum  Dorm:  Miss  Kay 
Adams. 

Phi  Kappa  Sigma:  Misses  Ann 
Almond,  Betty  Jane  Maddison, 
and  Barbaree  Prestwood. 

Ruff  in  Dorm:  Miss  Jackie  AW- 
ridge. 

Kappa  Sigma:  Misses  Mar>'  Lou- 
ise Bizzel  and  Margaret  Brunson. 

Phi  Kappa  Alpha:  Miss  Penn 
Anthony,  Jane  Welch,  Libby  Mc- 
p(AvelI,  Pat  Dillon,  and  Gall  WiH- 
ingham. 


Langencferf^r  Assistant  Dean; 
Replaces  Late  A.  W.  Pierpont 


Dr.  Harc^d  Q.  Lan^onderfer,  as- 
sociate professor  of  accounting^ 
has  heih  liamed  assistant  dean 
of  the  UNC  School  of  BTlsrncss 
Administration. 

Langenderfer  succeeds  the  late 
Associate  Prof.  A.  W.  Pierpont, 
who  died  here  last  month. 


Langenderfer    is 
has  two  children. 


married    and 


DAILY    CROSSWORD 


'/r   .    ■/■'.,?-...-.      7.;';,t:,%-  <',;,Y;,^,:y 


ACROSS 

I.  Pant  for  air 
5.  Crust  on 

ft  sore 
9.  French 

Minus! 

income 
10.  Harmonised 
ll  Follow 
13.  Come  in 
14. 6uidea 
l!k  Ablaze 
1«.  Like 
17.  e«Mmo 

knife 
IftCOmpMi 

point 

(»bbr.> 
ig.  Coronets 
23.  SahratioA 

Army 

(abbr.) 
35.  Literary 

composition 
26.  InheritoT* 
2».  Greek  letter 
SO.  Kind  of 

hound 

II.  Society  of 

V  Jesus 

■   (abbr.) 
39.  Aegean 

^  isumd 

m.  PreposiUon 
M.  Disembarks 
si  A  dervish 
41.  On  the  left 
side    (naut.) 

V  4i.  Girl's  name 
4lOral  (Law) 
44.  Revolves 

,4$.  Back  of 
:    tBe  neck 
44.  Apportioa 
DOWN 
i.  )^K  of 
tM  BiWe 
2.  A  bAudle  «. 


3.  Omamen- 
Ul  nail 

4.  BtUs  ot 
anchors 

5.  Pilfer 

6.  Perplexes 

7.  Against 
(prefix) 

8.  Malt 
bev«ra4r«» 

•.TeU 
11.  Hauled 
llPel#QRlI 
pronoun 

20.  Viper 

21.  Picnic 
spoiler 

22.  AffinMatiTe 
vote  (v«r.) 


24.  Sloths 

26.  Ex. 
clama- 
tion 

27.  Svstem 
of 
lines 

in  an 
optical 
iniitxi' 
ment 
SS.»iop« 

20.  snttu 

boy 
SI.  Strike 
32.  OtienUl 

country 
34.  AgAve 

corddgo 


T««t«reay*a  4aaw«^ 

S7.  Girl's  nam*! 

38.  Land  under 
cultivation 

39.  Fragrant 
wood  <B.L) 

40.  Highland 
skirt 


A  member  of, the  UNC  faculty 
since  1853,  Langenderfer  is  a  na- 
tive of  Indiana  and  holds  degrees 
from  Miami  Uftivcrsity  in  Ohio, 
Not^hvu'cstern  University  and  In- 
diana University.  He  is  a  certified 


eussrfHEDS 


WANtBI>— RlOe  TO  KBNTUGKY 
for  Th^s^ving  vacation.  Will 
share  expenses  and  driving.  Call 
Stan  Ber^haw,  Pilam  Hous^,  ft- 
9025. 


LOST— 4  MONTHS  OLD  DOiJEB- 
man  pincher  pappy.  Female, 
reddish-brown.  Answers  to  name 
of  Tayn*.  Strayed  from  vicinity 
of  Mason  Farm  Rd.  Sunday.  Re- 
ward. This  dog  mosl  be  lound. 
Call  9-2G66. 


FOia  BJSI«T  TO  YEAR-ROUND 
Resident:  Cosy  backyard  cottage, 
furnished,  short  walk  to  med. 
school,  comfortable  and  quiet. 
Pleasant  surrountiing>  Call  3311 
between  6  and  7  p.n.       1-^5-1 


DR.  LANGENDERFER 

public  accountant  and  has  his  doc- 
torate in  business  acLministration. 

He  is  co-autbor  of  .a  recent  ar- 
ticle in  The  Accounting  Review, 
which  caused  widespread  atten- 
tion in  accounting  ciscles  because 
of  its  criticism  of  present  teach- 
ing and  training  methods  in  ac- 
countancy and  its  recommenda- 
tions for  a  revision  of  Accounting 
curricula  and  textbooks  in  Ameri- 
can schools  of  accounting. 

Besides  holding  membership  in 
professional  fraternities,  he  is  also 
a  member  of  the  American  Ac- 
counting Assn.  and  the  N.  C 
Assn.   of  C.   P.   A.s. 


Phone 

g-1357 

LoeitM  4tfr 

Sotton'a 

Orvt  Store 


TYPEWRITING 

REGISTER  NOW 

FOR  NEW  CLASS 
Nonifemb«r  1 2  ~  January  1 8 


town  classes 


<ipr 


C 


Tu 

i" 

'7- 

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THE 

and  Ma 

t»f-c  t. 

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interest 

4^ 

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ttic    - 

it  now 

the    on 

;: 

block  11 

Tigers. 

This 

of  Ihc  I 

has  cor 

strong 

would 

outset 

son.  all 

team.  \ 

■^.tt.  ■'■ 

Orange 

ULt: 

Nov  em 

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ACC  It 

confers 

Biiit. 

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pif 

fades  1 

nation; 

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the    or 

break 

WH 

Maryli 

ftU>»- 

V  to  be 

■  'Clems 

tiltl 

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trfcc- 

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=*tid" 

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man  . 

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the  T 

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also  i 

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team 

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Duke 

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lat  there  is 
and  co- 
races  which 

Ions   in   the 

:a    are    the 

those    of 

speak    Airi- 

more    lib- 

,  who  are 

and    advo- 

V\  yk  spoke 
I  and  classes 
[vcrsrty  and 
lirham.  He 
|est  in  our 
sitting  up 
watch   the 


lEEN 

'*age    1) 

lord. 

Joan  Wen- 

'lub;  Misses 
issell.  Sally 
rilliams. 
I  Luc    Cross- 

[isj.es  Anne 
I  and   Ginger 

Miss  Sug- 

|th     Pai^am 

[isses  Celia 
and   Car- 

sses  Elaine 
^atchey. 
Gee  Rid- 

Miss    Mary 

Barbara 
Juise  Flet- 

lelen  White 

Miss      Kay 

iMisses   Ana 

Maddison, 
>d. 

Jackie  Aid- 
Mary  Lou- 
!t  Brunson. 
Miss   Penn 
Libby  Me- 
ld Gail  Wifl. 


in; 
int 


THURSDAY,  NOVEMBER  «,  19S4 


THi  rAlLY  TAR  HIIL 


PAGE  PVt$ 


CarolinaA/'irginh  Series  Is  Oldest  In  Southern  Football 


The 


ffi;  "w- 


iri   'iv 


SPORT    SCENE 


Tar  Heels 
Have  Five 


With  Bill  King  jGdme  Edge 


Mural  Tag  Football  Ch^rnps 
Meet  Squad  From  Virginia 


THE  GAME  BETWEEN  Clemson 
and  Maryland  at  College  Park  Sat- 
urday will  be  viewed  with  much 
intcresl  by  teams  and  fans  in  the 
Atlantic  Coast  Conference  because 
It  now  appears  that  the  Terps  are 
the    only     obstacle    remaining    to 


efb 


block  the  Orange  Bowl  path  of  the  ,  gensen  is  back  for  full  duty 
Tigers. 

This  fact  is  a  very  good  example 
of  the  fantastic  turn  of  events  that 
has  come  about  in  the  supposedly 
strong  ACC  this  season.  Who 
would  have  ever  figured  at  the 
outset  of  the  56  season  that  Clem- 
son. although  admittedly  a  strong 
team,  would  be  virtually  "in"  the 
Orange  Bowl  by  the  middle  of 
November? 

The  story  of  the  dilemma  in  the  i  tie  with  Florida  early  in  the  sea- 
ACC  this  season  is  an  old  one.  A  ■  son.  The'  Tigers  victory  over 
conference  with  at  least  two  sup-  South  Carolina  Oct.  25  really 
posed  national  powers  and  one  or  I  brought  coach  Frank  Howard's 
two  other  strong  dark  horses  en-  j  club  into  prominence.  The  Game- 
rounters  a  few  bad  breaks  and  cocks  were  also  being  considered 
fades  into  relative  obscurity  in  the  |  for  the  trip  to  Miami  on  New- 
national   limelight.    Bad   breaks— f  Year's   Day.   but  the    'Big  Thurs- 


Blue  Devil  simply  do  not  run  as 
well  behind  Brodhead  as  they  do 
when  the  redheaded  Jurgensen  is 
calling  the  shots. 

Duke  still  has  a  strong  club  jind 
should  finish  the  season  in  fairly 
good  shape,   especially   since  Jur- 

btk 
the  damage  has  been  done  at  Duke 
i»nd  the  Blue  Devils  can  only  hop« 
for  the  downfall  of  Clemson  and 
an  uprising  in  their  final  three 
games  (two  against  conference 
teams)  to  even  be  considered  for 
the  Orange  Bowl. 

*     *     » 

THE   CHANCES    OP   a   Clemson 
downfall  are  slim.   The  Tigers  are 
undefeated  in  six  games  and  thei 
only  blemish  on  their  record  is  a 


day"  lost  to  Clemson  was  a   dev- 
astating blow  to  their  chances. 

Clemson  has  games  with  Marj- 
land,  Miami,  .  Virginia,  and  Fur- 
man    rematAHig   oil   the    schedule 


the   one  factor  that  can  make  or 
break  a  team  or  a  conference. 

*     *     * 

WHEN  THE  1956  season  began. 

Maryland   and   Duke   were   picked    „         ^    „^^^ 

to  be  the  powers  in  the  ACC  with  |  and  there  is  stTu  a  possibility  that 
Clemson.  South  Carolina,  and  the  Tigers  might  start  dreaming 
W  akp  Forest  all  considered  as  about  that  Floridt  sunshine  too 
threats.  The  ACC  should  have  |  soon  and  succumb  to  the  pressure, 
been  a  powerful  conference.  |  n  that  were  to  happen  then  South 

Then  along  came  Uncle  Sam  to  .  Carolina  (5-2)  and  DVike  (3-4) 
rlaim  .Maryland's  All  -  America  !  would  assume  threatening  posi- 
quartcrback  candidate  Frank  Tam-  [  tions. 


burello.  The  Terps  still  had  a  great 
line,  but  Tamburello  was   the  key 


The  Tigers  will  be  subjected  to 
a  great  deal  of  pressure  in  the 
man  at  Maryland  and  without  him  |  closing  weeks  of  the  season,  but 
the  Terps  just  didn't  have  ii.  Nat-  j  they  have  a  mature  and  experi- 
urally  the  loss  of  Jim  Tatum  was ;  enced  bail  dub  that  has  shown 
also  detrimental  to  the  Terps,  but  |  great  ability  thus  far  this  season, 
the  feeling  in  most  quarters  was  |  Miami  should  be  the  toughest  team 
that  Tatums  successor  Tommy ;  that  the  Tigers  will  face  from  here 
Mont  already  had  a  ready  made  \  out  and  even  a  loss  there  would 
team  and  could  pilot  it  through  a  not  hurt  Clemson  too  much  if  they 
banner  football  season.  !  could  ffntsh  with  wins  over  Mary'- 

Looking  at  the  personnel  of  the  |  land.  Virginia  and  Furman. 
Duke  Blue  Devils,  one  cant  help;  Sc  at  present  it  looks  like  the 
but  wonder  how  the  Blue  Devils  ;  Clemson  Tigers  will  represent  the 
could  have  possibly  dropped  four  Atlantic  Coast  Conference  in  the 
games  while  winning  but  three  al- '  Orange  Bowl  come  January  1st. 
ready  this  season,  but  Coach  Bill  ■  The  Tigers  have  the  manpower  to 
Murray  s  boys  have  run  into  some '  go  all  the  way.  Of  course  there 
of  the  top  teams  in  the  country  \  are  still  four  big  weeks  left  in  the 
and  without  the  full  services  of  |  season  and  nothing  is  definite  yet, 
one  Sonny  Jurgensen.  probably  j  but  for  our  money,  the  Tigers  look 
the  greatest  signal-caller  in  Duke !  like  the  best  bet  to  make  the  New 
history.  j  Year  s  Day  trip  to  Miami. 

Jurgensen  has  been  hampered  i  As  for  the  Tar  Heels,  coach  Jim 
by  injuries  all  season  and,  despite  ]  Tatum  summed  it  up  well  in  his 
the  fact  that  his  number  one  sub- !  press  conference  when  he  stated 
stitute  Bob  Brodhead  is  quite  a  that  "its  been  a  long  season." 
quarterback  in  his  own  rights,  the  (Editor  s  note)  Wait  'til  next  year! 


IRFER 


hai  his  doc- 

_** 

ministration. 

'•'-' 

a  recent  ar- 

-Tf 

ing  Review, 

.  A- 

•read    atten- 

C" 

eles  because 

yn: 

*8ent  teach- 

(h 

hods   in   ac- 

TC 

•ecommenda- 

f.L. 

f  iecounting 

2ti: 

i£  in  Amcri- 

-'■ 

nling. 

mbership  in 

•ii 

?s.  he  is  also 

• . 

merican   Ac- 

il^ 

the    N.    C. 

^18 


es 


CHARLOTTESVILLE,    Va.— The 
1  Virginia-North  Carolina  game  here 
!  this   Saturday   will   be   the   sixty- 
first  in  the  longest  and  most  con- ! 
tinuous  series  in  major  Southern  j 
football   History.  I 

Virginiii's   first  and  almost   for- 
gotten athletic  field  was  the  site 
of   tho  first   game   in   October   of  \ 
1892.  A  second  ganrie  was  played  in  ] 
Atlanta   in   late   November  of   '92 ! 
for    the     "championship     of    the 
South",  with  Carolina  the  winner 
after  losing  the  first  time.  j 

The   1893  game  was  shifted  tc 
itichmond,  and   with  three  excep- 
tion   all    Virginia-Carolina    games 
were  played  in  Richmond  parks  up  I 
until  the  two-year  wartime  break  ' 
of    1917-18.    Games   of    1900.    1901  j 
and  1905  were  played  at  Norfolk.  | 

It  has  been  an  unbroken  home-  < 
and-home  series  since  it  was  re-  \ 
sumed  at  Chapel  Hill  in  1919  ex-| 
cept  for  two  more  Norfolk  games  \ 
during  the  second  world  war  sea-: 
sons  of  1943  and  1944.  Altogether,  I 
there  have  been  18  games  at  Rich- 
mond. 19  at  Charlottesville,  17  at 
Chapel  Hill  and  five  at  Norfolk.   | 

Virginia     dominated     the     first' 
half  of  the  series,  but  it  has  been  I 
mostly  Carolina  supremacy  during* 
th?  past  30  years.     Art    Guepe's 
high  scoring  teams  of   1950-51-52 
were    winners    of    three   consecu- 
tive games  for  the  longest  Virginia 
string  since    the   'teens.   The   Tar 
Heels   bounced   back   to  take   the 
last  three,  uinning  by  same  26-14 
scores  in  1954  and  1955. 

Carolina  now  has  a  five-game 
margin,  having  won  a  total  of  31. 
Virginia  has  won  26  and  three 
were  ties. 

Cavalier  prospects  of  overtaking 
the  Tar  Heels  again  were  brighten- 
ed by  good  offensive  and  defens- 
ive showing  in  last  Saturday's  6-2 
loss  to  Vanderbilt.  Starting  at  1:30, 
it  will  be  Virginia's  Jast  home 
game  of  the  season.  * 

Tar  Heels  Run 
Plays  Against 
Freshman  Unit 

Carolina  used  its  freshman  i 
squad  to  the  fullest  yesterday 
afternoon  in  an  extensive  workout 
for  its  Atlantic  Coast  Conference 
Game  with  Virginia  at  Charlottes- 
ville  Saturday. 

With  the  entire  freshman  squad 
participating  in  the  work,  the  Tar 
Heels  were  able  to  cover  all 
phases  of  the  game  in  the  long 
session.  Pass  defense  and  offense 
were  emphasized,  with  the  frosh 
opposing    the    varsity. 

All  players  were  on  hand  with 
the  exception  of  halfback  Jim 
Varnum.  and  all  participated  in 
the  work.  Six  had  missed  Monday 
and  Tuesday  rough  work  because 
of   injuries. 

Varnum  is  expected  to  be  re- 
leased from  the  hospital  tomorrow, 
where  he  has  been  recuperating 
frofn  tonsilitis.  The  Tar  Heels  will 
work  out  tomorrow  and  leave  for 
Charlottesville  by  bus  Friday 
afternoon. 


Carolina  tag  football  at  its  very 
best  will  be  displayed  this  Saturr 
day  moraing  when  the  Intramural 
Department  sends  the  flashy  Zeta 
Psi  team  against  the  tag  football 
champions  of  the  Universtiy  of 
Virginia. 

The  game  is  scheduled  to  ge- 
gin  at  10:15  on  Scott  ^ield.  On 
this  same  field  at  2:00,  the  two 
sdSiols  wiir  send  their  vairsity 
gridiron  representatives*  against 
each  other  in  a  tough  ^^^^CC  con- 
test. ^ 

Several  years  ago  tl|^.was  an 
annual  event.  As  many  jSfs  3.000 
students  have  journeyed  to  Scott 
and  Kenan  Stadiums,  prior  to  the 
regular    football    contest,    to  ^  wit- 


ness the  event  in  years  past. 
Since  this  is  taravan  weekend  for 
Cwolina.  it  is  hoped  that  a  large 

'  crowd  of  students  will  be  there  to 
cheer  the  Zeta  Psi  team  to  victory,  j 
The  Zeta  Psi  team  won  the  right  i 
to  represent  the  University  when 
they  defeated  Dental  School  earii- ! 
er  in  the  week,  23-0.  I 

Mac  Patton,  Tommy  Reams  and  ! 
Murry  Williams  are  expected  to  j 
lead  the  way  for  Coach  Paul  Ful-  [ 
ton's  bay.s.  Williams  kicked  a  32  j 
yard  field  goal  in  the  contest 
against  Dental  School.  Milton  Bar- 
ber has  been  doing  a  fine  job  on 

I  the  extra  point  tries.  He  sent  two 
through  the  uprights   against    the 
Dental  School. 
Other  team  members  who  will 


go  to  Virginia  are:  Jerry  Parker, 
Walter  Wilson.  Charles  Rouse, 
Tommy  Wood,  Jimmy  Cheatham. 
Bill  Bost,  Paul  Fulton,  Knox  Mas- 
sy. Strud  Nash  and  Marvin  Smith. 

One-half  of  the  game  will  be 
played  by  Carolina  rules  and  the 
other  by  rules  set  up  by  the  In- 
tramural Department  of  the  Uni- 
versity of  Virginia.  J.  H.  Riley, 
Director  of  Intramural  Athletics, 
and  Jonathan  Sutton,  Senior  Man- 


ager for  the  Virginia  team,  have 
msds  arrnngcments  for  the  con- 
test. The  Zeta  Psi  team  will  be 
housed  by  the  Virginia  team  on 
Friday  night,  and  v»^ll  be  guests 
o£  the  Virginia  Intramural  Depart- 
ment the  entire  weekend,  includ- 
ing the  2:00  contest. 


DUkathon  Runners  Will 
Meet  Tonight  At  8  KM. 

There  wll  be  a  meeting  for 
DUkathon  runners  toj^ht  at  8  \ 
p.m.  at  the  DU  House.  DUkathon  ' 
Chairman  Ernie  Kemni^'has  ask- 
ed that  all  interested"  students 
who  are  unable  to  attend  the 
meeting  contact  him  at  the  DU 
House,   phone  9-1301. 


Monogrammers  Meet 

Th^r*  will  b«  a  Monogram 
Club  mooting  tonight  at  7:4S  in 
th«  Monogram  Club.  It  is  impor- 
tont  that  all  membors  attend. 


W«  Afo  NdT  Supprotilng  ' 

PROUD 

SHOES 

By  Pauli  Murray 

A  courageous  young  woman  talks 
of  her  ancestors  —  both  black  and 
white  —  in  the  Chapel  Hill-Dur- 
ham area. 

Just  Out 

$3.50 

THEINTrMATE 
BOOKSHOP 

201  EfSf  Frtfnttttn  Street 
Op*n  Till  10  PM. 


) 


Coach  Walt^r*-Rat»b,  Intramural 
Director  at  Carolina,  and  two  of 
his  assistants  Rufus  Hackney  and 
Tommy  Johnson  will  accompany 
the  Zeta  Psi  team.  Don  Atkins, 
intramural  official,  will  assist  of- 
ficials of  VirlTmia  in  calling  the 
contest. 


COMPLEXION 


PROBL 


Qetr  Up  Acne^ 

with  Milky  Masqfw 

by  the  Hoode  ol  Wakefield 

MUky  Mas<i«e  SolTont  aotvally 
helffo  4iamhf  UMkhea*.  Milky 
Mastac  Extractor  kelps  lift  eat 
portioas  of  blaekkoat^a  witk  ca«h 
ip^ieattoB.  AaM  Creaai,  *  modi- 
eatei  ereftm,  applied  at  aigkt 
kelps  eiiflUaate  pteplos  aai  pas- 
tales  of 


sunoN's 

Cosmetic  Dept. 


Mcekhaad   Tr««tm«»t 

^•*^    ,  plut  25«  F. 
Aen«  Tr»«lm«nt 


*n 


p\vt  2fe  P.  *»g. 


ii's^r 


W''- 


Phono  94711 


USi  OUR  CONVENIENT  LAY-A-WA^PLAN 


"You  mean* .  .Colonial  is  feeding  millions 


\ 


FOR  ONLY  A  PENNY? 


^5 


'■   -> 


^^•iS.-^. 


Oifi^'peaii.*^  MiioJla)  for  the  profit  out  of  your 
dotla*!  thjit  CAlqiiijil  and  the  food  rhain  in- 
dnslrv  on  the  mTermge  receive*  for  doinx 
busineik*  for  vou !  Nearlv  99  t^ntu  of  your 
t»lt*  dollar  noes  to  buy  merrhaodiae  and 
to  pay  falariea,  rent,  utilities,  equipment, 
and  taxen.  The  one  penny  left  over  build* 
ne%>  ttore*  and  warehouses  and  pays  stoek- 
holders  for  their  investment.  How  is  this 
possible?  Self-serviee,  emah  and  carry,  large 
volume,  fast  turnover  —  Und  constant  vigi- 
lance over  costs.  By  feeding  millions  for  a 
penny.  Colonial  seeks  to  make  its  contribu- 
tion to  the  strength  of  a  greater  America  — 
Rememb«r,  Y'oor  ^otal  Food  Bill  is  Leas 
miieu  TOO  Shop  at  CS! 


STEAKS 


•jWj 


BUDGET  BEEF 

SIRLOIN,  CLUB,  RIB, 

OR  BONELESS  ROUND 

Take  your  choice . . . 
You  re  sure  to  mve! 


Join  The  Thrift  Parade! 

SAVE  2c  -  REDGATE  TENDER  CUT 


CHUCK  ROAST 


Budget    Beef 

First   Cut 
Bone    In — Lb. 


M.Natnr-Tender  ^^^  ^^^^ 
Rolled— Lb.   ^^    JW 


^•- 


SWIFTS   PREMIUM   FCIXV   COOKED  SMOKED 


COOKED  PIC3IIICS  u   39c 

3  TO  3H  LBS.  A\  ERACE  -  TOU\C  TENDER 

ROASTING  cmcKBws  ^  ;^9c 

CHEF'S    PRIDE    EOESH-MADE 

POTATO    SAIilD     "  ^e 


WQH  HOPMAN 

f.ashy  frosh  htUfback 


Frosh  Gridders   Prep 
For  Tilt  With  Biddies 


By  JIM  HARPER 

Coach  Fred  Tullai  ran  his  fresh- 
man gridders  through  a  long  prac- 
tice yesterday  in  preparation  for 
Saturday  night's  contest  with  the 
University  of  South  Carolina  frosh 
in  Florence,  S*  C, 

The  Tar  Babies  8y«at  much  of 
the  sessioA  ^erimmtgint  the  vAr- 
sity.  Featured  in  this  phase  was 
Vlrginia*type  offensive  and  de- 
fensive formations. 

It  was  learned  that  the  Tar  Ba- 
bies might  be  without  the  services 
(d  halfback  Jim  Crew  for  the 
Ciotrth  Carolina  tUL  Crew,  who 
turned  in  a  creditable  performance 
and  seoFed  one  touchdown  against 


I  Vir{;inia,  sprained  his  knee  id  t&e 
ccntest,  and  it  is  extremely  doubt- 
ful that  he  will  play. 

''  No  other  major  injuries  were 
suffered  by  frosh  gridders  tttd, 
barring  praelke  iiljufies,  the  team 

i  ELhould  appear  m  Floreace  physi- 
cally 80und(. 
More  pleasing  news  tonetMag 

,  an  injury  eaipie  yesterday  a»  tacj^la  i 
jplarl   (Moose)   Butler   returned  ,  to  | 

j,  drills.    Sutler,  who   S'^staiiied  an  ! 

;  elbow  injury  before  the  Virginia 

'  game,  is  now  working  out  in  ^eat ! 
clothes.    It  is  hoped  tha^  he  will 

I  be  able  to  participate  in  the  tar 
Babies'  final  game  with  nuke,  No- 
vember 22. 


MURALS 


TAG  FOOTBALL  RESULTS 

4  p.m.  Chi  Phi  13,  Pi  Lamb  0; 
Phi  Kap  Sig  20.  SPE  19;  Beta  27, 
KA  7;  Stacy  No.  2  over  Old  West 
by  forfeit;  Zeta  Psi  13,  Chi  Phi  0. 

5  p.m.  Sigma  Nu  14,  Kap  Slg  6; 
Sigmi  Chi  over  ATO  by  forfeit; 
Chi  Psi  over  Lamb  Chi  by  forfeit; 
Beta  6,  SAE  0;  Med  ^h  No.  1  Z7, 
Mangum  No.  2  0. 

VOLLEYBALL   RESULTS 

4  p.m.  DKE  No.  2  2,  SAE  1; 
VKE  No.  1  o\'er  Beta  by  forfeit; 
Manlcy  over  Old  Ba?t  by  forfeit. 

5  p.m.  Dent.  Sch  over  Lewis  by 
forfeit;  Law  Sch  over  Baffin  hy 
forfeit;  Zeta  No.  1  2,  Phi  Gam  1. 

td^AVf  TAO  FOOTBALL 
SCHEDULE 

4  pjfi.  Field  No.  1,  Grimes  No.  2 
vs.  Bverett  No.  1;  Field  No.  2, 
Rnflia  Ko.  1  vs.  Vic  Vil;  Field  No. 
%  AiM^i  vs.  Delt  Sig;  Field  No.  4, 
Stacy  No.  1  vs.  Mangum  No.  2; 
Field  No.  5,  Alexander  vs.  Aycoc|c. 

5  p.m.  Field  No.  1,  Law  Sch  ffo. 
1  vs.  Winston;  Field  No.  2,  Signjla 
Nu  vs.  SAH;  Field  No.  3,  SAE  M5b. 
PKA;  Field  No.  4.  TEP  vs.  ATO; 
Field  No.  5,  Mrd  Sch  No.  3  V5 
Stacy. 


GBEEM  BEANS 

SAVE  9c  -  REDGATE  EAHLT  GABDBK 

JUNE  PEAS... 

SWE  »c  -  REIKJATE  GHEEN  AND  WIUTE 

LIMA  BEANS . . 


YOUR  CHOICE 


Fancy  Quality  Porto  Ricik 

4  ^49'  i  YAMS 


5 


SPECIAL  VALUE!  -  SANSINE.NA  nOAST  BEET  OM 


GORMSD  BEEF  ct.^  39c 

SAVE  Se  -  REDGATE  RICH  RID  T<kllAtO  

CATSUP      2  ->  35< 

FAVORITE  WfTH  YOVNO  ANl>  OH«  -  RgpCATg  SMOOTH 

PEANUT  BvnER"^^'  35c 


Pre»h  Florida  ■  Gre^m  firm  Hemd* 

ORJINGES     CABBACE 

Doz.   25c       I      3    <^^    ll^ 


AISLES 

4-,J^  39c 


64 


Thrifty^  Enriched  White  Sliced 


BREAD  2  ^  25c 


Pick-of-lhe-Nesl  Grade  ''^"  Med.  S^  Fretk 

E  CCS  ^  i47c 

Nu-Treat  "Flavor  of  the  Moitthr  —  Femtk 

ICECREAM  ''^^69- 


CS  InaUmi 


COFFEE 
49< 


2-OL 
JAK 


CS  Brand 
FRESH-FROZEN  BABY  0REB4 

UMA 

BEAMS 

4  s&  89c 


CS  Brand 
FtESH-FROZm  KOtlDA 

OBANGE 

JUICE 

6  *^^^J^9« 


PAGE    SIX 


THE  DAILY  TAB  MBBt 


THURSDAY,  NOVEMBER  8,  1956 


Unbeaten  Soccer  Team  Meets  Strong  Virginia  Here  Today 


M^'Qt  £lc!li| 

^Q.Mj$m 

S  M  O 

RTS 

>.arry  Cheek. 

sports  Editor 

Facts  And  Figures 

Some  very  interesting  facts  and  figures  in  the  form  of  ACC  and 
use  football  statistics  have  come  trickling  into  The  Daily  Tar  Heel 
Sports  office  over  the  past  few  days.  We  thought  you  might  be  intei> 
ested,  so  let's  take  a  look  and  see  just  v/hat  stor>*,  if  any,  lies  therein. 
First  let's  sl*nce  ov»r  the  cenf*r*nc«  figure*.  Our  Tar  HmU 
•re  at  the  moment  dragging  up  the  rear  in  two  different  team  4th 
partn>ents:  total  offense  and   total  defense.  This  is  especially  sur- 
prising in  view  of  the  fact  that  they  are  fifth  in  botfi  rushing  end 
passing  offense,  and  seventh  in  rushing  and  pass  defense. 

What's  the  reason  for  this  apparent  contradiction?  Well  it  seems 
that  the  team  that  ranks  second  to  Carolina  in  total  offense,  N.  C. 
State,  is  way  up  among  the  leaders  in  passing,  thus  offsetting  the 
last  place  position  they  hold  down  in  rushing. 

State  comes  into  the  picture  again  on  the  defensive  side  of 
the  ledger.  The  Pack  is  only  a  step  above  Carolina  in  total  defence, 
but  they  »r9  second  in  the  conference  in  pass  defense.  Hence  the 
Tar  Heels  are  on  the  bottom  when  the  total  picture  is  brought  into 
focus. 

In  conference  individual  statistics,  ihe  Tar  Heels  have  two  men, 
Dave  Reed  and  Ed  Sutton,  in  the  top  ten  in  total  offense.  Sutton  ranks 
8ih  with  363  yards  total,  while  Reed  is  10th  with  316  yeards. 

Bill  Barf>es  of  Wake  Forest  and  Jim  Bahktiar  of  Virginia  ar* 
the  conference  big  guns.  The  two  bruising  fullbacks  are  running  one- 
two   in   both   total   offense   and   rushing   offense.    Barnes,   wbo   has 
gained  756  yards  along  the  ground,  needs  only  26  more  to  break 
the  single  »«ason  rushing  record  held  by  Joel  Wells  of  ClemMn. 
Sutton  continues  to  dominate  Tar  Heel  statistics.   The  CuUowhee 
Comet  leads  in  four  different   departments:   individual  rushing,  pass 
receiving,  kickoff  returns  and  sc(H"ing. 

Although  Sutton  leads  in  more  departments  than  any  other  man, 
fuliybeck  Wally  Vale  ranks  highest  on  the  national  scene  with  his 
sensational  44.1  kicking  average.  Vale,  Ellerson,  Va.,  junior  with  the 
golden  tee,  has  racked  up  1103  yards  in  25  boots.  Vele  has  an  out- 
side chance  to  kick  the  football  a  mile  this  season.  At  his  current 
rate  he  needs  to  kick  six  times  in  the  remaining  contacts. 
THE  LONG  TREK  TO  DURHAM 

It's  DLTvathon  time  again.  Plans  for  the  annual  11  mile  trek  from 
the  Chapel  Hill  Post  Ofiice  tc  the  Durham  Post  Office  are  neai.ing 
completion,  and  this  year's  race  looks  like  a  gala  event. 

The  race,  an  annual  event  sponsored  by  Delta  Upsilon  fra- 
ternity, will  be  held  Nov.  17.  An  extra  added  attraction  this  year 
will  be  the  selection  of  a  DUkathon  queen  to  reign  over  the  festivi> 
ties. 

A  large  turnout  is  anticipated  for  this  year's  ^marathon,  and  any 
of  you  guys  who  would  like  to  test  your  euduram-e  are  welcome  to 
come  on  out  and  join  in  the  'fun." 
STADIUM  SIDELIGHTS 

Its  showdown  time  for  the  UNC  soccer  team.  They  meet  a  tough 
Virginia  team  here  this  afternoon,  then  go  against  Duke  and  Mar>'- 
land  in  rapid  succession.  Its  on  these  three  games  that  the  confer- 
ence championship  depends.  If  they  can  manage  to  get  through  with- 
out a  loss,  it  will  be  the  firt  time  in  the  history  of  the  ACC  that  Mary- 
land has  been  dethroned.  Here's  luck  to  the  hooters. 

Freshman  basketball  teann  from  Carolina  and  State  will  meet 
each  e^her  in  four  different  games  this  year.    Each  has  a  star  span- 
gled line-up  of  cage  talent.    The  Tar  Babies  have  won  five  of  the 
last  six  games  played  between  the  two,  and  the  Baby  Wolves  will 
be  out  to  reverse  the  trend.   And  so  the  McGuire-Case  feud  goes  on. 
Speaking  of  basketball,  here's  a  note  from  State  College.  A  group 
of   former    State   basketball   players    including    Bobby   Speight,    Sam 
Ranzino  and  Paul  Brandenburg  among  others,  have  banded  together 
to  form  an  aluiQni  team.  Anyone  wishing  to  play  them  may  do  so  at 
their  own  risk. 


Last  Home  Appearance 
For  Powerful  Booters 


Frosh  Meet  State 

The  Carolina  freshman  soccer  freshman  team  in  scoring  with  six 
team,  coached  by  John  Wienants, '  goals  in  three  games.  Ghanin 
will    face   the   N.   C.    State   Wolf- '  '^""'^^    ^^ree   goals    against   State 

,^      I  in    the    second    meeting    between 
pack   in   Raleigh   tomorrow  after-  j  ^^^^  ^^^  ^^^^^^  ^^^  ^^^^^  r^^^^ 

Coach  Marvin  Allen  would  not  j  noon.  The  game  marks  the  third  j  ijna's  lone  goal  against  Duke  last 


tough  battles,  holding  the  varsity 
to  a  1-1  tie  both  years. 


By  JIM  PURKS  I 

The  high^scoring  varsity  soccer 
team,    undefeated    in   four   starts,' 

will  make  its  final  home  appear-  make    any    predictions    about    to-  j  and    final    meeting 
ance  of  the  1956  season  when  it    day's    game   with    Virginia.    "But  j  teams   this    season. 
takes  an  old  nemesis,  the  Univer-  I'd    say    its    the    strongest    team 
a.^j   oi    vuginia,  ftere  today  at  3   we've    faced    so    far    this    year. 
p.m.  on  Fetzer  Field.  i  They're  equal  to  us,"  he  warned. 

Today's  game  promises  to  be  a  The  Tar  Heels  are  currently  rid- 
hotly-contested  match  as  Virginia  Ing  high  with  an  impressive  record 
has  another  top-rp.te  squad  and  of  four  straight  wins,  scoring  18 
presents  a  formidable  obstacle  to  goals  for  an  average  of  better 
Carolina's  hopes  of  WTesting  the  than  four  per  game  and  allowing 
conference  crown  away  from  only  three  goals  to  be  scored 
Maryland.  against  them. 

For  the  past  two  years,  the'  Coleman  Barks  is  the  top  scorer 
Cavaliers  have  given  the  Tar  Heels   on  the  offensive  line  with  six  goals 

*  ~~ to  his  credit,  while  his  teammates, ,        .    ,    „  „      ,   ^,        ,   „.„ 

Johnny     Foster.     Captain     crover  |  ^°"^««^'  ^O-   at  Chapel  Hill 

BrowTi,  Pat  McCormick,    and  Ted 
Youhann«)  follow  closely  behind. 

Today's  game  also  marks  the  fi- 
nal home  game  for  five  veteran 
lettermen.  All  five  of  these  vet- 
erans are  on  the  first-string  and 
are  a  prirncipal  reason  why  Caro- 
lina is  having  its  best  season  in 


Last  Home  Appearance 

Senior  Pat  McCormick  is  one  of  the  several  veterans  who  will 
play  Ibeir  final  home  game  for  the  Carolina  soccer  team  here  today. 
McCormick  plays  right  wing  and  has  been  under  Coech  Marvin  Allen 
for  four  years. 


TENNESSEE  OVER  TECH: 


Tar  Heels  Picked 
To  Top  Cavaliers 


New  Punt  Mark 
Within  Reach 
Of  Wall/  Vale 

GREENSBORO  LfV-^unior  full- '  several  years 
back  Wally  Vale  of  North  Caro-  On  the  forward  line.  Captain 
lina,  who  did  not  figure  prom-  Grover  Brown  at  center  forward 
inently  in  Tar  Heel  plans  before  will  be  playing  his  final  home 
the  season  started,  today  leads  the  game  along  with  right  wing  Pat 
Atlantic  Coast  Conference  in  punt-  McCormick.  Both  Brown  and  Mc- 
ing  again  with  an  average  of  44.1  Cormick  have  been  under  the 
yards  which,  if  maintained,  will  coaching  of  Marvin  Allen  for  four 
put  him  into  the  record  books  as  years, 
the  No,  1  punter  in  ACC  history,  j     On  the  defensive  wall,  three  im- 

I  portant    players    will    be    making 

Vale,  punting  four  Umes  for  a  {heir  final  home  appearance.  Mike 
48.7-yard  average  against  Tennes-  Galifianakis  and  Ted  Jones,  both 
see  last  weekend,  must  maintain  fullbacks,  will  be  lost  to  the  team 
his  avearge  throughout  three  more  after  this  year  along  with  Allen's 
♦  iames  to  surpass  the  record  aver-  prize  goalie,  Chuck  Hartman. 
age  of  43.4  yards  sent  by  another  Hai-tman  is  playing  his  best  sea- 
Tar  Heel  Dick  Lackey,  in   1953.    [son     as    goal-tender    for     Allen's 

ACC  Service  Bureau  figures  squad.  Hartman  has  two  shutouts 
show  Vale  almost  five  yards  a  I  under  his  belt  so  far  and  has  actu- 
k^ck  ahead  of  his  closest  chal- 1  ally  permitted  oply  two  goals  to  be 
lenger.  halfback  Dick  Hunter  of  scored  against,  him.  The  other 
North  Carolina  State.  Hunter  has  goal  was  scorej  against  his  prcm- 
an  average  of  39.3  yards.  ising  successor,  Wilson  Cooper 

Fred  Polzer,  junior  end  from 


of    the    two 


The  Carolina  freshmen  current 
ly  have  a  record  of  two  wins  and  , 
one  loss,  the  sole  loss  at  the  hands  j 
of  the  Duke  freshman  team  when  • 
it  beat  Carolina'  in  an  overtime ; 
game,  2-1.  I 

Carolina  has  had  little   trouble  j 
I  with  N.  C.  State  in  their  two  pre- 
vious meetings,  winning  the  first ', 
game  4-3  in  Raleigh,  and  trounc- 
ing  the    Wolfpack   in   the   second 


Center     forward    John    Ghanin 
leads    the    forward    line    of    the 


week. 


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PLAYING 


Dental  School  Is  New 
Rod  And  Gun  Champ 


The  Dental  School  chalked  up 
2d  points  to  emerge  as  team  win- 
ner in  the  second  annual  co-rec- 
reatidwial  Rod  and  Gun  Meet  Tues- 
day at  the  Durham  Wildlife  Club 
Area.  Some  115  contestants  par- 
ticipated in  the  meet  which  was 
sponsored  by  GMAB  and  the  in- 
tramural department. 
,  Dental  School  just  edged  out 
Ka.ppa  Alpha  fraternity  which  tal- 
lied 27  points  in  the  team  totals. 
Chi  rhi  finished  third  with  21 
followeti'  closely  by  Sigma  Chi 
which  scored  20. 

In  the  indiylftual  events,  Clete 
OaJkley  won  a.<lose  match  over 
If  ugh  Cowan  to  take  first  place 
In  trap  shootmg.  Oakley  and  Cow- 
an finished  in  a  tie  for  first  plare 
Icioth  scoring  zi  of  25.  In  the 
shoot-off.  Oakte:^  scored  on  elev- 
en of  twelve,  while  Cowan  got  j 
only  eight  of  twelve. 
.The  archery  .event  was  won  by 
Scotty  Hester  of  the  Law  School 
vho  scored  202  points.  Hester  was 
followed  by  Carles  Bowen  and 
tn  JCay.  f^' 

O:  G.  Taylor  lacked  up  70  points 
to  tike  first  place  in  the  bait  cast- 
ing event,  winning  over  Morris 
Jones  and  John  Crawford. 

Fibrst  place  in  the  target  rifle 
matcih  went  to  John  Crawford 
with  131  points.  Crowford  was 
followed  by  Sharp  and  Price. 

The .  bass  and  brim  fishing  con- 
tent which  has^just  been  added 
tils  year  proved  to  be  the  trou- 
ble spot  for  the  contestants.  The 
fish  weren't  biting  and  nobody 
^-as  abi«  to  make  a  catch. 

The  trap  shooting  contest  drew 
Vye  largest  participation  with  33 
contestants  taking  part.  Target 
riOe  was  next  in  total  participa- 
tion with  29.  followed  by  bait 
casting  with  23,  and  archery  and 
iishiflg  with  »  «ach. 


Memb-rs  of  ihe  winning  Dsnta' 
School  team  and  order  of  their 
total  points  were  Taylor  (bait 
casting)  10  points;  Hood  (archery) 
7  points;  McAllister  (trap  shoot- 
ing) 7  points;  and  Franklin  (tar- 
get rifle)  5  points. 

Student  participation  in  the 
meet  was  encouraging  to  intra- 
mural officials  as  over  115  out- 
doorsmen  turned  out  for  the  com- 
petition. In  addition  to  the  115 
participants,  some  75  spectators 
were  on  hand  to  view  proceedings 
from  the  sidelines. 


By  ED  WILKS 

NEW  YORK  (if)— It  now  becomes 
apparent  why  Will  Grimsley  lam- 
med to  Melbourne  so  early.  The 
roMttd-faced  Temtessean  wasn't  up 
to  picking  the  Tennessee-Georgia 
Tech  game. 

But  starting  from  scratch,  with 
no  record  to  uphold  or  improve, 
we  go  with  Tennessee.  Say  13-9. 

W2  like  the  single-wing.  What's 
your  excuse? 

And  having  put  one  foot  for- 
ward, here's  the  plungs: 

Minnesota     18,     Iowa     12 — ^The 

Gophers   eldom    see   anything   but 

snow    on    New    Year's   Day.    This 

time  it's  different.  They'll   be   in 

Pasadena    and     Bobby    Cox     can 

show  'em  the  sights  on  the  Coast. 

Ohio   State   32,    Indiana    6 — For 

.what  it's  worth;  The  Hoosiers  are 

I  Notre    Dame's    only    victims    this 

'  season. 

I      Oklahoma    56,    Iowa    State    0 — 
I  Eddie  Stanky  sometimes  is  called 
"genial"  by  dose  friends. 

Michigan  State  28,  Purdue  7— 
lie's  also  called  other  names,  too, 
of  course. 

StanfOTd  19,  Oregon  State  14— 
Brodie  passes  for  three. 

Texas  A  &  M  21,  Southern  Meth- 
odist 8— The  Aggies  are  en  route 


trictly  upper-class... 
through  many  semesters 
of  satisfaction! 


to   their   first    conference   crown 

since  1941. 

Navy    13,3    Duke    7— The    Blue 

Devils  should  be  too  pooped  after 

that    great    try    against    Georgia 

Tech. 

Maryland    12,    (Tlcmson    7 — You 

want  an  upset?  Here  "tis. 
Syracuse  24,  Holy  Cross  6 — Not 

all  the  Crusaders  got  back  alive. 
Colorado  25,  Missouri  14 — More 

miser>    for    Missouri    and    orange 

blossoms  for  the  Buffs. 
Pittsburgh    26,    Notre     18— But 

those   Iri.sh   just    gotta   win   again 

sometime. 

Illinois  14,  Michigan  14 — Strictly 
;  mini  sentiment,  that's  all. 
;      Southern  Cal  32,  California  12--' 

This  pnr  should  be  zampeasy. 
j      And  a  once-over  lightly: 
I      East:  Army  60,  William  &  Mary  ' 

0;  Cornell  13,  Brown  12;  Colgate  j 
I  21,  Bucknell  6;  Columbia  28,  Dart- ' 
]  mouth  24;   Penn  State  32,  Boston 

U.    12;    Princeton    16,   Harvard    7;  I 

Yale  25,  Penn  14. 
j      Miiwest:    Kansas    13,    Nebraska  j 
;  7;   Marquette   21,   Kansas  State   7;  ; 

Cincinnati    14,   Wichita   0;   North- 
j  western  9,  Wisconsin  7;  Detroit  12,  { 

Drake  7.  | 

j      South:     Auburn    21,     Misisslppi 

State  13;  Kentucky  13.  VanderWlt 
'  12;  Florida  21,  Georgia  0;  Louisi- 


Virglnia,  caught  five  more  passes 
last  weekend  to  raise  his  confer- 
ence-leading pass  receiving  total 
to  17.  He  is  five  catches  in  front 
of  teammate  Bob  Gunderman, 
who  in  turn  is  three  ttiesd  •(  the  ;< 
next  closest  man,  Wake  Forest's 
Jack  Ladner.  Ladner  has  caught 
nine.  Buddy  Bass  of  Duke,  tied  for 
fourth  with  Alex  Hawkins  of 
South  Carolina,  has  the  best  per- 
catch -yardage  average,  a  lofty  18.4 
yards.„He  and  Hawkins  have  eight 
receptions. 


ana  State  15,  Oklahoma  Aic^  13; 
Soutjlt^arolina  14,  North  Carolina 
State  0;  Florida  State  20,  Furman 
6;  Tcdane  24,  Alabama  7;  Virginia 
Tech  12,  Wake  Forest  7;  North 
Carolina  18,  Virginia  12;  West  Vir-  j 
ginia  32,  Virginia  Military  13. 

Sourest:  Arkansas  14,  Rice  6; 
Houston  28,  Tulsa  7;  Texas  Chris- 
tian.24.>  Texas  Tech  6. 

FiT  West:  Utah  18,  Colorado  A 
&  M  12;  Denver  32,  Brigham 
Young  21;  Utah  State  14,  Idaho 
12;  Wyoming  32,  Montana  7; 
UCLA  21,  Washin^on  14;  Oregon 
28,  Washington  State  6. 


WILBUC  JUST  WOKE  UP  TO 
THE  FACT  THAT  HES  IN  QLAK! 


KtEPALBRTfORA 
BETTiR  FOm  AVBkAOil 

Don't  let  that  "drowsy  feel- 
ing" cramp  your  style  in  dtss 
...  or  when  you're  "hitting 
the  books".  Take  a  NoDoi 
Awakener!  In  a  few  minotes, 
you'll  be  your  normal  best . . . 
wide  awake  .  .  .  alert!  Ydot 
doctor  will  tell  you — ^NoDot 
Awakeners  are  safe  »  oofiii 
Keep  a  pack  bandy! 
15  TABLETS,  35€ 


luopoz 


Eycrybody  Picked  On  J.  Paul  Sheedj^  Till 
Wildroot  Cream-Oil  Gave  Hlni  Confidence 


"Wkttft  fhb  I  hear  a  vulture  breaking  up  with  your  girl  ?"  asked  Sbecdy's 

rootniBate.  "I  don't  know,"  wailed  J.  Paul,  "She  gave  me  back  my  diamond 

wing  tiAd  told  me  to  hawk  it.  What  makes  her  carri-on  ao?"  "Beclaws  yiMtr 

hait't  a  m«u,"  said  his  roomie.  "If  feather  a  gvy  needed 

Wildroot  Cream -Oil,  it's  you."  So  Sheedy  went  to  the 

atort  and  pecked  up  a  bottle.  Now  he's  flying  high  with 

his  tweetie  again,  beakausc  his  hair  looks  handsome  and 

healthy,  the  way  Nature  intended.  Neat  but  not  greasy. 

WildroOt  contains  Lanolin,  Nature's  finest  hair  and  scalp 

conditioner.  So  don't  y»M  stick  your  neck  out  taking 

chances  with  messy  hair.  Get  a  bottle  or  handy  tube  of 

Wildroot  Cream-Oil  the  nest  time  you're  at  the  store.The 

girls'U  soon  be  talon  you  what  a  handsome  bird  you  air! 

*t/ljl  S*.  Hisrris  Hill  RJ.,  VillJamsiillt,  S.  Y. 

Wildroot  Croam-Oil 
givos  you  confidenco 


^ 


JUST 
RECEIVED! 

A  New  Supply 

of  English  & 

Scotch,  Crew-Neck, 

SHETLAND 
SWEATERS 

in  addition  to  our  r*g- 
ular  colors,  wo  have 
just  added:      "^  :  ^  *• 

Charcoal  Blue 
Charcoal  Green 
Green  Mist 
Blue  Mist    ' 
Cambridge  Gray 

Only  -  $12.50 

Be^  prepared  for  the 
oncoming  cold  weath#r! 

SiaVSKI-  SHKPIIBIU) 


^1"^ 


*.^ 


WEATHER 

Cool  with  high  of  60. 


Serials  Dept. 
Chapel  Hill.  N.  C. 
8-31-49 

3rhc 


SOUTH 

It's  got  another  party.  So* 


VOL.  iNll  NO.  43 


Complete  (JP)  Wire  Service 


CHAPEL   HILL,   NORTH   CAROLINA,   t-RtOAY,   NOVEMBER   9,   1954 


Offices   in   Grakam   Memorial 


FOUR   PAGES   THIS    ISSUI 


2  A.  M.  Curfew 
For  Return  From 


Set 
Virginia 


Except  where  the  caravan  train 
Sihedule  conflicts,  the  UNC  wo- 
men students  going  on  the  cara- 
van trip  to  Virginia  will  have  to 
be  back  on  campus  before  2  a.m. 
Sunday. 

The  Dean  of  Women's  office 
made  this  clear  yesterday  and 
has  issued  a  request  for  coeds  to 
observe  the  regulations  concern- 
ing the  trip. 

Girls  must  return  to  the  dorms 
by  2  a.m.  (Sunday  morning).  The 
driving  time  (Charlottesville  to 
Chapel  Hill.  190  miles)  is  four 
and  one4ialf  to  five  hours.  Dean 
Katherine    Carmichael    said. 

Unless  women  students — when 
they  sign  out  at  their  dorm  for  the 
trip — list  the  name  of  a  specific 
hotel,  motel,  or  room  address 
where   they   intend   to   stay   while 


'  away,  they  must   return   to   their 
dormitory    on    Saturday    night    (2 

'  a.m.  Sunday  morning). 

The     Dean     of  Womens'  office 
said  it  was  to  be  understood  that 

I  women   students   traveling  on   the 
caravan    train    will    have    to    con- 
form to  the  train's  schedule. 
On    the   day   of   the   game,   stu- 

;  dents  are  not  to  leave  their  dorms, 
on   any   occasion  or  for   any   pur- 


pose, until  5  a.m..  the  Dean  of 
Women's  office  said. 

Girls  making  the  trip  can,  how- 
ever, sign  out  from  their  dorms 
b?lore  closing  hours  Friday  night, 
if  they  have  cleared  correctly. 

Students  having  problems  con- 
cerning the  coming  weekend  may 
di.sciiss  them  with  the  dormitory 
hostess  or  the  sorority  housemoth- 
er the  office  said. 


Frats  Now 
Compiling 

Proposals 


United  Nations  Meet 
For  Talk  On  Hungary 


F'raternities  involved  are  now  in 
the  process  of  compiling  recom- 
mendations concerning  the  S.  Co- 
lumbia St.  parking  restriction,  ac- 
cording to  Wilburn  Davis. 

Davis  heads  the  student  govern- 
ment Traffic  Advisory  Commiss- 
ion. 

When   compilation    is   complete.  I 
a  general  report  wil   be  conveyed 
to   the   Chapel   Hill    Board   of   Al- 


dermen by  the  commission,  Davis    ^-eek  on  the  Israeli- Egyptian  situ- 


Legislature    Votes    $400 
To  DTH  For  International 
And  National  Wire  Service 

▲ 

Measures  On  Parking, 
Honor  Courts  Dropped 

riu'  .Stiidcin    I.t;4i,«»l.iinu'  li.si  nis»hi   \(>u<l    iS-i;{  in   iav- 
nr  ol  a  l)ili  i»ivin}«    Flu'  Dailv  Tar  ]\vv\  .'sjoo  to  obtain  a  iia- 


Hillel  Foundation  Presents 
Views  On  Middle  East  Crisis 


The    Hillel    Jewish 
said    in    a    statement 


Foundation    be  driven  off  our  soil.' 
issued    this    Radio.  June  29.  1949). 


(Baghdad 


FROM  RADIO  DISPATCHES 

UNITED  N.\TIONS,  N.  Y.  —The 


English  Club 
Meets  Today 


United  Nations  will  consider  today 
resolutions  and  protests  concern- 
ing Russia's  invasion  of  Hungary. 

Yugoslavia    added    its    voice    to 

The  English  Club  will  meet  at  ^"*-"  U"**^^  N^^'''"^'  <*emands  that 
8  p.m.  today  in  the  Library  As-  ;  Russia  withdraw  her  troops  from 
sembly  Room  instead  of  las  night  I  Hungary.  And  the  United  States 
as  incorrectly  reported  in  yester-  !  v.as  reported  readying  a  resolution 
days'   Daily  Tar  Heel.  |  calling  for  Soviet    withdarwal. 

The    meeting   was   postponed    a  I  *     *     * 

day  due  to  the  speech  on  the  Mag-  ^  VIENNA  —  Promised  aid  from 
na  Carta  Thursday  by  Sidney  the  Soviet  Union  to  the  embattled 
Painter.  I  people  of  Hungary  has  not  yet  ar- 

Dr.  Hugh  Holman  of  the  English  rived,  according  to  sources  within 
Dept.    will   read    a    paper  entitled    the  country. 


are  continuing  to  knock  off  Soviet 

soldiers. 

*     •     * 

UNITED  NATIONS.  N.  Y.  —  A 
.Spanish  delegate  to  the  United  Na- 
tions said  he  wants  an  internation- 
al police  force  in  Hungary,  similar 
to  the  one  being  sent  to  the  Mid- 


said. 

The  aldermen  meet  Monday 
night  to  pass  final  decree  on  the 
restriction. 

OVERALL   PROPOSAL 

The  commission  will  examine 
reports  from  fraternities  involved 


die  Elasi.  The  delegate  said  Spain  !  and  formulate  an  overall  proposal 


ation  that  Israeli  forces  crossed  the 
Egyptian  frontier  "in  order  to  de- 
stroy military  position.«  from  which 
Fedayeen  (commando  unit)  raids 
into  Israel  had  been  mounted.  " 

The  Foundation's  Committee  on 
i^ublic  Information  issued  the  fol- 
lowing compilation  of  questitms 
on     the     mid-east 


would  contribute  troops  to  such  a 
police  force. 

*     *     * 

JERUS.\LE.M  —  Israel  is  report- 
ed ready  to  withdraw  her  troops 
from  the  Sinai  Peninsula  —  when 
the  United  Nations  police  team 
takes  over. 


'The    Unity   of    Faulkner's    Light 
in   August" 

Members  of  the  Duke  University 
.  Graduate  English     Club     will     be 
guests  at  the  meeting. 

As  is  customary  at  meetings  of 
the  club,  the  audience  will  be  in- 
vited to  ask  questions.  Refresh- 
ments will  be  served  at  7:30  p.m. 


LONDON  —  BritLsh  Prime  Min- 
ister   Anthony    Eden    won    a    now 
The  International  Red  Cross  has    ^'ote  of  confidence  Thursday  on  his 

Middle  East  policies.  He  said  Bri- 
tain and  France  will  pull  their 
troops  out  of  the  Eg>-ptian  area 
when  a  United  Nations  police  team 
arrives  in   the  war-torn   land. 


supplies  ready  to  rush   into  Hun 
gary,  but  has  been  held  off  by  Ru 
sian  border  troops. 


There  are  still  pockets  of  re- 
sistance within  Hungary.  Although 
Russian  troops  have  vfrtually  tak- 


WASHINGTON 


President 


27  Students  To  Attend 
SSL  Ttwrsday -Saturday 

\     27-member     delegation     will  j  Tom   Lambeth,  John   Brooks,   Son 

represent   UNC    at   the   State  Stu-    ny  Evans,     Jim     Armstrong.    Bill 

dent  Legislature  in  Raleigh  "Hiurs-    Sabiston.  Gar>'   Greer,  Tom    Long, 

day  through  Saturday.  j  Phil  Haire.  Pat  Adams.   Bob  Har- 

T.      .  J   u      r.u  •  Ti  u   Ti       '  rington    and    Miss    Nancy    Roths- 

Headed  by  Chairman  Bob  Har-      ....  ' 

cnild. 
rington,   the   officers  of  the   dele-  j 

gallon  are  Jim  Holmes,  vice  chair- 1 


en  the  coun^over^rebel  snipers    Eisenhower    Thursday    asked     for 

)  quick  entrj-  into  the  United  States  '  version, 
for  Hungarian   refugees. 
They  should  be  admitted  with  a 


which  will  then  be  submitted  to 
the  aldermen  fo  acceptance  or  re- 
fusal. 

}  Aldermen  have  agreed,  Davis 
;  said,  to  furnish  earth  moving 
I  equipment  if  fraternities  owning 
I  vacant  lots  will  agree  to  allow 
their  conversion  into  parking  lots. 

\  tentative  site  for  a  parking 
lot  has  been  mentioned  by  the 
aldermen.  This  is  the  vacant  lot 
adjoining  the  Beta  Theta  Pi 
house. 

The  Betas  own  this  property. 
And  according  to  a  Beta  repre- 
sentative who  met  with  the  Traf- 
fic   Commission,    they    are    some- 


and     answers 
rrises: 


Question:  Wliy  was  Egypt  per- 
mitting border  \'iolations  by  civi- 
lian infiltrators  and  trained  mili- 
XoTy  personnel  to  take  place'.' 

Answer:  To  implement  Nasser's 
•vords  "Israel  is  an  artificial  state 
which  must  disappear."  (In  a  talk 
with  representatives  of  the  Greek 
paper  Kathimerini,  May  8.  1954). 
Nasser  has  since  then  continually 
repeated  that  theme  in  various 
ways.  The  position  of  Na.sser  re- 
flected that  of  other  Arab  coun- 
tries. Thus:  "The  Jews  are  our 
enemies,  and  it  does  not  matter 
how  peace-loving  they  may  be.  We 
shall    never   cea.se    to   prepare   for 


what   reluctant    to   allow   the  con- J  the    day    of     reckoning,     for    the 

j  secona  round,  when  the  Jews  will 


Question:  What  is  Lsrael's  inter- 
est in  the  Suez  Canal'.' 

Anwer:  The  same  as  that  of  any 
other  nation.  She  desires  the  risht 
of  free  pas.sage  through  the  canal. 
However,  since  May  1.3.  1948  Egjpt 
has  been  conduct  in;;  a  blockade  of 
all  Israeli  ships,  and  particularly 
(•rdercd  thai  none  should  g  > 
thi'ough  the  Suez  Canal. 

Question:  Wliat  is  Israel's  in- 
terest  in  the  Sinai  Peninsula? 

Answer;  As  far  as  we  can  de- 
termine: A.  To  ensure  that  she 
shall  noi  be  attacked  from  posi- 
tions there  and  B.  to  neutralize 
islands  at  the  approach  to  the  Red 
Sea.  held  and  armored  by  Egypt, 
which  threatened  to  attack  any  Is- 
.-•aeli  ships  attempting  to 
the»  Israeli  port  of  Eilat. 

Question:  What  is  Lsrael's  inter- 
est in  the  "<laza  Strip'.'" 

.\nswer:  Tliis  linger  of  land  ex- 
tending out  of  Egypt  was  used  as 
a  base  of  operatimcs  against  Is- 
rael, lor  marauders  and  infiltrators 
and  semingly  was  being  used  as 
a  military  base   for  the   projected 

{See  HILLEL.  Page  3) 


t  ion: 


riir  ' 
(  iissioii   ill 


iiui   inic-i  national   wire, 
riir  \otf  ol   a|)j)ro\;il  ( anu-  i.Ucv  iiuu  li  (Ub.ilc  auitl  dis- 

I  tin-  two-hour  scs.sion. 
.Measures  (alliiii;   lor  (<»iinnitlc'cs  to  inxcsti^.ile  the   jx>s- 
sil)ilit\    oi   <ieltiu<4   p:irkin'4   '"•   ionstru<iion   siaiied  now  and 
the   |>o>sil)ilitv  ol    ha\in<4   tlu-  jndieial   eoints   meet    in   places 
other  th;ui   (.r.iham  '.Memoi  iai    wi-ie  (kleaied. 

On  the  hill  to  ;^et  the  1)  IH  the  .\.ss<«  iaied  Press  wire 
service.  Kditor  lied  Powledye  s;iid  "we  no  lon«ii'r  li\e  in  a 
campus  community."  and  that  what*— 
goes  on  in  the  rest  of  the  world 
vitally  ^ffects  every  student  on 
campus. 

Having    the    wire    would    create 


more   student    interest    in    interna 
tional  news.  Powledge  said. 

Jim  Monteith.  who  is  not  a  mem- 
ber of  the  legislature,  was  allowed 
reach  !  ^"  speak,  and  said  that  the  .students 
I  would   be  involved    in   internation 
at    and    national    affairs    "whether 
we  like  it  or  not." 


truth  and  was  too  short.  Brooks  re- 
ported  that   the  people  who  elect- 
;  ed  him  to  office  slated. 
I      Bnxiks  said  that  the  inlernation- 
j  al  news  was  not  the  most  import- 
!  ant  news  to  the  DTH.  that  cover- 
ing   world    news    was    a    third    or 
iourth    rale    responsibility    of    the 
paper. 
i      Stating    that    campus    news    was 
nu>re  important.   Brooks  said  that 
j  as   co-chaii  man   of  the   polls  com- 


mininium    of    the 
tape,  he  said. 


customary    red 


Representatives   fn)m   other   f ra- j 
ternities   on    S.    Columbia    St.    be-1 
tween    Franklin   St.    and   Cameron 
Ave.,  whene   tlie    reatriction  ia  iai 
force,   agreed   that    the  liotas   had 
a  ritcht  to  deal  with  their  proper- 
ty  in   any   way   they   saw   fit  at    a 
recent  meeting.  j 


man:  Nancy  Rothschild,  clerk;  Jim 
Monteith.  senate  floor  leader:  John  ! 
Brooks,    house    floor   leader:    Tom 
Long,    treasurer:    Joel    Fleishman 
and  Charlie  Dean,  social  chairmen. 

While  the  student  legislature 
is  in  session  in  the  state  senate 
and  house  chambers  in  the  Capi- 
tol building  in  Raleigh,  the  U.NX 
group  will  bring  before  the  as- 
sembly   two   bills: 

1.  A  bill  to  repeal  the  Pear- 
sail  Plan   amendment. 

2.  A  bill  call  for  the  interven 
tion  of  U.  S.  troops  in  Poland  and 
Hungary. 

The  whole  purpose  of  the  mock 
legislature,  which  has  headquart 
ers  at  the  Carolina  Hotel  in  Ral- 
eigh, is  to  bring  together  students 
from  colleges  throughout  the 
state  to  debate  topics  of  inter- 
national, national,  state  and  edu- 
cational nature. 

During  the  meetings,  the  UNC 
delegation  hopes  to  nominate  dele- 


Alternates  of  the  house  are 
David  Matthews,  Ethan  Tolman, 
Brandon  Kincaid.  and  Misses  Mir- 
iam Harris,  Alice  Eller  and  Mel- 
ba    Remig. 


Sweetheart's 
Crowning  Wed. 

Wednesday  will  be  quite  an  im- 
portant  day    to   some    UNC   coed. 

On  that  day  at  the  Interdormi- 
tory  Council  meeting  in  New  East 
she  will  be  crowned  the  ."Sweet- 
heart of  UNC  Dorms,"  according 
to  Don  Matkins  and  Whit  Whit- 
field, cu-chairmcn  of  the  contest 
committee  of  the  IDC,  which  is 
sponsoring  the  contest. 

Not  oirly  will  she  receive  a  $10 
gift  certificate,  but  also  a  bouquet 
of  roses  and  a  loving  cup.  And 
her  two  runnerups  will  bb  the  re- 
cipients   of   $5    gift   certificates. 

Judges,  who  are  Mrs.  Kay  Ky- 
ser,  Assoc.  Prof,  of  Philosophy 
gates  for  office  in  both  the  house  William  H.  Poteat  and  Bob  Cox, 
and  the  senate,  according  to  Chair- 
man  Bob   Harrington. 

The  UNC  delegation,  which  is 
divided  into  two  parts,  the  senate 
and  the  house,  includes  Senators 
Jim  Monteith  and  Larry  Matthews 
with  Benny  Thomas  as  alternate. 


Campus  Chest  ! 
Extends  Drve    I 

The  Campus  Chest  Drive  has 
been  extended  until  Tuesday,  ac- 
cording to  Jess  Stribling.  co- 
chairman  of  the  campaign. 

Following  is  a  list  of  the  fra- 
ternities and  sororities  which 
have  contributed  to  Campus  Chest 
with  the  average  contribution  per 
person: 

Delta  Kappa  Epsilon.  $1.03:  Al- 
pha Gamma  Delta.  $1.00:  Kappa 
Delta.  $.93:  Chi  Psi.  $.52:  Phi 
Delta  Theta.  $  .45;  Kappa  .\lpha, 
$.24;  Sigma  Phi  Epsilon.  $.15: 
Phi  Kappa  Sigma.  $  .08  and  Alpha  ing  is  expect?d  to  supply  the  last 
Tau  Omega,  $  .06.  I  chapter  in   the   restriction   story. 


Inauguration  Date 
Of  Hodges  WiJJ  Be  Set 


jlnittee  of  Graham  Memorial  Activi- 
ties Board  he  had  turned  in  sever- 
al arlieies  that  were  not  publish- 
ed. He  also  said  that  several  ar- 
ticles written  by  members  of  the 
Young      Republicans      Club      and 

1  Young  Democrat  Club  were  not 
printed  on  the  editorial  page. 

j      Mike  Weinman.  University  Party 

I  chairman  who  introduced  the  bill 
last  week,  said  tliiTc  was  no  issue 


Monteith    urged    the    legislators 
to  get  the    "right  perspective."  He 
said  that  »they  should  not  be   par- 
tisan in  voting.  He  told  the  repre- 
sentative.s    that    they    had    an    ap- 
•Mjrtuaily    to    vote    on    something 
I  which  would  affect  the  whole  stu 
dent  body.  He  chivJlcnged  the  mem- 
!  bers  of  the  body  to  vote  as  repre- 
j  sentatives  of  the  electorate. 

Representative    John    Brooks,    a 

I  Student    Party    member    opposing '  <*^    cutting    out    the    campus    news. 

the   bill,   said    nv   one   In    his   con  |  *-^""^'    ^ustne   Norman    said    (haf 

l.stixoencv  was  in  favor  of  having'  in-     "'*'  ''•'''♦•''  ''oi''''"'  ^'^''   Ji's'  ^  J'^'e 

I  lernational    and    national    news    in  i  '''   "^^^   world   new.s.   that    it   would 

have  to  be  all  campus  nvws  or  all 


60DAY  LIFT  *   "    | 

If    the    fraternities    do    propose 
some    feasible    .solution,      in      all  \ 
probability    the    two-hour    parking  ■ 
restriction  on  S.  Columbia  St.  will 
not  be  lifted   for  60  days,  as  was 
stated  by  aldermen  represtmtatives  ; 
at    a    previous    meeting    with    the 
commission,   according    to   Davis. 

Mayor  0.  K.  Cornwell  said  al- 
dermen representatives  were  act- 
ing without  "authoriMtion"  in 
suggesting  to  lift  the  ban. 

Monday   night's  aldermen   meet- 1 


RALEIGH,  i/Pi  —  A  decision  on 
whether  Gov.  Hodges'  inaugura- 
tion ceremony  will  be  held  in 
January  or  February  may  come 
next  week.  ! 

Gov.  Hodges  .said  yesterday  he 
hopes  to  announce  a  decision  at 
his  next  press  conference.  He  told 
newsmen  the  inauguration  could  \ 
come  a  month  ahead  of  the  Crcn- 
eral  .Assembly  or  it  could  wait  un- 
til early  Febniary. 

Traditionally,  the  inauguration 
ceremony  has  been  held  in  Jan- 
uary, the  daj-  after,  the  legislature 
convened.  On  Sept.  8.  however, 
voters  Approved  a  constitutional 
amendment  changing  the  date  for 


the    legislature    to    convene    from  I 
January   to   Febniary.  j 

Hwlges.  in  reply  to  a  question,  j 
said    he    look«    for    the    legislative  ' 
.session    to   be   of   average   length.  I 
adding     "I    .see    no    reason    for    an 
extraordinarily  Ions   session."  i 

Hodges   reported   "I'm  happy   to  ! 
announce"   that   Eugene   Shaw   has  : 
agreed   to   remain    on    as   Revenue 
Commissioner  until  July   1.    Shaw  j 
.said    last    Friday    he    is    stepping  j 
down  at  the  end  of  his  term  Jan. 
1  to  resume  law  practice  in  Greens- 
boro. 

Shaw's  decision  to  return  to 
Greensboro,  Hodges  said,  "was 
purely  one  of  his  choice. ' 


the    DTH.    II    did    not    pre.se.it    fht 

Wllllford  Named  Queen 

Miss  Martha  Williford  was  se- 
lected Ust  night  from  98  luscious 
lovelies  to  wear  the  crown  of 
Miss  Yackety  Yack  Queen  for 
1956. 

Miss  Williford  was  sponsored 
by   Kappa   Alpha   Fraternity. 

Radio  en>cee  Jimmy  Capps  of 
Raleigh  was  in  charge  ot  the  con- 
test. 

Narnes  of  the  14  court  mem- 
bers and  details  of  the  contest 
were  not  available  as  of  press 
time  last  night. 


AFTER  THREE  MONTHS'  TRAINING 


New  Troopers  Know  What  It  Takes 


local  merchant,  have  already  re- 
ceived photographs  of  the  entries 
in  the  contest. 

"The  23  coeds  who  are  entered 
in    the    beauty    contest    and    the 
dorms   which  have   selected   them 
as  representatives  are: 
Steele:   Misses   Bobbie   Madison, 
Delegates  tot  he  house   are  Ed    ^ibby  McDowell  and  Diane  Vach- 
Roland,    Gardner    Foley.    Charles    gresse. 

Dean,    Jim    Holmes,    Jim    Tolbert, !      i^^-ig.     viiss     Lucinda     Holder- 
Joel    Fleishman,    Whit    Whitfield,    jj^^^^ 

1      Everett:  Misses  Valerie  Von  Ara- 

mon.  Jane  Brock,  Joan  Wender 
and  Lucie  Crossland. 

Cobb:  Misses  Patsy  Poythress, 
Isabel  Madry,  Dottie  Wood  and 
Susan  Walker. 
Winston:  Miss  Anne  Newsome. 
Stacy:  Misses  Shirley  Carpent- 
er, Marian  Dickens  and  Elaine 
Burns. 

Aycock:  Misses  Sarah  Crawford 
and  Caroline  Blackwelder. 

Mangum:    Misses    Phyllis    Kraft 
and  Jackie   Aldridge. 

Old  East:  Mis^  Gwen  Heinzen. 
Whiteh"ad:  Miss  Carol  Liner. 


IN  THE  INFIRAAARY 

Students  in  the  Infirmary  yes- 
terday  included: 

Misses  Barbara  Calleiway,  Mar- 
garet Hafer,  Isabolle  Masterton, 
and  Kingo  Yamato,  James  Spears, 
Kenneth  Willis,  Morris  Hail, 
George  Myatt,  David  McGraw, 
Howard  Mills,  John  Reed,  Law- 
rence Robertson  Jimmy  Merritt, 
David  Carr,  John  Trott  and  Hugh 
Bryant. 


By  BOB  MYERS 

What  makes  a  trooper  a  troop- 
er? 

Ask  the  62  newest  members  of 
:he  North  Carolina  State  Highway 
Patrol.  They  know. 

And  spend  an  afternoon  chatting 
with  Albert  Coates,  director,  and 
Zeb  Alley,  an  assistant  director  oi 
the  Institute  of  Government  here 
and  veteran  patrolman,  Sgt.  E.  C. 
Jones. 

For  twelve  weeks  these  men 
taught,  observed,  and  guided  the 
1956  crop  of  patrolmen  in  the 
North  Carolina  Highway  Patrol 
basic  training  school,  only  one  in 
the  state,  conducted  jointly  by  the 
Institute  and  the  Highway  Patrol. 

Now  the  recent  grads  of  the 
school   are   on   active   duty.   They 


make    the    TO.WM) 
highway  safe. 


WORK 

The  patrolmen's  work  is  cut  out 
for  the  state  highways  which  are 
congested  with  a  greater  number 
of  vehicles,  more  powerful,  than 
at  any  other  time  in  hi.story.  and 
people  are  prone  to  speed  and 
drive  recklessly  to  their  destina- 
tions, and  sometimes  don't  get 
there  They  will  combat  the  grow- 
ing traffic  problem,  so  grave  that 
the  state  is  35th  in  the  nation  in 
number  of  accidents. 


COURSES 

Driver    education     and    pursuit 
That's   whv   the    patrolmen   like!  driving   are   two   of   the   most    im- 
ihe   recent    graduates   have   to    be.portant    practical    courses.    "After 


more  than  men  with  badges,  pis- 
tols, and  new  automobiles. 

A  spotless  personal  background 
and  good  character,  prerequisite  to 
extenive   training   make   the   men 


Gl  Wagesri 
Unlimited  | 

Veterans  in  school  under  the  i 
Korean  GI  Bill  may  earn  any  I 
amount  of  money  outside  ot  class  : 
without  jeopardizing  their  month- j 
ly  Gl  all(»wances.  the  Veterans  j 
.Vdniinistration    .said    recently.  | 

These  outside  earning.-;  need  not 
even  be  reported,  the  organiza- 
tion said.  V.^  explained  .some  vet- 
erans still  confuse  the  Korean  Gl 
Bill  with  the  original  World  War 
II  GI  Bill,  which  did  have  an  in- 
come "ceiling"  tnat  applied  to  vet- 
ejans  taking  all  type.s  of  training 
in  school,  on-the-job  and  on-the- 
tarm. 

V.\  added  there  is  a  "ceiling' 
for  Korean  veterans  taking  on- 
the-job  training.  Under  this  ceil- 
ing, when  a  veteran's  on-the-job 
training  wage>.  plus  his  Gl  allow- 
ance.^ exceed  .S3 10  a  month.  VA 
t(.  drive  before  he  can  do  anjihing  ;  is    determined   by   the   manner   in  ;  "'"  .•^'■"'*'  ^""■"  ^^*  allowance  ac- 

else.  •    Alley    said,    "and    th-v    get   «hich  motoiistK  conduct  themselves  i  ^""' '""'>'•  ^"  *""'"«  ^^*^  *»*^1  ^■'^^■ 

in   the  .$310   limit. 


jnternaJKjna)  news. 
I  .\l  (Jo/dsmith.  UP  a.ssisfant  chair 
•  ioan.  a.-^ked  if  de\oting  one-eight 
I  of  page  one  to  internation  news 
i  was  taking  over  of  the  Tar  Heel 
}  by  intrrnational  news. 
I  Student  Party  floor  leader  Jim 
,  Holmes,  who  said  he  was  speaking 
I  as  an  indi\idiial.  said  the  DTH  can- 
,  not  rover  the  world  scene  as  well 
j  as  the  other  dailies  of  the  state, 
i  and  that  the  campus  new.s  is  of  no 
less  importance  than  what  is  go- 
!  ing  on  in  Hungary. 
I  "We  have  te  decide  whether  to 
!iave  a  paper  for  the  campus  or  to 
have  one  that  will  win  prizes  for 
vftvering  international  news.' 
Holmes  said. 


miles    of    state    *sith  patrolmen  to  get  practical  ex- 

I  pericnce 

I  When  school  opens,  'rookies" 
arc  sworn  int<»  the  patrol  and  en- 
rolled, conditionally.  In  addition, 
men  are  given  personality  and  ap- 
litude  tests,  and  reviewed  by  a 
board  composed  of  Patrol  and  In- 
.«titutc  of  Government  instructors. 
Law  and  other  technical  courses 
are  tiiught  by  qualified  UNC  and 
Institute  professors,  the  practical 
courses   by  seasoned   patrolmen. 


ail. 


a   patrolman   musi    know   how 


which  people,  their  bodies  twisted, 
I  w..rped.    mangled    and     mutilated, 
became  invalids  or  corpses.  ' 

i  And  they  will  see  infractor  of 
the  rule  brought  to  justice  be- 
cause they  know  the  democratic 
system  of  protect  to  be  protected, 
safety  to  be  safe.  And  they  will 
j  motivate  this  jutice. 
! CONTRAST 

i      In  sharp  contrast  to  what  patrol- ' 
I  men  are  is  what  they  arent.  Their 
:  intentions    arc    good.    They    don't 
stalk   the   public  like  a   lion   after  j 
its  prey.  They  don't   desire  to  re- ' 
sort   to  ruses   and   trickery  to  see  j 
how  many  tickets  can   l>e   vnitten 
in  a  day. 

However,   the  strategA    thev   use  '■ 


have    completed    the    40   differeni  ^behind  the  badges  ambassadors  of 
courses  and  20  additional  lectures. 


nearly  100  hours  of  it." 

A/id   to   realize   a   violation,   pa- 
trolmen  must 


on  tht  highways. 

Cruising  down  the  highway,  pa- 
know   the   rules    of  j  trolmen     are    welcome    sights     to 


hours  of  studying,  and  walked  the 
disciplinary  chalkline  as  straight 
as  the  military.  They  aren't  "rook- 
ie" or  "trainees"  anymore,  as  dub- 
bed by  the  qualified  UNC  and  In- 
stitute professors  and  the  seaon- 
ed  NCOs  of  the  patrol  who  in 
strucied   them. 

They  have  welled  the  size  of  the 
active  corps  to  580,  near  full  force. 
E^ch  has  an  assignment  to  one  of 
the  30  districts  of  five  troops  that 
make  up  the  ranks  of  officers 
whose    task,    stated    simply,    is    to 


good  will  and  responsible,  efficient  the  road  and  the  laws  that  govern 
oficers.  And  that's  the  objective '  them,  court  procedure,  how  to  use 
of  the  school.  j  firearms    effectively,    accident    in- 

Highway  patrolmen  don't  grow ,  vestigation.  drivers  license  laws. 
on  trees.  Because  the  state  doesn't  j  ^nd  laws  of  jurisdiction,  traffic 
consult  the  unemployed  rolls  or !  control  and  first  aid.  On  these  sub- 
courihouse  benches  for  replace-  i  jects  they  spent  nearly  200  hours, 
ment.s,  vacancies  from  men  enter-  In  a  few  months,  these  young 
ing  other  state  positions  snowball  ;  "len  will  learn  much.  They  will 
to  as  many  as  60  a  year  until  men  i  come  face  to  face  with  the  traffic 
can   be  trained   to  fill  them.  i  problem,  the  speeders,  the  drunk- 

Four  to  six  months  prior  to  the !  en,  reckless,  perilous  drivers,  the 
start  of  .school,  thoroughly  screen-  !  •rrcsponsible  teenagers  and  <leath. 
ed  applicants  who  are  over  21  and  Th»y  will  be  able  to  relate  the 
physically  fit  are  assigned  to  ride  .  siekeninif  accounts  of  accidents  in 


motorists  who  obey  the  rules  and 
play  fair:  they  are  the  greatest 
weapons  which  the  state  has  to 
deal  with  those  who  don't  play 
tair. 

These  referees"  of  the  high- 
way .s  -also  believe  the  observance 
iiries  of  fair  play  is  an  important 
means  of  soothing  the  traffic  head- 
ache. Around  the  clock  the  patrol- 
men maintain  a  constant  vigil  on 
the  highways.  .\nd  they've  been 
doing  it  for  27  years.  The  way 
they  make  these  men  here  has 
proved    effect ive. 


Rates  for  veterans  in  school 
full-time  under  the  Korean  GI  Bill 

[  are  SI  10  a  month  with  no  depend- 

;  ents:  $135  wiih  one  dependent,  and 
S160  with  more  than  one.  These 
are  the  rates  that  are  not  affected 

I  by  outside  earnings. 

Job  training  allowances  begin 
at  S70  a  month  wtih  no  depend- 
ents; S85  wtih  one.  and  S105  with 

■  more    than    one    dependent.    The 
law    requiws    these    rates    be    re- 
duced at   four-njonth  intervals,  as  i 
training    progresses   and    veterans"  I 
puniing    abilities    inenease.    These 
rates   are   subject     to     the     S310 

i  "ceiling."'  1 


Young  To  Back 
SP  Slate  In 
Election  Tues. 

Student  body  present  Bob  Young 
yesti'iday  i.ssued  a  statement  iav- 
*iins  the  Student  Partys  slate  of 
i-andidates    in    Tuesdays    election. 

Young  said  "At  this  time  of  the 
year.  I  do  not  feel  that  I  can  com- 
pletely forsake  my  three-year  con- 
nection with  the  SP.  despite  the 
fact  that  I  hold  a  position  repre- 
.sentative  ot  all  sttuhnt  govern- 
ment. 

"I  speak  at  this  time  for  what 
I  feel  to  be  the  best  interests  of 
the   student   body. 

".Never  will  I  say  that  the  Stu- 
dent Party  has  ail  of  the  most 
qualified  students  in  its  member- 
ship. However,"  he  sa;<l,  *i  think 
that  experience  shows  that  SP 
personnel  has  been  more  active 
and  more  interested  in  the  welfare 
of  all  the  students  on  campus.  I 
think  this  interest  has  been  dis- 
played particularly  by  SP  legisla- 
tors. 

".  .  .  It  is  most  advantageous  to 
the  executive  branch  if  it  can  re- 
ly on  the  proper  functioning  of  the 
legislative  branch.  Student  govern- 
ment could  make  tremendous 
strides  for  the  remainder  of  this 
year."  he  said,  "if  the  SP  were  it 
the  majority  in  the  Legislature. 

'"I  challenge  each  student  tc 
consider  seriously  all  candidate; 
for  all  position.-.  I  think  you  wiL 
find  the  SP  candidates  most  quali 
fied  and  most  intere^sted,'  he  con- 
cluded. 


'C 


OUT  TODAY 


-J  ^'i 


PROSPECT  &  RETROSPECT 


Votes  For  Eisenhower  Mean  Quarterly   Has  Varied   Material  Wandering  About 


More  Importanci^  For  SouHi       charnesioan 


i-.ist  wtok  whfii  (iOP  oiibenia- 
tr»rial  tandidate  Kyle  Hayes  was 
on-canipiis,  he  told  the  ^'RC'.  that 
"Nortli  (aroliiia  must  hettmie  bi- 
partisi^n.  "  He  further  stated  that 
■'.North  Ciaiolina  uill  not  reaeh  its 
rioht  place  in  thf  |S  states  until  we 
ha\e  a  two-party  system."' 

Haves'  totnitiious  must  have 
hten  sliared  hv  a  lar^e  portion  of 
Tar  Hetl  voters  Tuesday  <Vhen 
tluv  turned  out  a  laiL»er  Repuf)li- 
(aii  \ote  than  ever  before  in  the 
history  of  the  state.  Of  course,  this 
was  just  in  the  Presidetitial*iace, 
bju  it  indicates  a  trend  away  from 
habitual    voting    practices. 

President  Kisenhowers  innnense 
persona^l  j>oj)uiaritv,  plus  the  war 
.situatioTi  in  F.uro|»e  and  the  Mid- 
east. prof)ablv  were  more  im|)ort- 
ant  factors  in  the  \«)te  rather  than 
anv  allej>;iame  to  the  Repid)liean 
Paitv. 

I  he  bi'4  tiling,  is  the  fact  that 
tlie  ".Solid  Soifth"  isn't  solid  any- 
ujore,  \\:tih  \'ir<>inia  and  Florida 
o«>in<>  for  Kisenhower.  This  fact, 
jilus  tite  lelatixelv  hfoh  Republi- 
can \«»ie  in  other  .Southern  states, 
shows  tljat  the  people  are  no  loit;i»- 
er  following  the  Demotratie  Party 
line  with  the  f)lind  obediancc  of 
pre\  ious  vears. 

This  is  of  great  significance  to 
the  jjeople  of  the  .South.  \V'hen  it 
bc^c(»mes  in  future  years  (if  the 
present  trend  continues)  evident 
that  the  South  is  no  longer  going 
to  \ote  the  nemcKratic  ticket  bv 
habit,  then  both  parties  will  be 
more  inc  li?ied  to  fight  for  the 
Southern  \ote. 

This  means  there  might  !>e  more 
Soutlierners  in  high  goxernntent 
pisitious.  more  njoney  j>oured  in- 
to the  South   lor  conservation  and 


development  and  more  ccmsidera- 
tion  of  all  the 'area's  particul.ir 
needs. 

When  the.se  things  cKcur  the 
.South  will  indeed  "rise  again"  and 
assume  a  role  of  great  economic  im- 
portqiue.  which  it  has  the  mide- 
\eloped  |)c»tenfial   to  tlo., 

.An  open  mind  next  election 
year  coidd  buy  the  Soiuh  economic 
e\r>liuion.  and  at  the  same  time 
North  Carolina  and  other  "back- 
waid"  states  cotdd  rise  to  their  rel- 
ati\e  positions  of  importance. 

Rain's  Nice 
But  Should 
Qiiit  Now 

It  rained  vesterday. 

The  light  drops  of  water  fell 
from  the  skv.  and  in  tlie  process 
knocked  oft  many  of  the  fall  leaves 
ft(»m  on  the  tuniierous  trees  on  the 
campus. 

It  looked  lather  ocld  and  at  the 
same  time  wonderfcd  to  see  the 
lea\es  and  rain  falling  simultan- 
eously. .And  stuclents  were  all 
decked  out  in  their  raincoats  of 
assorted  colors.  The  girls  wore 
their  big  txjots  and  carried  luu- 
br^llas. 

It  w.is  nice  to  have  the  rains 
come  for  a  day.  It  seems  to  have 
cleansed  the  camptis,  even  if  for 
just  a  dav.  But  tliere  were  many 
sighs  of  relief  when  the  sini  came 
out  late  in  the  afternoon.  Rain  is 
nice,  but  we  can  stand  only  so 
much  of  it. 


Doctors,  Editors:  Peace 


Last  week  at  a  meeting  of  the 
Institute  for  Research  in  Social 
Stience  a  study  (»f  the  relationships 
between  doctors  and  editors  was 
distus.sed.  I  heie  is  a  n(»tcjrious  in- 
compaiiljilitv  heiueen  the  two 
groups;  ilie  d'lMUssion  is  a  good 
thin';. 

1  he    I'lccUial    profession,    being 
lar.i^t   .iucl  vvell-organi/cdr  is  in  po- 


Let's  Watch 
Auto  Money 
Carefully 

(..nolina  doesn't  seeuj  to  Ik*  the 
nni\  college  that  ha«>  her  j>arking 
j)rol)letns. 

A  recent  article  from  a  state 
newspaper  stated  that  Bavlor  I'n- 
i\er  in  Waco.  Texas,  has  1.022 
parking  spaces -for  2,chk)  register- 
ed Ntudent  automobiles.  .Now  just 
what   is  being  done  alK)ut  it? 

I  fie  school  re|)orts  it  built  four 
parking  lots  last  year  and  that 
ihree  are  now  .inidei  construction. 
It  also  savs  it  Avill  cost  S',00  per 
Npac  e.  However  there  is  no  men- 
tion ;;s  to  wlfcfher  there  is  any 
money  appro|jriaied  h)r  the  build- 
jiig  (^f   lho.se -nfuch-needed  spaces. 

Now  that  is  "^lexas.  What  about 
Carolina!-  We  registered  our  cars 
for  a  fee  of  .Si!.-,o.  The  nionev  is  in 
I  lie  right  hands  and  just  waiting  to 
be  spent  cm  these  lots. 

The  cpiestioH  is  whether  the 
lutine  will  be  taken  into  mind  so 
that  a  situation  wont  develop 
where  we  will  oiugrow  the  ap- 
propiated  spate. 

The  Daily  Tar  Heel 

The  official  student  publication  of  the 
Publications  Board  of  the  University  of 
North  Carolina,  where  it  is  published 
daily  except  Monday  and  examinatiofe 
and  vacation  periods  and  summer  terms 
Entered  as  second  cla.ss  matter  in  tht 
ncist  office  in  Chapel  Hill,  N.  C,  undei 
the  Act  oi  March  8,  1870.  Subscription 
rates:  mailc^d.  S4  per  year,  $2.50  a  semes- 
ter; delivered,  $6  a  year,  $3.50  a  semes- 
ter. 

Editor    FREP  POWLEDGE 

Managing  Editor  CHARUE  SLOAN 


News  Editor  RAY  LINKER 


Business  Manager 


BILL  BOB  PLEl. 


Sports   Editor  


LARRY  CHEEK 


Night  Editor 
Proof  Reader 


.     Woody  Sears 
.J'red  Puwledge 


sition  to  do  virtualv  what  it  pleases 
with  regard  to  ruling  its  members. 
At  the  same  time,  the  medical  pro- 
fessicm  should  be  under  the  s.tme 
(Icxse  scrutiny  that  is  placed  on 
scluM)!  teachers  and  state  emplo- 
yees, inasmuch  as  all  three  groups 
are  vitally  involved  in  the  broatf 
classification  of  overseeing  the 
liealih,  education  and  welfare  of 
the  .American  f>eopIe. 
.^1  u  Jthtd  E.  ro^  a&  ouc^of  tb«!  f^rea  t  - 
est  mediums  for  spotting  and  aid- 
ing in  the  correction  of  societal 
ills,  the  .American  ne\vs}xipers  and 
their  editors  ijiave  often  aided  ma- 
teriallv  in  j)iotetting  tlie  .Ameri- 
can |H'ople  in  areas  \vhere  they  as 
a  m.iss  were  defenseless. 

Doctors,  like  all  other  profess- 
ional people,  aie  human  a'ud  sub- 
jec  t  to  err.  .A  gcjod  editor  can  keep 
them  on  their  toes,  with  the  end  re- 
sult of  better  medical  care  and 
practices  for  the  .American  people. 

Greeks  Face 
Integration: 

\Vhile  the   battle   h)r  school    in- 
tegration     is     still     being   waged, 
there's     another     question     which' 
will   ;i|fect  campuses  all   across   the 
country. 

This  is  the  (]ues>ion  of  integra- 
tion on  fraternity  ro\v.  .At  present, 
there  aie  approximately  joo.ooo 
students  in  schools  all  over  the 
coimtiy  who  are  members  of  fra- 
ternal oigani/ations.  And  most  of 
these  organizations  have  restrictive 
clauses  in  their  bvlaws  whic  h  per- 
tain to  membership. 

These  "white  clauses'  have  be- 
come the  object  of  much  contro- 
versy in  the  [)ast  10  vears,  and  are 
receiving  more  comment  each  day. 
The  restrictive  clauses  are  not  only 
aimed  at  Negro  students,  f)ut  at 
Orientals  and  religioirs  groups  as 
well. 

According  to  a  rejMirt  in  this 
week's  U.  S.  News  anrl  World  Re- 
port, a  showdown  might  be  coming 
soon.  There  appears  to  be  pres- 
sure on  every  side,  with  some 
schools  putting  tlie  .sc]uee/e  on  the 
locals,  who  in  turn  create  disturb- 
ances in  the  nationals.  .Several  na- 
tipnal  fraternities  have  already  lost 
chapters  as  desegregation  deadlines 
(imposed  by  the  colleges)  get 
ne^arer. 

The  Cjtiestion  here  is  how  long 
it  will  be  before  the  problem  pre- 
sents itself  to  UNC's  Greek  socie- 
ties. 


Today  The  Carolina  Quarterly, 
under  the  editorship  of  Miss 
^arcelline  Krafchick,  goes  on 
sale.  It  is,  as  it  says  on  the  title 
/page,  continuing  '"the  tradition 
established  with  the  University 
Magazine  in  1844.  ' 

The  Carolina  Quarterly,  Volume 
Nine,  Number  One.  is  a  potpourri 
of  good  writing  and  pleasant 
reading.  Through  the  use  of  a 
variety  of  themes  and  styles  the 
editorial  staff  of  the  University's 
literary  magazine  has  compiled 
articles  to  suit  a  broad  field  of 
interests. 

Thomas  Wolfe's  life,  as  present- 
ed on  the  National  Broadcasting 
Company's  Biography  in  Sound, 
has  been  transferred  to  the  open- 
ing pages  of  the  Quarterly  in  its 
original  .script  format. 

Something  is  lost  when  the  pro- 
gram is  read  instead  of  heard, 
but  it  remains  a  thrilling  sum- 
mary of  the  life  of  North  Caro- 
lina's greatest  writer.  Excerpts 
from  Wolfe's  works  "pointedly 
and  poetically  describe  the  au- 
thor's feeling  for  America  that 
he  strove  to  put  on  paper  during 
Jiis  short  life. 

If  a  magazine  can  be  paced, 
the  current  Quarterly  certainly 
has  such  a  quality.  If  the  reader 
.starts  at  the  beginning  and  fol- 
lows the  order  of  the  stories  as 
they  are  presented,  he  will  find 
him.self  moving  rapidly,  pausing, 
thinking,  re-reading  then  moving 
rapidly  on  again.  Intended  or  not, 
this  feature  makes  each  story 
and  poem  an  individual  instead 
of  something  to  be  compared  with 
what  preceded  it  or  what  will  fol- 
low. 

The  poetry  tends  to  lean  more 
towards  the  lyrical  side  of  the 
scale  with  no  really  starting  ex- 
periments in  the  medium.  But, 
for  the  most  part,  one  doesn't 
have  to  be  a  poet  or  student  of 
poetry  to  appriciate  what  the  lyri- 
cists are  trying  to  say. 

A  collection  of  seven  poems  by 
North  Carolina  poets,  with  an  in- 
troduction by  Roy  Moose,  bright- 
ens the  center  of  the  magazine. 
Moose's  introduction  is  a  clear 
analysis  of  the  work.s,  and  serves 
as  a  kind  of  tenderizer  for  the 
meaty  stuff  that  follows. 

William  Mangum's  cover  draw- 
ing of  Thomas  Wolfe  and  repro- 
ductions of  two  lithographs  by 
Benton  Spruance  add  to  the  gen- 
eral-appearance of  the  book.  .i_-^^ 

The  material  runs  from  a  char- 
acter sketch  of  a  man  named  Mor- 
ton from  Miss  Pati  Hills  new  no- 
vel, The  Nine  Mile  Circle,  to  be 
released  soon  by  Houghton  Mif- 
flin, to  a  slightly  off-beat  story 
by  Morion  Zelenko  entitled 
"Nereis." 

"Nereis"  is  the  name  of  a  cat, 
but  the  story  deals  with  artists 
in  the  true  cognac-scented,  draf- 
ty-g;irret   tradition. 

On  the  lighter  side  a  lecture  by 
Anton  Chekhov  on  "The  Harmful- 
ne.s.>;  of  Tobacco"  is  included. 
Eric  Bentley.  drama  critic  of  Jhe 
New  Republic,  has  done  the  Eng- 
lish version  in  a  bright  and  sym- 
pathetic manner. 

The  closing  works  of  the  maga- 
zine include  a  translation  of  a 
poem.  "Sombre  Landscape,"  by 
Kurt  Loup.  Dusseldorf,  Germany, 
librarian,  an  incident  entitled 
"The  Chestnut  Stud,"  another 
example  of  contemporary  lyric 
poetry,  "Elerne"  by  John  Forbis 


and  a  series  of  book  reviews  on 
North  Carolina  authors. 

"The  Chestnut  Stud  '  is  almost 
a  character  study,  yet  has  enough 
action  to  warrant  being  called  an 
incident.  The  piece  does  not  have" 
timf  to  become  a  short  story,  but 
whatever  it  is,  it  is  good  reading. 


Book  reviews,  no  matter  how 
eruditely  composed,  are  still  book 
reviews,  and  that  is  about  the 
best  that  can  be  said  for  them. 
The  Quarterly's  reviews  are  not 
much  different.  They  are  nice  es- 
says, and  occasionally  show  a 
sign  of  atempted  originality,  ef- 


forts at  being  other  than  bok  re- 
views. But  they  are. 

Miss  Krafchick's  magazine  is, 
on  the  whole,  an  addition  to  the 
fine  tradition  of  the  University 
Magazine,  and  at  the  same  time 
contains  material  to  suit  all 
tastes. 


'It  Came  From  Out  Of  Nowhere' 


A  NORTHERN  VIEW  , 


On  The  Lost  Art  Of  Bundling 


Cortland  Edwards 

What  ideas  do  you  hold  rela- 
tive to  courting  in  bed?  Can  lov- 
ers go  to  bed,  safely,  while  wear- 
ing their  clothes,  and  still  be 
chaste?  Is  it  morally  wrong  for 
one  to  go  to  bed  to  court — and 
morally  right  to  sit  up  all  night 
for  the  same  purpose? 

Let's  catch  up  with  •  grand- 
mother and  grandfather — be  they 
from  New  York.  Pennsylvania, 
Tennessee,  or  North  Carolina  — 
and  .sec  how  they  courted  with- 
out the  benefit  of  a  motel,  apart- 
ment, car,  or  park  bench. 

Courtship  in  those  days  was 
done  by  bundling.  Today  you  cari 
"neck",  but  yesterday  grandpa 
"bundled".  What  is  bundling? 

According  to  Webster's  Collegi- 
ate Dictionary,  1956  Edition, 
bundling  is  "To  occupy  the  same 
bed  without  undressing;— said  of 


a  man  and  woman,  esp.  during 
courtship.  " 

Briefly,  it  was  an  expedient 
practice  among  the  colonials  on 
a  scarcity  of  beds,  where,  on  oc- 
casion, husbands  and  parents  fre- 
quv«ntly  permitted  travelers,  boy- 
friends, doctors,  etc.,  to  bundle 
with   their  wives  and   daughters. 

It  was  condoned  in  what  we 
students  are  prone  to  call  "the 
olden  da.vs",  for  the  reason  that 
men  had  to  travel  over  long  dis- 
tances to  go  from  house  to  house, 
and  they  could  find  better  re- 
pose in  bed.  than  to  sit  up  all 
night;  then  too,  it  did  save  fire- 
wood. 

The  methods  of  bundling  in 
North  Carolina  were  the  same  as 
in  New  FIngland.  where  they 
either  bundled  with  their  clothes 
on.  or  made  some  slight  attempts 
at  going  to  bed  with  some  cloth- 
im;  discarded,  prepared  to  rest. 

There  are.  incidently,  different 


methods  of  bundling.  In  addition 
to  the  above  mentioned,  there  is 
the  pillowcase  for  the  girl,  the 
centerboard,  and  the  bolster. 
Bundling  bags,  viz.  the  pillowcase, 
were  not  unusual,  though  it  was 
difficult  to  find  any  data  on  them. 

To  you  who  have  read  this  far, 
you  are  probably  thinking  that 
this  is  a  matter  of  morals  more 
than  anything  else.  But  wait  a 
minute,  let's  be  fair.  Suppose  for 
a  moment  that  you,  the  reader, 
were  morally  honest,  and  wanted 
to  live  according  to  the  Christian 
and  social  standards  of  the  day — 
where  do  you  think  you  would 
t>e  safest  from  falling  into  evil 
ways? 

In  bed — where  others  can  hear 
your  voice  if  raised  in  fear,  or 
doubt?  In  a  motel?  In  a  cabin? 
In  Kenan  stadium?  In  the  woods? 
In  a  car,  miles  from  campi,  and 
off  the  public  highway?  Or  home 
in  bed? 


Pogo 


By  Walt  Kelly 


Li1  Abner 


By  Al  Capp 


H£TCHA  CRIT/C  BV  TH'TOE- 
WHEA/  HE  HOLLERS,  DCWriET  GO/"^ 
?'-IFAH  KNEW  WMUr 

THEr  meant;  ah'd 

SAFE  ON  r*"!- Ol>£^'^ 
SADIE  HAWI6IMS 
DAV  .I' 


later- 


THET  SHORE 
WOULD  BE 

lAH'LLGir 

VO'A 
HUS&IM, 
TOMORRY.'? 
AM  GOT 


\N\th  Many  Views 

Neil  Bass 

It  seems  a  shame  the  Faculty  Council  couldn't 
take  some  action — either  negative  or  a.ffirmative 
— on  the  new  class  cuts  regulation  at  last  week's 
meeting. 

But  Germans  had  a  great  deal  to  do  with  post- 
ponement of  the  action. 

That  is  to  say,  it  seems  a  possibility  that  juniors 
and  seniors  might  be  enjoying  "unlimited  cuts"  in 
the  near  future  if  classes  had  been  better  attended 
on  the  Saturday  following  Germans. 

The  council,  no  doubt,  took  into  consideration 
the  unofficial  report  that  more  students  cut  classes 
Saturday  after  Germans  than  ever  before  in  the  Uni- 
versity's history. 

Can  you  expect  a  more  liberal  class  attendance 
regulation  if  students  flagrantly  and  indiscrimin- 
ately cut  classes?  And  at  such  an  inopportune  time 
— while  the*  Faculty  Council  was  still  deliberating 
upon  the  liberalization  proposal. 

It  is  true  that  the  counci  was  still  deliberating 
the  new  class  cuts  rule  when  automatic  adjourn- 
ment  time — 6:45 — rolled   around. 

But  according  to  one  council  member,  no  action 
would  have  been  taken  at  this  meeting  even  if  the 
body  had  had  an  unlimited  deliberation  time. 

The  Council  actually  had  an  abundance  of  time 
to  consider  the  new  regulation  if  it  had  definitely 
wanted  to  pass  or  kill  the  proposal  at  the  session. 
COSMOPOLITANS 

Those  who  meandered,  by'  chance,  into  Graham 
Memorial  last  Friday  night  couldn't  help  but  absorb 
some  of  the  gaiety  which  was  flowing  out  the  win- 
dows. 

The  Cosmopolitan  Club  had  a  blast  on  GM's  second 
floor  and  apparently  had  a  great  time. 

Just  goes  to  show  that  students  can  have  a  real 
blast  without  getting  blind,  contrary  to  much  popu- 
lar belief. 

That  isn't  shades  of  Carrie  Nation;  and  I'm  cer- 
tainly not  a  supporter  of  the  Women's  Christian 
Temperence  Union:  but  a  little  fun.  unpermeated 
by  the  poiqnant  aroma  of  alcohol  certainly  is  a  re- 
freshing change. 
LAUNDRY  -^ 

If  you've  ever  sent  ten  pairs  of  socks  to  the 
laundry  and  got  10  singles  back,  join  the  club. 

This  old  reporter  had  that  unpleasant  experience! 
last  week.  ^ 

As  to  whether  or  not  the  laundry  will  graciously* 
replace   these    much-needed   garments   remains   to 
be  seen.  But  we'll  pursue  the  problem  hopefully  to ' 
the  bloody  end  and  publish  a  full  report  later         * 
STRAW  ELECTION 

Staunch  Democrats  are  still  reeling  as  a  result  of* 
last  week's  campus-wide  straw  election  which  cer- 
tainly furnished  hay  for  Ike  and  Dick.  ', 

But  the  superb  organization  which  Young  Repub-  *. 
licans  had  seems  to  be  the  answer.  Young  Demo-' 
crats  perhaps  could  pattern  after  this  brave  mi-.' 
nority.      ' 

A.  PbSSiBlE  SOLUTION  I 


Library  A  Source! 
Of  Great  IdeasJ 

C.  S.  Young  '^i 

Every  year  here  at  UNC.  the  clamor  arises  re- 
garding the  failure  of  the  students  to  take  active 
parts  in  the  extensive  program  of  extra-curricular 
activities  that  is  available.  It  is  said  that  student, 
interest  is  lagging,  tha  the  pseudo  intellectuals  are* 
sourdough,  that  the  most  satisfying  part  of  formal  I 
education  is  being  ignored.  I 

Could  be,  but  why  not  stop  a  mcmient  and  con- » 


sider  what  ig  actually  happening?  Instead  of  prod- 


ding, as  with  a  stick,  which  suggests  dealings  with ' 
children  (this  also  could  be)  why  not  stand  off  a  I 
measure  or  two,  and  get  a  cross-section.  * 

•Take  for  example  the  glorious  L^NC  Library,  j 
which  is  famous  to  all  who  have  been  outside,  but  - 
never  inside,  for  its  scholarly  atmosphere.  Here,  ^ 
matter  multiples,  professors  are  born,  geniuses? 
dwell  (or  grovel)  and  the  thick  columns  and  high-' 
ceilings  fairly  reek  with  impressionisms  of  genera- 
tions of  great  men. 

And  for  those  who  have  been  inside,  the  UNC 
Library  is  a  source  of  entertainment  unequaled  any- 
where else  on  the  campus.  Upon  entering,  we  dis- 
cover that  a  convention  of  some  type  is  in  session, 
and  typically,  most  of  the  members  are  in  recess, 
i  think  this  is  called    'smoke-break  "  or  something. 

It  is  nothing  serious  however,  even  though  the 
"lobby"  reaches  from  one  side  of  the  building  to 
the  other.  This  condition  might  lead  one  to  arrive 
at  unwarranted  conclusions.  Let  us  move  on  through 
this,  waving  our  arms,  and  picking  out  direction  as 
best  we  can.  We  approach  the  steps  to  the  second 
floor. 

Now  we  are  getting  into  the  region  where  true 
seekers  abide.  Ascending  the  first  few  steps,  we 
find  that  there  is  quite  a  conjestive  gathering  at 
the  bottom  platform.  What  have  we  here?  Is  this 
a  caucus?  What  admirable  traits  to  detect  in  the 
future  leaders  of  our  great  country. 

But  wait,  something  is  definitely  confusing.  The 
group  is  male  in  its  entirity.  And  yes,  yes  we  are 
quite  sure  that  they  are  standing  back  to  back.  And 
they  are  not  conversing.  And  then  a  ray  of  light 
breaks  through,  but  not  before  we  begin  our  ascent 
at  the  next  steps. 

Sprinkled  loosely  from  step  number  eight  to  the 
top,  we  spy  the  co-eds.  They  offer  a  severe  chal- 
lenge to  any  student  of  figures  in  motion.  The  posi- 
tions are  indescriba'ole,  save  one  feature  which 
seems  to  be  universal. 

'there  is  still  some  confusion.  We  reach  the  top 
of  the  steps,  then  turn  and  look  down.  No  more 
confusion.  Whatever  was  left  ig  cleared  up  by  one 
glance  at  the  digestive  stares  from  the  male  traffic. 

Suddenly  we  see  a  door  which  apparently  leads 
outside.  There  seems   to  be  no  other  place  to  go. 

How  can  anyone  expoct  students  to  ignore  a  con- 
dilicn  of  such  stimulation?  First  things  musjt  come 
first.rand  there  just  isn't  time  for  everything.  Ob- 
viously, all  that  has  io  be  done,  in  order  to  reju- 
venate interest  in  extra-curriculars,  is  to  incorpor- 
ate some  of  the  featmes  of  the  library. 


In 


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Dr.  Archibalcf  Henderson  Speaks  Thursday 
In  Connection  With  G.  B.  Shaw  Centennial 


Dr.  Archibald  Henderson,  mul- 
tilateral author  and  educator, 
will  speak  next  Thursday  on  the 
subject  which  has  occupied  much 
of  his  life's  literary  output,  in- 
tluding  his  most  recent  culminat- 
ing biography,  "George  Bernard 
Shaw:  Man  of  the  Century" 

Dr.   Henderson's   lecture   will 

•  be   under    the    auspices    of   the 

Friends     of     the    UNC    Library 

Thursday,  Nov.  15,  at  8  p.m.  in 

Gerrard  Hall. 

The  story  of  Dr.  Henderson, 
who  retired  from  the  University 
in  1947  as  Kenan  Professor  of 
Mathematics,  and  the  famous 
Irish  playwright's  association  is 
a  familiar  one,  the  result  of 
which  has  been  five  biographies 
and  litera|-y  studies  of  Shaw  and 
his  works. 

And  now,  as  far  as  Dr.  Hen- 
derson is  concerned,  he  has  writ- 
ten his  "culmination"  on  the 
life  and  works  of  the  Irish  wit 
in  his  latest  book. 

The  book  comes  in  the  cen- 
tennial year  of  Shaw's  birth. 
Scheduled  for  publication  No- 
vember 15,  the  volume  runs  to 
nearly  a  half-million  words,  60,- 
000  of  them  wTitten  by  Shaw 
himself. 

Interviewed  at  his  Chapel  HiV 
home  this  week.  Dr.  Henderson 
said  that  "Man  of  the  Century" 
is  his  complete  biography  on 
Shaw  as  drawn  from  the  great 
collection  of  materials  which 
Henderson  has  presented  to  the 
University  of  North  Carolina  Li- 
brary. The  collection  includes 
letters  and  other  materials  given 
to  Henderson  by  the  Irish  genius 
and  collected  by  Henderson  from 
other  sources.  After  giving  the 
Chapel  Hill  author  his  personal 


WHO 

WILL 

HE 

BE 

7 

BDmoc! 


sanction  to  become  his  biograph- 
er, Shaw  reportedly  said,  "You 
look  like  the  man  who  can  do 
the  job." 

"Man  of  the  Century"  is  the 
result  of  a  life+ime  of  study,  ar- 
ticles, and  Dr.  Henderson's  other 
Shaw  'biographies,  the  most  re- 
cent of  which  was  "Bernard 
Shaw:  Playboy  and  Prophet, " 
1932. 
UNIQUE  RELATIONSHIP 

Dr.  Henderson's  relationship 
with  Shaw  was  unique— closer, 
as  a  matter  of  record,  than  that 
of  any  other  American.  During 
his  lifetime  Shaw  provided  need- 
ed materials  and  assistance  to 
Henderson,  who  remembers  that 
the  longest  letter  from  the  play- 
wright was  54  pages  in  answer 
to  queries  in  conection  with  one 
of  the  biographies. 

One  critic  already  has  said 
that  the  coming  publication 
"quite  literally  begins  at  the  be- 
ginning and  ends  at  the  end." 
The  book  will  contain  material 
on  Shaw's  parentage,  childhood, 
and  youth.  The  reader  is  taken 
into  the  Dublin  household  and 
shown  among  other  things  the 
tragedy  of  Shaw's  father,  whose 
drinking  not  only  lowered  Shaw's 
personal  esteem  but  placed  the 
Shaw  in  an  awkward  social  posi- 
tion. 

Dr.  Henderson  shows  some  of 
the  underlying  forces  that  made 
Shaw  the  later  satirist  and  por- 
trayer  of  Irish  irreligion. 
SPOTTY  EDUCATION 

Spotty  as  his  education  was, 
inauspicious  as  was  his  first  job 
as  a  clerk  in  a  real  estate  office, 
Shaw  went  to  London  at  the  age 
of  20  and  there  threw  himself 
into  intensive  effort,  political 
^  and  literary,  that  brought  him 
fairly  early  recognition. 

It  was  at  this  point  in  Shaw's 
life  that  Henderson's  connection 
with  him  began.  Many  are  fa- 
miliar with  the  story  of  how  Hen- 
derson became  interested  in  the 


RANDOM 
SHOTS 

By  John  Bragaw 

Tall  tales  and  earthy  bits,  mostly 
i  about  North  Carolina,  by  the  saga 
of  WashinftoiC  N.  C. 
Oor  Special 

$1.98 

THE  INTIMATE 
BOOKSHOP 

205    E.   Franklin    St. 
Open  Till  10  P.M. 


DR.  HENDERSON 

. . .  speo/cj;   Thursday 

young  playwright.  Henderson  — 
himself  a  young  scholar  conduct- 
ing research  in  advanced  mathe- 
matics at  the  University  of  Chi- 
cago— attended  an  amateur  per- 
formance of  "You  Never  Can 
Tell,"  one  of  Shaw's  earliest 
play.s,  and  immediately  proclaim- 
ed Shaw  a  budding  genius.  The 
playwright  was  comparatively 
vnknown  in  America  at  this  time. 
But  Henderson,  who  says  he 
recognized  "something  new  in 
literature"  in  the  play,  resolved 
to  become  Shaw's  biographer 
and  proposed  as  much  to  the 
emerging  Irish  artist  in  a  letter. 

Following  a  period  of  volumin- 
ous correspondence  during  the 
next  several  years,  Henderson 
was  invited  to  visit  Shaw  at  his 
home  in  England.  His  first 
biography  on  the  playwright, 
"George  Bernard  Shaw:  His  Life 
and  Works,"  was  published  in 
1911  simultaneously  in  England 
and  America. 

It  was  not  long  before  the  liter- 
ary bigwigs  were  calling  Dr. 
Henderson  another  James  Bos- 
well,  the  Scottish  writer  who  won 
literary   fame  for  his  biography 


of  Samuel  Johnson.  Some  critics 
rated  Henderson  above  Boswell 
on  the  ground  that  iht  Chapel 
Hill  writer  swpassed  the  Iftth 
century  Boswell  both  in  depth' 
and  range. 

Bui  perhaps  the  most  remark- 
aUe  tribute  to  Biographer  Hen- 
deron  was  paid  by  Shaw  himself 
who  said:  "I  owe  a  debt  of  grati- 
tude to  Dr.  Archibald  Hender- 
son ...  He  was  the  first  perswj 
who  presented  me  in  any  intel- 
ligible and  intellectual  shape  to 
the  public  ...  I  congratulate 
myself  on  having  become  one  of 
the  'diversions  of  a  mathemati- 
cian'. As  a  consequence  I  got 
into  mathematical  shape  and  be- 
came a  swt  of  real  person.  Up 
to  1911  I  was  the  victim  of  half 
a  dozen  reputations  which  seem- 
ed to  be  hopelessly  insulated 
from  one  another.  I  was  a  man 
who  wrote  about  pictures  a  man 
who  wrote  about,  music,  a  man 
who  wrote  about  the  theatres,  a 
man  who  wrote  novels,  a  man 
who  wrote  plays,  a  man  who 
wrote  about  economics,  a  funny 
man,  a  dangerous  man,  a  man 
who  preached  at  the  City  Tem- 
ple, a  Shelleyan  atheist,  a  street 
comer  agitator,  a  leading  spirit 
of  the  Fabian  Society,  a  vege- 
tarian, a  humanitarian,  and 
Heaven  knows  what  else  besides: 
but  nobody  seemed  to  know  that 
these  men  were  all  the  same 
man  ...  I  became  an  individual 
where  I  had  not  even  been  a 
species;  I  had  only  been  uncol- 
lected odds  and  ends.  Henderson 
collected  me,  and  thereby  ad- 
vanced my  standing  very  materi- 
ally." 

Shaw  and  Henderson  were  in- 
timate friends  from  their  union 
in  1905  until  the  world  famous 
playwright  died  in  1950.  Six 
years  later  and  100  years  after 
Shaws  birth,  this  culmination  of 
half  a  century  of  interpreting  the 
life  and  works  of  the  now  im- 
mortalized playwright  makes  its 
appearance. 


STUDENTS: 

BUY  THIS  REMINGTON  PORTABLE  FOR 


$1  A  WEEK 

NOTHING  DOWN 

PaymonH  Will  Net  Start 
Until  February 

LEDBETTER-PICKARD 


u/^iLT     \,K\j:>^yVKJKV 


ACROSS 

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tion  of 

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used  in 

brewing 
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opening 

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12.  Italian  river 
14.  Perform 

19.  Take  out 

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IS.SiUical 

name 
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(Old  Eng.) 

21.  Even  (poet.) 

22.  Fishing-rod 
reel 

23.  Raven's  call 

24.  The  hawk 
parrot 

25.  River 
(Cer.) 

27.  Cooling 
device 

28.  Samarium 
<Jtym.) 

30.  Malt 
beverage 

31.  Kind  of 
goldfish 

(33.  Ptilen* 
!      bewlnf 

floiral 

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services 
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tempered  — 
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41.  Branch  of 
learning 

42.  Obeerves 

DOWN 

1.  An  Ameri* 
can  Indian 

2.  Game  of 
chance 

S.  Part  of 

"trt  be" 
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weight 

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length 
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seed 

covering 
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republic 
8.  seesaw 
11.  Lace-like 
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15. 


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Lion's 
home 
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CJhincae 

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devotee  ,     32.  On  fire 

Utensils  34.  Flesh  food 

used  37.  Part  of 

for  "to  be" 

sifting  38.  High  card 


Productive  Scholarship  In  UNC 
History  Dept.  Is  Cited  Here 


Productive  scholarship  in  the 
Dept.  of  History  is  being  carried 
on  at  a  high  level,  according  to 
figures  compiled  by  Professor 
Fletcher  M.  Green,  Chairman  "of 
the  Department. 

The  approximately  375  grad- 
uates holding  a  MA  or  Ph.D  from 
the  Department  and  now  active  in 
historical  research  and  the  teach- 
ing of  history  produced  last  year 
nine  books,  four  pamphlets,  one 
chapter  in  a  book,  and  forty-three 
articles.  The  articles  appeared  in 
twenty-eight  separate  historical 
periodicals.  The  faculty  members 
of  the  History  Department  were 
also  active,  producing  five  books 
and  eight  articles. 

In  addition  to  research,  faculty 
and  graduate  members  of  the  De- 
partment took  prominent  parts  on 
the  programs  and  in  the  admin- 
istration of  historical  societies. 
They    hold    at    present    seven   im- 

Free  Flick  Tonight 

"Dial  M  for  Murder"  will  be 
the  featured  showing  In  Carroll 
~  Hall  today  from  8  to  10  p.m. 

This  GMAB  free  flick  Is  en  Al- 
fred Hitchcock  thriller  starring 
Grace  Kelly,  Ray  Miiland,  and 
Thelma  Ritter. 


portant  executive  positions  in  his- 
torical societies. 

Undergraduate  enrollment  In 
history  continues  to  iaerease. 
Tliei-e  are  l,74i  students  pl^sent- 
ly  enrolled  in  history  cou^^  (Ton- 
trasted  with  1,433  in  the  fall  of 
1955.  1^10  students  are  enrolled 
ill  Social  Science.  The  number  of 
majors  advanced  from  108  last 
year  to  165  this  year,  and  the  num- 
ber ofgraduate  students  from  48 
to  57  in  the  same  period. 


BA  Book  Of  The  Month 
Written  By  2  UNC  Men 

A  book  written  by  two  USC  fac- 
ulty members  was  announced  to- 
day the  December  book-of-the- 
month  choice  f  on  business  and  gov-* 
ernment  executives. 

llxecutive  Books,  a  national 
book  dob  for  executives,  has  se- 
lected "Influencing  Employed  Be 
havior/'  by  R.  p.  Calhoon  and 
C.  A.  Kirkpatrick  as  the  outstand- 
inging  book  next  month.  Calhoon 
and  Kirkpatrick  teach  in  the  Uni- 
versity's School  of  Business  Ad- 
ministration. 

The  book  is  now  in  its  second 
printing.  The  first  edition  was 
published  in  1953.  McGraw-Hill  is 
the  publisher. 

Professors  Kirkpatrick  and  Cal- 
hoon form  a  unique  team  of  au- 
thors since  their  professional 
fields  are  quite  different,  Profess- 
or Kirkpatrick  being  in  Market- 
ing and  Professor  Calhoon  in  Per- 
sonnel  Administration. 


i>0 


Covering  The  Campus 


ihifd  Strauss  Opera 
To  Be  Presented  Tonight 

The  tiiird  opera  in  the  series  of 
operas  by  Richard  Strauss  will  be 
presented  by  Norman  Cordon  on 
''Let's  Listen  to  Opera"  over 
WUNC,  the  University  FM  station, 
at  8  p.m.  today. 

"Ariadne  auf  Naxos "  will  be  the 
feature  work,  on  an  Angel  Re* 
cording  by  the  Philharmonia  Or- 
chestra, conducted  by  Herbert  v<m 
Karajan.  Stars  of  the  performance 
•e  Elisabeth  Schwarzkept,  Irm- 
gard    Seefried,    Rita    Streich,    and 


Y  SCHEDULE 

Noon  —  Financial  Committee 
Meeting,  Mr.  Claude  Shotts*  office. 

2  p.  m.  —  Y-NewspAper  Staff 
Meeting,  Cabinet  Room,  Miss  Nan- 
cy Suttle  and  Jerry  Gunter  co- 
editors. 


We  Have  Just  Brought  In 
Some  Rare  and  Curious 

6Lb  LAW  BOOKS 

See  Them  In  Our  Old  Book 
Comer 

THE  INTIMATE 
BOOKSHOP 

MS   E.   Frarklin   St. 


PHYSICS  COLLOQUIUM 

Dr.  S.  T.  Butler  of  the  Univer- 
sity of  Sydney  will  be  the  speaker 
tonight  at  8  p.m.  at  the  IH»IC-Duke 
Physics  Colloquium.  Using  as  his 
topic  'Quasi-Chemical  Elquilibrium 
Theory  of  Super-Conductivity," 
Dr.  Butler  will  talk  in  Phillips 
Hall,  room  206. 

WESLEY  FOLKDANCE  GROUP 

The  Wesley  Folkdance  Group 
will  meet  tonight  at  7:30  in  the 
basement  of  University  Methodist 
Church. 

WUNC  TV 

WUNC-TV,  the  University's  edu- 
cational television  station,  channel 
4: 

12:45-^usic. 

1:00— Today  on  the  Farm. 

1:30— Music  Forms. 

2:00— Industry. 

2:15 — Bananas. 

2:30— New  Mann. 

5:45 — Music. 

6:00— Children's  Corner. 

6:  TO— News. 

6:45 — Sports. 

7:00— Art  Today. 

8:00— Know  You^  Schools. 

8:30— Prelude. 

9:00 — Student  Legislature. 
10:00— Final  Edition. 
WUNC 

WUNC,  the  University's  educa- 
tional FM  radio  station: 

7:00 — IntermezEo. 

7:30 — Assignment  Middle  East. 

7:45— The  UN  Story. 

8:00 — Let's  Listen  to  Opera. 
10:15— News. 

10:330 — Evening  Masterwork. 
10:30 — Evening  Mastei^ork. 


YMCA  STUDY  GROUP 

The  YMCA  -  sponsored  Study 
Group  on  Comparitive  Religions 
win  meet  Monday  night  in  108 
Hanes  Hall  from  5-6  p.m. 

Speaker  for  the  meeting  will  be 
Mohammed  Siddiqui  from  Lahore, 
Pakistan.  Soddiqui  will  speak  on 
the  Islam  Religion.  All  students 
are  invited,  according  to  Bob  Car- 
ter of  the  study  group. 

RENOEZVOUUS  ROOM 

There  will  be  dancing  this  Satur- 
day night  in  the  Rendezvous  Room 
to  the  music  of  Charlie  Culbreth's 
combo  from  8  to  11.  No  admission 
will  be  charged. 

WAA  GOLF 

Miss  Pauline  Simms,  golf  man- 
ager, has  announced  the  extension 
of  time  for  the  first  round  of  the 
WAA  Golf  Tournament  to  Mon- 
day, Nov.  12. 


Research  Conference 
Ofpened  }^er^  Yesterday. 

The  Rbss  Laboratory  Pe(Hatric 
Research  Conference  opened  at 
the  Sdjool  of  Medicine  Thursday 
with  70  innted  participants  from 
throughout  the  United  States, 
Canada  and  England  attending. 

The  two-day  conference  is  be- 
ing held  under  the  joint  auspices 
of  the  Department  of  Pediatrics 
of  the  Schools  of  Medicine  at  three 
institutions  —  the  University  of 
North  Carolina,  Duke  University 
and  Bowman  Gray  Scho«l  of  Med- 
icine. 

The  chairman  of  the  conference 
is  Dr.  Edward  C.  Curnen,  profess- 
or and  head  of  the  Department  of 
Pediatries,  UNC  School  of  Medi- 
cine. 

Two  sessions  will  be  held  here 
Thursday  and  the  conference  will 
end  after  two  sessions  at  Duke 
University  PYiday. 


CLASSIFIEDS 


LOST— 4  MO.  OLD  DOBERMAN 
Pinscher.  Strayer  from  Mason 
Farm  Rd.  early  last  week.  Red- 
dish brown  color,  short  erect 
ears,  clipped  tail.  Answers  to 
name  Tayne.  About  18"  to  top 
of  head.  Believed  to  have  been 
seen  on  campus.  This  dog  must 
be  found.  Reward  offered.  Con- 
tact 9-2666  or  Larry  Williams, 
K.  A.  House. 


LOST  —  AN  "ENICAR"  WATCH 
Tuesday  night  vicinity  of  Port- 
hole. Call  Daniel  Goldrich  at  8- 
1183  after  6  p.m.^  or  at  9-7688 
during  the  day. 


rNf  mmmsT  [nmTAnoR 

IN  m  WORID!"  S"r"HSSt 

ytSfou 

BOR6E 


n 


m  PiMOM 

COMEDY  IN  MUSIC 


// 


STATE  FAIR  ARENA  Raleigh,  N.  C. 

TnlT"^  SUNDAY,  NOV.  n 


8:30 
P.M. 


ALL  SEATS  RESERVED  —  PRICES:  $4  50,  $3.40,  $2.25  tax  incl. 

Mail   orders   and  tickets  nawi    Kerr    Rexall    Drugs, 

Camoran  Villee«:  Music   Ber,  26  W.   Hargett  St. 


Tomorrov/s 

Housecieaning 

Sale 

Features 

Children's 

Books, 

Novels, 

And 

Household 

Books 

The  Intimate 
Bookshop 

205   E.  FRANKLIN  ST. 
Open  Till   10  PJM. 


H|ig|hlights     ^ 
On  WUNC-TV 

Highlights     of     the     four-year 

course    leading   to    the   degree    of 

i  bachelor  of  science   in  the   UNC 

I  School    of   Nursing   will    be    seen 

I  over  WUNC-TV,  Channel  4,  at  9 

p.m.   today. 

1      The  hour  show  is  the  second  in 

!  the   series  of  programs   Icnow^n   as 

"Project  Health,"  sponsored  every 

other   Friday   night   by   the   UNC 

Division  of  Health  Affairs. 

Also  on  Friday's  program  will 
be  a  description  of  the  graduate 
programs  leading  to  the  degree  of 
j  master  of  science  in  nursing  ser- 
vice administration  and  teaching 
in   psychiatric  nursing. 

The  UNC  Division  of  Health  Af- 
fairs is  composed  of  the  Schools 
of  Medicine,  Nursing,  Pharmacy. 
Public  Health,  Dentistry,  and  the 
North  Carolina  Memorial  Hispital. 


Hiliel 

(Continued  from  Page  1) 

assault  or  "second  round"  against 
Israel. 

Question:  What  about  the  issue 
of  Israeli  "aggression." 

Answer:  David  Lawrence,  colum- 
ist  for  the  New  York  Herald  Tri- 
bune, wrote  on  Wednesday,  Oct. 
31:  "Who  really  is  the  aggressor 
in  the  Middle  East?  The  average 
person  who  reads  only  the  head- 
lines this  week  can  easily  be  mis- 
led if  he  doesn't  acquaint  himself 
with  the  full  record."  He  tlien 
sums  up  the  many  acts  of  bellijger- 
ency  and  actual  territorial  aggress- 
ion by  Egypt  against  Israel.  Presi- 
dent ELsenhower  in  his  address  of 
Oct.  31  referred  to  the  "grave 
provocations"  which  Israel  had  en- 
dured. The  Boston  Herald  on  Oct 
30  said  editorial^:  "The  Israeli  have 
endured  long,  not  always  wiaeljt. 
not  always  patiently  ndl  always  to 
the  best  hopes  of  ultimate  peace. 
But  they  have  come  at  last  10  the 
time  when  endurance  no.  longer 
offers  any  real  expectatiofl  of 
achieving  anything." 

Question:  What  can  we  kbpe  tor 
in  the  future? 

Answer:  Any  ahSwer  to  this 
question  is  in  the  nature  of  sur- 
mise,^ except  to  the  extent  that  it 
is  based  upon  the  continuing 
policy  of  the  Israeli  Government, 
and  the  ages-loog  hopes  of  the 
Jewish  peop\e  everywhere.  If  the 
armistice  of  lft48  gives  way  to  ,a 
relationship  of  peace;  If  iibrmal 
relations  are  established  between 
Israel  and  her  Arab  neifhbors: 
!  and  if  there  is  a  live-and-let-live 
attitude  viijich  will  grow  into  a 
live-and-help-live  philosophy,  then 
more  than  peaee  will  come  to  the 
Middle  East.  We  can.  und«r  suoh 
circumstances  look  to  a  progresa- 
fve  policy  whose  end  will  be  to 
bring  better  condlUo.l,  of  life 
to  all  concerned. 


WONDER  WHERE  THE  FARMERS  WENT 


SINCE  you  were  in  knee-pants,  over  two  million  Ameri- 
can farmers  have  dropped  out  of  the  picture.  In  1940, 
there  were  8,833,324  farmers.  Today:  6,505,000.  Who's 
taking  their  place  to  feed  our  growing  population? 

The  answer  is  machines.  Tractors  that  do  the  work  of 
40  men.  Grain  combines  that  reduce  labor  B5%.  Machines 
help  today's  fewer  farmers  feed  30  million  more  Ameri- 
cans than  16  years  ago. 

V  The  tremendous  output  of  today's  farmer  depends  upon 
)dte  trouble-free  operation  of  bis  machines.  That's  why 
every  make  of  farm  tcactor  uses  Timken*  tapered  roller 
bearings — why  more  and  more  implements  are  using  them 
too.  Timken  bearings  reduce  breakdowns  because  they 
roll  the  load,  practically  eliminate  friction,  last  and  last. 

Keeping  farm  equipment  rolling  smoothly  is  just  one 
exaipple  of  how  the  Timken  Company  keeps  America  on 
the  go— by  working  hand-in-hand  with  all  industry.  By 
making  possible  increased  speed  and  precision,  decreas- 


ing wear  and  maiotciuoce.  By  pioneering  improvemecus 
in  machines  and  b«ariajs. 

The  pioneering  spirit  has  helped  make  us  fhe  world's 
largest  manufacturer  of  tapered  roller  bearings  and  re- 
movable rock  bits,  and  a  leading  producer  of  fine  alloy  steel. 

The  best  place  to  keep  going— *««/  keep  going  up— is 
with  a  company  that's  helping  keep  America  on  the  go. 
So  you  may  be  interested  in  what  futvre  lies  ahead  of  you 
at  the  Timken  Company.  Write  for  your  copy  of  "Career 
Opportunities  at  the  Timkca  Company".  The  Timken 
Roller  Bearing  Company,  Caatoo  6,  Ohio. 


TIMKEN 

<  TKAaa-MAiui  Rca.  v.  s.  i>at.  orr. 

TAPiRiD  ROUER  BEARINGS 


Timken*  bearings  keep  America  on  the  GQ . . .  ond 
y(u;  keep  going  up  when  you  go  with  the  Timken  Compony 


THi  DAILY  TAR  HIIL 


PAG^   THREI 


I   I 


PAW  POUR 


THI  DAILY  TAR  HIIL 


FRIDAY,  MOVBMBER  ?,  1J5« 


Virginia  Hands  UNC.Booters  First  Loss  On  Muddy  Field 


For  The  Students,  A  Trip  North 

Capolina's  Tar  Heels  are  off  to  Virginia  today,  and  for  the  first 
timp  this  season,  a  large  majority  of  the  student  .^ody  will  be  tagging 
along  behind  to  lend  moral  support. 

fft  feotlMll   caravan    weekend,  and   with   no   classes   tomorrow, 
most  students    are   taking   advantage   of  the  welconne  break   from  ' 
dreary  routine  to  make  the  trek  to  Virginia  ^o  see  what  happens  to 
the  football  team  en  mn  away  from  home  Saturday. 

The  last  two  years  on  Caravan  weekends,  the  students  have  come 
home  with  a  bad  taste  in  their  mouths  after  seeing  the  UNC  football 
tpam  take  a  bad  licking.  This  season  the  Tar  Heels  have  another 
rougn  assignment  on  the  student's  big  day,  for  the  Cavaliers  are  re- 
portedly primed  and  ready  for  the  invasion  from  Tar  Heelia. 

Neither  of  the  two  ACC  tail  enders  have  been  particularly  im- 
pressive this  year,  but  both  have  shown  bright  promise  on  occasion. 
Carolina  has  a  modest  1-5-1  record  for  the  year  while  the  Cavalier* 
have  dene  a  little  better  with  three  wins  in  seven  starts. 
The  Carolina  brain  trust,   despite   their  teams  good  showing   in 
recent  games,  is  not  at  all  confident  about  their  chances  tomorrow. 
Scout  Jim  Hickey  turned  in  a  fore'ooding  report  to  newspapermen  at 
the  weekly  press  luncheon,  and  Coach  Jim  Tatum  himself  remarked 
that  he  was  "simply  astounded  at  the  improvement  this  Virginia  team 
has  shown"  over  last  year's  even  less  successful  edition. 

The  coaches  aren't  taking  the  Cavaliers  lightly,  but  what  about 

the  players?  This  is  a  question  that  can  only  be  answered  on  the  i 

playing  field  itself.  The  final  score  will  tell  the  story. 

Riysically.  the  Tar  Heels  are  ready.   Minor  injuries  received  in 

the  Tennessee  scrap  have  been  cleared  up,  and  all  hands  are  in  good 

shape.  Carolina  demonstrated  against  the  Vols  that  they  are  a  good 

sound  football  team,  and  if  they  can  stop  the  Cavalier  offense  built 

around  Jim  Bahktiar  and  a  razor  sharp  passing  attack,  they  should  be 

able  to  whip  their  northern  neighbors.  We  pick  Carolina  20,  Virginia  7. 


Big  Four  Checklist 


In  what  should  be  one  of  the  nation's  most  exciting  if  not  most 
important  games  of  the  day,  Duke  will  meet  the  Navy  Middies  ia 
Durham.  Nav>-  has  lost  jonly  on€  game  this  year,  that  to  Tulane  in  an 
upset.  Last  Saturday  they  put, on  their  most  impressive  showing  of 
the  year,  stomping  Notre  Dame,  33-7.  in  merciless  fashion. 

Duke  meanwhile  was  outplaying  the  nation's  second  ranked  team, 
Ceergia  Tech,  in  a  rather  thorough  manner,  but  lost  the  decision 
when  they  found  thentselves  without  a  goal  line  ounch.  The  Blue 
Devils  have  lost  four  games  this  year,  and  as  one  sports  writer  put  it 
probably  are  the  best  four  time  losers  in  the  country. 

This  one  looks  like  a  real  tossup  between  two  exciting,  unpredicta- 
ble teams.  On  the  basis  of  home  team  loyalty,  we  say  Duke  27.  Navy  20. 
Hapl«ss  N.  C.  State,  never  the  same  after  beating  Caroline  in  Wie 
opening  g«ne  of  the  eason,  seems  due  for  another  licking  when 
they  go  against  tha  South  Carolina  Gamecocks.  South  Carolina  has 
afreadr  knocked  ovw  •  pmir  of  Big  Four  squads  this  year  in  Duke 
end  Cerelino,  and  weuld  like  nothing  better  than  to  make  Stete 
victim  number  three.  South  Carolina  26,  Stat*  13. 
Wake  Forest  steps  outside  the  arena  of  conference  warfare  to 
tangle  with  Virginia  Tech.  The  Gobblers  are  the  class  of  the  Southern 
Conference,  and  last  Saturday  proved  it  by  battling  powerful  Clemson 
right  down  to  the  wire.  The  Deacons  have  a  good  chance  to  spring 
an  upset,  but  we  don't  see  it  VPI  13,  Wake  Forest  7. 


Tar  Heel  Punter  Extraordinaire 

Wally  Vale  (above),  Carolina's  sensational  fullback  with  the  golden  toe,  is  currently  ranked  second 
in  the  country  in  punting.  Vale  has  averaged  44.1    yards  per  kick  for  25  boots  this  year. 


By  JIM  PURKS 

The  Virginia  Cavaliers  jolted 
the  varsity  soccer  team's  confer- 
ence title  hopes  here  yesterday 
with  a  2-0  victory  on  mud-covered 
Fetzer  Field. 

It  was  a  hard-found  contest  all 
the  way  with  the  offensive  play  of 
both  teams  t>eing  hampered  by 
the    slippery    playing    field. 

Neither  team  could  score  in  the 
first  half,  but  Carolina  had  the 
shooting  edge,  having  seven  shots 
at  the  goal  to  Virginia's  three  in 
the  first  quarter. 

Carolina  had  a  good  opportunity 
to  break  into  the  scoring  column 
in  the  second  quarter  when  a 
penalty  kick  was  called  against 
Virginia.  -' 

Left  wing  Johnny  Foster's  first  j 
kick  went  over  the  top  of  the  j 
goal,  but  a  Virginia  man  was  off-  i 
sides  and  Carolina  was  enabled  to  j 
take  the  penalty  shot  again.  This  ■ 
time  Foster  almost  scored,  but  a 
fine  save  by  the  Virginia  goalie,  | 
Pete   Barres.   prevented   the   tally. 

Carolina  failed  to  threaten  ser- 1 
iously  again  in  the  first  half  and  I 
Virginia  dominated  play,  almost  j 
scoring  on  several  occasions.  UNC 
goalie  Chuck  Hartman  staved  off  | 
several  Cavalier  drives  with  fine  I 
saves.  j 

Virginia      wasted      little     time 
breaking    the    ice    in    the    second 
half.  Three  minutes  after  play  had  j 
begun    left    wing    Rocky    Prockin  i 
drove  a  hard  shot  into  the  Caro-  I 
Una    goal    from    the    left    corner. 

Four  minutes  later  the  Cava- 
liers added  to  their  lead  when 
left  inside  Rudy  Wachman  got 
around  the  Carolina  defense  and 


shot  past  goalie  Hartman  into  the 
right  corner  of  the  goal.  j 

A  two  goal  lead  proved  to  be  all 
the  Cavaliers  needed  as  the  ac-  ^ 
tion  slowed  down  considerably  in  j 
the  late  third  quarter  with  both  j 
teams  showing  signs  of  tiring.  | 
Neither  team  could  get  a  concert- ' 
ed  drive  going  in  the  fourth  quart-  ' 
er  and  waged  primarily  a  de- 1 
fensive  duel.  The  game  ended  with 
Virginia  victors.  2-0. 

The  Cavalier  victory  marked  the  , 
first  time  either  team  had  come  j 
out  victorious  in  the  UNC-Vir- ; 
ginia  series.  In  the  past  two  years,  i 
the  contests  ended  in  a  1-1  tie.      ; 

The  five  UNC  veterans,  Grover 


Brown.  Ted  Jones.  Chuck  Hart- 
man, Mike  Galifianakis,  and  Pat 
McCormick.  playing  their  last 
home  game  under  Coach  Marvin 
Allen,  performed  commendably. 

Captain  Grover  Brown  was  par- 
ticularly effective,  passing  and 
dribblipg  the  bail  well  in  a  fruit- 
less effort  to  break  UNC  into  t^e 
scoring  colmn. 

UNC's  next  match  will  be  an 
equally  tough  one  when  they  meet 
the  Duke  Blue  Devils  next  week 
on  Tuesday,  Nov.  13  in  Durham. 


Tar  Heels,  In  Good  Physical 
Shape,  Leave  Today  For  Va. 


By  LARRY  CHEEK  At  least  a  half  dozen  Tar  Heels   winning   over   VMI,    Wake   Fores* 

Carolina's  Tar  Heels,  apparently '  ^^^^  sidelined  with  minor  bruises  and  Lehigh, 
fully  recovered  from  the  physical  ^"^  -sprains  following  the  Vol 
beating  they  took  in  last  week's  ^^^^^-  ^^^  trainer  John  Lacey  said 
loss  to  mighty  Tennessee,  will  leave  1  J'^'^terday  that  all  hands  would  be 
today  at  1  p.m.  for  Charlottesville,  |  ^*^^^^'  *"  ^^  against  the  Cavaliers 
Va.,  and  a  Saturday  afternoon  '*"«^P'"al  of  the  Tar  Heels  have  miss- 
ed all  heavy  work  this  week  as  a 
result  of  these  minor  injuries. 
The  squad  spent  most  of  yester- 


datc  with  the  Virginia  Cavaliers. 


Freshman  Bootets  Meet  Pack 


The  UNC  freshman  soccer  team 
will  meet  the  N.  C.  State  freshmen 
for  the  third  time  this  season  to- 
day in  Raleigh. 

This  contest  marks  the  next  to 
last  game  the  Tar  Heels  will  play 
this  year  and  the  final  game  with 
th«  Wolfpack.  Coach  John  Wien- 
ants'  team  currently  has  an ,  im- 
pressive 2-1  record,  with  many 
players  showing  promise  for  next 
year's  varsity  squad. 

In  the  two  previous  contests- 
with  the  N.  C.  State  Wolfpack, 
Carolina  has  been  victorious  both 
times,  defeating  State  in  the  first 
contest.  4-3.  and  trouncing  the 
Wolfpack  in  the  second  meeting. 
"S-O. 

The  freshmen  have  suffered  on- 
ly one  loss  this  year,  the  one  loss 
coming  at  the  hands  of  the  Duke 


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freshmen  who  beat  them  in  an  ov- 
ertime game,  2-1. 

The  freshmen  will  have  a  chance 
for  revenge  against  the  Duke 
freshmen  when  they  meet  next 
week  on  Nov.  15  in  the  final 
game  between  the  two  clubs. 

Frosh  Gridders 
Wind  Up  Drills 

Soggy  grounds  yesterday  hamp- 
ered practice  of  the  freshman 
football  team,  which  went  through 
the  last  rough  workout  before  its 
match  with  the  South  Carolina 
frosh  tomorrow  night  in  Florence, 
S.C. 

The  Tar  Babies'  drills  empha- 
sized offensive  and  defensive  tAc- 
tics  which  they  will  employ  against 
the  Biddies. 

The  session  was  one  of  great  im- 
portance,   for,    as   is    usually    the 
rase,    other    sessions    this    week 
•  found   the    freshman   running  the 
j  varsity's  opponents  plays  in  scfim- 
.  mage. 

Coach  Fred  Tullai  said  yesterday 

that  halfback  Jim  Crew,  who  was 

injured  last  week  in  Virginia,  will 

I  definitely     not      play      tomorrow 

i  night.     Crew     saw     much     action 

I  against  the     Cavalier    frosh,     and 


WAA  Volleyball 

In  the  next  to  last  week  of  vol- 
leyball pUy,  Pi  Phi.  Alpha  Chi  O, 
and  Smith  Dorm  were  victorious. 
Pi  Phi  trounced  Kappa  Delta  56- 
13;  AChi  O  beat  Alpha  Bam  37-15; 
Smith  nosed  out  Pi  Phi  25-18. 
Outstanding  players  of  these 
games  were  B.  J.  Madison,  Pi  Phi. 
Elizabeth  Hightower.  Chi  O,  and 
Carol  Jones.  Smith. 

Next  week  Chi  0  meets  Smith 
Dorm  in  the  finals  of  the  losers" 
bracket  on  Monday  at  5  p.m. 


The  Cavaliers  came  out  of  the 
Vanderbilt  tussle  last  week  in 
good  ph.vsical  shape  and  will  get 
a  boost  in  the  line  with  the  ex- 
pected return  of  tackle  Ronnie 
Mclnik.  who  has  seen  little  ac- 
tion since  the  Duke  fracas.  Guard 


ALTER  YOUR 
CLOTHES 

to  the 

IVY  LOOK 

Drop  by  today  and  let  us 
show  you   what  proper   altera- 
tions can  do  for  your  outdated 
wardrobe. 

Come  in  early  for  your  holiday 
alterations. 

PETE 
The  Tailor 

133V2  E.  Franklin  St. 


Kappa  Sigma  Names 
Pledge  Class  Officers 

The  Kappa  Sigma  Pledge  class 
has  elected  Dick  Frazier  of  Golds- 
boro  as  their  president. 

Other  pledge  officers  include: 
Ira  Hardayy.  Raleigh,  vice  presi- 
dent; and  Tommy  Jackson  of  Kins- 
ton,  secretary. 


day  afternoon  in  the  lecture  room    "^^°'''  Outlen.  who  was  hampered 
but  went  out  doors  late  in  the  day !  ^^  "  ''"•'*-'  *"•'"'•>■  ^^^'"^^^  ^^"^y- ' 


for    a    routine    Thursday    drill    on!*'"    ••®°    ^    '"^^^^ 


to    g    at    top 


soggy  Navy  Field.  Players  worked 
out  in  light  geiir  in  a  dummy  ses- 
sion which  emphasized  both  of- 
fensive and  defensive  formations. 

Phil  Blazer.  Curt  Hathaway,  Dave 
Reed  and  Buddy  Payne  all  took 
part  in  extra-point  kicking  exer- 
cises to  cap  off  the  working. 

Virginia  has  had  an  off  and  on 
season,  losing  to  Duke.  South 
Carolina.  VPI  and  Vanderbilt,  while 


speed. 

This  is  Caravan  weekend  for  the 
Carolina  student  body,  and  a  .spe- ' 
cial    train    will    leave    today    fori 
Charlottesville.    Caravan    weekend  , 
games  have  been  a  special  jinx  for- 
the  Tar  Heels  the  last  two  years. 
In  1954.  Maryland  whipped  the  lo- 
cals. 33-0.  while  last  year  Georgia 
turned  the  trick,  28-7. 

After  several   unimpressive  per- 
formances early   in   the  year,   the 
Tar  Heels  have  come  to  life  with 
creditable   showings  4n   their   lastj 
three  games.  Although  still   lack-) 
ing  some  scoring  punch,  the  Tar 
.'Icel   offense,  led   by  junior  Dave 
Reed  at  quarterback  and  co-captain 
Ed   Sutton   at    halfback,   has   been  { 
looking  better  in  recent  games.       I 

A  real  strong  point  will  be  at  the  ' 
fullback    spot   where   Wally   Vale 
^^  will  bet  the  starting  nod.  Vale,  be- 
sides being  a  fast  powerful  runner, 
is  currently  the  number  two  man 
in  the  nation  in  punting.  The  El- 
lerson.  Va.,   junior  upped  his  av-  i 
erage     to     44.1     yards     per     kick  | 
again.st  Tennessee.  He  has  punted  | 
25  times  for  1.103  yards.  I 


AK  Psi  Names  Officer 
For  Fall  Pledge  Class 

L.  P.  Wheeler  of  Washington  has  i 
been  named  pi-esident  of  the  AI-  j 
pha  Kappa  Psi  fall  pledge  class. 

Other  officers  selected  are  Ed- 
die Bird  of  Charlestown.  W.  Va..  ! 
vice-president;  Jerry  Leonard  of  i 
Charlotte,  secretary:  Ralph  John-  j 
ston  of  Winston-Salem,  treasurer; 
and  Gerald  Suddreth  of  Granite  | 
Falls,  social   chairman. 


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FOR  NEW  CLASS 
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Rod  And  Gun  Winners 


Above  are  the  four  individual  winner*  in  the  annual  Rod  end 
Gun  field  day  competition  held  Tuesday.  They  are,  left  to  right: 
G.  G.  Taylor,  Dental  School,  (bait  catting);  Ritchie  Smith,  Lew  School 
Manager  holding  archery  trophy  for  winnor  Scotty  Hester;  Clet# 
Oakley,  Sigma  Nu,  (trap  shooting)  and  John  Crawford,  Sigma  Nu, 
(target   rifle). 


town   classes 

ChmffI  Hill,  North  Carolina 


JUDY  HOLLIDAY  *  PAUL  DOUGLAS 


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with  two 

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wit. 

good,  one  bad . . 

^.- 

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in  an 
exciting 
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Ajt'jq.ti    *0*N*'^ 


tl.H.C.   Library 

Serials   Dept. 
C*^?i?el   Hill.    N.    C. 
8-31-49 


CARAVAN 

1,500  copies  of  thi$  issue  havo 
been  sent  to  Charlottesville  for 
Carolina's  Caravan   game. 


3r()  c  Daily 


VOL.  LVII  NO.  44 


Complete  (JP)  Wire  Servict 


STar  Heel 


SLOWLY 

You   can   walk    that  way  today. 
So*  page  2. 


CHAPEL  HILL,  NORTH  CAROL  IN  A.  SATURDAY.  NOVEMBER  10.  1?56 


Offices   in   Graha.n   Uemorial 


FOUR   PAGES   THIS    ISSUI 


Weather  Looks  Good 
For  Weekend  Travel 


By   ANNE    DRAKE 

Weather  conditions  look  good 
for  traveling  this  weekend,  accord- 
ing to  a  spokesman   from  the  Ra- 


the caravan  train  last  night. 

Beta  Theta  Pi  has  about  32  stu- 
dents going  on  a  chartered  bus  to 
Charlottesville.  Some  40  people  are 
going  to  the  Virginia  game  on  the 
bus  chartered  by  Phi  Gamma  Delta. 
The  Sigma  Chi's  are  having  a  beach 
party  for  about  20  people  at  Myr- 
tle Beach. 

A  check  with  the  girls'  dormitor- 
ies yesterday  afternoon  revealed 
that  at  least  half  of  the  coeds  are 
going  out  of  town.  The  majority 
seem  to  be  spending  the  weekend 
at  home. 

The  Nurses  Dorm  had  the  highest 
percentage  of  girls  signed  out  for 
the 'Weekend  with  about  150  girls 
or  75  per  cent  going  away. 

A  word  of  warning  comes  from 
.\iajor  D.  T.  Lambert  of  the  High- 
way Patrol   in  Raleigh.  He  urges, 


Va.  Campus 
Much  Like 
That  Of  UNC 


Icigh-Durham  Airport  Weather  Bu- 
reau. 

This  afternoon  at  Charlottesville 
it  will  be  partially  •  cloudy  with  a' 
high  ot  50  degrees  predicted.  Those 
at  the  beaches  can  expect  fair, 
cold  weather  with  gusty,  northwest- 
erly winds  at  35  miles  an  hour 
gradually  diminishing  today  and 
tomorrow. 

The  mountainous  section  of  the 
.«tate  around  Asheville  had  its  first 
winter  weather  with  snow  flur- 
ries Thursday  night  and  Friday 
morning.  For  the  non-travelers  the 
Chapel  Kill  weather  will  be  fair 
and  cold,  as  is  generally  predicted 
fur  this  section  of  the  country.  The 
temperature  was  expected  to  drop 
to  20  degrees  Friday  night  rising 
to  the  low  50's  today.  Cold  weather 
v^as  forecast  again  tonight. 

This  taste  of  winter  weather  is 
expected  to  last  only  for  the  week- 
end, according  to  the  weather  bu- 
reau spokesman. 
MASS  EXODUS 

This  weekend  is  the  occasion  for 
a  mass  exodus  from  Chapel  Hill. 

Unofficial  reports  estimate  that 
approximately  150  students  left  on 


GOING  HOME 

. . .  )io  Saturday  cUusses 

"All  drivers  must  use  caution  and  i 

observe    speed    laws    in    order    to ' 

avoid  being  involved  in  a  highway    ""  ^^'"P"^  ^^  Virginia 

accident."  ' 

With  two  big  football  games 
within  the  slate  (Duke-Navy  and 
N.  C.  State-South  Carolina),  traf- 
fic will  be  unusually  heaN-y  this 
weekend. 


ORiVCRS  CAUTIONED 

Major  Lambert  reported  896  traf 
fie  deaths  in  North  Carolina  so  far 
this  year  and  stated  that  vehicle 
registration  is  higher  than  ever 
before.  With  the  d;iys  getting 
shorter  n.)w  as  winter  comes  on. 
he  cautioned  drivers  to  drive  with- 
in their  sight  range  and  watch  for 
pedistrians. 

Bus    travel    was    curtailed    from 
Chapei  Hill   this  weekend   due   to 
i,  Trailways    bus   driver  strike   ef- 
[  fective  at  midnight  Thursday. 

According  to  a  spokesman  at 
the  Chapel  Hill  Bus  Station,  the 
only  buses  running  are  those  be- 
tween Chapel  Hill  and  Durham. 

Nearly  300  Carolina  Co.  driver^ 
are  on  strike  affecting  bus  service 
I  over  a  five  state  area.  The  sche- 
'  dules   are   affected   west   to   Char- 
lotte and  Greensboro  and  north  to 
Philadelphia  via  Norfolk. 

A  company  spoKesman.  John  H. 
Thomas,  said  that  the  main  trouble 
IS  over  a  pay  hike  and  overtime 
payment   issue. 


The  University  of  Virginia  at 
Charlottesville,  officially  opened 
its  doors  to  students  in  the  spring 
ot  1825.  However,  the  idea  for  the 
school  was  formulated  many  years 
before  that. 

In  1817.  the  first  cornerstone  for 
I  a  university  building  was  laid.  The 
I  university  was  net  chartered  by  the 
i  General  Assembly  of  the  state  of 
I  Virginia  until    1819.   However,  de- 
spite the  difficulty  its  founders  had 
I  getting  the  educational  institution 
underway,   it    had   become   one   of 
the   largest   institutions   of   higher 
learning   in   the   United   States   by 
j  1861. 

Thomas   Jefferson,    first     presi- 
dent of  the  university  as  well   as 
president  of  the  United  Slates,  de- 
signed the  campus  grounds.  .  .the 
I  Lawns.   Ranges   and   the   Rotunda. 
I  Virginia  students  now  refer  to  the 
classroom  area  ol  the  campus  as 
j  'the    Grounds." 

j      The   Honor  system    followed   on 
the  Viiginia  campus  is  similar  to 
J  that  in  effect  at  Carolina.  The  Vir- 
:  ginians    have    no    official    Campu-. 
;  Code,  but  are  expected  to  behave 
themselves  in  a  gentlemanly  man- 
ner at   all  times. 
'      In     addition  to  the  College     of 
1  .\rts   and   Sciences,   U.   Va.   has   a 
I  Law  School.  School  of  Medicine  and 
a  Scho;>;  of  Engineering.  The  uni- 
versity confers  all  usual  academic 
degrees,    but    offers    no    honorary 
degrees. 

There  are  28  social   fraternities 
and  some 
p1    those    same   fraternities     have 
chapters  at   Carolina. 

The  University  of  Virginia  is 
composed  of  several  independent 
colleges  plus  the  main  school  at 
Charlottesville  and  Mary  Wash- 
ington College  at  Fredripksburg.  , 
Va. 

The  student  body  at  YirsiA>& 
seeni.s  tu  have  the  same  gripes  and 
complainLs  as  Carolina  Kcntlemen 
and  coeds.  They  have  been  fight- 
ing lor  their  unlimited  cut  system  , 
to  stay  in  effect  (this  system  is 
constructed  so  as  to  give  uppcr- 
claasmen  cut  privileges).  The  Vir- 
ginians have  also  been  to'ins  to 
solve  the  housing  problem  for  their 
married  students.  At  present,  the  ' 
married  students  are  living  in 
Copely  Hill,  a  housing  development 
similar  to  Victory  Village  at  UNC. 
Parking  restrictions  are  also  in 
effect  on  the  Virginia  campus  The 
students  are  required  to  regi.ster 
their  cars,  and  as  at  UNC.  fresh- 
i  men  are  not  allowed  to  keep  cars 
at  school.  There  is  also  a  non-park- 
ing regulation  in  effect  all  over 
the  campus  from  8:30  a.  m.  to  3:30 
p.  m.  except  on  Sundays  and  Sat- 
urdays after  1:00  p.  m. 

.Students  at  Virginia  have  almost 
the  same  type  of  activities  as  do 
UNC   students.   They   have   a    Stu 

(See  VIRGINIA,  Page  3) 


University  Of  Virginia  Rotunda 

Above  is  tha  Rotunda  of  the  Univarsity  of  Virginia,  situated  at  the  head  of  the  lawn  of  the  historic 
campus.  The  Rotunda  is  one  of  the  numerous  campus  buildings  designed  by  Thom««  J«ff*rfMi,  founder 
ot  the  University.  This  building  and  others  designed  by  Jefferson  were  constructed  under  his  personal 
supervision.  The  present  Rotunda  was  rebuilt  aHer  destruction  by  fire  in  1895, 


Carolina  Gridders  Meet  Virginia  In 
Conference  Battle  Today;  Caravan 
Travels  To  Charlottesville  For  Game 

j  Old  Rivals  Renew  Long 
And   Colorful   Series 


VK«t::>^HifSf|i 


•*5p^-W^^I^|fBS?3E3^«»9!5^^ 


"'**»*'*"■'>■*««■ 


■W 


By  LARRY  CHEEK 
C;H.\RL()rriS\  li.l.i.,  \.i.— C.aiolinas  lar  Ilecls  will 
try  to  salvage  ju.st  a  little  part  of  the  fast  ladiiii;  1936  lootball 
sca.son  here  thi.s  alteriUKHi  in  .Vott  Stadimu  ujjeii  tliey  go 
agaiii.st  the  riii\cisity  (»l  \  irgiiiia  C.a\alier.s  in  the  (hst  le- 
ne\\;>l  <)l  one  <»l  Dixies  most  (oloiiul  and  am  ient  |)ii;"Nkiii 
rivali  ie>. 

KitkolT  time  lor  the  Mi.  (lash  is  \:\u  p.m.  with  a  laige 
p;nti,sati  cr«»wd  sprinkled  with    Tar  Heel  siip|)orteis  e\pe<  ted 

— ■ — -, ♦to    sit    in.    Cold    temperatures    in 

the    40s    and    partly    cloudy    skies 
are  expected  to  prevail. 

This  is  football  caravan  week- 
end for  the  Carolina  student  body, 
and  a  whole  trainload  ot  students 
pulled  into  Charlottesville  last 
night  for  the  weekend's  festivities. 
With  only  two  more  games  re- 
maining on  the  schedule  after 
this  one.  the  Tar  Heels  need  a  win 
badly  to  bolster  their  poor  1-5-1 
season's  record.  Only  team  to  fall 
victim  to  Coach  Jim  Tatum's  crew 
has  been  Maryland,  while  such 
stalwarts  as  State.  Oklahoma, 
South   Carolina.  Georgic,  and  Ten- 


.'      vv  .    .  Tar  Heels  Invade  Cavalier  Country 

Above  is  a  map  of  the  University  of  Virginia  campus,  which  the  Tar  Heels  will  invade  this  week 
with  th«  caravan.  Shown  in  circle  at  the  iow«f-  left  i  s  Scott  Stadium  where  today's  feme  between  the 
UNC  Tar  Heels  and  the  Virginia  Cavaliers  will  be  played. 


Election  Of 
Council  Set 
On  Nov.  20 

Election  for  Honor  Council  can- 
didates will  not  be  held  Tuesday, 
according  to  .\ndy  Milnor,  chair- 
man of  the  student  Elections 
Board. 

Milnor  said  the  election  will  be 
held  Nov.  20,  and  possible  runoffs 
will  be  held  two  weeks  after  that. 

The  Bi-Partisan  Selections  Boards 
which  endorse  candidates  for  the 
honor  council  positions,  did  not 
have  their  endorsements  prepared 
by  the  deadline — nine  days  bef>>re 
campus  elections — he  said. 

,  Thus  candidates  would  not  be 
eligible  to  participate  in  the  Nov. 
13    general    elections. 

I  No  petition  candidate  had  his 
petition  in  by  this  time,  Milnor 
said.  "  Candidates  may  turn  their 
petitions  in  to  Acting  Chairman 
Gardner  Foley  at  207  Ruffin  Dormi- 

;  tory.  telephone  8-9146. 


UNC  Political  Science  Men 
Take  Part  In  Tenn.  Meeting 

Sixteen  members  of  the  instruc-    also   a    member   of   the   Board   of 
tional    and    research    staff    of    the  I  Editors  of  the  Journal  of  Politics 


UNC     Department      of     Political 

Science  are  attending  the  28th  an- 

I  nual  meeting  of  the  Southern  Po- 

'  litical   Science  Association  at  Gat- 

'  linburg.  Tenn.  this  weekend. 


published  by  the  Association.  In 
addition  to  those  already  men- 
tioned the  representatives  of  the 
University  at  the  meeting  will  be 
C.   B.   Robson,  P.  W.  Wager.  Mrs. 

!  Marjorie    Mendcnhall    Applewhite. 
The  program  of  the  meeting  has  ,  ^^^j^.  ^^,^,,^^^   ^   ^^   p.„^^^.  j  ^^, 

been  arranged  by  Prolessor  Alex 


Lenoir,  GM,  Library 
Observe  Regular  Hours 

The  Library,  Graham  Memo- 
rial, and  Lenoir  H«ll  will  be  open 
during  the  regular  hours  during-^ 
this  Carava^i  Weekend  The 
closing  hours  for  women^s  dorms 
will   also   be   ttie   san>e   as   usual. 


ander  Heard,  \icc-prcjjident  of  the 
program  committee. 

One  of  the  feature  of  the  pro- 
gram will  be  a  panel  discussion  on 
the  '•Contemporary  Middle  East" 
under  the  chairmanship  of  Pro- 
fessor Shepard  Jones,  who  prior 
to  his  return  to  academic  life  as 
Burton  Craig  Professor  of  Politi- 
cal Science  had  thirteen  years  of 
service  in  the  Department  of  State, 
the  last  part  of  which  was  as 
Public  Affairs  Officers  in  the  Unit- 
ed States  legation  in  Amman.  Jor- 
dan. 

Other  members  of  the  Univers- 
ity of  North  Carolina  Political 
Science  staff  on  the  program  are 
Frederic  N.  Cleaveland.  Gordon 
Cleveland.  Robert  Agger,  and  Fred- 
I  erick   Harris. 

I  Papers  will  also  be  delivered  by 
!  recent  Ph.D.  graduates  of  the  Uni- 
I  versity  Frank  K.  Gibson.  Univcrsi- 
1  ty  of  Georgia,  on  "The  Impact  of 
'  Industrialism  on  the  Government 
'  of  Cities  in  Georgia  and  South 
I  Carolina",  and  Lester  Milbrath  on 
"Personality  and  Political  Partici- 
i^pation." 

'  Professors  Heard  and  Frederic 
'  Cl«aveland  are  members  of  the 
'  Executive  Council  of  the  .\ssocia- 
I  tion    and    Professor    Cleaveland    i^ 


Dimmick.  John  Crittenden.  Mar- 
garet Hunt.  Bradbury  Seasholes 
and  Mr.  E.  B.  .Jeffries. 


56%  Of  N.  C. 
Med  Students   ; 

Attend  UNC      I 

I 

Of  the  117  students  entering  the 
three  medical  schools  of  North 
Carolina  during  the  lasi  academic 
year.  65  students  or  56  per  cent 
of  the  students  were  freshmen  at 
the  University  of  North  Carolina 
School  of  Medicine. 

The.se  facts  were  brought  out 
in  a  recent  report  by  the  Council 
on  Medical  Education  and  Hos- 
pitals of  the  American  Medical  As-  j 
ijociation.  '  1 

A  t -ta!  of  150  North  Carolina 
residents  began  the  study  ot  med- 
icine. These  65  students  who  en- 
tered the  UNC  School  of  Medicine 
represented  43  per  cent  of  the 
total  state  residents  who  entered  ." 
medical  school.  I 

Of  th  150  North  Carolina  stu- 
dents entering  medical  school  last 
year,  a  total  of  33  enrolled  in  out- 
of-state    schools. 


Nevy^Queenj 
Is  Shocked' 
At  Winning 

By   TOM   Wl£ST 

Petite   Miss  Martha   Williford, 
20.  of  Fayetteville.  has  been  .se-    ; 
lected   to   be    the    1956-57    Yack 
beauty  queen. 

Miss  Williford  and  her  court 
ot  14  beauties  were  chosen  Thurs- 
day night  in  Memorial  Hall  from 
U>3  lovely  young  ladies  compe- 
ting for  the  title. 

The  5-foot,  97 -pound  Tri-Delt 
pledge  was  very  modesi  al>v>ut 
entering  the  contest.  When  she 
walkod  away  with  the  crt>wn  .she 
wa^  bwth  ".shofked  and  plea.sed.  ' 
.•she  ."Said. 

The  Kappa  .\ipha  iM-aternity 
•sponsored    .Miss   Williford. 

Jimmy  Capps  disc  jockey  from 
RaieiiiJi    announced   the   contest- 
ants as  they  came  on  stage.  Each 
entered   the  spotlight   thr.tujih  a    : 
white   arch    entwined    with    arti-    1 
ficial    foliage    and     flanked      by 
white   iron    fence.   Two   Chi    Psi 
pledges,    Jcrn-    Adams    and    Art    , 
Schwerzel.    ushered    each   young    ' 
lady  down  the  two  steps  of  the 
arch  platform. 

Background  music  for  the  pro- 
gram was  provided  by  Flip  l^iil- 
ham's  combo.  IHu-ing  intermi.s- 
sior.  the  Phi  Kappa  Sigma  combo 
entertained.  ! 

After  intermi.s.>Jion  45  runners- 
up  again  paraded  before  the  full 
auditorium.  The  judges  then  re- 
tired to  select  the  queen  and  her 
tourt. 

The  judges  were  Ty  Boyd, 
Chapel  Hill  radio  announcer; 
.Monk  Jennings.  Chapel  Hill  Mer- 
chant, and  Charlie  Cash,  Dur- 
ham  radio   announcer. 

The  contestants  were  judged 
on  .symmetry  ot  teat  ores.  c>*ni- 
plexion.  hair,  figure  and  poise. 

Those  selected  to  be  in  the 
queens  court  were:  Misses  .Mar- 
ian Dickens.  Roberta  Chapin, 
Judy  I>ocker.  Sugar  Dudley, 
Doris  Adkins.  Lucinda  Holder- 
ncss.  Sally  English.  Pat  Dillon. 
Carol  Coopwood.  Libbie  Mc- 
Dowell Margery  Lindeman.  Nan 
Schaetter.  Patsy  Poythi-ess  and 
Jackie   .\ldridge. 

The  beauty  contest  is  staged 
each  year  &y  the  Yackdy  Yack. 
the  university  year  bo(»k.  Tom- 
my Johnson  is  editor  of  the  Yack 
this  year.  Co-editors  of  the  Yack 
beauty  department  are  Judy  Da- 
vis and  Gene  Whitehead. 

Miss  Williford.  the  queen,  is 
a  primary  education  major.  She 
came  to  Carolina  thi^  year  from 
St.  iMary's  in  Raleigh. 

She  is  a  devotee  of  nuMlern 
dance.  Last  year  at  St.  Marys 
sh?  studied  for  a  y  o  a  r  in 
a  modern  dance  group.  .Meniljer- 
ship  is  by  selection  only. 

Besides  creating  minlern  dance 
steps  Miss  Williford  also  ex- 
ecutes them.  According  to  her 
roommate,  she  is  quite  talented. 

She  is  studying  modern  dance 
course  here  at   Carolina. 

The  petite  queen's  choice  in 
music  is  jazz.  She  also  likes  any 
kind  of  dance  music,  she  says. 

The   queen    believes   that    the 
mairiagable  age  for  a  girl  is  21. 
and    that   the   ideal    family    has 
thr<  I    thiidron. 


The 

Starters 

UNC 

Pos. 

Va, 

Payne 

E 

Gun<4«»m\an 

Robinson 

E 

Polzer 

Redding 

T 

St    Clair 

Russavage 

T 

Melnik 

Ke«nper 

G 

Outton 

Jenes 

G 

;»fltflli 

Koes 

C 

K»Y»er 

Reed 

Q3 

Yarborough 

S  often 

H3 

Kneelano' 

McMuiien 

HB 

Cash 

Vale 

FB 

Bahktiar 

ne.s.see  ha\e  handed   the  locals  de- 
j  cisive  setbacks. 

i  The  Cavaliers,  reportedly  a 
vastly  improved  team  over  the 
'  one  Carolina  walloped  last  year, 
have  posted  a  3-4  record,  but  have 
i  looked  very  impressive  in  recent 
game.s.  Last  .Saturday  they  gave 
powerful  Vanderbilt  a  rugged 
tus.sel  before  falling.  6-2.  in  the 
rain  and  mud  here  in  Scott  Sta- 
dium. 

Four    biii    problems    are    facing 
I  the  Carolina    brain    trust    here  to- 
fla.v.  One   is  de\ising  a   defense   to 
stop  the  potent  Virginia  aerial  at- 
tack, another  is  stopping  thc.;Plung- 
1  ing  Persian.  Jim  Bahktiar:  a  third 
j  is  running  against  a  big  stout  Vir- 
j  ginia  line,  and  the  last  one  is  com- 
1  batting    the    let    down    that    may 
'  overtake   the  Carolina   team  after 
j  Ia.st    weeks    all-out    effort    against 
!  the  Tennessee  Vols. 
I      The     Cavalier     passing     attack, 
which  rides  on  the  good  right  arm 
of  quarterback  Noi.son  Yarborough, 
is  tops  in  the  ACC   and   is  among 
the   best    in    the   south    if  not   the 
<Sie  TAR  HKELS,  Page  4) 


O'Neill  Play 
Tryouts  Are 
Next  Week 

Tryout^i  tor  Eugene  O'Neill's 
'Desire  Under  the  Elms",  to  be 
produced  by  The  Carohna  Play- 
makers  next  month,  will  take  place 
on  Thur.sday  and  PYiday.  Nov.  15 
and  16.  under  the  supervision  of 
the  plays  director.  Thomas  M.  Pat- 
ters.>n    ol    the   Playmakers    staff. 

Auditioners  will  read  at  the 
Playmakers  Theatre  at  4  p.m.  on 
Thursday,  and  in  111  Murphy  Hall 
at  7:30  p.m.  on  Thursday  and  Fri- 
day. 

Thase  who  cannot  try  out  at 
the.se  hours  should  .«ee  .Mr.  Patter- 
-son  about  arranging  a  time.  Copies 
of  the  play  are  on  reserve  in  the 
Library. 

One  of  O'Neill's  most  widely  ac- 
claimed dramas,  the  play  was  pro- 
duced as  recently  as  1952  in  New 
York.  The  story  is  an  intense  fam- 
ily conflict  arising  from  an  un- 
expected marriage  of  an  elderly 
father  to  a  young  woman.  The 
Playmakers  will  present  "Desire 
Under  the  Elms"  in  Chapel  Hill 
Dec.    14   through   18. 


PAQi  TWO 


THE   DAILY  TAR  HBHL 


" SATURDAY,  NOVEMBER  10,  1956 


On  Studentless  Weekends, 
Folks  AH  Have  Philosophies 


WORLD  COMMENT 


CAROLEIDOSCOPE 


Caravan  ucekfuds  are  <;()<)cl 
thiui^s.  In  additittn  lo  (Uttin^  out 
one  ueekt'ud's  \v»»rih  ol  onerous 
Satnr(lav  (lasses,  tliev  lake  the  stu- 
dents auav  from  tlie  botiks  lor  a 
little  while.  Cerininly  there  are 
some  students  liere  who  need  !<) 
Ik*  taken  awav  from  iheir  books. 

But.  lor  the  peof)le  who  either 
couldn't  afford  to  !l;o  to  Charlottes- 
viile  Ol  who  didn't  want  to  ^o,  the 
weekend  is  even  Hettei.  It  means 
the  (ampats  is  quiet,  the  people 
Avalk  slower,  parkinj*  plates  ate 
easier  to  find. 

.\  studentle>s  .Saturday  on  the 
r.Mnpus  is  even  prettier  when  you 
add  the  fat  t  that  winter's  («»ld 
winds  aie  here. 

V'ou  (an  see  clear  from  I'raJik- 
lin  St.  to  Sotuh  Buildinj;.  And  you 
(an  stand  in  front  ol  the  women's 
dormitories  on  Raleigh  St.  and  see 
thtouoh  the  top  of  the  trees  in  the 
Arboretum  to  the  Planetarium. 

riie  lea\es  whith  fell  on  the 
Ground  last  week  are  not  there  anv 
lonyor.  Siron.ef.  friendly  men  who 
work  tor  tlie  University  have  clean- 
ed tliem  up  and  hauled  them  off. 
'I'he  rains  of  the  early  part  of  the 
^xeek  tore  tnore  lea\es  off  the 
tiees.  but  thev,  too.  have  been 
vaked  up  and  hauled  away. 

The  sun  is  \erv  low  in  the  skv 
no»vada\s.  It  rises  and  sets  from  the 
south,  and  it  does  not  stay  up  very 
loni».  The  skv  is  dark  when  y(i>u 
•ret  up  for  an  8  o'clock  class,  and 
it  is  dark  when  von  walk  alonj^ 
Mt(!orkle  Plate  toward  supper. 

The  skv,  when  it  is  lit  up  by  the 
sun.  lias  turned  a  deep,  ( lear  blue 
that  tan  only  be  destribed  as  a 
winter  bhie.  Ir  does  not  have 
ukmkI:  it   just  wains  of  colder  d.iys 


and  nights  and.  maybe,  snow. 

A  person  notices  these  ihiiii^s 
when  the  students  are  i»one  home 
or  to  plates  like  Charlotresx  ille. 
It  is  difficult  to  notice  them  when 
the  stiidents  are  here^  when  ytjii 
have  cut  your  S  o't  Ux  k  cla.ss  three 
times  and  when.  e\en  now  in  tlie 
middle  of  .\o\ember,  vou  are 
wfMr\  in:;  about  fiiiAl  examinations. 

It's  nice  to  walk  slowly  for  a 
( hai\,!L>e.  I  he  [Hople  you  meet  when 
you're  Avalkiirj;  on  weekends  like 
this  .'iTe  good  to  talk  to.  good  lo 
look  at. 

Kveryone  seems  f*  have  a  phi- 
losophy on  weekends  like  this.  Na- 
ttire  sort  f>f  surroimds  you.  and 
Monday's  (lasses  look  \('ry  far 
away. 


To  Quarterly: 
Cheers  For 
A  Good  Issue 


Sinterest  ( <»ngiatulations  are  in 
order  for  Miss  Marcelline  Kraf- 
( hick  and  her  staff  for  the  mng;nif- 
itent  job  they  did  on  tin*  first  is- 
siu*  of  this  year's  Quarterly. 

Fiom  cover  to  cover  it  is  tndv 
a  inaga/ine  of  widespread  interest 
and  intelligence.  The  tontent 
does  not  restrict  it  to  the  literary 
mind,  per  sc.  for  there  is  some- 
thing in  it  for  every  reader's  taste. 

It  was  a  magnificent  job.  bring- 
ing the  students  a  first-iate  liter- 
ary magazine.  We  are  already  an-, 
titipating  the  next  issue. 


Riots:  Lack  Of  Oppression 

Neailv  e\er\  tlay  tliere  is  an  ac-  that  must  jM»j)idaii>f  old  college  hi- 

count    in    the    newspapers   of    stu-  junxr 

deni   riots  in  other  countries.  Now  we  have  nothing.  The  stu- 
To  us  on  the  campuses  of  Amer-  dents  would  not  dare  to  gather  in 
itan  colleges     it     is    a  strange  psy-  protest  of  the  lynchiirg  of  the  t  h.-vii- 
thologv  wh-ih  draws     students     to  cellor.  sucfi  is  the  fear  of  vengeful 
riots    when    th.-re    is    tlie    certainty  administrators, 
that  death  or  scrionus  physical  in-  Or   maybe   ♦he   whole   qiie'stitrti 
jury  will  f'lr.ci  some  of  thc'r  lumi-  stems   from    the  fact   tliat   most   of 
|>crs.  us    have    never    experienced    mass 
W'li  :f   is  it  that  constitutes  tliis  oppression,  and  we  have  too  little 
diffejen(e     between     the     foreign  in  common   witl\  each     other     to 
students  and   the  American  prtJtii  unite   for   a  common  goal.    Some- 
type-    What    do   ue    have    on    om  how    it    is   ridiculous    to    think    of 
(am puses?    Pantv   raids     and      un-  .\inerican     students    tarrying    out 
atlultetatetl    \andalism.  riots  such  as  the  F.uro})ean  studeiUs 
It  is.  Ol  w.is.  a  ]>art  ol  the  .\ineri-    -haNe   beeti  doing  of  late.    It   seems 
tan  (ollege   tradition  to  ha've  stu-  incongrous    to    all    prat  tit  ality    to 
deiu   pranks  and     hi-jinx     of     all  even   attempt   a  tomparison. 
sorts,  but   the  actual  idea  of  being  Maybe    the    .■Vmeri(an     tollege 
desmittive    was    not    sup|K)sed    to  student     just    doesn't    possess    the 
enter    the    piilure.    But    now    that  net  essary   interest     in      others   and 
college    administiations    have    dis-  their   problems.   This   is    a    woeful 
couraged  this  phase  of  student  ex-  shortcoming, 
traiiuricidas.    the    result    seems    to 

be  a    la(  k   of   imagination   on    the  .      ^^                  I    <^  • 

part  of  the  stiulents.  A    ijOOCi    SiCin 

Thi«>  may   be   the  result  of  fear  '    *    "^^^^^^^^    ^^i^^i  I 

of  expulsion,  but     no     got»d     has  _          ^^|               m.   M  •      I 

ornie  fnmi  it.  Ill   Th^    AAlHst 

On     the     .American     university  ■■■      ■liV*fWll%^*JI 

.scene  we  cati  exfiect  to  have  a  few  _ 

paiuv  raids  which  will  not  amount  ^^jv  |%  |^N^%^4  C  n^^^ 

to  muth.  and  will   not  atctmiplish  ^^  I    D  I  Wi^vJol  1  t?tl 

anything.  /^   .     i     n  .i      .                 i  i  i       i 
,.,,     '^  ,         ,                 ,.    ,.„         ,  Out  ol  all  the  terror  and  blood- 
NX  ha't    has    happened.-'    W  hv    do  111.1            .          11             11 
,,             J         •                  J-  shed  of   the  past   week,   the   woild 
college    admmistrators    discourage  ,          1      ^               1  •                1 
,                 .              ....       ..J  has    cUmc    something    good. 

student  meetmgs  and    riots,    deny-  ,     ,           ,         •              ti              1 

L          L.       •   1               11             r.-  It    has  taken   its  troubles  to  the 

ing  them  the  right     to     blow     ofl  ...      ....     . 

,        iV      11               ....  I  nited  .Nations. 

steam  in  the  tjld  (ollege  tradition.-'  -t-i      n    •      1  v     •                  1 

..,,        ,        ,                 111  I  he  rnited  .Nations  now  looms 

What    has   happened   to  the   hoax,  ,           1  •     i-      1              .  • 

. LI as  otie  ol  mankind  s  t  lear  and  im- 

I          B^      •!       am          ■  ■          ■  mediate  ht)pes.  For  without  an  in- 

TmG  POIIV  Tor  Il66i  temati^mal   organi/ation   for  argu- 

'  ment  and  legislation,  we  will  sure- 

Tne  official  stutlent  pubhcation  of  the  1      j     .                     1 

_  . ,     ..        „      J     ,  ^u    .T          •.      .  'V  destroy   ourselves. 

PublK-afions  Board  of  the  University  of  .....     ,                            r       • 

North    Carolina,   where    it   is   published  "^    ^^''    "^    ''^^   nations      of      the 

daily    except    Monday    and    examinatiot  ^^<'»''fJ    'i:>ve    the   one    weaj)on    that 

and  vacation  periods  and  summer  terms  * -^'i   ^i"   ni<»t'  Jieople   in   less  time 

Entered  as  second  dass  matter  in  th«  than    humans    liave    ever    believed 

oost  office  in  Chapel  Hill,  N.  C,  undei  po.ssible.   With   the  passing     of     a 

the  Act  oi  March  8,  1870.  Subscription  law.  the  signing  of  a  dot  iiment.  the 

rates,  mailed.  $4  per  year.  $2 50  a  semes-  pushing     of     a     button,  they  tan 

ter:  delivered,  $6  a  year.  $3.50  a  semes-  ,,ip,.   ^,,,   ^i^^ir   enemv-and    they. 

_^ themselves,  tan   be  wiped  out. 

Editor   FRED  POWLEDGE  These   nations  whidi     have    the 

— : rrr: — , ;■ — — - —  pt)wer  t)f  death  over  eat  h  t)ther  are 

Managing  Editor  .  CHARLIE  SLOAN  u           f     i        i .    •      i    v      ■ 

L_Z Ji^j^rLTt  members   of   the    I  nited    Nations. 

News  Editor RAY  LINKER  They  have  been  aigii ing  daily  and 

Biiii^sTManager    _      BILL  BOB  PLEI,  "*"''^'y  ''*^  ^   ''"y  '^'"'P  '*^   i"tt-rna- 

.  titmal   soil   in   New   ^'^)rk   State. 

Sports  Editor                  LARRY  CHEER  Through    the    United    Nations, 

Subscription  Manager  _'.__..  Dale  Staley  '''**   >n't''il    l»ry   that   leads   to   war 

Advertising  Manager Fred  Katzin  '^^^  l>een  lessened— at  the  least,  war 

Circulation  Manager  Charlie  Jlolt  has  been  postjxjtied. 

Staff  Photographer Norman  Kant.,;  J^'^  ^^^^'^   "^"'^   c.mtinue   fun- 
Staff  Artist  Charlie  Daniel  "^''"^   '^^  arguments   thrt.ugh   the 

I 'nited    Nations,    and    the    United 

BUSINESS  STAFF-Rosa  Moore,  Johnny  Nations  must  retain  its  position  as 

Whitaker.  Dick  Leavitt.  Peter  Alper.  internatitmal  forum  and  legislative 

Night  Editor  - Fred  Powledge     body.   Without   it,   our  end  could 

Proof  Readers G.  Snyder,  C.  Schley  come  very  swiftly. 


There    Can   Be   No   Compromises        White  House: 

A  Family  Affair? 


Frank  Wamsley 

The  bloody  Hungarian  revolt, 
combined  with  turmoil  in  the 
.Near  East  has  shaken  our  world 
and  changed  our  way  of  think- 
ing. 

Here  in  the  United  States  vo- 
ters have  returned  a  general  to 
the  White  House^nd  turned  their 
thoughts  to  war.  People  all  over 
the  country  believe  that  ultimate- 
ly an  east-west  showdown  will 
(jome  and  they  are  afraid. 

In  over  eight  years  of  the  cold 
war  the  United  States  and  Ru.s- 
sia  have  not  agreed  on  a  single 
major  issue.  Other  countries  have 
fared  no  better.  Still  others  have 
fallen  prey  to  the  Soviet  .sv.stem. 
In  the  UN.  east  and  west  tJ«i>'ed 
off  and   veto   followed  veto 

iThe  forming  of  a  permanent 
UN  police  force  was  blocked  by 
disagreements  and  m  isunder- 
standings.  Today  valuable  time  i.s 
being  lost  in  forming  a  makeshift 
police  force  to  send  into  Egypt. 
Time  that  may  prove  exceedingly 
costly  while  Soviet  forces  threat 
en  from  one  end  of  the  canal. 

Conference  after  conference 
failed.  Arguments  in  the  UN  con- 
tinue today.  .And  all  the  while 
Soviet  Russia  was  not  idle.  Com- 
munism swept  China  into  its 
fold.  In  North  Korea  and  Indo- 
china she  supported  wars  that 
can  only  be  called  won.  Her  ag- 
ents participated  in  the  riots 
which  eventually  broke  down  the 
British  and  French  •colonial  sys- 
tems. 

War  and  unrest  seethed  and 
burned  through  Africa.  The  cream 
of  France's  army  has  gone  to  bat- 
tlefield graves  in  different  wars 
since  1945.  While  the  world  wat- 
ched. Russia  rigged  elections  and 
pulled  coup  after  coup  in  Europe. 
Puppet  governments  were  instal- 
led in  her  Satellites  and  the  So- 
viets began  to  consolidate  their 
positions. 

Austria  and  Germany  were 
stripped.  Germany  so  badly  so 
that  much  had  to  be  returned 
from  Kussia  to  prevent  mass  star- 
vation. In  .\ustria  millions  of  gal- 
lons mi  oil  per  month  were  tatton. 
When  the  Soviets  finally  agreed 
—to^sign  the  Austrian  peace  tre«*y,--. 
they  remanded  millions  of  gallons 
more. 

Austria  was  happy  to  pay  just 
to  get  rid  of  them.  They  weren't 
so  happy  when  they  saw  how  lit- 
tle the  Soviets  had  left. 

Ru.s.>ia  stalled  successfully  and 
smiled  or  .scowled  at  the  world — 
depending  upon  which  suited  her 
politics  for  the  moment.  In  the 
meantime  she  deveioped  her  nu- 
clear weapons,  expanded  heavy 
industry  to  the  complete  neglect 
of  all  else,  built  new  airfields  and 
army  camps,  started  the  Satellite 
armies  and  developed  her  war  po- 
tential to  an  all    time  high. 

And  all  of  this  while  the  west- 
ern world  tried  to  settle  issues 
over  a  conference  table.  With  a 
wide  expanse  of  ocean  between 
us  and  Russia,  wc  sat.  watched 
and  did  nothing.  The  only  near- 
taste  of  communism  came  during 
the  communist-inspired  Guatama- 
Ian  revolt  which  the  U.  S.  made 
sure  did  not  succeed. 

The  recent  squashing  of  the 
Hungarian  revolt  by  Ku.ssia,  after 
agreeing  to  talk  terms  with  the 
Nagy   government,     outranks   by 


THE  COMMUNIST  STATE 

.  bnUt   on    war   and   ret^ohition 


far  their  other  heinous  crimes.  It 
was  a  slaughter — a  brutal  display 
of  complete  and  utter  disregard 
for  human  life. 

After  this  the  West  must  see 
Russia  and  communism  for  what 
it  is  and  attempt  to  do  no  more 
business  with"  them.  The  commu- 


nist state  is  built  upon  the  prin- 
ciples of  conquest,  war,  revolu- 
tion and  the  envelopment  of  the 
whQle  worid  into  its  system. 

It  will  attack  from  within  or 
without.  It  will  use  any  means  av- 
ailable to  propogate  itself  and 
unscrupulously    sweep    from    he- 


fare   it   all   that    opposes   its'  de- 
sires. Conquest  is  communism. 

Is  it  not  time  that  we  refuse  to 
accept"  the  insults  to  our  country 
so  insidiously  ca.st  from  abroad. 
Is  it  not  time  that  we  expose 
the  communist  dictatorship  for 
what  it  is.  Is  it  n^t  time  that  we 
fight  back  and  carry  the  cold  war 
to  the  Soviets  with  such  fervor 
that  the  Russian  bear  must  back' 
down. 

Let  there  be  no  doubt  as  to 
the  Soviet  intentions.  No  weapon 
or  means  is  too  gross  or  unethical 
for  them  to  use.  A  new  and  stern- 
er foreign  policy  is  a  must  and 
we  must  be  rieady  to  back  up  our 
words  with  guns.  America  must 
stand  firm  and  ready  as  her  only 
recourse.  There  (fan  be  no  turn- 
ing back,  no  compromises. 


'Lighthouse' 


-»JiEuR^t-og»C 


PROFESSIONAL  FLUFFS 


Newspapers  Aren't  Quite  Perfect 


By  RAY  ERWIN 

In   Editor   Ahd    Publisher 

Corrections  can  come  of  typo 
in  such  tricky  ways  in  our  cranky 
craft  that  it's  sometimes  down- 
right canny  just  to  overlook  'em 
and  go  on  making  n(?wer,  bigger 
and  fresTier  mistakes  instead  of 
trying  to  make  the  wrongs  of 
yesterday. 

The  Milwaukee  Sentinel  thus 
"corrected"  the  erroneous  report 
of  a  woman's  death  (of  course 
such  obituarial  exaggerations  do 


have  to  be  set  straight):  "She  did 
not  died  in  St.  Mary's  Hospital, 
but  is  in  good  condition  there  due 
to  illness." 

And  "Only  2  L's  in  College' 
Campus  Head  Confir." 

The  little  story,  attempting  to 
correct  spelling  of  "college'  with 
three  L's  en  a  college  stationwa- 
gon,  spelled  it  both  ■'callage"  and 
"colloge."  Why  not  substituted 
"higher  elemoosenary  institu- 
tion"? * 

The   Raleigh   News   and   Obser- 


ver on  Oct.  2  carried  a  reader's 
letter  correcting  a  news  story  and 
the  head,  instead  of  using  "Not," 
stated:  "'Northwest-Hot  'Nit- 
Wits.'  •• 

Incidentally,  the  Hartford 
(Wis.)  Times-Press  claims  that 
"since  it  seems  to  pleace  a  lot 
of  people  to  be  able  to  find  and 
point  out  mistakes,  we  make  it 
a  point  to  put  them  into  the  paper 
purposely,  just  to  contribute  to 
the  contentment  of  his  chosen 
group." 


Pogo 


By  Wait  Kelly 


r^eai  If  \9 
AW.  ^t  to 
0B  'iikyr  INTO 


/PTHAT^ANEWTvlPg 
MOON,  rru  Hf  VfR  9€ 
P0PUUSl"'HO>A'  (20MMK 
ON  A  6ARBA6B  CM 

Ig, 'SWININ:  POW'N  IN 


vwwr 


Li'l  Abn«r 


By  Al  Capp 


Hcxu  Sadi«  Hauikins 
^>>sjsj>N/Wv/^t>t^''^t^a(j  Began  (Cor,tin<j^-) 

^^A0i£LORSi;-  Since  KiSNE 

O'  VCy  Biti  MAN  EMUFF  rMAWW    ,  . 

MAH  IXJTrER,  SACME  -AH  „. ^^P? 

GOrrA  TAKE  FIRM      r-<rX     ^ixptf 

MIASUIIES.7  . ^^^   ^       W, 


AH  DECLARES  THIS 
"SADIE  HAV(/KINS  [>AV'.^- 
WHEN  AH  FIRES  -VO' 
STARTS  RUNNIN'.rWHEN 
AH  FIRES  AGIN, SAME 
STARTS'.'  TH' ONE  SHE 
KETCHES'LL  BE  HER 
HUSBIN'-  \XS  60// 


Well,  Sadie  did  catch  one.  The 

other  Dogpatch  spinsters 
alkxued  it  luere  such  o  good 
idea  —Sadie  Haujkins  Day 
I  ujas  made  an  annual  affair  ! !  - 


fVH£A//^£^^CX/.£RS,  DOf/rLETGO.'- 
-THASS  HO/  AH'U.  SAVE 
MAHSELF  JNTH'RACEL.'J'-'i.ifc^tt' 


(Frank  Crowther 

Now  that  John  Foster  Dulles  is  ailing,  the  P0I4; 
tical  hot  potato  of  the  moment  is  whether  he  wiii 
bow  out  (on  a  super  "G"  Constellation  no  doubt) 
and,  if  he  does,  who  will  be  his  heir. 

Now  if  we  would  listen  to  Drew  (Doghouse)  Pear- 
son's advice,  we  would  probably  end  up  with  Joe 
Smith  or  Joe  McCarthy.  But  by  now  in  journalistic 
or  politicjil  circles,  Mr.  Pearson's  abortional  bohem- 
ianism  is  usually  just  taken  with  a  dose  of  arsenic 
and  a  little  head  shaking.  You  know,  he's  nice  lo 
have  around.  .  .in  a  test  tube.  ' 

If  we  give  any  thought,  however,  to  the  hypothe- 
tical situation,  the  tangents  that  can  be  traveled  in 
this  search  for  a  new  Secretary  of  State  are  myriad. 

We  can  start  right  in  the  respective  families  of 
the  President  and  the  Secretary  of  State  and  come 
up  with  two  very  good  specimens:  Milton  Eisen- 
hower and  Allen  I>ulies. 

The  latter  almost  ruined  his  chances  of  even  stay- 
ing on  in  the  Central  Intelligence  Agency  by  bung- 
ling the  Middle  Eastern  situation. 

He  was  summoned  to  the  W^hite  House  just  last 
week  and  asked  by  the  President  exactly  how  we 
could  find  ourselves  in  "a  delusion,  a  mockery,  and 
a  snare?" 

Seems  as  if  Mr.  Allen  Dulles  got  caught  with  his 
disseminated  eavesdroppers  down.  They  will  prob- 
ably give  him  the  "stand  in  the  corner"  treatment 
for  a  while. 

Milton  Eisenhower  is  an  accessible  and  formidable 
candidate,  but  the  Pi*esident  isn't  likely  to  tap  one 
of  his  own  family  even  though  he  may  have  the 
highest  respect  for  him  and  many  others,  also,  may 
hold  Milton  in  high  esteem. 

Those  close  to  Dee  assert  that  it  wonld  be  politi- 
cally inadvisable  to  place  his  brother  in  such  a  posi- 
tion. "iTie  Democrats  could  counter  with  "I  guess 
they  v'ill  change  the  name  of  the  Republican  Party 
to  Eisenhower  Inc.,"  or  "you  can  really  call  this  the 
Eisenhower  Administration,  with  Ike  as  President 
and  his  four  brothers  soon  in  control  of  the  Cabinet." 

Looking  elsewhere,  they  have  come  up  with  old 
"double-dead"  Dewey  from  the  Empire  state.  Every- 
one shudders  when  we  dare  to  mention  this  possi 
bility.  Why? 

Well,  it's  ceftainly  not  because  Dewey  is  biased 
or  dogmatic,  isSt?  Not  old  Tommy  who  threw  things 
through  his  mansions  windows  on  learning  that  he 
had  been  beaten  by  Harry  Truman.  Why  assuredly 
not,   "because   Brutus   is   an   honorable   man." 

What  of  Henry  Cabot  Lodge,  who  was  stuck  up  in 
the  United  Nations  after  spending  so  much  time 
getting  the  President  elected  for  the  first  time  that 
he  lost  his  own  Senatorial  position. 

We  cannot  say  that  he  has  not  had  the  experience 
in  foreign  affairs.  .  .  .after  all,  the  U.  N.  is  full  oi 
loreigners  and  he  has  been  right  in  the  middle 
of  their  affairs.  It  could  be  argued  that  the  U.  N.  is 
a  g^ood  prep  school  for  the  job,  (and  that  Lodge  has 
just  passed  his  finals. 

And  then  there  is  young  Hoobert  Heever,  Jr.,  the 
present  acting  Secretary  of  Stale.  He  is  gifted  with 
a  good  name,  but  is  lacking  in  the  accessary  ex- 
perience. .  .A  babe  in  the  foreign  affairs  woods,  so 
to  speak. 

Now  where  does  that  leave  us  dangling? 

YOU  Said  It: 

Patriots'  Object 
Higher  Than  Klan 

Editor: 

For  some  time  it  has  come  to  my  attention  and  to 
the  attention  of  other  PatrioU  that  there  is  a  ten- 
dency on  the  part  of  .some  honest  but  ill-informed 
people  to  attempt  to  identify  The  Patriots  of  North 
Carolina  with  the  Ku  Klux  Klan. 

Such  an  identification  is  exemplified  in  Wednes- 
day's Daily  Tar  Heel  editorial  describing  The  Pa- 
tiiots  as  an  "uptown  Ku  Klux  Klan."  Such,  sir,  is 
•fortunately  not  the  case. 

Reference  to  such  publications  as  The  Invisible 
Empire  by  Judge  Albion  W.  Tourgee,  The  Klans- 
man  and  The  Leopard  s  Spots  by  North  Carolina's 
Thomas  Dixon,  Jr.,  or  the  transcript  of  the  Ku  Klux 
Trials  of  1872  at  Columbia,  S.  C,  will  convince  the 
reasonable  reader  that  the  Klan  is  an  organizations 
that  thrives  on  superstition,  ignorance,  violence 
and  a  disregard  for  the  protections  afforded  by  law. 

Its  members  seek  refuge  behind  a  cloak  of  anony- 
mity, refusing  credit  for  their  deeds  of  mischief 
and  depredation. 

Following  the  Supreme  Court's  desegregation  de- 
cision m  May  of  1S54.  rumors  of  a  Klan  resurgence 
flourished  in  the  Carolinas.  They  indicated  that  Ku 
Klux  robes,  long  retired  to  trunks  and  closets,  were 
being  washed  and  hun«  out  to  dry. 

Viewing  the  racial  tension  and  unrest  which  cloud- 
ed North  Carolina's  horizon,  many  of  the  state's 
most  responsible  citizens  had  just  cause  to  fear  a 
renaissance  of  this   hooded  and  anarchist  order 

Largely  for  this  reason  and  in  the  fervent  hope 
that  order  could  be  maintained  and  chaos  averted 
The  Patriots  of  North  Carolina  was  formed 

In  brief  the  objects  and  purposes  of  this  organi- 
zation, as  set  forth  in  its  charter,  are  to  promote  the 
peace  and  domestic  tranquility  of  the  people  of 
this  state,  to  promote  the  value  of  maintaining  the 
existing  social  structure  of  this  state  in  which  here- 
tofore two  distinct  races  have  lived  in  an  atmosphere 
of  harmony  and  mutual  respect  and  co-operation 
o  promote  the  right  of  the  state  of  North  Caro-" 
Una  to  regulate  Us  own  internal  affairs  in  the  man- 
ner it  believes  to  be  most  conducive  to  the  han- 
Piness  and  welfare  of  its  citizens,  and  to  co-operafe 
with  and  support  our  state  and  local  civil  authorities 
m  maintaining  these  condition*  """nes 

These  principles  embody  an'  emotional  and  in- 
flammatory appeal  only  inasmuch  as  layalty  to  and 
reverence  for  our  st^te  may  be  deemed  emotional 
and  Liberty's  torch  inflammatory.  '^"»o"onal 

Anyone  interested  in  obUining  additional  infor-    - 
mation  about  The  Patriots  of  North  Carolina  may    ' 
contact   me  at  the  Zeta   Psi  House,  where  he  wiU 
find  me  unhooded  and  in  all  my  natural  ugliness.  . 

William  P.  Chtshira  ' 


:.tx: 


SATURDAY, 

For 

Christmas, 
that     ancient  | 
give  it,  will 
University. 

The  hands 
ed   back   som^ 
Morehead    Pk 
seventh  year 
of   Bethleh?m| 

The  now 
which  has  dra 
men  and  chill 
ing  in  1949,  w| 
from  Nov.  20 , 
"I'm  expectj 
year  than  we'l 
presentation,'! 
Manager  A.  FJ 
And  he's  a| 
for  them.  Te 
erecting  "behJ 
since  October) 
to  total  1, 
the  first  prodl 
"They're  gil 
their  time  to| 
the  Christmi 
time  needed 
rent  prograr 

Meanwhile,  I 
technicians  at| 
to  the  massiv4 
duction  are 
figured,  it's 

The  schedi 
has  been  ad\ 
this  year, 
planetarium 
to  accommodi 
tend  the  d 
game  Noveml 
"This  page^ 
point  where 
could  get  aH 
serted  Jer 
building  up 

"He  estimj 
tc  10,000  yoJ 
Carolina  and| 
Carolina  anc 
tend  the  60- 
year. 

Jenzano  d( 
sentation   "isi 
stant   effort 
"religion     in 
Agreement." 

"It   has 
tarily   by   cl 
scientists, 
life,"  he  add« 
all  ages,  fror 


Dro 

Table,  T 

THE 

205  E. 

DA 

A(; 

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dep 

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5. 

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Dw 

10. 

Asa 

11. 

Bes 

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14. 

Gr< 

15. 

Lib 

16. 

Crj 

17. 

Th( 

19. 

De 

20. 

r* 

*K 

21. 

Asl 

24. 

Gir 

25. 

Ca 

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Co 

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Co 

dit 

( (1 

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G<] 
cte 

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FU 

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R< 

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Fi 

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SI 

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U 

ro 

to 

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s: 

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S< 

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.T 

1 

V. 

s-4 

10,  19S6 


sATuHi^AV,  »f<yvi^git  y»,  V9^ 


tHfe  bAH.Y  tAH  HEEL 


PACE    THREE 


ir? 


the  poU- 

?r  he  will 

|no  doubt) 

ise)  Pear- 
with  Joe 
>urnalistic 
)1  bohem- 
|ot  arsenic 
's  nice  lo 

hypothe- 
raveled  ia 
re  myriad, 
imilies  of 
land  come 
[on   Eisen- 

jeven  stay- 
by  bung- 
just  fast 
how  we 

^kery.  and 

with  his 
dill  prob- 
■treatment 

}rmidable 
tap  one 
have  the 
I  also,  may 

I  be  politi- 

|ch  a  posi- 

"I  guess 

can  Party 
hi  this  the 

President 
1  Cabinet" 

with  old 
Ite.  EJvery- 
}hi&  possi 

is  biased 

sw  things 
(g  that  he 

assuredly 

lan." 

ick  up  in 
luch  time 
[time  that 

Experience 

lis  full  of 

|e   middle 

U.  N.  is 

ige  has 

r.  Jr..  the 

fted  with 

tssary  ex* 

■woods,  so 


lect 
tan 


ion  and  to 
is  a  tea- 
l-informed 
of  North 

Wednes- 

The  Pa- 

^ch,  sir,  is 

Invisible 
The   iClans- 
Carolina's 
le  Ku  Klux 
[nvince  the 
janizations 
violence 
^ed  by  law. 
of  anony- 
k  mischief 

egation  de- 
I  resurgence 
that  Ku 
losets,  were 

rhich  cloud- 
|the  stated 
to  fear  a 
St  order, 
/ent  hope 
OS  averted, 
led. 
thi^  organi- 
>romote  the 
people  of 
htaining  the 
k'hich  here- 

I  atmosphere 
operation. 

iorth  Caro- 
Jin  the  Bfian- 
■to  the  hap- 
co-operate 

II  authorities 

Inal    and   in- 

^alty  to  and 

\(i  emotional 

tional  infor- 
'arolina  may 
lere  he  will 
ral  ugliness. 
^.  Chcshira 


'rot:   \ 


PFcmeitirkim   tiow  Gef^mg  Heady 
For  Presentation   Of   Yule  Show 


Christmas,  in  all  the  splendor 
that  ancient  Blbfical  accounts 
give  it,  will  arrive  Nov.  20  at  the 
University. 

The  hands  of  time  wiH  be  tinn- 
ed back  some  2,00P  years  whei| 
.Morehead  Planetariuvi  begins  its 
seventh  year  running  of  the  "Star 
ol    Bethlehem." 

The  now  -  fame^  presentation, 
which  has  drawn  liO[,000  men,  wo- 
men and  children  99ce  ils  opeci- 
ing  in  1949,  will  coi^inue  tiiis  year 
trom  Nov.  20  to  Dec.  31.   , 

•I'm  ejcpecting  more  peaipl«  this 
year  than  we've  had  for  any  other 
presentation,"  said  Planetarium 
Manager  A.  F.  Jenazno. 

.\nd  he's  already  making  p^^fts 
for  them.  Technicians  have  been 
erecting  "behind  ^he  dome"  spe^gs 
since  October  29,  and  arQ  expected 
to  total  1,000  hours'  work  before 
the  first  production. 

•They're  giving  every  bit  of 
their  time  to  erecting  scenes  for 
the  Christmas  show,  except  for 
time  needed  to  present  the  cur- 
rent program,"  said  Jenzano. 

Meanwhile,  artists,  recording 
technicians  and  other  contributors 
to  the  massive,  and  expensive,  pro- 
duction are  at  work.  Everything 
figured,  it's  a  $5,000  production. 

The  schedule  of  presentations 
has  been  advanced  about  s  week 
this  year.  That  move,  said  the 
planetarium  manager,  was  made 
to  accommodate  persons  who  at- 
tend the  Carolina-Duke  football 
game  November  24. 

•This  pageant  has  gotten  to  the 
point  where  I  don't  believe  we 
could  get  along  wtihout  it,"  as- 
serted Jenzano.  "It's  just  been 
building  up  year  after  year." 

"He  estimated  that  from  8.000 
to  10,000  youngsters  from  North 
Carolina  and  points  in  South 
Carolina  and  Virginia  will  at- 
tend the  60-minute  programs  this 
year. 

Jenzano  declared  that  the  pre- 
sentation "is  typical  of  our  con- 
stant effort  to  keep  science  and 
religion  in  an  area  of  mutual 
agreement." 

"It  has  been  acclaimed  volun- 
tarily by  clergymen  and  laymen, 
scientists,  people  in  all  walks  of 
life,"  he  added.  "It's  for  people  of 
all  ages,  from  six  to  106." 


Through  the  planetarium  instru- 
ifient,  skies  of  Judea  are  recreated 
OQ  the  planetarium  dome  as 
astronomers  say  they  appeared  in 
the  year  7  B.C.  Five  tableaux  and 
9ther  effects  add  splendor  to  the 
presentation. 

J  As  the  "Star  of  Bethlehem" 
I  copunences,  a  narrator  gives  "a 
scientific  explanation  of  condi- 
I  tions  and  phenomena  of  the  Bib- 
i  lical  era,"  said  Jenzano. 

J     After  the  explanation  comes  the 
pageant,  which  begins  at  the  An- 
I  nunciatioq  and  follows  the  Christ- 
rmas-  story    through    the    Nativity. 
j  Composit  projection  of  a  cathedral 
I  jiatecior-  0|».  tbf  plai^tai^um  dome 
1  "fittingly  climaxes  the  story. 
I     As    in  former   years,    presenta- 
j  tions  thn  year-  wHl  include  splen- 
did colors  and  technical  know-how 
which  l\as  made  the  "Star. of  Beth- 


lehem" the  most  popular  plane- 
tarium production. 

The  realistic  account  of  the 
world's  most  cherished  season  is 
taken  from  the  King  James  version 
of  the  Bible  and  includes  many 
quotes  thereof.  It  is  designed  for 
general  public  appeal. 

Following  is  a  schedule  an- 
nounced today  by  Manager  Jen- 
zano: 

Dally  at  11  a.m.  and  2  p.m..  by 
reservation  only,  for  school  groups; 
public  programs  daily  at  8:30  p.m.; 
and  matinees  on  Saturday  at  11 
a.m.,  and  3  apd  4  p.m.,  and  on 
Sunday  at  2,  3  and  4  p.m. 

Jenzano  said  special  presenta- 
tions are  offered  at  times  other 
than  those  listed  above  for  any 
group  numbering  100  or  more. 
Reservations  should  be  made 
through  the  Morehead  Planetar- 
ium, UNC,  Chapel  Hill. 


GieeClubIs 
In  Va.  Now 

Having  returned  Wednesday 
night  from  a  performance  given  at 
Stradford  College  in  Danville,  the 
UNC  Men's  Glee  Club  again  travel- 
ed to  Virginia  yesterday  for  a  con- 
cert to  be  given  in  Charlottesville 
at  the  University  of  Virginia. 

The  glee  club,  under  the  direc- 
tion of  Dr.  Joel  Carter,  will  attend 
the  Carolina-Virginia  game  and 
then  cepart  for  Sweetbriar  College, 
where  it  will  give  two  performan- 
ces on  Sunday,  completing  its  first 
tour  of  the  year. 

A  soprano  soloist.  Donna  Patton, 
will  accompany  the  55  odd  mem- 
bers of  the  glee  club  on  its  week- 
end tour. 

Dr.  Carter  announced  that  the 
concert  will  feature  a  set  of  ex- 
cerpts, in  the  form  of  operatic 
scenes,  from  Mozart's  'Magic 
Flute  • 

The  two  variety  groups,  'The 
Four  Flatters,"  a  male  quartet,  and 
the  "Bakers  Dozen,"  a  triple  quart- 
et, will  present  the  special  music 
for  the  perfonn«Dces. 


Don't   Miss 

Today's 
Housecleaning 

SALE 

Dropped  titles  from  the  Children's    Corner,  The   Humor 
Table,  The  Fiction  Shelf,  »nd  The  Heme  Problems'  Shelf. 

THE  INTIMATE  BOOKSHOP 

205  E.  Franklin  St.  Open  Till  1 0  P.M. 


DAILY    CROSSWbRD 


ac;ross 

1.  To  commit 
depreda. 
tions 

S.  Burr  in 
wood 

9.  Dwell 

10.  Assistant 

11.  Bestowed 

12.  Money 
received  as 
wt^et,  etc. 

14.  Grow  old 

15.  Liberate 
Itt.  Cry  of  pain 
17.  The  coypu 

19.  Devoured 

20.  E«rth  as 
a  i:oddess 

21.  Asks 

24.  Girl's  name 

25.  Caress 

26.  Coaxes 
29.  Compus 

direction 
(labbr.) 

31.  Goddess  of 
death 
(Norse) 

32.  Riddle   ' 

34.  Rough  lava 

35.  Pish 
37.  Sloths 
iS.  LArge 

rock-borinf 
tool 
40  System  of 
worship  ef 
a  deity 

41.  Prune 

42.  Seaport 
(PaleeUnc) 

43.  Places 

44.  Tq^ 

DOWM 

l.HArMa 


3.  Evenini^ 
(poet.) 

4.  The 
(Old.  Enf.) 

9.  County 
(Pa.) 

6.  Fastidioue 

7.  Fuss 

8.  Distant 

11.  Team 

12.  Arab 
kingdom 

13.  Female 
sheep 

15.  Mulcted 
•18.  Split 
19.  Skill 

122  Set 
on  end 


^ 


23.  Same 

"Jassy" 
(Rom- 
ania) 

24.  Lam- 
prey 

26.  An  in- 
ter- 

ative 

27.  Cores 

28.  Thin    « 

29.  The 
greenbrier 

30.  The  Orient 

33.  A  thin, 
cotton 
fabric 


a'juNui  uoiJ'ja 
ycii^^  idgii'':;-'nw 

;iiL3D    'Ydrja 


T[9tirtt4my'»  Aatwcr    ; 

35.  Pin  for  meslj 

36.  Meats 
(kind) 

39.  Before 

40.  Crown 
42.  Geo^ia 

(abbr.) 


University 
Campus 


Civil  Service  Applications 
Being  Accepted,  Sources  Say 


YMCA  STUDY  GROUP 

The  YMCA-sponsored  Study 
Group  on  Comparative  Religious 
will  meet  Monday  night  in  108 
Hanes  Hall  from  5-6  p.  m. 

Speaker  for  the  meeting  will  be 
Mohammed  Siddiqui  from  Lahore, 
Pakistan.  Siddiaui  will  speak  on 
the  Islam  Religion.  All  students 
are  invited,  according  to  Bob  Car- 
ter of  the  study  group. 

RENDEZVOUS  ROOM 

There  will  be  dancing  this  Satur- 
day night  in  the  Rendezvous  Room 
to  the  music  of  Charlie  Culbreth's 
combo  from  8  to  11.  No  admission 
will  be  charged. 
WAA  GOLF 

Miss  Pauline  Simms,  golf  man- 
ager, has  announced  the  extension 
of  time  for  the  first  round  of  the 
WAA  Golf  Tournament  to  Men 
day,  Nov.  12. 
WUNC-TV 

WUNC-TV,  the  University's  edu- 
cational television  station,  channel 
4: 

6:30  Land  To  Be  Free 

7:00  Music    You    Want 

7:30  Frontiers    of    Health 

8:00  Renaissance  on  TV 

8:30  American   Politics 

9:00  Sign   Off 
WUNC 

WUNC,  the  University's  educa- 
tional FM  station: 

7:00  Paris  Star  Time 

7:30  Showtinie 

8:00  This  Is  Jazz 

9:00  Horizons   In   Music 

10:00  News 

10:15  Evening  Masterwork 

11:30  Sign  Off 


Church  Supper 
Sunday  Night 

The  Laymen's  Fellowship  of 
the  United  Congregational  Chris- 
tian Church  will  meet  for  a  cov- 
ered dish  supper  at  6:30  p.m.  Sun- 
day, in  the  new  Parish  House  lo- 
cated at  211  Cameron  Ave. 

The  main  item  on  the  program 
will  be  a  discussion  of  the  Every 
Member  Canvass  scheduled  for 
Sunday,  Nov.  18,  which  the  men 
have  agreed  to  undertake  as  their 
major  project  for  the  year. 

Also  slated  for  program  will  be 
a  discussion,  led  by  Phil  Green, 
Ray  Strong  and  Bill  Cherry,  on 
the  ways  and  means  of  reaching 
the  budget  goal  of  $15,000,  fully 
underwritten  by  personal  pledges 
Included  in  the  figure  is  an 
amount  of  $5,000  for  new  build- 
ing and  equipment. 

Reid  Suggs,  president  of  the 
Fellowship,  has  emphasiaed  every 
man  in  the  church  will  be  needed 
for  the  successful  completion  of 
the  Every  Member  Canvass. 

Radio  Station  WCHL  will  be 
broadeasting  the  worship  service 
of  the  church  on  Sunday  at  11  a.m. 
The  pastor,  Rev.  Harvey  L.  Carnes, 
will  speak  on  the  topic:  "Tithing, 
a  Blessing  in  Disguise." 

The  men  in  the  United  Students 
fellowship  will  be  guests  for  the 
supper  and  everyone  has  been  in- 
vited. 


Newsfiap^r  Points  Out 
What  Bensoh  Will  Do 

BLUFFS.  111.  (*— The  weekly 
Times  announced  yesterday  on 
page  one  that  its  predictions  as 
to  what  Secretary  of  Agricul- 
ture Ezra  Taft  Benson  "is  going 
to  do  for  the  fijrmer  can  be 
found  on  pages  2  and  9  and  con- 
tinued on  pages  6  and  7." 

The  pages  listed  were  blanlb. 


Some  People  Stayed  Here 

Like  Page  Anderson,  senior  from  Washington,  D.  C.  She's  catching  up  on  a  little  studying  instead 
of   going   to  Charlottesville,   Vs.,  for  the   caravan   football  game.  ^ 


Eight  Entered 
In  DUkathon 

Eight  out  of  11  letters  sent  to 
sororities  and  dormitories  asking 
for  candidates  fo  the  DUkathon 
Queen  Contest  have  been  received 
at  the  DU  House,  according  to 
Ernie  Kemm,  DUkathon  chairman. 

The  queen  will  be  crowned 
shortly  before  the  race  from  the 
Chapel  Hill  post  office  to  Dur- 
ham begins. 

Those  planning  to  run  in  the 
race  met  last  night  with  Kemm. 
He    asked    anyone    unable    to    at- 


tend  the   meeting  contact   him  at    ^^jj^^j  • openings  Weekend,"  "Mid 
the  DU  House,  phone  9-1301. 


Virginia  Campus  Much  Like  That  of  UNC 

dent  Union,  located  in  Madison  winters "  and  the  Easter  Dance." 
Hall,  and  a  Y.M.C.A.  They  also  have  Like  UNC,  the  girls  to  boys  ratio 
a  debating  group  known  as  the  '  j^  ^^^  ^^  Virginia,  so  there  is  a 
Jeffersonian  Society.  j  ^jg),   jn^por^   ^ate   three   times   a 

Virginia  student  publications  in-   y^^  , 

elude  The  Daily  Cavalier,  the  col-  j 

lege  newspaper  which  is  published 
Tuesday  through  Friday;  the  an- 
nual. Corks  and  Curls;  a  humor 
magazine;  and  a  literary  magazine, 
the  Virginia  Spectator. 

Still  another  similarity  between 
the  two  schools  are  the  three  big 
dance  weekends,  co-sponsored  by 
the  ^crman  and  P-K  student  dance 
societies.    Their   "Big  Three"   are 


WORTH 

fTS  WEIGHT 
IN  SOLID 


mmim 


JUDY  HOLLD/y  -  PAUL  DOUGLAS 


NOW 
PLAYING 


The  U.  S.  Civil  Service  Conj- 
mission  has  announced  that  appli- 
ftatinns  are  still  beng  accepted  for 
accountant  and  auditor  positions 
with  starting  salaries  of  $3,670  a 
year  in  various  Federal  agencies 
in  Washington,  D.  C,  and  through- 
out the  United  States. 

To  qualify,  applicants  must 
have  had  appropriate  education  or 
experience  or  possess  a  ■  CPA  cer 

Test  For  Positions 

Set  For  December  1 

I 

students  who  are  interested  in  | 
positions  with  the  National  Secur-  j 
ity    Agency    have    been    asked    to 
take  the  Professional  Qualification 
Test    to    be    given  on  campus  on 
December  1. 

The  test  is  one  of  ability  to 
read,  to  understand  and  to  reason 
logically  with  a  variety  of  verbal 
and  quantitative  materials.  Candi- 
dates who  qualify  on  this  test  will 
be  considered  for  professional  po- 
sitions with  the  National  Securi- 
ty Agency,  which  is  a  part  of  the 
intelligence  system  of  the  Federal 
Govemrtient. 

Interested  students  can  obtain 
application  forms  and  additional 
informatioh  about  the  program 
from  the  Placement  Service  here ! 
on  campus  or  by  writing  to  the 
Educational  Testing  Service,  20 
Nassau  Street,  Princeton,  N.  J.  A 
complete  application  must  reach 
the  ETS  office  by  November  24. 


tificate.,  Th'ose  who  qualify  on 
the  basis  of  experience  only  will 
be  required  to  pass  an  accounting 
t3St  to  demonstrate  .satisfactory 
knowledge  of  accounting  princi- 
ples. 

Full  information  and  instruc- 
tions on  filing  applications  are 
given  in  civil  service  announce- 
ment No.  51  Revised  which  may  be 
obtained  from  many  post  offices 
throughout  the  country  or  from 
the  U.  S.  Civil  Service  Commiss- 
ion. Washington  25,  D.  C.  Appli- 
cations will  be  accepted  until  fur- 
ther notice,  the  Commission  said. 


Accounting  Club  Elects 
Officers,  Organizes 

The  Accounting  Club  held  its 
organizational  meeting  Wednesday 
night  in  Hanes  Hall.  The  Consti- 
tution was  adopted  and  officers 
for  the  coming  j-ear  were  elected. 

Officers  elected  were:  Pres., 
Hughs  Binkley,  Kernersville;  Vice- 
Pres.,  Jim  Fokes.  Charlotte:  Sec, 
Marvin  Perrin,  Greensboro;  Treas., 
Tom  Crocker,  Rocky  Mount. 

Twenty  people  signed  up  for  the 
club.  Membership  is  open  to  ac- 
counting majors  and  sophomores 
taking  B.  A.  71  and  72  upon  rec- 
ommendation   of   their    instructor. 

The  club  will  meet  every  two 
weeks.  The  next  meeting  will  be 
at  7  p»Tn.  Nov.  19  in  Hanes  Hall. 


IT  RIPS  OPEN 
THE  HOT  HELL 
BEHIND  THE 
GLORY! 


This  is  a  picture  that  grabs  you  by  the  throat  ond  shove* 
you  into  the  shell-ripping,  blood-drenched,  scream'mg  heot 
of  war. 

Here  ts  the  hell  behind  the  glory . . .  the  r«ol  guU  ofKl  smell 
of  baftlel  Th}«  is  the  story  they  didn't  teii— of  the  heroes  wha 
stood  up  under  fire,  txnd  the  few  who  belJy-crawled  outi 


The  ASSOCIATES  .and  ALDRJCH  Co.  presenu 


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tH^OAtLY  TAR  HtlL 


tATURDAY,  NOVEMBER  18,  ^9U 


Freshman  Football  Team  M#ets  South   Carolina  Yearlings 


The  *)ccer  team  got  the  boot  yesterday. 

Virginia  came  to  town  and  handed  the  Tar  Heels  their  first  defeat 
of  the  1956  season.  2-0.  in  a  sloppy  contest  reeled  off  on  slippery 
letzer  Field.  Mud  was  everjnvhere  and  the  playing  surface  looked  more 
like  a  quagmire  than  anything  else. 

Co«ch  Marvin  Allen's  boys  slipped  and  slid  all  afternoon,  and  af 
the  game's  end,  were  utterly  exhausted  and  bedraggled.  The  leas  waa 
a  bitterly  disappointing  one  to  the  locals.  Hopes  of-  a  conference 
championship  were  running  high  In  the  Tar  Heel  cantp,  wid  the 
Nov.  ir  date  with  mighty  Maryland  was  uppermost  in  everyone's 
mids. 

This  and  Tuesday's  game  \*ith  I>uke  were  supposed  to  be  thei 
big  ones.  But  from  nowhere  came  the  Cavaliers,  and  the  Tar  Heel 
dream  was  rudely  shattered. 

There  is  still  a  chance,  however.  If  the  Tar  Heels  can  win  their 
last  two  games  from  Duke  and  Maryland,  the  title  will  be  pretty  much 
up  for  grabs.  A  lot  will  then  depend  on  what  happens  in  the  Virginia- 
Maryland  game,  an  all  important  match  still  to  be  played. 
HARRIERS  AIM  FOR  CONFERENCE  TITLE 

The  rapidly  improving  cross-country  team  has  an  excellent  chance 
to  win  the  conference  crown.  The  once-beaten  harriers  will  go  after 
championship  honors  Nov.  19  at  Charlottesville,  Va..  when  they  parti- 
cipate in  the  ACC  meet. 

Maryland,  the  only  f»m  to  whip  the  locals,  is  the  defending 
champion  and  the  team  to  beat  egain  this  year.  But  UNC  Coach  Dale 
Ranson  thinks  hie  boys  may  bo  just  the  ones  to  do  it. 

"A  lot  depends  on  what  happens  in  the  State  Meet  Monday,"  said 
iianson  yesterday.  "If  we  can  turn  in  a  good  performance  in  that  one, 
we  stand  a  good  chance  to  go  all  the  way." 

The  Carolina  runn€rs  have  come  a  long  way  ^nce  September. 
Lanky  junior  Exerett  Whatley,  normally  a  slow  starter,  has  come 
rround  in  fine  fashion  In  recent  meets,  while  Dave  Scurlock,  longleg- 
f  ed  Greensboro  youth  who  specializes  in  the  shorter  distances,  is  doing 
a  bang  up  job  in  his  sophomore  year. 

The  less  of  soph  star  Wayne  Bishop  before  the  seeson  started 
was  a  damaging  blow,  but  the  Tar  Heels  have  recovered  remarkably 
well. 

They  are  overwhelming  favorites  in   the  State  Meet  Monday.  Al- 
ready this  year  they  have  romped  over  Wake  Forest.  Duke  and  State 
(tvtice)  with  little  or  no  difficulty,  and  should  win  the  State  title  hands 
do^Ti. 
VIRGINIA  CAMPUS  HUMMING  WITH  ACTIVITY 

There'll  be  plenty  of  action  on  the  V^irginia  canjpus  this  weekend. 
Id  addition  to  the  varsity  football  game  in  Scott  Stadium,  there  will 
be  an  intramural  inter-campus  game  bet\veen  the  mural  champs  from 
Carolina  and  the  top  "amateur"  aggregation  from  Virginia.  And  last 
hut  by  no  means  least  will  be  the  annual  fall  tennis  match  between 
the  Carolina  and  Virginia  net  squads. 

Every  year   since  the  turn  of  the  century,  tennis  teams  from 
Carolina  and  Virginia  have  met  each  fall   at  the  conclusion  of  fall 
drills.  For  the  last  few  seesons,  the  Tar  Heels  of  Coach  Koofiaid  i 
have  been  in  the  driver's  seat.  Last  year  was  no  exception  as  the 
locals  walked  off  with  a  9-0  decision  here  in  Chapel  Hill. 

But  a  new  era  hiis  dawned  this  year.  A  new  coach.  Ham  Stray- 
horn,  has  taken  over  for  Kenfield  and  the  backbone  of  last  year's  con- 
ference championship  team  has  graduated.  Still  there  are,  or  should  be, 
enough  guns  left  to  handle  the  Virginians. 

Among  these  are  captain  Bob  Bortner,  Ed  Hudgins,  Frank  Liv- 
ingston, Geoff  Black,  Pete  Dell  and  Steve  Bank. 

The  match  will  be  played  this  morning  on  the  Virginia  varsity 
tennis  courts,  and  any  interested  students  are  invited  to  come  out  anti 
have  a  look  see  at  tennis  played  in  the  winter  time. 


^Tultai's  Squad 
Is  Favored  To 
Take  3rd  Win 

Coach  Fred  TuUai's  freshman 
gridders  take  to  the  road  again  to- 
day as  they  journey  to  Florence, 
S.  C„  to  do  battle  with  the  Biddies 
of  the  University  of  South  Caro- 
lina. 

The  Tar  Babies  go  into  the  con- 
test heavily  favored  to  add  an- 
other victory  to  its  scalp  belt.  Cur- 
rently they  are  sporting  a  2-1  re- 
cord, having  defeated  Virginia  and 
Maryland,  while  losing  to  Wake 
Forest  in  the  opener. 

This  will  be  the  last  test  for 
the  Tar  Babies  before  theic  finale 
Dgainst  the  Blue  Imps  of  Duke  in 
Durham,  November  22. 

Coach  TuUai  has  said  that  the 
starting  lineup  will  be  identical 
to  that  which  started  against  Vir- 
ginia I«st  week. 

Comprising  the  fwward  wall  \H1I 
be  ends  Don  Stallings  and  Ed 
Furianic,  Mike  McDade  and  Jim 
Jenrett  at  the  tackles,  guards  El- 
lis Wooidridge  and  JYed  Mueller, 
and  at  the  center  post,  Jim  Davis. 

Once  again  the  hackfield  will  be 
entirely  composed  of  North  Caro- 
lina natives.  Running  from  full- 
back wUl  be  Jim  Stevens.  The 
halfback  slots  will  be  filled  by 
Cornell  Johnson  and  Wade  Smith. 
At  the  all'  important  quarterback 
station  will  be  Nelson  Lowe. 

Backing  up  Lowe  wiU  be  reserve 
iiignai  Callers  John  Cummings  and 
Jerry  Amos.  Cummings  darted 
against  Maryland  and  both  have 
seen  much  action  this  year. 

Sure  to  be  on  call  for  dtity  are 
halfbacks  Dave  Lcffler  and  Ron 
Hopihan.  LeXfler  was  outstanding 
in  the  Maryland  tilt,  while  flop- 
man  scored  twice  against  Virginia 
and  wa.s  outstanding  defensively. 


Tar  Heels  Meet  Cavaliers  Today 


•  (Continued  from  Page  t)    '•     i 

nation.  Yarborough  has  establi^-' 
ed   himself   as   Dixie's   foremblst 
passer  with  his  total  yardage  fif;- 
ure  of  530.  Backing  Yarborough  u\)i, 
at  the  signal  calling  slot  will  b4>| 
Lefty     White     Clark,     a     strong  • 
chunker  in  his  own  right.  \ 

On    the   receiving   end    of    the* 


Blue  Devils   Entertain 
Strong  Naval  Academy 


DURHAM.  ue)—A  Duke  football 
team  that  has  made  a  habit  of 
alternating  losses  and  victories 
since  the  season  started  is  a  seven- 
point  favorite  to  defeat  Navj',  the 
nation's  12th-ranked  team,  here 
today.  < 

Once-beaten  Navy  flattened 
Notre  Dame  33-7  last  week  for  its 
fifth  victory  while  Duke  was  los- 
ing its  fourth  game  in  seven  starts. 
However,  Duke  played  some  of  its 
best  football  of  the  year  before 
yielding  7-0  in  the  last  quarter  to 


Georgia  Tech,  the  nation's  No.  2 
club. 

If  Duke  continues  its  policy  of 
losing  one.  then  winning  one, 
which  has  been  the  case  for  seven 
weeks,  the  Blue  Devils  will  pre- 
vail. 

The  game  will  match  the  na- 
tion's No.  1  team  in  rushing  de- 
fense. Navy,  against  a  Duke  back- 
field  that  leads  the  Atlantic  Coast 
Conference  in  rushing.  Navy  has 
yielded  an  average  yield  of  only 
101.8  on  the  ground.  Duke  has 
averaged  257.9 


Zeta  Psi  Will 
MeetUVA 
Champs  Today 

Most  of.  the  fans  who  made  the 
caravan  trip  to  Virginia  last  night 
are  unware  of  the  fact  that  they 
will  get  an  opportunity  to  watch 
two  Carolina  football  teams  in 
action  in  Scott  Field  today. 

This  morning  at  10:15  Zeta  Psi, 
the  Carolina  intramural  tag  foot- 
ball champs  will  go  against  the  tag 
football  champions  of  the  Uni- 
versity of  Virginia  in  the  renewal 
of  an  event  that  several  years  ago 
was  an  annual  affair  between  the 
two  schools. 

According  tp  past  rules  of  the 
event,  onchalf  of  the  game  will 
be  played  by  Carolina  rules  and 
the  other  half  by  rules  set  up  by 
the  University  of  Virginia  intra- 
mural department. 

There  are  hfgh  hopes  among 
Carolina  officials  that  this  feature 
will  bring  many  students  out  early 
to  watch  the  campus  champs  in 
action.  In  the  past,  as  many  as 
3,000  students  have  viewed  the 
contests  played  alternately  in  Scott 
Field  and  Kenan  Stadium. 

The  Zeta  Psi  club  will  be  the 
guest  of  the  intramural  depart- 
ment of  Virginia  for  the  entire 
weekend. 

Carolina  intramural  director 
Walter  Rabb  and  two  of  his  as- 
sistants Rufus  Hackney  and  Tom- 
my Johnson  are  with  the  Zeta  Psi 
team  and  will  work  with  the  Vir 
ginia  department  in  the  promotion 
of  the  event. 


Yarborough  and  Clark  flips  willV 
be  a  pair  of  lanky  ends  who  rank  ^ 
among  the  conference  elite.  Fred 
Polzer  at  one  flank  spot  is  the 
best  receiver  Virginia  has  '  had 
since  Gene  Sphoder  set  the  scho^ 
record  of  3^  catches  in  1950,  whil6 
Bob  Gunderman  on  the  other  end 
of  the  line  is  another  dangerous 
threat. 

The  problem  of  stopping  Bahk- 
tiar  is  another  imposing  one.  One 
of  the  mbst  bruising  fullbacks  is 
action  today,  Bahktiar  is  present- 
ly th'e  nation's  fifth  ranking  rush- 
er with  a  total  of  645  yards  along 
the  ground. 

The  Cavalier  line,  paced  by  Jim 
Keyser  at  center,  is  big  and  tough 
and  in  the  words  of  Coach  Tatum, 
"is  as  tough  as  any  in  the  con- 
ference." 

The  Tar  Heel?  have  picked  on 
Virginia  for  three  wins  in  the  last 
three  years,  so  there  is  a  danger 
that  they  may  fall  nctim  to  o\er* 
confidence  this  afternoon.  C}>acl| 
Tatum  warned  his  boys  earlier  in 
the  week  that  the  Cavaliers  will  be 
tough,  and  scout  Jim  Hickey 
backed  up  his  boss  by  asserting 
that  "they  coulH  have  beaten  Van- 
derbilt  with  a  few  breaks." 

Carolina,  loser  of  lour  in  a 
row  before  breaking  into  the  win 
column,  has  come  to  life  in  the 
last  three  games.  They  recorded 
their  first  victory  over  Maryland 
in  Kenan  Stadiinn,  34-«,  then  were 
tied  by  Wake  Forest  before  losing 


to  Tennessee  in  a  rugged  scrap. 
The  starting  lineup  for  today's 
gaihe  vicill  be  the  same  one  that 
has  done  so  well  for  the  past  three 
Saturdays.  The  offensive  attack 
Will  be  spearheaded  by  Dave  Reed 
at  quarterback.  Ed  Sutton  at  hall- 
back  and  Wally  Vale  at  fullback. 
Vale  is  curremtly  the  nation's  sec- 
ond ranking  punter  with  a  44.1 
Average  for  25  boots. 


Virginia,  taking  a  tip  from  Tar 
Heel  tactics,  ml\  also  go  with  the 
same  lineup  that  opened  last 
week's  game  with  Vanderbilt.  Both 
squads  are  in  top  physical  shape 
for  the  contest. 

The  Tar  Heels  hold  a  five-game 
edge  in  the  series  that  dates  back 
to  1892.  Carolina  has  won  31,  Vir- 
ginia 26  and  there  have  been  three 
ties. 


NOW  (S  THE  TIME! 


Don't  be  caught  napping  when  winter  comes 
through  and  leayef  the  biting  cold  at  your  door. 


Stay  warm  and  be  in  ttyle 
with  our  complete  line  of 


CUSSIFIEDS 


CHICAGO    FOR   THANKSGIVTNG 
—-I'm  leaving  by  car  Wednesday  . 
at  noon.   Nov.  21,  for  Chicago; 
can  take  three  riders  for  $16.50 
each,  round  trip.  Start  back  early  j 
Sunday  morning.  Fred  Powlodge,  | 
9-3361     afternoons:     B-8602     at 
night. 


LOST  —  AN  "ENICAR"  WATCH 

Tuesday  night  vicinity  of  Port- 
hole. Call  Daniel  Goldrich  at  8- 1 
1183  after  6  p.m.  or  at  9-7688 
during  the  day. 


OVERCOATS 


tl^..$et-in  Sleeve 
1^  Patch    And   Flap    Pockel 
Styles 

■•«■*•        -»■•*       t-  >  •■ '     •-'■■'--         '"i" 

Harris  Tweeds ^55.00 

Imported  Cheviots  tnd  ^V  ;  *' 
■     Tw*ediir.:^ll_.._  457.50 

Hand  Woven  Imported 

Shetlands  __.__.___  $67.50 


•.  .-  Jr:;:n  v*: 


.^:  >'.:.■  I 


STEVBKS^  S^KPHERD 


^^i 


Van  Heusen  asks: 

WHICH  MAJOR  IS  SAQER?         ' 


Here's  how  students  in  dif« 
feirent  majors  describe  Van 
Heusen : 

Biology  Major:  Van  Heusm 
will  siirvive,  because  it  fits. 
Psychology    Major:    Vail 
Heusen  is  well-adjusted  to  me. 
Physics  Major:  E=VH*. 
Economics  Major:  Nobody 
can  coinpete  with  Van  Heusen. 
English  Major:  Oh  that  this 
too,  too  solid  flesh  would 
always  wear  Van  Heusen. 
History  Major:  Van   Heusen 
is  great  for  dates. 
Archeology  Major:   Dig   that 
Van  Hciisen!  Makes  you  ^ick 
your  Cheops. 

Yes,  friend,  from  N.Y.U.  to 

♦Elegance = Van  Heusen. 


the  College  of  the  Pacific, 
there's  complete  agreement 
that  Van  Heusen  has  a  know- 
ing way  with  men's  wear.  In 
shirts,  pajamas,  sport  shirts, 
shorts,  ties  and  handkerchiefs, 
Van  Heusen  advances  your 
style  with  casual,  comfortable 
good  looks.  Look  for  Van 
Heusen.  In  fact,  demand  Van 
Heusen.  And,  mind  you,  buy  it. 
At  better  stores  everywhere, 
or  write  to  Phillips-Jones 
Corp.,  417  Fifth  Avenue.  New 
York  16,  New  York.  Makers 
of  Van  Heusen  Shirts  •  Sport 
Shirts  .  Ties  .  Pajamas 
Handkerchieis  •  Underwear 
Swimwear  •  Sweaters. 


WE  ARE  THE  EXCLUSIVE 


VAN  HEUSEN 


DEALER  IN  CHAPEL  HILL 


The  Big  Switch:  From  UNC 
Also  Ran  To  NFL  Fireball 


(The  folUjnoing  story  appeared 
in  the  Charlotte  News  and  toas 
later  reprinted  in  the  Chapel 
Hill  Weekly.)^ 

By  SANDY  GRADY 

Steve  Owen,  not  exactly  a  nov- 
ice at  rating  pro  football  players, 
made  a  curious  statement  the 
other  day. 

"This  Ken  Keller  is  one  of  the 
best  young  runners  I've  seen  in 
the  National  Football  League." 

It  had   a   curious  ring  -because 
Ken  Keller,   currently  the  rookie 
rage   of   the   Philadelphia  Eagles, 
was    anything   but   sensational    in 
four  seasons  at  Chapel  Hill.  Each 
fall  the  bugles  would  blow — those 
who  watched    the    jaunty,    dark- ' 
thatched  little   man     in     practice ! 
predicted.  "Keller  will  be  as  good  j 
as  Justice."  •  ' 

It  never  happened.  Oh,  Ken  led  ; 
the  Tar  Heels  in  rushing  a  couple 
of  seas-onx.  But  Carolina  was  hav- 
ing    .>;»fiic     blact    Saturdays  and 


Keller  was  no  torch  of  brilliance. 
When  the  Eagles  picked  up  Ken  in 
the  11th  draft  round,  folks  shrug- 
ged and  figured,  "the  kid  won't 
stick  long ..." 

And  here  he  is  —  ninth  best 
rusher  in  the  NFL,  finest  rookie 
galloper  in  the  business,  a  sensa- 
tion in  Philadelphia.  How  come? 

We  asked  this  question  of  George 
Barclay,  one  of  the  most  erudite 
service  station  men  in  the  land. 
Keller  was  Barclay's  project  at 
UNC.  And  Barclay  knew  the  an- 
swer. 

"I  brought  Ken  to  Chapel  Hill  in 
'51,"  says  Barclay, 'taking  time  off 
from  his  gas  pump  routine.  "He 
was  a  terrific  high  school  player 
at  Salina,  Pa.  Scored  a  fantastic 
number  of  touchdowns.  Played  of- 
fense in  the  two-platoon  and  was 
the  best  in  the  state. 

"But  at  Chapel  Hill  he  had 
trouble.  Ken  .just  didn't  like  de- 
fense. The  single  platwn  system 
(•:imf  along  und  he  had  to  fi'i  both 


ways.  He  didil't  like  to  tackle  and 
he  was  always  getting  a  bad  ankle 
or  shaken  up. 

"Had  he  been  playing  only  of- 
fense for  me,  you'd  have  heard  a 
lot  about  Keller.  He  was  as  fine 
a  runqer  as  this  league  has  seen. 
People  that  compared  him  with 
Justice  weren't  too  far  off. 

"Well  after  the  season  was  ov- 
er, I  took  him  with  me  to  the  Blue- 
Gray  game  at  >!ontgomery.  We 
were  running  two  platoons  and 
Ken  got  bis  love,  left  half  on  of- 
fense. He  had  a  good  day  and  the 
Eagle's  scout  liked  him.  They 
knew  he  was  a  sleeper. 

"I  wasn't  surprised  a  bit  that 
Ken  has  been  going  great  in  the 
[jros.  He  eats  that  up — catching 
punts,  taking  kickoffs  back,  run- 
ning the  ends.  He  weighs  about 
ISO  now.  he's  shifty,  he  cuts  and 
has  good  speed.  With  no  defense 
to  worry  him,  the  kid  is  fi  natural." 

And  Barclay  nii«ht  ]ia\e  added: 
a  year  tuo  late, 


arlemagne^ 


Oock,  stock,  and  firkin)  when  he  sallied  forth  to  lay 
about  him  with  mace  and  broadsword.  This  explains 
how  a  conquered  count  happened  to  be  sampling  a 
bucket  of  the  royal  suds  one  day  and  said,  "Charlie, 
this  is  great . . .  just  great!"  And  tins  alao  ezi^ains 
why  Charlemagne,  to  this  very  day,  is  called  Charles 
the  Great. 


■-■  ^  "^"  ■^-        or 

Once  there  #aj<ft  mnacle  tiutt  walked  like  ft  num.  H« 
was  called  Chaxlemagne  and  he  was  King  of  the  JiVanks. 
(No,  his  daddy  didn't  own  a  slaughter-house  in  Chicago. 
His  business  TO  sticking  Saxons— not  pigs.)  It  w  said 
that  His  Maje^y  stuck  his  vfrord  into  4,500  Saxons  in 


^ 


one  day,  and  that  he  is  the  real  originator  of  Shish 
keb(U>t  although  we  prefer  to  keep  an  open  mind  about 
this.  Now  when  Old  Charlie  wasn't  cutting  it  up  on  a 
battlefield  he  liked  to  hve  it  up  in  a  castle,  his  favorite 
chow  being  a  haiuich  of  venison  washed  down  with  ^ 
firkin  of  good  hearty  brew.  And  right  here  is  where  the 
^Id  boy  gets  his  name  in  lights  as  far  as  we're  concerned. 
He  introduced  his  beer  to  aU  the  barhariana  lucky 
enough  to  be  alive  when  the  donnybrook  ^was  over.  In 
fact,  history  has  it  that  he  took  his  brewery  with  him 


lAOIt    Sill 

▲NHEUSBK-BUBCH,  INa  •  ST.  LOUIS  •  NEWARK  •  U>8  ANGEtAS 


U  V  C  Library 
Serials  Dspt. 
Ch:.^2l  Hll'-.    N.   C. 


WEATHER 

Partly  cloudy  and  cool;  expoctod 
high  in  low  60s. 


©jclJaUuMar  Keel 


BRIGHTER 

Th«   world    is.   See   tho    R»view, 
page  2. 


VOL.    LVII    NO.  45 


Complete  {JP)  Wire'SerxHce 


CHAPEL   HILL,   NORTH   CAROLINA,   SUNDAY,   NOVEMBER   11,    1956 


Offices   in   Graham   Memorial 


FOUR   PAGES  THIS    iSSUf 


8o/c^  Boys  In  Blue  Topple  Virginia  Cavaliers,  21-7; 
Halfback  Sutton  Scores  Three  Times  In  Third  Quarter; 
.   UNC  Caravan  Weekend  Crowd  Is  Hit  By  Weather 


Tar  Heels  Jubilant 
On  Return  Trip  Home 


By  BILL  KING  i 

Special  to  The  Daily  Tar  Heel 

CHARLOTTESVILLE.  Va.  —  It; 
was  a  jubilant  group  of  Tar  Heels 
that  boarded  two  chartered  buses 
to  return  ta  the  University  of  Va. 
field    house    here    Saturday.    The 
Tar  Heels  had  just  won  their  sec- 
ond game  of  the  second  with  a  fine  i 
21-7     Atlantic     Coast     Conference , 
victory  over  the  University  of  Vir- 
ginia.  j 

One  of  the  happiest  of  the  Tar ! 
Heels  was  Coach  Jim  Tatum.  a  \ 
man  who  has  been  used  to  win- 1 
ning  for  14  years,  but  has  (lever  ' 
given  up  on  his  1956  Tar  Heels 
in  the  mid.st  of  a  woefully  poor  j 
season. 

••I've  never  been  so  proud  of  a  '■ 
team."   said   the  Tar   Heel   mentor 
as  he  walked   through   the   crowd 
of  well-wishers — who  greeted  him  ; 
immediately  following  the  vict')ry.  I 

"There    is    nothing    that    makes 
you    happier   than    to   see    a   team  \ 
come  up  off  the   floor  and   make  j 
such    a    fine    comeback.    It    shows 
that    they're    made    of    the    right 
stuff. 

"It  was  certainly  a  team  vic- 
tory." he  added,  "and  I  sure  am 
protid  of  the  boys." 

Tatum  paused  a  moment  to  have 
a  short  chat  with  right  tackle  Stu 
Pell's  family,  then  went  on  with 
his  appraisal  of  the  Tar  Heels.  "I 
thought  everybody  played  just 
fine."    he   added. 

Asked  what  he  thought  of  the 
performance  of  halfback  Ed  Sut- 
ton who  tallied  all  of  Carolina's 
touchdowns,  Tatum  replied:  -'The 
line  gave  Ed  lots  of  room  to  move 
and  he  ran  like  he  knows  how  to 
run.  Sutton  is  a  great  runner  when 
he  gets  a  good  start,  and  that  line 
sure  gave  him  a  good  start  today." 

The  big  Tar  Heel  coach  said 
that  he  thought  the  Carolina  of- 
fensive looked  as  good  in  the  sec- 
ond  half  as  it  has  all  season  and 
that  the  defense  played  a  heads 
up  game  of  football.  "'The  defen.^e  } 
and  offense  was  very  sharp  today,"  ; 
he  said.  i 

Did  the  Tar  Heeis  note  the  fine 
support  of  the  Carolina  Caravan? 
"You  bet  we  did,"     said     Tatum. ; 
"That  student  section  meant  more  i 
to  us  today  than  anything  else.  I ! 


don't  believe  we  would  have  come 
back  like  we  did  in  the  second 
half  if  it  hadn't  been  for  the  way  ' 
that  group  of  students  was  sup- 
porting the  team,"  he  added.  "It 
sure  did  make  me  happy." 

Tatum    declined     to    make    any 
comparison      between      Virginia's ' 
hard  running  fullback,  Jim  Bakh- 
tiar,  and  Bill  Barnes,  the  key  man  , 
in    the   Wake   Forest  offense  last  I 
week. 

"I  never  make  comparisons  be- 
tween players,"  Tatum  said.  "Both 
are  good  runners  with  entirely  dif- 
ferent styles.  Barnes  runs  more 
like  a  halfback,"  he  said.  "Both 
are  very,  good." 

Tatum  laughed  when  he  was 
asked  about  next  week's  game  with 
Notre  Dame.  "I  haven't  given  it 
a  thought,"  he  said.  '•This  game ' 
today  was  the  one  we  wanted,  it 
■w^as  a  big  one.  Now  I'll  start  think- 
ing about  Notre  Dame." 

He    added,    "I    definitely    think 
this  victory  will  give  the  team   a 
boost    in    morale    for    next    week,  ■ 
though." 

At  Tatum's  insistence,  the  buss- 
es carrying  the  Tar  Heel  gridders  < 
had   already  left     for     the     field  j 
house    and    Tatum    caught    a    ride 
with   a  Carolina   faithful   who  had  ; 
made   the     trip     via     automobile. ' 
Smiles    had    been    a    problem    this ' 
season    for    the   Tar    Heel   mentor ; 
but  today  he  was  making  the  most 
of  the   moment     as     he     happily  • 
walked   away  with     a     group     of  ^ 
friends.  Chances  are  he  was  think- 
ing   about    a    football    dale    next 
Saturday  in  South  Bend.  Ind. 


news 

m 
brief 


FROM   RADIO   DISPATCHES 

VIENNA  —  After  19  days  of 
fighting,  rebel  Hugarians  are 
still  holding  out  against  Russ- 
ian artillery  and  footsoldiers. 

Although  the  rebels  generally 
are  disorganized,  and  although 
they  are  greatly  outweighed  by 
the  Soviet  forces,  they  continue 
sniping  and  killing  wherever 
they  can.  observers  from  Hun- 
gary reports. 

The  pro  -  Moscow  Hungarian 
government  has  set  up  courts 
to  deal  with  captured  rebels. 
The  government  also  has  turned 
back  International  Red  Cross 
attempts  to  enter  Hungary  with 
food  and  medicine  for  the  na- 
tion, faced  wih  famine. 

NAPLES.  Italy  —  The  first 
planeload  of  troops,  part  of  the 
United  Nations'  police  force  to 
settle  the  Middle  East  fighting, 
landed    near    here   Saturday. 

MOSCOW  —  Russian  "technic- 
ians"— believed  to  be  jet  pilots 
and  mechanics — were  reported 
getting  ready  to  go  to  Egypt. 

Just  what  the  •voluntiers" 
were  going  to  do  was  not  im- 
mediately aniTouneed.  but  ob-  f 
servers  felt  certain  they  were 
going  to  help  equip  the  Arab 
world's    airforces. 

SEOUL.  Kprei — South  Korea 
officials  said  China  Communist 
forces  were  believed  massing  on 
the  truce  line  between  South 
and  North  Korea  Saturday.  An 
emergencv  meeting  of  the  state 
council  was  called. 


It  Didn't  Rain,:? 
It  Was  Cold 

By   BILL    KING 

Specutl  to  Tlie  Daily  Tar  Heel 

CHARLOTTESVILLE.  Va— It  didn't  rain  in  Charlottesville 
this  weekend,  but  the  intense  cold  was  just  about  as   bad. 

At  the  end  of  the  first -half,  however,  the  sun  came  out  and 
shone  its  blessing.s  on  the  Carolina  students,  who  by  that  time 
were  probably  already  pretty  well  frost-bitten. 

From  the  looks  of  the  sparse  crowd  of  spectators  on  the  visit- 
ing side  of  Scott  Field,  it  appeared  that  the  Carolina  Caravan  com- 
posed well  over  half  of  the  total  /lumber  of  fans  on  the  East  side. 

Most  of  the  Carolina  students  were  sitting  together,  one  ex- 
ception being  the  Glee  Club  which  occupied  a  section  of  the  stands 
at  the  North  end  of  the  field.  The  Glee  Club  was  right  in  there 
.supporting  the  Tar  Heels,  though,  and  there  were  three  cheerlead- 
ers there  to  lead  them  in  yells  for  most  of  the  game. 

The  first  band  to  make  its  appearance  on  the  field  yesterday 

(See  COIJ)  FANS.  Page  4) 


New  Elections  Law  To  Govern 
Fall  Polling  On  Campus  Tues. 


Basemenf  Of  House  Catches 
Fire  Here  Early  Saturday 


The  basement  of  a  duplex  be- 
longing to  Julius  Anders,  located 
at  208  Church  St..  was  burned  out 
by  a  fire  started  about  3  a.m.  Sat- 
urday morning,  believed  to  have 
been  created  by  a  defect  in  a 
floor  furnace.  i 

The  fire  department  of  Chapel 
Hill    reported    that,    although    the 
fire  did  not  spread  into  the  cen- ' 
tral    portions    of   the    house,    con- 
siderable damage  was  caused  be- 1 


low   the    first    floor,   in   the   base- 
ment. 

The  fire  created  a  great  deal  of 
smoke,  forcing  the  three  families 
occupying  the  white  frame  house 
to  move  most  of  their  furniture 
across  the  street  in  fear  of  the 
fire's    spreading. 

No  estimate  of  damage  caused 
by  the  fire  was  given  by  the  fire 
department.  ,  j 


Campus-wide   elections   Tuesday 
will  be  governed  by  the  electiorfti 
law  passed  last  spring  by  Student  . 
Legislature  and  amended  this  fall 
in    regards    to   polling    places.  ' 

The  law  provides  for  polling 
places  to  remain  open  on  the  day 
of  elections  from  8  a.m.   to  6  p.m. 

A4  amendment  to  the  law  ikidl 
fall  provides  for  polls  to  Ik'  placed 
in  all  mens  and  women's  dormi- 
tories. The  law  previously  called 
for  one  polling  place  in  each  dis-- 
trict.  j 

TOWN    POLLS  , 

Constituents  of  Town  Districts 
will  vol?  in  the  following  polling 
places:  Town  Men's  1.  Gerrard ' 
Hall;  Town  Men's  2.  Scuttlebutt;' 
Town  Men's  3.  South  Building:  ' 
Town  Men's  4.  Victory  Village; ' 
Town  Women,  Gerrard  Hall.  | 

The  law  stales.  "Town  resident,";  ! 
shall  voto  only  in  their  respective  ' 
polling  plyes.  Each  Tmvn  resi-  ] 
dent  must  sign  a  roll  before  vot-  ' 
ing." 

The  law  provides  that  each  vot- 
er shal!  be  reauired  to  present  his  I 
current     University     identification 
card,  and  sign  a  roster  before  he  ! 
is  permitted  to  vote.  j 

According  to  the  law.  any  run-j 
off  elections  will  be  held  a  week  | 
from  Tuesday.  j 

VOTING   DISTRICTS  ! 

The  composition  of  voting  dis- 1 
tricts   is  as   follows:   Men's   Dorm 


District  1— Cobb;  Men's  Dorm  2— 
Stacy.  Everett,  Graham,  Lewis,  Ay- 
cock:  Men's  Dorm  3  —  Conner, 
Alexander.  Winston:  Men's  Dorm 
4 — Joyncr.  Joyner.  Mangum.  Man- 
ley,  Grimes,  Ruffin.  Emerson 
Stadium:  Mens  Dorm  5  —  Old 
East.  Old  West,  Battle-Vance-Pel- 
lig— w.  4M>eele>  Whitehead.  Memor- 
i:ii  Hall  and  all  other  l?niversity 
owned    buildings    not    mentioned. 

Men's  Town  District  1 — south- 
ern .section  of  Chapel  Hill,  south 
of  Cameron  Ave.  and  its  imaginary 
extension  eastward  and  westward 
except  for  Victory  Village,  includ 
ing  tho.se  students  living  in  out- 
lying sectinns  and  cities  in  that 
general   direction. 

Town  Men's  2 — rectangle  bound- 
ed by  West  Cameron  Ave..  South 
Columbia  St..  West  Franklin  St. 
and  Carrboro  city  limits. 

Town  Men's  3  —  all  other  men 
town  students  except  tho.se  resid- 
ing   in    Victory    Village. 

Town  Men's  4 — Victory  Village, 
or  (he  area  bounded  by  Jackson 
Circle.  Mason  Farm  Rd..  Daniels 
Rd..  and  Polk  St. 

Women's  Dorm  District — all  wo- 
men's dormitories  and  Universi 
tv  owned  buildings  for  women 
residents. 

Town  Women's  District — all  wo- 
nfen  students  not  living  in  Univers- 
ity owned  buildings  and  women 
students  in  sororitv  houses. 


Bakhtiar  Drives  For  Virginia  First  Down 


Tar  Heels  Gano  Uo  On  Bakhtiar 


Posting  Signs 
On  Mouldings 
Called  Illegal 


j  Teams  Battle  Evenly 
During  Three  Periods 


By  GRAHAM   SNYDER 
A  dormitory  manager  has  recent- 
ly raised,  the   point  that  the  stap- 


By    LARRY    CHEEK 

Special  to  The  Daily  Tar  Heel    "-'  .  -.'■-' 

(:H.\R1.()  rriSX  ILl.K.  \a.-Spcvclv  Icl  Sutton,  a  Ini- 
niaii  lioiimini;  holt  at  riglit  hallbatk.  t-xplodfd  l(»i  three  quick 
ling  of  election  cam^Jiaign  posters  third  (uiartcr  l()U(  lulouns  to  j;i\e  the  Caroliiia  1  ai  Heels  a 
onto  the  wooden  moulding  of  bul-  stuuniui;  21-7  win  oxer  the  Welwildered  \  ii"i;niia  C.axaheis 
letin  boards  is  a  violation  of  the  \^^.y^^.  S;iturdav  in  lri<iid  Seott  .Siadimn  beloie  a  iiowd  ot  id," 
housing  office  rules,  and  that,   in  j  ,„„,  fans.  '^ 

adherence   to  these  rules,  all  pos- j  T\\c    I'av   lleels.  tvailiii!.;  7-0  ;ifh;illl  inie.   turned  loose  a 

ters   stapled  onto     the     moulding    (la//lin'4  toiK  lidoun  duo  in  .Sulion  and  quai  rerl)at  k  Dave  Reed 
would    have   to   be   removed.  j  jq  score  the  first  three  times  they*  ~"  "~"~ 

Keith  Gallimore.  dorm  manager    gained  possession  of  tlie  ball  in  the    won  the  first  half  and  Carolina  the 
of    Alexander,    stated    that    "I    am    jjiji-tj  period.  s-econd.  The'  Cavaliers  led   in  first 

not  trving  to  produce  an  argument  '  ..... 

or  make  an  issue  out  of  this  situa-  i      Stymied  by  a  tough  Virginia  line 

and   their   own   costly   mistakes   in 


tion.  but  I  am  trying  to  follow  the 
dormitory  rules.  These  rules  state 
that  no  tacks,  nails,  or  staples  may 
be  driven  into  the  walls,  doors  or 
wot)dwork."' 

Gallimore  explained  that  the  is- 
sue of  election  postecs  has  come 
up  in  past  campaigns,  and  that  the 
mutilation  of  the  mouldings  of  the 
bulletin  board.s  has  been  caused 
by  these  staples  and  tackles 

Gallimore  said  that  he  had  ob- 
.served  two  or  three  people  stap- 
ling campaign  posters  onto  the 
moulding  and  had  instructed  them 
not  to  do  so.  He  added  that  he  had 
removed    several    posters   and    put 


the  opening  half,  the  Tar  Heels  , 
found  the  combination  after  inter-  ( 
mission  immediately  upon  receiv-  ] 
ing  the  second  half  kickoff.  The  j 
Carolinians  launched  their  first 
drive  toward  paydirt.  starting  on 
I  heir  own  25  yard  line.  | 

BORE    BRUNT  | 

Sutton.  Reed  and  halfback  Larry  1 
McMuUen  bore  the  brunt  of  the  j 
assault,  with  Reed  connecting  on  \ 
a  12  yard  flip  to  Sutton  for  the  i 
score  with  only  4:25  g<me  in  the  ' 
second  half. 

Minutes  later  the  Carolinians  had 
their  .second  and  game-cirnching 
tally.  This  one  came  in  spwctacular 


downs,  11  to  7.  and  rushing  yard- 
age, 148  to  87,  at  intermission,  but 
the  Tar  Heels  came  back  with  a 
\engoance    in    the   .second    half    to 


THE   STATISTICS 

N.C. 

Va. 

First  Downs                    16 

17 

Rushing  Yardage         268 

189 

Passing  Yardage          124 

87 

Passes                             8-11 

921 

Passes   Intercepted          1 

0 

Fonts                         5-24.0       4-43.0 

Fumbles    Lost                    2 

2 

Yards    Penalized            54 

50 

them  in  the  center  of  the  bulletin,,     ..  .  .    ^,   ..        , 

w       J       J  ^   .J  .  .         ,,    fashion  with  Sutton  burstm-g:  over 

board  aod. had -torn  <»ne  poster  of f '  ,  ,,   ^     ,  ,  ,    ,        ,  .  T     ,. 

~  I  left    tackle    and    breakmg    inlo   the 

j  clear  for  a  68-yard  payoil   dash. 

I      The      concluding      tally,      which 


wrap  up  the  decision,  rolling  up 
an  overwhelming  margin  in  first 
downs  and  rushing. 


because  of  the  number  of  .staples 
in  it. 

J.  S.  Bennett.  Director  of  Opera- 
tions, concurred  with  Gallimore's 
observation.  Bennett  stated:  "The 
matter  is  simple  and  direct.  If 
any  dorm  manager  ob.serves  the 
stapling  of  any  poster  onto  the 
wood  moulding,  he  is  instructed 
to  take  it  down." 


Frost  Shivers  N.  C. 
In  First  Cold  Snap 

By   THE 
ASSOCIATED   PRESS 

Scattered  frost  shivered  North 
Carolina  for  the  .second  straight 
day  Saturday  as  autumn's  first 
cold  snap  lingered  on.  But  the 
weatherman  says  it  will  be  partly 
cloudy  and  mild  tomorrow. 

Temperatures  got  down  to  be- 
tween 22  and  30  in  the  moun- 
tains, and  30  to  38  el-sewhere. 

On  Mt.  Mitchell,  highest  peak 
in  eastern  United  States,  a  low  oi 
14  degrees,  18  below  freezing  was 
recorded  Saturday  morning. 


I  came  with  onl>  50  seconds  remain- 
j  ing  in   the   fatal   third   period,   was 
only   so   much   icing   on    the   cake, 
tor  by  this  time  the  Cavaliers  were 
I  in  a  rather  complete  state  of  shock. 
'  .\gain  if  was  a  Reed  to  Sutton  pass 
that   turned   the  trick.   Phil   Blazer 
successfully    conxerled     all     three 
extra  points.  ^ 

DOMINATED   HALF 

The  first  half  was  mostly  Vir- 
ginia as  the  Cavaliers  dominated 
olay  in  all  departments.  Coach  Jim 
I'atums  Tar  Heels  were  able  to 
muster  only  two  long  drives,  pen-  ^ 
.■t  rat  ing  to  the  Virginia  20  on  one 
md  to  the  Cavalier  18  im  the . 
other.  i 

The  Cavaliers  and  their  plunijing 
fulllvick  Jim  Bakhtiar  got  their 
only  touchdown  of  the  day  in  the  , 
losing  minutes  of  the  second  peri- 
od. Quarterback  Nelson  Yarhough 
climax'Ml  a  44-yard  drive  by  sneak- 
ing over  from  1  yard  out  with  4:35 
emaining  to  play. 

Statistically    speaking.     Virginia 


1 

Suttun    was     the     day's    leading 

ground     gainer,     picking     up     130 
'  I  ushing  and  47  via  pass  receiving. 

Bakhtiar  paced  the  Cavaliers  with 
99  yaids  rushing. 

The  two  squadj  slugged  it  out 
toe  to  toe  during  the  games  open- 
ing minutes  with  neither  gaining 
a  decided  advantage  until  the  Tar 
Heels  launched  their  first  drive. 
With  Sutton.  Reed  and  DeCanlis 
floing  most  of  the  work,  the  Tar 
Heels  moved  from  their  own  39 
down  to  the  Virginia  20  where  they 
bad  a  first  and  10. 
IN   HOLE 

Or.  the  first  play  from  this  point, 
however.  Reed  was  thrown  for  a 
nine-yard  loss  all  th?  way  back  to 
the  Cavalier  29.  This  put  Carolina 
in  a  h(»le  they  could  not  recover 
from.  Short  gains  In  Reed  and 
Sutton  were  offset  by  a  five  yard 
penalty  for  delay  of  the  game.  And 
fullback  VVally  Vale  was  forced  to 
kick   out    on    the   Virginia   17. 

The  Cavaliers  started  their  first 
long  but  unsiiccestui  push  toward 
goal-line  territory  from  their  17.  In 

(See  TAR  HEELS.  Page  4) 


Sutton  Trapped  On  Virginia's  25  Yard  Line 


Lat«   in    the   sMond    quarter   Jim    Bakhtiar    crosses  CaroUna's  11   yard  line,  setting  the  Cavaliers  up  Cavalier  fullback  Jim  Bakhtiar  is  dropped  on  Carolina's  28  yard  Carolina  lialfback    Ed    Sutton   moves  the   ball    five  yards  during  a  Tar  Heel  drive  finally  stopped  by 

for  their  only  touchdown  three  plays  later,  line  early  in  the  first  quarter  of  yesterday's  game.  Virginia    on    th»    Cavaliers'    20-yard-line.  —Special   Daily  Tar  Heel   Photos  by  Truman  Moor* 


FACE  TWO 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


THE  WEEK  IN  REVIEW: 


SUNDAY,   NOVEAABER   11,   1956 


SUNDAY, 


A  Slightly  Brighter  World,  Another  Win  For  Tar  Heels 


Fred  Powledge 


The  world  situation  changed,  perhaps  for  the  better,  last 
week. 

At  least  there  was  less  chance  of  immediate  all-out  war. 
Countries  were  taking  their  troubles  to  the  United  Nations,  and 
the  United  Nations  was  doing  something  about  them. 

The  two  biggest  trouble  spots  remained  the  Middle  East  and 
HMngar>-.  In  both  ai-eas  unexpected  history  has  been  made  in  the 
past  seven  days. 

Meanwhile,  in  the  United  States,  expected  history  was  being 
made.  Republican  President  Dwight  Eisenhower  and  his  Vice  Presi- 
dent Richard  Nixon  were  reelected  to  their  positions  overwhelm- 
ingly. The  American  people  apparently  were  convinced  that  Ike 
would  maintain  the  "peac^  and  prosperity''  that  were  his  campaign 
bywords. 

The  Democrats,  however,  retained  control  of  the  House  and 
Senate. 

THE  WORLD 

Herd's  the  way  the  Middle  Eastern  and  Hungarian  situations 
shaped  up.  day  by  day: 

sn»n)AY — In  Hungary,  the  country  which  broke  away  from 
Russian  rule.  Soviet  troops  had  turned  arcund  and  invaded  again. 
They  upset  the  rebel  government  of  Premier  Imre  Nagy,  instaled 
a  pro-Moscow  puppet  government  and  slaughtered  many  thou-^ands 
ol  patriotic  Hungarians. 

President  Eisenhower  called  upon  Russian  Premier  Nikolai 
Bulgunin  to  pull  U.S.S.R.  troops  out  of  Hungary.  U.S.  Ambas.sador 


Henry  Cabot  Lodge  Jr.  assailed  the  Russians  for  their  "wholesale 
brutality"  in  Hungary.  But  the  Russians  kept  on  shooting  Hun- 
garians, and  Hungarian  rebel  diehards  kept  on  sniping  at  Russian 
soldiers  who  came  to  cut  short  their  freedom^ 

In  the  Middle  East,  it  appeared  the  worst  was  over.  United 
Nations  Secretary  General  Dag  Hammarskiold  turned  in  a  recom- 
mendation for  an  international  police  force  in  the  Mideast,  where 
British,  French  and  Israeli  forces  were  battling  Arab  troops. 
Hammarskjold's  report  called  for  the  force  to  t>e  commanded  by 
officers  from  any  armies  except  those  of  the  great  powers  —  in 
other  words,  United   States  and  Russia. 

Britain  and  France,  who  invaded  the  Suez  Canal  area  after 
Israel  dug  deep  irtto  Arab  territory,  qpntinued  their  invasions. 

(British  Prime  Minister  Sir  Anthony  Eden,  in  a  speech  the 
previous  Saturday,  had  explained  his  country  and  France  entered 
the  Middle  Eastern  battle  to  keep  the  entire  area  from  l>eing 
inflamed  with  war.  Sir  Winston  Churchill,  the  former  prime  minis- 
ter, backed  Sir  Anthony  up.) 

«  *  :- 

MONDAY— The  Middle  East:  Russia  dropped  a  bombshell. 
The  U.S.S.R.,  in  ^lessages  to  President  Eisenhower,  Britain  and 
France,  said  it  was  prepared  to  use  force  to  bring  about  an  end 
to  Anglo-French  action  in  Egypt.  Prime  .Ministtr  Sir  Anthony  Eden 
was  told: 

"If  rocket  weapons  were  used  againct  England,  you  would 
call   it  a  barbarous  action.   But  what  is  the   difference  between, 
such   an   attack   and   the   attack   by    Britain   and   France   on    un- 
prepared  Egypt?" 


The;United  States  answered  that  the  idea  of  Soviet  interven- 
tion was  "unthinkable."  The  United  States  will  oppose  the  entry 
of  any  other  "new  forces"  in  the  Middle  East  except  under  United 
Nations  mandate,  a  White  House  statement  said. 

Israel  .announced  she  had  accepted  the  UN  ceasefire  decision. 

*  *.:  :;: 

TUESDAY — While  Americans  were  voting  for  their  President. 
Britain  and  France  seized  the  Suez  Canal  area  and  ordered  their 
troops  to  hold  their  fire  —  but  to  remain  in  their  present  posi- 
tions. 

*  *  t 

WEDNESDAY— The  Middle  East:  The  United  Nations  voted 
64-0  (with  12  abstentions)  to  send  an  international  police  force  to 
the  Middle  East,  as  suggested  Sunday  by  Un  Secretary  General 
Hammarskjold. 

Israel  announced  she  would  bar  "aforeign  force,  no  matter 
now  called,"  from  territory  her  troops  then  occupied.  Arab  forces 
demanded  withdrawal  of  all  attacking  forces  before  the  United 
Nations  police  team  arrived.  Britain  refused  to  move  her  troops. 
The  United  States  tightened  all  defenses  and  put  Naval  com- 
bat ships  on  24-hour  watch.  Said  Adm.  Arthur  Radford,  chairman 
of  the  Joint  Chiefs  of  Staff: 

"We  do  not  want  to  be  caught  flat-footed  and  at  the  same 
time  we  cky  not  want  to  take  any  provocative  actions  which 
would  get  us  involved." 

*  *  » 

THURSDAY — In  Hungary,  rebels  and  Communists  alike  were 
faced  with  a  famine.  Rebels,  even  though  they  had  virtually  no 


chance  of  survival,  kept  up  their  sniping  attacks  on  Conununist 
invaders,  who  by  then  had  taken  over  the  country. 

Marshall  Tito's  Yugoslavia,  which  herself  broke  away  from  the 
Russian  satellites,  joined  the  west  in  a  demand  that  Russia  remov* 
her  troops  from  Hungary. 

In  the  Middle  East,  Israel  said  she  would  withdraw  her  troops 
from  Egypt  and  cooperate  with  the  UN  police  force.  The  police 
force  was  being  organized  under  the  command  of  Maj.  Gen.  E.  L. 
M.  Burns  of  Canada,  head  of  the  UN  Palestine  Truce  Supervision 

Organization. 

*  *  * 

FRIDAY— The  Middle  East:  The  United  States  was  reported 
considering  a  mutual  security  pact  with  Israel  as  a  meahs  of  sim- 
mering down  the  wartorn  Middle  Elast. 

Hungary:  The  UN  General  Assembly  formally  called  the 
Russian  invasion  of  Hungary  an  "intolerable  attempt  to  deny  the 
Hungarian  people  .  .  .  freedom  and  independence." 

And  the  United  States  contributed  $1  million  to  Hungarian 

refugee  relief.  .  i 

•  *  * 

SATURDAY — In  Hungary,  the  Communist  government  refused 
to  allow  International  Red  Cross  personnel  into  the  country.  All.^ 
Red   Cross  relief  must  be  channeled  through  Communist  Yugo- 
slavia, the  government  said. 

Middle  East:  Part  of  the  United  Nations  police  force  headed 
for  the  Suez  Canal  zone,  although  Egypt  hasn't  said  she  will  allow 
foreign  troops  on  her  soil.  The  United  States  made  herself  ready 
to  fly  the  police  force  to  the  Mediterranean  as  quickly  as  required. 


PERSONALITY  OF  THE  WEEK: 


MIKE    WEINMAN 

.  poHtics  are  essential 


Politics  €r  Sales 

Joan  Moore 

There's  a  traveling  salesman  in  school  who  hates  "petty  poli- 
tics. ' 

He's  Michael  Weinman,  chairman  of  the  University  Party. 
Hell  finish  up  his  duties  as  UP  chairman  soon,  after  students 
vote  in  a  new  Student  Legislature. 

The  traveling  salesman  part  comes  during  the  summer.  Wein- 
man had  a  traveling  job  one  summer,  then  worked  in  a  manu- 
facturing plan  and  in  a  retail  store.  He  plans  to  Work  in  retailing 
after  graduation  from  the  School  of  Bu$ine.s5  Administration. 

Student  politics  are  essential  to  Weinman,  but  he  emphatically 
declares  that  he  hates  "petty  politics." 

He   says    h?'s   vitally   intcested    in    increasing   the   effective- 
ness   of    student    government 
aiid    bettering    campus    condi- 
tions. 

During  his  freshman  year. 

Weinman      became      affiliated 

with     the     Un''ersity     Party, 

"Since  that  tim^  ■*  he  .said,    'I 

wanted  to  be  chairman  of  the 

UP."    He    was   eiected   to   the 

» 

chairmanship  la.>^t  spring.  Also 
in  his  freshman  year,  he  en- 
gaged in  lacro.-'^  ^-  dd^voted  time 
to  the  Campus  Lhrni  drive,  and 
was  co-chairn^in  -of  the  Gra- 
ham Memorial  Dance  Commit 
tec. 

The  iollvwing  fall,  Wein 
m:  r  v.  on  a  seat  in  the  Student 
Lfgislature.  .He  was  an  orienta- 
tion counseler,  served  on  the 
Elections  Board,  and  gave  ad- 
ditional time  to  the  University 
Party  when  he  became  publici 
ty  chairman.  Weinman  also 
took  part  in  a  Sound  and  Fury 
production. 

Concerning  the  legislature, 
Weinman   said.   "It   has   never 
realized  its  full  potential.  Par- 
tisan feelings  hurt  the  legislature  and  should  be  forgotten  when 
a  bill  is  being  voted  upon." 

During  his  junior  year,  the  intelligence,  humor  and  influence 
of  Weinman  were  again  employed  as  his  voice,  once  more  echoed 
through  the  legislative  halls  of  New  East.  His  responsibility  in 
the  Student  Legislature  increased  as  he  became  floorleader,  chair- 
man of  the  Rules  Committee  and  chairman  of  the  Appointments 
Committee. 

Last  year  Weinman,  in  the  interest  of  decreasing  the  parking 
problem,  backed  a  bill  which  took  cars  away  from  freshmen  and 
sophomores.  "Now,"  he  said,  "since  there  is  money  and  available 
space  for  parking  lots,  I  hope  that  next  year  or  the  year  after, 
freshmen  and  sophomore  cars  may  be  returned  to  the  campus." 

Weinman  was  social  chairman  of  his  fraternity,  Zeta  Beta  Tau, 
and  also  a  member  of  the  Amphoterothen  Society.  This  year,  he 
again  took  part  in  the  orientation  program.  He  .is  still  seated  in 
the  Student  Legislature  and  is  a  member  of  the  Bipartisan  Selec- 
tions Board. 

Weinman  believes  that  "the  University  Party  has  had  its  best 
session  in  the  legislature. 

"Increased  membership  and  changes  in  the  rules  have  added 
to  the  improvement  of  the  party,"  he  said. 

Although  Weinman  has  great  respect  for  the  president  of  the 
^  student  bcdy,  he  hopes  to  see  a  UP  candidate  regain  this  position 
at  election  time. 

When  asked  what  he  liked  most  about  Chapel  Hill,  Weinman 
smiled  and  answered  promptly,  "Chapel  Hill!"  He  later  added,  "I 
think  it's  the  greatest  place  in  the  world." 

According  to  Weinman,  "extra-curricudar  activities  are  tre- 
mendous. They  provide  a  wonderful  means  of  expression  for  stu- 
dents. I  wouldn't  have  gotten  a  tenth  as  much  out  oi  my  life  at 
Carolina  without  them." 

The  official  student  publication  of  the  Publications  Board  of  the 
University  of  North  Carolina,  where  it  is  published  daily  except  Mon- 
day and  examination  and  vacation  periods  and  summer  terms.  EIntered 
as  second  class  matter  in  the  post  office  at  Chapel  Hill.  N.  C,  under 
the  act  of  March  8,  1870.  Subscription  rates:  Mailed.  $4  a  year.  $2 JO 
per  semester;  delivered.  $6  a  year,  $S.50  a^  sem^ter. 

Edilor  T__ - ^ -___..i^_.:.    FRED  POWLEDGE 


Managing  Editor 


CHARLIE  SLOAN 


News  Eriitor 


RAY  UNKER 


Business  Manager 


3^ 


BILL  BOB  PEEL 


Interpreting  The  Campus  News 
Misinformation    In    Legislature 


ON  THE  CAMPUS  LAST  WEEK: 


Chest,    Cars   And    Vacations 


Ray  Linker 


Editor  

Staff  Writers 
Night  Editor 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL  WEEif  IN  MVIEW 

:.^  -  .-*^. ^  ..:_'^  .  CHARLIE  SLOAN 


GEORGE  PFINGST  and  INCmiD  CLAY 

FRED  POWLEDGE 


Things  were  really  popping  in 
the  Student  Legislature  this 
week. 

And  it  was  all  over  a  bill  to 
appropriate  S400  to  The  Daily 
Tar  Heel  "to  acquire  the  services 
of  The  Associated  Press'  nation- 
al and  international  news  ser- 
vice." 

University  Party  Chairman 
Mike  Weinman,  who  introduced 
the  bill  last  week,  called  it  "one 
of  the  best  ever  introduced  in 
the  legislature."  He  didn't  say 
much  Thursday  night,  but  he  did- 
n't have  to. 

During  the  two-hour  session, 
no  less  than  seven  students  as- 
sumed the  rostrum  or  spoke  from 
the  floor  in  favor  of  the  bill.  No 
more  than  three  spoke  against 
the  measure. 

The  first  speaker  who  urged 
pa.ssage  of  the  bill.  Daily  Tar 
Heel  sEditor  Fred  Powledge.  said 
having  the  service  would  help 
educate,  creat?  interest,  and  en- 
able the  students  to  interpret  the 
news  better. 

While  at  th?  rostrum.  Pow- 
ledge read  a  message  from  News 
And  Observer  Editor  Jonathan 
Daniels  which  favored  having 
the  wire. 

Jim  Montieth,  a  member  of 
the  UP,  a  member  of  the  Phi, 
and  a  former  legislator,  was  al- 
lowed to  speak.  He  talked  down 
to  the  legislators,  quote.d  poetry 
and  the  Bible,  and  urged  the 
solons  to  "have  vision." 

He  challenged  them  not  to 
vote  as  members  of  the  two  po- 
litical parties,  saying  there  was 
a  war  going  on  of  self-interests 
versus  interests  of  the  whole 
campus. 

Before  he  finished,  Montieth 
told  the  body  they  would  be  cen- 
sured for  it  by  the  student  body 
if  they  didn't  pass  the  bill. 

UP  floorleader  Benny  Thomas 
told  the  legislature  (perhaps  un- 
knowingly) the  same  thing  that 
Powledge  had  told  a  meeting  of 
his  staff  a  few  hours  before:  that 
the  paper  will  continue  to  have 
world  news  no  matter  what  the 
Student  Legislature  does,  even 
if  it  means  staying  up  late  every 
night.  Thomas  didn't  know  how 
right  he  was  about  the  firm  con- 
victions Editor  Powledge  has  on 
covering   the   globe. 

Although  the  rtiain  argument 
of  the  opposition  seemed  to  be 
that  having  world  news  would 
cut  out  campus  news,  Powledge 
showed  thom  a  typical  paper  in 
which  he  said  about  30  column 
inches  could  be  omitted  without 
affecting  the  campus  news.  His 
point  was  pretty  sound,  consid- 
ering the  articles  he  pointed  out. 

However.  StiTdent  Pa'-tv  mem- 
ber John  Brooks  accused  the  pan- 
er  of  not  seeking  out  the  news 
and  of  not  publishing  what  it 
had. 

Mr.  Brooks  is  ritrht  about  p^e 
thing,  in  nart  at  l*»9st.  That  is 
about  seeking  out  the  np"'<!  No 
matter  how  hard  vou  trv.  I  think 
you  are  going  to  have  iust  so 
manv  staffers.  You,  for  nerhans 
I  had  better  sav  I.  Mr.  RrnoVe> 
culd  tak<»  30  averogp  students 
(if  we  could  get  that  many  stu- 


denLs  interested)  and  send  them 
out  after  stories,  but,  Mr.  Brooks, 
they  could  all  come  back  with  two 
stories  each  and  you  still  would- 
n't cover  the  campus. 

My  personal  conviction.  Mr. 
Brooks,  is  that  the  campus  can 
never  be  covered  completely.  I 
don't  think  any  person  sitting 
in  the  News  Editor's  desk  will 
ever  get  the  feeling  that  he  is 
gathering  all  the  news.  It  just 
can't  be  done.  True,  there  is  room 
for  improvement,  but  the  state- 
ment that  we  are  "not  seeking 
out  the  news"  is  nothing  more 
than  a  lie. 

Brooks  also  said  on  the  floor 
of  the  legislature  that  last  week 
The  Daily  Tar  Heel  did  not  pub- 
lish a  notice,  of  the  tree  movie 
given  by  GMAB  each  week.  If 
he  will  take  the  time  to  open  the 
Nov.  2  issue  (the  date  of  the! 
free  flick)  he  v. ill  find  on  page 
three,  column  s?vcn,  five  and 
one-half  inches  from  the  top  of 
the  page,  the  story  which  proves 
the  statement  by  him  to  the  leg- 
islators to  be  nothing  more  than 
a  lie. 

Representative  Brooks  stated 
on  the  floor  of  the  legislature 
that  things  he  submitted  were 
not  published.  As  News  Editor, 
I  know  of  only  one  thing  which 
he,  as  co-chairman  of  the  polls 
committee  of  GMAB  or  in  any 
other  capacity,  turned  in  which 
was  not  published.  That  was  the 
results  of  a  poll  taken  after  the 
Daily  Tar  Heel  cea.sed  publica- 
tion last  spring.  This  material 
was  "lost"  by  an  irresponsible  re- 
porter who  is  no  longer  with  us. 

Incidentally,  I  don't  know  of 
what  significance  a  poll  taken  of 
those  people  here  last  year  has 
to  do  with  those  in  school  now 
or  of  what  value  it  is  three  or 
four  months  after  it  is  taken. 
Bht,  I  concede  this  point  to  Mr. 
Brooks.  1  only  question  the  use 
by  him  of  the  plurality  of  the 
word — "articles."  I  have  seen  on- 
ly the  one. 

Mr.  Brooks  stated  that  the  in- 
ternational and  national  news  was 
not  the  most  important  news  to 
the  paper.  Well,  maybe  Brooks' 
world  (perhaps  till  he  is  called 
up  for  active  duty)  does  not  ex- 
tend beyond  this  campus,  but  1, 
to  use  the  ^ords  of  our  esteemed 
editor,  "don't  live  in  a  campus 
community  any  more." 


Two  other  points 
Brooks; 


about     Mr. 


1.  He  said  if  The  Daily  Tar 
Heel  is  "trying  to  compete  with 
other  papers"  by  having  world 
news,  it  should  be  put  on  a  sub- 
scription basis;  and  . 

2.  He  went  so  far  as  to  say  no 
one  in  his  constituency  was  in 
favor  of  having  the  world  news 
Later  when  questioned  he  .said  he 
only  talked  to  40  people.  Brooks' 
district  consists  of.  according  to 
the  election  laws,  "Old  Ea.st,  Bat- 
tle -  Vance  -  Pettigrew,  Steele, 
Whitehead.  Memorial  Hall  and  all 
other  University  owned  buildings 
not  mentioned  in  this  bill." 

Brooks  can  of  course,  because 
there  is  no  way  of  proving  it  (I 
still    have    my   notes)    deny   that 

these  were  his  exact  words. 


Members  of  the  SP  maintained 
that  they  were  speaking  and  vot- 
ing to  their  individual  con- 
victions and  not  acording  to  par- 
ty wishes.  Yet  when  the  vote 
came  the  legislature  voted  this 
way:  13  SP  members  against  the 
bill,  five  SP  members  for  it:  14 
members  of  the  UP  for  the  bill, 
none  agaiip^^t  it. 

SP  floorleader  Jim  Holmes 
said  he  "was  speaking  as  an  in- 
dividual," and  went  on  to  say, 
in  essence,  what  his  fellow  party 
member^  had  echoed:  that  "the 
campus  n^ws  is  no  less  import- 
ant than  Nyhat  is  going  on  in 
Hungary." 

Holmes  statement  that  "we 
have  to  decide  whether  to  have 
a  paper  for  the  campus  or  one 
that  will  win  prizes  for  covering 
international  news"  was  absolute- 
ly absurd. 

And  the  gentleman  who  said 
The  Daily  Tar  Heel  would  have 
to  either  be  a  campus  paper  of 
an  international  paper,  with  no 
splitting  down  the  middle,  could- 
n't be  more  incorrect. 

Before  ending,  perhaps  1  had 
better  add  one  comment  about 
my  own  beliefs  that  might 
soothe  the  SP's  baseless  fears  that 
campu.s-  news  will  be  covered. 

It  is  this:  that  as  News  Editor 
I  take  my  orders  from  Fred 
Powledge,  but  I  also  have  my 
own  convictions.  For  one  thing, 
I  believe  that  the  campus  news 
should  be  coveredv  and  it  will  as 
long  as  I'm  the  News  Editor. 
(There's  enough  space  to  have 
both  national,  international  and 
campus  news."  But  there  is 
-enough  fOom  for  both.  I'm  sure. 

When  campus  gives  way  to  in- 
ternational news — that  is,  when 
the  news  .of  the  world  starts  re- 
placing news  of  the  campus — 
that's  when  I  quit.  But  I  say, 
SP  members,  we  can  have  both. 
So  don't  be  afraid  of  not  having 
the  campus  covered.  Jim  Holmes. 
John  Brooks,  et.  al. 


Th?  campus  took  part  in  its 
annual  Campus  Chest  drive,  got 
ready  for  a  decisive  Board  of 
Aldermen  meeting  tomorrow,  and 
went  home. 

And  four  coeds  and  a  member 
of  the  administration  were  tap- 
ped into  the  highest  women's 
honorary. 

The  Campus  Chest  drive  was 
headed  up  by  Miss  Jackie  Ald- 
ridge,  who's  also  secretary  of 
the  student  body,  and  Jess 
Stribling.  With  a  goal  of  $1,500 
this  year,  the  co-chairmen  ex- 
tended  the   drive   until   Tuesday. 

The  Board  of  Aldermen  meet- 
ing was  scheduled  to  consider 
one  of  the  sorer  spots  of  the  Uni- 
versity— whether  or  not  fraterni- 
ty men  who  live  on  the  block  of 
S.  Columbia  St.  between  Frank- 
lin St.  and  Cameron  Ave.  have 
a  right  to  park  their  automobiles 
on  the  street  for  unlimited  per 
iods   of  time. 

The  town  maintains  they  don't.j 
and   put   up  a   two-hour  parkin 


!S 

'i 


restriction  on  the  block.  The  fra- 
ternity men  say  the  town's 
wrong,  that  they  have  no  other 
place  to  park  their  cars. 

The  board  will  get  a  report 
from  the  student  government 
Advisory  Traffic  Commission  on 
the  subject  tomorrow  night. 

*         *         * 

The  students  went  home — 
quite  a  few  went  to  Charlottes- 
ville— because  there  were  no 
Saturday  classes  yesterday.  The 
University  called  off  classes  for 
a  caravan  weekend  trip  to  the 
University  of  Virginia  at  Char- 
lottesville, where  UNC's  Tar 
Heels  played  the  Cavaliers  yes- 
terday. 

The  Tar  Heels,  with  a  previous 
record  of  one  win,  five  losses  and 
one  tie,  beat  the  Cavaliers,  21-7. 

The  four  coeds — Pat  McQueen, 
Joy  Earp,  Martha  Richardson 
and  Shirley  Guenthner  —  were 
tapped  into  the  Valkyries,  the 
highest   women's   honorary.   The 


organization  named  Martha  Deck- 
er, of  the  Dean  of  Women's  Of- 
fice, as  an  honorary  member. 

A  pretty  little  coed  from  Fay- 
etteville,  Martha  Williford,  was 
named  1956-57  Yackety  Yack 
beauty  queen.  Expressing  both 
shock  and  pleasure  at  being 
chosen.  Miss  Williford  confided 
the  ideal  marriage  age  for  a  wo- 
man is  21. 

She's  20. 

*        *        * 

Also  on  the  campus  last  week: 
The  Daily  Tar  Heel  asked  for 
and  got  S400  for  a  national-inter- 
national Associated  Press  wire. 
The  debate  was  one  of  the  hot- 
test in  the  Student  Legislature  so 
far  this  year. 

The  Carolina  Quarterly,  UNC's 
literary  magazine,  came  out  in  a 
new  format,  full  of  Thomas 
Wolfe  and  solid  writing. 

Earl  Slocum.  who  has  worked 
with  the  UNC  Band  for  32  years, 
retired.  Herbert  W.  Fred  became 
new  director. 


Swing  From  Asiatic  Abstentions 
Can  Earn  More  Respect  For  UN 


The  Christian  Science  Monitor 

Events  of  the  last  few  days  have  sorely  tested 
individuals  and  nations  as  to  their  adherence  to 
fundamental  moral  positions.  President  Eisenhow- 
er put  it  well  when  he  said  there  cannot  be  one 
code  for  the  weak,  another  for  the  strong:  one  for 
opponents,  another  for  friends.  Prime  Minister 
Nehru  has  followed  the  same  reasoning  in  linking 
Hungary  with  Egypt  in  denouncing  the  use  of  "mod- 
ern   arms   to  suppress   peoples."' 

Yet  when  India  had  a  chance  to  stand  up  in  the 
United  Nations  Assembly  and  vote  for  the  resolu- 
tion demanding  a  cease-fire  and  the  withdrawal 
of  Sovicty  troops  from  Hungary  it  did  not  ^eize  that 
opportunity.  It  abstained.  So  did  13  other  Asian  and 
African  nations.  They  acted  differently  about  the 
invasion   of  Egypt. 

They  were  not  deterred  by  the  fact  that  Egypt 
had  refused  to  make  peace  with  Israel,  but  instead 
had  been  building  up  its  arms,  conducting  repeat- 
ed raids,  and  threatening  to  wipe  its  little  neighbor 
off   the    map.    They   simply   saw   an    incursion    of 


Israeli,  British,  and  French  forces  into  Egypt  and 
rushed  to  vote  for  cease-fire  and  withdrawal. 

We  consider  that  vote  correct.  And  we  have 
often  been  grateful  for  t'ne  high  moral  and  hu- 
.  mane*  sentiments  these  nationr  have  expressed  in 
the  UN.  But  the  peace  cannot  be  built  on  one-way 
morality.  Surely  no  less  indignation,  no  less  effort 
to  halt  the  slaughter  and  "suppression  of  peoples" 
in  Hungary,  were  required. 

Explanations  can  be  made.  Many  Asians  and 
Africans  feel  a  special  kinship  with  Egyptians  thejf 
do  not  feel  with  Hungarians.  Most  of  them  have 
been  colonies  of  France  or  Britain.  They  have  never 
been  Soviet  satellites.  It  may  be,  too,  that  some 
delegations  did  not  have  time  to  consult  their  gov- 
ernments and  may  yet  correct  their  "abstentions." 

We  trust  such  corrections  will  be  made.  Also 
that  as  the  UN  proceeds  to  deal  with  these  two 
examples  of  direct  action  these  abstainers  will 
adopt  the  Eisenhower  position  and  lend  the  full 
force  of  their  moral  support  impartially.  So  doing, 
they  can  win  respect  for  themselves  as  truly  in- 
dependent and  for  the  UN  as  an  impartial  peace 
agency. 


Pogo 


By  Walt  Kelly 


'3ATgu.rri'"A,«aMiJOpy-i5'     N 


AWBOPy 


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Lil  Abn*r 


VlPBW.?-OLEMAN 

MOSE.  TOUE  ME  HOW  V 
y  SAVE  VIAHSELF_ 
IN  TH'  SADIE 
HAWKINS    _i 
DAY        ^\ 


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AU.  AH  (301TA  DO 

cf(/r/c  Bv  TH'Toe. 

WHEt^  H£  /OLl£RS, 

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FifiCBH 


By  Al  Capp 


-^CEPT,      '¥T    FP?At4KL.V, 
FRANKLY    \>  NEITHER      i  ^^ 
AH  DOH-T  W  DOES  AHffL- 


UN 
Ten 

What  SUCC6 
in  the  UniveJ 
for  specially 

Now  in  its 
gram  include! 
ed  first-year 
rolled   in   a 
high  scholasl] 
their  abilities 
according    to  I 

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endeavor   to 
national 
what  can  be 
of   special    t; 
of  a  small  lij 
at  the  same] 
portunities 
ty  can  affor(j 

One  sidelij 
is  that  morel 
abilities  app^ 
UNC  each  ye 
UNC  faculty! 
gratifying  to 
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The   Univi 


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SUNDAY,  NOVEMBER  11,  1956 


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sked  for 
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I  the  hot- 
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UNC's 
I  out  in  a 
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|32  years, 

became 


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What  Goes  On  Here? 

The  Carolina  Playmakers,  in  their  upcoming  production  of  G.  B.  Shaw's  "Androcles  and  the  Lion," 
present  some  antics  between  the  lion  and  Caesar,  with  Androcles  looking  on.  Left  to  right  they  are 
John  Sneden  of  Tenafly,  N.  J.,  Dick  Newdick  of  Agusta,  Me.,  and  David  Small  of  Morehead  City.  The 
play  will   be   given  here  Wednesday    through   Sunday  in  the  Playmakers'  Theater. 


UNC  Superior  Freshman  Program 
Termed  Successful  By  Officials 


What  success  has  been  achieved 
in  the  University's  novel  program 
for  specially  gifted  freshmen? 

Now  in  its  third  year,  the  pro- 
gram includes  25  unusually  talent- 
ed first-year  students  who  are  en- 
rolled in  a  unique  curriculum  of 
high  scholastic  standards  to  match 
their  abilities  as  superior  students, 
according   to    University    officials. 

The  program  is  considered  one 
endeavor  to  answer  the  pressing  i 
national  educational  dilemma:  j 
what  can  be  done  to  give  students  j 
of  special  talents  the  advantages  i 
of  a  small  liberal  arts  college  and  { 
at  the  same  time  furnish  the  op-  j 
portunities  that  a  large  universi 
ty  can  afford?  i 

One  sidelight  achievement  noted  | 
is  that  more  students  of  superior  1 
abilities  appear  to  be  entering 
UNC  each  year.  In  a  report  to  the 
UNC  faculty  it  was  stated.  It  is 
gratifying  to  note  that  the  number 
of  such  excellent  students  in  en- 
tering classes  seems  to  be  increas- 
ing from  year  to  year." 

The    University   also   announced 


•  changes  in  the  program  based  on 
I  an   analysis   of  the   experience  of 

the  program  during  the  first  two 

years. 

TESTED  SCHOLARS 

Selected  on  a  basis  of  superior 
aptitude  and  achievement,  as  de- 
termined by  tests  and  by  recom- 
mendations from  their  high  school 
principals,  25  freshmen  each  year 
are  given  extraordinary  attention 
— befitting  the  talents  of  better 
students. 

The  25  freshmen  are  taught  in 
a  group  in  three  principal  sub- 
jects during  the  first  year:  Eng- 
lish, mathematics,  and  social 
sciences.  The  program  will  be  con- 
tinued into  the  sophomore  year, 
beginning  with  the  present  class — 
to  the  extent  that  the  25  will  take 
a  course  in  philosophy  and  a  spec- 
ial course  in  history. 

Main  aspects  of  the  program  are: 

1.  The  25  freshmen  are  taught 
in  a  group  in  three  main  disip- 
lines. 

2.  Specially     selected     faculty 


This  is  a  picture  that  grabs  you  by  the  throat  and  shoves 
you  into  the  shell-ripping,  blood-drenched,  screaming  heat 
of  war. 

Here  is  the  hell  behind  the  glory ...  the  real  guts  and  smell 
of  bottlel  This  is  the  story  they  didn't  tell-of  the  heroes  who 
stood  up  under  fire,  and  the  few  who  belly-crawled  ooti 

The  ASSOCIATES  and  ALDRICH  Co.  presents 


JACK  PALANCE 
EDDIE  ALBERT 


if  im  ■  RWEKr  STW  ■  ricniuid  mel-  buddy  ebsen 


yju  J  xiii  AAiiyurno 

•mmmIMMAcMI 

NOW 
PLAYING 


"fn/wtf  fox"*     5rss"     •«-*««. 

NOMWt  BROOKS  -  PMJl  VRCOM  -  MMU  fOC 


robERTaldrich 


members  teach  the  group. 

3.  The  25  students  "learn  more" 
in  a  given  period  of  time  than  the 
average  class;  they  take  on  more 
assignments  and  cover  more 
ground;  therefore,  they  advance 
faster. 

4.  The  instructors  consult  with 
oae  another  to  provide  an  integrat- 
ed oneness  in  the  several  subjects 
taught. 

Although  the  three  chief  sub- 
jects are  English,  mathematics, 
and  social  sciences,  students  may 
substitute  Greek  or  Latin  for 
mathematics. 

The  1956-57  class  is  taught  by 
Prof.  Edward  A.  Cameron  of  the 
Mathematics  Department,  who  is 
chairman  ofthe  Universtiy's  com- 
mittee on  Provisions  for  Superior 
Students;  Kenan  Professor  Rich- 
mond P.  Bond  of  the  English  De- 
partment; and  Assistant  Professor 
George  V.  Taylor  of  the  History 
Department. 

In  addition  to  the  basic  courses 
in  which  the  25  are  kept  together, 
the  students  also  are  enrolled  in 
certain  classes  with  other  students. 
Besides  this,  ten  of  the  students 
are  together  in  a  special  class  in 
chemistry  for  top-ranking  students, 
taught  by  Professor  E.  C.  Mark- 
ham. 

Among  attainments  of  the  two 
preceeding  classes  have  been  "en- 
largement of  the  intellectual  hor- 
izon" and  maintainienance  of  high 
morale,  it  was  stated  in  a  report 
to  the  faculty. 

One  professor  told  of  his  ex- 
perience with  the  special  group 
and  compared  it  with  average 
classes.  He  said,  "Having  taught 
the  freshman  course  in  social 
science  for  the  past  four  years, 
I  am  convinced  that  these  students 
gain  enormously  from  the  ability 
to  proceed  at  their  own  rate  ot 
speed,  to  enter  into  topics  more 
intricate  than  those  ordinarily 
covered  in  the  course,  and  to  stim- 
ulate the  interest  oi  one  ^aQother 
by  questions  and  challenges  to 
throw  out  at  a  higher  level  of  so- 
phistication." 
INTEGRATED 

As  an  example  of  integration  of 
subjects,  the  students  may  he  stu- 
dying the  Renaissance  period  in 
history  at  the  same  time  they  stu- 
dy Shakespeare  in  English.  They 
may  also  learn  of  the  usefulness 
of  calculus  and  trigonometry  in 
the  devefopment  of  industrial  so- 
ciety, thus  combining  mathemat- 
ics and  social  science. 

Another  phase  of  the  program 
consists  of  out-of'Class  social  oc- 
casions for  the  students  and  facul- 
ty. 

The  25  students  of  this  year 
were  chosen  from  a  list  of  nearly 
100  entering  freshmen.  They  were 
top  students  in  their  high  school 
classes.  They  were  given  three 
tests:  the  ACE  Psychological  Ex- 
amination which  tests  general  ap- 
titude, the  Cooperative  Bnglish 
Test,  and  the  Cooperative  Alge- 
bra Test. 
21  TAR  HEELS 

Twenty-one  of  this  year's  group 
are  from  North  Carolina.  The  oth- 
er four  freshmen  are  from  Louis- 
iana, Massachusettes.  Tennessee, 
and  Virginia.  Sixteen  of  the  group 
are  graduates  of  high  schools  io 


UNC  Nursing  Students  Present  Highlights 
Of  Four  Year  Cdurie  Leading  To  BS  Degree 

B..     BAV     ■     IklVCB  nom^^-.. I      '„  1  .  J  .  ..  .  ■ 


By  JIAY  LINKER 

Except  for  one  small  blunder, 
the  show  presented  by  WUNC-TV 
Friday  night  on  the  highlights  of 
the  School  of  Nursing  was  much 
of  a  success. 

True,  most  of  the  people  in 
the  presentation  were  amateurs 
and  acted  accordingly,  but  they 
got  their  point  across.  And  one 
could  tell  that  a  lot  of  time  was 
put  into  the  planning  of  the  hour- 
long  show. 

The  show  presented  the  out- 
standing things  that  student  nurses 
do  while  they  are  here  taking  the 
four-year  course  leading  to  the 
degree  of  bachelor  of  science  in 
Nursing.  A  view  of  the  graduate 
programs  in  nursing  was  also  de- 
scrit>ed. 

Describing  the  typical  life  of  a 
student  nurse,  scenes  in  the  operat- 
ing room,  in  a  patient's  room,  in 
a  nursery,  and  in  other  hospital 
and   related   places     were   shown. 

The  presentation  showed  that  a 
lot  of  work  went  into  the  writing 
of  the  script,  which  was  prepared 
by  nursing  students,  members  of 
the  nursing  staff,  and  radio  and 
television  people.  Mrs.  Eloise  R 
Lewis,  associate  professor  in  sur- 
gical nursing,  wrote  most  of  the 
script,  wtih  Hugh  Downing  mak- 
ing revisions  and  giving  assistance 
on  the  technical  side  and  the 
nursing  students  advising  \fhere 
possible. 

The  cameraman  was  off  a  lit- 
tle from  time  to  time.  In  fact  the 
one  blunder  mentioned  above  was 
the  fault  of  the  cameraman.  The 
camera  was  focused  on  the  back 
of  a  patient  who  was  supposed  to 
be  getting  a  back  rub  from  a  stu- 
dent nurse.  From  the  front  the 
scene  was  perfect,  but  when  the 


camera  moved  in  close  and  around 
to  the  back,  it  could  be  seen  that 
the  patients  back  was  cloUied  and 
that  the  nurse's  hands  were  a  few 
anches  from  the  back.  It  would 
have  been  a  good  shot  if  the  ac- 
tors had  been  prepared  for  it,  but 
the  cameraman  goofed,  or  just 
wasn't  thinking. 

Besides  Mrs.  Lewis.  Dr.  S.  B. 
Alexander,  assistant  administrator 
in  the  division  of  Health  Afairs, 


t«ie     iwogram  Included  Misees  Pa^!  Anne  lii«»y  ,Rachael   Humphliefi, 
tricia  Kline.  Frances  Brandl,  Jean '  ^arah    B(»ey     and    Martha    Lentz 

.  ,  ■  and  Mrs.  Barbara  Self,  Mrs.  Mary 
London,  Mary  Ann  Keater,  Shurley  ,^  „^j^^  yatentine  and  Mrs.  Margar- 
Guenthner,  Ann  Page,  Sara  Usher. ;  ^i  Kistler. 


Newspaperman  To  Talk 
To  Press  Club  Monday 

Charlotte'  newspaperman  Kays 
Gary  will  be  guest  speaker  Mon- 
day night  before  the  Press  Club. 

The  club,  composed  mainly  of 
journalism  majors,  will  meet  at 
7:3a  p.m.  at  the  home  of  Dr.  Nor- 
val  Neil  Luxon,  dean  of  the  School 

of  Journalism.  Charlie  Johnsoa, 
a  senior  from  Lenoir,  is  club 
president. 

Gary,  who  received  his  A.  B. 
in  journalism  from  UNC  in  1M2.| 
is  now  feature  writer  and  colum- 
nist for  The  Charlotte  Observer. 
Last  year  he  won  the  Ernie  Pyle 
Award  given  by  the  Scripps-How- 
ard-Emie  Pyle  Memorial  Fund, 
for  his  feature  stories. 


Biostatistics  Head  . 
Going  to  French  Confab 

Dr.  Bernard  G.  Greenberg,  pro- 
fessor and  head  of  the  Depart- 
ment of  Biostatistics  of  th^.  Uni- 
versity School  of  Public  Health, 
will  attend  a  conference  at  Sevres. 
France  Nov.  12-23. 

The  workshop  and  conference  is 
on  planning  research  in  nursing  at 
the  International  Center  of  Schol- 
arly Studies. 

The  conference  is  sponsored  by 
the  Florence  Nightingale  Inter- 
national FouadaUofi  and  the  In- 
ternational Council  of  Nurses, 
which  is  affiliated  with  the  World 
Health  Organization  of  the  United 
Nations. 

The  three-member  faculty  of  the 
conference  is  composed  of  Dr. 
Greenberg;  Dr.  Eraser  Brocking- 
ton,  England;  and  Mme.  A.  Levy- 
Schoen  of  France. 


...■•-  V  •■'  *- 

Musical  Tonight 

Willis  Stevens,  pianist,  will  be 
presented  in  GMAB's  .third  pro- 
gram of  Les  Petites  Musicales 
at  8  p.m.  today  in  the  main  loungfe 
of  Graham  Memorial. 

Stevens,  instructor  of  nuisic  at 
Salem  Coltefe,  will  interpret  se- 
lections by  Bach,  Beethoven,  Cho- 
pin, and   Schumann. 

There  is  no  admission  charge  for 
the  program,  and  students  and 
townspeople  have  been  invited  to 
attend. 


'this  state.  'Preparatory  schools 
produced  seven  of  them.  T"wo  were 
graduated  from  out-of-state  high 
schools. 

Of  the  25  students,  nine  of  them 
are  Morehead  Scholars,  and  two 
are  National  Merit  Scholars.  One 
of  them  is  a  Brooks  Scholar. 

It  has  been  a  practice  to  invite 
new  faculty  members  to  participate 
,  in    the   program   each    year.    Pro- 
I  fessor   Canveron   is  the   only   one 
who   has   remained   with    it    from 
I  the  beginning  in  1954.  Other  far- 
j  ulty  members  who  have  taken  part, 
in     addition     to     those     already 
I  named,    are    Kenan    Professor    of 
Philosophy  JJverette  W.  Hall,  As- 
sociate  Professor  of  History  and 
Social    Sciences    James    E.    Kiag. 
!  Kenan  Professor  of  English  Will- 
,  iam  S.  Wells  .and  Assistant  Pro- 
fessor of  English  Peter  G.  Phialai. 


and  other  professioiial  health 
people,  took  an  active  part  in  mak- 
ing the  show  worthwhile.  Dr. 
Alexander  narrated  the  second 
half  of  tne  program,  which  con- 
cerned the  graduate  programs- 
leading  to  the  degree  of  master 
of  science  in  service  administration 
and  teaching  in  psychiatric  nurs- 
ing. 

Student    nurses    taking   part   in 


limiMUme  onl^f 


deOordsy 


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toilette  ifi  a  refillable  golden 
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,  leakprpof.  Travel  with  it 
Its  a  wonderful  gift  idea 
;l0O)0ut  hwrryl  Now  is  the  timet 


lAU  M  rOlLITTI  for  traval . . .  fw^  your  drcsMr . 
ftir  fMir  p\tr—  ...  tor  gIfU . . . 

TOUiOWM  MOI,  MMM.  ZlOANt,  iCT 

■J«T  99m  JSMTLIMIN. 

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WHAT'S  THE  LATEST  thing  in  college 
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I^STUDENTSI  MAKE  *25 

Oo  you  like  to  shirk  work?  Here's  some  easy  money— start 
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Send  your  Sticklers  with  your  name,  address,  college  and 
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Luckies  Taste  Better 

CLEANER,    FRESHER,    SMOOTHER  J 


J  ^^LJk^SL^  fks  sr  T*.e_s..J 


m>-m 


ITS 
TOASTED" 

to  tasfe 
b«tt«r! 


•  A.T.CS. 


paooucT  or 


AMSBiCA's  tMAoma  MAMurACTuaaa  ojr  cioaksttas 


M«l   POUR 


THfr  DAILY  TAR  HlfL 


SliNDAY,  NOVEMBER  11,  195S 


Tar  Babies  Make  South  Carolina  Biddies  Squawk,  31-0 

State  Championship  Meet 
Set  For  Raleigh   Tomorrow 


By  DAVE  WIBLE 

Special  to  The  Daaly  Tar  Heel 

FLORENCE,  S.C.— The  spirited. 
smooth-<^)erating  Tar  Babies  com- 
pletely overpowered  the  weak 
South  Carolina  Biddies,  31-0.  Sat- 
utday  night,  to  cap  a  successful 
day  of  North  Carolina  football. 

The  Tar  Babies  controlled  the 
Biddies  at  will  throu^  the  entire 
game.  South  Carolina's  deepest 
penetration  into  Tar  Baby  ter- 
ritory was  in  the  last  few  minutes 
of  the  game  when  the  Biddies  got 
to  the  Carolina  26-yard  line.  j 

The  Tar  Babies  were  paced  by 
the  hard  running  of  backs  Cornell  i 
Johnson.  Wade  Smith     and    Ront 
Hopman,  the  passing     of     Nelson ! 
Lowe  and  Jack  Cummings,  and  the 
defensive  line  play  of  Mike  Mc- 
Dade  and  Jim  Davis. 

These  were  the  standouts,  but 
as  Coach  Tullai  said  after  the  game, 


"The  boys  played  like  a  team.' 
When  they  were  in  a  hole  they 
worked  their  way  out.  The  entire 
team  played  heads-up  ball." 

Scoring  for  the  Tar  Babies  were 
Johnson.  Cotton,  Smith  and  Hop- 
man  (twice).  Both  the  defensive 
and  offensive  line  play  looked  the 
best  it  has  all  season.  The  Tar 
Babies  will  not  play  again  until 
Thanksgiving  Day.  when  they 
meet  the  Blue  Imps  of  Duke  Uni- 
versity. 


Wake,   VPI 
End  In  Tie 

BLAOCSBURG,  Va.,  (J»— Under- 
dog Wake  Forest  drove  80  yards 
in  the  final  period  here  today  to 
battle  Virginia  Tech  to  a  13-13 
deadlock  in  an  interconference 
football  game  in  which  the  Gobb- 
lers averted  being  upset  by  block- 
ing the  Deacon's  second  attempted 
conversion. 

Wake  Forest,  of  the  Atlantic 
Conference,  jumped  into  a  7-6  lead 
in  the  first  half  and  appeared  on 
the  way  to  a  surprise  victory  be- 
fore Tech  rallied  in  the  third 
period. 

The    favored    Techmea   scored 


Tar  Heels 

(Continued  from  Page  I) 

a  drive  consuming  19  plays,  the 
Cavaliers  ground  out  short  yard- 
age in  inexorable  fashion  all  the 
way  down  to  the  UNC  3-yard  mark- 
er where  the  faltering  Tar  Heel 
defense  rose  up  to  turn  back  the 
threat 

Cavalier  strategy  at  this  point 
may  be  called  into  question  by 
some  sideline  experts.  With  a  first 
and  8  situation  on  Carolina's  eight 
yard  line,  Virginia  quarterback 
Yarborough  ran  four  straight  plays 
without  calling  on  Bahktiar,  his 
ace  in  the  hole  all  afternoon. 

On  the  first  play,^Yarbough  roll- 
ed out  to  the  5.  Then  he  sent  sec- 
ond string  halfback  Ron  Jenkins 
into  the  line  for  one.  Nick  Lawyer 
picked  up  one  more  yard  on  third 
down,  and  the  threat  died  when 
Vale  broke  up  a  fourth  down  pass 
play. 

But  the  Cavaliers  weren't  long 
to  be  aenicd.  After  Carolina  fail- 
ed to  move  after  taking  possession, 
Vale  kicked  out  to  the  UNC  44. 
Virginia  took  over  there  and  Yar- 
borough, mixing  his  plays  to  per- 


fection,    directed     the     Cavaliers 
down  the   field  in  nine   plays  to 
their  only  score  of  the  day. 
With  the  Cavaliers  leading.  7-0, 


first  when  quarterback  Jimmy 
Lugar  sneaked  across  from  a  yard 
out  to  climax  a  76-yard  drive  in 

the  first  period.  The  Deacons  cap-  

italized  on  a  fumble  by  the  South-  i  Carolina  took  the  ensuing  kickoff 
era  Conference  Gobblers  and :  and  marched  to  the  Virginia  18 
marched  56  yards  in  the  second  i  before  losing  possession  on  a  fum- 
period  ..lib  fullback  BUI  Barnes  j^^le  by  second-string  quarterback 
scorin-  ^"'^  Hathaway. 

HalSack  Larry  Brooks'  convers-       ^h^.  ^^r  Heel  second  unit  spark- 
ion  after  Barnes'  one-yard  plunge  j  fd.i'^^^.  Pf^  ^^  Hathaway  and 


put  the  Deacons  in  tront — ^but  ooly 
until  Tech  halfback  Ray  England 
raced  18  yards  to  score  ia  the  third 
period.  ' -'" 

Back  came  the  Deacons,  how- 
ever, ■a.'ith  an  SO-j-ard  march  for 
the  tying  touchdown  wtih  quarter- 
back Charlie  Carpenter  sneaking 
aerosii  from  a  yard  out  The  Gob- 
blers blocked  the  attempted  con- 
version to  salvage  a  tie. 
Wak*  Fores*  0  7  0  6—13 
Virginia  Tech     «    0    7    0—13 

CLASSIFIEDS 


Cold  Fans  Watched 


(Contimted  from  Page  1   ) 

was  thfe  very  fine  Lenoir  High  School  marching  band. 

When  the  Carolina  majorettes  marched  across  the  field  to 
confront  the  all-male  Virginia  student  section,  there  was  a  brief 
moment  of  bedlam  in  the  stands.  From  then  on,  the  Cavalier  stu- 
dents cheered  with  every  movement  of  the  Tar  Heel  lovelies.  The 
band  also  got  a  well-deserved  ovation  from  the  Virginians,  probab- 
ly the  most  appreciative  audience  the  band  has  had  all  season. 

As  the  Tar  Heels  moved  toward  the  Virginia  goal  in  the  first 
quarter,  a  group  of  Carolina  students  moved  from  their  seats  high 
up  in  the  stands  down  to  the  rail  of  the  stands  to  implwe  their 
Tar  Heels  to  "M!ove  that  ball."  tj| 

In  the  third  quarter,  the  Virginia  quarterback  threw  a  pass 
toward  the  Cavalier  bench.  Virginia  Coach  Ben  Martin  calmly 
leaped  up  and  made  a  fine  catch  of  the  pass,  then  turned  and 
doffed  his  hat  to  the  crowd.  The  Virginia  student  section  prompt- 
ly struck  up  the  yell:  "We  want  Martin." 

Carolina  was  outplayed  in  the  first  half  but  it  was  a  different 
team  that  trotted  onto  Scott  Field  in  he  second  period.  The  Tar 
Heeb  looked  like  he  club  that  beat  Maryland  two  weeks  ago  when 
they  started  their  touchdown  march  at  the  beginning  of  the  second 
half.  From  there  on  it  was  all  Carolina. 

"Saturday  should  be  called  "Ed  Sutton  Day"  because  the 
Cullowee  senior  certainly  had  himself  a  great  day,  scoring  three 
times  for  the  Tar  Heels. 

When  Sutton  broke  loose  for  his  beautiful  touchdown  jaunt 
in  the  third  quarter,  two  Virginia  tacklers  gave  desperate  pur- 
suit, but  the  ex-Carolina  dash  man  wasn't  having  any  of  that;  he 
quickly  moved  away  from  his  pursuers  and  went  for  paydirt 

Prior  to  yesterday's  game,  Carolina  kicker  Wally  Vale  had 
a  44.1  punting  average,  second  best  in  the  country,  but  Vale's  first 
two  kicks  against  U.  Va.  hurt  him;  the  first  went  15  yards,  the 
second,  11. 


Tennessee  Stops  Go.  Tech, 
6-0,  In  Battle  Of  Unbeaten 


.v\ 


fullback    John    Maywood    leading 
the  way. 
STORM  BROKE 

Then  the  Tar  Heels  came  out 
for  the  second  half,  and  it  was 
here  the  storm  broke.  Reed  took 
the  kickoff  and  brought  it  back 
to  the  25.  Ed  Sutton  got  eight 
yards  to  the  33.  Reed  hit  Sutton 
with  a  passon  the  40,  and  the  enrly- 
haired  Tar  Heel  co-captain  moved 
the  ball  down  to  the  Virginia  48 
on  the  next  play. 

Vale  went  through  the  middle 
for  three  to  the  45,  and  McMullen 
and  Sutton  alternated  on  carries 
LOST— 4   MO.    OLD    D06ERMAN  i  to  the  Cavalier  27.  Then  Reed  f  ad- 


Pinscher.  Strayer  from,  Mason 
Farm  Rd.  eariy  last  week.  Red- 
dish  brown  color,   short   erect 


ed  back  and,  passing  against  an 
eight-man  line,  found  Sutton  all 
alone  on  the  15.  Sutton  gathered 


ears,   clipped   tail.   Answers   to  i  ^°  *^^  f^*P  3°^  rambled  across  the 

name  Tayne.  About  18"  to  top  j  S^*^  unmolested. 

The  Cavaliers  couldn't  move 
with  the  kickoff  and  Carolina  was 
soon  back  in  command.  Taking 
over  on  their  own  30,  the  Tar 
Heels  ran  two  unsuccessful  plays 
that  Virginia  stopped  cold.  Then 
Reed  tossed  a  pitchout  to  Sutton 
on  the  third  play  from  scrim- 
mage, and  the  Cullowhee  comet 
cut  over  left  tackle,  fought  his  way 
into  the  clear,  and  outran  a  trip 


of  bead.  Believed  to  have  been 
seen  on  campus.  This  dog  must 
be  found.  Reward  offered.  Con- 
tact 9-2666  or  Larry  Williams, 
K.  A.  House. 

IX>ST  —  AN  "ENICAR"  WATCH 
Tuesday  night  vicinity  of  Port- 
hole. Call  Daniel  Goldrich  at  8- 
1183  after  6  p.m.  or  at  9-7688 
during  the  day. 


ATLANTA,  (^>^Tailback  Johnny 
Majors,  operating  behind  a  swift, 
savage  line,  l^it  end  Baddy  Cruze 
wtih  two  big  passes  today  as  Ten- 

of  Virginia  defenders  to  the  goal. 
Blazer  added  the  point  and  Caro- 
lina led  14-7  with  the  third  quar- 
ter still  young. 

This  proved  to  be  the  crowning 
blow  as  the  Cavaliers  were  never 
ible  to  recover.  However,  the  Tar 
Heels  took  no  chances  as  they  rack- 
ed up  a. third  score  the  next  time 
they  gained  possefision.. 
StCONO  TEAM 

Thii;  time  it  was  the  second  team 
that  did  the  heavy  work  of  maneu- 
vering the  ball  into  scoring  posi- 
tion only  to  have  that  unbeatable 
combination  of  Sutton  and  Reed 
steal  the  show  with  a  five-yard  pass 
play  for  the  tally. 

Blazer  tacked  on  the  final  but 
unnecessary  point,  and  the  score- 
board read,  21-7,  in  f^vor  of  Caro- 
lina. 

This  wrapped  up  "the  story,  for 
though  each  team  unloaded  offen- 
sive fireworks  in  the  last  period, 
neither  seriously  threatened,  and 
the  Tar  Heels  walked  off  the  field 
with  their  second  victory  of  the 
season. 

Next  Saturday  it's  Notre  Dame 
at  South  Bend,  Ind.,  and  hopes  for 
an  upset  are  riding  higher  than 
ever  following  Saturday's  spectacu- 
lar second  half  sHbw.  Carolina's 
season  record  now  stands  at  2-5-1 
with  Notre  Dame  and  Duke  yet  to 
be  met. 


nessee  whipped  Georgia  Tech,  6- 
0,  in  their  football  battle  of  the  un- 
beatens. 

Tennessee  went  into  the  game  a 
touchdown  underdog  and  ranked 
third  nationally,  one  notch  behind 
Tech.  The  victory  made  the  Vols 
the  top  choice  for  a  Cotton  or  Sug- 
ar Bowl  bid  and  gave  them  a  good 
chance  of  replacing  Oklahoma  as 
the  nation's  No.   1  football  team. 

Fullback  Tommy  Bronson  scor- 
ed the  Vols'  touchdown  midway  of 
the  third  period  on  a  1  -  yard 
plunge.  But  it  was  Majors'  passes 
to  Cruze — a  16-yarder  to  Tech's  46 
and  a  45-yarder  to  the  1 — that 
made  it  possible. 


Vdilntramurals 
Win  Over  UNC 

CHARLOTTESVILLE,  Va  .—  Phi 
Kappa  Sigma,  intramural  champion 
at  thft  University  of  Virginia, 
scored,  jfour  touchdowns  in  the 
first  talf  to  defeat  Carolina's  in- 
tramural champs,  Zeta  Psi,  26-15, 
in  the  Mad  Bowl  here  yesterday. 

The  Virginians  intercepted 
three  Zeta  Psi  passes  in  the  first 
half  to  account  for  three  of  the 
tallies  and  margin  enough  to  win 
over  the ..  Carolina  intramural 
team  before  some  300  spectators. 

Knox  Massey  and  Jim  Raugh 
each  tallied  for  the  Zeta  Psi  team, 
but  thevgreatest  play  of  the  game 
came  wiien  the  Carolina  team 
moved  the  ball  seventy  yards  for 
a  score.  Massey  went  over  for  the 
tally  on  a  short  pass  that  climax- 
ed the  drive. 


By  RAY  LINKER 

I 
Carolina's  top-notch  cross  coun-j 
try  team  will   be  going  after  itsj 
third  consecutive  state  champion* 
ship  in  Raleigh  Monday. 

And  if  past  performances  this 
season  are  any  indication,  the  Tar 
Heels  should  come  away  with  the 
team  trophy. 

So  far  this  year  the  UNC  team 
has  conquered  everything  in  sight 


T*nn*ss*e 
Georgia  T«ch 


0     0     « 

0    0    0 


Duke,  Navy 
Tie,  7-7 

DURHAM,  (JPV— A  fourth-period 
pass  interference  penalty  on  Navy's 
1  helped  Duke  pull  out  a  savely 
fought  7-7  tie  yesterday,  the  third 
in  four  years  between  the-  two 
sdiools.  V 

Quarterback  Sonny  Jurgensen 
quickly  cashed  in  Duke's  big 
break,  sneaking  over  for  the  touch- 
down .  Halfback  Bernie  Blaney 
then  came  in  to  kick  the  point 
that  tied  it 


State  Scores 
Late  To  Beat 
South  Carolina 

RALEIGH,  (JP  — North  Carolina 
State  rammed  43  yards  for  a  fourth 
quarter  touchdown  on  the  passing 
and  running  of  halfback  Dick 
Christy  to  upset  South  Carolina  14 
to  7  yesterday  to  kill  any  hopes 
the  Gamecocks  had  of  winning  the 
Atlantic  Coast  Conference  crown 
and  with  it  a  trip  to  the  Orange 
Bowl. 

A  partisan  crowd  of  11,000  saw 
Christy  plwnge.over  from  the  two 
wtih  tke  winning  touchdown  with 
less  tlan  four  minutes  remaining. 
A  34>^»rd  pass  from  Christy  to  end 
John  ■  polkr  that  carried  to  the 
seven  sit  up  the  score.  Halfback 
Dick  Hunter  converted- 

The  Wolfpack  drive  began  from 
the  South  Carolina  43  when  center 
Jim  0^0  recovered  a  fumble  by 
Gamccoc|[  fullback  Don  Johnson. 

Othttfc.  Vmbles  and  penalties 
halted 'iseveral  driver  1^1"  both 
teams:  : 

Sou^  OaroHna.  scored  its  tbuch- 


Notre  Dame  Loses  Again; 
Meets  Tar  Heels  Saturday 

PITTSBURGH,  (*)— With  quart- 
erback Corny  Salvaterra  scoring 
one  touchdown  and  passing  for  an- 
other, Pitt's  bowl-hopeful  Pan- 
thers crushed  Notre  Dame,  26-13, 
yesterday,  handing  the  Irish  their 
fifth  straight  defeats-worst  losing 
skein  in  Notre  Dame  historj'. 

The  defeat  was  the  sixth  in  sev- 
en games  for  the  Irish  v(ho  are 
doomed  for  their  poorest  record 
since  they  began  playing  football. 

In  1933,  their  worst  season  be- 
fore this  season,  they  had  a  3-5-1 
record. 

down  late  in  the  second  period 
when  Johnson  rammed  over  from 
the  11  after  end  Julius  Derrick 
had  recovered  a  Wolfpack  fumble 
on  State's  27. 

Halfback  Alex  Hawkins  convert- 
ed to  give  South  Carolina  a  7-0 
margin. 

State  lost  no  time  in  evening 
up  the  score.  It  took  the  next  kick- 
off  and  drove  64  yards  for  a 
touchdown,  the  score  coming  on  a 
21-yard-pass  from  soph  quarterback 
Frank  Cackovic  to  Collar  in  the 
end-2X)ne.  End  John  Lowe  kicked 
the  extra  point. 
South  CaroliiM  0  7  0  0—7 
N.  C.   Stati  0    7    0    7—14 


except  the  strong  Maryland  team.  ] 
One  of  their  wins  this  season] 
came  over  t  previously  unbeaten 
Tennessee,  the  kings  of  the  South- 
eastern Conference. 

In  their  last  outing,  the  Tar 
Heels  turned  a  near  perfect  score 
(15)  in  whipping  the  Duke  Blue 
Devils,  16-48. 

Victories  have  also  been  regist- 
ered over  Virginia  in  a  dual  meet, 
over  Clemson,  State  and  South 
Carolina  in  a  meet  at  Columbia, 
S.  C.  The  Tar  Heels  loss  to  Mary- 
land came  in  a  trianglular  meet- 
ing between  the  Tar  Heels,  Terps, 
and  the  Wake  Forest  Deacons,  who 
finished  last  in  the  meet. 

Maryland  will  give  the  Tar 
Heels  trouble  in  the  conference 
meet  a  week  from  tomorrow,  but 
tomorrow  the  Tar  Heels  will  not 
have  to  worry  about  the  Terps. 

The  meet,  which  will  include 
teams  from  Carolina,  Duke,  State, 
Wake  Forest,  and  possibly  David- 
son, will  find  the  Carolina  team 
concerned  mostly  about  Duke  and 
State. 

The  21-41  win  over  State  by  the 
Tar  Heels  earlier  this  season  and 
the  convincing  win  over  Duke  in- 
dicates that  there  isn't  much  for 
the  UNC  men  to  worrj-  about. 

However,  in  years  past,  the 
teams  that  have  won  the  dual 
meets  have  not  always  come  out 
on  top  in  the  state  championships. 
Carolina  turned  this  trick  last 
3'ear.  After  State  had  squeaked 
out  a  dual  meet  win  early  in  the 


DAILY    CROSSWORD 


ACKOSS 

1  Puffed 

a  WitehM 

f .  Bondsmsji 

10  laiiiptleal 

12.  WatkiBf 

stick 
13  CouBtry 
(S.  Am.) 
14.  Sum  ap 
15. 1««rTiBMii< 
14.  Ouido's     ^ 

aote 
17.  W«d  mfm 
It  ll«aaiir« 

(ChiB.) 
20.  HewiBir 

tools 
21  Bakinf 

chamber 
2S  Small  spar 

<n«ut.> 
25  Lofty 

self-respect 
26.  Trees 
2T  Scorch 
2S  Greek  letter 
2f  Small 

briliiaiit 

piece 
W.  Viper 
S4  Kxclama* 

tiOB  of 

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S$  Man's  ttame 
3«  Cultiva^tor 
31  City  (Okla  > 
3f  Near  (poet  ) 
40.  Partneiv 
41  Kind  9i 

Ptum 
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2.  Boundary 
Indicator 
S.  Girrs  name 

4.  Pronoun 

5.  Callous 

6.  Topax  hum* 
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fixedly 

S.  SHenoed 
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a  wound 
11.  Girl's  name 
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is.  Asiatic  deer 


21.  Seaport 
(Al- 
geria) 

22.  South- 
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23.  Musical 
compo- 
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24.  Resting 

25.  Kind 
of 
fuel 

27.  A 
side 
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ZJUilLJU'J        Uija 


Sst«r4»y'«  A»«w«e 


31.  Finishes 
33.  Entreaty 
37.  Letter 

29.  Cubic  meter   38.  Audience 

30.  Dens  40.  Father 


if-il 


Here's  the  best  help  ever! 


now 


at  1/ 


pnce 


^r^  Special  Dry-Skin  Lotion 


Here's  tht  new... thickar... richer 
...Boa-gr«aty...piok  beautifyinf 
lotion  nftdf  up  of  nuffical  Sill> 
coqm!  AUaatoint  HcxiMshloropbene! 
Lftliolin !— tha  powerful  inrredienta 
absolutely  essential  to  reaUyAid  dry 
skin . . .  help  heal . . .  soften . . .  protect 
afainst  exposure  and  infection. 
ltot.Bow-41^ 

Hormone  Hand  Cream 

It's  ideal  if  you  prefer  a  cream.  It'a 
cooling  and  soethinf  ...precious  hor> 
mones  go  deep,  deep  down  to  smooth 
and  soften  rougtness  from  within. 
4  ot.  now-|1.26 


For  beauty  the  modem  way 

Dorothy  Gray ' 


Cosmehc  Oept.     Phone  9-8781 

USE    OUR    CONVENIENT    LAY-A  WAY    PLAN 


season,  the  Tar  Heels  came  back 
to  win  the  championships  by  10 
points. 

Expected  to  be  leading  the  Tar 
Heels  and  the  Pack  over  the  3.9 
mile  course  is  Jimmy  Beatty.  who 
last  year  broke  his  own  course  rec- 
ord for  the  second  time.  His  time 
last  year  was  20:3  0.6.  Other  Tar 
Heels  backing  him  up  will  be  Dave 
Scurlock  and  Everett  Whatley, 
who  are  exptcted  to  figure  prom- 
inently in  the  Tar  Heel  scoring 
along  wtih  Ben  Williams.  Howard 
Kahn,  John  Reaves.  Marion  Grif- 
fin, Perrin  Henderson.  Doug  Hen- 
derson, and  Alex  Coffin. 

Mike  Shea  will  be  the  Wolfpack's 
top  hope,  and  should  finish  second 
if  previous  performances  can  be 
taken  taken  as  an  indication  of 
his  ability.  Bob  Hotelling  will  be 
the  main  spark  in  the  not-to-strong 
Duke  team,  but  he  isn't  expected 
to  finish  in  the  top  five. 

Wake  Forest,  in  their  second 
year  of  rebuilding  a  team  from 
scratch,  doesn't  have  much  of  a 
chance  to  do  better  than  fourth 
in  the  State  championships. 

Freshmen  will  also  be  holding  a 
state  championship  meet,  the  big 
Four  teams  being  the  most  out- 
standing. 

The  UNC  Tar  Babies  will  be  go- 
ing after  the  second  straight  win 
here,  with  Cowles  Liipfert.  Fink 
Arthur,  John  Green,  James  Pack- 
ard, Ray  Bagwell,  Larry  Withrow. 
Frank  Sirianni  and  Bill  Porter 
running  for  the  Tar  Heels. 


COME   TO 

VARLEY^S  MEN'S  SHOP 

For  Your 

COOPER'S  PRODUCTS 


CADET  COLONEL 

salutes  Jockey  brand  underwear         * 

ClausewitE  McStrut,  rotc  generalissimo,  is  a  stickler 
for  obedience  to  commands.  "When  I  say,  *at  ease'  I 
mean  'at  eaaeP  "  he  says,  "and  Jockey  briefa  always 
let  you  be  at  ease!" 

You  don't  have  to  be  bucking  for  commendations  at 
inspection  time  to  appreciate  the  comfort  that  comes 
from  wearing  Jockey  briefs.  Better  stop  in  at  your 
dealer's  Boon...buy  a  supply  of  Jockey  briefs  and 
T-shirts,  and  feel  as  good  as  you  look! 


it'a  in  style  to  be  comfortable  ...  in 


Jocketi 


Ju  underwear 


mod*  only  by 


Wk.,  Kenosha,  WiKORsin 


JOCKEY  UNDERWEAR 

AVAILABLE  AT 

BERMAN'S  DEPT.  STORE 


v^ 


WEATHER 

Mostly  fair  and  cootor.  EitpectM! 
high  56  to  M. 


arhe 


aTar  iKecl 


OXFORD 

A  Former  Editor  Reports  From 
England.  See  Pag*  7. 


VOL.  LVII  NO.  46 


Complete  (fP)  Wire  Service 


CHAPEL  HILL,  NOI^TH  CAftOLINA.  TUESDAY,  NOVEMBER  13,  1956 


Offices   in   Graham   Memorial 


POUR   PAGES  THIS    ISSUE 


SHIRLEY  CARPENTER  IS  DORM  SWEETHEART 

.  .  .  with  Don  Matkin  of  IDC 


Aidermen  Postpone 
Action  On  Parking 
Ban  On  Columbia  St. 

The  Uxal  Board  oi  Aldermen  took  no  action  on  the 
Cohinibia  St.  parking  restriction  at  last  nights  meeting  due 
to  absenc  es. 

Cihairnian  W'ilhiirn  Davis  of  the  Student  j>()Vdrnment 
Traffic  Adxisory  (lonnnission  attended  the  nieetino;  prepar- 
ed to  present  recommendations  but  decided  ajijainst  presenta- 
tion due  to  absences  of  board  members. 

Da\  is's  report  was  formulated  by  compilation  of  individ- 
u«i  recommendations  made  jay  Co-* — ■ '■ 


lumbia  St.  fraternities  affected  by  j      He  will   present  his   report,   up- 
the   two-hour   parking   restrictionp!  on  which  final  decree  is  slated  to 


Dorm  Queen 
Crowhing  Is 
Set  fot  Wed. 

Miss  Shirley  Carpenter  has  been 
named  Sweetheart  of  UNC  Dorms. 

Miss  CarpenterT  sponsored  by ' 
Stacy  Dormitory,  was  named  over  j 
22  other  contestants  vieing  for  the : 

title.  i 

i 

Runner-ups  in  the  contest  were  | 
Miss  Phyliss  Krafft,  sponsored  by : 
Mangum     Dorm,  and  Miss     Libby  ^ 
McDowel.     sponsored     by     Steele 
Dorm. 

Judges  for  the  contest  were 
Mr?.  Kay  Kyser.  Assoc.  Prof  of 
Philosophy  William  Poteat  and 
Bob  Cox.  local  merchant.  j 

Miss   Carpenter   will    be   crown- 
ed at  tomorrow  night's  Interdormi- 
tory  Council  meeting.  She  will  re- ! 
ceive  a  bouquet  of  roses,  a  loving 
cup  and  a  $10  gift  certificate.        j 

Misses  Krafft  and  McDowell  will 
each  receive  $5  gift  certificates. 

The  contest  was  organized  by 
the  IDC  Contest  Committee,  Don 
Matkins  and  Whit  Whitfield,  co- 
chairmen. 


Freshman  And  Junior  Class  Officers, 
Numerous  Places  In  Legislature  Up 
For  Election  In  Campus  Polling  Today 

Kerr  Opposes  Whitfield 
For  Junior  Presidency 


The  restriction  was  imposed   by 
the  aldermen  during  the  summer 

ABStgHdES  '    . 


be  passed,  at  Thursday  nighf  s  al- 
Uermea   meeting. 


Library  ExteRstOff»  Dept. 
Issues  Two  PUblicdtions 


Davis  elected  not  to  present  his 
report  V^vea  Meriipdrary  presiding 
Officer   Oc^e   Davis   asked   him    if 

he  wouAri  rather  wait  until  Thurs-.-  j^  ^^  issued  by  the  ^Library  Bd- 
day  night  when  full  membership  o^l  tension  Department.     .    ■  ...(  /v     " 


Two  new  publicans  havfe  re<ien>- 


the  ooax-d  would  be  present. 

Only  Mayor  O.  K.  Cornwell,  per- 
manent presiding  officer,  was  ab- 
sent from  the  session. 

Present  were: 

Hubert  Robinson,  Gene  Stroud, 
Dr.  Paul  Wager  of  the  Political 
Science  Dept.,  Obie  Davis  and  Ken- 
neth Putnam. 

One  board  seat,  vacated  by  the 
resignation  of  Pokey  Alexander, 
is  as  yet  unfilled. 

Traffic  Commission  Chairman 
Davis  said  he  wanted  full  member- 


Department. 

The  first,  "North  Carolina  Mu- 
sicians: A  Selective  Handbook," 
was  prepared  by  the  N.  C.  Federa- 
tion of  Music  Clubs.  This  is  the 
most  extensive  publication  to  date 
on  the  subject  of  North  Carolina 
musicians  and  music. 

The  second,  "Studies  in  the 
American  Short  Story."  was  writ- 
ten by  Mary  Jane  Wing,  former- 
ly of  the  UNC  Library.  This  pub- 
lication contains  suggested  pro- 
grams for  14  book  club  meetings! 

Four     publications     are     issued 


ship  of  the  board  present  when  each  year  by  the  Library  Exten- 
he  presented  his  recommendation  I  sion  Department.  Two  are  North 
so  the  matter  would  be  definitely  i  Carolina  biographies  and  two  are 
and  finally  settled.  group  study  guides. 


Girls  Who  Want  Dorm  Rooms 
Must  Make  Reservations  Now 


The  Dean  of  Wimen's  Office  has 

I 
announced    that    applications     for ' 

room  reservations   are   now   being  | 

received. 

It   will   be   necessary  for   worn- 1 

en   students   who  plan   to   live   in  i 

the  dorm  during  the  spring  semes- 1 

ter  to  make  a  reservation  during 

the    period    Beginning    today    and ' 

ending  Nov.  2L  | 

I 
If    a    student    has    not    made    a  i 

room  reservation  by  spring,  the ! 
T>ean  of  Women's  Office  will  as- ; 
sume  that  she  will  not  be  at- ; 
tending  the  University  during  the  | 
spring  semester  or  that  she  is 
moving  to  a  sorority  house.  j 

The  procedure  for  reserving  a  j 
room  is  as  follows:  (1)  Go  to  the 
Cashier's  Office  in  the  basement  i 
of  South  Building  and  pay  the  $10 ' 
room  deposit.  A  receipt  will  be  | 
received.  (2)'  Bring  the  recepit  j 
to  the  Dean  of  Women's  Office  j 
(104-C.  South  Building)  and  fill  j 
out  an  application  for  room  res- 1 
ervation  Cards.  (3)  Have  the  cards  i 
marked    "Paid." 

If,     for  any  reason,  a     student 
is   uncertain  of  her  plans  for  the  j 
spring  semester,  she  should  come  j 
and  discuss  her  problem  with  Miss  j 


Isabelle  McLeod,  Executive  Secre 
tary  in  the  Office  of  the  Dean  of 
Women. 


Variety  Show 
Auditions 
Set  Nov.  28 

Auditions  will  begin  on  Nov.  28 
for  the  Carolina  Cavalcade  of  Ta- 
lent, which  will  be  held  on  Thurs- 
daj,  Dec.   13,  at  8  p.m. 

TWs  variety  show.  co^pon»ored 
by  GMAB  and  -Y-Nite,'  wi|l  be 
cfunposed    o<  •  iMMiisal   oi^--«Nn«4y 

acts  by  s?u5?n(s,  either  as  groups 
or  individuals.  Prizes  will  be  awar- 
ded at  the  show. 

Any  group  or  individual  with  an 
act  which  has  entcttalnment  val'.te 
has  been  urged  to  begin  now  to 
get  ready  for  auditions.  Auditions 
will  be  on  Wednesday,  Nov.  28,  7 
to  10  p.m.;  Thursday,  Nov.  29,  7 
to  10  p.m.;  and  Monday,  Dec.  3, 
7  to  10  p.m. 

Entries  should  be  called  in  to 
D|ivo  Davis  at  the  Phi  Delta  Theta 
House,  phone  number  8-9147,  be- 
fore Thanksgiving  if  possible,  of- 
ficials said. 

The  show  is  under  the  direction 
of  G.  C.  Pridgen,  Misses  Eleanor 
Kiggins,  Dottie  Wood,  and  Doris 
Atkins.. The  following  are  commit- 
tee heads:  Jim  Raugh,  Publicity; 
Miss  Nancy  Shuford,  Finance;  and 
Dave  Davis,   Elntries. 

Anyone  interested  in  helping 
with  production,  arangements,  pub- 
licity, staging,  props,  or  any  other 
,  phase  of  the  show  is  urged  to 
sign  up  for  those  committees  in 
iVIiss  Eleanor  Riggins'  office  in  the 
Y. 

The  sponsors  hope  that  the  Caval- 
cade of  Talent  will  become  an  an- 
nual production. 


Elections  Get 
Underway  At 
8  a.  m.  Today 

With  an  expected  vote  of  4,000 
the  UNC  campus-wide  election  of 
student  government  officials  gets 
underway  at  8  a.m.  today. 

The  polls  wil  stay  open  until 
6  p.m. 

Each  voter  will  be  -required  ta 
present  his  current  ID  card,  which- 
is  to  be  stamped  to  indicate  he 
has  voted.  Each  student  must 
sign  his  name  to  a  roster  at  the 
poll  before  he  wil  be  permitted  to 
vote. 

Campaign  literature  of  any  type, 
solicitation  for  the  advancement 
of  a  candidate,  and  commercializa- 
tion in  favor  of  a  candidate  will 
not  be  allowed  within  50  feet  of 
the  polls.  No  sound  mechanism 
may  be  stationed  within  hearing 
distance  of  any  polling  place. 

Districts  and  polling  places  are 
as  follows: 

Men's  Dormitory  District  1  — 
Cobb. 

Men's  Dormitory  District  2  — 
Stacy  Everett,  Graham,  Lewis  and . 
Aycock. 

Men's  Dormitory  District  3  — 
Connor,   Alexander,  and  Winston. 

Men's  Dormitory  District  4  — 
Joyner,  Mangum,  Manley,  Grimes, 
Ruffin,  and  E^merson  Stadium. 

«?^^™  wS.  "^K^A^if^Jrttll  Ttwrsdoy,  ChatrWen  Say 

Pettigrew,  Steele,   Whitehead.  Me- 1  •  h  ,■-  y 

morial    Hall,    and    all    other    Udl- i      ""   »v*»*y   U.\C   student   gave   5,  close,    but   donations    wm   blt^^  Jp- 


Today's  election   will   be  ior  freshman  and   junior  (las.s 
officers  and  numerous  legislative  seats. 

In  one  of  the  top  races  today,  John  Kerr   (IT)  opjK)ses 
Paul    "Whit"  Whitfield  for  junior  class  president. 

The  list  of  catididates  and  offices  is  as  follows: 
Junior    Class    —    President,   John 


:  Whit  Whitfield,  right.  Mid  John  Kfr,  candidates  for  junior  class 

I  ^pr«slcl«nt  in  today's  election,  wish  each  ottier  luck  in  •  pre-election 
i    get-together.  ■'"/..". 


Campus  Chest  Drive  To  Last 


versity-owned    buildings   not   men- 1  cents,    the    Campus    Ch<?st    Drive 
tioned.  j  would   go  over   its  goal    by   $150," 

A   poling  place   will  he   located  1  campus  Chest  Co-chairman  Jackie 

Aldridge     stated  '  yesterday,     an 


Police  Blotter  Listed 

students  on  the  Chapel  Hill 
police  blotter  from  Nov.  1  to  Nov. 
12   are  as  follows: 

Joseph  Grayzel,  speeding  65 
mph;  Elliot  Solomon,  speeding  B5 
mph;  Tasso  Spanos,  speeding  65 
mph;  John  Todd,  speed  70  mph 
in  35  mph  zone;  George  Myatt, 
presenting  another's  driver's 
license;  Joseph  Towe,  lending  his 
driver's  license  to  another; 
Lawrence  Fetner,  failure  to  give 
hand  signal,  to  stop,  resulting  in 
wreck;  Don  Brown,  speeding  70 
mph;  James  Grubbs  Jr.,  speeding 
65  mph;  George  Whiteside,  park- 
ing violation;  and  John  Taylor, 
failure   to   yield   right   of   way. 


in  each  dormitory.  Residents  of 
Emerson  will  vote  in  Ruffin,  and 
residents  of  unmentioned  Univer- 
sity-owned buildings  may  vote  in 
Old  East. 

Men's  Town  District  1  —  All 
men  students  living  in  the  south- 
ern section  of  Chapel  Hill,  south 
of  Cam?ron  Avenue  and  its  im- 
aginary extension  eastward  and 
westward  except  for  Victory  Vil- 
lage. Voting  in  Gerrard  Hall. 

•Men's  Town  District  2  —  All 
men  students  living  in  the  rec- 
angle  bounded  by  West  Cameron 
Ave.,  S.  jColumbia  St.,  W.  Frank- 
lin St.,  and  Carrboro  City  limits. 
Voting  in  the  Scuttlebutt. 

Men's  Town  District  3  —  All 
other  men  students  except  those 
residing  in  Victory  Village.  Vot- 
ing in  South  Building. 

Men's  Town  District  4  —  Men 
students  residing  in  Victot^  Vil- 
lage, or  the  area  bounded  by 
Jackson  Circle,  Mason  Farm  Rd., 
Daniels  Rd.,  and  Polk  St.  Voting 
in  Victory  Village.  One  bollot  box 

(See    ELECTIONS.    Page    3) 


Kerr  (UP)  and  Whit  Whitfield 
(SP);  vice-president,  Pat  Adams 
(SP)  and  George  Ragsdale  (UP), 
Secretary,  Jackie  Haithcock  (UP) 
and  Phyllis  Krafft  (SP);  treasurer. 
William  Deal  (UP)  and  James 
Merritt  (SP);  Social  Chairman 
Jennie  Margaret  Meador  (SP)  and 
Dot  Pressly  (UP). 

Freshman  Class  —  President. 
David  Evans  (SPi  and  Charlie  j 
Wilson  (UP);  'vice-president,] 
Cameron  Cooke  (UP)  and  Everett! 
James  (SP);  secretary,  Dewey; 
Dance  (SP>  and  Marj'  Ruth  Starl- j 
ing  (UP);  treasurer,  Peyton  Hawes 
(UP)  and  Jim  Wilber  (SP);  So- 1 
cial  Cliairraan,  Catherine  Carden ' 
(SP)    and   Roberta   Chapin    (UP),  i 

Men's   Dormitory    District    1    — , 
oner  year  legislarture  seat  —  Henry  i 
Bodenheimer  (UP)  and  Erwin  Ful- 
ler (SP).  j 

Meifc  Dormitory  District  2  — 
four  one-year  legislature  seats  — 
fim  AlfcoTj^j  <jGjP);  Peter  Brooke 
(UP),  iPlrank  Brown  (SP).  Doug 
^sele  (SP),  David  Fox  (UP). 
Gary  Greer  (SP),  Mike  Weaver 
(UP),  awi-  Whit .  Whitfield   CSP). 

Men's   Donnitory   District   3    — 
two  orie-y«ar  legislature   seats  — 
^    Dick    Gustafsoq    tSP).    L,arr>-    Mc- 
Campus   Chest    was   set   u^ 'by    Mullen  (UP),  John  Day  (SP).  and 


Councils' 
Elections 
Nov.  20th 

There  will  be  no  Honor  Coun- 
cil or  Student  Council  contests 
in  todays  elections,  according  to 
Andy  Milner,  Chairman  of  the 
Elections  Board. 

All  candidates  were  temp- 
orarily disqualified  for  failure 
to  hand  in  petitions  in  time,  Mii- 
ner  said,  and  the  Bi-partisan 
Boai'd  selections  were  not  ready 
at  the-  deadline. 

Honor  Council  and  Student 
Council  candidates  will  be  vot- 
ed on  in  a  Nov.  20  election. 

All  candidates  have  been  re- 
minded that  all  expense  ac- 
counts for  this  election  wvU  be 
due  by  6  p.m..  Nov.  19. 


ceived  throijgh  Thursday  night  in 
the  Y.       .    .  .       :  . 


nouncing  that  the  drive  has  been 
extended   through   Thursday. 

Contributions  will  be  received 
through  5  p.m.  Thursday  in  bot- 
tles set  up  in  Y  court  and  design- 
ated for  each  dorm  and  sorority 
and  fraternity  house,  she  said. 

Donations  chairmen  will  end 
their  soliciting  Tuesday  evening 
and  the  Campus  Chest  office  will 

Di  Sets  Reading  Night 

Senator  Pat  Adams,  chairman 
of  the  Ways  and  Means  Commit- 
tee, announced  that  the  Dialectic 
Senates  will  have  a  Readings 
Night  tonight  in  the  place  if  the 
usual  debate.      -    •    .         .  -. 

He  said  that  the  senate  has  by 
custom  had  one  evening  set  aside 
during  each  semester  for  the  pur- 
pose of  allowing  senaiors  and 
guests  to  read  either  original 
literary  works  of  their  own  or 
selections  from  the  works  of  their 
favoiile  authors. 


student  legislature  and  the  execu- 
tive branches  of  the  YM-YWCA 
to  combine  the  accumulation  of 
charity  drives  on  campus. 

It  is  the  only  soliciting  drive 
now  alowed  on  campus.  Miss  Al- 
dridge stated.  Students  are  only 
asked  to  contribute  once  a  year 
now,  she  said. 

The  "Y"  will  receive  contribu- 
tions Tuesday,  Wednesday  and 
Thursday. 

Containers  for  contributions 
wil  be  placed  on  Ihe  first  floor  of 
the  "Y*'  with  each  i^sideife's 
name  on  it. 

For  townspeople,  professors,  or 
Victory  Village,  separate  contain- 
ers will  be  labeled. 

Campus  Chest  now  stands  at 
about  $1,300.  The  major  part  of 
this  has  been  collected  from 
faculty,  alumni,  and  administra- 
tion. Miss  Aldridge  said. 

The  World  University  Service 
which  operates  on  the  principal 
of   student  to   student   giving,   re- 

(See    CAMPUS    CHEST.    Page    3) 


Students  Called  Upon  To  Appropriate 
A  Billion  Study,  Hours  During  1957 


GM'S  SLATE 


APO,  Grail  Room,  7-9  p.m.; 
Chess  Club,  Roland  Parker  1, 
8-11  p.m.;  Dance  Class,  Roland 
Parker  2  and  3,  6:30-8  p.m.; 
Sound  and  Fury,  Woodhouse 
Conference  Room,  4-6  p.m.; 
Men's  Honor  Council,  Council 
Room,  7-11  p.m.;  Elections  Board, 
Game  Room,  Rendezvous  Room, 
APO  Room,  6  p.m. 


Dr.  J.  Harris  Purka,  director 
of  the  State  Board  of  Higher  edu- 
cation, has  called  upon  the  stu- 
dents of  this  state  for  an  "ap- 
proporiation"  of  "one  billion 
study  hours  in  1957." 

In  a  s|}eech  prevalent  to  all 
students,  high  school  or  college. 
Purks  emphasized  that  this  "ap- 
propriation" should  be  devoted 
to  the  "acquisition  of  knowledge 
and  skills  in  arithmetic,  alge- 
bra, geometery,  history,  English, 
literature,  language,  government, 
and  science." 

"I  am  afraid  that  we  are  now 
at  the  point  of  payoff  for  a 
quarter  of  a  century  of  neglect 
of  study  of  fundamentals,"  he 
said. 

Purks  said  this  "appropria- 
tion" was  not  unreasonable.  "In 
the  first  place,  the  cost  in  dol- 
lars is  negligible;  we  do  not  have 
to  ask  our  legislators  to  provide 
it;   this  appropriation   does   not 


require  institutions;   it  will  not 
raise  taxes,"  he  said. 

Purks  said  the  result  of  this 
"appropriation"     would     be     to 
"automatically  force  htfTh  stand- 
ards upon  our  schools  and  col- 
leges." 

"We  would  soon  begin  to  see 
our  boys  and  girls  learn  to  ac- 
quire vocational  and  technical 
knowledge  with  speed  and  pre- 
cision," he  added. 

Purks  said  the  main  problem 
of  education  in  North  Carolina  is 
'to  see  to  it  that  education  is 
placed  in  the  heads  and  hearts 
of  the  youih  of  this  state. ' 

"The  essential  ingredient  in 
the  process  is  hard  study  by  the 
boy  or  girl  who  want."  to  acquire 
an   education,"   he   said. 

"The  only  thing  that  money 
and  institutions  and  teachers 
can  do  to  help  the  cause  along 
is  to  provide  opportunity  for 
people  to  ackquire  education  at 


DR.  J.  H.  PURKS 

.  . '.  asks  hard  study 

a  faster  rate  than  they  can  ac- 
quire it  without  money  and  in- 
stitutions and  teachers.  But  this 
is  in  turn  dependent  UjJon  the 
wiWiflgness  of  pupils  and  stu- 
dents to  study."  Purks  warned. 


The  former  Acting  President 
of  the  Consolidated  University 
also  discussed  the  questions  of 
junior  colleges  in  North  Caro--^ 
lini,  pointing  out  that  North 
Carolina  ranks  sixth  in  the  na- 
tion in  the  number  of  junior 
colleges. 

Purks.  therefore,  did  not  consi- 
der it  advisable  or  a  solution  to 
the  education  problem  to  establish 
more  junior  colleges.  "If  wei 
establish  many  more  junior  (or 
community)  colleges  there  will 
not  be  enough  professors  to  staff 
them."  Purks  pointed  out.  Purks 
did,  however,  make  an  exception 
to  Eastern  North  Carolina,  point- 
ing out  that  "the  low  density  of 
institutions  in  Eastern  North  Car- 
olina requires  that  special  con-, 
sidenition  be  given  this  area  by 
public  and  private  and  church- 
related  schools." 


I  Ralph   Willoughby  (UP). 

Men's    Dormitorj'    District    4   — 
one-year   legislature   seat   —   Rob- 
j  ert  Carter   (SP)   and  John   Minter 
'  (UP). 

Men's    Dormitory    District    5   — 

two  one-year  legislature   seats   — 

Bill    Baum    (UP),    Kenfteth    Hal' 

I  (UP),    Everett   James    (SP).    and 

I  Tom  Long   (SP). 

Men's  Town  District  1  —  six 
one-year  legislature  seats  —  Ron- 
I  aid  Belk  (UP).  Dave  Byren  (SP). 
Jerry  Cole  (UP).  Wilson  Cooper 
(UP),  Chuck  Cushman  (UP) 
Charles  Huntington  (SP).  Jack 
I  Lewis  (UP),  and  Bill  Robbin.s 
(UP). 

Men's  Town  District  2  —  one- 
year  legislature  seat  —  Joe  Clapp 
(SP)  and  Van  Woltz  (UP). 

Men's  Town  District  3  —  three 
one-year  legislature  seats  —  Herb 
Greenblatt  (SP).  Phil  Haire  (UP) 
Robert  Hodges  (SP),  James  John- 
son (SP),  Tom  Kenan  (UP),  and 
Jerry  pppertheimer  (UP).  Six- 
month  legislature  seat  —  Charles 
Howerton  (SP)  and  Griff  Miller 
(UP). 

Men's  Town  District  ♦  —  two 
one-year  legislature  s^ats  —  Floyd 
Andrews  (UP),  Darwin  Bel^  (SP) 
and  Ben  Peele  (SP). 

Women's  Dormitorj'  District  1 — 
two  one-year  legislature  seats  — 
Kittv  Corr  (UP).  Mar>'  Garvin 
(UP).  Betty  Huffman  (SP).  and 
Martha  Poindexter  (SP).  Two  six- 
month  legislature  seats  —  Julia 
Ann  Crater  (UP).  Jennie  Margaret 
Meador  (SP),  Babs  Moore  (SP) 
and   Margaret  Sanders   (UP). 

Women's  Town  District  1  —  two 
one-year  legislature  seats  —  Ellen 
Brauer  (SP),  Sheila  Cronan  (UP). 
Nola  Hatton  (SP).  and  Val  von 
Ammon  (UP). 

GMAB  Anifourites  List 
Of  Week's  Activities 

Graham  Memorial  Activities 
Board  activities  for  this  week  gel 
underway  today  at  6:30  p.m.  with 
dance  lessons  in  the  RendAou"^ 
Room. 

Scheduled  for  Thursday  are 
bridge  lessons  at  the  Victor>-  Vil- 
lage Day  Care  Center  at  7:30  p.m. 
and  a  film  series  presentation  of 
"M",  a  German  movie  at  8  p.m.  in 
CarroU  Hall. 


Menon  Will  Be 
Forum's  Next 
Speaker  Here 

By  GEORGE  PFINGST 

V.  K.  Menon  will  be  the  next 
speaker  that  the  Carolina  Speakers 
Forum  presents.  The  topic  of  his 
-peech  will  be  Nationalism  or  In- 
lias  Role  in  foreign  affairs. 

V.  K.  Menon  is  the  present  In- 
iian  Ambassador  to  the  United 
.\'ati;.ns  and  is  .Minister  for  Ex- 
ternal Affairs  for  the  Indian  Gov- 
ernment. 

A  definite  date  for  his  appear- 
ince  has  not  yet  been  set.  The 
tentative  dales  are  Dec.  3,  or  Dec. 
10.  It  is  hoped  that  Memorial  Hall 
will  be  available  for  his  address 
to  the  student  body. 
STUT  GOVERNMENT  AGENCY 

The  Carolina  Speakers  Forum  is 
an  official  student  government  ag- 
;?ncy  for  the  presentation  to  the 
campus  speakers  of  international 
tame.  It  is  a  descendant  of  the 
Campus  Political  Union  which  had 
its  beginning  here  about  twenty 
live  yjars  ago.  Us  function  was  to 
present  to  the  University  panel  dis- 
-u^sions,  debates  and  speakers. 
Among  its  guests  were  the  late 
Pre.sident  Franklin  Delano  Roose- 
velt and  William  Howard  Taft. 
.•iarry  S.  Truman  spoke  here  in 
1943  under  the  sponsorship  of  the 
CPU  when  he  was  the  Senator 
tron;  Missouri. 
FORMED  IN   1949 

In  1949  (he  Student  Government 
formed  the  Cai:olina  Speakers  Fo- 
•  um  to  choose  and  present  different 
speakers  to  the  University.  Funds 
;re  provided  for  it  by  the  Student 
vlovernment. 

Each  winter  a  hundred  or  so  in- 
vitations are  sent  out  to  likely  can- 
didates to  .speak  here.  From  those 
peakers  who  accept  the  offer  are 
chosen  the  speakers  for  the  fol- 
owinj}  year.  These  final  arrange- 
nents  are  usually  made  in  person 
which  requires  the  chairman  of  the 
Forum  to  travel  to  New  York, 
Washington  or  wherever  the  speak- 
-r  can  be  contacted. 

Already  this  year  the  Carolina 
speakers  Forum  has  presented 
Flollington  K.  Tong,  Nationalist 
Chinese  Ambassador  to  the  United 
States.  Its  planned  ,  speakers  this 
year  include  Sen.  Paul  Douglas, 
Vice-President  Richard  M.  Nixon, 
md  Walter  P.  Reuther,  president 
jf  the  CIO. 


FA6I  TWO 


THE  DAILY   TAR  HIBL 


NOVEMBER  13,  195C 


On  Getting  Out  The  Vote: 
A  New  Student  Legislature 


OXFORD  LETTER: 


(iet-oiit-;iiKl-v()tc  editorials  are 
ahvays  hard  U)  urite.  Fbey  are  al- 
ways the  same  tiling,  and  they  al- 
ways do  practically  n<jthin<;  to  <;ct 
out  the  vote. 

But  there's  something  else,  an- 
other reason  there  should  be  an 
editorial  t(5day  uroino  students  to 
vote: 

The  Student  Leoislatin-e.  part  oi 
Avhieh  will  he  elected  in  camprus- 
wide  elections  today,  needs  re- 
buildin<i[. 

Ihc  people  in  the  Studem  Ix'<»- 
islature.  besides  neglecting  their 
duties  wtih  consistencv,  ha\e  turn- 
ed out  remarkable  little  useful 
legislation  so  far  this  year. 

They  have  concerned  them- 
selves with  pitiful  resolutions 
mging  this  and  that;  they  have 
not  attacked  many  of  the  I'ltiVers- 
itys  basic  problems,  such  as  hous- 
ing;, freedom  of  thought,  freedom 
Ironi  oppression  from  overpower- 
lul  administrators,  the  absence  reg- 
uhuions.  the  problem  of  prices 
dowiuown.  the  prof)lem  of  scholar- 
ships and  student  aid  and  the 
down-to-earth  j)roblenrs  ot  the  man 
in  the  Lower  Quad  who  is  lonelv 
and    who   looks  to  his   fellows   tor 

help.  ;;,: 

No.  thev  have  taken  too  niiirb 
of  their  linie  up  wtih  petty  politi- 
cal arguments  and  attempts  to  look 
smart  to  each  other:  they  have  had 
diffidiltv  seeing  bevond  their  eye- 
lids. '  '  . 

1  hev  have  shown  their  apathy 
toward  their  offices  of  trust  by  not 
>h<»wing  up  frtr  (ommittee  meet- 
in.ijs  with  consistency. 

Thev  ha\e  shown  their  appar- 
ent inability  to  deal  intelligtiit- 
h  with  a  student  budget  that 
ecpials  th  :  of  many  small  corpo- 
ral i(»ns.  In  thi<i.  r(M).  they  ^a\e 
shown   c'xncme  pettiness. 

I  iiey  have  a  go(xl  student  body 
president,  the  ;best  one  in  ait  least 
four 
m 


of  its  mendjers.  \Vhile  we  have  no 
grudge  whatsoever  against  fresh- 
men or  sophomores,  we  seriously 
doubt  that  they  understand  the 
problems  of  this  unixersitv  as  d*) 
juniors  and  seriiors. 

A  gieat  many  c>l  the  members 
of  the  Student  Legishuurc  are  in 
their  first  two  vears  here.  Tliev 
receive  advice  from  older  students, 
who.  Avhilc  not  members  of  the 
legislatuic.  sit  back  as  sort  ot  elder 
statesmcMi  and  direct  the  affans. 
of   student   go\ermnent. 

If  this  is  so,  the  elected  rejjrc- 
seniatives  ol  the  students  of  this 
university  are  not  represeinative. 

Another  answer  lies  in  the  stu- 
dent body.  We  sus|)e(  t  that  it  does- 
n  t  care  \ery  nnich  what  its  stu- 
dent legislature  does  each  Thurs- 
day night. 

In  years  past  the  Student  Legis- 
lature has  somewhat  remedied  this 
situation  bv  buving  television  sets 
and  washing  machines  for  men  s 
and  women's  dormitories.  Bin  they 
did  so  with  mcmey  the  students 
paid  in  bhuk  fees,  and  the  money 
S(Min  ran  oin,  so  the  students  for- 
got again  alK)ut   their  legislature. 

It  is  apathy,  an  often  overworked 
but  choice  word,  that  is  partly  to 
blame  for  the  present  sad  condi- 
tion <)f  the  Student   Legislature. 

Just  what  tan  be  done  about  it 
we  do  not  know,  but  we  are  pret- 
ty certain  a  closer  relation  f)etween 
repiesentati\e     and     constituents 

would  work  small  wonders. 

»  *  ♦ 

So.  vote  today. 

Vtmll  have  trouljle  deciding 
whcun  to  \ote  for,  becau.se  very 
feAv  ( andidates  have  platforms:  they 
do  have  prettv  jxjsters.  though.  But 
Ave  suggest  \ou  vote  for  those  p«eo- 
ple  wIh)  appear  to  be  matme 
enough  to  handle  the  student  ac- 
tivities budget,  who  IcKjk  as  it. 
tiievll    attend    the    meetin<i"s   tliev 


years,    bultiJie    n1oaa«;-p»|iii9(t     promise  to  attend,  who  think  and 
ake   student   gqyernmeiit!;goQdf|,;j;p|Bfi,«||g\WY  beyond  their  evelids. 

*  *':  ■    '    ;^    '  :;  :ii|rj|'''**ll^  that  sbrt  (4  jnople  could   be 

\Vliv.  then,  is  ibe  Stuc(tiit  litg^^jt  rjliplected  today,  it  would  be  a  won- 
aiure  in  suc!>,|t>ffi^/7<^Hn4t|^iQfirt   \i\    tyierfnl — if  unprecedented— Student 
One  aiiswier^lVrH^'  )''^>tlf|itii!||tat»     Vjagislauue. 

Christnlasa  Herlhant  Style 


C.an>tjnaN   is  coming*-- 
tc)  <.hapel   Hill  nierchai*E» 


With    Halloween    barely  out   ol 
the    way    and    Thanksgiving  e\en 


V 


CHAPEL  HILL'S  EARLY  CHRISTMAS  DECORATIONS 

.  .  .  who  will  throw  the  money  changers  out? 


The  Daily  Tar  Heel 

The  official  student  publication  of  the 
Publications  Board  of  the  University  o! 
North  Carolina,  where  it  is  published 
daily  except  Monday  and  examioatlot 
and  vacation  periods  and  summer  terms 
Entered  as  second  class  matter  in  the 
oust  office  in  Chapel  Hill,  N.  C,  undei 
the  Act  OI  March  8,  1870.  Subscription 
rates:  mailed,  $4  per  year.  $2.50  a  semes- 
ter; delivered.  $6  a  year,  $3.50  a  semei- 
ter. 


E:ditor .. 

FRED  POWLEDGE 

Managing  Editor 

.     CHARUE  SLOA^ 

News  Editor 

...^   RAY  UNKER 

Business  Manager 

-.     Bn.I,  BOB  PLEt? 

Sports  Editor       .  .. 

^       LARRY  CHEEK 

EDITORIAL  STAFF  —  Woody  Sears. 
Frank  Crowthcr.  Barry  Winston,  David 
Mundy.  George  Pfingst.  Ingrid  Clay, 
Cortland  Edwards.  Paul  McCauley, 
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NEWS  STAFF— Clarke  Jones,  Nancf 
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Drake,  Edith  MacKinnon.  Wally  Kuralt. 
Mary  Alys  Voorhecs,  Graham  Snyder, 
Billy  Barnes.  Neil  Bass.  Gary  Nichols, 
Page  Bernstein,  Peg  Humphrey,  Phyllis 
Maiiltsby. 

SPORTS  STAFF:  Bill  King,  Jim  Purks, 
Jimmy  Harper,  Dave  Wible,  Charley 
Howson. 

Subscription  Manager  Dale  Staley 

Advertising  Manager  _ Fred  Katzin 

Circulation  Manager    Charlie  Holt 

Staff  Photographer Norman  Kantor 

SUff  Artist , Charlie  Daniel 

BUSINESS  STAFF— Rosa  Moore,  Johnny 
Whitaker,  Dick  Leavitt,  Peter  Alper. 

Night    Editor    .i.      Woody  Sear.^ 

Proof  Reader  — ..    .   Woodjf  Seari 


yet  in  the  futme.  there  are  red  and 
green  C^hrismas  befks  and  Santa 
Cllauses  hanging  over   Franklin  St. 

This  is  the  basest  lorni  ol  com- 
ntercialism.  And  Chapel  Hill  luer- 
chants— the  people  who  decide 
when  to  siring  up  (ihristinas  dec 
oi.-tion.s — are  to  blame. 

It  is  exactly  43  days  until  (hrist- 
mas.  a  day  that  used  to  mark  the 
celebraticm  of  the  birth  cjl  Christ. 

But  now.  in  the  materialist i< 
minds  of  most  people.  Christmas 
I)av  is  a  day  lor  swa|)ping  gilts. 
The  day  alter  (ihristmas  is  a  dav 
lor  gc»ing  downtotvii  and  exchang- 
ing Clhri.stmas  gifts  for  something 
else. 

.Merchants— not  just  in  Chapel 
Hill  but  in  most  other  (ities— are 
largely  responsible  for  the  \ncs- 
ent-day.  materialistic  approach  to 
Christmas.  Tliey  are  aided  and 
abetted  by  *  the  Madison  .\\e. 
crowd,  and  the  gullible,  securi- 
ty -  searching  public  helps  a  gr^at 
deal.   too. 

But  in  Chaj>el  Hill,  where  things 
are  sup}>o?»ed  to  be  ciiffcrent. 
where  an  acaderhtc  air  maintains 
itself  while  the  rest  of  the  stale 
and  world  drowns  in  matoiiali.sm. 
the  Franklin  St.  bovs  get  their  tin- 
sel up  a  week  and  a  half  before 
Thanksgiving. 

.\nd  no  one  bats  an  eye. 

Christ,  you  will  remember,  en- 
tered the  temple  and  drove  the 
money-changers  out. 

But  who  will  cut  down  the  pap- 
er mache  Santa  Clauses  and  other 
reminders  that  Christmas  is  com- 
ing to  Chaf^el    Hill's  stores? 

No  one  will,  and  before  long 
Christmas  will  have  alM)iit  as  nnich 
significance  as  a  tiic  sale. 


The  Dreaming  Spires:   Disturbed 


Ed  Yoder 

Voder,  who  last  year  was 
co-editor  of  The  Dally  Tar 
Heel,  is  now  a  Rhodes  Scho- 
lar at  Oxford,  England.  He 
wrote  this  last  week,  when 
Sir  Anthony  Eden's  position 
in  the  British  government 
appeared  unstable. 

OXFORD.  England  —  My  ten- 
ure here  as  an  alien  is  yet  short, 
but  long  enough  already  to  con- 
vince me  that  Matthew  Arnold 
had  in  mind  the  dreams  of  age 
when  he  wrote  of  Oxford's 
"dreaming  spires." 

When  we  arrived,  they  were 
dreaming: _but.  this  week's  gusts 
of  world  politics  have  disturbed 
those  dreams,  and  whether  anoth- 
er week  or  another  world  war 
will  come  before  they  dream  in 
peace  again,  no  one  knows. 

The  Ea.stern  Europe  and  Mid- 
dle East 'crises  have  broken  the 
sanctity  of  everj'  Oxford  function 
this  week— even  the  venerable 
tutorial  between  don  and  student. 
The  words  of  my  economics  tutor 
were  blunt  today,  as  I  strolled  in- 
to his  rooms  for  a  pitched  battle 
over  the  weekly  essay: 

"Never  again,"  he  muttered. 

"Never  again?"  I  asked. 

"Never  again    Tory,'   he  said, 

shaking  his  Manchester  (luardi.'tn 
in  emphasis.  "Next  time  I'll  even 
vote  Labor  before  Tory." 

Except  for  a  staunch  and  con- 
siderable school  of  old  Tories, 
who  don't  mind  affirming  their 
tried  belief  in  the  principles  of 
Realpolitick.  the  sentiments  of 
the  economics  tutor  seem  to  be 
typical  of  two-thirds  of  the  dons 
and  students  here  towards  Eden's 
action  in  the  Middle  East. 

The    division    of    opinion    here 

matches   in   bitterness,   surpasses 

in  conciseness,  the  division  Presi- 

.  dent  Trumr,n  rajsed  in  the  United 

States    five    years    ago    when    he 

handed  papers  to  Gen.  McArthur. 

*     *     ■> 

It  is  embarrassing  to  confront 
the  English  here.  Each  one  of 
them  has  a  pitiful  aspect  of 
apology  and  ombarrasment  about 
Eden  that  .seems  to  defy  comfort- 
ing. I  have  tried  to  explain  my 
feeling  that  perhaps  the  hands 
of  the  I'nited  States,  even  n.nv. 
are  hardly  stainless  in  what  has 
happened. 

But  those  protestations  have  a 
hollow  .sound.  Most  people  think 
you're  just  being  nice. 

All  this  carries  with  it  a  cer- 
tain justice.  In  the  morals  of 
politic.v  the  English  josh  Ameri- 
can* good-naturedly  but  with  a 
marked  smugness  ab.>ut  Diplo- 
macy a  la  Dulles.  Just  10  days 
ago.  the  English  could  fuss  in 
good  countenance  about  the  way 
U.  S.  Secretary  of  State  Dulles 
had  compromised  the  West's 
moral  position  and  .strained  the 
Anglo-American  alliance. 

Now,  in  the  turbulent  passage 
of  less  than  a  week,  the  ground 
has  quaked  and  rolled  away  be- 
neath their  feet.  F:den's  ultima- 
tum to  Israel  and  Egypt — and  its 
sudden  coincidence  with  the  sup- 
pression of  Hungarian  rebels  un 
dor  Rusian  tank-treads  —  ha-; 
dropjjcd  the  sense  of  political 
sin  over  the  British. 
NOT  SITTING 

But     the     students    and     dons 


aren't  by  a  long  shot  sitting  by. 
The  complexion  of  Oxf6rd  has 
changed  over  one  week  from  its 
unbelievable  detachment  to  a 
sizzling  anger.  It  has  not  been  un- 
usual in  the  past  three  days  to 
set  eyes  upon  a  long-haired  don, 
carrying  books  and  pape*  oddly 
askew  under  one  arm  and  a  flut- 
tering petition  against  the  gov- 
ernment under  the  other,  hasten- 
ing from  study  to  study  f«  signa- 
tures. 

♦     *     ♦ 

As  for  the  students: 

The  quads  are  barren  of  robed 


The  demonstVators  carried  pla- 
cards: "Law,  not  War."  "Obey 
the  Charter."  "United  Nations 
First."  '"Oxford  Students  for 
Peace.  "  Over  a  grotesque  cari- 
cature of  Eden's  familiar  acqu- 
iline  face,  mustache  drooping,  un- 
even black  letters  questioned:  "Is 
This  Face  Worth  It?" 

THE  ROMANS 

The  demonstration  carried  up 
ancient  Broad  St.  It  coursed  past 
the  rain  and  wind-eroded  bursts 
of  the  Roman  emperors  who  keep 
vigil  over  the  street.  Augustus'. 
Tiberius,   Claudius,   Nero,    Domi- 


Parting  The  Sea 


Conaer\'atives   in   the     entourage 
had  drowned  them  out. 

The  noise  dropped  as  the  pro- 
cession stopped  and  the  joiners 
suddenly  realized  they  were  being 
watched  by  bystairdtrs.  A  fetbie 
attempt  was  made  at  an  anti- 
Eden  speech,  and  two  students 
fought  over  the  British  flag,  one 
lowering  it  to  half  point  on  the 
stick  mast — to  thdnderous  cheers 
— the  other  trying  vainly  to  seize 
the  stick  and  push  the  flag  up 
again. 

A  half-hearted  chant— 'Sack 
Eden:" — was  tried,  but  it  failed. 
The  milling  stopped;  the  students 


.)  ( \o  ^   tY  : 


%\ 


figures  today.  At  11  a.m.  a  strect- 
ful  of  students  assembled  at  the 
Martyrs  Memorial  on  St.  Giles 
St.  and  took  a  fast  train  to  Lon- 
don to  demon.strate  before  No.  10 
Downing  St. 

Ten  days  ago.  just  before 
"Eden's  Folly  Day,"  as  an  Eng- 
lishman described  it  to  me,  two 
Balliol  students  flew  across  the 
Iron  Curtain  into  Hungary  to  bo 
stretcher  bearers;  at  last  report, 
they  had  been: 

1.  Imprisoned  by  the  counter- 
revolutionaries. 

2.  Officially  "sent  down" 
(That's  English  for  ((cxplusion) 
from  Oxford. 

A.s  I  stepped  from  the  gate'  of 
New  College  just  last  week,  shouts 
and  the  strains  of  "Brittania  Rule 
the  Waves"  heralded  a  marching 
throng  of  1.000  up  Holywell  St. 


tian — they  all  sullenly  watched, 
if  not  through  reflecting  eyes, 
through  dark,  hollow  sockets. 

The  eroding  elements  of  years, 
and  the  imagination  of  an  under- 
graduate lend  them  a  peculiarly 
tin>d  visage;  it  is  as  if  they  say. 
with  a  half-sneer:  "Wc  saw  this 
all  in  our  time." 

ijc  4:  4t 

The  demonstrators  rounded  the 
corner  from  Broad  St.  to  St.  Giles. 
As  they  marched  toward  the 
Martyr's  Memorial,  across  the 
very  point  where  Archbishop 
Craivmer  was  burnt  for  his  heresy 
against  the  Pope,  a  band  of 
staunch  pro-Government  students 
had  gained   the   memorial  steps. 

"We  want  war!  We  want  war!" 
thej  chanted. 

But  a  chorus  of  hoots  and  an 
other  bar  or  two  of  "Brittania 
Rule  the  Waves'  from  the  pranc- 
ing rebels  and   the  disillusioned 


dispersed.  And  the  melancholy 
statue  of  St.  John  the  Baptist 
on  the  portal  of  the  college  across 
the  street  took  up  the  sad  vigil 

the  emperors'  sneers  had  lost. 

*         #         * 

Tonight,  by  strange  conjunc- 
tion of  destinies,  is  Guy  Fawkcs 
night.  Guy  Fawkes  was  the  most 
unfortunate  royalist  in  English 
hi.story — it  was  he  who  was  found 
guarding  the  kegs  of  powder 
which,  by  the  Gunpowder  Plot, 
were  hauled  beneath  the  House 
of  Commons  to  blow  British  par- 
liamcntar>'  government  beyond 
Mars. 

It  is  a  strange  conjunction  of 
destinies — as  if  we  haven't  had 
enough  of  those  this  week.  It  is 
like  the  Fourth  of  July  back  home 
in  Mebane.  except  that  strieet 
crowds  are  restless  and  edgy,  and 
the  fireworks  popping  minute  by 
minute  have,  tonight,  a  strangely 
portentous  sound. 


Pogo 


By  Walt  Kelly 


of(Ufmic\erzN<=,.  -^ 


0 


^  marz/r" 


A  s^Ass  Of  WAxeii  pge  wgrriN'] 

A  POCKir  fAAHJAU  OP  ^TAff^, 

Mgoii6,0iirrBmmM'orHBiz 


t"-*a'i  '"Ci 


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dffiS?^:;  ^  ?^?  ^  ^^'^  \  '*ANP$.''  Nov\;  MOW  voi^ 

AT?|?« '^S«  picif?N  aS"'"^* *''  "^  ^"^  ^^  ^^^' • 

If  uANPe  AT  THg  Rpl4'"(5i.A^ 
0f  APf  POf?  X9N>t  WITH  f<AT)Vf  4 

W  CA6E  l-r  Hft$  MAf?5 


Li1  Abn«r 


By  Al  Capp 


r 


THEN,  GIT  OUTA  DOGPATCH- 

AN--  STAY  ourrf-  Ti  LL 

HAWKINS  DAV  IS  OVER/^- 


The  Revplt    ; 
On  Conformity 

Jerry  Brady  t" 

hi    The   \ofrr   Dame   Scholasfir 

On  Friday  I  picked  up  the  Scholastic  and  wan- 
dered aimlessly  tkrvvgli  its  vxriety  oBtil  I  reined  up 
at  the  picture  of  a  rain-coated  character  studjing  in 
front  of- that  paragon  of  styling:  GilberTs  on  the 
Campus  Shoppe  for  Distinguished  Men. 

Over  his  head  was  the  title  of  the  article:  The 
Ivy  Look  For  This  Fall"  which  was  written  with  the 
help  of  Esquire  Magazine  and  Gilbert's  without 
whose  help  the  article  would  not  have  been  possi- 
ble. I  was  told.  I  mentally  thanked  the  two  con- 
tributors and  went  on. 

On  the  next  page  two  others  were  frolicking 
in  the  back  of  Gilbert's  On  the  Campus  Shoppfi 
for  Distinguished  Men.  Now  even  the  well-rounded! 
cop  with  the  clock,  a  real  Magoo  of  a  man,  could  | 
not  have  suspected  those  two  of  playing  football,! 
particularly  in  velveteen  loafers,  button-down  an- 
gola tennis  shoes  and  tear-aw^y  sweat  socks. 

Meanwhile  another  feliow  was  looking  classic 
whlic  smoking  a  pipe  full  of  ivy.  I  believe  he  had 
a  patch  over  his  right  eye,  but  I  couldn't  see  for 
sure.  Another  boy,  who  was  going  upstairs,  looked 
like  he  was  going  to  a  Schmimoff  ad.      ^ 

This  may  sound  like  I  disapprove  of  these 
Sorin  subterraneans,  but  please  believe  that  I  have 
a  purpose.  I  feel  that  it  is  my  duty  as  a  devoted 
reader  of  Christian  Virtues  to  enlighten  these  meD 
with  a  little  grandfatherly  advice. 

SYMBOL  ^ 

Men.  look  around  you.  Try  to  pick  out  the  sym 
bol  of  }0ur  age.  a  universal  subject  of  admiration, 
the  citadel  of  Americanism.  Of  course  its  none  other 
than  Elvis  Presley,  idol  of  hound  dogs. 

Now  I  ask  you,  can  you  see  the  Presley  knees 
palpitating  through  neutral,  pleatless.  whipcord. 
"Natural  look"  touch-of-leather  trousers?  Or  the  El- 
vis pelvis  rotating  around  an  expandable  repp  belt 
and  back-of-the-pants  strap?  Or  those  Homung 
shoulders  being  thrown  around  inside  a  reefer  neck 
sweater,  soft  Shetland  tweed  sport  coat  and  Chester- 
field topcoat  with  velvet  collar 

Gentlemen,  in  all  seriousness,  you  rau*t  admij_^ 
that  you  cannot. 

Or  can  you  picture  Gene  Vincent  be-hopp;ng  witlT 
LuLu  while  dressed  in  glen  plaid  cheviots,  a  chalHs 
tie  and  a  poplin  all  weather  trench  coat  with  sripedi 
lining?  Such  things  would  only  get  in  the  way  oK; 
one's  guitar.  ..--j         ^  j- 

I»pon  closer  examination  you  will  sW  these 
our  ilcading  citizens,  are  dfessed  in  pegged  'pants^ 
Italiiui  shirts  tnd  motorcjcle  jacketa  Vl'haf  aboui 
you?  ■  .  ,,  ! -^'^  ''■[]\i''^i'      * 

And  another  thing,  have  yoii  looked  ^aty^i^  hair^ 
lately.  J.P^ul  Shfeeidy?"  You  mi^t  notice  tUtii  tties* 
men  vixav&  long,  swept-bsck  manes  which  glitslen  itt 
the  television  spotlight.  Does  .vours?  Mo.st  assuredly' 
not.  • 

f|,Jr'am  not  imposing  a  new  standard . upon >ou. lir' 
from  it.  If  you  want  something  more  functional.  a| 
switch  to  paratropper  styl^,  sometime  called  A« 
plowboy  attir*.  is  in  order  as  an  alternative.  ! 

This  style  offers  two-tone  field  boots,  khaki  con»"; 
bat  pants  and  not  much  else;  all  very  functional.: 
Can  you  Ivy  Leaguers  hook  a  slide  rule  on  the  strap' 
in  the  back  of  pleatless  pants?  Sheer  nonsense,! 
since  your  straps  are  as  functional  as  an  appendix.' 

But  the  plowboy  is  sure  to  have  a  genuine  slides 
rule  strap  as  well  as  a  pocket  for' hammers,  collap^-j 
iblc  measuring  stick  and  nails.  ' 

Look  this  man  over  closely  next  time  he's  seen' 
heading  for  the  John  F.  Cushing  building  and  try 
to  adapt  to  his  style.  Trench  coats  may  come  and, 
go,  but  corduroy  and  blue  suede  overalls  are  alwa}"?! 
in  style. 

DON'T  ACT  CHIPPER 

Whichever  style  .vou  choose  be  sure  to  add  an-- 
other  touch  that  shows  you're  modem:  don't  act| 
chipper  and  don't  dress  meticulously.  You  will 
create  a  much  better  impression  if  you  stammer  a 
little,  throw  your  head  back  aiid  saj%  "Ah.  I  don't 
know"  real  moodji-  like. 

Keep  your  eyes  cast  down  and  only  come  to  life 
when  someone  mentions  sports  cars  because  this 
is  being  Jiauny  Deanish.  ^ 

*  «  * 

Hand  in  hand  wtih  your  new  dress,  you  must 
ungroom  your  speech.  I'm  not  going  to  redefine 
such  words  as  "cool"  or  a  "square  with  ruffles"  since 
this  is  old  stuff  in  your  dictionary  by  this  time. 
However  next  time  you're  standing  around  the  Coke 
machine  you  migtit  practice  a  roirtine  like  this. 

First  voice:  "Hey.  let's  darink  to  ha  fool,  cause 
ahm  that  fool  thuhal  tole  mah  baybuli  goodby." 

Second  voice:  "Ye whew  mean  yewhew  babyuh 
dungone  an  lef  yewhew?" 

First  voice:  "Yes.  thuh  wuhun  that  Ihe  luhuhuhu 
huuv  soho." 

Second  \oice:  "I  ihit  yewhur  prayah  that  thehe 
ahhansir  she  gives  ahat  there  end  of  the  day  may 
stihil  be  thuh  sayhame  for  as  4unhong  as  veMJvhew 
lihiv  " 

Third  voice:  "And  haahuv  yewhew  ahulmost 
lahohst  ycMhur  mind?" 

Fourth  voice:    Yup." 

The  trick  of  this  technique  is.  as  you  can  sec. 
to  hitch  up  a  little  right  in  the  middle  of  a  word. 
You  might  also  trj-  a  few  tremors  and  a  fit  or  two 
since  word  reaches  here  that  they've  gone  over  big 
on  the  eahhohst.  1  mean  coast. 

*  «  * 

Have  you  got  ever>thing  straight  now?  Remem- 
ber, no  more  Adlai  Stevenson-Princeton  talk  be- 
cause your  dungaree  doli  is  sure  to  didappro%'e  as 
will  all  her  rx-bber-soled  friends  at  the  sweet  shop 
on  Lonley  Strt^t.  While  you're  down  there  impress 
her  by  ordeiing  a  tutli-rduil-au-rooti  (which  is 
French   for  "at  the  rally.") 

Do  you  want  to  be  stereotyped?  No?  Then  join 
in  the  style  revolution  that  is  upon  us!  Students  of 
the  world  unite!  Yewhew  have  nothing  to  lose  but 
your  toggle  toppers  and  pork  pie  hats! 


NOVEMBEl 

Aften< 

'  Faculty 
Of  the 
play  an  ir 
Dual  meet; 
torical  A.sa 
through  Sa 
ton  Duke 

..'James  \\\ 
Southern 
ttae  U.NC 
member  ofl 
trill  take  o| 
i^ssociatior 
d^mial   adj 

.Prof  Jar 
liver  a  paj 
ment  and 
India,"   on| 


H« 


STE! 
10K 


167  E 


ir$ 


'^ 


SULTRl 

£3m  sat 

And 

-A  ds 

I  tried 
I  did  I 

Bui  al 
Iga^ 

If 

smokinj 
big,  bi^] 
Big  Bii 
aUthe 
xoore 

Like  I 
ACh«i 


1 

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.■i. 

9. 

10 

11. 

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13,  195« 


NOVEMBER  13,  195« 


THI  DAILY  TAt  HEEL 


PAGE    THREE 


ty 


and  wan* 

reined  up 

tudjing  ia 

:'s  on  a* 


tide:  "TTi^ 

In  with  the 

IS    witlMut 

*n  possi- 

two  etfii* 

frolicking 
IS  Shop/pT] 
^I]-round«d 
nan,  could 
_  football, 
i-doirn  an- 
cks. 

ing   classic 

fve  he  ftad 

It  see  for 

^rs.  looked 

of  these 
lat  I  have 
a  devoted 
these  men 


pt  the  sym- 
idmi  ration, 
I  none  other 

sley  knees 
whipcord. 

Or  the  EI- 

repp  belt 

Homung 

reefer  neck 

Id  Chester- 


lUdt  admi|^ 

|>pping  with" 
a  chalHs^ 
[with  srip^v. 
the  way  ol{| 


»pants{ 
'faboutj 

limlen  injl 
assure  dl]|; 

lunctional,  a ; 

called  0^ 

Native.  *  j 

khaki  con>-<( 

functii>aal.{ 

|on  the  strapj 

tr  nonsenae.i 

in  appendixi 

lenuine  slidel 

lers,  coUap^) 

4 

-.  i 

le  he's  seen' 
ling  and  ti^^ 
ly  come  and. 
Is  arc  always] 


\t  to  add  an-* 
don't  ad; 
ly.    You   will 
stammer  a 
•.\h.  1  don't 


come  to  lifo 
because  this 


ss.  you  must 
to  redefine 
ruffles"  since 
by  this  time. 

>und  the  Coke 

e  like  this. 

tia  fool,  'cause 

I  goodby." 

whew  babyuh 

t  Ihe  luhuhuhu 

yah  that  thehe 
f  the  day  may 
ng  as  ye^-hpw 

hew     ahulmost 


s  you  can  seC, 

Idle  of  a  word. 

(id  a  fit  or  two 

gone  over  big 


t  now'.'  Remem- 
icetoo  talk  be- 
0  disapprove  as 
the  sweet  shop 
n  there  impress 
rooti  (which     is 

'  No?  Theii  join 
us!  Studeiits  of 
liing  to  lose  but 
hats: 


"I 


History  Dept.  Faculty 
Attend  Hrstortcal  Meet 

Faculty  members  and  graduates 
of  the  XJNC  Dept.  of  History  will 
play  an  important  part  in  the  an- 
nual meeting  of  the  Southern  His- 
torical Assn.  to  be  held  Thursday 
through  Saturday  at  the  Washing- 
ton Duke  Hotel  in  Durham. 

•  James  W.  Patton,  curator  of  the 
Southern  Historical  Collection  of 
tJje  UNC  Library  and  formerly  a 
member  of  the  UNC  History  Dept., 
will  take  office  as  president  of  the 
Association  and  deliver  his  presi- 
dential address  Friday  night. 

.Prof  James  L.  Godfrey  will  de- 
liver a  paper,  "The  Labor  Govern- 
ment and  the  Independence'  of 
India,"  on     Thi^rsday. 


Indian  Librarian  Joins  UNC 
Library  Staff  Fpr  3  Months 

The  Reference  Librarian  for  the  j  interested    while     here   at     UNC. 
National   Librarv-  of  India.  Janar-  j  Kanitkar  replied,  "I  have  recently 


been  given  the  task  of  setting  up 
a  library  at  our  new  Indian  Insti- 
tute of  Public  Administration  in 
New  Delhi;  therefore  every  phase 
uf    library    work    is    important    to 


dan  M.  Kanitkar.  has  recently  join- 
ed the  UNC  library  staff  for  a 
three  months  visit.  Kanitkar  is 
here  to  study  American  library 
methods  and  to  faaing  information 
on  Indian  libraries. 

The   UNC   Library   was   one   of  j      ^hen  he  continued,  "Usuallv  a 

11  in  the  United  States  choosen  by  1              ,      .  „     ^       .,        ,  .  '  , 

..       -  .        ^.       ,    o  I  ♦•.,«     o^^,     "6w  school  collects  piles  of  books 

the    International    Relations    Com-  j  *^ 

mitte  of  the  American  Library  As- 1  a"^     ^^«n  <^a"s     in     professional 
sociation  to  receive  Indian   Libra-  :  librarians    when    these    books    be- 


rians  now  in  this  country. 


come   unmanageable."   "This   time 


\Vhen  asked  in  what  phase  of  !  ^"^  ^^e  going  to  make  a  proper  be- 
ginning ancf  start  our  library  as 
it  should  be."  he  said. 


the  library  program  he  was  most 


WENTWOftTH  &  SLOAN 

JEWELERS 

PRESENT  THE 

"WORLD'S  FINEST  CLASS  RING" 


(By  JOHN  ROBERTS  MFG.  CO.) 

STERLING  SILVER $23,00 

10KGOLD 

'  Medium  Weight  __. ^ 

Heavy  Weight  ^ 

Extra  Heavy  Weight  


Plus  10%   Fed.   Excise  Tax 
$5.00  Deposit  —  Balance  C.O.D. 


$27.00 
$29.00 
$3  too 


167  E.  FRANKLIN  ST. 


PHONE  9  3331 


•"By  studying  your  present  pre- 
codures  and  their  devellopment, 
we  hope  to  have  a  very  effective 
library  program  at  our  new  school 
and  to  avoid  the  mistalces  that  you 
probably  made  along  the  way."  he 
said. 

He  explained  that  he  came  to 
UNC  because  it  has  one  of  tho 
oldest  state  university  libraries  in 
the  country  and  also  because  of 
its  Institute  of  Government. 

In  speaking  of  Indian  libraries 
in  general,  Kanitkar  stated  that 
at  present  they  are  rather  limited. 
He  added  that  in  the  second  5- 
year  plan,  which  goes  into  efect 
next  year,  provisions  are  being 
made  for  establishing  a  library 
in  each  district. 

The  books  in  these  libraries  will 
be  in  the  language  of  the  people 
of  the  particular  district  and  mo- 
bile units  will  circulate  them 
throughout  the  region. 

In  concluding  he  added,  "'Of 
course  this  program  will  be  handi- 
capped by  our  poor  roads,  but  we 
are  working  on  those  too.  All  of 
these  problems  are  interrelated 
and  must  be  solved  together." 


Covering  The  Univer$ity  Campus 


Chest 

(Continued  from  Page  One) 
ceives  60%  of  total  Campus  Chest 
contributions. 

Also  included  in  the  Campus 
Chest  Drive  are  the  Goettinger 
Exchange,  20'7r;  Care.  13*^^;  Can- 
cer, 7%. 

The  Campus  Ghest  Drive  was 
first  slated  to  run  from  Nov.  4- 
10.  but  because  the  goal  was  not 
met,  the  drive  was  extended 
through  Thursday.  Nov.  15,  Miss 
Aidridge  said. 

In  a  final  plea  for  funds  to 
meet  this  year's  goal.  Miss  Ai- 
dridge said.  "Can  we  as  students 
neglect  this  student's  responsibili- 
ty in  student  to  $tudent  aid  in 
giving  to  these  worthy  causes?  If 
you  cannot  afford  to  give  money. 
if  even  a  nickle  is  beyond  your 
capabilities,  then  have  you  clothes 
or  books  that  you  don't  need  or 
want?  Cart  you  afford  not  to  give 
a   nickel?" 


LILIAN  PIBERNIK 

.  plays  here  tonight 
♦ 

Miss  Lilian  Pibernik  Is 


IT'S  FOR  REAL! 


by  Chester  Fi«ld 


SUiTRY  SCINE  WITH  THE  HOUSB^ARTY  OUBEN 

She  Mi  next  to  me  on  the  train  tiiat  day 

And  a  wave  of  pajume  wafted  my  way 
;— A  dangerous  scent  that  is  called  "I'm  Bad!** 

Deliberately  made  to  drive  men  mad. 
I  tried  to  think  thouf^its  that  were  pure  and  good 

I  did  the  vary  best  that  I  could! 
But  alas,  that  perfume  was  stronger  than  I 

I  gave  her  a  Idas  . . .  and  got  a  black  eye! 

If  kissing  strangers  has  its  dangers,  in 
smoking  at  least  enjoy  the  real  tiling,  the 
Mig,  big^deasurt  of  a  Chesta^eld  King! 
Big  sise,  big  flavor,  smoother 
all  the  way  because  it's  pecked 
more  smoothly  by  Accu*R«y* 

like  your  ideasiare  6^? 
A  Oioileillold  Kins  Imi>  tvrytfcliHlt 


UNC  Public  Health  Staffers 
Present  Papers  At  Meeting 


Six  members  of  the  faculty  of 
the  University  School  of  Public 
Health  arc  presenting  papers  this 
week  at  the  84th  annual  meeting 
of  the  American  Public  Health 
dissociation.  ^  ^ 

The  meeting  is  being  held  in 
Atlantic  City.  N.  J.  this  week.  Ap- 
proximately 8.000  participants  are 
attending  from  throughout  the 
United  States  and  Canada. 

The  theme  for  this  year's  meet- 


ing   is      How    .\re   We    Doing    in 
Public  Health?" 

UNC  men  presenting  papers 
will  be  Dr.  Warfield  Garson  and 
Dr.  Joseph  Portnoy  of  theirD^t. 
of  Experimental  MWiciner-  6r. 
Roger  HOwell,  r>ept.  of  Mental 
Health;  Dr.  Bernard  G. 
berg,  Dept.  of  Biostatistics;  Dr. 
Charles  Cameron.  Dept.  of  Public 
Health  Administration;  and  Dr. 
John  Cassel,  Dept.  of  Epidemi- 
ology. 


Guest  Pianist  Tonight 

Miss  Lilian  Pibernik,  pianist,  will 
be  presented  in  a  concert  of  Hun- 
garian folk  music  in  Hill  Hall  to- 
day at  8  p.m. 

Her  recital  is  the  fifth  of  UNC's 
Dept.  of  Music  regfflar  Tuesday 
evening  series  concerts,  which  are 
open  to  the  public  free  of  charge. 

Miss  Pibernik'g  program  will  in- 
clude Bartak's  Suite  Opus  14,  four 
pieces  from  Kodaly's  "Zongora 
Muszika,"  Schubert's  Sonata  in  A 
Major  and^  Bach's  Toccata  in  D 
Major. 


Elections 

(Continued  frovi  Page  I) 

will  be  located  at  the  intersec- 
tion of  Mason  Farm  and  Pittsboro 
Roads.  Another  box  will  lie  locat- 
ed at  the  intersection  of  Daniels 
Rd..  Bagley  Dr.,  Jackson  Circle, 
and  Mason  Farm  Rd. 

Women's  Dormitory  District  1 
—All  women  living  in  University- 
owned  buildings,  which  are  not 
sorority  houses.  Voting  in  each 
dorm. 

Women's  Town  District  1  —  All 
women  students  not  living  in  Uni- 
versity-owned buildings,  and  wom- 
en residing  in  sorority  houses. 
VoUng  in  Gerrard  Hall. 

Students  may  vote  only  in  their 
respective  voting  places. 


DENTAL  DAMES 

Jhe  Dental  Dames  will  meet  in 
the  Assembly  Room  of  the  lAhruj 
today  at  8  p.m.  Dr.  G.  B.  Johnson 
will  speak  on  "The  Crisis  in  (hK" 
Public  School  Education. " 

SQUARE  DANCE  CLUB 

The  Square  Dance  Club  will  meet 
today  in  the  Women's  Gym  at  7 
p.  m.  New  members  have  been  in- 
vited to  attend. 

MODERN    DANCE   CLUB 

The  Modem  Dance  Club  will 
meet  Wednesday  at  4  p.m.  in  the 
dance  studio  of  the  Womens  Gym. 

EDUCATION  WIVES 

Education  Wives  will  meet  to- 
day at  8  p.m.  at  the  home  of  Mrs. 
l^eorge  Shephard.  Wives  of  gra- 
duate stulents   in   education   have 

been    invited   to    attend.  i 

I 

SCiENTlFIC  SOCIETY 

The  Elisha  Mitchell  Scientific  So- ' 
ciety  will  meet  today  at  7:30  p.m.  ■ 
hi  206  Phillips.  The  program  will 
include  discissions  by  J.  L.  Irvia 
and  J.  C.  Morrow.  i 

CHEMISTRY  CLUB 

The  Chemistry  Club  will  hold  its 
regular  meeting  tohight  at  7:30 
in  room  207  Venable  Hail.  Dr.  Vir- 
gil Mann  will  be  the  speaker. 

WUNCTV 

Today's  schedule  for  WUNC-TV, 
the  University's  educational   tele- 
vision station,  channel  4: 
12:45  Muaic.  < 

1:00  Today  on  Farm.': 

1:30  Music  in  Air. 

2:00  Science  and  Natare. 

2:30  Sign   Off. 

5:44  Sign  On. 

5:45  Music 

6:00  Magic  Lantern 

6:15  Sports  Clinic. 

6:30  News. 

6:45  Sports. 

7:00  Books  and   People. 

7:15  Bible  Course. 

8:00  Dr.  Shivers. 

8:45  State  Govemiiirtnt. 

9:30  Musical  Forms. 

8:45  State  Govertwnent. 

9:30  Musical  Forms. 
10:m  Final  Edition. 
10.05  Sign  Off. 
WUNUC 

WITNC.  the  University's  educa- 
tional FM  station:     j     > 

7:00  Intermezzo    < 

7:15  Over  the  Back  Fence 

7:30  Vistas  of  Israel 


day.  Nov.  14.  at  8  p.m.  on  the  Duke 
University  campcis.  j 

John  Rlatt  from  Australia  will 
speak  on  "The  Theory  of  Liquid 
Helium."  Dr.  BJatt  is  a  professor 
at  tke  University  of  Sydney.  j 

UNIVERSITY  CLUB 

Thfe  University  Club  will  meet 
tonight  at  7:3t>  on  the  second  floor 
of  the  Y.  It  is  very  important  that 
all  representatives  and  other  in- 
terested persons  are  present,  for . 
the  meeting  is  concerned  with  i 
plans  for  the  Notre  Dame  game, 
club  officials  said. 


WESLEY  CHOIR 

The  Wesley  Choir  will  hold  its 
regular  rehearsal  today  from  7  to 
8  p.m.  at  the  University  Methodist 
Church. 


HELLO  YOUNO  CAMPUS 
LOVERS 

Come  see  lis  t'or  the  Privacy 
of  our  "'Dark  Room"  and  some 
real  swinging 

PIZZA 
That  is  guaraftte^d^'to  make  you 
Fall  in  love  all  over  again. 

CAFE  MOUZA 
OPEN  24  HOURS 


ALTER  YOUR 
CLOTHES 

to  the 

IVY  LOOK 

Drop  by  today  and  let   us 
show   you   what   proper   altera- 
tions can  do  for  your  outdated 
wardrobe. 

Come  in  early  for  your  holiday 
alterations. 


•  PETE 
The  Tailor 

135V2  E.  Franklin  St. 


©0 


Green-,  vote 


Office  Of  Student  Activities 
Realeases  Schedule  For  Week 


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DAILY    CROSSWORD 

ACROSS  5.  Platform  21.  Measure 

1.  Persian  title     6.  Cone-bear-  <H«b.) 

.■i.  Hssteiied  ing  tree  22.  Term  of 

9.  Nuclei  of  7.  Arabian  endear- 

atarch  grain         chieftain  ment 

19.  Durstien  S.  Long  for  24.  Metallic 

11.  The  bishop      11.  Father  rocka 

of  Rome  12.  Process  oi       25.  First 

12-  Type  of  food  as-  man 

,   i^astry  similatioqi  <Bib.) 

14  AHfent  13.  Variant  2«.  Juice 

'  <«bbr.)  of  "his-  of  the         r*»t*t4tr»  Amw^e 

lS.Btitiah  15.  Follower  bully  tree         JT.  Male 

eolony  (Afr.)        ot  Adolf  28.  Mexican  dish        de«cen4aaC 

1«.  Peers,  Hitler  29.  River  (Eur.)  38.  Place 

'  conectively      17.  Angk>-  31.  Scoff  40.  South 

It.  SmaHest  Saxon  serf      33.  Whirl  AmeriC* 

atatc  (abbr.)  it.  Uprising  34.  Notioa  (abbr.) 

29.  Edict 
21.  Poems 
23.  Ifextoui 
2Vlnctte 
37.F«nMl 
diplomatie 
•gr^ment 
M.  Baby's  word 

31.  Mountain 
ranges 

32.  People 
devoid  of 
pigmenta- 
tien 

35.  Pronoun 
3«.  Young  girl 
37.  Maat 

.W.  Woody  plant 
40.  Spirit 
41."W'Jnglike 
42.  Poker  stake 
DOWN 

1.  Coasts 

2.  Ripened 
fruit  of 
the  rose 

3.  .Man 
beverage 

4  Bxclamatien 


According  to  the  Office  of  Stu- 1 
dent  Actovities.  the  following 
events  will  take  place  on  campus 
during  this  coming  week: 

At  8  p.m.  today.  Lillian  Piber- 
nik will  give  a  piano  recital  'in 
Hill  Hall. 

The  varsity  soccer  team  will 
travel  to  Duke  for  a  game  in  the 
afternoon. 

"Androcles  and  the  Lion."  the 
latest  Playmakers  production  opens 
Wednesday  evening.  The  play  will 
run  through  Sunday,  Nov.  18. 
Nightly  performances  will  be 
staged  at  8:30  p.m. 

The  School  of  Education  will 
hold  its  annual  convocation  Thurs- 
day in  Gerrard  Hall  from  3-5  p.m 

CLASSIFIEDS 

WANTED:  THOSE  AMBITIOUS 
Scholars  who  burn  otit  them- 
selves and  the  midnight  oil  to 
try  our  crazy  cuisine  and  go 
away  recharged.  Cafe  Mouza  op- 
en 24  hours. 


7:45  Variations  o(  a  The^^*' 
Theme 

8:00  Hill  Hall  Cqncert 
10:00  News 

10:15  Evening  Maslerwork 
11:30  Sign  Off 


Any  .student  who  is  unable  to 
at  the  proper  polling  place 
because  of  internment  in  the  In- 
firmary, absence  from  Chapel  Hill, 
or  any  other  reason  approved  by 
the  Elections  Board,  will  be  al- 
loifred  to  vote. 

Run-offs   will   be   held   Nov.   20. !  PHYSICS  COLOQUlM 
A  run-off  will  be  held  if.  for  an  j     A  joint  Duke-UKC  Physics  Col- 
office  to  which  there  is  to  be  only  I  l»quium  will  be  held  ofl  Wednes 
one  candidate  elected,  no  one  can- 1  """■  '       "^^ 

didate  receives  a  majority  of  votes  '  candidates  by  the  njimber  of  posi- 
cast  for  the  office.  j  tions  to  be  filled,  ajnd  then  divid- 

If  candidates   for  two   or  more  j.  ing    by    two.    Any  excess   of  this 
offices  (constituting  a  group)  are;  number  will   be   a   majority.  The 


In  conjunction  with  the  program, 
Archibald  Henderson  will  lecture 
on  the   subject,  "George   Bernard  i  to  be  selected,  and  there  are  more  j  candidates  who  may  be  in  such  a 


iit  iiit^d 


Of,  course.  "Most  everyone  does — 

often.  Because  a  few  monKnts  over 

ice-cold  Coca-Cola  refresh  you  so. 

It'i  iparkling  with  natural  goodness, 

pure  and  wholesome  —  and 

naturally  friendly  to  your  figure. 

Feel  like  having  a  Coke? 


•OmtO  UNDW  AUTHO«IT»  Of  THE  COCA-COLA  COMPANY  BY 


?»"«"^'I3 


Shaw — Man  of  the  Century"  at  8 
p.m. 

The  Freshman  soccer  team  will 
travel  to  .Duke  for  an  afternoon 
game. 

"M."  a  GMAB  Tree  flick  will 
be  shown  in  Carroll  Hall  at  8  p.m. 
Thursday. 

A  dance  will  be  held  Friday 
night.  The  Campus  Chest  Dance 
starting  at  8  p.m.  will  be  held 
in  Woollen  Gymnasium. 

There  will  be  a  rehearsal  for 
"Esther  Wake"  from  7:30-11  p.m. 
in  Memorial  Hall  Friday  evening. 

Two  varsity  teams  will  travel 
away  from  campus  this  Saturday. 
The  soccer  team  goes  to  play  the 
Terps  in  Maryland  while  the  foot- 
ball squad  goes  the  other  direction 
to  face  the  "Fighting  Irish"  at 
Notre  Dame. 

Monday  the  varstiy  cross  country 
teamwill  participate  in  the  ACC 
meet  at  Charlottesville,  Va. 


candidates  for  election  than  there  I  run-off  will  be  determined  by  the  ] 
are  offices,  then  the  majority  shall  i  number  of  seats  to  be  filled  in  the ' 
be  ascertained     b-y     dividing     the    run-off.  For  every  spat  open  there 
total    vote   cast    for   all   of   such  |  may  be  two  candidates. 


The  Junior  Sensation 


Why  Pay  High  Prices? 

Tve  Held  Them  Down  Since  July,  '55 

ASK  YQUR  BUDDY!  < 

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ESSO  GAS 
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ESSO  GAS 
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Reg.  29.9         H.T.32.9 

Plus 

Bring  This  Ad  And  Get  1  Cent  Off  Per  Gal.  Gas, 

5  Cents  Per  Qt.  OH 

?      WHERE      ? 

At  The  Students'  Friend 

WHIPPLE'S  ESSO  SERVICE 


See  It  For  Yourself  At 

The    Intimate 
Bookshop 

205  E.  Franklin  St.  Op«n  Till  10  P.M. 


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a  t  r 


B     RECK 

NEWBRECK     CREME     RINSE 

Breck  Creme  Rinse,  a  new  prejjaratitm,  is  used  after  the 
shampoo  to  add  softness  and  manageabjlity  to  your  hair. 
It  gives  the  hair  lustre  and  body  without  leaving  an 
oily  appearance.  Hair  that  has  a  tendency  to  tangle 
is  made  easy  to  comb  and  arrange  by  use  of  Breck 
Creme  Rinse.  It  is  helpful  in  the  care  of  permanent 
wav«8  and  'in  the  prevention  of  dry,  brittle  hair. 
Creme  Rinse    S  n.  II. 00  plus  lax. 


^«S>l£«J«»>*«< 


PAGE    FOUR 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HBEL 


NOVEMBER  13,  1956 


Harriers   Take    State    Crown:    Frosh    Lose 


Duke  Wins 
Frosh  Title 
Over  UNC 

RALEIGH  —  Speedy  Gary 
Weisger  broke  his  own  record 
here  yesterday  in  leading  the 
Ouke  University  freshman  harriers 
to  the  state  cross-country  cham- 
pionship. 

Weisger's  time  of  12:03  was 
good  for  a  first  place  finish  ahead 
of  Carolina's  Fick  Arthur  and 
Cowles  Liipfert.  Arthur  placed 
second  with  a  time  ofr  12:03  and 
Liipfert's  12:16  netted  him  a  third 
place  finish. 

The  Blue  Devils  finished  with 
i  team  total  of  24  points  and  a 
good  margin  over  the  second  place 
Tar  Babies  who  had  48  points.  N. 

C.  State  placed  third  with  72 
points,  folowed  by  Duke  with  92 
and  E\n  with  164. 

The  race  was  very  close  most 
of  the  way  with  Weiseger  and 
Liipfert  running  ahead  of  the  pact 
for  a  great  deal  of  the  distance.  I 
Arthur  made  his  move  and  puUed 
ahead  of  Lipfert,  but  as  the  three 
boys  hit  the  home  stretch  with 
Weiseger  well  out  front,  Liipfert 
made  one  last  big  effort  and  pull- 
ed a  few  feet  ahead  of  Arthur 
but  fell  behind  again  in  the  final 
200  yards.  •» 

The  summary:  l-Weisiger  D, 
12:03.  2-Arthur.  C,  12:14.  3-Liip- 
fert,  C.  12:23.  4-Shield,  D,  12-28. 
5-Menaker.  D,  12:30.  6-Van  Every, 

D,  12:32.  7-Reeling,  S.  12:35.  8- 
Blazemore,  D,  12:36.  9-Emmerke, 
S.  12:59.  10-Hurd,  D,  13:03.  11- 
Packard,  S.  13:05.  12-Maloof,  D, 
13:08.  13-Kennedy,  WF.  13:09.  14- 
Jordan,  WF.  13:10.  15-Bagwell,  C, 
13:12. -Ifr-HoriMi,  S,  ■  13:16.'  17- 
Wlthrow,  C.  13*1B. 


Beatty  Sets  |wmdaic  I 
New  Mark;  '  ' 

Shea  2nd 


RALEIGH  —  Jim  Beatty,  Caro- 
lina's   great    all-america    distance! 


YMterday's   Tag   Fpotball    Results 

Victory  Village  13,  Ruffin  No. 
1  12;  AKPSI  6,  Delta  Sig  O;  Man- 
gum  no.  2  over  Stacy  no.  1  by 
forfeit;  Law  School  over  Winston 
by  forfeit;  SAE  14,  Pika  7;  ATO 
8,  TEP  ^;   Med  School  no.  3   13, 

^^  A         *u       ♦      u     .    '  Stacy  no.  2  0. 
runner,   ad<red   another   trophy  to ;  Y^t.rd./s  Volleyball    Results 


his  already  overflowing  collection 
as  he  blazed  home  with  a  record 


Kappa  Sig  over  ZBT  by  forfeit; 
Sigma  Chi  2,  SPE  0;  Sigma  Nu  2. 


Ybb  Top  Poll 


Colorful  Ted  Youhanna  will  hold  down  the  starting  insid*  l«ft 
forward  position  for  the  Carolina  soccar  team  this  aftomoon  when 
they  moot  the  Duke  Blue  Devils  in  Durham.  YeuhMma,  a  native  of 
Bagdad,  Persia,  has  been  a  mainstay  in  the  Tar  Heel  attack  all  year 
long  with  his  skillful  dribbling  and  accurate  shooting. 

3  P.  M.  IN  DURHAM 


Booters  Play  Duke 
In  Big  ACC  Game 


breaking  time  of  20:06.5  to  lead  j  »KE  no.  2  1;  TEP  over  Phi  Delt 
tha  Carolina  varsity  to  the  state  |  by  forfeit;  Zeta  Psi  2,  KA  0;  Chi 
cross-country  championship  here  1  P**  °°  ^  2,  Beta  1;  Kap  Sig  2, 
yesterday.  ^^'^  ^^^  ^''  ^^^b  over  Aycock  by 

j  forfeit. 
The  Tar  Heel  harriers  placed  Today's  Tag  Football  Schedule  .. 
five  men  in  the  top  ten  to  com-  3:45;  Field  no  1,  DKE  vs  AKPsi; 
pletely  overwhelm  their  nearest  op- 1  Field  no  2,  Sigma  Nu  vs.  Phi  Delt; 
ponent  N.  C.  State  28-71.  Davidson  i  Field  no  3,  Phi  Gam  vs.  SPE;  Field 
edged  out  a  third  place  finish  I  no.  4,  PIKA  vs.  TEP;  Field  no  5, 
over  Wake  Forest  with  a  team  i  Chi  Phi  vs.  Pi  Lamb, 
total  of  87;  the  Deacons  finished  j  4:45:  Field  no.  1,  ZBT  vs.  Kap 
with  88  points.  Duke  completed  Psi;  Field  no  2,  Theta  Chi  vs.  Sig 
the  five  team  field  with  95  points,  j  Chi;  Field  no  3,  KA  vs.  SAH;  Field 

no.  5,  Kap  Sig  vs.  SAR 


Rsturn  Of  Lacrosse  To 
Sports  Program  Pushed 

An  attempt  to  return  lacrosse 
to  the  Carolina  athleticc  program 
is  being  made  by  student  Spencer 
Everette.  Everette  said  in  connec- 
tion with  his  organizational  at- 
tempt, "It  will  be  impossible  for 
the  sport  to  succeed,  however,  un- 
less enough  students  show  real 
interest   and   enthusiasm." 

He  urges  that  persons  interested 
in  the  return  of  lacrosse  this 
spring  to  contact  him  immediately. 

Persons  interested  may  contact 
Spencer  Everette  at  140  Cobb,  A. 
T.O.  house,  or  phone  8-9092. 


Beatty's    time   eclipsed    the   old 
course  record   of  21:05.9  held  by 


WP»— Tlie  Tennessee.  Volunteers 
are  the  No.  1  football  team  in  the 
latest  Asaociated  Press  poll,  edg- 
kt^rout  Ojcialiomo.  by  ^wo  points  in 
the  elgatst  vote  ot  th«  •  /se*Kn. 
Michigan  State  replaced  Georgia 
T^  in  tirird  \9\i1Ue  as  the  Engi- 
neers dropped  to  fourth. 


Tar  Babies  Work  As 
Unit  To  Stomp  Biddies 


By   DAVE   WIBLE 


Last  Saturday  night's  Tar  Baby 
rampage  over  the  hapless  South 
Carolina  Biddies  proved   that   the 

Carolina  frosh  are  powerful  in  both        ......        _^       ,     „ 

*u  ■  J  !.»     1      1 11  the  third  quarter  the  Tar  Babies 

their  running  and  passing  attacks. '  ,  .  j  ,.  oamta 

I  completed  5  passes  m  a  row  only 
The  Tar  Babies  used  the  ground  ,  ^^  be  penalized   each   time.  Thev 


Both  teams  have  lost  to  the  VTr- 
ginia  Cavaliers  and  by  the  idential 
2-0  margin.  Duke  has  already  play- 
ed Maryland,  the  conference  cham- 
pions for  the  past  three  years,  and 
gave  the  Terps  a  good  battle  be- 
fore bowing  3-1. 

.   'Carolina  will  face  Maryland  Sa- 
turday, Nov.   17  tn  Coilege  Park. 

Md.  in  a  contest  which  will  jnark 
the  Tar  Heel^s  last  game  of  the 

I  season.  , 

Duke,  like  Carolina,  had  its  re- 
I  serve  strength  considerably  streng- 
i  thened  this  year  due  to  the  addi- 
!  lion  of  several  sophomores  from 
i  a  top-rate  freshman  squad. 

i      Last  year's   Carolina   and   Duke 
The  Tar  Babies  worked  as  a  unft    freshman   teams   waged   a     hotly- 


By  JIM  PUftKS 

T-he  once-beaten  varsity  soccer 
tfeart  will  have  a  good  opportunity 
to' redeeta  Itself  for  Thursday's 
2-0  loss  tb  the  University  of  Vir- 
ginia' wlien  it  faces  the  Duke  Blue 
DevUs  at  3  p.m.   in   Durham. 

Today's  conference  test  will  be 
hit  f>u«boVer  for  Carolina  as  both 
teani^  ate  about  equal,  with  Duke 
shbwitfg  a  slight  edge  in  potential 
scoring  ability. 


the  whole  contest.  When  they  got 
a  break,  they  cashed  in  on  it.  When 
they  got  into  a  hole,  they  worked 
their  way   out.   At  one   time   late 


and  air  equally  well  as  they  mar- 


were  backed  up  from  their  own  30 


contested  two-game  series,  with 
the  first  game  ending  in  a  tie  and 
Carolina  winning  the  second  by  a 
narrow  one-goal  margin. 

Duke  will  be  seeking  revenge 
for  last  year's  series  with  Coach 
Marvin  Allen's  varsity  in  which  the 
Carolina  eleven  defeated  the  Blue 
Devils   twice. 

If  Carolina  can  defeat  Duke,  it 


All  Premiums  And  Draft 

T.  V.  —  Good  Piaco  To 

Watch  Bdxing  &  Football 

Bring  Your  Date 

SANDWICHES  OP  ALL  KINDS 

WEST  FRANKLIN  STREET  LUNCHEONETTE 

Next  to  Bus  station 

Phone  9-2846 


ched  ov^  the  Biddies.  The  Car<v  |  ^^^^  ^^^  gouth  Carolina  36.  It  was 
Una  frosh  went  overland  for  three  ;  „^  jj,^  ^-^^^  p^^^  ^^^„  Cummings 

1  air'frthe  oX\"  0  '    l'"^  ^  '°'''"'^"  °"  ^*^^  ^  '^  «^*  t  ^^^»  ^^  ^  ^'-"^  ^-  «  tie  for  the 

,^        ^  K  UK   T  o      »  "^^  ""^  *^*  ^""^^  ^"^  ^"'"•^  «*  ^^^    conference  title  despite  Thursday's 

180  pound  halfback  Ron  Hopman   ^me  time.  1  loss  to  the  CavaUers 

started  things  roling  late  in  the '. 
first  quarter  for  the  Tar  Babies 
when  he  gathered  in  a  South  Ca- 
rolina punt  on  his  own  25  and  gal- 
loped up  the  side  line  to  go  all 
the  way  untouched. 

The  Biddies  then  took  charge 
and  marched  to  the  North  Carolina 
37.  With  first  and  ten  on  the  37 
the  Biddies  fumbled  away  their 
scoring  chance  to  alert  Tar  Baby 
Fred  Mueller. 

The  running  and  passing  of  Cor- 
nell Johnson  moved  the  Tar  Heels 
down  to  the  Biddie  11  where  quar- 
terback Jack  Cummings  threw  to 
Charlie  Cotton  for  the  second 
score.  Fred  Karris  put  the  extra 
point  through  to  make  it  13-0  at 
the  half. 

Cummings  kept  his  arm  warm. 
Mid-way  in  the  third  quarter  he  hit 
Johnson  on  a  screen  pass  at  the 
50.  The  High  Point  flash  wasted  no 
time  in  running  the  South  Carolina 
half  of  the  field.  Fred  Mueller  and 
Mike  McDade  threw  beautiful  down 
field  blocks  to  open  the  gate  for 
Johnson's  score. 

Hopman  carried  the  load  on  the 
next  one,  as  he  intercepted  a  Bid- 
die  paK  on  the  50  and  carried  it 
to  the  36.  Four  plays  later  he  ran 
to  his  left.  Nelson  Lowe  and  Fred 
Hxirris  threw  two  good  blocks,  and 
the  way  was  clear  for  his  second 
tally. 

South  Carolina  again  fumbled 
away  uiotber  scoring  chance  en 
North  Carolina's  96.  The  Tar  Babies 
went  all  the  way  again.  Wade 
Smith  scored  on  a  drive  play  frum 
the  Biddie  38,  for  the  final  Tar 
Saby  score. 


Bring  y^f  Doctor  i 
profcrlpllo"*  to  • 


t3- 


O  Why  «  Prescription 
Specialist.'  One  reasoa  is 
that  our  large  prescriptioa 
volume  permits  us  to  catrj 
ample  stocks  of  a  great 
variety  of  drugs.  Thus  mHy 
prescription— simple  or 
complex— is  compounded 


promptly  and  precisely  as 
the  Doctor  directs.  You 
will  find,  too,  that  our 
prices  are  uniformly  fair. 
They  are  based  on  ac- 
curately-reckoned costs. 


SUTTON'S 

Phono  9-^81 


Today's   Volloyball   Schodule 

,     ^     ,  „.,       ^^  4:00:  Court  no.  1,  ATO  vs.  Delt 

yesterday^^nmnerupM^e    Shea;  Sig.   ^^^^^   ^^    ^    ^j^^^^y   ^.„^g^ 

,  "s.  Old  West;  Court  no  3,  Alexan- 

I  der  no.  2  vs.  Everett  no.  1;  Court 
no.  4,  Old  E&si  vs.  Winston. 

,     5:00:  Court  no.  1,  Alexander  no. 

j  1  vs.  Med  School  no.  1;  Court  no. 
Lanky  Dave  Scurlock  aided  the  1 2  Dental  School  vs.  Joyner;  Court 
Tar  Heel  cause  with  a  fifth  place  j  °o-   S.   Lewis   vs.    Everett   no.    2; 
finish   in   a   time   of   22:04.   John    ^°"^^  "«•  *•  Ma^^^y  ^s.  Ruffin. 
Reaves  and  Howard  Kahn  rounded  VOLLEY   BALL 

out   the    Tar    Heel's    top    five    in       Carr  Dorm   will   meet   Tri   Delt 
ninth  and  tenth  places  respective-    in  the  finals  of  the  W.A.A.  Volley- 


of  North  Carolina  State.  Shea  fin 
ished  this  one  with  a  time  o 
21:06.  Carolina'*  Everett  Whatley 
took  third  place  in  the  meet  with 
a  21:38  time. 


ly. 

Yesterday's  victory  was  a  repe- 
tition of  the  1955  state  meet  in 
which  Beatty  also  came  home  well 
ahead  of  the  field. 

The  Tar  Heel  speedster  in  his 
last  season  with  the  Tar  Heels, 
had  little  trouble  with  Shea  after, 
the  first  mile.  Shea  was  a  few  |  ^«a™  ^re  Joan  Wilsey  and  Sue 
feet  out  front  for  the  first  few  Gi^hner.  Both  teams  are  ready  for 
minutes   but  Beatty   turned  on   a    "»«  """^^s^-  ^ans  have  been  urged 

burst   of   speed   to   go   ahead   for  |  to  u-atch  the  game. 

good  after  about  a  mile. 


ball  Tournament  tonight  at  7  p.m. 
Carr  dorm  has  beat  ADPi,  67-21, 
and  Alpha  Gam,  39-28.  Tri  Delt 
beat  Smith,  32-23,  and  Pi  Phi  45- 
2& 

Leading  players  for  Tri  Delt  in- 
clude Diana  Ashley,  with  her  wick- 
ed serve  and  Pat  Brandt  with  her 
powerful     spike.     Heading    Carr's 


The  Tar  Heel  harriers  will  be 
shooting  for  the  Atlantic  Coast 
Conference  cross-country  title 
Monday  in  Charlottesville  Va.  Last 
year  Carolina  won  the  ACC  meet 
but  the  championship  went  to 
Maryland  on  a  dual  meet  basis. 

The   summarj';    1-Bcaty,   C,   20:- 
06.5.  2-Shea,  S,  21:06.  3-WhaUey, 
C,  21:38.  4-Medlin,  WF,  21:56.  5-; 
Scurlock,     C,     22:04.     6-McBryde,  j 
David.  22:15.  7-Hotelling,  D.  22:21. ! 
8-F.    Walker,    S,    22:24.    9-Reaves, ! 
C,    22:27.    10-Kahn.    C,    22:39.    11- 
Williams,  C,  22:48.  ! 


Carolina 


Tho  Tar  Hoofs  Protcrlption  Contor" 


TODAY 


June  ALLYSON^ 
COLLINS  •  GRAY 

Ann  Ann 

SHERIDAN  •  MILLER 


The  OPPOSITE  SEX*^ 


IS  YOUR  WARDROBE 
CHOCK  FULL  O' 
HOLIDAY  SPICE? 


Now  that  the  festive  season  is 
approaching,  it's  time  to  take 
inventory  of  your  wordrol)e  and 
let  Uncle  Milty  put  some  good 
old  spice  into  it.  Since  a  good 
many  of  our  customers  are  from 
other  parts  of  the  country,  wt 
have  to  stock  a  far  greater  as- 
sortment than  other  stores.  Con- 
sequently our  stocks  stay  fresh 
and  ample  at  all  times.  Just 
added  an  unusual  asosrtmeni 
of  suits  to  our  selections  includ- 
ing subdued  worsted  glen 
plaids. 


MILTON'S 

Clothing  Cupboard 


IT  RIPS  OPEN 
THE  HOT  HELL 
BEHIND  THE 
GLORY! 


This  is  a  picture  that  grabs  you  by  tha  throat  ond  shovtft 
you  into  tht  shell-ripping,  blood-drenched,  scr«oming  h«ot 
of  war. 

Here  'is  the  h«ll  behind  the  glory . '. .  th*  roal  guts  and  smell 
of  bottlol  This  is  the  story  they  didn'f  toll-of  the  heroes  who 
stood  up  under  fire,  and  the  few  who  belly-crawled  outi 


The  ASSOCIATES  and  ALDRICH  Co.  pieseots 


JACK  PALANCE 
EDDIE  ALBERT 


LEE  MmROBEIU  STRAOSS-RICIIARD  MECKEl- BUDDY  EBSEN 


^WIlllAMSMITHEIIS 


NORMM  MOOn  nVL  VMOM   mmTpoc  ROBERT  ALDRiCK 


TODAY 

And 

WEDNESDAY 


Everybody 

Has 

Christmas 

Cards 

But 

NOBODY 

Has  Such 

Pretty 

Nickel  Cards 

As 

THE  INTIAAATE 
BOOKSHOP 

205  East  Franklin  Street 
Open  Till  10  P.M. 


^  SPORT  COAT 

In'Hand  Wot«q  Imh  TwMds 

Bright  clear  colors  (lively  as  on  Irish  jig)  proclaim  the 
unique  individuality  that  only  skillful  hond-croflers  con 
weave  into  g  bolt  of  Jrish  Tweed^^ 


'  Large  flap   pockets,  natural  shoulders,  and  center 

vent  give  a  casual,  country  life  air  to  this  Sports- 
,      I     man-like  Jacket.  .  j 


iti^^ad^  *■ 


U^i-T     iU»i:I^U:i 


$45  to  $55 


"\  hear  so  many  meii  i^i;ef  not     i^jj 
starting  life  insurarnrfe  ^sooner'' 


A  reminder  to  busy  young  men 

from  J.  SPENCER  LOVE, 

Chairman  of  the  Board 

Burlington  Industries,  Inc., 

world  famous  textile  producers 


"It's'  hard  for  a  young  man  just 
starting  out  to  appreciate  all  the 
advantages  of  life  insurance.  So 
often,  by  the  time  he  does,  pre- 
miums are  highfer  and  he  may 
have  problems  with  his  medical 
examination.  I've  seen  it  happen. 

"That's  why  I  would  encourage 
any  young  man  to  get  ^is  first 
life  insurance  policy  as  soon  as 
he  can  .  .  .  certainly  by  the  time 
he  lands  his  first  permanent  job. 
.\nd  then  to  add  to  his  life  in- 
surance as  often  as  he  can.  He 
will  never  regret  it. 

"In  fact,  no  matter  how  farsighted 
he  is  ...  no  matter  how  much  life 
insurance  he  owns  .  .  .  chances  are 
that  some  day  he,  too  will  wish 
that  he'd  gotten  still  more  while 
he  was  young." 

Why    Policyholders   Are    So   Loyal 
To  Northwestern  Mutual  .  .  . 

This  company  is  one  of  the  world's 
largest  with  99  years'  experience 
and  a  reputation  for  low  net  cost 

It  is  also  a  .company  noted  for 
progressiveness.  For  example,  a 
new  program  of  settlement  op- 
tions- offers,  by  contract,  a  flexi- 
bility and  choice  of  action  never 
before  known   in  life  insurance. 

Here  is  fiulher  evidence  that 
there  are  signigicant  differences 
among  life  insurance  companies. 
It  is  one  reason  why  each  year 
nearly  half  the  new  policies  issued 
by  this  company  go  to  preaent 
policyholders. 

For  sound  help  in  your  security 
planning,  call  a  Northwestern  Mu- 
tual agent. 


A  NORTm\'ESTE3lN  MUTUAL  POLICYHOLDER.  Mr.  Love  has  for  many  years  made 
lif&  insurance  a  basic  part  of  his  financial  planning. 

The  NORTHWESTERN  MUTUAL 
Life  Insurance  Company 

MILWAUKEE,    ^^^SCONSIN 


ARTHUR  DEBERRY,  JR.— MAT"'  L.  THOMPSON 
SPECIAL   AGENTS 


6  Whid   Powell    BIdg. 


Telephone   9-3691— 8-5281— 9-5609 


Chapel  Hill,  N.  C. 


'—  ■'    —        .   -^   ^  ■  ,      -        I  Tn        I 


Ctrnprnl  till,  S*  e« 


WASHINGTON  /IS— The  Supreme  Court  Tues- 
day wiped  »ut  state  and  local  laws  requiring  seg- 
regation on  buses. 

It  did  so  by  affirming  a  decision  of  a  special 
three-judge  U.  S.  District  Court  in  Montgomery, 
Ala.  That  court  ruled  that  enforced  segregation 
of  whites  and  Negroes  on  Montgomery  buses  vi- 
olated the  Federal  Constitutions  guarantees  of 
due  process  and  equal  protection  of  law. 
UNANIMOUS 

In  a  brief  unanimous  order,  the  Supreme  Court 
cited  its  1954  decision  against  segregation  in  pub- 
lic schools.  It  also  cited  subsequent  decisions 
outlawing  segregation  in  public  parks  and  play- 
Kroiinris  and  on  public  golf  links. 


Wipes  Out  Bus  Segreg^tioh  Regulations 

.several    segregation    cases        ■'■■''■■"""■■■■■■■"^■■''■'^^■^^■••■'■■•■■■•■■•■Iw^iiiipBtBtaBiMBB**  „       ,       ..  .  .  l  .._ 


As  it  has  done  in  .several  segregation  cases 
since  its  basic  school  decision,  the  high  court 
acted  without  listening  to  any  argument.  Elxcept 
for  citing  three  segregation-banning  decisions,  all 
the  court  said  was: 

"The  motion  to  affirm  is  granted  and  the  judg- 
ment is  affirmed." 

Negroes  in  Montgomery  have  conducted  a  long 
boycott  of  city  buses  as  a  protest  against  segre- 
gation. One  of  the  things  they  resorted  to  was 
operation  of  a  car  pool  to  carry  those  who  used 
to  use  the  buses. 

A  state  court  at  Montgomery  is  now  consider- 
ing the  city's  attempt  to  hall  the  car  pool  as 
illegal.    The  court  continued  its  hearing  Tuesday 


THE  WORLb  NEWS  IN  BMh 

FROM  RADIO  blSP^TCHlS 
LONPON  —  Britain  said  th*  r»»|  rMsen  for  Anele-Fronch 
invasion  of   Egypt  was  #  Sovi«>»  militarY   bwiKlvp   in  fhf  Middia 
East. 

•  m\  » 

SAN  FRANCISCO  —  A  ftrottp  of  ships  fi^m  tH«  U.  S.  Sixtfc 
Floot  sailed  for  the  Pacific.  No  riinon  was  ^iven. 

•  *  I  c 

SINGAPORE  —  Tho  Chii«e««  W  Accoptina  vdim^MM  t*  fi»ht 
on  Egypt's  sido  in  tha  Middio  iasli.  ;  ' 

•  *.-  *  ■    ■      •■ 

UNITED  NATIONS.  N    Y,  -  the  UN  G«fOr#i  AssemWy  vMad 
to  take  up  tho  HiMi«aria«i  pro|ll»i% 


after  being  iDforroed  of  th^  Supreme  Court  ruliog. 

In  neighboring  Mississippi.  Gov.  J.  P.  Coleman 
said  his  state  would  continue  to  segregate  Ne- 
groes and  whites  on  publi*' conveyances,  despite 
the  Supreme  Court  oSrdar. 

"Oi»r  attitude  about  the  decision  will  be  the 
same  as  about  the  school  segregation  cases," 
Coleman  said.  Mississippi's  public  schools,  like 
many  others  in  the  South,  are  still  segregated. 

In  the  bus  segregation  case,  Montgomery's 
board  of  commissioners  and  the  Alabama  Public 
Service  Commission  appealed  from  the  ruling  of 
the  three-judge  court  voiding  state  and  local  bus 
segregation  Idws. 

The   lower  court,  dividing  2-1,  said   "There  is 


WEATHER 

Gonerally  fair  and   warmer.   Ex- 
poctad  high  of  73. 


mt 


VOL.  LVII     NO.  47 


Complete  i/P)  Wiie  S«rvic9 


now  no  rational  basis  upon  which  the  separate  but 
equal  doctrine  can  be  validly  applied  to  public 
transportation  within  the  City  of  Montgomery." 
And  it  said  "The  application  of  that  doctrine  can- 
not be  justified  as  a  proper  execution  of  state 
police  power." 

The  two  judges  in  the  majority  said  they  agreed 
with  a  decision  of  tht  Fourth  U.  S.  Circuit  Court 
of  Appeals  in  Richmond  that  "the  separate  but 
equal  doctrine  can  no  longer  be  safely  followed 
as  a  correct  statement  of  Jhe  law." 

The  separat3  but  equal  doctrine,  now  dead  lor 
all  practical  purposes,  was  laid  down  by  the  Su- 
preme Court  in  a  transportation  case  in  1806 
known  "^as  Plessy  vs.  Ferguson. 


OBLIGATION 

The  state  has  one.  See  page  2. 


NCAA  PUTS  N.  C.  STATE 


CHAPEL  HILL,  NORYH  CAROLINA,  WfOflESOAr,  fJiOVf/yUlER  14,  1*5* 


Offices   in    Graham    Memorial 


FOUR    PAGES   THIS    ISSUf 


YEAR  PROBATION 


•      •      ^ 


•      •      • 


*      *      f 


•      •      • 


Campus   Political    Situation    Inconclusive    After    Election 


'inducements'  Named 
In  N.  C  State  Ruling 

DFTROIT  —4^— The  N;.ti(,nal  Culk-iate  .Athletit   .\ssii. 
C.0UIK1I     I  ucsday    phuvd    lour  inaj,)!    S(  hools  on    probation. 


banmno  ,1,,^.^.  ,,(  ,|,^.,„  |,,„„  partuipatiiio  in  all  NCAA  simhi- 
sorecl   01    coopcratiijo   c\  '  * 

months  to  four  years. 

The  four  .schools  are  .North  Carolina  State  Colle'^e.  Ohio 
State  I'niversiiv.  the  I'niversitx  of  Soinhern  California  and 
th«    University   of   California. 

At  the  same  time,  the  council 
refused  to  lift  probations  against 
the  University  of  Miami  and  Tex- 
as A  &  >1.  The  action  rules  out 
any  possibility  that  football  teams 
from  these  schools  will  be  able 
to  participate  in  post-.'<oason  bowl 
games. 

STlfip  peNALTY 

The  jpoweffui  )8-man  couneiJ. 
policy-affecllng  Vody  of  the  NCAA!,''" 
handed  out  one  of  the  stiftefit  peVi- 
alties  in  its  history  in  placing 
North  Carolina  State  on  a  four- 
year    probation,  starting   Tt^esday. 

During  that  period  the  school ' 
will  not  be  eligible  to  enter  ath-l 
letes  or  teams  in  any  of  the  14 
NCA.A.  events  or  the  25  cooperat- 
ing events,  including  post-season 
bowl    games.  | 

The  college  also  was  denied  rep- 
resentation on  any  NCAA  com- 
mittee   and   the   right   to   vote  on 

(See  STATE,  page  4.)  I 


•nts   lor   j>eriods   ran,i»in,<;   from    nine 


Friday  Says 
University 
Was  Unaware 

RALEJGH    (if»  —  Consolidated 
Vni'vi^nity    ^f    Nwih    r^f^^f^ 
Pr^aident    WltUmm    C. 
^04¥Hj»»nt  iya  iiMin     the 
»»1(iVatioil1Wv«morth 
State    d^ia^^iiWt    n 
cat^ot    lind^tkand     t:.e 
tion'<4^cisioitiUl| 

■  >  ''  '• ,   , 

"We:are  determinca:>o 
of    the    evidence  till;  itm>^   cas 
he  added  In  a^ifatfej^im.  "anv,! 
will     take     whatever     action     it 
warrants." 

In  one  of  the  stiffest  punish- 
ments it  has  ever  meted,  the 
NC-\.\  announced  from  Detroit 
earlier  Tuesday  it  was  banning 
State   from    participating   in    all 

(See  FRIDAY,  page  3.) 


WASHINGTON  --  *  —  Ch»n- 
celor  C«r«y  H.  Bostian  of  N.  C. 
State  College  said  Tuesday^'The 
NCAA  must  have  had  some  evi- 
dence which  has  not  been  made 
kn9wn  to  me  or  other  officials 
of  the  college.  As  far  as  we 
know,  offers  like  that  (aid  to  the 


BOSTIAN:  'Stiff  Penalty' 


prospective     student)     have     net 
been  nude. 

"It  certamly  is  a  stiff  (penalty. 
But  I  am  quite  conviitftid  thf» 
council  would  not  have  ifvUd 
such  a  penalty  if  ttte  covncit 
members  did  not  have  .tHe  '^i' 
dence  to  back  It  up."       ,"   .  >Vii 

ly»^':"iii|' 


rDiscribpancies    Said 
In  Town  Men  District 

iy  NEIL  BASS 

Results  arc  imorKlusivc  as  to  whether  or  nOt  the  Uni- 
versitv  Party   niaint^.ined  its  majority  in  the  Student    l,ej»is- 
lature   alter   Tuesday's  (anipiis-uide  ballotiiig. 
4    Totals    in    legislative    balloting* — "    ^ 


were: 

University  Party— 24  seals. 

Student  Party— 24   seats. 

Rvn*offs — on*  seat. 

Disqualifications — one  scat. 

Thus  it  is  not  conclusive  thfit 
tbc  UP  will  maintain  its  majorit^y, 
t^  tbe,run-aCf  seat  in4  the  diie- 
qjiaUfied  seat  are  in  UP-dQminated 
town  men's  districts. 

Therefore,  it  past  etection  r^f 
snltD  are  indicative,  U  is  possiblb 
the  UP  Ifvill  nab  tbe  irUk^CI  ae4^^ 

in   Taviik, 


\\3S 

CohtribuKans 
Reach  $1400 


Wanried  "scat 
— in  Dviu 

But  »A'    ..„  -  - 
be  indii^ttvt>i^i 

threw  priuedtilt  i^:  t 
The  U*:     *  ■ 


'^^^ -petib  in  pow-j  ,. 

ertui  SP  0o|ta  %n>  U.  and  the    «*^* '*'^™<"' 


^ourtei^oL    blinilred    dollars    has 
been   ofiitrlboted   to   the   Cimpu? 
Chesiti  fvild  as  of  late,  yesterday.    ; 
•  This   is   ottlj'  ifU)6  abort   of  the 
|4ljM6|lk6»l  Bft  ucKby  tbe  eamt>aign,  1 
I  'Iti^tcti  \f  spo>nW<»d  4oWt||t;^ii:»^%^'^ 

«  m»v  nm  -        -  ifiT,   r^-T    r-rx    .     «'?rvkfeil»| 

winds       "  ^^    w'^^  tush    emergency     aid      tvi^ 
n^gfiriin  students,  victims  of  re-'} 
in    that    East    KulNl»^.J 


SP  gr.afobed  si  ««*tand  liecessiUted  I  P*aQ;^<#ntry. 

<.   ruii-off  tct  aimp.tr   in   Up*«»- 1.  'vC^roUha  students,  possessing  not 

trolled  T^wn  1l!*^V  in.  '^ 


Town  women  voted  yesterday,  along  with  students  frotn  all 
ofher  parts  of  the  campus,  in  annual  fall  elections.  Shown  with  poll 
tendor  Gardner  Folty  and  Misses  Sally  Shiploy  and  SuMn  WANi«r. 


Victory  Bell  Stolen  By  ATO  Fraternity 


By  FRANK  CROWTHER  j  fraternity— both     of     whom     we^ 

While   most    of  Tarheelia  slum- '  ^^'^   among   the   entourage   wln'cb 

bered  Tuesday  morning,  two  mem-   n>otored     to     the     University     of 

bcrs  of  the  ATO  fraternity  climb- 1  Maiyland  in  quest  of  the  Maryland 

ed    into    the    old    Duke    gym    and  j  Terrapin. 

stole  the  Victory  Bell.  j      Alter  working  out  a  plan  of  at- 

Thia  was   the  culmination   of    a   tack,  the  two  men  loaded  Harris' 

well-planned   maneuver  which   be-   auto  with  quite  an  assemblage  of 

gan   Monday  a'.'ernoon  and  ended:  tools:      an      ax,      three     crescent 


al  3:45  a.m.  Tuesday. 


wrenches,     pliers,  •  wire     cutters. 


The  two  men  involved  were  Bo !  screw   drivers,    a    sledge    hammer, 
Woodhall  and  John  Harvi*  of  ATO  and  some  open-end  wrenches. 


Consequently,  ne.xt  Tuiesday's 
election  may  swing  legislative  plu- 
rality 26-24  to  the  UP.  or  26-24 
to  the  SP.  or  may  bring  ahput  a 
deadlock—  25-25- 

The  disnuallfiod  se<at  in  Tetv^n 
Mon's  It  camo  Is  a  rpawH  of 
"discr*pan€ia»,"  accdrdint  to 
Elections  Board  Vice  Chairman 
Bill  Redding.  Mor«  bMi•»^s  were 
cast  than  tt»era  -war^  r<itistored 
voftrs  in  the  district,  it  was  ro- 

v#atoi. 

Results  of  the  juiii<M-  and  fresh- ' 
man  class  officers  werg  being  uvith- 
held  by  the  Elections  Board  until 


only   academic   freedom,   but   also 
self-government,    have    an    oppyor 

^M»MiMMB*«NOlMieaB*aaniHMa*MMiMa 
Flace  for  the  Campus  Chest 
danc*  Primly  i^thi  has  boon 
chanted  fram  Woollen  Gymna- 
sium to  CaM  bormitory  base- 
monl.   Th4  tln«*   is  the   sanfo — 

1:30-11:30  pM, 

mmmmmmmmmmimmmmmmmimmmmmmmm 


New  legislators  by  districts  are: 


tunity  to  assltt  thfe  Hungarian  stiv 
dents  by  contributing  to  the  Camp- 
us Chest.  The  World.  University 
Service,  wbfcR  i^ill  receive  60% 
tf  the  chest,  aids  needy  universi- 
ties and  university  students 
throughout  the  world. 

The  World  University  Service 
recently  appealed  to  the  U.  S.  Stale 
Department    to    find    ^    means    of 


Man's  Best  Friend  Not  Always  A  Dog 

Man  and  beast  become  comrades  during  the  persecution  and 
turmoil  of  Caesar's  empire  in  The  Carolina  Playmakers'  production 
of  Shaw's  "Androcles  and  the  Lion,"  appearing  tonight  through 
Sunday  at  the  Playmakers  Theatre. 


^     They  set  out  at  1  a.m.  Tuesday    invade  the  UNC  campus  and  give 
for  the  Duke  campus.  «!  it  a  new  paint  job. 

,  On  arrival  they  parked  their  car  I      Jetieries.    already    knowing    the  '  the  reelection  can  be  held  in  Town 
.ilext  to  the  Old  Gym  and,  after  a   whereabouts  of  the  bell,  called  thei'Men's  11. 
brief    encounter-  with    the    night  j  .\TO's  and  asked  that  thay  return 
watchman.  Woodhall  went  into  the  1  it  and  save  the  University  a  costly 
gjm  through  a  side  window.  j  repair  bill. 

After  locating  the  bell-cart,   he       Thus,  at  3:30  p.m.  Tuesday,  the 

campus  postman,   in  a  University  | TIL  Gustaf son  (SP),  Ray  (ja>);  Dorm    by  nopn  Xi»p«d«>>  These  bottjes  are)  will    begin    a    five-night    run    at 
of    North    Carolina    truck,   tarried  1 


Dorm  Men's  I.  Fuller  (SP);  Dorm    sending  aid  inside  Hungary.  1 

Men's   n,   Whitfield   fSP),   Alford       Contribution*  to  WUS  in  bottles 
(UT),    Weaver   (UP):    Dwm   Men's    set   up    in    Y  court   exceeded   $20 1 


'Androclies'  Will  Open 
Five-ShowiRun  Tonight 


'•Androcles    And    The    Lion.'" 
comedy  by  George  Bernard  Shc^w. 


and     he     causes     some     comical 
changes  in   Caesars   attitude. 


lugged  it  through  the  passageway  ; 
from  the  New  Gym  to  the  Old } 
Gym  and  wheeled  it  out  the  side ; 
door.  The  two  then  tied  the  cart 
to  their  auto,  sped  back  to  the  ^ 
UNC  campus,  and  concealed  the  j 
bell  behind  their  fraternity  house,  j 

The  coup  looked  like  a  complete  : 

success  and  Tuesday  morning  the  j 

boys  went  to  inform  coach  Tatum  ; 

j  of  their  conquest.  | 

Later  in  the  day,  however.  Dean  ' 
Cox  of  Duke  University  called  Ray  • 
Jefferies.    Assistant    Dean    of   Stu- 
tent    Affairs    at     UNC.    and    ex- ! 

presseri    much    concern    over    the ;  eommittee   which   will   recommend 
bu.iding   storm    of    anger   on    the .  ^  ehancellor  for  UNC. 
I>uke  cantpus.    It  was  reported  th  t 
the  Blue  Devils  were  planning  to ' 


Men's  rv.  Carter  (SP);  Dwm  Men's  j  designated'  for  feach  dorm  and  so- 
the  bell-cart  back  to  the  Biue  Dev- 1  V.  Baum  (UP).  Long  (SP).  i  rority    or    fraternity    house.    Con- 

ils,  ending  the  affair  just  B4  hours  |      Town  Men's  I,  Cole  (UP).  Cooper    tributions  ^1    He   deceived    at    Y 
after  it  had  been  conceived.  j         (.See  ELBffTlOK.  pa^e   i.)          court   Wednesday   and   Thursday. 


in    the    Playmak- 


Dick  Newdick  of  Augusta.  Me., 
appears    as    .\ndrocles.    with    Miss 
Pajie    William.s    of    Fort    Thomas. 
Ky..    as    his    wife.    Mogaera.    and 
Before    the    Playmakers,    Caro-j  d^^.j^  s,„a,,  ^^  Morehead  City  as 
lina  drama  group,  begin  their  sec-  j  the  lion. 


8:30    p.m.   today 
er".s  Theater. 


UNC  Chancellor  Selection  Group 
Considering  Names  Of  41  Persons 


The  names  of  41  individuals  are 
now   up   for  consideration  by  the 


Who  Rang  The  Ding  Dong? 

Mombers  of  the  Alpha  Tao  Omega  social  fraternity  pose  with 
the  Victory  Bell  they  took  from  Duke  early  Tuesday  morning.  The 
Victory  B-ll  is  awarded  each  year  to  the  winner  of  the  Carolina- 
Puke  football  gamo.^  It  has  been  won  by  Duke  every  year  since  1949. 


GMAB  Wilt  Hold  Lessons 
In  Bridge  At  Village 

Bridge  lessons  will  be  offered 
by  Graham  >femorial  Activities 
Board  at  the  Victory  Village  Day 
Care  center  beginning  Thursday 
night   at   7:30. 

Mrs.  Rogers  Wade  will  be  in- 
structor for  the-,  series,  which  is 
open  to  anyone  in  Victory  Vil- 
lage. 

Bridge  instruction  for  students 
will  be  held  in  Graham  Memorial 
each  Wednesday  at  4  p.m.  The 
first  lesson  is  scheduled  for  Nov. 
21,  and  instruction  will  continue 
for  a  period  of  weeks, 


R.  Mayne  Albright,  chairman  of 
the  17-man  group  of  trustees,  alum- 
'  ni  and  faculty,  said  that  the  full 
committee  will  nieet  next  on  I>ec. 
8.  it  is  the  hope  of  the  commit- 
I  t;^^e  to  make  its  recommendations 
I  to  President  William  C.  Friday 
'  shortly  after  the  first  of  the  new 

year,"  he  <;ai(l. 
j      The    committee    will    present    at 
i  least    three    names    to    the    presi- 
dent,  whose  responsibility  it  is  to 
nominate  a  chancellor  for  the  ap- 
proval  ot   the  Board   of   Trustees. 
i  Chancellor    Robert    B.    House    will 
rt;tire  on  June  30,  1937. 

Albright  reported  that  approxi- 
mately 70  niamss  have  been  sub- 
mitted to  the  committee  lor  it.^ 
consideration.  "Most  of  these 
n;inuvs   have  cuuio   fn»in   tl^  thrci- 


subcommittees  —  trustee,  faculty 
and  alumni — but  names  have  also 
been  submitted  by  a  committee  of 
students,  and  from  other  interested 
individuals." 

Additional   names   may  be   suh- ' 
mtted  to  Chairman  R.  Mayne  Al- 
bright in  Raleigh  or  to  the  "Com- 
mittee on  the  Chancellor"  in  South 
Building.  Chapel  Hill. 

The  list,    narrowed    from   70   to 
41    for   formal    consideration,    in- 


spection COmmitt.ee  members 
include: 

Board  of  Trustees —  J.  Spencer 
Love,  Greensboro;  Carl  Venters. 
Jacksonville:  Bill  Yarborough. 
Louisburg:  John  W.  Umstead. 
Chapel  Hill;  and  Floyd  Crouse. 
Sparta. 

Alumni  —  William  D.  Snider. 
Greensboro:  Terry  Sanford.  F.ay- 
eltcville:  Frank  Parker.  Asheville: 
Dr.  A.  M.  McDonald.  Charlotte:  and 


ond  show  of  the  season.  Shaw's  of- 
ficial biograpther.  Dr.  Archibald 
Henderson,  will  present  .some  com- 
ment.-; on   the  dramati.st. 

In  the  play,  Androcles,  a  meek 
Greek  tailor,  helps  a  lion  by  re- 
movinij  a  thorn  from  his  paw  when 
they  meet  in  the  forest.  Later, 
when  .\ndrocles  is  sentenced  to 
death  in  the  martyrs"  arena  by 
Emperor  Caesar,  he  face.*;  a  hun- 
gry lion  fresh  from  the  forest. 
The  lion,  who  is  the  same  one 
.\ndr(Kles  had  aided,  fortunately 
has    a    memory    like    an    eleplrant 


eludes  persons  "from  many  other    Albright.  Kalfcigh. 
arsas    as    well    as    from    the   Uni-  {      Faculty  ^at    Chapel    Hill  —  Prof, 
versity    and    Ihe    State   of    North  '•  James  L.  Godfrey.  Faculty  Coun- 
Carolina."   Albrijht  sjid.  1  ell;  Kenan  Prof.  Dougald  MacMil- 

The  only  restrictions  in  the  Ian.  DivisJon  of  Humanities:  Kenan 
committee's  present  policy,  he  Prof.  Rupert  Vance.  Division  of 
said,  are  ( 1 )  "not  to  consider  any- :  Social  Sci^ces:  Kenan  Prof.  John 
one'  who  has  already  attained  the  N.  Conch.  Divialon  of  Natural 
age  of  88."   and    <2)    "to  require  i  Sciences:    Prof.    Pk^l    N.    Guthrie. 


IN  THE  INFIRMARY 


that  any  nominee  be  a  person]  of 
high  scholarly  attainments  and 
academic  experience,  in  addition 
to  (jtltrr   riifjuired   attribiUr,--.  ' 


School  of  Butiuess  .administration: 
Kenan  Prof.  M.  T.  Van  Heckc.  Law 
School:  and  Dr,  Eriiest  Craige.  Di- 
vision of  HMlth  Affairs. 


Those  in  the  infirn\ary  today 
include: 

Misses  Ruby  Batten,  Elmira 
Herring,  Roberta  Simpson,  Su- 
san Donald,  Susan  Mayhue,  Shir- 
ley Edgerton,  Elizabeth  McGraw 
and  Anthony  Wolff,  Car/  Clark, 
John  Barefoot,  Robert  Tate, 
Frederick  Byrum,  Robert  Cofod, 
Jimmie  Merritt,  James  Emerson 
and   Richard  Saylor, 


John   Sncden    of   Tenafly,   X.   J. 

plays  Caesar.  Miss  .Amanda  Meiggs 
i  of    Moyock    and    John    Whitty    of 

.\ew  B:'rn  are  ca.st  as  Lavinia  and 
•  the  captain  who  guards  her.  Frank 

Beaver    and    Bob    Bailey,    both    of 

State.'^villi'.  and  Ted  Parker,  of 
i  Clinton  portray  the  martyrs.  Met- 
j  tulus.   Ferrovious  and  Spintho. 

O'.hors  in  the  cast  are  Harvey 
i  Knox  t»f  (Jreensbor;.:  Bill  Padgett 
j  of  Shelby:  Phii  Williamson  of  Wil- 
"  .son:  Bill  White  ol  Chattanooga. 
;  T?nn.:  Darwin  Coloman  of  Kern- 
!  ersville:  Mrs.  Suzanne  Davis  of 
;  Chape!  Hill:  Bill  Jones  of  India- 
i  napolis.  Ind.:  Bob  DuMeer  of 
Star:  Miss  Anne  Brooke -of  Staun- 
ton.  Va..  and   Miss   Hope  Sparger 

i  of  Scarsdale.  N.  Y. 

I- 

The  production  will  run  in 
Chapel  Hill  through  Sunday  even- 
ing, after  which  the  company  of 
25  will  embark  on  a  tour  of  four 
southern  states,  celebrating  the 
Playmakers"  2,5th  year  of  touring. 

Tickets  for  the  Chapel  Hill  per- 
formances are  on  ^ale  at  214 
Abernethy  Hall  (telephone  8-468). 
Ledbclter-Pickard  ^.    or   Box    1050. 


.  f: "  ■:*  '  -^ 

4  t 


PAGt  TWO 


THE  DAILY  TAH  HI BL 


WEDNESDAY,  NOVEMBER  14,  19H 


Tar  Hiee\  Juni^l-  Coll  ^gies: 
One  Of  The  Biggest  N  eeds 

"//  we  establish  many  more  junior  (or  rommunity)  colleges 
there  will  not  he  enonsrh  ftrolessors  to  staff  them."  —  Director  ]. 
Harris  Purks.   sptakiiif^  on    North   Carolina   hisj^her  ediuatioii. 

Since     the    end    of    the    sejond 
World    War.    the    Stale    ol     North 


A  NORTHERN  VIEW 


Chapel  Hill  Merchants  Not  Bad 


YOU  Said  It: 


Carolina'  has  been .  leelinj^  the 
pindi  of  the  educational  saddle. 
There  has  not  been  enough  rtMnn 
in  staie-sn|)|)orted  institutions  ot 
hiu;her  leaiiiin<i  to  take  care  ot 
the  students  who  warn  to  go  to 
colle<jf.  T  he  stale  has  l)een  nu>\- 
in<j[  along- verv  slowly  toward  do- 
ing something  about  the  prol)lein. 

The  legislaiule  created  the 
State  Board  of  Higher  Kducation. 
ivhidi  Dr.  Piirks  directs.  The 
lw)ard  was  given  broad  policy 
powers,  and  has  been  prcKeeding 
in   its  work  ijuiie  wcW.  » 

lint  we  disitj^ree  with  Dr.  Purks 
on  the  iniplitation  that  ((nnimnii- 
tv  or  junior  colleges  should  not  be 
created  l)ecause  there  wouldn't  l>e 
enough  good  people  t(»  stall  them. 
I'lie  cjiiesjion  ol  stall  should  be  a 
((insider.il ion  in  such  thinking  — 
a  major  lonsideration  —  bjit  it 
should  not  be  the  reason  tor  not 
building  (olleges. 

The  prime  consideration  of 
higher  education  in  this  state  is 
ob\iou>l\  the  student.  It  is  the 
student  uho  suffeis  from  bad  .or 
neglected  ediuation:  it  is  the  stu- 
dent who  gains  from  good  educa- 
tion. (Consequently,  the  state  gains 
or  loses,  according  to  the  treat- 
mem    its  stHis  and  daughters  get. 

Currently  the  .North  Capolina 
high  school  graduate  who  wants  to 
continue  his  education  in  this 
siate  does  one  <»f  two  things:  F.ith- 
er  he  goes  to  :i  "prixate  college 
or  iniixeisity.  such  as  Duke,  or  he 
g<»es  to  one  of  the  states  institu- 
tions. 

If  he  w  uits  to  go  to  the  Univer- 
sity here  or  to  N.  C.  State  ('ollege 
in  Raleigh,  or  if  she  Watits  to  at- 
tend    the     Womatis     Collide     in 

(iTeensf>oro.    the   student   riiust   go     colleges  tha^jfiqw  exist, 
ihrough      entvante      cxaoaXnations.  Obviously,    the  state    must   con- 

THese  exam m.i\ ions  are  aimed  at  struct  more  colleges.  The  profes- 
kccpij\^.;^bM<e;.wa  ,whq:,u>|<»^<|:|f.*fai^'.|  kf^  li>^ftt*ifiiV8l6'»^**™  somewhere 
out  ariywav.  it-.e  en'd  vesuVt  of  tliem "    \>ut  #¥'lmafettts  must  be  educated 


is  in  helping  to  keep  the  f'ni\ersi- 
ty's  swelling  enrollment  down,  its 
t  lassroonrs    uncr^nvded. 

Without  entrance  examinaiions, 
the  poor  student  would  be  s»d>- 
jected  to  another  fotm  of  weed- 
ing: He  would  fail  out.  Ihis  is 
an  integral  pan  of  ruiniing  the 
I'niverstty.  Achninistrators  know 
that  a  seiiioi  c  lass  is  nnich  smaller 
thni   it   was  four  vears  ago. 

What  happens  to  the  student 
who  is  kept  out  of  the  state's  three 
highest  institiuions.  either  by  ex- 
amination or  by  mid-term  grades? 

Ile  can  go  to  a  private  school,  or 
he  can  attend  another  state  sup- 
}M>rted  instiiution  —  loui-ve.n  or 
jtinior  college. 

Here  is  where  the  state's  need 
for  more  junior  or  community 
colleges   is  e\idenced. 

FcM  the  high  sc  hool  ja^raduate 
who  obviouslv  would  h:i\e  trouble 
starting  his  fresinnan  vear  at  the 
I'niversity  here,  the  connnmiity 
college  offeis  an  excellent  chance 
to  get  accustcimed  to  -the  college 
methods  (»f  reaching,  .\fter  twa 
years  at  a  conmiunity  college,  per- 
haps, the  student  woidd  be  ready 
for  Cha|>el  Hill.  ^ 

*  *  ,  * 

1  he  state  shoidd  not  expect  to 
educate  only  those  who  are  Chapel 
Hill,  Raleigh  or  Greenst>oro  ma- 
terial. It  also  has  an  obligation  to 
educate  those  whd  arc  not  of  Con- 
solidated I'niversity  stature.  It 
UMist  give  them  good,  solid  edu- 
cations. 

It  can't  do  this  without  more 
comnuinity  or  junior  colleges.  It 
cannot  hope  to  funnel  thousands* 
of  students  toward  the  (^)nso!i- 
dated  I'niversity,  then  pom  off 
the  ioatii  cjti  private  colleges  and 
the     few     state-supported     junior 


Cortland  Edwards 

Chapel  Hill  merchants  are  not 
robbers  as  most  of  the  students 
here  seem  to  thitik. 

Some  students  seem  to  think 
that  local  businessmen  are  mer- 
cenary wolves  that  prey  upon 
student  purses.  Actually,  such  a 
notion  is  unfounded. 

A  couple  of  merchants  are  guil- 
ty of  pricing  too  high.  But  it  is 
hardly  fair  to  condemn  all  of  the 
merchants.    The    smart    students 


just  steer  clear  of  the  hijackers, 
who  are  verj-  easy  to  recognize. 

The  merchants  generally — al- 
most all  of  them — offer  a  sur- 
prising variety  of  goods  and  ser- 
vices for  a  town  of  this  size. 
Quality  is  high  and  prices  are 
competitive  in  spite  of  business 
circumstances  that  are  not  the 
best. 

For  instance,  overhead  must 
be  paid  for  12  months,  even 
though    the    business    season    in 


Chapel  Hill  is  only  9  months.  In 
addition,  many  students  do  not 
buy*  in  Chapel  Hill,  but  in  their 
home  towns.  And  Durham  and 
Raleigh,  offering  the  deceptive 
lure  of  "big  city "  shopping  fa- 
cilities, are  just  a  few  miles 
away. 

Yet  local  merchants  provide 
enough  of  a  variety  in  merchan- 
dise that  Chapel  Hill  has  become 
a  gift  shopping  center.  Shoppers 
return  time   and   time   again   to 


'Now?  Oh,  But  Now  it's  Stopped  Raining' 


'IllCI 


A  Raat  Chapel 


^\  hether  or  not  you  like  G.  B. 
Shaw,  we  recommend  that  you  list- 
en to  Archibald  Henderson  talk 
about  him  tomorrow  night.  You'll 
certainlv    like    Henderson. 

Hc-nderscm.  who  lixes  on  F. 
Franklin  St.  in  a  big.  xvhite  house, 
is  the  worlds  most  expert  exjK'rt 
on  SliLW.  In  addition,  he  is  a  math- 
ematician, an  autlior  in  his  own 
light,  a  historian  and  a  very  inter- 
esting [K-rson  to  listen  to. 

In  fact.  Archibald  Henderson  is 
one  of   the   few  remiaining  bits  of 

The  Daily  Tar  Heel 

The  official  student  publication  of  tbe 
Publications  Board  of  the  University  ol 
North  Carolina,  where  it  is  published 
daily  except  Monday  and  examination 
and  vacation  periods  and  summer  terms 
Entered  as  second  class  matter  in  tht 
oost  office  in  Chapel  Hill,  N.  C,  uac^ei 
the  Act  oi  March  8,  1870.  Subscription 
rates:  mailed,  $4  per  year,  $2.50  a  semes- 
ter; delivered,  $6  a  year,  $3.50  a  seme» 
ter. 


Editor ._ 

.    FPED  POWLEaXJE 

Managing  Editor  .. 

-.  CHARLIE  SLOAN 

News  Editor    ... 

RAY  LINKER 

Business  Manager 

BILL  BOB  PLEl, 

Sports  Editor   .  . .. 

_.      LARRY  CHEEK 

EDITORIAL  STAFF  —  Woody  Sears, 
Frank  Crowther.  Barry  Winston,  David 
Mundy,  George  Pfingst.  Ingrid  Clay, 
Cortland  Edwards,  Paul  McCauley, 
Bobbi  Smith. 

NEWS  STAFF— Clarke  Jones,  Nancy 
Hill,  Joan  Moore,  Pringle  Pipkin,  Anne 
Drake.  Edith  MacKinnon.  Wally  Kuralt, 
Mary  Alys  Voorhees,  Graham  Snyder, 
Billy  Barnes,  Neil  Bass,  Gary  Nichols, 
PaRe  Bernjtein,  Peg  Humphrey,  Phyllii 
Maultsby. 

SPORTS  STAFF:  Bill  King,  Jim  Purjk«, 
Jimmy  Harper,  Dave  Wible,  Charley 
Howson. 


Subscription  Manager  _= Dale  Staley 

Advertising  Manager Fred  Katzin 

Circulation  Manager  Charlie  Hcrft 

Staff  Photographer  Norman  Kantor 

Staff  Artist  : Charlie  Daniel 

ikjSINESS  STAEF— Rosa  Moore,  Johnny 
Whitak«r.  Dick  Leavitt,  Peter  Alper. 


Night  Editor 


J'red  Powledge 


Old  Cha^'f'Hlif-iithe  Chapel  Hill 
that  had  mud  for  it.s  main  street, 
horses  instead  of  parking  problems, 
and  studetits  far  smaller  in  ninn- 
bers  and  far  laiger  in  seriousness. 

.Archibald  Henderson  is  like  his 
b<H»k  al)out  Chapel  Hill:  he  is  rath- 
er old.  bin  fresh  and  as  iineiesting 
as  a  new-born  child. 

II  he  talks  abom  anvthing  from 
photosyiuhesis  to  billiaicl  balls  tn- 
morrow  night,  we  won't  be  sur- 
prised. Hut  we  are  sure  he'll  be  a 
good  jn:iii  to  listen  to.     • 

Coeds,  Unite: 

Unswivel 

Lipsticks 

F.rC.EXf:.  Ore.  ^-Freshman 
.((/r/.v,  angry  at  the  Athletic  f.et- 
teniien'.s  Club,  stormed  into  the 
the  '  I'niversity  of  Oregon  Stu- 
dent Union  Building  last  night 
and  smeared  members  of  the 
football  squad   leith   lijtstick  .  . . . 

Sow.  there's  an  angle  for  you. 

We  heaitily  recommend  it  for 
coeds  everywhere.  Although  there's 
no  need  for  smearing  lipstick  on 
Tar  Heel  football  players,  it  would 
be  nire  to  see  the  Caroline  Ccx'ds 
rise  up,  all  of  a  sudden,  and  do 
something  violent. 

In  the  case  of  the  University  o' 
Oregon,  it  was  a  retaliatory  move 
by  the  girls.  'The  lettermen  have 
been  smearing  lipstick  on  the  faces 
of  freshmen  girls  who  fail  to  wear 
the  traditional  green  riblMJii  in 
their  hair  for  homecoming  week," 
says  The  .Assck  iated  Press. 

But  here,  girls  who  don't  get 
dates  on  the  weekends,  or  whose 
dii'tes  turn  out  to  be  teal  losers, 
could  cjuickly  turn  the  tables  on 
their  'Carolina  (ientlemcn.  With 
one  organized  swipe  of  a  thousand 
lipsticks,  the  girls  could  rapidly 
assert  themselves. 

fiirls  of  the  C-arolina  campus, 
imite.  I'nswivel  your  lipsticks  and 
let  the  gentlemen  know  you're 
here. 


^LErOOSCOPE 


Chapel  Hill  from  Durham,  Ral- 
eigh. Greensboro.  Winston-Salem 
and  other  "big  cities"  throughout 
this  and  neighboring  states. 

Chapel  Hill  prices  are  the  same 
as  everywhere  else.  Most  merch- 
ants here  sell  nationally  adver- 
tised goods — at,  or  less  than,  ad- 
vertised prices.  The  important 
thing  to  remember  is  that  our 
stores  don't  handle  the  cheap 
products  that  you  can  get  else- 
where. To  get  quality  you  must 
be  willing  to  pay  a  bit  more. 

Our  local  merchants  are  def- 
initely not  robbers,  with  the  ex- 
ception of  a  couple  who  are  so 
obvious  that  they  are  no  real 
menace  to  student  purposes..  As 
a  matter  of  fact,  the  merchants 
individually  and  as  a  group  are 
doing  the  students,  the  faculty, 
and  the  town  a  genuine  service 
in  more  than  one  way. 

To  even  think  of  a  boycott 
lights  up  a  sign  over  your  head 
saying  "'Ignoramus"  for  it  is  the 
right  of  these  stores  to  charge 
any  price  that  they  desire.  |f  you 
don't  like  them  just  don't  shop 
there.  It  is  you  who  will  suffer, 
not  they. 

With  your  eyes  oF>en,  why  don't 
you  do  your  Christmas  shopping 
on  a  pad.  Put  down  the  prices 
with  the  trade  names,  and  then 
take  them  home  and  compare 
them. 

I'll  bet  you  Chapel  Hill's  are 
much  more  reasonable. 

There  is,  however,  one  group 
of  merchants  that  I  am  leaving 
out.  That  is  the  restaurant  own- 
ers. They  are  really  out  to  make 
a  profit.  But  again  I  say,  if  you 
compare  them  to  restaurants  in 
other  locations  Chapel  Hill 
prices  are  still  lower. 

With  the  restaurants,  I  will 
have  to  admit,  quality  is  not  one 
of  the  by-lines.  But  if  you  want 
coffee.  Chapel  Hill  has  it  at  ten 
cents  a  cup.  almost  400?o  profit 

The  closest  thing  I  have  had 
to  good  coffee  comes  fre|n>  ^he 
Dairy  Barr.  But  any  other  foqd 
stiiffs  of  any  of  the  other  restau-  • 

.rants  I  caii  not  speak, far.  None  . 

.of   them   serve   quality,   pr  even 


quantity  for  that  matter.: 


What  A  Guy  Has  To  Put  Up  WifM 


Frank  Crowther 

My  fiancee  and  I  went  to  the 
Rath.skeller  for  dinner  last  week, 
and  were  provided  not  only  with 
some  fine  food,  but  with  some 
hilarious  entertainment  also. 

Soon  after  my  rare  b?ef  ar- 
rived, a  young  student  —  un- 
doubtedly a  first  .sf moster  fresh- 
man— ushered  in  his  mother  and 
father.  We  were  in  the  back 
room  of  the  Rat.  which  is  re- 
served for  couples  and  is  glar- 
ingly lacking  in  light  . . .  especial- 
ly if  you  plan  to  write  letters  or 
read  fine  print  in  your  parking 
ticket. 

"Where  the  hell  is  all  the 
light?"  asked  the  father,  'i  can't 
see  in  here.  What  do  they  want 
to  make  it  so  dingy  for?" 

"Its  got  Atmosphere,  Dad,"  said 


the  boy.  "It's  supposed  to  be  like 
a  cave  . .  .  you  know.' 

"Well  who  wants  to  eat  in  a 
cave."  replied  th?  elder.  "I  want 
to  see  what  I'm  slugging-  down." 

After  some  more  grumbling 
and  other  remarks  about  the  ab- 
surdity of  such  goings  on.  they 
settled  for  rare  beef,  steak,  and 
chicken. 

The  parents  must  have  jtist  ar- 
rived in  Chape!  Hill  and  it  was 
obviously  their  first  trip  to  Tar- 
heelia. 

•"Did  you  get  the  brownies  from 
your  Aunt  Martha?"  asked  the 
mother. 

"Yeah,"  said  the  son,  matter- 
of-factly.  ,_^». 

"Well,  have  you  written  and 
thanked    her    for   them?" 

"Aw,  mom,  you  knoWJIjcart't 
write    letters.    Gosh  . . .  well. . .    I 


just  get  all  mixed  up  and  don't 
know  what  to  write  ...  I  mean  .  .  . 
you   know?" 

"Now  don't  tell  me,"  said  the 
angered  mom,  'that  you  can't, 
write  a  short  note  and  say  thanks 
That's  the  least  you  could  do.  af 
ter  she  went  to  all  the  trouble  of 
making  them  and  mailing  them." 

"I  don't  have  the  time.  mom. 
You  know,  with-  all  my  studies 
'n  everything  I  hardly  have  time 
to  sleep.  Golly!" 

"Tell  you  what  I'll  do."  said 
the  father.  "I'll  draw  you  up  a 
form  letter  . . .  you  know,  just 
like  it  was  a  business  letter  and 
you  can  use  it  for  anything... 
Christmas  and  all.  Is  that  all 
right,  mother?" 

"Well  I  just  don't  see  why  the 
boy  can't  write  it  himself,"  she 
said.  "Don't  tliey  teach  you  any- 
thing like  that  in  English?  "  » 


"Naw,"  he  replied.  ""V^e  just 
gotta  write  stupid  themes  'n 
things.  I  don't  even  know  wf,at  to 
write  them." 

"Are  you  eating  any  candy?" 
asked  the  mother. 

"Heck  no,"  said  the  son.  "I 
just  don't  like     it     any    more." 

"Well,  you  have  to  have  some 
candy,"  said  the  mother,  domin- 
antly.  "Candy  is  good  for  j'ou  . . . 
it  gives  you  some  of  the  things 
you  need  . . .  like  vitamins  and 
things." 

The  poor  boy  spent  a  very  un- 
comfortable evening  and  I  don't 
wonder  tJiat  he  is  still  digesting 
his  meal. 

And  when  dad  has.  to  write  a 
"form  letter"  for  a  thank  you 
note,  it's  a  sad  day  for  the  Fresh- 
man lot. 


Pogo 


By  Walt  Kelly 


7s3TBE8Mou$gr<::£M'^ 


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W01A.P  0E  A  PVt^i 

AP^WOACH"' 

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GlttlH'-At'tH6'SAM'WLCl««1VP^  ^ 
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UM  Abner 


By  Al  Capp 


-An;ONC£AH  KMOWSuAM'LL 
BE  SAFE  FUM  HOPEFUL. 
COME  SADtE  HAWKIKtS  CV 
rr-.T-THET  csa/^ir  ic 


OH,  WHO  COULD  BE  LOW  XUFf 
TDOF  rORE  OLfTA  9fiCJL  FUM 
Th'DCDGFATOH  DICK-SHUNARV? 
-AN-  WHV  DID  IT  HAFrA  BE 
TK  'CRITIC'  PAGE  •^ 


Politics  In  Action 


This  i«  th«  first  of  tt>r««  p«rt»  ef  a  l«Hw  wrrt- 
»Mi  this  news|>ap«r  by  John  Brook*,  •  roprosent*^ 
tiv*  in  th*  Student  Legislature  from  the  Student 
Party.  Th*  letter  is  lij  reply  to  a  column  written 
by  Daily  Ter  Heel  Mews  Editor  Ray  Linker  for 
lest  Sunday's  peper. 

Editor: 

Before  beginning,  let  me  say  that  this  is  written 
with  a  cool  hand  and  a  great  deal  of  thought.  I  had 
thought  the  matter  of  the  absurd  appropriation  of 
$400  to  The  Daily  Tar  Heel  "to  acquire  the  services 
of  The  Associated  Press'  national  and  international 
news  service"  a  finished  matter. 

I  had  seen  no  reason  to  rehash  the  matter  in 
The  Daily  Tar  Heel  until  I  was  challenged  to  so  by 
a  very  harsh  and  bitter  article  by  Mr.  Ray  Linker, 
one  of  the  more  considerate  writers  on  the  staff  of 
the  paper,  which  was  evidently  aimed  squarely  at 
myself.  Because  Mr.  Linlter  takes  the  point-of-view 
of  a  staff  member  and  disregards  most  of  the  debate 
in  opposition  to  the  bill,  I  ^all  below,  analyse  his 
article  in  the  light  of  an  opponent  to  the  bill. 

Before  getting  underway,  however,  I  should  like 
to  comment  on  the  background  of  the  author  of  the 
bill  who  is  mentioned  in  paragraph  thre-^.  This  stu- 
dent is  written  up  as  the  "Personality  of  the  Week," 
a;id  for  this  I  congratulate  him.  However,  in  the 
article  conceirning  this  personality  there  are  some 
statements  which  puzzle  me.  The  personality  states 
emphatically  that  he  hates  "petty  politics." 

First  I  should  like  to  hear  his  definition  of 
"petty  politics"  and  then  I  should  like  to  hear  hfra 
explain  how  he  differs  from  his  definition.  I  am  also 
interested  in  what  he  means  when  he  says,  "The 
legislature  has  never  realized  its  full  potential." 

Perhaps  the  legislature  has  not  reached  its  full 
potential,  but  I  wish  the  personality  would  relate 
to  us  the  ways  in  which  he  believes  the  body  has. 
fall?n  down  other  than  by  being  plagued  with  the 
UP  unit  rule.  ' 

Before  tackling  the  unit  rule,  I  should  like  tfl" 
ask  one  other  question.  How  can  the  personality  say 
that  "the  University  Party  has  had  its  best  session 
in  the  legislature"  when  the  party  has  had  such  a 
small  portion  of  its  legislators  present  at  the  var- 
ious sessions  this  term? 

"    >If6ijr  to   return   to  the   peWonality's   statement, 
,  iVl^pqtisan^'fpelings  hurt  the  legislature  and  should    j 
*b^'f6rg(Aten  -when  a  bill  is  being  voted  upon."  Per-    ' 
haps  this' statement  is  the  result  pX.th.e.fi«rsonali- J 
fy^s  having  two  out  of  three  bills  defeated  by  the 
legislature  last  Thursday  evening  fine  to  what  legirf 
falorj^  palled    "petty    political    maneuvers."  3f 

Even  thougTi  the  validity  of  the  title  is  evidenl« 
it  is  interesting  'to  note  .thi^  the  UP  legislatorslj 
stuck  by  their  unit  rule  to  vote  for  1h«  measureVi] 
Luckily  for  the  student  body,  the  SP,  although'* 
holding  the  fewer  seats,  had  the  most  legislators*-^ 
present.        ,  .'.  .)  i.tl     ;  . .  ^ 

In  trying  to  label  the  SP  as  the  party  with  th«"^ 
unit  rule.  Mr.  Linker,  again  returning  to  his  report;^ 
stated  at  the  top  of  column  three,  "Members  of  th«!!3 
SP  maintained  that  they  were  speaking  and  votinff^ 
to  their  individual  convictions  and  not  according-- 
to  party  wishes.  Yet  when  the  vote  came  th*  legi^-  ;^ 
lature  voted  this  way:  13  SP  members  against  the*<J 
bill,  five  SP  members  for  it;  14  members  of  the!* 
UP  for  the  bill,  none  against  it."  jj 

Studying  this  accurate  report,  one  will  note  that;* 
the  SP  had  18  legislators  present  to  the  UP's  14. '1 
Also,  which  looks  like  a  unit  rule,  13  and  5  or  14?  '4 
It  is  evident  to  the  public;  but  what  is  more  im-  % 
portant.  it  is  real  to  the  legislators  that  the  SP  al-  "^ 
lows  its  representatives  to  vote  for  the  good  of  each  % 
legislator's  individual  constituency.  It  is  a  pitx.  '"* 
that  the  "personality  of  the  week"  is  dissatisfied! 
with  his  party's  practices.  " - 

Column  1,  "UP  Chairman  Mike  Weinman,  who 
introduced  the  bill  last  week,  called  it  'one  of  the 
best  ever  introduced  in  the  legislature.'  "  This  is , 
a  strange  statement;  perhaps  Mr.  Weinman  is  run- 
ning in  this  election  for  return  to  the  legislature  or 
again  for  the  UP  chairmanship.  Another  sentence. 
"He  didn't  say  much  Thursday  night,  but  he  did- 
n't have  to."  Excuse  me  for  suggesting  that  per- 
haps his  silence  was  for  the  best.  The  UP  seemed 
to  sense  this  when  they  invited -ilr.  Powledge  and 
Mr.  Montieth  as  guest  speakers  before  the  legisla- 
ture. 

Mr.  Powledge's  presence  was  natural  since  the 
oil  concerned  his  domain.  But  what  of  Mr.  Mon- 
tieth  s? 

Firtt  we  most  realize  that  the  Finance  Commit- 
tee reported  neutral  on  the  bill,  thus  causing  con- 
cern as  to  the  bill's  likelyhood  of  success.  Next  we 
must  note  that  Mr.  Powledge  personally  requested 
the  oratory  of  Mr.  Montieth's  on  behalf  of  the  bin 
and  that  the  two  collaborated  at  great  length  be- 
fore  appearing  Thursday  evening. 

Mr.  Montieth,  not  a  legislator,  is  noted  for  his 
fluency.  This  is  pointed  out  by  Mr.  Linker's  state- 
ment. He  talked  down  to  the  legislators,  quoted 
poetry  and  the  Bible,  and  urged  the  solons  to  have 
vision." 

IWight  I  suggest  to  the  reader  an  emotional 
trend?  He,  Mr.  MonUeth,  further  stated  that  he 
challenged  the  legislators  not  to  vote  as  members  of 
the  two  political  parties,  saylrtg  thete  jK^as  a  war  f  o- 
ing  on  of  self-interests  versus  interests  of  the  whole 
eampus.  Let  me  again  point  to  the  finai  vote  and 
to  the  first  sentences  of  this  paragraph.  .\ 

In  conclusion  Mr.  Montieth  told  the  body  they 
would  be  censured  for  it  by  the  student  body  if 
they  didn't  pass  the  bill.  Perhaps  this  is  again  dra- 
matic and  Emotional. 

(To  be  eontimt«d> 

.   .—   I.  Mii.  *  -  ♦ 


WSDNESO^ 


Sch 
For 


An  attack 
of  joumali^ 
humanities 
phasizing 
"quick    tui 
the  theme 
the   Novem! 
South  Atlar 
ed  in  Chapd 
Atlantic    Laj 

Associate 
Hayes  of  tht 
da,  who  is 
Southern 
ence,    has    i| 
attack     on 
arid  newspaf 
with  negleci 
while    buildj 
courses. 

Hayes  scol 
municators"r 
soon  do  thei 
die  Guest 
Milton." 

As  establi 
versities  an] 
number  of 
of  journalisr 
a  teaching  cJ 
hucksterizedj 
"Prattle,  baj 
in   the  sadd) 

The  South 
Association 
ILsb  and  ford 


ALTl 
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show   you 
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Th. 

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33.  Ruthe^ 
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THl  DAILY  TAR  HEIL 


PAt;E    THREE 


writ- 
icnt*- 

ritf«n 
r»r  for 


writtea 

It.  I  had 

iation  of 

services 

lational. 

latter  in 

to  so  by 

Lioker, 

staff  of 

larely  at 

^t-of-view 

lie  deliatfr 

alyie  his 

bill. 

lould  like 
lor  of  the 

J  This  stu-. 
|e  Week," 
in  the 
ire  some 
ity  states  . 


iltion    of 

|hear  him 

am  also 

rs,  -The 

itial." 

its  full 
kid  relate 
[body  ha$." 
with  th« 

like  ta/ 

lality  say 

session 

such  a 

the  var- 


[tatement, 
should 
>n."  Per-     | 

by  the 
rhat  1 


legislators^^ 

|measares^j| 

althonit^^l 

legislatorfjl 


accordis^^ 
th«  legis>:i 

gainst 

Ts  of  tht; 


note  that 

up's  i4; 

I  5  or  14?- 
more  im* 
the  SP  aF 
od  of  each>«' 
is  a  pits, 
Hssatisf  ie< 


t^ 


iman,  who 
one  of  the 
This  is . 
lan  is  nm* 
;islatnre  or 

sentence, 
ut  he  did- 

that  per- 
UP  seemed 
vledge  and 
the  legisla* 


since  the 
Mr   M»n- 

Commit* 

ausing  con- 

ss.  Next  we 

y  re4)uested 

of  the  bin 

length  be- 

»ted  for  his 
jker's  state- 
tors,  quoted 
Ions  to  hirve 


a  emotional 
ted  that  be 
members  iA 
as  a  war  go- 
lf, the  ii^iole 
lal  vote  aad 


le  body  they 
lent  body  if 
is  a^ain  dra- 


Schools  Of  JoUrhalism  Slammed 
For  Hucksterism  And  Neglect 


'iN<(:k-'i\NCk  Will  Sponsor 
Two  United  riations  Seminars 


An  attack  on  southern  schools 
of  journalism  for  "kicking  the  1 
humanities  around"  while  em-  I 
phasizing  "hucksterism"  and 
quick  turnover"  education  is 
the  theme  of  the  main  article  in 
the  November  edition  of  the 
South  Atlantic  Bulletin,  publish- 
ed in  Chapel  Hill  by  the  South 
Atlantic   Language   Association. 

Associate  Professor  Francis 
Hayes  of  the  University  of  Flori- 
da, who  is  also  chairman  of  the 
Southern  Humanities  Confer- 
ence, has  launched  a  scathing 
attack  on  journalism  schools 
and  newspapers  who  are  charged 
with  neglecting  the  liberal  arts 
while  building  up  vocational 
courses. 

Hayes  scored  ttie  "New  Com- 
municators" who,  he  said,  will 
soon  do  their  "homework  n  Ed- 
die Guest  in  preference  to  John 
Mllton."^^ 

As  established  in  many  uni- 
versities and  encouraged  by  a 
number  of  newspapers,  schools 
of  journalism  in  the  South  have 
a  teaching  creed  that  is  "heavily 
hucksterized,"  said  Prof.  Hayes. 
"Prattle,  babble  and  jingle  are 
in   the  saddle,"  he  said. 

The  South  Atlantic  Language 
As.sociation  is  composed  of  Eng- 
lish and  foreign  language  teach- 


ALTER  YOUR 
CLOTHES 

to  the 

IVY  LCX)K 

Drop  by  today  and  let  us 
show  you  what  proper  altera- 
tions can  do  for  your  outdated 
wardrobe. 

Come  in  early  for  your  holiday 
al^arations. 

PETE 
The  Tailor 

USl^i  E.  Franklin  St. 


George  L.  Coxhead 

U.N.C.  '42 
Campus  Representativa 


ers  and  scholars  in  nine  south 
eastern  states.  UNO  Associate 
Professor  Frank  M.  Duffey  is 
editor  of  the  Bulletin. 

Prof.  Hayes  is  scornful  of 
"communications  experts"  who 
have  put  equal  value  of  calculus 
and  "renovating  second  -  hand 
furniture." 

Phrases  criticizing  journalism 
schools  foUow: 

( There  is  an)  "incessant  mes- 
sianic trend  toward  more  prolif- 
eration of  trivia." 

"In  Southern  education.  Gen- 
eral Clutter  is  in  command." 

"They  have  erected  a  shrine 
to  a  word,  perhaps  a  nonce  word 
at  that,  ephemeral  as  'hubba 
hubba',  but  vastly  more  loaded." 
(The  word  is  communications.) 

"The  loud  and  self-compla- 
cent twins,  promotionalism  and 
LS-MFTism  provide  the  creed 
for  a  large  number  of  Southern 
teachers  of  journalism  and  edi- 
tors." 

"Schools  of  journalism  every- 
where duplicate  studies  already 
well  established  in  other  depart- 
ments." 

"Journalism  frequently  even 
thumbs  its  nose  at  English  and 
renounces  her  desperately  need- 
ed authority.  The  upstart  alleges 
that  mother  is  old-fashiond,  im- 
practical." 

"From  the  evidence  it  is  clear 
that  the  public  relations  people 
in  Southern  journalistic  pedagogy 
have  sold  themselves  a  bill  of 
goods.  The  time  is  ripe  for  an 
agonizing  reappraisal." 

Prof.  Hayes  points  out  ex- 
ceptions to  the  group  he  has 
criticized.  Among  these  excep- 
tions, he  said,  are  Mark  Ethridge 


of  Louisville,  V.  M.  Newton  of 
Tampa^  Fla.,  Jonathan  Daniels 
of  Raleigh,  Gerald  Johnson  of 
Baltimore  and  W.  S.  Howland 
of  Atlanta. 

Without  naming  individual 
schools  of  journalism,  Hayes  re- 
fers to  certain  ones  as  "X",  "Y" 
and  "Z".  School  X  is  housed  with 
a  School  of  Business  Administra- 
tion, and  one  course  descrip- 
tion in  the  curricula  is  described 
as  "Airline  Stewardess-Reserva- 
tionist  -  Journalismic   Sequence." 

Another  journalism  school  al- 
so advocates  courses  in  religion, 
textiles  and  sex. 

Prof.  Hayes  has  a  special  piece 
of  advice  for  the  English  De- 
partment, advising  it  to  "stock 
in  amphetamine,  stiffen  its  back- 
bone, and  erect  a  sgn  reading: 
'Trespassers  will  be  prosecuted 
to  the  full  extent  of  the  law.' " 


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DAILY    CROSSWORD 


.\CROSS 

1.  Breakfast 

cereal 
5  Killed 
9-.  Sudsy 
10!  Lawful 

12.  Fully 

13.  Two  under 
par  (golf) 

14.  Receptacle 
for  flowers 

l.V  I-air 

16.  Music  note 

17.  Like 

18.  Search  for 

20.  Measure 
of  length 
tind.) 

21.  Thrashed 
23.  Mature 
24  Dear  to 

the  heart 
26  Son  of  Noah 
28  Hifhlyin. 

flammable 
.    in«leri«* 
31  Bounder 

32.  Food 

33.  Ruthenium 
;       <«ym.) 

34.  Siberiair 

.  35.  Not  good 
3i5.  Clique 
tl.  Tapestry 
39.  Excess 

solar  year 
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42.  Stunted 

43.  Affixes 
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.  exchanf • 


2.  Shower 

3.  Likely 

4.  Brood  of 
pheasants 

5.  Smooth  «nd 
flossy 

6.  Rawboned 

7.  Ovum 


22.  Asleep 

23.  Hire 
25.  By 

way 
of 
2<.  People 
of 
Europe 


«.  A  hard  blow  27.  Province 
9.  Young  <Cuba) 

pigeon  29.  fiuilds 

11.  Rent  30.  Bumpy 

15.  Pointed  out  32.  Spara 

18.  Branch  35.  Fekth- 

19.  Lamprey  «red 

20.  Famous  creature 
pirate  36.  Rational 


FRIDAY 

{Qoniiviued  from  page  1.) 

NCAA  sponsored  or  cooperating 
events  for  four  years. 

Friday  said  "in  the  early  fall 
of  this  year  State  College  was 
notified  by  the  NCAA  of  possi- 
ble infractions  of  its  regulations 
in  the  recruitment  of  Jack  More- 
land  of  Minden,  La.  The  admin- 
istration has  thoroughly  investi- 
gated the  case. 

"From  the  evidence  we  were 
able  to  find,  the  administration 
concluded  that  there  had  been 
no  violation  of  the  NCAA  regu- 
lations and  so  reported  its  find- 
ings to  the  Committee  on  Infrac- 
tions of  the  NC.'VA  at  its  meet- 
ing in  Kansas  City  on  Oct.  22." 

Moreland,  a  6-10  high  school 
basketball  sensation  who  scored 
more  than  2,00  points  in  his 
senior  year,  suddenly  turned  up 
at  N.  C.  State  last  September 
after  several  schools  had  hinted 
they  had  locks  on  him. 

Continuing,  Friday  said  "The 
Committee  on  Infractions  charg- 
ed the  college  with  specific  vi- 
olations of  the  NCAA  regula- 
tions and  so  advised  the  admin- 
stration  of  the  college. 

'In  an  effort  to  oi,»-In  the  op- 
portunity to  review  the  evidence 
which  led  to  the  commitcee  to 
I'each  this  conclusion,  the  ad- 
mtaUtratlon  requested  access  to 
their  file  on  this  case  and  the 
request  was  refused.  We  then 
asked  for  a  postponement  of  the 
council  hearing  scheduled  for 
today.w  TMs  request  ^r  post- 
ponenleHll  was  tfKo  refused.  ;  • 
"Oh  the  basis  of  the  inforiha-^ 
tion  furnished  to  us  by  the 
NCAA  to  date,"  Friday  stated, 
"we  cannot  understand  the  pro- 
bation decision.  We  are  de- 
termined to  get  all  of  the  evi- 
dence in  this  case  and  will  take 
whatever  action  it  warrants." 


The  YM-YWCA  announced  Tues- 
day Its  sponsorship  of  two  United 
Nations  Seminars  to  be  held  on 
the  weekends  of  Nov.  23-25  and 
Nov.  29-Dec.  1  in  New  York  City. 

Miss  Anne  Queen  of  the  Y  office 
s«dd  tiiat  any  student  interested  in 
participating  in  either  one  of  the 
seminars  should  pi<^  up  the  nec- 
essary application  blanks  and  ad- 
ditio:ial  information  from  eithi^r 
Tom  Long  or  Polly  Clarenbach  in 
the  YMCA  building.  Miss  Queen 
announced  that  the  application 
deadline  for  the  first  seminar 
would  be  Nov.  20,  and  Nov.  26  for 
the  latter  one. 

The  approximate  total  cost  of 
the  seminar  trip  would  be,  acecn-d- 


At 


ee 

The  UiNC  Male  Glee  Club  it- 
turned  Sunday  night  from  its  m- 
nual  fall  tour.  Fifty-two  people 
made  the  tour  including  the  49 
Glee  Club  members,  the  soloist, 
Miss  Donna  Patton,  andJier  chap- 
erone. 

The  major  appeafance  of;;  the 
tour  was  the  joint  concert  in 
Charlottesville,  Va,  Friday  night, 
given  with  the  Virginia  Glee  Club. 
The  Glee  Club  gave  fouf  other 
concerts,  two  in  North  Carolina 
at  Hillsboro  and  Roxboro,  and  two 
in  Virginia  at  Stratford  College  in 
Danville  and  Sweet  Briar  in  Sweet 
Briar. 

Joel  Carter,  ferfectof  of  the 
Glee  Club,  said  "the  tour,  except 
from  a  financial  standpoint,  was 
a  very  successful  one,  with  the 
club  singing  very  well.  I  think  our 
soloist,  Donna  Patton,  did  her  us- 
ual fine  job  and  Hunter  Tilman 
turned  in  a  thorough  job  as  piano 
accompanist." 


Y  SCHEDULE 

1  p.m.  —  Goettingen  Committee 
—  Lenoir  Hall,  C.  C.  Shotts, 
Chairman. 

1:30  p.m.  —  Campus  Christian 
Council  Executive  Committee, 
Room  No.  3,  Bill  Kane,  Chairman. 

2  p.m.  —  Planning  Meeting  for 
Campus  Christian  Council  Study 
Group  in -World  Religion;  Office 
No.  3,  Leon  Holt,  Chairman. 


Crowning  Of  Oueen 
Is  At  IDC  Meet  Tonight 

At  the  meeting  of  the  Intent 
dormitory  Council  tonight,  Mi^ 
Shirley  Carpenter  will  be  cnmn* 
«d.  Sweetheart  of  UNC  Dorms. 

The  meeting  will  be  in  the  Phi 
Assembly   Hall. 

Miss  Carpenter,  an  Alpha  Gttixti 
was  sponsored  bf  Stacy  Dormi- 
tory In  the  contest. 

President  Sonny  Hallford  em- 
phasized the  meeting  would  be 
short,  and  urged  that  all  members 
be  ^present.  The.  meeting  will  b^ 
heM  at  7  p.m.  ..| 


Order  Of  The  Grail 

Will  Sponsor  Dance 

A  dance  honoring  Meredith  Col- 
lege will  be  held  here  Dec.  8  and 
will  be  sponsored  by  the  Order  of 
the  Grail,  according  to  Grail'  Del- 
egata  Luther  Hodges. 

The  idea  of  inviting  an  entire 
school  to  the  campus  for  a  social 
function  is  unprecedented,  save 
for  Consolidated  University  fun- 
ctions, said  Hodges.  He  also  ex- 
pressed hope  that  a  new  "institu- 
tion" was  being  established  by  the 
function. 

The  Grail  is  sponsoring  this 
dance  primarily  for  freshmen,  al- 
though Hodges  said  all  students 
are  invited. 


ing  to  the  YMCA,  between  $25-$30. 
This  figure  would  include  hotel  ac- 
commodations, meals,  the  UN  tour, 
and  other  expenses. 

Miss  Queen  said  that  the  UNC 
YMCA  was  assuming  joint  spon- 
•orship  of  the  second  seminar  with 
the  American  Friends  Service 
Committee.  This  Quaker  organi- 
zation conducts  UN  seminars  each 
year. 

The  purposes  of  this  trip,  as  out- 
lined by  the  YM-YWCA,  are  "to 
help  students  become  acquainted 
not  only  with  the  issues  confront- 
ing the  UN,  but  with  some  of  the 
differing  points  of  view  on  these 
issues." 

The  YMCA  office  listed  the 
trip's  curiculum  and  outlined  the 
seminar's  tour  for  participants  in- 
eluding  the  opportunities  to: 

(1)  Attend  meetings  of  the  Gen- 
eral Assembly. 

(2)  Visit  with  members  of  vari- 
ous VH  delegations. 

(3)  Become  more  familiar  with 
some  of  the  agencies  of  the  UN. 

(4)  Tour  the  UN  and  listen  to 
many  outstanding  speakers. 


Our  48^ 
Shelf  Is 
Bulging 
With  The 
Sort  Of 
Novels 
Mom  Would 
Enjoy 

THE  INTIMATE 
BOOKSHOP 


Debate  Team  Returns 
From  S.  C.  Tournament 

The  UNC  Debate  Team  partici- 
pated in  the  South  Carolina  In- 
vitational Debate  Tournament  in 
Columbia,  S.   C.  last  weekend. 

The  affirmative  team  of  Phillip 
Gerdes  of  Wilmington  and  Randy 
Oglesby  of  Greensboro  won  one 
and  lost  five.  The  negative  team 
of  Clay  Simpson  of  '  Lexington, 
Ky.  and  Harold  Stessel  of  Peek- 
skill.  N.  Y.  won  three  while  los- 
ing three. 

The  topic  for  the  tournament 
was:  Resolved:  That  the  United 
States  should  discontinue  direct 
economic  aid  to  foreign  countries. 


Readmitted  Stadents  Not 
To  Be  Placed  Oti^  Probation 


Students  who  ar#  suspended 
from  school  may  re-enter  without 
being  placed  on  probation,  accord- 
ing to  a  recent  dedree  passed  by 
the    three    judiciary    councils. 

Formerly  students  suspended 
from  school  for  one  semester,  cus- 
tomary suspension  period,  'were 
placed  on  probation  during  the 
semester  following  their  re-ad- 
mittance. 

Chairman  Luther  Hodges  of  the 
Student   Council   said   it   was    the 


concensus  of  his  group,  and  of  the 
Men's,  and  Women's  Honor  Coun- 
cils that  students  had  been  pun'- 
ished  enough  by  the  semester  sus- 
pension without  farther  corrective 
action. 

The  three  councils  voted  on  the 
idea  at  at  their  respective  sessions 
and  passed  it  handily. 

Miss  Pat  McQueen  heads  the 
Women's  Council  and  Jim  Exum 
heads. the  Men's  Council. 


■•'■"''Wft'"5S<?*V^'  'VffflVfiVP^^''' '  '^ 


30S    E.   Franklin   St. 
Open  Till  10  P.M. 


■ 


mk 


I  \ 


5  AN  D  LE  K  OF  BOS'l  ON  does  the  easiest  shoe  that  ever  sped  acroes  a  campus.  It^s 
a  handsewn*  SPORTSTER,  a  genuine  moccasin  that  means  your  foot  is  cradled  in  one  8oft» 
smooth,  unbroken  piece  of  pliant  leather.  Slim,  trim,  good  fittine  . . .    calf:  '^r^' 

Bi«f  k  Jl  Brown 


*(iMa<U«WD  vamp  and  back) 


Chafaiel, Hills  Only  Exclusive  Shoe  Store 


)X. 


\     •!! 


St.95 

Su«de: 

Black,  Gr«y,  Blu* 

$9.95 


lAlexdnder's  Shoes 


ESSO    RESEARCH 


iX 


^vonders'  with  oil 


ii"f  I  e  cf  /^  /O  1 6  ^'  >|  A 


N 


Fdbulous  oU-made  ruhher  for  the  world  of  sports 


Covering  The  Campus 


YMtcrter't  Am««V 

38.  Scad 
vmmI 

39.  Epoch 

10.  Young  a«al 


MODERN  DANCE  CLUB 

The    Modern    Dance    Club    will 
meet  today  at  4  p.m.  in  the  dance 
studio  of  the  Women's  Gym. 
PHYSICS  COLLOQUIUM 

A  joint  Duke-UNC  Physics  Col- 
loquium, will  be  held  at  8  p.m.  on 
the  Duke  Campus. 

John  Blatt  from  Australia  will 
speak  on  "The  Theory  of  Liquid 
Helium."  Dr.  Blatt  is  a  professor 
at  the  University  of  Sydney. 
LAW  WIVES  ASSOCIATION 

The  Law  Wives  Association  will 
meet  at  8  p.m.  at  Victory  Village 
Nursery.  A  business  meeting  will 
be  followed  by  bridge  and  ^nasta. 
FELLOWSHIP 

Tht  Carolina  Christian  Fellow- 
ship will  meet  today  at  7  p.m.  in 
the  choir  rehearsal  room  of  Hill 
Hall.  There  will  be  a  discussion  on 
"The  Biblical  Basis  of  Missions." 
WUNC-TV 

Today's  schedule  for  WUNC-TV, 
the  University's  educational  tele- 
vision, channel  4: 

~^      HAssiiNiSi 


WANTED:  RECIPIENTS  OF  DEAR 
John  Letters  from  the  "girl  you 
left  behind."  Come  see  us  for 
sympathy  and  scrumpious 
snacks.  Cafe  Mouza.  Open  24 
iMurs. 


10:59 

Sign  On 

11:00 

Fire  Prevention 

11:30 

Fire  Prevention 

12:00 

Tomorrow 

12:30* 

Future  Farmer 

1:00 

Today  On  Farm 

l:d0 

Play  Period 

2:00 

Career  For  You 

2:30 

Sign  Off 

5:44 

Sign  On 

5:45 

Music 

6:00 

Dra^v  Me  A  Story 

6:15 

Sports  Clinic 

6:30 

News 

7:00 

Industrial  Artisan 

7:30 

College  Concert 

8:0C 

G.  Bernard  Shaw 

8:30 

Living  Toigether 

9:00 

Mental  Gymnastics 

9:30 

American  t»olitics 

10:00 

Final  Edition 

10:05 

Sign  Off 

Wl/N^ 

WUNC,  the  University's   educa- 

tional PM  station: 

7:00 

Int^mezzo 

7:15 

Messages  and  Man 

7:30 

Songs  of  Fr^ce 

7:45 

Curtain  Going  Up 

8:00 

I  Hear  America  Singing 

8:30 

Georgetown  University 

Radio  Forum 

9:00 

Debussy  The  Master 

10:00 

News 

10:15 

Evening  Masterwork 

11:30 

Sign  Oif 

All'American  Iclckk  and  crashing  tackles  put  a  brutal  squeeze  on  the  rubber  in  a  football. 
But  footballs  with  bladders  of  Butyl  rubber  take  punishment  in  stride . .  .hold  air  indefinitely 
. . .  resist  weather  extremes.  Developed  from  oil  by  Esso  Research,  Butylrubber 
is  out^performing  natural  and  other  types  of  rubber  in  hundreds  of  uxiys. 
Proof ,  once  again,  that  ^^SO  H^SKAHCH  works  wonders  with  oUl 


(isso) 


PASe   POUR 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HHL 


WEDNESDAY,  NOVEMBER  T4,  175S 


Duke  Smashes  Title  Hopes  For  Booters  With  3-0  Victory 


'H*ek    S;>orrs  Editor 


Fall  Of  The  Fighting  Irish? 

For  one  of  the  few  times  since  the  inception  of  the  Carolina-Nolre 
Dame  football  series  in  1949,  the  campus  is  buzzing  with  talk  of  a 
possible ,  upset  over  the  legendary  Fighting  Irish  from  South  Bend. 
The  Irish  are  in  the  throes  of  one  of  their  most  miserable  seasons 
in  years,  while  Carolina,  although  admittedly  off  to  an  exceptionally 
slow  start,  has  shown  signs  of  coming  to  life  in  the  last  few  games. 

But  Ctrolin*  Head  Coach  Jim  Tatum  and  his  assistant  Eddia 
Taafua  aren't  antiraly  in  agreamant  with  this  optimistic  attititude. 
"Thok  racord  is  not  a  trua  indication  of  just  how  good  tha  taam 
raally  is,"  wamad  Taa9we  at  the  waekly  prass  lunchaon  hold  hera 
in  Lanoir  Hail  yastarday.  "Thay  ara  a  typical  Netra  Damf  iffot 
with  plawty  of  husHa  and  asgressivenass,  and  we're  loolcing  for  a 
tough  gama." 

Teague  went  on  to  list  some  of  the  reasons  for  Notre  Dame's  poor 
^-6  record.  "That  loss  to  SMU  in  the  season's  opener  really  hurt,"  he 
said.  "Itosing  to  a  team  that  had  been  vastly  underrated  in  pre-season 
speculation  seemed  to  take  a  lot  of  starch  out  of  them.  Then  on  top 
of  that  several  of  their  key  men  have  been  either  sidelined  or  slowed 
up  by  injuries.  Ever  since  that  opening  game  they've  played  good 
football  only  in  spots.  They  just  haven't  been  able  to  put  together 
;»ixty  minutes  of  it,"  said  Teague. 

Toagua  paid  tributa  to  Notra  Dam«  quartarback  Paul  Hamung, 
eallinf  him  "a  ana  man  gang."  "That  boy  can  do  anything:  run, 
pass,  black,  tackle,  punt,  kick  off  and  avan  kick  •xfr*  points. 
Thara's  not  a  battar  all-round  back  In  the  country,"  he  said. 

Coach  Tatum  then  added  a  few  words  of  his  own  in  support  of 
the  "Notre  Dame  wiil  be  tough"  theory.  "We've  only  played  two 
teams  this  year  that  Fd  say  were  better  than  Notre  Dame.  They,  of 
course,  would  be  Oklahoma  and  Tennessee.  I  don't  believe  anybody 
else  on  our  schedule  would  have  an  edge,"  Tatum  asserted. 

Tha  hafty  Tar  Haal  montor  than  took  tima  out  to  run  down 
th«  schadulas  played  by  Carolina  and  Notre  Oama  and  giva  a  quick 
comparison.  "Thair  schadule  has  baan  much  toughar  than  ours," 
ha  said.  "Thay'va  lost  to  SMU,  Purdua,  Oklahoma,  Michigan  Stata, 
Ha»y  and  Syracusa,  and  thwe's  net  a  weak  sister  anywhara  in  this 
bunch. 

"On  the  other  hand,  we've  been  beaten  by  State.  South  Carolina. 
Gewgia,  Oklahoma  and  Tennessee.  Oklahoma  and  Tennessee  are  both 
just  great,  but  bow  about  the  other  three?  They  just  can't  compatn 


'Soccer  Squad 
Lx)ses  Second 
Straight  Game 

By  JIM  PURKS 

DLTIHA.M— Duke's  Blue  Devils 
handed  the  UNC  varsity  soccer 
team  its  second  straight  loss  here 
yesterday,  shutting  out  the  Tar 
Heels.  3-30,  thus  rudely  shattering 
the  team's  hopes  of  a  conference 
title  this  season. 

UNC  goalie  Chuck  Hartman  had 
his  hands  full  from  the  outset  as 
Duke  immediately  took  the  offen- 
sive, beating  Carolina  to  the  ball 
and  feeding  sharp  passes  to  the 
for\**ard  line. 

In  the  first  quarter,  the  Duke 
forwards  took  IQ  shots  at  the  Caro- 
lina goal,  outshootipg  the  Tar 
Heels  t«n  to  one.  After  11  minutes 
«f  play,  iBlue  DiwH  center  for- 
ward Ed  G4\U(i  slipped  past  the 
erratic  Carolina  d^ftjlle  to  score 
and  put  Duke  ahead^-O. 

Before  the  Tar  Heels  could  re- 
cover, Duke  scored  again  early  in 
the  second  quarter  when  left  in- 
side Gunnar  Schull  took  a  nice 
lead  fr«m  his  halfback  and  drove 
the  ball  past  goalie  Hartman  into 
the  right  corner  of  the  goaL 

Duke's  second  goal  proved  to  be 
a  stimulus  to  the  Tar  Heels  as  the 
defense,  largely  sparked  by  half- 
back Ted  Smith's  inspired  play, 
tightened  up,  enabling  the  forward 
line  to  outshoot  the  Blue  Devils. 
The  team  had  started  too  latf;, 
however,  and  the  half  ended  with 
Duke  stiU  ahead.  2-0. 

The  same  pattern  developed  in 
the  second  half  as  the  Duke  play- 
ers usually  beat  Carolina  to  the 
ball  with  Carolina  showing  short 
spurts  oi  defensive  and  offensive 
strength. 

The  final  blow  was  dealt  the 
Tar  Heels  midway  in  the  fourth 
quarter  when  a  penalty  shot  was 
called  against  Carolina  and  Duke 
left  wing  Simon  Izaguicrre  scored 
to  boo.st  Duke's  lead  to  three  goals. 

The    Carolina    loss    marks    the 


Sfofe  College  On  Probation 


to  some  of  the  teams  Notre  Pame  ba$  l<fst  .to.  ,Qn  the  jMaia  of  -aH    second  straight  time  the  Tar  Heels 


this,  how  caA  we  be  favor^?'%.  .^^  jp,.  j,r,...-;  :»!  -jje  x^F-^cr  r  r  ' 

Despite  dire  warnings  from  the  \JNt  coactiiAg'st^ff.  thik  is  a  golden 
opportunity  for  the  TafKHe^ls:  to"  »ii|ia|tlh  first  win  over  a  Notre 
Dame  team.  And  becmise  this  is  the  concluding  game  in  the  series 
whMjh  began  in  the  hayday  of  Charlie  Ju.sticc,  if  s  win  now  or  wait 
'lii  the  ecMv^aonie  home.  -  ■'■  "i^'lj?*  l'- ■  ■-'  .'i.  »  "  •  •>  '■  i: 
I.-  -2.  .  ;    ...;  u   ;iTc.  ;5  _jt   icjifiiiji^  Irar*  tdf  fa;- s«i.)ti* 

vv  Th«  Big  Comeback  : 

The  victory  ovier  Viriginia  Saturday  was' a  highly  satisfying  one"  to 
U^IC  students  who  made  the  long  trip  North  on  the  Caravan  train. 
They  saw  the  Tar  HeeU  stage  a  complete  reversal  pf  form  in  the 
second  half  to  cpme  off  the  floor  after  a  poor  after  a  poor  pre-inter- 
mlssion  showing  and  win,  21-7. 

Ed  Sutton,  Dava  Raad  and  a  hard  charging  offansiva  forward    • 
wall  ware   tha  vital    factors.    Sutton,   long   laggad   halfback  with 
apaed  to  burn,  was  nevar  battar  as  ha  romped  to  an  unpracadantarf 
total  of  thraa  third  quartar  touchdowns. 

Reed's  field  generalship  and  bullseye  passing  played  a  big  part  in 
aU  three  Tar  Heel  TDs,  and  heads  up  line  play  paved  the  way  for 
Sutton  and  the  other  backs. 

But  the  brightast  spot  of  tha  whole  aftamoon  was  tha  manner 
in  which  Carolina  cama  from  bahind  to  all  but  blew  tha  Cavaliers 
out  of  Scott  Stadium.  When  thay  cama  back  on  tha  fiald  trariing 
7-0  at  tha  baginning  of  the  sacond  half,  thay  wara  in  no  meed  t» 
•It  back  and  take  their  licking  as  they  had  dona  on  soma  pravlaus 
occasions.    Instaad,  thay  unloaded  thair  big  gun.  and  bombarded 
Virginia  without  letup  to  take  tha  dacisien  in  a  walkMiray. 
Porhaps  this  is  a  sign  of  things  to  come.   The  story  wUl  be  told 
Saturday  in  South  Bend  and  the  foUowing  Saturday  in  Kenan  Stadium 
when  they  play  the  Duke  Blue  Devils.  After  that,  the  gear  mill  be 
stashed  away,  and  the  fireworks  will  be  over  'til  next  September 


have  beexf  held  scoreless  and  the 
first  time  Duke  ha.*;  bcateh  one  of 
C6Q€h '  Marvin   Allen's'  stiuads  in 


Starting  Irish  Flankman 

Dick  Pendargast,  veteran  Notra  Dame  and,  will  be  hi  tha  atarting 
lineup  Saturday  whan  tha  Fighting  Irish  antertain  Carolina  at  South 
Band. 

« 

Irish,  Tar  Heels 
Depend  On  Sophs 


(Continued  from  page  •!.) 
any  question  before  the  NCAA  for 
the   four-year  period. 

Southern  California  was  placed 
on  probation  until  July  1,  1958. 
Ohio  State's  carries  to  next  Aug. 
21.  Both  teams  are  banned  from 
the  NCAA  and  cooperating  events 
for  those   periods. 

University  of  California's  pro- 
bation continues  to  Nov.  13,  1957, 
}  one  year  from  Tuesday,  but  the 
school  will  be  permitted  to  >  take 
part  in  NCAA  sponsored  and  co- 
operating events. 

This  brings  to  four  the  number 
of    Pacific    Coast    Conference 
schools   chastised   by   the    NCAA. 
All    b^jit    California    were    banned 
from     post-season     bowl     games. 
UCLA  and  the  University  of  Wash- 
ington  were  chastised  earlier. 
In  the  case  of  North  Carolina 
State,  tha  council  said,  the  viola- 
tion was  offering  of   aid  to  an 
unnamed    "prospective    student- 
athlete." 

Among  the  inducements,  .the 
council  said,  were  annual  cash 
gifts,  a  seven-year  medical  educa- 
tion for  a  friend  of  the  prospec- 
tive athlete  as  well  as  a  five-year 
unrestricted  scholarship. 

Ohio  State,  the  council  said, 
was  guilty  of  allowing  its  "head 


By  LARRY  CHEEK 

It'll  be  sophomores  against  soph- 
emorcs^  Saturday  afternoon  when 
the  Fighting  Irish  of  NotF^  Dame 
entertain  Carolina's  Tar  Heels  in 
an  intersectional  game  at  South 
Bend,  Ind. 

Both  clubs  arc  going  with  youth- 
ful talent  this  season,  and  their 
records  bear  testimony  to  this 
fact.  The  famed  Fighting  Irish 
have  a  woeful   1-6  record  against. 


Aubrey  Lewis  at  halfback,  Dick 
Pendergast  at  end  and  Bob  Gaydos 
at  iiuard. 

The  Carolina  squad  came  out  of 
the  Virginia  game  in  good  physi- 
cal i^ape.  and  all  hands  arc  ex- 
pected to  be  ready  to  go  Satur- 
day. ^  • 

As  is  the  case  with  Notre  Dame, 
the  Tv  Heels  will  lean  heavUy  on 
youngsters.  Among  these  arc  Ron- 
j)ic  j(oes  and  Fred  Swearengen  at 


football  coach  "  Woody  Hayes  to 
utilize  "a  private  emergency  aid 
fund"  for  loans  to  football  play- 
ers. 

Southern  California's  probation, 
the  council  said,  came  because  the 
Southein  California  Educational 
Foundation  "provided  student- 
athletes  of  the  university  with 
monthly  cash  allowances."  Pay- 
ments ranged,  the  council  said, 
from  $10  and  $75  per  month.  j 

California's  probation  was  lev- 
eled because,  the  council  said, 
two  members  of  the  football 
coaching  staff  "administered  an  ' 
emergency  aid  fund,"  making  16 
loans  "which  averaged  approxi- 
mately $63"  over  a  two-year  pe- 1 
riod.  The  coaching  staff  members 
were  unnamed. 


stiff    competition,    while    the    re-   center,  Don  Kemper 'at  guard;  Leo 
building  Tar  Heels   have  only  two   RuSSaVagc,    Phil    Blazer,    Stu    Pell 


wins  and   a   tic   to  shpw  after  8 


starl-«i. 

The    Irish   have   a    young,    inex- 


BANK  WINS  FEATURE  MATCH 


Tar  Heel  Netters  Take 
5-4  Win  Over  Virginia 

Carolina's    tennis    team,    undis-   slump  in  the  2  and  3  doubles  con- 


two    ycttrs.    Carolina    had    beaten  |  Pericnced    team    with    only    three 
Duke     fduJr     straight     times, 
games    being    decided    by    a    one- 
gdalmariria.  :> 

Can^iad's  nett  gai&e  wlll'be 
ti-ith  thd  Maryland  Terps' on  Sat- 
urday, Nov.  17  «  College  Park. 
Md.  The  taiateh  will  be  the  team's 
final  contest  of  the  season, 
t 


and  Don  Redding  at  tackles;  and 


ELECTION 

(Continued  from  page  1.) 


CUP),  itewis  (UP),  Cushman  (UP); 
Town  Men's  H,  disqualification; 
Town  Men's  HI,  Greenblatt  (SP), 
Oppenhcimer  (UP),  Run-off  be- 
tween Jotuison  and  Kenan;  Town 
Men's  IV,  Andrews  (UP),  Peele 
(SP). 

Dorm  Women's  District,  Meadow 
«SP),  Carter  (UP),  Huffman  (SP), 
Core  (UP). 

Town  Women's  District,  Von 
Ammon  (UP),  Cronan  (UP). 

The  Student  Party  had  12  seats 
up  for  election  and  12  hold-over 
seats.  The  UP  had  16  seats  up  for 
election  and  10  hold-over  seats. 

The  SP  kept  its  12  contested 
seats  while  the  UP  nabbed  14  of 
their  If.  The  other  two  segts  will 
be  filled  in  the  nm-off  election 
next  Tuesday. 


MURALS 

YESTERDAY'S  TAG  FOOTBALL 
RESULTS 

DKE  61,  AK  Psi  0;  Sig  Nu  13, 
Phi  Delt  12;  Phi  Gam  7,  SPE  0; 
PiKA  13,  TEP  2;  Chi  Phi  14.  Pi 
Lamb  0,  ZBT  19,  Kap  Psi  7;  Sig 
Chi  over  Theta  Chi  by  forfeit;  KA 
over  SAH  by  forfeit;  SAE  14,  Kap 
SigO. 

YESTERDAY'S  VOLLEYBALL 
RESULTS 

ATO  2,  Delt  Sig  (w)  0;  AJcxan- 
der-2  over  Everett-l  by  forfeit;  Old 
East  2,  Winston  0;  Medical  School- 
1  2,  ^cxander-l  0;  Dental  School 
2.  Evciett-2  0;  Ruff  in  ovfer  Manley 
oy  forfeit. 

TOOAY'S  TAG  FOOTBALL 
•   i  SCHEDULE  ' 

8^.45:  Fiel#  No.  1.  Cobb-1  vs. 
Lewis:'  Field  No.  2.  Beta  vs.  Phi 
Delt  (w),  Field  No.  3.  Graham  vs. 
Old  West;  Field  No.  4,  Law  Sehool- 


.\toe  DieCantis  at  halfback. 
But  it  win  still  be  dependable 

old    timers    such    as    Ed    Si^tton, 

all    lettermen  in  the  starting    lineup. !  Pave     Reed,     Buddy     Payne     and 

One    of    these    lettermen,    quarter- !  Wally   Vale    upon    whom    the    'far 

ba^lf,  Paul  iloTQun^,,  fs   the  man  I  ilcel$  vviil  rely.  Tatum  gave  spe- 

that  ,ha^  the  Carolina  coaching  cial  praise  to  Payne  and  Vale  f6r!  1  vs.  VIctob'  Villagc;.;nfeld  ^<^.^ 
staff  worried.  As  Coach  Jim  Tatum    their  work  so  far  this  season,  term- 1  Winston  vs.'Ruffin-l.  j 

said  at  his  press  conference  yes- ;  ipg  Vale  one  of  the  country's  bet- j  4:45:  Field  1.  Medical  School-1 
terday,  "Our  basic  problem  is  to  ter  fullbacks  and  noting  the  great  vs.  StAty-lj  Field  No.  -2,  Dent 
stop  Hornung."  improvement  in  Payne's  end  play.  ■  School  vs.  BVP;  Field  No.  3.  Sig 

The  versatile  Hornung,   an  All-       Tatum  feels  that  his  chief  worry  j  Chi  v«.  Kap  Sig  (W>;  Field  No.  4. 

Saturday  will  be  getting  the  UNC  |  Joyner  vs.  Medical  Scho(ri-2.  •  •    j 

offeiise  to  clicking.  "Our  defense  — 

has    improved    300    percent    since 

the  season  began,  but  our  offense 

hasn't    even    picked    up    25     per 

cent,  "  he  said. 


America  selection  last  year,  is 
capable  of  breaking  any  game 
wide  open.  He  can  do  just  about 
anything,  and  as  Tatum  put  it, 
"You  could  play  that  boy  at  half- 
back, fullback,  end  or  quarterback 
and  you  wouldn't  hurt  the  team  a 
'oit." 

But  elsewhere  around  the  start- 
ing lineup,  the  story  is  different. 
Sophomores  predominate  in  the 
line  and  at  halfbacks  and  fullback. 
And  nothing  can  take  the  place  of 
valuable  experience. 

One  name  in  the  Notre  Dame 
lineup  has  a  familiar  ring.  Hold- 
ing dov,Ti  one  of  the  tackle  posts 
will  be  Bronko  Nagurski,  son  of 
one  of  football's  all  time  great 
fullbacks.  Nagxirski,  a  soph,  has 
shown  decided  improvement  since 
the  beginning  of  the  season  ac- 
cording to  scout  EJddie  Teague, 
and  could  play  a  big  role  in  the 
game  Saturday. 

Other  top  performers  in  addi- 
tion   to    Hornung    include    speedy 


puted  king  of  the  A.C.C.  tennis 
world  for  the  last  three  years, 
wound  up  fall  drills  last  weekend 
in  Charlottesville  with  a  shakey 
5-4  win  over  the  University  of  Vir- 
ginia Cavaliers. 

Tar  Hee)  ace  Steve  Bank  breez- 
ed by  Virgnia's  top  man  Sherry 
Snyder  6-1,  8-0,  to  take  the  num- 
ber one  singles  match.  Later  Bank 
teamed  up  with  Bobby  Bortner 
and  came  from  behind  to  take 
the  number  one  doubles  battle 
6-8,  6-1,  6-3,  and  clinch  the  match. 

The  Tar  Heels  built  up  a  big 
lead    in    the   singles    play,    but  a  { 6-4. 


test  almost  cost  them  the  match 

The   summary: 

Singles:  Bank,  (C),  defeated: 
Snyder,  6-1,  6-0;  Bartner,  (C),  de- j 
feated  Cromwell,  6-3,  6-4;  York, 
(V),  defeated  Foster,  6-3.  5-7,  6-2;  j 
Livingston,  (C),  defeated  Einevic]^  I 
6-3,  6-3;  Black.  (C),  defeated' 
Berkley,  6-3.  6-4;  Stoever,  (V),  de- 1 
feated  Smith,  6-2.  6-0. 

Doubles:  Bank  and  Bortner,  de-I 
feated  Cromwell  and  Berkley,  frB, ' 
6-1,  6-3;  Stover  and  York.  (V).  de- ; 
feated  Foster  and  Livingston,  6-0. ! 
6-1;  Snyder  and  Burnett,  (V),  de- ; 
feated  Smith  and   Black,  0-6.  6-4, '' 


FOR  PRIVATE  PARTIES  IN  THE  COUNTRYI 


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Flexible  rates  for  small  groups,  based  en  siie  of  party,  averag.* 
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($4«)    Telephone  9-3234. 


ulTT  LE'Tfiftifmr 

RICHABO 

AID  HIS  6REAT  ORCHESTRA 
nmnril    Memorial 
altiibluU  Auditorimn 
£^  ONE  NIGHT  ONLY 


Open 

ALL  DAY 
WEDNESDAY 

Berman's 

DEPT.  STORE 


NOW  PLAYING 


Carolina 


IT  RIPS  OPEN 
THE  HOT  HELL 
BEHIND  THE 
GLORY!' 


This  is  a  picture  thot  grabs  yeu  by  tha  throat  end  ihovM 
you  into  thf  sheli-ripping,  blood-drenched,  screaming  heat 
of  war. 

Hare  is  the  hell  behind  the  glory ...  tha  real  guts  and  smell 
of  bottlel  This  Is  the  story  they  dic/n'f  tell— of  the  heroes  who 
stood  up  under  fire,  ond  the  few  yho  betly-crowled  outi 

The  ASSOCIATES  and  ALQRICH  Co.  presents 

JACK  PALANCE 
EDDIE  ALBERT 


;«4i 


[EE  MM-ROBEIII  STRAUSS-  RICIIiUtD  JAECKEL- BUDDY  EBSEN 
zjmiM SMITHERS  ^&.  .»SS«  i5n«c  ROBERf aTdrich 


LAST  TIMES  TOPAY 


Everybody 

Has 

Christmas 


But 


'        --    ru  »,  •■: 


■if 


NOBOm 
Has  Such 


i^i'^-j^^.n^')'' . 


■iA 


ftH. 


i;  V.' 


■  ;      .  •        ■ 

Nickel  Cards 


WBii*TIMATE 

'    BOpicSHOP  ' 

uc:uk<'>iou 

205  East  Franklin  Street 


iOtJtn  T«l  V^l^f  ^ 


B  O  B  and  M  O  N  K 
of 

TOWN& 
CAMPUS 

SALUTE 
Athlete  Of  The  Week 


ED  sunoN 

Ed  Sutton  has  been  named 
athlete  of  the  week  for  his  eut- 
^ending  play  against  the  Uni- 
versity of  Virginia  last  Satur- 
day. Sutton  scored  all  three 
Carolina  touchdowns  in  the 
third  quarter,  and  was  the 
day's  leading  ground  -  gainer 
with   136  yards  in  rushing. 

We  want  htm  to  drop  by 
TOWN  A  CAMPUS  and  pick  out 
s  shirt  to  his  liking— compli- 
ments of  the  house. 

We  want  the  old  and  young 
'like  of  Chapel  Hill  to  make 
TOWN  A  CAMPUS  their  head 
quartprs  for  the  finest  in  men's 
clothing.   Drop  in   today. 


TOWN  & 


iii 


It... 


■i 


CAMPUS 


'*\^f^'^'^^^\yrt 


..  \^i 


'i^.vtA* 


be  fight  in  style  with 


ffRiweti,  shoes 


French  Shnner  shoes  have  a  distinctive 
smartness  that  harmonizes  beautifulh 
with  the  new  styles  in  men's  clothing. 
They  are  expertly  crafted  of  the  very 
finest  materials  .  .  .  your  assurance  of 
complete  comfort  and  long  wear.  Come 
in  today  —  and  see  for     ,  .  ,    <r. 

yourself  why  French         i 
Shriner  shoe*  are  finer. 


R€/^CHS  HQ§^£0i^ 


-INTRgDUCING- 

BRAND  NE^ir  CORD  'N  GRAIN 
In  Mahogany^And  Black  —  S22.95 


Julian 


•«"  \ 


WEATHER 

Ceneraily  fair   and   warmer.   Ex- 
pected hiflh  of  73. 


TRIALS  98FT« 
BOX  870 


-*•* 


atHiecl 


PROBATION 

At  Stat*   and   in  the  honor  wf*- 
tern.  See  Page  2. 


VOL.  LVil     NO.  48 


Complete  i/P)  Wire  Service 


CHAPEL  HILL,  NORTH  ffSf^QL^KJm^itVDAY,  J^yJUA^H  IS,  ^954 


Offices   in   Graliam   Memorial 


FOUR   PAGES   THIS    ISSUI 


Yack  Beauty  Queen  Surveys  Chapel  Hill's  Winter-Time  Roses 


Miss  Martha  Williford  chosen  last  week  as  1956-57  Yackety  Yack 
while  cold  winds  blow.  Miss  Williford,  a  coed  from  Fayetteville, 
at  the  Planetarium  sundial   until  the  first  sharp  frost,  according  to 


beauty  queen,  inspects  one  of  the  roses  that  has  been  bieeminf 
will  be  featured  in  th«  annual  this  year.  The  roees  will  be  feeftf^ed 
the  University  landscape  architect.  ((Photo  by  Fred  Powledge)   „ ' 


Roses  are  blooming  jm  the  vi- 
cinity of  the  sundial. 

F.  J.  kClair,  the  University's 
land.scape  architect,  isn't  sur- 
prised. H<e  planted  them. 

"Tbe,v  are  of  a  new  group  of 
roses  called  florihunda."  leClair 
said.  They  .JMl^fUn  nlfliost  six 
months  out  of  the  year.  j 

The  Groses — 20    varieties    in    all  | 
shades  of  red  and  white  and  yel- 1 
low — are     blooming     around     the  i 
Morchcad      Planetarium      sundial, 
erected  last  spring.   They  form  a  j 
unique   contrast    to  the   heaps   of  ■ 
dead    leaves    around    the   campus, 
more   indicative  of  mid  -  Novem- 
ber cold   winSjs. 

leClair  explained  that  Univei-si- 
ty  workmen  have  carefully  cut 
aw«y  the  roses  a^  they  wilted,  all 
through  the  summer.  "We  treat 
them  continuously."  he  said, 
"spraying  and  dusting  when 
needed,  and  pruning  the  old  fad- 
ed flowers  away."  the  roses  have 
been  in  continuous  bloom  since  last 
May.  when  they  were  planted. 

They'll  bloom  until  hit  by  the 
first  very  shtrp  fro.st.  leClair  said 

H^  said  the  roses  ace  products 
of  crosses  between  baby  rambler 
and  tea  roses,  along  with  other 
hybrids.     -.  •  >  -  ■:    » 


Only  38  Per  Cent 
Of  Student  Body 
Voted  Yesterday 


Campus  Chest  Reaches 
Goal:  Drive  Ends  Today 


27  UNC  Students  Go 
Today  To  Attend  SSL 


By  BILL  CATE 

A  27-member  delegation  will 
lepresent  UNC  at  the  State  Stu- 
dent Legislature  in  Raleigh  today 
through  Saturday. 

"This  year,  the  primary  interesi 
of  the  delegates  going  to  SSL  is  a 
legislative  experience  rather  than 
a  social  party  interest  similar  to 
previous  years  experiences,"  says 
John  Brooks,  house  floor  leader. 

The  whole  purpose  of  the  mock 
legislature,  which  has  headquar- 
ters at  the  Carolina  Hotel  in  Ra- 
leigh, is  to  bring  together  student., 
trom  colleges  throughout  the  state 
to  deoate  topics  of  international, 
national,  state  and  educational  na 
ture. 

Bob  Harrington,  chairman  of  the 
delegation,  feels  that  the  group 
has  a  more  serious  attitude  than 
previous  delegations  to  th^  SSL. 
He  said.  "Just  last  Thursday,  a 
bill  was  approved  by  the  Student 
Legislature  here  at  UNC  recogniz 
ing  the  SSL  delegation  as  an  offi- 
cial representative  of  the  student 
body.' 

Last  year,  the  influence  of  par- 
ties resulted  in  the  attendance  of 
but  one  delegate  to  the  assembly 
on  Saturday  morning,  the  last  day 
of  debates. 

This  year,  there  has  been  more 
legislative  interest,  according  to 
Harrington.  A  more  serious  atti- 
tude is  indicated  by  the  delegates' 
consideration  for  legislative  as- 
pects. Only  one  candidate  for  of- 
jice,  Jim  Holmes  for  presidency 
for  one  day  of  the  three  spent  in 
Raleigh,  is  being  considered.  Dem- 
ocratic attitude  is  reflected  in  the 


expectancy  of  support  by  UNC 
delegates  of  candidates  from  the 
smaller  eoUeges  iir  Worth  Carolina, 
HaiTington  said.  ^•' 

The  UNC  gVoMp  Witt  bring  be- 
fore the  assembly  two  bills:  1.  A 
bill  to  repeal  the  Pearsall  Plan 
amendment,  and  2.  A  bill  calling 
tor  the  intervention  of  U.  S.  troops 
in  Poland  and  Hungary. 

Acquiring  more  time  io  formu- 
late a  better  plan  for  education  is 
not  the  purpose  of  the  Pearsall 
Plans  postponement  of  the  segre- 
gation question,  proponents  ol  the 
SSL  uill  say.  It  is*felt  that  the 
Pearsall  Plan  will  not  answer  the 
problems  that  will  arise. 

These  "luture  leaders,"  whu 
make  up  the  delegation,  have  con- 
libuted  a  large  amount  of  tirfie 
nn  issues  that  they  feel  important 
and  they  pay  theii'  own  expenses, 
Harrington  said. 

The  officers  of  the  delegation 
are  Bob  Harrington,  chairman;  Jim 
Holmes.  vice-chairman;  Nancy 
Rothschild,  clerk:  Jim  Monteith, 
senate  floor  leader;  John  Brooks, 
house  floor  leader;  Tom  Long, 
treasurer;  Joel  Fleishman  and 
Charlie  Dean,  so<\i\  chairmen. 

The  UNC  delegation,  which  is 
divided  into  two  parts,  the  senate 
and  the  house,  includes  Senators 
Jim  Monteith  and  Larry  Matthews 
with  Benny  Thomas   as   alternate. 

Delegates  to  the  house  are  Ed 
Roland,  Gardner  Foley,  Charles 
Dean.  Jim  Holmes,  Jim  Tolbert, 
Joel  Fleishman  Whit  Whitfield. 
Tom  Lambeth,  Phil  Haire,  Pat 
Adams.  Bob  Harrington,  and  Miis 
Nancj   Rothschild. 


news 

in 
brief 

FROM  RADIO  DISPATCHES 

*       CYPRUS — A  radioman  report- 
id.  fho   ptk»plf- Hip  •€i**»»«»*^-„-!*ere^ 

skeptical  as  to  what  the  UnUeH' 
;  Nations  troops  can  accowipli>h 
by  mv>ving  into  Egypt.  The  feel- 
ing is  that  Egyptian  President 
Nasser  would  call  for  withdraw- 
)  al  of  the  UN  troops  as  he  did 
for    the    withdrawal    of    Brififeh 

'    and  French  troops.  

«     «     « 

WASHINGTON— President  Ei- 
senhower, speaking  about  the 
threat  of  Soviet  Russia  to  send 
an  army  of  volunteers  into 
I  Egypt,  said  the  United  States 
wouid  oppose  such  inlervenliun 
through  the  UN. 

»     *     « 

VIEN'NA — Russkn  troops  were 
reported  massing  alnnq  the  fron- 
tiers of  Poland.  Wladyslaw  Go- 
mulka,  first  secretary  of  the 
Polish  Communist  Party,  is  strug- 
gling hard  to  prevent  another 
uprising.  It  was  reported  if  ho 
fails  there  will  be  another  Hun- 
gary. 

From  Budapest  it  was  report- 
ed Janos  Kadar.  Hungarian  pup- 
pet premier,  has  fired  twelve 
Stalinists  from  top  positions  in 
the  government.  The  move  was 
made  as  a  friendly  gesture  to- 
ward anti-Stalin  Communists  in 
Moscow. 


Training  Meet  Set  I n 
Freshrfliifi  L4iSdership 


Freshmen  interested  ip  '^rainiag 
for  leadership  in  the  YM<SA^.  and 
other  campus  organiza(io|ts  jJpMvd^ 
beep  invited...ta«tu-QU  jsw^^ 
J^rpup  that  will  me-ef  b^ffsrcoo 
Thanksgiving  and  Chribtnamr jstcp- 
tions.  ..-\ 

This    special    group    ctfi'^  liiricr- 


No  Legiflature  MmI 

-.Jhere  wil  be  no  meeting  of  the 
Student  Legislature  tonight,  ac- 
cording to  Speaker  Sonny  Evans. 

The  body  wil  jjot  meet  dut  to 
the  fact  that  the  complete  results 
of  Tuesdays  elections  are  not 
Known.  Run-offs  are  required  for 
some  seats.         •  ^ 

The  runoffs  wil  be  held  next 
Tuesday. 

The  next  meeting  wil  be  Nov. 
29. 


Coloratura  Soprano  Will  Be 
Les  Petites  Musicales  Soloist 


Jan  Saxon,  colorature  soprano, ; 
will  be  the  featured  soloist  in  L«s  | 
Petites  .Musicales  program  Sun-  j 
day  night  at  8:00. 

Sponsored    by    Graham    Memor- 
ial Activities  Board,  the   musicale  | 
is  to  be  held  in  the  main  lounge  j 
of  Graham  Memorial.  | 

The  program  will  mark  Miss  ^ 
Saxon's  fourth  year  of  appearances  | 
before  Chapel  Hill  audiences,  j 
Formerly  a  special  student  in  Dra- 1 
matic  Art.  she  is  now  doing  con- j 
centrated  voice  work  with  Walter ; 
Golde  6f  Chapel  Hill  Golde  will  j 
be  the  accompanist  for  the  solo- 1 
ist.  ,        ! 

Hailing  from  Charlotte.  Miss! 
Saxon  has  been  active'  in  both 
drama  and  music.  While  at  the 
University,  she  became  a  member  j 
ol  the  Playmakers  and  appeared; 
in  such  productions  as  '"Julius^ 
Ca;^^sar"    and     E\eii  llic  Gods." 

Puring   liic   suminer     of     1956,  i 


she  played  the  leading  role  of 
Eleanor  Dare  in  "The  Lost  Col- 
only."  Other  outdoor  theatre  work 
includes  appearances  in  "Horn 
in  the  West"  and  "The  Highland 
Call." 

Jan  Saxon's  career  has  included 
a  good  bit  of  local  work.  She  has 
performed  as  soloist  with  the  Uni- 
versity Mens  Glee  Club,  the  Chor- 
al Society  in  "The  Messiah,"  and 
the  Durham  Civic  Choral  Society 
in    'Mozart  Requiem." 

Solo  appearances  with  Les  Pet- 
ites Musicales  and  the  Basingstoke 
Sextet  have  also  been  a  part  of 
her  musical  activities.  Opera  work 
in  Chapel  Hill  with  the  Music  De- 
partment consists  of  roles  in  "The 
Telephone  "  and  "The  Marriage  of 
Figaro." 

No  admission  is  charged  for  Les 
Petite.s  Musicales.  and  everyone 
has  been  invited  to  attend  the 
program  by  GM.VB. 


Di,  Phi  Hold  Annual 
Night  Of  Reading 

The  Dialectic  Senate  and  the 
Philanthropic  Literary  Society  meet 
in  the  Di  Hall  for  their  joint  Read- 
ing Night  Tuesday,  with  23  attend- 
ing.        ' 

Representative  Don  Jacobs,  the 
only  speaker  to  be  applauded, 
read  William  Jennings  Byran's 
"Cross   ol   Gold   Speech." 

Henderson  Gives  Talk 
On  G.B.  Shaw  Today 

]  Dr.  Archibald  Henderson  will 
give  a  public  lecture  tonight  at 
8  p.m.  in  Gerrard  Hall  on  "George 

I  Bernard  Shaw  —  Man  of  the  Cen- 

I  tui-y" 

I 

{      Chancellor  Robert  Burton  House 

will   introduce   Dr.   Henderson. 
I      The    lecture,    sponsored    by    the 
I  Friends  of  the  UNC  Library,  will 

be  followed  by  a  reception  for 
I  Dr.  Henderson  in  the  Library  As- 
I  .»«mbly    Room. 

Persons  planning  to  attend  the 
1  reception  have  been  ask  to  call 
I  the   library   office   by   no<»n  toda). 


Discussion 
On  Election 

e 

Is  Tonight 

There  will  be  a  panel  discus- 
sion of  the  recent  presidential 
election  Thursday  at  8:30  p.m.  in 
105  Caldwell. 

The  panel  members  represent 
the  various  fields  of  politieal 
science.  Dr.  Alexander  Heard, 
chairman  of  the  panel,  is  a  con- 
sultant to  the  Gore*Comjnittee  of 
the  Senate  studying  campaigfl  ex- 
penditures in  elections,  pr.  Fred 
Cleaveland  will  approach  the 
election  from  the  general  stand- 
point of  policy  impliei^ions  for 
both  parties.  Dr.  Robert  Agger 
and  Gordon  Cleveland  will  use  the 
statistical  approach  to  the  subject 
in  the  discussions  of  various 
trends  of  the  country  as  shown 
by  the  election. 

The  panel  will  discuss  •'The 
.Meaning  of  the  1956  Election." 
Statistics  will  be  used  to  illustrate 
and  to  discus>>  trends  of  the  coun- 
try and  to  illustrate  their  effect 
on  future  politics. 


ship  training  sponsored  by  the 
FnpshnMin  Fellowship,  will  qjeet 
IhKe  tiraesi:  the  meeting.';  will  be 
.(^.  St  ^Irin^ies  that  are  most 
convenient  for  the  members.  Con- 
ditcted  as  much  as  pos&ible  on  a 
diKcussiiBB  basis,  the  success  of 
the  group'  will  depend  on  the  ac- 
tive participation  of  the  freshmen 
who  ecroil.      , 

Upperciassmeri     will     serve     as 
resource  persons  in  order  thai  the 
topics  wil   be   thoroughly   present- 
ed.   Motion    pictures    and    mimeo- 
graphed   papers    wil    be    used    to 
make  the  topics  as  clear  as  possi- 
ble.  Already  lined   up  to   partici- 
pate are:  Bob  Young,  student  body  ; 
president      and      former      YMCA I 
treasurer;     <}erry     Mayo.     YMCA  • 
president:  Bob  Leonard,  freshman  ' 
work    chairman    and    past    fresh-  j 
man  camp  director:  Claude  Shotts 
and  John    Riebel.   VMCA  employ- 
ed staff. 

The  three  main  areas  that  will 
be  covered  are:  (1)  What  are  the 
essentials  of  leadership,  especial 
ly  in  committees  and  discussions? 
(2>  WJist*  are  the  essential  char- 
acteristics of  the  Student  Christian 
Association  Movement?  (3>  \NTiat 
is  our  work  on  the  campus,  and 
bow  can  we  best  participate? 

Freshmen  who  are  interested  in 
this  special  group  are  invited  to 
stop  by  the  Y  Information  Office 
today  and  fill  out  a  schedule  so 
that  the  plannng  committee  can 
set  the  time  for  meeting  that  is 
convciifcnt  to  all  .moniber.s  of  the 
gfoup. 


IN  THE  INFIRMARY 

Student*  in  ttie  inflrmery  y*«- 
terday  included: 

MiMes  Ruby  Batten,  Shirley 
Edgerton,  Elizabeth  McOraw, 
and  Roberta  Simpson  and  Fred- 
erick Byrum,  Cary  Clark,  Letiit 
Cody.  Waiter  Coenen,  James 
Emerfon,  Jimmie  Merritt,  Rich- 
ard Saylor,  Myron  SnetHerly 
Robert  Tate,  and  Anthony  Wolff. 


GM  FILM 
IS  TONIGHT 

The  secret  of  ".M"  wil  be  reveal- 
ed at  8  p.m.  today  in  Carroll  Hall 
when  GMAB  Foreign  Film  Com- 
mittee presents  the  fourth  of  its 
series   of  movies. 

It  was  this  secret  whi^h  scared 
all  of  Europe  and  caused  the  film 
to  be  banned  in  the  U.  S.  because 
of  its  terrifying  subject  matter. 
Although  it  is  still  banned,  the 
Foreign  Film  Committee  has  been 
able  to  get  it  under  special  con- 
ditions. 

Starring  Peter  Lorre  in  his 
fir«^  movie  role,  the  film  creates 
a  horrifying  effect  of  realism 
which  aroused  the  people  of  Eu- 
rope to  panic. 

No  single  admissions  will  be  ; 
sold  for  this  showing,  but  tickets 
may  ,be  purchased  for  this  film  I 
and  the'  four  remaining  films; 
''Hamenjco. '  "Lifetwat,'"  "Incor- 
rf^ble,*"  and  "Arsenic  and  Old 
liacf."  'hcJcels  aro  priced  at  $1.2.1., 


Campus  Chest 
Plans  Big  ^ 

Dance  Friday    i 

An  informal  party  has  been 
planned  for  Friday  night  as  a 
grand  finale  to  lh,e  Campus  Chest 
drive. 

'Over  100  girls  from  the  UNC 
School  of  Nursing  dorm  and  from 
Duke  wil  be  waiting  to  dance  to 
one  of  the  hottest  collegiate  com- 
bos in  the  Southeast."  said  Bob 
Jac«»bus.  Campus  Chest    official.      ! 

The  dance,  to  be  held  in  Cobb  ] 
basement  from  8:30  to  11.30  p.m..' 
wil  cost  SI.  whether  students  bring 
dates  or  choose  a  date  from  the 
girls   at    the   dance. 

Four  "big"  acts  will  be  pre- 
sented during  intermission,  ac- 
cording to  Jacobus. 

Refreshments  wil  be  served  at 
the  dance. 

Tickets  may  be  obtained  at  the 
Y-Court    from    8    a.m.    until    noon 


The  Campus  Chest  has  already 
reached  its  goal  ol  SI. 500  accord- 
ing to  Je.ss  Stribling,  co-chairman 
of    the    drive. 

The  drive  will  continue  through 
today. 

The  groups  which  have  donated 
the  mo.st  per  capita  so  far  are 
Spencer  dorm  in  the  dorm:ti»ry 
division,  and  Kappa  Sigma  in  the 
fraternity  division. 

Spencer  had  44  cents  per  per- 
son, and  Kappa  Sig  had  S2  per 
per   person. 

The  two  first  runners-up  were 
RuMin  dorm  with  24  cents  per 
person  and  Alpha  Delta  Pi  with 
SI..")!    per    person. 

Those  figures  are  not  final  as 
the  bottles  are  still  in  the  Y  build- 
ing lor  contributions.  The  final 
winners  will  bo  announced  at  the 
dance  Friday  .night.  The  trophies 
will  also  be  presented  at  this  time. 

today    and    tomorrow,    or    P'riday 
night   at  the  door. 

"This  is  really  going  to  be  a 
blast."  said  Jacobus.  "We'll  guar- 
antee  ever>'one   a   fabulous   time." 


UNC  law  Students  Compete  In 
Moot  Court  Tx^xJay^Tamorrov^ 


Three    UNC    law    students    will 
take    part    in    the    regional    argu- 

GM'S  SLATE 

The  following  events  are 
scheduled  for  today  in  Graham 
Memorial: 

Library  Reception,  Main 
Lounge,  4  p.m.;  Debate  Squad, 
Roland  Parker  Lounge  No.  1,  4 
p.m.;  Student  Council,  Grail 
teoom,  6  p.m.;  University  Party 
Caucus,  Roland  Parker  Lounge 
No.  1,  6  p.m.;  Student  Party 
Caucus,  Roland  Parker  Lounge 
No.  3,  6  p.m.;  PIFC,  Woodhouse 
Conference  Room,  7:30  p.m.;  In- 
terdormitory  Council  Court, 
Council  Room,  7  p.m  ;  The  Caro 
linians,  A. P.O.  Room,  9  p.m.; 
Graduate  Study  Group,  Wood- 
house  Conference  Room,  9:45  j 
p.m. 


nients  in  the  .National   Moot  Court 
Competition    today   and    tomorrow. 

The  Resjion  Si.\  meet,  which  em-  j 
braces  the  two  Carolinas.  will  be  j 
held  at  Wake  l<^)rest  College  in  j 
Winston-Salem.  j 

Winners  in  the  regional  argu- ; 
monts  wil  c(»mpele  in  naticmal  ar- i 
liiimenis  to  be  held  in  .New  York.    I 

T1k>  U.NC  representatives  will 
be  Frid  A.  Babson  Jr.,  Wilming- 
ton: Jaek  T,  Hamilton.  Smithlield 
and  Richard  P.  Weitzman.  New 
ark.  .N.  J.  They  won  team  position 
in  competition  with  other  law  stu 
(lunts  here. 

Leonard  S.  Powers,  visiting  pro 
lessor  of  law,  will  accompany  thj.' 
U.NC    students    to    Winston-Saloin 

Two  justices  of  the  State  Su 
prenio  Court,  a  Federal  judge 
and  a  number  of  Superior  Court 
judges  and  prominent  attorneys 
will  .sit  as  justices  during  the  two- 
day    competition. 


-♦      Approximately    38    per   cent    of 
th    campus    population    made    the 
j  trip    to    the    polls    in    yesterdays 
election. 

2.568  students  out  of  approxi- 
mately   7.000   students    voted. 

Voting  tabulation  on  freshmen 
and  junior  class  officers  were 
withheld  by  the  Elections  Board 
because  of  "discrepancies"  in 
Town  Men's  II.  Voting  totals  in 
the  district  will,  of  course,  affect 
final  figures  in  the  class  officer 
races.  Thus  the  vote  was  withheld 
until -the  district's  population  vot- 
es a.aain  in  next  Tuesdays  run-off 
election. 
LEGISLATURE 

.'\>  of  this  moment,  representa- 
tion in  the  student  Legislature 
stands  deadlocked  —  24  seats  oc- 
cupied by  University  Party  mem- 
bers and  24  seats  held  by  Student 
Party    members. 

Ownership  of  one  .seat,  in  Town 
Men's  III,  will  be  determined  by 
run-off    election    no.xt    Tuesday. 

Ownership  of  the  ether  undeter- 
mined seat  of  the  50  total  Legisla- 
ture .seals  will  be  decided  upon 
in  run-off  election  also.  This  run- 
off was  necessitated  by  the  "dis- 
crepancies"  in   Town   Men's  II. 

There  were  29  seats  up  for 
election  in  yesterday's  balloting. 
The  SP  had  12  seats  up,  and  the 
UP  had  17  seats  up. 

The   SP   had   12   jioldover   seats, 
I  whidi  will  come  up  f-tr  election  in 
;  in  the   spring,   and   the   UP  'nad  9 
holdover  seat*,  also  up  for  election 
in    the    spring. 
Is- 'flM*.  jii  an   accordance   with   tlie 
I  .staggered   cicrforal    policy   govern- 
ing   Legislature   elections. 
KENAN  DIFFICULTIES 

Residents  of  Kenan  Dormitory 
we,-e  unable  to  vote  in  yesterday's 
election. 

Kenan  is  located  in  Dorm  Wo- 
men's District.  The  two  parties 
split  in  the  district,  each  nabbing 
two  seats. 

The  ballot  bo.v  and  ballots  were 
in  the  dom.  but  there  were  no  poll 
'enders  all  day. 

"Notinsi  r*in  be  done  about  it." 
aid  Elections  Board  Head  .\ndy 
lilnor.  "It's  up  to  the  dorm  presi- 
lent  to  gel   poll  tenders.''  he  said. 

Kenan  President  Sarah  White 
aid  she  didn't  get  any  election 
nformation  until  lat?  Monday 
light.  'It  was  too  late  to  get  any 
)(.I1  tender,'!. ■'  she  said. 
COUNCIL   ELECTIONS  '  ' 

Honor  and  Student  Council  can- 
didates   were    not    voted    upon    in 


(.See  LEGISLATURE,  Page  3) 


DUkathon  Queen  Contestants  Pose 

Your  penny  may  pick  the  DUkathon  queen  if  you  buy  a  penny  ballot  and  vote  today  between  8  a.m. 
and  5  p.m  in  Y  Court.  Above  are  the  contestants  i  -»  the  contest:  first  row.  Misses  Nancy  Davis,  Anne 
Morgan,  Marian  Dickens,  Carolyn  Wise;  second  ro  v,  Phyllis  Krafft  Pat  Howard,  Sally  Price,  and  Sally 
Robeson.  Entries  for  the  DUkathon  race  itself  will  b     open  until  Friday  evening. 


Pknn  TWO 


TH«  aAlLY  TAR  HIBL 


THURSDAY,  NOVEMBER  15,  19S« 


N.  C.  Sfate  Can  Cool  Off      ^^"^'^'*^ 


And  Start  Building  Men 


All  the  laus  are  not  yei  in.  bnt 
ii  appears  N.  C.  State  College  has 
been  .guilty  of  offering  indue  einents 
to  a   prospective  basketball   player. 

The  decision  handed  doun 
Iiiesday  by  the  .National  CoIle^;4ate 
Atldt'tic  .\ssn.  ('onncil  thartjed 
Carolina's  sistei  instiution  with  of- 
fering <  ash  and  a  fi\e-var  unre- 
stricted scholarship  fo  a  "pros- 
|>e<ti\e  sttident-athiete."  He  sinte 
lias  been  identified  tentativelv  as 
ja<kie      Moreland.      who     entered 

Stale  College  this  (all. 

*  *    '  * 

\'arious  offiicals  of  the  college 
and  the  (ionsolidatcd  Cnijersitv, 
induding  President  William  Fri- 
day, said  they  knew  nothing  of  the 
exideiue  fx*liind  the  .\C.\.\'s  de- 
cision. 

So.  unless  von  go  entirelv  on 
the  word  of  the  NCAA  Council, 
all  tlu-  f.«  ts  iu-f-nt  vt't  in.  \Ua.  con- 
sidering the"  rsCAAs  files  are  cor- 
rett.  it  ap|>e;vis  State  College  is 
guiltv  of  one  of  the  greatest  sins  of 
niodeni  -  dav  higher  '  eduiation: 
Fa\(ninii  an  athlete  over  other  stu- 
dents, ollfi  ing  him  monev  and  ex- 


pense-paid ediuation.  and  offeting 
to  send  his  girl  friend   to  school. 

Most  colleges  and  universities  in 
the  i'nited  States  are  guilty  of  fav- 
ing  their  athletes:  Carolina  is.  :vl- 
though  it  doesn't  faxor  them  to  the 
extent  that  some  <»f  her  sister  in- 
stitutions do. 

Hut  if  State  Ciollege  is  guilty  of 
the  (barges  heapetl  upon  her  by 
the  NC.\A  CouiK  il.  she  surely  de- 
seives  a  four-vear  athletics  proba- 
tion  sentence.    In    fa<t.    four   years 

seems  a   little  t(»  sh()rt. 

*  ■*  * 

In  four  years  the  (<tllege  (oidd 
learn  the  true  value  of  athletics  on 
the  college  campus.  And  in  four 
years  the  college  coidd  lerrn  that 
athletes  who  are  l)ought  become 
professionals,  and  there  still  are 
laws  against  athletic  professional- 
ism on  the  campus,  e\en  though 
thev  are  skirted  at  e\erv  oj)p<)riuu- 
ity. 

Again,  we  say,  the  facts  aren't 
all  in.  lUu  if  the  NC..\.\s  decision 
is  an  accurate  one.  we  think  four 
vears  will  be  an  excellent  cooling- 
olf  period. 


Solons  Defend  Legislatures 


Honor  Councils  Were  Wise 


The  rni\ersit\'s  student  honor 
organi/at ions  should  be  connnend- 
ed  for  their  decision  to  take  stu- 
dents off  the  probationary  list  who 
return   to   I'.NC  ;  iter  suspension. 

.Students  xvho  ha\e  been  suspend- 
ed h"om  s<  h(M)l  for  a  semester,  the 
councils  reasoned.  ha\e  been  pun- 
ished enough.  Further  punish- 
ment, in  the  form  of  piobation, 
mereb  makes  it  harder  for  the  re- 
tinfing  student  to  readjust  to  the 
l'-ni\ersiLv. 

Meres  what  probation  is.  as  de- 
Ihiied  i)N  Mon\  fbmoi  Council 
Chairman  Jim  Mxuni.  m  a  .sp^eth 
la.st  spring: 

Under  probation,   a  student  is  not 
aHowed   to   partic  pate   in   any  «xtra- 1 
curriculais    whatsoever.    He    cannot     ' 
represent    th«    I'niversity    as   an   ath- 
lete, debater,  a  member  of  the  bawk  : 
or    any    studen-t    function.    He    is    al- 
Jow^ed   to  :bMt||RT't'>  a  social   fraterni- 
ty. fet*|-he  rjjjjiiM^-i^^rve  as  an  oi/iepr^ 
partirtpifcij  id  Intramurals  or  do  al|y- 
th  il ;    ex^pt^iOtteiid    chapter*  Jheet- 
ing,;.  sleep  and  eat'  at  the  house.  ' 

A  student  tinder  probation  should 
concern  himself  with  nothing  but 
sleep,    eating   and   study.  .  .  ." 

The  studertt  who  has  been  su- 
spended froui^the  I'niversity  for  a 
.semester  or  more  already  faces  al- 
most o\erpow*ering  reha])ilitation 
obstacles.  In  the  first  place,  many 
of  his  c  lassmates  and  friends  know 
Avhy  hes  lea\Mng  .scIich)!.  Also,  the 
act  of  suspension  leaves  a  deep 
personal  and  emotional  scar  on  the 
student  iiaolved,  pioxided  he  has 
any   feelings  at  all. 

The  Daily  Tar  Heel 

The  official  student  publication  of  tbe 
Publications  Bos^rd  of  the  University  of 
North  Carolina,  where  it  is  published 
daily  except  Monday  and  examinatioe 
and  vacation  periods  and  summer  terms 
Entered  as  seeond  class  matter  in  the 
Dost  office  in  Chapel  Hill,  N.  C,  undei 
the  Act  01  March  8.  1870.  Subscription 
rates:  mailed,  !M  per  year.  $2.50  a  semes- 
ter; delivered,  $6  a  year,  $3.50  a  semes- 
ter. 


Editor  

FRElb  POWLEDGE 

Managing  Editor 

__  CHARLIE  SLOAN 

News  Editor 

.    RAY  LINKER 

Business  Manager 

BHJ,  BOB  PLEI. 

Sports  Editor    

..     LARftY  CHEEK 

EDITORIAL  STAFF  —  Woody  Sears, 
Frank  Crowther,  Barry  Winston,  David 
Mundy.  George  Pfinpst,  Ingrid  Clay, 
Cortland  Edwards,  Paul  McCauley, 
Bobbi  Smith. 

NEWS  STAFF— Clarke  Jones,  Nancj 
Hill,  Joan  Moore.  Pringle  Pipkin.  Anne 
Drake.  Edith  MacKinnon,  Wally  Kuralt. 
Mary  Alys  Voorhees,  Graham  Snyder, 
Billy  Barnes.  Neil  Bass,  Gary  Nichols, 
Page  Bernstein,  Peg  Humphrey,  Phyllis 
Maullsby. 

SPORTS  STAT^!  BiU  King.  Jim  Purks, 
Jimmy  Harpef.  Dave  Wible,  Charley 
Howson. 


Subscription  Manager  .   Dale  Staled 

Advertising  Manager  — Fred  Katziu 

Circulation  Manager Charlie  Hoi! 


Staff  Photographer 
Staff  Artist  ..Jl 


Norman  Kantor 
.  Charlie  Daniel 


When  he  letiniis  to  school,  he 
supposedly  has  turned  over  the 
j>roveiiI)ial  new  leaf.  But  the  ikm^ 
leal  is  dead  if  he  is  placed  on  pro- 
bation, if  he  nuist  lestiict  his  ac- 
tivities to  sleping.  eating  and  study- 
ing. 

Rehabilitation  comes  from  par- 
tic  ipating—jianicipaiing  iu'  ex- 
ir;«c  iirric  iilais.  scHia'l  life  and  sports, 
as  well  as  taking  part  in  eating, 
slc^eping  and  studying. 

The  thiee  judiciary  councils  did 
the  wisest  thing  in  a  long  time  when 
they  thiew  oiu  the  piobation  rule. 

Bus  Ruling* 


This  is  the  second  part  of  a 
three-part     letter     by     Student 
Legislator  John  BrooVs  concern- 
inq  a  column  in   last  Sunday's 
Daily  Tar  He«l. 
Let  us  spend  a  moment  on  the 
words  of  wisdom  from  Mr.  Pow- 
ledge.  He  stated  that  having  the 
(A.P. )    service    would      help    en- 
able   the    students    to    interpret 
the     news     better.     He   further 
stated  that  the  articles  would  be 
briel.      having     been     compiled 
from  larger  news  stories. 

It  would  .seem  that  the  two 
stories  contradict  one  another. 
How  does  a  condensed  article 
help  enlighten  a  student  on  the 
full  story?  It  would  seem  the  re- 
verse to  me. 

While  at  the  rostrum,  Pow- 
ledge  read  a  message  from  News 
and  Observer  Editor  Jonathan 
Daniels  which  favored  having  the 
wire.  Pray  tell,  what  does  Jona- 
than Daniels  have  to  do  with  the 
Daily  Tar  Heel.  This  lead.s  me  to 
question'  the  ambitions  of  The 
Daily  Tar  Heel  editor  as  to'  his 
desires  for  the  future  of  the  pap- 
er. 

Here  let  us  note  the  recent  arti- 
cles ''compiled  from  radio  dis- 
patches." The  subheadings  them- 
selves were  nothing  but  propa- 
ganda tn  arou.se  the  student's  in- 
terest in  the  "hard  work"  being* 
rendered  -by  The  Daily  Tar  Heel- 
staff.  AI.so  interesting  is  the  fact 
that  the  staff  itself  admits  that 
ther.'  i.s  an  hour  which  is  the 
deadline  for  late  news  and  that 
during  the  past  two  weeks,  this 
deadline  has  been  continually 
broken — most    irregular. 

However,  the  news  rendered 
was  exceptionaly  interesting.  But 
the  point  is  this:  Meanwhile, 
what  happens  to  campus  news? 
The  answer  is  that  it  suffers.  I 
think  it  only  fair  to  give  .some 
examples  here. 

Mr.  Linker  charged  me  with  a 
falsehood  in  his  colurpns  because 


Linker  took  it 
free     nvovie     last 


I  stated  that  GMAB's  movies 
were  being  omitted  entirely.  Be- 
cause I  had  not  planned  to  speak 
on  the  bill  Thursday  evening,  I 
had  not  investigated  .tl?p  eaxact 
dates  upon  whicU.  such  material 
was  omitted. 

Therefore,  I  made  my  statement 
general,  and  Mr 
to  mean  the 
week.  Becau.se  The  Daily  Tar 
Heel  office  has  been  locked  Since 
my  first  reading  of  the  article 
whith  I  am  replying  to.  I  have 
still  been  unable  to  obtain  the 
exaci  dates.  But  two  things  stick 
in  my  mind  as  proof  of  the  neg- 
ligence of  The  Daily  Tar  Heel. 

First  is  the  fact  that  the  article 
advertising  "Tobacco  Road"  ap- 
peared in  The  Daily  Tar  Heel  on 
the  TTiursday  following  its  show- 
ing. 

Second  is  the  fact  that  GMAB 
has  been  forced  to  print  its  own 
circulars    concerning    the    activi- 


ties w-hich  it  sponsors  due  to  the 
uncertainty  of  Daily  Tar  Heel 
coverage. 

Perhaps  the  largest  bungled  re- 
cent event  concerned  the  Polls 
■Committe  of  GMAB.  Late  last 
spring  600  students  were  polled 
as  to  their  presidential  prefer- 
ences. The  final  tabulation  was 
not  complete  until  the  day  after 
the  final  edition  of  The  Daily 
Tar  Heel. 

Therefore,  the  Polls  Commit- 
tee submitted  this  fall  its  report 
to  The  Daily  Tar  Heel  for  pub- 
lication in  its  first  edition.  The 
committee  believed  the  report  to 
pro\'ide  an  interesting  compari- 
son between  itself  and  the  more 
recent  poll.  However,  as  Mr. 
Linker  pointed  out,  "This  mater- 
ial was  'lost'  by  an  irresponsible 
reporter." 

Mr.  Linker  follows  with  a 
question  as  to  what  other  articles 
were  submitted  to  him.  I  would 


recall  to  his  memory  the  article 
announcing  the  Mock  Election 
which  I  gave  him  the  third  week 
of  school. 

I  would  recall  to  his  memory 
the  second  article  announcing 
the  Mock  Election  which  I  gave 
him  the  fifth  week  of  school. 

I  would  recall  to  his  memory 
the  two  articles  which  Mr.  Tom 
Lambeth  submitted  to  him  con- 
cerning the  MocJt  Election  (one 
of  which  was  printed  in  con- 
densed form)  and  the  many 
hours  spent  by  the  two  of  us 
trying  to  persuade  The  Daily  Tar 
Heel  to  print  the  material. 

I  would  recall  the  six  articles 
which  the  YDC  and  YRC  sub- 
mitted during  the  last  week  be- 
fore the  Mock  Election  concern- 
ing the  student's  position  toward 
the  parties  and  candidates  which 
were  running  in  the  American 
election. 

(To  Be  Continued) 


Bipolar  Thaw 


^i^-'i'- 


Looks  Small 


.i' 


BUSINESS  STAFF— Rosa  MOOTe,  Johnny 
Whitaker,  Dick  Leavitt,  Peter  Alper. 


Night   Editor. 


.Woody  Seart 


Beside  Resf 

Iia   other     days,     the     Suprenie.i 
Court's  decision  Tuesday  to  throw' 
out  all  state  and  local  laws  requir- 
ing .se;gregation     on     buses     would 
ha\e  been  hot  new.s. 

But,  placed  beside  the  Hungar- 
ian and  Middle  Kastern  crises  and 
the  possibility  of  another  World 
\V';.r,  the  decision  to(»k  on  a  rath- 
er pale  color. 

It  appeared  small  beside  the 
rest  c»f  the  world.  It  made  the 
I'nited  State.s'  segrcgat ion-integra- 
tion fight  seem  sntall  beside  the 
Himgarians"  hcr«)it  persistence  in 
the  face  of  .So\iet  murderers,  be- 
side the  multi-sided  ciisis  along 
the  banks  of  the  .Sue/  Canal. 

Why  must  the  I'nited  .States 
seethe  from  the  inside  over  such 
a  thing  ?<s  seating  preference  on  a 
pid)lic  bus  \vhile  tioojjs  of  moie 
than  two  races  are  preparing  to 
stand  beside  each  other  in  the 
Mideast   to  pievent  another  war? 

Its  typically  .\merican,  we  sup- 
j)ose. 

Gfacious 
Living: 
NiJhriber  6 

What  l>etter  use  for  all  the  old 
auiunm   lea>es  than  a   boidire? 

We  don't  even  ha\e  to  have  a 
leason.  We  could  just  get  Head 
(-heerleader  Jim  Bynum  to  pro- 
claim a  get-together  (not  a  pep 
rally,  because  that  scates  off  peo- 
ple) one  Friday  night,  get  the  Tni- 
\ersity  to  haul  its  old  dead  leaves 
down  to  Freshman  Field,  touch  a 
mate  h  and  have  fini. 

It  would  beat  a  daiue  all  hol- 
low. 

There  could  be  more  guitar  nnis- 
ic  and  old-fashioned  singing  than 
you  ever  heard  in  the  Rat  on  a  Sat- 
urday night.  Von  wouldn't  even 
have  to  take  a  drink  in  order  to 
have  fun. 

Ciracious  Living  in  Chapel  Hill 
would  be  increased  tenfold  with 
iv  good  iKinfire.  Get  the  leaves, 
Jim;  well  provi4e  the  matches 
and  ukes. 


Concerrii 
Editors  And 


u 


•  i 


■EffHor' 

You/-  rather  vague  article  con- 
««erning  doctor.*;  tiJjd  editors  in' 
i.Iast  Friday's  JDai^  .  Tar  ,Heel 
'aroused,  among  other  things, 
my  interest.  I  am  honestly  anx; 
ious  to  learn  more  of  the  mechan- 
jcrs  cff  how  a  "good  editor"  can 
"keep  the  doctors  on  their  toes," 
because  in  my  desire  to  be  a 
good  doctor  I  do  not  wish  to 
leave  any  stone  unturned  that 
might  heighten  the  standards  of 
medical    practice. 

Perhaps  in  a  future  edition, 
you  might  elaborate  more  fully 
your  ideas  on  this  subject,  but 
•  please,  for  the  sake  of  fairness, 
do  not  omit  the  obvious  ways  in 
which  newspapers  and  magazines 
have  through  sensationalism 
damaged  the  welfare  o£  the 
American  people  and  have  caused 
physicians  much  difficulty  in  ad- 
ministering proper  medical  care. 
If  you  are  not  aware  of  any 
of  the.se  obvious  ways,  or  if  I 
have  been  too  vague,  I  shall  be 
ctelighted  to  be  moe  explicit  in 
future  correspondence,  if  you  so 
desire. 

Max  Morrison 


'Doctors    Edit  Misleading 


Editor: 

Your  provocative  editorial, 
"Doctors,  Editors:  Peace"  (Daily 
Tar  Heel,  Friday,  Nov.  9)  deals 
with  relationships  between  the 
'medical  profession  and  the  press. 
You  indicate  that  Hi« '  editorial 
was  occasioned  by  a  report  I 
made  before  the  Institute  for  Re- 
search in  Social  Science. 

The  fact  I  made  a  fcport  ,niay 
have  triggered  your  remarks,  but 
I  think  it  would  be  very  unfort- 
unate if  readers  got  tifie  ftnpress- 


ion  that  what  your  editorial  had 
to  say  reflected  what  was  saifl 
during  the  meeting.  No  one  sug- 
gested that  "there  is  a  notorious 
incompatibility"  between  doctors 
and  editors. 

I  am  not  sure  what  you  mean 
when  you  say  "the  medical  pro- 
fession should  be  under  the  same 
close  .scrutiny  that  is  placed  on 
school  teachers  and  state  em- 
ployees." but  I  might  add  that 
whatever  "scrutiny"  has  result- 
ed from  our  study  was  financed 
in  large  part  by  medical  people 
who   were   themselves   interested 


in       strengthing       relationships 
between  physicians  and  the  press. 

Members  of  both  groups  (medi- 
ical  and  editorial)  who  provided 
data  in  our  survey  have  evinced 
strong  interest  and  optimism 
concerning  medical  news  cover- 
age. No  editor  with  whom  I  talk- 
ed, however,  suggested  any  need 
for  "a  good  editor"  who  can 
"keep   (doctors)   on  their  toes." 

To  the  best  of  my  knowledge, 
no  Tar  Heel  representative  was 
present  at  the  luncheon  meeting 
at  which  the  report  was  made. 

Roy   E.   Carter,  Jr. 


Pog6 


By  Walt  Kelly 


^Y   A  mVflP  WAV  ID 

^l^^spO^i  Of-  ^LOP^J 


1M 

'M 


IV\  Abnv 


By  Al  Capp 


Editor: 

This  tetter  is  written  in  reference  to  your  very 
violent  and  unmerited  attack  oo  the  student  legis- 
lature in  the  Nov.  13  editorial  of  th^  The  Daily 
Tar  Heel. 

As  a  duly  elected  representative  of  the  Student 
Legislature  from  Dorm  Men's  III  (Alexander,  Win- 
ston, and  ConncH-)  I  would  now  like  to  justify  soine 
of  these  false  accusations. 

You  said  in  your  editorial:  "They  (the  Student., 
Legislature)  have  concerned  themselves  with  piii- 
ful  resolutions  urging  this  and  that;  they  have  not 
attacked  many  of  the  UUniversity's  basic  problems, 
such  as  housing,  freedom  of  thought,  freedom  from 
oppression  from  overpowerful  administrators,  the 
absence  regulations,  thg  iK-oblem  of  prices  down- 
town, the  problem  of  Scholarships  and  student  aid 
and  the  down  to  earth  problems  of  the  man  in 
the  Lower  Quad  who  is  lonely  and  who  looks  to 
his  fellows  for  help." 

How  can  you  say  that  it  is  the  duty  of  the  Stu- 
dent Legislature  to  deal  with  such  problems  as 
housing?  We  have  absolutely  nothing  to  do  with 
housing  in  any  form. 

Perhaps  you  blame  the  present  housing  condi- 
tion on  the  apathy  of  the  Legislature?  It  is  the 
concern  of  the  state  of  North  Carolina  to  provide 
housing  facilities  to  the  students  of  this  University 
—and  not  the  Student  Legislature 

You  also  list  above  freedom  of  thought  as  a 
problem  that  we  should  deal  with.  I  must  say  that 
until  I  read  your  editorial  I  did  not  know  that  free- 
dom of  thought  was  being  abused  on  thig  campus. 

Even  now  I  am  not  sure  what  you  mean  by 
freedom  of  thought  in  rciatiofl  to  a  student's  camp- 
us life.  But  whatever  you  mean,  I  am  sure  that 
freedom  of  thought  is  not  being  suppres.sed  hare 
at  UNC  today. 

Everyone  is  certainly  free  to  say  (anfl  think) 
what  he  wants  to  as  long  as  it  does  ncK  involve 
slander  directed  at  some  particular  person.  Even 
if  in  some  way  this  privilege  Were  being  abused, 
what  could  the  Student  Legislature  do  about  it? 

The  problem  of  scholarships  and  student  aid  is 
also  outside  the  reach  of  the  Legislature.  The  only 
source  of  income  that  the  Student  Legislature  has 
is  the  $18  that  *e  received  from  every  student 
when  the  student  activities  fee  is  paid.  Do  you  ex- 
pect us  to  put  this  money  into  scholarships?  Would 
this  not  be  direct  socialism  in  its  worst  form? 

The  Student  Legislature  has  intentionally  re- 
frained from  passing  anj  legislation  on  the  present 
class  absence  regulations  and  the  problem  of  prices 
downtown  because,  as  >'ou  said  in  this  same  edi- 
torial: "They  (the  Student  Legislature)  have  a  good 
student  body  president,  the  best  one  in  a  least  four 
years — ."  It  is  precisely  this  same  reasoning  that 
we  went  on. 

Bob  Young  and  -his  cabinet  are  now  working  on 
these  problems  mentioned  above,  and  to  establish 
another  body  to  work  en  these  problems  would 
bring  chaos  with  nothing  being  accomplishecL 

You  also  said:  "They  have  had  difficulty  in 
.seeing  beyond  their  eyelids."  This  is  again  a  false 
accusation..  We,  as  elected  rei>resentatives,  are  in- 
deed very  much  in  contact  with  everyday  campus 
problems. 

It  would  be  impossible  for  lis  not  to  be  since 
representatives  eome  from  every  part  of  the  camp* 
MS.  This  is  just  the  thing  that  our  constitution 
guards   against. 

Again  from  your  editorial:  "They  have  shown 
their  apparent  viability  to  deal  intelligently  with 
a  student  budget  that  equals  that  of  many  small 
corporations."  In  the  futiure,  before  you  make  a 
statement  such  as  this,  please  investigate  the  facta 
more  thoroughly. 

I  feel  sure  that  you  have  no  idea  as  to  how  much 
time  goes  into  the  preparing  of  the  annual  budget 
that  is  approved  every  spring. 

I  am  sure  that  you  will  find  that  more  time 
goes  into  the  preparing  of  the  annual  budget  than 
you  spend  in  a  whole  month  preparing  Daily  Tar 
Heel  editorials. 

Just  because  certain  organizations  on  campu.< 
didnt  get  all  the  money  they  they  would  have 
liked  to  have  gotten,  doesn't  mean  that  it  is  tbe 
fault  of  the  Student  Legislature.  We  only  have  so 
much  money  to  spend  ev»y  year.  .^  .    • 

Another  argument  that  you  used  against  the 
Student  Legislature  was  that  there  are  too  many 
freshmen  and  sophomores  in  the  Legislature  who 
are  too  immature  to  understand  "the  problems  of 
this  University  as  do  juniors  and  seniors,"  and  are 
therefore  directed  and  dominated  by  "older  stu- 
.  dents,  who,  while  not  members  of  the  Legislature, 
sit  back  as  sort  of  elder  statesmen  and  direct  the 
affairs  o€  the  student  government." 

'  Let  me  again  point  out  that  every  member  of 
the  Legislature  is  a  duly  elected  representative  of 
the  student  body  and  if  the  student  body  wants  to 
elect  all  sophomores  to  the  Legislature,  it  is  their 
privilege  to  do  so. 

From  your  editorial,  I  gather  that  perhaps  you 
want  a  constitutional  amendment  aU««'ing  only 
juniors  or  seniors  to  be  elected  to  the  Legislature. 
I  admit  that  this  is  perhaps  a  little  faceUous,  but, 
nevertheless,  it  illustrates  my  point  very  clearly. 
Tn  order  to  be  a  representative  body,  the  Legisla- 
ture must  be  composed  of  all  classes. 

In  summary,  let  me  suggest  a  few  rules  that 
you  might  think  about  the  next  time  that  you  at- 
tempt to  write  an  edit-Jrial. 

(1)  Make  sure  you  khow  the  facts  behind  what 
you  are  writing  about. 

(2)  Get  other  people  s  opinons  —  don't  rely  on 
yourself  too  much. 

. . .^     ._.       .  iUI  McNaull 


Lei 

(C<yMin\ 

yesterday'.s 
regularities 
nominees. 
In    accord 

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^.Cions     Boai 

■  Elections 
names   place 

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TMUtSOAY,  NOVEMBER  15,  19M 


TMi  OAtLY  TA«  HElL 


very 
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^AGE    TPfREt 


Legislature  lis  D^^dlocked  N6w 


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ooks  to 

ii: 

(C(fntimKd  from  page  1.) 

yesterday's  election  because  of 'ir- 
regularities in  the  selection  of 
nominees. 

In  accordance  with  the  Elec- 
tions Law,  students  who  are  not 
endorsed  by  the  Bi-l»artisan  Selec- 
tions Board  may  petition  the 
Elections  Board  and  have  their 
names  placed  on  the  ballot. 

But  the  Selections  Board  met  so 


Our  48^ 
Shelf  Is 
Bulging 
With  The 
Sort  Of 
Novels 
Mom  Would 
Enjoy 

THE  INTIMATE 
BOOKSHOP 

2«S   E.   Franklin   St. 
Open  Till  10  P.M. 


a?* 


^kH' 


late  that  candidates  who  were.ncut 
endorsed  were  unable  to  petition 
the  Elections  Board  nine  days  be- 
fore the  election,  as  the  law  re- 
quires. 

Thus  the  Student  Council  ruled 
that  sufficient  time  must  be  al- 
loted  candidates  to  petition,  ahd 
the  election  was  postponed  one 
week. 

LEGISLATORS 

New  Legislators  by  districts 
are: 

Dofm  Men's  I,  Henry  Boder- 
heinter  (St>);  DM  H,  Whit  Whit- 
field (SP).  Jim  Alfofd  (UP), 
Frank  Brown  (SP),  Mike  Weaver 
(UP);  DM  III,  Dick  Gustafson 
(SP).  John  Ray  (SP);  QM  IV, 
Robert  Carter   (SP);  DM  V,  Bill 


Spencer  Plans 
Buffet  Supper 
Friday  Night 

A  buffet  supper  wil  be  spon 
sored  by  Spencer  dormitory  on 
Friday  from  5:30^  p.m. 

To  be  held  in  the  dormitory  din 
ing  room,  the  supper  is  for  Spen- 
cer residents.  University  President 
William  Friday,  Chancellor  Rob- 
ert House,  and  University  admin- 
istration  officials. 

Hope  Spargo  and  Jimmy  Rogers 
will  provide  entertainment  for 
the  supper  guests. 

Patsy  Smith,  Spencer  social 
chairman,  announced  plans  for  the 
party  and  added  that  a  fall  decora- 
tion theme  will  be  carried  out. 


(kCsiBBBpil^ 


(AutkQr  q/  -Bartfoet  B-f  with  Ckttk,"  •(«. 


LITTLE  STORIES  WITH  BIG  MORALS 

Fir»t  Little  Story 

Once  upon  a  time  when  the  inventors  of  the  airplane 
were  very  small  boys,  the  roof  on  their  house  developed 
a  terrible  leak.  A  repairman  wa.s  called  to  fix  it.  He  set 
biij  ladder  against  the  side  of  the  house,  but  it  was  a 
very  tall  house  and  his  ladder  was  not  quite  long  enough 
,  to  reach  the  roof. 

"Sir,  we  haye  an  idea,"  .said  the  boys  who  even  at  that 
tender  age  were  resourceful  little  chaps.  "We  will  get 
lip  on  top  of  the  ladder  and  boost  you  up  on  the  roof." 

So  the  boys  climbed  to  the  top  of  the  ladder«  and  the 
repairman  came  after  them,  and  they  tried  to  booi^t  hini 
up  on  the  roof.  But,  alas,  the  plan  did  not  work  and  they 
all  came  tumbling  down  in  a  heap. 

MORAL:  Two  Wrights  don't  make  a  rung. 

Second  Little  Story 

Once  upon  a  time  a  German  exchange  student  came 
from  Old  Heidelberg  to  an  American  university.  One 
night  there  was  a  bull  session  going  on  in  the  room  next 
to  his.  "Ach,  excuse  me,"  he  said  timidly  to  the  group  of 
young  men  a.ssembled  there,  "aber  what  is  that  heavenly 
smell  I  smell?" 

"Why«,that  is  the  fragrant  aroma  of  our  Philip  Morris 
cigarettes,"  said  one  of  the  men. 

"Himmel,  such  natural  tobacco  goodness!" 

"It  comes  in  regular  size  in  the  handy  Snap-Open  pack, 
or  in  long  size  in  the  new  crushproof  box. . . .  W<m't  you 
try  one?"  ' 

"Dankeachim,"  said  the  German  exchange  student 
happily,  and  from  that  night  forward,  Whenever  the  men 
lit  up  Philip  Morris  Cigarettes,  he  hever  failed  to  be 
present. 

MORAL:  Where  there's  smoke,  there's  Meyer, 

Third  Little  Story 

Once  upon  a  time  Penelope,  the  wife  of  Ulysses,  had 
herself  a  mess  of  trouble  in  Ithaca.  With  her  husband 
away  at  the  Trojan  War,  all  the  local  blades  were  Wooing 
Penelope  like  crazy.  She  stalled  them  by  saying  she 
wouldn't  make  her  choice  until  .she  finished  weaving  a 
rug.  Each  night  when  her  suitors  had  gone  home,  Penel- 
ope, that  sly  minx,  would  unravel  all  the  weaving  she 
had  done  during  the  day. 


^  mrSn'lmkideiffai^  l/r/zP*' 


Well  sir,  one  night  she  left  her  rug  lying  outside.  It 
rained  buckets,  and  the  rug  got  all  matted  and  shrunken, 
and  Penelope  couldn't  unwind  it.  When  the  suitora  came 
back  in  the  morning,  the  poor  frantic  woman  started 
running  all  over  the  house  looking  for  a  place  to  hide. 

Well  sir,  it  happened  that  Sai^pho,  the  poetess,  had 
come  over  the  night  before  to  write  an  ode  about  Penel- 
ope's Grecian  urn.  So  she  said,  "Hey,  Penelope,  why 
don't  you  hide  in  this  urn  ?  I  think  it's  big  enough  if  you'll 
kind  of  squinch  down." 

So  Penelope  hopped  in  the  urn,  and  it  concealed  her 
perfectly  except  for  her  hair-do  which  was  worn  upswept 
in  the  Greek  manner. 

Well  sir,  with  the  suitors  pounding  on  the  door,  Sap- 
pho had  to  move  fast.  She  whipped  out  a  rator  and  cut 
off  Penelope's  hair.  The  suitors  looked  high  and  low  but 
they  couldn't  find  Penelope. 

MORAL:  A  Penny  shaved  is  a  Penny  umed. 

SllMcBlralawB.  l»s# 
Arm  roH  ttUI  with  maf  If  •»,  •««'«  your  atuttteHtd  meneg  mtth 
m  mild  and  ta$ty  PhiUp  Morria,  natural  lobaeeo  g00dtte»a  mil 
thm  way  through,  made  by  the  aponaori  of  thia  ealumn. 


Baum   (UP),  Tom  Long  (SP). 

Town  Men's  I,  Ronald  Belk, 
Jerry  Cole,  Wilson  Cooper,  Chuck 
CUshman,  Jack  Lewis,  Bill  Rob- 
bins,  all  UP;  TM  II,  disqualified; 
TM  III,  Herb  Greenblatt  (SP), 
Jerry  Oppenheimer  (UP),  Charles 
Howerlon  (SP),  Run-off  between 
James  Johnson  (SP)  "and  Tom 
Kenan  (UP);  TM  IV,  Floyd  An- 
drews (UP)  and  Ben  Peete  (SP). 

Dorm  Women's  District,  Misses 
Ann  Carter  (UP).  Jennie  Meador 
(SP),  Kitty  Corr  (UP),  Betty 
Huffman  (SP). 

Town  Women's   Disfarict,  Misses 
Sheik  Cronan  and   Val   von  Am- 1 
mon,  both  UP. 


Steinbeck  Best 
Will  Be  Given 

A  cast  of  Broadway  and  Hdl- 
lywood  actors  wil  perform  dram- 
atized highlights  fromt  he  novel; 
of  John  Steinbeck  in  the  program 
"The-  Best  of  Steinbeck,"  brought 
to  Chapel  Hill  by  The  Carolina 
Playmakers  at  Memorial  Hall  Dec. 

Constance  Bennett,  Tod  An- 
drews, Frank  Mc^ugh,  and  Robert 
Strauss  will  re-enact  scenes  from 
"The  Grapes  of  Wrath,"  "Of  Mice 
and  Men,"  "Tortilla  Flat,"  and 
other  Steinbeck  works,  adapted 
for  th^  stage'  by  Reginald  Lawrence 
and  directed  by  Elliott  Silver- 
stein. 

The  Playmakers  will  sell  tickets 
for  the  single  Chapel  Hill  perform- 
ance at  their  Business  Office,  214 
Aberncthy  Hall,  Box  1050,  Chapel 
Hill.  All  seats  are  reserved. 


q'Neill  Ploy 
Tryouts  Tbdo^ 
And  Tomorrow 

Tryouts  for  Eugene  O'Neill's 
drama  "Desire  Under  the  Elms," 
to  be  produced  by  The  Carolina 
Playmakers  neJct  month,  will  take 
place  today  and  tbmorrow  under 
the  supervision  of  the  play's  di- 
rector, Thomas  M.  Patterson  of 
the  Playmakers  staff. 

Auditioners  can  read  at  the 
Playmakers  Theatre  at  4  p.m.  to- 
day and  in  111  Murphy  Hall  at 
7:30  p.m.  today  and  Friday.  Those 
who  cannot  try  out  at  these  hours 
have  been  asked  to  see  Mr.  Patter- 
son about  arranging  a  time. 
Copies  of  the  play  are  on  reserve 
in  the  Library. 

One  of  O'Neill's  most  widely  ac- 
claimed dramas,  the  play  was  prd- 
duced  as  recently  as  1952  in  New 
York.  The  story  is  an  intense  fam- 
ily conflict  arising  from  an  un- 
expected marriage  of  an  elderly 
father  to  a  young  woman.  The 
Playmakers  will  present  "Desire 
Under  the  Elms"  in  Chapel  Hill 
Dec.  14  through  18. 


Y  SCHEDULE 

4  p.m.  —  Y  Newspat>er  STalT 
Meeting,  Cabinet  Room,  co-chair- 
men, Mias  Nancy  Suttle  and  Jerry 
Gunter. 

5  p.m.  —  Membership  Commit- 
tee, Library  Room  of  the  Y,  Miss 
Anne  E.  ()ueen. 

5  p.m.  —  Y  Study  Group  Eval- 
uation Committee,  Cabinet  Room, 
Claude  C.  Shotts. 

6  p.m.  —  Nurses  Association  of 
the  Y.  Supper  meeting  at  the  Hos- 
pital. Miss  Carolyn  Thompson, 
chairman. 


Miss  PIbernick  Gives 
Debut  Recital  Here 

Miss  Lilian  Pibernik,  pianist, 
made  her  debut  recital  Tuesday 
evening  when  she  presented  a  pro- 
gram of  piano  music  including 
Hungarian   folk   songs. 

The  concert  consisted  of  Shu- 
bert's  Sonata  in  A  Major,  Back's 
Toccatta  in  D  Major  and  two  Hun- 
garian compositions.  Suite,  op.  14 
by  Bartok  and  four  pieces  from 
Kodaly's   "Zongora  Muszika." 

MiSiS  Pibernik,  a  native  of  Za- 
greb, Yugoslavia,  came  to  the 
United  States  in  1950  to  enter 
Vassar  Cdllege,  Poughke«psie,  N. 
Y.,  where  she  received  an  A.B.  de- 
gree. After  leaving  Vassar,  she 
taught  music  and  theory  at  Miss 
Walls  School,  Pittsfield,  Mass. 

In  1954  she  came  to  Chapel  Hill 
as  a  graduate  assistant  in  the 
Dept.  of  Music  and  expects  to  re- 
ceive her  Master's  Degree  in  Mu- 
sic this  term.  Plans  for  (be  future 
Include  a  Ph.  JP^  degree  in  mu- 
sicologiL      "  j  f.'  i '  ■  I .  , ; : 

Miss  Piberidk's  recital  waff  the 
fifth  presentation  df  the 
Evening  Seriea  In  IliU  i%|je 


!iMi!,lJ|:,ii|    I 


Covering  The  Campiis 


WESLEY   FOLK   DANCE   GROUP 

The  Wesley  Folk  Dance  group 
will  hold  its  regular  meeting  Fri- 
day evening  at  7:30  in  the  base- 
ment of  the  University  Methodist 
Church.  All  persons  interested  are 
urged  to  attend. 
FOREIGN  LANGUAGE 
STUDENTS 

Frequently  requests  are  made  at 
the  Reference  Desk  in  the  Library 
for  the  names  of  persons  profi- 
cient in  foreigi^  languages  to 
translate  articles  needed  in  re- 
search. The  requests  are  often  for 
languages  other  than  French,  Ger- 
man or  Spanish.  Any  student  or 
Chapel  HTll  resident  interested  in 
commercial  translating  may  leave 
his  name  and  qualifications  at  the 
Reference  Desk. 
BIRD  CLUB 

The  Chapel  Hill  Bird  Club  will 


meet  Sunday  at  the  home  of  Dr. 
und  Mrs.  Gerald  R.  MacCarthy, 
107  Ledge  Lane.  The  program  of 
tMs  meeting  will  consist  of:  "A 
Report  on  a  Trip  to  Lake  Wacca- 
maw "  by  Mrs.  H.  W.  Walters  and 
"Death  by  T.  V..'  by  John  Trott. 
W.A.A.  TENNIS 

All  second  round  tennis  matches 
must  be  played  by  Monday  at  6 
p.m. 


Dean  Of  Women  Returns 

Dr.  Katherine  Carmichael,  Dean 
of  Women,  returned  to  Chapel 
Hill  yesterday  from  a  brief  visit 
to  the  University  of  Virginia. 


PATRONIZE  YOUR 
•    ADVERTlStRS    • 


DAILY 

ACROSS 

I.  Sudden 
Attack 

S.  Man's 

nickn«m« 
9.  Boggy 
10.  CaTitiea 
13.  Call  to 
prayer 
•    tUth.) 
is.  f»ifil>d 
•ftiilne 
H.iMiMtHt 

schools 
15.  FishermAA 
l«.  Some 

17.  Jumbled 
type  (print.) 

18.  King  of 
Bashan 
(Bib.) 

l».  Puptl  s 

tktrciat 
21.  W«*ry 
28.  A  lanffuagc 
3f.  Occupied 
27.  Armed 
■     forces 
ae.Hftlfanem 
31.  Mothar  of 

Iriahgodfe 
it.  Greek  letter 
SS.  Be  present 
34.  TitM  of 

recpcct 
ST.  ttoya  k>ve 

them 
St.  Stop 

39.  Monetary 
unit  (Ecu.) 

40.  Small 
quantities 

II.  Pieces  out 
12.  Percolate 

DOWN 

I.  Repartition 
a  city 


CROSSWORD 

31 


t.  Breakdown 

3.  Travelers' 
stopping 
places 

4.  Dysprosiuill 
(sym.) 

5.  Backbond 

6.  Not  brief 

7.  Jewish 
>■  toiOntli 

I.  ShoMing 

tUr 
f.  DawMy 
11.  Fabric 
13.  Continents 
17.  Genus  ef 

grasses 
30.  Pig  pen 


Scots* 

man's 

hat 
22.  Segih 
24.  Man'3 

name 
35.  Thrash. 

es 
n.  False 
28.  Cap 

flap 
2*.  Hard 

faU  . 
M.  A  little 

princess 

(pos*.) 
34.  Sman 

nail 


'  '-"•:   :.li^^lJ   ;.)X 


II- kS 
YM«*r4ar'*  ABt«r«r 

S5.  Country 
'    (Bur.)      t, 
34.  Tire  eisinf 
40.  Part  of 

"to  be' 


^  JANE  PARKER 


"■■■xi^w 


Rich  And  Full  Bodied  Coffe* 


MILD  <6  MELLOW  COFFEE 

EIGHT  O'CLOCK  •"■"^•^  «" 


1- 


Bag'      95c 


Vi-.^rous  And  Winey  Coffee 

'H  87c  «  $255  •  ■««.        '« 


99c 


^  ^•9  $2.91 


Canned 
Meats 

Can      "     ' 


ARMOUR'S 

Tr«*t 

Beef  Stew ^^i''  35c 

Goroed  Beef  —    "^   *3c 
Pwted  M«ats  2   »^-  \9c 
Chopped  Horn      "^^    49c 
•Corned  Beef  Hosh  '^   29c 

VDENNA-      >)      4.0Z      D7- 
9AUSAGt    C       caSi     ^'^ 


Frozen  Foods 

caessEBvsGMa     Pkg.      ■•^v 

jBABBOOK    FAKMS  10-C>Z.     ^3/a 

Pk2.    L3Q 
AU*  CUT  ^ 

OKAyOK  JI^CB 

uLrtnmB  svtct 


mXSVVK  MAIB 
Lr*ltO#)ASK 


WW    II    !!■■■    ■    ■   .     .     I  »-»-|-|-.|-|^,-,.^-^-^-^-^-^-,^-^-^-^^p.^^,^--^^-^-^^^-^ 


Fresh  Fruits  d  Vegetables 

Cranberries 

17c 


JuiCT  km 

FRESH 


1-U>. 
Bog 


White  M eated  Frteh  Imported 

CHESTNUTS <^  15c 


',    Vlorida  Fresh  Juicy 

ORANGES  


Bag     43c 


Large  Site  Fresh  Florida 

GRAPEFIUliT 


•••l'^ 


.     .  .     ....  "'  8-Lb.      J^ak 

1-4  .>»i    M>     Bag     4fp' 


'    FRESH  TRIMMED 
FULL  HEADS 


*W^^M»^»^MM»^MN^»^»^MMM»»M»<><»^^<»^»^»^»»^^M»i«^^^^i 


33c 


•LACKCTK*  Plcg 

Ift-Oz 
■  Pkgs. 


«-Oz. 
Caa 


15c 


Old  fenglish  Spread 

Kraft  Cheese 


5-Oc. 
Glass 


r29c 


MMN^NA^NA^N^MMMM^X 


UUkg  Tomato  Jidee  tt-o*^ «-» **    Lil*^  GrMn  f»ea»  .  » i^«»  c«  jic , 
Dole  Oked  Piwapple»»  « <**»c     Dole  Paaeapple  Juice«-oz  cng^e 

Angelus  Morshmollows pS"  19c' 


Golden  Whole  Kernel  '     ^  ^^^^^■■■P^'""^^ 

A&P  CORii  2t-l'27< 


Westover  Brond 


BLACKEYES  2 


No.  303 

16-Oz. 

Cons 


Reduced  Price!  Ann  Poge  With  TooKXto  Souce 

BEANS  ^  -  -  ct:  lOe 


Strong.  Waxed  Poper 


COT-lllTE- 

Jdrte  >iMk«r  F^MMy  BoNK       ^ 


125-Ft. 
Rott 


25 


Dash  Dog  Food 
2  hHi  29c 


»V,li  II       I 


"Super-Right''  Quality  Meats 


^  Super  Suds 


Lg. 
Pkg. 


32c  P^.  79c 


Vel  Powder 

V       Package  31  C 

/Fob  Powder 

51  c  P?g    75c 


Pkg. 


Ad  Detergent 


Lg. 

Pkg. 


37c  p"i'g.  73c 


Ajox  Cleanser 
25c 


r»      9    Reg. 
ik    Cans 


Room  Deodorant 

Florient 
79c 


Regtdar 
Can 


Dash  Detergent 


Larg*     3Q^ 
Package  ^^U 


Vel   Liquid 


Detergent    30^ 
U02.  Can  Jxt 


GRADE  "A"  YOUNG  DRESSED  &  DRAWN 


TURKEY 

HENS  r45c 


TQMS'V^* 

•      y*    Lb. 
Avg. 


4lch»»?K-49c 


"Super-Right  Pure  Pork 

Sausage 

29c 


1-Lb. 


**S«perTRigbt"  Heavy  Western 
Beef  6lade  Chuck 

Roasts 

;  43c 


MotTfU's  Pfide  or  Swift's  ^'remium  Short  Shank 

Whole  or  Half 


SMOKED  HAMS- -  < 


"47c 

SHANK  rORTION  lb.  3tc      CENTER  SLICES  Ik.  Mc 
21  d  W.  Franklin  St. 


STOBK 
ADDREvSS 


JAME  PARKER  6READ 

STUFFING  MIX 


^  I  Super  Markets 


Prices  This  \d  Effective  Through  Saturday,  N*t.  17th 


S«d  Label 

Rorb  Syrup 
£&  25c 

QM^m  Shorteoing 

i^luffo 


Oife 


35c  ^cK  95c 


Wesson  Oil 

2t  37clSi69c 


Snowdrift'  ^ 


IS   33c  '-^  87c 


«ABT 
rOODS 


Cerber 
Chopped  2  J»"  29c 
Strained  S^*"  31c 


Pluladelphia  Cream 

Kraft  Cheese 

Paekage   I  3C 

Kraft 
Cheese-Whiz 

'i2    33c 


SUcod    Pimieuto 

Kroft  Cheese 

Package  JjC 


Vdreeta 

Krdft  Cheese 

Package  JVC 


8-Oz.  Pkg.  23c 


^  ■*  *  »-  V  »  V    ^  *   V  ■ 


»Aftl  POUt 


THi  DAILY  TAH  HIIL 


THURSDAY,  NOVEMBER  15,  19W 


ALLEN  SAYS: 


Lack  Of  Desire  Caused 
Booter's  Loss  To  Duke 


By  JIM  PURKS 

Upon  returning  to  Chapel  Hill 
following  Tuesday's  loss  to  Duke's 
Blue  Devils  almost  every  member 
of  the  varsity  soccer  team  asked 
himself  or  was  asked  by  someone 
lelse  the  question:  "What  hap- 
pened?" 

The  question  didn't  apply  sim- 
ply to  what  happened  in  the  Duke 
game,  which  thg  Tar  Heels  lost 
3-0,  but  what  happened  to  the 
learn  which  was  once  riding  high 
-n'ith  four  straight  wins  and  a  phe- 
nomenal scoring  and  defensive 
average. 

Coach  Marvin  Allen  had  his  an- 
alysis of  what  happened  to  his 
team  in  the  Duke  game. 

"Fundamentally,  we  didn't  have 
as  much  desire  as  Duke.  I  think 
that  was  the  key,"  Allen  com- 
mented. "In  general,  it  was  a  lack 
oi  team  effort." 

"The  Duke  team  was  not  a 
skilled  team,  but  it  had  a  lot  of 
desire  and  effort,"  Allen  said. 


Varsity  Basketballers 
AAeet  Freshman  Squad 

C*relin«'t     varsity     basketball 
te*Ri,  ens  of  th«  pra-saasen  fa- 
vwitas  for  top  national  honors. 
Wit    s«    on    display    bofora    the 
horn*    folks   for   tho    first    timo 
Mils  season  tonifht   in  Woollen 
Qym  whon  they  mff  the  highly 
sillied  UNC  freshmen  in  a  scrint- 
met*  flame. 
Since   the    start    of    drills    on 
Oct.    15,   practice  sessions   have 
be*n  closed  to  the  student  body, 
and   this  scrimmage   marks   the 
first  timo  tho  flates   have   been 
thrown  open.    Tipoff   time   for 
"Hio  unerfficial  scrap  is  8  p.m. 


"The  fullbacks  played  poorly, 
especially  in  the  first  half,"  he 
added.  "They  started  dropping 
back  instead  of  going  after  the 
ball,  and  you  don't  do  that  in  a 
3-fullback  defense. 

"Bolli  of  the  goals  they  got  were 
set  up  by  miskicks  in  our  de- 
icnse." 

Coach  Allen  did  have  praise, 
however,  for  somg  members  of  the 
team  who  tried  hard  to  inspire  the 
Tar  Heels  to  cut  the  Duke  lead. 

"Mike  Galifianakis  did  a  good 
job,  especially  in  the  second  half, 
at  fullback,  and  Ted  Smith  played 
a  good  game.  I  think  Smith  played 
the  best  of  anyone,"  Allen  com- 
mented. 

Whether  a  let-dolvn  in*  team  ef- 
fort and  desire  is  the  cause  or 
some  other  factor,  the  problem 
will  have  to  be  solved  soon  as  the 
Tar  Heel's  biggest  contest  of  the 
year  will  be  held  Saturday  when 
they  meet  the  annually  powerful 
Maryland  Terps,  winners  of  the 
conference  title  three  times  in  suc- 
cession. 

Allen  said  he  would  make  some 
changes  in  the  lineup  in  an  effort 
to  sharpen  the  defense  and  restore 
the  scoring  punch  of  the  forward 
line. 

Carolina's  present  record  now 
stands  at  four  wins  and  two  losses, 
both  losses  coming  at  the  hands  of 
conference  foes,  Virginia  and 
Duke. 

The  Terps  are  currently  having 
another  successful  season.  Duke 
and  State  have  both  fallen  before 
Maryland  in  their  early  season 
contests  and  if  Maryland  can  de- 
feat Virginia  it  will  end  up  con- 
ference champion  for  the  fourth 
consecutive  year. 


SPORTS  SCENE 


with  BILL   KING  ,  ^,^„    ,.     ,     ,  •     „      ,     j 

RALEIGH  (Jr-^Jickie  Morftland, 

SoJiietiiiies  the  jyiiic  of  recruiting  a  bignauie  athlete  to'  tht  key"  figure  n  the  NCAA's  ac- 


Says  'Not  Guilty 


a  college  campus  comes  extremely  hij^h  and  such  was  the 
ca.se  of  North  Carolina  State  and  Jackie  Morelan^,  the  high 
school  sensation  from  Louisiana. 

The  NC.\A's  action  Tuesday  against  State  came  im- 
mediately following  an  announcement  that  the  NCA.\4iad 
several  schools  under  scrutinization  and  tliat  penalities  might 
be  forthcoming  in  the  immediate   ers  a  tremendously  wide  field,  t'or 


future. 

The  NCAA   evidently   has  iron- 
clad evidence  to  support  it's  harsh 


tioii.  in  placing  North  Carolina 
Static.  Gollege  on  four  years  pro- 
bation, declared  today  ""Hie 
school  is  not  guilty  of  what  it  has 
been  accused." 

In  his  first  utterance  sic^ce  the 
NCAA  announced   its   drasjiic  ac- 


the  next  four  years,  these  teafos,  ,     ^     .         *v-     iq«  — ^ih 

will  hiive  to  play  with  the  know-|  tion     J^terd^y     the     18-year-oW 
ledge  that  the  season  ends  when  |  Moreland  sa.d  fl?tly  ;  I  have  yio- 


prifije.  referred  all  questions  to  Fri-  \  as  a  high  school  basketball  star 
day.  Young  Moreland  declined  to  i  and  reportedly  received  offers  of 
comnTent    until    after    he    confers  I  aid    from    a   host   of  colleges.   He 


actioas   against  the  West  Raleigh  j  the  conference  title  is  decided  re-  j  lated  ho  rules  and  neither  has  the 
school  for  the  penalty  leveled  at   gardless  of  the  siwcess/of  anytbfj  college  ' 


RICflflRD 

AMbHBCREAT  ORCHESTRA 

Dm  PI f" IT    Memorial 

iMllifilllll   AndHorian 


Tldwls 


g^_ONE  NIGHT  ONLY 

Kemp's 


IN 

CHAPEL 

HILL 


FRLNOVie 

^  11.50  ^  $2.00    in 


State  was  the  most  severe  ever 
assessed  by  the  NCAA  against  a 
school. 

Of  course,  only  the  people  most 
intimately  associated  with  the  in- 
cident know  the  full  details,  but 
the  report  that  N.  C.  State  had 
(1)  offejed  ad  to  Moreland  con- 
sisting of  annual  cash  gifts,  (2)  of- 
fered a  7-year  medical  scholarship 
to  Moreland's  girl  friend,  and  (3) 
offered  Moreland  an  unrestricted 
five  year  scholarship,  plus  the  fact 
that  State  bad  just  finished  a  one 
year  probation  for  NCAA  viola- 
liqns,  is,  in  our  opinion,  enough 
to  justly  the  drastic  penalty  that 
has  been  inflicted. 

•         •         • 

IMOI^II  7Hi  FftCSCNT  ruling, 
State  will  be  forced  to  practically 
dissolve  ail  relation;  with  :  the 
NCAA  for  ihe  next  fou»  years-- 
ihis  will  prevent  any  Wolfpack 
team  from  competing  in  any 
NCAA  athletic  event  or  any  ath- 
letic event  with  which  the:  NCAA 
is  affilifited. 

This  is  a  devastating  blou  to 
North  Carolina  State,  especially  in 
view  of  the  fact  that  the  so-called 
minor  sports  will  suffer  the  pun- 
ishment just  as  much  as  basket- 
ball, football  and  baseball. 

It  cc:rtainly  seems  a  shame  that 
mincn*  sPorts,  such  as  track,  tennis, 
golf,  and  swimming  to  name  a 
few,  will  have  to  suffer  at  State 
because  of  the  lack  of  compassion 
of  a  certain  few  people  who  have 
completely  disregarded  athletes 
who  pl4y  the  game  for  the  fun  of 
il  and  strictly  on  an  amateur  basis. 

Such  outstanding  boys  as  swim- 
ming ace  Dick  Fag(}en  and  cross- 
country star  Mike  Shea,  plu§  sev- 


the  (earns. 

•         •         • 

OF  COURSE  THE  football  and 
baseball  teams  at  State  for  the 
next  four  years  will  also  suffer 
the  full  brunt  of  the  NCAA's  pun- 
ishment. 

Coach  E^l  Edward's  gridders 
have  been  on  the  rise  for  the  past 
year  or  two  and  have  showed  defi- 
nite signs  of  t>ecoming  ope  of  the 
ACC's  powers  in  the  near  future. 
Now  the  Wolfpack  no  longer  can 
look  toward  ^the  prospects  of  a 
bowl  bid 


R4  DM*  CiMsk  BKt,  HC^A 
spokMrnan  Mys  Christma;^  hpti- 
day  toumaiTMnn  covnt  as  regu- 
lar fl*a»Ofi  fMTiM  with  all  tanMs 
Included  in  t*«im'  24  i»ny  lim- 
it. Thvreffrr*,  NCAA  niUN 
would  no*  alfect  tournoy  u|>lo«» 
Stoto  official*  latM-  decidp  tip 
drop  It. 


William  C.  Friday,  president  of 
the     consolidated    university    of 
which  State  College  is  a  part,  said 
last  night  "We  are  determined  to 
The  basebaU  teams  at  State  for ;  get  all  the  facts  in  the  cas#  and 
the  past  several  years  have  usually  I  will  take  whatever  action  it  war- 


nade  &  good  showing  and  have 
just  missed  a  shot  at  the  NCAA 
'tournament  a  couple  of  times.  But 
it'll  be  a  long  time,  four  years  to 
be  exact,  before  they  can  be  con- 
sidered for  an  NCAA  berth  again. ' 

h  is  only  natural  to  assume  that 
basketball  is  to  be  held  responsi- 
ble for  all  th^  trouble  that  State 
has  had  with '  the  NCAA,  simio 
both  probaticjhs  evolved  arbund 
ba6ket58ll.  The  first  probation 
came  as  a  result  of  illegal  tryouts. 

The  Wolfj;)ack  has  most  certain-. 
ly  been  one  of  the  most  consis- 
tently gocxl  basketball  teams  in 
the  South  for  the  past  few  years, 
and  it  is  probably  this  incosisant 
desire  to  "stay  on  top"  that  has 
brought  about  the  intervention  by 
the  NCAA. 

•         •         it  , 

THUS  N.  C.  STATE  NOW  faces 
four  more  years  of  a  depressing 
situation  as  far  as  national  hon- 
ors are  concerned.  Of  course  the 
Wolfpack  will  appeal  the  NCAA's 

diarce   that   ne^  poffalty   m^  be 


rants." 

Friday  said  today  he  plans  to 
con|er  with  Dr.  Carey  H.  Bostian, 
State  College  chancellor.  Bostian 
was  in  Washington  today,  but  Fri- 
day said  he  is  due  to  return  to- 
morrow. 
RffFERR^D  TO  FRIDAY 

State  College,  athletic  officials, 
who  reacted  \o  news  of  the  pro- 
bation sentejice  with  stunned  sur- 


witih  Friday. 

Athletic  Director  Roy  B.  Clog- 
ston,  who  helped  present  State 
College's  case  to  the  NCAA  Coun- 
cil at  Detroit  yesterday,  said  he 
and  others  "presented  what  we 
thought  as  the  tnith  in  this  thing." 

"I  can  truthfully  say  every  rep- 
resentative of  our  school  thought 
we  were  not  in  violation"  on 
NCAA  rules,  added  Clogston  who 
was  not  present  when  the  Council 
made  its  decision  which  bans 
State  College  from  entering  teams 
or  individual  athletes  in  any  of  14 
jaCAA  events  or  25  other  events 
in  which  the  NCAA  cooperates. 
CASH  GIFT 

The  NCAA  Council  said  the  ac- 
tion against  State  involved  a 
"prospective  student  athlete"  who 
receiyed  offers  of  annual  cash 
gifts  if  he  would  enroll  at  State. 
It  said  other  inducements  offered 
included  a  seven-year  medical  ed- 
ucation for  a  friend  —  reportedly 
a  girl  friend  of  Moreland  —  as 
well  as  a  five-year  unrestejcted 
scholarship.  It  was  Friday  who 
identified  the  4' prospective  student 
athlete*  as  Moreland  whose  ar- 
rival at  State  College  this  fall 
crciated  a  flurry. 

The  ^rl  has  been  identified  as 
Betty  Clara  Rhea,  now  a'  student 
at  Cpntenary  College  in  Shreve- 
port.  La. 

Moreland  had  been  a  sensation 


told  newsmen  at  that  time  he  had 
signed  letters  of  intent  with  Cen-] 
tenary   College,   Texas    A&M    and  i 
Kentucky.    He    said    he    came    to 
State  because  of  its  civil  engineer- : 
ing  course  and  its  reputation  as  a  j 
basketball    power.    >Ioreland    said  i 
State  had  offered  only  an  athletic  i 
scholarship  and  $15  a  month  for 
laundry  —  as  allowed  by  Atlantic  j 
Coast  Conference  rules. 


Just  roceivod  another  shipmeni 
of  those  fabulous  crew  neck 
sweaters  of  imported  l»mb$- 
wool  in  both  men's  and  co-ed 
;>izes,  priced  at  only  $7.95. 

MILTON'S 
CLOTHING  CUPBOARD 


BEFORS 


COMPLEXION 
PROBLEMS? 


Fobtball  Team  Of  '46 
To  Stage  Reunion  Here 


AFTSK 

dew  up  Acne  >^ 

with  Blilky  Masque 

by  the  Ho«»e  of  Wakefield 

Milky  Mwqme  Solrent  a«t"«"7 
help*  diseolve  blackheads.  Milky 
Masque  Extractor  helps  lift  out 
portions  of  blaekheads  with  each 
application.  Aene  Cream,  a  medi- 
cated eream,  applied  at  mght 
helps  eliminat«  pimples  and  pns- 
tolee  of  ae»o. 


SUTTON'S 


One  of  North  Carolina's  finest 
looih»(  teams  will  gather  here  for 
thefUNC-Duke  game  Nov.  24  for 
its  ten-;>ear  reunion. 

1*e  1W6  team,  which  compiled 

an  d<H  record  and  went  to  the 

lugVit*)Wl. .  wUI    meet   Sot   the 


eral  other  top-notch  minor  siwrts 

athletes  are  no  lopger'eliglble  for' can  be  as  tough «as  nails  in  stfch 
any '  tmes  >irhich '  \ik^ '  any  i^rfitiVc-  n^tt^'xl  Us  Sk>p^f\  Kl  i«JB^tl>x- 
'Uo9,.wit^.th«  Natif^al.  <:^^giate  I  amVle  is  the  apiMai  of  the  Univer- 


A  Salute  To 
U.N.C/S  Own 

Archibald 
Henderson 

WHO'S   BOOK 

George  Bernard  Shaw 
Man  of  the  Century 

awaits  you 
in 

The  Intimate 
Bookshop 


Athletic  Association  and  tms  cov' 

lirjftife  J|o0i^«»  Wind  4Jp 
Camppion  Ag.ainsf  Duke 

The  Xr^mao'  soccer  ieam  will 
make  its  final  appearance  of  the 
seaso'n  this  af  ternepn  ,  when  they 
meet  the  Blue  Imps  of  Duke  in 
Durham.  This  will"  be  the  tean^'s 
rubber  match  to  determine  thier 
season's  success. 

The  team  goes  into  the  contest 
with  a  2-2  record,  having  defeated 
State  twice,  while  losing  once  each 
to  the  Wolflets  and  the  Duke 
frosh. 

The  first  match  between  the  two 
squads  found  the  regular  game 
ending  in  a  tie  and  the  outcome 
was  decided  in  an  overtime  pe- 
riod, the  Dukes  winning  2-1. 

Coach  John  Weinants  yesterday 
named  the  starting  team  for  the 
DurhajQ  fray.  Goalie  will  be 
Oeorg«  Bachelor.  The  fullback? 
will  be  Joel  Dlf^mett  and  Tom 
Cardie.  At  the  halfbacks  will  be 
Tate  jRebertson,  Bill  Stem,  and 
Ian  MdBryde.  Manning  the  wing 
slots  will  be  Charles  Whitfield 
and  Curt  Champlin.  The  insides 
will  he  Mike  Thompson  and  Hug 
Goodman.  At  the  center  forward 
pqist  wil  be  John  Ghanin. 


sity  ol  Aftiami  Mid  Texas  A&M. 

>l'"   ■     "" 1'     "-'       ■■    "(■!•< 


OASSIflEDS 


WANTED:  LATE  NIGHT  AND 
early  morning  wanderers  who 
seek  «  place  of  refuge  from  the 
cold  and  a  GOOD  cup  of  coffee. 
Try  us.  CAFE  MOUZA.  OPEN  24 
HOURS. 


Vah^sPunHiig 
Average  0if0p^; 
Now  41  Y<afds 

GREENSBORO  (iT  — Junior  end 
Fred  Pelzer  of  Virginia,  who  twice  1 
this  season  has  caught  five  passes  | 
in  one  game,  has  at  least  a  remote  I 
chance  of  equalling  the  Atlantic  i 
Coast  Conferenote  passrrecciving  j 
record  with  peak  performances  his 
final  two  games. 

.  Polzer,  who  caught  four  against 
North  Carolina  to  up  his  total  to 
21,  is  10  away  from  the  record  of 
31  established  last  fall  by  Wake 
Forest's  Bill  Barnes, 

Pelzer,  ACC  Service  Bureau  fig- 
ures show,  leads  the  conference 
receivers  by  eight  catches.  The 
No.  2  man  is  Bob  Gunderman;  also 
of  Vrginia.  with  Dickie  Daniels  of 
Wake  Forest  and  Ed  Sutton  of 
Tforth  Carolina  next  with  11  each. 

North  Carolina's  Wally  Vale. 
ACC  punting  leader  and  one  of 
the  nation's  best  all  season,  was 
called  on  twice  to  punt  inside  the 
Virginia  35  last  weekend,  a  heav>' 
contributor  to  his  relatively-poor 
21.7  average  on  tour  kicks  which 
reduced  his  season  average  to  41 
yards  per  kick.  He  is  now  closely 
challenged  by  N.  C  State's  Dick 
Huater,  who  is  averaging  39.^ 
yards. 


ning  of  the  Golden  Era  in  UNC 
football.   While   the  above   named 
stars  galloped  around  Kenan  Sta- 
dium, the  Tar  Heels  rolled  up  a 
four  year  record  of  32-9-2.  There 
will    always   be   arguments   as   to 
which  was  the  greatest  team.  All 
rst!*ti»ej  sifide'fthAi  s«aso^  fori  placed,  jind  won.  over  the  best  in 
al  and  grdiron  activities.  "        j  the  land.'  and  went  to  the  Sug»r 
"*i^ai^'^*t!«**Tar-A!ete-«Mi'i  Bowl  twice  and  the  Cotton  Bowl 
Bhw  Devils  go  at  it  in  the  big  one  '  once. 

Witt  be  so'me  of'  North  CaroUna'i  Many  say  the  1946  team,  when 
ffh<^  •footballers.  CapUined  by  |  Justice  gained  over  l.OOO  yards, 
<jhan  Highsmith  and  Ralph  Strayj  j  was  the  tops. . 
MbMtf^fec  team  was  con^posed  of  |  Termed  the  'Big  Huddle-,  the 
Ki^  Aiimrs  as  Charlie  Justice,  Art  \  reunion  v^  as  instigated  by  Wade 
ii}hiMh  Ktnny  PweU,.B<*.^Q»,i  Isaacs,  one. of  th.e  team  managers. 
i^O^-'Mltti'tf,  *>*  «e»h*,  a«?aeij  Ev«nt«  ^for  the  day  include  a  bar- 
iLbtfgers.   '  !  hecue,  the  game,  and  a  buffet  sup 

'l^hib'yea*'  IMS.was  the  begia-i  pen  ^      . 


»3.75 


,  i  "—-Cosmetic  Dept. 

,(.v         Phone  9  8781 
'.'Ufff^f^-       USE  OUR  CONVENIENT  LAY  A-WAY  PLAN 


pbt  2Se  F.  «M 


205  E.  Franklin  St. 


't»m 


Open  Till  10  P.M. 


AHtHOHf 

QUINN  jL 


aIs«ltifftB| 

WTfMfW 


TODAY 
ONLY 


MURALS 


YESTERDAY'S  TAO  FOOTBALL   ; 
RESULTS 

3:45:  Lewis  defeated  Cobb-1,  i 
14-0;  Beta  defeated  Phi  Delt  (W), ; 
12-6;  Ruffin-1  won  by  forfeit  over  I 
Winston.  I 

4:46:   Medical  School!   won   by  i 
forfeit  over  Stacy-l;  BVP  defeated  i 
Dental  School  14-0;   Kap  Sig  (W) ' 
We£eated^Sig,Chi  13:0;  Joyner  de- 
bated'NTedlcar'School-2,  9-0;  DKE 
CW)  defeated  Chi  Phf  41-6.  | 

YESTERDAY'S  VOLLEYf  ALL     { 
RESULTS 

4;00.  Chi  .Psi-2  (W)  defeated 
1^  2'li.  DKE-9  defeated  PiKA 
(W)»  2^;  Zeta  Psi-2  (W)  defeated 
Kap. Sig,  2-1;  Beta  won  by  forfeit 
over  Chi  Phi-2. 

6:00:'  Law  School-2  won  by  for- 
fcii.ovcfr  Slangum;  Zeta  P«i-1  (W) 
won  by  forfeit  over  Delt  Sig;  Phi 
Can  -tJefeated  ATO  (W)  2-0. 
TODAY'S  TAG  FOOTBALL 

'■■     /        SCHEDULE 

ZiHk  Field  No.  I,  Delt  Sig  vs. 
9i»CW;  Field  No.  2,  ZBT  vs.  Zeta 
Vai;  Field  No.  3  ,SAH  vs-  Phi  Deit; 
Field  No.  4.  Chi  ^si  vs.  Phi  Gam; 
Fi«d'No.  5,  ATO  vs.  SAE. 

4^46:  Fit^id  No.  1,  PiKA  vs.  Kap 
^g;  Field  No.  2,  KA  vs.  Sig  Nu; 
Field.  No.  S,  Kap  Psi  vs.  Chi  Phi; 
Field  No.  4,  DKE  vs.  Tbeta  Chi; 
Bield.  No.-  6,  Victory  Villi^ge  vs. 
WiAst6n.     - 

TODAY'S   VOLLEYBALL 
SCHEDULE 

4:00.*  Court  No.  1,  Ayoock  vs. 
Alexaiider-2;  Court  No.  2,  Ever- 
ett-rv«.  Cobb;  Court  No.  3,  Grimes 
vs.  bVP;  Court  No.  4,  Graham  vs. 
Mangtun. 

6:00:  Court  No.  1,  Medical  Sch-1 
vs.  Lewis;  Court  No.  2,  Winstoa 
vs.  Law  School-1;  Court  No-  3, 
Chi  Phi  vs.  llieta  Chi;  Court  No. 
4.  Beta  vs.  DU. 


A  GROWN-UP 
MOTION  PICTURE 
FOR  GROWN-UP 
EMOTIONS! 
•▼•vy  danghter 
•iio«MB«oit 
•very  iMureat  most! 


Teenage 
Rebel 


Itrr.nf 

GINGER  ROGERS 
MICHAEL  RENNIE 

NOW  PIAYING 


Carolina 


/a       abo 


carry  the  world  on  your 
•boulders? Our  *Naturataire  Model 
has  practically  no  shoulder  padding,  and 
its  softly  constructed  lines  fall  easily  and 
naturally  in  good  taste  and  comfort.  It 
took  two  decades  to  perfect  this  classic 
.  .  .  the  results  are  flatteringly  apparent. 


iMt»  ^  H^nrHMAN ASON 


'Mit  «»(irMiA 


Lightweight  Saxony 
fn  Olive  Grey  and  Scotch  Mist 


Julian*! 


Mantle  Is  Named  M9ft 
Valuable  Player  In  At 

NEW  YORK  (iP»— Mickey  Mantle, 
the  New  York  Yankee  shi$g/di 
who  won  the  American  I,<eaigue's 
triple  hatting  crown,  has  bee* 
^.  unanimQuslj'  named  the  most  val- 1 
uab^  player  of  the  league  in  th^  , 
ha^iOliny   u[    (hf  ^;ii.■^c'b;^l!   WrUeJ-.> 


■i^srr 


Triple  threat 

in  ony  league 

An\  w  ay  you  look  at  it,  this  Arrow  University 
shirt  is  an  eye-catcher.  Collar  buttons  down 
trimly  at  three  separate  points,  front  and  center 
back.  .KnA  the  back  sports  a  full  box  pleat. 
Comes  in  subtle  colors  galore  ...  6  plus  white  in> 
oxford  and  5  crisp  broadcloth  checks.  Team  it      ' 
up  with  this  smart,  alt-silk  repp  tie. 

Shirt,  $5.00;  tie,  J2.S0. 

ARROW^ 

—first  in  fashion 


SHUTS   •  TIES 


LTife«*-!:»»-V.i'**' 


WEATHER 

Partly   cloudy   and   mild   boom- 
ing vtfindy.  Expected  high  65-75. 


SThc 


^Tar  Med 


GUTS 

Hungary    will     be     remembered. 
See  page  2. 


VOL.  LVII   NO.  49 


Complete  (JP)  Wire  Service 


CHAPEL   HILL,    NORTH  CAROLINA,      FRIDAY.   NOVEMBER    16,    1956 


(Offices   in   Grahayn   Memorial 


FOUR   PAGES   THIS    ISSUI 


Frost-Time   Frolics   Campus   Chest 
Dance,   Will   Be  Tonight  At  8:30 


Tonight  the  Frost  Time  Frolics 
Anill  be  held  in  Cobb  Basement 
from  8:30  to  11:30  according  to 
Bob  Jacobus,  co-chairman  of  the 
dance.  The  Frolics  are  being  held 
as  part  of  the  Champus  Chest 
Drive  which  has  been  going  on 
for  the  past  two  weeks. 

At  present  time  the  total  collect- 
ed   is   SI 750.    acording    to    Jackie 

Aldndj^c. 

The  Frolics.  Jacobus  said,  would 
be  essentially  a  dance,  with  the 
music  furnished  by  Brunos  com- 
b).    Refreshments  will   be  served. 

Four  acts  are  scheduled  during 
the    intermission. 

For  the  men  on  campus  who  en- 
joy dancing  but  haven't  as  yet 
dates,  there  will  b?  over  a  hun- 
dred women  from  the  Nurses  Dorm 
and  Duke,  Jacobus  stated. 

Advance  ticket  sales  have  been 
going  well,  said  Jacobus,  however 
tickets  will  still  be  available  to- 
day in  Y  Court  from  8-12.  and  at 
the  dance  tonight. 

Decorations  will  be  along  the 
fall  theme,  including  leaves,  ap- 
ples, pumpkins  and  other  orna- 
ments. 

The  price  for  this  affair  is  SI 
with  or  without  a  date. 

I 

In-Service  I 

Training  Holds 
Second  Meet 

The  In-Service  Training  Series 
h^Jd  its  second  meeting  of  the 
3'ear  at  4:30  p.m.  yesterday  in  Car- 
roll Hall.  A  panel  discussion  cen- 
tered around  sofor\ly  and  indepen- 
dent  activities   on   campus. 

Desirable  utilization  of  time  for 
academic  purposes,  independents  in 
extra-curricular  activities  and  in- 
dividual opportunities  for  both  in- 
dependent and  sorority  women 
were  subjects  emphasized  by  the 
panel.  A  more  effective  dormitory 
program  and  cooperation  between 
sororities  and  independents  were 
also  discussed. 

Moderator  for  the  panel  was 
Miss  Martha  Decker,  assistant  di- 
rector of  student  activities.  The 
panel  consisted  of  Miss  Elizabeth 
Moore,  former  independent  woman 
student;  Mis^  Elaine  Burns,  presi- 
dent of  Women's  Independent 
Council;  Miss  Anne  Queen,  asso- 
ciate director  of  YWCA:  Miss  Isa- 
bclle  Carter,  member  of  the  Spec- 
ial Sorority  Problems  committee; 
Mrs.  Edward  G.  Bilpuch,  Alpha 
Dlta  Pi  alumna  advisor  and  Miss 
Sally  Price,  president  of  Panhell- 
enic  Council. 

Members  of  Panhellenic  Coun- 
cil and  Independent  Women's 
Council  were  invited  to  the  meet- 
ing to  hear  the  panel  and  to  par- 
ticipate in  the  discussion  which 
followed. 


Lift 


FROM    RADIO    DISPATCHES 

MOSCOW  —  Soviet  Premier 
Bulgat.in  Thursday  backed  down  j 
on  his  threat  to  send  Russian  i 
"volunteers"  to  fight  in  the  Miil-  j 
die  Ea.st,  and  thereby  heighten  1 
fears  of  a  third  World  War.  He  j 
sent  nUcs  to  Britain,  France  and  | 
Israel  expressing  satisfaction  j 
wilh  the  present  Middle  Eastern  j 
ceasefire,  but  added  the  three  ' 
coun;rics  should  pay  reparations 
to  Egypt  for  damages  done  in  the 
recent   invasion. 


Aldermen  Agree  To 
Columbia  Street  Parking  Ban 


Peace  Pilgrim  Here 
On  10,000  Mile  Hike 


Jack  Frost  And  iackie  Aldridge 

The  above  two  people  are  Jack  Frost  and  Jackie  Aldridge,  key 
figures  in  the  Frost-Time  Frolics,  scheduled  for  Cobb  basement  be- 
tween 8:30  and  11:30  p.m.  today.  Tickets  will  be  on  sale  in  Y-Court 
from  8  a.m.  until  noon  and  at  the  dance  tof ight.  Price  is  the  same, 
$1,  with  or  without  a  date,  and  over  100  women  will  b«  present 
according  to  Bob  Jacobus,  chairnian  of  the  dance. 


Frats,   Sororities   Set 
For  Holiday  Weekend 


By    MARY   ALYS   VOORHEES 

Kenan  Stadium  may.be  dressed 
in  an  air  of  quietness  for  the  week- 
ind,  but  one  could  hardly  say  the 
samo  for  the  remainder  of  the 
camras  as  Carolina  students  plan 
Ihcir  last  weekend  at  the  Hill  be- 
fore the  Thanksgiving   holidays. 

Turkey  will  be  on  the  menu  for 
some,  or  perhaps  the  occasion  will 
be  a  dance,  a  party,  or  a  hunt  — 
es  the  St.  A's  have  planned  for 
Saturday  —  but  regardless  of  the 
lorm  of  social  activity,  it  will  aii 
add  up  to  fun. 

In  conjunction  with  the  h  lidays. 
two  fraternity  houses,  DU  and  P' 
Kappa  Phi.  will  have  their  dates 
over  lor  Thanksgiving  parties  Sat- 
urday night.  At  the  Pi  Kap  House 
couples  will  be  dancing  to  music 
by  a  local  combo,  while  the  DCs 
will  be  celebrating  the  DUkathon 
race  wilh  a  turkey  dinner  and 
party. 

Included  as  their  guests  will  be 
the  eight  contestants  for  DUka- 
thon Queen  —  Misses  Nanay  Davis, 
Anno  iilorgan,  Marian  Dickens.  Car- 
olyn Wise,  Phyllis  Krafft.  Pat  How- 
ard, Saily  Price.  Sallie  Robeson  — 
and  then  dates. 
OTHER   SOCIALS 

Soint  other  Saturday  night  so- 
cials are  a  party  at  the  Lambda 
Chi  House  with  music  by  Curtis 
Field's  combo,  one  the  KA's  will 
have  to  "just  take  it  easy.  "  and 
another  at  the   ATO   House. 


I     Highlighting  the  Theta  Chi  soci-  < 
dl  calendar  for  this  week  will  be 
their  Annual  Pledge  Dance  Satur- 
day night  at  the  Carolina  Jnn.        | 
To  bi^in  the.  fo^rimeiit  tMy  win  j 
enterffin  at  a  tabin  party  tonight 
at     Beulah's     where    couples     will 
come  (iressed  as  L'll  Abncr,  Daisy 
Mae    or    .some    other    character    in 
the   Al  Capp  comic  strip. 

And  while  we're  oti  thg  subject 
of  csiuraes  —  ranging  from  Ro- 
man limes  down  through  the  "Gay 
Twciities"  right  up  to  Little  Ab- 
iiers  lime  —  no^oubt  some  have 
probably  wondered  just  what  oc- 
casions prompted  their  Carolina 
Triends  lo  dress  in  various  ways. 

One  such  occasion  was  last  night 
when  the  Kappa  Sig's  and  the 
ADPis  journeyed  out  to  the  Ameri- 
can Legion  Hut  for  a  "Gay  Twen- 
lies"  p-rty,  while  the  Phi  Delts 
and  Cni  O's  were  reviving  Roman 
aays  with  a  Roman  togo  party  out 
at  Beulah's  with  music  by  the 
"Down  Beats"  from  Burlington.      I 

Over  at  Jack's  the  ATOs  and 
Pi  Phi's  were  having  an  informal 
^et-togetiier.  | 

Last  Tuesday  evenig  found  the 
Lambda  Chi's  at  Beulah's  with  the 
Alpha  Gams  for  a  frontier  party. 
Couples  dressed  as  cowboys  and 
Indians,  danced  to  the  music  of  the 
"Castliers  "  from  Durham,  and 
Jim    Teaguc  land    Sara    Crawford 

(See  SOCIAL.  Page  3) 


LONDON  —  British  offiicaJs 
said  Bulganin  .should  worry 
about  paying  damages  to  Hun- 
gary. 

*  •         •       ■ 

NAPLES— United  Nations  Sec- 
retary General  Dag  Hammar- 
skj'old  arrived  from  Rome.  He 
leaves  this  morning  for  Egypt 
to  tie  up  loose  ends  of  the  UN 
troops'  operation. 

*  *         * 

UNITED  N'ATIONS.  NEW 
York— The  United  States  stout- 
ly opposed  efforts  of  India  and 
Soviet  Russia  to  seat  Commun- 
ist China  seated  in  the  U.N. 
«         *         * 

VIENNA— A  general  strike 
continues   in  war-torn   Hungary. 

*  *         * 

From  Yugoslavia.  Marshall 
Tito  discio.sed  a  great  division 
in  the  ranks  of  the  Kremlin.  He 
said  one  top  Red  official  wanted 
to  return  to  Stalinism.  He  call- 
ed the  crushing  of  the  Hungar- 
ian revolt  a  terrific  blow  to  so- 
cialism. Tito  said  Communist 
Pa  r  t  y  Secretary  Khrushchev 
must  realize  force  is  not  the  an- 
swer in  the  former  satellite. 


By   JOAN   MOORE 

Peace  Pilgrim,  a  small,  white- 
I  haired  woman  who  has  reached 
'  the  latter  part  of  a  10,000  mile 
walk  for  world  disarmament 
throughout  the  nation,  arrived  in 
Chapel    Hill    yesterday. 

She  began  her  mission  four 
years  ago,  walking,  talking,  and 
praying  with  people.  Dressed  in 
a  blue  tunic  and  carrying  only  a 
toothbrush,  comb,  and  newspaper 
clippings  ol  her  travels.  Peace 
Pilgrim  walks  until  oflored  food 
and  shelter. 

Peace  Pilgrim,  who  will  tell 
neither  her  name  nor  background, 
optimistically  hopes  to  see  world 
peace  She  believes  that  this  can 
be  accomplished  only  by  world 
disiirnianment.  "We  need  one  gov- 
ernment which  will  include  all 
the  people  of  the  world.  The  na- 
tions must  give  up  their  right  of 
declaring  war  to  the  United  Na- 
tions." she  said  emphatically. 

Walling  about  2.5  milts  per  day. 

Peace  Pilgrim,  now  on  her  twelfth 

pair  of  shoes,  has  traveled  in  Me.\- 

r  ico  and   Canada.  She  is  now  walk-i 

:  ing   100  "highway   miles  "   in  each 

I  state    of    this   country.      She      will 

!  travel    next      in      South      Carolina. 

I  Georgia,    and    F'lorida.    Peace    Pil- 

■  grim  does  not  plan  to  tour  Europe 

for  she  wants    to    talk    intimately 


But  Only  For  60  Days 
If  Frats  Present  Plan 


PEACE   PILGRIM 

. . .  irall.s  for  peace 


Bob  Young 
Denounces 
Bell  Theft 


"It  is  embarassing  to  the  foot- 
ball players  for  some  of  us  to  act 
immatiucly    about    this   game." 


'  By   NEIL    BASS  ' 

The  parking  restriction  on  Co- 
lumbia St.  wil  be  lifted  for  60 
days  —  from  Jan.  3  to  Mar.  1  — 
.f  fraternities  on  the  street  prej 
.vent  a  proposal  to  alleviate  their 
.jarkinij  problem  to  the  local  al- 
ciermeii    before   Jan.   3. 

'Ihis  is.  in  ellect.  a  motion  pass- 
ed lasl  night  by  the  Chapel  Hill 
Board  of  Aldermen. 

Seven    Iratcrnilies    are    affected 
by    the    two-hour    parking    restric- 
tion which  extends  from  Franklin 
St.   !o  (  aincfuii  .\ve. 
IMPLEMENTATION 

The  fiO  day  ban  liftj  aldermen 
emphasized,  will  be  a  period  dur 
iiig  which  fraternities  involved  are 
iv.  implement  suggested  solutions 
presented  to  the  Board  of  Alder- 
men before  Jan.  3. 

In  other  words,  aldermen  have 
put  it  on  the  line  to  fraternities 
invoivLd; 

"Show  us  a  concrete  plan  to  al- 
leviate parking  congestion  in  your 
area.  ;iiid  wc  will  lift,  the  ban  for 
60  days  to  allow  tinip  for  imple- 
mentation of  the  plan." 
COMMISSION 

Chairman  Wilburn  Davis  of  the 


Dorm  Queen 
Crowned  At 
IDC  Meeting 

Miss     Shipley     Carpenter 
crowned    the    Sweetheart    of 


Thi.-i  was  the  statement  made  by 

;  Bob  Young,  President  of   the   Stu- 

.  jWith  people  without  the  use  of  an    dent   Body,   as  he   derided   the   re- 

*Vi>h|    sti-aling    uf.  the    yictor.v  ^ejl 
(vi)ifi   Ilie  Dyke  Car;npus  by  several 


^ 


I     H*l»ltg|  tK  Hi  I  : 


I       "I    did    ffot    chot*t*o   to    be-    a  .pil- 

I  grim.-ri©  'iattl.'»:-.thrfalllOK«ii 

I  God  came  (o  me  suddenlx.  I  knew 

/     j  then    'h^t   1   w*iiki    be^a   w^jKJ^eTTM- 

I      I  until  mJteiRl^d  M-i«'i(lhiV*cl'9bjie^' 

j      •Another    war    would    bring    an- 

I  nihilatioii_^,  "      she.    tyifJitr  ■'h<||Jed. 

["while    d<sai-man>^ffr   wotild    iirrnV 

I  self-preservation."  i 

was        '•}\c  must  work  for  the  good  of 

^^C    all   people.  This   is  mv  pholosophv 

Dorms    at    Wednesday    night's    In- ,  ^^  |jf^.  ••  j^^p  p„nj.|u(j^.;^ 

terdormitory    Council    meeting.         |      Having     no     dependents.     Peace 

Mi.ss    Carpenter    was    presented  i  pi,jjrini  maintains  that  she  b.-longs 

a  bouquet  of  roses,  a   loving  cup    to  the   family  of   mankind.   "I   do 


and  a  $10  gift  certificate  by  co- 
chairman  of  the  IDC  C-ontests 
Committee  Don  Matkins. 

Runners-up  in  the  contest.  Miss 
Libby  .McDowell  and  .Miss  Phyliss 
Krafft  were  presented  $5  gift  cer- 
tificates by  Matkins  also. 

Miss  Carpenter  was  sponsored 
by  Stacy  Dormitory,  .Miss  Krafft 
by  .Mangum  Dorm  and  Miss  .Mc- 
DowcH  by  Steele  Dorm. 

Judges  for  the  contest  were  Dr. 
William   Poteat  of  the   Philosophy 
Dept.  Bob  Cox.  local  merchant  and 
Mrs.  Kay  Ky'ser. 
VENDING    MACHINES    8BFC    flu 

The    other    matter    which    came 


not   know   of  anyone  else   making 
such    a    pilgrimage,"   she   said. 

Peace  Pilgrim  has  spoken  re- 
cently to  groups  at  Duke  and,  N.C. 
State  and  will  talk  with  .several 
groups  here  on  campus. 

Librarian 

Is  Awarded       I 

Europe  Trip        \ 

A   check    for   $2,000    Icr    a    trip 
to    Europe    was    presented    yester- 
bcfore    the    council's    session    was  '  day  in  a  surprise  ceremony  to  Mi.ss 


t'iirolina   men.  '       ' 

Young  felt"^lli.it  it  was  unfort- 
unate in  that  the  night  the  bell 
was,  stolen.*  a  meeting  was  taking 
p'ace  at.  Duke,  between  student 
and  .  faculty  members  of  both 
schools  in  an  attempt  to  stop  the 
wave  of  vandalism  that  h;is  broken 
out  recently  in  Chapel  Hill  and 
Durham.  y 

He  went  on  to  .say  that  it  was 
discouraging  to  see  and  hear  that 
damage  is  being  done  to  our  camp- 
us by  someone  who  wants  to  stir 
up  feeling  between  UNC  and 
Duke.      '  .  .  ...     ; 

"We  are  not  angels  about  the 
matter"  he  said.  "We  have  un- 
necessarily invaded  their  campus 
during  the  past  few  da>s." 

President  Young  stressed  that 
if  a  UNC  student  is  caught  on  the 
campus  without  a  proper  reason, 
he  will  be  tried  immediately  by 
the  Student  Council.  Duke  has  as- 
sured l'ni\ersity  officials  that  sim- 
ilar action  would  take  place  if  a 
Duke  student  was  apprehend^ed  on 
the  campus  of  UNC. 


dormitory    vending    machines. 

Discussion  was  held  as  to  wheth- 
er or  not  vending  machines  should 
be  taken  out  of  dormitories  entire- 
ly becau.se  of  unsatisfactory  func- 
tioning, j 

No  decisive  action  was  taken  on 
the  matter. 

The  council  will  meet  again  on  : 
the  Wednesday  fololwing  Thanks-  I 
giving  holidays. 


Georgia 
rian  at 
1920's. 


Faison,    reference    libra- 
thf    University    since    the 


DUkathon  Set 
For  Sotun 


day 


IDC  Queen  And  Court 

Miss  Shirley  Carp«nt»r,  recently  elected  Sweet  Searf  of  UNC  Dorms,  is  shown  above  as  she  was 
presented  her  troph/.  Shown  with  her  are  Miss  Libby  McDoweU,  left,  and  MiM  PhyliM  Krafft,  run- 
ners-up. 


The  annual  Dukathon,  sponsor- 
ed by  Delta  Upsilon  social  fra- 
ternity, will  be  held  Sjaturday  at 
2  p.m. 

The  Dukathon  is  a  marathon 
race  starting  at  the  Carolina 
Theater  in  Chapel  Hill  and  cover- 
ing a 'distance  of  11  miles,  ending 
at  the  Durham  Post  Office. 

About  75  runners  have  entered 
the  race  so  far. 

Runners  follow  Franklin  St.  and 
the  Durham  Highway  into  the  city 
limits  of  Durham,  and' then  take 
the  main  streets  to  Five  Points  in 
the  middle  cf  town.  The  post  of- 
fice is  just  three  blocks  from  Five 
Points. 

Delta  Upsilon  SiviU  award  fii's*- 
second  and  third  place  winners 
special  medals.  .\ll  others  who 
finish  the  race  will  receive  >i"'' 
vivor's  mcfials. 


.Miss  Faison  retires  next  June. 
Faculty  members  and  others  who 
have  benefited  from  her  a.ssistiyice 
at  the  library  participated  in  the 
donations. 

A  large  numbi.r  ot  the  faculty 
attended  the  presentation  cere- 
mony at  4:30  p.m.  Thursday  in  the 
Graham  Memorial  Lounge.  It  was 
disci  sed  that  the  goal  of  Si.500 
has  been  oversubscribed  by  grate- 
ful eontributors. 

Chairman  of  the  facuity  group 
presenting  the  check  was  Profess- 
or Werner  P  Friedrich  Other  com- 
mittee members  were  Kenan  Pro- 
fessors Richmond  P.  Bund.  John 
N.  Couch.  Fletcher  .M.  Green.  Glen 
Haydon.  Urban  T.  Holmes,  B.  L 
Ullman.  and  Dean  Lucille  Kelling 
and  Frances  L.  Yocom  of  the  Li- 
brar\    Science   School. 

IN- THE  INFIRMARY 

Students  in  thg  Infirmary  yes- 
terday   included: 

Misses  Roberta  Simpson,  Julia 
Carter,  Elizabeth  Gardner,  Eliza- 
beth McGraw,  Mrs.  Shirley  Ed- 
gerton,  and  Jackson  Sparks,  Jim- 
my Merritt,  Louis  Cody,  Robert 
Gordon,  Myron  Snotherly,  Al- 
fred Dean,  John  Minter,  John 
Richardson,  Lesley  Bailey,  James 
Matthies    and    James    Dunn. 


fe.ssor   Pegg    said,    the    Poli.sh    and 
Hungarian   disturbances  posed  dif- 
ficult pr(  blems.  •'The  Ru.ssian  lead- 
ers   were    roughly   in   the   position 
of  a    man    who   has   a   panther   by 
the   Liil.   To  maintain  a   firm   hold 
is    both    difficult    and    dangerous 
but   to  turn  loose  is  to  suffer  loss 
of    personal    prestige    and    to    lose 
the    pelt." 
Poland,   according    to    Professor 
•  Pegg.  could  be  treated  with  some 
consideration  because  [he  interest 
of  that  nation  held  her  to  Russia. 
I  Hot  Hungary,  basically  hostile  and 
I  deriving  nothing  from  the  Russian 
ccnnoction.    must    be    crushed    by 
force   or  else   be   written   off  as   a 
loss. 

"The  result,"  declared  ,Profe.ssor 
Pegg. "has  been  a  ruthless  but:;hery 
of    Hungarian    patriots,      a      heart 
'  rending  sight  for  the  whole  world 
,  to  see.   This   cruel   act.   which    has 
i  shocked    the    conscience    of    much 
of  the  world  and  has  kindled  fresh 
I  hatreds   and    resentments   in    mill- 
ions of  hearts  throughout  the  So- 
viet   satellite    kingdom,    may    well 
presage   a    return   to   the   Stalinist 
In  cl:»sing.  Young  asked  students    policy  of  brute  force.   Nor  should 
here  to  save  their  energy  and  use    we    be   blind    to    the    fact    that    it 
it  at  the  Duke  -  Carolina  game  in-    could      mean      something      much 
stead  of  in  destructive  deeds.         .  worse." 


Pegg  Says 
Russia  Not 
Weakened 

The  Hungarian  revolt  and  dis- 
affection in  Poland  has  not  weak- 
ened Ru.ssian  power  nor  moderat- 
ed her  desire  for  an  aggressive 
foreign  policy,  according  to  Carl 
I  H.  Pegg.  professor  of  history  at 
■  the  University  of  North  Carolina. 
I  Speaking  before  the  Chapel 
i  Hill  Rotary  Club  this  week  Pro- 
I  lessor  Pegg  pointed  out  that 
'  "every  progrnosis  of  the  future  of 
,  Eastern  Europe  must  take  into  ac- 
I  count  the  fact  that  Russia  has  been 
i  struggling  for  the  control  of  East- 
ern Europe  for  a  Itmg  time,  that 
I  Poland  and  Czechoslovakia  are  ol 
j  great  strategic  value  to  Russia, 
j  and  that  a  large  number  of  well- 
:  equipped  Russian  divisions  are 
;  still    camped    on    the    soil    of    the 

'  satellite   states."  student     government    Traffic    Ad- 

I  Profes-sor  Pegg  believes  that  the  '  isory  Commission  had  previously 
!  present  phase  of  Russian  foreign  piesenteci  his  commission's  recom- 
policy  began  with  the  Summit  'lendation  that  the  restriction  be 
Conference  of  July  19.5,5  which  lifted  for  bO  days  to  allow  frater- 
gave  the  Russians  the  impression  ^  uities  lime  to  alleviate  congestion. 
that  the\  could  move  into  the  Near  \  .Aldermen  embodied  Daviss  re- 
and  .MidrfJe  East  wi.ihovt  hind- !  ^funmciniatinn  in  the  motion,  but 
rancQ.  But  wh^  Ihey  tried  to  dis-  ''  J'"<^'nde<(  it  to  stipulate  that  fra- 
engage  from  Eastern  Furope.  Pro-    icrnities  must  .show  some  progress 

toward  a/ie\ialing  their  parking 
probiini  bc'f.ire  the  ban  would  be 
lifted. 

Da\i.^.  whose  commission  has 
\.(»rktd  on  the  Columbia  St.  pro- 
rihm  since  the  beginning  of  fall 
seme.^ier,  presented  the  final  plea 
for    fraternities    last    night. 

President  Bob  Young  also  at- 
tended  the  meeting. 

Alderman  Obie  Davis  made  the 
motion.  .Alderman  Dr.  Paul  Wager 
of  the  r.ditical  Science  Dept.  at- 
tached the  provision  that  fraterni- 
Ues  involved  must  present  a  pro- 
posal bi'rcie  the  ban  would  be  lift- 
ed. 

Other  aldermen  present  at  the 
meeting,  chaired  by  .Mayor  O.  K. 
C  ornv.ell,  were:  Hubert  Robinson, 
Kenneth  Putnam.  Eugene  Strowd. 
Citmmission  Chairman  Davis 
emphasized  that  his  group  was 
.I'lw  mo\ing  on  to  a  study  of  the 
entire  campus  parking  problem  and  ' 
v.as  leaving  the  Columbia  St.  mat- 
:er  in  tiic  hands  of  fraternities  in- 
lolvtd. 


i 


John  Sneden  Acts  In 
Playmakers'  Production 

John  Sneden.  junior  from  Teiia-    "•.Androcles   and   the    Lien'  ,   which 
fly.  N.  J.,  is  not  newcomer  to  por-    began  last  night. 
trayinu      high-ranking      characters        The    Shaw    comedy    will    appear 
when  he  plays  Caesar  in  The  Car-    at  the  Playmakers  Theatre  through 
olin^    I'hiunak'.Ms"     production    of    Sunday,  eurtain.s  at  8:30   p.m. 

Sneden  first  appeared  in  a  maj- 
or r.de  with  the  Playmakers  in 
"Ondine".  sea.son's  opener  last 
year,  as  the  Lord  Chamberlain  of 
the  Riyal  Court.  In  a  later  pro- 
duction. "F'ven  the  (Jods".  he  play- 
ed the  role  of  the  Prime  Minister.  ' 
High-ranking  in  a  different  vein. 
in  •Seventeen",  the  musical  com- 
edy la.'?t  year,  he  played  George, 
a    haughty   young   college   man   in 


Marine  Found 
Guilty  On 
Jwo  Counts 

'  PAHHIS  ISLAND.  S.  C—  A  gen- 
eral court-martial  today  found  a 
bayonet-witiding  drill  instructor, 
Frederick  .\.  Renton.  guilty  of  two 
counts  of  cruelty  to  .Marine  re- 
cruits. 

Renton.  from  .New  York  City, 
was  tried  on  15  separate  charges. 
He  pleaded  guilty  to  two  at  the 
opening  of  the  trial. 

The  sentence  will  be  handed 
down  tomorrow.  Renton  faces  a 
maximum  punishment  of  five  years 
in  jail  and  a  dishonorable  dis- 
charge. 


Free  Flick 
Tonight 


God  is  .My  Co-Pilot"  will  be 
a  higjj  school  crowd,  the  only  one  G.M.ABs  free  flick  feature  of  the 
with    an   automobile.  i  week  held  in  Carroll  Hall  at  8  and 

In  the  first  play  of  this  season,    10  p.m.   today. 


■".Anastasia",  Sneden  acted  as  Pet- 
rovin.  an  exiled  white  Ru.ssian 
court  artist,  conspirator  wilh  a 
"{jrince,  and  one  of  three  tutors  of 
a  pretender  to  the  sovereignty. 
Now.  in    ".Androcles  and  the  Lion", 


Starring  Dennis  .Morgan  and 
Raymond  .Alassey.  the  film  is  a  bi- 
ographical screenplay  of  the  life 
of  Col.  Robert  Lee  Scott.  The  story 
takes  him  from  his  boyhood  days 
on  a   (Georgia   farm,  through  West 


JOHN  SNEDEN 

. . .  playx  Caesar 


he  appears  a.s  Caesar,  emperor  of  Point,  to  his  exploits  as  a  com- 
j  Rome  and  persecutor  of  the  Chris-  bat  pilot  with  Gen  Chennaulfs 
j  tian   martyrs.  |  Flying  Tigers, 


V^^'l^'lv^  \*^.**J^ 


PAOn  TWO 


THt  DAILY  TAR  HEtL 


FRIDAY,  NOVEMBER  U,  19S6 


Hungary  Teaches  A  Lesson 
to  The  Fat  And  Lazy  World 

"Sonieho'ic    drfianrf    alirays    maiuf^fd    to    keep   its   head    iij). 

Through  all  ihese  changes  the  man  in  the  street  would  he  apt  to'say 

I'irtualh  in  one  breath:  It  is  hopeless-  We  will  fight!"  —  Sew  Wirt 

•Times  Clorrespondcnt  .Hcniv  (iinig;er.  recently  returned  from  Riis- 

.sian-held  Budapest. 


WORLD  COMMENT 


PROSPECT  &  RETROSPECT 


Motivation:  Needed  Fpr  Action 


Vesterdav  the  lighting  was  all 
over.  The  Hunj4arians  had  been 
heaten.  phvsifallv,  by  the  Russians. 
More  than  l'o.ooo  Hinioarians  had 
been  killed.  atocrdin<i[  to  unof- 
fit  iai  estimates. 

Thev  were  20,000  brave  men, 
women  and  di^ldren.  .Ml  reports 
from  Hiniy,ary  indicate  that  the 
embattled  people  faced  death  sim- 
plv  and  courageously.  They 
thoiioht  only  a'lx)Ut  the  freedom 
they  were  fighting  lor.  They  t(M>k. 
rifles  and  handguns  and  homemade 
Molotov  totktails  and  went  out  in- 
t\>  the  streets  to  fight  Russian  tanks 
and  iirmored  troops.  They  knew 
ihe  tr»H>ps  outninnbered  them,  vet 
they  f<^)nghi   on. 

Thc'x  Idught  with  desperation 
and  tlelibeiation.  1  hey  were  join- 
ed in  their  fight  bv  their  countrv- 
mcn  ail  over  the  world.  New  N'ork 
longshoremen  refitsed  to  unload 
the  luggage  of  Conununists  invoh- 
ed  in  the  Russian  attack.  A  Hun- 
garian-horn British  woman  w^ 
fined  in  (ourt  for  throwing  a  l)ot- 
ile  (»f  .vonurt  tlirough  the  window 
of  the  Soviet  embassy  in   London. 

She  said:  "You  (an  arrest  me,  I 
wont  MUi  a\\a\.  I  am  Hungarian. 
If  \ou  saw  voin  peo[)le  sinking  in 
bl<M»d.  what   would   y(Hi  do?" 

.\i  liist  Jlie\  ihought  help  Avould 
come  horn  the  I'nited  \ati()ns  or 
the  Inited  Siai  -s.  But  when  help 
ditln't  <(»nu-.  the  Hungarian  peo- 
ple did  not  gi\t  up.  even  though 
ihev  knev.  m«M»-  Russian  divisions 
wcrt-  fuu-ring  llu-  battle. 

\Vlien  tlif  ir  amriumition  ran  out, 
they  struck  the  factories.  They 
.striKk  most  0/  Himf^^v'ft  eeott^mic 
]lfe.   and   aie   still   «m   strike. 

What  tloes  i]'^>  A(U\  up  to?  Wliat 
does  it  mean? 

ft  111  i"  of  <  (»ai.s-e,  that  a  na»- 
t'on  <  ati  btcoinc  fed  up  with  Ru.s- 
.sia!i-s.\!e  Ciommnnism  to  the  point 
Avhere  it  will  revolt.  It  proves 
again  5h;»f  C.ommtmism  is  no  good. 

.;>t 

Vim  the  Hnngari4)i  revolt  proves 
tiiat  people  in  this  fat  and  la/y 
W(M"ld  still  have  giUs. 

They  have  the  guts  to  pom  gaso- 
line inio^an  empty  wine  Ixntle  aatd 
.sling  it  at  a  Russian  tank.  They 
ha\e  tlje  gins  t(»  hand  rifles  to  their 


wives  and  (hildven.  and  the  wives 
and  children  have  the  gius  to  point 
their  husbands'  rifles  at  Russians 
;md  slux>t  10  kill.  They  have  the 
guts  to  stand  up  for  themsehes,  10 
jjracticaillv  renouiK  e  life  in  ()rder 
to  achieve  something  far  greater 
— freedom. 

It  was  freedom  the  Hungarians 
warned  in  the  first  place,  aiul  it 
was  freedom  they  fought  h)r.  It 
was  freedom  thev  had  for  a  few 
beaut ifid  hours,  and  it  was  free- 
dom that  the  Russi.^n  tanks  took 
awav  in  another  few.  but  horrif)le 
h«>i|rs. 

In  the  end.  it  was  freedom  that 
20.000  Himgarians  died  for. 

A  lew  da.vs  ago.  Carolina 
stopped  its  classes  for  two. minutes 
ill  tribute  to  the  Hungarian  stu- 
dents who  died  in  an  efh>rt  to  ac- 
hie\e  freedom.  \ow.  the  world 
woidd  do  well  to  sti>p  for  a  whole 
dry  and  re  fled  on  what  one  word*, 
one  feeling,  meant  to  20.000  hu- 
nt.ui   beings. 

Perhaps  the  world  is  not  so  fat 
and  lazv  after  all.  Perhaps  freedom 
does  mean  something  to  people 
after  all.  But  it  took  20.000  Innnan 
lives  to  j)ro\e  it. 

A  Chestfuli 
Of  Congrats 
To  The  Drive 

Tlie   Campus    Chest     drive    has 
achieved  something  that    is  pra<.ti- 
rally  urtprededehted   in  the  auhalsi 
6ff>.n<.%i^-  F|,|nt''j 

It  has  hit  the  top  of  its  $i.r,oo 

The  credit' gcies  id  Gb-<dhdinnert  ! 
Jes."*  Stribling  and  \fiss  Jackie  .Ald- 
ridge  and  the  people  who  worked 
with  them. 

Th^'  credit  also  goes  to  the  (on- 
iribiuers  who  realized  the  value 
of  a  one-shot  g'ving  (atnpaign  and 
who  dug  for  the  few  pe^mies  that 
weie  needed  to  get  the  (best  o\er 
the  top  this  week. 

It  was  a  good  drive,  and  it  had 
good  people  nmning  it. 


Frank  Wamsley 

It's  fall  here  at  Carolina  and 
students  shuffle  through  the 
leaves  to  their  classes  in  much 
the  same  manner  they  shuffle 
through  lite. 

Unnoticed  go  the  falling  leaves 
and  the  splendor  of  Fall.  Un- 
noticed goes  all  except  that 
which  happens  to  fall  within  the 
narrow  scope  of  the  student's 
life. 


Tomorrow  it  will  be  another 
date  with  some  cute  coed,  an- 
other football  game  or  a  trip 
home  for  the.  w^eekend.  Only 
occasibnally  is  the  student  stirred 
from  his  complacency. 

What  student,  who  now  and 
then  screams  himself  hoarse  at 
a  football  game,  or,  even  rarer, 
takes  part  in  a  panty  raid  as  the 
ultimate  in  self  e.\pression.  can 
understand  the  real  meaning  of 
student  demonstrations? 

Yet  across  the  Atlantic  stu- 
dents are  violently  demonstrat- 
ing. They  are  leading  the  ?Iun- 
garian  revolt,  attacking  and  burn- 
ing CommtMii.st  buildings  in  Par- 
is and  leading  protest  parades 
and   demonstrations   in   Berlin. 

Perhaps  you  have  wondered, 
after  looking  at  your  fellow  stu- 
dents, what  it  is  that  can  moti- 
vate students  to  such  violence, 
even  to  the  point  of  laying  down 
their  lives.  Would  the  fellow 
sitting  ne.xt  to  you  in  your  nine 
oclock  class  pick  up  a  flag  and 
march  on  Raleigh?  If  necessary 
would  he  take  up  a  rifle  and  fight 
for  whA  he  believes?  You  doubt 
that  he  would   . 

.And  he  probably  wouldn't.  He 
wouldn't  unless  the  cau.se  affect- 
ed his  own  personal  life,  family, 
well-being  or  happiness.  In  short, 
personal  e.vperience  and  know- 
ledge is  nece.ssary. 

Here  in  the  United  States  we 
are"   too'  far '  removed" fj-oni ' "f he  •  "*"  • 
causes    of    these    demonstrations 
tO'be  too  much' &f-f«rte<l -b^  .them^ ...... 

Of  course  we  object  to  much  we 
hear  of  but  it  never  goes  further 
Ihaii  that.' "' •••••<•• 

Students    in    Europe   have   seen 


poses  of  demonstration  or  pro- 
test. It  takes  only  a  fiery  leader 
to   mold    feelings  into  organized 

action. 


These  groups  which  meet  from 
time  to  time"  for  a  meal  or  a 
gla.ss  of  beer  are  healthy  signs 
of     a     free     thinking   people   in 


search  of  political  expression. 
They  are  miniature  town  meet- 
ings. They  are  the  seeds  of  De- 
mocracy. 


'Ah,  YouVe  Come  Back  To  Me' 


YOU  Said  It: 


A  Legislator  Replies  -  -  Part  3 


WMhY^m-e  to  what  Mr,  Pow- 
ledge  had  to  say  about. jartickK 
.tM*l.,f.Wj<l.,.t'''»'^'l.'^  fep'  dropped' 
from  the  pages  of  TJie- Daily  Tar. 

(omm|^isnjl|and  they  don't  \i)ke  li^g;^^,,^!  Ttie  a*po.r.nee  ol 
fil^^f  ^'OT  ''''^"^^^^^"•ttlf  {Vk^^^  relating  thej  trwi.of 'Uhfe 
bf!|ori^r.^  ^us.s>a  d^^oAl  MX  ^.legation  tj  the  region, 
•i^lir  ft  or  hvcd  in  on»l^  S,.«    YJI,.,,„  ,,^  ,,  vfr.  „,d',s.  ap- 

pointment   as  head  ipf  the   band 


Furman's  Rules:  Teh,  Teh 

"lie  have  given  a  great  deal  of  thoughtful  study  to  the  effect 
of  fraternities  on  the  life  and  influence  of  iFurman)  I'niversity. 
let  it  he  stated  here  and  now  that  Furman  I'nix'ersity  has  never  of- 
ficinlly  sponsored  dancing  ....  So  organization  on  the  campus  .... 
has  been  allowed  to  sponsor  d/inces/'—Vrom  report  of  Furman's 
board  of  trustees  to  the  S.  C.  Baptist  State  Convention. 


From  the  looks  of  the  report, 
maybe  Furman  had  better  forget 
about  fraternities  until  it  gets 
str:iightened  oiu  about  dances. 

The  Daily  Tar  Heel 

The  official  student  publication  of  tbe 
Publications  Board  of  the  University  of 
North  Carohna,  where  it  is  published 
daily  except  Monday  and  examinatiot 
and  vacation  periods  and  summer  ternjs 
Entered  as  second  class  matter  in  tht 
Dost  office  in  Chapel  Hill,  N.  C.  undei 
the  Act  ni  March  8,  1870.  Subscription 
rates:  mailed,  $4  per  year,  $2.50  a  semes- 
ter; delivered,  $6  a  year,  $3.50  a  semei- 
ter. 


Editor 

FRED  POWLEDGE 

Managing  Editor  .. 

.  _  CHARLIE  SLOAN 

News  Editor 

RAY  I.TVKKR 

Business  Manager 

BILL  BOB  FL-FT, 

Sports  Editor 

_    .    LARRY  CHEEK 

EDITORI.A.L  STAFF  —  Woody  Sears. 
Frank  Crowther,  Barry  Winston,  David 
Mundy,  George  Pfingst.  Ingrid  Clay, 
Cortland  Edwards,  Paul  McCauIey, 
Bobbi  Smith. 

NEWS  STAFF— Clarke  Jones,  Nan^ 
Hill,  Joan  Moore,  Pringle  Pipkin,  AJine 
Drake.  Edith  MacKinnon,  Wally  Kuralt, 
Mary  Aiys  Voorhees,  Graham  Snyder, 
Billy  Barnes,  Neil  Bass,  Gafy  Nichols, 
Page  Bernstein,  Peg  Humphrey,  Phyllis 
Maultsby. 


Night   Editor   _ 


.Woody  Sears 


The  South  Carolina  imiversity 
Itas  a  policy  "that  no  voung  ladies 
l>oarding  in  the  dormitories  are  to 
attend  dances  in  (ireenville  (where 
Fininan's  located)  or  elsewhere 
while  living  in  the  dormitories 
without  the  written  request  of 
their  parents  that  they  be  allowed 
t(»  attend."  .A,lso,  as  stated  a'bove. 
the  .s<h<M)l  won't  allow  campus  or- 
ganizations  to   ha\e   dames. 

Why.  we  wonder,  doesn't  Fur- 
man like  a  normal  lelationship  be- 
twen  the  two  sexes?  Why  are 
harmless  things  like  dantes  on  the 
blacklist  at  Greenville?  The  only 
reason  we  can  figure  is  that  the 
((mtiollers  of  the  imiversity.  the 
.South  Carolina  liaptists,  believe 
dan<  ing  is  a  sin.  " 

Baptists,  even  South  Carolina 
liaptists.  are  allowed  their  feelings 
on  the  matter.  But  we  feel  their . 
feelings  are  very  n:irrow.  In  the 
light  of  modern  life,  dancing  is  a 
normal,  not-tf)o-stivnous  way  of 
marking  and  maintaining  normal 
sexual  relationships. 

But.  alas  and  alack,  the  Sand- 
lappers  think  otherwise.  ,We  won- 
der how  the  average  Furman  grad- 
uate reacts  when  he  is  thrust  from 
college  into  the  Cold,  Hard.  Cruel 
World  of  Dance-Hall  Cuties!  O 
Lost. 


Viet  occupied  countries  know 
Communism  for  what  it  is.  TTiese 
would^  rather  die  than  submit  to 
it.  , 

Western  countries  are  glutted 
with  thousands  of  refugees  from 
Communist  oppression.  Each  one 
has  a  story  to  tell  and  people 
listen  and  believe.  They  believe 
because  they  have  heard  the 
same  story  dozens  of  times  be- 
fore. 

The  average  student  in  Europe 
has  little  money  to  spend.  There 
are  no  fraternity  hou.ses  or  com- 
fortable dormitories.  Many  get 
by  on  less  than  would  be  thought 
possible. 

But  he  is  vitally  interested  in 
the  world  about  him.  He  loves 
an  argument — especially  a  politi- 
cal argument.  He  belongs  to  clubs 
and   takes  part  in  discussions. 

This  love  of  meetings  is  espec- 
ially true  of  the  German-speaking 
countries.  Discussions  are  often 
heated,  for  opinions  are  diverse 
and  each  is  eager  to  make  known 
his  feelings  and   views. 

Such  student  groups  are  of  all 
sizes.  They  are  formed  for  many 
different  purposes  but'  all  are 
interested  in  politics  and  are 
quick   to  band   together   for  pur- 


three   different   day^  wasi  rather 
unnecessary.  ■•  ■]  > 

However,  the  poini  is.  That  be- 
cause The  Daily  T^r  ftetl  can 
not  attempt  to  cover  the  campus 
newswi.sc,  t  hat  it  should  have 
another  means  of  getting  filler 
and,  therefore,  it  should  have  a 
th^rd  news  service  at  the  cost  of 
$400. 

When  I  pointed  out  the  in- 
adequacy of  the  campus  cover- 
age, I  had  something  defrnit^*to 
comment  on  rather  than  the 
problem  in  general.  It  seemed  to 
me  that  student  government  was 
being  overlooked  by  The  Daily 
Tar  Heel  staff  in  their  efforts  to 
report  what  has  been  happening 
on   campus. 

As  most  of  you  realize,  the 
distance  between  The  Daily  Tar 
Heel  office  and  that  of  the  Stu- 
dent Government  is  very  small. 
The  pathetic  thin^  about  the  sit- 
uation is  that  the  editor  of  The 
Daily  Tar  Heel  doesn't  know  what 
is  happening  in  the  Student 
Government  office. 

For  instance,  last  week  the 
editor    wrote    an    editorial    com- 


menting on  the  fulfillment  of  the 
party  "platforms  by  each  party. 
His  jtnalysis  is  truly  pathetic.  He 
stated  that  nothing  had  been 
done  to  prt>vide  free  directories 
for  the  studentsi  that  nothing 
Jbad   bepn   done   toward   a   rebate 

.  sysiam.  Btj  .the    Book    Exchange. 

.flhftt  thalS.  P.  did  nothing  to  al- 
levjatK  thC';  parking  problem  (it 
was*  their!  very  own  resolution 
which;  the  trustees  accepted), 
that  nothing  had  been  done  to 
make  physical  education  volun- 
tary  for  veterans,  etc.   and   etc. 

.\Ithough  the  full  benefits 
from  the  accomplishment  of  the 
planks  of  the  platforms  have  not 
as  yet  been  realized,  they  can 
hardly  be  labeled  as  ^st  talk.  A 
great  deal  has  been  done  toward 
the  accomplishment  of  these  plat- 
forms whether  it  is  known  by  the 
editor  of  The  Daily  Tar  Heel  or 
not. 

Returning  now  to  the  debate  on 
The  Daily  Tar  Heel  bill.  I  should 
like  to  make  other  observations. 
First,  Mr.  Linker  states  that  Mr. 
Powledge  will  print  international 
news  whether  the  students  want 
it  or  not  (1st  column ).J'his  seems 
like  a  strange  and  stubborn  atti- 
tude, to  me.  Why  use  this  kind  of 
argument  to  seek  support  for  a 
bill?  Second,  Mr.  Linker  says 
that  the  day  when  campus  news 
is  omitted  is  far  off  and  that 
when  it  comes  he  will  resign 
fmm  the  staff. 

May  I  recall  to  his  memory  the 
words  "John,  we  just  don't  have 


room  in  the  paper  for  tfiis  mater- 
ial today.  "  May  I  also  call  his 
attention  to  the  fact  that  the  fol- 
lowing, day  the  top  third  of  his 
own  make-up  copy,  was  complete- 
ly replaced  by  international  news 
and  that  the  bottom  half  hid 
been,  drasticaly-i changed.  (I  sat 
in  the  office  ,two  hours  while 
the  copy  was  being  de§ign^{l^,t,iqrj.^ 
ing  to  get  room  fori<ihfe]ill<idlh 
Election  material.  I  saw  the  copy 
go  off  to  the  printers.  The  paper 
was  nothing  like  the  copy.) 

The  real  question,  however,  is 
this:  Is  The  Daily  Tar  Heel  go- 
ing to  be  a  student  newspaper  or 
one  which  tries  to  compete  with 
other  locals.  Because  the  inter- 
national news  can  be  read  more 
profitably  in  the  city  papers,  it 
would  seem  illogical  to  replace 
what  ought  to  be  in  The  Daily 
Tar  Heel  with  this  news. 

In  regard  to  my  constituency, 
let  me  clarify  Mr.  Linker's  mis- 
quote. I  said,  and  now  repeat, 
that  not  one  of  my  constituency 
with  whom  I  had  spoken  \fas  in 
favor  of  having  the  world  news 
service.  I  deeply  respect  their 
ideas  and  attitudes  and  shall  al- 
ways attempt  to  vote  for  and  de- 
fend their  ideals,  whether  they 
are  in  conflict  with  those  of  The 
Daily  Tar  Heel  or  not. 

For  those  of  you  who  have 
read  through  to  this  point,  I  ask 
your  forgiveness  for  my  criti- 
cisms and  your  respect  for  my 
viewpoint. 

John  C.  Brooks 


Pogo 


By  Walt  Kelly 


LiM  Abn«r 


By  Al  Capp 


^^=— " 


The  SADIE 
HAWKINS' 
EVE  DANCE- 
THE  MUSIC 
»SDPCVi/NED 

BVTHE 
CLOMPS  OF 

THE  Ladies' 

SPIKED 

syoE^ 

•    AND  THE 
AGONIZED 
SCfKEAMS 
OF  THE 

GENTLEMEM.5' 

11"  •••  u  L  rn  Of  — •«  >,,si,  ,« 


'j^^g^^-^ 


Election:  Was  It 
A  Kiss  Of  Death?  ^ 

Neil  Bass  ^ 

.  What  may  be  made  the  scapegoat  for  the  scant 
38  per  cent  of  the  student  population  which  mark- 
ed ballots  Tuesday? 

First,  bugs  in  the  electoral  process  should  be 
enumerated: 

(1)  Ballot  bax  stuffing  in  Town  Men's  II. 

(2)  Failure  by  the  judiciary  branch  to  select 
candidates  for  Honor  and  Student  Council  seats  in 
time  to  allow  candidates  not  endorsed  by  the  Bi'-- 
Partisan  Selections  Board  to  petition  the  Elections    . 
Board  for  privilege  of  allowing  their  names  to  ap;- 
pear  on  the  ballots. 

(3)  Failure  of  Kenan  Dormitory  government 
to  provide  poll  tenders  so  that  residents  might  vote.  - 

COUNCIL  ELECTIONS 

One  important  reason,  most  will  agree,  that  only 
3a  per  cent  of  the  student  body  turned-out  for  the 
election  is  postponement  of  Student  and  Honor 
Council  elections. 

The  judiciary  branch  is  to  be  severely  chastised  "*, 
for   failing  to  select   candidates   in  time  to  allow  • 
candidates   not  endorsed  to  petition  the  Elections 
Board  to  place  th-^ir  names  on  the  ballot  anyway.     "^ 
Petitions  must  be  in  to  the  Elections  Board  nine* 
days  prior  to  elections,  and  the  Bi-Partisan  Selec-'* 
tions  Board    began   choosing   candidates   only   one 
week  before  election  day.  , 

Thus  the  Student  Council  had  to  postpone  the 
judiciary  election  for  one  week. 

Therefore  some  students  interested  in  judiciary "  * 
branch  but  not  the  legislative  branch  failed  to  vote. 
And    many    students    interested    in    the   legislative 
branch  but  not  the  judiciary  branch  won't  vote  next.. 
Tuesday. 

Election  of  one  branch  stimulates  vote  for  the.  ..„ 
other  and  vice  versa. 

Fraternity  men  seem  to  be  a  bit  more  interest- 
ed   in    the    judiciary    branch    than    the    legislative" 
branch.  This  may  have  .something  to  do  with  voting 
percentage    drop    from    last   fall's  election  to  this 
one.  *" 

That  is  to  say,  when  election  for  the  two  branches 
was  held  simultaneously  last  fall,  approximately  55 
per  cent  of  the  student  body  voted.  Tliis  fall,  when 
election  for  the  two  branches  was  split,  38  per  cent  . 
of  the  students  voted. 

And  a  large  portion  of  tbe  percentage  drop  can 
be  traced  to  town  men's  districts — dominated  b.v 
fraternity  men. 

Here  are  the  figures  in  Tuesday's  38  per  cent 
election:  (First  column  lists  eligible  voters,  second    ■ 
lists  actual  voters) 

Town  Men's  I:  1,000—150.  '  *'  •(•••..  f. 

Town   Men's  III:   840 — 100.  "*    '       '      ;  :?'V 

Town  Men's  IV:  420— 65. 

Thus  the  scant  vote  may,  some  say,  be  parti aily  21! 
,  I   (r^ceable  to  the.  spUt4>rancii»  «le«ti<of^        .   '  ^i  ^ 
''     ■■   Another  interfsfitif  fart.'wWch  may  involve' W- 
apportionment  of  legislative  seats,  is  that  2,000  vot- 
ers   elected    14    representatives   in    dormitory  dis- 
tricts while  568  voters  elected;  15  representatives  in 
town  districts. 
ADMINISTRATION:. 

The  other  two  "bugs"  in  the  election  may  be 
traced,  some  would  contend,  to  the  election's  ad- 
ministration. 

That  is  to  say.  the  ballot  box  stuffing  in  T>I's  IT 
(a  hundred-odd  more  votes  were  cast  for  junior 
class  officers  than  there  are  juniors  in  the  district) 
is  the  result  of  faulty  election  administration. 

Also  the  lack  of  poll  tenders  in  Kenan  Dorm 
can  be  traced  to  faulty  administration. 

In  attributing  these  election  "bugs"  to  faulty  ad- 
ministration, we  are  not  directly  blaming  the  Elec- 
tions Board,  w^ich  is  ultimately  responsible  for 
the  election,  although  partial  blame  must  fall  on 
it5  shoulders. 

The  student  body  as  a  whole  in  these  districts 
is  to  be  blamed  for  lack  of  interest  and  responsi-    ., 
bility. 

The  Kenan  incident  shows  lack  of  interest;  ig- 
norance is  no  excuse.  The  TM's  II  incident  show.s 
lack   of  responsibility. 

Without  interest  and  responsibility  on  the  part"^ 
of  the  entire  student  body,  the  campus  democratic 
electoral  process  is  doomed  to  death.  And  admin-", 
istration   control   of   student   government's   budget, 
etc.  is  sparked  to  life. 
SOLUTIONS 

Thus  conspicuous  lack  of  student  vote  may  be 
attributed  to  two  causes: 

(1)  Split  election. 

(2)  Poor  administration. 

Both  of  these  causes  may  be  ultimately  attrib- 
uted to  lack  of  interest  and  responsibility  on  the 
part  of  the  student  body. 

Regardinj;  the  first  cause,  this  may  be  a  solu- 
tion: 

Combine  the  executive,  legislative  and  judicial 
brandies'  elections   into  one  massive   spring  elec- 
tion. But  this  would  entail  much  hardship  fw  the 
Elections   Board    and    possibly    lead    to    more    ad- " 
ministrative    "bugs." 

Regarding  the  second  cause,  this  may  be  a  solu- 
tion: 

Turn  the  entire  electoral  process  over  to  Uni- 
versity administration  and  hcype  for  more  efficient 
election  administration.  But  this  would  lead  to  dic- 
tatorial control  and  ultimate  loss  of  priceless  stu- 
dent s<;lf-govqrnment. 
REAL  SOLUTION 

The   real    and   best   solution   is  f^^r  students  to 
awaken  to  the  realization  that  self-government  is  a 
treasured    heritage   and   beccmie   interested   in   and , 
responsible  toward  the  electoral  process. 

If  this   doesn't   happen — and   there   are   no   in- 
dications it  will — then  one  of  the  above  suggested  \ 
solutions  must  be  turned  to: 

( 1 )  One  ma.ssive  election. 

(2)  Administration    control    of    student    extra-  ' 
curriculars. 

Even  though  Tuesday's  election  might  have 
seetaned  the  kiss  of  death  for  student  setf-govem- 
mnt,  let  us  all  hope  neither  of  the  above  solutions 
must  be  resorted  to — least  of  all  administration 
control. 


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F  KID  AY.  NOVEMBER  U,  1956 


THf  DAILY  TAR  HBH 


PAGE    THREt 


Chagall  Prints  Now  Exhibited 
In  Person  Hall  Art  Gallery 


MANLY  WADE  WELLMAN 

speaks   Tuesday 


Chapel  Hill  Writer 
Speaks  Here  Tuesday 


By  CRAIG  HORSMAN 

Manly  Wade  Wellman  will  epeak- 
Tuesday  at  8  p.m.  in  the  court 
room  in  Manning  Hall.' 

His  topic  will  be  "Silver 
Tongued  Lawyers."  He  is  one  of 
a  series  of  monthly  speakers  being 
sponsored  by  the  Law  Students 
Association. 

Wellman.  a  writer,  is  a  resident 
of  Chapel  Hill.  Though  he  was 
bom  in  Angola,  a  Portuguese  West 
African  colony,  his  bocks  all  show 
his  deep  interest  in  the  South. 

He  is  author  of  a  biography  of 
South  Carolina's  W^ade  Hampton, 
"Giant  in  Gray."  He  also  wrote 
"Rebel  Boast",  a  documented 
story  of  five  Corifederate  infantry- 
men from  B:nfield. 

His  most  recent  work  is  "Dead 
and. Gone"  which  will  be  publi£|h-, 
ed  by  the  tJNC  Press  in  February,  j 
It  consists  of  ten  classic  crimes  in 
North  Carolina  from  1808  to  iai4.  | 
Probably  the  most  famous  cvne  i^ 
that  of  Naomi  Wise,  or  "poor  Omi" 


as    they    called    her    in    Randolph  i 
County. 

Wellman  has  written  11  chil- 
dren's mysteries  and  over  500 
short  stories  and  articles.  He  has 
been  awarded  first  prize  by  Ellery 
Queen's  Detective  Story  Magazine 
for  one  of  his  mysteries. 


In  commenting  on  the  current 
exhibilion  of  Chagall  Prints  at 
Person  Hall,  Prof.  Edgar  Thorne 
of  the  Art  Dept.,  pointed  out  how 
the  artist  has  been  able  to  con- 
sciously preserve  elements  of  the 
primitive  and  naive  visual  lang- 
uage of  a  Russian  peasant,  while 
absorbing  the  most  advanced  ar- 
tistic idioms  of  Paris. 

He  further  explained  that 
throughout  Chagall's  work,  motifs 
of  his  childhood  survive  as  ex- 
pressions of  genuine  nostalgia. 

Elements  of  quiet  whimsy  and 
slight  satire  are  present.  But  even 
in  his  witticism  there  is  a  serious- 
ness, at  times,  even  a  soulfulness, 
continued  Prof.  Thorne. 

The  present  Chagall  exhibition 
includes  illustrations  of  "The 
Dead  Souls"  by  Gogol,  "The  Fa- 
bles" of  LaFontaine  and  a  number 
of  Bible  illustrations.    / 

Chagall  had  a  strong  feeling  for 
fantasy  and  fold  arts.  Having  been 
■born  in  a  provincial  Russian  vill- 
age, he  was  familiar  with  a  setting 
similar  to  that  of  Gogol's  book. 

These  qualities  led  VoUard,  the 
famous  Parisian  art  dealer  and 
publisher,  to  seek  out  Chagall  to 
illustrate  "The  Deal  Souls."  Be- 
fore their  completion,  VoUard  was 
convinced  of  their  success  and 
commissioned  Chagall  to  illustrate 
the  "Fables." 

This  series  of  100  etchings  was 


completed  in  1931.  Ten  of  these 
are  in  the  Person  Hall  exhibition. 

Vollard  next  conceived  the  idea 
that  Chagall  should  illustrate  the 
Bible.  At  Vollard's  in  1940,  Chag- 
all had  completed  105  plates  for 
this  series.  Fourteen  are  included 
in  the  exhibition. 

The  exhibition  will  continue 
through  Nov.  25. 

AFROTC  Drill  Team 
Has  Busy  Schedule 

The  AFROTC  Drill  Team  put  on 
it's  first  demonstration  for  the 
year  yesterday  as  part  of  an  AF- 
ROTC review  during  the  .sched- 
uled drill  period. 

The  drill  team  has  a  busy  sched- 
ule. Friday  night  it  will  put  on 
an  exhibition  in  Sanford  during 
the  half  of  an  high  school  football 
game. 

Next  Tuesday,  the  drill  team 
will  add  it's  color  to  the  Beat 
Duke  Parade  to  be  held  at  3:30 
p.m. 

Cadet  Bob  Harrington,  drill  mas- 
ter, said,  "The  members  of  the 
drill  team  have  put  forth  a  lot. of 
effort  and  we  are  really  looking 
good.  We  hope  to  excel  our  past 
records  of  proficiency." 

The  crack  drill  cadets  are  look- 
ing forward  to  the  competition  of 
all  the  North  Carolina  drill  teams 
to  be  held  this  coming  spring. 


GMAB  Schedules  Ttyouts 
For  Student  Talent  Program 


UNC  Alumni,  History 
Dept.  Holds  Breakfast 

The  annual  breakfast  meeting 
of  the  UNC  alumni  and  members 
of  the  Dept.  of  History  will  be 
held  at  Harvey's  Cafeteria  in  Dur- 
ham at  8  a.m.  today. 

Dr.  Fletcher  M.  Green  will  dis- 
cuss the  activities  of  the  members 
of  the  History  Dept.  and  the  work 
being  done  by  former  graduates 
who  are  now. at  other  colleges  and 
universities..  ; 

The  .breakfast  is  held  each. year 
in  conjunction  with  the  meeting 
of  Southern  Historical  Association 


SOCIAL 

(Comtimied  from  page  1.) 

won  the  prize  for  the  mOst  original 
j  costumes. 

Also  on  Tuesday  night  was  the 
j  cabm  party  at  Harpman's  lake  the 
DKE's  had  with  the  Pi  Phis. 
MORE  PARTIES 
Another  costume  party  was  the 


YACK  BEAUTY  CONTESTANTS 

who  were  sponsored  by  the  Chi 
Psi's  will  be  entertained  by  their 
sponsors  at  a  dinner  party  at  the 
Lodge    Tuesday   night 

Entries  were  Marion  Dickens, 
Jane  Brock,  Dot  Pressley,  Daryl 
Farrington,  Pee  Wee  Batton  and 
Bobbie  Brank. 

PINNINGS— Pika  Luther  Hodges 


Principals  At  Education  Convocation 


These  three  UNC  leaders  planned  for  the  Fall  Convocation  of 
th«  School  of  Education,  h«ld  yesterday  at  Garrard  Hail.  From  left 
to  right  are  Prof  Donald  Tarbat,  professor  of  education;  Mfss  Bar- 
bara Bannatt  of  UNC,  president  of  the  Frank  Porter  Graham  Chap- 
tar  of  Future  Teachers;  and  Ban  E.  Fountain  Jr.  of  Rocky  Mount, 
president  of  Phi  Dalta  Kappa,  honorary  education  fraternity. 

Dr.  Stinnett  Gives  Address  At 
Educational  Fall  Convocation 


The  first  in  a  series  of  enter- 
tainment programs  put  on  by 
Carolina  students  is  now  being 
planned,  H.  G.  Snipes,  publicity 
chairman  for  Carolina's  Calvacade 
of    Talent,    announced   yesteray. 

A  talent  show  will  be  sponsored 
by  Graham  Memorial  Activities 
Board  and  the  YM-YWCA. 

"If  you  have  any  ability  or  know  j 
anyone  who  has  any  'bility  to  ] 
sing,  dance,  etc.,  you  may  sign  up  j 
for  tryouts  to  be  held  on  Nov.  28. 1 
29,  and  Dec.  3.  from  7-10  p.m.," 
Snipes  said.  i 

Interested  students  may  sign  up 
by  contacting  Dave  Davis,  at  the 
the  Phi  Delta  Theta  House  or 
Miss  Eleanor  Riggins  at  the  YMCA. 

Cash  prizes  will  be  awarded  to 
winning   performers,    Snipes    said. 

The  committees  and  their  chair- 


men for  the  Carolina  Calvacade  of 
Talent  are  as   follows: 

Talent  committee:  Dave  Davis, 
chairman:  Mebane  Prichett.  Rich- 
ard Rynes,  Jim  Jordan,  Dottie 
Woods  and  Buddy  Strickland. 

Production  committee:  G.  C. 
Pridgen,  chairman;  Carol  Cape- 
wood,  Bobby  Love.  Ronald  Mc- 
Carter  and  Bob  Southerland. 

Y  chorus  committee:  Val  Von 
Ammon,  chairman;  Molly  Trout- 
man  and  Diana  Ashley. 

Publicity  committee:  H.  G. 
Snipes,  chairman.  Lou  Rosenstock. 
Babs  Mcwre,  Nancy  Milland,  Keith 
Palmer,  Sonny  Sox.  Ira  Robinson 
and  Jim  Raugh. 


PATRONIZE   YOUR 
•    ADVERTISERS    • 


one  the  KD's  had  with  the  Duke  I  has  pinned  Dot  Duncan  of  Sweet 


KD's  over  at  Duke  Monday  night. 
Everyone  has  a  suppressed  f^ire^ 
the  KD'i  presiimed,  thus,: :  eath 
member  came  dressed  as  her  par- 
ticular suppressed  desire. 

In  the  very  near  future  —  Sat- 
urday night  to  be  exact  —  will  be 
the  Rdman  toga"  party  planned  by 


Briar  .  .  •.  Buddy  Hambnck  haf 
given  his  Pika  pin :  to  Mary  Etta 
McUrry'of  Sh'elbiyi.  .  ,  E4itS  Hdr- 
grcve  of  W.  C.  is  wearing  ([Jeorge 
Artope's  Pika  pin  .  .  . 

Sigma  Nu  President  Bill  Morgan 
has  pinned  Mary  Kent  Zimmerman 
of  Sweet  Briar  ...  Another  broth- 


By  CHARLES  MATHIS 

Approximately  300  prospective 
teachers  heard  Sh  address  by  one 
of  the  nation's  reputedly  best  in- 
formed men  in  the  field  of  pro- 
fessional education  yesterday  in 
Gerrard  Mall  during  the  School  of 
Education  Fall  Convocation. 

The  convocation  was  in  observ- 
ance of  American  Education  Week 
and  it  marks  the  centennial  cele- 
bration of  the  founding  of  the  Na- 
tional  Education  Association. 

Dr.  T.  M.  Stinnett,  an  executive 
secretary  of  the  National  Educa- 
tion Association  and  editor  of  the 
Journal  of  Teacher  Education, 
told  the  education  students  that 
within  the  next  few  years  "educa- 
tion will  become  as  essential  to 
America  as  food  and  shelter." 

The  speaker  predicted  that  by 
1970  there  will  be  six  to  seven 
million  students  enrolled  in  col- 
leges, compared  to  the  three  mill- 
ion enrolled  in  colleges  today.  Al- 


so, he  predicted  that  the  salary  of 
teachers  will  be  doubled  by  1975. 

"We  must  match  Russia  dollar 
to  dollar  on  money  spent  for  edu- 
cation," he  declared. 

According  to  Dr.  W.  M.  Jenkins, 
chairman  of  the  convocation  com- 
mittee, the  convocation  was  spon- 
sored jointly  by:  the  Future  Teach- 
ers Association,  the  local  unit  of 
the  North  Carolina  Education  As- 
sociation and  Phi  Delta  Kappa. 


Cordon  Presents  Strauss 
Over  WUNC  Tonight 

A  double  bill  of  excerpts  from 
two  Richard  Strauss  operas  will 
be  presented  by  Norman  Cordon 
on  his  program  tonight  of  "Let's 
Listen  to  Opera"  over  the  WUNC- 
FM  radio  station. 

The  8  p.m.  broadcast  will  feat- 
ure selections  from  "Arabella" 
and  "Capriccio."  Starring  in  both 
operas  will  be  Elizabeth  Schwar- 
zkopf. 


COMBOS 


ORCHESTRAS 


The  JACK  VICTOR  Orchestra 

DISTINGUISHED   MUSIC    FOR   DANCING 

NOW    BOOKING    ENGAGEMENTS   FOR    THE 

WINTER    AND  SPRING   SEASONS 


CONTACT:  BOB  GRAPER 
Box  4993 
Duka   Station 
Durham,  N.  C. 


Telephone  Durham  9011 
Ext.   8243 


SEE 

George  Bernard 

Shaw:  Man  of 

the  Century 

By  U.N.C/s  Own 

Archibald 
Henderson 

THE  INTIMATE 
BOOKSHOP 


205    E. 
OPEN 


Franklin    St. 
TILL   10   PJ^. 


the    Chi    Phi's    and    their    dates,  j  er,    Charles    Davis    has    given    his 
Frinkk  Wrii^t's  Combo  will  provide  Sigma  Nu'ikin  rU>  Martha  F^reanuui. 


music  f6r  the  occasion. 
FOUNDERS  DAY 

Pounder's  Day  will  be  celebrat- 


of  W.  C.  .  .  .  Phi  Gam  Bill  Reading  ; 
has  pinned  Sally  Glyas  of  W.  C.  i.' .  i 
Duke  coed  Betsy  Babcock  and  Kbi 


ed  by  the  Tri  Delts  Sunday  at  their    Gam  Jeep  Myatt  are  pinned 


house  with  the  Duke  Tri  Delts. 


Chi  0  pledge  Ann  Ruffin  is  now 


Among  those  to  t>e   preseft   for    wearing   Richard    Hines'    Zete    pin 


the  occasion  are  the  officers  of  the 


ADPi  pledge  Ann  Shaw  has 


Don^t  Miss  Tomorrow's 

Final  Round-Up  of  Fall 

Bargains 

at 

The    Intimate . 


lYi  Delt  pledge  class — Belle  Corey  |  been  pinned  by  N.  C.  State  Sigma 
of  AUanta,  president;  Debbie  Con- 1  Nu  John  Montgomery  .  .  . 
nor  of  Charlotte,  vice  president. !  Mike  Lazarus  has  given  his  Kap- 
Julia  Ann  Carter  of  Raleigh,  sec-  ■  pa  Psi  pin  to  Betty  Ann  Thomas, 
retar>-;  Ginger  Walser  of  High  I  ECC  coed  ...  Phi  Delt  Bill  Zick- 
Point,  treasurer;  Pat  Dillon  of  graf  has  pinned  Jerry  Robinson  of 
Statesvilie,  activities  chairman;  and  j  W.  C.  .  .  .  Kappa  Sig  ToWnsend 
Ina  Gee  Ridley  of  Courtland,  Va.,  I  Holr  has  given  his  pin  to  Sally 
song  leader.  Robertson  of  Williamston. 


Bookshop 


205  E.  Franklin  St. 


Open  Till  10  P.M. 


DAILY    CROSSWORD 


ACROSS 

1.  Romaa 
atatesmaa 

5.  Sctt-iroinc 
vcaael 

9.  IBxlMiiated 

iO.  CapiUl 
(Viet  Nam) 

12.  Spring  up 

13.  Command 

14.  SUeea 

15.  MoUier 
1«.  Toward 
17.  Eaker 

iSu  Acora 

20.  Gtpital 

(Masa.) 
23.  Curved  lines 
24.Hc«rt. 

alwpctf 
2«.  Unhapf  y 

tete 
28.ai]K  (Syria) 

31.  Wh<B^  track 

32.  Measure 

Rcpuh.) 
3S.G|Mb'« 


2.  Mine  22.  Male     . 
entrance  cat 

3.  Girl's  23.  De- 
nickname  voured 

4.  Poem  25.  Winjr 

5.  Stem  with  26.  FalU 
iaftves  in 

«.  Injure  drops 

7.  India  (poet)  27.  Ex- 

8.  Written  pendi- 
in  verse                  '"*■« 

9.  Patriarch  »9.  Hauled       T«a«««ay's  Aaawar 
(Heb.)  30.  Fur-bearinr 

11.  Manacles  mammal  37.  Car  (^ort> 

If .  Earthly  32.  External  encd) 

18.  Ukewise  not  35.  Deity  39.  Malt     . 

19.  Kind  of  (Hindu)  beverage 
achoo)  30.  Girl's              40.  Ferryboat 

21.  Tax  nickname  (rare) 


'  "■'     '  1' 


HOUSE-  OF  f  ASH  ION 


PRESENTS 


HKE   HOUSE-  OF  f  ASH 


Williford 


'"""'   THIS  MONTH'S 


39.  M^, 
3«.UfaCi« 

krcwtaHJr 
38.BraM 

40.  Syiiithatie 
rwb^    . 

41.  Otetment 
43.Cbai>ge 
U.  Pariod 

of  time 
44.  Lump 
af  aftrth 
•OWN 
I.  ItaUaa  taaor 


WESLEY  POLKDANCE 

The  Wesley  Folkdance  group 
will  bold  its  regular  meeting  this 
evening  at  7:30  in  the  basement 
of  the  University  Methodist 
Church.  All  interested  persons 
have  been  urged  to  attend. 

FOReIGN  LANGUAGES 

Frequently  requests  are  made 
at  the  Reference  Desk  in  the  Li- 
brary for  the  names  of  persons 
proficient  in  foreign  languages  to 
translate  articles  needed  in  re- 
search. The  requests  are  often  for 
languages  other  than  French, 
German,  or  Spanish.  Any  student 
or  Chapel  Hill  resident  interested 
in  commericial  translating  may 
leave  his  name  and  qualifications 
at  the  Reference  Desk. 

oektaL  dinner 

The  annual  Dental  Dinner  will 
be  held  tonight  at  6:30  in  Lenoir 
Hall.    Dr.    Warner   Wells,    faculty 


j  member  of     the     UNC  School  of 

Medicine  and  translator  of  "Hiro- 

j  shima  Diary,*'     will     speak.     The 

I  Dental  Chorus  under  the  direction 

of  Dr.  Roger  Sturdevant  will  take 

part  in  the  program. 

j  O'NEILL  PLAY  TRYOUTS 

Today  is  the  last  day  for  tryouts 
for   Eugene   CNeill's   drama   "De- 
I  sire  Under  the  Elms."  Auditioners 
I  can  read   in   111   Murphy  Hall   at 
!  7:30  p.m.  today.  Those  unable  to 
I  tryout  at  thijs  hour  have  been  ask- 
ed to  see  Mr.  Thomas  M.  Patter- 
son, of  the  Piaymakers  staff,  about 
arranging  a  time. 
WUNCTV 

WUNCTV,  the  University's  ed- 
ucational television  station,  Chan- 
nel 4: 


Y  SCHEDULE 

3:30  p.m.— 'Y  newspaper  staff 
meeting. 

1:30  p.m. — ^Freshman  leadership 
training  committee.  Office  No.  3. 

2, p.m.— Joint  YM-YW  Cabinet 
meeting  at  the  Library  Assembly 
Room,  Miss  Martha  Richardson, 
Gerry  Mayo,  co-chairmen. 

4:30  p.m. — All-Campus  confer- 
ence committee.  Library  Assem- 
bly Room,  Miss  Kathy  LeGrande, 
Bud  Stalnaker. 


CLASSIFIEDS 


WANTED  TO  BUY  — ONE  PAIR 
of  army  officers'  "pinks"  with 
30"  waist  and  size  6'/«  OD  ser- 
vice cap.  Dial  9-7663  after  6  p.m, 


WANTED— LATE  PARTY  GOERS 
who  have  nowhere  to  go  after 
the  party.  Try  our  knocked  out 
sandwiches  and  swinging  snacks. 
CAFE  MOUZA,  OPEN  24  HRS. 


12:45 

Music. 

1:00 

Today  on  the  Farm. 

1:30 

Musical  forms,     if 

2:00 

Industry.               w^ 

2:15 

Bananas.               ^ 

2:30 

New  Mann. 

3:30 

Sign  Off. 

5:45 

Music. 

6:00 

Children's   Corner. 

6:30 

News.' 

6:45 

Sports. 

7:00 

Science  Fair. 

7:30 

Art  Today. 

8:00 

Know  Your  Schools. 

9:00 

Student  Legislature. 

10:00 

Final  Edition. 

10:05 

Sign  Off. 

WUNC 

Following   is   a    listing   of   pro- 1 

grams 

today  frqm  the  University's] 

FM  radio  station:                             | 

7:00 

Intermezzo. 

7:15 

Chalkdust. 

7:30 

Voices. 

7:45 

French  Pre'ss  Review.        { 

8:00 

American  Music   Festival- 

9:00 

Listen  America.                  | 

9:30 

Masterworks  from  France. 

10:00 

News.                                     1 

10:15 

Evening   Masterworks.        j 

11:30 

Sign  Off.  •            ^1 

"Miss  Fashionplate" 


Who  will  it  be  next  month? 
Each  month  one  Carolina  coed  is  select- 
ed by  her  frienos  on  campus  who  feel 
that  she  possesses  the  qualities  of 
poise,  personality,  and  the  ability  to 
wear  clothes  weil  ihat  merit  her  being 
named  "Miss  Fashionplate"  of  the 
month.     ' 

Nominated  for  December  are  .  .  .  Miss 
Roberta  Chapin,  Freshman  nurse  from 
Asheville,  Chi  Omega  pledge.  Miss 
Carol  Coopwood,  Senior  from  Holly 
Springs,  Mississippi.  Miss  Barbara 
Honey,  Junior  from  Charlotte,  Kappa 
Delta  pledge. 

Just  drop  into  Robbins  .  .  . 

Vote  for  your  favorite! 

DEADLINE  TO  VOTE 

IS  NOVEMBER  30. 


Presenting  Miss  Martha  Williford  .  .  .  Junior  from  Fayetteville  .  .  .  Tri  Delta  pledge  .  .  . 
chosen  last  week  as  Queen  of  the  1957  Yackety  Yack  Beauty  Court.  J.  B.  Robbins  House  of 
Fashion,  is  happy  to  announce  that  she  has  been  selected  "Miss  Fashionplate"  of  November. 

From  the  large  display  of  exciting  fall  and  winter,  fashions  at  Robbins,  Miss  Williford 
has  chosen  to  model  a  white  lame  Marlene  Original  with  gentle  draping  in  the  back  and  a  high 
cumberbund.  The  easy  flattering  lines  of  her  sneath  give  it  that  My  Fair  Lady  look  ^hich  is  cer- 
tainly befitting  a  queen  and  a  fashionplate. 

As  "Miss  Fashionplate",  Miss  Williford  has  been  awarded  a  gift  from  THE  HOUSE  OF 
FASHION.  CONGRATULATIONS  AAARTHA  WILLIFORD  .  .  .  "Miss  Fashionplate." 


Of  Chapel   Hill 


PAOl  FOUR 


THf  DAILY  TAH  HtIL 


FRIDAY,  NOVEMBER  16,  195« 


Tar  Heels  Leave  Today  For  Big  Battle  With  Notre  Dame 


Prediction:  Notre  Dame  20,  UNC  13 

The  dismal  '56  football  season  is  fast  fading  for  both  Carolina 
and  Notre  Dame,  two  former  pigskin  pov.ers  who  meet  tomorrow  in 
a  battle  of  the  have-nots  in  South  Bend.  Ind. 

Victories   hav*   been   fe^r   and    far   between   for   each    school 
this  year,  and  botti  the  Tar  Heels  and  Fighting  Irish  are  looking 
toward  tomorew's  game  'with  something   like  a    hopeful   glint   in 
their  eyes.  Each  vrould  like  to  salvage  something  from  the  '56  grid- 
iron scrapheap,  and  this  looks  to  both  parties  like  a  good  oppor- 
tunity. 
With  only  two  games  remaining.  Notre  Dame  and  Duke,  the  Tar 
Heels  would  like  to  fatten  their  2-5-1  record  a  little  bit  and  at  the 
same  time  enjoy  a  victory  over  Notre  Dame  for  the  first  time  in  his- 
tory. The  Irish,  on  the  other  hand,  have  even  greater  incentive  to 
spur  them.  Coach  Terry  Brennan's  charges  have   won  only  a  single 
decision  this  season  while  losing  six  games,  and  after  the  Tar  Heels 
come   Iowa   and   Southern   Cal,    two   rough  customers    in    anybcily's 
league. 
THE  LONG  ROAD  DOWN 

For  the  Irish,  it's  been  a  long  rough  trip  down  from  the  pinnacle 
of  gridiron  glory  they  once  held.  Ever  since  the  days  of  Knute  Rockne 
the  name  'Notre  Dame'  has  had  a  magic  quality  about  it  that  struck 
fear  into  the  hearts  of  rival  teams  and  coaches  all  over  the  laud. 
Fighting    Irish    teams    in    the    past    have    had    their    ups    and 
downs,  but  ntvr  have  they  fallen  quite  so  far.  This  year's  team 
has  taken  some  quite  thorough  wallopmgs  including  one-sided  loss- 
es to  Oklahoma,  Michigan  State  and  Navy.  Their  only  win  cagie 
by  a  two  touchdown  margin  over  Indiana. 
Several  factors  have  contributed  to  the  downfall  of  the  Fighting 
Irish.  The  players   are   young   and  inexperienced.   Injiuies   sidelined 
key  personnel  early  in  the  season.  And  the  schedule  is  a  murderous 
one,  although  this  didn't  bother  Notre  Dame  teams  in  the  past. 

The  Irish  have  played  good  football  in  spots,  and  if  they  ever 
jell,  they  will  be  a  tough  team  to  beat.  According  to  scout  Eddie 
Teague,  they  are  a  hard  charging  aggressive,  squad  with  the  old 
'never-say-die'  Notre  Dame  spirit.  And  you  can  bet  they'll  be  laying 
for  the  Tar  Heels. 
SERIES  MONOPOLIZED  BY  IRISH 

Carolina  and  Notre  Dame  have  been  slugging  away  at  each  other 
ever  since  the  1949  inaugral  game  in  New  York.  But  not  once  have 
the  Tar  Heels  emerged  victorious.  There  have  been  a  couple  of  squeak- 
ers, but  most  of  the  games  have  been  routs. 

Last  year  in  Kenan  Stadium,  Notre   Dame  ran  their  victory 
,  string  to  7  with  a  27-7  win  over  the  game  but  outclassed  Caro- 
linians. Tomorrow's  game  will  be  the  eighth  and  last  of  the  current 
.   series,  but  ttte  two  teams  will  meet  again  in  1958. 

We  think  our  Tar  Heels  have  at  least  an  even  chance  to  beat 
Kotre  Damp  tomc^row.  fhey  have  been  playing  good  sound  football 
iince  the:  MaryJaod  game,  and;  last  Saturday  reached  a  peak  in  the 
**^M  S"«"^r  oi  the  yirginja  contaat.  The  outcome  of  the  game  to- 
morrow depends  abnost  entirely  on  whether  or  not  they  can  dupli- 
cate thjs  performance.  .  . 

Thp  edge  will  go  to  the   team   that  5  fired   np  the  most.   And 
>aae  thing  is  certain.  Notre  Dame  will  be  eager,  sharp  and  ready  to 
play  football.  They  always  are,  even  in   losing,   and   tomorrow   will 
Ifc  ~o  exception.  , 
POSSIBLE  BUT  DOUBTFUL 

Can  Carolina  win?  Sure.  Will  they  win?  We  doubt  it.  It'll  be 
close,  and  enough  Tar  Heel  determination  could  turn  the  tide.  But  we 
pick  Notre  Dame  20,  Carolina  13.  And  we  hope  were  wrong. 

Elsewhere  around  the  Big  Four.  Duke  is  at  Wake  Forest  and 
State  travels  to  Pen  State.  The  last  one  is  not  too  difficult  to  pick 
despite  State's  win  over  South  Carolina  last  Saturday.  Its  a  long  ride 
up  to  State  College,  Pa.,  and  Penn  Sate  are  likely  to  prove  rather  un- 
gracious hosts.  The  Nittany  Lions  have  beaten  some  good  football 
teams  this  year,  and  one  of  them  was  Ohio  State.  Nuff'saW  Penn 
State  34,  State  «•  ' 

There's  no  doubt  who  the  favorite   should  be  in  the   Duke- 
^      Wake  Forest  game.  The  Blue  Devils  have  a  strong  explosive  squad 
with  plenty  of  manpower,  while  the  Deacs  hav.  Bill  Barnes  and 
not  much  else.  But  there's  more  to  this  than  appears  on  the  sur- 
face. Wake  has  a  pesky  team,  one  that  specializes  in  rising  to  the 
occasion  and  knocking  off  the  big  shots.  On  top  of  this  they  will 
bo  playing  boferf  a  home  crowd  in  friendly  surroundings. 
Whether  ofnot  this  wUl  be  enough  to  carry  the  day  remains  to 
be  seen.  The  Deacs  have  a  long  way  to  go  before  they  can   match 
Duke  ID  personnel.  We'll  stick  with  the  slide  rule  on  this  one    Duke 
21,  Wake  Forest  6. 


Paul  Hornung  Shifted 
To  Fullback  For  Irish 


Carter  Fights  Johnson 

NEW  YORK.  iiP>— Harold  Car- 
ter, £  rising  young  heavyweight 
from  Linden.  N.  J-,  takes  on  sub- 
stitute Youn^  Jack  Johnson  of 
Los  Angeles  tonight  in  a  10-round 
match  at  Madison  Square  Garden. 
Johnson  is  subbing  for  Bob  Baker 


By   LARRY   CHEEK  |  heavily    on    Wphoqiores.    Carolina 

North     Carolina's     Tar     Heels,  i  will  have  three  starters  and  a  num- 
primed  and  ready  for  battle  after  ,  her   of  second   stringers   who   are  i  vj,ho  was  forced  off  the  show  due 
last  week's  decisive  win  over  Vir-,|  sophs.  While  Notre  Dame  also  has  !  ^q  gn  attack  of  grippe, 
ginia.    leave    by    plane    this   after-    a    number    of    youngsters    in    the 


noon  for  South  Bend,  Ind..  and  a  ;  starting  lineup 


I 

i     ,The  Irish  have  only  three  letter- 
'  men   to  start   tomorrow.   The   are 
i  Paul  Hornung,  fulback;  Dick  Pen- 
;  dergast,  end;  and  Jim  Morse,  half- 
back. Hornung  was  shifted  to  full- 
back    in     the     first     quarter     of 
last  week's  game  with  Pittsburgh, 
I  and  will  start  in  that  position  to- 
;  morrow.  , 

I  Replacing  the  All  -  American 
I  Hornung  at  the  signal  calling  slot 
!  will  be  Bob  Williams,  a  sopho- 
1  more   whom   UNC   scout   terms   "a 


Heads  Up 


Above  is  •%%  action  photo  taken  during  the  W  AA  volleyball  finals  Tuesday  night.  On  the  left  are 
Carr  Dorm  team  members  Joan  Willsey  (making  the  shot),  Bev  Beckert  and  Pat  Anderson.  On  the 
right  are  Tri  Delts  Donna  Hoetetler  (foreground),  Gail  Willingham  (center),  and  Pat  Brandt.  Tri  Delt 
won  56-10. 


Tri  Delts  Top 
Carr  To  Win 
Volleyball  Title 

Tri  Delt  captured  the  WAA  vol- 
leyball title  Tuesday  night  by 
slaughtering  Carr  Dorm,  56-10,  in 
a  surprisingly  one-sided  match. 


Team  work  was  the  key  to  the 
Tri  Delt  victory.  Outstanding  Tri 
Delt  servers  included:  Diana  Ash-  j  20-7 
ley  with  15  points,  Gail  Willing- 
ham  with  11  points,  Mott  Butler 
with  9  points  and  Barbara  Doar 
with  8  points.  Pat  Brandt's  power- 
ful spikes  also  played  a  large  part 
in  the  Tri  Delt  triumph. 


MURALS 


YESTERDAY'S 
FOOTBALL    RESULTS 

3:45  Sig  Chi  defeated  Delt  Sig, 
28-6;  Phi  Delt  won  by  forfeit  over 
SAH;  Phi  Gam  defeated  Chi  P.si. 
7-6;  ATO  defeated  S.\E.  9-3. 


4:45:    Kap    Sig    defeated    PIKA, 

KA   defeated    Sig   Nu.    12-9; 

Chi    Phi    defeated    Kap    Psi.    4-0; 

DKE   won    by    forfeit    over   Thcta 

Chi.  ' 


Wrestling  Finals  Set 

The  semi-finals  for  intramurals 
wrestling  were  held  yesterday  in 
Woollen  Gym.  The  finals  will  be 
held  Tuesday  night  at  7:15.  Weigh 
in  time  will  be  Tuesday  afternoon 
from  1:00  to3:00  and  from  6:30  to 
7.00. 

The  finalists  will  be  130  lbs., 
Johnson  (S.\E)  vs.  Bonner  (Beta); 
i  137  lbs..  Henderson  (SAE)  vs. 
i  Childs  (ATO);  147  lbs..  Suddreth 
I  (AK  Psi)  vs.  Grubb.s  (SAE):  157 
libs.,  Dameron  (Kap  Sig)  vs.  Pal- 
i  mer  (DKE);  167  lbs..  Atkinson 
I  (DKE)  vs.  Kincey  (SAE);  177  lbs.. 


Saturday  afternoon  engagement 
with  the  Fighting  Irish  of  Notre 
Dame. 

The  Tar  Heels,  reportedly  in  top 
physical  condition,  will  leave 
Chapel  Hill  by  bus  today  at  12:30 
and  are  scheduled  to  depart  from 
Raleigh-Durham  Airport  one  hour 
later  at  1:30.  Because  of  uncertain 
weather  conditions,  the  team  will 
stay  over  in  South  Bend  until 
Sunday  morning  before  returning. 

Secret  practice  sessions  behind 
the  canvas  have  been  going  on  all 
week  long'  well  into  the  evening^  •>etter  short  passer  than  Hornung." 
as  Coach  Jim  Tatum  and  his  staff 
seek  to  discover  the  formula  for 
victory  tomorrow.  The  sessions 
have  been  long  ones,  and  the 
lights  have  been  turned  on  every 
night. 

The  game  tomorrow  has  little 
national  significance,  for  both  the 
Tar  Heels  and  Fighting  Irish  have 
slightly  tarnished  records.  Caro- 
lina has  won  two  while  losing  five 
and  tieing  one.  and  Notre  Dame 
has  won  one  and  lost  six. 

Both   teams   will    be    depending 


The  fight,  scheduled  for  10  p.m., 
EST,  will  be  carried  on  network 
NBC  radio  and  television. 

Lovely    Tinselly 

ADVENT 
CALENDARS 

50^  and  $1.00 

at 

THE  INTIMATE 
BOOKSHOP 

205    E.    Franklin    St. 
Open   Till    10    P.M 


"JUDGES. ..HOODS.. .THE  SOCIETY  SET... 
PICK-UP  GIRLS... 


Tompkoins  (SAE)  vs.  Kouri  (Sig 
Nu);  Unlimited.  Ward  (DKE)  vs. 
Boyette  (P'i  Gam). 


Smith  Dornx  topped  C^rr  Dorm, 
38-29.  for  second  place.  Carr  could 


YESTERDAY'S 
VOLLEYBALL    RESULTS 

There  was  only  one  Volleyball 
game  player  yesterday  —  Chi  Phi 
defoat'.d    Theta     Chi.    2-0.     These 


Teeiiage 
Rebel 


Wonderfvl    Wonderful 

CHRISTMAS    CARDS 
.40  for  $1.00 


not    stop    the    powerful    serve   of '  teams    won    by    forfeit:    Winston, 

E\'erett  1'.' Bcfta.  Graham' j/Ad  Medi- 
cal  School. 


at 


Eleanor  German.  Miss  German 
scored  14  points.  Smith  Dorm  was 
handed  ita  onl^  tounuuneili  dele&t 
b.v'  Tn  Delt:    >>■   -^'H    :'  n^*.-'   ''r 


Friday,  Bostian  Will 
Discuss  Moreland  Case 


^1     ■  r  TODAY'S 

'*  '>ootbAll    schedule 


3:46   Field   No.    1.    Everett-3   vs. 
\Langum-2.  Field  No.  2.  Manley  vs. 
Stacy-2;  Field  No.  3,  Law  school-1 
i  vs.    Duke   Law   School;    Field    No. 
RALEIGH.    (VP>— The    chancellor  ,  4  joyner  vs.- Grimes-2;  Field  No.  5. 
of    North    Carolina    State    College  [  (jobb- 1  vs.  Mangum-1; 


said  yesterday  reports  of  charges 
involving  the  recruiting  of  basket- 
ball star  Jackie  Moreland  were 
being  made  against  State  two  days 
after  he  enrolled  here  Sept.  5 


4:45  Field  No  1  BVP  vs.  Alex- 
ander; Field  No.  2,  Dental  School 
vs.  Aycock;  Field  No.  3,  Graham  vs 
Med    School-3;    Field   No.    4,   2:eta 


THE  INTIMATE 
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l05  E.  Franklin  St. 


Cinem/vScoP£ 


WIT«        ,. 
GINGER   ROGfgS  ' 
MlCHAfli    REMNIE 

i^ow  PLAyir^P 


Carolina 


THE  GOVERNOR... 

I  BUY  AND  SELL 
THEM  ALL!" 


"This  is  DREW 
PEARSON 
speaking:  'The 
Boss'  is  cellu- 
loid dynanite. 
Powerful  inter- 
ests, whose  names  would 
amaze  you,  have  tried  to 
prevent  yoa  from  seeing 
it.  I  helped  expose  ttie 
story  upon  which  it  is 
based— I  know  this  cor- 
ruption did  take  place.  I 
predict  this  picture  will 
create  the  year's  biggest 
screen  sensation." 


THE  PICTURE  THAT  WAS  TOO  HOT  FOR  KANSAS  CITY! 


JOHN  PAYNE  :ili 


n\ 


NOW 

'playing 


Gives  you  more  to  enjo\| 


Dr.   Carey    H.    Bostian   said    the    ^s»  ^'^    ^^i  Gam  (W):  Field  No.  5, 


origm  of  the  charges  was  not  j 
known.  He  announced  that  he  will  1 
meet  here  today  with  William  C. 
Friday,  president  of  the  Consoli- 1 
dated  University  of  North  Caro- 
lina, of  which  State  College  is  a 
unit,  "to  review  the  situation  and 
decide  what  steps  to  take." 

Bostian  said,  "We  want  to  learn 
from  the  NCAA  the  exact  nature 
of  the  evidence"  that  resulted  in 
State  being  placed  on  probation  for  | 
four    years    in    the    recruiting    of  \ 
Moreland,    18,   widely   sought   has- 1 
ketball    prospect   of  Minden,   La.    I 


SAE  vs.  SPE  (W). 


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Booters  Leave 
For  Maryland 
ThisAAorning 

The  varsity  soccer  team  leaves 
early  this  morning  for  College 
Park,  Md.  where  it  will  face  the 
defending  conference  champiohs, 
Maryland,  on  Saturday. 

j 

Coach  Marvin  Allen's  squad,  i 
beaten  iji  its  last  two  starts  by  i 
Virginia  and  Duke,  will  experience  | 
its  toughest  contest  of  the  year  in  | 
seeking  to  obtain  revenge  for  last 
years  3-0  defeat  in  Chapel  Hill.    \ 

The  team  is  expected  to  arrive  i 
in  College  Park  around  early  af- 
ternoon and  coach  Allen  will  send 
his  team  through  a  short  scrim-  j 
mage  in  preparation  for  Saturday's  j 
contest  which  will  beg9  at  10  a.m.  ' 

In  Thursday's  practice.  Allen  j 
shifted  left  wing  Johnny  Foster  i 
to  left  inside  with  Ted  Youhanna  j 
taking  Foster's  place  at  wing.         ; 

On  defense,     Ted     Smith     may 
break  into  the  starting  lineup  at  | 
left  halfback  due  to  his  sparkling  | 
play  in  the  Duke  game  and  during  1 
recent  scrimmages.  1 


^Uciure  r<j^ 


k^V<' 


FILTER  TIP 

TAREYION 

CIGARETTES 


The  Maryland  game  will  mark 
the  final  contest  for  the  Tar  Heels 
in  the  1956  season,  and  the  annual 
soccer  banquet  will  be  held  on 
Mnnd;ty.  Nov.   19  id  •i:^')  }>  "< 


SHAMPOO 

FOR   MEN 

Formulated  for  o  man's  hair  and  scalp. 
Conditions  while  it  cleans.  1 ,25  diu>  m. 


IN    UflBREAKABLE 
PLASTIC! 


SHULTON 

N«w  York  •  Toronto 


nrssBigei 


the  taste  IS  gredfl  1^ 
FILTER  TIpTAREYTON 


^.■ir-i,',     .■<:■:■     -^'^        ♦.■ 


s»*y* 


WEATHER 

Partiy  cloudy  ind  mild  beam- 
ing «indy.  Exp«ctMl  high  6S-75. 


Sez*lftlB  B«pFt« 


3rar  Mcti 


PILGRIM 

Is  she  making  progress?  $••  «di< 
toHai  page. 


CHAPEL  HILL,  NORTH  CARO^NA,  SATURDAY,  NOVEMBER  17,  1956 


Offices   in   Graham   Memorial 


FOUR   PAGES  THIS    ISSUI 


SOLUTION  NEEDED  BY  JANUARY 


Parking  Problem 
Resfs  With  Frats 

The  iiiodon  passed  by  local  a'ldermen  Thursday  ni<;ht 
leaves  the  Columbia  St.  parkino;  problem  squarcK  in  the 
iiands  ot  haternities  involved. 

.Aldermen  were  apparently  uillinj^  to  lift  the  two-hour 
restriction  lor  6o  days  without  strings  attached. 

But  the  se\en  haternities  aflected  by  the  restriction  be- 
tween Clolumbia  St.  and  Clameron  Ave.  had  submitted  no  con- 
crete prop<\sal  h)r  solving  their  congested  parking  even  if  the 
ban  were  lilted  temporarily. 

Chairman  Wilburn  Davis  of  the  student  government 
Traffic  Advisorv  Commission  had  requested  that  the  seven 
fraternities  compile  a  report  of  suggested  solutions  and  for- 
ward it  to  him. 

But  only  three  of  the  seven  sidnnitted  a  report  to  Davis. 
And  these  reports  suggested  such  solutions  as  boycott  of  al- 
dermen's  businesses  and   convers-^^ 


Tar  Heels  Sdek  First  Win 
Ever  Over  iSlotre  Dame 


ion  of  portions  of  the  Chapel  Hill 
Elementary  School  playground  in- 
to a  parking  lot. 

Aldermen  were  only  amused  by 
these  suggestions. 

Control    of    the      school      play- 
ground   isn't   within   the   jurisdic- 
tion of  the  aldermen.  Mayor  O.  K. 
Comwell  pointed  out. 
ONE  PLAN 

The  one  suggested  which  came 
from  fraternities  which  seemed  to 
impress  the  aldermen  as  '•pro- 
gress" concerned  the  conversion 
of  a  vacant  lot  between  the  Beta 
House  and  the  Sigma  Nu  House 
into  a  parking  lot. 

But  there  is  still  the  question 
of  whether  the  Betas,  owners  of 
the  property,  will  allow  it  to  be 
converted  into  a  parking  area. 

At  any  rate,  as  Commission 
Chairman  Davis  pointed  out,  the 
whole  matter  rests  with  fraterni- 
ties now.  His  commission,  which 
has  the  responsibility  of  studying 
the  entire  campus  parking  prob- 
lem, will  move  on  from  Columbia 
St.  to  a  comprehensive  study  of 
the  witire  campus. 

The  fraternities  which  have  been 
given  until  Jan.  3  to  work  out  a  | 
solution   to  their  congealed  park- ' 
ing  problem  are:  j 

Betjj  Theta  Pi,  Delta  Kaopa  Ep- 1 
silon.  Pi  Kappa  Alpha,  PI  Lamb- 1 
da  Phi,  Sigma  Chi.  Sigma  Nu  and  ! 
Sigma  Alpha  Epsilon.  { 


Buses  Run 
In  Face 
Of  Strike 


Cobb  Dorm 
Dance  Set 
For  Tonight 

By  MARY  ALYS  VOORHEES 

Seven  contestants  will  vie  for  th- 
title  of  '  Sweeheart  of  Cobb  Dorm" 
tonight  at  the  Sweetheart  Dance 
in  the  basement  of  the  dorm. 

One  of  the  highlights  of  the 
Cobb  social  calendar  for  the  sem- 
ester, the  dance  will  feature  music 
by  Bruno's  Combo,  and  among 
those  present  will  be  three  bus- 
loads of  girls  from  Woman's  Col- 
lege. 

Six  of  the  entries  for  sweetheart 
v/ere  elected  from  W.  C.  Dorms, 
including  Misses  Mary  Margaret 
Brown,  Kitty  Tuttle,  Joy  Daughtry 
and  Sandy  Riardan  of  Cotton  Dorrti; 
and  Misses  Gay  Boren  and  Maria 
Lamprinakos  from  Gray  Dorm.  Re- 
presenting the  UNC  Nurses'  Dorm 
will  be  Miss  Betty  Hobsom. 

All  UNC  women  students  have 
been  invited  to  attend. 

Judges  for  the  contest  are  Char- 
les Bernard,  assistant  dean  of  ad- 
mission and  Jim  Wadsworth,  hous- 
ing director,  from  LTNC,  and  three 
judges  from  W.  C. 

The  sweetheart  crowning  will 
take  place  at  intermission,  after 
which  refreshments — consisting  of 
punch,  cookies  and  candies — will 
be  served. 

Members  of  the  social  committee 
who  have  made  arrangements  for 
the  social  are  Don  Starling,  chair- 
man; Steve  Lyon,  dorm  president; 
Harry  Taylor,  vice  president;  Av- 
ery Thomas,  Jerry  Sullivan,  Bruce 
Hoyle,  John  Fox,  Eton  Matkins  and 
Russ  Bradshaw. 

Spencer  Dorm's  buffet  supper 
last  night  was  another  big  event  to 
take  the  limelight  this  week. 

Held  last  evening  at  the  dorm, 
the  social  was  for  Spencer  resi-j 
dents.  University  President  Wil- { 
Iiam  Friday,  Chancellor  Robert 
House  and  University  administra-  j 
tion  olficials. 

On  arrival  guests  were  welcomed  | 
by  Miss  Mary  Gravely,  dorm  sec-' 
retary,     Spencer     president     Jean 

I 
(See  DOliMS.  Page  3)         ' 


In  regard  to  the  Carolina  Coach 

Co.  drivers'  strike,  Chapel  Hill  Bus 

}  Station  Manager  H.  C.  Pearce  Jr. 

j  has  issued  several  announcements 

I  to  the  press. 

Although  bus  travel  has  been 
I  slowed  down  considerably  since 
'  the  drivers  left  their  jobs  Nov.  9, 
I  the  local  bus  station  is  open  and 
j  also  the  bus  station  trestaurani, 
I  and  both  will  continue  to  be  open 
I  regardless  of  the  strike,  according 
I  to  the  manager. 

This  (the  Carolina  Coach  Co.) 
was  our  main  source  of  travel  to 
and  from  Chapel  Hill,  but  we  have 
the  Durham-Chapel  Hill  bus  line 
^oing  in  and  out  of  Durham  ap- 
proximately every  hour, "  he  said. 

"Also,  aruigements  have  been 
made  with  this  company  to  start 
Saturday  to  make  three  trips  daily 
from  Chapel  Hill  to  Greensboro 
and  return.  At  Greensboro  con- 
nections can  be  made  to  Winston 
Salem  and  all  points  we.st."  he  con- 
tinued. 

Arrangements     have  al.so     been 
made  on  a  temporary  basis  until 
the  strike  ends  starting  today  to 
have  four  through  buses  to  Dallas, 
Texas,  and  one  bus  to  Tampa-Mai-  i 
mi,  Fla.  and  three  buses  to  Wash- ! 
ington  New  York.  "This  is  consider- ' 
able  more  service  to  these  partic- 
ular points  than  we  had  before  the  i 
strike, '  he  explained.  [ 

i 

"But  there  are  some  sections  in  1 

the  eastern  part  of  the  state  which 
we  haven't  been  able   to  get  any  j 
bus  service  to,  but  are  hoping  we 
can   get    this    covered   soon,  "    he  ! 
concluded. 


By  LARRY  CHEEK 

SOUTH  BEND,  Ind.  —North  Ca- 
rolina s  Tar  Heels  will  be  gunning 
lor  their  first  win  in  history  over 
a  Notre  Dame  football  team  this 
afternoon  in  Notre  Dame  Stadium 
when  they  take  the  field  before  a 
-elloui  crowd  of  57,(XX)  people  to 
do  battle  with  the  legendary  Fight 
ing  Irish  in  a  game  rated  even 
money  by  the  experts. 

Kickoff  time  for  the  intersec- 
tional  headliner  is  3  p.m.  EST.  The 
game  will  be  televised  locally  and 
will  be  aired  nationally  via  the 
Mutual  Broadcasting  System. 

Bo:h  the  Tar  Heels  and  Fight- 
ing Irish  have  taken  their  knocks 


I  this  year,  but  each  of  these  f* 
1  ball  giants  of  yore  is  expected 
'  be  fired  up  for  the  contest.  Ca 
.  iina  has  posted  a  2-5-1  record  in 
{  Tirst  year  of  the  new  Jim  Tat 
dynasty,  while  Notre  Dame,   o 
the  scourage   of  the    college   fo 
jail   world,   has   done   even   wo 
with  a  1-6  record. 

Notre  Dame's  only  win  came  ov 
Indiana,  20-6,  while  Carolina    to  i- 
pled  Maryland.  34-6,  and  Virgin!  i 
21-7.  They  also  tied   Wake   Fore  I 
6-6.    Against   one   common    oppoi 
ent  Oklahoma,  the  Tar  Heels  hav 
a    slight    edge.    The    Sooners    bej 
Carolina,    36-0,    and    Notre    Damt 
40-0. 


Carolina  has  yet  to  taste  vic- 
tory in  the  series  which  began 
some  8  years  ago  during  the  Char- 
lie Jiislice  era.  They  dropped  that 
first  game,  42-6,  in  Yankee  Stadium 
in  .New  York  City,  and  since  then 
iiave  come  close  on  only  two  oc- 
casions. In  1950  they  dropped  a 
close  14-7  decision  and  in  1951 
Jost   by  only   five  noinls,    12-7.        '• 

If  the  Tar  Heels  can't  win  this 
year,  they  will  havp  to  wait  at  least 
l\vo  more  years  before  getting  an- 
iolher  shot  at  the  Fighting  Irish. 
T  'd»y's  jjame  is  the  last  of  the  cur- 
Knt  series,  but  the  two  teams  will 
nio^t   again  in   1958  and    1960. 

Despite     their  poor  record     tc 


date,  the  Irish  are  reportedly  a 
spirited  aggresive  team  in  the 
knule  Hockne  and  Frank  Leahy 
tradition.  According  to  UNC  scout 
Eddie  Teague,  Coach  Terry  Bren- 
nans  squad  played  an  excellent 
iirsl  half  against  Michigan  Slate 
Ltefore  falling  apart  in  the  second. 
On  stveral  other  occasions  they 
have  duplicated  this  performance, 
but  haven't  been  able  to  play  con- 
sistcnljy  throughout  one  particular 
game. 

Inexperienced  personnel  and 
the  injuiy  bug  have  been  two  vital 
factors    that    have    hurt    the    Irish 

(See  CAROLINA.   Page   4) 

t 


DRIVE  NETS  $2,000 

Campus  Chest 
Surpasses  Goal 

I  lie  ('.anijju.s  Cilic-si  (lii\c'  ( oim  il>iui()!i.«>  li;'.\e  now  hit 
.S2. ()()(),  .Sr,()()  al)o\e  the  ;4()al,  accordino  to  )e.s,s  Stribliiii»  and 
.\li.ss    |a(kic'   .Al(iricl<.;t'.  ( ()-( liairineii  o\   thf  <lri\(\ 

1  he  money  Iroiii  the  (lri\e  will  go  to  W'oi  Id  I'niversiiy 
Ser\i{e.  the  (.oettingen  Kx<  haii;.4e  Seliolaiship,  Cancer,  and 
C.XRK. 

In  raising,  money  lor  the  drive,  Rnllin  and  Spencer 
dormitories.  .Alpha  Delta  Pi  .soioiitx.  and  kapp;-.  Sigma  fra- 
ternity ha\e  heeii  outstanding.  Chancellor  Robert  House  pre- 
.sentefi  eat  h  oi  them  with  trophies  last  night  at  the  Fro.st 
Time  Frolic    Dance. 

I  he  trophies,  according  to  .Miss  .\ldiidge.  embody  the 
aj)pre(  iation  ol  the  manv  people  who  will  be  helped  by  the 
money.  Kac  h  trophy  symboli/es  the  meaning  behind  the 
(iainpus  Cihest   drive,  and  reminds  its  possessois  c>f  the  help 

♦  their   money    has    brought    to   less 

fortunate  people. 

Outside     of     the 
made  bv   residences 


Henderson 
Helped  UNC 
Fame  Spread 

The  University  of  North  Caro- 
lina, unknown  outside  the  state  in 
the  19th  century,  had  acquired  a 
European  reputation   by  1930. 

At    least    thaf.s    according    to    a 
letter   in    the    1930   Yackety   Yack 
from  George  Bernard  Shaw  to  Dr. 
ArchibaTd    Henderson.    Shaw's    of- j  Tha  Gamma  Delta  and  Delta  Delta 
licial   biographer.  Delta    sororities    have    helped    the 

Henderson,  speaking  to  a  near- ,  drive  in  this  way. 
capacity  audience  in  Gerrard  Hall ;      The  Campus  Chest  drive  official- 
Thursday    night,   said    in    the    let- '  'y  dosed     at     5     p.m.     Thursday, 
ter   Shaw   gave  credit   to   him   for    There  are   some  pledges   out   that 
spreading    the    University's    fame    the    committee    hopes    will    be    in 


contributions 
organizations 
sucH  as  the  Grail  and  the  Pan  Hel- 
lenic Council  have  helped  in  the 
drive.  There  have  also  been  many 
contributions  from  foreign  stu- 
dents living  under  World  Uni- 
versity Service  help. 

Some  groups  have  donated  time 
rather  than  money  to  the  drive.  Al- 
pha Phi  Omega  service  fraternity, 
Alpha  Tnu  Omega  and  Sigma  Phi 
Epsilcn  social  fraternities,  and  Al- 


io Europe. 

Hendersjn,  Kenan  professor 
emeritus  in  the  Mathematics  Dept., 
.'imilingly  remarked  to  Chancellor 
Robert  House  he  was  still  work- 
ing to  make  the  university  known 
outside   the   state. 

He  was  speaking  at  the  opening 
of  an  exhibition  of  his  collection 
of  Shaw.  The  speech  and  exhibi- 
tion coincided  wUK  the  publication 


soon. 

The  Co-op  House.  Pi  Beta  Phi 
sorcrily.  and  the  foreign  students 
have  asked  to  send  contributions 
expre«sly  to  help  the  Hungarian 
students.  The  committee  will  be 
glad  to  receive  any  such  contri- 
butons.  it  was  stated. 

Miss  Aldridge  sais  that  there 
have  hem  contributions,  many  of 
them  given  anonymously,  from  all 


Beat  Dook  Queen  Contestants 


Pictured  above  are  contestants  for  the  title  of  Beat  Dook  Queen,  to  lead  Tuesday's  Beat  Dook  parade.  THe  queen  will  be  nanned  Tues- 
day. Contestants  are,  left  to  right  first  row.  Misses  Carolyn  Placak,  Patsy  Poythress,  Barbara  Honey,  Roberta  Hastings,  Vai  von  Ammon, 
Nancy  McFadden,  Barbara  Prage  and  Jane  Welch;  second  row,  Gail  Willingham,  Libby  Nicholson,  Susan  Mahue,  Jans  Sawyer,  Mary  Bur- 
gwyn,  Ann  Barber  Pat  Dillon,  Shirley  Carpsnter  and  Mary  Louise  31  zzell;  third  row  Sally  English,  Anne  W.  Ruffin,  Elaine  Burns,  Ida 
Robinson,  Dotty  Wood,  Lucinda  Holderness  and  Ann  Bobbitt. 


SSL  Votes     Beat  Dook  Parade  Is 
To  Abolish   Scheduled  For  Tues. 


DUkathon  Set 
For  Today 

The  annual  DUkathon,  sponsor- 
ed by  Delta  Upsilon  spcial  fratern- 
ity, will  be  held  today  at  1:30  p.m. 
The  marathon  race  will  begin  at 
the  Chapel  Hil  Post  Office  and  end 
at  th«  Durham  Post  Office. 

The   runners  will   be   led   from 
the  Chapel  Hill  Post  Office  by  the 
DUkathon  queen,  who  will  be  rid- 
ing in  a  convertible.     They     will  \ 
follow  Franklin  St.  and  the  Dur- ; 
ham  Highway  into  the  city  limits  j 
of  Durham,  and  then     take     the 
main  streets  to  Five  Points  in  the  I 
middle   of  town.   The   post   office  i 
is  just  three  blocks     from     Five  I 
Points.  The  queen  will  meet  them  | 
there.  j 

A  trophy  will  be  given  to  the  ^ 
winner,  with  second  and  third ! 
place  medals  for  those  positions.  ^ 
Survival  medals  will  be  given  to , 
everyone  who  finishes  the  race. 

There  are  approximately  75  en-  j 
trants  in  the  race.  They  will  be ' 
aided  (and  protected)  by  the  co- 
of>eration  of  the  Chapel  Hill  and 
Durham  police. 

The  identity  of  the  queen,  who  i 
was  chosen  by  penny  ballot  on ; 
Thursday,  will  be  revealed  today. ' 
Contestants  are  Misses  Nancy 
Davis.  Anne  Morgan.  Marian  Die-  ] 
kens,  Carolyn  Wise,  Phyllis  Krafft.  i 
Pat  Howard  Sally  Price,  and  Sally 
Robeson. 


School  Act 

RALEIGH  Ufi  —  The  State  Stu 
dent  Legislature  Friday  passed  a 
resolution  calling  for  repeal  of 
the  Pearsall  Plan. 

Introduced  by  the  University  of 
North  Carolina  delegation,  the 
resolution  says  the  State  Consti- 
tution now  has  within  it  "daases 
which  provide  .  .  .  for  the  means 
of  abolition  of  public  education." 

The  resolution  passed  by  the  stu- 
dents in  their  mock  legislature 
said  these  clauses  are  "morally 
wrong"  and  "contrary  to  thq  prin- 
ciples set  forth  in  the  United 
States  Constitution." 

The  Pearsall  Plan  involves  a 
two-pronged  amendment  to  the 
state's  constitution  to  meet  the 
public  school  segregation  problem. 
It  was  overwhelmingly  approved 
by  Tar  Heel  voters  Sept.  8. 

One  provides  for  tuition  grants 
to  children  whose  parents  do  not 
want  them  to  attend  unsegregated 
schools.  The  grants  could  be  used 
to  .send  the  child  to  a  private 
school  of  its  choice.  The  second 
part  of  the  amendment  authorizes 
local  elections  on  the  question  of 
closing  local  public  schools  if  they 
become   unsegregated. 

The  students  will  end  their  3- 
day  mock   legislature  today. 


McClamroch  Nominated 
For  Merchants'  Job 

Sandy  McClamroch.  Chapel  Hill 
radio  station  owner,  has  been  pom- 
inated  to  the  presidency  of  the 
Chapel  Hill  -  Carrboro  Merchants" 
Assn.  for  the  coming  year. 

Electi(,n  of, new  officers  will  be 
held  at  the  group's  general  meet- 
ing on  Dec.  10. 


Plans  are  progressin.q  for  the  an- 
nual "Beat  Dook"  parade,  which  is 
being  sponsored  by  Pi  Kappa  Al- 
pha fraternity..  It  will  be  staged  on 
'I'uesday,    Nov.    20.    at    3    p.m. 

The  Queen  of  the  'Beat  Dook  ' 
Float  Parade  was  chosen  Thurs- 
day night  following  a  supper  at 
the  PiKA  House,  but  the  identity 
of  the  queen  and  her  six  attenuanis 
will  be  withheld  until  the  parade 
day.  The  following  28  girls  were 
entered  in  the  contest:  Misses 
Nancy  MacFadden,  Libby  Nichol- 
;or.,  Pat  l^illon.  Anne  Barber,  (Jail 
W^illingham,  Daryl  Farrington.  Suj- 
an  Mayhue,  Barbara  Prago,  Rober- 

\  ta  Hastings,  Mary  Louise  Bizzell, 
Ida     Robinson,    Eleanor     Riggins, 

I  .lane  Brock,  Shirley  Carpenter,  Pa- 
tsy Poylhress,  Elaine  Burns,  Jane 

,  Burns,  Mary  Burgwyn,  Barbara 
Murray,  Jane  Welch.  Dottie  Wood. 

:  Barbara  Honey,  Val  Von  Ammon, 
Kay    Adams,    Lucinda    Holrlerne.-a. 

1  Carolyn  Placak,  Anne  Ruffin,  and 
Anne   Bobbitt. 

I      The  judges  for  the  contest  were 
E.  C.  Smith,  local  merchant;   Mrs. 
I  Kay  Kyser.  of  Chapel  Hili;  and  Jim- 
my  Capps,    WPTF   announcer. 

About  35  floats   from  sororities. 

tratcrnities,    womens    dorms    and 

men's   dorms    have    been    entered 

i  Trophies    will    be   awarded    to    the 

j  best  floats  in  the.se  four  divisions. 

j  Womens  dorms  entering  floats  are 

1  Smith,  Mclver,  and  Nurses'  dorm 

j  Enterics   from    the   dorm    division 

j  are   Alexander,   Ruffin,     Mangum. 

Lewis  and  EJverett. 

I      Sororities  entering  floats  are  AI 

pha  Delta  Pi,  Alpha  Camma  Delta. 

'  Chi  Omega.  Delta  Delta  Delta,  Ka 

ppa  Delta,  and  Pi  Beta  Phi.     ' 

Fraternities    entering    floats   are 
Chi  Phi,  Alpha  Tau  Omc.ija.  Kappa 
!  Alpha.  Thata  Chi,  Zeta  Beta  Tau. ; 
'  Lambda  Chi  Alpha  Sigma  Nu,  Siu- ' 
;  n.a  Phi   Epsilon,  Tau   Epsilon   Phi, 
!  St.  Anthony  Hall,  Sigma  .Alpha  E|>- ' 
i  silon,  Sigma  Chi,  Phi  Gamma  Delta, 


I'hi  Kappa  Phi,  Pi  Lambda  Phi, 
Dell^  Theta  Delta  Kappa  Epsihm 
ar.  I  Chi  Psi. 

The  Lincoln  High  School  Band 
and  the  UNC  Band  will  play  in  the 
parade.  The  Navy  Drum  and  Bugle 
Corps  and  Color  Guard,  the  Navy 
Team  and  the  AROTC  Drill  Team 
will    also   perform. 

The  UNC  cheerleaders  led  by 
ncad  cheerleader  Jim  Bynum  will 
be  present,  and  five  clowns  will 
also  lake  part  in  the  activities. 

According  to  Herman  Godwin, 
oarade  chairman.  "The  outlook  for 
a  successful  parade  is  very  bright, 
i-efs  just  hope  for  good  weather." 


Interest  High 
In  Talent  Show 

Several  groups  and  individuals 
have  shown  interest  in  the  coming 
Calvacnde  of  Talent  show  to  be 
presented  following  Thanksgiving 
holidays.  Dave  Davis,  taient  com- 
mittee ch.Tirman,'  termed  the  in- 
terest   "very,    very,   good." 

So  far,  trios,  quartets,  choral 
groups,  bands,  combos,  soloists, 
pant.^mine  acts,  and  a  calypso 
singer  have  signed  up  for  tryouts 
to  be  held  on  Nov.  28  29.  and  Dec. 
3,   from  7-10  p.m. 

A  .screening  committee  will  pick 
the  performers  for  the  hour-long 
show. 

'The  talent  program  will  be  the 
first  of  a  series  of  entertainment 
programs  put  on  by  Carolina  stu- 
dents," H.  G.  Snipes,  publicity 
chairman,  said. 

Interested  students  may  sign  up 
bv  contacting  Dave  Davis,  at  th? 
Phi  Delta  Theta  House  or  Mi.ss 
Eleanor  Riggin.s"  at  the  YMCA. 

Cash  prizes  will  be  awarded  to 
winning  performances.  Snipes  said. 

Th"  talent  show  will  be  spon- 
sored by  Graham  Memorial  Activ- 
ities Board  and  the  YW  YMCA. 


1073  Signed 
Team  Telegram 

Today  the  UNC  football  team 
will  receive  a  telegram  the  text 
of  whic;li  ii;  as  follows: 

','We  knaw  all  of  you  are  going 
to  give  the  best  that  is  in  you  to- 
day for  Carolina,  so  we  of  Caro- 
lina want  you  to  know  that  we're 
behind  you  to  the  last  man.  Win 
or  los?  you're  our  team,  but  noth- 
ing c;:uld  make  us  prouder  of  you 
than  a  victory  over  Notre  Dame 
today.  Few  of  us  could  make  the 
trip  physically,  but  in  mind  and 
spirit  each  of  us  is  with  you  to- 
day. We  hope  you  remember  that 
when  it's  hardest  to  ^et  off  the 
ground.  Let's  make  it  a  real  Caro- 
lin.T  Saturday — Beat  Notre  Dame!" 

The  telegram  contains  1073  sig 
natures  and  is  expected  to  be  de- 
livered at  1:15  p.m.  before  the 
team  takes  the  field.  The  length 
of  the  telegram  will  be  approxi- 
mately 160.  f?et.  according  to  Uni- 
versity Club  President,  Joe  Clapp. 

Clapp  said,  "All  1073  signatures 
were  Carolina  students.  This  makes 
it  the  biggest  student  telegram 
this  year.  We  would  like  to  thank 
all  those  who  took  the  trouble  to 
sign    the   telegram." 

M«ngum  Dorm  contributed  the 
largest  number  of  signatures  from 
the  dorms.  They  turned  in  a  total 
of  102  names.  In  the  fraternity  di- 
vision. S'gma  Chi  took  the,  high 
with  67  names. 


of  Henderson's  n^^Ti^biography,  i  over  the  campus.  She  says.  "The 
ICei/rg"?  Bornafd'*S!haw.,ife»  of  the'fa'p'u'tv  aid  administration  have 
Century.  li       '!'   ,'     f  back<d    us   all    the    way.    We   could 

V     In   1904.  Henderson  ,sa^d.  he 'saw     never  have   had   better  supporters 
Shaw  for   the   first   U^e.'  He  told,  ifo/.  any  charity  drive." 

how  he   had  been   persuaded   by  aj,;^;:      — ^ ji    ■; 

friend  to  go  .see  an  amateur  pro-:i_^_  1A#  f 

ducticn  of  a  Shaw  play  in  Chica- i  Vvarm    Weatner 
go.  ■  •  ■       I   ■■  ■,•■•' 

Having  never  hedrd 'of  Shaw,  he''  Ufte  f^f^nCiffCkn 
went  only  because  his  friend  had  "  *^^  i^%^*^\At  I C VI 
free  tickets.  Henderson  left  the 
theatre  entranced  and  since  then 
has  become  recognized  as  the 
world's  foremost  authority  on 
Shaw. 

Speaking  of  the  famous  play- 
wright. Henderson  said.  "He  dis- 
pensed with  sweetness  and  light 
in  favor  of  the  shock  tactics  of 
epigram,  half-truth  and  comic 
exag.geration. 

"It  is  not  only  good  for  people 
to  be  shocked  occasionally,"  Shaw 
once  observed,  "but  it  is  absolute- 
ly necessary  to  the  progress  of 
society  that  thev  should  be  shock- 
ed   pretty   often." 

Henderson  will  locate  in.  the 
Librarj'  of  Congress  Monday  night. 


That  Indian  Summer-type  weath- 
er that  floated  around  the  campus 
yesterday  won't   be  here  long. 

According  to  U.  S.  weather  fore- 
ca.sters  at  the  Raleigh  -  Durham 
Airport,  the  south  winds  bring- 
ing yesterday's  high  of  78  have 
been  replaced  by  winds  from  the 
northwest. 

Those  wind?  .  will  bring  colder 
weather  to  North  Carolina. 

The  low  last  night  was  estimated 
at  38:  the  high  today  will  be  in 
the  mid-.50s. 

Forecasters  said  Carolina's  foot- 
ball team,  playing  today  at  Notre 
Dame  in  South  Bend.  Ind..  will 
have  temperatures  between  40  and 
45  and  a  fair  to  partly  cloudy  sky. 


Scaffolds  Seem  Sinister 

Late  bonk  returners  are  not  to 
be  hung  from  the  scaffolds  now 
.standing  before  the  main  entrance 
to  the  Librar>'.  At  least  these  are 
fho  reassur-ng  words  given  by  a 
library  source. 

In';tf»ad.  the  scaffolds  are  being 
used  bv  a  Greensboro  firm  in  cut- 
ting the  name  of  the  building, 
"The  Louis  Round  Wilson  Li- 
brary," in  the  stone  above  the 
steps. 


FROM   RADIO   DISPATCHES 

C.\IRO — United  Nations  Secre- 
tary General  Dag  Hammarskjold 
met  with  Egyptian  Presidrnt 
Gamal  Abdel  Nasser,  reportedly 
to  ijron  out  differences  as  to 
what  UN  troops  were  supposed 
to  do  in  Egjpt. 

The  Egyptian  government  went 
on  record  a  opposing  any 
allied  effort  to  have  the  Suez 
Canal  cleared. 


UNITED  NATIONS,  N.  Y.— 
Acting  Secretary  of  State  Her-  I 
bert  Hoover  Jr.  went  to  the  U*N  } 
building  to  represent  the  United 
States  in  the  General  Assembly. 
He  warned  Russian  troops  to 
keep  out  of  the  Middle  East. 

The  General  Assembly  voted 
47-24  against  proposals  to  seat 
Communist   China   in   the  UN. 


VIENNA  —  Budapest  workers  i 

agreed    to   call    off    the   general  ' 

strike  in  Hungary  for  government  i 
concessions.  It  was  not  reported 

what  the  concessions  would  be.  I 


International 
Students  Plan 
Holiday  Party 

A  houseparty  for  international 
students  will  be  sponsored  by  the 
Inter-Varsity  Christian  Fellowship 
during  the  Thanksgiving  holidays. 

The  houseparty  will  be  held  in 
the  Blue  Ridge  Mountains  of  North 
Carolina   at    Saluda   Inn. 

Students  from  many  lands  will 
join  in  guided  tours  of  the  .scenic 
area  and  other  recreation.  There 
will  be  discussions  on  Christian- 
ity during  the  evenings. 

The  houseparty  will  last  from 
Nov.  22  to  25.  and  the  total  cost 
is  $14.  Further  information  about 
the  program  and  registration  may 
be  obtained  from  Challie  Iralu, 
226  Connor  or  Ed  Viser.  204  Con- 
nor. 


)N  THE  INFIRMARY 

Students  in  the  Infirmary  yes- 
terday   included: 

Misses  Roberta  Simpson,  Julia 
Crater,  Elizabeth  McGraw,  and 
Myron  Smotherly,  Alfred  Dean, 
John  Minter,  John  Richardson, 
Manley  Springs,  Daniel  Luke, 
Joseph  Friedberg,  James  Dunn, 
Jimmy  Merritt  and  Louis  Cody. 


PAGE  TWO 


THE  DAILl  f**  "^^*- 


SATURDAY,  NOVEMBER  17  1»5« 


Peace  Pilgrim's  Prayer: 
Can  The  Nations  Answer? 

"]]  e  need  onr  ^ovctnnirnf  which  will  include  all  the  jjcofAe  of 
iJic  WO) Id.  The  fiations  niusi  ^^ive  uf)  their  ri^ht  oj  dt'clanna;  war 
to  the  United  Xalions." —  A  sin.iU,  j^ay-haired  woman,  known  as 
Peace  Pilgrim,  in  conversation  here. 

People  Avlio  mav  have  been  in-  ^vere  not  so  muddv.  In  the  Initcd 

dined  to  lauoh  at  the  xvoman  who  Nanom    buildinp    ,„    Nrw    \ork. 

calls   herself  Pea.  e   Pilgrim   would  I't-^P'^'    J'\'"^  »"    *'^^''    »''*'    '''''^ 

change  their  minds  after  listening  ^^^''*^'  ari»unig. 

.    1   '       r           •      .  Thev    were    scttmci    nowhere,    a 

to  her  a  few  mniutes.  '  '  '^'        .        .  ,    „      ,                 i 

lot  of  people  said,  nnt  by  yesterday 

The  woman,  all  dressed  in  blue,  i\^^.^  had  cfiei  tivelv  halted  the  war 
risht  down  to  her  canvas  shoes,  in  the  Middle  F.ast.  had  shij)ped 
has  a  message.  The  message  is  of  thousands  of  soldiers— peace  sol- 
great  import  in  these  times  when  (ii(.,,^_i,,  ti^c  area,  and  had  started 
the  world  is  anticipating  another  jn  on  the  cpicstion  of  Hungarian 
great  war  and  when  people  are  al-  independence. 

ready  wondering  if  it  will  l)e  the  The  Tnited  Nations  had  p!;:>ed 

war  to  end  all  wars.  a   major   part   in   keeping   Russian 

,-,       ,    J                 ,       ..    -,,             •  tro(»ps    out     of    the     Middle     Fast, 

riie  ladv  savs  she     will   remain  .     ,' .              ,      ,           .  x 

,              ■     •,             1  •    J     J  And  It  Avas  the  Inited  .Nations  to 

a   wanderer     until     mankinci     has  ,  ■  ,    ^      ■  ,        ,  •       i                . 

,            J    ,                 -               ••  ci        1  which  President   1-iseiihowei   relet - 

learned  the  Avav  ot  peace,    bhe  also  ,    o    •        i      j-                    i 

'  red   Switzerland  s   request    for   an- 
sa vs:  ,                   ■           I 

other   summit   ccjnterence. 

My   friends,  the  world   situation    is  ^^„   ^^^^^^^  ^^.^     ^^^^^  ^. 

grav^.  Humanity.  wUh  fearful  alter-  ^j,  ^^^.^  ^^^^^^^^^  ^,^^^^  ^,^^.  ^^.^^,^^j 
ing  steps,  walks  a  knife-edge  between  .  ,  ,  .  ,  , 
complete  chaos  and  ^  golden  age.  '^  1^><»1^'"S  more  and  more  toward 
while  strong  forces  push  toward  t^ic  l'">tfd  Nations  for  guidance 
chaos.  Unless  we,  the  people  of  the  and  strength.  Nations  are  relying 
world,  awake  from  our  lethargy  and  less  and  less  cm  their  power  to  de- 
push  firmly  and  quickly  away  from  dare  war.  and  are  relying  more 
chaos,  all  that  we  cherish  will  be  and  more  on  the  international  de- 
dcstroyed  in  the  holocaust*  whicOi  will  jj^te  floor  for  the  settlement  of 
descend.'  their  arguments. 

The   Peace   Pilgrim   says   she   is  '  #             #             * 

walking  and  praving     for     io,ooo  rhusc    who    are    optimistic    sav 

miles.   Fler  goal   is  world  disarma-  ,),^  l^iited  Nations  have  emf)anked 

•iieni.  on  a  new  and  wcjiiderful  existence. 

\\'hile  we  doubt  the  world  will  U'e  hope  so.  For  without  help  Ircmi 

divivm   as   a    result    of   her    io,oc>o  ^y^^   internaticmal   legislative   body, 

mile    trip,    we    believe    tiie    gia^-  the  danger  of  the  Hvdrogen  Bf»mb 

haired  ladv  has  done  a  lot  to  put  ^n,]   (onjplete   destruction    is   very 

thoughts  of  peace     into     peoples  j^^i 

minds.   She    talks    simply,    slowlv.  Maybe    the    Peace    Pilgrim    will 

never   l)oring.    never  appealing   to  ,?!H  have  to  walk  hnever. 
the  emotions. 

We.   the   jH'ople     of    the  world.  |k  ■                        f% 

need     more     than     anvthing    else  |^  O^V,      DOVS/ 

peace.  We  need  it  immediatelv.  II  ' 

we  do  not  have  peace,  we  may  well  «^                     ^^^ 

l>e  blown  to  smithereens,  and  our  |   UFfl      V^fl 
children   never  will  kncjw-   why. 

In  Russia,  people  are  in  pqu^cr  "ipl                W\           * 

who   are    willing   to   take  chances  1  h^^^      DTdll^S 

with  millions  of  lives  in  order  to  r 

assume  domination  of  the  world.  "^he  Town  Board  of  Aldermen 

In     Fg\pt,    four    nations  —  the  has  given   UNC  fraternities  along 

Arabs,  lsv?qli>.  Briiish  ^iiAtttevf;^*  'SaC^litnilria  St)  6o  days  of  parking 

—are  ccjnduding  a  sm  dl  war  that  giace.    . 

threatened  »■'  Iv    l^x^\e  the  fit  i  nia-  V.Vii'    ■,  "  •  '           ■  ■        ^                    i 

.,        ,      .  ,4-     ,  1  \K'      -1-1  All  the  traternities  have   to   do 

jor  outb     ;ik  ol  World  War  Three.  i    xi        i       r         i 

In    >:   erica,     the     people     ^^.^  i'^esent  a  workable  plan  for  aL 

J                   .     ^ .  f^            ,  leviai^ng  then   parking  problems. 

pre-    Tited   ail   election   issue  — trte  ■       ?              '           "  ^ 

Hydrogen   Bomb  —  aud  promptly,  ■.,    It  is  a  big  order,  but  the  Cireek 

iiiriRcl   it  down.  ^louses     ii^     Big     Fraternity  ("oiirt 

In     Hungarv,     brave    patriots  have  the  brains  and  man|X)wer  to 

fouyhi   agaiiiNt   a   nation    that   told  eatery  ll  out. 

ihem  how  to  think— fought  at  the  There    should    be   much    biain- 

|)(>sNib!e  expense  of  another  Wcjrld  work  over  Scuttlebutt  coffee  Irom 

War — and   thev   lost;  now  on.   The  town  has  c(>me  almost 

But    in   another   place   the   skies  halfway. 

Don't  Mute  Spirit's  Sound 

\\  c  disagree  with  President  Bob  they  are  a   line  way  of  letting  olf 

^ Dung  about  the  theft  of  the  Duke-  j)ent-up  steam. 

Carolina   \  ictorv    Bell.  We    admit    thai    stealing    a    bell 

'  11    r-       f                           '              I  fiom    a   neighboring   institution    is 

If    Carolina    tnen     cant    .sneak  '^  -       r,                      ,    ■ 

r,     ,              1         I    ,      1    11  tiof  constructive.  But  it  certainlv  is 

o\er  to  Durham  and  steal  the  bell  ,  ,                          i  •        i 

,       -      .  ,,            ...         .,  good  fun,  not  something  that  a  stu- 

er.rlv  of  a  fall  morning  in  the  mid-  j         ,     ,             • ,           i       i  i 

,,       f     ,       .       I    ,,                     ,      .  dent   tx>dv  president    should   view 

die  of    the   footfjall   sea.son,  what  s  •  t      i 

,                ,       .                 ir      -  with  alarm. 

tJie  use  of  going  to  colleger  k    r-       r          .     i                  i 

^      "                "  .\   Carolina    student    caught    on 

College  pianks-not  the  destruc-  (j,^.  Dj^j^^,  campus  without   proper 

tive  kind  like  members  of  the  I  g-  ^.^^,^   ...j,,    ,,^.    ^.j^^    immediately 

ly  Club  pulled   last  spring— are  a  ,,,.    ^j^^     Student      Onmcil.      said 

definite  part  ol  college  life.  In  ad-  Voung.  Duke  students  caught  here 

diticm   to  providing  Mmicthing  to  ,,ithout  a  purijose  will  be  tried  bv 

remember  about  ones  alma  mater.  Duke's  honor  courts: 

'  *              *              * 

The  Daiiv  Tor  Heei  ^'^'^  ^'  '^^^'  ^^^^  ""'^  ^^  '^  stupid. 

/  but  it  probably  is  unconstitutional. 

The  official  student  publication  of  the  \  student.  Duke     or      Far     Heel. 

Publications  Board  of  the  University  of  ,),,^^,|^i    ,3^    3},!^    ^,3    ,^..,,|^    „„    3,,^ 

North    Carolina,    where    it    is    published  ,...,,„..     •      .1       f,,;.     1  c.   . 

...              .    ,,      ,           J            •     .  campus  111  the  I  nited  States,  pui- 

daily    except    Monday   and    exammatiot  '                                                    ' 

and  vacation  periods  and  summer  terms  ^^^''^  '^-."^  '^!'.  ^^^^' 

Entered   as  second  class   matter  in  the  President   ^  oung  was  asking   tor 

Dost  office  in  Chapel  Hill,  N.  C,  undei  "i^^e  school  spirit    not    long    aw. 

the  Act  oi  .March  8,  1870.  Subscription  Now.  he  has  a  fine  example  .>f  it. 

rates;  mailed,  $4  per  year,  $2.50  a  semes  and    ^^■ants   to   wipe    it    out. 

ter;  delivered.  $6  a  year,  $3.50  a  seme»  No.    President    \'oung:    let    the 

*^^-  .\T()s.      tho.se     masters     at   iiiter- 

Editor   FRED  POWT.EDGE  ^^'"P"^    decepjioii.    c:  rrv    on    one 

_: . of  the   Tniversitv  s     linest     tratli- 

Managing  Editor  CHARLIE  SLOAN  tions. 

News  Editor  "raY  LD^CER  ■■     |J                                            ■ 

Business  Manager    ^      BILL  BOB  PEIEL  ■  ■      lloPpOnwd 

Sports  Eflitor    LARRY  CHEEK  mm                            •    « 

EDrrORL4L~~6TAFF  -  Woody    Sears,  Aflflny,   Afjiflny 

Frank  Crowther,  Barry  Winston,  David  ' 

Mundy,   George   Pfingst.   Ingrid   Clay,  %^                             jt 

Cortland     Edwards,     Paul     McCauley,  .        T   O  AfC       ZVOO 

Bobbi  Smith.  I  car  D  /^yu 

■  .1  Within  the  next  few  years  "ed- 

NEWS    STAFF— Clarke    Jones,    Nancy  ucnfion  will  become  a.^  essential 

S'\'^'*^'if.T'\r"°"^'«r''u'°;.^°u  fo  America  as  food  and  shelter." 

Drake.  Edith  MacKinnon.  Wallv  Kuralt,  rx      *t-    x  t    c  •               1.1      v 

Mary  Alys  Voorhees.  Graham  Snyder,  -f^^'  t'  ^'-  ^"""f"  ^  ^'^^  .^•'■ 

Billy  Barnes.  Neil  iBass.  Gary  Nichols,  l»«»a^  Education  .Assn.,  speaking 

Page  Bernstein,  Peg  Humphrey.  Phyllig  t^'  tbe  VSC  School  of  fc.diKation 

Maultsby.  *aJl   convocation. 

Night  Editor Fred  Powledge       It  is  that  essential  now. 


RIVALRY 

A  Tradition 
Going  Down 
The  Drain? 

Woody  Sears 

It  looks  as  though  another  tra- 
dition is  going  doA'n  the  drain. 

Tnis  is  evidenced  in  the  fact 
that  the  UNC-Duke  victory  bell 
ban  to  be  returned  this  week 
aftor  it  had  been  so  successfully 
spiiited  away. 

And  the  worst  part  of  it  is  the 
reason  why  the  bell  had  to  go 
back  to  Duke.  .  because  the 
dukies  were  going  to  paint-up 
the  t^^'C  campus  as  a  retaliatory^ 
measure. 

My,  such  sportsmanship. 

Stealing  victor\-  bells  is  a  tra- 
ditional part  of  college  rivalries 
or  so  we  are  led  to  believe.  We 
would  like  to  see  this  rivalry  un 
the  order  of  good-natured  fun) 
continue  between  the  two  schools, 
but  il  looks  as  though  our  neigh- 
bors can't  stand  the  pace,  as  evi- 
(icnccd  by  this  display  of  spoiled- 
brat  tempermcnt. 

Congratulations  are  in  order  for 
the  ijoys  at  the  ATO  House  who, 
in  the  spirit  of  good,  clean  fun, 
and  without  doing  anything  des- 
tructive, managed  to  carry  out  a 
masterful  job  of  theivcry  for  their 
Alma  Mater. 

But  there  is  still  the  Duke  pep- 
rally  bonfire  to  consider. 

Last  year  a  group  of  boys  from 
the  KA  House  managed  to  get  the 
monstrous  pile  on  fire,  but  it  was 
extinguished  by  two  dukies  with 
carbon  dioxide  extinguishers. 

The  two  lone  watchmen  could 
have  easily  been  overpowered  and 
left  bound  and  gagged,  had  the 
KA  s  wished  to  resort  to  physical 
violence.  But  in  the  interest  of 
good  sportsmanship  they  let  two 
lone  freshman  dukies  spoil  their 
plot.  A  later  effort  -resulted  in 
two  very  badly  scarred  autos.  .  . 
scarrea  from  dukie-thrown  bricks. 

Our  neighbors  have  shown  that 
they  are  not  capable  of  carrying 
on  this  traditional  rivalry  without 
gettuig  nasty  about  it.  Indiscrimi- 
nate use  of  paint  brushes  does  not 
typiiy  anything  but  vandalism, 
and  it  is  not  at  all  proper  that 
Carolina  Gentlemen  should  en- 
gage in  any  .such  activities.  Steal- 
ing beJls  and  other  such  pranks 
do  no  harm  as  they  are  always 
returned  to  their  proper  owners, 
but  destroying  property,  muti- 
lating or  permanently  marking 
buildings  is  quite  another  thing. 
There  is  no  sense  in  engaging  that 
kind  oi  warfare'  with  anyone, 
for  there  can  be  no  winner. 

Duke's  Dean  Cox  should  be 
thoroughly  ashamed  that  he  had 
to  tall  Ray  .Jefferies  to  get  the 
bell  bacli  because  of  "the  build- 
ing storm  of  anger  on  the  Duke 
campus."  Seems  as  though  he 
would  have  haled  to  admit  in 
such  an  unquestionable  manner 
the  personality  of  his  campus. 
And  maybe  he  did. 

It  is  imperative  that  we  live 
up  to  our  obligations  as  (ladies 
and)  gentlemen  if  for  no  other 
reason  than  to  remain  "above" 
the  delinquent  urchins  from  the 
other  side  of  the  sewage  plant. 


This  Time  Let's  Get  A  New  TUe' 


«>l%rt-ri*B    «*/AS»*<»4GTTa'i  ■>><9iT  Co 


FORMER  UNC  STUDENT 


Big  City  Likes  Carolina  Gent 


I  ti 


George  Hamilton  IV.  the  Caro- 
lina gentlemaai  who  left  Chapel 
Hill  this  year  to  entertain  the 
folks  in  yankee  land,  is  doing 
well   for  himself. 

Tomorrow  night  thb  lanky  sing- 
er will  cross  melodies  with  Steve 
Allen,  the  man  who  put  Elvis 
Presley  in  tie  and  tails. 

Hamilton  took  a  trip  to  New 
York  a  few  weeks  ago  tc  present 
his  talents  on  Arthur  Godfreys 
talent  .scout  show,  and  Godfrey 
asked  him  ta  appear  on  his 
morning  shows  for  a   week. 

In  a  letter  to  The  Daily  Tar 
Heel.  Hamilton  expressed  his 
feelings  on   the  matter. 

"Everything  has  been  rolling 
right  along  up  here  and  were 
all  pretty  excited  about  the 
turn  of  events  since  the  week 
in  Now  York  on  the  Arthur  God- 
frey TV  shows. 

'As  a  result  oi  the  Godfrey  ap- 
pearances I  recently  signed  with 
'General  Artists  Corp.'  of  New 
York  City.  (The  largest  booking 
agency  in  the  United  StatCvS  and 
the  same  folks  who  handle  Per- 
r>-  Como.  Pat  Boone,  Frank  Si- 
natra, etc.) 

" 'G.A.C  is  planning  a  series 
of  guest  appearances  on  such  net- 


work TV  shows  as  'The  Perry 
Como  Show.'  Lawrence  Welk. 
Steve  Allen,  etc.  and  I'm  booked 
for  a  weekend  the  latter  part 
of  this  month  at  the  State 
Theater  in  Hartford,  Conn.,  on 
one  of  those    Rock  and  Roll'  re- 


'j"*^*;,-i^ 


HAMILTON 

...  a   Rose  and  a  Baby  Rvth 

views  with  Gene  Vincent.  The 
Platters.  Fats  Domino  and  a 
bunch  of  other  guys! 

"All  this  is  well  and  good,  but. 


man!! — when  in  the  world  am  I 
going  to  study?  We're  booked 
for  a  week  this  month  in  Wash- 
ington's top  night  club.  The  Ca- 
sino Royale',  and  I'm  playing  the 
Brooklyn  Paramount  Theater  in 
New  York  with  the  "Alan  Freed 
Rock  and  Roll  Show'  over  the 
CTi»^  stma^  holidays  with  Ajlan 
Dale.  Pate  Boone,  etc.     '    '    '  ' 

"The  Curtiss  Candy  Co.  is  bak- 
ing a  special  100  lb.  Baby  Ruth 
bar  which  will  be  cut  in  the 
lobby  of  the  Paramount  Christ- 
mas." 

Cashbox.  a  trade  magazine  re- 
ported this  week  that  Hamilton's 
record  "A  Rose  and  a  Baby  Ruth" 
is  16th  in  the  nation  and  begin- 
ning to  sell  in  England.  In  Port- 
land. Ore.,  the  magazine  report- 
ed, the  record  is  numbep  one, 
and  in  New  York  City  it's  num- 
ber two   in  popularity. 

Besides  guest  appearances.  5 
Washington  TV  shows  a  week 
and  a  3  hour  TV  show  on  Sat- 
urday nights.  Hamilton  is  at- 
tending American  University. 
Hamilton  wrote  that  he  finds 
himself  studying  "every  spare 
minute  I  can  find." 

George  Hamilton  IV  is  quite 
busv  these  days. 


Pogo 


.4^ 


By  Walt  Kelly 


NOWV10'JMAVgP:PiT 

U?  AN'  ACOUSP  TmJ 
VS'O^LP.    y 


,     .   .._    i^mO 


,»«   at..  ».**(«•#,  ■ 


Li'l  Abner 


By  Al  Capp 


> 


-AT  TH'SECO»«>  SHOT,  TM'-tfeM/-DOGfWCK  BEAUTIES 

UNFORTCHI^UT  BACHELOR.  D«UG  BACK  CVER  TM 
V     UWE  BEFORE  SUNIX>A/M  — OOrrA  MARKV  UP 

^  VVHUT  PROG  HIM.''/- 


Si 


V  ^ 


!:•• 

•^1. 


CAROLEIDOSCOPE 

Duke  Bell  Thef P 
Almost  Foiled 

frank  Crowther 

The  two  ATO's  who  stole  the  Victory  Bell  Iroml 
Duke  last  Tuesday  moiaing  were  almost  foUed  ioi 
the  attenipt,  but  the  mghl  watchman  was  just  about 
five  seconds  too  late.  1 

After  their  airival  at  Ihc  Old  Gym,  John  Hartfsf 
was  pla>-ing  ladder  while  So  Woodhall  scrambled  up 
his  back  to  the  side  window.  ""l 

Just  as  Woodhall  reached  ami  put  one  lo»t  »* 
the  window,  the  nighi  watchman  came  around  the 
corner.  Needless  to  say.  blood  pressures  soared.   ^^ 

Harris,  showing  his  mettle,  started  staggering  Af ' 
if  he  were  drunk  and  had  slipped  iato  the  bushc«. 
The  watchman  put  his  light  on  him  and  asked  him 
what  he  was  doing  there.  ^      ,^5 

"W^hy  I  wuz  juss  paytn'  tha  rent,  ossifer,     re;^ 
plied  Harris. 

He  went  on  to  say  that  he   and  his  fraternity 
brother  had  some  of  their  pledges  in  the  area  and 
were  preparing  them   for   the   ceremonies   of   the 
coming  day— all  in  a  manner  which  implied  that  !».. 
was  slightly  "preserved."  .U' 

The  watchman  thought  that  v,?as  Capitol  sayiii& 
"Ha  Ha,  you  fraternity  boys  cerUiniy  have  fun, 
don't  you?  " 

He  would  have  thought  so,  had  he  heard  Wood-  . 
hall's  heart  beating  like  a  pile  driver.  .  .inside  the 
window,  laden  with  tools,  ten  feet  above. 
*  »■       ,        * 

When  Time  magazine  characterized  the  New 
York  Times  as  "caution's  good  grey  grandmother/' 
they  hit  the  mcUphor  right  in  the  bread  basket.        ' 

The  Times  is  one  of  the  few  remaining  papers 
'  which  won't  allow  itseif  to  be  badgered  or  harassed. 
They  remain  calm  and  collected  during  all  crises,  , 
and  never  vary  their  standard  headline  peiatage.. 
They  don't  stoop  to  rabble-rousing  or  scandal  sheet- 
ing; their  hired  help  contains  only  men  of  master-. 
f ul  news  sense  and  unchallenged  integrity. 

When  we  think  of  or  speak  of  'newspaptring"  at  . 
its  highest,  the  Times  is  first  in  mind.  It's  a  good 
yard  stick,  almost  never  varying  its  standards.      . 

I  for  one  always  tlirn  to  moderations  motherly 
meridian,  and  will  continue  to  do  so. 


OLEE  CLUB  TOW  >  -      r^ 

Men  Lost  Voices 
Over  Va.  Girls  ^ 

Ben  Taylor       *  'j 

Nine  days  have  passed;  and  the  GI«»  Club  haa 

vet  to  recover.  „    .    /-i^ 

In  the  course  of  four  days,  the  U^C  Men  s  Glee 
Club  traveled  over  tnost  of  eastern  Virginia.,  missed 
'four  meals,  veiled  themselves  hoarse  while  helping 
to  pull  Tatum's  men  to  victor>%  g«v^/«/-^5^j;": 
certs,  met  m^t  of  800  girls. at  Stratford  and  ^eet 
Briar  Colleges,  and  almost  lost  their  voices.  Other 
than  that,  it  was  a  quiet  weekend^  ..^^.^.e- 

Ah  twas  a  cheerful  «'^h<JhVthbugh.  Ai-fhe  Wr 
^A>liJ\tp  die  hill  and  down  inottver.  tl>e.>neii  COJ^ 
•pletelv  (Utilized  all  Christmas  carols-rehgious  and 
otherwise,  destroyed  most  of  Stephen  Fosters  works 
with  almost  no  effort,  concocted  a  repertoire  of  mus- 
ic more  varied  than  any  Ehns  ever  dreamed  of, 
threatened  to  evict  two  tenors,  provided  unceasing, 
backseat  driving,  even  sang  a  few  hymns-m  the^ 
own  style,  of  course,  and  thought  about  the  next 
meal  they  might  get. 

Wednesday  went  along  almost  too  smoothly^  With 
pep  and  energj-  unbounaed.  fifty-odd  men  boarded, 
the  two  buses  and  wcr.  ready  to  go.  (A^  a  certsdn 
Virginia  paper  said  later,  "fifty  odd  men,    with  the 
dash  conspicuously  absent.) 

Not  knowing  exactiv  what  to  expect,  the  group 
rolled  toward  DanvUIe.  Va.,  for  a  stop  at  Stratford* 
College,  -a  small  women's  college.  After  a  scrump- 
tous  meal  of  fried  chicken  and  potatoes,  we  were 
readv  for  the  concert.  - 

Naturally  the  concert  was  a  success.  A  certain 
friend  of  the  Glee  Club  said  she  couldn't  under- 
stand the  enthusiasm  exhibited  during  the  concert, 
but  then  again  she  wouldn't  understand.  .  .she  ^"««t 
to  Duke. 

Let  me  pause  here  to  say  that  no  one  ever  toid 
us  Carolina  Gentlemen  that  no  singing  group  should 
give  too  good  a  concert  before  a  sea  of  beautiful 
faces. 

Friday  morning  at  9  we  again  left  Chapel  Hill. 
That  is.  we  were  supposed  to  be  off  again.  It  seems 
that  Carolina  Trailways  decided  to  call  a  strike  the 
night  before  we  were  to  depart.  Good-naturedly  wc 
waited.  At  1 -.27  a  Queen  City  Trailways  bus  arrived 
from  Charlotte  to  pick  us  up. 

From  there  we  arrived  at  Charlottesville.  Va.  only 
a  few  hours  late.  Right  again— no  supper.  So  with 
belts  pulled  in  at  leagt  four  notches,  the  UNC  Glee 
Club  performed  admirably,  with  several  nunibers 
going  over  very  well,  especially  the  comedy  Colleg- 
ium Musicum  as  conducted  by  der  maestro  himself, 
James  Chamblee.  Except  for  a  two-months-old  baby 
in  the  third  rov  who  refused  to  even  smile,  Chamb- 
lee had  them  rolling  in  the  aisles.  The  two  Glee 
Clubs  performed  two  numbers  together,  as  well  as 
the  respective  alma  maters.  The  audience  wasn't 
tremendous,  but  evervone  seemed  to  enjoy  it. 

Wishin*  to  skip  details,  I  will  say  that  th«p 
were  parties  Saturday  night  attended  by  most  of  tie 
Glee  Club.  ' 

Sunday  morning  and  on  to  Sweet  Briar  College 
in  the  Virginia  foothills  Somebody  goofed  and  W5'. 
arrived  on  time.  Far  beyond  that,  we  were  able 
to  enjoy  a  free  meal. 

We  participated  in  chapel  ser/ices  at  the  Episco-' 
pal  school  in  the  morning  and  gave  a  full  concert 
Sunday  afternoon   at  3:00. 

After  a  brief  pause  at  Stratford  Sunday  night  the 
club  rolled  into  Chapel  Hill  around  midnight. 

Unable  to  muster  the  energy  to  serenade  tbc 
ladies  of  Smith  Dormitory,  fifty  tired  Tar  He?ls 
stumbled  to  their  dorms,  the  '>"<"  thought  un  their 

minds 

When  do  we  eat?" 


SATURDAl 


Co 


F0fl€U»l4 

Frequent 
the  Htferei 
for  the  nar 


AAo 
pis< 

"Psychial 
diet  outcoj 
tions." 


This  is 
instructor 
Dcpt..  hac 
meeting  01 
o^:ar>-   polif 
Thursday 

"AlexandJ 
icai   Scicnl 
of  a  panelj 
national 
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Prof.  Rot 
Political 

Prof.  n\ 
ed  on  the  I 
diction   ii 

Prof. 
Gordon  cl 
Icnger  ofj 
od  and  p( 

explain 
on, the  cl< 
He  said. 
pigychiatri| 
termine 
tion. 

Clevelai 
inconsistef 
Democrati 
then  vote( 
idential  I< 
Assoc;  at 
that  the  ]] 
American 
ket-book."-  ■ 
was  )n'  po^ 
prosperity 
office. 

Assistant 
plained    '  tl 
groups   an| 
factor  in , 
further!  e^ 
sjInboliKej 
father"  ai 
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men  volei 


Photo 


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195< 


SATURDAY,  NOVEMBEJI  17  1956 


THE  dbr  TAR  HEEL 


PAGE  THREI 


ill  fronil 
>ile<l  inJ 
»t  about 


Harris 
Iblcd  up 


^ 


3 


foot 
ind  the 
ired. 

luring  as 
iNishes. 
(cd  him 


tT, 


re- 


|aternity 
t»  and 
of  the 
that  he 

sajing, 
|vc   fun, 

Wood- 
bide  Uie 


le   New 
lother," 

tet. 

papers 

rasped. 

crises,  . 
NBtagc., 

sheet-. 
I  master-, 

ring '  at  , 
a  goo<i 

t-ds.    . ; 

lotherly 


:,-t 


f 

iub  has 

missed 

ped  cott' 
Swe*t 
OAer 

oos  and 
's  works 

of  mu8- 
d  of, 
Dceasins, 

in  their 
the  next 

ly.  With 
boarded, 
certaia 
with  the 

le  group 

Stratford' 

scrump- 

we  were 

certain 
"t  under- 
concert, 
.she  v-eitt 

ever  toid 
ip  should 
beautiiul 

ipel  HiH. 
It  seems 
trike  the 
redly  we 
i  arrived 

Va.  only 

So  with 
jSC  Glee 

nun»bers 
y  Collcg- 

hims^lf, 
rold  baby 

Chamb- 
two  Glee 

well  as 
wasn't 
it. 

aat  thu^ 
ost  of  ttoa 
I 

College 

and  we' 

rere   able 


il 


e  Episco-' 
concert 


night  the 
night. 

nadc  t'lc 
Far  He5ls 
<<n  thi'ir 


fp        Covering  The  Campus 


FOR€IOM  LANGUAGES  i  in  foreign  languages  to  translate 

Frtquentiy  requests  are  made  at  |  articles    needed    in   research.   The 

the  Reference  Desk  in  the  Library  i  requests   are   often  for  languages 

for  the  names  of  persons  proficient    other     than   French,   German     or 

\ —  i  Spanish.    Any  student  or    Chapel 

Hill  resident  interested  in  commer- 
cial translating  may  leave  his  name 
and  qualifications  at  the  Reference 
Desk. 


Br.  H^ard 

Moderates 

Discussion 

"Psychiatrists  are  neeaed  to  pre- 
dict outcomes  of  national  elec- 
tions." 

« 

This  is  what  Gordon  Cleveland, 

instructor  id  the  Political  Science 
Dept.,  had  to  say  at  the  regular 
meeting  of  Pi  Sigma  Alpha,  hon- 
ocary  political  science  fraternity, 
Thursday  night. 

"Alexander  Heard.  Prof,  oi  Polit- 
ical Science,  acted  as  moderator 
of  a  panel  discufsion  on  the  1956  i 
national  election  and  introduced ' 
other  members  of  the  panel.  The  , 
other  experts  on  the  panel  includ-  i 
ed  Cleveland,  Associate  Prof.  Fred-  \ 
eric  N.  Cleaveland  and  Assistant ' 
Prof.  Robert  E.  Agger,  all  of  the  j 
Political  Science  Dept. 


CHRISTIAN   CHURCN  CANVASS 

The  United  Congregational 
Church  will  have  its  annual  "Every 
Member  Canvass "  Sunday.  Mem- 
bers and  friends  will  be  given  the 
opportunity  to  subscribe  their  per- 
sonal pledges  to  the  goal  of  $15, 
000. 

WAA  TENNIS 

All  second  round  tennis  matches 
must  be  played  by  Monday  at  6 
p.   m. 

WUNC 

Following  is  a  listing  of  programs 
tousy  from  the  University's  FM 
radio  station: 

7:00  Paris  Star  Time 
7:30  This  Is  Jazz 
9:00  Horizons  In  Music 
10:00  News 

10:15  Evening  Masterwork 
11:30  Sign  Off 


BSU  Dedicates 
Center  Today 


The  Baptist  Student  Union  will 
dedicate  its  new  Student  Union 
Center  tomorrow  afternoon,  ac- 
cording to  Rev.  Jim  Cansler,  the 
student  minister. 

The  Center  is  at  151  East  Rose- 
mary Street.  This  property,  form- 
erly belonging  to  C  M.  Matthews, 
was  recently  acquired  by  the  Bap- 
tist Studfc>t  Convention. 


Prof.  Heard  got  the  panel  start- 
ed on  the  problem  of  accurate  pre- 
diction in   a  national  election. 

Prof.  Heard  then  introduced 
Gordon  Cleveland,  who,  as  a  chal- 
lenger of  Gallup's  polling  meth- 
od and  predictions,  was  forced  to 
explain  why  his  own  predictions 
on, the  election  did  not  come  true. 
He  said,  '"Only  a  large  battery  of 
pigychiatrists  could  be  able  to  de- 
termine the  outcome  of  an  elec- 
tion." 

Cleveland  explained  people  were  I      The  demttftion.  which  will  take 
inconsistent      when      they     voted    place  at  the  new  Center  at  3  p.m.. 
Democratic  on  the  local  level  and    will  be  followed  by  an  open  house 
then  voted  Republican  on  the  pres- ,  from  3:30  to  5  p.m. 
idential  level.  I      ...  .^ 

Associate  Prof.   Cleaveland   said  i      ^'''*'*^  ^''O"^  ^11  over  the  state 
that  the  1956  election  showed  the    "^,  «Pected.    Interested  students 
American  people  'voted  their  poc- !  ^"'l /3<^""y  members  have  been  in- 
ket-boote'*.  anjl'th^  no  nartv,  tliat  I .' '^^^^  to  conje. 
was  in*p(hv*r    Wifring .  vdoncAnic  1   I'ii^i^  'completed,     the 
prosperity  has  been  turned  out  of!  will    be    one    of   the    best 

'<^"^"-  ifjlvi."  -i 'I    ^^*^'    acording    to     Cansler.    Th4 

Assistant  Prof.  Robert  Agger  &x-    home  which  will  house  it  has  been 
pUined    'that     certain      minority  i,  renovated,   redecorated,  and  com- 
groups  and   women  were  a   large    pleted  furnished  for  iis«: 
factor  in. Eisenhower'^  victorv.  He '     .  ,  .i   •;      i 

further,  explained  that  Ike  was'  ^*  Student  Union  hopes  the 
s\TnbOlieed  as  "the  great  white  ^®"^*^  "^'^^  ^^  =»"  inspiration  for 
father"  and  Stevenson  was  not  ac- ■  fu^Jents  to  participate  in  BSU 
ceptable  to  a  great  number  of  wo-,  f»"<^t.ons  which  arc  active  through- 
men  voters  because  Of  his  divorce.  |  °"^  ^'^^  campus. 


Henderson's  Lecture 
Officially  Opens  Sha 
Exhibition  In  Library 


Here's  What  To  Wear  In  Big  City 
If  You  re  Going  Up  For  Holidays 


Center 
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DAILY    CROSSWORD 


ACROSS 

1.  Satiate 

.'t.  Wedfres  in 

9.  Article 

of  virtu 

10.  Winged 

12.  Field 

of  action 

]  3.  Renew  a 

worn  tire 

14.  Biblical  city 

15.  Finish 
17.  Wither 
IS.  Stitch 
20.  Light 

Mmrce 
22.  Odin'a 

brotker 
^a.  Prepare  for 

publication 
25.  Loyalists 

(Am.  Rev.) 

38.  Cijnningly 
vicioas 
horsea 

30.  Faith 

32.  A  gale 

35j  Farnt  animal 

39.  A  crank 
(«lanf> 

3<.  Sefore 
3t.  Troubles 
42.  Permit 

44.  Compass 
point  (abbr.) 

45.  SailinC 
vessel 

47.  Wanderar 
4#.  Trend 

50.  Slitc- 
colored 

51.  Refuse 
tdfrant 

82.  Oftrder 

1.  TiiMiMtd 

W 


2.  Anger 

3.  Cord 

,  4.  Moneys  out 
at  interest 

5.  Jolt 

C.  Malt 
beverages 

7.  Spice 

8.  Perish 
through 
hunger 

9.  Reason 
11.  Fencer's 

foils 
K.  Obedient 
1».  Wish 
21.  Not 

(preAx) 


24.  Group 
of 
Bur- 


aH        (TED      JQIi 


mese 

tribes 
M.  Steal 
27.  Small 

istaMd 

29.  Lair 

30.  Brag 

31.  Ban- 
ished TMtctdar'a  Aa«w«v 

33.  Adorned  41.  Presently 

elaborately     43.  Narrated 


tf.Af^'j    Jin:-:.-: 


34.  Scraggy 

reoHoq.) 
37.  Taut 
40.  Solitary 


4«.  Lever 

tS.  Diminutive 

for 

Margaret 


A  major  library  exhibition  from 
the  Library's  Shaw  Collection  was 
officially  opened  Thursday  night 
at  a  reception  following  a  public 
lecture  by  Dr.  Archibald  Hender- 
son on  '"George  Bernard  Shaw — 
Man  of  tlie  Century." 

The  occasion  was  in  observance 
of  the  publication  date  of  Dr.  Hen- 
derson's new  culminating  biog- 
raphy of  Shaw  and  a  part  of  the 
University's  centennial  celebration 
of  the  jear  of  Shaw's  birth. 

The  exhibition  is  selected  from 
materials  on  Shaw  collected  by 
Dr.  Henderson  over  a  period  of 
50  years.  He  began  turning  them 
over  to  the  UNC  Library  in  1948. 
until  now  the  University  Library 
has  the  greatest  collection  of  Shaw 
in  the  world. 

The  unique  relationship  that 
existed  between  these  two  men 
is  evident  in  the  library  exhibition. 

The  letter  in  which  Shaw  pro- 
claimed Henderson  as  the  first 
person  to  put  him  together  as  a 
whole  person  is  shown.  There  are 
also  the  letters,  notes  and  anotat- 
ed  books  that  passed  between  them 
in  their  half-century  of  acquaint- 
ance. 

Since  1904  Dr.  Henderson  re- 
garded everything  "Shavian"  as  a 
"collettor's  item."  This  lead  to  his 
collection  of  posters,  playbills, 
clippings  and  materials  covering 
€v«T  phase  of  Shaw's  life  and 
work. 

Many  of  these  rare  and  unpro- 
curable items  are  shown.  Also  in- 
cluded are  numerous  pictures  of 
Shaw  and  Dr.  Henderson  togeth- 
er. 

Of  special  interest  is  a  letter 
written  to  Shaw  by  the  editor  of 


the  1930  Yackety-Yack,  explaini 
that  the  yearbook  was  to  be  d 
cated  .to    Dr.   Henderson   and 
questing    him    to    write    the   de( 
cation.  To  this  Shaw  replied 
the  University  of  North  Caroli 
hardly  known  outside  the  state 
the    nineteenth    century,   achiev 
a  European  vogue  in  the  twentiet 
through      Archibald      Henderson' 
activity  as  a  specialist  in  moder 
dramaturgy,  and  incidently  as  m 
friend  and   biographer.  I   embrac 
the   opportunity   of   which   I   hav 
been    honored    of    dedicating    th 
1930  Yackety-Yack   to   him." 

Dr.  Henderson  made  his  fam-j 
ous  collection  over  a  period  of  50 
years  and  began  turning  it  over 
to  the  UNC  Library  in  1948. 

The  exhibition  was  prepared  by 
Miss  Lucile  Kelling.  Curator  of 
the  Shaw  CQllection.  and  Mrs.  My- 
ra  Lauterer.  Preparator  of  Exhi- 
bitions. It  will  continue  through 
Dec.  31. 


Harvard  Dean  Of  Arts 
And  Sciences  Here  Mon. 

Dr.  J.  P.  Elder,  Dean  of  the 
Graduate  School  of  Arts  and 
Sciences  of  Harvard  University, 
will  be  in  Chapel  Hill  on  Monday. 
He  wishcis  to  talk  with  anyone  who 
nnjqjr  .qohsider  taking  graduate 
work  in  Arts  and  Sciences  at  Har- 
vard. 

He  will  be  available  from  9:30 
a.m.  to  12:30  p.m.  and  2:30  to  4 
p.m.  at  204  South  Building.  Those 
who  are  interested  in  seeing  Dean 
Elder  should  arrange  appointments 
by  calling  Dean  A.  K.  King's  sec- 
retary, number  6431. 


DORMS 

(Continued  from  page  1.) 

Peay  and  Spencer  Graduate  Coun- 
sellor Liz  Barnes  poured  coffee 
while  Misses  Arnold  Garvin  and 
Jane  Hammond  served  at  the  buf- 
fet. 

Miss  Sarah  Cannon,  dorm  trea- 
surer, supervised  the  place  set- 
tings. 

For  entertainment  at  the  dorms 
fall  social.  Hope  Sparger,  accom- 
painod  by  Miss  Nansetta  Hudson, 
and  Jimmy  Rogers,  accompained  by 
Jinruny  Hunter,  presented  a  pro- 
gram of  vocal  music  from  top 
Broadway  shows. 

Carrying  out  an  autumn  theme, 
the  hall  was  decorated  with  fall 
flowers,  leaves  and  arrangements 
of  fruit. 

Miss  Patsy  Smith,  social  chair- 
man, was  in  charge  of  the  arrange- 
ments for  the  supper. 


By  PEG  HUMPHREY 

Envisioning  a  gala  whirl  of  New 
York  City  over  the  Thanksgiving 
holidays? 

Packing  and  planning  for  a  city 
.acation  can  be  exciting  and  prove 
jleasantly  rewarding  with  a  little 
bought  and  imagination. 

Among  other  things.  New  York 

)oasti  a  variable  climate  and  an 

abundance  of  soot.  For  this  reason 

•ity  dwellers  cherish  dark  sheaths 

jind  clothes  that  don't  cringe  un- 

|ler  a  sudden   torrent  of  rain  and 

hat    can    withstand    the    pace    of 

raveling  around  many  hours. 

Time  is  precious  to  a  vatationer, 

0  fashions  that  don't  require  ten- 

er  loving  care  are  called  for.  Ac- 

.lally  just  a  couple  of  dark  dress- 

s  with  various  changes  of  jewel- 

\',  bags,  scarves,  etc.  can  see  the 

•vciage  person  through  the  activi- 

es  of  a  short  city  whirl. 

Simple    gold     button     earrings, 

(ark     gloves  and  a  large     roomy 

landbag  are  the  perfect  spark  for 

shopping  excursion  or  day  time 

•ghtseeing.  Tfie  wonders  of  a  trim 

;;te  bag  are  limitless. 

In   it   can   be  tucked    a   change 

E  shoes,  dressy  jewelry  for  even- 

g  wear,  extra  hose,  and  spaik- 

g  white    dinner  gloves  as  well 

small   purchases. 

ENING  TRANSFORMATIONS 

\    bejewelled  evening    sweater 

work  miracles  for  that  plain 

ath  worn  during  the  day   and 

so  eyes  to  turn  at  the  theatre. 

theatre  friends  dress  to  the 

t    and   this    year    ankle-length 

sfcrts   may   be   seen,   but    the   im- 

MTtant  thing  is  to  be  polished  and 

trim 


Comfortable  shoes  are  an  abso-  Allan  Poe,  Mark  Twain,  Willa  Cat- 
lute  necessity.  For  daytime  wear  I  her.  Eugene  O'Neill  and  other  per- 
New   Yorkers  are  seldom  seen  in    sons  of  note. 


English  Dept.  Fetes  ;   „,. 
Grad  StMdents  In  GM 

The  Englifi^h;  faculty  ^nd"  Wivei 
ente^;'tiinedthe  graduate  stude'ri^s 
at  a  tea  in  the  main  lounge  of 
Graham    Memorial  yesterday. 

The  social  gathering  offered  an 
opportunity  for  the  faculty,  and 
graduate  students  to  become  more 
closely  acquainted,  and  to  discuss 
topics  of  interest  to  English  stu- 
dents. 

A  large  crowd  attended. 


three  inch  heels  although  many  do 
appear  in  them  after  six.  Flats, 
however,  are  taboo  unless  you  are 
simply  window  shopping  around 
Greenwich  Village. 

INEXPENSIVE  ENTERTAINMENT 

Many  visitors  to  the  city  return 
with  merely  a  vision  of  bright 
lighti  and  exorbitant  prices,  but 
fun  can  be  had  and  the  flavor  of 
the  city  tasted  without  spending  a 
great  deal  of  money. 

For  instance,  off-Broadway 
shows  offer  lower  prices  as  well 
as  top  flight  entertainment.  The 
Three  Fenny  Opera  has  been  laud- 
ed by"  the  top  drama  critics  as 
has  been  "The  Iceman  Cometh,"  the 
Phoenic  Theatre  productions  and 
the  Cherry  Lane  Theatre  shows. 
The  Amato  Opera  down  in  the  Vil- 
lage offers  operatic  entertainment 
and  charges  no  admission. 

For  coffee  connoisseurs,  flavors 
from  all  countries  can  be  sampled 
at  the  various  espresso  houses,  the 
most  colorful  of  which  are  located 
in  Greenwich  Village. 

TOUR  GREENWICH  VILLAGE 

The  Greenwich  Village  Guide 
available  at  all  Village  newsstands 
will  prove  Lnvaluable  for  dealing 
with  the  many  tangle  of  little 
streets  that  befuddle  the  most  able 
of  travelers  and  cab  drivers  alike. 

It  contains  data  on  the  homes 
once  inhabited  by  Henry  James,  O. 
Henry,   The^odore    Dreiser,    EJdgar 


And  it  will  tell  you 
that  e.  e.  cummings  still  lives  at 
9  Patehin  Place  and  Tom  Pain*% 
old  iiome  is  now  Marie's  Crisis,  a 
tiny  little  night  spot  where  a  boun- 
cy Negress  will  play  any  request 
on  her  piano  and  sometimes  sing. 

Eighth  Street  is  a  trap  for  trou- 
ists  in  the  Village.  The  down  town 
set  perfers  hangouts  such  as  the 
White  Horse,  a  spot  favored  by  Dy- 
lan Tltomas,  Julius',  which  is  fa- 
mous for  its  hamburgers  and  saw 
dust  on  the  floor,  and  for  dinner 
and  cocktails,  Chumleys  at  86  Bed- 
ford Street  which  refuses  to  hang 
a  sign  and  therefore  is  frequented 
only  by  those  in  the  neighborhood. 


Theta  Ch\  Pledge  Class 

Wcks  Executive  Officers 

...        ~.  ,  -    '^  ' 

'  Th*  Pledge  <nass  oi  Theta  Ghi 
recently  elected  their  executive 
officrs.  Those  elected  were'K(«er 
Brehm  of  Newhall,  Iowa;  presi- 
dent: Jim  Hudson  of  Jefferson, 
vice-president;  Bill  Chears  of  Dan- 
\ine,  Va..  secretary  and  Ken  Brim- 
mer of  Charlotte,  treasurer. 


Wondarful     Wonderful 

CHRISTMAS    CARDS 
40  for  $1.00 

at 

THE  INTIMATE 
BOOKSHOP 

205  E.  Franklin  St. 
Open  Till  10  P.M. 


By  appointment  punwyors  of  soap  to  tin  lat«  King  George  VI,  Yardley  &  Co.,  Ltd.,  lonOM 


Moon  Eclipse  Will  Be 
Visible  Here  Tonight 

For  the  benefit  of  night  owls  the  earth  by  the  earth's  atmos- 
and  feathered  owls  who  will  be  j  phere.  Thus,  the  blue  light  is  fil- 
awake  midnight  tonight  and  early  tered  out.  and  only  the  red  comes 
Sunday,  the  Morehead  Planetar- 1  through  to  give  the  moon  a  cop- 
ium    yesterday    enlightened    them  j  per  color. 


Naval  Frosh 
To  Hold  Annual 
Dance  Dec.  1 

Tie  freshmen  of  the  UNC  Naval 
Reserve  Officers  Training  Corps 
unit  will  hold  their  annual  Mid- 
shipmen's Ball  Saturday,  Dec.  1, 
from!  8-12cOO  p.m.  in  the  Naval 
Armory.     " 

Music  will  be  furnished  by 
Bruno  Basso,  and  his  orchestra. 
Drwss  for  the  occasion  will  be 
formal  attire,  with  the  midshipmen 
wearing  dress  blue  uniforms. 

An  appropriate  theme.  "Four 
Corners  of  the  Earth."  has  been 
selected,  and  it  is  being  developed 
by  a  committee  of  midshipmen. 

Many  of  the  midshipmen  are 
escorting  young  ladies  St.  Mary's, 
Woman's  College,  Meredith,  and 
Duke,  in  addition  to  coeds  from 
VyiC.  A  total  attendance  of  150 
couples  is  expected. 

Miss  Katherine  Taylor,  dean  of 
Woman's  College,  has  arranged  for 
bus  transportation  to  be  available 
to  guests  coming  from  WC. 

Assistant  Dean  of  Student  Af- 
fairs Ray  Jefferies  has  announced 
midshipmen  will  be  allowed  to 
have  cars  on  the  campus  for  the 
weekend    of  the   dance. 


GMAB  Dance  To  Feature 
Don  Jefferson's  Combo 

Don  Jefferson  and  "The  Caro- 
linians" combo  will  be  the  feat- 
ured entertainers  for  a  dance  to 
be  held  in  the  Rendez-Vpus  Room 
from  8-11  p.m.  today. 

Spon.sored  by  Graham  Memor- 
ial Activities  Board,  the  dance  is 
offered  admission-free  to  the  UNC 
campus. 


SEE 

George  Bernard 
Shaw:  Man  of 
.  the  Century 

By  U.N.C/s  Own 

Archibald 
Henderson 

at 

THE  INTIAAATE 
BOOKSHOP 

205    E.   Franklin   St. 
OPEN   TILL   10   P^. 


II 


a 


Yardley^After  Shaving  Lotion 

tops  off  aAy  shave,  electric  or  latlier! 


•1. 


>■»  'n> 


*  sobHies,  refreshes  Hie  skin  . 

*  helps  heal:  razor  nicks      'j;.-'.' 

*  counte^acS^ryness  '*  >    ^'''' 
''*  gives  brisk,  masculine,  non-lingering  scent 

Starts  you  9tl  vS/Ji^KOC''  ^^^  'oce  forward! 

At  your  campui^ere,  $1.10  and  $1.50,  plus  toK 

Vtrdley  products  for  America  »re  cre»t|()  in  Englarnl  and  firHshed  in  the  U.S.A.  from  the  oiigirwf  Eriflisk 
lormulae.  con*mint  imported  and  dJraastic  in|r«lnnts.  Yardfey  of  Lo.idon.  Inc.  6?0  Fifth  Avp.  NYC 
# — ■ 


YAROLEY  PRODUCTS  AVAILABLE 

•  '  ^  ,      ft 

SUnON'l  DRUG  STORE 


about  the  eclipse     of     the   moon 
whidi  they'll  see. 

The  moon  will  enter  the  shadow 
of  the  earth  at  11  p.m.  tonight. 
Technically  speaking,  however, 
the  eclipse  will  not  begin  till  the 
moon  begins  to  enter  the  dark 
center  part  of  the  shadow  at  12:03 
a.m.  Sunday. 

Totality  will  occur  at  1:48  a.m.. 
and  then  the  moon  will  begin  leav- 
ing (he  shadow.  It  will  be  all  over 
at  4:35   a.m. 

"Normally  the  moon  does  not| 
disappear  from  full  view  during ' 
an  eclipse."  Planetarium  Manager 
A.  F.  Jenzano  said.  "It  is  usually 
oljserved  as  a  dark  copper  color- 
ed disc,  and  that  appearance  var- 
ies with  eclipses." 

The  reason  for  the  copper  col- 
or is  explained  in  the  current 
demonstration  "Mister  Moon"  at 
the  Planetarium  on  the  campus 
here.  The  sunlight  is  bent  around 


Mmm(Simm...im(iOmdl 


REPUBLIC 
JET  TEST  PHOT 

is  a  15-year  Camel  smoker.  He  says: 
"Cigarettes  were  pretty  much  alike  to 
me  till  I  started  smoking  Camels 
back  in  college.  When  it  comes  to 
real  smoking,  fere's  nothing  like  Camels." 


Delta  Siqma  Pi  Makes 
Tour  Of  Machine  Plant 

Thirty  five  members  of  the  Al- 
pha Lambda  Chapter  of  Delta  Sig- 
ma Pi,  international  'professional 
business  fraternity,  made  «•  tour 
Friday  afternoon  of  the  Wright 
Machinery  Co..  in   Durham. 

Wright  Machinery  Co.  special- 
izes in  the  manufacturing  of  pre- 
cision machines  used  a  great  deal 
by  the  federal  government.  The 
tour  of  the  plant  consisted  ,of  ob- 
sen'itions  of  the  production  of 
these  intricate  machines  as  well  as 
a  d^monstration  of  the  operating 
product.  A  discussion  period  fol- 
lowed the  tour  wttb  top  exaputi^s 
of  the  company  on  hand  to  answer 
the  many  and  varied  questions. 

Tours  of  this  kind  are  part  of 
the  (rafemity'j  profeisional  pro- 
gram and  are  taken  once  a  month. 


^<.,x     .X<J^''««'>»***■ 


Discover  the  difference  between  "just  smoking"  and  Camelsl 


B  J  Raynoldi  Teb.  Co.   Wlii«tQii-3«l»o.  M  C. 


You'll  find  Camels  taste  richer,  fuller,  more 
deeply  satisfying.  The  exclusive  Camel  blend 
of  quality  tobaccos  brings  you  smooth  smoking. 
You're  sure  to  enjoy  Camels,  the  most 
popular  cigarette  today.  They've  really  got  it! 


N 


II 


PAGE  FOUR 


THE  DAIl  TAR  HEEL 


SATURDAY,  NOVEMBER  17  195« 


Soccer  Men  Meet  Maryland  \Caroli 
Today:  Cross  Country  Team 
In  Conference  Meet  Monday 


Meet  1$  Top  One 
For  Soccer  Team 


Tar  Baby 
Soccermen 
Top  Duke 


Beatty  Aiter  Third 
Conference  Crown 

All- American  Jimmy  Beatty  and  his  Tar 
TIeel  team  mates  go  after  another  ACC  Cross 
Country  Championship  xMonday  at  Char- 
lottesville, Va. 

Beatty  set  a  new  record  last  Monday  in 
the  North  Carolina  Ooss  Country  Champ- 
ionships in  Raleigh.  T^ie  5-4  senior  won  the 
state  title  with  a  blistering  time  ot  20.06  for 
♦  the  4-inile  course  and  lead  the  Tar 
Heels  to  the  team  championship. 


The  freshman  soccer  team 
brought  Its  season  to  a  successful 
close  by  downing  the  Blue  Imps 
of  Duke  in  Durham  Friday. 

The  final  score,  2-0,  tells  only 
half' the  story,  as  the  Dukes  were 
not  only  held  scoreless,  but  they 
were  denied  a  shot  of  less  than  20 
yards  throughout  the  entire  game. 

Carolina  dominated  the  offensive 
play  as  well,  keeping  the  ball  in 
Ihike  territory .  for  most  of  the 
contest. 

Center     forward   John     Ghanin 
scored  both  of  the  Carolina  goals 
and  was  far  and  away  the  outstand-  j  scale  workout,  and  ^^ey  have  con- 
ing man  on  the  field.  Among  the  I  tinued  to  work  hard«  jU  this  week. 


The  Tar  Heels  were  heavily 
favored  to  take  the  State  title,  but 
it  will  not  be  so  at  Charlottesville. 
Maryland,  the  defending  champion, 
is  the  only  team  that  has  beaten 
Coach  Dale  Ranson's  harriers  this 
year.  The  Terp  harriers  overpow- 
ered the  Tar  Heels,  26-37,  early 
in  the  season. 

The  Tar  Heels  have  improved 
since  their  Maryland  defeat.  The 
times  of  several  of  the  runners 
have  been  lowered,  and  in  the 
last  three  meets  the  squad  has  run 
as  a  team,  with  everyone  finishing 
close  together,  according  to  Han- 
son. 

Coach  Ranson  stated  earlier  this 
week,  "The  reason  the  team  has 
improved  is  just  plain  hard  work." 
After  the  State  Championship,  in- 
stead of  taking  the  usual  day  off, 
the    squad    went    through    a    full 


COLLEGE  PARK,  Md.— Carolina's  vars- 
ity soccer  team,  not  yet  fully  recovered  from 

crippling  losses  to  V'irginia  and  Duke,  will 

face   its    toughest   opposition  of   the   season 

when  it  takes  on  the  Maryland  Terps  at  10 

a.m.  today  in  College  Park. 

Carolina  lost  last  year  to  the  Terps  in  a 

3-0  shutout  in  Chapel  Hill.  Revenge  for  the 

Tar  Heels  will  be  even  more  diffi-* 

cult  as  they  must  face  the  Terps 

on  Maryland's  home  grounds. 
Carolina  has   lost   two  straight 

games,  both    by    shutouts.    Their 

first  loss  was  to  the  Virginia  Cav- 
aliers who  defeated  them  2-0  in 

Chapel    Hill.    Duke   defeated   the 

Tar  Heels  next     in     Durham     by 

blanking  the  Tar  Heels,  3-0. 
In   order   to  even   stay  on  the 

field   with    the    Terps,   Carolina's 

forward  line  will  have  to  show  im- 
provement over  its  showing  in  the 

last  two  games,  and  the  defensive 

wall  will  have  to  be  particularly 

effective,    according   to  Tar   Heel 

Coach  Margin  Allen. 
Today's   game    marks    the  final 

contest  in  which  several  UNC  vet- 
erans  will   participate,   and  their 

loss  will  be  greatly  felt  on  next 
year's  team. 

Coach  Allen's  top-rate  goalie. 
Chuck  Hartman,  wiU  be  playing 
his  last  game.  Hart.nan  is  having 
one  of  his  best  seasons  in  the  nets 
and  his  sparkling  play  in  the  Vir- 
ginia and  Duke  contests  sav^d 
Carolina  from  losing  by  even 
wider  margins. 

Also  on  defense.  Allen  will  lose 
two  hustling  fullbacks,  Mike  Ga- 
lifianakis  and  Ted  Jones.  This 
year  marks  Galifianakis'  last  year 
of  eligibility  for  conference  play 
while  Jones  will  enter  the  law 
school  next  year. 

On  the  fanvirA  line,  the  Mary- 
land game  marks  the  final  con- 
test for  Captain  Grover  Brown  at 
center  forward,  right  wins  Pat 
McCprmick.  and  left  wing  Charlie 
6;^€T.'    '       .!''./.,"' 

Th*  team's  current  record  is  foiir 

wins  ah^  two  losses.  In  order  to 

toprbve  oh  last  year's  fetord  (4-2- 

i)  the  Mjtryiand  g^me  presehts  a 

'*wt*tat"   toM.  tliA,  VskT-  R^alib^ ' 

,111101       ivr.   Ml*--    *^n    ««^^*^* 

Maryland,  the  Atlantic  Coast  Con-         By  HUGH  FULLERTON  JR.        meets  Alabama,  a  two-game 
fcfepce  champion  last  year,  is  uti-     *1    fllj^^  jA^j4h«j»^rp^.  '        ih^r   this  ;s^sisdn  fhiqhj  Shouldn't 
l,^AWinco.Vfe.renceplaythissea-  .1^;    ;^^^^^^^^  ;    J  Wjk^  m.di  trp^^^^^ 

soil  and    s  fayore4  to  4»«^  ^«  fo^ball  coaches  seem  to  indicate  T^^*'^''''*^^  ''^^^'"^  ^°'"  ^^^  ^"*^' 
Carolinians        '  V        "'     '      "'"/>*^,'  "^^^^J^s  seem  ip  «naicaie  ^.^^^^^^       ^  ^  .     jj  .j^j 

vaxviii^iiiua.  ........      that    mnst    flf    tnrtav  .s    hiP     eam(>«  !  ,       ^.      ^  .         ^      .       .  _.. 

for  the  Cotton  Bowl,  takes  on  Rice, 
'  next-to-last    in    its    league.    Te.yas 
;  Christian  and  Southern  Methodist, 
leading     bowl  candidates  in     th^ 
I  Southwest,  play  Texas  and  Arkan- 
sas, respectively. 

The  other  top  10  teams  playing 
I  today,  Syracuse  9  and  Michigan 
,  10  could  run  into  trouble  against 
i  Colgate  and  Indiana.  Pass-minded 
I  Colgate,  virith  versatile  Guy  Mar- 
tin throwing,  might  even  knock 
SjTacuse  off  the  top  of  the  Eastern 


Top  Shape  for  Tilt 


other  hooters  who  performed  well 
for  the  Tar  Babies  were  Curt 
Champlin.  Bill  Stem  and  Hugh 
Goodman. 

Coach  John  Wienants  was  well 
pleased  with  his  charge's  perform- 
ance, which  brought  the  season's 
record  to  3  wins  over  2  losses. 

The  Blue  Imps  had  previously 
defeated  the  Tar  Babies  here. 
Roiinding  out  the,  won-lost  column 
are  two  wins  and  a  loss  to  the 
Woifiets  of  State  College. 


he  said. 

Ranson  feel3  the  Tar  Heels  real- 
ly want  the  conference  crown. 

Going  after  the  crown  besides 
Beatty  will  be  Everett  Whatley, 
Dave  Scurlock,  Ben  Williams,  How- 
ard Kahn,  John  Reaves,  Marion 
Griffin,  Perrin  Henderson,  Doug 
Henderson,  and  Alex   Coffin. 

Monday's  meet  will  be  the  last 
for  the  1996  season.      .       . 


I 


Tennessee,  Oklahoma 
favored  in  Td)s»  Gdmies 


irouijians.  ,       ,-.,•;    •      that   most   of   today's    big    games 

The     Carolina     Vwters     went  ^,jj^  be  played  by  teams  so  crip- 


through  a  sh<»t  practice  session 
yesterday  after  their  arrival  in 
College  Park. 


MURALS 


YestM-day's  Tag  Fotb»ll  Results 
3:45:  Mangum-2  defeated  Everett 
3,   140;   Manley  defeated  SUcy-2.   up  J ust  two  points  ahead  of  Okla 


pled  it  will  be  hard  for  them  to 

I  field     eleven  sound  players.     But 

j  you  don't   hear  any   such  sounds 

I  from     Tennessee  and     Oklahoma, 

the  teams  fighting  it  out  for  the 

top  ranking. 

The  sound  condition  of  those 
squads  portends  no  good  for  Mis- 
pssippi  and  Missouri,  the  teams 
they  face  today.  Tennessee  wound 


24«;  Law  School-1  defeated  Victory 
Village  22-0;  Joyner  won  by  for- 
fit  over  Grimes-2;  Cobb-1  won  by 
forfit  over  Mangum-1. 

4:45:  BVP  won  by  forfit  over 
Alexander;  Dental  School  won  by 
forfix  over  Aycock;  Graliam  won 
by  forfit  over  Medical  School;  Zeta 
Psi  defeated  Phi  Gam  (W).  27-0. 
YMt«r4ay'k  V«ll«yb«ll  RmuIIs 
4:00:  PTKA  woo  by  forfit  over 
Chi  Phil  (W);  DKE  (W)  defeated 
Chi  Psi-2,  2-0;  Zeta  Psi-1  de- 
feated ATO,  2-0.  5:00  Chi  Psi 
won  by  forfit  over  Chi  Phi-2  (W); 
Alexander-l  defeated  Joyner,  2-0. 

Olympic  Teams  That 
Withdrew  Are  Blasted 

By  WILL  GRIMSLiY 

MEliBOURNE,  Nov.  16  if)  — 
Avery  Brundage,  militant  presi- 
dent of  the  International  Olympic 
Committe  IOC,  came  to  Mel- 
bourne tonight  with  praise  for 
Olympic  preparations  and  a  sharp 
blast  at  countries  which  pulled  out 
of  the  games. 

He  also  said  he  doubted  there 
would  be  any  successftU  protests 
against  aggressor  nations,  such  as 
RiiS3ia,  because  "the  Olympic 
Games  belong  to  the  people.  They 
are  contests  for  individuals  and 
oot  of  nations." 

Brundage  said  he  had  heard  ru- 
mors of  possible  protests  but  none 
had  come  (rfficially  to  his  atten- 
tion. SupptxtfiTs  of  Hungai-y  were 
repwted  ready  to  ask  the  IOC  to 
bar  Russia  from  the  games  be- 
cause of  military  intercession  in 
Hungary.     ^  | 

Brundage  said  :  Every  civilized  , 
penson  should  be  appalled  by  the 
savage  slaughter  in  Hungary,  but : 
tiiat  is  no  reason  to  destroy  the  \ 
nucleus  of  the  good  will  of  this  I 
great  festival." { 


homa.    the  former  leader,  in  this   independent  list  »f  Pittsburgh  can 

weeks  balloting  of  sports  writers  1  ,.(>n  over  Army  in  another  big  one 

and  broadcasters  m  the  Associated   in  tjjis  group 

Press  ranking  poll.     Both     teams ' 

obviously  will  be  out  to  make  im- !     On  the  Pacific  COast,  Rose  Bowl 

pressive  showings  to  improve  their  1  eligible  Oregon   Stale   figures   to 


places  in  this  duel. 

Mississippi  has  the  best  deifen- 
sive  record  —  in  statistics  —  of 
any  major  college  team,  but  off 
its  losses  to  Tulane  and  Arkansas, 
Ole  Miss  hardly  looks  strong 
enough  to  stop  Tennessee's  John- ', 
ny  Majors  &  Co.  Mississippi  still 
is  in  the  running  for  a  bowl  invi- 
tation. 

Missouri  hasn't  won  a  game  on 
Oklahoma's  Owen  Field  in  20  years  ] 
and,  even  with  the  upset  iiycentive 
of  Don  Faurot's  last  game  as  Coach 
against  the  Sooucts,  the  Missouri 
team  that  has  lost  four  games  and ! 
tied  one  hardly  seems  to  have  the 
stuff  to  stop  mighty  Oklahoma. 

On  the  other  side  of  the  injury  j 
picture  there's  third-ranked  Mich-! 
igan  State,  which  faces  Minnesota 
with  three  of  its  top-line  players 
sidelined  for  the  season  and  three 
more  who  may  not  play  today.       | 

This  is  one  of  two  "must"  games 
in  the  struggle  for  the  Big  Ten  i 
championship  and  Rose  Bowl  bid 
— which  aren't  necessarily  the ! 
same.  The  other  brings  together 
Ohio  State  and  Iowa,  currently 
rated  sixth  and  seventh  nationally. 

TTie  Big  Ten  standings  show 
Ohio  in  front  with  four  victories 
and  no  losses.  Michigan  State  and 
Iowa,  each  4-1,  are  tied  for  second 
with  Minnesota  3-1-1  right  be- 
hind. Defending  champion  Ohio 
State  is  ineligible  for  the  Rose 
Bowl  because  of  probation  and 
.^tlichigan  State  because  it  went 
there  last  January.  Iowa  and  Min- 
nesota are  eligible,  which  may 
add  a  little  to  their  desire. 

Fourth-rated  Georgia    lech,  also 
very    much   in    the    bowl    picture. 


edge  ahead  o*  non-eligible  UCLA 
at  Idaho's  expense.  UCLA  has  an 
interseclional  tUt  with  Kansas. 


(Continued  from  page  1.) 

this  season.  Only  three  lettermen 
starters  were  on  hand  for  the  open- 
ing kickoff  this  season,  and  Coach 
Terry  Brennan  has  been  forced 
to  go  with  young  sophomores  for 
the  most  part 

Carolina  is  in  top  physical  shape 
but  the  Fighting  Irish  have  several 
key  men  either  slowed  down  or 
sidelined  by  injuries.  Fullback 
Dean  Studer  definitely  will  sit  out 
the  game,  while  four  others  may 
see  limited  action.  These  include 
guard  Bob  Gaydos,  ends  Dick  Pen- 
dergast  and  Gary  Myers  and  full- 
back Chuck  Lima.  Pendergast  and 
Gaydos  were  dependable  perform- 
ers who  had  been  slated  for  heavy 
duty. 

The  Notre  Dame  starting  back- 
field  is  still  uncertain,  depending 


TAB  HUNTER 

(Tbt  boy  with  t.^e  )><rr»cks  big!) 

natalieWOOD 

(Tht  |irl  with  tttt  overnisbi  case!) 


State  Men 
Plan  Meet 
On  NCAA  C(^se 

RALEIGH.  MS  —  Representidves 
of  N.  C.  State  College  p  an 
to  confer  with  an  NCAA  aficial 
over  the  weekend  to  try  to  Ifarn 
the  nature  of  the  evidence  that 
resulted  in  State  being  plaot  on 
probaion  for  four  years. 

Dr.  Carey  H.  Bostian.  Stati  Col- 
lege Chancellor,  announced  this 
yesterday  after  he  had  conferred 
wi'.h  President  William  C.  f>iday 
of  the  Consolidated  University  of 
Norlhi  Carolina,  of  which  State 
CSirege  is  a  unit,  and  Atjaniic 
Coast  Conference  Convnlsiioner 
Jim  Weaver. 

The  NCAA  couhdl  announced 
Tuesday  it  was  placing  State  Col- 
lege on  probation  for  four  years 
in.  the  recruiting  on  Jackie  .More- 
land,  IS-year-pld  basketball  ^lar  ot 
Minden,  La.,  who  bad  been  sought 
after  by  a  score  of  colleges.  . 

The  NCAA  charged  that  State 
had  offered  eash  inducements  and 
a  5-ycar  unrestricted  scholarship 
to  a  student-athlete  prospect.  The 
prospect  was  later  identified  as 
Moreland.  In  addition,  the  NCAA 
charged  that  a  7-ycar  scholai-ship 
was  offered  to  a  friend  of  More- 
land.  Reports  identified  the  friend 
as  Betty  Clara  Rhea,  Moreland's 
girl  friend,  a  student  at  Centenary 
College  in  Louisiana. 

Dr.  Bostian  said  it  was  decided 
today  that  representatives  of  the 
college  and  the  Consolidated  Uni- 
versity will  go  to  Kansas  City  over 
the  weekend  to  confer  with  Walter 
Byers,  executive  director  of  the 
NCAA,  regarding  the  case. 

Asked  if  the  State  and  UNC 
representatives  would  seek  the  evi- 
dence on  which  the  NCAA  acted, 
Bostian  said,  "We  want  to  go  over 
ever>thing  with  Mr.  Byers  that 
they  have." 


on  whether  or  not  AIl-American 
Paul  Hornung  gets  the  call  at 
quarterback  or  fullback.  Hornung 
won  his  spurs  as  a  quarterback 
last  year,  but  played  most  of  the 
first  quarter  against  Pitt  last  Sa- 
turday at  the  line  plunging  post. 

Coach  Terry  Brennan  indicated 
earlier  in  the  week  that  Hornung 
would  probably  start  at  fullback, 
but  Tnursday  he  was  working  the 
versatile  Hornung  at  his  old  slot. 

If  Hornung  starts  at  quarterback 
his  running  mates  will  be  Aubrey 
Lewis  and  Bobby  -Ward  at  half- 
backs, and  Jim  Just  at  fullback. 
Sophomore  Bob  Williams  will  take 
over  at  quarterback  if  Hornung 
is  shifted. 

Coach  Jim  Tatum  seems  likely 
to  go  with  the  same  starting  eleven 
that  has  performed  so  dependably 
for  him  since  the  Maryland  game. 
Dave  Reed,  Ed  Sutton,  Larry  Mc- 


Mullen  and  Wally  Vale  wiU  be  the  hard  charging  offensive  line.  Their 


starting  backfield  while  Buddy 
Payne,  Charley  Robinson,  Don 
Riedding,  Leo  Russavage,  Jimmy 
Jones,  Don  Kemper  and  Ronnie 
Koes  make  up  the  forward  wall. 
Stu  Pell  and  Phil  Blazer  will  pro- 
bably get  the  call  at  tackle  if  the 
Tar  Heels  kick  off. 

Much  of  the  credit  for  the  win 
over  Virginia   should   go   to  the 


Lovely   Tinseily 

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THE  PRIVATE 
LIFE  OF  A 
PUBLIC  ENEMYl 
WHO  ALMOST 
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OWN 
PRESIDENT! 

MWYME.. 


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IF  YOU'RE  A  SMOKER  who's  never  tried  a 
smoke  ring,  get  in  there  and  start  puffing. 
While  you're  at  it,  remember:  Lucky  smoke 
rings  come  from  fine  tobacco.  This  makes  no 
difference  to  the  smoke  ring,  but  it  does  to 
you.  You  see,  fine  tobacco  means  good  taste, 
and  Luckies'  fine,  naturally  good-tasting 
tobacco  is  TO^-^STED  to  taste  even  better. 
So  make  your  next  cigarette  a  Lucky,  and 
call  your  fii'st  smoke  ring  a  Proud  Cloud. 

STUCK  FOR  DOUGH? 

START  STICKLING! 
MAKE  $25 

We'll  pay  Jii'JO  for  every  Stickler  we  print — and  for  hundreds 
more  that  never  get  used!  So  start  Stickling — they're  bo  easy 
ynti  can  think  of  doKens  in  seconds!  S^cklcrs  are  simple  riddles 
with  two-word  rhyming  answers.  Both  wordd  must  have  the 
same  number  of  syllables.  (Don't  do  drawings.)  Send  'e^  ail 
with  your  name,  address,  college  and  class  to  Happy-Joe- 
Lucky,  Box  67A,  Mount  Vernon,  N.  Y. 


Luckies  Taste  Better 

CLEANER,   FRESHER,    SMOOTHER   I 


•A.  T.  C«. 


paooucT  or 


t^(^  {J^tt£*<jt€in  (yvt^ieeo---C(r7iyuitut 


AMXKICA'S    LkAOINO    MAMUPACTUK*K    OF    CiQAKBTTBa 


'■■^l^ 


8  t  c  Lt««tMrr 

CIBIALS  SEPT. 


WEATHER  . 

Occasional  rain,  partly  cloudy 
and  a  little  warmer.  Expectad  high 
today   in  tha  SCs. 


c  3)aitu 


Sat  3<ccl 


WEEK 


Ifs  reviewed  on  page  2. 


VOL.   LVIi   NO.   51 


Complete  (JP)  Wire  Service 


CHAPEL    HILL,   NORTH    CAROLINA,  SUNDAY,   NOVEMBER    18,   1956 


Offices   in   Graham   Memorial 


FOUR   PAGES   THIS    ISSUI 


IRISH  EDGE  TAR  HEELS,  21-14,  IN  THRILLER 


Election,  Run-Off 
Set  For  Tuesday 


ic-clection  in   rouii  Men's 


Ici;  IS  la- 
in"  lor 


Mens  and  WOniins   llonoi    Ciountil    nuinhers   will    be 
elected   in   j)(>lliiV4  <>n  campus    fuesdav,  when  a  lunoll   will 
Ik-  held  loi    Town  Men  s  ill.  and 
II. 

The  lun-oH  in  Town  .Mens  III  will  be  loi  one 
tmc  .seal,  while  re-eleition  in  Town  .Mens  II  will 
Ireslnnan  and  jmiioi  (^ass  ollieers. 

Town  Mens  II   ballots  were  dis(|ualiried  in  last  weeks 
election    because    of    discrepancies*  - 

in  approximately  90  votes.  Andy 
Milnor.  Elections'  Board  chairman 
said. 

Mi!n>r  said  the  discrepancy  oc- 
curred probably  because  poll  ten- 
ders failed  to  cross  off  voters 
names  in  the  Student  Directory  as 
the  votes  were  cast.  He  urged  poll 
tenders  to  make  certain  that  names 
arc  checked  off  in  the  directory  as 
the   votes   are   cast. 

As  ;n  last  Tuesday's  election,  bal- 
lot boxes  wil  be  placed  in  all  men's 
and  women's  dormitories.  Town 
district.*;  wil  vote  as  follows:  Town 
Mens  I.  Gerrard  Hall:  Town  Mens 
n.  Scuttlebutt:  Town  Mens  III, 
South  Building  or  Gerrard  Hall: 
Town  Men's  IV.  Victory  Village, 
Town  Women.  Gerrard  Hall. 


Campus  Chest 
Asks  Donations 
For  Hungarians 

Donations  are  l>cing  received  on 
campus  for  refugee  Hungarian 
students,  according  to  Campus 
Chest  co-chairmen  Miss  Jackie  Al- 
dridge   and  Jess   Stribling. 

T^e  donations  will  be  given  to 
World  University  Service,  an  or- 
ganization that  received  donations 
from  Campus  Chest,  tagged  for  the 
Hungarian  students,  according  to 
Miss  Aldridge  and  Stribling. 

Donations  will  be  received  un- 
til Thanksgiving  in  bottles  lo- 
cated in  Y  Court  and  labeled  with 
the  name  of  each  residence,  they 
ville.  Va.:  Daryl  Farrington,  Chap- 1  said.  Donations  will  be  received  al- 
el  Hill,  Sue  Atchison,  Washington,  '  though  the  Campus  Chest  Drive 
D,  C;  Marianna  Miller.  Pinevillc;  ;  officially  closed  Thursday  night. 
Lloyd  Dougherty,  Cincinnati,  Ohio; 

Doris  Peter,  Orlando,  Fla.;  Ann  |  Sixty  per  cent  of  money  donat- 
Morgan,  Jacksonville:  Betty  Barn-  i  ed  to  Campus  Chest  itself  was  sent 
cs.  Washington.  D.  C;  Nan  Schaef-    through    the    drives    board    of    di- 


WOMEN'S  COUNCIL  SEATS 

The  girls  approved  after  being 
interviewed  by  board  members 
v,'ere  Misses  Nancy  Milan,  Balti- 
more.   Md.:    Kit    Whitehurst,    Dan- 


Paintings 
On  Campus 
Removed 

The  "Duke"  signs  that  were 
painted  on  the  Old  Well,  campus 
sidewalks  and  the  stone  wall  in 
front, of  Cobb  Dormitory  during 
the  week  have  been  removed. 

Giles  Homey,  UNC  maintenance 
supervisor,  said  workers  from  his 
department  started  removing  the 
Carolina  Blue  paint  from  the  Old 
Well  about  8  a.m.  Wednesday.  The 
paint  that  was  used  was  a  cold 
water  paint  ,and  according  to 
Horney,  was  not  hard  to  get  off. 
He  said  that  they  -were  trying 
to  get  it  off  without  everybody 
finding  out  about  it  so  as  to  not 
give  our  students  a  cai'se  to  go 
over  there  and  paint  things." 

,The  word  "Duke"  was  also 
painted  on  the  sidewalk  in  down- 
town Chapel  Hill  and  on  a  'no 
parking  sign  across  the  street 
from  the  Post  Office.  These  still 
have   not   been   removed. 

Work  will  continue  this  week 
on  the  columns  of  the  Morehead 
Planet-irium.  Vandals  defaced 
them  early  in  the  month.  Special 
equipment  is  required  to  remo\c 
this  writing.  Horney  said  "the 
worst  thing  in  the  world  is  for  it 
(paint)  to  be  on  limestone,  it  can 
not  be  removed  from  this  surface 
without    special    equipment." 

The  Bell  Tower,  which  has  long 
been  a  favorite  target  for  vandals 
with  paint,  has  been  spared  so 
far  this  year. 


]AU- American  Paul  Hornung 
Scores  Notre  Dame  Clincher 
In  Games  Final  76  Seconds 

By    LARRY    CHEEK  « 

Spi-cial    To   The   Daily   Tar  Heel 

.SOr  III  liK.M),  Ind.— .\olre  Dames  never  say-die  li-^htinj;  Iri.sii  drove  (>.?  yards  in 
the  dyini;  minutes  of  the  lourth  (|uarter  .Satiirdav  to  wiiip  do;4-tirecl  .\(»nh  Ca.olina,  21-14. 
Paul  Horninii4.  Notre  Dame's  .All-.\njeviia  (juavterbatk  j)layin^  his  last  home  ;.;ame, 
s(()ied  iIk  uinniiit'  Kuulidown  with  onlv  ;()  s.tond.s  kit  in  the  :4ame  on  a  one-loot  (|narter- 
i);uk  sneak.  Tp  niuil  that  last  dec  idinj;  (h  i\e,  ihe  score  had  been  knotted  at  i  j-;.!!.  and  it 
,ij)j)iared  ilie  iwo  teams  would  wind  up  even. 

!>in    ilu'    Irish   wevenl    (o   be  denied.   With  linie  runnin;^  short,  thev  tof.k  jxtssession  on 
ihiir  oAvn    1:  \Mi\  line  altei   Carolina  had  tailed   in  a   I;  st   ditch   h)urth  down  edort.  With 

Hornung     and     halfbacks     Aubrey*  ^  ^ 

LLHvis  and  .Jim  Miiota  doing  the 
work,  they  moved  down  the  field 
in  14  plays  for  the  .score. 

Carolina  took  the  ensuing  kick- 
off,  but  lost  23  yards  on  three 
plays  before  the  gun  went  off. 

That  gun  was  the  .signal  for  a 
riotous  celebration  by  the  Notre 
Dame  student  body.  The  Irish  stu- 
dents rushed  onto  th?  field  and 
hoisted  Hornung  to  their  should- 
ers, then  turned  their  attention 
to  the  goal  post.s".  The  Tar  Heel 
obituary  was  signed  as  the  goal 
|K)sts   came    tumbling    down. 

Notre  Dame  grabbed  a  big  lead 
in  the  first  half  as  she  jumped  off 
to     a     M-O    advantage   before    the 


Hoosler  State 
Weather  Cold, 
Tar  Heels  Find 

By    LARRY    CHEEK 

S\)enu\   To   The   Daily   Tar  Heel 

It's  c.ild  here  in  Indiana.  When 
tl.c  Carijlina  football  team  stepped 
Mil  of  their  Airliner  at  the  Soulh 
Bend  .Airport  Friday  night,  they 
found  icy  cold  temperatures  hov- 
ering around  the  20  degree  mark 
uwaiting  them. 


JAN  SAXON 

Les  Petit  cs  Mii.titdles  soloist 


fer.  Tallahassee,  Fla.:  Cynthia  Se- 
gravcs,  Jacksonville,  Fla.;  and  Sara 
\anWeyk,  Winnetka,  III. 

The  Selections  Board  recom- 
mending these  candidates  was 
composed  of  the  chairman  and 
two  members  of  the  Women's  Hon- 
or Council  and  a  representative 
from  each  of  the  two  campus  poli- 
tical parties. 

MEN'S  COUNCIL 

Men  also  approved  by  a  Bi-Par- 
tisan  Board  to  run  in  the  election 
for  Mens  Council  are  John  Owens, 
High  Point:  Hugh  Patterson,  Eden- 
ton:  Don  Evans,  Greensboro:  Jack 
Jones:  Bill  Bost.  Greenville;  David 
Watson,  Raleigh;  Paul  Carr,  Hills- 
boro;  Bruce  Hoyle.  Rutherfordton: 
Lee  Ainslie,  Huntington,  W.Va.; 
Henry  Harriss,  Winston-Salem; 
Tucker  Yates.  Asheboro;  Gary 
Cooper,  Salisbury':  Bob  Carter, 
Selma;  Mason   Wilkins.  Durham. 


rectors    to    World 
vice,  they  said. 


University   Ser- 


Miss  Aldridge  and  Stribling 
said  that  the  money  will  prob- 
ably be  used  directly  for  aid  to 
an  estimated  20,000  Hungarian 
students  who  have  escaped  into 
Vienna,    Austria.  .'        , 


Thanksgiving  Service 
Planned  By  YMCA-YWCA 

The  YM-YWTA  will  spon.sor 
a  campus  Thanksgiving  service 
Tuesday  at  4:45  p.m.  at  the  Chapel 
of  the  Cross. 

Speaker  for  the  service  will  be 
the  Rev.  Charles  Hubbard,  pastor 
of   University   Methodist   Church. 

The  topic  of  Hubbard's  talk  "will 
be   "Going   Home." 


T  83-Foot  Tetsgram 

Sent  To  South  Bend    - 

More  than  183  feet  of  telegram 
rolled  its  way  to  South  Bend.  Ind.. 
Satui'day. 

The  telegram,  second,  longest 
this.  year,  was  signed  by  1.073 
Carolina  students  wishing  good 
luck  to  the  football  team,  whicli 
played   Notre   Dame  yesterday. 

The  wire  was  tied  with  a  Caro- 
lina Blue  ribbon  and  presented  to 
the  football  team  before  the  game. 

Miss  Claudia  Cannady,  chief  of 
the  Western  Union  bureau  here, 
commended  the  University  Club 
for  rounding  up  names  for  the 
telegram.  Miss  Cannady  is  a  vet- 
eran of  football  game  telegrams, 
and  remembers  the  longest  this 
year  was  a  241-footcr  sent  to  .\(;r 
man  for  the  Oklahoma  game. 


Petites  Musicales  To  Feature 
Miss  Jan  Saxon  At  8  Tonight 


• — EW  Pcm^s  Musfca!??  w'lU  pre 
sent  Miss  Jan  Saxon,  coloratura  so- 
prano, as  featured  soloist  in  a 
program  held  at  8  p.m.  today. 

[  Sponsored  by  Graham  Memor- 
ial Activities  Board,  the  musicale 
will  b?  presented  in  the  main 
lounge  of  Graham   Memorial. 

Accompanist   for  the  iioloist  will 

I  be    Walter   Golde    of    Chapel    Hill. 

who  is  now  directing  Miss  Saxon's 

:  program      of      concentrated    voice 

I  work. 

I  A  former  special  student  in  Dra- 
matic Art  at  the  University,  Miss 
Saxon  took  part*  in  both  dramatic 
I  and  musical  activities.  Roles  in 
i  Playmaker  productions  of  '  JuTus 
I  Caesar"  and   "Even  the  Gods"  were 

features  of  her  early  career. 
i      Other    previous    experience    in- 
cludes   roles    in  '  outdoor    theatre 


'  fyP^s'^ifiTSTiiVns  of  "The  Lost  Col- 
ony.  Horn    in    the    West,"    and 

"The   Highland   Call." 

'  Jan  Saxon's  w((rk  with  local 
musical  groups  consists  of  solo 
performances  with  the  University 
Men's  Glee  Club,  the  Choral  So- 
ciety,  the   Basingstoke  Sextet,  and 

'  Les  Petites  Musicale^;, 

On  tonight's  program  Mi.ss  Sax- 
on will  sing  "Come  Ever  Smiling 
Liberty "  by  Handel,  and  an  aria 
from  Mozart's  "The  Magic  Flute." 
Other  seletions  include  a  group  of 
German  lieder  by  Richard  Strauss 
and  Mahler,  an  aria  from  Rossini's 
"Barber  of  Seville."  and  a  group 
of  French  work.s  by  Lizsl.  Pierne, 
and  Moret.  Miss  Saxon  will  con- 
clude her  performance  with  an 
aria  from  "Les  Huguenots"  by 
M  ever  beer. 


It  v\ as  •still  cold  vesterday  morn-j 

ing.  and  by  game  time  the  themo-  i 

meter  had  climbed  no  higher  than 

3.1.   It   was  rough  on   the  fans,  but  [ 

the   player.^   loved    it.  | 

j      An    hour   before   gamelime.    the ; 

[  huge  concrete    bowl    that    is  Notre 

'  Damt  Stadium  was  still  practicall> 

I  deserted    with    only    a    handful    ol 

I  shivering     early     birds     on     hand. 

':  Things   started   picking   up   as   the  , 

1    p.^.  (CST)  kickoff  time   ncared.  i 

'      A  letter  from   an   ardent   Fight-  ; 

ing    Iri.>h    foolball    fan    was    l)ein,u  . 

circulated    annmg    the    players    on 

the  plane  ride  up.  The  letter  stal--d 

in  no  uncertain  terms  that,  "  .Not re 

Dame  would  grind  your  shiny  faces 

I  III    the   mud."   This    of    couise    re-  , 

(erred  to  the    "third  rale  and  sec-, 

ond  cla.ss"  Carolina   ftiotball   team, 

and   their  coach,  Jim   Tatum.  The 

'eller     w<is     postmarked     Tacoma.  ' 


FROM  RADIO  DISPATCHES 

WASHINGTON  —  Russia  has  ex- 
ploded a  large  nuclear  bomb,  ac- 
cording to  reports  from  sources 
in  !\;oscow. 

The  Atomic  Energy  Commission 
said  the  nuclear  test  was  a  bij 
one.  comparable  with  former  So- 
viet tests. 


Statistics 

I 

JNC 

NO 

First  Downs 

19 

17 

Rushing    Yardage 

248 

311 

Passing    Yardage 

71 

122 

Passes 

8  22 

6  17 

Passes   Intercepted  by 

1 

5 

Punts                              2-37.5 

339 

Fumbles    Lost 

0 

1 

Ya.-ds    Penaliaied 

30 

52 

Tar  Heels  could  .<c(ire  to  make  the 
count    14-7  at    halftime. 

Thi^  Tar  Heels  came  back  af- 
ter irttermission  to  tally  the  first 
time  they  gained  possession,  and 
the  .^jcore  was  deadlocked.  14-14. 
Carolina    penetrated    to    the    Irish 


13  late  in  the  third  quarter  but  an 

Washington,  and  was  signed  (what    intercepted    pass   killed   the   drive. 

else*  Patrick  .).  OReily.  j      Notro   Dame's     two     first      halt 

The  Tar  Heels  set  up  headquar     touchdowns   cam;'    as   a    direct  -re- 


ters  in  the  Elkhart  Holtel  in  Elk- 
iiart.  Ind.,  some  30  miles  from 
Seuth  Bend  Elkhart  is  in  the 
Eastern  Standard  Time  zone  whiK 
Soulh  Bend  is  in  the  Central  zone, 
and  there  was  no  little  confusion 
as  to  what  time  it  was,  where. 
Trai:icr  John  Laccy.  who  handled 

(See   GAME,    Page   4) 


.suit  of  a  pair  of  long  ball  play.s. 
The  Irish  got  their  first  score  from 
one  yard  out  on  a  Hornung  sneak 
after  a  long  pass  play  from  Hor- 
nung to  Morse  had  put  them  on 
the  Carolina  o5. 

Their   .second   TD      came     after 
Lewis,  a  sprint  star  in  the  spring- 

(See    HORXVNG,    Pag,-    4) 


MOSCOW  —  The  Soviet  Union 
called  ior  a  summit  conference  on 
disarmament.  It  agreed  it  will  dis- 
cuss limited  application  of  Presi- 
dent Ei.>enhowers  "open  skies" 
inspi  etion  proposal. 

Russia  also  called  for  destruc- 
'aon  of  all  H-bomb  and  A-bomb 
si»ckpiles  in  the  next  two  years 
and  an  immediate  ban  on  nuclear 
tests. 


V1ENN.\  —  The  Russian-spon- 
.  sortci  Hungarian  go\  ernmcnt  has 
imposed  harsh  controls  on  food 
and  el(.clricit\  in  an  apparent  ef- 
fort to  end  a  general  strike  by  pa- 
triots. Electricity  will  be  cut  i4l 
iour  hours  a  day.  and  farm  pr«»- 
duce  and  meat  will  not  be  deliver- 
ed to  Budapest,  said  the  govern- 
ment. ^ 
*     *     ♦                 .      '  -f 

WASni.NtnoN  -  Attorneys  rep- 
resent ir;g  Negroes  who  have  been 
boycotting  Montgwmery,  Ala.,  buses 
have  asked  the  Supreme  Court  to 
speed  up  the  effective  date  of  its 
iiianriate  ending  state  and  local 
laws  for  bus  .segregatiun.  The  pe- 
titicii;  asked  that  the  effective  date 
be   made   immediatelv.  * 


Late    For   Start    Of    Race,    Dick    MacFaddin    Wins    Dukathon    In    Rain 


1 ^^ 

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f^^^s^^-rf^^^^^^^T^^yr^' 

«s. 

* 

JUST    BEFORE    THE    GUN 

. . .  it   looks   like   fun 

fty   CHARLIE    SLOAN 

Although  he  showed  up  late  for  the  start  of  the  race,  Dick  Mac- 
Faddrn,  a  junior  from  Viola,  Del.,  probably  set  a  record  in  winning 
the  DUkathon  yesterday. 

The  DUkathon  is  the  annual  trek  from  Chapel  Hill  to  the  Dur- 
ham Post  Office. 

Although  .MacFaddrn's  tipie  of  one  hour  14  minutes,  29  and  two- 
tenths  .seconds  is  greater  than  the  hour  and  twelve  minutes  taken  by 
Tony  Houghton  in  1954,  MacKaddon  had  to  run  13.t)  miles  instead  ot 
til.'   usual    11.4, 


IN  THE  HOME  SI  RETCH 

. .  .  thraiigli   rain  and  traffic 

The  mixup  occured  when  the  police  fscort  channeled  the  runners 
onto  the  old  road  to  Durham  with  the  explanation  that  the  state 
would  not  let  them  take  the  new  four-lane  highway. 

Previous  arrangements  with  the  stale  police  had  included  taking 
the  new  road  without  any  aid  or  interference  by  patrolmen  between 

Chapel  Hill  and  DurHam. 

I 

In  spite  of  the  handicap  of  the  longer  and  more  hilly  road,  and 
a  cold,  fine  drizzle  mo.st  of  the  way,  27  runners  stumbled  up  to  the 
Durham  po.sl  office  by  the  time  the  race  was  two  hours  old. 

A  freshman,  Tommy  Saintsing,  placed  second  and  was  followed 
by  Don   Hichardsoii.  a  second  xear  medical  student. 


AFTER   THE    BALL    IS  OVER 

.  .  .  s'trriiHtrs  struc/qlr   ni  ' 

Richardson  gained  and  maintained  an  easy  lead  until  the  Durham 
city  .limits,  where  MacFadden  overlook  and  passed  him. 

MacFaddcn.  who  represented  Theta  Chi  social  iraternity  in  the 
race,  had  a  late  start.  He  cut  his  finger  in  the  gym.  and  by  the  time 
he  got  to  the  infirmar>  tn  have  it  dressed  and  returned  to  the  starting 
place,  the  runners  had  left.  . 

Upon  being  told  the  others  were*  on  their  way  he  started  at  a 
steady  pace  an.l  maintained  a  speed  grater  than  the  other  runners 
for  the  rest  of  the   race. 

At  the  Durham  Post  Office  the  winner  .reeei'ed  a  troph\  and 
•<•  ki.s,s  from  the  DL'kanthon  Queen.  Miss  Marian  Dickens. 

.Miss  Dickiiis  is  the  first  queen  to  be  s''I(Tti(l  in  connection  with 


AT  THE   FINISH   LINE 

...  a   Lis.-   jiu'ti   a   qucL  II 

the  annual  race,  sponsored  by  DeltaUpsilon  social  fraternity.  She  was 
crowned  before  the  race  by  Ernie  Kemm.  DlTiathon  chairman. 

Riding  back  to  Chapd  Hill  alter  the  race,  the  runners  were  in 
high  .spirits.  In  at  least  one  car  the  convcisation  concerned  the  race. 
MacFadden  commented  that   the  wet  weatht  •  had  not  Irindered  him 

at  all.  ,    .  :.- ,, 

.Someone  suggested  that  the  race  ought  to  bv.  run  in  both  direc- 
tiiuis.  Another  runner  made  some  remai'k  about  the  round  trip  really 
separating  the  men  from  the  boys,  and  Gary  Niche's,  who  has  run  the 
race  once  Ix-fore  and  placed  fourth  in  this  years,  commented  'hat  it 
.seems  f<N)|ish  to  run  all  the  way  to  Durham  ju.4   to  ride  back. 


PAGE  TWO 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


SUNDAY,  NOVEMBER   18,  1956 


CI  :;  0 


Week's  News  In  Review:  Decisions 
In  America,  On  Campus,  In  World 


Alarm 


Discrepancies  In  Elections, 
Campus  Chest  Goes  Over  Top 


UNC  students  voted  on  class  of- 
ficers, met  the  Campus  Chest  goal 
and,  in  a  flurry  of  school  spirit, 
whipped  up  floats  for  the  "Beat 
Dock"  parade  while  the  Chapel 
Hill  aldermL'H  lifted  the  Columbia 
St.  parking  ban. 

Results  of  the  campus  elections 
of  freshman  and  junior  class  of- 
ficers and  legislature  seats  were 
inconclusive  due  to  discrepancies 
in  voting  in  .the  irp-dominated 
town  men's  districts.  More  ballots 
were  cast  than  there  were  regist' 
ered  voters  in  the  disputed  areas 
and  two  legislative  seats  and  the 
class  election  results  will  remain 
undecided  unMl  the  runoff  elec- 
tion Tuesday.  Only  38  per  cent 
of  the  campus  population  made 
the  trip  to  the  polls  in  the  elec- 
tion. 

The  Campus  Che.st  Drive  sur- 
passed the  siSOO  goal  set  up  for 


gym  and  stole  the  Victory  Bell 
from  the  rightful  owner^j,  the  Blue 
Devils,  winners  of  last  year's  Duke- 
Carolina  game.  The  boys  were 
roundly  reprimanded  by  Student 
Body  President  Bob  Ycung  as  act- 
ing  "immaturi'ly." 

Richard  MacFaddon,  a  junior 
from  Viola,  Dela.,  won  the  annual 
DUkathon  race.  .MacFadden.  a 
member  of  Theta  Chi  fraternity, 
probably  .set  a  record  as  he  fir>- 
ished  first  with  a  time  of  14  min- 
utes, 29  and  two-tentlvs  seconds. 
27  runners  had  finished  the  race 
after   two    hours    had   elapsed. 

Miss  Marian  Dickens,  junior 
from  Thomasville,  was  cho.sen 
DUkathon  queen  shortly  before 
the  start  of  the  race. 

A  sizable  crowd  attended  the 
Frosttime  Frolics  in  the  basement 
of  Cobb  dormitory.  The  dance  was 
held  as  part  of  the  Campus  Chest 


Victory  Beli-Nappers  Survey  Trophy 

Shown  above  are  several  memkeri  ef  ATO  FrafemitT;  fturo  nttm- 
bers  of  w.'ii.h  io^ineyed  to' the  Ouka  campus  this  week  and  st^i^ 
the  Vtcio  "^11  from  the  gym.  Those  picturad  are  watching  with 
re!ijh  the  prize  being  towed  around. 


the  campus  in  collecting  more 
than  $1700.  Miss  Jackie  Aldridge 
and  Jess  Stribling.  co-chairmen  of 
the  campus  campagin,  extended 
the  deadline  for  contributions  to 
Thursday.  Special  emphasis  was 
placed  on  contributions  to  World 
University  Service  which  sup- 
ported the  Hungarian  student 
movem?nt  in  that  country's  bid 
for  freedom. 

Fraternities,  sororities  and  dor- 
mitories prepared  floats  for  the 
big  "Beat  Do.>k'  parade,  spon- 
sorted  by  the  Pi  Kappa  Alpha  fra- 
iernity,  to  be  held  Tuesday.  A 
queen  was  chosen  Thursday  night 
at  the  PiKa  house  whose  identity 
will  remain  secret  until  parade 
time. 

The  Chapel  Hill  Board  of  Al- 
dermen passed  a  motion  lifting  the 
two  hour  parking  ban  on  S.  Co- 
lumbia St.  for  the  60  day  period 
between  Jan  3  and  March  1.  1957. 
with  the  understanding  the  fra- 
ternities affected  will  present  to 
the  aldermen  by  Jan.  3  a  proposal 
to  alleviate  their  parking  prob- 
lem. 

The  aldermen  passed  the  motion 
after  a  plea  by  Chairman  Wilburn 
Davis  of  the  student  government 
Traffic  .'\dvisory  Commission  that 
the  restriction  be  lifted  for  60  days 
to  allow  fraternities  to  alleviate 
congestion. 

The  aldermen  stipulated  fra- 
ternities must  show  some  pro- 
gres  toward  solving  their  parking 
problem  before  the  ban  would  be 
lifted. 

Two  members  of  the  ATO  fra- 
ternity   climbed     into    the     Duke 


Drive. 


/*' 


Miss  Shirley  Carpenter,  spon- 
sored by  St^cy  dormitory,  was 
named  "Sweetheart  of  UNC 
Dorms."  Miss  Carpenter  received 
a  large  loving  cup  as  a  symbol 
df  her  reign. 

R.  Mayne  Albright,  chairman 
of  a  17-man  trustee  group  in 
charge  of  finding  a  new  chancellor 
for  UNC.  announced  41  names  are 
being  con.sidered  for  the  position. 
The  committee  hopes  to  recom- 
mend its  choice  to  Consolidated 
University  PresidcJit  William  C. 
Friday  soon  after  the  start  of  the 
new  year. 

Fraternities,  sororities  and 
dormitories  prepared  floats  for 
the  big  "Beat  Dook"  parade,  spon- 
sored by  the  Pi  Kappa  Alplia  fra- 
ternity, to  be  held  Tuesday.  .\ 
queen  was  chosen  Thursday  night 
at  the  PiKa  house  whose  identity 
will  remain  secret  until-  parade 
time. 

"Androcles  and  the  Lion"  open- 
ed Wedne.sday  night  at  the  Play- 
makers'  Theater  for  a  five  day 
stand.  The  George  Bernard  Shaw 
play  is  the  second  production  of 
the  season  for  the  Playmakers,^ 
The  play  was  prefaced  by  a  lec- 
ture by  Dr.  Archibald  Henderson, 
Shaw'.s    official    biographer. 

A  27  member  delegation  rep- 
resented UNC  at  the  State  Stu- 
dent Legislature  in  Raleigh.  Tho 
group,  headed  by  Bob  Harrington, 
introduced  a  bill  to  repeal  the 
Pearsall  Plan  amendment.  The  bill 
was  passed  by  the  mock  legislative 
body. 


University  of  North  Carolina,  where  it  is  published  daily  except  Mon- 
day and  examination  and  vacation  periods  and  summer  terms.  Entered 
as  second  class  matter  in  the  post  office  at  Chapel  Hill.  N.  C,  under 
the  act  of  March  8,  1870.  Subscpipticn  rates:  Mailed.  $4  a  year.  $2.50 
per  semester;  delivered,  $6  a  year,  $3.50  a  semester. 


Editor 


Managing  Editor 
News  Editor   .1.... 


FRED  POWLEDGE 
CHARUE  SLOAN 


RAY  LINKER 


Business  Mai^ager 


"V.  ■■■>^\l\-^'"'^' 


NCAA  Rules 
Against  State 
Recruiting 

The  National  Collegiate  Ath- 
l;tic  Association  gave  N.  C.  State 
fans  a  jolt  Tuesday  night  when 
the  association  suspended  State 
lor  four  years  from  participating 
in  any  NCAA  championship  or 
post  season  contests,  both  those 
sponsored  by  NCA.\  and  others 
h?ld  in^cooperation  with  the  as- 
sociation. In  addition.  State  will 
not  be  allowed  t:)  participate  in 
any  televised  event.  State  was 
charged  with  the  'improper  re- 
cruiting of  basketball  talent." 

Governor  Hodges  on  Nov.  30 
will  present  some  recommenda- 
tions for  sweeping  changes  in 
the   state's   tax   structure. 

Contingents  from  universities 
and  colleges  in  the  stat?  gather- 
ed at  Raleigh  Thursday,  for  the 
State  Student  Legislature.  The 
session  closed  yesterday. 

;:;  *  * 

The  Board  of  Trustees  of  the 
University  of  North  Carolina  ap- 
proved Wednesday  a  plan  to  es- 
tablish on  -an  experimental  basis 
a  nursing  school  at  Woman's 
College  in  co-operation  with  Cone 
Memorial  Hospital.  The  program 
would  provide  a  two-year  col- 
lege course  in  nursing  at  the 
Woman's  College  Campus  and 
one  year  of  internship  at  Cone 
Hospital. 

Duke  University  is  making 
plans  for  Founder's  I)ay  celebra- 
tion, set  for  Dec.  11th  and  12th. 
This  year  will  be  the  100th  an- 
niversary of  the  birth  of  the  prin- 
cipal benefactor,  James  B. 
Duke. 

*         *         * 

Gov.  Hodges  denied  Thursday 
that  he  had  made  any  deal  with 
Ben  Douglas  of  Charlotte,  a  dele- 
|:ated' candidate  for  Congress  in 
the  10th  District.  It  was  rumor- 
ed that  Douglas  wa.'^  coming  to 
Raleigh  to  take  over  as  chair- 
nia/i  of  the.StatjP  Highway  Com-f 
mission,  a  post  which  k.  H. 
Graham  will  relinquish  ne.xt  May 
1. 


Supreme  Court  Rules,  While 
Hungary,  Mideast  Cool  Off 


The  Supreme  Court  of  the 
United  States  moved  into  the 
world  spotlight  last  week,  along- 
side Hungary  and  the  Middle 
East. 

The  high  court  declared  state 
and  local  laws  for  bus  segrega- 
tion   were    unconstitutional. 

The  decision  affirmed  a  lower 
court's  ruling, that  city  and  .state 
bus  .segregation  in  Montgomery, 
Ala.,  was  unconstitutional.  The 
basis  for  the  decision  was  the 
federal  Constitution's  guarantees 
of  due  process  and  equal  pro- 
tection of  the  law. 

But  there  was  doubt  in  North 
Carolina  that  the  decision  would 
mean  very  much.  The  Tar  Heel 
state,  which  has  refused  to  com- 
ply with  the  court's  school  deseg- 
regation decision  of  two  years 
ago,  stil  requires  segregation  on 
buses  operating  within  its  boun- 
daries. 

On  the  other  sides  of  the 
world,  Hungarian  patriots  had 
fallen  before  Russia.  Russia 
had  threatened,  then  backed 
down  on  its  plan  to  send  "volun- 
teers" to  the  Middle  East  cris- 
is— and  possibly  touch  off  an- 
other World  War,  And  United 
Natrons  police  forces  began  ar- 
riving in  the  Middle  East  to 
separate  angry  Arabs,  Israelis, 
British  and  French. 

IN  HUNGARY,  rebels  tried  a 
little  longer  to  stave  off  Russian 
forces,  but  they  did  not  have  the 
strength.  With  an  estimated  20,- 
000  Hungarians  killed  in  the  pa.st 
two  weeks,  the  rebels  turniM  to 
a  general  strike.  Tho  strike  #t>uld 
continue,  they  said,  until  anti- 
Russian  Premier  Imre  Nagy  was 
returned  to  office,  until  they  had 
free  elections  and  freedom  from 
"Moscow, 

Ru.ssia  started  deporting  IHun- 
garian  -rebels,  repor(«diy-'4»  .Li- 
beria. The  United  States  called 
for  immediate  United  Nations 
censure  of  the  Soviet  move.   At 

INTERPRETING  THE  NEWS 


the  same  time,  Hungarian  rebels 
hijacked  a  Russian  train  and  res- 
cued more  than  1,000  of  their 
comrades  headed  for  Russian 
slave  camps,  ' 

»        «        « 
IN   THE   MIDDLE   EAST,   talk 
of  Russian   "volunteers"  to  help 
the    Arab    nations    brought    fear 
of  a  possible  World  War  Three. 

At, the  first  of  the  week,  Russ- 
ian sources  announced  thousands 
of  "volunteer"  soldiers  and 
"technicians"  had  asked  permiss- 
ion to  go  to  Egypt  to  fight  against 
Israel,  Britain  and  France.  The 
crisis  was  heightened  when  Egyp- 
tian Premier  Gamal  Abdel  Nas- 
ser's government  a.sked  Russia 
for  immediate  shipment  of  "vol- 
unteers." 

Meanwhile,  United  Nations 
police  forces  were  gathering 
'>utside  Naples  for  airiiftSng  to 
the  tense  Suez  Canal  trttk — to 
permanently  cease  the  fighting 
there. 

But  on  Thursday,  Soviet  Pre- 
mier Nikolai  Bulganin's  voice 
had  a  different  tone.  In  notes  to 
Britain,  France  and  Israel,  he 
made  no  mention  of  "volunteers," 
and  said  Russian  has  to  object 
to  the  U.\  police  force  since 
Egypt  has   accepted   it. 

President  Eisenhower  had 
pledged  the  United  Staffs  will 
support  an  UN  action  to  keep 
Soviet  and  Red  Chinese  "volun- 
teers' out  of  the  Middle  East 
figWing. 

And  Friday  the  United  States 
warned  Russia  to  keep  her  troops 
out  of  the  Middle  East  or  face 
United  Nations  opposition  back- 
ed by  United  States  power. 
*        »        « 

Major  shipping  ports  from 
Maine  to  Texas  were  tied  up  as 
60,000  members  of  the  Interna- 
tional Longshoremen's  Assn. 
walked  out  after  a  contract  dis- 
pute with  the  New  Yortc  Ship- 
ping Assn.,  representing  170 
shipping  and  stevedore  firms. 


Supreme  Court  Bus  Ruling 
On  Par  With  1954  Decision 


Josephine  Ripley 

h\  (Jiri.stian  S(  ictur  Monifor 

WASHINGTON  —  The  United 
States  Supreme  Court  decision 
against  racial  segregation  on 
buses  in  Montgomery,  Ala.,  is 
expected  to  rank  in  hi.storic  sig- 
nificance second  only  to  the  now 
famous  ruling  of  1954  against 
segregation  on  the  basis  of  race 
in  public  schooKs. 

For  the  ruling,  in  effect,  out- 
laws racial  discrimination  on 
public  transportation  within  the 
borders  of  any  state  on-  the 
ground  that  such  segregation  is 
unconstitutional. 
ISSUE:   STATES'   RIGHTS 

The  South,  already  mobilizing 
legal  counterattack  in  the  case 
of  schools,  is  preparing  to  "take 
it  to  court"  in  state  after  state, 
and  again  and  again,  if  necessary, 
on  this  newest  integration  issue. 

The  basic  issue  revolves  around 
states'  rights,  and  it  is  on  this 
ground  that  the  final  an^J  prob- 
ably long,  drawn  out  test  will 
come. 

The  South  is  braced  to  resist 
desegregation  on  a  broad  front, 
not  only  in  buses  and  schools, 
but  in  publjc  parks  and  other  fa- 
cilities within  state  borders. 

Even  now,  in  the  Richmond 
district  court,  Virginia  is  testing 
its  newly  enacted  anti-integra- 
tion laws  designed  to  circumvent 
the  Supreme  Court's  ruling  in 
tht  ca.se  of  schools.  This  test 
comes  as  hearings  open  in  the 
Prince  Edward  County  case — one 
of  the  five  on  which  the  Supreme 


IL.- BILL  BOB  PEEL 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL  WEEK  IN  REVIEW 

Editor _ CHARLIE  SLOAN 

r.taff  Writers GEORGE  PFINGST  and  INGRID  CLAY 

Night  Editor : FRED  POWLEDGE 


The  Peace  Pilgrim,  a  small, 
white  -  haired  woman,  passed 
through  Chapel  Hill  on  the  lat- 
ter part  of  a  10,000  mile  walk  for 
world  disarmament.  Peace  Pi- 
grim,  who  refuses  to  reveal  her 
identity  or  background,  is  optimis- 
tic in  hopes  of  world-  p>eace.  She 
believes  this  can  be  accomplished 
only  by  having  one  world  govern- 
ment with  the  power  of  war  in 
the  hands  oft  he  United  Nations. 


Court    based    its    original    deseg- 
regation decision. 
BUS  BOYCOTT  INVOLVED 

The  state  of  Virginia  is  also 
asking  for  dismissal  of  desegre- 
gation suits  brought  by  Negroes 
in  Norfolk  and  Newport  News. 
School  officials  in  Arlington  and 
Charlottesville  have  filed  briefs 
appealing  for  court  reversal  of 
orders  to  desegregate  there. 

Virginia  is  banking  on  its  new 
pupil  -  assignment  law  to  estab- 
lish the  desired  precedent  for 
circumventing  .school  integration. 
This  plan  provides  for  the  as- 
signment of  pupils  to  schools  on 
■lany  grounds,  other  than  racial, 
and  gives  dissatisfied  persons 
the  right  to  appeal  to  the  Gov- 
ernor a"nd  then  to  the  stale 
courts,  if  desired. 

The  Supreme  Court's  decision 
in  the  Alabama  bus  case  grew 
out  of  a  bus  boycott  by  Negroes 
which  started  last  December  and 
is  still  in  effect. 

The  court  acted  unanimously 
in  this  case,  but  did  not  hand 
down  a  written  decision.  Instead, 
it  issued  a  brief  order  affirming 
the  decision  of  the  United  States 
district  court  for  the  middle  dis- 
trict of  Alabama,  which  held  this 
instance  of  racial  .segregation 
contrary  to  the  Fourteenth 
Amendment,  and  hence  uncon- 
stitutional. 

CHALLENGES  DUE 

In  affirming  t  h  e  di.strict 
cofrt's  ruling,  the  Supreme  Court 
cited  its  decisions  in  two  .school 
cases — the  Dawson  case  in  Ala- 
bama and  the  Holmes  case  in  At- 
lanta— in  which  racial  segrega- 
tion in  the  I'se  of  publ'c  recrea- 
tional facilities  was  outlawed. 

Th?  citing  of  these  two  partic- 
ular cases  is  seen   as  indicating 
that  .«tate  laws  or  ordinances  w  t'l 
regard    to    racial    segregation    in 
any  public  facility  are  apparent- 
ly regarded  as  unconstitutional. 
Also,   since    attorneys    for   the 
state  in  the  Montgomery  bus  case 


premised  their  arguments  on  the 
1896  Plessy  vsf.  Ferguson  separ- 
ate-but-equal  doctrine,  the  new 
ruling  is  being  taken  as  a  com- 
plete repudiation  of  theory. 

The  decision  of  the  Supreme 
Court  in  the  Alabama  bus  suit 
recalls  an  earlier  ca.se  involving 
intrastate  transportation  in  which 
the  court  refused  on  April  23  to 
review  a  lower  court  decision. 
Due  to  a  misunderstanding,  head- 
lines proclaimed  the  outlawing 
of  segregation  o\\  intrastate 
buses.  It  was  later  discovered 
that  the  court's  refusal  to  review 
the  case  was  based  on  technical 
grounds  and  not  a  ruling  in  the 
case. 


«CTt?<4 


NINE-HOUR  DAY 


Grounds  Crewman  Likes  Campus 
Has  Gotten  Used  To  Ivy  Outfits 


Wally  Kuralt 


This  week's  Personality  of  the  Week  is  a  person- 
able gentleman  who  has  .seen  every  inch  of  the  Car- 
olina campus. 

He  is  Johnnie  Chavis,  32  year  old  "driver"  of  the 
UNC  grounds  crew.  In  his  work,  he  has  covered  the 
Carolina  campus  many  times,  and  "dug  up  a  good 
bit  of  it,  too." 

Chavis,  born  in  1932  in  Chatham  County,  has  a 
wife,  Jennie,  and  a  young  son.  Jesse. 

After  serving  a  stint  in.  the  Navy,  Chavis  re- 
turned to  Pittsboro  to  farm  under  the  GI  Bill.  Then, 
in  1948.  he  took  a  job  with  the  University's  grounds 
crew. 

"It's  4iicc,  working  here,"  he  says.  'I  had  been 
thinking  a  long  time  I'd  like  this  kind  of  work." 

■'For  one  thing  you  don't  do  the  same  thing 
every  day.  Then,  too,  its  outdoor  work.  I  like  the 
fellows  who  work  here,  and  we  have  some  very  nice 
folks  to  work  for,"  he  says. 

Explaining  the  term  "driver"  Chavis  says  the 
foreman  tells  him  what  to  do,  and  he  sees  that  the 
work  is  done.  Each  crew  is  divided  up  into  six 
groups  of  three  or  four  men.  and  one  man  is  the 
driver. 

These  groups  go  forth  at  7:30,  five  days  a  week, 
armed  with  rakes,  shovels,  axes,  and  any  other 
tool.*-  needed  for  the  day's  activities. 

"Wc  rake  leaves,  plant  grass,  put  fences  up  to 
keep  people  off  of  the  grass,  and  take  care  of  all 
the  shrubs,  says  Chavis.  Actually,  we  tend  all  the 
plants  and  grass  on  the  campus  and  at  the  hospital. 
We  eat  at  noon,  then  go  back  to  work  from  12:30 
until  5  p.m. 

•Deadbeats  don't  last  long  around  here,"  Chavis 
says.  "That  nine  hour  schedule  kills  'em  off." 

"We  don't  do  any  of  the  work  in  the  dorms  or 


buildings,"  Chavis  explained.   "Sometimes  we  help 
carry  in  heavy  equipment,  but  that's  all." 

The  walks  are  laid  by  a  specialized  crew,  accord- 
ing to  Chavis.  They  are  trained  to  do  that  partic- 
ular job,  he  says. 

.    Accidents  are  rare,  according  to  Chavis.  "We're 
pretty  careful,"  he  says.  "About  the  most  danger- 
ous work  used  to  be  pruning  trees,  but  that  job  was 
given    to   another   group    about    five   years   ago.  I 
don't   think   there  were   ever   any   accidents." 

Asked  if  he  ever  had  much  trouble  with  the 
campus  plant  life,  he  said,  "No,  we  just  set  out 
the  shrubs  right  and  keep  'em  watered  in  the  sum- 
mer,  and  they  do  all  right." 

•  "About  the  only  trouble  we  ever  have  is  with 
the  fences  around  the  grass,"  says  Chavis.  "We  put 
'em  up  one  day.  and  they  get  torn  down  the  next.*^ 

"When  we  cut  the  hospital  right-of-way,  we 
had  a  little  trouble  with  bees.  W^e'd  be  diggin' 
away  and  suddenly  everybody'd  start  scatterin'.  We 
all  got  away  as  fast  as  we  could  and  nobody  evee 
got  stung,  but  it  was  kind  of  a  nuisance,"  Cha\is 
said. 

'•I've  seen  a  lot  of  things  come  and  gone  since 
I've  been  here,"  says  Chavis.  ' 

"Those  three  buildings,  Carroll,  Hane.s,  and 
Gardner  were  built  after  I  came." 

The  space  taken  up  by  these  three  buildings  was 
formerly  a  parking  lot.  according  to  Chavis.  l 

"Carolina's  a  nice,  quiet  place.  It  has  a  pretty| 
campus,  a  lot  prettier  than  others  I've  seen."        : 

When  asked  about  the  college  students'  clothes,; 
he  said,  "They  look  very  nice.  Oh,  they  looked  a- 
little  funny  at  first,"  he  laughed,  but  I  reckon  yoiT 
can  get  used  to  anything  if  you  see  it  enough." 

"Yessir,  this   Ls  an   interesting  job.  Good  wQfk- 
ing  conditions,  good  equipment,  and  good  bosses, 
says  Chavis, 

"I  plan  to  stay  here  quite  a  while." 


Pogo 


By  Walt  Kelly 


..tUMOAY, 


Cov 


CHRISTIAN 
The     Un 
Christian  Ch| 
nual  "Eh'ery 
day.  Member 
given  the  opl 
their  personf 
of  $15,000. 
WAA  TENNI 
All  secondl 
iHUsl  be  plaj 
row. 
BIRD  CLUB 
The  Chat 
meet    today 
and  Mrs.  Ger 
Ledge   Lane.j 
meeting    will 
on   a  trip  t( 
Mrs.     Harolc 
Trott  will  ta| 


Jim  was 

had  coldl 
mirrors. 
a.sked    hi^ 
superior? 
mo  down 
.  day.s?  Ar 
profound! 
~     .    So    he 
the  famoi 
Hy    Pertj 
said  Pert^ 
.;    schachtes 
-■*.  batty   fr<J 
It  is  incut 
?T  4ncurable| 
•"•  for  you. 
'<>       Then  J| 
"Van  Heus 
read  ho\ 


DA 

.\t;i 

1. 

Sha 

and 

—       6 

A  la 

11 

M.ir 

piic 

12 

Co  IT 

calii 

13 

Mar 

(p« 

14. 

PaJ« 

15 

Fell 

16. 

Pur 

17. 

Ore 

18 

Dor 

as. 

Mji 

22 

Gir] 

25 

Snii 

san 

2« 

One 

28. 

Unl 

29 

Hoj 

• 

res 

phy 

31 

Cor 

32 

Cri 

33 

Bo< 

of] 

.*• 

Fo< 

pai 

39 

mr 

40 

Sp< 

42 

Set 

43 

Sc< 

the 

44 

Cu 

45 

Fn 

1 

Ha 

2 

C«t 

3 

Ch 

4 

Co 

S 

.Ex 

rchi 

Spl 

18,   19S« 


US, 

ts 

We   help 

Jw,  accord- 

Jat  partic- 

is.  "We're 
«t  danger- 
|at  job  wa5 
jrs  ago.  I 
Ints." 

with   the 

5t   set   out 

the  sum- 

|ve  is  with 
•'We  put 

the  next."^ 
Jf-way,    we 

3e  diggin' 
tterin*.  W« 
)body  evet 
te. "   Chavis 


Igone  sinc^ 
I 

lanes,    ana 


ildings  was 
vis.  I 

IS  a  prcttyj 
icen."  '• 

Is'  clothes.; 
yr  looked  ai 
reckon  yotT 
nough." 
Jood  wQrk- 
od  bosses," 


»lly 


Al  Capp 


.SlJ»JtiAY,  NOveMBER  18,  1956 


THf  I>AILY  TAR  HEEL 


PAGE  THREE 


Covering  The  Calnpu^ 


CHRISTIAN   CHURCH   CANVASS 

The  United  Congregational 
Christian  Church  will  have  its  an- 
nual "EJvery  Member  Canvass"  to- 
day. Members  and  friends  will  be 
given  the  opportunity  to  subscribe 
their  personal  pledge  to  the  goal 
of  $15,000. 

VVAA  TENNIS 

All  second  round  tennis  matches 
musl  be  played  by  6  p.m.  tomor- 
row. 

BIRD  CLUB 

The  Chapel  Hill  Bird  Club  will 
meet  today  at  the  home  of  Dr. 
and  Mrs.  Gerald  R.  MacCarthy,  107 
Ledge  Lane.  The  program  of  the 
meeting  will  consist  of  a  report 
on  a  trip  to  Lake  Waccamaw  by 
Mrs.  Harold  W.  Walters.  John 
Trott  will  talk  on    "Death  by  TV." 


WUNC 

7.00  Great  Music  of  the  Church 

7:30  Let  Thfere  Be  Ught 

7:45  The  Organ  Room 

8:00  The  Third  Programme 

10:00  News 

10:15  Evening  Masterwork 

11:30  Sign  Off 


WUNC 
9:45 

10:00 
i  10:30 


10:45 

11:00 

12:00 

tl2:30 

6:30 

7:00 

7:15 

7:30 

8:15 


-TV 

Back  to  God 
Sunday  School 
The  Pastor 
Organ  Prelude 
Church  Service 
This  Is  Life 
Sign  Off 
Big  Picture 
UN  Review 
Manners  Aboard 
Shakespeare 
Greensboro  Symphony 


FREUD  FRAUD? 


Jim  was  so  conceited  that  he 
had  cold  lips  from  kissing 
mirrors.  L^ntil  one  day  he 
asked  himself,  "Am  I  truly 
superior?  Do  not  girls  turn 
mo  down  daily?  Twice  on  holi- 
days? Am  I  not,  in  actuality, 
profoundly  inferior?" 

So  he  decided  to  consult 
the  famous  ps5'chiatrist.  Dr. 
Hy  Pertensive.  "My  boy," 
said  Pertensive,  "your  Rohr- 
schach  test  show.syou  are  going 
batty  from  collar  wrinklosis. 
It  is  incurable.  In  fact,  you  are 
incurable.  Nothing  I  can  do 
for  you.  $10,  please." 

Then  Jim  read  an  ad  for  a 
Van  Heusen  Centurv  Shirt.  He 
read  how  its  soft  collar  won't 
wrinkle  ever  .  . .  how  you  can 


maltreat  it  like  a  maniac  and 
it  still  won't  \\Tinkle  .  .  .  how 
without  a  bit  of  starch  it's 
impossible  to  wrinkle  it.  "Gee 
whiz,  I  am  saved,"  said  Jim, 
and  he  ran  to  his  haberdasher 
to  buy  one.  "$;].95  plea.se," 
said  the  clerk. 

Today  Jim  is  as  popular  as 
money.  And  he  still  has  his 
Van  Heusen  Century  shirt  be- 
cau.se  it  lasts  twice  as  long  as 
ordinary  shirts. 

S$e  it  at  better  stores  every- 
where,  or  drop  a  line  to 
Phillips-Jones  Corp.,  417  Fifth 
Avenue,  New  York  16,  N.  Y. 
Makers  of  Van  Heusen  Shirts 
Sport  Shirts  •  Ties  •  Pajamas 
Handkerchiefs  •  Underwear 
Swim  wear   •  Sweaters. 


WE  ARE  THE  EXCLUSIVE 


VAN  HEUSEN 


DEALER  IN  CHAPEL  HILL 


DAILY    CROSSWORD 


ACROSS 

1.  Sharp 

and  har.sh 
6.  A  fabric 

11.  Marketable 
price 

12.  Communi- 
cation means 

13.  Man's  name 
(poss.) 

14.  Paleness 

15.  Feline 

16.  Purpose 

17.  Greek  letter 

18.  Donkey 
19  Moral 

22  Girl's  n«m« 

23.  Small 
sandpiper 

26.  Once  mort 

28.  Unhappy 

29  HospitAl 
resident 
physician 

31.  Contend 

32.  Cry  of  pain 
33  Book 

of  Ma«sei 
G7  Footlike 

part 
29  Inhabitant 
40.  Spoken 

42  Setting: 

43  Scene  of 
the  crim« 

44  Cut  wood 

45  French  river 

DOWN 
1.  Hail 

2  City  in  IiKll* 

3  Charles 
Lamb 

4.  Corrod* 

5.  Exist ' 

<  Oiance  fr<l«ii 
Spanisli  t«  - 
S«ctt8i» 


Whitman 
8  Not 

working 
9.  Tawny 
animal 
10.  Peer 
14.  Italian, 
city 

17.  Botch 

18.  Treated 
sewage 

20.  Concealed 

21.  At  home 

22.  Swlfl*  rirer 

23.  Prehistoric 
animal 

24.  Afresh 


27.  Earth 

as 

a 

god- 

de.>«s 
30.  African 

river 

33.  Fail 
t* 
hit 

34.  Peruvi- 
an 
Indian 

35.  Merganser 

36.  Rational 

37.  American 
author 
(poss.) 


Sat«r4*]r'f  Antwrr 

38.  Sea  eagle 
41.  Southern 

general 
43.  Girl's 

nickname 


Dr.  Walter  Starkie 

bhown  above  is  Dr.  Walter 
Starkie,  British  lecturer  ami 
sp^iaiist  on  gypsy  music.  He 
will  give  a  lecture  and  denKMt- 
strations      here     tomorrow      and 

Tuesday.  

I 

Gypsy  Music 
Expert  To  Be 
Here  Monday 

A  world  -  famous  authority  on 
gypsy  music  is  lecturing  here  to- 
morrow and  Tuesday  under  aus- 
pices of  the  Romance  Languages 
Dept. 

Dr.     Waller     Starkie,     eminent 
British  Hispanist.  lecturer,  scholar 
and  writer,   will   speak   and   play ! 
the  violin  as  an  accompaniment,     j 

Dr.  Starkie  was  for  15  years  di- 
rector of  the  British  Institute  in  1 
Madrid.  He  has  taught  Spanish} 
and  Italian  literatures  at  Dublin 
University,  and  is  a  former  direc- 
tor of  the  Abbey  Theater  Move- 
ment. 

In  Chapel  Hill  Dr.  Starkie's  three 
appearances  will  be  as  follows: 

"Ritual  and  the  Theater" — 
Playmakers'  Theater,  8  p.m.  tomor- 
row. 

The  Wandering  of  Don  Quixote 
and  Sancho:  A  Visit  Today  to  the 
Scenes  of  La  Mancha"  (Illustrated 
with  slides):  111  Murphy  Hall,  12 
noon,  Tuesday. 

"Gypsy  Life,  History  and  Music" 
(illustrated  with  violin  music): 
Hill  Hall,  8  p.m.  Tuesday.  ^ 

Dr.  Starkie  is  currently  on  a 
tour  of  the  United  States,  appear- 
ing mainly  on  university  plat- 
forms. 

Dr.  Sterling  A.  Stoudemire  is 
chairman  of  the  Dept  of  Romance 
Languages.  Kenan  Professor  W.  L. 
Wiley  is  in  charge  of  the  Starkie 
program.  The  public  has  been  in 
vited. 


Lutherans  Will  Hear 
Child  Care  Specialist 

The  Lutheran  Student  Assn.  will 
meet  today  to  eat  dinner  and  hear 
a  child  care  specialist  speak  on 
"Lutheran  Welfare  Services.' 

The  association  will  meet  to^ay 
at  6  p.m.  to  eat  a  pre-Thanksgiv- 
ing  meal.  The  speaker  will  be  Al 
Broten,  assistant  director  of  the 
School  of  Social  Work  child  care 
project. 

Members  of  the  Lutheran  Stu- 
dent Assn.  at  Woman's  College  will 
attend  the  meeting. 


Before  The 
Duke  Gome 
Affer  The 
Duke  Game 
Meet  Your 
Family 
And  Friends 


Af 


THE  rNTlMAtt 
BOOKSHOP  « 

905  E    Pranklin  St. 
Open  Till  10  P.M. 


CLASSIFIEDS 


FOR  SALE:  SHOTGUN— STEVENS 
.410  model  58,  3-shot  clip,  bolt 
action.  If  interested,  call  Ralph 
Hunt,  9-5294. 


Playmakers' 
Set  Cast  For 
CyNeill's  Play 

Cast  for  the  Playmakeri'  pro- 
duction of  Eugene  CNeill's  "De- 
sire Under  the  Elms,"  to  be  pre- 
sented here  Dec.  14-18,  has  been 
announced  by  Thomas  Patterson 
of  the  Carolina  Playmaker's  staff. 

Foster  Pltz- Simons,  associate 
professor  of  Dramatic  Art,  will 
portray  Ephraim  Cabot,  a  strong 
old  New  England  Farmer  who  had 
conquered  barren  rock  to  make 
it  into  fertile  land.  Jo  Jurgensen, 
wife  of  another  Dramatic  Art  as- 
sociate professor,  plays  the  role  of 
Abbie,  his  new  young  wife.  Al 
Gordon,  graduate  student  fngm 
Greensboro,  enacts  the  part  of 
Eben  Cabot,  Ephraim's  son  and, 
■until  Abbfe  arrives,  his  heir. 

Simeon  and  Peter,  brothers  of 
Eben  who  give  up  their  claim  to 
the  household  and  leave  for  Cali- 
fornia in  search  of  gold,  are  play- 
ed by  Charles  Barrett  of  Hickory 
and  Chapel  Hill,  and  Ken  Lowry 
of  Troy,  Ohio. 

Others  in  the  cast  are  Lloyd 
Skinner  of  Burlington  as  the  Fid- 
dler; Dick  Rothrock  of  'Spring- 
dale,  Ark.,  as  the  Caller;  Pete  0'- 
Sullivan  of  Valhalla,  N.  Y.,  as  a 
drunk  man;  Nancetta  Hudson  of 
Coldsboro,  Mary  Finley  of  Mar- 
ion, and  Mary  Ruth  Johnson  of 
Eupora,  Miss.,  as  the  women;  Jim- 
my Sechrest  of  Thomasville,  Dan 
Seaton    of    Valparaiso,    Fla.    and 


Australian  Classicist 
Commonts  On  Studies 

Cieorge  Gellie.  senior  lecturer  in 
classics  at  the  University  of  Mel- 
bourne. Australia,  has  been  visit- 
ing this  week  at  UNC.  observing 
American  procedures  in  teaching 
Latin  and  Greek,  and  translation 
courses  in  English.  Gellie  is  visit- 
ing £  number  of  representative 
Canadian  and  American  colleges 
and  universities,  under  the  terms 
of  a  Carnegie  Fellowship. 

Commenting  on  the  difference 
between  undergraduate  training  in 
the  classics  in  America  and  Aus- 
tralia, Gellie  said:  "I  am  impressed 
by  the  wide  range  and  flexibility 
of  the  American  classical  curri- 
culum, a.o  compared  with  our  own, 
whicii  is  modeled  primarily  on  the 
conservative  British  university  sys- 
tem. 

Ho  expressed  amazement  at  the 
exchange  of  staff  in  American  uni- 
versities. "Almost  every  faculty 
member  seems  to  have  had  experi- 
ence at  two  or  more  universities," 
he  said.  "In  Australia,  the  eight 
universities  are  each  hundreds  of 
miles  apart,  and  their  staffs  tend 
to  be  permanently  settled  in  one 
establishment." 

Jerry  Young  of  Marion  as  the  men; 
Betty  Jinnette  of  Goldsboro  as  an 
old  woman,  and  Jim  Heldman  of 
Durham  as  the  Sheriff. 


'AncTrocies'  Endsl^un  Tonight 


DR.   GUY  B.  PHILLIPS 

. . .  recetuci-   $1000   bill 

Professor  Gets 
Service  Award 

A  $1000  bill  was  presented  this 
week  to  Guy  B.  Phillips  of  UNC 
by  the  State  School  Boards  Assn. 
in  recognition  of  his  services  as 
secretary  of  the  statewide  organi- 
zation. 

Dr.  Phillips  organized  the  assil. 
in  1937  and  has  served  without 
pay  the  past  19  years.  He  is  a  pro- 
fessor of  education  in  the  Uni- 
versity and  is  director  of  the  UNC 
summer 'School. 


'Androcles  and  the  Lion'  witt 
complete  a  five-day  run  at  the 
Playmakers  Theater  tonight.  The 
play  gets  under  way  at  8:30  p.m. 

The  play  will  be  the  annual  tour 
play  of  the  PIa3inak«rs  this  sea- 
son. The  tour  wiU  begin  Nov.  26 
and  end  Dec.  7.  The  play  will  be 
presented  in  Augusta,  Ga.,  Rock 
Hill,  S.  C,  Wilmington,  Goldsboro, 
Rocky  Mount,  Raleigh,  Danville, 
Va.,  Marion,  Lenoir,  and  Greens- 
boro. 

In  "Andrdcles  and  the  Lion," 
Androcles,  a  Grfre*  tailor,  helps  a 
lion  by  removing  a  thorn  from  his 
paw  when  tlsey  meet  in  the  forest 
Later,  when  Androcles  is  sentenced 
to  death  in  the  martyrs'  arena  by 
Emperor  Caesar,  h«  faces  a  wild 
beast  fresh  from  the  forest,  the 
lion  whom  he  befriended  who,  for- 
tunately, has  a  memory  like  an 
elephant. 

Appearing  as  Androcles  is  Dick 
Newdick,  of  Augusta,  Me.,  who 
played  Puck  in  last  spring's  "A 
Midsummer-Night's  Dream"  by  the 
Playmakers;  The  lion  is  played  by 


David  Small,  of  Morehead  City,  who 
had  a  leading  role  in  "Seventeen" 
last  year.  Caesar  is  comically  por- 
trayed by  John  Sneden,  of  Tenafly, 
N.  J.>  who  has  appeared  in  "A 
Midsummer-Night's  Dream",  "On- 
dine".  "Anastasia",  and  other 
Playmaker  productions.  John 
Whitt,  of  New  Bern,  portrays  the 
captain. 


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OPEN  TILL   10   PJM. 


JULIE   ANDREWS  saysi 

Fert'Iyy  a  Professor  ^Iggins 
among  magazines!  " 


Julie  Andrews,  tMrenty- one  year -old  British  girl,  piays  Eliza 
Ooolittie  in  th«  sensationol  BrMdway  raccess  "My  Fair  Lady" 
—a  musical  adaptation  of  George  Bornerd  ShsWs  "Pygnfiaiton." 


Q.  Miss  Andrews,  had  you  ever  be«i  away  from  your  family  before  you 
arrived  in  this  country  two  years  ago? 

A.  Never,  and  t  stiU  become  dreadfully  homesick.  But  I  do  talk  with  them 
several  times  a  week. 

Q.  By  phone? 

A.  No— by  phonograph.  We  talk  into  recording  machines,  and  airmail  the 
records.  They  are  »o  d,ear  I  can  even  hear  my  brothers  arguing  in  the  back- 
ground about  whose  turn  is  next.  It  is  as  if  ut  u>ere  all  in  one  room. 

Q>  You  never  exchange  the  usual  kind  of  letter?. 

A.  Very  seldom,  Vm  afraid.  Bui  we  post  back  and  forth  bits  of  particular 
interest— like  newspaper  renews,  and  favorite  articles  from  The  Reader's 
Digest. 

Q.  Just  the  Digest? 

A.  Oh,  no,  there  are  ethers  sometimes — but  Ae  Dige^  is  our  magazine. 
Mummy  and  Daddy  have  aiiuays  read  it,  emd  I  began  when  I  was  twelve, 
pU^ing  music  hails.  I  hod  tamiassehoaifCMd  my  teaching  governess  went 
through  eotry  issue  with  me  an  the  rum.  It  was  part  of  my  lessons. 

Q*  Do  you  still  read  it  mi  tiie  nin?  . 

A.  Oh,  yes— waiting  for  assignments,  waiting  for  buses,  even  waiting  for 
curtain  cues.  I  hope  I  neaer  have  to  be  without  it.  When  I  wish  to  be 
amused,  the  Dige^  amuses  me;  andu^tenl  need  to  be  scolded  or  instructed, 
I  can  always  find  an  article  Aat  tatht  to  me  like— 

Q-  Like  a  Dutch  uncle?  .  ,   , 

A.  No,  muck  more  deiightfutty—marje  like  Professor  ^Tggins  in  **My  Fair 
Lady"  showing  a  new  world  to  EUmb  Dotdittie. 


o  -^O  0 
o   ooo  o.  o 


CONDENSATION  PROM  POKTHCOMM* 
SOOK:  "THE  ONE  THAT  OOT  AWAY."  Tiw 

all  but  incredible  story  of  NasifigHter 
pilot  Franz  von  Werra — how  he  broke 
out  of  a  British  prison  camp,  auda- 
ciously attempted  to  steal  a  plane  . . . 
and  finally  did  escape. 

REWauON  AT  POXNAN.  Hei«  are  Sye- 
witnesB  accounts  of  the  June  uprisingB 
that  may  be  a  {weview  nX.  the  evmtual 
end  of  the  Cobunuiust  empire. 


TWO-CDMO  DAOMt  OP  YUSOP 

Eerie  experiences  of  a  British  odfesr  in 

the  Red-infested  jungles  of  Malaya. 


TNI  ANDREA  DO«IA*S  UNTOLD  STORY. 
Heart-rending  dranM  of  Dr.  Peterson's 
futile  5-faour  struggle  to  save  his  wife 
— pinned  under  wreckage  in  their  state- 
room —  ss  the  giant  liner  slowly  sank. 

Att  YOU  A  tOREf  L  A.  R.  Wylie  shows 
#a]rs  we  unwittingly  bore  others,  and 
how  to  make  yourself  more  intoreeting. 

WHY  TMHtS  CANNOT  BE  ANOTHER  WAR. 
Pohtser  Prize-winner  William  L.  I^u- 
renoe  trib  why,  in  the  awesome  light  of 
an  exploding  H-bomb,  one  thing  stands 
clear:  thermonuclear  war  means  cer- 
tain, suicide  to  the  aggressor. 


Reader's  Digest 
^^^  It*  popularify  and  influence  are  world-uiide 

~ -i.  fi  '''i  '«**  —  ~ 


fAftI  POUK 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HllL 


SUNDAY,  NOVEMBER  18,  1954 


Terps'  Finci  leads  Mates  To  4-0  Soccer  Win  Over  UNC 


Hornung  Leads  Irish  To  Win 


(Contimied  from  page  1.)         ■ 

time,  had  rambled  78  yards  to  the : 
Tar  Heel  15  fron;i  his  own  7.  Hor- 1 
nung  also  scored  this  ooe,  sweep- 
ing left  end  from  the  three  yard  i 
line  on  an  option  i^ay.  Hornung  I 
rounded  out  the  Notre  Dame  scor- 1 


ing  by  adding     all     three     extra 
points. 

Carolina  pushed  across  her  first 
marker  with  only  3:45  left  in  the 
second  quarter  on  a  8-yard  pass 
from  Sutton  to  halfback  Larry 
McMuUen  in  the  left  corner  of 
the  end  zone.  The  drive  consumed 


International  Preview  Meet 
Readies  U.S.  Olympic  Team 


SfELBOURNE,  i^>— The  United 
States  Olympic  track  and  field 
team,  praised  by  tiSk  Russians  as 
the  greatest  ever  assembled,  dem- 
onstrated again  yesterday  that  it 
will  be  tough  to  handle  when 
games  get  under  way  here  official- 
ly next  Thursday. 

Uncle  Sam's  athletes,  headed  by 
Jack  Davis  w!th  a  *rorld  record 
bettering  performance  in  the  120 
yard  high  hurdles,  grabbed  ei^t 
of  14  events  at  an  international 
preview  meet  this  afternoon  at 
fiendigo.  90  miles  from  here. 

Although  the  Russians  didn't 
complete  and  most  nations  enter- 
ed only  token  teams,  the  perform- 
ances of  the  U.  S.  athletes  drew 
plenty  of  comment  tonight  upon 
returning  to  the  site  of  the  Olym- 
pics. 

The  Bendigo  meet  was  the  sec- 
ond in  which  American  prowess 
had  been  effectively  demonstrated. 
On  Wednesday  at  Geelong,  the 
United   States   took    six    of    eight) 


event  in  another  preview  mgect. 
At  Bendigo,  Davis  stepped  over 
the  high  sticks  in  13.3.  one  tenth 
of  a  second  better  than  hi£  own 
world  mark.  In  the  1952  Olympics, 
the  25-year-old  Californian  finish- 
ed second,  barely  beaten  by  an- 
other U.  S.  star.  Harrison  Dillard. 
I  in  13.7.  That  was  an  Olympic  rec- 
ord, and  Davis'  time  was  the  same 
<as  for  DiUard. 

Officials  said  that  Davis'  13.3 
definitely  would  be  forwarded  to 
the  international  federation  for 
official  acceptance  as  a  new  world 
record.  Dick  AtUesey  of  the  Unit- 
ed States  is  listed  as  the  world 
record  holder  with  13.5,  but  Davis 
cracked  that  with  his  13.4  earlier 
this  year  while  running  in  the 
110-meter  hurdles.  10  inches  far- 
ther than  the  120  hurdles. 

Lee  Calhoun  of  Garj'.  Ind..  a^d 
North  Carolina  College  finished 
close  on  Davis'  heels,  followed  by 
Mijt  Campbell  of  Plainfield.  N.^., 
and  ,ex-Duke  University  great.  Joel 
Sbankle  of  Durham.  N.  C. 


Duke  Tops  Wake;  USC  Wins 
Over  Md;  Va.,  State  Lose 


WINSTON-SALEM.  (^  —  Duke 
had  the  superior  mudders  as  it 
sloshed  over  a  rain -soaked  field 
to  w>hip  Wake  Forest  2fr0,  yester- 
day in  an  Atlantic  Coast  Confer- 
ence football  game  that  saw  the! 
losers  fumble  the  ball  away  eight 
times. 

The  heav>'-9oing  in  a  cold  rain 
didnt  seem  to  bother  George  Dut- 
TOW.  Duke's  sophomore  halfback 
from  Washington,  D.  C.  who  scor- 
:  ed  the  first  two  'touchdowns  and 
set  up  the  third  as  the  Blu^  Dev^- 
ils  tallied  in  every  quarter  to  level 
dieir  season's  record  at  4-4-1. 

COLUMBIA,  S.  C,  OP  —  South! 
Carolina  aeofed  twice  in  the '  last 
six  minutes  yesterday  for  a  13-0  j 
Atlantic    Coast    Cijblerence    foot-j 
ball  victory  over  Maryland.  ! 

UNVERSITY  fARK,  Pa.  <^»— i 
Penn  State,  a  20-point  favorite.  | 
needed  a  touchdown  in  the  final' 


13  seconds  to  turn  back  a  fired 
up  and  surprisingly  strong  North 
Carolina  States  football  team,  14- 
7,  yestertiay  before  21.000  fans. 

Penn  State's  Nittany  Lions 
scored  the  winning  TD  on  a  nine 
yard  pass  and  run  play  from  half- 
back Billy  Kane  to  en4rlie^  lifTal- 

BALTIMORE,  t*— -Nivy  ^ot  the 
j  better  of  a  game  of  swap  with  a 
slippery  football  today  and  sub- 
stitute halfback  Cltet  Btnehett 
slivered  for  three  totichdowns  to 
give  the  Middies  a  34-7  victory  ov- 
er'Virginia  during  a. stpady  down- 
pour at  Memorial  Stadium.        , 

The  game  before  about  12.000 
fans  abounded  in  fumbles  and  pass 
interceptions.  The  ball,  got  away 
from  Virginia  backs  nine  times, 
with  Navy  recovering  four.  Navy 
let  it  squirt  away  four  times  and 
and  Virginia  dropped  on  three. 


Game  Coverage  Was  G6ocl 

arrived  in  the  Irish  camp  Monday 
to  pave  the  way  for  the  Tar  Heels* 
coming.  Wade  said  the  weather  was 
warm  all  week  long  until  the  Chap- 
ci  Hiilians  blew  in,  bringing  Old 
Man  Winter  with  them. 

What  would  you  guess  to  be  a 
representative  symbol  of  the  Uni- 
versity of  North  Carolina?  The  Old 
Well?  South  Building?  Old  East? 
■wrong  in  all  counts.  On  the  UNC 
'page'  of  the  program,  there  ap- 
pears a  photo  of  the  Morehead 
•Planetarium  right  under  a  short  of 
Chancellor  House.  And  so  goes  the 
:  fall  of  tradition. 

I     It   was    a   sad    story   when   the 

I  Notre  Dame  marching  band  came 

I  strutting  on  the  field  in  all  their 

I  colorful  finery.  Instead  of  major- 

tttes.   seven    liigh   stepping  drum 

majors  led  the  way  onto  the  green 

I  playing  turf  of  Notre  Dame  Stadi- 

I  um.  Kilfs  and  high  plume  hats  were 

the  order  of  the  day  despite  the 

.  chill  suiyoundings. 


(Continued  from  page  1.) 

the  time  table,  kept  things  pretty 
well  in  hand,  however. 

George  Stavnitski,  Tar  Heel  cen- 
ter who  was  severely  injured  in 
the  Oklahoma  game,  made  the 
tnp  with  his  teammates  and 
handled  the  spotting  duties  for 
Harry  Wismer  of  the  Mutual 
Broadcasting  System. 

Coverage  of  the  game  was 
thorough  to  say  the  least.  In  addi- 
tion to  the  usual  crowd  of  Midwest 
writers,  there  was  a  large  conting- 
ent of  North  Carolina  scribes  on 
hand.  Among  these  were  Jack 
Plomer  from  the  Durham  Herald, 
Hugo  Germino  of  the  Durham  Sun, 
Jack  Briebart  c4  the  Raleigh  News 
&  Observer,  Moses  Crutchfield  of 
the  Greensboro  Daily  News,  Wil- 
ton Garrison  of  the  Charlotte  News, 
;.nd  Frank  Spencer  of  the  Winston- 
Salem  Journal. 

UNC  Sports  Publicist  Jake  Wade 


only  6   plays  from  the  Tar  Heel 
38  yard  stripe. 

Carolina's  last  score  came  in  the 
early  moments  of  the  third  per- 
iod on  a  Curt  Hathaway  to  Moe 
DeCantis  pitchout  which  was  good 
for  6  yards  and  the  TD. 

Hathaway.  UNC  second  string 
quarterback,  saw  heavy  duty  in  the 
absence  of  Dave  Reed. 

Pass  interceptions  just  about 
proved  fatal  t6  the  Tar  Heels.  No 
less  than  three  serious  UNC  threats 
were  stopped  when  Notre  Dame  in- 
tercepted a  pass. 

Carolina  got  into  the  act  near 
the  end  of  the  first  half  when  Moe 
DcCanlis  intercepted  a  Notre  Dame 
pass  on  the  goal  and  lateraled  to 
center  Ronnie  Koes  who  ran  it  out 
'.0  the  30  yardline.  Nothing  came 
of  this,  however,  as  the^Irish  took 
the  ball  right  back  on  an  inter- 
ception. 

Notre  Dame  wasted  no  time 
tasting  paydirt  in  the  second  pe- 
riod. On  the  first  play  from  scrim- 
mage. Hornung  dropped  back  and 
hit  Morse  who  was  all  by  him- 
self in  the  left  flat  and  the  fleet 
Irish  back  went  all  the  way  to 
the  Carolina  7.  Three  plays  later 
Notre  Dame  Jed,  6-0.  Hornung  add- 
ed the  point  and  the  score  was 
7-0  with  13:36  left  in  the  second 
quarter. 

On  the  following  kickoff.  Sutton 
returned  it  to  bis  own  33  where 
he  fumbled  while  still  running. 
Notre  Dame  recovered  but  couldn't 
move. 

UNC  took  the  next  kickoff  and 
drove  right  down  the  field  for 
their  first  score  with  Hathaway  di- 
recting the  attack,  and  Ed  Sutton 
and  sub  fviliback  John  Haywood 
splitting  the  ball  carrying  chores, 
the  Tar  Heels  could  not  be  stopped. 
Haywood  got  12  yards  on  the  first 
two  plays.  Sutton  then  hit  sub  end 
Vince  Olen  with  a  pass  on  the 
Notre  Dame  31.  Hathaway  rolled 
<out  to  the  9  and  Sutton  hit  Mc- 
Mullcn  with  the  TD  pass. 

After  Notre  Dame  couldn't  do 
anything  with  the  second  half  kick- 
off,  the  Tar  Heels  took  possession 
oh  the  Notre  Dame  36  following 
Phil  Blazer's  recovery  of  an  au- 
brey  Lew^'  fumble. 

Sutton  lost  13  yards  on  the  first 
play,  but  tha  lo^t  yardage  was  re- 
gained when  the  Irish  were  called 
for  pass  Interference  on  their  own 
40.  DeCantis  went  for  18  yards  to 
tile  22,  Vale  iHcked  up  3  to  the 
19,  and  Hathaway  circled  left  and 
to  the  7  on  the  option  pla>'  where 
he  lateraled  to  Sutton  who  carried 
to  the  6.  A  Hathaway  to  Sutton 
pass  fell  incomplete,  but  the  soph- 
omore quarterback  pitched  it  to 
DeCantis  for  the  six  points  on  the 
next  play.  This  made  the  score 
14-14  with  12:00  left  in  the  third 
quarter. 

Notre  Dame  began  a  long  ex- 
tended drive  late  in  the  third  that 
carried  down  to  the  Tar  Heel  24 
before  stalling. 

The  Tar  Heels  took  possession 
here,  on  their  24,  with  10:11  left 
:n  the  gai^e,  and  began  a  last 
ditch  push  toward  paydirt.  Vale, 
AtoMullen  and  Sutton  shared  the 
ball-moving  duties  down  to  the  37 
yard  line  where  another  crucial 
fourth  down  situation  arose.  With 
6  yards  to  go,  Hathaway  faded 
back  and  flipped  a  pass  to  Ed  Sut- 
ton on  the  5-yard  line.  The  pass 
sailed  over  Sutton's  head  out  of 
bounds,  and  the  Tar  Heels  had  fail- 
ed. 

Notre  Dame  took  over  at  this 
point  and  surged  down  the  field 
for  the  tie-breaking  score.  The 
Irish  used  straight  power  plays  for 
6  and  7  yards  at  a  crack,  mowing 
down  the  weary  Tar  Heel  line  mer- 
cilessly. Le^yis  and  Milota  were  the 
key  men,  as  each  carried  five 
times. 


State  Officials  Plan  Nov.  25  Meet 
With  NCAA  Executive  Director 


*  Win  Gives  Maryland  Fourth 
Straight  ACC  Championship 


RALEIGH,  li!l— North  Carolina 
State  College  officials  yesterday 
postponed  efforts  to  learn  the  evi- 

Sooners  Score  10  TDs 
In  Stomping  Missouri 

NORMAN,  Okla..  WJ— The  Okla- 
homa Sooners,  obviously  enraged 
because  they  were  relegated  to 
the  No.  2  spot  -in  the  Associated 
Press  football  rankings,  vented 
their  fury  on  Missouri  today  with 
10  touchdowns  for  a  67-14  victory. 

The  triumph  gave  OkUihoma  its 
38th  straight  victor>'  —  a  modem 
record — and  its  ninth  straight  Big 
Seven  Conference  title  under 
Coach  Bud  Wilkinson. 

Oklahoma  dropped  from  first  to 
second  in  the  national  ratings  by 
Tennesse  this  week,  is  now  unde- 
feated in  48  conference  tilts. 


dence  on  which  the  NCAA  based 
severe  disciplinary  action  against 
the  college. 

The  postponement  of  a  tnp  to 
Kansas  City  to  confer  with  Wal- 
ter Byers,  NCAA  executive  di- 
rector, was  announced  in  a  bnef 
statement  from  Dr.  Carey  H.  Bos- 
tiah.  college  chancellor.  The  trip 
had  j^een .  planned  for  this  w-cek- 
end. 

"Since  Mr.  Walter  Byers,  execu- 
tive director  of  the  NCAA,  could 
not  arrange  a  mutually  convenient 
date  during  Thanksgiving  week, 
the  conference  with  him  and  of- 
ficials of  North  Carolina  State  Col- 
lege and  The  Consolidated  Univers- 
ity administration  has  been  post- 
poned until  the'  week  of  Nov.  25, 
Bostian  said. 


'Clemson  Didn't  Show  A  Thing' 
Says  Orange  Bowl  Committee 


MIAMI,  Fla.,  \Jft  —  The  Orange 
Bowl   subcommittee   in  charge   of 
supplying  teams  for  the  post-sea- ; 
son  game  will  meet     Monday     to 
talk   about,    among   other  things. ' 
the  Clemson  Tigers.  I 

Van     C.     Kussrow.     committee 
chairman,  yesterday  said.  "Clemson  [ 
didn't  show  a  thing." 

The  Tigers  were  considered  the 
Atlantic  Coast  Conference's  best 
Orange  Bowl  prospect  before  the 
University  of  Miami  smashed 
them  21-0  Friday  night.  And  appar- 
ently they  must  still  be  con.sid- 
cred  the  conferences  best,  al- 
Ihough  much  of  the  sheen  was 
knocj^cd  of  them  by  the  bruising 
.Miami  team. 

'■.\clually,  there's  no  outstand- 
ing team  in  the  Atlantic  Coast 
Conference  picture."  Kussrow  said. 

'We'll  wait  on  today's  results, 
then  hold  a  meeting  on  Monday.' 
The  committee,  under  its  contract 
with  the  conference,  may  be  heard 
concerning  its  choice  of  Atlantic 
Coast  Conference  team  to  meet  the 


The  NCAA  placed  State  College 
on  probation  for  four  years  earl- 
ier this  week.  It  charged  the 
school  with  giving  a  student-ath- 
lete a  five-year  unrestricted  schol- 
arship and  giving  a  friend  of  his 
a  seven-year  medical  scholar^ip. 

President  William  C.  Friday  of 
The  Consolidated  University  of 
North  Carolina,  of  which  the  col- 
lege is  a  branch,  identified  the 
student-<athlete  as  Jackie  More- 
land,  a  highly  sou^t  basketball 
player  from  Minden,  La.  The 
friend  reportedly  was  Moreland's 
girl  friend,  now  a  student  at  Cen- 
tenary CoNege  in  Louisiana. 

Friday  and  other  officials  have 
denied  any  knowledge  of  the  al- 
legations and  evidence  on  which 
the  NCAA  based  its  action. 

In  seeking  the  conference  with 
Byers,  Dr.  Bostian  said  college 
officials  wanted  to  "go  over  every- 
thing .  .  .  they  have"  on  the  case. 


COLLEGE  PARK,  Md.,  Nov.  17 
Iff) — Mike  Finci  scored  three  goals 
today  to  lead  Maryland  to  a  4-0 
soccer  victory-  over  North  Carolina 
and  its  fourth  straight  Atlantic 
Coast  Conference  championship. 

The  Terrapins,  who  have  won 
7  while  losing  only  to  Penn  State 
in  a  non-conference  tilt,  were  in 
charge  from  the  time  Rick  Stottlcr 
broke  the  scoring  ice  aft^  12  min- 

Y  Service  Group  Plans 
Trip  To  Youth  Center 

The  Y  Community  Service  Group 
has  completed  plans  for  a  visit 
Tuesday  to  the  Camp  Butner  Youth 
Center  and  Center  for  the  Blind. 

Students  making  the  trip  will 
leave  the  Y  Tuesday  at  4:15  p.m. 
The  group  will  eat  supper  at  the 
Center  for  the  Blind. 

All  students  interested  in  mak- 
ing the  trip  have  been  asked  to 
contact  Bill  Tucker,  chairman  of 
the  group. 


utes  of  the  first  period. 

Finci  added  another  goal  in  the 
first  quarter  and  Iwoted  in  one 
each  in  the  third  and  fourth  quar- 
ters. Maryland  took  24  shots  to  10 
for  the  Tar  Hels,  vfho  have  now 
won  4  and  lost  3. 


Lev*iy   Tinselly 

ADVENT 
CALENDARS 

50ff  and  $1.00 

at 

THE  INTIMATE 
BOOKSHOP 

205    E.   Franklin   St. 
Open   Till    10   P.M. 


f 


Tennessee  Tops 
Ole  Miss,  27-7 

KNOXVILLE,  Tenn.,  (iW  — With 
fullback  Carl  Smith  giving  Ten- 
nessee's bow]  bound  express  its 
momentum,  the  top-ranked  Vols 
rolled  past  .Mississippi,  27-7,  yester- 
day to  remain  unbeaten  and  un- 
tied. 

A  partisan  throng  of  42.000  saw 
the  Vols  yield  a  touchdown  to  the 
fired  up  Rebels  on  the  opening 
kickoff  and  strike  back  viciously 
for  their  eighth  straight  victorj-  of 
the  season. 

Smith,  190  -  pound  sophomore 
from  Washington  Courthouse, 
Ohio,  .scored  three  times  for  Ten- 
nessee 'as  the  Vols  ripped  apart 
Mississippi's  defenses  for  383 
yards  rushing  and  passing. 

Mississippi  had  gone  into  the 
game  with  tJie  best  defense,  sta- 
tistically, of  any  college  football 
team  in  the  country.  In  previous 
contests,  the  Rebels  had  yielded 
only  153.6  yards  a  game. 

Stung  by  falling  behind  for  the 
first  time  tills  season.  Tennessee ' 
got  its  single  wing  powerhouse^ 
rolling  in  the  second  period  with  I 
Smith  plunging  from  the  one  for 
the  Vols  first  TD. 


Big  Seven's  representative.  But 
members  of  the  conference  are  not 
bound  by  the  opinion. 

Clemson  has  won  five,  lost  one 
and  tied  two.  South  Carolina  has 
6  victories  and  three  losses.  T^ese 
are  the  best  records  in  the  con- 
ference. 

Clemson  Coach  Frank  Howard 
told  sports-writers  here  that  one 
Miami  play  beat  Clemson  —  a  play  \ 
in  which  quarterback  Sam  Scar- 
necchia  would  sometimes  pitch  out 
but  often  keep  the  ball  himself.  It 
gained  ground  for  the  Hurricanes 
time  after  time. 

"My  boys  looked  worn  out," 
Howard  said.  "We've  had  tough  j 
ball  games  Saturday  after  Satur- 
day. They've  looked  better  but  I 
wouldn't  detract  from  this  fine 
Miami  team." 


MURALS 


Monday's  intramural  schedule  is 
as  follows: 

TAG  FOOTBALL 

3:45  p.m.:  Field-1  DKE  vs.  Theta 
Chi;  Field-2  Sig  Nu  vs.  Beta;  Field* 
3  Phloem  vs.  Lamb' Chi;  Field-4 
Phi  Delt  vs.  KA;  Ficld-5  Pi  Kap 
Sig  vs.  Chi  Psi. 

4:45  p.m.:  Field-1  ZBT  vs.  Zeta 
Psi;  Field-2  TEP  vs.  Kap  Sig; 
Field-3  ATO  vs.  PiKA;  Field-4 
Cobb  (1)  vs.  Mangum  (1>;  Ficld-5 
Lewis  vs.  Law  School. 

VOLLEYBALL 

4  p.m.:  Court-1  Vic.  Vil.  vs.  Ay- 
cock;  Court-2  TEP  vs.  Delt  Sig, 
Court-3  Sig  Nu  vs.  PiKA  (W); 
Court-4  DKE  vs.  ZBT. 

5  p.m.:  Court-1  BVP  vs.  Med 
Sch.  (2);  Court-2  KA  vs.  Sig  Nu; 
Court-3  Everett  (2)  vs  Alexander 
(1);  Court-4  Med  Sch.  (1)  vs.  Joy- 
ner. 


Wonderful    Wonderful 

CHRISTMAS    CARDS 
40  for  $1.00 

at 

THE  INTIMATE 
BOOKSHOP 

305  E.  Franklin  St. 
Open  Till  10  P.tA. 


anything  can  happen  when  you  wear 

One  of  Corday^g  great  perfumes  .  . .  changing  manhood  to 
knighthood  . . .  challenging  stolen  glances  . . .  mystery  and 
adventure  in  its  every  golden  drop  distilled  jn  Paris. 

par/urns  COR  DAY 


FAME 


USE  OUR  CONVENIENT 
LAY-A-WAY  PLAN 


Phone  9-8781 


G  N  A  B  ! 

SHOOT  KEMP'S  TURKEY' NOW 

FOR  YOUR  THANKSGIVING  LISTENING 

A  BIG  WEEK'S  SALE . . . 

Monday,  November  19  Thru 
Saturday,  November  24 

LIST         SALE 

ALL  12"  LP'S ___         $3.98    '  $2.80 

ALL  12"  LP'S  $4.98       $3.80 

*  STILL  GOT  'EM  AT  $21.00  AN  INCH 

*  STILL  10"  LP's  AT  $1.00 

*  STILL  SOME  LP's  AT  50%  OR  BEHER 

*  STILL  ALL  EP  45  RPM  $1.05  EACH 
REG.  45  RPM  $.75  EACH 


207  E.  FRANKLIN 


CLOSED  THURSDAY 


Sensationally  New 


The  etory  »f  •   ruthless  finenciel   genius 
were  hit  slaves. 


«rhe  thought  w^men 


Yeu'tl  never  ferget  him.  .    You'll  never  forget  the  fabulous  way 
he  lived  end  loved.  .  .and  met  hit  death. 


The  Big  Happy  **^ 
Look  at  the 
New-Look 
Peacetime  Army! 


u 


Death  Of  A 

Scoundrel" 


Starring         * 
GEORGE  SANDERS  _     Li  J 

YVONNE  DeC ARLO J'-:-^'*^**^ 
^  \,^,    2[SA  ZSA  GABOR 
.    '      }^m-  VICTOR  JORY      ...ii;,,.,.^^ 
•    k(  UV*.  NANCY  GATES 

...,..,.    .......  COLEEN  GRAY 


TODAY 

AND 

MONDAY 


■■  .1  I  LI 


TAB  HUNTER 

I  (tn  'Battia'  dr*ss  again!)  | 

NATAUE  WOOD 

(a  'Rebel'  with  a  cause!) 


the  Girl  He  I 
Left  Behind? 

■  '  ...BUT  NOT  TOO  FAR  BEniNO  J 


NOW  PLAYING 


Carolina 


HERE  ARE  YOUR  OLD  GOLD 


r.   ,-.  ^^^  \ 


PUZZLES 


-a 


START 
NOW! 

WIN  A 

WORLD 

TOUR 

F0R1W0 


PUZZLE  NO.  16 


CLUE:  Established  by  a  wealthy  Boston 
lawj'er,  this  school  was  the  first  women's 
college  to  have  scientific  laboratories. 


ANSWER- 


Namt 

Addrest. 
City 


.State. 


College 

Bold  until  you  hare  completed  all  24  puzslea 


PUZZLE  NO.  17 


CLUE:  This  midwest  university  is  con- 
ducted by  the  Congregation  of  the  Holy 
Cross.  \  field  house  on  the  campus  here 
is  a  memorial  to  a  great  football  coach. 
ANSW'ER 


\   Name 

Addrtst. 
Citv 


.State. 


College 

Hold  until  ynj  have  completed  all  24  puzzle* 


YOU'LL  GO  FOR 
OLD  GOLDS 

CniMr  REQULAfl,  KING  SIZE  9r 
tiM  OREAT  NEW  FILTERS 

Old  Grolds  taste  terrific!  The  reason: 
Old  Golds  gife  you  the  best 
tobaccos.  Naiure- 
ripened  tobaccos ... 

/ 

-        SO  RICH,    /0%^,, 
SOUGHT,     /     -..X?W 
SO  GOLDEN     P 
BRIGHT!      /     ^ 


BEST  TASTE  YET 

IN  A  FILTER  CIGARETTE 

OvTCtgW  !«}«.  nmnv  H.  RsIllMvr 


PUZZLE  NO.  18 

CLUE:  A  railroad  magnate  gave$1.000.000 
to  help  found  this  Southern  university. 
Among  it«  alumni  is  writer  Robert  Penn 
Warren. 


ANS\^"ER. 


Addreu. 
CUv 


.  State. 


L 


College 

Hold  until  you  have  completed  all  24  puzrJeii 


l»t  Prixe:  WORLD  TOUR  FOR  TWO 

or  $5,000  CASH 
2nd  Prized.  Trip  to  Paris 
3rd-6fh  Prizes:  Trips  to  Bermudo 
7th.16fh  Pri»«s:  RCA  Hi-Fi  s«ts'Mork  IV 
17th-S6th  Prizes:  Brooks  Bros, 
wardrobe  certillcotes 


WEATHER 

Partly   cloudy,   a    littl*   w*rmer, 
with  expectwl  higb  in  mid-40s. 


m  ft  e  ttmnsa 

tSSIALS  8CPT* 


Keel 


INTEGRATE 


Chap*l    Hill    should.     Sm    poga 


VOL.  LVII  NO.  52 


Complete  (JP)   Wire  Hervtce 


CHAPEL  HILL.  NORTH  CARQUfiA,  TUESDAY,  NOVEMBER  20,  1956 


Offices   in   Grahcm   Memorial 


FOUR  PAGES  THIS   ISSUI 


Beat  Dook  Parade 
Starts  At  3  Today; 
Queen  Named 

The  Beat  Dook  Parade  will  begin  today  at  3  p.m. 

Floats  will  assemble  in  front  of  Woolkn  Gymnasium,  where  the 
parade  will  begin,  at  2  p.m. 

At  approximately  2:30,  the  parade  queen  will  be  crowned  at  the 
gym  by  Ted  Rogers  of  Pi  Kappa  Alpha  social  fraternity,  sponsor  of  the 
annual  event.  Rogers  is  chairman  of  the  queen  contest. 


nev5 

m 

brief 


FROM  RADIO  DISPATCHES 

LONDON  —  Reports  from  with- 
in Russia  Monday  indicated  Sa- 
vicl  Premier  Khrushchev  may  be 
on  the  way  out. 

The  pressure  of  world  opinion 
has  produced  a  crack  in  the 
Kremlin  wall,  said  one  radioman. 
He  predicted  the  Soviet  govern- 
ment maj"  wait  until  the  present 
satellites'  rebellion  is  over,  then 
remove  Khrusuchev  from  office. 

VIENNA  —  Hungarian  work- 
ers, many  of  them  back  in  their 
factories  after  a  general  strike, 
w»re  reported  not  doing  very 
much  work.  A  technique  of  'pas- 
sive resistance"  to  the  Russians 
has  bacn  adopted  by  the  rebels, 

said  The  Associated  Press. 

*  *  * 

UNITED  NATIONS.  N.  Y.  — 
U.  S.  Ambassador  Hewy  Cabot 
Lodge  tJld  the  United  Nations 
thai  Russia  is  continuing  to  de- 
port Hungarian  rebels  to  the 
freezing  Siberian  plains  in  open 
boxcars.  As  of  Nov.  14,  he  said, 
14,000  Hungarians  ha\e  been  Ut;- 
ported  from  iheir  native  land. 

PARIS  —  In  spite  of  govern- 
ment statements  that  there  would 
be   no   fcod   shortages.  Frenchmen 
staited      hoarding    and      getting 
ready  for  restrictions  on  every- 
Lhins  iroin  sugar  to  gasoline  — 
brought   on   by  the  Suei  crisis. 
Gasoline   consumption  will    have 
to  oc  cut  by  30  percent,  however, 
spokesmfen  said. 

*  *  » 

NEW  YORK  —Members  of  the 
International  Longshoremen's 
Assn.  continued  their  strikR  on 
the  Atlantic  coast  Monday  despite 
appeals  from  the  White  House 
to  rcE.h  terms  with  their  employ- 
ers. Ncgotations  will  be  resum- 
ed today. 


Herman  Godwin  is  chairman  of 
the  overall  event. 

Six  attendants  for  the  queen's 
float  will  also  be  named  at  the 
time   Jf  the  crowning. 

ROUTE 

Route  of  the  parade  is  as  follows: 
From  Woollen  Gym  up  Raleigh 
St.  to  Columbia  St.,  down  Colum- 
bia SI.  to  Kenan  St..  down  Kenan 
St.  to  Cameron  Ave.,  down  Cam- 
eron Ave.  to  Raleigh  St.,  down  Ra- 


Legislature   Control,   Honor  Seats, 

i 

i 

Class   Chiefs   In   Electoral    Balance 

Campus  Runoff  Ballot 
Set  Today  From  8-6 


Tico-year-old,     playing      wilder 

Hill    Hall    peaan    tree,    holding 

up  Ritz  Cracker   box.   saying   to 

pecan.s.-       "Here.       here      come 

here." 

<(:  «  * 

Campus  leader  searching 
campu.s     Sunday     morning     for 

i^igns   of   hinted   Dook   invasion. 

•     «     « 

Carolina  Coed  e.vclaiming  to 
boyfriend:  "/  may  be  dumb, 
but    I'm    not    stupid!" 


HOME  FOR  THANKSGIVINQ; 


Exodus  Starts  Tomorrow 


IN  THE  INFIRMARY 

Students   in   the   Infirmary   yes- 
terday included: 

Misses  Ruth  Lukent,  Doris 
Woody,  Nancy  Stephens,  Mery 
Valentine,  Nancy  Oavis,  Eliza- 
beth McGrrw,  and  Louis  Cody, 
Weyman  Richardson,  Robert 
Souther!;. -id,  Phillip  Reinhardt, 
Peter  Grodsky,  John  Schenck, 
David  McCall.  Radford  Fulger, 
James  Dunn,  Hilton  Goldman, 
Robert  Thornton,  and  Walter 
Collison. 


There  was  vandalism   on  both 
UNC    and    Duke    campuses    over 
the  weekend.  See  page  4  for  de- 
tails. 

leigh  St.  to  Raleigh  Rr,.,  where  the 
I  parade  will  conclude. 
I 

I  Coeds  entered  in  the  contest  are: 
j  Misses  Nancy  MacFadden.  Libby 
I  Nicolson.  Pat  Dillon.  Anne  Barber, 
Gail  Willingham.  Daryl  Farrington, 
!  Sysan  Mayhuc.  Barbara  Prago,  Ro- 
-  horta  Hastings; 

I      Mary  Louise  Bizzell,,Ida  Robin- 
I  ^im.    Elanor   Riggins,  Jane    Brock, 
Shirley  Carpenter,  Patsy  Poythress. 
Claina    Burns.    Jane    Burns,    Mary 
Burgwyn,  Barbara  Murray; 
j      Jane  Welch.  Dottie  Wood.  Barba- 
!  la    Honey.   Val   Von   .Ammon.   Kay 
.Vdams,   Lucinda    Holderness,     Ca- 
rolyn Flacak,  Anne  Ruffin  and  An- 
ne Bobbitt.  I 

Judges  for  the  contest  were  E.  C. 
:  Smiih.    local    merchant,    Mrs.    Kay , 
,  Kyscr  and  Jimmy  Capps.  Raleigh  ' 
j<iisc  jjckey. 

FLOATS  I 

I  A.-ound  35  floats  from  dormi- 
tories, sororities  and  fraternui  s 
'  have  been  entered.  Trophies  will 
I  bo  awarded  to  the  best  l"i(  ats  in 
;  these   four   divisions. 

Women's  dorms  entered  a.c: 
Smith.  Mclver  and  Nurses'  Dorm. 
j     Sororities  entered  arc: 
I      Alpha   Delta   Pi.   Alph^    Gamma 
I  Delta.  Chi  Omega,  Delta  Delta  Del- 
:  ta.   Kappa  Delta  and  Pi  Beta  Phi, 

Fraternities   entered    are; 

Chi  Phi,  Alpha  Tau  Omega.  Kap- 
pa Alpha,  Theta  Chi,  Zeta  Beta 
Tau,  Lambda  Chi,  Sigma  Nu.  Sig- 
ma Phi  Epsil3n.  Tau  Epsilon  Phi, 
SI.  .Anthony  Hall.  Sigma  Alpha  Ep- 
silon, Sigma  Chi.  Phi  Gamma  Del- 
ta. Phi  Kappa  Phi,  Pi  Lambda  Phi, 
Delta  Theta.  Delta  Kappa  Epsilon 
and  Chi  Psi. 

Men's    dormitories   entered    are. 
Alexander.      Ruffin.      Mangum, 
Lewis  and  Everett. 

Lincoln  High  School  and  UNC 
Bands  will  participate  in  the  pa- 
rade. The  Navy  Drum  and  Bugle 
Corps  and"  Color  Guard  and  the 
AFROTC  Drill  Team  will  also  per- 
form. 


2   Youths 
Jailed   In 
Dorm  Theft 

Two  Raleiglv  youths  have  been 
charged  with  first  degree  burglary 
after  they  allegedly  tried  to  steal 
a  wallet  frohi  two  sle<?ping  stu- 
dent.s. 

Police  Capt.  William  Blake  said 
the  two.  Albert  Van  Rheen.  17. 
and  Richard  Schaelling.  18,  were 
in  jail  without  bond.  They  face 
probable  caus?  ht'arings  in  Record- 
er's Court  today. 

Capt.  Blake  pieced  together 
this  story  from  the  youths'  admis- 
sions  and   other  evidence: 

Van  Rhcen  and  Sehoclling.  both 
employed  in  Raleigh,  left  a  rock 
'n  roll  concert  in  Raleigh  Friday 
night  and  came  to  Chapel  Hill. 

At  abot't  6:25  a.m.  Saturday, 
they  entered  Winston  Dormitorj- 
room  wh:re  two  students.  Jim 
.Ayres  and  Richard,  Billings,  were 
sleeping. 

Biirngs  \vpke  up,  Blake  .sajd. 
and  found  Schoelling  in  the^act  of, 
."ttealrnw  his  wallet  and  c'«*s  rini;. 
(See    THEFT,   page   3) 

Di  To  Debate 
;  Bill  Limiting       \ 
UNC  Enrollment 

I      The  Dialectic  Senate  will  debate 

tonight  a  bill  to  restrict  the  num- 
,  bor  of  students  at  the  Univcr.sity 
I      Debate  will  be  held  at  8  p.m.  in 

Di  Hall. 
;  The  bill  provides  that: 
!  "I.  The  maximum  number  of 
:  students  that  could  be  enrolled 
1  at  the  University  at  one  time  be 
,  limited  to  5,000;  XL  Out-of  state 
I  students    be    required    to    make    a 

grade  failing  in  the  upper  one- 
j  fourth  of  all  participants  in  the 
j  University  entrance  examinations 
j  before  they  be  considered  for  ad- 
!  mission."  j 

I      The  whereas  clauses  of  the  bill  : 

state,  "the  tremendous  increase  in  i 
J  students  eligible  to  enter  colleges  i 
I  in  the  past  few  years  has  put  un-  ! 
j  forscen  stress  upon   facilities   and 

personnel    of    the    University    and 
(See  DI  Page  3i  I 


By   GARY    NICHOLS 
«nd    EDITH   MacKINNAN 

Carolina  students  will  hop 
aboard  practically  everj'thing  av- 
ailable tomorrow  and  head  home 
lor  Thanksgiving. 

The  University's  official 
Thanksgiving  holiday  starts  W<\d- 
ncbuay  at  1  p.m.  and  ends  next 
Monday  at  8  am. 

While  airlines  and  train  sta- 
tions in  the  vicinity  were  re- 
porliiig  full  passenger  manifests, 
plcuiy  of  relaxatijn  and  tun  was 
being  planned  for  students  who 
sta\    in  Chapel  Hill. 

Here's  a  roundup  of  Thanks- 
giving plans: 

Heading  the  holiday  activities 
will  bo  the  contest  between  Ca- 
rohna  .s  Tar  Heels  and  the  Duke 
Blue  Devils.  This  year's  battle 
bctvvecn  the  two  arch  rivals  will 
be  held  in  Kenan  Stadium  with 
game  time  set  for  2  p.m. 

Satui day's  game  will  climax 
a  sditi  of  preparations  includ- 
ing tjiis  afternoon's  "Beat  Dook" 
parade.  Sponsored  by  Pi  Kappa 
Alpha  rr;iicrnity.  the  parade  be- 
gins at  2  p.m. 
PLANETARIUM 

The  Morehcad  Planetarium 
Chrislmas  Show,  "Star  of  Bethle- 
ncm,"  will  open  Wednesday  at 
8:30  p.m.  and  continues  through 
Dec.  31  except  for  Christmas 
Eve  and  Christmas  Day.  A^Acn 
the  planetarium  will  be  closed. 
Thrrc  wll!  he  a  Thanlw^ttinfe 
special  showing  on  Thankiigiv' 
in^  du.\  at  3  p.m..  and  malinoes 
on  Saturdays  at  11  a.m..  and  3 
and  4  p  m.  except  for  next  Sa- 
turday, when  the  Duke  game  will 
lake  precedence. 

rhe  busy  planetarium  schedule 
is  rounded  out  with  daily  show- 
ings by  reser\'?tions  for  school 
groups  at  1  and  2  p.m.  with  gen- 
eral public  showings  at  1  and  2 
p.m.  or,  Sundav.N. 

LIBRARY  HOURS       ' 

The  Wilson  Library  will  close 
on  Wednesday  at  5:00  p.m.  and 
will  remain  closed  until  9  a.m. 
Friday.  On  Friday  the  library- 
will  be  open  for  those  who  will 
remain  on  campus  during  the 
holidays  until  5  p.m.  and  will 
open  on  Saturday  from  9  unlii 
1  p  m.  Sunday  the  Library  will 
be  closed  all  day. 

GRAHAM  MEMORIAL 

Linda  Mann,  director  of  Gra- 
ham Memorial,  announces  that 
GM  will  be  closed  during  the 
Thanksgiving    holidays. 

The   building   will    be     closed 
from  Wednesday  at  7  p.m.  until 
Sa'f.rdsy   at   9   a.m. 
FOREIGN    STUDENTS 

Foroiyn    .students      have    been 


invited  to  visit  in  the  J^omes  of 
families  living  in  Chapel  Hill. 

A  party  will  be  given  for  K  v 
reqn  students  in  the  Presbyterian 
Hiit  ti-mon'ow  at  6  p.m. 

THANKSGIVING 

The  YM-YWC.A  will  sponsor  a 
campus  Thanksgiving  service 
Tuesday  at  4:45  p.m.  at  the  Cha- 
pel ot  the  Cross.  Speaker  for 
spo;iker  for  the  service  will  be 
the  Rev.  Charles  Hubbard,  pas- 
tor of  University  Methodist 
Church  The  topic  will  be  "CJoing 
Homo." 

INTER  VARSITY 

A  h.)u.separty  for  international 
stutleuts  will  be  spon.sored  by 
the  Inter-varsity  Christian  Fel- 
If.v'ship  during  the  Thanksgiving 
hofedays.  The  housepaily  will  be 
held  in  the  Blue  Ridge  Moun- 
tains at  Saluda  Inn.  Students 
from  n-any  lands  will  join  in  the 
guUied  tours  of  the  scenic  arra 
and  other  recreation.  There  will 
be  discussions  on  Christianity 
diirtng  the  evenings. 

The  houseparty  will  last  Nov. 
22—25.  and  the  total  cost  is  $14. 
I-Xuribei  information  about  the 
pro-am   and  registration     may 


be  obtained  from  Challie  Iralu. 
226  Connor,  or  Ed  Viser.  204 
Connor. 

TRANSPORTATION 

Airlines  are  not  only  heavily 
booked  for  Nov.  21  but  are  heavi- 
ly booked  in  advance  for  Christ- 
mas. Those  include  Eastern.  Capi- 
tal, and  Piedmont  airlines. 

The  Carolina  Coach  Co.,  main 
source  of  travel  to  and  from 
Chnpel  Hill,  is  still  on  strike  at 
thi;.  time.  The  Du.'-ham-Chapci 
Hill  bus  line,  hcwever.  is  going 
in  and  cut  of  Durham  approxima- 
tely every  hour. 

Three  trips  being  made  daily 
from  Chapel  Hill  to  Greensboro. 
At  Greensboro  connections  can 
be  made  to  Winston-Salem  and 
all  points  west. 

Arrangements  have  also  been 
made  on  a  temporary  basis  un- 
til the  strike  ends  for  lour 
through  buses  to  Dallas.  Tex.; 
one  bus  to  Tampa-Miami.  Fla.; 
and  three  buses  to  Washington 
and  New  York  daily. 

There  are  still  some  sections 
in  ;he  eastern  part  of  the  state 
which  cannot  be  reached  from 
hero  by  bus. 


r«Kla\'s  rimoll  elcdion  will  {IrlciiniiK-  .Stiidotii  l.ci'isla'- 
tmt-  (oiitrol.  ( (iiii|j<)siii<*ii  (jI  the  ilncc  judii  i;ny  tDiiiuils  and 
(hiss  oHin'is. 

Polls  uill   1)1-  ojK'Ji  Irom  N  a.m.  to  G  p. in. 

()ul\  Town  .Mens  li  usidiiil.s  will  Note  loi  (hiss  olliteis. 
Kiitiif  \<>t<.'  in  the  distiiti  was  disqualilictl  l.ist  week  diif  to 
(list  rt|);m{y  iH'iwtcij  rc'i^isioK'd  jmiior  voters  and  artiial  voters 
for   junior    class    officefs. 


One  legislator  also  will  be  elect- 
ed by  Town  Men's  H  residents. 
Joe  Clapp  (SP)  and  Van  Wolts 
(UP)   are  competing  for  the  seat. 

In  Town  Mens  HL  runoff  for  a 
Student    Legislature    .seat    will    be 


Residents  in  Town  Men's  L 
which  includes  all  men  students 
living  in  the  southern  section  of 
Chap;l  Hill  south  ot  Cameron  Ave. 
and  its  imaginary  extension  east- 
ward and  westward  except  Victory 


held  between  Tom'  Kenan  (UP)'  Village,  will  vote  in  (Jerrard  Hall, 
and  Jim  John.son  (SP).  Kenan:  R:sid<.'nts  in  Town  Men's  IL 
and  jDhnson  last  week  tied  with  i  which  includes  all  men  students 
49  votes  each.  .    |  living    in    the    rectangle    bounded 

.At  present,  the  University  1  by  West  Cameron  .Avlv.  S.  Colum- 
Party  holds  24  legislature  seats  \  bia  St..  W.  Franklin  St.  and  Carr- 
and  .  the  Student  Party  has  24.  i  boio  city  limits.  wJi  vote  at  the 
Thus  control      may   shift   26-24   to  '  Scuttlebutt. 

either  party,  or  membership  may  ;  Residents  in  Town  Men's  III, 
b?  deadlocked  2.5-25.  i  which  includes  all  other  men  stu- 

The  entire  campus  will  vote  for  '  Victory  Village,  will  vote  beside 
representatives  to  the  three  judi- '  South    Building    in   Y-Court   or   in 


India's  V.  K.   Menon 
Sj^eaks    Here    Dec.  10 


The.  Carolina  Forum  will  pre- 
sent V.  K.  Khrishna  Menon.  chair- 
man of  the  Indian  Delegation  to 
the  United  Nations,  here  on  Dec. 
10. 

Menon.  second  forum  presenta- 
tion in  its  195657  series,  will 
speak  in  Hill  Hall  at  8  p.m. 

The  forum  is  chaired  this  year 
by  Jim  Holmes. 

In  1928.  Menon  reactivated  the 
India  Ixngue  of  the  United  King- 
dom, an  organization  which  sup- 
ported India's  strug.rle  f.)r  inde- 
pendence. From  that  time  until 
1947  h?  remained  secretary  of 
the  league,  carrying  on  a  vigorous 
campaign  for  the  independence 
of  India. 
KOREAN   PROBLEM 

In  1952.  at  the  United  Nations 
General  A.ssjmbly.  Menon  put 
forward  a  plan  for  the  .solution  of 
the  Korean  prisoners  of  war  prob- 
lem which  was  delaying  the  end- 
inii  of  hostilities  in  Korea. 

.M?non  was  dosf-ribed  by  many 
observers  as  the  outstanding 
st::te«man  of  the  10th  session  of 
the  General  Assembly  of  the 
United  Nat'ons. 

Menon  also  piloted  the  Indian 
resoliiti.^n      on      Togoland      which 


gave  the  peq^le  .jijf  ,t|ie  area  the 
•ipportunity  to  decide  their  own 
future. 

Ea.'lier  this  year,  Menon.  as 
minister  without  portfolio,  was 
the  Indian  repre.sentative  to  the 
London  Conference  on  the  Suez 
Canal. 

.Ace;'rding  to  Chairman  Holmes, 
the  Forum  "cordially  invites  all  of 
those  who  are  interested  to  attend 
the  program. 

"Our  program'?  are  presented 
for  not  only  the  students  at  Chap- 
el Hill,  bi't  also  for  the  citizens 
of  the  state  of  North  Carolina, 
who  have  a  natural  intere.st  in  the 
welfare  of  their  University."  he 
said.  I 


ciary    councils. 

Candidates  for  th?  Men's  Honor  i 
Council   are:  j 

Junior  seats  (3):  Bill  Bo.st.  Don, 
Evan.*).  Jack  Jones,   Dave  Wat.son. 
John  ZoHicoffer.  Paul  Carr;  i 

Sophomoie  seats  (2):  Gary 
Cooper,  John  Owens.  Avery  Thorn  ! 
as.  Mason  Wilklns.  Tucker  Yates,  i 
'Freshman  seat:  (1).  Lee  Ainslee. 
Henry  Harris.  Hugh  Paftterson. 
Bruce  H'oyle,  Dick  Rjbinsdn.  Gor- 
don Street. 

Candidates      for     the      Women's 
.Honor   Council   are: 


the    building. 

Residents  in  Town  Men's  IV, 
which  includes  all  men  students 
residing  in  Victory  Village,  or  the 
area  bounded  by  Jack.son  Circle. 
Ma.son  Farm  Road.  Daniels  Rd.  and 
Polk  St.,  will  vote  in  Victory  Vil- 
lage. 

One  ballot  box  will  be  located 
at  the  intersection  of  Mason  Farm 
and  Pittsboro  Rds.  Another  box 
will  be  U>eated  at  the  intersection 
-  of  Daniels  Rd..  Bagley  Dr.,  Jack- 
son Cirri '  and  Mason  Farm  Rd. 

B^sidents      in      Town      Women's 
district,    which    include.*    idJ    worn- 


Misses      Sue      Atchi.son.      Betty  .      ,,   . 

Barnes.     Lloyd     Dougherty.     Daryl    ^"   sludents_  not  Jiving  m    Ln.ver 


.sify-owned  buildings,  and  women 
residing  in  scority  houses,  will 
vote  in  Grrrard  Hall. 

Any  student  who  is  unable  to 
vote  at  the  proper  polling  place 
because  he  is  held  in  the  Uni- 
VL^isity  infirmary  or  for  any  other 
reason  approved  by  the  Elections 
Board  will  be  allowed  to  vote  by 
ab.-'-T.tee    nallot. 


Manlv  Wellman  To  Sneak 
Tonight  In  Law  School 

Alanly  Wado  Wellmiui.  local  au- 
thor, will  be  the  guesi  speaker 
tonight  at  the  Law  School. 

VVellman's  to'>ic  is  entitled  "Silver 
Tfinsiic  Lnwyevs". 

His  talk  will  begin  at  8  p.m.  in 
the  Law  Sch<x>l  court   room. 

The  public  is  in\ited.  according 
lo  Je  TV  Campbell,  chairman  of  the 
Siieakor's  Committee. 


Farrin?rton.  Nancy  .Milan.  Marian- 
na  Miller.  Ann  Mo'gan.  Doris 
Pet.r.  Nan  Schaeffor.  Cynthia 
Sc'igraves.  Sara  Van  Weyk.  Kit 
Whitehurst.  Lucinda  Holderne.-s, 
Eve  Leah  McClatchey. 

Candidates    for    Students    Coun- 
cil   ar': 

Junior    .seats    (2):    Mac    Patten. 
Jay  Walker:  j 

S  ^phomore    seat     (1 ) :     Herman  ! 
Godwin.  Jim   Long.  j 

Dormitory  presidents  are  re- 
sponsible for  implementation  of 
the  regi.str3tion  system  in  dorm  j 
men's  districts.  They  must  pro- 1 
vide  poll  tenders  and  rosters  \ 
which  el  gible  voters  must  count- ! 
ersign  before   voting  ! 

In  town  men's  districts,  poll  ten  ;  int^j  two  st:Ues  —  eastern  and 
ders  and  rosters  are  provided  by  j  western  —  will  be  presented  be- 
representatives  appointed  by  the  fore  the  Philantropic  Literary  So- 
Elections  Board.  |  ciety   t. might    in    Phi    Hall    on   the 

All  dormitory  rsidents  will  vote  j  fourth  floor  of  New  East  at  8  p.m. 
in   th?ir   respective   dormitories.       I      Reasons    for    the    split    are    that 

Residents  of  Emerson  Stadium  I  the  cultures  of  the  East  and  West 
will  vote  in  Ruffin  Dorm,  and  j  are  very  dissimilar:  the  East  i.s 
residents  of  unmentioned  L'niver- j  agricultural;  th?  West  is  indus- 
sity-owned  buildings  may  vote  in  j  trial;  and  the  state  is  to.!  large  to 
Old    East.  I  have  a  homogenous  population. 


Phi  Gets  Bill 
To  Cut  State 
Into  One  More 

A  bill  to  divide  North  Carolina 


Cobb  Dorm  Holds  A  Dance 

Pictured  above  at  Cobb  Dormitory's  dence  last  weekend  are  MiM 
Joy  Daughtery  of  Cotton  Dormitory,  Woman's  College,  who  wat 
chosen  "Sweetheart  of  Cobb  Dorm."  She's  with  Steve  Lyon,  president 
Of  Cobb. 


Campus  Chest  Has  A  Winner 


Miss  Jean  Peay,  center  left,  and  Margery  Lindeman.  center  right, 
(^ot  trophies  for  gettirtg  out  the  money  in  the  Campus  Chest  campaign 
last'  week.  Miss  Peay  represents  Spencer  Dormitory;  Miss  Lindeman, 
Alpha  Delta  Pi  Sorority.  With  them  ere  Miss  Jackie  Aldridge  and 
Je*f  Stribling,  co-chairmon-of  the  drive. 


Loads  Of  Woman's  College  Girls 

Three  busloads  of  girls  from  Woman's  College  attended  the 
dance  at  Cobb  Dormitory  Saturday  niqht.  Here,  students  and  their 
dates  are  dancing  tc  the  music  of  Bruno's  Combo  in  the  dormitory's 
basement. 


And  Theta  Chis  Have  Dance,  Too 

The  Carolina  Inn  ballroom  was  the  scene  of  a  social  fraternity's 
annual  pledge  dance.  Here  it's  Theta  Chi.  Music  was  provided  by  Ken 
McCauley's  combo.  (For  another  party  picture,  see  page  4.) 

Norman    Kantor   Photo^ 


PAGE  tVl«> 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HfEL 


TUESDAY,  NOVEMBER  20,  1956 


SSL   Carolina   Delegation 
Do  Themselves  Very  Pfoud 


TAR  HEEL  HISTORY 


The  State  Student  legislature, 
and  particularly  the  I'NC'  delega- 
tion, should  be  commended  for 
asking  that  the  Pearsall  act  be  re- 
pealed. 

Ihe  Pearsall  ait.  for  which  (ioy. 
H<Klges  politicked  so  hard  and  for 
which  he  called  a  special  session  of 
the  \.  C.  Legislature  last  summer, 
is  -North  Carolina's  official  weap- 
<Hi  against  the  Supreme  Court.  The 
act,  \i)ted  into  the  Constitution  by 
a  large  mrjority  in  a  special  ele<- 
ton.  provitles  for  "'pnnaie"  scrhools 
if  public    sfliools  are  desegregated. 

I  he  att  uoidd  be  considered  un- 
constitutional by  the  T.  S.  Su- 
preme Court,  and  Avill  lie  if  a  test 
case  gets  %)  Washington,  liesidcs 
being  ijnconstitutional  as  a  side- 
stepping jPevice  for  the  dese;^re- 
gational  dfecision.  it  also  proNides 
for  the  destruction  of  the  state's 
public    school  system. 

II  th.e  pid)lic  schools  wrc  destioy- 
cd.  .Xovtlv-lt'arolina  will  sink  even 
deeper    iti^its   educational    mires. 

*   '■■'Sf  ■   ■'*■'*■  * 

The    %ate    Student    Legislatuie 

realized  tWs  when     it     called     for 

repc^al  ofTne  act. 

We  d&ij^t  that  the  State  Sttident 

l.ecii.slatii^    passed    -its    auti-Pear- 

.sall  nieaMire   just   to  be   liber  .1.   as 


many  of  the  pre\  ions  student  legis- 
latures have  done.  Rather,  the  SSL 
measure  reflected  a  great  deal  of 
considered    student    opinion. 

Students,  especii^lly  college  stu- 
dents, are  pretty  up-to-date  on 
wliat  is  lacking  in  North  Carolina 
education  right  nmv.  They  rcr-l- 
i/e  what  will  happen  iT  the  people 
of  the  state,  inllamed  emotionally 
by  the  Ku  Klu\  Klan,  the  Patriots 
of  North  Carolina  Inc.  or  ribble- 
rousing  }M>liticians,  ha\e  |K)wer  to 
wipe  out  their  public  scliool  sys- 
tem practicallv  oxeriiight. 
*  *  # 

The  vote  of  the  SSL  last  week 
technically  meant  nothing.  It  c.r- 
rfed  no  official  \veight,  passed  no 
actual  legislation.  \  'lot  of  the 
people  who  read  about  the  action 
tinned  the  page  of  their  newspaper 
aijd  wondered  what  the  damnfool 
younger  genet  at  ion  was  couiino  to. 

l>ut  the' SSL's  action,  intiodu.e.l 
by  the  C;-.<»liua  delegation  and 
passed  bv  a  majority  of  the  dele- 
gates, pin  a  portion  of  the  sta  e's 
student  bodv  on  record  as  op|)os- 
ed  to  the  plan  which  provides  for 
the  end   to  jjublic    schooling. 

Perhaps  the  students  Avill  lead 
the  state  where  the  state  itself  has 
tallen  down. 


And  Chapel  Hill  Could,  Too 


ChajH"!  I  lill.  we  renjember.  w»s 
c»ne  of  the  few  con'muuiities  in  the 
state  to  vote  ag:v:nst  the  Pearsall 
Plan  earfj\this  fall.  Lhe  measure 
tailed  to  ciwiv  the  t«)wn  \ts  a  small 
mari^in.  Rut  \\  majority— no  uiat- 
tei  how  bare  -  of  the  town  didn't 
li'<e  the   plarv  « 

This  wciuld  indicate  a  grfai  deal 
of  people  here  are  in  favor  of  de- 
se^reg.ttin:;  tlu-  public  scltcjols.  It 
bearN  out  our  conviction  that 
CiiajH-l  Hill.  ui'Ji  the  I'niversity 
conununitx  and  ill  the  people  who 
go  with   it.   is  tlie  most   important 

cent  of  lil^eral  thought  in  the  state. 

♦     -  *■  * 

Why.  ^hen.  is  there  no  action  to 
desegrei^aie   the  tciwn's  sc1)ck>1s? 

The  people-  f)l  the  town  who 
M'Ant  a  desj^cf  »ted  s< /lool  system 
should  o^  ^.^?e^hemseJves'»n<iHat— 
tempt  iw  desegregate.  They  shoida 
n<»t  \-..ii;  for  "more  appropriate 
tii;!i.'s"  t(j  come  along. 

The  present  time  is  appropriate. 
There  ts  little  action  on  the  seg- 
gregaiion  -  integration  front,  even 
fiom  the  extremists  like  Dr.  W.  C. 
George  a'nd  the  rest  c»f  the  Patriots. 
People  ap}x*ar  to  have  grown 
tired  (»f  talking  ;vtK)ut  segregation, 
even  in  South  Caroling,  that  uuid- 
pile  of  prt'judice. 

Careful.^  well  -  plaimed  action 
right  now  on  the  part  of  pro-in- 
tegrationalists  in  towu  wcwUd  re- 
sult in  a  dc'.e.^regated  Chapel  Hill 
school  system  fjy  the  beginning  of 
the  school^  year  next  fall.  If  they 
wait  nnuh  longer,  the  School  Board 
will  start  talking  aboiu  the  next 
year,  and  the  vear  after  that,  and 
so  on  into  infinity,  and  very  much 
of  nothing  will  f>e  done. 

The  Supfeinc  Court  ruled  more 
than  two  years  ago  that  segrega- 
tion iti  the  public  schcx)!  is  unc<on- 
stitutional.  This  state,  like  most 
of  the  others  in  the  South,  refus- 

vr — ^ — 

The  Daily  tar  Heel 

The  official  student  publicatioo  of  tbe 
Publications  Board  of  the  University  of 
North  Carolina,  where  it  is  published, 
daily  except  Monday  and  examinatiot 
and  vacation  periods  and  summer  ttrms 
Entered  as  second  cla.ss  matter  io  the 
oust  office  in  Chapel  Hill,  N.C.,  undel 
the  Act  oi  March  8.  1870.  Subscription 
rates:  mailed,  $4 .per  year,  $2.50  a  semef- 
ter;  delivered,  $6  a  year.  $3.50  a  semtiih 
ter. 


Editor 


FRED  POWLEDGE 


Managing  Editor     ._.  CHARLIE  SLOAli  ' 


News  Editor 


RAY  LINKER 


Business  Manager    ..     BILL  BOB  PLEL 


SpcH-ts  Editor 


LARRY  CHEXX 


EDITORIAL  STAFF  —  Woody  Sears, 
Frank  Crowther,  Barry  Winston.  David 
Mundy,  George  Pfingst,  Ingrid  Clajr, 
Cortland  "Edwards,  Paul  McCauley, 
Bobbi  Smith. 


NEWS  STAFF— Clarke  Jones.  Nan<^ 
Hill.  Joan  Moore,  Pringle  Pipkin.  Anne 
Drake.  Edi^h  MacKinnon,  Wally  Kuralt, 
Mary  A1x$l  Voorhees,  Graham  Snyder, 
Billy  BarW^,  Neil  Bass.  Gary  Nichols, 
.Page  BernpS^in,  Peg  Humphrey,  Phyllis 
Maultsby. 


Night  Editor  . 


Woody  Sears 


ed  to  c<>m|)lv  with  the  decision. 
\\\\\  this  to\vn.  like  several  others 
in  the  South,  appears  to  feel  inte- 
gr:  :ion  woidd  work  ti)  the  mutual 
benefit   of   all     the     races      Avhich 

would    be   involved. 

*  »  * 

It  is  time  foi  Chapel  Hill  to  de- 
se'j;i('t>ate  its  schools.  The  C.hapel 
Hill  .Ministerial  .Vssn.  worked^  hard 
and  lon^  houis  to  defeat  the  Pcar- 
.sall  Plan  when  it  was  behne  the 
legislature.  The  Chapel  Hill  In- 
teiracial  Kellowship  has  done  r:i 
excellent  jpb,  too.  \  arious  individ- 
uals—people like  Paul  (ireen — have 
shown  true  leadership  in  this  time 
of  crisis. 

Now,    they    should    blend    their 

energies  and   efofrts   into   one   or- 

gani/atiou  to  desegregate  the  pub- 

«Hc*sipho»*5.-Chapel»Hiil  could  set 

a  fine  precedent. 

Longhorn 

Justice: 

Tyranny 

Down  in  .\ustin.  Texas,  college- 
tvpe  freedom  is  being  meted  out 
again. 

Four  University  of  Texas  stu- 
dents who  were  parsing  around  a 
petiticm  were  called  into  the  of- 
fice of  the  dean  of  students. 

The  reason?  The  dean  of  stu- 
dents didn't  object  to  the  petition 
itself.  (It  advfxated  withdrawal  of 
the  I'nited  States  from  the  Olymp- 
ics because  of  Russian  "interven- 
tion in  Hungary  [which]  is  bar- 
baric and  imjustifiable  .   .  .   . ') 

Rather,  the  dean  s^iid,  the  peti- 
tioners didn't  ask  the  I'niversity 
of  Texas  for  permission  to  peti- 
tion. 

The  Texas  ipstitution  has  a  ride 
that  its  facilities  (obsiously,  in  this 
case,  its  classrooms,  soil  and  air) 
are  not  available  for  such  purjK)ses 
unless  they  are  sponsored  by  "ap- 
proved" organizations.  Even  then 
thev  may  be  questioned,  the  dean 
.said. 

*  *  * 

The;  the  I'lviversity  of  T^xas  is 
run  similar  to  a  dictatorship  is 
n<r>'t  new.  Last  year,  the->fine  .stu- 
dent newspaper  there  got  put  iiti- 
der  the  whool  c»f  journalism,  its 
freedom  squashed  forever,  simply 
because  it  differed  with  the  siiaie's 
politicians  .vbout  the  natural  gas 
bill. 

Since  then,  student  lieedom  has 
been   laughed  at   in   Austin. 

The  right  of  students  or  any- 
body else  to  petition  is  a  right  thai 
cannot  be  denied,  even  by  a  sensi- 
tive dean  of  students. 

The  students  oft  he  I'niversi- 
tv  of  Texas  should  petition  all 
they  want — even  petition  to  kick 
the  dean  of  students  out  c)f  office, 
it  they  feel  like  it.  A  few  head* 
may  roll,  but  we  believe  the  na- 
tion will  support  the  students' 
right  to  petition.  < 


The  Lady  Who  Rang  The  Bell 


FADING  TRADITIONS 


Clarke  Jones 

One  of  the  favorite  topics  of 
conversation  of  Frank  P.  Grah- 
am, University  president  in  the 
1930's.  was  the  story  of  Mrs. 
Cornelia  Phillips  Spencer,  other- 
wise known  as  the  "lady  who 
rang  the  bell." 

It  was  shortly  aftsr  the  close 
of  the  Civil  War.  Because  of  a 
revenue  loss,  it  was  apparent 
that  the  University  could  not 
last  much  longer  and  shortly  af- 
terwards,    the     resignations     of 

Beer  Bottles 
A  Problem 
In  Library 

Library  Notes,  Wilson  Libra- 
ry's staff  bulletin,  recently  re- 
printed the  following  from  the 
Utilversity  of  Kansas  Library's 
bulletin,  GAMUT, 

"One  of  our  more  fortunate 
recent  acquisitions  in  this  field 
was  the  Schlitz-Hammweiser  col- 
lection of  beer-bottle  Idbels. 

"The  peculiarity  of  this  col- 
lection lies  in  the  fact  that  all 
the  labels  have  been  left  intajt 
on  the  b.ttles,  crrating  we  feel, 
a  unique  storage  problem  in  li- 
brary history.  Some  of  the  bot- 
tles, in  fad,  arc  still  full. 

"We  expect  a  larg.'  number  of 
research  projects  based  on  this 
collection." 

A  NORTHERN  VIEW 

A  New  Set 
0\  Beliefs 
In  The  Lord 

Corr  Edwards 

To  me — God  is  not  love.  God 
is  work. 

To  me — there  is  no  such  thing 
as  religion.  Religion  is  a  social 
concept,  a  dassificatory  term.  It 
is  an  ethical  system. 

To  me— the  soul  is  nothing 
m'oi'6  (ha^'a.Ulspdsilion.  As  a  dis- 
position it  Q.xjji^  (MU*.«0;ts  in- 
dividual creator  exists. 

To  me — there  isn't  ntfw  and 
never  were  such  things  ae  Jesus 
Christ  as  the  son  of  God,  the 
Holy    Trinity,    angels,    etc 

To  m? — the  Bible  is  worthless 
as  a  book  of  prophecy,  or  as  a 
strengthener  of  the  weak.  It  is 
not  the  book  of  God. 

To  me  —  the  virgin  Mary  of 
Chri,stianity  was  not  a  virgin  in 
our  definition  of  the  word,  and 
should  not  be  worshipped  as 
such. 

To  me — Heaven  and  Hell  don't 
exist.  They  are  mythological  goal 
concepts. 

To  me — the  Church  is  a  pros- 
titution of  Cnrist's  teachings. 

To  me — a  particular  Religion 
is  good  and  necessary,  but  then 
too,  war  is  good,  and  necessary. 

Ti)  me — science  is  doing  away 
with   religion. 

To  me — there  is  a  God,  but  .  .  . 

The  God  in  which  I  believe  is 
dynamically  effective  in  this 
world  for  ALL  mortal  peopln. 
One  God  over  the  whole  Uni- 
verse  

(To    be   continued) 


President  Swain  , and  the  faculty 
membera  were  obtained.  Thus 
the    Unii^ersity    was    closed. 

In  the  early  part  of  1875,  there 
was  talk^  that  the  University 
trustees  tia.s  acquired-^  means  of 
raising  Ainds  for  xe-opening  the 
University  and  when  official 
word  came  that  it  would  re-op<^n, 
Mrs.  Corqelia  Philljip^  Spencer, 
one  of  the  University*s,staunchest 
supporters,  simply  couldn't  hold 
back  her  joy. 

Climbjng  up  to  the  belfry  in 
South  Building,  sh^  took  hold  of 


the  rope  and  personally  rang  the 
bell  there,  and,  as  Phillips  Rus- 
sell says  in  his  book  'The  Lady 
Who  Rang  the  Bell,"  she  did 
more  than  ring  a  bell;  "she  rang 
out  an  old  world  of  defeat  and 
inertia  and  rang  in  a  new  world 
of   hope   and  belief."  i 

SAME  BELL  8  BFC  FLUSH  r 
The  same  bell  that  Mrs.  Spen- 
cer rang  over  75  years  ago  is 
the  same  one  which  rings  inter- 
mittently through  out  the  day  to 
signify  the  beginning  aad  end 
ing  of  classes  as  well  as  remind- 


ing coeds  of  their  curfew. 

Occasionally  when  the  auto- 
matic switch  is  not  working,  the 
bsll  will  not  ring  and  in  this 
case  the  bell  is  rung  by  hand  by 
the  long  rope  which  Mrs.  Spen- 
cer used  so  many  years  before. 

The  b?ll  seems  to  have  a  cer- 
tain significance  and  meaning  for 
students  here,  and  as  Bill  Fri- 
day, Consolidated  University 
president,  once  remarked,  Uni- 
versity graduates  should  h^ve  a 
recording  of  this  bell  to  wake 
them  up  in   the  morning. 


'Pull  Over  To  The  Curb' 


vV^; 


YOU  ^id  It: 


^•Vr 


'♦V 


Michigan   Reader   Defends   Editor 


Editor: 

I  have  just  finished  reading  a 
letter  to  the  editor  in  the 
November  ,7  Tar  Heef  and  fell 
compelleti  to  air  my  views  on 
the  ^ubj^ct.  This  letter  was 
written  by  one  David  Suckow  in 
which  he  states  that  the  Tar 
Heci  has  been  printing  "leftist 
garbage"  and  that  you,  as  the 
editor,  have  been  allowed  to  air 
"pink-tingod  ideas."  Never  be- 
fore have  I  read  such  rubbish. 

In  the  past  I  have  followed  the 
Tar  Heel  quite  closely,  and. 
while  it  is  evident  that  the  views 
of  the  editor  are  predominately 
those    of   the    Democratic    party. 


I  have  found  no  evidence  of 
either  "garbage,"  leftist  or  other- 
wise,  or   "pink-tinged   ideas." 

Mr.  SucTcow  should  be  very 
careful  when  making  such 
sweeping  statements.  It  would 
seem  to  me  that  you  have  a  very 
good  case  against  him  for  slan- 
der, defamation  of  character, 
etc. 

As  to-  the  rest  of  the  letter, 
words  fail  me.  How  can  anyone, 
who  ha^  given  any  thought  to 
politics  at  all.  make  statements 
such  as  Mr.  Suckow's  statement 
on  the  H-bomb  issue.  "Vaporiz- 
ed," indeed!  This  would  imply 
that  the  U.S.  has  no  stockpile  of 
atomic    weapons    ready    for    use 


at  a  moment's  notice  and  also 
that  Mr.  Stevenson  had  given 
no  thought  to  the  possible  re- 
percussions of  such  a  plan. 

Perhaps  now  is  not  the  time 
to  stop  H-bomb  testing,  but  to 
use  the  emotional  appeal  that 
we  will  all  be  "vaporized"  if 
such  testing  ceases  is  ridiculous. 

I  should  like  to  applaud  The 
Daily  Tar  Heel  for  printing  such 
an  inane  letter.  At  the  same  time 
I  firmly  believe  that  the  space 
used  to  print  Mr.  Suckow's  letter 
might  have  been  used  to  much 
better    advantage    by    Pogo. 

Jean    Irving 

University  of  Michigan 


Pogo 


By  Wait  Kelly 


,    AN  U6iy  PtiOCf 


Li'l  Abnor 


By  Al  Capp 


Big    Business 
Saves    Holidays 


Woody  Sears 


Here  we  are  ip  the  midst  of  the  Christmas  sea- 
son again  ...  so  soon  .  .  .  literally  and  figuratively; 
the  commercial  Christmas  season,  that  is. 

With  Thanksgivin,?  not  yet  here,  we  find  curselv 
es  suiTOunded  with  gay  reminders  that  it's  present- 
buying  time  again. 

Before  we  have  a  chance  to  enjoy  the  traditioaal 
black  and  orange  colors  of  the  harvest  season  and 
our  harvest  holiday,  we  are  blinded  by  the  tinselly 
red,  white  and  silver  of  the  hucksters'  holiday. 

Maybe  I'm  old-fashioned,  but  I  find  it  rather  dis- 
gusting. 

But  at  any  rate  it  clearly  indicates  the  present 
trend  toward  commercialization  and  a  shifting  6,^nsp 
of  values.  , ,. 

The  worst  thing  about  it  is  that  we  all  but  igtibre 
Thanksgiving,  the  one  truly  American  holiday.  It  isj 
the  one  holiday  that  is  completely  of  Ameritanj 
origin,  representing  the  culture  of  our  forebe^s. 
It  is  tragic  that  we  give  so  little  attention  to  fftisj 
holiday  because  it  is  lost  ir  the  rush  to  prepiref 
for  Chrismas. 

The  Spirit  of  TTianksgiving  is  a  wonderful  thing 
but  it  is  no  longer  fell  as  it  should  be.  We  shouk 
all  stop  to  think  of  our  good  fortune  in  living  ir 
this  land  of  freedom  and  plenty,  esi>ecially  in  ihu^t 
worried  times. 

What  has  happened  to  feeling  that  one  inspir- 
ed us  tc  sing  "Come  yc  thankful  people,  '^me, 
Raise  the  song  of  harvest  home.  All  is  safely  gath- 
ered in,  Etc  the  winter  storms  begin  .  .  .?"'     "* 

Or  to  the  feeling  thai  it  is  a  time  for  fam,ilies| 

to  be  together,  as  reflc^ctcd  in  the  song  that  ■gjDcs:! 

"Over  the  river  and  through  the  woods.  To  Grand-j 

m:,ther's  house  we   ".o.  .  .?"  Or  yet  another.  "Wei 

-  gather  together  to  &'•<  the  Lord's  Blessing.  .  .?" 

Possibly  we  no  longer  feel  the  necessity  of  being 
thankiui,  because  things  come  too  easily  for  us, 
and  the  modern  grocery  store  eliminates  the  ne-| 
cessity  for  laying  in  stores  for  the  winter. 

Possibly  the  mobile  society  in  which  we^live 
has  us  spread  so  far  apart  from  our  relative^that 
it  is  no  longer  practical  for  families  to  get  together 
around  the  Thanksgiving  table.  And  possibly,  we 
haven't  got  time  to  worry  about  Thanksgiving  jtice] 
it's  almost  Christmas.  .^ 

It's  a  real  shame  that  progress  so  often  flipes- 
sitates  losing  some  of  the  "old"  traditions.  It's  aul] 
unfortunate   that  we   are   losing   Thanksgiving,.^i 
one  •lOO'ic"  American  holiday.  ..    ^.^ 

But    in    this    changing    culture    of   ours,    ^f 
family   ties   become   less   meaniful   and   less  f« 
entrenched   in   our  daily   lives,   it   is  more  or 
inevitable  4iiat  we  must  sooner  oy  later  forget,, 
family  holidays.  It  fits  into  thfe  pattern,  :-a 


Not  too  many  years  ago  Armistice  Day  vras  a 
big  holiday,  with  parades  and  fireworks  and  bands 
in  the  city  park,  but  that  too  has  fallen  victil*  to 
our  changing  ways.  The  big  Independence  ^ay. 
Fourth  of  July  holiday  is  fading  too. 

It  seems  as  though  the  only  holidays  whick) 
managed  to  survive  are  the  two  religious  hot 
Christmas  and  Easter. 

And  even  though  they  have  lasted  many  hun- 
dreds of  years,  they  too  would  probably  die  2  't 
weren't  for  the  great  merchandising  industry.   S 

If  we  keep  the  money  pouring  in,  mayJae^the 
business  world  will  keep  Christmas  and  East&!*lor 
us,  even  though  it  wUl  become  less  meaningful 
every  year. 

We  need  to  slow  down  and  do  some  reorieniitiL' 

Duke  Bell  Theft 
Not  Destructive 

Editor; 

I  suppose  it  would  be  better  to  leave  well  enough 
alone,  but  I  do  not  believe  that  I  should. 

It  is  my  belief  that  Bob  Young's  statement,  I' 
is  embarrassing  to  tiie  football  players  .  .  ."  i.s  so 
much  bunk.  The  football  players  at  Carolina  are  re^ 
ular  guys  and  are  certainly  not  a  bunch  of  nam  by 
pambies  as  Young's  statement  implied.  There  is 
nothing  immature  about  school  spirit;  if  there  wen. 
then  we'd  better  stop  having  pep  rallies,  a  card..oa:  J 
>.eclion,  and  cheerleaders. 

The  wave  of  vandalism  which  has  plagued  ij(  U' 
campuses  broke  out  weeks  bef  Jre  the  bell  was  stoU  n 
I  do  not  believe  that  stealing  the  bell  was  an  ;a; 
01  vandalism.  Webster  doesn't  either. 

Iroriically  enough  an  article  appeared  in  i-i* 
Durham  paper  the  same  day  Young's  statenieni 
came  out:  "Members  cf  the  A.T.O.  chapter  it 
Syracuse  made  sure  no  one  from  Colgate  w-uli 
swipe  the  cannon  the  fraternity  uses  to  signal  Svia 
cuse  touchdowns."  A  photo  with  the  article  showi.' 
two  boys  wheeling  the  c?.nnon  into  a  bank  vault 

The  Navy  goat  has  been  stolen  before;  ihe  Ai  iii\ 
mule  has  disappeared  several  times;  and  on  th 
West  coast,  Stanford  students  once  even  robbui 
the  Bank  of  Berkley  to  get  back  the  Axe  symbu. 
01  victory.  Is  this  custom  below  the  level  of  Car.. 
Una  gentlemen? 

I  believed  that  this  deed  would  increase  spirit 
al  bJth  colleges;  and  it  did.  If  the  Dook  students 
had.  any  real  spiritlncy  would  have  tried  to  get  ii 
back  in  the  same  manner  in  which  it  was  stolen 
The  bell  was  to  have  been  presented  at  the  game 
1.  we  had  won  we  would  have  kept  it;  if  we  lu.i 
lost,  return  it  on  the  field  after  the  game 

There  is  only  one  thing  I  would  like  to  gc  l 
straight  .  .  .  We  did  not  break  into  the  old  gjm. 
we  touched  nothing,  and  we  broke  nothing  to  get 
out.  There  was  no  vandalism  involved.  We  wish-d 
CLly  to  return  the  beil  to  its  PROPER  place. 

JOHN  C.  HARRIS 


■i^^^ 


TUESDAY,  NOVI 


(Continued 
other  colleges 
»Bd  the  LegisiatJ 
lina    has   .>hownJ 
^ofitempt     lor 
Srnd    has    not    p^ 
expansion   to    mj 
of      educalion-hl 
North   Carolina; 
ing   influx  of  \\ 
fweign   element] 
the  education  o 
by    overcrowdinl 
and  the  crowdel 
classroom,  iibrat 
are  preventing 
i  student  at  the 


-  '     fCotittrnwd 
Ife    and    policc,| 
gave  chase  and 
ling  three  blockl 
was  found  in  af 

Capt.  Blake  s| 
recently    been 
60-day  road  sci 
tn?  YMCA  in 
was   reported 
another  robber\| 

The     youths 
.-eparatc  .jails  — I 

—  so  they  coull 
x)ri   their   versic 
theft,  said  Captj 

"Ck  Ea 


i^.wi 


B 


f*-.vl- 


M 


lARi 


■.-nr 


frc 


^^^^w^^' 


20.  1*56 


TUESDAY,  NOVEMBER  20,  1956 


THt  pAtLT  TAt  MtlL 


f  AftE  THIlil 


t>/jt 


ys 


Itnas  sea- 
iratiwely; 

ourselv- 
pres^nt- 

•  ♦ 
raditioBal 
ison  and 
tinselly 
lay. 

aher  dis-l 


preset 
ling  s^nsc 

I         * " 

lut  igttbri 
Iday.  U 
lAmerftaj 
prebeltrs 
\n  to  f/ii 
prepirJ 

[lul  t^a| 

'e  shoul 

living 

in 


inspii 
fely  gatl 


familic 

tat  j^ed 

To  Granc 

ther.  "W< 

?"     I 

of  beini 
ly   for 
Is  the 

we4liv< 

togethei 
ssibly,  w^ 
iving  jj^c 


>ay  was  a 

and  bands 
victiA  to 
^nce    Say, 

^hiclriLve 
hoK&y^, 


die 
^try. 

iay-tte3fhe 
LasteJ*for 
meaningful 


?onencina. 

eft 
ive 

ell  enough 


enjent,  "It 
.  ."  is  so 

la  are  reg- 
of  namby 
There    is 

here  were, 

card.:oard 

jued  bcth 
was  stolen. 
/is  an  act 

ed  in  the 
statement 
chapter  it 
ate  wjuld 
ignal  Syra- 
cle  showed 
nk  vault. 

he  Ai  my 
nd  on  the 
en  robbed 
xe,  symbol 
1   of  Caro- 

ase  spiriti 

k  students 
d  to  get  it 

as  stolen. 

the  game. 

if  wt   had 
nc. 

like  to  get 
e  old  gj'm, 
lins  to  get 
We  wished 
ace. 
C.  HARRIS 


Dl 


AFTER  MANY  YEARS  OF  SERVICE: 


(Continued  from  page  1.)         \ 
other  colleges  of  North  Carolina; ! 
JiBd  the  Legislature  of  North  Caro- 
lina  has  shown,   as   the   past,   its 

^|o^tempt     for  our     country  club,  [ 

Tlnd    has    not    provided    funds    for 
expansion  >to  meet  the   onslaught 
of      education-hungry     youth     of  i 
North   Carolina;   and   the  increas- 
ing  influx  of  Yankees  and  other  I 

•foreign  elements  has  endangered ; 
the   education   of   our   native   sons! 

^by  overcrowding  the  University;! 
?nd  the  crowded  conditions  in  i 
classroom,  library,  and  dormitories  : 
ire  preventing  the  education  due  ■ 
*  student  at  the  University." 


Answerer  Of   Many  Queries 
Has   'Her   Day    Af   Library 


THEFT 


(Continued  front  page  1.) 
He    and    police,    cruising    nearby, 
gave  chase  and  picked  up  Schoel- 
Mng  three  blocks  away.  Van  Rheen 
was  found  in  a  parked  car,  sleep- 

C«pt.  Blake  said  Schoelling  had 

,  recently   been    released   from  two 

,  60-day  road  sentences  for  theft  at 

t«?  YMC.V  in  Raleigh.  Van  Rheen 

w*s    reported    on    probation    after 

another  robber>-  in  Raleigh. 

The  youths  were  placed  in : 
5*parate  jails  —  here  and  Hillsboro  ' 
—  so  they  could  not  get  together] 
V)h  their  versions  of  the  alleged! 
theft,  said  Capt.  Blake. 


'Let  Georgia  do  it"  has 
been  a  watchword  in  the  aca- 
demic and  research  setup  here 
for  the  past  quarter  of  a  cen- 
tury and  more. 

''Ask  Georgia,  she  knows"  is 
one  of  the  most  familiar  ex- 
pressions among  the  capped  and 
gowned  scholars  at  Chapel  Hill. 

When  Miss  Georgia  Faison  re- 
tires from  her  work  as  reference 
librarian  next  June,  she  will 
have  ahead  of  her  an  expense- 
paid  trip  to  Europe — and  around 
the  world,  if  she  chooses.  The 
expenses  have  already  been  met 
by  more  than  200  faculty  mem- 
b?rs  and  other  scholars  Miss 
Faison  has  assisted. 

A  surprise  party  which  includ- 
ed a  check  for  $2,000  was  hand- 
ed to  her  last  week  at  Graham 
Memorial. 

Among  those  who  contributed 
were  former  students  Miss  Fai- 
son has  helped  as  they  worked 
on  doctorate  and  master  theses. 

She  is  the  campus  champion 
"looker  upper"  of  the  elusive 
fact.    What    a    faculty   textbook 


7A 


7/ 


Viceroys 

lire  Smoother 


1 


yilia  ■> 


&• 


BECAUSE  ONLY  VICEROY 
HAS  20,000  FILTERS 

Twice  As 
Many  R Iters 

AS  THE  OTHER  TWO 
LARGEST-SELLING  FILTER  BRANDS 


COMPARE! 

How  many  fiit«rs  In  yovr 
fat«r  tipt  (Ramwnbw 
—Hi*  man  filt*n  th« 
wnoolhcr  tfi*  tost* I) 


Viceroy's  exciusiv*  filter  is  mode 
from  pore  celWose— soft,  snow-white,  natural! 


MISS  FAISON 

.  .  .  gei%  a  rcn-urd 

writer  wants  to  know  and  cannot 
find,  Miss  Faison  locates. 

Chancellor  Robert  House, 
speaking  at  the  ceremony  honor- 
ing Miss  Faison.  said  "if  I  fol- 
lowed   normal    University  tradi- 


I 


tion  on  this  occasion,  I  irould 
not  have  written  this  speech 
at  all.  I  would  hav«  gotten  TAiss 
Georgia  to  write  it  for  me." 

Dr.  Werner  P.  Fri«derich, 
chairman  of  the  faculty  cbmmit- 
tee  raising  the  funds  for  Mi^ 
Faison,  n»ade  the  following  fttr 
sentation  speech; 

"We  are  not  assembled  h«ft 
in  order  to  listen  to  long  speches 
but  rather  to  indicate,  through 
our  presence  and  by  means  ot  k 
tangible  gift,  just  how  gfsteful 
we  are  to  Miss  Faison  for  her 
helpfulness  during  the  past 
decades,  for  the  kindness*  tht 
graciousness,  the  •  goodness  she 
has  shown  to  all  of  us  and  to 
tell  her,  too,  how  very  much 
we  will  miss  her  now  that  she 
will  retire  from  her  position  as 
our  reference  librarian. 

"I  do  believe  that  the  Library 
is  the  most  important  building, 
the  center  of  any  great  Univer- 
sity— and  you.  Miss  Faison,  have 
most  certainly  been  the  very  soul 
of  our  library. 

"Thank  >"ou,  once  more,  fbf 
all  you  have  done  for  us  an4 
for  all  you  have  stood  for  during 
all  these  years." 


16  Students  From  Carolina 
Attending  Seminar  On  UN 


Sixteen  UNC  students  will 
leave  Friday  to  attend  a  United 
Nations  Seminar  in  Nfew  Yoric 
City.     . 

The  students  will  meet  with 
students  from  colleges  across  the 
nation  from  Nov.  29  to  Dec.  1. 
The  seminar  also  includes  face- 
to-face  interviews  with  delegations 
from  the  trouble  spots  of  the 
world:  Israel.  Algeria,  Egypt  and 
Arabia.  Theme  of  the  seminar  is 
"Colonialism,  Human  Rights,  Mid- 
dle East,  and  Africa." 

Students  planning  to  attend  the 
seminar  are  meeting  today  at  5:30 
*  p.m.  in  the  Y  Cabinet  room.  Any 
interested  students  that  are  un- 
able t3  attend  today's  meeting 
have  been  asked  to  call  Miss 
Eleanor   Rigglns   at   the   Y   office. 

The  following  have  signed  up 
lo  go:  Miss  Kathy  L«Grande,  Paul 
Carr,  Miss  Martha  Richardson, 
Jerry  Mayo,  Miss  Joyce  Brant, 
Miss  Ruth  Lukens.  Miss  Carla 
Smith.  Miss  Eleanor  Riggins.  Dick 


Frank,  Wally  Satterfield,  P6te 
Julian,  Miss  Judy  Davis,  t&cHiH 
Reyves,  Joe  Phillips,  Ron  Alden- 
berg  and  Bill  Tucker. 

Cars  will  leave  Chapel  Hill  for 
New  York  on  Thursday,  Nov.  28. 
The  program  begins  Friday  morn- 
ing and  ends  Sunday  morniiig. 
The  cost  of  the  trip  including  ac- 
commodations   is   $16.50.      .fif^A  : 

5,750  Ministers  Invited 
To  Planetarium  Show 

Chancellor  Robert  House  has.  in- 
vited more  than  5,750  Protestant 
and  Catholic  ministers  through- 
out the  state  to  attend  a  special 
showing  of  "Star  of  Bethlehem" 
at  the  Morehead  Planetarium  next 
Monday. 

Prior  to  the  PlanetaHum  page- 
ant, the  clerg>nlen  will  be  guests 
of  the  University  at  luncheon  in 
the  dining  room  of  the  Morehead 
Building. 


UNC  Hospital  Patients 
Will  Get  Holiday  Meat 


OISM,  Bi-own  &  WiBiaaaaB  Tobaooo  Om*. 


Hospitals  are  not  ideal  places 
to  spend  holidays,  but  a  person 
who  is  a  patient  in  a  hospital 
Thanksgiving  Day  will  have  all 
the  advantages  of  being  at  home, 
at  least  insofar  as  Thanksgiving 
dinner  is  concerned. 

Their  trays  will  hold  a  turkey 
dinner  with  all  the  trimmings,  if 
they  are  not  on  special  diets.  Aside 
from  this,  the  trays  will  be  deco- 
rated with  flowers  and  favors. 

The  preparation  of  holiday 
meals  is  just  one  of  the  hundreds 
of  jobs  that  are  done  each  week 
by  the  dietitians  of  North  Caro- 
lina Memorial  Hospital  at  the  Uni- 
versity of  North   Carolina. 

The  Hospital  Dietary  Depart- 
ment is  headed  by  Miss  Anderson, 
who  is  assisted  by  five  other  dieti- 
tians. Three  of  the  dietitians  are 
engaged  in  administrative  work 
such  as  operating  the  kitchen  and 
two  cafeterias  for  hospital  per- 
sonnel while  the  other  three  are 
therapeutic  dietitians. 

The  therapeutic  dietitians  super- 
vise the  preparation  of  the  food 
trays,  modified  diets,  baby  for- 
mulas and  give  instructions  lo 
the  patients  concerning  the  kind 
of  foods  they  should  eat  after 
discharge. 

All  food  at  Memorial  Hospital 
is  prepared  in  the  main  kitchen 
From  there  it  goes  to  nine  serv- 
ing pantries  throughout  the  hos 
pital,  the  student  infirmary  and 
the  two  cafeterias  where  hospita' 
workers  and  visitors  eat.  Approxi- 
mately 2.000  meate  are  served 
each  day. 

Another  important  job  of  the 
dietitian  is  working  with  the  doc- 
tors in  making  out  diets  for  pa- 
tients and  prescribing  proper 
foods. 

The  dietary  department  of  mos' 
hosoitals  ranks  second  in  size  onl' 
to  the  department  of  nursing.  Thi^ 
is  true  at  the  UNC  Hospital.  / 
staff  of  some  70  workers  assist 
Miss  Anderson  and  the  other 
dietitians  in  the  operation  of  th- 
department. 


From  a  financial  standpoint,  15 
to  20  cents  of  the  hospital's  dol- 
lar is  spent  in  the  dietary  depart- 
ment. The  department  also  uses 
35  to  40  per  cent  of  all  expendable 
supplies  purchased  by  a  hospital. 

Serve  meals  to  100  patients  and 
you  may  serve  100  difl^«rent  diets. 
However,  aside  from  regular  diets, 
five  other  broad  diet  classifica- 
tions would  cover  most  meals  serv- 
ed. 

The  salt  restricted  diet  is  just 
what  the  name  implies.  There  are 
numerous  variations  of  this  de- 
pending on  the  patient's  need. 

Bland  diets  are  composed  of 
non-irritating  foods  for  meny  typei 
of  patients.  These  vary  according 
to  quantity  and  quality. 

The  weight  reduction  diets  are 
all  too  familiar  to  many  of  as. 
Here  a  close  count  is  made  of 
calories. 

There  is  a  diabetic  diet  for 
patients  suffering  with  diabetes 
and  a  low  fat  diet  for  patients 
with  other  conditions. 

There  arc  many  variations  kad 
combinations  of  all  of  these  diets. 

The  Dietary  Department  of  Me- 
morial opens  at  5:30  a.m.  and 
closes  at  1:30  a.m.,  which  means 
that  someone  is  on  duty  here  20 
hours  out  of  the  day. 

Hospital  dietary  work  is  anotiier 
profession  in  the  field  of  h^altli 
services  that  is  attrticting  many 
young  women  today. 

It  takes  five  years  to  become  a 
qualified  hospital  dietitian.  A 
high  school  graduate  first  takes  a 
four  year  degree  in  home  econo- 
mics. During  that  time  she  studies 
certain  courses  in  institution  ad- 
ministration. Following  gradua- 
tion she  serves  one  year  of  die- 
tetic internship  in  an  institution 
approved  by  the  American  Dietary 
\ssociation. 

Incidentally,  young  ladies,  if 
"ou're  considering  becoming  a 
iietitian,  don't  worry  about  the 
20-hour  day  mentioned  above. 
You'll  only  be  asked  to  work  40 
.  hours  a  week. 


*^''**'*^^*^^^^^^^^W»»'W%'MM^^»%^^^^^i^^^^^^^^^^^^^*»^»MMM^>M»%^«%»MMM^»M»MV»i^'M»%i^»%^M%»»MM^»^^^»V»»^^»»»M^^»»^l<MI^<W^ 


dexoia  Oil 


A&P'S  OWN  ALL  PURPOSE 


EQU.\L  TO  THE   BEST 

VET 

COSTS  VOU  LESS 


•int     OA       Quort    CC 


p 

Bot 


:   A&P'S  OWN  PURE  VEGETABLE  SHORTENING 

(dexo  4"  30c  c=n  79c 


A&P  STORES  WILL  BE  CLOSED 

THANKSGIVING  NOV.  22nd 


A&P  HAS 
m.  YOUR 


Holiday  Favorites 


SPECIAL  PRICE!  Jane  Parker 

Apple 

Streusel 

Large 
8"  Size     Each 


SPECIAL  LOW  PRICE! 

PINEAPPLE 


A&P  FANCY 
CRUSHED 


O^^er  2^3's  Fruits  <&  Nuts  -Jane  Parker 


FRUITCAKES  r $1.35 

3-LB.  CAKE  $2.66  —  64J.  CAKE  $3.86 


Sliced  D«l-Monte  Pineopple  ''^^n'  29c 

D«l-Monf«  Pineopple  Juice  *l'°^  29c 

bel^Monte  Peoches      ^ifo*  ^^ca^  23c 

Del-Monte  Fruit  Cocktail--  ''cfn"  23c 

Sunshine  VoniiloWofers--  'p^^  31c 


APPLE 

KEG       46-Oz. 
-     m  Can 


Hobisco  Lorno  Doonet  Cookies  'p°l  31c 

lurry  Goucho  Cookies 

Strietmonn  Zestos  Crockers    ^-J:^-    27c 


-„_    y^-    37c 


Pkg. 


Chicken  of  the  Seo  Tuno  ^?7t    ct„"  39c 

N«$H«'s  Morsels %%:  23c 


APPLE  JUICE 

PIE  CHERRIES^  21^45^ 

GREEN  PEAS  ^'  ^^ 


^'^»MMMM^^^^»MM^^^^^^^^^^^ 


"Super-Right"  Quality  Meats! 


Griqdf '/A''  Young  Dressed  &  Drawn    10  to   12  Lb    Avg. 

TURKEY 


Fresh  Fruits  &  Vegetables 

—  LARGE  SIZE   PLUMP  RIPE  FRESH  


HENS 

TOMS 


Lb. 


45c 

BROILERS 


Cranberries  •17c 

LARGE  FULL  TRIMMED  HEADS  OF  — 1-- 

Cauliflower  r  25c 


4lei 


4   to   B   Lb. 
Avg. 
Lb. 


49c 


"SUPER-RIGHT"  PURE  PORK  SAUSAGE    ro„ 
MA$SACHUSETTS  DUCKLINGS  ___*^'^^^'«  49c 
LUTER'S  GENUINE  SMITHFIELD  HAMS    ^-  79c 

Fr<tsh  Dressed  ond  Drown 


White   Meated  Imported 

Italian  Chestnuts  ._ 

California  Pascal 

-    Sfalk 


Lb. 


1 5c 


Celery       -    ^^a'K     I5c 

FLORI DA  JU!CY '  ^ 


Morrell's  Pride  or  Swift's  Premiurri  Short  Shonk  Skinned 
Smoked  uai  p>  12-14 


CHICKEN  HENS  35c  /Oranges  -  's^.^  43c 

kAf\rrmil'c    Prirla  f\r  ^u/ift'c   Promiiim    d^x-vrt  ^K/nj-jJ^^   Skinned  I  ^B^^ 

> FRESH  JUICY  FLORIDA 

47e/  G'Frull  -  -  *«  47e 


HAMS  Nwmu 


Lb.  Avg. 
Lb. 


SftA.NE  POKTION  . .  Lb.  SSc 


CENTER  SUCES  ....  Lb.  S9c 


«WMMNAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA«WWM^ 


Delicious  With  Ham  or  Chicken  —  CRANBERRY  SAUCE 

Ocean  Spray 2  caw 


Lb  39^ 


Modess  Sanitary  Napkins  2  ^^'2  S5c 


Kraft  French  Dressing 


---.  ^Sr.   23c 


Kraft  Sandwich  Spread  . .  _    Tir   37c 
Kaf t  Salad  Dressing .'  Z   35c 


Kraft  Mayonnaise 


Jar 


37c  ?lr   67c 


Jewel  Oil 


Bot.    j2c   Bot.   59c 


Blu-White  Flokes ?S    9t 

Ideal  Dog  Food 2  'ciSi  29c 

Simple  Simon  l^i^   'J.?  33c  '^  49c 


Kleenex  Tissues '^io"' 25c 

UaIm.     cider  vinegar Pt.  Bot  19c        Qt.  Bot    "Mt 

neinZ     gherkins  pickles -—  7^-02.  Jar  3ie 

INDIA  RELISH  .— - -—  10-Oz.  Jar  STe 

Niblets  Golden  Corn  S^^l  2  l?iS  33c 


Jewel  Shortening..  \^^:  22c  ^^:  63c 


HOT  BABY  CEREAL 

PABLUM 

Oct  Meal  ..  'p2|    19c 
^4ixed  Cereal  %il  19c 


Prices  This  Ad  EffecUve  Through  Sat.,  Not.  24th 

X^^^^X  AMHICA  >    tOMxett    foot    HTAIlll  .  .     ItKI    IIS* 


^M^  I  Supermarket 


"■"•S   •   r»CIHC   Tl»   COMrANT 


STORE 

address 


210W.  Franklin  St. 


FROZEN   FOODS 

DULANY 

Baby  Limas  2  C'  49c 
Peaches  ..-  'Ig  23c 


f  AGE  ^OUK 


.:_L 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


TUESDAY,  MOVEMBER  ^,  19S6 


Wove  Of  Vandalism  Spread^^On  Campuses  Here,  At  Duke 


DUKathon:  Dogs,  Too? 


By  WALLY   KURALT 

In  the  DUkathon  Saturday,  27  men  and  one  dog  finished  the 
race. 

The  dog,  an  unknown,  shaggy  "all  American"  type  pooch,  fell  in 
with  Freddie  Hirsch  and  ran  from  Chapel  Hill  to  the  Dxurham  post 
office  by  his  side. 

"At  one  time  there,  I  had  seven  dcgs  running  along  with  me," 
said  Hirsch.  "This  one  dog  just  kept  following  me,  all  the  way  to  the 
finish  line." 

'It  was  kind  of  fun  having  him  along,  though,"  said  Hirsch. 

Now  comes  the  obvious  question:  Do  they  give  survivors'  medals 
to  dogs? 

Esso  Foundation  Announces  Gifts  To  Colleges 


NEW  YORK  Ut)  —  The  Esso 
Education  Foundation  today  an- 
nounced 297  financial  grants  to- 
taling $1,191,450  to  assit  privately 
supported  colleges  and  universi- 
ties in  the  United  States  for  the 
1956-57  academic  year. 

Today's  grants  represent  an  in- 
crease of  71  over  the  226,  total- 
ing $1,067,900,  made  in  January 
this  year.  ■  The  amounts  of  the 
individual  contributions  were  not 
made  public.  The  foundation  said 
it  felt  this  info^nadion  shouJd 
come  from  the  schools. 


Special  Jury 
In  Key  Trial 

CARTHAGE  IvP)  —  A  special 
venire  from  Mecklenburg  County 
was  ordered  today  from  which  a 
jury  will  be  drawn  to  hear  the 
second  trial  of  State  Colege  stu- 
dent Jack  Key,  charged  with  rape. 

Judge  H.  Hoyle  Sink  of  Greens- 
boro, ordered  the  special  venire 
to  report  at  10  a.m.  Wednesday, 
threatening  the  Thanksgiving  holi- 
day of  the  possible  jurors. 


Young  Aiks 
Scheduling  f^: 
Of  Events 


By  Phyllis  maultsby 

*|  i-j  ^he  wave  of  vandalism  initiat- 
*^e#^:^  the  inscription  of  the  mys- 
terious three- triangle  ^symbol  on 
yie  sandstone  column  of   More- 
d   Building   two  -weeks   ago 
spread  to  other  UNC  buildings 
I   over  the  past  weekend. 


North  Carolina  institutions  re- 
ceiving grants  are  Davidson  Col- 
lege, Duke  University,  Elon  Col- 
lege, Guilford  College,  High  Point 
College,  Lenoir-Rhyne  College, 
Quens  College  and  Wake  Forest 
College. 

The  foundation,  organized  in 
October,  1955,  coordinates  and  cen- 
tralizes the  educational  assistance 
program  of  Standard  Oil  Co.  of 
New  Jersey  and  certain  domestic 
affiliates,  the  Carter  Oil  Co.  is 
participating  this  year  for  the 
first  time. 


i««rTELFA 


MERCY   DRESSING   FOR 
WOUNDS    AND    BURNS 


PrescrifStion  Dept.     Phone  9-8781 

USE   OUR   CONVENIENT   LAY  A-WAY   PLAN 


Methodist  Study  Set 

HIGH  POINT  WP)  —  The  Method- 
ist College  Foundation  of  North 
Carolina  Inc.  Monday  established 
a  quadrennial  committee  to  pro- 
mote special  emphasis  on  Method- 
ist, colleges  in  the  state. 


Y  SCHEDULE 

The  Y  Schedule  for  today  is  as 
follows: 

3  p.m.  Freshman  Leadership 
Planning  Committee,  Office  3,  Bob 
Leonard,  chairman. 

4:15  p.m.  YMCA  Community 
S<?rvice  Committee  leaves  for  But- 
ner.  Bill  Tucker,  chairman. 

4:15  p.m.  Vesper  Committee. 
Rev.  Charles  Hubbard,  speaker, 
Ginger   Floyd,   chairman. 

5:30  p.m.  Y  Advisory  Board,  Dr 
Mann.  Middle  Roort.  Lenoir  Hall. 

5:30  p.m.  U.  N.  Seminar  group, 
Y  Cabinet  Room,  to  discuss  ar- 
rangements. 

9  p.m.  Executive  Graduate  Meet- 
ing, Pine  Room.  Bill  Deaton. 
chairman. 


Student  body  President  Bobi 
Young  has  urged  student  govern-! 
ment  organizations  to  cooperate  in  j 
scheduling  of  events  so  as  to  eli-. 
minate  major  conflicts.  j 

Young  issued  a  statement  yes- 
terday in  regard  to  a  resolution 
passed  by  the  Student  Legisla- 
ture Oct.  18.  The  resolution  urged 
that  the  heads  of  campus  organiza- 
tions avoid  conflict  in  scheduling 
events  for  the  same  night  and  ad- 
vised that  all  activities  be  routed 
through  the  director  of  student 
activities  office  so  as  to  insure 
their  orderly  scheduling. 

President  Young  stated  that  the 
head  of  an  organization  should 
check  with  Dean  Samuel  Magill 
and  with  the  secr#ary  of  the 
business  administration  school  in 
Carroll  Hall  to  make  sure  the 
date  on  which  they  are  consider- 
ing scheduling  an  event  is  free. 

PHONE 

He  ncted  that  a  telephone  call 
to  these  offices  might  mean  the 
difference  between  success  or 
failure  of  the  scheduled  program. 

In  the  event  a  serious  conflict 
should  be  scheduled,  the  organiza- 
tions involved  can  contact  the 
dean  of  student  activities  or  Young 
so  they  can  make  an  effort  to 
straighten  out  the  situation  to  the 
advantage  of  the  parties  concern- 
ed, said  Young. 


All  Premiums  And  Draft 

T.  V   —  Good  Place  To 

Watch  Boxing  &  Football 

Bring  Your  Oat* 

SANDWICHES   OF   ALL    KINDS 

WEST  FRANKLIN  STREET  LUNCHEONETTE 

Next  to  Bus  Station 

Phone  9-2846 


WHO  WILL  HE  BE? 

B   D  M  0  C 


A  complete  wardrobe  (including  tuit, 
pants,  sport  coat,  ties,  shirts,  «ho«s,  hat, 
etc.)  worth  $250  wmII  he  «iv«n  to  th*  male 
student  chosen  by  student  votes  as  ttie.  .  .  . 


BEST  DRESSED  MAN  ON  CAMPUS 

COME  IN  TO  TOWN  AND  CAMPUS  AND  VOTE  FOR  THE  MAN  OF  YOUR  CHOICE 

Coed  Votes  Count  5  Points 
Men  Votes  Count  1  Point 


The  triangles,  with  DUKE  in- 
scribed beneath,  appeared  on  the 
w^U  beside  the  main  entrance  to 
.-tli^  Library;  on  the  wall  and  on 
the  bulletin  board  inside  Phillips 
|1.  and  above  the  water  foun- 
rt  in  Carroll  Hall,  the  business 
administration  building. 

In  addition,  a  picture  of  Helm- 


holtz.  a  German  physicist,  was 
removed  from  the  wall  of  Phillips 
and  torn  to  shreds.  The  picture 
frame  was  then  put  back  togeth- 
er and  returned  to  its  place  on 
■  the  wall. 

A  similar  wave  of  vandalism 
has  occurred  at  Duke  University. 
Over  the  weekend  the  three- 
triangles  symbol  under  which 
UNC  was  written  appeared  in 
black  enamel  paint  on  the  phy- 
sics building  and  on  the  front 
door  of  the  engineering  build- 
ing. 

Obscenities  in  big  white  let- 
ters also  appeared  elsewhere  on 
the  campus. 


Four  leather  chaii-s  in  the 
men's  graduate  center  at  Duke 
were  slashed  on  the  seat  and  tin 
the  back. 

A  shed  at  the  buUding  site  of  a 
new  Duke  dormitory  was  burn- 
ed by  vandals,  and  a  number  of 
commodes  were  torn  up  at  the 
same  site. 

According  to  Giles  Horney, 
supervisor  of  the  UNC  Physical 
Plant,  Buildings  Dept.,  his  group 
has  not  ascertained  whether  paint 
damage  on  the  campus  was  done 
in  enamel,  which  is  more  injur- 
ious to  the  buildings  than  other 
types  of  paint.  He  said  the  sub- 
stance did  not  break  down  like 


Chi  Phis  Get  Real  Roman 


Chi   Phis  and  their  dates  cavort  in  ancient  Roman  style  at  the  fraternity  s  Roman  toga  party  held 
«t  the  Chi  Phi  house  Saturday  night.  Frank  Wright's  combo  furnished  music  for  the  ev^nt. 


Covering  The  University  Campus 


be  held   tonight  from  7-8  p.m. 


THANKSGIVING  SERVICE 

'Die  YM-YWCA  will  sponsor     a  |  the  University   Methodist    Church, 
campus    Thanksgiving   service   to-    p^^^^^y  gg^^^.^ 
*a|  at  4:46  at  the  Chapel  of  the        ^j.^.  pharmacy  Senate  will  meet 
Cro.ss.  Rev.  Charles  Hubbard    pas- 1^^^,^     ^^   ^  j^    ^g  jj^^^„ 

t«r    of    the    University      Methodist  I 
qfiUfclk    will    spf ak    on    the    topic  '  PHARMACEUXIAL  ASSN. 


"Going  Home." 

Y  SERVICE  GROUP 

The  y  Community  Service  Group 
will  leave  at  4:15  today  for  the 
Camp  Butner  Youth  Center  suid 
Center  for  the  Blind,  wherfe  they 
will  have  supper. 
GYPSY  MUSIC 

Dr.  Walter  Starkie,  eminent  Bri- 
tish lecturer  and  writer,  will  pre- 
sent "The  Wandering  of  Don  -Qui- 
xote and  Sancho:  A  Visit  Today  to 
the  Scenes  of  La  Mancha"  illus- 
trated with  slides:  at  111  Murphy 
Hall  at  12  noon.  He  will  also  lec- 
ture tonight  at  8  p.m.  in  Hill  Hall 
on  'Gypsy  Life,  History  and  Mu- 
sic." 
WESLEY  CHOIR 

The  reguar  choir  rehearsal  will 


!15  students  planning  to  go,  it  was 
;itated. 

xiic   oiuutrill.   DidiK^ii   ux    iwc   iiuii.li  i  WUNC-TV 

Carolina  and  American  Pharmaceu- 1      Following     is  a  listing  of     pro- 
tical  Association  will  meet  tonight ;  grams  today  from  the  university's 


ordinary  enamel,  but  could  easily 
be  some  other  type. 

He  said  the  symbols  could  not 
be  removed  from  the  limestone 
wall  of  the  library  Hntil  his  de- 
partment received  the  proper 
equipment.  L^nshkcd  or  quick 
lime  has  been  recommended  to 
the  department  as  a  remedy  by 
the  limestone  companies. 

Dean  of  Men  Cox  at  Duke 
stated  with  certainty  that  the 
paint  used  on  buildings  at  Duke 
campus  was  enamel.  He  raised 
the  point  that  in  this  respect 
the  recent  vandalism  differs  from 
the  usual  paint-jobs  which  pre- 
cede big  football  games. 

A  less  permanent  tj^e  of  paint 
is  quite  often  reser\'ed  for  the 
campus  statuary,  but  seldom  goes 
so  far  as  to  deface  buildings. 
Sgt.  Coy  Durham  of  the  Chapel 
Hill  Police  Dept.  refused  to  make 
any  comment.  He  said  he  was 
foljowing  up  leads  on  several 
suspects. 

Three  Chosen 
To  Prof  Ranks 

Chancellor  Robert  B.  House  has 
announced  the  appointment  of  sev- 
eral new  faculty  menibers  of  the 
University. 

.\mong  those  named  to  the  facul- 
ty were  three  assistant  ix'ofessors: 
Edgar  Faulcon  Thorne  of  the  Dept. 
of  Art;  Robert  Moats  Miller  of  the 
History  Dent,  and  Walter  Werner 
Amdt  of  the  Dept.  of  German. 

Thorne  is  a  native  of  Littleton 
and  has  taught  in  the  Chapel  Hill 
High  School,  Brooklyn  College  and 
Florida  State  University.  He  has 
been  associate  director  of  educa- 
tion and  research  for  the  North 
Carolina  Museum  of  Art  for  the  last 
two  years. 

I 

I     MiHer  come  to  UNC  from  Texas 

j  Western     College,    where     he     has 

taught   for  the  last  four  years.    A 

}  native  of  Evanston  lU.,  he  holds  a 

j  3. A.  degree-  from  Grinnell  College, 

and  M.A.   and  Ph.D.  degrees  from 

Northwestern  University. 

Amdt  a  native  of  Constantinople, 
Turkey,  has  l;ad  wide  experience 
Friday  will  meet  at  5:30  in  the  (in  the  teaching  profession  including 
Y  Cabinet  room.  So  far  there  are  |  positions   at   Friendsville  Academy* 

Guih'ord  College  and  UNC. 


at  I  UNITED   NATIONS  SEMINAR 

All  students  interested  in  attend- 
ing the  UN  Seminar  in  New  York 


in  HoWeil  Auditorium  at  8  p.m 
There  will  l>e  guest  speakers  from 
several  countries  on  the  topic  of 
International  Pharmacy. 

WUNC 

Following    is    a    listing    of    pro- 
grams today  from  the  University's 
FM  radio  station: 
7:00  Intermezzo. 
7:15  Over  the    Back  Fence. 
7:30  Vistas  of  Israel. 
7:45  Variations  on  a  Theatre 

Theme. 
8:00  American  Music  Festival. 
10.15  News. 

10:30  Evening  Masterwork. 
11:30  Sign  Off. 


Wentworth  &  Sloan 
Jewelers 


Diamond  Spfifi^^f56  to  $500 


.'.3. 


Yellow  or  WhffeSoidf  Weeding  Bands 
$10  to  $50 

Budget  Terms— 10%  Down,  10%  Per  Month 


167  E.  Franklin  St. 


Phone  9-3331 


Television  Station,  Channel  4 
12:44  Sign  On. 
12:45  Music. 

1:00  Today  On  Farm. 

1:30  Dear  Nancy. 

2:00  Science  &  Nature. 

2:30  Sign  Off. 

5:44  Sign  On. 

5:45  Music. 

6:00  Magic  Lantern. 

6:15  Sports  Clinic. 

6:30  News. 

6:45  Sports. 

7:00  Books  &.  People. 

7:15  Bible  Course. 

8:00  Dr.  Shivers. 

8:45  State  Government. 

9:30  Musical  Forms. 
10:00  Final  Edition. 
10:05  Sign  Off. 


«- 


Temperatures 
Little  Under 
Normal  Scale 

The  temperatures  for  yesterday 
and  today  are  just  slightly  below 
the  normal  temperature  for  this 
time  of  year,  according  to  the 
U.  S.  Weather  Bureau  at  the  Ra- 
leigh-Durham Airport. 

Totnorrow  the  campus  wiU  get 
showers  during  the  nSght.  A  cold 
front  is-  expected  to  arrive  here 
from  west  of  the  Mississippi 
River.  The  cold  front  is  not  con- 
nected with  the  blizzards  in  the 
Northwest,  however,  said  forecas- 
ters. 

Late  Tuesday  afternoon  the 
barometer  stood  at  30.34  and  was 
rising. 

The  bureau  would  make  no  pre 
diction  concerning  weather  for 
the  Duke-Carolina  game  Saturday. 


Phillips  Didn't  Hold 
On  To  His  $1,000  Bill 

Prof  Guy  B.  Phillips  didn't  hold 
the  $1,000  bill  he  received  last 
week  for  long.  He  deposited  baek 
in  the  Bank  of  Chapel  Hill. 

Phillips  was  awarded  the  bill  in 
tribute  from  the  State  Schopl 
Board  Assn. 

The  bill,  ordered  from  the  Rich 
mond  Federal  Reserve  Bank,  was 
shipped  to  Chapel  Hill  in  a  bag 
by  itself,  in  between  two  pieces 
of  plywood. 


Jazz  Fesf 
To  Be  Held 
In  GM  At  8 

Modern  jazz  hits  the  Carolina 
campus     fidl  force  tonight  at     8 

o'clock.  ^  v.         ■.    -■  -   V 

7^''  .'  '        ,     ■  •    - 

A  jazz  session  will  be  held  free 
of  charge  in  the  Rendezous  Room 
of  GM  from  8  until  11  p.m.  Fea- 
tured in  the  music  festival  will 
be  noted  jazzmen  from  the  Duke 
and  Carolina  campuses  and  from 
around  the  state. 

The  session,  sponsored  by 
GMAB  and  backed  by  the  newly- 
formed  UNC  Jazz  Club,  is  the  first 
of  its  kind  on  the  campus. 


'  The  groups  will  play  unrehearss- 
d  progressive  jazz.  There  will  be 
erai    groups    of    four    to    fiv« 


f 
Vjev 

'musicians. 

I  According  to  Doug  Sessoms,  in- 
stigator of  the  festival,  the  future 
of  Carolina  jazz  will  depend  upon 
the  success  of  the  program. 

Musicians  participating  in  the 
event  include:  Bill  Pape  and  Bill 
Rause  of  the  Duke  Ambassadors, 
F^  Latham,  Frank  Wilson,  and 
Wally  Kuralt  of  Carolina,  the 
Quarternotes  —  Kenny  Jolls,  Har- 
rison Register.  Bob  Hook,  and  J. 
Paul  Scott  —  and  others. 

Don  Reitan,  rated  by  some  jazz 
critics  as  one  of  the  best  pianists 
in  the  state,  is  also  expected  to 
be  on  hand. 

Sessoms  and  GMAB  have  in- 
vited anyone  and  everyone  inter- 
ested in  hearing  the  music  to  come 
iny  time  between  8  and  11  p.m. 
Admission  is  free,  and  refresh- 
ments will  be  served. 


Journalism,  as  we  know  it.  be- 
gan u-ith  the  weeOcly  Frankfort 
Gazette,  1615.  But  News-sheets 
called  .A.cta  diurma,  were  circulat- 
ed at  Rome  under  Government 
supervision  50  B.C.  and  perhaps 
earlier, 


Los< 


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20,  1956 


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)uld  not 
Imcstonc 
his  de- 
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quick 
^nd«d  to 
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It  Duke 
lat  the 
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several 


;en 
fks 


iTlouse  has 
?nt  of  sev- 
ers  of   the 

the  facul- 
I  professors: 

the  Dieiit. 
liller  of  the 
ler   Werner 

?rman. 

Littleton 

:hapel  Hill 

I'ollege  and 

.    He    has 

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the    North 

tor  the  last 

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years.    A 

[he  holds  a 

lell  College. 

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iNC 


St 

eld 

\he   Carolina 
>night  at     8 


|be  held  free 
lezous  Room 

|ll  p.m.  Fea- 
festival    will 

>m  the  Duke 

kes  and  from 


[onsored      by 
ky  the  newly- 
Ib.  is  the  first 
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ly  unrehears- 

lere  will  be 

Ifour    to    fiv« 


Sessoms,  in- 
\i\,  the  future 

depend  upon 
Irogram. 

gating    in    the 

*ape  and  Bill 

Ambassadors, 

Wilson,   and 

|Carolina,     the 

iny  Jolis,  Har- 

Hook,  and  J. 

others. 

by  some  jazz 
c  best  pianists 
io   expected   to 

lAB  have  in- 
sveryone  inter- 
music  to  come 
8  and  11  p.m. 
and  refresh- 
fd 


ve  know  it,  be- 
!ekly  Frankfort 
ut  \ews-sheets 
were  circulat- 
ler  Govenrnient 
and    perhaps 


C 


TU^S&AY,  hiOVEMBER  20,  19S< 


THi  PAH-Y  TAR  HEEL- 


PAGE    FIVE 


Lose  Last  3  Starts 


Booters  Wind  Up 
With  4-3  Record 


By   JIM   PURKS 

t 
Due  to  its  three  straight  losses 
coming  at  the  end  of  the  seasoii,  | 
ihe  varsity  soccer  team  ended  up ' 
with  a  record,   which,   instead   of 
being  sensational  as  expected,  was 
mediocre.  I 

Coach  Marvin  Allen's  squad  was 
riding  high  until  the  contest  with 
the  Virginia  Cavaliers.  Until  then 
the  team  had  won  four  straight 
games,  scoring  18  ^als  and  allow- 
ing only  three.  The  Cavaliers  end- 
ed the  winning  streak  and  started 
the  Tar  Heels  on  a  disasterous  los- 
ing one  in  which  they  lost  two  more 
games,  both  to  conference  foes. 

No  one  could  offer  a  perfect  an- 
swer to  the  puzzling  fall  of  the 
team.  Allen  said  that  the  schedule 
was  one  factor  as  the  team  had  four 
easy  contests  at  first  and  he  did  not 
have  an  opportunity  to  find  out 
what  their  real  weaknesses  were, 
especially  in  the  offense. 

NO  PUNCH 

After  the  Virginia  game,  the  of 
tensive  line  lost  all  its  scoring 
punch  and  Duke  and  Maryland 
proceeded  to  shut  the  Tar  Heels 
out.  2-0  and  4-0  respectively. 


Some  members  of  the  team  cit- 
ed the  poor  weather  which  h^ 
haunted  the  Tar  Heels  this  year  as 
a  factor.  Three  of  the  contests 
were  played  on  a  muddy,  wet  field 
which  slowed  down  play  consider- 
ably. UNO  played  Davidson  on  a 
slick  (ield  and  won  by  a  slim  2-0 
margin. 

Then,  rain  preceeded  the  Vir- 
ginia game  which  the  Tar  Heels 
lost  ,2-0.  Rain  followed  the  Tar 
Heels  up  to  College  Park,  M4- 
where  they  were  beaten  on  a  field 
more  resembling  a  sea  of  mud 
where  the  players  become  so  ba- 
thed in  mud  they  were  almost  in> 
dist'nguishable. 

LOSE  VETERANS 

Allen  will  lose  several  valuable 
veterans  this  year.  The  defensive 
wall  wil  be  especially  weakened 
IS  the  team  will  lose  fullbacks, 
Mike  Galifianakis,  Ted  Jones,  and 
Chuck  Hartman. 

On  the  forward  line  Allen  will 
!ose  the  services  of  Captain  Grover 
Brown  at  center  forward,  and  left 
.vings  John  Foster  and  Charlie  Oy- 


Duke  To  6fe  In  Top  Spirits  For  Big  Game 


Murray  Looks  For  Best 
Team  Effort  Of  Season 


Before  The  Duke  Game 
After  The  Duke  Game 

Meet   Your 
Friends    In 

Carolina's 
Uniqtie 
Book   Joint 

Books,  Nickel  Christn«cis 
Cards,  And  Brainy  Customers 

The    Intimate 
Bookshop 


DURHAM,  (iP  —  Duke  football 
Coach  Bill  Murray  said  yesterday! 
that  he  expects  the  Blue  Devils  i 
to  play  their  best  game  of  the  1 
season  in  Saturday's  final  with  | 
North   Carolina.  j 

Murray,  speaking  to  members  i 
of  the  press  in  Duke's  weekly  I 
press  conference,  also  said  he  | 
thinks  his  team  will  be  in  the  best ; 
physical  condition  of  the  year  for ) 
the  Tar  Heels.  ,       j 

"I  th  nk  the  boys  will  be  in  the  j 
best  frame  of  mind  this  week  than  i 
at  any  other  time  this  season,"  i 
Murray  commented.  "I  am  looking ; 
for  our  best  effort  of  the   year."  { 

Murray,  whj  has  never  lost  to  1 
Carolina  since  he  came  to  Duke  I 
in  1951,  told  the  group  that  Duke  j 
will  make  no  drastic  changes  for : 
Saturday's  game,  in  which  Duke 
will  be  after  its  seventh  straight  | 
win  over  its  rival.  "We  will  con-  j 
t1nu€  to  use  the  things  that  have . 
been  successful   for  us,"   he   said. ' 

Marty  Pierson,  Uuke  offensive! 
end  coach  who  has  scouted  the 
Tar  Heels  in  their  last  three  out- 1 
ings  against  Tennessee,  Virginia  | 
and  Notre  Dame,  was  high  in  his  { 
praises  for  Carolina.  \ 

"Carolina  is  just  as  big  as  any- ; 
one  we  have  played  this  season,"  j 
Pierson  said,  "and  the  boys  are  i 
fast,  especially  the  number  one  j 
hackiield.  i 

"I  think  Carolina  has  a  lot  of 
determination.  They  can  do  every- } 
thing  and  have  been  improving 
vastly.  They  could  have  beaten 
Notre  Dame  except  for  a  few  bad 
breaks." 

Pierson  singled  out  back  Ed  Sut- 
ton   as    the    outstanding    man    on 


the  team.  "He  is  a  fine  player  and 
can  break  up  any  game  with  his 
running." 

Reed  Sidelined 
By  knee  Ihiu^ 

Quarterback  Dave  Reed  loosed 
familiar  on  the  Carolina  practice 
field  yesterday  as  he  hobbled  on 
the  same  crutches  he  had  to  use 
for  a  month  or  more  earlier  in 
the  season  while  coaches  and 
trainers  expressed  hope  that  he 
Would  be  off  of  them  in  time  for 
the  Duke  game  here  Saturday. 

Reed  re-injured  his  knee  Satur- 
day early  in  the  Notre  Dame 
game,  won  by  the  Irish,  ^1-H-  He 
had  directed  two  beautiful  Tar 
Heel  drives  against  a  baffled  Noire 
Dame  eleven  and  was  a  co-star 
with  Ed  Sutton  before  he  h^d  to 
retire. 

Sutton,  who  at  South  Bend 
gained  132  yards  rushing,  com- 
pleted three  out  of  five  passes  for 
40  yards  and  caught  three  for  24 
workod  at  full  speed  but  with  a 
bandaged  dislocated  finger  on  his 
passing  hand. 

Others  on  the  Tar  Heel  squad 
were  bruised  from  th?  hard-fought 
battle  with  Notre  Dame,  but  set-  i 
tied  down  to  hard  work  for  Duke,  j 

Coach    Fred    Tullai's   freshman,  I 
who  play  the  Duke  frosh  at  Dur-  j 
ham  Thursday,  donned  Duke  blue 
on  defense  against  the  varsity  in  I 
the   secret   workout.  j 

Curtis  Hathaway,  who  played  i 
most  of  the  game  at  South  Bend,  j 
Ron  Marquette  and  Doug  Farmer  i 
carried  on  for  the  disabled  Reed  in  j 
offensive  work.  The  squad  drilled  j 
until  long  after  dark  intensively  ' 
rehearsing  both  offense  and  de- 
fense. I 


MURALS 

YESTERDAYS    VOLLEYBALL 

RESULTS 

Alexander  2-Everette  0;  Sig  Nu 
2-KA  0;  DKE  2-Med  School  1.  Sig 
Nu  1-PiKA  0  (forfeit);  Delta  Sig  2- 
TEP  0;  Med  School  No.  1  2-  Jpyner 
0;  Victory  Village  1-  Aycock  0 
(lorfeit). 

YESTERDAY'S   FOOTBALL 

RESULTS 

Zeta  Psi  28-ZBT  2;  Law  School  3- 
Lewis  0;  ATO  20-PiKA  0;  Mangum 
No.  1  20-Cjbb  No.  1  4;  Kappa  Sig 
Id-rtP  0;  Pi  Kappa  Sig  1-Chi  Psi  0 
(forfeit);  Phi  Delt  12-  KA  6;  Phi 
Gam  33-Lambda  Chi  6;  Sig  Nu  7- 
Beta  0. 


Back  Catches  Own  Pass'      State  Woftcs  For  Maryfand 


BALTIMORE,  <iP  —  Quarter- 
back John  Unitas  of  the  Balti- 
more Colts  is  going  to  make*  the 
National  Football  League  record 
book  the  hard  way.  He  caught  his 
own  pass. 

It  happened  in  Sunday's  game 
against  the  Detroit  Lions.  Unitas 
threw  the  ball.  It  hit  Ray  Krouse, 
big  Lion  lineman,  and  bounced 
straight  back  to  Unitas.  lie  caught 
it   and   gained  a   yard. 


RALEIGH   — .?—   North      Caro-j 
lina  State's  Wolfpack  got  down  to, 
heavy  work  yesterday  in  prepara- 
tion   for    its    season    finale    with 
Maryland   here    Thursday. 

The  squad  heard  a  scouting  re- 
port from  assistant  coach  Pat  Pep- 
pier, who  called  Maryland  a  sound 
defensive  club  despite  its  rather 
poor  wen-lost  record. 


The  squad  began  setting  up  de- 
fensive patterns  designed  to 
check  the  Maryland  split  T  at- 
tack. Several  new  plays  were  in- 
stalled. The  first  two  teams  ran 
through  its  multiple  oitfense 
reserves.  Quarterback  Frank 
Cackovic  alternated  with  Billy 
Franklin  in  the  No.  1  backfield. 


Monogrammers  Meet 

Monogram  club  president  John 
Bilich  has  announced  there  will 
be  an  important  meeting  tonight 
at  8:00  in  the  Monogram  Club 
building.  Carolina's  candidate  f.r 
Dixie  Clas.sic  Queen  will  be  select- 
ed. All  members  are  urged  to  b? 
present. 


Photo  Finishing  Service 

AS  CLOSE  AS  YOUR  MAILBOX 
GUARANTcED  SERVICE 

Any  8  exposure  roil  develop- 
ed and  8  JUMBO  PRINTS;  onlY 
50c — 12  exposures  75c — 16  ex 
posures  $1.00. 

FAST  6  HOUR  FINISHING 

FREE     ALBUM     WITH     EACH 
ROLL    OF    FILM 

FREE  MAILERS  , 

HOME  PHOTO  SERVICE 

Box  3803— Park  Place 
Greenville,  S.  C. 


Specialized 


Tension  Arises  At  AAelbourne 


Soviet  Runner  In 
Bizarre  Accident 


205  E.  FranKlin  St. 


Open  Till  10  P.M. 


DAILY    CROSSWORD 


ACROSS 

1.  Small  dog 
•(short- 
ened) 
5.  Senate 

attendant 

9.  EXecree  of 

high  court 

10.  Dwelling 

12.  Man-of- 
war's  small 
boat 

14.  Plead 

15  Type 
measure 

16.  Young  plant 

19.  Blunder 

21.  Infrequent 

22.  Castle's 
protection 

24.  Lay  waste 

28.  Sandy  drift 

(geol.) 

30.  Columbus' 
birthplace 

31.  Transferred, 
as  real 
estate 

33.  Source 

34.  Venture 

36.  Girl'B  name 

37.  Game  fish 

41.  New  Bruns- 
wick (abbr.) 

42.  Goddess 
of  night 
(Rom.) 

43.  Rope  loop 
(Naut.) 

45  Arctic  boat 
48.  Reason 
49  Serf 
50.  Jewel  CMC! 
(ob«.) 
DOWy 
1.  Flower 
Z.  Sea  eaf  l# 


3.  Casks. 

4.  Anesthetic 

5.  Native  fort 
(N.Z.) 

6.  Jewish 
month 

7.  Large  desert 

8.  Paradise 

9.  Revoked,  as 
a  legacy 

11.  Ovum 
13.  Period 
of  time 

17.  Pull 

18.  Pry 

20.  Gairden  tool 

23.  Famous 
President 
(nickname) 


25.  Wild 
ox 

(Cele- 
bes) 

26.  Virtue 

27.  Pal- 
ata- 
ble 

29.  Genuine 
32.  Pattcet 

leak 
35.  Per- 

form- 

37.  African 
antelope 

38.  European 
capital 

39.  Deer  (Ind.) 

40.  Dull-hued 


44.  Rcgtti  • 

46.  IndeAnitt 
srticic  . 

47.Knlfht« 
th*  , 
EicpNuit 
(sbbr.) 


By  WILL  GRIMSLEY 

MELMOURNE  — JP>—  VladlmLr 
Kuts,  Rusiiia's  world  record  holder 
in  the  10,000  meter  run,  barely 
escaped  serious  injury  yesterday 
when  a  gag  turned  into  a  near 
iragedy  at  Heidelberg  Olympic 
village. 

The  stocky  blond  runner  who  is 
favored  to  win  both  5,000  meter 
and  10,000  meter  titles  in  the 
Olympic  Games  opening  Thursday 
rammed  an  automobile  into  a  tel- 
ephone pole  in  front  of  the  Russian 
quarters  and  came  out  with  noth- 
ing ihore  serious  than  a  gashed 
chin. 

"EX'erything  is  in  order,"  a 
spokesman  at  Russian  headquar- 
ters said.  "Kuts  was  not  seriously 
hurt  and  shortly  after  the  acci- 
dent he  went  out  and  resumed 
training." 

Kuts  is  scheduled  to  run  Friday 
in  the  10,000  meters  —  an  event  'n 
which  his  time  of  28:30.4  is  the 
best  ever  recorded.  L«ter  he  is  to 
run  in  the  5,000  meters,  in  which 
his   best   time   is   13:39.6. 

BIZARRE   ACCIDENT 

Kuts"  accident  was  a  bizarre  one 
which  climaxed  another  chill, 
windy  day  at  the  village,  where 
the  athletes  are  finding  it  increas- 
ingly difficult  to  reach  top  form. 

ine  Russian  distance  ace  had 
just  finished  an  interview  with  a 
Melbourne  newspaper  reporter, 
in  which  he  expressed  interest  in 
cuxa,  wnen  someone  invited  him 
to  step  in  and  try  one  of  the  small 
Australian  models. 

Kuts  smilingly  leaped  into  the 
front  seat  ali>ne,  stepped  on  the 
starter  and  got  the  car'  moving. 
He  was  circling  a  small  court  in 
tront  of  the  Russian  quarters  at 
approximately  20  miles  per  hour 
when  he  noticed  one^of  the  doors 
was    not   tightly   closed. 

He  reached  over  to  close  it,  and 
as  ne  did  the  car  careened  wildly 
and  struck  a  telephone  pole. 

^tlNOR  INJURIES 

Kuts  jumped  out  of  the  car  with 
blood  pouring  from  his  chin  and 
went   into    one   of   the   big   brick 
puildings  housing  the  Soviet  ath- 
letes. Later  he  visited  the  hospital 
but    lelt   when    his    injuries   were 
described  as  minor. 
The  Russians    insisted    Kuts  was 
j  not   badly    hurt   and    immediately 
{  after  the  accident  he  went  to  the 
practice     field  for  a  few     jaunts 
I  around  the  track. 


Kuts  appeared  shaken  at  first ' 
but  later  seemed  all  right.  The 
damage  tp  the  car  was  estimated 
at  300  poimds  or  more  than  $600. 
The  telephone  pole  was  bent  hj 
the  impact. 

As  training  tapered  off  at  all 
venues  for  the  giant  sports  spec- ; 
lacle,  political  tensions  again 
raised  their  ugly  head  to  plague 
the  International  Olympic  Com- 
mittee, which  opened  a  three-day 
session. 

PETITION  DISTRIBUTED 

A  petition  was  distributed  to  the 
chiets  de  mission  of  all  competing 
aations  asking  that  they  institute 
action  to  bar  Russia  from  the 
games. 

The  petition  was  sent  by  the 
Hungarian  associations  of  Aus- 
tralia, which  are  said  to  represent 
the  Hungarian  associations  of  Aus- 
tria, France,  the  United  Stales  and 
other  countries. 

The  petition  said  in  effect  that 
it  was  incompatible  with  the  Olym- 
pic ideals  that  athletes  of  the  world 
should  compete  against  a  nation 
■'whose  armies  murdered  innoceiit 
women  and  children." 

Only  the  International  Olympic 
Committee  could  ban  any  lean; 
and  this  seemed  unlikely  In  view 
of  the  announced  stand  that  the 
games  are  a  contest  among  hMii> 
vitiuals  and  that  no  politics  should 
be  allowed  to  enter  the  games. 

Even  so,  it  is  likely  some  strong 
rcpresei.ta|ipns  will  be  jiiadfe 
against  Russian  competition  when 
the  IOC  holds  its  second  meetiag 
tomorrow. 

BRUNOAOE  MAKES  PLfiA 

Avery  Brundage,  president  of 
the  IOC,  opened  the  meeting  today 
with  9qotIii»-  plea  for  reten-tion  of 
the  Olympic  spil'it  in  these  tifties 
of  stress,  lie  said  |iie  Olympic 
movement  'lirilhout  moneir  or  spl- 
diers  cah  help  stop  warfare  i^y 
setting  examples  of  fair' ptay' and 
.sportsmanship  for  politicians  to 
follow." 

Meanwhile,     Jim  KeUy.     hel^ 
coach  of  the  U.  S.  track  and  field 
team,  spent  most  of  the  day  deny- 
ing rumors  which  flitted  around 
the  village. 

One  was  that  he  bad  decided 
to  use  Leamon  King  in  the  IW- 
nietcr  dash  although  King  failea 
as  one  of  the  three  top  '(^lulUiefs 
for  the  event.  Second  was  a  wild  i 
report  that  hammer  thrower  Glill 
Blair  had  been  booted  off  the  team  T 
for  "insubqy4im(i^" 


s^^ 


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That's  where  the  pause  that 
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Now  it's  enjoyed  fifty  million  times  a  day. 

Must  be  something  to  it.  And  there  is.  Have  aa 
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This  Marlboro  is  a  l6t  of  cigarette.  TRe  easy-drawing  filter  feels 
right  in  your  mouth.    It  works  but  doesn't  get  in  the  way. 
You  get  the  man-size  flavor  of  honest  tobacco.  The  Flip-Top  Box  keei.s 
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(HAM  IN  MCHMONA,  VUl^tNiA.  MOM  A  NiW  MARUOKO  UCWI) 


wmmmmmmmmmm^m^^m^^ 


r^ 


I 


PACE   SIX 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


TUESDAY,  NOVEMBER  20,  1956 


UNC  Wins  ACC  Cross-Country  Crown  By  Record  Margin 


Jim  Beatty 
Tops  Shea 
fgf  First 

Coadi  Dale  Hanson's  Carolina  Tar 
Heel  harriers  became  the  1956  ACC 
cross-country  champions  in  Char- 
lottes\-ille.  Va.,  yesftcrday  as  they 
outpoirfted  their  nearest  rival,  the 
Marvland  Terps.  35-81,  in  the  title 
mcci. 

j  The  Tar  Heels  swept,  first  fifth, 
[  seventli.  eleventh  and  twel  th  places 
j  to  roD  up  their  victo  y  margin. 
I  Jimmy  Beatty  suecessfuly  defend- 
j  ed  h's  indvidual  champion  h p  by 
taking  f  rst  place  in  a  dose  race 
j  with  Stale's  Mike  Shea. 

Virginia     f'nisJhed     third     behind 
I  Marjland  with  96  points,  aemson 
best.  Instead  of  kicking,  quarterback  Curt  Hathaway  took  the  snap  from  ;  ^.^^  fourth  with  115  and  State  finish- 


•  •  • 


•  •  • 


Varsity  Cagers  Whip  Frosh  Squad 


The  Gamble  That  Failed 

An  all  out  win-or-lose  gamble  by  Carolina  Coach  Jim  Tatum  was 
probably  the  turning  point  that  gave  Notre  Dame  a  21-14  victory 
over  the  Tar  Heels  in  South  Bend  Saturday. 

The  situation  w»s  this:  Carolina  had  the  ball,  fourth  down  and 
seven  yards  to  90  on  the  Notre  Dame  37  yard  line  with  time  run- 
ning short.  The  score  was  tied  14-14.  Coach  Tetum  had  two  alter- 
natives facing  him.  (1)  He  could  play  it  safe  and  call  a  punt  which 
would  give  the  Irish  possession  deep  in  their  own  territory  with 
only  •  very  few  minutes  left  in  which  to  score.  Or  (2)  he  eouW  go 
for  the  first  down  In  en  effort  to  retain  possession  and  perhaps  score. 
The  Tar  Heel  coach  chose  to  shoot  the  works  and  hope  for  the 


center  and  faded  iiack  for  a  pass.  Spotting  halfback  Ed  Sutton  down 
field  inside  the  Notre  Dame  20,  Hathaway  cut  loose  with  a  desperation 
serial.  The  ball  sailed  far  over  Sutton's  head  out  of  bounds,  and  the 
Irish  took  over.  , 

IRISH  SCORE  GAME  WINNING  TD 

Ever>body  knows  what  happened  after  that.  Notre  Dame,  playing 
inspired  football,  whipped  down  the  field  in  their  only  concentrated 
drive  of  the  day  for  the  winning  touchdown.  When  Paul  Hornung  went 
over  for  the  score,  only  76  seconds  remained  in  the  game. 

if  the  Irish  had  been  forced  to  start  their  drive  from  the  ten  or 

fifteen  yerd  line  instead  of  the  37.   it  might  have  been  a  different 

story.  In  all  probability,  the  clock  would  have  run  out  before  the 

Irish   could    have    moved    the   necessary   distance.    And    instead    of 

pounding  the  Tar  Heel  line  unmercilessly  with  running  plays,  they 

would  have  been  forced  into  a  race  with  the  clock,  and  started  pass* 

ing. 

The  Tar  Heels  were  the  better  footl>aIl  team  Saturday.  Curt  Hatha- 
May,  Ed  Sutton  and  Moe  DeCantis  murdered  the  Notre  Dame  ends  on 
the  option  plaj',  and  the  rugged  UNC  defense  stopped  the  Irish  time 
after  time.  But  that  rugged  defense  collap«:ed  on  two  vital  plays,  and 
three  pass  interceptions  within  the  20  jard  line  nuliffied  the  strong  ]  „j(|  ^^t  mark  of  19:40  set  by  Biur 
Tar  Heel  running  game.  !  Grim    of    Maryland.    Shea    fmished 

POUR  BIG  PLAYS  |  dose  beJiind   in  19:14;    also  break- 

Two  pass  interceptions  and  two  home  run  plays  made  the  half- ;  j^.^  Grim's  old  mark, 
time  seore  14-7  Notre  Dame  instead  of  21  0  Carolina.  The  first  inter- 1 
ception  came  just  after  the  opening  Idckoff  when  Irish  halfback  Aubrey  j  TIGHT  BAGE 


ed  fifth  with  131.  Trailing  the  lead- 
ers were  Wake  Forest,  137;  Duke 
164;  and  South  Carolina,  166. 

SIVEET  REVENGE 

The  win  was  sweet  revenge  for 
the  Tar  Heels.  EarMer  in  the  sea- 
son Ma?>1and  handed  them  theur 
only  defeat  of  the  j-e.-^r,  26-37.  in  a 
dual  meet  here  in  Chapel  Hill.  Since 
that  time  the  Carolinians  have  come 
a  Ions  way. 

Ifie  Terps  were  defending  cham- 
pions, but  last  year's  crown  was 
decided  on  a  dual  meet  basis.  Caro- 
lina won  last  year's  conference  meet 
on  an  unoiificial  basis. 

Beatty  tcnired  the  course  in  the 
record  time  of  18:54.9.  breaking  the 


•  •  • 


•  •  • 


•  •  • 


KearnsAnd'  ;j''*:°nly! 

My  Seven 

Rosenblutn 
Look  Sharp 


STAN  GROLL 


In  Thanksgiving  Classic 

Frosh  Footballers  Are 
Favored    Over    Imps 


LcM^-is  snared  a  Dave  Reed  to  Ed  Sutton  aerial  on  his  own  goal  to  halt  { 
what  appeared  to  be  an  almost  scoring  march  on  the  part  of  the  Tar  ' 
Heels. 

The  seme  thing  happened  later  on  in  the  first  half  when  De- 
Centis  had  one  intercepted  by  Notre  Dan>e  center  Ed  Sullivan  inside 
the  Irish  ten  yard  line.  This  drive  had  been  going  full  steam  until 
the  Tar  Heels  took  to  the  air  with  disastrous  results. 

Then  in  the  second  quarter.  Irish  halfback  Jim  Morse  sneaked 
all  alone  into  the  Carolina  secondary  to  catch  a  pass  from  Hornung 
which  carried  to  the  Tar  Heel  7.  A.  lew  plays  later  and  Notre  Dame 
hid  their  first  touchdown. 

And  a  few  minutes  before  the  half,  the  Irish  were  in  a  hole  on 
their  own  7  yard  line.  They  gave  the  ba!l  to  Lewis,  however,  and  the 
iieet  negro  halfback  sped  down  the  sid^^lines  to  tht  Tat  He^I  15.'T6u(!K- 
down  number  two  followed  in  short  order. 
COC^  POOTBALL.  BUT  NO  BREAKS 

it  just  wasn't  Carolina's  day.  Tliey  played  a  good  football  game, 
but  luc  ^itaiva  wcm  againai  them.  Too  many  mistakes  that  a  winning 
team  just  can't  afford  to  make  spelled  defeat. 

Next  Saturday  comes  Duke,  »n  old  traditional  rival  in  the 
strongest  sense  of  the  word.  It's  been  seven  years  since  a  Carolina 
football  teem  beet  Duke,  and  the  UNC  cantpus  is  hungry  for  a  win. 
And  it  looks  like  it's  going  to  be  another  year  or  two  before  the  Ter 
Heels  taste  the  sweet  nectar  of  victory. 

Duke,  despite  their  4-4-1  record,  has  a  powerhouse  as  they  have 
demonstrated  rather  successfully  on  recent  Saturdays,  and  with  a 
possible  bowl  bid  hanging  in  the  balance,  they  will  be  doubly  tough. 


Beatty  had  quite  a  battle  on  his 
hands  for  most  of  the  race.  Shea 
Slaked    right    beside    the    tiny   Tar 

Heel  up  until  the  last  few  minutes 

when  he  began  to  fall  back  steadily. 

Pfirty  of  Marj"land  was  wcH  off  the 

pi.ce,  finishing  in  19:56. 
Joe  Lcitham  of  South  Carolina  was 

fourlK,  E\erett  Wbatley  of  UNC  was 
1  fiiih,  Charley  Fleming  of  Maryland 

was    sixth    and    Dave    Scurloek    of 
!  UNC  fim«hed  seventh. 

Other  Tar  Heel  finishers  wcane 
i  John  Reaves  in  llih  5pot,  Howard 
'  Kahn  in  12tb,  Ben  WiJiam  in  LStb, 
'  Pcrrin    Henderson    nlneteentli    and 

Marlon  Griffin  21st. 


By  JIM  HARPER 

The  freshman  football  team  en- 
tered Its  final  week  of  practice  in 
high  spirits  yesterday,  and  work 
began  immediately  in  preparation 
for  Thursdays  game  with  the  Blue 
Imps  of  Duke  in  the  annual  Cere- 
bral Palsy  benefit  game  in  Dur- 
ham. 

The  Tar  Babies  rate  as  favorites 
in  the  contest,  having  compiled  a 
3-1  season's  record.  The  Dukes  have 
a  2-2  record  for  the  season. 

The  only  measuring  stick  for 
comparing  the  two  teams  is  the 
Wake  Forest  freshmen.  The  Baby 
Deacs  have  defeated  both,  though 
m  each  instance  the  margin  has 
,  been  very  close.  The  Tar  Babies 
were  defeated  14-12.  while  the 
Dukes  fell  13-12.  The  other  Duke 
loss  came  at  the  hands. of  State, 
14-13. 
The  Thursday's  date   may  alter 


By  LARRY  CHEEK 

A  host  of  loyal  Carolina  basket- 
ball fans  packed  Woollen  Gym  last 
Thursday  night  to  see  Coach  Frank 
IVIcGuire's  varsity  battle  the  talent- 
ed freshmen  of  Coach  Buck  Free- 
man. 

Many  questions  were 'left  unansw- 
ered in  the  minds  of  i  followers  of 
the  hardwood  sport  after  the  scrim- 
mage. -Although  the  varsity  won. 
62-56.  they  didn't  look  any  too  im- 
preslve  in  doing  so.  And,  strangely 
enough,  the  Tar  Babies  themselves. 
despite  the  surprisingly  close  score. 
Itemed  in  a  disappointing  perfor- 
ance.  , 

I  The  varsity  fielded  ^  starting 
I  lineup  composed  of  Pet^  Brennan 
j  and  Lennie  Rosenbluth  at  forwards, 
I  BUI  Hathaway  at  center,  and  Bob 
I  Cunningham  and  Tommy  Keams  at 
!  guard:"*^-  - -"^^^t 

Kearns.  stubby  junior,  poured  in 
18  points  to  pace  the  varsity  scor- 
ing, while  Rosenbluth,  everybody's 
.\11- America,  chipped  in  14.  6-S  cen- 
ter   Dick    Kepley    led    the    yearling 


Little  Sins 

in  Technicolor 

Starring 

Maurice  Chevalier 


It's  smart  to  he  cmrr  ■  iablc 


-WEDNESDAY- 

TowERiNG  Above  All  OTHERS! 


The  newest  Clarks 
original . .  -  Desert  Khan 

, . .  stylishly  contoured 
fw  comfort  in  hand  antiqued 
French  Calf  with 

microcellular 
Eolcs. 


Babies     have  had  a  week's     rest 
since  their  last  outing  and  should  j  ^^^^^  ^vlth   17. 
be  in  lop  condition  both  physically 

and  mentally  1     "^^^  fi^eshmen   appeared   afflicted 

that  tackle   Earl  I  ^"^^  *  severe  state  of  stage  fright 
'  in    the    first    few    minutes    as    the 


Desert®  Khan 

Made  in  Eiiglaod 

♦  I-4.95 


OF  ENGLAND 


It  was  hoped 
(Moose)  Butler  would  recover  from 
an  earlier  elbow  injury  in  lime  to 
go  against  the  Imps,  but  he  is  de- 
finitely out  of  the  scrap.  Butler 
was 
jitames. 

The  starling  lineup  for  the  Imps 
will  contain  five  natives  of  North 
Carolina.     These   include     tackles 


Coa-ch  Buck  Freeman's  squad  could 

crack    the    scoring   column.    Tilings 

a   mainstayVn    earfy    season  i>esan  to  even  u.o  later  on  as  Kepley 

and   diJi3inut;ve   guard   John   Crotty 


illlENCIFTilOV 


IN  Cinemascope  and  warnerColor 

stair, nj 

RCSSANA  PODESTA-  JACK  SERNAS 

.uos,.„m.Sir  CEORIC  HARDWiCKE 

STANLEY  BAKER  •  NIAU  MacGINNIS 
ROBERT  DOUGLAS  •  TORIN  THATCHER 

Sii-^npiiy  by  JOHN  TWIST  and  HUGH  GRAY 
erected  by  ROBERT  WISE  •  ^^^rVtZ.. 


Also  With  Kiltie  Flaps 

JULIAN'S 

COLLEGE 

SHOP 


started    to   find    the    range, 
wound  up  with  10  points. 


Crotty 


Warner  Bros. 

mtCSINT 


Coach     McGuire     substituted     by 


Mike  Marr  of  FayettcvUle.  and  Lar-    teams  in  the  first   half,   but  aban- 
ty  Powell  of  Winston  Salem;  guards 
iion  Byslian  of  Salisbury  and  Mike 
McGee     of   tUizabeth     City;      and 
quarterback      George      Harris      of  j 
Kinws  Mountain.  Harris'   top  sub- 1 


stttuto,  90b  Cummi^,  is  also  a  TSr 
Heel,  hailing  from  Clinton. 

Rounding  out  the  lineup  for  the 
l!)ukc  forward  wall  will  be  ends 
Allan  Whittier  and  Bob  Spada.  and 


,  under  crisp  cloudless  sk^.es  ran  up 
!  one  of  the  widest  victory  margins 


I  SPECIAL  PRAISE 

I 

j  Coach  Bale  Ranson  had  special 
I  praise  for  Reaves  and  Kahn  after 
j  the  meet.  These  two  scored  the 
i  really  big  points  by  filing  out  tlie 
!  U.NC  fi:st  five. 

1  Any  chance  Maryland  had  of  win- 
ning vanished  when  their  number 
Unfortunately  the'game  will  be  played  during  the  Thanksgiving  ^^^^  "^*"'  ^'"^  Hansen,  took  a  spill 
vacation  when  many  students  are  far  away  from  Chapel  Hill  enjoying  during  the  race  and  straggled  home 
turkey  dinners  and  holiday  get  togethcrs.  It  seems  inexcusable  to  us    '"  ^^^  plaefe. 

that  the  biggest  game  of  the  year  should  be  played  when  so  many  I     The    Tar   Hoel   harriers,    running 
of  the  students  are  out  of  town. 
SOUTH  BEND  SIDELIGHTS 

The  Carolina  football  team  and  traveling  party  hung  around  South  '  in    ACC    and    Southern   Conference 

Bend  a  little  longer  than  they  cared  to  Sunday.  When  the  squad  arrived    cross-country  htetory. 

at  the  airport  for  the  scheduled   10:30  a.m.   takeoff,   they   found    no  !      The  summary: 

airplane  awaiting  them.  Mechanical  failure  had  grounded  the  Delta       l  —  Beatty,  C,  18:54.9.  2  —  Shea, 

airliner  that  had  been  slated  to  malte  the  return  trip.  It  took  eight    S,  19:14.  3  —  Party,  M,  19:55.  4  — 

hours  before  another  plane  could  be  flown  in  from  Atlanta,  Ga.,  home  '  Latham.  S.  C.  20:00.  5  —  Whatley,  C, 

base  of  Delta  airlines.  j  20:04.  6  —  Fleming,  M,  20:13.  7  — 

Many  press  box  observers  thought  Ed  Sutton  was  as  good  a  back    I  Scurlock,  C,  20:16.  8  —  Medlln,  WF, 

as  thty  had  %—n  all  year  long.  This  takes  in  a  lot  of  territory,  for      21:17.  9  —  Barrier,  V,  20:29.  10  — 

the  Irish  have  faced  some  fine  football  players  from  such  schools  as 

Oklehonta  and  Michigan  State.  Sutton  was  the  Ter  Heel  wheelhorse 

all  day  long,  gaining  136  yards  rushing  in  21  carries. 

A  little  bit  of  everything  happened  in  the  game.  There  was  Hor- 
nung's  decision  to  run  with  the  ball  on  fourth  down  from  his  own  18 
yard  line.  There  was  the  fake  field  goal  that  went  for  no  gain.  Again 
Homimg  was  responsible. 

Carolina  got  into  the  act  with  some  daring  laterals,  one  from 
n*Centis  to  center  Ronnie  Koes  that  carried  for  an  extra  20  yards.  In 
addition  to  that,  Sutton  saw  a  90  yard  kickoff  return  go  down  the 
drain  with  •  fumble  which  he  lost  just  as  he  was  breaking  into  the 


standard  preparations,  but  the  Tar   cenior  Sid  Dosh. 


Wrestling  Finals  Set 

Tonight    the    Intramural    wrestl-   v<-  Jack  ChLlds  (ATO>:  7:40  —  John 


doned  this  polity  in  tne  second.  His  '• 
scc-ond  tcf;m  was  made  up  of  Joo  j 
Quigg  at  center,  Danny  Lotz  and 
Tony  Radovih  at  jorwards  and  | 
Stan  GroU  and  Kenny  Rosemond  i 
•:t  guards.  GroU  and  Lotz,  both 
-ophomores,  sh-\ved  flashes  of  bril-  I 
liance,  but  neither  was  especicdly  I 
consistent.  ■ 


TAB  HUNTER 

(in  'Battle'  dress  again!) 

NATALIE  WOOD. 

(a  'Rebel'  with  a  cause!) 


mOh  JCSSC  ROVCC  uuns 

■MMNMMMI 


I  BACKUS  -  H(M 


■s^SSH 


The  G«6 1 
He  Lef » 

Behind 


Carolina 


LAST  TIMES  TODAY 


ing  finals  will  be  held  from  7:15-' 
8:35    in    Woollen    Gym.    G    &    G 
specialists,     both     fraternity     and ! 
non-fraternity  men  will  battle  for 
top    honors    in      their     respective 
weight  classes.  ; 


Wilson  (Old  Wcsl>  vs  Henry  Rayne 
( Graham  >. 

147  lb.  7:45 Gerald  Suddreth 

(.\KPsl)  vs  winner:  Gale  Wallace 
(ATO>  vs  James  Pitlman  (TEP); 
7:50  —  Bill  A^cock   (.Mangum   vs 


Winners  will  be  awarded  Iro-  Jamci  Bringiiam  (Graham >;  157  lb. 
phies  after  the  final  match;  about  7:55  —  Bill  Damcron  (Kap  Slg)  vs 
8:45.  I  Yates  Palmer  (DKE);  8:00  —  John 


Bloor,  V,  20:30.  U  —  Reaves.  C. 
20:32.  12  —  Kahn,  C.  20:35.  13  — 
Tinsley,  Clem.,  20:14.  14  —  Williams, 
C,  20:44.  15  —  Rams,  M,  20:48. 


Clear. 


TA|t  HEELS  LOSE  TWO 

The  University  of  North  Caro- 
lina varsity  football  team  will  lose 
only  two  starters  from  this  year's 
club.  Halfbacks  E^d  Sutton  and 
Larry  JifcMullen  graduate  in  Junv. 


Swiss  Officially 
Withdraw  From 
Olympic  Games 

MELBOURNE,  UF)  —  Three  of- 
ficials of  the  Swiss  Olympic  de 
legation  called  on  E.  J.  Holt,  tech 
nical  director,  yesterday  and  for- 
mally withdrew  Switzerland  from 
the  games. 

The  action  came  as  Herbert  IBv 
over  Jr.,  U.S.  assistant  secy.,  0 
state,  was  reported  trying  to  get 
a  special  Army  plane  flown  to 
Switzerland  to  transport  the  team 
here. 

The  Swiss  withdrew  from  the 
?*imes  then  re-entered,  only  t( 
find  »t  was  too  late  to  get  com- 
metrcial  transportation  to  th 
scene.  An  appeal  was  made  to 
President  Eisenhower  by  the  U.  S 
Oljinpic  Committee  to  assist  the  j 
Swiis  as  much  as  po.sslble 
transportation. 


All  wrestlers  weigh-in  before 
the  matches  begin.  This  may  be 
done  in  the  locker  room  from  1:00- 
5:00  and  from  6:30-7:00. 

The   finalists: 

123  lb.  7:15  —  Curt  Champlin 
(.\T0)  vs  Tom  Rand  (DKE);  7:20— 
Joe  Carpenter  (Dental  School'  vs 
Joe  Chambl'ss  tLaw  Schcol*;  130 
lb.  7:25  —  Hall  Johnson  (S.\E>  vs 
Bill  Bonner  (Beta):  7:30  —  Charles 
Strange  (Dental  School)  vs  Roy 
Kirchberg  (Med  School •;  137  lb. 
7:35 ^Pen-in  Henderson   (SAE) 


Welborne  (Manley)  vs  Don  Rich- 
ardson (Med  School);  167  lb.  8:05— 
Dave  Atkinson  (DKE)  vs  Sonny 
Kincey  (SAE);  8:10  —  Joe  Bourne 
(Law  School)  vs  Ernest  Ransdell 
(E^creltcK 

177  lb.  8:15  —  Charlie  Tompkins 
(SAE)  vs  Lawrence  Kouri  (Sig  Nu); 
8:20  —  John  White  (Med  School) 
\s  Harold  Downing  (Law  School); 
Unlimited  8:25  —  David  Ward 
(DKE)  vs  Tom  Boyetle  (Phi  Gam); 
j  8:30  —  Mishall  Hayes  (Grimes)  vs 
Hernard  Harris   (Dent  School. 


TURKEY  SELECTIONS 
UNLIMITED 

We  have  all  the  trimmings 
for  a  Happy  Thanksgiving  but 
the  bird.  We  literally  have 
everything  from  soup  to  nuts  fo; 
the  well  dressed  Carolina 
Gentleman.  Happy  Thanks- 
giving. '     -^-^ 

MILTON'S 
Clothing  Cupboard 


;m  Lodge  For  Rent 


/ 


40'xio(y 


Comfortable  Tables 

Piano  Furnished 

REASONABLY  PRICED 

Special  Price  For  Week-Day  Frat  And  Club  Parties 

CONTACT  ROCK  PILE  -  "CARLTONS" 


PHONE  9-9672 


Why  Pay  High  Prices? 

Tve  Held  Them  D9Wh  Since  July,  '55 
ASK  YOUR  aUpDYl 

SPECIAL  -  7-Up  and  Tru-Ade  $1.00    Jf^'/pi^. 

ESSO  GAS  YES!  ESSO  GAS 

Cash  Cash  Cash 

Reg.  29.9         H.J.  32.9 

Plu$ 

Bring  This  Ad  And  Get  1  Cent  Off  Per  Gal.  Gas, 

5  Cents  Per  Qt.  Oil 

?      WHERE      ? 

At  The  Students'  Friend 

WHIPPLE'S  ESSO  SERVICE 


G  N  A  B  ! 

SHOOT  KEMP'S  TURKEY  NOW 

FOR  YOUR  THANKSGIVING  LISTENING 

A  BIG  WEEK'S  SALE . . . 

Monday,  November  19  Thru 
Saturday,  November  24 

LIST         SALE 

ALL  12"  LP'S   ^  $3.98       $2.80 

ALL  12"  LP'S  :.  a  $4.98       $3.80 


• 

• 
• 
• 


STILL  GOT  'EM  AT  $21.00  AN  INCH 
STILL  10"  LP's  AT  $1.00 
STILL  SOME  LP's  AT  50%  OR  BETTER 
STILL  ALL  EP  45  RPM  $1.05  EACH 
REG.  45  RPM  $.75  EACH 


207  E.  FRANKLIN 


CLOSED  THURSDAY 


^(^^ 


HAIR    GROOM 
TONIC 


IN     UNBREAKABLE 
PLASTIC  ! 

Groom&  your  hair  while  it  treats  your 
scalp.   Controls   loose   dandruff.    1.00 

"ploi  tox 
SHULTON        Mew  York      •      Tqronto 


• 


Serials  ]>«pt« 
eht9«l  8111 «   S*   C« 


/^» 


WEATHER 

partly   cipudy,   a    iitti*   wanner. 
With  txp»ct»d  high  in  mid-60s. 


ar()cllatlyWar3Kcel 


BALLOT 


It  works  both   ways. 


VOL.  LVII  NO.  53 


Complete  (>P)  Wire  Service 


CHAPEL    HILL,  NORTH   CAROLINA,  WEDNESDAY,   NOVEMbIr  21,   1956 


Offices   in   Graham   Memorial 


FOUR   PAGES  THIS   ISSUI 


23rd  Legislative  Assembly  Deadlocked 
As   Parties   Divide   Two   Run-off  Seats 


Patrol  Commander  Calls  For 
Safe  Driving  Over  Holidays 


*  UP  Earns  Smashing  Victory 
In  Class  Office  Contests 

By   NEIL    BASS  Van    Woltz    (UP)    bettered    Joe ;  24-1  majority  in  the  22nd  legisla- 

The   Student   Party   gained   one  ]  Clapp  (SP)  in  Town  Mens  n,  dis- 1  live  assembly.  One  legislator  was 


RALEIGH    (/Ti — The    commander  |  students,  not  to  "rush  themselves 
of  the  Slate  Highway  Patrol  yes- ,  to  death  in  the  Thanksgiving  holi- 
ferday   called    on    motorists,    espe- i  day  traffic." 
cially     homeward     bound     college '      Col.    James    R.    Smith    declared 


Miss  Lucinda  Holderness 

Shown  above  is  Miss  Lucinda  Holderness,  this  year's  'Beat  Dook' 
Queen.  She  was  chosen  from  a  field  of  27  coeds  entered  in  the  con- 
test. 


IN  ^BEAT  DOOK^  PARADE  1 

Greensboro  Coed 
Chosen  As  Queen 

Miss  l.iuiiula  Holdeiness  of  dreensbon?  reijined  over  a 
court  oi  six  attendants  atop  a  Pi  Kappa  .\lpha  float  in  yes- 
terdav's  Beat  Dook  parade. 

Miss  Holderness,  a  junior,  was  named  o\er  27  other  con- 
testants vyino  for  the  (Town. 

Pi    Kappa   Alpha    Fraternity  sponsoreil    the   e\ent. 

Delta   Delta  Deha.  (hi   Phi.  Smith  Dorm  anrl  Man,i>um 

Dorm  lock  top  honors  in  their  re-* 

spective   float    divisions.  |  ^^^ 

N.C.  Negro 
Population 
Biggest 

GREENSBORO  —  "The     largest 
Negro  population  of  ail  slates  be- 
•  ongs    to    North    Carolina    at    tbe 
present  time,"    a   UNC   sociologist 
was    lettered,     "Pogo    Says    Blast ,  ^^j^  Tuesday. 

.Duke."  I      x)r.  Daniel  O.  Price,  professor  of 

Smith  Dorm's  float,  upon  which  .  ..^^^y  statistics  at  the  University, 


Members  of  the  queen's  court 
were:" 

Misses   Pat  Dillon,   Shirley   Car- 
penter.    Val    Von    Amon.    Nancy 
MacFadden,    Mar>'    Louise    BizJBeII[_ 
and  Barbara  Honey. 
FLOATS 

The  Tri  Delta  float  had  as  its 
slogan  "Between  the  Devil  and 
the   Deep   Blue   'C". 

The  Chi  Phi  float,  topped  with 
a  gigantic  cannon  with  a  Duke 
blue  devil  peering  out  the  barrel, 


"Getting  off  to  a  good  start  is  es- 
sential to  enjoying  a  safe  trip.  We 
expect  heavy  traffic  over  the  en- 
tire state  Thanksgiving  and  many 
thousands  of  families  will  be 
heading  tor  "backhome"  reunions. ' 

Col.  Smith  said  the  patrol  will 
follow  its  customary  holiday  rou- 
anc  with  afl  leaves  suspended  for 
the  531  man  patrol   force. 

Ho  also  declared  the  patrol 
would  bo  using  all  its  scientific 
speed  detecting  equipment. 

Ho  stated  three  special  precau- 
tions are  nece.ssary  for  safe  holi- 
u.iy  driving: 


scat  to  deadlock  the  23rd  student   trict  in  which  vote  was  disqualified  :  doubly  endorsed. 

legislative  assembly,  and  the  Uni-    last  week,  to  prevent   los.«  of  ma-    ^lASS  OFFICES 

vcrsity   Party    earned    a    smashing  ^  Jority  by  the  UP.  ! 

victory   in  class  offices   in   yester-l      But   the   Student    Party    had   al- 1      But   in   the   class   office   depart- 

Clays   run-off   election.  |  ready   gained  three  seats  in  TM's    ^ent,  the  University  Party  stean» 

The  SP's  Jim  Johnson   defeated '  "I  ^'Jiilt-  the  UP  gained  two  seats  '  rolled  the  SP 
the    UP's    Tom    Kenan    in    Town    »"  Dorm  Men's  H,  representing  an 
Mens    ni   |to    deadlock   the    23rd    overall  gain  of  one  seat  by  the  SP. 
assembly  —  25-25.  '      The  University  Party  had  a  25- 


Olen  Dropped  For 
Using  False  Name 


1 — Have     your    car     ready     for 
traveling  in  any  kind  of  weather. 


.\  UNC  football  player  today  was 

dropped  from  the  squad  and  sus 

ponded  by  the  University  when  he 

2 — Be   physically    and    mentally    admitted   having   falsified    his   ap- 

alert.    "Fatigue,"    he    said,    "prot)- 1  plication  and  eligibility  papers  by 

ably    accounts    for    a    great    many  i  using  an  assumed  name. 


Chi  Phi  Float 

Shewi)^  above  is  the  Chi  JPh^  Ijoat^  tha  winnor  In  the  fry«t*rnity 
division.  The  cannon  with  a  blue  devil  looking  out  the  barrel,  is  let- 
tered "Pogo  Says  Blast  Duke." 


more  traffic  accidents  than  we  sius- 
pecl.  ' 

3 — Observe  traffic  signs  and  sig- 
nals faithfully. 

Smith  said  the  patrol  would 
hand  out  100.000  motorj.sfs  pray- 
ers, smull  printed  cards  which 
will  oe  given  to  each  driver  who 
is  stopped  for  a  routine  check. 


He  is  Vince  Olen,  208-pound 
junior  end  from  Somerville,  Pa., 
who  admitted  he  matriculated  at 
Temple  University  in  1950  under 
his  real  name  of  Vince  Olenik  and 


'neeting  with  the  Honor  Council, 
which  suspended  Olenik  (Olen)  for 
thie  remainder  of  this  and  all  of 
the  next  semester.  After  that  he 
can  apply  to  the  University  for 
reaclmission  in  the  usual  proce- 
dure, the  chancellor  said. 

Chancellor  House  emphasized 
that  no  one  affiliated  with  the 
University  in  any  capacity  had 
any   knowledge   of   Oleniks    name 


news 

m 
brief 


a  devil  was  clawing  at  the  "Pearly 
Gates,"  was  labeled,  "Devil,  You- 
're Above  Your  Level.  " 

Mangum  Dorm's  entry  was  a 
convertible  upon  which,  "Mangum 
Dorm's  Queen"  sat.  "She,"  a  he, 
was  wrapped  in  a  white  sheet. 

Judges     for    the     float     contest 
were    H.    S.    McGinty 
Chapel  Hill  Merchants'  Assn..  Jim 
Davis,  local  merchant,  and  Marvin 
Lee  ol   the  UNC  Economics  Dept. 

PiKa  Herman  Godwin  was  over- 
all chairman  of  the  event,  and 
PiKa  Ted  Rogers  handled  the 
queen  contest. 

The  parade  was  led  by  the 
NROTC    Drum    and    Bugle    Corps. 


:jpoke  on  North  Carolina's  popula- 
tion  trends    here  yesterday   at   a 
luncheon   meeting   of  the   Greens- 
boro Community  Council. 
POPULATION    INCREASING 

The  state's  population  is  increas- 
ing at  a  more  rapid  rate  than  the 
. .  ^  ,  nation  as  a  whole,"  he  reported, 
president, ,  ..^jjites  in  the  State  have  increas- 
ed 140  per  cent  in  the  past  50 
years;  Negroes  have  increased 
about  70  per  cent  in  the  same 
length  of  lime." 

North  Carolina  has  increascjd 
from  15th  among  the  states  in  to- 
tal population  In  1900  to  10th  in 
1950,  he  added. 

Dr.  Price,  said  that  North  Caro- 


Also  in  the  parade  were  the  UNC  <  jj^a  i^^g  -^  jo^g  history  of  popu- 


Band.  the  Lincoln  High  Band,  and 
the  AFROTC  Drill  Team. 

Other  out-standing  floats  enter- 
ed included  those  sponsored  by 
Alpha  Delta  Pi  Sorority  and  Sig- 
ma Nu  Fraternity. 


Key  Sentence 
Set  For  Today 
In  Rape  Case 


CARTH.XGE  iJf^—Jttdge  H.  Hoyle 


lation  loss  from  migration  but  the 
net  loss  between  1940  and  1950 
was  iieavier  than  in  any  previous 
decade. 

"Out-migration  from  North 
Carolina  is  continuing  high  and  it 
is  estimated  that  the  State  is  los- 
ing about  30,000  people  a  year,  a 
large  proportion  of  these  being 
nonwhite." 
HIGH   BIRTH  RATES 

'With  the  high  birthrates  since 
World  War  II  the  trend  of  an  in- 
creasing proportion  of  the  popula- 
tion being  of  labor  force  age  has 
changed  and  we  are  now  getting 
ncreasing      proportions      in      the 


Poster  Is 
Displayed 
Near  Polls 

By   PRINGLE   PIPKIN 

Illegal  campaign  literature  in 
form  of  a  .^ix  foot  poster  saying, 
"Vote  .  .  .  Tues  Paul  Carr  Men's 
Honor  Council  Junior  Seat,"  was 
displayed  intermittently  yesterday  Eisenhower  was  reported  about 
morning  outside  Gerrad  Hall.  ^eady  to  use  the  Taft-Hartley  \ct 

chairman    of    the    »•>  end  the  International  Longshore- 
men's strike.  The  White  House  an- 


[^        LAST   PAPER 

Today  is  the  last  issue  of  The 
Daily  Tar  H«el  until  after  the 
holidays.  The  next  issue  will  ap- 
pear Tuesday. 


playoo     freshman     football     there  j  falsification  or  ineligibility  to  play 

!  that,    season    and    on    the    varsity    football  and  that  the  development 

i  team  the  next  fall.  "shocked"     both    college    and    ath- 

After  that   he  served  two  years    '^^'^^  officials. 

in  the  Army  and  then  matriculated  ;      Coach  Jiri)  Tatum  questioned  the 

at    North    Carolina    in    1954.     He ,  player   ten    minutes   after   he   (Ta- 

played    as    a    freshman   here    that  |  ^"""^     ^^^     informed     by     faculty 

spa=ion.  was  a  reserve  on  the  var-    representative  O.  K.  Coniwell  that 

sit>  In  1S55  and  ha.s  played  in  nine  I  Atlantic    Coast    Conference     Coni- 

^'ames  here  this  fall.  i  n»»ssioner   James    H.    Weaver    had    JUDICIARY 

Chancellor      Robert      B.      House 
niaiic-     the     announcement      after 


UP-nominated  candidates  nabhed 
all  but  one  class  office,  the  vice 
presidency  of  the  freshman  class. 

SP-supported  Everett  James  was 
the  sole  victor  for  his  party  in 
class  office  races. 

In  the  most  keenly  contested 
pre-election  campaign  race,  John 
.\trr  (UP)  defealtHi  Whit  Whitfield 
iSP)  by  a  sizable  majority  —  437- 
302. 

Winner  by  the  narrowest  margin 
was  ireshman  class  Treasurer  Pey- 
ton Hawes  (UP)  who  defeated  Jim 
Wilber  (SP)  by  eight  voies  —  355- 
347. 

Class   officers  in  full  are. 
Junior    class:    Kerr   •')ver    Whit- 
field,  president;    George   Ragsdale 
over   Pat    Adams,   vice    president; 
-Miss   Jackie    Haithcock    over   Miss 
Phyliss   Krafft,  socretai-y;  William 
Deal  over  Jim    Merrill,  treasurer; 
Miss  Dot  Pressly  over  Miss  Jennie 
Margaret  Meador,  social  chairman. 
Freshman  Class:   Chariie  Wilson 
over  David  Evans,  president;  James 
over    Cameron    Cooke,   vice    presi- 
dei.t;     Miss     Mary    Ruth    Starling 
over  Dewey  Dance,  secretary;  Haw- 
es   over    Wilber,    treasurer;    Miss 
Roberta   Chapin   over   Miss    Calh- 
eiine  C'arden.  soeiai  chairman. 


FROM  RADIO  DISPATCHES 
CAIRO  —  The  United  Nations 
police  force  moved  on  Ptfrt  Said 
early  this  morning.  The  move  was 
made  as  a  preliminary  and  pre- 
cautionary measure  for  the  inhab- 
itants of  Port  Said. 


WASHINGTON 


President 


Andy  Milnor 
Elections  Board,  said  he  noticed 
the  poster  at  about  8:Lo  a.m.  and 
turned  it  around  so  that  the  side 
bearing  Carr's  literature  was  fac- 
ing the  wall.  He  changed  the  sign 
before  opening  the  poll.  The  re- 
verse side  of  the  poster  showed 
some  campaign  literature  for  Tom 
Long  and  Everette  James,  who 
ran  in  the  last  Tuesday's  student 
government    elections. 


nounced  he  may  hold  a  special  con- 
ference Friday. 


LCNTX)N  —  Prime  Minister  .\n- 
Ihony  Edens  private  secretary 
said  the  only  thing  wrong  with 
Eden  was  only  that  he  is  utterly 
exhausted.  He  may  be  back  in  a 
few  weeks,  the  secretary  said. 

Eden's    absence    caused    him    to 
miss    shouts    of    "Resign,    resign " 
According   to  the   poll   watchers    from    members    of    the   opposition 
at  Gerrard  Hall,  Carr's  poster  was  ,  Labo:   Party  in  the  House  of  Corn- 
shifted  from  front  to  back  several    mons.  The  shouts  followed  an  aii- 
times  during   the   morning.  ,  nouncement  there  would  be  oil  ra- 

Later  in   the   afternoon   one   of   tioning. 
Carr's  supporters  moved  the  sign. 

which  wa.s  placed  at  the  time  so  j  UNH^ED  NATIONS  -  A  majori- 
that  Carr's  literature  was  facing '  ly  o^  ^""'^"^  Nations  members 
the  wall,  from  the  east  end  of  were  forming  behind  a  plan  to  re- 
Gerrard     Hall     to     the     northeast    st^ro  the  Suez  Canal  to  Egypt  for 


requested  an  investigation.. 
(See   SUSPENSION.  Page  4) 


The  Queen  And  Her  Court 

The  seven  coeds  pictured  above  are  the  queen,  Miss  Lucinda 
Holderness,  and  her  court.  Seated  (left  to  right)  are  Misses  Val  Van 
Ammon,  Barbara  Honey  and  Pat  Dillon.  Standing  (left  to  right)  are 
Misses  Shirley  Carpenter,  Shirley  Biz7.eit,  Nancy  McFadden  and  Miss 
Hold*rn*ss. 


New  Men  In 
Health  Named 

Chancellor  Robc^rt  B.  House  has 
announced  three  appointments  to 
the  University  Division  of  Health 
.'Affairs  after  approval  by  Prrsi- 
dent  William  C.  Friday  and  the 
Board  of  Trustees. 

Dr.  Paul  Mahan  Cummings  Jr. 
has  been  appointed  assistant  pro- 
fessor in  the  Dept.  of  Periodontics 
and  Oral  Pathology  of  the  School 
of  Dentistry.  At  the  present  time 
he  is  teaching  at  the  University 
of  Alabama. 

Dr.  Kurt   Back  has  been   named 

research  associate  professor  in  the 

I  Dept.  of  Biostatistics  of  the  School 

!  of  Public  Health  and  the  Institute 

I  for  Research  in  Social  Science.  He 

came  here  from  the  University  of 

Puerto  Rico. 

Thomas  G.  Donnelly  was  ap- 
pointed research  associate  profess 
or  in  the  Dept  of  Biostatistics  of 
j  the  School  of  Public  Health  and 
Institute  of  Statistics.  He  came 
I  here  fr  >m  the  Dominion  Bureau  of 
Statistics  of  Canada. 


.All  figures  for  judiciary  election 
are  unofficial  but  pretty  "defi- 
nite." according  to  Elections 
Board  Chairman   Andy  Milnor. 

Unofficial  Mens  Honor  Council 
winners  are:  Three  junior  seats: 
Paul  Carr.  Jack  Jones  and  Don 
Evans. 

Two  sophomore  seats:  Tucker 
Yates,  run-off  between  Gary  Coop- 
er and  John  Owens. 

One  freshman  seat:  run-off  be- 
tween Dick  Robinson  and  Hugh 
Patterson. 

Unofficial  Women's  Honor  Coun- 
cil winners  are: 

Miss  Lucinda  Holderness,  run-off 
for  the  three  remaining  seats.  Miss- 
es Doris  Peter.  Cynthia  Seagraves. 
Nan  Schaeff<}r.  Sara  Van  Weyle, 
.Anne  Morgan  and  Kit  \Miitehur.st. 

Unofficial  Student  Council  win- 
ners are: 

Two  junior  seats:  Mack  Patton 
and  Jay  Walker,  who  ran  without 
competition. 

One  sophomore  seat:   Jim   Long 

(See   LEGISLATURE,  Page  3> 


LAST  DAY 

Today  is  the  last  day  for  wom- 
en stucients  to  sign  up  for  dorm- 
itory rooms  for  next  spring,  ac- 
cording to  the  dean  of  women's 
office. 


Sink  of  Greensboro  will  sentence    ^.^.j^^oi  ^g^g .-  ^e  said.  "This,  com- 
Jack   Key   today   for   assault   on   a    ^j^g^j  ^^j^  ^^^^  continuing  increase 

in  population  65  and  over,  is  put- 


corner  of  the  YMC-V  Building,  a 
position  which  was  the  required 
distance   fr:)m    the    polls. 


f.-male.  The  22-year-old  college 
students  scheduled  second  rape 
trial  was  cut  short  by  a  plea  of 
guilty  to  the  lesser  charge. 

Assault  on  a  female  is  a  mis- 
demeanor punishable  by  a  maxi- 
mum two  years  in  prison,  or  a 
minimum  $25  fine. 

Key,  a  North  Carolina  State 
loUcge  junior  from  Bobbins,  was 
charged  with  rape  on  a  complaint 
filed  by  his  girl  friend,  Martha 
Sue  Robinson.  Th.e  pretty  Biscoe 
schoolteacher    said    she   was    driv- 


ting  a  larger  number  of  depend- 
ents on  those  of  working  force 
age.  " 

Whites  in  North  Carolina  live 
longer  than  the  national  average, 
iJT.  Price  reported.  "Their  death 
rates  are  below  those  of  the  na- 
Uon,  mainly  because  rural  death 
rates  are  lower  than  death  rates 
in  urban  areas  and  much  of  North 
Carolina's  population  is  rural.  Ne- 
groes in  North  Carolina  have  death 
rates  slightly  higher  than  the  na-  i 


en  to  3   ionely  spot  the  night  of  i  lional  average." 
May  26  and  raped  in  Key's  auto-        When  the  Negroes  do  leave  the 
mobile.   Key  insisted    that   it   was  '  rural-farm  areas  in  this  .state.  Dr. 
hot  a  case  of  rape,  and  that  she    Price  said,   "they  are  much  more 
was  cooperative.  ]  apt    to    move    completely    out    of 

A  jury  deadlocked   11-1   at   the    the  slate  than  to  go  to  urban  or 
first  trial  here  in  August.   It  did  '  rural  noufarm  <areas,  as  the  whites 
(See  SENTENCE,  Page  3)        '  do." 


Student  Wrecks  Car 
Along  Arboretum  Wall 

A  Car<  lina  student  was  charged 
the  purpose  of  clearing  the  water-  ,  with  reckless  driving  last  night 
way.  The  United  States,  in  effect,  ^fter  the  car  ho  was  driving  crash- 
is  supporting  the  majority  by  not    ^^  j^,^  ^^^  ^^^^^  ^^.j,„  ^i^j^.^  runs 

beside   the  arboretum. 

Giles  Garrett  Nicholson,  fresh- 
man from  Burlington,  was  driving 
a    1955   Ford    station   wagon    and 


sending  oil  to  western  Europe  un- 
til troops  of  Britain,  France  and 
Israel  have  moved  away  from  ad- 
vance points. 

Undersecretary'  of  State  Herbert 
Hoover  Jr.  modified  this  stand 
somewhat,  however.  He  said  the 
United  States  would  senrl  oil  to  the 
17  affected  countries  in  western 
Europe  only  when  they  would  ad- 
vise Washington  how  much  they  Qya^j  shortly  before  11  p.m 
needed  and  who  needed  it 


First  Traffic 
Cases  Deal  In 
Auto  Probation 

The  Student  Government  Traffic 
Committee  met  Monday  night  to 
deal  with  the  first  reported  cases 
of  flagrant  violation  of  campus 
parking  regulations. 

.According     to     Barbara     Moore. 

Traffic   Committee   clerk,   all   sen- 

the  wall   across   from   the   Upper   tonces   handed  down   were   motor 

vehichle     probation.    This 


said  he  was  dodging  another  sta- 
tion wagon  when  the  wreck  occur- 
red.  The   car   went    partway    over 


DELINQUENT  POSTER 

.  .  .   m   y  Court 


m  THE  INFIRMARY 

Students  in  the  Infirmary  yes- 
terday included: 

Misses  Nancy  Stephens,  Mary 
Valentine,  Elizabeth  McGraiw, 
Elaine  Gallimore,  Nancy  Davis, 
and  Harold  Fortner,  Louis  Cody, 
Weyman  Richardson,  James 
Dunn,  Hilton  Goldman,  Robert 
Thornton  and   Waltar  Celliaon. 


The  car  belongs  to  Nicholson's 
mother,  Mrs.  Mozelle  Nicholson 
Foster,  574  Broad  St.,  Burlington. 

Chapel  Ilil  police  officers  Home 
and  Byro  estimated  damage  done 
to  the  car's  front  end  at  appro.\i- 
mateiy  $400.  No  one  was  hurt. 

It  was  .also  reported  another  stu- 
dent had  a  wreck  in  Greensboro. 
Details  were  not  available  at  press 
time  last  night. 


means 
that  any  subsequent  offense  of 
campus  parking  regulations  will 
automatically  render  the  offender 
subject  to  complete  revocation  of 
motor  vehicle  privileges. 

I      The  Traffic   Committee   was   set 
up  by  Student  Body  President  Bob  ■ 
Young  for  the  purpose  of  cutting  I 
down  on  student  violation  of  Uni- 

,  ver^ity  traffic  regulations.  I 


Phi  Delta  Theta  Float 

"It's  about  time''  the  football  team  'Beat  Dcok'  say  members  of 
Phi  Delta  Theta  Fraternity  as  the  sundial  moves  slowly  on. 


^A6I  TWO 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


WEDNESDAY,  NOVEMBER  21,  1956        »»' 


WEDNC 


Apatky  In  The  Ballot  Box: 
South  Building  Can  Step  In 


A  NORTHERN  VIEW 


LONG  ROAD  TO  DURHAM 


^^ 


I 


^t^stcr(la^'s  runoff  election  was 
hold  nut  for  the  usual  reason. 

Isuallv.  extra  elections  are  held 
so  various  candidates  can  run  off 
.uKUlier  balloting;.  But  yesterday's 
licit  ion  was  lield  because  certain 
>ei;nients  of  the  student  fxjdy  neg- 
lected tlieir  diuics. 

The  men  in  one  town  di-itrict 
li;id  to  vote  again  Tuesdav  for  class 
officers  because  of  discrepancies  in 
the  number  of  votes. 

The  judiciary  elections  had  to 
be  run  a  week  late  because  of  a 
fciuhip  in  the  mechanics  of  select- 
ing candidates. 

The  coeds  in  Kenan  Doritow 
didn't  get  to  xote  last  week  beiause 
their,  duly  elected  president  fail- 
e<l  to  see  that  the  ballot  boxes  were 
supcv\ised.        - 


1  hc^e  Wv^ren't  all  the  cases,  how- 
r\('r.  In  tlie  regular  election  last 
w(  ck  «^(iere  was  a'  general  air  of 
IK  gleet  about  the  balloting.  There 
u.K  talk  —  serious,  but  so  f^r  iin- 
•inl)Ntanti<ited  talk  —  about  ballot- 
box  stuffing. 

One  of  the  political  parties  ig- 
nored past  ruling  of  the  election 
board  and  pasted  its  campaign 
posters  all  over  the  l'ni\ersitv's 
brii  k    walks. 

.Several  candidates,  who  cam- 
paigned under  their  nicknames, 
were  surprised  to  find  their  given 
n;nnes  —  hardlv  used  since  gram- 
nnr  school  —  en  the  elc'ction  bil- 
lot. 

*  *  * 

What,  ih.en  i^  the  significance 
of  this  innnensc  apathv  toward  the 
ballot  l><»x?  It  is  rather  strange  to 
the  Carolina  campus,  where  .stu- 
dents have  long  prac ticed  the  right 
to  ^ote  far  mc^re  than  their  elders. 

AVe  cann«»t  explain  the  inditf- 
ferenie.  unless  it  is  because  the 
students  feel  nothing  comes  of 
their  vote. 

There  p'  -  otnids  for  tin's  feel- 
ing. Th  Salient  Legislature,  for 
the  p  -i  \ear  or  so.  has  done  little 
t.>  r.a~«c  a  feeling  of  respcc:t  to 
^\ann  the  hearts  of  the  student 
bodv.  The  Student  Legislature  h  >s 
become  something  tliat  gets  writ- 
ten up  e\ev\  Aveek  in  The  Daily 
■r:ir  Heel,  scmiething  that  passes 
:in  oicasicmal  re.soluiion  and  thr.t 
buvs  television  sets  for  the  dormi- 
tories. 

That,  we  ^upIX)se.  is  the  major 
reason    h)r    the    indifference. 


There  is  a  big  leason  for  worry- 
ing afjoui  the  ballot-box  indiffer- 
ence. 


11  the  student  bodv  proves,  as  it 
has  proved  in  the  past  two  weeks, 
that  it  really  doesn't  care  about 
elections  and  student  legislatures 
and  honor  councils,  the  folks  up  in 
South   Building  will   notice. 

f  he  people  in  South  Building 
will  sav  to  themselves.  ■'Olnioiislv 
the  students  don't  want  their  fiee- 
dom  very  rnuch.  or  they  would 
guard  it   l>etier.' 

.\nd  one  day— or  niavbe  between 
.semesters  or  at  the  end  of  the 
school  year  —  student  govennnent 
woidd  be  dissolved,  as  a  lump  of 
sugar  dissolves  when  water  toiuhes 
it. 

The  sttucture  of  lesponsible 
student  government  that  has  been 
built  for  the  past  many  yc»ars 
would  be  wiped  out.  Soinh  Build- 
ing would  ta'ke  the  administiation 
of  justice  awav  from  the  'students 
— as  it  has  alreadv  started  to  do — 
and  the  honor  system  woidd  be- 
come the  monitor  system. 

The  president  of  the'  student 
body  woidd  be  little  more  than  a 
person  who  tells  his  fellow  students 
not  to  walk  on  the  grass  and  not 
to  throw  toilet  paper  at*  football 
games  and  to  veil  veiv  loud  when 
the  football  team  rims  on  the  field. 

"Lhe  Student  Legislature  would 
be  a  third  debating  stxrietv.  with 
no  power  to  deal  with  a  tremend- 
oifs  student  budget. 

Student  government  wcjuld  be 
dead.  It  would  be  death  thiough 
inesponsibility. 


1  his  is  not  pure  pessimism.  It 
could  haj)pen,  veiy  easily. 

Gracious 

« 

Living: 
Number  7 

(»iacious  Living  in  Chapel  Hill 
would  be  much  graciouser  if  stu- 
dents took  it  easy  over  the  week- 
end. 

It  thev  were  to  drive  carefully, 
hold  bafll  on  the  alcohol-gasoline 
comfjinaticjn  and  allot  themselves 
plentv  of  time  for  traveling,  per- 
haps the  ninnber  of  returning  stu- 
dents will  equal  the  nimifjer  of 
those  leaving  this  afternoon. 

Student  fatalities  as  a  result  of 
Thanksgiving  travel  would  be 
most  ungratious  indeed. 


The  People  Cause  Crime 


.\bjsi  of  the  blame  for  Chapel 
Hills  earlv  Christmas  spirit  "  can 
be  laid  to  the  j>eople  who  keep  the 
merchants  in  business. 

Without  a  public  happy  to  gob- 

The  Daily  Tar  Heel 

The  official  stucient  publication  of  tbe 
Publications  Board  of  the  University  of 
North  Carohna,  where  it  is  published 
daily  except  Monday  and  examioatioB 
and  vacation  periods  and  summer  terms 
Entered  as  second  class  matter  in  tht 
Dost  office  in  Chapel  Hill,  N.  C,  undei 
the  Act  oi  .March  8,  1870.  Subscription 
rates:  mailed.  S4  per  year,  $2.50  a  semes- 
ter; delivered,  $6  a  year,  $3.50  a  semes- 
ter. 


Editor 


FRED  POWLEDGE 


Managing  Editor CHARLIE  SLOAN 


News  Editor 


RAY  LINKER 


Business  Manager     ..    BILL  BOB  Pi£L 


Sports  Editor 


LARRY  CHEER 


EDITORIAL  STAFF  —  Woody  Sear?, 
Franlc  Crowther,  Barry  Winston,  David 
Mundy.  George  Pfingst,  Ingrid  Clay, 
Cortland  Edwards,  Paul  McCauley, 
Bobbi  Smith. 

NEW^S  STAFF— Clarke  Jones,  Nancy 
Hill.  Joan  Moore,  Pringle  Pipkin,  Anne 
Drake.  Edith  MacKinnon,  Wally  Kuralt, 
Mary  Alys  Voorhees,  Graham  Snyder, 
Billy  Barnes.  Neil  Bass.  Gary  Nichols, 
Page  Bernstein,  Peg  Humphrey,  Miyllis 
Maultsby. 


ble  up  gifts  ;V')  dJiys  before  Christ- 
mas, the  merchants  and  their  pro- 
motion schemes  would  look  printv 
silly. 

.\s  it  is,  their  lij;hts'and  tinsel 
and  candles  on  Fianklin  St.  only 
reniind  the  shoptJer  that  Christmas 
(formerly  a  relioious  celebration 
observed  by  most  Christians)  is 
fi\e   paychecks  away. 

The  publics  attitude  toward 
Christn>as  w;.s  reflected  the  other' 
dav  by  Paid  Smith,  owner  of  the 
strangest  and  most  interestinjj; 
bookshop  in  the  world.  ,\sked  whv 
his  Christmas  cards  were  up  so 
early.  Smith  alowed: 

■'I  kept  them  off  the  shelves, 
e\en  thouirh  evervbodv  else  was 
getting"  their  Christmas  stuff  out. 
But  peoijle  started  comin«  bv  and 
asking;  where  my  cards  were,  I  had 
to  jret  them  out   in  self-defense." 

The  peoole.  driven  Christmas- 
mid  by  iiPtional  and  lotal  adver- 
tising;, demanded  their  Clhristmas 
cards  more  than  a  month  in  ad- 
viiTe.  It's  the  same  way  with  prac- 
tical! v  evervthin^  else  that  can  be 
sold  for  a  Christma.s  gift,  then  e\- 
chaneecl  when  the  after-ChriHtma"» 
sales  start. 

So  we  really  cant  f>lame  the 
merchants  too  much.  Ihey  mere- 
ly are   reacting  to  a  disea.se  they 


A  Second  Look  At  Man  s  Religion 


Cortland  Edwards 

"GOD  IS  WORK" 

To  me — God  is  not  lovc,-Goa 
is  work. 

To  me — there  is  no  such  thing 
as  religion.  Religion  is  a  social 
concept,  a  classificatory  term.  It 
is   an  ethical  system. 

To  me — the  soul  is  nothing 
more  than  a  disposition.  As  a  dis- 
position, it  exists  only  as  its  in- 
dividual creator  exists. 

To  me — there  isn't  now  and 
never  were  such  things  as  Jesus 
Christ  as  the  son  of  God,  the 
Holy  Trinity,  angels,  etc 

To  me — the  Bible  is  worthless 
as  a  book  of  prophecy,  or  as  a 
strengthener  of  the  week.  It  is 
not  the  book  of  God. 

To  me — the  virgin  Mary  of 
Christianity  was  not  a  virgin  in 
our  definition  of  the  word,  and 
should  not  be  worshipped  as 
such. 


To  mc — Heaven  and  Hell  don't 
exist.  They  are  mythological 
goal  concepts. 

To  me — the  Church  is  a  pros- 
titution  of   Christ's    teachings. 

To  me — a  particular  Religion 
is  good  and  nece.ssary,  but  then 
too.  war  is  good  and  necessary. 

To  me — science  is  doing  away 
with  religion. 

To  me — there  is  a  God.  but  .  .  . 

The  God  in  which  I  believe  is 
dynamically  effective  in  this 
world  for  .\LL  mortal  people. 
One  God  over  the  whole  Uni- 
verse .... 

I  do  not  believe  in  a  God  that 
can  be  known  only  to  the  Chris- 
t'ans.  or  the  Buddhists,  or  pag- 
ans. Nor  do  I  believe  in  a  God 
that  differs  from  the  Baptists, 
to  the  Methodists,  to  the  Catho- 
lies.  .^j 

I  do  not  believe  in  a  God  whose 
sole  authority  among  men  is 
based    upon    an  •  antiquated    and 


incomplete  Book  of  ambiguous 
and  contridictory  messages.  The 
bible  is  a  literary  work.  It  is 
primarily  a  history  book.  It  con- 
tains sonnets,  songs,  poetrj*,  and 
almost  all  forms  of  good  litera- 
ture. 

I  do  not  believe  in  a  God  cre- 
ated by  men  of  their  own  reali- 
ty, anc*  preached  by  men  in  their 
own  limitations.  My  God  is  over 
.ALL.  the  Christians,  the  Budd- 
hists, the  7th  Day  Adventists, 
etc.  ...  He  was  not  created  by 
man.  but  rather  he  created  man. 

I  do  not  believe  in  a  God  that 
must  make  u.se  of  "magic"  in 
miracles  and  the  p.sychological 
persuasion  of  ritual  based  on 
superstition;  nor  do  1  believe  in 
a  God  that  would  be  based  upon 
fear  and  original  sin.  The  mir- 
acles of  bibical  days  can  be  ex- 
plained  scientifically. 

I  do  not  believe  in  a  God  that 
depreciates  this  society  of  ours 
which  we  do  have,  and  which  is 


Mfs  A  Great  Performance  Goinc)  On  —  Take 
My  Word  For  If 


.'.'■/S 


The  Mason  Farm  Girls  Tragedy 


The  Mason  farm  which  lies 
in  the  immediate  vicinity  of 
Finley  Golf  Course,  was  once  the 
the  .scene  of  what  is  now  one  of 
Chapel  Hills  most  interesting 
tales,  that  of  the  .Mason  farm 
girls. 

Back  around  the  time  the 
North  and  the  South  were  having 
trouble   deciding    who    was   right 


abouL  the  slavery  issue,  the  two 
girls  were  born — Martha  James 
in  1857,  and  her  sister  Vcrina 
Caroline   in   1861. 

Little  is  known  about  the 
girls'  early  lives  but  around  the 
time  they  became  of  courtin'  age. 
both  found  thpm.selves  in  a 
rather  precarious  position — that 
of  both  being  in  love  with  the 
same  .suitor. 


This  young  swain,  preacher  by 
trade,  apparently  didnt  know 
which  way  to  turn  and  disap- 
peared, leaving  the  girls  in  a 
state  of  disappointment. 

Legend  has  it  that  in  1881, 
both  died  of  a  broken  heart  al- 
though it  is  perhaps  more  reas- 
onable to  assume  that  typhoid 
fever  was  the  real   reason. 


as  good  as  that  what  we  may  rea- 
sonably expect  or  want;  nor  do 
I  believe  in  a  God  that  permits 
the  dangling  of  another  life  as 
either  reward  or  punishment. 
What  Christianity  needs  is  an 
up-to-date  God  concept. 

I  do  not  believe  in  a  God  that 
permits  one  man  in  proper  garb 
to  sanctify  another,  or  indi\'id- 
uals  to  be  persecuted  or  exploit- 
ed under  the  guise  of  salvation 
by  other  men. 

I  do  not  believe  in  a  God  that 
allows  men  to  escape  the  conse- 
quences of  their  wrongful  acts 
by  the  acceptance  of  di\ine  in- 
tervention through  confession,  or 
by  any  other  means. 

God  is  a  concert.  The  God  I 
recognize  is  based  on  an  extens- 
ion of  rational  thought  and  de- 
signed to  assist  the  individuals 
in  this  world  achieve  maximum 
happiness  in  a  harmonious  com- 
munity. He  is  the  goal  symbol 
of  our  ethical  systems. 

Furthermore,  this  God  of  which 
I  speak  docs  not  demand  that 
I  insist  upon  reforming  others, 
but  merely  that  I  state  my  posit- 
ion and  admit  that  my  concept 
cannot  be  absolute. 

There  is  no  such  thing  as  THE 
religion.  Religion  undefinable. 
One  can  talk  about  a  Christian 
religion,  or  a  Zuni  religion,-  but 
cannot  talk   of  religion   per  se. 

I  believe  that  religion  is  es- 
sentially an  individual,  personal 
thing.  It  is  up  to  each  person  to 
decide  what  he  chooses  to  be- 
lieve. This  is  one  of  the  most  im- 
portant freedoms  we  enjoy  in 
this  countrj'. 

Each  person,  of  his  own  ac- 
cord, ought  to  examine  the  var- 
ious faiths,  and  either  choose  or 
develop  one  that  meets  his  needs. 
By  faith  I  don't  mean  .just  Meth- 
odist. Catholic.  Unitarian,  etc., 
but  also  Humanism,  Materialism. 
etc. 

Once  having  decided  which  is 
to  be  his  faith,  each  person 
should  make  it  a  vital  part  of  his 
everyday  life.  Faith  should  not 
be  allowed  to  degenerate  into 
the  vague,  abstract  state  that  it 
is  today.  If  it  does,  then  Some- 
thing is  wrong. 

Individuals  or  churchs  should 
not  be  allowed  to  use  psycholog- 
ical persuasion  and  social  press- 
ure of  faith  to  coerce  the  ignor- 
ant and  the  weak.  1  mention  on- 
ly a  few— Adolph  Hitler,  Billy 
Graham.   Oral  Roberts. 

The  ideas  above  are.  to  me.  es- 
sential to  the  development  of  a 
well-founded,  strong,  applicable 
faith  in  each  individual,  while 
guaranteeing  the  same  privilege 
to  all  others. 

Religion  is  a  touchy  subject  in 
public  print.  That  it  is  a  touchy 
object  indicates  its  vulnerabil- 
ity and  the  great  differences 
among  peoples  in  their  religious 
ideas.  It  is  vitally  important  that 
our  differences  never  destroy  our 
unity. 

What  we  want  is  the  kind  of 
understanding  that  enables  each 
of  us  to  think  what  he  wishes, 
and  do  what  he  wants,  an  long  as 
his  fellow  men  have  the  priAa- 
lege  of  doing  the  same. 

Perhaps  it's  time  for  you.  as 
college  students,  to  re-examine 
your  thinking  on  the  connections 
between  religion,  freedom,  and 
democracy.  Most  important  of 
all — re-examine  your  own  faith. 
Do  you  KNOW  what  you  RE.\L- 
LY  believe? 


Pogo 


By  Walt  Kelly 


IV\  Abn«r 


By  Al  Capp 


Niglit  Editor 


CortUind  Edwards       lielped  spread  among  the  people. 


(~/F HE  f^F/NDS  OUT  HE lAf^ED 
ON  M£~A,>-f'l.L  HA^T}^  /V?/ACS 


WISH  SOME 
(3AL  WOULD  SNATCH 
OPFA  THIS  MtJD  I 
DRAG  ME  BACK  , 
MARFTV  ME  Tf- 


MAH  BACHELOR  OAVS    1 
lSOVER.''.''-AH  E.1NI 
CAUGHT  BV  A  WCH  GAL, 
IN  A  GENKDOWINE  FXJP    ^ 


DUKathon  Runner  ^^ 
Recalls  Journey 


Gary  Nichols 


Daily  Tar  Heel  staff  writer  Nichols  ran  th* 
htlV  lenstfi  of  the  DUkathon  Saturday  afternoon 
mnd  finished  fourth  Below  is  his  own  accourit  of 
the  trip. 

What  in  the  world  am  I  doing  here?  What  am 
I  trying  to  prove?  Whatever  it  is.  there  ought  to 
be  an  easier  way  to  do  it.  It's  too  late  to  back  out 
now,  though,  even  if  r  wanted  to. 

Lineup.  Here  I  am  in  the  back  of  the  bunch  as 
usual.  Look  at  those  stances,  would  you?  It  looks 
looks  like  some  of  those  guys  are  planning  to  put 
on  an  11*^  mile  sprint.  When  are  we  going  to  get 
started?  I  want  to  get  this  over  with  as  soon  as 
possible. 

rStart.  Here  I  am  in  front.  It's  going  just  the 
way  I  planned  it.  now  if  I  can  just  hold  a  good 
steady  pace  and  keep  my  position.  If  someone 
catches  up  to  me  I'll  try  to  tag  along  and  sprintT 
it  out  with  him  at  the  finish. 

IV^  miles  out.  I  feel  like  Im  running  out  of 
gas.  I  sure  wish  I'd  gotten  into  shape  before  I  de- 
cided to  enter  this  thing.  I  can  hear  footsteps  be- 
hind me,  I  guess  he's  going  to  try  to  pass  me.  He's 
going  too  fast  for  me.  I  don't  believe  he  can  hold 
that  pace.  I'll  just  try  to  keep  going  at  this  rate. 
I'll  probably  catch  up  with  him  later  when  he  tires. 
Oh  oh,  here  comes  another  man.  I  guess  that  puts 
me  in  third  place  for  a  while. 

3.3  miles  out.  Hey.  what  are  they  doing?  I  thought 
we  were  supposed  to  follow  the  Durham  highway. 
They're  waving  us  out  the  old  road.  That  way  is 
longer  (13.6)  mi.).  What  are  they  trying  to  p'ull? 

The  road  is  a  lot  rougher  than  the  highway.  It's 
a  lot  hillier  too.  I  can't  understand  why  they're 
sending  us  this  way. 

4  miles  out.  I've  got  a  cramp  in  my  side,  I  won- 
der if  I  can  keep  up  the  pace.  It  feels  like  Im  be- 
ing folded  up  like  I'Ti  accordian.  I've  got  to  get 
rid  of  it  somehow.  Maybe  I  should  stop  and  walk 
a  while  or  put  on  a  short  sprint  to  try  to  work  it 
out  No,  if  I  stop  I'll  probably  never  start  running 
again  and  a  sprint  is  out  of  the  question. 

4.6  miles.  More  footsteps,  I  guess  I'm  about  to 
be  left  in  the  dust  again.  Here  I  was  worrying  about 
winning  this  race  and  I'll  be  lucky  to  finish  it.  This 
cramp  is  really  giving  me  a  fit.  I  don't  know  if  I 
can  hold  out  much  longer.  I've  got  to  finish  at 
least — I  told  everybody  I'd  finish  no  matter  where  I 
placed. 

5  miles.  Still  another  man  passing  me.  This  one 
is  breathing  awfully  hard;  I'm  almost  sure  he  won't 
last.  Those  two  are  fighting  it  out  to  see  which  one 
w^ill  pass  the  other,  that  ought  to  finish  him  for 
siire. 

6.5  miles.  Well,  now  they're  passing  me  in  twos. 
These  guys  look  pretty  fresh.  They're  staying  (o- 
gether  pretty  well  too.  That  puts  me  about  seventh. 

I'd  sure  like  to  know  how  the  football  team  is 
making  out.  I  should  have  stayed  in  Chapel  Hill 
and  listened  to  the  game.  I  wish  I'd  never  started 
this  thing,  there's  no  sense  to  it  at  all. 

7  miles.  Looks  like  I  was  right  about  that  guy 
who  was  breathing  so  hard.  He's  up  there  walking. 
He  looks  about  ready  to  quit.  He's  not  even  tr\nng 
to  stay  with  me.  I've  passed  him.  I'm  now  the  sixth 
man. 

74  miles.  I'm  passing  the  guy  in  the  blue 
sweater. 

8  miles.  The  guy  in  the  blue  sweater  is  passing 
me. 

84  miles.  I'm  passing  the  guy  in  the  blue 
sweater  again. 

No  one  in  sight.  I  sure  feel  alone.  I  have  no  con- 
ception of  there  being  a  finish  to  this  race.  All 
I  seem  to  be  really  conscious  of  is  the  fact  that  I'm 
running. 

94  miles.  Once  again  I  am  passed  by  the  blue 
sweater. 

10  miles.  I  've  passed  him  again;  I  hope  this  is 
the  last  I  see  of  him. 

I'm  aware  of  the  fact  that  I'm  creating  a  bit  of 
interest  from  the  people  along  the  way.  Children 
aad  other  bystanWs  keep  asking  me  what  it's  all 
about.  "Say.  why  are  you  running?",  asks  a  little 
kid.  "Because  I  have  a  letter  to  mail. "  I  answer. 

Durham.  I'm  coming  to  the  residential  section. 
There  arc  sidewalks  beside  the  road.  This  is  the 
first  time  I  realize  that  I  am  in  Durham  and  that 
there  is  an  end  to  the  race. 

Here's  another  guy  walking.  He  was  the  second 
one  in  the  race  to  pass  me.  I  think  he's  about  fin- 
ished too.  I'm  fifth  now.  if  I  can  pass  any  more 
and'or  some  drop  out,  I  might  finish  high  in  this 
race  yet. 

I  ought  to  be  coming  into  the  city  pretty  soon. 
There  should  be  only  about  3  or  4  miles  to  go.  I'm 
awfully  tired;  I'd  like  to  fake  a  trip  or  something 
and  just  lie  here  in   tbe  road. 

I've  come  to  a  fork  in  the  road.  I  don't  know 
which  way  to  go.  That  kid  is  pointing  to  the  left;  I 
hope  he's  not  trying  to  fool  me.  Maybe  1  should  wait 
til  one  of  the  cars  in  the  caravan  comes  by  to  find 
out  whether  I'm  on  the  right  road  or  not.  I'd  better 
not  get  too  far  from  the  other  road  in  case  I  am 
on  the  wTong  one. 

11  blocks  from  the  finish.  Oh  oh.  there's  the  guy 
in  the  blue  sweater  again.  I  guess  I  must  be  on 
the  right  road.  I've  got  to  beat  him.  That  would 
make  me  fourth.  That's  the  most  ironical  position 
in  the  race;  the  first  of  the  boys  who  didn't  place. 
That's  ray  position  if  Tm  running  true  to  form. 

8  blocks  from  the  finish.  There's  a  stop  light.  It 
had  better  be  green  because  I'm  going  through  it.  I 
think  I'd  welcome  being  hit  by  a  car,  at  least  I 
could  stop  running,  and  I  guess  that  would  be  a 
legitimate  excuse  for  stopping.   It's  gncen. 

5  blocks  from  the  finish.^ That  blue  sweater  and 
I  are  shoulder  to  shoulder;  I've  never  been  so  tired 
of  one  person  in  my  life. 

4  blocks  from  the  finish.^  Im  aliead  of  him.  I 
don't  know  how  far  behind  he  is.  I've  got  to  pick 
up  my  pace  a  little  bit.  He's  probably  liable  to  pass 
me  any  minute. 

There's  the  finish:  I  don't  have  enough  left  to 
sprint  the  last  part.  My  stomach  is  starting  to 
Iwave  I  made  it'  .lust  in  time:  here  come*;  the 
coffee  1  drank  for  break f.rst. 


Tryi 
Cm 

Anyone! 
Calvacade 
iield  afte| 
days,  accc 
publicity 

Snipes 
ing  proj 


D 


p 
10 

12 

13 

l.'i 
16 

IT 

J8 
19. 
20 
2.3. 
24 


26 

,"1 


?8J 
411 

4: 

4.31 
441 


1956 


WEDNESDAY.  NOVEMBER  21,  195& 


THE  bAlLY  tAk  HfeEL 


PAGE  THREE 


/■ 


r  ^2 


th« 

Bnoon 

\f  of 


|al  am 

?ht   to 
:k  out 

)ch  as 
looks 
to  put 
[to  get 
)on   as 

\st   the 

good 

Jmeone 

sprint 

jut    of 

I  de- 

tps   be- 

le    He's 

in  hold 

rate. 

|e  tires. 

it  puts 

thought 
ighway. 
I  way  is 
I  pull' 
ray.  It's 
I  they're 

I  won- 
|I  m  be- 
to  get 
\6  walk 
irork  it 
unning 

[bout  to 
[g  about 
it.  This 
kow  if  I 
inish  at 
I  where  I 

This  one 
le  won't 
lich  one 
I  him   for 

in  twos, 
lying  to- 

seventh. 

team   is 

jpel   Hill 

started 

[that  guy 
walking. 
?n  trying 

I  the  sixth 

the     blue 

bs  parsing 

Ithe     blue 

,e  no  con- 
race.   All 
tt  that  I'm 

the  blue 

jpe  this  is 

g  a  bit  of 
r.  Children 
hat  it's  all 
iks  a  little 

answer, 
ial  section, 
rhia   is  the 
and  that 

the  second 
about  fin- 
any  more 

igh  in  this 

>rctty  soon, 
to  go.  I'm 
something 

dont  know 
the  left;  I 

should  wait 
by  to  find 

.  Id  better 
case   I   am 

Ires  the  guy 
musl  be  on 
That  would 
iceil  (Kisition 
didn't  place, 
e  to  form. 

stop  light.  It 
through  it.  I 

ir,  at  least  I 
would  be  a 

•cen. 

\  sweater  and 

been  so  tired 

ad  of  him.  I 
p  got  to  pick 
liable  to  pass 

noue'h  left  to 
is  starting  to 
re  crimps;    the 


Tryovts  Are  Still  Open  for 
Campuswide  Talent  Program 

.\nyone  may  still  sign  up  for  the  |  sive  and  varied  program  which  will 
Calvacade  of  Talent  snow  to  be '  be  one  of  the  most  entertaining  of 
iield  after  the  Thanksgiving  holi-  j  the  year."  He  said  the  list  of  tal 
days,  according  to  H.  G.  Snipes,  its  i  ented  students  is  becoming  quite 
publicity  chairman.  I  large,  as  Carolina  has  eagarly  re- 

Snipes  described    the  forthcom- 1  impended, 
ing  program  as  being  "an  impres-'      "I  want  it  to  be  known  by  all 


COME  TO 

VARLEY'S  MEN'S  SHOP 

For  Your 

COOPER'S  PRODUCTS 


Covering  The  Cdrnpus 


Prof.  James  L.  Godfrey  of  UNC 
was  elected  a  member  of  the  Ex- 
ecutive Council  of  the  Southern 
Hi^oncal  Assn.  at  the  meeting  in 
Duriiam  last  weekend. 

WUNC 

Following  is  a  listing  of  pro- 
grams today  from  the  Universtiy's 
FM  radio  station. 


7:00 
7:15 
7:30 
7:45 
H:00 
8:30 

9:00 
10:00 
10:15 
11:30 


Intermezzo 
Messages  and  Men 
Songs  of  France 
Curtain  Going  Up 
I  Hear  America  Singing 
Georgetown  University 

Radio  Forum 
Debussy  the  Master 
News 

Evening  Masterwork 
Sign   Off 


WUNC-TV 

Following    is    a  listing   of   pro- 
grams today  from  the  University's 
television  statida,  Channel  4. 
12:45     Music 

1:00    Today  On  the  Farm 

1:30    Agriculture 

2:00     Tomorrow 

2:30    Sign  Off 

5:45     Music 

6;  00    Draw  Me  A  Story 

6:15     Sports  Clinic 

6:30    News 

6:45     Sports  * 

7:00    Industrial  Artisan 

7:30     Travelogue 

8:00    Rembrandt 

8:30    Living  Together 

9:00    Mental  Gymnastics 

9:30    American  Politics 
10:00    Final  Edition 
10:05     Sign  Off 


that  this  production  is  not  just 
GMAB's.  or  the  "Y's  "».  This  is  Car- 
olina's show  and  your  talent.  It  is 
felt  that  as  a  part  of  Carolina's 
way  of  life,  self  expression  is  very 
definitely  needed  and  this  show  is 
designed  to  do  just  that/'  Snipes 
said. 

To  sign  up  for  the  tryouts,  those 
wishing  to  enter  have  been  asked 
to  contact  Dave  Davis,  talent  chair- 
man at  the  Phi  Delta  Theta  House 
or  Miss  Eleanor  Riggins  at  the 
YMCA. 

Tryouts  are  to  be  held  next  Wed- 
nesday and  Thursday  in  Memorial 
HaU. 


Sentence 

(Continued  from  page  1.) 
not  announce  whether  the  major- 
j  ily  favored  conviction  or  acquittal. 
i  Judge  Sink  Monday  said  he 
\  would  order  a  special  venire  of 
'  100  pei-sons  from  Mecklenburg 
j  County  to  report  today  for  selec- 
tion of  the  jury.  Key  later  entered 
'  his  plea  of  guilty  to  assault,  which 

the  state  accepted. 
I      He  has  been  in  jail  without  priv- 
ilege of  bond  since  May  27. 


COLLEGE  JOURNALIST 

headlines  Jockey  brand  underwear  news 

"I  never  feel  beat  on  my  beat,"  writes  Scoop 
Meri?enthal«-,  ace  reporter.  "That's  because  I  insist  on 
the  casual  comfort  of  Jockey  briefs.  Believe  me,  Jockey 
will  put  the  30  at  the  end  of  your  underwear  sob  stMy!" 

It's  IK)  news  (and  that's  good  news)  to  most  men 
that  wearing  Jockey  Underwear  means  casual,  at-ease 
appearance!  Better  drop  into  your  dealer's  soon... buy 
a  supply  of  Jockey  briefs  amd  T-shirts,  and  fed  as  good 
as  you  look. 

it's  in  style  to  be  comfortable  ...  in 


Heath  Chosen  To  Head 
Sou^  Economic  Group 

Dr.  Milton  S.  Heath  of  UNC  was 
elected  president  of  the  South- 
ern- Ek>onomic  Assn.  at  the  con- 
clusion of  the  group's  26th  an- 
nual meeting  in  Raleigh  last 
weekend. 


Meet  that  talked-abouf 


Gov*  Proclaims 
Thursday  As 
Thanksgiving 

RALEIGH  i.ffi— Gov.  Hodges  to- 
day proclaimed  this  coming  Thurs'^ 
day  as  Thanksgiving  I>ay  and 
arged  North  Carolinians  to  be 
thankful  "for  another  great  har- 
vest and  other  material  blessing 
which  will  continue  to  provide  our 
people  with  the  highest  standard 
of  living  in  the  world." 

The  Governor  recalled  the  first 
Thanksgiving  observed  by  the  pil- 
grims in  1621  and  said  that  like 
them.  "We  face  many  grave  and 
perplexing  problems  in  »•  world 
torn  with  dissension  and  conflict.' 

He  said  that  to  meet  these  prob- 
lems will  "require  calm  and  coura- 
geous leadership,  a  keen  under- 
standing of  people  and  events,  ah 
abiding  faith  in  &ur  fund&mental 
democratic  principles,  ^a  demon- 
stration of  our  belief  we  are  a 
Christian  nation  and  a  unity  of 
purpose  worthy  of  our  great  heri- 
tage as  a  free  people." 


Legislature  Deadlocked 


(Cithtinued  frvtn  Page  I) 
over  Herman  Godwin. 

UNENOORSEO 

An  ftttere^ng.  affect  about  the 
judiciary  election  was  that  the 
ticket  leaders  in  both  the  Men-s 
and  Women's  Honor  Council  races 
were  unendorsed  by  the  Bi-Parti- 
san  Selections  Board. 

Miss  Lucinda  Holderness,  whose 
busy  day  yesterday  included  being 
named  queen  of  the  Beat  Dook 
parade,  led  the  ticket  in  the  Wo- 
men's Council  contest,  and  was  un- 
endorsed by  the  Selections  Board. 

Paul  Carr,  who  topped  the  tick- 


et   in    the    Mens  'council    race 
also  failed  to  meet  the  approval  of 
the  Selections  Board. 
UPHILL   CLIME 

The  wixming  of  one  legislative 
seat  from  the  University  Party  by 
the  Student  Party  represented  the 
culimnation  of  a  three-semester 
uphill  climb  for  the  SP. 

The  student  Legislature  had  been 
dominated  consistently  for  several 
years  by  the  SP  until  the  UP  gain- 
ed a  28-22  majority  for  the  20th 
Legislature  assembly. 

The  SP  made  it  26-24  during  the 
21st  assembly,  then  25-24-1  during 
the  22nd  assembly. 


Modern  Language  Professors 
To  Attend  Meeting  Thursday 


^w 


made  only  by 


Jockeu^ 


JOCKEY  UNDERWEAR 

AVAILABLE  AT 

BERMAN'S  DEPT.  STORE 


Third  In  TV  Health 
Series  Scheduled  Friday 

"The  Storehouse  of  Medical 
Knowledge"  will  be  the  title  Of 
tfxe  tl|ir.d  in  the  "Prajoct  Health'" 
series  of  program  sponsored  bS 
the  UNC  Division  of  Health  Af^ 
fairs  over  WUNC-TV,  Channrf  4. 
Friday  at  9  p.m.  ,"' 

This  program  is  being  presented 
by  the  UNC  Division  of  Health  Af- 
fairs Library.  The  "Project 
Health"  series  of  programs  is 
staged  every  other  Friday  night 
throughout  the  academic  year. 

The  program  will  originate  live 
from  the  DHA  Library  in  the  CKn- 
ic  Building  in  the  School  of  Medi- 
cine on  the  LTSI^C  Campus. 


Inc.,  Kenotha,  WiicofMin 


DAILY 

ACROSS 

1  Shine 

5  Seaport 
(Algeria) 

9  Sort 
10  Rascal 
12.  Language 

13  Comes  into 
view 

14  Not 
clogged 

15  Fish 

16  Part  of 
"to  be  ' 

17  Exclama- 
tion 

18.  Plant  juice 

19.  Mans  name 

20.  Hoydens 
23.  GirVs  name 

24  A  song 

25  Mother  of 
Irish  gods 

26  lota 
27.  l^tg 

31  Grow  old 

32  African 
worm 

53.  Exclama- 
tion 

34  Girls 
nickname 

S.-S.  Forbid 

36  Gaucho's 
weapon 

38.  Pale 

40.  Christmas 
sonpr 

41.  Pebble 

42.  Maxim 

43.  Places 

44.  Trust 

DOWX 
1  Handwrit- 

ing:  exp«rt« 
1  Tardy 
3  Norse  god 


CROSSWaRD 


4.  Skin 
tumor 

5.  Lowest 
decks 
(warships) 

6.  Crucifix 

7.  Past 

8.  Science  of 
coins 

9.  Gaze^ 
11.  Literary 

composition 
15.  Low' 

island 
18  Thus 
19.  Dog-headed 

ape 

(Egypt  ) 


21.  Deck 

officer 
22  A^  hand 
26.  Part  of 
"to  Toe" 

26.  Indonei. 
sian 
island 
fposs.) 

27.  Smooth, 
ing 
tools 

28  An  age 

29.  Sun  god 

30.  Reck 
(kind) 

35.  Flexed 

36.  Ordered 


Ye*t«r4ar'»  AMw«f 

37.  Spok««* 

39.  Gardener'* 

tool 

'  40.  Elevator 

eagre 


EVE  ARDEN     •    ANN  BLYTH 
I  BRUCE  BENNETT 

oiaicito  »r  Mooucte  •* 

MICHAEL  CURTIZ 'JERRY  WALD 

(C«tf«  n>v  rr  naNAlO  MACOOUOAiL  •   ■Alts' ON  THt 
■OVtk  m  JAMCS  M    CAIN    •    MUUC  (T  WAX  tTtlMt* 


NOW  PLAYING 


CaroliniJ 


AAedicine  School  To  Hold 
Research  Meeting  Today 

A  UNC  School  of  Medicine  Re- 
search Meeting  will  be  held  jit  4 
p.m.  today  at  the  Clinic  Audi- 
torium. 

Dr.  James  A.  Green,  Dept.  of' 
Anaf&my,  will  speak  on  "The  Re- 
sponses of  the  Epithelium.  Stroma 
and  Epithelio-stromal  Jiinction  of 
the  Mouse  Vagina  to  Steroid  Hor- 
mones." 

Dr.  C.  D.  Van  Cleave  of  the  De> 
partment  of  Anatiuny  will  talk  on 
'.'Strontium    Cateium    Discrimina- 
tion Ratios  in  Pool^  BVsmurs  of 
I  Rats." 

"The    Stuart    Defect:    A    'NeW 
Disease  of  Blood  Coagulation"  will 
I  be  the  topic  of  a  talk  by  Dr.  John 
•  B.  Graham  and  Dr.  Cecil  Hougie 
I  of  the  Dept.     of    Pathology    and 
Emily  M.  Barrow,  research  assist- 
ant. 


MAMMOTH!  MIGHTY! 
MAGNIFICENT! 


Warnea  BMStfUitiwt 


wuifUTitJOHNIWiSI 


IN  Cinemascope  and  warncrColo 
,T..»H^  ROSSANA  JACK 

P0DE8TA«mE«8ERNA8.Fitt 

StllCEDE)CHA«Blfl6KEnMnUiR 
ntttrKCinnr-iMirmtibirnRfrTiiiTeii^  ^ 
6RAY  wcionmERIVlSE  u^ST^^Z^  ^ 


w 


NOW 
PLAYING 


^Mcttrm 


g] 


B  RE'CK 


CafiAll  TkEATMWT 


CO  €  a  u  (  ij  u  I    c/Ta  i  r 

B       R       E      C      K 

CREAM    TREATMENT    FOR 
DRV     OR    DAMAGED    HAIR 

Breck  Cream  Treatment  is  a  new  and  eas\' 
■way  to  make  dr\'  or  damaged  hair  soft  and 
manageable.  It  also  aids  in  remo\  ing  dandruff. 
Breck  Cream  Treatment  contains  Lipicil,  a 
new  ingredient  ^hich  aids  in  the  treatment 
and  prevention  of  hair  dryness,  dandruff  or 
hard  to  manage  hair.  Help  give  your  hair 
natural  beauty  with  Breck  Cream  Treatment, 
l.'j  oz.  75(    2  OS.  $1.00   plus  t4ix 


Ten  members  of  the  UNC  facul- 
ty will  take  part  in  the  26th  an- 
nual meeting  of  the  South  Atlant- 
ic Modern  Language  Assn.  at  At- 
lanta Thursday  through  Satur- 
day. 

The  meeting  will  be  held  at  the 
Atlanta  Biltmore  Hotel  and  the 
campus  of  Emory  University. 

Among  those  from  UNC  who  will 
deliver  papers  are  Dr.  Clifford 
Lyons.  Dr.  George  M.  Harper.  Dr. 


C.  Hugh  Holman.  Dr.  A.  Palmer 
Hudson.  Dr.  Norman  T^.  Eliason, 
all  of  the  English  Dept.  and  Dr. 
Sturgis  E.  Leavitt,  Dr.  John  E. 
Keller  and  Dr.  Urban  T.  Holmes 
of  the  Dept.  of  Romance  Lang- 
uages and  Dr.  Herbert  Reichert  of 
the  Dept.  of  Germanic  Languages. 
Dr.  Frank  M.  Duffey.  associate 
professor  of  Spanish,  and  editor  of 
the  South  Atlantic  Bulletin,  will 
also  have  an  active  part  in  the 
meeting. 


COSMETIC  DEPT.  PHONE  9-8781 

USE  OUR  CONVENIENT  LAYA-WAY  PLAN 


Before  The  Duke  Game 
After  The  Duke  Game 

Meet   Your 
Friends    In 
Carolina's 
Unique 
Book   Joint 

Books,  Nickel  Christmas 
Cards,  And  Brarny  Customers 

The    Intimate 

* 

Bookshop 

205  E.  FranKiinrSt.  *  Open  Till  10  P.M. 


What  young  p«opf«  ar9  doing  at  General  Electric 


Yoyng  engineer  ' 
sells  million-dollar 
equipment  to  utilities 


Selling  electric  equipment  for  a  utility  sub- 
station—a complex  unit  used  in  power  trans- 
mission and  distribution— requires,  extensive 
technical  kno^^ledge  of  the  products  in- 
volved. Men-  who  sell  such  complex  equip- 
ment must  also  know  a  customer's  require- 
ments, what  will  best  fill  his  needs,  and  how 
lb  sell  the  merits  of  their  products  to  the 
executives  who  buy  such  apparatus. 

One  such  man  at  General  Electric  is  31- 
year-old  Allen  J.  Clay,  an  apparatus  sales 
engineer  serving  the  electrical  utility  com- 
panies in  the  Philadelphia-Allentown  area. 

Clay's  Work  is  ImporUnt,  Diversified 

For  Clay,  technical  selling  is  not  a  door-to- 
door  job.  As  a  representative  of  General 
Electric,  he  must  be  neady  to  discuss  cus- 
tomer needs  with  vice  presidents  or  help 
sohe  intricate  problems  with  skilled  engi- 
nccis.  His  recommendations  are  based  on 
his  own  engineering  background,  and  are 
backed  up  by  the  know-how  of  the  Com- 
pany's best  appliqation  engineers.  His  in- 
terest in  working  with  people  carries  over 
into  his  commimity  life,  where  he  take?  a 
part  in  many  local  activities— Rotary.  Com- 
munity Chest.  Boy  Scouts,  and  his  University 
Engineering  Alumni  Association. 

27;000  Conege  Graduates  at  General  Electric 

AUen  Clay  is  a  well-rounded  individual  who 
has  come  to  be  a  spokesman  for  General 
Electric  wherever  be  goes.  Like  each  of  our 
27.000  college-griaduate  employees,  he  is  be- 
ing gi\cn  the  chance  to  grow  and  realize  his 
full  potential.  For  General  Electric  has  long 
believed  this:  Whenever  fresh  young  minds 
are  given  freedom  to  make  progress,  every- 
body benefits— the  individual,  the  Company, 
and  the  country. 

Educational  Relations,  General  Electric 

Company,  ti^henectudy  3,  Acif  York 


PAGE  POUR 


THE  PAILT   TAR  H»L 


WEDNESDAY,   NOVEMBER  21.  1954 


Tar  Heels  Plan  New  Offensive  Formation  For  Blue  Devils 


Tat  Babies  Meet  Duke 
In  Turkey  Day  Scrap 


By  JIM  HARPER 

"Whoever  makes  the  least  mis- 
takes will  win."  Freshman  grid 
Coach  Fred  TuUai  is  making  this 
his  theme  in  final  preparations 
for  Thursday's  meeting  with  the 
Duke  frosh  in  Durham. 

Tullai  said  yesterday  of  the 
Cerebral  Palsy  benefit  game, 
•  Duke  will  go  all  out  to  win  tliis 
game.  They  have  a  good  team  and 
have  lost  by  only  a  small  margin 
when  they  were  beaten."  Duke  has 
been  defeated  twice;  by  Wake  For- 
est 13-12,  and  by  State  14-13. 

Coach  Tullai  pointed  out  that 
his  team  will  not  employ  any  new 
strategy  or  emphasize  any  one 
phase  but  will  play  much  the  same 
style  football  which  has  carried 
them  to  a  3-1  season's  record. 
I  The  starting  H'ar  Baby  lineup 
will  be  much  the  same  as  it  has 
been  through  recent  games.  At  the 
ends  will  be  Don  Stallings  and  Ed 
Furjanic.  The  tackles  will  be  Jim 
Jennret  and  Mike  McDade.  The 
guard  slots  will  be  filled  by  Fred 
Mueler  and  Ellis  Woolridge.  Jim 
Davis  will  once  again  be  at  the 
center  positfon. 

Taking  the  helm  at  quarterback 
will  be  Jack  Cummings  who  has 
alternated  at  that  spot  with  Nelson 
Lowe  throughout  the  season. 

Halfbacks  will  be  Cornell  John- 
son and  Wade  Smith,  while  once 
again  at  fullback  will  be  Jim  Ste- 
vens. ' 


Trainer  John  Lacey  said  yester- 
day there  have  been  no  serious  in- 
juries this  week  and,  as  rough 
workouts  have  ended,  the  team 
should  he  in  top  physical  condition 
(or  the  Duke  battle. 

Coach  Tullai  stated  that  team 
spirit  is  high  and  that  the  Tar 
Babies  will  no  doubt  be  "up"  for 
the  Turkey  Day  clash.  However, 
he  pointed  out  the  spirit  is  run- 
ning high  in  the  Duke  camp  as 
well.  This  points  to  a  good  contest 
in  which  the  team  with  the  great- 
er desire  w^ill  win. 


MURALS 


YESTERDAY'S  TAG  FOOTBALL 
RESULTS 

Beta    (W)    defeated    SPE    (W), 

j  11-0;    BVP   won   over   Aycock   by 

forteit;    Phi    Dek    defeated    SAE, 

1-0;    Kap   Sig   (W)   defeated   ATO 

(W)),   7-0;    Medical   School-2   won 

j  over  Grimes-2  by  forfeit;   Joyner 

I  defeated  Everett-1,  26-0;  Zeta  Psi 

I  (W)  defeated  Chi  Phi  (W),  1-0;  Sig 

Nu  (W)  defeated  Sig  Chi  (W),  14-0. 

YESTERDAY'S  VOLLEYBALL 

RESULTS 
DKE-1  (W)  deefated  Chi  Phi-1 
(W),  2-0,  Zeta  Psi-1  (W)  won  over 
SPE  (W)  by  forfeit;  Medical 
School-3  defeated  Old  East,  2-0; 
Sig  Chi  defeated  Kap  Sig,  2-0;  SPE 
won  over  SAH  by  forfeit. 


I  Reed  Will 
Miss  Game; 
Vale  Hurt 


Oklahoma  Regains  First 
In  AP  Poll;  Vols  Next 

By  BOB  HOOBING 

The  Associated  -Press 

The    Oklahoma    Sooners    appar- 
ently won't  stand  for  second  best 

— in  the  national  football  ratings 

as  well  as  on  the  playing  field. 
Coach      Bud      Wilkinson's      red 

shirts  have  1-egained  the  top  spot 

:n  the  Associated  Press  poU  after 

spending  an  unhappy  week  as  ran- 

nerup  to  Tennessee. 

Last    week    marked    the    second 

lime  this  season   Oklahoma  drop- 
ped  a   notch   in   the  balloting  of 

sports    writers    and     broadcasters 

and    the    effect    on    the    ensuing   ance  of  the  season  last  Monday  to 

Sooner  opponent  was  devastating. ,  win  the  title. 

— ■ 1  Jim  Beatty,  of  course,  was  fa- 
vored to  take  the  individual  crown, 
his  third;  but  Maryland's  duet 
meet  record  and  especially  their 
victory-  over  Carolina  early  in  the 
season  left  them  the  favorites  for 
the  team  trophy. 

The  Tar  Heels  didn't  let  that 
fact  bother  them.  All  eight  Caro- 
lina runners  were  across  the  fin- 
ish line  before  Maryland's  fourth 
man.  Carolina  skunked  Duke — aU 
eight  Tar  Heels  were  across  be- 
fore the  Blue  Devil's  first  man. 


By  LARRY  CHEEK 

Duke  Coach  Bill  Murray  had 
•better  be  on  the  lookout  Saturday, 
for  there's  no  telling  just  what 
new  offensive  weapon  cagy  Jim 
Tatuni  has  up  his  sleeve. 

The  Tar  Heel  head  mentor  dis- 
closed at  his  weekly  press  lunch- 
eon yesterday  that  a  new  forma- 
tion was  being  cooked  up  for  the 
Blue  Devils.  "We're  having  secret 
drills  on  both  offense  and  defense 
all  week  long,"  said  Tatum.  "With 
D^ve  Reed  out  of  the  lineup,  we 
can't  use  the  spread,  so  we're  go- 
ing to  have  to  try  something  new." 

Heed,  Carolina's  ace  quarter- 
back, reinjured  his  knee  in  the 
Notre  Dame  game  Saturday  and  is 
a  very  doubtful  participant  against 
the  Blue  Devils.  Reed  has  been 
watching  practice  sessions  this 
week  from  the  sidelines  on 
crutches,  and  sophomore  Curt 
Hathaway  will  get  the  starting  nod 
Saturday  in  his  place. 

Tatum  also  listed  a  number  of 
other  top  performers  who  have 
been  sidelined  by  injuries  suffered 
in  the  Notre  Dame  game.  Chief 
among  the  casualties  is  fullback 
Wally  Vale.  Vale  came  out  of  the 
Irish  scrap  with  a  stiff  neck,  but 
will  probably  start  against  Duke. 
SWEARENGEN  HURT 

Second  string  center  Fred  Swear- 
engen  received  a  severe  cut  on  his 
kuee  that  required  six  stitches. 
The  cut  is  right  on  the  bend  of 
the  knee,  and  it  is  doubtful  wheth- 
er or  not  the  injury  will  heal  by 
Satxu-day. 

In  addition,  halfback  Ed  Sutton 
has  a  sprained  little  finger  which 
may  ijolher  him  some.  It  ^s  hoped, 
however,  that  the  minor  injury 
will  not  slow  down  the  CulK)\*bee 
Comet. 

According  to  Tatum,  the  Tar 
Heel  squad  is  in  good  spirits  for 
Here  is  a  list  of  the  victors  and  ^^^  important  Big  Four  battle, 
the  way  they  finished:  Jim  Beatty  I  "^'^^  ^**'"  ^^^  ^^^^  morale,'  said 
1.  Everett  Whatley  5,  Dave  Scur-P^8  Jim.  But  as  far  as  that  goes, 
lock   7,   John   Reaves   11,   Howard  I****    '"^^^^    ^^^    *^^"    80od    ever 


Harriers  Gave 
Season's  Best 
Effort  Monday 

By  DAVE  WIBLE 

Carolina's  ACC  cross-countrv 
crown  is  the  "proof  of  the  pud- 
ding" Coach  Dale  Ranson  said  yes- 
terday, "the  proof  is  the  crown 
and  the  pudding  is  the  work  the 
distance  men  have  done  in  the 
past  weeks." 

Coach  Ranson  went  on  to  say 
that  every  man  on  the  eight  man 
squad    put    in    his   best   perform- 


Suspension 

(Continued  from  page  1.) 

•'Olen  admitted  his  guilt  readi- 
ly," said  Tatum.  "He  said  it  had 
preyed  on  his  mind  ever  since  he 
had  been  here  and  thit  it  was  a 
load  off  his  shoulders  to  find  His 
real  identity  discovered. 

"Olen  said  he  knew  he  did  the 
wrong  thing  the  minute  he  signed 
his  application  and  eligibility 
blanks.  He  said  that  it  was  made 
clear  to  him  then  by  University 
officials  that  any  falsification  on 
these  blanks  would  mean  suspen- 
sion and  loss  of  his  grant-in-aid," 
said  Tatum. 

"Olen  added  that  he  blamed  on- 
ly himself  although  he  had  been 
advised  by  a  friend  in  his  home 
town  to  do  it." 

Tatum  said  that  Olen,  a  good 
student  "making  normal  progress 
toward  graduation,"  had  been 
completely  above  suspicion  by  his 
staff  and  the  University  admin- 
istration. "We  had  no  way  of 
knowing  that  he  was  playing  un- 
der an  assumed  name." 

Olen,  who  has  made  fine  prog- 
I  >ss  as  a  player  this  year,  would 
undoubtedly  have  played  in  the 
traditional  game  with  Duke  here 
Saturday. 

"I  am  glad  that  it  came  out  be- 
fore the  Duke  game,"  Tatum  said, 
"and  we  are  embarrassed  that  he 
has  competed  in  games  here  in 
the  past.  I  am  writing  apologies 
to  all  our  opponents." 


Devils  Prep  For  Tar  Heels 


DURHAM    i/f] — Only    a    serious   in  top  shape  for  Carolina. 


attitude  of  work  prevailed  at  the 
Duke  practice  camp  today,  as  the 
team  went  through  its  second 
workout  in  preparation  for  the 
season's  final  against  Carolina's 
Tar  Heels  Saturday  in  Chapel 
Hill. 

It  was  probably  the  most  serious 
•jcssion  the  Blue  Devils  have  ex- 
perienced all  season,  as  but  one 
thought  prevails  in  the  minds  of 
coaches  and  players  alike — to  get 


Coach  Bill  Murray  said  yester- 
day he  anticipates  his  team  to  give 
the  best  effort  of  the  season 
agaln.st  the  Tar  Heels  and  also  that 
his  team  would  be  in  the  best 
frame  of  mind  for  the  clash.  To- 
■lay's  session  showed  that  the  Blue 
Dukes  should  be  able  to  fill  those 
qualifications. 

Offense  and  Defense  were  equal- 
ly stressed  today  as  practice  lasted 
until  darkness. 


Kahn  12,  Ben  WiUlams  14.  Perrin 
Henderson  19,  and  Marion  Griffin 
21. 


since  the  Maryland  game." 

Tatum  went  on  to  pay  tribute  to 
the  Blue  Devils.  "I  don't  know  how 


Beatty  is  not  through  running  *^^*  ^^^^  *^'"*>  ^^s  lost  so  many," 
yet.  Next  Monday  he  will  travel  ^^  asserted.  "They've  got  a  fine 
to  Michigan  State  University  in  i  ^'"^'  *"^  nobody  has  really  gone 
East  Lansing,  Michigan,  where  he '  against    them    except    Tennessee. 


relieve  th«  poin  of  surface 

VARiCOSE  VEINS 

PracticoUy  invisible  under  regular  hcae. 
Relieve  pain  of  surface  varicose  vekiS 
or  swollen  legs.  Authentic  iashkMed, 
2-way  stretch,  light,  cool,  comfc«toi>l#. 
Withstand  repeated  launderings. 


sunoN's 

DRUGSTORE 

PRESCRIPTION  DEPT.  PHONE  9-8781 

USE  OUR  CONVENIENT  LAY-A-WAY  PLAN 


will  make  his  bid  for  the  NCAA 
crown.  He  will  meet  the  top  dis- 
tance men  from  all  over  the  coun- 
try. Heading  the  list  with  Beatty 
are:  Henry  Kerr,  Michigan  State; 
Ike  Matza.  NYU;  Billy  Tidwell, 
Kansas,  and  Joe  Villarreal,  Texas. 


PATRONIZI  YOUR 
•    ADVERTISERS   • 


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Bex  3M3— Perk  Piece 
Greenville,  S.  C. 


A  scoop 

for  Arrow 


His  Arrow  Utnversky  sport  shirt  k  big 

news  with  college  men  this  Fall.  We 
brought  custom  shirtmaking  to  casual 
wear  with  this  one,  from  its  button- 
down  collar  in  front  {and  center 
l>ack)  to  its  action  box  pleat.  ''Custom" 
patterns,  too  .  .  ;  authentic  tartan 
«ir^)es,  uttersall  checks,  many  other  str^s. 

Tartans,  ^5.95;  checks  and  stripes  in 
cotton-rayon,  ^7.95. 


ARROW 

CASUAL  WEAR 


We  moved  the  ball  we!l  against 
Notre  Dame,  but  that  Duke  line 
will  be  tough.  Its  much  stronger 
than  Notre  Dame's." 

PRESTON  PRAISES  ' 

Scout  Pat  Preston  was  no  less 
lavish  in  his  praise  for  the  big, 
bad  Blue  Devils.  "They  have  a 
good,  well  balanced  te^im  with 
plenty  of  iiefl  and  speed,"  said 
Preston.  "The  line  is  big  and  fast, 
averaging  6'2'  and  210  pounds. 
And  they  also  have  a  very  good 
backiield  with  tremendous  depth 
at  halfback. 

"In  addition  they  have  a  top 
I  paAsing  attack.  I  just  hope  our 
j  boys  wont  go  to  sleep  because 
I  they  haven't  been  throwing  the 
I  ball,"  warned  Preston. 

When  asked  how  he  could  c6m- 

pare  Duke  with  Tennessee,  Preston 

replied,    'The  Duke  backs  have  an 

edge    over    the    Tennessee    back^, 

but  I'd  have  to  take  that  Vol  line." 

Preston  concluded  by  saying  that 

the  main  task  facing  the  Tar  Heels 

j  would  be  stopping  the  Duke  half- 

'  backs,   fullback  (Hal   McEhanney) 

I  and    quarterback    (Sonny    Jurgen- 

j  sen). 

A  large  turnout  is  expected  for 
I  the  Saturday  clash  between  the 
I  two  old  rivals.  At  least  31,000 
I  tickets  have  already  been  sold, 
I  and  a  crowd  of  35  to  40  thousand 
IS  anticipated. 

Duke     has    won     the    last     six 
,  games  in  a  row,  with  the  last  Car- 
I  olina  victory  coming  by  a  narrow 
'  21-20    margin    in    1949.    The    Tar 
Heels  rolled  up  four  straight  vic- 
tories  during   the   post-war   years 
when   Charley    Justice   was   here, 
out  wins  have  been  scarce  since 
then. 


INTERVIEWS  FOR 

CAREERS  WITH 

HERCULES 

If  you  will  have  a  major  in: 

CHEMISTRY 

a  Hercules  representative 
will  be  on  the  campus  to 
discuss  with  you  employ- 
ment possibilities  in: 

SALES  or  PRODUCTION 

(A  candidate  for  any  degree 
which  includes  one  year  of 
or^nic  chemistry  also  will 
be  considered.) 

Arrangements  for  interviews 
should  be  made  through 
your  placement  oltlce. 

HERCULES  POWDEK  COMPASY 

Nov.  29 


B  O  B  and  M  O  N  K 
off 

TOWN& 
CAMPUS 

SALUTE 
Athlete  Of  The  Week 


ED  SUTTON 

Ed  Sutton  has  been  named 
athlete  of  the  week  for  his  out- 
<vtanding  play  against  the  Uni- 
versity of  Virginia  last  Satur- 
day. Sutton  scored  all  three 
Carolina  touchdowns  in  the 
third  quarter,  and  was  the 
day's  leading  ground  -  gainer 
with   136  yards  in  rushing. 

We  want  him  to  drop  by 
TOWN  &  CAMPUS  and  pick  out 
■  shirt' to  his  liking — compli- 
ments of  the  house. 

We  want  the  old  and  young 
''like  of  Chapel  Hill  to  make 
TOWN  A  CAMPUS  their  head 
quarters  for  the  finest  in  men's 
clothing.    Drop   in    today. 

TOWN  & 
CAMPUS 


M 


It's  that  new  V8  in  the  '57  Chevrolet. 
It's  as  quiet  as  a  content^  cWind 
as  smooth  as  cream  .  .  .  and  it's 
cat -quick  in  response  when  you  call 
for  action! 

No  household  tabby  sitting  in  a  sunny 
window  ever  purred  more  softly  than 
Chevy's  new  V8  engine.  You  can 
scarcely  tell  when  it's  idling. 


But  when  you  nudge  the  accelerator, 
you  know  it's  there,  all  right!  Its  right- 
now  response  keeps  you  out  of  highway 
emergencies.  It  overpowers  steep  hills 
with  such  ease  they  seem  like  level 
landscape. 

This  new  Chevrolet  V8  puts  up  to  245 
high-compression  horsepower*  under 
vour  command!  It's  sassy,  sure— but  as 
tame  to  your  touch  as  a  purring  pussy- 
cat. Come  try  the  smoothest  V8  you 
ever  put  a  toe  to. 


lUSA 


•270-h.p.  V8  also  ovoilob'.e  at 
extro  cosr.  Also  Ramjet  fuel 
injection  engines  with  up  to 
283  h.p. 


that  purr  you  hear  is 


f  ^ 


.   Del  Ennis  Is  Traded 

PHILADELPHIA  0P(— Outfielder 
Del  Ennis,  the  backbone  of  the 
Philadelphia  Phillies  attack  ever 
since  he  joined  the  club  11  years 
ago,  yesterday  was  traded  to  the 
St.  Louis  Cardinals  for  outfielder 
Rip  Repulski  an^  utility  infielder 
Bobby  Morgan. 

Ennis,  31.  batted  .260  last  sea- 
son, driving  in  95  runs,  hitting  26 
home  runs  and  cbllecting  164  hits. 
Repulski,  28,  hit  .277,  batted  home 
55  run.«,  smacked  11  homers  and 
totaled  lOi  hiu. 


Stoeet,  smooA  and  aauiyi  Bm  M  Air  Sport  Coupe  with  Body  by  f\^tmt. 


OiU/frmeMtitll  OminUt  deaUrs 


display  dii*  famous  trademark 


See  Your  Authorized  Chevrolet  Dealer 


UtfrJUli*^ 


^^ 


w  w  e  vrmmrt 
t£RiALs  Bsrr. 

CSAPEI«  HILL,  JU   fi* 


WEATHER 

Cloudy  h«r*  today  with  snow 
flurriot  in  mountains  and  northern 
Piodniont. 


VOL.  LVII  NO.  54 


LIBERAL 

What    sort     of    education?    Soo 
P»««  2. 


Complete  i/P)  Wire  Service 


CHAPEL  HILL,  NORTH  CAROLINA.  TUESDAY.  NOVEMBER   27.   1956 


Offices  in   Graham   Memorial 


FOUR   PAGES   THIS    ISSUI 


University  Party  Sets 
Meeting  For  Tonight 

The  l^niversity  Party  will  meet  tonight  in  the  Roland 
Parker  Lounges  of  Graham  Memorial  at  7:30  p.m. 

The  main  order  of  husiness  will  he  the  election  of  new 
party  officers.  Accordino;  to  Party  Clhairman  Mike  Weinman 
the  race  for  new  party  chairman  promises  to  he  an  extitinjr 
one.  along  with  the  races  for  the  other  party  officerships.  This 

•  j  meeting  will  be  in  the  nature  of 

^^r%ff\^^  \A/lll  \^    victory    gathering    to   celebrate 

\«UllVt;il    VYIII  thp  uP's  victory  in  the  past  cam- 

U         D^  A      J  '  P"^  election,  Weinman  said. 

DG    I    r GSGnTGCl  The  UP  has  a  technical  majori- 

U  T  •       I  i  '*   '"  ^^^  legislature,  according  to 

n^l"^     I  OmOhl  '  Weinman,  and  has  many  plans  for 

^  I  the  coming  legislative  session,  he 

A      unique      composition      for,  said. 

orchestra  and  women's  voices  has  >      Weinman  urged  all  class  officers 

been  programmed  by  Earl  Slocum,    and  legislators  to  be  present  since 

director    of    the    UNC    Symphony  |  plans  for  the  coming  year  will  be 

Orchestra,    as    a    highlight   of   the !  discussed.  All  party  members  also 

orchestra's  fall  concert  at  8  p.m.  I  have  been  urged  by  Weinman  to 


tonight,  in  Hill  Music  Hall.  The 
concert  is  open  to  the  public 
without  charge. 


from    his 


Debussy's    "Sirenes 
Nocturne.*      will      be 
Twenty     women's  voices,     picked 
from  a  group  of  outstanding  sing-i 
crs  from  Chapel  Hill  and  surround- 1 
ing  communities  will  be  employed,  j 
Each  singer  has  had  separate   in- ' 
struction.  although  each  has  sung  I 
with  the  entire  orchestra  for  the 
past  three  rehearsals  only. 


attend  this   important   meeting. 

No  members  will  be  allowed  to 

vote  for  the  new  officers  who  have 

not    paid    their    yearly    dues.    All 

representatives    must    have    their 

presented.  |  ^^^^  }„  ^v  Tuesday  night. 


Di  Will  Debate  Bill 

On  Enrollment  Limitation 

The  Dialectic  Senate  will  debate 
'  a  bill  tonight  calling  for  a  limita- 
1  lion  of  the  UNC  enrollment  to  a 


maximum  of  5,000. 
Following       intermission.       the '      The  bill   includes   a     resolution 
orchestra  will  play  Tschaikow^ky's  t  that  out  of  state  students  must  be 


Fourth  Symphony.  The  composer 
sketched  his  Symphony  No.  4  in 
F  Minor  in  1874  and  completed 
it  in  1878.  It  is  the  first  of  his 
symphonic  works  to  attain  reco- 
gnition and  success  for  its  com- 
poser outs/de  'his  native  country. 


Playmakers 
Will  Present 
'Esther  Wake' 

"Esther  Wake",  a  melodrama  of 
colonial  North  Carolina,  sef  in 
New  Bern  and  Hillsboro,  will  be 
performed  by  the  Carolina  Play- 
makers  Drama  Group,  in  Graham 
Memorial  at  8  p.m.  Wednesday, 
December  5. 

The  Playmakers  have  been  com- 
missioned to  present  a  revival  of 
the  museum-piece  by  the  North 
Carolina  Society  for  the  Preserva- 
tion of  Antiquities. 

Adapted  and  directed  by  Mrs. 
Nancy  Henderson  of  Chapel  Hill, 
"Esther  Wake"  was  written  by 
Professor  Adolphe  Vermont,  visit- 
ing professor  in  Education  in  1911. 
Jt  was  staged  on  July  4  of  that 
year  on  the  portico  of  what  is 
now  the  Playjnakers  Theatre. 

The  play  is  done  in  the  roman- 
tic style  of  the  period  and  includes 
two  spirited  fight  scenes.  Accord- 
ing to  Director  Henderson,  it  is 
a  strong  example  of  early  Ameri- 
can drama. 


in  the  upper  fourth  of  "all  parti 
cipants  in  the  University  entrance 
examinations  before  they  be  con- 
sidered for  admission." 

The  measure  was  scheduled  for 

debate  last  week  but  a  quorum  of 

members  was  not  present. 

The  Di  has  invited  the  public  to 

This  concert  is  the  fifth  presen-    attend  the  meeting  to  be  held  at 

tation    of    the    Tuesday    Evening ,  a  p.m.  in  Di  Hall. 

Series    of    UNC's    Department    of 

Musie. 

23  Students 
Will  Attend 
UN  Semihar 

Twenty-three  UNC  students  hav.- 
signed  up  to  attend  the  UN  Seminar 
in  New  York  Friday  and  Saturday, 
according   to   YMCA   officia's. 

They  stated  that  there  i.s  room 
left  for  two  more  students  to  at- 
tend. 

Applicants  have  been  asked  to 
come  by  the  Y  before  3  p.m.  to- 
day. 

YMCA  President  Garry  Mayo 
stated  that  the  remaining  spaces 
will  be  filled  on  a  "first  come, 
first  served,  basis." 

Changes  in  seminar  plans  have 
been  affected  so  that  the  setninar 
is  now  solely  for  CaroliAa  students. 

Cars  will  leave  the  UNC  campus 
Thursday  night  for  New  York.  The 
seminar  will  begin  at  9  a.m.  Friday 
and  run  through  Saturday  after- 
noon. 


Mrs.  F.  D.  R. 
At  Duke 

DURHAM,  (iPi— Mrs.  Eleanor  Ro- 
osevelt charged  here  yesterday 
that  'Oil  interests  in  the  middle 
East"  prevented  the  U.  S.  from 
taking  vigorous  action  when  Israeli 
ships  were  denied  use  of  the  Suez 
Canal  in  1951. 

In  a  speech  to  the  Durham  Chap- 
ter of  the  American  Assn.  for  the 
United  Nations,  Mrs.  Roosevelt 
said,  "there  would  have  been  a 
clear  case  today  in  the  UN  if  in 
1951  the  U.  S.  had  protested  the.i 
and  there  that  all  ships  should  go 
through." 

"But.  ■  she  said,  'Oil  interests 
in  the  Middle  East  held  the  U.  S. 
from  action  against  Arab  coun- 
tries." 

In  a  press  conference  before  the 
speech,  she  contended  that  Israel'.s 
invasion  of  Egypt  was  "  not  at  all 
the  same"  as  the  North  Korean  in- 
vasion of  South  Korea  in  1930. 

"I  consider  Israel  acted  with  a 
great  deal  of  justification."  she 
said. 

However,  she  added.  "1  can  not 
say   that  of  Britain  and  France."  ; 

Mrs  Roosevelt  said,  ".Britain  and 
France  had  special  interests  in  the 
situation  but  they  should  not  have 
been  taken  as  an  excuse  for  flaunt- 
it.g  the  United  Nations."  1 

Mrs.  Roosevelt  said  she  consider- 
ed the  UN  stronger  today  than  it  • 


1^  Mr' 


r..«!i&aaiAS.«£«U.1S:.^i*i.^.«*.:.*k3JiJ^^ 


Lots  Staked  For 
Fraternity  Court 


I 


Several  of  the  scenes  from  some  of  John  Steinbeck's  best  works  will  be  re-enacted  by  •  professional 
cost  here  Saturday  nl«ht.  The  cast,  left  to  right,  ar*  Constance  Bennett,  Tod  Andrews,  Frank  McNugh 
end  Robert  Strauss.  DirecteiT  by  Reginald  Siverstein,  the  program  will  be  sponsored  by  the  Carolina 
Playmakers,  UNC  dramatic  group. 


I'nivcrsiiy  engineers  arc  in  the  priuess  of  stakinj^  off  lots 
•It  the  locations  of  the  new  social  and  professional  fraternity 
court  projects. 

The  "new  courts  are  situated  off  the  Pittshoro  Rd.  in  the 
wooded  area  between  X'ictorv  \'illaoe  and  Ciliase  .Ave.  The 
social  court   will   be  the  larg^er  of  the  two.  consistinof  of   10 

♦ — 

building  sites,  each  being  approxi- ,  five  fraternities  moving  to  the  new 

mately  one  acre  in  size,  w'hile  the  I  location  will  pay  the  whole  cost, 
professional  court  will  encompass  j  then  those  moving  later  pay  tiieir 
six  sites  of  around  one  acre  each.  |  pro-rated  share  in  reimbursement 

to  the  first  five  or  into  a  main- 
tenance fund."  The  social  fratern- 
ities will  supply  approximately 
three-fourths  of 'the  S58.000  total 
sum.  the  professional  fraternities 
supplying  the  remainder. 


English  Test 
Set  Tonight 
In  Hones  Holl 


SP  Will  Elect  Party  Officers 
At  Next  Monday's  Meeting 


The   two   locations    are    separated 
by  a  ravine. 

MEETING 

A  meeting  concerning  the  pro- 
ject, which  was  held  on  Oct.  25, 
was  attended  by  Claude  Teague. 
UNC  biLsiness  manager,  Sam 
Magill,  director  of  student  activi- 
ties, J.  S.  Bennett,  director  of  op- 
erations, J.  A.  Williams,  Univer- 
sity attorney  and  representatives 
of  the  various  fraternities  which 
have  shown  interest  in  moving  to 
the   new   locations.  ,t   . 


Meeting  last  night  in  Roland 
Parker  Lounge  of  Graham  Memori- 
al, the  party  decided  to  hold  no- 
minations and  election  next  week 


Phi  Will  Debate  On 
US  Forces  In  Hungary 

The  Philanthropic  Literary  So- 
ciety will  debate  tonight  a  bill  pro- 
posing the  intervention  of  U.  S. 
troops  in  Poland  and  Hungary. 

The  U.  S.  troops  would  attempt 
to  destroy  the  existing  governments 
in  those  countries.  The  bill  sug- 
gests more  aid  of  a  non-military 
nature  for  the  Hungarian  refugees. 


plans    to   elect    party   officials 
A  required  English  test  will  be    "t'Ct  Mondays  meeting 
given  tonight  in  Hanes  Hall  frwn 
7-9   p.m.   for   all   sophomores   who 
have  not  yet  taken  it. 
This  will  be  the  last  opportunity', 
was  before  the  Middle  East  crisis  ^*^o''d'"S    ^^    ^^^    George    Wood- j  for   the   following    party   officers: 
and  the  uprising  in  Hungary.  ward.     Testing     Service     psycho-  j  chairman,     vice  chairman,     secre- 

In    her   talk   to   the   Inter-racial    metrist,  for  .sophomores  who  failed  1 

meeting  of   the  assn.   for   the   UN    ^o   take   the   test   when   it  wts  of- 1 
on  the  campus  of  Duke  University,    fered  seven  times  during  the  past 
she  agreed  that  it  was  propt?r  for    t"o   weeks.  [ 

the  U.  S.  to     try  its  own  diploma-        Mrs.    Woodward    stated    sopbo- { 
tic  machinery"  on  world  problems,    mores  must   pay   a   $2   fee   before 

they  take  the  test,  and  all  absen- 
tees from  the  test  must  get  an 
excused  absence  from  the  Dean 
of   General   College. 


The  Student  Party  last  night  set    tary,     treasurer,     sargeant-at-arms 

at    and  advisory  board   members. 

Present  party  chairman  Tom 
Lambeth  commended  the  members 
lor  hie  work  in  the  recent  election. 
He  .said  all  candidates  for  election 
did  good  jobs  of  campaigning, 
whether  they  won  or  lost. 


Magill  stated  that  regulations 
applying  to  fral?rnities  at  their 
present  sites  would  apply  to  those 
moving  to  the  new  court.  The 
fraternities  may  be  required  to 
include  in  their  house  plans  pro- 
vision for  an  apartment  for  a 
house  mother,  however,  in  the 
event  that  the  University  evgr 
requires  all  fraternities  on  cam- 
pus to  retain  a  house   mother. 


Magill  said  tho.se  social  fraterni- 


Navy  Adds  Carolina 
To  Football  Schedule 


"But  when  no  solution  comes 
through  this  machinery."  she  said, 
■it  would  be  better  to  take  the 
case  at  once  to  the  UN." 


ANNAPOLIS,    Md., 
anoTJunced    yesterday 


—   Navy 
is    radi- 


t  could   be   held  by  the  fraternities  j 

The  SP  increased  its     member-  before  actual  building  began  and; 

ship   in   the   Student     Legislature  eo.st  of  the  lots.                                  i 

irom  22  to  25  as  the  result  of  the  j 

Nov.   13  election  and  the  Nov.  20  According   to    Magill.    to    whom 

run-off  ballotting.  The  University  ^^e  various  fraternities  must  apply  j 

Party  also  controls  25  seats  in  the  ^^^  a  '^^  at  the  new  site,  lots  will 

assembly.  ^  allocated  in  order  of  the  initia-  j 


According  to  Teague  the  meet- 1 
ing  was  "engineered  by  Harold  ■ 
Twisdale"  of  the  Lamba  Chi  ] 
Alpha  fraternity  which  initiated  | 
the  drive  for  the  court.  Teague '.  ties  expressing  a  definite  desire 
stated  the  participants  tried  to  to  move  t.o  the  new  site  were  the 
arrive  at  a  method  of  allocation  of  j  Lamba  Chis.  SPEs  and  ZBTs.  Se- 
lots,   length     of  time   the     leases '.  veral    pharmaceutical,  dental,   and 

business  fraternities  have  shown 
interest  in  the  professional  court 
development. 


COLONIAL  STYLE  . 

The  style  of  architecture  will 
probably  follow  traditional  colon- 
ial  lines,  but  all   house  plans  are 


Lambeth  gave  special  praises  to    tive     shown     by  the     fraternities, ,  subject  to  the  approval  of  the  Of- 


Ifit  Stay  Cold  AwhUe 


cally  shaking  up  its   1957  football    Brandon    Kincaid    and    Miss    Judy    those    in    on    the    planning    from 

schedule;  with  North  Carolina,  Cal-    Davis  for  their  work  in  the  cam-    the      beginning    probably      having 

,  ifoinia,  Georgia  and  George  Wash-!  paign.  j  first    choice.    Allocation,    however,, 

_  j  ington  replacing  four  of  this  sea-       The    meeting  w^as  brief,  ending    would  also  be  "determined  by  the  j 

I  fcon't  nine  opponents.  1  early  so  that  party  members  could    size   of  the  house   to   be   built   in 

./.^l      Korth     Carolina   ntovcs   in      for  1  go  to  Durham  to  hear  Mrs.  Eleanor    relation    to   the    suitability    of   the 

I  Cornell.      California   >for      Tutane,  *'if<!iosevelt  speak  on  the  Duke  cam-'"tof. 


The  cold  weather  experienced  by  1  on    the    coast    yesterday    aftrnoonj  Geoi'gia  for  Cincinnati,  and  Gevirge  •  PUs. 


C.aroliaa  .students  over  the,  week- 
^nd  wMfr*  continue  for  the  next  se- 
vtfrfii  dajrsi  J    i".  :^r.  ... 

The  Weather  Bureau  at  Raleigh- 
Durham    airport    reported    yester- 1 
day  there  was  a  possibility  of  light  I 
flurries  of  snow  mixed  with  rain,  j 
in    this    area    about    Thursday    or 
Friday. 

The     weatherman   explained     a 
weak     low  pressure  area     formed 


and    is    expected    to    move    to  th« ,  Washington     for   Virginia.     Being 
north-northeast.        ■  retained     are     William   it,     Mary, 

This   will    bring   cold    northerly   Penn,     Notre   Dame,  ;Duke      and 
winds   into   the   .slate   resultthC  in    Army. 

cold  weather  probably  for  the  re- 1    'North  Carolina  is  the  most   re- 
mainder of  the  week.  cent   of  the   foiu-   1957   newcomers 

A   weak   weather  front   through    to    have    played   Navy.    They    met 
the  state  cau.sed  light  snow  flurries 
in'  the    mountains    and    Piedmont 


early  yesterday  morning.  A  little 
sleet  fell  there  around  noon  yes- 
terday. 


No  Award  To  Be  Given  This 
Year  In  Putnam  Competition 


Ministers  Were  Guests 
On  Campus  Yesterday 

.\11  ministers  throughout  North 
Carolina  .were  invited  to  visit  the 
Vf<C  campus  yesterday. 

According  to  Rav  Jelfcries.  asst. 


lor  the  only  previous  time  in  1946  to  the  dean  of  student  affairs,  ap- 
■when  North  Carolina  won,  21-14,  in  proximately  250  were  present.  The 
Baltimore.  |  Ministers  attended  a  buffet  lunch- 

The  Creorgia  game  next  year  eon  at  the  Morehead  Planetarium 
will  be  in  the  Oyster  Bowl  in  Nor-  and  also  a  showing  of  the  Planetar- 
folk,    Va.  ium  show.     Star  of  Bethlehem." 


/^iatibUtC:    ^}h 
LEASE . 

Leases  .  on  tha^coiitf-  ^j^'  may 
be  applied  for  on  a  three  year 
option.  At  the,encr;of^ls  jtime. . 
however,  if  a  fraternity  is  'wi  the  j 
verge  of  building,  but  has  not  yet 
put  its  plans  into  effect,  the  lease 
will  be  renewed.  ! 


lice  of  the   University  eng^^neer. 

According  to  Harold  Twisdale, 
Lamba  Chi  spokesman,  the  main 
problem  of  the  fraternities  is 
raising  the  $58,000  so  the  Univer- 
sit;(-  can  begin  development  of 
utiiiti,es  in  the  area  prior  to  build- 
ing. He  .stated  "We  hope  to  be  ob- 
taining leases  within  the.  p^xt 
month  «f  just;  as  somt  a»  t^e^'lots 
are  staked   off." 


.,     O    J  j;  t  II, > 
■«r  pilaft  for.  develop- 


No  award  will  be  made  this 
year  in  the  Putnam  Prize  competi- 
tion open  to  Consolidated  Univer- 
sity of  North  Carolina  students 
and  alumni,  Miss  Jessie  Rehdcr  of 
the  UNC  English  Dept.  said  Sun- 
day. 

Miss  Rehder,  the  Putnam  con- 
tact on  compus,  explained  the  de- 
cision was  made  on  the  basis  of 
the  contest  rules,  which   stipulate 


year,   it    may   be   resumed    in  the 
future. 

"The   University    feels  the   con- 
test has  served  admirably  the  pur- 


Exum   Issues  Men's 
Honor  Council  Report 


The*  teiifatiiT" 

ment  of  the  sites  presented  bv  the 
University     engineer's     ftffice     in- 
clude parking  lots  and   recreation 
Magill    staled    the    cost    of    the    facilities.  A  swimming  pool  site  is 
project    would     approach    $58,000. ,  located  in  the  center  of  the  cluster 
No  definite     decision     has     been  ,  of  houses  at  the  social  fraternity 
made   as   to   a   method   of  raising  •  court. 

I  the  money  but  all  fraternities  will  J      „,    •    .  ,  .  »  j     ..rr.                  j 

,     ,,       ,            .            ^       r  ^,           Twisdale  stated.    'Teague    and 

I  eventually  share  the  costs  of  the  «    ij    „         ^k^-;*:  ^ 

.       .            ^                                         all     South  Building     authorities 

development                                           .  .-            j 

I              "^                                                  I  have    geen  very    cooperative    and 

'      According    to    Magill    it    is    un- ;  have    shown    a    great    deal    of    in- 
decided  "as   to  whether  the   first !  terest  in  the  project." 


Chairman  Jim   Exum   yesterday 
issued  this  report  of  action  taken 


poses   for  which   it   was  originally  1  thus  far  this  academic  year  by  the 
formulated,    namely,    to   stimulate  j  Men's  Honor  Council.     . 
interest  in  writing  among  the  »tu- '      Exum   said   such   reports   would 
dents  at  the  Con.solidated  Univer- 1  be   foithcoming   bi-weekly   for   the 
sity,"  she  said.  duration  of  this  year. 


Mrs.  Doris  Belts  of  Chapel  Hill 
a  former  student  at  Woman's  Col- 


His  report  in  lull  follows. 
"Action     of  the     .Men's     Honor 


now  awaiting  civil  action  with  re- 
gard  to   the  stolen  car. 

"The  council  accepted  the  de- 
fendant's testimony  with  regard 
to  the  car.  He  was  convicted  and 
suspended  on  the  charge  of  hav- 
ing used  someone  else's  credit 
cards. 

"In  another  case  a  .student  was 


Mrs.  Roosevelt  Says  UN  Has 
Been  Strengthened  Recently 

By   FRED   I'OWLEDGE  |  tcrnoon  to  members  of  the  Chapel 

Hill  and  Durham  communities  in- 


Mrs.  E3ear»or  Roosevelt  said  Mon- 


terested  in  the  United  Nations.  She 


no  award  will  be  given  if  none  of    lege  and  winner  of  the  first  Put- 1  Council   so   far   this  year   has   in-  j  charged   with    cheating   on   a   pop 


the    books     submitted     meet 
standards  of  the  publisher. 

A  number  of    'promising  books" 
were    .sent   on    to    New    York,   she 
reported,    including   a    new   novel 
by  a  young  North  Carolina  author,  j 
Jackson   Burgess.  He   was  given  a , 
contract  for  his  book,  but  was  not ;  in 


the  i  nam   Prize,   now  has  a  new   novel  i  eluded  the  following  cases: 


with  Putnam's  Amos  Paul  of 
Rocky  Mount,  who  was  awarded  a 
special  prize,  is  at  work  on  a  man- 
uscript. 

At    least    two    students    on    the 

campus   at    Chapel   Hill   are   now 

the   process   of    finishing    new 


Hungarian  Clothing  Drjve  Is 
In  Process  Throughout  Week 


The  Hungarian  Relief  Clothing 
Drive  under  the  sponsorship  of 
the  Chapel  Hill  Friends  and  the 
Community  Church  is  now  under 
way. 

This  appeal  for  special  gifts  of 
money  and  clothing  has  come 
from  the  World  University  Serv- 
ice in  Geneva,  Switzerland,  to  aid 
the  students  of  Hungary. 

According  to  Mrs.  E.  T.  Chant- 
lett  of  the  Community  Church, 
every  type  of  clothing  is  urgently 
needed.  Boxes  will  be  placed  in 
dorms,  fraternities  and  sororities 
for  clothing  donations.  Students 
have  been  urged  to  fill  these  boxes 
by  Thursday.  Clothing  can  also  be 
turned  in  to  the  old  Institute  of 
Government       Building      thhough 


This  drive  is  a  community  pro- 
ject with  all  Chapel  Hill  churches 
participating,  along  with  the  In- 
terfranity  Council.  APO  Service 
fraternity  and  the  Woman's  Resi- 
dence  Council. 

The  General  Secretary  of  World 
University  Service,  Mr.  Douglas 
Aitken,  said  that  -at  the  present 
moment  it  is  not  possible  to  send 
aid  to  specific  groups  of  students 
within  Hungary,  but  that  assis- 
tance is  desperately  needed  for  the 
students  who  are  among  the  thou- 
sands of  persons  who  are  fleeing 
to  the  safety  of  the  Austrian  bor- 
der." He  went  on  to  say  that 
"WUS.  faithful  to  its  principle  of 
providing  assistance  to  the  Uni- 
versity community  on  the  basis  of 
need  without  discrimination,  would 


Saturday  between  8:30  a.m.  and 
5:30  p.m.  Donated  clothing  should ,  ^^^^  ^^^''y  '"e^""  ^^  assisting  the 
be  in  wearable  condition  and  al-  members  of  the  Hungaian  univer- 
ready  mended,  officials  said.  '  sity  community." 


1  given  the  full  prize  since  hi.s  man-  j  novels.  Miss  Rehder  added. 


uscript  is  still  incomplete. 

Miss  Rehder  announced  although 
the  contest   will   not   be   held  this 

Late  News 

FROM  RADIO  DISPATCHES  , 

WASIHNGTON—  Four  Baghdad  | 
powers    maintained    quiet   but   ur-  j 
gent  contact  with  the  United  States 
on  reports  Russia  was  pouring  arms 
into  Syria.  Of  the  four,  only  Iraq 

is  an  Arab  state. 

•?  •  * 

•  UNITED  NATIONS,  N.  Y.  —The 
United  Nations  General  Assembly 
voted  overwhelmingly  to  approp- 
riate $10,000,000  for  the  UN  po- 
lice force  in  Egypt.  The  lone  dis- 
.senting  vole  came  from  Soviet 
Russia. 

*  «  • 

GREENWICH.    CONN.   —  Band 
leader  Tommy  Dorsey   was   found 


"When  the  opportunity  arises," 
.she  said,  "The  University  from 
time  to  time  will  utilize  short- 
terra  contests  to  offer  encourage- 
ment to  students  in  the  expanding 
writing  program." 


Dance  Lessons 
In  GM  Tonight 


"The  defendant  was  charged 
with  using  some  gasoline  credit 
cards  which  he  knew  to  be  some- 
one else's.  He  used  the  cards  on 
a  trip  from  Florida  to  .New  York 
in  the  summer  of  1956. 

"The  defendant  pled  guilty  to 
the  charge.  He  was  suspended 
from  school  with  the  recommenda- 
tion that  he  not  be  allowed  to  re 
turn  to  the  University  until  the 
fall   semester.   1957. 

"It  was  established  in  this  case 
that  the  defendant  was  driving  a 
stolen  car.  but  he  testified  before 
the  council  that  he  was  unaware 
that  the  car  was  stolen.  The  de- 
fendant testified  that  he  had 
Iwught    the    car    from    a    man    in 


quiz.  He  was  informed  by  his  in 
structor  of  the  suspicions  against 
him;  whereupon  he  reported  him- 
self to  a   member  of  the  council. 

"He  pled  guilty  of  the  violation 
before  the  council  and  was  sen- 
tenced to  indefinite  probation, 
which  normally  lasts  one  full 
.semester. 

"Besides  the  student's  perfect 
honesty  with  regard  to  the  viola- 
tion, one  other  circumstance  caus- 
ed the  council  to  render  a  sen- 
tence of  probation  rather  than 
suspension,  the  latter  being  the 
normal  sentence  for  cheating. 

"This  was  the  fact  that  the  stu- 
dent was  from  a  foreign  country 
attending  the  University  on  a 
special     visa     program     carefully 


day  the  United  Nations  has  been !  delivered  a  public  speech  last  night 
strengthened  a  great  deal"  in  the !  at   Duke    University. 


Dance  lessons  sponsored  by 
Graham  Memorial  Activities  Board 
wil  be  featured  today  in  the  Ren- 
dezvous Room  from  6:30  to  7:45 
p.m. 

Under  the  direction  of  Mrs. 
Bounds  of  the   Bounds   Studio  of 


Quarterly  Is  Still 
On  Sale  On  Campus 

The  first  issue  of  the  Carolina 
^w„..«o  V,.  ...^  x^v.u..»o  ^y—"  --  j  Quarterlv.  University  literary  ma 
Dance,    the    lessons    provide    basic '  ^    .        .•  ,  , 


Durham  and  had  paid  cash  at  the   .supenised    by   the   United    States 
time  of  purchase.  This  student  is    Government.    Should    this   student 

stop  school  for  any  reason  he 
would  automatically  be  deported 
from  this  country. 
"The  council  felt  that  in  this  case 
su.spension  would  actually  amount 
to  a  verdict  of  expulsion,  since  it 
would  be  highly  unlikely  that  the 


steps  of  the  foxtrot,  mambo,  jit- 
terbug and  tango.  Special  em- 
phasis .will  be  placed  this  week  on 
the    tango. 

"We  have  a  good  group  of  boys    BuUshead       Bookshop.       Intimate 
in  the  dancin?  class,  but  we  still  Bookshop,  Carolina  Inn  and  Scuitle- 


gazine.  is  on  sale   at  several  cam- 
pus stores. 

Single    copies    can    be    obtained 
from     the  GM  information     desk. 


past  few  weeks. 

In  a  private  meeting  here.'  the 
wife  of  the  late  President  Frank- 
lin D.  Roosevelt  called  for  more 
I  ersonal  understanding  of  and  par- 
ticipation 
tion. 


In  her  talk  here,  Mrs.  Roosevelt 
spoke  in  a  panel  with  Clark  M. 
Eichelberger.  director  of  the  Am- 
erican Assn.  for  the  United  Na- 
tions. Dr.  Shepard  J'ones  of  the 
UNC    Political    Science    Dept.    mo- 


in   the  world   organiza- '  derated  the  discussion. 


Mrs.  Roosevelt  said  she  was 
grateful  the  United  Nations  had 
shown  strength  in  considering  two 
recent  crises — the  invasion  of 
Egypt  and  the  Hungarian  revolt 
and  later  supression  by  Russia. 

Asked  later  if  she  were  ever 
pessimistic  about  the  United  Na- 
tions,   she   replied:     'Never   about 


(lead  m  %is  home  Monday,   death  ■  don't    have    enough    girls,"   stated    butt 


being  due  to  strangulation  on  food 
particle;  while  sleeping.  A  Green- 
wich coroner  ruled  the  famous  mu- 
sician's death  to  be  accidental. 


Mrs.  Bounds. 
Two  final  classes  will  be  taught 


This  issue  will  be  on  sale  until 
the   end   of   the    month.   Other   is- 


Mrs.  Roosevelt  spoke  in  the  Lib- 
lary  Assembly  Room  yesterday  af- 

Talent  Tryouts 
Wed.,  Thurs. 

Today  is  the  last  day  to  sign  up  |  '^^^  ^'nhed  Nations— I  get  pessi- 
.  .  ,  ,  „  ,•  ,  ^  ,  mistic  about  some  individual  na- 
for   tryouts    for   Carolina's    Calva-  L-        ..    ^  ,  ,    ..•    .• 

I  tions.      For    examples    of    '  mdivi- 

cade  of  Talent  show,  according  to ,  aual    nations'     she    offered    U.    S. 

H.  G.   Snipes,  publicity  chairman. '  failure  to   "take  matters  to  the  UN 

.„  .  .J  !  when   it   should   have   Uken   them 

Anyone  who  can  sing,  dance,  or   .1     „  •    „j  f    1  r  .w 

*         «-  ■  "i    there    and  failure  of  some  other  na- 

play  an  instrument  has  been  urged  tions  to  keep  promises  they  have 
10  sign  up  with  either  Dave  Davis  made  to  the  international  agency, 
at  the  Phi  Delt  House  or  Eleanor  i      ..j.^  ,^,^^,^  ^^^,   „^. 

Riggins^  the  YMCA  olf.ce.  |  ,i„„,  ..g^^ting  together,"   Mrs.  Ro- 

Tryouts  will  be  held  Wednesdavj  <^evelt   said.     Not  tomorrow,   but 
and   Thursday  nights  in  Memorial '  ^^'^"^"al'y-    «»    achieve    .some    sort 
,    ^  .       .  T.  ..  <^f  permanent  peace." 

student    involved,    once    deported,  j  Hall.  j 

could  ever  return  to  the  University  11    u^  •      ^^®   United   Nations    has    a   tre- 

a^ain.  His  offen.se  together  with  *""^^  ^*'*'*'  ^'"'  °^  presented  r  ^endous  job  to  do  toward  this  goal. 
his  cooperative  attitude  did  not  j  Thursday,  Dec.  13  at  8  p.m.  in  j  she  sain,  but  cannot  do  it  without 
warrant  expulsion.  The  council,  |  Memorial  Hall  with  a  cash  prize 
therefore  rendered  probation  as  |  going  to  the  best  judged  perform 
being   the   more   appropriate   sen- 1  ^^ ..  ^^jj  Snipes. 


fence. 
"Other 


er. 


cases    which    have    oc- '      The  talent  show  will  be  sponsor- 


thi.s   semester,   with   a  new   series  i  sues  will  be  put  out  in  February ,  curred   this  fall   will   be   reported    de  by  Graham  Memorial  Activities 
1  bofiinning  next  semester,  and  May.  i  in  succeeding  articles."  '  Board  and  the  YW-YMCA. 


the  help  of  individuals.  "Our  in- 
dividual responsibility  ■  to  the  UN 
comes  in  participating  in  national 
policy  formation,  she  said.  It  is 
national  policy  that  the  UN  looks 
to  for  its  policies,  she  explained. 


11 


PAGl  TWO 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


TUESDAY,  NOVEMBER  27,  19M 


The  yberal  Arts  Education: 
Other   Campuses   Beliefs 


CAROLEIDOSCOPE 


Richard  Snyder 

fu  The  Michigo}!  Daily 

F.fhuation  should  be  a  big  ice 
cream  cone.  So  it  seems  honi  the 
increasing  tendency  to  cry  for  more 
''integration,"  more  survex 
courses. "  more  'l)roadh -oriented 
comses." 

That  there  should  be  some 
unitv  in  knowledge  in  the  liberal 
arts,  no  one  will  deny.  Fhat  (oni- 
partmentali/ation  (»f  the  discip- 
lines is  badwhen  it  lea\es  lUKover- 
ed  areas  between  the  disciplines 
is  also  a  virtuous  remark. 

But  when  a  student  asks  for  a 

tfunse    which    will    coordinate    all 

* 

the  knowledge  in  a  given  area  of 

natural   science,  social   sciences  or 

the   humanities,   then   he   is  citing 

c\idenie  of  his  own  shoru oniings. 

The    fun(ti«>n    «>f    the    liberal    arts 

s<  hool  and  facullv  is  not  to  crawl 

inside  the  mind  of  the  student  and 

fcrm   all   the  knowledge  from   the 

\  ai  ions  courses  he  has  taken   into 

some  kind  of  a  map  of  life. 

*  »  # 

It  is  the  student's  responsiliility 
to  assimilate  the  various  disciplines, 
to  gi\e  rhein  proper  balance  in 
\ieA\  of  what  his  aim  in  life  is.  The 
facultv  ma\  tell  him  what  balance 
of  comses  would  be  advisable,  but 
it  cannot  ancl  sfiould  not  also  pro- 
\ide  a  nieina<l  blueprint  .showing 
\\liere  each  intellectual  two-l)y- 
four  l;o(-s  and  how  it  should  be 
nailed  in. 

If  education  wciv  to  consist  ol 
a  mass  ol  sinvey  courses  —  where 
the  student  gets  a  ■f>road  "  view  of 
Science  or  Cailture  or  life  —  its 
products  would  wind  up  knowiir.; 
plentv  about  everything  in  geneial. 
nothing  alK)ut  anything  in  parti- 
cular. 

Moreover,  the  Science  or  Cul- 
tuic  or  I.ile  major  would  have  no 
power  Ol  .bilitx  to  find  out  any- 
thing in  panic  idar.  (We  wXDiild 
have  to  grant,  however,  thati  !hi^ 
would  be  able  to  speak  eloqtien^l^ 
after  graduation  on  auy  subject-*— 
tor  c|0  seconds.;  ..  ..-.ji,-    ,  ,- 

We  agiee  with  Pro^; |fi|s^iper^ 
that  ediicatioti  -n  brci'^fll"r?i||ii^ 
onlv  after  r.'i:cation  ioicli^i^j^ii  m 
a  j>:  .tic  ■  '  .r  .;rea.  For  it  isftcit  un- 
til a  s;:Kient  develops  hi$'|aj:^iltks 
ol  ill  Inking  and  expression  ;tHit  he 
can  gv;i->j)  the  relation  of  partacU- 
lar^. 

.\nd  these  faculties  cannot  be 
developed  wiihotit  concentiated 
Avork  in  specific  disciplines  where 
theie  arc  specific  j)rc»blems  and 
philosophies  to  be  discussed.  The 
|K>wer   to  think   does   not   develop 

in  a  vacuum. 

*  *          « 

In  this  role,  the  facidty  should 
onlv  n;t  as  the  catalyst.  It  shc^uhi 
not  mix  the  in^jredients  for  the 
student.  It  shoidd  not  serve  Kdu- 
(ation-rnder-(;lass  \o  the  student. 
Obstacles  in  the  way  of  a  liberal 
education  today  are  catrsed  more 
bv  student  irrespcmsibilitv  than  by 
some  of  the  notorious  flaws  in 
teaching  methods. 

The  faculty  can  to  some  extent 
dip  the  student  an  educational  ice 
ncam  cone.  But  it  would  not  take 
loo  Icjng  for  that  type  of  education 
tcj  melt. 

The  Daily  Tar  Heel 

The  official  student  pubhcation  of  tbe 
Publications  Board  of  the  University  of 
North  Carolina,  where  it  is  published 
daily  except  Monday  and  examinatiot 
and  vacation  periods  and  summer  terms 
Entered  as  second  class  matter  in  the 
Dost  office  in  Chapel  Hill,  N.  C,  undei 
the  Act  oi  March  8,  1870.  Subscription 
rates;  mailed,  $4  per  year,  $2.50  a  semes- 
ter; delivered,  $6  a  year,  $3.50  a  semet 
ter. 


Editor  

FRED  POWLEDGE 

Managing  Editor  ... 

.    CHARLIE  SLOAN 

News  Editor 

RAY  LINKER 

Business  Manager    . 

BILL  BOB  PLEL 

Sports  Editor     

.^    LARRY  CHEEK 

EDITORL\L  STAFF  —  Woody  Sear?, 
Frank  Crowther,  Barry  Winston,  David 
Mundy  George  Pfingst.  Ingrid  Clay. 
Cortland  Edwards,  Paul  McCauley, 
Bobbi  Smith. 


KEWS  STAFF— Clarke  Jones,  Nancy 
Hill.  Joan  Moore,  Pringle  Pipkin.  Anne 
Drake.  Edith  MacKinnon,  Waliy  Kuralt, 
Mary  Alys  Voorhees,  Graham  Snyder, 
Billy  Barnes,  Neil  Bass,  Gary  Nichols, 
Page  Bernstein,  Peg  Humphrey,  Phyllia 
Maultsby. 


Night  Editor 
Proof  Reader 


Cortland  Edwards 
.,    Ben  Taylor 


Bob  Wohl 

In   The  I'CLA  Brum 

One  of  the  giCat  problems  lac- 
ing all  uni\ersities  at  the  pfesent 
time,  and  especiallv  important  here 
?t  l'C".L.\,  is  Jjow  to  in>j>art  to  the 
general  student  bodv  a  liberal  edu- 
•  cation. 

riie  reason  loi  this  |)roblem  is 
that  during  the  last  centurv  there 
has  fjeen  a  greater  and  greater  icn- 
dencv  toward  specialization  and 
the  sj)Iitting  up  of  the  education.d 
process  into  isolated  fields  ol  con- 
centration ^vhich.  although  giving 
the  student  an  excellent  prepara- 
tion in  one  small  segment  of  siudv. 
does  not  provide  him  witlr  the 
i>eneral  c  ultural  b.cc  kground  ^^•Ili(h 
is  the  object  of  all  education. 

In  the-  last  decade,  and  especial- 
lv in  the  last  few  years,  educators 
li.vc  come  to  be  inoie  and  more 
concerned  with  this  problem,  and 
several  special  committees  ha\e 
been  binned  to  study  this  situa- 
tion from  the  poiiH  of  \  ievv  of  mak- 
ing it  possible  loi  the  student  who 
js  recpiired  to  sjieciali/e.  to  attain, 
at  the  sauR'  time,  a  certain  amount 

of  general  education. 

*  # 

One  of  the  most  interesting 
and  inlornjative  reports  to  couie 
out  of  this  tv})e  of  .-i-tixitv  has  been 
the  nublication  of  a  small  booklet 
bv  the  ("aineuie  Foundation  for 
the  Achancement  of  leaching, 
summ.iri/ing  a  disc  irssion  of  libeial 
education  bv  \~  of  the  h)undation  s 
trustees,  most  of  them  college  j)iesi- 
dents. 

This  rep<.)rt  is  signiiicant  lo' 
a  ninnlvr  of  reasons,  but  is  mainly 
inrerc-ting  f<»r  its  conclusion  that 
libernl  education  is  rotnpatible 
with   specialization. 

.AL(corfhng  tf»  the  snmmar\.  in 

order  to  I'escue  the  libeial  arts  col- 

; liege  from  the  c:)nslaught  of  speci.di- 

^aatfon.  it  is  t'ssential  to  distinguish 

"the  goals  of  libe'val  "education  from 

those  ol.  the   professional  schools. 

"Ihe  s^oals  of  a  liberal  educc- 
Hon.     sav  tlierepoit.     are  the  goals 
of  ?  lifetime,  and  few  men  achieve 
•itjiem." 

-li;  In  other  words,  it  is  not  a  ques- 
•tlon  of  either-or,  of  a  general  edu- 
cation or  a  specialized  one:  the 
trnlv  educated  man  must  have 
both.  The  pin  pose  ol  the  libeial 
edutaiioji  is  to  leaiu  how  to  li\e. 

.\nd.  although  a  liberal  educa- 
tion will  ob\iousl\  make  a  man  a 
bettei  professional,  this  shoidd  not 
be  considered  its  only  reascju  for 
l>eing.  It  is'an  end  in  it.self. 
/  .\s  the  report  states  it:  "The 
first  orientation  of  a  liberal  edu- 
catioti  is  lowaid  man  as  man.  nol 
toward  man  as.  monev  maker." 

It  would  be  well  for  all  of  iis 
to  remember  these  princ  i|)les  in 
an  age  when  specialization  has  been 
ina<lc  an  objec  t  ol  \  eneralion. 

Suggestion: 

.\  suggestion   lor  Phi  Kappa: 

Cet  a   (jueen. 

^'ou■le  Icjst  if  ycMi  re  .m  organi- 
zation or  an  event  that  doesn't  have 
a  cpieen.  The  Carolina  campus 
lias  got  so  many  cpieens  light  now 
fhat  coeds  who  haven't  been 
crowned  cpieen  ol  this  or  that  ha\e 
ample  reason  to  harboi  inlfiiority 
complexes. 

.So.  to  pio\ide  more  interest 
in  (!iat  noble  organization.  Piii 
Fkta  Kappa,  we  [)ropose  a  cjuecn. 
She  could  be  selected  from  the  A- 
aveiagt* girls  cm  the  c-nnpus.  crown- 
ed in  the  Reserve  Rearling  Room 
of  the  I.ibrarv,  and  ("Chancellor 
Mouse  could  kiss  her  on  the  c  heek. 

What  a  boost  h)r  the  society 
ol  scholarsl  People  avouIcI  be  tail- 
ing all  o\ei  theinsehes  to  pledge 
up. 

Reminder: 

'■  (L'nix'er.sily  Business  Manager 
Claude)  league  said  he  hofjed 
cotislruc/ion  will  begin  soon  after 
(Jirislnias  of  this  year.  Once  con- 
struction starts,  lie  said,  it  will 
fake  about  one  year  to  conif/letc 
Ifte  buildings  .  .  ." — From  news 
storv  in  fall  of  nj.'j",.  concerning 
construction  of  new  dormitories 
for  the  University  campus. 

Constniclion  hasn't  stalled  yet. 


Most   Writers   Are    Iconoclasts 


Frank  Crowther 

In  the  past  few  years,  I  have 
brushed  over  many  thousands  of 
words  concerning  writing.  None 
of  it  has  rubbed  off  on  me  as  I 
would  have  wished  .  .  .  but  1  have 
clipped  several  interesting  pieces 
during  this  period.  I  have  found 
that  Fulton  Oursler  was  born 
drunk;  talent  is  built  in  solitude: 
writers  are  trying  to  express  the 
difference  they  feel  between 
themselves  and  the  rest  of  the 
world  (something  about  which  I 
have  often  thought).  Here  are 
a   few  explanations: 

Dorothy  McCleary  in  Creative 
Fiction  Writing: 

"Why  do  we  want  to  write?  In 
order  to  express  the  difference 
which  we  feel  between  ourselves 
and  the  rest  of  the  world:  to  let 
our  inner  vision,  which  has  been 
accumulating  inside  of  us  ever 
.since  we  drew  our  first  conscious 
breath.  The  only  way  we  can  ex- 
press this  very  personal  possess- 
ion is  by  putting  it  into  terms  of 
everyday  life  so  that  the  reader 
will  be  able  to  understand  and 
enjoy   it  . . ." 

Goethe  said  once  that  we  build 
character  in  the  stream  of  the 
world   l^ut   talent   in  solitude. 

He  said  that  after  one  has 
lived  hard,  danced  many  dances, 
sung  many  songs,  observed  as 
many  things  as  he  could  hold, 
he  should  then  find  a  quiet  place, 
to  withdraw  ...  be  it  an  attic,  or 
a  .sea-side  resort,  a  mountain 
lodge,  or  whatever,  as  long  as  it 
is  in  solitude  where  your  mind 
and  soul  will  have  time  to  slow 
down,  clear  its  throat,  and  begin 
again  to  function. 

If  they  function  well,  you  may 
be  a  great  storyteller;  if  they 
don't,  you  may  still  be  a  suc- 
cessful writer,  but  only  of  second 
or  third  rate. 

This  final  quotation  is  from  an 
unknown  source,  but  its  n^clnjiiig 
is  not  in  who  wrote  it.  but  in  its 
interpretation: 

■'"I  once  asked  Fulton  Oursler 
why  he  never  drank  and  he  said, 
'I  was  born  drunk.  I  was  born  in- 


THE  LION  AND  ANDROCLES 


toxicated  with  life,  all  of  it.  So 
were  you.  Add  alcohol  to  this 
and  it's  a  conflagration.' 

•'This  is  true,  and  the  high 
emotional  reaction  is  an  abso- 
lute   essential.    All   writers   have 


it.  Nor  must  you  be  fooled  by, 
say,  the  man-of-the-world  poise 
and  savoir-faire  of  a  Gallico;  he 
,is  actually  an  old  softie.  Or  the 
cold,  deadpan  exterior  Ring  Lard- 
ner  presented   to   the   world.   In- 

'Tsk  Tsk' 


side,  Ring  was  a  man  of  the  vio- 
leince  against  evil  which  pro- 
duced Champion  and  Hair  Cut. 

'Most  writers  are  iconoclasts 
in  some  way  or  another,  bitter 
against  existing  wrongs." 


'.j'/lVi    ;io'U::i':;.'i.i b 'i^^    "i:! !:: :i olf%  'v ii^s-'tf"?^^ 


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Playmakers  Play  Shaw  -  -  Shaw  Loses 


Paul  McCauley 

Seeing  the  Playmakers'  pro- 
duction of  "Androcles  and  the 
Lion"  reminded  me  of  what  hap- 
pened when  a  college  theatrical 
group  wrote  to  G.B.S.  and  re- 
quested permission  to  do  one  of 
his  plays.  This  very  Shawish  re- 
ply was  received  by  the  group: 
"You  can't,  but  you  may. "  So 
went  the  evening  and  the  Play- 
makers' dubious  "tribute"  to 
Shaw. 

'Androcles  and  the  Lion"  is 
the  story  of  a  tiny,  timid,  terri' 
fied  tailor  and  a  not-so-terrible, 
articulate  Lion,  who  become  dan- 
cing partner.s  after  Androcles 
removes  a  thorn  from  the  Lion's 
paw. 

Androcles  is  captured  by  the 
Romans  and  led  away  to  Rome 
with  other  Christians  to  be  fed 
to  the  lions  in  the  arena  for 
Caesar's  amusement.  .Just  so  hap- 
pens that  .\ndroclc>s  ends  up  in 
the  arena  with  Tawny,  the  gre- 
garious "felion"' 

These    two    again    give    Marge 


and  Gower  Chaftipioh  a  run  for 
their  money.  The  curtain  drops 
after  Androcles  proclaims  to 
Tawny:  "Whilst  we  stand  togeth- 
er, no  cage  for  you;  no  slavery 
for  me". 

David  Small  as  the  Lion,  John 
Sneden  as  Caesar,  and  Ted  Park- 
er as  Spintho  share  the  honors  in 
the  acting  dcpartmet.  Mr.  Small 
nicely  timed  several  appropriate 
phrases  in  between  roars.  This 
was  a  refreshing  touch  inserted 
by  Director  Harry  Davis.  I'm  sur- 
prised that  Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer 
hasn't  thought  of  the  same  thing. 

.John  Sneden  gave  a  very  nice 
interpretation  of  a  pampered, 
spoiled,  selfish,  egotistical  Cae.s- 
ar.  Ted  Parker  as  Spintho.  the 
Christian  who  wanted  to  be  a 
martyr,  combined  his  Jerry  Lewis 
type  antics  with  nice  timing  and 
brought  to  life  a  relatively  dead 
audience.  He  was  obviously  hav- 
ing a  good  time  and  so  was  his 
audience. 

Dick  N'ewdick  did  not  convey 
the  genuine  naivete  and  warmth 


vof  .Androcles.  .John  Whitty  and 
Amanda  Meiggs.  as  the  Captain, 
and  Lavinia  (the  love  interest) 
made  a  nice-looking  couple,  but 
lacked  enough  variety  and  seem- 
ed to  be  taking  Mr.  Shaw  a  lit- 
tle too  seriously. 

Robert  Bailey  gave  a  sincere 
effort  as  Ferrovius  but  needs 
more  polish  and  also  more  va- 
riety. Mr.  Bailey  also  was  taking 
Shaw  a   little   too  seriously. 

The  most  prominent  thorn  was 
not  in  the  Lion's  paw  but  in  the 
side  of  the  production  in  the 
form  of  Frank  Beaver  as  "Metel- 
ius".  "Metelius"  is  a  Playmaker's 
combination  of  Lentulus  and 
iletellus  who  are  both  courtiers 
in  the  play  as  originally  written. 

Frank  Beaver  fits  Shaw's  des- 
cription of  Lentuius:  "slender, 
fair-haired,  epicene  "  —  but  was 
given  the  name  "Metelius".  "Me- 
telius is  manly,  compactly  built 
.  .  ." — according  to  Shaw's  des- 
cription. 

There  was  nothing  manly  about 


the  figure  that  appeared  on  the 
stage  in  the  guise  of  "Metellius" 
except  that  it  was  flate-chested 
and  had  a  crew-cut.  An  incon- 
gruity of  this  sort  is  certainly 
not  in  keeping  with  a  commem- 
oratory  production  of  Shaw's 
play. 

Tommy  Rezzuto  designed  a 
functional  set  for  a  tour  ghow 
that  is  practical  and  is  instru- 
mental in  establishing  the  light 
afr  of  fantasy  and  farce  necessarj' 
for  this  play.  Lights,  sound,  cos- 
tumes, and  mak'2up  were  all  good 
and  provided  attention  outlets 
during  periods  wheix?  the  produc- 
tion dragged. 

The  audience  response  was 
hike  warm  and  they  seemed  to 
enjoy  Shaw  more  than  the  pro- 
duction. The  pacing  was  slow  for 
the  most  part  and  the  audience 
was  no  catalyst.  This  production 
did  not  come  up  to  my  expecta- 
tions or  to  pass  productions  of 
lesser  plays  given  by  the  Play- 
makers. 


Pogo 


By  Walt  Kelly 


KANSAi?a?5  wgc«"  iKpeESgNt MAW  ;  fi*kT  i\  Hei?g,roO'-"H'5 
WHEN  I  TCyto     /^^ww.yMPic$r 


PtlACnd'"  THg  OlP     ^   VOU  IN  A       \  ANP  WW.  VOUVU  Bi  SCuTftlN' 
AAAN  KAMSAeoO  1^  60NNA  It^U^H  $(WJ  VOUg  ?(8i6NP$  ON  6Al?TH 

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IV\  Abner 


By  AI  Capp 


DUKE  GAME 

Finally,  A  Display 
Of  School  Spirit 

C.  S.  Young 

Saturday  was  a  great  day  in  Chapel  Hill.  It  was- 
the  scene  of  a  football  game,  the  caliber  of  which 
has  not  been  played  here  in  a  long  time. 

When  the  Blue  Devils  from  Duke  took  the  field 
against  the  Tar  Heels  from  Carolina,  a  near  capacity 
crowd  packed  the  cold  hard  seats  in  Kenan  Stadium. 

Surprisingly  enough  the  student  sections  were 
filled,  a  fact  which  thoroughly  disproves  the  claim 
that  Carolina  students  have  school  spirit  only  when 
it  doesn't  interfere  with  anything  else.  Spirit  was 
in  abundance  on  Saturday.  "»^ 

The  fans  watched  two  good  teams  play  hard 
aggressive  football.  The  blistery  wind  and  light 
snow  flurries  dampened  the  spirits  of  only  a  few. 
The  stands  remained  full  until  very  near  the  end 
of  the  game,  a  well  <l&served  tribute  to  the  members 
of  both  teams. 

The  field  was  literally  covered  with  outstand- 
ing players  all  afternoon.  Ed  Sutton,  for  one,  played 
a  tremendous  game.  Some  contend  that  it  was  the 
best  of  his  career. 

But  it  was  not  <all  Sutton.  On  the  other  side  of 
the  line  there  was  big  Sid  Deloatch,  who  battered 
and  pounded  at  the  Tar  Heels  until  it  looked  as  if 
he  were  in  complete  control  of  one  whole  side  of 
the  line. 

And  then  there  was  Sonny  Jurgenscn.  who  di- 
rected the  Duke  team  with  such  finesse  and  split- 
second  timing  that  at  times  he  was  almost  obscure. 
His  passes  were  almost  non-existant;  none  were 
thrown  in  the  second  half,  and  the  option  play  was 
usfd  only  sparingly. 

The    mast   gratifying   thing    about    this   football 
game    was   the   reaction   of  the   Carolina    fans.   Al"' 
though  beaten  by  t\vo  touchdowns,  the  fans  remain- 
ed loyal,  something  that  has  been  lacking  in  the 
past. 

There  were  no  angry  cries  of  dissatisfaction  at 
the  end  of  the  game.  The  fans  were  proud  of  the 
showing  made  against  the  strong  Duke  team.  As  the 
game  ended,  the  supporters  of  both  teams  poured 
onto  the  playing  field  to  congratulate  the  winners 
and  the  losers. 

It  wa.';  a  football  game  that  will  not  be  forgotten 
soon  in  Chapel  Kill  or  in  Durham,  and  it  is  evident 
that  the  real  winners  were  the  fans  who  saw  it. 


FELINE  FRIENDS 


Cats  Diets  Don  t 
Include  Bird  Meat 

Woody  Sears 

«.,. «,Qae . night  .severi)| ; weeks  aga  while  xidiBg  vtiu. 

Rosemarj-  St.,  I  saw  the  car  in  front  of  me  hit  a 
'  <yJit.The' j)Oor  animal  was  flipped  into  the  air  and 
fell  back  jto  tfhe  , pavement,  convulsed  several  times, 
then  liy  still  in  the  classic  pose  of  the  "Chessie" 
cats. 

We  always  hate  to  see  anything  get  run  over, 
whether  it  be  a  cat,  dog  or  squirrel,  or  whatever 
else.  The  thing  that  was  so  striking  about  this  was 
the  fact  that  the  people  in  the  car  never  seemed  to 
notice  that  they  had  hit  the  poor  beast.  But  I 
imagine  the  big  tires  and  excellent  shock-absorbers 
of  their  Buick  concealed  the  fact  for  them. 

I  doubt  seriously  that  they  realized  what  they 
had  done,  and  I  feel  sure  that  they  wouldn't  have 
done  it  on  purpose.  Yet  the  fact  remains  that  they 
did,  and  that's  what  counts. 

That  little  episode  somehow  seemed  indicative 
of  everything  we  do  nowadays.  We  do  everjlhing 
so  fast  that  half  the  time  we  don't  look  where  we're 
going,  and  if  something  or  someone  gets  in  our 
way,  we  have  good  shock-absorbers  to  null  the  jolt. 
And  this  is  not  only  in  cars. 

We  jump  from  place  to  place  and  from  thing 
to  thing  without  giving  il  a  lot  of  thought,  and  we 
are  so  often  careless  about  the  other  person's  feel- 
ings that  we  all  hit  somebody  low  occasionally  with- 
out really  intending  to  do  so. 

And  some  just  say.  "C'est  la  vie!** 

So?  What  do  you  think?  Or  do  you? 

On  ca^ipus  we  have  a  good  opportunity  to  ob- 
serve a  lot  of  this  sort  of  bumgling  along.  Much  is 
said  that  should  never  be  said,  and  a  lot  is  done 

that  should  never  be  done.  Just  look  around 

if  you  can  stop  bumbling  along  long  enough  to  do 

so. 

*  *  * 

Maybe  the  reason  for  all  this  is  that  I  like  cats. 
Lots  of  people  don't,  but  I  admire  the  lonely  cat 
quite  a  bit.  This  is  because  I  admire  independence 
wherever  I  see  it,  and  the  cat  is  a  very  independent 
creature.' 

.  You  hear  tales  of  these  poor,  pampered  dogs 
who  live  indoors  all  their  lives  and  eat  nothing 
but  cooked  meat,  etc.,  and  how  they  can't  be  in- 
duced to  eat  anything  else,  even  if  they  are  starving. 

Maybe  this  Ls  a  lot  of  hooey  from  people  who 
like  to  brag  about  everything,  and  having  a  dog 
that  lives  so  high  off  the  hog  might  be  something 
to  brag  about.  I  don't  know  because  I  never  had 
a  dog  that  faired  so  well. 

But  the  point  I'm  making  is  that  you  can't  ruin 
a  cat  that  way.  A  cat  always  manages  to  eat.  and 
doesn't  seem  to  be  so  prone  lo  adapting  to  eating 
habits  so  thoroughly. 

Maybe  ynu  never  heard  of  it.  but  there's  an  out- 
fit called  the  American  Feline  Society  which  con- 
cerns itself  with  the  welfare  of  America's  millions 
of  cats. 

Naturally,  these  folks  might  be  a  little  bit  biased, 
but  they  maintain  that  cats  are  very  beneficial 
creatures,  especially  in  the  area  of  rat  control. 

They  a'so  ran  a  survey  of  196  dead  cats:  that 
is.  they  disected  that  many  cats  that  had  fallen  vic- 
tim to  autos.  and  found  that  none  of  them  had 
bird  meat  in  their  stomachs. 

These  figures  were  used  by  the  Socijty  to  prove 
to  cat  haters  w'ho  were  bird  lovers  that  cats  don't 
eat  birds.  .  .except  those  that  are  in  some  way  de- 
fective, viz..  tho.se  that   can't   fly. 

To  digress  into  the  vernacular,  cats  is  o.  k. 


WOMi 

The! 
will 
Grail 

W€SL| 
Thef 

day  fr| 
sjty 

CHE/ 

The  I 
day  ai 
A  fill 
Energj 


Chi 
Foi 

Cloth 

a    po\ 

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delect 

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$1.50. 

Gone  H 

little 

Dorothl 

the  fill 

See   TF 

Childrd 
books"! 
appcalij 
B«by 
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GoldenI 
v.ith  til 
Haroldj 
Johnsol 
O'Mallc 
of  a 
Grown-j 
A  Hole! 
This  ia 
Kraussi 
very  sr 
of  all. 
Beatrixl 
most  oj 
on  up. 


Bri 


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(ER  27,  1954 

\ploy_ 

irit 


Hill.  It  was- 
?r  of  which 

look  the  field 
Inear  capacity 
jnan  Stadium, 
lections  were 
les  the  claim 
pt  only  whea 
Spirit  was 

|s  play  hard" 
and     light  ' 
only  a  few. 
lear  the  end 
[the  members 

ith   outstand- 
one.  played 
>t  it  was  the  ' 

)ther  side  of 
ho  battered 
looked  as  it 
[•hole  side  or' 

sen.  who  di- 
se  and  split- 
lost  obscure, 
none  were 
ion  play  was 

I' his  football 
la    fans.    Al*- 

Ifans  remain- 
;king  in   the  ' 

^tisf action  at  ' 
)roud  of  the 
team.  .\s  the 
?ams  poured 
the  winners 

I  be  forgotten 
lit  is  evident 
saw  it. 


n't 
eat 


£idlagM«|u^ 
|of  me  hit  a_^^ 
the  air  and 
fveral  times, 
le  "Chessie" 

?t  run  over, 
I  or  whatever 

3ut  this  was 

k  seemed  to 
;ast.    But    I 
Ick-absorbers 
I  them. 

what  they 

juldn't  have 
|ns  that  they 

»d   indicative 

everything 

where  we're 

gets  in   our 

mil  the  jolt. 

from  thing 
ight.  and  we 
jerson's  feel- 
kionally  with- 


tunity  to  ot>- 

)ng.  .Much  is 

lot  is  done 

around  

^noiish  to  do 


It  I  like  cats, 
ic  lonely  cat 
independence 
independent 

jmpered   dogs 

cat    nothing 

can't  be  in- 

are  starving. 

people  who 

laving   a    dog 

|bc  something 

I   never  had 

[ou  cant  ruin 
bs  to  eat.  and 
[in«  to  eating 

HTc's  an  out- 
V  hich  con- 
ricas  millions 

^tle  bit  biased, 
fry  beneficial 
Jat  control. 
&ad  cats:  that 
lad  fallen  vic- 
of    them    had 

:i:ty  to  prove 
lat  cats  don't 
[some  way  de- 
ls 0.  k. 


TUESDAY,  NOVEMBER  27,  1956 


THC  DAILY  TAfi  HEEL 


FAGE    THREE 


Covering  The  Campus 


WOMEN'S  RESIDENCE   COUNCIL  I  YOUNG  ADULT  GROUP 

The  Women's  Residence  Council  The  Young  Adult  Group  will 
will  meet  tonight  at  7  p.m.  in  the  I  meet  at  8  p.m.  at  the  University 
Grail  Room  of  Graham  Memorial,  i  Methodist  Church. 


WESLEY  CHOIR 

The  Wesley  Choir  will  meet  to 
clay  from  7  to  8  p.m.  at  the  Univer- 
-jty  Methodist   Church. 

CHEM  CLUB     . 

The  Chemistry  Club  will  meet  to- 
day at  7:30  p.m.  in  Venable  207. 
.\  film  produced  by  the  Atomic 
Energy  Commission  will  be  shown. 


FACULTY  CLUB  LUNCHEON 

Professor  J.  Carlyle  Sitterson, 
Dean  of  the  College  of  Arts  and 
Sciences,  will  speak  today  when 
ihe  Faculty  Club  meets  at  the  Caro- 
lina Inn  at  1  p.m.  Professor  Sitter- 
son's  topic  will  be  'Liberal  Artei  ^„',"  Vvl  u"'  ••-  '— ■— "^  "*"^- 
..  1%  •  *  r  xl  -Lu  ^  ^i  sels  Opera  House.  Theatre  de  la 
m  the  University  of  North  Caro- ' 

.'ina." 


'Mignon'  Set 
ForWUNCTV 
Viewing  Friday 

Norman  Cordon,  commentator 
for  "Let's  Listen  to  Opera"  each 
Friday  night  over  WUNC,  the 
University  of  North  Carolina's  FM 
station,  has  chosen  as  this  week's 
presentation  Ambroise  Thomas' 
ever    popular    "Mignon." 

The  broadcast  at  8  p.m.  Friday 
was  recorded  at  the  famous  Brus- 


Christmas  Gifts 
For  Tiny  People 

Cloth  Books  —  Our  set  will  stand 
a  powerful  lot  of  gumming,  and 
most  will  survive  a  dip  in  the 
washing  machine  and  come  out 
dclecta'ole  as  new!  15  titles  to 
tempt  you.  Priced  from  50c  to 
$1.30. 

Gone  Is  My  Goose  —  A  very  lovely 
little  book  by  Chapel  Hill's  own 
Dorothy  Koch.  Simple  enough  for 
the  first  grader  tjo  read  to  baby. 

$2.25 
S—  The  Circus  —  by  H.  A.  Rey. 
Children  (love  Rey's  "peek-a-boo 
books"  and  this  one  is  especially 
appealing.  |ji,oo 

B«by  Anjmals  —  Thick  paper  and 
warm  colorful  pictures  make  this 
Golden  book  a  year-round  favorite 
with  tiny  folk.  $i.oo 

Harold's  Fairy  Tale  —  by  Crockett 
Johnson.  The  director  of  Mr. 
O'Mallcy  writes  an  ingenious  tale 
of  a  small  boy  and  a  crayon 
GroM'n-ups  like  it  too.  $1.50 

A  Hole  is  to  Dig  —  by  Ruth  Krauss 
This  is  not  the  newest  of  Miss 
Krauss'  books,  but  we  find  that  our 
ver>-  small  customers  love  it  most 
of  all..  ,1  50 

Beatrix  Potter  Books  —  We  have 
most  of  them,  from  Peter  Rabbjt 
on  up,  and  they're. heart-warming' 

THE  INTIMATE 

Open  Till  10  P.Mi 


'  WUNC-TV 

WUNC-TV',  the  University's  edu- 
cational television  station,  channel 
4: 


12:45 

Music. 

1:00 

Today  on  the  Farm. 

1:30 

Music  in  the  Air. 

2:00 

Science  and  Nature. 

5:45 

Music. 

6:00 

Magic  Lantern. 

6:15 

Sports  Clinic. 

6:30 

News. 

6:45 

Sports. 

7:00 

Books  and  People. 

7:15 

Bible  Course. 

8:00 

Dr.  Shivers. 

8:45 

-State  Government. 

9:30 

Musical  Forms. 

10:00 

Final  Edition. 

10:05 

Sign  Off. 

CU5SIFIEDS 

FOR  SALE:  1949  FORD-8.  SEAT 
covers,  radio,  heater,  and  new 
battery.  Price  $195.00.  See  at 
101  Mason  Farm  Rd.  anj-time  or 
phone  8-0113. 


Photo  Finishing  Service 

AS  CLOSE  AS  YOUR  MAILBOX 
GUARANTEED  SERVICE 

Any  8  exfMsure  roll  develop 
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Greenville,  S.  C. 


Monnaie,  by  London  Records.  The 
chorus  and  orchestra  of  that 
theatre  are  conducted  by  George 
Sebastian. 

The  title  role  wil  be  sung  by 
Genevieve  Moizan  supported  by 
Janinc  Micheau  as  "Philine," 
Libero  de  Luca  as  "Wilhelm 
Meister,"  and  Rene  Bianco  as 
"Lothsrio."  ^, 


Study  Begun 
In  Med  School 

A  three-year  study  of  "The  Pro- 
cess of  Patient  Referral  to  a  Uni- 
versity General  Clinic  in  a  Rural 
State,"  has  gotten  underway  in 
the  UNC  .Medical  School,  made 
possible  by  an  $86,325  grant  from 
the  .U  S.  Public  Health  Service. 

Drs.  Kerr  L.  White  and  T. 
Franklin  Williams  of  the  Depart- 
ment of  Preventive  Medicine  are 
the  'principal  investigators  for 
the  study. 

The  grant,  provided  by  the 
USPHS  Division  of  Hospital  and 
Medical  Facilities,  provides  $27.- 
370  for  the  first  year.  $29,285  for 
the  second  and  $29,670  for  the 
third. 


Police  Blotter 

Students  on  the  Chapel  Hill 
police  blotter  between  Nov.  12 
and  Nov.  26  were  as  follows: 
John  Grey  Todd,  speeding;  Miss 
Marilyn  Ann  Keil:  blocking 
driveway;  William  Pender, 
speeding;  JerTy  Edward  Cohen, 
speeding;  Lee  Joyner,  hit  and 
run;  James  Robertson  McQuis- 
ton,  stop  sign  violation;  Clifton 
Thomas  Boyd,  passing  on  curve; 
Giles  Garrett  Nicholson,  reckless 
driving;  Charlie  Allen  Ross,  stop 
sign  violation  and  speeding; 
William  J.  O'Sullivan,  public 
drunkeness;  and  Donald  Spencer 
Atkins,  public  drunkeness. 


UNC  Nursing  School 


Health  Prof 
Heads  Group 

Miss  Julie  Smith,  associate  pro- 
fessor of  public  health  nursing  at 
the  University  School  of  Nursing, 
was  elected  chairman  of  the  pub- 
lic Health  Nursing  Section  of  the 
American  Public  Health  Assn.  at 
the  recent  meeting  of  this  associa- 
tion in  Atlantic  City. 

Miss  Smith,  who  was  vice-chair- 
man of  this  section  for  the  liast 
two  years,  is  a  native  North  Caro- 
linian. She  graduated  from  Hol- 
Hns  College,  the  Universfty  of 
Pennsylvania  Hospital  School  of 
Nursing,  and  received  her  master's 
degree      at     Teacher^      College, 


News  Picture  Exhibit 
Is   In   Wilson   Library 


Elected  Agency  Member  I  C«'"'i»bia    Unlvrsity.    Before   join 


Dr.  Elizabeth  L.  Kemble,  dean 
of  the  University  School  of  Nurs- 
ing, announced  today  that  the 
School  of  Nursing  has  been  ap- 
proved for  full  membership  in  the 
Council  of  Member  Agencies.  Dept. 
of  Baccalaureate  and  Higher  De- 
gi-ee  Programs  of  the  National 
League  of  Nursing. 

Membership  in  this  Council  is 
limited  to  collegiate  schools  of 
nursing  that  have  been  fully  ac- 
credited by  the  Collegiate  Board 
of  Review  of  the  National  League 
for  Nursing.  The  UNC  School  of 
Nursing  is  the  first  school  of  nurs- 
ing in  North  Carolina  to  receive 
full  membership  in  this  agency. 

£ 

Public  Health  Profs 
Present  New  Methods 

Two  members  of  the  faculty  of 
the  University  School  of  Public 
Health  will  present  a  new  proce- 
dure in  the  diagnosis  of  syphilis 
at  the  American  Medical  Assn. 
Clinical  Conference  in  Seattle, 
Wash.  Nov.  26-30. 

The  new  procedure  is  called 
"Treponema  Pallidum  Comple- 
ment Fixation  Test." 


ing  the  faculty  of  the  University 
School  of  Nursing,  she  was  resi- 
dent lecturer  in  public  health  nurs- 
ing, she  was  resident  lecturer  in 
public  health  nursing  at  the  Uni- 
versity of  Michigan. 


Rf  ed  Speaks  In 
RaJ^igh  Friday 

L.  Deno  Reed,  audiologist  of 
the  North  Carolina  Memorial  Hos- 
pital and  instructor  of  otolaryn- 
gology in  the  University  School 
of  Medicine,  Dept.  of  Surgery,  will 
speak  in  Raleigh  on  Friday. 

Reed  will  address  a  meeting  of 
the  North  Carolina  Assn.  of  Spe- 
cial Therapists  at  the  Sir  Walter 
Hotel  at  7  p.m.  on  the  subject  of 
"Diagnostic  and  Therapeutic  Mea- 
sures for  Speech  Defective  Chil- 
dren." 

Reed  also  will  be  a  member  of 
a  panel  headed  by  Mrs.  Annie  Ray 
Moore,  health  educator  of  the 
North  Carolina  Dept.  of  Public  In- 
struction, which  will  discuss 
"promising  Hearing  with  the 
H«rd-of -He  ar  in  g. " 


The  traveling  exhibit  of  the  13th 
annual  "News  Pictures  of  the 
Year"  contest  is  now  on  display 
in  the  Library. 

The  exhibit  features  all  the  top 
prize  winners  and  finalists  in  this 
year's  contest.  It  includes  rep- 
resentative prints  from  the  top 
portfolio  that  gave  the  title 
•'Magazine  Photographer  of  the 
Year"  to  Grey  Villet  of  Life  maga- 
zine. 

The  "News  Pictures  of  the  Year" 
contest  is  co-sponsored  by  the  Na- 
'  tional  Press  Photographers  Assn. 
and  Encyclopedia  Rritannica. 

Under  NPPAs  educational  pro- 
gram short  courses  in  photo- 
journalism are  taught  in  schools 
in  Boston.  Syracuse,  Chapel  Hill, 
Chicago,  Seattle  and  Los  Angeles. 

The  still  division  of  the  year's 
contest  was  judged  in  ten  different 
categories.  The  current  exhibition, 
consisting  of  about  140  prints, 
contains  a  cross-section  of  these 
ten  categories. 

This  j'ear's  show  is  being  ex- 
hibited in  leading  colleges,  uni- 
versities,     public      libraries      and 


museums     throughout     the   coun-  i 
try.  j 

The  UrCC  Library  is  exhibiting, 
the  prints  in  the  Assembly  Room,  i 
the  Reserve  Reading  Room  and  j 
the  General  College  Reading  Room,  j 
The  show  will  remain  .  here  '. 
j  through  totnorrow.  i 


UNC  Medical  Profs 
Attend  Teachers  Meet 

Two  members  of  the  University 
of  North  Carolina  School  of  Medi- 
cine faculty  returned  recently 
from  the  Atlantic  City  meeting  of 
the  Association  of  Teachers  of 
Preventive  Medicine. 

Dr.  William  P.  Richardson 
participated  in  a  panel  on  teach- 
ing rehabilitation  by  a  Dept.  of 
Preventive  Medicine.  Dr.  William 
L.  Fleming  took  part  in  a  round 
table  talk  on  "Clinical  Preventive 
Medicine." 


Children's 
Book  Week. 
Enjoy  A 
Second 
Childhood 
In  The 
Wonderland 
Of 

THE  INTIMATE 
BOOKSHOP 

205  E.  Franklin  St. 
Open  Till  10  P.M. 


J 


Teacher  Shortage  Is 
By  Noted  Educator, 


Analyzed 
UNC  Dean 


Why  Pay  High  Prices?    • 

I've  Held  Them  Down  Since  July,  '55 
ASK  YOUR  BUDDY! 

SPECIAL  -  Z-Up  and  Tro-Ade  $1.00    IZ^^^^ 

ESSO  GAS  YES!  ESSO  GAS 

Cash  Cash  Cash 

Reg.  29.9         H.T.  32.9 

Plus 

Bring  This  Ad  And  Get  1  Cent  Off  Per  Gah  Gas, 

5  Cents  Per  Ot.  Oil 

?      WHERE       ? 

At  The  Students'  Friend 

WHIPPLE'S  ESSO  SERVICE 


By  BOB  MYERS  I      'By  1965.  the  gross  productivity 

A  tireless  first  grade  teacher  !  of  the  country  will  reach  $960  bil- 
took  cotton-topped,  cherubic,  little  lion,  and  in  20  years  present  pro- 
Johnny  upon  her  lap  and  struggled  .  auction  wjll  be  multiplied  five 
to  put  on  his  galoshes,  which  were  j  times."  the  national  education  of- 
a  mite  small.  ■  ficial  said.  "And  by  1975  the  ave- 

Aiter  15  minutes,  the  "mud-dob-  rage  income  for  the  working  man 
bers*"  were  manipulated  as  Johnny   \\iH  be  increased  to  $3,200  annual- 


DAILY    CROSSWORD 


ACROSS 

1  Shine 
6  Faultily 
11  RaAcal 


8.  Installed 
ceremoni- 
ously 

9  Mix 


12  Miil«»  blanket  10  Auction 

13  Incites  16.  Mans 


14  Smithy* 

block 
15.  Fools 

17.  Before 

18.  StQps 

21.  Bellow 
24  Assemble 

troops 
27.  Piers 

(Arch.> 
29  Setting 
.10  Damper 

22.  Appends 
33.  Not  awake 
35.  Yam  (H.I.) 
37.  Uproar 

41.  Inside 

44.  Mature 
person 

45.  Pillar 
of  3ton« 

46.  Indian 
soldier 

47  Mud  hut 
48.  County 
(Eng.) 

DOWN 

1.  Unit  of 
weight 

2.  Wolf 

3.  German 
river 

4.  Absolute 
sovereign* 

5  Middle 
(Law) 

6  Wine  cup 
7.  Homo 

•apiena 


nickname 
19  Genus 
of  swine 

20.  Pranks 

21.  Uncooked 

22.  Single  unit 

23.  Gained 

25.  Finish 

26.  Property 
(L.) 

28.  Lamprey 


31  Sports 
official 
(colloq  ) 

34.  Rub 
out 

35  Sound, 
as 
a 
gooae 

36.  Fa- 
miliar 
uith 
^  slang) 

ZS.  Drinking 
vessels 

39.  Genus 
of  lily 


an     aii3     as3 

uaasuB  aasia 


TMtcrday'a  Aaiwcr 

40  Underworld 
river 

42.  Old  times 
( archaic ) 

43.  King  (Sp.) 


ly. 

With  other  advances  will  dawn 
the  greater  era  for  education.  "By 
1975  thfc  population  of  the  United 
States  will  increase  to  as  majiy  as 
ihe  combined  peoples  of  England 
and  two  other  EJuropean  countries, 


asserted,  "Miss  Jones,  these  aren't 
my  galoshers.'  And  she  struggled 
15  more  minutes  getting  them  off. 

•'But  they  belong  to  my  brother 
and  mother  said  for  me  to  wear 
them.'  Johnny  disclosed,  much  to 
the  teacher's  chagrin. 

And  the  teacher  struggled  with 
'Johnny's  "galoshers"  once  again 
and  she  thought  about  the  first 
day  of  school  when  there  were  so 
many  kjds  in  her  room  that  it  ap- 
peared and  sounded  like  a  Satur- 
day cartoon  matinee  at  the  local 
theater.  That  was  the  day  Mrs.  Van 
Wagon  brought  in  little  Percy,  say- 
ing, "Miss  Jones,  I  know  you  will 
give  personal  attention  to  my  dear 
son." 

Miss  Jones  took  a  look  around 
the  room  and  with  a  half  sigh 
said.  "Oh,  yes,  Mrs.  Van  Wagon, 
little  Percy  will  get  special  atten- 
tion." 

Figurative  as  they  may  be,  the 
foregoing  jllustrations  were  used 
by  T.  M.  Stinnett,  reputedly  one 
of  the  best  informed  men  in  the 
countrj-  on  education  as  executive 
.secretary  of  the  National  Educa- 
tion Associations  Commission  On 
Teacher  Education  and  Profession- 
al Service,  in  pointing  out  the  ex- 
tra burdens  of  teachers  amid 
crowded  conditjons  in  the  nation's 
)  public  schools. 

But  the  educator,  on  a  recent 
visit  here,  says  the  country's  cur- 
rent educational  problems  in  pub- 
lic schools  are  no  indication  of 
things  to  come.  Stinnett,  noted  for 
his  prophecies,  says  the  country 
i£  on  the  threshold  of  the  "Golden 
Era  of  Education." 
GOLDEN   ERA 

This  Golden  Era  will  develop  in 
the  next  25  years  along  with  the 
advance  jn  nemerical  technology; 
electronics,  atomic  fission,  produc- 
tion of  more  goods  than  ever  be- 
fore, new  scientific  and  synthetic ;  namely,  the  quantity  and  quality 
materials,  50  per  cent  more  food  j  '^f  teachers  we  will  get."  Stinnett, 
production,  the  rocket  and  jet  age.  |  s-Jd.  He  indicated  that  the  Ameri- 
and   the   coming   of   the     30-hour  j  can   people   should   stop     kidding 
work  week,  the  educator  prophesi- '  themselves   of  the   misconceptions 
ed.  about    education   and   stop   trj'in^ 


to  duck  the  fundamental  causes 
of  the  teacher  shortage  and  grow- 
ing demands  for  teachers. 

"The  future  d€T>end8  on  the  kind 
of  teachers  we  will  get,"  he  said, 
•and  we  can  get  them."  What  can 
be  done  of  necessity  is  Ijke  the 
two  men  who  fell  into  opposite 
ends  of  a  newly-dug  eight-foot-deep 
grave  while  taking  a  short  cut 
through  a  cemeter>'  at  night- 
After  each  had  been  detained 
for  sometime,  and  pondering  his 
fate,  one  discovered  he  had  com- 
pany and  tapped  the  other  on  the 


Nursing  School 
Faculty  Attend 
Chicago  Meet 

Miss  Marion  S.  Wood  and  Miss 
Mary  Walker  Randolph,  professors 
of  nursing  at  the  University  of 
North  Carolina,  are  representing  j- 
UNC  School  of  Nursing  at  a  meet- 
ing in  Chicago  this  week  of  the 
Council  of  Member  Agencies,  Dept. 
of  Baccalaureate  andHigher  De- 
gree Programs,  National  League 
for  Nursing. 

Miss  Wood  is  in  charge  of  the 
undergraduate  program  and  Miss 
Randolph  of  the  graduate  program 
in  the  School  of  Nursing. 

The  UNC  School  of  Nursing  has 
recently  been  approved  for  full 
membership  in  League's  Council, 
which  is  limited  to  nursing  schools 
fuHy  accredited  by  the  Collegiate 
Board  of  Review  of  the  National 
League  for  Nursing. 


MAKE  YOUR  NEXT  MOVE-A  FRIENDLY  BUSI- 
NESS CHAT  WITH  THE  (^fe  MAN.  YOU'LL 
FM^D  THAT: 

THE  NEW  YORK  LIFE  AGENT 

ON  YOUR  CAMPUS 
IS  A  GOOD  MAN  TO  KNOW 

George  L  Coxhead 

» 

UNC  '42— CAMPUS  REPRESENTATIVE 

PO  BOX  1065  PHONE  82331 


t^»Mifim*M^^* >««nmi.i>i  j^p^jjyyaiptis^^^twy  i>.aUBM>wii^ii(,<.   Tftftrfm^t^r^^,, . .  c  i  -  - 


$10  BILLION  SPENT 

"And  where  the  nation  is  now 
spending  $10  billion  on  education  la 
public  schools,  by  1975  there  will 
be  need  for  an  expenditure  of  $25 
billion  and  teachers'  salaries  will 
nave  to  be  doubled,"  he  said.  Un- 
less teachers'  salaries  are  increas- 
ed, educators  will  f  jnd  othef  fields 
more  attractive. 

'We  must  add  600.000  new  teach- 
ing positions  by  1965,"  the  authori- 
ty emphasized,  and  in  the  next  ten 
years  must  prepare  one  and  one- 
half  million  new  teachers  to  meet 
the  demand. 

"In  the  ensuing  10  years,  edu- 
cation wil  assume  the  private  fav- 
or of  the  American  people  as  it 
never  has  before.  It  will  become 
as  necessary  to  people  as  clothes 
and  shelter,"  Stinnett  predicted. 
COMPETITION  WITH  RUSSIA 

Another  reason  for  the  advance 
of  education  js  competition  with 
Russia.  Stinnett  pointed  out  how 
Russian  leaders  have  disco^^ered 
the  power  of  their  peoples  and 
how  they  are  subsidizing  education 
with  scholarships  and  grants  under 
a  regimented  system. 

"We  must  keep  abreast  of  Rus- 
sia," Stinnett  said.  He  proclaimed 
the  salvation  of  American  educa' 
tion  is  by  "our  own  democratic 
system — not  any  regimented  sys 
♦em  like  Russia  has."  We  must 
have  access  to  free  edxicatjon  for 
every  child  fi'om  grade  school 
through  college. 
KEY 

"The  key  to  all   is  the  future. 


All  Premiums  And  Draft 

T.  V.  —  Good  Placa  To 
t  Watch  Boxing  &  Football 

Bring  Your  Data 

SANDWICHES  OF  ALL   K»NDS 

WEST  FRANKLIN  STREET  LUNCHEONETTE 

Next  to  But  Station 

Phone  9-2846 


the  executjve  secretary  predicted,    shoulder,   "Key, "   he   said,     "you 

can't  get  out  of  here. "  But  he  did. 
TEACHER  SHORTAGE 

I>ean  Arnold  Perry  of  the  School 
of    Education,  approached     about 
the    teacher  shortage,  emphasized 
the  gravity  of  the  problem  and  sug- ! 
gested  mass  production  of  teachers  j 
Z.S  a  means  of  meeting  the  forth- 1 
comjng  demand.  j 

The  dean  pointed  out  that  the  | 
post-war  bumper  crop  of  children  j 
nas  only  recently  been  felt  in  the  ' 
elementary-  schools.  In  about  five  | 
years  the  shock  wave  will  roll  over  j 
the  junior  high  schools  and  in  an- 1 
other  three  years,  over  the  senior  j 
highs.  j 

Statistics  bear  out  the  dean's  j 
statements.  The  nation  in  1954-55  j 
had  690,000  elementary  teachers 
and  375,000  high  school  teachers. 
Of  this  number,  about  eight  per 
cent  leave  each  year,  recuiiring  the 
replacement  of  about  SsIDOO  teach- 
ers. 

But  this  isn't  enough.  Around 
15,000  ihore  would  be  needed  just 
to  overcome  the  present  crowded 
conditions  of  the  schools.  Another 
30,000  teachers  would  be  needed 
to  take  care  of  the  national  in- 
crease in  enrollment. 
EDUCATION  OF  TEACHERS 

North  Carolina,  for  instance,  had 
a  shortage  of  1,267  teachers  last 
year.  Since  1947,  the  number  of 
teachers  in  the  state  has  increased 
by  about  1,000  a  year,  but  the  edu- 
cation of  tea4:hers  has  not  kept 
pace  with  the  increasing  enroll- 
ment: 

A  program  for  relieving  this  pro- 
Wem  should  meet  certam  minimum 
standards  to  be  effective.  First, 
present  standards  of  teacher  edu- 
cation should  be  majntained.  or 
(he  teacher  profession  will  lose  Its 
appeal  to  alert  and  intelligent  peo- 
ple. "I«wer  standards  will  deny 
the  school  cMld  the  superior  in- 
struction and  guidance  which  we 
aie  seeking  for  him,"  the  Dean 
said. 

The  program  should  be  channel- 
ed through  20  white  and  12  Negro 
institutions  alreadj'  jn  existence  in  . 
the  state,  and  any  worthwhile  pro- ' 
gram  must  be  a  long-range  one, 
because  "no  tempM*ary  'stop-gap' 
measures  will  suffice. " 

"What  will  Johnny  face  in  ths 
classroom  of  the  Golden  Era  in 
Ediication'.'  ' 


Display  Case 

An  oak  boolrtaw  to  display  and 
protect  a  valuable  collection  of 
rare  books  on  pharmacy  was  pre- 
sented to  the  School  of  Pharmacy 
here  recently  by  the  Woman's 
Auxiliary  of  the  North  Carolina 
Pharmaceutical  Assn.  Dr.  E.  A. 
Brecht.  dean  of  the  school,  accept- 
ed the  case  for  the  school.  The 
presentation  was  made  by  Mrs. 
W.  P.  Kendall.  Charlotte,  presi- 
dent of  the  organization  and  Mrs. 
W.  P.  Brewer,  Greensboro,  im- 
mediate past  president.     • 


«y  «mi||w>wwiiHwl wiiiiimx' »mtjim 


j^  Out  of  fear, 

'*'  she  fled  from  him... 
Out  of  fascination, 
she  clung  to  him ! 


■-'    DORIS  np^r^' 
LOUIS  jourdan: 

BARRY  SULLIVA'N 
FRANK  LOVEJOY 


LAST  TIMES  TODAY 


Carolina 


over— wnen  you 
pause  for  Coca-Cola.  It's  sparklmg  widi  quick 
refreshment . . .  and  it's  so  pure  and  wholesome 
—naturally  friendly  to  your  figure.  Let  it  do 
things— good  things— for  you. 


•OniED  UNOEI  AUTMOtrTY  OF  THE  COCA-COU  COMPANY  lY 

DURHAM  COCA-COLA  BOHLING  CO. 


1956,  THE  COCA-COLA  COM^ANT 


"Coke"  it  e  regitterMl  tf«d»«Mrk. 


AcaiuM.u«cTURE.<.h  BRIAN  KEITH  •  KIM  HUNTER  •  PAUL  KELLY-  KEVIN  COUGHLIN 

Wfl^i'^  $crtw»pt<«r  by  DANIEL  TARAOASH  <  ELH3K  MOU  •  O^erted  fry  DANt£L  TARAOASH  •  PrMuced  by  JUtlAN  8LAUSTEIN  •  A  PHO€NIX  PROOUCTlQH 


TODAY 

And 

WEDNESDAY 


PAGE  FOUR 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


TUESDAY,  NOVEMBER  27,  tffl 


Blue  Devils  take  21-6  Decision  From  Stubborn  Tar  Heels 


Duke's  Blue  Devils  tacked  the  final  nail  in  Carolina's  pigskin 
coffin  Saturday  as  they  roared  to  a  21-6  win  over  the  game  but  outgun- 
ned Tar  Heels.  Nobody  was  much  surprised  at  the  outcome,  for  the  men 
of  Coach  Bill  Murray  were  two  touchdown  favorites  in  pre-game  specu- 
lation. 

The  T»r  H«els  were  'up'  for  the  game  and  gave  their  Durham 
rivals  a  rugged  battle  of  it  before  succumbing.  It  was  just  a  question 
of  superior  Blue  Devil  horses  all  the  way  down  the  line.  The  Dukes- 
ters  pounded  Caroiin*  with  basic  power  plays  through  the  line  and 
sweeps  around  end,  and  the  Tar  Heels  just  couldn't  muster  enough 
strength  to  halt  the  onslau^th. 

The  final  score  of  21-6  was  a  true  representation  of  the  relative 
strength  of  the  two  teams.  Both  were  ready  for  the  game,  and  both  [ 
came  into  it  wanting   a  win  badly.  Hence  the  psychological   factors 
canceled  out,  and  the  better  team  won. 
END  OF  THE  ROAD  ! 

For  the  Tar  Heels,  it  was  the  end  of  a  long,  long  road  that  began 
way  back  in  September  when  N.  C  State  clobbered  them,  26^.  Since  i 
that  fateful  day,  the  locals  have  had  their  ups  and  dovims  against  some  j 
rugged  competition.  For  the  season  their  record  was  2-7-1,  certainly  i 
liot  up  to  pre-season  expectations. 

For  all  practical  purposes,  the  1956  Carolina  football  season  | 
began  Oct.  20  when  they  trampled  the  Maryland  Terps,  34-6,  for  ; 
their  first  win  of  the  year.  From  this  point  on,  the  Tar  Heels  played  ' 
good  sound  football,  and  were  never  once  really  shan>ed  by  the  op-  | 
positions.  Disregarding  the  first  four  games,  thoir  record'^as  2-3-1,  not  | 
bad  considering  the  caliber  of  teams  they  played. 

In  those  first  four  contests,  they  were  a  miserable  football  team. 
State  trounced  them,  26-6.  Oklahoma  walked  over  them,  36-0.  South 
Carolina  blanked  them,  14-0.  And  Georgia  caught  them  at  their  lowest 
ebb  of  the  season,  winning  26-12. 

After  the  Georgia  debacle,  a  new  spiril  took  hold  in  the  Tar  Heei 
camp,  and  things  began  to  happen.  Maryland  was  no  match  for  the 
aroused  Carolinians.  Wake  Forest  held  them  to  a  6-6  tie  in  a  slugfest. 
Mighty  Tennessee  ground  out  a  hard  fought  20-0  victor>-.  Virginia  went 
dovra.  21-7.  Notre  Dame,  though  outplaced  by  their  southern  rivals,  i  ^°  ^^"^  ^^  ^.^^'^^  ^^^  quarter  end- 


Duke  Wins 
Rugged  Tilt 
On  Ground 

By    BILL    KING 

The  estimated  36,000  fans  who 
bundled  up  in  their  overcoats  and 
blankets  Saturday  to  watch  the 
always  colorful  and  hard-fought 
cattle  between  Carolina  and  Duke 
went  away  (roni  Kenan  Stadium 
knowing  that  they  had  seen  a  cou- 
ple of  good  ball  clubs  in  action. 
The  shivering  spectators,  most  of 

jwhom  stayed  until  the  last,  watched 

I  a  methodical  ground-gaining  Duke 
cffense  tear  the  Carolina  line  wide 
open  and  proceed  to  march  to  a 

i  21-6  victory  over  the  reluctant  and 

;  hard-fighting  Tar  Heels. 

The  Blue  Devils  hard-charging 
backfieid  was  simply  too  much  for 
Coach  Jim  Tatums  Tar  Heels  as 
the  West  Durham  boys  incessantly 
punched  out  short  gains  through 
ine  Tar  Heel's  forward  wall,  pick- 
ing up  four  or  five  yards  on  every 
carry. 

Duke  gave  an  indication  of  what 
it's  speedy  backfieid  was  going  to 
do  in  the  la.st  part  of  the  first 
quarter.  After  George  Dutrow  had 
intercepted  Ed  Sutton's  pass  on 
the  Duke  17  and  returned  to  the 
22,  the  Blue  Devils  were  penalized 
5  yards  back  to  the  17.  On  the  next 
play  Jurgensen  flipped  a  30  yard 
pass  to  Bob  Benson  to  put  Duke 
on  the  Carolina  47.  Then  the  Blue 
Devil's  grinding  backfieid  went  in- 
to action. 

The  Blue  Devils  ran  10  plays 
through  the  Carolina  line  and  went 


triumphed,  21-14.  .\nd  then  Duke  applied  the  clencher,  21-6.  in  what 
was  certainly  no  disgrace. 

SUNNY  DAYS  AHEAD 

Yes,  it's  been  a  long  year,  and  we  believe  big  Jim  Tatum,  not  so 
sunny  now  as  he  once  was.  was  glad  to  see  Kenan  Stadium  empty 
for.  the  last  time  Saturday.  The  jovial  Tar  Heel  head  mentor  is  ad- 
mittedly 'down'  after  experiencing  the  v-'orst  season  of  his  entire 
coaching  career,  but  we  think  he's  far  from  out.  The  worst  is  over; 
the  best  is  yet  to  come. 

,  Things  lire  lookinji  up  f^,  i^xt  seaoft.  ^Most  of  the  regulars  on 
thi%  year's  squad  vfere^  ?f^^^  9ophoip<Kes  .  and  juniors,  so.  the  per- 
sonnel next  year  should  bf  fjfperifpced.  Thfs  year's  fro»h  squad, 
d^pitie  that  4$^7  loss  1^  HVJ^ff  ^*f  h^^^  ^'fl*  promi«ing  talent,  and 
some  of  thefe  boysshi^jd  bo, a  f|reat  help  nexf  sofeen. 

There  will  be  several  changes  in  the  schedule,  but  no  letup  from 
this  year's  back-breaking  loa^  is  fo;-eseen.  Two  newcomers  who  are 
definitely  set  to  be  on  the  '57  slate,  arp  Miami  and  Clemson  replacing 
Oklahoma  and  Notre  Dame.  The  Fighting  Irish  will  return  in  '58.  An- 
other tentative  foe  is  Nayy, in  place  of  Georgia,  but  this  is  still. in  the 
uncertain  stage. 

FALL  OF  THE  FRESHJIEN:  A  SAD  STORY      .      .    _„ 

The  UNC  freshmen  got  the  socks  beat  off  them  in  Duke  Stadium 
Thanksgiving  Day.  The  Blue  Imps  scored  a  touchdown  in  the  first  few 
minutes  of  the  game  as  a  result  of  a  Tar  Baby  fumble,  and  the  score 
mounted  from  there  on  out.  The  final  was  45-7  with  the  gun  stopping 
Duke  on  Carolina's  one-yard  line. 

It  was  a  pitiful  exhibition  of  football  on  the  part  of  UNC.  The 
Tar  Babies  could  do  nothing  right.  They  made  every  mistake  in  the 
book,  and  seemed  to  go  out  of  their  way  to  give  Duke  touchdowns. 
Blocked  punts,  fumbles  (5  lost),  and  intercepted  passes  were  a  dime 
a  dozen. 

The  Carolinians  were  dead  tired  throughout  the  game.  They  show- 
ed little  spirit  and  no  hustle.  On  the  other  hand,  the  Blue  Imps  were 
primed  and  ready  for  the  big  game.  They  were  a  fighting,  aggresivc 
aggregation  hungry  for  victory,  and  they  got  it. 

What  happened?  The  outcome  was  a  complete  surprise  to  every- 
body. The  Tar  Babies  had  rolled  up  an  impressive  3-1  record  going  in- 
to the  game,  and  had  been  rampaging  over  all  opposition  in  recent 
games.  Then  the  bottom  fell  out. 

Why?  We  think  Tatum  himself  put  his  finger  on  the  crux  of 
the  matter  when  he  said  the  freshmon  were  tired  from  scrimmaging 
the  varsity  all  week  long.  For  the  Carolina  coaching  staff,  the  big 
game  was  the  UNC-Ouke  varsity  clash,  not  the  Turkey  Day  battle 
between  the  f  rosh  squads.  Carolina  doesn't  have  the  varsity  manpower 
Duke  has,  so  the  freshman  squad  must  be  used  to  prepare  the  varsity 
for  an  important  game.  It  was  a  regrettable  situation,  but  unavoid- 
ably so. 


ed.  On  the  first  play  of  the  second 
[period,  Jurgensen's  pass  wa.s  incom- 
i  plete   then   the   Duke    backs   took 
I  over  again  and  on  four  plays  went 
over  for  the  score.  Wray  Carlton 
traveled  right  end  for  the     tally 
I  from  the  eleven  yard  line. 
I     The   Tar  Heels  were   far  from 
j  discouraged,  however,  as  they  came 
1  right  back  with  a  touchdown  with 
1 5:58    remaining     in  the     quarter. 
j  From  there  own  15  Carolina  mar- 
ched 85  yards  for  a     touchdown 
with  the  help  of  two  15  yard  pena- 
lties against  Duke.  Sutton  was  the 
big  man  in  the  march  carrying  the 
ball   nine  times   before  Hathaway 
sneaked  over  from  the  one  for  the 
tally.  Phil  Blazer's  extra  point  was 
wide  and  Duke  had  a  7-6  lead  with 
5:58  left  in  the  half. 

The  Blue  Devils  bounced  back 
before  the  half  ended  with  a  touch- 
oown  in  ten  plays  and  only  five 
yards  through  the  air.  Bernie  Blan- 
(y  made  it  13-6  on  a  seven  yard 
run  around  left  end.  Blaney  added 


*  Sutton  Heads  List  Of 
Seniors  In  Last  Game 


Afnong  The  Nation's  Best      ...  ,<>  v,,,.  i 

Tar  Heel  distance  ace'  Jim  Beatty  finished  second  yesterday 
in  the  NCAA  cross-country  meet  in  East  Lansing,  Mich.  Beatty  lost 
out  to  Walt  McNew  of  the  VInlveirsHy  of  Texas.  j 


Saturday's  Duke-Carolina  clash 
in  Kenan  Stadium  brought  to  a 
close  the  college  career  of  ten 
Carolina  gridders  and  a  very  long 
season- for  Coach  Jim  Tatum  who 
experienced  the  worst  year  in  hit 
coaching  tenure. 

Probably  the  biggest  loss  for 
the  Tar  Heels  will  be  big  Ed  Sut- 
ton, the  Cinderella  man  from  Cul- 
lowee  who  first  came  on  the  sporty 
scene  much  better  known  for  his 
basketball  ability  than  for  his 
football  know-how.  Sutton  prog- 
ressed so  rapidly  during  his  four 
years  that  he  carved  himself  a 
niche  in  the  UNC  annals  of  foot- 
ball greats  in  his  final  season  with 
the  Tar  Heels. 

Along  with  Sutton  in  the  back- 
field,  the  Tar  Heels  lose  the  serv- 
ices of  big  Don  Lear,  a  hard  charg- 
ing fullback  who  was  handicapped 
by  a  knee  injury  all  season  and 
wasn't  able  to  see  much  action; 
Larry  McMullen,  one  of  the  un- 
sung heroes  of  the  Carolina  team 
who  saw  a  lot  of  action  and  play- 
ed some  very  fine  ball  for  the 
Tar  Heels;  and  Doug  Farmer,  a 
boy  who  many  thought  would  be 
a  top-notch  quiflrterback  but  who 
didn't  play  last  season  and  was 
used  only  sparingly  this  season. 
•  In  the  line,  the  Tar  Heels  lose  a 
fine  end  in  Larry  Muschamp,  a 
starter  at  the  first  of  the  season. 

Husky  center  George  Stavnitski 
played  his  final  game  early  in 
the  season  when  he  received  a  seri- 
ous injury  against  mighty  Okla- 
homa. Stavnltski's  potential  was 
never  realized  as  the  big  center 
was  unable  to  play  after  the  Okla- 
homa game. 

Graduation  will  hit  the  guard 
slot  hardest  at  Carolina.  Such  boys 
as  Jo^in  Bilich  and  John  .^Jones 
closed  out  their  college  careers 
Saturday.  In  addition,  the  Tar 
He^is  loee  lettermaft  Darden  L'^ve- 
say  aTid  end  Btiy  BWitrgtoti.'^^  ^.  ^ 

And  a  lew  sidelites  from  the 
game: 

Coach    Jim    Tatum    altered    his 


Beatty  Grabs  Second 

Place  In  NCAA  Meet  Give  A  Child 

Book  Before 

18th  annual  NCAA  cross  country  j  Jones,  both  of  Michigan  State,  fin-  |    ^f|r|Ci'|YlC|C 


EAST  LANSING,  MICH.,  t*»— 
Walter  McNew.  an  overlooked  en- 
try from  the  University  of  Texas, 
put  on  a  blazing  finish  to  win  the 


Kennedy  led  at   the   mile,   two{ 
mile   and   three    mile    marks,    but 
faded  into  third  place  in  the  finish.  | 
Gaylord     Denslow    and       Selwyn  i 


run  in  a  good  time  of  19:55.7  here 
yesterday. 

McNew,  a  junior  from  Amarillo 


the  extra  point  with  1:51  remain-   Tex.,  turned  on  the  steam  to  sprint 


ished  fourth  and  filth  to  secure 
MSU  the  team  title  with  a  low  of 
28  points. 


ing  in  the  half  and  the  Tar  Heels 
left  the  field  at  intermission  trail- 
ing 14-6. 

The  final  tally  came  in  the  last 
■period  when  Duke  moved  from  the 
Carolina  28  for  the  score  with 
about  six  minutes  left  in  the  game. 
Jurgensen  went  over  from  the  Ca- 
rolina one  for  the  score.  Blaney 
added  his  third  extra  point  and  the 
Blue  Devils  had  the  game  wrap- 
ped  up  21-6. 


Indoor  Track 

Coach  Dale  Ranson  has  asked 
that  ail  boys  interested  in  in- 
door track  report  to  the  tin  can 
any  day  this  week  at  either  2:15. 
3:15  or  4:15  in  the  afternoon. 


YESTERDAY'S  TAG  FOOTBALL 
RESULTS 

Medical  School  won  by  forfeit 
over  Ruffin;  Q^U  won  by  forfeit 
over  Theta  Chi;  Phi  Gam  defeated 
Kap  Sig  2-1;  Medical  School— 2 
refeated  Law  School — 2,  2-0;  Sig 
Nu  defeate<^  SAE,  2-0;  Phi  Gam 
(W)  won  by  forfeit  over  SPE  (W); 
DKE-1  defeated  Kap  Sig  (W)  2-0; 
DKE  defeated  Chi  Psi,  2-0;  Dell 
Sig  (W)  defeated  Sig  Chi  (W)  2-0. 

YESTERDAY'S   VOLLEYBALL 
RESULTS 

Zeta  defeated  Kap  Psi,  42-0;  SAE 
(W)  defeated  Beta  (W),  6-0;   Chi 
Psi  won  by  forfeit  over  SPE;  DKE 
won  by  forfeit  over  Delt  Sig;  Phi 
Kap  Sig  won  by  forfeit  over  Lam- 
bda Chi;  Kap  Sig  and  Sig  Nu  tied, 
game  called  because  of  darkness; 
Chi  Phi  won  by  forfeit  over  ZBT. 
Last   Tuesday   night   the    Etorm 
and  Fraternity  wrestlers  grappled 
for  top  honors  in  the  Intramural 
MTestling     finals.   Here     are     the 
trophy  winners  in  each  division. 

Dormitory  Champions:  123  lb., 
Joe'Chambliss  (Law  School);  130 
Jb.,  Charles  Strange  (Dental  Sch.); 
137  lb.,  Henry  Abyae   (Graham;. 


Paul  Hornung  Selected  As 
Bonus  Choice  By  Green  Bay 


PHILADELPHIA,  \Jf>—The  Green 
B<iy  Packers  selected  Notre  Dame 
quarterback  Paul  Hornung  as  their 
National  Football  League  bonus 
choice  yesterday  after  Head  Coach 
Lisle  Blackboiu-n  drew  the  lucky 
slip  from  the  hat  at  the  pro  foot-  \ 
ball  draft  meeting.  j 

In  the  first  round  of  the  regular 


Ron  Kramer,  Michigan  end,  tap- 
ped by  Green  Bay;  Len  Dawson, 
Purdue  quarterback,  picked  by 
Pittsburgh;  Jim  Brown,  Syracuse 
halfback,  selected  by  Cleveland, 
and  Claience  Peaks,  Michigan  State 
halfback,   drawn    by   Philadelphia. 

Commissioner  Bert  Bell  presided 
over  the   partial   draft     aession— 


draft,  Jon  Amett.  Southern  Califor- 1  ^'^f.iT^  ^^f/^^  four  Irounds- 
nia  halfback,  .selected  by  the  Los'^""^  '°  "''^'  '^^  "^'^^  ^'"'^''" 


Angeles  Rams,  was  the  No.  1 
choice.  The  12  teams  selected  ac- 
cording to  the  standings  as  of  yes- 
terday with  the  last-pface  club 
first  and  the  first-place  team  last. 

Grabbed  quickly  in  the  first 
round  were  such  1956  college  All 
America  prospects  as  Stanford's 
passing  ace,  John  Brodie,  second 
choice  named   by  San   Francisco; 


League  competition  for  American 
football  talent.  The  final  26  rounds 
of  the  annual  player  draft  will  be 
held  during  the  league's  mid-Jan- 
uary meeting. 


the   last    hall    mile   despite   27-de- 1 
gree     cold   and   three    inches     of 
snow  thai  made  treacherously  slip-  j 
pery    footing   over   the     four-mile 
course.  j 

McNew  overhauled  favored  Hen- 1 
ry  Kennedy  of  Michigan  State,  win- 1 
ner  of  the  Big  Ten  and  IC4A  meets  i 
and  previously  unbeaten  this  sea- ! 
son.  The  slender.  5-8.  124-pound  1 
Texan  finished  going  away,  80 
yards  ahead  of  the  second-place 
Jim  Beatty  of  North  Carolina. 


Co-Rec  Volleyball  Play 
Set  T^  Begin  Next  Week 

The  Intramuals  Department  an- 
nounced yesterday  that  the  annual 
co-recreational  volleybaM  tourn- 
ment  wil  be  held  Wednesday  and 
Thursday  of  next  week,  December 
5th  and  6th.  The  playoffs  will  be 
Dec.  11th  and  the  finals  will  be 
the  13th.  Anyone  interested  in  en- 
tering should  contact  the  Intra- 
muals Department. 

All  persons  interested  in  officiat- 
ing intramural  basketball  games 
check  by  the  intramurals  Office, 
315  Woollen  Gymn.  anytime  this 
week.  There  will  be  a  clinic  for 
these  officials  Monday  December 
3,  at  4  p.m.  in  room  301-A  Woollen 
Gym. 

The  joint-intramurals  council 
will  meet  tonight  at  7:30  in  301-A 
Woollen  Gym.  All  dorm  and  fra- 
ternity intramural  managers  must 
be  present.  Basketball  entries  will 
be  due  at  the  meeting. 


LADY  MILTON  SHOP 

• 

Just  received  shipment 
of  heavenly  cashmeres 
from  Hawick,  Scotland 
in  both  Braemar  and 
Drumlanrig  in  both 
classics  and  unusual 
Styles— from  $26.50. 
New  authentic  Ivy  but- 
ton-down shirts  in 
solids,  tartan  stripes  and 
tartans,  from  $5.95. 

Clotting  Cupboarli 


Advent  Calenders  —  Wonderful 
tinselly  pictures,  containing  tiny 
doors  and  windows,  one  to  open 
each  day  from  December  1st  untjl 
Christmas  Eve.  Children  love  them. 
50c  and  $1.00. 

A  ChristmM  Story  —  by  Mary 
Chalmers.  A  jewel  of  a  story  alwut 
a  little  girl's  search  for  a  star  to 
top  her  tree.  In  the  tiny  size  little 
children  love.  $1.00 

Tall  Book  of  Christmas  —  Thsi 
beautiful  companion  to  the  pop- 
ular Tall  Mother  Goose  brings  to- 
gether dozens  of  little  Christmas 
stories  and  poems.  $1.50 

Rudolph  The   Red-Nosed   Reindeer 

—  A  modern  seasonal  class jc.  We 
have  a    good  supply   at  59c  each. 

THE  INTIMATE 
BOOKSHOP 

205  East  Franklin  Street 
Open  Till  10  P.M. 


1^ 


qjUI^CAj^ 


i47  lb..  James  Bringham  (Graham); 
157  lb.,  Jjhn  Welbornc  (Manley), 
167  lb..'  Earnest  Ransrell  (Everett); 
177  lb.,  John  White  (Medical 
School);  Unlimited,  Hernard  Har- 
:ia  (Dental  SchooU. 


COMBOS 


ORCHESTRAS 


The  JACK  VICTOR  Orchestra 

DISTINGUISHED   MUSIC    FOR   DANCING 

NOW   BOOKING   ENGAGEMENTS  FOR  THE 

WINTER  AND  SPRING  SEASONS 


CONTACT:   b6B   GRAPER 
Box  4993 
Duke   Station 
Durham,   N.   C. 


Telephone  Durham  9011 
Ext.  8243 


•  Because  we  make  pre- 
scriptions our  primary 
business,  we  are  able  to 
carry  ample  stocks  of  a 
great  variety  of  drugs. 
This  means  that  even  the 
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tions are  compounded 
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as  the  Doctor  directs. 
Moreover,  yoB  will  find 
our  prices  uniformly  fair, 
based  on  accurately-de- 
termined costs. 


sunoN's 

Phone  9-8781 


<l»liili»i«ni*iifcif  iVii 


starting  lineup  slightly  in  order 
that  a  couple  of  senior  lettermen, 
John  Bilich  and  Don  Lear,  might 
get  into  the  Duke  game. 

There  was  a  big  turnout  of  Duke 
students  at  the  game.  The  Blue 
Devils  faithfuls  filled  almost  two 
sections  on  the  north  side  of  the 
playing  field. 

Seemed  like  Ed  Sutton  found  a 
new  place  to  run  Saturday.  The 
Tar  Heel  halfback  went  through 
the  line  more  than  he  has  ever 
done  before. 

A  few  people  must  have  sensed 
that  snow  would  start  falling  in 
the  third  quarter  because  there 
were  several  groups  which  made 
their  exodus  right  after  the  sec- 
ond half  got  underway. 

It  was  plenty  cold  in  the  press 
box  too  Saturday.  Members  of  the 
press  had  consumed  some  30  gal- 
lons of  coffee  by  the  middle  of  the 
third  quarter. 

Durham  Morning  Herald  Sports 
editor  Jack  Horner  had  the  cold 
weather  problem  pretty  well  solv- 
ed as  he  sat  in  the  press  box  with 
a  cigarette  lighter  that  threw 
flame  like  a  blo\^  torch.  It  kept 
his  hands  warm  anyway. 

' rH^ 


Sooners  Sure  Thing  To 
Capture  National  Title 

THE   ASSOCIATED    PRESS 

Oklahoma's  slick  Sooners  have 
moved  within  sight  of  their  second 
straight  national  football  cham- 
pionship after  receiving  another 
vote  of  confidence  from  writers 
and  broadcasters. 

With  the  final  balloting  only  a 
week  away,  Oklahoma  held  a  05- 
point  bulge  over  runnerup  Tennes- 
see in  the  latest  tabulations. 

The  Sooners,  tied  with  Washing- 
ton 1908-14  for  the  all-time  rec- 
ord of  consecutive  victories  at  39. 
convinced  81  of  the  159  participat- 
ing spoils  writers  and  announc- 
ers they  deserved  first  spot. 


A  WEATHERCOAT 
YOU  CAN 


Wa^h! 


WENTWORTH 

&  SLOAN 


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the 

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instrument 
that  does 
something 
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^SrV^i-*? 


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Admiral 

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WENTWORTH 
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St. 


Uonbontumn 

Ab  exduBve  Cabric.  Washing- 
machine  teata  prove  London 
Foe  WeathercoaU  bold  their 

shape,  won't  fade,  pucker,  or 
shrink — lirip-dry  in  two  hours 

to  smooth,  smart  wrinkle- 
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JULIAN'S 

COLLEGE 

SHOP 


IT'S  FOR  REAL! 


by  Chester  Field 


'The  Tar  Heel's  Prescription  Center" 


^     PHILOSOPHY  FOR  TODAY 

'Tou  ask  me  why  I  amfle,"  he  said. 

"When  H-Bombs  hang  above  my  head. 
My  car's  a  wreck  . .  .  my  gal  has  fled 

My  money's  gone  ...  I'm  in  the  red  ..  , 
Why  do  I  smile?  .  .  .  You  ask  me  why? 

CHESTERFIELDS!  THEY  SATISFY!" 


MOIALi  Everything  looks  bright  with 
your  Chesterfield  alight!  Cheer  up 
every  smoking  moment  with  more 
real  flavor,  more  real  enjoyment. 
SmUe,  firiend  .  .  .  with  the  smoothest- 
tasting  smoke  today,  packed  more 
smoothly  by  ACCU •  RAY! 

Llk*  your  pl«asur«  Ugf,,, 

Smokm  for  rort  . . .  wnok*  Chett»rfl*ld  I 


*  Serimls     !)•»*• 
eiiapel  Hill.  »•   ^ 


W  i  A  T  H  E  R 

Partly     cleOdy     »t%di     continued 


cold. 


mt 


aTar  Xccl 


PACE 

Students  can  set  it.  See  pago  2. 


VOL.  LVII  NO.  55 


Complete  (/P)  Wire  Service 


CHAPEL  HILL,  NORTH  CAROLINA,  WEDNESDAY,  NOVEMBER  28,  1956 


Offices   in   Graham   Memorial 


FOUR    PAGES   THIS    ISSUI 


New  Instructors  Named  To 
History  Department  Posts 

Three  new  instructors  ^  have 
joined  the  History  Department  at 
the  University  of  North  Carolina. 
I)r>  Fletcher  Green,  department 
tl[i;urinan,  has  announced. 

Tlie  new  instructors  listed  by 
Dr.  Green  are  Dr.  Morton  Keller 
of  New  York.  Dr.  Hugh  D.  Haw- 
kins of  Oklahoma  and  Charles  A. 
Hale  of  Minnesota.    • 

Two  of  the  instructors.  Hale  and 
Keller  will  teach  in  the  Depart- 
mrnt  of  Social  Science. 

Hale  received  his  B.A.  degree 
from  Amherst  College  in  1951  and 
his  M.A.  from  the  University  of 
Minnesota  in  1992.  In  1952.  he 
sfudlcd-at  the  University  of  Stras- 
bo/arg  under  a  Fulbright  grant. 
Last'  year,  he  carried  on  research 
in  Mexico  under  a  Doherty  fel- 
lowship in  preparation  for  his  doc- 
toral di.'isertation. 

Dr.  Keller  recently  received  his  ielligcnco  fiom  1953  through  1956. 
Fh.D.  degree  from  Hanard  Uni-  Dr.  Hawkin.s  received  hi.s  Ph.D. 
vcrsity.    He  sei-ved  with  Naval  In-    degree   from   Johns   Hopkins    Uni- 


MORTON   KELLER 

.   .  of  New   York 


A.   HALE 

.    .    .   of  Minncsotu 

vcrsity  in  1954  and  served  for  two 
year.s  with  the  Army  .\ir  Trans- 
pjrtation  Corps  in  Germany. 


Stage,  Film 
Stars  Here 
Saturday 

Four   Broadway   and    Holl>-wood 

stars  wii;  appear  on  the  stage  of 

Memorial   Hall   Saturday   night   at 

8:30  in  the  'The  Best  of  Steinbeck.  * 

sponsored    by   The    Carolina    Play- 
makers. 


Constance  Benn«tt.  Tod  An- 
drews, Frank  McHugh  ?nd  Robert 
Strauss  will  enact  dramatized  ex- 
cerpts from  the  works  oi  Pulitzer 
prize   novelist   John   Steinbeck. 

Constance  Bennett  is  a  member 
of  the  famous  Bennett  family, 
with  her  father  Richard  Bennett, 
one  of  the  great  actors  of  the  past 
fifty  years,  and  her  sisters,  Joan 
and  Barbara,  stage  and  film  stars. 
Educated  abroad,  Constance  be- 
gan her  acting  career  at  fourteen, 
when  she  was  ''discovered"  by 
Samuel  Goldwyn.  Before  she  was 
twenty-five  her  success  grew  w=th 
one  hit  after  another  until,  after 
her  fourth  assignment,  she  estab- 
lished a  record  by  receiving  $30.- 
000  a  week  for  five  weeks  for  a 
picture. 

Among  her  eighty  films  were 
"Common  Clay,"  "Ladies  In 
Love."  "Tail-spin."  and  the  "Top- 
per" series.  Six  years  ago  she 
became  Hollywood's  first  full- 
fledged  woman  producer  when 
she  purchased  '  the  best-seller 
"Paris  Underground"  and  produc- 
ed it  entirely  on  her  own.  playing 
the  leading  role.  In  recent  years 
she  has  toured  in  such  theatre  pro- 
ductions as  Noel  Coward's  "Elasy 
Virtue."  Philip  Barry's  "Without 
Love."  '"Over  Twenty-One,"  and 
"John  Loves  Mary."  In  Germany, 
where  her  husband  was  a  Wing 
Commander  during  the  Berlin  Air 
Lift,  she  gave  two  performances 
a  day  for  the  Air  Force  for  two 
months. 

Besides  her  theatre  and  film 
work  Miss  Bennett  has  owned  her 
own  cosmetics  firm,  designed  a 
fashion  line  called  Constance 
Bennett  Originals,  received  five 
citations  for  her  war  work,  or- 
ganized her  current  ABC  radio 
show  and  recently  completed  a 
successful  tour  of  the  top  supper 
cluhs  in  the  country. 

Tickets  for  the  .production  are 
available  for  $2.50  and  $1.50  at 
the  Business  Office,  2 14  Aber^ 
nethy  Hall. 


'Magic  Flute' 
To  Be  Given 
Here  Sunday 

Les  Pctites  .Musicales  will  pre- 
.'.ent  •The  Magic  Flute."  an  abridg- 
td  version  of  the  .Mozart  opera, 
with  Norman  Cordon  and  the  Uni- 
versity Glee  Club  on  Dec.  2. 

Sponsored  by  Graham  Memorial 
.\ctivities  Board,  the  production  is 
to  be  held   in  Hill   Hall. 

Heading  the  cast  wih  be  Norman 
Cordon  as  Sarit^tro.  Tohn  Tfanks'  as  ! 
Tajpiuo.  Doua  Patton  as  Pamina, 
and  iloel  Carter  as  Papagano.  The 
University  Glee  Club  uiil  be  under 
th»>  direction  of  Joel  Carter. 

Robert  Andrews,  who  holds  his 
masters  degree  in  Dramatic  Art 
Ircm  UNC.  will  direct  the  opera, 
which  will  be  presented  with  cos- 
tumes and  scenery. 


Grail  Dance 
Set  For  Dec.  8 

One  hundred  Meredith  College 
women,  at  least,  will  be  on  the 
campus  tor  the  Dec.  8  dance  spon- 
sored by  the  Order  of  the  (Jrail. 

The  entire  campus  is  invited  to 
attend  the  function,  according  to 
Delegata    Luther   Hodges. 


FROM  RADIO   DISPATCHES 

WASHINGTON— Russia  was  re- 
ported moving  steadily  and  rap- 
idly in  the  Middle  Ea^t  to  exploit 
ihc  break  in  the  alliance :  of  the 
western  powers. 

State  Dept.  spokesman  Lincoln 
White  charged  Russia  witli  send- 
ing small  arms,  trucks  and  similar 
equipment  into  S^ria.  a  violation 
.d  a  United  Nations  rcfliplution 
asking  UN  members  not  to  send 
mui*e  arms  to  the  Middle  East. 

While  .said  the  Soviet  Union 
has  been  sending  them  for  some 
lime  and  also  since  the  resolution 
was  adopted. 

«     <:     « 

AMM-\N,  Jordan — Jordan  an- 
nounced she  is  cutting  free  her 
relations  with  Great  Britain  and 
all  British  bases  there  will  be  liq- 
uidated. 

It  was  reported  she  is  consider- 1 
ing  the  establishment  of  diplo- 
matic, cultural  and  economic  ties 
j  with  Ru.ssia.  A  radio  announcer 
I  said  this  could  move  the  Soviet 
Union  across  the  Arab  states 
through  Syria  and  Kgyp{  to  the 
Suez  Canal.  1 

•     *     *  ' 

LONDON— One    hundred     mem- 
bers   of    the    consen'ative    Labor 
Party     in    Parliament    adopted    a 
,  lesolution   severely   criticizing  the 
i  American     position     in     the    Sue/ 
;  crisis    and    the    complete    reliance, 
on   the   UN.   It   was    reported  the 
American    position   endangers    the 
Atlantic  alliance. 


Automation  In  Mathematics  Demonstrated  Here 


A  mathematics  professor  from  N.  C.  State  College  demonstrates 
an  electronic  computer  to  a  Carolina  math  professor.  The  machine 
was    one    of    two    demonstrated    at    a    North    Carolina    Mathematics 


Teachers  Conference  here.  One  was  an  equation  solver  built  out  of 
surplus  parts.  The  other  was  an  analog  computer.  Shown  are  Prof. 
John  W.  Cell  of  N.  C.  State,  left,  and  Prof.  J.  W.  Lasley  of  UNC. 


Freshmen  are  especially  cordial- 
ly invited.  Hodges  said. 


Music  for  the  function  will  be 
provided  by  the  Duke  .Ambassa- 
dors,  an   eighteen-pieqe   band. 


Weinman 
Re-elected 
UP  Leader 

A  large  turnout  of  University 
Party  mcnibi'rs  bestowed  a  rare 
honor  upon  Mike  Weinman  la.st 
night  by  decisively  re-electing  him 
as  party  chairman. 


Spring 
Begin 


AUGUSTA.     Ga.  —  The     White 
House  gave  assurance  the  Atlantic        Weinman,  a   senior  and  a  mem- 
alhance  would    remain   intact.  ber  of   Zeta    Beta   Tau  social    fra- 

Secretary    of   State    Dulles,   just  j  lernitv.  was  oppos<'d  for  the  chair- 
recovered    from    an    imcstinal    op-    manship    bv    Jim     Monteith.     la.st 
i  eration.   will    tall    with    ft6e«Went    year's  UP  nominee  for  senior  vice 
It    will   last  from  8-11    p.m.   and    Eiseohower  oo  his  w«y  kayW.*>»wi )  ■prgSldeM    in   the   spring   oloctlons, 
will   be  held  in  Woollen  Gymnasi-  '  Key  West.  Fla. 

"It's  a  tremendous  honor  to  be 
re-elected  as  party  chairman.  " 
Weinman  said  after  the  meeting 
was  ad.journed.  'Til  work  very 
hard    to    se<'    wo    win    the    spring 


No   admission 
performance. 


is   charged   for   the 


Dean  Brandis 
To  Talk  On  UN 

The  first  supper  forum  of  the  VM- 
YWCA  will  be  held  Thursday  with 
Dean  Henrj'  Brandis  Jr.  of  the  Law 
School  giving  an  address  entitled 
"The  Potenitalitics  of  the  United  Na- 
tions." 

The  meeting  will  be  held  in  the 
large  dining  room  on  the  second 
floor  of  the  North  end  of  Lenoir 
Hall.   Meeting  time  iti  5:30  p.m.  | 

The  forum  is  a  continuation  ot 
tie  international  relations  study  I 
group  which  has  been  meeting  in 
ti:e  afternoon  i  night  i.  Tonights ; 
meeting  is  sponsored  by  the  inter- ' 
national  relations  group  and  the  cur- 1 
rent  affairs  group  of  the  YMCA- ! 
VTVCA.  ' 


um. 

The  idea  of  inviting  another 
school  outside  the  Consolidated 
University  to  the  campus  for  a 
social  event  is  without  precedent, 
according   to   the    Grail'  delegata. 

It  ;s  haped  a  precedent  will  be 
established  by  the  dance  which 
will  be  followed  by  other  groups. 
Hodges   said. 

In  subsequent  articles  concern- 
ing the  establishment  of  this  new 
tradition.  President  of  the  Stu- 
dent Body  Bob  Voung  and  class 
officers   will  comment  on  it. 


Clothing 
Donqflons 
Are  Good 


Holidays 
Enjoyable 

By  MARY  ALYS  VOORHEES 


ACCORDING   to  the   Greek  way 

of  lile.  Thanksgiving  vacaliou 
meant  quite  a  big  time  for  some 
membei-s  of  the  student   body. 


While  most  Carolina  gentlemen 
and  coeds  were  packing  cars  to 
spend   the   holidays   with   the   tain 


elections.    We've   got    the   material  '  '■>•  a  ^roup  of  Lambda  Chis  could 


IDC  Won't  Meet 

The  Interdormitory  Council 
will   n6t   meet  tonight. 

Instead  the  council  will  have 
a  special  meeting  tonight  week, 
Dec.  5,  at  7  p.m. 

President  Sonny  Hallford  said 
the  reason  for  postponement 
was  that  quiz  conflicts  were  too 
great.  Primary  reason  was  a 
business  administration  exami- 
nation conflict,  Hallford  said. 

Tentative  speaker  for  the 
meeting  is  Directcor  of  Student 
Activities   Sam  Magili. 


and    I   think    we'll   win    it."    Wein- 
man added. 

In  the  other  elections  for  nc»^\ 
party  officers.  Butch  Tomlins(Ui 
and  Dave  Davis  were  elided  by 
acclamation  for  the  offices  of  vice 
chairman  and  treasurer  respec- 
tively. 

Both  Tomlinson  and  Davis 
sophomores  at  the  university. 
Tomlin."ion  is  a  member  of  (he 
Beta  Theta  Pi  social  fraternity 
and  Davis  is  a  mcmbcM-  of  the  Phi 
Delta   Theia    fraternity.  i 

Harriett    Bobbitt    was    accordi-d 
a    similar   honor   as    that    given    tn 
Student     donations     have     been  J  ^^'*^''"'"«"   ^''^*""   ^^^^'   members   re- 
i  light   since   boxes  for  the  clothing    P'«^^<'f^    her    a.s    secretary    of    thi 


be   found  out   at 
ham    airport,    eaj 
a   trip  .south. 


Preregistration  To 
Here  On  December  6 

Stiulents  in  the'  <;etu'i;il  (olle^^c-  should  !)(.•  si:.;niiiu,  up  tliis 
week  lor  ap|)(tiiunu-iiis  t(»  jHcTo^i.siti  lor  iiu-  spiiii'^  semester, 
.U((H(lini;  to  ;m  aiiiioiiiu  eiueiu  lioiii  tl\e  Ceiitial  Records 
()Mi(e. 

Piere*»istialioii  in  (»lliei   sdmols  and  iK  pai  tiiuiits  \vill  be 

♦'onducied  in  Decemljer  als.i. 

j      In  the  General  College,  students 
have  bt?en  asked  to  sign   the   ap- 
j  i;olntmenl     sheets     in     308    South 
j  Building.    They  may  si^n  them  un- 
I  til    a    week    fi'om    tomorrow.   Pre- 
1  registration   will    be   from   Dec.    6 
!  (hiouLih   Dec.    18.   During   this  pre- 
I  legistration     period     the     students 
i  -ihoiihl     nn  et     with     their    advisor 
luriny  '.hcii   aj)iijinlment  lime  and 
I  obtain   Iheii    green   forms  showing 
courses  for  next  semester.    Kor  fi- 
nal   instructions    and     processing, 
the  green  iorins  should   be  taken 
to  No.  1  Haiics  Hall  (which  is  open 
laily  Iroin  U.'Si)  a.m.  to  4:30  p.m.). 


Talent  Show 

Is  Tonight 

t    •  ■ ,  . 

T;.voiits  for  the  Carol'ma^s  Caval- 
eade  of  Talent  Shmr  will  be  held 
tonight  and  Thiiisday  from  7-10  p.m. 
at   .MemoriaJ   Hall. 


Donations  of  clothing  to  the 
Hungarian  Relief  Clothing  Drive 
from  townspeople  through  today 
have  been  good,  according  to  Mis. 
E.  T.  Chanlett  of  the  Community 
Church. 

The  drive  is  under  the  sponsor- 
ship  of    the    Chapel    Hill    Friends  | 
i  and  the  Commimity  Church. 


Studenfs  Off  For  UN 
Seminar  Tomorrow 

By  PRINGLE  PIPKIN  ■      Saturday     morning     Dr.     Clark 

Twenty-one   UNC  students,  nine  I  Kichciberger,  executive  director  of 

girls  and   twelve  boys,  will   go   to '  the    American   Association   of   thfj 


IN  THE  INFIRMARY 


Students  in  the  Infirmary  yes- 
terday include: 

Misses  Elmira  Herring.  Cloy- 
die  Carstarphen.  Elaine  Galli- 
more,  and  Nicholas  Marcopults, 
Robert  Mauldin,  Hilton  Cold- 
man,  John  Shackleford,  Richard 
Saylor,  Robert  Kerr.  Paul  Strass- 
lor,  Harrington  Alexander, 
Lewis  Cody,  Weyman  Richard- 
son »nd  James  Edwards. 


New  York  Thursday  by  car  for  a 
seminar  on  the  United  Nations. 

This    seminar    is    sponsored    by 
the  UNC  YM-\'WCA  with  staff  as- 1 
.sistance   from    Miss   Anne   Queene, 
director   of    thg    YWCA.    Six    stu- 
dents fi-om  Ohio  and  Michigan  will  | 
join  the  group  in  New  York.  The  j 
UNC   group  will  stay   together  in 
the  same  hotel  in  New  York. 

Thursday  evening  the  group  will 
have  an  orientation  session  for 
ihc  seminar. 

Friday  morning  the  contingent 
will  be  familiarized  with  functions 
of  the  United  Nations.  At  10  in 
the  morning  the  students  will  go 
to  the  General  Assembly  of  the 
United  Nations.  In  the  afternoon 
ihe  group  will  tour  the  UN  Build- 
ings. At  8  p.m.  there  will  be  a 
seminar  session  with  two  resource 
porple  from  the  UN  or  AKSC. 


United   Nations,  will  speak   to  the 
seminar.  At  11:30  that  morning  the  \ 
group  will  evaluate  its  work.   The  l 
students  will  leave  for  Chapel  Hill  I 
tarly  Sunday  morning.  I 


had    not    yet   been    placed    in    the 
residence    halls    yesterday. 

The  appeal  for  special  gifts  and 
clothing  came  through  the  World 
University  Service  to  aid  Ihe  stu- 
dents of  Hungary. 

A.1-S.  Chanlett  stated  that  an, 
one  who  saw  Walter  Kronkite's 
Sunday  newscast  on  televi.sion 
will  h;'ve  some  idea  of  the  im- 
mediate need  of  the  Hungarian 
refugees. 

The  drive  will  continue  through 
Saturday,  and  cverj*  type  of  cloth- 
ng  is  welcomed.  There  is  a  special 
demand  for  bed  linen  and  baby 
clothing,  however. 

According  to  Mrs.  Chanlett. 
since  the  clothing  donations  are 
oeing  routed  through  the  Ameri- 
can FViends  Senice  Committee, 
proper  distribution  procedures 
are  assured.  There  had  been  scm" 
apprehension  on  the  part  of  don- 
ars  about  whether  the  clothing 
might  be  confiscated  by  the  Com- 
munists or  sold   at   a   profit. 

The  drive  is  a  commurtitv  pro- 
ject with  all  Chapel  Hill  Church- 
es participating,  along  with  the 
Interfraternity  Council,  the  APO 
Service  fraternity  and  the  Wo- 
man's   Residence   Council. 


elected    her    a.s    secretary    of 
UP.  • 

Bobbitt.  a  member  of  Pi  Beta 
Phi  sororty.  was  opposed  for  the 
office  of  .secretary  by  .ludy  .\nn- 
Crater. 

Tb?  terms  for  the  officers  will 
last  until  late  in  the  spring  sem- 
ester when  the  UP  will  hold  an- 
other election  for  new  officers. 


But    this    wasn't    to    be   just    ap 

ordinary   trip,   so  the  fellows   had 

a    private    lK'-3    plane    fly    them 

down  to  Palm  Beach.  F'la.'s  sunny 

I  shores,  arriving  in  time  for  a  swim 

are  |  before  dinner. 

With  the  warm  weather  to  en- 
j.i.v.  their  activities  included  a 
party  'with  the  Lambda  Chis  at 
Rollins  College,  nightclubbing  — 
one  brother  dating  a  Russian  prin- 
I  cess — and  loads  of  swimming. 
And  then  to  add  to  the  vaca- 
tion, the  gioup  headwl  back  to 
the  Hill  in  time  for  the  Duke- 
(.arolina  game  Saturday,  after 
\,hich  they  entertained  the  Duke 
Lambda  Chis  at  a  .Tuke  Box  Party. 
While  they  were  iiijoying  them- 
selves in  the  Sunshine  State,  the 
ZBTs  were  having  a  grand  ole 
time  up  in  New  Y.jrk  City,  .\fter 
spending     Thanksgiving     Day     at 


Dave     Da\is.     talent     committee 

chairman,    annoiniced    that    an.\one 

wishing    to    display    his    talent    or 

the   Raleigh-Dur- 1  ^tunt.-   may  .still  .sign  up  for  a  try- 

erly    anticipating  i  out    at    the   office   of    Miss    Eleanor 

I  liiggins  in  the  V. 

Tile  ptN)j>;e  wh<»  ha\f  alread.v  .silli- 
ed up'  for  tr\-outs  were  descrilied 
l^y  Davis  -i?;  •talent  which  should 
provide  a  \er>  entertaining  show 
and  an   exenin,'  of  fun    ' 

.\nother  feature  of  the  show,  the 
Y  .\ife  Choru*.  was  announced  b\ 
choriLs  chairman  Valarie  von  .\m 
mon  to  he  open  for  people  with  sing- 
ing talent.  Mi^.s  .\mmon  asked  all 
interested  jjersons  to  sign  up  at  the 
\  office. 

Prizes  to  Ije  awarded  to   winners  ^ 
V.  dl  Ik?  announced  later  by  the  joint 
si>on.sni-s  of  the  show.   Y  Nite  and 
c;.M.\B. 


(See  Holidays,  Page  3) 


Student  Relief  Being 
Coordinated  In  Austria 


Originally,  two  weeks  ago.  some 
UNC  students  were  going  to  at- 
tend a  seminar  sponsored  by  the 
Friends    Service    Committee,     but 

the  Friends  group  could  only   ac- 1 — 

commodate     two     UNC     students.  ] 

YMCA  President  Gerry  Mayo  and  |  Ju$f  One  P||;iyfiCS   TeacheiT 

YWCA  President  Martha  Richard 


son  consulted  with  the  Y  staff  and 
decided  to  form  a  UNC  seminar. 

If  this  seminar  is  successful,  the 
group  plans  to  conduct  another 
one  in  the  spring,  according  to 
^layo. 

The  cost  to  each  student,  in- 
cluding aceomnuKiaiion.s.  is  about 
^25. 


Student  relief  activities  in  .\ustria 
are  now  being  coordinated  by  a 
committee  which  includes  World 
l^niverslty  Service,  the  Coordinat- 
ing Secretariat,  and  the  .-Vustrian 
Xational   Union  of  Students. 

The  (Jraz  union  is  one  branch  of 
the  committee  working  to  help  Hun- 
garian .students  who  are  resisting 
Communist   oppression. 

Tile  following  letter,  dated  Nov. 
0.  was  sent  to  .\merican  universi- 
luv  from  students  at  Graz  Univer- 
sity in  .\ustria: 

Dear  Students: 

'"We.  the  students  of 
versify  ha\e  organised  a  union  to 
issist  our  friends  in  Hungarj'.  Other 
universities  of  .\ustria.  and  even 
those  of,  Switzerland  and  Germany 
ha\e   also   f<^unded    .•vuch   groups. 

"We  collected  money,  bought  food. 


Philosophy 
Professor 
Is  Lecturer 

» 

Dr.  Everett  W.  Hall.  Kenan  pro- 
fessor of  philosoph\,  i.s  to  be  the 
Humanities  Division  Faculty  Lec- 
turer for  the  fall  term.  The  lec- 
ture, entitled  "What  Is  It  a  Phil- 
osopher Dres?"  is  scheduled  for 
8  p.m.  Tuesday.  Dec.  4.  in  rooni 
106  Carroll    Hall. 

Faculty  lectures  are  presented 
three  times  each  year  by  the  Uni- 
versity's Division  of  the  Humani 
ties   and   are   intended   to   interest 


■■.\ow  our  means  are  exhausted! 
.   .   .   Theietore  we  actKi  your  helol 

"The  liberty  of  a  country  depends 
upon  it.  We  need  the  money  urgent- 
ly- 

"We  are  constantly  in  touch  with 

our    Hungarian    collengues    and    the    ues   ano   are   inienaeu   lo    inierf-si  '  i.   n    t        i     ,t, 

.        .  j  """   *"'    iiin-iiuiu    lo    I'lure.si  I  jjaii    for    further    processing,     ac- 

Hed    Cross,    tnerelore    we   are   best    the  students  in  that  undergaraduate  I  rording  to"  Central  Rt 
situatetl    to    provide    Hunyary    with    division  as  well   a^ 


ARTS  AND  SCIENCES 

In  Ihc  Colli  Kc  of  Aj-ts  and 
Sciences.  prcregi>lration  will  be 
held  Di.'c  6  through  Dec.  18.  Stu- 
dents who  haVe  a  major  in  the 
college  shoulti  see  their  depart- 
nciifak, advisor,  .secure  their  green 
Jorms.  and  lake  them  to  Hanes 
Hall  lo!  processing,  the  Central 
Records  Office  reported.  Pre-Law, 
I'ri^Mod.  Pre-Dental  hnd  special 
students  have  betn  asked  to  see 
he  advisor  in  the  Dean  of  Arts 
:4iid  Sci(  noes'  olfice. 

Students  in  the  School  of  Bu.si- 

ness     .\dminist  ration     have     been 

a.sked   to   sign   appointment    books 

in  Carroll  Hal!  Fo\cr  from  Dec.  3 

ihrough  Dec.  8  in  order  to  be  able 

t,.  see  their  advisor  during  the  ad- 

I  vising  period.  Dec.  12.  13.  14.  and 

17.    Proregistration  will  take  place 

I  m  the  Foyer  of  Carroll  Hall  on  thg 

same  dates  as  the  advising  period. 

}      The    School    of    "Education    will 

'  hold       preregistratiim       Dec.       10 

'  through    Dec.    15.    Students    havfe 

been    i-cquested    to    obtain    green 

i.jrms  in  duplicate  from  theii-  ad- 

,  visor,   take   them    to   127   Peabody 

lor  approval,  leave  one  copy  there 

and    take    the    original    to   Hanes 

Hall. 

GRADUATE   SCHOOL 

Preregistration  lor  regular  stu- 
Jcnts  now  enrolled  in  the  Gradu- 
.ic  School  should  sec  their  depart- 
mental advisor.^'  l>etween  Dec.  10 
through  Dec.  17.  secure  green 
iorms.    and    take    them    to    Hanes 


GREENSBORO.  ^f^-The  combin- 
ed efforts  of  all  colleges  in  North  medianes  and  clothing.  Tliese  weiv 
Carolina  turned  out  just  one  t|«a'»-  t'"ansported    to    the    Hungarian    bt.r- 
fied    high    school    physics    teacher  tie'"-  v.herv  the  Re<l  Cross  took  over, 
'ast  year  and  during  the  current  ^^'^  chartered   an   airplane   to  take 
.school    year    they    will    turn    out  »>«dicine    and    surgical    supplies    to 
none,  William  C  Friday,  president  i!>c   wounded    in    Budaiusi     We   im- 
}    of  the  Consolidated  University  ofpiovised    hospitals    and    temporary 
I    North  fai-olina,' said    here   yester- !>omes   tor   the   Huiiyanan   relugc^s 
I   dav.  in   tJU'  border. 


')adl.\  needed  material.  Our  student 
president  \L<:ted  a  Hungarian  uni- 
versity JH'hind  the  Iron  Curtain  and 
.set  up  contact  with  the  rebeling  stu- 
dents.  Tliey  accompany  our  loaded 

„         Ti   •  '  li'ucks  up  to  BudaiH'^t.  then  the  sup- 

Graz    Uni- 1  "^ 

plies  are  distributed  directly  to  the 

students  who  are  losing  their  blood 

ii.  the  fight  for  freedom. 

'Confiding  in  ,vour  help  we  thank 
.' ou  for  all  the  Hungarians  who  are 
fi'^hting  for  their  freedom.  With 
sincere  greetings. 

"Tiie  StiidenLship  Council  of 
(iraz." 

Tho.se  wishing  to  contribute  to  the 
Hungarians  have  been  asked  to  send 
their  donation.>  to  the  Y.M-^"WC.^ 
!n  care  of  Mi.ss  Jackie  .\ldridge. 
Hottles  will  remain  in  V  Court  con- 
:ii>ually  for  cttntributioiis. 


the  public  and 
the    entire    university    community. 
'■  The   sL'ries   began    in    1945. 

Prof.  Hal!  joined  the  U\C  facul- 
ty in  1952.  alter  heading  the  Dept 
of  Philosophy  at  the  University  of 
Iowa  for  10  years.  He  had  previ- 
ously taught  at  Ohio  State  Uni- 
versity and  Leland  Stanford  ITni- 
versity.  A  native  of  Wisconsin,  he 
received  his  A.B.  and  A.M.  de- 
grees at  Lawrence  College.  Apple- 
ton.  Wis.,  and  his  Ph.D.  at  Cornell 
University. 

Currently  president  of  the 
North  Carolina  Philosophical  So- 
ciety, Dr.  Hall  has  written  two 
books:  What  Is  Value'?  .\n  Essay 
in  Philosophical  .Analysis  'and 
Science  and  Values.  A  Study  in 
the  Historj  of  Ideas,  published 
this  year. 


ecords  Office. 

Undergraduate      students      who 

will  graduate  in  .lanuary  Jind  plan 

lo   enroll    in   the   Clraduate   School 

'  in  the  spring  Semester  are  not  eli- 

i  ,4ible  lo  preregistcr  and  must  reg- 


(See   Prerccivstration.   Page   3) 


GM'S  SLATE 

Student  Government,  4-5  p.m. 
Grail  Room;  Pan  Hell,  5-6  p.m. 
Grail  Room;  Free  Flicks  Conv 
mittee.  4-6  p.m.  Roland  Parker 
1  and  II;  Jehovah's  Witness.  8- 
9:30  p.m  ,  Roland  Parker  I;  De- 
bate Squad,  4-6  p.m.,  Roland 
Parker  III;  Chem  Femmes,  8- 
10:15  p.m.,  Roland  Parker  III; 
CUSC,  4-5:30  p.m..  Woodhouse 
Conference:  APO  Pledge  Class, 
8:30-9:^  p.m.,  APO   Room. 


11 


PAGE  TWO 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HE€L 


WEDNESDAY,   NOVEMBER  28,  1956 


WEDfJE! 


Integration  On  Campus: 
It  Could  Start  At  Carolina 

"The  fwoffh'  arc  alwtiws  ahfod  oj  Ihr  Imlillciniis  and  nlittost  }if> 
to  the  stnfesineu"  JS.  C.  (i<>v.  Luthcv  II<m1«4Cs.  s|)eakini;  to  State  Slii- 
dcxM   Lcijislatme  racmlv. 

(iov.  Hfxloes  was  renuntliiij*  the  tion      ol      atadeniic       freedom    lor 

.students   of   one   of    the    universal  N'oiih   C.aiolitia.    is   presently   nar- 

rules  of  politics  when  he  made  that  rou-rnincled  about   \ci>vocs. 

statement     at      the     State   Student  Ne^ro        underjiT;vduaits       here 

Legislature  meeting  the  other  day.  (onid  i»elp  build  up  the  (iiltiue  of 

Not  oidv  is  it   true-of  politiis.  but  this  state.   Thev  eoidd    teac  ii    their 

of  all  foinis  of  aiuhoritv.  pure,     white,     An.i;lo-S;t\on     »  lass- 

,      ,,         ,•,,,,•  nj.:«tes  iuu(h   a1)out   life,  about   (o- 

Here  at    the   Consolidated    Itii-  •            ,           ....           , 

,       ,  op;T;Uinn.   about    niuiatne.   about 

versuv.  lor  example,  the  statement  ,         •          ,          .            .,                ,  , 

.       •        ,,  ,          •        ,                 ,  eau«ali<in.     In    trtnrtt,    lliev    (ould 

iniQ;nt  \\ell  be  turned  to  read:  ,        .        .1    .                1 

^,             ,                    ,              ,       1  retiixe  an  etuuation   that   rs  eciual 

The  students  are  always  ahead  .       1  ...  .,   .              .     r            .1      ' 

,     ,                            ,     ,  to— but  not  separate  from — ihr;  re- 

ol    lie   trustees   and   almost  H,ip  to  .  ^ .  .   ,  .,      '  ,  •       *-      u     1 

,       ,        ,      ,.                                 ^^  reived  bv  the  white    far  Heel. 

the   f;«intv,  '     #          ^          ^ 

#  #  # 

The   facidtv,  we   tee),   would   a( - 

In    case   of  eampus   racial    inte-  ,.^.^,^    ime-ration    easiN.     1  he    stu- 

oration.  this  rule  holds  partitularlv  (|j.„j   ]„„iy.   uith   the  ex<eption  of 

"""^-  a   few     jMejudiied     Patriots     who 

While    a    lar-re   seoment    of    the  ''-^^t-   trouble     even      livinjr     with 

la«  iiitx  'w.»uld  weUome  ecUuation-  tluMUselves.  W(»uld  feel  no  pains  at 

al    integrJition.  here,    a    son^ewhat  infes>ratMV4. 

smaller   l>ut  significant   jxjrtion  of  ''   ''*  ^''^"  '^"'"^^  '»'    1 '  "stees  and 

the    siudem    Imdv    a-lso    would    l>e  "tembers  ol  the  Universitys  admin- 

hapjA    to   have   inendH-rs     of     the  '^i'a"«»"    that    must    be   convinced 

Neyvo  ia(e  ooini^  tos<ho(.l  with  it.  '''•'•   •"•"''*'   '"'t'Sration  here  would 

The  Boaifj  of!  rustees.  which  runs  l«''>i''i'    iIh'  state.   And    it    is  these 

a   -returaJion    behind   the   students  |«<>1>I^-  ^^1>'^  ;»it'     "«'»t'     i'^elv     to 

and  a  li-tle  behind  the  facidtv.  ap-  '^'"'^    '"    f''^'"    >i"H-worn    convic- 

peais  to  be  verv  much  ai^ainst   in-  '"*"^  •''"'"'   '''t"  superiority  of  the 

te'<ration  here,  at  State  College  in  ^^'"''"  '  '*^-  ^^  '''^^  !<•''  ^^''l  ''^"  >»'"<l- 

Raleish  rnd  the  Womans  Clolleoe  ^  ''^'  students  and  la«  uhv.  if  thev 

in  (Greensboro.  ""''^   '^   mind   to   it,  could   do   the 

job.   The    job   \s()iil(l   be   liard,    but 

This  i.s  bad.  we  leel.  Imause  in-  Hu-   pavoff  woul   be  oreat. 
te'.iration  would  help  tile  Univers- 
ity, the  state  a!id  the  South.  ^^ 

While  the   rest  of  the  state  and  I    nailKS,  ^^131/ 

the    South     have     |>lo<lded     alon^.;. 

s'destejjpin.ii    the   Supreme   C'ourt's  C^^^    nTi^^l^^^^rf* 

nrvf    dcsej;rey,afion    decision,    it    is  I    Of       I    IdxwT^ 

onlv  here  that  <  >meihini^  has  been 

done  about  i!ie  dei  ision— and  that  T*          ^\         I*        * 

was   <lone    not    bv    the    I'niversity.  |   O    rvwllC|IOri 

but  bv  :\'  federal  lourt. 

.\ic(>idin^   to  a   full-pa^e  ad   in 

ImUr^vaduai.-  Negroes  were  ad-  a    Ralei-"!!    paper.    evanoeHst    Oral 

milted  here  a!t.-  r  the  (t.urt  ruled  Roberts  is  in   the  capitol  ( ity  for 

the  Iniversity  had  to  let  thein  in.  a  six-ni<»lu  stand. 

PrevioiLslv     Negio    graduate    stu-  ..p^.^,.;^   ^.^^^^ .'.            ^,^^.   ^^j^^.,.. 

dents  could  enter  I  NC     if     thev  ti^ement.  "are  free.' 

couldn  t     get     the  education  they  t-i      •          1                 r      1  •          t  • 

„  J    .       ...            .-.   ,-         c  That  s  mighty  nice.  In  this  word 

needed     at     state     institutions  tor  ,                    i  •        •     ,    j- 

Xceroe  ^vhere  everything,  including  ad\icc, 

<()nies  at  a  cost,  it  is  heartening  to 

P»ut  jfie   l^n'xf  sifv     never     has  krfu     that    Oval     Roberts     is    just 

v.elci.r^f'd    \e  ;ro   students.    It   has  plain  giving  prayers  away, 
made  thf  .,e  who  do  get  in  feel  as 

if  rh»  \  are  not  wanted.  It  set  aside  AAA                                    I 

a  .wiiole  section  of  Steele  Dornii-  i\    AAOnODOiX/ 

tory— while  the  rest  of  the  campus  '    *   f  wlV^I  IV^^V/I  y 

w.  s  (lo^vded  into  three-man  rofuns  #^  ■                 11^ 

—for  the  few  Negro  students  wHo  ^l^^>|  1 1  ^4      F\/^^ 

were  enrolled  here.  "^1  I  V^U  I VJ       U  /  t? 

*  *  « 

The   rniversity   has   fought— not  ^TrlA      l^ll^llf^ 

opeiiK.    but    in    emotions — against  ■    ■  i^?      ■    vJ  I  LJ I  V? 

Negro  applitants.     Many     of     the  w, .......    i',,-   ..        11           .1 

",     . '  '.                     .,    .                  ,  Western    I  iiion.    wliuh    (ontrols 

people  in  im|>ortant  I  niversitv  ol-  ,1...  ,1.1       •..            .1 

[..     '              ,. '             .        .              .  the  telegraph  wires  in  this  (ountrv 

lues  are  solidly  against  integration  .,.,1  ,1  ;      ,' .      i            .          .1 

,         ,                  "  ,.           _, ,"        ,,  aii{|  this  state,  has  got  another  rate 

in  the  t  lassrfM>ms.  Ironi  Chame   -  •  ,  ..     .     .    .1        x      »u  f       i- 

„    .           ,,                   ,,.                 ,  in<  lease  within   Noith  Carolina, 
or    Rofiert    Mouse    to    Director    ol 

.Admissions  Roy  Armstrong,  South  I  he    iiu  rease,    atcording    to    re- 

Iluilfling  is  filled  with  p>eople  who  j)orts  yesterday,  will  raise  Western 

do  not  believe  in  desegregation.  I'nirm's    N.    C    income    by    about 

*-ri                    1  •                          11  Si '{1. 000  a  year. 
I  here  is  nothing  wrong  with  the 

fact  the  chaiuellor  and  ,\rmstroiig  But  more  people  are  finding  the 

have  negTitive  feelings  about  inte-  telephone    is    their    (piickest.    best 

gration.  We  respect  their  opinions,  and    most   effitient    frien<l.   and    it 

but   differ  greatly   with   them.   P'or  (osts  far  less. 

the  rni\ersitv.  the  single  remain-  ,..,    1        ,           ,              ,          , 

1    1     r           M     II        I      1  While  telegraph  rates  ha\e  been 

ing  symbol  of  a  really  liberal  edii-  ",. ,'    .                            , 

l-        •      .1  •      .              1'       ,         J  Uonig  up  steadily  in  past  years,  the 
<ation  m  this  state  and  a  h)iuida-  ,    ,          ,            '       ,'    ,       . 
<ost    ol    long-(listaii<e    telephoning 

TL^  f\^Zl.«  T«.»  LJ^^i  '''*^   '**^'^'"   <^"'    to   the   point    where 

ineUaiiy    larneel  people    are    thinking    nothing    of 

..       «.,..,.       ...    ,.        ,  ,/  <l'Hling    New    York,    and    thinking 

The  officia)  student  publication  of  the  ••    ,        ,       ,,•        -•-   1 

Publications  Board  of  the  University  of  '''''    ''"'^'  ''}  ^'"''"^    ^'^^y- 

North   Carolina,   where   it  'h  published  — , 

daily    except    Monday    and    examinatiot  \V'e.stern    Inion    h.vd    better   be- 

*nd  vacation  periods  and  summer  terms  JA'"  thinking  about  its  future:  rate 

Entered  as  second  class  n^^ter  in  th«  incieases.    while    probably    needed 

Oust  office  in  Thapel  Hill,  Vk  C,  undei  \erv  muth,  will  not  bi  ing  it   more 

the  Act  01  March  8.  1870.  ^bscription  business  or  make   it   more  Iriends 

rates^  mailed.  $4  per  year.  $^.50  a  semes-  Rather,  while  ( osts  go  up.  it  would 

ter;  delivered.  $6  a  year,  $3.50  a  semes  i,„  ,,.-,.   ,■  ,.   ,.       ,„,     ..^    , 

.  •>e  AMse   loi    tlie   te!egraj)lis   mono- 

' poly  to  (oiisider  these  things: 

Editor FRED  POWLEDGE  i,-...»„,.                    «     i                   n   j 

taster   seivue.    Radio-controlled 

Managing  Editor  CHARLIE  SLOAN  Western  rnion  (ais.  used  in  some 

i^s  E^t^;                  _  RAY  LINKER  '"7.">P"''t't"    areas,    would    speed 

..  delivery  of  telegrams. 

Business  Manager     .     BILL  BOB  PLEL  ^ 

^ A((uia(v.  Misspelletl  names  and 

Sports^ Editor    LARRY  CHEEK  incorrect    figures   in    telegrams   are 

EDITORIAL    STAFF  —  Woody    Sears,  i'lexi  usable.  Tliey  lose  friends  for 

Frank  Crowther,  Barry  Winston.  David  '''^  <'»ni|)aiiy  faster  than  a  teletype- 

Mundy    George   Pfing.<!t.   Ingrid   Clay,  <ini  ti(k. 

Cortland     Edwards.     Paul     McCauley, 

Bobbi  Smith.  (<onvenieii(  e.     Western      Union 

~— — bureaus  that  dose  at  <)  or  10  in  the 

NEWS    STAFF-Clarke    Jones,    Nancy  evening    arcnt    miu  li    use    to    the 

Hill  Joan  Moore.  Pringle  Pipkin.  Anne  p^,.,„„    ,,.,,„   ,,,3„,                   ,            , 

Drake,  Edith  MacKinnon,  Wally  Kuralt,  '„,.,,    ,,    ,,  ,„ 

Mary  Alys  Voorhees,  Graham  Snyder,  "  '                     '       ' 

Billy  Barnes,  Neil  Bass,  G«ry  Nichols,  l-'riendliness.      If      all      bureaus 

^ge  Bernstein,  Peg  Hurapfcrey,  Phyllis  ^  co„ld     (oiicentrate     as     much     on 

___*,!!l!!^^; friendliness  and  helpfulness  as  the 

Night  Editor   _ •Woody  Sears  <>"<*  in.  Chapel  Hill,  more  business 

Proof  Reader Ben  Taylor  and  good-will  would  result. 


A  COUNTRY  WATCHES  HUNGARY  DIE 


A  Sign  In  Sweden;  A  Lonely  Plea; 
An  Aroused  Population;  A  Gray  Day 


Harry  Kirschner 

Writer  Kirschner.  who  at- 
tended Carolina  last  year,  mar- 
ried a  Swedish  girl  and  went 
to  Sweden  to  live.  Here,  in  a 
special  dispatch  to  The  Dajfy 
Tar  Heel,  he  describes  the 
Hungarian  Revolt — from  a  Swe- 
dish point  of  view. 

GOTHENBURG.  Sweden  —  On 
Gustave  Adolf's  Day,  Nov.  6, 
1956,  most  of  the  p<'ople  who  live 
in  Gothenburg.  Sweden,  went 
down  to  Gustave  .-Vdolfs  Square 
(named  for  the  statue  of  him 
which  points  at  the  spot  where 
he  said  the  new  city  of  Gothen- 
burg was  to  be  built  in  1623)  to 
watch  the  traditional  ceremony 
which   takes  place  annually. 

Gustave  .Adolf  was  the  Swed- 
ish king  who  fought  so  success- 
fully in  German  and  Middle  Eur- 
ope during  the  Thirty  Years  War. 
He  was  known  for  fairness  and 
lionosty.  and 
primarily  for 
straight- 
forwardness. 
Sweden  re- 
n\  e  m  b  c  11  s 
him  for  wha' 
he  did,  and 
for  what  he 
stood  for. 
Eeach  year 
STATUE  previously  it 

, . .  different  has  been  the 

same.  The  same/  school:*  sent 
groups  to  march  in  the  parades. 
The  same  dignitaries  made  the 
speeches.  It  is  a  day  of  remem- 
berance  which  has  been  un- 
changed so  as  to  hold  its  memory. 
This  .vear  in  Gothenburg  it  was 
different.  The  marchers  were 
carrying  the  Hungarian  flag  and 
the  United  Nations  fla^  side  by 
side  in  the  lead. 

When  the  revolt  began  in 
Hungary  on  Oct.  23  Sweden  turn- 
ed and  listened.  The  radio  began 
doubling  and  tripling  its  news- 
broadcasts.  Newspapers  sold  fast- 
er from  the  .stands.  But  through- 
out the  first  and  second  da.vs  of 
the  revolt  there  was  no  indica- 
tion frcm  the  people  of  their 
feelings.  It  was  too  much  like  the 
Poznan  rioting,  and  the  East 
Berlin  rioting  of  three  years  ago. 
GAINING  GROUND 

By  Oct.  26  the  rebellion  seem- 
ed to  be  gaining  ground  and  it 
looked  as  if  it  might  succeed.  The 
first  indication  of  sympathy  that 
I  heard  was  the  story  of  a  medi- 
cal student  who  arrived  on  that 
date  five  minutes  late  for  his 
morning  class.  When  he  entered 
the  room  one  of  his  fellow  stu- 
dents asked  him.  in  a  loud  voice, 
why  he  was  late.  "Why,  it  wa.s 
terrible!"  he  cried.  "Gota  Platsen 
(a  small,  but  very  prominent 
square  at  the  head  of  one  of  the 
mo.st  important  boulevards  of  the 
city)  is  filled  with  tanks  and 
soldiers  shooting  everywhere. 
Bodies  are  lying  all  over  the 
place.  It's  ghastly!" 

Then  he  added  as  an  explana- 
tion, "It  took  me  an  hour  to 
get  through."  All  the  students 
laughed.  He  looked  at  them. 
"Why   do   you    laugh?"   he   de- 


manded. "Why  do  you  laugh? 
ifs  happening  700  miles  away; 
why  couldn't  it  be  happening 
here?" 

Two  days  later  sympathy  for 
Hungary  had  spread  to  such  an 
extent  that  5,000  students  from 
Gothenburg  University  staged  a 
protest  march  against  the  use  of 
Russian  troops  in  Budapest.  They 
carried  banners,  c  ne  of  them 
reading,  "Throw  the  slave  drivers 
out!" 

The  police  at  first  tried  to  hold 
up  the  demonstration  for  fear 
that  it  might  become  disorderly. 
But  they  themselves  showed 
every  sympathy  with  the  students 
and  finally  stepped  off  to  the 
side.  The  students  marched 
through  the  city  to  Gota  Platsen 
( the  small,  but  prominent 
square)  wfiere  they  rallied.  There 
was  no  disorder  at  any  time. 
REBELS  IN 

At  that  time  the  rebels  were 
in  control  of  most  of  western 
Hungary.  But  by  a  few  days  later 
the  Russians  had  sent  in  more 
and  more  armored  divisions 
while  they  made  a  feint  of  with- 
drawing their  troops  from  Buda- 
pest. The  tide  had  turned  and 
the  rebels  were  losing  ground. 

On  Nov.  3  only  one  radio  sta- 
tion remained  in  the  hands  of 
the  Hungarian  revolutionaries. 
While  the  Russians  encircled  the 
station  and  began  to  close  in  for 
the  kill  the  rebels  made  one 
broadcast  for  help.  It  was  first 
in  English  and  then  in  Hungar- 
ian. 

I  heard  it  from  a  tape  record- 
ing Radio  Sweden  madcf  and  re- 
broadcast  to  Gothenburg.  I  have 
never  heard  a  voice  so  c^esporate. 

"This  is  Hungary  calling. 

"This  is  Hungary  calling,"  the 
voice  repeated  quickly  and  force- 
fully, but  with  a  tremorv  of  tens- 


h 


'In  order  to  preventfoVir  an- 
nihilation and  the  annihilation  of 
our  cause,"  the  speakef  contin- 
ued steadily  with  a  good  English 
accent,  "you  must  send  help  to 
us  immediately  in  the  form  of 
parachute  troops  over  the  .  .  . 
•Mountains.  (I  did  not  understand 
the  name.)  The  Soviets  have  sur- 
rounded us  completely  with  over- 
whelming forces  and  are  closing 
in. 

"In  the  event  that  this  will  be 
our  last  broadcast  to  the  res't 
of  the  world  please  repeat  this 
message  again  and  again.  Please 
let   people  know. 

CLOSING  IN 

"The  Soviets  are  closing  in 
on  us,  killing  all  of  us."  The 
voice  gained  in  intensity,  the 
speaker  suddenly  becoming  in- 
creasingly urgent.  The  Soviets 
may  have  been  coming  up  the 
st^rs.  "Help  us  before  it  is  too 
late.  Repeat  this  message  again 
and  again.  For  the  sake  of  God 
help  us  before  it  is  too  late!" 

I  noted  that  on  the  same  day 
that  the  Hungarian  people  plead- 
ed for  airborne  troops  to  be  sent 
to  their  aid  President  Eisenhower" 
told  Premier  Bulganin  that  he 
was  shocked  by  the  vicious  use 
of  Soviet  troops  in  Hungary. 


The  Swedish  people  began  to 
react  strongly.  The  radio  put 
on  a  money-raising  program 
which  lasted  for  five  hours  into 
the  night.  It  consisted  of  two 
men  and  records  which  they 
played.  The  show  collected 
$300,000. 

And  the  Hungarian  flag  was 
borne  in  the  lead  of  the  parade 
on  Gustave  Adolf's  Day.  Behind 
it  banners  were  carried,  some 
calling  for  liberty,  others  for 
free  speech,  and  others  for  a 
free  Hungary.  There  was  no  re- 
action or  even  a  murmur  when 
the  crowd  saw  the  flag  as  it  was 
carried  into  Gustave  Adolph's 
!S<luare. 

The  marchers  stood  in  long 
rows  across  the  steps  of  the  art 
museum.  The  president  of  the 
student  union  made  a  short 
speech  from  a  podium  placed  in 
the  center  of  the  steps.  Then  he 
called  for  one  minute  of  silence 
in  mourning  for  the  Hungarian 
dead  and  in  sympathy  with  their 
cau.se. 

The  four  Swedish  flags  which 
stand  in  front  of  the  mu.seum 
were  lowered  to  half-mast.  The 
crowd  fell  silent,  the  men  re- 
moving their  hats.  Then  the  sil- 
ence was  over  and  the  fla^s  sent 
back  up.  The  Hungarian  and 
United  Nations  flags  were  slowly 
carried  down  the  steps.  The  stu- 
dents carrying  banners  fell  in 
behind  them  and  they  marched 
out   of  the  square. 

The  demonstration  was  over, 
and  the  people  went  off  to  cafe.s 
for  their  pastry  and  coffee,  which 
is  the  traditional  way  of  ending 
the  holiday. 
DIFFERENCE 

It  had  been  in  many  ways 
just  like  the  students'  demon- 
stration of  the  week  before.  But 
the  students'  demonstration  was 
not  sponsored  by  the  city  govern- 
ment of  Gothenburg,  the  second 


„  THE   SIGN 

. .  .  outlined    in    black 

'largest  city  in  Sweden,  and  this 
one  on  Gustave  Adolf's  Day  was. 
Three  days  later,  Nov.  9.  Swed- 
en consented  to  receive  100,000 
refugees.  The  youth  group  of 
the  People's  Party  (not  a  com- 
munistic part.v — rather,  the  lib- 
eral right-wing  party.)  wired  Dag 
Hamm(!rskjold  at  the  UN  saying 
it  "abhored  the  crushing  of  the 
Hungarian  people  by  the  Russ- 
ians, and  had  admiration  and  re- 
spect for  the  dead."  It  petitioned 
the  secretary-general  to  tell  the 
USSR  to  let  a  United  Nations 
force  into  Hungary  to  supervise 
(he  withdrawal  of  the  Soviet 
forces  and  to  hold  free  elections. 


A  national  Swedish  lawyers' 
a.ssociation  and  the  youth  groups 
of  all  four  non-communist  Swed- 
ish democratic  parties  (the  law- 
yers and  students  acting  as  two 
.separate  bodies)  petitioned  the 
King  of  Sweden  to  bring  up  Hun- 
gary in  the  UN  fir  police  force 
action. 

By  Sunday,  Nov.  11.  the  news 
coming  from  Hungary  had  stop- 
ped for  the  most  part.  But  it 
was  clear  that  the  Russians 
were  in  terrible  control.  For 
all  the  pleading  and  hoping, 
and  all  the  petitions  to  the  UN, 
nothing  was  being  done  and 
nothing  would  be  done. 

The  free  world  was  concentrat- 
ing on  the  Suez,  and  when  it  was 
not  doing  that,  if  ever,  it  was 
following  the  1938  Nazism  era 
policy  of  shutting  its  eyes  and 
sitting  on  its  hands. 

Meanw^hile,  the  Hungarians 
were  being  liquidated  for  doing 
what  orators  in  the  United 
States  had  hoped  and  prayed  and 
prophesied  that  they  would  do 
for  the  last  eight  years.  But. 
President  Eisenhower  was  honest 
and  forthright  in  his  election 
campaign:  we  Oc  have  peace  and 
prosperity — in  the  United  States. 
I  went  for  a  walk  on  that  Sun- 
day. The  day  was  bleak  and  cold, 
with  darkness  coming  on  quickly 
at  4  p.m.,  the  way  it  does  in  No- 
vember near  the  60th  parallel. 
Over  at  Slottsskogen  Park  some- 
one had  put  up  posters.  I  saw 
the  one  on  the  lamp  post  first. 

It  was  of  white  paper  with*  a 
black  border  and  it  had  the  word, 
Budapest,  written  across  it  in 
black.  Then  I  saw  bigger  ones 
on  the  trees,  white  with  black 
borders  and  Ungern  (Hungary) 
in  black.  There  were  posters  on 
every  lamppost,  and  almost  all 
of  the  trees. 

1  looked  at  the  word,  Buda- 
pest. I  remembered  the  way  we 
stacked  the  dead  in  Korea — one 
on  top  of  the  other,  a  pile  made 
up  of  nothing  that  minutes  and 
hours  before  had  been  each  one 
a  being  possessed  by  the  price- 
lessness  of  being  alive  and  hop- 
ing. Then  I  looked  at  the  poster 
again.  Even  the  right  to  sadness 
was  gone. 

It  was  too  terrible  to  be  sad 
about.    Budapest    was    nothing. 
Nothing  that  you  could  grieve 
for.'    It    was    as    the    bodies    in 
Korea,  a  thjng  only  lately  alive, 
full  of  hope  and  fighting.  Now 
there  was  nothing,  only  a  bleak 
and  barren   rememberance. 
The    day    was   ending    as    if   it 
had  been  staged  as  a  background 
for   the   posters   and  the   mourn- 
ing.   It   was   very   cold   and   th^ 
light   was   fading   from   the   sky. 
The  sky  was  dull  gray  and  heav- 
ily overcast,  a  bleak,  cold  winter 
sky.  As  the  darkness  came  on  no 
shadows  formed;  no  contrasts  of 
light  and   dark,   warm   and   cold 
stretched   across    the    lawns   and 
walks. 

Only  one  dull  gray  color  hung 
everywhere,  fading  as  the  day  re- 
ceded, but  unchanging  in  its 
grayness.  There  was  no  light,  no 
warmth  to  be  found.  It  had  died: 
and  all  was  turning  to  black- 
ness. 


~r  T  -7 


Pogo 


By  Walt  Kelly 


IN  iVg  680-yARP    /  4i.ffP6«?|^ 

PA6H-'ANPTH6N      \    JUMf? 
Wgtl^MAVE  OUSCACe. 


"■  I'M  K>P\N'  /  ^xreif^'POiiHQ  ^HCT 
Mlt  IN        V  7 


Li'l  Abn«r 


By  Al  Capp 


THE   SQUARE 

.  it  u'os  not  calm 


On  Religion: 
Another  Side 


Ben  Taylor 


To  me — ^God  Ls  love.  Love  of  God  impels  work 
for  Him. 

To  me — there  is  such  a  thing  as  religion.  Religion 
is  a  definite  system  of  faith.  It  is  based  upon  a  long- 
ing and  hope  for  love  which  can  be  fulfilled  only  by 
an  invisible  spirit — God.  It  is  a  soul-directed  mani- 
festation. 

To  me — the  living  soul  is  a  physical  body  into 
which  has  been  breathed  the  breath  of  life.  This 
animated  principle  is  everlasting. 

To  me — Jesus  Christ  lives  in  the  hearts  of 
Christians  today  as  vividly  as  He  lived  on  earth  2,- 
000  years  ago.  Jesus  Christ,  the  Holy  Trinity,  An- 
gels,, etc.,  are  as  real  to  me  today  as  before;  as 
real  to  Christians  as  cynicism  is  to  Cortland  Ed- 
wards. 
THE  BIBLE 

To  me— The  Bible  is  the  book  of  God.  It  is  the 
God-inspired  book  of  law,  prophecy,  comfort,  love 
and  hope.  It  serves  as  reassurance  for  the  strong 
and  as  a  strengthener  of  the  weak. 

To  me — In  our  mortal  interpretation  of  a  vir- 
gin— one  who  has  not  had  sexual  intercourse — Mary 
is  a  virgin  ....  "for  that  which  is  conceived  in  her 
is  of  the  Holy  Ghost"— Matthew  1:20.  She  is  highly 
revered,  but  no  Christian  sect  worships  her  in  the 
same  plane  as  God  or  Jesus  Christ. 

To  me — Heaven  and  hell  exist.  Heaven  is  the 
dwelling  place  of  diety.  angels  and  souls  of  the  re- 
deemed; a  type  of  superimposed  firmament  created 
by  God.  Hell  is  the  place  of  eternal  punishment,  the 
antithesis  of  heaven. 

To   me — The  church  is  not  a   "prostitution"   of 
Christ's  teachings;  but  an  outlet  for  those  teachings. 
It  is  a  brotherhood  or  family. 
SCIENCE 

To  me — Science  is  not  "doing  away  with  God." 
It  is  seeking  to  correlate  scientific  fact  with  re- 
ligious concepts  to  produce  a  more  easily  under- 
stood system  of  beliefs  in  God. 

To  me — There  is  one  God — The  Lord. 
For  me,  materialism  cannot  be  a  faith  or  a 
religion.  It  deals  with  mortal  properties,  com- 
pletely shunning  the  poss|ble  existence  or  worth 
of  any  superior  being  or  spirts.  Because  of  this  it 
is  a  purposely  created  state,  not  a  faith. 
FAR  SUPERIOR 

My  religion  is  based  upon  my  belief  that  there 
is  one  far  superior  to  that  which  I  aspire  or  will 
ever  attain.  That  one  is  God — the  Lord  Jesus  Christ, 
son  of  God,  Father  of  men.  If  believing  in  Him  and 
His  omnipotence  is  foolhardy,  selfish,  unrealistic, 
and  ignorant,  then  I'll  die  a  foolhardy,  selfish,  un- 
realistic and  ignorant  man.  But  I'll  die  knowing 
that  111  spend  eternity  in  peace. 

The  Carolina  Spirit 
36  Years  In  The  Past 

Editor  Thomas  Wolfe 

///   riic  i()2o   Tfii  Het'l 

The  rapid  expansion  of  the  student  enrollment 
brings  out  another  problem  besides  the  housing 
proposition.  , 

Certain  critics  of  University  growth  are  saying 
that  the  University  will  gradually  get  to  the  size 
where  the  unity  of  purpose  and  of  spirit  that  has 
thus  far  given  the  campus  its  distinctiveness  will 
disappear.  We  call  it  the  Carolina  Spirit. 

Is  this  criticism  justified?  Can  the  University 
maintain  itself  through  growth?  That  Ls  the  present 
problem. 

The  analysis  shows  us  that  there  is  at  the  very 
beginning  a  wide  divergence  between  the  Universi- 
ty and  universities  that  have  become  places.  That 
difference  is  age. 

But  those  younger  universities  grew  up  in  an 
extremely  short  time.  Tliey  have  conparatively  no 
tradition  to  draw  from.  We  have. 

Now  tradition  is  an  excellent  thing,  even  if 
VI'  are  inclined  to  disregard  it  in  these  swift  new 
times.  It  is  an  excellent  thing  when  we  allow  it 
to  .i^uide  us  and  not  to  bind  us.  For  instance,  a  man 
is  not  made  great  by  the  knowledge  that  his  dorm- 
ilfiry  room  was  once  occupied  by  a  man  who  later 
became  governor  of  the  state,  or  secretary  of  the 
navy,  but  he's  certainly  going  to  be  bolstered  up  by 
this  knowledge. 

It's  much  the  same  idea  that's  to  be  found  in 
the  great  war  poem,  "In  Flanders  Fields."  'Be  ours 
the  torch  to  hold  it  high,"  and  we  feel  that  we  can- 
not break  faith  with  those  who  have  been  here  be- 
fore us.  And  each  one  of  those  great  old  boys  who 
have  lived  here  at  some  time  during  the  past  cen- 
tury and  a  quarter  have  left  something  of  their 
personality  behind  them 


Peg 
window.  Nl 
were  Peg'^ 

Free  Bri< 
To  Be  G\\ 

Bridge  les 
by     Grahai 
Board  in  i\\i 
day  from  4J 

Instructed 
sous  are  oj: 
in  learning 
lessons  will 
for  a   perior 


{    • 


IV 


Drop  by  t^ 
show   you 
tions  can 
wardrobe. 
Come  in  e 
alterationsJ 


Th( 

135'^ 


DA 


.ACR^ 

1.  Auarl 
6.  Ur.adI 
iO.  Flov.« 
n.  River  I 
13  On  lif 
14.Co\va| 
IS.  Netlil 

fabnci 
16  Earii 
IT  Belgii 

com  ml 
;3.  Circulf 
22  SimiaJ 
25  Cea.'sel 

(Nauf 
::6  Gate^^| 

<  Jap 
28.  Scold  I 

29  Come[ 
insiilel 

31 .  Brag 

32  Bay 
windc 

35  Dull  pi 

39  Bnghf 
colorel 

40.  Chamf 

41.  Straif 
(colled 

42.  Sleep! 

43.  Part  ol 
for  ox/ 

44  Put  inj 
symbol 

DO\M 

1.  Child', 
carriaf 

2  Methc 
leamnl 

4  Li?ht 
breezes 

5  Con^.paJ 
point  (( 


t  28,  1956 


WibfJiSDAY.  NOVEMBER  28,   1956 


THE  &AILY  TAft  Httt 


rAGI   THREE 


y 


>els  work 

Religion 
)n  a  long- 
only  by 
Ited  mani- 

Ibody  into 
life.  This 

hearts  of 

earth  2,- 

finity,  An- 

jefore;   as 

hland  Ed- 


it i<  the 
fiort.  love 
strong 

|r>f  a  vir- 
rse — Mary 

^ed  in  her 

is  highly 

ler  in  the 

\en  is  the 
I  of  the  re- 
it  created 
jment.  the 

tution"  of 
teachings. 


nth  God." 

with    re- 

[ily  under- 


lith  or  a 
les,  eom- 
lor  worth 
lof  this  it 


that  there 
re  or  will 
^us  Christ, 
Him  and 
Unrealistic, 
jlfish,  un- 
knowing 


if 

St 


Enrollment 
housing 

ire  saying 
the  size 
that  has 

;nes3  will 

University 
»e  present 

the  very 

Universi- 

ices.  That 

up  in  an 
itively   no 

even  if 
Iswift  new 
allow  it 
Ice.  a  man 
his  dorm- 
Iwho  later 
|ry  of  the 
[red  up  by 

found  in 
'•Be  ours 

kt  we  can- 
here  be- 

[boys  who 

past  cen- 

of   their 


Local  Man  Makes 
Jewelry  By  Hand 


Peg  and  Doris  look  over  son>e  of  the  jewelry  in  Hopkins'  studio 
window.  Notice  the  spiral-bangle  earrings  in  th^  foreground.  They 
were  Peg's  Favorites. 


Free  Bridge  Lessons 
To  Be  Given  By  GMAB 

Bridge  lessons  are  l>eing  offered 
by  Graham  Memorial  Activities 
Board  in  the  Rendezvous  Room  to- 
day  from   4:38-6:30  p.m.. 

Instructed  by  Mrs.  Wade,  the  les- 
.sons  are  open  to  anyone  interested 
in  learning  bridge.  The  series  ol 
lessons  will  be  taught  free  of, charge 
for  a  period  of  weeks. 


ALTER  YOUR 
CLOTHES 

to  the 

IVY  LOOK 

Drop  by  today  and  let   us 
show   you    what   proper   altera- 
tions can  do  for  your  outdated 
wardrobe. 

Come  in  early  for  your  holiday 
•Iterations. 


PETE 
The  Tailor 


Atlceson  Lost  To  Skins 
For  Renriainder  Of  Year 

WASHINGTON  (/P^The  Wash- 
ington Redskins  suffered  a  blow 
in  their  comeback  campaign 
yesterday  with  the  announce- 
ment that  fullback  Dale  Atkeson 
needs  a  leg  operation  and  will 
be  lost  for  the  season. 

Atkeson  is  expected  to  under- 
go the  operation  tomorrow  on  a 
knee  injured  while  the  'Skins 
were  toppling  the  Chicago  Cards 
on  Oct.  28.  The  212-pounder 
from  Lomita,  Calif,  has  been 
idle  ever  since.  Coach  Joe  Ku- 
harich  switched  Leo  Elter  from 
halfback  to  full  and  also  has 
used  field  goal  artist  Sam  Baker 
in  Atkeson's  spot. 


CLASSIFIEDS 


FOR  SALE:  1949  FORD-8.  SEAT 
covers,  radio,  heater,  and  new 
battery.  Price  $195.00.  See  at 
101  Mason  Farm  Rd.  anytime  or 
phone  8-0113. 

A  HIGH  SCHOOL  BOY  GOING 
away  to  school  wants  to  buy  an 
overcoat,  size  40  Long.  Anyone 
interested  call  Chris  Fink,  2971. 


By  WOODY  SEARS 
And   PEG  HUMPHREY 

A  new  art  form  has  come  to 
Chapel  Hill,  and  true  to  tradition, 
:t  is  something  unique.  The  man 
who  has  made  this  contribution  to 
-\orth  Carolina's  center  of  culture 
is  Charles  Hopkins,  a  pleasant  fel- 
law  who  is  the  man-next-door  type, 
lather  than  the  layman's  conception 
of  the  artist.  He  doesn't  wear  a 
beard  or  dress  in  deliberately  slop- 
py clothes.  One  finds,  instead,  an 
immaculately  neat  man  with  a 
trim  mou.stache  and  a  warm  smile. 

A  former  resident  of  Graham, 
Mr.  Hopkins  lived  there  before 
World  War  II  and  for  a  short  while 
afterward  while  he  was  working 
With  the  North  Carolina  State  Board 
ot  Health  as  the  Chatham  County 
♦  Sanitarian. 

Mr.  Hopkins  is  engaged  in  je'Wlery 
making,  but  not  in  the  everyday 
<ense  of  the  work.  He  not  only 
makes  jewelry,  but  he  designs  it 
as  well,  incorporating  creative  abi- 
lity and  skill  into  his  creations.  He 
i"-  a  master  craftsman  in  a  little- 
known  and  httle-practiced  art. 

Charles  Hopkins  has  not  always 
been  a  jewelry  maker.  In  fact,  it 
is  something  that  he  stumbled  on- 
to quite  by  accident  when  he  was 
in  ihe  Maritime  Service  in  World 
War  II. 

"A  lot  of  the  lx>ys  had  been  using 
scrap  aluminum  to  make  ash  trays 
and  watchbands  and  other  such 
trinkets,  so  I  decided  to  try,"  he 
.said.  Soon  he  was  using  silver 
<H)ins  and  bits  of  coral  in  his  work. 
His  only  tools  at  that  time  were 
a  small  hammer  and  a  file. 

'Tliis  new  hobby  was  a  god- send," 
he  said.  "Once  we  were  laid  over 
in  the  lagoon  at  Eniweitok  for  73 
days,  and  if  I  hadn't  had  some- 
thing to  occupy  my  mind  and  my 
hands  1  would  have  gone  complete- 
ly crazy." 

About  a  year  and  a  half  later, 
Hopkins  was  transferred  to  the 
European  Theatre.  He  had  several 
days  of  shore  leave  before  he  was 
to  lK>ard  his  new  ship,  and  he 
spent  these  wandering  around  New 
York.  Walking  down  Eighth  Street 
in  Greenwich  Village,  he  came 
across  the  shop  of  the  jewelry 
designer  Sam  Kramer,  who  is  in- 
ternationally famous  for  his  ec- 
centric designs.  Now.  twelve  years 
later,  Hopkins  laughs  about  that 
visit.  "I  was  full  of  questions  about 
everything,"  he  said,  "and  Sam 
finally  gave  me  the  name  of  a  book 
to  read  and  told  me  where  I  could 
buy  materials.  So  I  got  the  book 
and  $100  worth  of  tools  and  went  to 
work  almost  as  soon  as  I  got  on 
board. 

"There  I  was,  in  the  middle  of 
the  North  Atlantic,  in  a  rolling  Li- 
berty ship,  trying  to  solder  silver 
with  an  alcohol  torch.  Every  time 
the  solder  started  to  melt  the  torch 
would  go  out  or  the  ship  would  list 
and  spill  everything  off  the  table." 

Aside  from  the  fact  that  Hopkins 
has  always  been  handy  with  tools, 
t.here  is  nothing  in  his  background 
that  would  have  given  any  indi<?ation 
of  his  newly  discovered  ability.  At 
the  end  of  the  war  he  returned  to 
his  job  with  the  N.  C.  State  Board 
of  Health,  as  the  Chathtam  County 
Sanitarian. 

While  he  was  living  in  Graham 
he  continued  to  work  at  his  hobby 
iind    study    all    material    he    could 


DAILY    CROSSWORD 


ACROSS 

1.  Award 
6.  Unadorned 

10.  Flowers 

11.  River  (It  ) 
13  On  tiptoe 
14.  Cowardly 

15  Netlike 
fabric 

16  Ear  shells 
17.  Belgium 

commune 
:d.  Circulating 
22  Simian 

25  Cea.se 
(Naut.) 

26  Gateway 
(Jap  ) 

28.  Scold 

persistently 
29  Come  back 

inside 

31.  Brag 

32.  Bay 
windows 

35.  Dull  pain 

39.  Brightly- 
colored  bird 

40.  Chamber 

41.  Straight 
(coiloq.) 

42.  Steep 

43.  Part  of  yoke 
for  oxen 

44.  Put  into  • 
symlx)ls 

DOWN 

1.  Child's 

carriage 
2  Method  of 

learning 
3.  Egyptian 

poddess 

4  Light 
breezes 

5  Compass 
point  (abbr.) 


6.  Hair  clasps 

7.  A  U.  S. 
President 

8.  Tear  apart 

9.  German 
river 

12.  Half  ems 
14.  Maize 

18.  Science 
of  rocks 

19.  Metal 
container 

20.  Pulpy 
fruit 

21.  Tattered 
cloth 

22.  Skill 

23.  Jumbled 
type 


24.  God- 
dess 
of 

heaUng 
(Norse) 

27.  Prov- 
ince 
(Can.) 

30.  Orient 

31.  Capital 
(Switz.) 

32.  Goddess 
of 

harvests 
(It.) 

33.  Knocks 

34.  Arab 
kingdom 

36  Frigid 


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37.  Cavity 

38.  Fresh-water 
tortoise 

42.  House  of 
Commons     - 
(abbr. ) 


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rind  on  the  subject  of  gemology. 
It  was  in  this  manner  that  he  met 
the  girl  be  was  later  to  marry. 
Since  he  was  doing  so  much  read- 
ing, he  eventually  fot  to  know  tlie 
librarian  at  the  May  Memorial  Li- 
brary in  Burlington  v«7  well.  And 
not  too  much  later.  Miss  Mary  Cut- 
Ut  became  his  wife. 

Mr.  Hopkins  stayed  with  the 
Board  of  Health  until  1951,  when 
be  resigned  to  return  to  school 
at  UNC.  He  earned  a  degree  in 
.Anthropolcgj',  folk>wing  that  with 
a  degree  in  Librarj'  Science,  and 
for  two  years  he  was  on  the  staff 
ot  the  Duke  Library. 

He  has  spent  his  past  few  sum- 
mers at  art  schools  in  different^ 
parts  of  the  country.  Two  of  these 
schools  are  the  famous  Cranbrook  ' 
Academy  of  Art  in  Bloomfie4d 
Hills,  Mich.,  and  the  California 
College  of  Arts  and  Crafts  in  Oak- 
land. He  spent  this  past  sumnter 
at  the  latter,  where  be  studied 
under  Margaret  de  Patta  and  Ro- 
bert Winston. 

Aside  from  making  unusual  je- 
welry, Hopkins  has  two  special  side- 
lines. One  is  doing  jewelry  repciir 
work  that  most  jewelers  won't 
touch,  and  the  other  is  creating 
designs  especially  for  a  customer's 
particular   needs  or  desires. 

Hopkins  says  the  pieces  he  makes 
are  not  costume  jewelry.  "I  use 
only  karat  golds  and  sterling  silver 
in  my  \\x>rk.  .\nd  all  the  stcmes  I 
use  are  genuine  gems.  This  is  not 
to  keep  the  price  up,"  he  said,  "but 
to  insure  the  permanence  of  the 
<?ork.  These  metals  are  more  easily 
worked  and  are  more  durable," 

Hopkins'  Franklin  St.  studio  has 
the  appearance  of  luxury  and  good 
taste,  but  lacks  the  impersonal, 
<-ommercial  atr  of  most  jewelry 
shops.  His  display  includes  designs 
for  every  taste,  ranging  from  dangl- 
ing earrings  for  the  debutante  to 
chaste  silver  cuff  links  for  men. 
Each  piece  is  distinctive  and  bears 
tlie'mark  of  superb  craftsmanship. 

The  polished,  uncluttered  trend 
in  fashion  which  becomes  more  evi- 
dent each  season  calls  for  that  cer- 
tain spark  which  jewelry  by  Hop* 
kins  provides.  A  dark  dress  can  be 
effectively  dramatized  with  a  three- 
dimensional  pin,  and  there  are 
smaller,  but  less  daring  earrings 
and  pins  that  are  sure  to  make  fine 
conversational  pieces. 

For  men,  Hopkins  has  fashioned 
handsome  cufflinks  in  silver  and 
gold,  some  with  stones,  some  with- 
out, some  massively  masculine,  and 
seme  that  add  that  extra  touch  to 
the   charcoal   ensemble. 

Charles  Hopkins  is  one  of  the 
lucky  few  who  have  been  able  to 
develop  a  fascinating  hail>by  into  a 
'  ull-time  job.  Now,  twelve  years 
;  after  he  t>egan  to  make  jewelry,  he 
has  "arrived"  as  an  artist  In  his 
own  right. 


{ComXi-KVLed  from  Pagt  I) 
ister  on  Jan.  31,  Central  Records 
reported. 

In  Public  Health,  Nursing  and 
Dental  Hygiene.  Law,  Libraty  Sci- 
ence, Medicine  and  Dentistry,  stu- 
dents should  follow  instructions 
which  are  either  posted  on  bulle- 
tin boards,  announced  by  their 
aeans  or  announced  in  classes. 
Journalism  preregistration  will 
take  place  Dec.  8  through  Dec.  16. 

In  Pharmacy,  prer^istration 
dates  are  as  follows:  first  and 'sec- 
ond year  students — ^Dec.  5;  third 
pnd  foiuth  year  students — Dec.  6: 
graduate  students — Dec.  7. 


Concert  Band  Plans 
Rehearsal  Tomorrow 

Students  interested  in  playing  in 
the  University  Concert  Band  have 
been  asked  to  attend  the  band's 
first  rehearsal  tomorrow  at  4:30 
p.m.  in  Hill  Hall. 

Interested  students  not  able  to 
attend  the  rehearsal  may  contact 
Herbert  Fred  at  Hill  Hall  to  ar- 
range for  an  audition. 


PRE-LEGAL  EDUCATION  TALKS 

Mr.  Malcolm  D,  Talbott,  Chair- 
man of  the  Assn.  of  American  Law 
Schools'  Committee  on  Pre-Legal 
Education,  and  Professor  of  Law 
at  Rutgers  University,  will  be  on 
campus  Friday  ai  3:45  p.m.  and  for 
a  short  while  Sfterward.  Interested 
students  who  wish  to  discuss  pro- 
blems of  pre-legal  education  have 
been  asked  to  meet  with  Mr.  Tal- 
bott in  the  basement  of  Carroll 
Hall,  Room  2. 
HOBBY  NIGHT 

"Hobby  Night",  presented  by  the 
Assn.  for  Aging  and  Community  Re^- 
lationships,  will  be  held  tomorrow 
at  7:30  p.m.  in  the  Assembly  Room 
of  the  Louis  R.  Wilson  Library. 
The  program  will  be  introduced  by 
Mr.  Raymond  Kaighn,  with  several 
hobby  subjects  to  be  discussed  by 
members  of  the  Assn.  Everyone  in- 
terested in  hobbies  has  been  asked 
to  attend. 
KOREAN  VETERANS 

All  Korean  veterans  under  Pub- 
lic Law  550  should  submit  their 
certification  of  training  for  the 
month  of  November  to  315  South 
Building  by  Nov.  30. 
CLOTHES  FOR  HUNGARY  DRIVE 

The  clothing  drive  sponsored  by 
the  American  Friends  Service  Com- 


mittee and  the  Chapel  Hill  Com- 
munity Church,  destined  for  Hun- 
garian relief,  has  been  extended 
to  last  through  Dec.  1.  Donated 
clothing  should  l  be  delivered  in 
boxes  to  the  old  Institute  of  Gov- 
ernment Building  on  E^st  Frank- 
lin St.  between  8:30  a.m.  and  5:30 
p.m.  Tor  the  duration  of  the  drive. 
Checks  shoidd  be  made  out  to  the 
iVmerican  Friends  Service  Com- 
mittee and  mailed  to  the  Chapel 
Hill  Community  Church,  Box  2, 
Chapel  Hill. 
WUNC-TV 

Folowing  is  a  listing  of  programs 
today  on  the  University's  Television 
Station,  Channel  4. 
12:45     Music 

1:00    Today  on  the  Farm 

1:30    Play  Period 

2:00    Inland  Voyage 

5:45     Music 

6:00    Draw  Me  A  Story 

6:15    Sports  Clinic 

6:30     News 

6:45    Sports 

7:00    Industrial   Artisan 

7:30    College  Concert 

8:00    Rembrandt  Immortal 

8:30    Living  Together 

9:00    Mental  Gymnastics 

9:30    Agriculture 
10:00    Final  Edition 


Ch»rl««  Hopkins  Shows  Carolina  co-eds  Peg  Humphrey  and 
Doris  Adkins  a  bracelet  he  made  out  of  sterling  silver.  Both  girls 
•re  wearing  jewelry  he  made.  (All  Photos  by  Woody  Sears) 

Student    Holidays 


(Continued  from  page  1.) 

home,  a  dozen  or  so  ZBTs  headed 
up  to  the  big  city,  where  they  re- 
ported a  "terrific  time"  nightclub- 
'oing  and  seeing  the  sights  around 
the  town. 

MEANWHILE,  back  at  the  Hill, 
fraternity  houses  were  opened  up 
for  brothers,  pledges,  their  dates 
and  alumni  who  had  climbed  the 
hills  to  see  the  annual  Duke-Caro- 
lina football  clash. 

The  Chi  Psis  were  having  a  par- 
ty, as  were  th©  Phi  Kaps,  and 
irom  reports  it  seems  it  was  hard 
to  tell  who  was  supposed  to  be 
where,  as  there  were  as  many  Phi 
Kaps  at  the  Chi  Psi  Lodge  as  there 
were  at  the  Phi  Kap  House  and 
vice  versa. 


I  Others  entertaining  after  the 
j  game  were  the  Kappa  Psis,  the 
I  DUs,  Sigma  Nus  and  Theta  Chis. 

j  AND  NOW  that  we're  on  the 
I  subject  of  parties  around  vacation 
j  time,   we   wouldn't   want   to  omit 

two  parties  just  prior  to  the  mass 

exodus  Wednesday. 
To  celebrate  going  home  for  the 

holidays,    the    Sigma    Nus    had    a 

party  at  Hoenig's   Lake   with  the 

Pi  Phis. 

And  the  SFEs  had  a  hamburger 
supper  Monday  night  with  the 
Alpha  Gams. 

Also,  just  prior  to  their  trip  to 
Florida,  the  Lambda  Chis  had 
their  Thanksgiving  dinner  Tues- 
day night.  After  the  dinner,  which 


was  held  at  the  house,  an  informal 
party  erded  the  evening. 

ENGAGEMENTS  .  .  .  SPE  Rich- 
ard Pierce  to  Miss  Dottie  Gattis  of 
Raleigh  .  .  .  DU  President  Bob 
Hice  to  Mi^  Thelma  Hargett  of 
Charlotte.  .  .  .  Former  Sigma  Nu 
Bob  Powell  to  Pi  Phi  Sally  Ship- 
ley. .  .  .  ZBT  Hirsh  Bressler  to 
Miss  Barbara  May  of  Atlanta.  .  .  . 
Alpha  Gam  Sue  Brock  Jones  to 
former  N.  C.  State  SPE  Dave  Mill- 
er of  Tarboro,  ...  KA  Pat  Mc- 
Cormick  to  ADPi  Barbara  West 
.  ,  .  Former  Pika  John  Dickson  to' 
Tri-Delt  Donna  Hostettler. 

MARRIAGES  .  .  .  ADPi  Pat  How- 
ard and  Phi  Gam  Ernie  Haste  were 
married  Thanksgiving  Day  in  High 
Point.  Several  of  her  ADPi  sisters 
were  up*  for  the  rites  and  her 
romnmate,  Mary  Jo  Douglass 
served  as  maid  of  honor. 


Large  Grant  Given 
I    By  Science  Foundation 

I      A   grant    of    $267,600    from   the 

;  National  Science  Foundation  for  a 

'  special    training    course    for    high 

i  school    science    and    mathematics 

'  teachers  was  announced  yesterday 

i  by    President    William    C.    Friday 

1  and  Chancellor  T.oheri  B.  House. 

The  Institute  of  Natural  Sciences 

at  UNC  will  sponsor  an   institute 

designed  to  help  50  or  more  high 

school    science    and     mathematics 

teachers  improve  their  knowledge 

of  science  subject  matters. 

■nie  National  Science  Foundation 
revealed  last  Thursday  that  more 
than  $4,000,000  is  being  granted  to 
16  institutions  to  train  approxi- 
mately 750  teachers  next  year. 


ordinary 


means 


charles  Hopkins  of  chapel  hill 

designer/craftsman 

over  Sutton's  ph  92686 


INT£RVIEWS  FOR 

CAREERS  WITH 

HERCULES 

If  you  will  have  a  major  in: 

CHEMISTRY 

a  Hercules  representative 
wili^  be  on  the  campus  to 
discuss  with  3rou  employ- 
ment possibilities  in: 

SALES  or  PRODUCTION 

(A  candidate  for  any  degree 
which  includes  one  year  of 
organic  chemistry  also  will 
be  considered.) 

Arrangement*  for  interview's 
should  be  made  through 
your  placement  ofiice. 

HEKCULES  POWDEK.   COMP^KfY 

Wilmington  99,  UrL 

Nov.  29 


Christmas  Gifts 
For  Tiny  People 

Clorti  Books  —  Our  set  will  stand 
a  powerful  lot  of  gumming,  and 
most  will  survive  a  dip  in  the 
washing  machine  and  come  out 
delectable  as  new!  15  titles  to 
tempt  you.  Priced  from  50c  to 
$1.50. 

Gone  Is  My  Goose  —  A  very  lovely 
little  book  by  Chapel  Hill's  own 
Dorothy  Koch.  Simple  enough  for 
the  first  grader  to  read  to  baby. 

S2.25 
So*  The  Circus  —  by  H.  A.  Rey. 
Children  love  Rey's  'peek-^-boo 
books"  antl  this  one  is  especially 
appealing.  $1.00 

Baby  Animals  —  Thick  paper  and 
warm  colorful  pictures  make  this 
Gold^Q  book  a  year-round  favorite 
with  tiny  folk.  $1.00 

Harold's  Fairy  Tale  —  by  Crockett 
Johnson.  The  director  of  Mr. 
CMalley  writes  an  ingenious  tale 
of  a  small  boy  and  a  crayon 
Grown-ups  like  it  too.  $1.50 

A  Hole  Is  to  Dig  —  by  Ruth  Krauss 
This  is  not  the  newest  of  Miss 
Krauss"  books,  but  we  find  that  our 
very  small  customers  love  it  m'ost 
of  aU..  $1.S0 

Beatrix  Potter  Books  —  We  have 
most  of  them,  from  Peter  Rabbjt 
on  up,  and  they're  heart-warming! 
95c  each 


THE  INTIMATE 

BOOKSHOP 

205    E.    Franklin   St. 

Open  Till  10  P.M. 

Stop  everything^start  laughing! 


IF  YOU'VE  GOT  a  Lucky,  you've  got  it  made. 
That's  'cause  you  just  can't  beat  a  Lucky  for 
taste.  Luckies  are  made  of  fine  tobacco— light, 
riatiu-ally  good-tasting  tobacco  that's  TOASTED 
to  taste  even  better.  In  fact,  you'll  say  Luckies 
are  the  best- tasting  cigarette  you  ever  smoked. 
What  more  could  you  want?  Oh,  the  answer  to 
the  Stickler!  If  you're  in  a  light  plight,  what  you 
need  is  a  Match,  Natch! 

"ITS  TOASTED" 

to  taste  better! 

la  i.J'MiWi.MAMMWJ 


^    STICKIEI  MAKE  $2$ 

St ieklere  are  simple  riddles  with  two-word  rhyming  answem. 
Both  words  must  have  the  same  number  of  syllables.  (No 
drawings,  please!)  They're  ao  easy,  you  can  think  of  dozens 
in  seconds.  We'll  shell  out  $25  for  every  stickier  we  use— and 
for  hundreds  more  that  never  see  print.  So  send  stacks  of  'em 
with  your  name,  address,  college  and  claai  to  Happy-Joe- 
Lucky,  Box  67.\,  Mount  VernOn,  N.  Y. 

Luckies  Taste  Better 

CLEANER,    FRESHER,    SMOOTHER   I 


•a.T.C«.      rmoovct  ow  orw  t,^nnt^cgart  Jwtieeo-^^'^jyutnf^ 


AMtaiCA'S    LSAOtHO    UMIVItACTV%»»   OF    CZOASSTTa* 


^  •  .  i.  -.  .' 


PAGE   POUR 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


WEDNESDAY,  NOVEMBER   28,  195^ 


J 


UNC  Swimmers  Look 
For  Banner  Season 


By  STEWART  BIRO 

In  seventeen  years  of  colle- 
giate competition.  North  Caro- 
lina has  never  lacked  for  a  win- 
ning swimming  team.  This  year 
should  prove  no  exception. 

Ralph  Casey,  in  his  sixth  year 
as  head  mentor,  has  assembled 
possibly  the  strongest  Tar  Heel 
squad  yet.  Thirteen  of  17  letter- 
men  return  from  last  year  and 
together  with  eight  top-flight 
sophomores,  will  attempt  to  add 
to  the  17-year  record  of  130  dual 
meet  victories  in  147  outings. 

In  the  sprints,  graduated  Dick 
Baker  will  be  missed,  but  Jun- 
iors Bill  Roth.  Walt  Rose.  Kelly 
Maness,  and  Bill  Zickgrat  from 
a  strong  quartet.  Roth.  Rose,  and 
Zickgrat  were  members  of  Car- 
olina's championship  400  yard 
relay  team  which  set  a  new  con- 
ference record  last  season. 

Juniors  Milt  Veazey  and  Jim 
Atwater  coupled  with  sopho- 
mores Jeff  Zwicker  and  Tony 
Schiffman,  will  carry  the  load 
in  the  gruelling  220  and  440 
yard  freestyle  events.  Atwater 
placed  in  the  conference  meet 
last  year,  while  Zwicker  and 
Schiffman  were  winning  fresli- 
man  laurels. 

Team  captain  and  senior  all- 
American  Charlie  Krepp  leads 
the  backstroke  contingent,  fol- 
lowed by  sophmoores  Brent 
Nash  and  Bill  Butler.  Krepp  is 
defending  conference  title  and 
record  holder  in  the  100  and 
200  yard  events. 

Dick  Goad.  Junior  from  Gib- 
son ville.  N.  C..  along  with  Soph- 


CHARLIE  KREPP 

. .  .  Tar  Heel  All-Aviericttn  Merman 

ley  along  with  conference  cham- 
pion Krepp.  The  latter  ranked 
third  m  the  nation  in  thi.s  event 
last  season. 

Probably  the  man  with  the 
least  worries  is  diving  coach 
Dick  Jamerson,  whom  Casey  suc- 
ceeded as  nead  man  in  1952.  His 
springboard  artists  Dave  Mcln- 
nis.  Ned  .Meekins.  and  Tom  Par- 
ker, placed  one.  two.  three,  re- 
spectively: in  the  cdnfercncc 
one  and  three  meter  events.  All 
three  return,  in  addition  to 
graduate  Joe  Kelso,  who  has  one 
year  of  eligibility  remaining. 

Conlerencewise.      things     will 

be    improved     with    all    schools 

.having  a  team  for  the  first  time 

in  the  loop's  history.  N.  C.  State 


will  again  provide  the  Tar  Heels 
sliffc.st  competition,  followed  by 
Duke.  Clemson,  Virginia,  South 
Carolina,  Wake  Forest  and 
Maryland. 

State,  coached  by  Willis 
Casey,  younger  brother  of  the 
Ralph,  is  at  this  time  somewhat 
of  a  questionmark.  Scholastic 
difficulties  hamper  some  of 
their  lop  men  and  these  may  be 
ruled  ineligible. 
■  Carolina  and  State  shared  last 
year's  conference  crown  ending 
the  season  with  identical  5-1 
records.  The  Tar  Heels  won  in 
their  first  meeting,  47-37,  only  to 
be  nosed  out  by  the  Wolfpack  in 
last  meet  of  the  season.  42-41. 

For  the  second  time,  the 
strong  Tar  Heels  will  be  host  for 
the  NCAA  Swimming  Champion- 
ships which  will  be  held  in  Bow- 
man Gray  Indoor  Pool  March 
28-30.  The  national  event  was 
first  held  here  in  1949. 

Carolina  opens  its  season  this 
Saturday  when  they  journey  to 
Greenville.  N.  C.  to  take  on  the 
Bucs  of  East  Carolina.  The  first 
home  meet  will  be  December  7 
against  South  Carolina. 
THE  SCHEDULE: 
Dec.     1 — E.    CaroliRa 

Dec.     / — S.  Carolina  

Dec     18 — Duke      

Jan.     3 — Virginia 
Jan.   15 — N.  C.  State 
Jan.   19 — Maryland 
Feb.     9 — Clemson 
Feb.   11 — Car.  C'legiates 
Feb.  23— N    C.  State 
Mar    1,  2— ACC   Champs 
Mar.  28-30  NCAA  Ch. 


There 

Home 

There" 

There 

There 

Home 

Home 

Home 

Home 

Home 

Heme 


omores 
Mercer, 


Dick 
and 


Cas^well, 


Chris 
will 


Deo  Tribus 
carry  the  teams  fprtunes  in  the 
orthodox  breaststroke  event.  The 
200  yard  butterfly  breaststroke 
slots  will  be  .filled  by  junior 
Telfair  "Mac"  Mahaffey  and 
sophomore  Bob  Turner. 

Mahaffey  will  see  double  duty 
in  the  200  yard  individual  med- 


Mural  All -Stars  Play 
2nd  Tilt  At  Greenville 


Book  Before 
Christmas 

Advent  Calendars  —  Wonderful 
tinselly  pictures,  containing  tiny 
doors  and  endows,  one  to  open 
each  day  from  December  1st  untjl 
Christmas  Eve,  Children  love  them. 
50c  and  $1.00. 

A  Christmas  Story  —  by  Mary 
Chalmers.  A  jewel  of  a  .story  about 
a  little  girl's  search  for  a  star  to 
top  her  tree.  In  the  tiny  size  little 
children  love.  SI  .00 

Tall  Book  of  Christmas     —    Thsi 
beautiful   companion  to   the  pop- 1 
ular  Tall  Mother  Goose  brings  to^  j 
gcther  dozens  of  little  Christmas  j 
stories  and  poems.  SI '50 

Rudolph  The   Rod-Nosad  RaindeM-' 

—  A  modem  seasonal  class -.c.  We 
have  a    good  supply  at  59c  each. 

THE  INTIAAATE 
BOOKSHOP 

205  East  Franklin  Straat 
Opan  Till  10  P.M. 


This  afternoon  the  Phi  Gam  and 
Zeta  Psi  tag  football  squad  will 
combine  their  pigskin  talents  and 
take  on  an  intramural  all-star 
squad  from  Elast  Carolina  College. 
The  contest  will  be  on  intramura] 
field  3  at  3:30. 

This  is  the  second  game  with 
the  Greenville  boys:  the  Zeta  Psis 
traveled  to  East  Carolina  before 
the  holidays  and  downed  the  home 
team  20-0. 

The  Intramural  department  an- 
nounced yesterda^'  that  plans  are 
being  made  for  a  third  game  be- 
tween the  two  schools  sometime 
next  week. 

Today  the  Tar  Heel  teams  will 
try  something  different:  instead  of  ! 


Selections  Unlimited 

Our  gift  stocks  are  complete — 

if     your     friend     is     satorially 

fussy,  you  can  be  sure  to  please 

him  with  our  selections, 

MILTON'S 
CLOTHING  CUPBOARD 


using  the  best  players  from  each 
squad  and  making  one  unit,  the 
two  platoon  system  will  bg  used. 
The  Zeta  Psis  will  handle  the  of- 
tense  and  the  Phi  Gams  will  taitc 
the  defense.  Carolina  rules  will 
govern  the  action  and  the  local  in- 
tramural department  will  furnish 
the  officials. 

The  Zeta  Psis  have  been  de- 
feated only  once:  the  intramurals 
champions  from  the  university  of 
Virginia  downed  them  26-13  in  the 
Mad  Bowl  the  caravan  weekend. 
The  Phi  Gams  have  not  done  any 
traveling  but  have  not  been  beaten 
in  intramurals  play. 

The  Carolina  teams  are  in  dif- 
ferent divisions  —  the  true  tale  of 
the  intramural  champions  will  not 
be  known  until  next  week  when 
these  two  teams  meet  in  the  play- 
offs. 


Carolina 


NOW  PLAYING 

"The  Angel  Who 
Pawned  Her  Harp" 

Starring 
FELIX   AYLMER 

DIANNE   CILENTO 

"Miss   Cilento,   a   beautiful   blonde. 

makes   a   hit   wherever   she   goes." 

N.  Y.  DAILY   NEWS 


Vf.tr>  IK;  picfm-e  ha.-;  said  this 


E  DAVIS  IN  STORM  CENTER 


Spotlight  Shifts  Jo  Hardwood  Sport 


All-America  Cager 


Lanky  Lennie  Rosenbluth,  6-5  senior  forward  from  Greenville, 
Tenn.,  will  lead  the  Carolina  basketball  team  into  action  Saturday 
when  they  meet  the  McCrary  Eaglas  in  the  opening  game  of  the 
season.  Rosenbluth  is  considered  a  %ur»  bet  for  all-America  honors 
this  year. 


Beatty  Slips  'N  Slides 
To  Second  In  Big  Meet 


First  Game 
For  Locals 
Is  Saturday 

By  LARRY  CHEEK 

With  the  shoulder  pads  and 
helmets  safely  tucked  away  for  an- 
other nine  months,  it's  time  to  re- 
tire to  the  luxurious  warmth  of 
the  fireside  and  contemplate  the 
return  of  that  winter  time  mon- 
arch. King  Basketball. 

The  1956-57  hardwood  campaign 
gets  off  to  a  rousing  start  this 
Saturday  night.  Dec.  1.  with  just 
about  all  the  major  national  and 
ACC  powers  swinging  into  action. 
And  around  the  Atlantic  Coast 
Conference,  the  finger  of  suspi- 
cion points  at  the  Carolina  Tari 
Heels,  and  rival  coaches  say, 
"There's  the  team  to  beat." 

The  Tar  Heels  stepped  into  the 
national  limelight  last  year  with 
an  overall  mark  of  18-5  and  a 
regular  season  tie  with  N.  C.  State 
for  the  ACC  championship.  Only 
one  man,  captain  Jerry  Vayda,  was 
lost  from  last  year's  fine  team, 
and  with  a  trio  of  promising  soph- 
omores rising  to  take  his  place, 
things  look  bright  on  the  local 
scene. 
RAVE  NOTICES 

Pre-season  honors  have  been 
coming  thick  and  fast  for  the  UNC 
basketballers  and  their  star,  Len- 
nie Rosenbluth.  In  two  magazine 
selections,  the  Tar  Heels  are  rated 
third  and  fourth,  while  Rosen- 
bluth. high  scoring  forward  in  his 
last  year  as  a  Tar  Heel,  has  been 
named  to  one  all-Amcrican  first 
team  and  in  addition  received  a 
second  team  nomination  in  an- 
other  magazine. 

But  all  hasn't  been,  sweetness 
and  light  for  Coach  Frank  Mc- 
Guire's  squad.  Going  into  their 
opening  contest  against  the  Mc- 
Crary Eagles  Saturday  night,  the 
locals  will  be  minus  the  services 
of  three  boys  who  had  been  count- 
*ed  upon  for  extensive  service  by 
IVIcGuire.  Two  of  the  players,  cen- 
ter Bob  Young  and  guard  Frank 
Goodwin,  were  dismissed  from  the 
team  for  disciplinary  reasons, 
while  another,  sensational  soph 
Harvey  Salz,  was  lost  to  the  team 
due  to  scholastic  difficulties. 


Pete  MulHs  Gets  Post 


Clyde  E.  (Pete)  Mullis,  associate 
professor  of  physical  education  in 
the  University,  has  accepted  an  in- 
vitation by  the  Department  of  the 
Army  to  serve  as  an  instructor 
next  siunmer  in  the  U.  S.  Army's 
Athletic  Clinic  in  Europe. 

A  versatile  athlete,  Prof.  Mullis 
has  been  a  member  of  the  physical  | 
education   faculty   at   Chapel   Hill 
the  past  17  years. 

As  assistant  tiasketball  coach 
from  1940  to  1952,  one  of  his  teams 
(in  1946)  played  in  the  finals  of 
the  NCAA  championship  tourney 
in  Madison  Square  Garden. 

As  an  undergraduate  at  UNC. 
Mullis  was  an  outstanding  varsity 
basketball    plajer.    He    earned    a 


rrionogram  as  a  diver  and  swim- 
mer. He  was  president  of  the  Mono- 
gram Club,  and  was  president  of 
his  class,  sen/ing  also  as  a  mem- 
ber of  the  student  council. 


By  GERRY  COHEN  and 
GILBERT  ROTHSTEIN 

Jim  Beatty,  running  against  cold 
wind,  in  a  three-inch  snow,  and  on 
a  slippery  track,  had  to  come  from 
far  back  of  the  field  to  gain  sec- 
ond place  in  the  NCAA  cross 
countrj'  meet  in  East  Lansing, 
Michigan,  on  Monday. 

Beatty,  after  a  good  start  and 
holding  good  position  in  the  first 
part  of  the  race,  hit  a  slippery 
sidewalk  midway  the  race  and  slid 
about  ten  yards.  While  this  was 
going  on  he  was  passed  by  most 
of  the  other  runners.  Every  time 
jic  tried  to  catch  up,  the  footing 
of  the  incomparable  UNC  cross 
country  runner  gave  way,  and  he 
was  forced  to  drop  further  behind. 
When  lie  again  got  on  good 
ground,  Jim  ran  like  the  champion 
that  he  is,  and  in  a  blazing  finish 
managed  to  pass  all  the  runners 
in  front  of  him  with  the  exception 
of  Walter  McNew,  of  the  Univer- 
sity of  Texas.. 

At  the  finish  of  the  race,  Jim 
was  not  breathing  hard,  and  was 
ready  to  run  the  race  over  again. 
According  to  Beatt:^.  1-he  snow  on 
the  track  had  been  partially 
dragged  off,  but  even  then,  only 
ihe  top  crust  of  snow  was  removed 
end  snow  and  ice  still  covered  the 
ground.  At  the  first  of  the  race, 
Jim  said  that  he  watched  every 
.step  he  took  and  picked  out  places 


he  thought  would  give  firm  footing 
but  the  hard  surfaces  were  com- 
pletely covered  with  ice  and  snow. 

The  temperature  did  not  bother 
him  although  it  dropped  to  27  de- 
grees during  the  race  and  there 
was  a  15  mph  wind  sometimes  be- 
hind him  and  sometimes  against 
him.  Even  under  such  bad  condi- 
tions he  beat  the  favorite,  Henry 
Kennedy  of  Michigan  State,  pre- 
viously unbeaten  this  season. 

Coach  Dale  Ranson  said  Beatty 
has  had  a  day  off  and  is  now  ready 
to  start  work  for  the  Indoor  Meets 
he  will  enter  up  North  in  Wash- 
ington. Boston.  Cleveland  and  New- 
York.  Ranson  added  that  Beatty 
aid  not  run  in  the  IC4A  where  he 
could  have  competed  against  Ken- 
nedy because  the  UNC  track  team 
had  a  chance  to  win  the  ACC  team 
championship  at  the  conference 
meet  that  weekend. 

Beatty  has  set  records  on  every 
cross-countr>-  course  in  the  Atlan- 
tic Coast  Conference.  He  has  won 
four  state  championships.  He  has 
also  won  three  ACC  champion- 
ships on  the  courses  of  Maryland, 
N.  C.  State  and  Virginia.  At  the 
University  of  Virginia  he  lowered 
the  course  record  approximately 
50  seconds.  Jim  Beatty  is  truly  ohe 
of  the  greatest  track  men  the  ACC 
has  ever  known.  He  certainly  earns 
the  nickname  "The  pint  size  ath- 
lete with  a  gallon  of  ability." 


MURALS 


Tag   Football    Results 

Medical  SchooI-3  defeated  Man- 
ley,  8-0;  Ruffin-1  defeated  Victory 
Village,  1-0;  Pi  Lamb  defeated 
ZBT.  6-0:  Law  School  -2  won  by 
forfeit  over  Mangum-T;  DKE  (\V*) 
defeated  Zeta  Psi  (W),  1-0;  Medi- 
cal School -2  won  by  forfeit   over 


Everett-1;    Phi  Delt  (WO   defeated 
SPE  (W),  7-0. 

VOLLEYBALL  RESULTS 
Phi  Kap  Sig  won  by  forfeit  over 
SAH;  Kappa  Alpha  defeated  Delt 
Sig,  2-0;  ATO  defeated  Chi  Phi, 
2-0;  Zeta  Psi  defeated  Sig  Nu,  2-0; 
Sig  Chi  defeated  ATO.  2-1:  AKPsi 
won  by  forfeit  over  Theta  Chi.. 


i'-eAal 


*eotuM.iAPKTu«-*ii.BRIAN  KEITH    KIM  HUNTER  •  PAUL  KELLY    KEVIN  COUGHLIN 

9Mi*  bM  StfMn»l«r  b*  OANCL  TAJUOASH  t  EUCK  MOLL  •  0.fec1«<(  by  OANIEL  TARAOASH  •  Produced  t>»  JULIAN  Bi  AUSTEIN  •  A  PHOENIX  PRODOCTIOH 

LAST 


TIMES 
TODAY 


=4  cZ/zeatro 


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BITTER  PILL 

The  loss  of  Salz  was  an  especial- 
ly bitter  pill  for  McGuire  to  swal- 
low. The  6-1  guard  from  Brooklyn 
led  last  year's  frosh  squad  in 
scoring,  and  was  almost  a  sure  bet 
to  gain  a  starting  role  in  his  first 
year  as  a  varsity  member.  But  the 
powers  that  be  declared  "not  so." 

With  Salz  available  for  back- 
coiu-t  duty,  the  Tar  Heels  would 
have  been  23%  better,  says  Mc- 
Guire. The  peppery  guard  would 
have  taken  much  of  the  pressure 
off  Rosenbluth  with  his  outside 
shooting  and  would  have  provided 
UNC  with  a  potent  one-two  punr^. 

But  even  without  Salz.  the  Tar 
Heels  arc  not  weak  at  the  guard 
slots.  Bob  Cunningham  and  Tom- 
my Kearns,  a  pair  of  battle  tested 
juniors,  have  been  running  first 
string  in  early  practice  sessions, 
IfuI  soph  Stan  GroU,  Salz's  tunning 
mate  on  the  frosh  team  last  year, 
is  close  behind.  Holdovers  Tony 
Radovich  and  Ken  Roscmond  pro- 
vide depth. 

On  the  front  line,  it's  been  Ro- 
senbluth and  Pete  Brennan  at  for- 
wards, and  giant  Bill  Hathaway  at 
center.  Joe  Quigg.  a  starter  oh  last 
year's  team,  is  running  behind 
Hathaway  at  the  pivot  post  while 
Danny  Lotz,  a  husky  6-5  sopho- 
more, is  the  number  one  reserve 
at  forward. 


Children's 
Book  Week. 
Enjoy  A 
Second 
Childhood 
In  The 
Wonderland 
Of 

THE  INTIMATE 
BOOKSHOP 

205  E.  Frenklin  St. 

Open  Till  10  P.M. 


Special 

for 

Wednesday 
Only 


Rugby  San>ple  Jackets 
Big    Shipment 


Were 
%  9.95 
$1^95 
$  5.95 


Now 
$6.40 
$9.40 
$3.40 


One  Group  Sweaters,  Most^)r  All 
Colors  and  Sizes 

REDUCED  as  low  as  $3.98 
Some  Were  $12— Now  $7.95 

Khaki  Or  Black  Ivy  League 
Pants,  Irregulars,  now      $2.98 

Chenille  Spreads,  White  and 
Colors.  Single  and  Double 
Just  $4.98 

Cooleemee   Sheets 
72x108— $1.69 

Pillow  Cases,  First  Quality 
3  for  $1.00 

Towels,  20x40,  All  Colors 
Were  $.50— Now  3   for  $1.00 

BERAAAN'S 
Dept.  Store 

Open  All  Day  Wed. 


B  O  B  and  M  O  N  K 
of 

TOWN& 
CAMPUS 

SALUTE 

i 

Athlete  Of  The  Week 


ED  SUTTON 

It's  getting  to  be  an  old  story 
by  now.  Ed  Sutton,  Carolina's 
greatest  runner  since  Charley 
Justice  (as  he  has  become 
known),  has  been  named  Ath- 
lete of  the  Week  for  the  fou^h 
consecutive  time  following  his 
typically  sensational  perform- 
ance against  Duke  Saturday  in 
his  UNC  swan  song.  Sutton  for 
the  third  straight  week  racked 
up  over  100  yards  rushing, 
smashing  through  the  Blue 
Devil  defenses  for  134  yards  on 
the  ground. 

We  want  him  to  drop  by 
TOWN  &  CAMPUS  and  pick  out 
■  shirt  to  his  liking — compli- 
ments of  the  house. 

We  want  the  old  and  young 
'like  of  Chapel  Hill  to  make 
TOWN  &  CAMPUS  their  head 
quarters  for  the  finest  in  men's 
clothing.   Drop   in   today. 

TOWN  & 
CAMPUS 


THE  ROSEMARY  LAUNDRY 

329  W.  Rosemary  Street 
(Back  of  University  National    Bank) 

Offers  you  its  exclusive  HAND  ironing  service  . 
Wash  and  dry  laundry,  too  ...  9  lbs.  wash,  dry,  folded 
Shirts,  Each,  $.15  Extra 

ALSO  DRY   CLEANING  SERVICE 


$.80 


Don't  Forget  To  Vote 

'    '           for  the  November                        I 

MISS  FASHIONPLATE 

{     )  CAROL  COOPWOOD                            f 

(     )  BARBARA  HONEY 

(     )  ROBERTA  CHAPIN              -^ 

V             Deadline  Is  November  30 

Come  In  and  Cast  Your  Ballot 
at 

~y^<^^^^^ 

or  fill   in  above,  sign,  and  n>«il  to  J.  B.  ROBBINS 

I  <r>«-' 


»  ire  l.fBRA!tY 
SERIALS  DSF»T. 
CHAPEL  HILL,    B.   6. 


WEATHER 

Cloudy    And    colder.    High    tom- 
l>eratvres  from  40  to  low  40'$. 


3r()  e  DaUy 


f 

Mtti 


WARRANT 

To  kill.  Se4  page  2. 


VOL.  LVII  NO.  56 


Complete  (JF)  Wire  Service 


CHAPEL  HILL.  NORTH  CAROLINA,  THURSDAY,  NOVEMBER  29,  19S6 


Offices  in   Graham   Memorial 


POUR  PAGES  THIS   ISSUI 


Hungarian  Refugee  Will  Talk 
At  7  Tonight  In  Carroll  Hall 

Present  Crisis 
In  Hungary 
Will  Be  Aired 


A  Hungarian  refugee  student, 
who  was  one  of  the  leaders  in  the 
student  demonstration  earlier  this 
month,  will  speak  here  tonight. 

The  student,  who  is  using  the 
assumed  name  of  Istavan  Laszlo, 
will  speak  at  7  p.m.  today  in  Car- 
roll Hall  auditorium. 

Laszlo  is  making  a  tour  of  col- 
leges and  universities  throughout 
the  country,  speaking  about  the  pre 
sent  crisis  in  Hungary.  He  spoke 
on  Tue.sday  night  at  N.  C.  State 
college. 

The  21-year  old  student,  who 
fled  to  the  U.  S.  with  Miss  Anna 
Kethly,  leader  of  the  Hungarian  So- 
cial Democrat  Party,  will  relate 
specifically  the  role  that  the  Hun- 
garian students  played  in  the  re- 
cent revolt. 

Laszlo  is  appearing  with  a  group 
travelling  under  the  sponsorship  of 

Y  officials  announced  yostor- 
doy  the  speech  by  Law  School 
Dean  Henry  Brandts  Jr.  origi- 
nally scheduled  for  tonight  has 
been  postponed  due  to  the  ap- 
pearance on  campus  of  the  Hun- 
garian refugee  speaker. 


Di  Defeats!  ^g^^. 
LimH-ation    brief 


the  National  Student  Assn.  and  is 
here  under  auspices  of  the  local 
association. 

The  speaker  will  be  introduced 
by  Ralph  Delia  Cava,  a  member  of 
the  visiting  group.  The  speech 
will  be  interpreted  from  Hungari- 
an to  English  by  Charles  Derescki. 

Student  Body  Pre^dent  Bob 
Young  will  be  moderator  of  the 
progranj.  Chancellor  Robert  B. 
House  will  welcome  the  group  on 
behalf  of  the  University. 

After  the  speech  by  Laszlo,  the 
floor  will  be  open  for  questions  to 
any  of  the  guests. 

Following  the  program  there  will 
be  a  public  reception  in  the  Main 
Lounge  of  Graham  Memorial  Stu- 
dent Union. 

Before  the  speech,  at  5:45  p.m., 
the  group  will  be  guests  of  the 
administration  and  local  student 
leaders  at  a  banquet  at  the  Caro- 
lina Inn. 

President  Young  has  announced 
that  contributions  for  a  Hungarian 
relief  fund  can  be  made  as  those 
attending  leave  the  auditorium. 
The  money  will  go  to  the  Free 
Hungarian  Student  Committee  in, 
Vienna,  Austria,  Young  said.  The 
committee  is  the  equilavent  to  the 
NSA  in  this  country. 

Several  events,  including  the 
varsity-freshman  basketball  game, 
the  Student  Legislature  meeting 
and  the  foreign  film,  are  being 
postponed  to  later  times  tonight 
because  of  the  speech.  (See  other 
stories  elsewhere  this  page.) 


Measure 

The  Dialectic  Senate  voted  11-1 
2  Tuesday  night  to  defeat  a  bill 
to  limit  the  enrollment  of  the 
University  of  North  Carolina. 

Senator  Jerry  Boudreau  intro- ' 
duced  and  defended  the  bill  with  , 
a  display  of  Yankeephobia.  He 
proposed  that  the  northerners  go 
to  Yale  or  Harvard  and  that  the 
University  be  for  the  sons  of  the 
p?ople  -who  pay  for  it.  ( 

Claiming  that  the  bill  was  rem- 
iniscent of  Duke.  Senator  Norman 
Smith  said  that  the  University 
was  made  great  by  foreign  ele- 
ments. 

Senator  Dan  Vann  wanted  the 
yniversity  to  admit  A  and  B  stu- 
dents from  North  .Carolina  and  ; 
some  bright  out  of  state  students  ; 
in  order  to  give  the  campus  a ' 
cosmopolitan  air.  "We  must  have 
the  best  minds  of  the  nation,"  he  : 
said.  -  { 

Senator  Jcel  Fleisehman  claim- 
ed that  far  any  culture  to  grow  I 
there  must  be  an  interplay  of ; 
ideas.  j 

Then  Senator  Pat  Adams  mov- ' 
ed  that  second  article  of  the  bill  j 
("Out-of-state  students  be  requir- 
ed to  make  a  grade  falling  in  the  ' 
upper  one-fourth  of  all  partici-  i 
pants  in  the  University  entrance ; 
examination  before  they  be  con- 
sidered for  admtSMon")  be  struck-  ' 
en  out  His  motion  w»s  pas&ed  by  ; 
a  vote  of  7-5.  i 

Saying  that  restriction  is  not  , 
the  answer.  Senator  Bill  Sabiston  i 
felt  that  to  meet  the  problem  ot  i 
increased  enrollment  the  Univer-  j 
sity  must  expand   its   facilities. 


PROM  RADIO  DISPATCHES 


WASHINGTON  —  Soviet  Russia 
was  caught  redhanded  by  both  the 
Arab  states  and  the  United  States 
as  starting  the  present  crisis  in 
the  Middle  East. 

The  State  Dept.  confirmed  offi- 
cially Russia  started  the  trouble 
by  sending  arms  to  Syria  both  be- 
fore and  ^fter  a  United  Nations 
resolution  calling  for  no  arms  to 
be  sent  to  the  Middle  East.  The 
State  Dept.  reported  $460  million 
worth  of  arms  had  been  sent  to 
Syria  by  Russia. 

AUGUSTA.  Ga.— President  Ei- 
senhower sent  French  Premier 
Guy  Mollet  a  letter  reaffirming 
faith  in  the  Atlantic  alliance.  He 
had  already  sent  one  to  British 
Prime  Minister  Sir  Anthony  Eden. 

White  House  Press  Secretary 
James  Hagerty  said  the  Middle 
East  situation  had  eased  in  the 
past  weeks,  later  backed  down 
when  informed  that  State  Dept. 
spokesman  Lincoln  White  said 
there  was  more  tension  in  that 
area.  Hagerty  said  he  originally 
was  talking  only  about  the  Suez 
Canal  crisis. 

LONDON— The  British  cabinet 
mel  to  decide  whether  to  go  on 
defying  a  UN  order  to  withdraw 
its  troops  from  Egypt.  What  the 
cabinet  decided  is  secret  and  may 
remain  so  until  British  Foreign 
Secretary  Selwyn  Lloyd  talks  to- 
morrow. 

LTMITED  NATIONS,  N.  Y.— It 
was  reported  many  members  of 
the  United  N«tion«  were  in  favor 
of  establishing  a  permanent  UN 
police  force,  to  be  called  the 
United  Nations  Regular  Force 
(UNRF)  UN  Secretary  General 
Dag  Hammarskjold  said  he  had 
uad  such  an  organizAtion  in  mind. 


Mantovani,  New  Music 
To  Come  Here  Dec.  6 


Address  Changes  Are 
Central  Records  Business 

students  who  change  campus 
address  are  urged  to  report  the 
change  to  Central  Records  in  Han- 
es  Hall,  Assistant  to  Dean  of  Stu- 
dent Affairs  Ray  Jefferies  said 
yesterday. 

Important  notices  and  messages 
for  students  are  sometimes  un- 
delivered due  to  lack  of  address, 
Jefferies  said. 

Jefferies  also  asked  that  stu- 
dents put  return  addresses  on 
letters  to  avoid  confusion  in  mail 
delivery. 

Students'  letters  are  sometimes 
delayed  a  full  week  because 
specific  campus  addresses  are  not 
-on  the  envelopes,  Jefferies  said. 


IN  THE  INFiRAAARY 


Students  in  the  Infirmary  yes- 
terday included: 

Misses  Elmira  Herring,  Cloy- 
dia  Carstarphen,  Prisciila  Nor- 
man, Elaine  Gallimore  and  Har- 
rington Alexander,  Louis  Cody. 
James  Edwards,  Nicholis  M«r- 
copulos,  Charles  Richie,  Richard 
Saylor.  Robert  Kerr  and  William 
Luesing. 


By   EDITH  MACKINNON 

Mantovani  and  his  New  Music 
come  to  the  UNC  campus  on  Dec. 
6. 

Sponsored  by  the  Student  En- 
tertainment Committee,  the  well- 
known  artist  and  his  45-piece  or- 
chestra will  be  presented  in  Me- 
morial Hall  at  8  p.m. 

Mantovani  brought  his  New  Mu- 
sic for  the  first  time  to  the  United 
States  in  the  fall  of  1955  on  a  38- 
I  city  tour,  together  with  appear- 
I  ances  in  Canada.  This  first  Ameri- 
j  can  tovu*  attracted  sold-out  houses 
j  of  enthusiastic  audiences  through- 
I  out  the  east  and  middle  west. 
{  This  season  Mantovani  and  his 
I  musicians  return  to  the  United 
I  States  for  a  ten-week  tour  from 
I  coast  to  coast. 

Called  the  "master  of  the  tum- 
bling strings,"  Mantovani  has  in- 
troduced a  sound  which  is  char- 
acterized by  sweeping  melody  com- 
bined with  orchestral  ingenuity. 

His  "New  Music, "  which  has  be- 
come familiar  to  audiences 
throughout  the  world  in  the  last 
tew  years,  came  into  being  at  the 
request  of  London  FFRR  (English 
Decca).  The  recording  artist,  in- 
augurated the  era  of  New  Music 
v/ith  his  first  album  for  London 
FFRR  Records,  •'Waltzing  with 
Mantovani,"  that  displayed  the 
string  tones  which  were  to  capture 
the  fancy  ol  audiences. 

The  immense  advance  interest  in 
the  creator  of  the  famous  New 
Music  may  in  large  part  be  attrib- 
uted to  the  success  of  his  many 
London  recordings,  which  include 
his  signature,  "Charmaine,"  his 
version  of  the  ballad  "Greon 
Sleeves,"  and  to  his  authorship  of 
the  popular  "Cara  Mia,"  which 
the  bandleader  wrote  two  years 
ago  for  the  English  tenor,  David 
Whitfield. 

Mantovani's  arrangement  of 
"Charmaine"  swept  to  the  top  of 
the  U.  S.  Hit  Parade  in  1951; 
there  have  been  few  subsequent 
weeks  in  the  past  five  years  when 
a  Mantovani  arrangement  was 
missing  from  this  roster  of  favor- 
ites. 


The  performance  will  be  pre- 
sented free  to  students,  with  a  $1 
admission  charge  for  student  wives 
and  a  S2  charge  to  others. 


State  Requests  ACC  Investigation 
Of  Basketball  Suspension  Ruling 


Phi  Downs  Bill  Asking 
US  Aid  For  Hungary 


By  PRINOLE   PIPKIN 

The  Philanthropic  Literary  So- 
ciety downed,  11-4,  Tuesday  night 
a  resolution  favoring  Unitec  States 
mtervention  in  Poland  and  Hun- 
gary. 

At  an  executive  session  after 
the  meeting  Representative  John 
B.  Lewis  was  made  the  Phi  repre- 
sentative to  the  Delwite  Council, 
which  makes  rules  and  announces 
procedures  for  all  formal  debating 
on  the  UNC  campus. 

Representative  Lewis  gave  the 
historian's  report  on  Charles  B. 
Aycock,  former  Governor  of  North 
Carolina  and  a  member  of  the  Phi, 
whose  portrait  is  hanging  in  Phi 
Hall.       . 

Representative  Jim  Montieth  in- 
troduced and  defended  the  resolu- 
tion  with   a   speech    termed   "the 


Football  Hero 
Is  'Assaulted^ 

Local  football  hero  Ed  Sutton 
was  "assaulted"  last  night  as 
he  escorted  his  date.  Miss  Jane 
Brock,    back   to  Smith    Dorm. 

At  about  10:30  p.m..  as  Suttoa 
and  Miss  Brock  returned  to  the 
dorm.  Miss  Dickie  Pick  err  el  1« 
Sutton's  "ex-girl  friend,"  met 
them  at  the  door  and  "in  a  jeal- 
ous rage"  assaulted  Sutton. 

The  event  was  one  in  the 
series  of  happenings  leading  W' 
the  annual  Phi  Alpha  Delta 
legal  fraternity  mock  trail,  to 
be  held  Dec.  7  in  Manning  Hall 
Court  room. 

A  "local  policeman"  arrived 
on  the  .scene  and  parted  i  the 
two.  Later  Sutton  said  he  was 
"not  preferring  charges,  "but 
the  case  is  being  "referred"  to 
the    "Honor   Council". 


best  of  the  evening"  by  the  critic. 
Representative  Lewis.  Representa- 
tive Montieth  reminded  the  mem- 
bert  that  even  though  the  United 
States  might  risk  war,  it  must  act 
for  freedom. 

Requesting      that     the     United 

States  use  its  mind  to  determine 

j  its   actions.    Representative    Ethan 

j  Tolman    said    there    would    be    a 

I  jubilee  in  hell  if  the  bill  passed. 

Representative     Don     Jacobs 

claimed  "we  are  pleading  for  war. ' 

He   advised   the   Society    to  avoid 

j  war  and  settle  the  issue  peacably. 

Representative    John    B.    Lewis 

'  said  the  lYench  had  intervened  in 

i  the   American   Revolutionary    War 

I  and  we  should  do  likewise  in  Hun^ 

gary  and  Poland. 
I      "There   can   be   no   war  today," 
claimed     Representative     John 
I  Brooks.  He  went  on  to  say,'  'there 
will  never  be  another  petty  war." 
Lik«ning  the   American  position 
to  that  of  the  French  in  regards 
to     the     American     Revolutionary 
war.     Representative     David     Mat- 
thews urged  affirmative  action. 

Guest  Gardener  Foley  asked  that 
the  members  think  of  results  of  a 
world  war  rather  than  just  the 
late  of  the  Hungarians. 

Senator  Joel  Fleishman  of  the 
Di  said  that  the  world  could  not 
recover  from  a  world  war,  which 
would  result  if  this  bill  were  i 
passed.  "Caution  may  save  the 
world,'*  he  said. 


Chancellor  Bostian  Says  Player 
Moreland  Is  Termed  Ineligible 

R.\LK1GH— '^— N.  C.  State  Clollege  has  rei|uested  the  .Atlantic  Coast  Confereme  to 
make    "an    independent    and   complete    invest ijration"  of  the    Jackie   .Moreland  case. 

Tliis  was  announced  \Vedne.sday  by  Di.  C:avey  P.osiian.  State  College  Chancellor, 
ulio  revealed  that  Moreland  has  been  ruled  ineli^ihle  to  play  at  State  by  .\CX:  Commis- 
sioner   |im   Weaser,  .  . 

Moreland,   flashy   .Minden,    I-i.,   hif^h   school  basketball  star,  is  the  center  <.l  recruiting 

♦violations  charges  brought  againgt 

State  College  by  the  NCA.\,  which 


Debate  Squad  Will  Attend 
Hall  Of  Fame  Tournament 

The   UNC   Debate   Squad   moves    debater    as    well    as    being    vice- 
into  high  gear  this  weekend  as  the    president  of  the  student  body, 
team  moves  north  to  the  Hall   of  I      The  negative  team  representing 
I-ame   Debate    Tournament    to   be !  UNC   at   this   tournament    wiU    be 
held  on  the  campus  of  New  York    composed   of  Forbes   Ramsey    and 

Dave  Lieberman.  Ramsey  is  a  jun- 
ior and  has  attended  tournaments 
during     the     past     two     years     at 


University. 

This    marks    the    first    time    in 
three  years  that  Carolina  will  be -"J^^^gj^"  (.^[j;^^,^  "  g' '^^^^ 


represented  in  the  tournament.  In 
1953.  Carolina  placed  second  at 
NYU,  ahead  of  many  of  the  top 
universities  in  the  country.  This 
tournament  annually  attracts  most 
of  the  ivy  league  schools  as  well 
as  top  teams  from  the  south  and 
midwest. 


has  placed  State  on  probation  for 
four  years. 

Dr.  Bostian  said  State  College 
and  University  of  North  Carolina 
officials  had  requested  the  ACC 
investigation  because  they  had 
been  unable  to  obtain  unrestrict- 
ed use  of  evidence  on  which  the 
NCAA  acted  in  taking  its  action 
against  N.  C.  State. 


In     Greensboro     ACC 
sioner  Jim  Weaver  said: 


Commis- 


'  Tallahassee,    Fla.    Lieberman,    the 
I  present    Chairman    of    the    Debate 


Council,  is  a  senior  and  will  be  de- : 
bating  in  his  last  tournament,,  as  ] 
an  undergraduate. 

The  debate  squad  has  arranged 
one     of     their     best     tournament 
schedules  in  recent  history.  In  ad- 
Debating  the  affirmative  side  of    dition  to  the  Hall  of  Fame  Tourna- 


"I    am     confirming    Chancellor 
Bostian's    statement    in    that    Jack 

Tomorrow  The  Daily  Tar  Moel 
will  publish  perHnent  excorpts 
from  the  University's  report  to 
the  Board  of  Trustees  concorn- 
ing   the   N.   C.   State  suspension. 


the    question,      'that     the     United '  ment,   the   team   has    gone   to   Co-    Moreland' s  basketball     eligibility 

Slates    should    discontinue    diiect ,  lumbia,  S.  C,  and  plans  to  debate    blank    had  been   received   in    this 

economic     aid     to     foreign     coun- !  in  such   places    as  Winston-Salem,  i  >ffice    and  that    it    had    not    been 
tries,"    will    be   John    Brooks    and  i  Williamsburg,    Va.,    and    New    Or- '  approved. 


"On  action  of  such  nature  I  am 


Sonny    Evans.    Brooks    is    a   sopfio-  .  leans. 

more  and  has  an  outstanding  rec-        Different  members  of  the  squad!  ^^^  permitted  to  make  any  state- 

ord   as   a   debater   at    Carolin-a.   as    will    represent    Carolina    at    these 


Murals  Dept. 
Plans  To  Pay 
Its  Managers 

A  move  is  currently  unden^ay 
to  provide  compensation  for  dorm- 
itory and  fraternity  intramural 
managers. 

The  move,  instigated  by  the  In- 
tramurals  Department  and  sup- 
ported by  th?  Interdjrmitory 
Council,  15  aimed  at  stimulating 
more  student  participation,  accord- 
ing to  Coach  Walter  Rabb. 

Rabb,  recently  named  head 
baseball  coach,  heads  the  Intramu- 
rals    Department. 

Rabb  said  that  student  partici- 
pation in  the  intramurals  pro- 
gram was  on  the  decline.  The  de- 
(See   MURALS.   Page   3) 


MANTOVANI 

.  .  )iere  Dec.  6 


Supreme  Court 
Scheduled  For 
Scales'  Appeal 

GREENSBORO  UP)  —  Admitted 
Communist  Junius  Scales  may 
learn  Monday  whether  he  will 
serve  a  six-year  term  imposed  on 
him  in  Middle  District  Federal 
Court  here  in  April,  1955. 

The  decision  will  come  from  the 
U.  S.  Supreme  Court.  The  high 
court,  which  has  considered 
Scales'  appeal  of  his  conviction,  is 
expected  to  announce  its  decision 
Monday. 

Principal  issue  of  the  appeal  is 
whether  the  membership  clause  of 
the  Smith  Act,  under  which  th'» 
former  USC  student  was  convict- 
ed and  sentenced,  is  constitu- 
tional. 

The  clause  prohibits  member-  j 
ship  in  any  organization  which  ad- 1 
vocates  violent  overthrow  of  the , 
government  with  knowledge  of  I 
the  organization's  piuTHwe.  | 

Scales,  37,  has  contended 
through  counsel  that  the  clause  is 
unconstitutional  in  view  of  a  sec- 
tion of  the  Internal  Security  act 
of  1950. 


Traffic  talks 
Continuing 
Through  Fri. 

The  fir.it  Regional  Traffic 
Court  Conference  opened  Monday 
at  the  Joseph  Palmer  Knapp  In- 
stitute of  Government  building 
and  will  continue  through  Friday 
Nov.  30. 

The  Traffic  Court  Conference 
has  as  its  principle  objective  the 
improved  court  handling  of  traffic 
violators  due  to  the  continuing  se- 
riousness of  the  traffic  accident 
iind  congestion  problem. 

Traffic  court  conferences  are  be- 
ing conducted  at  leading  law 
bchools  and  universities  through- 
out the  country.  They  are  designed 
to  help  judges,  prosecutors,  jus- 
tices of  the  peace,  court  clerks 
and  attorneys  to  set  up  effective 
trafifc  court  programs  in  their 
communities. 

A  check  lor  $2,500  was  pre- 
sented to  the  University  by  the 
Esso  Safety  Foundation  to  provide 
.grants-in-aid  and  administrative 
expenses  for  the  conference.  Ac- 
cording to  Walter  Lee  Horton,  As- 
sistant Director  of  the  Institute  of 
Government,  the  grants-  in  -  aid 
were  earmarked  for  increasing 
North  Carolina,  South  Carolina 
and  Virginia  attendance  at  the 
conference. 

Of  special  interest  on  the  pro- 
gram have  been  a  talk  by  Edward 
Scheldt,  Commissioner  of  Motor 
Vehicles,  on  Driver  Licensing,  and 
an  open  question  and  answer  pe- 
riod, "This  is  What  1  Want  To 
Know." 

The  roster  of  participants  for 
the  Conference  include  magis- 
trates and  judges  from  Canada, 
Arizona,  Louisiana,  and  Illinois. 

North  Carolina  judges,  prosecu- 
tors and  other  court  personnel  un 
able  to  attend  the  entire  confer- 
ence will  be  special  guests  for  the 
sessions  scheduled  for  Friday.  A 
'1  raffic  Court  Institute  will  be  pre- 
.     (See  TRAFFIC,  Page  3) 

State's  MacGitfivray 
Drops  Out  Of  School 

RALEIGH  —<»—  Sophomore 
Bob  MacGillivray  who  was  being 
considered  as  a  started  on  N.  C 
State's  basketball  team  this  season, 
has  dropped  out  of  school. 

College  officials  said  he  had 
fallen  too  far  behind  in  his  school 
work  to  h.^pe  to  catch  up  this 
.semester.  They  expect  him  back 
in    January. 


well  as  in  high  school,  where  he  |  tournaments,  and  places  on  th« 
was  rated  as  one  of  the  top  three  squad  are  still  open  to  any  under 
or  four  debaters  in  (he  country,  i  graduate  interested  in  intercoJJe- 
Cvans.  a  junior,   is  also  a  veteran    giate  debating. 


Freshman  Nurse  Gets 
Marines'  Honor  Title 

A    freshman     in     nursing,    Miss    in   lh:>   U.NC  Band,   will   take   part 
Jane   Brock,  has   been   selected  as    in   numerous   activities   in  connec- 


"Mi.s.s  Marine  Oftlcer  Procurment" 
lor   the   Carolinas. 
Miss  Brock,  who  is  a  majorette 


tion  with  the  new  title.  I 

! 

Tomorrow  she  will  appear  on  a  ' 
new    .Marine    Corp   program    on    a 
Raleigh  radio  station. 

Marine  officials  said  she  would 
be  the  guest  of  numerous  radio 
and  TV  shows  in  the  area  in  the 
next  few  weeks. 

During  December  she  will  be  [ 
a  guest  of  the  Marine  Corps  in 
the  Washington,  D.  C,  area  and 
also  observe  Marine  Officer  Train- 
ing at  Marine  Corp  Schools  in 
Quantico,   Va.  ( 

Current  members  of  the  Marine 
Corps   Platoon   Leader's  Class   en- 
rolled   here    at    Carolina    will    be 
sponsored  by  Miss  Brock  at  Quan-  ; 
tico  this  summer  as  they  undergo 
their     annual     six    week     training  j 
period    leading    to    their    commis-  , 
sions  as  second  lieutenants  in  the  i 
reserv  s. 


Yack  Proofs 
Due  Tomorrow 

Friday  is  the  last  day  that  stu- 
dents can  choose  which  of  their 
pictures  will  be  in  this  year's  Yack, 
according   to   the   annual   officials. 

Students  can  make  their  choices 
from  the  proofs  now  in  the  APO 
Room  in  the  basement  of  Graham 
Memorial. 

The  room  wil  be  open  from  1 
to  7  p.m.  through  Friday. 


GM'S  SLATE 


MISS  JANE  BROCK 

.    .   .    Manue    Qu^cn 


"Tj^^TSnoTingattivitios    aro 
schcodulod   for  GM  today: 

M»\n  Lounge — Reception  for 
Hungarian  studont;  Grail  Room 
—5:15  Debate  SquatT.  6-11  Stu- 
dent Council;  Roland  Parker  1 — 
4-5:30  UP  Caucus;  6-7:30  UP 
Caucus;  Roland  Parker  3 — 4-5 
Studont-Facuity  Forum,  4-7:30 
SP  Caucus;  Council  Room — 7- 
9:30  IDC  Court;  A^PO  Room— 
7:30-9:30  Combo,  9:30  11  Combo. 


•.nents  until  it  has  been  reviewed 
oy  the  executive  committee  of  the 
conference.  If  North  Carolina 
State  College  desires  to  appeal,  it 
v.ill  be  processed  after  it  is  re- 
ceived in  this  office  as  quickly  as 
it  is  possible  to  do  so. 

"The  basis  for  the  disapproval 
of  the  boy's  eligibility  blank  was. 
that  this  office  had  accepted  the 
lindings  of  the  NCAA." 

STATUS 

Dr.  Bo.stian  said  State's  request 
to  the  conferencec  was  accom- 
panied by  a  request  that  it  review 
Moreland's  eligibility  status. 

He  said  Weaver  had  "informed 
us  that  he  cannot  approve"  More- 
land's  eligibility  certificate.  Dr. 
Bostian  agreed  this  had  the  effect 
ol  ruling  Moreland  ineligible  un- 
til the  ACC  acts. 

Dr.  Bostian  made  it  clear  State 
College  will  nit  lake  action 
against  any  nieml)ers  of  its  ath- 
letic staff  "until  we  know  th.-'y 
!iave  violated"  ACC  or  NCAA  reg- 
ulations in  recruiting  Moreland.  K 
regulation  of  the  Consolidated 
University  ol  North  Carolina  fays 
ihat  any  stall  member  "willfully 
violating  an  NCAA  w  ACC  regu- 
lation" "shall  be  dismissed  imme- 
diately.*" 

Dr.  Bostian  said  State  had  pro- 
sented  its  request  for  a  full  in- 
vestigation to  Dr.  Charles  Jor- 
dan of  Duke  University,  presi- 
dent of  the  ACC.  He  said  the 
conference  cannot  consider  tho 
request  until  it  meets  in  Greons- 
boro  Dec.  7. 

Dr.  Bostian  released  a  lengthjr 
report  of  the  case  compiled  for 
Ihe  Board  of  Trustees  of  the  Con- 
solidated University.  He  said  it 
contains  all  we  know"  about  the 
Moreland  case.  It  was  signed  by 
Bostian,  President  William  C.  fVi- 
day  of  the  Consolidated  University 
of  North  Carolina  and  W.  D.  Car- 
michael  Jr..  vice  president  .of  the 
Consolidated  University. 
CONVENTION 

Dr.  Bostian  said  State's  only 
avenue  of  appeal  from  its  proba- 
tion sentence  would  be  on  the 
floor  of  the  NCAA  convention  and 
■"we  think  our  best  avenue  of  ap- 
peal is  through  our  own  confer- 
ence." He  said  "if  we  cannot  con- 
vince our  own  conference"  he  saw 
no  hope  in  appealing. 

Dr.  Bostian  told  newsmen  a  pri- 
vate detective  had  taken  part  in 
the  case.  He  said  he  did  not  know 
v,ho  had  first  brought  complaints 
against  State  in  the  Moreland  case 
j-nd  "we  don't  know  who  hired  a 
private  investigator  to  make  a  pre- 
liminary investigation.' 

He  added  that  "this  all  began 
with  the  work  of  a  private  dete^ 
live  working  out  of  Atlanta." 


PA&E    TWO 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HllL 


THURSDAY,  NOVEMBER  2»,  1»54 


Tar  H^el  Driver's  License: 
A  Virtual  Warrant  To  Kilt 


A  REBUTTAL  OF  ICONOCLAST  EDWARDS: 


A  history  piulessor  hit  the  nail 
s<|uaic'lv  on  ii>  licad  the  other  dav 
when  he  loiupared  anioinohilc.s  to 
piohihit  ion. 

ill  l)oth  <ases,  said  I)i.  J.  <..  Sit- 
terson.  the  peo|)le  jnst  didn  t  h>l- 
luw   or  lielicvc  in   the  laws. 

Ill  the  tase  of  piohibition.  which 
\\a>  Dr.  SitierMHis  topie  tor  the 
(lav.  the  people  ,t;huily  p;;'ssed  leg- 
islation Jo  outlaw  liqnor  "for  the 
other  fellow."  .\s  soon  as  the  Con- 
>ritui:<»nal  amendment  was  passed, 
nearh  everyhodv  who  drank,  be- 
h»ie  stalled  drinking  aj^ain.  They 
made  ^in  in  theiv  bathtnbs  and 
bonuht  it  frtiin  lKM)tleggers.  and 
\irtn."llv  no  one  who  drank,  be- 
h»re  was  deprived  of  his  diinier 
todtly. 

The  else  i.v  the  saaue  so  !ar  as 
anii'nn»l)iles  gt»,  said  Dr.  Sitterson. 
hi  ales  and  munit  ifxdities  gladly 
pa.ss  K-^islation  liiTiitin^  sjieed  ol 
ears  and  peoj)Ji:.  jnovidfing  stifl 
jv.iialfirs  f(»r  those  who  break  the 
uile>.  S(i  what   hrppens? 

I*n!p!t-   speed. 

*  «         * 

rh(\  speed  floH'ii  narroAV.  jatn- 
jfied  hi:ilMvavs.  kntwviiig  that  theii 
d.siviKtion  lies  niftier  their  right 
If  or.  Ihev  droi>  Mfto  a  lower  gear 
and  flash  bv  h  ipp\  <  hildren  t»n 
theii  w.n  Iionu-  Iroin  school.  They' 
kill  .1  Kw.  and  iIkv  kill  themselv- 
es. 

No  nii'tcr  hoit^m  inv  laws  are 
p)'st(|.  the  pi'ople  will  speed.  No 
ii>  fcr  how  mam  spei'ders  and 
d'lntk  diixeis  ^e  api)rehended. 
th  v  sii'l  will  sperti  and  get  drnnk 
.nid  ':\i  into  (  rs.  No  mallei  how 
IP  iii\  (iMiit-s-  cd-  editorials  are 
\'i;:'en.  iio  m'tei'-how  mtich  ii\- 
ii  Diide  ioes  into  a  slow-down- 
and-li\e  •  :iini>ai'.in.  no  matter  what 
the  nov^iij'.r  s  vs.  n(»  tnatier  how 
11'  i\  policemen  are  put  on  doii- 
ble-diitv.  die  pi-ople  will  contiinie 

t.«  dii\i-  t.i-t. 

*  *  * 

riu-  in\m;_'diatc  answer  to  all 
this  is.  l-o'get  abont  the  speed 
laws.  Forget  ;ibout  the  policemen 
and  the  edi'  ials  iti«'  'h'"  f ani- 
paiffns  an.''  '  "  — Vk*.  'Ihc  p-'oplc 
V  '•]]  sjx'  "orhing  you  can  d<j 
^\\\\     ■        rhem.  so  let  them  speed. 

T'  It  is  preitv  nearly  true.  But 
iluic  i«^  something  el.se  that  the 
.''a  If  ol  No-.  :h  C::olina  ran  do 
ill  It  would  (III  the  slate's  traflii 
driilis   tieineiid<»nslv. 

1  he  slate  can  start  making  it 
haul  lor  j)eo(jIe  i<»  get  driver's  li- 
t  eiises. 

*  *  * 

IikUi     present     State     Highwav 


Dept.    rules,    an    idiot   can    —   and 
manv  do  —  get  driver's  licenses. 

1  he  written  test  is  a  farce. 

Iht  driving  test    is  ridicidous. 

M;  nv  a  senseless  diiver  —  a  per- 
son who  would.  g{j  eompletely  to 
pieces  in  a  strained  highway  sit- 
iiati(»n  —  can  jrass  his  driver's  li- 
cense test  in  this  slate,  and  can 
pass  it   with  flying  colors. 

llien  he  can  clind)  into  his  car. 
armed  with  a  virtual  warrant  to 
kill  signed  bv  the  .Stale  Highwa-v 
Dept..  and  he  can  plow  down  the 
narrf)w  and  jannned  highways  ol 
North  Carolina  and  the  Tnited 
.States,  knowing  nothing  about 
mechanics.  alMHit  roads,  about  au- 
tomotive plivsiis,  alMiut  first  ;'-id. 
about  what  to  dt>  when  his  auto- 
mobile Starrs   iiun  a  slide. 

The  state,  in  allow  in,<i;  senseless 
chiveis  to  pilot  cars,  is  conunittin; 

homicide   on    its    citi/ens. 

.<•        *         » 

f  lie  state  has  traffic  laws,  but  it 
does  not  have  the  patrolmen  or 
imntic  ipal  poruemen  to  enforce 
thetn.  It  st.uids  to  leason.  theie- 
foie.  th.  •-  adequate  driver's  license 
tesis  would  weed  out  the  people 
who  are  prone  to  kill  on  the  high- 
wa\s. 

They  do   not. 

The  lests  do  not  tiller  out  the 
dauiieroiis  drivers.  Thev  throw 
those  drivers  iiUo  the  naiTow  and 
jammed  hiuhyavs.  behind  wheels 
and  !)eliind  hn.ue  engines,  without 
proper  knowledue  under  certain 
abnormal   conditions. 

Ihe  lesull:  Death,  death  and 
move  death. 

.l-(lif<iis  turn  to  liieir  tvpcwriters 
.ind  scold  the  public  for  speeding. 
Hiulnvay  Patrol  officials  release 
their  usual  warnings,  and  start  to 
crack  dtmn. 

lUu  at  the  same  time,  a  senseless 
would-be  driver  is  getting  permis- 
sion to  kill  Ciom  his  driver's  license 
testin*^  official.  He  is  climbing 
into  his  car  without  an  automo- 
tive brain  in  his  head,  and  he  is 
f-'-'n-r  into  the  narrow  and  jam- 
niec!  hi*hwavs;  headed  tor  deatJi. 

All  the  state's  laws  and  all  the 
state's  policemen  can  do  nothin:^ 
to  cut  the  highway  death  rate  so 
long  as  the  state  allows  idiots  to 
drive  on   its  higliwnvs. 

Fclitorials.  cops  and  more  laws 
wtm't  make  a  bit  of  difference. 
Ihe  only  way  to  stop  higlnvSay 
slaughter  is  to  take  the  weapons 
ol  death  awav  fiom  tlie  jieople  who 
would   use  them. 


History  Will  Be  Told  At  7 


I  .!« li  vcai  the  Carolina  Forum, 
(.ladii.ilc-  llistorv  (".lub.  pjlglish 
Club  and  other  orgaatzatiotis  bring 
important  speakers  to  the  campus. 

Ihev  are  important  because  thev 
Iiave  something  important  Uj  say 
.di^nu    the   state.   Jiaiion   or   world. 

Ihey  are  an  essential  part  of  edu- 
c.ui<»n:  they  :nc  the  part  that  can- 


The  Daily  Tar  Heel 

The  official  student  publication  of  tbe 
Publications  Board  of  the  University  of 
North  Carolina,  where  it  is  published 
daily  except  Monday  and  examinatioc 
and  vacation  periods  and  summer  tem:s 
Entered  a.s  second  class  matter  in  the 
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Managing  Editor  ...    CllAEUE  SLOAJ^ 


News  Editor 


RAY  UNKER 


Business  Manager 


BELL  BOB  FUEL. 


Sports  Editor 


LARRY  CHEEK 


EDrrOIlL\L  ST.\FF  —  Woody  Sear?, 
Frank  Crowther.  Barry  Winston,  Oavid 
Mundy.  Georye  Pfingst,  Ingrid  Clay, 
Cortland  Edwards,  Paul  McCauley, 
Bobbi  Smith. 

NEWS  StAFF— Clarke  Jones.  Nancy 
Hill.  .Joan  Moore.  Pringle  Pipkin.  Anne 
Drake.  Edith  MacKinnon,  Wally  Ktiralt, 
Mary  Alys  Voorhees,  Graham  Snyder, 
Billy  Bafnes.  Xeil  Bass!  Gary  Nichols, 
Paye  Bernstein,  Peg  Humphrey,  Phyllis 
iVaultsby. 


Night  Editor 
Proof  Reader 


Graham  Snyder 

—  Ashmead  P.  Pipkin 


not   be  got   from  books. 

lint  tonight  a  relatively  quiet 
campus  organi/ation  will  present 
a  speaker  who  will  deliver  perhaps 
the  most  important  address  of  the 
year. 

His  aliasname  is  Istvan  Laszlo. 
He  helped  in  student  denionstra- 
ti(»iis  in  his  native   Hiuigary. 

Ihe      2i-year-old      student      is 
,    iraxeliJig    across    the    country,    ex- 
plaining the  crisis  in  Hungary.  He 
is  explaining  it   from  a   first-hand 

viewpoint., 

*        *         * 

I.aszio  is  a  mere  student,  .speak- 
ing af>out  a  ccjuniry's  present  con- 
dition, liiu  his  speech  will  explain 
to  the  students  here,  half  a  world 
,1'way  from  Him  gar  v.  what  is  meant 
bv  sue  h  vague  and  un-understand- 
able  terms  as  freedom,  war  and 
oppression. 

I.aszlcj  w.udied  Hungarians  be- 
ing* oppre.ssed  by  Russia.  He 
^^at(hed  ihein  turn  and  fight  back 
at  Russia.  He  watched  wliat  hap- 
pens when  you  revolt  against  Com- 
nuinism. 

He  will  explain  what  the  stu- 
dents of  Hungary  did  when  their 
freedom  had  been  stepped  on  too 
much.  It  was  the  students,  you 
remember,  with  the  poets  and 
newspapermen,  who  started  the 
Hiuigarian    revolt. 

Las/los  speech  will  be  a  living 
chapter  of  history.  It  will  be  giv- 
en in  Carroll  Hall  at  7  p.m.  today. 
It  will  be  important  —  important 
i  to  ail  students,  whether  they  arc 
history  majors,  business  adminis- 
tration students  or  future  sociolog- 
ists and  educators. 


God  Is  Very  Much  More  Than  Work 


P.  E.  Barrow 

■  Some  people  are  so  narrow-minded  they  can  see  througl^ 
a  keyhole  with  both  eyes.  I  celebrate  the  right  of  anyone  to 
speak  his  mind  on  matters  spiritual,  political,  social  and  other- 
wise. 

Istthere  no  limit  to  the  journalistic  achievements  of  our 
own  Daily  Tar  Heel?  We  hardly  expected  to  find  within  the 
columns  of  this  newspaper  such  an  interesting  th(H)logical  dis- 
course as  presented  by  the  sage  from  Sag  Harbor  in  a  receni 
Ksue  under  the  title- "God  is  Work." 

It  is  refreshing,  I  say,  to  find  .any  mention  of  it  since  us- 
ually we  find  il  devoted  to  more  mundane  matters  such  as. 
campus,  local,  national  or  even  international  affairs  rather  than 
spiritual  matters  of  this  and  other  worlds.  I  hasten  with  Quixo- 
tic abandon  and  fervor  to  accept  the  challenge  of  the  gauntlet 
thus  fliiiig. 

The  paramount  infusion  of  spiritual  fog,  which  has  ob- 
literated any  appreciation  of  such  divers  matters  as  those  with 
which  he  (Columnist  Cortland  Edwards),  purports  to  deal,  is 
due  to  the  McCarthy-like  style  which  has  cast  so  many  asper- 
sions and  doubts  upon  so  many  different  matters  that  it  would 
take  a  dozen  theologians  more  competent  than  this  amateurish 
layman  to  ans'vcr  thcni.  even  v.orking  feverishly  night  and 
day  for  several  weeks. 

Interestingly,  Edwards  gives  no  arguments  in  support 
of  this  cataloguing  of  his  likes  and  dislikes  (mostly  the  lat- 
ter) in  matters  spiritual  or  religious.  It  is  as  if  he  had  said 
"t  like  mustard  on  my  ice  cream"  and  one  is  always  tempt- 
ed to  the  banal   reply,"  O.K..  so  you  do  —  theres  no  ec- 
counting  for  tastes". 
Bui  here  1  wish  to  assail  the  ideas,  not  the  person,  since 
it  is  they  which  must   meet  the  tests  of  acceptability   in  thc^ 
open  market-place  of  truth.  Also,  these  ideas  of  this  iconocla.^t 
are  not  as  unusual,  unique  nor  idiosyncratic  as  they  might  ap- 
pear upon  first  inspection:  in  fact,  indifference  is  the  keynote 
and  apathy  the  watchword  of  our  modern  culture  today. 

fcN^en  though  we  must,  with  Voltaire,  say  "I  may  disagree 
with  everything  you  say,  but  I  will  defend  to  the  hilt  your, 
right  to  say  it,"  nevertheless,  you  and  I  are  each  only  one  in 
dividual.  You  and  I  are  only  a  speck  of  cosmic  dust,  but  in 
your  very  act  of  defiant  disbcliei  you  have  displayed  the  free 
dom  of  will  and  conscience  which  i.-^  at  once  the  grandeur  and 
glory  as  well  as   the  downfall  of  man. 

God  does  not  tell  man  he  must  believe  —  he  only  makes 
it  pos.sible  and  then  gives  him  the  freedom  to  choose.  Fortun- 
ately, also,  for  him  he  is  never  beyond  the  redemption  of 
God's  grace  and  love;  Forgiveness  is  always  ready  to  be  given 
no  matter  what  he  may  do  to  estrange  himself  from  God. 
♦         *         ♦ 

Good  debaters  frequently  attempt  to  find  some  points  ol 
agreement.  Here  are  some  points  where  this  cynical  and  Men- 
ckenish  individual  may  not  find  himself  so  much  at. variance 
although  many  will  say  he  has  not  come  far  enough. 

1.  Tie  is  monotheistic  at  Jeast.  and  not  an  agnostic  or  ac 
atheist. 

2.Justifiable  (in  .some  cases)  criticism  of  certain  forms  oi 
Christianity  (e.g.— intolerant  denominationalism.  etc.).  However, 
here  one  is  prompted  to  ask  if  he  isn't  'throwing  the  baby  out 
with  the  bath"  since  most  do  iwl  claim  to  l>e  perfect  or  even 


"good"  Christians,  but  rather  admit  they  are  sinners  and  say 
further  that  "all"  have  sinned  and  fallen  short  (whether  it  be 
intolerance,  hypocrisy  or  whatnot). 

3.  One  universal  God  for  all  people — Ail  Christian  denom- 
inations and,  indeed,  most  of  the  major  religions  such  as  Ju- 
daism, Mohammedanism,  Christianity,  etc.  believe  this,  albeit 
they  differ  somewhat  radically  on  the  fate  of  non-believers. 

4.  Relatively  minor  importance,  of  miracles  and  question 
of  virgin  birth  as  grounds  of  faith.  In  other  words  a  "faith' 
rooted  in,  or  that  hangs  by,  acceptance  of  these  is  indeed  an 
inadequate  and  weak  one.  (Here  one  wants'  to  deny  that  by 
this  one  Escapes  the  central  question  for  Christians  of  the  con- 
frontation of  the  Man  Jesus  who  was  either:  A. — the  greatest 
and  most  deluded  madman  of  history  or  B. — He  was  what  He 
said  Ho  was.  namely,  the  Son  of  God. 

But  to  get  to  the  matter  of  differences  with  the  ideas 
^    contained  in  Cortland  Edwards'  article,  the  following  four 
wi4l  suffice: 

■~.  1.  God  is  "work"  —  What  a  classic'.  —  Almost  Marxian  in 
flavor  unless  he  means  works  as  in  "faith  without  works  is 
dead."  iVlso  he  says  'God  is  a  concept.  The  God  I  recognize 
is  based  on  an  extension  of  rational  thought  and  designed  to 
etc."  although  earlier  he  had  said  "I  do  not  believe  in 
a  God  created  by  men  of  their  own  reality  and  preached  by 
men  .  .  .  etc."  Certainly  reconciling  these  two  contradictory 
views   requires    some    very    unusual    versatility    and    flexibility 

.of  mind. 

2.  After  stating  categorically  there  'is  no  such  thing"  as 
religion  he  then  says  that  it  is  only  a  social  concept  and  an 
ethical  system.  (Even  though  there  is  no  such  thing"?  —  it  is 
at  least,  even  for  him,  the.se  two  ...  Or  again  for  him,  it  is 
e.^sentially  an  individual  personal  thing  —  but  we  "can  not 
talk  of  religion  per  se." 

3.S0UI  is  a  'disposition'"  and  nothing  more.  We  may  assume 
by  disposition  he  means  something  roughly  akin  to  the  "per- 
sonality" of  the  individual.  Here  there  is  no  real  problem, 
just  a  crying  need  to  enlarge  your  view  of  the  soul.  Spul  is 
not"  'just'  personality"  -—  but  suprapersonal  and  transcendent 
in  somewhat  the  same  way  that  the  "I"'  (ego  or  subjective  self) 
tiar.:icends  the  mere  "me''  or  objective  self. 
NO  CONFLICT 

4.  There  is  no  such  necessary  conflict  between  science  and 
religion  as  claimed.  Dr.  Coulson,  in  the  most  recent  McNair 
lectures  here,  siiowed  that  science  addresses  itself,  in  a  dif- 
ferent way  (i.e.,  different  views  of  same  construction)  to  man  s 
problems  and  answers  "how"  but  never  the  ultimate  question 
of  "why*/"  indeed,  to  ask  it  is  not  "scientific."  Einstein,  one 
of  the  most  celebrated  minds  of  this  or  any  other  century, 
says  science  without  religion  is  lame  and  religion  without 
science  is  blind. 

As  to  any  so-<alled  scientific  explanation  of  the  miracles 
they  are  not  even  scientifically  observable  nor  certainly  re- 
peatable  for  experimentation.  It  is  rather  that  they  are  ex- 
ceptions to  the  laws  that  .science  discovers  that  defines  them 
a.s  miraculous  to  start  with. 

For  many  (hey  are  not  prerequisite  to  faith  in  God  or 
Christ,  nor  is  the  virgin  birth  for  some,  and  in  fact  one 
Christian  denomination  does  not  even  subscribe  to  the  divinity 
of  Jc\sus. 


I  cannot  agree  with  our  iconociastic  theologian  when  he 
avers  that  what  we  need  is  an  up-to-date  God  concept  Tha 
best  illustration  I  can  find  of  what  we  need  today  is  found 
in  a  little  article  by  Charles  Templeton  in  the  current  issue 
of  Readers  Digest  entitled  "The  Hope  of  Christma>"  from 
which  these  two  quotes  were  chosen. 

"Christmas  is  the  sj-mbol  of  hope.  But  has  any  hope  ever 
seemed  less  likely  to  be  fulfilled  than  the  one  ^1^»<?^«^  ^J° 
in  Bethlehem  that  gray  December  night  nearly  2,000  yearS 
ago?  How  patheticaUy  incongruous!  A  newborn  Infant  proclaim- 
ed as  a  challenge  to  the  sprawling  might  of  the  Roman  Bn- 
pire'  The  gentle  Jesus  pitted  against  Caesar!  And  yet,  what 
of  Caesars  might  today?  His  armies  are  history,  his  empu-e 
has  crumbled,  his  influence  is  almost  nil.  But  the  things  of 
which  Jesus  spoke  —  those  intangible  ideals,  those  words  of 
hope  —  have  outlasted  the  material  world  m  which  they  were 
spoken  and  have  grown  stronger  with  every  century.  This  is 
the  ground  for  the  hope  that  is  borri  again  each  Christmas 

Day. 

*        *        * 

"How  vain  it  sometimes  seems  to  believe  that  love  and 
good  wall  can  triumph  over  the  organized  hate  and  the  evU 
power  abroad  in  our  world  today.  It  seems  such  an  unequal 
contest.  How  then,  confronted  with  the  grim  reality  of  life  in 
the  atomic  age,  can  we  find  hope  in  the  lovely  but  seemingly 
outdated  story  of  Christmas?  "Where  do  we  begin?  We  begin 
where  they  began  who  gathered  about  the  manger.  Is  our 
world  troubled?  So  was  theirs. 

'We  have  so  sentimentalized  Christmas  that  we  have  little 
comprehension  of  the  bloody,  callous,  violent  time  into  which 
the  Christ  child  was  born.  If  the  little  group  in  the  stable 
had  looked  at  the  ugliness  and  injustice  that  filled  their  world, 
they  might  well  have  cried  in  despair.  Look  what  the  world 
has  come  to!'  Instead,  they  looked  at  the  babe  asleep  in  the 
straw  and  cried  out,  'look  what  has  come  to  the  world!'  .  .  . 

"Is  it  a  glib  and  easy  optimism  to  hold  out  the  hop* 
that  one  person  can  do  something  toward  meeting  the 
great  needs  of  our  time?  In  our  nMSsive,  impersonal  world 
may  we  really  believe  in  the  influence  of  the  nameless 
individual?  Look,  for  an  answer,  at  the  men  who  followed 
Jesus  when  he  can»e  to  manhood.  Today  they  are  honored 
and  called  saints.  What  were  they  when  Jesus  called  them? 
They  were  typical  workingmen  —  fishermen,  tax  collectors, 
'the  common  people  who  heard  him  gladly.' 

'They   were   indistinguishable   from   the    millions   around 

them  —  until  they  met  Jesus.  Then  His  faith  in  them  called 
forth  their  faith  in  God,  and  these  formerly  unexciting  men 
went  out  to  turn  the  world  upside  down  and  to  change  the 
course  of  history  .  .  . 

"Every  Christmas  a  hope  is  born,  a  hope  like  the  shining 
star  which  became  the  finger  of  God  pointing  to  Bethlehem 
and  to  the  future.  This  is  the  hope  of  Christmas:  That  thougli 
the  outlook  may  seem  dark,  the  only  darkness  we  need  to 
fear  is  the  darkness  within.  The  Prince  of  Peace  has  come, 
and  with  Him  the  faith  that  some  day  men  will  "beat  their 
swords  into  plowshares  and  their  spears  into  pruning  hooLs.' 
What  if  the  news  in  the  headlines  is  bad?  'Behold,  I  bring 
you  good  tidings  of  great  joy."' 


PUBLISHED  TODAY: 


i 

—  II 


Former  Student  Levin 
Writes  Of  His  City 


'  Charlie  Sloan 

Hun  Levin,  a  former  student 
who  is  living  in  Chapel  Hill  and 
is  currently  at  work  on  a  novel, 
loves  motorcycles,  m.xlvrn  jazz 
and  stray  dogs.  He  does  not  grow 
beards,  wear  white  tennis  shoes 
or  drink   Chianti  Dy  candlelight. 

All  this  would  seem  to  dis- 
qualify him  as  a  poet,  yet  a  col- 
lection of  Levin's  poetry  is  be- 
ing released  today  by  New 
Sounds  Publishers  of  Chapel  Hill. 

Titled  I,  The  City,  the  poom.s 
have  a  strong  resemblance  to 
the  work  of  Carl  Sandburg.  Lev- 
in admits  that  Sandburg.  Whit- 
man, MacLeish.  Dylan  Thomas 
and  Wilfred  Owen  have  influ- 
enced his  work. 

To  Levin  a  metropoli.s  is  the 
ruler  of  its  inhabitants,  and  of- 
ten it  Is  not  the  most  enlighten- 
ed ruler. 

The  title  piece  is  divided  into 


seven  parts,  each  describing  a 
particular  facet  of  the  city's  per- 
sonality. They  are,  for  the  most 
part,  vividly  descriptive,  but  each 
is  only  a  related  collectipn .  of 
thoughts. 

The  poems  all  have  the  single 
charact2ristic  of  strong  ideas 
.strongly  put.  Continuity  comes 
only  through  the  .single  subject, 
a  city. 

All  this  makes  lor  good  read- 
ing, although  it  is  rather  harsh 
for  ordinary  entertainment. 

In  addition  to  the  series  of 
poems  concerning  the  city;  th<>re 
are  four  other  pieces  done  in  the 
same  style.  These  show  Levin's 
ability  to  handle  several  types 
of  poetry  in  a  pleasing  manner. 

I,  The  City  proves  that  poetry 
can  have  guts  and  not  be  obnox- 
ious about  it.  As  Levin's  second 
published  work  it  is  very  much 
to  the  ct>dit  of  his  ability  as  a 
poet. 


Modern  Egypt 


They  Griped  About  Cost 


One  hundred  years  ago  in 
Chapel  Hill.  Miss  Nancy  Hilliard 
sold  the  Eagle  Hotel,  popular 
center  for  guests  and  students, 
to  Col.  Guthrie  for  a  sum  not 
named. 


UXC  students  protested  against 
the  general  raising  of  board  from 
$50  a  "session"  to  $55  and  $60. 
If  this  kept  up.  they  argued,  stu- 
dent board  would  soon  cost  $10  a 
month. 


Pogo 


By  Walt  Kelly 


Tn  AJ^JTITAUA  W ) 
^       we       fl 


IV\  Abner 


By  Al  Capp 


Winter  Thoughts: 
We  Miss  A  Lot 

Woody  Sears 

With  the  las-t  of  the  autumn  leaves  blowing  off 
the  fci-ees  and  settling  into  the  verj-damp  mulch  of 
their  predecessors,  and  with  the  temperature  still 
meriting  the  wearing  of  overcoats  at  high  noon, 
we  recognize  the  fact  that  winter  has  arrived  in 
Chapel  Hill. 

So  often  it  is  said  that  spring  turns  one's  mind 
to  thoughts  of  love  and  youth,  etc.  But  what  is 
said  of  fhe  other  seasons?  To  be  sure,  people  are 
not  so  far  removed  from  their  four-legged  counter- 
parts that  the  nocturnal  changes  do  not  elicit  some 
emoting. 

Whet  do  we  say?  That  it  is  a  season  of  death? 
or  that  it  w  nature's  slumber  time?  So  maybe  it 
is  some  of  both,  yet  both  are  so  stereotypical  of 
our  unin>aginative  responses. 
Seems  as  though  winter  could  well  be  the  sea- 
son of  appreciaUon  ...  for  things  we  don't  ordi- 
narily think  of.  Things  like  the  warmth  of  the  homes 
or  dormitories  we  return  to  at  night,  the  delicious 
feeling  ©f  a  hot  shower  biu-ning  the  cold  out   of 
your  system,  the  cozy  smell  of  coffee  brewing  in 
the  kitchen  or  a  small  diner,  the  comfortable  heft 
of    blanket  on  a   cold   night,   the  companionship 
around  an  open  fireplace,  the  crisp  sterility  of  * 
moonlit  night,  and  the  frost  that  speckles  the  green 
lawns. 

These  are  things  we  would  miss  if  we  couldn't 
have  them,  but  we  never  think  about  them.  In- 
stead, we  think,  "Geez,  it's  cold,"  and  tuck  our 
collars  closer  to  our  throats  and  scurry  on  our  re- 
spective ways. 

After  spending  a  few^  days  in  the  contagious 
ward  at  the  Infirmary,  Fve  decided  that  things  are 
not  so  bad  over  there  as  some  folks  would  lead 
you  to  believe.  The  food  is  tolerably  good,  the  beds 
are  better  than  most  in  the  dorms,  and  most  of  the 
staffers  are  human  beings  .  .  .  "Enema"  Ed,  the 
class-cutter's  "friend". 

None  of  the  medicine  I  received  was  very  ob- 
jectionable, and  I  got  in  a  lot  of  good  sack  time. 
The  nurses  were  all  pretty  terrific  personalities 
who  good-naturedly  put  up  with  a  lot  of  guff  from 
their  patients.  All  in  all,  I  have  no  complaints  to 
make,  and  my  experience  leads  me  to  believe  that 
those  who  profess  to  have  got  a  raw-deal  while 
they  were  there  are  probably  the  people  who  ask 
for  it  and  will  continue  to  find  themselves  in  un- 
savory circumstances  the  rest  of  their  lives  as  a  re- 
sult.. 

One  of  the  nurses  came  in  at  9:10  one  night 
and   Informed   us   that  we   had   50    minutes  till 
lights  out.  "But  nurse,"  somebody  called.  "I'm  a 
60-mlnute  man."  Her  Inscrutable  count«nance  nev- 
er chenged   ae  she  replied.   "Then  you're   going 
to  have  to  better  your  time  tonight." 
Those  nurses  aren't  n.echancial  pill-jerks  Armed 
with  an  infiniate  amount  of  patience,   a  sharp  wit 
and  a  good  sense  of  humor,  they  dole  out  their 
healing  arts  with  professionah  aloofness,  but  manag- 
ing to  maintain  that  ah-  of  personal  contact  that 
keeps  everybody  happy         .  except  the  aforemen- 
tioned few.  " 
Tliey  re  good  folks  in  anybody's  book. 


THURSDl 

Frii 

Williaml 
the  C©ns 
North  a 
speaker    il 


on  a  I 
an  hi 
eveni 
ll 
Harll 


Befc 

volui 
tenta 
what 
toke 


Prisd 
medil 
one 
an  ui 

si 

her 
fries! 
fours 
brou^ 

Hark 


been 
intelll 

puUecl 
likeM 


\ 


(J 
had 
nutii 
a  bij 
aroiil 
the 
Harl 

"thai 

too 
cigal 

that 


.. 

into 

such 

.Phil 

. 

jr'X)c 

wasi 

• 

Thf 

ralu 

the> 

i                  ^ 

oi  U 

DAI 

ACR 

1 

Brid| 

fare-s 

6 

Valis 

11 

Pert* 

12. 

Weir 

13. 

Dcpa 

15. 

Bapt 

fount 

16. 

Abov 

17 

Blacl 

18. 

Tree 

20 

Crac 

22. 

Hum 

24. 

Gun 

25. 

Excl 

mati 

27 

Ba  sq 

cap 

29 

Slop 

3t 

Gold 

32 

Pre* 

t;m»» 

Ti* 

Torr 

35 

Srof 

37 

Borr 

38 

Mov 

barr 

40 

B'X.t 

42 

N«>iii 

Ea.>=t 

•      43 

F>.s' 

46 

r,ro\ 

48  CiM| 

a'-ir 

49 

Cpr 

50 

Cub 

DC 

1 

a*^ 

2 

.  Poei 

3 

.  Sho 

mat 

4 

Wa! 

5 

n\bi 

•'•f 

956 


THURSDAY.  NOVEMBER  29.  1954 


jTHE  daily  TAl^  HREL 


PAGE  THREE 


|en  he 

Tho 

I  found 

isiiu^ 

from 

ever 

born 

years 

:laim- 

Em- 

what 

impire 

igs  of 

rds  of 

were 

lis  is 

listmas 


re  and 
evil 
lequal 

llife  in . 
lingly 
begin 

IS   our 

little 
which 
stable 
world, 
world 
I  in  Ihe 


the 
rerld 
lekss 


rs, 

(around 

called 
Ig  men 
|ge  the 

shining 

lehein 

Itbough 

)eed   to 

come, 

\X  their 

hooks.' 

bring 


s: 


t 


fing  off 

^ulch  of 

re  stai 

noun, 

ived  in 

s  mind 
Iwhat  is 
>ple  are 

•ounter- 
bit  some 

dMth? 
lybe  it 
tical  of 

the  sea- 
|n't  ordi- 
e  homes 
elicious 
out  of 
!wing  in 
ble  heft 
nionship 
iily  of  * 
he  green 


Friday  To  Speak  At  WC  Saturday 


William  C.  Friday,  president  of 
the  Censolidated  University  of 
North  Carolina,  will  be  guest 
speaker    in    Greensboro    Saturday 


at  the  mid-winter  luncheon  meet-  chancellor, 
ing  of  the  Woman's  College  Alum- 
nae Assn. 
Dr.  W.  W.  Pierson,   acting  WC 


HAPPY  TALK 

As  we  all  know,  conversation  is  terribly  important 
on  a  date.  When  lulls  in  the  conversation  run  longer  than 
an  hour  or  two,  one's  partner  is  inclined  to  grow  logy^— 
even  sullen.  What,  then,  does  one  do? 

If  one  is  wise,  one  follows  the  brilliant  example  of 
Harlow  Thurlow.' 

Harlow  Thurlow  prepares.  That  is  his  simple  secret. 
Before  the  date,  he  goes  to  the  library  and  reads  all  24 
volumes  of  the  encyclopedia  and  transcribes  their  con- 
tents on  his  cuffs.  Thus  he  makes  sure  that  no  matter 
what  his  date's  interests  are.  he  will  have  ample  material 
to  keep  the  conversation  alive. 

Take,  for  example,  Harlow's  first  date  with  Priscilla 
de  Gasser,  a  fine,  strapping,  blue-eyed  broth  of  a  girl, 
lavishly  constructed  and  rosy  as  the  dawn. 

Harlow  was,  as  always,  prepared  when  he  called  for 
Priscilla,  and,  as  always,  he  did  not  start  to  converse  im- 
mediately. First  he  took  her  to  dinner  because,  as  every- 
one knows,  it  is  useless  to  try  to  make  conversation  with 
an  unfed  coed. 

So  he  took  her  to  a  fine  steak  house  where  he  stoked 
her  with  gobbets  of  Black  Angus  and  mounds  of  French 
fries  and  thickets  of  escarole  and  battsdions  of  petits 
fours.  Then,'  at  last,  dinner  was  over  and  the  waiter 
brought  two  finger  bowls. 

"I  hope  you  enjoyed  your  dinner,  my  dear,"  said 
Harlow,  dipping  into  his  finger  bowl. 

"Oh,  it  was  grandy-dandy  !'*  said  Priscilla.  "Now  let's 
go  someplace  for  ribs." 

"Later,  perhaps,"  said  Harlow.  "But  right  now,  I 
thought  we  might  have  a  conversation." 

"Oh,  goody,  goody,  two-shoes!"  cried  Priscilla.'  "I 
been  looking  everywhere  for  a  boy  who  can  carry  on  an 
Intelligent  conversation." 

"Your  search  is  ended,  madam,"  said  Harlow  and 
pulled  back  his  sleeves  and  looked  at  his  cuffs  to  pick  a 
likely  topic  to  start  the  conversation. 


I  nm^t  ^e  mSfli^^  ^i^m^^lio/^ 


i  )h.  woe !  Oh.  lackaday  1  Those  cuffs  on  which  Harlow 
had  painstakingly  transcribed  such  diverse  and  fa>«ci- 
nating  information  —  those  cuffs  were  nothing  now  but 
a  big,  blue  blur  I  For  Haiiow-poor  Harlow!  -splashing 
around  in  the  finger  bowl  had  gotten  his  cuffs  wet  and 
the  ink  had  run  and  not  one  word  was  legible  I  And 
Harlow  broke  out  in  a  night-sweat  and  fell  dumb. 

"I  must  say,"  said  Priscilla  after  several  silent  hours, 
"that  you  are  a  very  dull  fellow.  I'm  leaving." 

With  that  she  flounced  away  and  poor  Harlow  was 
too  crushed  to  protest.  Sadly  he  sat  and  sadly  lit  a 
cigarette. 

All  of  a  sudden  Priscilla  came  rushing  back.  "Was 
that."  she  a.sked.  "a  Philip  Morris  you  just  litV" 

"Yes,"  .said  Harlow. 

"Then  you  are  not  a  dull  fellow !"  she  cried  and  sprang 

into  his  lap.  "You  are  briyht!  Anybody  is  bright  to  smoke 

such  a  perfect  doll  of  a  cigarette  as  today's  rich,  tasty 

.  Philip  Morris,  which  is  brimming-full  of  natural  tobacco 

g«:»odness  and  fresh  unfiltered  flavor Harlow,  tiger, 

wash  your  cuffs  and  be  my  love!" 

"Okay,"  said  Harlow,  and  did.  and  was. 

■  Max  Shuinian.  1906 

The  makers  of  Philip  Murrit  Cigarettes,  who  bring  you  this 
rolumn  each  week,  are  very  happy  for  llarlotc  -  and  for  all 
the  retl  of  you  leho  hate  diicotered  the  true  tobacco  goodne»g 
of  today's  Philip  Morris.' 


DAILY    CROSSWORD 


ACROSS 

1   Bridge 

fares 
6  VzMses 

11.  Perfect 

12.  Weird 

13.  Departs 

15.  Baptismal 
fountain 

16.  Abound 

17.  Blackens 

18.  Tree 

20  Cracfc-filler 
22.  Humble 

24.  Gun  (slang) 

25.  Excia-     . 
matien  - 

2T.  Basquelike 

cap 
2!».  Sloping  edge 

31.  Gold  (Her.)  , 

32.  Present 
time 

34.  Terrible 
35  Scoff 

37.  Bom 

38.  Movable 
barrier 

40.  Booty 
42  Near 

Easterner 
43.  FlMhy  berry 
46.  Grows  white 

48  Catlike 
animal 

49  Upright 

50.  Cubic  meter 


DOWN 

1  Sesame    ^ 

2.  Poem 

3.  Shoe 
material     ^ 

4  Waah  ^1^, 

5  Hibernal  Uw' 
•ttte  ^ 


6  Germanium 
(sym.) 

7.  Renovated 

8.  Sarcasm 

9.  Color 
10.  Places 

14.  Complacent 

18.  Large  read- 
ing desk 

19.  Prophet 
21.  Flap 

23.  River  (Me.) 

25.  In  this  place 

26.  Toward  the 
sheltered 
side 

28.  Digit 


30.  Yield 
of 
a 

vine- 
yard 

33  Skin 
mark 

35.  Not 
fresh 

36.  Sources 

38.  Gaze 

39.  Sanda- 
rac 
tree 

41.  Leave  out 
44.  Thrice 
(mus.) 


sTTTTT?! 


asjof^iTJO  can 


ssDaaB  us 
[vEQMHa  as 


Yrtl«r4ay'»  Aacwer 

45.  Coin 
(Swed  ) 

47.  Address  ab- 
breviation 


will  present  Friday 
and  Mrs.  L.  Richardson  Preyer, 
Greensboro,  president  of  the 
Alumnae    Assn.,   will    preside. 


Mrs.  Kenneth  Greenfield,  Kem- 
ersville,  chairman  of  the  nomin- 
ating committee,  will  present  a 
slate  of  officers  to  be  voted  on 
by  the  association  next  Spring. 
Other  reports  on  alumnae  activity 
during  the  past  year  will  be  read. 

The  luncheon  will  begin  at  12:30 
p.m.,  in  Elliott  Hall.  Mrs.  William 
A.  Lambert,  Greensboro,  social 
committee  chairman,  is  in  charge 
of  arrangements. 


Audiologtst  To  Speak 
In  Rai^igH  On  IFriday 

L.  IJ^d^  fieed;  aadiologist  of 
the  North  Carolina  Metnoriil  Hos- 
pital of  UNC,  will  be  guest  speak- 
er at  the  North  Carolina  Assn.  of 
Special  Therapists  meeting  Triday 
at  the  Sir  Walter  Hotel  in  Ra- 
leigh. 

Reed  will  speak  at  7  p.m.  on 
"Diagnostic  and  Therapeutic  Mea- 
sures for  Speech  Defective  Child- 
ren." 

Reed  also  will  be  a  member  of  ■ 
a  panel  headed  by  Mrs.  Amue  Ray 
Moore,  health  educator  of  the 
Dept.  of  Public  Instruction  of  Ra- 
leigh, which  wil  be  discussing 
"Promising  Practices  with  th« 
Hard-of-Hfearing."  ^ 


Covering  The  Campus 


I  GRAD  CLUB 

!  The  third  meeting  o?  the  gradu- 
ate" club  will  take  place  Friday  at 
8:45  p.m.  in  Roland  Parker  Lotm^c 
of  Graham  Memorial.  An  informal 
!  discussion  will  be  led  by  Dr.  Bill 
I  Poteat.  All  graduate  students  have 
been  invited. 
SUPPER 

Orange  Methodist  Church  is 
having  a  brunswick  stew  supper 
iSaturday  from  5  to  7:30  p.m.  at 
$1  a  plate.  Proceeds  will  go  to  a 
building  fund.  The  church,  which 
is  two  miles  out  Airport  Road,  has 
invited  the  public. 
FILM  COMMITTEE 

The   Graham   Memorial   Activi- 
ties   Board    film    committee    will 
meet  Friday   at  2:30  p.m.  in  Ro- 
land Parker  Lounge  No.  1. 
CONCERT  BAND  TRYOUTS 

Students  interested  in  playing  in 
the  UNC  Concert  Band  have  been 
asked  to  attend  the  first  rehearsal 
today  at  4:30  p.m.  in  Hill-Z. 
BRIDGE  LESSONS 

Bridge  lessons  sponsored  by 
Graham  Memorial  Activities  Board 
will  be  taught  today  in  the  Day 
Care  Center  of  Victory  Village  at 
7:30  p.m.  Presented  free  of  charge, 

Dean  Sitterson 
Outlrnes  Mojor 
University  Task 

"The  major  educational  task 
facing  the  University  of  North  Car- 
olina, is  that  of  challenging  to  the 
utmost  the  ablest  students,  while 
at  the  same  time  providing  edu- 
cational opportunities  for  the 
larger  number  of  students  seek- 
ing admission  to  the  college," 
Dr.  J.  Carlyle  Sitterson,  Dean  of 
the  College  of  Arts  and  Sciences, 
said  yesterday. 

Speaking  on  "Liberal  Education, 
the  Liberal  Arts."  before  the  Uni- 
versity Faculty  Club,  Dean  Sitter- 
son stressed  "It  is  the  able,  the  su- 
perior individual  who  explores 
new  fields  of  knowledge,  discov- 
ers new  truths  and  opens  for  us  all 
the  doors  to  a  fuller  and  more 
fruitful    life." 


Pharmacy  School  Gets 
Some  Old  Patent  Drugs 

W.  L.  Lamar,  Denton  pharma- 
cist, has  recently  donated  a  num- 
ber of  old  patent  medicines  to 
the  UNC  School  of  Phaimacy. 
Among  them  are  Triner's  Bitter 
Wine,  Pond's  Extract,  Dr.  Morse's 
Indian  Root  Pills  and  Cascarets. 
These  items  will  be  placed  in  the 
School  of  Pharmacy  Museum. 


\ 


Traffic 

(Continued  from  Page   1) 

sented  by  the  UNC  Instftute  of 
Government  on  Friday  and  Satur- 
day aimed  especially  at  problems 
of  the  North  Carolina  solicitors 
and  judges  of  recorders  courts. 

Edward  Scheldt,  The  Honorable 
George  B.  Patton,  attorney  general 
of  North  Carolina,  and  the  Honor- 
able Leo  Carr,  Judge  of  the  Su- 
perior Court,  15th  District  will  be 
featured  speakers  of  the  Institute 
program. 

Mr.  Horton  stated  that  the  Traf- 
fic Court  Conference  has  been 
very  successful  and  that  the  par- 
ticipants are  ver>'  much  impressed 
by  the  new  Institute  of  Govern- 
ment Building  and  by  the  Carolina 
campus. 

He  quoted  James  P.  Economos, 

Director  of  the  American  Bar  As- 

socication  Traffic  Court  Program 

and  Director  of  the  Traffic  Cburt 

Conference  as  saying  that  the  con- 

j  ference  is  "one  of  the  most  sue- 

,  cessful  programs  ever  held  in  the 

'  South,  with  a  very  fine  response 

from  this  state." 

The  program  is  presented  by 
the  University's  Institute  of.  Gov- 
ernment in  cooperation  with  the 
American  Bar  Association  Traffic 
Court  Program  and  the  North  Car- 
olina Bar  Association 


the  lessons  ii'e  open  t-o  anyone  iii 
the  Victory  Village  area  who  is 
interested  in  learnirig  bridge. 
WUNC 

Today's  schedule  for  WUNC,  the 
University's  FM  radio  station,  op* 
crated  on  a  frequency  of  91.5 
megacycles  and  a  power  of  12,000 
watts:  -         - 

T  p.m. — ^Intermeao. 

7:18  p.m.— ^Chalkditst 

7:30  pi.m;— Music  Program. 

7:46  p.1ba.— French  Rrws  Re- 
view. 

8  p.m. — Encore. 

8:30  p.m.— Folk  Music  of  the 
World. 

9  p.m.— Listen  America. 

9:30  p.m. — Governor's  Press  coa- 
ferenCe. 

10  p.m. — ^News.. 

10:15  p.m.-^Evcning  Master- 
work. 

11:30  p.m.—Sign  Off. 
WUNC-TV 

Today's  schedule  for  WUNC-TV. 
the  University's  tele\isioD  station, ' 
Channel  4:  •"         - 

12:45  p.m.— ^usic. 

1  p.m.— ^Poday  on  Farm. 
1:30  p.m.— Gloucester. 

2  p.a3.-^Medidae. 
5:45  p.m. — Music.  . 

6  p.m. — ^Magic  Lantern. 
6:15  p.m.— -Sports  Clinic. 
6:30  p.m.— News. 
6:45  p.m.— Sports. 

7  p.m.— Garden  Wall. 
7:15  p.m.— iBible  Course. 

8  p.m.— 'Dr.  Shivers. 
8:45  p.m.— State  <k>vemmcnt. 
9-.S0  p.m.— ^Ucture  Kail. 
10  p.m.-=Fimfl  Bdition. 


Rotary  Club  Donate^ 
$100  To  NC  Hospital 

The  Chapel  Hill  Rotary  Club 
has  donated  another  $100  to  the 
Rotary  Fund  for  Pediatrics  at  Me- 
morial Hospital.  The  first  dona- 
tion was  made  last  spring. 

The  use  of  the  money  is  unre- 
stricted. The  money  is  being  used 
for  the  purchase  of  toys,  crift  ma- 
terial  and  playroom  supplies. 


Murals 

(Contmwed  from  page  1.) 
cline,  he  emphasized,  is  only  in 
the  dormitory  division.  Fraternity 
interest,  primarily  because  of 
closely  knit  organization,  is  "hold- 
ing its  own,"  he  said. 

The  idea  of  offering  compensa- 
tion to  intramural  managers  has 
a  twofold  intention,  according  to 
Rabb: 

(1)  To  delegate  to  some  one 
person  responsibility  of  lieldiaf 
at  least  one  team  for  each  sport 

(2)  Through  delegation  , of  re- 
sponsibility to  one  recompensed 
person,  to  avoid  the  "costly  and 
disintegrating  influence"  of  tot' 
feits. 

Rabb  mentioned  as  possible 
forms  of  compensation  being  in- 
vestigated: 

(1)  Room  scholarsbip. 

(2)  Salaries. 

The  room  scholarship  is  pre- 
ferable, Rabb  said. 

The  intramurals  head  said  pos- 
sible results  of  compensating  in- 
dividual intramural  managers  in- 
cluded: Inculcation  of  pride  in 
athletic  achievements  of  individu- 
al dormHories  and  fraternities, 
atnd  growing  acquaintanceship  be- 
tween residents  which  would 
stlmulpte  other  extra-curricular 
activities  besides  intramurals. 

In  conclusicn,  Rabb  said: 

"The  entire  intramurals  pro- 
grarti  is  dependent  upon  a  good 
corps  of  intramural  managers." 

Condensation  would  more  de- 
finitely insure  better  intramural 
managers,  ^ihb  said. 


*^^^^^J^»V,»  <^^^^^V^^»^l^^l^)^»i^^^^MMV^»^Vi^^< 


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6RITS 

Special  Combination  Offer 
$1.50  Value  Tea  Pot  Plus 
24  Our  Own  Tea  Bags 

Only  98< 

SPECIAL  LOW  PRICE!  Sunshine 

Hydrox  Cookies  pS  49^ 


Swonson'sTVSSS.  pS*  69c 
Swonson's  S2  1^^  5^:  25cj 
Strietmonn  SSS...  iS:  29g 


Mareal  Toilel  Ti»sves  JMi  i«c  Mareal  Oiaacr  S^fkim  z^^Htc 
XarcalPasCclNapklM^^"l*<:  Mareal  Wkite  NapUas  'Pi^fc 
Mareal  Kttdiea  Cham  Waxed  Paper 'aiu*'     28c 


t*»Ai*^^M»^»rf»^»<^^^MM^M»^^>^MM^M> 


<« 


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Swiff's  Meats 

POR  BABIES 

.\SSORTED     'JJ^ 
JARS— EACH   ^JC 


STEAKS 


Boneless  Round 


Porterhouse — Cubed  or  T-Bone 
Lb 


STEAKS  '  75t   STEAKS 

Chuck "-  Roasts 


89c 

39c 


Boned  &  Rolled  Rib 


Leon  Boneless 


ROASTS   75c  STEW  BEEF  55e 


DOG   FOOD 

Orleans 


HORSE 
MEAT 


2     Cans    39c 


Octagon  Soap 

LAUNDRY       |A^ 
BAR— EAai      lUC 


Octagon  Soap 

rOILET  -7^ 

BAR— EACH        /C 


A&P'S  FARM  FRESH  FRUITS 
AND  VEGETABLES 


KRAFT  PHILADELPHIA 

Cream  Cheese 


3-Oz. 
Pkg. 


15c 


80z 
Pkg 


39c 


Kraft 


Cheez-Whiz 

'J^  57c 


KRAFT 

Velveeta  Cheese 

Package  jIaI 
nUIT  PIMIENTO 

Cheese  Slices 

Package  JjC 


KRAFT  OLD  ENGLISH 

Cheese  Spread 

'fui  29c 


Fresh  Oranges  . . . . 8  ii  45c 

Cranberries?!^" 'sai   17c 


BOSC  PEARS 


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15 


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Bouquet 

fxpiLET      2     12,     ,7c 


CRAPEFRUIT  -  -  'B  47 


SOAP 


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uper  ^arket 


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STORE         210  W.  FRANKLIN  ST, 

ADDRESS 


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mmmi 


PAGE  FOUR 


TKi  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


THURSDAY.  NOVEMBER   29,  1956 


Varsity  And  Freshman  Cagers  Tangle  Tonight  In  Woollen 


HOLDENKERR 

•*  rauoMMQi  ngoMCMi 


T/?e  Proud 

and 

Profane 


TKELMA  HITTER  DEWEY  MARTM 

NOW  PLAYING 


Carolina 


Ask  Yourself  These 


Questions? 

• 


Do  you  enjoy  shopping  whert 
selections  are  rather  limited? 
\io  you  like  to  shop  for  shoe; 
only  to  find  wide  widths  in  youi 
size? 

Do  you  like  to  shop  for  shirti 
only  to  find  the  wrong  sleeve 
length  in  the  shirts  you  like? 

Well,  at  Milton's  with  their  vast 
array  of  selections,  you  won't 
have  to  put  up  with  these  in- 
adequacies. We  carry  shirts 
from  13 '•2  32  to  17/36;  shoes 
from  e*^  to  13 — a  to  e  and  in 
cordovan  loafers — aa/e.  In  suits 
and  sport  coats  we  have  shorts, 
regulars,  longs,  and  extra  longs. 
We  pride  ourselves  with  our 
complete  stocks. 

MILTON'S 
Clothing  Cupboard 


Sutton  And  Jones  Named 
To  All-Conference  Team 

'  Tm-  Heels  Ed  Sutton  and  Jim 
Jones  heve  been  nanned  to  first 
string  positions  on  the  1956  ACC 
All-Conference  fovtbail  team  as 
announced  by  the  cenforonc* 
SporH  Writer's  Assn. 

Sutton  received  186  votes  to 
gain  a  baclcfield  position  vvttiie 
Jones  nailed  down  one  guard 
post  with  152  votes.  End  Buddy 
Payne  made  the  third  team. 

Jones  was  also  named  to  the 
Associated  Press  All-Conference 
team.  Sutton  wae  on  the  AP 
second  team.  Sophomore  guard 
Don  Kemper  also  made  the  sec- 
end  team,  included  on  the  hon- 
orable mention  list  was  eoph 
center  Ronnie  Kees. 


It's 

Children's 
Book  Week. 
Enjoy  A 
Second 
Childhood 
In  The 
Wonderland 
Of 

THE  INTIAAATE 
BOOKSHOP 

MS  E.  Pk'anlclin  St. 
Open  T|i  10  P.R 


I 


THE  ROSEMARY  LAUNDRY 

329  W.  Rosemary  Street 
(Back  of   University  National    Bank) 

Offers  you  its  exclusive  HAND  ironing  service  . 
Wash  and  dry  laundry,  too  ..     9  lbs.  wash,  dry.  folded 
Shirts.  Each,  $.15  Extra 

ALSO  DRY  CLEANINO  SERVICE 


$.S0 


Old  Man  Winter 
Is    Here  ! 

...  But  we  have  just  recei>#ed  a  new  shipment 
of  overcoats  that  will  be  ^our  salvation  on  the 
cold  days  ahead.  \  ^ 

LOOK  AT  THitSE  VALUES 

Harris  Tweeds      .^__ $55.00 

Imported  Cheviots \_ I  57.50 

Imported  Shetlands  ^x\A  Tweeds  67.50 

DON'T  DELAY  ANOTHER  DAY.  HURRY 
ON  DOWN  TO: 


^ 


»    STF.VE^fS^  SHEPHERD 


iGame  Time 
Slated  For 
8  O'clock 

Coach  Bucli  Freeman's  highly 
regarded  freshman  cagers  go  gun- 
ning for  revenge  tonight  in  Wool- 
len Gym  at  8  p.m.  when  they  taice 
on  the  Carolina  varsity  for  the 
second  time  this  season  in  a  game- 
condition  scrimmage. 

T\,'o  weeks  ago  the  varsity, 
paced  by  the  shooting  of  Tommy 
Kearns  and  Ijennie  Rosenbluth, 
toppled  the  yearlings,  62-56,  in  a 
close  and  hard  fought  encounter. 
But  missing  from  the  Tar  Baby 
lineup  that  night  was  Mike 
liteppe,  first  string  guard  from 
New  York.  Steppe  has  since  re- 
turned to  action  and  will  be  in  the 
starting  lineup  tonight. 

The  game  will  sel-ve  as  a  warm- 
up  for  the  Tar  Heels'  season  in- 
augural against  the  McC^ary 
Eagles  Saturday  night  at  Ashe- 
boro.  Their  first  home  game  will 
be  against  Furman  here  next 
Tuesday  night. 

The  varsity  starting  lineup  to- 
night is  expected  to  be  the  same 
that  started  two  weeks  ago.  That 
unit  was  made  up  of  Bill  Hatha- 
way at  center,  Rosenbluth  and 
Pete  Brennan  at  forwards,  and 
Keorns  and  Bob  Cunningham  at 
guards. 

McGuire's  second  unit  will  prob- 
ably be  made  up  of  Stan  Groll  and 
Kenny  Rosemond  at  guards,  Dan- 
ny Lotz  and  Tony  Radovich  at  for- 
wards and  Joe  Quigg  at  center. 

The  freshmen  will  go  with  John 
Crotty  and  Steppe  at  guards,  York 
Larese  and  Lee  Shaffer  at  for- 
wards, and  Dick  Kepley  at  center. 
Kepley.  a  6-8  lad  from  Roanoke, 
Va.,  led  the  frosh  scoring  in  their 
last  encounter  with  the  varsity, 
pumping  in  17  points. 

The  starting  time  for  tonight's 
game  was  originally  set  for  7:30. 
but  was  moved  back  one  half  hour 
so  that  students  may  attend  the 
speech  in  Carroll  Hall  by  a  Hun- 
garian refugee  student 


Intramural  All -Stars  Top  Pirates 


MURALS 


YESTERDAYS  TAG  FOOTBALL 
RESULTS 

Kappa  Sig  defeated  Sig  Nu,  6-0; 
SPE  won  by  forfeit  over  Phi  Kap- 
pa Sig;  Pi  Lambda  Phi  won  by  foi^ 
feit  over  Kappa  Psi;  Phi  Delt  de- 
feated Beta  13-7;  Phi  Gam  won  by 
lorfeil  over  Chi  Phi. 

YESTERDAY'S  VOLLEYBALL 
RESULTS 

SAE  defeated  Pi  Lam  2-0;  Kap 
Sig  defeated  DKE  2-0;  Zeta  Psi-2 
defeated  Beta  2-1;  Chi  Psi  won  by 
lorfeit  over  Sigma  Chi;  Dent 
School  defeated  Eiverett-2,  2-0; 
Law  School- 1  defeated  Old  East. 
2-0. 

^CLASSIFIEDS 

i  A  lUCH  SCHOOL  BOY  CrOING 
away  to  .school  wants  to  buy  an 
overcoat,  size  40  Long.   Anyone 

I      interested  call  Chris  Fink,  2971. 


FOR  SALE:  1954  NASHUA  HOUSE 
trailer.  3  rooms  with  adjoining 
nurs«ry  or  study  room,  and 
screened-ln  front  porch.  All 
inodern  conveniences.  Ideal  set- 
up for  student  and  wife  with  or 
without  children.  Location: 
Sloan's  Trailer  Park,  I'a  miles 
from  Chapel  Hill  on  Airport 
Road — Maurice  L.  Clcgg. 


The  Zeta  Psis  and  Phi  Gams 
combined  their  intramural  tag- 
football  teams  yestertay  and  bare- 
ly overpowered  the  all-stars  from 
E:ast  Carolina,  9  to  6. 

The  Tar  Heels  sewed  in  the  first 
half  when  Murry  Williams  of  the 
Zetas  took  the  last  of  three  short 
passes  by  his  teammates  and 
scooted  down  the  sideline  for  six- 
ty yards.  Williams  also  kicked  the 
extra  point. 

The  Pirates  from  E^ast  Carolina 


came  right  back,  going  forty  yards .  sailed   over   the   end   zone    for   a 
an  a   punt  retiu-n  for  their  only  i  safety.  The  Zetas  handled  all  the 


talley. 


offensive    duties 
Gams   took   care 


while    the    Phi 
of   the   defense. 


The   second    half   was   scoreless 
until  Hugh  Cowan  of  the  Phi  Gams  j  Milton  Barber  did  the  signal  caU 
blocked   an   ECC   punt.    The   ball  I  ing  for  the  Zetas. 


The  Gringo 


Mad! 


AA-7* 

University  Cleaners 

Oppositt  Post  Offic* 


Photo  Finishing  Service 

AS  CLOSE  AS  YOUR  MAILBOX 
GUARANTEED  SERVICE 

Any  8  •xpetur*  roil  dovolop- 
•d  and  8  JUMBO  PRINTS;  only 
50e — 12  exposures  75c— 16  ex 
pofuros  $1.00. 

FAST  6  HOUR  FINISHING 

FREE     ALBUM    WITH     EACH 
itOLL    OF    FILM 

FREE  MAILERS 

HOME  PKOTO  SERVICE 

Box  3803— Park  Placo 
Grtonvillt,  S.  C. 


IDEAL  CHRISTMAS  GIFT 


Musical  Football 

Plays  "Hark  The  Sound!'' 
Blue  and  White— $3.50 


Aelacbrwidi 
Ae  lying'-grMii  ^^ 
•yet  knew  wlqrl 


GARY 


BARBARA 


OAKY  0%  BMKDHKH 

lOPER  Stanwyck  J 

Bmwihg  Who 


Julian's«S| 


fUm»d  in  MEXICO 
\  and  pretantecf  by  WAKNEi  BROS. 


Hear  nuUHKK  UUM  sing  the| 
new  ballad  'Mowmo  wiio- 


mmutH  sv  PHILIP  YORDAN .  ""^  ^'H^t'III^T^'*'  •  '''"cted  by  HUGO  FREGONKE^ 

•UNITED  STATES  PICTURESn«oo  distributed  by  WARNER  BROS. 


ALL   ITS  THRILLS  MORE  THRILLING   WITH 

WarnerPhonic  Sound 


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cT^tGettr^ 


Enjoy  Christmas  Shopping  Where  Books  Abound 


It  i^ood  books  draw  ^ootl  c  ustonu-rs,  the  hi^hrst  rccoin- 
tneiulation  we  roiild  ask  is  tht-  folks  you'll  meet  in  your  w(<rni- 
eaten  old  bookshop  betwctn  now  and  Christmas.  From  Cape 
Fear  to  the  lennessee  border,  literate  Farheels. look  ionvard 
to  a  Christmas  browse  in  the  Intimate  Bookshop.  We  like  to 
think  you  belong  in  this  high  company. 

To  tempt  vou.  we've  picked  a  lew  of  the  new  books  on 
our  bulgir.R  shelves.  We  hope  one  of  them  will  bring  you  in 
to  the  spot  where  Chrismws  shopping  is  most  fun  in  Cha|>el 
Hill.  . 


JAZZ  AT  TURNAGES 

Saturday  afternoon,  2:00,  Turn- 
ages  Cabin  in  Durham. — Jazz  by 
Dick  Gables  "All  Stars."  Beer 
ser/ed. 


^jL        Wh«r«  th«  compliments 
4  A        ar«  ladled  out 

Thfs*  days,  it's  very  often  that  you 

find  a  guy  Wearing  this  Arrow  Gkn 
button-down.  It  rales  plenty  of  praise  for  . 
its  tnm-tailored  collar  and  harmonizing  colors 

(newest  is  a  subtle  blue).  There  are  a  dozen  shades 
to  choose  from  in  oxford  or  broadcloth  ...  and  • 
new  Arrow  silk  striped  fie  to  top  it  off. 
Glen  White  shirt,  ^3.95;  patterns  and  solid 
colors,  JS.OOi  tie,  ^2.50. 


Children's  Books 

Zooparede,  by  Marlin  Perkins  A 
\ery  fine  book,  based  on  a  wonder- 
ful television  program.  A  wondcr- 
lul  gift  for  the  half-pint  viewer! 

$2.95 

A  Hole  (s  to  Dig,  by  Ruth  Kraus. 
This  little  book  is  going  into  its 
tifth  year  as  a  juvenile  bestseller. 
We  think  the  secret  is  that  grown- 
ups like  it   too.  $1.50 

The  M««ic  Pin,  by  Chapel  Hills 
own  Ina  B.  Forbus.  There's  some- 
thing a  bit  old  fashioned  and  de- 
lightful in  this  book's  unblushing 
devotion  to  the  wonderful  world 
of  make-believe.  6  to  10  year-old- 
ers  will  find  it  refreshing!       $2.50 

Fun  at  the  Zoo,  by  J.  Bentley 
-Aistrop.  Children  love  real-life 
stories  about  animals.  This  British 
export  has  the  fine  feeling  for  na- 
ture that  is  a  hallmark  of  Engilsli 
juveniles.  $1.00 

;  Hanover's  Wishing  Star,  by  Nancy 
Caffrey.  Here's  a  good  new  one 
for  the  little  girl  who's  read  all  the 
horse  books.  &-to-13  Age  Group. 

$2.75 

The  Step-By-Step  Cook  Book  for 
Girls  and  Boys.  A  wonderful  in- 
troduction to  cooking  for  the  jun- 
ior cook  or  chef.  Filled  with  easy- 
to-make  goodies  for  the  younger 
teens.  $2.95 

j  The  Iliad  and  the  Odyssey,  adapted 
lor  the  young  reader  by  Jane  Wer- 
ner Watson.  A  Giant  Golden  Book, 
wjth  all  the  color  and  beauty  that 
marks  that  series.  $3.95 

The  Wonderful  World  of  Meth- 
entatics,  by  Launcelot  Hogben.  Sur- 
prismg  as  it  may  seem,  here's  a 
book  which,  with  fine  pictures  and 
lively  writing,  actually  makes 
mathematics  appeal  to  the  adven- 
turous boy!'  A  handsome  gift  $2.95 


Carolina 
Corsair 

By  Don  Tracy 

A  gory  slice  of  North  Carolina's 
piratical  past,  all  sprinkled  with 
love  and  all  that. 

TO  MAKE  YOUR 

CHRISTMAS 

MERRY 

$1.00 


ARROW- 

—first  in  fashion 

SMIHTS   •   TIfS 


Good    New     Novels 

King  of  Paris,  by  Guy  Endore.  A 
biographical  novel  about  Alexandre 
Dumas.  Both  men  and  women  will 
lind  it  irresistable  reading.  $4.00 
The  Heike  Story,  by  Fiji  Yoshika- 
v/a.  A  medieval  epic  from  old  Jap- 
an.  Something  off  the  beaten  path. 

$4.95 
Remembrance  Way  —Chapel  HiU's 
own  Jessie  Rehder  gives  us  a  first 
novel  marked  by  almost  fierce  hon- 
esty and  great  competence.  North 
Carolina  setting.  $3.50 

A  Single  Pebble,  by  John  Hersey. 
A  deceptively  simple  story  of  love 
on  a  river-boat.  $3.00 

Caleb,  My  Son,  by  Lucy  Daniels. 
A  deoply  moving  drama  of  the 
South,  by  the  latest  of  the  Writin' 
Daniels  of  Raleigh!  Recommended. 

$2.75 
A  Certain  Smile,  by  Francoise 
Sagan.  That  pretty  little  French 
girl  writes  of  love  and  seduction. 
O  la  la!  $2.95 

Captain  Little  Ax,  by  James  Street. 
A  story  of  the  underage  warriors 
of  the  Confederacy,  by  Chapel 
Hill's  late  great  novelist.  $3.95 

Dead  Man's  Folly,  by  Agatha 
Christie.  If  there's  a  crime  addict 
on  your  list,  this  new  Hercule 
Poirot  mj'stery  will  score  a  bull's 
eye  with  him.  '  $2.95 

Deluxe  Tour,  by  Frederick  Wake- 
man.  The  author  of  The  Huxters 
dissects  a  group  of  travelers  for 
your  edification.  $3.95 


Books  For  The 

One    And   Only 

Sometimes  a  book  says  things 
you  wouldn't  quite  dare  to  say 
yourself.  When  it  says  them  to  the 
right  person,  the  results  »can  be 
.swell!  Here  are  some  books  that  do 
a  wonderful  Cyrano  at  Christmas. 

This  is  My  Beloved,  by  Walter 
Benton.  The  most  effective  two- 
some reading  ot  our  age.         $3.00 

Sennets  from  The  Portuguese.  The 
poems  Ellizabeth  Barret  Browning 
wrote  to  her  Robert  may  well  ex- 
press what  you  want  to  say,  and 
sister,  how  they  do  express  it!  A 
pretty  edition.  $1.00 

The   Rubaiyat  of   Omar   Khayyam. 

You  can't  beat  the  old  teritmaker 
for  the  "time  is  fleeting"  philoso- 
phy that  is  so  effective  at  times. 

$2.49 


The 

Family  Of 

Man 

Steichen  s    great    collection    of 
photographs  is  a  run-away  best 
seller. 

Herd  Bound  _    $2.95 

Paper  Bound  : $1.00 


Special   Books 
For  Special 


PeopI 


e 


The  Fireside  Book  of  Beseball.  The 

old  man  has  been  pretty  nice  to 
you.  Knock  him  over  with  this 
showy  one-volume  library!  Swpil 
illustrations.  $5.95 

Treasury  of  American  Gardens,  by 
Fitch  and  Rockwell.  One  of  those 
t>ooks,  superb  in  text  and  illustra- 
tion, that  is  a  Cadillac  among  gifts! 

$1Z50 
The  World  We  l,ive  In  —  Young 
Readers  Edition.  The  Kid  broth- 
er will  know  you're  a  big  shot 
when  you  give^him  this  breath- 
taking number.  $4.95 
•George  Bernard  Shaw — Man  of  the 
Century,  by  Archibald  Henderson. 
We  have  autographed  copies  for 
early  birds.                             $12.00 


Books   At    Low 
Prices 

fcssays  in  Science,  by  Albert  Ein- 
stein. The  distinguished  scholar 
talks  of  principles  of  research, 
scientific  truth,  relativity,  and 
other  subjects  of  interest  to  the 
scientific  mind.  $1.00 

The  Laughton  Story,  by  Kurt  Sing- 
er. An  intimate  portrait  of  one  of 
linest  actors  —  and  nicest  people 
—  of  our  time.  A  Bookshop  Speci- 
al ..  .  $1.29 

No    Picnic    on    Mount    Kenya,      by 

Felice  Benuzzi.  This  story  of  three 
Italian  prisoners  of  war,  who  es- 
caped camp  to  climb  a  forbidden 
mountain,  is  the  rugged  sort  of 
thing  that  makes  good  arm-chair 
reading.  $1.00 

Peter   Pauper  Gift   Editions  —  we 

stock  more  than  twenty  titles  in 
this  series  of  exquisite  little  books. 
Perfect  for  the  •more  than  a  card  " 
problems  on  vour  Christmas  list. 

$1.00 

Good     Grief,     More     Peanuts,     by 

Charles  M.  Schulz.  That  little  ras- 
cal Peanuts  has  captured  America's 
heart.  Our  top  dollar  seller!    $1.00 

Random  Shots,  by  John  Bragaw. 
iiundreds  of  amusing  oddments 
and  stories  about  North  Carolina, 
by  the  favorite  columnist  of 
STATE  magazine.  A  Bookshop 
Special  $1.98 

Satan  in  the  Suburbs,  by  Bertrand 
Russell.  The  first  book  of  fiction 
by  a  truly  remarkable  All  'Round 
Man  of  our  century.  $1.00 

The   Southern   Part  of   Heaven,  by 

William  Meade  Prince.  The  best- 
loved  book  ever  written  about 
North  Carolina.  Buy  it  in  time  to 
enjoy  it  yourself  before  passing 
-ihe  treat  along  at  Christmas.  A 
Bookshop  Special  .  .  .  $2.49 


Bibles  For 
Christmas 

We  caiTV  both  the  Revised 
Standard  and  the  King  James 
versions  of  the  Bible,  in  styles 
ranging  from  inexpensive  cloth 
to  fine  leather. 


Top-Notch    Humor 

The  Complete  Book  of  Absolutely 
Perfect  Housekeeping,  by  Elinor 
Goiding  Smith.  Not  since  "The 
Unfair  Sex"  have  we  seen  such  a 
delightful  humor  book  for  the 
v/eaker  sex.  Give  it  with  confidence 
to  every  young  married  woman  on 
your  list,  and  you'll  get  a  name 
as  an  Understanding  Sort  of  Chap! 

$2.50 
Eloise,  by  Kay  Thompson.  It's  not 
often  a  bad  little  girl  gels  clutched 
to  the  adult  bosom,  but  Eloise  has 
made  the  grade.  Most  everybody 
loves  her!  $2.95 

The  Hokinson  Festival  —  It  isn't 
every  day  you  can  share  a  full- 
grown  laugh  with  the  family,  but 
they'll  love  the  Hokinson  clul)- 
ladies  as  much  as  you  will.  A  per- 
iect  gift!  $5.00 

Max  Presents,  by  Giovanetti.  The 
most  popular  character  in  PUNCH, 
'ogether  with  his  delightful  co- 
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9r()  c  Daily  ffi^Tar  Keel 


VOL.  LVII,     NO.  57 


Complete  {JP)  Wire  Service 


CHAPEL  HILL.  NORTH  CAROLINA,  FRIDAY,  NOVEMBER  30.   1956 


Offices   in   Graham   Memorial 


c  iri >  s 

Hurry,  hurry,  hurry,  Sm  paf •  2. 


POUR   PAOES   THIS    ISSUI 


MOCK  TRIAL  PREPARATIONS 


Lawmakers 


Hungarian    Cause  Is  Just 


Ed  Sutton  Is  Found   Dead'    Elect  New 

In  Arboretum;  Wallet  Gone  b///c/o/c/om  Ref uqee  Student  Savs  Here 

Fnothall     nlnvor    VA    fsiiffnn    was  i  a_^_^_-^B-aai-a^_B-BHai^^HHH|^BHMMnHBMiHHHB^^aMi^B^^M  Bw   NEIL    BASS  ^^  ' 


Football  player  Ed  Sutton  was 
found  "dead"  in  the  arboretum 
!ate  last  night. 

He  was  found  by  Miss  Daryl  Far- 
rington  and  her  date  as  they  were 
returning  to  the  girl's  dorm. 

He  was  discovered  about  10:45 
p.m.  lying  face  down.  "Sheriff" 
David  EX'ans.  of  "Manning  County," 
is  investigating. 

This  ovont  is  another  in  tho 
series  of  happenings  leading  up 
to  the  annual  Phi  Alpha  Delta 
legal  fraternity  mock  trial,  to 
be  held  in  Manning  Hall  court- 
room Dec.  7. 

Sutton's  wallet  was  missing,  of- 
ficers said,  and  a  fingernail  file 
was  found  near  the  body.  "Police" 
f^aid  they  believed  the  file  to  be 
the  weapon  that  inflicted  the 
wound. 

No  fingerprints  were  available, 
they  reported. 

"Officers"  said  Sutton  appeared 
to  have  crawled  or  to  have  been 
dragged  a  short  distance. 

"Coroner"  John  Moore  said  that 
the  death  occurred  through  sever 
ing  of  the  arter>-  in  the  neck.  He 
estimated  the  time  of  death  was 
between  9:30  and  10.30  p.m. 

Robbery  may  have  been  the 
chief  motive,  officers,  said,  but 
stated  that  no  conclusive  evidence 
could  be  pointed  to  that  would  in- 
dicate this,  except  for  the  fact 
that  his  wallet  was  not  on  him 
when  he  was  found. 


ED  SUTTON'S  BODY 

Above  is  Ed  Sutton's  "body,"  discovered  last  night  in  the  Ar- 
bcretum.  When  discovered,  the  "body"  was  lying  face  down.  Sutton's 
"murder"  is  part  of  preparations  for  the  Mock  Trial  scheduled  Dec. 
7  by  Phi  Alpha  Delta  legal  fraternity. 


Vandals  Deface 
Mason  Portrait 

A  local  man  who  left  a  grant  of  j 
$1,000  for  the  "education  of  in-  j 
digent  students"  h*s  had  his  ] 
South  Building  portrait  smeared  | 
by  some  unknown  hand.  i 

The  portrait  of  James  Pleasant ; 
Mason,  which  hangs  in  the  South  . 
Building  foyer  out  side  the  chan- 1 
cellor's  office,  had  a  darker- 1 
than-u'sual  mustache  for  a  few 
diys  until  it  was  removed  late 
yesterday. 

The  painting  was  an  original 
oil  of  the  former  owner  of  the 
famous  Mason  Farms,  located  near 
Chapel  Hill,  of  which  many  tales 
have  been  told.  Mason  lived  from 
1827    to    1893. 


nev5 

in 
Jbricf 

FROM  RADIO  DISPATCHES 

LONDON— England  has  agreed 
to   withdraw   all    her   forces   from  I 
Eg>-pt.  The  agreement  followed  an 
announcement   that   the    U.S.    has 
promised  to  relieve  the  European 
oil  shor^ge  wlien  the  British  att<, 
tf»e  French  make  a  definite  move 
to  leave  Suez.  British  officials  said  ^ 
the   withdrawal    wil    be    complete ' 
by  Christmas.  I 

WASmNGTON— The    U.   S.    has' 
extended   its  NATO   protection  2.-1 
000  miles  eastward  from  the  Dard- ; 
anelles  on  to  the  border  cf  India, 
to  cover  nations  under  the  shadow  i 
of  Soviet  guns,  and  the  U.  S.  fleet 
is  now  in  the  Mediterrean.  Observ- ' 
ers  have  remarked  that  this  sho'.v 
of   power   will    probably    have    an 
effect  as  far  away  as  Moscow. 


Autumn  Party, 
SNA  Soc  Hop 
Slated  Tonight 

By  MARY  ALYS  VOORHEES 

Tonight  is  party  time  for  the  in- 
dependents! 

And  with  the  party  only  hours 
away,  final  plans  are  in  the  mak- 
ing by  Independent  Women's  As- 
sociation President  Elaine  Burns 
and  Sonny  Hallford...  pi^sidaat.  of 
the  Interdormitory  Council. 

The  basement  of  Cobb  Dorm 
will  be  the  scene  of  the  social, 
which  will  feature  the  music  of 
The  Joymakers  from  Durham  from 
8   p.m.   until    midnight. 

Four  men's  dorms  —  Ayoock, 
Everett.  Stacy  and  Grimes — will 
be  the  hosts  for  all  the  independ- 
ent women  on  campus  for  the  fall 
party. 

Among  those  working  on  the 
event  are  George  Stefanou.  chair- 

(See  PARTY,  Page  3) 


By  NEIL   BASS 

The  22nd  assembly  student  Leg- 
islature threw  open  its  doors  last 
night  with  the  University  Party 
m  control. 

The  UP,  with  a  near  perfect  24- 
member  attendance,  swept  through 
all  elected  positions  victoriously. 

Conversely,  the  Student  Party, 
with  an  unofficial  six  absence^, 
was  repulsed  in  its  attempt  to  cap- 
ture Legislature  offices. 

Assembly  membership,  due  to  a 
one  seat  gain  by  the  SP  in  the 
recent  election,  is  deadlocked — 25- 
25. 

OFFICIALS 

Newly  elected  22nd  assembly  of- 
ficials are: 

Speaker  pro  tempore.  Bill  Red- 
ding over   Whit   Whitfield: 

Parliameniarian,  Jack  Lewis 
over  John  BrQoks; 

Clerk.  Miss  Kathy  LeGrand  over 
Miss  Betty  Huffman; 

Sergean<-at  arms.  Randy  Wil- 
liams over  John  *Ray. 

The  SP.  ui>on  realizing  the  im- 
possibility of  cracking  iron-clad 
party  lines,  voted  UP  candidates 
to  committee  chairmanships  by  ac- 
clamation. 

Committee  chairmen  are: 

Ways  and  Means,  Al  Goldsmith, 
Finance  Committee,  Jerry  Oppen- 
heimer;     Rules     Committee,     Bill 
Baum. 
NEW  MEASURES 

New  measures  thrown  into  the 
legislative  hopper  for  processing 
are: 

(1)  A  resolution  asking  the -Uni- 
versity director  of  operations  to 
"investigate  and  carr>'  through'  a 
program  for  the  maintenance  of 
aormitory  television  sets.  Co-in 
troduced 

f2)  Bill  calling  for  appropriation 
of  $61  to  the  Campus  Chest  to  pay 
lor  two  trophies.  Introduced  by 
Whit  Whitfield  (SP). 

(3)  Bill  requesting  S800  appro- 
priatin  to  the  Yackety  Vack  to  de- 
tray  expenses  incurred  through 
printing  additional  copies  for  in- 
creased enrollment.  Introduced  by 
Publications  Board  Chairman  Frank 

Farrell  (SP). 

(4)  Bill  requesting  SLOOO  appro- 
priation to  University  Glee  Club 
to  defray  "travel  expenses."  Co-in- 
troduced. 


Hungarian  Freedom  Fighter  And  Friends 

Shown  above  at  the  left  is  Istavan  LaszIo,  a  leader  of  the  recent 
Hungarian  revolt  for  freedom,  at  a  banquet  in  the  Carolina  Inn. 
The  21-year  old  student,  touring  the  country  under  sponsorship  of 
the  National  Student  Assn.,  spoke  here  last  night  before  a  capacity 
crowd  in  Carroll  Hall.  Others  in  the  picture  are  (center)  Charles 
Derescki,  his  interpreter  and  Ralph  Delia  Cava,  also  touring  the 
country    with    LaszIo. 

Hungarian  Relief  Fund 
Has   Received   $300 


Says  Pubfic  Opinion 
Will  Help  Resistance 

By    NANCY   HILL      ' 

The  aims  of  the  Him;2,arian  revolution  "arc  just  and 
simjjje  —  freedom,  free  elections,  a  free  Hunoan.,"  Istavan 
LaszIo,  Hunjrarian  refiij^ee  .student,  told  a  raparitv  crowd 
in  (...roll  Hall  last  nio[ht. 

■"\'ou  have  a  rij>ht  to  know  if  we  fought  for  a  just  cause." 
said  l.as/.lo,  himself  two  weeks  ago  a  leader  of  a  revolution- 
ary force  of  T.ooo  workers,  peasants  and  students. 

The  Hungarian  people  rose  up  against  oppression  as 
they  have  in  the  past,  he  said. 
"Now  again  we  rose  to  a  point  in 
history  where  we  could  no  longer 
stand  slavery  —  we  had  to  fight." 
LaszIo  was  sent  to  this  country 
to  appear  before  the  United  Na- 
tions, but  was  not  received,  he 
.said.  He  is  now  speaking  to  college  I 
groups,  because  "Your  opinion, 
public   opinion  of   a   free   country  I 

Squirret-Chcf^er  I 
Tuffy  Gofxe 
From  Campus 

Tutfy   is  gone. 

Tuffy  is  the  little  brown  and 
white  mongrel  that  spends  most 
of  his  time  up  around  Davie 
Poplar,  chasing  and  barking.'  at 
frightened    squirrels. 


The  YM-YWCA.  which  Ls  spon- 
soring the  Hungarian  Relief  Fund, 
ha.s    now    received    about    S300    in 


Aldridg?     at     8-9089.     The     money 
will  be  sent  to  Vienna.  .Austria  by  ! 
the      World     University      Service,  i 


[donations,  according  to  Miss  Jack- ,  Gifts  ot  food  or  clothing  will  also      <-"»">"*,  lo  n 
ionTTe  Aldridse.  r  be  acceptod.  and  thoy  may  be'made      Alice    Sm**h 


Before  the  Thanksgiving  holi- 
days, some  students  borrowed 
Tuffy  for  squirrel  hunting.  Ajid 
he  hasn't  been  returned  yet,  ac- 
cording to  his  owner.  Mrs.  Mary 


A  new  appeal  wa.<<  heard  last 
evening  from  a  Hungarian  refugee 
who  helped  le^d  the  revolt  in  his 

village.      ""■  ■    •  *'.'.'/'  -  I 

.  >  . . ,     .    .        , .       .        ^ 

"Including  money  from  the 
Campus  Chest  and  Chri.stma.s  do- 
nations. Carolina  will  probably 
give  a  total  of  about  Sl.oOOV  said 
Mi.ss  Aldridj:c'. 

Mcnetary  donations  may  be  loft 
in  the  milk  b:>ttles  placed  in_  the 
Y  fur  that  purpo.<;c  or  they  may  be 
made    by    contacting    Miss    Jackie 


by    contacting    Mi5«;    Aldridge. 

INFIRMARY 

Students  in  the  infirmary  yes- 
terday   included: 

Misses  Elmira  Herring,  Pricilla 
Ncllman,  and  Elaine  Galllmore, 
and  Nicholas  Marcopulos,  Charl- 
es Richie.  Richard  Sayler,  Rob- 
ert Kerr.  William  Luesing,  Rob- 
ert Eason,  John  Adams,  Harring- 
ton Alexander,  and  James  Ed- 
wards. 


"Tuffy  was  a]wa.vs  having  cof- 
fee and  doughnuts  y.'ith  the  stu- 
dents," Mrs.  Smith  said  yester- 
day. She  also  said  Tuffy  looks 
like  he  has  a  mustache  around 
his  mouth. 

Tuffy.  Mrs.  Smith  said,  has 
one  of  his  tags  missing  froii)  his 
collar,  and  he  has  iu.st  one  of 
his  requirecj   tags. 

Anyone  who  h.is  any  informa- 
tion about  Tuffy  should  call 
Mrs.  Smith  at  87741  during  the 
dav  or  at  85.337  in  the  evening. 


will     strengthen     our     resistance 
which  is  still  going  on,"  he  said. 

LaszIo  urged  students  to  write 
their  congressmen  urging  a  more 
resolute  stand  on  the  part  of  the 
United   States   in  Hungary. 

"This  is  all  we  are  asking.  But 
you  can  do   it,"'  he  said. 

"And  if  you  do  it,  I  will  be  able 
I  to  tell  the  Hungarian  people  that 
'  the  American  students  support  our 
j  cause  —  that  we  are  not  alone." 

1  Telling  of  the  part  Hungarian 
'  students  played  in  the  revolt,  Las- 
I  zlo  told  of  one  incident  in  which 
j  Hungarian  students  surrounded  a 
'  radio  station  in  an  effort  to  broad- 
cast to  the  west  the  demands  of 
the  rebels. 

Two  students  were  sent  in,  a  boy 
and  a  girl.  The  boy  returned  bleed- 
ing with  the  girl  dead  in  his  arms. 
"This  is  the  answer  we  got,"  Laszk) 
1  «aid. 

I      He    told  of  repeated  incidences 
I  or  unkept  promises  on  the  part  of 
the  Hussians  in  efforts  to  effect  a 
1  ceasefire.  There  is  only  one  guar- 
/  an  tee   to  force-  Kussia   to  keep  IkS" 
j  promises,   he    said   —   if   ive   con- 
I  tinue    to    resist,     and    if   we    have 
I  world  public  opinion  on  our  side. 
"We    hope    for   a    unified    voice 
being    raised    in    the    Free    World 
!  condemning  Russia  and  supporting 
!  the  Hungarians  in  the  revolution," 
i  he  stated. 

j  LaszIo  is  accompanied  on  his 
:  tour  of  U.  S.  colleges  by  Ralph 
Delia  Cava,  a  representative  of  the 
National  Students  Association  spon- 
soring Laszio,  and  by  an  interpre- 
ter, Charles  Derescki. 


STATE  COLLEGE'S  SUSPENSION  -  PART  I 


The  Moreland  Case:  Report  To  Board  Of  Trustees 


The  National  Collegiate  Athletic  Assn..  according  to  its  constitu- 
tion, is  an  organization  of  "colleges  and  universities  in  the  United 
States,  with  accceptaole  academic  standards,  which  accept  and  ob- 
serve the  principles  set  forth  in  its  Constitution  and  By-Laws".  The 
establishment  and  direction  of  the  gcnen:!  policy  of  the  Assn.,  in 
the  interim  between  conventions,  is  cominitted  to  a  Council  of  18 
mem^>e^s. 

This  Council  in  turn  designates  a  committee  on  infractions  lb 
serve  as  the  fact-gathering  agency  of  the  council.  The  committee 
consists  of  four  memoers.  The  executive  director  of  the  assn.  serves 
a*  an  ex-officio,   non-voting  member. 

All  allegations  and  complaints  relative  to  a  member's  violation 
of     the     regulation*    of     the     Assn.     are    channeled     through     the 
exacutiv*  Director  to  tha  committee.  If  tha  committee  on  infrac- 
tions determine*  that  a  complaint  warrants  an  official  inquiry,  it 
calls  upon  tha  chlaf  administrative  officer  of  the   institution   in- 
volvad  to  disclose  all  relevant  information,  and  may  arrange  for 
the    ap|>earance  of   representatives  of  the    institution   before   the 
committe*. 
When  the  committee  on  infractions  completes  an  investigation 
it  submits  a  written  report  to  the  council  containing: 

(Ij  A   statement    of   the   histoJ-y   of.  the   case,    including   the 
charges  of  misconduct. 

(2)  A  detailed  summary  of  the  evidence  before  the  committee. 

(3)  The  findings  of  facts  made  by  the  committee,  its  conclus- 

ions as  to  whether  the  member  has  been  in  violation  of 
its  obligations  as  a  member,  and  if  so,  the  particular  re- 
spects in  which  the  member  has  been  in  violation. 

(4)  Disciplinary  or  corrective  actions  taken  by  the  institution 

or  Conference  or  any  other  agency  involved  in  the  incident. 
(3)  The  committee's   recommendations   for   the   disposition   of 

the  case. 
The  report  of  the  committee  on  infractions,  less  its  recommen- 
dations, is  made  available  to  the  member  involved  and  this  member 
is  entitled  to  appear  before  the  council  to  challenge  the  findings 
of  fact  and  the  evidence  upon  which  the  report  is  made;  to  produce 
additional  evidence  and  to  argue  such  matters  of  Assn.  law  as  may 
he  involved. 

THE  MORELAMD  CASE  (NCAA  NO.  94) 
On  Sept.  26.  1956,  the  executive  director  of  the  NCAA  wrote  to 
Chancellor  Bostian  of  State  College  notifying  him  that  the  infrac- 
tions committee  believed  that  information  in  the  hands  of  the  com- 
mittee in  connection  with  the  recruitment  of  Jack  Moreland'  of 
Minden,  Louis,  was  of  sufficient  substance  to  warrant  an  official 
inquiry  into  the  ca.se. 

The  administrative  oificers  ot  the  college  and,  at  the  request 


% 


X,iin»iiiiliiili.i.l»«I         I.     I    ■» *" 


Jack  «ox"»^ftti^  .   . 
(?Ta»«  in  mil) 


"r  Uurar:',     Thi.  sofeolo-sh^P  U  SCo.i  .'or  four  y^rs. 

I  ««y  »M«n^  «t^^«r  «ch«ol  with.l^ie  approval  ef  th«  '!«Ad  Coac:h. 

In  th«  «vef*  9t  ar  Mvr?  a«»  «  r««^vit  ci:  v^viiCrMAm  in  Basketbuia  at  N»  C. 
ittte  CoUtg-^f  i**  «Xl«r.hip  aid  wUi  oo^tlnv.  t,hr..v,,>;out  the  .^rl.oa  cov^r^r! 
by  tL  .ontraii\v--n  tboug^^   the  a>^ove  mm<i^^y  be  r.quirtsd  tc  ror.go  pnrtUt^ 

^Thts  igree,*nt  aei^mi*  of  m  tb*l  I  rnik*  nMsMvxj  progress  t<.'.ara«  gra^*^ 
tion,  conduct  v^w^lt  4^  »  g^ntXei^an,  *nd  givo  tvOl  cooperi^tior.  ..i>  al.  tia^^a* 


Sif^t^ed    Jack  yorftlard  (elgre^)  -, 

^l'  1-    .,-,,..-.-      |i  lii'i    ■  iiiM»i  ..I.I.I  <    ■»»  " 

'  f  at«^!.i.  _  ,    ■      ,  ,/ii  1 , lit-,,  -  ■  I         ■  -  — ■  ^ 

■f /  •  Tt  i«  undftr»tvod  Ustt  Cum  VoreUM  wlXX  matrlcuUia  In  Ssptemt^r  of  I9$f  tn 

the  School  of  Siif lne«ri»^f  *  OiT51»  .    — --^ 

MORELAII4D  SIGNED  THIS  AGREEMENT 

Pictured  above  is  a  facsimile  of  tha  agreement  signed  by  Jackia     has  ruled  misconduct  on  the  part  of  the  college  in  acquiring  ^Aora- 
Mereland,  NC  State  basketball  player  from  Minton,  La.  The  NCAA      lands  signature,  and  has  placed  State  on   a  four-year  probation. 


of  Chancellor  Bostian,  President  Friday  and  Mr.  Carmichaei  of 
the  consolidated  University,  questioned  Moreland  and  the  coach- 
ing staff  members  involved  and  filed  with  the  infractions  com- 
mittee formal  statements  by  Moreland  and  the  staff  members 
denying  all  of  the  allegations  of  infractions. 

Our  inquiry  revealed  that  Moreland,  on  May  11.  1956,  w>hile 
visiting  State  College,  signed  a  'letter-of-intenf  to  enroll  at  State 
College.  This  letter  stipulated  speciiicaly  a  four  year  grant-in-aid 
from  the  college.  The  lelter-of-intent  is  as  follows: 

On  Oct.  22,  1956,  at  a  hearing  bofore  ihe  infractions  committee 
in  Kansas  City,  Chancellor  Bostian  and  Athletic  Director  Clogston 
ccnied  all  charges  of  infractions. 

On  Oct.  31,  1956,  the  executive  director  notified  Chancellor  Bos- 
tian, by  letter,  that  the  infractions  committee  would  cite  State  Col- 
lege before  the  Council,  in  Detroit,  on  Nov.  12.  1956  and  charge  the 
institution  with  serious  infractions  of  the  NCAA  rules  and  regula- 
tions in  connection  with  the  recruitment  of  Js>ckie  Moreland.  The 
college  was  furnished  a  detailed  summary  of  the  charges. 

Immediately  President  Friday  asked  the  executive  director  of 
the  NC.\A  for  the  file  of  evidence  and  for  a  postponement  of  the 
hearing  scheduled  on  Nov.  12.  1956,  as  he  would  be  unable  to  par- 
ticipate because  of  a  meeting  of  the  executive  committee  o(  Uni- 
versity Board  of  Trustees  scheduled  on  Nov.  13. 

Th  NCA-\  Executive  Director  sent  Chancellor  Bostian  two  tele- 
fjrams.  as  follows: 

■•Chairman  Everest  believes  council  should  consider  report  tt 
Detroit  meeting  since  postponement  would  necessitate  five  or  six 
months'  delay." 

Walter  Byers 
"Mr.  Friday's  request  presented  to  committee  via  teleph(me. 
It  is  committee's  view  that  release  of  case  file  would  be  contrary 
to  established  policy  and  accordingly  regrets  it  cannot  accommo-" 
date  North  Carolina  State  in  this  matter.  Committee  does  not  be- 
lieve this  position  unfair  since  your  institution  knows  committee's 
findings  and  knows  identity  of  witnesses  whose  evidence  has  serv- 
ed as  basis  for  committee's  co;iclusions." 

Walter  Byers 
It  should  be  noted  that  while  the  last  telegram  above  points  out 
that  State  College  knows  the  infractions  committee's  findings  and 
the  names  of  the  witnesses,  the  exf»cutive  director  does  not  claim 
that  the  college  administration  knows  the  full  detailed  evidence 
which  has  served  as  the  basis  for  the  committee's  conclusions. 

On  Nov.  12,  19$«  Chancellor  Bostian.  Athletic  Director  Cio«etMi 
and  Assistant  AttileKc  Director  Casey  aopearod  befora  the  CMincil 
in  Detroit  and  denied  all  the  charges  of  the  infractions  committee. 


(See  REPORT.  Pane  3) 


J 


I   1 


PAGE   TWO 


THt  PAILT   TAII  HIIL 


FRIDAY,  NOVEMBER  M.  ItM 


F|IDi 


The  Rush  Is  On/ Kiddies: 
Hurry,  And  Get  The  Crips 


Al><)ut  -,,oo  stndcnrs.  ihe  Cen- 
tral Retord.s  ultice  estimates.  s<x)ii 
Axill  Ik-  iushiiij>  to  theii  deans  and 
;.',his(tvs  to  si;4n  up  lor  tl»e  ( rip 
<()urse>  tlu-  I'niversiiy  otieis  f(»r 
tl»r»se  wlio  wonld  like  to  have  their 
parchment  job-«;ua  ran  tees  handed 
down  with  a  inininunn  of  echua- 
tion. 

Ihis  matter  ol  erip  courses  be- 
eomcs  inereasiu-ily  iin})ortant  this 
tin»e  of  the  yejM.  with  ea|j[ei  stu- 
tleiUs  rnshin"4  m  prere^ister  early 
in  order  to  Ih'  snre  ol  j^ettin*;  their 
recpiests. 

rnForinn;v:eh.  ihi>  vvortln  j^oup 
is  lahoiinu;  nndei  a  mi>appiehen- 
sion.  It  seems  'Mass  tirkeLs  are 
doled  out  to  seTiiors.  jiniiors  and 
sophoinoies.    in    that    older,    alter 

j)ri'it';;i^tratioij    i>  dll   t>ver. 

*         #         * 

()l)\iouslv  there  aren't  enough 
sini[)le  suhjeets  to  ijo  around,  and 
I'ljtnnatelv  so.  KducalionaJ  toite- 
hi'diir;  is  uf)t  a  pleasant  tiling.  But 
alter  Pencil  Shaipeuinn  ic»'{  is 
( !osed.  what  lemains? 


'Iliose  students  who  net:dc:d  easv 
cpiality  points  are  in  dan;^ei  ol 
learn in<4  soinethinj;.  and  they  niay 
not  j»et  a  i^ood  i;raJe  in  cloins;  it. 

.\iid  tiiis  is  a  tia'^edv  worthy  ol 
•4ieai  s\mp;"!hy.  Sympathy  for  tlie 
lortiniates  uhc*  yen  ccjurses  Jik.e 
Pencil  Sharpening  lo'j  and  will 
leave  the  I'nivcrsitv  uith  a  line 
di'^ret* — just   a  fine  dcj^ree. 

.\o(  th.it  wi're  a.i^ainst  the  con- 
\enien|  crip.  h)r  it  serves  as  a  line 
balance  on  a  heaw  sc  hedide:  but. 
too  man\  students  ate  sijijninyj  up 
lot  cotuses  bec:uiise  ihey  have  a 
reputation  lor  bein'4  easy.  Tlu> 
oraciicc  can  vc-rv  well  c  tu  out  the 
indi\idu;»l  who.  for  one  reason  or 
tlie  (nher.  sincerelv  waius  that  par- 
tic  idar  couise. 

Perhaps  Scuith  liuildintj  can 
work  out  a  wav  of  finding;  if  a  stu- 
dent s  purpose  for  wantinj>  a  course 
is  interest,  need  oi  the  imich  more 
fretjuent  la/iness.  A  more  con- 
scientious ;i:lvisin<>  pro<jfram  nii]g;ht 
help. 


Watch    Nineteenth     Hole 


Most  people  ai("  piettv  concern- 
ccl  o\rr  the  Middle  Fast,  ^^^ule  the 
shootiiii*  war  has  ceased  there  and 
the  I'nited  .\a:ittjis  ;)(»lice  team  h  is 
started  to  avuir.  the  Suez  Canal 
ajca  si  ill  Nmtns^ilie  possible  start- 
ing point  ol  W'cWd  W.n  MI. 

Rnsvi;j.  |(M  <■".  (tuple,  has  bee  i 
r"c(jveu:d  'N  ;he  nation  uiiicli 
shipped  m'llisii's  of  dollars'  worili 
<  I  ;irn!.s  to  Svri  I  and  F,«jypt.  At 
pusiiu  .1  iJ,<>-*"«V  iei  yrcjup  is  be-, 
lie\ed  in  iiinirc|^  in  Syria. 

(Mrolin;(  (•i^lemen  are  still 
Avorrvih's  :  f>ouU'their  draft  status. 
And  thoughtful  people  are  still 
■woiuleriui*  w!ien  the  lighting  will 
reallv  break  t>ut. 


.\ll    this   iiiiii\   in    \ti<rnstii.  Ga..* 
wliere  he  is  j>la\  i«a{  jjoU,  i^i^^^ii^iit 


REMEMBER.    IKE 

Hey  block. 

Dwight  Kisenhower  appears  scarce- 
ly |)eriurbed  al>out  tlie  Middle 
Fast,  (im  Hagerty.  the  man  who 
runs   messtiies   between    the   Presi- 


The  Daily  Tar  Heel 

The  official  .student  publication  of  tbe 
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daily  except  .Monday  and  examinatiot 
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Entered  as  sc'cond  cla.ss  matter  in  the 
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Editor 


FRED  POWXEDGE 


Managing  Editor           CHARUE  SLOAI^ 
News  Editor  _.   RAY  LINKER 


Business  Manager  _..     BILL  BOB  PLEL 


Sports  Editor 


LARRY  CHEEK 


EJ)rrORIAL  STAFF  —  Woody  Sears. 
Frank  Crtmther,  Barry  Winston,  David 
Wund?,  George  Pfingst,  Ingrid  Clay. 
Cortland  Edwards,  Paul  McCauIey, 
Bobbi  Smith. 

NEWS  STAFF— Clarke  Jones,  Nancy 
Hill.  Joan  Moore.  Pringlc  Pipkin.  Anne 
Drake.  Edith  MacKinnon,  Wally  Kuralt, 
Mary  .Alys  Voorhees,  Graham  Snyder, 
Billy  Barnes,  Neil  Bass.  Gary  Nichols, 

Page  Bernstein,  Peg  Humphrey,  Phyllis 

,  MauUsby. 


Night  Editor  _ 


Graham  Snyder 


dent  and  the  rest  ot  the  United 
States,  tossed  any  worries  aside  this 
week  ;nd  said  he  lelt  .Mideast 
tension  "has  been  jireatly  eased 
c)vei   the  last  two  or  three  weeks. " 

Ha-^ertv  i>  ri^ht.  The  fi<ifhtin<^ 
has  stopped,  flic  tension  has  been 
cased,  lint  the  time  has  not  vet 
c  ome— nor  will  it  ever  come— foi 
the  President  to  stc)p  woriAini; 
.d)i>nt  die  situation  in  tavor  oi 
irolf. 

President  I  isenliower.  I  la^tertv 
Aud  the  rest  ol  the  Re})ublican  Ad- 
ministration ap|)ear  to  ha.vc  wor- 
ried very  little  about  both  the 
Middle  East  and  Central  F.uroj>e 
( rises.  Both  crises  caught  Washin,!:;- 
ton  completely  off  guard.  In  both 
instances  the  United  States  has 
v:h».\<-n  ^'erv  little,  if  any,  actual 
leackrsj»i|j.  Henr\  Ciabcjt  l.(xlge's 
speeches  in  the  United  rVations, 
pins  a  little  red-tape-cutting  for 
Hungarian  refu2[ees.  arc  alxmt  all 

we  can  be  proud  of. 

*  #  * 

Somehow,  we  think  Adlai  Stev- 
enson would  have  done  things  dif- 
lerenilv.  He  woidd  ha\e  stepped 
into  the  situaticjn  and  when  it  was 
o\er,  we  would  have  been  closer 
to  jKjace.  and  .America  would  ha\e 
been    more   respected. 

I-\en  Hanv  Truman  would  have 
done  something.  But  Kisenhower 
and    Hagerty  do  nothing. 

I  here  uiav  be  a  water  trap  at  the 
end  ol  the  faitmvavs  of  indifference. 


The  State's 
Biased  For 
Mr.  Johnsor\ 

On  the  road  between  here  and 
Duiiiam.  there's  a  sign  tliat  says 
■Restaurant  Area."  It  looks  like 
all  the  other  roadside  signs  put  up 
by  the  State  Highway  Dept. 

But.  to  our  knowledge,  it  is  the 
first  ■Restauiant  .\rea'"  sign  in  the 
state. 

Ii  points  \<)  How; 'id  Johnsons 
restauiant,  the  large,  luxurious  eat 
ing  place  f)etween  Uhapel  Hill 
and  Durham. 

rhere  is  no  reason  for  the  State 
of  .\orth  C-arolina  to  advertise 
Howard  Johnsons  restaurant.  The 
building,  set  back  from  tlie  road 
on  a'  knoll,  does  not  pose  a  tlireat 
to  safe  dri\ing.  The  sign  implies 
the  .State  of  .North  Carolina  would 
like  folks  to  stoj)  and  spend  mcjuey 
with    Hcjward    fohnsoii. 

If  the  slate  is  going  to  advertise 
Johnson ■»  eating  place,  it  also  must 
jjut  up  a  sign  in  front  of  Brady's 
and  the  Shamrcx-k  restaurant,  two 
eating  places  also  on  the  Durhain- 
(  Iiaj)el   Hill  road. 

And  ncj  other  roadside  eating 
places  in  the  state  must  be  treated 
unfairly.  Similar  signs  must  go  up 
all   along   the   statq|)|   higjiways. 

The  state*  shouldn't  be  fairer  to 
Howard  Johnson  than  it  is  to  any- 
body ckse.  It  woidd  be  better  to 
take  the  sign  down. 


AN  AltTHORITY  TALKS  ON 


Trustee  And  The  Student 


Victor  S.  Bryant 

Victor   S.    Bryant   is   one   of 
I   the    University's    hardest-woric- 
j   ing  and  ntost  respected  trustees. 
He  has  served  on  several  com- 
mittees to  search  for  officers  of 
.     the    University,    and     is    gen- 
erally known  as  the  Board  of 
Trustees'   best   spokesman.      A 
Durham  attorney.  Bryant  deliv- 
ered  this  speech   to  the    UNC 
Faculty    Club.    It   will    be   con- 
tinued in  future  issues  of  The 
Daily  Tar   Heel. 
I     At  the  outset  I  must  make  it 
/  plain  that  while  1  am  a  member 
of  the  Board  of  Trustees  of  the 
Univ-rsity   of   North   Carolina,   1 
have  no  authority  t,i  speak  either 
for  the    board    or  any   group   ot 
trustees,  What  I  shall  say.  there 
fore,  will  represent  only  my  in- 
cJividual    views.   Indeed,   there   is 
not     onLv    a     possibility    but     a 
strong   probability   that   some  of 
my    fallow    trustees    would    not 
c-om:ur  in  a  part  of  what  I  shall 
sa.y. 

In  contrast  with  some  of  the 
f  ancient     European     universities, 
which  were   first   started  on   the 
initiative    of   teachers-  or   groups 
of  students,  the  General  Assem- 
bly   of    .\orth    Carolina    in    1789, 
acting  under  coiistilurional  man- 
date,  brjught    th''    University  of 
North    Carolina    into    existence. 
Chapel  Hill  was  chosen  as  the 
site.  The  state  has  since  then 
nurtured  and  made  possible  its 
growth,    it  has  reaped   rich    re- 
wards   from    its    progress    and 
success,  and  has  suffered  keen- 
ly   ly   from  any   of  its   reverses  or 
shortcomings. 
Of    course,    tht*    stale    can    not 
and  does  not  attempt  to  operate 
and  manage     its     university.     It 
would  b?  impossible  for  it  to  do 
so.  By  the  nature  of  things  the 
University     must     be     operated 
I  thro-ugh  some  intermediate  body 
^  — hence   th-    Board    of  Trustees. 
By    statute    this    university    Haji 
100   regular  trustws   plus    four 
living  ex-officio  members  of  the 
board.  The  Executive  Coiiimitt,ee 
consists    of    12    Trusters,   which 
'   number  alone   is   more  than  the 
entire    membership    of    the   trus- 
te:s"  board   of  s:)mc  universities. 
*         «»         ♦ 

To  enable  the  trustees  to  func-- 
tion  with  assurance  and  certain- 
ty as  to  their  powers  and  duties, 
the  Gen:'ral  .Assembly  in  1789 
enacted  the  following  law: 

"The  trustees  shall  have  the 
power  of  appointing  a  president 
of  tho  University  of  .North  Caro- 
lina and  such  professors,  tutors 
and  other  officers  as  to  them 
shall  appear  necessary  and  prop- 
er, whom  they  may  remove  for 
misbehavior,  inability  or  neglect 
of  duty." 

Soms  years  later  the  following 
became  a  part  of  the  code  by 
legislative  enactment: 

'The  trustees  shall  have  the 
power  to  make  such  rules  and 
regulations  for  the  management 
of  the  University   as  they  may 
deem  necessary  and  expedient, 
not  inconsistent  with  the  cons- 
titution and  la-ws  of  the  state." 
Thus    the    state    expected    th? 
trustees    to    manage    and    super- 
vise the  operation  of  a  .state  uni- 
versity. It  i.s  significant  that  the 
(Jeneral    .Assembly    did    nat    cir- 
cumscribe    the     powers     of  the 
Board  of  Tru.<itees. 
This   fact   indicated   something 


not  only  of  the  type  of  perform- 
ance* expected,  but  it  served  no- 
tice that  the  trustees  were  to  be 
held  just  as  answerable  for  the 
operation  of  the  University  as  a 
ship's  captain  for  the  ■cp^ration 
of  h  s  vessel  regardless  of  who 
mi-^ht  have  actually  made  th« 
error  in  case  of  mishap. 

This  is  a  responsibility  fixed 
by  law.  It  can  neither  be  avoid 
ed  nor  chan'ied  by  an  Individual 
trustee. 

.    ^-    . 

The  powers  given  the  trustees 
are  broad.  They  should  be.  I  do 
not  sugg(;:'<t  that  it  is  always  ex- 
pedient for  the  Trustees  to  use 
the  full  measure  of  their  authcri- 
ty. 

On  the  contrary,  there  are 
many  times  when  it  would  be 
highly  inadvisable  to  do  so.  I  am 
sure  that  the  best  results  freq- 
uently can  be  obtained  by  dele 
gating  certain  powers  to. the  ad 
ministration  and  to  the  facult>'. 
and   once   this  is   done  the  trus- 


of  the  members  of  the  General 
Assembly  with  the  job  which  is 
being  done  by  the  faculty,  the 
administration,  and  I  hope  with 
that  being  done  by  the  trustees. 

It  must  be  realized  at  the  out- 
set that  the  trustee  of  a  state 
university  has  responsibilities  to 
four  distinct  entities: 

The  state,  the  university  ad- 
ministration, the  faculty,  and  the 
student  body.  With  your  permiss- 
ion I  should  like  to  set  forth 
my  concept  of  a  trustee's  re- 
sponsibilities to  each  of  these 
groups. 

The  trustees,  by  statute,  have 
tJie  non-delogable  duty  of  select- 
ing a  president  of  the  University 
uprtn  their  own  recommendation. 
By  the  University  Code  they 
elect  the  provost,  the  comptrol- 
ler, the  business  manager,  the 
chancellors  and  certain  other  ad- 
ministrative officials  upon  the 
recommendation  of  tlie  president. 
*        *        * 

While  the  obligation  to  select 
a  president  is  by  law  that  of  the 


ical  appraisals  by  the  public,  the 
faculty  and  tlie  students,  the  ad- 
ministrative officers  have  every 
right  to  assume  that  the  trus- 
tees who  put  them  in  these  posi- 
tions will  take  their  places  by 
theii'  sides,  rather  than  seek  the 
safety  of  shelter,  when  the  bricks 
begin  to  fly. 
THE  STUDENTS 

Of  course  the  trustees  have  ob- 
ligations to  the  students.  One  of 
these  is  to  provide  a  faculty  of 
the  highest  calibre.  While  it  may 
not  be  the  responsibility  of  the 
trustees  to  select  the  teachers 
personally,  they  have  a  right  to 
know  that  the  students  are  being 
taught  by  dedicated  men  and  wo- 
men capable  of  quickening  and" 
inspiring  maturing  minds  and  of 
challenging  the  best  in  a  stu- 
dent's possibilities,  latent  though 
they  may  be  at  the  tigie. 

The  trustees  should  see  to  it 
that  the  students  arc  pro\ided 
comfortable  living  quarters,  that 
they  can  obtain  wholesome  food, 
and  have  access     to    all    of  the 


'Who  Else  Do  We  Pick  Up  In  This  Car  Pool?' 


.ui  •  }.*' 


tees    should    scrupulously    avoid 
inlcrfercing  with  either  the  ad- 
ministration   or    the   faculty,    at 
lea.st  until  there  has  been  a  fail- 
ure on  their  part  to  function. 

The  same  wise  reasons  which 
prompted  the  lawmakers  to  grant 
wide  powers  to  the  trustees 
make  it  persuasive  that  the,,tnis- 
tees  should  delegate  wide  and 
uncircumscribed  powers  to  the 
administration  and  faculty  in 
thos<>  certain  areas  in  which  these 
groups  are  best  qualifred  to  func- 
tion. —'■ 
FINANCES 

The  state's  financial  support 
of  the  University  is  meastfred  in 
terms  of  the  amount  of  rrtifttiey 
which  the  general  assemblies 
have  appropriated.  On?  look  at 
the  campuses  of  the  three  branch' 
es  of  the  University  with  their 
many  buildings,  and  a  realization 
of  the  millions  spent  each  year 
for  support  and  maintenance  of 
this  institution  as  compared  with 
the  resources  of  our  state,  indi- 
cate to  my  mind  the  satisfaction 


trustees,  I  wish  now  tj  acknowl- 
edge with  deep  gratitude  the  val- 
uable a.'jsistance  and  cooperation 
rendered  the  trustees'  commit- 
tee to  nominate  a  president  by 
the  members  of  your  own  facul- 
ty committees.  Without  this  help 
from  the  faculty  I  am  certain 
that  the  trustees'  committee 
could  not  have  embarked  upon 
this  arduDUs  task  with  the  con- 
fidence and  assurance  which  I 
hope  will  be  well  justified  in  the 
result,  once  our  duties  shall  have 
been  completed. 

The  trustees  have  given  to  the 
president  and  his  administrative 
assistants  broad  powers  in  the 
discharge  of  tlieir  duties.  Few 
restrictions  and  limitations  have 
been   imposed. 

In  the  performance  of  their 
duties  they  have  the  right  to  ex- 
pect the  loyalty  and  full  support 
of  the  trustees  for  whom  they 
act. 

Having  been  sent  to  positions, 
the  very  nature  of  which  freq- 
uently make  them  objects  of  crit- 


physical  facilities  needed  to  en- 
able young  men  and  women  to 
reach  maturity  fully  equipped  to 
take  their  places  in  the  common- 
wealth. 

The  only  luxury  for  which  I 
plead  in  behalf  of  any  student  is 
the  luxury  of  mental  efficiency. 

Mattel's  pertaining  to  the  stu- 
dent honor  system,  student  auto- 
mobiles, and  many  problems 
connected  with  student  extra- 
curricular, activities  should  be 
s.7lved  by  the  students  working 
with  the  administrative  officials 
and  faculty,  although  the  trus- 
tees through  their  Visiting  ^Com- 
inittees  take  interest  in  these, 
and  at  times  act  in  matters  ol 
broad  policy. 

While  the  students,  of  course, 
have  a  definite  place  and  respon- 
sible functions  in  the  life  of  any 
university,  in  the  final  analysis 
the  operation,  control  and  man- 
agement of  the  Unversity  must 
remain  in  the  hands  of  the  ad- 
ministration, faculty  and  trus- 
tees. 


Pogo/ 


By  Walt  Kelly 


jt$  iAP'"  ?06&^  6om  «5  c^-:  A 
PAUL  ovee  AAV  ueuAL  lo^asib  ah  <&unnv 

NATURE '"  Ti^g  ^YfAtAP  \i  lO^  ITS 
lEAPINCtTlIgH'-W^i^ 


Mcvv6vge-'>ouuu  3e  Z 

(SlLAP  ID  ICMONV  I  1$ 

^AP— vvriv  A  owu 

AT  TMf  H6UV\,  tUlN^f     ^ 


V\'HAT  00 

von  T»<INtC 

O?  tHAT' 


TAUKIN'  MUrwy  Al.SgApv7<5«'gCiAl.i.\ 
AN'  PO&QI9  (?£MAiN5  vv.TM  QCCV 
KAePLV  6V2N  CClV, 


AlliSAXOd 

fAiiHr  OS  HAszl 


Li'l  Abn«r 


b3A>nd-ONVId  ISWOM  oNOoas    * 
3H1  An3a3VN  9;3H  -/.■>1INADQy3| 
-LON  S,3M-yyd3n3W  V 


;i-3D>fcl  S.DtXWD  3HX  NO 
S»V3<3ciV  VWl|fi  V 


By  Al  Capp 


— SIM3ddVH  DNIKL 
S"gj-ON  M3.-1  I'tMH  3HJ^ 


Religion: 
Logical? 

Chal  Schley 

People  have  been  publicly  denying  the  existence  - 
of  God  around  here,  obviously  unaware  that  by  so'** 
doing,  they  are  denying  not  only  their  own  ability-^ 
to  think  rationally,  they  aTe  also  denying  the  possi- 
bility of  scientific  knowledge.  ''^ 

Scientific  knowledge,  as  I  understand  it,  is  the 
product  of  applied  rational  thinking,  i.e.  logic. 

Logic  depends  for  its  validity  en  the  validity 
of  the  cause-*nd-effeet  rel»tionshlp,  which  in  turn 
presupposes  th«t  there  c»n  b«  no  effect  indepen- 
dent  of  at  least  one  cause. 

Consider   the    universe.   Consider   it   from   anjj,; 
angle  at  all — W^ordsworthian,  Einsteinian,  even  per- 
sonal— and,  irrespective  of  one's  reactiwi  to  it,  on« 
must  concede  that  it  exists. 

Thus,  if  the  universe  exists  (as  modern  science 
pre-supposes),  and  if  causality  is  valid  (as  indeed" 
it  must  be  in  order  that  man  may  trust  reason),  then 
it  must  be  concluded  that  the  universe  had  a  cause. 

OK.  What  was  that  cause? 


A,  word  of  caution  is  appropriate  to  those  who  * 

■would  attempt  to  answer  the  foregoing  question  by  ' 

means  of  reason.  Reason  is  a  limited  tool,  as  the  * 

following  simple  test  will  show:  ^  * 

Let  the  reader  stop  reading  a  minute  and  try,  • 

really  try-  to  think  of  anything  at  all  which  is  not  * 

bordered  by  time  but  which  yet  has  definite  mean-  • 

ing.  both  for  himself  and  for  others.  I 

ABSTRACTS  '"  '•    • 

• 

What  about  beauty,  love  and  similar  abstracts?  » 

These  fail  to  meet  the  requirements  because  their  J 

meanings  are  adjectival  in  nature:  that  is,  these  ab-  ♦ 

stractions  depend  for  their  meaning  and  for  their  [ 

verj-   formulation  on  that  which  is  time-bordered,  \ 

i.e.  on  man.  » 

Spgaking  for  myself.  I  have  never  been  ible  to  ■ 

conjure  up  a  concept  which  would  meet  the  speci-  » 

fications,  although  I  admit  that  my  failure  to  do  so  4 

does  not  brand  the  task  impossible.  J 

Thus  it  is  seen,  at  least  from  my  point  of  view,  I 

that  human  thought  is  limited  by  time.  Time,  how-  J 

ever,  is  measured   in   terms  of.  and  is  therefore  • 

limited  by,  the  universe.  Thus  the  futility  of  ap-  , 

plying  human  reason     to    the    question  of  what  ♦ 

caused  the  universe  is  apparent.  j^ 

All  right,  then,  how  are  men  supposed  to  knew  } 

what  caused    the.  universe,   nHich    less   what  thf  k 

characteristics  of  this  force  were  (or  »r9)7  ^ 

Well,   the   foregoing  are  goM   questions!  Mono  « 

properly,  they  should  have  been  phrased  "In  what  \ 

sense   can   man  know  anything  about  th?  power  • 

which  created  the  universe?"  I 

Reason,  and  therefore  rationally  certain  knowl- 
edge, have  been  eliminated  as  possible  answers 
because  of  their  limited  nature.  Thus  I  may  be  ac* 
cused  of  perching  well  out  on  a  limb  w^hen  I  say 
that  it  seems  to  me  that  the  causer  of  the  universe, 
having  caused  the  same  to  exist,  v^-ould  have  caused 
it  to  e.vist  independent  its  causer.  That  is,  I  be- 
lieve that  the  intelligent  being  which  created  a 
universe  which  contains  inteUigence  would  not  hav» 
omitted  a  means  of  communication  between  himsell 
and  his  creation.  To  believe  otherwise  would  be  to  t 

accuse  the  creator  of   infantile  capriciousness.        .  - 

:!;  *  * 

Granted,  then,  that  a  means  of  communicaUott 
between  creator  and  created  exists,  has  that  means 
been  employed? 

I  believe  that  it  has.  Throughout  recorded  his- 
tor>-,  men  have  arisen  against  all  censure  and  have 
tried  to  point  out  to  their  fellow  men  the  dazzling 
futility  of  homocentric  faitli. 

At  the  same  time,  those  men  have  tried  to  indi- 
cate the  best  path  for  humanity  to  foUo^v. 

I  believe  that  those  men  were  inspired  by  t4»e 
creator  to  speait  on  hu  behalf,  i  believa  that  this      • 
process,  which  I  accept  as  revelation,  reached  its 
height    in    the    life    and    teachings    of    a    Jewish       ^ 
carpenter. 

I  could  go  on  listing  my  beliefs,  but  it  occurs  tq^ 
m?  that  I  am  deviating  from  my  intended  purpose, 
which  w-as  to  offer  an  answer  to  those  who  denied 
the  existence  of  God  (or  of  Brahm,  Allah,  Jehovah 
— in  general,  of  that  being  which  created  the  uni- 
verse and  which,  in  spite  of  men,  governs  it). 

•    •    • 

PROSPECT  t,  RETROSPECT: 

Sweat    Shirt 
Curtains    Up 

Neil  Bass 

It's  time  to  gripe  again. 

Why  should  students  have  to  show  identification 
cards  at  University  athletic  functions? 

Pass  books  are  paid  for  anyway,  so  why  should 
the  Depl  of  Athletics  be  so  particular  in  checking 
ID'S  to  instire  that  non-students  don't  use  them? 

Ftirthermore,  why  is  the  Dept  of  Athletics  so 
isolated  from  student  government? 

Why  has  a  Sweat  Shirt  Curtain  been  draped 
around  actions  of  the  Carolina  Athletic  Associa- 
tion? 

These  and  many  other  questions  will  continue 
unanswered  until  students  get  more  representation 
in  the  I>ept.  of  Athletics. 
HUSH-HUSH  ATMOSPHERE 

This  same  hush-hush  atmosphere  surrounds 
the  Infirmarj'  blodj  fee  which  every  student  paj's 
and  few  use.  This  time  it's  the  Iodine  Curtain,  hue 
that's  material  for  another  column. 

Meanv^hile,  until  student  representation  is  al- 
lowed by  athletic  folks,  all  we  can  say  ia: 

"Come  down,  come  down,  from  your  ivory  tow- 


er. 


Or: 

From  Encs=n.  Crook  and  Corcwell 

Students  blindly  catch  hell. 

From  McGuire,  Rabb  and  Tatum 

We  accept  athletic  policy  verbatum. 

H  wj're  gonna*  pay  dough. 

I^t's  have  .some  say-so. 

O.K.:' 


Chrialj 
v^onderf^ 
fleet  th€ 
but  alsol 
the  pers(j 
present  ( 

Everyc 
of  statioz 
slick,  ste 
Items  tha 
special 
why  not 
each  nar 
the  type| 
"frail  ar 
door  type] 
etc. 

In  this  I 
any  bottlj 
of  the  nj 
son  will 
of  a  fraj 
sonality. 
jewelry  a| 
these  wit 
outfit  thel 

And   t| 
paths  to 


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FRIDAY,  NOVEMBEH  30,  1^54 


TMi  DAJkY  rJJL  HUi. 


PAGC  THKEt 


existence  - 

»t  by  so  ' 

*n  ability  ' 
the  possi- 

it,  is  the 
^ogic. 

validity  ' 
|h  in  turn 

indepen- 

;  from  anjt,", 
ev^n  per-  ^ 
to  it,  on* 

|rn  science 

[as  indeed 
kson).  tbea 
id  a  cause. 


Ilhose  who    , 

luestion  by    • 

^ol,  as  the    • 

• 

and  try,    » 
ich  is  not    * 

lite  mean-    ♦ 

f 

abstracts?  fc 

ause  their  \ 

these  ab-  i 

for  their  I 

-bordered,  \ 

len  ible  to     J 
the  speci- 
to  do  so 

[it  of  view, 
rime,  how-     j 

therefore 
lity  of  ap-     3 
of  what     i 

to  kfww 
what  th« 

ions.   More 
'•In  -what 
|th?   power 

lain  ^nowl'  ' 
|e    answers 
lay  be  ac- 
khen  I  say 
|€  universe, 
lave  caused 
kt  is,  I  be-" 
created   a 
Id  not  have 
en  himaeli 
t^ould  be  to 
>usnesfi. 

lunicatioa 
lat  japans 

:orded  his- 
and  have- 
le  dazzling 

»d  to  mdi- 
|ow. 

by  tT»e 
th«f  this 
»ach«d  it» 
Jewish 

it  occurs  t(^ 
>d  purpose, 
k-ho  deme4 
Jehovah 
;d  the  unl- 
it). 


t 
P 


lentiiication 

jwhy  should 
fin  checking 

\e  Ihem? 
Lthletics  so 


[ill  continue 
sresentation 


■  urrounds 
|tudent  pays 
rurta.n,  but 

ation   is  al- 

ivorv  low- 


/ 


Covering  Th^  Cainpi^ 


GRAO  CLUB 

The  third  meeting  of  the  gradu- 
ate club  will  take  place  tbday  at 
3.45  p.m.  in  Koland  Parker  Lounge 
of  Graham  .Memorial.  An  informal 
discussion  wUl  be  led  by  I^.  BiU 
Poteat.  All  ^i^uate  students  have 
been  invited. 

CONGItSGATtON  CHM^IAN 
CHUR£H 

The  annual  meeting  of  the  mem- 
bers of  the  Congregation  Christian 
Church  will  be  hdd  in  the  Fellow- 
ship Hall  at  8  p.m.  Election  of  new 
officers  for  the  coming  year  will 
lake  place  at  this  time.  Members 
have  been  urged  to  attend. 
STATE  EMPLOYED 
ASSOCIATION 

There  will  be  a  meeting  of  the 
State  Employees  Association  Tues- 
day at  7:30  p.m.  in  Getrard  Hall. 
GUTest  speakers  will  be  Dr.  Reece 


W.  Befryhill,  Dean  of  the  U.  N.  C. 
School  of  Medicine  and  the  Honor- 
able Thad  Bute,  Secretary  of  State. 
BUSINESS  AOMIN liTRATION 
STUDENTS 

Business  Administration  students 
must  sign  appointment  books  for 
pre-registration  from  pecember  3-8 
in  Carroll  Hall  foyer  in  order  to 
see  their  advisors  dming  the  ad- 
vising period,  December  12,  13,  14 
and  17.  Pre-registration  will  take 
place  in  the  foyer  of  Carroll  Hall 
on  the  same  dates  as  the  advising 
period. 
SUPPER 

Orange  Methodist  Chiurh  is  hav- 
ing a  brunswick  stew  supper  to- 
morrow from  5-7:30  p.m.  at  $1  a 
plate.  Proceeds  will  go  to  a  build- 
ing fimd.  The  church,  which  is  two 
miles  out  Airport  Road,  has  invit- 
ed the  public. 


Report  Of  Jpckie  Maryland  Case 
To  Consolidated  University  Board 


PUT  THE  5PAiyg,E 


IN  THE  EYES  OF  YOUR 


SwefBtheart 

Feminine  Friends 

Relatives 

With 

GLIHERING  CHRISTMAS  GIFTS 

From 


fer. 


Of  Chapel  Hill 
HANDSOMELY  GIFT  WRAPPED 


Christmas  gifts  can  be  especially 
I         wonderful  when  they  not  only  re-  j 
i        fiect  the  fine  taste  of  the  giver  | 

but  also  catch  the  personality  of! 

the  person  to  whom  they  are  being  j 
4        presehlcd.  \ 

Everyone  has  accumulated  reams 
of  stationCTy,  records,  jewelry,  lip- 
stick, stockings,  handkerchiefs  .  .  . 
items  that  can  but  seldom  have  a 
special  meaning.  This  Christmas 
why  not  put  a  little  notation  beside 
each  name  on  your  list  specifying 
the  type  of  individual  such  as 
•'frail  and  feminine",  "rugged  in- 
door type"  "polished  sophisticate", 
etc. 

In  this  way  you  won't  give  just 
any  bottle  of  perfimie  to  any  one 
of  the  names,  but  one  special."  per- 
son will  be  the  JpMrtunate  Tecei>ient 
of  a  fragrance  keyed  to  their  per- 
sonality.' As  for  scarves,  belts, 
jewelry  and  the  like,  try  to  select 
these  with  some  idea  as  to  what 
outfit  they  will  best  accent 

And  there  are  so  imany  new 
paths  to  tred  when  shopping  for. 


Yuletide  remembrances  .  .  cozy 
bedroom  slippers,  colored  gloves, 
elegant  evening  purses,  an  asscwt- 
ment  of  perfume  scents,  jewelry 
boxes  in  a  partictilar  color,  satin 
containers  for  stockings,  ^oves. 
etc.,  a  cookbook  of  special  Carolina 
recipes,  frivolous  lingerie,  trinket 
boxes  .  .  .  the  list  becomes  endless. 

Faberge  devotees  dote  on  the 
giant  sized  bottles  of  their  fra- 
gnance,  and  scented  soaps,  dusting 
powder  and  bath  salts  are  appreci- 
ated  by  lovers  of  elegance. 

This  is  the  era  of  bright  jewels 
to  spark  the  polished  uncluttered 
look  of  the  current  fashions  and  to 
give  ensembles  that  My  Fair  Lady 
apffeatsact.  Find  out  ybmr  recepi- 
ehts  wardrobe  colics  and  select 
matching  or  brilliahtly  contrasting 
pieces,  if  you.  are  shopping  for 
one  who  is  attached  to  simple 
rfieaths;  she  can  never  own  enough 
dazzling  pins. 

Let  this  be  a  year  for  giving 
particular  gifts  to  those  particular 
people  on  your  Christmas  list. 


On  Nov.  13,  1966,  the  council  chairman  t^egraphed  to  President 
Friday  and  Chaneellor  Bostian  of  its  decision  to  put  State  College 
on  probation  for  four  years.  The  telegram  reads: 
"CONFIDENTIAL.    This  is  to  advise  you  that  ^e  NCAA  Council, 
in  session  today  in  Detroit,  adopted  the  following  resolution: 
"BESOLLmON  ' 

"NORTH  CAROLINA  STATE  COLLEXJE 

WHEREAS;  the  NCAA  Committee  on  Infractions  has  investigated 
alleged  violations  of  NCAA  Legislaition  by  North  Carolina  State 
College,  Raleigh,  and  reported  its  findings  to  the  council; 

"WHEREAS,  the  Council  has  found  North  Carolina  State  College 
to  have  been  in  violation  of  Article  Vl,  Section  1,  of  the  by-laws 
in  that  representatives  of  the  college  offered  a  prospective  student- 
athlete  aid  in  excess  of  that  permitted  by  the  Atlantic  Coast  Con- 
ference and  tills  association  to  influence  said  student-athlete  to  en- 
roll at  North  Carolina  State  College;'  % 

"^WUEBEAS^  the  inducements  of^ed  took  the  form  of  annual 
cash  gifts  and  a  seven-year  college  Medical  -  education  for  a  friend 
cf  the  prospective  studentathlete,  as  well  as  a  fnre-year  'unrestrict- 
ed' scholarship  which  is  not  permitted  l^  the  governing  legislation 
of  the  Atlantic  Coast  Conference;  • 

"\MfERBAS,  the  council  has  found  North  Carolina  State  College 
to  have  violated  the  provisions  of  Aiticie  VI;  Section  1,  of  the  by- 
laws and  Article  111,  Section  1  and  4,  of  th6  constitution,  in  that  a 
staff  nuember  and  a  friend  of  the  coll^g^  offeired  $80  to  the  prospec-' 
live  student-athlete  to  pay  his  transportation  costs  to  Raleigh,  N.  C, 
to  enroll  at  the  college,  and  subsequently,  the  $80  was  given  to  the 
student-athlete  for  this  purpose; 

"WHIIREAS,  the  NCAA  Council,  May  7,  1954,  placed  North  Caro- 
lina State  College  on  probation  for  one  year  and  ruled  it  ineligible 
to  participate  in  the  1955  National  Collegiate  Basketball  Champion- 
ship, this  action  being  based  upon  violatiocis  of  Article  VI,  Sections 
2  and  3,  of  the  by-laws; 

"WHEREAS,  the  NCAA  Committee  on  Infractions  and  the  Com- 
missioner's office  of  the  Atlantic  Coast  Conference  cooperated  to 
the  maximum  degree  possible  in  carrying  on  the  many  inter-views 
and  investigations  necessary  in  obtaining  the  facts  of  the  particular 
case; 

"NOW,  THEREFORE,  BE  IT  RESOLVED,  that  the  NCAA  Coun- 
cil place  North  Carolina  State  College  oh  probation  for  a  period  of 
four  years  from  this  date  (Nov.  13.  19S6),  it  being  understood  that 
the  ccHnmittee  on  infractions  shall  renew  the  a^letic  policies  and 
practices  of  the  college  prior  to  the  expiration  of  this  probation; 

"BE  rr  FURTHER  RESOLVED,  'that  during  the  period  of  this 
probation,  North  Carolina  State  College  shall  not  be  eligible  to  ento" 
athletes  or  teams  in  national  collegiate  championship  competition  on 
those  invitational  and  like  events  which  cooperate  v^ith  the  NCAA 
in  the  administration  of  its  enforcement  program  and.  further,  the 
college's  athletic  teams  shall  not  be  eligible  to  participate  in  the 
national  football  tele\ision  series  administered  by  the  association- 
or  in  any  other  television  program  controlled  by  this  association; 

BE  IT  FURTHER  RESOLVED,  that  during  the  period  of  this  pro- 
bation the  College  shall  be  denied  the  privilege  of  being  represented 
on  any  NCAA  committee  and  the  right  to  vote  on  any  question  be- 
fore the  association. 

"BE  IT  FURrmBR  RESOLVED,  that  North  Carolina  SUte  Col- 
lege be  reprimanded  and  censured  for  the  activities  of  its  B^istant 
basketball  coach  and  its  assistant  athletic  director  for  their  participa- 
tion in  this  affair  of  the  director  of  the  Wolfpack  Club,  the  col- 
lege's local  booster  organization;  Further,  iri  connection  with  tjus 
action,  it  should  be  noted  that  it  is  the  cottQCH's  Opinion  that  the 
recruitment  of  this  prospective  student-athlete  uiafsiMdertakeniyrillt 
the  knowledge  and  expressed  authority  of  the  head  basketball ^#iri4|f; 
"BE  rr  FURTIffiR  RESOLVED,  that  record  beflmade  <rf  t^  co- 
operation and  assistance  accordied*  the  NCAA  and  its  committee  on 
infractions  \)y  the  commissioner  of  the  Atlantic  Coast  Conference. 

"This  information  is  being  released  to  the  press  approximately 
6  p.m.  (EST).  We  respectfully  request  that  you  make  no  public  state- 
ment on  this  matter  until  announcement  has  been  completed  at 
this  end." 


Freshman   Groiip   On   Leadership 
Training  Meets  Today  At  3  P.M. 


(CorO^iied  from   Page  1) 

man  of  the  men's  planning  com 
mitte  and  Benny  Thomas,  chair-  \  duct  a 
man  of  the  IDC  social  committee, 
Stacy;  Whit  Whitfield,  chairman 
of  the  refreshment  committee, 
Everett;  Jimmy  Womble,  chair- 
man of  decorations,  Grimes;  Jim 
Dixon,  president  of  Aycock;  and 
Dale  Austin,  vice  presiddtit  of 
Stacy. 

Spencer  Coeds  Mary  FranciES 
Hough  and  Joyce  Holland  have 
been  handling  the  publicity  In 
their  dorm,  as  have  Mclver  Pres- 
ident Babs  Moore  and  Smith  Coed 
Betsy  McKinhon. 


The  first  meeting  of  the  special 
Freshmen    Group    on    Leadership 
Training,  which  is  being  sponsor- 
ed by  The  Freshman  Fellowship, 
will  be  held  today  at  3  p.m.  in  the 
I  Cabinet  room  of  the  YMCA 
I      A  film   entitled  "How  To  Con- j 
Discussion"  will  be  shown, ' 
after  which   Dr.   Richard  Calhoon  j 
will  serve  as  the  leader  in  bring- ! 
ing  out  "The  Essentials  of  Lead- 
ership." 

Dr.  Calhoon  is  a  professor  on 
the  faculty  of  the  Business  Ad- 
ministration School  and  an  experi- 
enced re.source  person  in  work- 
shops on  human  relations  and 
leadership. 

This  is  the  first  of  a  series 
of  l^ree  meetings  to  be  held  be- 
fore the  Christmas  holidays,  the 


next  two  being  hsld  at  the  same 
lime  and  location  —  Fridays  at 
3  p.m.  in  the  Y  Cabinet  room 

The  Programs  for  the  meetings 
to  follow  will  deal  with  the  Essen- 
tial Characteristics  of  the  Christ- 
ian Associations  and  their  work 
on  the  campus.  Resource  persons 
will  be  Mr.  Claude  Shotts,  Bob 
Young.  Bob  Leonard,  Gerry  Mayo 
and  John  Riebel. 

'Experience     gained     at     these 


meetings  wiU  be  valuable  not  only 
to  those  w4io  may  be  in  the  Y, 
but  to  those  who  are  in  other 
campus  activities"  said  Leonard, 
Freshman  Work  Chairman.  The 
FYeshmen  Fellowship  Council  in 
discussing  plans  for  next  fall's 
Freshmen  Camp,  felt  that  it  would 
be  advantageous  for  all  those  in- 
terested in  working  on  Fredimen 
Camp  to  attend  these  meetings  if 
at  all  possible,  he  said. 


Coeds  Jeanne  Sillay  and  Linda 
Schoof  have  been  representing  Al- 
derman in  the  planning  as  have 
Carr  Coeds  Sally  Peter,  Jewel 
Buffaloe  and  Joy  Earp  with  Betty 
Jinette  and  Mary  Louise  Davis  in 
charge  of  publicity  in  that  dorm. 
IT'S  see  HOP  TIME 
The  Nurses'  Dorm  will  have  the 
welcome  mat  out  tonight  from  8 
o'clock  to  midnight  for  all  camp- 
us men  who  possess  a  pair  of 
socks. 

Shoes  will  be  checked  at  the 
door,  and  dancing  will  be  to  the 
music  of  top  recording  artists  for 
the  informal  event. 

The  nurses'  social  is  boing  spMi- 
sored  by  the  Student  Nurses  Asso- 
ciation with  SN.\  Second  Vice 
President  Jane  Mulvey  in  charge. 

Other  SNA  officers  are  Presi- 
dent Shirley  Guethner,  First  Vice 
President  Sharon  Farrington,  Sec- 
retary Gail  Hodgson  and  Treasur- 
er Barbara  Miles. 

Student  Nurse  Sandy  Roberts, 
who  is  in  charge  of  refreshments, 
is  assisting  with  arrangements. 


Brock  Receives 
Another  Title 

Miss  Jafte  Brock  has  added  an- 
othr  title  to  her  list  of  beauty 
crowns  —  she  is  coed  of  the  mon- 
th for  Coach  and  Athlete  maga- 
zine. 

A  picture  of  the  striking  20 
year  old  blonde  UNC  majorette 
covers  a  whole  page  in  the  Nov- 
ember issue  of  Coach  and  Athlete.. 
Miss  Brock,  according  to  the 
sketch  which  accompanies  the  pic- 
ture, was  Miss  Atlanta  for  1956. 

The  sketch  in  Coach  and  Athlete 
concludes  with  tiiis   paragraph: 

"Her  compact  figure  (35-23-36) 
and  striking  smile  make  her  a 
tremendous  hit  wherever  she 
goes.  And  contrary  to  what  might 
be  expected,  yet  typical  of  the  tra- 
ditional Southern  Belle,  Miss 
Brock  retains  a  natural  charm  and 
simplicity  that  many  lose  after 
years  of  having  their  beauty  ac- 
claimed." 


Dr.  William  Poteot  Speaks 
At  Graduate  Qet-Together 


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t.MoUM^or 

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Associate    Prof,    of    Philosophy, 

'  Dr.    William    Poteat,   wll   lead    an 

informal    discussion    at    tonight'^ 

third  graduate  get-together  of  thcf 

year. 

The  meeting  will  take  place  in 
Roland  Parker  Lounges  of  Graham 
Memorial  at  8:45  p.m.  today. 

After    the    discussion,    refresh- 
ments will  be  served  and  the  stu- 
dents  will   move   to   the   Rendez- 
vous room  where  they  will  dance  j 
to  the  music  of  the  Five  Dimen-i 
sions  Combo. 

A  charge  of  25  cents  will  be  j 
made  to  cover  the  cost  of  the  re-j 
f^shments  and  the  combo.  | 

The  graduate  club  Is  sponsored, 
by  the  YMCA  and  the  YWCA. 

Bill  Deaton,  chairman  of  the  ex- 
ecutive committee  of  the  club, 
said,  "there  was  a  fine  response 
to  the  first  and  second  programs 
and  we  hope  to  have  even  better 
response  to  this  meeting." 

This  is  the  first  time  a  program 
of  this  combined  nature  has  been 
tried  and  it  should  be  of  interest 
to  all  graduate  students,  officials 
of  the  club  said. 

Club  spokesmen  said  they  hop- 
ed that  in  the  immediate  future 
the  group  would  be  able  to  hold 
election  of  their  own  officers  and 
take  action  on  matters  concerning 
the  welfare, of  graduate  Students. 

Other  members  of  theexecutive 
committee  of  the  club,  besides 
Deaton,  include  Bill  Kirkaman 
from  law  school;  Bob  Rennick; 
Miss  Coleen  Crenshaw,  education; 


Miss  Barabara  Battle,  dramatic 
art;  Miss  Jo  Deason,  dramatic  art; 
Miss  Pat  Dixon,  social  work;  Bob 
Crain,  mathematics;  and  Pres 
Browning,  English;  and  George 
Kegrave,  pharmacy. 


'Magic  Flute' 
Sunday  Night 

"The  Magic  Flute,"  abridged 
version  of  Mozart's  opera,  will  be 
presented  by  Les  Petites  Musi- 
cales  Sunday  at  8  p.m.  in  Hill  flail. 

Norman  Cordon,  formerly  with 
the  Metropolitan  Opera  for  twelve 
seasons  and  present  head  of  the 
North  Carolina  Music  Program, 
will  star  in  the  title  role  of  Saras- 
tro.  The  University  Glee  Club, 
Joel  Carter  directing,  will  pro- 
vide a  choral  background  for  the 
work. 

Preceding  the  opera,  the  "Missa 
Brevis"  will  be  performed  by  the 
Chapel  Hill  Choral  Club  under 
the  direction  of  Music  Professor 
Joel  Carter. 

No  admission  is  charged  for  the 
GMAB-sponsored  program. 


ALTER  YOUR 
CLOTHES 

to  th« 

rVY  LOOK 

Drop  by  today  and  let  us 

show   you   what   proper   •Itora- 

tions  can  do  for  your  eutdatad 

wardrobo. 

Como  in  oarly  for  your  holiday 

alterations. 


PETE 
The  Tailor 

U5V2  E.  Franklin  St. 


The  New  Book 

PETER 
ARNO 
CARTOONS 

Is  Here  ^ 


THE    INTIAAATE    BOOKSHOP 


205  E.  Franklin  St. 


Open  Till  10  P.M. 


N 


E 


Herbert  AAorrison  To 

I 
Speak  At  Duke  Dec.  13 

DURHAM —«^— Herbert  Morri- 
on,  Mie  of  Britain's  most  respect- 
•d  members  of  Parliament  and 
"or  years  one  of  Britain's  highest 
anking  government  leaders,  will 
i»eafc  in  Duke  University's  Page 
Vttditouum  on  Dec.  13. 

The  public  is  invited  to  his  free 

•»cture  on  "The  Battle  For  Peace." 

Tie  program   is  being  sponsored 

-V  the  Educational  Affairs  Com- 

Mjittop  of  the  Duke  Student  rnion 


A  GENTLE  FRAGRANT  SPRAY  THAT  HOLDS  HAIR 
SOFTLY,    BEAUTIFULLY    IN    PLACE    FOR    HOURS 

Breck  Hair  Set  Mist,  with  its  delicate  touch,  holds  your 
hair  softly  in  place  for  hours.  It  also  provides  a  quick 
and  easy  way  to  make  lasting  pin  curls.  Fn^ant  as  a 
bouquet,  Breck  Hair  Set  Mist  contains  lanolin,  which 
brings  out  the  natural  histre  and  beauty  of  your  hair. 

4H  OS-  $J-25  pius  tax  11  m.  %2.00  plus  lax 


COSMETIC  DEPT. 


PHONE  9^781 


USE  OUR  CONVENIENS  UY-A-WAY  PLAN 


MS  or  PhD 

Physicists 

Chemists 

Mathematicians 

Who  have  joined  the  Operations  Evaluation  Group 
of  Massachusetts  Institute  of  Technology  have  found 
that  a  career  in  Operations  Research  offers: 

Challejnging  Research 
Competitive  Salaries 
Academic  Atmosphere 
Liberal  Fringe  Benefits 
Paid  Leave  For  Study  or  Research 

Campus  Interviews  Tues.,  Dec.  11, 1956 

OPERATIONS  EVALUATION  GROUP 

Division  of  Defense  Laboratories 
Massachusetts  Institute  of  Technology 


I  I 


i^ 


PAGE  POUR 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


FRIDAY,  NOVEMBER  30.   IW* 


Varsity  Cagers  Top  Freshmen,  9  6-59  In  Scrimmage 


It's  smart  to  be  comfo. 


Rosey  &  Co.  Pull  Away  * 
After  First  Half  Scare 

By  LARRY  CHEEK 

Carolina's  varsity  basketball  team,  trailing  by  7  points  after  8 
minutes  of  the  first  half,  came  roaring  from  behind  to  rout  a  scrappy 
tut  outclassed  freshman  team,  96-59,  in  a  scrimmage  game  played 
last  night  in  Woollen  Gym  before  a  packed  house  of  8,000  fans. 

The  issue  was  very  much  in  doubt  for  the  first  few  minutes  as 
the  red  hot  frosh  grabbed  an  early  lead  and  held  on  tenaciously 
Egainst  the  varsity'  first  stringers.  But  as  the  halfway  point  of  the 
opening  stanza  neareti,  the  tide  began  to  shift  with  the  varsity  rapidly 
closing  the  margin.  With  the  score  standing  22-21  in  favor  of  the 
varsity,  the  second  team  entered  the  game  and  the  runaway  began. 

■ ♦     Tony  Radovich,   Stan  Groll  and 

Co.  began  to  apply  the  pressure, 


Len  Rosenbluth 
Named  Capt. 
Of  Cage  Squad 


Lennie  Rosenbluth  has  been 
named  Captain  of  the  1956-57 
North  Carolina  basketball  team,  it 
was  announced  last  night  by 
Coach  Frank  McGuire. 

The  6-5  senior,  native  of  New 
York  and  now  a  resident  of 
Greeneville,  Tenn..  is  one  of  the 
nation's  most  celebrated  bjeketball 
players.  Named  on  at  least  one 
first-string  All-An»erican  team 
last  season,  Rosenbluth  is  a  popu- 
lar pre-season  choice  to  repeat  that 
honor  generally  in  the  coming 
campaign. 

The  smooth-working  forward 
was  fifth  in  scoring  last  year  with 
a  26.7  average  for  23  games.  His 
6l4  points  brought  his  two-year 
varsity  total  to  1,150,  just  1'72 
short  of  the  University  cai«er  re- 
cord held  by  Al  Lifson,  who  play- 
ed four  seasons.  In  Rosenbluth's 
freshman  year  here,  he  sawed  627 
points. 

Rosenbluth  is  the  key  man  on 
a  Carolina  team  which  is  being 
picked  to  be  one  of  the  top  teams 
in  the  country  this  season. 


and  managed  to  make  the  halftime 
score  46-29  against  thd  bewildered 
yearlings.  The  second  half  was 
merely  a  formality  with  the  varsity 
running  up  the  score  at  will,  pump- 
ing in  50  points  to  only  30  for  the 
first  year  men. 


BDMOC 

CONTEST 
leading  Fhref 

1.  Myroh  Cohlcfin 

2.  John  Foster 

3.  tarry  Ford 

4.  Frank  Crowther 

5.  Wes  Thompson 


High  scorer  for  the  night  was 
frosh  center  Dick  Kepley,  6-8 
stringbean  from  Roanoke,  Va.,  who 
poured  in  19  points.  Leaping  Lee 
Shaffer,  6-7  forward  with  the  agili- 
^  ty  of  a  gazelle,  took  runnerup 
honors  for  the  yearlings  with  14. 

Lennie  Rosenbluth,  although  held 
scoreless  in  the  first  half,  hit  a  hot 
streak  in  the  opening  moments  of 
the  second  period  (o  tally  15  points 
in  a  little  over  10  minutes.  Joe 
Quigg  and  Radovich,  both  mem- 
bers of  the  second  team,  collected 
14  apiece  while  lanky  forward  Pete 
Brennan  connected  for  12..  Also 
breaking  into  double  figiu*es  was 
Groll,  6  foot  soph  guard  who  hit 
for  10. 

Other  scoring  found  Tommy 
Kearns  with  7,  Bob  Cunningham 
with  6,  Danny  Lotz  with  6  and  big 
Bill  Hathaway  with  5.  None  of  the  j 
remaining  freshmen  got  above  6 
points.  j 

Coach    McGuire    substituted    by  ] 
teams  just  as  he  did  in  the  pre- 
vious varsity  win  over  the  fresh- 
I  men.  On  his  first  unit  were  Hath- 
-    away,   Rosenbluth,   Brennan,   Cun- 

I'  ningham  and  Kearns. 
I  The  Tar  Heels  open  their  season 
'  officially  tomorrow  night  against 
the  McCrary  Eagles  in  Asheboro. 
Their  first  home  game  is  next 
Tuesday  night  with  Furman.  On 
the  same  night,  the  freshmen  meet 
^p  Hifjh  Point  Jayvees  in  a  pre- 
liminary battle. 

ciassiAeds 


Records  Show  Sutton 
Greatest  In  Decade 


Wrestling  Champs 


Here  are  the  intraimiral  wrestling  champions:  left  to  right,  front  row:  Hall  Johnston  (SAE)  T30  lb; 
Joe  Chamfeliss  (Law  Seh)  123  lb;  John  White  (Med  Sch)  177  lb;  James  Bingham  (Graham)  147  lb;  John 
Welbome  (Manley)  157  lb;  Ernest  Ransdell  (Everett)  167-  lb.  Back  row:  Henry  Rhyne  (Graham)  17T  lb; 
Charles  Strange  (Dent  Sch)  130  lb;  Bernard  Harris  (Dent  Sch)  unlimited;  Tom  Boyette  (Phi  Gam)  un- 
limited; Gerald  Suddreth  (AK  Psi)  Bill  Dameron  (Kap  Sig)  157  lb;  Dave  Atkinson  (DKE)  167  lb. 


jMoore  And  Patterson  Meet 
In  Heavyweight  Title  Bout 


By  JACK  HAND 

CHICAGO— (i»t— The  old  man 
fights  the  former  Olympic  cham- 
pion for  the  world's  heavy- 
weight title  tonight  with  Archie 
Moore,  39  "going  on  43,"  pitting 
his  experience  against  21-year- 
old  Floyd  Patterson  for  the 
crown  vacated  by  Rocky  Marci- 
ano  in  April. 

Moore,    who  had   his   first   pro 
fight  in  1936  when  Patterson  was 


only  a  babe  in  arms,  hopes  to  baseball  park  presentations  for 
make  the  grade  on  the  seco^id  try ;  this  sort  of  a  scrap.  However,  tele- 
in  this  15-round  match.  He  was  j  vision  explains  that.  The  radio-TV 
knocked  out  in  nine  rounds  last  j  sponsor  has  tossed  in  $200,000  for 
September  in  Mariano's  last 
fight.  The  odds  on  Moore  have 
been  flickering  from  8  to  5  to  6 
to  5  with  the  latest  6  to  5  and 
•pick  'em. 

A  heavyweight  title  fight  indooa* 
at  Chicago  Stadium  is  a  novelty 
in  an  age  accustomed  to  summer 


FOR  SALE:  1954  NASHUA  HOUSE 
trailer.  3  rooms  with  adjoining 
nursery  or  study  room,  and 
screened-in  front  porch.  All 
modem  conveniences.  Ideal  set- 
up for  student  and  wife  with  or 
without  children.  Location: 
Sloan's  Trailer  Park,  I'-j  miles 
from  Chapel  Hill  on  Airport 
Road — Maurice  L.  Clegg. 


Track  Competition  Ends 

Yanks  Try  To  increase 
Olympic  Lead  On  Reds 


JAZZ  AT  TURNAGES 

Saturday  afternoon,  2:00,  Turn- 1 
ages   Cabin   in   Durham. — Jazz   by 
Dick    Gables     'All     Stars."     Beer 
served. 


THE  ROSEMARY  LAUNDRY 

329  W.  Ros^nary  Street 
(Back  of  University  National   Bank) 

Offers  you  its  exclusive  HAND  ironing  service  . 
Wash  and  dry  laundry,  too  ...  9  lbs.  wash,  dry.  folded 
Shirts.  Each,  $.15  Extra 

ALSO  DRY  CLEANING  SERVICE 


$.S0 


By  WILL  GRIMSLEY 

MELBOURNE— <i<V— Two  young 
giants.  Milt  Campbell  and  Rafer 
Johnson,  climaxed  the  two-man 
race  for  the  decathlon  gold  med- 
al today  as  the  U.  S.  track  and 
field  team  entered  the  final  phase 
of  its  assignment  to  build  up 
enough  points  to  carry  the  Yanks 
to  another  over-all  Olympic  title 
in  the  unofficial  point  count. 

The  track  and  field  athletes, 
America's  workhorse  crew  when 
it  comes  to  winning  medals  and 
points,  thus  far  have  collected  12 
of  the  19  gold  medaLs  won  by  the 
U.  S.  in  Ih  el956  games.  And  the 
track  and  field  competition  comes 
to  an  end  tomorrow. 

After  that,  Anferica  wil  have 
to  concentrate  on  the  swims  as  its 
main  source  of  points  while  Rus- 
sia  goes   to   work   in   gymnastics. 

Going  into  today's  events-with 
the  first  swimming  finals  sched- 
uled in  the  men's  100-meter  free- 
style and  women's  200-meter 
breaststroke  —  the  U.  S.  holds  a 
318  to  219^  edge  over  Russia  in 
points. 

The  only  track   and   field   finals 


Going  into  the  final  five  ponts — 
110-meter  hurdles,  discus,  pole 
vault,  javeHn  and  1,500-meter  run 
—Campbell,  from  Plainfield,  N.  J., 
was  running  ahead  of  Johnson's 
pace  when  he  set  the  record  of 
7,985  points. 

The  complete  domination  by  the 
American  pair  in  the  decathlon 
and  a  400-meter  run  victory  by 
Charley  Jenkins  of  Villanova  were 
highlights  of  yesterday's  competi- 
tion in  cold,  blustery  weather.  But 
the  big  talk  wa.s  reserved  for  the 
3.000-meter  steeplecha.se  —  which 
provided  the  first  rhubarb  of  the 
games. 

Britain's  Chris  Brasher  —  the 
"rabbit"  who  paced  Roger  Ban- 
nister to  his  historic  break 
through  the  4-minute  mile  barrier 
— first  was  judged  the  winner  in 
record  time,  then  was  disqualified 
for  "interference." 

The  Olympic  Jury  of  Honor  fi- 
nally settled  the  case  and  award- 
ed the  deci.sion  to  Brasher,  who 
finished  15  feet  ahead  of  the  pack, 
and  then  disallowed  a  subsequent 


HALF  'N  HALF 

FUDGE  SUNDAE 

Vanilla  and  Chocolate 

Ice  Cream 

Topped  With 

Hot  Chocolate  Fudge  and 

Hot  Butterscotch 

30c 


women  s 

.sprint,  and  the  U.  S.  is  without  a 

qualifier  in  the  sprint. 

Campbell,  the  1952  runnerup, 
and  Johnson,  the  world  record 
holder,    were    in    a    class    all    by 


todav    are'  in    the    decathlon    and    Pr^t^^'  ^y  Hungary's  Sandor  Roz- 
shot    put    and   200-meter    snyoi.  the  world  record  holder  and 
'"interim"   winner. 

Brasher's  time  was  8:41.2.  clip- 
ping the  Olympic  record  set  by 
Horace  Ashenfeller  of  the  U.  S.  at 
8:45.4    in    1952.    Chuck    Jones    of 

themselves   through   the   first  half  j  Iowa  was  ninth  as  the  lone  Amer- 

of    the    decathlon    yesterday    with    lean  entry.  Ashenfelter,  "too  old" 

Campbell    winning    three    events  j  for  the   event,  failed  to  qualify. 

and   placing   second   in   the   other  j 

two   for  a   4.564-pont    total.  Johft- [         ii"'.^-'?    ^.-^—v,-,  '^s^,,^  ,^    ,^,^ 

son,  a  UCLA  student,  was  second  i  ^  Z  THfi  FR 

with  4375  aiLwJ;«ai     '^rjUAMBS  AOAiNI 


the  rights  to  aim  his  microphones 
and  cameras  (NBC)  at  the  ring  at 
10  p.m.  EST  with  Chicago  and  a 
150-mile  surrounding  area  blacked 
out  on  TV. 

According  to  the  contracts,  each 
fighter  will  get  30  per  cent  of  this 
anticipated  total  take  of  almost 
$450,000.  It  will  be.  by  far,  the  big- 
gest   payday    for    Patterson. 

No  matter  what  happens  .in  the 
.stadium  ring,  a  new  record  will 
be  set  in  the  age  department. 
Moore  would  be  the  oldest  man 
ever  1o  win  the  heavyweight  title 
and  Patterson  the  youngest. 

The  contrast  in  the  two  men  is 
startling.  Moore,  bom  in  1916  or 
1913.  depending  on  whether  you 
take  his  word  or  the  record  book 
claims  of  his  mother,  is  a  ring 
gypsy  who  has  battled  around  the 
world  from  Tasmania  to  Toledo 
in  156  fights  for  a  131-20-5  record. 
Until  he  latched  onto  the  light 
heavyweit'ht  crown  in  1952  he  was 
avoidei^  at  every  opportunity. 

When  Archie  finally  got  his  shot 

at    Marciano.    Sept.    21.    19.55.    he 

.startled  the  world  by  dropping  the 

'  Rock  in  the  second   round.  Moore 

j  failed   to    move    in    when    his    big 

•  chance    beckoned    and    eventually 

was  knocked  out  in  the  ninth  after 

taking  a  bad  beating. 

Patterson  never  has  taken  a 
beating.  In  fact,  he  has  lost  only 
one  of  31  pro  fights  since  he  came 
back  from  the  '52  Olympics.  That 
one  defeat  was  a  disputed-decisi9n 
eight-rounder  to  Joey  Maxim,  the 
"cute"   ex-light   heavy   king. 

Swabbed  in  cotton  by  his  cau- 
tious manager.  Cus  D'Amato,  Pat- 
terson was  brought  along  slowly 
against  mediocre  opposition. 
D'Amato  finally  made  the  big  step 
last  June  when  he  sent  Floyd 
against  Hurricane  Jackson  in  a 
12-round  elimination  match.  Pat- 
terson won  a  split  decision,  al- 
though he  won  handily  6n  this 
scorecard.  but  broke  a  bone  in  his 
right  hand   in  the   process. 

The  broken  hand  delayed  plans 
for  a  Moore  fight  during  the  late 
summer  or  early  fall  .and  finally 
resulted  in  this  November  date. 


The  almost  brutal  late  season 
rush  of  big  EM  Sutton,  Carolina 
halfback,  made  him  the  greatest 
Tar  Heel  runner  in  a  decade,  ac- 
cording to  recently  released  sta- 
tistics. 

The  Cullowhee  Comet,  who  clos- 
ed out  his  career  with  a  131-yard 
effort  against  Duke  last  week, 
racked  up  more  yardage  this  sea- 
son and  during  his  career  than  any 
TSr  Heel  runner  since  the  great 
Charlie  Justice. 

In  his  four-year  varsity  career. 
Justice  rolled  up  2465  yards  on  the 
ground  while  Sutton  picked  uo 
1334  in  three  years,  with  this  sea- 
son by  far  his  greatest. 

The  748  net  yards  gained  by  Sut- 
ton this  year  is  the  finest  single 
season  performance  since  Justice 
totaled  774  in  1946  and  766  in  1948. 
It  took  three  great  late  season 
gt.mes  for  'Sutton  to  compile  his 
total.  In  the  21-7  UNC  win  over 
Virginia,  Sutton  picked  up  136. 
Against  Notre*  Dame  he  was  even 
more  effective,  racking  up  179. 
Then  he  closed  out  against  Duke 
with   131. 

Sutton  also  led  the  1956  Tar 
Heels  in  individual  receiving  with 
14  caught  for  159  yards,  kickoff 
returns  with  296  yards  in  14  re- 
turns, and  scoring,  with  seven 
touchdowns  for  42  points. 

The  Morehead  Scholar  carried 
120  times  this  season,  more  than 
twice  as  much  as  any  other  Tar 
Heel.  He  actually  picked  up  778 
yards,  but  lost  30  through  the  year 
fot  a  net  746.  He  averaged  6.2  per 
carry  for  the  year. 

The  final  team  figures  show  the 

Tar  Heels  trailing  their  collective 

opponents  in  almost  every  depart- 

i  ment.  Finishing  with  a  2-7-1  rec- 

j  ord,  UNC  picked  up  2515  offensive 

Aggies  Whip  Longhorns 

AUSTIN.  Tex.— (AP)  —  Rough 
and  ready  Texas  A&AA,  piloted  to 
perfection  by  quarterback  Rcddy 
Osborne,  wrapped  up  the  South- 
west Conference  championship 
today  by  dumping  gritty  Texas 
34-21  for  the  first  Aggie  win  in 
Momorial   Stadium. 

The  revengeful  Aggies,  the 
country's  No.  5  team,  finished 
with  their  first  undefeated  sea- 
son since  winning  the  national 
championship  in  1939. 


yards  while  giving  up  3308. 

In  punting,  a  late  season  splurge 
of  end  zone  kicks  kept  fullback 
Wally  Vale  from  cracking  Harry 
Dunkle's  University  record,  which 
he  "had  dead  aim  on  all  season. 
Vale  kicked  several  into  the  end 
zone  in  the  last  few  games,  with 
ihe  twenty  yards  subttracted  from 
each  kick  hurting.  He  finished  with 
a  41.1  average  for  31  kicks.  Dunkle 
averaged  46.6  in  1939. 


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CONSISTENCY 

A  cemnwdity  UNC  cmi  um  mif 
pi.  S—  •ditorifii  pti9: 


VOL.  LVII.  NO.  5t 


Complete  (/P)  Wire  Servict 


CHAPEL  HILL.  NORTH  CAROLINA,  SATURDAY,  DECEMBER  1,  1956 


FORUNCCHilNCEUOR 


Screening  Committees 
Work   Will  Start  Fri. 


•y  PHYLLIS  MAULTSBY 

The  Committee  on  Norainatiofus 
for  Chancellor  at  the  University 
in  Chapel  Hill  will  meet  Friday 
to  begin  the  work  of  screening 
names  which  are  under  considera- 
tion for  the  office  of  LTNC  Chan- 
cellor to  succeed  Robert  B.  House 
who  is  retiring. 

Chairman  of  the  committee  is 
Kaleigh  Attorney  R.  Mayne  Al- 
bright, who  is  also  president  of 
the  University's  Alumni  Asso. 

His  group  is  divided  into  three 
.subcommittees,  the  six-man  Trus-j 
tee  Subcommittee,  headed  by  Hil!  j 
Yarborough  of  Louisburg;  the  five^ 
man  Alunmi  Subcommittee,  headed  I 
by  VVilliam  D.  Snider.  Associate  I 
Editor  of  the  Greensboro  Daily 
NcwsT;  and  the  seven-man  Faculty  ' 
Sii;; committee,  with  Dougald  Mac] 
iJ'illan  of  the  Carolina  English  De- 1 
partment  at  its  head.  j 

The  three  committees,  working! 
logether.  have  built  up  a  list  of  i 
.names  of  men  whom  they  consider  I 
qualified  as  prospective  chancellor! 
material.  i 

At  the  present  time,  the  commit- 
tees are  assembling  full  biograp- 
hical information  about  the  men. 
.\ccording  to  Mr.  Albright,  the 
bulk  of  the  task  of  collecting  this 
information  falls  to  the  Faculty 
Committee,  because  the"  resources 
of  the  University  are  at  its  dis- j 
posal.  allowing  it  to  do  a  thorough 
job. 

Jlr.  Albright  stated  that  a  few 
names  had  already  been  dropped 
from  the  list,  but  that  this  had 
occurred  only  where  the  person 
under  consideration  expressly  de- 
sired it  or  where  his  age  made 
•it  unwise  that  he  be  considered 
for  selection.  j 

The  members  of  the  committees  I 
»re  currently  reading  the  inforas- 
tion  on  th^  <Mi<Bi  wnier  cunakiet'- ' 
ation  as  it  comes  to  them.  AX  the 
full  commfttee  ^|i«9«(io^  b4i  FHdty 
they  will  begin' to  narrow  the  group 
to  a  workable  list  of  10  to  13  men. 
The.  work  of  selection  of  those 
nominees  to  be  presented  to  Uni- 
versity president  William  C.  Fri- 
day  may   then   begin.   With   inter- 


views of  nominees  for  the  chancel 
lorship  being  done  by  committee 
members. 

Mr.  Albright  stated  that  the  final 
selection  ,of  the  three  or  more 
nominees  which  will  be-  presented 
to  Mr.  Friday  for  his  naming  of 
the  chancellor  will  not  occur  un- 
til after  the  Christmas  holidays, 
at  which  time  the  committee  will 
an-ive  at  its  decision. 


Offices  in   Graham   Memorial 


FOUR  PACES  THIS   ISSUl 


Laszio  Says  Hungary 
Will  Achieve  Freedom 


Robert  Strauss,  noted  stage  and  screen  actor,  is  pictured  above 
with  Louis  Lefkowitz,  a  personal  friend,  on  his  left  and  Dick  Planer. 
Planer  is  Chancellor  cf  TEP  fraternity  which  Strauss  visited  on 
campus. 

SECOND  COUNCIl  REPORTED 

Honor  Council  Rules 
On  Bad  Check  Passing 

The  following  is  the  second  in  a  ,  Check    Probation,    he   is   then   sub- 
series  of  ai-ticles  reporting  actions  !  jp^t  to  another  trial  bv  the  Men's 

by  the  Mens   Honor  Council   this  I  „ .  ^  i       j  . 

,  ,,  •  Honor  Council  and  to  a  .sentence 

fall. 


Small  dog  in  Daily  Tatr  Heel 
office  vainly  licking  empty  Coke 
bottle. 

«         *         « 

Zoology  professor,  after  writ'' 
ing  20-letter  vyords,  trying  to 
spell  "rhythm,'^  fmoUy  giving 
up,  writing  "beat." 


No  Charges 
On  Sutton's 
Death'  Yet 

•'Police"  have  made  no  charges 
yet   in    the   case   of   the    "death" 
of  UNC  footballer  Ed  Sutton,  who  ' 
was   found   "dead"   in   the  arbort-  : 
tum  Thursday  night. 

•Sheriff"  David  Evans  of  'Man-  i 
ning  County"  is  continuing  his  in-  j 
vestigation  and  has  discovered 
certain  evidence  which  he  indi- 1 
cates  may  lead  to  the  arrest  of  ' 
a  Carolina  coed. 

These     happenings     are  in  con- 
junction with  the  iinnual   Phi   Al- 
pha ^  Delta    legal    fraternity    mock    j"^'„  ""^^  ■"^'"'   """"'    ^"^'"^"   "'"  j  Honor  Council  and  to  a 
trial,'  which  will  be  held  in  Man- 1    ^   '  j  of    University    Probation.    Tliis    is 

ning  Hall  courtroom  Dec.  7.  i       The  reoorts  are  made  neriodical-    *u        _  i  . 

_,     .  .      .  liic  I  epulis  an.  muuc  pel  ivaiLai  .  tjjg  regular  sentence  given  m  some 

tach  year  a  •  crime     is  carried    ly  by  Council  Chairman  Jim  Exum.  I  , .  ...  „      r  .u     «  ,-  ^ 

out  under  the  supervision  of  the  |  Rather  than  publishing  a  complete!  ^"^'^^'«"«  ^^  "'^  "«"««•  <-«de. 
PAD.   and   the   fraternity     has     a  i  list  of  all  council  cases.  Exum  pre- j        'If  a   student   again     cashes     a 
prominent    judge   from    the    state  |  viously    explained    that    the    more  1  bad  check  while  under  Univer.sitv 
to  hear  the  case.  The  jlJr>-  is  made!  interesting  and  controversial  cases    o^w..;^.,    i,    .     .      i      ^  i,  ^ 

iin  nf  r-«i-niino   ^t„A^„*^  I         ■  j  ,_        .         .  '  Prcbdtion    having    alreadv    cashed 

up  of  Carolina  students.  |  would  be  released.  k,  ^    «k.  „i,        -.v."     .  i. 

in    the    investigation,    a    M-allet        -A    student    was    charged    with  n*"^    checks    w  thin    two   years     he 
•belonging  to  Sutton  had  not  been    having     cashed  four  'bad'  checks  j  'LZ^Z   Z  H<>n„"r '^n.^fil 
fo»d  >te  ,y*-jterday.  j  ^-tifain  two  years  at  the  Universit>-    '^^'   ^'    ''''  "*'"°^  *^''""^''- 

I>av6  said  several  persons  wa¥iP^Book  Exchange.  _  ^^       h^'lB  th*  case  we  are  diacuaaing  the 

ha\f\n   ia»eDKio»od     in     coMiee(w»ii  MO^MAk  PH6<f*DU'Ri'      "^^  "^"'j'^u'deril"  charged     adJmTTeS'  know- 
with    thfe    "deS'th "  .  •     I       ••The      normal      procedure      fijr]  ing   that    he    had    cashed    hLs   f irst  | 

^{handling    bad    check    violations    i«  i  bad    check    in    October.    1955.    He  i 
il  as  follows:  When  a  student  cashes'  testified,    however,     that     he    was 
his  first  bad  cheek,  nothing  is  done,     unaware     of     having     cashed     two  i 
If  t^ic   offense   is   repeated   within  i  others   on    February   8.    ISoe,   and  i 
two  years,  a  warning  letter  is  sent!  February    11.    1956   and   one   other  i 
the  student  from  the  campus  Bad  j  on  July  17.  1956  as  he  was  charged.  ' 
Check     Representative     informing  ;  His  stub  book,  which  he  produced 
tile  offender  that  in  case  of  a  third  ;  as  evidence,  showed     a     sufficient . 
viclatioOr-  he  will   be  tried  by  the  j  bank    balance    on    each    of    these ! 
Men's   Council   and   be   subject   to  j  dates.   The   case   was   recessed   for 
a  penalty  of  Bad  Check  Probation.  [  further  investigation   at  the  bank. 

"Bad    Check    Probation    implies  i        ,.,,         .,.     ^         .  j| 

,   ,,  ....  ji         \Vhen    the   Council   reconvened 

none   of   the   restrictions    imposed    .,      ,  ,,      .  ,     .,       ,  r      .     J 

.  ....  1         J  .     »!.      the  following  week,  the  defendant 

when  a  student  is  sentenced  to  thje !  .„..:f:„j    .u."'  u:„    ..•..,_    ; .:„..   i 

regular,  or  University,  probatioii. 
The  student  convicted  of  cashing 
three  bad  checks  within  two  years 


EO  SUTTON 

.  7nock  trial  victim 


is  on  probation,  so  to  speak.  onl>' 
I  insofar  as  cashing  checks  is  con- 
cerned. 

SECOND   OFFENSE 

■'If.   however,    a    student  cashes 
another  bad  check   while  on   Bad 


tions  at  the  bank  had  proved  to 
his  satisfaction  that  he  had  made 
an  error  in  his  stub  book  and  the 
checks  in  question  had  been  re- 
turned marked  'insufficient  funds." 
They  had.  however,  been  passed 
through  the  bank  a  .second  time 
and  honored,  since  he  had  in  the 
meantime  made  additional  deposits. 


By    CLARKE   JONES 

Lslavan  Laszio  is  a  dedicated 
man. 

Dedicated,  that  is.  to  the  belief 
Ills  native  Hungary  will  someday 
achieve  complete  independence 
Irom  Soviet  Russia. 

His  earnestness  came  out  here 
•vhen.  in  answer  to  a  question  whe- 
ther he  thought  Hungary  would  ev 
tntuall.\  Im?  free,  he  said  firmly 
"Yes.  definitely  so.  Otherwise  I 
A"<»uldn"f  be  going  around  the  coun- 
tr>   like  this." 

The  21-year  old  student,  travel- 
•in?  under  an  assumed  name  in  or- 
der to  protect  relatives  .still  in  Hun- 
gary, is  presently  making  a  tour  of 
colleges  and  universities  through- 
out the  country  «)n  behalf  of  the 
Hungarian  crisis.  He  is  calling  for 
public  opinion  which,  he  said,  'can 
.strengthen  the  resistance  still  going 
on." 

In  an  interview  late  Thursday 
night,  he  quietly  answered  quos- 
lions  put  to  hin  on  subject*;  as  the 
lighting  in  the  rt'volt.  comparisons 
oetween  students  in  Hungary  anc! 
students  here  and  his  ideas  on  the 
present  setup  in  the  Kremlin.  He 
spoke  through  an  interpreter.  Char- 
les DeresckJ. 
REVOLT 

He  became  involved  in  the  re- 
volution as  a  leader  of  students  at 
his  university,  his  po.sition  at  the 
beginning  being  .somewhat  similar 
to  that  of  Student  Body  President 
Bob  Young  here.  I 

"The  first  fighting  was  dtme  on 
the  nisht  ol  Oct.  29.  The  next 
morning  a  cease-fire  was  ordered" 
and  the  next  fighting  took  place 
Nov.  4.  early  in  the  morning  when 
the  Ru.ssians  b<»gan  putting  down 
ihe  revolt,  1a*  said. 

He  e.xplained.  as  ho  did  during 
his  Carroll  Hall  speech  earlier,  he 
h».d  gone  to  a  Russian  coniinandt-r 
immediatcly  after  the  ceasefire  or- 
r  had  beeh  jftsx]ed^an<^  ^^!!S!^  *** 
nou-  the  reason  for  th7«  Soviet 
*anks  in  his  native  city.  Scpron. 

The  commander  replied  the  tanks 
uere  beinjj  used  jis  a  defense 
against  .\merican  troops  on  the 
way  into  Huagar.\    from  .Vustria 

•'I  didn't  see  one  foreign  soldier 
in  Hun}4ar>-  except  the  Russians.  " 
he  .said. 

Laszio  went  back  to  the  5t)00-in«n"' 
army  he  had  been  leading  and  told  : 
his      troops    to   relax.    •'The      next 
morning     (Nov.4)   at    4   a.m.      this 
same     commander     attacked     ni.\  ' 
sleeping  city."  j 

STUDENTS  HERE  I 

In  comparing  Hungarian  students  I 
with  .\merican  students,  he  spec- 1 
ifically  pointed  out  the  freedom  I 
;.tudents  have  here. 

■'Stuflonts  here  can  freely  ex  | 
press  their  opinions  and  student  j 
(  rganizations  here  in  this  country  | 
really  represent  the  students.  '  | 
They  also  have  the  possibility 
of  seeing  different  viewpoints  and  ' 


don't  have  to  read  only  what  the 
governments    prescribes    to    them. 

'•Their  lives  are  easier,"  he  said. 

Hex  believes  there  is  a  shakeup 
in  the  Moscow  hierarchy  and  th'^ 
struggle  in  the  Kremlin  was  the 
cause  ol"  the  zig-zagging  in  Hun- 
gary." 

"What's  going  on  in  Hungary  is 
only  a  reflection  of  what's  going 
in   Russia. ■■   he   siiirl. 


\  Steinbeck's  Best 
Is  Given  Tonight 

\  (lonstaiuc   licniK'tt.    lOd   .\iulreus.   Frank   McHugh  and 

I  R«)l>(.rt  .Strauss  will  upjjear  in  jKison  t(>ni<:;lit  at  H  in  Memorial 

Mall  in   "I  ho  l>cst  ut  .Stcitibct  k".  a  jyiooraiu  ot  dramatized  ex- 

(vrpi.s   Irnin   tin-   works  c)l    Pn!it/tM    ixnelist   John   Sieinl)eck, 

.s|)(tnsoie<l  in  (;ha|K'l  Hill  l>v    I  he  (".aiolina  Plaxinakeis. 

.Miss  lieniifti.  mcmlu'i  ol  a  famous  a<tino  lamilv  aiid 
Hollvwoocl's  first  woman  prodiuei,  has  appeared  in  eighty 
films,  including  "Ladies  In  Love". 


"Tail-spin",  and  "Topper"  senes 
and  "Paris  Underground".  Tod 
Andrews  was  featured  on  Broad- 
way in  "Summer  and  Smoke".  'Mr. 
R.^bel■ts".  and  "Sabrlna  Fair",  and 
is  a  frequent  leading  man  on  tele- 
vision. 

Robert  Strauss  has  appeared  in 
such  films  as  "Stalag  17'.  "Sailors 
Beware",    "The    Bridges   at    Toko- 


ISTAVAN    LASZLO 

.  .  spetik.\    for  freedoiit 


nev5 

m 
brief 


IN  THE  INFIRMARY 


Students  in  the  Infirmary  yes- 
terday  included: 

Misses  Elmira  Herring.  Pricil- 
la  Norn\an,  Elaine  Gallimore, 
Betty  Riley,  and  Harrington  Alex- 
ander, Jack  Solon>on,  John  Lee 
and  Richard  Saylor.  Robert  Kerr, 
William  Luesing,  Robert  Easen, 
and  John  Adams. 

Town  Catis  For 
Widening  Bids 

Bid.-  lo  widen  Henderson  and 
Rosemary  Streets  have  been  form- 
all.\  called  for  by  the  Town  ol 
Chapel  Hill.  The  bids  will  be  re- 
ceived at  the  Town  Hall  until  3 
p.m.  on   IKH-eniber   10. 

Hend:rs  n  St.  will  be  made  a 
width  of  38  feet  by  taking  10  feet 
<:ff  the  west  side  and  three  feet 
off  the  east  sid?  from  East  Frank- 
lin to  East  Rosemary  Streets  ac- 
eordinj"  to  plans  and  specifications 
on   file   in   the  Town  Hall. 

Also,  according  to  these  plans. 
E:ist  Rosemary  St.  between  Hen- 
derson and  Columbia  will  be  made 
39  feet  wide  by  taking  five  feet 
off  the  south  and  10  feet  off  the 
north  side. 

These  two  projects  are  design- 
ed to  speed  up  the  flow  of  traffic 
through  town  and  are  both  in  ac- 
cord with  the  Babcock  traffic  con- 
trol  plan. 


i^ROM  RADIO  DISPATCHEiS 


H.\V.\N.\,  Cuba  —  The  Cuban 
government  of  Presdient  Batista 
reported  it  had  completely  c.-ushed 
revolts  in  three  eastern  cities.  At 
least  five  were  killed  and  13 
wounded. 

*  *  * 

HAWi*l'l— -The  Senate  Internal 
Security  Subcommittee  began  an 
investigation  of  communism  in  the 
Hawaiian  Lslands.  Several  thous- 
and longshoremen  and  field  work- 


Ri".  "Act  of  Love ".  and  "Seviti 
Year  Itch",  and  has  acted  in 
Broadv.ay's  "Stalag  17".  'Twen- 
fieth  Century"  and  •"Detective 
Story".  Frang  McHugh.  who  is  al- 
so from  a  theatrical  family,  has 
acted  on  Broadwa.\  in  "The  Fall 
Guy".  "Is  Zat  So",  -Excess  Bag- 
gage", and  Florenz  Zeigfeld's 
'"Sh.-iw  Girl",  and  in  Hollj-oi'ood 
films  in  "Tlie  Dawn  Patrol",  •'The 
Front  Page".  "One  Way  Passage", 
•"Three  Men  on  a  Hor.se".  and  "Go- 
in"  My  Way".  He  has  appeared 
in  over  125  pictures. 

T(might  the  four  actors  will  per- 
lonn  selections  from  St?inbeck's 
Canm'ry  Row*.  "The  Grapes,  of 
Wrath  ".  "Tortilla  Flat '.  'The  Pas- 
tures of  Heaven",  and  "Of  Mic« 
and  Men".  Musical  background 
-and  special  scenic  and  lighting  ef- 
fects are  part  of  the  production. 

Reginald  Lawrence,  former  in- 
structor at  the  University  of 
Southern  California.  Rice  Insti- 
tute. Fordham  University  and  th* 
.American  Theatre  Wing  Profess- 
ional School,  and  author  of  scripts 
produced  on  television's  Kffft 
Theatre  and  Studio  One.  has  adapt- 
ed Steinbeck's  writing  for  the 
stage.   The  production  is  directed 


ers  went  on  s\rike  in  protest.  |  by    Elliot    Silverstein.    former   l^i- 


The  -  strike,  tailed  by  Harr> 
Bridges,  head  of  the  International 
Longshoremeii's  and  Warehouse- 
men's Assn..  put  a  crimp  in  the 
islands'  thrtie  major  industries — 
shipping,    piiieapples    and    sugar. 


rector  of  Omnibus.  Stage  manafer 
is  .Tohn  Weaver. 

Tickets  for  "The  Best  of  Stein- 
beck"  are   available  for  $2,50  a'nd 
$1.50  at   the  Playmakers  Bu^inftss 
1  Office.  214  Abemethy  Hall. 


"Magic  Flute"  Star 

Donna  Patton  appears  as  the 
stolen  princess  Pamena  in  Les 
Petites  Musicales'  |>ro<luct'ion  of 
Mozart's  'The  Ma^ic  Flute'  to- 
mmrow  at  t  p.  m.  in  Hill  Hall. 


Taient  T^ybuts 
Lasf  TiH  Dec.  3 

Talent  auditions  for  the  forth- 
coming "Carolina  Cavalcade  of 
Talent"  have  been  extenfed  un- 
til  Dee.  3. 

Dave  Davis,  chairman  of  th«  ^1- 

ent     committee,     announced     thS|t 

Monday    night    will    be    the    fipal 

audition.  The  tryouts  will  be  heid 

!  in   Memorial   Hall   from  7-10  p.m. 

.\n.v  student  group  which  wishes 
j  to  present  stunts  or  any  type  'of 
I  i:ilent  has  been  urged  lo  audition 
Further  information  may  be  b^d 
\  by  calling  Davis  at  the  Phi  Defia 
Theta  house  or  Mi.ss  Eleanor  Rlg- 
^ins  at   the  •¥'  office.  '; 

Tickets  for  the  Dec.  13  Talept 
Show  will  go  on  sale  soon  in  *V' 
Court.  Cash  prizes  will  be  award- 
ed to  the  winners  of  the  show.^ 


— —  ' —     State  College's  Suspension  -  Part  II """T r 

Friday    Asks    NCAA    For    Case    File   On  I  Moreland 


(The  following  is  the  second  installment  of  the  report  submitted 
oy  William  Friday.  Conaolidated  University  President,  Carey  H.  Bos- 
tian,  Chancellor  of  State  College,  and  William  D.  Carmichael,  Vice- 
President  of  the  Consolidated  University  to  the  Consoliilated  Univer- 
sity Board  of  Trustees  on  State  College's  recent  suspension  by  the 
National  Collegiate  Athletic  Association.) 

President  Friday  telephoned  to  the  Elxecutivc  Director  in  De- 
troit and  again  requested  the  release  to  him  of  the  case  file. 

It  was  pointed  out  to  the  Executive  Director  that  under  a  memo- 
randum of  the  President  of  the  Consolidated  University  issued  on 
July  4.  1953,  the  Chancellor  of  State  College  is  responsible  for  as- 
suring that  the  Director  of  Athletics  holds  periodic  meetings  of  all 
members  of  the  coaching  staffs  and  obtains  from  each  staff  member 
a  certification  each  quarter  that  to  the  best  of  his  knowledge  and 
l)elief  our  institution  is  In  complete  compliance  with  all  the  by-laws 
of  our  conference  and  of  the  National  Collegiate  Athletic  Asso. 

Further,  this  executive  order  prescribes  that  "If  at  any  time  it 
is  clearly  established  that  any  member  of  our  staff  has  willfully 
violated  any  of  the  by-laws  of  our  conference  or  the  National  Col- 
Irgiate  Athletic  Asso.  or  that  he  had  knowledge  of  any  violation  and 
failed  to  disclose  this  inforn^tion  to  the  proper  authorities,  he  shall 
be  dismissed  immediately." 

Prasident  Friday  txplalnad  to  tha  exacuHva  director  that  under 
thia  Preaidant's  Memorandum  no  disciplinary  action  will  be  taken 
asainct  a  staff  member  until  it  is  "clearly  establislied"  that  he  has 
willfully  violated  NCAA  or  ACC  reffulat^ons,  or  that  he  had  know- 
ledge of  any  violation  and  failed  to  diaeloae  this  inforn>ation  to  the 
proper  euthorities. 

This  procedure  made  it  imperative  that  the  State  College  and 
Consolidated  University  administration  should  see  the  complete  case 
No.  94  file  in  an  effort  to  determine  definitely  if  there  have  been 
willful  violations  by  staff  members  or  unreveaJed  knowledge  of  any 
violation. 

Pi-esident  Fiiday  has  stated  repeatedly  to  the  Elxecutive  Director 
{hat  neither  the  officials  of  Slate  College  n>>i    the  officials  ol  the 


#  t 


rrcT 


Jack  Vor«»"»8rd 


•choUraliii)*     Thi«  ich^l«r»hlp,  «*t9h  ^oaf»r&8  to  A.C»C.   snd  to  N.e.A.A, 

M|ul«tioj»s,    Includ^n  kOOii,   m/J^,   naTTOK,  TEES,   BC<3K5,   arjd  |1<»C0  p«r  »o«th 
/ti^r  Uundrj',     Thif  .»choUv»Kip,,t»- 1;«<^-  ^^r  fo^jr  r^* 

II  ♦       1  K#7  atterd  «urfa«r  »<^hoo1  wHfc  th*  a^prcva!    cf  ln«  HttAd  Gssch, 

in»    ".tl^  th«  ev«r.t.  of  *r  injvii?  a?  a  r«.^«lt  of  p*ri5.cljB«Ving  'in  Basktlb&.U  at  H»  C. 
*$ttte  College,    the  »c)iclRri«hlp  alti  fill  o^rtinvf  thrt.-t!^i;irtit  the  r.«rd<?fi  a&verM. 
'\f7  tb»  conU*nat  «T«f5  Xh'^^igY   Uiff  »b<5ve  .i??«w^d  i^aj  "(?»  r«iqy^red  to  forage  pt|*4ci<r 
Am*  In  th«  arort. 


2V»       This  agre»»«at  <ui8yM»l»  of  n^  tl^iaV  I.  ^t  natiifficl-t^rr  progress  toward*  gr»^ip« 
tiop,  conduct  i^tftlr  ««  a  g^nCtmaxj,  ir.d  giY«  fvl?  c<?op«rRtl0^        all  t.l»«av 

S%R««i'  Jack  VcTtil^rd  (slgred) 

*'  II    II  mil  in    MM. «ii    ii»  n !»><»■  II)  III  » t, 


ijHHi  vn  ^;»^yin»iBW  I  ■» xifH"  i,  •   wi~ 

U^f  School  cf  ^|!y^ff«ri;;g,  C;!?!!^ 


Consolidated  University  have  seen  sufficient  evidence  to  convince 
them  that  any  State  College  staff  member  has  violated  any  NCAA 
or  ACC  regulation.s. 

President  Friday  repeated  hi.s  request  that  he  and  his  associates 
be  permitted  to  review  the  tile  of  exidence.  On  Nov.  14.  1956.  the  Ex- 
ecutive Director  wrote  President  Friday  the  following  letter; 

"Dear  Mr.  Friday:  .    .^:. 

'Please  be  adnsed  that  the  NC.\A  Committee  on  Infractions, 
with  the  approval  of  the  .\ssix?iation's  officers,  has  authorized  me  to 
n>eet  with  you  and  Mr.  Carmichael  at  Kansas  City  to  review  the  North 
<-  arolina  State  case  file. 

"The  case  file  will  be  made  available  lor  the  inspection  by  you 
and  Mr.  Carmichael  suoject  to  the  following  conditions: 
'  1.  Copies   of   certain    information   ^\^II    be   made   available   for 

internal  use  within  your  institution. 
"2.  Other  reports  and  memoranda  will  be  made  available  ooly  for 

your  reading.     (Copies  will  not  be  released.) 
"3.  You  and  Mr.  Carmichael  will  tuUy  respect  any  request  I  might 
make  that  a  particular  source  or  sources  of  information  shall  be 
treated  as  confidential  by  the  two  of  you. 
"4.  You  and  Mr.  Carmichael  will  not  disclose  to  any  other  person, 
except  to  Chancellor  B»>stian  on  a  confidential  basis,  the  part 
that  certain  designatwJ  person.s  have  played  during  the  process- 
ing of  this  case. 
'•5.  You  and  ilr.  Carmichael  will  respect  any  othex  limitations  that 
the  Committee  on  Infractions  or  I  may  impose. 
•These  stipulations  are  necessar>-  because  the  Committee  on  la- 
fractions  and  my  office  have  made  commitments  to  certain  persons 
regarding  the  use  of  this  information.  The  committee  hai^  asked  that 
I  inform  you  that  any  violation  or  contradiction  of  these  conditions 
.shall  be  considered  cause  to  re-open  the  North  Carolina  State  case. 

"The  NCAA  doe.s  not  wish  to  appear  difficult  or  unsympathetic. 
The  committee  and  officers  wish  to  be  of  assistaace,  but  it  must 
honor  conipletL-iy  certain  commitments  and  obligations." 

(See  FPJDjW,  Page  3)  '  '    " 


PAGE  TWO 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


SATURDAY,  DECEMBER  1,  19S5 


SATURDAY 


Instruction  Consistency: 
A  Goal  For  The  University 

"  t  lit  iiiujvt  tulu(ulioniil  hi.sk  lacliii^  llif  L'nh't'>.\if\  of  Xorth 
Ctirolinu  i.\  thai  of  i  hallctii!;ino^  /<»  lln  iiiinost  the  tihlrst  students, 
while  at  tlie  sttnie  time  fmn'idim^  edmational  oftjuntunities  f(n  tlie 
iatiiei  fiitinhei  of  stmlenls  seeking  tnhiiissioti  to  the  eolle}^e."—Dv.  J. 
(larlylf  Sirtfvsoii.  (Uiiii  <»!  tlu'  (■.oIle<»  «»f  Arts  and  Sciences. 
DtMii    SiiU'i son's    siau-Micni    vc- 


OOEHINGEN  LETTER: 


jK-ais  an  «>rtrn-askcfl  <|ncsti<K)  in 
nuMlrrn  fdnrptional  ( ircles:  What 
t(»  do  with  outstandint*  .studcius 
in  an  institiitioii  (icsiyticd  to  -^i^c 
as  livt'at  a  ntnnlui  n{  {x-ople  as 
j)ossihlc  rnouuh  i'(hu'ati<»n  lor 
thiin  to  sinHi\f  in  a  svstcni  based 
on    the   ahni^htU    (ollc'^e   (le^ieer 

I 'n'oriunatclv.  oulstandin;4  stn- 
dfnts  ait'  a  niinoiitv  liump.  litn  it 
is  tilt"  uroiip  IVom  whidi  tlic  worlds 
leadt-rs  ;irt'  (  host-n.  Naturally  tlu'st- 
[>eoplf  should  Iw  f ai  ed  with  the 
■.•vt'Orvt  (.-(hu  itionat  <  hal|eniivs 
pos,sihlt\  And  natmally  this  is 
iMorr  ilian  ihf  a\frav>t'  studctu  can 
I-    •    "'•. 

llowf\er.  the  ablest  stndenti 
<.'«"'-lr|  noi  be  sepavated  from  the 
otheis,  because  a  major  part  of  the 
Icrnin,:    process    on    the    part    of 


one    ihiniL».    and    find    himself    ill" 
>ol\e<l   hx  another. 

One  (ourse  mav.  and  does,  have 
a  icpuialion  for  bein^  simple  ini- 
der  ojie  pijofessor  atid  next  to  im- 
|>ossible  »n»<ler  an<»iher.  A  "B  "  in- 
lelli'Hence  student  may  <4et  an  "A" 
under  one  instructor  and  wonder 
\vl»\  an  apparently  "*A  "  al)ilitv  sUi- 
deni  can  not  do  better  than  "i." 
under   another. 

»  *  ■» 

Dean  Siiterson  mi|nhl  well  add 
•"  'Uv  rni\ersity's 
list,  that  of  tmiiin*;  otn  j^raduates 
who  are  \eter;»ns  of  an  ecpial  cpial- 
ii\  and  innnber  of  challenoes. 
Without  this.  pnrjMKse  of  higher 
education  is  lost. 

Ihe  de<»ree  ceases  to  be  a  mark 
ol    a    cettain      calibre      indi\id(iai. 


both  .i'.onps  is  meetin;4  people  and      -^r.- les  shc»w  noihin<;.  and  the  ablest 

e\than^ini»   ideas.      If     classes     are 

<>(-arecl  to  the  normal  student,  the 

more    .idxaiued    cannot    help    but 

Ix-'come    bcHexl.He   can    not    even 

c'      M  .•    I  >f  Avork. 

This  matter  of  the  more  capable 


si'mIcmus  l«»se  the  chance  to  stride 
ahead  of  their  more  aveiage  class- 
mates. 

.\  v»<mh1  <»c>al  for  the  I'niversity 
to  work  for  in  the  innnediate  fm- 
nre    is    consistency    in    instruction. 


doin-i  inferior  work  is  not  a  hyp-  desi«»iied  to  drtiw  the  most  oin  of 
othetical  thini^.^.V  tia-nsfer  student  each  student  Avithout  censuring 
from  a  pri\.iLe  institiuion  noted  him  because  he  is  unable  to  meet 
that  the  work  at  Ciarolina  pic)«4Tesse.N  the  same  challenj'e  as  his  class- 
so  much  siowefi^than  at  his  former  mates.  Besides  ra'isinj>  standards. 
placeOf  study  tliaf  he  doers  n»t  feel  the  feeliu'j'  of  haviiv.;  earned  a 
a   necessity  to  »tndv.  and   is  conse-  place  in  educational  stanclin<>  tni,o;ht 


cpi'-ntly  fat  beh«id  in  his  work. 

Difficult,  fastinoxinu  atid  meaty 
courses  do  exist  at  the  l'ni\eisity. 
but  we  h;'\e  tf)ese  characteristics 
«»nly  because  'the  instructor  in- 
iec  ts  them  into  the  currictihun  on 
his  own.  (!la.«^  p»c>y;iams  are  not 
at  all  cc»nsistenr.  and  as  a  lestdt  a 
student     may     sinn     up    e\|H'ctin!L; 


prod  students  into  beins,  .interest- 
ed in  more  than  how  lon»  before 
the  lee  ture  is  o\ei. 

As  lor  the  studeius  who  don't 
seem  to  care  now.  they  piobably 
wotildn't  care  uncler  any  system: 
.ri».'  fitcv  wou't  do  anybody  any 
i;(»od  whether  the\  ha\e  a  degree 
or  not. 


GMs  Music:  Worth  Hearing 


One  Of  ithc  harc(est  Avorkiiig 
•iroups  of  peij^pU'  on  cainpiis  today 
is  the  stu*h  ntN  who  work  in  the 
student  imi^ilVlr  It  is  the  same  grcuip 
which  pm)j^J^*  suliers  most  freq- 
uentFv  frfiihrt  -ili--  -rou-iii^;  tendency 
of  siuiier  •  »:<»hv  awav  from  any- 
thi"  "Ol  iii.Vohing  studies,  sex 
or  aKohol.        < 

One*  ot  t'lf  unfr>rtiniate  thinjafs 
about  :his.  's  that  it  is  actually 
.  .-  f.  ^M.  I;,  MJy,.  urades  in  one  of 
these  three  connnon  campus  ac- 
ii<  iMclii  i()  i;et  student  par- 
I*   •    •  •=    M 

Woidd  ii  be  too  much  to  ask 
students  to  participate  in  some 
I'niversity  -  s|)onsored  rec  leaticm 
occasionally?  It  begins  to  appear 
so.  Alth<»ugh  (•raham  Memorial 
reports  that  moie  students  are  mak- 
ing u>e  ot  its  facilities  than  ever 
belote.  it  still  finds  some  of  its.niost 
woithwhile  iiiid   relaxing  activities 

sjjijrsely  attended. 

*  *  * 

I  here  has  been  sctme  talk  of  di.s- 
contiiuiing  Les  Petites  Musicales 
if  moie  students  dont  attend.  .Such 
a  move  woidd  be  just,  for  the  au- 
diences of  the  Sunday  e\ennig 
prc»grams  ha\e  in  the  }>ast  consist- 
ed   laiiiely    of    townspeople. 

liin  to  deptive  students  of  a 
chance  to  hear  a  variety  of  good, 
live  nursic  would  be  utdorinnaie. 
"^  That  is  it  would  be  unfortiuiate  if 
thev  knew  what  thev  were  being 
deprived  of. 

The  Daily  Tar  Heel 

The  ufficial  stucient -publication  of  tbe 
Publieations  Board  of  tfie  University  of 
North  Carolina,  wfierf  it  is  published 
daily  except  Monday  and  examinatiot 
-and  vacation  periods  and  summer  terms 
Kntered  us  second  elass  matter  in  tlic 
nost  office  in  Chapel  Hill,  N.  C,  undei 
the  Act  oi  March  8.  1870.  Subscription 
rates:  mailed.  .$4  per  year.  $2.50  a  semes- 
ter; delivered.  .S6  a  year.  $3.50  a  seme» 
ter. 


Editor 


FRED  POWLEDGE 


Managing  Editor    CHARLIE  SLOAxN 


News  Editor 


Business   Manager. 


NANCY  HILL 
BILL  BOB  PLEL 


Sports  Editor 


LARRY  CHEEK 


NEWS  STAFF— Clarke  Jones.  Naflcy 
Hill.  Joan  ^foore,  Pringle  Pipkin,  Anne 
Drake.  Edith  MacKinnon.  Wally  Kuralt. 
Mary  Alys  Voorhees,  Graham  Snyder, 
Billy  Barnes.  Neil  Bass,  Gary  Nichols, 
Page  Bernstein,  Peg  Humphrey,  Phyllis 
Maultsby. 


Night  Editor  , 


Ben  Taylor 


ToinorroAv  night  the  Glee  (Hub 
will  present  an  atnidged  \ersion 
of  Ihe  Magic  Flute"  in  Hill  Hall. 
The  l.M  jiccjple  are  concerned 
afnun  the  .si?c?_of  |.he  audience,  and 
the„(ile^e  CAiih'^  reactic^n  if  a  large 
number  of  student.s  do  not  appeal . 

The  large  audience  a-t  the  speech 
made  by  the  Hungarian  student 
Thmsday  night  proved  tfiat  stu- 
dents aie  capable  of  coitiing  out 
to  hc-ar  worthwhile  programs. 
Music   can  be  worthwhile,  too. 

Xmas  Wishes 
To  A  Gen.  In 
Washington 

the  r.  S.  .\rmy,  which  has  a 
Hair  for  doing  lcM)lish  things,  has 
perhaps  hit  its  peak. 

(ien.  Maxwell  1).  Taylor,  the 
.\rmy  chief  <»f  staff,  has  signed  ;i. 
regidation  saving,  according  to 
Ihe  .Asscniated  Pre.sj»: 

'■  'The  exc  hange  of  c;'rds  will  be 
discouraged"  this  (ihristmas,  and 
and  next  Christmas,  too,  among 
civilians  and  military  persomie! 
working  in  .\iniv  offices  iti  and 
aroinid   W'ashiugtiui.  " 

The  reason?  Since  woikeis  see 
eac  h  cHher  alinc^st  every  day.  cpiotes 
the  regidation.  it   is  "innieces.sary" 

to  swap  cards. 

*  *  * 

Mayhap  the  t^eneral  hasn't  been 
getting  enouiih  sleep  recently,  or 
he  has  a  l>otheisome  idcer.  Or 
mavlM*  his  wile  doesn't  like  Christ- 
mas cards.  ()i  mavbe  he  hasn't 
lead  Dickens'  'A  Chiistiuxs  C'aiol  ' 
in  a  long  time. 

No  nt''  ter  what  the  real  reason 
is.  somethitig  should  be  clone  a1»out 
( .<•)).    F  a\  lor. 

We  prooosr-  ih;it  all  Carolina 
students,  ficuhv  ;nul  administrat- 
tioM  jM'rsonnel  zip  ri'.'lu  down  to 
ih"  Intiimtr  nnrf  I.edbetter-Pick- 
arl'^  and  jMck  out  nice,  cheery 
Chrisfn);is  i  ;nds. 

.Address  them  to: 

f-'n.    Nfavwell    I),    i  avlor,    rS.\ 

The    Pent.,  ^on 

AVa-hington.   1),  C.  " 

.Seveial  thou.sand  Christinas 
caicls.  with  pretty,  Christuiasy  pic- 
tures on  the  front  atid  mc\ssages  of 
pood  c  heer  inside,  mi-'ht  soften  up 
the  old  lx)v's  heart  a  little. 

.And  somebody  ought  to  mail 
him  a  copy  of  "A  Christmas  Carol." 


Think  It's  Fun  Down  At  The  Rat? 
Try  Munich's  16-Day  Beer  Blast 


Dan  Southerland 

GOETTINGEN,  Germany  — 
Months  ahead  of  time,  many 
southern  Germans  know  they'll 
be  tremendously  happy  at  a  cer- 
tain time  of  the  year  at  a  certain 
place. 

Thafs  at  Hie  annual  October 
Festival  in  Munich.  The  largest 
folk    festival    in    Europe,    it    is 


atso   without   a   doubt   the   big- 
gest beer  blast  in  the  world. 

The  slalistics  prove  it.  During 
the  16  days  of  merrj-making.  the 
Bavarians  and  8  million  out-of- 
town  visitors  consumed  more  than 
4  million  litres  of  special  "Ok- 
toberfest"  brew.  (One  litre  is  a 
little  less  than  a  quart.) 

Bavarians,  who  drink  on  the  av- 
erage one  pint  of  beer  per  person 


per  day,  did  a  heap  of  eatin'  too. 
They  put  away  2  million  pork 
sausages,  200,000  roast  chickens, 
150  tons  of  fish,  charcoal  broiled 
over  a  fire  on  sticks  ("Steckerl- 
fische"),  16  whole  oxen  roasted 
over  a  wood  fire,  rolls,  radishes 
and  alpine  cheeses.  This  was 
washed  down  with  hearty 
droughts  of  .sweet-ta.sting  Munich 
beer. 


'Come  In,  Friend  —  I  Welcome  Suggestions' 


* 


GOD  IS: 


A  \tis^y  wM*^     4}*^  vH    ^Ls4f'iit  {*»,  vt**" 


A  Conscious  Realization 


Julian  Sessoms 

God  is  the  conscious  realization  of  every  crea- 
ture who  thinks.  This  manifestation  appears  in  the 
minci  esthcticaily.  intellL-ctually  or  otherwise.  The 
consciousness  is  GckI,  fcr  only  through  conscioics- 
ness  can  we  even  admit  the  existence  of  Deity. 

We  have  no  otiier  proof  of  Deity  outside  of 
consciousness,  except  by  the  illogicity  of  faith,  we 
must  admit  that  we  are  all  God.  The  whole  being 
equal  to  the  sum  of  its  parts  we  conclude  that  God 
is  the  sum  of  man's  conscious  thoughts. 

God  is  not  material,  but  cjnly  exists  as  a  projec- 
tion of  man's  meagre  wish  to  grasp  .something  as 
a  crutch. 

In  devising  the  concept  of  a  materialistic 
deity,  man  was  grasping  for  that  last  straw  to 
explain  his  existence.  The  damnation  of  man  is 
his  refusal  to  admit  his  complete  autonomy,  and 
that  the  concept  of  God  is  only  a  brain  projec- 
tion of  his  consciousness,  composed  of  the  multi- 
ple of  the  conscious  thoughts  of  all  men. 

It  is  simple  to  illustrate  the  immaterialism  of 
God.  If  all  conscious  thought  were,  abolished,  thon 


the  concept  of  God  would  be  abolished.  With  no 
thought  of  his  being,  he  would  no  longer  exist,  be- 
cause without  consciousness  there  would  be  no 
entity.  God.  then,  is  mental  conception  derived  by 
man  to  ^tfsfy  a  need,  and  a  certain  longing  that  he 
cannot  explaini 
ILLUSTRATED 

The  use  of  the  concept  of  a  supreme  Deity  is 
plainly  illpstrated  throughout  man's  history.  Only 
in  limes  of  extreme  collapse  of  material  and  imma- 
terial (philosophical)  concepts  has  man  withdrawn 
into  complete  religious   institutionality. 

Such  is  the  disgusting  action  of  the  romantic- 
ists who,  in  the  end,  withdrew  into  their  shells  of 
unreality — religion. 

Throughout  the  Dark  Ages  of  Europe  it  is  plain- 
ly illustrated  that  when  man  has  no  other  refuge  he 
withdraws  from  reality  into  the  illusionary  world  of 
ascetic  religion — a  conscious  brain  projection  of 
what  hc5  wants  to  be  is  embodied  in  the  world  of  re 
ligious  fantasy. 

Therefore,  God  exists  only  in  the  consciousness, 
reserved  as  a  refuge  from  one  illusion  to  another  of 
even  more  farce — an  illusion  within  an  illusion. 


The  secret  of  the  Munich  beer 
is  in  the  pure  mountain-  wj^ter 
from  which  it  is  made.  The  spec- 
ial festival  beer  has  a  25  to  32 
percent  alcohol  content.  A  quart 
costs  about  40  cents. 

On  the  Theresien  Meadow,  call- 
ed the  "Wles'n,"  Munich's  seven 
largest  breweries  have  enormous 
beer  halls.  Carolina's  whole  stu- 
dent body,  including  graduate 
students,  easily  could  have  been 
seated  in  one  of  the  gaily-decora- 
ted halls,  where  Bavarian  musi- 
cians clad  in  leather  shorts  play- 
ed brassy  music  and  people  sang 
and  whooped  it  up.  Husky  "beer 
maids  shuttled  back  and  forth, 
easily  carr>'ing  as  many  as  10 
steins  at  once. 

The    stone   steins    are    made 
in  the  nearby  village  of  Kefer- 
loher  especially  for  the  festival. 
Last  year,   about   30,000     were 
stolen.    They    are    supposed    to 
make  a  good  weapon  in  a  scrap. 
Special  attendants  were  on  the 
lookout     for  fights.  The     Frank- 
furter    Allgemeine  reported     50 
were  evacuated  in  brawls. 

The     newspa- 
per went  on  tc^\^« 
say     about     20 
doctors,  over 
400       assistants' 
and      180     Red 
Cross       helpers  L 
had  to  adminis 
ter  first   aid 
3.443,400    cases 

As     well     asii5 
running  a  baby 
sitting     service,? 
the  German  Red 
Cross  had  a  "so 
bering-up    tent"; 
where      drunks  i 
could   sleep     it ; 

off.  ; 

On  the  fair  s. 
grounds  the  j 
beer  halls  were 
located  in  a  -.^  ^ 
kind  of  Coney  r 
Island  including 
roller  coasters, 
concession  stands,  shooting  gal- 
leries, crazy  houses  and  a  motor- 
cycle daredevil  show. 

In  addition  to  the  activity  on 
the  "Wies'n,"  a  parade  through 
downtown  Munich  started  things 
off  on  the  first  day.  Flag  swing- 
ers, bareback  riders  cracking  bull- 
whips.  Austrian  sharpshooters  and 
villagers  representing  142  south- 
ern German  towns,  some  with 
their  own  bands  and  colorful 
floats,  took  part  in  the  three  mile 
procession. 

We  saw  all  of  the  present  cos- 
tumes existent  in  the  present  day 
German-speaking  nations.  I  was 
impressed  by  one  group  wearing 
80-pound  hats  portraying  the 
kingdom  of  fields  and  woods. 
START 

I  guess  you're  wondering  how 
this  festival  got  its  start.  In  1810, 
the  wedding  of  CrowTi  Prince 
Louis  I  and  Princess  Therese  of 
the  House  of  Sachsen-Hildberg 
was  celebrated  with  horseracing 
and  beer  drinking.  The  folks  liked 
the  fe.stivitics  .so  much  they  de 
cided  to  make  it  a  tradition. 

One  reason  for  continuing  (lie 
festival  might  be  that  about  $15. 
000,000  is  spent  by  visitors.  A 
more  likely  reason,  however,  is 
the  Bavarians  just  like  to  live  it 
up  for  a  few  weeks  every  year. 


ling .  j  \ 

ers,  I .  _   A  J 


Pogo 


Cy  Walt  Kelly 


MfP.vyoMBAt-'Hg'^  COMe  Auu  ^ 

-TAB  ^AAV  ff?0\\  MAf?$  TO 
\N'^^  OltO'lMfKfi 


0?Av^r 


NO"  I'M  Hg)?g 

to  TAKg  -r^g 

4augAKN' 

CHAM^fN^HII?/ 


»•»  'd^  •••,<<</<.  mi 


Li'l  Abner 


Bv  Al  Capp 


Trustees  And    '^ 
The  Faculty 

Victor  S.  Bryant  ^*^ 

This    is  the   tecond    installment   in    Trust**  Tsn 
Victor  Brywit's  speech  to  the  UNC  Faculty  Club  .:- 
on  the  responcibilities  of  a  member  of  Carolina'*  t,rf^ 
Board  of  Trustees.  i^i 

May     I  now  point  out  certain     responsibilities^^"^ 
which  the  trustees  have  towai'd  the  faculty.  "''* 

You  will  note  that  the  law  gives  the  trustees  the  '^ 
power  of  appointing  such  professors,  tutors  and  other'  ^''* 
officers  of  the  University  as  to  them  shall  appear''"; 
necessary  and  proper,  whom  they  may  remove  for  ^^ 
misbehavior,  inability  or  neglect  of  duty.  This  does*'*'^ 
not  require  the  trustees  to  initiate  the  selection  of ''"''^ 
the  members  of  the  faculty.  Indeed,  it  would  be"**'' 
highly  out  of  order  for  them  to  embark  on  such  a  ^■*'' 
policy.  '»'^"' 

The  trustees  are  told  that  it  is  the  function  of-   '*> 
the  faculty,  the  deans  and  the  chancellors  to  select 
future  faculty   members,   and    that   the   candidates 
so    chosen  should  be    presented  to  the  Board    of 
Trustees  only  for  formal  approval. 

I  accept  this,  but  when  you  claim  this  privi- 
lege f  am  sure  you  realize  that  you  must  accept  the 
responsibility  which  goes  with  it.  Before  appoint- 
ing one  recommended  for  a  faculty  position,  a 
trustee  should  satisfy  himself  as  to  whether  in  his 
opinion  tHt  candidate  will  be  guilty  of  misbehavior, 
wtiether  he  possesses  the  requisite  ability  and 
whether  he  may  be  expected  to  perform  his  duties 
if  chosen  as  a  faculty  member. 

Faculty  membership  in  this  University  should 
no^  be  open  for  a  teacher  lacking  in  ability.  Neither 
should  it  be  a  haven  for  a  lazy  educator,  if  such 
there  l>e,  seeking  a  place  to  rest. 
NO  SLANTING 

In  my  judgment  a  trustee  has  no  right  to  try 
to  see  that  the  faculty  is  filled  with  a  group  of  peo- 
ple who  think  all  one  w^ay.  Such  an  unwarranted  ef- 
fort to  slant  faculty  teachings  could  result  in  a 
great  disservice  to  the  student,  who  may  leave  the 
University  having  been  taught  only  what  a  particu- 
lar trustee  or  group  of  trustees  want  him  taught. 
This  exceeds  the  prerogative  of  a  trustee. 

It  is  highly  important  that  the  faculty  in  tha^  ^ 
University  be  provided  with  the  proper  equipmont. 
I  include  as  high  in  priority  a  large,  Intel Ugantty  ^ 
stocked  library.  This  is  indispensiblc  to  any  really 
great  university,  and  no  trustee  can  be  complac- 
ent  until  he  knows  this  requirement  has  been  met.   '' 
There   ntust   also  be   proper   equipment   and   full 
opportunities  for  research. 

It  is  peculiarly  the  responsibility  of  the  trustee 
to  see  that  an  adequate  salary  schedule  is  main- 
tained for  both  faculty  and  administrative  officers. 
This  schedule  should  be  one  which  will  enable  the 
continual  recruitment  of  an  outstanding  faculty,  and  ' 
at  the  same  time  enable  the  University  to  retain  its 
present  distinguished  faculty. 

No  teacher  can  do  his  best  work  when  involved  ' 
in   debt   and   harassed   by   bill   collectors.   Like  the 
dew,   but  perhaps  not  so  gently,  the  high  cost  of 
living  falls  on  the  professor  as  well  as  tbe  Jajinan.-  - 
We  must  expect  our  faculty  members  to  i^ceive  oU  „ 
fers  to  go  elsewhere,  but  we  should  be  prepared 
through  financial  and  other  means  to  fight  to  hold  r 
them. 

*  •  ♦        t    ,..    '.,  ■'    _ 

May  I  digress  here  to  pay  tribute  and  to  recog- 
nize a  deep  and  perhaps  unacknowledged  debt  of  -- 
gratitude  to  those  of  you  who  have  received  such  "^ 
offers  and  who  have  chosen  to  cast  your  future  lot       | 
here  with  this  University.  [ 

1  know  of  instances,  far,  far  more,  I  suspect, 
than  you  think  I  do,  in  which  many  of  you  have 
received  offers  at  greatly  needed  financial  increases 

and  yet,  through 
your  loyalty  and 
;  confidence  in  this 
institution,    have 
remained  here.  I 
can  not,  however, 
feel  that  the  state 
has  any  ri^ht  to 
profit  financially 
from  such  loyal- 
ty on  your  part. 
The  University  Is 
uiider  a  great  ob- 
ligation to  you.  I 
ask  that  you  hold  - 
on  a  little  longer, 
because  I  foresee 
[  a  glorious  future 
I  immediately       a- 
I  head  for  this  Uni- 
I  versity. 

I  am  keenly 
aware  that  a  num- 
ber of  important 
positions  in  this 
University  are  now  being  filled  on  an  acting  basis. 
These  will  be  filled,  and  I  believe  filled  well,  with 
all  reasonable  dispatch.  What  might  have  seemed 
stumbling  blocks  will  be  stepping  stones  to  better 
clays  ahead. 

There  is  another  obligation  of  the  trustees  attout 
which  I  must  speak,  because  m  my  mind  it  out- 
weighs in  importance  many  of  the  other  things 
which  I  have  said.  The  trustees  must  see  that  th« 
lacuny,  once  it  is  brought  to  the  University,  live 
and  operate  in  a  congenial  atmosphere. 

To  do  this  you  must  enjoy  academic  freedom. 
It  is  the  obligation  of  the  trustees  to  see  that  you 
do.  It  would  be  an  unnecessary  trespass  upon  your 
time  to  trace  either  the  oackground  or  meaning  of 
academic  freedom,  except  in  brief  to  say  that  i 
heartily  endorse  what  I  believe  it  stands  for,  and 
this  might  be  fairly  summarized  in  three  principle>- 
PRINCIPLES 

First,  a  teacher  should  have  full  freedom  in 
research,  and  the  right  to  publish  the  results  of 
his  research.  No  university  should  presume  to  cir- 
cumscribe the  boundaries  within  which  a  faculty 
memlH^r  may  search  lor  the  truth,  although  his 
other  duties  may  limit  the  allowable  time  for  re- 
search. 
PRINCIPLES 

First,   a   teacher  should  have  full   freedom   in 
research,  and  the  right  t.i  publish  the  results  of  his . 
research..  No  university  should  presume  to  circum- 
scribe the  boundaries  within  which  a  faculty  mem 
ber   may   search   for   the   truth,    although    is   other'^ 
duties  may  limit  the  allowable  time  for  research. 


TRUSTEE    BRYANT 

.  .t>ie    responsibilities 


Mon 
Meril 

Students 
Club  dinini 
have  a  ehc 
ners  and  fc 

Manager 
the    new^ 
Monday — i 
meals  each! 
eon  and  $] 
stitutes  in 
ed  that  the 
eafh  day. 
in    price 
West  »taU 
breakfast 
the  same 
the  footbal 
the  Monogi 
of  football} 


Vai 
DO 

//  ica.?  c| 

And 
"Byttiy\ 
gUiUriiu, 
Wtiiii 

"Your 
your  ifhi\ 

Your 
And  yoh 
airfui,  ni 

—Wri 

FamI 
ofthinj 

Ift   it    hj 

down 

dealer 
you   01 


D, 


14 

1.^ 


17 
IS 


19. 
■20 


21 


i2 
i4 


26. 
•»~ 

28 


29 

■iO 


21 

a3. 


♦0. 
41 
«2 


I.  19S5 


SATURDAY,  DjECEMBER  1.  ^9i& 


THE  OAILY  TAR  HEEL 


PAGE   THREE 


iTrustt*  :    ■ 
Club 

Uibilities  "'^ 

Istees  the    '' 

land  othei"  ''"* 

|l  appear'-' 

move  for    ^' 

'his  does  *•' 

[•tion  of  ^''<? 

.oiild  be"*'**^ 

In  such  a  ^  ^'' 

iction  of    -*» 
to  select 
landidates 
>ard     of 


IIS  privi- 
cc«pt  th« 

ition,  • 
^•r  in  his 

»h«vior. 
^lify  And 
lis  duties 

^ty  should 
Neither 
if  such 


fht  to  try 
ip  of  peo> 
ranted  ef- 
iult   in   a 

I  leave  the 
la  particu^ 
taught. 

in  th«' 
|uipmM»t. 
lUtanHy- 1 
ty  r««lly 
|eeiii|iUco 
in«t. 
[and   full 

le  trustee ' 
is  main- 
officers, 
(nable  the 
?ulty,  and  ' 
retain  its  ^ 

involved 
Like  the 
cost  of 
layman.- 
ceive  oft  „ 
prepared  • 
It  to  hold  ■ 


to  recos- 

|d  debt  of  - 

ived  soek'* 

I  future  lot 

I  suspect, 

you  have 

increases 

through 

>yalty  and 

^nce  in  this 

have 

led  hare.  I 

t,  however. 

It  the  state 

^y  right  to 

financially 

:h  loyal* 

your  part. 

Iniversit^. »» 

la  grfeat  oh- 

|n  to  you.  I 

It  you  hold  ' 

Sttle  longer, 

I  f  oreaes 

\ioijs  future 

liately      a- 

^or  this  Unl- 

|am  keenly 
that  a  num* 
If  important 
Ions  in  this 
acting  basis. 
well,  with 
bve  seemed 
es  to  better 

■uslees  about 
ind  it  ou't.- 
other  things 
see  that  the 
iversity,  live 

ic  Ireedom. 
see  that  you 
s  upon  your 
•  meaning  of 
say  that  1 
nds  for,  and 
e  principles: 

freedom  in 

he   results   of 

esume  to  cir- 

ich  a   faculty 

although    bis 

time   for   re- 


1  fceedum  in 
results  of  his 

me  to  circum- 
faculiy  mem-. 
'»gh    in  other '- 

or  research. 


> 


Monogram  Club  Now  Has  One 
Menu  For  Lunches,  Dinners 


students  eating  at  the  Monogram 
Club  dining  room  will  no  longer 
have  a  choice  of  fare  in  the  din- 
ners and  food  items. 

Manager  Prank  West  stated  that 
the  new  menu  —  efftctive  since 
Monday — provides  for  two  fixed 
meals  each  day,  the  85-cent  lunch- 
eon and  $1  dinner,  with  no  sub- 
stitutes in  either  meal.  West  add- 
ed that  the  menu  would  be  changed 
ea^'h  day.  along  with  a  slight  rise 
in  price  in  the  Sunday  meals. 
West  stated  that  all  patrons  of  the 
breakfast  meal  would  be  served 
the  same  menu  as  that  offered  to 
the  football  te^m.  now  eating  in 
the  Monogram  Club  since  the  close 
of  football  season. 


i  West  attributed  the  reason  for 
j  discontinuing  the  a  la  carte  menu 
'  "to  the  lack  of  seating  facilities 
(  at  peak  serving  periods,  and  to 
;  the  lack  of  kitchen  space. 

In  arranging  a  fixed  menu  for 
each  day.  West  said  that  he  had 
tried  to  set  up  a  system  serving 
a  choice  of  foo4j"acceptable  to 
nearly  everyone." 


WESTMINSTER 

Westminster  Fellowship  of  the 
Presbyterian  Church  will  meet  Sun- 
day at  6  p.m.  for  supper  in  the  hut 
on  Rosemary  St.  Marvin  Singleton 
of  the  American  Humanist  Assn. 
will  deliver  a  talk,  "Who  is  Su- 
preme— God  or  Man?" 


Friday's    Request    Of    NCAA    File 


Van  Heusen  asks: 

DO  YOU  GO  WITH  YOURSELF? 


It  uas  an  ancient  haberdasher 
And  he  sioppeth  one  of  three. 

"By  thy  long  grey  beard  and 

glittering  rye, 

Whuffo  thou  stoppesi  me?" 

"Your  hankies  don't  nmtch 
your  ghirts,  my  friend. 

Your  ties  clai^h  u-ith  your  e.yeg. 
And  your  ghorta  are  .dimply 
awful,  sir, 

— Wrong  rolor  for  your  thighs." 

Familiarstory ,  eh  ?  This  kind 
of  thing  happens  eftsoons.  Don't 
Wt  \x  >vappen  to  you.  -lust  go 
down  to  your  Van  Heusen 
dealer  and  have  him  show 
you   our    harmonized,   in- 


tegrated w^ardrobes.  In  these 
handsome  wardrobes,  shirts, 
ties,  handkerchiefs,  sport  shirts 
— even  shorts  and  pajamas — 
are  co-ordinated  perfectly. 
There  are  checks,  plaids, 
solids,  stripes  to  pick  from. 
All  fine.  And  they  give  you 
that  well-matched  look  ai  a 
surprisingly  moderate  price. 

At  better  stores  everywhere, 
or  write  to  Phillips-Jones 
Corp.,  417  Fifth  Avenue,  New 
York  16,  New  York.  Makers 
of  Van  Heusen  Shirts  •  Sport 
Shirts  .  Ties  .  Pajamas 
Handkerchiefs  •  Underwear 
Swimwear   •  Sweaters. 


WE  ARE  THE  EXCLUSIVE 

VAN  HEUSEN 

DEALER  IN  CHAPEL  HILL 


DAILY    CROSSWORD 


ACROSS 

1.  Smart 
5  Aleutian 

island 
9.  Constel- 
lation 
10.  Exhausts 
(stano 

12.  More 
mfrequent 

13.  Search 
thoroughly 

14.  Undivided 
15  Wide- 
mouthed  jar 

17.  Music  note 

18.  Letter 
t  Heb.  I 

19.  Bom 
20  Head 

covering 
21.  Gardener* 
plague 

23.  Claw 

24.  An  amount 
of  work 

26.  Near  by 
27  Travel 

28.  Spinning 
toys 

29.  Before 

30.  Mountain 
defile 

31.  Close  to 
33.  Type 

measure 
24.  Young 

sheep 
36.  Friar's  title 
U.  A  f  iant 
St.  ArabUn 

chieftains 

40.  Booth 

41.  Particlea 

42.  Founder  of 
C3uiatiaa 
Sdane*    ^" 


oow.x 

I.  Hoisting 
machine 

2. and 

hount}^ 

3.  Frozen 
water 

4.  Tiara 

5.  Willianfu 
Tells  mark 

6.  The  Penta- 
teuch (var. ) 

7.  Also 

8.  Scold 

9.  L«t  fall 
11.  Proper 
le.  Guided 
20.  Browns  in 

theaun 


21  Juice  of 
the 
grape 

22.  Finish 

23.  Short 
sleep 

24.  Confec- 
tions 

25.  De- 
struc- 
ti^ 
ant 

2<..G^erman 
painter 
28.  Male  cat 

30.  Coat  with 
sugar 
crystals 

31.  Marshal 


iutiuSiQCi  □ana 

3E11  aaya  an 
aa   aaao   'jaa 

uaroua  rgaaaa 


Y«*t«r4ay'i  A«tw«r 

32.  Soviet  News 
agency 

34.  Disembark 

35.  Convulsions 
37.  Uttle  child 
39.  Cry  of  a  cow 


(Contmiied  from   Page  1) 

Finally,  I  wish  to  assiure  you 
that  &Ir.  Bergstrom  and  I  will  try 
to  be  of  maximum  assistance  to  you 
under  the  foregoing  conditions. 

"We  will  assume  that  if  you  and 
Mr.  Carmichael  choose  to  visit  with 
us  next  week  in  Kansas  City,  our 
meeting  will  be  in  accordance  with 
the  foregoing  conditions." 

The  NCAA  Km  ■  long  estab- 
lished practice  of  respectins  the 
privacy  of  eny  informant  or  wit- 
nets  and  has  censittently  refus- 
ed to  permit  confidential  infor- 
mation furnished  to  its  Infrac- 
tions Committee  to  be  made  pub- 
lic 

Obviously,  however,  it  would  not 
oe  of  value  to  the  State  College 
and  Con.solidated  University  of- 
ficers to  see  the  NCAA's  file  of 
^vjdenco  in  this  case  if  we  cotild 
not  confront  our  athletic  staff 
riiembers  with  any  evid«ice  in- 
volving them.  To  make  this  point 
entirely  clear.  President  Friday,  on 
Nov.  19.  1956.  telegraphed  the  NC- 
AA Executive  Director  as  follows: 

"In  order  that  our  position  b3 
a  matter  of  record,  and  that  th|re 
be  no  misunderstanding  of  oiu*  te- 
lephone conversations,  North  Caro- 
lina State  College  reserves  the 
right,  after  reading  and  review- 
ing your  file  of  evidence  concern- 
ing the  alleged  violations  of  NCAA 
regulations: 

"1.  To  question  directly  any  wit- 
ness whose  testimony  appears  to 
have  influenced  the  elision  of 
the  Coimcil, 

"2.  To  confront  any  of  your  wit- 
nesses directly  Hnth  the  pereon 
or  persons  implicated  by  the  testi- 
mony of  your  witness  or  witnesses, 
and 

"3.  To  take  whatever  steps  ap- 
pear w&rranted,  including  a  dis- 
cussion of  our  own  findings  from 
(1)  and  (2)  with  our  Trustees. 

"It  should  be  understood  that 
these  conditions  are  accepted  by 
you  prior  to  any  visit  by  adminis 
trative  personnel  of  North  Caro- 
lina State  College  or  the  Consolida- 
ted University  to  your  office. 

"On  Jan.  25.  1964,  the  Executive 
Committee  of  our  Board  of  Trustees 
declared  that: 
'1.  Intercollegiate  athletics  at 
the  University  in  Chapel  Hill 
and  North  Carolina  State  Col- 
lege in  Baleigh  shall  be  ad- 
ministered and  their  budgets 
controlled,  imder  the  authority 
delegated  by  the  Board  of 
Trustees,  by  the  Chancellors, 
with  the  approval  of  the  Presi- 
dent,, in  the  same  manner  that 
other  departments  of  our  insti- 
tutions are  administered  and 
controlled. 

'2.  Athletic  personnel,  includ- 
ing Directors  of  Athletics  and 
coaches,  shall  be  subject  only 
to  the  authority  of  the  admin- 
istrative officers  of  the  insti- 
tutions, as  prescribed  by  the 
Chancellor  and  approved  by 
the  President.' 

"Therefore  this  Trustee's  man- 
date makes  necessary  Chancellor 
Bostian's  participation  in  the  pro- 
posed conference  in  yoiu*  office. 
William  Friday 
On  November  21.  1956,  the  Ex- 
ecutive Director  responded  to  Fri- 
day as  follows: 

November  21,  1956 
AJR  MAIL 
Confidential 

Mr.  William  Friday,  Pfesident 
j  Consolidated   University   of 

North  Carolina 
Chapel  Hill,  North  Carolina 
I  Dear  Mr.  Friday: 

This  is  in  reference  to  our  pre- 
vious correspondence  and  conver- 
.sations  regarding  the  North  Caro- 
lina Sta'tie  case  (No.  94}  and,  in 
particular,  yoiu-  request  that  desig- 
nated representatives  of  the  Uni- 
versity system  be  permitted  to  ex- 
amine the  NCAA  Committee  on  In- 
iractions'  file  related  to  Case  No. 
94.  It  has  been  the  Committee's 
understanding  that  you  and  your 
associates  made  this  request  to  de- 
termine whether  there  was  cause 


to  dismiss  certain  athletic  staff 
members  now  employed  by  North 
Carolina  State  College. 

As  indicated  in  my  conversation 
with  you  from  Detroit,  Nov.  14.  and 
repeated  in  subsequent  communica- 
rions,  the  NCAA  and  its  Committee 
in  Infractions  are  sympathetic  and 
wish  to  be  of  maximum  assistance. 
I  have,  to  the  best  of  my  ability, 
advised  the  Committee  as  to  the 
purpose  of  your  request  as  original 
iy  otitlined  to  me  by  O.  K.  Corn- 
well  and  discussed  by  us  in  several 
subsequent  conversations.  Finally, 
the  Committee  today  reviewed  your 
telegram  of  Nov.  19  and  the  Com- 
mittee regrets  to  say  that  as  of 
now  it  does  not  understand  the  in- 
tent and  purpose  of  the  proposed 
meeting. 

Representatives  of  North  Caro- 
lina State  College,  already  have 
been  advised  as  to: 

(1)  The  findings  of  the  Com- 
mittee on  Infractions. 

(2)  The  names  of  all  key  wit- 
nesses who  have  been  inter- 
viewed by  the  Committee  or  its 
representatives. 

(3)  The  specifit  Sets  perform- 
ed by  North  Carolina  State  re- 
presentatives (as  substantiated 
by  these  witnesses)  which  were 
in  violation  of  NCA-\  require- 
ments. 

(4)  The  findings  and  conclus- 
ions of  the  NCAA  Council. 

(5)  ThjB  penalty  enacted  by  the 
NCAA  Council. 

In  your  telegram  of  Nov.  19,  you 
state  that  North  Carolina  State  Col- 
lege reserves  the  right  .  .  . 
"1— to   question   directly   any 
witness  whose  testimony    ap- 
pears to  have  influenced  the 
decision  of  the  Council, 
" — to  confi"ont  any  of  your  wit- 
nesses directly  with  the  person 
or  persons  implicated  by  the 


cussiFtios 


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trailer.  3  rooms  with  adjoining 
ntu-sery    or    study    room,    and 
\     screened-in     front     porch.     All 
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up for  student  and  wife  with  or 
without    children.    Location: 
j      Sloan's  Trailer   Park.  1^2   miles 
I      from    Chapel    llill    on    Airport 
j      Road — Maurice  L.  Clegg. 

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j      Saturday  aitemoon.  2:00,  Turn 

I  tges   Cabin   io   Durham. — Jsq   by 

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ier/ed. 

SOMEONE  Tlfea)~  UP~  WRONG 
light  tan  suede  jacket  at  Lenoir 
Hall  Thursday,   Nov.  2d.  about 
6  p.m.  Please  call  James  Crow- 
ell,  311  Mangum. 


testimony  of  your  witness  or 
witnesses,   and, 

"3 — to  take  whatever  steps 
appear  warranted  (sic),  includ- 
ing a  discussion  of  our  own 
findings  from  1-)  (sic)  and  (2) 

^ith  oiU"  trustees."     ' 

North  Carolina  State  College 
never  has  ben  denied  nor  is  not 
now  denied  any  of  the  three  pro- 
cedures outlined  in  your  telegram. 
At  any  time  during  the  process- 
ing of  this  case.  North  Carolina 
ftate  College  could  have  underta- 
ken any  one  or  all  three  of  the 
actions  you   describe. 

Representatives  of  North  Caro- 
lina State  College  have  known  for 
some  time  the  identity  of  various 
persons  whom  the  NCAA  has  In- 
terviewed in  regard  to  this  matter. 
For  purposes  of  summary,  they 
are:    (We  have  omitted  names.) 

It  was  the  Committee's  original 
impression  that  since  yom-  own 
investigation  had  not  been  fruit 
ful,  you  desired  to  meet  with  the 
ConuniUee  and  discuss  the  case 
with  it.  Your  recent  telegram  in- 
dicates that  you  are  desirous  of 
interviewing  various  persoi .  and 
conducting  a  supplementary  inve* 
♦igation.  It  is  the  Committee's  view 
that  certainly  this  action  is  weli 
within  your  authority  and  you 
should  proceed  as  you  see  fit.  The 
Committee,  however,  sees  no  par- 
ticular reason  why  there  should 
be  a  meeting  since  you  already 
have  all  of  the  pyertinent  informa- 
tion necessary  to  conduct  such  an 
investigation. 

Nonetheless,  the  Committee  wish- 
es to  assure  you  that  it  will  be 
happy  to  meet  with  you  and  your 
representatives  to  discuss  the  case 
and  be  of  every  assistance  that  it 
can. 

Sincerely, 
s    Walter  Byers 
Walter  Byers 
^VB:  mh 


Costumes  Out,  Books  Go:  UNC  Social  LiteiJp 


Give  Children's  Books  For 
Christmas  Delight 


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A  very  charming  picture  story,  but 
it's  in  the  "ask  grandpa  for  that " 
class.  j,       $3.00 

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A,  distinguished  author  of  ^ayjult 
booki  wrii^  a  delicate  knd  lovely 
story  foi   little  girls.  $2.50 

The  Wonderful  World  of  Archae- 
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thentic book  for  junior'  adven- 
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The  Great  Locomotive  Chas*  Walt 
Disney's  colorful  version  of  the 
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MAy  Dick,  adapted  for  young 
readers  by  Felix  Sutton,  and  illus- 
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«^"4i  r%  »'>''»?^^  I'-'i 


The  Intimate 
Bookshop 


205  E.  Franklin  St. 


Open  Till  10  P.M. 


By  MARY  ALYS  VOORHEES 

Turning  to  another  chapter  of 
Carolina  social  life,  attention  is 
focust*^  on  pledges,  as  several 
groups  have  been  in  a  partying 
mood. 

One  such  social  event  was  held 
last  night  at  the  schoolhouse  with 
SAE,  Zete  and  DKE  pledges  and 
their  dates  dancing  to  music  by 
a  local  combo. 

THEY  HAVE  PAINTED 

They  have  painted  the  town  red. 
They  h.'ive  painted  the  town  pink. 
But  last  night  the  Chi  Psis  went 
one  better.  They  painted  the  town 
plaid. 

The  occasion  was  the  fraternity's 
plaid  party  at  the  Lodge,  and  from 
the  looks  of  attire  worn  by  Chi 
Psis  and  their  dates,  things  were 
really  plaid. 

Some  came  in  plaid  Bermudas, 
some  came  in  plaid  shirts.  Some 
even  came  in  plaid  shirts  and  plaid 
Bermudas.  Result?  Plaid  glad  time. 

THURSDAY  NIGHT  had  its 
share  of  masqueraders.  too. 


Out  at  Lloyd's  Barn  there  was  a 
mountaineer  party  with  the  Phi 
Kaps  playing  host  to  the  Pi  Phis. 

Blue  jeans  were  prevelant,  as 
were  straw  hats,  flannel  shirts  and 
all  .sorts  of  attire  representative  of 
lolks  up  in  then  thar  hills. 

The  Zetes,  and  their  dates,  mean- 
while, were  clear  "Out  of  Space." 

Dressed  for  the  occasion  as  fall- 
en stars  (wonder  what  .4hey  look 
like?),  rocket  ships.  Captain  Mar- 
■■el,  men  and  women  from  Mars,  the 
Zetes  had  a  local  combo  provid- 
ing music  for  their  astrology  par- 
ty. 

Friday  night  found  the  Lambda 
Chis  out  at  the  Saddle  CTub—  ac- 
tives and  pledges — where  they  were 
hosts  to  the  Duke  Lambda  Chis  and 
their  dates. 

PINNINCS.  .  .  Pika  George  Ar- 
tope  to  WC  Sophomore  Ekiith  Har- 
grove. .  .  .Pika  Julian  Winslow  toj 
ECC  Coed  Pat  Everton.  .  .  .Pika 
Jim  Bynum  to  Duke  Sophomore 
Jean  Davis.  .  .  .SAE  Snyder  Garri- 
son to  Chi  O  Nancy  Shuford.  .  . 

Phi  Kap  Dennis  Beam  to  WC 
Sophomore  Ann  Shutt Phi  Kap 


Bob  Morrow  to  UNC  Cheerleader 
Joan  Wender.  .  .  .Phi  Kap  Doug 
Schachner  to  Jo  Craarford  of  Strat- 
ford. .  .  .Phi  Kap  Wes  Thompson  to 
UNC  Coed  Burr  Thompson.  .  .  . 

TEP  Dickie  Planer  ixi  WC  Junior 
Barbara  Cooper.  .  .  Phi  Delt  Ma*^ 
ion  Griffin  to  Pi  Phi  Beth  Buie.  . 
Phi  Gam  Josh  Taloe  to  WC  Stu 
dent  Betty  Brady.  .  .  .Former  Piki 
Lee  Clark  of  Greensboro  to  Pi  Phi 
Harriett  Lewis.  .  .  . 

Pi  Phi  pledge  Margaret  Head  to 
Duke  KA  Tommy  Shannon.  .  .  . 
Pi  Lam  Stan  Bershaw  to  Phyllis 
Milen  of  Mt.  Vernon,  Ky.  .  ,  .Sig- 
ma Chi  Ray  Murphy  to  Kathleen 
Darwin  of  Chattanooga,  Tenn.  .  .  . 
Sigma  Chi  Billy  Knauff  to  Doris 
McColl  of  Charlotte. 


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PASI  FOUR 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HIRL 


SATURDAY,  DECEMBER  1,  19SS 


Cagers  Face  McCrary  Tonight  In  Opener 


THE  MORELAND  CASE:  WHCS  RIGHT? 

The  Jackie  Moreland  furore  is  on  again  in  full  force  following  the 
announcement  of  ACC  Commissioner  Jim  Weaver  that  the  6-8  N.  C. 
State  cage  recruit  is  ineligible  to  play  under  Wolfpack  colors.  State  is 
tiv-manding  a  complete  investigation  of  NCAA  charges  that  brought 
them  a  four  year  suspeasion  and  caused  Moreland  to  be  declared  in- 
eligible. 

Everyone  connected  with  the  Consoiideted  University  is  con- 
vinced of  State's  innocence,  end  Proxy  Bill  Friday  is  determined  to 
get  at  the  root  of  things.  This  observer  hopes  the  West  Raleigh 
school  is  not  guilty  as  charged,  but  we  have  our  doubts  concerning 
trir  alleged  innocence.  Information  reaching  our  ears  has  it  that  at 
least  part  of  the  accusations  are  founded  on  cold  unalterable  fact, 
and  this  is  enough  to  hand  the  Wolfpack. 

But  the  investigation  goes  on,  and  rightly  so.  Bill  Friday  is  not 
the  man  to  take  a  slap  at  one  of  his  institutions  lying  down,  and  he 
will  not  rest  until  the  truth  is  found.  No  matter  how  the  investigation 
by  Friday  turns  out,  there  are  likely  to  be  repercussions.  If  the  charges 
are  proved  false,  State  and  Carolina  may  bolt  the  NCAA  unless  thf 
nr.tion-al  bod>'  consents  to  reconsider  the  case. 

And  if  the  charges  are  justified  and  some  member  of  the  athletic 
staff  at  State  is  found  guilty  of  "unethical  conduct."  there  is  likely  to 
be  an  overhaul  of  the  basketball  setup.  For  such  actions  cannot  go 
overlooked,  or  so  says  the  Consilidated  University.  Everett  Case  and 
Vic  Bubas  are  on  the  hot  seat,  ajid  it  will  be  some  little  time  before 
they  can  rest  comfortably.  j 

CAROLINA:   THE   TEAM  TO   BEAT  | 

In  the  midst  of  all  this  turmoil  over  Jackie  Moreland  the  1956-57 
basketball  season  is  all  readj'  to  open  with  Carolina's  Tar  Heels  ratpd 
the  team  to  beat.  The  UNC  cagers  play  McCrary  tonight  in  their  de- 
but, and  will  be  top  heavy  favorites  to  win. 

After  the  semi-pro  Eagles  come  Furman.  Clemson,  George  Wash- 
ington, South  Carolina  and  Maryland  in  rapid  succession.  Then  ttie 
Tar  Heris  take  off  on  that  all-important  northern  swing,  playing 
such  teams  as  NYU,  Dartmouth  and  Holy  Cross  in  three  successive 
nights. 

This  could  be  the  trip  that  tells  just  how  good  the  highly  rated 
locals  really  are.  NYU  reportedly  has  their  best  team  in  years  with 
four  outstanding  lettermen  and  two  shining  sophomores  to  build 
.'.round.  Dartmouth  was  Ivy  League  champ  last  year,  and  shows  no 
signs  of  weakening.  And  everj'one  knows  what  kind  of  basketball  re- 
putation the  Holy  Cross  Crusaders  have. 

Coach  McGuire  himself  knows  the  road  ahead  is  a  tough  one.  "If 
we  win  two  out  of  three  gantes  up  north,  I'll  know  we  have  a  very 
good  team.  But  we  could  lose  them  all,"  he  warned. 

And  around  the  ACC  the  story  is  the  same.  Though  some  squads 
are  in  the  throes  of  rebuilding,  all  of  them  are  dangerous.  "There's 
no  such  thing  as  an  unbeaten  season  in  basketball  anymore, '  said  Mc- 
Guire. "It's  impossible  to  pick  a  weak  schedule  because  any  of  these 
foams  can  beat  you." 

Who's  the  team  to  beat  in  the  ACC  outside  of  Carolina?  We 
»«y  wake  P^v*t.  mnd  me**  of  thm  experts  m^rem  with  ub.  The  Oeacs 
l«**  only  LeVty  DaWs  from  last  year's  fine  team,  and  should  have 
their  usu»l  scrappy,  aggressive  ball  club.  State  and  Duke  were  hard 
hit  by  graduation,  Md  the  other  ACC  schools  haven't  climbed  to  a 
par  with  tfie  Big  Four  institutions. 

The  Tar  Heels  went  undefeated  on  their  home  stomping  grounds 
last  year,  but  defeats  on  the  road  spoiled  their  good  record.  The  ques- 
tion this  year  is:  Can  they  mature  enough  to  win  on  the  road.  The  key 
to  a  successful  season  lies  in  the  answer. 

One  thing  to  Carolina's  advantage  will  be  the  experienced  person- 
nel on  hand.  Last  year  the  Tar  Heels  were  forced  to  go  with  youthful 
sophomores,  and  although  the  youngsters  did  a  good  job,  the  lack  of 
experience  hurt.  As  Coach  McGuire  put  it.  "The  ACC  is  a  junior  and 
senior  league."  ^^ 

HERE'S  HOW  THEY'LL  FINISH: 

Since  everj'body  else  is  doing  it,  why  don't  we  try  our  hand  at 
predicting  the  order  of  finish  in  the  ACC  this  season?  Here  goes. 

1— North  Carolina.  Nobody  should  be  surprised  at  this.  The  Tar 
H^ls  are  loaded  with  just  the  right  balance  of  age  and  youth.  Height 
tt>ere  s  plenty  of,  and  any  man  on  the  squad  can  shoot  with  unerring 
accuracy.  But  still  there's  the  Coliseum  jinx  and  how  to  lick  it. 

2— Wake  Forest.  The  Deacs  are  good.  They  have  a  veteran  lineup 
that  will  be  hard  to  stop.  And  that  Wake  Forest  hustle  and  spirit  is 
something  to  behold.  ^ 

.*"'*-  ^  *♦•*••  '•'*'•  »••<•»  ••«♦  Shavliek,  AAolodet.  DiNardo  and 
Dickman.  And  earlier  this  week  they  lost  their  top  sophomore.  But 
they  II  be  mighty  tough  to  beat  along  about  tournament  time  in  Rey- 
nolds Coliseum. 

4— Duke.  This  is  a  tough  one.  for  when  you  get  past  the  first 
three  there's  not  much  to  choose.  The  Blue  Devils  were  almost  com- 
pletely wrecked  by  graduation  and  other  bugaboos,  and  will  have  a 
hard  time  fighting  off  the  challenge  of  other  teams 

And  quickly  in  descending  order,  the  rest:  5-<nemson.  A  team  of 
hustlers.  6— Maryland.  Just  about  down  and  out  with  only  Bob  O'Brien 
le.t.  7— Virginia.  Bill  Miller  doesn't  have  enough  Jielp.  8-South  Caro- 
lina. We  could  be  wrong. 


Rosenbluth  Heads  List 
Of  Veteran  Performers 


By  LARRY  CHEEK 
Carolina's  tall  and  talented  Tar 
Heel  basketballers,  picked  by  ex- 
perts to  be  among  the  nation's 
elite  this  season,  kick  the  lirf  off 
the  long  awaited  1956-57  cage 
campaign  tonight  when  they  go 
against  the  semi-pro  McCrary 
Eagles  in  Asheboro. 

Tipoff  time  for  the  contest  is 
sot  for  8  p.m.  Since  McCrarj'  is 
not  a  college,  the  game  will  not 
count  on  the  official  Carolina  rec- 


Yesterda/s  Mural  Results: 


TAG  FOOTBALL   RESULTS 

Dental  School  defeated  BVP,  15- 
0;  Medical  School!  defeated  Man- 
gum-2  33-0,  Medical  School— 3  de- 
feated Stacy— 2,  40-6;  Sigma  Nu 
(W)  defeated  ATO  (W),  6-0. '. 


VOLLEYBALL  RESULTS ' 

Phi  Gam  defeated  Sig  Chi,  2-0; 
Sigma  Nu  defeated  Delt  Sigma.  2- 
0;  Chi  Phi  won  by  forfeit  over  Be- 
ta; SAE  defeated  Phi  Kap  Sig,  2-0; 
DU  won  by  forfeit  over  AK  Psi; 
Zeta  Psi  defeated  Phi  Delt.  2-0;  Chi 
Psi  defeated  ZBT,  2-0. 


T 


Starting  our  2nd.  Successful  Year 
Bringing  you  the  best  jazz  in  the  South 

JAZZ  AT   TURNAGE'S 

Presents  DICK  GABLE  and  the 

Atl-Stars 
Every  Saturday  Afternoon  2:00  . 
Beer  Served 


To  Pace  Grapplers 

Pictured  above  with  Coach  Sam  Barnes  are  three  lettermen  who 
will  lead  the  Carolina  wrestlers  this  season.  They  are,  left  to  right: 
Charley  Boyette,  Captain  Bob  Wafrner  and  Ken  Hoke.  At  left  is 
Barnes.  _ .-_    _   _  

Grapplers  To  Depend 
Heavily  On   Sophs 


By  BOB  NEY 

On  Saturday.  Dec.  8.  Carolina's 
varsity  wrestling  team  will  com- 
pete against  Washington  &  Lee 
and  Wake  Forest  in  the  first  inter- 
collegiate doubleheader  in  over 
25  years.  On  the  same  day,  the 
freshmen  will  also  make  their  de- 
but against  Washington  and  Lee. 

Returning  from  last  year's  vars- 
ity squad  are  lettermen  Dave  Wall 
at  123  lbs..  Captain  Bob  Wagner 
at  130.  Charley  Boyette  at  147. 
Ken  Hoke  at  157,  and  Glenn 
Doughtry  at  177. 

Coach  Sam  Barnes  is  also  count- 
ing heavily  on  sophomores  from 
last  year's  freshman  team,  one  of 
the  finest  in  Carolina's  history. 
Leading  the  crop  of  young  blood 
will  be  Perrin  Henderson  in  the 
137  lb.  class,  Dave  Atkinson  in  the 
167  lb.  class,  and  Dave  Corky  in 
the   heavyweight   division. 

Depth   will  be  no  problem   this 


year,  for  behind  these  boys  are 
sophs  Henry  Rhyne  at  130  lbs.  Bill 
Adcock  at  137,  Rob  Boyette  at 
157.  Bill  Child  at  177.  and  Dick 
Hahman  in  the  heavyweight  class. 

After  the  first  few  matches 
Coach  Barnes  should  have  a  much 
better  idea  who  he  will  use  the  re- 
mainder of  the  season. 

Fifteen  freshmen  will  try  out 
on  Monday.  All  are  verj-  promis- 
ing, and  according  to  Coach 
Barnes,  the  only  thing  that  should 
hold  them  back  is  their  greeness. 
Only  four  of  the  yearling  aspi- 
rants have  had  wrestling  exper- 
ience. 

The  varsity  schedule: 

Dec.  8.  Wake  Forest  aqd  Wash- 
ington &  Lee  hcret  11 — Davidson 
here;  14 — Citadel  there;  Jan.  4 — 
Virginia  here:  18— N.  C  State 
there;  Feb.  2— VPI  there;  8 — Mary- 
land here;  22 — VMl  there;  27 — 
Duke  there.  .^ 


Plans  For  New 
Cage  Leagues 
Are  Underway 

The  Intramural  Department  at 
Carolina  is  attqftij^ting  to  form  two 
new  basketball  leagues  this  year. 
One  is  a  church  league  to  be  com- 
posed of  teams  organized  in  the 
local  churches,  while  the  other 
will  be  a  league  for  those  students 
who  are  ineligible  for  regular  in- 
tramural competition. 

The  church  league  games  will 
be  scheduled  the  same  way  as  the 
dormitory  and  fraternity  intra- 
murals,  and  regular  intramural 
rules  will  apply. 


ord  as  recognized  by  the  NCAA. 

The  Tar  Heels  will  send  a  vet- 
eran squad  seasoned  with  tal6nted 
sophomores  into  action  against  the  | 
rugged  semi-pro  Eagles.  Leading 
the  way  will  be  Ail-American  Len-  j 
nie  Rosenbluth,  UNC's  Mr.  Every- 
thing. Rosenbluth,  who  was  recent- 
ly named  captain  of  the  team, 
poured  in  points  at  a  rate  exceed- 
ing 26  per  game  last  year  and  also 
led  the  squad  in  rebounding. 

Other  returning  lettermen  from 
last  year  who  will  back  up  Rosen- 
bluth include  Joe  Quigg.  6-9  cen- 
ter; Pete  Brcnnan,  6-7  forward; 
Tommy  Kearns.  5-11  guard;  Bob 
Cunningham.  6-4  guard;  and  Tony 
Radovich,  6-2  guard.  Quigg.  Rado- 
vich  and  Bremian  were  starters 
last  year. 

Promising  newcomers  include 
mammoth  center  Bill  Hathaway, 
fon\-ard  Danny  Lotz  and  guard 
StJti  droll. 

Coach  McGuire  hasn't  decided 
definitely  on  a  starting  lineup,  but 
Rosenbluth,  Brennan  and  Hatha- 
way seem  to  be  sure  starters.  Cun- 
ningham and  Kearns  have  been 
running  on  the  first  unit  at  guards 
in  scrimmage  sessions,  but  one  of 
these  boys  may  be  displaced  by 
Quifg  in  order  to  get  more  height 
in  the  game. 

Radovich,  a  veteran  in  his  fifth 
There  will  be  an  organizational »  year   of    varsity   basketball.   Groll 


meeting  Monday  night  at  7:30  in 
room  301 -B  Woollen  G>Tn.  All 
churches  interested  in  entering 
this   league   arc   asked   to  send   a 


and  Lotz  are  sure  to  see  a  lot  of 
action  also. 

McCrary    has    gotten    the    jump 
on  Carolina  as  far  as  game  exper 


representative  with  a  team  roster ,  jence  goes.  The  Eagles  have  play- 
to  this  meeting.  i  gd  i^^q  contests  so  far,  winning  one 


Swimmers  Open  Season 
Against  East  Carolina 


By  STEWART   BIRD 

Carolina's  defending  ACC  co 
champion  swimmers  will  open  their 
1956-57  season  when  they  clash 
with  coach  Ray  Martinez's  East 
Carolina  mermen  tonight  at  Green- 
ville. 

The  Buc's  are  in  their  third  sea- 
son of  collegiate  competition.  They 
showed  well  in  the  Carolina  Col- 
legiate Championships  last  year, 
and  are  again  expected  to  field  a 
well  balanced  team. 

According  to  Coach  Casey,  the 
Carolina  squad  is  in  better  shape 
for  this  time  of  year  than  any  pre- 
vious team.  Those  that  have  been 
showing  well  in  practice  have  been 
Mac  Mahaffy,  in  the  butterfly,  Bill 
Roth  and  Bill  Zickgraf  in  the 
sprints,  and  Schiffman  in  the  dis- 
tance events. 

Two  changes  have  been  made  by 
the  NCAA  rules  committee  in  the 
dual  meet  program  this  year.  One 
hundred  yards  of  orthodox  breast- 
etroke  has  been  added  to  the  med- 
ley relay  making  it  now  400  yards 
of  backstroke,  orthodox  breast- 
t  troke,  and  freestyle.  The  200  yd. 
individual  medley  has  been  elimi- 
nated and  replaced  with  200  yards 
of  orthodox  brcastroke. 


I  Carolina's  Traveling  squad,  nine- 
teen strong,  will  depart  from  Wool- 
len Gym  after  lunch  on  Saturday, 
returning  late  that  night.  The  meet 
is  scheduled  for  8:00  p.m.  at  tho 
East  Carolina  pool. 

South  Carolina  will  provide  the 
opposition  when  the  Tarheels  open 
their  home  season  December  7th 
in  Bowman  Gray  indoor  pool. 

THE  LINEUP 


400  yard  freestyle  relay  — But- 
j    ler.  Rose,  Zickgraf,  Roth 
1         220  yard  freestyle  —  Zwicker, 
Veazey 

50   yard   freestyle   —   Maness. 
I    Nash 

j        200  yard  butterfly  —  Mahaffy, 
,     Turner 

I        Diving  —  Mclnnls,  Meeks,  Par- 
{    ker 

I         100   yard      freestyle    —   Roth. 
Cashwell 

I        200  yard  backstroke  —  Nash, 
t    Butler 

400  yard  freestyle— Schiffman, 
Atwater. 

200  yard  breaststroke  —  Mer 
cer.  Goad,  Tribus 

400  yard  freestyfe  relay  — 
Zwicker,  Rose,  Zickgraf,  Roth 


The  other  league  will  consist  of 
players  from  the  graduate  and  un- 
dergraduate schools  who  are  either 
ineligible  for  intramural  com- 
petition, or  who  would  like  to  play 
outside  of  intramurals. 

The  principle  purpose  of  form- 
ing such  a  league  is  to  provide  an 
opportunity  to  play  basketball  for 
those  varsity  basketball  letter  win- 
ners in  school  here  who  are  not 
permitted  to  compete  in  intramur- 
al basketball.  But  since  there  will 
not  be  enough  of  these  letter  win- 
ners to  form  a  league,  other  stu- 
dents who  are  eligible  for  intra- 
murals, but  would  rather  play  in 
ahothcr  league  are  also  welcome. 

Before  any  definite  pKins  can  be 
made,  the  intramural  department 
must  see  if  enough  men  are  in- 
terested to  make  siich  a  program 
practical. 

Coach  Walter  Rabb.  Director  of 
Intramural  Athletics,  has  promised 
that  the  intramural  department 
will  schedule  games  and  provide 
basketball  courts  and  officials  if 
a  league  is  formed. 

If  you  arc  interested  in  playing 
in  such  a  league,  please  call  the 
Intramural  Department,  Phone 
9424.  and  give  your  name  and  ad- 
dress. Please  call  as  soon  as  poss- 
ible so  the  proper  arrangements 
can  be  made  in  planning  a  sched- 
ule and   forming  teams. 


aad  losing  one  to  Catawba  Col- 
lege of  the  North  State  League.  In 
their  last  outing  they  topped  the 
Indians.  84-75  behind  the  second 
half  shooting  of  former  State  cen- ! 
ter  Cliff  Dw>er. 

The  6-10  Dwyer  will  start  at; 
center  for  the  Eagles,  while  an-  j 
other  Wolfpack  star  of  the  past.  I 
Slamming  Sammy  Ranzino.  gets ! 
the  call  at  one  forward  post.  Smith  j 
Langdon.  the  Eagle's  number  one  I 
scorer  in  games  to  date,  will  pair  | 
with  Ranzino.  The  guards  will  be  I 
Jim   Jordan   and   Ha]    Atkinson. 

One  of  McCrary's  most  depend- 1 
able    performers   will    t>e   missing  i 
from  the  lineup  tonight.  He's  Ray  j 
Stanley,  UNC  freshman     who     is' 
playing  with  the  Eagles  while  sit- 
ting out  a  semester's  ineligibility. , 
Stanley  entered  school  last  year  at  | 
the   beginning   of   the   second   se-  j 
mester,   and     is     not  eligible   for ' 
either    the    varsity    or    freshman 
teams.  The  6-4  Stanley  played  al- 
most  half    the    game    against    Ca- 
tawba, and  .scored  8  points. 

The  Tar  Heels  will  open  their 
home  schedule  next  Tuesday  night 
against  the  high  scoring  Furman 
Purple  Paladins  in  Woollen  Gym. 
The  freshmen  will  play  High 
Point's  jayvees  in  the  preliminary. 


TAR  HEELS  IN  NEW  YORK 

The  Carolina  basketball  team  will 
appear  in  New  York  City  this  year , 
for  the  first  time  since  1946.  The , 
Tar  Heels  play  New  York  Univer- 1 
sity  on  December  20.  in  Madison 
Square  Garden. 


BIRD  CLUB 

i  The  Chapel  Hill  Bird  Club  will 
sponsor  a  field  trip  Sunday.  Matt 

;  Thompson  will  direct  the  trip.  All 
those  interested  in  going  have 
been  asked  to  meet  at  the  Bell 
Tower  at  7  a.  m.  The  trip  will  in- 
clude a  visit  to  University  Lake 
and  will  end  at  9  a.m. 


THE  FR 


FLAMES  AGAIN  t 


Paratnaunt  Pratcnts 

RAULEHE 

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J.  Paul  Shcedy*  Was  A  Scairdy  Cal  Till 
Wildroot  Cream-Oil  Gave  Him  Confidence 


Feor  J.  Pawl  veldt  too  scared  to  ask  for  a  date  —  he  just  lacked  conhdencc 

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Wildroot  Cream -Oil.  Itil  keep  your  hair  handsome  and  healthy  looking, 

and  I  ain't  lion."  So  J.  Paul  put  the  bite  on  him  for  some 

money  and  pussyfooted  down  to  the  store  for  a  bottle. 

Now  he's  the  pride  of  the  campus,  manely  beclaws  his 

hair  looks  so  good  . . .  tjeat  but  not  greasy.  Wildroot  has 

no  alcohol  to  dry  your  hair,  instead  it  contains  Lanolin, 

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a  bottle  or  handy  tube  of  Wildroot  Cream-Oil  yourself. 

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*»flM  So.  Harrh  Hill  Rd.,  Vriniamstille, N.  Y. 

Wildroot  Cream-Oil 
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REVIEW 

C«mfHiS  and  Nation.  S«e  P«f*  2. 


VOL.  LVII.  NO.  S9 


Complete  {/P^Wire'$enk§ 


CHAPEL  HILL,  NORTH   CAROLINA,   SUNDAY.   DECEMBER  2.   1956 


Offices  in   Graham   Memorial 


FOUR  PAGES  THIS   ISSUI 


COED  HELD  WITHOUT  BOND 

'Sheriff  Evans  Nabs 
Buttons  'Murderer 

Coed  Dickie  Pickerrell  was  "ar- 1  uection  with  the  annual  Phi  Alpha 
rested"  lat?  last  night  by  "Sher-  Delta  mock  trial,  which  will  be 
iff"  David  Evans  of  "Manning  held  Friday  in  Manning  Hall 
County"  and  charged  with  the  courtroom.  The  "crime"  and  "ar- 
"murder"  of  footlsall    player    Ed    rest"    and   other  related   happen- 


Sutton. 

The  "arrest"  was  made  in  con- 


DiCKIE   PICKERRELL. 

. . .  arrested  coed    .  -■ 


ings  are  staged  true  to  life  eacH 
year  by  the  organization,  and  the 
trial  is  one  of  the  biggest  events 
of  that  the  law  students  have  each 
}'ear. 

Miss  Pickerrell  is  being  "held" 
in  "Manning  County  jail"  without 
'bond,  pending  her  "indictment" 
by  the  grand  jury. 

The  coed  refused  comment  on 
the  "murder,"  except  to  deny  th« 
charges. 

"Sheriff"    Evans   said   the    "a**- 
rest"  was  made  on  the  theory  that 
Miss  Pickerrell  "killed"  Sutton  in 
a  jealous  rage  when  Sutton  indi-i 
cated  to  her  that  he  preferred  the  i 
company  of  Miss  Jane  Brock,  pret-  '• 
ty  UNC  Band  majorette.  j 

The  "bod}'"  of  Sutton  was  found 
in  the  arboretum  Thursday  night.  | 
This  followed  a  "fight"  of  Wednes- 
day night  between  Mi«s  Pickerrell 
and  Sutton,  TTje  "assault"  occurred 
as  :  Sutton  was  taking  Miss  Brock 
back  to  her  dbrm  following  a  date. 


Capus  Waynick  Receives  Award 

Pictured  abev*  is  Capus  Waynick  (center)   receiving  the  Alpha      President  of  the  UNC  Chapter  of  AKPsi  Bob  Ratledge  is  shown  at 
Kappa  Psi  Civic  Award  from  O.  Arthur  Kirknvan,  N.  C.  State  Senator,      left. 


Cordon  Will  Sfar 
Today  In  Musical 

.\orih  Carolina's  lirst  and  only  Metropolitan  Opera  star. 
Norm;  .)  Cloidon,  will  make  his  first  local  singino  appearance 
Avhen  I.es  Peiites  Musiralcs  presents  Mozart's  "The  .Magic 
Fhite"  at  8  p.m.  today  in  Hill  Hall. 

The  opera,  abridoed  and  in  KnoJish.  will  be  performed 
in  full  costume  and  sccnen  with  the  University  C.lee  Club 
luider  the  director  of  Joel  Carter. 

Story  of  'The  Mao;ic  Flute  "  re\()h es  around-  the  love  of 
a  young  prince,  Tamino,  for  a 
stolen  princess,  Pamena.  During 
his  search  for  the  girl.  Tamino  is 
introduced  to  the  cult  of  Isis  by 
High  Priest,  Sarastro,  and  under- 
goes an  ordeal  of  silence  as  initia- 
tion. Aided  by  Sarastro,  the  prince 
is  united  with  Pamena  and  com- 
pletes the  final  trials  of  his  initi- 
ation. 

Tenor  John  Hanks,  Professor  of 
Music  at  Duke  University,  will 
sing  the  role  of  Tamino,  the  young 
prince.  Pamena  will  be  played  by 
soprano  Donna  Patton,  and  Joel 
Carter  will  play  the  role  of  Papa- 
gano.  Norman  Cordon  will  appear, 
as  the  High  Priest  Sarastro. 

Cordon,   host   and   commentator 
on  WUNC's   "Let's   Listen  to  Op- 
era,"  sang  with  the  Metropolitan 
for  twelve  seasons,  during  which  : 
time  he  performed  in  several  Mo-  j 


HAPPENINGS  ON  THE  HJU 


Tri  Delt  Pledges'  Frolics 
Highlight  Social  Week  End 


Bamsviite,  Md.,  president;  Chris 
Winjamsoai  df ;  Manhasset,  N.  Y., 
vice  {H^esident;  Herb'  Hawkins  of 
Triangle,  Va.,  secretary;  Sandy  of 


High   Point  Man   Receives   AKPsi 
Award  For   Outstanding   Service 


Capus  M.  Waynick  of  High  Point, 
recent  head  of  the  N.  C.  Small  In- 
dustries Commission,'  was  honor- 
ed last  night  at  a  banquet  by  Al- 
pha Kappa  Psi.  professional  fra- 
i  ternity   in   busines   administration. 


ed  a  plaque  for  his  "'service  and  Hill.  Mr.  and  Mrs.  J.  W.  Austin 
devotion  to  the  fraternity"  by  of  Charlotte.  Dr.  and  Mrs.  Arthur 
President   Bob  Ratledge.  i  Whitehill   and  Dr.   and  Mrs.  Will- 


Mr,    Waynick   received   the   fra- 


By  AAARY   ALYS  VOORHf  SS 

Geometry  was  never  so  lovely! 

And  probably  there  isn't  a  tri- 
angle in  any  geometry  book  which    .^_. 

couM  vie  with  the<Mie  fonned  Fri-llHcrlMan.  fiMMtftr.  >' temity'a  Civic  Award  for  outstand- 

day  night  at  the  CaroJina  Ihtt  bali-J     mOm  imiB0t<tfMi  .yii^inphwkf  seiidce   to  community,   state. 
roo«i  by  the  Tri  Delt  pledge.       [ar«  Sbeef  HotaiJ*tltt    of '  WHloW  |  an^^  naflonrflf^has"TTong^and  ad- 
la  billowing   white    gowns    and  •  Springs,  pt«»id«ilt;  9ohn  Hondros !  mirablo    record   of   service  to   the 
carrying  -miniature    bouipieta    <»fi<rf  WiHston-Satem,  Vice  president;    sta^  "of.'Nofith   Carolina,    aoool-d- 


Mr.  Jordan  was  president  of 
the  local  chapter  in  1952,  and  was 
recently  elected  Grand  Vice-presi- 
dent of  the  national   fraternity. 

Special     guests     included     Mrs. 
Waynick,    Senator    and      Mrs.      O. 
Arthur  Kivkroen-^  Hlgh-F«k»t,  H^]    -^ 
I  and  Mrs.   L.  R.  Jordan  of  Chapel 


ard    Graham    of    Chapel   Hill,   and 

Mr.   Walter  Lowe  of   Indianapolis. 

Following   the   banquet   the    ac- 


Run-Off  Elections  Set 
Tues.  For  Honor  Seats 

Run-off    elections    will    be    held  | 
Tuesday  for  Honor  Council.  j 

Ballot  boxes  will  be  placed  in 
every  dorm,  and  the  town  districts 
will  remain  the  same.  ' 

The    candidates    are:    FYeshman 

Honor    Council:     Dick     Robinson, 

'  Hugh  Patterson;  Sophomore  Honor 

Council:  John  Owens.  Gary  Cooper; 

Womens     Honor     Council:     Anne 


Headed 
For  Home? 


tive  members  of  AK  Psi  hoeored  ^  Tllorgan,  Doris  Peter,  Nan  Schaef- 
th?ir  fall  pledge  class  with  a  form- .  fer.  Cindy  Scagraves,  Sarah  Van 
al    dance.  I'Wfeyk,  and  Kit  WhitehursU 


yellow  carnations  the  pledges  step-|  Larry   Craiver    of    Wihstdn-Salem, 
ped  down  the  stairs  into  the  lUne-f  secretary--  treasurer;      and      Art 
light  as  their    names    were  .  ail- 1  Schwer^r  of  Summit,  N. -J.,  ser- 
nounced  by  Ray  Jefferies,  assistailtl  geant-at>anta$. .  '  '*\-<.]      >•    !" 
to  the  dean  of  student  affairs,  g<> .'         ,    — :-^ — *i'-  ;,  '}i  ,■* — : — i. 
ing  on   out   into  the  ballrown '  to ; 
stand  by  their  other  pledge  sisters! 
to  form  a  huge  triangle,  syml)ol  of  j' 
the  Greek  letter  D. 

From  A  to  Z  as  their  nam«  wete 
called  each  pledge  took  her  place 
at  the  top  of  the  stairs,  which  were 

flanked  by  tall  black  wrought-iron  GKEENSBOilO  —  Uh  ^  William 
seven-branched  candelabra  holding  ■  Friday,  President  of  the  Consoli- 
burning  white  tapers— somewhat '  dated  University  of  North  Caro- 
similar  to  the  Annual  North  Caro-  [  Una,  today  asked  alumnae  of  Wo- 
lina  Debutante  Ball  in  Raleigh.       ^  man's  College  to  join  with  him  in 


[leaf  ion 
Of  UiliVersif  y 
hCalhtiFor 

GREENSBORO 


ing  to  the  award,  ai>d  served  as 
ambassador  to  Nicaragua  during 
the    Truman    Admmistration. 

From  1923-1935  and  again  in 
1942,  he  was  editor  of  the  High 
Point  Enterprise. 

L.  R.  Jordan  of  the  Duke  Medi- 
cal Outpatient  Clinic  and  formerly 
an  instructor  at  UNC,  was  present- 


Men  Reserve 
Rooms  Jan.  3 


Manrovdnrs  Popularity  ftecwd" 
Accbmfianies  His  Performance 


How   are    you   getting    home 
over  the  Christinas  holidays? 

Driving? 

Need  a  ride? 

Need  riders? 

!th9n  wetcl«:for  The  Daily 
Taf  l4d«l*«  special  service  fer 
'home-bound  studoAts.  It  starts 
fjyis  woolc  on   Pago  Thro*. 

There'll  be  awn:  dotoifs  in 
f  ueaMjay  r.AMkrning's  pmpmr. 


JOHN   HANKS 

. .  .  sings  tonight 

zart  works,  including  "The  Magic 
Flute"  and  "Don  Giovanni."  He 
is  presently  head  of  the  North  Car- 
olina Music  program. 

Stage  director  for  the  produc- 
tion is  Robert  Andrews,  TV  writ- 
er-director. Designer  is  Charles 
Hardman,  Art  director  for  WUNC- 
TV.  June   Craft,  of   the   Carolina 

'  Playmakers,    is   costumer.   Hunter 
Tillman    and    Mrs.    Bert    Davis    of 

i  Chapel    Hill    will    accompany    the 

i  opera  al  the  piano  and  organ. 
Preceding  the     opera     on     the 

1  musieale  program  will  be  the 
!  "Missa  Brevis,"  sung  by  the  Chap- 
i  el  Hill  Choral  Club  under  the  di- 

;  rection  of  Joel  Carter. 

j       No  admission  is  charged  for  the 
GMAB-sponsored   program. 


Music  for  the  annual  event  was 
provided  by  the  Duke  Ambassadors 
from  Durham  with  Lew  Sartorius 
and  his  Dixieland  jazz  for  inter' 
mission. 

Ivy  garlanded  the  banisters 
around  the  ballroom,  and  the  sil- 
ver punch  bowl  containing  lime 
punch  centered  the  refreshment 
table.  Elsewhere  on  the  table 
were  silver  trays  of  cookies. 

As  a  final  to  their  pledge  week- 
end the  Tri  Delts  moved  over  to 
the  Crystal  Ballroom  of  the  Wash- 
ington Duke  Hotel  in  Durham  last 
night  for  a  champagne  party. 

MOVIE  STARS  at  the  Hill.  Four 
screen  stars  to  be  exact.  The  ac- 
tofs  and  actress  to  whom  we  are 


rededieating^  the  purposes  of  the , 
eoU'ege.  j 

Friday  spoke  at  the  mid-winter 
luncheon  of  the  Alumnae  Assn.   { 

Introduced  by  Dean  W.  W.  Pier- 1 
son,  acting  chancellor  of  WC,  Fri- i 
day  noted  that  "There  isn't  any- 
one I  know  who  could  have  come 
to  Greensboro  and  done  the  job' 
you    (PiersOT)   have   done."  | 

The  youthful  president  outlined 
the  necessity  of  keeping  high  stan- 
dards in  the  thre^  branches  of  the 
Greater  University.  i 

"We  must  continue     to     obtain 
competent  personnel  to  meet  the 
demands  of  continued  enrollment 
increases,^'  he  said,  "I  ask  you  to 
I  make  your  friends   aware  of  the 
referring  are  those  who  appeared'  need  for  additloflal  funds  from  the 
last  night  in   "The  Best  of  Stein-    leg'slature  so  we  can  continue  to 


,  Men  students  who  wish  to  re- 
I  serve  a  dormitory  room  for  the 
!  Spring  semester,  1957,  are  not  re- 
!  quired  to  do  so  until  Jan.  3,  ac- 
i  cording  to  the  University's  Hous- 
'  ing  Office. 

When  the  students     return     on 

'  Jan.    3    from    Christmas    holidays, 

I  form  cards  will  be  distr;but?d  to 

I  them   by    their     dorm     managers. 

RALEIGH— o<^-Led   by  senior  ^  There  will  be  three  options  on  the 

John  Maglio,  who  scjred  22  points,  i  card:    (1)    wish     to     retain     this 

and  sophomore  John  Richter.  who    room;   (2)  do  not  wish  to  reserve 


When  Mantovani  appear.s  in  Me- 
morial Hall  Thursday  at  8  p.m. 
presenting  his  New  Music,  he 
brings  with  him  a  record  of  great 


training  included »work  at  the  piano, 
[  but  at  the  age  of  14  he  turned  to 
i  'he  violin. 

By  the  time  he  was  19  Mantovani 


State  Whips  Pittsburgh, 
97  To  85,  In  Opener 


popularity   with   the  American   au-    had   his   own  orchestra,  and  at  21 
dience.  !  was  performing  in  one  of  London's 

Familiar  to  this  countr>'  through  ,  fashionable  hotels.  He  began  to  ex- 
his  recordings  and  an  American  .  periment  in  arrangements  and  in- 
'oncert  lour  in  1955.  the  artist  has  I  strumentalion    and    intrigued   Lon- 


i^aiiCludfe  Club  Hears 
v^hifosophy  Professor 


achieved  a  strong  following  among 
those  lovers  of  semi-classical  and 
light  clasical  music  set  to  a  lilting, 
relaxing  style. 


scored  24,  North  Carolina  State 
opened  its  basketball  season  last 
night  by  defeating  Pittsburgh.  97- 
85. 

Except  for  the  opening  minutes. 
State  led  all  the  way,  although 
Pitt  closed  an  8»-78  gap  to  89-85 


room;  (3)  wish  to  change  room. 
The  forms  must  be  returned  to 
the  dorm  managers  by  Jan.  6. 

Those  students     who     wish     to 
chans?    rooms      must      go   by    the 


Show^business"  "Variety"  maga- 
zine has  slated  that  '•Mantovanis 
phenomena!  popularity  is  based  on 
the  appeal  of  his  music  to  that 
immense  middle  audience  that  car- 
es not  for  jazz  nor  dotes  on  most 


Housing  Office  by  Jan.  8  to  make :  symphonies." 
necessary     arrangements,     accord-        The     Venetian-born 


don  with  his  Tipica  orchestra. 

"The  master  of  the  tumbling 
strings"  turned  to  the  ^heatre  when 
he  became  musical  director  for 
such  postwar  Noel  Coward  musi- 
cals as  "Sigh  No  More,"  "Pacific 
1860."  in  which  Mary  Martin  made 
her  London  debut  and  "The  Ace 
of  Clubs." 

With  this  varied  background  of 
concert-s,  recordings  and  theatre  ap- 1 
Londoner,    pearances  Mantovani  will  bring  to 


on    the    superb    aharpshooting    ofl  ing  to  Jim  Wadsworth.  University    f  oming  from  a  musical  family,  be-    Chapel    Hill    his   New   Music   that 
Don  Hennon.  Housing  Officer.  I  gan   his  career  in  Ehigland.  Early    "has  something  for  everybody." 


State  College's  Suspension  -  Part  III 


Complete  Evidence  Refused  Friday 


DR.    P6TEAT 

. .  spoke  to  grads 


beck,"  sponsored  by  the  Carolina 
Playmakers. 

Friday  night  the  TEPs  had  the 
htuior  of  having  one  of  the  actors, 
Robert  Strauss,  over  for  dinner. 
..  Since  Strauss  was  a  personal 
friend  of  Louis  Lefkowitz  of  Spring 
Valley,  N.  Y.— near  Strauss'  home- 
town— the  TEPs  decided  to  invits 
him  over  when  they  learned  he 
vcuid  be  playing  here  this  week- 
end. 

No  doubt  most  Of  the  fellows  had 
seen  his  movies  "Stalag  17,"  "The 
Man  With  The  Golden  Arm"  and 
"Attack,"  and  wanted  to  meet  him 
in  person  and  learn  of  his  (limb  to 
ptardom. 

PLEDGE  OFFICERS  . . .  Pledge 
ofiVers   of  the  Phi     Kappa    -5i« 


draw  on  highly  trained  faculties 
and  personnel. 

"If  we  fail,  we  shall  not  have  a 
Woman's  College  of  the  quality  we 
hav^  now.*'  he  said. 

Candidates  for  the  association 
offices  were  n^med  at  the  business 
session  following  Friday's  talk. 
The  election  will  bs  conducted  by 
mail  next  May  and  results  iin- 
nounced  at.  the  commencement 
meeting.   . 

l^-s  candidates:  President — Mrs. 
Herbert-  Falk,  Greenslwro;  Mrs. 
Paul  R.  Mauldeh,  Kannapolis;  Sec- 
ond Vice-President,  Mrs,  John  S. 
Kent,  Greensboro;  Miss  Celeste 
Ulrich,  Greensboro;  Recording  Sec- 
retary, Mrs.  E.  A.  Womble,  Wins- 
ton^Salem;  Miss  Juanita  Stott,  Ra- 


pledg'.*  class  are  George  Meuke  of !  leigh;  Alumnae  Board  of  Trustees 
,.  — ' ^   I  —Miss 


'  IN  TI^E  INFIRMARY 

StMdents  in  ft>e  UNC  Inflrmaiar 
yesterday  indwSed:  Misses  Ann 
•r«wn.  Elaine  GalUmere,  Elmlra 
Herring  and  Penny  Norman,  and 
Harrington  Al'exander,  William 
^e•.  Ronald  Koes,  John  Le«,  Rob- 
Aft  lasen  and  John  Adams. 


Ezda  Deciney,  Orlando. 
Fla.,  Mrs.  Frank  S.  Holt,  Burling- 
ton; Mias  Patricia  Markas,  Kannap- 
olis; Mrs.  William  A.  Davison, 
Charlotte;  Mrs.  A.  C  Jenkins,  Jr., 
Payetteville  and  Mrs.  Richard  L. 
Rice,  Raleigh. 

Miss  Barbara  Parri&h,  Alumnae 
Secretary,  reported  on  the  asso- 
ciation's activities  for  the 
year. 


This  is  the  last  installment 
of  the  report  by  State  and  UNC 
chancellors  to  the  Cor»olidated 
University  Board  of  Trustees  on 
State  College's  suapension  by  the 
National  Collegiate  Athletic 
Assn. 

It  should  be  noted  that  Presi- 
dent Friday  had  not  at  any  time 
requested  any  meeting  with  the 
Committee  on  Infractions.  He 
merely  wished  to  go  to  Kansas 
City  with  Chancellor  Bostian  and 
Mr.  Carmichael  to  review  the 
file  of  evidence  and  if  he  found 
evidence  of  any  violation  by 
members  of  the  State  College 
Staff  to  be  permitted  to  con- 
front them  with  the  evidence 
and  its  source. 

On  Nov.  26.  1956  President 
Friday  telephoned  to  the  NCAA 
Executive  Director  and  a^ked  if 
there  might  be  any  relaxation 
of  the  conditions  under  which 
Stale  College  and  the  Consoli- 
dated University  officiala  might 
be  permitted  to  review  the  case 
file.  The  excutive  director  said 
that  the  Infractions  Committee 
could  not  deviate  frcm  its  policy 
of  refusing  to  permit  any  pub- 
licity of  confidential  informa- 
tion furnished  to  it.  President 
Friday,  Chancellor  Bostian  and 
Carmichael    agreed     that   little 


EVERETT    CASE 

State  College  bcuskeiball  coach 


would  be  acf*rmplsihed  toward 
solving  the  administrative  prob- 
lem by  having  the  State  College 
and  Consolidated  University  of- 
ficials review  the  file     of     evi- 


dence   on    thi.s    restrict?d    basis. 
Consequently,  the  trip  to  Kansas 
City  to  review  the  case  file  was 
called  off. 
On  Nov.  26,  1956.  Chancellor 


Bostian,  President  Friday  and 
Mr.  Carmichael  net  with  the 
Slate  College  Athletic  Council 
(composed  of  faculty,  students 
and  alumni).  The  case  was  re- 
viewed in  detail.  Tnu  .Athletic 
C  uncil  unanimously  adopted  a 
resoulion  urging  Chancellor 
Bostian  and  President  Friday  to 
request  that  the  Atlantic  Ccost 
Conference  make  an  independent 
and  complete  investigation  of 
the  case. 

On  Nov.  27.  19.i6.  Chancellor 
Bostian  and  Dr.  H.  A.  Fisher 
(Chairman  of  the  State  College 
Athlet'c  Council)  President  Fri- 
day and  Mr.  Carmichael  of  the 
Consolidated  University  met 
with  Dr.  Charles  Jordan,  Presi- 
dent of  the  Atlantic  Coast  Con- 
ference and  filed-  with  him  an 
official  request  from  State  Col- 
lege that  the  Conference  proceed 
immediately  with  an  ind?pen- 
dent  and  complete  investigation 
of  the  case,  it  being  understood 
that  the  ful'  findings  and  all 
?\"denre  compiled  in  the  investi- 
gation would  be  presented  to 
the  Chancellor  of  State  College 
and  made  matters  of  public  rec- 
ord. 

Carey  H.  Bostian 

William  Friday 
William  D.  Carmichael,  Jr. 


SP  Will  Elect 
Officers  fi^on. 

The  Student  Party  will  meet 
Mcnday  at  8  p.m.  in  Roland  Park- 
ers 1  and  2  of  Graham  Memorial. 

Acording  to  SP  chairman  Tom 
Lambeth,    the    main    business    of   graduate    students.   Deaton    hopes 


Dr.  William  H.  Poteat,  associate 
professor  of  philosophy,  was  the 
principal  speaker  for  the  third 
meeting  of  the  UNC  Graduate  Club 
I'Yiday  night. 

Dr.  Poteat  spoke  pertaining  to 
anxiety,  courage  and  truth"  as  re- 
lated to  philosophy.  According  to 
Dr.  Poteat,  "courage  should  be 
neither  bla.meworthy  nor  praise- 
worthy." However,  courage  is, 
needed  to  face  truth,  he  said. 

Dr.  Poteat  illustrated  his  points 
with  the  myths  of  Oedipus.  Adam 
and  Faust.  These  myths  show  the 
relationship  between  man  and 
truth,  he  said. 

Following  his  speech.  Dr.  Poteat 
lead  an  informal  question  and  an- 
swer period. 

The  Graduate  Club,  sponsored  by 
the  YMCA  and  the  YWCA,  was 
lirst  organized  this  fall.  Its  pur- 
pose is  to  better  the  social  welfare 
of  the  graduate  student  at  UNC. 

According  to  Bill  Deaton,  presi- 
uent  of  the  club,  the  programs 
throughout  the  year  will  be  pre- 
sented by  speakers  from  all  de- 
partments of  the  university.  The 
purpose  of  these  programs  will  l>e 
to    broaden    the    horizons   of    the 


:he  club  will  soon  be  organized  on 
u  more  permanent  basis. 


Recent  t^rad  Robert  Evans 
Holds  Oxford  Debate  Post 


the  evening  will  be  the  election  of 
officers.  Offices  to  be  filled  are 
I  those  of  chairman,  vice  chairman, 
secretary,  treasurer,  sergeant-at- 
arms,  and  four  members  of  the  ad- 
visor:/ board.  All  SP  members  are 
entitled  to  vrle. 

Lambeth  said,  "In  past  four 
campus  elections,  a  majority  of  Robert  M.  Evans  of  Durham,  a 
the  voters  has  indicated  its  pre-  1952  UNC  graduate  now  at  Oxford 
ference  for  the  Student  Party.  It  Law  School.  England,  has  recently 
is  therefore  important  » that  as  been  elected  librarian  of  the  Ox- 
many  people  as  possible  be  present  ford  Union,  chief  debating  society 
to  <;hoose  thos?  people  who  will  of  'he  University, 
lead  ths  party  in  the  coming 
months." 

Lambeth   noted   that  SP  has   no 


dues  and  membership  Ls  open  to 
all  students. 


Humanities  Lecturer 

Dr.  Everett  W.  Hall,  Kenan 
Professor  and  chairman  of  the 
Philosophy  Dept.,  will  speak 
Tuesday  evening  at  8  in  room 
106  Carroll  Hall  on  "What  Is 
It  a  Philosopher  Does?"  This 
ttlk  is  the  annual  fall  lectwret 


As  librarian,  Evans  assumes  the 
position  of  second  in  authority  of 
the  debating  society  at  Oxford. 
The  position  is  considered  as  a 
creditable  achievement  for  an 
American  in  an  English  university. 

Brother  of  Sonny  E\ans,  Vice- 
President  of  the  Student  Body, 
Robert  Evans  was  attorney  genera] 
while  attending  UNC  and  was  elect- 
ed to  Phi  Beta  Kappa.  After  two 
years  with  the  Navy,  he  studied  at' 
Yale  Law  School  until  he  entered 
Oxford. 


^^rm^^^i^w^ 


PAGE  TWO 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


SUNDAY,  DECEMBER  2,   1956 


The  News  In  Review:  UN  In  Egypt 
State  In  Trouble,  Body  At  UNC 


'Was  It  A  Hungarian?' 


•  • 

Hungary,  Sutton's  'Death/ 
And  A  New  Fraternity  Court 

A  Hmii;ariaii  iflujJVf  stiulent,  who  was  one  oJ  the  Icad- 
tis  ill  thf  siiickiu  (Icnioiistiaiion  earlier  this  inoiuh.  s})()kc 
Ikiv  rhiiisday  niyht.  The  suidfiit,  who  is  usiiv^  tl)e  assimu'd 
iiaiiic  oKI>tavaii  I,as/lo.  is  m.lking  a  tour  ol  colleges  and 
universities  throughout  this  (ountry.  speakfti<»  u'lM)iit  the 
present  ( risis  in  Hun<>arv. 

The  ui-vear  old  studtn;.  wlio  Hetl  lo  the  I'.S  with 
Miss  Anna  Kethlv.  leader  ol  tlie  lliui'^^rian  Social  Demoirat 
Partv.  related  speeilieally  the  role  that  the  Hini;i>arian  stu- 
dents played  in  the  recent  lexolt. 

Las/lo   said.    "The  a'inis  ol    the    Jluiigarian    re\<>liuion 
'   "are   jim   Awd  sitiiple— hediiui.   Tree  elettiotis.  a   Tree   llun- 

*  #       *  t 

The  \.M-VA\(.\.  whi<h  is  sponsorin;;;  the  lluu.oariai! 
Reliel  Fuufl.  has  imjw  received  ahoin  S'^oo  in  donations.  A 
luw  appeal  was  heard  hoin  Istaxan  Las/lo.  ;i  H unitarian 
refugee,  who  sj)oke  here  Thursflav  ni<>hi.  'iui  Judiui;  nionex 
Ironi  ihv-  (lanijjirs  Clrt'si  and  Cihristnias  donations.  Carolin.i, 
will  prohahly  i»i\e  a  total  of  about  Si. ',00.'  sxid  Miss  Jackie 
.\ldriflur.    Fhe   inone\    will   be  sent   to  \ienna.   Austria  b\ 

the  W'oi  III  l'ni\ersii\  Service. 

*  *  »  "^ 

The  2L'iul  assembly  student  Legislature  opened  Thiiis- 
dav  night  with  the  Lnsversity  Party  in  control. 

Llie  LP.  with  a  near  pertec  t  2}  niember  attendance. 
swept  througli  .ill  elet  ted  positions  victoriou.slv.  Conversely. 
the  Student  Paitv.  with  an  unollicial  six  ivijsences.  was  re- 
pulsed ill  its  aiieii)j)t  to  capiure  Legislature  ollices. 

AsseuibK    uieiubership.  due  to  a  one  .seat  gain  bv    the 

SP  in  tlu-  uceui  eleiii«)n.  is  deadlocked— 2-,-2-,.    , 

*  *  # 

Lots  h)r  a  new  IraierniiN  tourt  to  be  located  oli  Pitts- 
b.)u>  Rd.  in  ;iie  woodicl  area  between  \'i(  tory  \illage  and 
Chase  A\r.  l-  being  staked  oil  by  univer.sity  engineers. 
One  (Diirt    w.il  ^*l\j  ten  building  sites  lor  social   Iratenir- 


AND    SANTA    CLAUS    CAA^f    TO    CHAPEL    HILL 

. .  .  to  stwt  the  Christmas  Keaaon 

tie>  the  other.  si\  lor  pujtessional  haternitie-S.  The  (ost  of 
the  projei  I  will  cost  S;,iS,«tx>.  three. quarters  of  which  will 
be   raised   by   the  social   fraternities  and   the  remainder  by 

the    professional    fraternities. 

*  *  * 

Mrs.  Kleanor  Roosevelt  spoke  at  a  private  meeting  here 
Mond;y   afternoon.   She  said   the  I'nited    .Nations  has  f)een 

■strengthened  a  great  deal"  in  the  jiast   few 'weeks. 

*  *  * 

Jim  Beatty  placed  second  Tuesday  in  the  iHth  annual 
NC.AA  (loss  (ouiitrv  run  at  F.a^t  Lansing,  Mich.  Beattvs 
time  of  5(>:r»',.7  was  bettered  by  only  Walt  'McNew  of  tJie 
I'niversity  of  Texas. 

Spring  pierc^Lstratiou  will   begin   Dec.  0  and  continue 

lo  Dec.   iS. 

*  *  * 

I  hursd;  V  nigfit  Kd  Suttcjn  was  found  "dead"  in  the 
Alx>ietiim.  His  wallet  was  missing,  Fd  was  cooperating  in 
the  series  of  happenings  leading  up  to  the  annual  Phi 
.Alpha  Delta  legaHraternity  mock  trial,  to  be  held  iiiNlan- 
ning    Hall   ccjintroom    Dec.   7. 

rwentVTone  LNC:  students  left  h)r  New  York  Lhurs- 
dav  to  go  to  the  LNC  I'.N  Seminar.  The  trip  was  planned 
In    tiie  A M-VAVCfA.  The  group  returned  Sunday.     , 

*  *  * 

Miss  jane  Brock,  a  freshman  nurse,  has  been  named 
Miss  Marine  Officer  Procurement"  for  the  Carolinc'.s.  Fri- 
day, in  her  new  capacity,  she  appeared  on  a  new  .Marine 
Corps  program  on  a   Raleigh  radjo  station. 


tKlje  Bail?  tE^at  J^eel 

Tht  official  student  publication  of  the  Publications  Boaid  of  the 
rniversUy  uf  North  Carolina,  where  it  is  published  daily  except'Mon 
day  jnd  examination  and  vacation  periods  and  summer  terms.  Elntered 
as  second  class  matter  in  the  post  -office  at  Chapel  Hill,  N.  C,  under 
the  act  of  .March  8,  1870.  Subscripticn  rates:  Mailed,  $4  a  year.  $2.50 
per  semester;  delivered,  $6  a  year,  $3.50  a  semester. 


Editor 

„_ f- FUED  POWLEDGE 

Managing  Mitor 

.         CHARLIE  SLOAN 

News  Editor  ... 

...  RAY  LINKER 

Business  Manager  .  

Bn.L  Rf>B  PF.EI. 

More  land 
Case  Was 
Explosion 

D:-.  Cary  Bostian,  Chancellor  of 
N.  C.  State  College,  has  request- 
ed the  Atlantic  Coast  Con- 
ference t )  make  "an  independent 
and  complete  inve.stigation"  of 
the  Jackie  "Moreland  case,  which 
caused  State  to  be  put  on  a  four 
year  p/obation  by  the  National 
Collegiate   Athletic   Assn. 

Allc'ging  thiit  Stale  has  not 
been  abb  to  obtain  full  and  un- 
restricted use  of  the  evidence  in 
the  case.  Dr.  Bo.stian  hopes  to  be 
abb  to  get  the  ACC's  backing 
when  and  if  he  appeals  the  case 
en  the  floor  of  tha  NCA.A.  con- 
vention. 

On  Sept.  .26  the  'NC.\.\  wroto 
to  Chancellor  Bostian  notifying 
him  that  th|e  infraction  commil- 
ts  believed  that  information  in 
the  hands  of  the  cJommittee  in" 
connection  ifc-ith  the  recruitment 
of  Moreland  was  sufficient  sub- 
stance to  warrant  an  official  in- 
(luiry   into  the  case. 

Oct.  31  the  NC.\.A  wrote  to  Dr. 
Bostian  that  the  infractions  com- 
mittet  woidd  cite  State  College 
before  the  Council,  in  Detroit. 
Nov.  12. 

The  Council  charged  that  State 
had  offerjxl  aid  in  excess  of  that 
permitted  by  the  Atlantic  Coast 
Conference  and  this  association 
to  influence  Moreland  and  that 
in  the  coiincirs  opinicm  the  re- 
cruitment of  Moreland  was  un- 
dertaken with  the  knovvlsdgQ  ?nd 
cxpre.ss^  authority  of  the,  htad 
basketball    coach.  t;  .•  - 


•  •    - 

UN  In  Middle  East,  Workers 
Revolt  Ir)  Hungary,  Nagy  Gone 


United  Nations  forces  moved  in- 
to the  still  disintegrating  Middle 
East  last  week,  as  the  United 
States  sought  t.)  improve  r?lations 
with  her  oldest  European  allies, 
Britain  and  France. 

The  UN  ordered  Danish  ^roops 
intj  the  Suez  Canal  no  man's  land 
separating  .\nglo^French  and  Egyp- 
tian troops. 

The  Danish  rifle  company  oc- 
cupies an  800  -  yard  wide  buffer 
zojie  on  both  the  eastern  and 
western  banks  cf  the  canal. 

It  was  th?  first  time  in  history 
that  an  international  army  had 
movod  into  separate  warring  na-' 
lions. 

As  Britain  promised  phased 
withdrawal  of  her  troops  in  Egypt. 
President  Eisenbowor  set  in  mo- 
tion emergency  measures  to  rush 
extra  U.  S.  oil  t)  Western  Europe, 
with  the  assurance  that  the  speed- 
up in  shipmenLs  will  not  result  in 
oil-gascfline  rationing  in  this 
country. 

Th?  move  to  help  heal  the  rift 
between  this  country  and  its  Brit- 
ish and  French  allies  was  made 
upon  private  assurances  to  the 
U.  S.  that  the  British-French  with- 
drawal from  Egypt  will  take  place 


The  communist  Hungarian  pup- 
pet government  started  arresting 
"criminals  and  counter-revolution- 
afies"  throughout  the  country 
in  a  new  torror  campaign  design- 
ed to  crush  all  resistance. 

Thousands  of  refugees  poured 
into  Western  Europe  fleeing  from 
red  justice,  y.  S.  immigration 
quotas  were  lifted  in  regard  li 
the  Hungarians  in  order  to  pro- 
vide relief  in  absorbing  the  over- 
flow. 

Communist  authorities  contin- 
ued to  d:ny  entrance  of  special 
U.  N.  observers  in  Hungary,  de- 
spite repealed  requests  by  Secre- 
tary  General   Dag   Hammarskjold. 

U.  N.  relief  operations  were  al- 
so denied  to  tho  intematknal 
organization  by  Budapest  officials. 

Communist;  methods  in  Hungary 
arc  hiding  to  a  break  between  pre- 
mier Tito  o?  Yugoslavia  and  the 
Kremlin.  Tito  was  miffed  by  the 
seizure  of  former  Hungarian  pre- 
mier Nagy  as  he  l?ft  the  Yugo- 
slav embassy  in  Budapest.  Nagy 
had  been  promised  a  safe-conduct 
guarantee  from  Hungary  by  the 
present  government. 

On  the  national  scene,  the  strik- 
ing pier  wokers  of  the  Interna- 
tional Longshoremen's  Association 


Exercise  Of 
As    Expressed 


— Diiniit  in  1  he  i.hapcl  Hill  Sens  l.tadrr 

Academic   Freedom 


By    A    Trustee 


in  compliance  with  United  INJations    wer?  ordered  back  to  work. 


Victor  S.  Bryant 


resolutions. 

A  breaking  p:iint  in  Syria-Irag 
rehUions  wa?  threatened,  as  Iraq 
became  disturbed  by  increased  So- 
viet influence  in  Syria.  Uncoltfirm- 
ed  French  reports  stated  that  So- 
viet arms  shipments  were  being 
sent  to  Syria. 

The  effectiveness  of  the  Hun- 
garian w'ork^rs  revolt  rapidly  dis- 
integrated as  hunger  and  cold 
forced  laborers  to  return  to  their. 


.  The  Government  obtained  seven- 
ty-day Injunction  under  the  Taft- 
Hartley  Act  against  the  workers 
in  Federal  court.  A  back-to-work 
order  had  terminated  nine  days  of 
idleness  on  the  Atlantic  and  Gulf 
coasts  which  went  into  effect  on 
Monday. 

New  York, 'the  nation's  largest 
and  hardest  hit  port,  estimated 
that  .5175.000.000  in  foreign  com- 
merce was  held  up  during  the 
walkout. 


Stalinism   Stages   Comeback 
At  Bolshevik  Anniversary 


The  University  must  serve  not  only  as  the 
repositoi-y  and  guardian  for  discovered  knowledge, 
but  it  must  in  addition  insist  on  the  extension  of 
the  known  boundaries  of  knowledge  by  a  relentless 
search  for  truth.  It  must  be  independent  of  politics, 
fcr  the  search  for  truth  and  the  practice  of  politics 
have  little  in  common  if  one  accepts  the  usually 
understood  definition  of  a  politician  as  one  who 
would  circumvent  the  will  of  God.  I  would  think  it 
advisable  for  a  university  to  h^ve  on  its  faculty 
members  representing  as  niany  respectable .  yiew- 
p  >ints  as  possible. 

The  mere?  fact  that  one  is  a  professor  does 
not.  however,  remove  him  from  the  inexorable 
lest.*?  of  integrity,  competence  and  citizenship.  A 
physician  who  loses  his  skill,  a  lawyer  who  sur- 
renders his  intellectual  integrity,  a  business  man 
who  invests  in  Uic  wrong  .stocks,  all  pay  certain 
penalties.    A    university    professor,    like    it    or    not. 


for  valuable  service,  although  they  are  not  execu- 
tives.   They   serve    practical   ajid    useful   purposes, 
particularly    in    conveying    to   the    full    Board   of. 
Trustees  in  their  annual  reports  the  views  of  the 
Faculty  and  students. 

It  is  highly  essential  that  the  Trustees  refrain 
from  any  attitude  which  has  the  appearance  of 
spying  or  methods  which  smack  of  intimidation. 
Even  the  threat  of  3uch  would  play  havoc  with  aca- 
d3mic  freedom.  If  such  should  happen  it  would 
pr;  perly  be  resented  by  the  Faculty.  Some  mem- 
bers under  these  circumstances  would  be  tempted 
to  seek  freer  fields.  For  others  the  stimulation  of 
adventurous  thinking  would  vanish.  References  to 
important  present  day  movements  would  become 
sterile  and  innocuous;  many  avenues  of  inspired 
thinking  would  be  closed;  teachers  who  should  beckon 
pupils  to  foll3-w  them  through 'the  portals  of  wisdom 
to  new  vistas  of  inspired  learning  would  halt  at  the 
threshhold  content  to  point  cut  timidly  a  safe  and 
uninspired    way.    The    student,    the    State    and  the 


is  jud^d  by  his  integrit>-  and  his  professional  com-  .    University  would  be  the  sufferers  thereby.  I  pray 


//; 


Paul  Wohl 

riic   (Jni.slian 
Monitor 


S(  iriK  (' 


Editor 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL  WEEK  IN  REVIEW 

CKARUE  StOAN 


Stalinism  made  a  comeback  at 
this  year's  anniversary  celebra- 
ticm  of  the  Bolshevik  revolution 
— a  rejuvenated,  streamlined  Sta- 
linism, shorn  of  theoretical  verb- 
iage, hardhitting,  practical,  tri- 
umphant" the  Stalinism  of  effic- 
iency engineers  and  managers. 

Its  spokesman  was  one  of  the 
youngest  party  presidium  mem- 
lov,  who,  according  to  Yugoslav 
bers.  Mikhail  Andreycvich  Su.s- 
diplomatic  sources,  has  emerged 
as  Stalinism's  major  wire  puller 
in  the  Kremlin's  inner  circle. 

The  record  of  Mr.  Suslov's 
recent  activities  confirms  this 
view.  Wherever  a  Communist 
Party  has  restored  Stalinist  shib- 
boleths, Mr.  Suslov  has  shown  his 
hand.  It  was  he  who  mastermind- 
ed the  recent  congress  of  the 
French  Communist  party,  who 
backed  Erno  Gero  as  successor 
of  Hungary's  Matyas  Rakosi.  put 
Janos  Kadar  into  the  saddle,  and 
strengthened  Eiast  German  party 
chief  Walter  Ulbricht. 

Mr.  Su&lov's  keynote  speech 
of  Nov.  6  was  remarkable  in 
fhree  respects: 

1.  Kenceforlh  every  socialist 
revolution  has  to   abide   by  four 

"laws,"  he  said.  This  means  thai 
the  much  broader  resolution  oi 
the  20th  party  congress  which 
made  allowance  for  intermediary 
forms  of  socialism  and  various 
transitional  phases  has  been  shel- 
ved. 

2.  Heavy  industry,  especially 
the  basic  industries  of  military 
orclnaace,  (K>ntinues  to  advance 
in  leap^  and  bounds. 

3.  Stalin's  leading  role  in  the 
revolution,    in   the    "building    of 

^socialism  and  in  the  struggle  with 
the  enemies  of  the  working  clas^■■ 
was  highlighted.  iHe  was  praised 
as  a  mighty  organizer  and  Marx 
ist.  "Serious  mistakes  "  resulting 
from  his  personality  cult  were 
mentioned  in  passing. 

FOUR  PREREQUISITES 

The  four  essential  prerequisites 
of  any  successful  socialist  revolu- 
tion, according  to  Mr.  Suslov,  are: 
(a)  "establishment  of  the  politi- 


cal power  of  the  working  class 
headed  by  its  leading  section" — 
the  Stalinist  formula  for  a  Com- 
muni.si-controllcd  parly;  (b)  "all- 
round  strengthening  of  the  union 
of  the  working  class,  the  peasants 
and  other  toilcy-s,"  in  other  words 
a  Soviet  system;  (c)  "liquidation 
01  capitalist  ownership  of  indus- 
try, l.anks.  transport  and  com- 
munications, public  ownership  of 
basic  nicans  of  production,  and  a 
planned  economy ';  and  (d)  "de- 
termined defftnse  of  the  conquests 
of  the  socialist  revolution  against 
the  former  ruling  class  of  ex- 
ploiters, which  in  this  context 
means  the  setting  up  of  Com- 
munist-indoctrinated security  for- 
ces. 

These  tour  prerequisites,  said 
Mr.  Suslov.  resulted  from  the 
historical  experience  of  the  So- 
viet revolution.  They  are.  accord- 
ing to  Lenin,  and  as  quoted  by 
the  speaker,  "of  international  sig- 
nificance."' In  other  words,  unless 
four  conditions  aer  fulfilled,  no 
revolutionary  regime  can  claim 
to  be  accepted  as  an  equal,  ho 
argued. 

The  Kremlin  is  thus  held  up 
as  supreme  arbiter  of  socialist 
aspirations  anywhere  in  the 
world. 

In  the  face  of  Mr.  Suslov's 
four  "common  features  and  laws 
of  victory  of  socialist  revolution 
and  of  the  setting  up  of  a  new- 
society  based  on  socialist  princi- 
ples," most  of  the  Asian  coun- 
tries which  Moscow  sought  to 
draw  into  its  orbit,  could  not 
qualify  as  "socialist." 

LOOK  TOWARD  EUROPE 

Practically,  this     maf     not    be 
very  important  because  Commun- 
i.-Jts,   if  they   want   to   go    into   a 
movement,  know  how  to  construe 
a  theory  to  justify  any  exception 
from  a  pjle.  It  is  significant,  how- 
ever, tor  the  thinking  of  the  men 
around  Mr.  Suslov  who  seem  to 
look   more    toward    Europe    and 
North  America  than  toward  Asia. 
Like  the  late  Andrei  A.  Zhdanov, 
imder  whom  he  started  his  career. 
Mr.   Suslov   never  showed   much 
interest  in  Far  Eastern  affairs. 
JHis  Veferences    to    Communist 
China     were     perfunctory.     The 
most  he  had  to  say  was  that  "in 
the  next  five-year  plan  China  will 


become  a  great  industrial  power. " 
The  theme  of  Communist  Party 
Chief  Nikita  S..  Khrushchev's  and 
Foreign  .Minister  Dmitri  T.  Shepi- 
lov's  speeches  about  the  need  for 
the  Soviefs  "to  merge  with  Chi- 
nese, Intfians,  Persians  and  Egyp- 
tians" was  noticeably  absent  from 
this  year's  anniversary  address. 

Us  mood  was  one  of  almost 
complacelHMlatisfaction  with  the 
Soviet  Union's  domestic  achieve- 
ments during  the  past  three  years. 
Steel,  oil,  and  power  production 
were  progressing  at  the  same 
rate  as  during  the  past  three 
years,  which  represents  a  remark- 
able speed-up,  since  aitniial  per- 
centage increases  lend  to  decline 
as  production  expands,  ^viet 
steel  output  at  the  current  rate  of 
49.000,000  metric  tons  already 
comes  to  half  of  the  United 
States  steel  capacity  of  roughly 


prtence  as  demonstrated  in  his  research  and  in  his 
teaching.  • 

In  the  enjoyment  and  exerciss  of  academic  free- 
dom it  is  inevitable  that  at  lime.s  you  will  col- 
lid?  with  established  and  orthodox  beliefs.  Your 
views  may  conceivably  be  offensive  to  others.  They 
may  (Conceivably  be  wrong.  But  right  or  wrong  you 
have  the  r  ght  and  sometimes  the  obligation  to 
formulate  and  express  your  conscientious  beliefs 
so  long  as  they  are  not  immoral  or  illegal.  These 
beliefs  may  be  offensive  to  me  as  a  Trustee,  but 
I  would  be  derelict  in  my  duty  if  1  failed  to  pro- 
tect to  the  fullest  .your  rights  under  Academic 
Freedom.  It  may  be  an  unpalatable  task  to  rescue 
som?  academic  exhibitionist  who  has  chosen  to 
float  upstream,  but  it  must  be  remembered  that 
Gallileo.  Sir  Isaac  Newton,  Roger  Bacon,  the  Naza- 
rene  of  the  lirs-t  century,  and  a  now  respectable 
host  of  others  were  at  one  time  branded  as  heretics. 

The  Trustees  as  an  evidence  of  their  interest 
in  the  University  have  appointed  visiting  commit- 
tees who.se  duty  it  is  to  visit  the  campuses  of  the 
three  institutions  at  least  once  each  calendar  year 
t)  survey  and  study  the  needs  and  problems  of 
each  institution.  They  are  charged  with  devoting 
special  attention  to  such  matters  as  the  improve- 
ment and  expansion  of  the  physical  plant,  financial 


105,000.000  metric  tons  as  of  Jan.  g requirements,  and  faculty  and  student  needs.  These 
1.  committees,    in    my    judgment,    have    opportunities 


Pogo 


that  nothing  of  this  kind  will  happen  at  the  Uni- 
versity of  North  Carolina,  and  as  a  Trust:-*  it  is 
one  of  my  responsibilities  to  see  that  it  does  not 
happen. 

I  have  reserved  for  my  last  item  some  analysis 
of  the  Ti'usteo's  responsibilities  to  the  Slate  it- 
self. This  is  frequently  a  joint  responsibility  of  both- 
the  Faculty  and  the  Trustees.  To  use  a  very  trite  ex- 
pression, this  responsibility  is  to  promote  the  aims 
and  welfare  of  the  University.  However,  an  ana- 
lysis of  these  aims  necessitates  some  clear  under- 
standing of  what  we  expect  our  University  to  be. 

The  University  of  North  Carolina  has  long  been 
rocognlzed  as  the  capstone  of  the  State's  educa- 
tional system.  It  was  conceived  as  such  by  the 
statesmen  who  drafted  our  Constitution.  It  has  oc- 
cupied this  position  since  the  Chapel  Hill  branch 
was  first  started  in  1793.  Since  that  time  the  Slate 
has  authorized  many  other  state  supported  col- 
leges and  institutions  of  higher  learning,  but  there 
has  never  been  any  question  that  the  University  c{ 
North  Carolina  as  now  consolidated  stands  as  the 
head  of  the  State's  public  educational  system.  The 
University  should  net  remain  content  to  qualify 
fcr  this  position  as  a  matter  of  statutory  law.  It 
must  in  every  sense  of  the  word  justify  this  posi- 
tion of  leadership.  This  ju.stification  must  rest  up- 
on excellence  in  teaching,  superiority  in  scholar- 
ship and  the  best  in  research. 

.• 

By  Wait  Kelly 


vvg^u,  P^*A5S,RC\'T  EITHee 


IV\  Abn«r 


YOU  PUQPtH      j  tH&H^H, 

\  CHiwy.' 


By  Al  Capp 


SJJN< 

N 
R. 


Rot 
'Best 
c;ame 
previo] 
mancej 

Spjoi 
nectioi 
Mr.  S« 
in  Dar 
some 
He's  al 
and  St] 
ed  Ijc 
add  t< 
atrical] 

Accc 
TEP 
answei 
motior 
ed  in. 
plea.si 
in  the  I 
Arm*."! 
the  pj 

Jon 
Tall 

A  fc 
will  SI 
Union 
p.m.  tc 

Miss  I 
allah, 
effect 
people 

She  il 

in  JortI 
fective 

A  sp^ 
dent  Ue 

all  stu{ 
to  find  I 
ing  in 
ly   thos 
dominal 


lER  2.   1956 


^NOAY,   DECEMBER  2,   1956 


TH^  pAItT  TAR  HEEL 


P4kGE  THfteC 


lews  Lead'et,.^ 


om 


not  execu- 
lul    purposes,  - 
Board    of . 
•ierw's  of  the 

stees  refrain 
kpearance  of 
I  intimidation. 
^oc  with  aca- 

m   it  would 

Some  raem- 

be  tempted 

|imulation  of 

^jferences  to 

>uld  become 
of  inspired 
khould  becion 
lis  of  wisdom 
Id  halt  at  the 
|\°  a  safe  and 

]te   and  the 

^reby.  I  pray 

at  the  Uni- 

rrust:>e  it  is 
it  does  not 

>me  analysis 

le   State    it- 

aility  of  both- 

lery  trite  ex- 

lote  the  aims 

Iver,  an  ana- 

1  clear  under- 

?ity  to  be. 

las  long  been 

Itate's  educa- 

Isuch    by  the 

]n.  It  has  oc- 

Hill  branch 

Ime  the  State 

)p  ported    col- 

ig.  but  there 

luniversity  of 

Vands  as  the 

system.  The 

[it    to    qualify 

jtory   law.  It 

|ify  this  posi- 

lust  rest  up- 

k-   in   scholar- 


Kelly 


Al  Capp 


lE'S  A 

T 

IRAOG 

rr 

HAT 

KOVES 

) 

m  t^fi  mm^  Ret^^f  n  TVI  ve^^^g^,  w^^ 
Roles  And  Movies,  Says  Strauss 


By   HIL   GOLDMAN 

Robert  Strauss,  a  trouper  in  the. 
'Best  of  Steinbeck"  road  company, 
came  to  Chapel  Hill  a  few  di^a 
previous  to  the  group's  pctiorr 
mance  last  night. 

Sporting  a  heavy  beard  in  con- 
nection with  the  roles  he  plays. 
Mr.  Strauss  could  t)e  seen  eating 
m  Danziger's  or  just  chatting  with 
some  of  the  students  in  Harry's. 
He's  a  big  man — over  six  feet  tall 
and  stockily  built.  His  distinguish- 
ed iMk  asd  well  trained  voioe 
add  to  an  already  distinctive  ths 
atrical  appearance. 

Accepting  an  invitation  lo  the 
TEP  house,  Mr.  Strauss  eagerly 
answered  questions  concerning,  the 
motion  pictures  and  plays  he's  act- 
ed in.  He  confessed,  "It  was  a 
pleasure  working  with  Kim  Novak 
in  the  film  'Man  Wi^  a  Golden 
Arm'."  The  actor  also  portrayed 
the  part  of  "Animal"  in  "Stalag 

Jordan  Student  Will 
Talk  To  BSU  Tonight 


17"    in    both    the    Broadway 
Hollywood  productions. 

"I  have  done  seme  television 
work,  and  there  actually  isn't  ni^di 
difference  in  difficulty  between 
that  medium  and  movies.  It's  |ust 
a  matter  of  personal  choice." 

Someone  asked  whether  during 
movie  'takes'  the  stars^  read  their 
lines  off  cue  cards.  Mr.  Strausft^ 
answer  was  an  emphatic  "No!  You 
come  to  the  studio  prepared  for 
that  day's  shooting."  Continuing, 
he  said  that  movie  stars  ^e  still 
being  discovered,  and  dO'  not 
necessarily  come  out  cf  dramatic 
schools.  Mr;  Strauss  is  not  luder 
contract  for  any  particular  studio^ 
but  free  lances  all  his  pictures* 
lUght  new,  he  has  no  immediate 
plans  for  another  picture. 


and   tor    willingly    posed    for    various 
L  "candid"  shots. 


Math  Graduate  Student 
Receives  $300  Award 


A  graduate  student  in  the  De- 
partment of  Mathematics  has  re- 
ceived a  $300  award  for  an  out« 
'  standing  contribution  which  led 
to  the  solution  of  a  theoretical 
problem  met  in  pr3paring  tables 
to  facilitate  practical  applications 
of  the  mathematical  theory  of  ex-i  the 
periment  design.  j  three   years   ago    when   East   Ger- 

He  is  Robert  p.  Burton,  who  was    mans  by  the  millions  demonstrated 
a  mathematician  with  the  Nation-'j  against    the    Bed    masters.    Tlie 
,il  Buiesu   cf  Standards     in     the .  demonstration  was  crushed  by  So- 
Statistital  Engineering  Laboratory;  viet  tanks. 
I  I'clil  he  entered  UNC  this  yfear.   |      But.  said  De  Luco,  "it  was  a  pow- 
I      Officials  of  the  National  Bureau  \  erful  revolt  in  a  moral  and  spirit- 
work 


.\  veteran  foreign  correspond- 
ent said  Saturday,  "I  believe  we 
are  witnessing  a  crumbling  of  the 
foundations  of  the  Soviet  empire 
in  Europe  and  that  in  the  end  not 
even  the  martyrdom  of  Hungary 
will-havebeen -in  vain." 

Dan  De  Luce.  Associated  Pre^s 
general  executive  and  AP  corres- 
pondent in  Europe  ior  17  years, 
said  this  yesterday  in  a  talk  to  the 
North  Carolina  Associated  Press 
News  Council  here. 

De  Luce,  whose     first    foreign 

assignment  was   in  Budapest,  said 

he   thought  the   ''first  turning  of 

Red  tide  came"  in  Germany 


He  added  'It  folded  until  an- 
other day — i  day  the  Soviets  have 
cause  to  feer." 

De  Luce  raid  the  Russians  had 
considered  their  satellites  as  "a 
security  belt"  against  attack  and  a 
"reliable  springboard  for  aggress- 
ion against  the  West,"  but  "this 
is  an  illusion." 

He  said  he  thought  in  the  end 
Hungarians  will  win  for  them- 
selves "some  form  of  home  rule" 
or  gain  a  status  similar  to  that 
Finland   has   won   for  itself. 


(Covering  The  Universify  Campus 


At  the  boys'  prompting,  the  ac-    of  Standards  said   Burton's  work  •  ual  sense.' 

— ^ [  was  far  above  requirement  while ;  

he  was  employed  with  them.  Be- 
fore leaving  NBS.  Burton  collab- 
oratted  with  Prof.  R.  C.  Bose  of 
UNC  in  the  preparation  of  a  joint 
paper  giving  full  details  of  the 
new  approach  and  a  number  of  im- 


_• 


207  Freshmen 
Talfe  CU  Tests 


GREENSBORO,   UPi  —  Admission 
A  foreign  student  from  Jordan  |  tests  were  given  to  207  prospective '  portanV  extensions  in  the  field  of 


will  speak  to  the  Baptist  Student 
Union  at  their  supp«F  forum  at  6 
p.m.  today. 

Miss  Laila  Khurey  from  Ram- 
allah,  Jordan,  will  speak  on  the 
effect  of  the  Suez  Crisis  •  on  her 
people  and  country. 

She  is  familiar  with  Baptist  work 
in  Jordan  and  will  tell  how  ef-, 
fective  this  work  has  been. 

A  spokesman  of  the  Baptist  Stu- 
dent Union  said,  *  !t  should  interest 
all  students,  especially  Baptists. 
to  find  out  how  Baptists  are  work- 
ing in  foreign  coim tries,  especial- 
ly those  so  close  to  communist- 
dominated  countries.'' 


freshmen  planning  to  enter  one  of  experiment  design.  Dr 
the  three  branches  of  the  Univers-  fessor  of  statistics,  is 
ity  of  North  Carolina  when  rep- 
resentatives of  the  UNC  Testing 
Bureau  appeared  at  Women's  Col 
lege  yesterday. 


The  big  game  room  of  Elliott 
Hall  had  an  unfamiliar  academic 
roie  to  fill  when  the  morning  and 
afternoon  five-hour  examination 
kept  the  high  school  seniors  glued 
to  their  test  sheets  and  folders. 

During  the  day  the  state-wide 
tests  wers  conducted  in  11  other 
center.<i,  and  on  Dec.  13  additional 
tests  will  be  given  ior  studeBta  in 
other  areas. 


By  appoinlment  purteyors  of  soip  to  the  tote  King  Gwrg*  VI,  Vartley  a  Co,  ltd,  UrtOB 


Bose.  pro- 
a  summer 


consultant  with  N^S. 


5th  Art  Auction 
Begins  Thurs. 

Over  100  paintings,  drawings, 
prints  and  ceramic  and  sculptured 
works  will  go  to  the  highest  bid- 
der whem  the  5th  annual  Art 
Auction  sponsored  by  the  Student 
Publications  of  the  N.  C.  State  Col- 
lege School  of  Design  gets  under- 
way at  8  pjn.,  Thursday.  Dec.  6,  in 
Raleigh. 

Roy  Gussow,  professor  of  design 
at  the  college  and  well-known 
throughout  the  state  for  his  sculp- 
tors in  metal,  will  act  as  auction- 
er  during  the  sale  ip  the  College 
Union  ballroom. 

All  works  were  contributed  for 
auction  by  School  of  Design  stu- 
dents. eX'Students  and  instructors, 
and  by  amateur  and  professional 
artists  In  this  area.  Proceeds  from 
'the  sale  will  'be  used  to  finance' 
the  School  of  Design's  Student 
Publications,  a  non-profit  magaHine 
distributed  both  here  and  abroad, 
which  features  literary  and  pic- 
torial contributions  by  some  of 
the  world's  most  renown  artists. 

Works  range  from  the  contem- 
porary to  the  traditional,  from  the 
many  sizes,  shapes  and  styles  of 
realistic  to  the  surrealistic,  in  as 
art  as  there  are  contributors  to 
the  sale.  ' 

The  auction,  open  to  the  pub- 
lic, has  no  admission  charge.  Co- 
chairmen  for  this  year's  sale  are 
Jimmy  Klutz  and  Wayne  TaylOT, 
both  School  of  Design  students. 


TtDO  tciii  "^Itojf  and  giri,  tod- 
dling toward  arboretunu  Mother 
around  comer  of  btuUkfug, 
searching  despercBtely. 

Coed  eating  tioo  servings  of 
potatoes,  three  slices  of  bread, 
tioo  desserts,  plus  cfther  vitals, 
then  cionvplaimng  she  just  can't 
lose  u-^hL  '. 

Hounddog,  pernaps  campaign^ 
ing  for  the  Oscar  of  the  year 
among  canines,  the  "Fido"  cwp 
tertaining  Tar  Hebls  in  the  li- 
brary with  some  of  his  many 
tricks. 

Coed  on  rtadiig  headlines 
"Ed  Sutton  Is  Found  'Dead,'" 
grasping  ir,  horror  "Oh,  No.'" 
before  reading  further  to  dis- 
cover the  words  "Mock  Trial." 


Dr.  Smith  to  Sp^ak 
At  Physics  Colloquium 

Dr.  Walter  L.  Smith  of  the  Dept. 
of  Statistics  will  ^>eak  on  "The 
Cumulants  of  Renewal  Processes" 
at  the  Statistics  Colloquium  Dec. 
3  at  4  p.m.  The  meeting  will  be  in 
206  PMIIIfys  HBflr  und  Is  o'pi?f»M5^*9lstruct 
the  public.    ^^  ,  .\  . 

"Bhe  speaker  will  cover  the  year- 
to-year  fluctuations  of  the  cost  of 
renfewal  processes  and  the  pre- 
dictability of  sych  fluctuations. 

Dr.  Smith  recently  resigned  from 
the,  UNC  faculty  to  accept  a  posi- 
tion as  lecturer  in  mathematics, 
attached  to  the  Statistical  Labora- 
tory, at  the  University  of  Cam- 
bridge in  England. 

Dr.  Smith,  a  graduate  of  Cam- 
bridge, holds  degrees  of  B.A.,  M.A. 
and  Ph.D.  in  statistics.  He  came 
to  Chapel  Hill  in  September*  1954. 
He  teaches  advanced  probability 
and  statistics. 


Bunting  Is 
Fraternity 
Speaker 

At  the  monthly  diuier  meeting 
of  the  Alpha  Lambda  Chapter  of 
Delta  Sigma  Pi,  international  pro- 
fessional business  fraternity,  Rob- 
ert L.  Bunting,  assistant  professor 
of  economies'  was  the  guest  speak- 
er. 

Bunting's  topic  for  the  evening 
was  "The  Criticisms  of  the  Free 
Enterprise  System".  He  pointed 
out  tliree  distinct  groups  of  sueh 
critics.  The  first  gr6up  were  those 
from  the  far  left  who  say  the  sys- 
tem is  good  but  that  it  just  do^- 
n't  work,  ] 

He  said  that  if  these  critics  are  I 
pressed  for  an  alternative  system  I 
that  they  couldn't  come  up  with  a  ; 
better  system.  The  systems  that : 
they  would  have  to  resort  to  are ' 
so  far  fetched  and  undesirable  that ' 
consideration  of  such  is  out  of  • 
question.  He  said  that  this  group  | 
was  wrong  when  they  say  that  the  j 
system  does  not  work  —  "it  has  | 
worked,  it  is  working  better  today, ' 
and  from  all  indications  it  will 
work  even  better  in  the  future".      \ 

The  second  group  of  critics  were  | 
called  those  that  were  friendly 
to  the  system.  They  say  that  the 
system  is  good  bat  we  have  to  have 
farm  price  supports,  high  tariffs, 
strong  unions,  and  guaranteed 
wages.  He  said  that  this  group 
wasn't  friendly  at  all,  rather  they 
are  dangerious  for  they  reflect  | 
in   the   system.  j 

Bunting  labeled  the  third  group  | 
as  those  who  consider  the  free  i 
enterprise  system  as  immoral. ; 
These  people  contend  that  such  j 
a  system  puts  great  stress  and ; 
premium  on  self  interest  Bunting  i 
contended  that  this  was  not  im- 1 
moral  but  rather  desirable.  You  j 
can    g<*t    ahead    only    if    you    are ; 


SOCCER  PICTURES 

Yack  pictures  will  be  made  of 
all  varsity  soccer  pliyers  at  4  pjn. 
Tuesday  on  the  Soccer  team.  Team 
officials  said  it  was  important  that 
everyone  be  present. 
COSMOPOLITAN  CLUB 

The  Cosmopolitan  Club  meets  to- 
day at  4  p.m.  in  the  Librar>-  assem- 
bly room.  A  discu-ssion  of  the  peo- 
ples and  land  of  Korea  will  be 
given  'oy  the  following:  Dr.  and 
Mrs.  A.  C.  Howell,  Dr.  Donald 
Kent,  Dr.  Inhyun  Song,  Kee  Chung 
Yoo,  .Tea  Min  La,  and  Miss  Yooa 
Tuk  Kim.  Dr.  Howell  will  show 
color  slides  and  the  others  will 
'.iemonstrate  various  aspects  of 
Korean  life  and  discuss  the  pro- 
blems in  Korea  today.  Refresh- 
ments will  be  served. 
WOMEN'S  SWIMMING 

Entries  for  the  Women's  Athletic 
Assn.  swimming  meet   are  due  in 
the    Women's    Gjm    by    Monday, 
WAA  officials  said. 
WAA  COUNCIL 

The    Women's   Athletic   Council 
will  meet  Monday  in  Graham  Me- 
morial at  7  p.m.  All  representativ- 
es have  been  urged  to  attend. 
BIRO  CLUB 

The  Chapel  Hill  Bird  Club  will 
sponsor  a  field  trip  Sunday.  Matt 
Thompson  will  direct  the  trip.  All 


thusc  interested  in  going  have  been    BABY  SITTERS 
askeil  to  meet  at  the  Bell  Tower  at       ^  list  of  Chapel  Hill  High  School 
7  p.m.  The  tTip  will  include  a  visit  students  who  may  be  contacted  for 
University  Lake   and   will   end  baby  sitting  services  is  now  avail- 

j  able.  Mrs.  Jane  Price,  home  eco- 

I  nomics  teacher,  has  announced  that 

of   the   the  list  may  be  picked  up  at  the 


to  University  Lake   and 
at  9  a.m. 
WESTMINSTER 

Westminster  Felloe-ship 
Presbyterian  Church  will  meet  Sun- 
day at  6  p.m.  for  supper  in  the  hut 
on  Rosemary  St.  Marvin  Singleton 
cf  the  American  Humanist  Assn. 
will  deliver  a  talk,  "Who  is  Su- 
preme —  God  or  Man?" 
RECEPTION  COMMITTEE 

The     Reception     Committee     of 


high  school  home  economics  cot- 
tage on  Dec.  3  from  3:45-4:45  p.m. 
or  from  7:30-8:30  p.m. 

BAND  PICTURES 

*  All  band  members  have  been  re- 
quested to  report  to  Hill  Hall  Tues- 
day at  4:30  p.m.  to  have  their  pic- 


Graham  Memorial  Activities  Board  ^"^^^  taken  for  the  Yack.  Uniforms 

•nust  be  worni.^ficials  of  the  band 
-:aid. 


will  meet  at  4:30  p.m.  Wednesday 
m  the  Woodhouse  Conference 
Room  of  Graham  Memorial.  The 
committee  has  invited  anyone  in- 
lerested  in  working  on  the  com- 
mittee to  attend  the  meeting. 
WOMEN  VOTERS 

A  general  meeting  of  the  Chapel 
Hill  League  of  Women  Voters  will 
be  held  at  8  p.m.  Monday  in  the 
assembly  room  of  the  Library.  The 
general  public  has  been  invited. 
JAZZ  RECORDS 

Jazz  recor(fs  will  be  in  the  main 
^ounge  of  Graham  Memorial  Monday 
from  7-9  p.m.  The  program  will 
feature  newly-released  jazz  records 
which  are  now  going  on  sale  at 
local  music  stores. 


STUDENTS! 


51 


AWEEK 

Nothing  Down 

NOTHING  TO  PAY 
UNTIL  FEBRUARY 


/^^^  7^  FIN  EST- 


STATE   EMPLOYES 

A  meeting  of  the  Statt  Employes 
\ssn.  will  be  held  Tuesday  at  7:30 
p.m.  in  Gerrard  Hall.  Dr.  Recce 
3erryhill,  dean  of  the  UNC  School 
of  Medicine,  and  North  Carolina 
Secretary  of  State  Thad  Eure  will 
be  guest  speakers. 


PATRONIZE  YOUR 
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New!  YardAey  SHovver  Shompoo 

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.     •  lathers  luxuriously,  rinses  quickly 

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Lion,  by  William  Pene  Du  Bois. 
A  vtry  charming  picture  story,  but 
it's  in'  the  "ask  grindpa  for  that" 
class.  $9.00- 

The  Fairy  Doll,  by  Rumer  Godd«n. 
A  distinguished  author  of  adnlt. 
book*  writes  a  delicate  and  lovely 
story  for  little  girli  $2.50 

The  Wondorful  World  of  Aixhoe- 
olojiy,  by  Ronald  ^  Jessup.  Color 
paintings,     diagrams     and     maps 


make  gay  decorations  for  this  au- 
th«?ntic  book  for  junior  adven- 
tures. $3.95 


Fraternity 
Wives  Form 
Organization 


The  wives  of  the  members  of 
the  Alpha.  Lambda  Chapter  of 
Delta  Sigma  Pi,  international  pro- 
fessional 1>U8iness  fraternity,  met 
last  week  to  form  a  group  to  be 
knowa  t^  the  Delta  Sigetts. 

The   group  was  called  together 

under  the  able  leadership  of  Mrs. 

Tho  Grott  Locomotive  Chaw  Walt    Alice    Spencer,    a    member    of    a 

Disney's   colorful   version    of   the    similar  group  last  year. 

Civil  War's  most  daring  exploit.-j     The  Delta  Sigetts  will  work  in 

'     -  -      •    -$t;0O   coordination  with  the  fraternity's 

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readl^rs  by  Felix  Sutton,  and  illus- 
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social.  Immediate  plans  adopted 
at  the  meeting  consisted  of  the  as- 
sumption of  the  stuffing  of  the 
Ghriitmas  stockings  to  be  given 
out  sat  the  fraternity's  annual  or- 
phanage party,  assumption  of  the 
responsibility  of  adding  "the  wo- 
man's touch"  to  the  fraternity 
hause,  and  plans  for  a  small  Christ- 
mas^ party  for  the  brothers.  Plans 
fot^  th^  election  of  officers  will 
be  discussed  in  the  near  future. 

■Thosa  originating  the  first  meet- 
ing <jf  the  Delta  Sigetts  were  Mrs. 
Alice  Spencer,  Mrs.  Ann  Patter- 
son, Mrs.  Ann  Kaminski  and  Mrs. 
Diana  Lasley. 


aDvtinng  <  iui  liapp-'ti  whtn  you  wertr 

On?  iH'  (^»>ft'ay'^^  f,ro»>  j>r>1tit"'j»         *  «.i?*girt^  nmlJht>i>d  f*^ 
knig^tJiorwj  .  , .  chi^'llcjtging  *t.^jon  ^hnctt 


FAME 


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CARDS  AND  GIFTS 

For 

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OFFICE  SUPPLIES        0   UNC  ANIMALS  O   PENNANTS 

THE  UNUSUAL  AND  THE  EXCITtfijG 

LEDBETTiER^RIjCKARA 


PEN  &  PENCIL  SETS 


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fts^v 


PAGi  FOUR 


THt  DAILY  TA»  HEEL 


SUNDAY,  DECEMBER  2,  1»5« 


Tar  Heels  Debut  With  84-70  Win  Over  McCrary  Eagles 


Jackson  Is  Top  Contender 
For  Heavyweight  Title 


CHICAGO  —  Uft  —  New  heavy- 
weight champion  Floyd  Patterson's 
first  title  defense  probably  will  be 
against  Hurricane  Jackson,  but 
Floyd's  manago*  certainly  would 
like  Rocky  Marciano  to  try  a  come- 
back against  his  21-year-old  suc- 
cessor. 

At  Toronto,  however,  Marciano 
r&id  he  would  not  end  his  retire- 
ment announced  in  ApriL 

Cus  D'Amato,  Patterson's  beam- 
ing pilot,  told  a  news  conference 
yesterday  that  he  was  interested  in 
iny  title  defense  which  would 
bring  the  most  money  at  the  gate. 

That  brought  up  Marciano's 
i.ame  and  D'Amato  quickly  con- 
ceded a  meeting  between  Rocky 
and  Patterson  would  be  the  "most 
desirable  match  that  possibly  could 
be  made." 

"There  is  no  doubt  it  would 
draw  the  biggest  gate  in  the  his- 
tory of  boxing,"  he  said. 


Harry  Markson.  chief  match- 
maker for  the  International  Boxing 
Club,  calculated  such  a  bout  would 
draw  "well  over  a  million  dollars, 
maybe  as  mudi  as  two  million." 

In  the  iwe-TV  era,  the  present 
record  gate  of  $2,658,660  was  set 
at  the  Tunney-Rempsey  fight  in 
Chicago's  Soldier  Field  in  1927. 
How  much  TV-radio  fees  would 
swell  a  Patterson-Marciano  bout 
is  anybody's  guess. 


Rbsenbluth"^ 
Scores  25 
In  Victory 


Officials  Clinic 

Th«  intramural  bask»tM'il  offi- 
cials clinic  wilt  be  hdcf  n«xt 
w—k.  Tha  first  nwating  is  sche- 
duled Monday  aftomoon  at  4 
p.m.  The  othor  two  wifl  ba  en 
Wodnosday  and  Thursday  nights 
•t  7  p.m.  All  tho  meatinvs  will 
b«  in  reent  301 -A  Woollan  Gym. 

Tha  officials  must  attoind  all 
thraa  meetings  to  bo  paid. 


Clemson  Tops  Furman 
To  Wrap  Up  Bowl  Bid 


By  DEL  BOOTH    *  period  from  the  two  after  Furman  i 

had  tied  the  game  with  a  90-yard  | 
first  period  march.  Furman  half- 1 
back  Jackie  Powers  raced  two ' 
yards  for  the  touchdown.  | 

Later  in  the  second  period  Clem-  j 
son  got  its  first  touchdown  of  the  ; 
season   by   passing  with   quarter- 
back Charlie  Bussey  throwing  for  j 
13  yards  to  end  Dalton  Rivers  in 
the  end  zone.  j 

Clemson  got  its  final  touchdown  i 
midway  of  the  fourth  period  on  j 
fullback  Bob  ^>ooner's  two-yard  j 
plunge.  A  few  plays  later  Furman  j 
fumbled  in  its  end  zone  and  Povr  1 
ers  fell  on  the  loose  ball  for  an 
automatic  safety  and  two  more  [ 
I  points  for  Clemson.  j 

I  The  victory  gave  Clemson  an ! 
I  overall  7-1-2  record  and  left  it  4-  j 
I  0-1  in  the  eonferenc& 

A   frustrating  tliird    period   for 

Cldnison  saw  a  clipping  penaTt^',  a 

fumble  and*  a   T5-yard   loss  on   a 

I  pass  try  halt  drives  deep  into  'f\ir* 

!  man  twritory. 

Clemson  to<*  10  plays  to  get  its 

U.  S.  Qlym-  i  first   touchdown.    Wells   gained   8 

and   14   before  taking  a    17-yard 

pass  from   Bussey.   This 


CLEMSON,  S.  C—UR— Clemson 
rolled  to  a  convincing  28-7  football 
victory  over  under-manned  Fur- 
man here  yesterday  in  its  drive 
ior  a  bid  to  meet  Colorado  in  the 
Orange  Bowl. 

The  Atlantic  Coast  Conferwjce 
champions  tried  desperately 
throughout  the  atfemoon  to  run  up 
a  nmch  bigger  score  on  their 
Southern  Conference  opponent. 

All-Conference  halfback  Joel 
Wells  opened  the  scoring  with  a 
15-yard  touchdown  run  ending  a 
70-yard  drive  frwn  the  initial  kick- 
off.  He  scored  again-  in  the  second 

Ofympiii;  Teom 
Race  Will  Go 
Down  To  Wire 

By  TEO  SMITH 

MiXBOUKNE— ^ 
pians,  haAing  dominated  the  track  | 
and  field  phase  of  the  1996  games, !  screened 


ASHEBORO— (/« — Carolina's  Tar 
Heels,  ranked  among  the  top  five 
basketball  teams  in  the  nation  in 
pre-season  predictions,  launched 
their  cage  campaign  here  tonight 
with  an  84-70  victory  over  the  sur- 
prisingly strong  McCrary  Eagles. 
A  standing  room  crowd  of  approx- 
imately 1,500  fans  saw  the  game 
at  JUcCrary  gymnasium. 

The  local  serai-pro  team  stayed 
on  even  terms  with  Carolina  all 
the  way  until  losing  three  of  its 
regulars  via  fouls  in  the  latter 
stages  of  the  game.  The  score  was 
tied  11  times  and  changed  hands 
on  10  occasions. 

Lennie  Rosenbluth,  Carolina's 
AJl-American  forward,  broke  the 
game  wide  open  in  the  final  eight 
minutes  when  he  scored  three 
straight  points  to  hike  the  Tar 
Heels  to  a  66-62  margin.  From 
there  to  the  finish  it  was  a  runa- 
way. ! 

Rosenbluth  topped  the  point 
makers  for  the  night  with  25 
points,  but  was  closely  followed 
by  Sammy  Ranzino,  former  State 
All-Amencan  who  dropped  in  23 
points  for  McCrary,  most  of  them 
coming  on  long  push  shots  from 
the  center  circle. 

Other  top  talliers  were  Pete 
Brennan  with  19  and  Joe  Quigg 
with  15  for  Carolina,  and  Jim  Jor- 
dan with  14  and  Smith  Langdon 
with  13  for  McCrary. 

McCrary  was  crippled  when 
center  Cliff  Dw>'er,  former  State 
star,  Jordan  and  Ralph  Hodges 
fouled  out.  This  left  the  Eagles 
with  only  one  tall  man  in  its  line- 
up, ushering  in  their  downfall.     . 


now  must  look  to  their  swimmers 
and  divers  in  the  final  run  with 
Russia  for  the  saofficial  team 
championship. 

It's  going  to  be  close.  And  the 
Yaiiks  may  not  make  it. 

Despite  a  recwd-smashing  13 
gold  medals  in  men's  track  and 
field,  where  the  Americans  piled 
up  232  points,  Uncle  Sam  entered 
the  last  week  of  Olympic  competi- 
tion with  only  a  463  to  ^OV^  edge 
over  Russia  in  the  point  standings. 

Over-all,  the  United  States  had 


third-down  throw  at  the  Furman 
37  with  13  to  go  was  the  key  play 
in  the  series. 


Tech  Tramples  Georgia; 
Accepts  Gator  Bowl  Bid 

ATHENS,  Ga.  —  (^  —  Georgia 
Tech's  powerful  Engineers  whipped 
Georgia  350  yesterday  and  im- 
mediately voted  to  accept  a  bid  to 
the   Gator  BowL   It  will   be   the 


Vols  Vanquish 
VmiyBy28-t 

,  •  NASHVIIiLE.  ,Tenn.,  M» '  -fr^tle 
Johnny  Majoi's  ran  the  ball-hawk- 
ing Tennessee  Vols  into  a  27  to  7 
victory  over  Vanderbilt  yesterday 
for  their  10th  straight  football  vic- 
tory and  a  bid  to  the  Sugar  BowL 

The  victory  against  a  fired-up 
squad  of  Commodores  gave  Ten- 
nessee the  undisputed  Southeast- 
ern Conference  championship  and 
their  first  perfect  season  since 
1951.  A  sellout  crowd  of  28,000 
saw  the  contest. 

The  Vols,  playing  conservative 
football  most  of  the  way,  took  ad- 
vantage of  breaks  to  score  their 
first  two  touchdowns,  orie  in  the 
first  period  and  another  in  the 
second.         i 

' L 


sixth  Straight  bowl  appearance  for 
oagged  28  gold  medals,  to  18  by  1  i^he  Engineers, 
the  Russians.  But  there  isn't  much  I      Tech  will  play  Pittsburgh  in  the  j 
hope  of  adding  many  more  to  that  {  Jacksonville.   Fla.    game    Dec.    29. 
U.  S.  total  outside  of  the  swimming  I  The    boisterous    acceptan<:e    came 


competition.  i 

Swimming  and  diving  is  the  last  j 
ol  the  "blu^ribbon"  events  in  the 
games.  But  there  are  a  swarm  of| 
fringe    sports  to  be   decided,   in-! 
eluding  gynmastics,  and  the  Rus- 
sians figure  to  make  the  most  of 
it. 

The    main    hope    is    swimming,  [ 
and  the  Yanks  gave  signs  of  hold- 
ing  their   own    against   Australia 
and  Japan  in  today's  ffnals  by  fin- 
ishing one-two  in  the  men's  spring- 
board diving  event  and  adding  ai 
fourth   to  the  gold  medal  in  the  I 
men's  200meter  butterfly. 


n  the  dressing  room  following  the 
lopsided  triumph.  j 

The  victory  was  Tech's  ninth  of  j 
the   season   against   one   setback.  ' 


PATRONIZE  YOUR 
•    ADVERTISERS    • 


DAILY    CROSSWORD 


Help  Fight  TB 


Buy  Christmas  Seals 


CUSSIFIEDS 

FOR  SALE:  1954  NASHUA  HOUSE 
trailer.  3  rooms  with  adjoining 
nursery  or  stMly  room,  and 
screened-in  front  porch.  All 
modern  conveniences.  Ideal  set- 
up for  student  and  wife  with  or 
without  children.  Location: 
Sloan's  Trailer  Park,  IVi  miles 
from  Chapel  Kill  on  Airport 
Road — Maurice  L.  Clegg. 


S05IE0NE   PICKED   UP   WRONG  } 
brown  overcoat  at  N.  C.  Cafeteria 
Thursday,  Nov.   29,  about  noon. 
I  have  theirs.  Call  Albert  Har- 

<    riett,  319  Everett. 


ACROSS 

1.  Competitor 
•.  Pocketbook 

11.  Greek  letter 

12.  Drug 

13.  DtminUh«d 

14.  Contests 
of  speed 

19.  Past 
1«.  Writing 

UMe 
17.  Act  of 
retribution 

20.  Evening 
(poet.) 

23.  Spigot 

24.  Asterisk 
29.  Cart 

2«.  PhlUppine 
island 

29.  River  (Eng.) 

30.  Sailor 
(Brit.) 

31.  Seise 
(slang) 

32.  Baking  dish 
36.  French 

Socialist 

premier 
3S.  Single  unit 
3*.  Anklebone 
41.  CUStOITM 

43.  Catkin 

44.  Skillful 

45.  Outstrips 
4«.  Thrashes 

DOWN 

1.  Mountain 
ash 

2.  Semblance 

3.  Snake  poisoa 

4.  ItfAturc 

5.  Te«inc  \aof 
«.Skm 

e^anUif    ' 
f.  lawaUiM 


9.  (Girl's  name 
10.  Type 

measure* 
19.  Slope 

18.  Boy's  school 
(Kng.) 

19.  River  (Pol.) 

21.  Cistern 

22.  Before 

24.  Withered 

25.  Pale 

26.  Movie 


30.  Head 

covering 
32  Cor. 

rodcs 

33.  Republic 
(A.iU) 

34.  Out  of 
place 

35  Birds- 
homes 

37. and 

Fontanne 


acsna  aaac*] 

uaniia  muiiun 
.^014  aaa     an 


actress  (first  39  Flap 
name)  40  Wood  form 

27.  Eats  for  shaping 
grttOil^  metal 

28.  Escape  obyou 
(slang)  (Archeol.i 


SalarS*)'*  Asawar 

II  Queen 
of 

fair- 
ies 

42.  Poem 


FIRST  TIME  TO  PLAY  IN  N.  C. 


A  Superior  Moive.s.Top  Rating 


TO  IHYJITI  IVl»v 

lYMMOWi' 


...•OWMiUANTTHAT 
MOVIl  PAIIg  WILL  M 
TAtmw  ABOUT  IT 
>OK  iOlil  TlliMI»» 


ASensoHonal  New  Motion  Picture 

"RIFIFr 

•  •  •  means  Trouble! 

Directed  by  JULES  DASSIN 


STARTS  TODAY 

Criterion  theatre    »^.„.v., 

7  PULL  DAYS  DURHAM,   N.  C 


rnt 


HERE  ARE  YOUR  OLD  GOLD 


PUZZLES 


PUZZLE  NO.  19 


CLUE:  Opened  in  1791,  this  is  the  oldest 
Catholic  university  in  the  U.  S.  Among 
its  schools  is  one  for  foreign  service. 


ANSWER. 

NaJiu 

Addreta_ 


CUy. 


.State. 


College 

Hold  UBtU  you  have  completed  all  24  puzzles 


WINA 

WORLD 

TOUR 

FORHWO 

• 
RMrrang* 
ttelfttws. 

iiMch 

pnnlt 

toffonn 

tiMIIMM 

tf  an 

AiMikan 

CoUegter 

Univtriity 

YOU'LL  GO  FOR 
OLD  GOLDS 

Clthfr  RCQULAR,  KING  SIZE  or 
th«  GRCAT  NEW  FILTERS 

Old  Golds  taste  terrific!  The  reason: 
Old  Golds  give  you  the  best 
tobaccos.  Natiire- 
ripened  tobaccos . .  -    ,       . 

so  RICH,    /^>Gft)A 

so  GOLDEN 
BRIGHT!      / 


^:.„IEST  TASTE  YET 

IN  A  FILTER  CIGARETTE 


PUZZLE  NO.  20 


l^il^B 


CLUE:  This  New  England  college  is  not*»d 
for  its  foreign  language  schools.  A  13,000- 
acre  forest  tract  serves  as  a  nnountain 
campus  for  winter  sports  and  outings. 

ANSWER 


Name..^ 
Addren. 
City 


.StaU. 


College 

Hold  until  you  have  oompletad  all  24  puzdw 


PUZZLE  NO.  21 


CLUE:  Opened  in  1876  with  a  bequest 
from  a  Quaker  merchant  of  Baltimore, 
this  university  now  has  one  of  the  largest 
medical  schools  in  the  world. 

ANSWER 


Name 

Addreu. 
City 


State, 


College ________-_^_^— - 

Hold  until  you  hmve  completed  ail  24  puzzlee 


ENTER  NOW!  GET  BACK  PUZZLE8! 

Send  five  cents  for  each  hack  puzzle; 
five  cents  for  a  set  of  rules.  Enclose  a 
self-addressed,  stamped  envelope.  Mail 
to  Tangle  Schools,  P.  O.  Box  9,  Grand 
Central  Annex,  New  York  17,  N.  Y. 


•-  i. ' . 


♦  ■*( 


^^Oaa^^^^'z^zn^ 


heimq^macat 


OR ...  A  SHORT  HISTORY 
or  THE  SHORT  BHaCR 

Once  upMi  a  time  hn  a  far  off  country  caDled  **Y«  Oidk 
Nowe  Yorke/'  a  traveling  Knight  riding  on  a  St. 
Bernard,  knocked  on  a  fanner'a  door  and  aakad  it  h« 
could  stay  the  night. 


"You're  faded,  Mac,"  said  the  farmer  in  his  quaint 
New  England  parlance,  "I  wouldn't  put  a  Knight  out 
on  a  Dog  like  this.  I'll  even  have  my  daughter  rustk: 
us  up  a  pair  of  small  beers." 

Now  if  any  reader  has  the  idea  that  this  is  going  to  be 
one  of  those  funnies  about  the  farmer's  daughter,  he's 
right.  Please  read  on — and  pay  attention.  We  may  ask 
questions  later. 

"Here  are  the  small  beersy  Papa,"  said  Tondelayo. 
stealing  a  shy  glance  at  the  Knight.  She  wasn't  much 
on  looks,  but  on  the  other  hand  she  had  a  figure  like 
a  million  bucks,  all  wrinkled  and  green. 

"A  delicious  brew,"  said  cur  hero,  quafltog  it  in  one 
k>ng  giu-gle,  "could  I  encore  it ...  a  short  small  beer 
perhaps?" 

The  farmer  laughed  uproarioudy  at  the  little  mat  clL 
his  guest. 

"A  ahort,  small  beer,"  he  criad,  "by  George,  someday 
you'll  be  famous  for  that  remark!" 

"You  bore  me.  Dad,"  said  the  traveler.  "The  cat  I 
want  to  meet  is  the  local  talent  that  brewed  this  beer." 

"Why,  I  did,"  said  Tondelayo,  "would  you  like  to  sea 
my  brewery?" 

So  she  took  him  out  to  the  brew  house,  opened  her 
hops  chest  and  out  hopped  her  fairy  godmother,  who 
waggled  her  wonder  stick,  turned  Tondelayo  into  tha 
1708  version  of  Marilyn,  and  then  disappeared  in  a 
doud  of  dyst  with  a  hearty  *'Hi  Ho  Uranium."  TTiere* 
upon  the  traveling  knight  revealed  himself  as  really 
being  the  president  of  the  Brewmeisters  local  805  doing 
a  little  incognito  market  research.  He  was  no  cube,  ao 
he  put  Tondelayo  under  ball  and  chain  contract,  aet 
hfW  up  in  business,  and  togethn  they  founded  one  of 
the  biggest  families  and  breweries  in  New  England,  aa 
well  as  that  noble  institution  "the  abort  beer." 


MOKAl..*  The  quantity  of  the  beer  depends  on  the  tize  of  the 
jJoM.  The  quality  depend*  on  the  brand . . .  and  thaft  a  ttory 
that  alway*  end*  happily  with  Budweiaer  in  hand. 


I 

iA«lft  SffK 

AffHBUSKR-BUSCH,  INC.  •  ST.  LOUIS  •  NSWABK  •  UM  AWO 


-  \'l  ' 


i 
'     1" 


m^i 


W 


^^^^^^mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm 


w  «  e  iiffiMiff 


e« 


WEATHER 

Sunny  and  •  little  warm«r.  Hifh 
t*mperctur«c  24-32. 


artje  Daily  Mat  Heel 


PRESSURE 

ffs  tim«  to  apply  if.  Sae  pa««  2. 


VOL.  LVII,  NO.  60 


Ccimplete  (JP)  Witt  Strviet 


CHAPEL  HILL,  NORTH  CAROLINA,  TUESDAY,  DECEMBER  4,  1956 


Offices   in   Grah/tm   itemorial 


SIX  PAGES  THIS  ISSUE 


Art  Museum  Site 
Suffers  Vandalism 


\ 


The  wave  of  vandalusm  on  cam- 
pus has  spread  to  the  Ackland  Art 
Museum  that  is  b?ing  built  on 
South  Columbia  St.  J.  W.  Camp- 
bell, construction  inspector  for 
the  building  firm,  reports  that 
bricks  have  boon  defaced  and  ter- 
•acotta    p'pe    broken. 


said,  is  not  the  type  of  thing  that 

college  students  do. 
!      The  bricks  that  were  ruined  are 

hand  made  in  Virginia  from  old 
!  wooden  forms  and  their  cost  is 
;  high.  As  for  the  pipe,  it  runs  $8.50 
,  a  section.  The  greatest  expense  is 
I  in   the   la-bor   spent   on  having   to 


Campbell  suspects  the  damage '  correct  the  damage, 
s  the  work  of  three  youths  in !  Campbell  had  nothing  but  the 
own  who  have  been  seen  prowl- ;  highest  praise  for  the  ctfoperatibn 
ng  about  the  project  at  night,  j  that  the  students  have  given  him 
Tar  used  in  waterproofirig  the ,  He  said  that  he  had  loaned  tools 
foundations     was     smeared     o\«r    and  given  sand   to  the  fraternity 


bricks    and    rocks    dropped    onto 
pipe    laid    for    drainage.    This,   he 


men    that    live    nearby    and 
had  worked  with  him  100%. 


thev 


Seminar  Session    < 

Studants  at  tha  United  Nations  Saminar  dlacwss  the  orvanizatien 
•f  tha  UN  and  the  world  situations  with  UN  dclasatas  and  amployeas. 

Russian  UN  Delegation 
Tells  Seminar  Students 
US  Threat  To  Russia 


Want  Ride  Home? 
Use  DTH  Service 


3-Man  Rooms  Out 
At  Semester's  End 

.Men  .siudents  o.aiufK'd  into  {luee-niaii  r«Mmi>  noniiiilly  re- 
.side<i  in  In  two  ^tiidciiis  will  soon  have  ilieir  ti^lji  living;  situ- 
ation  relio\e<l. 

riif  floiisin;4[  Onice  aiinounccd  vesiciday  that  the  six 
ihrec-man  roon)  dormitories  on  eanijjus  will  he  (onxeried 
into  two-man   rcMnn  dorms  at   the  Ijesiimiiij^  >>{  the  second 

semester. 


By   CORTLAND   EDWARDS 

The  Russian  delegation  to  the 
UN  told  Carolina  student?  last 
weekend  why  Russian  tanks  went 
into  Hungary,  why  tbe  USSR  re- 
fused Ike's  'open  skies"  policy, 
why  the  U.  S.  poses  a  bigger  threat 
to  the  Soviet  security  than  the  re- 
verse, and  that  USSR  has  not  sold 
arms 'to  Syria.  , 

Over  23  students  attended  a  Uni- ' 
ted  NatitMis  Semiji«r  in  New  York  • 
City    last 
Saturday. 


planes  and  take  strategic  pictures 
of  all  of  Russian  defenses,  and 
strategic  areas.  Then  they  could 
bomb  every  one." 

Vorontsov  continued  by  saying 
that  if  Ike's  plan  had  included  to- 
tal disarmament  first  then  Russia/ 
would  agree  to  the  "open  skies  ' 
poJky.  It  would  be  foolish  to  con- 
sider it  before  hand. 

The  secretary  also  pointed   out 
Ri^asia 


thM  Ribsja  ieit  XBuch  more  in- 
Tbursdmy,  fifulMy,  and  :  Mctinr  ttm  ^4j^e  V>  *  <jtatM|»c 
UNC  joined     studefets  -  fHe  fTnitoil  4SCS|tei  haa  air  hafinajfi*- 


from  21    other  colleges   and   held 
round  table  discusslooa  with  UN 


pablc  of  canying  atomic  bombers) 
completely  surrounding  the  USSR. 


'iclegations  from  Israel.  Yugoslav-   There  arc  bases  in  England,  Spain. 


la,  the  Zionist  States,  the  Arab 
States,  Britain.  Eg>i>t,  Indonesia, 
India,  PakisUn,  Algeria,  USSR  and 
Thailand. 

The  most  important  delegation 
scmmar  was  chaired  by  the  Third 
Secretary  to  the  Permanent  USSR 
Delegation  to  the  United  Nations, 
Julie  M.  Vorontsov.  He  said,  "Rus- 
sian troops  and  tanks  entered 
nungar>'  at  the  request  of  Hun- 
gary to  help  subdue  the  Fascists 
who  were  attempting  to  overthrow 
the  people's  government." 

He  did  not  define  'Fascists'  but 
instead  he  said  that  it  was  the 
same  definition  that 
used.  He  did  try  to  define  it  by 
>aying  that  America  was  not  a  Fas- 
cist government,  but  Nazi  Germany 
was. 

"Russia  refused  the  open  skies' 
policy  of  President  Eisenhower," 
?ays  Vorontsov,  "because  it  did 
not  include  total  disarmament.  Un- 
der Eisenhower's  plan",  the  U.  S. 
could     send     over     reconaissance 


Algeria,  Alaska,  Japan,  etc.. 

Also,     Vorontsov     added,     "the ' 
newspapers      in      America      carry 
stories  every  day   of  newer     and 
faster  jet  planes  that  arc  capable 
of  bombing  Moscow  in  two  hours ; 
or  less.  Russian  newspapers  never 
carry  stories  that  they  have  planes  ! 
that  arc  capable  of  bombing  Was^h-  j 
ington,  D.  C,   or  New  York  City 
within  a  couple  of  hours."  ! 

He  concluded  the  subject  by  say- 1 
ing  that  if  the  U.  S.   would   give 
Puerto  Rico,  Hawaii,  Virgin  Islands,  j 
land  in  Alaska,  and  land  in  New- ' 
foundland  or  Greenland,     so  that 
Americans  Russia  coiiJd  build  air  bases   and! 
surround  the  U.  S.,  then  Americans  ! 
would  feel  the  same  way  that  the 
Russians  do  now. 

At  the  end  of  the  discussion  Vo- 
rontsov said,  "Russia  has  not  sold 
any  arms  to  Sjria,  and  furthermore 
I  cannot  see  any  reason  why  the 
buying  of  arms  by  any  country 
.c:hould  bo  considered  as  such  an  im- 
moral thing." 


HOW  AR|  YOU  o«Min9  home  ever  the  Christmas  holidays? 
IF   YOU   HAVtN'T  yi^  dacidMl.   and  would   litte   to  rida  with 
somebody  also,  Tho  Daily  Tar  Heel  will  bo  glad  to  help  you. 

STARTING  SATURDAY  ON  Pag4  3,  Jht  Daily  Tar  Haol  will 
run  names  of  studants  who  want  rides  to  various  points  over  tha 
holidays.  There  also  will  bo  a  list  of  students  who  have  cars,  are 

driving,  and  who  want  riders. 

*  •  • 

HERE'S  HOW  YOU  get  your  name  on  the  lists: 
COME    BY  THE  Daily  Tar  Heel's  newsroom,  second   floor  of 
Graham  Memorial,  anytime  between  7  and  A  p.m.,  any  afternoon 
except  Sunday.  Or,  you  can  mail  your  information  to  The  Daily 
Tar  Heel,  Box  10M.  Chapel  Hill. 

♦  •  * 

GIVE  YOUR  NAME,  address,  telephone  number,  and  where 
you  want  to  go  or  where  you're  driving.  Indicate  whether  you 
have  a  car  and  want  riders,  or  have  fa«t  and  want  a  ride. 

THE  SERVICE  IS  free.  It  will  last  as  long  as  there  are  natn— 
en  the  list. 

»  •  • 

ON  SATURDAY  MOKNINO,  or  earlier  if  there  are  aytowgh 
names.  ThA  Qaily  tar  Iteal  will  start  pvMlahIng  tho  list  on  ^age  3. 

Ii4M*>  (M  ^H%  tffm  "^^f  MMI  newerofm  bo«M-o  S.  p.m.  will 
rum  Im  »f»o  WMli^.  jUhr*  ollfHdfl.  TfioeeTtfinlng  In  ifHir  3  p^ttb  ' 
will  run  two  mornings  later. 

NAMif  WILL  Awn  untll  their  owneri  indicata  they  have 
found  thOir  ridOs. 


Ackland  Excavation 

Two  students  survey  progress  in  construction  of  the  new  Ackland 
Art  Museum.  Work  has  been  hampered  by  a  rash  of  vandalism. 

UNC  Student  Killed 
In  Automobile  Wreck 


j      Leslie    Gilliland    Jr.,    a    20-year- 

I  old    junior    at    UNC.    was    killed 

I  early    Monday    morning    when    hi.s 

car  and  a  truck  collided  at  the  in- 

I  tcrsection    of    Highways      54    and 

55.    His   fiancee,   riding   with   him 

was  critically  injured.  I 

Gilliland.  of  Pinehur.st  was  kill- 
I  ed  and  Mis.s  Sandra  Murray  18, 
I  .of  Tarrytown.  N.  H..  was  in.iur?d 
I  iui  the  accident  which  occurred 
\  while  they  were  rcturniiiii  to  Cha- 
•  pel  Hill  from  a  fraternity  dance 
j  at  Raleigh. 

t       Mi-ss  Murray,  who  su.stained  head 


A.  Baxter  .said  that  the  tragedy 
"was  the  result  of  the  truck  not 
.stopi)ing    at    the    intersection." 

Ba.xttM-  explained  that  .some  ve- 
hicle in  an  earlier  wreck  Satur- 
day night  had  knocked  down  the 
.stop  .sign  where  tho  big  truck  drove 
past  '"but  that  there  w;cre  ap 
proacing  signs  intact  which  show- 
ed the  cr  ssing  to  be  a  dangerous 
one." 

Highway  Patrolman  D.  M.  Dy- 
s(-n  quoted  Shahan  as  saying  he 
v. as  driving  at  a  speed  of  about' 45 
miles  per  hour  at  the  time  of  the 
wreck  and  did   not  see  a  stop  sign 


4^inittries.  was  takefi  to  Watts.  .Hosrjj  at  ih«j  interst^gjkiott..^-^ 
'*'*^*rn      •*!/*    »K^n     «f.>na^»i«i['/i  * '  r>»i      -  Before    hort'ached 


Elecfions 
Of  Councils 
Are  Today 

Elections  will  be  held  today  for 
.seats  on  the  Men's  and  Women's 
Honor  Councils  with  the  polls 
being  open  from  8  a.  m.  till  6 
p.  m. 

Two  seats  ■  are  open  on  Men's 
Honor  Council.  Dick  Robinson 
and  Hugh  Patterson  are  running 
for  the  freshman  seat  while  Gary 
Cooper  and  John  Owens  are  com- 
peting   for    the    sophomore    seat. 

On  the  Women's  Honor  Council.  ' 
three  seats  are  to  be  filled.  There  ' 
is  a  runoff  for  the.se  seat.s  between 
Ann  Morgan.  Doris  Peter,  Nan  ' 
Schaeffer.  Cynthia  Segraves.  Sara 
Van  Weyk  and  Kit  Whitehurst.  AH 
candidates  have  been  endorsed  by  • 
the    selections    board.  ' 

There  will  be  one  ballot  box 
in  each  dorm  and  one  box  in  Bat- 
tle-Vance-Pettigrew.  Town  women 
'and '  Town  Men's  I  will  vote  in 
Gerrard  Hall.  Town  Men's  H  in 
the  Scuttlebutt.  Town  Men's  HI 
in  South  Building  and  Town  Men'.s 
IV  in  Victory  Village. 

The  Election.s  Board  has  urged 
that  all  students  vote  in  this  elec 
tion  aifd  especially '  it  has  been 
urged  that  students  vote  in  their 
appointed   districts. 


THE  WHOLE  THING'S  free, 
the  holidays. 


Ifs  an  easy  way  to  get  heme  over 


True  Biir  Returned 
In    Sutton    'Murder' 


Di  To  Talk  Censure 
Of  Nehru,  Menon 


The  Dialectic  Senate  will  debate 
a  bill  regarding  "those  wandering 
troubadours  of  Communist  Ty- 
ranny. Jawalarlal  Nehru  and  V. 
Krishna  Menon"  at  their  meeting 
Tuesday  night  at  8:00  on  the  top 
floor  of  New  West. 

Specifically  the  bill  states,  "it 
(the  Senate)  doth  condemn  Jawal- 
arlal Nehru  and  his  high  priest  of 
perdition,  V.  Krishna  Menon,  for 
their  egotistical  seeking  of  self- 
glory,  and  innumerable  acts  i)f 
moral  turpitude  in  international 
affairs:  H:  Sec.  1.  That  Jawalar- 
lal Nehru  be  granted  no  honors 
public  or  private  on  the  occasion 
of  his  visit  to  the  United  States; 
Sec.  2.  That  Krishna  Menon  on 
the  occasion  of  his  visit  to  the 
University  of  North  Carolina,  be 
declared  persona  noij  grata  to  the 
Senate  of  the  Society." 

The  preface  to  the  bill  states 
'Nehru  has  preached  equality  for 
all  men  in  other  countries  from 
Texas  to  Algeria,  and  has  denied 
minorities  in  India  their  basic 
rights  of  free  speech  and  assembly: 
N:hru  has  denounced  action 
against  insurgents  in  other  coun- 
U'ie^.  and   has  employed   military 


forces  to  crush  minority  groups 
on  the  Indian  sub-continent  who 
seek  the  right  to  choose  their  own 
form  of  government;  Nehru,  yhile 
the  Soviets  were  pouring  fresh 
forces  into  embattled  Hungary,  re 
quested  of  Premier  Bulganin  an 
account  of  the  "'facist  uprising,' 
and  presented  the  Bulganin  ac 
ount  to  the  people  of  India  as  th*t 
"truth;"  India  has  pursued  i 
course  of  "neutrality"  in  favor  ol 
the  Soviet  Union;  V.  Krishna  Me 
non  has  acted  as  the  Lord  Higl 
Propogator  for  all  these  acts  o 
Nehru  self-aggrandizement  in  in 
temational  affairs,  concludes  thi 
bill. 


IN  THE  INFIRMARY 


Students  in  the  Infirmary  yes- 
terday  included: 

Miss  Frances  Plyler  and  Jam*s 
Exvm,  Eugene  Lawrenc*.  Stan- 
ley Garris,  James  Greer,  Robert 
Eason,  John  Adams,  Cecil  Bar- 
rier, Marion  Byrd,  Harrington 
Alexander,  John  Lee.  and  Ron- 
ald Koes. 


The  annual  mock  trial  procicdlng.s 
are  picking  up  steam  as  the  Fri- ; 
day   trial  nears.  ] 

The  "grand  jury"  yesterday  re- 
turned a  true  bill  of  indictment 
charging  Miss  Dickey  Pickerrell 
M  ith  the  "murder"  of  football 
player.  Morehead  scholar  Ed  Sut- 
ton. 

In  Other  events  leading  to  the  \ 
annual  mock  trial,  sponsored  by ' 
Phi  Alpha  Delta  legal  fraternity,  | 
Sutton  was  found  "dead"  in  the  ' 
arboretum,  and  Miss  Pickerrell  < 
was  "arrested"  and  charged  with  j 
Aie  "murder."  ' 


The  night  before  Sutton's  'mur- 
der." he  and  Miss  Pickerrell  had 
i  "light"  in  front  of  Smith  Dorm 
as  Sutton  was  bringing  his  date. 
Miss  Jane  Brock,  back  to  the 
dorm. 

Miss  Pickerrell  still  denied  the 
charge  late  yesterday  and  said 
she  had  no  ■  other  comment  to 
,makc. 

Miss  Brock  is  still  in  a  "state 
of  shock."  officers  said,  and  was 
unavailable  for  comment  yester- 
day. 

The  trial  has  been  set  for  Fri- 
day in  Manning  Hall  courtroom. 


'tJ^tal  and  tWen  tra!i<»f?rrl'd'  TO 
Memorial  Hospital  in  Chapel  Hill. 
Memorial  Hospital  authorities  de- 
clm-d  to  c'>mm<Mit  on  h;i-  condi- 
ti<'n    last    night. 

Gilliland  was  carrying  in  his 
pocket  at  the  time  a  diamond  ring 
which  he  intended  to  give  his 
sweetheart.  Tiie  couple  was  to 
have  visited  his  parents  yester- 
day at  which  time  he  planned  to 
present  her  with  the  ring. 

The  driver  of  the  tractor-trailer. 
Roy  Everette  Shahan.  32.  of  De- 
Leon.  Fla..  was  booked  oji  a 
charge  of   manslaughter. 

State   Highway    Patrol    Sgt.     W. 


this    inter- 
sert'on.'"    n\son    said,    "there    were 
a  number  of  .signs  he  should  have 
seen.  One  s'gn  n-toci  there*  was  an 
;  inle'-.srrtion    ahead,    one    gave    in- 
formation     a    Junction    was      just 
ahi-ad.  a  white  sign  gave  the  mile- 
;  age    to    Chanel     Hill,    and      there 
j  were  a   number  of  reflectors  light- 
:  ing   up   the    immediate   area." 

.^rrang;MTlc•nts  are  -incomplete 
for  the  funeral  services.  which 
will  be  held  at  the  Pinehurst  Com- 
munitv  Church. 
Gilliland  is  siu'vived  by  both 
i  parents,  two  brothers,  and  three 
sisters. 


ACC  To  Consider 
Moreland  Review 


DURHAM.  ./Pi  —  The  Atlantic 
Ceast  Conference  will  consider  on 
Thilrsday  North  Carolina  States 
request  that  the  ACC  investigate 
the  Jackie  Moreland  basketball  re- 
cruiting cas?  and  re.s^ilting  four- 
year  probation  slapped  on  the  col- 
lege by  the  National  Collegiate 
.Athletic  .A.ssn. 

Dr.  Charles  E.  Jordan  ol  Duke. 
ACC  president,  sad  today  he  had 
■nvited  Chancellor  Carey  H.  Bos- 
tian  of  North  Carolina  .state  to 
appear  before  the  faculty  chair- 
men of  athletics  at  Greensboro 
Thursday,  the  day  before  the  an- 
nual winter  meeting  of  the  confer- 
ence  opens. 

Moreland.  a  6-8  freshman  from 
Minden.  La.'  has  not  been  ap- 
proved for  athletic  eligibility  by 
\CC  Cr^mmissioner  Jim  Weaver. 
The    NCAA   last    Nov.    1.3    charged 


University  Announces 
Examination  Schedule 

According  to  the  Central  Office  of  Records,  the  time  of  an  ex 
amination  may  not  be  changed  after  it  has  been  fixed  in  the  schedule. 

No  student  may  be  excused  from  a  scheduled  examination  except 
)y  the  University  Infirmary,  in  case  of  illness;  or  by  his  General  Col 
ege  Faculty  Adviser  or  by  his  Dean,  in  case  of  any  other  emergency 
ompelling  his  absence.      * 
Vll  ^I-Yench.  '^German,  and  "^Spanish  courses  numbered 

l,3,3.3x.  and  4,  •Pharm.  Ec.  34.  *BA  177  Mon..  Jan  21.  8:30  a.m. 

SJl  11:00  a.  m.  Classes  on  TTHS  . Mon.,  Jan.  21,  2:00  p.m. 

Vli  10:00  a.  m.  Classes  on  TTHS .Tues.,  Jan.  22.  8:30  a.  m. 

Vll  11:00  a.m.  Classes  on  MWF  .        Tues.,  Jan.  22.  2:00  p.m. 

Ul  3:00  p.m.  Classes.  *Chem.  11.  'BA  71  k  72.  *Chem.  43. 

anl  all  classes  not  othciwisc  provided  lor  in 

the  schedule  ._.- -    v  _ Wed.,  Jan.  23,  8:30  a.m. 

Vll  8:00  a.m.  Classes  on  TTHS  Wed.,  Jan.  23.  2:00  p.m 

vll  2:00  p.m.  Clasies  on  MWF,  *Pharm.  15, 

*BA  130    -, Thur..  Jan.  24.  8:30  a.m. 

Vll  12:00  Noon  ClaiMl«8  on  MWF  :..„;_..  Thur..  Jan  24,  2:00  p.m. 

ill  2:00  p.m.  Clawes  on  TPKS,  *Phami.  10, 

*Econ.  31,  32,  «1,  k  70    Fri.,  Jan.  25,  8:30  a.m. 

.11   12:00  Noon  Classes  on  TTHS  and 

all  Nav.  Sci.  — -  Fri..  Jan.  25,  2:00  p.m. 

Jl  1:00  p.m.  Classes  on  MWF,  <Pol.  S«i.  4l, 

*Econ.  81  - Sat., 

11  9:00  ajn.  Classes  on  MWF   ._, '..  Sat. 

vll  9:00  a.m.  Classes  on  TTHS  Mon 

11  8:00  a.m.  Classes  on  MWF   

•Jl  10:00  a.m.  Classes  on  MWF  .  . 

vll  Elxams  resulting  in  conflicts  from  Common 

Exam  scheduled  above   Tues.,  Jan.  28,  2:00  p.m 

''In  case  of  any  conflict,  the  regularly  scheduled  exam  will  take  i  ted  States  of  .America"  The  bill 
precedence  ovci-  the  common  exam.  (Common  exams  are  indicated  by  i  will  be  debated  as  though  the  date 
an  a.steri.<jk.)  '       '  .  'were   Dec.   18.36.   no   historical   re- 


State  with  violation  of  recruiting 
regulations  in  Alorelands  case  and 
suspended  the  .school  from  all 
NCAA   activities   for  four  years. 

Both  the  .tjchool  and  Moreland 
have  protested  they  are  innocent 
of   the   charges. 

Bcstian  .said  tho  college  feels 
the  best  way  in  which  to  appeal 
to  the  NCAA  is  "throush  our  own 
conference."  He  called  fot"  "an  in- 
dependent and  complete  investiga-; 
tion"  by  the  .ACC. 

Jordan  said  that  after  Bastian  , 
appears  before  the  faculty  chair- 
men on  thp  eve  of  the  annual 
meetins  to  state  h's  case  the  mat- 
tT  will  g)  before  the  .ACC  execu- 
tive committee    for   study. 

The    final    decision    may    come 
Thursday    night    although    an    an- 1 
nouncement  may  not  be  made  ua- ' 
til  Fridav  at  tho  conference  meet- j 
ing,  .Jordan   indicated. 


Phi  To  Debate 
Century'  Bill 


Jan.  26.  8:30  a.m. 

Jan.  26.  2:00  p.m. 

,  Jan.  28.  8:30  a.m. 

Mon.,  Jan.  28.  2:00  p.m. 

.  -.    Tues.,  Jan.  29.  8:30  a.m. 


Discussing      their        semesterb 

I  "century    bill,"    the    Philanthropic 

Literary  Society  will  debate  Tues- 

j  day  night  at  8:00  on  the  top  floor 

;  of   New   East. 

j  The  bill  provides  that  "the  As- 
I  sembly  cf  the  Philanthropic  Li- 
j  terarv-  Society  go  on  record  as  re- 
j  cognizing  the  Constitutionality  of 
I  secession  from  the  Union  of  so- 
i  vereign  States  Known  as  the  Uni- 


ferences  after  that  date  will  be 
allowed   in  the  debate. 

The  "whereas"  clauses  of  the 
bill  state,  "The  component  States 
of  the  Union  known  as  the  United 
States  of  America  entered  said 
Union  voluntarily  and  the  exis- 
tence of  the  Slate  of  North  Caro 
lina  within  the  Union  4>erpetrated 
by  the  Constitution  of  the  United 
States  has  become  increasingly  dif- 
ficult." 

Representative  John  B.  Lewis 
will   introduce   the   bill. 


SP  Chooses 
Officialdom 

.Jim    Hobiies.    foi-mer   party    flooi- ' 
leader,    was    named    Student    Party 
*hainnan  for  remainder  of  tlie  aca- 
demic vear  at  a  meeting  last  night. 

Holnies.  a  junior,  succeeds  Tom 
I.ambeth. 

Lambeth,  who  was  :4i\en  a  two- 
minute  stranding  o^•ation  by  party 
merftbers.  <onaratulated  the  group 
on  a  "sucees^fMl"  fall  election. 
1  "I  hone  interest."  he  said,  "stimu- 
Icited  in  tiie  fall  will  cai  ry  over  to 
the  spring.  '  | 

OTHER  OFFICERS  | 

.AH  major  offices  were  filled  by 
the  party  in  s  five-minute  period. 

.Acclaimed  to  part\'  jxists  alon.;,' 
v.ith  Chain;. an  Holmes,  acclaimed 
also,  were: 

Vice-chairman.    Whit    Whitfield;      ; 

Secretary.    Miss   E.ster  Ballentine: 

Trea.surer.    Bob  Carter: 

Sergeant-at-ai  nis.  John  Wilber; 

Legislature  w4iij>.    E\erett   James. 

ADVISORY  COMMITTEE 

A'amed  to  the  party  advisory  com- 
mittee were:  G.nry  Greer.  Brandon 
Kincaid,  Gardner  Fole\  and  Everett 
James. 

The  nominating  session,  quickt^t 
in  a  numlxjr  of  .vears.  actuallj  last- 
ed approximately  4.")  minutes. 

Only  strenuooi  opposition  offered 
to  stKcessful  f^andidates  for  part\ 
IX)sts  was  for  advi.sory  committee 
'seats. 
NEW  CHAIRMAN 

Newly  elected  Clvairman  Holmes 
llvanked  the  party  for  election  to 
bis  post   and   said: 

"1  boj)e  we  can  come  home  with 
■i  victory  in  the  spring." 

Holmes's  first  action  was  the  ap-. 
tx>intment  <rf  .loel  Fleishman  to! 
chah-inanship  of  the  party  social  j 
c-ommittee.  \ 

Next  week's  party  meeting  was 
:>ostponed  due  to  conflict  between  it 
and  presentation  of  tlie  Carolina 
Fortun. 


With  the  exception  of  the  few 
two-man     room^;     already     in     the 
dorms,    the    290    triple    rooms    of 
the  si.\  dorms  —  -Stacey.  Everett. 
Lewis,    Graham.     Alexander,     and 
.Aycock-'-will    be    completely    con- 
verted into   two-man   room  dorms. 
Mrs.  Carlene  Jones.  Htmsing  Of- 
fice Secretary,  said  that  because 
of  the  alleviated  living  space  sit- 
uation afciiring  due  to  students 
moving      into      fraternities.      the 
Housing    Office    will    change    the 
three-man    room    dorms    and    will 
still   be  able   to  handle  the  influx 
of  .second  semester  students. 

"If  any  three  men  wish  to  re- 
main in  their  present  room — in 
any  "of  these  six  dorms,  they  may 
do  so."  said  Mrs.  Jones.  "A  spe- 
cial airangement  will  be  made 
whereby  each  student  will  pay  the 
double  room  rent  (S65.75  i>er  se- 
mester): if  the  three  men  retain 
the  room  until  .April  .5.  they  will 
be  refun«led  the  money  charged 
for  three-man  room  rent  ($53.25 
per  semester  I. 

.A.S  to  the  time  when  actual  mov- 
ing operations  will  begin.  Mrs. 
Jv'nes  estimated  that  it  would  be 
some  time  shortly  before  the'  end 
of   the  semester. 

With  the  present  .508  two-man 
rooms  in  all  the  liorms  on  campus, 
the  conversion  of  290  triple  rooms 
in  the  six  dorms  will  increase  the 
number  of  two-man  rooms  tw  ap- 
proximately. 943.  according  to  the 
figures  released  by  Mrs.  Jones. 

.As    to    the    numbtjr    of    people 

originally    in    all    tho    donns.    Mrs. 

1  Jones    stated    that    approximately 

I  103  stud.^nt.K  had   moved   out  since 

th'.>  beg  lining  o[  fall  semester. 

The  present  .status  of  the  re- 
mainina:  mens"  d  )rms.  Connor. 
\\'inston.  and  Cobb,  will  be  retain- 
ed along  with  its  few  triple-man 
room.s.  according  to  Mrs.  Jones. 


IDC  Declares 
Special  Week 

Today  throu;;h  next  Tuesday  has 
been  declared  -Know  Your  Dorm 
Ofliceis  Week"  by  the  Interdormi- 
tory    Ccuncil. 

Piirpo.sf  of  the  week,  accord- 
ing to  IDC  Pr.sident  Sonny  Hall- 
ford,  is  to  give  recognization  to 
dorm  officers  and  to  encourage 
dorm  officers  to  know  their  resi- 
dents." 

Tenlat've  proeram  for  the  week, 
as  announced  by  the  IDC,  indo- 
les: 

( 1 )  Dorm  meetings  by  each  of 
the    individual    dormitories. 

(2)  Encouragement  of  100  per 
cent  attendance  at  tomorrow 
night  s  IDC  meeting. 

(3)  Speech  by  Director  of  Stu- 
dent -Activities  Sam  Magill  at  the 
meeting  emphasizins.  "Dorm  Of- 
ficers' Responsibility."' 

(4)  .Awarding  of  attendance 
prize  by  Miss  Jane  Brock  at  to- 
morrow   night's    meeting. 

(5)  Smoker  after  the  meeting 
with    free    refreshments. 

Dormitories  are  urged  to  co- 
operate with  the  program.  Presi- 
dent   Hallford    said. 


GM'S  SUTE 


Roland  Parker  1 — 6-S  Eiactiens 
Board;  9  1)  Chass  CIvb;  Roland 
Parker  2,3 — 7:06  Elactlont  Board; 
Woodhouta  Council  (toonv— 2:30- 
*  Sound  and  Fury;  7-11  Man's 
Honor  Council;  Rondoivous 
Room — 5-6  Talent  Shew;  6:30  8 
Dance  Class;  APO  Room — 7-9 
APO. 


Philosopher's 
Role  Subject 
Of  Talk  Today 

The  role  of  a  philosopher  will 
be  discus.sed  by  Dr.  Everett  W. 
Hall  in  the  fall  Humanities  Lec- 
ture tonight  at  8  p.m.  in  106  Car- 
rol!  Hall. 

Dr.  Hall.  Kenan  professor  and 
chairman  of  the  Department  of 
Philosnpsy.  will  >peak  before  stu 
dents,  faculty  members  and  inter- 
ested members  of  the  general  pub- 
lic. Three  faculty  lectures  are 
sponsored  each  \ear  by  the  UNC 
Division  of  Humanities. 

Formerly  head  of  the  Philoso- 
phy Department  at  the  University 
of  Iowa.  Dr.  Hall  came  to  UNC 
in  1952.  A  native  of  Wisconsin, 
he  was  educated  at  l.nwrence  Col- 
lege in  Appleton.  Wis  .  and  at  Cor- 
iiell   University. 


■^rr--    -»— TtT-rj 


'1^ 


PAGE  TWO 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


TUESDAY,  DECEMBER  4,  15!6 


First  Aid  For  Legislature- 
Apple  Pressure  On  Its  Neck 

luu  lecfut  items  in  rlu-  news  have  rejniiuiecl  the  ])e(»ple  ol  North 
Clrnsliiiii  just  Avhat  a  terrible  shape  tlieir  ediuation  system  is  in. 

President    William    Fridav  4>f  the  Consolidated   t'niversity   iej>orted 

l)<>th  items.  One  reveals  that  out  oi  all  the  slates  Kjlle^e  graduates  last 

year,  there  eamr  exadl)  one  person  (piali^ied  to  tea<  h  hi'4h  school  phvs- 

ks.  And  at  the  end  of  this.ve;-...  the  staK-  kHI  o-radnate  exai  tly  /en*  phy.siis 

teachers. 


You 


A  TRUSTEE  ASKS: 


The  other  item  lonsisted  of  a 
plea  Iroiii  Fiidav  to  \V*<'.  alunniae 
to  press  for  morel 
money  from  ih' 
Stale  so  more  an( 
]>eller-<pialilied  in- 
stnuiois  t;m  holdl 
down  North  C.aro 
.  liiia  teat  hint;  ap 
j)oi!iiments. 

The  note  on  tlu| 
shorta'j;e  of  phvsie^ 
teadiers  w.-s  snr 
prisin«».  I  h  e  pie 
for  more  edntation- 
al  moiuy  was  not.  ■.:.  worried 
It  has  heen  draii^etl  oin.  almJit 
ever\  month  otj  the  month,  lor  as 
Ion-;  as  We  tan  remeinher.  Pre.si- 
dent  Fridav  made  the  pie  i  shorl- 
Iv  altei  he  ))e(ame  actiti;.;  president; 
lie  !i  >  teissned  it  frequently  sinte 
then.  "  /  <■ 

A\'hv.  jhi-n.  isn't  sonjeihinj>;  done 

alxun  ii? 

•  *  *  ■  -♦ 

The  slate's  lci;islaiors  will  ai^iee, 
.ihrtost  to  a  man.  that  we  need  moie 
money  fov  more  tea<heis.  for  hel- 
ler fea<  Iters,  and  so  we  tan  iiuhue 
pi(ispe<ti\e  tetchfis  to  henune  act- 
ual teachers  and  stay  in  the  Old 
North  Stale. 

riie\  will  shake  their  heads  in 
ajireemcut  with  the  state's  cdn  a- 
t*>is  an«i  tilt  ^vi'.c\  ta\p;ivers.  and 
.'\eti  iTuke  »'  •  lies  alxuit  the  im- 
poitant  t-  of  adt'tptatelv-paid  teach- 
ers and   lite  need  for  iiuive  inonex . 

ett  .  :*' 

Hut.  when  th '  lime  tomes  for 
tTie  hudv^fl  tw"  he  a|>proved,  the 
teachers  di>n't  jrit  a  raise.  Their 
jobs  are  n»»t  made  more  attractive. 
There  is  Utile  i-h  no  veas<»n  l.or  a 
prospective  teaftHer  to  remain  in 
N'ortli  (iaiti^yMia^ 

\\'heri.  .|h>i4(i^gCt^U£Uli  .mllA  MmUuL, 
the  libiarx's  'ppropriation  is 
slashed  in  h  ;!r  There  is  no  money 
for  j>erni.iiKii;  improvements.  The 
fej«lui»  tlon't  get  a  thino.  They 
(oniinne  c.ishin;;  their  pittances 
that  reflet  t  onlv  otie  thinj»:  F.dii- 
cation.  in  Anierita.  is  somethin"; 
very  ni«  e.  somethin-.;  even  essential, 

\hu  to  hell  witli  the  teachers. 

*  »  * 

.Memheis  of  the  North  Carolina 
Cieneral  .\ns«iiiI)1v  lia\e  awful  sh*»rt 
memories  when  ii  (tunes  lime  to 
l:'V  oni  the  hieiniial  f)nd;.;et.  Fhev 
forget  al>«>iu  .shaking  their  heads 
in  a<;ieement  nith  the  edntatots 
and  the  taxpayers.  Fhev  forget 
that  there  is  :i  crisis  in  edireatioii 
in  Ntnth  Carolina.  Fhey  tan  the 
bndi»et  wher^  it  tan  easiest  he  cut. 
The  Ctinsolitlated  I'niversiiy.  they 
liave  hiinid,  is  a-n  extellelit  place 
to  cut  the  hntb^et. 

J  he  taxpayers  and  the  e(hi<atois. 
then,  shoniti  remind   their  elet  ted 


The  Daily  Tar  Heel 

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Editor 

.FRED  POWLEDGE 

Managing  Editor   . 

'h.  CHARLIE  SLOAN 

News  Editor 

NANCY  HILL 

Business  Manager 

^     BILL  BOB  PL-EL 

Sports  Editor 

. :!_   LARRY  CHEEK 

NEWS  ST,\FF-narke  .tones.  Nancy 
Hill,  J  tan  Moore.  Pringle  Pipkin.  Anne 
Drake,  Edith  MacKinnon,  Wally  Kuralt, 
^ary  A!y.s  Voorhees,  Graham  Snyder, 
Billy  Barnes.  Neil  Ba&s,  Gary  Nichols. 
Page  Bornjtein,  Peg  Humphrey.  Phyllis 
MauU-sby. 


Subscription  Manager 
Advertising  Manager 
Circulation  Manager 


Dale  Stalcy 
Fred  Katzin 
Charlie  Holt 


BU^NESS  STAFF— Rosa  Mt*ore,  Johnny 
Whrtaker,  Dick  Leavitt,  Peter^  Alper. 

SPORTS  STAFF:  Bill  King,  Jim  Parks, 
Jimmy  Harper.  Dave  Wible,  Charlejr 
Howson. 


tt  presentatixes  of  the  fat  l  that  th's 
sj;»te  is  ex|)et  ient  inj;  an  edni:>iion;d 
(lisis.  I  hev  sIkhiM  mayhe  remind 
the  polititians  that  there  are  a  lot 
of  ediK  :ovs  in  this  state,  and  :in 
a^vltll  lot  ol  taxp:i\eis  wlio  are 
W(!i.  >iiii;  ahoiit  the  (li^is.  .md  tiial 
il  th(»se  i^ionps  i;(»i  in<,)e:hei  tliev 
toiild  tlo  a  lot  ol  i»oi>d — or  d  una  e 
-~;it   the  next   elet'tion. 

*  *  » 

I  he  lei;islaiojs.  who  ha\e  'i  ;J 
hit  and  sassv.  miolit  o;et  .s;  arc  m 
ciion^h  to  do  soinethino  a'hont  the 
crisis. 

TheV  meet  in  jnsi  a  few  moMihs 
in  Kaleii^h.  It  wcuild  he  wise  if  the 
edncatois.  like  the  Con.solidated 
rni\tJsiivs  U'illiahi  Friday,  stall- 
ed reminding  them  of  their  re- 
sjM>Msil)ility    toward    education. 

It  Wdiilcl  he  liood.  loo.  if  (iov. 
I.niher  Hod^^es  would  tell  the  le:^- 
isl;tt(»is  th;ii  the  state's  edntatioial 
fntme  depends  mightily  on  the 
next  hndi^et. 

*  »  # 

It    would    l»e    e\en    heitei    if   the 
l'ni\tisit\s     lioaitl     ol      Ti  nsiees, 
whi(  Il  is  made  up  larnelv  of  le.nisla-  ■ 
itus.   would   appiv   the   piessme  to 
its   (.eneral    .AssemhK    niemhers. 

Otherwise,  the  state  is  in  hir 
an* n her    two    years   of   crisis. 

.And  the  slate's  heieti>h»ie  j)io- 
t;ressi\e  ednc  atitHMl  svstem  m;iv 
not  he  ahle  It)  hold  tip  ittider  an- 
oihei    hienninm  ol  ciisis. 

Statesman 


Waynick 
Worth  It 


Vvaynick 

. . .  deserved 


C'apus  Waynick  is  Nt»rth  Caro- 
IhCi's  l>est  examj>le  of  a  siatesma-n. 
'^<>  il^JUta  MtkUig  that  AIj 
p;i  P.si  hnsi-j 
nes.s  liaten 
ity  hont^ret 
t  he  H  ig 
Po  i  n  t  hn 
m  a  nitariai 
with  its  riv 
it   awaicl. 

AV'aynit  k 
w  h  o  h  a 
l)een  T.  S 
amhassad  o  t 
to  t  W(»  .Soiiil; 
.\  m  e  1  i  c  ani 
repnhlits  a 
\v  ell'  as  a 
hard  -  work- 
ing man  on  stale  soil,  always  has 
seemed  tpiite  a  few  vards  ahove  the 
poliiit  lairs'  platean.  In  recent 
years  )ie  has  woiked  eneijfetiially 
lor  the  saKaiion  ol  N<»rth  Carolina, 
lookinc;  heyond  the  time  when  to- 
l>.at(o  will  not  mean  as  ninth  as  it 
means  now.  He  has  wondered 
ahoiii  small  hnsiiiess  and  in- 
diisliy  in  this  state,  and  his  won- 
deriin»s  haxe  been  (onstrnt  live. 

f  he  hnsiness  fraternity  showed 
wisdom  in  picking  Waynick.  If 
ever  a  I'ar  Heel  deserved  a  civic: 
award,  it  is  the  Avhite-haired  man 
frtnn   High   Pt>iiit. 

No  Kisses, 
No  Brains 


In  Wise. 


Night  Editor 
Proof  Reader 


-  -wf 


Graham  Snyder 
Ben  Taylor 


I-oi  the  dean  of  women  at  Mar- 
cpielie  rni\ersiiy  in  Wisconsin 
goes  onr  honcpiet  lor  ha\ing  the 
narrowest   mind  ol  the  week. 

Dean  \I;.f)el  McKlligott  told 
her  ct»eds  an,d  their  dates  there 
would  he  a  eraekdown  on  girls 
■'who  kiss  gtKKinighi  in  frt»nt  t»f 
dormitories"  for  wtnnen.  \'it>laiors 
ate  getting  ea'mjnised  h>r  t>ne  week- 
end. 

*  *  tt 

•  in  addjtif>n  tt»  tlie  narrowmind- 
ness  award,  wc  rettmnnend  that 
Dean  McKlligott  move  to  FnrtfVin 
I'niveisity,  down  in  South  Caro- 
lina, where  dances  aren't  allowed 
t)n  the  campus.  Sinely  a  blending 
of  narrow  minds  tonld  come  up 
with  sometliing  tonstructive. 


Said  It     £^qII   Amateurs    Run 


Courses 

Editor: 

In  your  editorial,  "Instruction 
Consistency:  A  Goal  for  the  Uni- 
versity," which  appeared  Dec.  1. 
you  stated  "however,  the  ablest 
students  should  not  be  separated 
from  th"  others,  because  a  major 
part  of  the  l**arning  process  on 
the  part  of  both  groups  is  meet- 
ing people  and  exchanging 
idea^.' 

Is  the  classroom  the  primary 
place  to  meet  people?  Are 
classes  just  another  organized 
sccial  function  of  the  Universi 
ty?  I  do  not  suggest  an  anti- 
social attitude  towards  one's 
classmate's;  there  are  other 
functions  on  the  campus  with 
more  social  opportunities. 

AKso,  the  etiitorial  seems  to  as- 
sume that  'Ihc  outstanding  stu- 
dents" are  all  very  weil-acquainl' 
ed  with  each  ntlier  and  therefore 
cann  t  meet  any  new  p.ople  on 
their  mental  level.  While  mc'Ct- 
ing  people  i.s  part  of  the  I?arn- 
ing  procos.>».  there  are  many 
other  places  besides  the  cla.s.s- 
room  to  meet  people. 

'SUICIDE  25' 

Are  "the  outstanding  slu- 
dent.s"'  incapable  of  having  con- 
trasting ideas  and  exchanging 
these  ideas'.'  Do  they  all  have  the 
same  background,  join  the  sani? 
fraternit.N*  or  think  the  same 
thoughtsr  If  you  had  observed 
the  present  students  of  '".suicide 
25,"  you  Would  find  that  they 
represent  with  the  exception  of 
their  mentality  any  25  chosen  at 
random. 

Raising  the  standards  of  the 
University  is  an  admirable  goal. 
However,  the  standards  will  not 
be  raised  b.v  makin*.>  the  hard 
cour.v?s  consistent  in  difficulty 
with  the  less  stimulating  classes. 
Guaging  the  courses  to  the  men- 
tality of  the  students  is  perhaps 
the  answer  to  a  better  educa- 
tion for  everyone. 

Ashmead    P.    Pipkin 

» Thanks  Frojp. 
DrToDTft  ' 

Editor; 

The  Dialectic  Senate  wishes  to 
express  its  appreciation  to  your 
paper  fjr  the  consistent  interest 
and  cooperation  it  has  shown  in 
covering  Senate  meetings  and 
publicizing    the   debates. 

The  Senate  regards  this  as  evi- 
dence of  a  resurgent  "era  of  good 
feeling"  on  the  campus,  and  ex- 
tends a  unanimous  voU-  of  thanks 
to  the  editor  and  entire  staff  of 
The  Daily  Tar  Heel. 

Malcolm   Partin,  Clerk 
f    Dialectic   Senate 

They're  Different 
In  Kansas  City 

The  unusual  in  fashion  is  be- 
ing shown  at  the  Circulation 
Desk.  A  young  girl  in  her  20s 
applied  fir  a  library  card  wear- 
ing a  long  trench  cna^.  the  tight- 
est of  jeans  and  barefooted.  On 
being  asked  if  she  was  being  init- 
iated into  some  .sorority,  she  very 
crisply  said  she  worked  for  The 
Kan.sas  City  Star.  We  are  still 
wontlering. — Library  Staff  iVejr.s-, 
Kansas  City,  Mo.,  public  library. 


.  . .  how  a  trustee  ferls  about  ediicxLtion 
TRUSTEE  BRYANT  (RIGHT)  WITH  PRESIDENT  AND  WRS.  FRIDAY 

Photo  by  Fred  Powledge 

•   ■  •  • 

WHERE  DC  THE  DIRTY  THINGS  HAPPEN? 

A  Tale  About  The  Alums 


Woody  Sears 


Once  upon  a'tjme  iti  the  rievr, 
never  hiiul  of  college  joys,  ther? 
was  q,,ffllo\v  \v1io  thought  that 
'college  Spys  slicKild  ptai' ' Uy^ttet- 

Maybe  lots  of  people  th  Uight 
th  s  was  a  good  idea,  and  some  of 
the  aUim.s — bless  their  jilvetiik* 
hearts-thought  it  would.be  nice 
if  they  helped  out  the  situation 
with  a  fttt!.'  of  the  green-sfiiff 
on  the  side. 

This  got  to  be  a  big  thing, 
and  lots  of  big-hearted  alums 
all  over  the  country  cauiftht  tiie 
idea,  and  even  got  excite(|^  the 
point  that  they  began  to  press- 
ure the  big  brass  at  dear  old 
alma  mater. 

•'We  want  a  winniq" .  tearn." 
they  said,  just  like  th'ejy-'s^'  it 
for  the  benefit  of  thP'^Sbttiall 
ami  ba.seball  pe  pie.  Anfft!^"' re- 
sult is  that  a  wonderfti^i^Bny 
Scourt  pure  nlea  has  mO*il»«om- 
ed  iuto  an  fnsidious  evil  that 
haunts  colleges  ail  over  the  coun- 
try- *  .< 
•DONT  HAPPEN  HERE'     '*" 

We  read  about  things  liks'lhat 
from  other  parts  of  the  country, 
and  think  "Mvi  that's  terrible. 
I'm  glad  that  things  like  that 
don't  happen   here." 

We  hear  about  the  big  scandals 
on  the  West  Coast  involving  the 
Pacific  Coast  l^eague  scjiqols 
where  they  used  "fast  money  and 


faster  girls"  to  aid  in  the  re- 
cruiting  of    prospective   athlet?s. 

.And  we  hear  about  the  addi- 
t  onal  subsidies  that  were  given 
to  Big  Ten  athletes  and  the  su- 
spensions that   resulted. 

My.  all  that  business  certainly 
is  shameful. 

But  now  it   is  no  longer  far-re- 
moved.    Somebody     pointed    the 
linger  and  the  whistle  was  blown 
on   State   College.   .Naturally,  thi.s 
h;is    upset    a    lot   of   people,   an'i 
nubody   seems  to  know  anything 
ah;ut   it,  including  State's  Chan- 
cellor Bostian  (who,  in  this  writ- 
er's Tpinion,  is  one  of  Ihij  state's 
finest   men   in   addition   to  being 
a   great   educator),  ^hd   our  own 
William   Friday.  They  claimed  to 
be  unawar?  of  the  situation   that 
brou.j'ht  on  all  the  hullabaloo. 
One  of  the  confusing  aspects 
of  this  case    is   that   neither   of 
these  two  men  knew  about  any 
shady      deals,      and      doubtless 
these  deals,  if  any,  would  never 
have  occurred  had  they  known. 
But   they   aren't   the   only   ones 
who  don't   know   anything 

The  thing  that  seems  strange 
about  •this  is  the  fact  that  the 
newspapers  gave  the  Moreland 
episode  such  a  big  play  back  at 
the  beginning  of  the  mess  when 
Moreland  signed   with  State. 

The  N'C.AA  didn't  let  this  g-> 
unnoticed,  as  indicated  by  their 
actions  again.st  Stat?  last  week. 


Something     is     wrong     somo- 

•  where. 

«         *         * 

If  the  charges  art  valid,  and  it 
doesn't  seem  thai  the  NCAA 
would  be  so  far  wrong,  there  has 
dcfiniieiy  been  some  underhand- 
ed business  going  on  over  in  Ra- 
leigh. 

That  brings  another  question 
to  light. 

If  such  th'ngs  have  been  hap- 
penins  at  State,   it    isn't  illogi-  t 
cal     o    assume   that   they    have 
been   happening   at   other   ACC 
schools?    The   question      is,      at 
which  school  have  these  things 
happened,  or  is  everyone  doing 
it? 
Folks    here   u:   the   Hill   should 
be  extremely  happy  that  the  man 
who  scoreti  30  points  against  the 
Slate  varsity  in  the  Tuanksgiving 
night   freshman-varsity  tilt  won't 
be  around  to  harass  tht^  Tar  Heels 
.  nixl      season.      But      hold      yoijr 
breath,  because   it   isn't   definite 
yot.  ^ 

POINT  AT  UNC? 

.•^nd  in  the  meantime,  some- 
body is  liable  to  point  the  finger 
over  this  way,  and  we  may  get 
the  shrill  blast  of  athletic  doom 
from  the  NCA.\  boys  ourselves. 
Maybe  other  schools  will  hear  it 
too  before  this  thing  is  settled. 

Maybe  all  these  dirty,  dirty 
things  happen  only  at  State. 

A  bt  of  folks  don't  thinks  .so. 


Pogo 


Bv  Wait  Kelly 


NOW,  AS  egPeg^gNTAtiVf  Of- 

a60-lM?iC<5  ANP  >h  ti4g 
HOST  NATION,  AUU0W/V\5 
■  ro  INf  OffM  VOJ  TMg 
'    \    Ngrr  gVgNT  \^  THg 


T4gwAyyoul^ANT^^g 

HAL?  S\}Ji.  WAS  II.U6AI, 

OP  (?UNNfM6  IN  THg 
PENTATHtON. 


I  (?AN  It 


|?(6HT/N0\\  Ju?T  wait  AMTVvOU  WAV'S  TO  l?uN  fV/T/^ 
III  ©er  TMg  gOU!PV1£\T    .'  Trig  JA\EuN,  t^g  P:eCu5 

VV  -,v*rY  Al-^<^  THgectf  A 

OP  UgMNG'-U^ 
HCW  CO  VOU  HjlLt-^ 
ASOirr  ugAf'iNGf /J.^^^ 


Li'l  Abn«r 


By  Al  Capp 


By  Victor  Bryant 


Bryant,  a  prominent  and  r»spected  tn^ec  of 
th«  ComoKdated  University,  It  writing  •bout  th* 
trust**'*  r*sp*nsibilities  to  his  univarsity.  Today's 
installm*nt  is  th*  last  in  a  series  ^ivinf  ttiit  of 
his  sp*ech  to  th*  UNC  Faculty  CIvb.  1 

Much  still  remains  to  be  done  in  charting  the 
true  course  of  the  American  university. 

In  tills  country  we  have  embarked  upon  an  ex- 
periment in  mass  education  at  the  college  and  uni- 
versity level.  We  are  still  in  the  experitiiental  stage, 
when  the  results  are  unknown  and  questions  ere  in 
order.  '■  .    S    -} 

We  have  few  guiding  precedents.  Wis  Iraow  that 
in  the  English  universrties  excellence  in  tpaching 
was  accomplished  largely  because  d  the  sound  sec- 
ondary educational  preparation  of  the  Engliah  stu- 
dents and  their  careful  selection,  although  perhaps 
too  little  emphasis  was  placed  upon  graduate  work 
and  nraearch  .... 
POURING  MONEY  IM 

Today  in  America  we  are  pounring  money  into 
both  the  secondary  and  higher  level  educational  in- 
stitutions at  an  undreamed-of  rate.  Doubts  have  been 
expressed  as  to  the  outcome  and  efficacy  of  the  ex- 
periment, but  we  can  not  and  dare  not  stop. 

In  a  state-supported  university  the  probltra  of 
numbers  is  not  as  easy  to  control  as  in  a  private 
institution.  Recently  the  dean  of  a  well-known  col- 
lege said  that  his  institution  accepted  only  about 
one  out  of  each  eight  applicants.  As  trustees  and 
faculty  m;ml>ers  in  a  state  institution  our  answer 
to  this  is  that  we  must  fight  the  harder  to  see  to  it 
that  the  real  values  in  education  are  given  their 
proper  positions. 

Certainly  you  kmw  these  values  and  their 
places  far  better  thanl.  I  recognize  that  the  Uni- 
versity in  many  of  its  aspects  is  necessarily  a  social 
agency,  and  that  social  attitudes  afe  extremely  im- 
portant. 

I  should,  however,  be  permitted  to  question 
whether  or  not  the  intellectual  efforts  in  our  uni- 
versities are  being  subordinated  to  the  social  and 
extracurricular  activities  of  the  students. 

Could  it  be  that  some  students  are  attending 
the  University  simply  because  it  is  looked  upon  as 
the  next  step  in  growing  up? 

I  question  whether  it  is  fair  to  take  the  money 
of  the  parents  or  the  time  of  the  student  and  then 
see  him  flunked  out  at  the  end  of  the  first  or  sec- 
ond year  when  it  should  have,  been  obvious  far 
sooner  th*t  he  was  not  prepared  for  his  experiment 
in  higher  education. 

Many  p*ople  without  colle9*  education,  who 
appreciate  their  iobs,  ere  happier  citizens  th*n 
som*  with  a  cellcg*  education  who  feci  ttxm- 
selves  abov*  their  jobs  and  perform  their  inks 
without  enthusiasm  simply  becaus*  th*y  knva  of 
no  other  means  of  supporting  th*ms*lv*s. 

If  the  excellent  secondary  educational  prepara- 
tion of  their  students  has  contributed  largely  Uj 
the  strength  of  the  English  universities,  we  should 
all  the  more  clearly  realize  that  the  aims  of  our  uni 
versify  cannot  be  fully  achieved  unless  our  stu- 
dents come  here  with  a  sound  background  of  sec- 
ftndary  school  education. 
WHAT  TO  TEACH  STUDENTS^ 

Another  permissible  concern  is  what  students 
will  be  taught  once  they  are  here.  This  is  prLmarl 
ly  your  task  rather  than  mine. 

A  list  of  tho  many  courses  offered  in  some  uni- 
versity curricula  prompts  me  to  ask  whether  our 
universities  have  become  weathervanes  and  are  of- 
fering pupils  what  they  want  rather  than  what  they 
need.  May  I  also  ask  whetber  it  is  not  possible  for 
a  pupil  to  graduate  with  a  lot  of  information  and 
very  little  idea  of  how  to  think? 

I  should  lili*  to  See  innovations  in  our  curricula 
vi*w*d  .with  a  critical  ey*.  and  th*  offorings  of 
makebeliev*  scientists  and  the  too  facile  solu- 
tions which  spring  from  dilutod  knowledf*  care- 
fully scrutiniMd. 

Amateurs  can  ao  longer  do  the  world's  think- 
ing, but  they  can  certainly  upset  it. 

I  do  not  exceed  my  prerogatives  as  a  trustee 
when  I  insist  that  this^  university  be  dedicated  to 
excellence  in  teaching,  the  highest  In  scholarship, 
and  the  best  in  research.  I  want  it  known  through- 
out the  nation  not  only  for  high  scholarship  among 
its  faculty,  bu*  for  the  scholastic  excellence  of  its 
graduates — men  whom  the  world  can  look  to  as 
sound  thinkers. 

*  *  *  I 

After  all.  you  as  faculty  members  and  we  as 
trustees  have  entered  into  a  benevolent  conspiracy 
to  educate  thousands  of  young  men  and  women.  I 
trust  that  there  will  be  ample  evidence  to  prove 
that  we  have  committed  at  least  some  overt  acts  in 
carrying  out  this  conspiracy. 

The  tru.stees  of  this  institution  are  deeply  in- 
terested in  its  welfare.  My  service  with  them  over 
a  number  of  years  has  convinced  me  beyond  any 
doubt  that  they  are  a  group  of  dedicated  men  and 
women,  and  if  at  times  their  responsibilities  have 
not  been  carried  out  in  a  proper  manner,  it  is  be- 
cause they  have  not  been  clearly  understood. 

Surely  they  do  not  wish  to  trespass  upon  those 
areas  which  properly  should  be  reserved  for  you. 

SUGGESTS  INQUIRY  ; 

It  has  often  occurred  to  me  that  there  shotild 
be  S3me  faculty  or  administrative  statement  at- 
tempting to  define  these  areas  for  the  benefit  of  the 
benefit  of  the  trustees.  Perhaps  an  inquiry  of  this 
nature  should  be  initialedi  by  the  trustees  them 
selves,  for  one  of  the  tirst  responsibilities  ol  a 
trustee  is  tj  understand  what  a  university  is — Mrhat 
the  idea  of  a  university  is — and  how  the  trustees 
can  help  make  this  university  a  better  one. 

My  anibitlon  for  th*  University  of  North  Car- 
olina is  that  it  will  justly  deserve  a  reputation  for 
being  the  great  liberal  university  of  the  South.  I. 
know  that  ot»»er  parts  of  the  country  m-*  looking 
at  us  to  s*e  if  we  are  going  te  preserve  our  heri- 
tage in  this  respect .... 
To  all  of  y:)u  I  say  that  the  faculty  is  the  heart 
and  soul  of  the  university.  Its  future  lies  largely  «n 
your  hands 


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THi  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


4. 


Third  Place  Finishers 

Shown  above  are  mwnbers  of  the  UNC  Debate  Team  who  last  weekend  won  third  place  in  the  New 
York  University  Hall  of  Fame  Tournament,  entered    by   schools  from   all    over   eastern    United    States. 
"  from   left  to   ri9ht  are  John   Brooks,   Sonny   Evens,  Faculty  Advisor  Dr.  Norman  W.  Mattis,  Dave  Lieber- 
men   and    Forbes   Ramsey. 


Debate  Team  Is  Third 
In  NYU's  Tournament 


'      Carolina's      debate    team      won 
third  place  in  the  New  York  Uni- 

State  In  Need 
Of  750  More 
Schoolteachers 

WASHINGTON.  '.Jf>  —  A  need 
for  750  teachers  this  year  to  bols- 
ter the  36.419  teachers  in  North 
Carolina  was  pointed  out  yester- 
day by  the  National  Education 
Assn. 

The  NEA   said   that    in   all.   the 
Tiation  needs  47.760  additional  ele- 
mentary   and      secondary     school 
teachers  to  relieve  crowded  class- 1 
'•rooms.  I 

,In  addition  to  the  crowded  con- 
*diticns.  the  NEA  said,  about  80. 
000  of  the  nation's  1,258.136  teach- 
ers are  on  an  emergency  or  sub- . 
standard  basis  with  m&ny  of  them 
'  not  holding  regular  teaching  cer- 1 
tifications. 

The  NEA  estimated  the  average 

salary    of    classroom    teachers    in 

"elenientary  and  secondary  schools 


i  versity  Hall  of  Fame  Tournament 

I  in  New  York  last  weekend.  Schools 

I  from  all  over  the  Elastern  United  j 

States  sent  representatives  to  the 

I  tournament. 

I  .  I 

I  The  negative  team  composed  of  i 
Dave  Lieberman  and  Forbes  Ram- : 

I  sey      won    all    of    their      debates ; 

I  against  teams  from  John  Hopkins,  i 
St.  John  s,  Brandeis  and  NYU,  the  j 
host  team.  They  make  up  the  first  I 
UNC  team  to  have  a  perfect  re-  i 
cord  since  the  spring  of  1954.        j 

John  Bi-ooks  and  Sonny  Evans  ! 
won  two  and  lost  two  of  their  de- 
bates. TTiey  swept  over  Pace  Col- 
lege and  the  University  of  Scran- 
ton  and  lost  to  Dartmouth  and 
McGill. 


Quicklime  Is  Needed 
For  Removal  Of  Paint 

The  markings  on  the  columns  of 
the  library  and  the  planetarium 
will  remain  there  for  several  days. 
The  university  is  waiting  for  the 
arrival  of  quicklime  to  clean  the 
markings  put  on  the  columns  by 
vandals  just  before  the  Duke 
game,  according  to  G.  S.  Homey, 
supervisor  of  physical  plants. 

Horney  was  advised  by  the 
limestone  company  that  made  the 
colun\jis  to  use  quicklime.  Previous 
attempts  to  clean  the  markings 
with  ordinary  cleaning  solutions 
and  steam  cleaning  have  not 
worked  and  only  smeared  the' 
markings. 

If  the  paint  had  been  thicker,  it  j 
would    not    have    penetrated    the 
columns.  But  the  vandals  thinned 
the  paint  so  that  the  paint  would 
soak  into  the  porous  limestone. 


India's  Menon 
Speaks  Here 
Next  Monday 

V.  K.  Krishna  Menon,  leader  of 
India's  delegation  to  the  United 
Nations,  is  slated  to  be  the  Caro- 
lina Forum's  second  speaker  of 
the  fall  semester  here  on  Monday 
night. 

Forum  chairman  James  Holmes 
of  Washington,  D.  C.  said  Menon 
will  speak  at  8  p.m.  in  Hill  Hall 

His  address.  Holmes  said,  wiil 
deal  with  nationalism  or  India's 
role  in  foreign  affairs. 

The  Forum  is  a  non-partisan  ag- 
ency of  the  UNC  student  govern- 
ment and  brings  to  the  campus 
during  the  school  year  a  series 
of  prominent  speakers  who  reflect 
varying  shades  of  political  and 
economic   thought. 

In  1928  Menon  reactivated  the 
India  League  of  the  United  King- 
dom, an  organization  which  sup- 
ported India's  struggle  for  inde- 
pendence. From  that  time  until 
1947  he  remained  secretary  of  the 
league,  carrying  on  a  vigorous 
campaign  for  the  independence  of 
India. 

At  the  United  Nations  General 
Assembly,  in  1952,  Menon  pflt  for- 
ward a  plan  for  the  solution  of 
the  Korean  prisoner  of  war  pro- 
blem. He  also  piloted  the  Indian 
resolution  on  Togoland.  which 
gave  the  people  of  the  area  the 
opportunity  to  decide  their  own 
future. 

Earlier  this  year,  Menon  was 
the  Indian  representative  to  the 
London  Conference  on  the  Suez 
Canal. 

So  far  this  year,  the  forum  has 
presented  HoUington  K.  Tong,  Na- 
tionalist Chinese  Ambassador  to 
the  United  States.  Its  plianned 
speakers  this  year  include  Sen. 
Paul  Douglas.  Vice-President  Ric- 
hard M.  Ni.xon  and  Walter  P.  Rew- 
ther.  vice  president  of  the  new3y 
formed  AFL-CIO. 


Covering  The  Campus 


Forty-six  schools  competed  in 
I  the  tournament,  making  it  one  of  | 
I  the  largest  in  the  country.  The  I 
I  size    and    renown   of    the    partici-j 

pants  ranged  from  small  and  ob- 
I  scure  to  the  tap-ranking  schools  in  I 
\  the  nation. 

I  The  next  test  for  the  UNC  de- 
baters will  be  the  annual  Dixie 
to  be  $4  220.  North  Carolina's  av-  |  Classic  at  Wake  Forest  on  Dec- 
'erage   was   $3,291.  I  ember  14  and  15. 


Chapel  Hill-Durham 
Dietetic  Meet  Here 

A  meeting  of  the  Chapel  Hill- 
Durham  Dietetic  Association  will 
be  held  at  the  North  Carolina 
Memorial  H'jspital  of  UNC  to-- 
morrow at  8  p.  m.  A  number  of 
foreign  students  of  the  University 
will  speak  on  "Christmas  in  Fore- 
ign  Lands." 


FROM  WEST  VIRGINIA 


Wrifer  Here  Is  Gathering 
Material  For  New  Novel 


Hospital  And  Nursing 
Officials  Meet  Today 

A  statewide  meeting  of  hospital 
administrators  and  directors  of 
nursins  service  will  be  held  at  X 
p.m.  today  in  the  amphitheater  of 
the  UNC  School  of  Nunsing. 

The  purpose  of  the  meeting  is 
to  discuss  and  explore  needs,  fa- 
cilities, and  possibilities  of  provid- 
ing extension  courses  for  nurses. 

The  meeting  is  being  sponsored 
by  the  Educational  Administrators, 
Consultants  and  Teachers  Section 
of  the  North  Carolina  State  Nurses 
Assn. 


By   WAYNE    LAMM  | 

Hidden  in  one  of  the  writing 
rooms  of  the  Southern  Historical 
'.Oallection  at  the  USC  Library 
ihese  days  sits  a  busy  woman  who 
has  come  all  the  way  from  Charles- 
ton, W.  Va..  to  gather  material , 
about  her  native  land  for  a  new 
ttovel. 

Mary  Lee  Settle,  author  of  the 
hew  book,  "0  Beulah  Land",  is  in 

■  Chapel    Hill    in    search    of    facts 

:  about  the  status  and  influence  of  ■ 
the  Know  Nothing  political  party  I 

.  wbich  flourished   in  Virginia  and  ; 
other   eventual    influences    in   the  < 
Virginia-West    Virginia    area    dur- 
ing   the    mid-nineteenth    century.  ! 
While   here,   she  s  a   house   guest 
of    Max    Steele,    creative    writing 
teacher   in    the    UNC    Depart,    of 

r- English. 

'     The  other  day.  Miss  Settle  sat. 
posed    comfortably,   on    a   rug   in 
Mr.  Steele's  Chapel  Hill  apartment  i 
and  talked  in  her  attractive  Brit-  t 
ish  accent  about  her  writing,  the 
last    book.    England,    literary    re- 

■  search,  and  the  Southern  Histori- 
cal Collection  in  the  UNC  library. 

"They    have    done    magnificent 

'  work  in  the  collection  here."  said 

Miss  Settle,  who  comes  to  Chapel 

Hill  fresh  from  , the  success  a  few 

weeks   ago   of    the   publication    of 

.  *;0  Beulah  Land".  For  the  last  13 

.years,   she   has   bsen   in   England 

,  i>ut  owns  a  home  near  Charleston. 

,  W.    Va.   "I   wish    that    those    with 

oJd    papers    and    other    materials 

would   turn  them   in   here,   where 

their    value    will    be    realized    and 

where    they    will    be    cared    for 

properly." 

IN  ENGLAND 

Whil^  th3  surprisingly  young 
author  insists  that  her  late-t  wcrk 
isn't  a  "historical"  novel,"  she 
spent  three  years  while  in  England 
V  going  through  historical  papers 
for  background  material  which 
became  "O  Beulah  Land".  Be- 
cause no  libraries  were  kept  in 
W'est  Virginia  at  the  time  of  the 


story,  research  in  the  British  li-i 
braries,  which  have  many  early  j 
papers  of  that  area,  proved  pro£i-j 
table.  I 

Miss  Settle  has  been  writing 
since  she  was  a  child.  Her  liter 
ary  achievements  include  poetrj', 
short  stories,  newspapering,  a 
movie  scenario,  and  two  previous 
novels,  "The  Love  Eaters"  and 
"The  Kiss  of  Kin",  both  written 
in  England.  During  World  War 
II,  she  served  in  the  English 
WAAFs  and  married  Douglas  New- 
ton. Bnglish  poet  and  journalist. 

"O  Beulah  Land",  according  to 
the  aulho.  is  the  first  of  a  four- 
volume  novel  with  a  settinjg  in 
West  Virginia.  Miss  Settle  began 
the  outline  and  plan  for  the  vol- 
ume social  history  in  novel  form 
in  1953.  She  picked  this  form  as 
a  technique,  she  says,  for  the  in 
elusion  of  not  only  the  social,  po- 
litical, and  economic  forces  be- 
hind the  development  of  two 
small  valleys  in  West  Virginia 
from  1755  to  the  present,  but  also 
to  show  the  change  in  character 
of  the  people  living  in  the  valleys 
as  a  result  of  these  forces,  and  of 
their  inheritance  in  terms  of  a 
pergonal   past. 

Miss  Settle  says  she  got  her  idea 
for  the  work  while  riding  one  week- 
fnd   with    a    middle-aged   married 
couple  whoj  constantly  "picked"  at 
one  another,  each  according  to  his 
own  whims  and  prejudices.  "I  want- 
ed to  know  the  reason  for  this  con- 
tinual picking,"  she  said,  "and  it 
I  occurred  to  me  that  to  find  out  I 
;  would  have  to  search  back  into  the 
past  of  that  section  in  West  Vir- 
i  ginia,  back  into  previous    genera- 
i  tions  and  eras  and  delve  back  into 
the  historical  events  and  traditions 
I  which  give  us  those  we  have  to- 
I  day. " 

i  Since  arriving  in  Chapel  Hill, 
ihe  author  has  lectuned  to  Steele  s 
:ind  Miss  Jessie  Rehder's  creative 
I  writing  classes.  She  said  to'  one 
I  class,  prefacing  her  reading  of 
parts  of  "O  Beulah  Land",  that  she 
found  her  native  section  of  West 


Virginia  suitable  for  the  setting 
of  the  four-volume  novel  because 
it  represents  "one  of  the  ideal 
cross-cultures  of  this  country,  a 
microcosm  which  can  mirror  deve- 
lopments outside  itself."' 
SECOND  VOLUME 

The  second  volume  of  the  work, 
which  will  be  called  "Know  No- 
thing,,' will  deal  with  the  political 
party  which  flourished  in  Virginia 
in  the  nineteenth  century.  Other 
facets  of  research  for  the  novel 
will  include  a  study  of  the  mid- 
nineteenth  century  l)€ginning  of 
the  railroads,  the  canal  stock  com- 
panies, the  effect  of  Irish  immigra- 
tion, the  growth  of  the  military  fas- 
hion in  the  South,  the  influence  of 
leligious  and  temperance  reforms, 
the  economic  importance  of  slavery 
and  the  Romantic  Revival. 

"I  am  working  on  the  theory  that 
mostly  primary  references  should 
!  be  used  if  the  research  is  to  mir- 
room  successfully  the  influence  of 
the  period  on  the  futiure,"  Miss 
Settle  says.  '11  is  not,  I  believe, 
what  actually  happens  in  any  given 
period,  but  what  the  people  be- 
lieve at  the  time  is  happening, 
which  influences  the  future  as 
handed  down  opinions,  colorings, 
prejudices,  and  habits.  It  is  of  no 
use  to  enter  the  period  before  the 
Civil  War  (in  her  present  work), 
as  an  example,  with  modern  atti- 
tude toward  slavery.  From  such  a 
point  of  view,  one  can  only  con- 
demn; my  problem  is  to  under- 
stand." 

Giving  reason  to  her  plan  of 
work,  the  author  says  the  legends 
of  the  past,  the  forgotten  influen- 
ces, which  cover  over  the  reali- 
ties, obscure  an  objective  attitude 
toward  the  present.  "Americans 
are  concerned  more  than  any  other 
people  with  identity.  Having  lived 
in  E^urope  for  some  years,  I  can 
see  this  in  relation  to  other  coun- 
tries. Our  concern  with  identity 
keeps  us  questioning,  alive.  Once 
a  cuhure  group  is  Satisfied  with 
its  answers  to  who  it  is,  it  has 
reached  its  recadence.  it  no  longer 
questions. 


NOW  PLAYING 


MOST    N[.TALING    I'K    INSPIHf.n 

KIRK    DOUGLAS 
LUST   FOR   LIFE 


SOCCER  PICTURES 

Yack  pictures  will  be  made  of 
all  varsity  soccer  players  at  4  p.m.*' 
today.   Team    officials    said    it    is 
necesarj-  that  everyone  be  present. 

RECEPTION   COMMITTEE 

The  Reception  Committee  of 
Graham  Memorial  Activities  Board 
will  meet  at  4:30  p.m.  tomorrow 
-n  the  Woodhouse  Conference 
Room  of  Graham  Memorial.  The 
comntittee  has  invited  anyone,  in- 
terested in  working  on  the  commit- 
tee to  attend  the  meeting. 

BAND  PICTURES 

•  All  band  members  have  been  re- 
quested to  report  to  Hill  Hall  to- 
day at  4:30  p.m.  to  have  their  pic- 
lures  taken  for  the  Yack.  Uniforms 
must  be  worn,  officials  of  the  band 
said. 

STATE  EMPLOYEES 

A  meeting  of  the  State  Em 
ployees  Assn.  will  be  held  today 
at  7;30  p.m.  in  Gerrard  Hall.  Dr. 
Reece  Berryhill,  dean  of  the  UNC 
School  of  Medicine,  and  North 
Carolina  Secretary  of  State  Thad 
Eure  will  be  guest  speakers. 

Y  NIGHT  CHORUS 

The  first  rehearsal  of  the  Y 
Night  Chorus  will  be  held  at  5 
p.m.  today  in  the  Rendezvous 
Room  of  Graham  Memorial. 

GRAD  CLUB 

The  Executive  Committee  of  the 
Grad   Club   will    meet   today   at   5 
p.m.  in  the  Pine  Room. 
SOCK  HOP 

A  sock  hop,  sponsored  by  the 
"Y"  Niu-ses'  Assn.  will  be  held 
Friday  from  8  to,  11  p.m.  at  the 
Niuses*  dormitoiiy.  Refreshments 
will  be  served. 
STUDENT  WIVES  CLUB 

The  Student  Wives  Club  will 
meet  at  7:30  p.m.  at  the  main  en- 
trance of  the  planetarium.  They 
will  go  on  a  tour  of  the  plane- 
tarium and  afterwards  "The  Star 
of  Bethlehem"  will  be  presented. 
Admission  is  forty  cents.  All  stu- 
dent wives  have  been  invited  to 
attend. 
WESLEY  CHOIR 

The  Wesley  Choir  will  hold  its 


regular  rehearsal  tonight  from 
/  to  8  p.m.  at  the  University  Meth- 
odist Church. 

PHARMACY    SENATE 

The  Pharmacy  Senate  will  meet 
today  at  7  p.m.  in  Rom  113  Howell 
liall. 

WUNCTV 

Today's  schedule  for  WUNC-TV, 
the  University's  television  station, 
channel  4: 
12:45 — Music 

1:00— Today  on  Farm 

1:30 — Music  in  the  Air 

2:00 — Science  and  Nature 

2:30--Sign  Off 

5:45 — Music 

6:00 — Magic  Lantern 

6:16--Sports  Clinic 

6:30— News 

6:45— Sports 

7:00— Books  and  People 

7:15 — Bible  Course 

8:00— Dr.  Shivers 

8:45 — State  Government 

9:30 — Musical  Forms 
10:00— Final  Edition 
10:05— Sign   Off 


December  12 
Is  Last  Day 
For  'Adoption' 

December  12  is  the  last  day  for 
campus  groups  to  "adopt"  families 
for   the    "Empty   Stocking   Fund." 

This  year  600  families  are  up 
for  adoption,  but  only  150  have 
been  adopted.  The  project  is  a 
community  affair  which  is  carried 
out  annually  by  the  citizens  of 
Chapel  Hill. 

Any  groups  desiring  to  help  with 
the  holiday  season  project  have 
been  asked  to  contact  Mrs.  John 
Crittenden   at  8-0275. 

Up  to  December  1,  19  campus 
groups  had  adopted  families  and 
were  helping  to  "Fill  an  Empty 
Stocking  to  Fill  an  Empty 
Heart." 


Dr.  HanVTo 


PkOt  THREt 


Speak  To 
Hospital  Auxiliary 

Dr.  Geo^  C.  Ham,  head  of  the 
Dept.  of  psychiatry  School  ol  Med- 
icine, will  speak  before  a  mec^ftg 
of  the  Woman's  Auxiliary  of  the 
l^orth  Carolina  Memorial  Itospital 
on  Wednesday  in  the  SebooA  of 
Nursing   Auditorium. 

Dr.  Ham  will  speak  on  «iie-  pro- 
blems of  children  and  the  ap* 
proach  the  Dept.  of  Psychiatry 
takes  in  working  with  them. 

A  film,  made  in  the  Psychiatry 
Dept.,  dealing  with  a  7-year-old 
child  and  how  her  problems  were 
approached  will  be  shown.  The 
film  will  be  followed  by  a  ques- 
tion and  answer  period. 


Cold  Front 
Is  Coming 

A  predicted  cold  front  slowly 
moving  down  from  the  North  is 
expected  to  dispel  the  balmy,  In- 
dian-summer weather  prevailing 
over   Chapel   Hill. 

Although  yesterdays  weather 
seemed  to  be  preeminent  of 
Spring,  the  Raleigh-Durham  Wea- 
ther Bureau  expected  its  death ' 
around  Thursday  by  the  predicted 
Northern  cold  front.  ,  j 

The  April-like  high  of  68  degrees ' 
prevailed  in  like  manner  over  I 
the  whole  Southeastern  part  of  j 
the  United  States.  The  Weather} 
Bureau  attributed  the  Spring-like  1 
weather  to  warm  winds  coming  j 
from  the  West  and  Southwest  j 
bringing  part  of  that  section  of 
the   country's   warmth   with   them. ' 


UP  Meeting  Postponed 

There  will  be  no  meeting  of 
the  University  Party  tonight»  ac- 
cording to  Party  Chairman  Mike 
Weinman. 

The  regularly  scheduled  meet- 
ing has  been  postponed  due  to 
the  basketball  game  with  Furman. 
However,  there  will  be  an  execu- 
tive committee  meeting  tomorrow 
afternoon  at  3:30  p.  m.  in  Graham 
Memorial. 

The  chairman  of.  the  standing 
committee  will  be  announced  at 
a  later  date. 


Yack  Picture* 

Yack  picturts  will  be  w6ti  mf 
all  varsity  soccer  players  at  4 
p.m.  this  afternoon  on  tha  Mc- 
cer  field.  It  is  important  that 
everyone  be  present. 


BOOK  DEDICATED  TO 
DECEASED  STUDENT 

A  volume  has  been  placed  in 
Wilson  Library  in  honor  of  Bob 
Ellebe,  late  residebt  of  Steele 
Dorm  killed  in  an  automobile  ac- 
cident last  month. 

The  volume,  Letters  of  Thomas 
Wolfe,  was  donated  by  the  In- 
terdormitory  Council. 

A  committee,  composed  of  El- 
lebe's  friends  in  Steele  Donn,, se- 
lected the  volume. 


***mnFI'  CONTAINS 

A  30  MINUTE  STRETCH  OP  WORD* 
LESS  MOVIE-MAKillG  THAT  IS 
ONE  OF  THE  MOST  EMGROSSiNG 
SEQUENCES  SINCE  THE  INVEN- 
TION or  MOTION  PICTURES," 

-—Tirnt  Magazine 


GARY 


COOPER 

Distant 

DRUMS 


2  SUPER 
Cooper 

^SMAStfESr 


cooPEirt 

«UTH 

ROMAN 


.  UWTEOSTATISPttTUReS  < 


TODAY   ONLY 


STEVE  COCHRAN 


'    A  SensotiQnol  New  Motion  Plcfurei 

''RIFIFr 

—  .^.means  Troyblel 

D/Vecfed  by  JULES  DASSIN 

Ne  On»  Savfadl  Onca  Pacrtura  Ha»  Staifarf. 
SPECIAL  LATE  SHOW  FRIDAY  NIGHT 


REGULAR  SHOWING 
STARTS  SUNDAY 


ryA'PV/TYj 


HAVE  A  REALCIGAREnE...Ue  aGM€P.i 


You'll  find  Camels  taste  richer,  fuller,  more 
deeply  satisfying.  The  exclusive  Camel  blend 


Discov^  the  difference  between  "just  smoking"  and  Camels!  "'  ■""^'^  '""""^  ""^^ """ '™°''"'  "°""^ 


-.  J.  CcjU^SOi  Tub.  Cu  .  \Viii.-tiin-S»lem. S.  C. 


---    Ttr    '■-»•»•  ♦• 


You're  sure  to  enjoy  Camels,  the  most 
.popular  cigarette  today.  They've  really  got  it! 


«H 


^rw^i^^^rw^^r^w^ 


#AGt   POUR 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


TUESDAY,  DECEMBER  4,  1954 


13  Books  for  Miiiionaires 


The  nicest  thing  about  giving 
books  at  Christmas  is  that  you  can 
make  a  really  impressive  splurge 
for  no  more  than  ordinnry  run-of- 
the-mill  gifts  cost  in  ordinary  lines. 

Here,  for  example,  are  some  of 
the  most  expensive  books  in  our 
stock.  When  you  give  these,  you've 
shot  the  works!  And  yet  the  price 
runs  lower  than  mail-order  cata- 
logue kitchen-ware. 

The  Book  of  the  Sky.  edited  by  A. 
C.  Spectorsky.  A  companion  to  last 
year's  breath-taking  "Book  of  the 
Mountains**,  filled  with  out-of-this- 
world  iUustrations.  $10.00 

Troasury    sf    Amorican    Gardens, 

by  Fitch  and  Rockwell.  With  250 
ill&strations,  100  in  color.  A  big 
beautiful  book,  to  delight  the  heart 
of  any  gardener.  Somebody  on  your 
list  will  swoon  for  this  one!   $12.50 

Buttorflys  and  MoH«s,  includes  34 
t^  the  most  beautiful  color-plates 
you  ever  saw.  Kg  and  impressive. 

$10.00 

• 

Our  Littrary  Horitago,  a  Pictorial 
History  of  the  Writer  in  America, 
by  Vaa  Wyck  Brooks  and  Otto 
Bettmann.  A  wonderful  "UhitttT 
show-piece."  $8.50 


Thomas  Rowlandson 
His  Life  and  Art 

By  BERNARD  FALK 

A  fine  biography  of  the  famous 
English  caricaturist,  illustrated 
with  many  reproductions  of  his 
work,  in  black  and  white  and 
in  color. 

Our  Special 

$5.95 


George  Bernard 

Shaw 

AAan  of  the  Century 

By  Chapel  MirK  Own 

Archibald 
Henderson 

A   Literary  Landmark, 
And  Just  Out! 

$12.00 


The  Letters  of  Thomas  Wolfe, 
edited  by  Elizabeth  Nowell.  A  fat 
handsome  book,  by  one  of  the 
U.N.C.'s  outstanding  products. 

$10.00 

Dutch  Painting  —  An  incompara- 
gift  you  can  find  for  the  sp<H'ts- 
productions.  $25.00 

The    Fireside    Book    of    Baseball, 

edited  by  Charles  Einstein.  A  one- 
volume  library  of  the  game's  most 
'pleasant  literature.  The  very  finest 
gift  you  can  fine  for  the  sports- 
minded.  $5.% 

Japanese  Flower  Arrangement^  by 

Seido  Twata.  For  combined  beauty 
and  utility  this  book  has  no  near 
rival  $6.95 

Gram's  New  Modem  World  Atlas 
Newest  and  one  of  the  best.  A 
nice  gift.  $8.45 

Fost-lmpressionism,  by  John  Re- 
wald.  The  vital  art  years,  1888  to 
1883,  brought  together  in  impres- 
sive color  and  text.  $15.00 

Composers  on  Music,  edited  by 
Sam  Morgenstern.  Quotations  from 
most  great  composers,  from  Pales-! 
trina  to  Copland,  on  their  art.        I 

$7.50 


CERTIFICATE 

Grover  Lee. Jr.,  third  year  law 
student  aitd  special  representative 
of 'the  Jefferson  Standard  Life  In- 
surance Co.  in  Chapel  Hill,  was 
recently  awarded  a  certificate  for 
having  completed  a  life  insurance 
course  which  he  has  been  studje 
ing  for  the  past  year. 

Lee  is  currently  spending  much 
of  his  time  coniacling  UNC  stu- 
dents. 


Operation  Will  Make 
State  Dental  History 

By   ROBERT   H.   BARTHOLOMEW  ,  graduate  dental  seminar,       home-  j 

coming  day  and  the  annual  meet- 1 


Hall  Is  Author 
Of  Philosophy 
Book  Story 

Dr.  Everett  W.  Hall  of  UNC  is 
the  author  of  an  article  appear- 
ing in  a  book  written  by  29  lead- 
ing philosophers. 

The  book,  "American  Philoso- 
phers at  Work:  The  Philosophic 
Scene  in  the  United  States,"  was 
edited  by  Sidney  Hook  of  New 
York  University. 

Dr.  Hall's  article  is  entitled 
"MUl's  'Proof  of  Utility."  The 
book  has  been  described  as  an 
"encyclopedia  of  contemporary 
American  philosophic  thought." 

Dr.  Hall,  before  leaving  the  min- 
istry to  become  a  philosophy 
teacher,  was  the  pastor  of  a  Me- 
thodist Church  . 


18  Books  at  $1  Each 


Men  Like  Books 

Games  for  Two,  by  Albert  Blore- 
head  and  Geoffrey  Mott-Smith. 
You'll  find  everything  from  Liar 
Dice  to  Honeymoon  Bridge  in  this 
useful  book. 

Introduction  to  Murder,  by  Wen- 
zell  Brown.  A  thought-provoking 
case  study  of  the  JU>nely  Hearts 
Murders.  Ours  are  copies  of  the 
criginal  $2.75  edition,  but  they're 
yours  for  a  dollar. 

Fourteen  Men.  by  Arthur  Scholes. 
A  hair-raising  account  of  explora- 
tion in  the  Pacific  Aataretic. 


Children  Like  Books      ! 
Most  of  All!  I 

By   Space  Ship   to  the  Moon,    by 

Coggins  and  Pratt.  How  the  little  j 
boys  eat  this  up!     '  | 

Peter   Pen  —  The   famous   story,] 
sdapted   for  younger   children   by 
Phoebe  Wilson,  and  gorgeously  il- 
lu^ated  by  Ruth  Wood. 

Moby  Oick.  adapte^f^  young 
readers  by  Felix  Sutfon.^  Lots  of 
color.  ■• 

Robert  E.  Lee,  by  David  McDowell. 
Little  boys  are  great  hero-worship- 
pers, and  here's  a  fine  hero  for 
them. 


No  Picnic  on  Mount  Kenya,  by  Oklehon»e  —  A  Golden  Book  of 
Felice  Bemizzi.  If  your  man  en-  '/estern  paper  dolls,  based  on  cos- 
joys  rocking-chair  mountain  climb-  tumes  of 'the  famous  stage  and 
ing,  here's  a  dilly  tor  him.  screen  play. 

The  Story  of  Little  Black  Sambo, 

by  Helen  Bannerman.  The  same 
story  and  illustrations  that  delight- 
ed you,  ever  so  long  ago. 


Ladies  Like  Books 

Carolina   Corsair,    by   Don  Tracy. 
Here's  tlood,  thunder  —  and  love 
—  in  the  days  when  bloody  Black- 
board  hung  out   on  the  Carolina   ^^^^  ^^  t^°^  "Peek-a^boo"  books 
jjijjy^  SO   popular  with   the   first   story 

book  set. 


See  the  Circus,  by  H.  A.  Rey.  An- 


Ledy  Builfi^htor,  by  Patricia  Mc- 
Cormick.  The  personal  story  of  a 
girl  from  Texas  who  became  a 
famoiis  bullfighter. 

Written  on  the  Wind,  by  Robert 
Wilder.  This  scandalous  story  of 
North  Carolina  tobacco  barons  will 
be  out  in  a  feature  movie  soon. 

Betty  Crocker's  Good  and  Easy 
Cook  Book  —  lOOO  time-saviiig  for 
the  novice  cook  —  a  present  the 
v/hole  family  will  thank  you  for! 


Favorite  Nursery  Songs.  A  beauti- 
ful edition,  full  of  good  and  color- 
ful illustrations. 

Cinderella  —  Oxirs  is  the  most 
handsome  edition  we've  ever  seen. 
Captures  all  the  magic  of  the  old 
favorite. 

Hardy  Boy  and  Nency  Drew  series. 
For  the  10  to  14  adventurers  we 
have  a  full  line  of  these  staples  — 
and  if  they  double  up  on  titles  at 
Ctwiatmas,  we'll  swap  'em  around 
later.  • 


6  Books  of  Laughter 


Write  Mo  k  Poem,  Baby,  by  H. 
Allen  Smith.  A  coUecticm  of  prize 
efforts,  candid  and  comical,  of  very 
young  writers.  Laughable.       $2.95 

The^Comptote  Book  of  Abselutoiy 
Perfect  Housekeeping,  by  Elinor 
Goulding  Smith.  The  distaff  side 
of  the  bookshop  crew  whoops  over 
tiiis  one  —  and  so  we  suspect, 
will  every  woman  who  is  a  little 
sick  of  the  usual  woman's  magazine 
guff  about  the  delights  of  home- 
making.  $2.50 

The  Tom  Lehrer  Song  Book  —  The 
sleeper  among  best  sellers.  Over  a 
year  old,  and  still  one  of  the  most 
popular  books  on  our  humor  table. 

$2.00 


Laughter  in  Bod,  by  Davis  and 
Choda.  Not  what  you  think.  It's 
something  to  cheer  up  that  sick 
friend,  and  a  right  good  job  it  will 
do.  $2.95 

The  Hokinion  FestivaL  If  you  don't 
remember  Helen  Hokinson's  de- 
lightfully busty  club-women,  the 
family  will  —  and  they'll  thank 
you  sincerely  for  this  round-up  of 
her  best  work.  $5.00 

Kovarsky's  World  —  the  newest 
rage  among  New  Yorker  cartoon- 
ists looks  at  everything  from  Arabs 
to  naked  ladies  in  his  own  parti- 
cular cockeyed  way.  Treat  yourself 
to  a  free  read  of  this  one,  and 
then  check  off  some  names  on 
your  list.  $2.95 


DO  YOUR  CHRISTAAAS  SHOPPING 
WHERE  BOOKS  FLOCK  THICKEST 


The  intimate  Bookshop 

205  E.  FrankHn  St.  -  Open  Till  10  P.M. 


NOW  PLAYING 


''RIFIFI 


...moons  Trevb/of 
Directed  by 
JULES  DASSIN 

STAltINC 

JEAN  SERVAIS,   ROBERT 

MANUEL.  CARL  MOHNER 

Today 
Through  Saturday 

Criterion 

THEATRE   DURHAM,   N.   C. 


Dental  history  will  be  made  in 
North  Carolina  tomorrow  when 
some  150  dentists  will  witness  a 
single  dental  operation  at  the  same 
time. 

This  feat  will  be  staged  at  the 
UNC  School  of  Dentistry  through 
the  media  of  closed  circuit  tele- 
vision. Under  ordinary  circum- 
stances only  two  or  three  people 
may  witness   a   dental  operation. 

This  closed  circuit  television 
display  is  a  preview  of  what  will 
soon  be  a  common  occurence  at 
the  UNC  School  of  Dentistry, 
thanks  to  the  aid  of  the  Denfal 
Foundation  of  North  Carolina.  Inc. 

Among  the  projects  already  com- 
pleted at  the  School  of  Dentistry 
by  the  Dental  Foundation  is  the 
.installation  of  a  humidify  and 
temperature  control  system  in  the 
research  laboratory  and  loans  to 
worthy  students.  A  closed  circuit 


Dental  Founda-1 


IDC  Holds 
Successful 
Patrty   Fri. 


All  the  Independent  women  on 


ing  of   the   N.   C 

tion. 

REASON 

The  reason  for  the  existence  of  campus  and  inhabitants  of  Ay- 
the  Dental  foundation,  incorpor-' cock.  Everett,  Grimes  and  Stacy 
ated  under  the  laws  of  North  Car-  men's  dormitories  had  a  very  suc- 
olina  in  1950.  is  to  aid  the  educa- '  cessful  party  in  Cobb  basjment 
tional  and  research  program  of  Friday  night,  according  to  Inter- 
the  UNC  School  of  Dentistrj",  and  dormitory  Council  Social  Chair- 
thereby  the  dental  and  general  man  Benny  Thomas, 
health  of  the  people  of  the  state. 


OR.  JOHN  C.  BRAUER 

. .  .  Foundation    secretary'treastirer 

TV  installation  will  be  completed 
soon. 

Wednesday's  program  will  be 
staged  with  equipment  belonging, 
to  WUNC-TV  and  will  be  operated 
by  p?rsonnel  of  the  station.  It  will 
be  directed  by  John  Young,  as- 
sistant professor  of  radio,  tele- 
vision   and   motion    pictures. 

Same  350  people  are  expected 
to  gather  at  the  School  of  Dentis- 
try Wednesday  to  attend  one  of 
three  evanta^-These  are  the  post- 


The  Foundation  provides  a  legal 
medium  or  agency  for  the  deposit 
of  funds,  or  for  the  assignment  of 
property,  which  is  under  control 
of  trusted  educational,  profession- 
al and  lay  leaders  and  citizens  of 
the  state. 

The  Board  of  Directors,  in  whom 
is  vested  the  authority  and  con- 
trol of  the  Foundation,  is  com- 
prised of  a  list  of  outstanding  lay 
and  pro|es§ional  leaders,  includ- 
ing many  administrative  officers 
of  the  University. 

The  objectives'  and  purposes  of  j  pus  is  invited 
the  Dental  Foundation  are  to  pro- 
vide funds  not  available  via  state 

I  appropriations  for:  (1)  research, 
(2)  special  equipment  for  improv- 
ing and  advancing  educational 
standards,  (3)  student  loans  as 
directed  by  donor,  (4)  special  lec- 
tureships as  directed  by  donor 
and  (5)  other  programs  as  ap- 
proved by  the  Board  of  Directors. 
OFFICERS  N 

The     present     officers    of     the 

I  Foundation  are  Dr.  Walter  T.  Mc 
Fall,  Asheville,  president;  Dr.  C. 
C.  Poindexter,  Greensboro,  vice- 
president  and  Dr.  John  C.  Brauer, 
Chapel  Hill,  secretary-treasurer. 
Dr.   Brauer   is  dean   of   the   UNC 

I  School  of  Dentistry.  New  officers 
for  the  Foundation  will  be  elected 
at  a  Foundation  meeting  Wednes- 
day. 

The  School  of  Dentistry  will 
hold  its  first  homecoming  day 
Wednesday.  Since  the  first  class ' 
of  dentists  were  graduated  in  1954  { 
a  total  of  150  students  have  re-  i 
ceivcd  degrees  as  doctors  of  den- ; 
tal  surgery  and  20  students  have  | 
completed  courses  in  dental  hy-  i 
giene.  i 

The   day-long   postgraduate   den- 


The  men  and  women  came  as  two 
separate  groups  and  the  idea  of 
bringing  a  date  was  discouraged 
in  order  to  get  more  people  to 
participate  by  not  being  left  out 
for  lack  of  a  date. 


Lanier  Resigns  From  Board; 
Pope  Named  To  Succeed  Him 

Claude    T.    Pope,    Cedar    Grove    the  Courthouse  by  Clerk  of  Court 
tobacco  farmer,  succeeded   Edwin  ,  Eidwiu  Lynch. 
S.     Lanier  as  a  member  of     the  j     in  the  absence  of  Board  Chair- 
Board    of    Coimty    Commissioners; 
yesterday  as  new  members  of  the 
five-man  body  were   sworn   iii  at 

Sfate  Gains 
$3.5  Million 
Over  Yeat 

j  Lanier  of  Chapel  Hill  was  present 
Raleigh,  Uf)  —  North  Carolina's  j  but  did  not  sit  with  the  Board  in- 
general  fund  collections  decreased  |  asmuch   as   fee   formally   resigned 


man  R.  J.  M.  Hobbs  wiio  is  ill  the 
new  Board  membens  ag^ed  to 
postpone  until  a  spc:cial  meeting 
next  Monday  nig'jt  their  formal 
organization  and  the  appointment 
of^a  number  of  County  of  finals. 
Sim  Efland,  outgoing  Bdard 
mcm<ber,  presided  over  a  routine 
meeting  of  the  commissioners  as 
they  convened  for  their  regular 
meeting  this  morning.  Others  pres- 
ent were  Dwight  Ray  of  Carrboro 
and  Henry  Walker  of  St.  i!ary>. 


One  of  the  main  objectives  of 
the  party,  other  than  having  a 
good  time,  Thomas  said,  was  to 
suppress  the  campus  wide  idea, 
held  by  both  men  and  women,  that 
a  person  has  to  have  a  date  to 
attend  organizational  dances  and 
parties    where    the    general    cam- 


It  more  people  would  partici- 
pate in  campus-wide  social  func- 
tions, far  fewer  men  and  women 
would  be  sitting  in  their  dorms 
on  Saturday  night  because  they 
"do  not  know  anyone  to  date," 
Thomas  said. 

Cobb  basement  was  decorated 
as  a  Pall  scene  at  the  party  and 
refreshments  were  served.  TTie 
Hillside  Joymakers  combo  from 
Durham   entertained. 


47  To  Attend 
Arson  School 
Opening  Today 

Forty-seven  experienced  invest- 
igators of  arson  and  other  unlaw- 
ful burnings  will  arrive  here  today 
for  the  fifth  annual  Arson  School 
to  be  held  at  the  Institute  of  Gov- 
ernment today  through  Friday. 

Attending  this  intermediate 
school  in  arson  investigation  will 
be  representatives  of  local,  state, 
tal  seminar  will  begin  at  9  a.m.  !  and  national  governmental  agen- 
and  continue  through  4  p.m.  with  j  cies  responsible  for  arson  and  un- 
ihe   Dental    Foundation    luncheon  |  lawful    burning    control,    law   en- 


$484,099  last  month,  but  the  in- 
take this  fiscal  year  has  shown  a 
gain  of  more  than  3^  million  dol- 
lars over  the  same  period  a  year 
ago. 

This  was  reported  yesterday  hy 
Revenue  Commission  Eugene  Shaw 
in  a  report  to  Gov.  Hodges.  Shaw 
said  decreases  were  noted  in  all 
schedules  for  November  except 
sales  inheritance,  privilege  and  in- 
tangible faxes. 

General  fund  receipts  during 
November  totaled  $11.61(8^44. 
compared  to  $12,102,243  in  Nov- 
ember last  year.  For  the  fiscal 
year  to  date  the  collections  have 
amounted  to  $66^846,522  a  gain 
of  $3,856,860,  or  6.12  per  cent,!  Mr.  Efland.  in  a  sinwlar  state- 
over  the  same  period  last  year. |  ment,  said  'I  have  appreciated  the 
\  Shaw  said  increases  were  noted  opportunity  to  ser\'e  my  people  of 
in  all  schedules  for  the  fiscal  year  1  Orange  County  and  have  served  in 
except  gift  freight  car  line  and  my  opinion  to  the  best  interests 
insurance  taxes.  of  all  with  a  clear  conscience  and 

The  biggest  drop  last  month  was '  a  P^ace  cf  mind.  I  have  enjoyed 
in  the  income  tax  schedule.  Re- !  serving  with  each  of  the  present 
turn^  from  individual  and  corpo-  j  members  and  appreciate  the 
rate  taxes  totaled  $1,132,010,  a  f""  cooperation  received  from 
degrease   of   $429,667   in   compar- 


in  a  letter  to  Lynch  on  Thursday 
evening. 

Resolutions  of  thanks  for  their 
service  of  the  past  two  years  were 
presented  and  passed  in  behalf 
of  Mr.  Efland  and  Mr.  Lanier. 

In  a  statement  to  the  old  Board 
Mr.  Lanier  declared  "I  go  off  the 
Board  with  the  feeling  that  the 
County  employees  are  doing  a  con- 
scientious job.  I  have  enjoyed  my 
relations  with  the  other  Board 
members  and  the  County  employ- 
ees and  wish  to  make  my  services 
available  to  you  if  ever  needed 
in  the  future."  He  further  praised 
his  colleagues  for  th^r  work  dur- 
ing the  past  biennium. 
EFLAND  > 


As  prescription  specialists,  it  is  our  business  to 
"keep  up"  on  the  latest  medical  developments;  to 
stock  the  newer  products  in  anticipation  of  your 
Doctor's  call.  Thus,  we  can  compound  any  pre- 
scription promptly  and  precisely  as  directed. 
So,  bring  your  Doctor's  prescriptions  to  us 

sunoN's 

Phone  9-8781 


"The  Tar  Heel's  Prescription  Center" 


DAILY    CROSSWORD 


ACROSS 

1.  Borden  on 
6.  Commenced 

11.  Thick  aoup 

12.  SwlfUy 

13.  Threefold 
15.  Notion 
10.  Keenest 
18.  Walk 

through 
water 

21.  Oazelle 
^Tlbet) 

22.  Mimic 

23.  Noble 
27.  Sells 

30.  Numeral 

31.  Prolong 

33.  Perched 

34.  Merry 

35.  Plural  of 
"serum" 

36.  Lar^e  fish 

40.  Prickly  pear 

41.  Shade 
45.  Dwell 

47.  Sultan's 
decree 

48.  Movable 
barriers 

49.  Ancient 

DOWN 

1.  Likely 

2.  Prickly 
envelope 
of  a  fruit 

3.  Swiss  canto: 

4.  Taut 
6.  Thin 

stratum 

(getd.) 
•.  Barium 
,    (aym.> 
f.Toinb 


8.  Gadoid  fish 

9.  Highest 
cards 

10.  Tidy 
14.  Loiters 

17.  Put  to  flight 

18.  Flutter 

19.  Top 
20  Slight 

depression 

24.  GaeUc 

25.  Posterior 

26.  Greek  letter 
2S.DebMe 

29.  Jagged 
knot 


32.  Colors, 
as  eggs 

35.  Angry 
■growl 

36.  Male 
deer 

37.  Musical 
instru- 
ment 

38.  Least 
whole 
number 

39.  Buckeya 
SUte 

42.  Father 

43.  Poem 


Zin'^'£rL\  a:.3iau[i 


44.  Skin  tumor 
46.  Compass 

point 

(abbr.) 


at  noon. 

The  highlight  of  the  seminar 
will  be  the  closed  circuit  TV  pre- 
sentation. Three  demonstrations 
will  be  given.  These  will  be  by 
Dr.  John  W.  Gallagher,  professor 
of  peridontology  and  oral  path- 
ology and  director  of  dental  hy- 
giene; Dr.  Marvin  E.  Chapin.  pro- 
fessor of  oral  surgery;  and  Dr. 
Clarence  L.  Sockwell,  assistant 
professor    of    operative    dentistry. 

TV  screens  will  be  set  up  in 
three  classrooms,  each  havmg  a 
seating  capacity  of  50  persons. 
The  clinicians  and  their  patients 


forcement  agencies,  fire  protec- 
tion departments,  and  special 
agents  of  underwriting  organiza- 
tions, who  have  graduated  from 
one  of  the  previous  arson  schools 
at  the  Institute  of  Government,  or 
who  have  had  four  or  more  years 
of  employment  in  the  capacity  of 
a  criminal  investigator  or  special 
agent. 

The  students  of  the  school  will 
represent  not  only  North  Carolina 
agencies,  but  agencies  all  over  the 
southeastern  seaboard  that  are  in- 
terested in  up-to-the-minute  de- 
tailed instruction  in '  the  areas  of 


will  be  located  in  another  part  of '  investigative   technique   and  crim- 


sion  with  November  last  year.  For 
the  fiscal  year  the  intake  has  to- 
taled $11,025,689,  a  gain  of  $995. 
074. 

Sales  tax  collections  showed  a 
gain  of  $214  last  month  with  total 
receipts  of  $6424.736.  Y^T  the 
fiscal  year  the  collections  have 
amounted  to  $30,989,627.  an  in-i 
crease  of  $1,650,152. 

Highway  fund  collections  dur- 
ing November  totaled  $7,393,541,) 
a  drop  of  $366,007.  For  the  fiscal 
year.  However,  the  intake  has 
shown  an  increase  of  $$1,902,594, 
with  collections  totaling  $40,264, 
849. 

Inheritance  tax  receipts  for  the 
month  amounted  to  $255,880,  a 
gain  of  $659.  The  privilege  tax 
schedule  brought  in  $232,328,  an 
increase  of  $15,414.  Franchise  tax 
receipts  totaled  $2,372,786,  a  gain 
of  $38,220.  Beverage  tax  collec- 
tions showed  a  decline  of  $169, 
210,  with  a  total  of  $875.22^.' 


each  of  them.  I  have  no  enmity, 
prejudice,  or  hatred  toward  any- 
one and  congratulate  the  Boafd 
on  the  potential  calibre  of  the 
new  members.  I  am  satisfied  with 
the  new  Board.  They  will  always 
have  my  support.  Best  of  luck 
and  godspeed." 

Following  adjournment  of  this 
meeting  the  two  new  members 
were  sworn  in  and  the  new  Board 
was  convened  with  Mr.  Ray  act- 
ing a.s  tempojar>'  chairman^  A 
number  of  routine  reports  from 
County  employees  were  heard  be- 
fore the  noon  recess: '  ' 
Mr.  Pope  was  appointed  to  fill 
out  the  remaining  twg  years  in 
Mr.  Lanier's  term;  according  to 
law,  by  Chief  of  Court  Lynch,  Mr. 
Efland  retired  from  the  Board  tQ- 
day  as  a  result  of  his  having  fai>- 
ed  at  re-nomination  in  the  Demo^ 
cratic  primary  last  May,  in  which 
Mr.  Stanford  and  Mr.  Hobbs  wera 
nominated  and  subsequently  elec- 
ted. 


the  building.  Two  TV  cameras 
will  be  used  to  shoot  tfie  demo- 
nstration, giving  the  observers  a 
better  view  of  the  demonstrations. 


Real  Estate  Consultant 


inal  interrogation. 

Classroom  sessions  will  be  held 
in  the  Institute  of  Government 
Building  on  the  UNC  campus.  The 
practical  problem  bui^nihgs  Jare 
set  up  at  the  Institute's  Clear  Wat- 


Sociologist  Describes 
N.  Carolina  In  1970 


Gives  Talk  To  BA  School!  "   SP^ngs    firearms   ranges,    two 

I  miles  out  of  Chapel  Hill.  The  prac- 
Rountree  Crisp.  Durham  real  I  tical  problems  will  consider  the 
estate  consultant,  recently  gave  |  investigative  aspects  of  dwelling, 
his  annual  guest  lecture  before ;  warehouse,  and  automobile  fires 
the  class  in  real  estate  in  the  j  and  will  serve  as  experince  in 
UNC  School  of  Business  Admin- 
istration. 


the  handling  of  complex  arson  and ' 
unlawful  burning  offenses. 


IT'S  FOR  REAL 


by  Chester  Field 


SANTA  CLAUS  ANALYZED 

Why  oh  why  does  Santa  go, 

"Ho-Ho,  Ho-Ho,  Ho-Ho,  Ho!" 
Is  it  just  because  he's  jolly? 

I  believe  he's  oflf  his  trolley. 
, . ,  Gifts  for  everyone  on  earth 

Bre^  hysteria — not  mirth 
If  you  had  his  job  to  do 

Bet  you'd  shake  like  jelly  too! 

MOlALi  End  your  gift  problems  before  they  start.  Give 
Chesterfield  in  the  carton  that  ^ows  for  real— to  a}l 
the  happy  folk  who  zmoke  for  real!  Buy  lots—to 
do  lots  for  your 
Christmas  list. 

Smoke  for  fl .  •  • 
MtMke  Ch«>t«rfi«ldl 

IW  for  «*nr  »hll<>>apklnl  van* 
wofttil  far  publlcslidu. 
ChuWrfI'M.  P.  O.  Bm  n. 
M..  York  a^M.Y. 

O  IJfa«<  a  Mran  TabaMa  Ca 


The  most  significant  population 
trend  in  North  Carolina  during 
the  past  generation  has  been  the 
growth  of  more  than  100  cities 
and  towns,  a  UNC  sociologist  said 
in   Charlotte  Monday  night. 

Dr.  Gordon  W.  Blackwell  made 
the  statement  in  speaking  on 
"North  Carc^ina:  1970"  before  the 
Adult  Education  Council  of  Char- 
lotte and  Mecklenburg  County. 

Dr.  Blackwell,  who  is  Keyan  pro- 
fessor of  sociology  and  director 
of  the  UNC /Institute  for  Research 
in  Social  Science,  said  the  past  anci ; 

the  present  are  the  only  sound  North  Carolina  in  non  farm  wages, 
bases  for  decisions  which  may  de-  he  said,  after  pointing  out  the  aver> 
termine  the  future.  age  weekly  earnings  in  North  Car- 

He  said  he  would  focus  his  re-    olina  is  only  $54.54. 
marks   on    the   past    and   present  i     Figures  quoted  by  Dr.  Blackwell; 
rather  than  "turn  soothsayer  and    ranked  North  Carolina  as  46th  in 
look  into  tea  leaves  or  a  srystal  j  number  of  people  who  have  com.- 
ball."  !  pleted  high  school. 

He     told     the    Charlotte    group ,  1»70  GOAUS  :;,,. 

"the  kind  of  state  we  shall  have"  j  In  suggesting  goals  for  19?6. 
will  depend  on  a  number  of  things    he  mentioned:  •. 


Winston-Salem,  High  Point,  TTiom- 
asville,  Lexington,  Salisbury,  Kan* 
napolis.  Concord,  Charlotte  and 
Gastonia. 

So  far  as  income  is  concerned", 
Dr.  Blackwell  said,  the  state  rank^ 
40th  in  the  United  States. 

In  1950,  the  median  net  ijicome. 
of  the  state's  farm  families  was 
only  $1,304. 

•'North  Carolina     farm     people 
must  raise  much     of     their     own 
food."  he  said.     "Many     wouldn't^ 
have   any  food   otherwise." 

Only  Mississippi     ranks     belov^ 


technological  i  the  people 


including: 

1.  Natural    resources. 

2.  The   people  themselves 

3.  The    level    of 
development. 

4.  Capital  wealth. 

5.  Basic    institutional    services 
such  as  government,  religion,  edu- 
cation and  health. 
POPULATION 

In  turning  to  population,  Dr. 
BlaclnA'ell  pointed  out  from  1900 
throogh  1956,  there  was  a  136  per 
cent  increase  in  the  number  of 
whites  living  in  North  Carolina. 
However,  he  added,  the  percent- 
age increase  in  the  Negro  popula- 
tion was  only  about  half  as  rapid. 

But  despite  this  increase,  the 
total  net  loss  of  population  through 
oUt-migration  was  about  209,000 
between  1940  and  1950.  he  said. 

In  commenting  on  the  urbaniza- 
tion of  the  state,  he  said  there  i.* 
a  crescent  of  urbanized  counties  ex- 
tending from  Raleigh,  through  Dur 
ham,      Burlington,       Greensboro, 


1.  To  keep   more  of  the   most 
capable  young  people  in  the  state:  - 

2.  To    improve    the    health    of- 


3.  To    provide    more    adequate-  - 
welfare  for  the  unfortunate. 

4.  To   provid«   income  fOr  the  ■ 
people. 

5.  To  improve  the  education  of - 
the  people. 

6.  To  reorganize  agriculture'' 
and  to  industrialize  the  state. on  a" 
selective  basis. 

7.  To  plan  for  an  orderly 
growth  of  the  cities  and  towns  in 
the  state.  ' 

Tf>  accomplish  these  things.  Dr. 
Blackwell   said,    the    Consolidated" 
University  can   play  a  big  part. 

"Perhaps     it     is     not    too   far- 
fetched  to   compare    the   Consoli-  ^ 
dated   University   to  the   heart  of 
♦he  human  being."  he  said,  "the"'" 
University  pumos  life  blood  to  all 
parts  of  the  state  and  into  all  seg- 
ments of  its  social  and  economic  *' 
structure." 


tlJE.?6 


7 


Ta 
St. 


'"    Coach  j 
freshmai 
"ius  regu'l 
6:15  p.i 
"Yar   Bat 
Point   CI 
inary    aJ 
•Jneets  FJ 
•nie   c| 
ginning 
schedulel 
"only  pre 
scrimmai 
'■^sity. 
">•   The    II 
■  pair  of 
'•to  live 
^Ueam  of 
■'"ftf  the 
history 
'    Coach  I 
'^or  anotl 
■-*tess  thai 
-eagers 
claim 
Catholic 
'.   Bruno 
■^ew  Yorl 
-;A11-Amei 
tind  was! 
•vafter  hij 
♦Lares  e  p] 
^lemy  in 
:  Valuable  I 
jrf   New 
tournamt 
HoldinJ 
U,lot  for  t| 
»haffei, 
rom    Pi^l 
rn.All-Std 
Pittslj 
Most  Valj 
|a  row  in 
ToumamJ 
Anothel 
til-state 
Keplej . 
;^hool 
Hisjh   in 


Pa 


MELB( 
more  01^ 
pected 
ler  McCoij 
was  favoj 
men's  sp| 
her  bid  fo 
ble-doubl< 

The 
drew  t  h€ 
games, 
SaturdayJ 
scbedule<! 
schedule. 

The   U| 
iiiated  trJ 
ing  on  S^ 
^ians  in 
w^ith  4631 
the  Russi 
the  U.  S.f 
if  Uncle 
onto  the  I 
America 
sfeveral 

Russia 
Soviet 
gymnast  i^ 
gary  secc 
Almericat 

'Gymna 
cycling, 
WTestlinj 
ming,  W€ 
ous  areni 
pic    settlj 

In  1952 
every  sv\ 
aftd    the 
has  mad^ 
like  ieavi 

Only  o| 
far,    but 
ripped  fr 
tralia's 
Uncle   S^ 
Japan':: 
in  the  <i 
meter  Ire 

Rose, 
has     bro| 
1,500   mt 
le^l  the 
43:31  7  e< 
per  cent, 
a  power 
manaka 
beyond 
30.7  set 
at  Helsinl 
faster  thl 
standard 


tlJEi?bAY,  BHefeMfifft  4,  1956 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEt 


F   .GC  FIVF 


X  4.  1954 


\m 

of  Court 

ird  Chair- 
is  ill  the 
ig|[$ed    to 
meeting 
|ir   fomal 
(pointment 
officials. 
Boord 
a  routin? 
sioners   as 
|r   regular 
khers  ptes- 
Carrboro 
St.  Mary'.s. 
[aR  present 
Board  in- 
resigm^d 
Thursday 

for  their 
rears  were 
in    behalf 
[Lanier. 

old  Boai*d 

I  go  off  the 

that  the 

>ing  a  con- 

Injoyed  my 

Vr     Board 

ty  employ- 

ly  serrices 

^er   needed 

ler  praiited 

work  dur- 


»ilar  stale- 
mated the 
people  of 
served  in 
^t   interests 
nence  sad 
?e  enjoyed 
le  present 
Mate       the 
h'ed      from 
(no  enmity. 
)ward   any- 
the   Board 
>re    of    the 
tisfied  with 
fill  always 
of    luck 

lent    of   this 
members 

new  Board 
Ir.  Ray  act- 
lairman;  A 
Reports  from 
re  heard  be- 
ll n  ted  to  tni 
VQ  years  in 
Jcording     to 

Lynch,  Mr. 
lie  Board  tq- 
I  having  fai^ 

the  Demo^ 
ty,  in  which 
[Hobbs  were 
luently  elec- 


Point.  ThoBQ- 
flisbury,  Kan- 
)arlott«    and 

|i>  concerned^, 

le  state  rankii 

Jtates. 

|n  net  income. 

families   was 

I  farm     people 
their     own 
my     wouldn't^ 
ruise. " 

rank.s     belo^ 

•n  tarm  wages. 

out  the  averv 

in  North  Car- 

Dr.  Blackwea 
na  a.s  Mth  in 
'ho  have  com-  , 


>ai-    lor    1970, 

e  oi  the  most 
le  in  the  state:  - 
the    health    ot- 

•/ 

Here    adequat*'- 
ortunate. 
ncome   for  the- 
re education  of  •• 

te      agriculture^' 
the  state. on  a*- 

an     orderly 
s  and  towns  ih 

lese  things.  Dr. 
le   Consolidated' 
y  a  big  part.      ■ 
not   too   far- 
■e    the   Consolj- 

0  the   heart  of 
he  said,  "the"! 

lif^  blood  to  all 
md  into  aU  s^g-' 

1  and  economU" 


Tar  Heel  Varsity  Opens  Home  Schedule  With  Furman; 
Frosh  Nay  Preliminary  Agaihsi  High   Poinf  Jayvees 

Tar  Babies  Will  Offir 


Star  Sprinkled  Lineup 


By  BILL  KING 

"^  Coach  Buck  Freeman's  1956 
freshman  basketball  squad  makes 
its  regular  season  debut  tonight  at 
6:15  p.m.  in  Woollen  Gym  as  the 
"Tar  Babies  go  against  the  High 
Point  College  jayvees  in  prelim- 
inary action  before  the  varsity 
'meets  Furman  at  8:00  o'clock. 

llie  contest  will  mark  the  be- 
ginning of  a  twenty-one  game 
schedule  for  the  Tar  Babies  whose 
only  previous  action  has  been  two 
scrimmage  sessions  against  the  var- 
sity. 

"  The  Tar  Babies  have  a  large 
j>air  of  shoes  to  fill  if  they  ejcpect 
to  live  up  to  the  great  freshman 
team  of  last  year,  undoubtedly  one 
"Of  the  best  yearling  squads  in  thr 
history  of  UNC  basketball.  * 

Coach  Freeman  has  the  material 
^or  another  banner  season  with  no 
iess  than  three  all-state  high  school 
esgers  rnd  another  who  won  ac- 
claim as  All  -  American  among 
Catholic  prep  teams. 

Bruno  Larese,  6-4  forward  from 
-New  York  City  is  the  boy  who  woti 
'.All-American  honors  last  season 
tind  was  one  of  the  most  sought- 
after  high  schoolers  in  the  east 
•Larese  played  for  St.  Ann's  Acad- 
emy in  New  York  and  won  Most 
Valuable  Player  awards  in  several 
u)f  New  York's  best  high  school 
tournaments. 

Holding  down  the  other  forward 
jlot  for  the  Tar  Babies  will  be  Lee 
•Shaffer,  a  big  6-7  jump  shot  artist 
iirom  Pittsburg,  Pa.  Shaffer  was 
. ;  n  .\11-State  choice  at  Baldwin  High 
in  Pittsburg  and  was  voted  the 
'■lost  Valuable  Player  two  years  in 
a  row  in  the  Ford  City  Christmas 
Tournament. 

Another  of  Freeman's  former 
aJl-state  boys  is  6-8  center  Dick 
Kepley.  Kepley  played  his  high 
school  ball  at  Jefferson  Senior 
High  in  Roaooke,  Va.  and  was  a 


second  string  all-american  last  sea- 
son. 

At  the  guard  positions,  Freemah 
probably  will  go  with  6-3  Mike 
Steppe,  an  outstanding  high  school- 
er from  New  York,  and  John  Crot- 
ty,  at  5-11  the  only  man  on  the 
freshman  squad  under  six  feet. 
Crotty  is  from  Bayoone,  N.J.  home 
oi  former  Tar  Heel  captain  Jerry 
Vayda.  He  is  a  graduate  of  St. 
Peter's  Prep  School  and  was  an 
oil-state,  competitor  there. 

Heading  the  list  of  what  should 
l>e  a  very  potent  bench  for  the  Tar 
Babies  are  Grey  Poole,  6-5  forward 
from  Raleigh  and  one  of  the  most 
widely  acclaimed  cagers  in  North 
Carolina  last  year,  and  Lee  Ains- 
lie,  another  big  forward  who  also 
stands  at  6-5  and  hales  from  Hunt- 
ington, W.  Va. 

Rounding    out     the    Tar    Baby 

squad  which    will   probably  dress 

for  tonight's  game  are  forwards. 

Jack  Crutciifield  and  Bill  McRack- 

en;  guard.";.  Wally  Graham,  Gerald 

Griffin,    Charlie    Wilson,    Tommy 

Saintsing  and  Dave  Loughlin. 

FRESHMAN  SCHEDULE 

D«c.    4— Hi«h  Point  J.V.      home 

0«e.     7— Wilni'9»on  Jr.  Col.  away 

D«c.  12— N.C.   Stat*  .  .   Kimten 

Dec.  17 — D<ik«  - heme 

^n.     4 — E«st*rn  MiL  Inst,   away 
Jan.    »— Atl.   Chris.   J.V.    away 

Jan.  11 — ^Wak*  Forest  hem* 

J«n.  12 — Stalling  A.F.  Base  heme 

Jan.  1S->N.C.  Stat* away 

Jan.  19— N.C.  State  _  Graensbore 

Jan.  31 — Wake  Ferest  away 

Feb.    2 — Bullls  School  heme 

Feb.     4— Davidsen  J.V.    - .  away 
Feb.     a— Hi«h  Point  J.V.      away 

Fab.     9 — Duke  .— _- heme 

Feb.  13— Wake  Forest  home 

Feb.  19— N.C  Stat*  home 

F*b.  22— Atl.  Chris.  J.  V.     heme 

Feb.  23 — Duke  away 

Feb.  2^— Wake  Forest    away 

i — Duke away 


IN  OLYAAPIC  GAMES 


Pat  McCormick  Shoofs 
For  Diving  Twih 


By  MURRAY  ROSE 

"if 

MELBOURNE  —  (AP)  —Three 
more  Olympic  records  were  ex- 
pected to  fall  today,  and  Pat  Kel- 
ler McCormick  of  Lakewood,  Calif., 
was  favored  to  wrap  up  the  wb- 
men's  springboard  gold  medal  in 
her  bid  for  an  unprecedented  "dou- 
ble-double." 

The  glistening  Olympic  pool 
drew  the  major  attention  in  the 
games,  which  come  to  an  end  on 
Saturday,  with  the  fringe  events 
scheduled  to  take  up  most  of  the 
schedvile. 

The  United  States,  which  dom- 
inated track  and  field  events  clos- 
mg  on  Saturday.  stiU  led  the  Rus- 
sians in  the  unofficial  team  total 
v^ith  468  pointfi  against  ^419>r2  tot 
the  Russians.  A  lot  depends  upon 
the  U.  S.  showing  in  the  swiming, 
if  Uncle  Sams  athletes  can  hang 
onto  the  point  advantage,  for  the 
Americans  don't  figure  strongly  in 
s^erai  other  sports. 

Russia  closed  in  slightly  when 
Soviet  women  finished  first  in 
gymnastics  yesterday,  with  Hun 
gary  second  in  an  event  in  which 
Americans  were  shut  out. 

•Gymniistics,  shooting,  fencing, 
cycling,  yachting,  Creco  —  Roman 
wrestling,  along  with  the  swim 
ming.  were  on  tap  today  at  vari- 
ous arenas  in  Melbourne's  01j«i- 
pic   settlement. 

In  1952  at  the  games  in  Helsinki 
every  swim  record  was  smashed, 
and  the  curtent  onslaught  her« 
has  made  the  Helsinki  marics  fall 
like  leaves  in  a  November  storm. 
Only  one  has  stood  the  test  so 
far,  but  that  is  expected  to  be 
ripped  from  the  Iwok  when  Aus- 
tralia's mighty  Murray  Rosi^, 
Uncle  Sam's  George  Breen.  and 
Japan's  Tsuyoshi  Yamanaka  clash 
in  the  eight-man  final  of  the  400- 
mete^  freestyle. 

Rose,  IB^ear^W  vejgetarian  whp 
has  broken  the  world  standard 
1,500  meters,  favors  the  4<».  He 
led  the  qualifiers  with  a. time  ol 
43:31.7  extending  himself  only  "80 
per  cent.'*  Breen,  oX  Buiftlo,  N.  Y-r 
a  power  srwimmer,  and  young  Ya- 
manaka are  certain  to  push  Rose 
beyond  the  Olympic  mark  of  4: 
30.7  set  by  France's  Jean  Boiteaux 
at  Helsinki  and  posdbly  to  a  speed 
faster  than  Ford  Konno's  world 
•tandard:  4:28.7  i«  th«  U-  S:  X 


The  swim  program  opens  at  2 
p.  m.  local  time  11  p.m.  EST  with 
heats  in  the  men's  lOO-moter  back 
stroke  followed  by  the  women's 
400  meter  relay.  The  evening  card 
has  the  men's  40(>-meter  final  and 
the  last  four  dives  in  the  women's 
springboard  divihg  in  Which  the 
magnificent  McCormick  leads. 

The  backstroke  century  Olympic 
mark  of  1  minute,  5.4  seconds,  set 
by  Uncle  Sam's  Yoshi  Oyakawa 
should  be  duck's  soup  for  Oyakawa 
himself  and  a  classy  field  of  con- 
tenders including  Australia's  Dave 
Th^ik  and  Johnny  Monckton.  All 
three,  as  well  as  others,  iiave 
eclipsed  the  time  repeatedly. 

Women  have  troken  Olympic 
records  in  the  200-  meter  breast- 
stroke  artd  the  100-meter  back 
stroke.  The  listed  world  mark  for 
the  100-meter  butterfly,  a  new 
Olympic  event,  was  eclipsed  by 
America's  comely  Shelley  Mann 
Monday  night. 

The  men  have  busted  Olympit 
records  in  the  200-meter  butterfly 
the  100-meter  freestyle,  the  200 
meter  breaststroke  and  the  800 
meter  freestyle  relay. 


Leaping  Le«  Hooks  One  In 

Lee  Shaffer,  6-7  frosh  from  Pittsburgh,  Pa.,  will  be  in  the  starting  Uneuft  tonight  *t  forward  when 
the  Carolina  Tar  Babies  open  their  season  against  the  High  Point  College  Jayvees  here  in  Woollen  Gym. 


Carolina  Swimmers  Tr||Npl|f 
East  Carolina  Fish,  vS5l3CI|l 


Ezzard  ChftHef  Hangs 
Up  Gloves,  Quits  Game 

HOUSTON,  TcJt.  — <^  A  sche- 
duled boxing  bout  Dec.  11  be- 
tween former  heavyweight  cham- 
pion Ezzard  Charles  and  Roy  Har- 
ris, <Hitsta9diiig  former  Golden 
Glover  from  East  Texas,  today 
was  cancelled  due  to  Charles'  re- 
tirement, announced  in  Cincinnati 
yesterday.  r    I 

<;harle8,  Ua.  making  the  an- 
nouncement that  he  would  retire 
trora  boxihS  to  devote  his  time  to 
family  and  business  interests,  said  | 
he  trout  with  Harris  was  the  only 
one  H  had  pending. 


By  STEWART  BIRD 

Rallying  from  a  first  event  dis 
qualification,  Carolina's  champion 
mermen  swept  pij^ht  out  of  nine 
remaining  lirst  places  to  down  F^a.s; 
Carolina,  55  to  30,  Saturday  night 
in  Greenville. 

With  a  capacity  crowd  of  600 
looking  on,  Carolina  stars  Zwicker, 
Nash,  and  Mahaffy  won  the  second, 
third,  and  fourth  events  to  give 
the  Tarheels  a  lead  they  never  re- 
linquished. 

The  disqualification  came  when 
one  of  the  medley  relay  swimmers 
left  his  mark  before  the  next  man  ] 
had  touched.  Carolina  won  the 
event  by  half  a  pool  length,  but 
the  points  went  to  the  Bucs  on  the 
:ule  infraction. 

East  Carolina  was  hurt  by  the 
loss  of  some  men  due  to  colds  but 
still  fielded  a  team  that  gave  the 
Tarheels  keen   competition. 

UNC  will  open  defense  of  its 
\CC  co-championship  December 
seventh  against  South  Carolina  in 
Bowman  Gray  pool. 


The  "Summary: 

400  yard  medley  relay — ECC 
(Sawyer,  Keebber.ling,  Gartman, 
Denton),  time — 4:23.0. 


220  yard  freestyle — (1),  Zwick- 
er (UNC),  (2).  AAcKee  (ECC),  (3). 
Williamson   (ECC).   time— 2:20.4. 

50  yard  freestyle— (1)  Nash 
(UNC).  (2)  Churn  (ECC).  (3)  Ma 
ness  (UNC).  time  24  9. 

200  yard  butterfly— (1)  Mahaf- 
fy (UNC),  Turner  (UNC).  (no 
ECC  entries),  time — 2:21.7. 

Diving— (1)  Mclnnis  (UNC),  (2) 
Meekins  (UNC),  (3)  Dyer  (ECC). 
total   ponits:   84.0. 


.  toa  yard  f^e#«tvle  — (1)  R6th 
(UNC)  (2)  Denton  (tec).  (3) 
Meads  (tCC).  tinw— 53i9/ 

20Q  yard  backstrokeMl|  Saw- 
yer (ECC).  (2r Nash  (UNC),  (3) 
Butler  tUNC),  time--2:14.e. . 

440  yard  freestyle— (I)  Schlff- 
man  (UNC),  (2)  McKee  (fi^CC) 
(3)  Atwater  (U»C).  time^iW.t. 

200  yard  breattstroke  —  (lj 
Mercer  (UNC),  (2)  Koabl>crlinig 
(CCC  (5)  Goad   (UNC),  time,  — 

2:3*.«.- ;     •  '■'\;\-:  '- 

4(^  yard  frestylf  nelay^^ 
(7wieker.  Zkkgraf,  Rose,  Rotb). 
time-!^:35.1 .  ' V' ^  ■  '■  -     .' :  .    • » 


Rosenbiuth  Will  Lead 
Cagers  In  Home  Debut 


By  LARRY  CHEEK 

Carolina's  highly  publicized  bas- 
ketl>all  team,  winners  over  McCrary 
Saturday  night  in  their  season's 
debut,  open  their  home  season  to- 
night in  Woollen  Gym  against  the  I  Conference 


The  Paladins  also  have  a  spec- 
tacular newcomer  in  the  lineup, 
lie  is  BvTcn  Pinson  of  Henderson, 
Ky.,  a  freshman  who  will  compete 
against   the   locals.  Freshmen    are 

legible   to    play   in   the   Southern 


R€AfCH 


MEN'S 


^  Hat /yen, 

^it.ta  Qua^hf,  SHOES 


Furman  Purple  Paladins  in  what 
promises  to  be  a  wide  open,  free 
scoring  affair. 

The  Tar  Heels,  rated  among  the 
nation's 4op  five  teams  in  presea- 
son polls,  whipped  McCrary,  84-70 
Saturday  night  in  a  game  that  was 
close  up  until  the  last  few  min- 
utes. Furman  had  worse  luck  in 
their  opener,  losing  to  Tennessee, 
114-106  in  a  high  scoring,  race 
horse  duel. 

Lennie  Rosenbiuth,  Joe  Quigg 
and  Pete  Brennan,  three  old  de- 
pendables  from  last  year's  fine 
squad,  paced  the  local  cagers  Satur- 
day. Rosenbiuth,  a  sure-fire  bet  for 
iVll-American  honors,  poured  in  25 
points,  and  was  instrumental  in  a 
late  Tar  Heel  surge  that  put  the 
game  on  ice.  Brennan  took  runner- 
up  honors  with  19  markers  while 
Quigg  bagged  14. 

Rosenbiuth  and  Brennan  will  be 
in  the  starting  lineup  tonight,  but  j 
6-11  soph  Bill  Hathaway  will  hold  i 
down  the  pivot  po^t.  Hathaway  j 
scored  only  five  points  against  Mc-  j 
Crary,  all  on  free  throws,  but  was 
a  terror  on  defense,  blocking  shot ' 
after  shot.  I 

The  guards  tonight  will  be  Bob  ' 
Cunningham  and  Tommy  Kearns. ' 
Cunningham  rippled' the"  nets  for 
6  points  against  McCrary.  Backing 
up  these  two  will  be  Stan  GroU, 
Tony  Radovich  and  Ken  Rosemond. 
Danny  Lotz  and  Quigg  are  the  first 
line  reserves  up  froi^t. 

Leading  the  Purple  Paladins 
into  action  will  be  E^ck  Wright,  A 
16.7  scorer  lasi  year  who  made 
ihe  All-Southern  Conference  sec- 
ond tournament  team.  Bill  Ranks. 
6-8  lad  from  Charlotte  and  Steve 
Rose,  6-9  skyscraper  from  Taylors, 
\.C,  are  other  veterans  who  should 
5ee  ektensive  action  against  tho 
far  Heels. 


The  Tar  Heels  hit  the  road  Sat- 
urday for  their  only  other  game 
jf  the  week.  They  play  the  Clem- 
son  Tigers  in  Charlotte  in  their 
first  conference  tilt  of  the  year. 

Tonight's  game  w.il  begin 
promptly  at  8  p.m.  and  will  be 
preceded  by  a  preliminary  contest 
between  the  UNC  frosh  and  llie 
High  Point  Jayvees.  Garnetime  for 
that  one  is  6:15. 


•  flawless  fashion 

•  complete  comfort 

.  exacting  construction 

See  them  today! 


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~%  ,.-X   .-J  I    ^'jt-':''^"-[  '..''* 


Arts  Aiiifl'ieieffice  Dean     | 
Named  to  History  f  osf    i 

Dr.  J.  Garble  ^ittpraoit  profes- ; 
abr  of  histcrj'  at>  CN6.  has  been  I 
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Dean  of  th«  College  of  Arts  and 
Sciences  at  UNC,  he  was  selected 
at  the  recent  meeting  in  Durham 
Of  the  Southern  Mistbricil  Assn. 


Informal    Fliotogniphy 

I  By  appointment  at  your  home) 

Weddivg    Photos 

A   Spenaltv 

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Ofc — News  Building, 

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WEATHER 

CloudinM  and  mild  WwdfMsday 
•nd  Thursday  with  <catt«r«d  show 
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3r()  c  Daily 


PRESENT 

Married     folks     won't    get    one. 
^ee  page  2. 


VOL.  LVII,  MO.  6} 


Complete  (/P)  Wire  Strvie* 


CHAPEL  HILL,  NORTH  CAROLINA,  WEONESDAY,  DECEMBER  5,  19S« 


Offices  in  Graham   Memorial 


FOUR  PAGES  THIS  ISSUE 


Everett  Hall  Delivers 
Fall  Humanities  Lecture 

The  snake  who  tempted  Eve  in  quite  disgusted,  though  more  with 
the  Garden  of  Ekien  was  really  a  himself  than  with  Eve.  "I  should 
philosopher,  it  was  said  here  to-  j  have  known  it  was  hopeless  in 
nijiht  by  Kenan  Professor  Everett '  your  present  state.  There's  noth- 
HalK  chairman  of  the  UNC  depaJ-t- 1  ing  for  it  but  to  take  a  bite  of  the 
ment  of  philosophy,  delivering  the  fruit.  See  how  attractive  it  is?" 
fall  humanities  lecture.  E\e    was    Doth    more    inquiring 

Prof.  Halls  subject  was'  'What  and  resentful.  And  as  the  one  trait 
Is  It  a  Philosopher  I>oes?"  He !  got  the  better  of  her  the  other 
slated  tnat  although  the  philoso-  j  grew  until  she  reached  a  state 
phcr  questions  many  vie\*T)oints  of  j  bordering  on  blasphemy.  She 
existence  and  good  and  evil,  he  is  ;  thought  more  and  more  about  goixl 
as  humble  as  the  snake  who  crawls  j  and  evil  and  her  newly  acquired 
upon  his  belly.  j  knowledge  of  them.  Then  one  day. 

Explaining  that  the  task  of  the  j  agitated  by  internal  debate  witli 
philosopher  is  to  knalyze.  criticize  I  ncrself.  she  jlmost  stepped  on  the 
ortd  evaluate  outlooks  on  life,  Dr.  |  serpent  as  he  slithered  through 
Hall  reviewed  diverse  methods  {  the  grass  desperately  trying  to  get 
used   by   philosophers  to  perceive    out  of  her  way.    This  so  startled 


Yesterday  s  Run  Off  Election 


.  nd  delineate  ethical  problems. 

"If  ycure  in  trouble,  ostensibly 
Aith   your   mate   but   really   with 


her  that  she  screamed   at  him  in 
nost  unladylike  fashion: 
"You    vicious    varmint:    You'rj' 


yourself."  said  Hall,  "don't  come  '  the  cause  of  all  my  troubles.  And 
10  a  philosopher  for  wisdom  rath-!  for  what?  A  pseudo-knowledge,  of 
or  go  to  your  psychiatrist  for  an-  something  that's  not  in  the  world 
olysis."  j  (See  HALL.  Page  3) 

Here    is    a    part    of    Dr.    Hall's 
mythical    dialogue    between    Eve 
end  the  snake:" 

"Just  look  at  yourself,"  said  the 
viper.  You're  walking  around  in 
'oroad  daylight  right  in  front  of 
Adam  and  me,  too,  without  a 
stitch  01  clothing  on  youl  Aren't 
you  ashamed?  Dont  you  sec  what|  ^he  chairman  and  members  of 
a  brazen  hussy  you  are?  That's  U^c  Orientation  Committee  for 
evil  1 

..'*.,„       .,.,,.      ,j  ,_         .         ,  fall.  1957,  will  be  announced  after 
Evil,   evil?  I  should  be  asham- '  oi>,-;=*«,«<,    ,,^^^t;^^      - ^:-«   ♦ 

.„  ,    ,     .^        .      .      ,  „      . ,  ^        Christmas    vacation,    according   to 
cd?  I  don  t  understand,    said  Eve.  • 

■'V»hy  you  haven't  got  a  stitch  i 

of  clothing  on  either,  nor  have  any  j 

of   the    animals — though   some    of 

!hera  have  more  hair  than  we.  But 


Orientation 

Organization 

Underway 


student      Body      President      Bob 
Young. 

Young  said  "In  my  opinion,  this 
wall  be  the  most  important  ap- 
pointment of  the  schodol  year,  for 
the  work  of  the  Orientation  Com- 
mittee and  of  the  Orientation 
Chairman  in  particular  determines 
the  calibre  and  general  philoso- 
phy of  the  entire  studcn  gener- 
ation." ..       • 


'.he  evil?  Tell  me.  what  does  it 
look  like — is  it  the  color  of  my 
skin,  or  is  it  darker?  And  what 
shape  is  it — round,  oblong,  tri- 
angular? Honestly.  I'm  trying  aw- 
lulfy  ^d  and  I  can't  see  an3*thing 
I  didn't  see  before.  Maybe  if  I,  __ 
wore  colored  glasses?  Or  looked  at '  ""^*  chainrian  of  the  Orients 
myself  at  twilight  (I  look  quite  *^^  Committee  wUI  have  to  make 
nice  then}"*"  all  of  tbe  basic  ^aas.  «*iid«  ti»e  : 

•Pshaw.-'  remarked  the  serpent.!  ^'^'"'^  "^^  the   committee    and   pre- 

i  pare  everyone  for  the  best  orien- 
tation week  ever  for  the  students 
next   fall."   He   added.    "It   is   im- 
!  perative  that  we  get  the  most  in- 

Here  This  Week  ■  '"""■  "' '"° ' '""""' ""' 


Coh<:lucles  Voting  Till  Spring 


By  JNeiL  BASS 

Yesterday's  run-off  election 
rounded-out  the  siatie  of  elected 
student  govcrnmeint  officials  un- 
til spring  elections. 

Balloting  yesterday  also  con- 
cluded a  solid  month  of  cam- 
paigning and  other  processes  con- 
nected   with   elections. 


MacKay  Speaksj 


Coed  Enters  Maid  Of  Cotton  Contest 


Car»11rM's    Shirley    Csrpenter,    senior    from    Oskboro,    is    soing 

to  compete   in  the  netionel  AAaid  of  Cotton  contett  this  year.   Mis« 

Carpenter,  currently   reigning   as  Miss   Modern   Venus   on   the   UN4 

cmmput,  hopes  to  win  the  conteet  in  Nashville,  Tenn.,  Dec.  27.  ' 

^       w.  ^ ^ ►.     .„ ,  .^fjhoto.  by.  Fred- Pawitt&gmf^  • 

•%^»      .*'  •    ''■  '"*■' ^-      •■"^"'■s' ^^-^-^ '- ^  '^  ,.    »   ,  — :- — -^ i 

'No  Substitute  For  Equality/  V, 
Dr.  Elder  Tells  Duke  Students 


Mr.  James  A.  Mackay,  a  repre- 
sentative to  the  Georgia  General 
Assembly  and  a  practicing  at- 
torney   in    Decatur.   Georgia,    will         .^.  .  .  ,.    ^. 

,    . ,.„    .  „      ,.  •      positions  mav  pick  up  application 

speak  to  campus  groups  here  this    ^, ^      .       ;^ _     ^^   j._..     r- 


sons  for  these  positions. 

There  will  be  15  members  of 
the  Orientation  Committee,  ten 
men  students  and  five  women  stu- 
dents. Anyone  interested  in   these 


week. 

Mackay,  who  is  being  sponsor- 
ed by  the  YM-YWCA.  will  give 
his  main  address  tomorrow  at  6 
p.m.  in  the  upstairs  dining  hall  of 
Lenoir  Hall.  His  subject  will  be 
"ITie  Role  of  Georgia  in  National 
and    International    Politic;;." 

On  Friday.  MacKay  will  speak 
to  political  science  classes  at  8 
a.m.  in  106  Hanes  Hall  and  at  11 
a.m.  in  106  Carroll  Hall. 

MacKay  will  speak  on  "Christ- 
ianity and  Student  Government'' 
FYiday  from  2  to  4  p.m.  in  Roland 
Parker  Lounges  1  and  2.  in  Gra- 
ham  Memorial. 

The  public  has  been  invited  to 
attend  all  these  meetings. 

MacKay  received  his  A.B.  de- 
gree from  Emory  University  and 
has  also  done  graduate  work  at 
Duke  University.  He  has  served 
as  a  lecturer  in  law  in  the  Emory 
Law    School. 


blanks    in    the 
ment  Offices. 


Student     Govern- 


Daily  Tar  Heel  To  Print 
Christmas  Travel  List 

Students  who  haven't  found  a 
way  home  for  Christmas  or  who 
have  n«t  yet  found  enough  rid- 
ers ere  invited  to  come  by  The 
D»ily  Tar  Heel  office  end  get 
their  name  en  the  list. 

The  DTH  will  run,  free  of 
charge,  a  list  of  studtnts  who 
need  rides  end  those  who  need 
riders.  The  names  will  run  be- 
ginning Saturday  and  continue 
until  everyone  listed  has  rides  or 
riders. 

Names  can  b*  turned  in  to  the 
paper  between  2  and  6  p.m.  each 
day. 


DURHAM  — </fi—  "There  is  no 
substitute  for  equality,  because  it 
will  admit  no  graduations  be- 
tween races  in  tenns  of  the  re- 
spect that  should  be  accorded  hu- 
man beings."  Dr.  Alfonso  Elder, 
president  of  North  Carolina  Col- 
lege, told  an  audience  at  Duke  i 
University    last    night. 

Describing  "some  ot  the  char- 
acteristics of  the  modern  Negro, " 
Dr.  Elder  made  a  public  address 
under  the  sponsorship  of  the  Ed- 
ucational    Affairs    Committee     of 


Wastebasket  Fire  At  WC  ' 
Does  $650  Damage 

GREENSBORO  —Ut^—  Fire  that 
apparently  originated  in  a  waste-  i 
brisket  did  damage  estimated  at 
$650  to  a  room  on  the  second 
floor  of  Marj-  Foust  Dormitorj'  at 
Woman's  College  shortly  before 
9   o'clock   yesterday   morning. 

Six  fire  trucks  pfccautionarily 
responded  to  the  alarm  and  the 
blaze  was  quickly  extinguished.  A 
dresser,  other  furnishings,  and 
some  clothing  and  personel  prop- 
erty of  the  student  were  lost.        I 


GM'S  SUTE 

""ThenfoHSwTngaetlvlflet    are 
scheduled  for  OM  tMlay: 

M«in  Lounge^  ••!),  ^UynMk- 
ers;  Grail  Room,  S-4,  Pen  Hellen- 
ic Council,  6-t,  AKPei;  Relend 
Parker  \.  2  and  3,  *-l,  AKPsi; 
Roland  Parker  1,  l-9tM,  Jeho- 
vah's Witneses;  Weedhouse  Con- 
ference Room,  4-5:M,  GMAB's 
Reception  ConMnitteO;  Rendez- 
vous Room,  4:30-*,  6MAB  Bridge 
Lessons;  APO  Room,  8:30-9:30, 
APO  Pledge  Class. 


Checks  For  Vets 
Being  AAoiled 

The  veterans  in  school  under 
the  Korean  GI  Bill,  can  cheer  up 
because  they  will  probably  not 
have  to  go  on  vacation  without 
their  government  funds,  according  , 
to   the   Veterans   Administration.    I 

In  December,  because  many 
.schools  and  colleges  g^\  out  be- 
fore the  checks  are  usually  re- 
ceived, the  VA  is  making  a  special  I 
effort  to  mail  the  checks  early.  If ! 
the  checks  fail  to  reach  here  in 
time  to  be  delivered  before  the 
vacation,  they  will  be  held  at  the 
the  post  office  until  after  the 
holidays  arc  over,  according  to 
Col.  Shepard. 

The  law  requres  GI  allowances 
to  be  paid  sometime  after  the 
end  of  each  month  of  training 
completed.  But  before  a  payment 
can  be  authorized,  the  veteran  and 
his  school  must  submit  a  certifi- 
cation to  VA.  stating  that  he  has 
been  in  training  status  all  month. 
These  reports,  which  are  usually 
filled  out  the  last  of  the  month, 
may  this  time  be  filled  out  be- 
tween December  17-19.  said  SIk'- 
piir(1. 


Preregistration 
Closes  Today 

The     appointment    book.s     fcr    j 
preregistration    close    today    for 
students     in     General     College. 
Registfation  -actually  starts  Dec. 
6. 

Preregistration  in  the  other 
schools  starts  on  or  about  Dec. 
6.  depending  on  the  school. 
The  details  of  preregistration 
in  all  schools  has  been  pub- 
lished and  posted  on  most  bul- 
letin boards  around  the  camp- 
us. In  all  casea.  the  last  day  for 
preregistration  is  Dec.  18. 

According  to  Director  of  Ad- 
missions. Roy  Armstrong,  ap- 
proximately 3.000  students  are 
expected  to  take  advantage  of 
preregistration.  The  other  .stu- 
dents will  have  to  register  along 
with  the  new  students  at  the 
beginning  of  next  semester. 
From  60  to  100  new  students, 
including  first  semester  fresh- 
men and  transfers  are  expected 
here  next   semester. 


the   Duke   Student    Union. 

■'The  one  characteristic  differ- 
ence between  the  factors  which 
motivate  Negroes  and  the  factors 
which  motUale  other  people  in 
America  is  the  Negro's  desire  fur 
equality."  the  NCC  president 
saitl.  , 

"The  desire  grows  stronger  with 
each  succeeding  generation:  it 
grows  broader  with  each  effort  to 
achieve  it:  and  its  meaning  deep- 
ens with  each  effort  to  understand 
it.''   he   .said. 

In  his  efforts  to  achieve  equali- 
ty "The  Negro  operates  simul 
taneously  as  an  idealist  and  as  a 
praymatist."  Dr.  Elder  said.  "He 
has  set  his  eyes  on  the  attain- 
ment of  the  ideal:  yet.  he  realixcs 
that  the  means  of  attaining  the 
ideal  must  be  practical  in  the 
sense  that  they  must  work." 


nevs 

brief 


FROM  RADIO  DISPATCHES 
C.MRO  —  .\nglo-French    mdlilary 
forcts    have    begun    a    mass    wilh- 
'.irawal  troin  EgApt.  Obsorvvrs  ex- 
pect the  job  will  be  done  within 

the  week. 

*  *     *        •  J 

WASHUVGTON  —  The  ^  United 
•States  has  notified  all  interested 
.^ovurnments  in  the  Middle  East  no 
aggressicm  will  be  tolerbtpd.  To 
oack  the  announcement  up.  the 
\.  S.  Sixth  Fleet  is  taking  up  mili- 
iary  positions  through  the  eastern 
Mediterranean  basin. 

V   «   *       ,j  ;  • 

VIENT«JA — ^There  were  reports 
the  Red  puppet  government  of 
Bidgaria  is  purging  its  army  to 
tut  chances  of  a  revolt.  Unresl 
v,as  reported  in  Bulgaria  and  Ro- 
mania. ^ 
«     *     <i: 

BUDAPEST  —  Russian  soldiers 
shot  at  Hungarian  women  placing, 
[lowers  on  an  unknown  soldier's 
^rave  Tuesday.  It  was  exactly  a 
month  since  Soviet  forces  returned 
to  Budfapest  to  take  ov^r  the  gov- 
crmnent . 

*  *     * 

C'lAItfTON,  Tenn..  —  Jnlc^raltd 
Clinton  lligh  School  was  clo.sed  in- 
oefiniteiy  by  its  schuol  board  Tues- 
day aftdr  a  whitt '  Baptist  minister 
who  led  Negro  children  to  class 
v.as  beaten.  In  Washington.  U.  S. 
.\tty.  Gen.  Herbert  Browneli 
warned  persons  inteiicring  with 
school  integration  will  be  prose- 
cuted  by   the   federal   government. 


completely     terminated     until    the 
.spring,   is   deadlocked   —   25-25. 

The  Student  Party  gained  one 
seat  from  the  University  Party  "to 
bring  about  tie  membership,  but 
failed  to  muster  enough  attend- 
ance at  last  week's  first  session 
to  keep  the  UP  from  sweeping  all 
Legislature  offices. 
CLASS  OFFICERS 

In  the  class  olficcs  department, 
the  University  Party  completely 
dominated  with  one  exception, 
vice-presidency  ol  the  freshman 
class. 

If  swept  victorious'^v  through 
all  .junior  class  offices. 

The    most    hotl.v-contested    class 

i  office  —  presidency  ,!f  the  junior 

1  class  —  was  captured  by  the  UP's 

.Tohn    Kerr    over    the    SPs    Whit 

'  Whitfielo. 

22  Legislature  scats  will  be  fill- 
.  ed  by  the  spring  election,  as  well 
j  as    campus-wide    executive    offices, 
j  sophomore    and    senior   class   offi- 
Superior  Court  Judge  W.  A.  Lc-  ,  sludent.s.    From   this   group   a   jury  j  cers  and  some  judiciary   posts. 
,arhd     McKeithan     from     Pinchursl    of    12.    with    an    alternate,    will    be 


First   of   the   elections  was   held 
Nov.   13.  Then   run-offs  were  held 
on    Nov.   20   an<l   yesterday. 
WOMEN'S  COUNCIL 

Winners    in    yesterday's    run-off ! 
balloting      for      Women's      Honor 
Council   posts   are: 

Misses    Ann    Morgan.    Sara    Van 
Weylc   and   Kit  Whitehurst. 
MEN'S  COUNCIL 

Winners    in    balloting    for   Men's 
Honor    Council    posts    are: 

Freshman   s'at:    Hugh   Patterson 
over    Dick    Robinson. 

Si)phomorc    seat:     Gary    Cooper 
over  John   Owens. 
JUDICIARY 

Thus  the  complete  slate  of  repre- 


sentatives   elected    to    the    judici- 
ary branch  this  fall  is: 

Men's  Honor  CouncI:  junior 
.seats.  Paul  Carr,  Jack  Jones  and 
Don  Evans;  sophomore  seats. 
Tucker  Yates  and  Gary  Cooper: 
freshman    seat.    Hugh    Patterson. 

Women's  Honor  Council:  Miss- 
es, Lucinda  Holderness,  Doris  Pet- 
er. Sara  Van  Weyle  and  Kit 
Whitehurst. 

Student    Council:     .lunior    seats. 
Mack     Patton     and     Jay     Walker; 
sophomore  seat.  Jim  Long. 
LEGISLATURE 

The  22nd  student  Legislature 
assembly,    now   that    elections   are 


McKeithan  To  Judge 
Sutton  'Murder'  Trial 


v.ill  be  on  the  bench  when  the 
annual  law  sch'MjI  mock  trial  opens 
here  Friday. 


at     3:30    p.m. 


in 


chosen     Fi'iday 
Manning  Hall. 

Events  leading  up  to  the  annual 

I  affair  include  the  followinii: 

The    trial,    sponsored    each    year  j      ^^^    Football     plaver    Ed    Sutton 

by    Phi    Alpha    Delta    legal    nater- |  ^^^^    "as-saulted"    bv    •iumer    mrl 

nity.  will  be  held  m  Mannning  Hall  |  ^^.^^^^y.  ^y^^^  j^j^.,..^,  ,>i,.kerrell  last 

Court  r.>om  al  7:30  p.m.  Fruiay.        y^'ednesdav    night.    (2)    Sutton    was 

Summons    have   gone  out  to  50 !  ..,ound    dead  "    in    the    arboretum 


Grail  Dance 
Sat.  Night 


ummings 
ointed 


Approximately  200  women  from 

Meredith    College    will    arrive    at 

night.    (3)    Miss    Picker-  Woollen  Gymnasium  Saturday  night 

I  rell   was   "arrested'   Saturday   and  I  ior  a  dance  .sponsored  by  the  Or- 

j  chavged    with    the    'murder.'    and    der  of  the  Grail 

(4)  Monday  the  grand  jury  return- 


I  ed  a  true  bill  of  indictment  in  the 

^^OOO/ni  GCl        ■       ^'*^'*'<^    counsel    for    the    defense 
■      "^  '  will   be   Charlie   Shaw,   assisted   liv 

ei    a    M  I     Paul  Holt.  Robert  Thomas,  Dextei 

^^  ^*  ■    ^^     ■    ■  ^^^^"^.J       ?'•  J-  i'"rassinelti  i^  chief  t  counsel 
Kaiuh  !  '^"'".  S^*^  l>rosecuti;)H.   being  aNsisloii 


apl 
c/iairman  ot  the  fcloction^' Board. 
Jficsfdkirt      B<»b 


um.yiincs.     has     Deen  ^a|ipomted  i,''>-/'<^^"'>   <-'^'»i*'^^'"'  ^uauc^  G^Hiam. 

George  Miller  und   Hal   Conidy.  ,j  , 
Chief    w.ilncs.s   ior    the    prose^i-' 


I   ^!IZ     .,.!f„..„  .,,   vJ      «»<>"  will  1)0  Mi.ss.Jano  Broek.  whc*i  I'ot   iiavirg  an;    t^-pe  of  entei-tain- 
cle   the  a oixtintnieiii   >'^s-;  '       .    ■  -4 1 U^  f^.i  .     f.i-  •     et.      •       i    • 

"  'was  with  Suttou  the   night  ho  v.i||»«-J*' '<"'  reCnehtaon  f4r  our  leisuie 


Montovani  And  45  Violins 
Will  Play  Tomorrow  Night 

"Monty,"  better  knewn  to  the 
music  world  at  Montovani,  will 
arriva  on  campus  tomorrow 
bringing  with  him  his  new  mu- 
sic  and  a  4^  piece  orchestra. 

Concert  time  is  set  for  8  p.m. 
in  Memorial  Hall. 

Montovani  is  currontly  on  his 
second  ten  week  American  tour 
covering  the  country  from  coast 
to  coast. 

The  program  will  bo  free  to 
students  with  a  $1  admission 
charge  to  student  wiv.es  and  a 
$2  charge  for  others.  Doors  will 
opon  at  7  p.m. 


Stiftitnt 
Voung  ma 
terday. 

.Andy  Miliior.  past  chairman  of 
the  board,  offered  his  resignation 
lifter  the  fall  ger>eral  electi<)n.  Bill 
Redding  has  been  handling  the 
work  111  the  board  since  that  time. 
Voung  said. 

President  Young  said  that  sev- 
iial  people  expressed  an  infercsi 
in  the  position  and  were  seriously 
-onsideied  for  the  post. 

In  a  statement  yesterday.  Young 
said,  in  part: 

•'During  his  work  with  the  board 
he  has  been  above  partisan  poli- 
tics,   has    wjrkcd    very    hard    and 

,ery  capably  with  any  job  that  was  '  be  taken  aJler  Jan 
to  be  done.    The  position  is  a  most    to   graduate,  office 


The  women  are  scheduled  to  ar- 
rive    between     seven     and     eight 
o'clock,    according    to    Grail    Dele- 
:;;ale  Lulher   Hodges   .Ir. 
PRESIDENT'S    STATEMENT 

In  cnncclion  with  the  dance, 
open  u>  ihe  entire  campus  —  both 
men  and  women  students  —  Prvsi- 
Knl  Rob  Vchiul:  i.ssued  the  foJJow- 
tiUjT^e/V-  rr  'T( 
rtf  lis'TiaVe 


m^ 


jnpod   about 


Suttou 
■"assaulted'   by   .Mis.s  Pickei'ell. 

Sheriff  is  David  Evans  and  court 
reporter   is   Lemiiil    Blades. 

Masters'  Theses 
Due  Jancary  4 

Masters'  theses  for  candidates 
'or  the  January  commencemcni 
must  1)e  filed  in  the  Graduate  Of- 
liee  by  Jan.  4.  the  office  announced 
yesferdi.y. 

The  Graduate  School  office  is  lo- 
cated at  202  South  Buildin;;. 

Written  examinations  for  Mas- 
ters' cantlidates.lVir  January  cannvnt 
17.  laceordinii 


jiours  over  the  weekends  .  .  .  The 
Older  of  the  (irail  is  attempting 
"o  (Id  Something  about  this  situa- 
tion. 

"This  Saturday  nighf  the  Grail 
i.->  sponsoring  a  dance  in  Woollen 
Gymnasium  to  which  each  individ- 
ual studtnt  is  invited  The  Grail  is 
;.sking  women  from  .Meredith  Col- 
lege to  i)e  guisls  for  this  dance. 
This dtes  not  mean  that  the  Grail 
is  diseouiauing  altendan'.e  of  Car- 
olina wonun.  Rather,  attendance 
of  all  Carolina  studcr.ls  is  encour- 
aged. 

"All  the  prolils  tiom  this  dance 
I  will    Ik'    used    to    provide    scholar- 


; ontroV(>rsial  one  and  will  require  'The  Graduate  oflive  ,  ais((  an- 1  ships  for  worthy  students.  There- 
much  lactfulness  a'nd  fctr-mimled  nounced  that  any  students  leaving  lore,  for  three  h  uus  of  enjoyable 
ness.  1  am  sure  that  Ralphs  w*ll  .schcMil  in  Jajiu;u"y  or  June  who 
hanole  the  position  .ery  ably  ;md  would  like ,  to  apply  for-  a  job 
will  prepare  the  campus  for  the  through,  the  (d'lice  should  go  by 
best  election  possil)le  in  the  spring  |  the  office  apd  regi.ster  as  ^soon  as 
cf  1957.'  i  possible. 


entertainment  and  fellowship,  and 
lor  a  profitable  expenditure  of 
MKir  money.  1  urge  that  as  many 
Carolina  s1u<itnts  as  jjossible  make 
.dans  to  attend  this  dance.  " 


PI  ay  makers  Revive  1919 
Melodrama  Tonight  In  GM 


^^SaSF^  ?s':SS<5?^^IS8SSflBrv»ft^  'SiKWci.'^ 


IN  THE  INFIRMARY 

I        Students  In  tho  Infirmary  yos- 
I    terday  are  as  follvwt: 

'  Miss  FrancM  Tyler,  Stanley 
{  Carriss,  Charles  Howson,  Mi- 
,  chaol  Gibbon*,  Peyton  Hawcs, 
j  Jamos  Croer,  Lawrence  Red- 
mond, Herman  Jones,  John 
!  Adams,  Cecil  Barrier,  Marion 
8yrd,  Roland  ftttton,  Robert 
!  Terry,  Malcolm  McLean,  John 
I     Lee   and   Ronnie   Koes. 


By   EDITH   MacKINNOS 

•Esther  Wake.  "  a  melodrama 
which  stirred  up  a  good  bit  of  lo- 
cal interest  when  first  presented 
in  1919.  will  be  performed  by  the 
Playmakers  tonight  in  Graham' 
Memirial's  main  lounge  at  8. 

Written  by  the  late  Adolphe  Ver- 
mont, the  play  was  first  protluced 
when  ils  author  was  a  visiting  lec- 
turer in  French  at  UNC.  Upon  its 
first  presentation  in  the  presence 
of  the  North  Carolina  governor  at 
Hill.sboro  in  1919.  the  play  drew 
wide  acclaim. 

In  1921  the  Spartanburg  Herald 
ri'ported  that  the  governor  ".  .  • 
was  so  impressed  with  the  drama 
that  he  urged  its  immediate  pre- 
sentation in  Raleigh.  This  was 
done.  Ih"  Chamber  of  Commerce 
paying  the  expenses  in  order  tint 
no  children  however  poor  should 
miss  the  opportunity  of  seeing 
vividly  portrayed  the  spirit  of 
1771. 

A  proclamation  was  issued  by 
the  mavor  urging  all  citizens  to 
come.  The  opora  house  at  Raleigh 
h  'Iding  4.000  person  was  packed. 
I.'OO  pe   i)Ie  being  turned  awav." 


Action     of     the     play     centers ;  6    in    Raleigh 
around  the  .North  Carolina  Regula- ,  Hotel, 
tors    and    their    struggles    against!       No    adm  ssiim    will 
autocratic  tyranny  in  the  pre-Revo-  i  for  the   performance 
lufionary    days    of    the    state.    The 
shortened      version      of      "'Esther 
Wake"   has  been  adapted   by   Mrs.  j 
William    Henderson,   who   also   di- ^ 
rects  the  play. 

Heading  the  cast  will  be  Rusty ; 
Rothrock  playing  Esther  Wake  j 
and  .Joe  Whittaker  hs  Lord  Tyron. 
Both  players  were  co-starred  in  the  ; 
recent  Playmaker  production  of , 
"Ana.stasia."  i 

Peter  O'Sullivan  will  star  as ' 
Edmund  Fanning.  Revolutionary . 
villain,  and  Fred  Burrell  will  be , 
featured  in  the  role  of  leader  of  i 
the  Regulators.  | 

Other  members  of  the  cast  in- 
clude Pat  Liston.  Dick  Rothrock. 
Harold  Williamson.  Si  Perkins, 
Don  Seaton.  James  Heldman.  Revr 
Robert  Iiusko,  Boyd  Barrier.  James 
.^rmscost.  and  James  Potter.  j 

The  melodrama  will  be  present- 1 
ed  with  minimum  staging  done  by  | 
Al  Gordon,  and  costumes  by  June  j 
Craft.  I 

A  second  performance  of  "Esth- 1 
er  Wake"  is  to  be  presented  Dec.  j 


Sir    Walter 


Playmakers  "Esther  Wake"  Speaks  To  Lord  Byron 

Ru&ty  Rothrock  a's  "Either"  talks  with  Joe  Whittaker  (Lord  Byron)  tonight  in  Graham  Memorial's 
main  lounge  in  the  Playmaker's  production  of  "Esther  Wake.  The  play  was  written  by  a  visiting  lee- 
turei    in   1919,  and   is  adapted   by  Mrs.  William   Henderson. 


PAGE  TWO 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HSEL 


WEDNESDAY.  DECEMBER  5,   1954 


Now,  How  About  A  Present 
For  llNC's  Married  Folks? 

riir  Inixfj^itv  has  <^\\vu  durmitorv  iiifn  an  uiifxpected  Chrtstinas 

[llt'Sflll. 

SfiortK  afur  the  holidays,  thi-  cuiieiu  threc-iUfH-iii-j-riMim  crisis 
(whiih  has  <ontinued  for  tlu  l:isi  loupli-  ol  years')  Avill  ht-  relieved.  The 
ihiid  man  uili  he  mo\ed  into  another  room. 

The  reason,  explains  the  Housiui>  Olliie.  is  thai  a  tnuttlier  of  d<jrni- 
iloix  men  ha\e  nuned  int«»  fiHteutiiv  Jionses  lollouin,:;  fall  fraieiiiitv 
riishin,;.    I  hev   lea^"^-  n>oni  for  the 


YOU  Said  It: 


thud  tnan   fioni  anoihei    kmhii. 

While  it  \\ill  he  nice,  and  a  wel- 
( oine  (Ihiistni.rs  present,  it  won't 
last  \eiy  ion;;,  "prsl  like  a  peppei - 
mint  sti«  k. 

.\e\t  fall,  mtn  a^ain  will  he 
pilc<l  tliiee  to  .«  room,  liie  ap;ri- 
nieiws  and  spate  i(><»ni>  in  town  will 
Ik-  (lannned  full  <»l  people.  The 
fraternities  will  not  have  taken 
their  ainiual  numl)er.  rnf<Mtunate 
Ireslnnen  will  l)e  ponted  iiUo  C'ohl) 
l>aseintut  like  slaves  on  their  his- 
tojiial  passatie  lioin 
Ameri»  a. 


The  siiuation  will  he  condemn- 
eil  l;o!ii  all  (piarters.  Housiui;  Di- 
reeloi  jaines  Wadswotth  will  do 
his  nsnal  ^ood  joh  in  trvin,i>;  U>  h>- 
«ate  livinu  (piarters  tor  Chapel 
11  ill's  tlumsands  of  retnt  iiin.i;  stu- 
dtiiis.  ,  y 

*  *  * 

I  h«-  siinatinn  uill  he  declared 
;■  ( lisis  .t'^ain.  Iinstees  and  ad- 
jninistr.ition  ptople  will  talk  ahoiit 
tlu-  M((<l  Inr  additional  dormi- 
tdiles.    \\i  \    little    will    he  done. 

In  a  year  and  a  half,  perhaps, 
('..oolina  will  ha\e  additional  li\- 
inu  tpiivtcrs  liir  men.  (ioeds  will 
!ja\«-  niitther  Avin.i  of  loonis.  I»nl 
h\  the  time  I'lo  new  doiniitoiies 
have  heen  Imili.  the  Tniveisitv 
uill  aL;.iin  he-  (iampin,»  three  tiien 
in  dotm  Torv  loonii  hnilt  for  two. 

Now.  Hot  a  \  •»'  anil  a  half  from 
now.  is  ihe  lim<  Iim  the  I'niversity 
t«)  u,et  another  loan,  from  the  (e*l" 
era!  >;o\evtiment  and  <itavt  on  phms 
for  \auly  '.greater  honsin^.  .\nd 
now  is  tlie.time  for  somethino"  else. 

'rite  rJiirff  rn  iiiwlfl  uet  a  (lln'isi- 

ried  srudi  ii!.' 

\ittoi\    \  ilJage.   fmili   vears  a;^o 


I'nixersity's     modem     hospital,     a 
i\iemoriatto  the  student  who  uuist 
support  a  familv  hut   who  still   has 
i-neitiA    and    lUitrmination    ii»    i^ii 
an  ediKation. 

\i(  lory  \  illa.;e  is  a  preltv  j»iti- 
ful  miiuoiial.  l^in  ii  will  do.  I'ni- 
\crsiiv  otfitials  ieas4»n.  until  some- 
tliini;  else  is  <onsiin(ted. 

.\t  the  piesent  lUte  (»f  constriK- 
lion.  nothiuj4  will  e\er  he  eon- 
stiiut<'d.  Ihe  I'niveisitv  has  not 
lilted  a  fiii'^et  {n  snhstantiallv  im- 
ptoxe  the  maiiied  stndents  l<»t 
Xfritr.  to  sinte  it  shipped  the  .\nn\'s  frame 
lun'ldin,<;s  into  liie  iiollow  heliind 
Memorial  Ifospital  several  years 
a>i(».  l.a.st  year  anothei  fiame  slia< k 
was  moved  in,  hnt  it  wiis  neither 
an  improvement  not  siihstamial. 


Ihe  >\aiiiM'4  list  lor  apartments 
anil  houses  in  \'i<  torv  \'illay,e  has 
iiritwii  lon^ei  than  a  five-year-old's 
('Inistmas  list.  With  lemarkahle 
fonsistetHv  the  Noith  Carolina 
(i<net;  I  .\ssemf>lv.  rhe  Cniversitv 
and  its  lloaid  (»f  I  riisiees  have  ig- 
nored the  «rvin^  neetl  t>f  more 
h«»nsiin;  for  C\C  lamilies. 

Marrieil  stiuUiits  m.ike  np  a 
si/eahle  peicentafi^e  of  the  stndein 
hotlv.  1  hev  eontrihute  to  the  com- 
immiiv.  thev  (ontrihnte  to  .North 
Carolin;!  edurafion.  lint  Avhen 
thev  warn  a  de<  eiH  place  to  live, 
rhev  ate  <;iven  noihitiv;  hnt  shrn<fs. 

Mat  lied  stndi'nts'  honsinj;  rare- 
Iv  finds  its  way  to  rhe  proj)Osed 
Imdj^et  for  tlte  Cniversity.  because 
there    Ure    ttn)  many    items   whith 

have   prioiitv  over  it. 

*     '         ♦  ♦ 

It  is  tin'ie,  we  Sit«fij;est.  for  the 
I'niversilv    to   leali/e   that  sliovin.i; 

t  hr  miiarion,  t^  fl^ie  bottdoQ  of  the 

jii  inritv  lisf'  win  "d<»  uo  ^hkI.  It 
will  not  relieve  the  situation.  It 
y\'\\\    nourish    a    situation    that    i.^ 


as  <i  ieui|>oiarv  honsinj>  deveU»p-  aheadv  rotten,  that  will  fester  im- 
ment  ft>r  ,  martied  students^  and  til  the  married  studetns  '^ei  a  lair 
their  lamilies.  still  sits  behind  the,    ^<^h  •    ,:,->'    - 

FROM  THE  ST.  lOUIS  POST-DISPATCH;  ~ 

Private  Colleges  Need  Help 

Will)  the  letetn  repoi  t  on  edn<a- 
tion  beyoiul  the  hi<>h  sdtool,  this 
su'^«»^'>'-*»  ^  I'f^^'  aleiiness  in  Wash- 
ington tt»  the  ediuaiional  trisis. 

Ilut  the  wliole  problem  never  will 
he  solved  by  better  finan(in.<> 
ol  j>id>li<  sch«K>1s  ot  bv  new  f)uild- 
in,!4s  lot  stale  imiversities  siu  h  as 
those  planned  h>r  the  I'niversitv 
of  Missouri,  -     .    •       ... 

I'livaie  scho<»ls  —  and  espet  iallv 
piivate  tolle<;es— still  <  arry  a  sub- 
stantial })ait  of  the  nation's  teadi- 
iu'^  load.  .\nd  it  is  desirable  that 
they  shoidd  do  so  fi»r  the  sake  of 
that  divetsity  of  thouoht  wiiidi 
stimulates   demo<iatv. 


Wellaie  Seiretarv  Mariiui  !». 
Kolsom  amtonnces  tiiat  the  admin- 
istration will  push  a  federal  .st  hool 
aid   f)ill    when   Couyress  convenes. 


The  Daily  Tor  Heel 

The  otlK-ia!  studt-nt  .publication  of  the 
Publication*  B<»ard  of 'the  University  ot 
North  Carolina,  wh^re  it  is  published, 
daily  except  Monday  and  examiaatiot 
and  vacation  periods  sujd  summer  terms 
Entered  as  second  class  matter  in  thi 
Dost  office  in  Chapel  Hill.  N.  C,  undei 
the  Act  01  March  8.  1870.  Subscription 
rates:  mailed,  S4  per  year.  $2  50  a  semes- 
ter; delivered,  $6  a  yejr,  $3.50  *  »eme« 
ter. 


^ear, 


Editor      FRED  POWLEDGE 

Managing  Editor  CHARUE  SLOAN 

Nev*s  Editor  NANCY  HILL 

Business  Manager  BILL  BOB  PL'EL 

Sports  Editor      LARRY  CHEEK 

NTrW'S  STAFF— Clarke  Jones.  Nancy 
Hill,  .r»an  Moore.  Prinsle  Pipkin.  Anne 
Drake.  Edith  .MacKinnon.  Wally  Kuralt, 
Mary  .Alys  Voorhees,  Graham  Snyder, 
Billy  Barnes.  Neil  Bass,  Gary  Nichols, 
Page  Bernstein.  Peg  Humphrey,  Phyllit 
Maultsby. 

Subscription  Manager  ^  Dale  Staley 

Advertising  .Manager    .    Fred  Katzin 

Circulation  Manager  Charlie  Holt 

BUSINESS  ST.VFT— Rosa  Moore,  Johnny 
Whitaker,  Dick  Leavitt,  Peter  Alper. 

SPORTS  STAPF:  Bill  King,  Jim  Purks, 
Jimmy  Harper,  Dave  Wible,  Charley 
Howson. 


Staff  Photographer  Norman  Kantor 

Staff  Artist Charlie  Daniel 

Librarian       Sue  Gishner 

Ni^ht  Editor -  Cortland  Edwards 


^'et'tllo.se  s<lnM>ls.  tiM».  have  theii 
monev  worries.  Ihe  <  ase  is  well  il- 
lustrated bv  Westminister  ('ollei^e 
at  Fulton.  Mtt..  a  s<  IuhjI  well  known 
to  Missourians.  It  is  the  oidy  small 
(«)lle<;e  exclusively  for  men  west 
of  the   Mississippi. 

It  does  not  <ommand  tfie  en- 
dowmeiu  of  sni  h  s<h<H»ls  in  the 
Fast,  but  its  jJiaduates  have  en- 
lithed  the  life  of  the  (ominunity. 
state  and  nation  in  business,  in  all 
oi  the  pr(»fessiotis  and  in  public 
life.      .      . 

At  a  dinner  at  the  I'niversity 
(ilufi ...  Westminister  lauiuhed  a 
drive  to  raise  $6.50o,o«k).  In  view  of 
the  need  foi  increasing  facidty  sal- 
aries, not  to  menti(m  the  cost  of 
impiovino  f;Kilities.  the  sinn  is 
small  enough.  .\rid  vve  trust  it  will 
be  realized. 

.After  all.  schools  like  Westmin- 
ister (ainiot  apjX'al  to  the  legisla- 
ture or  any  other  public  ta.xing 
bodv.  Vet  they  work  for  the  good 
ot  the  public.  .__^__.,^ 


God:  what  Does  He  Mean? 

Religion:  Acme  Of  Absurdity         Religion:  Ifs  Now  A  System 


Editor: 

The  Christian  religion  of  today 
is  the  acme  of  absurdity.  It  is  ^n 
intense  philosophy  of  pessimism 
and  pessimism  is  full  of  egotism 
—the  world  is  not  good  enough 
fcir  us. 

Th*  defenders  of  the  Christ- 
ian f«ith  are  its  greatest  en- 
emies, because  their  fine-drawn 
distinctions  couse  doubt  and 
stimulate  the  mind.  These  mor- 
alists are  woak  creatures,  for 
morality  ii  a  weapon  used  by 
the  weak  in  an  effort  to  limit 
the  strong. 

These  v^eak  creatures  shudder 
at  the  thought  of  mental  strength. 
but  they  thrive  like  vampires  on 
the  anemic  thoughts  of  the  hap- 
less people  M  ho  are  confused  and 
lacking  in  mental  strength. 
REALIZATION 

Nothing  is  so  fatal  to  an  ideal 
as  its  realizatiiVn.  and  I  have 
realized    the    Christian    religion. 


For  me.  it  is  insufficient  in  force 
and  quality.  The  Christian  re- 
ligion as  taught  through  and  by 
the  church  is  inapt,  incomplete 
and    imperfect. 

I    am   not   meek,   for    I    have 
mental  strength. 

My  religion  is  in  my  mind,  and 
does  not  need  the  accessories  of 
going  to  churoli  and  performing 
the  babbling's  of  materialistic 
rituals. 

These  arc  my  views.  I  am  not 
trying  to  convert  anyone,  but 
merely  stating  my  thoughts.?! 
shall  take  a  sophomore's  de- 
light in  shocking,  by  telling  you 
why  I  do  not  care  about  ceri- 
verting  anyone  to  my  way  of 
thinking. 

1.  The  meek  shall  inherit  the 
earth — six  feet  of  it. 

2.  "The  instruction  of  fools 
is  folly...*'..' 


Thomas  V.  Kirkland 
• 

'Nice  Little  Kitty' 


'  l:i 


Editor: 

Well,  now,  for  the  past  few 
days  The  Daily  Tar  Heel  has 
been  fairly  riddled  with  various 
person's  views  on  God's  if,  why. 
what,  who,  etc.,  and  1  guess  it's 
a  good  thing  for  people  k>  express 
themselves  now  and  then  on 
these  mat  tens. 

I  don't  doubt  that  it  does  quite 
a  few  people  some  good  to  read 
what  others  think  about  such 
things,  but  it  can  be  overdone. 

^I  think  most  people  who  have 
any  real  religion  know  what  it 
is,  and  they  know  how  it  affeet.i 
them,  and  what  it  has  to  do  with 
their  lives. 

What  It  more  important, 
however,  it  that  these  people 
realize  that  no  specific  con- 
cepts of  religion  trt  established 
to  satisfy  all  people,  or  for  that 
matter,  even  large  groups  of 
people,  but  rather  to  instill  in 
people  a  desire  te  learn  a  little 


;i>4^i|!m^V 


A  COED  WRITES 


-#^  E" »«.  :r.  I.  o  «r  K. 


something  about  who  they  are 
and  what  they  are  doing. 

When  certain  persons  jump  up. 
indignant,  and  begin  to  rant  and 
rave  about  what  they  think  is 
right,  what  is  right,  and  what 
others  should  think  is  right,  it 
leaves  me  with  the  impression 
that  they  are  going  all  out  in 
an  attempt  to  convince  them- 
selves that  they  have  not  been 
deceived  in  that  which  they  have 
been  led  to  believe. 

It  appears  that  they  are  not 
very  sure  of  themselves,  and  that 
they  are  afraid  that  there  will 
be  loo  many  people  who  don't 
follow  in  their  line  of  thinking, 
if  they  don't  call  out  to  the 
"strays"  who  are  not  so  active 
as  is  thought  they  should  be. 
Do  these  people  have  any  real 
religion,  if  this  be  the  case?  Do 
they  even  know  what  their  re- 
ligion is? 

It  appears  to  me  to  be  a  sys- 
tem by  which  some  people  at- 
tempt to  erect  a  safeguard  for 
themselves  again.<»t  something  that 
toy  have  no  concrete  knowledge 
of.  but  which  has  been  pounded 
into  them  for  so  long  that  they 
become  automatic  in  their  reac- 
tions to  it. 

They  never  miss  a  Sunday 
church  service,  they  never 
take  the  Lords  name  in  vain, 
they  n«vcr  do  anything  that  is 
considered  to  be  socially  wrong, 
and  they  live  what  they  con- 
sider to  be  healthy  spiritual 
lives. 

I  don't  think  anyone  could  con- 
vince me  that  these  people  really 
believe  that  they  are  going  to 
have  eternal  life.  There  must 
be  doubt. 

God  gave  man  the  power  of  rea- 
son, and  yet,  how  many  people 
use  it?  Or  is  it  that  a  line  should 
be  di^wn  to  limit  reasoning  in 
certain   fields?  , 

ANY  REASON? 

'  Although  I  don't  like  to  split 
hairs,  is  there  any  reason  why 
it  cannot  be  said  that  a  person 
who  fails  to  think  .things  out  for 
himself  is  not  fulfilling  his  birth- 
right? 

And  if  a  person  comet  to 
the  concluion  that  he  deecn't 
believe  in  the  God  that  is  com- 
monly accepted,  what  then? 
What  happens  te  him  when  he 
comes  to  the  end  of  his  lif#  on 
earth? 

I  am  inclined  to  believe  tliat. 
if  there  i->;  a  life  after  this  one. 
every  individual  will  walk  up  to 
the  God  and  say.  "Here  I  am, 
God,  look  at  me."  And  the  God 
will   say,  "Look  at   yourself." 

C.  S.  Young 

■    •  • 


Dont    Censure    Otiihrs     Beliefs    On    God 


Editor: 

I've  btH-Mi  reading  the  columns  concerning  various  individual 
beliefs  about  "God''  with  considerable  attention,  and  I  hope  The 
Daily  Tar  Heel  has  not  published  the  last  of  them. 

It  is  interesiing  to  discover  that  there  a  liumbor  of  people  in 
the  University  who  are  desirous  of  niiiking  their  convictions  and 
who  are  capable  of  formulating  them  so  concisely. 

I  would  like  to  inquire,  however,  whether  such  a  statement  of 
belief  cannot  be  made  without  one  writer  censuring  another's  be- 
liefs. 

Ultimately  each  poison's  ideas  about  "God"  are  based  on  con- 


jecture alone,  since  "proofs'  patently  do  not  exist,  and  therefore 
censure  by  various  writers  of  those  who  disagree  with  them  seems 
rather  futile. 

Further,  it  is  not  necessarily  desirable  or  eteentiai  that  there 
be  agreement.  This  criticism  is  particularly  applicable  to  those 
whose  convictions  teach  tolerance  and  acceptance  of  others. 
If  we  believe  in  the  right  of  peoples  of  other  areas  —  Buddhist."^. 
Hindus,  Muslims  and  others  —  to  hold  what  beliefs  they  want,  it 
seems  equally  important  to  reserve  this  right  for  individuals  within 
this  culture.  ^  .  .         ,   ..    '. 

■■:     .':-'•:'"''.    rV'-v^   ;' vVlH;  vi|»^>;;-V    Elisabeth  Oeutsch 


Pogo 


By  Walt  Kelly 


Li'l  Abn«r 


By  Al  Capp 


EDUCATOR  J.  HARRIS  PURKS 

. . .  it's  got  to  be  in  the  head,  liands  and  the  heart 

Money  s 

I      A/o/  All 

J.  Harris  Purks 

Dr.  Purks,  now  head  of  the  state's  Board 
of  Higher  Education.,  was  previously  provost 
and  then  acting  president  of  the  Consolidated 
University.  What  follows  is  partial  text  of  a 
spoech  he  delivered  recently  to  representatives 
of  the  North  Carolina  press.  Second  installment 
of  the  speech   will   be   published   tomorrow. 

We  have  learned  a  lot  about  education  in  North 
Carolina.  We  have  much  more  tj  learn.  We  certain- 
ly do  not  know  all  of  the  answers  to  our  problems. 

We  do  have  some  convictions: 

1.  Too  many  of  our  boys  and  girls  do  not  finish 
high  school. 

2.  Too  few  of  our  bright  high  school  graduates 
enter  college. 

'3.  The  shortage  of  teachers  is  due  in  large 
measure  to  fhe  fact  that  the  cost  (to  parents 
and  studenK)  of  a  college  education  tends  to 
eliminate  that  large  portion  of  the  potential  for 
service  and  achievement  which  is  found  among 
boys  and  girl  of  families  in  low  incdm« 
brackets. 

4.  The  shortage  of  trained  personnel  in  most 
areas,  including  teaching,  is  also  due  in  part  to 
the  reluctance  of  those  who  will  be  or  are  so  fort- 
unate as  to  be  able  to  attend  college  to  study  dilli- 
gently  in  high  school  or  college, 
JUMP  TO  CONCLUSIONS 

In  the  face  of  these  convictions  it  is  all  loo  easy  ■ 
ta  jump  to  the  conclusion  that  we  should  have  many 
more  colleges  and  junior  (or  community)  colleges, 
and  that  these  should  be  brought  within  the  reatS*: " 
of  those  who  are  not  financially  able  to  gp  to  col- 
lege. Yet  certain  hard  if&ctS  siare  us  in  the  face:' 

1.  North  Carolina  at  this  moment  ranks  seventh 
among  the  states  in  the  number  ol  institution*  of 
higher  education,  jovd  if  junior  ^dieses  aldae  be 
consid<pred  Ndi'th  Cart)linarJinks  sixth  in  the  na- 
tion. 

2.  About  one-third  of  the  58  institutions  of  high- 
er educaction  in  Noriii  Caiolina  can  take  more  sti^- 
dents  and  need  more  students  in  order  to  have  en- 
rollments which  make  efficient  operation  possible. 

3.  If  we  establish  many  more  junior  (or  com- 
munity) colleges  there  will  not  be  enough  profess- 
ors to  staff  them. 

4.  Already  in  North  Carolina  and  in  the  na- 
tion the  high  schools,  desperately  short  of  teach- 
ers, are  being  pinched  as  somd  of  their  best  teach- 
ers move  into  junior  colleges  as  professors. 

Certainly  we  will  not  win,  in  the  long  run,  by 
depleting  the  ranks  of  high  school  teachers  in  order 
to  establish  colleges,  because  the  inescapable  end 
result  will  be  acceleration  of  poor  preparation  of 
high  school  graduates  for  college,  aod  a  continued 
lowering  of  standards  in  both  high  school  and  col- 
lege. 
ASSUME  WRONG  FUNCTIONS 

Colleges  then  will  begin  to  assume,  at  high 
levels  of  cost  to  parents,  to  taxpayers,  to  churches, 
and  to  private  donors,  the  functions  which  properly 
should  oe  assigned  to  the  high  schools,  and  reduce 
even  further  the  level  of  education  attainable  by 
those  who  cannot  afford  to  go  to  college. 

I  am  convinced  that  there  is  no  ^uick  solu- 
tion to  the  educational  problem  of  North  Caro- 
lina or  of  the  nation;  that  there  is  no  easy  solu- 
tion  even    when   time    is   allowed;    that    money 
.    alone  cannot  produce  a  solution. 

I  am  afraid  that  we  are  now  at  the  point  of  pay- 
off for  a  quarter  of  a  century  of  neglect  of  study  of 
fundamentals,  of  dilution  of  curricula,  of  lowering 
of  standards  of  attainment  required  for  certificates, 
diplomas  and  degrees,  and  of  reliance  upon  form 
and  growth  of  institutions  rather  than  upon  the 
sub.stance  of  learning. 

Ten  or  15  years  ago  the  dean  of  a  college  in 
one  of  our  Southern  states  was  asked  to  write  a 
series  of  short  statements  for  a  weekly  box  in  the 
college  newspaper.  He  was  asked  to  do  this  in  a 
style  which  would  catch  the  attention  of  under- 
graduates and  in  the  hope  that  an  impression  would 
be  made  upon  them.  One  of  these  boxes  contained: 
"A  person's  education  can't  be  framed  and 

placed  on  a  wail. 
Ifs  in  his  head  and   hands  and   heart, 
or  it   isn't  anywhere  at  all." 

If  this  statement  has  merit — and  I  think  that 
it  does,  since  I  was  the  dean  who  made  it — our  prob- 
lem is  to  see  to  it  that  education  is  placed  in  the 
heads  and  hands  and  hearts  of  the  youth  of  this 
state. 

This  task  cannot  be  accomplished  solely  by  mak- 
ing appropriations  of  money  for  support  of  institu- 
tions; it  cannot  be  accomplished  simply  by  building 
more  injjtitutions,  nor  can  it  be  accomplished  by 
providing  more  teachers. 

The  essential  ingredient  in  the  process  is  hard 
study  by  the  boy  or  girl  who  wants  to  acquire  an 
education. 

We  must  somehow  rid  ourselves  of  the  thought 
that  we  can  ^ 

1.  "Give"  an  education  tp  youth. 

Or  even 

2.  "Provide"  an  education  for  youth. 


WFDNFCr 


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To 
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Samue 
UNC  Dept 
director  of| 
eis.  will 
reading  of 
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children  hi 
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During   his| 
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nual   read  ill 
and  other 
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WFDNF5DAY,  DFCEMRER  5.  7956 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


PAGE  THREE 


heart 


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lated 

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rivet 
lent 


North 
t^rtain- 
>blems. 

finish 

iduates 

|larg« 

rents 
Is  to 
for 
tons 
z6tn» 

most 
Jart  to 
so  fort- 

diUi- 


oo  ea>y 
ire  many 
bolleges, 
ie  reach 
to  col- 
face?  • 
>eventh, 
lions  of 
lone  be 
the  na- 

of  high- 
ire  sX\\' 
lave  en- 
jossible. 
com- 
profess- 

the  na- 
if  teach- 

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s. 

run,  by 
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ible  end 
^■ation   of 

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and  col- 


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;hiirches, 

properly 

Id  re<!uce 

jnable  by 

seiu- 

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money 

U  of  pay- 
study  of 
lowering 
tificates, 

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ipon   the 

bollege   in 

write   a 

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[this   in   a 

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lion  would 

L'ontained: 

and 


thouiiht 


Playmakers 
To  Sponsor 
Carol  Story 


Covering  The  Campus 


LOCAi.  PHYSICS  COLLOQUIUM 

Dr.  James  Kupperian  of  the  Na- 
val Research  Laboratory  will  speak 
Today  in  250  Phillips  Hall.  His  sub- 
Samuel  Selden,  chairman  of  the  I  ject  will  be  ""Optica  Measurements 
UNC  Dept  of  Dramatic  Art  and  Above  the  Atmosphere." 
director  of  the  Carolina  Playmak- ;  FELLOWSHIP 
ers.  will  present  his  traiditional  I  The  Carolina  Christian  Fellow- 
reading  of  Charres  Dickens'  be-  j  ship  will  meet  on  Friday  night  in 
loved  classic.  "A  Christmas  Ca-p^Pafl  of  Wednesday.  The  Rev. 
rol,"  on  Sunday  at  4:30  p.m.  in' Paul  Snyder,  pastor  of  the  Advent 
the  Playmakors  Theatre.  Chapel !  Moravian  Church  in  Win.ston- 
Hill.  Salem,  will  be  the  gue.st  speaker. 

Students.        faculty       members.    The  meeting  will  take  place  at  7 
townspeople      and      paiticularly    P"^-   '"  ^^^  choir  rehearsal  ro(|pi 
children   have  been  invited  to  at- 1  ^*^  ^*''  UaU. 
tend    the    program,    sponsored    by  j  RECEPTION  COMMITTEE 
the   I^laymakers.  The     Reception     Commitee     of 


The  annual  reading  of  the  fam- 
ous Christmas  story  of  Scrooge 
and  Tiny  Tim  was  begun  at  Chapel 
Hill  by  Frederick  H.  "Proff 
Koch,  founder  of  the  Playmakers. 
During  his  lifetime  "Proff"  gave 
278  readings  of  the  story  all  over 
America,  including  four  per- 
formances at  Town  Hall  in  New 
York  City.  Since  Koch's  death. 
Selden  has  been  giving  the  an- 
nual reading  both  in  Chapel  Hill 
and  other  towns  in  North  Caro 
lina. 

Preceding  the  performance  and 
fonr.ing  interludes  between  the 
staves  of  the  stor>',  edited  by  Seld- 
en. selected  recordings  of  Christ- 
mas   music   will    be    played. 

Selden.  who  came  to  UNC  in 
1927.  had  previously  been  a  mem- 
ber of  the  Yale  Playcraftsmen 
and   a    professional   actor   in   New 


And  the 
Best 

Christmas 
Cords 
Cost  o 
Nickel  ot 
The  Intimote 
Bookshop 


Graham  Memorial  Activities  Board 
will  meet  at  4:30  p.m.  today  in  the 
Woodhouse  Conference  Room  of 
Graham  Memorial.  The  committee 
has  invited  anyone  interested  in 
working  on  the  committee  to  at- 
tend the  meeting. 


York  with  the  old  Provincetown 
Playhouse  at  the  time  when  Eu- 
gene O'Neill  was  begining  his 
career  there.  He  appeared  in  sev- 
eral of  O'Neill's  early  plays,  and 
was  general  stage  manager  for  the 
touring  company  of  "Desire  Un- 
der the  Elms." 


PHI  BETA  KAPPA  INITIATION 

There  will  be  a  Phi  Beta  Kappa 
initiation  today  in  the  Phi  Hall  of 
New  East  at  4:30  p.m.,  as  announc- 
ed by  Ernest  Mackie,  dean  of  stu- 
dent av,'ards. 
SOCK  HOP 

A  sock  hop,  sponsored  by  the 
"Y "  Nurses  Assn.  will  be  held  Fri- 
day from  8  to  11  p.m/  at  the 
Nurses  dormitory.  Refreshments 
will  be  served. 

WUNC-TV 

Todays  schedule  for  WUNC-TV, 
the  University's  educational  telo 
vision  station,  channel  4: 

12:45 — Music 

1:00— Today  on  Farm 

1:30— riaj-  Period 

2:00 — Career  for  You 

2:30— Sign  Off 

5:4^  Music 

G-.dJ—Ncws  ^x 

ti:  15— Sports  Clinic         ''■^ 

6:30— News 

6:45 — Sports 

7:00 — Industrial  Artisan 

7:30— College  Concert 

8:00— Rembrandt  Immortal 

8:30 — Living  Together 

9:00— Mental  Gymn. 

9:30 — Agricultiu*e 

10:00— Final  Edition 

10:05— Sign  Off 


History  Prof  Explains 
Old  Surgery  Methods 


to  explore  the  biological  bases  of 
behaviour,  wherein  will  lie  the  de- 
When   a    Roman    "surgeon"    got  |  MacKinney  of  the  UNC  Dept.  of  j  velopment  of  new  chemicals,  new 
out   his  hot  branding  iron  in  the  |  History,  told  members  of  the  In-    drugs,  which  will   alter  an   unde- 


Contemporary  Courses 
Offered  By  Poly  Sci 

The  Political  Science  Dept.  has    Officer  of  the  Allied   Mission  for  j 
announced    it    is    offering    several    Observing     Greek     EHections;      in 
courses    of    particular    contempo- 1  1950-52  he  was  a  special   adviser 
rary  interest  for  the  spring  semes- i  to  the  Secretary  of  State  on  Near 
ter.  j  Eastern,  South  Asian  and  African 

'The  Middle  East  in  World  Poll- 1  Affairs;  and  from  1952-1954  he  1 
tics,"  Political  Science  148,  will  be '  served  a  tour  of  foreign  duty  as 
offered  in  view  of  the  present  I  PubHc  Affairs  Officer  in  Pakistan 
world  crisis.  Instructor  for  the  i  and  in  Jordan, 
course  will  be  Shepard  Jones,  Biu-- '  "International  Regional  Organi- 
ton  Craige  Professor  of  Political  i  lations '  will  be  offered  by  the 
Science.  j  department,    taught    by    Professor 

Dr.  Jones  is  qualified  to  give  the    Lawrence  Cramer, 
course  due  to  active  experience  in ;  GOVERNOR 

dealing  with  the  problems  of  the  |     professor  Cramer  was  governor 

area   while    on   official   duty    with  J  ol    the    Virgin    Islands    (1935-41y, 

The  State  Dept.  j  Secretary    General    of   the    Carib- 

In  1946  Jones  was  the  Executive  i  bean  Commission  (1946-54),  served 

with  the  State  Dept.  and  taught 
international  politics  at  Columbia 
University. 

Other  courses  offered  by  the 
Political  Science  Dept.  this  spring 
will  be  "Municipal  Administration 
i  in  the  United  States,  the  "Govern- 
'  ment  of  Russia"  and  "Recent  Na 
I  tional  Policy  and  Administra- 
"Current  Trends  in  European  I  lion." 
Psychology"  and  "Modern  Mental  l 
Chemistry"  were  the  themes  of 
two  lectures  delivered  at  UNC 
Monday  by  Dr.  Roger  W.  Russell 
of  University  College,  London. 

Dr.  Russell,  executive  secretary 
of  the  American  Psychological 
.\ssn.,  made  the  public  lectures 
under  sponsorship  of  the  fsychol- 
ogy  Colloquia  of  L^NC  and  Duke  Tenn.,  this  week  attending  the 
University.  j  Southwide    Chemical    Conference. 

The  noted  psychologist  pointed        ^'"     Arthur    Roe.    Dept.    Chair- 
out  "modem  research  is  beginning!  '"^".   heads   the   UNC   delegation, 

which  includes  H.  D.  Crockford, 
S.  B.  Knight,  E.  C.  Markham,  J. 
C.  Morrow,  C.  N.  Reilley,  and  0. 


Psychologist 
From  England 
Lectures  Here 


UNC  Chemists 
Go  To  Meeting 

Seven    members    of    the     UNC 
Chemistry  Dept.  are  in  Memphis, 


'Walk  With  Me' 
On  WUNC-TV 

'X 

Toniprrow  Eve 

•Walk  With  Me'  will  be  the 
title  of  the'  'Project  Health"  TV 
program  to  be  seen  over  WUNC- 
TV,  Channel  4  on  Friday  at  9  p.m. 

The  program  is  being  presented 
by  the  Physical  Theray  Dept.  of 
the  North  Carolina  Memorial  Hos- 
pital  of  UNC. 

This  presentation  shows  step 
by  step  the  program  carried  on  at 
Memorial  Hospital  for  patients 
with  many  disabilities.  These  pa- 
tients are  atteriipMng  to  "stand 
on  their  own  feet"  in  a  physical 
sen.se  as  well  as  psychologically. 

Many  of  the  patients  treated  in 
by  the  Physical  Therapy  Dept.  of 
be  shown  as  they  are  receiving 
treatment  and  instruction  in  un- 
derwater exercises,  crutch  walk 
ing  and  the  use  of  braces. 

"Project  Health"  is  the  title  of 
a  series  of  programs  sponsored 
by  the  UNC  Division  of  Health 
Affairs.  The  Division  is  composed 
of  Memorial  Hospital  and  the  UNC 
School  of  Medicine,  Nursing. 
Pharmacy,  Dentistry  and  Public 
Health. 


UNC  Dental  Alumni  Association 
To  Hold  Business  Meet  Today 

The    business    meeting    of    the    courses  in  dental  hygiene.  This  is 


PATRONIZE   YOUR 
•    ADVERTISERS    • 


year  800  and  applied  it  to  a  se- 
rious flesh  wound  of  a  patient,  it 
v.asn't  an  act  of  mercy,  but  stand- 
ard procedure. 

Today,  with  all  the  technologi- 
cal advancements  of  modern  med- 
ical science  at  his  disposal,  cau- 
terization to  the  surgeon  is  prac- 
tically a  forgotten  medical  term 
defined  as  the  burning  of  tissues 
'  with  a  heated  knife  of  iron.  And 
j  actual  and  potential  patients  have 
no  fear  of  being  put  to  the  torch 


ternational  Surgeons'  Hall  of  Fame    sired  behaviour." 
at  Chicago  Tuesday.  "It  is  one  of  the  most  hopeful' 

Professor  McKinney's  lecture !  solutions  to  carrying  afflicted  per- 
describing  Medieval  surgical  tech- :  i>ons  back  to  normal  mental  states, 
niques,  was  the  third  in  a  series :  he    said    in    discussing    what    he 


K.  Rice.  Dr.  C.  R.  Spell,  who 
teaches  biochemistry  in  the  Dept. 
of  Medicine,   is  also  attending 

All  of  the   UNC  reprcisentatives 
will  have  active  parts  in  the  pro- 
I  gram,      with      Knight,     Markham, 


sponsored    by   the   Surgeons'   Hall!  termed  the  "biochemical"  bases  of  j  Spell,  Reilley  and  Rice  presenting 


of  Fame  and  the  University  School ,  behaviour 
of  History  of  Surgery  and  Related 
Sciences. 
RECONSTRUCTION 

Although  the  practice  of  cau- 
terization would  seem  barbarian 
today,  "surgically  and  otherwise, 


like  a  viestern  steer  when  hauled  j  Dr.  McKinney  said,  "the  centuries 
anto^  an  operating  room.       ,  :  following  the  disintegration  of  the 


Hall 


(Conthmed   from    Pqge   1) 


j  papers  on  various  technical  topics. 
Dr.  Roe  will  serve  as  chairman 
of  the  conference  steering  com- 
mittee, and  will  preside  at  the 
Science  Fair  Symposium,  which 
will  also  be  attended  by  Dr.  Crock- 
ford,  director  of  the  district 
science  fair  to  be  held; in  Chapel 


LONG  WAY 


"'U 


Roman  Empire  were  not  a  black 


As  the  preliminary  account  in- '  night  of  barbarism,  but  rather  a 
dicates,  surgery  has  come  a  long  [  roughly  vigorous  age  of  recon- 
way,"   Henan   Professor   Loren '  C.  |  struction,    of    pioneering    on    new 

■  ■:  ~ ' — '■ — '—  i  frontiers  6f  civilization." 

Using  colored  slides,  Dr/'Atc- 
Kinney  illustrated  the  techitiques 
of  medieval  surgeons  in  bleedivi^, 
cauterizing,  and  operatiilj'  .oo 
wounds,  and  for  hernia,  stoii^i  -ah<d 
I  fistula.    He    also    showed    iUustr^ 


at  all.  You  told  me  there's  good    Hill  next  spring 

and   evil,  and  that  by  eating  the 

forbidden .  ^uit   I'd   get   to   know 

them!  Weli't  ;|te  it,  and  at  first  I 

'ttjP(4i^t  yoii  Were  right,  b^ause  I 

)Mi|iiif  ienced  ^ome  new  eniotiont^-^V 

shame,  guilt,  tyashfulness."  ' 

.      I  admit  you  c^iilt  litecally  see    J 

these;   the>;  are  not  colored,  have 

no  sh|^pe$,''tmd  they  do  associate 

with  otHer  things,  like  nakedness. 

But  you  said  that  they  weren't  just 


l-'li'^'H^ 


tiofts  of  the  techniques  of  primi-;  new  items  Adam  and  I  hadn't  ex- 


tivc  orthopedics  and  dentistry. 


pcrienced  and  so  hadn't  named — 


The     advancement    of    medical  j  that  they  were  categories. 
and  surgical   techniques  was  slow       'You  were  a  liar.  They're  really 


during  the  period  1000  to  1500, 
although  the  Arabs  preserved 
much  of  the  medical  knowledge  of 
the  ancient   world,   Dr.   McKinney 

said. 


just  new  facts  or  occurrences,  not 
so  different  from  lizards-^M*  chip- 
nunks  only  harder  to  get  acOuaint- 
'jd  with  since  inside  one  anO  fleet- 
ing. But  as  to  there  being  a  whole 


However,  many  ancient  medical  j  new  dimension  of  things,  a  moral 
practices    were    of    long   duration,    ought  and  ought  not  as  well  as  a 


DAILY    CROSSWORD 


ACROSS 

1.  Pull 

5.  Frontiers- 
man's ahoea 
9.  River  <Fr.) 

10  A  fragrant 
wood 

1 1  Shooting 
star 

12.  Compass 
point 


2  Point  27.  Boys 

3.  E?mploys  school 

4   Abatement  (  Eng  > 

(coUoq.)  29.  Gramp- 

5.  Shallow  dish  us 

6.  Drooping  30.  Harvest 

7.  Girls  name      31.  Young 
g.  Hunting  dog 

11.  Shout 
13.  Garment 
borders 


u  Public  notice   16.  Talks  glibly 
-').  Dine  19  Portion 

17.  Crown  21.  Good  friend 
of  head  24.  Hawaiian 

18.  Pitcher  spout         food 


20.  Invalid's 
food 

22.  Type 
measure 

23.  Jump 
25.  Candles 
28.  Small  root 
30.  Withdraw 

from 

busings 
22.  Particle 
35  Elevated 

train 

(coUoq.) 
:;«.  Weep 
o8.  Wooden 

block 
:;9.  Greedy 
42.  Auxiliary 
44  Gold  (Her  ) 
45.  Nymphs 
(Moh.) 
47.  Arboreal 

marsupial 

49.  Rant 

50.  At  one  time 

51.  Distort 
b2.  Rsqulre 

DOWN 

I.  Hooded  crow 

tBiir.>    , 


26  Chinese 
river 


eels 

33  Deco- 
rated 
leather 

34.  Loca- 
tion of 
Taj  Mahal 

37.  River 
(Alaska) 

40.  Arab 
kingdom 


lai^ldlAlNl 


aas      sraacititJ 
a^n  aaiiK 


Yrttrrday't  Amwer 

41.  Plunge  into 

water 
43.  Part  of  a      v 

.skeleton 
46.  Stitch 
48.  Highest  card 


according  to  the  lecturer. 

For  example.  Dr.  McKinney 
quoted  a  medieval  description  of 
the  results  of  bloodletting  from  a 
medicall  handbook  of  the  Ilth 
century  that  would  put  any  ad 
writer  for  a  patient  medicine 
panacea  of  today  in  his  glory, 
BLOODLETTING 

"(Bloodletting)  contains  the  be- 
ginning of  health,  makes  the  mind 
sincere,  aids  the  memory,  piu'ges 
the  brain,  restores  the  bladder, 
warms  the  marrow,  opens  the 
liearing,  checks  tears,  removes 
nausea,  benefits  the  stomach,  in- 
vites digestion,  evokes  the  voice, 
builds  up  the  senses,  moves  the 
bowels,  enriches  sleep,  removes 
anxiety,  and  nourishes  good 
health." 

Following  the  practice  of  cau- 
terization, surgery  in  the  Western 
World  took  a  turn  for  the  better 
in  the  11th  century.  Dr.  McKii\ney 
said. 

The  study  of  anatomy  was  pop- 
ularized with  the  disecting  of  ani- 
mals and  later,  cadavers  (human 
corpses).  "Some  advance  was  even 
made  toward  anesthesia  with  the 
development  of  'sporific  sponges' 
and  more  complicated  procedures 
such  as  suturing  in  abdominal  op- 
erations were  attempted,"  Dr.  Mc- 
Kinney said. 

CLASSIFIEDS 


factual  is  and  is  not — it's  bunk! 
The  only  new  hitings  were  the 
shame,  the  guilt,  the  bashfulness, 
and  I  could  well  do  x  without 
them!" 

Though  the  reptile  was  some- 
what terrified  by  this  outbiu-st  he 
was  also  stung  by  it  so  he  paused 
in  his  twistings  long  enough  to  re- 
spond: "I  was  afraid  of  this,  Eve. 
The  fruit  was  over-effective.  In 
stead  of  simply  inducing  you  to  ac- 
cept the  categories  of  good  and 
evil  it  has  transformed  you  into  a 
fellow-philosopher,  but  an  erec 
one  who,  instead  of  crawling  bo- 
lore  the  Creator  and  accepting  His 
.system,  stands  up  to  Him  and  de- 
fies His  whole  framework  of  ideas. 

"In  a  way,  I  rather  envy  you 
and  your  freedom;  but  I  warn  that 
there  will  be  enmity  from  now  on 
between  the  naturalists  and  value- 
denyers  you  spawn  and  my  own 
offspring.  For  I  really  do  see,  be- 
sides your  shame  and  guilt  and 
other  emotions,  a  moral  evil  which 
is  their  source.  It  really  is  a  fea- 
ture of  some  of  your  behavior 
and,  I  admit,  occasionally  some  of 
mine.  And  it  is  not  just  another 
item  that  exists  in  the  world,  like 
another  lizard  or  even  a  new  emo- 
tion. 

"It  is  a  whole  dimension  of 
things;  it  is  bad  that  you  went 
naked,  which  is  different  from  the 
mere  fact  that  you  did  go  about 
without  clothes  and  even  that  you 
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and  ask  for  Jim  Teague. 

FOR  SALE:  CHEAP  TRaJ^SPOR 
tation!  1949  black  Buick  Super. 
Two-door  sedan  complete  with 
accessories.  Good  condition.  See 


phone  8-0164. 


FOR  RENT:  FOUR  ROOM  HOUSE 


of  mind  again,  and  we'll  never 
come  to  agreement,  since  our  dif- 
ference is  not  about  some  particu- 
'ar  creature  that  Jehovah  may  or 
al  127  Jackson  Circle  anytime  orf  "^^V  "O^  have  put  in  the  garden* 


And   at   this   he   crawled   away. 


American  students  of  engineer- 
ing, science,  architecture,  agricul- 
ture and  commerce  may  apply  for 
foreign  on-the-job  training  during 
the  1957  summer,  according  to  an 
announcement  made  recently  by 
the  U.  S.  Committee  for  lAESTE, 
the  Internatfonal  Assn.  for  the 
Exchange  of  Students  for  Tech- 
nical Experience.  ^ 

During  the  1957  summer,  Ame- 
rican industry  will  accept  foreign 
engineering  .students  for  training 
under  lAESTE's  program.  Under 
this  program  college  students  in 
engineering  and  other  technical 
fields  are  sent  abroad  for  on-the- 
job  training  diu-ing  their  summer 
vacations  for  a  minimum  period 
of  eight  weeks.  In  1956.  58  U.S. 
students  trained  in  13  European 
countries  and  75  foreign  students 
were  employed  in  45  U.S.  indus- 
tries. 
QUALIFIED  STUDENTS 

U.S.  colleges  have  been  a.sked 
to  nominate  qualified  American 
students  who  wish  practical  train- 
ing abroad.  In  addition,  each  ap- 
plicant must  have  completed  his 
third  year  of  engineering  or 
scientific  study,  must  have  had 
practical  experience  in  this  coun- 
try, and  must  be  able  to  pay  for 
his  international  travel.  Appli- 
cants may  indicate  their  choice  of 
country  from  among  the  lAESTE 
members  as  well  as  their  particu- 
lar field  of  specialization. 

The  deadline  for  receipt  of  ap- 
lications  is  December  28,  1956. 
Each  American  applicant  will  be 
asked  to  pay  a  $25  application 
fee,  $20  of  which  will  be  returned 
if  no  suitable  placement  can  be 
made.  Candidates  with  drawing 
before  January  15,  1957,  will 
have  $15  refunded  to  thom. 
OTHERS 

Other  countries  participating  in 
the  lAESTE  program  are:  Canada, 
Iceland,  India,  Israel.  Portugal, 
Turkey  and  Yugaslavia. 

lAESTE  was  organized  in  1948 
by  universities  and  indutries  "Of 
nine  countries  in  \7<w.tern  Europe. 
Its  aims  are  to  train  advanced  stu- 


NOW  PLAYING 


''RIFIFI 


...means  Troub/ef 
Directed  by 
JULES  DASSIN 

';;i^    STARHiNC 
JfA«  SERVAIS.   ROBERT 

maNMel.  carl  MOHNEH,  * 
M'      Today 
'*  Tli^ough  Saturday 

*'  Criterion 


UNC  Dental  Alumni  Assn.  will  'oe 
held  at  4  p.m.  today  in  Lecture 
Hall    "C". 

Since  the  first  class  of  dentists 
was  graduated  in  1954,  a  total  of 
150  studemts  have'  received  de- 
grees as  doctors  of  dental  surgery 
and   20   students    have    completed 


the   first   homecoming   day  in  tke 
history  uf  the  school. 

A  number  of  lectures  and  es 
says  will  be  delivered  during  the 
morning  for  those  not  attendine 
the  TV  demonstrations.  Tliese 
will  be  held  in  the  Hospital  Au- 
ditorium on  the  fourth  floor  ©f 
the  N.  C.  Memorial  Hospital. 


You'll  Find 


MORE 

CHILDREN'S 

BOOKS 


To  Make  Your  Christmas 


♦•.V 


Merry 


n 


I        -II.  'J  -i 

^,    ',yi'    HI  till 


THEATRE    DURHAM, 


205  L  Franklin.  St. 


■ 


The    Intimate 
Bookshop 

6pen  till 


)«•!»  •(      «      ■■■■*'■     ".      '    « 

.1    ••     • 

II      f .  .  1 ;  t  •  I      •  - '     ■ 


5.1 1    ! 
.lli*»<<. 

•  An  «j' 

10  F. 


-it  l» 


but  slowly  enough  so  that  fftCheard  |  dents    of   science    and   technology 

in  the  theories  and  techniques  of 
other  nations,  and  to  build  a 
foundation  for  international  un- 
derstanding and  good  will  among 


Eve  fling  the  words  at  him,  "I 
located  on  Barclay  Road.  Elec- ;  hate  you — you  deluder  of  ^man- 
trie  ftove,  refrigerator,  hot  wat-  j  kind!  There  is  no  good  an3  evil 
er  heater,  and  oil  circulator  I  nor  any  knowledge  of  them;  there 
furnished.  $65  per  month.  Phone  are  only  our  poor  human  emo- 
8-0148.  tions."  **" 


these  potential  leaders  cf  science 
and  industry. 


14  >     JJ.      ,'.'■ 


Sti.t  :      iii    ' 


A  Cam(Dus-to-Career  Case   Histcry 


He  puts  communications  on  the  go 


Martin  Jepson.  E.E..  Purdue,  '53, 
is  an  Engineer  in  the  Radio  and 
Special  Services  Secfion  of  Illinois 
Bell  Telephone  Company. 

"T  help  design  mohile  radiotele- 
phone systems,"  says  Martin.  "We 
have  a  wide  variety  of  customers, 
including  trucking  firms,  railroads 
and  marine  traffic  of  all  kinds.  Many 
husiiie^smeii.  too.  want  these  systems 
for  their  private  cars.  Each  customer 
has  his  own  communications  prob- 
lems, and  these  are  a  constant  and 
stimulating  engineering  challenge. 

"Anbther  part  of  my  job  is  to  help 
set   up  facilities  for  conventions. 


sports  events  and  the  like.  Last  sum- 
mer's Democratic  National  Conven- 
tion, for  instance,  used  enough 
circuits  and  facilities  to  serve  a  small 
city.  There  were  special  circuits  for 
broadcasting,  teletypewriters,  the 
press,  and  for  inside  communica- 
tions. It  was  our  job  to  set  tho.se 
facilities  up  and  keep  them  operating. 

'"The  increase  in  demand  for  tele- 
phone and  related  services  is  phe- 
nomenal. It's  this  growth  that's 
creating  real  career  opportunities  in 
the  telephone  business.  Add  to  this 
the  fact  that  it's  a  stable  business, 
and   you've   really   got    something!" 


Martin  Jepsoii  is  one  of  many  young  men  who 
are  fnKling  interesting  careers  in  Bell  Tele- 
plione  Companies,  and  also  in  Bell  Telephone 
I..al>oratorie8,  Vkestern  Electric  and  Sandia  Cor- 
poration. See  your  placemen!  officer  for  more 
information  ahout  Bell  System  Companies. 


I 


..J 


PA3B   FOUR 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HIIL 


WEDNESDAY,  DECEMBER  5,  1556 


Rosenbluth  Scores  47  As  Tar  Heels  Rout  Furman,  94-66 


Rosey  Breaks  Scoring  ; 

I 

Mark  Held  By  Glamack 


The  Orange  Bowl:  Who  Should  Go? 

The  most  representative  team  from  the  Atlantic  Coast  Conference 
vill  not  be  playing  in  the  Orange  Bowl  come  New  Year's  Day.  Instead 
they  will  be  sitting  back  by  the  fireside,  watching  Clcmson  and  Col- 
orado battle  via  the  medium  of  TV. 

In  case  you  haven't  gu*ss*d,  the  team  we're  talking  about  is 
Duke,  far  and  away  the  best  club  in  the  ACC.  Because  of  a  cou- 
ple of  bad  Saturdays,  the  Blue  Devils  were  knocked  out  of  the 
New  Year's  Day  scrap.  And  yet  at  the  end  of  the  seJIson  no  one 
questioned  the  fatt  that  Duke  had  a  better  team  than  did  Clenv 
son.    That  is  no  one  but  Tiger  fans. 

The  question  is  this:  Does  the  ACC  want  to  send  their  best  team 
•or  the  conference  champion?  "W'e  for  one  would  like  to  see  the  mat- 
ter cleared  up  one  way  or  another.  This  "'representative  team"  busi- 
ness leads  only  to  confusion. 

The  Baseball  Beat 

Carolina  has  a  new  head  baseball  coach,  or  at  least  that's  what 
the  official  release  stated.  Actually  the  new  coach.  Walter  Rabb.  has 
been  in  charge  of  the  Tar  Heel  baseballers  since  1947  when  ho  took 
over  as  field  manager  for  oldtimer  Bunn  llearn,  victim  of  a  severe 
stroke.  Hearn  officially  retired  only  last  spring,  however. 

The  'new'  Tar  Heel  coach  is  a  personable,  energetic  fellow  who 
has  a  finger  in  a  little  bit  of  everything.  In  additiorr  to  his  coach- 
ing duties,  Rabb  has  served  as  director  of  the  extensive  Intr*- 
mural  program  here  at  UNC,  and  has  been  a  member  of  the 
NCAA  District  Baseball  Committee. 

This  could  be  the  year  for  Coach  Rabb.  The  affable  head  mentor 
will  have  a  veteran  rich  squad  at  his  command  this  spring  when  horse- 
hide  season  rolls  around,  and  with  several  outstanding  pitchers  from 
former  years  returning  from  the  inactive  UM,  the  Tar  Heels  could 
go  a  long  way. 

One  of  the  squad's  brightest  young  hurlers  will  be  missing  this 
spring.    He's  Les  Gilliland,  stringbean  righthander  from  Pinehurst 
who  was  killed  in  a  tragic  auto  accident  last  Saturday  night.  Giili 
land  proved  last  year  in  his  sophomore  season  that  he  was  a  real 
comer,  and  had  been  counted  on  for  •ixtensive  service  in  the  up- 
coming campaign. 
Hurlers  returning  to  Tar  Heel  livery  after  a  leave  of  absence  in- 
clude lefty  Joe  Morgan  and   Charley   Aycrck   from   service   and  Tom 
Maultsby  who  has  .iust  finished  a  year's  ineligibility. 

Another  former  Tar  Heel  baseballer  has  been  making  quite  a 
name  for  himself  since  graduation.  Bruce  Holt,  regular  third  base- 
man on  the  '54  team,  performed  with  the  U.  S.  Olympic  baseball 
•  team  in  an  exhibition  game  in  Melbourne.  The  Olympic  team  is 
composed  of  Army,  Navy,  Marine  and  Air.  Force  men  in  the  Far 
East  comnrund.  AirmUf  HoW 'is  stationed  »1<  Johnson  Air  Base  in 
Japan. 

•  '  'A  L^fe  Bit  Of  Ev^ything        '    » 

'A  4txartet  of  athletes  here  ire  having  their  troubles  A-ith  the  aeh'ool 
hodks.  They  lurb' trosH  Ualfback  Cornell  Johnson,  swimming  Air-Ameri 
cah  Charlie  Krepp  and  varsity  basketballers  BiH  Hathaway  and  Stan 
Crii>U.  And  over  at  Duke,  IVray  Carlton,  sophomore  halfback  who  was 
a  leading  Blue  Devil  ground  galneV  in-  the  season's  closing  stages,  is 
finding  the  scholastic  going  much  rougher. 

Jack  Nelson,  formerly  a  student  here  at  Carolina,  grabbed  off 
fourth  place  honors  in  the  200  meter  butterfly  event  in  the  Olym- 
pics. Teammate  Bill  Yercyzk  won  the  event. 
And  speaking  of  the  Olympics,  who   are  you   picking  to  win   the 
unofficial  team   championship?   Well,   we  don't   want  to  be   branded 
Ted',  but  we're  mighty  afraid  the  Russians  will  pull  it  out  by  monop- 
olizing such  sports  as  women's  gymnastics  and  Greeo-Roman  wrestling. 
Anyone    interested    in    attending    the    Carolina  NYU    gam*    in 
Madison  Square  Gardon  Dec.  20  should  contact  Lou  Rosenstock  at 
the  ZBT  fraternity.   If  enough  students  are  interested.  Coach  Mc- 
Guire  will  reserve  an  end  zone  section  for  Tar  Heel  supporters. 


Carolina's  Tar  Heels  turned  tig- ; 
er  in  the  second  half  last  night  be-  '. 
hind  the  record  breaking  sharp-  j 
shooting  of  Ail-Ainerican  Lennie ' 
Rosenbluth,  and  romped  to  a  94-  i 
66  victory  over  stubborn  Furman  ; 
m  a  wild  contest  played  before  a  '• 
capacity  crowd  of  5.300  fans  in  j 
Woollen  Gym.  i 

The  homestanding  Tar  Heels  led  j 
by  only  seven  points,  37-30,  at  half,  I 
but  sparked  by  the  shooting  of  j 
Rosenbluth   and   Joe   Quigg.   man-  I 


Frosh  Hit 
100  Mark 
In  Debut 


Carolina's    freshmen    hoopsters 
began   their  season  with  a  flying ! 
start  last  night  when  they  whipped  ' 
the  outclassed  High  Point  College  ' 
JV's  101  to  61.  1 

After  letting  the  High  Pointers  ] 
have  an  8  to  4  lead  in  the  first  two 
minutes  of  the  game,  Coach  Buck  | 
Freeman's  quintet  gathered  mo-  j 
mentum  and  preceded  to  run  away  I 
with  the  ball  game. 

The  Tar  Babies  leading  49  to  25 ! 
at  the  half  came  back  with  new  I 
vigor  and  did  not  let  the  High  { 
-*oint  team  score  from  the  floor  [ 
lor  the  first  13  minutes  of  the  sec- 1 
ond  half. 

Leaping    Lee    Shaffer    was    the 
high   scorer   for   the   Tar   Babies,  i 
with  18  points.   Shaffer  controlled  ! 
the  backboards  with  his  rebound- 
mgs  and  tap  ins. 

The  Tar  Babies  played  a  team 

viclorj-  with  5  men  hitting  in  the 

double  digits.    The  only  time  the 

.  Tar  Babies  looked  loose  was  in  the 

I  iinal    minutes    when  ^thcy    bygan 

eyeing  the  century  mark.  It  was  iri 

j  the   last  45   seconds   when   Wally 

I  Graham  sank  a  looig  push  shot  for 

I  the  99th  and  100th  points. 

I      The  summary: 


aged  to  pull  away  and  turn  the 
game  into  a  rout. 

But  the  big  news  of  the  night 
was  the  performance  turned  in  by 
Rosenbluth,  considered  by  many  to 
be  the  greatest  basketball  player 
in  Carolina's  history.  Lanky  Len- 
nie, widely  known  for  his  sensa- 
tional scoring  splurges,  broke  a 
iecord  that  had  stood  for  15  years 
last  night  as  he  poured  in  20  field 
goals  and  7  free  throws  for  a  total 
of  47  points,  a  new  University  re- 
cord. 

The  previous  record  of  45  was 
set  by  the  great  George  Glamack 
in  1941  agaiilst  Clcmson  and  was 
tied  by  Rosenbluth  himself  last 
year. 

The  Tar  Heel  captain  had  only 
17  at  half,  but  a  30  point  total  in 
the  second  stanza  put  him  over 
the  top.  He  scored  the  record 
breaking  basket  with  M  seconds 
left  and  was  immediately  taken 
out  of  the  game  by  Coach  Frank 
McGuire. 

Although  Rosenbluth  took  high 
scoring  honors  with  his  47  points, 
it  was  big  Joe  Quigg  who  provided 
the  spark  that  set  the'  locals  off 
in  the  opening  minutes  of  the  sec- 
ond half.  Quigg  a  bench  warmer 
for  most  of  the  first  half,  started 
the  second  period  at  center  it. 
plact  of  Billy  Hathaway  and  buck- 
eted 10  points  in  3  minutes  and 
46  seconds.  When  the  tall  center 
left  the  giame  with  13:02  to  go,  the 
Tar  Heels  had  stretched  their  mar- 
gin to  13  points  and  were  never 
headed. 

Carolina  jumped  off  to  a  quick 
advantage  in  the  initial  moments 
of  the  game,  but  couldn't  hold  it 
as  the  Paladins  came  roaring  from 
behind  to  go  ahead,  15-12  with  11:- 
50  remaining  in  the  first  half.  The 
Tar  Heels  came  back  to  take  the 
lead.  16- 15  on  a  Hathaway  tap  in 
shortly    after,    and    continued    to 


Sooners  Win  National  Grid 
Crown  Over  Tennessee  Vols 


NEW     YORK    — (iP—    Displaced] 
only  twice  during  the  season,  the  \ 
Oklahoma    Sooners     finished     on  \ 
top  in  the  final  Associated  Press 
poll  to  be  rated  the  No.  1  college 
football  team  of  1956  for  the  sec- 
ond  straight  year. 

The  high-geared  Oklahomans, 
winners  of  40  consecutive  games, 
also  were  rated  the  No.  1  team  in 
1950,  so  their  third  such  designa- 
tion retires  the  Rev.  J.  Hugh 
O'Donnell.    C.S.C.,   Memorial   Tro- 


stretch  that  lead  til  the  halfway 
point.  Then  when  the  second  hal^ 
rolled  around,  it  was  all  Quigg 
and  Ro.^enbluth. 

The  Tar  Heels  made  38  of  91 
shots  from  the  floor  for  a  percent- 
age of  41,8.  while  Furman  hit  26 
out  of  84  for  a  poor  31  ""c  mark. 
Quigg  led  the  Carolina  shooters  in 
aecuracy  with  8  for  11,  73rT .  Rosen- 
bluth had  20  for  37. 

Guard  Dick  Wright  paced  Fur- 
man's  fast  break  attack  and  wound 
up  with  21  points  to  take  top 
scoring  honors  for  the  Paladins. 


phy.  placed  in  competition  by 
Notre  Dame  in  honor  of  the  for- 
mer president  of  that   institution. 

The  Sooners  piled  up  a  total  of 
1.715  points  in  the  vote  of  the  187 
sports  writers  and  broadcasters 
participating  in  the  final  poll.  Un- 
beaten Tennessee  wa.s  a  good  sec- 
ond with  1.618  points,  with  the 
Rose  Bowl-bound  Iowa  Hawkeyes 
third  with  1.270  points,  based  on 
the  system  of  10  points  for  first, 
9  for  second,  and  on  downio  one 
point  for  a  lOth-place  ranking. 

Georgia  Tech  took   fourth  place 
with   1,211   points,   and  Texas  Ag- 
gies,   Miami,    Michigan,    Syracuse,  I 
Michigan   State  and   Oregon   State  i 
in  that  order  made  up  the  remain- 
der of  the  top  10. 

Oklahoma,  although  pressed  by 
Tennessee  in  the  point  totals,  had 
a  wide  margin  in  first-place  votes- 
being  chosen  for  that  spot  in  104 
ballots  as  the  Vols  were  the  top 
choice  of  48  critics.  Iowa  received 


15  first-place  votes.  Miami  12.  and 
the  remainder  were  scattered 
among  five  other  teams. 


Caroline 


FO  FT    PFTP 


Shaffer,  f  _.  9 


Laresc,  t  . 
Kepley,  c 
Crotty,  g  . 
Steppe,  g 


4 

^  4 

, 7 

3 


Graham,  g  5 

Wilson,  g  2 

Griffin,  g  , 4 

Crutchfield,  f 2 

Ainslie,  f  ._, 0 

Poole,  g  2 


State  Stages  Comeback 
To  Top  Deacons,  73-63 

Paced  by  the  shooting  and  re- 
bounding of  6-11  center  Bob 
Seitz,  the  underdog  State  Wolf- 
liack  rose  up  to  smack  down  Wake 
Forest's  Demon  Deacons,  73-63  in 
a  Big  Four  battle  played  in  Win- 
ston-Salem last  night. 

The  Pack  trailed  27-22  at  the 
halfway  point  but  came  roaring 
from  behind  in  the  second  stanza 
to  wrap  up  the  win.  Coach  Everett 
Cases  crew  had  51  points  while 
holding  their  opponents  to  only  36 
in  the  second  half. 

Seitz  used  his  height  to  best  ad- 
vantage as  he  rippled  the  nets  for 
22  points-  Guard  John  Maglio  fol- 
lowed with  16  while  Cliff  Hafer 
had  13.  The  Wake  scoring  was 
evenly  divided  with  Jim  Gilley, 
Wendell  Carr,  and  Ernie  Wiggins 
all  hitting  double  figures. 


Co-Rec  Volleyball  Play 
Gets  Under  Way  Tonight 

The   intramural  department  has 
made   final    preparations   for   the 
annual     co-recreation     volleyball 
tournament.   The  tournament,  the 
first     01     several     co-recreational ; 
sports  planned  for  men's  and  wo-| 
men's   organizations,    will    be    un- 1 
derway  tomorrow  night  In  Wool- } 
Jen  Gym  at  7:00  t 

This  years   tournament   will   be 
by   far  the  largest  ever  with   42 
teams  entering   —  24   men's   and 
24  women's.  The  teams  are  divid-  [ 
ed    into    six    four-team    leagues  i 
Each    league    will    play    a    round  i 
robin    tournament    to    determine  \ 
the    league    champion.    The    six ; 
league    champions    will    then    go  j 
into  a   single   elimanstion  tourna- ! 
ment   for  the  final  championship.  | 

.\   trophy   will    be   yiven    1<>   tii.-  | 
9h:impi(.>r»t.hip  team. 


Hornung  Wins 
Heisman 

NEW  YOR  K-J.fi— Paul  Horn- 
ung. IMotre  Dame  quarterback, 
yesterday  was  awarded  the  Heis- 
man Trophy  given  by  the  DOWN- 
TOWN Athletic  Cluo  as  the  out- 
standing college  football  player  of 
1956. 

Hornung  becopies  the  22nd  win- 
ner of  the  trophy,  established  in 
1935  in  honor  of  John  W.  Heisman, 
famed  coach.  Jay  Berwanger  of 
the  University  of  Chicago  was  the 
first  winner,  and  Howard  "Hop- 
along"  Cassady,  Ohio  State  half- 
back, Mas  chosen  for  the  1955 
trophy. 

The  Notre  Dame  star  received 
a  total  of  1,006  points  in  the  poll 
conducted  among  1,318  registered 
electors  over  the   nation. 

Johnny  Ma.iors.  fine  Tennessee 
back,  was  second  in  the  balloting 
with  994  points,  making  it  the 
closest  finish  in  years. 

Twelve  players  were  listed  in 
the  voting,  with  two  Oklahomans, 
Tommy  McDonald  and  Gerry 
Fubbs,  ranking  third  and  fourth. 


Totals    ._. 

H.  P.  JV'S 

Wilson,  f  .- 
'Aissell,  f  „ 
Parrish,  c  - 
Sellecs,  g    , 

Swiggett,  g 

Jolly,  f  _, 

Cecil,  g  . 

Gilley,  f  

Fromydoval,  f   _ 

Totals    


42     17     29  101 


FG    FT    PFTP 


2 

_...  1 

-_-  1 

_._  1 


_  5     12 
2      0 


1     22 
3       4 


.    0 
0 

^_  1 


13    35    24    61 


Furman 

Bob  Gaines;  f 

Conrad,  f  _ 

Salver,  f  .. .. 

Herring,  f  .1^ 

Ross,  c   _.„ . 

Hanks,  c  ..... 

Cooper,  g  

Bill  Gaines,  g  . 
Wrgiht,  g  ...__ 

Pinson,  g  

McKinney,  g  . . 

Totals 


Carolina 

Rosenbluth,  f  ... 

Brennan,  f  

Lotz,  f      

Hathaway,  c 

Quigg,  c  

Kearns,  g  

Cunningham,  g 
Radovich,  g    ._ 

Grol,  g  

Rosemond,  g 

Totals    


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FIND  THAT: 

THE  NEW  YORK  LIFE  AGENT 

ON  YOUR  CAMPUS 
IS  A  GOOD  MAN  TO  KNOW 

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..,iO  BRIiUAMTTHAT 
MOVM  PAWf  WILL  Bf 
TALKIMO  ABOUT  IT 
FOR  SOME  TIMII" 


—Harold  Tribwn* 


Record  Attempt 

A  former  Tarheal  «wlmmer 
will  attompt  to  set  a  new  Amer- 
can  swimming  record  Friday 
night. 

Buddy  Baarcke,  Carolina  star 
in  1951-52-53,  will  attempt  to  set 
a  new  standard  in  the  50  yard 
breaststroke. 

The  AAU  sanctioned  event 
will  take  place  in  conjunction 
with  the  UNCSouth  Carolina 
dual  meet  at  8  p.m. 

Officials  for  the  special  event 
will  be  Ralph  Casey,  Dick  Jam 
arson,  B^b  Colbert,  Pete  Grods- 
ky,  George  Coxhead,  and  Joiiii 
Wienants. 


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A  SensaHonal  New  Motion  Picture 


"R  IF  IF  I 


J9 
...means  Trouble! 


Direcfed  by  JULES  DASSIN 

No  On*  Sooted  Once  Feature  Has  Started. 

SPECIAL  LATE  SHOW  FRIDAY  NIGHT 
REGULAR  SHOWING 
STARTS    SUNDAY 


B  O  B  and  M  O  N  K 
of 

TOWN  & 
CAMPUS 

SALUTE 
Athlete  Of  The  Week 


LENNIE  ROSENBLUTH 

Lanky  Lennie  Rosenbluth, 
Carolina's  high  scoring  cage  ace, 
has  been  named  Athlete  of  the 
Week  for  his  performance  in 
last  week's  opening  game 
against  the  McCrary  Eagles. 
Rosenbluth,  a  popular  candidate 
for  All-American  honors,  poured 
in  25  points  and  sparked  a  late 
Tar  Heel  surge  that  sewed  up 
the  decision. 

We  want  htm  to  drop  by 
TOWN  &  CAMPUS  and  pick  out 
a  shirt  to  his  liking — compli- 
ments of  the  house. 


HiiLTER  BRENIAN  •  U9R0I  IMMl 

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clothing.    Drop    in    today. 

TOWN  & 
CAMPUS 


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Slacks 


COiRICTtY  TAItORID  M 

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Domestic,  importtd  and 
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Charcoal  Gray,  Charcoal  Blue,  Cambridg* 
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ALSO:   New  Dacoron  worsted  shades  and  a  complete  collection 
of  imported  British  Heather  colours  FROM  $13.95  up. 


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«  II  C  riBSASY 
tlRlALS  BBPT. 
CHAPK*  HII,L,   U.  C« 


WEATHER 

North   Carolina:    Fair   to   partly 
cloudy  and  «eol  tonight. 


©)  c  Daily 


!. 


S  O  L  O  N  S     , 

They'll  get  a  chance  to  do 
good.  See  page  2. 


VOL.  LVii,  NO.  «2 


Complete  UP)  Wire  Service 


CHAPEL  HILL,  NORTH  CAROLINA,  THURSDAY.  DECeMft^R  6,   1956 


Offices   in   Graham   Memorial 


SIX  PAGES  THIS  ISSUE 


Mantovani's   Violins 
To  Perform   Tonight 
At  8  In  Memorial  Hall 


"The    master    of  the    tumbling  i 
strings,"    Mantovani,    and    a    45 
piece  orchestra  will  present  Man- 
tovani-styled    New    Music    tonight] 
in  Memorial  Hall  at  8.  I 

Students   are    admitted    free   to 
the  performance,  with  a  $1  admis- 1 
sion  fee  being  charged  to  stud^m  , 
wives  and  a  $2  charge  to  others. ; 
Doors  will  open  at  7.  | 

Tho  recording  and  concert  ar- ' 
list  is  currently  on  his  second  ten-  j 
week  American  tour  covering  the . 
country  from  coast  to  coast.  Man-  j 
tovani  plays  in  Chapel  Hill  three ; 
days  before  his  concert  in  New  j 
York  City's  Carnegie  Hall.  : 

Into  his  new  style  Mantovani  j 
has  introduced  a  sound  which  is  i 
characterized  by  sweeping  melody 
combined  with  orchestral  ingenui- 
ty. The  45  piece  heavy-on-the- 
strings^  orchestra  provides  serai- 
classical  and  light  classical  music 
set  to  an  easy,  relaxing  pace. 

Mantovani's  New  Music,  which 
has  become  familiar  to  audiences 
in  the  last  few  years,  came  into ; 
being  at  the  request  of  London 
FFR  (English  Decca).  The  record- 
ing artist  inaugurated  the  era  of 
New  Music  with  his  first  album 
for  London  records,  "Waltzing  j 
with  Mantovani."  ; 

Two  of  his  own  compositions  are  \ 
on   Mantovani's    program   tonight, : 
"Serenata  D'Amore"  and  "Italian 
Fantasia."  i 

Other  numbers  included  in  the  I 
concert  are  Irving  Berlin's  "AI-  j 
ways."       "Greensleeves,"       "Blue ; 


Hill  by  the  UNC  Student  Enter 
.ainment  Committee  as  a  feature 
of  their  student  entertainment 
program  for  1956-57. 

House  Speaks 
Today  At  4 

Chancellor  Robert  B.  House 
will  speak  today  in  the  third  meet- 
ing of  the  1956  series  of  In-Ser- 
vice  Training   Programs. 

House,  speaking  in  the  main 
lounge  of  the  Dormitory  of  the 
School  of  Nursing,  will-  speak  on 
human  values  in  work  with  in- 
dividual students. 

A  small  group  of  women  who 
regnlirly  work  with  students  has 


Thtee   Money   Bills   Befoit^ 
Studeht   Legislature    Tonighf  hnef 


news 


student  body  President  Bob 
Young  will  talk  on  the  "State  of 
the  Campus"  tonight. 

He  will  speak  to  the  Student 
Legislature  at  its  regular  meet- 
ing, 7:00  p.m.  on  top  floor  of  New- 
East.  Legislature  meetings  are 
always  open  to  students. 

President  Young  will  be  taking 
f 


Mantovani  Makes  Music  In  Memorial 

Mantovani  and  hit  45  violin  ensemble,  currently  on  their  second 
ten-week  tour  of  the  U.S.  will  perform  tonight  at  8  in  Memorial 
Hall  under  the  sponsorship  of  the  Student  Entertainment  Committoe. 

'School  Needs  Group 
Proposed  By  Hodges 


0/  Senate  Fails  Bill 
Condemning  Nehru 


CHANCELLOR   HOUSE 

if' .ji  ■..  speaks   todajf 


Danube"     by     Strauss.     Shubert's  j  i>^en  invited  to  attend  this  meet- 


'Ave    Marie."    "Some    Enchanted 


ing.   Included  are:   dormitory   hos 


Evening"  by  Richard  Rogers. ;  teases,  fraternity  and  sororit 
Aurics  "Moulin  Rouge."  Cole  For- !  housemothers,  a  representative 
tar's  "Begin  the  Begulne,"  «ihI  from  the  Olfice  of  Student  Affairs 
"The  Swan"  by  Saint-Saena.  ^  gnd  the  Sc«K»oIa  ol  Nursing,  *nd 

Mantovani  is  brought  to  Oiapel  j  jj^e  staff  of  the  Office  of  the  Deaft 
"      "  !  of  Women. 

Library  Announces  Hours'     ^".    Victor    Humphreys,    hos 

;  tess    in    Kenan    dormitory,    is    in 
For  Christmas  Holidays     i  charge  of  the  meeting.  Mrs.  Mar- 
garet   Jackson,    hostess      in      the 


The  Wilson  Library  has  an- 
nounced the  following  schedule  of 
hours  to  be  maintained  during  the 
Christmas  holiday  period: 

Dec.  19 — 7:45  a.m.  -  5  p.m. 

Dec.  20-21—9  a.m.  -  5  p.m. 

Dec.  22 — 9  a.m.  -  1  p.m. 


School   of   Nursing,    is    in    charge 
ot    arrangements. 


Whisky  Still  Found 
Near  Raleigh-Durh;*m 

RALEIGH— A  whisky  still  with 
Dec.  23-25  —  Closed  (Sunday,  U  capacity  of  500  gallons  per  day 
Christmas  Eve,  Christmas  Day).!  was  destroyed  within  a  quarter  of 

J  mile  of  the  heavily-traveled  I\u 
lei<^h-I>urham  highway  Wednesday. 

The  still,  which  had  about  7,200 
gallons  of  mash  on  hand,  was  about 
400  yards  off  US  70.  within  shout- 
ing distance  of  the  cutoff  to  t!ie 
Ilaleigh-Diurham  Airport. 


Dec.  26-28 — 9  a.m -5  p.m. 
Dec.  29 — 9  a.m.  -  1  p.m. 
Dec.  30— Closed  (Sunday). 
Dec.  31 — 9  a.m.  -  5  p.m. 
Jan.  1  — Closed. 
Jan.  2 — 9  a.m.  -  5  p.m. 
Jand   3 — Resume  regular  hours. 


Davidson  Petitions 
US  Action  In  Hungary 


DA VIDSOX  —  Scores  of  David- 
son College  sTudents  signed  a  peti- 
tion addressed  to  President  Eisen- 
hower yesterday  urging  vigorous 
action  by  this  country  to  focus 
moral  condemnation  on  Russia  for 
her  actions  in  Hungary. 

The  petition  asked  that  the 
United  States  seriously  consider 
withdrawing  diplomatic  recogni- 
tion of  the  present  Budapest  gov- 
ernment. 

The  resolution  was  critical  of 
what  it  called  a  lack  of  vigor  or 
direction  in  United  States  policy 
after  the  East  Berlin  and  East 
German  uprisings  of  June  1953 
and  the  riots  in  Poznan,  Poland, 
last  July. 

It  criticized  "an  American  inde- 
cision which  did  nothing  to  pre- 
vent, or  even  mitigate,  the  crush- 
ing of  Hungarian  lives  and  hopes 
by  Soviet  tanks." 


,  The  petitions  were  distributed 
after  an  Action  for  Hungary  rally 
j  at  which  an  unidentified  26-year- 
'  old  refugee  declared,  "We  believed 
the  United  Nations  would  help  us. 
But  we  are  not  bitter.  We  had  to 
light.  We  will  fight  again." 

His  remarks  were  interpreted  by 
Dr.  Zontan  Sentivanyi  of  Waynes- 
ville,  who  fled  from  Hungary  10 
years  ago. 

The  rally  was  a  prelude  to  the 
expected  arrival  later  this  month 
of  a-  Hungarian  refugee  family 
which  the  DavHson  community 
has  agreed  to  "adopt."  Arrange- 
ments for  the  family's  passage 
from  Europe  will  be  made  through 
the  Church  World  Service  of  New 
Yt>rk    City. 

•  The  college  community  will  pro- 
vide a  permanent  home  and  a  job 
for  the'   family   bread-winner. 


GM'S  SLATE 

Tito  following  acthrities  are 
scheduled  for  6M  today: 

Grail  Room,  4-5,  ixocutive 
Council  of  Studont  ••Yommont, 
6-11,  Student  Couficill  Roland 
Parker  1,  6-7:30  UP  Caucu»;  Ro- 
land Parker  2,  4-5,  Debate 
Squad,  7:30-8:30,  YRC;  Roland 
>arker  3,  4-5  StydonhFacuIfy 
Porum,  6-7:30,  SP  Caufwa;  Wood- 
house  Conference  Row^.  3-5:30 
Audit  Board;  Council  Room,  7- 
9:30  IOC  Court. 


1,000th  Road  Death 
Chalked  Up  Tuesday 

RALEIGH-^(AP)— When  Lang- 
ley  Barefoot.  54,  was  killed  in  a 
Johnston  Countv  collision  Tues- 
day, he  became  the  1.000th  person 
to  be  killed  on  Tar  Heel  highways 
this  year. 

Last  year  the  1.000th  person 
was  killed  during  the  Thanksgiv- 
ing holidays  and  a  total  of  1.165 
persons  were  killed  during  the 
year. 

As  of  Wednesday,  1.001  persons 
have  been  killed  f^n  the  state's 
highways,  compared  with  1.058  at 
the  same  period  last  year. 


DURHAM— (AP)— Gov.  Hodges 
last  night  proposed  a  State  Citi- 
zens Committee  for  Better  Schools 
(SCCBS)  to  find  "what- the  inter- 
I'St  in  schools  is  at  local  level.s 
over  the  entire  state." 

Hodges  said  the  committee  will  \ 
make  "a  study  of  our  school  need>  | 
with  particular  reference  to  the  j 
tinancing  and  the  responsibility  of  i 
all  of  us  at  local  levels  as  well  as  | 
state  levels."  j 

The  Governor  made  the  an- ' 
nouncement  in  a  speech  prepared  \ 
for  delivery  at  the  annual'  winter  i 
meeting  qf  the  Division  of  Super- 1 
iotendents  of  the  North  Carolina  ' 
Education  Assn. 

Hodges  said  he  pUiis  to  appoint 
the  cr^mmittee  "as  soon  as  possi- 
ble" and  call  a  meeting  to  kick- 
off  the  campaign. 

News  Service 
Startis  Jan.  3 

The  Daily  Tar  Heel's  interna- 
tional anti  national  news  service 
will  start  with  the  first  paper  of 
the  new  year. 

Editor  Fred  Powledge  Wednes- 
•iay  announced  The  Associated 
Pres  teletype  will  be  installed  and 
umninj,'  in  time  to  start  a  world 
news  column  in  the  Jan.  3.  1957, 
'.dition. 

The  Student  Legislature  this  fall 
appropriated  $400  to  The  Daily  Tai 
Leel  for  the  news  wire  after  furi- 
ous battle  on  the  floor  of  the  leg- 
slatur". 

Those  who  opposed  the  wire 
•ervicc  said  its  installation  would 
•nean  curtailment  of  student  new.s 
in  The  Daily  Tar  Heel.  Those  favor- 
ing the  wire  said  the  students 
new  need  a  summary  of  national 
and  international  events  to  enable 
them  to  keep  up  with  the  modern 
world. 

The  teletype  will  cost  The 
Daily  Tar  Heel  $20  a  week.  That 
figure  is  what  it  costs  The  As- 
sociated Press  to  errata  the 
wire,  said  Powledge.  The  wire 
association  is  cutting  its  |>rice 
"because  we  are  an  educational 
anti  non-profit  institution,"  the 
editor  said. 

Powledge  explained  the  tele- 
'.j  pe  could  have  been  started  this 
week.  'But  The  Associated  Press 
said  it  v;ould  have  to  charge  us 
for  use  of  the  wire  during  Christ- 
mas holidays,  when  it  wouldn't  be 
in  use,'  he  said. 

"Therefore  we  decided  to  start 
operations   right   after   Christmas 
holidays." 
EXPLANATION 

Powledge  gave  this  explanation 
of  the  wires  operation: 

A  teletype  machine  is  much  like 
a  typewriter,  and  similar  to  a  West- 
ern Union  receiving  machine. 
Electrical  impulses,  carried  over 
telephone-type  writes  to  the  ma- 
chine, operate  its  keys  like  those  of 
an  electric  typewriter. 

Folded  paper  is  fed  to  the  ma- 
chine from  deep  boxes. 

When  a  story  breaks  at  any 
point  in  the  world  serviced  by  The 
Assocftte  '.  Press,  Powledge  said, 
a  newsman  types  out  his  story  on. 
a  teletype  transmitter. 

The  story  is  transmitted  to  The 
(See  INTERNATIO^TAL.  page  4j 


The  Governor  expressed  the 
hope  that  the  committee  "will 
bring  to  the  professional  educa- 
tors, to  the  state  government,  to 
the  public  at  large,  and  to  the 
1959  General  Assembly,  what  our 
problems  are.  what  our  needs  are 
and  how  they  would  suggest  we 
go  about  meeting  these  needs." 

Hodgs  told  the  group  'there 
should  be  more  and  njore  of  local 
support"  for  the  schools.  He  said 
"1  believe  the  people  of  North 
Carolina  at  local  levels  will  pay 
tor  schools  and  education.  It  is 
being  proved  now  by  local  sup- 
plements, even  though  they  run 
from  $50  a  year  tir  the  Itrwest  case 
to  upwards  nl  :»1,500  a  year  in  the 
high?i>t  ca.sp.  'Hiere  may  not  be 
uniformity,  there  .should  not  be 
uniformity,  there  should  be  a 
minimum  .standard  and  the  state 
sh  uld  support  .such  a  standard." 

Hodges  declared  that  more 
local  support  'is  our  only  help 
lor  the  future,  not  only  of  raising 
the  necessary  amount  .»f  money, 
but  of  keeping  our  character  and 
our  dignity,  and  of  giving  to  the 
children  m  .re  than  they  are  no.v 
getting." 

Touching  on  th?  need  for  more 
and  better  vocational  schools, 
Hodges  declared  "If  North  Caro- 
lina is  to  regain  its  industrial 
leadership,  we  must  have  the 
training  and  education  which  will 
equip  our  .vouns  p'^ople  for  in- 
dustrial employment." 

He  c.nfe.ssed  "I  realize  that  1 
GO  not  have  y>;ur  support  entire 
y  in  thi.s  idea  of  local  support  and 
!  think  it  is  probably  expecting 
too  much  to  have  the  support  ot 
the  genera!  assvembly  for  the  so- 
called  matching  formula  which  1 
proposed    for    teachers'    salaries." 

He  declared  'We  must  think 
courageously,  we  must  think  in  a 
nodern  fashion,  we  must  not  let 
invthing.  in  these  particular  days 
with  our  shortages  of  teachers 
.stand  in  the  way  of  giving  our 
children  the  best  instruction  that 
is  available  and  wtihin  our 
means." 

Among  the  questions  he  posed 
were  "What  of  the  terms  of  the 
teachers?  Why  should  they  b? 
specified  nine  months  of  20  days 
each?  Why  can't  they  be  paid  on 
a  more  practical,  dignified  year- 
roimd  basis,  having  in  mind  the 
child  and  his  needs,  th?  com- 
munity and  its  responsibilitv.  Why 
can't  we  look  hard  and  long  at 
certification  and  make  corrections 
if  needed,  certainly  keeping  in 
mind  the  need  ta  challenge  inter- 
ested youna  peiple  who  might 
make  admirable  teachers  but  who 
might  not  have  had  the  technical- 
ly required  number  of  hours  of 
certain   courses." 


IN  THE  INFIRMARY 

Students  in  the  Infirmaryyes- 
terday  included. 

Stanley  Garriis.  Charles  How- 
son,  Peyton  Hawes,  Dennis 
Beam,  John  Adams,  Marion 
Byrd.  Alexander  Galloway,  Jer- 
ry Oppenheimer,  Harrincrton 
Alexander,  Malcolm  McLean. 
John  Lee,  and  Ronnie  Koes. 


•  Voting  134,  the  Dialectic  Sen- 
ate failed  Tuesday  night  a  bill 
condemning  Jawalaral  Nehru  and 
V.  Krishna  Menon  of  India. 

Senator  .Norman  Smith  intro- 
duced the  bill,  and  in  defending 
it  called  Nehru,  "a  man  complete- 
ly without  principles."  He  claim 
ed  that  Nehru  was  interested  onl\ 
in  what  he  can  get  for  himself. 

Speaking  negatively.  Senator 
Joel  Fleischman  said  that  it  is 
natural  that  Nehru  should  try  t^ 
come  out  on  top  in  the  interna 
ti;  nal  squabbles;  all  statesmen  do 
so. 

Senator  Erwin  .\very  pointed 
out  that  while  Nehru  condemned 
the  British  and  French  interven- 
tion on  Egypt,  he  said  nothing 
about  the  Russian  suppression  of 
the    Hungarians. 

Senator  Betty  Huffman  explain 
ed  that  India  wished  to  assume  in 
Asia  the  same  pasition  that  tht 
United  States  had  taken  in  the 
western  hemisphere  with  the 
Monroe  Doctrine.  "We  cannot  an- 
tagonize  neutrals."  she  said. 

Claiming  that  the  most  import 
ant  threat  to  India  was  from  th 
north  and  posed  by  the  Red 
Jg^llj^eae.  Senator  .,Qill  Wible  con 
eluded,  "We  should  continu.'  to 
put  nrrssu'"e  on  India  to  come  .join 
with  the  W&st.' 

"We  did  the  snme  thing  (India's 
action     on     forei  |      po'iicy)     ci^ 
.selves    when    we    were   a    new    na  j 
tion."      claimed      Senator      .Nancy 
R  thschild.     She    said     India     was 
incap:]h!e    of   su.staining    a    power- 1 
ful   modern  army,  and  her  people  | 
are  ignorant  and  cling  to  their  old  ! 
ways. 

Guest  Frederic  Wolfer  said  tha   j 
.Nehni    could    not    he    judged    by  j 
what   the   Nationalist   Chinese   had 
said  rf  him.  as  .some  hod  tried  to 
do  earlier.  He  claimed  that  the  Na- 
tionalist   were  strongly  bia.sed.        ! 

Senator  G^rry   Baudre^u   called 
the    bill    tinged    with    "Republican  ' 
isolationism"  .X.'^kina   "who  are   to  ' 
condemn?",     he     felt     that     the 


part  in  a  tradition  established  sev-  legislature     floor     tonight     after 

eral  years  ago.  "State  of  the  Cam-  President    Ycdtsg's    speech.    And 

pus"  addresses  have  been  deliver-  the  body  will  receive  a  bill  to  set 

ed   to   fresh   Student   Legislatures  up    a    committee    to    contact    stu- 

twice  a  .vear,  right  after  they  are  dents  who  cash   bad  checks   with 

elected   in    campus-wide  elections.  Chapel  Hill  merchants. 

APPROPRIATIONS  j      The  bad  check  bill  will  be  intro 

Three   appropriations    measures,    duced   tonight  and   voted  on  next 
totalling    $1,861.29,    will    hit    the,  week. 

■ I      The      appropriations      measures 

are: 

1.  A  bill  to  appropriate  $1,000 
to  the  Men's  Glee  Club  to  defray 
travel  expenses  incurred  in  its  lal! 
and    spring    tours. 

2.  An  $800  appropriation  to  the 
Yackety    Yack    for   printing    addi- 

United    States'    policy   right   after    tional  yearbooks.  The  reason  is  the 
the      American      Revolution      had  i  University's    increased    enrollment 
been  much  the  same  as  India's  to-    this  year, 
daj-  i      3.   A   bill   to  appropriate  $61.29 


FROM    RADIO   DISPATCHES 

BUDAPEST— Hungarian  women 
demonstrated  against  Soviet  troops 
for  the  second  straight  day  Wed- 
nesday. Daring  RusAian  soldiers 
to  fire  their  poised  rifles,  the 
women  marched  into  public 
squares  in  open  defiance  of  So- 
viet rule. 


BUDAPEST  —  Budapest  Radio 
said  Wednesday  United  Nations 
General  Secretary  Dag  Hammar- 
j.kjold  cannat  come  to  Hungary 
Dec.  16  as  he  had  planned. 
*         *         « 

UNITED  N.'\TIONS,  N.Y.  — 
American  Ambassador  Henry  Ca- 
bot Lodge  Jr..  informed  of  Hun- 
gary's  change   of   mind   al>out  ad- 


.^ter      the      meeting      Senator    t.T  the   Campus  Chest  to  buy  tro- 1  ^^jj^g    Secretary    Hammar^kjold. 


Rothschild  supervised  the  serving    phies  for  fraternity  and  dormitory 
of  crffee  and  cookies  to  members  I  men's  divisions  in  the  recent  char- 


and  guests 


ity  drive. 


Moreheads 
Graduates 
Out  For' 56 

The  .Morehead  .scholarships  for 
graduate  students  will  not  be 
awarded  this  year,  according  to 
K.  A.  Fotzer  chairman  of  the 
Morehead  Foundation,  which  dis- 
tributes the  gifts  for  their  donor, 
John  Motley  Morehead. 

The  scholarships  "have  been  dis- 
centinued  temporarily,"  Fetzer 
said,  and  added  that  he  doesn't 
•know  when  they  will  be  rein- 
stated." 

He  said  thev  were  discontinued 
in  keeping  with  the  original  inten- 
tion ol  the  program,  which  wa-: 
to  attract  undergraduates  to  the 
Uni\ersit.v. 

Fetzer  said  he  anticipated  that 
the  undergraduates  would  ad- 
vance to  provide  a  field  for  grad- 
uate .scholarships. 

He  stated  that  there  is  also  a 
chanct>  that  the  endowment  will 
be   increa.sed. 

The  pr  gram  was  .set  up  in  1951 
on  the  graduate  level  because 
Morehead  wanted  to  see  the  pro- 
'•ram  in  operation  before  expand- 
ing it.  Fetzer  said.  After  it  was 
proven        successful.        Morehead 


said   "the  action  of  the   Budapest 
government    is   an    affront    to   the 
.  ,  secretary  general  and  to  the  whole 

I      In  addition  to  the  appropriation  :  civilized   world." 
j  bills,  the  legislature  will  act  on  a !  *        *         * 

I  resolution    to    endorse    a    proposal  i 
that    the    University    work    out    a 
maintenance    program   for  televis- 
Ivn    sets   in    men's    and    women's 
dormitories. 

The  resolution  would  ask  the 
University's  Director  of  Opera-  i  pistol  [rop?  a  person  believed  to 
tions  to  form  the  program.  Main-  \  have  incited  race  riots.  No  inci- 
tenance  of  the  television  sets  now  dents  were  reported  Wednesday, 
is  financed  by  individual  dormi-  and  officials  hoped  they  could 
tory    social    funds,    which    provide    open    the    school,   closed    for    fear 


CLINTON.  Tenn— A  posse  of 
U.S.  marshalls  swept  into  Clinton 
Wednesday  and  arrested  16  trou- 
blemakers" at  integrated  Clinton 
High  School.   One  lawman  took  a 


primarily  for  social  functions. 

I  Hungarian 
1  Fund:  $323 

i  The  Hungarian  Relief  Fund  yes- 
i  terday  collected  $23.20.  This 
j  brings  the  fund  to  $323.20.  This 
'  money  will  be  sent  to  aid  the 
I  Hungarian^  Refugees  who  are  I'lee- 
I  ing  wio  Austria.  Sixty  per  cent 
j  f  the  Campus  Che.st  has  already 
I  been  .<»ent.  said  Campus  Chest 
Co-Chaiiman    Jackie    .Aldridge.         j 

Bob  Young,  president  of  the  j 
student  body,  commented.  ''Last  j 
week,  students  heard  a  fellow  I 
student  tell  of  his  war-torn  and  | 
ravaged  homeland  in  Hungary.  He  i 
t  Id  of  the  vital  role  his  student-  I 
had  played  in  the  fight  for  free- 
dom. I  challenge  each  student  i 
here  to  prove  to  these  students 
that  we  are  interested  and  sympa- 


thetic to  their  critical  position, 
made  awards  to  freshmen  in  the  Hundreds  of  students  are  in  need 
sprin?   of    19.53   and    in   each   year    „,  ^^on^,,.  ^^^  pjoj^es  at  this  time. 

!  Let's   do   our  part  —  give   money 
the   return   to    ^^6  clothes  to  the  Hungarian  Re 


of  riots,  tomorrow  or  Mondav. 


MELBOURNE.  Australia  —  at 
least  40  members  of  the  Hun- 
garian Olympics  team  have  decid- 
ed to  stay  here  and  seek  asylum 
with  Australia  or  the  United 
States,  rather  than  return  to  their 
homeland,  taken  over  a  month  ago 
by    Soviet    forces. 


BERLIN— For  the  first   time  in 
j  Several "^5T?ars.       Russians       have 
,  blocked  a  U.S.  military  (ruck  con- 
\o.\     headed    from    here    to    West 
I  Germany.  The  Army  refused  to  al- 
low   Soviet    troops    to    search    the 
trucks,     and     instead     sent     them 
back  to  Berlin. 


WASHINGTON  —  Secretary  of 
State  John  Foster  Dulles  was  pro- 
nounced ph.vsically  fit  Wednes- 
day after  his  cancer  operation.  His 
doctors  said  he  was  ready  to  start 
bjck    to   work. 


thereafter. 

Fetzer  said   that 


(See  MOREHEAD,  page  4) 


Talent  Show  Cast 
Selections  Complete 

Preparatory  plans  for  the  forth-  ney  (comedy).  Warren  Miller  (gui- 

coming  Carolina  Cavalcade  of  Tal-  tarist).  Pee  Wee  Batten  and  Com- 

ent  show  have  been  completed,  ac-  bo.   Herb   Shellings   (folk   singer), 

L-ording  to  the  talent  committee  of  and  Pete  Bourgedis  (folk  singer). 


ihe  show. 

Dave  Davis,  talent  committee 
hairman,  announced  that  all  of 
the  acts  for  the  show  have  been 
selected  by  a  screening  commit- 
tee and  that  rehearsals  will  con- 
tinue up  to  the  date  of  the  show,  to 
be  staged  Dec.  13  at  8  p.m.  in 
Memorial   Hall. 

Featured  highlights  of  the  show, 
according  to  program  officials, 
will  be  a  battle  of  the  drums  and 
the  Musical  Group,  composed  of 
Lennie  Rosenbluth,  Joe  Quigg, 
Pete  Brennan,  and  Bob  Cunning- 
ham. 

The  chorus  committee  of  the 
show  stated  that  anyone  still  in- 
terested in  singing  in  the  "Y-Nite" 
Chorus  may  do  so  by  attending  the 
rehearsal  at  5  p.m.  in  the  Rendez- 
vous Room  of  CM. 

The  talent  committee  announced 
that  the,  fnllowing  acts  have  been 
chosen  to  perform  in  the  show:  Ed 
Crow  and  DKE  Combo,  Gay  Ann 
Tanner  (nantomine),  Carol  Jean 
Suther  (singer),  Ronald  Yuen 
(harmonica),  Hoke  Slmp.son  (Ca- 
Ij'pso  singer).  The  Co-Heads  (girls 
quartet).  Five  Dimensions  (com- 
bo), Oliver  Bloomer  (ventrilo- 
quist). 

Barbara  Prago  (singer).  Jerry 
Farber  *  (piano),  Nick  Kerns  (pi- 
anoj.  Bruno's  Combo.  Mike  Mou- 


Ticket  officials  of  the  show 
stated  that  tickets  are  on  .sale  ir. 
Y  Court  and  in  fraternity  and  so 
loritv   houses. 


lief  Fund." 

All  Chapel  Hill  churches  have 
been  a.sked  to  donate  to  this  drive. 
Several  churches  are  planning 
Christmas  programs,  with  the  do 
nations  to  aid  the  Hungarian.^ 
During  Thanksgiving  two  church 
es.  The  Chapel  of  the  Cross  anr' 
the  New  Hope  Presbyteri:^'^ 
Church,  planned  .sucht  programs 
successfully. 

Donations  may  be  made  eithe' 
It  the  YM-YWCA,  the  Studen 
"tovernmcnt  Room  at  Graham  Me 
m^rial  or  bv  contacting  Jackit 
Aidridge  at  89089. 


PORT  SAID.  Egypt  —  Angry 
Egyptians  set  fire  to  the  F.  W. 
Woolworth's  store  here  Wednes- 
day after  British  authorities  tried 
to  force  the  reopening  of  all  shops. 

BUDAPEST— The  Moscow  Lit- 
erary Gazette  scolded  Hungarian 
vriters  Wednesday  for  becoming 
"victims  of  beurgeoise  idealogy." 
The  writers  said  the  Soviet  gov- 
rnment  had  made  a  'historic  mis- 
take" in  suppressing  Hungarian 
freedom. 

^  *  i- 

LONDON— There  was  talk  of  a 
>ucce.s.sor  to  Prime  Minister  Sir 
.\nthony  Eden  Wednesday.  F^s 
■^abor  oppo.sition  in  Parliament  op- 
nosed  strongly  Eden's  sta*id  on  the 
Middle    East. 


Musicians  For  The  Y's  Talent  Show 

A  live-wire  foursome  prepares  the  Talent  show  planned  by  the   YW-YMCA  for  Dec.  13.   Pictured  •f 
George  Ballard,  Ron  Oldenburg,  Pee  Wee   Patten  and  Jess  Stribling. 

-If- -••       ■'         .  ^         ■'■' 


V     \ 


THUI 


pAge  two 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


e^*X:5-«THURSOAY,  DECEMBER  6,  1956 


G\ee  Club  And  Video  Sets: 

The  Student  I.e;^islaluif  roiiiiilir  will  set  two  bills  «»t  iuijKjna'nte  to 
luckst  ol   lIk'  student  bodv. 

One  woultjtusk  the  ('uivcisitv's  director  of  operatioirs  lo  'inv^.stigaie 
and  earry  tlif<»ngh^u  effeeti\e  |>rosr;i:n  concerning  the  inainteiiAiKC 
of  nien  s  and  Avoniens  doiniitory  tele\i,sion  sets."  *| 


YOU  Said  It: 


Prove  God  Rationally? 


EcMtor: 


Ihe  other  \v5n1Ui  appropriate 
"for  the  pujtjx^se  of  defraviu^  es- 
penses  iiuujpivd  in;  its  fall  and 
spiin'4  t'Mirs.  .  .  .'" 

Both     ineasuies    dcscrxc    iniani- 

niou.N  Votes.  "'^ 

*  *        ■'  * 

,As  for  ^«^if^^ij(?le\ isionSet  bill,  the 
introdnters^afviie  that  donnitorv 
receiving  sth  are  had  to  keep  in 
ifcKKl  >hape^  Duinntorv  social 
i«»nds.  "uiaiiratained  priniarilv  for 
suciaf  fnuctipiwi. "  are  quite  limit- 
ed. Asies^ii^^'csidents  fm  televi.>- 
ioii  set  rep;  i IS  i>  fiard  uork.  I)e- 
(an^e  residents  lia\e  a  habit  of 
niovint;  ont  at  the  end  <»f  a  seini^stei 
or  acadeniit    vear. 

.So.*  j>rop(jnein.s  ol  iht  bill  >av. 
the  operations  agency  of  the  Uni- 
versity .should  formulate  a  pn»,giani 
for   maintaining  the   seis. 

*  >F  t 

\\\-  !ia\c  ouc  grijK.'  uiih  the  bill: 
1 1  ici!>  rhc  Director  of  Operations 
A\h.if  to  do  with  tele\  Lsion  stts 
that  the  >tudents  and  student  g<.v- 
crnnuni  Ijought,  It  does  not  offer 
t.'ie  serA'ico  of  student  government 
or  the  students  to  distiuss  with  tlie 
Director  of  Operations  the  proper 
means  of  uKMntainhig  the  ma- 
<  hin;  N. 

Whilo  ifj^'  esscntiaJ  that  ic!e- 
\i>»ion  sets  I>e  miinrained.  an  1 
while  if  is  pa)  t!v  the  dntv  of  rh.^ 
IniveisitN  'to  nniut ain  them,  it 
?'>o  is  the  (httv  of  the  studejat&  to 

hi'p  in  tlu'  inainten;Vn<  e.        .     -r,.^  ^ 

■*■"■*         * 

^    rl V I     '   ll-ns    is   a    'a    ol 

monev  for  the  Student  Legislatnie 
to  hand  out  to  ativ  organization. 
Huu  toiu^hf.  wh.  1)  the  ^^cn's  GLe 
Club  ask-  f.»i  Ni.ooo.  the  legisla- 
ture -hduld  write  the  tlieck  grat.- 

The  INf:  Men's  Glee  Club, 
from  all  ret>')rts  all  along  its  tonr 
trail  this  fall, -is  a  fine  and  noble 
representati\e  ■  of    the    University. 

WIdle  tJjf,.',yj'Jt*iJ*4viT»'  rrj:c- 
sents  the  '  in  i  interest  and 
roiwhes'  .jr*ing  and  r<?crii*tfftg 
abil:':--.  r'lfe  Glee  Club  sort  of  le- 
)  jin  'n  people  rliat  the  Universitv 
has  .iu  ac:«demic  side,  too.  People 
u  hv)  h.jve  htv*"il  the  .grr)up  sing  this 
\eai   ;nf  prettv  \\\\\  nnaniinous  in 


.Si, 000    to    the     Mens    Glee    Club 

prai.sing  the  dub,  its  director  aiwl 

I  lie  University.  V         K- 

*  *  « 

Members  f»f  t.'.e  .Mens  -Gke 
Club  aie  nioie  hopeful  than  ever 
for  sutcess  this  \e.ir.  They  are 
tiUking  about  special  eveiiLs  ^  {oj, 
tiie  campus,  plus  more  tra\e'in^ 
ivlu.s  ukuIk'  a  (r.'.k  at  the  Id  Stti- 
livan  show  sometime  in  the  furtnx-. 
Ihev  hive  high  ambitions:  ,th' 
thousand  di>llars  could  help  thctia, 
leali/i-  those  ambitions.  Jt^, 

Difference 
That  Holds 
U.S.  Back 

"I  he  one  characfrnstic  differ 
rnce  betxi'eeii  tJie  factors  wJiiih 
motivate  Xegroes  and  the  fac- 
tors ichich  motivate  other  people 
in  ^inierica  is  the  Xegro's  desire 
for  equality"— Pvcsidcni  .-Mfon.so 
Klder  of  North  C*H"olina  Clol- 
lege.  in  speech  at  Duke  I'niver- 
sitv. 

The  .sooner  tiie  white  suprema- 
(ists  in  the  I'nited  States  recog- 
nize and  agree  with  what  Dr.  F.lder 
said,  the  better  tlie  country  will  l)e. 

FUre  in  this  tiny  world  where 
nations  hourly  rub  shoulders  with 
other  nations,  the  United  St;-' es 
cannot  retain  its  world  leadership 
so  li  ng  as  there  is  inecjuality  'm 
the  lumc  front.  .  .    V 

Now.  tlie  .\merican  Negro  is 
being  treated  v.asth  unequal  to  the 
whites.  This  is  true  not  onlv  in  th" 
South,  but  in  most  of  the  North  as 

well. 

•         «         * 

It  is  foolish— but  it  is  human  — 
for  Americans  to  go  on  treating 
tliv.'i  "  f.IJc't'.*  dri7et7.s  Tin<TjualIy. 
^V'J^^Ie  it  will  take  time  for  South- 
erners to  heal  the  wounds  inflict- 
ed hv  the  Supreme  Court,  thev 
should  at  least  apply  the  iodine. 
Sidesteppiiig  Avill  neither  last  for- 
ever, nor  will  it  help  America's 
po^irion  in  the  ivorld. 


I  am  pleased  to  see  thai  the 
level  of  theological  thinking  by 
The  Daily  Tar  Heel  columnists 
has  been  rising,  after -a  dismal 
beginning  consLsting  of  unpro- 
ductive recitations  of  credos  by 
writers  Edwards  and  others. 
Nevertheless  the  .  . .  article  by 
^Cljal    Schley    requires    some    an- 

Basing  his  argument  for  the 
•mstenc*  of  God  on  the  alleg- 
•d  fogical  necessity  for  it,  Sch- 


ley proceeds  in  a  manner  ser- 
iously lacking  in  logic. 

First,  he  slates  that  the  prop- 
osition "Th3re  can  be  no  effect 
independent  of  ^t  least  one 
cause''  is  a  logical"  law,  and  is 
in  fact  the  folindation  of  logical 
thinking. 

This  is  not  true. 

Cause-and-effect  relationships 
are  empirical  generalizations 
{^hfrarzalions  about  wliat  hap- 
pens in  the  world,  based  on  re- 
pOiVc<}  iuiiuan  obsicrvations).  not 
losicallv  nece.>i~arv  truths. 


We  cannot  speak  of  empirical 
generalizations  in  terms  of  cer- 
'lainty,  but  only  in  terms  of  prob- 
ability; ''There  probably  is  no  ef- 
fect independent  of  at  least  one 
cause." 

Even  if  ii  wire  true,  without 
exception,  that  every  "tff»ct" 
has  a  cause,  Schley  errs  in  as- 
serting that  tfiis  would  prove 
the  existence  of  the  "First 
Cvuse,"  which  he  chooses  to 
calf  God  (although  being  a  First 
Cause  doesn't  require  the  "per- 
sonal attributes  of  love,  justice. 


etc.,    we     usually     attribute  to 
God). 

If  every  effect  has  a  cause — 
either  antee3d<3nt  or  simultaneous 
— then  the  First  Cause  must  in 
tuin  have  been  caoseri,  and  so 
oil,  to  infinity. 

The  ''First  Cause"  argument 
was  first  advancsd  by  Aquinas 
as  one  of  several  attempts  to 
prove  "God"'  rationally.  His  at- 
tenvpts.  nnd  all  others  before 
and  sFnce.  have  -failed. 


Brad    Seasholes 


W^i^^^^ 


*"•/' 


t 


A  Few  Minutes  Of  Spring 


loi  a  tcw  liouis.  Cliapcl  Hill 
saw.  and  jtuifted  and^  touched 
s}jrin^.     i;     '  -   ■   '*  ..  ' 

Spring  (auft.'  throligh  a  miical- 
^ulation  bv  the  weather  bureiu. 
and  tuyneil  the  campus  into  a  li\e 

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Entered  a.<  second  class  matter  in  tht 
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:    TRED  POWLEDGE 


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|)lai('.  .  happ)  place  again,  liy  the 
time  this  morning's  edition  of  this 
newiipaper  is  delivered,  the  warm 
air  and  soft  sunlight  probably  will 
be  replaced  by  weather  in  bettir 
ii.innonv  ^vitli  the  calendar. 

lint  as  this  is  being  written,  stu- 
dent.s  are  walking  atioss  the  Uni- 
\ersitv's  bviik  walks  in  trout  of 
Silent  Sam.  and  they  have  a  spring 
in  their  step  that  matches  the 
spring  in  tlie  air.  _       _    . 


I  Every  once  in  a  while  a  student 
in  the  dormitory  across  the  way 
lets  go  with  a  spving-like  yell. 
There  was  talk  of  a  {>ossible  pantv- 
laid  at  lumh,  and  people  have  un- 
rolled their  car  window.s  —  all  the 
way  to  the  bottom. 

Ihe  warm  air  feels  strange, 
(lowing  as  it  does  through  trees 
that  are  naked  yf  leaves.  The  soft 
sun.  setting  almost  in  the  south  in- 
.stead  of  the  west,  and  setting  earlv 
in  the  afternoon,  outlines  Chapel 
Hill's  church  spires  with  even 
•'Tea ter  softness. 


Students  who  ha\e  worried  all 
week  :»'bout  their  grades  and  their 
diplomas  have  suddenly  stopped. 
Now  they  worry  about  being  lone- 
Iv.  Now  they  woiiy-  about  life,  and 
God.  and  love. 

It  will  last  but  a  tew  hours.  It 
may  have  stopped  by  the  time  this 
morning's  edition  is  delivered. 

.  But  spring,  a  magical  mystical, 
wonderful  spring,  came  to  the 
town  yesterday.  For  a  moment  it 
stayed  around,  just  long  enough  to 
upset  people's  w^ter  balance  and 
make  them  worry  a  little. 


Spring.  e\en   in  December,   is  a 
wonderful  thing  for  the  souL 


Sayso 
Is  Quite 
Important 


•         /  • 

'V/e  Can  Sure  Do  Some  Liberating  Over  Here', 


■f  ^ 


Neil  Bass 


We  got  ^omc  response  to  laat 
■week's  column  about  the  "Sweat 
Shirt  Curtain"  veiling  actions 
taken  by  the  Lk.'])t.  of  Athletics. 

Director  of  Student  .Activities 
Sam  Magill  wroli*  lo  explain  that 
three  student  representatives  sat 
on  the  Athletic  Council  —  the 
pre.-<idenl  of  the  student  body, 
president  of  the  Carolina  .Ath- 
letic .\s.<n.  and  Monogram  Club 
Jircsidcnt. 
THE  QUESTION 

Magill's  interest  is  greatly  ap- 
preciated, bat  the  question  re- 
niain.s: 

Just  how  much  pawcr  do  the*e 
three  rcpres:ntative.<!  have  in  Ih;.- 
affairs  of  Woollen  Gym  IncV 

Not  that  they're  nat  conscient- 
\  -  ious  representatives,  but  most 
would  contend  the  bulk  of  ath 
letic  business  is  transacted  with- 
out students'  having  one  iota  of 
sayso. 

To  repeat  la.-;t  week".-  weak 
poetical  att.mpt: 

If  \vc   pay  our  dcugh. 
Let's  have  some  say  sj. 
O.K.?  --   .      -  .  -    .    . 

A  statement  itemizTtig  expehtl- 
ifure  of  student  block  fe:s  would 
certainly  be  in  order. 

L..st  Thursday  night's  Student 
Legislaure  meeting  emphasized 
the  necessity  of  elected  student 
representatives'  attendance  at 
meetings  cf  their  organizations. 

The  Student  Party  had  an  un- 
official s!.\  absences  and  lost  all 
elect:d    legislative    posl.s. 

The  smallest  part  of  a  legisla 
tor's  duty  is  attendance  at  sess- 
ions. He  should  communicate 
with  his  constituency  all  week 
and  represent  them  on  Thurs 
day  nights. 

The  lodes. one  o-r  power  has 
.s'nifted  somewjiat  within  the  Uni- 
versity Parly.  The  dormitory  seg- 
ment is  gaining  partial  control. 

The  shift  was  effected  with  the 
election  of  stalwart  dormitory 
man  Benny  Thomas  to  the  legis- 
lative floorleader's   post. 

Thafs  smart  politics  in  view 
of  the  past  UP  label,  fraternity 
man's  party.  It  may  lead  to  in- 
teresting developments. 


irS  COMING  UP  FAST 


Age   Of   Optical   Illusions 


Woody  Sears 

Us  new  car  time  again.  , 

,Tli?  pre-Chrislmas  rusli  to  get 
the  now  models  out  i»  on,  and 
it's  going  hot  and  heavy.  They 
are  looking  like  darts,  and  200- 
horsepower  engines  are  common- 
place. And  so  are  prices  of  $3.- 
000  and  up. 

This  makes  one  stop  to  think, 
sometimes,  about  what  we  are 
coming  to.  Our  economy  seems 
to  be  becoming  one  in  which 
the  auto  loan  will  replace  the 
old  mortgage  on  the  home  as 
the  prevalent  debt  of  the  m«r» 
on  the  street.  " 

RIDICULOUS 

It   seems   rather    ridiculous    to 


bi'y  a  new  car  every  year  or  so 
just  to  maintain  appearances  in 
Vm  neighborhood,  for  surely  the 
m  st  of  us  couldn't  possibly  burn 
up  one  of  these  new  hot  models 
in  12  to  24  months. 

Looks  like  sooner  or  later  it 
will  be  a  car  for  every  member 
of  the  family.  Of  course,  some- 
thing will  have  to  be  done  to 
lower  the  licensing  age  so  that 
the  wee  tots  can  all  have  motor 
ized    transportation. 

Kvery  once  in  a  while  some 
science  fiction  wag  portrays  the 
family  of  the  future  sitting  in 
mechanized  chairs  resembling 
wheel  chairs,  riding  every  place 
they  go.  They  even  do  Ihe  what 


little    house    work    that    remains 
in  this  fashion.  Isn't  that  silly? 

li^  3»  lie 

Sc  let's  not  ignore  the  possi- 
bility that  we  might  eventually 
become  a  race  of  weaklings. 
The  point  in  those  science  fie 
tion  bits  was  not  so  much  the 
idea  of  the  mechanized  chairs, 
but  that  people  had  actually 
lost  the  use  of  their  legs  from 
lack  of  use. 

Wc  might  be  coming  to  an  age 
of  greator  confusion.  Fashions 
make  people  look  taller  to  go  in 
Icwer  cars  lo  go  faster  over  in- 
creasingly inadequate  roads. 

Maybe  it'll  be  called  the  age 
of  optical  illusions. 


:^^t-7^r\ 


ti'\  Abner 


By  Al  Capp 


.CAIN'T  ShJOOZE-OJ  ACCOUMT 
O'  TH'  HAPPV  Bl-EATIN'  O' 

'THEM  SWEET  Lit  LAMBS .^ 
AH  LOVCS  Ll'L  LAM&S- 


Appropriation: 
Billion  Hours 

J.  Harris  Purks 

Thi*  is  the  second,  and  last,  installment  in  a 
speech  delivered  by  former  UNC  Acting  President 
J.  Harris  Purks  to  menribers  of  the  Tar  Heel 
press.  Dr.  Porks  new  is  ha«<r  of  t%«  State  Board 
of  Higher  Education' in  Raleigti. 

The  only  thing  that  «aoney  and  institutions  and 
teachers  can  dj  to  help  the  cause  atong  is  to  provicie 
opportunity  for  people  to  acquire  education  at  a 
iasier  rate  than  they  can  acquire  it  without  mom  \ 
and  institutions  and  teachers.  But  this  is  in  turn 
dcp:;ndent  upon  tlie  willingness  of  pupils  and  stu- 
dents to  study. 

1.  We  should  build  end  support  institutions: 

7.  We  certainly  ought  to  provide  qualified 
teachers  and  professors,  but 

3.  We  must  study  in  order  to  learn. 

I  know  that  we  can  assume  that  North  Carolina 
will  support  her  system  of  educational  institutions 
at  all  levels  of  educational  effort.  I  know  that  North 
Carolina  will  respond  to  efforts  lO  produce  and  lo 
employ  qualified  teachers  and  professors.  Money  is 
required  for  these  things  and  it  wilj  be  forthcoming 
*  *  * 

But  there  is  another  form  of  support  for  educa 
tion  to  wftich  I  would  like  to  call  your  attention. 
and  for  w-hich  I  w^ould  like  to  ask  your  support.  1 
refer  ta  the  need  ior  an  appropriation,  from  ihe 
people  of  this  state,  of  one  billion  study  hours  in 
1957  devoted  to  the  acquisition  of  knowledge  and 
skills  in  arithmetic,  algebra,  geometfj-,  history,  Eng- 
lish, literature,  language,  government  and  science. 
This  appropriation  is  not  unreasonable.  In  the 
first  place  the  tost  in  dollars  is  negligible;  we  do 
not  have  to  ask  our  legislators  to  provide  it;  this 
appropriation    does    not    require    institutions;    it 
will  not  raise  laxes. 

On  the  positive  side,  this  appropriation  will  give 
us  something  to  do  witti  bur  spare  time;  it- will 
even  save  us  money,  because  we  will  not  have  as 
much  time  to  devote  to  transient  amusements;  it 
will  provide  intellectuai  satisfaction;  it  will  raise 
the  cultural  level  of  our  people;  it  will  greatly 
enhance  our  capacity  to  meet  the  requirements  of 
the  technological  age  in  which  we  live. 

It  will  provide  for  us  a  sense  of  ownership  ol 
the  cultural  and  scientific  heritage  which  has  come 
down  to  us  through  centuries  of  thought  and  effort; 
it  will  provide  for  us  a  basis  for  arriving  at  our 
own  convictions,  and  thus  eliminate  our  reliance 
upon  predigesled  writings  and  speeches  of  com- 
mentators; it  will  provide  for  us  a  sense  cf  strength 
and  confidence;  it  will  assure  us  of  educational 
progress. 

It  will  flash  the  signal  to  the  nation  that  North 
Carolina  is  on  the  way  trward  becoming  a  widely 
and  thoroughly  educated  state,  it  will  automatical- 
ly raise  the  standards  of  our  schools  and  colleges; 
^    it  will  shorten  the  time  required  for  our  young 
men   and   women   to   reach   heights  of  leadership 
in  science,  engineering,  literature,  the  professions 
arKi  the  vocations. 
Tlie  figure  one  billion  is  arrived  al  by  suggest- 
ing that  the  1.200,000  boys  and  girls  and  youn?  men 
and  women  of  school  or  college  age  devote  10  hours 
each  week  fjr  50  weeks  in  the  year  to  such  studies, 
over   and    above    hours    of    attendance   in  classes 
whether  in  school  and  college  or  not.  and  that  2.-  % 
000,000  other  citizens  of  appropriate  learning  ages 
devo'.e  4  hours  per  week  for  50  weeks  U)  such  study. 
AUTOMATIC   HIGHER  STANDARDS 

If  wo  should  make  this  appropriation  in  i9"i 
and  in  succeeding  years  we  would  soon  automatical- 
ly force  high  standards  upon  our  schools  and  col- 
leges; we  would  a.ssure  an  education  for  lens  01 
thousands  of  North  Carolina  boys  and  girls  who 
cannot  attend  college;  we  would  provide  teacjjers 
in  quantity;  we  would  boost  the  sales  of  bookcase.^, 
study  lamps,  books,  pencils,  global  maps:  architecis 
would  begin  to  place  study  nooks  and  built-in 
shelves  in  new  homes;  we  would  begin  to  see  homo 
libraries  used  for  study  rather  than  for  decorati< :n; 
we  would  increase  the  sales  of  electrical  power, 
wc  might  have  a  few  mure  cases  of  eye  strain  anJ 
considerably  fewer  cases  of  emotional  instahiri'x; 
wc  would  soon  begin  to  see  our  boys  and  girls  karn 
to  acquire  vocational  and  technical  knowledge  anj 
skills  with  speed  and  precision. 


:-*^,-^ 


THE  WORLD: 


in   Britain: 
Rationing  Again 

Peter  Lyne        .  - 

In    Ilic  Christian  Science   .Momtur  , 

LONDON  —  There  is  something  alarming  *-iOd 
poignant  about  the  slowing,  down  of  the  wheels  of 
a  nalion  the  size  of  Britain  with  its  50  million  |eo 
pie  and  its  6  million  vcfliicles.  ''-'w-       -  "■-•■ 

The  grip  of  the  oil  squeeie  has  suddenly  taken 
hold  throughout  the   land.   Gasoline   rationing   re- 
suiting  from  the   Egyptian  situation   has  become 
the  chief  current  topic  of  conversation. 
GRIM  TWILIGHT  ; 

Tnis  present  phase  of  Britain's  oil  shortage?  is 
a  kiiid  of  grim  twilight  before  the  official  rationicg 
scheme  comes  into  effect  Dec.  17.  For  many  Wis 
worse  than  rationing  itself  because  of  its  uncertain- 
ty. 

< 

Leaving  aside  the  acutely  controversial  questite.' 
of  whether  Britain  and  France  should  have  acted  ;j; 
the  first  place  as  they  did  over  Egypt,  most  Britons 
feel  that  the  Western  powers  must  try  to  cooperate 
to  clear  up  the  mess. 

Responsible  spokesmen  for  Britain  are  warning 
that  there  is  a  rapid  and  dangerous  rise  6f  entf- 
Amerlcan  feeling  in  Britain  which  could  wrecl^ 
the  Anglo-American  alliftnce  and  tlie  Atlanta 
Alliance  with  advantage  only  to  the  Communis* 
Uec. 

Fiom  here  in  London  the  danger  looks  as  gra»e 
as  any  this  reporter  has  known  in  morg  than  'j 
quarter  of  a  century  in  the  service  of  Anglo-AmWi 
can  fneudship,  understanding  and  cooperation  for 
worid  peace  and  a  decent  way  of  life 


i 


1  - 

He 

Sui 
To 

A  su| 
with  pr 
be  con(| 
has 
Reid 
of  Yal( 

The 
es  taui 
nod   all 
and  th; 

The 
session 
ground 
of  two 
credit 

Yale-1 
that  thl 
and  w^ 
country 
to  Soi 
the  Loil 
€S  begil 
student 
perirvd 

Spons 
that  int 
tain  ad^ 
the  trij 
Hall.  32 
Universl 

Coi 
To 

In  rej 
a  coiirs^ 
the  Unil 
in  eki 
next 

The 


r 


Coi 


Spe 


Yt   in   a 

Resident 

He«l 

Beard 


ii-ns  and 
provide 
lun  at  a 
ft  mon«'y 
in  turn 
land  stu- 

^iens: 
lualified 


Carolina 

fetilutions 

|at  North 

and  to 

Money  ;s 

leoming. 

)r  educa- 
Attention. 
ipport.  I 
from  the 
I hours  in 
je   and 
)ry.  Eng- 
I  science. 
In  the 
):  we  do 
it;  this 
lions;     it 

I  will  give 

:    it- will 

have  as 

vents;   it 

kill   raise 

|1    greatly 

iments  of 

?rship  of 
has  come 
id  effort; 
\i:  at  our 
reliance 
of    corn- 
strength 
I'jcational 

»t  North 
widely 
>matical- 
:olleges; 
young 
|ad«rship 
fessions 

suffgest- 

)ung  men 

10  hours 

\h  studies, 

classes. 

Id  that  2,-% 

Jning  ages 

ich  study. 

in    f9o7 

itomatical- 

and  col- 

|)r   tens   of 

girls  Who 

teachers 

I  bookcases, 

architecli> 

id    built-in 

see  home 

lecoration; 

:al    power. 

strain  and 

I  instability; 

girls  learn 

rledge  and 


am 


« 
arming  'nod 
e  wheel*  of 
million  Jeo- 

lenly  taken 
tioning  r»- 
as   become 


shortage  ."^  is 
ial  rationi«5g 
r  many  it* is 
15  uncertajn- 


•sial  questiten 
lave  acted  ^n 
most  Britctis 
I  to  cooperate 

» 

arc  warning 
rise  of  antf- 
could  wreck 
^e  Atlantit 
Conununiat 

* 
)oks  as  grave 
msre   than  'a 
Anglo-AnfCi"! 
jperation  for 


THURSDAY,  DECEMBER  6,  1956 


THi  DAILY  TAR  HtlL 


VMMMW^M>^^MM>^MMMM^^^»rf^M^MMMM^ 


V^ 


FACE    THRBI 


A&PS  LOW  FOOD  COSTS 
HELP  HOLIDAY  BUDGETS! 


"      '      "  Here's  Newest  Air  View  Of  The  Center  Of  The  Campus 

.rea"*itwas**'tak'.''rbv'i  t'^'^j!  ^^'^l'*'   ^""*""^   ""**  surrounding        versity    News    Bureau.     Campbell    really    went    modern-he    used    i 
"  ***  "'*•"  »>y  photographer  Monroe  Campbell  for  the  Uni-        ' 


versity    News    Bureau, 
helicopter. 


Summer  Term' 
To  Be  In  Paris 

•'   A  summer  session  for  students 
with  previous  work  in  French,  to 
be  conducted    near  Paris.   France, 
has     been     announced     by     Yale- 
Reid   Hall    and    the   French   Dept. 
of  Yale   University. 
The  session  will  consist  of  class- 
-^  es  taught  over  a   month-long   pe- 
riod  at    the   Sorbonne   University 
'  .;  »nd  the  Louvre  museum.     ' 
..      The   only    prerequisites   for   the 
^^ session   are:    some   previous    back- 
i  irround  in  French,  and  completion 
I"  of  two  caurses  for  which  college  ] 
r  credit    will    be   given. 
^"    Vale-Reid    Hall    officials    stated 
that  the  group  of  25  college  men 
and     women     from    all    over    the 
country  will  travel  by  private  bus 
to  Normandy  and  the  Chateaux  of 
the  Loire  for  a  week  "before  class- ! 
es   begin.    Before    returning    home 
students  will   enjoy   a   three-week 
period   for  independent  travel. 
-»    .Sponsors  of  the  program  stated 
that  interested  students  could  ob- ' 
tain   additional   information   about 
tbe  trip   by  writing  to:   Yale-Reid 
Hall,  320  W.   Harkness  Hall.  Yale 
University,    New   Haven.   Conn. 


A&P  Has  A  Complete  Stock  Of 

FRESH 
FRUIT  CAKE  INGREDIENTS 


Special  Pack!  White  House! 

EVAP.  MILK  6 


Can 
Carton 


An  A&P  Exclusive — White  House  Dry  Non-Fot 


MILK  SOLIDS  ^:t  29 


A&P  Has  A  Complete  Stock  Oi 

FRESH 

NUTS  IN  THE  SHELL 


Governor  Starts  Drive 

Covering  The  Campus   ^o' safety  on  Highway 


BURRY  VANILU  WAFERS  . . 
DROMEDARY  PIHED  DATES 


FELLOWSHIP 

The    Carolina    Christian    Fellow 
'  ship   will    meet   on    Friday   night. 
'  The   Rev.    Paul    Snyder,    pastor   of 
the   Advent    Moravian    Church    in 
Winston-Salem,  will   be  the  guest 
j  .peaker.    The    meeting    will    take  j 
pl^ce   at  7  p.m.   in   the   choir   re- i 
hcarsal   room   of  Hill   HaU  j 

DEBATE  SQUAD 
j  A  Debate  Squad  meeting  will  be 
I  held  this  afternoon  at  4  p.m.  in' 
Graham  .Memorial.  Pairing  will  be  1 
announced  for  the  Dixie  Cla.-;£ic ' 
tournament.  Chairman  Lieberman  | 
emphasized  that  it  is  very  import-' 

Holman  To  Present  Talk     ' 
At  Luncheon  In  Raleigh 

Prof.  C.  Hugh  Holman  of  the 
UNC  English  Dept..  will  give  a  talk 
at  the  luncheon  session  of  the  an- 
nual meeting  of  the  State  Literary 
and  Historical  Assn.  of  North  Caro- 
Ima  in  Raleigh  tomorrow.  He  will 
discuss  the  books  of  fiction,  drama  . 
and  poetiy  written  in  North  Caro-  j 
lina  between  August  31.  1955,  and 
August  31,  1956.  ! 


next    semester 
.  ,  The    new  course   will    be   listed 


Course  Offered  In  Hebrew; 
To  Be  Taught  By  Gitlin 

*  '  In  response  to  the  demand  for  as  Religion  113,  as  well  as  Com- 
a  course  in  the  Hebrew  language,  parative  Linguistics  113.  A  second 
Ihe  University  will  offer  a  course  part  of  the  course  will  be  avail- 
in  elementary  Hebrew,  beginning  able  beginning  with  the  fall  semes- 
ter, but  the  two  may  be  taken  in- 
dependently for  credit. 

The  course  will  be  taught  by  | 
Professor  Emanuel  Gitlin,  assis- 
tant professor  of  Biblical  Litera- 
ture at  the  University  since  1953. 
Professor  Gitlin  has  studied  Se- 
metic  languages  at  the  Oriental 
Institute  of  the  University  of  Chi- 
cago, the  Oriental  Seminary  at 
Johns  Hopkins  University,  and  at 
the  Graduate  School  of  Duke  Uni- 
versity. 

Hebrew  is  the  first  Semetic 
language  course  to  be  offered  at 
Carolina.  Its  grammar  is  relatively 
simple,  according  to  Dr.  Gitlin, 
and  once  the  alphabet  and  the 
sound  of  the  language  become  fa- 
miliar, progress  is  fairly  rapid. 

The  Sephardic  pronunciation, 
used  in  modern  conversational 
Hebrew,  will  be  used  in  class.  A 
standard  grammar  will  be  supple- 
mented by  simple  readings  from 
the  Bible. 


!  ant  that  all  members  be  present. 
STUDY  CROUP 

The  Campus  Christian  Council 
study  group  on  The  Christian  Stu- 
dent and  the  University  will  meet 
today  at  5  p.m.  in  the  second  floor 
of  the  Y  building. 
WUNC-TV 

Todays  schedule  for  WUNC-TV, 

the  University's   television  station 

is  as  follows. 

■  12:45     Music 

1:00    Today  on  Farm    -  .'^ 

1:30    Music  in  View      V  j 

2:00     Medicine 

5:45     Music 

6:00     Magic  Lao  tern 

6:15    Sports  Clinic 

6:30     News 

6:45     Sports 

7:00    Garden  Wall 

7:15     Bible   Course 

8:00     Dr.  Shivers 

8:45     State  Government  i 

9:30     Lecture  Hall  .  j 

10:00     Final  Edition 

10:05     Sign   Off 

WAA   BASKETBALL  j 

The  W.A.A.  Basketball  Club  will  | 

meet  today  at  4  p.m.  This  will  be! 

a  short  organizational  meeting.        | 


.-^    -^. 


i  RALEIGH— (AP) —A  drive  to 
get  the  legislature  to  approve  a 
three-pronged  attack  on  the  high- 
way safety  problem  got  underway 
Wednesday  at  a  meeting  of  the 
Governor's  Traffic  Safety  Council. 

Members  of  the  council  were 
urged  to  work  with  legislators  to 
win  support  for  1.  A  motor  ve- 
hicle inspection  program,  2.  A 
law  to  facilitate  the  use  of  chemi- 
cal blood  tests  for  drunken  driv- 
ers, and  3.  An  expanded  program 
of  driver  training  in  the  public 
schools. 

Gov.    Hod&«9    told    libe  •~«e«oeil 

members,  "I  certainly  hope"^th€ 
next  session  of  the  legislature 
will  enact  an  inspection  law  tnd 
chemical  hood  tests  legislation. 
He  added,  "it  is  imperative  that 
we  find  the  means  for  bringing 
driver  training  to  more  and  more 
and  more  of  our  young  people." 


- 12:  2le 

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A&P  ORANGE  JUICE   Or  Packer's  Label    46-Oz.  Can  29c 

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Cake     $1.35  Cake    $2.65    Cake    $3.85 


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> »  . 


Motor  Venicles  Commissioner 
Ed  Seheidt  urged  tfie  council 
members  to  talk  with  their  legis- 
lators to  win  support  f*  •'these 
vital  projectl."  .• 


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ROASTS 


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'SUPER-RIGHT"  FRESH 

PORK  LOIN 

HALF  OR  WHOLE 


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Even  Pop's 
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Will  Be     0: 

■  'i 

Merry 

If  You  i 

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From 

The  Intimate 
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205  E.  Franklin  St. 


Open  Till  10  P.M. 


Sweetheart  Soap 2  ISs   17c 


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Nylonge  Sponges^o  12c  'S  19c  %  33c 
Super  Suds  —  paJSge  32c  Package  79c 

Vel  Powders  [ pSe  31c 

Fab  Powders  ..  pa'Sge  31c  pacJae.  75c 


Ad  Detergent .  rSle  37c  P^JSge  73c 

Ajox  Cleanser 2  "'cfSf'  25c 

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Surf  Powder ...  P^tfg.  31c  p^S°.'«  75c 
Silver  Dust  ...  p^cKI.  32c  pSiSW  79c 
Breeze  Powder  ..  ^.   32c  ^ii.  79c 


KinSO    Blue package    31c    Package  75c 


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1    ■  > 


MCE    FOUR 


ON  POLITICS,  GENERAL  SUBJECTS 


Ga.  Attorney  To  Talk 
Here  Today ^  Tomorrow 


.& 


'I 


James  A.  Macftay,  representa- 
tive in  the  Georgia  General  As- 
sembly and  prominent  Decatur, 
Ga.  attorney,  will  be  on  campus 
today  and   tomorrow  to  speak   to 


And  the 
Best 

Christmas 
Cards 
Cost  a       ; 
Nickel  at 
The  htimate 
Bookshop 


several  campus  groups  on  political 
and  general  subjects. 

Mackay's  appearance  on  cam- 
pus is  sponsored  by  the  YM- 
YWCA.  His  main  address  today 
will  concern  the  subject,  '"The 
Role  of  Georgia  in  National  and 
International  Politics."  This  high 
light  of  Mackay's  schedule  will 
take  place  at  6  p.m.  in  the  up- 
stairs dining  room  of  Lenoir  Hall. 

Tomorrow.  Mackay  will  address 
political  science  classes  at  8  a.m. 
in  106  Hanes  Hall  and  at  11  a.m. 
in  106  Carroll  Hall. 

Mackay's  schedule  for  tomor- 
row afternoon  takes  him  to  Ro- 
land Parker  Lounges  one  and  two, 
where  he  will  speak  at  2  o'clock  | 
on  "Christianity  and  Student  Gov- 
ernment." 

Mackay  received  an  A.B.  degree 
at  Emory  University  and  lat<ftr  did 
graduate  work  at  Duke  University. 
He  served  for  some  time  as  lec- 
turer in  law  at  the  Emory  Uni- 
versity Law  School. 


JAMES  A.  MACKAY 

.  speaks  today  and  tomorrow 


iiti 


•THE  HOUSE  OF  FASHION 


•  PRESENTS 


MISS  BARBARA  HONEY 


■' }'  J 


-••'  ^-'    f,  .     .,-/•-     '-■     •   .   '     --     »•  •• 

,-     y-  THIS  MONTH'S      -*-v 
»      J-  •  it 

i      :  >• 

f     "Miss        1 
Fashionpiate 


// 


'*  «%-.4.. 


THE  DAILY  TAt  HtlL 


THURSDAY,  DECEMBER  «,  1956 


-l.'.-l!,j-    V-'-t^  -- 


Cu)-|>f)  (pg^rf  f  Tax 


WASHING^^  —M^  Congrea-f 
sional  tax  ♦^^rs  ^ere  »UW4 
Wednesday  to  cut  Jevfes  on  iig- 
arets  and  ci^rs.  Witnesses.  at..a 
House  hearing  said  the  tobacco 
industry  is   "sick."'  •-     ,- 

Two  members  of  CoBgress, 
Chairman  Cooley  (D-NC)  <tf  ihe 
House  Agriculture  Committee  and 


Rep.    McMillan    (D-SO),    urged ,»   farmer  diteetly  as  well  as  assist 


House  Ways  and  Means  subcom-^ 
mittee  to  recommend  slicing  one 
cent  a  pack  off  the  cigaret.taX  ' 
Cooley  said  flue-cured  tobacco 
has  been  brought  to  a  "precaridus 
situation"  first  by  plant  diseji^, 
then    by    the    unexpectedly   high 


line 


,,1^  y 


Polished  elegance  is  Miss 
Honey's  theme.  Here  she  is 
pictured  ready  for  the  most 
festive  of  Christmas  bails  .  .  . 
in  a  white  taffeta  with  that  im- 
portant fair  lady  draping  .  .  . 
note  the  flattering  gentle  full- 
ness of  the  skirt  .  .  .  the  clus- 
ters of  compliment  provoking 
sparkling  gold  sequins. 

A  junior  from  Charlotte, 
Miss  Honey  is  a  sociology  ma- 
jor and  a  pledge  of  Kappa  Del- 
ta Sorority. 

J.  6.  Robbins  House  of  Fash- 
ion is  happy  to  present  Miss 
Barbara  Honey  as  AAiss  Fash- 
ionpiate of  December.  In  hcn- 
or  of  her  election,  Miss  Honey 
will  receive  a  gift  from^  the 
House  of  Fashion.  *        J 


Who  will  be  "Miss  Fashionpiate"  in  January?  Contestants  are  pictured  below.  The  dead- 
for  voting  is  January  3.      '^^^-^j     ^»«i^  '  ■     '  "'"  •    i 

VOTE  NOW  FOR  YOUR  FAVORITE  AT  THE  "HOUSE  OF  FASHION."     '  *  '^•*'  •    |  • 


- 1 


■  *  * 


g 

^m 

1 

^^^^m 

m 

mESFi^*M^m^ 

Miss  Grace  Boney  .  .  .  Senior 
education  major  from  Wallace 
...  Pi  Beta  Phi  Sorority  .  .  . 
loves  the  feminine  touch 
which  is  being  emphasized  in 
this  season's  showings. 


Miss  Mary  "Pee  Wee"  Bat- 
ten .  .  .  Senior  radiortelevision 
major  from  Mt.  Gilead  . . .  Kap- 
pa Delta  Sorority .  .  .  noted  for 
her  singing  and  ukelele  rendi- 
tions .  .  .  prefers  knitted  cos- 
tumes and  high  skinny  heels. 


"t 


AAiss  Bobbi  Smith  .  .  .  vivaci- 
ous junior  from  Bangor,  Penn- 
sylvania .  .  .  Tri  Delta  transfer 
from  William  &  AAary  .  .  .  fav- 
ors reds  and  beiges  with  re- 
gal touches  of  luxury  .  iu^l  J^ 


'*?* 


-  OfChapemili 


MoreHMii 

(Continued  from  page  1) 

the  original  plan  of  the  prbgraiin 
was  to  provide  maximum  benefitfi 
to   undergraduates. 

"The  trustees  feel  thfit  under- 
graduates make  more  vital  con- 
tributions to  campus  life  than  do 
graduates,"  Fetzer  said.  And  the 
University  can  gain  more  from 
the  uirdergraduates,  he  added. 

The  awards,  given  with  no  quota 
or  .set  number  in  mind,  were  made 
last  year  to  four  graduate '  stu- 
dents, 28  freshmen  and  two  junior 
college  students.  Graduates  re- 
received  $1,500  and  undergradu- 
ates got  $1,250.  In  the  past,  win- 
ners of  the  awards  continued  to 
collect  each  year,  if  they  kept  lip 
their  good   standings. 

Presently  there  are  eight  gradu- 
ate students  with  the  scholarships, 
and  72  undergraduates. 

A  total  of  15  graduates  have  re- 
ceived their  degrees,  and  four  stu- 
dents   who    were    junior    college 


.4 

Carplma  Business  Students 
toQef  Insurance  Magazine } 


'^ield  of  hew  disease-resistant  va- 
rieties. 

-  Urging  repeal  of  the  "one  cent 
extra  tax  imposed  during  the  Ko- 
rean conflict,"  Cooley  said,  "you 
are  taxing  a  sick  industry." 

He  testified  all  segments  of  the 
industry  agree  the  ;tax  cut  is  need- 
e<|,    and  that  it  would  help   the 


UNC  is  one  of  ioore  than  100  |  slic^-psp&r 
colleges  and  universities  at  which 
"Insurance    World    1857,"    a    new 


jl^lner  Tp  Upod 
He  iCommiltee 


ill  building  up  consumption  of  ci^ 
arets. 


GREE2vrSBORO  U(\—Dt.  Clyde  A. 
Milner,  presidextt  of  Guilford  Col- 
lege, has  again  been  named  chair- 
man of  the  North  Car(rfiiia  State 
committee  for  selection  of  Rhodes 
scholars,  it  was  announced  Wed-    ^^Jj^j^^^^by  members  of  the  AI- 


magazine  puii^i&hed . 
by  a  group  of  Yale  University; 
students,  will  be  distributed  free.i 

The  two- volume,  224  page  maga-j 
zine,  with  two  sejaK^te  East  and 
West  editions,  is  .i  business  pro- 
position with  a  s.iious  purpose, 
that  of  presenting  a  <k  nplete  and 
objective  analysis  of  the  Ameri- 
can insurance   industry. 

More  than  300,000  undergrad- 
uate students  in  the  nation  and 
Canada  are  scheduled  to  receive 
the  magazine,  direct  by  mail,  or 
through  special  distributing  agents 
on  respective  campuses. 

The  publication   will  be  distrib- 


In  Mu^icdle 

A  plAao,  'cello  and  violin  con- 
cert will  be  featured  on  Les  Pet- 
ites  Musicales'  Dec.  9  progrim 
held  in  Gniaham  Memorial's  main 
lounge  at  8  p.m. 

Pianist  Robert  Wallenborn  >  of 
UNC's  music  faculty,  violinist 
Julii  Mueller  and  'cellist  William 
KlelOTi  both  of  the  Duke  Univer- 
sity Music  Department,  are  artists 
for  the  concert. 

Poesentcd  on  the  evening's  pro- 
gram w4ll  bo  a  survey  of  French 
music  centered  around  works  of 
the  eighteenth,  nineteenth,  and 
twentieth  centuries. 

Included  on  the  program  are 
Couperin's  "Concert  Royal,"  a 
suite  of  eighteenth  century  dances, 
a  trio  by  Chausson,  and  a  trio  by 
Ravel.'  One  of  the  Impressionist 
composers,  Ravel  is  known  to  con- 
cert audiences  for  his  "Bolero," 
and  music  tot  the  ballet  "Daphnis 


pha  Kappa  Psi  and  Delta  Sigma 
Pi,  professional  bu^ness  frater- 
nities. 


Folklore  Group 
Meets  Today 


nefiday 

At  the  same  time,  it  was  an- 
nounced that  the  selection  com- 
mittee in  each  state  will  meet  Dec. 
12  to  hold  persohal  interviews 
with  the  candidates  designated  by 
their  colleges  and  universities  to 
Compete  for  the  scholarships.* 

Other  committee  members  are 
the  Rev.  E.  F.  Mosely,  rector  of 
St  Mar>'s  Episcopal  church  in;  The  North  Carolina  Folklore  So- 
Kinston;  Dr.  Robert  lue  Humber.  ■  ciety  will  hold  its  45th  meeting  to- 
Greenville  attorney;  W.  A.  Rose-  morrow  at  the  Sir  Walter  Hotel  in 
borough  of  Durham,  and  S.  Shep-  i  Raleigh,  Dr.  A.  P.  Hudson  announc- 
ard  Jones,  professor  of  political  |  ed  recently, 
science  at  the  University  of  North ; 
Carolina  i      Dr.  Hudson,  secretary-treasurer, 

■-•"'  said  the  program  will  begin  at  2:30 

p.m.,  with  Prof.  Richard  G.  Walser 
of  State  College  presiding.  In  ad- 
dition to  a  number  of  speakers,  the 
society    will     hear    a    report    on 


transfers   received  regular  liberal    and  Chloe." 

arts  degrees.  The  fifst  class  of  un- !      The   concert   u-ill    be    presented 


dergraduates  with  Morehead  schol- 
ars will  graduate  this  June.  There 
will  be  seven  graduating,  who 
were  Morehead  .scholars.  One  boy 
who  was  to  have  finished  this 
year  graduated  last  ycM".!,"':':,  • 
-^  :\^ 

■'    .    •>  y  Schedule  ^^:- 

5  p.m. — Meeting  for  all  the  Y 
Night  committee  planning  for  the 
Cavalcade      of      Talertt.  *'    Cabinet 

Ro^n. 

4  p.m. — Joint  Cabinet  Meeting — 
YMCA-YWCA.  Cabinet  Room.      . 

6  p.m. — Lenoir  Hall,.  Supper 
Forum  with  James  ^tackay.  "The 
Role  of  Georgia  in  National  and 
International  Politics."        --.v-^    • 


jgain  at  Duke  University  on  Dec. 
14. 

No  admission  is  charged  for  the 
GMAB-spoosored    program. 


Mountain 

Climt^ing 
Anyone  ? 

Mountain  climbing  has  a  foot- 
hold at  Carolina. 
>.  }lirs.  Julia  Ivey,  Wilson  Library 
worker,  was  checking  through  a 
book  pertaining  to  mountain 
climbing  last  week,  when  a  slip 
of  paper  at  the  front  of  the  book 
caught  her  eye. 

It  was  a  note,  inviting  students 
interested     in     obtaining    greater 
liieights  to  join  Bill  Stewart  of  Old 
.  East     Dormitory    in     scaling    the 
FOR  RENT:  FOUR  ROOM  HOUSE    T^tons  and  other  ranges  out  West 
located  on  Barclay  Road.^  El«c-.  next  summer. 


cussiniDS 


FOR  SALE:  CHEAP  TRANSPOR- 
taties!  1949  black  ^ck  Super. 
Tw(^oor  sedan  complete-: with 
acc^sories,  Good  condition.  See 
at  127  Jackson  Circle  anytime  o4' 
phone  a-0164. 


trie  stove,  refrigerator,  hot  wat- 
er heater,  and  oil  circulator 
furnished.  $65  per  month..  Phone 
8-0149.  .„ 


ft^Z  AT  TURNAGES 

Saturday  afternoon,  2:00,  Turn- 
ages  Cabin  ip  Durham.— Jazz  by 
Dick  Gables  "All  Stars."  Beer 
ser/ed. 


Interest  whetted,  Mrs.  Ivey  de- 
lved, into  other  manuscripts  on 
the  subject  and  discovered  more 
-  rfiotes-of-thc  same-varietjr-as-the 
first. 

Fearing    that    these    invitations 


Internationai 

(Continued  fronn  Page  1) 

Associated  Press'  New  York  head- 
quarters, then  refed  to  the  tele- 
type that  will  be  mounted  in  The 
Daily  Tar  Heel's  offices. 

"That  nWanc  •  ctvry  that  hap- 
pens in  London  will  b*  report- 
ed on  our  wire  altnost  immedi- 
ately," Powied«e  explained.  "The 
same  thing  goes  for  important 
stories  that  happen  in  the  United 
States  or  anywhere  ilse  in  the 
world." 

The  teletype  will  be  the  third 
such  machine  maintained  by  the 
Daily  Tar  Heel. 

1.  A  teletype  which  brings  in 
sports  news  from  all  over  the 
United  States. 

2.  One  which  handles  all  The 
.Associated  Press'  North  Carolina 
news.  The  Daily  Tar  Heel  can 
u*ansmit  messages  and  stories  on 
this  Mire,  said  Powledge. 

.   The  editor  said  he  plans  to  de- 
vote "somewhere  around  a  column 
per  day"  to  -national  and  interna- 
tional news.        •->.■.-,?■«.,•- -J 
WILL  VARY 

"It  Will  vary  a  great  deal,  how- 
ever," he  said.  "On  days  like  Wed- 
I  nesday,  when  we  have  a  six-page 
paper  and  more  room  for  campus 
news,  we  can  afford  to  spend  more 
space  on  the  world  and  national 
situation. 

"On  days  when  there  are  a  lot 
of  advertisements  and  a  bulk  of 
campus  news,  we  will  have  to  cut 
the  world  and  national  report 
down  considerably." 

"We  always  favor  campus  news 
over  any  other  kind,"  he  said,  "be- 
cause we  are  the  only  newspaper 
that  care  about  the  University  of 
North  Carolina  above  anything 
irlse.  "SlTrce '  the-  Studemr^ay  for 
The  Daily  Tar  Heel  whether  they 
want  it  or  not,  we   are   aware  of 


''North  Carolina  Folklore,"  the  so- 
ciety's official  journal,  and  will 
elect  officers  for  1957. 

Dr.  Norman  Eliason  of  the  UNC 
Elnglish  Dept.  is  one  of  the  speak- 
ers. His  topic  Will  be  "Tarheel 
Talk,"  the  same  name  of  the  re- 
cently published  book  which  he 
wrote.      •'      ,      .     *         .- 


LOST  SATL'RDAY  NIGHT—  Jew- 
eled Black  Cashmere  Sweater  in 
vicinity  of  Mclver  Dorm.  Finder 
please  contact  Barbara  Prago, 
89142. 


LOST  —  TEXTBOOK  —  GREAT 
Critics.  Please  return  to  Graham 
Memorial      Information      Desk. 


TYPEWRITING  —  Double-spaced 
— 25c  per  page.  Rough  draft: 
Study  notes,  Dissertations.  Miss 
Kathrjn  McGalliard,  214  Rose- 
mary Street,  2  p.m.  to  ,4,  p.m. 
daily.      .  •  ..  V 


not  think  the  students  will  be  dis- 
appointed when  the  teletj-pe  starts 
after  Christmas." 


might    slip    from    the    books    un- ;  a  tremendous  responsibility.  I  do 
noticed.  Mrs.  Ivey  aided  the  clev- 
er reader  by  clipping  his  notices 
to  the  pockets  of  the  books. 

Students  really  and  truly  inter- 
ested in  this  sort  of  thing  may  get 
a  glimpse  of  the  Tetons.  in  Wyom- 
ing, as  displayed  by  a  local  drj-- 
cleaning  firm   in  its  window. 

Those  interested  have  been  ask- 
ed to  see  Stewart,  11  old  East. 


DR.  NORMAN  EL'tS  ELIASON 

...  speaks  at  Folklwe  Soci^y 

Speech,  Films  Planned 
For  Transport  AA^ajors 

Dr.  II.  Jackson  Darst,  Education- 
al Advisor  to  the  Commandant  at 
the  Army's  Transportation  School 
at  Fort  Eustis,  Va.,  will  speak  to 
the  members  of  the  U.\C  chapter 
of  the  National  Defense  Transpor- 
tation Assn.  on   Tuesday  night. 

All  transportation  students  and 
majors  are  urged  to  attend  the 
meeting  which  will  be  held  in 
Lenior  Hall  at  7  p.m. 

In  addition  to  his  speech,  Dr. 
Darst  will  show  films  of  the  equip- 
ment and  various  modes  of  tran.s- 

j  portation  used  by  the  Transporta- 

1  tion  Corps. 


Physicians  Throughout  State 
Are  Here  Today  For  Meeting 


bean  At  Meet 


Qiot  th«j|«  in  your   "^  ^ 

holiday  plans? 


■■■WU^  /»i(i.  •^\*; 


This  all- Arrow  outfit  can  make  a  Chnstraas 

morning.  (With  a  couple  of  well-placed  hints, 
it  can  be  yours.)  For  your  Christmas  check- 
list: this  stand-out  Cohot  sport  diirt  of 
imported  cotton  flannel,  with  the  new  ^ort-point 

collar  i  and  two  college  standbys,  Arrow  slacks  and 
University  styUd  crew  neck  sweaters. 

Shirt,  |5.95i  sweater,  $1  l.95i  slacks,  ^12.95.        ;  ^. 


ARROW 

—first  In  fashion 


Physicians      from      tJiroughout    officer  of  Raleigh,  will  be  one  of 
j  North   Carolina  will  take  part  in    the  speakers  on  the  program.  Dr. 
[  a  one-day  regional  meeting  of  the  \  Norton    will   speak    on   "Epidemi- 
Dean  J.  C.  SitLerson  of  the  Col- '  American    Coflege    of    Physicians    ology    of    Infantile    Paralysis    as 
lege  of  Arts  and  Sciences  is  attend- j  ^^^  ^''^'*^'-  Modified  by  Salk  Vaccine;  Future 

iiig  the  meeting  of  Southern  Assn. '      The   meet>ing    will    be    held    at    Risks    to   Adults    in   North   Caro- 
of  Colleges  and  Secondary  School    the  UNC  School  of  Medicine.         |  lina." 

in.  Dallas,  Texas.  |      Dr.  J.  W.  R.  Norton,  state  health  :      I>r-  Walter  L.  Palmer,  president 

'  of  the  American  College  of  Physi- 
cians and  professor  of  medicine, 
at  the  University  of  Chicago,  will' 
sptjak  at  a  dinner  to  be  held  at 
the  Carolina  Inn  at  7  p.m. 

Registration  will  begin  at  1:30 
p.m.  in  the  auditorium  on  the 
fourth  floor  of  Memorial  Hospital. 
The  meeting  will  get  underway  at 
2  p.m.  with  a  talk  by  Dr.  Raymond 
M.   Wheeler  of  Charlotte. 

Others  appearing  on  the  pro- 
gram will  be  Drs.  Thomas  B.  Har- 
nett, U.NC  School  of  Medicine; 
Benjamin  F.  Martin,  Winston- 
Salem:  James  M.  Alexander,  Char- 
lotte: Logan  0.  Jones,  Charlotte; 
George  J.  Baylin.  Durham  and 
George  P.  Penick,  UNC  School  o£- 
Medicine  and  John  R.  Chambliss, 
Rocky  Mount. 

Following  a  10-minute  intermis- 
sion a  panel  discussion  will  be 
held  at  4  p.m.  Taking  part  in  this 
will  b?  Drs.  Ernest  H.  Yount, 
Winston-Salem;  Harold  D.  Green, 
Winston-Salem:  Keith  S.  Grimson. 
Durham  and  James  W.  Woods. 
ITXr  School  of  Medicine. 


SNIITS  •  Till  •  SLACKS 


«A  I-  ;  s  V-  j  f  ^'S  - .-»'«  --  r 


«1 


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University; 
Ibuted  free.: 
page  maga-i 
East  and 
isiness  pro- 
purpose, 
nplete  and 
I  the   Ameri- 

undergrad- 

,  nation    and 

to  receive 

y   mail,   or 

iting  agents 

be  distrib- 

of  the  Al- 

?lta   Sigma 

less    frater- 


1        I 


roup 
lay 

i'olklore  So- 
I  meeting  to- 
ter  Hotel  in 
m  announc- 


[•y-treasurer, 
\gin  at  2:30 

G.  Walser 

Jing.  In  ad- 

•akers,  the 

?port  on 
re."  the  so- 

and    will 

^f  the  UNC 

the  speak- 

"Tarheel 

of  the  re- 

which    he 


"^^^m^- 


■LIASON 

e  Society 

nned 

jors 

Education- 
mandant  at 
lion  School 
II  speak  to 
I'C  chapter 
Transpor- 
y  night, 
udents  and 
attend  the 
held    In 


peech.   Dr. 

the  equip- 

s  of  trans- 

Transporta- 


»g 


be  one  of 
rogram.  Dr. 

'"Epidemi- 
aralysis  as 
ine;  Future 
•orth   Caro- 

president 
e  of  Physi- 
medicine 
hicago,  will' 
be  held  at 
m. 

in  at  1:30 
m  on  the 
al  Hospital, 
ndcrway  at 
Raymond 
tte. 

the    pro- 
mas  B.  Bar- 
Medicine; 
Winston- 
nder,  Char- 
Charlotte; 
urham    and 
C  School  of 
Chambliss, 

te  intermis- 
on  will  be 
part  in  this 
n.  Yount, 
I  I^.  Green, 
S.  Grimson. 
W     Woods. 


THURSDAY,  DECEMBER  6,  1956 


fHE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


r  .GC  I^tVt 


Winter  Sports  Slate 

DECEMBER 

1 — Varsity  basketball  at  McCrary;  Swimming  at  East  Carolina. 

4 — Varsity  basketball,  Furman   here;   Freshman   basketball.  High 
Point  JV  here.  '' 

7— Freshman    basketball    at    Wilmington    Junior    College;    Swim- 
ming, South  Carolina  here. 

8 — Varsity    basketball,    Ciemson    at    Charlotte,    N.    C;    Wrestling 
O/Vake  Forest  and  Washington  &  Lee  here. 

11 — Wrestling,  Davidson  here. 

12 — Varsity     basketball,    George    Washington    at     Norfolk,    Va.; 
Freshman  basketban,  N.  C.  State  at  Kinston,  N.  C. 

14 — Wrestling  at  The  Citadel. 

17-!-Varsity    basketball,    Maryland    here;    Freshman    basketball, 
Duke  here. 

18 — Swimming  at  Duke. 

20 — Varsity  Basketball,  New  York  University  at  Madison  Square 
Garden. 

21 — Varsity  basketball,  Dartmouth  at  Boston. 

22 — Varsity  basketball.  Holy  Cross  at  Boston. 
.  27 — Varsity  basketball  Dixie  Classic  at  Raleigh 

28 — Varsity  basketball  Dixie  Classic  at  Raleigh. 

29 — Varsity   basketball   Dixie   Classic   at  Raleigh. 
JANUARY 

4 — Freshman  basketball  at  Eastern  Military  Institute;  Wrestling, 
Virginia  here. 

5 — Swinuning  at  Virginia. 

8 — Varsity  basketball  at  William  and  Mary;  Freshman  basketball 
a:   Atlantic  Christian  JV. 

11 — Varsity  basketball  Ciemson  here;  Freshman  basketball.  Wake 
Forest  here. 

12— Varsity  basketball,  Virginia  here;  Freshman  basketball.  Stal- 
ling; Air  Force  Base  here. 
-     15 — Varsity  and  freshn>an  basketball  at  N.  C.  State 

18— Wrestling  at  N.  C.  State 

19 — Freshman   basketball,  N.  C.   State  at  Greensboro;  Swimming 
Maryland   here. 

30 — Varsity  basketball  at  Western  Carolina.  -*^" 
FEBRUARY 

2 — Freshman  basketball,  Bullis  School  here;  Wrestling  at  VPI. 

5 — Varsity  basketball  at  Maryland. 

6 — Freshman  basketball  at  Davidson  JV 

8 — Freshman  basketball  at  High  Point,  JV;  Wrestling  Maryland 
here. 

* — Varsity  basketball  Duke  here;  Freshman  basketball  Duke  here; 
Swimming,  Ciemson  here. 

11 — Varsity    basketball    at    Virginia;    Swimming    Carolina    Colle- 
giates  here. 

13 — Varsity  and  Freshman  basketball   Wake  Forest  here. 

1? — Varsity  and  Freshman  basketball,  N.  C.  State  here. 

22— Vs.^iity  basketball  South  Carolina  here;  Freshman  basketball 
Atlantic  Christian  JV  here;  Wrestling  at  VMI. 

23 — Freshman  basketball  at  Duke;  Swimming  N.  C.  State  here. 

26— Varsity  a.nd  Freshman  basketball  at  Wake  Forest. 

27— Wrertling  at  Duke. 
MARCH 

1 — Varsity    and    Freshman    basketball   at   Duke;    ACC    Swimming 
tiere. 

2 — ACC  Swimming,  here.  -  ^ 

7 — Varsity  basketball  at  ACC  tourney,  Raleigh. 

8 — Varsity  basketball  at  ACC  tourney,  Raleigh. 

9 — Varsity  basketball  at  ACC  tourney,  Raleigh. 

23 — NCAA  swimming  here. 

29 — NCAA  swimming,  here.  j;  .  ' 

30 — NCAA  swimming,  here.  .  ^        .  .     . 


Heavy  Trading  Anticipated 
In  Minor  League  Sessions 


Intramural  Officials 

Above  are  the  men  who  keep  things  running  smoothly  on  the  intramural  playing  fields.  They  are: 
first  rwo,  left  to  right,  Joe  McGinn,  Charlie  Young,  Ritcliie  Smith,  Bob  Wagnor,  Jim  Whisnant,  Eddie 
Green,  Ray  Willis  and  Jack  Petty.  Second  row,  Jim  Brown,  John  Stratton,  Al  McSurely,  David  Graves, 
Jim  Johnson,  Bob  Stuart,  and  Don  Atkins.  Third  row,  supervisor  Ed  Stewart,  Julias  Tomiinson,  Howard 
Whisnant,  Bob  Warwick,  Ray  Hoidferd,  Harold  Downing,  Willis  Johnson,  Rob  Pendergraph  and  Paul 
Belanga. 


Tar  Heel  Fish  ' 
Challenge  USC 
Here  Tomorrow 


Sooners  Get  All-Star  Berths 


MIAMI,  Fla.-(AP)— Five  play- j 
ers  from  Oklahoma,  the  nation's  I 
No.  1  football  team,  will  play  in ' 
the  North-South  Ail-Star  game  here  I 
Dec.  26,  game  director  Andy  Gus-i 
tafson  announced  <oday. 

The  Oklahoma  players,  who  will 
i  be   on   the   North    sqwad,   include ! 


ter  Jerry  Tubbs,  quarterback  Jim 


Coach  Jim  Ratliff's  South  Caro- 
lina Gamecock's  will  arrive  tomor- 
row night  in  the  first  leg  of  a  road 

trip  that  will  see  them  meet  the    ^  ,,,     ,     ,„  ,,  ^ 

rar  Heel  mermen  on  Friday  night '.  ?_^.^f'f.^J^..  l^'Ill^y    ^^^:'''_t[^',   ^.^'^ 
and  N.C.   State   in  Raleigh   Satur- 
day. 

.Although  the  Tarheels  took  the 
South  Carolinians  65-15  last  season, 
they  are  expected  to  field  a  strong- 
er club  this  year. 

As  for  the  locals,  they  will  make  j 
:»saults   on    two   .\CC   marks.   The 
medley  relay  team  of  Krepp.  Kick- ; 
Rraf,  Roth,  and  Rose  will  attempt 
to  set  a  new  standard  in  the  400 
yard  medley  relay.  This  is  the  first 
year    that     this    event    has    been  | 
.-iwum  .It  400  yards  instead  of  300.  i 
'.'he  400  yard  freestyle  relay  team 
of  Krepp,  Kickgraf,  Roth  and  Ro.se  : 
will  attempt  to  crack  the  existing 
ACC   record    set    by   the   Tarheels 
last  year.  i 


Harris,   tackle   E^d  Gray   and  end 
John  Bell. 

The  North  previously  had  signed 
Penn  State's  Billy  Kane  and  Jack 
Calderone. 

Players  announced  for  the  South 
team  are  Jackie  Simpson,  Jo? 
Brodsky  and  John  Barrow,  all  from 
the  University  of  Florida. 


By  JOE  REICHLER 

JAGKSONVniiE,  Fla.  u!"!— While 
the  higher  classification  minor 
leagues  were  drafting  36  players 
at  a  cost  of  $156,750  yesterday, 
major  league  executives  were  get- 
ting down  to  serious  trade  talk  at 
the  annual  minor  league  meetings 

.\Ithough  the  only  deal  consum 
mated  thus  far  has  been  the  eight- 
player  transaction  between  Detroit 
and  Kansas  City,  officials  were 
looking  forward  to  one  ^.i  the 
most  active  trade  sessions  in 
years. 

Manager  Birdie  Tebbetts.  who.sc 
Cincinnati  Redlegs  have  been  dick- 
ering with  several  clubs  in  hopes 
of  strengthening  their  pitching 
staff,  predicted  every  club  in  the  { 
National  League  will  be  involved 
in  at  least  one  trade  either  here 
or  at  the  major  league  meetings 
in  Chicago. 

"I've  never  seen  anything  like  | 
it,"  he  said.  ''EI\'ery  club  in  our  j 
league  has  expressed  an  eager-  ! 
ness  to  trade.  Not  only  that,  but  j 
they've  actually  gotten  down  tc  j 
brass  tacks  and  mentioned  names,  j 
Unless  I'm  all  wet,  I'm  sure  there  j 
wUl  be  a  number  of  deals — and 
for  top  flight  players,  too." 

One  proposed  multiple  deal  in 
volving  such  big  names  as  Richie 
Ashburn  and  Harvey  Haddix  of 
Philadelphia  and  Carl  Furillo  of 
Brooklyn  had  reached  the  seriou.-. 
.«'tage  until  it  was  finally  rejected 
by  General  Manager  Roy  Haney 
and  Manager  Mayo  Smith  of  the  j 
PhiUics. 


Had  the  deal  gone  through, 
Brooklyn  would  have  dealt  the 
Phillies  Furillo,  outfielders  Gino 
Cimoli  and  Bert  Hamric,  shortstop 
Bill  LilJis  and  pitcher  Ken  Leii- 
man  for  Ashburn  and  Haddix. 

"The  deal  is  off,"  Smith  flatly 
Jeclared.   "We  rejected  it.  Brook- 

yn  didn't  offer  us  enough." 

I 

A  proposed  .  deal  between  the 
Chicago  Cubs  and  Redlegs  involv-> 
ing  either  Bob  Rush  or  Sam  Jones,  j 
2  pair  of  right-handed  Cub  pitcr.  j 
ers,  and  Smoky  Burgess,  Cincin- 
nati's second-string  catcher,  also  j 
appears  to  have  fallen  through,  j 
Tebbetts,  however,  is  confident  his 
team  will  copie  out  of  this  meeting 
with  a  pitcher.  The  New  York 
Giants  have  offered  Ruben  Go- 
me/ their  Puerto  Rican  right- 
hander to  the  Reds  for  Burgess. 


And  the, :  ^.^ 
/nfimofe  :^c^   "^ 


The  most  active  would-be  trad- 
ers in  the  American  League  ap- 
pear to  be  Washington,  Boston, 
Chicago,  Baltimore  and  Cleveland. 
The  names  most  handled  about  are 
a  trio  of  third  basemen — Washing- 
ton'^  Eddie  Yost,  Cleveland's  Al 
Rosen  and  BaItimor?'s  George 
Xell. 


PATRONIZI  YOUR 
•    ADVERTISERS   • 


Clean  Early  For 
The  Holidays 


Bookshop 
Gift-Wraps 
Books 
Free! 


JOHN  CROTTY 

Tar  Baby  peppcrpot  guard 


MURALS 


Intramural  tag  football  i.s  coin 
ing  to  a  close  this  week  as  the 
league  champicns  battle  it  out  fur 
the  .sch  )ol  crown.  This  aftprnoon 
ihe  I>KE's  and  the  Sigma  Nij's  ?,o 
for  the  Iraternity  blue  team  cham- 
pionship. The  I>KK  whites  are  the 
white  team  champions. 

The  winners  of  the  blue  league 
champion.')hip  will  play  the  DKE 
white  team  Fruiay  for  the  frater- 
nity crown. 

The  dorm  championship  will  be 
played  Friday  also.  The  down  and 
iraternity  champion.s  will  make 
their  bid  for  the  .school  title  Mon- 
day afternoon  in  Kenan  Stadium. 

Yesterdays  tag  football  play- 
offs results: 

.Aledical  School!  defeated  Medi- 
cal School-2  6-0;  DKE  (W)  defeated 
Sig  Nu  (W).  20-13;  Sigma  Nu  de- 
feated Zeta  Psi,  7-6;  DKE  defeated 
SAE,  21-0. 


GRADE  "A"  DRESSED 
AND  DRAWN,  CUT-UP 
READY  FOR  THE  PAN! 


coLotiMi  sfoirri 


SavC'Vp  to  16c!  Winner  Quality 

!tBACON 

39« 


1 


l-LB. 
PKG. 


■   '       '  Special  Price  .  .  .  Save  10c!  Betty  Crocker 

CAKE  MIX 


Yearling  Grunt 
And  Groaners 
^  Meet  Generals 

This  Saturday,  Carolina's  fresh- 
» •  man  wrestling  squad  will  open  it's 
■    sea.son     against     the     Washington 

-  and  Lee  junior  varsity.  The  meet 
will  b?  held  in  Woollen  Gym  be- 

'  fore    the    varsitj^'s    matches    with 

-  Washington  and  Lee  and  Wake  i 
'  Forest.  I 
'  '   Pacing  t.he  frosh  matmen  will  be  i 

-  Jim  We. born  wrestling  in  the  147  | 
pound    class.    Welborn    has   twice  | 

■been   .\.C.   High   School    wrestling' 

'   champion  in  his  weight  class.         i 

Holding  the  top  posit! cn.»  in  th?  , 

other  weight   classes  wil   be:   Bill  I 

•  Suttle,  130;  Jo3  Perrine.  137;  Don  j 
Russell.  157:  Ron  Purdy.  167;  Ben-  i 

'    no   Sack,    177;   and   .Mike   Pittman.  I 

"    heavj-weight.  | 

Wrc.st'ing     coach     Bill     Barnes  j 

'""said  yesterday  that  Sack  is  one  of; 

the  top  men  on  the  squad  although  I 

*  he  has  never  wrestled  before  this 
■year.  • 

The   Tar   Babies  can   count   on  i 
loosing  cne   match   already:   there 
is  not  a  man  en  the  squad  light 
enough    to    wrestle    in    the    120  j 
pound  class.  The  squad  wiU  have  ! 
to  forfeit  this  match.  Csach  Barnes 
is   mak'ng   an   appe-sl    for   a    man ' 
that    will    wrestlf?    in    this  weight.  I 
Any    one    interested    meet    Coach  i 
Barnes  near  a  set  of  scales. 


DAILY    CROSSWORD 


-,? 


ACROSS 

1.  Newly 
married 
woman 
6.  Explosive 

missile 

10.  Addition* 

to  bills 

12.  River  (Man- 
churia) 

13.  Not  awaka 

14.  Vex 

15.  Born 

16.  Slid  downhill 
on  snow 

IS^Pack  away 
19.  Chills  and 

fever 
22.  Stories 
27.  Harass 

29.  Bondsman 

30.  Smiled 
with  joy 

32.  Prime 
minister 
(G.B.) 

33.  Delineate     • 
35.  Rejects 

39.  Chatter 
(colloq.) 

42.  Wing- 
shaped 

43  Stored 
fodder 

45.  Chinese 
dynaat^ 

46.  Beg:an  a 
voyage 

47.  Senate  boy 

48.  Approaches 

DOWN 

I.  BroakfMt 

food 
2  Move        1> 

apwani     ' 

{LNot         /^ 


4.  River 

(G.  B  > 
5  Upright 

6.  Obstacles 

7.  Neglect 

8.  Stubborn 
person 

9.  Raised 
11.  Fool 

17.  Milkflsh 
(pi.) 

18.  Appear 

19.  Warp-yarn 

20.  Excla- 
mation 
(slang) 

21.  "Land  of 
the  free" 
(abbr.)   . 

23.  Moved,  as  air 


24.  Youth 

25.  Evening 
(poet.) 

26.  Coin 
(Jap  ) 

28.  Spreads 
grass 
to 
dry 

31.  Gar- 
ment 

34.  Far 
eastern 

35.  Sloping 
roadway 

36.  Charles 
Lamb 
( pen  name ) 

37.  Long 
tooth 


tiaa   a^yr^      an 


Yesterday'*  Anawcr 

38.  Force 
onward 

",9  Festive 

10.  Dyeing 
apparatus 

41.  River 
bottoms 

44.  Falsehood 


Plentiful  Supplyl  Tender  Juiry  Pork 

ROAST 

RIB  END       ;      l.OIN   END      j     HALF  LOIN 

C    ]   LB.    ^S:SC    [   LB.   BS^SC 


DEVIL'S  FOOD 

WHITE 

YELLOW 


3 


20-OZ. 
PKGS. 


89 


L.  29' h'  35*  i  ^' 43' 

Special  Buy . . .  Ideal  for  Christmas  Gifts! 

Stretch  Hose 

LADIES'        I         MEN'S 

JSMALI^  MEDIUM,  I^RCE    j     FITS  A.NY  SIZE  (SOCK.S) 

3;^.  $2-00  2'^^^$!-^ 

Reg.  99c  Pair         \         Reg.  79c  Pair 
JSetc  Crop  —  In  The  Shell 

Pecans  Z-^l^ 


Save  9c!  Southern  Gold 

MARGARINE 

4  K.  99. 


Save  4c!  Sotnerdale  frozen 

GREEN  PEAS 

3  '^i  49< 


<:risco 


>:  i^;^f  ■'; 


3Lb.i:an 


SHORTENING        .    

■ .,.,  »/*<v     .- V  "..  ".   ■''-■^■-     '<.■:■-      --^■■-    •  • 
•      .-  ir:'--  O  ■■•V«v*^v'»   •*":-vvi'-  S^*'<"^*"i'    ■ 


RED  BAND 


FLOUR 


10  Lb.  Bag 


'Ky- 


**^^:^\*  sj.^ 


I  ARCe  SIKE 


FILBERT'S 

f  \.N<  ^    NEW   CBOP 

ALMONDS 

f  WCl    MTS 

MIXED 

MiiOiiM   >rtE 

WALNUTS 

FANCY    BRAZIL   NUTS  OR   B.4BV      ' 

WALNUTS 


II 


LB. 


LB. 


LB. 


LB 


53c 
63c 
53c 
53c 

49c 


Fresh  Juicy,  Medium  Size  Florida 

GRAPEFRUIT 


8-LB. 
BAG 


VOLR  TOT.\L  FOOD  BILL_l!5  LESS  WHEN  VOL  SHOP  .4T      COLONIAL    STORES 


■1 


fACE  :fr 


THE  DAfI  Y  TAR  HFPl 


Tiii'PcnAY.   nrrrMnrn   ^     l»c^ 


4CC  M////  Consider  Morel  and  Case  In  Meeting  Today 


Grants- In 
Aid  Under 
Discussion 


Tar  Heels:  Still  A  Mystery 

The  1956-57  basketball  season  is  off  and  running,  and  as  usual  the 
Big  Four  teams  have  been  romping  over  outside  competition  only  to 
have  their  throats  cut  in  family  feuding.  E&cYi  of  the  '"tobacco  road" 
stalwarts  has  played  two  games,  and  only  one.  Wake  Forest,  h&s  lost. 
And  you  guessed  it.  The  winner  was  another  Big  Four  team,  N.  C. 
State. 

The  surprising  Pack,  lightly  regarded  in  preseason  speculation, 
toppled  the  favored  but  mon>entarily  inept  Deacons,  73-43  Tues- 
day night.    State  whipped  Pitt,  97-85  in  their  opener  last  Saturday. 
Our  own  Carolina  Tar  ileels  are  still  somewhat  of  a  mystery  after  i 
two  outings.    In  their  first  start,  they  pulled  out  an  84-70  win  over  I 
the  McCrary  Eagles,  and  in  their  second,  staged  a  second  half  rally  j 
to  down  Furman,  94-66. 

On  each  occasion,  the  Tar  Heels  started  out  slowly  »n^  were 
forced  to  come  on  with  a  rush  in  the  second  half  to  se>w  up  the 
decision.  Against  Furman  Tuesday,  they  pl<y*d  miserable  basket- 
ball for  ntost  of  the  first  half,  and  if  it  hadn't  been  for  a  Joe 
Quigg  hot  streak,  the  game  might  have  been  much  closer.  This  in 
spite  of  Lennie  Rosenbluth's  47  point  effort. 

And  the  .McCrary  game  was  a  nip  and  tuck  affair  until  three  of  the 
Eagle  starters  fouled  out  of  the  game.  Then  and  only  then  did  the 
Tar  Heels  start  to  walk  away  from  their  semipro  rivals. 

Saturday  night  ifs  Clemson  in  Charlotte,  end  the  local  cagers 
stand  in  danger  of  being  upset  unless  they  play  40  minutes  of  good 
basketball.  The  Tigers  have  a  youthful,  fiery  club  capable  of  ris- 
ing to  the  occasion,  it  will  undoubtedly  be  Carolina's  toughest 
game  of  the  season  up  to  this  point. 

And  while  were  on  the  subject,  a  couple  of  hardwood  notes:  John 
Wesscls,  6-7  State  frosh  center,  has  left  school,  but  is  expected  back 
next  semester.  (.\jid  this  on  the  heels  of  the  Moreland  controversy). 
Wilt  Chamberlain  scored  52  points  in  his  varsity  debut  Monday  night. 
But  didn  t  cur  boy  Rosey  get  47  himself? 

Gridiron  Sidebars 

Ken  Keller,  the  flashy  little  halfback  from  Pennsylvania  who  never 
quite  panned  out  here  at  Carolina,  has  blossomed  forth  into  a  full 
fledged  pro  star  with  tne  Philadelphia  Eagles.  Keller,  a  starter  with 
the  Eagles,  will  be  on  display  Sunday  in  Washington's  Griffith  Sta- 
dium when  the  Eagles  tangle  with  the  Redskins. 

It's   definite   now,   Clemson,   Miami    and    Navy    replace   Notre 
Dame,  Oklahoma  and  Georgia  on  the  Tar  Heel  football  schedule 
next  year. 
And  guess  who's  the  number  one  bowl  game  of  the  day?  The  lowly 
Gator  Bcwl.   of  course.    The  hustling  JacK^nville   promoters,  trying 
to  edge  their  way  into  the  really    'Big  BjwI"  classification,  came  up 
with  a  real  gem  in  Georgia  Tech  and  Pittsourgh. 

Nobody's  asked  us  yet  to  compare  Tennessee  and  Oklahoma, 
but  we're   going   to  volunteer   an   opinion   anyway.   We  saw   both 
play,  (Tennessee  twice),  and  we  agree  with  Coach  Jim  Tatum  and 
his   Carolina  football   players.  The   Sooners  •rt  the   nation's  best. 
Just  in   case  you're  interested,   here's    the  way  we  rate  the   ten 
teams  on  Carolina's  56  football  schedule:  1 — Oklahoma.  2 — ^Tennessee. 
3— Duke.    4 — South   Carolina.    5 — Notre   Dame.   6 — Georgia.    7 — Wake 
Forest,  ft— State.  9— Virginia.  10— Maryland.  And  how  about  the  Tar 
Heels?  We'd  put  them  right  behind  Duke. 

In  closing,  a  word  on  track:  The  UNO  indoor  track  squad  is 
working  out  daily  in  the  tin  can,  and  glowing  reports  on  their 
activities  have  been  reaching  our  ears.  The  names  most  often 
mentioned  are  Everett  Whatley  and  Wayne  Bishop,  a  pair  of  dis- 
tance men  who  should  give  a  good  account  of  themselves  this  sea- 
son.   Of  course  there's  always  Jim  Beatty. 

Two  notes:  Dave  Coates,  burly  West  Virginian  who  specializes  ia 
the  shot  put  has  turned  up  at  South  Carolina  after  flunking  out  of 
L'NC.  Coates  was  rated  by  experts  as  a  potential  Olympic  performer. 
Richa^  Waters,  outstanding  pole  vaulter  and  hurdler,  has  dropped 
out  of  school  due  to  scholastic  difficulties.  IJe  will  be  missed  this 
spring. 


Frosh  Mermen  Open 
Season   With   Cadets 


By  STEWART  BIRD 

The    UNC    freshman    swimming ! 
'team  opens  its  1956-57  season  Sat-! 
urday  afternoon  in  Staunton,  Va., 
against    the    cadets    of    Staunton  j 
Military  Academy.  | 

As    to    the    potential    of    Coach 


breaststroke. 

Another  product  of  Connecticut 
swimming  circles  is  Mike  Rosen, 
lormerly  of  Woodbridge  High.  He 
IS  counted  on  heavily  in  the  sprint 
events,  "followed  by  freestylers 
Ted   Moore,   Lou  Terrill,   Bill  An- 


Dick  Jamersons  Tar   Babies,   the !  Person,  Glen  Greene,  Rufus  Knott, 
picture  is  somewhat  cloudy.  j  ^^^  Charles  Pittman. 

Very  few  of  the  boys  have  had'  ^''^  ^^^^  »'  Jacksonville,  Flor- 
competitive  experience,  and  just  ^^^  '^  ^^^  o"^y  backstroker  on  the 
how  this  will  affect  the  team  is  |  ^Quad,  and  more  are  needed  if 
a  question  that  may  be  answere«l  t-'arolina  is  to  field  the  necessary 
Saturday.  Lack  of  team  depth  is  number  of  men  in  this  event, 
another  problem  that  can  be  over-  i  Wilkes  Coleman  along  with 
tome  only  by  more  men  turning '  Wachendorfer      will      carry      the 


out  for  the  squad. 

Despite  this  somewhat  pessimis- 
tic outlook,  there  are  a  few  bright 
spots  on  the  horizon. 

Foremost  among  these  is  Paul 
Wachendorfer,  who  has  one  of  the 
brightest  futures  of  anybody  who 
ever  donned  a  pair  of  Carolina 
swim  trunks. 

Last  year  he  itts  recognized  as 


team's  fortunes  in  the  breaststroke 
events. 

Driver  John  Smith,  winner  ©f 
the  intramural  title  this  year  and 
Jost  Polack  hold  down  the  spring- 
board department. 

Nash  Mcintosh  is  the  number 
two  man  behind  Wachendorfer  in 
the  200  yard  freestyle.  This  Savan- 
nah,   Georgia    native    has    never 


the  outstanding,  pfep  school  swim-    ^^""^   ^  competitive   race   in    his 


mer  in  the  country,  being  ranked 
lirst  in  no  less  than  three  events 
on  the  Prep  All-American  team.  A 
graduate  of  Hotchkiss  in  Lakeville, 
Conn.,  this  Vienna,  Austria,  native 
also  holds  the  American  Prep 
School    record    in   the    100    yard 


Team  Of  Giants         i 

If  North  Carolina  Basketball' 
Coach  Frank  McOuire  wanted  tot 
play  his  five  tallest  men  at  the  \ 
same  time,  the  average  height  \ 
would  be  6-8. 

All-America  Lennie  Rosenbluth  ' 
would  be  the  "shortest"  man  all 
6-5,  while  sophomore  Bill  Hatha-  j 
way  would  be  the  tallest  at  6-11. 


life,  but  is  turning  in  times  in 
practice  that  show  promise  of 
things  to  come.  Freestyler  Bob 
Jones  has  been  progressing,  and 
.should  garner  some  points  for  the 
Tar  Babies  in  the  200. 

Coach  Jamerson  has  not  yet 
formed  his  medley  and  freestyle 
iclay  teams,  but  is  experimenting 
to  find  the  best  combinations. 

TALL  UNC  FRESHMAN 

The  University  of  North  Caro- 
lina freshman  basketball  starting 
team  a%eragcs  6-4.  The  tallest  man 
is  center  Dick  Kepley  at  6-8,  and 
the  shortest  is  guard  Joiin  Crotly 
at  5-11. 


By  KEN  ALYTA 

GREENSBORO  —  Tne  Atlantic 
Coast  Conference,  beset  by  re- 
.ruitiug  troubles  and  a  four-year 
!  .\C.\A-imposed  probation  against 
'  on  J  cf  its  members,  comes  to 
4rips  with  tho.se  issues  at  its  an- 
nual fall  meeting  here  tomorrow. 

Th. 

gin  until  Friday  morning,  but 
what  transpires  tomorrow  at  a 
round  of  closed  committee  meet- 
'Tig-i  will  determine  the  pattern  of 
tne  Fr"day  session. 

Two  years  ago  the  conference 
missed  passing  a  grants-in-aid 
measure  by  one  vote.  The  tally 
was  5-3  in  favor  of  grants,  with 
six  votes  needed  to  pass. 

Recent  events  have  pointed  up 
the  need  for  some  athletic  scholar- 
ship regulations.  Six  such  plans 
will  be  considered  by  faculty 
chairmen  at  their  closed  sessions 
tomorrow.  Five  come  from  a  spe- 
cial committee  appointed  by  Dr. 
Charles  Jordan  of  Duke,  ACC 
president,  to  study  grants.  A  sixth 
is  offered  by  the  coaches  commit- 
tee on  recruiting,  headed  by  Bill 
.Murray  of  Duke. 

The  i-ecruiting  issue  was  climax- 
ed last  month  when  the  NCAA 
slapped  a  four-year  probation 
against  North  Carolina  State  for 
alleged  recruiting  irregularities  in 
the  case  of  Jackie  Moreland.  The 
6-8  freshman  from  Minden,  La- 
has  not  been  approved  for  ACC 
athletic  elegibilily  by  Jim  Weaver, 
.\CC  commissioner. 

Both  State  College  and  More- 
land  have  denied  guilt  of  the 
charges  brought  by  the  NCAA. 

State  Chancellor  Carey  H.  Bos- 
tian  has  been  invited  to  appear 
before  the  faculty  chairmen  to- 
morrow following  his  request  last 
week  for  an  "independent  and 
pumplete"  investigation  by  the 
national  group. 

He  said  he  felt  the  best  way  for 
State  to  appeal  is  through  the  con- 
ference. 

After  Bostian  is  heard  the  ACC 
executive  committee  will  study 
the  matter  of  intervention  by  the 
conference.  An  announcement  of 
■he  decision  is  not  expected  be- 
fr;re   Friday. 

The  recruiting  phase  of  high 
pressure  college  athletics,  which 
bciled  over  with  the  probation  of 
State,  had  numerous  football  over- 
tones, as  well,  in  recent  months. 

North  Carolina  State  and  the 
University  of  North  Carolina  ex- 
changed bitter  words  in  the  con- 
test for  .services  of  a  freshman 
fullback.  The  player.  Cornell  John- 
son of  High  Point,.  N.C..  ended  ud 
at  North  'Carolina  after  having 
earlier  accepted  an  athletic  schol- 
arship  at    State. 

In  addition.  North  Carolina  re- 
cently dropped  from  its  squad  end 
Vince  Olen  when  he  admitted  hav- 
ing falsified  his  application  and 
eligibility  papers  by  using  an  a.s- 
sumed  name  after  having  played 
at  Temple  University  under  his 
real  name  of  Olenik  In  IMO.  Olen's 
high  school  principal,  Michael 
Shockloss  of  Swoyersville,  Pa.. 
High  School,  said  "the  North  Caro- 
lina people"  had  been  told  the 
youth  had  been  to  Temple  and 
"they  said  not  to  worry  about  it." 
All  this  happened  before  Jim  Ta- 
tum and  a  new  coaching  regime 
took  over  at  North  Carolina  last 
January. 

Minor  rules  changes  and  numer- 
ous committee  reports  will  be  act- 
ed on,  but  they  are  overshadowed 
by  the  recruiting  rumpus. 


United  States'  Chances  Are  Slim  At 
Olympic  Games  As  Russians  Cut  Lead 


BV  TED  SMITS 

MELBOURNE  (^^— Russian  ath- 
letes have  surged  to  within  20 
points  of  the  United  States  in  the 
ding-dong  battle  for  the  unofficial 
team  honors  at  the  1956  Olympic 
Games,  and  American  hopes  of 
pulling  out  victory  virtually  dis- 
appeared today. 

After  Russian  successes  in  gym- 
nastics yesterday  the  score  stood 
formal  meeting  will  not  be- !  at  538H:  points  for  the  U.  S.  and 


Mural  Announcements 

The  intramurals  office  releas- 
e<i  the  follewinfl  announcements 
yesterday: 

Anyone  intorMtod  in  entering 
the  Outlaw  Basketball  Leagu*  is 
invited  to  go  by  the  intramural 
office  and  sign  up.  The  league 
is  opfn  to  ovoryono  and  play 
will  got  under  way  December  11. 

Entries  for  intramural  hand- 
ball cloto  today  at  five  o'clocit. 

Intramural  basketball  will  get 
under  way  Monday,  Oocomber 
10. 

Fraternity  Blue  Loague  Tag 
Football  Finals  today.  Dorm  fi- 
nals Friday.  Frat  and  White 
League  plays  Blue  Loague 
champs  Friday. 

All  campus  championships 
Monday  in  Kenon  Stadium.  Game 
time,  4:00  p.m. 


518'2  for  Russia..  This  was  under 
the  system  of  10  points  for  each 
first  place,  and  five,  four,  three, 
iwo,  one  for  the  other  five  plac- 
ings. 

In  gold  medals,  the  U.  S.  leads 
with  31,  to  23  for  Russia.  The  So- 
viets lead  in  second  place,  or  sil- 
ver medals,  with  25,  as  against  22 
for  the  U.  S.  Bronze  medals  show 
24  for  Russia  and  12  for  the  Amer- 
icans. 

Only  a  handful  of  swimming  fi 
nals  remain  for  the  U.  S.  to  pick 
up  additional  points,  while  Russia 
still  has  plenty  to  pick  up  in  gym- 
nastics, Greco-Roman  WTestiing, 
and  fencing. 

Thus  domination  of  the  United 
States  in  the  Olympics  that  began 
with  the  first  modern  games  in 
Athens  in  1896  almost  certainly  is 
coming  to  an  end. 

But  by  the  irony  of  fate,  Amer- 
ican achievement  of  15  gold  med- 
als in  men's  track  and  field  and 
one  in  women's  track  represents 
a  high  water  mark  in  this  sport 
that  is  the  center  of  the  games. 

Despite  the  setback  in  unofficial 
points,  this  was  a  great  day  for 
the  Red,  White  and  Blue. 

Pretty  Shelley  Mann  from  Ar- 
lington, Va.,  led  a  grand  slam 
sweep  of  the  wonxen's  100-meter 
butterfly  swimming  event,  and  set 
a  new  Olympic  record  of  1:11.0. 

She  was  followed  by  Nancy  Jane 
Ramey  of  Mercer  Island,  Wash., 
and  Mary  Jane  Sears  of  Chevy 
Chase,  Md. 

George  Breen  of  Buffalo,  N.  Y., 
served  notice  on  Australia's  idol, 
.Murray  Rose,  winner  of  Olympic 
MM)  hundred  meter^ihat  the  .Amer- 
ican must  be  reckoned  with  in  the 
i,500  or  metric  mile. 

Breen  smashed  the  world  record 
to  bits  in  his  qualifying  trial,  set- 
ting a  new  mark  of  17:52.9.  Rose's! 
old  record  was  17:59.5.  They  meet  i 
in  the  tinals  Friday. 

In    yachting,    Bert    Williams    of  j 
Chicago  piloed  the  Kathleen  58  to 
lirst   place   in   the  star  class  and . 
the  United  States  also  picked  up  a  1 
third    in   the   dinghy   division   as 
Sweden    won    two   yachting    fir.sl.i 
and    Denmark    and    New    Zealand 
jopped  the  other  gold  medals. 

And  in  swimming,  lt>yi'ar-old 
Carin  Cone  of  Ridgewood,  N.  J.. 
lost  a  heart  breaker  to  Judy  Grin- 
iiam  of  Britain  in  the  lOO-mcter 
jackstroke  in  which  both  gir»s 
v.cre  timed  in  1:12.9  for  a  new 
Olympic  record. 

-There  also  was  hope  for  United 
States  points — possibly  even  one, 
■Avo,  three — in  the  high  dive  in 
which  Dick  Connors,  Passadena, 
Calif.,  led  after  the  six  prelimi- 
nary dives  with  80.20. 

Joaquin  Capilia  of  Me.vico  held 
•second  with  78.68  and  Josef  Gar- 
lach  of  Hungary  was  in  third  place 
with  77.77. 

Gary  Tobian  of  Los  Angeles, 
held  fourth  with  76.77,  Roman 
Brener  of  Russia  was  fifth  with 
76.56  and  William  Farrell  of  Los 
Angers  won  sixth  spot  with  75.07. 

The  reason  for  American  opti- 
mism is  that  the  dives  that  lie 
ahead  are  of  the  optional  and  dii- 
licult  character  in  which  the 
Americans  e.\cel. 

Actually  on  first  dives  the 
.'Vmericans  trailed  badly,  but  as  the 
-Jay  wore  on  their  scores  kcpl 
mounting.  High  dive  finals  will  be 
held  today. 

In  other  swimming  events  toda) 


The  Dollar 
Table  at 
The  Intimate 
Bookshop 
Solves  More 
Christmas 
Problems 
Than 

Santa  Clause! 


only  scattered  points  can  be  ex 
pected — in  200-meter  breaststroke 
for  men,  lOO^eter  backstroke  for 
men,  and  400-meter  relay  for  wom- 
en. 

The  Australians  are  just  plainly 
too  good. 

Americans  are  asking  them- 
selves at  the  Olympic  Village 
"What  went  wrong  in  theso 
eames?" 

Actually  things  could  scarcely 
have  gone  better  in  track  and 
field.  But  the  Australians  cut  se- 
verely into  American  points  in 
swimming  and  in  gymnastics.  The 
Japanese  failed  to  hold  down  the 
Russians  as  had  been  expected.  In 
boxing  the  Russians  did  well  and 
the   Americans  faltered   even    to 


losing  two  boxers  who  missed  were  always  Russians  ready  to 
making  their  weight  by  tiny  mar-  challenge  while  Americans  were 
gins.  I  lor  the  most  part  bringing  up  the 

In    rowing    the    United     States    ^^^''• 
made  its  best  ever  Olympic  show- !     There  undoubtedly  will  be  loud 
ing   but   the  Russians   were   righl    post-mortems  when  the  American 
it  America's  heels.  team  returns  shortly  before  Christ- 


Carolina 


The  American  weightlifters  die' 
not  fare  as  well  as  expected  and 
:he  Ru.ssians  did  better  than  they 
hoped.  Then  in  the  sports  so  dear 
to  the  European  heart — gymnas- 
tics, fencing,  freestyle  wrestling, 
Greco-Roman  wrestling,  soccer 
water  polo,  field  hockey,  shooting 
and  the  modern  pentathlon — there 


mas  but  the  fact  is  it  performed 
creditably  in  all  the  major  nation- 
al sports  and  only  lost  ground  in 
ihose  in  which  participation  in  the 
United  States  is  confined  to  a 
handful  of  athletes. 


CL«*r 


! 


6tBLE 

Tracy 

Colbert 

Lamarr 


CHRISTMAS  IS  NO  PROBLEM 
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CONTEST  CLOSES  DEC  7 

THE   LEADING 
FIVE    ARE  : 

Myron  ConkI in 

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Johnny  Foster 
Larry  Fon 

Wes  Thompson     \ 

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COME   IN  AND  VOTE  FOR  THE  MAN 
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VOL.   LVII,   NO.   63 


U  II  C  Llbfinr 
Serials  9«pt« 
Chajel  Hli:»  M.  C* 


OThe 


V  SOLONS 

They'll    get    a    chance    to    do 
good.  See  page  2. 


Cotnpltte  UP)  Wire  Service 


CHAPEL    HILL,   NORTH   CAROLINA,   FRIDAY,   DEpEMBER   7,    1956 


Offices   in   Graham   Memorial 


FOUR  PAGES  THIS  ISSUE 


Bob    Young 

Asks  For  More  Housing 
For  Married  Students 


By  NEIL  BASS  I 

President  Bob  Young  touched  on 
SIX  specific  campus  "situations"  in 
!iis  Stale  of  the  Campus  Address; 
delivered   before  the  student  Leg- 
islature last  night. 

Other   than    stipulating   prevail- 
ing conditions  in  numerous  phases ; 
of  campus  life,  the  most  conspicu- ; 
(»us    portion    of    Young's    address  ■ 
.vas  aimed  at  bringing  about  minor 
-hanges  in   the   legislative   branch 
of  student  government. 
In   this   area.   Young   suggested; 

(1)  Reactivation  of  the  Legisla- 
ture executive  committee  to  in- 
crease cooperation  and  understand- 
ing on  all  sides. 

(2)  Increase  in  the  power  of  the 
Rules  Committee  to  allow  resump-  ^ 
tion  of  the  practice  of  administer- 
ing  qualification    tests    to   legisla-  j 
tors.  I 

(3)  Establishment    of    a    Styles' 
Committee    to    make   grammatical 
and  stylistic  changes  in  legislative 
'neasurcs. 
OTHER  SITUATIONS 

Other  situations  dealt  with  by  i 
Young  v.ere:  | 

Graham  Memorial:  Young  stipu- 
'dled  that  a  committee  of  the  GM ' 
^yoard  of  directors  is  "preparing  a 
very  extensive  and  comprehensive  | 
report  ...  of  the  dire  need  for  a  ■ 
)iew    and    expanded    building    to 
meet   the   need   of  our  rising  en-  • 
roUment.  Our  plan  is  to  prepare  a 
strong  case  for  a  new  building  and 
present  our  case  to  the  1957  Gen- 
eral As.sepbly.  if  the  local  admin- 
istration approves  our  plans." 

Athletic  Situation:  The  president 
1  hanked   the   athletic   director  for ' 
reducing  date  tickets,  complimeot 
ed   the  J[>asketbalJ   team,   and  tj>« ,' 
handling  ot  the  "Vince  Owen  Case"  i 
by  the  Men's  HoBor  Council.  ' 

Housing  Situation:  Yoang  an-  j 
nounced  that  he  would  meet  wllhj 
James  Wadsworth,  housing  officer,  i 
and  the  administration  to  prepare 
a  "strong  case"  for  the  request  of 
200  apartments  for  married  stu- 1 
dents.  I 

Chancellor   Situation:    President 
Young    complimented   vice    Presi-  j 
(lent     Sonny     Evans's     committee 
which  aired  the  recommendations 
offered  by  students  to  fill  the  seat 
lo  be  vacated  by  Chancellor  Robert 
House   in   the   spring.   Young   also ; 
culogozed  House,  calling  him    "the 
symbol  of  Carolina  with  all  its  tra- ; 
ditions  and  glories."  j 

Student  Government  Situation; 
Here  Young  offered  his  suggested 
improvements  in  the  legislative 
branch,  and  apologized  for  the  "in- 

I 

Lambda  Chi 
Bowl  Game 

i 

Tomorrow 

The  fourth  annual  Lambda  Chi 
Alpha  Bowl  Game  will  pit  the 
Lambda  Chis  from  Carolina 
against  the  Lambda  Cbls  of  Duke 

The  game  will  be  held  at  2  p.m. 
Saturday    in    Duke    Stadium. 

According  to  Kim  Ballis.  In- 
tramural Manager,  the  Lambda 
Chis  from  Carolina  will  have  the 
edge  over  the  brothers  from  Duke 
as  to  weight,  ability,  and  exper- 
i<'nce.  Even  with  these  advantages 
this  could  prove  to  be  a  tight 
game  for  the  Carolina  brothers, 
as  was  evidenced  by  the  6-6  tie 
in    Kenan    Stadium   last  season. 

The  boys  from  Carolina  have 
developed  several  top  notch  plays 
which  will  depeud  on  the  ability 
of  several  outstanding  former 
high   school   players. 

According  to  sources  on  Metii- 
odist  flats,  a  fairly  large  crowd  is 
expected    to    turn    out    to    watch 

(See  Lavibda  CM,  Page  3) 

IN  THE  INFIRMARY 

^Ttodent*  in  th^Tnflrmiry^rov 
terday  includtd: 

Harrington  Alexander/  Mal- 
colm McLoan,  Louis  Cody,  Stanly 
Garriss,  Francis  Ooferowolski, 
Vincent  Muliori,  Rotmte  Koos, 
Robert  Perry,  Alexander  Gala- 
way,  Robert  Morrison,  and  James 

CHamb|c«, 


Changes  In   Stud  en  f    Legislature 

_• ^ 

Scholastic  Society 
Initiates  33  Members 


convenieitce"  caused  to  the  campus 
oy  fall  elections.  He  put  the  blame 
on  his  shoulders  for  certain  elec- 
tion "regularities,"  saying.it  dem- 
onstrated a  'lack  of  foresight"  on 
his  part. 

Youngs  address  in  full  will  be 
released  on  the  editorial  page  of 
thi.c  paper. 


Legislature 
Pays  Out 
$1,861.29 


By  NEIL   BASS 

The  student  Legislature  approp- 
riated a  toUl  of  $1,861.29  at  last 
night's  session. 

Of  this  figure,  xhe  University 
Glee  Club  received  $1,000,  the 
Yackety  Yack  got  $800.  and  the 
Campus  Chest  got  $61.29. 

All  three  appropriation  bills 
ran  into  little  opposition. 

The  other  measure  passed  by 
the  lawmakers  was  a  resolution 
asking  that  the  director  of  opera- 
tions assume  responsibility  for 
mainteance  of  television  sets  in 
University  dormitories. 

Appropriation  received  by  the 
Glee  Club  is  to  be  used  to  defray 
transportation  expenses  for  tours. 
The    measure    was    co-sponsored. 

Money  appropriated  to  the 
Campus  Chest  is  to  be  used  to 
pay  for  two  trophies  awarded  to 
fraternity  and  dortirttorj-  which 
contributed  roT>s-t  to  the  recent 
Campus  Chest  drive.  Bill  was  Stu- 
dent Party  sponsored. 

The  S800  approprition  received 
by  the  Yackety  Yack  is  to  be 
used  to  finance  additional  cop'es 
for  a  rising  enrollment.  Bill  was 
SP-sponsored. 
APPOINTMENTS 

Appointments  announced  by 
Speaker  Sonny  Evans  arc: 

Ways  and  Means  Committee:  A! 
Goldsmith,  chairman.   Sonny  Hall- 
ford.    Bill    McNaull.     Al      Alphin. 
Clemm  Shankle,  Jim  Alford.  Jer- 
l  ry    Cole,    Benny      Thomas,      Mike 
;  Weaver. 

Finance    Committee:    Jcrr\-    Op- 

penheimer,  chairman,  Bob  Carter, 

Don    Furtado,    Tom    Long.    John 

!  Brooks,   Wilson  Cooper.   Bill   Red- 

j  ding.  Miss  Sheila  Cronan.  Miss  Va- 

,  lerie  Von  Ammon. 

Rules  Committee:  Bill  Baum. 
:  chairman.  John  Ray,  Frank 
j  Brown.  Miss  Betty  Huffman. 
j  Chuck  Howerton.  Miss  Kitty  Corr, 
;  Miss  Julia  Ann  Crater.  Charles 
i  Cushman,  Ben  Van  Woltz. 

Appointments    committee:     Son- 
ny Hallford.  Benny  Thomas.  Herb 
I  Greenblatt. 


J.  D.  WRIGHT 
.  surprise  witness 


Thii-ty-th'.ee    candidates     for     Plii 

Beta    Kappa    nere   initiated   by   the 

Carolina     chapter    of    the    national 

l.onorary  scholastic   fraternity  Wed- 

;  i.esda.\'  afternoon. 

Iniliatiun  was  conduited  by  the 
« liapter  officers:  Jim  Exum  of 
.Snow  Hill,  president;  Joanna 
I  Scrou'g.s  ot"  Chapel  Hill  and  Cla\ton 
1  bavid.son  of  Moore.sville.  co-vice 
I  !>resident.s:  Bill  .McLean  of  Lum- 
!  IxMton.    recording     secretar.v;     and 


JANt:     bKOCK 
, . .  state's    untness 


OICKIb   PICKERRELL 
. . .  dt'/e?idant 


STUDENTS  'GENERALLY  BORED' 


Mackay   Says   Georgia  To  Remain 
Within  Law  On  Court's  Decision 


By  CLARKE  JONES 
James  A.  Mackay.  representative 
in  the  Georgia  General  Assembly, 
said  yesterday  his  state  .  "is  nut 
championing  integration  but  will 
be  against"'  measures  taken  out.'^ide 
the  law  to  get  around  the  Supreme 
Court's  decision. 

Speaking  to  members  of  a  state 

government  political  science  course 

of  Dr.   David   G.   Monroe,   he   said 

I  believe  you've,  got  to  live  within 

the  framework  of  the  law.' 

"I  think  the  point  will  come,  as 


news 

m 

brief 


Young  Calls 
Officers  Week 
Important  Time 

In  connection  nith  the  present 
'"Kdow  Your  Dorm  Ofticers  Week" 
oeclarcd  by  the  Interdormitory 
Council,  President  Bob  Young  ^is 
sued  the  following  statement: 

"For    all    mens    dormitory    resi- 
dents,   tills    should    be    a    most    im- 
IJortant  time  of  the  year.  It  is  for 
>x>ur  benefit  and  for  the  benefit  of 
the  fDC  that  tliis  has  been  declared 
I  Know  Your  Dorm  Officers  Week.' 
.'     "Ihiring  this  week  much  emphasis 
■  will  be  placed  on  project*  tliat  will 
'  help   each   resident    know    who    his 
dorm  officers  are.   I  hope  each  of 
us  will  taik^  ad\-antai;e  ot  this  op- 
portunity. 

"Tlus  'Week'  is  a  new  idea  for 
student  go^■crnment  initiated  by 
Sonny  Hallford,  IDC  president.  The 
success  of  the  work  of  our  dormi- 
tory officers  and  our  dormitory 
projects  wnll  depend  on  whether  or 
i  not  all  dormitory  residents  yet  to 
know  each  other  well  and  work  to- 
ietlier  for  the  rest  of  the  year. 

"Lets  make  it  a  successful  jear 
'-jj-  the  IDC.  You  do  your  part  and 
Ihc  dorm  olficers  will  do  tbeirsj.'' 


cflnpus 

SEEN  I 


Gov.  .Mjirvin  Griffin  .said,  when  sve 
will  settle  down  and  accept  tlic  de- 
cision." 

Maek.iy  called  for  calmness  and 
reflective  thinking  on  the  su'^ject. 
Me  pointed  out  Georgia  has  an  at 
tornay  general  who  goes  "hogwiid 
and  says  you're  a  traitor  if  you 
rjre  calm  about  it.  " 

His  remarks  came  alter  ques- 
tions  were   put    to    him    by    class 


Micmbers. 

In  answer  to  a  question  as  to 
.low  Georgia  college  students  lee!  i 
<ibout  the  Court's  decision,  he  said 
ihey  are  ■■generally  bored"  with 
the  whoie  thing.  If  there  is  a  vote 
on  whether  the  college  is  to  be 
integrated  or  not  "'students  usiial- 
'N  vote  overwhelmingly  in  iavor 
of  integration,  ^ut  usually  they 
don't  care,"'  he  said. 


Forces  Of  Change  In 
South  Seen  By  Mckay 


FROM  RADIO  DISPATCHES 

LONDON— British  Prime  Minis- 
ter Sir  .\nthony  Ed'en  won  a  vote 
of  confidence  on  his  action  in  the 
SJuez  Canal  problem.  But  a  refusal 
to  vote  by  15  members  in  the 
Con.-,ervative  Party  was  reported 
i.s   meaning  a   loss   in   prestige  for 

Eden. 

*     *     * 

UNITED  N.\TIONS,  N.Y.— U.S. 
."..mbassador  Henry  Cabot  Lodge  Jr. 
was  conrerring  with  other  nations 
on  the  lefusal  of  the  puppet  Hun- 
garian government  to  admit  UN 
Secretary  Geneial  Dag  Hammar- 
skjold. 

The  Soviet  Union  threatened  to 
block  the  Security  Council  unless 
CzechoU>vakia  is  named  to  replace 
Yugoslavia  on  the  council. 

*  M  si: 

ICNOXVILLE.  Tenn.  —  Federal 
Judge  Taylor  promised  to  try 
within  10  days  16  persons  accused 
of  racial  violence  which  closed  in- 
tegrated Clinton  High  School. 

MELBOURNE,    Australia      -    40 
members  oi   the  Hungarian  Olym- 
pic team  refused  to  return  to  their 
lative  Hungary. 
BUSES  — 

RALEIGH  — (AP)—  Buses  are 
scheduled  to  roll  again  over 
strike-bound  Carolina  Coach  Co. 
Routes  between  Raleigh  and  Wil- 
liamston  and  between  Raleigh  and 
Washington. 

The  State  Utilities  Commission 
yesterday  said  S.  D.  Small,  own- 
er of  Durham-Chapel  Hifl  h%:n 
lines. plans  to  begin  serving  the 
points  Saturday  under  emergency 
authority  which  will  expire  when 
the  Carolina  Coach  strike  is  set- 
tled. The  strike  began  at  mid- 
night Nov.  8  and  neither  side  has 
shown  any  willingness  to  give 
ground 

Three  bus  lines  now  are  oper- 
ating under  emergency  authority 
between  Greensboro  and  Durham 
— the  Surburban  Bus  Lines  Co. 
of  High  Piont.  M.  &  B  Transit 
Lines  of  Burlington  and  Small's 
Durham-Chapel  Hill  b  us  lines. 
Each  uses  a  slightly  different 
route. 


By    GRAHAM    SNVACR  - 

'  hrei;;  are  iiiovable  trailitiuns 
and  irresistible  forces  effecting 
changes  in  the  South.  "  James  Mc- 
Kay told  a  group  of  people  la.st 
night   in   Lenjir   Hall. 

While  bL'^el  with  conflicting 
traditions  and  numerous  prob- 
lems, the  Georgia  General  Assem- 
bly represcBtative  djeclared  that 
the  South  is  striving  to  conquer 
these  -setback.s  in  its  forward 
moves. 

Citing  the  state  of  Georgia  as  an 
example.    McKay    enumerated    the 
problems  facing  the  region  of  the  j 
South  and  then  recounted  the  lac- 1 
tors    responsible    for    the    changes ' 
of  improvement   in  the  South.  He  ] 
stated   that  there  are  '"acute  limi- 
tations   in    the    public   schcol  /sys- 
tem,   inadequacies    in   communica- 
tions   and    in    newspapers,    and    in 
the  existence  of  almo.st  unbelieva- 
ble conditions  of  poverty  in  some 
regions."    McKay    stated    that    al- 
though   the   state    nf    Georgia    has] 
many    natural    resources,    there    is  | 
a    laelj    of    facilities      to      exploit  j 
them. 


'-  McfCny  allribtTteri  mtmy  of  the 
S^Ultll'.^  problems  to  a  "defined  op 
position  to  chan^ie  and  a  prevalent 
sense  of  suspicions  among  man.v 
people.' 

.-\llhough  the  bi-racial  situation 
in  the  S:jiith  is  a  major  problem 
confronting  the  South  today.  Mc- 
Kay declared,  "it  is  a  problem  as 
old  as  the  South  itself,  and  one 
subject    to  the   forces  of  change." 

Listing  the  changing  moves  ap 
parent  in  the  South.  McKay  again 
us'.'d  the  state  of  Georgia  as  an 
example  of  improvements  which 
would  promise  greater  future 
chan;ies.  He  declared  that  jf  the 
S  uth  can  solve  its  scientific,  edu- 
cation;il.  and  political  iifoblems.  it^ 
will   have  solved  its  .setbacks. 

McKay  concluded:  "1  am  charged 
with  being  a  hide-bound  optimist; 
I  look  with  expectation  to  the  fut- 
ure—  in  the  next  fifteen  vears — 
and  to  the  astounding  clianges 
the  future  will  bring  to  the  South.  , 
I  feel  that  these  forc.?s  of  change  : 
wilt  cnueate  new  values  and  will 
still  retain  thv  useful  one.s  of  the 
past." 


Eb  SUTTON 
•  fc-  . . .  "victim" 

Note  Declares 
Miss  Pickerrell 
Innocent 

By  GARY  NICHOLS 

New  e\  ideuse  has  come  to  light 
.n   the    "Sutton   murder  case". 

Yesterday    the    DTii    receixed    a  ' 
eonfossion  note  \yhich  had  also  Ix-en 
sent  to  "Sherilf"  David  Evans  test-' 
■lying  to  the  innocence  of  .Miss  Dick-  | 
o.\    Pickerrell. 

Miss  Pickerrell  iioes  on  trial  to- 
night in  the  trial  of  the  State  ot 
Mannin.i;   \s    Pickerrell. 

-Miss  Pickerrell  has  yet  to  make 
a  comment  on  the  case  other  than 
a  plea  of  not   guilty.  ■ 

The  letter  reads: 

"Dear  Mr.  Evans. 

"I  have  contained  nivself  this 
kmg.  and  now  1  nutst  get  this  oft 
my   mind. 

"I  can't  bear  to  .see  this  iuntt- 
tc-nt* Jrtrii' Wckcv^;  iHi  «tender^  aiiW 
.-.(•cused.  I  niiist  tell  you  the  truth.  1 
k  llori  Suhon.  1  had  to  do  it.  .Sonio- 
t'Mns:  inside  Just   forced   nie. 

"Fran    Uobi^owshi 
"210    .\.vcock 
Tar  Heel 

"Wca'izinu  that   tiiis   is  inioorlani 
I    thowulit    I   should  write  this  to  be 
■)ul)li>hed.     so    iier    name    will     Ix* 
completely  clear  in  the  eyes  of  the 

pl'l)l!C.'" 

The  trail,  sponsored  each  year  by 
Phi  .\lpha  Delta  legal  fvaiernity. 
vill  be  held  tonight  at  7:30  p.m. 
.n  Mannm^  Hall  Court  room.  Pre 
-idinu  over  the  case  will  be  Su- 
'K'dor  Court  Judge  W.  .\.  Lelaiid 
AlcKeithan    frhin    Pinehurst. 

At  ;i:.">0  p.m.  today  a  jurv  of  12 
vill  be  chosen  from  .50  students  who 
received  .*nmnion.s.  The  public  i.« 
Muiied   in   Ixrth   instances. 

Tlie  trail  is  ex;v(  ted  to  take  on 
idded  fire  when  Miss  Jane  Broik 
takes  the  .stnnd  to  testify  against 
Miss  Pickerrell.  Miss  Brock  is  the 
<»i:e  wh<i  i*p!aeed  .Miss  Pitkerrell 
in  the  affei.'nons . iUf  Sutton. 
^'^  ^  / 
(Sfc   Note  Di'clares.   Pai^e  3) 


Imports  To 
Be  Guests 
For  Dance 

.'Vpproximately  200  women  from 
Meredith  College  will  airive  by 
bus  at  Woollen  Gymnasium  be- 
tween  7-8  o'clock   Saturday  night. 

The  occasion  is  a  campus-wide 
informal  dance  sponsored  by  the 
Order   of  the   (Jrail. 

The  dance,  music  tor  which  will 
be  provided  by  the  15-piece  Duke 
Amba.ssadors,  will  last  from  8-11 
o'clock.  Admission  will  be  SI  per 
couple   or   stag. 

PRESIDENTS   STATEMENT 

In  connection  with  the  dance, 
freshman  class  President  Charlie 
Wilson  released  the  following 
statement: 

"As  this  Grail  dance  was  organ- 
ized   primarily    for   the    benefit   of 
.freshm<io,  your  class  aHicers  urge 
you  to'attend. 
I       "There     will     be     approxjniatel.v 
*  200    unescorted    girls   from  .Mere- 
dith,  therefore  you  need  not  liave 
I  dates    to    attend. 

"As  freshinen  ai-e  denied  the. 
right  to  operate  cars  on  campus 
by  Trustee  regulation,  such  func- 
tions as  tfcis  arc  particularly  bene- 
ficial to  our  class. 

'Th.-refore.  by  attending  this 
dance  and  c^ntributini:  to  its  suc- 
cess. perh:ip.s  a  precent  will  be 
established  which  will  enrich  our 
social  program  here  at  Carolina. 
The  dance  is  informal  with 
coats  and  ties  requested,  accord- 
ing to  Grail  Delegata  Luther  Hod- 
ges. 

GM'S  SLATE 

The     following     activities     are  _ 
scheduled  for  GM  today: 

Grail  Room — 1:00  p.m.  Execu 
tive  Counsel  of  Student  Govern- 
m«nts,  Roland  Parker  1  and  2  - 
2:00  p  m.  ITMCA  Forum,  Rendez- 
vous Room — 7:30  p.m.  Sociology, 
5:00  p  m.  Talent  Chorus. 


Air  Force  ROTC  Man    Becomes  Citizen 


Ttcv    c'oy.v    fiiour.ing    in    front 
of   iVetc   JEu-^t — bttween   ci^j^f, 


Boydan    M..    ZIotnick,    a    sophomore    AFROTC    member,    becomes 
a  citizen  of  the  United  States  in  certmonles  held  in  Greensboro.  He 
is   pictured   here   with   Mrs.   VV.    0.   Geirin||er,   clerk    in    the    Federal 
^?Vrt  It  Qr^ensboro,  who  si||n«d  p*ptrs  fof  ZJQtnick  tp  become  a 


citizen.  ZIontnick's  family  came  to  the  United  States  as  refugees 
from  Poland  in  1944,  and  settled  in  Maxton.  ZIotnick  went  to  high 
school  at  Deep  River  and  entered  UNC  in  1955  on  a  Boy  Scout  Assn. 
scholarship, 


Dr.  E.  L.  Mackie.  Cha]X'l  Hill,  cor- 
responding secretary  and  treasurer. 

Dean  Heiu-;  P  Brandis  Jr.  of 
the  U.\C  School  of  Law  made  a 
<^Iiort  talk  at  the  ceremonies,  held 
on  Dec.  5  in  celebration  of  the 
".nniversary  of  the  foundins  of  the 
(.rganization  on  Dec.  .5.  1775. 

Frnest  L.  Mackie.  Dean  of  Stu- 
dent .Vwards,  co:i'niented  that  the 
group  corresponded  to  the  usual 
number  inducted  b>  toe  fraternity 
in  the  fall,  and  that  a  larjier  lM>dy 
of  initiates  would  Ik-  taken  in  the 
-jM'inj;. 

To  qualify  for  F*hi  Beta  Kappa 
memljer.ship.  a  student  here  for 
three  .vears  or  ni(»re  must  have  a 
B  average,  or  92.5  percent.  If  a 
student  is  here  for  onl.v  two  years' 
•■, ork  as  an  undergradute.  he  is 
eligible  if  he  i;as  an  average  of  at 
itast  94  per  cent.  An  .\  Ls  consider- 
ed as  97. J  i>er  cent. 

Tile  Xi  uiiliates  are  Ellen  E. 
lirauer.  Chapei  Mill;  Thomas  S. 
Rriikhou.se.  Rocky  Point;  Daniel  E. 
Clark.  F:\erett.s;  llerlx-n  O.  Davis. 
liOxl>oro;  IJonald  G.  Gannon  and 
Kol>erl  L.  Lindsey  Jr  .  Charlotte; 
Fred  L.  Ginn  and  Pc.mela  .\.  Royall, 
Golds'.ioro: 

William  L.  CJodwin.  Smithfield; 
Willicim  D.  Gra.\.  Hoanoke  Rapids; 
Robert  B.  Jacobus  and  Herman  W. 
Ta.vlor  Jr..  Raleigh:  Walter  H. 
Jernigan.  Dunn;  Ralph  D.  Johnson, 
Winston-Salem. 

Reginald  G.  Mason  Jr..  Hender- 
'-on;  William  ji.  .Matthews.  Rock- 
well; .\ndrew  J.  Milner.  WUming- 
lon:  Thomas  C.  Pitt,  Rocky  Mount; 

.\rthur  R.  Price  and  Roy  W. 
Wil.sou.  Marion:  Josei>)vine  B.  C 
Ruffin  and  .\lari:>n  S.  Wai-ehime. 
Durham:  I.ul)..  T.  .Slienill  Jr..  Con- 
cord ; 

.\nn  (".  Welch.  (Jreen.sboro;  Ralph 
L.  Wflson.  Ha-nlel:  Lewis  R.  Bin- 
lord.  .Norfolk.  \'a.:  Doiio^las  D. 
CantrelK  Seaford.  Dela.:  .\ancy  Afc- 
Fadden.    Mlanla.  Ga  : 

Colin  R.  .McMillan.  Houston.  Tex- 
.<;:  Chariot !e  F.  .Miles.  .\nnapolL»-. 
vld.:  C'larles  W.  Oyer.  Woleott. 
\.   v.:   Timothy  Wo:>d.  Tampa.  Fla. 

Mogiil  Speaks 
About  Duties 
Of  Dorm  Heads 

Director  oi  Student  Activities 
Sam  .Magill  spoke  to  the  Inler- 
fiormitory  Council  Wednesday 
rifiiht  «on  ■•Responsibilities  ol  D«rm 
Uifjc-eiv" 

.Magill.  a  former  dorm  resident 
himself,  emphasized  the  need  for 
■  comimmity""   on  ca.mpus. 

"'liie'  campus  i>  fragmented.  ' 
.Magill  said.  He  mentioned  •'com- 
l)aitmentalization'  of  (ireeks  and 
indepeniienl.s.  and  the  necessity  of 
establishing  •unity"  between  the 
various  groups. 
PREREQUISITES 

Magill  listed  the  following  fac- 
tors as  prerequisites  toward  es 
tabiishing  the  desired  unified 
'•campus  community:"* 

(1)  Establishment  of  "identity'' 
ty""   of    individuals. 

(2)  "Acceptance  "  of  individ- 
uels  in  the  overall  scheme  of 
dormitory   life. 

(3)  "Redemption"'  of  unaccep- 
table and  unsuccessful  individ- 
uals through  corrective  judicial 
action. 

Oilier  ileuis  discussed  on  the 
' oimcils   agenda  were:   • 

il)  Necessity  of  alleviating  the 
present  "vending  machine  situa- 
tion." 

.Man.v  d.jrni  residents  are  being 
cheated  by  mechanically  tiefective 
machines,   it  was   pointed  out. 

(2)  Tlieft.s  in  dormitories. 

Stveral    vendin;>    machines    havp 
beer,  raided.  President  Sonny  Ha!l 
:or(i  »!ated. 
REPORTS 

During  committee  reports. 
Vice  President  Neil  Bass  report- 
ed that: 

(1)  Excuses  for  absences  due 
to  fraternity  meeting  conflicts 
would  not  be  accepted  by  the 
Rules  Committee. 

(2)  Solicitation  in  dormitories 
except  during  the  annual  Cam 
pus  Chest  Drive  is  •illegal. •*  Of- 

?5cc  MMULL.  fuyi.  3, 


1 

4  ^ 


1  i 


PAGE    TWO 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


FRIDAY,  DECEMBER  7.  1956 


Time  For  Modern  Thinking 
Came  In  Summer,  Governor 

"l\'r  iiinsi  Ihinl;  (nnrdi^rouslw  wr  nni.sl  think  in  ti  modern 
hJ.\Jiion.  we  inu.\l  no!  h'l  itn\lhino.  in  llwse  Inirlicnlin  days  with  om 
.shorluires  of  teachers,  stand  in  the  way  of  givin<^  oni  chiltlien  the 
best  instrnction  thitl  is  avaihifde  and  witJiin  our  mentis."  - 
North  C.aiolin.i  (.<»\.  l.utluM  Hocli;t'>.  speakinj;  to  I  ai  Ifttl  school 
siiperimiiuUiiis. 


REACTION  PIECE 


If  the  Old  North  Statf  is  ,uoin'4 
r(»  t'Hihaik  on  an  era  oi  iiKx'ern 
thinking  ahont  t'diuation.  one 
ininht  a>k  why  its  toiisiitiiiioii 
(oiuaiiis  |»ro\isioii  loi  rapid  clini- 
inaiiou  o!  the  school  svstiiii  which 
|o!  Years  Itas  made  the  dilleteiui' 
l»en\eeii  this  state  and  hei  pooi  er 
Soutiierii  lui'^hhois. 

H  we  aie  se.iiihiii<^  lot  ihi-  "hest 
edneaticm  thai  i>  available  and 
within  oni  ine.tns,'"  ue  cainiot  al- 
so Niippoit  a  ( t'listitntion  which 
sa\s  the  Stan-  ol  North  (Carolina 
(an  uithdraw  its  siip|M»tt  c»l  the 
M  hcjol  svsteiu  il  a  certain  nuinl)er 
o!   \(»ters  wants  it   to. 

*  *  *  - 

I  iie    pi«)\isions    wtie  urj^ed    l>y 

the    .i^overnor    ol    Nortii  Carolina. 

'1  he\     were    wiitten    hy  him    and 

nu'iril»eis  of   the  (.eneral  Asseinhlv 


at  seeret  meetings.  |>assed  hv  the 
leijislaiure  at  an  open  session,  and 
\«»t<<l  ntto  the  c  oiisi  it  Mt  ion  l)\  tlie 
people    at     a    state-wide    election. 

(he  provisions,  ol  course,  have 
lo  do  with  inie'^tatioii.  II  ihe  stage's 
s<  hools  are  intei;taied,  they  can  be 
closed  down:  the  state  c;;n  with- 
i\\A\\  its  support  and  pav  a  i  idic - 
nioiis  SUM!  lo  Norih  (laiolina  par- 
ents so  tiiey  can  send  their  diildieii 
to  a  sei^ic'naled    "piixale     school. 

.S(».  the  '.;t>\ci  iioi's  icmarks  sound 
laiher  h\  pc»c  riiic  al  in  \  iew  of  his 
actions    last    summer. 

I  hen,  he  was  exec  tiling  :•  meth- 
od to  execute  the  school  svsteut. 
Now.  he  wants  to  think  in  a  mod- 
ern   fashion. 

Peihaps  the-  modem  thinkinj; 
should  ha\e  come  last  snmmei.  We 
ha\e    slip|)ecl    -,c»    \ears   since   then. 


Morehead:  UNC's  Stepdad 


John  Motlev  Movfhead  Avon't 
be  !4i\in'4  an\  more  .<»Taduate  sehol- 
ai ships  this  \ear. 

I  he  reason.  ;..eordini>  to  an  of- 
licial  ol  the  .Moieliead  Founda- 
tion, is  thai  ■  tmderi^rachiates  make 
more  \ilal  contributions  to  tanifr- 
u>    lile    tlian   tio   oiaduates.*" 

loi  this  ieasonin'4.  Morehead 
.ind  his  foundation  should  be  con- 
|.;i.i  in  kited. 

Ifoth    inide  liiadualis   And   ,i;iad- 

iiatc-  student-  .ne  niu><>itant   to  the 

c  olle|t»e  c  om- 

mnn.ix.  lUit 

<>  II  1  \     one 

sej;ment      — 

t  h  e   iindeiK^ 

oradiiatc    -Hf 

is  nbsoluiel\»» 

vital    to   the 

t  h  ep  V  y 

n  n  i  V  ersitv 

ediigfjtioii,- 

We   do  not 

jiiean  to  sav 

tJxai    :-■•  '  ':i- 

ntc  stuiieni 

;c ;  >      little 

tiioic      than 

fii.inul  doiis.  ( >n  the  tojitrarv    tliey 

aie    the    seed    that    pi<>(Wt<es    i;ood 

insmictcMS    and.     e\cntuallv.     cio< - 

tois   and    Kenan      prolessois       liut 

when  it  is  a  choice  between  j^ixinsj; 

scholarships    to    i;radnates    or    un- 

deiiiiadu.ites.    we    feel    the    inuler- 

yraduates  shoii^d  l)c  given  the  ad- 

\  intauc. 


'^ 


.\loie  power  to  the  foundation 
in  its  s<h« Warship  efforts.  We  hope 
mo!  e  and  more  undei.i>iadiiates  aie 


The  Daily  Tar  Heel 

The  official  student  publication  of  tbe 
Publications  Board  of  the  University  of 
North  Carolina,  where  it  is  published 
daily  except  -Monday  and  examinatiot 
*nd  vacation  periods  and  summer  terms 
Entered  as  .second  class  matter  in  tht 
Dost  office  in  Chapel  Hill,  N.  C,  undei 
the  Act  ot  March  8.  1870.  Subscription 
rates;  mailed,  $4  per  year,  $2.50  a  semes 
ter;  delivered.  $6  a  year,  $3.50  a  semet 
ter. 


Editor 


FRED  POWLEDGE 


Managing  Editor 
News  Editor 


CHARLIE  SLOAN 


NANCY  HILL 


Business  Manager 
Sports  Editor   _ 


BILL  BOB  PLEL 
LARRY  CHEEK 


NEWS  STAFF— Clarke  Jones,  Nancy 
Hill,  Joan  Moore.  Pringle  Pipkin.  Anne 
Drake.  Edith  MacKinnon,  Wally  Kuralt, 
Mary  .\lys  Voorhees,  Graham  Snyder, 
Billy  Bames,  Neil  Bass,  Gary  Nichols, 
Page  Bernstein,  Peg  Humphrey,  Phyllis 
MaulLsby. . 


Subscription  Manager  _ 
Atfvertising  Manager  _ 
Circulation  Manager 


Dale  Staley 
Fred  Katzin 
Charlie  Holt 


BUSINESS  STAFF— Rosa  Moore,  Johnny 
Whitaker,  Dick  Leavitt,  Peter  Alper. 


SPORTS  STAFF:  Bill  King,  Jim  Purks, 
Jimmy  Harper.  Dave  Wible,  Charley 
Howson. 

Staff  Photographer  Norman  Kantor 

Staff  Artist Charlie  Daniel 

Lilirarian  Sue   Gishner 


Ni^ht  Eklitor 


Graham  Snyder 


aided  in.  their  seaic  h  aft**r  educa- 
tion in  the  years  lo  come.  The 
.Morehead  Fotiiidation  has  been  a 
i^ood  step-lather  to  .\orth  C-aiolina 
higher  edua.iion. 

Tobacco 
Industry 
Could  Cut 

.North  ( Carolina's  C.onmessman 
llaiold  C;o(»ley  has  ui;4ecr  the  tax 
peoj)Ie  to  cut  a  peiinv  oil  the  c  i^- 
aret   lew. 

.\  pennv  less  per  pac  k  would  sa\e 
us  iiueterate  smokers  a  small  for- 
tune o\er  a  period  of  veais.  Uui  we 
suggest  tlie  eut  in  package  cost 
come  from  the  maniflaVtmers.  a.<' 
well  as  from  a  L^ovLinment  tax 
slice. 

*  *  * 

.\ccordin<;  to  C.oolev.  the  lob.u - 
(o  industry  is  "sic  k."  The  pennv 
rut  would  help  both  maiiutac  t  in  er. 
f.irmei  and 
CO  n  Mimer. 
he  lepotled. 

The  man- 
u  f  a  CI  im  rs._ 
howe\c'i.  .il- 
s(»  would  do 
well  to  chop 
iheii  lelail 
prices  a  lit- 
tle. It  was 
not  too  loiii; 
a,i»c»  when 
y  o  II  (ould 
Uet     a     pack 

ol       ie''ulai-  

,     ^  COOLEY 

si/ecl.    11  o  n- 

.  .  .  .s7?ce 

filtered,     n  o  ii-meiilholaled,     plain 

old  c  i.t;arets  for   i(>  cents. 

« 

l)Ut  then,  when  maiHilac  turer.s 
started  uiKieistandiiii;  the  \aluc  of 
(oast  -  to  -  toast  .jdveitisin<>  and 
mc»iith  -  to  -  mouth  sellin'.^.  the 
cost  of  a  pack  of  Aveeds  went  up 
cpiic  klv. 

Ihe  cancer  .scare  came  a;|on;^ 
and  liie  mail u fat turers  had  to  .idd 
filters  to  their  cigarets.  I  hey  had 
to  sjH-nd  more  aKlvei  tisin^;  monev 
tellint;  the  people  that  their  brand 
definitely  (lid  not  kill  vou  on  the 
sj)oi,  that  their  fjranti  was  clean, 
that  the  bii^st'si  antl  fastest  athletes 
in  the  woi  Id  smoked  their  lirand, 
that  executives,  bandleatleis,  mov- 
ie stars  and  men  with  tattoos  on 
their  hands  smoked  their  brand — 
antl  were  belter  men  foi  it. 
*  *  # 

.\  pennv  cut  in  the  (ij<a\et  tax 
would  help  the  manufacturers,  the 
laiiners,  the  smokeis.  Hut  a  self- 
inflit  terl  tut  in  priie  by  the  indus- 
try would  help  even  ntore.  If  the 
industiy  wanted  lo  keep  prices  tip 
and  pav  the  farmer  more,  tfiat 
would  be  jgootl. 

If  it  wanted  to  cut  out  some  of 
its  more  flamboyant  advet  tisino; 
inetlu»ds  and  slice  off  the  innocent 
filler  tips  and  drain  out  the  men- 
thol, then  pay  fanners  more  and 
t  hajf;e  <ustomeis  less,  it  would  be 
even   better. 


GOP's  Viewing  Long  Range 


David  Mundy 

NOTE  ONE:  The  last  tim« 
Reaction  Piece  appeared  there 
was  a  note  at  the  top  declaring 
that  the  author  is  a  "Independ- 
ent turned  Republican."  Hor- 
f'es!  He  is  the  opposite,  and 
will  remain  so  until  at  least 
the  resurrection  day  of  Sen. 
Taft. 

NOTE  TWO:  God,  contrary 
to  recent  splurges  on  The  Daily 
Tar  Heel  editorial  page,  will 
not  be  discussed  in  Reaction 
Piece.  Eisenhower,  maybe,  but 
no  closer  approach  will  be  made 
to  any  of  the   gods. 

Far  be  it  from  me  to  tell  the 
Republicans  what  to  do,  other 
than  to  tell  some  of  them  to  take 
their  you-know-whats  and  go 
you-know  where.  So  put  thi.s 
down   to  informed   speculation. 

Seatv'd  in  Wa.shinyton,  or  wher- 
ever el.se  those  ivy-shrouded 
eggheads"  sit,  the  party  strate- 
£isls  are  working  out  some  pla>^ 
lo  beat  the  pants  oil  the  Demo- 
crat Party  ^or  the  next  lO-to-20 
ye.;r.s. 

Th»  chief  element  of  the 
strategy  is  just  to  let  the  vari 
ous  and  assorted  wings  of  the 
party  beat  each  other  to  death. 
Out  of  the  carnage  will  cgme 
sufficient  votes  To  elect  Nixon 
In  1760,  Nixon  in  1964,  and 
whomever  the  party  chooses 
thereafter. 

All  this  will  take  place  while 
the  Democrat  Party,  as  it  has  in 
the  pa.st  years,  chooses  candi- 
dates, selects  its  national  candi- 
dates, mounts  its  silvery  white 
pinto  pony  and  rides  off  in  all 
directions. 

J*-     *     * 

Firs'i,  the  Republican  Party, 
politicians  will  attempt  to  break 
the  strangie-hoid  on  the  mass 
•minority  groups"  of  the  North 
which  VDK  gave  the  Democrat 
Party.  Thi.s  will  be  the  easiest  of 
the  party's  tasks. 

As  it  becomes  more  oDvious 
that  the  economic  policies  follow- 
ed by  the  Republicans  provide 
more  properily.  these  group.s  will 
lose  scmie  of  their  bias  in  fav.)r 
of  Jhe  more  "liberar"  economic 
policies  of  the  .New  and  'Fair'* 
Deals. 

But  more  important  for  the 
party  strategists  »rt  those  un- 
enlightened white  supremacist 
Democrats  of  the  South. 

All  Kepul)lican  candidates  for 
oifice  will  campaign  on  Kastland 
and  Talmadge  like  the  Demo- 
cr;:ts  for  20  years  campaigned  on 
Hoover.  They  arent  quite  as  big, 
but  they  will  make  even  better 
targets. 

Other  things  being  almost 
equal,  why  should  a  Negro  prefer 
a  DemtK-ratic  candidate  for  Con- 
gress over  a  R4?publican"~candi- 
date?  Because  it  will  give  the 
Southern  Democrats  more  influ- 
ence in  Congress?  Ha.  Ha. 
WRITING  OFF  SOUTH? 

But  does  this  mean  that  the 
Republicans  -are  writing  off  the 
South?  Not  at  all.  By  -bu.sting' 
a  fc'i^-  of  the  most  stupid  Repub- 
lican leaders  in  the  South,  they 
-will  clear  the  way  for  a  series  of 
plays  that  will  offer  the  party 
tremendous  gains. 

This  effort,  4he  elimination  of 
the  pj'ity's  hide-bound  elements. 


presents  the  biggest  difficulty  in 
e/fecting  the  strategists"  plans. 
Here    again    the    reactionary 
white-supremacist  elements  can 
be  treated  as  a  foe  in  order  to 
secure  the  votes  of  Negroes  and 
more  enlightened,  whites. 
The     Republicans     can     secure 
more   Southern  votes  by  explicit- 
ly   deiining    their    national    posi- 
tion    vis-a-vis     government     eco- 
nomic    policies,     ctmtrols     over 
business  and  agriculture. 

Here  the  Southern  Republicans 
will  be  able  to  campaign  most 
ettectively  against  such  members 
of  the  Democrat  Party  as  Reuther 
and   Hubert  Humphrey. 

Aside  from  this  outright  stra- 
tegy    planning,     the    Republican 


party  is  beginning  the  greatest 
glamor-candidate  hunt  in  history. 
Personable  candidates  win  vic- 
tories over  dull  and  colorless 
ones. 

Examples;  North  Carolina's 
Congressman  Jonas,  sole  Republi- 
can congresman  from  his  state, 
led  Ei.senhower  by  more  than 
1.000  votes  in  his  district. 

In  Oregon,  the  Republican  can- 
didate for  the  Senate  campaigned 
on  the  slogan  "Im  out  of  a  job, 
so  I'd  like  your  vote,"  and  limit- 
ed his  debate  to  chit-chat  about 
the  weather  and  such  things.  His 
opponent  went  around  telling  au- 
diences whatever  they  wanted  to 
hear,  and  won  the  election. 

The  Republican  candidate  for 
the  Senate  from  Colorado  cam- 


I 


paigned  on  his  10-gallon  ha-t 
and  his  friendship  with  the 
President.  He  lost. 

Now.  if  the  party  strategists 
have  their  way,  the  next  election 
will  feature  a  lot  of  candidates 
especially  trained  or  selected  te 
play  the  irole  of  the  "Modern 
Young   Politician." 

It  may  seem  that  this  is  just 
stating  the  obvious.  But  it  will  be 
noticed  in  the  ne.xt  few  years 
that  the  Republican  Party  will 
consciously,  if  surreptitiously,  or- 
ganize ?.  drive  to  find  people  who 
will  make  personable  candidates 
persuade  them  that  they  should 
run  for  office,  "groom  '  them  for 
their  races,  and  offer  them  the 
aid  regularly  offered  such  candi- 
dates. /  M    » 


'You  Say  There  Might  Be  Bears  Around  Here?' 


^-^^ 


VA 


'     "     •  ■.  •  ,■■■•• 

WASHINGTON  &  LEE  SOUTHERN  COLLEGIAN: 


A  Christmas  Dictionary  Of  N.Y. 


Here's  part  of  a  dictionary  of 
New  York  published  bV  the 
Southern  Collegian,  student 
magazine  at  Washington  A  Le« 
University.  It  describes  people 
and  places  students  will  see  en 
Christmas  visits  to  the  big  city. 

Bar:  Long  board  (with  brass 
rail  at  base)  where  one  may  or- 
der a  small  portion,  at  eight 
times  the  price,  of  what  normal- 
ly is  sold  at  the  ABC  Store  in 
large  portions. 

Bill  more:  Hotel  in  clubby 
neighborhood  where  you're  like- 
ly, to  spend  most  of  your  time. 
(Note:  Check  room  467;  big 
blast.    Knock    three    time«,    sing 


•Lord    Jeff    Amherst"    and    walk 
in.) 

Biltmore  Clock:  Only  reliable 
lime-piece  in  town.  .  :  j  i 

Brooklyn  Bridge:  Slightly  long- 
er tha*.  the  footbridge.  Don't  buy 
at  any.  terms. 

Tiger:  Originally  a  carniverous 
animal  of  prey.  Now  refers  to  one 
who  thrives,  very  untigerishly,  in 
Princeton  or  thereabouts.  Easily 
distinguished  by  false  voice, 
blonde  hair,  patched  tweeds  and 
aloofness. 

Vas«-ar:  School  in  Poughkeepsie 
where  girls  are  taught  when  to 
say  "No"  and  sometimes  practice 
it. 


f 


Village:  Quaint  bffhemian  com- 
munity where  the  natives  might 
take  you  for  all  you  have,  includ- 
ing your  virtue,  if  carried. 

Welleslcy:  New  England  school 
where  some  nice  girls  go.  Un« 
fortunately,  they  go  home  for 
Thanksgiving. 

Yale:  Smooth,  ruddy  complex- 
ioned  Tweed  wearer.  Usually 
seen  in  and  about  "21"  (see 
"21  ■).  Recognizable  by  taste  for 
Haig  and  Haig,  prep  school 
friends  and  Parliament  tigar- 
ettes. 

Smith:  Common  name.  Also 
school  for  common  girls  of  same 
name. 


Pogo 


By  Wait  Kelly 


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ANP  I'VB  eorx     /it  W'A5j  PBlgNP*/  I  WA4 
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mln  •rMtf'C'W  <«'  ■ 


>0U  A8g  PgUV^N© 
Ol$0-m\C  SAHIBS . 


60  PAR  yo;.'a 

OPFiClAu  TMg  PC? 

20OMgrffi6  $ 
>  Z4H0tfff$AsP6 
A»NUTg5  AN?  T>,g 
6nP  not  >gTOs 


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aUBT'JA' 
COMI ;.?  AN' 


-s%8i;^ 


L'it  Abner 


/dOGPATCH  tf-  MAH 
(      HOME  TCN4Uft~\V\JL 
\   &EdONICET'SE.E. 

>  MAH 
I    DEAR 

>  FRIENDS 

(agin.':'^ 


By  Al  Capp 


Society 
Loves  Itself 

Cortland  Edwards 

American  society  is  not  too  interested  in  what 
the  United  Nations  is,  what  it  is  doing  or  what  it 
can  do.  Last  weekend,  while  attending  a  United 
Nations  Seminar,  I  interviewed  12  people  in  the 
lobby  of  the  United  Nations  building  and  in  the 
gallery  of  the  General  Assembly  meeting  which 
was  in  progress. 

The  12  answers  that  I  received  should  have  been 
all  the  same,  or  at  least  relatively  similar.  But  l 
found  out  that  this  was  not  true. 

People  at  the  UN  went  there  for  their  own 
little  points  •*  view.  They  were  not  interested 
in  what  was  going  6n  in  the  world  from  any  other 
view  point  than  what  would  affect  them  tomor- 
row as  individuals. 

Each  individual  was  as  subjective  as  possible. 
Only  a  few  tried  to  be  objective.  This  very  factor 
is  carrying  over  or  is  a  cany-over  from  many  other 
institutions  and  walks  of  life  in  America. 

I«  colleges,  it  is  a  lack  of  interest  in  the  Univer- 
sity as  a  wole,  and  is  shown  in  the  emphasis  of 
getting  a  certain  giade  on  tests,  and  it  is  shown  in 
the  lack  of  participation  in  campus  organizations, 
IN   INDUSTRY   IT'S  THE   SALARY 

In  industry,  it  is  shown  in  the  workers'  interest 
in  getting  a  higher  salary  at  the  expense  of  any 
thing  or  anybody.  Workers  just  don't  seem  to  care 
what  goes  on.  on  the  other  side  of  their  workbench. 
Nobody  seems  to  be  interested  in  the  whole  scheme 
of  things  anymore. 

In  religion,  it  is  shown  as  the  fight  between  the 
Methodists  and  Baptists,  or  the  Protestants  and 
Catholics,  or  the  Christians  and  Jews. 

Evorybody  is  forgetting  that  wc  all  have  to  live 
together.    Everybody    is   forgetting    th»t   wt  are 
very  minute  piecos  ef  a  very  large  universe.  Pt^- 
pie  *r9  just  getting  to  be  too  smell  minded. 
In  the  interview,  I  asked  each  person  why  they 
came  to  the  United  Nations  that  day.  Here  are  some 
of  the  replies: 

Airs.  William  Lyons  of  Newark,  N.J.,  said.  'Oh 
I  have  heard  so  much  about  the  nickel-silver  doors 
donated  by  Canada  and  the  beautiful  tapestry  do- 
nated by  Belgium  that  I  just  had  to  come  and  see 
them. ' 

I  asked  her  whether  she  planned  to  attend  tht 
assembly  meeting  er   net,  and  she   replied,  "Oh 
no,  I  would  n9vr  understand  anything  like  that." 
Mrs.  Rosa  Gatson  of  New  York  City  brought  her 
two  daughters  to  the  UN.  I  interrupted  her  listen- 
ing of  the  communication  set  to  ask  her  why  she 
was  there. 

She  replied,  "I  have  been  trying  to  teach  my 
goils  how  to  speak  good  Spanish.  Apd  the  girl  tran.^ 
lator  who  speaks  it  over  this  thing  (ear  phonesi 
speaks  it  so  beautifully  that  I  brought  my  goUs  to 
hear  her." 

*         *         * 

' •  ! •  .1}*'  •}' 

Jan  Melton,  a  Bohemiaii  stttdyli^'epulpturing  in 
Greenwich  Village,  came  up  just  I  to  sese  the  statue 
ot  Zeus.  2eus,  incidentaHy,  was  ^he  ikifig  of  th.' 
gods  of  Greek  mythologyv-.-     =«     'i^'     i-      --. 

It  IS  a  nude  male  figuie  of  an  athlete  and  th« 
head  of  an  old  man,  and  is  located  in  the  lobby 
of  the  General  Assembly. 

All  the  other  people  interviewed  -were  primari- 
ly interested  in  the  cantileve^ed  b.i«?onies  and 
subdued  lighting  of  the  assembly,  or  the  178  char- 
ry  trees  in  the  gerden,  or  the  acoustics,  or  every- 
thing else  except  what  was  going  on  in  the  as- 
sembly meeting. 

There  was  one  exception  though.  She  was  Mrs. 
Rosentem  from  Brooklyn.  She  said,  "The  man  who 
represents  my  nation,  he  is  speaking,  from  the 
heart,  about  my  people  they  are  killing." 

These  are  Americans  speaking,  but  thev  are 
speaking  for  themselves,  and  are  not  for  America 
Can  we  save  the  world  for  Democracy  we  with  so 
many  small-minded  peoples? 


YOU  S«id  It: 


Kirkland    And 
MentalAloofness: 

An  Open  Letter  To  Thomas  Kirkland: 

...  In  defense  of  your  religion,  you  said  "I  am 
not  meek,  for  I  have  mental  strength."  and  My 
religion  is  in  my  mind.  .  .  ." 

I  cannot  help  but  te  question,  as  I  also  have 
a  mind,  the  strength  with  which  you  are  able  to 
porsu*  your  religion,  for  I  fail  to  see  what 
staunch  determination  is  required  to,  as  someone 
enee  said,  "worship  at  ttte  altar  of  your  own 
achievement." 

Yours,  and  not  Christianity,  would  seem  to  be  the 
religion  of  egotism;  certainly  it  is  one  of  eventual 
pessimism  as  the  chances  seem  pretty  good,  and 
•  here  I  guess  I  don't  quite  measure  up  to  your  defi- 
nition of  Christians  as  being  moralists  since  I've 
been  know^n  to  take  a  bet  occasionally,  that  this 
altar  will  crumble  as  it  becomes  undermined  with 
"human"  failiu-e  of  which  a  few  of  us  "weak'  ones 
are  sometimes  capable. 
TRYING  TO  CONVERT  HIM 

Unlike  you.  Mr.  Kirkland,  I  am  trying  to  convert 
someone— you.  It  is  my  sincere  hope  that  someday 
you  will  remember  this  letter  and  it  will  help  vou 
come  from  out   behind  your  intellectual   aloofness. 
It  is  not  odd  that  you  should  base  your  life's 
philosophy   on   a    few   pat   phrases,    but   what   is 
strange   U   the  feet   that   you   had    to   take   them 
from  the  Bible  and  thai  you  should  have  had  to 
take  them  out  of  context  »n<l  that  you  perverted 
the  meaning  of  one  o#  them  to  suit  your  needs. 
I  wonoer  if  you  realize  that  not  one  attempt  is 
ever  made  anywhere  in  the  Bible  to    -prove"  that 
what  God  says  is  true. 
I  leave  you  with  a  short  slorj  : 
At  the  end  of  a  monastery  tour  he  (an  'enlighten- 
ed atheist")  said  to  the  monk  guide,  'If  God  doesn't 
exist,  and  I  believe  He  doesn't,  then  vou  will  have 
wasted  your  whole  life." 

Ihe  monk  smiled.  Tf  1  am  wrong,  I  will  have 
wasted  at  nj-ist  50  to  70  years.  If  you  arc  wrens, 
you  will  waste  an  eternity. " 

:    '  U:-—L^  James  C.  Reynolds 


i 


Pai 
Lati 


Paul 
whose  n| 
ous    wit 
.  Fpeak  at| 
^  oi    the 

p.m.  tod| 
. ,  Jloom 

Dr.   GiJ 
est   drar 

v.iil  be 
Selden. 
Stic  .A.rt.s  I 

^     Mrs. 

Mae   Rus 
-'Will    ser\j 

tea. 

"Wilde.H 
"the  Civil 
for    two 
tu<-ky. 

■  ■  Se\erai  I 
each  sea? 

'  trs    are 
cuss   iheij 
"WUder^ 

'ing  July 


PATI 

•    Al 


N 


205  E.  F 


AC 

1 

Mai 

a 

Hap 

10 

Sen. 

11 

Or* 

are4 

fore 

12 

Ma( 

14 

Not 

as  t 

le 

Pou 

m*< 

IS 

Bab 

god 

19 

Sha 

red 

20 

Sk! 

21 

Insi 

24 

Dw 

25 

Sul 

dec 

26 

Apj 

27 

Ma 

nicl 

28 

Nic 

29 

Re! 

to« 

30 

Gai 

cha 

31 

Nic 

<sv 

32 

Dir 

firs 

36 

.  \  ; 

38 

Ra 

car 

39 

Cb 

41 

Qu 

42 

W« 

««ir 

43 

No 

bui 

1 

D 

Go 

S.Le 

tER  7.  1954 


// 


fsted    in   what 

or  what  it 

ing    a    United 

?ople   in  the 

and   in  the 

leeting    which 

\\d  have  been 
^imiiar.   But   I 

th*ir    own 

>t    interested 

any  other 

|th«m  t«mor- 

as    possible 
\s  very  factor 
many  other 
rica. 

the  Univer- 
emphasis  of 
It  IS  shown  in 
I  organizations, 

fkers"  interest 
)ense  of  any- 
seem  to  care 

lir  workbench, 
^vhole  scheme 

between  the 
)testants    and 

have  to  live 
»»t    wo   aro 
I  i verse.  Po^ 
minded. 
Ison  why  ihey 
flere  are  some 

J.,   said,    "'Oh 

?l-silver  doors 

li  tapestry  do- 

jiome  and  see 

|to  attend  the 

replied.   "Oh 

>9  liko  th««." 

brought  her 

^ed  her  listen- 

her   wixy  she 

to    teach    my 

I  the  girl  tranv 

(par  phones) 

'  my  goils  to 

iKcutptuiiHg  in 
^ee  the  statue 
kifig   a|  th.' 

Ihlete  and  th« 
in  the   lobby 

'ere.primari- 
»ni««  and 
the  171  chf. 
tics,  or  owenr- 
>n    in  tho  as- 

Sbe  was  Mrs. 

The  man  who 
ing,   from   the 

ing.  ■ 
but    they    are 
for  America. 

key  we  with  so 


(\nd 
ness: 


^ou  said  "I  am 
oth."   and    "My 

I  also  have 
Oil  are  obi*  *o 

to  see  what 
to,  as  someone 

of   yoor   own 

seem  to  be  the 
one  of  eventual 
etty  good,  and 
up  10  your  deli- 
ist.«,  since  I've 
nally.  that  lhi« 
ermined  witb 
weak  ■  ones 


nd( 


yinji  to  convert 
?e  that  someday 
It  will  help  you 
actual  aloofness. 
Mse  yoor  IIfo'» 
%.    but    wha*    i* 

to   take   thorn 
Id  have  hod  *• 

yo«  ponror*od 
oit  your  noods. 

one  attempt  is 
to      prove"  that 


e  (an  enlighten- 
,  "If  God  doesn't 
tn  you  will  have 

onj.  I   will  h«v« 
you  are  wrcnS. 

amas  G.  Reynolds 


FRIDAY,  0€C€MBBR  7.   1954 


THE  DAILY  TA«  HEEL 


PAGE    THREE 


Paul  Green  To  Discuss  His 
Latest  Drama  Today  At  3:45 


By  TOM  BYRO 

Paul  Green,  the  North  Carolinian 
whose  name  has  become  synonym- 
ous with  symphonic  drama,  will 
Ppeak  at  the  second  Bull's  Head  Tea  j 
oi  the  season  to  be  held  at  3;45  i 
l».m.  today  in  the  Library  Assembly 
.loom. 

Dr.  Green  w^ill  speak  on  his  lat- 
est drama  Wilderness  Road."  He 
V  ill  be  introduced  by  Dr.  Samuel 
Selden.  Head  of  the  Dept.  of  Dram- 
atic .\rts  and  Director  of  the  drama. 

.\rrs.  Paul  Green  and  Mrs.  Caro 
-Mae  Rus.sell,  sister  of  Dr.  Green, 
will  serve  as  hostesses  for  today's 
tea. 

"Wilderness  Road  ",  a  drama  of 
the  Civil  War.  lias  been  presented 
lor    two   summers    at    Berea.    Ken- 

tii-cky. 

Se-veral  Bull's  Head  Teas  are  held 
each  season.   This  year,  local  wtU-  | 
f  r?    are    being    presented    to    dis- } 
cuss   theii-   recent   work. 

Wilderness  Road,"  produced  dur- 
ing July  and  .\ugust  at  the  Indian  ! 


PATRONIZE   YOUR 
•    ADVERTISERS    o 


PAUL  GREEN 

. . .  Bull's  Head  speaker 

Fort  Theatre  at  Berea.  Ky.  is  tlK" 
seventh  in  a  series  of  symphonic 
dramas  which  Green  has  written  for 
production  in  sp)ecially  built  am- 
phitheatres in  the  South  and  in 
other  parjs  of  the  United  States. 
The  play  i.s  set  in  the  southern  .\p- 
palachian  foothills,  just  before  and 
during  the  early  years  of  the  Civil 
War.  From  the  tensions  and  bitter- 
ness of  this  tragic  period  in  our 
h'story  the  author  has  written  a 
■parable   for   modern   times." 


Dr.  Summer 


ustrates 


Talk  Today 

Dr.  Clemens  Summer  Professor 
of  the  History  of  .\rt.  will  give  an 
illustrated  talk  on  "Giotto  and  the 
Miracle  Plays"  at  the  English  Club 
meeting  tonight  at  8  p.m.  in  the 
Library  .Xssembly  Room. 

Dr.  Summer  will  discuss  the  in- 
tf.rre!ationships  between  the  miracle 
plays  and  medieval  painting.  He 
will  particularly  empha.size  the  work 
(>r  the  famous  14th  centurj'  Floren- 
tine painter  Giotto. 

Dr.  Summer,  a  native  of  Ger- 
many, received  his  doctorate  in  art 
l:istor>'  and  medieval  history  from 
the  University  of  Fi-eiburg.  He  has 
served  as  art  curator  in  the  mu- 
.seum  at  Freiburg,  taught  at  the 
Unixc-sity  of  Greifs\veid  and  serv- 
ed as  guest  lecturer  at  the  Uni- 
versity  of   Stoekliolm. 

He  came  to  the  United  States  in 
1988  and  joined  the  UNC  faculty  a 
year  later.  Dr.  Summer  has  bad 
many  articles  on  medieval  paint- 
ing and  sculpture  published. 

Refreshments  will  be  served  be- 
fore  tonight's   meeting. 


Covering  The  University  Campus 


PSYCHOLOGY 

Dr.  Shiells  sections  I  and  III  of 
Psychology  24  will  not  meet  to- 
morrow because  of  the  convention 
of  the  North  Carolina  Psychology 
A^sn. 
GOLF  TESTS 

Women's  individual  tests  in  goll 
will  be  given  Tuesday  and  Thurs- 
day at  4  p.m.  in  the  gym. 
BIBLE  SUNDAY 

Universal  Bible  Sunday  will  be 
observed    Sunday    at    the    United 
Congregational  Christian  Church. 
CHRISTIAN    FELLOWSHIP 

The  Carolina   Christian   Fellow- 
ship will  meet  toni^t  at  7  in  the 
choir  rehearsal  room  of  Hill  Hall. 
Speaker    will    be    the    Rev.    Paul 
Snyder,      of      Advent      Moravian 
Church  in  Winston-Salem. 
FACULTY  CLUB 
'     The    Faculty    Club    will    meet 
Tuesday  at  1  p.m.  at  the  Carolina 
Inn.  Speaker  will  be  Prof  Almonte 
j  Howell  whose  subject  will  be  "The 
'  Exiteriences  of  a  Professor  in  South 
Korea." 


You'll  Find 


.  ■  -^ '■-'-<  -  ■^.,. 


MORE 
CIVILIZED 


^[     •    "    »i.!i     •■    tJi-Vi'i.   < 


NON-FICTION 


.4..;  '   r.:      I- 


To  Make  Your  Christmas 
_  .  Merry 

'n 

The    Intimate 
Boo1<shop 


205  E.  Franklin  St. 


^.i^'in{)ii^;..\  ^■ 


DAILY    CROSSWORD 


Acmoss 

1  Marshea 
5.  Happon 

10.  Send  forth 

11.  Gra«ay 
are*  m 
forest 

12.  Man's  name 
14.  Notched. 

as  a  leaf 
16.  Poundinc 

machines 
18.  Babylonian 

god 

19  Shade  of 
red 

20  Shill 

21.  Insurgenta 
24  Dwell 
23  SulUn'a 
decree 

26.  Apple  drink 

27.  Man's 
nickname 

28.  Niche 
29  Resort 

town 
(Ger.) 

30.  Game  of 
chance 

31.  Nickel 
<*ym.) 

12.  Diminishing 
gradually 

36.  A  step 

:i8  Railroad 
car 

39.  Choose 

41.  Quote 

42  Waminf 
•ignal 

43  Not 
IwrtienconM 

OOWK 

l.Good  Que^i 

t-LMiv«  watt 


3.  River 
(Ariz.) 

4.  Mad  rush 

5.  King  of 
Bashan 
(Bib.) 

6.  Hotel 
employee 

7.  Elevator 
cages 

8.  Shrub 
(Jap.) 

9.  Stores 
13.  Spout, 

for  a  tree 
15.  Consumers 
17.  Half  ems 
20.  General's 

assistant 


21   Be 
comes 
mature 

22.  Hermits 

23.  Attic 
in- 
habi- 
tants 

24.  Candy 
26.  Smear* 


sEns 

eoHHQa  oSS§ 
oaaaaa  HgBR 
msra  aanHQBS 

aans  anEjnaa 
□HHaD  annns 

anciH  aannaH 


ed 

with  Ve«terd«y'«  AMw«r 

wax        %■        35.  Color 
28  Knock      %,  37.  Fourth 
30.  Mockery     ^       Arabian 

32.  Layer  caliph 

33.  Marine  40  Thor. 
mammal  o" 

34.  Snares  (sym  ) 


Istanbul  Paper 
Reports  Riots 

ISTANBUL,  Turkey— (i«V-T  h  e 
Istanbul  newspaper  Comhuriyet 
yesterday  reported  rioting  in  a 
number  of  S.vrian  villages  along 
the  Turkish  border.  It  said  Turk- 
ish residents  of  Syria  were  fleeing 
the  country. 

In  a  story  from  it.s  correspond- 
ent in  the  south  Anatolian  city  of 
Diyarbakirk.  the  paper  said  as 
many  as  1.500  Turks  may  already 
have  fled. 


Magill  Speaks 

(Continued  from  page  1) 

fenders  may  be  prosecuted,  ae- 
cording  to  University  re^ule-* 
tions,  Bass  emphasized. 

Treasurer  Bob  Carter  informed 
Council  members  that  dormitory 
social  fund  was  approximately 
$1,300. 

The  council  will  not  meet  again 
before  Christmas   holidavs. 


Open  Till  10  P.M. 


Gitlin,  Eliason 

Lambda  Chi 

(Continued  from  page  1) 
Carolina    tangle    with   Dook. 

Sonny  Jurgen.scn  and  Hal  Mc- 
Elhaney  will  be  on  hand  to  help 
officiate  the  game.  Rumor  has  it 
that  two  Carolina  stars  will  be  on 
hand  to  complete  the  officiating 
staff. 

On  the  sidelines,  color  will  be 
added  to  the  game  b^  a  card  sec- 
tion and  several  unusual  cheers 
from  the  Carolina  cheering  sec- 
tion. 

Each  team  will  use  the  uniform 
of  its  school,  and  they  will  play 
tackle  ball. 

The  Carolina  boys  feel  that  thi.s 
is  their  year  and  aim  to  run  up 
a  big  score  to  avenge  two  previous 
defeats  at  the  hands  of  Duke. 
There  is  no  admission  charge  for 
the  game. 

-  CLASSIFIEDS 


Bus  Hikes 
Protested 
By  Negro 

RALEIGH  —  oW  —  A  Chariotte 
Negro  told  the  utilities  commissioo 
ytsterday  that  if  Charlotte  Citv 
Coach  Lines  Inc.  would  hire  some 
Negro  bus  drives  he  "Wouldn't  be 
here"  prote.'Uing  a  proposed  hike 
vr   bus  fares. 

1.  W.  Anderson,  spokeftmaa  for 
Charlotte  Negroes,  said  h?  v.as  ap- 
pearing in  behalf  of  the  "little  peo- 
ple, the  very  folks  who  c«n  little 
al'ford"  a  fare  increase. 

The  Charlotte  Bus  Co.  wants  to 
increase  the  price  of  its  bus  tokens 
from  four  for  34  cents  to  ssveu  for 
$1.  Other  fares  would  remain  un- 
changed. 

A  petition  containing  the  signa- 
•ures  of  about  200  persons  w4io  ob- 
jected to  the  Uwrease  was  filed 
with  the  .comihissioo  early  last 
month 
..ave  gott.^ 

The  commiasiao  hlfOd '  V^BMriog 
OB  the  increase  la  Octobes  j«IkI-  he 
•protests  were  '.  oiced.  The  uext  day. 
li'^wever,  several  tetcgram ;  of  pro- 
lt-6t  were  reel". 4^u  b  the  cDrnmi.ision. 
i'lcludins  one  from  Ander^v^jn.  who 
»br6«itened  a  Negro  bjycott  of 
CharVolte  bu«-  opej-ations  if  Negi-oes 
were  not  giveii  i  chuioe  to  be 
.'  ;.  rd  on  the  lu  -'ike. 

.\nderson  jr»id  t-ida^  tbf  {he  pro-  j 
e-i  was  not  mule  "in  ar.y^^ave  •)i 
ho.tility."  He  e<l<'ed  th.t  if  we 
'Md  wanted  t>.  Wv*  could  Tfiy«'  he- 
.r'e'l  one  of  1.1)?  embar'asinj<  »il- 
II  'lions  like"  i:  ^iontgolllei^v,  .A'a. 
<:nd  Tallahas&ee.  Fla.  In  those  cities 
?  ^fioes  boy. ',' .>•••  bus  syst..»ms  be- 
'a  .se  of  the  ^''^i-fgation  is!>ue. 

."nderson  t>  1  th-  comojissioii  ihe 
employment  of  Negro  b«ir  drivers 
would  be  "a  treniendr>us  gain  iii 
pride"  for  negroes. 


WUNC 

\MJNC,    the    university's    educa- 
tional FM  radio  station: 
7 :00 — Intermezzo. 
7:15— The  UN  Story. 
^    7:30 — Masterworks  from 
France. 
8:00— Let's  Listen  to  Opera. 
10:15— News. 

10:30 — EJvening  Masterwork. 
11:30— Signoff. 
WUNC  TV 

\VUNC-TV,  the  university's  edu 
cational  television  station,  channel 
4: 

12:45— Music. 

1:00— Today  on  the  Farm. 
1:30 — Musical  Forms. 
2:00— Industry. 
2:15— Chateau. 
5:45 — Music. 

6:00--Childrens  Comer. 
6:30— News. 
6:45 — Sports. 


Gilliland 
Hearings 
Are  Today 

WARRENTON— (^»^-A  threcnmem- 
ber  committee  of  the  N.  C.  State 
Bar  will  bold  a  hearing  here  today 
on  charges  of  unetlucal  conduct 
brought  against  James  D.  GillUand, 
local  attorney. 

GiUiland  is  accu-sed  in  two  charg- 
er of  fraudulent  action  in  securuig 
two  divorces  that  later  were  voided. 
Ta  another  charge  he  is  accused 
of  unethical  conduct  in  the  opera- 
tions of  a  collection  i  agency  in 
Warren  County. 

Last  March  Gilliland  created 
quite  a  stir  in  his  hometown  when 
he  represented  alleged  communists 
at  hearings  in  Charlotte  before  the 
House  Un-t\merican  Activities  Com- 
!nittee. 

He  was  criticized  shai-ply  for  say- 
ing that  the  congressional  commit- 
tee  might   weU   look   into   the   atti- 
tudes and  actions  of  North  Carolina 
Mderson   *aid    "We    couldll  J:f^'  ^^^^''^S  th.e  U.  S.  Supreme. 
l^a  10,0rt)  n*n»s,t{{l,    .-1^   segregatwrn   decision. 

■■■  ■■  ^""*  V^ben  it  fUed  the  charges  Oct.  23. 

tbe  State  Bar  declared  that  Gilli- 
laod  Ls  "an  unfit  periwn  to  continue 
in  the  practice  of  law  ..." 

He  denied  tlie  charges,  asserting 
he  has  alwa\-s  practiced  the  high- 
est ethics.  He  said  he  never  mis- 
represented an.\'  facts  knowlingly. 
la  the  two  cases  in  which  he  is 
charged  with  fraud,  Gilliland  said 
he  acted  on  inTormation  supplied  by 
clients. 

Serving    on    the    trial    committee 
are   Don    A.    Waiser   of    Lexington, 
C  harles    T.    Hagan    Jr.    of   Greens- 
boro and   Ai'mi-stead  J.    Maupin  oi  j 
Kaleigh.  The  committee  can  recom- 
mend that  Gilliland  be:   (D  absolv- 
I  ed,    (2)    reprimanded,    <3)    suspend- 
I  «1   from  practice   for  a  period,   or 
j  (4)  disbarred. 

}     Gilliland  was  expelled  from  the 
'  Warrenton  Lions  Club  and  the  War- 
renton  Country  Club.  He  refused  to 
resign   as   Solicitor   of   Warren   Re- 
corder's Court. 

In  one  of  the  charges  he  is  ac- 
tu-ied  of  repre.senting  a  bankrupt 
whose  collectible  accounts  were  sold 
to  a  collection  agency  which  he  also 
^presented. 


FENCIMG  PHOTO  TO0AY 

Team  captain  Don  Cerbin  has 
requested  that  ell  mambars  of 
both  the  fencing  team  and  fenc- 
ing club  be  present  at  Wooltan 
Gym  to4ay  at  4:00  e'clack  for  a 
Yack   picture. 


Any  Time  Is  Party  Time  Here 
On  Campus  OlF  The  University 


FOR  RE.NT:  FOUR  ROOM  HOUSE 
located  on  Barclay  Road.  Elec- 
tric stove,  refrigerator,  hot  wat- 
er heater,  and  oil  circulator 
furnished.  $65  per  month.  Phone 
8-0148. 


By   JOAN   MOORE 

As  December  days  gallop  for- 
ward, students  are  inten.^ly  con- 
cerned about  lectures,  books,  and 
quizzes.  However,  despite  this  mo- 
nastic scholarship  which  has  invad- 
ed the  campus,  there  is  also  gaiety 
here,  for  "any  time"  can  be  "par^ 
time"  at  Carolina. 

The  Carolina  gentlemen  of  Miaa- 
ly  Dorm  wiB  be  living  it  up  tonight 
as  they  indulge  in  steak  suppers  at 
Larry's    Bar    and    Grill.    This    will 


Klan  Holds  tlaily 
Near  Mecksvilte 


JAZZ  AT  TURNAGES 

Saturday  afternoon,  2:00,  Turn- 
jgcs  Cabin  in  Durham.— Jazz ^by 
Dick  Gables  "All  Stars."  Beer 
served. 


LOST  SATURDAY  NIGHT—  Jew- 
eled Black  Cashmere  Sweater  in 
vicinity  of  Mclvflr  Dorm.  Finder 
please  contact  Barbara  Prago, 
89142. 

LOST:  RED  JACKEtTvIThTc.NIT 
bottom  and  Paul  written  on  up- 
per left  hand  side.  Call  8-9103. 


MOCKS  VI LLE  —(API—  Some 
1 500  persons  turned  out  for  « 
cross-lit  rally  of  the  Ku  Klux  Klaa 
10  miles  southwest  of  here  last 
night. 

A  man  dressed  in  a  robe  and 
hood  told  the  crowd  that  he  had 
rather  die  than  "to  have  my  child- 
ren go  to  school  with  negroes." 

He  identified  himself  as  "the 
Grand  Wizard  of  the  Ku  Klua 
Klan  and  a  preacher  of  an  old 
established  deooounation.  Neitticr 
he  nor  any  of  the  eight  robed  atid  | 
ho>ded  men  w'ho  accompanied 
him  would  reveal  their  oames  or 
tell    where  they  weire   from. 

He  told  th«  group  that  "what 
wc  need"  is  three  scb'^ol  systems 


be   followed  by  a   beer  party. 

The  nurses  will  also  party  tonight. 
Socked  feet  will  twirl  to  the  music 
of  popular  records  from  8  till  11. 
This  sock  bop  Ls  being  sponsored 
by  the  "Y"  Nurses  Association,  and 
will  be  the  first  of  the  social  ac- 
tivities put  on  by  this  group.  Men 
— many  men — will  be  cordially  wel- 
comed by  the  nurses. 

The  men  of  EX-erett  dorm  are  co- 
operating with  'Know  Your  Dorm 
Officers  Week",  sponsored  by  the 
LE>C,  by  spicing  \ip  their  dorm  meet- 
ing with  music.  This  music  is  pro- 
vided by  Warren  Miller,  an  inhabi- 
tant of  Everett  who  sings  and  also 
v.- rites   songs. 

Other  parties  are  planned  for  five 
voming  week  as  the  pre-Christmas 
&e>ason  gets  under  way. 


— "one  for  all  the  negrpes  who 
want  to  go  to  school  with  each 
other,  one  for  all  the  white  child- 
ren who  want  to  go  to  school  by 
themselves  and  one  for  the  Negro 
lovers. 

The  rally  had  been  announced 
in  advance  by  KKK  handbills 
mailed  from  Charlotte.  Another 
rllly  is  scbethiled  for  Greensboro 
Friday  night. 

Officers  fi\:m  Davey  and  Ire 
delJ  County  Sheriff's  Department 
were  on  hand  but  no  disorder  de- 
veloped. 


7:00 — Science  Fair. 
7:30— Art  Today. 
8:00— Air  Age. 
8:30— Prelude. 
9:00 — Project  Health. 
10:00 — ^Pinal  Edition. 


Pickerrell 


(Continned   from    Page   1)        , 

Another  surprise  witness  in  the 
case  will   be  J.   D.   Wright.  J 

Sutton  was  found  "dead"  in  tbe 
.\rboretiim  on  the  night  of  Novem- 
ber 29.  His  wallet  was  missing  and 
a  fingernail  file  was  found  near  the 
Lody.  'Police"  said  they  believe  the 

Hie   was   the   weapon   that   inflicted  j  — . 

the  wound.  I  CORDON'S    PROGRAM 

Earlier  that  week  Sutton  was  "as-  j  Carl  Maria  von  Weber's  "Der 
taulted"  by  his  "former  girl .  Freischutz"  (The  Freeshooter)  will 
ifriend".  Miss  Pickerrell.  Miss  Pick- '  be  the  operatic  offering  on  Nor- 
errell  was  "arrested"  Saturday  and    man     Cordons     "Lets     Listen     to 


Law  Student 
Will  Discuss 
Poetry  Today 

Hal  Sieber.  a  UNC  law  student, 
will  talk  today  at  a  meeting  of 
the  North  Carolina  Poetry  Society 
at  the  Sir  Walter  Hotel  in  Raleigh. 

Sieber  will  talk  at  the  meeting, 
which  begins  at  2:30  p.m.,  on  a 
"Discussion  of  Modern  Poetry." 
He  also  will  give  a  reading  of  his 
own  poems  from  two  poetry  books 
he  wrote 

The  society  is  meeting  with 
fieven  other  societies,  including 
the  State  Literary  and  Historical 
Society,  to  make  the  annual  sur- 
vey of  North  Carolina  art,  litera- 
ture, music  and  other  cultural  as- 
pects. 


charged  with  the   "murder". 

Monday  the  "grand  jury"  return- 
ed a  true  bill  of  indictment  in  thf 
case. 

Chief  coun.sel  for  the  defense  will 
Le  Charlie  Shaw,  assisted  by  Paul 
Holt,  Robert  "niomas,  Dexter  Watts 
snd   John   Comer. 

J.  J.  Frassinetti  is  dlief  counsel 
for  the  prosecution  and  will  be  as- 
sisted by  Jerry  CambeU,  Duane 
GLlliajn,  George  Miller,  and  Hal 
Conely. 


, .  .dist motive  pocket  lighter 
for  discriminating  tastes! 

Thix  Chri^tmi^ 
the  luxurious  ROI  ^^ 

Its  slim  lines  and  eleganT 
finish  are  everything  ever 
sought  in  a  pocket  lighter. 
Cliromium  plate, 
engraved  design  .  .  .*9^' 
With  "easy-fill"  swivel  btae. 
Other  RO\S0N  Pocket 
Lighters  jrom  $3.95 

WENTWORTH 
&  SLOAN 

JEWELERS 

167  E.  Franklin  St.  ^ 

PHONE  9-3331 


Opera"     on     radio     station,; 
WUNC,    at    8    p.m.    The    perform- 
ance, recorded  by  London  Records 
in  Vienna,  stars  Hans  Hapf,  Maud  j 
Cunitz,    Emmy    Loose,    and    Otto 
Edelmann. 


Clifton  Webb  To  Star      , 
In  Free  Flick  Tonight 

Clifton  Webb  launches  on  a  baby- 
fittins  career  tonight  when  GMAB 
presents  its  free  flick  of  the  week 
in   Carroll   Hall   at  8   and   10. 

Starring  with  Webb  in  •Sitting 
Pretty,"  a  comedv  of  a  man  who 
sets  tbe  baby-sitting  society  on  its 
ear.  are  Maureen  OHara  and  Ro- 
bert  Young. 


And  the 
Best  ^ 

Christmas 
Cards 
Cost  a 
Nickel  at 
The  Intimate 
Bookshop 


NOW! 

You  Can  Have 

A  Clear 

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. . .  with 

ITtcL&qjujL 

CLEAIV  iiP  A€]%i:  and  BLAiKHEAI»f$ 

Milky  Masque  Extractor  actually 
helps  dissolve  blackheads.  Milky 
Masque  Extractor  helps  lift  out  por- 
tions of  blackheads  with  each  appli- 
cation. Acne  Cream,  a  medicated 
cream,  applied  at  night,  helps  elimi- 
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\ 


Use  Our  Convenient  Lay-A-Way  Plan 
Cosmetic  Dept.  Phone  9-8781 


».  -.v 


MS  or  PhD 

Chemists 
Physicists 


Who  have  joined  the  Operations  Evaluation  Group 
of  Massachusetts  Institute  of  Technology  have  found 
that  a  ^areer  in  Operations  Research  offers-. 

Challenging  Research    . 

Competitive  Salaries 
;:  Academic  Atmosphere 

Liberal  Fringe  Benefits 

Paid  Leave  For  Study  or  Researcfi 
Campus  Interviews  Tues.,  Dec.  11, 1956 

OPERATIONS  EVALUATION  GROUP 
Division  of  Offense  Laboratories 
Massachusetts  Institute  of  Technology 


f  ASI  FOUR 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


FRIDAY,  DECEMBER  7,  1756 


Tar  Heel  Mermen  Meet  Birds  In  Second  Test  Here  Tonight 


,,       !Hi:  BK.  lOL'R:  STRONG  AS  IVF.R  , 

At  the  outset  of  the  cuirent  basketball  season,  general 
specuhitiotj  held  that  this  would  be  one  of  the  poorest  sea- 
sojis  in  a  decade  for  the  Big  Four  but  if  things  continue  to 
Tini  as  they  have  since  the  season  started  then  North  Carolina 
might  \erv  easilv  niainiaift  its  status  as  one  of  the  country's 
leading  basketball  area's. 

State  and  Duke  were  supposed  to  be  the  teams  hit 
hardest  by  grnduatiov  and  academic  troubles  but  the 
Wolf  pack  and  Blue  Devils  have  shown  signs  of  once 
ai:;ai)i  offerinu^  a  stronit;  challeni^e  for  the  ACC  title.  Both 
clubs  are  undefeated  and  the  Wolf  pack  have  already  had 
a  fen  fwint  victory  over  admittedly  potent  Wake  Forest. 

Ciaiolina  and  Duke  arc  also  unbeaten  but  neithei  has 
faced  Big  Four  opposition.  Duke,  however,  has  conference 
^vins  over  Cleni.son  and  South  Carolina,  phrs  an  iutersectit)n- 
at  thriller  over  (ieorgia  Tech. 


The 
>fc<lrarv 
night    in 


Tar  Heels,  with  victories  over  Fmnian  and  the 
Eagles,  get  their  first  conference  shot  tomorrow 
Charlotte  against  the  Clemson  Tigers.  After  the 
Clcmson  game,  the  Tar  fieels  have  two  conference  games 
remaining  before  the  Christmas  l^olidays:  thev  plav  South 
Carolina  in  Clolumbia  Dec.  13.  and  .Maryland  here  on  the 
J7th. 

Although  New  Years  Day  is  many  days  and  millions  of 
vords  away,  this  writer  would  like  to  get  in  his  two  cents 
vorth  concerning  the  Orange  Bowl  Game  between  C:lemson 
and  Colorado.  Fhis  colunui  is  of  the  opinion  that  the  people 
in  Mia-mi  who  watched  their  Hiuricane.s  trample  Clemson 
21-0  three  weeks  before  the  season  ended  are  all  wet  on  their 
appraisal  of  tiic  Tigers. 

In   the  first  place.  Clemson   icas  woefully  short  of 
full  strenghth    in    the    Miami   game    -with    quarterback 
.  Charlie  Bussey  suffering  a  thumb  injury  that  forced  the 
Tigers  to  move  the  ball  on  the  ground,  and  in  the  second 
ftlace.  the  Hurricanes  were  one  of  the  strongest  teams  in 
the  country  this  season,  capable  of  beati}ig  about  any- 
body iv  t lie  Big  Sex'cn   (including  Cohtrado)  with  the  ex- 
.  ception  oi  Oklahoma. 
\  ^    \\\  short,  we  think  the    Figevs,  barring  injuries  lo  key 
players,  will  bring  home  an  Orange  Bowl  victory  come  Jan- 
uary 1st.  Want  a  score?  Clemson  20.  Colorado   1  j. 

CUFF  NOTES 

lar  Flecl  students  who  are  interested  m  the  Carolina 
swimming  team  will  get  an  opportunity  to  watch  the  mermen 
in  action  tonight  against  South  Carolina  in  Bowman  Ciray 

Pool.  Time,  8  o'clock 

Up   West    Virginia   way,  fans  and  coaches  have  al- 
ready tabbed  Hot  Rod  Hinidley  as  "Player  of  the  Year." 
The  Clown  Prince  might  just  turn  the  trick  to  if  he  can 
get  serious  about  the  game  when  the  occasion  demands. 
The   recent    naming  of  Walter   Rabb   as  head    baseball 
coach  at  C:arolina  was  just  a  matter  of  formality.  Mie  < on- 
genial   Rabb  has  been  coaching  tlm  Tar  Heels  for  the  past 
several  vears  due  to  the  failing  health  of  Buim  Hearu   .... 
Hearn  im  identallv  was  head  coach  of  the  Tar  Heels  for  twen- 
ty-seven vears. 

A  note  of  sjicculation  concerning  the  baseball  team: 
^vender  if  there'll  be  a  new  assistant  coach  named  for  the 
Tar  Heels?  Probaf)ly  not  since  Rabb  has  been  hand  hug  the 
chores  bv  himself  anvwav.  If  there  is  any  new  apponitment, 
theie  is  probablv  a  good  chance  that  freshman  coach  Henry 
House  will  get  the  nod. 

The  United  States  Olympic  team  has  found  the  going 
rough  m  Melbourne  in  the  last  day  or  two  and  now 
American  hopes  of  taking  first  place  are  practically  ml. 
The  Russians  surged  ahead  in  team  totals  yesterday  and 
are  almost  certain  to  finish  ahead  of  the  previously  slight- 
l\  favored  Americans. 

'  Otie  of  the  most  controversial  figures  on  the  sp<nts  beat 
now-a-davs  in  Notre  Dame  football  mentor  Terry  Brennen.  / 
Fveiybodv  has  his  own  idea  a^  to  whether  or  not  Brennen 
AviU  be  ousted  at  South  Bend  but  the  final  decision  will 
probably  be  a  long  time  coming  as  Irish  officials  are  report- 
edly "taking  their  time  "  in  considering  action  against  the 
vourhful  Brennen.  


Mermen  In 
Home  Deb 
With  Birds 

Carolina's  powerful  mermen 
open  defense  of  their  Atlantic  j 
Coaf-t  Conference  co-championslup 
when  they  clash  with  the  South 
Carolina  Gamecocks  tonight  at  8 
p.m.  in  Bowman  Gray  Pool. 

The  Tar  Heels,  paced  by  eight 
returning  Icttcrmcn  an.1  a  host  of 
promising  freshmen,  will  be  gun- 
ning for  their  second  consecutive 
win  of  the  young  season.  In  their 
opener  last  Saturday  night,  they 
sank  the  East  Carolina  Pirates  by 
a  55-30  count. 

The  Carolinians,  losers  only  to  i 
State  last  year,  are  strong  in  every  \ 
event.  Led  by  All-America  Charlie  : 
Krepp,     great      backslroker     and 
medley   man,   the   Tar   Heels   will 
be  after  a  perfect  record  this  sea 
son.  Others  who  rate  hig'h   in  the 
eyes   of   Coach   Ralph   Casey    are 
veteran  sprinters  Walt  Rose'.   Bill 
Roth  and  Bill  Zickgraf.  and  divers 
Dave  Mclnnis  and  Ned  Meekins. 

Krepp  did  not  swim  against  East 
Carolina  due  to  scholastic  commit-  j 
mcnts,  but  his  teammates  were 
impressive.  Soph  Jeff  Zwickcr  won 
the  220  yard  freestyle  with  a  time 
of  2:20.4.  Mclnnis  and  Meekins  took 
first  and  second,  respectively,  in 
diving  and  the  UNC  freestyle  re- 
lay team  went  400  yards  in  3:35.1.  j 

The  meet  will  be  highlighted  by  ! 
three  record  breaking  attempts.  | 
In  a  special  AAU  sanctioned  event. 
Buddy  Baarcke,  Carolina  star  of , 
three  years  ago,  will  be  shooting ' 
for  a  new  Ajnerican  mark  in  the  j 
50  yard  buterfly  breastroke.  UlMC's  ! 
relay  teams  will  be  after  new  con- ; 
ference  standards  in  the  400  med- 1 
ley  and  400  freestyle  relay  events.  { 

South  Carolina  is  on  a  road  trip 
that  finds  them  going  against  the  1 
Tar  Heels   tonight  and   the  State 
Wolfpack  tomorrow.  ' 

CAROLINA   LINEUP 
400  yard    m*dlty    r*l«y — Kr*pp, 

Zich^raf,  Roth,  Res* 
22(1  yard   frcttyS*  —   Schiffman, 

Zwickcr 
SO  yard  frcMtyl*  —  Nash,  Ma- 

n«ss 
200  yard     buttM^Iy  —  Mahaffy, 

Turnar 
Diving  —  MMiklns,  Parkar 
100  yard  frattyl*— ^ash,  Man«»s 
200  yard  backstrok*  —  Zwickar, 

Butiar 
440  yard     freaatyla  —  Atwattr, 

Schiffman 
200  yard     braaststroke  —  Goad, 

Marcar 
400  yard  fraastyla  relay — Krepp, 

Zichgraf,   Roth,   Rose 


ACC  Hears  State 
Plea  For  Appeal 


YORK   LARESE 

.sharp  shooting  iroth 


Frosh  Cagers  Meet 
Wilmington  Tonite 


By  DAVE  WIBLE 

Carolina's  fi^eshman  cagers  went 
thivugh  a  long  scrimmage  yester- 
iday  in  prcperation  for  tonight's  j 
contest  -.uth  Wilmington  Junior  Cul-  ■; 
lege  at   Wilmington.  I 

Tonight    the    Tar    Babies    will    be 
:  gainst    much     tougher    opposiltion  j 
than  lhe>   met  in  their  opener  with  j 
the  HLgii   Point  College  J.V.'s.   Tlie  j 
boys    from    down    east    are    experi- 
enced cagers.  many  of  wlwm  play- 
ed at  large  colleges  or  in  the  ser- 
vice before  they  attondcd  Wilming- 
ton. 

Coach  Vince  Grtmaldi  will  be 
hcndling  the  Tar  Babies  tonight  in 
I  he  abMince  of  freshman  head 
(oacli  Buck  Freeman.  FYeeman  will 
b«'  doing  some  scouting  for  the  var- 
sity Grimaldi  was  a  star  guard  for 
tile  Tar  Heels  a  few  ycai-Ti  liack.  lie 
is  now  doing  graduate  work  in  phy- 
sical education. 


,  guards     Jol.n     Crotty      and      Mike 
i  Steppe.    Grey    Poole.    Jack   Crutch- 
I  field,  Lee  Ainslie.  and  Wally  Gra-   eligibility 
ham  are  tlie  leading  reserves. 


By  KEN  ALYTA 

GREENSBORO  — (AP)—  P^ac- 
ulty  athletics  chairmen  of  the  At- 
lantic Coast  Conference  met  in 
closed  session  today  to  hear  the 
request  of  Chancellor  Carey  H. 
Bostian  of  North  Carolina  State 
College  that  the  conference  con- 
duct its  own  investigation  of  the 
basketball  recruiting  case  that  re- 
sulted in  a  four-year  NCAA  im- 
posed probation  against  the  col- 
lege. 

Bostian  and  I»rcsident  William 
C.  Friday  of  the  Consolidated  Uni- 
versity of  North  Carolina,  which 
embraces  North  Carolina  State, 
met  with  the  chairmen  for  about 
two  hours. 

The  conference  executive  com- 
mittee met  late  tonight  to  consid- 
er the  action  of  the  ACC  in  the 
matter. 

Conference  President  Dr. 
Charles  E.  Jordan  of  Duke  in  a 
statement  after  the  meeting  with 
Bostian  and  Friday,  said  "it 
should  be  pointed  out  that  we  are 
not  sitting  as  a  jury  on  the  case, 
but  we  have  been  requested  to 
consider  whether  the  conference 
should  make  an  independent  in- 
vestigation of  the  charges." 

Announcement  of  the  confer- 
ence decision  will  come  tomorrow 
when  the  first  general  session  is 
called  to  order. 

The  NCAA  three  weeks  ago  put 
North  Carolina  State  on  probation 
for  4  years  because  of  what  it 
called  "recruiting  imegularities". 
in  the  case  of  Jackie  Morcland,  a 
6-8  freshman  basketball  player 
from  Minden,  La. 
Moreland's  conference  athletic 
has  not  been  approved 


by  conference  Commissioner  Jim 
Weaver  pending  final  disposition 
of  the  case. 

Both  the  school  and  Moreland 
have   denied   the    NCAA   charges. 

North  Carolina  State  has  asked 
the  conference  to  conduct  an  in- 
vestigation into  the  case,  terming 
it  the  best  avenue  through  which 
to  appeal  the  NC.\A  action. 


Carolina 


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Grimaldi  said  yesterday  tliat  al- 
though the  Tar  Babies  topped  the 
icntry  mark  in  their  victorious  de- 
but against  High  Point,  this  is  no 
indication  of  theii-  strengUi.  "'The 
H4gh  Pointers  were  very  weak", 
l;e   said,     "Vou    can   not    tell    much 


MURALS 

The  DKE's  became  blue  league 
champions  yesterday  when  they  de- 
feated the  Sigma  Nu's  1-0.  The  two 
fraternities  battled  to  a  tie  at  the  j  about  a  basket  ball  team  in  a  game 
-arac's  end.  To  play  oft  the  tie  each  1  like  that.  The  game  tonight  and 
team  was  given  the  ball  for  four |  next  weeks  game  with  St^U-  will 
plays  starting  at  the  fifty  jard  line.  |  --ell  us  plenty  about  our  real 
The  DKE's  completed  two  thirty  '  ■'■'''ength.  " 
yard  passes  their  last  two  plays  put-  (j,i,„.,,j,  ^oc-s  not 
ling  the  ball  in  Sigma  Nu  territory.  |  ^.^^y^  f,eshmen  » ill 
The  Sigma  Nu's  had  one  play  to 
get  the  ball  back  over  the  fifty 
but    they   were   not    able    to   come 


JAZZ 

AT   TURNAGE'S 

PRESENTS 

Dick  Gable 

AND  THE 

ALL  -  STARS 
EVERY  SAT.  2:00  P.M. 

BEER  SERVED 


Olympics  Go  Into  Home 
Stretch;  Reds  In  Lead 


sia's  strong  Dynamo  club  favored 
over  Yugoslavia — the  men  of  the 
Hammer  and  Sickle  had  a  total  of 


By  WILL  GRIMSUEY 

MELBOURNE  —   The   Olympic 
pames     dedicated    to    good    will 

Long  nations,  went  into  the  next  690i/.  points  in  the  American  sys- 
to  last  day  of  competition  yester- !  tern  and  596Mi  in  the  European 
day  with  an  outbreak  of  bitter  pro- j  compared  with  558^^.  and  465Vi  for 
tests  and  bickerings  as  the  Soviet  the  United  States.  , 
Union  surged  past  the  United  j  The  Russians  won  seven  gold 
States  in  the  unofficial  team  cham-  medals  in  men's  gymnastics  and 
pionship.  ^^^^  *"  wrestling  for  their  biggest 

American  officials  conceded  to '  day  of  the  games  while  America's 
the  Soviets  "greater  depth"  after  36-year-old  domination  of  the  men's 
Russia's  gymnastic  precisionists  high  diving  board  was  broken  by 
and  muscle  men  of  the  mat  un-  Mexico's  Joaquin  Capilla. 
leased  a  lindslidc  of  gold  medal  j  The  diving  result  provoked  a 
triumphs  which  sent  them  into  an  strong  protest  from  Earl  Michael, 
insurmountable  point  lead  in  both  United  States  diving  coach,  who 
the  American  and'  European  criticized  the  judging  of  Hungar- 
counting   svstems.  | '*"   ^"^   Rusian   scorekeepeers   at 

With  only  two  more  days  of  com-   the  waterside, 
petition  remaining  -  and   one  of    ,   Tnis   was   just   one   of   the   out- 
tbese.  the  Saturday  offering,  only .  l>ursts    during   a   da>    .narked    by 
^h.  soerer  f.H.lhafI  finals  with  Ri.s- p-^"'^'"'  «"'»  fbspules. 


throu^.  The  ball  being  on  the  Sig 
ma  Nu'iS  side  of  the  mid  stripe 
gave  tlie  DKE's  the  victor>'. 

Medical  School  -3  defeated  Medi- 
eal-1,  6-0  to  advance  to  the  dorm 
finals. 

The  Dorm  and  Fraternity  finals 
will  be  iHayed  this  afternoon..  The 
winners  in  these  divisions  will  play 
Monday  afternoon  for  the  school 
championship. 


tliink  this 
quite  equal 
I  iast  \cars  tremendous  squad.  "1 
tliink  we  have  a  well  rounded  team 
this  year  and  a  lot  more  depth,  but 
it  will  take  a  lot  to  stack  up  with 
iast  years  team.  We  wiU  play  a 
loughcr  schedule  this  year  and  pro- 
bably  not  win  as   many  games."      ' 

Analyzing  his  squad,  Grimaldi 
iaid  that  Burno  Larese  has  the 
sharpest  sliooting  eye  and  is  expect- 
ed to  lead  the  scoring  statistics 
along  with  Lee  Shaffer  and  Dick 
Kepley.    Top    backcourt    men    are 


Co-Rec  Volleyball  Begins 


Intramural  Co-Recreational  Vol- 
leyball made  its  debut  Wednes- 
day night  as  47  teams  participated. 
A  total  of  210  individuals  played 
for  their  respective  teams.  Each 
team  consisted  of  three  girls  and 
three  boys  along  with  several 
substitute    players. 

Nine  teams  went  undefeated  as 
22  games  were  played.  Each  team 
played  two  games.  One  game  re- 
mains on  the  schedule  for  each 
of  the  teams  to  complete  the  round 
robin  schedule.  Ken-Rabb's  Roust- 
abouts and  Alpha  Gam  Ill-Sigma 
Nu  displayed  a  fine  quality  of 
volleyball.  They  will  be  the  teams 
to  beat. 

■Games  arc  played  on  a  twenty 
minute  time  limit  divided  into  ten 
minute  halves.  T^vo  boys  can  not 
plav    tlic    b:ill    consffutiwl).    I«e^'- 


ular  NSGWS  rules  apply  in  other 
cases. 

Ollicials  arc  furni.shed  by  the 
Intramural  Department  and  the 
Women's    Athletic    Association. 

Regular  league  play  will  be  com 
pleted  Monday  night  at  7:00.  Tics 
will  be  played  off  following  regu- 
lar play,  at  8:00.  The  finals  will  be 
played  Thursday  night  in  Woollen 
Gym.  Managers  will  draw  for  po- 
sitions in  the  single  elimination 
tournament  following  play  Mon- 
day night. 

Listed  below  are  the  teams  who 
are  undefeated  thus  far:  Delta 
Sigma  Pi-Smith  II;  Pi  Phi  II-Law 
School:  Carr  IV-Chi  Phi  II;  Delta 
Delta  Delta  Ill-Zeta  Psi  I;  Kenan- 
Rabb's  Roustabouts:  Kappa  Delta 
II-Kappa  Sig  II:  Tri  Delt  U-Kap 
Sig  1:  Kappa  .-Mpha-Smith  I:  Mc- 
Iver-SAF,;  AU)ha  (;aiii  Ill-Si^ma 
Xil. 


LADY'S  IMPORTED  FINEST  SCOTLAND 

CASHMERE    SWEATERS 


20% 

Discount 


Cardigans 

And 

Pullovers 

(While  They  Last) 


Julian': 


[t  l|t)C$ 


■H"^— Piffl* 


The  Dollar 

Table  at 

The  Intimate 

Bookshop 

Solves  More 

Christmas 

Problems 

Than 

Santa  Clause! 


ADVENTURE 

SWEEPING  FROM  KENYA... 
TO  THE  CONGO! 


^'>V£H1WIE  ON  TH£  ARWCAh^RONrtfR 

CinemaScopE 

COL^O^    BY 

TECHNICOLOR 

•WARWICK  pnoouciiOK  ■  .COLUW.BiA  pictuw 


sc-«,wi.)hJOHNGILLtriG 

b»4  on  in  ar«:fu'  tv)  t,  ISLiN  AUSTER 

»ir«trt  t/  JOHN  GILLING  •  r^ttxtt  n  ISIIN  AUSTtR 

f=..;..f.«iu:.ri  IRVING ALIiNind ALBERT R, BROCCOLI 


S^M.eettFe 


TODAY  &  SATURDAY 


«f 


60  TO  SEE  'RIFIFI' 


PERHAPS  THE  KEENEST  CRIME  FILM  THAT 
EVER  CAME  fROM  FRANCE ...  COMPARES 
MORE  THAN  FAVORABLY  WITH  THE 
MEMORABLE  FILM  'THE  ASPHALT  JUNGLr 
...  IT  MAKES  THE  HAIRS  ON  THE  BACK 
OF  THE  NECK  RISE!" 

—Bosley  Crowther,  New  York  Times 


''A  SUPERIOR  MOVIE... 

so  briiiiont  that  movie  fans 
.    will  be  talking  about  H  for  some  timer' 

^    .^-~  —Htrald-Tribuna 

"iricicit ...  THE  SUSPENSE  IS 
ALMOST  UNBEARABLE!" 

''AN  EXPERT  DEMONSTRATION  on  how  to 

get  the  maximum  in  drama  and  suspense . . . 

Never  relaxing  excitement,  a  classic  exercise  in 

keeping  nerves  stretched  taut  through 

ingenuity,  imagination!" 

—  World-Tahgram 

"EVERY  OVERTONE  THE  UNDERWORLD 

AFFORDS  . .  .  'RIFIFr  comes  up  with^ 

hot  singer  to  equal  the  Marilyn  Monroe 

effect,  dnd  just  in  cose  she  isn't 

suffTicient,  there's  another  bouncier 

miss  who  bathes  her  gangster  boy  friend 

and  tussles  with  him  among  the  suds^' 


■iv.: 


-N.w  York  PoA 


''SITS  A  NEW  HIGH   IN  SUSPENSEI 

. .  A  piece  of  film-making 

that'll  have  you  holding  your  breath 

when  you  aren't  chewing  your  fingernails." 

r-  Journol-Anfrican 

I 

'THE  BEST  UNDERWORLD  STORY  YET 
FILMED  . . .  holds  you  in  an  iron 
grip  ...  It  is  the  best 
.  foreign  film  seen 
this  year!" 

—  Dvlly  M'lrrot 

A  oensational 

New 
Motion  Picture 


''RIFIFr 

.\. means  Trouble! 

TONIGHT 


i* 


SPECIAL   LATE   SHOW 
Regular  Shov\^ing  Starts  Sunday 


.•f* 


U.H.C.  -tlBRART 
SERIALS  DEPT. 
BOX  870 
CHAPEL  HILL,  N.C 


'-■-:■'■  .' 


House  Raps  ACC  s  Grahts-in-Aid  Program  In  Meeting 


GREENSBORO,  (.\P)  —The  Atlantic  Coast  Conference  tabled 
the  touchy  grants-in-aid  to  athletes  question  Friday  in  an  executive 
session.  -  ^  j.    ^^^^      ,  ,    %  ^  ^   „ 

The  executive  session  was  called  to  discuss  a  point  raised  by 
the  University  of  North  Carolina. 

North  Carolin*  r»qu*st*d  an  inter prctatrDn  by  the  conference 
on  whether  the  length  of  time  for  an  athlete  to  be  ineligible  may 
be  determined  by  the  commissioner. 

Specifically,  the  case  in  question  was  that  of  Don  Cokcr,  former 
backfield  star  at  Reidsville  High  School,  now  a  freshman  at  North 
Carolina.  Several  months  ago  Coker  was  ruled  ineligible  for  ath- 
letics at  North  Carolina  by  the  ACC  executive  committee. 

That  ruling  backed  up  an  earlier  decision  by  Commissioner 


Weaver   that    Coker   was   ineligible   for   aihlelics   at    Chapel   Ilill 
because  he  received  aid  beyond  that  allowed  by  conference  rules. 

Weaver  said  the  aid  took  the  form  of  a  country  ciub  member- 
ship at  Reidsville,  which  the  commissioner  said  "was  paid  for  by 
North  Carolina  alumni  and  friends." 

Conference  rules  state  simply  that  an  athlete  receiving  illegal 
aid  shall  be  declared  ineligible  for  athletics  at  the  institution  in- 
volved. 
HOUSE 

On  the  matter  of  grants-in-aid,  retiring  Chancellor  Robert 
House  of  the  University  of  North  Carolin.i,  making  what  he  called 
a  farewell  address,  urged  the  conference  to  "get  back  to  the  con- 
sideration of  the  welfare  of  the  boys  concerned."  He  said  the  ACC 
has  not  "moved  as  a  conference  one  inch"  beyond  the  stage  it  had; 


reached  when  it  broke  from  the  Southern  Conference  three  years 
ago. 

Speaking  of  Whitt  he  ceiled  "the  recruiting  racket  ell  ever  the 
United  States,"  Mouse  Mid  "we  »n  getting  inte  freuMe  and  we 
stink.  Not  one  of  US  has  a  reason  to  look  down  his  Mse  et  another 
one." 

He  urged  the  conference  to  "get  back  to  the  level  of  your 
group  prestige,"  or  throw  its  rules  and  regulations  into  the  waste 
basket. 

The  conference  television  committee  was  supported  by  the 
trroup  as  a  whole  in  its  recommendations  that  the  NCAA's  plan'  for 
televising  football  next  year,  still  to  be  announced,  be  endorsed 
by  th»  Arc.  The  request  of  a  television  station  to  broadcast  the 
final  game  of  the  conference  basketball  tournament  March  9  In 


^-4    »■■•.   .-»-*-•■ 

Raleigh  was  tabled  ifl  favor  of  further  study.     -  -      .       •-     — 
CHAMPION 

Beginning  with  next  football  season,  the  conference  will  send 
its  champion  to  play  in  the  Orange  Bowl  game  at  Miami..  Up  to 
now,  the  conference  rule  has  called  for  "the  most  representative 
team,"  not  necessarily  the  champion,  to  got  the  bowl  bid.  However, 
starting  next  season,  all  teams  will  play  at  least  six  conference 
games  making  the  eventual  first-place  finisher  a  "representative 
champion."  In  the  event  of  a  tie,  the  football  committee  will  de- 
cide the  issue. 

The  financial  report  showed  total  income  for  the  year  ending 
Nov.  30  of  more  thaa  $85,000.  Over  !>56.000  was  realized  on  the 
basketball  tournament.  Elxpenses  v.-ere  just  under  S70.000.  leaving 
a  net  profit  for  the  year  of  slightly  more  than  $13,000.. 


WEATHER 

They  change  rapidly.  See  page  7. 


CHANCELLOR 

There  is  one  man.  See  editorial, 
Pe9e  2. 


VOL.  LVII,  NO.  64 


Complete  {JP)   Wire  Service 


CHAPEL  HILL.  NORTH  CAROLINA.  SATURDAY.  DECEMBER  t.  19M 


Officu  in  Gruham   Memcrial 


FOUR  PAGES  THIS  ISSUE 


hKU5H.  SOPHS  STILL  GET  THREE  |  .  ^ 

FACULTY    KILLS    CUT    REGULATION 


Paul  Green  Says  New  Play 
Treats  Present  Problems 


\ 


"Subject  Timely 
Now,"  Author 
Says  At  Tea 

Paul  Green,  Chape!  Hill  play- 
wright, yesterday  said  that  his 
latest  symphonic  outdoor  drama, 
"Wilderness  Road."  deals  with 
the  same  sort  of  problems  as 
those  now  facing  the  American 
people,    especially   the    South. 

Green,  speaking  at  the  BuU's 
Head  Bookshop  tea.  also  said  th«t 
the  drama  "tells  the  story  of  the 
struggle  of  idealism  against  the 
ever  present  forces  of  ignorance, 
prejudice  and  political  narrow- 
ness of  too  years  ago." 

"And  the  subject  is  still  timely," 
he  added. 

Green  explained  that  the  hero 
of  the  play  is  a  young  teacher  by 
the  ".somewhat  symbolic  name  of 
John  Freeman,'  who  founded  a 
school  in  the  mountains  of  Ken- 
tucky in  the  year  1858. 

Freeman  sets  about  teaching 
truth  as  he  sees  it — the  truth  of 
American  democracy,  of  the  New 
Testament  and  the  Christian  relig- 
ion. But  during  the  Civil  War, 
tempers  are  heated  and  slavery 
soon   involves   him   in   trouble. 


CU  Office 
To  Move 


President  William  C.  Friday  said 
yesterday    the    Consolidated    Uni- 


LEGISLATIVE  ROUNDUP 


Young's  Talk  Well 

Received  By  Legislators 


unanimously. 

A   similar  resolution   was 


also 


Legislators    received      President    lity  for  maintenance  of  dormitory 
Bob  Young's  State  of  the  Campus   television  sets  froin  individual  dor- 
versily    hopes   to   have   its   offices   Address  enthusiastically  Thursday   uiitories  to  the  office  of  the  direc- 
movod    from'    South    Building    to   night.  |  tor   of    operations   was    approved 

the    old    Institute    of   Government]      a  standing  ovation  was  accorded 

Aprf/or  tt  nr'st  IfTav.'"'    'V''  '""'"'  '""  '""  ''''•  '  ^--^^  unanimou.,ly  by  the  Inter- 

I      Oiher   items   on    the    legislative    dormitory  Council. 

President    Friday    said    the    old   agenda  included  three  finance  bills    ABSENCES 
Institute   of   Government    building   which  were  passed  with  little  op-       Legislators  absent  from  the  ses- 
would  be  renovated   between  now  position.  sion  were: 

and    the    fH..l    of    May    if    present  j      rhe  only  measure  which  aroused        Sludeni    Party.  .(2)    Dick    Gusta- 
plans  work  out.  [much  haggling  from  lawmakers  was 

He  .said  sketches  had  been  turn-  a  bill  appropriating  $1,000  to  Uni- 
ed  in  to  an  artist.  Drawings  will  ■  versity  Glee  Club. 
be  made  from  these  to  use  in  oh-  Band  President  Don  Nance  pre- 
taining  bids  for  the  remodeling,  j  sented  the  glee  club's  plea  effect- 
Only  the  interior  of  the  building  '  ively  and  handled  lawmaker's 
wilL.be  remodeied.         ^  «4-'4uestions   handily. 

Thus      he    received    his      $1,000 


Profs  Get  Choice 
On  Upperclassmen 

The  l-atiilty  (iomicil  vcsterdav  killed  thf  old  (lass  at- 
tendance regulation  allowing  only   three  iiits  per  i  lass. 

In  its  place,  the  (onntil  approxed  a  regiiiatiAn  which: 

(i)  l.tlccts  no  (hanoe  in  attendance  lor  Ireshnien  and 
sophoniores. 

(2)  .Allows  iiniiors  and  seniors'  cuts  to  he  regidated  by 
individual   instrnctors. 


Paul  Gr««n  spoke  yesterday  at  the  Bulls  Head  Bookshop  tea  on 
his  latest  symphonic  dranrta,  "Wilderness  Road."  Green  who  lives  in 
Chapol  Hilt,  is  the  author  of  "The  Lost  Colony,"  "The  Common 
Glory,"  and  "Faith  of  Our  Fathers." 


neighbors    are    finally    reconciled 
to     his   idealism   and     set     about 
His  neighbors    burn    down    his  i  building  a    new  school  house 
school  and  beat  him,  but  he  will 


not  raise  his  hand  against  them. 
He  rebuilds  his  school  and  then 
Kentucky  is  overrun  by  the  South- 
ern forces  He  finally  picks  up  his 
gun  and  fights,  leading  his  men 
against  former  friends  and  neigh- 
bors commanded  by  his  own  broth- 
er. 

Freeman     is     killed     and     his 


After  saying  that  the  play  deals 
with  the  same  kind  of  problems 
facing  the  South  today.  Green  de 
clared  that  "if  we  continue  to  try 
to  evade  our  responsibility  in 
this  time  of  crisis,  then  the  more 
surely  shall  we  —  with  our  old 
purveying  of  outmoded  ethics,  out 
moded   science   and     a     perverse 


President  Friday  gave  three  rea- 
sons for  the  planned  move. 

1.  The  Consolidated  Universi- 
ty offices  need  more  space  and 
Ihi.s    building    will    provide    that. 

2.  Ul'  ioels  that  the  Consoli- 
dated University  offices  should  be 
off  the  main  campus  at  Cliapcl 
Hill. 

3.  The  move  will  give  Chan- 
cellor House  an  his  staff  more 
space  in  south  Building. 

Consolidated  University  offi- 
cers who  will  be  included  in  the 
move  are:  William  C.  Friday, 
president;  William  M.  Whyburn, 
vice   president   and    prpvost;   Will- 


ison,    Aady    Milnor. 

University  Party  (4)  Bill  Redding, 
Van  Woltz,  MJSK  Kitty  Corr,  Phil-  j 
lip   M alone. 

In  line  with  absences,  Chairman  j 

Bill  Bfkom  of  the  Lfegislature  Rules  \ 

Committee  said:  \ 

"My  committete-.  wHl  enfiHH^e  at- ; 

•enianee  regulations  to  the  fullest  i 


By  NEIL  BASS 

Understanding  of  the  new  regu- 
Htion   is  that  juniors  and  seniors 

ay  have  unlimited  unexcused  ah- 
ences  so  long  as  they  maintain  a 
,C",  average. 

On   the    other    hand,    since   coa- 

'rol  of  cuts  is  entirely  in  the  hands 

of    each   respective    instructor,    in- 

'.tructors  might  allow  a  student  no 

__      '   .         »  tu'  "o».:i.o  A.n/.a   cuts  if  his  work  was  unsatisfactory. 
The  Order  of  the  Grail's  dance  ,     ^,  ^    i     nr.A 

X.         ■   «  ♦.,„   ^^»,  ->  ^t  '>.i_._iith    according  to  Chairman  J.  L.  God- 

hononng  the   women'  of  Mereditii    _ 

I  rey. 


Grail  Dance 
Begins  At  8 
In  Woollen 


which  the   group   will    use    to  de-  extent." 

Iray  travel   expenses.  |      The  body  will  not  convene  again 

APPROVAL  until  the  second  week  in  January, 

Legislators     also  approved     ap-  in   accoi  dance  with   a   by-laws-sti- 1 

poinlment   of  Ralph  Cummings,   a  pulation  which  provides  that  legis-  j 

freshman,  to  chairmanship  of  ihe  lative   .sessions   (|o   not    meet     on 

Elections   Board.  Aeeks  directly  preceding  and  fol  , 

A  resolution  shifting  responsibi-  lowing  holidays.  | 


Amerkan  College  Of 
Physicians  Meet  Here 


Christianity  —  rob  ourselves  and  iam  D.  Carmichael,  Jr.,  vice  pres- 
our  children  of  the  fullness  of  the  I  ident  and  finance  officer;  and 
future.  I  A..    H.    Shepard,    business    officer 

•But      I      am    convinced    North  \  and    treasurer.    Secretarial    staffs 
Carolina  and  the  S:/Uth  will  meas- j  will  also  be  included  in  the  move. 
ure    up   to   this   challenge   and,    in  i 
the    words    of   .\eschlus.   help   the  i 
right     'o   prevail.   There   is     hard  | 
w'^rk    and    patient    work      to      be 
done.   And   we   will   do   it.   .And   if ' 
not    we    older    ones  —  then    the  i 


Hr.  J.  W  R.  .Norton,  state 
health  officer  of  Raleigh,  was 
among  the  many  physicians  who 
presented  papers  before  the  reg- 
ional meeting  of  the  American 
College  of  Physicians  held  at  the 


both  of  the  North  Carolina  State 
Board  of  Health. 


College  will  begin  today  at  a  p.m. 

Approximately  200  wf©m*n, are 
scheduled  to  arrive  by  bus 'ffom 
Meredith  at  Woollen  Gymnasium, 
site  of  the  dance,  'Tietween  7:30 
and  8  o'clock,  according  to  lAith-j 
er    Hodges,    Grail    delegata,  '         I 

The  entire  campus  is  invited 
to  attend  the  function.  Hodges 
said. 

Students  may  come  stag  or  with 
dates,   he  emphasized. 

Admission  for  the  dance  is  $1 
per  couple.  It  will  be  informal 
with  coats  and  ties  requested. 
Hodges    said. 

Music  will  be  provided  by  the 
15-piece    Duke    Ambassadors. 


Universitv   of   North    Carolina. 


young    people      certainly, 
eyes  are  straining  ahead." 


Their 


Rain  Tomorrow!  Family  Adoption  Total 

Will  End  Balmy  ,     ^^    ,      Hnr\   r      r 
Spring Weatherfis  Only  180  So   Far 


Showers  tomorrow  will  bring 
to  an  end  the  week  of  sunny  sum- 
mer weather  that  Carolina  ladies, 
gentlemen  and  dogs  have  been  en- 
joying. 

The  weather  man  at  Raleigh-Dui'- 
ham  Airport  reports  that  yester- 
day's high  of  78  is  the  warmest 
the  area  has  been  on  that  date 
since  1951.  Exactly  how  long  the 
mild  weather  will  last  is  still 
cloudy.  The  weather  man  de- 
scribed the  condition  as  not  being 
a    "clear-cut    situation." 

He  described  the  extended  spell 
of  sunny  weather  as  being  due 
to  a  "rather  stubborn  high  press- 
ure .system  over  the  Southeast." 
This  system  is  stronger  than  any 
of  those  blowing  in  from  the 
Northwest  and  has  prevented  them 
from  entering  the  area.  These 
frustrated  systems  are  partially  re- 
sponsible for  the  cold  weather 
which  the  rest  of  the  country  is 
having. 

Uast  night's  low  of  54  will  give 
way  to  another  balmy  day,  partly 
cloudy  and  warm  with  a  high  in 
the  low  70's. 


A  small  total  of  180  families 
out  of  the  600  needy  .families  that 
applied  for  aid  have  been  adopt- 
ed io  far  through  the  Empty 
Stockings  Fund,  according  to  Mrs. 
John  Crittenden,  chairman  of  the 
drive.         «    "*  '  . 

The  annual  Empty  Stockings 
Fund,  which  is  sponsored  by  the 
Junior  Service  League,  consists 
of  an  individual,  group*  or  organ- 
ization adopting  a  needy  family 
that  has  applied  to  the  league  for 
Christmas  help. 

Those  who  are  interested  in 
adopting  a  family  should  either 
call  Mrs.  John  Crittenden,  8-0275, 
or  get  in  contact  with  the  Junior 
Service  League  not  later  than 
Thursday,  December  12. 

Upon  application,  the  adopter  is 
given  the  names,  ages,  sizes,  spec- 
ial needs  and  address  of  the  fam- 
ily adopted.  The  adopter  then 
brings  a  gift  box  to  the  old  In- 
stitute of  Government  building  on 


Monday      through 
1  and  5  p.m. 


Saturday     be- 


A   box   usually  consists   of   toys 
for   any  children   that    may  be    in 
the  family  a  gift  for  the  husband    tossup. 
and  wife,  and  food  such  as  fruit 
flour  or  sugar.  , 


Lambda  Chi's 
Tangle  Today    \ 
In  Bowl  Game  | 

Carolina    football    may    be    over , 
for   19.'.6   but"  the   Tar   Heels   will  I 
have    a    second    chance    to    beat 
neighboring    Duke    today    in   Dur- 
ham. 

UNC's  Gamma  Nu  gridders  go  | 
1<)  Duke  Stadium  today  to  take : 
on  the  Blue  Devils  of  Gamma 
Theta  in  the, fourth  annual  Lamb- 1 
da  Chi  Alpha  Bowl  game  at  2  p.m. ! 
The   contest   has  been  rated   as  a ! 


Dr.  Norton  told  the  physicians,  i 
'The  State  B'>ard  of  Health  is  | 
most  appreciative  of  the  support 
and  personal  assi.stance  given  the 
state  and  local  health  departments  \ 
by  the  members  of  the  Medical . 
The  title  of  Dr.  Xor^on'^  paper  jg^^j^^y     ^f  ^j^^  state     of     North  | 

Carolina  in  the  promotion  of  the  j 
state  wide  poliomyelitis  vaccina-  j 
tion   program."  \ 


was  "Poliomyelitis  Control  in 
North  Carolina."  It  was  jointly 
prepared  by  Dr.  Norton  nad  Drs. 
Fred   T.   Ford  and  J.   H.   Tuthill. 


IN  THE  INFIRMARY 

"T?o3ontsir^he  Infirmary  yes- 
terday   included: 

Misses  Janie  Proctor,  and  Jane 
CKamblee. 

Harrington  Alexander,  Malcom 
McLean,  Lewis  Cody,  Francis  Do- 
browolski,  Ronald  Koes,  and 
Robort  Morrison. 


HAPPENINGS  ON  THE  HILL 


.•>yv  • 


Alpha  Gamma  Pledge's  Presented 
In  Snowy  Winter  Wonderland 


By   MARY   ALYS  VOORHEES 


I  Wint?r  arrived  in  all  its  beauty 
I  Friday  evening  when  the  Alpha 
I  Gams  transformed  the  Carolina  Inn 
!  Ballroom  into  a  snowy  wonderland 
Both  clubs  have  gone  at  full ;  fo^  their  annual  pledge  dance, 
speed  this  week  in  preparation  for 


Business  Fraternity 
Initiates  14  Members 

The  Alpha  Lambda  Chapter  of 
Delta  Sigma  Pi.  international  pro- 
fessional business  frater'nity,  in 
ceremonies  held  Thursday  night 
initiated  14  new  members  into 
the   fraternity. 

The  new  brothers  are:  Bob  Bar- 
ber, Erwin-  Herman  Bunch,  High  | 
Point;  Mac  Carter.  Madison;  Nor- 
man C'oggins.  Kannapolis;  Roger; 
Eller.  Purlear:  Jim  Glass,  Mt.  j 
Airy;  Fred  Isenhower.  Conover;  | 
Joe  Kaminski.  Norco.  Calif.;  Bill 
Mathews,  Hockvvell:  Jim  Shreve, 
Mayodan;  Lloyd  Smith.  Shelby; 
Dave  Stanton,  Lumberton:  Perry 
Turner,  Hickory;  and  David  Veasy, 
Durham. 


the    fraternity-sponsored    affair. 


190  lbs.  per  man  and  .1  bevy 
of  swift  backs,  wi'.»  rpen  tii« 
game  with  the  following  probable 
starting  lineup: 


Snow-covered  greenery,  accented 
by  glittering  snowflakes  suspended 
The    Tar  Heels,  boasting  a  line  \  from  the  four  chandeliers,  a  ma.s- 

sive  Christmas  tree  in  the  center 
of  one  wall  and  white  paper  stud- 
ded with  silver  snowflakes  cover- 
rig  the  banisters,  set  the  tempo  of 
the  dinner-dance. 


John  Wilbur  and  Corb?tt  Stew- 
art, ends:  Dave  Berryhill  and  Jim 


At   the   candlelight   banquet   in- 


Johnson,  tackles:  Tillar  Lytle  and  1  dividual   tables  for  six  were   cen- 
George   Kak  Kaloyannides,  guarJs  ■  tered  with  two  red  candles  garland- 


and  George  Maydonis,  center. 

In  the  backfield  will  he  Kim  Bal- 
lus,  quarterback;  Don  Koontz  and 
Johnny  Wooten,  halfbacks  and 
Earls  Tolin.s,  fullback. 


Two  varsity  stars  from  both 
schols  are  expected  to  officiate. 
Loser  of  the  game  will  treat  the 
victor  to  a  party  tonight. 

Last  year's  contest  ended  in  a  6- 
6  tie. 


i  cd  with  snowy  greenery  and  Christ- 
I  mas  balls.  To  mark  the  pledges 
!  places  were  presents  from  their 
I  sorority  sisters — Alpha  Gam  charm 
j  necklaces. 

I      Afterv/ards   came    the   highlight 

)i  the  evening— the  presentation  of 

the   fall   pledges  and  their     dates 

who  formed  a  figure  representing 

!  a  hugh  snowflake. 

First  to  be  introduced  was  Pled- 
i  ge  Class  President  Phyllis  Kraf ft 


v.'ith  Paul  Carr.  The  other  pledge 
officers.  Vice  President  Ann  In 
hiam  with  Cortrttt  Stewart,  Secre- 
tary Ruth  Neialer  Mith  John  Sha- 
,>ard  and  Treasurer  Andrea  Stalvey 
with  Dick  MeCallister  were  pre- 
sented next,  followed  by  the  re- 
mainder of  the  pledges  and 
their  dates. 

Master  of  ceremonies  Ray  Jeffer- 
ies  introduced  each  pledge  and  her 
date,  after  which  they  formed  a 
large  snowflake,  In  the  center  of 
the  floor  with  the  pledge  class  pre- 
sident m  the  center  holding  white 
oatin  streamers  leading  to  each 
couple. 

Immediately  after  the  formation 
the  pledges,  dressed  in  white  gowns 
and  carrying  bouquets  of  red  roses, 
kneeled  while  the  Alpha  Gam  sis- 
ters san?  "Reverie"  to  them. 

T'ne  evening  was  concluded  with 
dancing  to  the  music  of  Bill  Lang- 
ley  and  his  Star  Dreamers. 

This  aftem<K)!v  will  find  the  Al- 
pha Gams  out  at  the  Ranch  House 
where  theif  d|tea  will  entertain 
them  at  a  champagne  party,  and  as 
a  climax  to  their  pledge  week  end 
is  a  party  tunifht  at  Johnny  s  Sup- 


students 
a 


per  Club  in  Raleigh. 

THEATER    PARTIES   claimed 
good     number   of   UNC 
Thiu"sday  evening. 

Mantovani  was  in  town  with  his 
"new  music,  '  and  what  better  rea- 
son could  one  find  for  a  party? 

With  the  concert  in  mind  the 
St.  A's  rolled  out  the  welcome  mat 
and  bad  their  dates  over  for  din- 
ner, afterward  heading  over  to 
Memorial  Hall  to  hear  the  music  of 
Manrovani. 

The  ZBT  s  were  playing  host  to 
tne  AEPhi  sorority  from  Duke,  so 
after  dinner  they,  too.  were  off 
for  the  concert. 

Also,  the  Lambda  Chis  had  their 
dates  over  to  the  house  for  a  steak 
Unner,  after  which  they  included 
themselves  in  the  overflow  crowd 
'.0  see  and  hear  the  popular  musi- 
cian. 

PARTY,  PARTY  seems  to  be  the 
theme  this  week  for  most  Greek 
letter  houses,  regardless  of  the 
type  of  party. 

As  the  Christmas  season  is  just 
around  the  corner  the  Phi  Gams 
ind  Chi  O's  entertained  at  the  Phi 


OPERATION 

The  licw  regulation   will   be   put 
into  opeiation  at  the  beginning  of 
the  spring  semester,  in  February, 
^  Godfrey  said. 

!      The  regulation  w'as  proposed  by 
'the    Faculty    Councils   Committee 
on   Student   Class   .A.ttendance,   Dr. 
I  Hugh  Holman.  chairman. 

I      The  report  in  its  entirely  will  be 

I  released  next  Wednesday,  Council 

.Secretary  Dr.  A.  C.  Howell  said. 

The  new  pv.ten dance  rule  was  not 
available  yesterday.  Dr.  Howell 
said,  because  certain  "modifica 
tions''  made  to  the  original  report 
on  the  tloor  had  not  been  incorpo- 
rated into  it  yet. 

A  presidentially-appointed  stu- 
(ient  government  committee  met 
with  Dr.  Holman  s  committee  while 
it  deliberated,  and  suggested  the 
class  attendance  regulation,  in  ef- 
lect  prior  to  the  spring  of  1955, 
;  oe  rcinstat(;d. 

i  This  regulation  allowed  all  stu- 
dents' cuts  to  be  regulated  by  in- 
dividual instructors.  Descriptive 
term  for  the  regulation  was  "un- 
limited cuts." 

The  committees  suggestion  was 
incorporated    in    the    new   regula- 
tion  for  juniors   and   seniors  with 
C  ■  averages,  but  not  for  freshmen 
and  sophomores. 

The  Faculty  Council  is  composed 
jf  approximately  70  members,  in- 
cluding 33  ex-officio  members  and 
some  40-odd  elected  members  from 
he  various  University  depart- 
ments. 


Pi  Delta  Phi 
To  Sing  Carols 

Phi  Delta  Phi.  the  honora/y 
French  fraternity  on  campus,  will 
present  a  program  of  group  sing- 
ing of  French  Christmas  carols, 
guest  singers,  and  speakers  on 
French  Christmas  at  its  meeting 
Monday  at  7:30  p.m.  in  the  Ren- 
dezvous Room  of  Graham  Memor- 
ial. 

The  public  has  been  cordially 
invited  to  attend  and  join  in  sing- 
ing the  French  carols.  A  social 
hour  will  frilow  the  program  at 
which    time   refreshments    will    be 


Gar.i  house  Thursday  for  50  little  j  served. 


^■S^l^::r 


m^ 


fAGE  TWO 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


SATURDAY,  DECEMBER  8,  ]9U 


Carolina's  Next  Chancellor: 
There  Is  One  Man  Who  Fits 

It  is  rare  that  I  he  D.iily  1  ai  Hitl  tati  sav  it  sptalvs  lor  the  lua^ 
joiity  of  the  slndciit  l)<)d\.  In  lad.  niost  ot  the  time  the  editorial  views 
ol  this  newspaper  are  toutrarx   to  those  ot  the  students. 

lint  we  leel  that  The  Hiilv  1  ar  Heel  and  the  members  <»l  the  stu- 
dent ImkIn  who  hr.Ae  oj)inions  on  one  snbjett  are  in  agreement  this 
morninu;. 

']  he  oiu'  suhjei  I  is  ilir  nixt  iliautellor  ol  this  I'niversity.     ^ 

*  *  .*  pres>nre.    no    mamr    lr()m    where, 

th;  :  (jjmes  to  him  whik-  he  sits  in 
.Soinh  linildin^.  Hi-  nuist  say  what 
he  heliexes.  write  what  he  l)e'ieve\ 
do  what  he  heliexes:  when  he 
(eases  doino  this,  he  should  he  re- 
mo\ed.  Ihis  is  idealisti(.  we  will 
admit:  hnt  the  i^ood  eollejies  and 
mtixersiiii's.  we  ha\e  noticed.  ha\e 
idealistic  (hand-Ilors  ;  ;id  presi- 
dents. 


GOEHINGEN  LETTER 


In  onr  o|)inion.  the  ehaiuellor 
ot  tlie  I'nixersitv  ol  Noith  (iavo- 
iina  shoidd  have  as  his  main  iol> 
the  ynidance  of  the  I'niversitv  to- 
Axard  hetier  and  more  edniation. 
I  his  is  a  ratlier  broad  thin:;  to  say. 
and  it  lan  be  snbdixided  into  manv 
more  ( ateoorie.s.  bnt  we  feel  it  is 
the  prime  responsibilitv  of  the 
( lian( cllor. 

lli>  other  jobs  .«re  enon<;h  t<j 
iiiike  most  men  slnink  away.  He 
nuisi  hold  together  \arions  sei*- 
meiiis  of  the  I'niversity  whieh  are 
ti.uliii-nallv  at  eaih  others  throats. 
Me  nuiNt  make  snre  thai  <l»e  fae- 
iil!\  is  well  taken  eare  of.  He  nuist 
ri  p.  eMiit  the  I'nixersitv  to  the  rest 
ol  ilif  Nt.  c.  the  nation,  the  uoild. 

lie  is  lire  man  who  will  be  call- 
id  oin  of  l)ed  in  the  middle  of  the 
ni^ln  and  .xsked  for  eonnnent  on 
sontetliing  that  happened  minutes 
before,  fie  must  oe  able  to  '.;i\e 
I.I  it    and    l)onest   answeis.        ^« 


Ihe  (haneellor  of  this  miiwrs- 
ii\  nujNt  he  a  fair  man.  Ian  io  the 
Nindents.  the  fat  ultv.  the  admin- 
i^ti  ion.  ilu'  other  luo  niend)eis 
ol  liie  ( :on>olitl.ited  rni\ersitv. 
the-  i.i\j).t\>i^  of  tlu'  state  and. 
above  all.  I  -ir  to  his  educator  s 
« onseieiKi-.  He  must  not  sell  his 
s.ail  <;r  ai!\  pnt  of  th**  I'liivtrsitv 
b'.i  ansi-  Ml  alnmnns  who  |j;ives 
I  .\(.''  i' f(')i  of  nioney  wants  some- 
thi" .'  done.        '    J        '  . 

.-.li'  i  J*ir--.    ■■•■  r    "     .  . v'. 

He  mii^t  l)e  a  disHked.  some- 
linies  h..  .(!  man.  as  all  men  in 
jmblit  office  m  ist  be.  Bm  he  must 
be  ronstrnc  ted  scj  lliat  he  can  take 
nnfair  eriric  i;m  in  his  stride,  so 
lie  (  an  /■r>ke  j-  \\  ithotit  des  cpdin;', 
to  ilic        fv  ilvel  ol  his  critics. 


He  must  keep  aihlejics  in  its 
I  io;,tr  Ivilaiue  with  the  rest  of  the 
I'niversitv.  just  as  he  must  balance 
.lrI^  and  s(i(iuts.  Itnsiness  admin- 
i-iraiioii.  nicdicine  and  ;i1l  the 
o;Ihi  dixisioiis  and  schools  and 
collewfv  that  make  up  this  beanti- 
lid  rni\ersitv.  He.-  nnist  keep  the 
balance  faitly.  without  favor  tcj  or 
fear  ot  anv  one  j^tcnip. 

He   must   not    be   afraid  t»f  anv 


The  Daily  Tar  Heel 

Thu  uilicial  student  publication  of  tbe 
f'ublicaticjns  Board  of  the  University  of 
\orth  Carolina,  where  it  is  published 
daily  except  Monday  and  examinatiot 
and  vacation  periods  and  summer  terms 
bantered  as  second  class  matter  in  tht 
Dust  office  in  Chapel  Hill,  N  C,  undei 
the  Act  oi  .March  8.  1870.  Subscription 
rates:  mailed,  .S4  per  year.  .S2  50  a  semes 
ter;  delivered.  S6  a  year,  S3.50  a  semes 
ter. 


Editor      FREU  POWLEDGE 


Managing  Editor 
News  Editor 


CIL\RUE  SLOAM 


NANCY   HILL 


Business   Manager    .       BILL  BOB  PL'EL 


Sports  Editor 


LARRY  CHEEK 


NEWS  STAFF— Clark*  Tones,  Nancy 
Hill.  .J"nn  .Moore,  Pringle  Pipkin.  Anne, 
Drake.  Edith  MacKinnon,  Wally  Kuralt, 
-Mary  Alys  V'oorhees.  Graham  Snyder, 
Billy  Barnes.  .\eil  Bass.  Gary  Nichols, 
Pane  Bernstein,  Peg  Humphrey,  Phyllis 
Maultsby. 


Sut)scripfion  Manager    Dale  Staley 

Advertising  Manager  Fred  Katzin 

Circulation  .Manager    Charlie  Holt 


BUSLNESS  STAI-T— Ro.sa  Moore,  Johnny 
Whitaker,  Dick  Leavitt,  Peter  AJper. 

SPORTS  ST.AFF:  Bill  King.  Jim  Purks, 
Jimmy  Harper,  Dave  Wible,  Charley 
Hnwson. 


KDnORIAL  STAFF  —  Woody  Sear?, 
Frank  Crowther,  Barry  Winston,  David 
.Mundy,  George  Pfingst.  Ingrid  Clay. 
Cortland  Edwards,  Paul  McCauley, 
Bobbi  Smith. 

Staff  Photographer  Norman  Kantor 

Staff  Artist    Charlie  Daniel 

Libiarian  .    Sue   Gishner 


Mure  is  somethinji  else  that 
we.  as  students,  feel  is  \ital  to  a 
'^ood  chanci'llor  of  this  nni\evsilv. 
l'e:haps  the  ptoj^le-  searchin*;  for 
the-  man  ha\e  tended  to  overlook 
this,  because  the  people  who  are 
lookinj>  are  no  longei   students: 

Ihe  chancellor,  in  Ihe  Dioily 
I  .n  Heels  estimation,  ^nst  ha\e 
a  poweilnl  nri;iny  wiiliin  him  to 
teach.  To  teach  vonn«  ()eopIe  not 
jnst  biolo^v  or  historv  oi  soc  iolojjv 
ci  phi!osoph\.  bin  to  leach  them 
how'  to  think. 

I  he  man  in  tJie  chancellor's  ot- 
fi(e  Wi.w  has  this  innint;  is  bomid 
to  form  polities,  apjioim  officials 
and  condnct  his  off  ic  i'  in  a  way 
tliat  reflects  ihit  nr'^inuj.  That, 
moll-  ih.m  .invthiiiiJ  else,  is  what 
this  nnixersitv  needs  ri^ht  now.    ^ 


We  all'  iiilormally  familial  with 
the  names  of  the*  latidtv  pecjple 
beinu  considered  h)r  the  chanc:ell- 
or.sjiip,'',(>n.  ,the  list,  tJiere  is  one- 
man.  wV  tcel;  who  satisfies  kIjc 
abo\e  list  of  cjuidificaiions. 

He   is  William    H.  Poteat. 


■    t.u 


Proof  Reader 
Night  Alitor 


.  Wally  Kuralt 
—     ^(flharlie  Sloan 


Doctor  Bill  Poteal,  as  many  of 
his  stndenis  know  Iiim.  is  an  ex- 
cellent scholar.  He  is  vitally  in- 
teic'sted  in  students  and  their  self- 
ooverrvment  and  their  right  to  say 
what  thev  want  to  sav. 

He  is  as  representative  of  the 
I'liixeisity  of  North  Claroliiiiv  as 
anv  of  her  b>rmer  famous  piesi- 
dents  and  c  banc  ellc»rs.  He  is  .i  rep- 
riseniati\e  of  .\orth  Carolina,  bni 
he  also  sees  jjast  the  \'iii;inia  and 
South    Carolina    borders. 

He-  is  interested  in  keepint;  the- 
'.iood  tiacbtions  of  this  inn\ersi- 
I.V  ali\e  and  tlnivln;^.  because  he 
knows  the  \aliie  c»f  j^ckkI  traditions. 
He  is  inteiested  iti  scein'4  that  the 
I'liiversity  stavs  in  proper  balance, 
that  nothino;  here  comes  out  on 
top  except    ihinkiii'4. 

Ihe  students,  faciiltv.  admini- 
Mration  and  taxpaveis  could  trust 
the  rniversity  in  the  hands  of  Dr. 
Poteat.  They  could  know  that,  no 
ma-ttei  what  attacked  the  Tnivers- 
ii\.  if  the  attack  were  nniiiMified 
Dr.    Poteat    would    put    it    down. 


Above  all.  William  Poteat  is 
passionatelv  inteiesied  in  ^^a-tting 
his  students   to   think. 

^'on  can  tell  that  in 'his  classes 
in  the  Dept.  of  Philosophy.  You 
can  tell  it  when  you  sii  with  hint 
«on  a  Cinveisity  boaid.  and  when 
\ou  drink  coffee  with  him  in  Le- 
noir Hall,  ^ou  can  tell  ii  when  you 
walk  with  him  avio.ss  .McCcjrkle 
Place  to  the  c»ther  side  of  Franklin 
St.  to  ufei  an  ice  cream  cone  and 
talk  about  life  and  education  and 
relic;ion  and  ativtliini^  else  in  the 
world  or  outside  ii. 


liecause  Dr.  \\  ilti. m  H.  Po- 
teat is  all  these  things  and  manv 
more.  The  Dailv  I  ar  Heel  feels 
he  woidd  make  the  best  possible 
c  haneellor  lot  this  university.  We 
think  the  majority  of  the  students 
who  care   feel   the  same  way. 

It  is  awfid  hard  to  find  anv- 
thins  wron»  with  Doctor  Bill  Po- 
teat. If  he  weic  named  t  hn'ncellor. 
We  could  sav  the  same  h»r  the  rni- 
versity. 


Frank's 
Confused, 

It  Appears    Tradition,  Free  Cuts  And  Much  Studying 


Tar  Heel's  Life  In  German  University: 


G 


Frank  Crowther 

I  think  that  I'll  start  a  new- 
philosophy  called  "the  Philo- 
sophy of  Confusion." 

.\1I  sophomores  are  automat- 
ically eligible.  Therefore.  I'm  al- 
ready a  member.  But  if  I  remain 
confused  when  I  attain  the  status 
of  junior.  wiH  I  still  be  elijjible 

or   will      a     confused   junior 

have    to   appl.v*. . .  or     is     niin&. 
confusion  an  entrance  ticket? 
I'm   confused! 

My   confusion    is      confusing, 
/     for,  being  rational,   I   am  as  to 
/      whether   I   am   confused   that   I 
am    confused    .    .    .and    this      is 
threefold    confusion  which 
would  add  to  the  confusion  .  .  . 
confusing,  isn't  it? 
But   if  confusion,  cpislemologi- 
cally.  means  disorder  and  chaos, 
how-  can  we  ever  have  any  order 
Lj  our  confusion?  And  confus?d 
people  in  confusion  are  some  of 
the  worst  people  I  have  over  en- 
countered .  . .  indeed,      ifs      con- 
fusing. 

If  we  confound   our  confusion, 
we   end    up   perplexi>d— which   is 
another  word  for  confused. 
■^-         h-         t 

It  was  rallior  amusing  to  see 
the  results  a  few  days  back  of 
the  Olym-oic  fencing  matchc's: 
Ilungaiy^  9;  Russia.  7. 

Whjit?  in  Budapest  the  Huss- 
i«r^.  fortified  with  tanks,  ma- 
c;hine  guns  and  divisions  of  men. 
arc  mowing  down  hundreds  of 
unarmed  Hungarians — mourning 
women  etai— the  Hungarian  and 
Kussian  athletes  arc  eating  and 
sleeping  and  playing  together  in 
Molborne.  You  can  imagine  what 
is  going  on  in  their  n^spective 
minds. 

Ironic  that  without  their  tanks 
and  with  only  swords  between 
men.  the  Ru.'isians  didn't  fare  as 
well  ....  small   justice! 

I  suppose  that  Alice  Edwards 
Jenes,  the  first  woman  to  re- 
ceive a  di'gree  from  thp  Uni- 
versity of  North  Carolina,  be- 
lieves that  Chapel  Hill  i.>,  an 
extremely   likeable  place. 

While  snapping  photos  be- 
hind Gimglioul  Castle  the  other 
day,  I  happened  to  meet  our 
first  feminine  graduate.  After 
tactfully  spending  a  few  min 
utes  trying  to  get  her  to  pose 
for  me,  she  relented  rather  he- 
sitantly. 

She  said  she  came  to  Chapel 
Hill  in  1898  and  has  remained 
liere  permanently,  i  don't  think 
that  I  -would  be  putting  my.selt 
out  on  a  limb  by  assuming  that 
she  must  have  an  affectation  for 
"the  Hill." 

HAPPY  BIRTHDAY 

Winston  Churchill  ha.s  just 
turned  82. 

It's  a  little  hard  to  believe  he 
can  be  that  old.  for  the  words 
he  .shouted  to  the  world  and 
snarled  at  Hitler  not  too  long  ago 
were  the  words  of  a  man  with 
a  heart  full  of  both  youth  and 
courage.  If  a  man  is  no  older 
than  his  heart,  he  is  much  young- 
er than  82.  and  always  will  be. 

At  any  rate,  it's  a  pleasure  to 
stty  happy  birthday  to  one  of  the 
great  men  of  our  time. — Raleigh 
News   &   Observer 


The  new  students  became  officially  welcomed 
and  matriculated  in  Goettinyen  University  recently, 
while  you  were  home  for  the  Thanksgiving  holidays. 

The  rrtbtriculation  celebration  is  a  big  day  in 
the  University  calendar.  There  are  no  lectures. 
The  new  students  don  their  specialoccasion-black 
suits  and  gather  in  the  Aula  of  the  University,  in 


letics— stand  in  line  and  receive  their  matriculation 
I.  D.  cards  from  the  dean  of  their  faculty  and  a 
handshake.  What  I  am  trying  to  point  out  is  the  tra- 
dition that  exists  even  in  so  new  a  German  Uni- 
x'ersity  ^founded  1736)  as  Goettingen. 

As   I  said,  matriculation  is  a  celebration  day, 
and  the  students  adjourn  to  one  of  the  many  local 


'We'd  Love  To  Have  You  Drop  In  Some  Other  Time' 


marcties   the   Faculty    Senate    in   all    its   academic 
robery. 

.Vfter  everyone  is  seated  m  a  hushed  silence, 
the  rector  (the  university  president),  the  dekan  (the 
Dean)  of  the  medical  faculty  and  the  University 
Symphony  Orchestra  give  the  new  students  words 
and  notes  of  welcome.  The  program  lists  the  rector 
as  "his  excellence  the  rect5r."~ 
CONRAD    ADENAUER-TYPE    CLOTHING 

Tne  -Nluucnts'  outfit,  wcjrn  only  for  very  momen- 
tous events,  consists  of  a  blaclj  wool,  double-breast- 
ed-suit, with  white  shirt  and  silverish  silk  tie — as 
epitomized  by  the  dress  you  see  Conrad  Adenauer 
in. 

Confronting  you  in  the  Aula  are  portraits  of 
(ieorge  II  of  Hanover,  founder  of  the  University. 
Bismarck,  famous  Goettingen  alumnus;  and  other 
famous  graduates  or  patrons  of  the  University. 
Among  the  Faculty  Senate,  as  they  march  in.  are 
five  Nobel  Prize  winners. 

After  this  part  of  the  ceremony,  the  new  stu- 
dents in  each  faculty— Philosophy,  Theology.  Sci- 
ence, Law,  Medicine,  Forestry,  Agriculture,  and  Ath 


Gasthofs  (taverns)  to  drink  a  stein  or  two  to  on« 
ansther's  future  scholastic  achievement. 

For  the  last  three  weeks  the  students  have  at- 
tended many  lectures,  trying  to  find  a  professor 
or  a  subject  or  a  lime  suited  their  tastes.  In  my 
case,  it  was  only  in  finding  a  professor  and  his 
subject  that  I  could  understand  in  German. 

Some  students  take  30  hours  a  week,  some  10. 
Some  students  go  to  every  lecture,  some  once  a 
week.  If  a  student  does  not  attend  lectures  no  one 
knows  it  (  r  thinks  bad  of  it.  It  is  a  perfectly  normal 
practice. 

•         * 

Most  of  a  German  student's  education  comes 
from  what  he  seeks  for  himself  and  from  research  in 
his  field,  not  from  what  the  professor  says  in  class. 
The  professor  only  suggests  books  to  read,  never 
assigns;  usually  the  suggested  list  is  much  larger 
than  one  could  read  even  if  he  were  taking  only 
that  lecture. 

The  only  work  that  is  required  comes  in  a 
seminar,  in  which  the  classes  are  smaller  than  the 
lectures,   there    is   class   participation,   and   per- 


Pogo 


By  Walt  Kelly 


I'vg  fiAia  SOT  Twg  JOBS  rH\ms6 

Of  Li  lUi^  TiMg  SfiWS  QHV  VOUJ? 


-:«'. 


r 


MABTHA,A\yH0U6gl«gPfl?, 

\vM5NTW!$MergoB 

wiT\g0$. My  W08P, 

,1 


M^fgOK  \VA$  A  «HOT 

AKP-  r- ^   - 

T00CI3WT 
Al?g,  AUTg- 


L'il  Abner 


By  AI  Capp 


jCOMMEwaS  RIGHT  APTEf? 
'^LL  DOGI^TCHERS  SPRAVS 
TMAR  FIELDS  W/F  TURNIP 

Termite  exterminator. 

WiIlpancetothe 
d7in'  screams  of 

THE.  FRU^-mATEP 

TURNIP  TB'^^';!^ 


(-THIS 

MEA 
/DEA'T-y 


C-f^O^KS  H^/C//  HAS         \ 
S7>KJ7yED  ra  DEATH /S    \ 

•jesr  AS  oo/ET  AS /=oa<s  ) 

WHfCH  aw  SHOT  TO   ,^ 
OEATH.'T'-)    I — ^ 


haps  a  paper.  Otherwise,  the  professors  have  no 
knowledge  of  a  student's  work  until  the  first  and 
final  exams  after  four  or  five  years 

Before  this  final  which  is  a  comprehensive  oral 
and  written  exam  on  all  of  a  student's  University 
work  there  are  no  tests  or  exams  whatsoever. 

When  a  German  student  enters  the  University, 
he  begins  his  field  immediately,  whether  it  be  law, 
medicine,  dentistry,  theology,  philology  or  history. 

WOULD  BE  THOUGHT  ABNORMAL 

From  what  I  have  seen^  the  typical  German 
student  by  American  standards  would  be  thought  b- 
normal.  Without  tests  or  exams  to  prod  him  on,  it 
is  commonplace  for  a  typical  student  to  put  in  12 
hcrnrs  of  study  a  day.  He  would  read  not  only  the 
required  book  or  two  for  a  Carolina  course,  but  the 
suggested  books  and  the  background  books  to  the 
course's  subject  i.s  well. 

I  would  imagine  that  no  two  German  students' 
education  is  same,  because  the  process  of  education 
is  not  that  of  uniform,  mass  production,  but  one  in 

'  which  the  acquisition  is  left  to  the  student's  initia- 
tive and  self-seeking.  I  might  draw  a  comparison 
to  the  educational  process  found  on  the  graduate 

'     level  in  America. 

<  Talking  of  traditions  and   lectures:  when  the 

professor  enters  the  room  for  his  lecture,  the 
students  beat  their  right  fists  on  the  desks  in  a 
welcome  or  respect.  The  same  is  repeated  when 
he  leaves  the  lecture,  with  the  students  remaining 
seated  until  he  is  out  of  the  room. 

Or,  if  there  is  nothiug  to  knock  on,  they  enact 
the  first  line  of  that  old  high  school  football  yell — 
"stomping  on  the  grandstand:  beating  on  a  tin  can; 
who  can,  we  can,  etc." 

It  was   a   little   disconcerting  the   first   time  I 
heard  this  ovation  of  admiration.  It   reminded  me 
more  of  a  peanut  gallery  or  basketball  gymnasium, 
.    than  an  ivied  hall  of  learning. 

Then  there  is  the  way  I  live.  In  the  student 
house  in  which  I  live,  live  also  40  girls.  Most  live 
only  two  flights  of  steps  up,  with  a  few  intersper- 
sed here  and  there  on  the  men's  floors.  There  are 
79  other  males. 

Now  you  might  think  that  eating  and  sleeping 
so  With  girls  would  lead  to  a  wicked,  immoral,  Bo- 
hemian life;  but  it  isn't  so.  Ladies  and  Gentlemen. 

it  seems  that  the  men  and  women  have  not 
beon  conditioned  to  concentrate  so  much  on  one 
another.  Most  of  the  students  are  less  interested 
in  dating  and  moie,  in  studying. 

The  rules  over  socializing  are:  1.  That  men  can  ■ 
be  in  women's  rooms  until  10  p.m.  and  vice  versa 
until  11  p.m.  2.  That  one  can  drink  in  the  presence 
of  men  and  women  (the  student  house  even  sell$ 
"^  wine^ind  champagne  for  .the  student's  convenience), 
even  to  the  point  of  diunkedness  as  long  as  he 
makes  no  disturbing  noises.  3.  That  must  important 
of  all  it  should  be  extremely  quiet  at  all  times  as 
most  of  the  students'  purpose  is  study,  not  frolic. 

Nansenhaus  is  an  international  student  house. 
A  foreigner  and  a  Grrman  room  together.  I  atn 
now  a  foreigner,  and  American  with  whom  ffio 
Europeans  associate  a  wierd  pronunciation, 
chewing  gum,  money,  a  sprawling  sitting  position, 
fear  of  Communism  and  fear  of  bacterias. 

The  Englanders  joki::gly  say  of  the  Americans: 
''Over-fed,  over-paid,  over-sexed,  and  over  here."  But 
all  in  all,  getting  back  to  where  I  live,  I  might  say 
Nansenhaus  is  quite  cosmopolitan. 

WRIHEN  IN  1852: 

The  University: 
A  Habit  Of  Mind 

John  Henry  Newman 

rhc  Idea  of  a  University 

It  is  a  great  point  then  to  enlarge  the  range  of 
studies  which  a  University  professes,  even  for  the 
sake  of  the  students;  and,  though  they  cannot  pur- 
sue every  subject  which  is  open  to  them,  they  will 
be  the  gainers  by  living  among  those  and  under  those 
who  represent  the  whole  circle. 

This  I  conceive  to  be  the  advantage  of  a  ieat 
of  universal  learning,  considered  as  a  place  of  edu- 
cation. 

An  assemblage  of  learned  men,  zealous  for  their 
own  sciences,  and  rivals  of  each  other,  are  brought, 
by  familiar  intercourse  and  for  the  sake  of  intellec- 
tual peace,  to  adjust  together  the  claims  and  rela- 
tions of  their  respective  subjects  of  investigation. 
They  team  to  respect,  to  consult,  to  aid  each  other. 

Thus  is  created  a  pure  and  clear  atmosphere  of 
thought,  which  the  student  also  breathes,  though  in 
his  own  case  he  only  pursues  a  few  sciences  out  of 
the  multitude.  He  profits  by  an  intellectual  tradition, 
which  is  independent  of  particular  teachers,  ^hich 
guides  him  in  his  choice  of  subjects,  and  dulv  in- 
terprets for  him  those  wlAch  he  chooses. 

He  apprehends  the  great  outlines  of  knowledge, 
tae   principles  on  which  it  rests,   the  scale   of  its 
parts.  Its  lights  and  its  shades,  its  great  points  and 
Us  little,  as  he  otherwise  cannot  apprehend  them. 
Hence  it  is  that  his  education  is  called  "liberal." 
A  habit  of  mind  is  formed  which  lasts  through 
life,  of  which  the  attributes  are   freedom,  equi- 
tabloness,  calmness,  moderation  and  wisdom:  or 
what   in   a  former  discourse    I   have   ventured   to 
call  a  philosophical  habit. 

This,  then,  I  would  assign  as  the  special  fruit  of 
the  education  furnished  at  a  universitv,  as  contia.t- 
ed  with  other  places  of  leacb^jig  or  modes  of  teach- 

stfd™'  ^  ^^"^  ""^'^  ^"'""'^  °^  a  university  in  its 


Tl 
have  a 

ride  to  I 

THESE 
RIDES   TO 
AFTER  TH| 

Robert  L 

New  York. 
Charlie  Sll 
or    9-336—1 

Derek 
2381— New 

Stuart  S| 
C«014  or 

Bob  Ber^ 
or  8-9197- 

mhan  To| 
Jliami.  P'la. 

W.  G.  Scrl 
17-3  ^  Venal 
Ohio 

Kenneth 
Franklin    S| 
mosa. 

Shiriev 
8-9076- Roc-j 

Saily  Peyl 
Orlando.  Flj 

Bill  Adcoi 
Knoxville, 

Raine.-  M 
18 — Louisvil 

Marion   Ii 


Am 

Besi 

Chrn 

Can 

Cosi 

N/ci 

The 

Bool 


Tlure  a| 
thefa'-T 
A.  Art  In 
VI  ear  \  Ik 
shin.TH 
\"an    iU 
tliat  \\y(i 
Arthur  J 
enough,] 
keep  hiJ 
keep  hi.s| 
purpose] 
Down 
wowed 
on  sight 
of  fine 

Todaj 
Button- 
authentl 


1954 


SATURDAY,  DECEMBER  8,  1956 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


PAGE    THREE 


ive  no 

Fst  and 


ive  oral 
liversity 
[•er. 

i.ersity, 

be  law, 

(history. 


IGerman 

ight    b- 

on,  It 

in  in  12 

)nly  the 

but  the 

to  the 

Itudents' 
iucation 
one  in 
iuitia- 
iparison 
graduate 

lien  the 
the 
cs  in  a 
when 
iinin9 

enact 

yell— 

tin  can; 

time  I 
ided  me 
inasium. 


student     "^ 

[ost  live 
uersper- 
icre  are 

• 
[sleeping    "*■ 
)ral,  Bo- 
itlemen.    ' ' 


^A 


'f«> 


A 

•to  :< 

:  o 

H 


ve  not 
one 
rested 


on 


-*  I 


?*-. 


Imen  can 
ice  versa 

j presence 
.en  sells 
Jenience), 
as  he 
iportant 
times  as 
frolic. 

house 
.  i  am 
lom  tfie 
:iation. 
>sition. 


lericans: 
."  But 

light  say 


nd 


range  of 

for  the 

I  not  pur- 

y  will 

ider  those 


of  a  seat 
e  of  edu- 


s  tor  their 
L*  Ijrought, 
f  intellec- 
and  rela- 
estigation. 
ach  other. 

osphere  of 
though  in 
ices,  out  of 
1  tradition, 
ers.  tvhich 
d  duly  in- 

kno.v  ledge, 
ale  of  its 
points  and 
K-nd  them. 
iberal." 

ts  through 
iom,  equi- 
isdom;  or 
ntured   to 

eial  fruit  of 
as  contrast- 
es  of  teach- 
^sity  in  its 


Going  Home  For  Chrisfrnqs? 
These  People  Want  Rjdes 


These  people  want  ridet  to  distant  points,  or  can  give  rides,  over  the  Christmas  holidays.  If  you 
have  a  car,  are  headed  for  one  of  the  points  listed,  a   nd  need  riders,  contact  these  people.  If  you  want  a 
ride  to  one  of  the  places  listed  at  the  end,  contact  t  he  folks  who  have  cars  and  need  companions. 

Washington, 


THESE  STUDENTS  WANT 
RIDES  TO  THE  PLACES  LISTED 
AFTER  THEIR  NAMES: 

Robert  Lauten,  313  Cobb,  8-9002 
N'cw  York. 

C  harlic  Sloan,  D.  U.  House,  9-1301 
or    9-336 — Washington,    D.    C. 

Derek  Roper,  500  North  St., 
2331— New  York. 

Stuart  Shelby.  Law  School,  8- 
f'OH  or  8-0981— New  York. 

Bob  Berger,  Law  School.  »-9014 
or  8-9197— New  York. 

L^han  Tolman,  207  Ruffin,  8-9146 
Miami,  Fla. 

W.  G.  Scribner  and  wife  and  son, 
17-3  '-Venable  Hall— Springfield, 
Ohio. 

Kenneth    Chi-Kun    Yang,    208Vv .  j 
Franklin    St.,    9-247— Taipei.    For- 
mosa. 

Shirley  Ajiderson,  302  Kenan, : 
b-9076— Rocky  Mt.  ' 

Saily  Peyton.  301  Smith,  89133, 
Orlando,  Fla.  j 

Bill  Adcock,  308  Mangum.  8-9183 
Kno.wille,  Tenn.  ' 

Raine.-  Menking,  18  Steele,  8-90 
18 — ^Louisville.  Ky.  i 

Marion  Karris,  309  Spencer,  89 


And  the 
Best 

Christmas 
Cords 
Cost  a 
Nickel  at 
The  Intimate 
Bookshop 


1 04 — Engelhard 

N.  C. 
1      Howaid  Kahn,  108  Alexander,  8- 
I  9107— Baltimore,  Md. 
{      Al  Higgins,  309  Connor,  8-9154— 
'  New  York. 
I     Leif  Eiickson,  208  Lewis — Spruce 

Pine. 
John  Oliver.  Ill  EXerett,  8-9056 

Summit.  N.  J. 

THE  RULES 

If  you  want  to  get  your  name 
on  either  of  these  lists,  drop  by 
The  Daily  Tar  Heel's  newsroom, 
second  floor  of  Graham  Mem- 
orial, or  mail  your  name,  address 
telephone  number  and  destina- 
tion to  The  Daily  Tar  Heel,  Box 
1080,  Chapel  Hill.  The  lists  will 
run  as  long  as  there  are  stu- 
dents who  need  rides  or  riders. 
The  service  is  free. 

Walter   Everett.  305  Lewis.  8-90 
28— Washington.  D.  C 

Beatrice   Rodriguez,  305   Kenan, 
8-9076— New  York. 

Ana    Maria    Ortiz.    Kenan — New 
York. 

Helen   Duke.   407.\  E.   Franklin, 
8-1273— New  York. 

Thomcs  L.  Gillette,  303  Alumni 
Bldg..    8-8462— Kansas   City,    Mo.    j 

Elizabeth  Moore,  109  Kenan,  8-9 
172 — Wilmington,  N.  C.  i 

Lynwood     Thompson,     5  Battle,  I 
>}-9175— New  York  To  ChafJel  Hill 
-ifter   Christmas  | 

Marjorie  McMahan.  Carr,  8-9106 
Charlotte.  j 

Richard    Alexander.    313    Ruffin 
8-9182— Ft.  Lauderdale,  Fla. 


John  Dale,  210  Connor,  8-9178— 
Asheviile  or  Knoxville. 

Buddy  Clark,  Theta  Chi,  8-9123 
Atlanta,  Ga.       . 

THESE   PEOPLE    HAVE     CARS ! 
AND     WANT   RIDERS   TO     THE 
PLACES    LISTED    AFTER    THEIR 
NAMES: 

M3>s   Henrietta   Laing,     95414 — 

to  New  York  City  or  Westchester. 

Roland  Clemmons,  413  W.  Cam- 


-to    Atlanta    o^ 


Washington, 


eron    Ave.,    92181 
New  Orleans. 

Warren     Miller 
D.  C. 

David  L.  Heck,  33  Davie  Circle, 
92786— Lo  Shblby,  6hio,  via  Mt. 
Airy  and  Charleston;  W.  Va.,  leav- 
ing Dec.  22. 


Egon  Wellesz 
Speaks  Today 
In  Hill  Hall 

Egon  Wellesz.   the  famous  Aus- 
trian  composer,   musicologist   and 
authority  on  Byzantine  music,  will  j 
speak  today  at  the  monthly  meet- 
ing  of   the   Southeastern   Chapter 
of     the     American     Musicological  I 
Society.    Prof.   Wellesz  will  speak  i 
at      2:30   p.    m.      today      in      Hill 
Hall  on     "Eastern     Elements     in 
Western   Chant." 

Prof.  Wellesz,  a  native  of  Vi- 
enna, has  been  a  lecturer  in  the 
history  of  music  and  a  member 
of  the  faculty  of  Music  at  Oxford 
University  since  1943. 

Prof.  Wellesz.  who  is  in  the 
United  States  for  a  three  month 
visit,  has  studied  Byzantine  mus- 
ic for  40  years.  Through  it  he  has 
been    able    to    see    the    European 


YM,  Hillel 
To  Sponsor 
Noted  Film 

Those  with  an  interest  in  psy- 
chology, and  the  general  public 
at  large  aire  due  for  a  treat  Wed- 
nesday when  "Torment,"  the  first 
in  a  series  of  films  sponsored  by 
the  YMCA  and  Hillel  film  forum 
committee,  will  be  shofwn. 

An  announcement  from  the 
sponsors  of  the  film,  to  be  shown 
in  Carroll  Hall  at  7:30  pim.,  says 
the  film  deals  with  the  psycholog- 
ical effect  of  a  sadistic  school- 
master on  one  of  his  students*  in 
the  first  throes  of  adolescent 
love. 

The  film  will  be  shown. in  con- 
junction with  a  discusaion  follow- 
ing  the   movie   to  be   led   by  Dr. 


SP  Won't  Meet  Monday 

The  Student  Farcy  will  not  meet 
on  Monday  night.  The  Party  mem- 
bers chose,  to  by-pass  the  regular 
meeting  in  order  to  attend  the 
olina  Forum  presentation  of  the 
Hon.   V.   K.   Krishna    Menon. 


tradition  against   a   non-European    jay   Ostwalt,   a  visiting   professor 

background.  It  has  also  interested    fr^m  Davidson  College. 

him  as  one  of  the  most  fundament- 1 

al    examples    of   the   relation    be- 1      ^^-    Ostwalt.    the   head    of   the 

tween  music  and  religious  liturgy.  I  ^^pt.    of    Education    and    director 


aArAETH0R 


IS  THIS  THE  MAN 
WHO  STARTED  IT? 


Tliere  are  some  who  dispute 
the  fart  that  President  Chester 
A.  Arthur  was  the  first  man  to 
wear  t  he  Oxford  Button-Down 
shirt .  They  are  right,  he  wasn't. 
\'aa  Heusen  has  discovered 
that  its  drijjinator  was  actually 
Arthur  A.  Chester,  who,  oddly 
enough,  used  the  button  nol  to 
keep  his  collar  down,  but  to 
keep  his  shirt  up.  Whatever  its 
purpose,  the  Oxford  Button- 
Down  (or  Button-Up)  shirt 
wowed  Mr.  Chester's  crowd 
on  sight  and  has  been  a  staple 
of  fine  wardrobes  ever  since. 
Today,  Van  Heusen 's Oxford 
Button-Down  is  still  in  the 
authentic  Chesterian  tradition 


.  .  .  but  with  a  wonderful  dif- 
ference. The  cloth,  woven  oi 
fine  long-staple  cotton,  is  as 
soft  as  a  co-ed's  smile,  yet 
exceptionally  long-wearing. 
Superbly  tailored  in  the  smart 
Van  Heusen  wa.v,  thi.s  Oxford 
Butlon-Down  enhances  your 
looks,  whether  j  ou're  involved 
in  class,  tugs  of  war  or  mid- 
night brawls.  $5.00. 

At  better  stores  everywhere, 
or  write  to  Phillips-Jones 
Corp.,  417  Fifth  Avenue,  New 
York  16,  New  York.  Makers 
of  Van  Heusen  Shirts  •  Sport 
Shirts  •  Ties  •  Pajamas 
Handkerchiefs  •  Underwear 
Swimwear   •  Sweaters. 


WE  ARE  THE  EXCLUSIVE 

VAN  HEUSEN 


DEALER  IN  CHAPEL  HILL 


His  published  works  on  the  sub-  j 
ject    include:    "Eastern    Elements 
in    Western    Chant"     (1947)    and 
'A    Histary    of    Byzantine    Music 
and  Hymnography"   (1949).  j 

His  compositions     included:' op- 
era.s,     ballets,     orchestral     music  I 
and  chamber  music,  but  he  i.";  bet- 
ter  known    for   his   choral    works.' 

The  Wilson  Library  is  now  ex- 
hibiting  3   collection   of  his  com- ' 
positions  and  writings  in  honor  of 
his  UNC  visit. 

The  public  has  been  invited  to 
attend  the  meeting. 

Happenings 

(Continued    From   I'aae    1) 

children,  ages  four  to  eight,  from 
the  Methodist  Orphanage  in  Ra- 
leigh. 

Santa  Claus  was  there  to  dislri- 
oute  presents  to  the  youngsters, 
and  after  a  party  the  Phi  Gams  en- 
tertained the  group  at  a  dinner. 

Monday  night  found  the  Pi  Phis 
over  at  the  Pika  House.  After  diri- 
uer,  the  group  journeyed  out  to  the 
Elbow  Room  for  a  combo  party 
v/hich  featured  dancing  and  the 
singing  of  favorite  college  songs. 

Greensboro  was  the  destination 
'ast  Saturday  for  the  fellows  over 
al  the  Lambda  Chi  house.  Some 
brothers  took  coed  dates — others 
dating  at  WC— and  headed  for  the 
Plantation  Club  where  they  partied. 

FOOTBALL  GAMES  and  beer 
parties  cut  another  notch  in  the 
social   ladder  this  week. 

The  SPE's.  Pikas,  KAs  and  Kap- 
pa Sigs  all  had  their  brother-pledge 
annual  football  games  this  week, 
ending  the  events  with  beer  par- 
ties at  their  respective  houses. 

.\nother  football  game — schedu- 
led for  this  afternoon — will  see  the 
Lambda  Chis  in  a  gridiron  scram- 
ble with  the  DUke  I>ambda  Chis 
in  Duke  Stadium,  after  which  the 
groups  will  journej'  over  here  to 
the  school  house  for  a  joint  party 
.vith  music  by  the  Lambda  Chi 
Combo. 

Out  al  the  Legion  Hut  the  ATO's 
will  be  partying  tonight  with  mu- 
sic by  the  Three  Deuces,  while  the 
ZBT,  Pi  Lam  and  TEP  pledges  will 
be  having  a  beer  party. 

PINNINGS.  .  .  Phi  Kap  Jack 
Michie  to  WC  Senior  Jody  Mjrick. 
Sigma  Nu  Jim  Marlowe  to  Duke 
Sophomore  Jane  Kearns.  .  .  .Beta 
Bill  Baldridgc  to  WC  graduate 
Ester  Boh  an  nan  of  Silcr  City.  .  .  . 
KA  Chuck  Flack  to  Pi  Phi  Pledge 
Jane  Sawyer 

ENGAGEMENTS Alpha  Gam 

Ann  Gillette  to  Johnny  Burt,  UNC 
grad  student  and  former  Duke 
Lambda  Chi.  .  .Pi  Phi  Susan  Wal- 
ker to  former  L'NC  DKE  Bruce 
Gustafson  of  Washington.  . .  .Kappa 
Sig  Bob  Henley  to  St.  Mary's  grad- 
uate Mary  EJkins  of  Raleigh.  .  . 
Kappa  Sig  Dick  Booth  to  Carolyn 
iP.awls  oi  Rideigh. 


House  Given 
Brief  Case  ! 

After  Speech 

A    leather  brief   case    was   pre- 
sented to  Chancellor.  Robert  House 
following   his    speech    to   the   Ifa- 
Service   Training  Program  Thurs- . 
day.  I 

I 

The  program  was  held  in  the 
lounge  of  the  Nurses'  Residence. ! 
Personnel  of  the  women's  dormi-| 
tories  and  sorority  houses,  staff: 
of  the  Dean  of  Women,  and  a  few  j 
special  guests  were  present  for; 
the  talk  and  a  reception  following,  j 

Hostesses  for  the  occasion  were  ■ 
Mrs.  Robert  Jackson,  Mrs.  Victor 
Humphreys.  Miss  Isabelle  Mac- 
Leod, and  Mrs.  J.  C.  Clamp.  | 

Chancellor  House's  speech  was 
recorded  and  is  now  on  file  in 
the  audio-visual  office. 

Two  Of  State's 
Top  Literary 
Prizes  Given     \ 

RALEIGH— (AP)— Two  of  North; 
Carolina's  top  literary  awards  j 
went  last  night  to  Glenn  Tucker  j 
of  Flat  Rock  and  Mrs.  Frances; 
Gray  Patton  of  Durham.  i 

Tucker  won  the  25th  annual! 
Mayflower  Society  Award  for  his 
non-fiction  book,  "Tecumseh,  Vis- 
ion of  Glory."  Mrs.  Patton  received 
the  fourth  annual  Sir  Walter  Ral- 
eigh Award  for  her  fiction  book, 
"A  Piece  of  Luck." 

The  awards  were  presented  at  j 
the  56th  annual  meeting  of  the] 
State  Literarj'  and  Historical  As.sn.  I 
Three  other  award  winners  were  j 
announced  at  the  association's , 
morning  session. 

Presentation  of  tlie  literary 
awards  clima.xed  a  week  of  meet- 
ings by  cultural  societies  of  the  j 
state.  Other  organizations  which  t 
met  yesterday  included  the  North  j 
Carolina  Poctr>'  Society.  The  North  I 
Ca;;olina  Folklore  Society,  and  i 
th^  North  Carolina  Society  of  ■ 
Ccninty  and  Local  Historians.  i 
Mrs.  Patton's  book  was  adjudged  ; 
the  best  work  of  fiction  published: 
by  a  North  Carolinian  during  the } 
12-inonth  period  ending  August ; 
;Si^  Tucker's  award  was  for  being  | 
the  author  of  the  best  non-fiction  ' 
volume  by  a  Tar  Heel  author  dur- ! 
ing  the  .same  period.  j 

The  board  of  award  for  the  May- 
flower Cup  was  composed  of  Mrs. 
C.  W.  Biggerslaff  and  Clarence  W. 
The   general   public   as   well   as!  Griffin   of   Forest   City,     Dr.     H. 
the  student  body  has   been   invit-j  Broadus    Jones    and    Dr.    Percival 
ed  free  of  charge  to  both  the  mov- 1  Perry  of  Wake  Forest  College,  and 
ie  and  discussion.  |  Jay  Jenkins   of   Raleigh. 


Covering  The  University  Campus 


Cocering  the  CAIIPUS  sa    .oRl  w,,  i  Tuesday  at  1  p.m.  at  the  Carolina 
NOT  MEETING  j  Inn.  Speaker  wii  be  Professor  Al- 

Dr.     Dashiell's     Psychology     24    monte  Howell  whose  subject  will 
sections   I  and   III  will   not  meet  I  be    "The    Experiences   of    a    Pro- 
today   due   to   the   convention  of  j  lessor  in  South  Korea." 
the     North     Carolina     Psj'chology '  DANCING 

Assn.  i      Graham      Memorial      Activities 

GOLF  TESTS  Board    will    present    dancing    to- 

Women's     individual     tests     in ;  night    in    the   Rendezvous     Room 
golf   will   be   given   Tuesday   and '  of    Graham    Memorial    from   8-11. ' 
Thursday  at  4  p.m.  in  the  gym.     '  Juke  box  music  will  be  provided 
BIBLE  SUNDAY  |  free  by  GMAB.  ' 

■    Universal  Bible  Sunday  will  be — - — ] 

observed  tomorrow  at  the  United 
Congregational  Christian  Church. 
FACULTY  CLUB 

The  Faculty   Club     will     meet 

Lutheran  Choir  To  Sing 
Christmas  Muiic  Sunday 

Some   300   dentists,   dental   hy- 

Christmas    and    Advent    music    gj^nists  and  visitors  from  through- 

by    the    church     choir     of     Holy  ■  ^^    North    Carolina    attended    a 

Trinity    Lutheran   Church,    under;  postgraduate    dental    seminar,    a 

the   direcUon     of     Mrs.     Edward  I  nieeting    of    the    North    Carolina 

Bernasek,    will    be    presented    at ;  Cental  Foundation  and  the  Home- 

ihe  Sunday  night  meeting  of  thC;  ^.^j^j^g  p^y  ^^^^  ^j^is  week. 

Luthern  Student  Assn.  Sunday  ati      „,      ^  -^    ..  i     •  •        j 

_  ,      ;      Closed    circuit    television    dem- 

'  I  onstrations    were    staged    by    the 

The  organist  will  be  Mrs..  Oline  j  UNC   Dental   School.   This   is  the 

Phillips,  and  soloists  will  be  Miss  <  first  time  that  dentistry  has  been 

Linda  Han;ig,  Mrs.  Melv^rda  Hook  i  taught  by  such  a  method  in  this 


Closed  Circuit 
TV  Experiment 
1$  Successful 


of  student  counselling  at  David- 
son, is  at  UNC  this  year  as  a  vis- 
iting professor  of  education.  Fbr- 
mcrly  he  was  assistant  director  of 
the  Bureau  of  Testing' and  Gtiid- 
ance  at  DuJce  University.     ^    -    - 


The    film    has    received 

lavcrable  reviews  from  noted 
publications  in  this  "country  anfl 
abroad.  It  won  the  Grand  Prix'au 
Cinema  at  the  Cannes  Interna- 
tional Film  Festival. 


and  Dr.  Esfa  Petursson.    •"'A:.:." 
\i     ■.:;  ■ 

The  service  will  end  with  two 
Christmas  hymns  by  Martin  Luth- 
er. Visitors  are  invited  to  partici- 
pate in  the  service. 


state. 

Officers  were  elected  at  the  an- 
nual   Dental    Foundation    lunch. 
I  The  entire   slate   of   officers  was 
1  reelected.  Included  were  Dr.  W.  T. 
I  McFall,   Asheviile,   president;   Dr. 

. I  C.  C  Poindexter,  Greensboro,  vice 

president  and  Dr.  John  C.  Brau- 
TWO  University  Surgeons  |  er,  Chapel   mil   sccretary-treasur- 

Attending  Florida  Meet   i  *^  ,         .     .     r^   .  , 

**  j      All   members     of     the     Dental 

Dr.  N.  A.  Womack  and  Dr.  H.  C  Foundation  Executive  Committee 
Patterson,  Jr.,  both  of  the  De-  ^nd  Investment  Committee  were 
partment  of  surgery,  are  attend-  i  reelected.  One  member  was  add- 
ing a  meeting  of  the  Southern  ^  ^^  ^o  the  Executive  Committee, 
Surgical  Association  at  Boca  Rat- !  dj.  Kverette  Moser  of  Gastonia. 
on,  Fla.  this  week. 


PHILOLOGICAL  CLUB 

The  Philological  Club  will  meet 
Tuesday  at  7:30  p.m.  in  the  Facul- 
ty Lounge  of  Morehead  Planetar- 
ium. Professor  Lawrence  A- 
Sharpe  of  the  Romance  Language 
Dept.  will  present  a  paper  en- 
titled "Some  Highlights  of  Por- 
tuguese Literature.''  All  faculty 
members  and  graduate  students 
interested  have  been  invited  to 
attend. 

The  date  has  been  changed  from 
the  usual  first  Tuesday  in  order 
to  avoid  a  conflict  with  the  Di- 
vision of  Humanities  Lecture. 

WUNC 

VVLT^C,  the  University's  educa- 
tional FM  radio  station: 

7:00    Paris  Star  Time 

7:30    Showtime  ; 

8:00     This  Is  Jazz 

9:00    Horizons   In   Mud   Music 
10:00     News 

10:15     Evening  Masterw-ork 
11:30     Sign   Off  .  ! 

WUNCTV 

WTINC-TV,  the  University's  ed- 
ucational tele\ision  station,  chan- 
nel 4: 
6:30     Land   To   Be   Free 
7:00    No  Longer  Worries  j- 

7:30    Frontiers  Of  Health  | 

8:00    Renaissance    On   TV  • 

8:30    Agriculture  ! 

9:00     Sign  Off 


QramnnJng 
for  Examsl^i 


CLASSIFIEDS 

FOR  RENT:  FOUR  ROOM  HOUSE  ; 
located  on  Barclay  Road.  Elec-1 
trie  stove,  refrigerator,  hot  wat-  j 
er  heater,  and  oil  circulator  i 
furni.'*hed.  $65  per  month.  Phone  | 
8-0148. 


JAZZ  AT  TURNAOIS 

Saturday  afternoon,  2:00,  Turn- ' 
ages   Cabin   in   Durham. — Jazs  by  i 
Dick     Gables     "Ail     Stars."     Beer 
served. 

LOST  SAIXRDAY  NIGHT—  Jew- 1 
eled  Black  Cashmere  Sweater  in  ; 
vicinity  of  Mclver  Dorm.  Finder  ; 
please    contact    Barbara    Prago. 
89142. 

LOStTrED  JACKET  WITH  KNIT  | 
bottom  and  Paul  written  on  up-' 
per  left  hand  side.  Call  »B-9105. 


The  Dollar 

Table  at 

The  Intimate 

Bookshop 

Solves  More 

Christmas 

Problems 

Than 

Santa  Clause! 


Fiiht  "Book  Fatigue"  Safely 

Your  doctor  will  tell  you — « 
NoDoz  A-Jvakener  is  safe  as  an 
average  cup  of  hot,  black  cof- 
fee. Take  a  NoDoz  Awakener 
when  you  cram  for  that  exam 
...or  when  mid-afternoon 
brings  on  thos^  "3  o'clock  cob- 
webs." You'll  find  NoDot  give* 
yon  a  lift  without  a  letdown ... 
helps  you  bnap  back  to  normal  | 
and  fight  fatigue  safely!  -I 

■       r  ^^     Oormt)  60  loblcTi —   "^  .J 


NOQOZ 

flWAKENERS 


thefirstleeriBust 

'or  ■^'  '' 

"Wliy  Flyxnou-tli  Roo]«Lec3. 
axici  Rolled 


y^ 


t 


Oaoe  upon  a  time  there  was  a  group  of  cats  who  really 
•mvdX,  far  out  on  a  one  way  exoirsion  canoe  called  the 
Mayflower.  Now  they  weire  a  mighty  cool  combo,  but  they 
had  to  go  on  tour  because  a  square  from  Goonville  who 
billed  himself  as  King  jAines  I  gave  them  the  heel  and 
they  had  to  cut  out  on  merry  old  England. 

Anyway,  they  finally  got  a  booking  on  the  New  World 
circuit  ia  a  spot  called  Virginia,  named  in  honor  of  Eliz- 
abeth I  fcHT  some  reason  or  other. 

Iliis  particular  day  some  of  the  boys  were  cooling  it  on 
deck,  quaffing  a  few  tankards  of  brew  when  it  was  John 
Alden's  turn  to  go  for  refills. 

When  he  got  below  none  other  than  a  screen-tester  named 
{^risdlla  Mullins  was  running  the  spigot. 

"Make  with  the  suds  for  Myles  Standish,"  says  John. 

"I'll  clue  ycu.  Dad,"  says  Priscilla.  "There's  exactly  ona 
tankard  left.  %>eak  for  yourself,  John." 

Tliey  split  the  tankard  and  John  returned  topj^ide. 

"SireS,  I  wish  to  report  the  beer  is  gone." 

"Nutty,  man!"  they  repUed.  "That  bear  is  reaX  gone. 
Giv6  us  another  chorus  on  it!"  •  '    -.- 

"But,  you  don't  dig  me,  Sires"  said  J.  A.,  **the  barrels 
are  empty.  This  bit  is  overP* 

"WHAT?"  shouted  the  elders.  "OUR  BEER  IS  BUST'.l 
Turn  this  raft  aroiind  and  make  it  to  Plynoouth  Rock. 
W6*re  cuttin'  out  on  this  date  as  of  now!" 

And  that's  the  story  of  how  the  Pilgrims  landed  at  Ply- 
mouth Rock  instead  of  Virginia.  And  if  you  don't  believe 
H  you  can  take  it  up  with  our  agent. 

moral:  You're  missing  the  boat  if  you  haven't  tried  the 
griutest.  Next' time  you  order  beer,  speak  for  yourself  and 
specify  Budweiser.  Man,  it*s  the  most!        ^ 


\    : 


LA«lt    tflt 

I     '  * 

ANHKUSER-BUSCH,   INC.    •   ST.   UOVIS   •    NKWARJt   •    LOS  AN(;ELE.9 


PAGE  FOUR 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


-\ 


SATURDAY,  DECEMBER  8,  1956 


Cagers  Meet  Tigers 
Tonight  In  ACC  Tilt 


By    LARRY    CHEEK  I 

Carolina's  Tar  Heels,  the  team  to 
beat  in  the  ACC  according  to  pre-, 
season  dope,  get  their  first  taste  j 
of  conference  competition  tomor- 
row night  in  Charlotte,  and  from  ' 
all  indications  it  could  be  a  bit-  { 
ter  one.  j 

I*roviding  the  opposition  for! 
Coach  Frank  McGuire's  squad  will ' 
be  the  pesky  Clemson  Tigers.  Ear-  j 
her  thii  week  the  Tigers  served  \ 
notice  they  will  be  hard  to  handle 
when  they  battled  Duke  right  down  ' 
to  the  wire  before  losing  out,  84-78. 1 

Last  year  in  the  AAC  tourna- ' 
ii.ent  the  youthful  Tigers  showed  | 
signs  of  maturity  when  they  near- 
ly eliminated  State  in  the  tourney's 
opening  round.  Their  losses  from 
that  fine  tournament  team  were 
negligible,  and  the  squad  that  will 


lace   the   Tar  Heels   tonight   is   a 
veteran  aggregation. 

Again.St  Duke  Monday  night, 
guard  Vince  Yockel  and  forward 
Ed  Brinkley  were  the  leading 
scorers.  In  addition  the  other  three 
members  of  the  starting  unit  are 
potent  point  producers  as  well. 
Leading  this  trio  is  Bill  Yar- 
borough,  top  scorer  for  nearly  4  i 
years.  Gene  Seay  gives  the  squad 
valuable  .strength  under  the  boards, 
while  aggresive  guard  Tom  Came- 
ron  rounds   out   the   starting   five. : 

The  Tar  Heels,  winners  of  two 
games  so  far,  came  into  their  own  I 
Tuesday  night  in  the  second  half  j 
against  Furman  when  they  poured ' 
in  57  points  to  run  away  from  their  1 
southern  neighbors.  The  big  noiSe 
as    usual   was   Lennie   Rosenbluth ' 
with  his  record  breaking  47  points, 
but  Joe  Quigg  and  Pete  Brennan 


UNC  Wrestlers  In 
Triple-Meet  Today 


A  rare  treat  for  Carolina  wrest- 
ling fans  is  in  the  offering  here 
at  Woollen  Gym  this  afternoon. 
Carolina  Wrestling  Coach  Sam 
Barnes  has  scheduhed  a  tripJe- 
header. 

The  wTestling  spectacular  be- 
gins at  3  o'clock  when  the  Caro- 
lina freshmen  are  host  to  the 
Washington  and  Lee  frosh.  Fol- 
lowing the  freshman  match,  the 
big  brothers  of  the  two  schools 
move  into  action,  and  at  approxi- 
mately 5  o'clock  the  Tar  Heels 
will  go  back  to  the  mat  and  meet 
Wake  Forest. 

It  is  quite  a  challenge  to  the 
Tar  Heels,  but  coach  Barnes  is 
certaiq  his  boys  will  dp  well.  He 
is  looking  for  oRe  of  his  best 
seaibns  with  six  lettermen'  return- 
ing in  about  every  weight  classifi- 
cation, and  a  pro^niSing  I  group  ti 
sopibomores  to  addT  depth- to  the> 
squad. 

W^ashington  and  Lee  will  be  the 
strongest  of  the  visitors  and  coach 
Barnes   is    sending  his    best    men 


against  them.  They  are:  Dave  Wall  , 
(123).  Captain  Bob  Wagner  (130).! 
Perrin  Henderson  (137).  Charlie 
Boyette  (147).  Ken  Hoke  (157), 
Dave  Atkinson  (167).  Glenn  i 
Daughtry  (177)  and  David  Corky' 
(heavj-weight). 

The    strength    of    Wake    Forest 
is  unknown.  The  Deacs  have  a  lot 
of  sophomores  on  this  years  squad 
and  there  is  no  way  of  knowing 
how  they  will  perform.  Last  year 
Wake  edged  the  Tar  Heels.  18-6.    , 
Little   David  Wall  will  have  to! 
be  the  iron   man   tomorrow.   The  j 
123-pounder  will  be  the  only  Tar 
Heel    grappler    wrestling    against  ■ 
both  schools.  Meeting  the  Deacons  I 
with   Wall  will   be:   Henry  Rhyne , 
(130),   Bill    Adcock      (137).     Ron: 
MiJlia«an      (147).      Bob     Boyette' 
(157).  Bill  Childs   (167).  Ed  Hut-, 
chins   (177).    and     Dick     Hahmon 
!(heavyweight). 

I  Today's  matches  will  be  the 
openers  for  all  three  schools.  The 
;  Tar  Heels  will  only  have  a  two- 
'  day  rest  before  their  next  match 
■  with    Davidson    next    Tuesday. 


Five  ACC  Teams  Agree 
On  Aid  Grants  Program 


(See   Related   Storj/,    Page    1)      , 
FROM  AP  WIRE  REPORTS 

Proposals  for  setting  up  grant-  j 
in-aid  program  in  the  Atlantic! 
Coast  Conference  was  tabled  at  i 
the  conference  meeting  in  Greens- 1 
boro  yesterday  because  of  opposi- ! 
tion,  but  five  schools  in  the  con-  j 
ferenoe  reported  they  would  re- 1 
spect  the  ooramitments  of  stu- 1 
dents  to  attend  any  of  the  other ' 

five  schools.  • 

I 

UNC,  Duke,  State,  Wake  For-! 
est  and  Clemson,  in  a  statement ; 
issued  by  Duke  Athletic  Director ' 
Eddie  Cameron,  said  the  five ; 
schools   would   "respect  the  com- ' 


mitments  of  students  who  had 
signified  their  intention  of  accept- 
ing an  athletic  grant-in-aid"  at 
any  of  the  five  schools. 

The  conference  also,  in  effect, 
ruled  North  Carolina  student  Don 
Coker  permanently  ineligible  for 
athletics    at   UNC. 

Coker  had  been  declared  inelig- 
ible   several    months    ago    by    the 

conference  executive  committee  for 
accepting  what  was  termed  "aid 
beyond  the  limits  allowed." 

Coker,  now  a  North  Carolina 
freshman,  remains  permanently 
ineligible   under  conference  rules. 


DAILY    CROSSWORD 


.ACROSS 

1   .\ccumulal« 
6.  DLscharge 

10  Man's  nam* 

11.  Spanish 
title 

12  Gaze 

13  From    this 
lime 

14.  Particles 
16.  Robber 
19.  Slolha 
22.  CucUoo 
2i  Stgnal 

light 
25.  DiA-ells 

28  River 

t  Yugo  ) 

29  Pillars  of 
stone 

31  Cut.  u  a 
coin  s  edge 

32  Ancient 
Roman 
money 

Z?>  Military 
science 

36.  Lay   away 

37.  Kingly 
40  River 

» Venez.) 

44.  Living 

45.  Species  of 
pepper 

46  Coniferwid^ 

tree 
47.  Shabby 

(colloq.) 

DOWN 

1.  Land 
nieasurM 

2.  Cushion 

3.  Winf 

4.  Sprout 

S  UAd«rw«rli 


6.  Charges 
for 
servicea 

7  Hostelry 

8  Fabulous 
bird 

9.  Before 
11.  Participated 
15.  Flap 

18  Very  ligh* 
wood 

17,  Join 

18.  Cleaves 

19  Grape  seeds 

20  Type  of 
architecture 

21.  Catches  in 
stockingsi 


24  Argent 
<abbr.) 

2«.  Ele- 
vated 
train 
(Pop.) 

27.  Colonize 

30  Anna, 
mesc 
meas- 


aiH  aaaa 
an   OTjaaSara 


ure 
14.  Finds  Te«Urd«y'i  Aa»w«r 

fault  39.  Alcoholic 
(colloq.)  drink 

35.  Conical  tent  41.  Indian 

3«.  Keep  42.  Color 

37.  Knock  43.  City 
i8.  High  priest  (Virginia) 


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also  chipped  in  with  valuable 
points.  Quigg  was  especially  im- 
pressive, hitting  ten  straight  points 
at  the  beginning  of  the  last  half, 
and  eiiectively  dominating  the 
backboards  while  in  the  lineup. 

Despite  Quigg's  sterling  play 
against  Furman,  the  starting  cen- 
ter tonight  will  in  all  probability 
be  Bill  Hathaway,  the  6-11  .soph 
who  started  both  the  McCrarj-  and 
Furman  games.  The  forwards  will 
be  Rosenbluth  and  Brennan  while 
the  guards  will  be  Tommy  Kearns 
and  Bob  Cunningham.  Danny  Lotz, 
Stan  GroU  and  Tony  Radovich  are 
front  line  reserves  along  with 
Quigg. 

Rosenbluth's  sensational  .scoring 
ipree  Tuesday  night  had  Tar  Heel 
hardwood  fans  in  a  dither.  The 
tt-5  senior  was  never  better  as  he 
hit  20  of  37  shots  from  the  floor 
and  7  free  throws  to  shatter  the 
old  University  scoring  record  of 
45. 

The  story  of  Lennie's  Iqng-to-be- 
remembered  one  man  show  was 
adequately  summed  up  by  one  of 
the  5,500  fervent  fans  who  sat  in 
on  history  in  the  making.  "He's 
a  poet,"  said  the  awe  stricken  on- 
looker. And  poet  he  was. 

Gamotime  for  tonighfs  ACC 
scrap  is  8  p.m. 

DfCt's  knd  Law 
School  Take 
Mural  Titles 

The  tag  football  dorm  and  fra- 
ternity championships  played  yes- 
terday pitted  an  odd  combination 
of  teams  in  both  games;  Doctors 
against  Lawyers  and  brothers 
against  brothers.  Law  School-2 
managed  to  squeeze  by  Med  School 
2  and  win  the  dorm  championship, 
7-6.  The  DKE's  blue  squad  beat 
their  brothers,  the  whites,  with 
a  little  larger  margin,  13-0. 

In   the  dorm  game     everything 
was  nip  and  tuck  for  the  fi^st  half 
i  with  neither  team  able  to  hit  pay- 
dirt.  After  a  rest  and  a  scoreless 
!  third   quarter   the    action   became 
I  fast    and   furious.    The    good    doc- 
tors-to-be,    punted    to   the     saw- 
bones, and  Jack  Hudson  grabbed 
a  lateral  on  the  return  and  went 
all  the  way  for  the  score.  Hudson 
became  the  hero  of  the  day  when 
he  caught  another  pass  for  the  ex- 
tra point. 
The  medical  men  were  not  to  be 
1  di.sheartened.    One    play   after  the 
I  touchdown  Jim  Marlowe  took  a  20- 
yard  pass  over  the  goal  line  for 
the    tally.    The    extra    point    was 
,  missed  and  with  it,  the  dorm  title. 
j      In  the  DKE-dominated  fraterni- 
ty  championship,    The    DKE    blue 
'  team    had    things    under    control 
:  for  most  of  the  game.  It  was  not 
i  an  easy  win  though,  as  the  whites, 
!  supposedly    the    men     not      good 
;  enough  for  the  blue  team,  wanted 
;  badly  to  upset  their  brothers.   It 
i  was   a   hard   fought  ball  game   all 
'  the    way    but    the    blues    had    too 
'  much  for  the  white  club. 
,      Glenn   Pickard  got  things  .start- 
ed for  the  blues  when  he  blocked 
and   recovered  a  kick   in  the  end 
1  zone   for  the   fir.st  score.  The  ex- 
j  tra  point  was  perfect.  Things  even- 
j  ed  out  for  both  clubs  throughout 
I  the  rest  of  the  first  half  and   up 
I  tintil    the    final    minute    of    play. 
The   blues  worked   the  ball   down 
j  to    the   white    20-yard    line   where 
Jerry  Hartzog  hit  Jim  Raugh  on 
'  the    ten.    Raugh    tripped    quickly 
I  over  the  line  for  the  final  tally. 
I      The    school    championship    will 
j  be    Monday    afternoon    in    Kenan 
I  Stadium  at  3  o'clock.  The  winner 
I  of   this    contest   will    be    declared 
the      Intramural      Tag      Football 
Champions    of    the    University    of 
North  Carolina. 


UNC  Mermen  Down 
Gamecocks.  69 


The  Long,  Long  Reach 


Joe  Quigg  (above),  6-8  UNC  center,  is  slated  for  heavy  duty  at 
the  pivot  post  tonight  when  Carolina  'meets  Clemson  in  an  ACC 
scrap    in    Charlotte. 

Frosh  Cagers  Top 
Wilmington  89-64 


Carolina's  freshman  cagers  ov- 
erpowered Wilmington  Junior 
College  in  Wilmington  last  night. 
89-64,  for  their  .second  straight 
win. 

Sharp  shooting  York  Lare.se 
and  Lee  Shaffer  took  top  scoring 
honors   for   UNC    with  22  apiece. 


Not  Long 


Tar  Baby  Dick  Keplcy  followed 
close  behind  with  18.  Kepley  did 
an  outstanding  job  under  the  back- 
boards   grabbing   23    rebounds. 

The  Tar  Babies  looked  a  little 
loose  the  first  half  but  went  to 
the  dros.'^ing  room  with  a  46-35 
lead. 

THE  SUAAMARY 
Carolina 


By  STEWART  BIRD 

UNC's  star  -  studded  aquatic 
team  opened  defense  of  its  ACC 
co-chanmpionship  last  night  by 
downing  an  undermanned  South 
Carolina  squad,  69-15  in  Bowman 
Gray  Pool. 

A  sparse  crowd  of  200  specta- 
tors  saw  Tony   Schiffman,   Brent 
Nash   and     two     powerful     relay 
teams  sweep  six  of  the  Tar  Heels 
en  first  places. 

Schiffman  led  all  the  way  in 
each  race  to  take  the  220  and  440 
yard  freestyle  events.  Nash  was 
the  other  double  winner,  captur- 
ing the  50  and  100-yard  sprints. 

Two  records  were  established  by 
Coach  Ralph  Casey's  mermen.  The 
medley  relay  team  of  Krepp,  Rose, 
Zickgraf,  and  Zwicker  set  a  new 
conference  standard  of  4:00.4.  The 
same  quartet  missed  by  one  and 
five-tenths  seconds  eclipsing  the 
ACC  400-yard  freestyle  relay  rec- 
ord set  by  the  Tar  Heels  in  1956. 
Former  Carolina  star  Buddy  Ba- 
arcke  wrote  his  name  in  the  rec- 
ord books  with  a  time  of  25.1  sec- 
onds for  the  50-yard  butterfly  in 
a  special  AAU  sanctioned  event. 

Ace  sprinter  Bill  Roth  did  not 
compete  due  to  a  shoulder  injury 
sustained  this  week  in  practice. 
With  his  return,  the  new  medley 
relay  standard  wUl  probably  be 
lowered  even  more,  and  the  free- 
style relay  mark  erased  also. 

Times  turned  in  by  the  Tar 
Heels  were  much  improved  over 
last  week's  efforts  against  East 
Carolina.  Mahaffy  chopped  five 
seconds  off  his  clocking  of  last 
week  in  the  200-yard  butterfly. 
Schiffman,  Nash  and  Mercer  were 
others  turning  in  better  perform- 
ances. 

The  Blue  Devils  of  Duke  Uni- 
versity will  provide  the  opposition 
for  the  mermen  in  their  next  meet 
December  18th  in  Durham. 

The  sumnvary:  | 

400-yard    medley    relay — Krepp, 
Rose,    Zickgraf,    Zwicker.    Time — , 
4:00.4  (new  conference  record),      j 

220-yard  fi^estyle  —  ( 1)  Schiff-  j 
man  (UNC).  (2)  Gaston  (SO,  (3)  I 
Goad    (UNC).    Time— 2:13.7.  | 

50-yard  freestyle  —  (1)  Nash 
(UNC).  (2)  Bailey  (SO.  (3)  Ma- 
ness   (UNO.   Time— 24.6. 


200-yard  butterfly— ( 1 )  Mahaf- 
fy (UNC).  (2)  Turner  (UNC).  (No 
SC   entries).    Time — 2:18.2. 

3  meter  diving  —  (1)  Kelso 
(UNC),  (2)  Parker  (UNC).  (3) 
Kimes    (SC).    Points:    277. 

100-yard  freestyle  —  (1)  Nash 
(UNC),  (2)  Paulnot  (SC). 66666 
(UNC),  (2)  Maness  (UNC),  (3) 
Bailey    (SC).    nme— 55.4. 

200-yard  backstroke  —  ( 1)  But- 
ler (UNC),  (2)  Paulnot  (SC).  (On- 
ly   entries).    Time— 2:37.3. 

440-yard  freestyle— (1)  Schiff- 
man (UNC),  (2)  Atwater  (UNC). 
(3)    Gaston    (SC).   Time-— 4:58.3. 

200  yard  breaststroke — (1)  Mer- 
cer   (UNC),    (2)    Campbell    (SC), 


PATRONIZE   YOUR 
•    ADVERTISERS    • 


OMAHA— (AP)— Robert  D.  Klein 
Schmidt  of  the  University  of  Buf- 
falo (N.Y.),  told  newsmen  before  a 
concert  here  that  carillon  music  is 
either  "sacred"  or  simply  a  nuis- 
ance. 

His  concert  afterwards  on  the 
electric  carillon  at  an  Omaha  shop- 
ping center  was  interrupted  by 
police.  Neighbors  —  to  prove  Prof. 
Kleinschmidf's  point  —  had  com- 
plained the  music  was  annoying. 


ffcf(:ii! 


W  RAN  OUT 
IN  THE  GUN  SMOKED 
DITCH  CALLED  THE 
KILLER  UNO 
OF  WYOMING!    ' 


Totals 

31     27 

16 

89 

Wilmington 

fg     ft 

Pf 

tp 

Totals 

22     20 

17 

64 

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Frosh  Fish 
Meet  SMA 
In  Opener 


Carolina's       1956-57      freshman 
squad   gets   its     first   test   of   the 
season  in  Staunton,  Va.  this  after-  , 
noon     against  Staunton     Military  | 
Academy  and  the  Tar  Babies  have 
a  mass  of  questions  that  must  be 
answered    before    any    predictions 
can    be    made   regarding   the   sue- ! 
cess  or  failure  of  their  season.        j 

Th  potential  is  there,  what  there 
IF  of  it,  out  Coach  Dick  Jamerson's  ' 
team   is   woefully   sliort   in   depth 
and    experience,    and   this   is    the 
major  factor  in  the  final  outcome. 

The   brighest   star  on  the  frosh  ' 
mermen  horizon  is  Paul  Wachen- ; 
dorter,  a   boy  who  last  year  was 
recognized    as    the    country's  most  ' 
outstanding  prep  school  swimmer. 
He    won    Ail-American   honors   in  ^ 
three  events  on  the  prep  front  and 
holds  the  American  Prep  School : 
record    in    the    100    yard    BreaiJt- 
stroke. 

Mike  Rosen  of  Woodbridge  High 
in  Connecticut  leads  a  liii  of 
mermen  who  might  develop  in  the 
sprint  divisions.  Others  are  free- 
stylers  Ted  Moore,  Lou  Tei;ill, 
Bill  Anderson,  Glen  Greene,  Rufus 
Knott,  and  Charles  Pittman. 

The  Tar  Babies  are  sadly  lack- 
ing in  backstrokers  and  will  rest 
the  burden  in  that  division  on 
Bill  Jobes  of  Jacksonville,  Fla. 

Wilkes  Coleman  is  being  count- 
ed  upon   to  give  Wachendorfer  a 
big  boost  in  the  breaststroke  divis-  ] 
ion.  Wachendorfer  of  course,  will  , 
shoulder   most   of   the    burden   in 
this  event. 
I      Divers    John    Smith,    winner   of 
the  intramural  title  this  year,  and 
Jost   Polack  should  lead  the  way 
in  the  diving  division. 

Wachendorfer  will  also  bear 
watching  in  the  200  yard  free- 
style and  should  get  some  aid 
from  inexperienced  but  slightly 
competitive  Nash  Mcintosh.  Bob 
Jones  rounds  out  the  Tar  Babies' 
200  medley  and  with  a  little  ex- 
perience might  become  a  leading 
competitor  in  that  division. 


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(3)    Cooper    (UNC)   Time— 2:37.1. 
400-yard    relay — (UNC)    Krepp, 
Rose,   Zickgraft,   Zwicker.  Time— 
3:31.2. 

UNC  Grad  Baarcke  Tops 
50-yd  Butterfly  Mark 

Buddy  Baarcke,  swimming  for 
the  North  Carolina  Athletic  Club, 
set  a  new  American  record  for  the 
50-yard  butterfly  in  a  AAU-sanc- 
tioned  time  trial  here  last  night. 
His  time  was  :25.1. 

Baarke,  a  UNC  graduate  stu- 
dent, is  the  former  holder  of  one 
world  and  six  American  records. 


Its  fun  to  go  formal  in 

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notural  shoulders,  flop 

pockets,  non-pleated 

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oil-season  worsted, 

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retailer  or  free  formol 

dress  chort,  writ*: 

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CAMPUS  WAITER 

gives  tip  on  Jockey  brand  underwear 

"A  misplaced  fidget  can  bring  down  a  house  mother's 
wrath,"  says  Warmthumb  Spilling,  sorority  house 
waiter.  "I  always  wear  Jockey  briefs,  and  I'm  famous 
for  my  casual  aplomb  during  missing  dessert  Investi- 
gations." 

Take  a  tip  from  Warmthumb— serve  yourself  a  full 
course  of  comfort  with  Jockey  briefs.  Better  drop  into 
your  dealer's  soon . . .  buy  a  supply  of  Jockey  briefs  and 
T-shirts,  and  feel  as  good  as  you  look. 

it's  in  style  to  be  comfortable  ...  in 

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J 


WEATHER 

Ceeivr  and  possibi*  thewart 


m  e  Alaily 


WEEK     IN     REVIEW 

Sm  Page  2. 


VOL.  LVII,  NO.  65 


Complete  (JP)  Wire  -Hervice 


CHAPEL  HILL,  NORTH  CAROLINA,  SUNDAY,  DECEMBER  9,  19M 


Offices   in   Graham   Memorial 


FOUR  PAGES  THIS  ISSUE 


Violinist,    Pianist,   Cellist    To    Play 
Tonight  At    8  In   Graham   Memorial 


Trio  Will  Play 
Recent  French 
Numbers  At  8 

By  EDITH  MacKINNON 

Pianist  Robert  Wallenborn, 
'cellist  William  Kleinz,  and  vio- 
linist Julia  Mueller  are  featured 
artists  in  tonights  presentation 
by  hes  Petites  Musicales. 

Sponsored  by  GMAB,  the  pro- 
gram' will  be  held  in  the  main 
It-unge  of  Graham  Memorial  at  8. 

Presented  in  the  evening's  con- 
cert will  be  a  survey  of  French 
music  centered  around  works  of 
the  eighteenth,  ninetenth,  and 
twentieth  centuries. 

Wallenborn.  internationally 
known  for  his  European  tours. 
is  serving  on  the  (UNC)  faculty 
this  fall  in  the  Dept.  of  Music. 
After  stud^Ung  undar  Rudolph 
Ganz.  Hugo  Tieckelmann  of  Chi- 
cago, and  George  Bertram  in  Ber- 
lin. Wallenborn  made  his  profes- 
sional debut  with  the  Chicago 
Symphony   Orchestra. 

Also  included  in  his  career  are 
posts  as  professor  of  music  his- 
tory- at  UNC  and  the  University  of 
Texas,  and  as  lecturer  on  modern 
music. 

Both  Kleinz  and  Miss  Mueller 
are  memebrs  of  the  Duke  Univer- 
sity music  faculty. 

Included  on  the  program  are 
Couperin's  "Concert  Royal,"  a 
suite  of  eighteenth  century 
dances,  a  trio  by  Chausson.  and  j 
a  trio  by  Ravel.  One  of  the  Ira- 
pressionist  composers.  Ravel  is 
known  to  concert  audiences  /or 
hi6-  "Bol«co,'.<-Mid-  musie  -ier-  -Um 
ballet  "Daphnis  and  Chloe." 

The  concert  will  be  presented 
again  at  Duke  University  Dec.  14. 
No  admission  is  charged  for  the 
musicale  program. 


Double  Cut  Penalties  Won't 
Affect  Most  Upperclassmen 

Student  Responsibility 
Emphasized  By  Young 


IN  TRIAL  FRIDAY  NIGHT 


Pickerel!  Is  Cleated 
In  Suiton  Murder  Case 

Miss  Dickie  Pickerell  was  found    was  being  unduly  prosecuted.  The 
not  guHty  of  the  Nov.  29  "murder"  ,  defense   said   this  was  due   to  an 


of  Ekl  Sutton.  ! 

.\  jury,  composed  of  seven  mia  : 
and  fivf  women,  returned  its  ve;-*! 
iict  late  Friday  night  after  hearing  ] 
evidence  and  testimony  present'rd  ' 
by  both  sides  in  the  case  of  The 
State  of  Manning  vs.  Pickerell.        ' 

The  jury's  acquittal  of  the  dc- ! 
lendant  brought  to  conclusion  tno  ! 
annual  mock  trial,  held  in  Mannin-.,  i 


(See  PICKERELL,  Page  3) 


By  NEIL  BASS 

In  accordance  with  the  new 
class  attendance  regulation  adopt- 
ed by  the  Faculty  Council  yes- 
terday,  no  extra  penalty   will   be 


Menon's  Address  Here 
Has  Been  Postponed 


Musicale  Trio 

■  i^rlia  Mueller,  violinist,  Robert  Wallenborn,  pianist,  and  William  Kleinz,  cellist,  will  be  presented 
toninht  at  8  in  the  Graham  Memorial  Lounge.  Thei  r  program  will  include  selections  by  Couperin, 
Chausson  and  Ravel. 


MASTER  OF  THE  TUMBLING  STRINGS 


Manfovani  Ptays  New 

iFnflS4  Full  House 


Quarterly  Head 
Asks  For  New 
Staff  Members 

Students,  graduate  and  under- 
graduate, who  are  interested  in 
working  on  the  next  two  issues  of 
The  Carolina  Quarterly,  UNC  liter 
ary  magazine,  have  been  invited  by 
editor  Marcelline  Krafchick  to  at- 
tend a  meeting  at  the  Quarterly 
office  Wednesday  afternoon  at 
4:30  p.m. 

Positions  are  open  on  the  fiction 
and  poetry  staffs,  and  circulation 
and  general  office  staffs.  Work  is 
now  in  process  for  the  second  is- 
sue,  to  go  to  press  in  January. 


,      By   WALLY 

Mantovani.  "the  master*  of  the  ^^^-'^i'«  P'""§'"«"i-  <lispiayed  the  ex- 
tumbling  strings."  and  his  "n&w  ^'^^  ^P^ed  an^  ability,v  of  the 
music"  played^  a  packed  Mem- ,  '^o?','^^''*'^  '"  extremely  fast  runs 
orial   Hall  Thursday  night.  "  '      i  ?*^i"g   "many   measures. 

The  orchestra,  containing  45  in- 
struments, all  but     10     of     them 


third^ 

laved 


A     .scheduled 

Ha^'s  courtroom,  presented  by  Phi    here    tomorrow 

Alpha  Delta  legal  fraternity. 
Sutton  was  found  "dead"    in    the 

Arboretum     on  the  night  of  Nov. 

2G.    A    fingernail    file   found   near 

the   body   was  thought   to   be   the 

murder  weapon. 

Harlicr    that    week    Sutton    wa.< 

"assaulted"  by  Miss  Pickerell,  his 

former  girl  friend.  Miss  Pickerell 

was  promptly  arrested  and  charged 

with  the  "murder." 

The    proceedings   got    underway 
t  at  7:30  Friday  when  the  State  pre- 

.sentfd  its  indictment  for  murder 
I  in  the   first   degree.     A     capaci'y 

crowd  watched  as  the  State  press- 
!  ed  its  ca.se  by  introducing  a  losx- 

triangle  among  the  defendant.  Mi«s 

Jane  Brock  and  Sutton. 

The  picture  as  presented  by  the 

various  witnesses  of  the  State  a 

tempted  tv)  show  Miss  Pickerell  as 
I  s   jilted    lover  who   had    been    re 
'  placed  by  Miss  Brock  in  Suttiai  s 
I  affections. 
i~  The  defense  attempted  to  shu.u 

how  an  innocent  person  who  h^ 
I  KO  substantial  alibi  for  her  where- 
,  about.s   on    the    night    in    question 


public  address 
by  V.  Krishna 
Menon,  chief  of  India's  delega-  ^ 
ti  :n  to  the  United  Nations  Gen- 
eral Assembly,  was  postponed 
yesterday.  Menon  said  he  wanted 
to  be  on  hand  at  the  Assembly  [ 
Monday  for  the  start  of  debate 
and  voting  on  the  Hungarian  is- 
sue. I 


Menon  is  Indian  minister  of  ex 


ternal  affairs  and  exponent  of 
that  nation's  "neutralist"  position 
between  Russia  and  the  West.  He 
will  speak  under  auspices  of  the 
Car  lina  Forum.  That  is  the  offi- 
cial speaker  presentation  agency 
of  student  government  here. 

Jim  Holmes,  forum  chairman, 
said  he  is  trying  to  arrange  for 
Menon  to  speak  as  soon  as  pos- 
sible, likely  after  the  first  of  the 
year. 


strings,    was    received    most    en- 
thusiastically   by    its    appreciative 
audience. 
It  was  reported  more  than  200 


When  the  trnditional  "Green- 
sleeves"  vva;<  announcerl,  a  chorus 
of  "ooh's"  .»;wept  th:>  audience. 
With  its  haunting  melody,  and 
excellent  interpretation,  it  was  per- 
haps the  most  enjoyable  selection 


people   were   turned     away 


after  i  ^^  ^^^  evening. 


every  available  seat,  window  sill. 
and  standing  space  was  filled. 

Mantovani,  after  entering  as 
his  strings  played  quietly,  began 
the  concert  with  "American 
Gypsy,"  a  tune  depicting  the  good 
and  bad  times  of  the  gypsy.  The 
conductor  led  his  orchestra  with 
much  animation,  and  the  mu- 
sicians responded  to  his  ever>- 
movement. 

"Always,"  an  old  favorite,  Ir- 
ving Berlin  song  followed,  and 
was  done  justice  by  the  strings. 


ness    administration    fraternity. 

?fliss  Thompson,  a  Kappa  Delta 
sorority  senior  majoring  in  ele- 
nieatary  education,  wiM  chosen 
Queen  by  a  committee  of  judges 
constating  of  Mrs.  Kay  Kyser,  Dr. 
C.  SI  George,  and  Dr.  J.  P.  Har- 
land. 

She  was  crowned  Queen  last 
night  at  the  dance  ty  Ivey  Rogers, 
presidesnt  of  the  fraternity  who 
presented  to  her  a  dozen  red 
roses  and  a  silver  loving  cup. 

The  Rose  Dance  Was  held  in 
the  Carolina  Inn  Ballroom  which 
was  decorated  to  the  theme 
"Christmas  Island."  The  music 
was  furnished  by  the  Joymakers 
from   Durham. 

At  the  banquet  preceeding  the 
dnnce  the  new  brothers  were  pre- 
sented and  the  Outstanding  Pledge 
Award  was  made  to  Joe  Kamin- 
s':i.  of  Norco,  Calif.  The  award 
was  iox   the   pledge   that   showed 


It  might  be  noted  here  that  the 
dynamics  the  rise  and  fall  in  vol- 
ume— and  the  balance  of  the  group 
were  near  perfect.  The  second 
and  third  parts  could  be  easily 
heard,  but  did  not  drown  out  or 
even  challenge  the   melody. 

"Petite  Ballet."  "Blue  Danube." 
and  "Ave  Maria"  were  good  exam- 
ples of  perfect  intonation  in  the 
violin  section,  which  many  times 
sounded  as  one  violin  when  the 
section  played  in  unison. 

The  "Symphony  des  Machines." 
by  Wal  Berg,  was  designed  to 
make  the  percussionist  hustle.  As 
Mantovani  put  it.  "He  thinks  he's 
everything  in  thi.s  number."  Car- 
rying his  music  from  stand  to 
.stand,  the  percussionist  displayed 
the  ability  to  switch  from  one  in- 
strument to  another  in  the  space 
of  a  few  beats.  At  times  it  seemed 
he  would  be  late  striking  a  beat, 
but  he  somehow  managed  to  come 
in  right  on  the  beat. 

In    "Some   Enchanted   Evening." 

one    of    the    evening's    few    sour 

(  Mr.  and  Mrs.  W.  L.  Ivey  and  Dr.  i  *»otes    slipped    in.    The    clarinetist 


Carolyn  Thompson  Is 
Queen  Of  Rose  Dance 

Miss  CarobTi  Thompson,  UNC  [  outstanding  abilities  of  leader- 
coed  from  Whiteville,  was  ship,  devotion  to  the  ideas  of  the 
chosen  to  reign  as  queen  at  the :  fraternity,  and  who  as  a  pledge 
annual  Rose  Dance  of  the  Alpha  \  gave  unfailing  service  to  the  fra- 
L«ambda  Chapter  of  Delta  Sigma '  ternity  and  the  community. 
Pi!,  international  professional  busi- 1      ^^^^^^    ^^^    ^^^    ^,g^^^^^    ^^^^ 


dramatic   lulls   in   the  music. 

"Luxenmbourg  Polka"  opened 
the  ^second  half  ol  the  show.  The 
i:ccorrlian  displayed  agility,  but 
several  of  its  notes  were  out  of 
tunc.  One  reed  on  a  note  would 
he  in  tune,  the  other  out. 

"Moulin  Rouge,"  or  "Where  is 
Your  Heart?"  was  played  most 
beautifully,  and  featured  a  trum- 
pet solo  that  was  perfectly  in 
tune  and  was  quite  effective.  The 
trumpet  player  played  forcefully 
but  never  blasted. 

A  lightearted  selection,  "The 
Donkey  Serenade",  followed.  Man- 
tovani delighted  the  audience  with 
amusing,  though     a     bit     hammy, 

(See  MANTOVANI.  Page  3)       ' 


Lambda  Chis 
Are  Victorious 
In  Bowl  Game 


The  U.NC  Lambda  Chis  defeated 
the  Gamma  Theta  chapter  of  Duke 
yesterday  in  the  third  annual 
Lambda   Chi   Alpha*  Bowl    13-6.   in  I  inars  and  speakers 


College  Y's 

Meeting 

Relations 

By  CHARLIE   SLOAN 

About  25  delegates  from  eight  col- 
K\:;es  and  univensities  in  three  states 
a'-e  the  guests  of  the  YW-YMCA  at 
ij.NC  and  \VC  in  Chapel  lliU  this 
wtekend. 

Tlie  event  is  the  first  Interc-oUegi- 
ate  Relations  Consultation.  Accord- 
ing to  a  letter  .sent  to  tlie  schools 
last  month,  the  purixxse  of  the  con- 
ference is  to  .start  a  move  toward 
the  following  five  goals:  I 

( 1 1  Revaluation  of  the  role  of  the  ' 
^   on  campus.. 

<2i  The  exchange  of  ideas  about 
present  .t>rojocl^;  and  success  of  past 
ones  through  means  of  a  newsletter. 

(3 1  The  exchange  of  deputations. 

(4 1  The  Joint  sponsorship  of  sem-  j 


■^m' 


V.    K.    KRISHNA   MENON 

. .  .  apeecJi  here  postponed 


Split  Within  Its  Ranks 
Is  Confronting  ACC 


C.  S.  Gwrge. 


CARQLYN  THOMPSON 

. . .  roi^e  dance  queen 


had  cleaned  th?  moisture  from 
the  inside  of  his  instrument  be- 
tween numbers,  and  had  to  hurry 
to  get  it  reassembled  in  tim?  for 
his  solo.  When  he  began,  he  was 
a  slight  bit  flat  and  had  to  finish 
his  solot  flat.  Then,  when  he  had 
a  measure  rest,  he  ad.justed  his 
mouthpi?ce  quickly.  In  his  second 
solo  he  was  sharp.  Whether  Manto- 
vani's    glance    was    at    him    is    de- 

i  batable,  but  the  woodwind  was 
clearly    embarrassed.    For    the    re- 

:  maind-:r  of  the  night  the  clari- 
netist continued  his  previous  ex- 
cellent handling  of  the  instru- 
ment. 

The  first  half  of  the  concert 
was  end-'d  with  the  placing  of  the 
"L'2ht    Cavalry,"   by   Suppe. 

Thought  noticablc  only  in  qui"! 
sections.  WU.NC  nut  in  its  sounds 
via  Memorial  Hall's  amplification 
svstem.  The  subdued  sounds  of 
the  station  took  much  away  from 


Durham. 

This  was  a  regulation  eleven 
man  tackle  football  game  of  four 
full  quarters  with  both  teams 
playing  in  equipment  furnished 
by  the  school's  Athletic  Depart- 
ments. 

The  first  half  went  scoreless  as 
both  teams  were  unable  to  pene- 
trate their  opponent's  territory 
beyond  the  25  yard  line. 

In  the  third  quarter  what  seem- 
ed ta  be  destined  a  defensive  bat- 
tle suddenly  changed  complexion 
as  Carolina  quarterback  Kim  Bal- 
lis  found  his  left  end  John  Wil- 
bur alone  in  the  flat  and  hit  him 
with  a  pass.  Wilbur  took  the 
aerial  en  the  Duke  3.5  and  went 
for  the  score.  Ballis  kicked  the 
extra   point. 

In  the  fourth  quarter  lightning 
struck  in  the  form  of  an  inter- 
cepted   pass.      Carolina      halfback 


(51  The  exchange  of  .speakers 
among  near-by  campuses. 

Thus  weekend's  meeting  is  primar- 
ily for  the  puriK>.se  of  discussing 
the.se  and  othej  ideas.  Co-chairman 
lor  the  YMC.\  Intercollegiate  Rela- 
tions   Committee    Dkk   Frank   said 


By  KEN  ALYTA 

GREENSBORO— (AP)— The  At- 
lantic Coast  Conference,  which 
was  born  in  May,  1953  when  its 
members  broke  away  from  the 
Southern  Conference,  now  is  con- 
fronted with  a  split  within  its  own 
ranks,  brought  on  by  the  athletic 
grants-in-aid  dbntrovcrsy. 

This  division  was  brought  sharp- 
ly into  focus  Friday  night  between 
sessions  of  the  fall  meeting  of 
the  .\CC  after  the  question  of  set- 
ting up  a  conference-wide  grants 
program  had  been  side-stepped  by 
b?ing  tabled. 

The  five  schools  favoring  the 
plan.  Duke,  North  Carolina  Wake 
Forest.   North  Carolina   State  and 


mittee.  were  tabled,  rather  than 
consume  time  in  pointless  discus- 
sion. 

However.  Gus  Tebell.  Virginia's 
director  of  athletics,  held  out  the 
possibility  that  his  school  may 
provide  the  chink  in  the.  armor  of 
resistance  to  the  plan  by  the  three 
holdouts. 

Said  Tebell.  "If  the  grants  plan 
as  operated  by  the  five  schools 
ppov?s  to  be  a  good  thing  for  the 
conference.  I  think  Virginia  could 
be  for  it  at  the  spring  meeting  of 
the  conference  next  Mav." 


imposed  for  classes  missed  before 
and    after   holidays. 

In  other  words,  juniors  and 
seniors  with  a  "C"  average  may 
cut  classes  directly  before  and  af- 
ter .schedule*  holidays  without  a 
double  cut  penalty. 

Students  enrolled  in  the  Gener- 
al College  will  still  be  subject  to 
the  old  three-cut  regulation  with 
the  same  double-cut  penalty,  how- 
ever. 

President  Bob  Young,  who  ap- 
pointed a  student  government 
committee  which  made  recom- 
mendations to  the  Faculty  Coun- 
cil's Committee  on  Student  Class 
Attendance,  stressed  in  a  state- 
ment yesterday  student's  respons- 
ibility under  the  new  attendance 
system. 

Young  said: 

"My  word  of  warning  is  that 
we  must  now  demonstrate  the  re- 
sponsibility that  must  accompany 
this  more  liberal  policy.  If  students 
choose  to  cut  excessively  without 
excu.se.  then  the  council  will  un- 
'loubtedly  revert  to  the  previous 
ystem — or  one   more  stringent." 

The  new  regulation: 

( 1 )  Effects  no  change  in  at- 
tendance regulation  for  students 
taking    General    College    courses. 

(2)  Allows  juniors'  and  seniors' 
cuts  to  be  regulated  by  individual 
instructors. 

Understanding  of  the  class  at- 
tendance rule  is  that  juniors'  and 
seniors'  cuts  will  not  be  limited 
so  long  as  they  maintain  a  "C" 
average. 

Young's  statement,  in  part,  on 
the  new  attendance  regulation 
reads: 

"I  am  very  pleased  with  the 
action  of  the  Faculty  Council.  The 
work  of  Dr.  Hugh  Holman's  Com- 
mittee (Committee  on  Student 
Cla.ss  Attendance)  was  well  re- 
warded,  in   my  opinion. 

"Representatives  of  student  gov- 
ernment met  with  the  committee 
for  a  rather  lengthy  period,  and 
we  offered  some  opinions  ...  well 
received,  and  implicit  in  much  of 
the    policy    adopted." 

Concerning  liberalization  of  the 
cuts  rule.  Young  said: 

"We  must  now  show  faculty 
members  that  we  are  here  for  an 
education,  and  prove  that  a  strict 
class  attendance  policy  is  not 
necessary  for  a  proper  education." 

Full  copy  of  the  new  attendance 
rule  will  be  released  in  Wednes- 
day's Daily  Tar  Heel. 

The  Faculty  Council,  which 
meets  monthly,  is  composed  of  ap- 
proximately 70  members,  includ- 
ing 33  ex-officio  members  and 
some  40-odd  elected  members  from 
the  various  University  depart- 
ments. 


I      The  new  regulation  will  go  into 
Of  the  three  holdouts.  Virginia    effect    with    the   advent     of     the 
(See  DISSENSION,  Page  4)        I  spring  semester. 


the  confereme  has  been  restricted  !  Orange    Bowl    bound   Clemson,   is- 


in  the  numl)er  of  delegates  since  it 
will  be  mainly  a  planning  meeting. 

In  addition  to  tlie  delegates  from 
CNC,  students  at  tlie  conference  in- 
liude  three  representatives  ti-om  the 
University  of  South  Carolina,  four 
f;om  WCUNC,  three  from  Eastern 
Carolbia,  two  from  A  tt  T,  two  from 
.'^late.  two  from  Duke,  two  from  the 
Jniversity  of  Virginia  and  one  from 
North  Carolina  College. 

-Members  of  tlie  UNC  Y  working 
<.n  the  conference  include  Frank. 
Miss  Anne  Queen,  Y  staff  advisor. 
Miss  Mary  Killian,  Chairman  of  the 
N'  W  C  .^     Intercolle.ijiate     Relations 


John     Woofen    snatched     a     Duke ,  ^  ^mniittce    and    Bob    Cowan,    Co- 


pass  on  the  .50-yard  line  and  ran 
the  pigskin  back  for  the  score. 
The  conversion  attempt  failed. 

Late  in  the  final  p?riod  the 
Duke  Lambs  avoided  a  shutout 
when  they  scored  on  a  20-yard 
pass  play. 

The  contest  was  witnessed  by 
about    a   hundred    spectators. 


Ciiaimian  of  the  YMC.\  IntercoUegi- 
hle  Relations  Committee. 

Speaking  of  the  goal  of  this  con- 
ference. Frank  said,  •We'd  like  to 
take  positive  «teps  in  achieving  clos- 
er interc-ojlegiate  relations  among 
llie  V's  of  (lie  universities  and  col- 
leger in  the  immediate  three-stati 
area.  ,^ 


sued  a  brief  djclaration  of  their 
plans  for  setting  up  their  own 
grants  program.  It  calls  for  each 
to  honor  commitments  by  pros- 
pective students  at  one  of  the 
four  other  schools. 

They   will   operate   independent- 
ly   of   the   conference    in  this   re- 
spect. Th  program,  to  be  approved 
by   the   presidents   of   the   schools,   , 
will  take  effect  Feb.  1. 

Virginia,     South     Carolina     and 
Maryland    were   the   three    schools    : 
whose  stand  against  a  conference- 
wide  program  resulted  in  the  in-   ; 
dependent  action  of  the  other  five,  i  i 

It  was  clear  to  all  schools  af- 
ter lengthy  discussions  in  commit- 
tee and  Informally  Thursday 
night  that  the  aid  program  was 
favored  5-3,  one  short  of  the  tally  ' 
'  Touired  to  pass  under  conference 
;  -ules.  I 

Therefore,    the    five    plans    for , 
'sulating  such  aid.  the  product  of  | 
i  exhaustive  study  by  a  special  com- ^ 


Samuel  Selden  Reads  Dickens 
In  Playmakers  Program  Today 


The  annual  public  reading  of 
Charles  Dickens"  "A  Christmas 
Carol"  will  be  given  by  Samuel 
Selden  here  today  at  4:30  p.m. 

Students,  faculty  members, 
townspeople  and  especially  chil- 
dren have  been  invited  to  hear 
the  reading  in  the  Playmakers 
Theatre. 

Selected  recordings  of  Christ- 
mas music  will  he  played  before 
the  reading  and  as  interludes  be- 
tween the  four  staves  of  the  story, 
which  was  edited  by  Selden.  He 
has  been  giving  the  annual  read- 
ing since  1944.  continuing  the 
tradition  begun  by  the  late  "Proff" 
Frederick  H.  Kock.  founder  of 
the  Playmakers. 

Selden  heads  the  UNC  Depart- 
ment of  Dramatic  Art  and  is  di- 
rector of  the  Playmakers. 


PAGE    TWO 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


SUNDAY,  DECEMBER  9,  \9i6 


SUNDAY, 


REVIEW: 

CAMPUS 
STATE 

WORLD 


SPRING  WEATHER,  BUT  NO  PANTY  RA  ID: 


TALENT  SHOW  S  DAVIS  (FAR  RIGHT)  WITH   FOLKS  AUDITIONrN(^ 

. .  .  !<Vc  e 's  a  'ataliit  or  tdcnt:  he's  fniding  it    - 


Talent  Showman  Davis 
Is  Prodding  Students 


Ej  PHYLLIS  MAULTSBY 

Dave  Davis  has  a  project  un- 
derlay which  ho  hjpes  wiil 
stir  up  inltrcjt  in  student  ac- 
tivity. 

Davis  is  taknt  committee 
chairman  f  r  t'.ie  'Carolina  Ca- 
valcad  •  'r..'.c^l''  which  will  be 
produced  next  week.  With  an 
€'■?  to  the  future,  he  aims  to  put 
0:1  a  show  which  will  move  the 
.'tuuc-..t  h-..]y  into  Memorial  Hall 
lor  the  big  production. 

INITIATE  NEW  TALENT  IDEA 

Davis  v.ants  to  initiate  a  pro- 
ject in  which  the  people  on 
campus  who  have  talent  of  en- 
tertainment value  will  want  to 
participate  and  which,  at  the 
same  time,  will  be  so  good  that 
the  "spectator  participants"  will 
ask  for  it  and  expect  to  see  it 
again   and    ai>ain. 

For  Davis,  the  idea  of  the  -. 
show  grew  out  of  the  "Y** 
Night  talent  programs  which 
were  held  last  year  in  conjunc- 
tion with  religious  speakers. 
From  them  he  recognized  the 
abundance  of  talent  on  the  UNC 
campus. 

Realizin2  that  the  special 
spark  which  makes  for  a  hit 
was  lacking.  Dave  and  a  group 
of  interested  students  at  the  Y 
began  to  hatch  a  .scheme  for  a 
show  with  a  unifying  theme 
which  would  have  wide  popular 
appeal. 


Now  working  in  colaboration 
with  Graham  .Memorial  Activi- 
ties Board,  Davis  i;*  using  the 
thematic  approach  by  tying  in 
the  acts  with  student  life.  "Its 
pretty  hard  to  do  and  be  clever 


at  the  same  timi>."  he  says.  "But 
it's  essential." 

In  screening  talent.  Davis  put 
together  new  acts  which  have 
never  performed  together,  and 
at  the  same  time  he  is  giving 
a  lot  of  ne'^pl-:'  who  are  really 
gc  d  a  chance  to  perform  for 
Uu'  students  again.  .  _, — 

According  to  D^^,  "One  of 
the  main  things  about  the  taieht 
show  is  to  get  people  out  of 
their  little  circl«  of  friei(ds,  ♦e^ 
move  with  othei*  students,  to 
get  them  to  expend  their  energy 
on  taking  a  spectator  interest 
in   activities." 

He  wants  to  arouse  student 
interest  in  events  other  than 
just  major  sports,  football  and 
basketball.  Davis  likes  the  ta- 
lent show  idea  because  he  be- 
lieves the  students  will  want  to 
see  thei*.  friends  |>erform.  "We've 
really  gpt  a  representative 
gijc^p,"  ha-'fays  of  his  perform- 
ers. 

Davis  is  a  pre-med  major.  A 
Mjrehead  scholar,  he  is  a  mem- 
ber of  the  Phi  Delta  Theta  so- 
cial fraternity.  He  is  a  member 
of  the  track  team,  and  is  treas- 
urer  of   the  University   Party. 

TALENT  PROGRAMS  NOT  NEW 

Talent  programs  are  not  new 
to  Davis.  He  was  a  member  of 
a  quartet  which  sang  at  the  "Y" 
Nights  and  performed  at  other 
functions  last  year.  He  \yorked 
at  Freshman  Camp,  incidentally 
a  group  of  miscellaneous  musi- 
cians who  later  evolved  into 
Bruno's  Combj. 

According  to  Davis.  "It  all 
comes  down  to  getting  people  to 
work  together.' 


Clje  Bailj>  Ear  J^eel 

The  official  student  publication  of  the  Publications  Board  of  tho 
University  of  North  Carolina,  where  it  is  published  daily  except  Mon- 
day and  examination  and  vacation  periods  and  summer  terms  tntered 
as  second  class  matter  in  the  post  office  at  Chapel  Hill.  N.  C,  under 
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per  semester;  delivered,  $6  a  year,  $3.50  a  semester. 


Editor - 

FRFTp  POWT.EPGE 

Managing  Editor  _     _ .=. 

CHARLIE  SLOAN 

• 

News  Editor        _ . 

_.        NANCY  HILL 

Business  Manager              ...  

Night  Editor  ...   . ;. -ji       ....... 

BnJ,  BOB  PEEL 

.  _ Cortland  H.  Edwards 

THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL  WEEK  IN  REVIEW 
Staff  Writer  PHYLLIS  MAULTSBY 


Cuts,  Rooms  ^  state  Of  Campus  Address 


Juniors  and  Seniors  will  be  able  to  use  their  own  discretion 
on  h:w  many  times  they  cut  classes  noxt  semester.  At  the  Facility 
Council  meeting  Friday  the  present  cut  rule  was  cut  from  the 
books.  . 

But  before  students  get  in  the  habit  of  rolling  over  and  going 
back  to  sl?ep  on  cold,  wet  mornings  they  had  better  check  with 
their  instructors.  The  new  regulations  leave  the  limiting  of  cuts 
up  to  the  individual  instructor. 

Last  week  the  student  boay  was  not  too  concerned  with  cold. 
wet  mcrnings,  though.  Because  of  a  persistant  high  pressure  s.vs- 
ti,;m.  temperatures  hovered  around  the  70's.  drawing  crowds  of 
students  to  Y  Court  after  a  morning  sunning  and  throwing  Chap- 
el   Hill  s   Christmas   dec  rations   strangely  out   of  place. 

Youngs  SpeechC 
GM  And  Atblefics 

Last  week  student  body  President  dob  Young  delivered  his 
£emesterly  "State  of  the  Campus"  address  to  the  Student  Legis- 
lature and  the  student  body.  Toda/,  The  Daily  Tar  Heel  starts 
publication  of  the  speech's  text.  Second  installment  will  be  in 
Wednesday  morning's  paper.  As  the  text  is  published.  The  Daily 
Tar  Heel  will  appraise  and  comment  on  President  Young's  state- 
ments. 

1  wonder  if  anyone  can  actually  describe  th^  "intangible  thing 
we  call  "the  stale  of  the  campus."  My  purpose  is  not  that  of  present- 
ing any  hypothetical  or  philosophical  .situations,  but  that  of  describ- 
ing as  b;sl  I  can  tliej present  c.  ndition  of  our  student  life. 

I  wciild  like  i'j  cite  some  of  the  problems  confronting  us — .vou 
and  m?.  as  student  leaders— al  this  time.  Also.  1  would  like  to  rei>ort 
on  the  progr:ss  of  our  m:ijnr  projects  for  the  year.  ,    .    '    v 

GRAHAM  MEMORIAL  " 

Fiist.  the  pr 'geam  is  rapidly  expanding  and  becoming  more 
inclusive  and  extensive  every  day.  Various  programs  are  being 
given  in  many  different  buildings  and  room.s  through  ut  the  campus. 
The  Graham  Memorial  .Activities  Board  is  to  be  congratulated  for  a 
very  much  improved  program. 

Secand,  Mi.ss  Linda  .Mann,  who  is  the  present  temporary  director, 
has  b?en  doing  a  mo-^t  satisfact  ry  job  in  her  new  position.  She  has 
a  staff  which  lack^  experience,  but  is  hard  working  and  is  determined 
to  maintain  the  high  standards  of  our  student  union. 

Third,  Joel  Fleishman  is  chairman  of  a  committee  of  \h?  Graham 
Memorial  Board  of  Direct')rs.  This  group  is  preparing  a  very  ex- 
tensive and  comprehensive  report  of  the  backgr-'und  of  our  build- 
ing, of  the  present  use  of  if,  and  of  the  dire  need  for  a  new  and  tx- 
parjded  building  to  meet  the  nrcd.";  of  our  ri.^ing  enrollments. 

Our  plan  is  to  prepare  a  strong  case  for  a  new  building  and 
present  our  case  to  the  1957  General  Assembly,  if  the  local 
admiriistratiof -approve^  tOMr  plans.  The  fact  that  programs,  are 
having  to  be  given  all  over  the  campus  points  out  the  need  for 
one  |C|ti^a|U^  |^||  ( ^#«|vii|H  Mnlon  budding. 

Fourth,  trie  'mys'liiiipoit ant  problem  facing  the  Board  of  Di- 
rectors at  present  is  its  search  for  a  professional  student  union  di- 
rector. 

We   need  someone    to   guide    us   during   the    next    few    years,   to 
further  expand  the  program,  to  prove  the  need  for  a  new  building. 
■  anftijo-.nfiake  plans  for,J|i^  np\\'  building. 

.;  "Thi^  is  the  long-range  objective  of  the  board.  To  achieve  this 
obje(^ye.  the  status  '-I'lh^  director  in  the  University  administra- 
hon  shOHid  be  cleKatWl. '       '  ' 

^he  director  of  Graham  Memorial  should  be  placed  on  the 
staff  «f  the  Dean  of  Student  Affairs,  rather  than  being  subordi- 
Mte  to  the  Director  of  Student  Activities. 
The  administration  does  not  feel, that  this  change  Ls  necejssarj-. 
Before  we  can  proceed,  some  change  must  be  made. 
ATHLETIC   SITUATION 

First,  thanks  to  the  Athletic  Director  for  reducing  date  ticket 
prices.  A  maximum  number  of  students  used  this  privilege  for  the 
Wake  Forest  game.  If  was  a  most  beneficial  gesture  on  their  part.  I 
hope  the  practice  may  continue  in  future  years. 

Second,  many  complaints  were  heard  about  lack  of  support  for 
the  football  team.  There  was  no  general  lack  of  concern  or  lack  of 
support.  Many  mistakes  were  made  in  planning  pep  rallies  and  in 
stirring  up  enthusiasm. 

Throughout  the  sea<;on,  I  think  team  spirits  remained  high; 
and  I  also  feel  that  student  support  was  always  in  evidence 
when  the  situation  demanded  it. 

Third,  the  "Vince  Olcn  Case"  was  handled  promptly  and  proper- 
ly by  the  Men's  Honor  Council.  It  was  a  most  unfortunate  situation  to 
have  arise.  My  sincere  hope  is  that  there  will  be  no  damaging  re- 
purcussion.s  in  the  future. 

F'ourth.  basketball  prospects  for  this  year  are  tops.  I  hope 
ever.vone  will  support  the  Tar  Heels  all  the  way  through  the  season 
and  the  NCA.\  tournaments.  My  hope  is  that  this  team  will  be  na- 
tional champions.  In  my  opinion.  Coach  McGuire  and  the  team  de- 
.serve  the  honor. 


Pogo 


The  unseasonal  heat  brought 
violence  to  the  campus.  Football, 
player  Ed  Sutton  was  found 
"dead"  in  the  arboretum  Thurs- 
day before  last,  and  last  week 
coed  Dickie  Pickerell  *  was 
brought  to  "trial"  for  his  "mur- 
der." 

Actually,  Phi  .Alpha  Delta  legal 
fraternity  was  responsible  for  the 
affair.  The  "murder,"  "indict- 
ment" and  "trial"  was  all  a  part 
of  their  annual  mock  trial.  Miss 
Pickerell,  by  tlie  waj.  was  ac- 
quitted. 

*        *        *       ' '  ^1 

Next  semester  students  will  be 
able  to  move  about  in  their  rooms 
without  running  into  a  room- 
mate at  every  turn.  The  housing 
office  announced  Tuesday  that 
n>  one  will  be  assigned  to  a 
tlirce-man  room  unless  he  re- 
quests to  be. 

Changes  were  being  made   in 


student  government,  too.  The 
slate  of  student  government  of- 
ficials was  filled  out  after  Wed- 
nesday's election.  The  run  -  off 
election  deadlocked  the  Student 
Legislature  at  25-25,  but  absences 
on  the  Student  Party  side  at  the 
first  meeting  allowed  the  Uni- 
versity Party  to  corner  all  the 
legislature  offices. 

Three  money  bills  totalling 
$1,861.29  were  passed  on  by  the 
legislature  last  week  From  this 
amount  the  University  Glee 
Club  received  SI .000.  the  Yacke- 
ty  Yack  S800  and  the  Campus 
Chest  S61.28. 

Student  Body  President  Bob 
Young  delivc\-ed  his  State  of 
The  Campus  address  to  the  legis- 
lative body,  and  in  the  course  of 
the  speech  touched  on  six  specif- 
ic campus  "situatioas." 

Part  of  Young's  address  was 
concerned    with    bringing    about 


minor    changes    in    the    legisla- 
tive branch. 
In  this  area,  Young  suggested. 

(1)  Reactivation  of  the  Leg- 
islature executive  committee  to 
increase  cooperation  and  under- 
standing on  all  sides. 

(2)  Increase  in  the  power  of 
the  Rules  Committe  to  allow  re- 
sumption of  the  practice  of  ad- 
ministering qualification  tests  to 
legislators. 

(3)  Establishment  of  a  Styles 
Comminee  to  make  grammatical 
and  stylistic  changes  in  legisla- 
tive measures. 

Memorial  Hall  was  packed 
Thursday  night  for  Mantovani's 
Student  Entertainment  Commit- 
te-sponsored  concert.  As  early 
as  7:30  the  auditorium  was  full, 
and  by  the  time  the  concert  start- 
ed 8  the  crowd  was  spilling  out 
0^  the  building. 


-The  master  of  the  tumbling 
strings."  45  sets  of  them,  pre- 
sented a  smoothly  paced  con- 
cert with  a  wide  range  of  selec- 
tions. At  the  end  of  the  per- 
formance the  audience  granted 
him  a  standing  ovation. 

All  in  all,  the  week  was  pret- 
ty much  like  any  other  of  the 
year.  The  unusual  weather  cre- 
ated an  unusual  December  air. 
bringing  out  short  sleeves  and 
bringing  down  convertable  tops. 
Although  it  didn-'t  feel  like  fhe 
Christmas  season,  students  were 
negotiating  for  rides  home  and 
trj'ing  to  get  caught  up  in  their 
studies  before  the  holidays.  But 
the  usual  campus  groups  held 
their  meetings,  the  dogs  contin- 
ued to  chase  squirrels,  and  camp- 
us life  kept  pretty  much  to  the 
usual  routine. 


It  Won't  Be  Too  Long  Before  This  Starts  Again 


Preregistration,  meaning  the  approach  of  another  semester, 
made  its  appearance  on  the  campus  last  week.  It  brought  visions  of 
scenes  stfch  as  this,  when  students  fill  out  miles  and  miles  of  forms 

.■■■•••    •  •     .../.  ,, 

A  Visit  To  The  UN: 


and    sign    their    names    until    they 
holidays  were  no  longer  far  away 
nations. 


have   writer's   cramp.   Christmas 

— and   neither   were  final  exami- 

(Photo  by  Frod  Powlcdge) 


The  Crisis  Is  Real 


Writer  Gillis,  a  senior  in 
business  administration  from 
Greensboro,  attended  a  recent 
seminar  at  the  United  Na- 
tions in  New  York.  Here  are 
some  of  his  feelings  about 
the  n>eeting  with  internation- 
al minds. 

By  NORMAN  GILLIS 

At  the  United  Nations  seminar 
in  New  York  last  week  students 
from  this  university  and- 21  other 
colleges    and     universities     were 


bombarded  with  facts,  issues  and 
political  interpretations  from  op- 
posing idealogics  and  nationali- 
ties. 

On  the  last  day  of  the  seminar 
a  round-table  discussion  was  held 
to  summarize  the  issues  laid  be 
fore  the  students  by  the  delega- 
tions ofYugoslavia,  the  U.S.S.K.. 
Egypt,  the  Arab  states,  Pakistan. 
Israel    and    the    Zionist    states. 

At  this  meeting  several  stu- 
dents expressed  their  confusion  in 
the  questions  they  asked:  Which 


By  Wait  Keliy 


y  vvgu. THAT N'AC<$  Yl  »A\ B 


CAf4  youx^s  T  ^wg  mtim 

urngjceyfy  jama      \  £yafyBopy  ,'s^-^CMiDMc'\ 


L'il  Abner 


AH  LOyESTH'ANNOOAL 
TURNIP  HARVEST  DANCE- 
SPESH'LY  THET  SOLEMN 
MOMENT  WHEN  THEV 
STOPS  TH'  MOOSIC  -AN' 
WE  ALL  WALTZES  — 


By  Al  Capp 


TO  TH'  DVIN'  &CBtAMS 
O  TH'  EXTERMINATED 
TURfS<!.Q^ERMlTES 


delegate  do  we  believe'^  Which 
reports  are  correct?  This  article 
is  devoted  to  weighing  the  in- 
foi-mation  on  the  Hungarian  situ- 
ation. 

The  delegate  from  the  U.S.S. 
R.,  J.  M.  Vorontsov,  said,  "Rus- 
sian troops  and  tanks  are  in 
Hungary  at  the  request  of  Hun- 
gary to  subdue  the  fasists  and 
their  movement  to  overthrow 
the  peoples'  government." 

Earlier  that  week  Pravda.  offi- 
cial Red  newspaper,  "Every  Hun 
garian  worker,  peasant,  and  in- 
tellectual has  seen  for  himself 
that  the  counter-revolution  made 
a  desperate  attempt  to  capture 
power  in  order  to  return  the  fac- 
tories aod  plants  to  the  capita- 
lists, the  land  to  the  landowners 
and  again  put  gendarmes  and 
policemen  on  the  necks  of  the 
people." 


Why  did  Vorontsov  use  the 
term  "fascist,"  when  Pi-avda  plac- 
ed the  peoples'  grievance  with  the 
capitalists?  The  Russians  have 
used  semantics  most  effectively 
to  gain  support  on  one  issue  or 
another. 

Knowing  that  fascist  is  a  dis- 
tasteful word  in  the  mouths  of 
Americans,  Vorontsov  evidently 
hoped  to  gain  some  support  for 
his  argument  by  switching  lables. 

A  recent  telegram  to  UN  Sec- 
retary General  Das  Hammarskjold 
fr(.m  Jon-os  Kadar  said,  "The 
Hungarian  Revolutionary  Workers 
and  Peasants'  Government  de- 
clares that  Imre  Nagj's  appeal  to 
the  United  Nations  requesting  a 
discussion  of  the  Hungarian  ques- 
tion in  the  United  Nations  is 
invalid  and  cannot  be  regarded 
'as  an  appeal  coming  f^r  Hungary 
as  a  state.  '' 

'The  Revolutionary  ^'orkers' 
and   Pc^^ants"    Government    em- 


phatically objects  to  the  discus- 
sion of  the  above  mentioned  ques- 
tion either  in  the  Security  Coun- 
cil or  the  General  Assembly  since 
this  question  falls  exclusively 
within  the  competence  of  the 
Hungarian  Peoples  Republic "' 

Just  hov/  is  one  supposed  to 
»?iew  the  situation  in  Hungary 
if  UN  observers  are  denied  the 
opportunity  to  report  conditions 
in  that  country?  This  would 
lead  to  a  one  sided  source  of 
news  if  it  were  not  for  the  Hun- 
garian refugees,  which  now 
amount  to  one  percent  of  the 
total   Hungarian  population. 

Biting  Rusian  nails,  the  Soviet 
Weekly  said,  "The  Hungarian 
people,  dissatisfied  with  the 
shortages  and  the  mistakes  made 
by  the  government  and  parly, 
demanded,  quite  justly,  the  mus- 
takes  made  by  the  government 
and  paity,  demanded,  quite  justly, 
demanded,  quite  justly,  the  ehni 
ination  of  these  short  comings 
But  this  just  and  peaceful  move- 
ment was  used  by  reaction  for 
counter-  revolutionary  purposes.  ' 

This  was  followed  with  the 
statement.  "Tlie  very  first  re- 
ports arriving  from  Hungary 
show  that  the  Kadar  program  is 
receiving  wide  support  in  iIk' 
country.  At  factories,  mills  and 
in  the  streets  the  people  are 
discussing  and  approving  tJ>i5 
program,  and  express  readiness 
to  carry  it  into  practice.  He 
who  has  lived  in  freedom  for 
one  month  will  not  put  on  the 
chains  of  capitalist  slaverj-  vol- 
untarily." 

Does  anyone  need  a  moi"" 
.  concrete  evidence  than  the  re- 
fugees still  coming  out  of  Hun- 
gary in  spite  of  the  risks  they 
must  take  to  escape,  to  sub- 
stantiate the  news  of  the  Hun- 
garian situation  in  American 
newspapers  and  to  realize  that 
the  Russian  news  is  a  mere 
fabrication? 


G 


Th 
have  a 
ride  to  I 

THESE 
RIDES   TO 
AFTER   THJ 

Robert  La| 
New  York. 

Charlie   : 
1301  or  9  32 

Derek    Re 
2381— New 

Stuart    Sli| 
9014  or  8-OS 

Ethan    To| 
9146— Miami 

W.    G.    Sc 
son,    1 7-3 
field,   Ohio. 

Kenneth 
Franklin   St.| 
mosa. 

Shirley 
8-9076— R  Of] 

Sally  Peytl 
Orlando,   Flj 

Bill    Adcol 
9183— Knoxd 


And! 
Besf 

Can 

Cost 

Nicki 

The 

3ooi 


There   is   cfj 
to  dress  aflerl 

Coeds  scldol 
ily  to  enjoy 
ler   six   outk 
ends,  but   ih< 
festivities  rei^ 
fer  them  the 
the  various  n| 
ion    innovator 
earthed. 

For  one  thij 
dtiwn.   backs 
higher  front 
But  this  isn't 
new   way    of 
this  season, 
a  mu.st  even 
sophisticate, 
r  earls  or  brill 
jnering  jewellj 
a  wardrobe 
party  clolhesj 
The  Si 

Subtlety  is  I 
ballroom  dreS 
more  modest 
pear  dramafil 
their  restrainf 
skirts  are  beii 
floor.  General 


ST 


1 9,  1956 


SUNDAY,  DECEMBER  9.  1956 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


^AGi    THUflt 


jumbling 
\m.  pre- 
M  con- 
)f  selec- 
?  per- 
iranted 


|as  pret- 
of   the 
ler    cre- 
Jber   air. 
and 
ble   tops. 
I! ike   fhe 
Its  were 
inie    and 
|in  their 
lys.  But 
held 
contin- 
|fl  camp- 
to  the 


.! 


histmas 

jexami- 
,ledge) 


discus- 
led  qucs- 
\y  Coun- 
)ly  since 
llusively 

of  the 
Iblic' 

Dsed  to 
ingary 
t4ie 
iitions 
woulcT 
irce   of 
Hun- 
now 
of   th« 
ion. 

Se  Soviet 

igarian 

ifith    the 

tes  made 

party, 

i  the  mis- 

krernment 

jte  justly, 

Ithe  elini 

[  comings 

fcul  move- 

L-tion   for 

jrposcs.  ' 

Iwith    the 

first    re- 

Hungciry 

k'ogram  is 

in    the 

lills   and 

)ple    are 

I'lng     this 

readiness 

■Aivv.     He 

Bcloni    for 

n  on   the 

3 very    vol- 

a      iivvfr 
tlio    re- 
ef Hun- 
Jrisks   thpy 
to    bub- 
thi-    Hun- 
Anvrican 
■alize    that 
I    mene 


""■^ 


m 


■•-■jr 

•  1^4)    >> 


ion 


Going  Home  For  Christmas? 
These  People  Want  Rides 


These  people  want  rides  to  distant  points,  or  can  give  rides,  over  the  Christmas  holidays.  If  you 
have  a  car,  are  headed  for  one  of  the  points  listed,  a  nd  need  riders,  contact  these  people.  If  you  want  a 
ride  to  on^  of  the  places  listed  at  the  end,  contact » he  folks  who  Kave  cars  and  need  companions. 


THESE  STUDENTS  WANT 
RIDES  TO  THE  PLACES  LISTED 
AFTER  THEIR  NAMES:  j 

I 

Robert  Lauten,  313  Cobb,  8-9002 ! 

New  York.  j 

Charlie  S|oan,  D.U.  House.  8- i 
1301  or  9-3361— Washington.  D.  C  I 

Derek  Roper.  500  North  St., 
2381 — New    York.  ' 

Stuart    Shelby.    Law    School,    8  \ 


Rainer  Menking,  18  Steele,  8- 
9108— Louisville,  Ky. 

Marion  Harris,  309  Spencer,  8- 
9104 —  Engelhard  or  Washington, 

N.  C.  ^ 

Howard  Kahn,  108  Alexander.  8- 
9107— Baltimore.  Md 


9014  or  8-0981  j-New  York. 

Ethan  Tolman.  207  Ruffin.  8- 
9146— Miami,   Fla. 

W.  G.  Scribner  and  wife  and 
son.  17-3  Venable  Hall — Spring- 
field. Ohio. 

Kenneth  Chi-Kun  Yang.  208  W 
Franklin  St..  9-2471 — Taipei.  For- 
mosa. 

Shirley  Anderson.  302  Kenan, 
8-9076— Rocky   Mount. 

Sally  Peyton.  301  Smith,  8-9133 
Orlando,  Fla. 

Bill  Adcock.  308  Mangum,  8- 
0183— Knoxville.    Tenn. 


And  the 
Best 

Christmas 
Cards       - 
Cost  a 
Nickel  at 
The  Intimate 
Bookshop 


THE  RULES 

If  you  want  to  get  your  name 
on  either  of  these  lists,  drop  by 
The  Daily  Tar  Heel's  newsroom, 
second  floor  of  Graham  Mem- 
telephone  number  and  destlna- 
orial,  or  mail  your  name,  address 
tion  to  The  Daily  Tar  Heel,  Box 
1080,  Chapel  Hill.  The  lists  will 
run  as  long  as  there  are  stu 
dents  who  need  rides  or  riders. 
The  service  is  free. 

Al  Higgins.  309  Connor,  8-9154 
New  York. 

Lief  Erickson.  208  Lewis- 
Spruce  Pine. 

John  Oliver.  Ill  Everett,  8-9056 
Summit.  X.  J. 

Priscilla  Roetzel.  106  Kenan,  8 
9172— Trenton  or  Newark,  N.  J. 
or  New  York. 

Walter  Everett,  305  Lewis,  8 
9028— Washington.  D.  C. 

Dr.  and  Mrs.  Mercedes  de  Sofo. 
8-9172— New  York  or  Newark.  N.J. 

Leonard  Killian,  309  Alexander. 
8-9105— .\lbuquerque,    N.    M. 

Beatrice  Rodriguez,  305  Kenan, 
8-^76— New    York. 

Ana  Maria  Ortiz.  Kenan — New 
York. 

Helcji  Duke.  407A  E.  Franklin, 
8-1273— New   York. 

Elizabeth  Moore.  109  Kenan,  8- 
9172— Wilmington.   N.  C. 

Lynvvood  Thompson.  5  Battle, 
8-9175— New  York  To  Chapel  Hill 
after  Christmas. 

Marjorie  McMahan,  Carr.  8-9106 
i  Charlotte. 


Richard  Alexander,  313  Ruffin 
8-9182— Ft.    Lauderdale,    Fla. 

John  Dale.  210  Connor,  8-9178— 
Asheville   or   Knoxville. 

Buddly  Clark,  Theta  Chi  8-9123 
Atlanta,  Ga. 

THESE  PEOPLE  HAVE  CARS 
AND  WANT  RIDERS  TO  THE 
PLACES  LISTED  AFTER  THEIR 
NAMES: 

Miss  Henrietta  Laing.  9-5414 — 
to  New  York  City  or  Westchester. 

Thomas  L.  GUlette.  303  Alumni 
Bldg,   8-8462— Kansas   City,   Mo. 

Roland  Clemmons.  413  W.  Cam- 
eron Ave.,  9-2181— to  Atlanta  or 
\ew  Orleans. 

Warren  Miller  —  Washington. 
D.  C. 


David  L.  Heck,  33  Davie  Circle, 
9-2786— to  Shelby  Ohio,  via  Mt. 
Airy  and  Charleston,  W.  Va.,  leav- 
ing Dec.  22. 

Brad  Seasholes,  215  Caldwell,  9- 
7688— to  Syracuse,  N.  Y. 

Susan  Inman,  303  Smith,  8-9133 
— to  Vermont,  western  Mass.-,  Conn, 
and  N.Y. 

Chuck  Federspiel,  8-6433  or  9- 
2382— to  centra!   Michigan. 

R.  E.  Berr>'.  106  Whitehead,  8- 
9066— to   Laurel.   Mass. 

Ed    Kiscr,     315   Alexander,     8- 

9105 — to   Laurinburg   via   Sanford 

and   Aberdeen. 

j      Phil  Meyer,  705  Pritchard  Ext., 

,  8-8528— to  Topeka,  Kan.  via  Kan- 

I  .sas  City,  St.  Louis. 


PICKEREU  INNOCENT 

(Continued  From  Page  1) 

entirely  unrelated  set  of  incidents 

The  presiding  judge  was  W.  A. 
Leland  McKeithen,  superior  cour* 
judge  from  Pinehurst. 

Chief  counsel  for  the  defense  was 
I  Charlie  Shaw,  assisted  by  Paul 
[  Holt,  Robert  Thomas,  Dexter  Watts 
and  John  Comer. 

J.  J.  Ftassinetti  was  chief  coun- 
sel for  the  prosecution.  He  was  as- 
sisted by  J.erry  Campbell.  Duane 
Gilliam.  George  Miller  and  Hal 
Conely. 

Phi  Alpha  Delta  reported  it 
would  like  to  thank  all  the  par- 
ticipants involved  and  the  student 
body  at  large  for  making  the  triil 
one  of  its  most  successful  in  the 
past  fe'A*^  years. 


Dr.  Haydon  Is  Honored  By  Music  Society 
During  Celebration  Of  His  60th  Birthday 


Montavan 


(Contmued  Frotn  Page   1) 


The  additional  number,  Char- 
mainc,"  started  with  strings  in 
unison  and  spread  into  spine- 
tingling  harmony.  After  this  se- 
lection, Mantovani  and  his  or- 
che«;tra  received  well  deserved, 
•Le  Cynge.-  or  'The  Swan,'  bv  P'-o'^^nfi^d  applause,  and  the  con- 
^„:„.   o -^   _, .  ,,"     ductor    .said    if    he    were    encour- 

aged much  more,  he  "might  come 


glances  over  his  shoulder. 

Cole  Porter's  "Begin  the  Be- 
guine"  was  rendered  effectivclj', 
as  was  the  "Dance  of  the  Comed- 
ians." 


UNC  German  Professors 
Named  To  Assn.  Posts 

Dr.  John  G.  Kunstmann  Af  UNC 
has  been, elected  chairman  o£  the 
regional  chapter  of  the  American 
Assn.  of  Teachers  of  German. 

His  selection  as  head  of  the 
AATG  organization  came  during 
a  recent  meeting  of  the  South 
Atlantic  Modern  Language  Assn> 
(SAMLA)   in  Atlanta.  Ga. 

Also   during  the  Atlanta   meet- 1 
lag  Dr.  Frederic  E.  Coenen,  pro- ; 
f^sor   of   German   at   UNC,    was 
elsrted  secretary  of  the   German  | 
Section  of  SAMLA  for  the  year 
1936-57. 


Dr.  Glen  Hadon.  chaifman  of' 
the  UNC  Music  Dept.  since  1934,' 
was  honored  j-esterday  at  a  meet- 
ing of  the  Southeastern  Chap- 
ter of  the  American  Musicological  i 
Society  as  part  of  the  general  j 
celebration  of  his  60th  birthday-.  | 
The  noted  composer,  musicologist  j 
and  personal  friend  of  Dr.  Hay- 1 
dpn.    Prof.    Egon   Wellesz  of   Ox-  \ 

ford   University  was   the   speaker ' 

I 
Dr.  Haydon  was  presented  with  j 
a  folder  containing  letters  from  ! 
scores  of  musicologists  express-  i 
ing  their  congratulations  and ; 
praises  for  his  WK>rk  at  UNC.  He  i 
was  also  presented  with  a  rare  i 
book  by  Wagner  as  a  gift  from  ' 
the  Music  Dept. 

Dr.  Haydon  has  held  many  posi- ' 
tions  in  the  musical  field,  in- 1 
eluding  President  of  the  Ameri- ! 
can  Musicological  Society.  He  has ; 
composed    orchestral-  and    cho'ral  ■, 


music.    His    writings 
pioneer    tcxtb:'  k    on 


include     a  j      For  the   past   week   the   Wilson 
musicolog>'  I  Librarv'  has  been  displaying  a  col- 
and  more  than  40  other  scholarly  I  lection  of  his  writings  as  part  of 
publications.  (  the  birthday  celebration. 


The  After  Six  Look 


•..iw?«it4dS^' 


By  Peg  Humphrey 


There  is  definitely  a  new  way 
to  dress  after  six  o'clock. 

Coeds  seldom  have  an  opportun- 
ity to  enjoy  this  new  exciting  af- 
;er   six    outlook    except    on    week- 


served  for  the  older  more  sophis'.i 
cated  theatre  set.  however. 

The  accent  is  on  the  fabric  and 
the  elegant  touches  of  sequins 
fair  lady  drapery,  and  splashy  pins. 


ends,  but  the  holidays  with  gala  Fabricwise.  chiffon  in  number  one, 
festivities  reigning  nightly  will  of  with  the  popularity  of  taffeta,  bro- 
fer  them  the  chance  to  delve  into '  cade  and  lace  mounting  fast.  Nets 
the  various  new  looks  which  fash-  and  tuKes  seem  to  be  losing  the 
have   recently   un-    preferred  position  they  have  held 


ion   innovators 
earthed. 

For  one  thing,  skirts  are  inching 
dowTi,  backs  are  going  barer  and 
higher  front  necklines  are  obvious 
But  this  isn't  all.  There  is  a  whole 
new  way  of  approaching  fashion 
this  season.  Tl^e  feminine  touch  is 
a  must  even  for  the  most  polished 
sophisticate.  Yards  and  yards  ol 
r  earls  or  brilliant  beads  and  glim- 
mering jewelled  pins  can  revitalize 
a  wardrobe  of  stark  unadorned 
party  clothes. 

The  Subtle  Approach 

Subtlety  is  the  by  word.  Even 
ballroom  dresses  have  a  much 
more  modest  approach  and  yet  ap 
pear  dramatic  and  appealing  in 
their  restraint.  Both  full  and  slipi 
skirts  are  being  seen  on  the  dance 
floor.  Generally  the  sheath  is  re- 


for  so  long. 

Look  At  1912 

Take  a  look  at  the  ladies  uf 
1812.  Cecil  Beaton  did  when  he 
designed  the  costumes  for  My  Fair 
Lady.  More  and  more  adaptations 
of  the  fashions  of  that  era  are 
iVPcaring  in  dress  shops  all  over 
'.he  country.  Important  details  to 
look  for  include  the  empire  waisl- 
line,  •elogant  fabrics,  gentle  flat- 
tering draping,  and  those  extra 
touches  which  are  strictly  an  in- 
uividual  affair  .  .  .  artificial  flow- 
ers, large  sunburst  pins  worn  ab- 
.solutely  anj"where,  fur  riches,  ropes 
and  ropes  of  beads. 

Christmas  parties  will  be  more 
fun  than  ever  with  this  whole 
new  special  'I'm  a  lady!"  look  for 
after  six. 


(A'dvertisemcnt) 


STOP  STAR  GAZING 
Be  a  Star  with 
;     Sparkling 
:  .      Holiday 

Fashions 

Convenient  Gift  Shopping,  Too! 


of  Chapel  Hi 


ror  suggestions  on  holiday  dressing,  see  Peg  Humphrey's 
column  above. 


Saint  Saens.  again  showed  excell- 
ent handling  of  the  seocnd  and 
third  parts. 

In   "Gold    and   Silver."  a   waltz 
heavy  on  strings,  the  guitar  could 
be  heard  occasionally.  It  was  dif- 
ficult to  hear  the  unamplified  gui- 
tar  most    of  the   time.   "Gold  and 
I  Silver"  is  considered  by  .Mantovani 
I  as   "one   of   the     most     beautiful 
!  picce.^^  of  music  ever  written." 
j      "White    Christmas."    though    a 
I  little   early,      was      pretty,      with 
I  sleigh  bells  and  all. 

Mantovani's  own  'Italian  Fan- 
tasia" was  to  end  the  show,  but 
after  a  dramatic  ending  the  au- 
dience applauded  enthusiastically, 
and  he  returned  for  one  encore. 

Thomasville 
Man's  Art 
On  Display 

The  art  of  a  celebrated  English 

artist    now    living   in   Thomasville 

is  being  exhibited  in  the  Morehead 

1  Planetarium  .\rt  Gallery  at  UNC 

j      The    exhibit,    which    consists    of 

I  a   number  of  water  colors,  draw- 

ingings  and  oils  by  Geoffrey  Jen- 

;  kinson,    will   continue   throughout 

I  December. 

In  the  exhibit  arc  a  number  of 
I  North  Carolina  scenes,  including 
I  Grandfather  and  Roan  Mountains, 
i  and  beach  scenes. 
!  One  of  Jenkinsons  works  is 
j  valued  at  $1,500.  Others  have  been 

called  priceless. 
!      Jenkinson    is    nationally    recog- 
I  nized  in  England  and  had  a  paint- 
ing hung  in  the  Royal  Academy  of 
Art   when  he  was  only  21  years 
!  old.  He  now  has  two  pictures  on 
permanent  exhibition  in  the  Roy- 
al Cambrian  Academy  in  Wales. 
Also  one   of  his  works  was  se- 
lected for  purchase  for  permanent 
display  in  the   State   Museum   of 
Art. 

Now  an  illustrator  for  a  Thom- 
asville furniture  manufacturer, 
Jenkinson  has  had  works  received 
favorable  when  exhibited  in  North 
Carolina.  This  is  the  second  ex- 
hibition of  his  works  in  the  Art 
Gallerj-. 


back." 

Even  better  than  the  best  high- 
fidelity,  the  concert  was  a  big  suc- 
ce.^s.  and  well  worth  the  money 
paid.  The  am.i^ing  speed  and  vers- 
atility of  the  strings,  combined 
with  excellent  intonation  and  in- 
terpretation by  the  winds  and  per- 
cussion were  guided  quite  ably  by 
.Mantovani.  and  produced  an  en- 
joyable evening  for  all  who  at- 
tended. 

A  few  miscellaneous  criticism: 
the  vibraphone  vibrato  seemed  too 
fast;  the  second  trumpet  was  not 
strong  cDQugh  at  times,  and  be- 
came flat:  the  bass  players  play 


Russell  May  Turn  Pro 

SAN  FR.\NCI9CO-<;!V-Bm  Rus- 
sell, tile  6  foot  10  all  America  cen- 
ter, wRs  reported  yesterday  to  be 
deliberating  professional  basketball 
offers  from  the  Harlem  Globe  Trot- 
ters and  the  Boston  Celtics.  Tlie 
Globe  Trotter  offer  was  reported 
$30,000  a  year. 

Tlie  former  University  of  San 
Francisco  star  came  back  to  San 
Francisco  last  night  from  the  Olym- 
pic games  in  AiiUrnlia  where  he 
helped  the  United  States  team  grab 
the  championship. 


perfectly  in  tune,  but  were  la 
occasionaily:  the  jnufictan  who, 
doubled  on  flute  and  piccollTVa^ 
most    excellent,   and   pl»yed   with 

good  taste  and  phrasing;  oa*  of 
the  trombones  blasted  on  sodie  of 
its  lower  notes,  though  it  may  have 
been  necessary;  in  its  upper  reg- 
ister, the  oboe  becaipe  slightly 
sharp;  the  guitar  could  not  he 
heard,  although  it  would  be  out 
of  place  if  amplified:  the  violas 
and  'cellos  added  the  depth  to 
make  the  violins'  s6und  bubbling 
and  cffectiw;  Memorial  Hall 
need.<  new  seats  or  some  sort  of 
elevated   foot-rest. 


FACULTY  CLUB 

The  Faculty  Club  will  meet  Tuos 
day  at  1  p.m.  at  the  Carolina  Inn. 
The  speaker  will  be  Professor  Al- 
monte Howell  whose  subject  will 
be  "The  Experiences  of  a  Profess- 
or in  South  Korea  " 


PHILOLOGICAL  CLUB 

The  Philological  Club  will,  meet ' 
Tuesday  at  7:30  p.m.  in  the  Faculty  '' 
Lounge  of  Morehead  Planetarium.  ■ 
Professor  Lawrence  A.  Sharpe  of 
the  Romance  Language  Dfept.  will 
present   a    paper   entitled   "Some 
Highlights    of   Portuguese    Liteta 
tiire. 


The  Dollar 
Table  at   xM 
The  Intimai^:: 
Bookshop  ^^' 
Solves  More 

Christmas  :v- 
Problems  p{ 
Than 
Santa  Claus  i 


(ii;tSEEal/oP5 


^oOL  ^''^  "^^  ""  "^  turDpe. 


That's  ^y  American  Express  Student  Tours  are  expertly 
planned  to  include  a  full  measure  of  hidividiuil  leisure — 
ample  free  time  to  discover  your  Europe — as  well  as  the 
most  comprehensive  sight-seeing  program  available  any- 
where! Visit  England,  Scotland,  Denmark,  Norway, 
Sweden,  Holland,  Belgium,  Germany,  Austria,  Switzer- 
land, Italy  anji  France — accompanied  by  distinguished 
tour  leaders— enjoy  superb  American  Express  service 
throughout. 

11  Special  Tom's  ...  53  to  63  days  ...  via  famous  ships: 
.^v    He  de  France,  United  States,  Libert^,  Saturifiia, 
■  V  Guilio  Cesare,  Flandfe.  $1,448  up 

f    Also  Regular  Tours  ...  42  days . .  .  si,30i  up 

.  '• 

You  can  always 
TRAVEL  NOW— ^PAY  LATER 
when  you  go  American  Express. 

For  complete  information,  see  your 
Campus  Representative,^ 
locsil  Travel  Agent  or 
American  Express 
V  Travel  Service,  i^^W 

^      member:  Institute  of  v 

International  Education  and  Council 
on  Student  Travel 

.  .  or  simply  mail  the  haady  coupon. 


American  Express  Travel  Service 

65  Broadway,  New  York  6,  N.  Y.  do  Travel  SaU*  ihrtnos 

Yes!  Please  do  send  me  complete  information  ^-50 

about  1957  Student  Tours  to  Europe! 

Njime ,*...... 

Address 

City 


Zone. 


State. 


MOTtCT  YOUR  TMVTL  FUNDS  WITH  AMERICAN  EXPRESS  TRAVELERS  CHEQUES- SPENDABU  EVtRYWHDK 


lilt     'f  >•/??' 


HERE  ARE  THE  LAST  IN  THE 
SERIES  OF  24  QLD    GOLD 


PUZZLES 


Polish  Poefs 
Work  Exhibited 
In  Library 

A  collertion  of  photographed 
materials  on  the  life  and  work  of 
the  Polish  poet,  Adam  Mickiewicz 
(1798-1855),  is  now  on  exhibition 
in  the  Assembly  Room  of  the  Wil- 
son Library.  The  e.vhibit  was  pre- 
pared by  the  Polish  Embassy  last 
year,  the  centennial  of  the  poet's 
death. 

Mickiewicz  is  considered  to  be 
the  greatest  of  the  Polish  poets 
atid  one  of  the  outstanding  figures 
of  European  literature  in  the  19th 
century.  He  is  famous  as  a  patriot 
an  spiritual  leader  in  the  long 
struggle  of  the  Polish  people  for 
their  national  indepedence. 

The  materials  will  be  display- 
ed through  Dec.  18. 


PUZZLE  NO.  22 


CLUE:  Opened  in  t876,  this  western  uni- 
versity :»  named  (or  a  great  Mormon  leader. 


ANSWER- 

Xa  me 


Addrea$. 

City 

College^ 


.suite. 


PUZZLE  NO.  23 


CLUE:  This  university  deri\-es  its  name 
from  a  portion  of  the  Northwest  Territory. 
It  includes  coordinate  colleges  for  men 
and  women. 


ANSW'ER. 

A(f<frcM__ 

City 

College 


.  State. 


PUZZLE  NO.  24 


CLUE:  Located  on  the  shore  of  one  of  the 
Great  Lakes,  this  university  was  opened 
in  18.55.  Frances  Willard  was  once  iean 
of  women  here. 


ANSN\"ER- 

Name 


Addreet- 

City 

Col'ege^ 


.StaU. 


Covering  The  Campus 


GOLF  TESTS  ,^ 

Women's  individual  tests  in  golf 
will  be  given  Tuesday  and  Thurs 
day  at  4  p.m.  in  (he  gym. 
WUNC 

WUN€.  the  University's  educa- 
tional b'M  radio  station: 

7:(X) — Music    Fror/\   Germany 
7:30— Let  There  Be  Light 
7:45— The  Organ  Room 
8:00— The  Third  Programme 
9:30— The  Seventh  Continent 
10:00— This  Week  .  . .  N.  Carolina 
10:15— News 

10:22— Evening  Mastcrwork 
11:30— Sign  Off 
FRENCH   CHRISTMAS   CAROLS 

Phi  Delta  Phi,  honorary  French 
fraternity  on  campus,  will  present 
a    program    of    group    singing    of 


French  Christmas  carols,  guest 
singers,  and  speakers  tomorrow  at 
7:30  p.m.  in  the  Rendezvous  Room 
of  Graham  Memorial.  The  public 
has  been  cordially  jnvitcd  to  at 
tend  and  join  in  the  sin^ng. 
WONC-W,  the  University's  educa- 
Uonal  television  station: 

9:45— Back  to  Ordd 
10:00— The  Pastor 

10:45— Organ  Prelude 

11:00 — Church  Service 
12:00— This  Is  The  Life 

12:30— Sign  Off 

6:30— Big  Picture 

7:00 — iVhierican   Album 

7:30 — Shakespeare 

8:11^— UN  Review 

8:30— Books  And  Ideas 

9:00— Sign  Oft 


PLAYERS  may  now  mail  their  completed  sets  of  24  Tangle 
Schools  solutions  in  accordance  v^ith  rule  3  of  the  Official 
Tangle  Schools  Rules. 

Before  mailing  your  puzzle.s,  keep  an  accurate  record  of  your 
answers.  All  players  should  be  familiar  with  the  Official  Rules 
which  appeared  at  the  beginning  of  t  he  conte.st.  Players  are  urged 
to  reread  the  rules  carefully  and  follow  them  closely.  Rale  No.  3 
reads: 

3.  NOTE  (a)  When  entrants  have  completed  solutions  to  the 
complete  set  of  24  puzzles  .  .  .  the  solutions  are  to  be  printed  or 
typewritten  by  the  entrant  in  the  answer  space  provided  on  the 
puszle  (or  a  reasonable  facsimile).  The  complete  set  of  24  puzzles 
must  be  answered,  neatly  trimmed,  and  enclosed  in  an  envelope, 
flat  and  not  rolled,  and  addre3.sed  to:— Tangle  Schools,  P.  O.  Box 
26A,  Mount  Vernon  10,  N.  Y.,  and  mailed,  bearing  a  postmark 
not  later  than  December  19,  1956.  Decorated,  pasted  or  embel- 
lished puzzles  are  not  permitted.  Kach  set  of  24  puzzles  must  be 
accompanied  by  a  wrapper  from  any  type  Old  Gold  Ciifarette 
package  (Regular.  Kinf  Size  or  Filter  Kings)  or  a  reasonable 
faesimile  tUereoT. 

(c)  After  the  deadline  for  mailing  solutions,  the  correct 
answers  to  all  24  puzzle.s  will  be  published  in  a  single  issue 
of  this  paper.  Each  contestant  mast  keep  an 
accurate  record  of  all  solutions  and  check  his 
answers  with  the  published  correct  answers. 

REMEM^CR-EI^TRIES  MI^ST 
ek  I^OStMARKE'p  Wo  LATER 

tNan  ^ei^nesdAy, 
djecem^^i^  1^,  1956.  be  sur^e 

TO  INCLUDE  A  WRAl>f>{l|R, 
F^OM  AnV  6L0  WlO 
CIG/iREfTTE  PACKAGE  WITH 
i^CM  SfJO^  *     * 

2|  C9M|»L^I^  >'^^^5'< 


FOLLOW  THESE  MAILING  INSTRUCTIONS  CAREFULLY! 


\  OOE,  JOHN 
\  UKE  DRIVE         ^ 
\  SOUTH  BEND,  ^ 
\              IND. 

- 

Print  or  type  your  name  and  re^rn 
address  on  back  of  envelope, 
lost  name  first,  like  ttiis: 

To  help  checkers,  use  business- 
sire  envelope  approximately 
4"  X  9'/j".  Type  or  print  fhe 
address  as  shown.                         ^\ 
Use  6^  postage.              ^ 

/ 

• 

TANGLE  SCHOOLS        ^ 
;..  '         P.O.  BOX  26A 

MOUNT  VERNON  10.  N.  Y. 

Use  business-size  envelope  4"  x  9 1  "  •  •  ■  sometimes  referred 

to  as  a  No.  W  envelope. 

Kach  of  the  puzzles  must  be  neatly  trimmed,  separately,  and 

placed  in  numerical  order. 

No  decorations  please!  .\ddre.-;s  envelope  as  shown. 

Your  name  and  address  must  be  on  the  back  of  the  envelope 

.ACROSS  THE  EXD  and  in  the  position  shown  in  the  illustration. 

Please  print  or  type  in  capital  letters— LAST  name  fibst. 

If  mailed  according  to  instructions,  6p  postage  should  be  enough. 

Be  sure  to  include  a   wrapper  from  any  type  OLD   gold 

CIGARETTE  PaCKAGK   REGTLAU,  KIXG  SIZE  OK  FILTER  KI.N'G) 

with  each  set  of  24  puzzles.  If  you  are  sending  more  than  one 
sset  of  puzzles,  place  each  sot  in  a  SEPARATE  envelope  under 
youf  own  name. 

In  th^  even'  of  ties,  thf  Tie-Breaking  puzzles  referred  to  m 
pjk  2(b')  will  be  published  %  this  paper  with  instructions  as 
•to  who  is  eligible  to  play.  Publication  of  these  Tie-Breaking 
puzzles,  if  needed,  will  be  announced  soon  after  the  corrocC 
answers  to  the  24  puzzles  have  appeared. 


PAGE  FOUR 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


SUNDAY,  DFfEMBFR  %  19S6 


UNC  Cagers  Down  Clemson^  94-75;  Brennan  Hits  28 


FRATERNITY  CHAMPS 

Fraternity  Division  Intramural  Tag  Football  C  hampions  are  pictured  above.  Members  of  the  DKI: 
blue  team  are:  1st  row,  (left  to  right),  Ed  Schenck,  Bob  .Shelly,  Jim  Patricic,  'Larry  Bell,  John  Jester, 
Dave  Ward,  Glenn  Pickard,  Jim  Raugh,  and  Harry  Smith.  2nd  row  (left  to  right),  Skip  Rand,  Jack  Moore, 
Shelby  Miller,  Canie  Smith,  Jerry  Hartzog,  George  Raines  Stedman  Morris  and  Bob  Walker. 


Hf' 


Grapplers  Open  With  A 
Win  Add  Tie,  Frosh  Lose 


Carolina's  varsity  grapplers 
opened  I  he  season  yesterday  after- 
noon with  a  17-13  win  over  Wake 
Forest  and  a  12-12  tie  with  Wash- 
ingion  and  Lee  in  a  wrestling  doub- 
leheader. 

The  Wake  match  is  the  first  vic- 
tory for  the  Tar  Heels  in  their 
last  thirteen  outings.  The  Tar 
Heels  have  been  very  weak  ilie 
past  tv.o  seasons  winning  no  mat 


ches  last  year  and  only  two  the  I 
year  beiore.  Last  season  the  W&L  ! 
squad,  third  in  the  Southern  Con-  : 
ference,  defeated  Carolina  26-10;  ' 
and  weak  Wake  Forest's  only  win  ■ 
of  the  season  was  a  18-16  victory 
over  the  Tar  Heels.  i  i 

Carolina  coach  Sam  Barnes  said 
after  yesterday's  matches,  "I  am 
pleased  that  we  did  so  well.  We 
used  15  different  wrestlers.  Thai's 


Staunton  Hands  Frosh 


Mermen  42-34  Lacing 


By   STEWART   BIRD  i 

Carolina's  frosh  swimmers  bow-  j 
cd  in  their  first  meet  of  the  see.- 1 
son  to  the  powerful  Staunton  Mil-  I 
itary  Academy  cadets,  42  to  34  yes-  i 
terday  afternoon  in  Staunton,  "Va.  ! 

The  iead  changed  hands  twice  j 
before  Staunton  went  .ahead  to  [ 
stay  at  the  end  of  the  sixth  event. 
Carolina  had  no  entries  in  the  div- 
ing which  gave  the  cadets  eight  i 
points  and  a  31-23  lead  which  they  J 
never  relinquished.  i 

The   Tar    Babies    outscored    t^e . 
cadets  in  first  places,  five  to  four, 
but    it    was    lack    of    team    depth 
necessary     for    the    seconds    and  I 
thirds  that  provided  Staunton  wuh 
its  winning  margin. 

Paul     Wachendorfer     took     two  I 
firsts   for  Carolina,  capturing  the  ; 
100  butterfly  and  the  150  Individ- ' 
ual  medley.  Other  first  place  win 
r.ers  for  the  frosh  were  Bill  Jobci. 
Nash   Mcintosh   and   the  200  yard 
freestyle    relay    of    Ruufs    Knott,  ' 


Dissension 

<  Continued   From   Page   1) 

appears  to  be  the  one  most  likely 
to  swing  over  to  establish  the 
majority  of  six  required  to  estab- 
lish a  conference-wide  system  gov- 
erning grants  and  letters  of  intent 
by    prospective   students.  i 

William  W.  Cobey.  Maryland 
athletic  director,  called  the  grants  ' 
idea  'a  step  toward  professional- 
ism, the  very  thing  we  are  try- 
ing to  curb.  I  believe,  and  my 
school  believes,  that  a  boy  should  ' 
have  until  th?  very  lai»t  possible 
date  to  make  up  his  mind  as  to 
the  school  of  his  choice  and  not 
be  bound  by  something  he  signs, 
say  in  February.**  j 

Rex  Enright.  South  Carolina's! 
athletic  director^  said  the  grants 
plan  "creates  too  much  pressure 
on  a  signing  date"  to  ;be  accept- 
able to  his  school. 

Schools  favoring  the  plan  had 
come  to  Greensboro  feeling,  or 
at  leas-t  hoping,  that  tljis  would 
he  the  time  to  finally  put  overt 
the  program.  It  was  felt  by  many 
that  in  view  of  the  unprecedented 
wave  of  recruiting  trouble  that 
had  struck  the  conferenc,  the  dis- 
senters would  swing  over  to  the  ' 
majority. 

North  Carolina  State,  slapped 
with  a  four-year  probation  by  the 
Nati;>nal  Collegiate  Athletic  Assn., 
and  North  Carolina  have  been  es- 
pecially hard  hit  by  recruiting 
snarls. 

Two  years  ago"  when  the  grants 
program  finally  burst  into  the 
open  alter  years  of  quiet  rum- 
bling, the  measure  again  fail^  to . 
pass  by  one  vpte.  


Bill     Anderson,    Charles     Pittmar. ! 

and  Mcintosh. 

THE  SUMMARY]  .  | 

SO  yard  freestyle  —  (1)  Saffer 
(SMA),     (2)     Moore     (UNC),     (3)    ' 
Stern  (SMA).  time  —  24.2.  ! 

MO  yard  buHerfly  —  (1)  Waeh- 
enderfer    (UNC)>    (2)    OavMMn   \ 
(SMA)  (9)  Evans  (SMA).  time  — 
1:03.0. 

200  yard  freestyle  —  (1)  Me-   I 
jntosh      (UNC)      (2)      Goidwater    I 
(SMA),  (3)  Jone»'(UNC).  time  — 
2:12.2. 

100    yard     backstroke    —     (1)    { 
Jobes    (UNC),    (2)    Zager    (SKU), 
(3)  Smith  (SMA).  time  —  1:10.6 

100  yard  freestyle  —  (1)  Sa«er 
(SMA),  (2)  Rosen  (UNC),  (3) 
Dole  (SMA).  time  57.2 

Diving  —  (1)  Harper,  (2)  Zag- 
er (SMA).  (no  UNC  entries). 

150  yard  individual  medley — 
(1)  Wachendorfer  (UNC),  (2) 
Deans  (SMA),  (3)  Davidson 
(SMA).   time  —   1:36.4. 

200  yard  medley  relay  —  (1) 
Dean,  Goidwater,  Davidson, 
Stern  (SMA).  (2)  Jobs,  Coleman, 
Rosen,  Moore  (UNC).  time  — 
2:05. 

200  yard  freestyle  relay  —  (1) 
Kjiott,  Anderson,  Pittman,  Me- 
Irltosh  (UNC).  (2)  Walter,  Gardes, 
C  Jiberth,  Infante  (SMA).  time  — 
1:51.0. 


a  lot  of  boys  and  a  lot  of  strength. 
We  are  going  to  have  a  good  sea- 
son this  year." 

Captain  Bob  Wagner,  Charles 
Boyette,  Dave  Atdinsons  and  Glenn 
Daughtry  were  the  Tar  Heel  win- 
ners in  the  Washington  and  lAe 
bout.*  Carolina  led  going  into  th^ 
last  match  but  heavj-weight  David 
Corky  dropped  a  3-1  decision  tj 
W&L's  John  Hollister  to  give  the 
Generals  the  tie. 

In  the  Wake  Forest  match,  Tar 
Heel  victors  were  Henry  Rhync, 
Charlie  Boyette,  his  second  of  the 
afternoon,  Ron  Boyette,  Charlie's 
brother,  Bill  Childs,  and  Ed  H.'it- 
chins. 

Carolina's  freshmen  met  the 
Washington  and  Lee  J.V's  before 
the  two  varsity  matches.  The  Tar 
Babies  did  not  fare  as  well  as  the 
varsity  lOsing  the  match  15-10.  Jim 
W'ilborn  and  Mike  Pittman  were 
the  only  Tar  Baby  victors.  Wil- 
born,  grappling  in  the  147  pound 
division,  pinned  bis  man;  and  Pilt- 
man,  a  heavyweight  won  by  forfeit. 
THE  SUAAMARYS: 

Varsity  W&L 

123  .—  Armor.  (W&L),  defeateJ 
Wali,  12-11;  130  —  Wagner,  {€). 
def  j<ed  Patton.,  4-2;  137  —  Parker, 
(WAiL),  defeated  Henderson.  2-C; 
147— Boyette,  (C).  defeated  House, 
8-5;  157  —  Fowler.  (W&L)  deieai- 
ed  Hoke.  5-S;  167  — -  Atkinsons, 
(C).  defeated  Miller,  5-4:  177  - 
Daughtry.  (C),  defeated  Holland. 
4-2;  Heavyweight,  Hollister.  (W&L), 
defeated  Corky,  3-1. 

Varsity-Wake   Forest 

123  —  Carlton,  (Wl"),  pinned 
Wall.  1:20;  130  —  Rhyne,  (C).  pin 
ned  Keeter:  137  —  Harrison.  (WF), 
defeated  Adcock,  9-7;  147  —  C. 
Boyette,  (C),  defetated  Featherston. 
7-4;  157  —  R.  Boyette,  (C),  defeat- 
ed Geer.  6-5;  167  —  Childs,  (C),  de- 
feated Jones,  6-2;  77  —  Hutchins, 
(C).  defeated  Marsh.  2-0;  Heavy- 
weight —  Hahmon,  (C),  defeated 
Dail.   6-2. 


Rosenbiuth 
Scores  26, 
Kearns  14 


CH.\RLOTTE  -^Jf\-  North  Caro- 
lina's seasoned  Tar  Heels  called  on 
veteraas  Pete  Brennan  and  Lennie 
Rosenbiuth  for  some  fancy  shooting 
here  last  niijht  and  won  an  Atlantic 
Coa^t  Conference  basketl>all  vfctory, 
94-75.  over  Clem.son. 

Brennan  .scored  28  points  and  Ras- 
fcubluth  26  as  the  highly-ranked  Tar 
Heels  methodically  ground  out  their 
win. 

Tlie  Tar  Heels  snatched  the  lead 
from  tJie  outset  and  never  \\-ere  be- 
hind. With  Brennan  and  Rosenbiuth 
leading  the  way.  Coach  Frank  Mc- 
Guire's  hot-handers  hit  19  of  their 
first  25  shots  from  the  floor  as  they 
raced  to  a  51-36  half  time  advan- 
tage. 

Rosenbiuth  stuffed  20  of  his  26 
points  into  the  net  during  that  torrid 
first  half. 

Brennan  took  over  in  the  second 
half  and  the  Tar  Heels'  lead  began 
to  really  balloon.  A  layup  by  Rosen- 
biuth shoved  Carolina  into  a  71-41 
lead  with  5  minutes  gone  in  Uie  half, 
and  that  30-point  margin  was  main- 
tained until  McGuire  sent  in  his  re- 
serves. 

In  addition  to  his  slick  ball-hand- 
ling, Brennan  was  brilliant  under 
tne  l>ackboards,  picking  off  11  re- 
bounds to  lead  both  teams.  Center 
Gene  Seay  had  11  takeoffs  for  Clem- 
son  and  his  14  points  helped  Clem- 
son  stay  in  the  game.  Guard  Bill 
Yarborough  was  high  for  the  Tigers 
with  18. 

Brennan  hit  9  of  12  field  shoLs  and 
10  of  12  free  throws.  Rosenbiuth  had 
9  for  17  from  the  field  and  8  of  9 
from  the  foul  line. 
NORTH  CAROLINA  G       F      P     T 


V ,,:  DORMITORY  CHAMPS 

Pictured  above  are  members  of  the  Dormitory  Tag  Football  Champions,  Law  School-2.  Kneeling  (left 
to  right),  Joe  Chamblis,  Leu  Parham,  Joe  Cruciani,  Jess  Butler,  Billy  Meredy,  Gordon  Battle.  Standing 
(left  to  right),  Tom  Johnson,  (capt.),  Howard  Broug  hton,  Harold  Downing,  Bernie  Batts,  Jack  Hudson, 
Phil  Logan  and  Henry  Whitesides.  Absent  when  the  picture  was  taken  were  Joe  Borne  and  Andy  Mc- 
Daniel  (co-capt.). 


DKEs,  Law  School  Play  For  Crown 


Pittsburgh  Hands  Miami 
initial  Reversal,  14-7 

MIAMI,  Fla.—(AP)— Ralph  Je- 
lic  and  Tom  Jenkins,  two  under- 
rated fullbacks,  supplied  the 
spark  yesterday  which  carried 
Pittsburgh  to  a  14-7  upset  over 
Miami's  previously  unbeaten  Hur- 
ricanes. 

Neither  Jelic  nor  Jenkins  scor- 
ed— they  left  that  to  quarterback 
sneaks  by  Corny  Salvaterra  and 
Tommy  Lewis — but  both  were  re- 
sponsible for  putting  the  ball  in 
touchtown    territory. 


The  surprisin^y  strong  DKE  i  The  game  will  be  filmed  in  col- 
blue  team  and  the  Law  School-2 '  or  for  use  in  Europe  by  Professor 
team  will  battle  "or  the^Intramux- i  Clyde  E.  Mullis  as  a  teaching  and 
al  All-Campus  tag  football  champ- 


ionship Monday  afternoon  at  3:30 
in  Kenan  Stadium. 


demonstration  mechanism.  Mr. 
Mullis  will  serve  as  an  instructor 
next  summer  in  the  U.  S.  Army's 
Athletic  Clinic  in  Europe. 


These  two  teams  won  the  right 
to  play  for  the  All-Campus  champ- 
ionship by  finishing  in  the  num- 
ber one  position  in  their  respec- 
tive ^  divisions.    The    DKE's    white 

squad  finished  on  top  in  their  di- ,  ^^^^^  ^^^  ^^^  ^aw  School 
vision  and  were  allowed  to  play 
their  fraternity  brothers  to  see  I  t«''>  ^^^'^s  are  composed  of  some 
who  would  represent  the  fraterni-  of  the  better  tag  football  players 
ties  in  the  big  event.  on  campus.  The  game  promises  to 


Captain  Jerry  Hartzog  and  Jim 
Raugh  will  lead  the  DKE  team 
while  Jack  Hudson,  Joe  Cruciani 
and  Jess  Butler  will  be  the  main- 

These 


Rosenbiuth,  f 
Holland,  f 
Brennan,   f 
Lotz,    f 
Hathaway,  c 
Qui8.»,  c 
Kearns,  g 
Groll,  g 
Cunningham, 
Radovich,  g 
Rosamond,  g 

Totals 
CLEMSON 
Brinkley,    f 
Moncrief, 
Yockel,  f 
Hoffman. 
Seay.   c 
Cameron. 
Yeary,  - 
Yarborough,  g 

Totals 

North   Carolina 

Clenteon 


f 


g 


8-9     0 

0-0     0 

10-12     4 

0-3     2 

0-  1     3 

0-0     3 

4-6    3 

1-2     2 

0-0     4 

2-2     2 

1-2     2 

34  26-37  25 

G      F      P 

4      1-1 

2-  2 

5-  7 
0-  0 

6-  9 

3-  5 
12-13 

8-  9 
19  37  43  21 
51     43- 


EARN  YOUR  MASTER'S  DEGREf 

AND  PREPARE  FOR 

AN  EXECUTIVE  CAREER  in  RETAILING 

C'oniprehcnsive  nine-month  proKrsm  for  A.U.  and  B.S. 
■tfiaduat^ :  rmphmiia  on  executive  diret-tiun  in  mnjor 
storw  dovetailed  with  clsuirooni  work.  Totitl  pay  for 
Utore  work  $450.  Co-ed.  S<-holai':<hips.  Selective  job  place- 
aieat  before  craduation.  G.I.  approved.  Next  elass, 
September   8,    1957.     Apply    now.     Write    for    Uiilletio    C. 

SCHOOL  OF  RETAILING 
UNivERSrry  of  Pittsburgh  pw*..,!.  n,  p.. 


be  an  exciting  one.  Intramural  Di- 
rector Walter  Rabb  extended  a 
cordial  welcome  to  students  and 
faculty  members  to  attend  the 
game. 

Officials  for  the  contest  will 
be  John  Stratton,  Don  Atkins,  Jim 
Whisnant   and   Roy   Holdford. 


fujmf 

M-G-Ms 

starring 

TOM  EWELL 

ANNE  FRANCIS 

ANN  MILLER 

NOW  PLAYING 


Carolina 


'^OO  TO  SEE  'Rlfin\e. 

PERHAPS  THE  KEENEST  CRIME  Hi.M  THAT 
EVER  CAME  FROM  FRANCE . . ,  COMPARES 
MORE  THAN  FAVORABLY  WITH  THE 
MEMORABLE  HLM  'THE  ASPHALT  JUNGLE' 
.  •  •  IT  MAKES  THE  HAIRS  ON  THE  BACK 


36    39—75 


Co-Rec  Volleyball 

Co-recreation  volleyball  round 
robin  play  will  be  completed  Mon- 
day night  at  7:00.  One  game  re- 
mains on  the  schedule  for  each 
team.  All  tics  will  be  played  off 
at  8:00.  Single  elimination  play- 
offs will  be  held  Thursday  night 
in  Woollen  Gym. 

210  individuals  participated  last 
Wednesday  night  as  the  schedule 
began. 


^  j'fqbVt      Qy  appjintmen*  purveyors  of  soap  to  the  Itte  King  George  VI.  Yirdley  &  Co.,  Ltd.,  LondM 


*:^ 


'^. 


V 


CLASSIFIEDS 


DAILY    CROSSWORD 


FOR  RENT:  FOUR  ROOM  HOUSE 
located  on  Barclay  Road.  Elec- ' 
trie  stove,  refrigerator,  hot  wat- 
er heater,  and  oil  circulator 
furnished.  $65  per  month.  Phone 
8-0148. 

LOST  SATURDAY  ISTIGHTirj^. 
eled  Black  Cashmere  Sweater  in 
vicinity  of  Mclver  Dorm.  Finder 
please  contact  Barbara  Prago. 
89142.  * 


LOST:  RED  JACKET  WITH  KNIT 
bottom  and  Paul  written  on  up- 
per left  hand  side.  Call  8-9105. 


knd  the     - 
Intimate 
Bookshop 
Gift-Wraps . 
Books 


free! 


ACROSS 

1.  Eyeglasses 

(coUoq.) 
6.  Dried  morn- 

ing-slory 

root 

11.  Apportion 

12.  Beetle 

13.  Light  wood 

14.  Couple* 

15.  Mother  of 
Irish  godJ 

16.  Meadow 

18.  Soak  flax 

19.  Selenium 
(ssrm.) 

20.  Gentlt 

22.  Sloth 

23.  Malt 
beverag* 

24.  Mythical 
monater 

26.  Exalted 

28.  Lawn 

29.  Pie 
Ingredient 

30.  Dart 

31.  Part  of 
"tobe" 

32.  Block  of 
glacial  ic« 

34.  Quaker  itate 

(abbr.) 
36.  Reaort 

38.  Diatresa 
signal 

39.  Chatter 
(coUoq.) 

40.  Auction* 
42.  Impudent 

(slanf) 

44.  Appcarinf 
as  if  eaten 

45.  S-shB:t>«<l 
molding* 

46  Dutch 
painter 

47.  MaricUn*' 
_*Ucj5i 


DOWN 

1.  Ancient 
country 

i  pOSSL  )  ' 

2.  Smoothing 
tool 

S.  Girl's 
name 

4.  Lettuce 

5.  Stopped,  as 
an  engine 

6.  Oriental 
country 

7.  Wine 
receptacle 

8.  Den 

9.  Overdue, 
as  debts 

10.  Meat  pies 
17.  Audience 
20.  Flcxe* 


21.  Type 
of 

archi- 
tec- 
ture 

23.  Stripe 
(Mil.) 

25.  Gun 
(slang) 

26.  Turn- , 
biers 

27.  Fort 
em-        ^i^ 
bank-      *^ 
ment 

28.aty<Scot.) 
30.  Back 

33.  City  (Ger.) 

34.  Grew  white 

35.  Bottomless 
gulf 


'juii      t-Jt^raHwn!! 
[ioar^M  ['jiiiniiEs 

ynanw  (Jt-infsm 


t»t«r4ax'*  Aaswee 

S7.  Fraf  rant 

wood 
3».  Seclud«4 

valley 
41.  CompaM 

point 

(abbr.) 
13.  Turkish  UtU 


OF  THE  NECK  RISE!" 

—Bosley  Crowther,  New  York  Times 

"A  SUPERIOR  MOVIE..*     , 

iii   'ii' i  •  so  brilliant  that  movie  fan$ 

...... will  be  talking  about  it  for  some  time!"   ' 


■''P 


—  Htnid-Trikunt 


Niwt  Yardley  f^re-Shaving  Lotion 

<^'^      '     for  electric  shaving 

^-    •  •  tautens  your  skin 

•  eliminates  razor  burn  and  razor  drag 

•  counteracts  perspiration 

1^    ^         *  '"o'^es  it  easy  to  whisk  away  your  ■ .   " 

■Y^    '  stubbornest  hairs 

H«/pj  give  e  smoofhar  efeefr/c  s/iavef 
At  your  campus  store,  $1  plus  tax 

Yifdity  products  foi  Amerie»  %n  crnted  in  Enttand  »nd  nnish«d  in  the  U.S.A.  from  the  ori|in»l  Enillsk 
taraatss,  Mmbinlni  imporUd  and  domestic  incraditnts.  Yardlty  of  London,  Inc.,  620  Fifth  Ave.,  ft.Y.C. 


"****..    THE  SUSPENSE  IS 
ALMOST  UNBEARABLEr 

—  Do'fx  Nawa 

''AN  EXPERT  DEMONSTRATION  on  how  to 

get  the  maximum  in  drama  and  suspense . . . 

Never  relaxing  excitement,  a  classic  exercise  in 

keeping  nerves  stretched  taut  through 

ingenuity,  imagination!" 

—  WarMr«/«fr«ai 

"EVERY  OVERTONE  THE  UNDERWORLD 

AFFORDS  . .  .  'RIFIFI'  comes  up  with  a 

hot  singer  to  eqmal  the  Marilyn  Monroe 

effect,  and  just  in  case  she  isn't 

sufficient,  there's  another  bouncier 

miss  who  bathes  her  gangster  boy  friend 

ond  tussles  with  him  among  the  suds!" 

-H*w  roHr  f^ 

''SETS  A  NEW  HIGH   IN  SUSPENSE! 

. .  A  piece  of  film-making 

that'll  have  you  holding  your  breath 

when  you  aren't  chewing  your  fingernails." 

,       ^  -^  Journml-Amtitom 

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FILMED  • .  •  holds  you  in  an  iron 
grip  ...  It  is  the  best 
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this  year!" 

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i 
There  Are  Just  15  Days  Until  Christmas,  And  All  Over  Town  Lights  And  Decorations  Are  Remiiiding  People.  Here's  The  Christmas  Sign  That  Hangs  Over  The   End  Of  franklin  St.,  On  The  'Curve' 

Photo  by  Fred  Powledge.- 


«2 


!i-\i  J 


WEATHER 

Fair,    somewhat    warmer,    wind/ 
in  aftertioon.  Expected  high,  56-64 


VOL.  LVII,  NO  66 


rM 


Lumpieie  {A')    iViie   ieruice 


GEORGIA 

Maybe  a  change  is  coming.  S»P 
•dit»rial,  page  8. 


wm 


TWELVE  PAGES  THIS  ISSui 


AUTO  REGISTRATION  FEI: 


Traffic  Court  Receives  List 
Of  Those  Who  Failed  To  Pay 


New  Cut  Ruling  Approved 
By  Majority  Of  Dept.  Heads 


By   TOM   COOLMAN 

A  list  of  names  of  those  stu- 
dents' who  Uilcd  to  pay  the 
automobile  registration  fee  by 
ycst-rday's  deadline  has  been 
submitted  to  the  Traffic  Court 
of    the    Student    Council. 

The  Traffic  Advisory  Com- 
mission of  the  University  has 
slated  that  "Violators  of  the  re- 
striction rcyulatian,  persons 
whose  automobiles  do  net  dis- 
play a  registration  sticker,  per- 
sisl.nt  violators  of  Chapel  Hill 
regulations  .shalj  be  tried  by  an 
(Stabiished  Traffic  Court,  and 
at) 

nr.Mit     ;iiid    fines    should    b 
plied    with    ill!    fines 


mobiles  that  do  not  display  reg- 
islralion  stickers  will  be  noted 
by  the  Chape!  Hill  police,  be- 
ginning today,  and  turned  in  lo 
South   Building. 

The    check     will    concern    all 
automcbiies  parked   on  campus, 
especially     in     tiie     vicinity     of 
Cobb   Dormitory,   officials  said. 
ABOUT  400 

Letters  were  mailed  Nov.  29 
to  all  students  who  had  de- 
clared automobiles  durin;;  reg- 
istration but  who  had  failed  to 
pay  the  ,S2.50  registration  fee. 
.\cc()rding    lo    Ray    Jefferies.    of 

„....         student     affairs    office     approxi' 

nrtln.?.  j»53kv  oL  PunisK^  -f^»|rtfcte4«  7B'4Ca.^twk?nK.li«d  nt»t 
ip     .     ••ix>plir(l    t')      the      warniuij"'      of 
placed    in  Q   Seuth    Building   yesterday 
the  Student   Governmrnt   Gener- 


UP  Schedules 
Executive  Meet 


p.m 

according 

chairman. 


to      Mike 


Lounge. 
Weinman, 


In   place  of  its  regular  meeting    ent    set-up.   Two   held   no  detinite 

ton'ght   the   University   Party  will    opinion  on  the  matter. 

have    an    executive    session    at    7  ...  •.,»„ 

.„,.„,         ,         „  The  new  cut  system,  to  go  into 

at    Roland    Parker    Lounge.      ,^.  ^  •'    ^        _  i  „      .. 

ettect     next    semester,    makes    no 

change  in  freshman  and  sopho- 
more class  attendance.  Juniors 
The  public  is  not  invited  to  this  and  seniors  will  be  allowed  un- 
mceting.  but  any  member  of  the  limited  class  cut.s.  at  the  discre 
UP  Party  may  come,  said  Wein- ;  lion  of  the  individual  professor. 
fiKn.  During  the  evening  the  pub-i  \n  the  event  that  upperclassmen 
l|x}<Jy  nrwi -Ximjtifr*  t»f  the  Part.v.  talc e  com-.ses  numbered  under  30 
will  be  discussed. 


By  JACQUELINE  HAITHCOCK  ,V    *^  / 

Mr-  recently  re\  i.sed  i\as>  c  »it  systein  ha,s  the  approval 
ol  the  majiniiN  <>t  I  .\C  department  head.s  a<e«Mdin<>  to  a 
l)ail\    I  ar  Heel  .sin\ey. 

I  en  <»l  i«>  dep  iiinent  representatives  (jnestioned  on  die 
subject  uere  Uniud  to  lavor  tlie  reNision.  Onlv  two  opposed 
it.  uliile  live  lelt  it   would  m  ■    e  little  diltetence  in  lIW  p«<^s~ 


..1    other   departments.       ..  .*> 

Dorothy  C.  Adkins  of  the  Psy- 
chology Dept.  feels  the  n-sw  sys- 
tem offers  a  slight  improvement 
oxer  the  present  system.  •'It  seems 
lo  liberalize  things  a  bit-  for  liie 
uppcrcla&smen,"  she  said.  "A  uni- 
versity does  not  need  any  attettd-'- 
anee  regulations.  »    ; 

•*I  hope  we  'can  substHute  cal?*- 
fiilh    maintained    academic   st»il^ 


al  Surplus.  Such  punishment 
and  fines  .should  bo  enforced 
bv  the  University  .Administra- 
tion." 

License   numbers   of   all   awto- 


The  actual  regulation  of  de- 
claring automobiles  wont  into 
effect  in  the  fall  ,of  1948:  how- 
ever, this  is  the  first  y.ar  that 
a  rpgi-itration  fee  has  been  re- 
quc>sted.  • 


Al   Goldsmith   has  been  appoint- 
efl  tie  new  publicity  chairman  for 
UP    .'\ll   party  members  interest  .'d 
on   working  on  the   publicity  com- ^ 
miltee  have   been  urged   by  Wein- 1 


'or   listed   as  General   College   elec- j  ards  for  attendance  records  in  (9i« 
"^  fives.   IjViwev^r.    they   will    be   sub 

}?rt    to    the   siamc    cut    regulations 

as    students    in    the    General    Col 


man  to  attend  this  meetinj 


Menon  To  Speak  Here    '"''  ''"*'  '°"'^'* 
January  7,  Says  Forum 


■'"he  Women's  Residence  Coun- 
cil will  meet  toaay  at  7  p.m.  in 
the  Grail  Room  of  Graham  Mem 
.trial.  This  is  a   reguiar  meeting 


lege   in   those   particular   courses. 
Department    heads   favoring    the 
I  new    system    seem    to    hold    t:he 

general  opinion  that  in  a  univer- 
!  sity  students  .-hould  be  mature 
[  enoirih  to  regulate  their  cla.ss  at- 
!  tendance.  Those  opposing  the  re- 
J  vision  felt  that  certain  circum 
'  stances  in  their  d;'partm?nts  re- 
i  cpiired  .some  stricter  form  of  reg- 
I  'ilation    than    might    be    neces.sary 


Meditation:  A  Student  Takes  Time  To  Think 

A  dormitory  wall,  the  sky  and  a  church  steeple  form  the  frames^  for  this  Carolina  studont  as  he  me- 
ditates between  classes.  Meanwhile,  a  controversy  on  religion  and  God  has  been  broiling  on  the  campus. 
For  the  latest  arguments  see  Page  Eight.  (Photo  by  Fred  Powledge) 

No  Chancellor  Selected  As  Yet 
By  Friday's  Advisory  Committee 


No  chancellor  has  been  selected  The  committee  is  eliminating  na 
as  yet  to  replace  Robert  House  who  prospects,  merely  arranging  names 
retires  in  June.  i  <Jn   a   priority   basis,   he  said. 

No  final   decision   was  made   3t        President   Friday    will    consider 
a   meeting   Saturday   of  President    the  recommendations  in  the  prio- 
William    Friday's    Advisory   Chan  i  ity  order  designated  by  the  com 
celior  Selection  Committee.  .miltee,    but   will   be   bound    to   ac 

Dr.  Dougald  MacMillan,  Kenan  cept  no  one  recommended  Mac-  he  said 
professor  of  English  and  chairman 
of  ihe  faculty  branch  of  the  selec- 
tion committee,  said  yesterday  that 
any  report  of  final  decision  by  the 
committee  was  "entirely  erron- 
eous." 
ONLY  ADVISORY 

The  Selection  Committee,  head  I       ......       .  .  j     ,.,    *  „» 

„    .,  AiK-t«i,»   nf  R-i  '      A    brightly    decorated.    13    foot 

rd   bv  R    Mayne  Aibrignt  of   Ka^  T       . 

rf    Vr  m;ii,«   nnintpH  out     high    cedar    tree    is    now    gracing 
Icr'n    Dr.   MacMillan  poiniea  out.     ....  ,   ,,        .  j     * 

Hi^ii,   1^1     ii        J  „,„  K«Jv  tn  Ton- i  the   Main    Lounge   of    the   student 
is  merely  an  advisory  body  to  con  = 

solLted  University  President  Fri- '  union  building,  and  spreading  its 
solidated  universiiy  ric  fragrance  around  the  room 

day.  '  I      ,„w     ._,  _  i....:-_j  r „, 

He    may    accept   or   reject    our 


Millan  said. 

The  faculty  committee  chairman 
said  no  definite  date  had  been  set 
lor  the  next  full  committee  meet- 
ing. 

"We  are  considering  a  grt  U 
many  names  slowly  and  carefully." 


Christmas  Tree  Graces  Lounge 


Graham  Memorial  will  be  bust- 
ing with  Christmas  spirit  starting 
today. 


carol  singing  performed  by  the 
Duke  Madrigal  Singers,  grouped 
around  the  symbol  of  Christmas 
spirit. 

Glum.  quiz-worried  students 
have  been  invited  to  find  a  bit  of 
cheer  in  the  tree,  on  display  un- 
til   the    holidays. 


V.     Krishna     Menon.     chief     of* 
India's    dclcgalicn    to    the    United 
Nations,  will  speak  Jan    7  on  the  I 
U.NC    campus,    according    to    Jim 
Holmes,    chairman    of    the    Caro-  [ 
lina  Forum.  ! 

Mcnjn  postponed  a  speech  here 
scheduled  »f or  yesterday  to  attend 
debate    and    vote   on    the    Y    Hun- 
garian   crisis    at    the    United    Na-  I 
lions.  I 

He  is  expected  to  talk  about 
India's  part  in  world  affairs.  He 
.has  been  a  strong  booster  of  the 
neutralist  attitude  which  had  been 
the  theme  of  Indian  foreign  jifblicy  i 
in  regard  to  the  cold  war  between  ! 
the  Communists  and  the  free 
world,  it  was  stated. 

I  The  Indian  minister  and  his  pri 
I  vati'   secretary   will   arrive   at   the 

Raleigh-Durham  Airport  at  5:42 
'  p.m.  Jan.   7.   He   will   be  guest   ol 

honor   at   a   reception   in    Graham 

Memorial  after  the  speech,  .sch:-d- 

uled  for  8  p.m. 

'  Holmes  said  that  the  full  sched- 
ule  of   speeches   planned    for   the 

I  University  and  Menon's  own 
heavy    sch'jdulc    made    a     bcfi>re- 

I  Christmas  talk  impossible. 

Dr.  Charles  B.  Robson.  chair- 
man of  the  board  of  political 
science,  will  interview  the  foreign 
minister    following    the    reception. 

"It  is  well  worth  our  time  to 
hear  a  speech  by  a  man  of  Menon's 
calibre,"  said  Holmes. 


recommendation^,"   MacMillan 
said. 

Di.  MacMillan  would  n>ake  n) 
definite  statement  as  to  the  pro- 
gress of  the  committee.  AH  infor- 
mation of  committee  aiJtiOn  is  sup 
posed  to  be  released  by  committee 
Chairman  Albright.  MacMillan  said. 

.\bked  if  the  committee  had  n*'' 
icwfid  the  field  any.  MacMillan  sa.<! 
n^  e;!i'i(!t?.-.ion,>  had  been  puide. 


The  tree  was  obtained  from  an 
anonymous  donor'  by  GM  officials. 
It  was  decorated  with  gaity  by 
GM  officials  and  interested  on- 
loakers  yesterday. 

Each  year  the  Graham  Memorial 
Activities  BoaVd  sets  up  such  a 
tree  in  the  lounge  to  be  enjoyed 
by  all. 

This  year,  th?  tree  vvill  be  a 
part  of  Les  Petites  Musicales.  Sun 
(lnv,    Les    \fusicales    will 


Women's   Residence 
Grail    Room;   7-9. 


GM's  ActiviHes  Schedule  For  Today 

Council    — 


Council 


1; 


Ch:ss  Club  —  Roland  Parker 
8-11. 

UP   Meeting   —   Roland    Parker 
2.  3;  7-11. 

Sound   and    Futy  — ■  Woodhouso 
feature  Conf..  2:;W-fi. 


.Men's  Honor  Council 
Room;  .711. 

Dance      Class      —      Rendezvous 
Room;  6:30-8. 

Tulenl     Chorus    —    Rendezvous 
Room;  5-6. 

Jazz  Club  —    Rendezvous  Room; 
B-Tl. 

APO  —   APO   Room!  7-9 


future 

WON'T  WORK  T:' 

Oeorge  J.  Smith  of  the  Afr 
Force  ROTC  said.  'I  don't  think 
t  would  work  with  our  program." 

Fletcher  M.  Green  of  the  His- 
tory Dept.  docs  not  object  to  lin- 
limited  cuts.  "T  think,  howevfr. 
that  the  regulations  .should  be  th^ 
s;mie  tliroughoul  the  college."  h* 
Slid. 

John  .\.  Couch  of  the  Botany 
Dept.  representetl  .several  peo- 
ples opinion  by  saying.  'If  a  per- 
-son  isn't  here  to  learn  he  ought  to 
get  out  of  the  university.  As  it 
is  there  aren't  enough  classrooms 
for  people  who  desire  an  educa- 
tion. 

•This  system  ought  to  prond* 
some  of  the  much-needed  ejlra 
space." 

Of  those  feeling  the  revision 
would  make  little  difference. 
Dougald  MacMillan  of  the  Engli;^ 
*Dept.  held  th?  strongest  opinion. 
■'I've  been  here  for  the  last  fort* 
years."  he  said,  "and  we've  been 
trying  one  cut  g.v.<5tem  after  antftfi- 
er.  Seems,  like  we  end  up  goina 
in  circles  really  making  no 
changes  at  aU."  ''»^ 


\ 


A  Pretty  Christmas  Decoration— Or  Present 


She's  Miss  Jane  Brock,  freshman  from  AtUnU.  She  »  thinking  about  Christmas.  She  would  m»ke  * 
nice  decoration  for  a  Christmas  tree,  wouldn't  she?  Oi ,  even  better,  shed  look  nice  all  wraw»ed  up  and 
sitting  under  a  Christmas  tree,  eh?  ...  <'*»'«♦«>   ^^    ^^^^    Powtedge) 


.*  .'r 


\  • 


f- 


news 

m 

brief 

FROM  radio' DISPATCHES 

MOSCOW  —  The  Coram  unisT 
youth  oi  Russia  were  reported  cir- 
culating a  declaration  of  indepen 
(ience  against  the  government  oi 
Soviet  Russia.  The  declaration  Oit- 
ed  circulating  their  own  newspa 
^anda  line  .seldom  corresponds  I.) 
tacts  received  by  the  rest  of  th^ 
world. 

In  various  universities  throuiii- 
out  Russia  students  were  report 
ed  circulating  their  owti  newspA 
pers.  the  news  based  mostly  on 
radio      reports    from    the      Britiih 

Broadcasting  Corp. 

*  *  *  ' 

VANCOL"N'E3t,  B.  C  —  .\  jian* 
irans-Canadian  .\irlines  plane  w^s 
lost  in  a  storm  in  a  mountairoU'! 
area  of  British  Columbia.  Sixty 
tMo   persons  wei"e  aboard,   incluti 

ing  seven  Americans. 

*  *  * 

WASHINC.TON  —  The  admim.«- 
•  ration  is  mi.king  no  pro\isions  for 
tax  cuts,  during  the  coming  ycai. 
aec.irding  to  an  official  statenicut 
from   the   Treasury   Dept. 


Ml  II  Hi»  L'M  «^  H*igwQ«*i'*y 


MGiTWO^ 


**»»«^; 


THt  DAILY  Tkk  Htit 


TUISOAY.  oiciWBER  U.  1956 


Race  Re|ptw^  Researcher  Says  'South  Is 
Faced  today  With  Tremendous  Opportunity' 

By   GARY    NICHOLS 


•Tae  South  today  is  faced  with 
a  tremendous  op^j^tunily." 

Thfse  words  were  sp.»ken  by 
J.  M.  Dabbs.  who"  is  now  at^  -the 
University  under  a  fellowship 
grant  to  do  researcli  fw  His  com- 
ing book  conceJ-nthg'  race  rela- 
tions. 

•The  South'  ii~iKh  p'^^'ition  to 
set  a  prostres^ivo-  pattern  in  race 
relations,    and.    what   is   more   im- 


p.  rtant,  in  •humanizing"  industry."  ber  of  the  exec,  committee  of  the 

he  continued.   •'The  race   problem  Southern      Regional      Council      of 

is    one    of    the    coming    problems  Atlanta.   Georgia. 

oi    the   world.    We    have    a    better  Dabbs  has  been  using  the   lTNC 

chance    here    than    anywhere    else  Library  for  about  six  months.  He 

to    meet    this    challenge.    What    is  claims    that   the    library   here    has 

done    here   will   be    watched    from  -the    best    facilities    in    the    South 


Chase  Residents  Fight 
Fraternity  Court  Site 


Alfred 

-:<?'■? 

HITCHCOCK 

^.    ,,:. 

AT  HIS       ^i 

BEST!           1 

SUSPENSE 

AT 

ITS 

v^^ 

GREATEST! 

^.^— i^ 

if/ 

/^  1        ^     M 

*!**><. 

all   over  the   globe." 

i       Dabbs.    a    lull,    gray-haired,    dis- 

tingui.shed-looking     gentleman,     is 

;il  pres.nt  a  farmer  in  Maye.sville, 

S.   C   He  attended    Uie   University 

.y  of  South  Carolina   w  liere  he  later 

'  taupjit      English.      AUvf      leaving 

]  there,     he  became     the     head     of 

the    English    Dept.    at    Coker    Col- 

,  lege. 

i  Dabbs  qu't  teach'ng  and  re- 
turned to  th?  farm.  Finding' him- 
."^eir  among  many  .Xevrro  tenants 
ho  soon  became  interested  in  the 
Ne'.:rH's   and    their    problems. 

He   has  been   wriiing   tor   maga- 
zin:s    for   years,    but    for   tlie    last 


for  a  book  on  the  race  problem." 
•'T'lere  is  much  mort-  liberalism 
in  th'  South  than  people  think 
there  is."  Dabbs  saiil.  'A  lot  of 
us  aic  conservative  in  that  we 
would  rather  keep  quiet  than  to* 
disagree  with  our  neighbor.  A 
great  many  of  tis  ,arc  not  sure 
whnt  we  think,  in  short,  we  are 
mor.»   or  less  confused." 

Dal)bs  did  his  undergraduate 
w(  rk  in  p-iychology  and  graduate 
work  in  psychology  and  English  at 
Clark  University  and  Colum');a 
Iniversity  respectively.  This 
combination  he  fe^els  makes  him 
well    qualified    for    work    on    his 


two  or  three  .vears  his  work  has  book  since  he  can  use  ps.vchology 
been  connected  mostly  with  the  to  ana!.^ze  th?  problem  and  Eng- 
inter-raci.d  problem.  He  is  a  mem-    lish  to  put  his  work  in  writing. 


^/ 


/  lElrecc^ 


I   B.i-ei  on  t.it  n.5vr!  i>v  n^rhnc  du  .siiariet 

LAURENCE      JOAN 

OLIVIER  •  FOiNJTAINE 

•iA  CEORCE  S.ANDERS 

^yrmMd  by  AI-FREO  HITCHCOCK 

r.«<iu..d  h.  [MV(D  O.  SKi.7\!CK 

k»  Eovor«  Tr;u«iph  •    1>  stMbacnl  b>  :i>th  Century-Foai 

NOW  PLAYING  . 


Carolina 


"GO  TO  SEE  'RiriFI'^',.. 

Crowiher,  N   Y    Timej 


'7^  IF  IF  I 


J1 

...means  Trouble! 


No  One'Seated  Once  Feature  Has  Started. 


LAST  TIMES 
TODAY 


Residents  of  a  soi.thside  neighbor- 
hood will  formally  oppose  the  sx;t- 
ting  up  of  a  new  fraternity  court 
(II:  a  University  tract  adjoining  their 
i  !-operty. 

.\  position  again.st  tlie  projw.sal 
iiris  heen  fled  v.ith  the  University 
Building  and  Grounds  Committee  by 
ix-rsons  inin.;  on  Chase  .\ve.,  which 
'joiders  to  wootled  area  behind  Vic- 
tory Village  in  which  the  16-frater- 
:nt.\   develo.imertt  would  he  located. 

(  hairman  P.  W.  Wager  o'.  the 
committee     said    that    his     gro-u^.' 

V.  ould  give  the  petitioners  a  hearing 

« 

iit   their  next   meeting. 

This  Tar  Heel  Edition 
Sets  Advertising  Recorc' 

Today's  Christmas  edition  of  The 
Daily  Tar  Heel  .set  a  new  record 
in  advertising,  according  to  Bill 
Bob   fee  I.   business  manager. 

'•The  revenue  from  this  paper 
will  be  a  great  help  to  the  fin- 
nncial  condition  of  the  Tar  Heel," 
Peel   reported. 

In  conclusion  he  praised  Fred 
Katzin.  advertising  manager,  and 
his  staff— John  Minter.  Dick  Sir- 
kin.  Dick  Ix'avitt  and  Miss  Peg 
Humphre.\ — for  their  hard  work 
on  the  issue. 


WC  Students  Present 
2  Plavs  Over  WUNC-TV 

The  W'oinaus  College  I>rama 
(Jroup.  which  presents  the  ""Hour  of 
Thespus"  monthly  over  VWNC-TV. 
last  night  presentetl  two  plays. 

Both  -.vere  15th  Century  English 
pla.vs  and  we"e  presented  as  ex- 
yerimentals  by  the  WC  group. 

The  plays  presented  were  "The 
Knuntiation."  in  which  the  .\ngel 
:piH>ars  t)efore  Mary  with  the  news 
ot  the  coming  of  the  Christ  Child: 
ond  •The  Second  Shepherds  Play.  ' 
ill  which  the  Shepherds  express  con- 
< » i-n  ab.)ut  the  Birth  ol  Christ.  'The 
Seiond  Shepherd's  Play"  followed 
tl'.c  pattern  of  presentation  used  in 
the  15th  century:  that  i.>j.  using  a 
(art  as  a  stage. 


TJ»e  new  fi-ateruHy  court  was 
pptposed  for  this  are?,  a  University 
.'■.j'okesman  explained,  after  a  iw«- 
'•iou5ly-.selected  five-lot  area  near 
.  the  Pines  Restaurant  on  the  Raleigh 
Hoad  was  disapproved  a&  being  too 
II' i  irom  the  campus.  In  tli«  new 
I'evelcpnvent.  which  fraternities 
■.v(,;ild  lease  for  99  vears,  would  t)€ 
10  social  and  six  pi^ofe-ssional  fra- 
u  rnitics. 

A  s^pokesxtian  for  the  petitioners 
said  they  were  objecting  to  the 
,).opjsed  location  because  the  •uuis- 
•nnce  ot  noise  aad  increased  t^af- 
lic"  in  the  area  would  decrease 
property  values. 

60-WO  Apply 
For  Admission 

Abou^.:60  to  100  students  have 
applied  for  admission  to  the  Uni- 
versity lor  the  second  semester, 
according,  tj  the  Admissions  Of- 
fice. 

Mrs.  Gertrude  Rippy.  Group  Su- 
pervisor of  the  Admissions  Office, 
stated  that  this  number  will  be 
slightly  increas-d  by  the  begin- 
ning of  the  second  semester. 

Mrs.  Rippy  reported  that  the 
number  of  application's  received 
so  far  is  about  the  same  as  in  for- 
mer years. 


PKiTela  Kappa  Initiates 
May  Pick  Up  Pictures 

Recent  Phi  Beta  Kappa  initiates 
may  pick  up  copies  of  the  picture 
made  of  the  group  in  room  312 
South  Building,  according  to  an 
official  of  the  scholastic  fraternity. 


Christmas 
Gifts 


For  The  Ladies! 

ShJF'n  Shore  Blouses 
Martha  Manning,  Shirley  Lee,  Jud/ 
Lane  and  Georgianna   Dresses 
Fine  Feather  Hose 
Deb  Torwn*  and  iolane  Shoes 
Samsonite  Luggage  for  Ladies 
Beautiful  Wool  Skirts 

Lovely  Sweaters.^  ^ 

Lingerie 

Fashionable  Winter  Coats 

Housecoats  and  Robes 

Paiamas  '•> 

Handerchiefs  and  Scarves 

Gloves 


H 


For  The  Men! 

Arrow  and  Wing   Shirts 

Engiishtovifn   Suits 

Men's  Extra  Slacks 

Rugby  Jackets 

Crosby  Square  Shoes 

Men's  Bedroom  Shoes 

Men's  Samsonite  Luggage 

Men's  Cooper   Underwear 

Cooper's  Socks 

Swank  Jewelry  For  Men 

Men's  Handkerchiefs 

Ties 

Leather  Belts 


Jf 


Entire 
Family! 


.      *         Gifts  Gift-Wrapped  And  Prepared  For  Mailing  Free! 

BERMAN'S  DEPT.  STORE 


119  E.  Franklin  St. 


■  i*,':'^  ■;, 


Chapel  Hill 


Phone  6921 


After  The  Busiest  Two  Weeks  Ever 


-? 
t 


Dental  Dames  Meet 
Today  In  Library 

The  Dental  Dames  will  meet 
today  at  8  p.m.  in  the  Library 
.\ssembly  Hall  for  a  general  busi- 
ness session. 


Weekend  Consultation  Leads 
'To  Better  Understanding' 


'^                                           it 

f 

mm 

■  * 

J  ^^mm^^m-' 

%i«       ■■'."' 

DANZIGER'S 


7^ 


*«? 


FROM: 

AFRICA 

AUSTRIA 

DENMARK 

EGYPT 

ENGLAND 

FRANCE 

GERMANY      f^' 

GREECE 

HOLLAND„fe. 

INDIA         '  *='    ' 

INDONESIA 

ISRAEL 

ITALY 

JAPAN 

MOROCCO 

PORTUGAL 

SWEDEN 

SWITZERLAND 


Tile  tir.st  Intercollegiate  Rela- 
tions Con.sultation.  held  over  the 
weekend  by  the  UNC  YM-YVVCA 
led  to  bett.r  iinder.standinij 
iimonj;  the  delegates  from  VM-  \ 
YWC'.Ws  loeated  in  three  states.] 
aceordin,.;   to   the   office. 

About   2.">  delei»ates   from   North  I 


MardJ  Gras 
&  Gerttians 
May  Unite 


Fraternities  will  vote  Wednes- 
day nifjht  on  a  proposal  to  com- 
bine Winter  Ormans  with  the 
Carolina    Mardi    Crras. 

If  this  pr  tposal  Ls  passed,  a  Mar- 
di Gras  committee  under  the  spon- 
sonship  of  Graham  Memorial 
will  work  jointly  with  the  Ger- 
mans Club  to  put  on  a  formal, 
asked  ball  in  honor  of  Graham 
Memorial's    silver    anniversary. 

Tentative    plans   include   a   free 

concert   on     Feb.      15      with      the 

Mitchell  Ruff  Duo  as  the  kick-off 

celebration  of  Craham  Memorial's 

birthday.    On    the    following    day, 

Louis    Arm.strong    will    put    on    a 

concert    which    will    be    restricted 

to   German    Club     members     and 

their    dates.    Armstrong    will    also 

provide   th?   music    for   the   dance 

on   the   same  night   which  will   be 

open  to  any  Carolina  students. 

There   will   be     a     four     dollar 

'  charge  for  German  Club  members 

I  and  a  two  dollar  charge  for  those 

,  de.«iring  to  go  to  the   dance. 

i       According     to    Jim     Armstrong, 

•  chairman  of  the  Mardi  Gras  com- 

I  mjttee,    "This    Mardi   Gras    Dance 

j  can    be    tremendous.    We    are    one 

I  of  the  few  campuses     that     does 

I  not   have  a  college-wide  weekend. 

'  Sueh  a  weekend  could  become  an 

I  annual    affair   and   could  knit    the 

I  campus  closer  together." 


IF  YOU  NEED  ANY  OF  THE  BIG  CHRISTMAS  SELLERS  LISTED  HERE,  YOUU* 
FIND  THEM  WAITING  FOR  YOU  TODAY  IN  CHAPEL  HILL'S  MIRACULOUS  OLD 
BOOK  BARN!  ^^ 

The  Intimate  Bookshop  Has  If! 


Carolina  colleges,  and  th-e  Univer 
sities  of  South   Carolina  and   Vir 
ginia.  arrived  in  Chapel  Hill  Fri-  | 
day.  for  a  weekend  of  discus.ssion  j 
about     ways     to     improve     their 
organization.  j 

The  delegates  concentrated  on 
five  goals:  j 

(1)  Evaluation  of  the  role  of 
the  Y  on  campus.  i 

(2)  "J'h*  exchange  of  ideas  about 
present    projects    and    success    of  , 
past     projects,     by     l)egLn.ning     a 
news-letter.  | 

(3)  The  exchange  of  deputa- 
tions.     '-—  I 

(4)  The  joint  sponsorship  of 
.seminars  and  speakers. 

(5)  The  exchange  of  speakers 
among  campuses  near  eoougb  to 
be  reached  from  another  in  a 
short  time.  I 

The  news-letter  was  discussed  ^ 
favorably  at  the  meetings,  accord-  • 
ing  to  the  Y,  | 

•The     delegates      left      Sunday , 
aftrrnoon     with     a     better     unity  j 
within  the  organization.  The  con""-  j 
sulfation  we   think  was   very   suc- 
cessful," Y  (rfficials  said. 

Si\)all  Boy  In  Hospital 
Here  In  Need  Of  Blood 

\  plea  for  blood  has  been  made 
by  hospital  authorities  aod  th*? 
parents  of  a  small  l>oy  who  has 
been  a  patient  in  Memorial  Horpi 
tal  for  over  a  month. 

The  youngster  is  Sand>-  Phelps 
son  of  Mr.  and  Mrs.  Calvin  Phelpf. 
(,f  726  Long  Avenue,  Rocfcy  Mount. 
Doctors  have  been  unable  to  dia- 
gnose his  rare  malady.  Medication 
has  been  stopped  and  continual 
transformations  is  the  only  treat- 
ment that  may  be  given  the  boy. 

•BIokI  donations  are  needed  be 
cause  of  those  repeated  transfus- 
ions. His  blood  type  is  'O,  '  but 
d»xrtors  have  emphasized  that  any 
type  of  blood  is  needed  at  once 
as  his  particuliar  type  does  have 
to   l>e   replaced. 

Persons  wishing  to  give  blooil 
should  contact  Memorial  Hospital, 
officials  said. 


Anglo-Saxon  Attitudes 

Annapurna  ($1.39  edition) 

Battles  and  Leaders  of  the 

Civil  V/ar 

Bible  as  History 

Caleb  My  Son 

Captain  Little  Ax     .; 

A  Certai'n  Smile'  ,     ,' 

Charles  Addams  Cartoon 

.;         ,   Books 

— : Compulsion'!'. 

Eliot's  Cultivation  of 

Christmas  Trees 

Deluxe  Tour 

Don't  Go  Near  the  Water 

Eloise 

Fountain  Overflows 

Fourth  World 

'Frontiers  of  Knowledge 

George  Bernard  Shaw 


•    ^     V.  ■ 


Gift  from  the  Sea 

Hell  of  a  Way  to  Run  a  RaiiroacJ 

Hokinson  Festival 

Jefferson,  Champion  of  the 

Free  Mind. 

Joy  of  Cooking       ^ 

■> King  of  Paris 

Our  Valiant  Few 

The  Outsider 

Peyton  Place 

—Remembrance  Way 

Songs  of  the  Pogo 

Testimony  of  the  Spade 

-This  Is  My  Beloved 

Tom  Lehrer  Song  Book 

Tribe  that  Lost  Its  Head 

eWorld  of  Mathematics 

'        Plus  all  the  good  Juveniles 
Plus  Bushels  of  Bargains! 


■■4, 


^i 


And  Plenty  Of  Good   Nickel  Christmas  Cards! 


\-  '  V-    .,-.«,  V  ^ 


The  Intimate  Bookshop 


205  E.  FRANKLIN  ST. 


■JI    - 


OPEN  TILL  10  P.M. 


A  GALAXY  OF  CHRISTMAS  GIFTS 

...  And  Festive  Holiday  Fashions,  Too! 


T'JESOAY 


Jaz 
Jaz 

The  Jaiol 
formal  j; 
dez-vouz 
ol-ial   tonil 

This  sc] 
gram  pre^ 
backed  cii 
lose  5tud( 
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Inciii'lo 
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playinq  le| 
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trump. t 
Hsrrisui 
J.   Paul   S< 
\\\2    Quad 
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notables 
jazz  worlc 

Plans  fc 
tiun  of  tticj 
scntcd  lor 
al.    At    pr( 
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and   prepj 
function.^, 
headed    b\ 
am,  an(i 
£imp.son. 
ly  Kurall 
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The    cof 
recorded 
Monday   n| 
Afemorial 
fidelity 
been  done 
.shop,  and 
a*  recordii 
ed.    the 
play    it    t| 
fiThn  7  to 


Tony 
©n  while 
technici"in| 
the   pt^ysi^ 


Th 
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our  pro{ 
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Thisl 
describe^ 
Bethlehc 

This 
Bethlehe 
been 
se*  iblan^ 

Since 
•go,  "Tt 
during 
shows  ii 

The  I 
year,  bi 
far  the 
POPUL/ 

It  H 

prograi 

years.  J| 

•*How( 

attendal 

Jeni 
presents 
quickly 

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1956   ' 


TIJE50AY,  DECEMBER    11,  l?:6 


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PAGE    THttt 


Club  Will  Hold  Informal 
J^zz   Session   Tonight   In   GM 


Th€  Jazz  Club  will  hold  an  in- 
formal jazz  session  in  the  Ren- 
dez-vouz  Room  of  Graham  Mem- 
orial  tonight   at  8  p.m. 

This  session,  the  second  pro- 
gram presented  by  the  GMAB- 
backcd  club,  is  open  to  all  col- 
lege students  interested  in  good 
modern  jazz. 

Included  in  the  list  of  music- 
ians are  Bill  Page,  trombone- 
playing  leader  of  the  Duke  .Em- 
bassadors; Dick  Gable,  lead 
trump:t  for  the  Ambassadors: 
Harrison  Register.  Kenny  Jolls. 
J.  Paul  Scott,  and  Bob  Hook— 
tlvj  Quarter  .notes — Frank  Wil- 
son, tenor  sax;  and  many  other 
notables  from  this  sections 
jazz  world. 

Plans  for  permanent  organiza- 
tion of  the  Jazz  Club  will  be  pre- 
sented for  tho  listeners'  approv- 
al. At  present,  a  steering  com- 
n»ittee  is  doing  all  the  planning 
and  preparatii  n  for  the  group 
fnnctions.  This  committee  is 
headed  by  Jarvis  "Flip"  Lath- 
am, and  includes  Miss  Salli 
Simpson.  Tasso  Spanos  and  Wa, 
\S  Kuralt.  Adviser  to  this  group 
is  Doug  Sessoms. 

The  committee  has  planned 
recorded  music,  played  each 
Monday  night  over  the  Graham 
Memorial  Main  Lounge  high- 
fidelity  system.  Records  have 
been  donated  by  a  local  record 
shop,  and  if  a  student  requests 
a* recording  not  already  obtain- 
ed, the  club  will  secure  and 
play  it  the  following  Monday  i 
fPftn  7  to  9  p.m. 


Goinq  Home  For  ChristmasP 
Want  A  Ride?  Need  Riders? 


These  peQple  want  Hdet  to  distant  points,  or  can  give  rides,  over  the  Christmas  hofidiryt/if^W    ' 
have  a  car,  »re  head^  for  one  of  the  points  listed,  and  need  riders,  contact  these  people.  If  ybii  wahf  a 
ride  to  one  of  the  places  listed  at  the  end,  contact  ihe  folks  who  have  cars  and  need  companions.  ' 

THESE 


Town  Telophon^  Bo6ki  I 
Now  ieihg  Olttflbuttd 

toriefe  are  beinf  printed  and 
^ould  be  distributed  hj  the  end 
of   this  wcelLV   . 

Officials  s^d   thst    ovtt    7.000 
copies  were  being  printed  and  dis- 
tributed. ._■    .  I 
__■  ''^  '■»..▼.■•    > 
The   new  directories     atve     a 

brown  cover  with  campus  scenes 
depicted  on  it. 


Jazz  Sessioners  Swing 

Three  of  the  participants  in  the  first  Jazz  Club  jazz  session,  held 
before  Thanksgiving  are  pictured  above.  They  are,  left  to  right.  Bob 
Hook,  J.  Paul  Scott,  and  Harrison  Register.  They  will  be  on  hand 
for  tonight's  session  in  the  Rendezvous  Room. 

Sesscws  stressed  attendance  to    ,     tonight.  There  will   be   no  dues 


tonight's  session.  b.-cause  it 
'•may  be  our  last  opportunity  un- 
til after  exams  to  meet  and  list- 
en and  discu.ss  plans  tor  organiz- 
ing and  deciding  upon  a  charter." 
Persons  attending  the  pro- 
gram interested  in  joinmg  and 
taking  part  in  the  club  will  be 
asked   to   sign   for   membership 


in  tfte  club,  according  to  Sess- 
oms  and  the  steering  committee 
ruling.  The  steering  committee 
will  limit  or  refuse  membership 
if  for  some  reason  necessary,  he 
said. 
Admission  to  the  session  is 
free.  Refreshments  will  be 
served.  ^  .  *>  " 


STUDENTS  WANT 
RIDES  TO  THE  PLACES  LISTED 
AFTER  THEIR  NAMES: 

Robert  Lautcn.  313  Cobb,  8-9002 
New  York. 

Charlie  Sloan.  D.U.  House,  8- 
1301  or  9-3361— Washington,  D.  d. 

Derek  Roper,  500  N<»tb  St., 
2381— New   York. 

Stuart  Shelby,  Law  Sciow^j!  8- 
9014  or  8-0981— New  York. 

Ethan  Tolman.  207  Ri^fin,  .8- 
9146— Aliam;,   Fla.  A    \C 

W.  G.  Scribner  and  wife  and 
son,  17-3  Venable  Hall — Spring- 
field. Ohio. 

Kenneth  Chi-Kun  Yang.  208  W. 
Franklin  St..  9-2471— Taipei,  tdv- 
mosa. 

Shirley  Anderson.  302  K.«  lan, 
8-9076— Rocky  Mount. 

Bill  Adcock,  308  Mangum.  8- 
9183— Knoxville,   Tenn. 

Rainer  Menking,  18  Steele,  8- 
9108 — Louisville.  Ky. 

Marion  Harris,  309  Spencer,  8- 
9104 —  Engelhard  or  Washington, 

N.  C. 

Howard  Kahn,  108  Alexander.  8- 
9107— Baltimore.  Md. 


Helen  Duke,  407A  E. 
8-1273— New  York. 


FYanklin, 


THE  RULES 

If  you  want  t»  get  yevr  name 
on  either  of  th*M  lists,  dre^  by 
Th»  Daily  Tar  Heel's  newsreem, 
second  fleer  of  Graham  Mem- 
orial, or  mail  your  name,  address 
talephone  rMimber  and  destine- 
tion  to  The  Daily  Tar  Heel,  Bojc 
1080,  Chapel  Hill.  The  lists  Will 
run  as  long  as  there  are  stu- 
dents who  need  rides  er  riders. 


Harold  Stessel  211  Stacy.  8-9031 
— New  York  City  or  Westchester. 

Sara  Humphrey,  Pi  Phi  House, 
8-9096  —  Washington.  D.  C. 

Carolina  Hume.  Pi  Phi  House, 
8-9096  —  Washington.  D.  C. 

John  Gauntlett.  8-9154  -^  <^- 
cago. 

Al  Hiseins.  309  Connor,  8-9\54 
New  York. 

John  Oliver,  111  Everett,  8-9056 
Summit.  N.  J. 

Priscilla  Roelzel,  106  Kenan.  8 
9172 — Trenton  or  Newark,  N.  J. 
or  New  York. 

Walter  Everett.  305  Lewis.  8- 
902a— Washington.  D.  C. 

Dr.  and  Mrs.  Mercedes  dc  Soto. 
I  8-9172— New  York  or  Newark,  N.J. 

Leonard  Killian.  309  Alexander, 
8-9105— Albuquerque.   N.   M. 

Beatrice  Rodriguez,  305  Kenan. 
8-9076— New   York. 

Ana  Maria  Ortiz,  Kenan— New 
York. 


LjTiwood    Thompson,    5    Battle, 

8-9175— New  York  To  Chapel.  Hill 
after  Christmas.      .  -■      '""« 

Marjorie  McMahan,  Carr.  8-9106 
Charlotte. 

Richard  Alexander.  313  Ruffin 
8-9182— H.  Lauderdale,   Fla. 

John  Dale,  210  Connor,  8-9178 — 
Asheville  or  Knoxville. 

Buddly  Clark,  Theta  Chi  8-9123 
Atlanta,  Ga. 

THESE  PEOPLE  HAVE  CARS 
AND  WANT  RIDERS  TO  THE 
PLACM'tfllSTED  AFTER  THEIR 
NAMES:- 

Miss  Henrietta  Laing,  9-5414 — 
to  New  York  City  or  Westchester. 

Thomas  L.  Gillette,  303  Alumni 
Bldg,  8-8462— Kansas  City,  Mo. 

Roland  Clemmons,  413  W.  Cam- 
eron Ave.,  9-2181— to  Atlanta  or 
New  Orleans. 

Warren  Miller  —  Washington, 
D.  C. 

David  L.  Heck,  33  Davie  Circle, 
9-2786— to  Shelby.  Ohio,  via  Mt 
Air>-  and  Charleston,  W.  Va.,  leav- 
ing Dec.  22. 

Brad  Seasholes,  215  Caldwell.  9- 
7688— to  SjTacusc.  N.  Y. 

Susan  Inman.  303  Smith.  8-9133 
— to  Vermont,  western  Mass..  Conn, 
and  N.Y.  I 

Chuck  Fcdcrspiel.  8-6433  or  9- 
2382 — to  central  Michigan. 

R.  E  Berry,  106  Whitehead.  8- 
9066— to  Laurel,  Miss. 

Ed,  KJscr.     315   Alc^xander.     8-' 
9105 — to   Laurinburg   via   Sanford 
and   Aberdeen.  j 

Phil  Meyer.  705  Pritchard  Ext..* 
8-8528— to  Topoka.  Kan.  via  Kan- 
sas City,  St.  'Louis.  J 


Our  Christmas  Gift  To  Youl 
NOW  GOING  ON! 


■  •,  -S^iSftl*'  v.^"? 


c^ 


<■■  • ; 

*^ ..  • 

•■■-V- 

„  A?- 

.«.,vi.- 

i^^i 


STOCKWIDE 

PRE  -  CHRISTAAAS  SALE 

Finest  Custom  And  Budget  |^ 
Home  Furnishings 
Lamps -Carpeting -Bedding 
Pictures-Home  Accessories  ,, 

EVERYTHING   REDUCED 

Some  Groups  Marked  As  UmAksCpst 
Of  Cost  Pius-10% 


■  i^- 


■Mf'-^M.'*'  ^i^ 


I'    , 


PATRPNIZE   YOUR 
,«    AOVIRTISiRS    • 


OPEN 

NIGHTS 

'TIL  9 

SATURDAYS  TIL  6 


wA'..^.. Ski- ';*>.' 


OOM  OF  FlHt  FJJBNlTURS" 


Kenneth  C.  Royall,  Jr.— Needham  P.  Broadw^ll 


,■  Reaaying  ror  ^.lovy^ 

Tony  Jenzano  (left),  manager  of  Morehead  Planetarium,  looks- 
en  while  John  T.  Britian,  (right)  technician,  J.  W.  Gates,  assistant 
technician,  examine  the  Varifocal  Projectoi  which  is  responsible  for 
th«   physical  construction  of   "The   Star   of   Bethlehem." 

The  Star  Of  Bethlehem 
Seen  By  5,000  In  '56 

,"     ^-  >  1  T|*f  r"        By  CHARLES  MATHIS 

"Other'  planetanuriis  have  Christmas  programs  but  I  believe 
our  program  to  be  physically  and  aesthetically  the  largest  presen- 
tation ever  produced  by  any  planelariucn  in  the  world." 

This  is  hew  Tony  Jenzano.  manager  of  Morehead  Planetarium, 
describes  the  Planetarium's  current  presentation  of  •Thq  Star  of 
Bethlehem." 

This  Christmas  season  marks  the  eighth  year  •"The  Star  of 
Bethlehem"  has  been  presented.  But  according  to  Jenzano,  it  has 
been  "enlarged  and  improved"  so  that  it  bears^  "very  little  re- 
se' »blance  to  the  original"  version. 

Since  it  opened  for  this  Christmas  season  less  than  three  weeks 
•go,  "The  Star"  has  been  shown  to  more  than  5,000  people.  And 
during  December,  the  total  attendance — that  of  all  the  various 
shows  since  the   Planetarium  opened  in   1949 — ^will   reach  735,000. 

The  Planetarium  presents  a  variety  of  »rograms  throughout  the 
year.  but.  according  to  Jenzano,    'The  Star  of  Bethlehem"  is    'by 
far  the  most  popular." 
POPULAR  WITH  CHILDREN 

It  is  especially  popular  with  school  children.  And  this  year's 
program  is  slightly  higher  in  school  attendance  than  in  previous 
years,  Jenzano  said. 

"However,  with  the  December  weather  conditions,  the  relative 
attendance  may  or  may  not  confirm  this.  '  he  added. 

Jenzano  said  the  Easter  show,  another  Morehead  Planetarium 

presentation,  ranks  second  to  the  Christmas  sbow  in  attendance, 

".quickly  adding  that  he  meant  "presentalifin  '  instead  of    "show" 

-   .       "Chir  programs  should  not  be  called    show."^',"  he  said,  smiling. 

"The  Star  of  Bethlehem"  is  divided  into  two  parts,  with  the 
fjrst  based  on  science  and  the  second  on  scripture. 

"The  solenmity  and   beauty   of   the   Biblical    pageantry   of   the 

fJrst  Christmas,  the  birth  of  Jesus,  make  the  Star  of  Bethlehem  the 

most  cherished  of  all  Planetarium  presentations.  Religion,  science, 

'  history   and   philosoohv   corrte   tcgether   to  contemplate   'The   Star' 

•nd  the  eternal  questions  it  poses." 

',  This  year  the  recorded  choral  selections  in  the  Star  are  sung 
by  the  Appalacham  Stafe  Teachers  College  Choir.  Dr.  Urban  T. 
Holmes,  Kenan  professor  of  Romance  Philology  at  Carolina,  record- 
e'U  the  scriptural  passages  for  the  presentation. 
'  Except  for  Dec.  24  and  Dec.  25.  'The  Star  of  Bethlehem"  will 
1^  presented  at  830  ovt-ry  evening  of  thr  month  T1  is  also  pre- 
sented at  11  a.  m..  3  and  4  p.  m.  on  Saturdays  and  Sundays  al  2, 
3  and  4  p.  m. 


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Pre  -  Christmas 


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'  i  <. 


Before  you  begin  your  Christmas  shopping,  buy  yourself  a  gift. 
Now  is  your  chance  to  own  shoes  of  the  finest  style  and  quality 
ai  a  greatly  reduced  price.  The  most  famous  names  In  shoe- 
making  are  available  to  you  for  a  limited  time  at  a  low,  low  sale 
price.  Come  in  today  while  there's  still  a  good  selection  and  go 
home  with  two  or  three  pair. 


SUEDES  &  LEATHERS 
BY  .  .  . 

Capezio 

Foot  Flair 
Johansen 

Deb      -A.        •  ^^;| 
Red  Cross  /^ 

Sandler  of  Boston 
Fiancees    ^        ^/ * 

Heels  from  $8.89 
Flats  from  $6.89    ' 
Handbags  from  $2.99  to  $5.99 


:Jk^. 


i 


CHAPIL  HILL'S  ONLY   EXCLUSIVE  SHQf  fJOftW 
OirU-?:-'  ?        OPEN  FRIDAY  NIGHT  UNTIL  9:00  P.M. 


r^'-r 


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yiUJ!i'4J>igjiijqiHWgHBiLiu.,iiiaJL  -ey? 


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•    »•*    »*WV»»  Vi-\»*N/  W-  ^  V-^^'^^^^^^^^^^ 


TUESD/J 


vAGB    POUt 


Century  Bill 
U^  Tonight 
In  Phi  Hall 


!  Ths  Philaniropic  Literary  So- 
ciety will  debate  Tuesday  at  8 
p.m.  on  the  top  floor  of  New  East 
a  seraesterly  "century  bili,"  orig- 
inally scheduled  for  last  Tuesday 
night. 

Th3  bill  provides  that  "the  As- 
sembly of  the  Philanthropic  Liter 
ar>'  Society  go  on  record  as  recog- 
niiing  the  Constitutionality  of  se- 
cession from  ihe  Union  of  sov- 
erign  states  known  as  the  Unitfed 
States  of  Ameriea." 

The  bill  will  b«  debated  m 
though  the  debate  were  OWE.  11, 
1856,  and  no  historical  references 
after  that  date  will  be  allowed 
in  the  debate. 

The  preface  of  the  bill  states, 
"The  component  States  of  the  Un> 
ion  known  as  the  United  States 
of  America  entered  said  Union 
voluntarily,  and  the  State  of  North 
Carolina  A^ithin  the  Union  per- 
petrated by  the  Constitution  of 
the  United  States  has  become  in- 
creasingly difficult." 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


TUESDAY,  DECEMBER  11,  195^ 


FOR  HOLIDAYS: 


^., 


Stwiiifits  Expected  To  Swell 
Every  Means  Of  Transportation 


Representative    John    B. 
will   introduce  the  bill. 


Lewis 


Bf  GRAHAM  SNYDER 

Transportation  facilities  serving 
UXC  will  «ijoy  a  torrent  of  pas- 
senger business  trom  departuring 
Carolina  students  during  the  flr.it 
few  days  of  the  Christmas  h<riida>'s. 

The  exodus  of  students  hooded 
for  homo  and  the  holidays  is  ex- 
pected to  iWfll  •v«ry  mvdo  of 
commercial  transportation  to  its 
passenger  limit  during  the  firs» 
two  da>s  of  the  holiday  period. 

The  train  and  airlines  companies 
operating  from  Raleigh  report  full 
passenger  reservation  manifests  on 
Dec.  »,  20.  and  21.  'Hie  Southern 
R^way  Co.  stated  that  Pullman 
BBd  reserved  seat  cars  were  being 
added  to  their  crack  trains  as  th** 


cflnpus 

SEEN  I 


Coed,  walking  under  tree, 
startled  bjf  the  sound  of  a  Tar- 
zan-lik^  yell  ahcDe  her. 

«        »        * 

Student  climbing  vnt^  On  up- 
per  bunk  to  find  a.  black  dog 
starring  him  in  the  eve. 


aemand    fof   passenger     space     in- 
creased. 

.\irline.<?  officials  reported  that 
reser\ations  were  also  completely 
filled  on  their  main  flights  going 
toward  Xew  York  and  Miami.  Fla. 
on  the  first  three  days  of  the  holi- 
days. 

The  Continental  Travel  .\gency  of 
Chapel  Hill  stated  that  its  facilities 
were  booked  solid  on  all  means  of 
transiwrtation. 
I     Bus  service  is  also  expected  to  be 
I  taxed   by  the  departure  of  students 
from   Chapel   Hill.    Until   the   settle 
ment    of    the    strike     o^     Carolina 
Coach    Co.     is     effected,     students 
depending   on   easterii   North    Caro- 
lina   transportation    wHl    have    the  • 
services  of  the  Durham-Chapel  Bus 
Lin€«5.   The  owner  of  the  bus  lines, 
S.   D.   Small,  stated   that  the  buses 
i  would  operate  over  Carolina  Coach 
'  routes    between    Raleigh    and    Wil- 
I'amston  and  Raleigh  and  Washing- 
ton. (N.  C.)  until  the  Carolina  Coach 
strike   is   settled. 

.\lthough  space  is  not  reserved, 
di?patcher.s  of  the  Chapel  Hill  bus 
station  reported  that  the  flow  of 
students  Is  expected  to  be  heavy  on 
buses  going  toward  New  York  and 
Alianii,  and  toward  all  points  west. 
The  t.vo-week  holiday  period  of- 
ficially begins  at  6  p  m.  on  Dec.  19 
and  ends  at  8  a.m.  on  Jan.  2. 


^O^    Ei^£^f<yOAf£  \ 


'>^ 


LADIES'  RAZORS  '^ 

SCHICK  .  SUNBEAM 

These  are- -the-ne west  thmgs-tn- 
womens  gifts.  She  will  be  over- 
joyed at  being  relieved  of  the 
messy  task  of  shaving  with  a 
blade.  She  will  eliminate  thoise 
unsightly  cuts  and  nicks.  Saves 
time,  saves  skin!  Available  in 
white,  blue,  purple,  pink,  and 
black,      v^     . 

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When  you  give  a  gift  for  Christmas, 
you  want  to  give  the  very  finest  that 
you  can  afford..  A  gift  from  Went- 
worth  and  Sloan  assures  you  of  f  inesi 
quality  and  you  know  that  your  dear 
one  will  cherish  it  forever.  You  wii' 
be  pleasantly  surprised  to  find  that 

theJaesl-COSts- very  little  more  than 

cheap    unknown    merchandise.     It  s 
^  well  worth  your  while  to  come  by 
and  see  our  selection. 


;«;:• 


'h     ,-/ 


NEWEST  WATCH  BANDS 
by  FLEXLET 

You've  seen  these  new  Speidef 
watch  bands  around  the  campus 
on  the  most  fashionable  wrists. 
Truly  a  revolutionary  improve- 
ment on  the  old  fashioned 
expansion  band.  Combines 
strength  and  beauty  magnifi-, 
cently. 

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Finest  pocket  lighters 

by  RONSON  •  COLIBRI 

Nothing  is  appreciated  mor*:; 
than  a  Ronson.  Recognized  as 
the  leading  lighter  in  the  world 
Many  try  to  copy  it  but  none  cap- 
ture the  beauty  and  workman- 
ship of  the  original. 

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K 


■ti'.^ 


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TRAVEL  ALARM  CLOCKS 
by  SETH  THOMAS 

A  gift  that  is  appreciated  by  any- 
one who  travels  anywhere.  Well 
protected  from  the  rigors  of 
rough  handling.  Attractive  case 
#nd  face.  You  can't  go  wrong 
with  one  of  these.   . 

from  $1tl,9S 


^^^   PEN  &  PENCIL  SETS 
PARKER  -  SHEAFFER 

foV  Mom,  Dad,  brother,  or  sister, 
a  fine  pen  and  pencil  set  is 
always  a  perfect  answer  to  your 
gift  problems.  Why  not  give  the 
best,  Sheaffer  or  Parker. 

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Wentworth  &  Sloan 


JEWELERS 


Regulations  For  Coeds 
During  Holidays  Issued 


It's  Almost  Winter:  The  Shadows  Prove  It 

If  the  past  few  warm  days  have  confused  stuc'ents  about  the  time  of  year,  the  sun's  slanting  rays 
should  clear  up  the  matter.  Here,  on  Graham  MemDrial's  front  porch,  a  student  compares  his  shadow 
wUh  that  of  the  student  union's  high  columns.  It's  only  2  p.m.,  and  the  sun  is  coming  from  far  in  the 
South — a  sure  sign  of  winter.  {Photo  by  Fred  Powledge) 


By  JOAN  MOORE  * 

Dr.    Ratherine    KMinedy    CarmJ- 

cbael.  Dean  of  Women,  has  issued 

the    following     apnouDcement     con- 

i  ?ernin2   regulations   f<M"  coeds   dur- 

:n!»  the  Christmas  holidav.s. 
I 

j  The  won?en's  dormitories  and 
•sorority  houses  will  close  for  the 
;  Christmas  holidays  at  noon  on 
1  Thursday,  Dec.  20.  They  will  re- 
j  t)])en  on  Wednesday,  January  2.  On 
I  January  2,  the  dormitories  and 
i  s  jrority  houses  will  remain  open 
j  imtil  12  o'clock  midnight  (and  not 
I  11  o'clo(>k).  according  to  Peggy 
Punk,  chairman  of  Women's  Resi- 
I  dcnce  Council,  and  the  Office  of  the 
I  Dean  of  Women. 

!  . 

■If  a  girl  is  to  travel  overnight  in 
!  i.n  automobile,  either  leaving  Chap- 
j  el  Hill  or  returning  to  Chaf)el  HLU, 
!  she  must  have  a  special  letter  from 
I  her  parent  to  her  dormitoiry  hos- 
1  tess  or  sorority  hous'another,  giving 
I  her  this  definite  permission.  Thh 
j  decision  y.as  made  last  Thursday 
.il  a  meeting  where  were  represent- 
i  ed  the  Women's  Residenc  Council, 
j  til  Woman's  Honor  Council,  dormi- 
!  tory  host'^sses,  sorority  housemoth- 
ers and  the  Dean  of  Women's  Office. 

If  a  girl  is  to  arrive  in  Chapel 
IDU  at  some  hour  that  does  not 
coincide  with  the  hours  during 
v.hich  her  dormitory  is  normally 
open,  she  must  carefully  check  in 
advance  her  specific  plans  with  a 
member  of  the  dormitory  admini- 
stration or  with  her  ho.stess  or 
housemoth:>r,    officials    said. 

Any    woman    student,     who    ex- 


pects to  return  to  Chapel  Hill  on 
any  date  earlier  tlian  Jan.  2  and 
who  plans  to  stay  o\"«rm|fht  any- 
(  where  other  than  ii  i  er  residence, 
\\i\\  be  required  to  :wf  fy  her  dormi- 
tory hostess  or  sorority  housemother 
.'Tefore  leaving  her  residence  for 
the  Christmas  holidays.  It  will  lie 
necessary  for  the  student's  parent 
to  write  the  hostes.s  or  housemother 
<'f  the  daughter's  nlan^  and  to 
express  approval  of  those  plans. 
1'be  hostess  or  housemother  must 
receive  this  stateinent  from  the 
parent  before  the  student  signs  out 
for  the  Cliristmas  holidays. 


North   Carolina    Photographers 
British  Artisf s  Work  Exhibited 


Spruill  Explains 
School's  Poiicy 
On  DoubleCuts 


I  To  the  untrained  eye  it  is  very  |  hanging   in    the    far   right    corner 

'  difficult   to   tell    whether   some  of  j  of  the  room).  It  combines  the  best 

I  the    pictunes    are    photographs    or|  aspects  of  oil  painting  and  photog- 

'  oil  paintings,  but  at  least  one  gen-    raphy.    I'd    say      the 


By  GARY  NICHOLS 

Have  you  been  to  the  Planetar- 
ium   lately? 

Chances   are    you   haven't    taken  „p^^„    3,^^,   ^^■^   ^.j,.^.   ^^^^^  ^^^.^^g 

time    and   are    missing  out  on   the  „,^   trouble   in   this   respect, 

new  exhibits  which  can   be   loi<|i<l  ^„,             ^     .                  , 

,  T^he  mystaiuous  couple  were  pro- 

..   1  IeLSSLUiD«i,..f»hotoscikf)hcrs    who,    af- 
m  the  nortmwing  exhibit  room    ^^,^   com.montinj^   on    many    of   the 
is  an  exhibit  of  colored   portraits    p;^^^  j,^^.,.^^  ,„fj  ^.^^^[^^  ^.^.^^ 

their  names. 


With  the  approach  of  Christmas 

holidays,  students  are   warned   a- 

gainst  taking  class  cuts  on  either 

of  the  two  daj-s  prior  to  the  be- 1 

1  ginning  of  the  holidays  or  inune- 

i  diately  following  the  holidays. 

In  regard  to  students  who  must 

say      tne      outstanding    report     for     employment     before 

thing  about  the  exhibit  as  a  whole  |  jjg^     jg  ' 

the   variety     of     unique 


put  on  display  by  the  North  Caro- 
lina Phctograhcrs'  .\ssn. 

Pictures  have  been  placed  on 
display  by  16  various  photogra 
phy  studios  in  North  Carolina, 
including  Lavergne  of  Chap«l 
Hill. 


I 

;      "Most    of   the   pieturcs   are   run- 

'  of-lhc-niill    exhibit    material,    with 

the   exception   of   that   one   in   the 

!  corner.  (Referring  to  an  oval  por- 

I  trait     of     a     middle-aged    woman. 


IT'S  FOR  RlAli  ^f:  ,i1i^Ot^^ 


SANTA  CLAUS  ANALYZED 

Why  oh  why  doep  Santa  go, 

"Ho-Ho,  Ho-Ho,  Ho-Ho,  Ho!" 
Is  it  just  because  lie's  jolly? 

I  believe  he's  oflf  his  trolley. 
.  .  .  Gifts  for  everyone  on  earth 

Bteed  hysteria— not  mirth    • 
If  jrou  had  his  job  to  do 

Bet  you'd  shake  like  jelly  too? 

MOIALi  End  your  gift  probletns  before  they  start.  Givo 
Chesterfield  in  the  carton  that  felows  for  real— to  all 
the  happy  folk  who  smoke  for  real!  Buy  lots— to 
do  lots  for  your 
Cliristmas  list. 

Smok*  for  fcJ . . . 
unek*  Ch*st*rf Uld ! 

ISO  for  evarr  phlloiophleml  vtn* 
ftcc«pc«d  for  publlcfttioQ. 
ChxterfUld.  I*.  O.  Box  21. 
N<w  Vork  4ii.  N.  y. 

C  Lifft«tl  A  Hyen  Tobaceo  Co. 


i.s   tne   variety     of     unique     back- 
grounds."  said  the  gentleman. 

In  the  south  wing  of  the  Plane- 
tarium is  an  exhibit     of     water 
,    colors,  pencil  and  wash  drawings. 
I    oils,  and  pen  sketches.  They  are 
;    the  work  of  a  young  Englishman 
I    by  the  name  of  Geoffrey  Jenkin- 
son. 
Jenkinson      has     been      in      the 
I  United    States    since    1950.    He    is 
j  nationally    recognized    in    England 
but  has   not   yet   become   as  well- 
known  in  the  U.  S.  as  he  is  in  his 
I  native    land.    .\t    the    age    of    21. 
'  Jenkin.^on    was  accorded  the  hon- 
I  or   of   having   a    painting   hung   in 
j  the   Royal   Academy. 
j       His     greatest     attribute    is    one 
that  seems  to  be  a  pitfall  for  many 
!  young    artist.s — that    ~  of      getting 
minute  detail   in   his     work.     His 
wtirk    shows    a    keen    insight    into 
the   modern   metropolitan   scenes. 


The  Dollar 

Table  at 

The  Intimate 

Bookshop 

Solves  More 

Christmas 

Problems 

Than 

Santo  Clous  i 


Dean   of  the   Faculty  C. 

:  P.  Spruill  in  a  letter  to  the  fac- 
ulty    explained     that     a     student 

1  may: 

i      (1)  Use  his  accrued  cuts. 

(2)  Be  excused  from  quizzes 
and  labs  that  he  misses  because 
he  is  using  his  cuts.  He  should  al- 
so be  assured  by  his  teacher  or 
advisor  that  he  will  not  be  drop- 
ped for  over-cutting  provided  he 
has  not  already  incurred  more 
than  two  onexcused   absences. 

Spruill  stated  further  that  a  stu- 
dent  "should    present   in   advance 

I  to  his  advisor  or  dean  a  written 

;  statement  from  his  employer  stat- 
ing at  what  time  before  Dec.  1§ 
he  must  report  in  order  to  have 
the  employment." 

Students  who  miss  class  on  the 
two  days  prior  and  following  the 
holidaj's  without  being  excused 
will  be  subject  to  the  penalty  of 

j  two  class  cuts  for  each  cut  incur- 
red. Excuses  will  be  accepted  on- 
ly in  cases  of  sickness  or  emer- 
gency. 


Steve  Cuts 
Curls 
In  GM  Shop 

By   EDITH  MacKINNON 

'Long  or  short,  we  can  cut  it." 
This  is  the  advice  given  to  all 
Carolina  coeds  who  are  interest- 
ed in  having  their  hair  cut,  shap- 
ed or  trimmed  right  here  on  cam- 
pus in  Graham  Memorial's  Barber 
Shop.  ."^ 

■  » 
Hair  cuts  for  coeds  are  •  n«w 
feature  of  the  shop<  which  lias 
long  been  «  standby  «f  th*  Caro- 
lina Centlenwn.  Now  tho  Caro- 
lina Lady  has  an  equal  chance 
to  have  her  coiffure  ro-done  by 
«n  experienced  barber. 

Special  hours  for  coeds  have 
bean  set  for  Saturdays  from  1-4 
p.m. 

"Just  ask  for  Steve,"  says  the 
friendly  barber  who  will  do  aJl 
the  haircuts  for  the  ladies.  Hav- 
ing had  previous  experience  with 
beauty  shops  in  Durham,  Steve 
now  feels  qualified  to  begin  hair 
styling  services  for  that  most  par- 
ticular young  lady — ^the  Caroline 
Coed. 

A  young  man  with  a  wide  va- 
riety of  hobbies,  including  roller- 
skating  and  square  dancing,  Steve 
now  finds  that  his  job  of  cutting 
the  coeds'  hair  is  proving  very 
interesting. 

Before    a     motorcycle    accident, 
Steve  taught  roller-skating  in  Dur- 
ham   and    Knoxville.    Tenn.,    and 
had  ambitions  of  some  day  joining 
the   professional   skaters'   ranks. 
For  the  cood  wbo  might  feal 
a  litHe  hesitant  in  invading  the 
privacy  of  a  men's  barbar  shop, 
Steve  gives  this  piece  of  advlea 
— "Don't   be    hesitant.    Wa    faal 
that  we  can  do  tha  job  you  want, 
whether  your  hair  is  long,  shorf, 
or  in-between." 

So  far,  a  good  number  of  girls 
have  made  use  of  the  new  coed 
s'ervice  and  have  been  very  pleas- 
ed with  the  results,  he  reports. 

Another  popular  feature  of  the 
barber  shop's  new  plan  is  their 
standard  price  of  $1  for  all  hair^ 
cuts  or  trim.s.  This  price  is  slight- 
ly lower  than  those  charged  in 
local  beauty  shops. 

So  foeds.  if  your  hair  has  that 
uncut  feeling,  find  your  way  down 
to  the  dim  basement  of  Graham 
Memorial — '-Just    ask    for   Steve." 


Fraternities,  Sororities, 
Dorms  List  Presidents 


Following  is  a  list  of  the  presi- 
dents of  UNC  fraternities,  sorori- 
ties and  dorms: 

Fraternities:    Alpha   Tau   Omega, 
Sandy    Sanders;     ^ta    Theta     Pi, 
Hugh  McCall;  Chi  Phi,  .Mian  Holt;  j 
Chi  Psi.  Nick  Fisher;   Delta  Kappa 
Epsilon,  Larry  Bell;  Delta  Upsilon, 
Bob  Mice;  Kappa  .Vlpha,  Ray  New-  i 
some;  Kappa  Sigma,  Keith  Pakner;  | 
Lambda   Chi    Alpha,    Bob   Harring-| 


Pi  Lambda  Phi,  Dick  Sirkin;  Si- 
gma Alpha  Epsilon,  Pat  Hunter, 
S'gma  Chi,  Claude  Plumlee;  ^^na 
Nu,  Bill  -Morgan;  Sigma  Phi  Epsi- 
lon, Jon  Dawn;  Tau  EpsUon  Phd. 
Dick  Planer;  Theta  Chi,  George 
:Morgan;  Zeta  Beta  Tau,  Bob  Hor- 
rik;  and  Zeta  Psi,  Will  Woodard. 
The  president  of  Dcdta  Psi  (St.  An- 
thony Hall)  is  always  kept  secret. 
Men's    Dorms:      .\lexander,     Don 


The   Right 

, .  ,:.     For 

Holiday 


Dress 


Season 


*i  i 


Little   Shop 


ton;  Phi  Delta  Theta,  Niven  Prit-  Eudy;  .\>-cock,  Jim  Dixon;  Batt)e> 
chett;  Phi  Gamma  Delta,  Joe  WaJ- j  Vaoce-Pettigrew,  Neil  iBass;  Cobb, 
-cr;  Phi  Kappa  Sigma,  Ed  Willing- ,  Steve  Lyon;  Connor,  Norman  Dra- 
ham.  Pi  Kappa  Alpha,  Dan  Clark;  ;  per;  Everett,  Whit  Whitfield;  Gra- 
•Pi    Kappa    Phi,    George   Anderson;  i  ham,  Craig  Gibbons;   Grimes,  Jim- 

— — — my   Womble;   Joyner,   Dave  Byers; 

!  Lewis,   FYank  Brown;    Mangum,   Al 

Alphin;     Manly.     Bill     Pruett;     Old 

I  East,  Bob  Smith;  Old  West,  Tedd.v 

I  Jones;     Ruffin,    Etlian    To  1  man: 

'  Stacy,     George     Stefanou;     Steele. 

Neil  Bender;  VkTiKehead.  NeU  True- 

btood;    and    Winston.    Stan  Garriss. 

Women's  Dorms:   .\ld«rman,  Miss 

Jean   SilJay;   Carr,   Miss  Joy  Earp; 

Kenan,   Miss  Sarah  ,Q.   White;   Mc- 

Iver,   Miss  Barbara  Nfoore;  Smith. 

lMIss  Carol  Jones  and  Spencer.  Mi&s 

Jean  Peay. 

Sororities:  Alpha  Delta  Pi.  Mis.s 
Shirley  Williani.s;  Alpha  Ganuua 
Delta,  .Miss  Trud:;  Lefler;  Chi  Onoe- 
g&.  Miss  Jo  Ruffin;  Delta  Delta 
Delta,  Miss  Ida  Robinson;  Kappa 
•Delta,  iCss  Peg  Humphrey  and  PI 
Beta   Phi.   Miss  I>3rothy  Gi^eulacti. 


•?- 


i? 


t 


Pro! 
ing  of  tl 
day  —  f| 
iestimor 
prcf.   Hi 


■h. 


Ro 

Mi 
Sw 


■     Bill  Ko'J 
Titaten  V 
tii.:ie.s   Gi 
a      doubtl 
'  Duke  Blul 

Roth 

•last  weikl 

known    ci 

able    t ) 

not   serioi 

•  nature  th^ 
■comDetilic 
aliment. 

•V  •    Unles.s 

than   now| 

.*i'.l  nut 

"-Mr    the 

■will    pr  ) 

mei.s   lH 

•  400  yai 
against  H 
.,  The 
John  Sin| 
ing  sHcc 
Dave  Myi 
3ut    for   fi 

It  is  h(>i 
shape  to 
ip  fu!ur( 

In  oi.'id 
remain-  t| 
of  suffictl 
to  enable 
switch  hiJ 
around   l(i 

.  look    J I    t| 
murul 
veals    thej 
who  plac< 

,  are  not   nl 
frcsiinu'n 
,,  "Tiieir   t| 
lure  a>  t< 
parti(ipat| 
is  hoped 
of  them 
the  fortur 
tentional 
serve  pov 
The    In 
out   for 
the   pov\  I 
b^ro  Hi;i| 
non  in  (ic 

baro  hjs 
cKibs  in 
in  the  .SoJ 

No 

>Arr\ 
Mo 

RALKll 
State  CuJ 
in   t.he 
lowin<4 
top  brsv 
fere nee 
Wea\er 

State, 
■bation 
hiethod 
Mtnden. 
has  aske^ 
ov,*n  inv( 
-Fcllowl 
Weaver 
S.  C.  Sti 
matter.- 
''now  un| 
oellege 
.  He  ad^ 
we  comt 
next  stei 
further 
made   thi 

Bo.stia^ 
iiwued  tl 
m  infor 
was   n 


TUESDAY,  DECEMBER    n,  19S6 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


ler 

I  tor 

be 

font 

?r 

to 

m^. 

iiist 

\xhe 

lout 


lit." 
all 

rest- 
ip- 

Jber 


14 


va- 
ller- 
keve 

ting 
|v  ery 

lent. 

iDur- 

and 

Ining 


Igirls 

id 
leas- 

s. 

the 
their 
Ihair- 
]ia*t- 
|d    in 

that 

lown 

lara 

leve. ' 


S, 


Si- 
nter , 
a 
EjKi- 
Ptu, 
Se 
Hor- 
ard. 
An- 
ret. 
Don 
ttie- 
Cobb. 
Dra- 
(ira 
I,  Jim- 
yers ; 
un.  Al 
;  Old 
Teddy 
man; 
Steele. 
1  True- 
^arrtes. 
I,  Miss 
Earp; 
r.  Mc- 
Smith. 


PAGE     FIVE 


l\ 


Music  Dept.'s  Haydon  Recognizad  For  Service 

Prof.   Glen   Haydon,  "thairman   of   the   University  Music  Dept.  since  1934,  was  honored  at  the  meet- 
ing of  the  Southeastern  Chapter  of  the  American  i/usicological  Society  last  Saturday  —  his  60th  birth- 
^  d»Y  —  for  service  to  musicology.  Members  of  the  department's    faculty    present.-d    him    with    gifts    and 
testimonials  in  a  surprise  ceremony.  They  are,  left  to  right.  Miss  Mary  Grady  Clarke,  William  Newman, 
prof.  Haydon  and  Wilton  Mason.         -  ;  *  v=   «   ,  ,  ;,  .     *  (Press  Photo  Service). 


Cordon  Set 
For  Carol 
Sing  Here 

Norman  Ccrd  ,n,  former  Met- 
ropolitan opera  star  and  di 
rector  of  the  North  Carolina 
Music  Program  of  the  Universi- 
ty Extension  Division,  will  lead 
the  community  carol  sing  pro- 
gram to  follow  this  Sunday's 
parade  cf  leligioos  Christmas 
floats.         ;  .;•  :.     .       -: 

Chnir  groups  from  various 
local  churchijs.  which  will  en- 
ter the  parade  floats,  will  assist 
in  c  )ndULting  the  sing,  which 
will  begin  about  4:30  p.m.  be- 
side th?  Morehead  Building. 
Sandy  McClamroth.  chairman  of 
the  Jaycee  -  sponsored  parade, 
said  that  13  churches  have  signi- 
fied that  they  would  prepare 
entries  for  the  parade,  which 
will  leave  from  the  Carrboro 
L.irns  Park  at  4  p.m.  and  travel 
down  Main  and  Franklin  Streets. 


Roth  May 
Miss  Duke 
Swim  Meet 

Bill  PvGth.  ace  sprinter  on  tho  un 
T>V?alen  UNC  swimming  team,  con 
tii.;ies   en  the  injured   list   and  is 
a      doubtful    starter    against      ihe 
Duke  Blue  Devils  next  Tuesday. 

Roth  suffered  a  shoulder  strain 
last  week  in  practice,  and  it  is  n  i' 
known  exactly  when  he  will  be 
able    t>   go   again.   The   injury    is 

..Dot  serious  now.  but  is  of  such  a 

•  nature  that  continued  practice  and 
^omoetitioivcould  lead  to  a  serious 
aliment. 

-.  •  Unless  the  shoulder  heals  fa.>;{L'r 
than   now   expected,  he     pro'.;a'o!y 

.vi!l  not  see  action  again  until  at 

Sler    the    holidays.    Roths    absence 

••  wfl)    probably   sidetrack    the   mo  •- 

men's   efforts   to   set   a    new   ACC 

400    yard    freestyle    relay    record 

against  the  Blue  Devils. 

,,,  ,The    only    diver    the    team    had. 

John  Smith,  pulled  a  tcnclon  play- 
ing soccer,  and  is  out  indefinitely 
Dave  Myers.  Elkin,  N.  (.".,  turneci 
iut  for  the  diving  yesterday,  -anvi 
It  is  hoped  that  he  can  round  into 
shape  to  give  Carolina  some  ooin',. 
in  future  meets. 

In  other  events,  the  siluatDn 
rj;mains  the  same.  There  is  a  lac-k 
of  sufficcnt  boys  out  for  the  team 
to  enable  Coach  Dick  Jamerson  io 
switch  his  over  worked  swimmer; 
aroimd  to  get  the  best  results.  A 

.  look  at  the  results  of  the  intra- 
mural meet  held  in  October  f> 
veals  there  are  several  freshmen 
who  placed  high  in  that  meet  that 

.  are  not  now  competing  in  anothe: 
freshmen    sport. 

Tiieir  times  were  of  such  ^  na 
ture  as  to  definitely  warrant  their 
participation  for  the  freshmen.  II 
is  hoped  by  C  ach  Jamerson  some 
of  them  will  turn  out  and  bolster 
the  fortunes  of  a  team  that  has  pi 
tentional  except  for  lack  of  re- 
serve power. 

The  Irosh  have  their  work  cu' 
out  for  them  when  they  take  on 
ih»  powi'rful  mermen  of  Greens- 
boro High  School  Saturday  after 
non  in  CJowman  Gray  Pool.  Greens- 
boro has  one  of  the  most  powerful 
cKibs  in  the  state,  and  undoubtedij 
in  the  .South. 


No  Decision  Is 
-  Arrived  At  In 
Moreland  Case 

RALEIGH  —  (AP)  —  N.  C. 
State  College  reached  no  decision 
m  the  Jjckie  Moreland  caSe  fol- 
lowing a  meeting  of  the  school's 
top  bra.ss  with  Atlantic  Coast  Con- 
feisence  Commissioner  James 
Weaver  yesterday. 

State,  put  on  four-years  pro- 
bation by  the  NCAA  for  its 
Wi'ethod  of  recruiting  Moreland,  a 
Mtnden,  La.,  basketball  sensation, 
has  asked  the  ACC  to  conduct  its 
ov/h  investigation. 

Following  the  meeting  with 
Weaver.  Dr.  Carey  H.  Bostian, 
S.  C.  State's  Chancellor,  said  the 
matters  discussed  by  Weaver  are 
''now  under  consideration  by  the 
ooUege  administration." 
.  He  added  that  "just  as  soon  as 
we  come  to  a  decision  as  to  the 
next  step  we  will  announce  it.  A 
further  announcement  will  be 
made  this  week." 

Bostian's  s'lort  statement  was 
issued  through  the  college's  pub- 
lic information  office  and  there 
was  no  elaboration. 


Unique    / 
Fine   Gifts   In^'AII   Pnces 

She'll  Especially  Appreciate 
A  Quality  Gift  From    :'. 

Whitehall  Shop 


• 


:,••.  »'^ 


DURHAM    ROAD 


Antiques  &  Gifts 


PHONE   9479 


SPORTS  GIFTS 


IH 


at 


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Our  equipment  for  your  Bar  is  ^he  most  complete  selection  of  any  in  Chapel 
Hill.  Come  in  and  see.  We  have.   ...  ^t  I  1  f^l?/^     ; 

•  BAR  ACCESSORIES  •  GLASSWARE 

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•  MIXES  and  Mors  D'Oeuvres  •  SHAKERS    .■ 

and  Many,  Many  More  V 

Carolina  Sport  Shop 


151  E.Franklin  St. 


Phone  8-7851 


Flannels  And  Worsteds 
sizes  35  to  46,  Reg.  and 
'onqs-$45.00 


Also:  Men's  suits  with 
two  pairs  of  pants.  .  .  . 
Charcoal  Brown  and 
Charcoal  Gray.  All  sizes, 
reg.  and  Longs.  .  $39.95 


Men's  Ivy  League  Slack: 
(one  group).  All  wool, 
wool/dacron,  and  many 
other  miracle  blends 
Sizps  29  to  38.  '  ' 
$12.95       - 


Men's  100%  Or  lot. 
Sv*/eaters,  Small,  Med- 
ium, and  Large,  all  co 
lors,  long  sleeves. 

$5.95      - 


Men's  pajamas, 
sizes  A,  B,  C,  D. 
solids,  prints, 
stripes  .  .  .$2.93 

Compare   at   $3.95 


Archdale  white  dress 
shi'rts.  Guaranteed  long 
life.  All  collar  styles 
sizes  1 4  to  1 7y2,  sleeves 


32-35-$2.98. 

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Men's  We  yen- 
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dovans, black 
and  brown,  wing 
tip  and  plain  toe. 
$17.95 


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For 
Christmas 


Men's  long  sleeve  spori 
shirts.  Ivy  League  pat- 
terns, checks,  solids. 
Large  selection  in  sizes 
small,  Medium,  large 
and  extra  large 

$2.98, 

Ono  group  $i.9t 


At 


Shop  Now  While  The  Selection  Is  Big 


Ladies  Lyion  Hose  by 
Durham,  full  fashion, 
seemless  mesh,  51  gg. 
15  den.  Sizes  8V2  to  1  1 . 
All  new  Christmas  sha- 
des, v.^^.    $1.03 


i»  i- 


7.- 

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•  •  '. '  A- 


Ladifes  Orion,  Turbo  Hi- 
bulk  sweaters,  sizes  34 
to  40,  cardigc^n,  lone 
sleeve' $3.98 


LjdiGS  Dressy  lilousos 
Docron,  Nylpn,  Rayon, 
sizes  32  to  42,  by  sucn 
famous  names  as  Piloi 
Qnd  Jane  Holly.  $3.98 
ro$7.95 


Ladies  Catalina  Sweaters,  Slip- 
overs from  $3.95  to  $7.95 
Cardigans  -  $4.95  I0  $10.95 

Cashmere: 

Slipovers  .  ___!___  $19.95 
Cardigans    .  „  $24.95 

Beautiful  colors  for  Christmas 
giving. 


■■•',■        - V''   ■'  -  -  -  - 


Ship'N  Shore  Blouses,  all  sizes, 
So  Smart  To  Give.  $2.98  and 
$3.98     ..    ,      . 


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.  Shadowline  Slips,  Sizes  34  to 
42 $5.95 

■^    A^so:  gowns,  pajamas,  panties, 
and  robes. 


.:?:sif.vt':  •»->!• '::.'% 


OPEN  TILL  9  FRIDAY  NIGHT  -  PLENTY  OF  FREE  PARKING 


I 


Hslk-Leggett-ilortoiiCo 


Of  Chapel  Hill 


•^  \M 


PAQt  SIX 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEl 


T'J5*DAY,  D?f:«:f'B5P,  11,  1'"* 


Tar  Heels  Are  Sixth  In  First  Associated  Press  Cage  Poll 


Grapplers  Meet  Cats 


North  Carolina's  unbeaten 
MTestling  team,  with  one  victory 
ai.d  a  tie  unuer  its  bolt,  takes  on 
Davidson  CoHege  tonight  in 
Woullen  Gym  at  8  p.m. 

rhp  Tar  H:el.s  Woke  a  10-match 
lo  in^  streak  Saturday  in  an  un- 
usual double-header.  In  the  first 
match  they  tied  Washington  and 
Lire.  12-12.  and  in  the  second  they 
vtiipped  Wake  Forest.  17-13.  to 
claim    their    first    Atlantic    Coast 


Conference  victory  of  tJic  season. 
Coach  Sam  Barnes'  squad  will 
be  looking  for  its  first  victor}'  over 
Davidson  in  four  years.  Last  year 
:he  Cats  took  a  26-10  win  in  the 
Dnly  meeting  between  the  two 
rivals.  Davidson  has  posted  a  2-2 
record  so  far  this  season  with 
'.rins  c-ming  over  VMI  and  Pfcif- 
fer  College,  and  losses  coming  at 
'he  bands  .of  Auburn  and  Marshall. 


^^g^^ggT! 


A  Lovely  Gift  For 
Everyone  On  Your        ^-^ 
List . . .  Not  Expensive 
Either 


I--.  ^ 


Beautiful  ;;•  ,'^' 

Amity  Wallets     i . .  -.■  v 


.  •  •3^  '■•  -• 


•SH-       V 


World   F'amous 
Ronson  Lighters 


Kansas  Jay  hawkers  Top 
Rankings,  State  Is  8th 


2.  San    Francisco 

3.  Kentucky     ..... 

4.  Louisville    

5.  S.  Methodist  .. 

6.  North  Ccrolina 

7.  Illinois 

8.  N.  C.  Statt  2 

&.  Alabama    _ 0 

10.  Canisius     4 


SECOND  TEN 

11.  Ohio   State 

12.  W.    Kentucky 

13.  W.  Virginia 

14.  Kansas  State 


15.  Dayton      0 


^  M  Got  If 

in  action  from  yesterday's  mural  tag  football  championship  game, 
Dke  Jim  Raugh  leaps  high  into  the  air  to  bring  down  the  ball  while 
Bill  Mareadi  of  the  Law  School  looks  on. 


Shaeffers 
Pen  ie.  Pencil  Sets 


;  t>.>;'i-*.^  .va 


.^..v 


DOPP  KITS        O        HAIRDRYERS        - 
ELECTRIC  SHAVERS  by  Schick,  Ndreico,  Sunbeam 

SLOAN   DkUG  CO. 


Gift  Selections 
'M  Unlimited 

We're    still    adding    new    item< 

daily  to  insure  you  of  plenty  of 

choice  gift  selections. 

One   of   the   nicest   suggestions 

tor   mother    is   an   irrtported   set 

of  tartan  gloves  and   matching 

stole.. 


For  the  lassie  we've  added  more 
shetlarKl  crew  neck  sweaters 
starting  at  $7.95. 

And  if  you've  inclined  towarJ 
cashmere,  the  new  colors  we 
lave  in  both  Drumlanrig  and 
Braemar  are  really  out  of  this 
vorld.   . 

Our  complete  asertment  of  Lady 
Hathaway  shirts  always  make 
]ood  giving. 

For  the  lad  in  your  life — It's 
just  a  question  of  how  much 
you'd  like  to  please  him.  You 
Simply   can't  miss. 


MILTON'S 
Clothing  Cupboard 


(^r^ 


>* 


SOLVE  YOUR  "I  JUST  DON'T 
KNOW  WHAT  TO  GET  HIM"  PROBLEM 


SLIPPERS 


ARE  THE  ANSWER 


No  doubt  you've  run  up  against  the  problem  of  not  having  any 
idea  of  what  to  buy  one  of  your  dear  ones  for  Christmas.  Either 
you  don'1  know  what  he  wants  or  else  he  already  has  everything 
in  your  price  range.  Solve  the  problem  with  a  pair  of  slippers,  a 
gift  with  the  warmth  of  summer;  one  which  most  people  lack 
and  would  appreciate. 

LACOCK'S 

SHOE  SHOP 


t- 


H! 


SBT 


Dekes  Top  I 
Law  School 
For  Crown  i 

I 

By  DAVE  WIBLE  j 

The  Demon  DKEs  blasted  Ihcir  ; 
way  to  the  school  intramural  tag- 
lout  ball  championship  yesterdav 
with  a  first  half  scoring  spree  to 
down  Law  School-2.  14-0,  for  tliC 
school  title. 

ihe  l>KE's  scored  two  touch 
downs  snd  a  safety  in  the  last 
three  minutes  of  the  lir.st  liajf 
ior  the  only  taliys  in  Ihe  ball  game 

Law  .School  got  off  to  a  fast  start 
keeping  the  ball  inside  the  DICE 
thirty  yard  line  the  majority  ot 
Ihc  first  twenty  minute  half.  .'\' 
one  time  they  had  the  ball  on  tne  i 
DKE  two  but  were  not  able  to 
score.  j 

The  DKEs  first  score  came  when  ' 
Jim  Raugh  intercepted  a  Law! 
School  pass  on  his  own  25  and  took ' 
it  to  the  Law  School  30  before  pass  j 
ing  to  Glenn  Pickard  who  went  over 
for  the  score.  The  extra  point  was  ' 
blocked.  | 

On  the  kickoff  the  LawTers  tried 
a  long  pass,  the  DKE's  intercepted  i 
on  the  Law  School  40  and  scored 
on  the  next  play.  The  scoring  play 
v.as  a  lour  man  operation:  .Terr.-' 
Hart/og  passed  to  Dave  Ward,  W.ird 
,  passed  to  Shelly  Miller.  .Miller  pas* 
'  ed  to  Bob  Shelly  who  by  this  timi> 
was  near  enough  to  the  goal  line 
to  score.  Again  the  extra  point  at- 
tempt Wis  no  cod. 

The  DKp;s  kicked  off  to  the  Law 
ycio.  li  Aaa  a  long  kick  puting  tne 
Law  School  deep  in  their  own  ter- 
ritory. Several  plays  later  DKE 
Harry  Smith  trapped  Law  Schoo.s 
Joe  Cruciani  behind  the  goal  lino 
lor  the  safety.  Then  came  the  half. 

The  second  half  was  a  stalemate. 
Neither  team    made    any   serious 
scoring   threats.   When    the   game  I 
ended  both  teams  huddled  and  gave  ' 
their  opponents  a  cheer,  and  then 
•he  Campus  Bowl  was  over.  j 

It  was  over  for  the  players  but' 
the  action  seen  in  this  game  will 
be  seen  many  more  times.  Eil.ms 
were  taken  of  the  game  and  will  be 
used  to  demonstrate  the  Tar  Heel 
way  of  playing  tag-football.  The 
films  will  be  taken  to  Europe  this 
summer  and  used  for  an  Armed 
Forces  Athletic  Clinic. 


By  JACK  HAND 
Associated  Press 

Wilt  the  Stilt  Chamberlain,  a 
7-foot  sophomore  whiz  with  a  45.5   THE  FIRST  TEN 

point  average  in  his  first  two  eol-      i.  Kansas     , 

lege  games,  has  helped  Kansas 
move  out  front  in  the  first  Asso- 
ciated Press  basketball  poll  of  the 
1956-57   season.  | 

A  total  of  58  of  the  108  basket- 1 
ball  writers  and  sportscasters  cast-  j 
ing  ballots  put  Kansas  as  the  No. ! 
1  team  on  early  victories  over , 
Northwestern  and  Marquette.  The  \ 
Jayhawkers   polled    896   points.      | 

Kansas:  hits  the  road  this  week, 
to  play  at  Washington  both  Friday 
and  Saturday  and  will  be  at  Cali- 
fornia   Dec.    18    before    returning 
home. 

The  San  Francisco  Dons  "with 
their  5ft*game  winning  streak  are 
in  secotid  place  with  18  firsts  and 
675  points.  The  Dons,  minus  All 
America  Bill  Russell  and  many  of 
their  top,  stars  of  last  yoar,  have 
knocked  off  four  opponents,  in- 
cluding. SeatMe.  They  also  take  to 
the  road,  this  week  to  play  in  a 
Chicago  .'^tournament  over  the 
weekend; 

Kentucky  drew  s6lid  support,  in- 
cluding six  firsts,  to  hold  third 
place  with  514  points  on  its  per- 
fect 3-0  record.  Louisville,  despite 
its  defeat  by  Canisius.  isn't  far 
behind  in  fourth  place  with  40J 
points,  two  points  ahead  of  fifth- 
ranking    Southern    Methodist. 

Then  come  North  Carolina.  Illi- 
nois, North  Carolina  State,  Ala- 
bama and  Canisius  in  that  order 
to  round  out  the  top  10. 

The  point  standings  are  figured 
on  thp  basis  of  10  for  first,  nine 
for  sev'ond  and  so  on  down  to  one 
for  tenth. 

Alabama.  No.  9.  and  West  Vir- 
ginia. No.  13.  are  entered  in  the 
Birmin'^ham  Clas.sic  Tournament 
over  the  weekend  and  other  mem- 
bers of  th?  top  20  face  important . 
tests.  , 

The  lop  10  teams  first  placet 
votes  and  won-lost  records  through  ' 


Dec.  8  in  parentheses  (points  on 
10.  9,  8,  7,  6,  5,  4,  2,  1  basis): 


It).  Njiagara    , — 

17.  Iowa  State 

18.  Okla.   City 

19.  Okla.  A&M 

20.  Seattle    


2-1 
3-0 
1-1 
3-1 
3-1 


61  A  sock  hop,  sponsored  by  the, 
55  1  Y  Nurses  Assn.,  will  be  held  Fri-; 
48  uay  from  8  to  11  p.m.  at  the  Nurs  * 
45  cs  dormitory.  Refreshments  will  be^ 
32    served.  * 


58 
18 
6 
6 
3 
3 
0 


2-0 
4-0 
0-0 
3-1 
2-0 
2-0 
2-0 
3-0 
3-0 
4-0 


3-0 
1-0 
3-0 
2-0 
2-1 


896 
675 
514 
4^3 
401 
350 
338 

?71 

252 
225 


220 

180 

131 

98 

62 


Buy  Your  Gifts 

At  VARLEY'S 


:•{' 


GBD 


Pipes  of  distinction  for  men  who  want  the  Best. 

VARLEY'S 


MEN'S  SHOP 


Unusuol  Christmas  Gifts 


V 


Cashmere:  the  fleece  of  23  Kashmir  mountain  goats,  who  hardly 
'  ascend  below  20,000  feet,  go  into  the  making  of  one  cas'r- 
V    mere  sportcoat;  13  for  making  100%  cashmere  sweater.  .     . 

Robes  made  of  wonderful  luxurious  warmth,  without  weight,  in 
VIYELIA,  collection  of  unusual  colourings  in  TARTANS.. 

DACRON  blended  with  cotton  raincoat,  com.pletely  water-repe' 
lent  and  WASHABLE;  rain  cap  to  match.  .  .  . 

SOX  In  all  brushed  cotton,  that  feel  like  cashmere,  in  new  Britisi^ 
r  shades,  as  well  as  diamonds,  spaced  neatly.- 

NEW  olive/tan  oxford  button-down  shirts,  to  bjend  with  the  new 
^  fall  sportswear.  ..  .        ■■ ..  '  ^^^1   i^-     ■ 

MUSICAL  FOOTBALL  IN  UNC  COLORS,  that  plays  "HARK  THc 
SOUND". 

And,  the  OLD  WELL  CUFF  LINKS,  in  STERLING  SILVER,  with 
matching  tie  bar.  ... 


Julian's  College  Shop 


Tickets  On  Sale 

Tkl(»*»  for  the  Carolina  NYU 
basketball  game  to  be  played  in 
New  York  City  Dec.  20  go  en  sale 
this  n>orning  in  Y-Coort.  The  du- 
cats will  be  on  sale  at  the  hours 
of  10  and  11,  and  cost  75  cents 
each.  145  tickets  are  en  sale, 
but  more  will  be  acquired  if  the 
available  supply  runs  out.  Any- 
one desiring  additional  informa- 
tion may  contact  Lou  Rosen- 
stock  at  the  TEP  house. 


Christmas 

SPORTS 
GIFTS 


I 


THE  GIFTS 

THEY'LL  CHERISH 

FOR  YEARS 


from 


{^wrM 


na 


Sport  Sluf 

featuring    a 


Cardinals  And 
Cubs  Engineer 
10-Piay6r  Deal 

CHICAGO-(AP,    _    St.    Louis 

and  Cilucago  yestcrdi^y  completed 

a  lO-pIayer  deal  involving  pitchers 

Sam  Jones  of  tlfe  Cubs  and  Tom 

Polwlsky  of  the  Cardinals. 

In   the    first   player   transaction 

j  completed    at    the    major    league 

I  meetings    the    Cardinals   acquired 

southpaw      pitcher      Jim      Davis. 

j  catcher    Hobie    Landrith.     utUity 

I  man     Eddie     Miksis     along     with 

:  Jones,  the  strong  right-hander  of 

I  no-hit   fame. 

The  Cubs  got  lefty  Jackie  Col- 
lum,  catcher  Ray  Katt  and  short- 
stop Wally  Lammers  in  addition 
j  to  right-hander  Poholsky.  The 
!  Cards  alsa  promised  to  send  two 
more,  pfayers  to  the  Cub.s  from 
their  Triple  A  farm  clubs  oT 
Omaha  and  Rochost;  r  bv  March  J 


GREAT  GIFT 
FOR  GOLFERS 

SPALDING  AIR-FLITE  Golf 
Balls.  Famous  for  long-hittinf 
characteristics.  Now  with  a 
whiter,  tougher  cover.  Now 
packaged  in  handy,  handsome 
Desk  Caddy  Sets  for  Christmas 
giving,  at  no  exrra  cost. 

Carolina 
Sport  Shop 

Phone  8-7851 
151   E.  Franklin  St. 


^mmi 


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JUNIOR 

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cr  volume  in  less  time  than  any  other 
junior  beater.  Thumb  control  in  handle, 
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Wide  shaving  suiiacc  gives  quicker  and 
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When  buying  gifts,  get  something  they'll  remember  for  years  and  years  to  come.  You 
want  beauty,  usefullness,  and  long  lasting  quality.  You  get  all  of  these  in  a  Sunbeam 
appliance,  plus  the  backing  of  one  of  the  largest  companies  in  the  world. 

BENNETT  &  BLOCKSIDGE 


105  E.  FRANKLIN  ST. 


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..  •.T-.ir^.  -.j.i.;^n,^ 


l^«^. 


1'-4 


TUESDAY,  DECEMBER    11,  19S6 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


» 

Friv 
Nurs  J 
ill  be 


St. 


J 
i 
I 


^AGE  SEVEN 


BUT  MORE  HELP  ASKED: 


Many  Campus  Organizations  Have 
Adopted  Families  For  Christmas 


By  JIMMY   PURKS 

At  least  23  canipius  organizations  have  adopted 
necfly  families  through  the  annual  Empty  Stockin:, 
"ur  i.  anri  a  toial  of  180  out  ol  600  families  thai 
applied  for  aid  through  tiic  hind  have  been  adopted. 

This  year's  drive  may  end  as  one  of  the 
poorest  since  the  annual  drive  was  initiated  if 
more  organizations  do  not  show  interest  and 
adopt  families  before  the  December  12  deadline. 

"It  really  isn't  good  and  we're  worried  about  the 
turnout."  Mrs.  .John  Crittenden,  chairman  of  the 
drive,  said  yesterday.  ^ 

-Mr.s.  Crittenden  cited  several  examples  of  needy 
families  still  unadopted  which  will  not  have  a  Christ- 
mas unless  Jiclped  by  others. 

The  following  cases  are  examples  of  the  numer 
ous  families  that  stiil  need  adoption:  A  man.  whose 
wile  died  of  cancer,  with  three  children  to  support 
nn  his  .-jmall  sala.y  as  suv*'  mill  Worker.  He  ha.sn  i 
been  able  to  complete  paying  the  costly  medical 
bills  and  won't  be  able  to  give  presents  to  his  chil- 
dren unless  helped  out  tnrough  the  Empty  Stock 
ing  Fund. 

A  man  and  his  wife  with  two  small  children.  The 
husband  hasn't  i)een  abic  to  work  since  June  of 
1955.  Ili.s  wife  does  ail  she  can  to  help  the  children 
and  pay  the  medical  expenses.  The  Empty  Stockin.c: 
F^ind  helped  the  family  last  year,  but  the  situation 
of  the  f;imily  is  worse  than  la.st  year. 


To  adopt  a  family  the  organization  should  con- 
tact either  Mrs.  Crittenden.  8-0275.  or  the  Junior 
Service  League,  which  is  sponsoring  the  drive. 

Upon  notification,  the  committee  in  charge 
of  aligning  the  various  families  to  ttre  adopters 
will  furnish  the  adopter  with  the  names,  ages, 
sizes,  special  needs,  and  address  of  the  family 
Adopted. 

The  ad>>pters  will  then  deliver  a  box  for  the  fam- 
ily to  the  old  Institute  of  Government  Building,  to- 
day through  Saturday,  from  1  to  5  p.m. 

A  iwx  for  the  adopted,  family  usually  contaiiis 
toys  for  any  children  in  the  family  and  a  gift  for 
the  husband  or  wife,  and  standard  food,  such  as 
flour,  sugar  or  fruit. 

Ovganizations  which  have  adopted  families  thus 
far  are:  Alderman  Dorm,  Alpha  Phi  Omega  social 
fraterr.ily.  Alpha  Delta  Pi  sorority.  Alpha  Phi  Ome- 
ga business  fraternity,  Carr  Dorm.  Chi  Omega  sor- 
ority. Connor  Dorm.  Delta  Kappa  Epsilon  six:iol 
fraternity.  D.n'..:!  Dames,  Interdornfitory  Council, 
Mclver  Dorm.  Sophomore  Alcdical  Wives,  the  Jun- 
ior nursing  cla.ss.  and  the  Pan-Hellenic  Society. 

Pharmacy  Wives,  Pi  Beta  Phi  sorority.  Spencer 
Dorm.  C'nristian  Acti.)n  Commission  of  the  Westmin- 
ster Fellowship  of  the  Presbyterian  Church.  Cam- 
pus YMCA-\^Vr.\.  aeta  Beta  Tau  social  fraternity. 
Crimes  Dorm.  Law  Wives,  and  the  School  of  Nurs 
ing  dcmitory. 


UNC  Eligible  For  Ford  Grants 


The  Univer»ity  Press  at  Chapel 
Hill  is  one  of  approximately  40 
in  the  United  States  that  are  now 
eligible  ior  the  Ford  Foiuidation's 
new  $1.7.°)0.000  program  of  finan- i 
cial   assistance  to   university  pres- 1 

The  new  program,  attnounced  ' 
in  early  October,  is  the  first  at- 
tempt to  provide  large-scale  fin 
ancial  assistance  system.at'ically 
and  directly  to  American  uni- 
versity presses  over  a  period  of 
years,  according  to  Lambert 
Davis,  director  of  the  UNC  Press. 

Davis  dLseusses  the  Ford  Foun- 
dation Program  in  an  article  in 
the  latest  issue  of  "Humanities ,  in 
the  South."  news-fftter  of  Uie 
Southern  Humanitifit  Confereaoe. 
Issued  from  Chapel  Hill,  the  pub- 
lie.Ttion  is  edited  by  Dr.  Stur^fis 
E.  Leavitt.  Kenan  professor  oi 
Spani.sh   at   UNC. 

"The  grants  are  to  be  made." 
DavLs  reports,  "to  university  pres- 
.ses  that  can  establish  and  main- 
tain their  eligibility  to  receive 
them.  The  impoi*tant  qualificat- 
ions for  eligibility  are:  a  pro- 
fessional staff  of  at  least  three 
full  time  employees,  including  the 
director:  a  governing  board  ade- 
quately repre.«?nt:!tive  of  the  hu- 
manities and  the  social  sciences; 
and  a  suftici'^nt  publishin-^  record 
in   these  fields."  ' 

Davis  said  it  is  estimat.^d  that 
the  grants  to  the  individual  pre.«- 
.sr.s  will  run  from  a  minimum  of 
$2  500  a'  .vear  to  an  estimated 
maximum    of   S50.000  a    year. 

Miss  Helen  B.  Parker  of  the 
UNC  Press  said  university  presses 


will    submit    a    publishing    project  ] 
to     the     Ford     Foundation  •  along 
with  estimated  expense  data.  The  ^ 
Foundation     will     in    turn     decide 
whether  or  not  it  will  support  the 
project. 

According    to    Miss    Parker,    the 
UNC    Press    has    received    aid    ir, 
the    past    from   the   Ford    Founda- 
tion, but   along  a  different   policy.  1 
The  .Vshmore  project  of  tl>e  UNC  j 
press   was   such   a    program.    .\s   a  i 
result,  three   books    were   publish- 
ed:    "Public     Education     in     the  I 


South."  1955;  "The  Negro  and 
th?  SclfSols.'  1954.  by  Harry  S. 
.\shmore:  and  "Schools  in  Transi- 
tion."  19."i4. 

The  Ford  Foundation  places  no 
restrictions  on  eligibility  for  the 
new  grants  except  they  must  be 
in  the  United  States  and  must 
be  in  the  field  of  the  humani- 
ties or  the  social   sciences. 

UNC  Press  Director  Davis  said 
"The  amount  of  money  granted  to 
a  press  will  depend  upon  the 
press  capacity  to  use  it  wisely." 


Students  Now  Preregistering 

r 
Students  all  over  campus  are  now  preregistering.  Are  you  one 
of   them? 

Tliis  weeli  manr  .student.^  are  n»oe» itig  with  their  adviser.s  and 
obtaining  iheir  green  forms  showing  ihcir  courses  lor  next  semes- 
ter. For  final  instructions  and  processing,  (he  ercen  forms  are  tak- 
en to  No;  1  Hants  H.dl  (which  is  open  fn  m  8;30  a.m.  to  4:30  p.m. 
daily>. 

■The  .schools  and  their  rospeclive  date.-,  for  preregistration  are 
as  follows: 

C.eneral   College — Oimtinuing   through    Dec.    18. 

.\rts  8i  Scienee.s — ^Continuint;  through  4)ec.  18. 

Business  .\dniinistratioii  —  Tomnrrow.  Thursday.  Friday  and 
.Monda\  Proregisiration  will  take  place  in  the  Foyer  of  Carroll 
Hull  on  the  above  day:,. 

Education-  Y'.-sterday  throuuh  .^.u'.irday.  SUidents  should  ob- 
tain green  forms  in  duplicate.  Take  to  127  Peabody  for  approval, 
where  they  will  leave  one  copy  and  t;!ke  originals  to  Hanes  Hall. 

.Touinulism — Through  Sunday  in   B.\nuia  202. 

Graduate  Sch<-<ol— Dec.  10  through  Dtc.  17.  Undeiuraduate  stu- 
dents who  will  graduate  in  .fanuaiy  antl  plan  to  enri>ll  in  the  Grad- 
uate School  in  the  sprin-j;  semester  are  not  eligible  to  preregister 
nnft  must   register  on  Jan.  31. 

Students  in  the  .schools  of  Nursing;  &  Dental  Hygiene.  Public 
Health.  Law.  I-ibrary  Science  and  .Medicine  and  Dentistry  will  be 
01   have  been  informed  of  their  prerer  istiation  procedure. 

Those  in  the  .school  of  S  cia!  Work  are  to  report  to  113  Alumni 
for  preregistration  information. 


Dr.  Beach  of  Duke  and  Sam  Magill  ot  Carolina 
Will  Speak  At  Student  Ecumenical  Conference 


Dr    Waldo   Beach   of   Duke   Uni   ■ 
versity  will  be  the  featured  speak-  | 
tr  at  the  Student  Ecumenical  Con- 
ference   to    1k'    held    at    Davidson 
C'^llege   just    after   Christmas. 

Bringing  together  350  college 
students  from  11  Southeastern 
stales,  and  from  leadin.^  Prt^testani 
denominations  and  the  YM  and 
YWC.\.  the  conference  will  deal 
with  the  theme  Our  United  Wit 
ness  Oil  the  Campus.  "  seekinii  lo 
clarify  the  meaning  Christian  wit- 
ness and  unity  in  the  academic 
''ommunity. 


DR.  WALDO   BEACH 

.   .   .   teatinr  s-^jeiil;er 


A  graduate  of  W^sleyan  Univers- 1 
ity.    Dr.    Beach    rtn-eived    his    B.D.  I 
degree  from  Yale  in   1940  and   his  { 
Ph.D.  in  1SH4.  He  is  now  Pioiess«.r  ! 
■A  Christian  Fthics  at  Duke  Divin 
ity  School  and  is  widely  known  a.- 
a   lecturer   and  writt-r  in   the  field 
of  (  hri.dian   Ethics. 

Other  conference  leaders  in-  { 
elude  Dr.  Albert  Winn  of  Still-  ' 
man  College,  Dr.  Malcolm  Mc- 
Afee of  Devldson  College,  Rev. 
Irvin  Etiinger  of  Richmond,  Va., 
and  Larry  Eisenberg  of  Scarritt 
College  in  Nashville,  and  Samuel 
Magill  of  UNC. 

Unique  in  its  emphasis  upon  in- 
lividual  .study,  the  conference  will 
explore  specific  ai-eas  of  work  on 
the  campus,  with  seminius  on  stu-J 
deu'.  go\ernment.  fraternities,  sor- . 
critics,  campus  honesty  and  honoi  j 
.s>  stems,  study  groups,  campus  race 
relations    and    summer    opportuni- 
tici. 

UNC  students  attending  the 
conf*r*nce  ar*  participating  this 
week  in  an  intefuive  study  and 
preperatiati  for  the  conference 
meeting  each  evening  frofr.  9- 
10:30  at  the  Y  Library  under  the 
leadership  of  Rev.  Mwrray  Un- 
roh,  director  of  the  Wesley  ■ 
PdundafioM. 

Other   UNC   .stu<icnts    and    staff 
rejiftei*ed  for  the  conference  are: 


Fred  Baber.  .lohn  Brooks.  Miss 
loyce  Bryant.  Doug  Cantrell.  Ray 
l.oni;.  .lackie  Cooper.  Zane  Eargle. 
Miss  .Jackie  Haithcock.  Melvin 
:Iipps.  ililt  Kane.  Larkin  Kirkman, 
\lis.<  \a.'ic.\  l^attimnre.  Holla'nd  .Mc- 
Swain.  Gerry  Mayo.  Jim  Merritt, 
'Ami  Stulnaker.  Donn  Weiis.  Rev. 
Hob  In-iko.  Rev.  Harry  .Smith  and 
!%ev.  I'uruh. 

Any  student  wishing  further  in- 
lormati(m  about  the  conference 
-hould  set  in  tcuich  with  .Mary  Hcl- 
(  n  Shelburne  at  the  Nurses'  Df»rm. 
or  see  .John  Riebel  at  the  YMCA. 


DR. 


SAMUEL   MAGILL 

.   otu"    oj   leaders 


-■>♦■**'»■••'-»    r' 


Tur- 


M&t    EIGHT 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


TUe&OAY.  OECCMaCA  n,  1956 


n. 


(.egisidtor  From  Georgia 
Said  Interesting  Things 


RELIGION:  A  CAMPUS  ISSUE 


IiiU. 


I  hf  ^I;^u•Innlt   last   ut*tk  <»t   ilu-  k"'isl.ifor  tioin  (ifov'ia  uas  sliixk- 

■  I,  \ 


Hf  s.iid  I  I  hiuk-  tiir  lime  will  umih  .  .  .  when  \vi'  will  stiiU-  (l(»\\n 
and  at  lit'})!  rht-   (Supienie  C'.omt  >    (le.st;4ie,i»aiiou)  tli'cision."' 

jamt's  A.  Mitika\,  a  ixpicst  iu;ui\e  in  the  Ciet>rg!a  (ieireial  Assembly, 
niaiif  (juiu-  a  lift  «>n  ilu-  I'NC.  rampiis  last  week.  But  it  was  the  shcvkiti:; 
staremem    alx»\f.    il(*!i\ere(i    in    a 


poliiieai    >eieii«  e   class,    that    loi  iis- 

•icd  r.Nf'  student^'  aLlcutiouoii  his 

visit.    •  f^.Tjr*.  .>^    ; 

*  -♦  ♦ 

I  In-    ta(  t    thai    a    l.eoij^iaii    tan 
talk  siu  h   a   wav  alnMit    racial    ime- 
oration   is  sli(Hkin;4.   And   uhen  an 
elected   representati\e  ot   the   peo-, 
pie  says  it.  it  ijistianj^e  indeed. 

We  :..-huire  Mackay  h>i  saNiiii; 
"1  l»elic\e  vi>ti\c  ooi  to  live  with- 
in the  liaiuewoik  ol  the  law."  lor 
hack  ist  ('.eoryia'.  ue  suspect,  such 
a  statenic-nt  wiuijd  be  considered 
danuerons  at  the  ininiinmn.  C.ont- 
nuinist    at    the   ntavimutn. 

While   some   t»i    the   other   Sou- 


that    1  rskine   (laldwcH    treated. 

\o\v.  it  apptjnrs.  there  are  at 
least  two  men  in  the  Slate  ol 
(ieoij;ia  \\h(»  are  ihinkiii'4  alnnit 
the-  iiitine,  \»  ho  ;  .e  lonternin;^ 
ihemseKes  with  a  little  mote  than 
Axorrv  about  the  te\tile  industtv 
anrl  the  .\e»r(»  situ.itioii.  One  (»l 
these  men  is  Sen.  (ieoij^e  ol  (ieoi- 
^ia.     The  olhci    is    Rip.    Mat  k.iy   ol 

the    state    leL^islatiire. 

*  *  * 

We  hope  liiat  mi  n  like  Mackay 
»4t(tx\  in  luimlKT  in  (ieori>ia.  I«»r 
with  the  world  .»s  sma-ll  as  it  is 
now.  with  the  attitms  ol  the  I'nii- 
ed  States  alfettin'.;  so  i  loselv  the 
Itelin-'s  ol   nations  hallwav  aiDintd 


Jhern    stares   Tiave    un)\ed    aheatl—       the  woi  Id.  it  is  pitilul  to  think  that 


siatf^.  like  Notlh  (.arolina.  X'ir'^in- 
iu.  reimessee- iud  Fhnida  —  iheie 
a!wa\s  has  been  a.  lult  ol  batk- 
tvardne  s  in  tlu*  South:  States 
like  (.eoi'ia.  Soinh  C.aiolina.  Ala- 


there  remains  in  this  tounttv  ot 
lieedom  a  section  as  iinpro;4iessi\e 
as  the  b.'i'ckward  belt. 

I  he    I'nited    States    will    ha\e    a 
dil lit  lilt    time    })i(»v;iessinj»    iis    she 


hama.     Mississippi    and    Louisiana  has    piiv^iessetl    il    theie   are    stales 

ha\e.    lot    some    le;  son.    temained  whith    refuse     to     mo\e     forward 

far  in   the  ba«  kiiiound.    Ihev  liave  altin^;  with  the  rest, 

repifsented    the    closest    thiniis    in  Men    who    think      like     .Mackav 

the    Somh    to    tlie     Ittbatto    Road  talks  tan  make  the  diltereiue. 


THF  RAIEIGH  NEWS  AND  OBSERVER: 


•y> 


TV  Isn't  Essential  To  Life 


Almost  e\eiMla\  vtui  heai  peo- 
ple saving.  "Wow  just  what  in  the 
worltl  ilid  we  do  belore  we  had 
lele\isi<»n"-""  .Sad'\  enou<;h.  the  diie 
implitation  is  th  ti  the  home  must 
have  been  devoid  ol  entertainment 
and  «>f  spiritual  comfort. 

Now.  it  apjK'.ts  from  these  all 
too  mm«'  roll*  !i»«»emenls  that  it  le- 
vision  is  some  kiml  ol  ^^olden 
trntth  upon  wliuh  sorelv  beset 
people  lean,  ^'<^u  WDuld  assume 
that  it  is  a  ma;i;ii,il  lointt  pouring 
a   stream    t)f    rithe.Nt    bles.sin«    into 

e\erv  Amen  i.ui  home. 

-  • 

To  be  sure,  telt  \ision  has  jn-ov- 
cd  a  bit  i  '  :  lo  many  people.  It 
has  aflovded  some  positive  entei- 
I'inu.;  lU  and  it  t|;»s  helped  t<>  kill 
oil  some  vacuous  hoius.  There  is 
nothing  uronu**l#ih  it.  |>ei   se._ 

lint  to  answer  the  tiresome  (pies- 
ritrti.  people  did  pretty  well  l>efore 

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tele\isit)n  lame  to  the  home.  I  hev 
rtatl  books  anti  niai»a/ines:  they 
i;i!kttl  and  tluy  \isited  merely  Un 
the  >;ike  ol  i><i<Kl  tompanv:  they 
pl,i\etl  taitls  and  other  j»ames.  and 
thiv  iinertained  ihemselxes  l>y 
sittin;;  tpiictlv  ami  ihinkin;^. 

ICIex  ision  must  ne\er  he  toii- 
sidtietl  a^  a  vital  nete.ssiiv.  I  he 
golden  ttiUih  upon  uhith  so  many 
pet»|)U'  rai^tuiouslv  lean  can  break 
luuler    its  own    Avei;.;ht. 

It  is  all  rij^hl  to  own  a  set  antl 
to  enjov  it  to  tlie  lullest,  but  it 
shoidd    .not      nsurp*.   tl<£      entire 

stiuiiif  ol   li\inu[. 

Gracious 
Living: 
Number  8 


Tlu-  town's  Rosemary  .St.  is 
most    imj;rat  ions  t)l    Lite. 

The  ttmn.  alter  t  titiin.i'  into  the 
stieet.  piled  diit  into  the  holes 
antl  kit   it  there. 

Cars  hit  the  mountls  ol  dirt. 
.Sprinj»s  >»et  hint.  Passengers  .^el 
Innt.  Tires  j;et  hurt.  The  stieel 
doesn't  j^et   hurt. 

Let  lis  <;et  <>ia(it)us  with  tlie 
street  lejrairs.  (iraeious  l.ivitvj;  in 
(.hapel  Hill  is  ^ettinjj^  a  rurle 
shot  k. 


Frosh  Got 
Extra  Push 
At  Dance 


(lamlina  lieshmeu  w\ut  iltm't 
ha-xe  cars  on  the  tainpns  s^t  a 
t  haiue  to  beat  the  upperelassmcn 
S.mirday. 

The  Order  ol  the  (.rail  bron«»lit 
'jiHi  Meredith  Ctillcnf  women. 
St  rubbed  and  l>eautilul.  over  by 
bus.  The  wtimen  were  iin-asked- 
lor;  the  Carolina  lieshinen  UM)ked 
them  o\ei    and  look  their  pick. 

It  is  a  j4ood  itlea  to  brinji»;  "ills 
bom  neij;hbt)rin<»  tt)lleges  to  the 
l'ni\ersitv  lt)r  tlaiues  and  other 
soeial  events.  Besides  making  fri- 
ends with  t)ut  edueatituial  neif'li- 
bors.  it  als<»  allo\\s  I'ar  Heel  fresh- 
men to  ,«>et  it>  i.nt>w  and  strike  up 
a  roinaiitii  existence  with  females 
their  ouii  ajjjes.  For  many  junior 
Caroline  Coeds,  a  freshman  is  the 
stum  t>r  the  earth,  a  thing  not  t<) 
tiate. 

riie  iieshmen  ktuiw  better,  and 
so  did  the  ^irls  at  Meredith  after 
the  dante  Saturday.  


Edwards  Mounts  The  Stump  Again; 
He's  Wearing  A  Black  Armband 


Cortland  Edwards 

I  am  wearing  a  black  armband 

today  for  I  am  mourning  for  wnat 

has  seemingly  been  a  tremendoi.s 

less  to  our  very  purpose  in  life: 

Mans  religion. 

1  have  suspected  that  rel'yion 
WU.S  oil  its  way  out;  now,  much  to 
my  sorrow.  I  iind  thi.s  to  be  qui.- 
true. 

In  tlic  wake  of  my  last  column 
I  can  easily  categorize  the  res- 
ponses in  two  divisions:  37  for  . 
.  .  .7  aL;in  .... 

And  ot  tht>se  seven  .Al  McSure- 
ly,  wh  )  wrote  a  letter  to  the  edi 
tor  which  1  thoroughly  eniay.'i; 
and  hope  is  printed,  was  the  only 
oos  wht>  said  "I  bi-lieve  such  anJ 
such,  because  of  such  and  suca. 
And  he  was  the  only  one  whu 
seemed  to  have  faith  in  hi>  own 
reli^tiiHis  do<:m;i. 

A  second  nay  came  over  the 
telephone  from  a  southern  Bap- 
tist who  spent  the  first  five 
minutes  cursing  me  for  stat- 
ing .what  I  believed.  I  was  un- 
der the  imp/ession  that  one  of 
the  basic  doctrines  of  the  Bap- 
tist church  was  "Religious  Li- 
bertv!" 

The  third  nay  came  over  a  plcte 
of    birthday   cake   and    a   cup   ol 
delicious  ci^lfct'.  Her  vehement  -i- 
tack  lil  made  my  ears  burn)  was 
not  constructive  at  ail.  Her  major 
complaint  was  n>  t  of  what  I  said 
(for  siu    ajireeii  with  almost   ah) 
but  rather  in  the  method  I  used 
The  fourth  was  written  by  a 
pre-intelligent      student        wh*   : 
could  not  or  would  not  say  any- 
thing to  my  face.  I  discount  his 
article  (OTH  No.  55)  for  his  il- 
logical and  contradicting  state- 
ments.   He    proves    beyond    the 
shadow  of  a  doubt  that  his  faith 
is  blind  and  that  he  has  thought 
not  one  iota  of  what  he  thinks 
he  believes. 

For  Mr.  Taylor  m.iintains  th;ii 
a  girl  doesn't  havi*  to  have  .se.xua! 
relations  with  a  man  in  order  ti 
be  pregnant  (artificial  insfmiu.. 
tion  was  nt>l  known  in  bibicul 
dajs  and  n-it  used  with  luuiiarrifil 
wtmien  tiKlav);  he  believts  that 
heaven  and  hell  are  geographicu! 
lix-ations,  antl  last!*-,  he  claims 
that  his  religion  is  based  up<  n 
t.ne  superior  being,  antl  then  sa.>  ■> 
'That  one  is  CtKi  the  Lord  .lesu.; 
Christ,  the  .sOn  of  Cod,  and  tiu- 
Father  of  man.  ' 

Is    Mr.    Taylor    suggesting    thut 
God  is  the  same  as  J.  (.'hrisl:  dtus 
he   suggest    that    the    Ix>rd    is   the 
Father  of   Men,  or  does   he  sug- 
gest that  he  himself  is  sterile  aal 
cannot    be   the   father   t»f   men   o; 
wjmen   and   that    the   embryo   in 
a  mothers  womb  is   impiegnatei' 
by  the   spei  tn   of   a   supernatura! 
being? 
*         No.    5    was    written    by    P.    E. 
Barrow.    This   article    was   writ 
ten  beautifully.  The  man  most 
certainly  has  mastered  the   use 
of  the  Er»glish  language. 
His  article  was  not  tmly  supiv- 
iorally   written,   but   at    the  same 
time  was  so  convincing.  But  what 
I   want   to  know   is  what   did   he 
say".'  lie  seetnctl  to  be  to  wrapped 
up  in  criticizing  me  based  on  nis 
interpretation    t)f    my    article. 

His  article  did  show  a  lot  of 
profound  thinking  and  I  only  wish 
that  more  people  woulti  aim  to 
wards  many  of  the  height.-  ihtt 
Mr.  Barrow  has  already  reaclietl. 


Lastly,  was  an  article  written 
by  .Tulian  Sessoms.  His,  too,  show 
ed  much  thought,  but  il  sountis 
like  Mr.  Se.ssoms  is  agnostic  more 
than  anything  else.  I  might  almost 
say  an  athiest,  but  then  I  can  tie- 
fine  wiiat  one  is. 

■■:■.  *  -  "  ' 

.All  in  all,  1  have  been  very 
disappointed  in  the  response  tha; 
I  received,  in  that  I  have  beon 
laboriiig  under  a  misapprehen.siou 


that  there  were  a  lot  more  "ChiMs- 
tains"  on  this  campus  than  there 
appears  to  be. 

Those  that  spoke  in  agree- 
ment with  iViy  article  spo4ce  like 
lost  sheep.  They  didn't  knev 
where  they  belonged  nor  what 
they  really  believed.  The  or- 
ganized church  has  made  no 
provision  whatsoever  for  the  in 
tellecrual  individuels  that  as- 
pire for  a  m«re  rational  belief. 


Other  complaints  were  thai  I 
slated  "I  do  not  believe,"  but 
not  what  *'I  do  believe."  So,  for 
the  benefit  of  those  who  seek  a 
more  modern  concept  of  religio.i. 
etc.  (this  is  not  to  say  a  more  su- 
perior one,  for  there  is  no  su- 
perior religion)  I  would  suggest 
thoy  read  on.  contemplate  on  what 
I  have  to  say  and  then  go  on 
thcmsolves  and  find  out  what  ex- 
actly they  do  believe  in. 


MORE  ON  REUGION: 


«  ••>   iMt.'    W 


Kirkland  Explains  beliefs 


An    Open    Letter      To      James    C. 
Reynolds: 

Vmir  letter  was  open,  but  your 
mind  was  clo.sed. 

First,  let  me  dear  up  your 
failure.  ".  .  .  to  see  what  stauncli 
determination  is  required  to 
'vvorship  at  the  altar  of  .vour  own 
achievement'." 

The  staunch  determination 
necessary  to  do  this  it  th'#'^e- 
sire  to  /each  a  higher  level  of 
understanding  of  God  and  our 
purpose    of   existence. 

Christianity  was  inadeciuate, 
so  I  chose  to  formulate  my  own 
beliefs.  It  takes  mental  strength 
to  do  this  because  any  idiot  can. 
and  usually  d;>es.  follow  the  herd 
of  sheep  to  the  altar.  It  takes 
strength  to  break  free  of  this 
herd's  stagnant  podl  of  religious 
beliefs. 
ONE  OF  EGOTISM 

My  religion  is  indeed  one  of 
egotism.  It  has  to  be  by  nature 
rather  bv   choice.   Since    I   form- 


ulated my  beliefs,  they  are  mine 
and  ego-involvement  is  manda- 
tory for  their  very  existence.  1 
have  t  ■>  believe  in  them  or  else 
they    wouldn't    survive. 

I,  however,  am  quite  content 
with  the  world  and  plan  to  live 
life  to  its  fullest  extent.  To  do 
this,  I  must  be  free  of  the  mon- 
olithic veil  that  surrounds  not 
only  Christianity,  but  all  or- 
ganized  religions. 

Now  as  to  your  little  story 
about  the  monk  and  the  .so-called 
"enlightened  atheist."  I  take  it 
you  are  the  monk  and  I'm  the 
aetheist.  But.  what  I  want  to 
know  is,  where  did  you  gel  the 
idea    that    I    professed    atheism? 

Like  so  many  people,  you  im- 
mediately surmised  that  I  didn't 
belive.in  a  God  when  I  condemn- 
ed Christianity.  This  is  pure  tra- 
vestism. 

I  turned  from  Christianity  be- 
cause  it   failed   to  satisfy   me  in 


Pogo 


my  understanding  of  God.  Chris- 
tianity persjnalized  the  God  and 
had  silly  little  rules  tliat  people 
should  live  by  in  order  to  please 
it.  More  tra  vest  ism. 

KNOWLEDGE  OF   IT 

The  love  of  God  springs  from 
knowledge  of  It.  and  knowledge 
of  It  should  be  derived  from 
general  ideas  and  not  from  a 
historical  narrative  written  by  a 
bunch  of  men  suffering  from 
hallucinations. 

God  gave  man  the  ability  and 
privilege  to  think.  The  monk 
thought  one  way,  the  "atheist " 
thought  another,  God  created 
them  both.  Do  you  think  for  one 
minute  that  God  would  condemn 
one  and  choose  the  ether?  If 
this  is  the  type  of  God  you  be- 
lieve in.  then  he  is  indeed  a  Ma- 
chiavellian  beast. 

You  said.  "...  I  also  have  a 
mind  .  .  ."  Use  it.  • 

Thohias  V.  Kirkland 

■    •'' 

'.       By  Walt  Kelly 


L'il  Abner 


By  Al  Capp 


Hit  tr  ilia  fiiliJiiilJ 


It  Spurred 
UNC  Thought 


Frank  Crowther  i  t 

All  tbis  time  we  have  had  the  spur  which  wa> 
needed  to  instigate  some  student eresponse  and  we 
didn't  even  know  it.  There  it  was,  right  under  our 
needle-n-oses.  .  .  .only  look  a  slight,  incoherent  jani^- 
ling  by  Cortland  Edwards  to  make  it  heard. 

His  religious  rampage  v/as  the  fuse  to  a  bin*ct 
of  replies— the  Letters  To  The  Editor  that  were  lon^ 
sought  after. 

It   should    have   •   kimple   deduction:   all    this 
fall  e««r  pin  cushion  had  been  politics,  with  a  fe-v 
deviations  here  and  there.  I  don't  knew  what  bug 
bit   Edwards,  but  the   right   one  did.  .   .  that  is, 
of  you  are  looking  for  end  results. 
Switching  fr/)m  politics  to  religion  seems  te  have* 
cluboed  the  students  mi   a  long  dormant   Charie}- 
horse. 

Just  for  example,  last  in  Wednesdays  paper  we 
had  three  articles,  or  responses,  concerning  the  'fly 
in  the  bottle."  One  masterpiece — with  which  I  ohaH 
scuffle  belOw — had  religion  depicted  as  the  '  ncme 
of  absurdity."  Juxtapcsed  was  one  relating  ireligion 
as  "a  system."' 

The  best  feature  ©•f  ail,  however,  was  the  piece 
just  below  Herblock's  campaign  tiger  by  a  coed 
who  urged  "don't  censure  beliefs."  It  appeared  al- 
most as  if  she  were  acting  as  referee.  Bong!  .  .  . 
round  four  coming  up. 

Overall,  some  of  the  letters  have  been  inter- 
esting, some  drab,  and  others  plainly  illogical  or, 
seemingly,  a  burst  of  acne  en  route.  Ahi   liberal     ' 
mindedness.  .  .lux  Mbertatus.  .  .ad  infinitum. 
I  would  like  to  mention  something  about  several 
of   the   letters   but    space   would    not    permit.    So   I    • 
.shall  write  a  letter  myself.  .  .  an  open  letter  to  one 
ol  the  adventurous  authors,  Thomas  V.  Kirkland.  .  . 
ugh: 

Dear  Kinkajeu,       -        '  «i«v>    .  ^  ■* 

1  suppose  that  your  four  years  of  "higher  educa- 
tion" at  the  University  have  been  spent  netting  your  ^ 
little  jewels  of  mossed  moronism.  You  must  be  such  - 
a  nice  little  boy.  .  .all  ready  to  lunge  into  the  l>i*  ■' 
bad.  pes.simistic  world  lull  of  weak  creature?.  A.'C 
you  too,  too  depressed? 

Take  a  BIG  stick,  my  "mental  strength''  pro-.  . 
ponent,  you're  one  who  will  assuredly  have  use^, 
for  it. 

Since  you  aie  a  senior,  I  suppose  I  can  be  a^f * 
cursed  of  "senior  soccor."'  And  I'm  just  a  poor,  shock*"^ 
ing  sophomore;  I'm  lost,, confused  and  weak  of  mindC".,' 
so  don't  even  have  to  pollute  your  thoughts  with  > 
my  meanderings.  T.'-.^. 

Really,  old  man,  your  two  propositions  are  prime 
rump  roasts. 

The  first  one,  "The  meek  shall  inherit  the  earth—, 
six  feet  of  it,"  is  a  theft.  The  last  time  I  remember., 
hearing  it.  Anthony  Quinn  delivered  il.  much  more 
admirably  than  you.  in  the  motion  picture  "Viva  Za- 
pata." Oh.  I  know,  your  mental  strength  wTe.icheJ 
it  from  your  strong  mind.  .  .  don't  tell  me.  I'vfe  » 
heard  it   before.  '.._  / 

The  second,  saying  that  the  instruction  of  fools 
is  folly,  was  at  least  in  quotes;  I'm  thankful  you  ,-. 
didn't  claim  birthrights  for  that  one.   Even   if  'it 
■were  true,  I  would   have  to  nominate  you  to  b« 

the  leader  of  the  pack.  

Marx  is  not  your  su'oject,  you  are  his.  .  .or  is 
Nietzsche  your  favorite  "madicine?" 

What  you  need  is  your  vena  salvatella  bled.  Tha* 
is  the  superficial  vein  on  the  back  of  your  hand, 
coming  from  the  little  finger,  which  when  bled  wa; 
considered  by  the  ancients  as  efficacious  in  curing 
disease. 


If  you  don't  have  your  own  knife,  be  my  guest. 
To  shew  how  illogical  one  of  your  hypotheses 
is  (and  this  is  my  main  objection),  I  will  put  the 
hilarious  thing  to  its  crumbling  test. 

You  said.  "Nothing  is  so  fatal  to  an  ideal  as  i*; 
realization.  .  .  ." 

You  did  not  specify  any  certain  category,  so  V'- 
ply  it  to  the  following  and  take  stock  of  your  re- 
sult: 

"An  assemblage  of  integers  belong  ing  to  a  field 
"K"  such  that  every  sum  aiid  every  difference  of 
any  certain  category,  so  apply  it  to  the  followin. 
and  take  stock  of  your  result: 

"An  assemblage  of  integers  belonging  to  a  fiel  1 
"K"  such  that  every  sum  and  every  difference  of 
any  two  elements  "e  prime"  and  "e  prime  prin;e" 
is  also  an  element  "e"  of  the  assemblage  and  anv 
product  of  an  element  'e  "  by  an  integer  '  k"  of 
"K"  is  also  an  element." 

Does  the  realization  of  this  ideal,  which  it  most 
certainly  is,  make  it  fatal?  II  so,  please  elucidate. 
You're  full  of  holes  like  a  golf  course.  If  they 
had  mental  Exiax,  I'd  buy  you  a  carton  for  Christ- 
mast.  .  .  but  yeu  don't  even  believe  in  Christmas, 
do  yeu? 

Cheers, 
■^  Frank  H.  Crowther 

P.S.     A  Klnkajou,  for  your  information  as  veil 
as  our  readers,  is  a  nocturnal  arboreal  carniverous 
mammal  about  three  feet  long,  with  a  slender  body 
long  prehensile  tail,  large  lustrous  eyes,  and  sof'T ' 
woolly  yellowish-brown  fur.  .And  it  is  easily  tamed. 


AND  EVEN  MORE: 


Seashoies'  Logic: 
It's  Off  A  Little 

Editor: 

Brad  Seasholes"  logic  in  his  letter  condemning 
the  logic  of  Clial  Schley  would  be  excellent  if  the 
proposition  "There  can  be  no  effect  independent  f 
at  least  one  cause"  were  indeed  an  empirical  gene 
ralization. 

It  is  not. 
It   is   an  analytical   principle   directly   proceed- 
ing from  the  analytic  principle  of  contradiction 
by  wey  of  the  Principle  of  the  Excluded  Middle. 

Seasholes  again  errs  in  asserting  that  if  every  cl 
feet  must  have  a  cause,  then  the  first  cause  must 
also  be  caused.  The  first  cause  is  not(  as  he  assumes 
an  effect. 

Obviously,  Seasholes  has  never  read  Aquin'js  on 
this  matter,  although  he  alludes  to  him. 

.-..,^  ;^;,.-.-.    ■  -.-  „     ,  F.  C.  Madifan 


Sw« 
is  the  \\ 
school, 
righ  ,  w| 
styles  ir 


Mc 

would 
design,! 
firMis  hi 


Bu\ 

i  III  poll 

to.  bil 
\\a\    III 


TUESDAY,  DECEMBER     11,  1956 


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Iquiriis  on 
MadifAn 


THI  DAILY  TAlk  HIlL 


PAGI  fllNt 


Coed?  Not  Married?  Don't  Worry 


By  ANNE  DRAKE 

The  college  woman  of  today  is 
the  "marrtageabie*'  w:omaii,  ac- 
cording to  Dr.  Katherine  K.  Car- 
michacl,  who  has  been  Dean  of 
Women  at  UNC  since  1946. 

Sine;  coming  to  Chapel  Hill 
Dean  Carmichael  has  noted  sever- 
al changes  in  the  Carolina  coeds. 
She  noticed  a  particular  emphasis 
on  marriage  in  1946  when  World 
War  II  was  over  and  all  the  ve- 
terans were  returning. 

Also  in  1950  at  the  outbreak 
of  the  Korean  War  there  was  an 
upsurge  in  the  marriagfe  rate 
among  coeds.  At  present  the  rate 


V  <    

has  gone  down  Somewhat.  i 

Onlj  75  per  cent  of  college  wo-  j 
men  actually  do  marry,  she  said, ; 
but  that  figure  is  rising  every ! 
year.  From  her  experience  Dean 
CarmichacJ  obsened  that  the; 
Carolina  coeds  expect  to  marry 
and  to  marry  early.  1 

StatistitS  show  that  the  average 
U.  S.  male  marries  between  the 
ages  of  212  to  26.  Proportionately, 
the  average  U.  S.  woman  marries 
when  she  is  around  20  years  old. 

College  women  have  more  chil- 
dren   todaj'    than    befo[|3    Worid 
War   II.   And  there   is  more   em- ; 
phasis  on  jobs  today  than  in  1946, ' 


according  to  Dean  Carmichael.  In 
one  out  of  four  marriages  today 
both  the  husband  and  wife  work. 
However,  only  50  per  cent  of  col- 
lege women  work. 

Dean  Carmichael  says  that  she 
never  has  coeds  come  to  her  now 
with  a  problem  about  whether  to 
have  a  career  or  matrimony.  The 
coeds  of  today  accept  the  fact 
that  most  of  them  will  have  to 
work  after  marriage  or  at  least 
be  prepared  to  work  in  case 
something  happens  to  their  hus- 
band. They  do  not  visualize  them- 
selves as  dedicated  career  women 
but  as  family  breadwinners.  They 


The  Sweater's  Still  The  Thing 

j.  Swoators  change  style,  but  they're  always  favored  among  Carolina  coeds.  Newest  in  sweater  styles 
If  tK«  Ivy  League  crew  neck,  modeled  on  the  left  by  Carolyn  Wise,  who  finds  them  to  be  just  right  for 
Cchoel,  wearing  with  Bermudas  and  on  informal  dates.  For  more  dressier  occasions,  Barbara  Doar,  on  the 
rJfih  ,  wears  here  charcoal  gray  cashmere  slipover — an  old  favorite — which  features  one  of  the  newer 
styUs  in  necklines. 


Carolina  Fashion  Flairs 


just  want  to  t;e  prepared  to  S^t 
a  job. 

Aifter  talking  bo  sociologists, 
Dean  Carmichael  said  they  be- 
lieve that  th«  average  girl  works 
until  her  husband  earns  $6,000 
in  the  South  and  $7,000  a  year 
in  the  North.  She  said  she  would 
be  glad  to  discuss  this  point  with 
anyone  who  disagrees. 

Dean  Carmichael  believes  there 
are    two   factors    that    make    wo- 
men consider   woi^ir^.   One   fac-j 
tor   is   the   high  incidence   of   di-  j 
vorce  in  the  U.  S.  Secondly,  wo-} 
men  are  outliving  their  husbands,  i 

The   divorce  i-ate  has   declined 
somewhat  since   1946.  Immediate- ' 
ly    after    World   War   II,    almost  j 
one  out  of  thre  marriages  ended 
in  divorce. 

Economically.  ih.e  coed  is  evi- 
dence that  this  is  age  of  prosper- 
ity by  the  way  that  they  dress, 
according  to  Dean  Carmichael. 

".\s  far  as  I  know,  there  is  no 
college  in  the  U.  S.  with  enough 
closet  space  for  the  girls.  The 
closets  are  not  built  for  the  vol- 
uminous  skirts   that  are   in   style 


She  pointed  out  aiiother  archi- 
tectural impirove'ureht  needed  in 
women's  dormitories  that  w^as  not 
considered  in  1946.  With  the  ad- 
vent of  nylon,  oftea  and  other 
drip-dry  fabrics,  dormitory  laun- 
dry rooms  are  oldfashioned. 

Also  she  has  noticed  that  the 
coeds  are  traveling  more  both  in 
this  country  and  abroad  than  they 
used  to. 

Dean  Carmichael  said  that  the 
idea  of  a  university  woman  as 
a  bluestocking  (literary  w  pedan- 
tic person)  has  disappeared  en- 
tirely now.  And  it  was  probably 
out-of-dat«  in  1946. 

Numerically,  Carolina  coeds 
have  not  changed  much  since  1946. 
There  were  about  1,080  women 
students  in  1946,  and  th^re  are 
1,215  thLs  year. 

Dean  Carmichael  sums  up  her 
opinion  of  coeds  in  1946  and  in 
1956  with  the  observation  "There 
are  no  fundamental  differences 
in  people  fiom  one  country  to 
another  or  one  generation  to  an- 
other although  they  may  b€  dif- 
ferent  in   emphasis." 


The  Long  And  Short  Of  It 

When  the  subject  turns  to  socks  one  finds  varie  us  styles  there,  too.  Although  most  coeds  may  b» 
seen  in  the  "short"  white  socks  worn  by  ft*tty  Bamts  en  the  left,  which,  by  the  way,  cover  half  the  leg, 
another  style,  the  argyle  knee  socks  in  which  Dottie  Wood  is  pictured,  are  quite  often  seen  with  Ber- 


mudas and  school  clothing. 


(Fred.  Powledge    Photos) 


Fashion  Items  For  The  Coed 

Most  jvery  coed  can  think  of  some  extra  special  item  a  little  different  from  the  ordinary  which  she 
would  like  to  include  in  her  wardrobe.  Such  an  exam  >le  is  Hannah  Kirby's  white  car  coat  trimmed  in  red 
design,  complete  with  a  hood,  on  the  left.  For  school  and  informal  dates,  Dannie  Miller,  on  the  right, 
finds  her  white  cotton  blouse  to  be  just  the  thing. 


UNC  Coeds  Don't  Resent  Imports, 
But  They  Don't  Like  Male  Attitude 


Christmas  Dance  WtU       | 

Be  Held  In  GM  Saturday  I 

Graham      Memorial      Activities  | 
Board   is   sponsoring   a   Christmas 
dance  to  be  held  in  the  Rendez-  J 
vous    Room    Saturday    from    8-11 
p.m. 

Chuck  Flack  is  in  charge  of  ar- 
rangements for  the  dance,  which 
will  have  music  provided  by  a 
combo. 

Miss  Linda  Mann,  director  of 
Graham  Memorial,  has  announced 
that  the  Rendezvous  Room  will  be 
decorated  in  the  holiday  theme, 
including  a  Christmas  tree  and 
other  greenery.  ' 


Ail  Premiums  And  Draft 

"      T.  V.  —  Good  Place  To 
^        Watch  Boxing  &  Football 
Bring  Your  Date 

'         SANDWICHES  OF  ALL   KINDS 

WEST  FRANKLIN  STREET  LUNCHEONETTE 

Next  to   Bus   Station 

Phone  9-2846 


Why  Pay  High  Prices? 

I've  Held  Them  Down  Since  July,  '55 
1  ASK  YOUR  BUDDY! 


Pt  Cas« 
Pius  Dep. 


SPECIM  -  7-Up  and  Tru-Ade  $1.00 

ESSO  GAS  YES!  ESSO  GAS 

Cash  Cash        ; .  v^  Cash 

Reg.  29.9         HX 


'  FlOt 

Bring  This  Ad  And  Get  1  Cent  Off  Per  Gal.  Gis, 
.  5  Cents  Pdr  Qt.  Oil  ,.     . 

V       ?      WHERE      ?      t  ^ 

At  The  Students^  Friend 

WHIPPLE'S  ESSO  SERVICE 


By  MARY   JANE   FISHER 

of   the  (.aroliiia    1)()\>   \vv\u    l(»   think   th.-l 


•  -.     Mokt 
imports. 

.\ccordiii,n  to  a  poll,  it   is  not   tlic  inipor  t>    tlu-nisc 
to,  but  the  attitudes  the  l)oys  take  louaix 
uay  made  the  lollouinjn  (oinnients: 

Miss    \far\     Moore    Ma>on:       I    lliink    it  s   line   h)i 


the  loeds   resent    the   ho\  s     dating 


IS   that    most    oi    the   (oeds   object 
I   the    (oecU.    Sonie    ot    the   loeds    who    ieel    this 


to,  imports  or  cosds.  and  neces- 
sary to  date  imports  because  of 
the    ratio.    However,    I    think    a 
good  many  of  the  Carolina  boys 
have  a  stereotyped   idea   of  the 
Carolina    coed    in    their    minds, 
and  think  of  her  as  being  a  con- 
ceited    party      girl     dated      up 
months    ahead.    A    lot    of    boys 
complain  about  coeds  being  un- 
friendly  and   conceited   on   cam- 
pus, but  many  of  the  boys  take 
i  it   for   granted    that   coeds   will 
be  unfriendly  and  thus  are  un- 
friendly   themselves." 
.Miss  Emory  Burkhardt:  "They 
'.should      date      wherever      they 
want,     but     in     doing     it     they 
shouldn't    be    under   the    misap- 
prehension   that    we    coeds    are 
alike    until    they've    given    us   a 
fair  chance." 
irMiss  Ann   Holt:   "Boys  should 
-JBOt    classify    every-    girl    by    the 
i:;$tandard    definition    of    a    Caro- 
.'>Kjia  coed,  but  by  the  individual 
"^Kerself.    then    make    their   deci- 
sion as  to  whether  they  want  to 
import  oth?r  girls.  Juniors  and 
seniors,    leave    the    imports    for 
sophomores  and  freshmen!" 

Miss  Patsy  Miller  thinks  it's 
inconsiderate  of  a  Carolina  boy 
to  date  a  particular  coed  to  the 
point  that  the  coed  does  not  have 
a  resource  to  fall  back  on  when 
•  big  week-end  comes  up  and  he 
•sks  his  favorire  import. 

Some  of  the  girls  foqj  that 
boys  should  date  coeds  more  of- 
ten merely  for  the  sake  of  con- 
venience: 

Miss  Martha  Williford:  "I 
think  it's  very  nice  for  boys  to 
date  imports,  but  it  seems  to 
me  it's  less  trouble  for  them  to 
date  coeds. ' 

Miases  Mary  Louise  Bizzell 
and  Eleanor  Williamson  think 
that  every  boy  and  g'rl  should 
date  the  people  he  or  .she  en 
joys  going  out  with  the  most:  if 
boys  enjoy  dating  imports,  they 
should  dat->  them,  and  if  girls 
enjoy  dating  bo>s  other  than 
Carolina  boys,  they  should  also 
date  them.  But  they  added: 
'.  ♦•^f(»i('    power   to    the    ones   who 


date  on  campus:  it's  much  sim- 
pler." 

Miss  Jill  O'Donnell:  "1  think 
boys  should  definitely  date  girls  i 
on  _  campus,  because  we  have 
come  here  for  the  purpose  of 
dating  these  fine  Carolina  gen- 
tlemen, and  we  expect  to  sfe 
them  in  some  place  other  than 
Y  court." 

Miss  Carolina  Osborne:  "I  think 
it's  first  come  first  served,  and 
we  were  here  first!  Seriously, 
the  boys  ought  to  date  the  girls 
they  want  to,  be  they  far  away 
or  close  at  hand." 

Still  others  seem  to  be  very 
much  in  favor  of  imports: 

Miss  Nancy  Llewellyn:  "Girls' 
schools  (i.e. — Saint  Mary's  and 
WC)  are  situated  so  that  they 
don't  have  any  other  good  sour- 
ces for  dates.  Carolina  coeds 
should  not  feel  so  insecure  that 
they  are  not  willing  to  share  a 
few  of  the  excess  with  fellow 
members  of  the  fair  sex." 

Miss  Jackie  Haithcock:  "I  think 
it's  evident  that  the  ratio  of 
boys  to  girls  here  at  Carolina 
makes  it  necessary  for  the  boys 
to  have  imports  over.  Another 
reason  is  probably  that  the  boys 
feel  that  the  coeds  don't  appre- 
ciate them." 

Miss  Nancy  Davis  thinks  boyi 
need    variety   after   dating   Caro 
lina   ccads   all   the   time.    In   her 
► -. 

GM  Spring  Calender 
Deadline  Is  Dec.  19 

Deadline  for  Graham  Memorial  s 
spring  semester  calendar  of  events 
has  been  set  for  Dec.   19. 

Linda  Mann,  director  of  Graham 
.Memorial    has    announced    that    a  I 
calendar    is    now    being    compiled  I 
listing     campus     events     for    the 
spring  semester.  ' 

The  calendar  will  be  similar  to  i 
the     fall     calendar     which     listed 
.sports    events,    film    series.    Play- 1 
maker     features,     lectures,     music 
programs,  and  elections. 

Anyone  intere.sted  in  placing  an 
item   on   the  calendar  should  con- : 
tact   Miss  Linda   Mann   in  Grahanj 
Memorial    hv   Dec.    19. 


to  date  I  lie  oirls  they  want 
opinion,  girls  from  other  schools 
are  different  and  provide  this 
variety. 


Victory  Viilaqe  Party  - 

A  Christmas  party  for  all  chil- 
dren of  UNC  students  will  be  held 
Wednesday  at  the  Victory  Village 
Day  Care  Center  from  6-8  p.m. 

Sponsored  by  Graham  Memorial 
Activities  Board,  the  party  has 
become  an  annual  Christmas  fea- 
ture for  the  children  of  the  UNC 
campus.  Miss  Lee  Ann  Curtis, 
chairman  of  the  Receptions  Com- 
mittee, has  announced  that  Santa 
Claus  will  be  present  for  the  par- 
ty, and  other  holiday  entertain- 
ment will  be  offered. 


You'll  Find 

MORE 
NORTH 


CAROLINA 
BOOKS 

To  Make  Your  Christmas 
Merry 


Stevens  -  Shepherds 

HOLIDAY    HOUSE 


>n 


The    fntimate 
Bookshop^ 


205  E.  FranKJin  St. 


Open  Till  10  P.M. 


Gifts    For    Everyone  ! 


Carafette  and  warmer  sets 
Fine  leather  utility  kits 
Self-snuffing  ash  trays 
Plastic,  leather,  metal  flasks 
Zippo  cigarette  lighters 
Fishbowl  brandy  snifters 
Bar  accessories 


$5.00 
$4.95 
$1.00 

$1.50  to  $5.00 
$3.50 
$3.50 

$1.00  to  $5.00 


^MoHflMjjj^Ji^ 


Imported  crew-neck  sweaters 
Fine  leather  billfolds 
Irish  Linen  handkerchiefs 
Top  grain  Cowhide  Luggage 
Pajamas,  robes,  nightwear 
Leather  traveling  tie  cases 


$12.50 

$5.00  to  $7.50 

4  for  $1.50 

$24.95  to  $49.95 

$3.95  and  up 

$4.95 


Foam  rubber  coaster  sets     .• 
Plaid  bottle  guards 
Novelty  party  napkins 
Hammered  aluminum  ice  buckets 
Bourbon  Decanters 
Highball  glass  sets  (8) 
Twin  waffle  sets 
Comical  "quote"  signs 
Handsome  cocktail  shakers 
8-pc.  Plaid  Outing  kits 
Jeweled  gifts 


$1.50 

$5.50 

$1.00 

$2.95  up 

$2.25 

$2.95  to  $6.50 

$5.00 

$1.00 

$3.50 

$14.95 

1 .00  and  up 


Wool  challis  and  imported  silk  ties  $2.50  up 
Button-down  Oxford  dress  shirts  $3.95  -  $5.00 
Personalized  initial  jewelry  $2.50  and  up 

Imported  wool  arglyle  socks 
Ivy  league  sport  shirts 


$2.50  and  up  ^  p^i  po^j^i  Sachets 
$5.00  and  $5.95 


Hogg  of  Hawick  Cashmere  Sweaters 
Imported  Shetland  scarfs  (7  ft.) 
Lady  Manhattan  Shirts 
Handwoven  Shetland  Sweaters 


$25.00 
$6.95 
$3.95  -  $5.95 
$13.50 
$1.00  to  $3.95 


Stevens  -  Shepherd 


OPEN  FRIDAY  EVENINGS 


UNTIL  9 


?>•  -* 


tr    *■  *  t    «>  •  ' 


»-»•  «'*  v-»-*-«^4»V-*«-w  *-«  ««<  '<»•'.-•-'*-««!>■  1^4 


I'TB"  •'«.■•«-  »•   .  . 


iPAGE   TEN 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


TUESDAY,  DSCEMBER  n.  1956 


GM  Will  Close 

Graham  Memorial  Student  Un- 
ion has  announced  the  following 
closing  hours  for  the  holidays: 

Close*  Dec.  19  at  6  p.m. 
Opens  Jan.  2  at  1  p.m. 


And  the 
Best 

Christmas 
Cards 
Cost  a 
Nickel  at 
The  Intimate 
Bookshop 


BILL   TROTMAN 

.  .  has  ttco  roles 


7h*r0's  a  Chri$tma$-momu»g  tbril . . .  and  rt>9  itari  of  a  Uft'hng  hobby  in  a 

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Christmas  Special 

RADIANT  40''  x  40''  BEADED 

Foister's  Camera  Store 


Projection  Screen  .... 

Portable  Tripod  Model 


mmF 


Ex-Student 
Now  Acting 
In  Alaska 

An  ex-UNC  student  by  the  name 
ot  Bill  Trotraan  might  well  be  call 
ed  the  "fellow  with  two  military 
hats." 

Private  Trotman,  28,  United 
States  Army,  Alaska,  overnight  be 
came  a  Lieutenant  (j.g.)  in  the 
Navy.  In  the  Workshop  Theater  > 
production  of  "Mr.  Roberts,"  at 
Anchorage  Community  College, 
that  is. 

Bill  started  theater  work  at  an 
early  age.  He  appeared  as  a  brown 
potato  in  "Your  Garden  I*Yiend.s'" 
.vhile  a  first  grade  student  in  Win- 
.•■lon-Salem. 

He  did  high  school  plays  end 
then^meved  on  to  the  stage  here 
at  UNC.  His  first  major  part  iwas 
of  87-year^ld  Senator  Cromwell 
in  "Strange  Bedfellows,"  follow- 
ed by  "Death  of  a  Salesman''  and 

"Crucible." 

i  ■'      •  w- 

Trotman  also  toured  the  South 
with  a  stock  company  playing  in 
"Arsenic  and  Old  Lace."  He  di- 
rected "Sword  of  Gideon"  as  an 
'  outdoor  drama  at  Kings  Moun 
tain. 

After  leaving  UNC  he  went  to 
New  York  ariti  attended  the  Stella 
Adler  School  of  Drama  and  the 
American  Theater  Wing.  From 
I  New  York  he  went  to  the  Barn 
Theater  in  Augusta,  Mich.,  where 
he  played  two  seasons  of  stock. 

TO  NEW  YORK  -^     ^'     "^ 

He  returned  to  New  York  and 
auditioned  for  the  lead  in  "No 
Time  For  Sergeants."  He  won  the 
part,  but  a  few  days  later  was 
flrafted.  Asked  if  he  still  had  "no 
time  far  sergeants,"  he  replied 
"No  comment." 

Upon  looking  up  Frank  Brink, 
another  ex  UNC  student.  Bill 
found  him  in  the  proces  of  cast- 
ing for  "Mr.  Roberts."  Trotroan 
won  the  lead. 

Director  Brink  was  a  Lieutenant 
Commander  in  the  Navy  during 
the  Korean  conflict  so  he  is  well 
qualified  to  direct  this  particular 
production.  Trotman  is  continuaJly 
linding  himself  corected  in  nauti- 
cal terms. 

"I  just  can't  help  it."  Bill  says. 
"T  guess  the  Army  did  a  thorough 
u>b  in  indoctrinating  me  in  its 
ways  and  language." 


lii{l..JLIVl^J 


Duke  Singers 
Here  Sunday 


Les    Pctites    Musicale.^    presents 
the     Duke     Univ3rsity     Madrigal 
Singers  in  a  program  of  Christmas  ' 
music  Sunday  in  Graham  Memor- 
ial's main  lounge  at  8  p.m. 

The  Madrigal  group  is  compos- 
ed of  21  undergraduate  and  grad- 
uate men  and  women  of  Duke 
University  who  interest  themsclv- 
os  in  the  study  and  performance 
of  unusual  music  for  small  vocal 
ensembles. 

Particular  interest  is  centered 
around  madrigals,  chansons,  mo 
tets,  and  allied  types  of  music 
from  the  Renaissance  period  to 
the  present  day. 

Sponsored^^v  the  Duke  Univers- 
ity Department  of  Aesthetics,  Arts 
and  Music,  the  group  Ls  under 
the  direction  of  Mrs.  Eugenia  Sa- 
vi'.le. 

In  connection  with  the  Christ- 
mas theme.  Graham  Memorial 
will  b?  decorated  with  a  Christ- 
mas tree  and  other  holiday  trim 
for  the  program. 


Debaters 

In  Tourney         j 

In  Winston         \ 

Phillip     Gerdcs,     David     Evans,  i 
Clay  Simpson,  and  Harold  Stessel 
will    represent    Carolina's    Debate 
Squad  this  week  when  they  journ-  i 
ey    to    Wake    Forest    College,    to 
compote  in  the  annual  Dixie  Clas- 1 
sic    Tournament    Friday   and    Sat- 
urday. 

Gerdes  and  Evans  will  take  the  ; 
affirmative  stand   on   the  national 
topic.  Resolved:   "That  the  United  ; 
States   should    discontinue    aid    to 
foreign  countries,"  ^ 

Simpson  and   Stessel  will  speak 
for  the   negative.   Faculty  advisor 
to   the  club.   Richard   T.   Dowthit.  i 
is  accompanying   the   debaters. 

Just   recently   a   team  composed 
of  Dave   Lieberman.  Forbes  Ram- 
sey. John   Brooks,  and  Sonny  Ev-  j 
ans   won   third   place   in    the  New 
York    University,    Hall    of    Fame  j 
Tournament.      Forty  -  six      Eastern; 
schools    took    part    in    the    debate, 
making   it   QftS.  of   the   largest   in 
the  country.  ■ 


^ 


JO  JURGENSEN,   LEFT,   AND    FOSTER    FITZ-SIAAMONS 

...  as  Abbie  and  Ephraim  Cabot  in  Playmaker's  Show 

STARTING  FRIDAY: 


Playmakers  Will  Present ONeill's 
Drama  'Desire  Under  The  Elms' 

Dcsiic   i'ii(Kr  iIk-  I- Inis."  by   Kiigenc  O'.Xeill,  will  be  picscnted  by    The  Carolina  Play- 
in;ikfrs  at    ilir   Playmakers  Tbcatre.    Friday   through   Tiicsdav  at  8:'{o  p.m. 

The  (Irain.i   has  been  acclaimed  by  IJrooks    .Atkinson,    drama    critic    lor    The    Xcw    ^'o^ 
limes,  as    'the  greatest  play  ever  written  by  an   American."  5 

1  eaiurin!:»  an  exj^eiienced  and  mature  ca.st.    the    production    is    inider    the    direction    oi 
I'NC.    Diiinatic    .\n    Frolessor  Thcmias    .M.    P.uteisonx 

Porrrayin^  elderly  Ephraim   Ca  ^  =-"-- 

hot. 


the  role  originally  played  by 
Walter  Huston  in  1924,  is  Foster 
Fitz-Simnions,  UNC  Dramatic  Art 
professor,  former  profcsional  danc- 
er, novelist  and  plaj-wright. 

Piayivig  Abbie,  his  new  wife,  is 
Jo  Jiirgonscn.  a  graduate  of  Duke,  j 

former  student  of  Dance  with  Jose  »- 

Linicn,  star  of  the  Playmakers*  mu  I      "-^    ^''^'''^     ^s     Born,"     adapted 
sical  prxiuction  of  "Kiss  Me  Kate":  ^'"O"'  ^  radio  play  by  Stephen  Vin- 


Pulpit  Players 
Will  Present 
'Child  is  Born' 


in  1954. 

In  tho  role  of  Eben  Cabot.  Eph- 
raim's  .son,  is  .\1  Gordon,  graduate 
student  from  Greensboro,  who  has 
appeared  on  the  Playmakers  stage 
in  majjr  roles  in  such  plays  as 
■  Ondinc,"  "Blood  Wedding,"  and 
"A   Miu.-^ummer-Xight's   Dream  ' 

Cast  as  the  brothers  Simeon 
and  P»ter  are  Charles  Barrett, 
graduate  student  from  Hickory, 
and  Ken  Lcwry,  English  major 
from  Troy,  Ohio. 


cer.t  Benet,  will  be  the  Christmas 
production  by  Th?  Pulpit  Players 
ot  the  Baptist  Church  in  ChapeJ 
Hill,  with  two  performances.  Sui^- 
day.  Dec.  16,  and  Thursday.  Dec. 
2U,  at  8  p.m.  'n  the  sanctuary  of 
the  Baptist  Church.  The  publit 
has  been  invited  la  attend  the 
repeat  cf  last  year's  popular  per- 
formance. ..* 

The  play  is  under  the  directiofT 
of  John  W.  Parker,  chairman  of 
the  Religious  Drama  Committee," 
and  Mrs.  Louise  Lament,  director 
of  the  Lament  School  of  Crea- 
tive Dramatics. 
Featured   in   the  cast    arc:    No& 


Barrett,  an  .Air  Force  veteran, 
appeared  in  "The  Lost  Colony" 
last  summer.  Lcwry  has  spent  the 
past  two  summers  acting  in  profes-  "^^"  Cordon,  head  of  the  Nortlt 
sional  summer  stock  companies.  Carolina  Music  Program,  as  the 
Both  were  is  the  company  that  N'aiTalor;  Earl  Wynn.  chairman 
toured  three  states  in  the  Playmak-  of  UXC's  Department  ot  Radio, 
ers"  successful  production  of  "The  Television  and  Motion  Pictures. 
Rainmaker  '  last  year.  ;  as  the  Innkeeper;  Mrs.  Lamont  as 

"Desire  Under  the  Elms"  is  the  the  Innkeeper's  Wife;  Walter 
powerful  story  of  passions  of  hat-  Spearman,  professor  of  Journal- 
red  and  love  within  a  family  that  i.'^m.  as  The  Thief;  Harry  Davis, 
stems  from  desire  for  the  land.  Professor  of  Dramatic  Art,  as  Jo- 
increasing  in  violence  and  deptn  s?ph;  Peter  B.  O'Sullivan.  gradu- 
until  even  the  land  is  overshadow- ;  ate  student  in  Dramatic  Art,  as 
'^■<^-  \  the  Roman  soldier;  Mrs.  Keen  01- 

And  ii  is  a  love  story  that  be-  iver  O'Sullivan  and  Gloria.  DiCos- 
gins  in  earthy  passion,  and  rises  \  tanza  of  Chapel  Hill  as  the  Sei^ 
through  suffering  Into  true  love,      vants. 


'Torment'  To  Be  First  Film 
Of  Hillel-Y  Sponsored  Group 


CAROLINA 
Barber  Shop 

131  E.  Franklin  St. 


^J^^y 


..:  TARHEEL 
r  BdrberShop 

IS/'/j  E   Franklin  St. 


UNIVERSITY 
Berber  Shop^v 

145  E.  Franklin  St. 


VILLAGE 
Barber  Shop 

Across  From  Post  Office 


"Torment,"  the  first  in  a  series 
of  films  sponsored  by  the  YMC.A 
and  Hillel  film  committee,  will 
be  .shown  in  Carroll  Hall  Wednes- 
day at  7:30  p.m.  ' 

This  film  deals  with  the  psy- 
chological effect  of  *  a  sadistic 
schoolmaster    on    one   of   his    stu- 


This  film  will  be  shown  in  con-  * 
junction  with  a  discussion  follow-  - 
ing  the  movie  to  be  held  by  Or.  ^ 
Jay  Ostwalt,  a  visiting  professor 
from  Davidson  College. 

Dr.  0.stwalt  i^;  head  of  the  Dept.- 
of  Education  and  is  director  oL 
dents  in  the  first  throes  of  adoles-  Student  Counseling  at  Davidson.' 
cent  love.  |  He   is   at   UNC   this   \'ear  as   visit-. 

•Torment,"    described    bv    Time '  '"^  Associate   Prof,   of   Education., 
magazine  as    -one  of  the  best  pic-    F'o'"""Pi"ly   he   was  assistant  direc- 
tures    of    the    year— a    frank    and    ^"'^  °^  ^^^  Bureau  of  Te.sting  and" 
intelligent    drama    powerfully    di-    Guidance   at    Duke   University, 
rected    and    beautifuliy    played."        The  general   public,   as  well  aa"- 
won    the    Grand    Pri.\    au    Cinema    the  student  body,  has  been  invit- 
at   the  Cannes   International    Film  ]  ed  to  attend  this  free  movie  and 
Festival    and    stands   on    its   own '  also    the    discussion    led    by    Dr.; 
merit.  Ostwalt.'^ '--  -t-- 


TUESDJ 


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adapted 
■phen  Vin- 
Chnstmas 
it  Players 
in    Chai>eJ 

inces.  Suii- 
Nclay.  Dee. 
icuiary  of 
■Tc  public 
|att:'nd     ths 

>PLilar   per- 

directioiT 
^airman  of 
Committee," 
if,  director 

of    Crea- 

a  r'j :    \or- 
the    North 
am.    as    the 
chairman 
of    Radio. 
Pictures, 
Lamont   as 
Walter 
)t    Journal- 
arry    Davis. 
Art.  as  Jo- 
van,   gradu- 
tic    Art.    as 
s.  Keen  Gl- 
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as  the   Ser- 


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up 


>wn  m  eon-* 
ion  follow-''^ 
•  Id  by  Or.  ' 
professor 

of  the  Dept." 
di rector  oL 
t  Davidson.' 
?ar  as  visit-. 
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istant  direc- 
Testing  and 
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Ird    by    Dr.- 


TUESDAY,  DECE^'.BER    11.  1956 


THE  DAILY   TAR  HEEL 


PAGE   ELEVEN 


c4y  EspetiaUy  at  Christmas . . . 
e^  woman  deserves  a  crown 


miSTO   MINUTI    fHAVI 

6'/2  months  supply  of  rich  in- 
stant lather.  Packaged  in  gay 
Christmas  carton.  $t 


HIATHIR  SHAVE  LOTION 

Handsome  jug  of  refreshing 
Heather  Shave  Lotion  ...  a 
blend  of  distinctive,  masculine 
fragrances.  In  gay  holiday 
sleeve.  $1 


HEATHER  SET  —  For  after- 
shave,  after-shower  pleasure. 
Heather  Lotion  and  Men's  Co- 
logne in  Scottish  jugs.  $2 


SPICED  THREESOME 

Miniature  Scottish  jugs  of  cool, 

crisp  Spiced  Shave  Lotion,  Talc 

and  Men's  Cologne.  Gift-boxed, 

'  $1.50 


HEelexia.  I^vilDinsteixi's  G-if  t  SiDangle  Sets 


Shining  spangled  beauties  to  set  her  eyes  a-liglit . . . 
her  spirits  bright !  Helena  Rubinstein's  glowing 
Gift  Spangle  Sets  have  the  look  of  IUXU17  at  prices  sv>e:?i 
and  low.  Choose  the  lasting  Cologne  paired  with 
luscious  Silk-Velvet  Hand  Lotion  or  the  Cologne  wi  Ji 
smooth,  fragrant  Talc.  Either  way  it's  a  festive 
way  to  say  "Merry,  Merry  Christmas."  Each  set  in 
a  choice  of  romantic  White  Magnolia,  beloved 
Apple  Blossom  Time  or  heavenly  Heaven-Sent. 
Each  set  Christmas-priced  at  2.50  plus  tax. 


l-ivT 


%MfliStMSii> 


Celo9n«  Parhtmmm  in  Crown 

tettlet— Each,  a  true  echo  of 
the  matching  perfume.  Fragrances: 
Stradivari,  Wind  Song,  Beloved, 
Crown  Jewel  or  Dudiess  of  York. 
$2   for  2  oz.,S3.50  for  4  ox. 


Chriftmat  Ang*!  —  For  every 
"angel"  or*  your  list,  this  heavenly 
cologne  frogronce,  gaily  pock- 
aged  in  a  surprise  pop-out  of 
radiant,  Christmas  ornoments.  92 


Pr«s«nffotion  S*t-A  '/j  dram 
of  exciting  new  Added  Attroc- 
Hon  perfume  in  the  good  com- 
pony  of  Wind  Song  and  Added 
Attroction  Colognes  ...  in  a  swid 
of  satin.  13 


i\3G(^BTS- 


...'.f 


Gaily  decorated  tea  sets  98c  up 


Dolls  __ 98c  to  $11.9^ 

Brides,   Dolls   of   faravay    lands, 
Betsy-Wetsy,   and   others. 


Musical  toys  —  guitars,  othe- 
instruments,  musical  tops,  etr 
S9c   to   $6.00 


Musical  push  toys  69c  to  $3.5C 
Specialities  by  FTscherPrice  and 
Suzy  Goose. 


Send  some  Christ- 
mas spirit  'round 
thf  world  ...  or 
'cross  the  street 
with  cards  from 
our  festive  holi- 
day  colltction. 


'  A  complete  selection  of  individual  or  boxed  Christ- 
mas cards  by  the  American  Greeting  Card  Corporation. 
Also  a  complete  selection  of  wrapping  paper,  ribbons, 

tags,  seals,  enclosure  cards,  etc.  exquisitely  styled  by  the 

e 
American  Greeting  Card  Corporation. 


Slinkys 

Slinky  dogs,  tra 


39c  to  $2.98 
ins,  worms,  ets. 


Hundreds    of    games    for    every 
age  2Sc   to   $3  95 


MerrI*  C»lesnef-2  flasks  of 
Rose  ond  Potpourri  gaily  sere- 
naded by  Dicken's  colorful 
Caroieers.  *l 


Cologne  Lantern  —  The  fra- 
grant cheer  of  Christmas  in  a 
decorative  lantern.  3  flask  bottles 
of  Potpourri.  Hollyberry  ond  Rose 
Colognes.  >1.50 


Soft  cuddly  pluth  toys  98c  to 
$5.98.  Teddy  bears,  pandas,  dogs, 
cats,   and   many   other   animals 


Scale      model    airplanes,      cars, 
boats,  ets.  39c  to  $2.98 


This  is  only  a  small  listing  of  the  large  selection  of  ^oys  and 
games  at  Sutton's. 


Smokers 


Je^kr«l  lex  -  Golden  perfume 
purse    dispenser    with    a    2    02. 
crown  of  matching  Cologne  . 
nestled    in    a    sotin-tined    velvet 
box.    Choose     Wind     Son 
Strodivari.  $5       ■*» 


Gifts 


All  Available  At     ' 
THE  TAR  HEEL'S  GIFT  CENTER 

I 


Ronson  cigarette  lighters  3.95  to  14.50 
Also,  lighters  by  Zippo,  Ascot,  and 
other*. 


SELF-SERVICE 

I  REE  GIFT 
.      AND  MAIL 
WRAPPING 


SUTTON 


[•J*F>=- 


OPEN  TIL  10  P.  M. 


EVERY  NIGHT 


UNTIL  CHRISTMAS 


V'«»J<'»»^»<>>>»-#  <  '^  >  ■»  ^»  »-*••-♦  - 


PAGE  TWELVE 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


TUESDAY/ DECEMBER  11,  1956 


Carolina  Cavalcade   Of  Talent  Show  Will  Be  Thursday 


Pictured  above  are  several  of  the  acts  which  witi  be  vying  for 
top  honors  in  the  Carolina  Cavalcade  of  Talent,  to  be  held  in  Mem- 
otial  Hall  Thursday  at  8  p.m.  The  campus-wide  talent  contest  is 
jointly    sponsored    by   the    Graham    Memorial    Activities    Board    and 


the  YMCA  Y  Night  Committee,  and  features  a  first  place  award  of 
$25.  Ed  Crow,  on  drums,  and  Dick  Stoker,  piano,  of  the  DKE  combo 
are  shown  in  the  picture  at  left  warminq  up  for  the  event.  The  second 
picture  shows  Jerry  Farber,  who  performs  a  comedy  act  using  the 


piano  as  a  prop  and  for  unusual  music.  Herb  Shellings,  UNC  gradu- 
ate, is  pictured  second  from  right.  Shellings  will  sing  folk  ballads 
and  will  accompany  himself  on  guitar.  Bruno's  Combo  (far  right)  i* 
shewn  rehearsing  for  the  show  as  Les  Sutorius  hits  a  high  note  on 


trumpet.  Joe  Alexander  is  the  drummer,  and  Bruno  Raso  is  playing 
the  accordian.  The  fourth  member  of  the  combo,  bass  player  Wally 
Kuralt,  is  not  pictured.  v 

^  (Photos  by  Norman  Kantor) 


I     Sixteen  Acts  Will  Compete  For  Top  Prizes, 
Musicians  Expected  To  Bring  Large  Crowd 


The  Carolina  Cavalcade  of  Ta- 
knt,  'xponsored  jointly  by  the 
YM-YWCA  and  Graham  Mcniori- 


And  the 

Intimoie 

Bookshop 

Gift'V/rcps 

Books 

Free!   ^  ^ 


al  Activities  Board,  will  be  pre- 
sented at  8  p.m.  Thursday  in  Me- 
morial llajl. 

Hi-jhlights  uf  the  show,  accord- 
in:;'  t'->  program  officials,  '.vill  be 
a  battle  of  the  drums  and  a  "nui 
sical  .group"  composed  of  Len- 
nio  KosrnMuth.  Joe  Quia;;.  Pete 
Brcnnan  and  Bob  Cunninghani, 
all  U\C  varsity  basketball  play- 
ers. 

A  total  of  16  acts  will  be  com 
petirK)  for  three  cash  pri::es:  a 
$25  first  place  award,  a  $15  sec- 
ond prize,  and  a  $10  prize  to  the 
act  placing  third. 

The  show  is  being  presented 
in  an  effort  to  establish  more  of 
a  feeling  of  community  on  this 
large  campus,"  said  Miss  Eleanor 
Rig:4ins  (f  the  YWC.\,  "and  to 
gather  the  whole  student  body 
for  the  program  they  will  all  en- 


joy before  going  home  for  the 
holidays." 
THE  ACTS 

The  following  acts  have  bce:i 
chosen  to  perform  in  the  show: 
Ed  Crow  and  the  DKE  combo; 
Miss  Gjy  Anne  Tanner;  Miss  Ca- 
rol Jean  Suther,  singer;  Ronala 
Yuen,  harmonica;  Hoke  Simpson. 
eal\pso  singer;  The  Co-Heads, 
girls*  quartet;  Five  Dimensions, 
combo;  Oliver  Bloomer,  ventrilo- 
quist. 

Miss  Barbara  Prago,  singer 
Jerry  Farber.  comedy-piano  act; 
Nick  Kerns,  piano;  Bruno's  Com- 
bo: HL-rb  Shelling,  folk  singer, 
and  Jim  Bcatty,  singer. 

Dave  Davis  and  Dottie  Wood 
will  serve  as  master  and  mistress 
of  ceremonies. 

Ed  Crow  and  Norman  Gillie 
designed  and  contructcd  sets  for 
the  show. 


The  Y  Night  Chorus  will  also 
put  in  an  appeararKe  at  the  show 
The  group  is  directed  by  Miss 
Val  von  Ammon,  and  students 
interested  in  singing  have  been 
invited  to  attend  the  third  re- 
hearsal of  the  chorus  Tuesday 
at  5  p.m.  in  the  Rendezvous 
Room  of  Graham  Memorial. 

The  chorus  numbers  30  pres- 
ent. Miss  Von  Ammon  and  Bud- 
dy Strickland  are  co-ordinators  of 
the   singers. 

Tickets  for  the  talent  show 
can  be  obtained  in  the  Y  office, 
or  from  Miss  Neltie  Sanders  at 
the  Pi  Beta  Phi  house.  Miss  Dar- 
yl  Farrington  in  Alderman,  or 
from  Jim  Raugh  at  the  DKE 
house. 

The  price  of  tickets  is  50  cents 
haif  of  which  wMl  go  to  the  Y 
and  half  to  G.MAB. 


Covering  The  Campus 


You  feel  lo  new  tnd  fresh  and 
good— all  over— when  yod  pause  for 
Coca-G>la.  It's  sparkling  with 

quick  refreshment . . .  and  it's  so  pure 
aad  wholesome— naturally  friendly  to  your  figure. 

Let  it  do  things— good  things  — for  you. 

IOm.10  UND«  AUTHOilTY  Of  TMe  COCA-COIA  COMf  ANr  «T 

DURHAM  COCA-COLA  BOTTLING  CO. 


*C«lc*"  i«  a  r*gi»t«r«d  trad«-mark. 


®  1»36,  THi  COCA-COU  COMPANY 


PHILOLOGICAL   CLUB 

The  Philological  Club  will  mec; 
today  at  7:30  p.m.  in  the  Facui'y 
Lounge  of  Morehead  Planetarium 
I*rofessor  Lawrence  .\.  Sharne  of 
the  Romance  Language  Dept.  wi'l 
present  a  paper  entitled  "Soni',' 
ilighlights  of  Portuguese  Litera- 
ture." All  faculty  mcMnbcrs  and 
graduate  students  interested  ha\e 
lieen  invited  to  attend. 

The  date  was  changed  from  tiic 
usual  first  Tuesday  in  order  to  iiv 
m\  conflict  with  the  Division  of 
Ilumanilies  Lecture,  held  last  week. 
WUNC 

l\.<iays  schedule  for  WUNC,  th- 
Cniversilys  non-eommercial  F.VI 
station,  91.5  megacycles.  12,.)C3 
watt-power: 

7:0a— Spirit  of  Christmas. 

7:15 — Over  the  Back  Fence. 

7:30— Vistas  of  Israel. 

7:45-^Variations  of  the  Theatre 
Theme. 
^8:00 — Christmas  Is  Coming. 

8:30 — American  Music    Festival. 

9:30 — AdventiU'es  in  Song. 
10:00— News. 
10:15 — Evening    Masterwork. 

SCIENTIFIC   SOCIETY 

The  Elisha  Mitchell  Scientific  So- 
;iely  will  meet  at  7:30  p.m.  in  20o 
Phillips  Hall.  Two  papers,  "'Iden- 
iification  of  Kidney  Stones  with  ;. 
Petrographis  Microscope,''  and  "Re- 
lations of  Factor  Analysis  to  toe 
Newer  Multivariate  Statistical  Me- 
thods," will  be  presented  by  Virgii 
I.  Mann,  Geology  Dept..  and  Har 
old  Hotelling,  Statistics  Dept.,  re- 
spectively. 

FACULTY    CLUB 

The  Faculty  Club  will  meet  to- 
day at  1  p.m.  at  the  Carolina  Inn " 


Speaker  will  be  Professor  Almon- 
te   Howell    whose    subject   will    oe 
"Th-?   Experiences   of   a   Professor 
in  South   Korea." 
GOLF  TEST 

Women's  individual  tests  in  golf 
will  be  given  today  and  Thursday  in 
liie  gym  at  4  p.m. 
CHEM  CLUB 

The  Chemistn  Club  will  mcvi 
today  al  7:30  p  m.  in  Venable  Hall, 
room  207.  Haivey  Daniel]  will  de- 
liver a  talk  entitled  "Grecian  Sti- 
?ntific  Thought." 

Di  Will  Air 
Pearsall  Plan 

The  repeal  of  the  Pearsall  Plan 

will   be  the  subject  of  the  Dialec 

tic  Senate's  Tuesday  night  debate 

to  bL'  held   at  8  p.m.   on   the  top 

j  floor  of  Old  West. 

j      The  bill   is  prefaced  with   these 
I  statements:    "It    is    the    inherent 
;  right    of    every    American    citizen 
I  to  have  all   the  opportunities  and 
privileges  guaranteed   him   by  the : 
:  Constitution  of  the  United  States:' 
any  discrimination  because  of  col- 
i  or,    race   or  creed    denies   the   in- 
j  dividual  these  inherent  rights  and 
I  privileges;    segregation    in   public 
I  schools  because   of  color,  race  or 
1  creed   is   a   discrimination   against 
j  American    citizens;     the     Pearsall 
1  Plan    pasatd    by   the    General    As- 
sembly in  the  General  Election  of 
September    8,    1956,    is    a    direct 
breach  of  the  inherent  rights  pro- 
pounded   in    the    Constitution    of 
'he  United  Stateai" 


)( 


^. 


fiMStmas 


y^ 


stnlfi 


CARDS  AND  GIFTS 

For 

EVERYONi 


iA-;^ 


r4      ^ 


SHOP  EARLY 

AND 

AVOID  THE 

LAST  MINUTE  RUSH 


STATIONERY 


OFFICE  SUPPLIES 


UNC  ANIMALS 


9    PENNANTS 


PEN  a.  PENCIL  SETS 


THE  UNUSUAL  AND  THE  EXCITING 

LEDBETTER-PICKARD 


ULL^.L 


!ff!S9B5B"!f8R! 


mm 


S.V.C.   Llbi*ary 
Serials     Dept. 
Chapel    Hill.    N.    C. 
8-31-49 


WEATHER 

Mostly     cloudy     with     scattored 
«how»rs.   ExpMtod  high  S5-6S. 


arhe 


iCl;  TM 


EYES 


Somobody's  ar*  closod.  S««  l«*d 
OditoritI,  pas*  2. 


VOL    LVII,  NO.  67 


Complete  OP)  Wire  ^ervtcc 


CHAPEL   HILL,  NORTH   CAROLINA,  WEDNESDAY,   DECEMBER   12,  1956 


Offices   in   Graham  ■  Memorial 


FOUR  PAGES  THIS  ISSUE 


SEOUL  TOUR  BY  PROF: 


Hodges'  Inauguration  Program 


Korean  Students  Seek     ^^  Begin  in  Early  February 

Social  Pattern  Of  US 


Korean  students  are  '"looking 
to  America"  for  a  pattern  which 
will  lighten  the"  burden  of  pover- 
ty and  establish  a  new  society  in 
their  war-torn  land. 

"They  envy,  more  tlian  any 
tiling  else,  the  full  and  varied  op- 
portunities which  American  stu- 
dents enjoy."  Dr.  A.  C.  Howell. 
Professor  of  English  said. 

^  Dr.  and  Mrs.  Howell  returned 
to  the  United  States  late  this  sum- 
mer after  spending  a  year  as  visit- 
ii\;i  lecturers  at  Seoul  National 
University,  Seoul.  Korea. 

Addressing  a  Faculty  Club 
luncheon  yesterday  at  the  Carolina 
Inn  here.  Dr.  Howell  had  as  his 
topic.  •'Tlie  Experiences  of  a  Pro- 
fessor in  South  Korea." 

He  briefly  recalled  before  th-e 
UNC  group  his  "re-orientation"  in 
an  "entirely  strange  environment 
and  educational  system." 

Among  educational  customs  dif- 
ferent from  those  in  the  United 
States.  Dr.  Howell  »aid,  is  Che  Ko- 
rean feature  of  being  compelled 
to  spend  on^^'s  entire  undergrad- 
uate career  in  the  same  univer- 
sity. 

"Transfer  from  one  university 
to  another  is  simply  impossible, 
and  this  is  true  even  between  col- 
leges  of   the   same   university." 

He  said  that  although  he  met 
"some  fine  scholars."  he  believes 
the  main  interests  of  Korean  pro- 
fessors "are  in  scholarship  and 
publication  —  not  teaching." 

According  to  the  JJnglish  pro- 
fessor, gaining  admission  to  a  Ko-J 
rean  University'  -  is  ctifQc^.  al-j 
though  once  aatnitted',  a  student 1 
finds  it  ."easy  ^o  stay  apd  to  ob- 1 
^  taJB^  |k  »d«^ec."  kttt«d»^.  r^ula- ! 
tions.*  too,   are   lax.  , 

"One  reason  for  this  (lack  of 
attention  to  classroom  activities), 
said  Dr.  Howell,  "was  that  all  the 
classrooms  were  unh«ated.  Rather 
than  suffer  the  cold,  both  pro- 
fessors and  students  went  home." 

Dr.  Howell  said  that  course 
examinations  "are  seldom  search- 
ing." His  objective-type  examina- 
tions were  said  by  the  students 
to  be  "the  hardest  they  had  ever 
had." 

About  the  Korean  university 
system,  he  assorted  it  "shows  a 
loose  combination  of  American 
and  German  influencea,  supwr-im- 
posed  uix>n  the  basic  Chinese  ed- 
ucational pattern  vhlch  has  ex- 
tended over  thousands  of  years." 

•'Members  of  the  younger  gen- 
oration  are '  eager    to    erai^; 

the  marks  of  war.  to  lighten  the 
burden  of  poverty  which  ^encony 
passes  them,  and  to  make' a  ne#' 
Korea  in  which  the  solid  virtues 
and  talents  of  her  people  will  ap- 
pear in  their  true  light. 

"Students    are    id«rt    to    thesie 


things."  he  added;  "and  they  look 
to  America  to  furnish  them  a  pat- 
tern." 


Officials 

Discussing 

Retirement 


RALEIGH— < A?)— Two  full  days 
ol  ceremony  and  social  events 
will  mark  the  inauguration  of  Gov. 
Hodges  next  February  for  a  four- 
year  term  as  chief  executive  of 
North  Carolina. 

State  Sen.  James  M.  Poyner  of 
Wake,  general  chairman  of  the 
Governor's  inaugural  committee, 
said  Tuesday  the  .naugural  pro- 
gram will  begin  Wednesday.  Feb. 
6.  with  the  convening  of  the  1957 
legislature. 

It  will  continue  through  the  fol- 
lowing day.  when  the  inaugural 
itself  will  take  piace.  .\n  open 
house  and  reception  for  the  pub- 
lic  at   the   executive    mansion    on 


Officials  of  cities,  counties  and 
other  instrumentalites  of  govern- 
ment from  all  over  the  st'ate  will 
gather  at  the  Institute  of  Govern- 
ment Thursday  for  a  conference 
on  Local  Governmental  Employees 
Retirement. 

Nathan  H.  Yelton.  director  of 
the  North  Carolina  Public  Em- 
ployees Social  Security  Agency, 
has  scheduled  this  general  meet- 
ing so  that  officials  may  dicuss 
the  changes  in  the  Social  Security 
Act  and  to  answer  questions  witih 
respect  to  covering  public  employ- 
ees under  Social  Security. 

Social  Security  coverage  for  law 
enforcement  officers  and  firemen 
will  be  a  major  topic  for  discuss- 
ion. The  desirability  of  bringing 
employees  now  covered  by  Social 
Security  alone  under  the  N.  C. 
Local  Governmental  Employees" 
Retirement  System  will  be  dis- 
cussed. 

The  Thursday  morning  session 
will  be  taken  up  with  general  dis- 
cussions. .Mrs.  Davetta  L.  Steed, 
executive  secretary  of  the  N.  C. 
League  of  Municipalities,  will  | 
speajk  on  "Local  Governmental 
Employees  Retirement  System."  j 
Yelton  will  discuss  "Local  Reltre- 
mcnt  and   Social  Security."  j 

Henry    Bridges.     State     Auditor ' 
and   chairman   of   the     Board     of  1 
I  Commissioners    of    the    Law    En-  i 
j  forcement    Officers'    Benefit    and ; 
j  Retirement  Fund,  will  have  as  his 
I  subject,    "Law    Enforcement    Oi-  \ 
ficers  and  Social  Security."  .M.  D.  j 
Dewberry,    regional    represetative ! 
of  the  Bureau  of  Old-Age  and  Sur-  j 
vivors     Insurance,      will      discuss 
"Changes    in    the    Social    Security 
Act  Affecting  Public  Employees." 


Bruno's  Combo 
Plays  At  Dancr 

Bruno's  Combo  will  play  for  the 
C  lu-istmas  dance  to  \>e  held  Satur- 
day ni:;;ht  in  the  Rendezvous  Room 
from  »-ll. 

Sponsored  'oy  Graham  Memorial 
.\ctivities  Board,  the  dance  i.%  pro- 
vided for  all  UNC  students  and 
fheir  guests.  The  Rendez\ous  Room 
uiy  be  decorate^ Jn  a  h^lidtiy  theme 
complete'  with  Chrjptma>s-  tree,  .and 
r«fi'eshmentl   \v1U  *be'  served. 

Chuck  Flack,  chairman  of  the  GM 
Dance  Committee,  has  stated  that 
further  plans  for  the  dance  will  be 
announced  later. 


Awards  For 
Grads  Are 
Terminated 

.\wardin2  of  Morehcac!  Scliolar- 
.-hips  for  graduate  studies  at  th'j 
University  of  North  Carolina  has 
been   terminated    "until    further   no- 

tKC." 

But  the  eight  students  now  in 
3iaduate  school  under  tiie  .Moi-ehead 
■irograni  will  retain  tlieir  scholar- 
ships ■funumh  the  full  term  of  tiic 
original  grant.  '  , 

This  announcement  was  made  re- 
cently by  Moreliead  Foundation  Di- 
rector R.  .\.  Fetzer  as  the  Dec.  15 
deadline  for  applications  for  un- 
dergraduate studies  under  the  .More-  j 
head   allotments   ne.iied. 

Fet;:er  said  future  graat.s  for  grad- 
uate work  were  tenii>oranly  termin- 
i-ted "tK'cau.se  tile  trustees  ai-e  con- 
centrating at  the  present  on  the 
undergraduate  awards." 

He  made  tlt-ar.  iiowever.  that  tlio 
oight  graduate  students  now  study- 
:n;^  under  .Moreliead  Scholarships 
Mill  continue  to  receive  $1,500  an 
Viially  'tlirousn  the  tull  term  of  tlie ' 
original  grant." 

.Vieinn>n.le.     Fetzer     urged     high' 
»«'hool    and    junior    college    students 
; ^commended    for    1957,^   grants   to; 
ha\  e  their  appLicatioius   in   by   Dec.  j 
15.  Some  have  already  been  riteiv- 
eci. 

The  number  to  l>e  .selected  lo! 
i.ext  year's  undergraduate  program  , 
will  be  determined  "by  the  quality 
of  the  candidates  and  the  amount 
of  money  available.  '  Fetzer  .said. 
The  grants  for  undergraduate  stu- 
dies are  worth  $1,250  annually. 

Last  ,\ear  23  freshman  and  two 
junior  college  scholarships  were 
awarded.  Eighty  scholarships  are 
iH>w  in  force  on  the  UN'C  campus 
-  72  undergraduate  and  eight  grad- 
uate. 

"The  object   and   aim   of  the   pro- 
.,7am."    said    the    Foundation    direc- 
tor,  "is  to  attract  to  the  Uni\ersil.\  ! 
ol    -North    Caiolina    oul.standing   stu- 
dants,    who.    in    turn,    will    tend    to ' 
elevate    the    standard    of    the    insti-  ; 
tulion's  student   body.  ! 

We  fc-el   'hat   this  goal   is  attain 
(■'ble,"  he  concluded. 


Thursday  evening  will  be  the  final 
event. 

In  the  state's  last  inaugural  four 
years  ago.  all  t'he  activities  were 
crammed  into  one.  day.  Two  days 
later  Gov.  ITmstcad  suffered  a 
heart  attack.  He  died  in  office,  to 
be    succeeded    by    Hodges. 

Poyner  said  "Every  effort  will 
be  made  by  t'he  Governor's  in- 
.lugural  committee  to  plan  an  iin 
pressive.  dignified  inauguration 
befitting  our  great  governor  .  . 
This  is  an  outstanding  event  in 
the  life  of  our  state,  and  we  intend 
lo   celebrate    it    properly." 

On  the  day  of  the  inauguration 
Gov.  Hodges  and  his  inaugural 
party  will  leave  the  Governor's 
mansion  at  11  a.m.  and  go  to  the 
Raleigh  Memorial  .Auditorium, 
where  a  joint  .session  of  the  legis- 
lature will  be  h:^ld.'  There  the  Gov- 
ern;:r.  Barnhardt  and  members  of 
the  Council  of  State  will  be  ad- 
ministered  their  oaths  of  office. 

Hodges'  inaugural  address  will 
complete  the  proceedings  at  the 
auditorium,  .\fter  the  joint  session 
has  been  dissolved,  a  bis  parade 
and  review  will  be  held  on  Fayette- 
ville  St.  Following  this,  there  will 
be  a  luncheon  at  the  mansion  for 
members  of  the  Governor's  inaug- 
ural  party. 


nev5 

m 

brief 


Nursery  To 


GENERAl  C<kl|iig  t^iWI 


an 
It 


FROM  RADIO  DISPATCHES 


Open  Door  Faculty  Clarifies 

This  Week  K^^  Rw©  Change 


V:ENN.\— .A.  clash  near  Bud  bl- 
uest was  reported  to  have  t  ikei; 
place  between  Soviet  and  n.itioit- 
alist  troops.  The  Soviets  withdrfw 
Irom  the  battle  leaving  21  dead  a; 
the  streets.  A  general  stride  in  director 
Budape.>Jl  was  all  but  compl-te. 
North  of  the  city  freedom  fign'- 
ers  cunlinued  to  fight  the  Rus.si:.n 
tanks. 


Di 


STOCKHOL.M.  Sweden— The  So- 
viet ambassador  lo  Sweden  v.as 
lorced  to  ask  Moscow  not  to  return 


A    new    premature    nnrserv   will!      S»"<*'^"'^    ^^'^i"^    "P^*'"    college :  Student    Class    Attendance,    reads. 
■Ao   inU)   operation   at   North   Caro-  1  ^'""'•^es  must  maintain  a  "C"  aver-    m    part: 

lina  Memorial  Hospital  this  week.  Us^'    »h'^   ^""^'^'^   "'   ^^'y  ^'^   »"        "Regular   cla.^s   attendance    is    a 

according  to  an  announcement  bv  I  ^e    allowed    more    than    three    un-    .student   obligation,   and   a   student 

Rebert    R.    Cadmus,    hospital '  excused  cuts  per  class  during  the  j  is    responsible    for   the    work,    m- 

spring    semester.  ,  eluding  test.s  and  written  work,  of 

This  is  in   accordance   vith^  the  ,  all  class   meetings, 
new    class    attendance    regulation       "All  students  enrolled  in  courses 
adopted    by    the    Faculty    Council    numbered  under  30  and  in  courses 

I  ILsted  a.s  Genei  .!l  College  electives 
siiall  be  governed  bv  the  following 


The  new  infant  care  center  will 
provide   service   not   only    for  pre- 
mature infants  but  al.so  for  other  I  jyj,j  pri^jav 
acutely    ill    new-born    babies    that 
require   special   attention. 


This    facility    is    beig    developed 
as   a   new   pi0!.;rain   under  the   di- 
rection   ( f   Dr.    E.    C.    Curnen   .Ir.. 
him  to  Stockholm.  Newspapers   in    head  of  the  Department  of  Pedia-  ;  per    semester 

tries  of  the  UNC  School  of  Medi- 
cine and  chief  of  the  Pediatric 
Service  of  North  Carolina  Memor- 
ial Hospital. 


Students    enrolled      in      classes  .  .       , 

w    ^j       ^-.    on    »^  :„  ^^,,^^^c    attendance    requirement    mi    these 
numbered  under  30  and  m  courses  ^ 

listed     as    General    College    elec- ,  <*o"'''^s: 

;n   u       11.^.^^   o  «»...-i.«..nt        "A     student     whose     une.xcused 
fives  will  be  allowed  a  maximum  ,    ,  .         , 

.1  '  ^  A      ...^    „^..    r.ij.;-    absences  equal  the  number  of  reg- 

three    luiexcused    cuts    per    class  ^ 


'itocKhoIni 
bassador. 


died   him  the  spy 


WASHINGTON  -  A  gentlen.ens 
war  was  on  concerning  the  d'-vc! 
ipuunt  of  atomic  power.  (.  Iia-r 
man  of  the  .Atomic  Energy  Com 
mi.ssion  .\dmiral  Lewis  Sl'au"- ■ 
called  for  a  prudent  and  cons'.ruc 
live  program  for  power  reactors 
with  a  deadline  five  and  one-h.ill 
years  trcm  now.  .At  the  same  time. 


Mi.ss  .M.irtha   Russell  will  be  the 
head    nurse    of    the   unit.    Slie    is  a  I 
n;itivc  of  .Albermarle  and  received  ] 
special     training    at     Johns    Hop- 1 
kins  Hospital  in  the  field  of  spec- 
ial   care    f.-r   premature    infants. 


It  students  don't  majiniain  a 
"C"  average  •  for  courses  under- 
taken during  the  preceding  se- 
mester, they  will  be  .subject  to 
the   old   three-cut   rule. 


The  new  regulation,  adopted  in  • 
the  form  of  a  report  from  Dr. ' 
Hugh     Holmans     Committee     on 


The    nursery    will    accommodate 
1.5    infants.    .About    nine    per   cent 


Clinton  .Anderson,  chairman  of  ;lie    of   all   infants  born   in   North   Car- 


Duke  Receives 
Endowment 

The  Duke  Endowment  surprised 
Duke  University  with  gifts  total- 
ing S2.4  millin  tday  as  a  climax 
to  the  University's  32nd  annual 
Founder's  Day   program. 

The  money,  appropriated  in  twj^ 
separate  actions  b\  the  Duke  En 
dowmcnt  Board  of  Trustees,  in- 
cludes .S730.000  t.>  be  used  lo  es-  : 
tablisli  graduate  fellowships  and  | 
another  S1.H50.000  "for  certain; 
building  purposes  and  for  endowed  I 
suppcrt    of   the   university." 

The  announcements  were  made 
by  Duke  University  President 
Hollis  Edens  as  the  closing  feat- 
ure of  a  special  ceremony  com- 
memorating the  10th  anniversary 
of  the  birth  of  James  B.  Duke,  the 
universitys  founder  and  chief 
benefactor. 

Am>  ng  those  present  for  the 
occasion  were  a  number  of  Duke 
family  members,  including  Miss 
Doris  Duke,  daughter  of  the  late 
James  B.  Duke.  Sh:'  arrived  here 
yesterday  for  the  special  two  day 
centennial  event. 

.Members  of  the  Duke  Endow- 
ment Board  of  Trustees  met  on 
the  campus  yesterday  but  did  not 
announce  their  appropriations  to 
the  univcrsitv  until  this,  afternoon. 


joint  atomic  energy  committee  of 
Con  .;res.-;  demanded  heavy  goveru- 
menl  .^uhsinies  now.  Anderson 
called  for  full  speed  ahead  now 
in  order  to  put  the  U.  S.  ahead  ol 
all   rival   nations. 


olina  are  classified  as  premature. 
A  baby  weighing  five  and  a  half 
pounds  or  !e.«s  than  2..500  grams 
is   considered    as   nreniature. 


for  urn 
To  feafure 


The  new  infant  care  center  was 

=;     «:     *  !  designated    as   a      Stat-    .Approved 

VANCOUVER.    B.    C— An    arm  \  Premature    Center    bv    Dr.    A.    H. 

ada   of  f>A  planes  was   ordered    to '  Elliot,    director    of    the    personal 

search    for    a     missing    Trans-Ca- 1  health  division,  of  the  North  Car- 

nadian   Airiines    plane    missing    u\  \  olina   Stale  Board  of  Health.  The 

State  Board  is  spon.soring  three  of 
the  beds  in  the  nursery. 

There  are  seven  centers  for  care 
of   premature    infants     in     North 
lian    underground    informed    allied    Carolina.  These  are  located  at  Ra-  . 

military   authorities   that   a   voun-  leight.    Wilmington.     Win.ston-Sal- ]  «P'^n*^d.    .»»    townspeople    «s    well 
Bi'itish    lieut«'nanl    was    kidn;!ppel  '  i  rn.    Charlotte.    .As!u'\ille    and    two 
at   pinpoint   and   later  killed.  !  at    Ourhani. 


i  ularly  scheduled  class  meetings 
'  (exclusive  of  laboratn-ry  meetings) 
!  in  the  course  in  a  normal  week 
shall  automatically  be  on  attend- 
ance probation.  .An  additional  un- 
e.Kcused  ab.sence ....  shall  drop 
the  student  from  the  course  with 
a    '^rade    of    "'F." 

"Regulation  of  attendance  in  up- 
per colleiie  cour.sos  and  in  courses 
in  undergraduate  profajsionai 
schools  sliall  be  the  responsibili- 
ty of  the  instructor  who  has  the 
authority  to  determine  what  ab- 
sences are   allowable. 

•'Students  in  the  upper  colleges 
or  in  the  la.st  two  years  in  pro- 
tes.sional  schools  whose  average  on 
all  courses  undertaken  in  the  pre- 
cedin;i  semester  was  not  up  to 
"C"  grade  shall  he  subject  to  reg- 
ulations governing  freshman  and 
sophomore  courses. 

"Students  who  receive  Honor 
Roll,   academic   standing     in     the 


Canada.    Bad    weather    caused    the 
search  to  be  cancelled. 

PORT  S.\ID.   fegypt  -The   E.c..  ; 


■Torment",  a  ^ps.vchelogical  sus 
pense  thriller  dealing  with  con 
fiused    feelings      of      adoVescente. 

particularly  in  the  Stqdein-Teach-  previous  semester  have   the   pri\i- 

er   relationship.'    the      first      film  ipg^  ^^  optional   attendance  of  up 

,,ponsored     by    tiie    YMC.\.  -  Hillel  to  the   limit   of  2.5 '"c    of  the  total 

Forum  Series.  wi\l  be  held  tonight  piggj,   meetings."  .  '    ' 

at  7:30  p.m.  tn  CaiToll  Hall.  j  . .    ^;:\ 

The   movie,   which   i.s   tree   and 


-r  v- 


Baubles    Brighten    Black    Dresses 
For    Flashy    Conformist    Fashion 


By  f»EG  HUM^NRiY 

It's  that  same  old  word  again 
.  .  .  conformity. 

Many  words  have  been  flung 
about  the  editorial  page  dealing 
wita  this  subject  and  the  dangers 
of  the  growing  trend.  Mass  pro- 
duction has,  of  course,  made  its 
contribution,  but  there  arc  still  a 
few  little  tricks  left  if  feminine 
wiles  will  only  grasp  at  them. 

ADD  FLAVOR 

Take  the  case  of  the  plain  black 
dress  of  which  every  coed  is  ru- 


IN  THE  INFIRMARY 

Students  in  the  lAllrmsry  yes- 
terday included: 

Misses  Effie  BrMfes,  Mary 
Burywyn,  Eva  McClafcHey,  and 
Francis  Dobroweltfci,  Marior. 
Bell,  Charles  •ray,  Roliert  Ham 
•d.  Earl  Oslesty,  Q«(in*ll  Adams. 
Wailia  Shook,  NaroM  Fowler, 
James  Thomi»son,  Malcolm  Mc- 
Laan,  Louis  Cody,  CmM  Nebille, 
and  Frederick  Hirsch. 


1  mored  to  have  at  least  one.  There 
'  are  numerous  devious  methods  lo 
I  permeate  this  classic  with  the  fla- 
vor of  the  individual  perscnaliiy 
;  of  its  owner.  .    '  '   *     . 

The  use  of  color  "Is  one  way.  Be- 
jewelled pumps  perhaps  in  the 
,  rich  new  color  maple  sugar  or  red 
^  pumps  with  gold  buckles  may  be 
I  substituted  for  basic  black  pumps 
Then  pick  up  this  color  in  your 
i  choice  of  jewelry,  scarves,  hand- 
!  bags  or  whatever.  As  for  hand 
I  bags,  deep  slim  ones  produce  a 
!  dramatic  effect  for  tall  coeds. 
j  FUR  AND  COLOR 

I     The  addition  of  fur  touches  adds 
j  richness    and    beauty.    And    glove.-; 
:  in  any  color,  but  preferably  picK- 
j  ing  up  another  color  in  yuur  en 
semble,  will  tell  your  public  that 
you    are   aware   of   the   spice   and 
excitement   of   color    and    have    a 
flair  of  originality.  Turquoise  and 
red   make  jaunty  accents   for   the 
dark  ensemble  and  men  are  noted 
for  their  fondness  of  blue  in  au« 
shade. 

If  you  arc  one  of  those  who  dole 
on    biilliant    colors    in   quantity,   a 


]  striking  effect  can  be  produced  by 
I  wearing  shoes  and  gloves  maich 
j  ing  your  dress  and  then  ad-iin- 
one  dazzling  pin  or  a  pair  of  e.voti  ■ 
noticeable  earrings.  Or  perhaps 
the  one  extra  spark  may  come  in 
the  form  of  stark  white  or  ol. 
white  gloves  .Ml  black  and  white 
is  known  'o  produce  a  dramatic 
effect. 

PAISLEY  PRINTS 
Cumberbunds  of  paisley  or  other 
minute  prints  are  popular  and 
often  provide  just  that  needed 
.•>park  to  an  other  wise  drab  en 
semole.  The  print  may  be  picke.1 
up  in  a  matching  head  band. 
Bracelets  worn  above  the  elbow 
a  perky  flower, .  ropes  and  ropes 
of  the  new  stark  white  pearls,  or 
■,wo  large  gold  slave  bracelets  dry 
them  with  a  gold  evening  cash 
meio)  may  also  bv  worn  to  give  a 
costume  vitality. 

Or  indulge  in  the  fun  of  e.xpen 
menting  by  mixing  fabrics  an  I 
textures  such  as  the  saucy  berul 
fled  silk  shirt  with  a  blanket  plaid 
wool  skirt  or  knitted  tops  wilh 
flowing  chiffon  skirts. 


Cavalcade  Of  Talent 
Is  Tomorrow  Night  At  8 

The  Carolina  Cavalcade  of 
Talent  will  be  presented  tomor- 
row night  at  8  in  Memorial  Hall. 
Sponsored  jointly  by  the  YM 
YWCA  and  Graham  Memorial 
Artivities  Board,  the  show  will 
include  a  total  of  sixteen  acts. 

Christmas  Tree 
Is  Placed 
In  Lenoir  Hall 

Gaily  decorated  Christmas  trees 
are  bej^jinning  to  become  a  com 
monplace  sight  in  campus  build- 
ing.s.    . 

With  a  large  cedar  tree  in  tht 
lounge  of  Graham  .Memorial,  a  lo 
loot  tree  has  now  been  erected 
m  the  main  dining  room  of  Le- 
noir Hall,  and  the  door  frames 
have  been  festooned  with  pine 
wreaths  and  pine  cone  string.-;. 

George  Bullock  stated  he  set  up 
the  tree  two  days  ago  and  deeoral 
ed  It  with  the  help  of  the  ca.-<hicrs 

To  help  infuse  a  little  added 
spirit  into  the  pine-filled  air,  Le- 
noir Hall  officials  have  recenlJ: 
begun  to  play  Christmas  reeor  I: 
over  the  loudspeakers  for  the  en- 
joyment of  diners. 


a.s  studeiit.s.  is  a  Xihii  dealing  with 
[  <*e  |»».v'dto*Ofie«l  elt«K;<  of  a  sad- 
istic schoolmaster  ou  one  of  his  ■ 
students  in  the  first  throes  of 
adolescent  love,  v^ill  be  shown  in 
conjunction  with  dj.scu.ssipu  foF-^ 
lowing    the    movie    to    be    led    by 


Jolly  Old  i\fT 
OMAB's  Guest 


Center  from  6-8. 


Planetarium  Face  Lifting 


.Santa  Clause  comes  to  visit   to- 
night   when   CrM.\B   gives   a   party 

,.  foi-  th?  children  of  UNC  .students 

Or.  JayOswall.ans,tingprotessor,^j^  ^,^^    ^.^^^^^.    -..ll^^^   ,j^^.   ^^^^ 

I  Irom    Davidson    Colleg*. 

Dr.   Oswalt   is  head   of   the   De- 

i  partment  of  Eu^cation  and  Direct-;      .\1|    children    of    the    University 

or  .  Student    Council    ^\    Davidson    have    been    invited    to    the    party. 

College.    He    is  'here    this   year  as    which  has  become  an  annual  feat- 

a    visiting    .Associate    Professor   of    ure  of  the  holiday  season. 
I  Kducation.  Fornierly  he  was  as.sisl-  \       V.  ntriloquist     Oliver     V'omraer 

ant  director  of  the  Bureau  of  Test-'  an<l     hi.s    dummy.     •Jimmy."   will 

I  ini2  and  Guidance  at  Duke.  j  present    a    program    for    the    chil- 

The  stor>\  a.<  reviewed  by  John    dren.   Christmas  stockings  will   be 

McCarlen    in    the    "Xew    Yorker",    given  to  each  child  by  Santa  Cl-aus. 

deals  with  a  boy  equally  contused        Riefreshments    will    be    .«ervcd. 

by  Latin  and  Love,  a  girl  who  has!  and    a    holiday    decoration    theme 

explored    the    possibilities    of   sex,  will    be   carried   out. 
I  with  precocious  haste,  and  a  high        Lee    .Ann    Curtis,    chairman    of 

.school    teacher   afflicted     with      a    the  GM.AB  Receptions  Committee. 

mental  tic  that  provokes  ihim  into    is   in   charse    of   all    arrangements 
;  hating    everyone..  1  for  the   party. 


Hot  lime  has  been  applied  to  the  columns  of  the  Morehead 
Planetarium  and  covered  with  cloth  in  an  effort  to  remove  the  scars 
of  last  month's  vandalism.  The  process  will  be  repeated  severai 
times. 


Here's   University's 
Examination  Schedule 

.According  to  the  Central  Office  ol  Records,  the  time  of  an  ex 
amination  may  not  be  changed  alter  it  has  been  fixed  in  the  schedule 

No  student  may  be  excused  from  a  scheduled  examination  except 
by  the  University  Infirmary,  in  case  of  illness;  or  b\  his  General  Co' 
lege  Faculty  Adviser  or  by  his  Dean,  in  case  of  any  other  emerj;ency 
compelling  his  ahsence. 


AFROTC  Cadets  To  Fly 
To  FIbrtda  ror  Tour 


All  ^French.     German,   and'  Spanish   courses   numbered 

1.2.3.3X.  anc;  4.    Pharm.  Ec.  34,    B.\  177        .Mon..  Jan.  21.  8:30  i.m 
XV   11:00  a.m.  Cla.s.ses  on  TI  HS  Mon..  Jan.  21.  2:00  p.m 

All   10:00  a.m.  Cla.sses  on  TTHS       .  _ ..     Tues.,  Jan.  22.  8:30  a.m 

All   11:0j  am    Classes  on  MWF  Tues..  Jan.  22.  2:00  p.m 

All  3:00  p.m.  Clas.ses,     Chcni    11,     BA  71  &  72.  --Chcm.  43. 

and  all  classes  not  otlicrwise  provided  lor  in  ' 

the  schedule  Wed..  Jan.  23.  8:30  a.m 

All  8:00  a.m.  Classes  en  TTHS  Wed..  Jan.  23.  2:00  p.m 

AH  2:00  p.m.  Cla.sses  lu   MWF.  -Pharm.   15. 

B.A    130  .     Thur..  Jan.   24.  8:30   am 

.M'   12:00  Noon  Cla.sses  on  MWF  Thur.,  Jan.  24.  2:00  p.m 

All  2:00   p  m.   Classes  on   TTHS,    -Pharm.   10. 

•Econ.  31.  32.  61.  &  70 
All  12:00  Noon  Classes  on  TTHS  and 

all  Nav.  Sci. 
All   1:00  p.m.  Classes  on  MWF.  *Pol  Sci.  41 

■  Kcon.  81 

•Ml  9:00  a.m.  Classes  on  MWF _ 

.All  9:00  am    Cla.s.ses  on  TTHS       -_ 

All  8:00  a.m.  Classes  on  MAVF  .._^_ 

All   10:00  am    Cla:i.ses  on  .MWF 


A  coniingent  of  30  iwr  force  ca  !  air  cad«ts  will  return  to  USC  on 
dels   v^ill    fly   to   Florida  ove'.-   ihe    Sunday  afternoon, 
weekenxl     of    JDec.    J4-16     on     an!      Col.    Franklin    Swann.    Prof,    or 
.AJrp,OTC  field  trip..  .A.ir  Siionce.  stated  that  the  cadets 

Leaving  at  12  p.m.  Fti«i«y  "iron  i  will    tour    Palm    Beach    .Air   Force 
the    fUlcigh-DUrhani    airpqrl,    the  ^  Base  and   it^   facilities   and   opera- 

■        —  — — — ^— -    ---.— ^^ ^ — I  lion    activities.    The    cadets'    trip 

will  culminate  in  a  briefing  ny 
the  .Air  Phot(»graphic  and  Charti.ig 
Group  and  in  rides  on  two  USAF 
transiK>rt  planes. 

Col..  Swann  stated  that  the  Oi - 
ject  of  the  trip  will  Ix-  ""to  orient 
the  cadets  to  an  air  force  base 
and  to  provide  motivation  for  an 
air  lorce  career." 

Tlie  cadets  makin'.:  the  flight. 
con.>istint;  mainly  of  freshmen  anj 
.sophomores,  were  selected,  accor-1- 
ing  to  Col.  Swann.  on  the  basis  of 
nterest      aiid      standing      in      air 


Record  Of  UNC 
Songs  Plertned 
&y  Gle9  Clwb 


]  Plans  ar*  being  ad\*anced  lor  the 
'■  cutting  of  a  record  of  Carolina 
i  loyalty  sonits  b>  the  UN'C  Men's 
^  Glee   Cluh 

Charles  Sho^,  business  manager 

of  the  Gl*e  Club,  ahnounced  Mon- 

1  day   that  the  Gl^te   Club  hope^  to   science  w  ork 

;  cut   an      EP  record  conlaining  at 

j  least  four  songs,  among  which  will 

be  the  alma  mater.  Carolina  Loyal- 

Fri.,  Jan.  25.  8:30  a.m. ,  ty    Song,   and   the   Carolina    Fight 

i  Song. 
Fri  .  Jan    25.  2:00  p.m  \      The  disc  will    be  cut   by   a   nat- 
!  ional      company      foIlo^^^ng      the 
Christmas  holidays. 

Shoe   said   the   sixty-odd    voices 
of  the  Glee  Club  -will  attempt  to 
Mon.,  Jan.  28.  2:00  p.m.  •  record   one   or   two    of   the    songs 
Tues..  Jan.  29.  8:30  a.m  j  before  leaving  for  the  holidays. " 


OM'S  SLATE 


Sat..  Jan.  26.  8:30  a.m 

Sat.,  Jan  26.  2:00  p.m 

Mon..  Jan.  28,  8:30  am 


All  Exams  resulting  in  conflicts  from  Comfnon  {      "The  record  will  co&t  less  than 

Exam  scheduled  above  Tues.,  Jan.  29.  2:00  p.m  j  retail  ones  due  to  the  volume  pur- 

In   case  of  any   connice.   Ihe  regu'ar  schedule»l   exam    will   take  j  chased.  They  will  be  sold  to  UNC 

precedence  over  the  common  c.\am.  Common  exams  arc  indicated  "oy  !  students,   alumni,   and   aay  othei*s 

an  asterisk  )  j  desiring  a  copy."  Shoe  said. 


Activities  in  Graham  Memorial 
today  »r«  as  fellows: 

Pan  Hellenic  Council,  S-6  pun., 
Grail  Room;  Jehovah's  Witness- 
es, 8-9:30  p.m.,  Roland  Parker 
1;  Law  Wives,  7:30-8:30  p.m  Re 
land  Parker  2;  Debate  S^uad, 
4:30-6  p.m.,  Roland  Parker  3; 
Chem.  Femmes,  8  10:15,  Rolan4 
Parker  3;  GMAB  bridge,  4:30-6 
p.m..  Rendezvous  Room;  APO 
Pledga  Class,  8:30-9:30  p.m., 
APO  Room. 


?A-i; 


....  r-A. 


PAGI  TWO 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


'r   rJl 


WEDNESDAY,   DECEMBER    12,    1954 


W60N«SOAY| 


There's  A  Tad  Of  Silliness 
In  Rules  For  Carolina  Coeds 

It  is  tlillitiili  to  l)flir\c  tlti>  is  H)-,().  11  yoii  rtad  thf  rctciil  ;ui- 
iKMUKi-inent  about  rotcl  (ihtistmas  i"c't> illations,  you  Avould  lia\f  thought 
it   uas  iXr^ti. 

W't    <|iio!i'  -tKnn    the-   annouiu fiufiit: 

a'4t'iu  ii's.  tluy  lulp  iiiakf"  tlu-  Cai- 


A  NORTHERN  VIEW: 


If  a  ^irl  is  to  travel  overnight 
in  an  automobile,  either  leaving 
Chape!  Hill  or  returning  to  Chai>el 
HilJ,  .she  must  have  a  special  letter 
from  her  parent  to  her  dormitory 
hostess  or  swrority  hoiteemother. 
giving  h«r  this  definite  permission. 

I  lu*  rf>»u]atioii.  aiiopit-d  la^t 
wi'fk.  at  a  mt'ttiiii;  ol  tlic  oi<4ani/a- 
lious  tio\emin!>  («>t(l  lilt-  lure,  is 
ahfnii    A    « rumrv    out    ol    date. 

*        *        « 

()l>\ioii>lv.  tlu-  statciiuiit  is  not 
dc-simu'd  as  a  dfienent  to  anto- 
iiiohile  adidt'Hts.  It  ()h\iouslv  re- 
Icis  to  ilu'  sexual  "sateiv"  of  C.ar- 
<»liiia  loeds.  .\nd  lieie  is  where  tlu 
(oed  i^oxeriiiiiii  a<;eiu  ies  ait-  oil 
base. 

Iheif    i>    a    .i»eiiiTal    ( oiueptioti 


olitia  (ocd  A  niter  illusion  ol  pin 
t\   and   nieeness  to  the.  re.st  ol   the 
state.  '  -#.     I       \i '^y 

III  iiutl*.  ol  (oiiise.  the  <oed  \vlu» 
is  ridiiij;'  home  enn  do  anvthin;^ 
she  ^vanrs  to  do.  [hose  who  uani 
to.  do.  I  h«)sc'  who  don't,  don  t. 
I  lie  ret»nlation  does  not  matter  a 
bit. 

*        *        * 

It  also  <aii  be  ai>iiu'd  that  the 
IniveisiiN.  in  tellin;^  a  (<K'd  what 
she  <an  and  t.innoi  do  whili-  she 
is  lidini;  home  o\  tv  a  holiday,  is 
o\ei  stepping;    its    anthorit\. 

(>t  ionise,  we  kiioxv  that  a  (Caro- 
lina <<»ed  is  a  ( Carolina  ( oed 
\\her<'\er  she  ma\  be.  Unt  the 
truth  is  that  she  also  is  an  indixid- 


here.  atnonu  some  ol  the  members  nal.  a  leal  peison.  a  bein;^  tapable 
of  ihi*  ( oe«l  U[<>\einini>  a.i>eiuies.  ol  tIion«;hi  aiul  aetion.  She  is  the 
tint  a'l  (!.ir<dina  toeds  are  pure  iiidixidnal  more  than  she  is  a  (Car- 
olina   (<)efl. 

I'o  send'  her  hoine.  lUMtly  pin- 
ned n»  a  sheet  of  rei»ulati<)ns.  is 
sillv.  It  is  silly  betause  —  il  she 
I  eels  like  it  —  she  will  remove  the 
>heet  ol  rei^idatif^ns  as  s<M^n  .xs  the 
automobile  j^ets  in  miles  out  of 
(ChajK-l  Hill.  II  she  wishes  to  h>l- 
low  the  rules  . —  to  eonform  to 
what  a  i^roup  ol  jx'o}>le  here  leels 
epitomizes  the  C'arolina  eoed  — 
she  will  follow  the  rules  anvway. 
The  <><K>d  sense  ol  a  ma'ture  a\'o- 


''^d  ip".  e  ami  prettv.  thev  don't 
have  aiiv  sexual  ambitious,  tli^V' 
don't  diink  intoxitatin;j  bexeiasies 
and  thev  don't  turse.  This  is 
wivtui:.  (  .-eds.  like  hiom  other  men 
ami  \Nouun.  .nc  aitiatled  to  ilie 
oiifio.siie  Nex.  .Sonie  ol   them  drink. 

Most    ol    them   (iirse. 

*        *        * 

.\  preitv  illusion  has  In-en  built 
up  about  the  (Carolina  coed.  Xnd 
the  illusion  is  just  as  Avorn<»  as  it 
<an  be.  Refiiilaiions  siu  h  as  the 
r»ne  about  overnight  automobile  man.  not  rules  atlopted  bv  a  }>Toup 
rides  are  elfe*  li\e  onh  in  that  thev  of  people,  should  novern  the  (Car- 
make  some  parents  leel  better.  olina  coed's  beha\  if«  —  not  onlv 
tluv  eaim  the  ( onsc^teiues  ol  the  on  the  road  to  home,  but  on  the 
members    of    ilve    (\»ed    governing      tampus.    too. 

Ralph  Cumminqs  Has  A  Job 


R.ilph  (CtiuifDinplsT^j^s  a;V^]r>l.biii;i.  i^ti^uhiii^'jp'.pk^sWrs  H,^c|,'. 'bulletin 
job.    Il    \\y\\   Uit    i»H|jr!;ii,  fliyh'rwJi.  t^>ija^l-<)  *h;iv*.  Wn)«  vUiUjtqd    Haf*- 
davs  at   the   luosi.  ^t»#;  it  wtri'Ut''a' 
hu^e    undiTiakiii'.v. 

Ralph  (anmniii»j?^T»a»'|iiitJ'licBiii 
named    rhainnan    (»f    the    student 
Flections  fJoaid.    Jlie  iM)st  lias  be- 
come  a  major  one  on  the  campus- 
in   recent  veais. 


It's  i:-  .  trtant  bet:au.se  there 
have  been  so  maiiv  chairmen,  so 
mau\  w»»rkers.  h<^  many  itiulent 
voters,  who  dtmt  tare  alx»ut  a 
detent  elcttitm  on  this  t  ampus. 
that  the  |jost  has  been  nejijlected. 
Likewise,     student     elettions    have 

been    iu'«;Ietled. 

*        »        *         ■ 

A  \t.ii  a;4o.  a  ballot  Imjx  wasn't 
pitked  ui>  after  a  davs  votinji.  It 
just  sat  ill  (Cair  Dormitory,  full 
of  votes,  unattended.  I  he  «  hair- 
inan  ol  the  Mettions  lioard  tould- 
ii'i   (luile  explain   it. 

I  his  fall,  the  «(ieds  in  Kenan 
Doimitorv  didni  vote.  There 
was   no   pollteiuler. 

In  ;H  recent  elections.  b:i|liot 
boxes  have  been  stuffed.  alth(»u<fh 
this  (an't  be  jnoved  legally.  In 
all  letent  elections  the  rules  t»t 
pnMedure  (proximitv  of  sij^ns  to 
polls,    ivpe    of    }>osters.    method    ol 

The  Daily  Tar  Heel 

The  official  student  publtcation  of  the 
Publications  Board  ot  the  University  of 
North  Carolina,  where  it  is  published 
daily  except  Monday  and  examination 
tnd  vacation  periods  and  summer  terms 
Entered  as  second  class  matter  in  the 
oost  office  in  rhapel  Hill,  N.  C,  undei 
the  Act  oi  March  8.  1870.  .Subscription 
rates:  mailed.  $4  per  year.  $2  50  a  semes- 
ter; delivered.  .$6  a  year,  $3.50  a  semei 
ter. 


Editor 

FRED  POWLEDGE 

Managing  Editor     . 

_  CHARLIE  SLO.\N 

Nev%s  Editor 

NANCY  HILL 

Business  Manager 

BILL  BOB  PL-EL 

Sports  Editor  

LARRY  CffEEK 

Subscription  Manager   .     .     Dale  Staley 

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Circulation  Manager  Charlie  Holt 

BUSINRSS  STAFF—Rosa  Moore.  Johnny 
Whiiakor.  Dick  Leavilt.  Dick  Sirkin. 


SPORTS  STAFF:  Bill  King.  Jim  Purks, 
.Jimmy  Harper.  Dave  Wible,  Charley 
Hrtwson. 


EDfTORIAL  STAFF  -  Woody  Sear^, 
Frank  Crowther.  Barry  Winston.  David 
Mundy.  Georgf  Pfingst.  Inerid  Clay. 
Cortland  Edwards,  Paul  McCauley, 
Bobbi  Smith. 


Staff  Photographer 
Librarian 


Norman  Kantor 
^t    Sue   Oishner 


Night  Editor 
Proof  Reader 


Graham  Snyder 
-^ ,Ji6u  Taylor 


fa^l.^) 

♦» t iiiiit ly.' : il.h^'  'Fl^i^ioH.s:  litl^Wt.  Hap- 
py  t<»  enti   its   work   the  day   after 

}  i  i  df^iiiiaiik  ;hiis:  done  ricKhing  tit  TierV 
little  to  torrect  these  corruptions 
of  , the  stiidem  votingf^  process. 

I'lettions  laws  and  limits  on  ex- 
pense attjjunts  have  become  hu<j;e 
,  jo^es  tt»  i|>eople  who  are  runnin» 
lot  tianipiis  t>ffite.  FJectitiiis  Boapd 
(hairmeii  and  their  fellt)w  work- 
ers have  retold  that  jolce  at  every 
elei  lion. 

Obviouslv.  the  need  is  for  a 
sti(»ni[»  thairman  <»1  the  student 
Klettions  lioard.  .Vnd  that's  wliere 
Ralph    (.ummiii'^s  <(»mes    in. 

We  su;4J4est  the  lollowin</  items 
loi  (ihairnuin  (aimmin);s.  whose 
effitientv  will  next  be  tested  at 
.spriny   elettions,    far,    lar   away: 

1.  .Start  work  now  on  the  sprinji; 
elettion.  betause  it  isn't  as  far 
away  as  you  siispet  t. 

L'.  Two  weeks  behne  the  elet- 
tion. set  up  voui  network  t>f  jx)ll- 
tendeis.  \jake  sine  -  by  install- 
ing other  pt)lltenders,  il  netessa- 
IV  —  thev  will  be  on  dutv  elettion 
d.iy. 

",.  (ionsult  with  the  honor  (oun- 
tils  on  the  forim  of  election  law 
vioh'titms.  punishment,  atitl  the 
best    way  t«»  tatth   v  iol.uors. 

|.  Consult  with  spvint;  tantli- 
thiTes:  reati  the  Riot  .\t  t  tt)  them; 
explain  the  yesses  and  nf>es  of  the 
elettion  law.  Then,  if  yt)u  tatth 
theni  in  clear  and  open  vittlation 
of  the  law.  take  them  before  the 
honor  tount  ils.  Do  not  (lose  vour 
eves  to  violatituis  simpiv  betause 
the  tandid;  le  appe.iis  to  be  ;i  nite 
per.stm.  .\II  pt>litit  ians  are  nice 
people  around   elettion    time. 

',.  Choose  people  lor  ballot 
(oiuiters  who  have  proven,  thiotijrh 
prevituis  nonpailisan  service  to 
the  campus,  that  thev  will  ctmnt 
by  oltI-fashit)netl,  m;ithematical 
methotis  —  not  on  a  slidiui*  st;ile 
that  works  in  relation  to  their  like 
or    flislike    hn    the    taiulidates. 

fi.  Supervise  the  whole  job  your- 
.self.  Do  not  ""et  anv  sleep  ele<tion 
ni,t»lit.  eat  only  the  worst  and  sim- 
plest of  h»od  all  day  elettion  day. 
W'atth  the  polls  vtunself.  Watt  h 
the  polltentleis.  Watt  h  the  vote- 
(ounters.  If  there  is  dtuibt  aht>ut 
the  honesty  of  an  electitms  work- 
er, tentl  polls  antl  tount  f)allt>ts 
yourself,  so  you'll  knt>w  the  elec- 
tion  was   held  torrectly. 

7.  .And,  above  all.  make  .«ire  all 
the  ballot  boxes  are  in  beft>re  you 
detinue   4 he    eleciitin    oxer. 


More  Of  One    Mans  Religion 


Cortland  Edwards 

I  believe  in  one  God — not  the 
Trinity  —  and  m.v  philosophy  of 
faith  and  life  is  founded  upon  the 
principles  of  freedom,  reason  and 
tolerance. 

I  believe  in  "the  Church  Uni- 
versal."' .\lso,  that  this  church 
includes  all  men  and  women,  of 
every-  race,  color,  and  creed,  who 
.seek  God  and  worj^hip  him  thru 
•'service."  "actions."  and  "deeds" 
to  th?ir  fellow  men. 

.Membership  in  this  "Church 
Universal"  does  n(vt  depend  on  a 
formal  creed.  There  is  no  genu- 
flecting, crossing  oneself,  or  com- 
plete emersion.  It  is  simply  upon 
the  honest  ilesire  in  a  person's 
heart  "to  do  ju.stly.  to  love  kind- 
ness, and  to  walk  humbly  with 
ones  (lOd.  " 

I  am  not  what  most  people  con- 
sider an  orthodo.v  Christian,  for 
they  have  forgotten  and  forstken 
the  real,  human  Jesus  of  Naza- 
reth, and  have  substituted  a 
"Christ  "  of  dogmatism,  meta- 
physics, and  pagan  philosophy. 
I  would  prefer  being  called  a 
liberal  Cluistian.  or  more  simply 
a  religiMus  Liberal.  The  intoler- 
ance and  pre.iudice  of  people 
who  cjll  themselves  Christians, 
be  they  from  New  York,  or  North 
Carolina,  or  anywhere  el.se. 
makes  it  very  difficult  for  me 
to  rejoice  in  the  name  "Chrkst- 
ian". 

My  main  philosophy  is  that 
every  individu.Tl  has  the  right 
to  approach  his  God  in  his  own 
way  .and  that  every  religious 
community  has  the  duty  of  cre- 
ating such  patt?rns  of  v\'orship 
as  best  serve  the  needs  of  that 
society. 

With  this  concept  of  mine  go 
many  other  things.  I  do  believe 
in  prayer.  I  do  believe  in  Jesus 
Christs  teachin.ns.  I  do  believe 
in  the  Bible. 

Jesus  Christ,  to  me.  is  one 
of  the  rarest  of  personalities 
that  has  ever  walked  among  men. 
He  is  onv.  of  the  greulest  relig- 
ious teachers  of  all  time.  I  even 
endor.se  his  prophetic  preaching, 
his  moral  teaching,  and  his  spir- 
itual insight.  But  I  refuse  to 
make  a  "god"  of  him  who  was 
so  utterly  numan  in  everything 
that  he  did. 

He  even  once  protested  against 
being  called  "good".  I  will  al- 
ways look  upon  him  as  Jesus  the 
inspired  moral  and  spiritual 
teacher.  One  whose  whole  stature 
grows  with  the  ages,  and  who.se 
words  and  example  will  remain 
the  staff  (f  life  for  those  who 
hunger  after  truth,  .justice,  and 
rightousness. 

The    Bible,    to    me,   is   a    great 
book   of   religious    prose,    poetry, 
and     drama.     The     doctrine     of 
"revelation"   in   the   Bible   is  for- 
eign     to      my     beliefs.   Rather   I 
would    reserve    the    prerogative 
of   critical    appreciation   which    is 
intimately    related    to    liberty    of 
conscience.    The    ff)llowing    lines 
of    .Tamos     Russell     Lowell    more 
nearly  express  my   personal   atti- 
tude: 
Slowly  the  Bible  of  the  race  is 
writ. 
And   not   on   paper   leaves  or 
leaves  of  stone: 
Each   age,  each   kindred,   adds 
avers?  to  it. 
Texts  of  despair  or  hope,   of 
joy  or  moiin. 
Whil«    swings    the    sea.    while 


Pogo 


mists    ihe    mountain   shroud. 
While   thunder's  surges  burst 
on  cliff  and  cloud. 
Still    at    rhe   prohet's   feet    the 
nations  sit. 

.About  salvation,  heaven,  and 
hell  I  also  have  very  -  definite 
ideas.  I  believe  in  "salvation  by 
character."  To  me.  as  man  devel- 
ops a  society  where  moral  values 
and  spiritual  insights  are  treas- 
ured, man  will  find  the  road 
that  leads  to  peace,  justice,  and 
brotherhood. 

.Man  at  his  best  is  the  surest 
proof  that  he  needs  n,-)  God-man 
"Savior"  to  die  for  him  and  for 
the  sins  of  the  world.  Instead, 
he  needs  all  the  help  that  good 
education,  noble  example,  and  a 
friendly     cooperation      with     all 


peoples  can  give  him.  God's  help 
will  not  come  to  those  who  dump 
all  their  troubles"  and  burdens 
on  him.  Remember  "God  helps 
them  that  help  themselves."  If 
njan  is  to  be  '"saved."  the  image 
of  God  within  that  man  will  save 
him — hereas  well  a.s  hereafter. 

If  by  heaven  you  mean  an 
abode  of  eternal  light  where  the 
"saved  and  redeemed"  enjoy 
everlasting  bli.ss,  and  if  by  hell 
you  mean  the  devil's  eternal 
darkness  where  the  wicked  suf- 
fer unending  torment  and  pun- 
ishment, then  I  think  you  are 
quite  deluded,  for  all  this  is 
nonsense. 

I   believe  that  evil   defeats   it- 
self   and    that    virtue   is    the    re- 


ward of  those  who  obey  the  laws 
of  man  and  God.  Hell  is  man's 
failure  to  be  and  live  up  to  his 
best.  Hell  is  injustice,  violence, 
tyranny,  hatred,  war,  etc.  The 
thing  to  do  is  to  fight  these  evil 
forces  here  and  now,  and  then 
to  help  create  that  "Paradise" 
of  which  the  poets  speak. 

I  believe  als(»  in  prayer,  but  I 
prefer  calling  in  meditation.  In 
my  meditations  I  do  not  pray  ""in 
the  name  of  the  Father  and  the 
Son  and  the  Holy  Ghost,"  nor 
do  I  close  each  pra.ver  in  Jesus' 
name.  These  are  mere  cliches  and 
are   superfluous. 

In  closing,  I  shall  repeat  a 
quote  from  Dr.  Nash  which  I 
think  is  quite  au  propos.  "Relig- 
ion is  God's  biggest  enemy!" 


• 


'I  Shot  An  Arrow  Into  The  Air—' 


^,<.r    ii^t,^^  ,;   i-.tij^ 


• 

A  DOG  DIES 


Poor  Passionate  Pup  Pays  Price 


Stan  Shaw 

In  the  past  .North  Carolina  has 
dcmon.strated  the  ridiculous 
backwardness  of  its  laws.  Mo.st 
of  the.se  laws  have  been  the 
work  of  guilt-ridden  old  women 
who,  in  their  desire  to  escape 
their  own  guilt  complexes  have 
carried  on  campaigns  for  and 
against  various  things.  They 
huve  done  .such  great  work  as 
prohibition,  anti  -  birth  control 
legislation  and  various  other  not- 
able»  achievement.s. 


"  It  .seems  that  they  have  pass- 
ed a  law  making  it  illegal  for  an 
animal  to  be  normal  now.  We 
were  walking  across  the  campus 
the  other  afternoon  when  we 
saw  a  rather  .seedly  character 
standing  next  to  the  remains  of 
a  small  white  dog.  The  man  hat! 
just  shot  her  because  she  was  '".n 
season." 

It  seems  that  in  North  Caro- 
lina it  is  a  public  di.sgrace  for  a 
female  dog  to  be  in  season.  \V  > 
do  not  blame  the  man.  If  he 
had    no    more    initiative    than   to 


eliminate  little  dogs  he  must 
find  a  way  of  making  a  living 
somehow. 

The  fault  lies  with  those  per- 
.sons  who  consider  ii  a  public 
disgrace  for  animals  to  carry 
out  the  natural  laws  of  nature. 
We  wonder  if  they  wished  to  in- 
dict God  as  an  accomplice  after 
the  fact,  since  it  seems  that  He 
was  the  One  guilty  in  the  first 
place.  Perhaps  it  is  just  a  move- 
ment to  eliminate  sex  from  the 
world. 


By  V/al»  Kelly 


THE  OUTSTANDING  LECTURE: 


Eye-Openers 
Are  Occasional 


Woody  Sears    ^      j 

Once  in  u  while,  though  not  very  oftere,  un- 
f.Htunately,  we  hear  a  superb  lecture,  the  kind  that 
makes  you  sit  up  and  think.  The  kind  that  causes 
you  to  realiae  just  how  unknowing  ytni  really  are, 
and  how  much  there  is  to  learn.  And,  too,  how 
worthwhile  it  is  to  learn. 

One  qualifying  statement  before  continuing, 
please.  By  the  "we"  in  the  above  paragraph,  it  was 
not  written  to  be  the  editorial  "we"  that  means  "I, 
the  writer."  It  means,  or  was  written  to  mean,  all 
the   students   here   at   the   University. 

An  occasional  good  lecture  is  not  so  surprising, 
for  they  must  occur  every  now  and  then,  just  count- 
ing on  the  law  of  averages.  But  it  is  unfortunate 
that  they,  nuist  come  so  seldom. 

The  professors,  of  course,  are  up  again-st  a  ma- 
jor task  in  the  compiling  of  lectures  to  give  to  an 
often  unwilling  audience.  And  considering  that  they 
are  constantly  butting  heads  with  big  weekends 
and  the  aftermath.s  thereof,  ball  games,  concerts, 
or  balmy  weather  or  its  miserable  counterpart,  they 
do  an  admirable  job  on  the  whole. 

Quite  often  its  hard  to  go  to  school,  and  as 
many  times  it  seems  like  a  great  waste  of  time. 
School  for  many  of  us  i^  just  another  long,  arduous 
step  (or  stumbling  block)  to  some  distant  goai. 
Maybe  the  goal  is  achievable,  or  perhaps  it  is  just 
a  pipe-dream  that  will  blow  away  by  the  time  we 
get  there,  but  nevertheless  we  are  anxious.  We 
are,  possibly,  impetuous  in  this  sense.  But  we  are 
not  alone  in  this. 

Then  all  of  a  sudden  we  go  to  class  one  morn- 
ing and  sit  down  to  the  routine  of  semi-listening 
and  note-taking.  Five  minutes  after  the  class  has 
commenced,  we  are  .surprised  to  find  that  we  are 
listening  attentively  to  everything  that  is  being 
said.  About  half-way  through  the  period  we  arp  sit- 
ting on  the  edge  of  our  seats  and  find  that  we've 
;  tmly  taken  a ,  (ew  nqtes.  And ,  our  .mintls  ^are .  work- 

f^     Pbr^N  once,  we  are  in  "tune**"  with  fht*mi': 
'•Structor;  the  things  he  is  saying  are  falling  into 
■place,  and  we  can  see  thai  this  is  real,  that  this  is 
the  "living*"  knowledge  that  is  often  mentioned. 

When  the  class  is  over,  we  feel  as  thou^  ve-;, 
should  go  up  to  the  instructor  and  tell   him  ihat   " 
we  enjoyed  the  lecture.  And  almost  all  of  us  wi'l 
leave  the  classroom  feeling  that  it  was  worth  our 
while,  for  once,  to  come  to  class. 

One  really  good  lectwe  per  semester  would 
probably  be  a  good  average.  Its  a  shame  that  thi.y 
don't  happen  more  often. 

Such  a  lecture  can  be  on  any  subject  at  all, 
but  it  will  open  the  door  to  many  new  thoughts, 
and  often  a  whole  new  perspective,  if  only  for  a 
little  while. 

It  would  be  hard  to  define  what  makes  a  good 
lectiu-e,  and  to  isolate  the  component  parts  tu::t 
differentiate  it  from  any  other  one.  .Maybe  it's  like 
the  "Lost  Chord'"  that  the  organist  found  one  ojy 
and  never  recaptured.  Maybe  it's  like  the  chemist 
who  spills  his  bottles  and  comes  up  with  somelhuig 
new  and  worthwhile.  And  maybe  there  are  some 
people  who  just  know  how. 

There  is  the  possibility  that  every  lecture  should 
be  a  good  one,  but  we  cannot  see  it  as  such.  Maybe 
this  is  the  fault  of  .  .  .  well,  put  the  blame  where 
you  will.  The  fact  remains  that  too  often  we  don't 


>oy'«s  9^iMH'Au  ti&:oeQ^  on  wow 
1OH6  IT  tAi<rg$  YOU  ro  6gT  TH«U 


Q 


vet?  pi$rusffN 

\MAgmr 


N0W$Hg'H.HAVg10$TA(?T 

AuchzZ'  iroip 

VOlC^WWgNgXCITBP'" 

'$TAeT0Vgl2W)TH\OUC 

mm  BYBwirne^e  o^ 


•*»  ".i  t-.^:trt,  '-C. 


NOW 

.^  ^jAy£ 

I  AwerwA 

ANp  6TAff  r 


«i,«W       H-J5W 


L'il  Abner 


By  Al  Capp 


LECTURES 

stMHe  make  you  ^t  up  and  think 


•  sec  '  and  hear  because  we  are  not  trained  to  do  so 
get  out  of  school  what  we  should  because  we  just 
cant   ".see"   it   or   hoar   it.   And   maybe   we   don  t 

•'  But  the  fact  remains  that  an  occasional  lectu  c 
that  Ls  really  out  of  the  ortlinary,  that  is  somethm- 
wiiich  doesn't  happen  everyday  can  snap  us  oii"t 
of  our  mental  lethargy  and  give  us  something  to 
remember. 

Something    to   remember,    some    memorable    in 
tellectual  e.vperience.  something  new  4o  think  about 
or  a  new  -.eed  "  of  thought  which  can  grow 
these  are  the  things  we  are  here  for.   But   maybe 
It  has  to  happen  before  we  realize  it. 


G 


These 
have  a  car, 
ride  to  one 

THESE     STUJ 
RIDES   TO  THE 
AFTER  THEIR 

Stuart    Shcby, 
9013  or  R-0981— > 

Ethan  Tolmanl 
9146 — Miami.  Fla| 

W.  G.  Scribn< 
son,  17-3  VenablJ 
field,  Ohio. 

Kenneth  Chi-KJ 
Franklin  St  ,  9-2| 
mosa. 

Shirley  Anders| 
90*76 — Rocky  Moi 

Bill    Adcock, 
9183 — Knoxville. 

Rainer    Menki 
9108 — ^Louisville. 

Marion  Harris. 
9104 —  Engelhartj 
N.  C. 

Howard  Kahn, 
9107 — Baltimore. 

Harold  Ste.ssel.l 
—New  York  Cit; 

Sara  Kumpl.rej 
8  9096  —  Washinj 

Carolina  Ilumt 
ti-9096  —  WashinI 

John  Gauntlet 
cago. 

.M  Higgins.  3( 
New  York. 


PATRONI 
•    ADVER 


J.  i»ai 
Wildi 


It's  hard  to  "see"  sometimes. 


"Sh««dy,  you're 
fowl.  >X'hy  dou't] 
right  down  to  tj 
duck  in  jchool 
healthy  .  .  .  neat 
was   sipping   a 
chick  on  catnpuj 
the  gals  are  gi- 
Wildroot  Crtit 
Guaranteed  to  Jl 

*»/  IM  So  fhitnX 

wnjro< 

gives  yol 


DAILY 

ACROSS 

1.  Deluge 
6.  Footlikt; 

organ 
S.  Stacking 

machine 

10.  Insect 

11.  Quick 

12.  State  flower  i 
(N.  Mex.) 

14.  Gulf  (Sit).) 

15.  Support 

17.  Tidy 

18.  Spinning  toj 
20  Small 

stream 

22.  Compass 
point  (abbr.j 

23.  God  of  love 
25.  Dredge,  as 

a  river 
27.  Man's  ran. 

29.  Name 
meaning 
healer 

30.  Obligaticnsl 
33.  Ill 

36.  Ahead 

37.  Praise 
3J>.  Card  game 
iO.  Man's  nam< 
42.  Uttle  fellov 

44.  Medal  of 
Honor 
(abbr.) 

45.  River  (Fr.)j 
47.  Stairv^•ay 

post 

49.  Building 
addition 

50.  Tributary 
stream 

52.  Dutch 
commune 

53  Part  of 
knii;ht.j' 
armor 
DOHN 


WEDNESDAY,  DECEMBEH   12,   1956 


S 


TKC  DAILY  TAR  KEBt 


•»•■     . 


PAGE    THREE 


would 
u  th«.y 


i\   all, 

)u°hts, 

lor   a 


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Its  that 
It's  like 

chemist 
lethuig 
»oine 


shoutd 

.M;.ybe 

whore 

ic    lon't 


"1 


un- 

thal 

- 

luses 

'— *»» 

are, 

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how 

■  •■■* 

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was 

IS      I, 

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V" 

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ount 

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l\¥Ofk- 


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into     »*«•*•! 
Ihis  is 
hied. 


That 

wiM 

th  aur 


"-V-«l* 


Going  Home  For  Christmas? 
Want  A  Ride?  Need  Riders? 


World  Forum  Series 
ToBeOnWUNC-TV 


These  people  want  rides  to  distant  points,  or  can  give  rides,  over  the  Christmas  holidays.  If  you 
have  a  car,  are  headed  for  one  of  the  points  listed,  and  need  riders,  contact  these  people.  If  you  want  a 
ride  to  one  of  the  places  listed  at  the  end,  contact  the  folks  who  have  cars  and  need  companions. 


THESE    STUDENTS    WANT      John   Oliver, 
RIDES  TO  THE   PLACES   LISTED   Summit    N   J 
AFTER  THEIR  NAMES: 


11    Everett.   8-9056 


Priscilla  Roetzel,    106   Kenan.  8 
smart     Shcby.    Law     School      •<  j  9172  -  Trenton    or  Newark,    N.    J 

f?,.l3  or  S-0981-New  York.  "'"   ^^^   Y"'"'^- 

Kthan    Tolman,    207    Ruf fin.    8- 1      l-^""^''^   Gillian.  309  Alexander. 

0146-Miami.  Fla.  |  8-9^105^Albuquerque.  N.  M. 

\V.    G.    Scribner    and    wife    and ' 

son.  lT-3  Venable  Hall  —  Sprint^  | 

field.  Ohio.  t 


Kenneth  Chi-Kun  Yang,  208  W. 
Fr.uiklin  St..  9-2471— Taipei,  For- 
mosa. 

.Shirley  Anderson,  302  Kenan,  8 
9076 — Rocky  Mount. 

Bill  Adcock,  308  Mangum,  S- 
9183— Knox ville,   Tenn. 

Rainer  Menking,  18  Steele.  8- 
ai08— Louisville.  Ky. 

Marion  Harri.s.  309  Spencer.  8- 
9104—  Engelhard  or  Washington. 
N  C. 

Howard  Kahn,  108  Alexander,  8 
9107— Baltimore,  Md. 

Harold  Stessel.  211  Stacy.  8-9031 
—New  York  City  or  Westcheste^-. 

.Sara  Humphrey,  Pi  Phi  House 
S  90S6  —  Washington.  D.  C. 

Carolina  Hume.  Pi  Phf  Hou.se, 
r.90y6  —  Washington.  D.  C. 

John   Gauntlett,    8-9154   —    Chi- 

.\1  Higgins.  309  Connor,  8-9154 
New  York, 


PATRONIZE  YOUR 
•    ADVERTISERS    • 


Beatrice  Rodriguez.  305  Kenan, 
8-9076— New  York. 

Ana  Maria  Ortiz,  Kenan  — New 
York. 

Helen  Duke,  407A  E.  Franklin. 
8-1273— New  York. 

Lynwood  Thompson.  5  Battle,  8- 
917J— New    York   To    Chapel    Hill 

THE  RULES 

if  you  want  to  get  your  name 
on  either  of  these  lists,  drop  by 
The  Daily  Tar  Heel's  newsroom, 
second  floor  of  Graham  Mem- 
orial, or  mail  your  name,  address 
telephone  number  and  destina- 
tion to  The  Daily  Tar  Heel,  Box 
1080,  Chapel  Hill.  The  lists  wiil 
run  as  long  as  there  are  stu- 
dents who  need  rides  or  riders. 

after  Christmas. 

Marjorie  McMahan.  Carr,  8-910'J 
Charlotte. 

Richaid  Alexander,  313  Ruffi:! 
d-9182— Ft.  Lauderdale.  Fla. 

John  Dale,  210  Connor,  8-9178  — 
Ashcville  or  Knoxville. 


Li.".a  Rehor,  224  Kenan 
York  City. 


Now 


Airy  and  Charleston.  W.  Va.,  leav- 
ing Dec.  22.  . 

Joel  A.  Snow,  1  Pettigrew.  89174 '      ^""^^  Seasholes,  215  Caldwell.  9- 
St.  Petersburg.  Fla.  i  ''68»— to  Syracuse,  N.  Y. 

Susan  Inman,  303  Smith,  8-9133 
Owen  Leland,  108  Connor,  89153   _to  Vermont,  western  Mass.,  Conn 


Already  seen  and  discussed  wide- 
ly in  metropolitan  New  Yorft,  the 
10th     annual     New  York    Herald 
Tribune  World  Forum  will  be  view- 
!  ed   in  this  area  starting  Wednes- 
]  day  at  9:30     p.m.     o'clock     over 
i  WU.\C-TV,  Channel  4  as  the  Edu- 
j  cational  Television  and  Radio  Cen- 
ter distributes  kinescoped  record- 
I  ings  of   the  forum   for   the  third 
I  successive  year. 
1      The    new    national    educational 


—Charleston,  S.  C. 

THESE  PEOPLE  HAVE  CARS 
AND  WANT  RIDERS  TO  THE 
PLACES  LISTED  AFTER  THEIR 
NAMES: 

Mi.ss  Henrietta  Laing,  9-541 1  — 
to  New  York  City  or  Westchester. 

Thomas  L.  Gillette,  303  Alumi.i 
Bldt...  8  8462  Kansas  City.  Mo. 

Roland  Clemmons,  413  W.  Cam- 
eron Ave..  9-2181  —  to  Atlanta  cr 
New  Orleans. 

Warren  Miller  —  Washington. 
D.  C. 

David  L.  Heck.  33  Davie  Circle, 
9-2786— to    SheJby,    Ohio,    via    !VIc. 


and  N.  Y. 

Chuck  Federspiel,  8-6433  or  9- 
2382 — to  central  Michigan. 

R.  E.  Berry.  106  Whitehead.  8 
9066— to  Laurel,  Miss. 

Ed  Kiser,  315  Alexander,  3-910.5 
— to  Laurinburg  via  Sanford  and 
Aberdeen. 

Phil  Meyer,  705  Pritchard  Ext, 
8-8528— to  Topcka,  Kan.  via  Kan- 
sas City,  St.  Louis. 

Fred  Katz,  9031,  Ext.  571  —  to 
Washington,  D.  C. 

Bryce  Johnson.  State^  College, 
Raleigh,  TEmple  29363  —  to  iSaho 

Dick  Potthoff,  216  Connor,  8- 
9172  —  to  Jacksonville,  Fla. 


Library  Has  4  New  Exhibits 
On  Display  All  This  Week 


The  following  exhibitions  are  )n 
display   this    week    at   the    Wilson 
Library: 
NEW  EXHIBITS 

"lOOth  Anniversary  of  the  Biri'i 


an  exhibit  prepared  by  the  Music 
Dept.   to    mark    the   centenary    of 
Schumann's  death;  ground  floor. 
CONTINUING  EXHIBITS 
"Selections  from  the  Archibald 


of  Woodrow  Wilson,"  in  two  ca-ses  '  Henderson   Collection    of    Bernard 
Buddy   Clark,  Theta   Chi   8-9123 .  on   the  main  floor;   an  exhibit  of  j  Shaw"    (through    Dec.)     in    eight 


Atlanta,  Ga. 

Angela   Aeosta 
Baltimore. 


218    Kenan    ~ 


J.  Paul  Sheedv*  Was  An  Iglv  Duckliiijr  Till 
Wildroot  Crram-Oil  Gave  Him  Conftdem'e 


works  bath  by  and  about  Woodrow  j  cases  on  the  main  floor;  an  exhibit 
Wilson  with  emphasis  on  his  n-rii-j  of  Shaviana  selected  from  the  col- 
ings.  Wilson  was  born  on  Dec.  28, '  lection  siven  to  the  Library  by  Dr. 
^356.  1  Henderson, -said  to  be  the  greatest 

•Winners  of  the  1956  North  Cai-    Shaw  collection  in  the  world, 
olina   Literary  Awards,"  announc  |      "Adam     Mickiewicz:     1798-1855" 
ed  Dec.  7  by  the  State  Literary  a.id    (through  Dec.  17)  in  the  Assembly 


Historical  Assn.;  main  floor. 

"Desire  Under  the  Elms,"  an  ex 
hibit  of  the  play  by  Eugene 
O'Neill,  displayed  in  connection 
with  the  Carolina  Playmakers'  pr-^ 
Auction  to  be  given  Dec.  14-18. 

•  Robert    Schumann,    1810-1856," 


"Shaady,  you're  quacking  up",  snorted  his  girl  friend.  "Your  appearance  is 

fowl.  Why  don't  you  wise  up  to  Wildroot  Cream-Oil .'"  So  J.  Paul  marshed 

right  down  to  the  store  and  pecked  up  a  bottle.  Now  he's  the  sharpest 

duck  in  school  because  his  hair  looks  handsome  and 

healthy  .  .  .  neat  but  never  greasy.  When  last  seen  he 

was  sipping  a  chocolate    moulted   with    the   prettiest 

chick  on  campus  (  ■  .  •  and  she  caught  the  bill !  )  So  if 

the  gals  are  giving  you  the  bird,  better  get  some 

Wildroot  Cream-Oil  .  .  .  eider  a  bottle  or  handy  tube. 

Guaranteed  to  drive  most  swimmin'  wild  ! 

*o/  I  il  So  Harris  Hill Rii..  WtlUamnilU.  .V.  Y 

Wi'.Jroot  Cream-Oil 
gives  you  confidence 


ic  5   iiic    Miarpoi 


Quarterly  Head 
Calls  Meeting 
For  Staffers 


Exhibition  Room,  groand  floor;  ? 
traveling  exhibition,  made  up  by 
the  Polish  Elmbassy,  consisting  ol 
photographed  material  on  the  life 
and  work  of  Adam  Mickiewicz, 
Polish  poet  and  patriot. 

•Glen  Kaydon:  60th  Birthday " 
an  exhibit  presenting  a  select|oc 
of  the  work  of  the  Chairman  of 
the  University's  Dept.  of  Mnsic,  m 
honor  of  Dr.  Haydon's  birthday  on 
Dec.  9;  main  floor. 

"Egon  Wellesz:  Composer  and 
Musicologist,"  an  exhibit  in  honor 
of  Professor  Wellesz  who  spok«^ 
Dec.  8  at  the  monthly  meeting  of 
the  Southeastern  Chapter  of  the' 
i  American  Musicological  Society; 
!  ground  floor. 

"The  Book-of-the-Week:"  The 
1356  Mayflower  Award  Winner, 
"Tecumseh":  Vision  of  Glory"  by 
Glenn  Tucker;  foyer. 


Students,  graduate  and  under- 
graduate, who  are  interested  in 
working  on  the  Carolina  Quarter-  i 
ly  have  been  asked  to  attend  \ 
meeting  today  at  4:30  p.m.  in  the 
Quarterly  office,  according  to  Miss 
Marcelline  Krafchick,  editor. 

Refreshments  will  be  served   at 
the  meeting. 

Library  Schedule  For 
Lectures  To  End  Tonight    Christmas  Holidays 

Dr.  Clemens  Sommer,  professor  jjje  Wilson  Library  has*  an- 
of  the  history  of  art  at  UNC.  will  nounced  the  following  schedule  o* 
conclude  his  illustrated  lectures  on  i  hours  to  be  maintained  during  th? 

Christmas  holiday  period: 
Dec.   19 — 7:45  a.m. -5  p.m. 


DAILY    CROSSWORD 


2.  Grieve 

3.  Viper 

4.  Personal 
pronoun 

5.  Lever 
e.  Walk  b«ck 

&nd  forth 
7.  Enclose 
8. Island 

(N.Y.) 
9.  Work 
11.  Method  of 

learning 


ACROSS 

1.  Deluge 
e  Footlike 

organ 
».  Stacking 

machine 

10.  Insect 

11.  Quick 
12  State  nower 

(N.  Mex.) 
U.Gulf  (Sib.) 
15.  Support 

17.  Tidy 

18.  Spinning  toy  13.  Except 
20.  Small  16.  Disease 

stream  of  sheep 

22.  Compass         19.  Harbor 

point  (abbr.)  21.  Meadow 
22.  God  of  love  24.  Seaman 
25.  Dredge,  as       26.  Bucket 

a  river 
'l",.  Man's  name 
29  Name 

meaning 

healer 
30.  Obligations 
33.  Ill 

36.  Ahead 

37.  Praise 

39.  Card  ganre 

40.  Man's  name 
42.  Uttle  felkjw 

44.  Medal  of 
Honor 
(abbr.) 

45.  River  (Fr.) 
47,  Stairway 

post 

49.  Building 
addition 

50.  Tributary 
stream 

52.  Dutch 

commune 
53  Part  of 
knights' 
armor 
liOWN 
l.So«k 


28.  Af- 
firma- 
tive 
vote 

30.  Ught 
litter 
(India) 

31.  Bound- 
less 

32.  Under- 
water 
craft 
(coUoq.) 

34.  (3ne 
show- 
ing 

promise 
(colloq.) 

"A.  Eyelid  dye 
(East) 


DOSiilEi;    BOSS 

anacif  i-iuEae 

Etilij    UIHUH    CIS 

Dtirjid   i^iaaassi 
HcoH  [saQPia 


Rembrandt  tonight  at  8  on  WUNC- 
I'V.  Channel  4. 

The  title  of  the  three-program 
series  is  "Rembrandt  Immortal: 
Retrospect  after  350  Years." 

Two  previous  programs,  telecast 
November  21  and  28.  have  received 
favorable  comments  from  viewers. 
One  letter  received  by  the  Chapel 
Hill  studio  stated.  •Although  1  have 
never  had  the  slightest  intention  of 
buying  a  TV  set,  if  programs  such 
as  this  continue.  1  may  capitulate." 


Dec.  20-21 — 9  am..-5  p.m. 
Dec.       —9  a.m.-l   p.m. 
Dec.  23-25--Closed  (Sunday, 
Christmas  Eve,  Christmas  Day). 
Dec.  26-28 — 9  a.ra.-5  p.m. 
Dec.  29—9  a.m.-l  p.m. 
Dec.  30 — Closed  (Sunday). 
Dec.  31—9  a..m.-5  p.m. 
Jan.  1 — Closed. 
Jan.  2 — 9  a.m.-5  p.m. 
Jan.  3 — Resume  regular  hours. 


USh  Now 
Leader  Of 
Free  World 

DURHAM,  N.  C— (AP)— The 
leadership  of  the  free  werld  has 
suddenly  been  thrust  upon  the 
'United  Slates  in  the  greatest  shift 
of  power  since  the  fall  of  Rome. 
Federal  Judge  John  J.  Parker  of 
Charlotte  declared  here  Tuesday. 

"And  whether  we  like  it  or  not." 
the  Duke  Founder's  Day  speaker 
asserted,  "our  nation  has  been 
charged  wtih  responsibility  for 
the  leadership  of  the  free  nations. 

"For  us  to  fail  to  accept  it  is 
to  turn  the  free  world  over  to  Rus- 
sia and  to  slavery,"  Judge  Parker 
said,  adding,  "underprivileged  peo- 
ples all  over  the  world  are  look- 
ing for  guidance  and  we  are  the 
only  one  of  the  free  nations  in 
position  to  furnish  them  the  lead- 
ership that  they  need." 

He  said,  "If  we  do  not  accept 
world  leader^ip  ....  on  the  basis 
of  law  and  righteousness."  Russia 
will  unify  the  world  "on  the  basis 
of  force  and  fear. 

"If  we  are  to  preserve  our  free 
institutions,"  he  warned,  "m« 
must  educate  our  people  so  that 
they  may  be  able  to  cope  with  the 
dangers  that  threaten  those  in- 
stitutions." 


television  series.  "World  We  Want, 
1956 "  features  all  33  forum  dele- 1 
gates  in  panel  dis(?ussions  on  sub- 1 
jects  ranging  from  their  own  im- 
pressions of  America  to  the  advis- 
ability of  admitting  Red  China  to 
the  United  Nations. 

Moderated 'by  Mrs.  Helen  Wall- 
er, forum  director  of  the  Herald 
Tribune  staff,  the  14  half-hour 
programs  provide  American  stu- 
dents with  a  look  at  their  cbuntry 
and  themselves  through  the  eyes 
of  these  young  visitors.  One  sess- 
ion is  devoted  to  a  comparison  of 
the  American  public  school  sys- 
tem with  schools  familiar  to  the 
delegates  in  tiheir  own  countries. 

Viewers  also  have  an  oppor- 
tunity to  see  international  rela- 
tions on  highly  personal  level  as 
delegates  discuss  tense  world  sit- 
uation which  directly  involve  their 
own  countries,  and  therefore, 
their  own  personal  lives.  The 
delegate  from  Lsrael  explains  how 
she  must  prepare  to  defend  her 
country  by  learning  to  use  a  gun 
while  the  Yugoslav  delegate  puts  else  has  done." 
forth  a  heart  rendering  plea.  "We 
are  all  sen.sible  people.  Why  can't 
we   act   sensible?" 

Four  of  the  programs  are  de- 
voted to  an  exhaustive  discussion 
of  the  roots  of  prejudice. 


Pegg's  Book 
Widely  Used 
As  Text 


Henry  Uoit  and  Co.  has  informed 
Professor  C.  H.  Pegg  of  the  UNC 
History   Dept.   that   his   book    "Con- 


Mollis  Will  Be  Colonel 
On  European -Assignment 

Clyde  E.  'Pete"  Mullis,  associate 
professor  o2  playsical  education, 
who  recently  r(?ceived  an  invita- 
tioh  to  serve  as  an  instructor  in 
the  Army  Athletic  Clinic  neyt 
June  13  to  July  8.  in  Europe,  has 
been  notified  by  the  Adjutant 
General  that  he  will  be  located  in 
Nurnberg     and     Frankfurt,     Gcr- 


temporary  Europe  in  World  Focus"  |  many,  during  this  period.  Mullis 
has  made  a  solid  and  gratifying  I  will  have  the  rank  of  colonel  for 
start,  with  "adoptions"  of  the  vol-  j  this  assignment, 
•inie  for  textbook  purposes  in  30  col- 


leges and  universities  in  20  states. 


Professor  Pegg  was  assured  by 
h's  publishers  that  the  book,  pub- 
lished in  mid-summer,  has  lieen 
"universally  well  received  every- 
where" from  New  York  to  Cali- 
fornia. The  publishers  anticipate  a 
larger  number  of  adoptions  during 
the  next  three  months,  since  cours- 
es for  which  the  book  is  best  suit- 
ed usually  fall  in  the  Spring  sem- 
ester. 

Profes.sor  Eleanor  M.  Doughtery 
of  the  College  of  Great  Falls, 
writes:  "1  have  been  in  Europe  five 
times  since  the  war  and  I  feel  that 
this  author  has  caught  the  new 
.spirit   —  the  changes  —  as  no  one 


And  the 

Intimate 

Bookshop 

Gift-Wraps 

Books 

Free! 


Commerce  Fraternity 
Initiates  17  Members 

The  Alpha  Tau  chapter  of  Alpha 

Kappa     P.>i     commerce    fraternity 

ro'Cently  initiated   17  new  members 

into  the  fraternity.   The  new  mem- 

I  bers  are:   L.   P.   Wheeler,  Washing- 

'  ton;    Hugh    Campbell.    Laurinburg; 

I  D\\ight   Jenkins   and   John   Reaves, 

Charlotte;  Gerald  Suddreth,  Granite 

:  FaUs; 

Jimmy  Hunter.  Raleigh;  Bob  Pen- 
;  dergraph,  Durham:  Ralph  Johnson, 
i  Wmston-Salem ;  Ted  Smith,  Sea 
I  Cliff.  N.  v.;  Edward  Bird,  Charles- 
town,  W.  Va.;  Alton  Pons,  Valdese; 
I  Aiex  Lewis,  Morehead  City;  Donald 
'  Moore  and  Donald  Pugh,  Asheboro; 
j  billy  Green,  Chapel  Hill;  James 
"The  ruling  force  in  a  democracy  !j,^^„  Clinton;  Joe  Clapp.  Greens- 
is  informed  public  opinion."  Judge  ^^^ 
Parker  stated,  "and  one  of  the 
most  important  tasks  of  education 
is  #•  develop  that  opinion  by  train- 
ing men  and  women  who  will  be 
capable  of  dealing  with  the  prob- 
lems  of  the   state." 

Judge  Parker  was  the  featured 
speaker  at  the  University's  32nd 
annual   Founder's   Day  exercises. 


m-' 


^'^■ 


.t-«t' 


£/fJoy  Longer  Holidays  ^ 

For  Ftttt,  ConvenieM  Service 

Bristol-Kimgsport 
Johnson  City 

LOUISVILLE 
CINCINNATI 

cmd  many  other  points 


Coll  51,60  (Roleigh)  or  Your  Travel 


Argent  For  {Reservation^  Informati 


r-.i 


Kf 


F/enmonr 


PitomonT 


Relationships 
Assn.  Is  Tonight 

The  .Assn.  for  .Aging  and  Com- 
munity Relationships  will  hold  a 
meeting  tonight  at  the  Institute  of 
Pharmacy,  on  Church  St.  at  8  p.m. 

Chancellor  Robert  B.  House  will 
be  featured  in  a  brief  talk.  .Accord- 
ing to  Victor  Hugo,  said  an  an- 
nouncement from  the  Assn.,  forty 
is  the  age  of  youth  and  fifty  is  the 
yiHith  of  old  age.  .And  whether  you 
agree  with  Hugo,  you  will  most 
likely  be  interested  in  Hou.se's  topic 
which  is    "How  Old  Is  Old?"  it  said. 

There  will  also  be  a  short  Christ- 
mas movie,  games  directed  by  Ray- 
mond P.  Kaighn  and  carols  led  by 
Mrs.   Ira  Mann. 

All  members  of  the  V-ommunity 
interested  in  the  work  of  the  Assn 
are  cordially  invited. 


After  The  Busiest  Two  Weeks  Ever 

The  Intimate  Bookshop  Has  It! 

IF  YOU  NEED  ANY  OF  THE  BIG  CHRISTMAS  SELLERS  LISTED  HERE,  YOU'LI 
FIND  THEM  WAITING  FOR  YOU  TODAY  IN  CHAPEL  HILLS  MIRACULOUS  OLD 
BOOK  BARN!   - 


•'ii 


Yctlerdiiy'*  Aniwer 

38.  oand  hills 
11.  Baked  piece 

of  clay 
43.  Couches 
46.  N?wt 
48.  Tiny 
51.  Water  god 

(Babyl.) 


CAROLINA  CHRISTIAN  I  in   the   Physics  Building  at  Duke 

FELLOWSHIP  University.  Dr.  A.  P.  French,  chair- 

The  Rev.  David  Yates  will  be  I  man  of  the  Dept.  of  Physics  at  the 
the  speaker  at  the  weekly  meeting  |  University  of  South  Carolina,  wUl 
of  ihe  Carolina  Christian  Fellow- :  speak  on  the  topic  "Nucleon  Ex- 
ship  tonight  at  7  in  the  choir  re  !  change  Stripping  Reactions." 


hearsal  room  of  Hill  Hall. 

PHYSICS  COLLOOUIM 

A  joint  UNC-Duke  physics  col- 
loquim   will   be   held  tonight   at   8 


CLASSIFIEDS 


FOR  SALE:  1950  HUDSON  SUP 
er  6.  four  door,  excellent  con- 
dition. $250  or  nearest  offer. 
Call   Draper  at  8-9154. 

THERE  WILL  BE  NO  "JAZZ  AT 
Turnage's"  this  weekend  (Dec. 
15).  Sessions  will  resume  Jan. 
5. 

FOR  SALE:  CHRISTMAS  TREES, 
holly,  running  cedar,  mistletoe. 
Open  every  day  except  Christ- 
mas day.  Blackbird's  Market, 
W.  Franklin  St. 


WUNC 

Today's  schedule  for  WUNC,  the 

University's  m  radio  station: 
7:00— The  Spirit  of  Christmas 
7:15 — Poetry  in  Song 
7:30 — Songs  of  France 
7:46 — Curtain  Going  Up 
8:00 — Christmas  is  Coming 
8:30 — Georgetown  University 

Radio  Forum 

9:0O^Debussy  the  Master 
lOOO— News 

10:15 — Evening  Masterwork 
11:30— Sign  Off 

ED  WIVES  CLUB 
The  Ed  Wives  Club  will  sponsor 

a.  party  tonight  at  8.  Mrs.  Guy  B. 

t'hiliips    will    be    hostess    at    her 

home  at  517  E.  Rosemary  St. 

CHARLOTTE  CAROLINA  CLUB 
The  Charlotte  Carolina  Club  will 

hold  a  meeting  at  7  p.m.  Thursday 
FOR     SALE:     1955     MERCURY    in   105  Gardner.  Officers   will    d  i  I 
Mark    55.   40   horsepower,    $385.    elected  and  plans  will  be  made  for  I 
Contact     Ronnie    Nuckles.     407    a   dance   to   be  held  in  Charlotte , 
Winston.  on  Dec.  27. 


All  students  from  Charlotte  have 
been  invited  to  attend. 

BABY  SITTING  SERVICE 

Should  interest  warrant,  the  ba- 
by sitting  service  conducted  dur- 
ing home  football  games  at  Vic 
tory  Village  community  center  will 
be  extended  for  the  home  basket- 
ball games,  officials  of  the  nurseiy 
.'•aid.  Those  interested  should  cal' 
cither  9-2316  or  8K)177. 
WUNCTV 


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OPEN  TILL  10  P.M. 


VAGI    FOUR 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


WEDNESDAY,  DECEMBER    12,   1955 


Varsity  Cagers  Meet  G  W;  Tar  Babies  Tangle  With  Wolf  lets 


tilt  To  Be 
Reeled  Off 
In  Norfolk 


IMA  Has  Brilliant 
Mural  Cage  Record 

By  LARRY  CHEEK  | 

When  the  1956-57  Intramural  l>a5ketball  race  gets  under  waj  to-  i 

night,  it  will  be  T>L\  against  the  field.  Or  at  least  if  past  history-  is  i 

any  indication,  such  should  be  the  case.  j 

TAIA.  or  the  Town  Men's  Association  as  thej-  are  otherwise  re- ,      Faced  with  the  neccssitv  cf  up 
ferred  to.  has  reigned  supreme  over  the  local  mural  hardwood  scene  \  'lolding  their  lofty  national  ranK- 
for  two  years  now,  and  the  current  edition  of  "old  pros'  stands  poised  |  mg,    the    unbeaten    Carolina    Tar 
and  ready  to  uphold  the  high  standard  set  by  their  predecessors.         !  liecls   tangle   with   George   Wash 
Ifs  been  nearly  3  years  sine*  «nyene  beat  the  TMA  beys,  ami 
during  that  time,  the  "cagers  without  a  home"  have  romped  to  32 
consecutive  victories  find  two  atl-campus  championships. 
The  winning  tradition  started  in  the   1954-56  season  when   the 
Town  Men,  sparked  by  the  play  of  Kenny  Rosemond,  a  varsity  squad 
member  now.  whipped  through  a  rugged  schedule  without  a  loss.  They 
captured  the  mural  title  that  year  with  a  win  over  the  Dekes  in  the 
finals. 

Then  last  year,  it  was  the  same  story  all  over  again,  although  this  '  tht    latest   UP   poll.    Coach   Frank  j 


By  LARRY  CHEEK 


ington's  young  but  ambitious  Colo- 
nials tonight  in  Norfolk.  Va.,  m 
an  inter-conference  cage  clash. 

The  tall  Tar  Heels,  off  to  a  Cast 
start  in  the  1956-57  basketball 
race,  have  swept  past  two  out- 
classed opponents  with  murderous 
ease  to  jump  into  second  place  ia 


McGuires  club  clobbered  Furmaa 
94-66,  in  their  official  opener,  an.l 
whipped  Clcmson,  94-75,  in  their 
conference  debut  in  Charlotte  Sat- 
lu-day  night. 

George  Washington,  a  school 
known  for  its  fine  basketball 
teams  down  through  the  years,  is 
very  much  in  the  rebuilding  stage 
this  season.  Ail-Americans  Joe 
Holup  and  a  host  of  other  stars 
from  last  year's  club  are  gone,  and 
the  Southern  Conference  club  must 


time  the  Town  Men  did  it  without  ace-in-the-hole,  Rosemond.  In  Tact. 

last  season  no  one  in  the  league  was  strong  enough  to  offer  a  serious 

challenge  to  the  rough  and  ready  Town  Men. 

With  footballer  Bill  Koman  serving  as  "hatchet  man"  under 
the  boards,  TMA  slaughtered  all  opposition,  running  u^  100  plus 
scores  en  three  different  occasions.  No  team  managed  to  coma 
closer  than  15  points  to  beating  them,  and  in  the  all>cwnpus  fi- 
nals it  was  TMA  60,  Sigma  Nu  40. 
A  look  down  the  roster  of  those  two  teams  of  past  years  shows  a 

sparkling  array  of  cage  talent.  On  the  unbelaen  54-55  tea^  it  v.-as 

Rosemond,  Bill  Elllington,  Eddie  Mann,  Ike  Neely,  Gene  Smith  and 

Steve  Kenney  who  did  the  damage.  All  of  these  boys  had  long  years 

of  basketball  service  behind  them.  Ellington  was  an'  all-state  selection 

while  playing  for  High  Point  High  School,  as  was  Mann  with  Chapel  ■  depend  on   young  blood  this  sea- 
Hill  High..  Smith  was  a  veteran  of  seiHice  ball,  while  Neely  played  ;  son. 

briefly  on  the  Carolina  varsity  under  Tom  Scolt.  The    only   returning   starter    i. 

Some  of  the  same  names  appeared  in  last  year's,  lineup.  Islington  !  guard  Walt  Telasky,  a  6-2  jimio. 

and  Neely  were  still  on  the  scene  as  was  the  playing  manager.  Bill  i  who  carries   most   of  the  scorin- 

Powell.    But  most  of  the  other  boys  had  gone  their  respective  ways.  |  load  for  the  Colonials.  The  othci 

A  rebuilding  job  was  called  for.  and  ace  recruiter  Powell  went  out  \  four  starters  are  also  sophs,  with  j 

and  came  up  with  the  material  for  another  championship  team.    He  j  two  rising  from  last  year's  ja>-vee 

enlisted  the  services  of  Koman  to  take  care  of  the  rough  work.    He    team    and    two   com.ing    from    the 

lined  up  6-6  Ken  Shepard  to  handle  the  center  chores.  And  he  came    ranks  of  the  reserves. 

up  with  Guy  Moore  aad  Johnny  Rosemond,  a  pair  of  sharpshooting       The  Colonials  are  winless  in  two  I 

guards,  to  man  the  guard  slots.  Shepard  and  Moore  both  were  gradu-    starts  to  date,  losing  to  Wake  For- 1 

arcs  of  a  year  of  freshman  ball.  j  est  and  William  &  Mary.  The  Wil-  ! 

Only  two  familiar  faces  can  be  found  in  this  year's  lineup.      [  ^i^in  &  Mary  tilt  was  a  close  one 
They  are  Ellington,  bade  for  his  thirtf  year  lid  rated  the  campus's     i  with    the    Indians    prevailing,    89  ' 
top  nHiral   performer,  and  Roeomond,  Chapel   Hill  youth  with  a      ^-  I 

deadly  jump  shot. 
In  addition  to  these  two  vets,  the  Town  Men  have  six  other  boys 

who  rate  as  front  line  performers.  Chief-among  this  group  is  John 

Bilich,  240  pound  football  tackle  who  replaces  Koman  as  the  team 

"bouncer."  Bill  Schmidt,  a  6-3  grad  student  from  Miami,  and  Al  Mc- 

Surcly,  a  6-2  newcomer  from  Arlkigtoa,  A'a.;  will  provide  depth  under 

the  boards.  ...•.,.-.,,;       ■    .>    : 

On  the  back  line.  Rosemond  Wit)  receive  capable  batking  from 

Eddie  Brawlcy,  soi^h  from  DtHrham  who  specializes  in  the  broad  jump, 

Charles  Gray,  a  service  vet  from  High  Point,  and  Jack  Brown,  a  grad 

student  from  Marion.  .        ;. 

AiUnager  Powell,  dOspito  beevy  iesies  f^om   lest  year's  cham- 
pionship squad,  is  looking  forward  to  the  upcoming  campaign  with 
his  usual  air  of  optimism.  "We're  not  going  te  be  as  good  as 
last  year,  but  we  should  be  plerOir  goorf  enough  to  win,"  he  pr% 
.dkted  yesterday. 

/     "Schmidt  and  Elllington  give  us  a  strong  one-two  scoring  punch.  I 

and  with  Bilich  under  the  boards,  we'll  be  tough  to  beJat,"  saia  Pow- 1 

ell.  WTien  asked  to  name  TMA's  number  one  challenger,  Powell  put  j 

his  finger  on  the  Dental  School,  but  added,  "ATO  and  Sigma  Chi  may  i 

give  us  a  run  for  our  money  too." 

TMA  opens  its  schedule  tonight  against  Victory  Village.    '       \ 


UNC  State  'coaching  Jobs 

Up  For  Grabs 


UNC  Jump  Shot  Artist 


Pete  Brennan  (above),  will  be  in  the  starting  lineup  tonight 
when  the  Carolina  Tar  Heels  take  on  George  Washington  in  Nor- 
folk, Va.  Brennan,  a  6-7  forward,  poured  in  28  points  to  pace  the 
Tar  Heels  to  a  94-75  win  over  Clemson  last  Saturday  night. 


Frosh  Play 
In  Kinston 

By  DAVE  WIBLE 

Carolina  s  undefeated  Frosh 
cagers  will  travel  to  Kinston  to- 
night to  meet  the  strong  State 
Wolf  lets,  possessors  of  a  2-1  seasoi, 
record. 

Tonight's  contest  will  be  the 
toughest  for  the  Tar  Babies  to 
date.  Their  two  wins  have  come 
over  the  hapless  High  Point  Col- 
lege Jayvees  and  mediocre  Wil- 
mington Junior  College. 

Coach  Vince  Grimaldi  will  start 
the  .same  quintet  that  has  opened 
the  other  two  contests.  Lee  Shaf- 
fer. 6-7  jump  shot  specialist  and 
6-4  York  Larese  will  start  at  the 
forward  slots.  The  Tar  Babies  tali 
est  man  at  6-8,  Dick  Keply  wi'l 
be  the  pivot  man.  Driving  Mike 
Steppe  and  John  Crotty,  the  short 
est  of  the  Tar  Babies  will  handle 
the  backcourt  chores. 

State  starters  will  be  Walter 
Bortko  and  Bob  Cole  at  forwards, 
Don  Gallagher  at  center  and  Bui 
Haig  and  Bob  McCann  at  gguards. 
The  Wolflets  will  be  without  the  homa's  highly  successful  Bud  Wil- 
services  of  their  two  original  cen-  kinson;  Bobby  Dodd  of  Georgia  Tech, 
ters,  Jackie  Moreland  and  John '  Duffy  Daugherty  of  IMichigan 
Wessels.  The  much  disputeci  Mor6-  State  and  Frank  Leahy,  retired  Notre 
land  has  been  declared  ineligible '  Dame  coach.   There's  no  indication 

has    that  any  of  them  are  interested  in 
the  jobs. 


By  HUGH  FULLERTON  JR. 

NEW  YORK  —  >/Fi  —  With  a  half 
dozen  or  so  of  the  best  coaching 
jobs  in  college  football  up  for  grabs, 
the  "big  name"  men  of  the  coaching 
profession  can  expect  to  spend  a 
lot  of  time  denying  rumors  for  the 
next   month  or  so. 

With  the  end  of  the  1956  college 
season,  three  head  coaches  with 
long  and  honorable  records  have 
2one  into  retirement  and  a  half 
dozen  others  have  resigned  —  or 
have  been  politely  fired  —  at  ma- 
jor  colleges. 

The   list   reads   like   this: 

Retired  —  Lou  Little,  Columbia; 
Don  Faurot.  Missouri,  and  Jesse 
Hill,  Southern  California.  The  last 
two  are  moving  into  athletic  direc- 
tors'  posts. 

Resigned  —  Ed  Price,  Texas; 
Ciialmer  Woody  Woodard.  Southern 
Methodist:  Bernie  Crimmins.  In- 
diana; V'nce  Di  Francesca.  Iowa 
State;  Lynn  Pappy  Waldorf.  Cali- 
fornia, and  just  yesterday,  John 
Sauer.    The   Citadel. 

Tlie  names  most  prominently 
mentioned  in  connection  with  the 
major    vacancies    have    been    Okla- 


B  O  B  and  M  O  N  K 
of 

TOWN& 
CAMPUS 

SALUTE 
Athlete  Of  The  Week 


by    the    ACC     and    Wessels 
dropped  out  of  school. 


Tar  Heel  Matmen 
Top  Davidson  20-8 


The  up-and  -  coming  Carolina 
wrestling  squad  won  their  second 
match  of  the  season  20-8  from  the 
matmen  of  Davidson  College. 

The  Tar  Heels  lost  only  the  123- 
pound  and  the  Heavj-weight  bouts ! 
taking  the  other  six.  Captain  Bob{ 
Wagner    was    the   only   Tar    Heel' 
to   pin  his  man;   the  other  boutS 
were  won  by  decisions. 

The  Tar  Heels  are  spforting  a 
2-0-1  record  this  year,  already  the 


The  Tar  Heels  will  travel  to  the 
Citadel  next  Friday  for  the  sea- 
sons   fourth    match. 

The  summary: 

123  —  Coleman,  (D),  pinned 
Wall,  2:05  in  the  first  period;  130 
—Wagner,  (C),  pinned  Cole,  2:45 
in  the  first  period;  137— Hender- 
son, (C),  defeated  Griffin,  4-0; 
147— Boyette,  (C).  defeated  Gee, 
7-3;  157— Hoke,  (C).  defeated 
Brown,  2-1;  167— Atkinson,  (C), 
defeated  Westerveit,  3-2;  177— 
best  in  many  seasons.  Last  year!  Daughtry,  (C).  defeated  King,  8- 
the  Wildcats  defeated  the  winless  {7;    Heavcyweight — Fagg,    (D),    de- 


Lcnnie  Rosenbluth  and  Pete 
Brennan,  the  two  big  men  in  the 
conquest  of  Clemson  Saturday 
night,  should  pace  the  Tar  Heels 
both  in  the  scoring  column  and 
under  the  boards  tonight.  Rosen- 
bluth, new  holder  of  the  Univer- 
sity one  game  scoring  record,  has 
averaged  36.5  points  per  game,  and 
in  addition  has  pulled  down  an 
average  of  11  rebounds  per  outing. 

Brennan,  top  scorer  against  the 
Tigers  with  28  points,  has  a  21.5 
scoring  average  and  a  10.5  rebound 
mark  to  trail  Rosenbluth  in  both 
departments. 

Rounding  out  the  starting  quin- 
tet will  be  Bill  Hathaway  at  cen- 
ter, and  Tommy  Kearns  and  Bob 
Cunningham  at  the  guards. 

Also  figuring  prominently  i:i 
Coach  McGuire's  plans  is  lanky 
Joe  Quigg,  6-8  junior  who  rates  at- 
the  Tar  Heel  number  six  man  at 
the  present  time.  Quigg  has  a  14,5 
scoring  average  and  is  the  team 
leader  in  rebounds  with  a  mark  of 
12  per  game. 

The  Tar  Heels  will  round  out  a 
two  game  road  trip  Saturday  night 
when  they  meet  the  South  Caro 
Iina  Gamecocks  in  Columbia.  Their 
next  home  game  is  next  Monday 
night  with  Maryland. 


Floyd  Patterson  Named 
'  Fighter  OiTheY  ear 


By  JACK  HAND 

NEW  YORK  -  (iP  —  Floyd  Pat- 
terson, th'.'  youngest  heavyweight 
champion  in  the  hustory  of  the  prize 
ring,  yt'sterda>  wus  named  winner 
of  the  Edward  J.  .\eil  Memorial 
Plaque  as  "Fighter  of  the  Year" 
by   the   Boxing  Writers'   Assn. 

The  21-year-old  former  Olympic 
champion  wlio  climaxed  his  spec- 
tacular riiC  by  knocking  out  .Archie 
Moore  in  five  rounds  at  Chicago 
Nov.  3(K  will  receive  tlic  award  at 
the  association's  annual  dinner  Jan. 
24    at    the    Roosevelt    Hotel. 

Patterson  wa^;  the  unanimous 
choice  of  the  writers  who  did  not 
coniiider    any    other   nominee. 

The  Neil  trophy  is  the  most 
prized  of  all  boxing  awards  and  is 
presented  annually  to  the  fii^hter 
of  the  year  or  the  man  who  did 
the  most  to  advance  the  sport  dur- 
ing the  year.  It  is  awarded  in 
memory   of   the   former   Associated 


Press  boxing  writci  who  was  kill- 
ed in  1938  while  serving  as  a  war 
correspondent   in  Spain. 

Carmen  Basilio,  the  welterweight 
champion,  was  the  1955  xs  inner. 
I  Originated  in  19.38  when  Jack  Demp- 
1  ,sey  was  the  winner,  others  to  re- 
ceive the  plaque  were  Billy  Conn. 
Henry  .\rmstrong.  Joe  Louis.  Barn- 
ev  Ross,  the  boxers  in  the  armed 
.services  1943,  Benny  Locnard, 
James  J  Walker.  Tony  Zale,  Gus 
Lesnevich,  Ike  Wiliiams,  Ezzurd 
Charles,  Ray  Robinson,  Jersey  Joe 
Walcott,  Rocky  Martiauo,  Kid  Gav- 
ilan  and  Bobo  Ol.son. 

Patterson,  a  product  of  the  gold- 
<  n  gloves,  moved  to  the  top  of  the 
amateur  ranks  and  won  the  Olym- 
pic chami'ionship  as  a  middle- 
weight at  Helsinki  in  1952,  He 
turned  piX)fe&sional  on  his  return 
and  has  won  31  of  hLs  32  fights, 
losing  only  on  a  disputed  decision 
to  Joey  Maxim  in  eight  rounds  in 
1954, 


Statement  On 
Moreland  Case 
Is  Forthcoming 

RALEIGH— (AP)—N,  C.  State 
College  Chancellor  Carey  H. 
Bostian  has  promised  another 
statement  will  be  made  this  week 
on  the  Jackie  Moreland  case. 

Dr.  Bostian  made  the  announce- 
ment following  a  three  hour  meet- 
ing Monday  with  James  Weaver, 
Commissioner  of  the  Atlantic 
Coast   Conference, 

State  was  placed  on  probation 
for  four  years  by  the  NCAA  for 
its  method  of  recruiting  More- 
land,  a  6-8  lefthanded  basketball 
sensation  at  the  Minden.  La.. 
High  School  last  season. 


Tar  Heels  26-10, 


feated  Corky.  5-4. 


UNCNYU  Tickets 

Nearly  100  tickets  have  been 
sold  to  tht  UNC-NYU  basketball 
game  in  New  York  City,  and 
sales  tf  nteving  briskly.  More 
tickets  will  be  erdered  when  the 
available  supply  runs  «ut.  Any 
one  desiring  tickets  should  con- 
tact Leu  Rotcnstock  at  the  ZBT 
house,  not  the  TEP  house  as  was 
reported  yesterday. 


Club  Owners  Vote  To  Change 
Rule  Affecting  College  Players 


By  JOE   REICHLER 

CHICAGO— (AP)— The  major 
league  clubowners,  in  a  surprise 
move,  voted  yesterday  to  rescind 
the  college  rule  whereby  a  big 
league  club  was  not  permitted  to 
sign  a  college  player  after  he  liad 
reached   his   sophomore  year. 

Ending  their  winter  convention 
a  day  sooner  than  expected,  the 
big    league    executives    voted    to 


The  Students  Speak 


Was  NCAA  Too  Severe? 


By  JIM  HARPER 

Perhaps  the  most  controversial 
issue  concerning  athletics  to  be 
raised  in  the  past  few  weeks  i.s 
the  NCAA's  suspension  of  State 
College  from  NCAA  -  sponsored 
events  for  the  next  four  years  oe- 
cause  of  alleged  infractions  ii 
State's  recruiting  of  basketball 
sensation  Jackie  Moreland. 

Oxer  the  weekend  the  Daily  Tar 
Heel,  in  an  attempt  to  determine 
student  opinion  on  the  matter, 
asked  this  question  to  members  of 
the  s-tudent  body:  "Do  you  think 
that  the  NCAA  was  too  severe  in 
its  punishment  of  State  College?  " 

This  is  i  >w  the  various  student* 
answered: 

Elliot  Hickman.  "Yes.  The 
NCAA  hasn't  presented  enough 
evidence  to  gu.stify  their  actioa." 

Bob  Young— "No.  If  the  alleged 
actioius  arc   true,   niimdj    if  .Murt- 


land  was  offered  what  they 
tNCAA)  say  he  was,  I  think  the 
basketball  team  and  coaching  staff 
should  be  penalized.  In  view  of  the 
fact  that  State  had  just  come  off 
probation  for  one  year,  they  cer- 
tainly should  have  been  aware  of 
any  violation,  and  should,  have 
been  much  more  cautious.  How- 
ever, I  don't  think  the  whole  ath- 
letic organization  should  be  pun- 
»shed." 

Henry  McPherson.  "Yes.  Per- 
haps they  weren't  too  severe  on 
the  basketball  program,  but  they 
were  too  severe  on  the  sports  pro 
gram  as  a  whole.  It's  unfair  to  pun- 
ish boys  in  swimming,  tennis  antl 
wrestling." 

Frank  Miller,  "Yes.  They 
(NCAA)  hurt  the  other  sports,  es- 
pecially swimming,  more  than  thuy 
did  the  basketball  team." 

W'alh  Kuralt— "No.  1  think,  if 
rile  \('.\A  ividencc  is  .>ub,stanluu, 


that  State  got  what  it  deserved 
Rules  weren't  actually  made  to 
break," 

Joe  Hurt,  "Yes.  The  NCA\ 
never  disclosed  what  evidence 
they  had  to  act  on  the  matter 
State  should  have  had  a  chance  lo 
give  their  side  of  the  story.  I  think 
they  were  framed." 

Fick  Arthur.  "Yes.  From  what  I 
sec,  the  NCAA  hasn't  presented 
anough  evidence  to  justify  the 
punishment.  I  think  it's  too  severe 
for  one  case.  For  a  number  of 
cases  it  would  not  be  too  severe 
but  for  one  case,  yes." 

Mailcolm  iVIcLeod,  "No.  I  onlv 
regret  that  other  sports  have  'o 
suffer  as  a  result  of  this  incident, 
I  think  that  college  athletics 
should  remain  at  an  amateur 
level.' 

Buie  Costen,  "No.  Because  col- 
lege sports  are  turning  profession- 
i}\.  Iiitercoilegiate  comjpetition  was 


originally  meant  to  be  wholesome 
competition  between  amateurs. 
Today  unorthodox  principals  used 
by  colleges  and  universities  in  olv 
taining  players  arc  destroying  ihi^ 
original  concept  of  intercollegiate 
competition," 

Dave  Jones,  "Yes.  There  have 
been  so  many  abuses  of  the  amr.- 
teur  standing  regulations  that  they 
are  meaningless.  I  feel  that  l) 
take  a  single  case  of  abuse  froiv 
the  many  and  make  a  harsh  rul 
ing  is  unfair.  This  affair  smells 
like  headline  hunting  on  the  pa -t 
of  the  Association  to  me," 

John  Alexander,  "Yes,  it  waa 
too  severe,  in  that  I  personally 
think  that  only  the  sport  invoiveJ 
should  be  punished  for  the  mis- 
demeanor." 

Leroy  Walker.  "No.  If  ihc 
NC.NA  has  the  facts  on  the  ca^u• 
I  don'l  think  they  were  to-i 
harli." 


adopt  all  measures  passed  by  the  | 
minors    at     their     National    Assn. 
convention     in     Jacksonville     last 
week,  including  the  28-player  cut- 
down  amendment  on  opening  day,  ' 

It  was  their  action  on  the  col- 1 
lege  rule,  however,  that  created 
the  biggest  excitement,  a  decision 
that  is  certain  to  cause  consider-', 
able  resentment  in  college  circles,  | 
especially  among  the  members  of  ; 
the  American  Assn,  of  College  I 
Baseball   Coaches, 

There  was  a  fallacy  in  this 
rule,  however.  It  lay  in  the  fact 
that  minor  league  clubs  were  not 
under  its  jurisdiction  since  they 
had    steadfastly    voted    against    it. 


MURALS 


Six  teams  met  yesterday  in  in- 
tramural volleyball  action  play- 
ed in  Woollen  Gym.  In  the  fra- 
ternity class  these  were  the  re 
suits:  In  the  White  League  Zeta 
Psi  defeated  Sig  Nu  2-1.  ATO  de 
feated  Zeta  Psi  in  the  Blue 
League  The  only  dormitory  ac- 
tion featured  a  2-1  win  by  Med 
School  1  over  Med  School  3. 


And  the 
Best 

Christmas 
Cards 
Cost  a 
Nickel  at 
The  Intimate 
Bookshop 


2  YEARS  IN  PROOUCnON!  THOUSANDS  IN  THE  CAST! 

HOWANI  JUNCTION 

-r/nrAVA  GARDNER  •  STEWART  GRANGER  •  .    B!U  travers 

IN   COLOR   ANP' CINEMASCOPE 


earolina 


NOW   PLAYING 


SOPHIA 


"The  signorina  racks 
up  quite  a  score!"    ^ 

»CfOw»ner.  N.   Y.   Timet 


'¥ 


LOREN 

"When  this  siren  erupts,  it's 
every  man  for  hinriself!" 

_  Do  >  W     o' 


*TooBad  f  $hesBa«» 


with 
VITTOHIO  Oe  SiCA 


TODAY 
•^      ONLY 


The  Dollar 
Table  at 
The  Intimate 
Boofcs/iop' 
Solves  More 
Christmas 
Problems 
Than 
Santa  Claus! 


PETE  BRENNAN 

Pete  Brennan,  6-7  forward  or 
Carolina's  highly  touted  bas- 
ketball team,  has  been  nameH 
Athlete  of  the  Week  following 
his  28  point  scoring  spree 
cigainst  Clemson  Saturday  night, 
Brennan  hit  10  of  12  free 
throws  and  9  of  12  field  goals 
in   racking   up   his  total. 

We  want  him  to  drop  by 
TOWN  &  CAMPUS  and  pick  out 
a  shirt  to  his  liking — compli- 
ments of  the  house. 


We  want  the  old  and  young 
-like  of  Chapel  Hill  to  meke 
TOWN  &  CAMPUS  their  head 
quarters  for  the  finest  in  men's 
clothing.    Drop   in    today. 

TOWN  & 
CAMPUS 


Perfect  in  style 

as  well  as  comfort..^ 


FLORSHEIM 

Tassel  Slip-ons 


These  carefree  islip-ons  are  haadi^umeiy  proper  for  ail 
round-the-clock  occasion.s.  1  hanks  to  the  special  lasts 
designed  by  Florsheim  just  for  these  shoes,  they  fit 
snugly  ail  o\cr  nitboul  slipping  or  binding.  Slip  into 
a  pair  ?oou. 

In   black    and    mahogany   cordovan. 

NEW    GIFT    CERTIFICATES 

REDEEMABLE    ANYWHERE 

IN     U.  S.  A. 


Julian* 


\ 


e  #(op 


■'4^i::i£ 


€!iapel  Hill,   H.   C 


N.  C.   SfSte  Assistants   G 


RALEIGH— JJ»)— The  assistant 
Director  of  Athletics  at  N.  C. 
State  and  an  assistant  basketball 
coach  violated  Atlantic  Coast 
Conference  regulations  in  rc- 
cruitin,?  Jackie  Moreland,  ac- 
cording to  a  telegram  released 
Wednesday  by  Chancellor  Carey 
H.  Bostian. 

Dr.  Bostian  released  the  tele- 


gram, which  was  received  last 
Saturday  from  ACC  Commission- 
er James  H.  Weaver,  following 
an  afternoon  conference  with 
Consolidated  University  Presi- 
dent William  Friday. 

The  telegram  specifically 
named  Assistant  Athletic  Direc- 
tor Willis  Casey  and  assistant 
basketball  coach  Victor  Bubas  as 
having   knowledge    of    and    par- 


ticipating  in    the   alleged    viola- 
tions. 

Bostian  said  States  Faculty 
Athletic  Council  will  meet  this 
coming  Saturday  (10  a.m.)  to  de- 
cide what  the  next  step  will  be. 

Moreland,  a  6-8  basketball 
sensation  at  Minden.  La.,  showed 
up  at  State  this  fall  after  he  had 
signed  a  letter  of  intent  to  en- 
ter Texas  A&M   and   a  grant   in 


aid  at  Kentucky. 

The  NCAA  placed  State  on 
probation  for  four  years  for  its 
method  of  recruiting,'  Moreland. 

State  officials  denied  the 
charge.':  and  asked  the  ACC  to 
make  its  own  independent  in- 
vestigation. 

Last  Saturday  ACC  Commi.><- 
sioner  Weaver  met  with  Bostian 
to  go  over  a  preliminary  investi- 


In    Recruiting   Moreland 


gallon   report.   President   Friday 
was  out  of  the  State. 

The    telegram    released   today 
said: 

.  .  The  Atlantic  Coast  Con- 
ference decided  to  interview 
Victor  Bubas,  Willis  Casey,  Har- 
ry Steward  (head  of  the  fund 
raising  Wolfpack  Club)  and  Jacli 
Moreland.  This  was  done  by  fac- 
ulty   representatives    on    Thurs- 


day evening,  Dec.  6,  1956.  Based 
upon  this  interview  the  faculty 
representatives  reached  the  fol- 
lowing conclusions: 


"1- 


S80 
his 


-Moreland  was  given 
for  transportation  from 
home- to  Raleigh. 

'"2 — These  funds  were  given 
to  him  in  the  presence  of  and 
with  the  knowledge  of  Bubas  and 
Casey. 


"3 — ft  was  stated  that  this 
money  was  actually  given  by  Mi-. 
Laiighlin,  an  uncle  of  Mrs.  Casey 
(no  further  identification). 

"4 — After  Moreland  arrived  in 
Raleigh,  he  was  assured  at  leas; 
by  Bubas  that  he  would  be  given 
a  fifth  year  of  financial  aid  a^ 
N.  C.  State  if  this  became  nec- 
essary. 

"From  the  foregoing,  the  fac- 


ulty representatives  have  con- 
cluded that  excessive  financial 
aid  w^as  given  to  Moreland  in 
violation  of  ACC  regulation.*;. 

We  cannot  express  any  fur- 
ther opinion  as  to  the  degree  of 
guilt  of  Specific  acts  witho^ 
making  a  full  scale  investiga- 
tion. Before  any  ACC  penalties 
are  imposed,  we  await  further 
communication  from  you.' 


WEATHER 

Cloudy  with  »how*rs  »nd  celd«r. 
High  today  60.  ^ 


2r()  c  Daily  ffi  ^Tar  Mtti 


VOL.  LVII     NO.  6S 


Complete  {JP)   Wire  Service 


CHAPEL  HILL,  NORTH  CAROLINA,  THURSDAY,  DECEMBER  13,  1956 


Offices   in   Graham    Memorial 


FLAG-WAVING 

Silence   Speaks   louder.   So*  odi- 
torial.   Page  2. 


POUR  PAGES  THIS  ISSUE 


Carolina  Cavalcade  Of  Talent 


Twenty  Acts  Will  Compete 
Tonight  In  Memorial  Hall 


Twenty   acts    wiJI    rompete    fhr   prizes    tonii^ht    in    Tlie^ 
f:arolina  Cavalrade  ol  Talent  held  in  Memorial  Hall  at  S.    | 

Sponsored  jointly  by  the  VM.VWCA  and  (irahnm  Men)- 
orial  Activities   fioard,  the  talent   proQfrani  will  .ilso   include 
an  appearance  bv  the  Y-\ite  Chorns  under  the  direction  ol  | 
Nfi.ss  \'al  \'on  Amnion.  Co-ordinator  with  .Miss  \'oii  .\nun<in  ; 
for  the  '^o  sinsjers  is  Buddy  Strickland. 


The  20  acts  will   be  competing  ♦ 
for  three  cash  prizes:  a  $25  first 
plcM^e   award,   a  $15  second  pri;e, 
and  a  $10  prize  to  the  act  placing 
third. 

Judges  for  the  show  are:  Kay 
and  Georgia  Kyser;  Jc^m  Clayton, 
instructor  in  radio  and  television, 
Harry  Middleton,  manager  of  a 
Durham  radio  station;  and  Sam 
Selden,  head  of  the  I>ramatic  Arts 
Dept. 


'Lifeboat' 
To  Show 
At  8  PM 


Lcnnie      Rosenbluth      and      nis  * 
troupers   will   not   appear   due   to 
their  practicing  for  the  South  Car- 
olina   game.     Ed     Sutton,    former 
Carolina   football   player,   will   ap- 
pear with   the  "doggers."  In  ad- 
dition,  track  star  Jim  Beatty  will 
make  a   surprise  appearance.   The  i 
entire  show  will   be  accompanied  I 
by    Don    Jefferson   and    the    "  Em- 
bers." 

Dave  Davis  and  Miss  Dottle 
Wood  will  serve  as  master  and 
mistress  of  ceremonies. 

Tickets  for  the  talent  show  can 
be  obtained  in  the  Y  office,  or 
Irom  Miss  Neltie  Sanders  at  tlix> 
Pi  Beta  Phi  house.  Miss  Daryl  Far- 
rington  in  Alderman,  or  from  Jim 
Raugh  at  the  DKE  house. 

The  price  of  tickets  is  50  cents, 
half  of  which  will  go  to  the  Y  and 
half  to  GMAB. 


"Lifet>oat,'  an  Alfred  Hitchcock 
thriller,  will  be  shown  tonight  a'; 
8  p.m.  at  Carroll  Hall  sponsored 
by  the  Fine  Film  Committee  of  i..c 
(rraham  Memorial  Activities 
Board. 

The  picture  stars  Tallulah  Bank- 
'lead  and  is  the  next-to-last  offti- 
ing  of  the  Fine  Film  Series  this 
semester. 

The  film  depicts  the  lifeboat  ex 
perierices  of  a  group  of  men  an<l 
women  set  adrift  following  a  tor- 
pedoing of  their  ship.. 

Miss  Bankhead  portrays  a  young 
heiress  who  becomes  a  key  figure 
in  the  emotional  conflict  which 
arises  during  the  trial  at  sea. 

Admission  Is  by  su]>scripti(»n  on- 
ly, but  tickets  for  this  featuri'  and 
'Incorrigible,"  the  next  r  ino  F'iin! 
presentation,  will  be  on  sale  at 
Carroll  Hall  prior  to  th"  film 
I  Tickets  for  the  two  films  are  75 
I  cents. 


Di  Senate  Calls  For 
Pearsall  Plan  Repeal 


In  an  almost  ulianimous  de- 
cision, 11-1.  the  Dialectic  Senate 
voted  Tuesday  night  to  repeal  the 
Pearsdll   Plan. 

In  introducing  the  bill,  Condi- 
tional Senator  Betty  Huffman 
claimed  the  present  situation  Is 
impossible  and  would  result  in 
chaos  for  the  North  Carolina  pub- 
lic school  system. 

"Although  tiie  state  supports 
the  schools,  no  one  is  forced  to 
go  to  them,"  argued  negative  speak- 
er. Senator  Gene  Whitehead.  He 
went  on  to  say  that  segregation 
was  desired  by  the  people  of  North 
Carolina. 

Senator  David  Lambeth  said 
the  state  could  not  defend  its  al- 
locating money  to  private  schools 
and  the  Pearsall  Plan  has  destroy- 
ed much  of  the  work  of  civic  com- 
mittees. 

Senator  Stan  Shaw  stated  no 
one  is  able  to  look  at  the  situation 
objectively  and  that  with  proper 
education  the  Negroes  could  de- 
velop some  traits  they  are  lack- 
ing. Later  in  the  evening  he  ex- 
horted the  Senate 
children    from    the 


Scabbard 
And  Blade 
Initiates  16 

The  Scabbard  and  Blade  So- 
ciety initiated  16  new  members 
Tuesday  night  at  the  Naval  Armo- 
ry. 

Those  taken  into  the  organiza- 
tion   included:  ' 

Ronald  C.  Gahrmann,  Harry  C. 
Steele.  Kenneth  M.  Callender.  S. 
B'iiine  Beck.  Geiyld  M.  Mayo, 
Thomas  G.  Farrell.  Ralph  P.  Hunt. 
William    D.    Lackey. 

Also  Jerry  R.  Cole.  Colin  R. 
McMillan.  John  Ludwig,  Thomas 
W.  Davis  III.  Maurice  Glatzer. 
Canie  B.  Smith.  Frederic  C.  By- 
rum  and  John  R.  Alexander. 

The  Scabbard  and  Blade  is  a 
national  military  socie4>-  with  lo- 
cal chapters  called  companies. 
The  -«:ocicty  is  located  at  146  lead- 
ing colleges  and  universities 
where  there  are  reserve  officer 
training    programs. 

Its  purpose  is  primarily  to 
raise  the  standard  of  military  ed- 
ucation, to  unite  in  cl(\sor  rela- 
tionship the  military  depls..  to  en- 
courase  and  foster  the  es.sential 
qualities  of  good  and  efficient  of- 
ficers and  to  promote  friendship 
among   the   cadet   officers. 

Officers  of  the  society  this  year 
are  Capt.  Darwin  Bell,  1st  Lt. 
Hugh  Cowan.  2nd  Lt.  Ricljard 
Booth  and  1st  Sgt.  Gordon  Brown 
The  advisers  are  Lt  Col.  Franklin 
Swan  Air  Force  and  Maj.  Law- 
rence  Norton,   Navy. 


Columbia  St.  Fraternities  Display 
Progress  Toward  Parking  Solution 

Dekes  Construct  Lot; 
Betas  Modify  Theirs 


Got  60  Per  Cent  Of  Campus  Chest 


World  University  Service  Sends 
Letter  To  University  Students 


the   principles  of  our  ancestors." 

"The  plan  is  unconstitutional  j 
and  will  be  found  to  be  so  when  ■ 
it  comes  before  the  Supreme  j 
Court,"  claimed  Pebbley  Barrow,  j 
He  quoted  an  enabling  act  to  the  j 
Plan,  "The  Supreme  Court  iS| 
u.surping  the  rights  of  the  j>eople  | 
of  North  Carolina,"  and  said  it  | 
was  stupid  for  the  state  to  try  to  \ 
take  a  slap  at  the  Supreme  Court.  | 

Senator  Nancy  Rothschild  stat- 
ed the  Plan  would  be  found  to  be 
unconstitutional  when  it  is  brought 
before  the  Supreme  Court  and 
asked  that  the  South  accept  its 
fate  gracefully.  "We  ought  to  be 
horrified  at  the  Pearsall  Plan," 
she  concluded. 

Claiming  that  the  Pearsall  Plan 
is  a  radical  movement  and  the 
tool  of  citizens'  groups,  Senator 
Gerry  Boudreau  asked  for  mod- 
eration. 

Guest  Frederic  Wolfer  said  Chat 
integration  had  been  working 
very  well  in  the  army. 

Conditional  Senator  Gary  Greer 

.said  we  must  look     the     problem 

'to   keep    our    squarely  in  the  face  and  sdlve  it. 

dirt    of    inte-    "To  repeal   the   bill   will   give   us 


Choral  Club,  Grail  To 
Make  Caroling  Tour 

Members  of  the  Univcr>.ity 
Choral  Club  will  join  members 
of  the  Order  of  the  Grail  for  s 
caroling;  lour  of  the  campus 
next  Tuesday  night. 

The    Grail    sponsors    a    campu.s 
caroling  tour  each   Christmas. 

Students  are  invited  to  join 
carolers  in  front  of  Hill  Hall  aft- 
er the  Choral  Club  concert  at  8 
oclock  to  participate  in  the 
tour,  atc'ording  to  Grail  Carolini; 
Chairman  Sonny  Hallford. 


After  receiving  60';  of  the  re- 
cent Campus  Chest  Drive,  World 
University  Service  sent  the  follo.v 
ing  letter  to  the  Students  of  tiie 
University  of  North  Carolina. 

"We  are  writing  to  advise  you 
that  as  funds  are  received,  thej 
are  being  cabled  to  Europe,  whe/r 
a  WUS  field  representative  •.•« 
working  among  Hungarian  stu- 
dent escapees. 
GIFTS   PROVIDE   RELIEF 

"(Jift.s  chdnnc'ied  through  \\'\J^ 
are  being  u.sed  to  provide  imme- 
diate relief,  including  maintv- 
nance,  transportation,  clothing, 
miscellaneous  effects,  books,  in- 
struction materials,  and  personne  ; 
lo  establish  and  operate  for  thrae 
months  a  spgeiirt  csmip  tin  slndeJT^ 
lefugees,  who  must  bo  housed  un- 
til they  are  resettled,  to  pro\id< 
basic  maintenance  when  the  cur- 
rent one-month  folding  progruni 
of  the  Red  truss  is  terminated, 
and  to  meet  such  long-term  neeus 
as  i-osettlenunt  ami  scholarship 
aid. 

"It  IS  still  hoped  that  a  way 
may  be  found  to  assure  the  dis 
tribution  of  relief  safely  and  in 
accordance  with  WUS  principle^i 
to  university  students  remaining 
in  Hungary.  At  the  time  of  writ 
ing,  however,  such  channels  do 
not  appear  to  be  assured. 
COORDINATING    COMMITTEE 

■"WUS  is  one  ol'  three  orga;.'- 
zations  participating  in  an  'ntcr 
national  co-ordinating  committee 
set   up   in  Vienna   on   Nov.    16   o\ 


a  conffrence  of  fourteen  National 
Uni.  ns  of  Students,  All  program.s 
for  aid  to  Hungarian  student  refu- 
gees are  being  coordinated  by  this 
committee,  which  is  cooperating 
vvith  the  established  voUiiitarv 
agencies   now  wroking   in   Austria 

■■\Ve  shall  keep  you  informed  of 
.^ub.sequent  developments.  Me^m- 
while,  you  have  our  deep  appre- 
ciation  for  the  .sympathy  and  c m- 
crete  support  you  have  given  to 
these  brave  and  deserving  stu- 
dents." 

The  letter  was  signed  by  Bill 
Kitchen,  executive  secretary  oi 
WUS. 

Miss  Jackie  Ahlridge.  repre.^ee.t- 
mg  the  YWCA,  has  asked  "the  slu 


cflnpus 

SEEN  I 


Sitting  nhere  the  KXtLks  cross 
h^  the  court  between  Mclver, 
Aldennen  and  Kenan:  a  s}hped 
road  sign  reading  "Cattle  Cross- 
ing." 

*         *         *         * 

Coed  trying  to  buy  gentlevuin  s 
coffee  in  Lenoir  Hall. 


UNC  Press  Club 
Meets  Tuesday 

The  University  Press  Club  will 
meet  Tuesday  to  hear  Sam  Ragan. 
managing  editor  of  the  Raleigh 
News  and  Observer. 

The  meeting  will  be  held  at  7:30 
p.m."  on  Mt.  Bolus  Kd.  at  the  home 
of  N  .rval  Xfil  I.uxon,  dean  of  the 
J()urnaii>ni  School.  Students  de- 
siring tianspcration  {6  the  meet- 
ing have  be?n  asked  to  moot  at 
Bynum   Hall   at   7:15   p.m. 

Ragan  has  held  many  responsi- 
ble jol)s  in  state  press  associations 
and  has  served  as  president  of 
the  Eastern  Carolina  Press  .Assn. 
His  Sunday  column  in  the  News 
and  Obs.^rver.  "Southern  Accent.' 
is  one  of  the  most  widely  read 
c.  lumns  in  the  state,  and  he  is 
considered  to  be  one  of  the  most 
respected  and  most  responsible 
newsrapermen  in  North  Carolina. 
He  has  just  been  named  a  .li 
rector  of  the  .Associated  Press 
Managing  Editors  Assn. 

Students  who  are  not  members 
of  the  Pre.ss  Club,  but  wi.sh  to 
•oin.  have  been  urged  by  Presi- 
lent  Charlie  Johnson  to  attend 
•he  meeting  and  al.so  to  join  the 
club. 


lent  body  to  respond  to  the  Hun 
garian  Relief  Fund  which  w*! 
terminate  Saturday  at  noon.  i 

"After  listening  to  the  pleas  for  | 
aid  from  the  Hungarians  over  var-  | 
ious  news  broadcasts,  we  have  ; 
hoped  that  the  entire  campus  wi'!  j 
:  eaiize  hew  vital  and  necessary  ' 
contributions  are  to  the  Hungari-  ; 
ans  lives  and  freedom.  Miss  Aid-  j 
ridge  said.  j 

"Christmas  Is  the  time  of  giv- 
ing   and    bringing    happiness    to    | 
others.  During  all  the  tinsel  and    ; 
bright    lights   of   Christmas,    lefa 
not     forget     the     season's     true 
meaning.  When  we  make  out  out 
Christmas  list  this  year,  perhaps 
we   should    include   the    Hungari- 
ans  ami  -tnuk*  It  truly   a   season 
of    giving    and    bringing    happi- 
I     ness    to    others,"    Miss    Aldridge 
stated. 
Contnoutii  ns  may  hv  left  at  the 
YM-YWC.A  or  in  the  Student  eo\-j 
ei  nment     room     of     Graham     Me- 
morial.   The    money    will    he    sert 
after  the  C'hrislmas  donations  have! 
been    collected    from    the    Chupel  | 
Hill  churches  Sunday.  | 

Also,  anyone  that  has  old  clothes  i 
and  wi,-.hes  them  to  be  used  tori 
Hungarian  Relief  may  send  the  ' 
.'Icthes  lo:  ( 

American  Friends  Service  Com-  i 
m  it  tee 

23rd  and  Arch  Street 
Philadelphia,  Pa.. 


.\t  Ica.si  tlnee  Irateniities  itiiedcd  by  the  C;<)!iinil)ia  St. 
parkin^'  restri(ti(in  liavc  taken  some  a(  tion  to  alle\i:iie  their 
parking  problem.  iii\csti;^ation  revealed  yesterday. 

The    Clhapel    Hill    Pxjard    of    .Mdermeu    at    its    No\.    ili 
meeting  \otcd  to  lile  the  tud-h<>in   parkin*;  limitation  lor  6o 
day.s— Irom  fan.   4  to  .Mar.  .{— il 
submitted   a    feasible   sohnion 


Jan.  3. 

The  60-day  ban  lift  would  be  to. 
allow  fraternities  involved  time  to 
implement  solutions  at  which  they 
might  arrive. 

The  local  aldermen  imposed  tr. 
two-hour     parking    restriction     01 
Columbia     St.     between     Franklii; 
St.    and    Cameron    Avenue    dun  ig 
the  summer. 
PROGRESS 

Repori  of  progress  made  by  each 
of  the   seven  fraternities  in\'OiVed 
I  is  as  follows: 

!  Delta  Kappa  Ppsilon  has  con- 
.stntcted  a  parking  lot  directly  b? 
hind  its  house  which  will  accom- 
modate approximately  40  cars,  ac- 
cording to  I^esident  Larry. Bell. 

Beta  Theta  Pi  fraternity  has  ] 
made  minor  modificatirns  to  va- 
cant property  beside  its  house,  fa- 
cilitating additional  paFking  lor 
its  members,  according  to  Spokes- 
man Larrie  Brandner. 

Brandner  said  the  lot  was  "juiv 
big  enough"  to  park  cars   belon;: 
ing   to    Betas,    ami    that    no    other 
fraternities  had  requested  permi.- 
?ion  to  use  it.  "We  won't  give  up 
our  land,"  he  said,  "partly  because 


the  seven  (iTeternitics  involved 
to    their   parkin<i    problem    bv 

the  land  title  is  held  by  our  Alum- 
ni Assn." 

Sigma  Nu  has  taken  "planning 
action,"  according  to  a  fraternity 
spokesman. 

Pi  Lambda  Phi  was  scheduled  to 
take  aciion  on  the  problem  at  lust 
nights   meeting,  according   to  fra- 
ternity  Preident   Dick   Sirkin. 
CHALK  MARKS 

"For   the  time  being,  well  just 
runoff   chalk ''marks."     Sirkin  said. 
,  !^irkin     was     referring     to     chalk 
;  marks  placed  on  tires  by  local  po- 
licemen to  check  dai'atii'n  of  park- 
ing.. 

Sigma  Chi  has  taken  no  action 
;:t  ail.  Ho.sca  Wilson,  vice  presi- 
dent, said. 

"Our  impression  is  that  the  mat- 
ter is  lo  be  workefl  through  the 
Interlraierniiy  Council."  Wilson 
said. 

Sigma  Alpha  Epsilon  is  "eon- 
-idering,  but  has  done  nothmg 
definite.'  according  to  hou.se 
Manager  Stuart  Dawson. 

Pi  Kappa  Alpha  is  still  "study- 
ing the  situation. '■  acc.>rding  to 
iralernity  Spokesman  Harry  Brax- 
ton. 


Fire  Put  Out 
In  Frat  House 


Chapel  Hill  firemen  were  call 
ed  to  the  Phi  Kappa  Phi  fraier- 
nily  house  at  11:45  a.m.  yesiei- 
day  to  extinguish  a  grease  fire. 
The  fire,  on  a  gas  stove,  was  put 
out  before  atiy  damage  was 
done.  i--,~[i! 

•    It;.-,  " 

The  house,  at  206  W,  Camei- 
on  .Ave.,  reportedly  had  no  fire 
extinguisher,  but  borrowed  one 
from  next  door  to  stop  the  !)lazc 
before  the  fire  truck  arrived. 


Secession  From  Union 
Is  Within  Law  --  Phi 


gratiort."    In    this    second    speech 
he  said,   ''We  must  keep  true  to 


IN  THE  INFIRMARY 

Students  in  th*  Infirmary  y»s 
tcrday  included: 

Miss«s  Jo  Ann  S»w*rt,  Eve 
McClatchey,  Gaylt  Norman,  and 
Francis  DobrowoUkI,  Marion 
Boil,  Chariot  Cray,  Ivoy  Hoath, 
Robert  Harned,  Donnell  Adams. 
Charles  McBrido,  Harold  Fowler, 
William  Bost,  Pliiilp  Roinhardt, 
David  Lough  li  n,  Frederick 
Hirsch,  Malcolm  McLean,  Lewis 
Cody,  Roy  Coleman,  Jooeph  Bry- 
an, and  Phillip  Lo9an. 


a  chance  to  express  our  personal 
decisiveness,"  he   said. 

Concluding  the  debate  after 
several  interruptions.  Senator  Joel 
Fleischman  said  the  question 
boiled  down  to  whether  the  "su- 
perior race" — if  there  be  such — 
ihas  the  right  to  deny  opportunity 
to  the  "inferior  race" — if  there  be 
such.  He  said  segregation  was  un 
wise  and  unethical. 


CKarlotte  Club  Meetinn 

The  Charlotte  Carolina  Club 
,  wil  meet  today  at  7  p.m.  in  105 
j  Gardner. 

'      Officers    will    be    elected     and 
plans   formulated   for   a  dance   in 
,  Charlotte.   Dec.   27. 


The  Philanthropic  Literary  So- 
ciety Tuesday  night  recognized  by 
a  vote  of  10-3  the  constitutionality 
of  secession,  a  bill  debated  as 
though  it  were  Dec.  11,  1856. 

In  an  eloquent  speech  with  the 
use  of  Biblical  references.  Senator 
Jim  Montieth  said:  "There  is 
nothing  sacred  about  this  Union  \ 
of  States.  He  said  it  was  imposs- 
ible to  froce  unity  among  diverse  ' 
elements  when  at  the  present 
lime  (1856)»  no  union  exists.  He 
said  "We  will  win  because  we 
believe  in  what  we  are  and  ever 
shall  be.  The  framing  fathers  had 
no  intention  of  forming  an  indis- 
soluble  union." 

Representative  John  Brooks 
said  it  was  not  possible  to  run  from 
the  problem  by  turning  to  secess- 
ion.  He   asked   the  states   to   yield 


Duke  Madrigal  Singers  Here  Sunday 


Les  Petites  Musicales  presents  the  Duke  University  Madrigal 
Singers  in  a  program  of  Christmas  music  Sunday  in  GM's  main 
lounge  at  8  p.m.  Directed  by  Mrs.  Eugenia  Saville,  the  group  special- 

/ 


izes  in  the  performance  of  unusual  music  for  smalt  vocal  ensembles. 
Pictured  left  tc  right  arc:  Bob  Smith,  Don  Webstar,  Frances  Strick 
land.  Shirley  Lindquist,  Ann  Foussen,  Ann  Hunter,  and  Dick  Wood. 


IDC  Completes 
Directory  Here 

The  Interdormitory  Council 
has  recently  completed  compila 
tion  of  an  IDC  Directory  for  con 
venience  of  council  members. 

The  directory  contains  a  list 
of  council  officers  and  their  ad- 
dresses. IDC  committee  head«. 
dormitory  .social  grouping.  ID 
Court  members  and*  their  ad 
dresses,  listing  of  dormitory  01- 
ficers'  duties  and  a  complete 
li.st  01  each  individual  dormi- 
tory's officers  and  their  ad- 
dresses. 

The  directories  may  be  ob 
tained  by  those  interested  from 
the  nX"  office  in  New  East  An- 
nex, according  to  a  council 
spokesman. 


some  of  th;ir  sovereignty  to  the 
Union. 

Claiming  that  the  interest  ol 
the  agrarian  South  and  the  in- 
dustrial Narth  were  different.  Rep- 
resentative Hill  Johnston  looked 
to  secession  for  a  solution  of  the 
problem. 

Representative  James  Duval  said 
the  question  of  the  evening  was 
only  that  of  the  constitutionality 
of  the  secession  and  there  is  noth- 
ing in  the  Constitution  supporting 
it.  He  .said  the  Constitution  could 
not  be  broken  except  by  ratifying 
another  one. 

Representative  Lawrence  Matt- 
hews said  he  did  not  think  the 
question  should  revolve  entirely 
around  the  constitutionality  of  se- 
cession. "If  the  Union  will  not 
work,  w?  should  secede."  he  said. 
He  concluded.  "The  issue  should 
revolve  what  each  individual  wants 
to  do." 


Police  Blotter 

Students  on  the  Chapel  Hil! 
police  blotter  from  Dec.  1  to 
Dec.  12  include:  C.  Stewart  Daw 
son.  speeding;  Joel  Vickers.  no 
light>  on  vehicle;  John  Francis 
Warner,  stop  light  violation; 
William  Tyson,  wrong  way  o«< 
one  way  street. 


GM'S  SLATE 


Activities   in   Grahsm   Memorial 
today  are  as  follows: 

Faculty  Committee  on  Sorori- 
ties and  Fraternities,  3:30-S, 
Grail  Room;  Student  Council, 
6-11,  Grail  Room;  (JP  caucus,  6- 
7:30,  Roland  Parker  I;  SP  cau 
cus,  ^7:30,  Roland  Psrker  III; 
IDC  Court,  7-9:30,  Council  Room. 


PAGE   TWO 


THE  DAILY  TAR  H'lEL 


A     THURSDAY,  DEClWeER  13,  }9U 


Flag-Waving  Won't  Work 
For  Bill  Of  Rights  Week 

rius  !!>  National  Hill  ol  Rinlits  Wctk  —  n<H  National  Pickle  Week. 
or  National  Dry  Flv  Fisheiniens  Week,  but  National  Bill  oi  Rii^hts 
Week.  It  is  one  week  of  the  yj  set  aside  to  spotlight  what  the  people  of 
the  United  States  .should  rciiieinber  all  vear. 

It  would  l)e  unrealisiit  t«>  s;iv  tliat  suili  a  week  of  emphasis  is  not 
needed,  for  it  is.  and  needed  hadlv.  When  d»]le.i;c  students  can  sit  m  a 

class    and    stamniev     or    stare     in  vevv    remarkable    thino.    It    is    re- 

slrvk-jawed  silence  when  asked  to  stricted  bv  local,  state  and  federal 

name    the^  Bill    of    Rights,    ^nnc-  law:  vet  most  people  never  reali/e 

thins  has  \o  be  done.  it    i>    not   absolute.    This    is   as   it 

Those     first     iten     amendments  should    be.    With    freedom    (omes 

were  inchulcd  to  insure  the  con-  !csj)onsibility.   and   with    i();,   md- 

tiiniatit»n  of  personal   and   nation-  lion    people   t(j   take  care  ol    there 

al   libertv.  The  cxpre.ss  reason   for  ha\e  to  be  checks, 
our  '.government  is  "to  secure  the  llic  nicest  thinj;  to  do  lor  Na- 

blessin;^  i)f  libertv  to  ourselves  and  tional   Bill  of  Risrhts  Week  woidd 

our  jx)sterit\.  ■  The  Bill  of  Ri;4hts  !)e   tr.  have   a   time  of   silence.   Si- 

is  a  list  of  those  bles.sin§s.  knee  so  the   Bill  lan  rin^  out  for 

On    one    hand    it    misfht    appear  itself   widioni  commercial    piomo- 

that    there    is    no    need    to    go    to  tion  material,  piessure  gionps  and 

ativ   great    lengths,    to    indulge    in  hvsieiical    name   callins-    Freedom 

ativ    fl:  4-wavino    on    the    subjei  t.  is  somethin.i;  to  be  enjoyed,  and  it 

I  he    Ainerican   I.ej;ion.   the   QAR  (an  be  had  until  an  outside  party 

ami  most  o\  the  labor  uuiotis  con-  tiies     to     f.  kr     it     aA\av.     freedom 


x:aroleidoscopb: 


staurh  remind  the  world  that  lire 
nation  is  free,  and  that  evil  forces 
of  darkness  are  trviujj,  to  en.slave 
the    wo,  Id.    eiuhain    the    minds   of 


exists,  it  is  just  supjiressed  bv  out- 
side forces. 

Freedom  can  be  used  against  it- 
self, for  effei  live  propaganda  must 


\uuih.  (lamp  a  gag  in   the  mouth  have  freedom  of  speech  and  press 

of  freedoiu.  that  the  United"  States  to    luake    itself    heard.    So    people 

is  treading  the  brink  of  disaster.  tuust  karn  to  recogni/e  wh>;ii  the 

A    flag-draped   piece  on    Bill  ui  g)e;it  ideal  t>eing  made  is  a  victim 

Rights  Week  is  hardlv  the  time  to  of  its  own   benignitv.   Other  than 

sav  unkind  things  about  souls  sin-  tliat   there   isnt  nuic  h    we  can   do 

cerelv  trving  to  ram   fr-jcdom  at  a  but  sit  b.-.k  ami  enjoy  it.  and  ol- 

free  nation.   But  mcst  flag-draped  fer  suj)port   and   sympathy    to   the 

i  reins  are  fiassed  over  as  charming  Freedom    Fighters    of    a    less    for- 

pieces    ol    patiiotism    and    usuallv  tuiiate  svstem. 

miss    tluii    m..  k   compleiclv.     This  Saturdav     is     National     Bill     ol 

is    no    tim*    to    wave    flags.    Flag-  Riglus    dav.     Fake    a    numient    to 

\^aving  creates  onlv  a  stiff  bree/e.  review  just    what   it    is  the  Bill  «)i 

and     '^e    previously    lifted  organi-  Rights  represent.  .\nd  il  vou  don't 

/uiuns.  among  othtrs.  arc  alreacU  know   them,  it   is  about   time  you 

(\l).rt    at    til  It.  loutid    out.    Uncle    Sam    .says    you 

Freedom     fl  tunted     doesn't     ai  -  t.we  eiiht  vears  of  vour  life  to  de- 

loniplish  auvthing.  and  it  alienates  lend    the    Bill    of    Right.s.    and    ii 

people    wh(.    are    deprived    of    it.  njiiiht   be  well    to   what    the   ptice 

Anuriia's   bvanl   of   free(k)m   is   a  ol  defeat  would  be.  . 

Combined  Y's  Gaining  Unity 


Carolina  s  \\\Q\  and  YWCA 
combinetl  tiicir  etfortj*  at  the  be' 
ginning  of  tlie  year  in  order  to 
bring  about  a  more  smoothly  co- 
ordinated prtijram  and  to  reach 
more  sLiid  n;s.  llius  far  the  plan 
has  wor  .  !  ..ut:,iivell,  and  after 
last  wiekend  tJi|iigs  look  very  rosv 
for   'he  grouj)s'  J^mbined.hiturc. 

1  he  first  Iiue*collegiare  Rela- 
tions Uonsnltation  was  held  last 
Saiardav  and  Sundav.  and  repre- 
sentati^es  Irom  the  Y's  of  nine 
(olkges  antl  uni\ersities  gathered 
in  Uhapel  Hill  to  talk  shop  and 
( \(  hange  notes. 

I'i\e  goals  were  discussed.  .Ml 
of  the.se  goals  do  credit  to  the 
purpose  of  the  organization.    But 

The  Daily  Tar  Heel 

Th(  affitial  student  publication  wf  tbe 
Publications  Board  ol  the  University  of 
North  Carolina,  where  it  is  published 
daily  except  Monday  and  examinatiot 
and  vacation  periods  and  summer  ternis 
Entered  a.s  second  class  matt*r  in  the 
Dosl  office  in  Chapel  Hill.  N.  C,  undei 
the  Act  oi  March  8.  1870.  Subscription 
rates;  mailed.  S4  per  year.  $2.50  a  semes 
ter;  delivered.  $6  a  year.  $3.30  a  semes 
ter 


one  quality  was,  Eortunatelv.  mis- 
sing fiom  the  meeting— the  quali- 
ty of  self-satisfaction.  Much  more 
apparent  was  self-evaluation,  an 
cag.Tncss  to  improve,  re-do  t)r 
eliminate  portions  ol  the  program 
not  up  to  the  neccessary  caliber 
of  the  group. 

These  Y  people  are  never  satis- 
fied. And  it  is  a  very  good  thing 
dia!  thev  are  never  satisfied,  for 
this  would  destroy  the  very  pur- 
pose of  the  organization.  What  the 
use  of  the  information  gathered 
at  the  confereme  will  be  remains 
to  be  .seen.  But  one  thing  is  for 
sure.  The  organization  has  a  bel- 
ter inter-campus  unity  than  be- 
fore, and  Y  workers  on  all  the 
campuses  will  continue  their  work 
more  vigorously  because  of  it. 

Gracious 


Living: 
Number  9 


Editor         

FRED  POWLEDGE 

Managing  Editor   .... 

CHARLIE  SLOAN 

News  Editor    

„       NANCY  HILL 

Business  ^(anager    .„ 

.    BILL  BOB  P£;EL 

Sports  ExJitor    

LARRY  CHEEK 

Subscription  Manager 
Advertising  Manager 
Circulation  .Manager 

Dale  Staley 

Fred  Katzin 

.  ..      Charlie  Holt 

NEWS  STAFF'— Clarke  Jones,  Ray  Link- 
er, Joan  Moore.  Pringle  Pipkin,  Anne 
Drake.  Edith  MacKinnon,  Wally  Kuralt, 
Mary  .\lys  V'oorhees,  Graham  Snyder, 
Billy  Barnes.  Neil  Bass,  Gary  Nichols, 
Page  Bernstein,  Peg  Humphrey,  Phyllis 
Maultsby. 


BUSINESS  ST.Vl-T— Rosa  Moore.  Johnny 
Whitakcr,  Dick  Lea\ilt,  Dick*Sirkln. 


SPORTS  ST.\PT:  Bill  Kin£.  Jim  Purk)S, 
.limnn  Flarper,  Dare  Wtble,  Charley 
Uowson. 


EDITOni.XL  ST.XJ-T  —  Woody  Sear?, 
Frank  CrowtheV,  Barry  Winston,  David 
Mundy.  George  Pfingst  Ingrid  Clay, 
Cortland  Edwards,  Paul  McCaiiley, 
Bobbi  Smith. 


Staff  Pboto^apher 
librarian 


Nurouu  Kantor 
..  Sue  Gishner 


Night  Editor Charlie  Sloio 

Proof  Reader  Clark  Jones 


In  the  interest  of  more  gracious 
living  for  the  Consolidated  Uni- 
versity of  North  Carolina.  Presi- 
dent Friday  has  annoimced  that 
the  old  Institute  of  (ioverinnent 
building  will  be  renovated  to 
the  CU's  staff. 

^Apparently  the  move  will  be  a 
very  complete  one,  since  even  the 
secretarial  staffs  will  be  included 
in  the  shift.  When  it  gets  down 
to  this  level  the  student  lx)dy 
should  offer  up  a  little  breath  of 
thanks.  In  fact  anyone  at  all  who 
has  any  reason  to  diop  by  the  of- 
fices should  feel  a  twinge  of  grati- 
tude. 

The  bright  young  ladies  who 
aie  employed  bv  the  Consolidated 
U»iiversi<:y  are  a  major  part  of 
gnocious  living  at  (chapel  Hill. 
They  have  a  difficult  task,  since 
people  visiting  the  offiqials  are 
not  always  there  to  tlnow  orcfiids. 
These  individuals,  as  well  as  nerv- 
ous students  who.  for  one  reason 
or  another,  must  talk  to  a  CU 
executive,  are  tieated  with  equal 
courtesy,  and  usually  leave  happy.  ^ 
It's  all  in  a  day's  work  for  the  sec- 
retaries and  receptionists. 

Their  presence  is  somediiug  to 
be  thankful  for.  Besides,  thev 
make  the  office  a  nuich  prettier 
place  to  visit. 


Parallel:  Princeton,  UNC 


It 


Frank  Crowther 

Last  week,  the  selection  of  the 
new  president  of  Princeton  Uni- 
versity went  almost  unnoticed  by 
North  Carolina's  presses.  I  hope 
that  this  was  nat  the  case  among 
the  members  of  the  Chancellor's 
Selection  Committee  of  our  uni- 
versity. 

Before  going  any  further,  we 
may  look  at  the  questions. 
"Well,  what  significance  is  this 
to  UNC"  or  "What  effect  does 
this  have  on   Carolina?" 

Princeton  has  always  had  a 
g'.eat  reflective  influence  on  our 
>>chool.  Tlio  founder  of  the  Uni- 
versity of  North  Carolina,  Will- 
iam R.  Diavie  (born  in  England, 
by  the  way),  was  graduated  from 
Princeton  in  1776  with  hrvnors. 
He  was  also  later  to  become  tiie 
jrorernor  of  our  state  (1798-99). 
Davii'  was  chiefly  responsible  for 
the  establishment,  location,  build- 
ing and  endowment  of  UNC.  He 
was  also  instrumental  in  naming 
the  first  instructors  as  well  as 
planning  an  clastic  curriculum 
fcr  the  university. 

When  UNC  was  charteed  iu 
17891'  seven  members  of  the 
Salisbury  Academy  were  Prinoe 
tan  graduates:  Alexander  Mar- 
tin— a  governor  of  Nortih  Caro- 
lina; Samuel  E.  McCorklc — the 
only  minister  on  the  board: 
Spruce  Macjy  —  a  distinguished 
.jurist;  Adiai  Osborne — who  heli)- 
'  ed  prepare  an  ordinance  for  tiie 
curriculum;  David  ('aldweli — 
known  for  '"log  college:"  James 
Hall— wh.j  established  the  acad- 
emy of  sciences,  and  Samuel 
Spr'ncer. 

The     architecture     of     South 
;<   Building,     Old     East     and     Old 
West  shows  a  definite  influence 
of    Princeton. 

We  hope  that  this  latest  move- 
luovement  at  Princetrm  will  als;) 
have  an  influence  on  Carolina — 
at  Isa.st  in  its  selection  of  a 
chancelktr. 

The  e.xecutive  committee  of 
the  board  of  trustees  announced 
Friday,  Dec.  7.  t!iat  it  had  elect- 
ed Robert  Francis  Co'ieen,  an  a.s- 
sistant  professor  of  ch^ssics,  as 
th?  16th  president  of  Princeton 
University. 

COUNTRY  SEARCHED 

It  is  significant  to  note  that 
this  .selection  was  made  after 
a  thorough  canva.ssing  of  the 
country — after  all  that,  trustees 
reached  into  their  own  ranks 
and  selected  a  37-.vear-old  a.s.sist- 
ant  professor  of  Classics. 

I  offer  the  following  informa 
lion  for  contemplation: 

1.  Dr.  (k)heen  is  37;  Caro- 
lina's Dr.  William  Poteat  is  37. 

2.  Dr.  Goheen's  parents  were 
medical  missionaries;  Dr.  Po- 
teafi  father  was  a  minister. 

3.  Dr.  Goheen  was  bom  in 
hidia  and  returned  to  the  U.  S. 
at  the  age  of  15;  Dr.  Potest  was 
lyjrn  in  China  and  returned  when 
he  was  10. 

4.  Dr.  Gohee  received  h  i  s 
Ph.  D.  in  1948;  Dr.  Poteat  re- 
ceived  his   Ph.  D.   in    1951. 

5.  Dr.   Goheen   was   an   assist- 


r 


Pogo 


ant  professor  in  the  Classics 
Dept.  (humanities);  Dr.  Poteat 
is  an  associate  professor  in  the 
Philosophy  Dept.  (humanities). 
And  on,  and  on. 
I  am  not  trying  to  infer  that 
we  are  Princeton's  little  boy;  in 
the  last  years,  we  have  become 
mjre  of  a  correlative  brother  in 
effect. 

What  I  am  trying  to  conve/ 
is  that  there  appears  to  be  a 
trend  among  universities  ap- 
pointing their  administrators 
— that  is,  among  universities  of 
integrity    and    national    respect 


— toward  the  selection  of  men 
who  are  not  just  names  of  na- 
tional  acclaim,   but   those  who 
have     rock-ribbed     educational 
backgrounds,    -who    art    highly 
thought    of    in    the    classroom 
and   en   the  campus,   and   who 
are  first  ana  foremost  dedicat- 
ed   to   their    work  —  be    it    for 
their  university,  their  students, 
or  themselves. 
Chairman  Helm  of  the  execu-' 
tive  committee  at  Princeton  put 
it  very   well:   "We   feel  that  Dr. 
Goheen's  standing   as  a   scholar, 
his    dedication    tr>    leaching    an^ 


his  personal  qualities  fit  him 
uniquely  to  carry  on  the  uni- 
versity's high  traditions. 

"With  the  selection  of  a  teach- 
er and  a  scholar  of  the  classics 
with  a  wide  ranging  interest  in 
other  fields  of  learning,  we  ex- 
pect to  maintain  at  Princeton 
the  balance  between  the  social 
sciences,  the  natural  sciences  and 
the  humanities  that  is  our  par- 
ticular  goal." 

Can  we  not  say  that  Dr.  Will- 
iam Poteat  is  of  the  same  human- 
itarian blood  and  educational 
breeding? 


•  • 

'Freezing  To  Death  Isn't  So  Good,  Either' 


Happiness   Pills  And   The   Press 


An  AP  dispatch  from  Seattle 
says  that  two  University  of  Ore- 
gon psychiatrists,  Drs.  Dickel  and 
Dixon,  have  .just  asked  the  AMA 
(ps  the  headline  put  it):  "Do 
'Happiness  Pills'  Rob  Americans 
of  Traditional  Worrj  and  Alert- 
ness'.'" 

It's  not  the  pills  but  their  ov- 
eruse which  is  dangerous,  the 
doctors  say:  dangerous  to  the  in- 
dividual through  a  breakdown  of 
his  "philosophy  of  morals  and 
emotions,"  to  society  "because  it 
is  being  led  to  believe  that  no 
one  ever  •  should  have  to  be 
afraid  or  feci  anxiety"  as  con- 
trasted  to  the  older  theorv  that 


self-reliant  Americans  can  "hold 
their  own  against   adversity." 

Brooding  ever  this   item  we 
noted  that  the  President  —  the 
nation's    prize    tranquilizer  — 
continued  golf  at  Atlanta,  and 
that  happiness  pill  Hagerty  an- 
nounced the  Suez  crisis  just  an 
"incident"    with    Middle    East 
tensions    receding    rapidly. 
What    we   ache   for   at   a    time 
like    this   is    a    responsible    two- 
party  press  to  cudgel  affairs  out, 
the  administration's  responsibili- 
ty included.  How  far  did  the  tor- 
tuous   Dulles    policy    precipitate 
intervention;  why  didn't  we  pres- 
siure    Nasser    the    wav    we    have 


been  pres^suring  our  allies;  is  Ike 
yow  going  to  delegate  responsi- 
bility to  the  UN  the  way  he  dele 
gates  responsibility  to  Sherman 
Adams;  and  finally — do  we  have 
a  policy  and  if  so  what  is  it? 

Partisanship  plays  a  vital  role 
in  democracy  by  keeping  the  is- 
sues eternally  whetted.  Britain 
has  a  strong,  responsible  two- 
party  press  that  has  functioned 
admirably  through  the  crisis. 

But  in  the  United  States  the 
lack  of  a  balanced  opposition 
dulls  the  whole  discussion.  The 
torpid  editor  finds  it  always 
easier  to  give  his  readers  another 
do.^  of  happiness  pills 

.         ■  * 

By  Walt  Kelly 


ViJ 


IT'$  AMA7JM7  fM/ffPlfff^UM 
AMAtM'y  CC03£7?/yO\i'Zt^ 

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L'ii  Abner 


By  Al  Capp 


At  supersonic  Speed,  the 

'anNUAI-  PLAGOeOF  NO-GOOD,  THIEVING  TURNI  P 
TERMITES  ^X)M5  OVER  MIAMI,  HEADED  FOR  THEIR 
ANCESTRAL  FEEU/NG  GROUND DOGPATCM.':'' 


YQU  SwcHt: 

The  Turnover: 
Tesf  For  Coeds 

Editor:  , 

For  three  years  and  a  summer  session  here  m 
Chapel  Hill,  I  have  observed  with  careful  inspection 
aU  forms  and  shapes  of  giggling,  jibbering  females. 
To  the  surprise  of  many  of  us  here,  some  of  th.j 
coeds,  who  transfer  at  the  junior  level,  arrive  with 
visions  of  sugar-plums  and  parties  dancing  in  their 
heads.  Oh,  the  free  Carolina  spirit  (s)! 

Most  of  these  young  maidens  epme  with  eyes 
open  and  tongue  hanging  out,  ready  for  adventure 
and  a  good  time.  "Hip,  Hip,  Hurrah!    I'm  a  Tar 
Heel  born  —  I'm  a  coed  bred  —  and  Im  superior 
to  all  other  girls.  I  don't  know  vfhy,  but  I  am,  and 
don't  call  me.  III  call  you." 
But  a  few  girls  have  not  been  moved  by  all  this 
dazzle  and  remain  untouched   by  the  typical  atti- 
tude. 

So,  for  a  year,  these  starry-eyed  wonders  live 
in  the  typical,  fast  life  here  at  Chapel  Hill  —  foot 
ball  games,  fraternity  parties,  Hogan's  Lake,  basket- 
ball games,  and  many  other  forms  of  entertainment. 
Life  just  couldnt  be  this  wonderful! 

Dates,  dates,  and  more  dates  .  .  .  then,  the  .uin 
mer  vacation.  Boy!  They  could  sure  use  thr<-e 
months  rest,  and  usually  spend  it  reminiscing  tiie 
"old  times"  at  the  old  "stMnping"  grounds. 

But  aiss  .  .  .  the  summer  passes,  September  ar- 
rives, and  school  starts.  Their  once-new  faces  now 
blend  into  the  old,  and  once-sparkling  new  person- 
alities have  fizzled  into  the  background,  darkened 
by  the  now  new  crop  of  lovelies,  fresh  from  the 
barred-windowed  junior  colleges,  as  ready  as  the 
last  crowd  of  a  year  before. 

As  the  "old  girls"  return  for  their  senior  year, 
open-armed,  they  aie  shocked,  surprised  and  moat 
surely  hurt  deeply,  when  they  are  not  met  v.ith 
that  more-than-welcome  approach,  as  the  year  be- 
fore. 

Rushing  past  them  are  the  fraternity  wolves 
and  itermitory  Casanovas,  not  batting  an  eye  at 
their  dulled  charp,  but  hypnotized  by  the  daz- 
xiing  view  of  the  new. 

But  wait  .  .  .  let's  look  again.  Some  of  the  oliitr 
boys  have  stopped  to  talk  to  some  of  the  old  girls. 
But,  they  weren't  so  popular  last  year.  Why,  I  can 
remember  when  that  girl  wouldn't  go  out  and  drink. 
Say,  isn't  that  the  one  who  slugged  Jack  at  Ho- 
gan's Lake  last  year?  Yea!  I  think  so.  What's 
Jack  talking  to  her  now  for? 

It's  the  completion   of  a   picture  which   is  as 
old  as  the  coed  school  itself.  Ifs  the  yearly  turn- 
over.   Senior    party    girls    are   taking    a   backseat, 
and  senior  ladies  and  potential  wives  taking  the 
front. 
All  the  soft  charm  and  meaningful  emotion  over- 
looked the  last  year  are  what  the  senior  men  art 
looking  for  now.  That  flashy   Bee  Bop  A  Lou  Lah 
has  faded,  and  girls,  if  yo  uhaven't  anything  eJse 
to  offer,  then  prepare  yotirsclf  to  be  stuck  in  that 
inevitable   back  scat. 

All  at  once,  tho.se,  v.ho  know  no  other  road  iv- 
cept  that  one  leading  to  fraternity  bars  and  rowdy 
parties,  aie  suddenly  aware  that  the  bridge  A 
friendship  and  sincere  feelings  has  been  washed 
out  by  the  new  flood  of  their  exact  likeness. 

While  those,  who  before  were  seemingly  lost 
in  the  undergrowth  of  the  snarling,  shocking  mass 
of  psuedo-social  jungle  life,  are  now  walking  in  a 
clearing,  they  find  that  they  have  survived  the 
test  and  are  looked  up  to  and  admired. 

So,  I'll  leave  it  up  to  you,  girls  If  you  ti-ans- 
fer  as  a  product  of  any  junior  college,  which  of 
these  two  catagories  v.ill  you  fall  into?  Think  aboui 
it  sincerely. 

Claries  (Sonny)  Forbes 

THE  CAMPUS~2: 

Housing,  Chancellor 
Important  Issues 

President  Bob  Young 

This  is  the  second  installment  in  student  body 
President  Bob  Young's  recent  state  of  the  campui 
address.  The  speech  will  be  continued  tomorrow. 

Construction  on  the  new  men's  dormitories  ant 
the  addition  to  Spencer  women's  dormitory  should 
begin  sometime  in  the  spring.  Bids  are  now  being 
processed,  and  a  dwision  should  be  forthcoming 
soon. 

The  facilities  in  the  men's  rooms  have  be^n 
examined  by  Sonny  Hallford  and  me,  representing 
student  government,  and  members  of  the  admnus 
tration.  These  facilities  will  be  as  modern,  con- 
venient and  adequate  as  any  in  the  country. 

Second,  housing  for  married  students  is  cne 
of  our  major  problenu  at  present.  Some  400  ^ou- 
ples  are  on  the  waiting  list  for  apartments  in 
Victory  Village,  which  hardly  houses  that  many 
families. 

A  request  has  been  approved  by  the  Board  of 
Higher  Education  for  200  apartments.  It  does  a-i 
rank  too  highly  on  the  priority  list  for  the  Budget 
Committee  to  consider. 

I  plan  to  meet  with  James  Wadsvvorth  and  the 
administration  to  see  if  we  cannot  prepare  a  strong 
case  for  fnis  request  and  get  it  granted 
THE  CHANCELLOR  SITUATION 

As  you  all  probaoly  realize,  Chancellor  Hou>.e 
will  resign  at  the  end  of  this  school  year.  For  many 
years,  he  has  been  the  symbol  of  Carolina  with  all 
its  traditions  and  glories. 

Now  we  face  the  problem  of  finding  a  replace 
mem  for  him.  This  search  is  a  most  difficult  one, 
being  handled  by  a  most  distinguished  and  able 
committee  of  faculty,  trustees  and  alumni. 
Studei:t  government  has  had  a  most  satisfactorv 
hearing  before  the  committee.  Our  committee,  chair 
ed   by   Sonny   Evans,   held    hearings   and    interviews 
for  several  days.  This  group  prepared  an  e.xceilen' 
report,  wit^  all  the  facts  and  opinions  it  had  gathe •- 
ed. 

From  the  data,  the  person  who  received  Uic 
most  student  support  was  suggested  to  the  coming- 
tee  as  our  preference  for  chancellor. 

1  am  not  prepared  to  reveal  the  contents  of  th  s 
report,  but  feel  that  the  University  would  be  in 
the  best  possible  hands  if  the  students'  recommen- 
dation should  be  named  chancellor. 


YRC\ 

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will  meet  I 
land  rarfc 
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THURSDAY,  eeCCMdElt  13,  }H6 


THi  DAILY  TAR  HEIL 


PAGE  THRU 


Y      YRC  To  Meet  Tonight  At  7 

j        The    Young    Republicans    Club!      At  the  meeting  there  will  be  a 

will  meet  today  at  7  p.m.  in  Ro- 1  discussion    of    the    state    conven- 

.        ^  «,  .     ^     .        I  ^i°"  ^"^  PJans  will  be  made  con- 

iand  Parker  Lounge  2  m  Graham  |  eerning  the  picture  for  the  Yack- 

Mcmonal.  j  ety  Yack. 


OiiC»rp<! 


Kith 


(Author  of  "Barefoot  Boy  With  Cheek,"  etc.) 


EAT,  DHLNK,  AiND  BE  MARRIED 

i  hi  a  recent  tour  of  seven  million  American  colleges. 
I  wa^  struck  by,  two  outstanding  facts:  first,  the  great 
number  of  students  who  smoke  Philip  Morris ;  and  second, 
the  great  number  of  students  who  are  married. 

The  first  phenomenon  -  the  vast  multitude  of  Philip 
Morris  smokers  -  comes  as  no  surprise,  for  what  could 
be  more  intelligent  than  to  smoke  Philip  Morris?  After 
all,  pleasure  is  what  you  smoke  for.  and  pleasure  is  what 
Philip  Morris  delivers.   Try  one.   Light  up  and  see  for 

yourself Or,  if  you  like,  don't  light  up.    Just  take 

a  Philip  Morris,  unlighted,  and  puff  a  couple  of  times. 
Get  that  wonderful  flavor?  You  bet  you  do!  Even  with- 
out lighting  you  can  taste  Philip  Morris's  fine  natural 
tobacco.  Also,  you  can  make  your  package  of  Philip 
Morris  last  practically  forever. 

No,  I  say,  it  was  not  the  great  number  of  Philip 
Morris  smokers  that  astountjed  me;  it  was  the  great 
number  of  married  students.  Latest  statistics  show  that 
at  some  coeducational  colleges,  the  proportion  of  married 
undergraduates  runs  as  high  as  twenty  per  cent!  And, 
what  is  even  more  startling,  fully  one-quarter  of  these 
marriages  have  been  blessed  with  issue! 

Now,  to  the  young  campus  couple  who  are  parents 
for  the  first  time,  the  baby  is  likely  to  be  a  source  of  con- 
siderable worry.  Therefore,  let  me  devote  today's  column 
to  a  few  helpful  hints  on  the  care  of  babies. 

First  of  all,  we  will  take  up  the  matter  of  diet.  In 
the  past,  babies  were  raised  largely  on  table  scrajis.  This, 
however,  was  outlawed  by  the  Smoot-Hawley  Act,  and 
today  babies  are  fed  a  scientific  formula  consisting  of 
dextrose,  maltose,  distilled  water,  evaiporated  milk,  and 
a  twist  of  lemon  peel. 

After  eating,  the  baby  tends  to  grow  sleepy.  A  lullaby 
is  very  useful  to  help  it  fall  asleep.  In  case  you  don't 
know  any  lullabies,  make  one  up.   For  example: 

Go  to  sleep,  my  little  htfant,  .'•■y\ 

Goo-yoo  moo-moo  poo-poo  binfanf. 

* 

A  baby  sleeps  best  on  its  stomach,  so  place  it  that  way 
in  its  crib.  Then  to  make  sure  it  will  not  turn  it.self  over 
during  the  night,  lay  a  soft  but  fairly  heavy  object  on  its 
back  —  another  baby,  for  instance. 


»»€70- 


'^/i-f/i-i^t'a/^J/^t^/^/^j^(f/^^^^^^^^ 


So.  as  j-ou  see,  raising  a  baby  is  no  great  problem. 
All  you  need  is  a  little  patience  and  a  lot  of  love.  Also 
diapers,  rompers, soakers, crib. mattress. sheets, bumpers, 
blankets,  high  chair,  diapers,  talcum,  baby  oil.  fi-^h  liver 
oil.  paregoric,  diapers,  safety  pins,  cotton,  cotton  covered 
toothpicks,  bottles,  diapers,  nijjplcs,  diapers,  bottle 
bru.shes,  booties,  diapers,  nighties,  wrappers,  diapers, 
rattles,  teething  rings,  pacifiers,  diapers,  and  unlimited 

^ """■*■•  5  Ma.'c  Shulman.  ]<>G6 

When  Baby  U  fa*l  a»ieep  —  the  little  angel!  —  tchy  not  relax 
and  give  yourself  a  treat?  With  Philip  Morris,  of  rorris! 
Made  in  long  size  and  regular  by  the  sponsors  of  this  roluinn. 


DAILY    CROSSWORD 


ACROSS 

1.  Women 
like  these 

6.  Lamp  hght 
<  slang) 

10.  Think 

1 1.  Long-ear«d 
rodent 

12.  Disembarks 

13.  Put  forth 
effort. 

15.  Coin 

(Swed.) 
le.  Ck>in  (Jap.) 

18.  Chinese 
measure 

19.  River  (Pol) 

20.  Time 
between 
periods 

23.  Lettuce 
(U.S.) 

24.  Cord 

25.  CUiw 

28.  Grade  (In 
school) 

29.  Qrin 
(Anc.  Gr.) 

iO.  Sloths 

SI.  TftUu  flibly 

iZ.  Mineral 

aprinf 
»6.  Man's 

nickname 
17.  LAfge  tub 

38.  Faucet 

39.  Snake  deity 
(Haiti) 

42.  MeriU 
i4.  Christmas 

song 
»5.  River  (Fr.) 
I«.  Greek  letters 
47.  Backs 

of  necks 
DOWN 
1  Perforn^s 

alone  (avn.) 


2.  Armadillo 

3.  Fabric 
from  flax 

4.  Extremity 

5.  Instruction 
period 

6.  aty  (Belg.) 

7.  SUck 

8.  Anger 

9.  King 
Arthur's 
seer  (poss.) 

14.  Eras 
17.  Half  ems 

21.  Building 
additions 

22.  Narrow  inlet 
(geol.) 

23.  Young  horse 


25.  Semi- 
precious 
stone 

26.  Gastro. 
pod 
mollusk 

27.  Fate 

28.  Reser- 


voir 
30.  Constel 
lation 

32.  Sins 

33.  Razor 
strap 

34.  Velvethke 
fabric 

35.  Projecting 
ends  of 
churfches 


mauaR  amaBL! 
HK  aaa  nsHo 
U3U  iziaam  yii^ 

ana  qbd 

saDE^acsL]  earn 
r^HB   raaaraara 


YMt«r4s]r't  Aatww 

40.  Witty 
saying 

41.  Girl's 
nicknam); 

43.  Excla- 
mation 


The  Daily  Tar  Heel's 
Holiday  f^ide  Service 


The  ioUowing  people  need  rides,  or  cap  give  rides,  to 
distant  points  over  the  Christmas  holidays.  If  you  have  a 
car,  arc  headed  lor  one  of  the  points  listed  and  need  riders, 
(ontact  these  people.  If  you  want  a  ride  to  one  of  the  places 
listed  at  the  end,  contact  the  folks  who  have  cars  and  need 
riders. 


RIDES  WANTED  j 

Stuart  Sheby,  Law  School,  6 
3013  or  8-0981— New  York.  ' 

Ethan  Tolman.  207  Ruffin,  &- j 
9146— Miami.  Fla.  | 

Kenneth  Chi-Kun  Yang,  208  W.I 
Franklin  St.,  9-2471— Taipei,  For- j 
mesa.  I 

Shirley  .\nderson.  302  Kenan,  8  I 
9076— Eocky  Mount.  i 

Uill  .\dcock.  308  Mangum,  8-  ; 
9183— Knoxville.  Tenn.  j 

Marion  Harris,  300  Spencer,  8-  j 
9104 —  Ejigelhard  or  Washin^ton,-^ 
N.  C. 

Howard  Kahn,  108  Alexander,  8  j 
9107— Baltimore,  Md.  ! 

Harold  Stessel,  211  Stacy,  8-9031 ' 
—New  York  City  or  Westchester,  j 

Sara  Humphrey,  Pi  Phi  Iloutie  | 
8-9096  —  Washington,  D.  C.  j 

Carolina  Hume,  Pi  Phi  House,] 
3-9096  —  Washington,  D.  C.  j 

John  Gauntlett,  8-9154  —  Chi- j 
cago. 

Al  Higgins,  309  Connor,  8-9154 ! 
New  York.  j 

Priscilla  Roelzel,   106  Kenan,  8 
9172  —  Trenton  or  Newark,  N.  J.  j 
or  New  York. 

i 

THE  RULES  ' 

If  you  want  to  get  ytfUr  name 
on  either  of  these  lists,  drop  by 
The  Daily  Tar  Heel's  nawsroom, 
second  floor  of  Grahani  Mem- 
orial, or  mail  your  name,  address 
telephone  number  and  destina- 
tion to  The  Daily  Tar  Heel,  Box 
1080,  Chapel  Hill.  The  lists  wiki 
run  as  long  as  there  are  stu- 
dents who  need  rides  or  riders. 

Leonard  Killian,  309  Alexander, 
8-9105— Albuquerque,  N.  M. 

Beatrice  Rodriguez,  305  Kenan, 
8-9076— New  York. 

Ana  Maria  Ortiz,  Kenan  —  New 
York. 

Helen  Duke,  407A  E.  Franklin. 
8-1273— Now  York. 

Lynwood  Thompson,  5  Battle,  8 
9 17 J— New  York  To  Chapel  Hill 
after  Christmas. 

Marjorie  McMahan,  Carr,  8-91C5! 
Charlotte.  I 

Richard   Alexander,    313  Ruffin  I 
•3-9182— Ft.  Lauderdale,  Fla.  | 

John  Dale,  210  Conner,  8-9178-  | 
Asheville  or  Knoxville. 

Buddy  Clark,  Theta  Chi  8-9123 
\tlanta.  Ga. 

Angela  Aeosta,  218  Kenan  — 
Baltimore. 


Lisa  Rehor,  224  Kenan  —  New 
York  City. 

Joel  A.  Snow.  1  Pettigrew,  89174 
—St.  Petersburg,  Fla. 

Owen  Lelaild,  108  Connor,  89155 
—Charleston,  S.  C. 

Jerry  Chichester,  215  Aycock, 
8-9126— Macon.    Ga. 

Sue  Rexrode.  321  Mclver.  8-9134 
Roanoke,  Va. 

Bill  Henshaw.  202  Alexander, 
8-9107— Knoxville,  Tenn. 

RIDERS  WANTED 

Thomas  L.  Gillette,  303  Alumi.i 
Bldg.,  8-8462  Kansas  City,  Mo. 


Warren 
D.  C. 


Miller  —  Washington. 


David  L.  Heck,  33  Davie  Circle, 
9-2786— to  Shelby,  Ohio,  via  tA'. 
Airy  and  Charleston,  W.  Va.,  leav- 
ing Dec.  22.  . 

Brad  Seasholes,  215  Caldwell,  9- 
7688— to  S>Tacuse,  N.  Y. 

Susan  Inman.  303  Smith,  8-913S 
— to  Vermont,  western  Mass.,  C<nih 
and  N.  Y. 

Chuck  Federspicl,  8-6433  or  9- 
2382— to  central  Michigan. 

R.  E.  Berry.  106  Whitehead,  8- 
9066— to  Laurel,  Miss.  r"'^ 

Ed  Kiser,  315  Alexander,  3-9105 
— to  Laurinburg  via  Saniord  and 
Aberdeen.  '  •     • 

I-Yed  Katz,  9031^  Ext.  571  -5^0 
Washington,  D.  C. 

Bryce  Johnson,  State  College, 
Raleigh,  TEJnple  29863  —  to  Idaho 

Dick  Potthoff,  216  Connor,  8- 
917C  —  to  Jacksonville,  Fla. 

Louis  Lefkowitz.  TEP  House, 
8-9007 — to  New  York  via  New  Jer- 
sey Turnpike  and  Garden  State 
Parkway. 


Fred  To  Attend  Meeting 
In  Chicago  This  Week 

Herbert  Fred.  Director  of  UNC 
Bands,  will  attend  the  Biennial 
Meeting  of  the  National  Assn.  of 
College  Band  Directors  to  be  held 
in  Chicago,  today  through  Satur- 
day. 

Fred  will  serve  as  chairman  of 
the  assn.'s  southern  division  and 
as  a  member  of  the  convention's 
steering  and  hospitality  commit- 
tees. 


Covering  The  Campus 


COMMUNITY  CHURCH 

The  Community  Church  of  Chap- 
el Hill  will  have  its  annual  Christ- 
mas Music  Service  Sunday  at  11 
a.m.  in  Hill  Music  Hall.  The  choir, 
under  the  direction  of  Gene  Strass- 
ler,  will  perform  "The  Midnight 
Mass'  by  Marc-Antoine  Charpen- 
tier.  The  public  has  been  invite  i. 
CANTERBURY  CLUB 

The  Canterbury  Club  will  hold 
its  annual  Christmas  open  house 
at  the  Parish  House  on  Friday 
from  9  to  12  p.in.  Carols  will  be 
sung  around  the  decorated  tree  and 
dancing  will  be  featured.  All  stu- 
dents have  been  invited. 
STUDENT  WIVES 

The  Student  Wives  Club  will 
hold  a  covered  dish  Christmas  par- 
ty Saturday  at  6  p.m.  according  to 
Pat  Howard,  secretary  of  the  club. 

Husbands,  wives,  and  children 
have  been  invited  to  cofne  and 
bring  a  covered  dish  to  the  party, 
which  will  be  give  at  the  Victory 
Village  Nursery. 
W.A.A.   BASK€TBALL  CLUB 

All  women  interested  in  joining 
the  Basketball  Club  have  been 
urged  to  sign  up  in  the  Women's 
gym  before  the  Christmas  holi- 
days. The  club  will  meet  once  a 
week  on  the  day  preferred  by 
those  who  sign  up. 
W.A.A.  TENNIS 

All  participants  in  the  tennis 
t  lumaTnent  have  been  urged  to 
play  t'licir  matches  immediately  so 
the  tournament  may  be  completed 
before  the  holiday^. 
CHARLOTTE  CAROLINA  CLUB 

The  Charlotte  Carolina  Club 
will  hold  a  meeting  at  7  p.m.  today 
in  105  Gardner.  Officers  will  be 
elected  and  plans  will  be  made 
lor  a  dance  to  be  held  in  Cha- 
loUe  on  Dec.  27. 
BABY  SITTING  SERVICE 


baby  silting  service  conducted 
durig  home  football  games  at  Vic- 
tory Village  community  center 
will  be  extended  for  the  home 
basketball  games,  according  to  of- 
ficials of  the  nursery.  Those  in- 
terested have  been  asked  to  call 
either  9-2316  or  8-0177. 

GMAB  CHRISTMAS  DANCE 

Graham  Memorial  Activities 
Board  is  sponsoring  a  Christmas 
dance  Saturday  from  8  to  11  p.m. 
in  the  Rendezvous  Room. 

WUNC 

Today's  schedule  for  WUNC,  the 
University's  FM  radio  station: 
7.00    Spirit  -of   Christmas 
7:15     Cbalkdust 
7:30    Cosmofpolitan  Interview 
7:45    Fench   Press   Review 
8:00    Christmas  Is  Coming 
8:30    Folk  Music  of  the  oWrW 
9:00    Listen  America 
9:30    Governors    Press    Confer- 
ence 

10:00    News 

10:15    Evening    Masterwork 

11:30     Sign  Off 

WUNC  TV 

Today's  schedule  for  WUNC-TV. 
the  University's  educational  tele- 
vision station: 
12:45     Music 

1:00    Today  on   Farm 

1:30     Music  in   View 

2:00    Medicine 

•2:30     Sign   Off 

5:45     Music 

6:00     Magic  Lantern 

6:15     Sports    Clinic 

6:30     News 

fe:45    Sports 

V:00    Garden  All  j 

7:13     Bible    Course  '     ' 

8:00    Dr.    Shivers      ,  I 

845    State    Governmeot 

9:30    Lecture   Hall     .' 

H):00     Final    Edition     ' 


Should     interest     warrant,     the   10:05     Sign  Off 


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THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


THURSDAY,  DECEMBER  13,  l^fil 


KfcPLEY  GETS  26: 


Ftosh   Basketballers 
Lose.  97-89,  To  State 


A  Good  Beginning 

Carolinas  winter  athletic  teams  are  off  to  a  flying  start.  After  a 
week  and  a  half  of  competition,  all  of  the  tiirce  varsity  sports  teams 
are  unbeaten,  and  only  the  wrestling  team  has  been  hard  pressed  so 
far. 

The  highly  ranked  basketballers  lead  the  way  with  three  de- 
cisive wins  in  a  row.  Coah  Ralph  Casey's  perennially  powerful 
swimmers  have  racked  up  two  one  sided  triumphs  with  ridiculous 
ease,  while  the  wrestlers  of  Coach  Sam  Barnes  have  posted  a  pair 
of  wins  and  one  lone  tie. 
GRAPPLERS  ARE  MUCH  IMPROVED 

A  year  ago,  the  pitiful  UNC  wrestlers  were  unable  to  win  a  sin- 
gle match.  The  Tar  Heel  squad  struggled  through  a  nine  meet  sched- 
ule with  a  notable  lack  of  success.  They  came  close  to  winning  on 
only  one  occasion,  losing  out  to  Wake  Forest.  16-18.  And  in  their 
last  three  matches,  against  VPI.  Maryland  and  Virginia,  they  weie 
unable  to  score  even  one  point. 

Then  this  season  came  the  about  face.  In  their  first  meet,  a 
doubleheader  against  Wake  Forest  and  Washington  &  Lee,  they 
whipped  the  Deacons  and  tied  the  Generals.  Tuesday  night  in 
their  second  outing,  they  walloped  Davidson,  20-8,  to  gain  revenge 
for   one  of  last  year's   lickings. 

Although  the  grappplers  are  off  to  a  blazing  start,  they  may  have 
a  good  deal  more  trouble  from  here  on  out.  Remaining  on  the  sched 
ule  are  Citadel,  VMI,  VPI.  State,  Duke,  Virginia  and  Maryland,  all 
teams  with  a  considerable  edge  over  the  Tar  Heels  in  manpower.  But 
regardless  of  how  the  rest  of  the  season  goes,  it  will  be  one  of  the 
host  campaigns  in  years  for  the  Carolina  wrestlers. 
SWIMMERS  CARRY  ON  TRADITION 

Down  in  Bowman-Gray  pool,  its  the  same  old  story.  This  yeai^' 
Carolina  swimming  team  is  another  good  one,  just  like  the  power- 
houses of  the  past.  Outstanding  swim  teams  have  been  the  rule  here 
at  Carolina  for  the  past  20  years,  and  this  current  edition  is  no  ex- 
ception. 

The  first  two  meets  have  been  pure  fromality  for  the  locals. 
They  stomped  East  Carolina,  55-30,  and  followed  up  with  a  69  15 
trimming  of  South  Carolina's  Sand  locked  Gamecocks.  The  remain- 
ing meets  should  pretty  much  follow  the  pattern  of  these  first 
two  with  only  N.   C.  State  posing  a  problem. 

The  eyes  of  the  campus  are  focused  primarily,  however,  on  Coach 
Frank  McGuires  brilliant  basketballers.  The  Tar  Heels,  as  expectced, 
have  proved  to  be  the  class  of  the  conference  at  this  early  stage,  and 
the  chief  question  to  be  answered  is  "Can  they  keep  it  up?'  \ 

The  Tar  Heels  are  on  the  spot.  Everybody  will  be  gumiing  for 
them,  trying  to  knock  them  from  the  top  of  the  heap.  The  potential 
is  there.  Its  simply  a  question  of  whether  or  not  it  will  be  achieved 
when  the  chcips  are  down.  Last  season  it  wasn't.  Let's  hope  the 
story  will  have  a  happier  ending  in  this,  the  year  of  decision. 


Carolina's  freshmen  cagers  were 
knocked  out  of  the  undefeated 
bracket  i.-'st  night  when  they  were 
defeated  in  an  overtime,  91-89,  by 
the  State  College  Wolflets. 

The  Tar  Babies  and  Wolflets 
were  tied  79-aIl  at  the  end  of  the 
regulation  time.  In  the  three  min- 
ute overtime,  the  boys  from  Ra- 
leigh found  the  range  a  little 
quicker  than  the  Tar  Babies  and 
had  a  four  point  lead  the  last 
two  seconds,  but  Tar  Baby  Lee 
Shaffer  put  one  through  to  leave 
the  Tar  Babies  only  one  basket 
behind  as  the  gun  went  off. 

Carolina  had  a  50-43  lead  at  the 
half.  They  had  a  bad  night  at  the 
foul  line  connecting  only  11  of 
28,  St.ite  had  29  of  39  attempts 
good. 


Carolina 

Larcse,  f 
Shaffer,  f 
Kepley,  c 
Steppe,  g 
Crotty,  g  . 
Poole,  f   .. 


The  Box 

FG    FT    PFTP 

7       3       4     17 


10 

12 

6 

2 

2 


Crutchfield,  f  0 


Cagers  Win,  82-55,   i 
Over  GW:  Lennie  Gets  27  i 


Totals   39     n     22     89 


Cv*ry  woman  Its  slav«l 


Robinson  Trains 

GREENWOOD  L.\KE,  N.  Y.  _ 
(.\P)  —  Sugar  Ray  Robinson, 
whose  cold  forced  a  postponement 
of  his  middleweight  title  defense 
against  Gene  Fullmer  from  to- 
night to  Jan.  2.  yesterday  return- 
ed to  training.  He  did  exercises 
and  worked  out   but   did   not  box. 

Ribinson  expects  to  resume  box- 
in^g  over  the  weekend.  He  reports 
himself  completely  recovered 
,  from  ,his    recent  illness. 


UNC's  Sutton 
Makes  Irish 
All-Opponent 

SOUTH  BEND,  Ind.  (*— Notre 
Dame's  poorest  football  team  ir. 
Irish  history,  today  agreed  that 
Oklahoma,  No.  1  in  the  final  na 
tional  AP  poll,  was  the  best  team 
it  faced  this  season. 

The  Sooners  blanked  the  Irish. 
40-0. 

The  Irish,  who  wound  up  with  a 
2-8  record,  selected  three  players 
?ach     from     Oklahoma,     Michigan 
State  and  Purdue  on  their  all-op- 
ponent  team,  a   13-man  array. 
Tommy     McDonald     of     Okla- 
homa  easily  clinched   one    half- 
back   berth,   but    Ed    Suttorr  of 
North     Carolina,    and     Clarence 
Peakc^  and    Dennis    Mendyk    of 
Michigan  State  tied  at  the  other 
halfback  post. 

Remainder  of  the  team:  Joe 
Walton.  Pittsburgh,  and  Lamar 
Lundy,  Purdue,  ends;  Ed  Gray 
Oklahoma,  and  Alex  Karras,  Iowa, 
tackles;  Dan  Currie,  Michigan 
State,  and  Ed  Voytek,  Purdue, 
guards;  Jerry  Tubbs,  Oklahom;:. 
center;  Ken  Ploen,  Iowa,  quarter- 
back; and  Mel  Dillard,  Purdue, 
fullback. 

Walton,  Karras,  Tubbs  and  Mc- 
Donald were  All-America   choices 


N.  C.  Stat* 
Bortko,  f  ._..^_ 

Cole,  f    15  6 

Gallagher,  f  4  12 

Haig,  g  3  5 

McCann,  g  ,..„ 6  0 

Estis,  g  0  0 


FG    FT    PFTP 

3       6       4     12 


Totals 
North  Carolina 
N.  C.  Stat*      .. 


'31  29  20  91 
50  79  89 
43       79       91 


Geo.  Wash 

Morrison,  f 

Jolly,  f 

Bash,  f  — 
Cooper,  f   _ 

Guiuilia,  c 

Darden,  c  

Khisley,  g 

Telasky.  g    

McDonald,  g 

Baker,  g  

Matalavage,  g  ._ 

Totals  


G 

t 

..-.  1 

_-  1 

_.  0 

_.  3 

.     6 

„   0 

..    1 

1 

2 

1 

2 


F 

0-0 
2-3 
0-2 
2-2 
7-11 
<M> 
0-0 
3-5 
2-3 
(H) 
3-4 


11     19-30  13    55 


Duke  Leaves 
For  Classics 
In  Birmingham 

DURHAM— (AP)— Duke's  Blu;e 
Devils,  with  high  hopes  of  pull- 
ing a  major  upset  to  keep  their 
unbeaten  record  intact  leave  late 
today  for  Birmingham,  Ala.,  to 
compete  with  three  other  strong 
quints  in  the  third  anual  Birming- 
ham Classic. 

The  Blue  Devils  will  open  the 
two  day  tournament  against  na- 
tionally ranked  and  high  scoring 
Alabama  Friday  night  and  the 
Duke  team  which  surprised  many 
observers  by  winning  their  first 
three  contests,  will  definitely  be 
up  against  one  of  the  strongest 
teams  they  can  hope  to  face  all 
season.  Duke  is  the  decided  un- 
derdog. 

Alabama  under  new  coach  Dr. 
Eugene  Lambert,  has  a  3-0  record 
to  date  and  boasts  the  highest  1 
scoring  team  in  the  ation  at  ^c  I 
present  time.  The  Crimson  llde 
in  its  first  three  games  has  aver- 1 
aged  106  points  a  game.  It  rolled 
over  Jacksonville  State,  102-56; 
downed  Birmingham  Southern 
110-69;     and     beat     Eastern     Ken- 


Carol  ina                     G        F  P 

Rosenbluth,  f  . 10      7-7  2 

Brennan,  f . 2      5>7  2 

Lotz.  f 1      04)  2 

Searcy,  f    -. 0      0-0  1 

Hathaway,  c    2      2-2  1 

Quigg,  c  7      2-4  3 

Xearns,  g 14-4  1 

Kearns,  g 14-4  1 

Cunningham,  g 3      0-0  4 

Radovich,  g  ._j 2      0-12 

GroU,  g  _._. 0      (M)  0 

Rosemond,  g 2      0-0  0 

Holland,  g  10-0  1 


NORFOLK,  Va.  —  (AP)  — 
North  Carolina's  sixth-ranked  Tar 
Heels,  with  Lennie  Rosenbluth 
caging  27  points,  dominated  play 
from  start  to  finish  here  Wednes- 
day to  rout  G€orge  Washington  82- 
55  in  an  interconference  basketball 
game. 

The  game  was  strictly  no  con- 
testas  the  Atlantic  Coast  Confer- 
ence Tar  Heels  scored  eight  points 
before  GW  got  its  first  tally. 
North  Carolina,  winning  its  third 
straight  contest,  rolled  up  a  34-13 
halftime    lead    and    used    its    en 


Help   Fight  TB 


Buy  Christmas  Seals 


Totals  31     20-25  19    82 

Geo.   Washington    13     42—55 

North  Carolina  34    41 82 


tucky,    103-88. 

The  Blue  De  vils  have  shown 
in  beating  Georgia  Tech.  South 
Carolina  and  Clemson  that  they 
have  the  makings  of  a  good  team 
and  a  win  over  the  Tide  would 
definitely  assure  Coach  Harold 
Bradley  of  the  calibre  of  his  boys. 

The  other  first  round  Friday 
night  finds  Mississippi  Southern 
engaging  a  highly  touted  West 
Virginia  ball  club,  also  unbeaten. 
The  southerners  have  lost  one. 

The  finals  of  the  Classic  come 
on  Saturday  night  and  promoters 
have  estimated  the  best  crowd 
yet. 


PtTER  BEVERLY  LEE 

GRAVES -GARLAND.  VAN  CLEEF 

^■■-  -'Jjvcil  ani!  Uir«cI-0  thf  ROGER  CORMUfl 
ttttat  »,  AU£DICAN  imtRNAriOMl  PlCIUdtS 

-  PLUS  - 
HYPNOTIZED! 


Ci»l/  1.,.  tJ  -J,  AV(tKH.AN  INIth  .AIl'jNAL  PICIURt*" 

TODAY  ONLY 


The  Dollar 
Table  at 
The  Intimate 
Bookshop 
Solves  More 
Christmas 
Problems 
Than 
Santa  Claus! 


Co-Rec  Volleyball  Activity  ^       "^ 

Miss  Barbara  Battle  o'  the  Kenan  Dorm-Rabb's  Rousterabouts  co- 
rec  voilayball  squad  misses  a  block  as  a  teammate  and  an  unidenti 
fied  opponant  look  on.  (Photo  by  Bill  Suttle.) 


Alpha  Gam  Wins  WAA  Swim 
Meet  Over  Chi  O  And  Pi  Phi 


The     Women's     Athletic     Assn  \ 
Swim    meet    was    won    by    Alpha 
Gam  with  39.5  points.  I 

Second  and  third  were  close  with  : 
Chi  O  beating  Pi  Phi  out  by  .5  > 
point — 31-30.5.  ! 

It  was  a  close  meet  throughout 
ihe  event,  but  winning  both  relays; 
clinched  the  meet  for  Alpha  Gam  ! 
Other  team  point  scores  were:  Tj;  '■ 
Delt  26,  ADFi  15.5,  Carr  Dorm  10. 1 
Mclver  Dorm  9.5,  and  Smith  Dorm  | 
2 

Points  were  given  for  the  first 
live  finishers  in  each  event. 

The  summary: 

25yarci     freestyle — (1)     Debbie 
Connor,  Tri  Delt.  (2)  Bobbi  Madi- 
son, Pi  Phi,  (3)  Ruth  Woodruff,  I'i 
Phi,  (4)  Kay  Smith  Alpha  Gam,  (o 
Katherine  Brown,  Chi  O. 

25-yard  backstroke — (1)  Janot 
Banwerman,  Carr  Dorm,  (2)  Betty 
Ackerson,  Pi  Phi,  (3)  Ann  Gillett, 
Alpha  Gam,  (4)  Jane  Brock,  Smith 
Dorm,  (5)  Katherine  Erime,  Clu  O 

50-yard  freestyle — (1)  Debbir 
(  onnor,  Tri  Delt.  (2)  Janet  Banner- 
man,  Carr  porm,  (3)  Betty  Acker- 
son.  Pi  Phi,  (A)  Trudy  Lefler,  Al- 
pha Gam,  (5)  Kirksey  Sink,  Chi  0. 


25-yard  breast  stroke — (1)  Deb- 
bie Connor,  Tri  Delt,  (2)  Ann  Gil- 
lett, Alpha  Gam,  (3)  Kathenne 
Coe,  Chi  0,  (4)  Bertie  Hasting,  Pi 
Phi,  (5)  Jean  Crawford,  ADPi. 

25-yard  breast  stroke  for  form— 

(1)  Bami    Bourne,    Mclver    Dorm, 

(2)  Sara  Williamson,  Tri  Delt,  (3) 
tie,  Donna  Anderson  ADPi,  and 
Ftancis  Reynolds,  Alpha  Gam,  (5) 
Bertie  Hasting  Pi  Phi.. 

25-yard  free  style  for  form-  - 
(1)  Mutt  Parker,  Chi  O,  (2)  Sara 
Williamson.  Tri  Delt,  (3)  Donna 
Anderson,  ADPi,  (4)  Bami  Bourne, 
Mclver  Dorm,  (5)  Jane  Riley,  Al 
pha  Gam. 

25-yard  back  stroke  for  form — 
(1)  tie.  Donna  Anderson  ADPi,  and 
Francis  Reynolds,  Alpha  Gani,  i3) 
Katherine  Brown,  Chi  O,  (4)  Bam; 
Bourne,  (5)  Dot  Grevlach,  Pi  Phi. 

75-yard  medley  relay— Smith, 
Gillett,  Lefler,  (Alpha  Gam),  Kir- 
by,  Coe,  Parker,  (Chi  O),  Williams. 
French.  Maddison,  (Pi  Phi),  Cfaiv 
don,  Crawford,  Sherrod,  (ADPi). 

100-yard  free  style  relay— Lof- 
ler.  Smith  Reynolds.  Riley,  (Alphj 
Gam,'.  Farrington.  Parker,  Sink 
Coe,  (Pi  Phi).  Womlrull,  Ackerson 
Williams,  French— (.Pi  Phij. 


tire    squad    against    its    Southern 
Conference  foe.  i 

George  Washington,  essentially 
a  sophomore  squad,  hit  only  26 
per  cent  of  its  shots  in  going 
down  to  its  third  straight  de- 
feat but  this  was  the  first  time  the 
Colonials  really'  had  been  out- 
classed. 

The  Tar  Heels  hit  on  43  per 
ceat  of  their  shots  with  Joe  Quigg 
backing  up  Rosenbluth's  scoring 
with  16  points  and  dominating  the 
boards.  Rosenbluth  and  Quigg 
were  the  only  Tar  Heels  to  hit  in 
double  figures  as  the  entire  squad 
saw  action. 


GW's  only  bright  spot  was  the 
play  of  Eugene  Guarilia.  6-6  soph- 
omore center  who  collected  19 
points,  the  only  Colonial  in  double 
figures. 


George  L.  Coxhead 

U.N.C.  '42 
Campus  Ropresentativ* 


NEW  YORK  LIFE 


*o»o  »»• 


INSUKANCi  COMPANY 


And  the 

Intimate 

Bookshop 

Gift-Wraps 

Books 

Free! 


WE  STILL 


ti,  • 


Six  Cpeds 
To  Sponsor 
Squadron 

The  Air  Force  ROTC  unit  has 
announced  the  names  of  six  coeds 
who  have  been  i>elected  to  the 
Sponsor  Squadron. 

The  coeds  s?rve  in  the  capaci- 
ty of  morale  boosters  for  the 
unit.  They  work  with  the  cadets 
in  sponsoring  the  Air  Force  Dance 
and  are  present  at  all  dress  re- 
views  and   shows. 

The  .six  recently  selected  to  the 
group  were  Misses  Mary  Louise 
Bizzell,  Goldsboro;  Carol  Dennis, 
Essex  Fall,  N.  J.;  Marian  Dickens, 
Thomasville;  Pat  Dillon,  States- 
ville;  Angeline  Papazisis,  Jackson- 
ville. Fia..  and  Carolyn  Placak, 
Tryon. 

They  will  serve  with  the  coeds 
who  were  selected  to  the  group 
last  year,  which  includes  Misses 
Mary  (Pee  Wee)  Batten,  Mt.  Gi-. 
lead^  Isabel  Holbrook,  Kannaplis;  \ 
EliMbeth  James.  Robersonville; 
Janet  Johnson,  Orlando,  Fla.;  Jo 
Ane  Knott,  Oxford;  Barbara  Love, 
Lincolnton;  Isabel  Madry,  Kinston; 
Sylvia  McArthur.  Spartanburg. 
S.  C;  Barbara  Miles,  Burlington; 
Edith  Moore,  Sylva;  Amy  Morse, 
Washington,  D.  C;  Anne  New- 
.some,  Hampton,  Va.;  Ann  Sor- 
man,  Enfield;  Patsy  Poythress. 
Chapel  Hill  and  Susan  Walker, 
Wilniington. 

The  girls  are  nominated  by  a 
member  of  the  Cadet  Corps  and 
chosen  by  a  selection  board  com- 
posed of  cadets. 

Officers  of  the  group  include 
Misses  Susan  Walker,  Honorary 
Cadet  Colonel;  Anne  Newsome, 
Adjutant  and  Recorder;  Pat  Dil- 
lon. Operations  Officer  and  Bar 
bara  Miles,  Comptroller. 

CLASSIREDS 

FOR  SALE:  1950  HUDSON  SUP- 
er  6,  four  door,  excellent  con- 
dition. $250  or  nearest  offer. 
Call  Draper  at  8-9154. 


~A  m.  w^^' ' 


U  ^J|L 


DIRECT 

R  E  AD  I  N  G 

WATCH 


THE  BOOKS 
YOU  NEED 

♦  « V 

To  Make  Your  Christmas 
Merry 

The    Intimate 
Bookshop 


205  E.  Franklin  St. 


Open  Till  10  P.M. 


Masculine,  modern  design  Has  the 
new.  different  'Insta  Vision'  dial 
Shock  resistant,  waterproof*  and 
anfi  magnetic.  The  21  lewel  move 
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natural  gold  filled  case.  $7SI  52 

♦V.'hen  cce  cio«rn  andcrn'a!oiei"^'aci 
PKlCt  INCLUDES  rEDEPAl  TAX 


WENTWORTK 
&  SLOAN 

.JEWELERS 

167  E.  Franklin  St. 
PHONE  9-3331 


THERE  WILL  BE  NO  "JAZZ  AT 
Turnage's"  this  weekend  (Dec. 
15).  Sessions  will  re.surae  Jan. 
5. 

FOR  SALE:  CHRISTMAS  fREES. 
holly,  running  cedar,  mis'tletoe. 
Open  every  day  except  Christ- 
mas day.  Blackbird's  Market, 
W.  Franklin  St. 


LOST— A  SMALL  SILVER  PIN 
on  Tuesday,  between  5-6  o'- 
clock, in  the  neighborhood  of 
Franklin  St.  Call  8-6497  after 
5:00.  I 


Unusual  Christmas  Gifts 


Cashmere:  the  fleece  of  23  Kashmir  mountain  goats,  who  hardly  descend  below  20,000 
feet,  go  into  the  making  of  one  cashn>ere  sportcoat;  13  for  making  100%  cash- 
mere sweaters  ... 

'v    ■'., 

-  Robe*  m*6*  of  wonderful  luxurious  warmth,  without  weight,  in  VIYELIA,  collection 

of  unusual  colourings  in  TARTANS  ... 

-  OACRON  blended  with  cotton  raincoat,  completely  water-repellent  and  WASHABLE; 
'  I  rain  cap  to  match  ... 

'     SOX  in  all   brushed  cotton,  that  feel   like  cashmere,   in   new   British   shades,  •%   weir 
as  diamonds,  spaced  neatly  ...  • 


r^/ 


NEW  olive/tan  oxford  button-do¥m  shirts,  to  blerMl  with  the  new  fall  sportswear  .  .  . 

MUSICAL  FOOTBALL  IN  UNC  COLORS  that  plays  "HARK  THE  SOUND". 

And,  the  OLD  WELL  CUFF  LINKS,  in  STERLING  SILVER,  with  matching  tie  bar  .  .  . 


■I!  J    ■"'' 


Julian's  College  Shop 


WEATHER 

Ciaudy  with  showrtrs  «nd  coidtr. 
High  tsday  60. 


!J.T!.C.  LIBRARY  ^ 

SERIALS  DEPT.  | 

BOX  870  1^ 
-€HAPEL  HILL^N^C 


M  c  Daily  Mar  Keel 


TRENDS 

A    change     in    th«    Communirt 
^arty.  S*e  editorial,  ^s^e  2 


VOL.  LVII  NO.  69 


Complete  (JP)  Wire  Service 


CHAPEL    HILL,    NORTH    CAROLINA,    FRIDAY,   DECEMBER    14,    1956 


Offices   in   Graham   Memorial 


FOUR  PAGES  THIS  ISSUE 


Durham   Man   Denies  Guilt  In  Summer    Cheating   Ring' 


'Desire  Under  The  Elms    To 
Ofyen  On  Campus  Tonight 


-♦' 


NiN  MORELAND  CASE: 


The  Carolina  Playmakers  will 
present  the  first  of  five  perform- 
ances of  Eugene  O'NeiU's  drama 
of  a  New  England  family,  "Desire 
Under  the  Elms",  in  the  Playmak- 
ers Theatre  tonight. 

Directed,  by  Thomas  M.  Patter- 
son of  the  Dept.  of  Dramatic  Art, 
the  production  features  a  cast  of 
€X|)erienced  local  actors  and  will 
play  through  Tuesday  night. 

Foster  Fitz-Simons,  associate  pro- 
fessor of  dramatic  art  and  former 
internationally-known  dancer,  has 
appeared  with  Ted  Shawn's  Dan- 
cers, and  with  Miriam  Winslow 
toured  the  U.  S.  and  Argentina. 
He  is  author  of  "Four  on  a  Heath" 
(published  in  1934  by  Rofw,  Peter- 
son), and  "Road  into  the  Sun" 
(brought  out  in  1^9  by  the  Dra- 
matic   Publiishing    company). 

JOINED  PLAYMAKERS 

In  1942  he  became  Playmakers 
staff  designer  and  instructor  in 
scene  design  and  costume  design, 
and  assistant  to  Professor  Sam  Sel- 
den  in  the  acting  course.  In  1943 
he  collaborated  with  Tom  Avera 
on  "The  Twilight  Zone",  a  full- 
length  play  produced  as  the  major 
original  of  the  year  His  novel. 
"Bright  Leaf",  was  later  made 
into  a  movie. 

He  lias  served  the  PlajTnakers 
as  designer,  director,  actor,  chore- 
ographer and  composer,  and  dur- 
ing the  summer  he  is  associate  di- 
rector of  'Unto  These  Hills"  af. 
Cherokee. 

His  wife,  Marion  Fitz-Simons,  is 
on<  of  the  Playmakers'  all-time 
mitstadlng    actresses.    Fitz-Simons  j 


■  iiWi.^'-t^^^^Jl^qipmi   I         ~-- 


State  Assistants  Say 
Nothing  Illegal  Done 


AL  GORDON  < 

in  Playmaker's  prwlnction   tonight 


Professor  Kai  Jurgensen.  A  grad- 
uate of  Duke  University,  she  has 
been  featured  in  the  Playmakers" 
musical  productions,  '"Princess 
Ida"  and  "Kiss  Me  Kate". 

Al  Gordon,  gradual?  assistant 
from  Greensboro,  portrays  the  role 
of  Eben,  Ephraim's  son.  Gordon 
has    appeared    in    ten    major    pro- , 


has  acted  in  summer  .sock  theatres 
for  the  past  two  summers.  Bar- 
rett, a  graduate  student  from 
Hickory,  played  in  the  symphonic 
drama.  •Th?  Lost  Colony."  at  Man- 
too  la.^^t  summer.  Both  actors  tour- 
ed in  the  Piaymaker.«!'  company  of 
■'The    Rainmaker"    last    fall. 

OTHERS  IN   CAST  «         .- 


RALErGH  — UPt—  Two  Xorth  Caro- 
lina State  College  AtheUic  Officials 
spoke  up  for  the  first  time  yester- 
day on  charges  involving  them  in 
the  Jackie  .Moreland   case. 

Vic     Bubas,     assistant     Wolfpack 

basketball  coach,  said  a  charge^at 

lit      "impropeijly    promised"     .\TDre- 

!and     a     five-year    scholarship     "is 

•ithout    foundation." 

Willis  Casey,  assistant  athlatic 
director  at  the  college,  Mid  it 
was  true  that  he  was  aware  that 
Moreland,  a  Minden.  La.,  high 
school  basketball  star,  had  been 
given  $80  to  pay  his  transporta- 
tion to  State  College. 

'  However,  Casey  said  the  interpre- 
tation that  Moreland  was^  student 
of  the  college  at  the  time  he  ac- 
cepted tlie  money  "is  contrary  to 
the  facts." 

Mori*over,  Casey  added,  Moreland 
returned  the  money  to  the  donor. 
Dwight  Laughlin  of  Bossier  City. 
La.,  "wiihin  48  hours"  because  "he 
had  decided  that  he  would  enroll  at 
Centennary    College." 

The  6-8  lefthanded  basketball 
player  changed  his  mind  again 
and  did  enroll  at  North  Carolina 
State.  The  NCAA  placed  the  col 


lege  on  probation  for  four  years 
because  of  alleged  recruiting  vio- 
lations in  the  case.  ^ 

The     statements    bv    Bubas    and 


Student,  Turned  States  Witness 
Says  Andrews  Threatened  His  Life 


,  .  By  WALLY    KURALT 

And  FRED  POWLEDGE 
HILI^SBORO — The   rniversity's   "cheatino  rin,^"  rase  came  to  an  end  of  the  tiack  here 
Thursday.  .\  former  l'.\C  .student  from  Durh:  m   uas  on   trial    for   breakin|i   and  entering 
I'niver.sity  buildings  to  steal  examination  papers.  y 

.\  student.  Max   Iccnhour,  accused  the  D.irham  man.  Herbert  (i.  .Andrews  Jr..  of  steal- 
Casey    followed    earlier    comment    ing  examination   papers  last  summer,  of  offering  them   for  sale  and   of  breaking  into  of- 
resterday     by      Head     Ba.sketbaU    ficcs  in  Caldwell  Hall  a-nd  South  Building.  .Andrews,  called  to  the  st:nid.  repeatedly  denied 
Coach  Everett  Case,   who  made  it    l^c  had  stolen   the  papers.   In.sicnd,  he  intimated  Iccnhoiu-  had  done  the  stt':ilin,n. 
plain    that    neitiier    he    nor    other,  .Andrews  is  before  Orange  Superior  Court  judge  Raymond  .Mallard  on  charges  of  break- 

Vt/olfpaek  athletic  ofiicials  intend  to    j^j,^  ^^^^  entering  to  steal   the  quizzes.   Icenho  ir,  still  a  student  at  the  I'niversitv.  appeared 

as"^»  state's  witness.   He  admitted  to  ap|)roa(  h'ng  Anrlivus  in  order  to  buv  the  examination, 
getting  it  and  using  it  on  a  qui/  la.st  summer. 

INVESTIGATION  |  tions   and  selling   them  to   .students 

.\ndrews'    arrest  earlier   this   fall  j  who   didn't   want   to   study, 
'.limaxed    a    detailed    Men's    Honor  ;      The  trial  will  be  continued  today. 
Council   inve.'Jtigation  of  the  "cheat-  j  Courtroom  observers  said   they  felt 
mg  ring,"   which  allegedly  made  a  i  the  cas<?  should  be  ended  by  iKX)n. 


resign. 

Case  asserted  the  college  is  in- 
rocent  of  violations  in  the  recruit- 
in,?  of  Moreland.  He  added  that  no- 
'jody  has  shown  him  anything  to 
convince  him  that  Casey  and  Buba.s 
have  done  an.vthing  WTong  or  vio- 


(Soe    STATE,    Page    4) 


business   of   getting   UXC   examina- 


Concert  To  Be  Given 
By  University  Chorus 


GM'S  SLATE 


ductions  with  the  Playmal?ers.  in-j      ntK^-.    „  .u     „-o«   -^„  vr.«»..4^. 
ptay  the  roteofEphraim  Cabot  in  ,  „„ding  "The  Crucible  ""Ondine'^  "'      ^*^^'^"  '"  ''"'  "'"*  "^*  '^""'^^ 


"Desire  Under  the  Elms",  the  role 
created  by  Walter  Huston  in  the 
original  production  in  1924. 

JO  JURGENSEN  AS  AfeBiC 

Playing  the  part  of  Abbie,  Eph- 


and   "Seventeen".   He   has  also   ap- 

p?ared  in  "Unto  These  Hills,"  out- 

!  door  drama   staged   at   Cherokee. 

i      Ken  Lowry  and  Charles  Barrett 

■  appear   as   Eben's   brothers.   Peter 


raim's  new  wife,  is  Jo  Jurgensen, !  and    Simeon.    Lowry.    an    English 
wife    of    Dramatic    Art    Associate    major  at   UNC   from   Troy,   Oliio. 


Hudson  of  Ciokisboro;  Pel'.r  B.  O'- 
Sullivan  of  Valhalla.  N.  Y.;  Bet- 
ty Jin.nelte  of  Gnldsboro;  Gar- 
land .\tkins  of  Gastonia;  Lloyd 
Skinner  of  Burlington:  James 
Helmnn    of    Durham;    Mary   John- 

(See  PLAY  MAKER.  Page  4) 


Grail  Room — 4  p.m. — Graham 
Armorial    Board   of   Directors. 

Roland  Parkar  1 — 3;30  p.m. — 
Faculty  committ**  en  Serorit(«t 
and  fratarnitias.  .i 

Roland  Parker  7,  3 — 7  p.m. — 
University   Club. 

Woodhouse  Conference  —  3:30 
p.m. — Audit    Board. 

Woodhouse  Conference  —  10 
p.m. — Tri   lota. 

Rendezvous  Room — 6  p.m. — 
Statiatics  Students. 


HAPPENINGS  ON  THE  HILL 


Santa  Makes  Multitude  Of 
Stops  On  University  Campus 


Chase  Group 
Granted  Meet   j 

Residents    of    Chase    Ave.,    who 
are   fighting   the   proposed  f rater- 1 
nity   development  in  the   wooded  , 
area  behind  Victory  Village,  ihave  I 
been   granted    a    bearing    by    the 
UNC  Building  and  Grounds  Com- 
mittee,    a     memebr  of   the   com- 
mittee said  yesterday. 

First  off  was   his   stop   yesterdaj 

But    the   hearing   will    probably ,  at    Oxford    Orphanage,     where    the 
not  be  held  until  the  first  of  the    KDs  and  Delta  Sigma  Rs  were  en- 


By  MARY  ALYS  VOORHEES 

Santa  was  a  bu.sy  little  man  this 
week. 

And  if  you're  interested  in  seeing 
just^w,  hop  aboard  his  sleigh,  and 
we'll    take    a   spin    with    him. 


year,  according  to  Dr.  P.  W.  Wag- 
er, professor  of  political  science 
and    member    of    the   committee. 

'  Tlie  Chase  Ave.  residents  are 
objecting  to  the  proposed  16  fra- 
ternities because  of  the  "nuisance 
of   noise   and   increased  traffic." 

They  say  the  "noise  and  in- 
creased traffic"  wotild  decrease 
dieir   property   value. 


tertaining  at  a  Christmas  party 
After  distributing  presents  to  all  tiie 
children,  Santa  was  back  on  his 
sleigh  and  headed  toward  the  Hil.. 

Stopping  off  at  the  Beta  House. 
St.  Nick  i)ecame  the  tenter  of  at- 
traction for  all  the  underprivileged 
children  being  feted  by  the  Betas. 

Moving  on  down  the  street,  Santa 
pulled  up  his  sled  in  front  of  the 
Pi  Lam  House,  where  they  and 
the  Stray  Greeks  were  playing  host 


IT'S  IN  THE  AIR 


; 


Mistletoe-Time  Hits 
Young  And  Old  On  Hill 


By   EVANS  TAYLOR 

You  can  feel  it  in  the  air,  see  it 
in   windows   and   stores,   professor.; 

give  tests  .     ..  the  Chrtebnas  spirit 
19  here. 

Herds  of  shoppers  are  on  the 
streets  of  Raleigh  and  Durham,  Old 
Ciranddad  is  in  a  lx>ttle  like  a 
rocket  ship,  and  a  coed  at  a  fra- 
ternity party  was  timed  as  being 
under  the  mistletoe  more  than  half 
the  tinne  .  .  .  she  just  stood  there 
with  a  hopeful  smiJe  on  her  face. 

A  group  of  kids  stood  before  a 
igrandly  decorated  window  on 
Franklin  St.  Among  them  was  a 
ragged  little  colored  boy,  tears  show- 
ing in  his  eyes.  He  knows  Santa 
will   miss  him. 


ofi  their  Christmas  sermons,  per- 
haps adding  something  new.  The 
Carrboro  mills  give  all  of  their 
workers  a  turkey.  .And  a  bum  down 
at  the  bus  station  has  an  oa.sy 
time  getting  a  handout. 

People  do  silly  things,  and  sonu'- 
times  they  do  wonderful  things. 
One  young  veteran  tripU.i  his 
charge  account  to  buy  presents  for 
l>eople  who  didn't  need  them.  He 
cooperated  with  others  to  send 
food  and  clothing  to  the  needy.  The 
.spirit   is   to  give,   and  he  gave. 

But  mostly  Christmas  is  children. 
You  see  the  light  of  pure  amaze- 
ment in  the  child's  eyes  when  he 
sees  a  department  .store  Santa 
Claus.    The    kid    loves    it.    but    the 


to  the  underprivileged  children  from 
Carrboro. 

.Another  Christmas  party  on 
Santa's  list  Thur.sday  was  the  one 
(.\<>r  at  tiic  KA  House.  The  Tri 
Delts  and  K.As  were  entertaining  a 
^roup  of  orphans,  and  after  Santa's 
arrival  refreshments  were  served 
and  the  group  joined  in  the  sing- 
ing of  c-aroJs.  Tlien  last  night  after 
•he  parly,  the  K.\s  hosted  a  dinner 
ior  the  Tri   Delts. 

Tonight,    nfter    a    few    hours    rest 
trday.    St 
.I'-'ain. 


nevs 

m 
htief 

FROM   RADIO   DISPATCHES 

.M  O  S  C  O  W  —  Mostow  Radio 
charged  Vice  President  Nixon's 
trip  to  Austria  was  veiled  inter- 
ference and  camouflage  on  the 
part  of  the  U.N.  The  broadcast 
said  his  trip  was  being  made  to 
give  support  to  the  Hungarian 
underground. 


WASHINGTON— Two  U.  S.  Sen- 
ators— William    R.    Knowland    (R.- 
.\ick   will   be  on   the  go    CjHif. )  and  Hubert  Humphrey  (D.- 
Minn.)  urged   diplomatic   and   eco- 


The    first    appearance   of    the    70- 
voice    University    Chorus    under    its 
new    director,     Wilton    Ma.son,    will  I 
tx-   presented  at  its  Christmas  con- 1 
(ert  on  Tuesday.  Dec.  13,  at  8  p.m.' 
in    Hill    .MvLsic    Hall.  , 

The  concert  is  one  of  the  Tues- 
day Evenins  Series  presentations 
made  bv  thv  UNC  De:>artment  of 
.Music  and  is  open  to  tlie  public 
without     charge. 

The  unusual  oratorio  of  Hein- 
rich  S.huctz,  -Tlic  Christmas 
Story."  is  the  principal  work  on 
the  program.  The  ol-nU>rio  was 
written  near  ^  the  end  of  the  com- 
po.ser's  lii'e  anti  i^pi-csonts  oiw*  of 
the  finest  expres.^ions  of  this  geniu.<, 
iin    im-wrtant    oredecess^yr   of    Bach. 

Durin'.;  S-huetz's  lifetime  only  the 
K>lo  parts  allotted  to  the  evangelist- 
Tirrrntor  were  pudilishid  and  it  was 
Ml  until  1903  tiiat  t!ie  complete  in- 
strumvntol  and  vocal  parts  were 
discovered  in  manuscript  in  the 
University  Library  of  Upsala.  Swe- 1 
den.  I 

This  coiKorfs  /-erfortname  Is 
hased  u;x)n  ports  derived  from  .ni- 
crofilms  o;   the  Up.=;ala   manuscript. 

Soloists    lor    the    oratorio    include: 
.Ian  Saxjn.  soprano:  Gene  Strassler. 
Roy  Weaver  r.nd  Jose.>h  Mc.Mlister.  ; 
tenors;    and    .fam.'s    Chani&lee    and 
David  Sm.nll,  basses. 

Miss  Saxon  will   be  heard  as  the 


Here  are  some  of  tha  facts  of 
the  case,  as  brought  out  in  testi- 
mony Thursday  by  Andrews  and 
Icenhour: 

Icenhour  said  be  asked  .\ndrews 
about  getting  examinations,  was 
told  .Vitdre\<^  could  get  them,  and 
\'.ent  with  .\ndrews  and  another  stu- 
dent to  Caldwell  Hall  (the  Political 
Science  Dept.  •  late  one  night  and 
waited  while  Andrews  entered  an 
office  and  returned  with  the  exam- 
ination.    This     happened     again     a 


will  appear  as  the  three  wise  men 
and  Small  luis  t'lie  role  of  Kuig 
Herod. 

For  this  occasion  the  cnorus  will  j  later  date,  said  Icenhour. 
be  joined  b>'  an  orchestra  made  up  |      Icenhour  said   when   Honor  Coun- 
ol     members     of      the      University    lU    pressure   built    up  on   tlie  casi\ 
sxmphony.   .\n  additional  feature  of    .Andrews   told   him   the   council   han 
the  progrnm  will  be  a  .::roup  of  un- 
frmiliar    car.ols    from    mnny    lands. 


including  Catalonian,  Ukrainian, 
Russian  and  .American  mountain 
pongs. 

Dr.  Mason  returned  to  Chapel 
ITill  this  fall  after  a  j'ear  o|  stDd>' 
in  Italy  as  a  Ford  Foundation  fel- 
low. The  choruB  wts  organized  In.st 
spring  at  the  end  of  the  .semester. 
Tliis  is  the  first  time  there  ha.s  fc>een 
ii  permanent  mixed  chorus  of  stu- 
dents. 


Christmas  Tree 
In  Manly  Dorm 
Catches  Fire 

Christmas  spirit  receixed  a  rude 
jolt  Wednesday  night,  as  an  un- 
identified student  set  fire  to  a 
Christmas  tree  on  third  lloor  Manly 
dormitory,  according  to  Woody 
ihomasson.  dormitory  manager. 
The  fire,  which  started  at  9:30 
rnwl  and  Str.issler  v.ill  have  the  v,'a.s  quickly  drowned  by  residents 
ix>le  of  the  evangelist  who  narrates    o)   the  dorm. 


the  epispdes  of  the  Christmas  story. 
Weaver.    McAllister    and    Chamblee 


With  only  two  stops  »n  his  list,  i  nomic  sanctions  of  Russia  if  all 
Santa  will  go  by  the  Zete  bourse;  other  steps  fail  to  solve  the  Hun- 
uhere  the  Zctes  and  the  \DPis i  jilrian  quest'i^i.  The  two  men 
f'-jm  Duke  will  fete  children  from  emphasized  they  were  speaking 
the  .Methodist  Orpanage  in  Raleigh,    for    themselves   and    not    the    gov- 

Also   this   evening   is   the   .stop  he    ernment. 
\».  ill  make  at  the  SPE  House,  where  «         *         * 

they  will  try  to  make  this  Christmas  POZNAN — Steelworkers  in  Poz- 
a  little  happier  for  three  under-  nan  were  reported  ready  to  strike 
privileged  families  with  prc.scnt.s,  if  Soviet  Russia  does  not  proceed 
*•  lothing  and  a  Christmas  dinner.  !  to  withdraw  its  troops  from  Hun- 
.Afterwards.  they  v.ill  entertain  their  ;  gary. 
dates    at    a    Christmas   dinner.  |  *         *  « 

On  Saturday,  first  stop  is  at  the  WASHINGTON— President  Ei.s- 
cereSral  palsy  hospital  in  Durham^  enhower,  accompanied  by  his  wife 
where  the  ADPis  and  the  Phi  Kap- '.  Mamie,  flew  back  to  the  White 
pa  Psis  from  Duke  will  fete  the !  House  from  a  two  week  golfing 
patients  at  a  Chirstmas  party.  {  vacation    in    Augusta.    Ga.   Doctors 

Another  yule  party  to  include  reported  the  President  to  he  in 
Santa's  presence  will  be  Saturday  ;  excellent  health  and  said  that  the 
rflernoon    when    the    Lambda    Chis  i  vacation   was   beneficial    to   him. 

have  a  party 'for  the  children  from . 

the  Methodist  Orphanage  in  Ra- 
leigh. The  children  v.ill  arrive  after 
lunch,  and  the  brothers,  pledges 
and  their  dates  Will  entertain  them ! 
with  cartoons  and  a  Christmas  mo- 
\  ie. 

When  the  movies  end,  Santa  will 
arrive  with  presentjs  for  all,  after  | 
which  ice  cream  and  cake  will  be ; 
served.  And  as  an  end  to  the  even- 1 
ing,  they  will  have  a  juke  box  i 
party  at  the  house  for  themselves  j 
end   their  dates.  j 

CHRIST.MAS  means  parties!  | 

And   with   the  yuletide  season  ap- 1 
I-roaching.  thouglits  of  lessons  have  ' 


Chapel  Hill's  ministers  are  dusting    watcher  Is  even  more  thrilled. 


(See   SANTA.   Page  3) 


Free  Flick  Features 
"Singing  In  The  Rain" 

"Singing  In  The  Rain."  a  light 
musical  comedy  .starring  Debbie 
Reynolds.  Gene  Kelly,  and  Donald 
O'Conner,  is  tonight's  free  flick 
at  Carroll  Hall.  Performances 
are   at   8   and    10   p.m. 

The  dancing  of  OConner  and 
Kelly  are  featured  in  th  s  film. 
wh;>se  title  song  became  a  hit. 
The '  love  triangle  of  Kelly  and 
O'Conner  at  the  extremes  of  the 
base,  and  Miss  Reynolds  at  the 
vertex  provides  for  some  amus- 
ing  episodes. 


Youths 

Convicted 

OfBurglary 

Two     Ralei'4h    vouths    were    con- 
•,  icted     yesterday     of     first 
burglary     by     the     Orange 
Superior   Court. 

.■About    3    weeks    ago    .Albert    Van 

Hheen,    IT,   and    Richard    Schoelling. 

115.     were     charged     with     burglary 

I  after    allegedly    trying    to    steal    a 

'  wallet    from   two   sleeping  stwdents. 

j      Van   Rheen   was  sentenced  to  im- 

I  I'risonment   for  2  years.   SclicK.»lling. 

however,  turned  State's  witness  and 

f^ot   15  months. 

Van  Rheen  and  Sihoellins  were 
l>oth   employed    in    Raleigh. 

On  the  night  of  Nov.  16  they 
left  a  rock  n  roll  concert  in  Ra- 
'e;,gh  and  came  to  Chapel  Hill. 

At  about  6:25  a.m.  Schoelling  en- 
tered Winston  Dormitory  and  crept 
into  the  room  where  two  students, 
Jim  .Ayres  and  Richard  Billings, 
were    sleeping. 

BUlinys  woke  up  and  found 
Schoelling  in  the  act  of  .stealing  his 
wallet  and  class  ring.  Schoeling  fled. 

Billings  gave  cha.se  and.  joined 
by  police  cruising  near  by,  caught 
Schoellin;.;  three  blocks  away.  Van 
Rheen  was  found  sleeping  in  a 
parked   car. 

Schoelling  had  previously  been 
released  fro.m  two  road  sentences 
f(ir  thcit,  while  Van  Rheen  was  on 
probation  for  robbery. 


Siiortlx-  following  the  fire  Thomas- 
son   called   a   meeting  of  the  third 
.'ioor    residents;    however,    the    cul- 
j>rit  was  not  found.  Thoniasson  .said 
that  he  intended  to  take  the  matter 
to    Housing    Director    tames    Wads- 
v.orth  and   unless   the  offender  was 
located,    the   whole   floor   would    be 
put   on    probation,    Thomas. son   said. 
The    tree   was   piit    up  last   week 
I  \    residents    of   the   floor   and   de- 
corated    with    crepe     paper    which 
'i>urncd  qulckl.\',   whil'^  only  the  bot- 
tciTi  of  the  tree  itself  was  burned  by 
the  time  the  fire  was  put  out.   The 
degree    fire    was    appai-ently    a    deliberate 
County    attempt;     however,    outside    of    the 
'  tree,  there  was  no  damage. 


uc  real  evidence.  If  Icenhour  told 
the  council  anything  about  .\ndrews. 
he  testified,  .\ndre'ws  said  "1  had 
J'ad  it,  as  far  as  I'm  concerned." 

Icenhour  said  he  and  Andrews 
■went  to  Dean  of  Student  Affairi 
VreA  Weaver's  office  in  South  Build- 
ing at  a  later  daie.  where  .\ndrews 
entere<l  the  office  and  produced  his 
1  Andrews')  and  Icenhour 's  achooi 
records. 

Icenhour  said  he  y^eni  to  Uni- 
versity officials  and  reported  the 
case,  fearful  of  what  the  conse- 
quences might  be  is  he  carried  it 
any  further.  Later,  h«  said.  An- 

Press  Club  " 
To  Hear  Ragan 

Tiie  Univer5it\  Pi-ess  Club  will 
ireet  Tuesday  to  hear  Sam  Ragan. 
managing  editor  of  the  Raleigh 
."^'ews  .And  Obsen-er. 

The  meeting  will  be  held  at  7:30 
p.m.  on  Mt.  Bolus  Rd.  at  the  home 
of  Nor\'al  \e;l  Luxon,  dean  oi  the 
UXC  Journalism  School.  Students 
desiring  transportation  have  been 
<  sked  to  me?t  at  Bynum  Hall  at 
7:15  p.m. 

Students  who  are  not  members 
of  the  Press  Club  but  who  wish 
to  join,  have  been  urged  by  Presi- 
dent Charlie  Johnson  to  attend  tlte 
meeting  and  also  to  join  the  club. 


drews  made  several  th/eats.  One 
of    them:    "He    said    'No    matter 
how  this  thing  comes  out,  you'll 
have  me  to  face  .  .  .  You  couid 
be    run   over    mysteriously    by    a 
car  .  .  .'  " 
-\ndrews,  who  said  he  now    works 
at    his    father's    clothing    gtore    in 
Durham,  was  suspended  b\'  the  Uni- 
versity  several   years   ac;o.   He  al.so 
has    .ser\ed    a    prLson    sentence    in 
connection  with  a  liquor  still  raid. 

He  denied  e^er  going  to  the  Cald- 
well office  and  South  Building  with 
Icenhour,  and  intimated  Icenhour 
was  the  one  vvho  got  the  examina- 
tion. 

.\ndrews  said  he  ncer  threated 
Icenlioar  when  the  Honor  Council 
j>ressiire  was  on.  He  said  several 
students  had  approached  him 
<  .\ndrews '  about  getting  evamina- 
iion  papers,  but  that  he  did  not 
i^rovide  them. 


Hodges  Enters 
Rhodes  Finals 

;  use  student  Luther  Hodges 
Jr.  was  named  one  af  two  Sorth 
Carolina  finalists  in  Lhc  1956 
Rhi  des  Schol.-»,s4i  p  competition 
Rhodes  Scholarship  competition 
ill    Durham    Wednesday 

Hodges,  a  senior  majoring  in 
economics.  was  chosen  from 
among  15  semifinalists  by  the 
State  Selection  Committee.  He 
and  the  other  finalist  —  Malcolm 
R.  Williamson  of  Duke  University 
—  will  go  before  the  Southern 
District  Committee  tomorrow  in 
Atlanta.   Ga. 

In  .'Mlanta,  they  will  meet  ten 
other  finalists  from  Florida. 
Georgia.  South  Carolina.  Tennes- 
see and  Virginia.  Four  winners 
selected  from  this  group  will  re- 
ceive Rhodes  Scholarships  for  a 
minimum  of  two  years"  study  at 
Oxf.ird    University. 

Hodges  has  served  as  president 
of  the  Consolidated  University 
Student  Council,  a  member  of 
the  Men's  Honor  Council  and  as 
a  commencement   marshall. 


THEY  PAINTED  MOREHEAD  COLUMNS 

Vandals  Are  Unpopular 
With   Building   Dept. 


Service  To  Be 
Tuesday  Night 


The  Campus  Christmas  Service 
will  be  held  Tuesday  at  7  p.m.  at 
the   Presbyterian  Church. 

Sponsored  by  the  YMC.\  and 
[he  YWCA,  the  service  has  been 
planned  for  the  entire  campus  in 
anticipation  of  the  real  significance    «f  the  Building  Dept 


By    PAGE    BERNSTEIN 

The  inconsiderate  vandals  who  so 
maliciously  painted  Morehead 
Ilanetarium  have  made  themselves 
e-pecially  unpopular  witli  members 
(.f  the  Building  Dept.  of  the  Univer- 
sity. 

However,  it  has  t)econ\e  a  chal- 
lenge to  the  "campus-keepers"  for 
thej'  are  attempting  to  clean  the 
unsightly  damage  without  destroy- 
ing  the  looks  of  the  c-olumns. 

To  date,  three  methods  of  clean- 
ing have  t>een  used.  G.  F.  Horney 
said  that   a 


of    Christmas. 

After  the  invocation  by  Chan- 
cellor Robert  House,  James  Kay 
Ky.ser  will  speak  on  "What  the 
Birth  of  Christ  Means  in  the 
Lives   of   StUd?nts    Today." 

Student  Body  President  Bob 
Young  will  lead  the  closing  pray- 
ers after  a  program  of  carol  sing- 
ing, led  by  meml>ers  of  the  UNC 
Men's  Choir,  throughout  the  ser- 
vice. 

The  service,  which  will  take 
place  the  day  before  the  Christ- 
mas holidays  begin,  will  be  out 
in  time  ior  other  activities  sche- 
duled for  that  evening. 


i>rocess    of    using    steam    ha.s    l>een 
tried.    When    this    failed,    a    sugges- 
tion   by    a    limestone    manufacturer 
was   put   to  the  test. 
This  was  to  envelope  the  coliimn.s 


Horney  feels  this  might  work.  With 
enough  time,  the  penetrated  paint 
may  become  'so.tened"  to  the 
point  where  steam  could  wash  it 
out.   It  will  lie  tried  anyway. 

The  woikmen  .oersonall.v  feel  that 
the  lime  and  eifoit  spent  on  the 
columns  have  ix-en  enough  to  wash 
iway  tlie  pillars  but  they  still  .stub- 
liornly  stand. 

Horney  said  that  ever>lhing  will 
be  tried  to  clean  them  before  they 
give  up. 

IN  THE  INFIRMARY 


Students  in  the  Infirmary  yes- 
terday   included: 

Misa  Gail  Narman  and  Frances 


a     ".soaking'     of    hot    quicklime.  |    OobrowOlski,  Marion  Bell,  Charl 

as  Gray  III,  Ivey  L.  Heath  Jr^ 
Robert  J.  Harned,  Jack  Lewis, 
Gary  E.  Cooper,  Charles  C.  Dav- 
enport, William  Best  Jr.,  F'hilip 
Reinhatdt,  David  Loughlin,  Fred 
Lae  Hirsch,  Dawson  Carr,  John 
Barto,  Thomas  Finney,  Malcolm 
H.  McLean  Ml,  Lewis  Cody,  Roy 
Coleman,  Robert  Baggett,  Joseph 
Bryan,  Benton  L.  Beard  and  Phil- 
lip  Logan. 


The  purpo.se  was  to  bleach  the 
paint  out.  This  also  failed,  but  not 
(.-ompletely. Between  the  steam  and 
the  lime,  a  goodly  part  of  the  sur- 
isce  of  destruction  was  clear.  Only 
the  penatration  of  the  extra  thin 
paint    remains. 

The  third  method  has  now  been 
ijrought  into  being.  That  Ls  the  old 
standby  —  elbow  grease.  Workmen 
are   now   attempting   to   rub   it   off. 


PAGl    TWO 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


FRIDAY,  DECEMBER  14,  19M 


FRI 


Over-Balancing  May  Ruin 
Russia's  Economic  Programs 

It  appears  thai  tlic  Ccntial  CA.)iuinittcc  <tf  the  C^omnuuiisi  pai  ty  has 
dctided  tu  appta.sc  tiie  people  in  order  to  still  the  unrest  in  Russia.  1  hey 
are  doing  this  by  givin^  a  better  break  to  consumers,  making  a  drastii 
revision  in  their  housing  piojec  ts.  and  investing  almost  twite  as  nuuh 
money  in  ligjit  industries. 

1  he  tonujiittee  has  stheduled  a  meeting  for  the  latter  part  ol  thi.s 
month  to  (list  irss  the  changing  cconomit  trends  and  to  reconsider  several 
pre-pr(>j)()sed  plans — plans  wliidi  point  to  the  pa(ificariNn  oi  tiie  peas- 
ants. 

I  he  (loimnnnivt  leaders  ;:re  (<jming  to  the.  meetiny;.  supposedlv. 
Kith  an  air  of  gloxving  satisfaction     on     one     hand,     owing     to    their 

j)i()Sj>e(ts  of  a  favorably  long  run 
gain  in  their  basic  economv;  and. 
on  the  other  hand,  thcv  are  appre- 
hensive because  of  the  growing  dis- 
(ontent  am<»ng  their  plebians.  es- 
})eciiilh    the   restless  students. 

Allen  Dulles,  head  of  oin-  Cen- 
tral IntMligence  Agencv.  has  re- 
ported that  there  is  marked  evi- 
dence tfiatf  he  youth  in  Russia  is 
not  as  readv  as  it  used  to  be  to  ac- 
(ept.  without  question,  the  Coni- 
muniNt  dogma,  .\l.so.  th^re  havf 
l);'en  \  irious  leports  from  within 
tlut  liiere  are  embrvonir.  smoidd-. 
criu'j  sta-res  of  revc»lt  in  many  othir 
I-  ts  of  the  r.S.S.R.  These  are  en- 
cuni.iging  signs  for  the  West. 


THE  CAMPUS-3: 


Legislature  Changes  Suggested 


Bob  Young 


Oil  rhe  other  side,  not  onlv  have 
t!)e  S(»\ict  e(  onomijjts  predicted  a 
stjoiij.^  upswing  in  the  ba.sic  econ- 
emv.  but  two  riiired  States  eco- 
nomists at  Vale  I'niversity  have 
lovseeu.  the  same  thing.  Henry  C. 
Wallic  !i  and  William  ].  Fellner.  of 


Vale's  stafi.  lune  asserted  as  duk  h 
it)  writing  for  The  Re\iew  of  Kco- 
nomits  and  Statistics,  which  came 
off  the  pie.s-ses  recently. 

The  mo\ e  to  coTrsunnuers  goods 
is  espetiallv  interesting  in  that  So- 
viet stiategv,  sin{e  the  New  Kc<j- 
i)onn"(  Policy  on  uji-'S.  has  been 
in  the  production  of  hea\y  iiulns- 
trv's  "))rodn<er's""  g(x)ds.  The  (oii- 
sumer  has  been  neglec  ted  and  lom- 
pellcd  to  take  a  scat  in  the  rear  of 
the  bus. 

It  seems  that  a  fortunate  bal- 
ance has  countered,  for  the  mo- 
ujent.  the  check  tli;i't  has  been 
thrown  into  the  path  of  the  C.om- 
nnuiist  m.uhijie. 

lint  this  is  only  one  balance— 
if  it  is  pulled  over  theii  eyes  prop- 
crlv— to  coiniter  their  many  top- 
he:ivv  balances.  The  Western  world 
feels  that  time  will  provide  more 
cliecks  than  thev  can  possible  hand- 
le. The  tomorrows  will  kill  Com- 
munism. ... 


This  J  is  the  third  part  of 
President  Bob  Young's  State  of 
the  Campus  address.  In  this  seg- 
ment, he  discusses  the  student 
government  situation  and  the 
traffic  situation. 

Fust,  Fall  Elections 'are  final- 
ly concluded.  I  apologize  for  the 
inconveniences  that  were  caused 
on  campus,  through  lack  of  fore- 
sight   on    my    part.    Several    un- 


necessary mistakes  were  made 
in    the    election    procedures. 

Ralph  Cummings  has  been  ap- 
pointed Chairman  of  the  Elec- 
tion's Board.  I  am  making  an  ef- 
fort now  to  see  that  only  capable 
and  interested  persons  remain 
en  the  Board.  With  cooperation, 
hard  work,  and  good  planning, 
the  spring  election  should  pro- 
ceed   smoothly. 

Second,  the  Student  Legisla- 
ture   needs    more    vigorous    and 


more  seriou.s  participation.  Many 
members — from  both  parties  — 
are  not  properly  accepting  their 
responsibilities.  Give  me  some 
examples,  you  may  say:  You 
should  alwa.\s  be  aware  of  the 
i.ssues  that  are  coming  up  in 
each  session.  You  should  know 
what  offices  are  to  be  filled.  You 
should  be  searching  for  import- 
ant   matters    for    consideration. 

You    should    be    aware    of   the 
functioning   and  progress  of  va- 


'Do  You  Think  There  Really  Is  An  America?' 


Planning  For  UNC's  Future 

l\ei\i>iit  knows  the  \alue  ul  planniu;^  .'head,  but  usually  tlie 
kin)wktlue  doesn't  d(j  too  much  good.  The  last  miinite  in  recent  years 
has  c.jiiie  lo  be  the  most  opportune  time  to  do  a  davs  work.  Foriiniately 
]\o\)  Vonn<2:  reiM/es  the  value  of  plannin.;  ahead.  .\s  president  of  the 
student  bodv  ii  is  his  job  t«»  see  that  ihiiigs  gel  done,  and  apparently  he 
realizes  rh      p!an.s  nnisl  be  made  in  adx  an;  c. 


\ 


souiethnig  most 
\ith  the  new  ar- 
and  earlv  fa^l. 
return  to  the 
small   groups  of 


()jientatu>n     is 
students  (ojnu  ct 
rivals  f\    the   hil 
Thosi-   wUii   uiust 
campus  earlv   sec 

new  students  beiiig  led  around  the 
buildings  and  cai:ipus  by;  well  in- 
formed Voong  ladvg*  and  gentle- 
n^ev  A\  ho' apparentlv  hAve  the  most 
minute  fads  (.  m  eming  tiu-  Tni- 
versity  at  ih.u   laiger-tips. 

This  Vast  knowledge  of  the 
ram'>.>i:>  does  not  come  alxAit  bv 
accident.  .Ask  anybody  wlio  has 
wovke«l    as    uvicntntion    counselor. 

I  he  task  must  be  planped  in  ad- 
\ance.  far  in  advance.  This  is 
where  President  Young  has  shown 
his  knowledge  of  the  pitlivlls  of  a 
la.st  minute  stand.  The  chairman 
and  members  of  the  19,'')7  fall  Ori- 
entation Committee  arc  to  f>e  an- 
nounced soon  alter  Christmas  vaca- 
tion. 

This  will  give  the  groups  all 
spi  in  >  and  summer  to  plan  tor 
next    vears   new    crop   of   scholars. 

rhe  })eoj>le  in  the  student  govern- 


The  Daily  Tar  Heel 

The  olticial  student  publication  uf  tbe 
Publicatiuns  Board  ot  ibe  UniversilJ'  of 
North  Carolina,  where  it  is  published 
daily  except  Monday  and  examinatiot 
and  vacation  periods  and  summer  terms 
Entered  a.s  second  class  matter  In  tht 
Dost  office  in  Chapel  Hill  N.  C,  undei 
the  .-Kct  oi  March  8.  1870  Subscription 
rates:  mailed,  S4  per  year.  $2.50  a  semes 
ter;  delivered.  S6  <i  year,  $3.50  a  semei 
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Editor     _         

FRED  POWI.FWJE 

Managing  t^ditor    . 

CH.\KUE  SLOAN 

News  Editor 

.    .    NANCY  HILL 

Business  Manager 

BILL  BOB  PL-El. 

Sports  Ekiitor    

LARRY  CHF.RK 

Subscription  Manager 
Advertising  Manager   . 
Circulation   Manager 


Dale  Staley 
Fred  Katzin 
Charlie  Holt 


M:rVVS  ST-AIT— Clarke  Jones,  Ray  Link 
er,  Joan  Moore.  Pringle  Pipkin,  Anna 
Drake.  Edith  MacKinnon,  Wally  Kuralt, 
Mary  .Mys  V'oorhees.  Graham  Snyder, 
Billy  Baines.  ScU  Bass,  Gary  Nichols, 
Page  Bernstein.  Peg  Humphrey,  PliyUis 
Mault«by. 


BUSrS't'^S  STAIT  -Rosa  Moore,  Johnny 
Whitaker.  Dick  Leavitt.  Dick  Sirkin. 

SPORTS  ST.XFF:  Bill  King,  Jim  Purks, 
Jimmy  Harper.  Dave  Wible,  Charley 
How.son 

EDrrORLVL  STAFF*-  VVoody  Sean, 
Frank  Crow  tber.  Barry  Wiojtoix,  David 
Mundy:  George  Pfmgst.  Ingrid  Clay. 
Cortland  Edwardi.,  Paul  McCauTel, 
Bubbi  Smith. 


Staff  Pholugrapher 
Librarian 


'_  Normao  Kanlor 

_.  Sue  Gishner 


Night  Editor    ..    Grj^hiin  Snyder 

Proofreader  -  R*y  LiMer 


mem  uffi(  e  h  \e  doiU'  ail  tlu-y  can. 
alfer  the  naujes  are  aunouiKed  it 
will  be  up  to  the  orientation  chair- 
man and  his  connnittee  to  complete 
the  plans. 

Whoe\er  the  chairman  will  be. 
we  hope  he  realizes  the  importance 
of  plaiming  ahead.  Young  is  right 
wlien  he  calLs  the  appointment  of 
orientation  counselor  the  most 
importaiu  of  the  school  year.  Ix- 
cause  his  work  and  the  xvork  of 
his  committee  "determine  the 
(alibrc  and  general  philosophy  oi 
the  entire  student  generation." 

Red  Policy 
In  Hungary 
Is  Obvious 

The  New  York  Times 

Today,  seven  weeks  after  the  Hungar- 
ian revolution  began,  the  political  and 
moi-al  bankruptcy  of  Mo.scow's  policy 
in  Hungarv  is  clearer  than  ever.  That 
policy  has  attained  none  of  its  objec- 
tives. It  has  been  defeated  by  the  cour- 
age of  the  Hungarian   people. 

The  mere  recital  of  the  latest  events 
makes  clear  the  debacle  of  Moscow's 
attempt  to  rcimposo  slavery  in  Hun- 
gary. Tuesday  the  general  strike  call- 
ed by  the  "dishsolved"  Budapest  Cen- 
tral Workers  Council  was  largely  a  suc- 
cess, as  tens  of  thousands  of  Hungarian 
workers  defied  the  Soviet  terror.  The 
workers  council,  not  the  puppet  Kadar 
group,  has  the  confidence  of  Hungar- 
ian workers.  Reports  of  large-scale  part- 
isan fighting  in  the  Hungarian  country- 
side showed  Tuesday  that  even  the 
military  phase  of  the  Hungarian  revo- 
lution has  not  been  crushed. 

Outside  of  Hungary,  too.  the  political 
ilisaster  born  of  Moscow's  evil  policy 
is  mounting.  The  demonstration  in  Stet- 
tin gave  an  inkling  of  the  sympathy 
the  Polish  people  feel  for  their  Hun- 
garian fellow-victims  of  Soviet  oppress- 
ion. Yugoslavia,  where  only  a  month 
ago  Tito  called  for  full  support  of  Kad- 
ar. is  now  rapidly  turning  away  from 
that  position.  The  United  .\ations  res- 
olution submitted  by  India,  Burma,  Cey- 
lon and  Idonesla  shows  that  these  neu- 
tral Asian  nations,  too.  recognize  the 
essence  of  the  crimes  Soviet  troops  are 
committing  in  Hungary. 

Against  this  background  we  can  on- 
ly welcome  the  exit  of  the  puppet  Hun- 
garian delegation  from  the  United 
Nations  General  Assembly.  It  is  unfort- 
unate that  this  traitorous  group  was  not 
forced  out  by  direct  U.  N.  vote,  but  its 
exit  under  any  conditions  is  a  gain.  The 
way  is  now  clear  for  an  important  step. 
The  General  Assembly  should  invite 
Mrs.  Anna  KethJy,  the  only  free  mem- 
ber of  the  last  legal  Government  of 
Hungar>-,  to  address  the  Assembly  and 
to  represent  the  brave  Hungarian  fight- 
ers for  freedom. 


•../' 


\  ' 


PROSPECT  &  RETROSPECT: 


rious  committees  in  the  execu- 
tive and  judicial  branch.  You 
should  attend  all  caucuses,  com- 
mittee and  legislative  sessions. 
Some   suggested  changes: 

1.  Set  up  a  styles  committee, 
equally  represented  by  both 
parties.  This  group  would  check 
all  bills  passed  by  the  Legisla- 
ture, and  would  make  necessa- 
ry grammatical  and  stjies 
changes.  They  should  not  change 
the  content  or  intent  of  any 
bill. 

2.  Re-activate  the  E.Kecutive 
Committee  of  the  Legislature. 
This  would  include  all  officers 
of  the  assembly,  plus  the  two 
floor  leaders.  This  procedure 
would  increase  cooperation  and 
understanding  on    all   sides. 

.3.  Increase  the  power  and  con- 
trol of  the  Rules  Committee.  Re- 
sume the  practice  of  giving  all 
new  legislators  a  test  of  the 
basic  contents  of  two  documents 
—The  Student  Legislature  By- 
Laws,  and  Robert's  Rules  of 
Order.  There  is  much  work  to 
be  done.  Let's  all  tackle  it  re- 
sponsibly. 

It  seems  that  our  most  press- 
ing situation  continues  to  be 
the  traffic  problem.  For  several 
weeks  now.  we  have  wrangle!  " 
over  the  Columbia  Street  restric- 
tion. The  Traffic  Committee 
with  WiVbuni  Davis  as  chair- 
man, has  concentrated  its  wofk 
on    the  problem   above. 

The  aldermen  and  merchants 
have  been  undrrstandig  and 
sympathetic  to  our  problem. 
However,  we  must  realize  that 
there  are  pressures  on  them, 
other  than  thjse  from  students. 
The  board  felt  that  the  restric- 
tion is  necessary  for  the  con- 
,  venionce  of  Chapel  Hill  resi- 
dents. Also,  they  feel  that  the 
fraternities  should  present  somo 
plan  and  demonstrate  their  in- 
itiative. 

The  plain  fact  is  that  adequate 
parking  space  was  not  included, 
in  the  plans  for  this  residential 
area.  I  am  still  hopeful  that, 
through  the  cooperation  of  all 
the  fraternities,  we  can  find  a 
sali.<faotory  s  lution.  As  far  as 
the  campus  is  concerned,  I 
feel  that  we  can  find  more 
parking  space  and  have  it  in 
use  in  the  near  future. 


Lifting  The  Sweat  Shirt  Curtain 


Neil  Bass 

Is  there  a  big  shake-up  in 
store  for  the  Athletic  Dept.? 

Does  Carolina  stand  a  strong 
chance  of  losing  amiable  basket- 
ball mentor  Frank   Mc(iu  re? 

Is  the  Athletic  Uept.  adminis- 
tration undergoing  complete  re- 
vision to  suit  the  Tatumian 
taste? 

Will  athletics  ever  bj  the 
.same  as  they  were  in  B.T.  era? 
(Before  Tatum) 

Regarding  the  first  and  third 
questions,  it  seems  that  Athletic 
Director  Chuck  Erickson  is  tail- 
oring the  athletic  budget  to  suit 
Tatumian  taste  completely. 

This  means,  of  course,  that 
Coach  McGuire.  for  whom  most 
students  have  great  admiration, 
is  getting  the  short  end  of  the 
financial  .stick. 

His    boys    have    been    politely 


elbowed  out  of  the  Monogram 
Club  and  forced  to  eat  in  Lenoir 
Hall.  Also  his  budget  has  been 
naProwe^.  his  etxpenditures 
slashed  to  the  extent  that  press 
banquets,  etc..  have  been  push- 
ed out  of  the  picture  for  his 
team's  road  trip  to  New  York. 

Certainly  this  is  a  great  in- 
justice to  Coach  McGuire,  who 
is  perhaps  in  for  his  greatest 
season  here,  and  possibly  one 
of  the  greatest  .seasons  we  have 
ever   had.  ^      - 

Certainly  a  good  deal  of  this 
can  be  attributed  liy  inefficient 
administration,  yea  partisan  ad- 
ministration, but  also  perhaps  a 
little  more  weighty  student  par- 
ticipation might  serve  as  a 
check  and  balance  for  the 
athletic    .set-up. 

It  is  to  be  understood  that 
football   is   the   salvation   of   the 


.Athletic  Dept.  as  far  as  finances 
are  concerned.  But  this  doesn't 
mean  tliat  other  sports,  particu- 
larly basketball,  are  to  be  axed 
by   athletic  folks. 

And  if  the  University  admin- 
ijitration  would  get  busy  and 
try  to  scrounge-up  financial  sup- 
port for  a  new  gymnasium — a 
gymnasium  promised  McGuire 
when  he  came  here  to  coach — 
and  construction  of  which  was 
promised  within  five  years  as 
an  attraction  to  Coach  McGuire 
— then  basketball  here  would 
perhaps  contribute  on  the  mon- 
etary level  n»w  contributed  by 
football. 

It  might  be  argued  by  sources 
from  which  this  reporter  got  in- 
formation that  »evelation  of  the 
turbulent  athletic  situation  is 
not  proper  or  appropriate  at  this 
time. 


Pogo 


Bui  Hugo  Germino  of  the  Dur- 
ham Sun  revealed  the  situation 
in  a  column  last  week  to  the 
geeral  public;*  consequently,  stu- 
dents should  certainly  be  aware 
of  the  athletic  situation  and  take 
action  on   the   matter. 

This  is  what  we  mean  by  stu- 
dents having  no  say-so  in  ath- 
letics. Tatumian  tactics  are  over- 
powering the  entire  athletic  set- 
up, and  students  actually  know- 
nothing   about   it. 

Thus.  Coaoh  .McGuire  may 
tender  his  resignation  without 
students  being  aware  of  the  im- 
plications and  ramifications  of 
the  situation. 

Down  with  the  Sweat  Shirt 
Curtain. 

Students  must  be  given  more 
authority  in  the  athletic  setup 
if  a  healthy  democratic  situation 
is    to    prevail. 

•■•■•• 

By  Walt  Kelly 


fiBTUPH  Of  THgiS 

omACCow? 


\  V©U0FT5NMU^ 


^    ftlHKiN'     i 


L'il  Abner 


By  Al  Capp 


YOU  Said  It:  - 

Should' ve  Penned ' 
Passionate  Pooch  ^ 

Editor: 

Mr.  Stan  Shaw,  in  his  article,  "Poor  Passionate 
Pup  Pays  Price,"  aims  his  indignant  verbal  volley 
in  entirely  the  wrong  direction  when  he  leaves  the 
innocent  blood  of  the  unfortunate  little  dog  at 
the  doorsteps  of  "guilt-ridden  old  women."  I  agree 
with  him  wholeheartedly  about  some  of  the  pre- 
posterous campaigns  carried  on  by  these  Sainted 
Sisters  of  the  Anti-Sin  Society,  but  Mr.  Shaw  fails  . 
to  look  at  the  murder  of  the  slain  canine  realistical- 
ly. 

Evidently  he  has  not-  had  the  benefit  of  the 
exfierience  of  being  awakened  at  4:00  in  the  morn- 
ing or  kept  from  studying  numerous  times  in  the 
past  few  days  by  the  yapping,  howling,  snarling, 
fighting  mob  of  four-footed  admirers  which  the 
young  lady  had  attracted,  and  which  roved  the 
campus  behind  her  with   vocal  enthusiasm. 

r  am  riot  condoning  the  killing  on  female  dogs 
who  mast  inevitably  yield  to  nature,  but  they 
should  hot  be  allowed  to  roam  at  loose  over  the 
cami^us  with  their  pack  of  paramours  disturbing 
sleepers  an<i  studyers  at  all  hours  of  day  and 
night.  If  the  dog  had  an  owner,  he  should  have  been 
discreet  enough  to  pen  her  up  for  the  duration  of 
her  period  of  excitement;  if  not,  it  was  the  rightfai 
duty  of  the  city  to  take  action. 

By  removing  the  source  of  stimulation  from  the 
boisterous  herd  of  hounds,  that  hard-hearted  individ-     . 
ual  who  must,  through  lack  of  initiative,  slaughter 
dogs  to  make  a  living,  has  restored  order  and  quiet     -- 
to   the   campus   and   sant   our   canine   lo\-ers  back     ,. 
to  their  proper  duties  as  pets  and  watchdogs. 

J»rry  A.  Shields 


POETIC  PARODY: 


Christmas  Tale  In 
Merchants   Class 

Leroy  Epps  Walker 

'Twas  the  season  of  Christmas,  when  all   through 

the  land 
Gifts  and   presents  were  in  great  demand; 
Decorations    were    hong    in    store    windows*   with 

care. 
In  hopes  that  shoppers  would  be  lured  there; 
Merchants  forsook  the  snugncss  of  their  beds. 
While  nsions  of  dollars  dahced  in  their  heads; 
Stores    stayed    cpbn    from    early    til    late, . 
As   silver-tongued  clerks  offered   custom,ers   bait. 
When  cut  in  the  street  there  arose  such  a  clatter, 
People  ran  from  the  stores  to  see  what  was  the 

matter; 
Out  through  the  doors  they  ran  like  a  flash, 
And  then  in  the  street  halted  their  mad  dash. 
The  sun  on  the  breast  of  the  new-fallen  snow. 
Gave  to  everything  in  sight  a  glitter  and  glow; 
When,  what  to  their  wondering  eyes  should  ap- 
pear. 
But  a  Cadillac  convertible  leading  the  parade  of 

the  year. 
The  Cadillac   bore   a   rider,   adept  at  oratorj-  and 

verse. 
The  exalted  President  of  the  Chamber  of  Com- 
merce. 
More  rapid  than  vultures  the  merchant-sponsored 

floats  came. 
While  he  joked  and  laughed  and  call  groups  by 

name; 
"Now    students,    now    teachers,    now    hoosewives 

and  chauffeurs. 
Farmers,    preachers,   musicians   and   loafers. 
To  the  m.ijestic  stores,  stocked  from  wall  to  wall, 
Dash  in,  dash  in,   dash   in  and  buy  all." 
As  dry  leaves  that  before  a  wild  hurricane  fly. 
When  they  meet  with  a  obstacle,  mount  to  the 

sky; 
So  to  television  studios  the  merchants  they  flew. 
With    their   heads   full   of   sales    talk,   and    with 

money   in    view. 
Like  never-tiring  parrots,  they  were  heard  night 

and  day, 
"There's   no  money   down,   and  you  have   months 

to  pay!" 
People   tried  to  enjoy  programs,   but  every  time 

they  turned  around, 
Onto  the  screen  merchants  came  with  a  bound. 
They  were  dressed  in  fine  style  from  head  to  toes, 
With  their  highly  shined  shoes  and  tlieir  imported 

clothes. 
One  merchant's  valet  had  a  bundle  on  his  back 
The  modern  peddler  with  his  demonstration  pack. 
The   merchants  eyes — how     they     glittered!     h's 

smile,  how  leerv! 
He  could  talk  for  hours  and  ne\er  grow  weary; 
His  greedy  little  mouth  worked  like  a  shuttle 
To  his  strange  brand  of  logic,  people  offered  no 

rebuttal. 
.\  cigarette  he  suavely  held  in  his  hand, 
While   he  told   of  his  products  so  splendid   and 

grand. 
He  had  a  clean-shaven  face,  his  belly  was  drawn 

in. 
The  epitome  of  merchants,  the  idol  of  many  men. 
Oozing    personality,    appearing    harmless    as    an 

elf. 
He    was   very   amusing   in   spile   of  himself. 
With   a  .<ly  look   in  his  eyes  and   a  cock   of  his 

head. 
lie    ga\e   people    to   know    they    hud    nothing    to 

dread. 
He  spoke  many  words,  this  was  his  chosen  work. 
Wr  nging  the  money  out  of  each  vulnerable  jerk. 
With   a   last  burst  of  superlatives,   as  he  beamed 

like  a  rose. 
His   high-pressure   sales  talk  came   Vj  a 
H?    called    hl^    valet,    ta    h!s    chauffeur 

vhistle. 
And    strutted    rapidly    away,    stiff    as    a 
But  he    paused   to  cxcliim,   ere   he   went    oat    of 

sight, 
"Kvery   one  of  ymi   g.t  doAn  and  buy    iomethJng 
before    night!"  " 


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FRiDAY,  DECEMBER  M,  19M 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


PAGE    THREf 


dogs 

they 

the 

krbing 

and 

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jhtfoi 

the 

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ighter 

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back 

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[rough 

with 

|E:re; 
-ds, 
?ads; 

bait. 

Ilatter. 
the 

hh. 

sh. 
low, 

'low: 
Id  ap- 

Ide  of 

aad 

Com- 

isored 

ips  by 

»wives 

wall. 

le   fly. 
|to  th^ 

flew, 
with 

night 

Imonths 

ry  time 


Is  back- 
pack. 
1!     b  s 

J  weary; 
iltle. 
»red  no 


lid   and 

drau  n 

ly  men. 
as    an 

cf   h:a 

Ih.ng    to 

In  wurk. 
)le  jerk. 
I  beamed 

I clos^. 
give    a 

bribtle 
out   uf 

Imothiiij 


Retired  Admiral,  Assistant 
Prof,  Join  Morehead  Staff 


.\  retired  U.  S.  Xavy  rear  admiral 
iind  a  UNC  assistant  professor  of 
seology  have  jouied  the  narrating , 
t.iaff  of  the  Morehead  Planetarium, ! 
:i  was  announced  Wednesday  by! 
Planetarium  Manager  A.  F.  Jen-j 
zi.no.  i 

D.  W.  Looruis.  a  veteran  of  both  [ 
World  Wars  wlw  retired  in  Cha'>el  j 
JTill  after  35  yetrs  of  service  in  the  I 
Navy,  is  now  narrating  the  special: 
children's  shows  of  '"iStar  of  Betii- 
It'hem"  at  11  a.m.  and  2  p.m.  daily. 

A  native  of  Milwaukee,  Wis.,  and 
a  graduate  of  the  U.  S.  Naval 
Aeademy  at  Annapolis,  Md.,  Ad- 
ir.iral    Loo  mis     was     a     transport 


squadron  commander  in  Pacific 
amphibious  operations  dunng  World 
War  II,  after  which  he  conunanded 
the  Naval  ROTC  unit  here.  ! 

Added  to  tlie  staff  of  uarratoi^s  for  j 
the  public  show  Ls  Philip  Seff,  a 
member  of  the  LFNC  geology, dept. 
ind  a  speciali.«t  in  histoiical  geo- 
logy. He  came  to  the  University  last 
summer  from  Southwestern  Louisi- 
ana Institute. 

Loomis  and  Seff  complement  the 
regular  narrating  staff  composed  of 
CHto  Stuhlman,  N.  W.  Matti^  and 
Har\ey  W.  Daniell,  who  are  well- 
known  to  Morehead  Planetarium 
audiences. 


The  Daily  Tar  Heel's 
Holiday  Ride  Service 


Santa,  Socials  Mix 


(Continued  From  Page   1) 
been  second  place  to  all  the  parties 
(B  this  week's  menu. 

Starting  off  the  week  was  the 
Phi  Delt-Tri  Delt  party  Tuesday 
evenittg.  After  dinner  at  the  Ph 
Drft  House,   the   couples ,  journeyed 


And    to    Ijegin    the    weekend,    the, 
Theta  Chis  will  be  over  m  Durliam 
tonight    at    the    Castle    where   they  j 
and  their  dates  will  have  a  Christ-  j 
mas  party  while  the  Pi  Phis  stage 
theii-  annual  pledge  dance.  ! 

H.\RRY  BELAFONTE  will  be  the  j 


The  lollowing  people  need  rides,  or  tan  give  rides,  to   out  to  Carl's  for  a  tacky  party  vvith   star    attraction    at    the    Plantatwa 


distant   points  o\er  the  Christmas  holidays.   It  you  have  a 

(ar,  are  headed  for  one  of  the  points  listed  atid  need  riders, 

contart  these  people.  If  you  want  a  ride  to  one  of  the  places 

listed  at  the  end,  contact  the  folks  who  have  cars  and  need 

riders. 

RIDES  WANTED 


207    Ruffin, 


Carols,  Plans,  and  Presents 

By  Peg  Humphrey 


Li^a  Rehor,  224  Kenan  —  New 
b-  \  York  City. 

Joel  A.  Snow,  1  Pettigrew,  39174 
— St.  Petersburg,  Fla. 

Owen  Leland,  108  Connor,  89155 
— Charleston,  S.  C. 

Jerry  Chichester,  215  Aycock, 
8-9126— Macon.    Ga. 

Sue  Rexrode,  321  Mclver,  8^i;<4 
Roanoke,  Va. 


Despite  the  leaps  and  bounds  cf 
the   thprraometer,   that   feeling   is' 
beginning  to  permeate  the  air.        ! 

Carolers  appearing  in  the  night 
with  candles,  after  dinner  carol 
sings  by  the  piano,  and  the  scram- 
ble to  arrange  rides  home  for  the  | 
iiolidays  all  indicate  ^hat  the  i 
'.  hristmas  season  is  upon  us  ...  a 
-•    '  season  for  not  only  mirth  and  so- 

cial   affairs   but    also   a    time    to 
-'  bring  happiness  into  the  hearts  of 

dear  ones  by  giving  them  tokens 
of  friendship  and  love. 

Now  how  about  a  plan  for  shop 
•"•ti ,  ping  efficiently  right  now  in  order 

,  ^^  to  save  that  last  minute  dash  to 

the  store  only  to  find  things  pret- 
ty well  picked  over.  First  of  all 
A  notebook  with  a  list  of  the  peo 
pie  you  are  giving  to  with  person 
?Iity  notations  and  ideas  for  pres- 
ents. .If  you  plan  to  mail  any  gifl3. 
it  is  a  good  idea  to  include  ad- 
-'     •  dresses   and   carry   this    notebook 

.'.^10  _  with  you.  Then  you  can  have  a  gif; 

•  -  ••  wrapped  and  mailed  directly  from 

ihe  store. 

And   to  this   list   such   items   as 

^  ^Tapping     paper,     ribbons,     seals, 

'-?  scotch  tape,  postage  stamps,  Christ- 

..«.jt  mas  cards,  jaunty  package  decora 


tions,  coloured  paper  for  elaborate 
gift  wrapping,  and  a  bottle  of  ink 
to  refuel  that  busy  pen. 

And  when  it  comes  to  the  actual 
shopping,  don't  forget  to  pick  up 
a  few  emergency  presents  for 
names  perhaps  overlooked  on  your 
list.  They  can  be  such  timeless 
gifts  as  jewelry  Iw.xes,  ornate  shoe- 
horns, luxury  soaps,  handkerchiefs, 
sheer  hose,  and  trinket  bo.xes. 

Now   for   those   major  presents. 
They   should    definitely    be   some- 
thing a  bit  frivolous  .  .  .  not  un- 
forgiveably  unpractical  .  .  .  but  an 
elegant  item  that  bespeaks  luxury 
and  the  sort  of  purchase  a  person 
usually  overlCK)ks  except  w'hen  on 
u  shopping  spree;  such  as,  a  cud- 
dly cashmere  sw(?ater   .   .   .  "frill.' 
blouse  .  .  .  elegant  silk  shirt  .  .  . 
fur  riches  that  may  come  in  the 
form  of  a  purse,  neckpiece,  qr  hat 
...  a  subscription  to  Punch  .  . 
a  recording  of  a  poet  reading  hi:? 
owTi  works  ...  a  piece  of  luggage 
...  velvet  chino  pants  .  .  .  fluffy 
I  slippers    ...   a   traveling   kit    to 
I  fondle  precious' jewels  or  lingerie 
[  .  .  .  a  dashing  evening  purse  .  .  . 
I  most    important    a    gift    that    will 
}  bring  sparkles  of  pleasure  into  the 
!  eyes  of  the  recipient. 


Bill  Heniihaw.  202  Alexander. 
8-9107-— Knoxville.  Tenn. 

John  Underwood.  221  V^ce  St., 
5466— Charleston.   S.    C. 

Christian  Lefebure,  3  Battle, 
89175— New  York  City. 

Morris  Wilder,  212  Mangum, 
8906.5 — Hendersonville. 

Allan  Spader,  218  Gr^am,  8- 
908&— Parkersburg,  W.  Vi.' 


(Advertisement) 


YOU'LL    BE    AMAZED! 
At  The  Galaxy 

Elegant  Christmas  Gifts 
at 


Ethan    Tolman, 
9146 — Miami,  Kla. 

Kenneth  Chi-Kun  Yang,  208  W. 
Franklin  St.,  9-2471— Taipei,  F,or- 
mosa. 

Bill  .\dcock.  308  Mangum,  8- 
9183--Knoxvillc.  Tenn. 

Marion  Harris.  309  Spencer,  8- 
9104  -  fclngeihard  or  Washington. 
N.  (.'. 

Howard  Kahn,  108  Alexander,  8 
9107— Baltimore.  Md. 

Harold  Stessel.  211  Stacy.  8-9031 
—New  York  City  or  Westchester. 

Sara  Humphrey,  Pi  Phi  House 
8-9096  —  Washingtop,  D.  C. 

Carolina  Hume,  Pi  Phi  House, 
3-9096  —  Washington.  D.  C. 

John  Gauntlett,  8-9154  —  Chi- 
cago. 

Priscilla  Roctzel,  106  Kenan,  8 
9172  —  Trenton  or  Newark,  N.  J. 
or  New  York. 

THE  RULES 

If  yoo  want  to  g«t  your  name 
on  either  of  these  lists,  drop  by 
The  Daily  Tar  Heel's  newsroom, 
second  floor  of  Graham  Mem- 
orial, or  mail  your  name,  address 
telephone  number  and  destine 
tion  to  The  Daily  Tar  Heel,  Box 
1080,  Chapel  Hill.  The  lists  wnl 
run  as  long  as  there  are  stu- 
dents who  need  rides  or  riders. 

Leonard  Killian.  309  Alexander. 
8-9105— Albuquerque.  N.  M. 

Beatrice  Rodriguez,  305  Kenan, 
8-9076— New  York. 

j\.na  Maria  Ortiz,  Kenan  —  New 
York. 

Helen  Duke,  407.\  E.  Franklm. 
JM273— New  York. 

Lynwood  Thompson,  5  Battle,  8-    Raleigh.  TEmple  29383 
917a— New    York   To   Chapel   Hill 
after  Christmas. 

Marjorie  McMahan,  Carr,  3-910'j 
Charlotte. 

Richard  Alexander.  313  RuXii.-! 
j  9182— Ft.  Lauderdale,  Fla. 

John  Dale,  210  Connor,  8-9178— 
Asheville  or  Knoxville. 

Buddy  Clark,  Theta  Chi  8-912i 
■\tlanta,  Ga.  ' 

Angela  Aeosta,  218  Kenan  — 
Baltimore. 


music  by  Doug  Clark  and  his  com 
bo.  ♦  i 

Also   partying  on   this   particular 
evening  were  the  Sigma  Chi  broth- ; 
ers   and  pledges,   who   were  enter- 
taining at  a  eodktail  hour  for  their 
dates   with  eggnog   and  other  yule 
refreshments  on  the  menu,  while  the ' 
Delta    Sigma    Pis    were   feting    KD 
Carolyn  Thompson  of  Wlviteviile  at  ■ 
a    birthday   party.    Late   that   night 
they  serenaded  Carolyn  in  honor  of 


Ciub  in  Greensboro  Saturday  nigbt 
and  the  reason  for  the  mass  move- 
ment of  two  fratei-nities. 

The  Phi  Kaps  will  be  going  up 
with  their  dates,  as  will  the  TEPs, 
who  will  be  dating  coeds  and  also 
some  WC  girls. 

KAPPA  PSI  has  elected  their  new 
pledge  class  officers. 

Selected  to  lead  the  newest  mem- 
bers of  the  fraternity  were  Whit 
Moose    of    Mount    Pleasant,    presi- 


Carrboro  School  Kids  Enjoy  Party 

The  happy  faces  shewn  above  belong  to  members  of  the  first 
grade  at  Lincoln  elementary  school  in  Carrboro.  The  party,  spon- 
sored annually  by  Beta  Theta  Pi  social  fraternity,  was  held  Thurs- 
day at  the  Beta  house.  Two  films  were  shown  and  the  children  en- 
joyed games,  refreshments  and  gifts. 


her    bemg    chosen    queen    of    their  dent;  Hugh  Clark  of  Pinetops.  vice 
Rose  rtenee.  |  president;   Joe  Ferrell  of  Elizabeth 

Wednesday    night    found    the    Phi  City.      secretary-treasurer;      David 
Delts  havmg  their  annual   brother- j  Cooke  of  midebren,  chaplain;   and 
wiedge   Christmas    party    while    the ,  Rusty    Freeman    of    Pittsboro,    so-  j 
■  Tri   Delts   were   entertaining   alum-  j  eial  chauman.  ^  | 

r.ae   and   their   children    at   a   yule  \  j 


RIDERS  WANTED 

Thamas  L.  Gillette,  303  AlumtJ 
1  Bldg.,  8-8462  Kansas  City,  Mo. 
i     Warren     ililler  —  Washington. 
|D.  C 

I  David  L.  Heck,  33  Davie  Circle, 
j  9-2786— to  Shelby.  Ohio,  via  M'. 
I  .\iry  and  Charleston,  W.  Va.,  icav- 
I  ing  Dec.  22.  . 

I      Brad  Seasholes,  215  Caldwell,  0- 
j  V688 — to  SjTacuse.  N.  Y. 
'     Su.'jan  Inman.  303  Smith,  8  9133 
—to  Vermont,  western  Mass.,  Conn 
i  and  N.  Y. 

j      Chuck   Federspiel,   8-6433   or   9-1 ' 
i  2382— to  central  Michigan.  j 

!  R.  K.  Berry.  106  Whitehead,  8- 
1  9066 — to  Laurel.  Miss.  | 

(  Ed  Kiser.  315  Alexander,  8-9105 
I  —to  I..aurinburg  via  Sanford  and 
i  Aberdeen.  i 

I      Fred  Katz.  9031,  Ext.  571   -   to! 
j  Washington.  D.  C  | 

i      Bryce    Johnson.    State    College,! 
to  Idah«^' 
Dick    Potthoff,    216    Connor,  8- 
917C  —  to  Jacksonville,  Fla. 

Louis  Lefkowita.  TEP  House, 
8-9007 — to  New  York  via  New  Jer- 
sey Turnpike  and  Gardes  State 
Parkway. 

•Dot    Hail,    83392— to    Williams- 
burg. Va.  na  Richmond. 

Ann  McConaughy,  AD  Pi  House, 
80983 — to  Columbia,  S.C. 

J.  Timothy  Stevens,  208  Ruffle. 
89146— to  Allentovn,  Pa. 


■  party. 

A  steak  dinner  started  off  Tnurs-j 
day  evening  for  the  Lambda  Chis.  | 
after  which  they  and  their  dates 
took  in  the  talent  show.  That  after- ' 
noon  the  Chi  O  sisters  and  pledges 
exx  hanged  presents  at  their  an- ' 
flual    Chirstmas    party. 


I  WAA  BASKETBALL 

All  women  interested  in  joining  I 
the  Basketball  Club  have  been  I 
iu*ged  to  sign  up  in  the  Women's 
gym  before  the  Christmas  holidays,  i 
The  club  will  meet  once  a  week 
on  the  day  preferred  by  those  who 
sign    up. 


' CANTERBURY  CLUB 

The  Canterbury  CluD  will  hold 
its  annual  Christmas  open  house 
at  the  Parish  House  today  from 
9  p.m.  to  12  midnight.  Carols  will 
be  sung  around  the  decorated 
tree  and  dancing  will  be  featureeL 
All  students  have  been  invited. 


PATRONIZE   YOUR 
•    ADVERTISERS 


0  K  L  Y 
376  DAYS 
It  I L  L 
CHRISTMAS 


>;^5,'»i   }  ^{A^/T4>,  riM.:^' 


-^^     .^.,  i. 


IJ 


—  Clyde  E.  'Pete'  Mullis,  associ- 
ate professor  of  physical  educa- 
Hon  at  the  University,  has  ac- 
cepted an  invitation  from  the 
U.  S.  Army  to  be  an  instructor 
iir  tfit  Athletic  Clinic  for  the 
Army  in  Europe  next  summor. 


CLASSIFIEDS 


THERE  WILL  BE  NO  "JAZZ  AT 
Turnage's"'  this  weekend  (Dec. 
15).  Sessions  will  resume  Jan. 
5. 


Swedish  Prof  Visits  Compus; 
Will  Deliver  Several  Talks 


FOR  SALE:  CHRISTMAS  TREES, 
holly,  running  cedar,  mistletoe. 
Open  every  day  except  Christ- 
ihas  day.  Blackbirds  Market, 
W.  Franklin  St. 


And  the 
Best 

Christmas 
Cards 
Cost  a 
Nickel  at 
The  Intimate 
Bookshop 


mi 


And  not  a  day  too  many  to 
enjoy  the  full  pleasures  of 


.I-;;  f\f 


The  Intimate 
Booksfiop 


ihiii .' 
»r.  K. 


205  E.  Franklin  St. 


Open  Till  10  P.M. 


CONVENIENT  GIFT  WRAPPING   / 

See  Peg  Humphrey's  Column  Above 
For  Gift  Suggestions. 


.\  Swedi.sh  profesor.  who  is  an 
expert  on  statistics  and  economics, 
is  currently  visiting  in  Chapel  HiU 
and  will  give  two  public  talks  on 
the  two  subjects. 

Professor  Herman  Wold  of  the 
University  of  Upsala.  Sweden,  will 
address  the  Statistics  Colloquium 
Monday  at  4  p.m.  in  Phillips  Hall 
on  'Specification  Errors  in  Regres- 
sion  .Analysis." 

This  topic  is  a  problem  connected 
with  tlie  extent  of  the  enxirs  likely 
to  be  made  in  forecasts  by  ignoring 
relevant  predicting  variables  to 
whj<  h  he  has  made  mathematical 
contributions.    • 


On  Tuesday  at  4  p.m.  he  will 
speak  to  economists  in  Carroll  HaU. 

Professor  Wold  is  well  known 
among  statisticians  throughout  the 
world.  His  first  book,  dealing  with 
the  analysis  of  time  sere  series 
A\ith  the  help  of  tlie  newly  de\'eloped 
thro  tl>eory  of  stochastic  processes, 
was  his  thesis  for  the  degree  of 
Doctor  of  Philosopy  at  Stockholm 
in    1938.   It   was   widely   circulated. 

He  is  makmg  a  tour  of  important 
centers  of  statistical  and  economic 
research  in  this  country  under  the 
auspices  of  the  Rockefeller  ?'oun- 
datiun. 


DAILY    CROSSWORD 


ACR08S 

1.  Before 
(naut.) 
6.  Girl's  name 

10.  Nobleman 

11.  Prickly 
envelopes 

•   of  fruits 

12.  Weather. 
cocks 

13.  One  who 
brings 
ill  luck 

14.  High  (mus.) 
1.5.  Vie  with 

17.  African 
worm 

18.  Salt  (chem.) 

19.  Compass 
point 
(abbr.) 

20.  City  (Okla.) 
22.  Pile 

25.  Word  of 

unknown 

meaning 

(Psabns) 
2T.  Music  cues 
30.  Blemish 

32.  Yount 
wopian 

33.  Bone  (onat.) 
35.  Meadow 

37.  Droop 

38.  Slopped  over 
41  Wooden 

form  for 
shapisff 
metals 
(Archaeol.) 

42.  Cksh 

43.  Europeans 

45.  Related 

46.  Thaws 

47  Tidy 

48  Ascend 

DOWN 
1.  Giwtropod 
moUusk 


2.  Fancy 
goldfish 

3.  Com 
(Swed.) 

4.  Flowers 

5.  Half  an  em 

6.  Coin 
(Anc.  Gr) 

7.  Moon- 
goddgss 

8.  Rasp 

9.  Residue 
of  fire 

12.  Valleys 
(poet.) 

13.  Mint  drink 
16.  Angel  set 

over  the 
moon 
(Pers.) 
21.  Drop  bait 


23. 


V 


24. 


26. 


28. 


29. 
31. 
33. 


34. 


36. 


Forti- 
fy 

Small 
farm- 
ers 
(Eur) 
Cnirist- 
mas 
foliage 
People 
of 

Siam 
Boi:ders 
A  letter 
Founder 
of 

Ottoman 
empire 
Ray  of 
a  wheel 
Viper 


H'jnir*iH  asi^rao 
i^Yijii  aikjasEiaia 

u:-(ii.^n  t^r.it-:nH 
iliHtMW   utiKisa 


YrtterdBy'i  Aatirer 

39.  Marine 
mammal 

40.  Period 
of 
fasting 

44.  Fourth 

caliph 
46.  Mother 


BIRD  CLUB 

There  will  be  a  meeting  of  the 
Chapel  Hill  Bird  Club  at  3  p.m. 
Sunday  at  the  home  of  Harold 
and  Mrs.  W'alters.  Mrs.  Appleber- 
ry  will  be  the  guest  speaker. 
UNIVERSITY  CLUB 

The  University  Club  will  meet 
today  at  5  p.m.  in  Roland  Parker 
Lougcs  2  and  3  to  have  the  Yack- 
ety  Yack  pictures  retaken.  There 
will  be  no  meeting,  just  the  pic- 
ture retaken. 
COMMUNITY  CHURCH 

The  Community  Church  of  Chap- 
el Hill  will  have  its  annual  Christ- 
mas Music  Service  Sunday  at  11 
a.m.  in  Hill  Music  Hall.  The 
choir,  under  the  direction  of  Gene 
Slrasiler,  will  perform  "The  Mid- 
night Mass."  by  Marc-Antoine 
Carpentier.  The  public  'has  been  ; 
invited. 
STUDENT  WIVES  j 

The^  Student    Wives    Club    will 
hold   a   cov3red     dsh     Christmas ; 
party  tomorrow  at  6  p.m..  accord-  j 
ing  to  Pat   Howard,   secretary.       j 
WAA  TENNIS  i 

.Ml    participants    in    the    tennis, 
tournament    have    been    urged    to 
plav    Ihf'ir    matches    immediately  i 
30   the   tournament   may   be   com- 
pleted  before   the  holidays. 
GMAB  DANCE 

Gr^fham      Memorial      Activities 


Board  is  sponsoring  a  (Hiristmas 
dance  tomorrow  from  8  to  11 
p.m.  in  the  Rendezvous  Room  of 
Graham  Memorial. 

WUNC 

Tddays  schedule  for  WUNC,  the 
University's  FM  radio  station: 

7:00    Spirit   of   Christmas 

7:15    The  UN  Story 

7:30    Masterworks  from  France 

8:00    Let's   Listen   to  Opera 
10:15    News 

10:30    Evening   Masterwork 
11:30    Sign   Off 

WUNCTV 

Today's     schedule     for    WUNC- 
TV,   the    University's   educational 
television  station: 
12:45     Music 

1:00    Today  on  Farm 

1:30    Musical  Farms 

2:00     Industry  '■ 

2:1.5     Jets 

2:30     Sign  Off 

5:45     Music 

6:00    Children's   Comer 

6:30     News 

6:45     Sports 

7:00    Science  F3ir 

7:.30     Art  Today 

8:00    Your   SOhook 

8:30    Christmas  Painting 

9:(K)    NC  Art  Museum 
10:00    Final  Edition 
10:05     Sign  Off 


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Look  through  that  '57  Chev- 
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how  its  new,  deeper  design 
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Glance  down— just  a  bit  — 
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THi  DfJLY  TAR  HEEL 


FRIDAY,  DECEMBER   14,   195d/ 


TROUBLE   DOWN   SOUTH 

Tomorrow  night's  game  with  South  Carolina  in  Columbia  could 
be  trouble  for  Coach  Frank  McGuire's  Carolina  cagers. 

The  Gamecocks  are  fresh  from  «  75-61   win  over  once   mighty 
but  fading  N.C.  State,  and  visions  of  an  upset  over  another  member 
of  North  Carolina's  fabled  "Tobacco  Road"  will   be  dancing  before 
their  eyes. 
The  game  will  be  played  in  the  Gamecocks  home  lair  at  Columbia, 
and   this  will  make  UNC's  chore   doubly   lough.   So  far  this   season 
S'^uth  Carolina  has  rolled  to  3  wins  while  dropping  one   decision  to 
Duke  by  a  101-74  coimt. 

Coach  McGuire's  squad  has  had  very  little  trouble  this  season 
in  chalking  up  three  consecutive  wins.  Their  last  triumph  came 
over  woeful  George  Washington  Wednesday  night  in  Norfolk. 

In  that  game,  George  Washington  put  on  a  demonstration  of  the 
fine  art  of  basketball  that  can  only  be  termed  'pitiful'.  The  Colonials 
vere  a  study  in  futility,  and  could  do  nothing  right.  In  the  first  half 
they  scored  a  total  of  13  points,  and  unheard  of  oddity  in  this  modern 
era  of  high  speed  and  race  horse  basketball. 

The  Tar  Heels  were  not  much  better  in  the  opening  half.  They 
hit  only  26%  of  their  shots  from  the  floor,  but  still  held  a  34-13 
lead   at  intermission.  Things  opened  up   in   the  second   stanxa,   but 
it  was  still  a  bad  night  all  the  way  around. 
Carolina  won,  however,  although  they  didn't  look  too  good  doing 
it.  But  it  must  be  remembered  that  the  caliber  of  the  opposition  often 
plays  a  big  part  in  determining  just  how  well  a  team  plays. 

After  the  South  Carolina  test  tontorrow,  the  Tar  Heels  return 
home  to  face  Maryland  Monday  night.  Then  they  leave  for  the  frosty 
north  and  engagements  with  NYU,  Dartmouth   and  Holy  Cross  on 
~hursday,  Friday  and  Saturday  of  next  week. 
IN   THE   GARDEN,  A  CHEERING  SECTION 

Coach  -McGuire's  lads  should  feel  right  at  home  when  they  take 
the  court  in  Madison  Square  Garden  Thursday  night  to  battle  NYU. 
In  the  stands  to  cheer  them  on  will  be  a  contingent  of  UNC  students 
from  the  New  York  area.  And  on  hand  to  lead  the  Tar  Heel   sup- 
I  urtcrs  will  be  a  small  but  enthusiastic  combo  and  a  cheerleader. 
Lou  Rosenstock  is  the  m*n  behind  the  movement.  Lou  made  ar- 
rangements with  Coach  AAcGuire  and  the  powers  that  be  at  the  Gar- 
den  to  get  some  tickets  to  sell  to  Carolina   students  interesed   in 
going  to  the  game.  Sale  of  the  ticket*  got  under  way  on  Tuesday 
ot  his  week  in  Y-Court,  and  only  •  limited  supply  is  left.  Anyone 
who  would  like  to  sit  in  on  the  Ter  Heels  scrap  with  NYU  may  still 
pick  up  a  ducat  if  they  drop  by  Y-Court  at  10  or  11  a.m. 
THAT  WALL  OF  SILENCE 

Carolina  students,  alumni  and  fans  have  been  searching  their  radio 
<iials  in  vain  on  recent  nights  for  a  broadcast  of  the  Tar  Heels  road 
fames.  The  UNC  basketballers  have  already  played  three  games  away 
from  home  this  season,  and  nobody  was  on  hand  to  describe  the  ac- 
tion to  the  folks  back  home. 

On  the  other  hand.  State  games  at  home  and  away  are  aired  by 
a  number  of  stations,  although  ttie  Pack  is  in  the  midst  of  probably 
their  worst  season  in  history.  It  seems  a  shame  that  the  nation's 
second  best  team,  Carolina,  should  be  forced  to  take  back  seat  to 
State  in  the  matter  of  coverage. 

We  don't  pretend  to  know  whys  and  wherefores  of  the  broadcast- 
ing industry.  Such  mundane  items  as  sponsors  and  money  undoubte'i- 
ly  play  a  big  pasrt  in  determimng  who  broadcasts  what  gam«s.  Bat 
it  seems  a  shame  that  State  should  receive  duplicate  coverage  from 
t«vo  or  more  broadcasters  whiie  Carolina  remains  suiTounded  by  a 
wall  of  silence. 

Something  should  be  done.  Interest  in  basketball  here  on  campus 
is  at  an   all-time   high,  and  students  as  well   as  townspeople   would 
like  to  follow  their  Tar  Heels  on  the  road  as  well  as  at  home. 
We  don't  know  what  steps,  if  any.  could  be  taken,  but  we  would 
like  to  see  somebody  take  action.  What  about  WUNC?  Its  a  possibility 

Vic  Sexias  In  Top  Form 
For  Davis  Cup  Matches 


Awards  For  Volleyball  Champs 

Co-Rec  Volleyball  champions,  SAE-Mcl/er,  are  pictured  above  as 
they  received  their  trophies  for  a  winning  performance  last  night 
in  Woollen  Gym.  First  row  are,  left  to  right.  Miss  Joan  McLean, 
Pete  Williams  and  Miss  Joyce  Alligood.  Second  row.  Jay  Walker, 
Miss  Betty  Reece,  and   Bob  Scholze.  (Photoby  Bill   (Suttle) 

Mclver-SAE  Wins  Tourney 


Grapplers 
At  Citadel 

Carolina's  twice  victonous  and 
once  tied  varsity  grapplers  travd 
to  Charleston,  South  Carolina,  to- 
nite  for  a  conte.st  with  the  Bulldogs 
cf  the   Citadel. 

This  should  be  a  rough  one  for 
the  Tar  IleeLs  since  the  Citadel  al- 
ways manages  to  field  a  very 
.strong  -squad,  but  the  Tar  Heels 
ha\'e  shown  that  they  are  power- 
ful also,  defeating  Wake  Forest 
fnd  Davidson,  and  .splitting  with 
Washington  and   Lee. 

The  Tar  Heels  met  Washington 
and  Lee  and  Wake  Forest  on  the 
same  day  and  had  to  di\'ide  their 
strength.  If  this  had  not  been  so 
the  result  of  tlie  W  &  L  match 
inight  have  been  a  little  different. 

Going  to  the  mat  for  the  Tar 
Heels  in  tonite's  contest  will  be: 
letterman  Dave  Wall  in  the  123- 
pound  class.  Captain  Bob  Wagner 
at  130.  Perrin  Henderson  at  137, 
letterman  Charles  Boyetle  at  147, 
letterman  Ken  Hoke  at  157,  Dave 
.Atkinson  at  167,  Bob  Childs  at  177, 
:md  Dave  Corky  in  the  heavyweight 
division. 

130-pounder  Henry  Rhyne  and 
heavyweight  William  Hayes  are 
also  making  the  trip  with  the  squad. 


State  Officials  Deny  Charges 


By   TOMMY   JOHNSON  j 

Mclver-SAE  outlasted  Tri   Delt- 
Kappa  Sig  in  a  very  close  contest  | 
to     take     the     Co-Rec     Volleyball  [ 
championship,    2-0.    last    night    in 
Woollen   Gym. 

I 

First  game  score  was '14-20.  and  i 

the  second  game  was  taken  by  the  ^ 
very  slim  margin  of  22-20.  It  was  ; 
a    hard    founght    contest    all    the  [ 


The  hard  hitting  of  Bob  Scholze  1 
and  consistent  play  of  Pete  Will- 1 
iams  was  too  much  for  the  Tri  i 
Delt-Kappa  Sig  team.  The  Tri', 
DeU-Kappa  Sig  team  Jiayed  B  , 
fine  brand  of  ball,  however,  work-  I 
ing  as  a  team.  The  team  players 
were:  Caleb  Maddox,  Mi.ss  Pat  I 
Brandt.  Chris  Carpenter.  Miss  Di-  j 
ana  Ashlev,  .Miss  Gail  Willingham, 


Pat   Wright,  Miss   Donna   Hostett- 
ler,  and  AI  Larson. 

In  semi-final  play,  S.AE-Mclver 
upset  favored  Kenan  Rabb's  Rou<:t- 
abouts,  2-0.  Tri  Delt-Kappa  Sig 
won  a  close  contest  over  Alpha 
Cram-Sig  Nu.  Five  minutes  over- 
time was  required  to  complete  the 
game  as  neither  team  could  gain 
the  two  point  advantage  which 
was  requirea  to  win.  The  final 
score  was  2-0. 

The  games  were  conducted  by 
the  Intramural  Dept.  and  the  Wo- 
men's Athletic  Assn.  Two  out 
of  throe  ten-minute  games  were 
required  to  win. 

Coach  Walter  Rabb.  Intramural 
Director,  presented  the  awards. 
Idividual  trophies  were  given  to 
the  Mclver-S.\E  team  for  their 
winning   performance. 


Jack  Williams  Wilt  Play 
With  Special  Back  Brace 

WLNSTON-SALEM  —  (AP)  — 
Wake  Forest  basketball  player 
Jack  Williams  received  relief  for 
his  aching  back  yesterday  in  the 
form  of  a  special  brace  and  im- 
mediately rejoined  the  team  for 
afternoon  practice. 

X-rays  Wednesday  night  showed 
a  congenital  spinal  defect  caused 
pains  which  kept  Williams  side- 
lined in  a  game  at  Virginia  Tues- 
day night.  * 

*  A  physician  said  Williams  will 
be  able  to  play  if  he  wears  the 
brace.  Thus  it  appears  Williams 
will  be  available  when  Wake  For- 
est opens  defense  of  its  Carrousel 
Tournament  title  at  Charlotte 
Monday. 


By   WILL  GRIMSLEY 

PERTH,  Western  Australia  — 
(AP) — Vic  Seixas.  in  the  midst  of 
his  si.xth  Davis  Cup  campaign  fo'" 
the  United  States,  scoffs  at  talk 
•that  at  33  he  is  'over  the  tenni.; 
ball"  and  has  left  his  best  playing 
days  behind. 

■'For  one  big  match  or  for  one 
big  series  of  matches  I  feel  sure 
I  can  play  as  well  as  I  did  four 
or  five  years  ago."  the  tall,  good 
looking  Philadelphian  said  today 
before  the  inter-zone  Davis  Cup 
match  against  India. 

"It  isn't  a  matter  of  condition. 

Rosie's  36.5 
Average  2nd 


In  America 


»->_,  ■\  i 


By  THE  ASSOCIATED  PRESS 

After  only  two  games  of  varsity 
basketball.  Wilt  -The  Stilt"  Cham- 
berlain is  possessor  of  a  major 
college  record  and  is  the  leading 
point-getter  in  college  basketball. 
The  .^even-foot  Kansas  sopho- 
more racked  up  52  points  against 
Northwestern  and  39  against  Mai- 
quette — a  total  of  91  for  an  ever- 
age  of  45.5  a  game.  NCAA  records 
.show  that  no  other  sophomore  eve- 
made  such  a  start  in  major  col 
joge  competition. 

Second  to  Chamberlain   is  6-5 
Lennie  Rosenbluth  of  North  Caro- 
lina  with    a   36.5   point   average 
for   two   ganf>es.    Little  59  Chct 
Forte     of     Columbia,     the     first 
played  to  hit  a  100-peint  total  this 
season,  is  third  with  33.3  points 
a  game. 
Alabama's    Crimson    Tide,    scor- 
ing over  100  points  in  each  of  lis 
first   four   games,   tops   the   major 
college  team  scoring  list  with  an 
average-  of  106  points  a  game. 
North  Carolina  is  second  with 
a  94  average  for  two  games,  fol 
lowed     by     Southern     Methodist, 
93.8  and  Western  Kentucky,  93.0. 


I  don't  believe  I  have  slowed  up  a 
step.  But  there  is  a  psychological 
problem.  I  cant  get  keen  as  often 
as  before.'" 

Seixas,  America's  top-ranking 
player  and  a  University  of  Norta 

;  Cilrolina    graduate,    meets    India  s 

I  playing  captain,  27-year-old  Narei'a 
Kumar,  in  today's  second  single; 

j  match    at    the   Royal    Kings    Park 

I  courts. 

In  the  first,  India's  No.  1  player, 

:  19-year-old  Ramanathan  Krishnan, 

nopes  to  give  his  country  the  jump 

I  when  he  plays  Herbie  Flam,  28,  of 

i  Beverly  Hills,  Calif. 

I  The  opening  match  is  scheduled 
I  for  1:45  p.m.,  local  time  12:45  a.m. 
i  liastern  Standard. 
j  American  Capt.  Bill  Talbert 
I  named  Seixas  and  Sam  Giamna'- 
[  va  of  Houston,  Tex.,  for  Saturday's 
!  doubles  against  Krishnan  and  Ku- 
j  mar,  but  indicated  he-  may  subst.- 
;  tute  Flam  for  the  less  experienced 
Texan  if  the  U.S.  should  lose  one 
of  the  first  singles  matches.  Sub- 
stitutions are  likely  for  Sunday's 
concluding  singles  if  the  Ameri- 
cans clinch  the  series  Saturday. 
j  Giammalva  and  Mike  Green  of  Mi- 
I  ami  likely  will  be  put  in. 
i  Both  captains  expressed  pleas 
I  ure  at  the  way  the  draw  turned 
i  out.  TaPiert  pointed  out  that  Seix 
as  prefers  the  second  match  and 
has  a  poor  record  in  openers. 


Fraternity  Champs 


Pictured  above  is  the  ATO  volleyball  team,  winners  of  the  Blue  League  title.  They  will  nrteet  the 
dorm  champs,  Med  School-1,  for  the  all-campus  crown  Monday  afternoon  at  5  p.m.  Front  row,  left  to 
right.  Bill  Rand,  Frankie  Black  and  Sterling  Haig.  Back  row,  Frank  Maonne,  Sid  Sparrow,  Bill  Mason 
and   Joe   Rand. 


(ConUnued  From  Page   I) 

lated  any  negulatiOD~>  of  the  NCAA 
cr  the  ACC.  • 

Bubas  said  he  told  Moreland  that 
if  he  decided  to  enroll  at  State  Col- 
lege "I  would  recornmend  him  to 
the  scholarship  committee  for  a 
full  Atlantic  Coast  Conference 
scholarship.  I  did  not  make  any 
promise  of  any  kind  beyond  that 
point." 

The  assistant  coach,  himself  a 
former  Wolfpack  star,  said  he  un- 
derstood that  after  Moreland  en- 
rolled at  the  college  here  "he  learn- 
ed that  several  State  College  ath- 
letes and  athletes  of  other  colleges 
in  the  Atlantic  Coast  Conference 
had  recei\'ed  an  additional  scholar- 
ship year  to  complete  work  on 
their  degrees  after  their  athletic 
eligibility  had  been  exhausted.  This 
practice  is  known  to  the  college 
officials  .  .  .  and  that  practice  is 
not  illegal." 

'But>as  added,  "under  the  circun>- 
stanees  Moreland  had  the  right  to 
assiune  that  he  woitld  receive  the 
same  treatment  shoidd  it  become 
necessary  at  some  future  date." 

Casey  identified  Laughlin  as  "a 
friend  of  the  college."  He  added, 
"the  rules  are  perfectly  clear  that 
it  is  legal  for  an  Alumnus  or  friend 
of  the  college  to  pay  transportation 
costs  for  a  prospective  athlete  to 
visit   the   campus." 

Casey  said  the  NCAA,  the  college 
administration,  and  the  ACC  faculty 
members  "have  all  been  informed 
iliat  the  money  was  returned  and 
that  at  that  time  Jackie  was  not 
positive  he  was  going  to  attend 
State  College.  It  is  difficult  to  un- 
derstand how,  in  these  circimi- 
stances,  an.vone  can  rule  that  his 
toy  was  definitely  a  student"  at 
that  time,  he  asserted. 

Case  made  his  statement  when 
asked  about  rumors  circulated  in 
Winston-Salem  that  he  and  Bubas 
had  resigned.  The  rumors  circu- 
Icted  atter  State  College  Chancel- 
lor Carey  H.  Bostlan  released  a  tele- 
gram from  Jim  Weaver,  conamis- 
sioner  of  the  Atlantic  Coast  Con- 
ference. The  telegram  implicated 
Bubas  and  Casey  in  recruiting  vio- 
lations  in  the  .Moreland  Case. 

State  College's  Athletic  Council 
plans  to  meet  Saturday  to  decide 
the  next  step  the  school  will  take. 
Presumaly  it  will  decide  what  ac- 
tion, if  any,  to  take  against  Casey 
and   Buas. 

Poiuting  out  that  he  has  not  been 
aocused  of  any  violations.  Case  de- 
clared, 'I'm  certainly  backing 
iho.se  thev  are  trying  to  make  goats 
out  of  100  percent." 

Case,  questioned  about  Bubas, 
I  raid,  "He  has  not  done  anything  to 
I  ."csign  for.  I  would  not  let  him  re- 


Playmakers 

(Continued   From   Page    I) 

ston  of  Eupora.  Miss.;  James  Sech- 
rest  of  lliomasville;  Jerry  Young 
of  Marion;  Mary  Van  Finley  of 
Marion;  and  Rronk  Rinaldi  of 
Waterbury,  Conn. 

I 
Setting  for  the  play,  which  takes  ; 

place  on  the  Cabot  farm  about  j 
the  1850's,  was  designed  by  Tom-  ■ 
my  Rezzato,  with  costumes  and 
makeup  by  Irene  Smart  Rains  and  i 
June  Craft,  all  of  the  Playmakers  i 
staff.  Stage  manager  and  his  as- 
sistant are  Joe  Whiteaker  of  Pine  > 
Bluff,  Ark.,  and  Anastasia  Christ, 
of  Newark,  N.  J. 


.sign  if  he  wanted  to    Tnat's  rldicu- 
Jous"       « 

Case  declared  that  "As  far  as  I'm  | 
concerned  we  are  not  guilty.  I 
don't  give  a  damn  who  says  it. 
This  is  just  a  stirred  up  mess.  I 
don't  think  the  Chancellor  or  the 
University  officials  are  convinced 
that  they  have  done  anj-thing  wrong. 

"I  think  what  they  have  put  out 
.c.o  far  is  hear-say.  I  consider  evi- 
dence as  something  in  black  and 
v.'hite.  If  they  are  going  ta  convict 


schools  on  the  evidence  they  havj 
in  this  c^-.e,  there  vvili  not  oe  mani 
left  to  play  basketball  and  football 
or  anything  else."  * 


*\ 


Jackie  Robinson  Is  Traded 


Mural  Handball 

The  Intramural  Department 
has  announced  that  the  first 
pound  2f  the  singles  handball 
tournament  must  be  played  by 
January  3.  Pairings  are  posted 
in  the  intramural  office  and  on 
the  handball  courts.  Entries  are 
responsible  for  contacting  their 
opponents  and  reserving  courts. 
The  tournament  will  be  smgle 
elimination  until  the  quarter 
finals  when  double  elimination 
will  start  with  a  winners  and 
losers  bracket. 


NEW  YORK  —  (AP)— Jackie 
Robinson,  one  of  the  most  contro- 
versial figures  in  baseball,  was 
sold  to  the  rival  New  York  Giants 
by  the  Brooklyn  Dodgers  today 
for  a  reported  $30,000  and  pitch- 
er Dick  Littlefield  iri  a  deal  that 
startled  everyobdy  including  Rob- 
inson. 

Robinson,  who  will  be  38  on  Jan. 
31,  has  talked  often  of  retiring. 
Uncertain  about  his  status  in  1957. 
he  asked  the  Giants  for  a  few  days 
to  think  it  over. 

Obviously  shocked  by  the  news. 


.  30tl>.Cntio/*f«  »r»swt> 


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first  relayed  to  him  la.st  night  by  ! 
telephone  from   both    Dodger  and . 
Giant    officials,   Robinson    said    he 
realized  "baseball  Ls  like  that." 

Jackie's  young  son,  Jackie  Jr., 
cried  when  he  first  learned  the 
news  that  his  father  was  no  long- 
er a  Dodger. 


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on  Student  Travel  ...  or  simply  mail  the  handy  coupon. 


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^•N.C.   Library 
Serials      Dept. 
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8-31-49 


WEATHER 

Cloudy   with  occasional   rsin  or 
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ar()  c  Daily 


d    FRAT    COURT 

Rosidonts     protest     Fratornity 
_   ^"^mori  moving  in.  So*  pago  2. 


m^^£^it>^. 


VOL.  LVII,  NO.  70 


Complete  (A*)  Wire  Service 


CHAPEL   HILL,  NbRTH  CAROLINA.  SATURDAY,  DECEMBER   15,   1956 


Offices   in   Graham   Memorial 


FOUR  PAGES  THIS  ISSUE 


Andrews  Sentenced  2-4  Years  In   Cheating'  Scandal 


FIRST  CAVALCADE  OF  TALENT 

Pee  Wee'  Batten  Places 
First  In  Talent  Show 

By  MARY  ANN  FISHER  I 

Talent  flowed  freely  Thursday  night  as  twenty  !i;r«iips  \ 
of  Carolina  students  exhibited  a  wide  variety  of  miiiiral  and 
comedy  talent  in  Memorial  Hall  in  the  first  annual  Carolina 
C'avalcadc  of  Talent. 

The  tirst  place  prize  went  to  Miss  M.-^ry  'Pee  Wee" 
liatten  and  the  rombo  that  arroinpanied  her.  whidi  iiu  hided 
(ieor^e  Ballard,  Ron  Oldenbnro^,  and  (eff  Stril)linr».  Second 
place  went  to  Hoke  Simpson,  and  thirct  to  lirinio's  ( .omlvi.    | 

Mi.ss  Batten  and  the  combo  did  ,  The  judges  were:  Kay  and  Ge^r 
a  medley  of  songs,  including  par^s  gia  Kyser;  John  Clayton,  instruc 
of  'Tonight  You  Belong  To  Me"  tor  in  radio  and  television;  Harry 
'Green  Door",  "Be-Bop-a-Lula",  Middleton,  manager  of  a  Durham 
"Mickey  Mouse"  and  their  version  ladiostal ion;  and  Sam  Selden,  head 
01  "White  Cnnstmas. "  Hoke  Simp-  i  of  the  Dramatic  .A.rts  Department. 


ron.  accompanying  himself  on  thf 
•'Jamaica  Farewell"  and  "Matilda." 
Bruno's  Combo,  which  consists  of 
Bruno  Raso.  Les  Sutorius.  Joe 
Alexander,  Wally  Kuralt,  all  fresh- 
men who  began  playing  at  fresh- 
man ca;np,  played  "Tenderly"  and 
•'Shake,  Rattle,  and  Roll." 

Don  Jefferson  and  the  Embers 
provided  music  before  the  show 
and  between  the  acts.  The  orgaiv. 
zers  wished  to  express  particular 
thanks  Tor  their  participation.  G.  C. 
Pridgen.  director  of  the  show,  said 
"Don  Jefferson  and  the  Embers 
added  from  50  to  100  per  cent  n 
the  show." 

Dave  Davis,  director  of  talent  and 
master  of  cermonies,  feels  thai  the 
show  was  a  great  success.  He  said. 
"I  tliought  that  the  response  waj  | 
tremendous  and  that  the  turn-out 
.showed  us  we  should  make  it  &t  i 
least  a  yearly  event.  We  hope  to  j 
discover  more  new  talent  for  each  ' 
new  show,  and  maJie  each  ooe  a  I 
progressively   bigger   tuccess."        ', 

Others  who  helped  to  make  the 
show  what  it  was  were  Doris  Ad- 
kins,  who  worked  with  a  staging 
.^nd  production,  and  Miss  Eleanor 
Riggins. 


Hodges  Up 
Before  The 
Rhodes  Group 

ATLr'iNTA.  GA.— UNC  student 
Luther  Hodges  appears  here  to- 
day before  Rhodes  Scholarship 
Southern  District  Committee. 

Hodges  was  named  one  of  twj 
North  Carolina  finalists  in  1956' 
Rhodes  Scholarship  competition 
Wednesday  in  Durham,  N.  C.  b> 
North  Carolina  State  Selection 
Committee. 

He  appears  today  before  tho 
committee  with  Malcolm  R.  Wil- 
liamson of  Duke  University, 
North  Carolina'*  other  finalist. 

Hodges  and  Williamson  wll! 
com{>ete  with  contestants  fro  n 
Florida,  Georgia,  •South  Carolina. 


Dixie  Classic 
Debate  At  WF 

WINSTON-SALEM— (AP)  —  A 
University  of  South  Carolina  stu- 
dent won  first  place  in  the  after- 
i  dinner  speaking  division  of  the 
Dixie  Classic  D3bate  Tournament 
last  night  at  Wake  Forest  College. 

Winner  was  Fred  Le  Clerq.  Sec- 
ond place  went  to  Burnell  Chaney, 
Denison  University  of  Ohio.  Both 
spoke  at  a  banquet  given  the  some 
60  debaters  and  coaches  attending 
the    tournament. 

Final  round  in  the  extempor- 
aneous division  will  be  held  at 
1:30  p.m.  Saturday. 

Three  rounds  of  debating  were 
held  this  afternoon.  Final  rounds 
are  scheduled  for  9  and  11  a.m. 
and  2:30  p.m.  Saturday. 

The  teams  are  debating  the  na- 
tional collegiate  topic  proposing 
that  th?  United  States  discontinue 
direct  economic  aid  to  foreign 
countries. 

Schools  participating  in  the 
tournament  in  addition  to  those 
named  above  are: 

The  University  of  Miami,  the 
University  of  Florida.  Duke  Uni- 
versity, the  University  of  North 
Car'>lin3.  Georgetown.  College  of 
Kentucky.  Carson  -  Newmiin  Col- 
lege, George  Washington  Univers- 
ity and  Wake  Forest  College. 


nev5 

m 
brief 

FROM  RADIO  DISPATCHES 

VIEI.'NA  —  The  Hungarian  gov 
ernment  Friday  was  virtua'ly 
without  a  government.  The  cen- 
tral di'-ection  —  what  little  there 
was  —  was  in  the  hands  of  lf.e 
cabinet  secretariat  of  profession 
a  I  civil  servants. 

10.000  armed  rebels  were  re 
ported  in  the  hills  around  Buua- 
pest  waiting  for  a  chance  to  at- 
tack the  Soviet  troops.  The  fight- 
ing Friday  reached  a  temporary 
lull. 


Job  Searchers 
To  Hove  Aid 
Of  Free  Book 


They  Star  In  Playmakers  Production 

Al  Gordon,  left,  as  Eben,  and  Jo  ju.-jiensen  as  Abbie  star  in  the 
Carolina  Playmakers'  production  of  Eugene  CNeiil's  "Desire  Under 
The  Elms"  which  opened  here  last  night.  The  play  will  close  Tuesday 
ni|(ht. 


THE  MORELAND  CASE 


RALEIGH— (AP)- 


study  {it  Oxford  University. 


Few  Universities  Want 
Ivy  League  Football 


NEW  YORK— (AP)— Although 
a  lot  of  college  administrators  and 
some  newspapermen  think  the 
Ivy  League's  pressurelsss  football 
program  is  almost  ideal,  there's  no 
great  rush  to  follow  the  lead  of 
the  Ivies. 

And  if  other  colleges  erer  pur- 
sue that  movement,  which  has 
eliminated  spring  practice,  toned 
down  recruiting,  restricted  sched- 
ules and,  in  general  subordinated 
iootball  to  other  aspects  of  aca- 
demic lifQ,  they  will  do  it  very 
slowly. 

That's  the  majority  opinion  of 
the  sports  writers  and  broadcast- 
ers co-operating  in  the  Associated 

"'No  Highway 
In  Sk/'  Free 
Flick  Tonight 

Marlene  Dietrich  stars  in  the 
first  Saturday  free  film  preseta- 
tion,  "No  Highway  in  the  Sky", 
tonight  at  8  and  10  p.m.  at  Car- 
roll Hall.  Co-starred  with  Miss 
Dietrich  are  James  Stewart  and 
Glynis   Johns. 

This  performance  is  something 
in  the  nature  of  experiment,  and 
if  the  audience  at  this  program 
is  reasonably  large,  it  is  prob- 
able that  there  will  be  a  future 
Saturday  free  film  series,  accord- 
ing to  Seamon  Gottlieb,  chairman 
of   the   Free   Film   Committee. 

James  Stewart  portrays  a  scien- 
tist who  finds  himself  on  a  type 
of  plane  of  which  he  has  just 
warned  the  aviation  world  of  the 
dangers.  The  passengers  on  the 
plane  include  Miss  Dietrich  and 
Miss  Johns,  and  the  probabilities 
of  a  crash  throw  the  three  into 
close  contact. 

The  Free  Film  Committee  an- 
nounced that  there  are  two  more 
films  remaining,  "Incorrigible" 
and  ''Arsenic  and  Old  Lace"  on  the 
Free  Film  Series,  instead  of  one 


Press  post-season  football   survey. 

Replying  to  a  qq^stion  about  the 
likelihood  of  other  colleges  adopt- 
ing the  Ivy  attitude  toward  foot- 
ball, 42  of  58  gave  negative  an- 
swers and  only  11  affirmative. 

Ai»d  several  of  those  added  com- 

(See  UNIVERSITIES.  Page  3) 


.N'orlh     Caro- 

Alhletic 

Council  plan.t;  to  meet  today  to  do- 

cide    what    the    school's    next    step 

Moreland 


It  may  decide  what  action,  if 
any,  to  take  against  Asst.  Athletic 
Director  Willis  Casey  and  Asst. 
Basketball   Coach    Vic    Biibas. 


M«^7!ie|tioTT  preparing -t«T  seek 
jobs  "may  find  help  in  a  book  now 
Tennessee,    and     Virginia.    Fou;-  j  bejn!^  ,  Ift^de      available  \|fethout    ijna    State's    15  -  mepib 
winners  selected  from  this  grou^  ^cosf'by^e  University  Placement 
will  receive  Rhodes  Scholarships      Service. 
for     a    minimum    of   two     years         The  ^  Soots,    entitled    Career,    is 

hard-bound      and      contains      256    ^'^^    ^e    in    the    Jackie 

pages  written  and  paid  for  by  148    case. 

leading  American  companies  "who 

bring   together  notice  of  all   their 

opportunities    for   college    men    in 

jone    place." 

The  books  will  be  available  Dec. 
17.  18  and  19  in  211  Gardner 
Hall.  I 

Free  books  will  be  available  for 
senior  and  graduate  school  men 
in  Arts  and  Sciences.  Business  Ad- 
ministration, and  Journalism 
Depts.  Reference  copies  may  be 
obtained  by  others  through  the 
Placement  Service.  j 

Career  features  cross-indexes  to 
help  .seniors  pick  their  best  em- 
ployer prospects.  i 
The  book  is  distributed  through 
official  agencies  on  600  college 
campuse'a  The     NCAA     placed 


Council  Decides  Today 

Next  Step  On  Moreland  Little  Notice  ^ 

May  Be  Given 
To  Reservists 


Is  Nof  To  Visit 
UNC  For  5  Years 

Special  to  The  Daily  Tar  Heel 
By  FRED   POWLEDGE 

HIl.LSBORO— .\n  ex-siiideni  who  couldnt  stav  away 
from  the  I'niversity  was  sentenced  Friday  to  2-4  vears  in 
pri.son.  He  was  convicted  in  Chapel  Hill's  suninier    cheating 

ring"  case. 

The  ex-student,  Herbert  G.  .Andrews,  ^^7,  oknurham, 
cannot  set  foot  on  the  I'NC  campus  for  the  next  five  years. 

judge  Raymond  .Mallard  of  Orange  Superior  Court 
sentenced  .Vnd'rcws  yesterdrv  after  a  jury  deliberated  54  min- 
lues  and  loimd  him  guiltv  of: 

1.     Two  charges   c!    breaking  and   etitcrmg    I  niversitv 

offices. 

2    One  charge   of  breaking  and    pressure     caused  them   to     worry 
enterin-  and  stealing  examination    about  the  Caldwell  Hall  incidcn  .. 

I      When  Andrews  took  the  stand, 
PORT  SAID  —  Egyptian  suic.r'e    ^-^P*^    ■  ^^^  repeatedly  denied  stealing  ih> 

commandos  attacked  British  Andrews  attorneys  immediately  examinations  and  entering  either 
troops  in  three  separate  grenade  ;  appealeJ  the  case  to  State  Supreme  caldwell  offices  or  South  Build- 
assaults.  Three  Egyptians  w^^r.-^  Court.  I  in"  He  maintained  his  innocence 
™ded^  There  were  no  British       ^^^^^^  ^^^^^^^^^  .^  ^^^.^^^.^^  ^^^    ^^.e  charges  through  the  whole 

;•  *  *  sentence,  said:  ,  ^"^^^  Thursday's   testimony,     Icen- 

PARIS    —    Secretary    of    Stol?        "It    is    a   very    despicable    thing    hour  said  Andrews  became  alarnu' 

John  Foster  Dulles,   leaving   the  ;  that  you  have  committed.  I  don't    ^vhen  Honor  Council  heal  was  tuxn- 

N.-VTO  meeting  which  ended  Fri-    know  why  you  did  it You  ap-    ^^  ^^  Icenhour,  who  told  the  UNC 

day,  said  the  meeting  accomplisli-  parently  are  living  in  a  schoolboy':?  admini.siration  and  student  repres- 
ed  a  great  deal  to  bury,  if  not  v/orld  in  which  you've  never  grown  gntatives  of  the  Honor  Council  2II 
dissolve,  entirely  the  differences    up."  i  the  facts  of  the  case  last  summer, 

between  the  western  allies  over  1      Andrews'  mother,  with  whom  he    ^3,^  Andrews  made   open   threats 

and  his  children  live,  slumped  cv-    ^^  ^is  liie  when  he  discovered  liie 
er  a  chair  and  started  crying  si-    student  was  talking, 
lently.  \ 

The  sentence  consisted  of  a   1  2  j 
year  term  in  state  prison  for  bre^ 
Ing  and  entering  the  dean  of  stu 
aent  afiairs'  office  in  South  Buili! 
ing  to  look   at   Andrews'    and   an 
other  st'-.dent's  records,  and  a  .si- 
milar term  for  breaking   and   er. 


the  Suez  Canal  situation. 


NEW  YORK  —  Two  of  the 
country's  noted  publications — 
Collieri  and  Woman's  Home  Com- 
panion —  were  faced  with  an  al- 
most inevitable  end  of  publica- 
tion. Colliers  faces  a  debt  of  ^' 
million  alone  this  year.  \r, 
aroused  body  of  employees  pleaJ 
ed  to  keep  the  magazine  afloat. 


This,  loo,  Andrews  denied. 

The  wnole  case  was  built  around 
unexplained  cheating  on  examina- 
tions lajt  summer.  Icenhour,  wno 
was  a  summer  school  student,  said 
he  went  to  Andrews  for  the  exami- 
.laticn.  Icenhour's  explanation  to 
officials,     and     Andrews'     arrest. 


tering  an  office  in  Caldwell  Hall    came  several  weeks  later. 


probation    for    tour   years    for    the 
alleged   violations. 


Casey  and  Bubas  issued  state- 
ments yesterday  denying  any  vio- 
lations on  their  part  in  the  case. 
They  said  the  charges  involving 
them  were  "without  foundation" 
and    "contrarv   to    the    facts." 


Icenhour  admitted  to  cheating 
with  the  examination.  Ke  became 
;he  state's  witness  in  the  ca,se, 
nowcver,  and  appeared  this  week 
only  as  a  witness  against  And.-ews. 

He  is  still  a  student  al  the  Uni 
versity. 

A;idrews.     who  was     suspend'.'d 


The  Con.solidated    University   of 

N;:rth  Carolina,  of  which  state   is 

a  unit,  has  a  directive  which  states 

that  "If  at  any  time  it   is  clearly 

established    that    anv    member    of 

week  by  State  College  Chancellor    ^^.^  ^taff  has  wilfully  violated  any 

Carey  H.  Bostian  implicated  Bubas    of   the   bylaws   of  our  conference 

and   Casey   in   the   Moreland   case,    or  the  National  Collegiate  Athletic 


A  telegram  released  earlier  this 


The  telegram  from  Atlantic  Coast 
Conference  Commissioner  J  i  m 
Weaver  said  Bubas  and  Casey  had 
knowledge  of  and  participated  in 
alleged  violations  involving  the 
recruitment  of  Moreland.  a  former 
high  school  basketball  star  at 
Minden.  La. 


COMPETITION  FOR  N.  C.  ARTISTS 


Praise  Is 
Given  YRC 
By  Adams 

The  Young  Republican  Club  of 
UNC  Thursday  night  heard  Keith 
Snyder,  president  of  the  organi- 
zation, read  a  letter  of  thanks  from 
Sherman  Adams,  Secretary  to  the 
President  of  the  United  States. 

Adams  complimented   them  for  |  ^°  ^^^  "^""'^  Annual  Competition    gfj  ^^gny  different  colors. 


A.ssn.  or  that  he  had  knowledge 
of  any  violation  and  failed  to  dis- 
close thi.-;  information  to  proper 
authorities,  he  shall  be  dismissed 
immediately." 

Stale    Coach    Everett    Case    de- 
clared   yesterday    that    neither    he 
or  any   other   State  athletic  offic- 
ials intend  to  resign  as  a  result  of 
State  on    the  Moreland   incident. 


■with  the  intent  of  stealing  an  ex 

amination. 

The  tliird  charge,  breaking  and 

,efttering^    Caldwell    Hall    and    la.'- 

ceny  of  an   examination,   resultcrj 

in  a   two-year  road   term  for  .Vn- 

drews.  Judge  Mallard  suspended  i^ 

charged  Andrews  with  court  costs. 

and  placed  him  on  five  year  proba-    from   the   University  after  num.^r- 

tion  with  the  condition  he  not  set    ous  appearances  before  the  Honor 

foot  on  the  campus  for  that  time.    Council,  has  served  a   federal  pri- 
He   was  convicted   on   testimony"    son  tern,   in   connection  with  a  ii- 

of  a  present  student.   Max     Ic^n-    quor    still   raid.   His    attorneys   ar 

hour.  '  gued  Friday  that  the  prison  term 

Icenhour  testified  he  negotialed    was  largely     responsible  for     the 
that    they  may   get    little   advance    v.ith  Andrews  for  purchase  of  an     'bad  treatment"  Andrews  had  re- 
notice    to   report    for   active    duty    examination  paper,  and  went  willi    ceived   Irom   the   University     and 
in      case      an      emergency    arises. '  .Vndrew.^  to  Caldwell  Hall  whi'.e  the    Honor  Council  since  then. 
Amount  of   time   will   be   allowed    defendant   entered   an   instructor'.*       "He's  trying  to  overcome 
according  to  the  t)T>e  of  emergen-    office  and  returned  with  the  paper     live  down  the  previous  case, 
cy.    Whenever    possible,    a    30-day   This  happened  a  second  time,  lie    'he  defense. 

alert   period  will  be  given.  j  ".^aid.  |      University   students   Pat   Patler- 

'  Icenhour  said  he  also  stood  guard  son  and  .lim  Elxum  appeared  ou 
The  letter  advises  individuals  while  Andrews  entered  the  dean  oi  '  the  witness  stand  during  the  trial, 
that  they  should  arrange  their  per- '  student  affairs  office  and  produc-  Patterson  was  head  of  the  sum- 
sonnel  affairs  so  that  a  sudden  en- ;  ed  his  (Icenhour's)  and  Andrews'  mer  Horor  Council  this  year,  and 
try  upon  active  duty  would  cause  permanent  records.  They  did  this.  |  Exum  presently  is  chairman  of  me 
the   minimum  of  inconvenience.      ;  he  testified,   after  Honor  Council  |  Men's  Honor  Council. 


Carolina  gentleman  who  are 
.Army  reservists  are  receiving  let- 
ters from  the  Dept.  of  the  Army 
(hat  speak   ill  of  things  to  come. 

The  letter?  inform  the  reservists 


and 
said 


UNC  Student  Is  In  Art  Contest 


By    RONNIE    MILLIGAN 

James  Brewer,  24  year  old  sen- 
ior art  student  from  Asheville, 
N.  C,  received  news  recently  that 
his  two  entries  had  been  selected 


Art  in  Raleigh,  Dec.  5 
1956. 


Dec.  30. 


Faculty  Will 
Attend  Meeting 
December  28. 


Dormitory  Night  Life  Is  Alive 
With  Pre-Holiday  'Fun  Times' 


By  JOAN  MOORE  ]  the  students   left   to  carol,   taking 

The     Yule  -  tide     season     finds  '  Christmas  baskets  and  gifts  to  the 
dorm  night  liie  at  its  best  as  stu- 


I  dents  attend   parties  and  prepare 
i  for  more  ''fun  time." 


Brewer's  work  consists  of  two 
original  pieces  in  ceramic  sculp- 
ture, painted  terra  cotta.  The  work 
is   made  of   fired   clay  and    paint- 


for  N.  C.  Artists.  The  contest  will 
be  held  in  the  N.  C.  Museum  of 


Bruno's  Combo 
To  Play  For 
Dance  Tonight 


their  work  in  the  school's  mock 
election,  which  Eisenhower  won 
by  two  votes. 

Contents  of  the  letter  are  as  fol- 
lows: 
YRC,  University  of  North  Caro- 
lina: 

The  President  is  delighted  to 
know  that  he  won  the  Universi- 
ty of  North  Carolina  campus 
election.  Thanks  for  letting  him 
know  and  for  your  help  in  up- 
setting a  precedent. 

Sincerely. 
Sherman  Adams 
Snyder  said  that  there  is  an 
effort  underway  to  get  either 
Senator  Knowland  or  Vice-Presi- 
dent Nixon  to  speak  at  their  an- 
nual banquet.  Knowland  is  Sen- 
ate Mittority  Leader.  Both  are  from 
California.  Rep.  Paul  Jonas  will 
be  invited  if  Knowland  or  Nixon 
cannot   appear. 

The  club  discussed  plans  to  at- 
tend   the    forthcoming   YRC    con- 
vention   in    Winston-Salem.    They!      All   members     of     the     campus 
plan  to  send  about  20  people   to    community   have   been    invited   to 
the  affair.  The  convention  is  set    the   dance   which   is   offered  free 


Brewer  came  to  the  University 
in  1951  with  intentions  of  study- 
ing dentistry,  but  he  later  decided 
to   change   his   major   to   art. 

.'^fter  one  .vear  of  college.  Brew- 
er dropped  out  of  school  and  wen' 
to  New  York  City  to  study  jcwtiry 
designing.  Six  months  later  he 
was    drafted    into    the    army. 


Since  the  army  offers  great  op-, 
portunitifs  for  artists,  both  ama- 
teurs and  professionals.  Brewer 
continued    to    learn    about    art. 


Bruno's  Combo  will  furnish  the 
music  tonight  for  the  Christmas 
dance    held     in     the     Rendezvous 

Room  from  o-12.  j 

I      While      stationed      in      Alaska, 

Sponsored    by    Graham    pernor- ^  Brewer    entered     an    art     contest 

ial   Activities  Board,   the  dance  is    spon.sored    by    the    army's    special 

planned  for  all  UNC  students  and    services  branch.   The  entries  con- 

their  guests.  si.sted     of    paintings.    handicrai'Ls. 

sculpture,     furniture  design,     etc. 

The    Rendezvous   Room    will    be    out    of   a    total    of   35   competing 

d?corated    with    a    Christmas    tree    entries.    BrcM'er    won    first    prize 


and    other   holiday    trim, 
ments  will  be  served. 


iUm  as  reported  earlier  this  week,  for  Feb.  B-9. 


of  charge  by  GMAB. 


Refresh-  I  with  his   jewelry   design. 

i  Robert  Howard,  art  instructor, 
said;  "Brewer  is  a  good  sculptor 
and  has  developed  rapidly  both 
in  feeling  and  structure  since 
his  return  from  the  service." 


The  entire  Classics  faculty  of 
the  University  of  North  Carolina 
will  attend  the  88th  meeting  of 
the  American  Philological  Assn. 
to  be  held  in  Philadelphia  Dec. 
28-30. 

The   professors   included   in   the    laughter, 
group    are:    B.    L.    Ullman,   P.   H. 
Epps.    J.    P.    Harland.    Walter   Al- 
len, Jr.,  Albert  Suskin.  and  Char- 
les  Henderson,   Jr. 

Professor  .\llen  will  present  a 
pap':r  on  Cicero's  famous  line,  "0 
fortunatam  natam  ne  consule  Ro- 
man '  ( 0  fortune  blest  Rome,  born 
in  my  counselship.)  This  line  has 
served  to  blight  Cicero's  reputa- 
Vvn  as  a  poet,  but  it  is  Professor 
Allen's  belief  that  the  line  is  ac- 
cept ab!?  according  to  Roman  theo- 
ry and  th*t  Cicero's  political 
enemies  are  responsible  for  the 
ridicule   it   received. 

Professor   Ullman   is  serving  as 
the  APA  chairman  of  the  Liaison 
Committee  on  Microfilming  Manu- 
script  Catalogues,    a   joint    project 
in  which  the  Library  of  Congress 
and    numerous  .scholarly   orgaftiza- 
I  tinns    are    participating. 
'      Other    members    of    the    faculty 
'  going  to  the  meeting  include:  Ben 


Only  a  few  remaining  days  and 
the  bustling  Carolina  campus  will 
be  vacated  by  students,  but  now 
in  the  dorms  there  are  brilliant 
red  and  green  decorations,  glow- 
ing trees  and  bubbling  Christmas 


Many  of  the  women's  dorms  are 
having  informal  get-togethers  af-  today  are  as  follows: 
ter  closing  hours.  At  these  "all 
female"  parties,  pajamas  and  roll- 
ed hair  take  the  nod  in  the  fash- 
ion department  as  coeds  indulge 
in  food  and  fun. 


All  Autos 
Should  Be 
Registered 

The  Student  Traffic  Court  will 
not  take  action  until  after  Christ- 
mas on  those  students  who  failed 
to  meet  the  deadline  of  Monday. 
Dec.  10  for  paying  their  registra- 
tion fee.  The  Traffic  Court  is 
busy  now  with  several  cases  deal- 
ing with  excess  parking  tickets, 
speeding  and  other  violations. 

A  student  who  brings  a  second 

car    to    school    or    a    replacement 

Men's  Honor  Council.   1:30-6::i1. !  for  the  original  one  must  register 

WoodhoiLse  Conference  Room.  j  it   with   the   proper   authorities   in 

I  South  Building;  however,  he  does 


infirmary  and  to  shut-ins. 

The  Nurses  Dorm  had  its  an- 
nual Christmas  dance  last  night 
in  the  basement  of  Cobb  dorm. 
The  music  was  furnished  by  a 
colored   combo   from   Burlington. 


GM'S  SLATE 


Activities   at    Graham    Memona 


Cosmopolitan  Club,  6-12,  Rolanrl 
Parker  i,  2.  and  3. 


The   Mangum    Men     and     their 
dates  partied  at  the  Elbow  Room   vous  Room 
last    night.      Spirits      were      high  ~' 

while  holiday  music  added  to  the 
merriment  of  the  occasion. 


G.  M.  A.  B.  Dance,  8-11.  Rendc;- 


The  residents  of  Smith  will  en- 
tertain invited  faculty  guests  and 
their  children  Sunday  afternoon.    ; 

At  Mclver,  a  buffet  supper  for 
an  expected  125  persons  is  on 
the  social  calendar  tonight.  Af- 
tet  the  food,  coeds  and  their  dates 
will  sing  carols. 

Music    floated    from    the    semi- 
darkness  of  the  Rendezvous  Room  ; 
Recce.    Charles    Gross.    Elizabeth    last  night  while  residents  of  Carr. 
Jlunter.    Charles    Milhauser,    Ron- j  Alderman    and    Stacy    danced    to  j 
aid  White  and  Mary  Martin.  j  popular  recordings.  After  dancing, 


IN  THE  INFIRMARY 

Students    in    the    infirnuiry    yet 
terday  included: 

Malcolm  McLean,  Lewis  Cody, 
Roy  Colentan,  Robert  Baggett. 
Robert  Brawley,  Joseph  Bryan, 
Benton  Beard,  Philip  Logan.  Ma 
rion  Bell,  Ivey  Heath,  Grady  Phil- 
lips, Allan  Spader,  Jack  Lewis, 
Charles  Davenport,  William  Best, 
Philip  Reinhardt,  David  Louqh- 
lin,  Dawson  Carr,  John  Barte, 
John  Kauanagh,  and  Radford 
Folser. 


not  have  to  pay  an  additional  S2.50 
for  the  second  sticker,  according 
to  Ray  Jeffries  of  the  Student  Af- 
fairs   Office. 

Many  student*  have  not  been 
registering  their  cars,  thinking 
that  another  $2.50  was  necessary, 
he  said. 

License  numbers  of  automobiles, 
numbering  close  to  100.  without 
registration  stickers  have  been 
tyrned  in  to  South  Building.  The 
numbers  will  be  seiit  to  Raleigh 
as  soon  as  possible  for  identifica- 
tion,   according    to   Jeffries, 


ATI-.\NTA,  Ga.  —  The  Nation- 
al .\ssn.  for  the  Advancement  of 
Colored  People  agreed  to  open 
its  books  to  the  state  of  Georgia 
in  compliance  with  a  court  order. 


^  M... 


FAGt  TWO 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEtL 


SATURDAY,  DECEMBER  15,  1956 


SATUROi 


To  People  Of  Chase  Ave .     Taking  Advantage  Of  AG  reaf  Freedom 

Frats  Must  Go  Somewhere 


Sonic  pcoplf  seem  to  think  fraternities  do  not  make  good  neigli- 
bors.  In  fact  the  residents  of  ('hasc  Arc.,  near  the  site  of  the  proposed 
fraternity  development,  are  so  sure  of  it  that  they  liave  all  signed  a  peti- 
tion, saying  tliey  don't  wij.n  the  greeks  in  the  neighborhood. 

Fhcy  have  pretty  good  reasons  for  this.  Such  things  as  "noise  and 
.  increased  traffic  "  are  their  main  cases  for  opposing  the  development. 
.Actually,  the  peopK  of  C.hase  .\ve.  are  iiol  really  looking  at  tlie  marter 
realistically. 

Thn  the  fraternities  would  like  to  have  new  quarters  is  to  he  ex- 
pected, but  there  is  another  aspect  to  the  situation.  Most  of  the  present 
houses  are  old.  and  depreciating 
rai)idlv.    Most    of    the    houses    are 


full  cif  fire  hr^.'/ards  caused  bv  over- 
loaded lircuits  and  large  amounts 
of  trash  stowed  nnd^r  stairs  and 
in  odd  ( ovners.  The  Univfrsity 
must  take  care  oi  her  students:  and 
fvaternitv  men  are  students  as 
nuuh  as  the  traditional  "man  in 
the  lower  quad." 

With  this  in  mind,  .yid  some 
outside  prodding,  the  Bofrd  of 
rrusrces  orJGTnated  the  idea  of 
r<in  •  Tnivcrsitv  propertv  for  new 
frarevnitv  Imildings.  The  idea 
was  rcft-r-ed  to  the  Buildings  and 
(i'ornd'i  ('ommittee.  Th^  commit- 
ti  r  hul  the  task  of  locating  a  piece 
wf  land  Nnital)Ie  for  a  fraternity 
c;iurr. 

Suit.) hie  plots  ;ire  few.  the  com- 
inittec  foinid.  and  thcv  soon  nar- 
rowed the  candidates  to  two — the 
v.i^:'dcd  site  behind  Victory  Vil- 
la::e  and  a  lot  at  Mason  Farm.  Cri- 
i -ria  for  the  IcKations  incliudcul 
a-  cessibTlhv.  proximitv  to  utilities, 
but  not  propertv  that  will  be 
e\enniai^  needed  for  oihei  I'ni- 
■vcrsirv    buildings. 

Nfa-on  Farm  is  pietty  far  om. 
and  NOUKT  sort  of  transportation 
svstem.  >1  untie  buses  and  station 
^•^•(•n^.  xvowlil  hi\e  to  be  (reared 
p"d  maintained  no  the  men  could 
1  "  sure  of  a  w  iv  to  get  to  and  from 
the  campus  uheticver  thev  want- 
ed. 

f)n  the  otiui  h'nd.  the  space 
beiiind  \  it  t<jrv  \'illage  Is  on  the 
periph"   V  uf  the  ( ampus,  is  with- 


ing  fic'-ternities  in  the  neigiibor- 
hood.  let  it  be  said  tint  there  art- 
certain  fac  ts  of  life  which  residents 
in  a  (ollege  tonnnuniiv  must  face. 

C College  men  keep  late  hours, 
current  studv  habits  don't  require 
a  man  to  say  how  long  he  studied, 
but  if  he  can  say  he  was  up  until' 
three  o"(  Kxk  in  the  nu)rninLj  with 
1"'^  <tndie<  he  is  soci.dlv  acceptable. 
Of  course  he  was  probably  engag- 
ed in  anv  of  the  ininunberable  ac- 
tivities available  to  students  until 
1 :  -'o  or  so. 

There  is  a  certain  amount  of 
noise  in  an  area  where  over  tw«) 
hundred  men  h.old  residence.  But 
this  noise  is  ordinarily  restricted  to 
Weekends  and  spontaneous  dem- 
onstrations <»f  vouthful  exuber- 
ance. 

I  .And  tliere  is  some  advantage  to 
havin^  stnjus  backs  and  willing 
hands  in  the  area.  Who  needs 
watdi  dogs  with  a  small  armv 
parked  just  the  other  side  of  the 
back   frnce? 

MI  fa{  etioiisness  aside,  the  Chase 
\\e.  people  do  ha\e  ^me  grounds 
for  complaint,  but  the  move  has 
not  yet  been  started,  and  the  men 
have  to  go  .some  where.  It  seems 
vctv  likely  that  the  people  plan- 
nMv;  for  the  aica's  development 
"ill  allow  a  genet oiis  strip  of  land 
for  a  bTiffer  zone,  possibly  a  park 
v.h'-i-  .greeks  and  townsfolk  alike 
tiMilcI  pitnic  in  the  spring. 

One  thing  the  Chas  Ave.  group 
will  not  have  to  worry  a-boiit.  I'n- 
less    female    temperment    changes 


in  walkin  '  distaiK  e  of  the  campus      radicallv  in  the  near  future,  towns 


^a  long  wilk.  granted  .  and  has  the 
other  prerequisites  for  the  tra- 
ternit)-  residences, 

Xow,  for  the  benefit  of  the  five 
families  of  Chr"-'^  \\c-.  t-'.-;  -.-re  not 
agreeablv    ir;  liiu  .1    towards    liav- 


people  in  the  vicinity  will  not  have 
to  .worrv  about  panty  raiders  (the 
Duke  Cinonicle  has  speculated  it 
would- -be -called  a  shorty  sortie) 

t-a!"arn;Vg  thcrr  lawns  and  flower 
uardcna. 


Linguistucs  For  Everybody 

hi  ;!^'s  (1.  v  when  international  crisis  follows  international  crisis 
in  aJm(»si  routine  order,  knowledge  of  a  foreign  language  is  most  im- 
{Mjrtant.  And  its  imj^rtance  is  not  restricted  to  diplomats  and  foreii^n 
seivi(e  eniplovees.  More  and  more  foreign  language  material  filters 
dcjwn  to  the  a\eragc  .Vmerican  citizen  level  without  being  translated. 
Americans  are  '.;oing  to  FAiiope  in  ever-increasing  numbers,  and  mo>t 
oi  them  liavcn't  had  anv  more  ol  a  language  than  ivcis  required  of  them 
in  (ollege. 

a  language.  .Students  are  expected  to 
a  week  in  class  and  about  twice  as 


I  his  is  not  much  knowledge  of 
spend,  in  most  cases,  three  hours 
main  outside  of  <kv-.s  with  their 
required  language.  In  this  time 
the  student  mav  get  to  use  the 
lansiia'.Te  orally,  the  wav  it  would 
be  mast  useful,  mavbe  tweirty 
minutes  a  week.  That  is,  unless  he 
has  an  indulgent  roommate  w'ho 
can  stand  someone  painfully  form- 
itig  foreign  words  out  loud.  Be- 
sides, much  of  the  expected  study 
time  outside  of  class  is  spent  in 
trviuL^  to  tr;.nslate  the  labels  on 
wine  bottles  in  the  Rathskellar. 

toreiiin  lansnages  can  be  in- 
feiestinu  topics  fur  studv.  but  when 
the  student  starts  out  unsure  of 
hiip.self.  and  drops  far  behind  as 
the  course  [>rogrc.s.sc&.  interest  does 
not  do  him  tuudi  good.  Boredom 
becomes  a  lac  tor  in  die  study  of 
l.urguagcs  foi  most  pepple,  and 
this,  in  turn  tontrilxites  to  stu- 
dents leaving  s(  hool  with  a  lang- 
uage (->n  their  tra-nscript.  and  no 
plape  c]!>e. 

TKe  Daily  Tar  Heel 

The  official  <tiujcni  pubJication  uf  tbe 
I'ubhcaiions  Bnard  of  the  University  of 
North  Carolina,  wht-re  it  is  published 
d«iily  except  .Mundav  aod  examlDatiot 
and  vacation  periods,  and  summer  temos 
Entered  as  -(.cfind  'jIh.ss  matter  in  thi 
Post  olJire  in  (Jhapel  FTill.  N.  C.  undei 
the  Acr  ..li  March  8.  1870.  Subscription 
rates  mHil*d.  f6A  p^r  year,  S250  a  semei 
ter.  (Jflivt-r^d    %  4  y»far,  $3  50  a  iietQei 


Editor    J_-:._^ 

PREIl  {»0\\'LEDGE 

Hanaging  Editcjr 

.    CHARLIE  SLOAJJ 

Ne^i  Editor    

X.VN'CY  im.L 

Business  Manager 

.    BILL  BOB  PLEl 

Sppcts  Editor      ,_. 

LARRY  CHEEK 

Night  "F/lifv.i- 


Curtland  Ed*ar(Js 


.\  two-fold  change  is  needed  in 
language  training.  Firstly,  the 
training  in  a  foreign  language 
should  be  started  muvh  earlier. 
Kuropean  students  have  had  seven 
or  eight  years  of  foreign  languages 
by  the  time  they  enter  a  imiversity. 

Secondly,  students  sliould  f)e  en- 
( our'aged  to  use  their  second  lang- 
uage whenever  the  opportunity 
presenLs  itself.  Up  until  last  year 
tliere  was  a  co-op  residence  in 
Clhapel  Hill  where  only  Frendi 
was  spoken.  When  a  student's  daily 
bread  depends  on  his  ability  {o 
know  how  to  ask  for  it,  he  i&  go- 
ing to  learn  the  proper  words.  A 
few  of  the  kvnguage  departments 
tried  laboratories  last  year  where 
students  could  spend  an  hour  us- 
ing the  language  thev  were  study- 
ing, but  these  were  closed  because 
of    poor    attendance. 

The  studv  of  lanouage  tan  not 
be  sugar-coated.  It  is  a  difficult, 
time-consuming  thing,  (irjdes  are 
not  intended,  to  be  used  for  coer- 
cion, most  certainly  not  in  the  field 
of  languages  where  material  can 
be  memorized  for  a  test  and  for- 
gotten the  next  dav.  There  re- 
mains onlv  one  thing,  make  it 
necessary  for  a  student  to  know  how 
to  converse  for  his  personal  com- 
fort. This  sounds  a  little  harsh,  but 
it  doesn't  have  to  be  as  violent  as 
llut.  At  another  university  there 
is  an  instructor  who  s})eak  to  hi."! 
students  only  in  Spanish,  and  when 
he  meets  them  on  the  street  he  ex- 
pects them  to  answer  him  intelli- 
gently, and  in  Spanish. 

These  measures,  however,  need 
only  be  temjx)rarv,  for  if  a  student 
is  brought  up  with  a  language  in 
the  public  schools  he  is  going  to 
know  it  bv  the  time  he  getsto  col- 


CAROLEIDOSCOPE: 

Man^s  Beliefs 
And  Freedoms^ 
Shattered 

F[jink  Crowther 

Of  ?ji  man's  most  private  D'- 
•liefs.  those  concerning  his  reli- 
gion and  relating  to  his  sex  life 
used  to  be  his  most  private.  But, 
alas,  the  twentieth  century  ha^i 
shattered  even  these  inner  wells 
of  peace,  quiet  and  relaxation  an<l 
has  turned  them  into  blazing,  ev- 
en scarring,  infernos  which,  at 
times,  run  over  their  iH-im. 

The  freedom  that  men  once 
ciierished  has  been  twisted  un- 
til it  is  now  thoui^ht  of  as  lh(> 
right  to  think  and  believe  as  o.v' 
pleases,  as  long  as  you  don't  Kl 
anyone  know  what  it  is.  Society's 
conservative  instinct,  in  many 
cases,  tends  to  crush  out — in  one 
manner  or  another — any  radical 
ideas  as  if  they  were  atheistic 
witch  brew«  and  they  arc  forced 
to  die  out  like  May  flies. 

If  from  this  strong  or  "in  pow- 
er" bjliefs  crushing  out  of  iiic 
smaller,  more  radical  beliefs  we 
extracr  a  synthesis  which  is  mov- 
ing toward  the  time  when  we  wl'l 
have  a  conceptual  standard  of 
excellence,  beauty,  and  perman 
ent  value,  then  we  are  progi-ess- 
ing.  But  this  does  not  seem  to 
be  the  case  in  the  America  of 
today. 

It  has  nut  been  long  past — a.iil 
may  not  yet  be  past— when  many 
of  the  peoples  of  the  world  looK.- 
ed  to  .\merica  and  predicted  that 
heie  would  evolve  a  reasonable 
inspiring,  wholesome  and  intel- 
ligent religion.  Here  was  a  na 
tion,  they  dared  hope,  that  would 
find  a  criterion  for  all  mankir.d 
and  would  produce  an  embrN.* 
from  ,vhich  future  generations 
could  extract  their  own  counsel 
for   living. 

fft)U-  fotrg.  .\rm?ricir."  are  we  to 
persist  with  these  crustations  of 
creeds  ana  amoebic  divisijns'^  In 
these  days  of  the  "shrinking 
world."  can  we  not  see  that  ou." 
aoundance  cf  time's  sands  is  slow 
ly  being  blown  away?  There  a.^e 
not  too  many  of  the  '"tomorrow, 
and  tomorrow,  and  tomorrows  ' 
left.  Those  often  used  shelters  ol 
the   future  are  upon   ua. 

We  inust  then  use  the  utmojt 
of  our  present  facilities  ip  solve 
this  issue  which  "will  continiiv 
to  flourish  so  long  as  man  con 
fronts  the  unknown,  and  is  puz 
7!ed  and  alarmed  by  it — that  is. 
so  long  as  the  unknown  menacv~ 
his  everyday  comfort.  It  i.>  n><l 
ignorance  per  se  that  shakes  hini. 
but  ignorance  that  is  practical 
pressing  and  personal." 

The  front  pages  of  our  papcr> 
are  fiiled  with  accounts  of  v!.< 
lencc  in  Hungary,  Poland,  In- 
land, Israel,  E'gypt,  Cyprus,  e'.o. 
Can  wo  not  point  to  the  goverr. 
ments  of  these  countries  and  un- 
sheathe the  prime  fault  of  disi.r 
dcr.  discontent,  and  disaster? 

VVhat  else  have  we,  except  some 
form  of  common  faith — rcasoji- 
able  and  encompassing  —  in'o 
which  all   men  can  osmose? 


YOU  Said  It: 


'Not  Very  Much,  Whaf  s  New  With  You?' 


w 


.m 


^    ~    ^--'=^~  ^ 


A  Challenge  For  Tom  Kirkland 


Editor: 


;   ^  >,  T 


Well,  well,  well,  Tom  Kiik- 
land,  alias  Modern  Gargantua, 
has  raised  his  mental  codpiece 
and  proceeds  to  project  the  hot 
striam  of  his  anger  and  ambitioo 
on  pjor  old  Christianity,  who 
clt'nch<>s  his  teeth,  closes  his  eyes 
and  dripping  and  stinging  from 
the  hoi  drenching,  remembers  ilie 
words  of  the  Man  he  tries  to  Xoi 
low,  perhaps  erratically  at  time.s. 
"Forgive  them  for  they  know  n'){ 
what   they  do." 

These  words  were  squeezed 
out  when  Hiaf  man  was  hang 
ing,  the  whole  weight  of  his 
body  suspended  by  iron  nails, 
like  railroad  spikes,  one 
through  one  palm,  one  through 
the  other,  one  through  the  feet, 
one  on  top  of  the  other,  crush 
ing  the  bone,  ripping  the  mus- 
cle, driven   into  the  cross. 

Even  that  wasn't  half  bad  com- 
pared to  the  fact  that  his  spi-il 
writhed  from  the  salty  sting  com 
ing  from  the  harsh  criticism  'J. 
the  rulers  of  the  institution  he 
loved,  the  mashing,  bruising  blow 
of  the  duplicity  of  his  intimatv 
associates,  and  the  vacumed.  hol- 
low   ache    coming    from    the    de- 


parluT"  01   his   owti     ccnvi,-tioi  s 
(Eli.    Eli.   lama    sabacthani). 

Me.  -nd  I  'must  confess  He  was 
meek,  still  had  the  strength  to 
hang  on  to  the  powerful  idea  tiiat 
had  gripped  him  and  led  liim  to 
such  d  tragic  pass. 

So  task  you,  old  buddy,  Tom, 
in  "the  lustihoad  of  your  young 
powers"  have  you  the  menta! 
stamina,  the  innate  consistency 
and  discipline,  the  mental  guts. 
in  short,  to  travel  a  little  far 
ther  beyond  these  ordinary 
mortals,  "the  defenders  of  the 
Christian  faith''  and  hit  Jesus 
Christ  as  hard  as  /ou  can  right 
in  the  mouth. 

Having  conquered  the  ram 
parts,  I  challenge  you  to  char^:^" 
the  citadel,  to  summon  all  yjur 
courage  %nd  passion  and  advance 
on  the  Man  who  stands,  just 
stand?,  unarmed.  Have  you  the 
prerequisite  mental  strength? 

So  it's  "mental  strength"  is  i " 
Haven't  you  acquainted  yours-Mf 
with  the  Socratic — dialectic  prin 
ciple,  or  have  you  only  been 
nourished  on  locusts  and  wild 
honey? 

Do  you  reckon  that  even  as 
physical  exercise  gives  greater 
physical  strenglh,  so  will  menta. 


exercise,  by  persuading  others  c' 
your  views  also  increase  your 
mental  strength? 

I'll  v.restle  with  you  anytime, 
because  I'm  unconvinced  that 
CMristianily  is  the  "Acme  of  Ab- 
surdity'  (What  a  cute  little  epi- 
gram). 

Forgive  my  speaking  of  "loy:;l 
deceit,''  Tom,  old  boy,  but  as  a 
warmi.ig  up  exercise  for  your 
mental  wrestling  match,  I  recom 
mend  YLixi  Pound's  "The  Ballad 
of  the  Goodly  Fere,"  then  maybi. 
Schweitzer's  Quest  of  the  Histori 
cal  Jesus. 

And  then  if  you  pin  me  intel- 
lectually, you  will  have  greater- 
courage  and  confidence  to  at 
tack  this  man  whose  ideal  you 
have  claimed  to  have  realized, 
and  if  you  conquer  him,  you 
will  have  castrated  Christianity 
and  then  the  world  will  take  up 
"Kirklandinanity"  as  its  new  re 
liglon. 

The  bell  rings,  round  one,  are 
you  afraid? 

Having  been  taught  "to  care 
and  not  to  care,'"  I  remain,  ','my 
pefice  in  Hi.«  will,"  affectionately. 

Mike  Simpson 


Pogo 


By  Walt  Kelly 


Radical  Thoughts 
On  UNC  Coeds 


Editor: 

Look  at  the  end  of  this  column;  it  isn't  signed. 
And  why  haven't  we  signed  it?  Because  we  didn't 
dare.  We  didn't  dare  to  sign  our  names  because  wh«*l 
we  have  to  say  is  so  radical  that  we,  being  intiini 
dated  by  that  metaphor  of  Purest  Ray  Serene  caJ: 
ed  "the  Carolina  W^ay  cf  Life,"  haven't  the  cou- 
rage to  own  up  to  our  own  ideas. 

What  we  have  to  say,  and  to  ask,  is  this: 

To  begin  mith,  as  Carolina  coeds  we  have  found 
that  there  is  only  one  Viay  to  succeed  socially  on 
this  campus.  That  way  is  to  make  ourselves  appear 
as  empty-headed,  party-minded,  frail  and  stupidly 
feminine  creatures.  The  Carolina  gentleman  seems 
to  want  only  these  things  in  his  weekend  date.  A? 
long  as  she  is  fairly  attractive-looking,  meets  peo- 
ple well,  can  call  forth  compliments  from  hi.= 
friends,  and  can  carry  on  inane,  insipid,  watered- 
down  drivel  all  evening  long  without  allowing  any 
lapses  in  the  prattle  (during  which,  heaven  forbid, 
those  around  might  be  forced  to  use  their  rusty 
brains  to  think  of  something  worthwhile),  she  i? 
automatically  assured  of  dazzling  success.  She  is 
bound  to  become  overnight  the  rage  of  Y-Court  and 
the  idol  of  her  friends 

But  we,  hanng  tried  this  meaningless  merry-go 
round,  are  not  satisfied.  Perhaps  we  ar;  naive  op- 
timists, but  we  can  not  l>€lieve  that  the  typical  Ca 
rolina  gentleman  is  actuaiiy  the  shallow  person  tins 
attitude  makes  him  seem.  L;  he  really  so  immature 
that  all  he  wants  is  the  girl  who  is  like  a  display 
cake  in  a  bakery  window,  beautifully  iced  and  or- 
namented, but  consisting  of  nothing  under  the  ic 
ing,  but  cardboard?  I>oe3  he  frow'n  upon  the  g«-l 
■who  is  genuinely  interested  in  learning  something 
while  she  is  here?  Does  he  truiy  object  to  display 
ing,  now  and  then,  some  iatelligence?  Is  he  so  child- 
ish and  weak-minded  that  he  dare  not  discuss  some- 
thing worthwhile  and  of  lasting  interest?  Is  every- 
one here  expected  to  party  his  college  years  awaj, 
never  discovering  the  wonderful  experience  of  cha'- 
lenging  conversation  and  the  interaction  of  ques 
tioning  minds?  Must  the  quietly  inquisitive  intel- 
lect be  ridiculed,  criticized  and  ostracized  for  speak- 
ing out? 

Here  let  us  add  thai  we  are  not  trying  la  be 
holier-than-thou,  nor  are  we  suggesting  that  evei'y- 
one  become  a  loud-mouthed,  obnoxious  pseudo-in- 
tellectual. But  is  it  wTong  for  a  girl  of  some  intel- 
ligence to  ask  for  an  occasional  display  of  the  samr 
from  her  date? 

The  real  question  of  this  letter  is  two-fold.  First, 
does  the  majority  of  this  institute  of  learning,  (aid 
that  is  what  it  is,  in  case  anyone  has  forgotten"*, 
give  a  hang  about  what  is  of  real  significance  ia 
the  world  today?  And  second,  presuming  that  the 
answer  to  the  latter  is  yes,  is  it  such  a  crime  -for 
us  to  say  so? 

What  do  YOU  think?  Or  DO  YOU? 

Names  Withheld   by   Request 


THE  CAMPUS 


Student  Govt 
Has  Plenty  To  Do 


1 


Bob  Young 


This  is  the  final  section  of  Student  Body  Presi- 
dent Bob  Young's  State  of  the  Campus  address 
two  weeks   ago. 

Tomorrow,  the  Faculty  Council  will  decide  on 
the  class  attendance  regulation.  Student  Government 
representatives  discussed  this  matter  at  some  length. 
1  am  grateful  that  we  were  privilaged  to  present  oiir 
views.  I  will  not  predict  the  outcome  of  tomorrow's 
meeting,  but  feel  confident  that  the  Council  will 
take  our  feeling  into  consideration. 

At  present,  preliminary  plans  are  being  made 
for  a  "Students'  Day"  of  values  being  available  to 
all  students  by  the  Chapel  Hill  merchants.  One  par 
ticular  day  will  be  set  aside,  when  all  the  mer- 
chants will  cut  their  prices  considerably,  for  tiie 
t>enefit  of  students.  Values  will  be  offered  by  tnc 
stores,  from  service  stations  to  movie  theaters. 

For  some  time  now,  a  Student  Government  com- 
mittee has  been  studying  the  Book  Exchange  situs- 
lion.  The  main  purpose  was  to  study  their  e.Tcpeii->2 
and  income  and  see  if  the  income  were  being  used 
for  a  justified  purpose.  All  of  the  profits  go  either 
ior  repairs  or  for  scholarships.  None  of  these  sc 
holarships  is  for  Athletic  Grants-in-Aid.  All  of  thcn^ 
go  to  needy  and  worthy  students. 

It  seems  that  there  i^  very  little  possibility  oi  a 
change  in  administradve  policy  with  regard  to  book 
cr  supply  prices.  I  would  urge  all  organizations  'o 
use  the  Book  iixchange  and  take  advantage  of  le- 
duced  costs  of  supplies. 

According  to  Mr.  J.  S.  Bennett,  telephones  will 
be  placed  on  each  floor  of  most  men's  dJrmitorici 
u->  soon  as  the  buildings  department  can  get  them 
installed.  Proper  handling  and  proper  use  of  these 
pbcJies  will  insure  that  uds  privilege  will  alwajs 
remain. 

Thus,  you  see,  v.e  have  our  work  cut  out  lor 
us.  I  'would  like  to  express  my  appreciation  to  ev- 
eryone for  their  excellent  cooperation.  1  wourd 
challenge  each  of  you  to  accept  your  respon^ibi'i- 
tie.  and  join  me  in"  fin-Jing  a  solution  to  these  pro 
blems.  Through  further  cooperation,  we  can  ali  he 
successful.  "^ 


COSMOPt^ 

The  Coi 
v/ill   hav( 
party  toe 
MemorialJ 
asked  to 
mas  pres< 
the  gift 
square  dz 
rol  singir 
served. 

SWEDISt 

Profess^ 
Universuj 
address  tl 
Monday  aj 
He  w'ill  i{ 
ror5  in 
Tuesday 
speak  to 

PRESS  Qi 

The  Li 
meet  Tuel 
managirigl 
News  An<j 
•will  be  ni 
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Neil  Luxe 

CHRISTf 

The    Ci 
will  be  hi 
the  Pres 
meeting, 
and  "nvcl 
speak  on 
Means  in 
day." 


Thi 
Tai 

m 

Boi 

5oi 

Chi 

Pn 

Thi 

Sa> 


SATURDAY,  DECEMBER  13,  195« 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


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Covering  The  University  Campus 


COSMOPOLITAN  CLUB 

The  Cosmopolitan  Club  members, 
\.iU  have  their  anijual  Christinas 
party  today  at  8  p.m.  in  Graham 
Memorial.  Each  member  has  been 
a>ked  to  bring  a  wrapped  Christ 
mas  present  worth  about  $0.23  lo; 
the  gift  exchange.  There  will  be 
-(juare  dancing  and  Christmas  ca 
v'A  singing.  Refreshments  will  be 
-orved. 

SWEDISH  PROFESSOR 

Professor  Herman  Wold  of  the 
I  niversity  of  Upsala,  Sweden,  will 
address  the  Statistics  Colloquiun 
Monday  at  4  p.  m.  in  Phillips  Hall. 
-le  will  talk  on  "Specification  Er 
rors  in  Regression  Analysis.  On 
Tuesday  at  4  p.m.  Dr.  Wold  will 
>-poak  to  economists  in  Carrol  HaU. 

PRESS  CLUB 

The  University  I*ress  Club  will 
meet  Tuesday  to  hear  Sam  Ragan, 
managing  editor  of  the  Raleigli 
News  And  Obser\-er.  The  meeting 
ui!l  be  iieid  at  the  home  of  Jour- 
nalism School  Dean  Norval  Luxo 
Neil  Luxon,  Mt.  Bolus  Rd. 

CHRISTMAS  SERVICE 

The  Campus  Christmas  Service 
will  bo  held  Tuesday  at  7  p.m.  at 
ihc  Presbyierian  Church.  At  the 
meeting,  sponsored  by  the  YMCA 
and  YWCA,  James  Kay  Kyser  will 
speak  on  "What  the  Birth  of  Christ 
Means  in  the  Lives  of  Students  To- 
viay." 


The  Dollar 
Table  at 
The  Intimate 
Bookshop 
Solves  More 
Christmas 
Problems 
Than 

Santa  Claus! 


UNIVERSITY  CHORUS  i  tournament    have    been    urged    n 

The  University  Chorus  will  make  '  play  their  matches  immediately  so  | 
its  first  appearance  under  its  new  j  the  tournament  may  be  completed  | 
director,     Wilton     Mason,   at     ito  |  before  the  holidays. 
Christmas   concert  Tuesday    at   8 


GMAB  DANCE 

Graham  Memorial  ActiviUes 
Board  is  sponsoring  a  dance  today 
from  8  to  11  p.  m.  in  the  Grahar.: 
Memorial    Rendezvous    Room. 

WUNC 

Today's  schedule  for  WUNC,  the 
University's  FM  radio  station. 

7:00 — Spirit  of  Christmas 

7:30— Showtime 

8:0O~This  Is  Jazz 

9:00 — Horizons  in  Music 
10:OO~News 

1j:  15- -Evening  Masterwork 
11:30— Sign    Off 

ENGLISH  CLUB 

The  English  Club  will  hold  its 
annual  Christmas  Party  today  at 
8:30  p.m.  at  902  Arrowhead  Road. 
There  will  be  a  skit  and  various  re- 
freshments. 


p.m.  in  Memorial  Hall.  The  unus- 
ual oratorio  of  Heinrich   Schuetz, 
"The  Christmas  Story,"  is  the  prin- 
jipal  w'lrk  on  the  program. 
WAA  BASKETBALL 

All  women  interested  in  joining 
the  Basketball  Club  have  been  ur 
^ed  to  sign  up  in  the  Women's 
?ym  before  the  Christmas  holidays. 
The  club  will  meet  once  a  week  un 
the  day  preferred  by  those  who 
sign  up. 

BIRD  Club 

There  will  be  a  meeting  of  tlie 
Chapel   Hill   Bird   Club  tomorrow 
at  3  p.m.  at  the  home  of  Harold  | 
and  Mrs.  Walters.  Mrs.  Applebeny 
will  be  the  speaker. 
COMMUNITY  CHURCH  j 

The  Community  Church  will  have  ! 
its  annual  Christmas  Music  Service  I 
tomorrow  at  11  a.  m.  in  Hill  Music 
Hall.  The  choir,  under  the  direc- 1 
tion  of  Gene  Strassler,  will  perform  ' 
'The  Midnight  Mass"  by  Mai\:- ' 
Antoine  Carpentier.  The  public! 
has  been  invited.  .  j 

STUDENT  WIVES 

The  Student  Wives  Club  will  hold 
a  covered  dish  Christmas  party  ti  j 

day  at  6  p.m.  according  to  Pat  Ho-|      The  collection  bottles  in  the  Y 

waITpmm^^"         '  building    will    be    removed    today 

*  M     ^'^'*!*  I  at   noon   in  order  for  the   cabled 

All   participants  m   the     tenmsj  ^oney   and  clothes  to  reach   the 

Hungarian  refugees  before  Christ- 
mas. 

Any  donations  after  this  time 
can  be  made  by  contacting  the 
student  government  office  in  Graih- 
am  Memorial,  according  to  an  an- 
nouncement from  Miss  Jackie 
Aldridge,  Y  representative. 
The  Wesley  Foundation  will  l  "Christmas  for  these  students 
hold  a  party  today  at  7:30  p.m.  in  [  will  not  only  be  Santa  Claus-less. 
the  basement  of  the  University '  but  also  homeless  and  even  food- 
Methodist  Church.  I  less  unless  we.  and  others  like 
At  the  party  there  will  be  taffy '  us.  take  the  initiative  to  help  them 
pulling,  gift  wrapping,  tree  deco-    in  their  big  moment  of  distress," 


The  Daily  Tar  Heel's 
Holiday  Ride  Service 


Y-Night  Committeemen  To  Meet 


Y  -  N 1  g  h  t  committeemen  wiW 
!  will  meet  Monday  at  5  p.m.  in  the 
Y-Cabinet  Room  to  discuss  plans 
for  future  Y-Nights. 

According  to  Miss  Eleanor  Rig 


DR..  GEORGE  C.  HAM 

. .  .on  Psychiatry  Board 

Ham  Is  Choice  Of 
UNC  Psychf,atry  Board 

Dr.  George  C.  Ham,  professor 
and  chairman  of  thie  Dept.  of 
Psychiatry  of  the  UNC  School 
of  Medicine,  has  recently  been 
unanimously  elected  to  the  Board 
of  the  Anverican  Fund  for  Psychia- 
try for  a  term  of  one  year. 


Y's  Collection  Bottles 
To  Be  Removed  Today 


Wesley  Group  I 
To  Hold  Party  ' 
Tonight  At  7:30j 


fled  to.  just  as  maily  past  Amer- 
icans  have   done. 

"We  can  think  of  no  better  sea- 
son than  this  Christmas  season  for 
U5  as  students  of  the  Universi^ 
of  Nor^h  Carolina,  to  help  these 
Hungarian  students  in  their  fight 
and  their  flight  for  freedom,"  it 
said. 


WUNC-TV  In  Meeting 


The  following"  people  need  rides,  or  can  give  rides,  to 
distant  points  over  the  Christmas  holidays.  If  you  have  a 
car,  are  headed  for  \me  of  the  points  listed  and  need  riders, 
contact  these  people.  If  you  want  a  ride-4o  one  of  the  places 
listed  at  tht-  end,  contact  the  folks  who  have  cars  and  need 
riders. 

David  L.  Heck,  33  Davie  Circle, 
9-2786— to  Shelby,  Ohio,  via  M'. 
Airy  and  Charleston,  W.  Va.,  leav- 
ing Dec.  22.  . 

Brad  Seasholes,  215  Caldwell,  9- 
7688— to  Syracuse,  N.  Y. 

Susan  Inman,  303  Smith,  8-9133 
— to  Vermont,  western  Mass.,  Conn 
and  N.  Y. 

Chuck  Federspiel,  8-6433  or  9- 
2382— to  central  Michigan. 

R  E.  Berry,  106  Whitehead,  8 
9066— to  Laurel,  Miss. 

Ed  Kiser,  315  Alexander,  3-9105  ; 
— to  Laurinburg  via  Sanford  and  j 
Aberdeen. 

Fred  Katz,  9031,  Ext.  571  -  to 
Washington,  D.  C. 

Bryce  Johnson,  State  College,  j 
Raleigh,  TEmple  29363  —  to  Idaho  i 

Dick  Potthoff,  216  Connor,  8- 
917C  —  to  Jacksonville,  Fla. 

Louis  Lefkowitz,  TEP  House, 
8-9007 — to  New  York  via  New  Jer- 
sey Turnpike  and  Garden  State 
Parkway. 

Dot  Hall,  83392— to  Williams- 
burg, Va.  via  Richmond. 

Ann  MoConaughy,  AD  Pi  House, 
80983— to  Columbia,  S.C. 

J.  Timothy  Stevens,  208  Ruffin. 
89146— to  AJlentown,  Pa. 


RIDES  WANTED 

Ethan  Tolman,  207  Ruffin,  8- 
9146— Miami,  Fla. 

Kenneth  Chi-Kun  Yang,  208  W. 
Frauklin  St.,  %B471— Taipei,  For- 
mosa. 

Bill  Adcock,  308  Mangum,  8- 
9183 — >Knoxville,  Tenn. 

Marion  Harris,  300  Spencer,  8- 
9104 —  Engelhard  or  Washington. 
N.  C. 

Howard  Kahn,  108  Alexander,  8- 
9107— Baltimore,  Md. 

Harold  Stessel,  211  Stacy.  8-9031 
— New  York  City  or  Westchester. 

Sara  Humphrey,  I*i  Phi  House 
8-9096  —  Washington,  D.  C. 

Carolina  Hume,  Pi  Phi  Hoi^e, 
3-9096  —  Washington,  D.  C. 

John  Gauntlett,  8-9154  —  Chi- 
cago. 

Priscilla  Roetzel,  106  Kenan,  8 
9172  —  Trenton  or  Newark,  N.  J. 
Of  New  York. 

THE  RULES 

If  you  want  to  got  your  name 
on  oithor  of  those  lists,  drop  by 
The  Daily  Tar  Hool's  nowsroom, 
second  floor  of  Graham  Mem- 
orial, or  mail  your  name,  address 
telephone  number  and  destina- 
tion to  The  Daily  Tar  Heel,  Box 
1080,  Chapel  Hill.  The  lists  will 
run  as  long  as  there  tn  stu> 
dents  who  need  rides  or  riders. 
e     I  \af  T      B  i      Leonard  KiUian,  309  Alexander, 

carl  Wynn  To  Represent  8-9105— Albuquerque,  n.  m. 

Beatrice  Rodriguez,  305  Kenan, 
8-9076— New  York. 

Ana  Maria  Ortiz,  Kenan  —  New 
York. 


•^ins-Df  the  Y.  the  committee  hopes 
.0  plan  future  programs  of  in- 
ierest  to  the  whole  student  body 
umilar  to  the  Y-Night  Talent 
Show  last  Thursday. 


^ 


By  appointraent.purveyof  $  of  soap  to  tlw  late  Krnc  Gaorga  VI,  Vaniley  i  Co.,  Ltd.,  UmdM 


rating,  caroling  and  a  reading 
by  Dave  Setzer  of  "The  Littlest 
Angel." 

The  Foundation's  traditional 
Christmas  buffet  dinner  will  be 
held  tomorrow  at  6  p.m..  admiss- 

I  ion  S  .50  per  person  It  will  be  fol- 

:  lowed  by  a  choral  and  organ  con- 

'  cert   in  the   sanctuary. 

1       Everyone  has  been  cordially 


I      The   possibility  of  setting  up  a 

j  regional    network    of    educational 

!  television  stations  will  be  consid- 
ered   at*  a-  meeting  this  weekend 

I  in    Atlanta,    Ga.    of   the    Regional 

i  Educational  Television  Committee 

I  of  the  Southern   Regional  Educa-, 
tion  Board. 
Earl  Wynn  will  attend  the  meet- 
with  our  beloved   fainilies;   every- 1  iW*    as      the  "  i-epresentative      of  .      .  ,      ^^ 

and  'Happy  New  Year*  in  this  television  station.  Wynn -is  chair- 
*  land  of  freedom,"  the  announce-  man  of  the  ttept.  of  Radio.  Tele- 
'  ment  said.  vision    and    Motion    Pictures,    and 


the    announcement    .''aid    Friday. 
"Christmas  for  us  this  year  wjll 
probably   be   one  of  the   happiest 
of  our   lives   as   we  go   home   for 
the   holidavs  to  our  warm   homes 


Helen  Duke.  407A  E.  Franklin, 
^1273— New  York. 

Lynwood  Thompson,  5  Battle,  8- 
917J— New  York  To  Chapel  Hill 
after  Christmas. 

Marjorie  McMahan,  Carr,  3-91()6 
Charlotte. 

Richard  -Alexander,    313   Ruffin 


vited    to 
events. 


participate    in 


the    two  I      "This  'freedom*  is  what  most  of  1  director 
these     refugees    fought    for    and ;  Center. 


of    the     Communication 


Wedding  Ring 


John  DaTe,  210  Connor,  8-9178— 
Asheville  or  Knoxvllle. 

Buddy  Clark,  Theta  Chi  8-912i 
\tlanta,  Ga. 

Angela  Aeosta,  218  Kenan  ~- 
Baltimore. 

Lisa  Rehor,  224  Kenan  —  New 
York  City. 

Joel  A.  Snow.  1  Pettigrew,  89174 
— St.  Petersburg,  Fla. 

Owen  Leland,  108  Connor,  89155 
—Charleston.  S.  C. 
I      Jerry    Chichester.    215    Aycock, 
I  8-912G— Macon,    Ga. 
i      Sue  Rexrode,  321  Mclvcr,  8-9134 
j  Roanoke,  Va. 

I      Bill    Henshaw.    202    Alexander, 
I  8-9107— Knoxville.  Tenn. 

John  Underwood.  221  Vance  St.. 
5466— Charleston.    S.    C. 

Christian     Lefeburc.     3     Battle, 
8917.^-Ncw  York  City. 
j      Morris     Wilder,     212     Mangum, 
!  89065— Hendersonville. 

Allan    Spader,    218    Graham,  8- 
j  908^-Parkersburg,  W.  V^a. 
1      George    Grayson.    206    Winston. 
;  8-7191— Washington.    D.    C. 
j      Betty  Barnes,  Spencer.  8-9067— 
Washington.  D.  C. 

Bill    Porter,    9   Vance.    8-ll77— 
Washington.  D.  C. 
RIDERS  WANTED 

Thomas  L.  Gillette,  303  AlumrJ 
Bldg.,  &8462  Kansas  City,  Mo. 

Warren  Miller  —  Washington. 
D.  C. 

W.  S.  Brewer.  30(1  Whitehead, 
8-9113— Mansfield.  Ohio,  via  Char- 
leston, W.  Va.  and  Columbus, 
Ohio. 

Mrs.    W.    C.    Hudson.    ^8792— 
New  York,  leaving  Sunday  or  Mon- 
day. 
Herb    Greenblock,    TEP   House. 

8-9007— New   York   and   vicinity. 

.^ 


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UNIVERSITIES 

(Contirvaed  From  Page  1) 
ments  like  "slowly"  or  eventually. 
Some  writers  who  couldn't  see 
the  big  time  colleges  de-emphasiz- 
ing football  to  the  extent  that  the 
eight  old  EJastern  universities 
have,  pointed  out  that  there  likely 
will  be  SDme  retrenchment — ducj 
mainly  to  the  competition  for  star 
players  and  to  the  mounting  costs 
of  football. 

Those  same  costs  also  were  giv- 
en as  a  reason  why  a  lot  of  col- 
leges will  continue  on  a  high- 
pressure  basis  to  eet  teams  that 
Arill  produce  plentiful  gate  re- 
I  ceipls. 

I      "jvy    lpa?u»    football    is    viewed 

I  as  minor  league  stuff  and  it  w-ould 

I  be  hard  to  convince  a  Midwestern- 

;  er  that  their  varsities  could  whip 

^  Big  Ten  fresh  teams,"  wrote  one 

big    time    footbal    i    the    football 

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'^•'Ge  FOUR 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


SATURDAY,  DECEMBER  15,  1956 


Tar  Heels  After  Fourth  Tonight  Against  South  Carolina 


The  Titan  Tumbles 

'The  King  is  dead,  long  live  the  king.' 


That  lime  worn  phrase  neatly  sums  up  the  Atlantic  Coast  Confer- 
ence cage  race  to  this  point.  Coach  EX^erett  Case's  basketball  empire 
at  North  Carolina  State  has  collapsed,  for  the  moment  at  least,  and 
the  ACC  has  a  new  monarch:  the  Carolina  Tar  Heels. 

For  the  past  decade.  State  has  been  undisputed  ruler  of  the  basket- 
ball world  in  this  part  of  Dixie.  EN-er>-  year  with  monotonous  regula.'- 1 
ity.  Coach  Case  and  his  crew  have  brought  home  the  conference  i'lAg  I 
to  West  Raleigh.  | 

i 

But  it's  time  for  a  change.  This  season  the  Pack  has  already  lost  I 
two  conference  games,  and  to  whom?  Why  to  Clemson  and  Souih  i 
"Carolina,  a  pair  of  Palmetto  State  have  nots  who  used  to  be  doormats  ! 
for  the  mighty  Pack.  \ 

And  while  this  was  going  on,  Coach  Fraak  McGuire.and  his  powi-j-  ' 
ful  Tar  Heels  were  rolling  over  three   unfortunate   opponents  with  i 
effortless  ease.  The  UXC  cagers  are  ranked  second  in  two  national 
polls  and  sixth  in  another.  Inside  the  conference,  they  are  odds  on  ; 
lavorites  to  dethrone  State.  It  looks  like  the  payoff  year  has  fina;ly 
ccme  for  the  long  suffering  Frank  McGuire. 

THUNDER  ON  THE  BOARDS 

Carolina's  top  distance  runners  go  on  display  this  afternoon  in  the 
Tin  Can.  A  select  group  of  six  assorted  milers,  two  milers  and  halt 
milers  will  run  a  three-quarter  mile  time  trial  at  4:15,  and  they  will 
be  aiming  for  a  new  record  in  this  odd  distance  event 

Leading  the  pack  will  be  Jim  Beatty,  considered  by  many  *o  be 
the  nation's  top  collegiate  distance  runner.  ,\lso  running  will  be  Dave 
Scurlock  and  Wayne  Bishop,  soph  sensations  who  should  give  Beatty 
stiff  competition.  Other  participants  include  cross  country  ace  Everett 
V.'hatley,  middle  distance  men  Ben  Williams  and  Howard  Kahn,  and 
newcomer  John  Reaves. 

The  group  will  be  shooting  for  the  record  of  3:06  set  by  Jim  Davis 
way  back  in  the  early  "405.  Beatty  himself  unofficially  bettered  t.'ial  ' 
mark  in  Finland  this  summer  with  a  3:01  9  clocking  on  an  outdoor  ; 
track. 

It  should  be  a  good  show  to  see,  for  veteran  Coach  Dale  Ransor 
has  termed  the  group,  "The  best  bunch  of  three-quarter  milers  ever 
to  step  up  to  the  starting  line  in  the  south.'" 

Beatty  will  get  his  first  taste  of  big  time  competition  in  the  two- 1 
mile  and  mile  alopg  about  the  middle  of  January  when  the  big  me-  \ 
tropolitan  indoor  meets  get  rolling.  The  inJoor  season  lasts  from  Jar.  ; 
uary  to  the  middle  of  March. 

HOT  OFF  THE  GRIDDLE 

Carolina's  famous  basketball  captain,  Lenpie  Rosenbluth,  will  be  | 

featured  in  Sport  Magazine  eariy  n-ext  year  ('57).  Winston-Salem  sports  ; 

writer  Mai  Mallet  gave  Lennie  the  complete  treatment  and  reportedly  ' 

.  tells  all  about  the  UNC  star.  Its  with  color  pictures  and  everything,  • 

so  keep  one  eye  cocked  on  the  news  stands.  i 

Still  in  the  cage  dept:  The  latest  issue  of  Sports  Dlustrated  Ala-  i 
feazine  features  a  roundup  of  the  nation's  leading  basketball  teams  \ 
end  their  mascots.  In  a  two  page  color  layout,  the  Carolina  Ram,  dear  ! 
o'd  Ramases,  is  decked  out  in  a  UNC  uniform.  Surroundinp  Ramases  | 
is  an  assorted  group  of  Bulldogs,  Mustangs.  Lions  and  of  all  things,  ' 
a  Wolf. 

Ken  Keller,  flashy  Philadelphia  Eagle  Iialfback  who  last  year  did 
his  ball  toting  for  Carolina,  has  been  sidehned  for  the  remainder  of  I 
the. season  by  an  injury  he  suffered  in  last  Sunday's  battle  with  the  ' 
Washington  Redskins.  Keller  was  the  leading  ground  gainer  for  the 
Lagles  when  the  hand  of  fate  struck.  i 

The  poor  neglected  college  sports  editors  have  finally  gotten  into  ' 
the  act.  John  Glavin,  sports  ed.  of  the  Notre  Dame  Scholastic,  conduct-  | 
td  a  survey  among  the  college  joes  and  came  up  with  an  all-american  j 
football  team.  This  is  what  it  looks  like:  Ends,  Ron  Kramer,  Michigan  | 
and  Joe  Walton,  Pitt;  tackles,  Jerry  Witte,  Oregon  State,  and   Mike 
Sandusky,  Maryland;  guards,  Jim  Parker.  Ohio  State  and  Bill  Glas.-,  : 
Baylor;   center  Jerry  Tu'obs,  Oklahoma;   quarterback,  Paul   Hornung. 
Notre  Dame;  halfbacks,  Tonuny  McDonald,  Oklahoma,  and  Johnny  Ma 
jors,  Tennessee;   and  fullback  Paige  Cothren,   Mississippi. 

This  observer  took  part  in  the  voting,  but  our  card  must  have 
been  lost  in  the  shuffle.  Else  what  happened  to  Bill  Barnes  and  hd 
Sutton?  Not  to  mention  Elvis. 


Rosie  And 
Wallace  In 
Point  Duel 

By  BILL  KING 

Carolina's  highly  regarded  Tar 
Heels  will  lay  their  unblemished 
record  on  the  line  tonight  when 
they  go  against  a  strong  South 
Carol'^ia  club  in  Columbia,  S.  C. 

The  Tar  Heels,  with  three  vic- 
tories under  their  belts,  will  be 
shooting  for  their  second  Atlantic 
Coast  Conference  win.  Carolina 
blasted  Clemson  94-75  in  its  initial 
conference  test  last  Saturday  night 
in  Charlotte. 

The  Gamecocks,  victorious  ov- 
er N.  C.  State  Wednesday  night, 
should  offer  the  Tar  Heels  stiff 
opposition  featuring  high  scoring 
forward  Grady  Wallace.  South 
Carolina  also  has  victories  over 
Wofford  and  Georgia  and  has  lost 
only  to  the  surprising  Duke  Blue 
Devils. 

The  Tar  Heel  attack  will  be 
led  by  All-American  Lennie  Rosen- 
bluth, the  nation's  number  two 
scordr  and  a  cinch  to  win  national 
honors  again  this  season.  Rosen- 
bluth should  receive  able  assistant 
from  Pete  Brennan,  a  forward 
who  has  really  come  into  his  own 
this  season. 

In  addition  to  Roisenbluth  and 
Brennan,  the  Tar  Heels  have  a 
pair  of  efficient  ball  -  handling 
guards  in  Bob  Cunningham  and 
Tommy  Kears,  plus  Stan  Groll,  a 
capable  sophomore  up  from  last 
year's  crack  freshman  club.  Groll 
should  get  first  call  if  either  Cun- 
ningham or  Kearns  should  falter. 

At  center  McGuire  will  proba- 
bly go  with  Bill  Hathaway  in  his 
starting  lineup,  but  6'8  Joe  Quigg 
IS  destined  to  see  a  great  deal  of 
action. 

South  Carolina  mentor  Frank 
Johnson  will  iirobably  start  Ray 
Pericola  and  Dick  Hoffman  at 
guards,  Fred  Lentz  at  center,  and 
Wallace  and  Bobby  McCoy  at  the 
forward  posts.  Lentz,  a  €'8  center 
from  Asheville,  is  one  of  the  top 
rebounders  in  the  conference  and 
grabbed  25  rebounds  against  State 
Wednesday. 

Tonight's  tilt  marks  the  Tar 
Heel's  third  road  game  after  beat- 
ing Furman  in  Chapel  Hill  in 
their  second  game  of  the  season. 
The  Tar  Heels  return  home  Mon- 
day and  go  against  the  Maryland 
Terps  befoe  traveling  to  New 
York  during  the  Christmas  holi- 
days for  a  three-day  basketball 
tour. 


Orange  Bowl  Tickets 

Any  students  or  faculty  mem- 
bers desiring  tickets  to  tlie  Oran- 
ge Bowl  game  between  Clemson 
end  Colorado  should  get  in  toucn 
with  the  ticket  office  before 
noon  today. 


Fresh  and  Pfeiffer 
Grapplers  Meet  Today 

Carolina's     freshman    grappling* 
squad  will  have  their  second  tang- 
le session  of  this  season  this  af- 
ternoon when   they  meet  Pfeiffer 
College  at  3:00  in  Woollen  Gym. 

The  Tar  Babies  hold  a  0-1  rec- 
ord for  the  season.  They  were  de- 
feated by  the  WasSilngton  and 
Lee   J.V.s. 

Going  to  the  padded  ring  for 
the  Tar  Babies  will  be:  Curt 
Champlin  at  123,  Charles  Whitfield 
at  130.  Bill  French  at  137,  Bill 
Gautir  or  Jim  \\(;elbom  at  147, 
Ron  Purdy  or  Bob  Russell  at  157, 
Jim  Henderson  at  167,  Beno  Sack 
at  177  and  Mike  Pittman  in  the 
heavyweight    division. 


DAILY    CROSSWORD 


CLASSIFIEDS 


THERE  WILL  BE  NO  "JAZZ  AT 
Turnage's''  this  weekend  (Dec. 
15).  Sessions  will  resume  Jan. 
5. 

FOR  SALE:  CHRISTMAS  TREES, 
holly,  running  cedar,  mistletoe. 
Open  every  day  except  Christ- 
mas day.  Blackbird's  Market, 
W.  Franklin  St. 

RIDER  WANTED  TO  NEW  YORK 
Monday  if  possible.  Will  leave 
at  anytime  If  interested,  please 
call  Mrs.  W.  C.  Hudson  at  9- 
8792.  ... 


ACROSS 

1.  Throws 
6.  Corroded 
iron 

10.  Around 

11.  Sinjrins^ 
voice 

12.  Mother  of 
Irish  gods 

13.  Girl's  neme 

15.  Owns 

16.  Wavers 

17.  Mine 
entrance 

19.  Neuter 
pronoun 

20.  Enclosure 
(Scot.) 

21.  Poison 

22.  Spread  g;-ass 
to  dry 

24.  South 
Dakota 
(abbr.) 

25.  Choking  bit 
27.  Knock 

Ughtly 
29.  Postscript 

(abbr.) 
31.  Isthmus 

(Asia) 
33.  Burden 
36.  Winr 
38.  Cloee  to 
S9.  River  (Fr.) 
40.  Stops 

43.  Not 
(preOx) 

44.  Entrust 

45.  Owing 

46.  Level 

47.  Approaches 

49.  Lairs 

50.  Garden  tool 

jyows 

I.  Ailominion 


2.  Degrading 

3.  Thu3 

4.  Volcanic 
rock 

5.  Narrow 
passage 
of 
water 

6.  Declaim 
violently 

7.  Nonhealing 
sore 

8.  Cubic 
meters 

9.  Threw 
12.  King 

of  Israel 
14.  Change 


18.  East 
Indian 
tree 

23.  Valley 
(poet.) 

26.  Lawn 

28.  Thump- 
ed 

29.  Stuffed 

30.  Part  of 
a 

gar- 
ment 

32.  Garreta 
34.  Stir  up 
}5.  Sand  dune 

(Eng.) 
37.  Poplar 


--inr-.-.Hfr  i-jmkin 


Tc(t«Hls)r'a  Ae*w«r 

41.  Blectrifled 
particles 

42.  Oase 
48.  Masurium 

(sym.) 


Two  Tar  Heel  Stalv\^arts  In  Tonight's  Game 

Two  of  UNC's  Tar  Heels  are  pictured  above  p  preparing  for  Carolina's  fourth  victory.  They  are 
Lennie  Rosenbluth  and  center  Joe  Quigg.  The  game  tonight  is  against  the  University  of  South  Carolina 
and  will  be  held  at  Columbia,  S.  C. 


Yanks  Lead  India,  2-0,  In 
Cup  Play;  Vic  Sexias  Wins 


By  WILL  GRIMSLEY 

PERTH.  Australia— (AP)— The 
American  Davis  Cup  forces  met 
India  in  doubles  today  after  grab- 
bing a  2-9  lead  in  the  singles  of 
their  interzone  finals  but  they 
didn't  look  like  a  team  which  will 
•dent  Australia's  armor  in  the 
challenge  round  later  this  month. 

Herbie  Flam  of  Beverly  Hills, 
Calii..  fighting  off  leg  cramps  and 
set  points  most  of  the  way,  final- 
ly vanquished  19-year-old  Ramana- 
than  Krishnan,  India's  number  one 
player,  in  a  marathon  match  yes- 
terday. 7-5.  4-6.  10-8,  2-6,  6-4. 

Then  the  old  reliable  Vic  Seixr.s 
of  Philadelphia,  in  his  sixth  Davis 
Cup  campaign,  whipped  past  Nar- 
e.sh  Kumar,  fra.l-looking  captain 
of  the  two-man  Indian  team,  6-4, 
8-1,  6-2. 

The  Yanks  can  clinch  the  ser- 


ies in  the  doubles  at  the  picture- 1 
sque  Kings'  Park  courts  here  at 
the  bottom  of  the  world.  But  there 
is  no  certainy  that  the  final  de- 
cision won't  be  carried  into  Sun- 
day's  final   singles. 

"These  boys  have  played  togeth- 
er a  lot  and  they  are  tough."  said 
Bill  Talbert,  U.  S.  captailj  who 
named  Seixas  and  Sam  Giammalva 
of  Houston  to  meet  the  Indian 
tandem.  Krishnan  and  Kumar 
were  good  enough  to  carry  Seixas 
and  Ham  Richardson,  a  superior 
team,  to  five  sets  at  Wimbledon 
last  summer. 

"We  are  happy  we  are  getting 
into  the  doubles,"  said  Kumar,  a 
28-ycar-oid  veteran  of  internation- 
al  competition. 

"I  am  sorry  we  did  not  split  the 
opening  singles,  but  we  should 
have  a  good  chance  in  the  dou- 
bles." 


Talbert  said  he  was  pleased  that 
the  United  States  got  off  to  a  win- 
ning start.  But  it  was  obvious  the 
American  team  needed  much 
more  improvement  if  it  is  to  stand 
toe-to-toe  with  Lew  Hoad  and  Ken 
Rosewall  in  the  challenge  round 
at   Adelaide  .starting  Dec.  26. 

"I  don't  think  F!am  pressed 
Krishnan  enough,"  the  U.  S.  cap- 
tain said. 

"ITie  Seixas-Kumar  match  was 
an  anti-climax  with  the  Philadel- 
phian's  stronger  service  and  net 
game  prevailing  against  the  slen- 
der Indian's  deft  retrieving  tactics. 

"I  had  trouble  at  first."  sa.d 
Seixas.  "Kumar  is  cute  and  tricky 
and  he  made  shots  I  was  unable  to 
anticipate.  But  after  I  learned  nis 
style.  1  did  better." 

"He  was  just  too  good."  .said 
Kumar  of  Seixas.  "I  lost  to  a  bet- 
ter man." 


Frosh  Mermen, 
Greensboro  Hi 
Tangle  Today 

By  STEWART  BIRD 

Coach  Dick  Jamerson's  fresh- 
men swimmers  will  play  host  at 
five  o'clock  this  afternoon  to  the 
power-laden  Greensboro  High 
School  squad  in  Bowman  Gray 
Pool. 

The  meet  should  produce  inter- 
esting and  close  races  all  the 
way  through  the  program.  A 
comparison  of  times  reveals  that 
the  top  men  on  each  squad  are 
rather  evenly  matched  in  all 
events. 

Paul  Wachenderfer,  ace  butter- 
fly and  medley  man,  will  face 
some  of  his  closest  competition  of 
the  young  season.  Dodson  of 
Greensboro  in  the  butterfly  and 
Nance  in  the  individual  medley 
have  turned  in  times  that  will 
push  the  Prep  All-American  all 
the  way. 

A  somewhat  uncertaijn  rooter 
will  be  present  in  the  person  of 
Tony  Schiffman.  star  freestyler 
for  the  Tar  Heel  varsity.  His 
younger  brother,  Harry,  will  be 
competing  for  Greensboro  in  the 
200  yard  freestyle,  the  same  event 
his  older  brother  excells  in 

This  will  be  the  second  start 
and  first  home  meet  of  the  sea- 
son for  the  Tar  Babies.  They  lost 
their  initial  encounter  last  Satur- 
day to  Staunton  Millitary,  42  to  34. 


OLYMPIC    STAR 

A  former  University  of  Nofh 
Carolina  ireshman  swimming  stai, 
Jack  Nelson  of  East  Lauderdale, 
Fla.,  was  a  fourth  place  finisljc' 
in  the  Olympic  200  meter  butterfly 
competition. 


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WEEKIN  REVIEW 

Campus  .State  and  World  New< 
se«  page  2. 


VOL.  LVIi,  NO.  71 


Complete  {ff)  Whe  Service 


Frat  Noise  Cited 
By  Two  Petitioners 


CHAPEL  HILL,  NORTH  CAROLINA,  SUNDAY,  DECEMBER   16,  1956 


Offices   in   Graham   Mem4frial 


FOUR  PAGES  THIS  ISSUE 


Three  signers  of  the  petition 
opposing  the  building  of  a  new 
fraternity  court  in  the  wooded 
area  behind  Victory  Village  made 
it  clear  Thursday  why  they  ob- 
ject to  the   move. 

W.  0.  Sparrow  said,  "I  have 
the  same  objections  any  family 
does  to  living  in  a  colony  of  fra- 
ternities. They  are  just  not  a  de- 
sirable place  for  family  living.  In 
any    residential    area   where    you 


4  Named 
As Rhodes 
Winners 


ATLANTA  — oVt—  Four  Rhodes 
scholarship  winners  were  selected 
last  night  from  12  finalists  repre 
senting  six  Southeastern  states. 

The  winners  were: 

Aartonio  Marion  Gotto  Jr.,  21, 
Nashville,  Tenn.,  a  senior  majox 
ing  in  chemistry  at  Vanderbilt 
University;  Erich  Gruen,  21,  Ar- 
lington, Va.,  seniw  in  ancient  hi> 
tory  at  Columbia  University;  Don 
xVlan  Smith,  20,  Cleveland,  Tenp  . 
senior  in  history  at  Vanderbilt; 
and  George  B.  Thomas,  21,  Nor- 
folk, Va.,  senior  in  philosophy  at 
the  University  of  Virginia. 

The  four  were  picked  from   12 
finalists,   two   each   from   Tennes- 
see. Virginia,  Georgia,  North  Ca.-- 
olina,  South  Carolina  and  Florida. 
They  will  have  two  years  at   Ox- 
ford  University  in  England  com 
cencing  in  October,  1957,  plus  un  I 
opportunity  to  earn  a  third  year's ' 
scholarsliip.  j 

UNC  student  Luther  Hodges  Jr., 
a   senior   majoring  in   econoouci',  i 
■was  one  of  the  two  finalists  from 
Korth  Carolina. 

The  Southeastern  winner*  were : 
among    32    to    be    selected    from 
throughout  the  United  States. 


have  a  congregation  of  young  peo- 
ple excessive  noise  is  bound  to  re- 
sult." 

I  Phillips  Russell,  local  newspap- 
erman,  said  he  opposed  the  move 
'  on  the  grounds  that  there  is  plenty 
of  other  space  in  which  to  con- 
struct a  fraternity  court.  His 
home,  he  said,  would  practically 
I  be  hemmed  in  by  the  fraternities. 

"From  what  I  hear  and  see,  the 
behavior  of  some  fraternities 
leaves  much  to  be  desiredi"  Rus- 
I  sell  said,  citing  the  disturbance 
between'  fraternity  men  and  the 
police  last  spring  as  an  example. 

"I'd  rather  be  without  them," 
he  added. 

Russell  also  pointed  out  the  res- 
idents should  have  been  asked 
what  their  feeling  would  be  on 
the  matter.  This  should  have  been 
done  before  plans  went  as  far  as 
they  have,  he  said. 

Dr.  John  V.  Allcott.  professor  of 
art  in  the  University,  felt  he 
should  find  out  more  about  the 
proposed  plan  before  saying  any- 
thing. He  wants  to  know  the 
plans  of  the  University  and  the 
arrangements  that  have  been 
made.  "We  are  concerned,  just 
as  any  family  is,  about  who  our 
next  door  neighbors  are."  he 
said. 

Dr.  Allcott  said  the  proposed 
fraternity  court  would  be  right 
in  the  Chase  Ave.  residents'  back 
yard,  but  that  rational,  sober 
judgement  could  be  made  only 
after  hearings  with  the  Building 
and  Grounds  Committee. 

The  committee  last  week  grant- 
ed a  hearing,  to  be  held  probably 
around  the  first  of  the  year,  to 
the  residents  fighting   the  move. 


Mardi  Gras,  Germans, 
Will  Be  Held  Jointly 


The  Carolina  Mardi  Gras's  pro- 
posed plans  for  having  the  Mardi 
Gras  in  conjunction  with  Winter 
Germans  was  officially  accepted 
by  the  majority  of  the  13  German 
Club  fraternities,  it  was  announced 
yesterday. 

The  social  weekend '  called  the 
Carolina  Mardi  Gras  will  start 
Friday  night.  Feb.  15  at  8  p.m. 
in  .Merriorial  Hall  with  a  concert 
by  the  Mitcheljl-Ruff  Duo,  aftd 
festivities  will  continue  with  the 
Germans  concert  Saturday  after- 
noon in  Memorial  Hall  with  Louis 
Armstrong   and   company. 

Saturday  night  will  climax  the 
weekend  with  a  forma!  ball  deco- 
rated with  the  New  Orlean's  theme 
in   the  gym. 

Bids  for  both  concert  and  dance 
for  German  Club  members  will  be 
$4.00,  tickets  for  the  dance  open 
to  all  Carolina  students  will  be 
$2.00  featuring  Armstrong's  band. 
The  Mitchell-Ruff  Duo  will  be 
free  to  all. 

The  Carolina  Mardi  Gras,  Feb. 
1.5-16.  1957.  will  be  co-sponsored 
by  the  German  Club  and  Graham 
Memorial  Graham  Memorial  cele- 
Anniversary. 

National  publicity  is  being 
sought  for  this  weekend  of  social 
festivities    and    it    is    hoped    that 


the  spirit  on  campus  will  make 
this  one  of  Carolina's  greatest  so- 
cials, according  to  Mardi  Gras  of- 
ficials. 

Publicity  will  be  out  after 
Christmas  and  students  will  be 
asked  to  meet  with  GM  officials 
to  plan  the  ball. 


cflnpus 

W  SEEN  I 


Elderly  gentleman  standing 
on  corner  oiit.ide  of  Playmak- 
er's  Theater  practicing  golf 
siving  tvith  an  imaginary  chib. 


Supreme  Court 
To  Consider 
Dacision  Mon. 

WASHINGTON— {AJ>)— The  Su- 
prehie  Court  will  have  another  op- 
portunity tomorrow  to  act  on  two 
requests  that  it  reconsider  its  Nov. 
43  decision  holding  city  and  state 
bus  segregation  laws  unconstitu- 
tional. 

The  court  took  no  action  on  the 
requests  at  its  opinion  day  ses- 
sion last  Monday.  There  was  no 
indication  whether  it  would  do 
so  when  it  meets  again  tomorrow 
to  hand  down  decisions  and  or- 
ders. 

If  the  high  tribunal  does  not 
act  tomorrow,  the  matter  will  be 
;  deferred  until  after  the  court  re- 
;  turns  on  Jan.  14  from  the  Christ- 
,  mas-New  Year's  recess. 
j  Requests  for  reconsideration 
I  have  been  filed  by  the  city  of 
I  Montgomery'  and  the  state  of  .\la- 
!  bama. 

I      Pending  action  on  these  requests 
the   Supreme  Court's   official   not- 
I  ification  of  its  decision  will  not  be 
I  sent    to   the     special      three-judge 
U.   S.    District  Court   in   Montgom- 
ery which  first  declared  unconsti- 
I  tutional  the  state  and  city  laws  re- 
quiring bus  segregation. 


N.C.  State  College  Officials 
To  Stand  Behind  Coaches 

Bostian  Again  States 
School  Is   Not   Guilty 


By  WALLY  KURALT 

State  (lollcmc  officials,  after  a  .six  hour  iiieetin,!:^  yesier- 
dav,  announced  they  woidd  stand  behind  their  coaches  in 
the  jatkie  Morcland  case  'no  matter  ufiat  Clonnnissioner 
Weaver  does."  , 

"As  far  as  we're  concerned,  they  (\'ic  Biihas  and  Willis 
(«asey)  are  in  perfe(  tly  <v<x)d  standing,"  .\.  C.  State  Chancellor 
Carey  H.  Bostian  .said,  folloivino  yesterday's  closed  session. 
-— ♦  Atlantic  Coast  Coference  Com- 
missioner Jim  Weaver  met  with 
Bostian,  State's  Athletic  Coun- 
cil. Consolidated  University  Pres- 
ident William  Friday  and  Vice 
President  William  Carmichael,  and 
others  concerning  the  $80  given 
6-8  Jaokie  Moreland  for  transporta- 
tion to  State,  and  the  five  year 
scholarship  also  given  the  Minden, 
La.,    basketball   .sensation. 


CHANCELLOR   CAREY   H.   BOSTIAN 

.  .  .  (leniea  ACC  accusations 


Pi  Phi   Pledges   Are    Introduced 
At  Gay  Yule  Party  Friday  Night 


Chances  Offered  For 
Travel,  Study  Abroad 

France,  Italy 
On  Itinerary 
Ol  Art  Tour 


Duke  Singers 
In  Musicale 
Tonight  At  8 

Les  Petites  Musicales  presents 
a  program  of  Christmas  music 
featuring  the  Duke  University 
Madrigal  Singers  tonight  in  Gra- 
ham Memorial's  main  lounge  at  8. 

Sponsored  by  the  Duke  Dept. 
Of  Aesthetics,  Art  and  Music,  the 
group  is  directed  by  Mrs.  Eugenia 
Saville,  assistant  professor  in  the 
Music  Dept. 

The  group  consists  of  21  under- 
graduate and  graduate  men  and 
women  whose  mutual  interest  is 
in  the  study  and  {>erformance  of 
unusual  music  "for  small  vocal  en- 
semble, such  as  madrigals,  chan- 
sons, nrotets,  and  allied  types  from 
the  Renaissance  to   the  present. 

Members  cooperate  with  the 
director  in  research,  program 
planning,  duplicating  of  music, 
publicity  and  staging.  Numerous 
concerts  are  planned  each  year, 
both  on  and  off  the  Duke  campus, 
as  well  as  radio  and  television 
performances. 

The  madrigal,  in  which  the 
group  specializes,  is  a  song  for 
thr?e  or  more  parte  and  is  par- 
ticularly suited  for  Christmas 
music. 

The  Duke  singers  will  include 
on  their  prograiii  tonight:  Christ- 
mas songs  for  three-part  male 
chorus;  sixteenth-cetttUry  choruses 
in  French,  German  and  Latin  by 
composers  Guillaume  Costeley, 
Michael  Praetorius,  Giovanni  Ma- 
ria Nanin;  eighteenth-century  har- 
monized tunes  by  American  com- 
posers Supply  Belcher  and  Will- 
iam Billings;  Swedish  and  Span-  ■ 
ish  carols;  and  modem  English  ' 
compositions  by  John  Ireland  and 
Arthur  Benjamin.  Soloists  Frances 
Strickland,  soprano,  and  Don 
Webster,  baritone,  will  be  featur- ' 
ed  in  the  works  of  the  latter  com- 
posers. I 

An  unusual  set  of  Christmas  ! 
pieces  by  Elizabethan  composer 
William  Byrd  is  included  in  this 
program,  in  whidi  a  section  for 
solo  or  duet  accompanied  by 
stringed  instruments  ig  completed 
by  an  a  cappella  choral  refrain. 

No  admission  is  charged  for  the 
CiVIAB-sponsored  program. 


By   MARY    ALYS   VOORHEES 

Twirhng  skirts,  long  dangling 
eaiTings  and  music  in  a  Yuletid: 
mood  set  the  tempo  Friday  nigh; 
in  the   Carolina   Inn    Ballrt.om   for 


corted   them   over  to   one   side 
the    room   where    each    pledge   re- 
ceived   a    wine   carnation    —   Iho 
scrorily    flower   —  and    a    Pi    Phi 
I  bracelet  of  arrows  —  tlie  symbol 


the  annual  Pi  Phi   Pledge   Dance. 'of  the  scrority. 


Dancing  in  a  winter  wonderland 
<3i  snow-covered  pine,  the  jouplos 
whirled  about  the  floor  to  the  mu- 
sic of  Bill  Langley  and  his  Star 
Gazers  and  the  songs  of  Vocalis' 
Barbara   Prago. 

In  one  corner  of  the  ballroom 
was  a  iiugh  snow-covered  Christ- 
mas tree  illuminated  with  bhie 
lights.  Elsewhere  about  the  rooi.n 
fere  arrangements  of  snowy  pine 
and  silver  pine  cones,  with  large 
white  snowflakes  suspended 
from  each  of  the  four  chandeliers 

After  intermission,  the  1956  Pi 
Phi    Pledge   Class    was    presented. 

To  the  the  tunes  of  favorite  Yule 
carols,  the  pledges  —  all  dresseJ 

in   billowing  white   gowns   —   de  !  Sandy  Sanders,  Censor  Sarah  Jane  , 
scended  the  stairs  as  their  naniej  '■  Shaw    with    Harry    Braxton    came  ! 


First  to  be  introduced  wj>: 
Pledge  Class  President  Arnold  Gar- 
vin with  Chuck  Cu.shrftan.  Otht'r 
officers  and  their  dttes,  Vice  Presi- 
dent Ki<ty  Corr  with  John  Crav/- 
ford.  Secretary  Doe  Doe  Fenwick 
with  Kon  McC  ill,  Treasurer  Rob- 
erta Ha-ting.s  with  Tony  Horntha! 
were  presented  next. 

Scholarship  Chairman  Kit  White- 
Iiurst  with  Andy  Wood,  Socia' 
Chairman  Mollie  Spruill  with  Bill 
Pender,  Projects  Chairman  Pat 
Wilson  with  Coleman  Barks,  Activ 
ities  Chairman  Cindy  Segraves 
with  Frak  Malone,  Historian  Nancy 
Llewellyn  with  Howard  WiKian's, 
Song    Chairman    Beltie    Kell 


of  I  took  their  places  on  the  dajice 
lloor.  lormmg  a  white  cloud  oi 
loveliness.  The  actives,  lined  up 
along  one  side  of  the  room,  then 
sing  several  Pi  Phi  songs,  aftvr 
which  a  dance  was  held  in  honor 
of  the  pledges  and  their  dates. 

Decorating  the  refreshment  l;:- 
ble,  from  which  fruit  punch  srtid 
Christmas  cookies  were  served 
after  the  dance,  was  a  five-brancii- 
.silver  candelabrum  holding  ret! 
tapers  ind  other  Yulclide  decor. 

As  a  linale  to  the  weekend,  li 
Phis  and  their  dates  were  over  in 
Durham  last  night  at  the  SadcilL 
Club  fo*-  a  steak  supper,  conclud 
ing  the  evening  with  dancin^i. 

Unique   ideas  often   mean   fun. 

And  probably  all  the  Chi  Pais 
and  their  dales  yesterday  wiil 
agree. 

In  the  Christmas  mood,  the  fei- 
with  i  lows  decided  on  a  Yule  party.  Iron' 
which  another  idea  grew. 

As  a  result,  they  and  their  dal 


Summer  Study 
Available  In 
Great  Britain 

British  universities  will  offer 
six-week  cour.sos  to  .American  stu- 
dents this  summer,  according  to 
an  announcement  made  today  by 
Kenneth  Holland,  president  of 
the  Institute  ol  International  Edu- 
catirn.  | 

The  various  courses  open  to 
Americans  will  be  taught  at  Ox- 
ford, at  Stratford-on-.A.von  and  at 
the  capit:il  cities  of  London  and 
Edinburgh.  | 

Although  limited  in  number, 
scholarships  will  be  available  to 
American  students  Two  lull  schol- 
arships are  reserved  tor  graduate 
students.  Application  forms  for 
award  and  admission  may  be  se- 
cured from  the  Institute.  1  E.  67th 
St..  New  York  or  from  its  region- 
al offices  in  Chicago,  Denver, 
Housto.  San  Franci.sco  and  Wash- 
ington. 

Scholarship  applications  must 
(See  SUMMER.  Page  3)  i 


Students  interested  may  take  a 
EuH'pean  .Art  Tour  through  France 
and  Italy  next  July  19  through 
Sept.  5,  for  less  than  SI. 000,  ac 
cording  to  Dr.  Clemens  Sommer 
of  the  University  Art  Dept. 

S967  covers  expenses  for  trans- 
portation, b(  Ih  oceanic  and  land, 
hoKll.  m?als  sight.ieeing,  tmns- 
fers  and  gratutities.  Dr.  Sommers 
announced. 

Travel  arrangements  have  been 
made  by  Transmarine  Tours.  Inc., 
an  organizatim  with  membership 
in  tho  American  Society  of  Travel 
Agents. 

"Travel  and  sightseeing  in  Par- 
is and  the  art  cities  of  Italy  fol- 
lowed by  10  days  at  Positano  on 
the  Mediterranean  coast  near  Na- 
ples and  Capri,"  are  included  in 
th?  trip's  itinerary.  Dr.  Sommers 
announced. 

Interested  students  may  apply 
to  Dr.  Sommers  at  Person  Hall. 


VVUNC-TV  ASSISTS 


9^'.- 


were    announced     by     Master    of 
Ceremonies  Ray  Jefferies. 

At  the  bottom  of  the  steps  th  ::y 
were  met  by  their  dates,  who  es 


out  nexL,  followed  by  the  remaind 
er  of  the  class. 

When  each  pledge  and  her  dai<. 
had    he.'n    prci?,ente(l,    the    pledi;i.i 


es  spent  the  afternoon  enjoying  a 
"clean  up  party,  "  cleaning  the 
lodge  to  the  music  of  a  Dixiel  ui.i 
(See   HAPPENINGS.  Page  3) 


Educational  TV  Rising 
*  In  NC  Public  Schools 


History  Frat 
Initiates  27 

Phi  Alpha  Theta,  national  hon- 
orary history  fraternity,  initiated 
27  new  members  in  the  local  chap- 
ter Tuesday. 

The  fraternity,  one  which  recog- 
nizes "conspicuous  attainments 
and  scholarship  in  the  field  of 
history,"  has  chapters  in  150  col- 
leges and  universities  throughout 
the  nation,  and  was  established  at 
Carolina  in   1952. 

Undergraduate  requirements  fbi 
the  fraternity  are  that  the  mem- 
ber must  have  a  B  plus  average 
on  all  history  courses,  and  an 
average  of  B  on  two-thirds  of  all 
of    his    remaining    courses. 

Undergraduates    initiated    Tue- 
day  included  John  Patrick  Adarns. 
Asheboro;    Josephine    Taylor    Al- 
bert,   Baltimore;      Quincy     Adams 
Ayscus.     Monroe;     Girard     Edgar 
Boudreau,      N.    Augusta,      S.    C; 
Charles  Harwood  Bowman,  South- 
ern Pines;   Larie  Kent  Brandner. 
1  Arlington,  Va.;  Brett  Taylor  Sum- 
■  mey,   W.   Jefferson;      William      E. 
Brigman,  New  Bern;  Cloudius  Le- 
Roy  Carlton,   Greeosboro;   Max   F. 
Chandler,      Kannapolis:      Dick.son 
Brown   Dunlap,    Chapel    Hill;    and ; 
Laslie  Morgan  Hale,  Fayetteville.    j 
Other    undergraduates    initiated ' 
were     Marian     Elizabeth     Hobeck.  | 
Virginia  Beach,  Va.;  Richard  Wood- 1 
ard     Hudson,    Vandermere;    John 
Hosea    Kerr.    Warrenton;    Thomas 
Willis    Lambeth,    Winston  -  Salem; 
Robert    Edward   Lavietes,    Greens- 
boro; James  E.  Martin.  Charlrtte; 
.A'bert    Ray    Newsome,    Winston- ' 
Salrni;  Malcolm  Overstreet  Parlin. 
Enfield;    Bobby   Pratt    Rose.    Ken- 
Iv:  Joanne  Saunders,  Norfolk,  Va.; 
John     Daniel     Vann,     Greenville, 
S.C;  and  John  Hilliard  Zollicoffer. 
Henderson. 

Faculty  members  initiated  in- 
cluded Dean  Cecil  Johnson,'  .Miss 
Mary  Lou  Lucey,  and  Dr.  George 
Taylcr.   all  of  Chapel  Hill. 


Local  High  Schoolers  View  TV  In  Class 


Pictured  above  arr  a  group  of  Chapel  Hill  Hlg'i  School  students  watching  television  in  the  class- 
•n  educational  practice  which  is  rising  in  the  state's  public  schools,  according  to  a  recent 
survey  by  the  North  Carolina  Committee  on  the  Public  Schools  and  Educational  Television.  The  com- 
mitt**  is  headed  by  Or.  D.  G.  Tarbet  of  the  UNC  School  of  Education. 


Only  eight  per  cent  of  the  pub- 
lic schools  in  .North  Carolina  now 
have  television  sets,  a  recent  sur- 
vey indicates. 

However,  the  survey,  made  by 
the  North  Carolina  Committee  on 
the  Public  Schools  and  Educa- 
t  onal  Television,  shows  that  14 
per  cent  more  will  get  sets  next 
year. 

The  North  Carolina  Committee, 
headed  by  Dr.  D.inald  G.  Tarbet. 
associate  professor  of  education 
at  U\T,  is  part  of  the  Southern 
St:tes  Work   Conference. 

According  to  a  rep'^rt  released 
this  week  by  Dr.  Tarbet  62  of  the 
717  public  schools  which  respond- 
ed had  TV  sf»ts  and  103  more  plan- 
m(\  to  -^htain  sets  next  year. 

Included  in  the  purpo.ses  of  the 
survey  were: 

1.  To  encourage  the  use  of 
TV    for  education. 

2  To  discover  better  techniques 
for  the  use  of  TV  in  education. 

3.  To  determine  the  most  ef- 
fective methods  and  practices  for 
th"  use  of  TV  in  public  school 
education. 

Most  of  the  principals  contact- 
ed in  the  survey,  according  to  the 
report,  said  t'hev  are  favorable  to 
the  use  of  TV  in  the  classroom. 


sponded  lo  the  questionnaire  said 
the  most  valuable  courses  which 
could  be  offered  would  include 
social  studies,  science,  and  other 
subjects  such  as  language  arts, 
dramatics,  travel,  music,  and  phys- 
ical  education. 

The  report  concluded:  'Through 
the  combined  efforts  of  WUNC- 
TV  (the  educational  TV  station 
at  UNC)  and  the  schools  of  Edu- 
cation of  the  Consolidated  Uni- 
versity, programs  ranging  from 
.science  to  the  arts  are  being 
brought  to  the  students  of  North 
Carolina  schools  through  the 
medi"m  of  television. 

"These  pr-^grams  are  planned 
and  exeeutpd  with  the  main  ob- 
ipetiv?  h?i^g  actual  viewing  in 
th"  classrooms  of  the  sta+e.  In 
this  ^-nv  it  will  be  nf^cs'b'e  for 
students  to  gain  valuab'e  knowl- 
edrtn  from   mnn\    specialists." 

The  so^'pv  h*»f«  net  been  com- 
nleted  and  r»r.  Tf»rhr>t's  ''en'><*t  was 
a   condensed   version   of   a   longer 

OP". 

IT\C  orof'^oc-rs  on  tSo  com- 
m'tpe.  In  nddltlon  to  Tarbet.  in- 
c^'ide  Dr  Richard  T,  Beard,  asso- 
rinfo  nrofessor  of  Education:  and 
V^r]  Wvnn.  chfl'rm^n  nf  the  Radio. 
Television    and    Motion    Pictures 


Carol  Program 
Scheduled 

The  Wesley  Choir  will  present 
an  evening  concert  of  Christmas 
music  in  the  sanctuary  of  the 
University  Methodist  Church  at 
7  p.m.  today. 

The  choir,  under  the  direction 
of  Miss  Clara  Smith,  will  present 
a  program  of  traditional  English 
carols  and  carols  from  other 
countries.  Edgar  Higgins.  orgaiiist 
for  the  choir,  will  play  Prelude 
and  Fugue  in  G  Major,  Bach; 
Chaconne  in  C  Major,  Pachabel; 
and  Now  Thank  We  All  Our  God. 
Karg-Elert.    • 


The   school   officials     who     re- 1  Dept. 


Bus  Strike  Not  To  Halt 
Transportation  Here 

Additional  bus  services  have 
been  acquired  for  a  temporary 
basis  while  the  Carolina  Trail- 
ways  are  still  on  strike.  Six  buses 
will  begin  operating  tomorrow,  ac- 
cording to  H.  C.  Pearce,  local  bus 
station   agent. 

Those  buses  to  be  added  in  ad- 
dition to  those  already  operating 
include  two  buses  to  Charlotte  via 
Greensboro,  two  buses  to  Ilc«cky 
Mount  and  WiHiamston  and  two 
buses  to  Wilson.  Greenville  and 
Washington.   N.   C. 

At  present  there  are  two  non- 
stop buses  going  directly  to  Wash- 
ington. D.  C,  Baltimore  and  New- 
York  City.  One  of  these  through 
buses  leaves  Chapel  Hill  at  12:07 
p.m.  and  the  other  leaves  here  at 
5:30  p.m.,  arriving  in  New  York 
City  at  8  a.m.  the  following  morn- 
ing. 


The  seven  j'ear  scholarship  re- 
putedly given  Moreland's  girl 
friend  and  other  allegations  made 
by  the  NC.\A  were  not  discussed 
at  the  meeting,  according  to  Bos- 
tian. "The  Athletic  Council  did 
not  discuss  the  status  of  the 
coaches.'"  said  Bostian.  "though 
there  were  widespread  expressions 
of    confidence    in    them."' 

There   was   speculation   prior  to 

I  the  meeting  that   it   might   result 

in    a    showdown    over    the    future 

status    of    Bubas    and    Casey    and 

j  possibly    others    on    the    college's 

I  athletic   staff. 

1      The    meeting    resulted    in    reaf- 
firmation   of   confidence     in     the 
j  staff    by    Bostian.    and    a    second 
j  request  that   the   ACC   conduct   a 
/  fu/J    investigation. 
.      "It  is  our  conviction   that  these 
I  aHegaticns     can     be    satisfactorily 
explained. ••  said   Bostian.   "We  re- 
quest   that    Administration    Offic- 
ials of  State  College  be  permitted 
to    appear     before     the     Faculty 
Ch:'irnian  to  answer  the  charges." 

The  S80  given  Moreland  was 
not  used  by  Moreland.  according 
to  Bostian.  Within  48  hours  the 
money  was  returned.  Bostian  said, 
and  .Moreland  had  decided  to  en- 
roll at  Centennary  College. 

Weaver  said  Saturday: 

•'I  have  received  the  telegram 
from  Chancellor  Bostian  of  North 
Carolina  State  College  which  re- 
quests a  hearing  of  the  Moreland 
case  bcfrre  the  faculty  chairman 
of  the  .\tlantic  Coast  Conference, 
and  the  contents  of  this  telegram 
have  been  transmitted  to  Dean  Ep- 
pley.  president  of  the  conference, 
with  my  recommendation  that  a 
hearing  be  held  in  Greensboro 
n:xt    Friday    in    my   office. 

'•I  am  alsp  transmitting  by  tele- 
gram to  Chancellor  Bostian  the 
action  that  this  office  has  taken 
on  the  matter.  I  am  prohibited  by 
'  conference  .  regulations  from  di- 
vulging the  contents  of  this  tele- 
gram but  Chancellor  Bostian  is  at 
liberty  to  make  any  announce- 
ments that  he  wishes." 

Chancellor  Bostian  said  he  had 
not  received  the  wire  late  la»t 
night  and  was  retiring  for  the 
night  after  instructing  Western 
Union  to  hold  up  delivery  of  any 
messages   until   this   morning. 

He  said  he  would  make  public 
the  contents  of  Weaver's  tele- 
gram '"after  first  notifying  any- 
one   who    might    be    concerned." 

Bubas  and  Casey  ha^e  denied 
the  allegations  against  them.  Bas- 
ketball Coach  Everett  Case  has 
emphatically  backed  them.  As 
Casey  said.  "The  rules  are  perfect- 
ly clear  that  it  is  legal  for  an 
alumnus  or  friend  of  the  college 
to  pay  transportation  costs  of  a 
prospective  athlete  to  visit  the- 
campus.'" 

Bubas  said  it  wa.s  fair  to  as- 
sume that  Moreland  might  qualify 
for  a  fifth,  year  of  scholarship  aid 
but  that  no  promise  had  been 
made  that  he  would. 

Bubcs  .stated  that  athletes  in 
several  ACC  schools  have  received 
an  additional  scholarship  year  to 
complete  work  on  their  degrees 
after  their  athletic  eligibility  had 
been  exhausted. 

"We  stand  ready  and  waiting  to 
cooperate  in  (an  ACC>  investiga- 
tion." said  Bostian  in  his  telegram 
to  Weaver. 


i»Aet  rwo 


REVIEW: 

CAMPUS 

STATE 
WORLD 


On   Campus;  Frafs 
Take  Action  On  Parking 

Ihc  uui'jority  ol  IXC.  dcpaitinent  heads  approxed  tl)c 
recently  revised  class  cut  system,  but  also  included  a  tVw 
inc»difications.  According  to  a  Daily  Tar  Heel  survey,  lo 
ol  i<)  department  representatives  questioned  on  the  subjett 
Avere  hound  to  favor  the  revision. 

Hut  |uniors  and  Seniors  arc  warned  to  keep  that  aver- 
age up  if  rliev  uant  to  make  full  use  of  the  revised  cut  sys- 
tem. All  students  taking  upper  toilette  courses  must  main- 
tain a  "(.""  average  this  semester  if  they  are  to  be  allowed 
more  tlian  three  un-excused  cuts  per  class  during  the -spring 
semester. 

Freslnnen  and  S«*phoniores  arc  still  subject  to  the  old 

three-<:ut  rule. 

#  *  * 

riic  Mibjeci  of  parking  problems  still  remains  a  domi- 
nant one  in  <.  ampus  conversatioji.  But  a  few  groups  are 
providing  a^  little  action  to  mix  wiih  the  talk. 

At  least  three  fraternities  affected  by  the  Colinnbia  St. 
parkiuii  rcstrii  ticm  have  taken  some  action  to  alleviate  their 
jtarking  pro}>lems. 

A  jo-tar  parking  lot  has  been  constructed  by  Delia 
Kappa  Kpsilon  fraternity  directly  behind  its  house.  .\  vacant 
lor  beside  the  licta  Iheta  Pi  house  has  been  modified  for 
additional  parking  for  the  fraternity's  meml)ers.  And  Sigma 
Nu  l!>>  tik.n  planning  action"  ttmccniing  the  parking 
situation. 


ten  wa.kcd  oil  with  first  pvi/e 
for  her  \<)lM  rendition  of  a 
popular  mcdkv.  I  bike  Simp- 
son, folk  singer,  a  ui  liruno's 
combo  copped  second  and 
third  prizes.  If  the  r-<:'^onse 
and  turn-out  for  '""  show  arc 
any  indicati  '.  "  I'.eat  show  ot- 
ficials  feel  loiiiident  that  the 
,  osr.u"'  Aall  become  an  an- 
i.    A  affair. 

C   a  r  o  !'  n  r-    (ampus    talent 
tame  to  tlie  foie     last     week 
wlien     joint     sponsors     YM-   -^ 
\"\\'X'  \  and  (iraham  Memor-   ^ 
ill  Activities  Hoard  presented    >Vl 
tlie     Carfilina     Ca\alcade     of 
r:i'e.')i    rinn>dav   niglit. 

Mivs  XFarv     Pee  Wee"  Bat- 


ENTERTAINMENT 

the  Y  had  a  talent  shmv 


Kxperienced  local  actors  opened  with  another  Caro- 
lina Plavmakeis  production  for  a  five-day  run  starting  Fri- 
day night. 

Kugene  OXeills  drama  oi  a  New  England  family. 
Desire  I'nder  the  Elms,"  will  play  through  Tuesday 
night.  Foster  Fitz-Siruons.  [o  Jurgensen,  and  A]  (.ordon 
are  featured  in  tlic  starring  roles. 

*  *  * 

Fhis  last  full  week  before  the  holidays  held  a  lot  for 
the  L'NC  campus.  In  addition  to  pre-vacation  quizzes,  stu- 
dents managed  to  get  in  some  Christmas  shopping,  ride  ne- 
gotiatitm.  and  even  some  holiday  parties.  A  good  week  to 
close  out  the  ior>()  si:a.s<m. 


The  oil'icial  student  publication  of  tlie  Publications  Board  of  tJio 
tni\er,-ity  of  North  Carolina,  where  it  is  pubhstied  daily  except  Mon- 
day and  examination  and  vacation  periods  and  summer  terms.  Ejitered 

< 
as  second  class  matter  in  the  post  office  at  Chapel  Hill,  N.  C,  under 

the  act  of  March  8,  1870.  Subscription  rates;  Mailed,  $4  a  year.  S2.50 
per  semester;  delivered,  $6  a  year,  $3.50  a  semester. 


Editor 


^Sanagiug  Editor 


>.ews  Eiditor 


FRED   POVVLEDGE 


CHARUE  SLO.VN 


NANCY  HILL 


Business  .Manager 
Ni^t   Editor 


BILL  BOB  PEEL 
Clarke  Joncs 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL  WEEK  IN  REVIEW 

Staff  Writers         .      Gary  Nichols,  Frank  Crowther,  Charlie  Sloan 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEIL 


SUNDAY,  DECEMBER  16,  1956 


Tar  Heels  Report  Or)  Revolt  Ir)  Hungary 


GOETTINGEN  LETTER: 


^ 


Russians  Deported  Hungarians, 
Say  Rebel  Refugee  In  Germany 


Proofreader 


Raj   Lijoker 


D.an  Southerland 

I  saw  the  four  as  I  was  walk- 
ing along  Weender  Stra.sso  after 
Professor  Kayser's  lecture  on 
November  23rd.  At  first  1 
thought  they  might  be  Italians 
uith  their  black  hair  and  dark 
faces.  They  were  all  wearing  be- 
rets and  shabby  overcoats,  laugli- 
ing  and  chattering  with  one  an- 
cther. 

As  I  walked  by,  otne  tapped  me 
oa  iJie  .snoulder  and  said  "Bank, 
bank," 

They  followed  me  to  the  Nord- 
deutsche  Bank  of  Goettingen.  I 
asked  tliem  if  they  were  '"Un- 
garn."  With  what  little  German 
they  knjw  they  told  me  they 
were  from  Budapest.  They  spoke 
of  "Russki,  grenades  and  Pan- 
zer." 

Then  they  showed  me  the  Hun- 
garian "Forint"  which  they  were 
going  to  change  into  German 
Marks  and  went  smiling  into  the 
hank.  I  learned  later  that  they 
would  have  received  nothing  for 
their  money. 

These  were  the  first  refugees 
I  saw  in  Goettingen.  Since  that 
time  many  more  have  come 
through  Goettingen  from  the  ref- 
ugee reception  camp  located  on- 
ly ten  miles  away  on  the  East 
Zone   border. 

One  of  the  ten  refugees  whi 
have  enrolled  as  students  at 
Goettingen  University.  Richard 
Bartha.  is  now  living  in  our  in- 
ternational student  home,  the 
Nansen  Haus. 

One  evening  when  we  wtre 
visiting  a  student  fraternity. 
Richard  talked  of  some  of  hi-; 
experiences  during  the  fighting 
in  Budapest. 

He  told  of  using  a  .sub-machine 
gun  in  the  street  fighting  in 
which  25.000  people  lost  their 
lives.  Bottles  filled  with  gaso- 
line were  an  effective  weapon 
against  huae  Russian  tanks.  But 
he  had  to  be  careful  not  to  g^'t 
his  hand  blown  off  as  he  ignited 
the  rag  in  the  neck  of  the  bottle 
and  h-.irled  it.  hoping  that  the 
fire  would  get  to  the  tank's  mot- 
or. 

He  and  other  students  held  out 
for  two  weeks  in  some  universi- 
ty buildings.  i\t  night,  because 
they  knew  the  back  streets  of 
Budapest  better  than  the  Russ- 
ians, they  could  sneak  out  and 
get  food  and  supplies. 

He  laughed  as  he  told  the  hu- 
morous side  .of  his  story.  They 
■got  some  plates  from  a  tavern 
and  lined  them  up  in  the  strci't; 
then  they  threw  sand  over  the 
plates.  Soviet  tank  drives  caut- 
iously withdrew  in  order  not 
to  run  over  what  they  thought 
were  mines  in  the  street.  An- 
other time,  they  threw  up  a  reck 
barricade  with  an  old  stove  pipe 
sticking  out  like  the  barrel  of 
a  gun.  The  Ru.ssians  pumped 
shells  at  it  for  half  an  hour,  al- 
thougih  not  one  rebel  was  in 
the  vicinity. 

The  fraternity  boys  listened 
intently. 

After  the  fighting  had  died 
out,  and  Russian  police  began 
deporting  young  revolutionists  in 
railroad  ears,  Richard  .said  good- 
bye to  his  mother  and  left  Buda- 
pe.st.    Since    then   he    has    heard 


State  Economic 
Outlook  Good 

North  Carolina  is  another  week 
older  and  deeper  in  debt.  W.  E. 
Easterling,  executive  secretary  of 
the  Local  Government  Commi.ss- 
ion  released  figures  which  show 
that  as  of  last  June  30.  North 
Carolina's  counties,  cities,  town? 
and  special  districts  had  a  record 
total  indebtedness  of  $423,280,926. 
This  is  more  than  45  million 
above  the  debt  figure  on  Jume 
30.  1954. 

Easterling  pointed  out  that 
'•you  must  consider  that  the 
State's  resources  are  at  an  all- 
time  high."  He  described  the 
over-all  debt  picture  for  the  fis- 
cal year  as  being  "good. ■', 

*  *  :): 

The  Dukes  gathered  in  Durhani 
last  week  to  attend  the  centen- 
nial observance  of  the  univers- 
ity's founder,  James  B.   Duke. 

As  a  climax  to  the  program. 
Duke  Endowment  surprised  the 
university  with  gifts  totaling  S2.4 
millions.  Quite  a  Christmas  pres- 
ent IW  th?  P9Qkies, 


nothing  of  her.  Mail  and  tele- 
graph contact  with  Hungary 
was  cut  off. 

You  could  sense  the  sincere 
sympathy  the  Germans  had  as 
they  listened  to  Richard.  I  be- 
lieve, they  felt  it  much  more 
than  an  American  student  could, 
perhaps  because  Hungary  is  a 
matter  of  hours  away  and  the 
VS.\  js  on  the  other  side  of  the 
Atlantic,  and  perharh  because 
the  Germans  had  also  exper- 
ienced the  horror  of  war  in  their 
hjjmeland. 

This  is  not  to  say  that  most 
German  students  would  have 
founght  alongside  the  Hungar- 
ians if  given  the  chance.  Some 
would  have,  perhaps,  but  mxst 
of  them  would  see  no  reason  for 
it.  Would  it  really  do  any  good'' 
The  idealism  of  the  German  stu- 
dent of  20  years  ago  is  gone.  He 
is  now  sick  of  war.  pessimistic, 
and  looking  at  things  coldly, 
realistically. 

But  most  German  students 
would  like  to  have  been  able 
to  help  more  than  they  could. 
As  one  f'icnd  at  the  University 
in  Muenster  said  in  a  recent 
letter.  "During  the  tragical  oc- 
currences in  Hungary,  we  have 
had  the  terrible  feeling  of  want- 
ing to  do  something,  wanting  to 
help,  but   can  do   nothing." 

What  were  the  Goettingen  stu- 
dents able  to  do  besides  sit  and 
tensely  listen  to  radio  accounts 
of  the  slaughter? 

On  the  evening  of  November 
3.  there  was  a  mass  student  pro- 
test against  the  Russian  aggress- 
ion in  Hungary.  A  group  of  pro- 
fess.ws  grimly  lead  a  "Schweige 
Mar.sch.'  silent  precession,  of 
students  up  the  main  street.  The 
street  was  lined  .with  people. 
For  more  than  an  hour  thous- 
ands of  students  marvhed  silent- 
ly by  in  a  ccld  drizzly  rain. 
Along  the  streets  of  16th  century 
timbered  houses,  candles  blink- 
ed and  flags  hung  Irom  the  win- 
dows. The  crowd  gathered  at  Al- 
bani  Place  where  the  Rector  ©f 
the  University  and  the  president 
of  the  student  body  urged  stu- 
dents to  give  their  support  to 
Hungarian  students  and  spoke 
against  the  brutality  of  the  So- 
viet  government. 

Students  gave  their  support 
by  raising  money  and  giving 
ilo/thing.  .\fter*  classes  they 
dropped  money  in  collection 
boxes  marked,  "We  won't  forget 
you."  They  gave  ^hoes,  o\>.t- 
e.  ats  and  all  types  of  clothing  to 
refugees  coming  in  through  the 
camp  on  tlie  border. 

On  December  1,  the  Univers- 
ity held  a  dance  in  the  three 
rooms  of  a  student  mess  hall 
similar  to  Lenoir,  with  a  band 
in  each  room,  in  order  to  raise 
more  money  to  help.  The  Union 
of  Chri.stian  Democratic  Stu- 
dents at  Goettingen  (the  active 
followers  of  Adenauer's  Party 
at  the  University)  came  out 
strongly  against  the  dance  sayiing 
it  was  not  the  right  way  to  se- 
cure money.  Despite  much  pro- 
test, eight-hundred  people  at- 
tended and  made  it  a  successful 
money-raising   project. 

For  weeks,  ministers  preached 
on  Hungary  at  the  pulpit,  and 
profe.ssors  preached  in  the  let- 
lure  halLs. 

But  still  students  had  the . 
feeling  of  being  so  close  to  the 
.  "Eisene  Vorhang,"  the  iron  cur- 
tain, that  they  could  hear  the 
cries  of  dying  Hungarians,  but 
could  do  n;>thing. 

There  is,  among  a  very  few- 
students,  a  slight  resentment 
against  America,  because  "The 
Voice  of  America"  helped  stir 
up  the  Hungarians,  although 
America  knew  .she  couldn't  risk 
starting  World  War  III  by  sup- 
porting the  revolution.  Seme  say 
the  Hungarians  had  definitely 
expected  armed  help  from  the 
West. 

But  in  the  United  States  lies 
Germany'.s  only  hope.  The  stu- 
dents I  have  talked  with  are  dis- 
appointed with  the  English  gov- 
ernment and  have  an  increa.sed 
lack  of  respect  for  the  French 
g:^vernment  after  the  aggression 
in  Egypt. 

A  very  few  students  .see  a  dim 
future.  One  girl  historv  .student 
told  me  she  knew  that  Ru.ssia 
would  conquer  Europe  in  a  mat- 
ter of  weeks.  It  would  C3rae 
evetuallv  v.hetJier  in  t'-o  or  ton 
years.  She  wondered,  will  we  get 
the  full  support  of  the  U.  S. 

BbI  most  German  students  are 
counting  on  the  United  States. 
their  only  hope  and  protection. 


MOSCOW  IN  TROUBLE: 


USSR's  Treatment  Of  Hungary 
Is  Shattering  Communist  Myths 


Barry  Farber 


(.mmiraaan  holmes 

...  experience  In  student  politica 
'"'    '  — Norman  Kantor  Photo 

PERSONALITY  OF  THE  WEEK: 

SP  Leader  Jim  Holmes 
Interested  In  Politics 

Gary  Nichols 

James  Houghton  Holmes  is  Chairman  of  the  Student  Party  here 
at  Carolina.  He  is  a  Junior  from  Mount  Airy  and  has  been  involve! 
in  politics  since  he  was  a  freshman. 

He  attended  his  first  meeting  of  the  Student  Party  in  his  fresh 
man  year  and  has  been  active  ever  since.  He  has  also  been  in  the 
Student  Legislature  i<v  three  years.  Last  fall  he  acted  as  Parliamen- 
tarian in  this  group. 

Holmes  is  a  soft-spoken,  ambitious  politician.  When  questioned 
as  to  his  interests,  he  replied  that  his  main  interest  is  politics, 
but  he  also  is  pretty  much  of  a  music  lover,  preferring  Beethoven 
and  Tchaikowsky  to  most  composers.  He  likes  to  read — mainly  Hiv 
tory,  political  non-fiction,  and  philosophy,  '•.\bove  all,"  said  Holmes, 
"I  like  to  talk."  He  is  chairman  of  the  Carolina  Forum. 

Holmes  is  a  History  major.  He  intends  to  go  to  grad  school  when 
he  graduates  and  hopes  to  become  an  instructor,  and  later,  a  pro 
fessor.  His  biggest  goal,  however  is  to  get   into  politics. 

In  campus  politics  he  has  been  the  SP  floorlcader,  a  member 
of  the  Advisory  Board,  and.  right  now,  Chairman  of  the  SP. 

His  plans  for  the  SP  are  "to  continue  backing  Bob  Young.  Thc- 
things  he  has  dune  will  help  put   us  across  this  spring." 

"Above  all,'  Holmes  said,  "we're  not  j.tst  interested  in  winnirg 
an  election.  We're  interested  in  getting  something  done  in  studeu* 
governmeat."  1*.^.*^.».  -    '        :.       .,: 

-NATIONAL  &  INTERNATIONAL:  ^^ 


In    The    Greensboro    Daily 
News 

Communism  is  on  the  ropes. 

Its  myth  has  been  shattered, 
its  -power  is  waning,  its  future 
koks  bleak.  Basic  truths  have 
caught  up  with  it.  It  no  longer 
takes  a  wild-eyed  optimist  to 
spot  forces  in  moticm  on  both 
sides  of  the  Iron  Ciu-tain  that 
starkley  confirm  what  only  a 
f  e  w  anti  -  Communist  fanatics 
would  have  dared  claim  a  month 
ago. 

Whether  Communism  dies 
violently  or  by  slow  leprosy  de- 
pends on  the  Russian  leaders 
themselves  and  on  whatever 
global  policy  the  West  adopts 
from  now  on.  The  free  world  is 
in  position  to  win  with  or  with- 
out war.  The  Cold  War  cards  have 
all  been  reshuffled  by  herioc 
Hungarian  hands.  We  hold  most 
of  the  aces.  If  the  Eisenhower 
administration  plays  our  new 
hand  skillfully.  Soviet  Russia 
may  well  go  broke  on  its  own 
bluff. 

Hungary  has  spoken.  We  now 
know  for  sure  that  which  form- 
erly we  only  tried  to  believe — 
that  Communism  as  a  way  of 
life  is  a  bankrupt  fraud;  it  does- 
n't work,  nobody  likes  it;  it  must 
command  by  brute  force;  and, 
its  captives  are  ready  to  be 
crushed  barehanded  under  Rus- 
sian tanl  ;  to  prove  it. 
*         *      '  * 

Russias  bosses  are  desperate. 
They  have  reason  to  be.  For  every 
Hungarian  who  expectorated 
upon  the  trampled  corpse  of  a 
Communist  policeman,  how  many 
Poles.  Czechs,  Romanians,  and 
even  Russians  themselves  would 
relish  the  same  opportunity? 

A  militant,  unbending  Amer- 
ican policy  at  this  time  capitaliz- 
ing on  communism's  agony  could 
earn  this  nation  history's  ever- 
lasting thanks  for  engineering 
the  most  humane  clean-up  job 
cf  the  epoch.  America's  attitude 


up  to  now  has  been,  "Look.  Rus- 
sia. You've  taken  a  third  of  the 
world  and  mistreated  it.  Please 
don't  try  to  take  any  more." 

There  are  compelling  reasons 
for  us  to  change  this  immediately 
to  read,  ''America  is  morally  at 
war  vk^ith  Soviet  oppression  in 
Russia  and  every  other  Red-rul- 
ed country"  and  back  this  up 
forcefully  without  fliching  or 
f]uctu.ating.^ 

The  great  lesson  America  has 
left  unlearned  is  that  Russia  has 
so  much  more  to  fear  from  war 
than  we  do.  We  gingerly  dodge 
actions  like  helping  Hungary  or 
daring  Russia  to  send  one  volun- 
teer troop  to  Egypt  for  fear  of 
"provoking"  ihe  Russians.  We'd 
much  rather  be  provoked  our- 
selves. We  behave  like  a  tiger 
afraid  of  a  hyena.  That's  exactly 
the  proportion  of  our  military- 
advantage  bver  Russia. 

How  would  Russia  meet  an 
American  e.xhibition  of  moral  de- 
termination? General  Gruenther. 
retiring  commander  of  N.A.TO. 
has  described  how  the  West  can 
deliver  running  retaliatioi.  if  at- 
tacked. We  have  all  the  means 
to  annihilate  Russia  right  on  its 
borders.  Soviet  planes  would 
have  to  fly  across  the  top  of  the 
world  and  Canada  to  strike 
America.  The  air  edge  is  ours. 

Dissension  is  festering  among 
top  Kremlin  leaders.  Their  satel- 
lites are  waiting  for  a  chance 
to  run  amuck.  Hungary  already 
has.  The  Moscow  rulers  would 
have  a  difficult  time  selling  the 
Russian  people  on  another*  war 
vith  screaming  slogans,  unless 
the  war  is  purely  in  defense  of 
the  homeland.  Russians  are  sick 
of  war.  They  are  also  sick  of  slo- 
gans. In  spite  of  their  obedient 
silence  they  fear  the  power  and 
envy  the  promise  of  the  United 
States.  Russians  know  other  peo- 
ple have  cars,  turnpikes,  sports- 
wear, and  deep  freezers.  They 
are  beginning  to  wonder  out  loud 
why  they  don't  have  more  of  a 
chance  to  enjoy  life,  too. 


The  World  Had  A  Busy  Week 


Frank  Crowther 

The  week  has  been  one  of 
continued  conflagration  in  Hun- 
gary, conciliation  in  NATO,  con- 
demnation in  the  United  Nations, 
and  lastly,  but  po.ssibly  of  most 
.«;ignificace.  creation  in  Hoboken, 
New  Jersey. 

With  the  threat  of  a  wide  strike 
faring  them,  the  Kadar  regime 
started  the  week  in  Hungary  by 
cutting  off  all  communications 
again,  forbiding  the  worker's 
councils,  and  setting  into  effect 
martial  law.  It  also  called  for 
the  surrender  of  all  arms  and 
threatened  offenders  with  court 
action. 

By  Wednesday,  the  country^ 
was  in  the  grip  of  the  predicted 
strike  and  there  were  clashes 
between  the  idle  workers  and 
the  local  police  in  Budapest.  The 
effectiveness  of  the  strike  was 
acknowledged  by  the  Kadar  con- 
trolled    newspaper     which     ex- 

• 

Pogo 


claimed  that  it  had  "never  seen" 
anything  like  it  befoi"e.  By  the 
end  of  the /week,  the  Budapest 
workers  had  staged  a  new  sit- 
down  strike  and  had  were  re- 
portedly seeking  out  new  lead- 
ers for  th?ir  cause.  The  burst- 
ing bubbles  had  lost  none  ,>f  their 
spontaneity. 

In  Paris.  Secretary  of  State 
Dulles  buried  tlie  hatchet  among 
our  NATO  allies  by  calling  for 
U.  S.  aid  to  the  sagging  European 
unity  and  pledging  continued 
econom.v.  One  of  Dulles'  strong- 
est appeals  came  when  he  pro- 
pos9d  that  moral  force  should  be 
relied  on  to  avert  war  and  over- 
come Soviet  despotism  as  prac- 
ticed in  Hungary.  He  also  assert- 
ed that  the  U.  S.  did  not  necessar- 
ily have  to  consult  NATO  in  an 
immediate  crisis.  Overall,  the  15 
nation  pact  looked  as  if  it  had 
moved  to  higher  and  dryer  ground 
after  the   sudden  squall. 

•  . 


In  the  United  Nations,  a  U.  S. 
sponsored  move  to  censure  the 
Soviet  Union  was  passed  by  the 
General  Assembly.  The  proclama- 
tion condemned  Russia  for  its 
intervention  in  Hungary  and  call- 
ed on  it  to  make  "immediate  ar- 
rangements" for  withdrawal  of  its 
forces.  The  vote  was  55  to  8  with 
13  abstentions. 

In  other  highlights  of  the  week. 
Britian  was  granted  1.3  billion 
dollars  credit  by  the  Internation- 
al Monetary  Fund  to  bolster  world 
confidence  in  the  sterling:  schools 
in  Clinton,  Tenn.  and  on  the  Gaza 
strip  reopened  their  doors  after 
both  had  weathered  weeks  of 
violence:  the  Budapest  puppet 
representatives  to  the  U.  N. 
walked  out  charging  that  they 
had  been  "rudely  and  disgrace- 
fully" offended;  Nehru  enplaned 
for  his  visit  to  the  U.  S.  and 
three  days  of  consultations  with  -  tame  the  now  savagely  recklest 
the  President;   and,  the  Israelis,      H-bomb. 


after  killing  48  Israeli  Arabs 
who  had  unknowing  broken  a 
curfew,  could  say  no  more  than, 
"Whoops!" 

Physicists  in  the  Stevens  In- 
stitute of  Technology  of  New 
Jersey,  however,  may  very  well 
have  deserved  the  spotlight  last 
week,  for  their  creation  of  a  uni- 
verse in  a  test  tube. 

In  one  half-millionth  of  a  sec- 
ond, they  simulated  what  took 
place  in  an  estimated  billion 
years  by  electrifying  atomic 
particles  with  both  negative  and 
postive  electrical  charges,  shoot' 
ing  them  out  of  a  thimble  sized 
atomic  gun,  and  subjugating  them 
to  a  tremendous  magnetic  field. 
For  the  first  time,  we  may  have 
an  insight  to  the  mechanism  (?) 
which  causes  our  expanding  un- 
iverse to  expand.  They  may  well 
have  found  an  inroad  needed  tc 


• 
By  Walt  Kelly 


tw 


L'il  Abner 


By  Al  Capp 


HONGRt.  )l     BUT /N A  FEl^f  DAiS 


5UNDA1 


Co 


CHRISTMAS 

The    Camp'^ 
will  be  he.d 
the   Presbyte^ 
I  meeting,  spor 
I  and  the  ^-WC 
w^ill  speak  oiij 
I  Christ  Means] 
'dents  Today." 
PRESS  clubI 
.     The   Univeil 
jroeet  Tuesdayj 
'managing    ed| 
News  and   01 
will  be  held 
nalism   Schoc 
Xeil   Lnxon. 
UNIVERSITY 
The  Univerj 
its  first  appej 
cirector.     Wij 
Christmas    c( 


Among 
that   Vaj 
niake  ar^ 

Sport 
ihe  (iarkX 
that  Txasj 
baby,  yi 
*'Pas.s  tf 
Useful  f{ 
and  col| 
tend  t( 
graceful! 

Sport  j 
on  the  ml 
you're 
tr.theb^ 
•whether 
at  the 
down  a^ 
Crash ! 

Edibl 
leading.] 
shady 
co-ed.  Si 


SUNDAY,  DECEMBER  16,  1956 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


PACE   THREI 


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rd 

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?r 

II  y 


m 
u- 
ins 

its 
lid 
|he 
ike 

Jng 
Icl 

ttce 
idy 

lid 
the 

kar 

?ss 

of 

lick 

5lo- 

?nt 
md 
Ited 

>o- 
Irts- 

ley 
loud 


Fabs 


lan. 


c. 


Covering  The  Campus 


,p.m.  in  Memorial  Hall.  The  unus- 

Service   ual   oratorio   of  Heinrich  Schuelz, 

,^ill  be  held  Tuesday  at  7  p.m.  at    "The  Christmas  Story,' 


CHRISTMAS  SERVICE 

The   Campus    Christmas 

,e  held  Tuesday  at  7  p.m.  at     The  Christmas'  s'tory,"  is  the  prm 
the  Presbytenaji   Church.   At   the  cipal  work  on  the  program 
vAceung.  sporsored  by  the  YMCA  i  WAA  BASKETrai  i 
and  the  YWCA,  James  Kay  Kyser 
will  speak  on  "What  the  Birth  of 
Christ  Means  in  the  Lives  of  Stu- 
cicnt.s  Today." 


The  Daily  Tar  Heel's 
Holiday  Ride  Service 


PRESS  CLUB 

Iht'  L  aiversity  Press  Club  w;ll 
meet  Tuesday  to  hear  Sam  Ragan 
n-.anagi! ,,'  editor  of  the  Raleigh 
>;ews  and  Observer.  The  meeting 
will  be  held  at  the  home  of  Jour- 
ualii'Ti  School  Dean  Norval  Luxe 
v.i;  I.iixun.  Ml.  Bolus  Rd. 
UNIVERSITY   CHORUS 

The  L  niversity  Chorus  will  mako 
iLs  first  appearance  under  its  new 


WAA  BASKETBALL 

All  women  interested  in  joining 
the  Women's  Athletic  Assn.  Bas- 
ketball Club  have  been 
sign  up  in  the  Women's  gjra  be- 
fore the  Christmas  holidays.  The 
club  will  meet  once  a  week  on  the 
day  prefered  by  those  who  sign 
up. 

COMMUNITY  CHURCH 

The  Community  Church  wiil 
have  its  annual  Christmas 
-Service  today  at  11  a.m.  in  Hill 
Music  Hall.  The  choir,  under  the 
direction  cf  Gene  Strassler.  will 
perform  "The  Midnight  Mass"  by 


The  following  people  need  rides,  or  can  give  rides,  to 

di.sta'in    [x^ints  over   the  Christmas   holidays.   If  you   have  a 

car,  aie  lic.idcd  tor  one  of  the  points  listed  and  need  riders, 

urged  to!  contact  tliese  people.  If  you  want  a  ride  to  one  of  the  places 

listed  at  the  end.  contact  the  folks  who  have  cars  and  need 

riders. 

RIDES  WANTED 

Kenneth  Chi-Kun   Yang,  208  W. 

I  Franklin   St.,   9-2471— Taipei,   For- 

.  ,    niosa. 

,,^''^'1      Bill    Adcock.    308    M»ngum,    8- 
Music 


Florida  Wins  Debate 
Tourney  In  Winston 

Summer 


Poh'ce  Find  No  Answer  Yet 
In  Attempt  Robbery  Of  Lenoir 


(lirector.    Wilton     Mason,     at    its  ,  Marc-Antoine  Carpenticr.  The  pub 
Christmas    concert    Tuesday    at   ?  i  !ic  has  been  invited. 


EDIBLE  SPORT  SHIRTS? 


Among  the  sort  of  sport  shirts 
that  \'an  Heusen  refuses  to 
make  are  the  following: 

Sporl  whirls  that  light  up  in 
ihf  dark-:  These  are  the  kind 
that  ilash  messages,  like  "Hey, 
baby,  you're  a  honey,"  or 
"Pass  the  ashtray,  please." 
l'«eful  for  parties,  faculty  teas 
and  cotillion  balls.  But  they 
tend  to  commercialize  the 
graceful  art  of  conversation. 

SpiTt  shirts  icith  road  map.-t 
on  thtm:  Too  dangerous.  Say 
you're  driving  from  campus 
to  the  big  city.  You  don't  know 
■wbether  to  turn  left  or  right 
at  the  tvimpike,  so  you  look 
dowTi  at  your  shirt  to  check. 
Crash! 

Edible  sport  shirts:  Too  mis- 
leading. You're  sitting  under  a 
shad\-  tree  with  your  favorite 
co-ed.  She  rests  her  head  gently 


on  your  chest.  You  think  she's 
fond  of  you.  Suddenly  you  hear 
^'munch,  munch,"  and  there 
goes  your  delicious  shirt!  It 
was  it  she  craved,  not  you! 

But  the  sport  shirts  that 
Van  Heusen  does  make  arc 
fascinating.  Dashing  check.-^, 
interesting  plaids,  splendid 
stripes,  solids  in  some  very 
unusual  colors.  Their  cut  is 
free  and  comfortal>le  .  .  .  thoir 
style  is  original  and  flattering. 
Thumb  through  the  collect  ion 
that  your  campus  haberdasher 
proudly  displays. 

At  better  stores  everywhere, 
or  write  to  Phillips-Jones 
Corp.,  417  Fifth  Avenue,  New 
York  16,  New  York.  Makers 
of  Van  Heusen  Shirts  •  Sport 
Shirts  •  Ties  •  Pajamas 
Handkerchiefs  •  Underwear 
S^^^mwear   •  Sweaters. 


WE  ARE  TH^,  EXCLUSIVE 


VAN  HEUSEN 


DEALER  IN  CHAPEL  HILL 


9183— Knoxville,   Tenn, 

Marion  Harris.  309  Spencer,  8- 
9104—  Engelhard  or  Washington, 
N.  C. 

Howard  Kahn.  108  Alexander,  8 
9107— Baltimore.  Md. 

Harold  Stessel.  211  Stacy.  8-9031 
— New  York  City  or  Westchester. 

Sara  Humphrey,  11  Phi  Hou:>e 
8  9096  —  Washington,  D.  C. 

Carolina  Hume,  Pi  Phi  House, 
3-9096  —  Washington.  D.  C. 

I*riscilla  Roetzel,  106  Kenan,  8 
9172  —  Trenton  or  Newark,  N.  J 
or  New  York. 

THE  RULES 

If  you  want  to  get  your  nam* 
on  either  of  these  lists,  drop  by 
The  Daily  Tar  Heel's  newsroom, 
second  floor  of  Graham  Mmti- 
orial,  or  mail  your  name,  address 
telephone  number  and  destina- 
tion to  The  Daily  Tar  Heel,  Box 
1080,  Chapel  Hill.  The  lists  will 
run  as  long  as  there  are  stu- 
dents who  need  rides  or  riders. 
I^onard  Killian,  309  Alexander, 
The  service  is  free.  Students 
have  been  asked  to  notify  The 
Daily  Tar  Heel  when  they  get 
their  rides  or  riders. 
8-9105— Albuquerque,  N.  M. 

Beatrice  Rodriguez,  305  Kenan, 
8-9076— New  York. 

Ana  Maria  Ortiz,  Kenan — New 
York. 

Helen  Duke,  407A  E.  Franklin, 
8-1273— New  York. 

Lynwood  Thompson,  5  Battle,  8 
9170— New  York  To  Chapel  Hill 
after  Christmas. 

Marjorie  McMahan,  Carr,  8-0106 
Charlotte. 

John  Dale,  210  Connor,  8-9178— 
Asheville  or  Knoxville. 

Buddy  Clark,  Theta  Chi  8-9123 
(Vtlanta,  Ga. 

Angela  Aeosta,  218  Kenan  — 
Baltimore. 

Li^a  Rehor,  224  Kenan  —  Now 
York  City. 

Joel  .\.  Snow,  1  I'ettigrew,  89174 
— St.  Petersburg,  Fla. 

Owen  Leland,  108  Connor,  89155 
—Charleston,  S.  C. 

Jerry  Chichester,  215  Aycock, 
8-9126— Macon,    Ga. 

Sue  Rexrode,  321  Mclver,  8-9134 
Roanoke,  Va. 

Bill  Hen.shaw,  202  Alexander, 
8-9107— -Knoxville.  Tenn. 

John  Underwood,  221  Vance  St.. 
5466— Charleston.    S.    C. 

Christian  Lcfebure,  3  Battie, 
89175— New  York  City. 

Allan  Spader.  218  Graham,  8- 
9085 — Parkersburg,  W.  Va. 

George  Grayson,  206  Winston, 
8-7191— Washington.    D.    C. 

Betty  Barnes,  Spencer,  8-9067 — 
Washington,   D.  C. 

Bill  Porter,  9  Vance,  8-1177— 
Washington.  D.  C. 

John  Abramson,  ZBT  House, 
6031— Miami,  Fla. 

George  Schroeder,  431  Cobb,  8- 
9012— Raleigh. 


RIDERS  WANTED 

Thomas  L.  Gillette,  303  AliimiJ 
Bldg.,  8-8462  Kansas  City,  Mo. 

Warren  Miller  —  Washington. 
D.   C. 

W.  S.  Brewer,  300  Whitehead, 
8-9113— Mansfield,  Ohio,  via  Char- 
leston, W.  Va.  and  Columbus, 
Ohio. 

Mrs.  W.  C.  Hudson,  9-8792— 
New  York,  leaving  Sunday  or  Mon- 
day. * 

Herb  Greenblock,  TEP  House, 
8-9007 — New    York    and    vicinity. 

David  L.  Heck,  33  Davie  Circle, 
9-2786— to  Shelby,  Ohio,  via  Mr. 
Airy  and  Charleston,  W.  Va.^  leav- 
ing Dec.  22.  . 

Brad  Seasholes,  215  Caldwell,  9- 
7688— to  Syracuse,  N.  Y. 

Susan  Inman,  303  Smith,  8-9133 
— to  Vermont,  western  Mass.,  Conn 
and  N.  Y. 

Chuck  Federspiel,  8-6433  or  9- 
2382 — to  central  Michigan. 

R.  E.  Berry,  106  Whitehead,  8 


(Continued    From   Page    I) 
be  in  by  March  1,  1957,  and  for 
regular    applications,    Marth    30, 
1957. 

Courses  to  be  offered  next  sum-  |  <lebater 
mer  are:  Shakespeare  and  Eliza- 
bethan Drama,  the  University  of 
Birmingham  course  given  at  Strat- 
ford; Literature  and  Art  in  Geor- 
gian England,  1740-1830,  at  the 
University  of  London;  Literature, 
Politics  and  the  Arts  in  17th-cen- 
tury' England,  at  Oxford  Univers- 
ity; the  European  Inheritance  giv- 
en by  the  Scottish  Universities  at 
the  University  of  Edinburgh;  and 
English  Law  and  Jurisprudence 
at  the  University  of  London. 

The  last  course  is  open  only  to 
law  graduates  and  students  en- 
rolled in  accredited  law  schools. 

A  variety  of  excursions  to 
places  of  interest  in  its  area  is 
provided  by  each  of  the  schools, 
i  which  will  also  arrange  visits !  Pittsburgh, 
which  are  not  open  to  the  general 
public. 

Since  1948  the  British  Universi- 
ties have  combined  annually  to 
organize  a  special  program  of  sum- 


♦  WTNSTON-SALEM  —(Jf)—  The 
,  University  of  Florida  won  first 
j  place  in  the  Dixie  Classic  Debute 
I  Tournament  which  ended  yester- 
1  day  at  Wake  Forest  College. 


A  Wake  Forest  student,  David 
Hughes  of  Newnan,  Ga.  was  chosen 
as  the  tournaments'  tops  individual 


Florida  and  two  other  institu- 
tion, Duke  and  Notre  Dame,  each  ! 
won  nine  debates  and  lost  three. ' 
The  winner  was  picked  by  point  i 
.systems,  Duke  was  second  and ! 
Notre  Dame  third. 

Florida  also  was  chosen  as  hav 
ing  the  top  affirmative  with  Notre  j 
Dame  winning  second  place.  In  the 
negative  division  Duke  won  first 
place  and  Wake  Forest  was  sec 
ond. 

Selection  of  Hughes  as  the  Lop 
individual  debater  marked  the  sec- 
ond tournament  in  as  many  weeks 
;n  which  he  has  won  this  honor. 
He  was  chosen  last  week  at  a 
tournament    at    the    L'niversity    of 


Schools  participating  in  the 
tournament  in  addition  to  those 
mentioned  above  were: 


No    answer    has 
from  SBI  officials 
tempting    to    indenlify    would-be 
thieves  who  last  week  broke  into 
Lenoir  Hall. 

The  burglars  failed  in  their  at- 1 
tempt  to  unlock  a  safe  containing  j 
an  undisclosed  amount  of  money,  j 

Fingerprints  were  taken  by  lo-  ^ 
cal  police  and  report  sent  to  the  j 
SBI  in  Raleigh  in  an  attempt  to  | 
identify  the  criminals  j 

The  burglars,  on  the  night  of  j 
Dec.  3,  gained  entrance  through ; 
,the  north  door  of  the  dining  hall! 
and  forced  open  doors  leading  to  i 
the  manager's  office,  accounting 
office,  and  safe  room.  j 

G.  W^  Prillaman.     Director     of  i 
Student  Dining  Halls,  stated  that  i 
"to  my  knowledge,  nothing  of  value  ! 
was   taken."     In     explaining  the  ^ 
break-in,  Prillaman  also  said  that  I 
someone    is    in    the    building    23 
hours  a  day  and  that  the  probable 
time  of  the  burglary  was  between  ; 
2  and  3  a.m.  when  the  building  is 
unoccupied. 

It  is  believed  that  the  arrival  of 
the  bakers  at  3  a.m.  for  duty  prob- 


been    received .  ably  scared  the  burglars  and  pre- 
ia  Raleigh  at-  ,  vented    them    from    opening    the 
safe  and  taking  the  money. 


The  DoWar 
Table  at 
The  Intimate 
Bookshop 
Solves  More 
Christmas 
Problems 

Than  ' 

Santa  Clous! 


9066— to  Laurel,  Miss.  j  are  designed  to  serve  the   needs 

Ed  Kiser,  315  Alexander,  3-9105  j  of  post-graduate  students,  highly 
—to  Laurinburg  via  Sanforc?  and  I  qualified  undergraduates  in  their 
Aberdeen.  |  junior  or  senior  years  will  be  ac- 

Fred  Katz,  9031.  Ext.  571  »--   to  |  cepted 
Washington,  D.  C. 

Bryce  Johnson.  State  College, 
Raleigh,  TEmple  29363  —  to  Idah>'  | 

Dick    Potthoff.    216    Connor,  8- j 
917C  —  to  Jacksonville,  Fla.  \ 

Louis    Lefkowitz,    TEP    Hou.se, } 
8-9007— to  New  York  via  New  Jer- ; 
sey  Turnpike     and     Garden  State 
Parkway. 

Dot  Hall,  83392— to  WUUams- 
burg,  Va.  via  Richmond. 

Ann  McConaughy,  AD  iPi  House, 
80983— to  Columbia,  S.C. 

J.  Timothy  Stevens,  208  Ruffin, 
8914ft— to  Allentown,  Pa. 

Tasso  Spanos,  8-6433,  to  Pitts- 
burgh, Pa.,  via  Pennsylvania  Turn- 
pike. 

James  .Abcrt,  8-7246;  evening.s — 


The  University  of  North  Car<^ 
mer  schools.  Although  the  courses  j  Hna,  Georgetown  College  of  Ken- 
tucky, ,  Carson-Newman      College 


George  Washington  University  and 
Denison  University  of  Ohiff, 


8-8340 — to     Lancaster. 
Washington,  D;  C. 


Penn.    via 


And  the 
Best 

Christmas 
Cards 
Cost  a 
Nickel  at 
The  Intimate 
Bookshop 


me 


AFTER   SHAVE 
LOTION 


Refreshing  antiseptic  action  heals 
razor  nicks,  helps  keep  your  skin 
in  top  condition.  1 .00  mus  toi 

SHULTON        N«w  York   •    Toronto 


Happenings 
On  The  Hill  '^ 

(Continued   From  Page   1) 
combo.  (The  original  idea  was  to 
have  a  rake  party  outside  to  rake 
leaves,  but  the  weather  put  a  stop 
to   that. 

As  an  intermission  lo  the  day's 
program,  the  group  adjourned  for 
an  hour  or  so  to  get  dressed,  after 
which  their  dales  returned  for  din- 
ner. 

And  then  a  second  party  —  a 
Christmas  party  —  took  place  in 
celebration  of  the  oncomin^g  holi 
days. 

And  -.vhile  were  on  the  subjccl 
of  uniqueness,  there's  the  DL 
Christmas  party  last  night  to  think 
about. 

In  order  to  make  their  house  s 

I  little   different,   the  DUs   built  a 

room   of   holly   inside   a   room    m 

the  house  —  a  jbb  turned  over  to 

the  pledges. 

Thoughout  the  holly  were  Christ 
mas  lights,  and  other  Yule  decor. 

Santa  waS  there  to  distribute 
the  prank  presents  exchanged  hj 
the  blethers  and  pledges,  which 
no  doubt  were  enjoyed  by  their 
dates. 

Eggnog,  fellowship  and  the  ex- 
change of  presents  were  on  the 
agenda  for  St.  A's  and  their  dates 
last  night. 

Holding  their  ^nnual  Chirstmas 
party  at  the  Hall,  the  group  gathei- 
ed  around  the  Christmas  tree  lo 
celebrate   the  approaching  season. 

Also  last  night  were  the  Phi 
Dell  Annual  Christmas  Party  with 
dates  over  for  dinner  and  the  Pi 
Kaps'  Yule  party  at  their  house. 

On  the  program  today  will  bo 
the  Faculty  Tea  the  Chi  Psis  are 
having  at  the  Lodge  from  4  to  6 
to  fete  professors,  instructors  and 
other  members  of  the  faculty,  and 
the  party  the  Lambda  Chis  ar>^ 
holding  over  at  the  Plantalioc 
Club  in  Greensboro. 

PINNINGS  . .  ZBT  John  Kridel  to 
Pat  Endler  of  South  Orange,  N.  J. 
.  .  .  Ze»e  Jack  Gray  to  Duke  Coed 
Reba  While  .  .  .  Beta  Joe  Callicott 
I  to  W€  Junior  Betty  Decker  .  .  .  Chi 
O  Catherine  Brown  lo  N.  C.  Stale 
Kappa  Sig  David  Bamhardt  ...  Pi 
Kap  Bill  Acker  to  UNC  Student 
Nui-se  Betty  Tate. 


ANNOUNCEMENT  BY 

Illinois  College  of 
OPTOMETRY 

AppIScationa   for    admission    to 

classes    beginning    February    4, 

1957    and    September    9,    1957 

are  now  being  received. 

Three  year  course 

of  professional  study 

Leading  to  the  Degree  of 

Doctor  of  Optometry 

Requirements  for  Entrance  I 
Two  years  (60  semester  hours  or 
equivalent  quarter  hr»  )  in  spe- 
cified liberal  arts  and  sciences. 

WRITE  FOR  BULLETIN 
TO:  REGISTRAR 

ILLINOIS   COLLEGE 
of  OPTOMETRY 

3241    So.   Michigan   Ave. 
Technology  Center,  Chicago  16,  HI. 


PRE- 
CHRISTMAS 


HERE  IT  IS! 
Kemp's  Annual 

SALE 


ir- 


-•*•*<  0 
k/' 


a.m. 


-9 


p.m. 


MONDAY  -  TUESDAY  -  WEDNESDAY 

EVERYTHING  GOES... 

WE  ARE  GIVING  THE  BEST  NOW  .  .  . 
AND  NOT  THE  WORST  AFTER  CHRISTMAS! 

Com©  And  Get  Em! 

C  207  «.  franklin  Sf. 


WHAT  IS  A  ROBOT'S  SMLEt 


Tin  Grin 


SANItY    PLOTNICK. 
U     OF   VIKCINI* 


WHAT  IS  WATER  OVER  THE  DAMt 


Sluice  Juice 


FR*HCtS  TYSON. 
COLUMBIA 


(see  f>ARACRA^»  S€LOY*) ^^^y 


WHAT  IS  A  PEHUVIAN  ORCUS  ACT! 


Llama  Drama 

rtAMCCS  SANDERS. 
TIMS  STATI  COLLiei  FOS  WOMIN 


A  PLf  ASANT  PRESENT  like  cartons  of  Luckies  can  make 
a  dolly  jolly  or  a  pappy  happy.  And  they're  just  the 
things  to  cheer  up  a  .glum  chum  or  a  gloomy  roomie. 
So  the  guy  who  gives  loads  of  Luckies,  of  course,  is  a 
Proper  Shopper.  He  appreciates  Luckies'  better  taste— 
the  taste  of  mild,  good-tasting  tobacco  that's  TOASTED 
to  taste  even  better— and  he  knows  others  appreciate 
it,  too.  How  'bout  you?  Give  loads  of  Luckies  yourself! 


//i 


WHAT  IS  A  lOUD-MOUTHEO 
BASEBALL  FANf 


SHIRLEY  WALL. 
SOUTHER*    ILUNOIS 


Bleacher  Creature 


WHAT  IS  A  HUNTER'S  DUCK  DECOY* 


Fake  Drake 


DAVID   LEAS. 
U    OF   MARYLAND 


WHAT  CAUSES  SEASICKNESS! 


Ocean  Motion 


CLARK  FHIPPEN. 
TRINITY   COLLEGt 


IT'S 
TOASTEP" 

to  taste 
better! 


WAA  TENNIS 

All  participants  in  the  Women's 
.Athletic  Assn.  tennis  tournament 
have  been  urged  to  play  their 
matches  'Immediately  so  the  lour 
nament  may  be  completed  belorc 
ilifc  bolidays.       -  j 


WHA^A1«  A  OOlPirS  CMHORtN* 


Daddy's  Caddies 


DONALD    METER. 
SOLTH    DAHOTA    STATE 


STUDENTS!  MAKE  $25 


Do  you  like  to  shirk  work?  Here's  Bome  easy  money — 
start  Stickling!  We'll  pay  $25  for  every  Stickier  we 
print— and  for  hundreds  more  that  never  get  used. 
Sticklers  are  simple  riddles  with  two-word  rhyming  answers.  Both  words 
must  have  the  same  number  of  syllablas.  (Don't  do  drawings.)  Send 
j-our  Sticklers  with  your  name,  address,  college  and  class  to  Happy-Joe- 
Lud^',  Box  67 A,  Mount  Vernon,  N.  Y. 


Luckies  Taste  Better 

CLEANER,    FRESHER,    SMOOTHER    i 


9A.T.C0.       phoocct  or 


tAtU' J'^n*.U£<in  iJ<;^cixeo^unry%<Mi^  am 


KRICA'S    LSADINU    MANUrACTTIBBII    OF    CIGARXTTIS 


<'.GK  FOUR 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


SUNDAY,  DECEMBER  16,  195^ 


Unbeaten  Tar  Heels 
Cap  90-86  Overtime 
Decision  From  Birds 


IN  WOOLLEN  GYM: 


Rebounding  Tar  Babies 
Take  On  Duke  Tomorrow 


COLUMBIA  —  (AP)-*Und€feat- 
ed  and  nationaly  -  ranked  North 
Carolina  was  pushed  to  the  limit 
here  last  night  beore  beating  the 
University  of  South  Carolina,  90- 
86,  in  an  overtime  Atlantic  Coast 
Conference   basketball   game. 

Two  guards.  Tommy  Kearns  and 
Tony  Rado\'ich,  scored  a  field  goal 
and  a  free  throw  each  in  the  last 
minute  of  the  overtime  stanza  to 
wrap  up  the  game  for  North  Car- 
olina. The  game  had  been  tied  76- 
76  at  the  end  of  regulation  play. 

Kearns,  with  29  points,  led  the 
5Coring  for  North  Carolina.  For- 
ward Grady  Wallace  was  high 
scorer  for  the  South  Carolina 
Gamecocks  with  35  poiirts,  of 
which  24  were  tossed  in  after 
halftime. 

With  seven  seconds  to  go  in  reg- 
ulation time,  guard  Ray  Pericola 
drove  in  and  laid  up  a  field  goal 
to  tie  the  score  at  76-76. 

North    Carolina's    star    forward 


Lennie  Rosenbluth,  who  had  aver- 
aged 33.3  points  a  game  up  till 
last  night,  scored  18  points. 

With  about  a  minute  to  go  in 
the  overtime  period.  Kearns  was 
fouled  as  he  moved  in  to  make  a 
shot.  Kearns  was  awarded  the 
basket  and  also  a  free  throw 
which  he  made.  The  three  points 
put  North  Carolina  ahead  87-86. 
Moments  later  Radovich  was  also 


Cagers  Meet  Terps 

Coach  Frank  McGwire's  powar- 
ful  ca9«rs  make  their  final  horn* 
appaaranca  bafora  tha  Christmas 
holidays  tomorrow  night  whan 
thay  tangia  with  tha  pasky  Mary- 
land Tarpt  at  8  p.m.  in  Woollan 
Gym. 

Following  tha  Tarp  clash,  tha 
Tar  Haals  wil  iaav*  an  a  thraa 
gama  road  trip  to  N«w  York  City 
and  Boston  whara  thay  will  maat 
NYU,  DartnMuth  and  Holy  Cross. 


U.S.  Whips  India 
in  Davis  Cup  Play 


B/    WILL    GRIMSLEY 

PERTH.  .\ustraUa  —  Lf*—  Sam 
Giammalva.  a  bowlegged  Texan 
who  hit.>  a  tennis  ball  as  if  it  were 
?  hated  demon,  won  his  place  on 
the  United  States  Davis  Cup  teair. 
yesterday  when  he  teamed  brili) 
antly  with  veteran  Vic  Seixas  to 
clinch  the  Davis  Cup  inter-w>ne  fin 
al  against  India. 

Told  before  he  took  the  coai't' 
that  his  performance  would  de-  i 
cide  whether  he  would  compete . 
against  Australia  in  the  challenge  '■ 
round  later  this  month,  the  21-yea ;  j 
old  University  of  Texas  sttident  I 
trom  Houston  put  on  a  powerlul' 
show  with  Seixas  to  crush  India's 
Ramanathan  Krishnan  and  Naresh 
Kumar  in  doubles.  6-2,  3-^  «-4. 
6-4. 

After  Bill  Talbert,  U.S.  captain, 
said  '"Until  further  notice  this  iS 
my  doubles  team  against  Australia. 
Vic  and  Sammy  didn't  prove  they 
are  the  last  answer  in  a  doubles 
team  but  they  teamed  well  togelh 
:r  and  right  now  they  look  likc- 
the  best  we  have." 

Talbert  acknowledged  that  be- 
fore the  match  he  had  gone  vnto 
private  conference  with  Gianv 
malva  and  told  him  his  position 
on  the  team  would  depend  on  to 
day's  match. 

"li  Sam  had  indicated  he  might 
not  fill  the  bill,  I  was  ready  ta 
experiment  with  Siexas  and  Herbie 


.Flam  as  a  team."  Talbert  added. 

Both  Talbert  and  Harry  Hop- 
man,  Australian  Davis  Cup  cap- 
tain, must  nominate  their  four 
man  squads  for  the  challenge 
round  today.  The  lineups  appear 
cut  and  dried  on  both  counts. 

The  American  team  which  will 
be  named  to  face  the  Aussies  al 
Adelaide  Dec.  26-28  will  consist  of 
Seixas,  a  Philadelphian  making 
his  sixth  Davis  Cup  campaign, 
Flam  of  Beverly  Hills,  CalLC.. 
Giammalva  and  19-year-old  Mike 
Green  of  Miami. 

The    Australian    team    will    be 
made  up  of  tennis  twins  Ken  Rohe 
I  wall  and   Lew   Hoad,   plus  Neale 
Fraser  and  Ashley  Cooper. 

Itose\vall  and  Hoad  are  likely  to 
carry  the  foIMoad- 

Talbert  insists  <his  singles  as- 
signments against  the  heavily  lav 
ored  Aussies  are  still  undecided 
and  will  depend  on  workouts  in 
the  next  10  days.  There  is  still  a 
chance  he  will  go  with  his  young 
sters  Giammalva  and  Green  on  the. 
theory  that  the  oldsters  have  prov- 
ed they  can't  beat  Hoad  and  Rose- 
wall  and  the  experience  would  pav 
future  dividends  for  his  so-called 
'kids." 

The  doubles  victory  today  gave 
the  United  States  a  3-0  lead  over 
India  in  the  best-of-five  series  an'l 
relegated  Sunday's  final  singles 
matches  to  the  category  of  exhibt 
tions. 


Wrestlers  Top  Citadel, 
15-W,  In  Friday  Match 

The  Tar  Heel  grapplers  contin-   days.  Their  next  match     will 
ued  to  stay  on  the  undefeated  list    against  Virginia  January  4. 


be 


by  out  tusseling  the  Citedal  Bull 
dogs,  17-10  Friday  night  at  Char- 
leslown,  S.  C. 

This  was  the  third  win  for  the 
Carolina  matmen  in  four  matches. 
The  only  blemish  on  their  record 
is  an  opening  season  tie  with 
Washington  and  ,Lee. 

The  strong  Tar-  Heels  revenged 
la.st  years'  27-7  licking  received 
from  the  Citadel  by  only  given  tUe 
Bulldogs  only  two  matches  and  a 
tie.  Carolina  lost  the  127-pound 
and  the  heavyweight  matches  and 
th(!   137-pound  nratch  was  the  tie.  

Tar  Heel   Captain   Bob  Wagner  j 
brou.^ht  home  his  third  win  of  j  Beatty  Sets  New  Mark 

the   season    Friday   to   stay   unde-  j  !„  Quarter-Mile  Trial 
feated.  Other  Tar  Heel  grapplers 


The  summary: 

123  lb.,  Greco,  C,  pinned  Wall; 
130  lb..  Wagner.  UNC,  decisioned 
Pirone.  4-0;  137  lb.,  Henderson, 
UNC.  decisioned  Rudick,  7-4;  147 
lb..  Boyette,  UNC,  tied  Taylor, 
4-4;  157  lb.,  Hoke,  UNC.  decision- 
ed Pinaichik.  5-4;  167  lb.,  Atkin- 
son, UNC,  decisioned  Childress, 
4-0;  177  lb.,  Childs,  UNC,  decis- 
ioned Childress,  4-0;  177  lb., 
Childs,  UNC.  decisioned  Huntley, 
5-1;  Heav>'weight,  Eisenberg,  C. 
decisioned  Corkey,  4-0. 


with   the  same  record  are  sopho- 
mores Don  Childs  and  David  At- 
kinson.   Charles    Boyette   had    the! 
tie   in   this   match  to  give  him  a! 
season  record   of  three   wins  and  | 
a  tie.  j 

Perrin  Henderson  and  Dave  Ken  i 
Hoke  are  the  remaining  Tar  Heel ', 
victors.  Henderson  and  Hoke  both 
have   a   2-1   season  record.  ' 

The  matmen  will     be     out     of  ■ 
competition    until    after   the   holi- ; 


Jim  Baatty  shattered  tha  un- 
official University  three-quarter 
mile  record  here  yesterday  as  he 
toured  the  indoor  track  In  3:03.4, 
nearly  3  seconds  batter  than  the 
old  mark  of  3:06  held  by  Jim 
Davis. 

Finishing  behind  Baatty  in  the 
time  trial  were  Ben  Williams, 
Everett  Wh*tley,.Dava  Scurlock, 
Wayna  Bishop,  Howard  Kahn 
and  John  Reaves  in  that  order. 


CLASSIFIEDS 


UNC-NYU  Tickets 

All  these  who  haven't  pur- 
chased tickets  to  the  Carolina- 
NYU  basketball  game  in  New 
York  City  Thursday  night  may 
obtain  them  tha  night  of  tjia 
game  at  the  50th  Street  ticket 
windcfw.  The  price  will  be,  75 
cents,  and  any  student  with  an 
ID  card  may  gat  as  many  as  two 
tickets. 


fouied  making 

a  shot.  He 

too 

was 

awarded  the  field  goal  a 

tid  made 

his  free  throw. 

The  Box 

UNC 

G       F 

P 

T 

Rosenbluth   f 

8       2-6 

4 

13 

Brennan   f 

8       6-8 

5 

22 

Hathawav  c 

0       0-1 

1 

0 

Quigg  c 

2  •  4-5 

3 

^! 

Kearns  g 

10     9-13 

3 

29' 

Groll  g 

0      0-0 

0 

0 

Cunningham  g 

4       2-4 

5 

10 

Radovich  g 

1        1-1 

3 

3 

Totals 

33  24-38 

24 

90 

use 

G       F 

P 

T 

Wallace  f 

12  11-14 

5 

35 

Hoffman  f 

1       0-2 

4 

0 

Smejkal  f 

4       4-4 

2 

12 

Lentz  c 

1       0-0 

4 

2 

Goodroc  c 

2       5-5 

2 

9 

Pericola  g 

4       7-9 

4 

15 

McCoy  g 

4       3-6 

3 

11 

Totals 

28  30-40 

24 

86 

North  Carolina 

U    40 

14—90 

South  Carolina 

90    46 

10—86 

1 

N.  C.  State 
Tops  GW,  76-62 

R.\LEIGH—(AP)— North  Caro- 
lina State  continued  its  mastei-y 
over  George  Washington  with  a 
76-62  victory  before  4,500  fans 
here  last  night. 

The  Wolfpack's  big  men,  center 
Bob  Seitz  and  forward  John  Rich- 
ter.  teamed  up  to  put  N.  C.  State 
back  into  the  win  column  after  a 
two-game  losing  streak.  Seitz 
bucketed  20  points,  while  Richter 
had  19. 

Richter  also  bagged  19  rebounds 
as  N.  C.  State  racked  up  its.  17th 
straight  win  oveu  the  Colonials, 
\\ho  have  not  beaten  the  Wolfpack 
since  1946.  It  was  the  fourth 
straight  loss  this  season  for  George 
Washington.  They  have  yet  to  win 
one. 

The  Wolfpack,  playing  slow  and 
deliberate,  led  all  the  way  and 
was  out  front.  42-31,  at  the  half. 
Their  biggest  margih  Was  a  15- 
point  spread  midway  the  second 
half. 


Carolina's  once  beaten  freshmen 
basket  bailers  meet  their  second 
Big  Four  opponent  of  the  season 
tomorow  night  in  Woollen  Gym 
when  they  play  host  to  the  Duke 
Blue  Imps  in  a  6  p.m.  preliminary 
10  the  varsity  clash  with  Maryland.. 

The  Tar  Babies  will  be  hoping 
for  better  luck  on  their  second 
stop  around  the  Big  Four  baby 
circuit.  In  their  first  outing  agaiu.^t 
a  local  rival,  they  lost  to  State  s 
highly  toutered  frosh,  91-39,  in 
Kinston  before  2,000.  fans. 

Before  that  loss  to  State,  the 
Tar  Babies  had  whipped  tooa  pair 
of  one-siaed  wins  over  the  Hijih 
Point  Jayvees  and  Wilmington  Jun- 
ior College. 

Lee  Shaffer  and  Dick  Kepley,  a 
pair  of  jack  rabit  skyscrapers  with 
a  soft  scoring  touch,  have  paced 
the  Carolinians  in  games  to  date. 
Kepley  poured  in  26  points  against 
tiie  Wolflets  while  Shaffer  follow 
ed  close  behind  with  24.    . 

York  Larese,  a  6-4  forward  fron: 
New  York  City,  has  also  been   a 


consistent  scorer  in  games  to  date 
and  is  highly  regarded  by  the  Tar 
Heel  brain  trust.  Holding  down  tiie 
stjirting  guard  slots  will  be  dim- 
inutive John  Crotty  and  sharp 
shooting  Mike  Steppe.  Gray  Pooie* 
Wally  Graham  and  Sandy  Ainsle? 
are  front  line  reserves. 

The  Blue  Imps  are  somewhat  of 
an  unknown  quantity,  but  off  thoir 
performances  in  early  games  must 
l>e  rated  a  strong  threat.  Carroll 
Youngkin,  a  burly  6-6  center  from 
North  Davidson,  and  Jack  Boyd,  a 
pepperpot  guard,  are  the  ringleaJ 
ers  for  Coach  Whit  Cobb's  club. 

Tomorrow  night's  game  is  the 
last  one  for  the  Tar  Babies  before 
the  Chrtstmas  holidays.  They  re- 
turn to  Action  on  Jan.  4  when  thoy 
meet  Edwards  Military  Institute. 


PAYNE  FREEMAN 


,  \HOLD 
I  -;j  BACK 
'    ^^  THE 

rrv^NiGHT 


Frosh  Matmen 
Overpower 
Pfeiffer,  19-13 

The  Freshman  Wrestling  team 
won  their  first  match  of  the  sea- 
son last  night  by  defeating  Pfeiffer 
Junior  College.  19  to  13,  in  Wool- 
len Gym  before  a  good  sized 
crowd. 

TTie  summary: 

123  lb. — Champlin  (C)  pinned 
Plott   (P)   3  min.  35  sec. 

130  lb.— Cuthbertson  (P)  pin- 
ned Charles  Whitfield  (C)  3  min. 
45  sec*  I 

137  lb.— Perrini  (C)  planned 
Wells   (P)   2  min.  55  sec.  i 

147  lb.— Bill  Gautier  (C)  dWis- 
ioned  Sides  (P)   13  to  9.  j 

157  lb.— Ron  Purdy  (C)  decis- ' 
ioned  Spoon  (P)  13  to  3.  { 

167  lb.— Whitesides  (P)  pinned 
Jim  Hudson  (C)  2  min. 

177  lb.— Beno  Sack  (C)  decis- 
ioned Griffith   (P)  4  to  3. 

Heavyweight — ^Thomas  (P)  cecis- 
ioned  Mike  Pittman  (C)  15  to  10. 


Giants  Scuttle 
Eagles  To  Win 
Eastern  Crown 

PHILADELPHIA  —  ( AP)  —  The 
New  York  Giants  won  their  first 
National  Football  League  East- 
ern Division  championship  in  10 
years  yesterday,  crashing  the^ 
Philadelphia  Eagles,  21-7,  with  a  j 
bruising  ground  attack  and  a  rug- 
ged  defense.  I 

As  a  result  the  Giants  headed  | 
home  for  a  few  days  rest  and  j 
then  10  days  of  extensive  practice  | 
for  the  NFL  championship  game  \ 
Dec.  30  at  Yankee  Stadium  against  j 
the  Western  Division  winner,, 
either  the  Detroit  Lions  or  the 
Chicago  Bears  w4io  meet  head  on 
for  the  honor  tomorrow. 

After  a  scoreless  first  period 
there  was  little  doubt  that  the 
last  place  Eagles  were  merely  a 
stepping  stone  to  the  Giants'  first 
Eastern    crown   since    1946. 


Ham  Richardson  Named 
Top  Netter  By  USLTA 

NEW  YORK  —  ( AP)  —  Twenty- 
three-year-old  Hamilton  Richard- 
son, who  plays  tennis  only  when 
he  can  take  time  off  from  his  stud- 
ies at  Oxford,  yesterday  was 
named  as  the  No.  1  American  ten- 
nis player  for  1956. 

Richardson,  a  native  of  Baton 
Rouge,  La...  heads  the  mens'  sing- 
les rankings  drawn  up  by  the  U.  S. 
Lawn  Tennis  Assn.  And  with  Vic 
Seixas  of  Philadelphia  as  his  part- 
ner, Richardson  also  is  listed  as 
No.  1  in  men's  doubles. 

Herb  Flam  of  Beverly  Hills, 
Calif.,  was  ranked  second.  Vic 
Seixas,    rated    as    the    top    Ameri- 


can amateur  after  Tony  TrabcrC 
turned  pro,  was  dropped  to  thirtf 
place.  • 


And  the 

fntimate 

Bookshop 

Gift-Wraps 

Books 

Free! 


lord  ili  est 

first   name   in  quolity   forrTiol*. 


NOW  PLAYING 


Carolina 


tt  s  fun  to  go  format  in- 

thift  trim  n«w  tux 

with  tcmi-paok  lop*'. 

patural  thouldcrs.  flap 

pockets,  non-ptvotffd 

Irouscrt.  Jet  Slack 

alt-scoson  wof&t*J. 

silk  sotin  faiL.g. 

t  :r  nonie  cf  r»orf" 

re'ji'er  or  i'r*»  fonr.ol 

cJrc's  cliart.  wiit*. 

V'usf  Mill  ClatkM.  t*<  . 

101  V/.  21  li.Ni  Y.  1 


DAILY    CROSSWORD 


FOR  SALE:  CHRISTMAS  TREES, 
holly,  running  cedar,  mistletoe. 
Open  every  day  except  Christ- 
mas day.  Blackbird's  Market, 
W.  Franklin  St. 

RIDER  WANTED  TO  NEW  YORK 

Monday   if   possible.    Will    leave 

♦at  anytime.  If  interested,  please 

'call    Mrs.    W.    C.    Hudson    at    9- 

£792. 


ACROSS 

1.  Somersaults 

fcoUoq.) 
C.  Faultily 

11.  Writer  of 
fables 

12.  Of  ton* 

13.  Moiaten 

15.  Capital 
,  (Nor.) 

16.  Half  enrui 

17.  African 
worm 

19.  Shoshonean 
Indian 

20.  Spherical 
22.  Sunk  fence 

29.  Prickly 
.    plant 

2&.  Ascend 

30.  Cornered 

31.  Draft 
regulator 

33.  Roman  date 
3i.  Not  awake 
3<.  Hole-plerc. 

ing  tool 
38.  Unhappy 
36.  Dancer's 

cymbals 
42.  Wander 
44.  Optical 

illuf  ion 
4«.  Trifled 
4$.  Centers 

49.  Kind  of  rock 

50.  Waits  upon 

DOWN 

1.  Diminish. 
as  color 

2.  Thin 

3.  Doctrines 

4.  Father 
5  An 

incantation 

6.  Close  to 

7.  Cry  of  a  cow 


8.  OfTended 

9.  Scasoninir 
10.  Astringent 

fruit 
14.  Midday 
18.  Incite 

20.  Pants 

21.  Aweigh 

22.  Owned 

23.  Mficaw 

24.  Asiatic 
mountain 
chain 

26.  Confederate 
general 

27.  Man's 
nicknam* 
(poss.) 


UliUU    OU    CINN 

una  ufl  i-i?j[riw 
KRHaKDH  jia-s 


29.  Lam- 
preys 

32.  Quan- 
tity 
of 
paper 

35.  Public 
ordi- 
nance 

36.  Branch 
of 

leam«  8stHr4s)r'«  Aaiw*v 


ingr 
37.  sheep  hair 

39.  mountain 
pool 

40.  Matured 

41.  Minua 


43.  Bncount' 

ered 
45.  Spawn 

offish 
47.  From 

(prefix) 


iW 


i 


a» 


i 


w 


IX 


^ 


M 


XI 


ST 


^ 


^ 


% 


3» 


9        10 


37 


THE  AimSEX  LEAGUE 

in 


WIU  BE  WATCHING  YOU 


PRE- 
CHRiSTMAS 


Ni  WIM  P.  VKM  ml  Kff  meal. r ; .  d»  M  t>,  (OKE  flttfOi  •  i)ir.c(«i  b,  .VQMQ  imSSM 

TODAY 

AND 

MONDAY 


AT  IT  AGAIN! 
Kemp's  Annual 

SALE 

9  a.m. -9  p.m. 
Everything  On  Sale... 

MONDAY  -  TUESDAY  ~  WEDNESDAY 
WE  DON'T  WANT  ANY  INVENTORY  LEFT 

GET  GOOD  MERCHANDISE  NOW  .  .  / 
AND  NOT  LEFTOVERS  AFTER  CHRISTMAS! 

207  E.  Franklin  St. 


CONGRATULATIONS 


A 


MYRON  CONKLIN 


BDMOC  1956-57 


■•"Mi      ■       - 


•»! 


U.«.C«  Library 

Serials  Dept. 
Chapel  Hill.  N.  C. 


AAcGuire  And  Tatum  Deny  Split  Reports 


FRANK  MCGUIRE 

.  absolutely   no   conflict 


football  Coach  Jim  Tatum  and  Basketball  Coach  Frank  McGui»e 
have  denied  there  is  a  conflict  going  on  .within  the  athletic  dept. 
between  their  respective  sports. 

In  saying  the  reports  are  incorrect,  McGuire  noted.  "In  the  five 
years  "I  have  been  at  Chapel  Hill,  the  authorities  have  wholeheartedly 
and  enthusiastically  cooperated  with  me  in  our  efforts  to  produce 
the  type  of  basketball  team  the  University  and  alumni  can  be  proud 
of." 

Tatum's  statement  said,  "I  haven't  seen  our  basketball  team 
play,  or  even  practice,  but  I  uncierstend  it  is  on*  of  the  top  teams 
in  the  country.  We  are  telling  the  young  men  we  arc  talking  to 
about  attending   Car6lina   that   it  is  our   hop*   that   wa  can   build 


a  football  team  to  be  just  as  proud  of  as  tht  fine  basketball  pro- 
gram Coach  McGuire  has  accomplished." 
SPECULATION 

The  statements  came  following  specul;«.ion  in  several  newspaper;, 
including  The  Daily  Tar  Heel,  that  Tatum  was  responsible  for  tnc 
changes  made  recently  in  the  organization  of  the  athletic  dept. 

McGuire  explained  he     "was   recently  turned  down  on   some  re- 
quests  in   connection   with   the   basketball    team,   but   it   was   explain 
cd  .  .  .  the  administration  did  not  think  they  were  financially  feasible. 
After  talking  it  over  with  the  athletic  dirccior.  I  can  understand  ni^ 
position,"  he  said. 

"Football  had  nothing  to  do  with  that.  There  is  absolutely  no 
conflict  between  the  two  sports.   We   use  different  facilities  and 


different   personnel,   and   play   in    different  seasons.   We   operate 

entirely  separately." 
Tatum  was  out  of  town  when  the' papers  picked  up  the  story,  and    W 
on  his  return  he  said  he  was  "amazed.'* 


^'  » 


TWO   DIFFERENT  SPORTS 

He  added  he  regrets  "that  Coach  McGuire's  statements  have  been 
turned  around  in  such  a  way  that  there  could  be  a  conflict  betrveen 
basketball  and  football.  There  is  no  chance  of  these  two  sports  ever 
conflicting.  They  are  two  differeAt  sports  and  come  at  different  sea- 
sons." 

McGuire  said,  concerning  reports  that  he  is  dissatisfied  with  ti)e 
situation,  "If  I  have  said  anything  to  imply  such,  I  regret  it.' 


JIM    TATUM 

no  choiue  for  rift 


Jackie   Moreland's    Girl   Friend   Admits    Offers    Of  Scholarship  ,  ;-~se.  story  on  Page  ^ 


WEATHER         , 

Showers    and    little    change    in 
temperature.  Expected  high  65.      ,; 


VOL.   LVII,   NO.  72 


Complete  i/P)  Wire  Service 


CHAPEL    HILL,   NORTH   CAROLINA,   TUESDAY,   DECEMBER    18,   1956 


Offices   in    Graham    Memorial 


^  O  D  O  R 

It  is  stifling.  See  editorial  page. 


FOUR  PAGES  THIS  ISSUE 


9  Football  Games  ' 
To  Be  Forfeited  j 
Because  Of  Olenik 

(;RKK.\SIU)R()— (.\P)— riie  inc.  lootball  j>aines  in  : 
which  N'incc  Olenik  partJtipated  during  the  ip.'jG  season 
have  been  tDrleited.  anording  to  Atlantic  Cloa.st  Conterence  , 
bv-la\vs.  it  was  announced  Monday  by  Commis-sioner  jini 
Weaver.  j 

Olenik.  a  junior  from  Swoycrville.  Pa.,  played  micier 
the  name  of   X'inte  Olen   and   he   had   previouslv   plaved  at 

( ^—♦Temple    University,    although    his 

I  I         I  A      I  records  at  North  Carolina  did  not 

Hodges  Asks 
Democrats 
To  Keep  Faith 


RALEIGH— ( AP  )—^o\:    Hodges 

yesterday     called     for     Tar    Heel:, ^     . 

Democrats   to  keep  faith  in  their  I  ^'ty  s  attention.  During  this  period 


show    him    to    be    a    transfer    stu- 
dent. 

The  second  string  end  partici- 
pated in  the  first  nine,  games  of 
the  season  but  was  withheld  from 
the  final  one  with  Duke  after  the 
matter  was  called   to   the   Univer- 


the  TVir  Heels,  in  their  first  season 
under  Coach  Jim  Tatum.  defeated 
Maryland      and      Virginia,      tying. 
Wake  Forest.  ; 


party  aod  modernize  it. 

He    made    the    statement    in    ari 

brief   talk    of    welcome    ss    North ' 

Camliaa's  14  Democratic  presiden:^, 

tlal     electors     «Mse«nbIed     in     the  \      Commissioner      Weaver's     state-  ■ 

State  Senate  chamber  and   formal-  j  ment  was  as  follows: 

ly    east    their    ballots     for     Adlai  \ 

Stevenson.  I      "'"   according  with  the  Atlantic 

Hodges  noted  that  the  matter'  ^^^^^  Conference  by-laws  (rule 
of  a  few  thousand  votes  could  ^^-  section  B>  the  University  of 
have  meant  the  difference  in  a  ^*"^^  Carolina's  football  games  of 
Republican  group  meeting  to  cast !  ^^^  ^^^^  ^^^^"^  '"  '^'^'''^  ^'"<^^ 
North  Carolina's  electoral  voes.  i  Olenik  participated  shall  be  for- 
Stevenson  polled  590.630  votes  in    ^«'t«d. 

the  Nov.  6  general  electit>n  in '  "This  office  did  not  make  an 
North  Carolina  and  President  Ei-  investigation  but  called  the  matter 
senhower  received  575.062.  |  to  the  attention  of  officials  of  the 

The  electors  were:  1st  District,  j  University  of  North  Carolina. 
W.  C.  Dawson,  Elizabeth  City:  \  They  acted  promptly.  This  office 
2nd.  W.  H.  S  Burgwyn  Jr..  Wood-  received  the  full,  co-operation  of 
land:  3rd,  Dr.  John  D.  Robinson.  !  their  administrative  officials.  No 
Wallace:  4th  W.  L.  Lumpkin.  ]  one  feels  that  any  person  at  the 
Louisburg;  5th.  Mary  Kerr  Spen-  j  University  of  North  Carolina  had 
cer.  Winston-Salem:  6th.  Dvis  S.  |  any  knowledge  of  the  facts  in 
Neill.  High  Point.  7th.  W.  A.  John-  ■  the  matter. 

son.  Lillington;  8th.  C.  Watson  '  This  office  is  hereby  notifying 
Brame.  North  Wilkesboro:  9th.  |  the  conference  service  bureau 
Mrs.  J.  C.  Spencer.  Lenoir;  10th  that  in  future  records  the  1956 
Shelton  M.  Roper.  Lincolnton:  11th  j  season  football  games  of  the  Uni- 
C.  C.  Home.  Shelby:  12th  Claude  !  versify  of  North  Carolina  in  which 
S.  Ramsey,  Asheville.  and  two  i  olenik  participated  shall  be  list- 
delegates-at  large.  Clark  and  Fred  j  ^d  as  forfeits." 
B.  Helms.  Charlotte.  i 


Green  On 

Senators 

Committee 


Prof.  Fletcher  M.  Green  of  UNC 
has  been  appointed  a  member  of 
an  advisory  group  of  historians  to 
aid  a  Senate  committee  in  de- 
signating the  five  .senators  in 
American  hi»tory  "who  have  con- 
tributed most  significantly  to  the 
development  of  our  countrj-." 
Portraits  of  the  senators  chosen — 
none  of  whom  can  be  li\ing  per- 
sons— will  be  placed  in  the  Senate 
Reception  Room. 

The  Senate  committee,  whose 
chairman  is  J6hn  F,  Kennedy  of 
Massachusetts,  includes  Senators 
Richard  B.  Russell.  Mike  Mans- 
field. Styles  Bridges,  and  John 
W.  Bricker.  The  advisorj-  commit- 
tee of  hJvtoriiins  is  hoaded  by 
Prof.  Allan  Nevins,  of  Columbia 
University. 

The  advisory-  committee  will  per- 
form two  functions.  It  will  choose 
a  panel  of  100  historians,  politics! 
scientists,  and  other  scholars  who 
will  be  polled  for  their  opinions 
regarding  the  choice  of  the  five 
senators  who.se  portraits  will  be 
hung  in  the  Senate  Reception 
R-xim.  Professor  Green  has  been 
asked  to  name  twenty  scholars 
from  the  South  to  be  members  of 
this   panel. 

Second,  the  advisory  committee 
will  decide  on  broad  criteria  to 
guide  the  hundred  panel  mem- 
bers in  rendering  judgment. 


Science  Foundation  Gives  UNG 
$125,000  For  Teacher  Training 


AN  EDITORIAL: 


Appeal  For  Hungary 


i  V. 


SEE  PAGE  TWO 


State's  Voters 
Cast  Ballots 
For  Dead  Man 


'  High  School  Science, 
i  Math  Teachers  Benefit 


Kyser  To  Talk  Tonight 
At  Christmas  Service 


CHARLOTTE  —  (.\P)  —  North 
Carolina  voters  cast  366.752  bal- 
lots in  last  months  general  elec- 
tion lor  a  Republican  candidate 
who    had    been    dead    more    than 

lour  months.  i 

I 

Gfover  C.  Bobbins  of  Blowing 
Rock,  candidate  for  North  Caro- 
lina secretary  of  state,  died  Juno 
24.  but  the  Republican  party  did 
not  withdraw  his  name  and  the 
State   Board  of  Elections  was  ncH. 


1  wo  onmts  totaling  .Si2"i.ooo  will  be  used  hy  IWCl  next 
siniinitr  to  tniin  higii  .s(  hool  niatliciuatiis  and  .sc-iciue  teach- 
ers and  tolk'm'  ( lu'iuistrv  teatiieiN. 

I  ho  annouiueiiiem  of  tlu-  «>v;vnis.  from  the  National 
Stiente  Konnd;nion.  \va>  miide  .Satuiflav  hv  Consolidated 
riii\irsii\  President  William  (..  Ividay  and  INC  (.liantellor 
Rohen   l».  House. 


The  Campus  Christmas  Scr>'ice 
will  bo  held  tonight  at  the  Presby- 
terian  Church  at  7. 


The  folFowihg  caroLs  wi."  be 
.suMK  b.\  the  congrejiation  at  dt'.s 
ignated  times  durinu  the  reading 
of    the     Christmas     .scripture:     "O 


Spoiisi.>red     by     the    YM-YWCA, 
tlve    program    will    include    Christ- 
mas music,  a  reading  of  the  ChrLst     Three    Kings 
mas  stor.N .  and  a  talk  by  James  Kay 
Kyser. 


months    after   hi»    death. 

Drmocrat     Tlmd     Kiire    was     re- 
elected,   polling   737.266   voles,   un- 
Liltle    Town    of     Bethlehem."    -0|;i":"'<'    <hal    hi.>:   opponent    wa.s    not 
Come   All   Ye   Faithful-   and   "We    campaigning. 


It  is  the  second  time  in  tv»o 
weeks  L'^NC  has  been  tapped  t.) 
help  in  a  national  program  to  pre- 
pare* high  quality  science  teachers. 

^,    jri^vp    wec^s    ago     the    Nationl'i 
Science    Foundation    gave    $267.60'vi 
notified.  Ballots  were  printed  two    j^  ^^^t^.  .;,,.  ^  science-and-mathem  : 


Following  a  selection  of  Christ- 
mas music  by  Ed  Higgins.  organ- 
ist, the  congregation  will  join  in 
the   singing  of   "Silent   Night," 

Invocation  will  be  given  by  Chan- 
cellor Robert  House,  and  the  read- 
ing of  the  Christmas  stor>-  will 
be  done  by  Norman  Cordon, 


-What  the  Birth  of  Christ 
Means  in  the  Live.s  of  Students 
Todj.v  ■  will  be  the  Christmas 
message  delivawd  by  Mr.  Kay 
Ky.ser.  followed  by  prayert;  led  by 
Rob   Young. 

To  conclude  the  service,  the 
congregation  will  .join  in  the  sing- 
ing of  "Silent  Night." 


Raymond  Maxwell,  chairman  cf 
the  elections  board,  said  no  offi- 
cial notice  of  the  death  was  given 
llio  board  and  thiif  the  situation 
did  n(.t  come  to  light  until  The 
Cha'iotte  News  querit'd  hini  about 
it  today. 

Kobbins  wa.<  a  prominent  de- 
veloper and  ov\ned  the  famou.-^ 
Blowing  Rock,  moi/itain  scenic 
attraction. 


heniatif.*   in.vtitute   during   the   re^   , 
ular   1957-58  .sch.-l   year.   The   .o...  i       VIENNA    -     Ward     came     that 
bined   grant.s    total    nearly    S400.00.  '  Vice    President    Richard    M.    Nixon 

I  would  not  be  allowed  to  take  a 
I  look  at  the  Hungarian  border.  Au- 
j  thorities  there  said  it  would  be 
,  too  risk.v. 


Orange  Bowl 
Tickets  Here 
For  Students 

Tickets  for  the  Orange  Bowl 
Game  in  Miami  on  New  Year's 
Day  have  ben  made  available  for 
UNC  students. 

The  ticket  office  in  Woollen 
Gym  has  secured  tickets  and  will 
get  more  if  the  demand  justifies 
it.  Acording  to  a  spokesman  from 
the  Gym.  tickets  have  been  sold 
only  to  alumni.  The  student  body 
has  not  responded  to  the  sale. 

Tickets  have  been  procured 
from  Clemson.  fhe  team  that  rep- 
lescnts  the  Atlantic  Coast  Con- 
ference in  the  Orange  Bowl.  Clem- 
son  will  oppose  Colorado  in  the 
New  Year's  Day  contest. 

Tickets  are  priced  at  $6.23  €ach 
and  all  are  reserved  seats.  The  j 
tickets  wil  be  assigned  in  the  | 
order  that  they  are  purchased  so 
that  the  first  purchasers  will  get 
the  best  seats. 


IN  THE  INFIRMARY 


Shidtnta  in  th«  Infirmary  y«s 
terday  includsd: 

Ronald  Purdy,  Julius  Timbar- 
lake,  Charles  Dav*rH»ert,  Baxtei* 
Norton,  Phillip  Rtinhardt,  John 
Barro,  Garratt  Folgcr,  Roy  Cole- 
man, Robert  Baggett,  Roberr 
Brawie/  and  George  Stavnitski. 


Alert  Al  Finds 
Pop's  Hideout 

By   EVANS  TAYLOR 

If  Al's  pop  thought  he  could 
hide  a  toy  firetruck  at  Al's  hou^c, 
oe  had  another  think  coming. 

Al  is  the  four  and  a  half  year 
old  *on  of  Mr.  and  Mrs.  Kit  Car- 
bon, who  live  on  Chapel  Hill  Route 
Three,  and  as  he  said,  "I  pound 
a  pire  twnck. " 

His  father  thought  it  was  prelly 
smart,  hiding  "Santa'^'  presents 
for  the  tike  in  the  pump  housi;. 
After  all,  Al  never  goes  out  there 
unless  someone  is  with  him. 

But  Al  decided  to  do  a  little  ex 
ploring  about  the  yard.  He  open, 
jpd  the  door  to  the  pumphou^ 
very  quietly,  hoping  that  his  mo;e 
didn*t  hear.  He  looked  behind  the 
botwater  heater  and  like  he  says 
.  .  .  "dcre  it  was'. 

"Daddy  theys  "at  Santa  Claus 
left  it  dere  cause  he  wouldn't  ha\e 
time  to  come  around  on  Christmas 
fight,"  says  ^1. 

"Well  aren't  you  afraid  Sanla 
Claus     vjon't    come    to     see    you 

liOW?" 

"Naw,'  says  Al,  "Daddy  they  at 
be  recKoned  Sanny'ed  just  have  to 
fine  time  to  come  affer  all. "  I 

He  said  it  with  such  a  knowing  | 
.-mile,  almost  a.s  if  he  .  .  . 


Going  Home  For  Christmas? 
Want  A  Ride  ?  Need  Riders  ? 


MM 


These  people  want  rides,  or  ca  ngive  rides,  to 

have  a  car,  are  headed  for  one  of  the  points  listed, 

a  ride  to  one  of  the  places  listed  at  the  end,  cont 

RIDES  WANTED  Carolina    Hume,    Pi   Phi    House, 

Herman    Schultz.    9-2636— Phila-   G-9096  —  Washington,  D.  C. 

delphia.  Priscilla  Roetzcl,   106  Kenan,  8 

Bill    Adcock.    308    Mtngum,    8- '  91^2  —  Trenton  or -Newark,  N.  J 

9183 — Knoxvillc,  Tenn. 


dlstant  points  over  the  Christmas  holidays.  If  you 
and  need  riders,  contact  these  people.  If  you  want 
act  the  folks  who  have  cars  and  need  companions. 


Marion   Harris,  309  Spencer,  8- 


or  New  York. 
Beatrice  Rodriguez,  305  Kenan, 


9104—  Engelhard  or  Washington,  j  8-9076— New  York, 


N.  C. 

Howard  Kabn,  108  Aiexaodcr,  8 
9107— Baltimore,  Md. 

Sara  Humphrey,  Pi  Phi  HouaC 
8-9096  —  Washington,  D.  C. 

THE  RULES 

Today  is  Hi*  last  day  for  stu- 
dents naoding  ridM,  or  ridors  to 
bring  thair  namos  by  for  publica- 
tion tonwrrow.  If  you  want  your 
nam*  on  aithar  of  tho  two  lists, 
como  by  Tho  Daily  Tar  Haal's 
newsroom,  on  tha  sacond  floor 
of  Graham  Momorial,  anytime 
from  2-S  p.m.  If  you  can't  come 
by,  mail  your  some  ,address  tele* 
phone  and  destination  to  The 
Daily  Tar  Heel,  Box  1080.  Chap- 
el Hill.  The  service  is  free.  Stu- 
dents have  been  asked  to  notify 
The  Daily  Tar  Noel  when  they 
get  their  rides  or  riders. 

Leonard  Killian,  309  Alexander, 
8-9105-  Albuquerciuc,  N.  M. 


Ana  Maria  Ortia,  Kenan  — New 
York. 

Helen  Duke,  407A  E.  Franklin, 
8-1273— New  York. 

Lynwood  Thompson,  5  Battle,  8 
917j— New   York   To   Chapel    Hill 
after  Christmas. 
I      Marjorie  McMahan,  Carr,  8-910G 
j  Charlotte. 

i     John  Dale,  210  Connor,  8-9178- 
Ashevillc  or  Knoxville. 

Buddy  Clark,  TbcU   Chi  8-912i 
\tlanta,  Ga. 

Angela    Acosta,    218    Kenan    — 
Baltimore. 

Li.ia  Rehor,  224  Kenan  —  New 
York  City. 

Joel  A.  Snow,  1  Pettigrew,  89174 
— St.  Petersburg,  Fla. 

Owen  Leland,  106  Connor,  89155 
— Charle.ston,  S.  C. 

Jerry   Chichester,    213    Aycock, 
8-9126— Maobn.    Ga. 

Sue  Rexrode,  321  Mclvcr,  8  »i:<4 
Roanoke    Va. 

Bill    Henshaw.    202    .\lcxandcr, 
8-9107— KiKixville,  Tcnn. 


John  Underwood.  221  Vance  St.. 
5466— Charleston.    S.    C. 

Christian  Lcfebure,  3  Battle, 
89175— New  York  City. 

.\llan  Spader.  218  Graham,  8- 
9085— Parkersburg,  W.  Va. 

George  Grayson.  208  Winston. 
8-7191— Washington.    D.    C. 

Betty  Barnes.  Spencer,  8-9067-— 
Washington,   D.   C. 


Herb  C.reenblock.  TEP  House, 
8-9007 — New    York    and    vicinity. 

Brad  Seasholes.  21S  Caldwell,  9- 
7688— to  Syracuse.  N.  Y. 

Susan  Inman.  303  Smith,  8-9133 
-  to  \ei  niont,  western  M;iss  ,  Conn 
and  N.  Y. 

Chuck  Federspicl.  8-6433  or  9- 
2382— to  central  Michigan. 

R.   K.  Berry.   106  Whitehead,  C 


As  extraordinary  incentives 
to  high  school  and  collega  teach- 
ers, stipends  for  each  accepted 
student  nK%\  summer  will  exceed 
what  the  average  teacher  earns 
during  the  same  six  weeks  sum- 
mer period.  Each  student  will 
receive  $450,  plus  $90  for  each 
depenaent,  travel  allowances, 
and  remission  of  tuition  and 
fees.  A  teacher  with  a  wife  and 
two  children  will  get  tht  equi- 
valent   of    about    $800. 

The  I;:stitute  of  Natural  Scienc- 
es, dirtcted  by  Kenan  Profes.so' 
Arthur  Wrn.\  will  sponsor  the  pro 
grams  which  will  coincide  with  the 
first  session  of  supimer  school  in 
1957. 

\   gram   of  S75.600  will  support 
scholarships    for    75    high    .scho^)' 
mathematics  and  science  teacliert: 
I  .^50.00   in  .scholarships   for  50  col- 
lege   chemistry    teachers    will    un 
'  derwTito  the  second  course.  i 

•    ■  I 

EMINENT  VISITORS  j 

The  li!nd.s  will  brin^  to  the  Lni-  j 
versity      nationally      distingui.*ho(!  ' 
scientii^Js  t<»  lecture,  and  some  ot 
the   meetin.ijs  -Will   be  open   to   Ihe 
public. 


PARIS  —  French  Foreign  Mini.s- 
t?r  Christian  Pineau  said  the 
weakness  of  the  United  Nations 
was  that  it  made  laws  for  some 
nations  and   not   for  others. 


PORT  S.MD  —  An  Eg.\T3tian 
soldier  shot  and  killed  a  French 
soldier  on  board  ship  preparing 
to  leave  the   Suez  Canal   zone. 


GETTYSBURG.  Pa.  —  India's 
Prime  Minister  .Nehru  said  almost 
nothing  as  President  Eisenhower 
took  him  on  a  tour  of  the  farm, 
The  high  spot  of  the  tour  was 
reported  to  have  been  the  visit 
to  the  cow  barn  where  Nehru 
looked  at  the  President's  cows. 
(Cows  are  sacred   in  India.) 


Bill    Porter.    9   Vance,    8-1177— ,  9066— to  Laurel.  Miss. 


ZBT     House. 


Washington.   D.   C. 

John    .Abramson. 
6031~Miami.   Fla. 

George-  Schroeder,  431  Cobb,   8- 
9012— Raleish. 


RIDERS  WANTED 

Bob  Black.  210  Ruffin.  8-9146  u 
New  Yiiik.  leaving  11:00  p.m.  Uci.. 
24.    Arn\'e    before    Noon. 

Thomas  L.  Gillette.  303  Alumi.i 
Bldg.,  8-8462  Kansas  City,  Mo. 

Warren  Miller  —  Washington. 
D.   C. 

W.    S.    Brewer.    300    Whitehead, 
8-9113 — Mansfield.  Ohio,  via  Char- 
le.ston.    W.    Va.      and 
Ohio. 

Mrs.  W.  C.  Hudson.  9-8792— 
New  York,  leaving  Sunday  or  Mon- 
day. 

David  L.  Heck.  33  Davie  Circle, 
9-2786—10  .Sheihv  Ohio.  vi»  \1' 
•Airy  and  Charleston,  W.  Va.,  leav- 
ing; Dec.  22.  , 


,.Ed  Kiscr,  315  Alexander,  8-910.5 
— to  Laurinburg  via  Sanforr  and 
Aberdeen. 

Fred  Katz.  9031,  Ext.  571  -  to 
Washington.  D.  C. 

Bryce  Johnson,  State  College, 
Rah-i;;h,  TEmple  29363  —  to  Idaho 

Dick  Potthoff.  216  Connor,  8- 
917r.  —  to  .Tacksonville,  Fla. 

Louis  Lefkowitz.  TEP  House. 
8-9007— to  New  York  via  New  Jer- 
sey Turnpike  and  Garden  State 
Parkway 

Dot  Hall.  83.392-to  Williams- 
burg. Va.  via  Richmond. 

.\nn  MeConaughy.  \D  Pi  House. 
Columbus,  j  809P:i— lo  Columbia.  S.C. 

'    I      J.  Timothy  Stevens.  208  Ruffin. 
89146— to   Alleniown.   Pa. 

Tasso  Spanos.  8-6433.  to  Pitts- 
burgh. Pa.,  via  P^nnsvlvania  Turn- 
pike. 

Jame.s  .\berl.  R-7246-  evenings — 
8-1^340 — to  Lancaster,  Penn.  via 
Wit.-hin^ton,  D.  C. 


The  science  and  mathematics  in- 
stitute lor  the  high  .school  teache,  s 
'  vvill    be    under    the    immediat.e    di- 
rection of  Profes.sor  E.  A.  Cameron 
.mathematics)    and    Professor    Vic- 
tor A.  Creiiiech  (botany).  Teachers 
:  will     be     offered     a     progrom     .'t 
I  course,  seminars,   lectures  and   'n 
formal      discussions,     which     wi;! 
"bring   high   school   teachers    into 
contact     with     the     .sciences     and 
mathematics     as     living,     growin. 
bodies  •)!  knowledge,  conducted  by 
able  .scientists  who  also  have   the 
intere.st  and  skill  fo  interpret  their 
.subjects  to  high  .M;-h<K>l   teachers." 

The  chemistry  program  will  b? 
directed  by  ,\ssf>ciate  Pi-ofessor  S. 
Young  Tyree.  with  the  prime  ob 
jective  of  increasing  the  ability  of 
college  teachers  to  interest  slu- 
dents  in  ehemi.stry  as  a  career.  The 
Institute  of  Natural  Sciences  hold:- 
the  be.st  w.-iy  to  do  this  is  to  m 
crea.se  the  teachers  basic  know- 
ledge of  his  subject,  and  to  keep 
him  aware  of  modern  develop 
men's  in  sciences. 

GOV.   HODGES 

When  the  first  grant  was  mace 
known  Nov.   29.  Governor  Luther  \ 
Hodges  said   the  program  at   UNC  j 
will     p.ovide    educational    Icade;- 

(i'cc  hOVNDATlOS,  Page  3) 


I  Ei.senhower  and  Xehru  will  go 
to  Washington  today  where  they 
will  begin  the  general  internation- 

I  al    discussions    which    the    Presi- 

[  dent   is  said   to  prefer. 


Men's  Gtee  Club  To  Join 
Grail  In  Caroling  Tonighl 

The  Men's  Glee  Club  will  join 
Order  of  the  Grail  members  for 
a  caroling  tour  of  the  campus  after 
tonight's  Choral  Club  concert. 

The  caroling  tour  is  an  annual 
event   sponsored   by   the   Grail. 

All  students  interested  in  parti- 
cipating hve  been  encouraged  to 
meet  the  combined  group  at  Hill 
Hall  after  the  eight  o'clock  con- 
cert. 

GM'S  SLATE 

Activities  today  in  Graham 
Memorial  arc  as  follows: 

University  Club,  7-8  p.m.,  Ro- 
land Parker  1;  Chess  Club,  8-11, 
Roland  Parker  1;  University 
Party,  7  11,  Roland  Parke. 
Lounges  2,  3;  Sound  and  Fury, 
2:30-6  p.m.,  Woodhouse  Confer- 
once  Room;  Men's  Honor  Coun- 
cil, 7-M,  Council  Room;  Danca 
Class,  6:30-8  p.m.,  Rendezvous 
Room,  APO,  7  9,  APO   Room, 


M6i   TWO 


CHAPEL  HILL  NEWS  LEADER 


TUESDAY^  D^EMBER  II,  1456 


A  Way  ti  Send  Christmas 
t#  The  folks  Who  Need  It 

Carolina  studeiiLs  ha\e  dfuiunstiatecl.  with  their  charitable  at - 
repianie  of  the  ie<ent  Cianipus  Chest  drixe,  a  real  Christmas  leeliniJ. 
Thev  have  i^i\en  monev  toother  people,  and  they  ha\e  given  it  iinsellish- 
ly 

Because  the  students  have   been   so  unseilish.  we   believe   they  i'>in 

go  a  bit  furtlier  toward  brinjjino  Christmas  to  other  people.   W'e  reler 

to  the  people  of    Hinit>aTV.  people  ,        ,  i      i  i 

Vi   .  /^-i    •  1  •  heedom.  write  a  chet  k  and  put   it 

who  will   ha\e  Chnstntas  this  veav  -        ,  -i     »•  -n    i     ,   r-i    ■ 

,      .        ,       ,  ,.'    ,  ni  the  mail.  \oii  wdl  teel  CJinst- 

mr)stlv    \u    the    heart,    verv    lutl*  i-    t     i  •    j  r  j 

.,,,,.  ntas  a  little  bit  deeper  it  vou  do. 
under  the  i-hristmas  tree.  ' 


YOU  Said  It: 


A  NORTHIRN  VIEW: 


*        *        * 

IWtause  thev  ha\e  been  so  un- 
selfish, we  think  Carolina  students 
will  send  C.hri|stma^  presents  to 
Huui;ar\.  The  presents  <  an  be  sent 
Ik'si  in  the  form  of  f(KKl.  clothifii», 
other  thin<4,s  that  we  aviII  take  htv 
,;»ranted   this  Christmas. 

This  is  ;ui  appeal  to  Carolina 
students,  those  students  uho  have 
proved  .their  un.sellishness  and 
those  wJK)  have  not.  It  takes  ju«>t 
a  little  mouev.  this  Christmas  pres- 
ent   for   Muni^arv. 

II  von  are  a  Catholit.  send  vour 
mtiritv  to  Catholi(  Relief  Services. 
I  p)  Madison  Ave..  .New  York.  Vou 
tan  oainiark  it  for  anjr; special  pur- 
pose vdu    wish. 

11  \oii  are  a  Pi'otestant,  scud  it 
to  (  huiih  \\'o,ild  Servites,  215 
Koimh  A\e..  New  Vork,  It  also  can 
be  e;ninarked. 

If  \.iu  are  a  jew.  send  vtnir 
monev  to  the  Ctiited  Hebrew  Im- 
micrant  Air  .Scnietv,  42.',  Lafayette 
St.,  New  York,  v  N'V.  The  society 
\\il'  not  earmark  supplies  bouaht 
vhh  the  monev.  but  will  turn  all 
of  it  tnuard  Hungarian  relief  if 
\<iii   drsi<;iTafe  it   so.    - 

II     v. Ill    are    -^one    of    these,    trv 
tlie  Amcritan  Ked  Cross.  i^Si/,  E. , 
I  lanklin    St..    downtown. 

It  vou  Willi  C'hristmas  to  be 
sj*iead  i"t.»  the  tired  land  of  the 
people    who    ii;ue    their    lives    for 


Christmas: 
Old-Timey, 
And  Nice 

the  chuithes  of  Chapel  Hill 
and  (lanbtMo  shoultl  be  con,i>rat- 
ulaled  on  their  obser\aiice  of 
<  Christmas  Sundav. 

riiev  put  on  a  parade,  and  it 
tiidnt  ha\e  a  bit  of  commercialism 
in  it.  It  was  taken  Irom  the  Bible, 
anti  it  dealt  with  the  person  ^^hose 
f>irthday  we  celebrate   f">ec.   2-,. 

riic  trucks  and  wa'^ons  be.niui; 
singers  aiul  vii»nettes  from  the  storv 
of  Christ  were  considered  bv  some 
parade  writchers  as  not  too  pro- 
fes.sic>nal  in  finish,  riure  was  an 
abundance  of  aluminum  foil,  thev 
remarked.  a,nd  no  li<»hts  and  frills. 

N\e're  j^lad  the  floats  were  sim- 
ple antI  homemade.  Thev  tontrast- 
etl  \erv  neatly  with  the  Christmas 
deconviions.  haiiftinu-  over  the  street, 
that  were  put  up  by  Chapel  Hill 
and  C'arrboro  mert  hams  a  month 
and  a   half  before  C'hristm.as. 

The  thurthes  and  the  thurth- 
pf(»ple  have  reallv  obsei\ed  Christ- 
mas in  the  tine  way—a  way  that  is 
I:  -kin^  nowadays  in  most  places, 
e\en  people's  hearts. 


The  Odor.   It   Is   Stifling 


State  Colle.ife  definitely  is  'at 
fault  in  the  ;»t  kie  > foreland  ba.s- 
ketball  tase. 
» The  e\i'leiuc.  uncovered  from 
day  to  da\  lor  tlie  past  fev  weeks, 
tontinues  to  mount  —  and  it 
mounts  only  in  favor  of  the  Na- 
tion il  Colle'j^iate  Athletic  Assn., 
auaiiisi    the  college. 

The  bi<»j4est  slice  of  evidence, 
perhaps,  taaie  to  light  over  the 
weekend.  It  was  a  si^iifd  statement 
bv  student  Moreland,  evidently 
supp<inin;^  stmie  t»f  the  charmtis 
that  ha\e  been  le\eled  against 
State  Colle«»e  bv  the  \C.\.\  and 
the    \tlantit    Coast  Confetence. 


The  Daily  Tar  Heet 

Thr  official  student  publication  of  tbe 
Publications  Board  ot  the  University  of 
North  Carolina,  where  it  is  published 
4aily  except  Monday  and  examinatioi 
and  vacation  periods  and  summer  terms 
Entered  as  second  cla^s  matter  in  tht 
oost  otfice  in  Chapel  Hill.  N.  C,  undei 
the  Act  oi  March  8.  1870  Subscription 
rates  mailed.  $4  per  year,  S2.50  a  Semei 
ter;  delivered.  $6  a  yar.  $3.5d  a  lemet 
ter. 


Editor 


FRED  POWLEDGl 


Managing  Editor 
News  Editor 


CHAHLIE  SL6AN 
-     NANCY  HILL 


Business  Manager BILL  BOB  PLEa. 

Sports  Editor  


LAlUlY  CHEEI 


Night  Edits)r 


Cortland  Edwards 


Subscription  Manager Dale  Staley 

Advertising  Manager  Fred  Katzio 

Circulation  Manager   ._  Charlie  Holt 

NEWS  ST.\FF— Clarke  Jones,  Ray  Link 
er,  Joan  Moore.  Piingle  Pipkin,  Anne 
Drake.  Edith  MacKinnon,  WaDy  Kuralt, 
Mary  Alys  Voorhees,  Graham  Sn/der, 
Billy  Barnes.  Neil  Bass,  Cart  Nichols, 
Page  Bernstein,  Peg  Humphrey,  Phyllit 
Mauitsby. 


BUSLNESS  STAFF— Rosa  Moore,  Johnny 
Whitaker.  Dick  Leavitt,  Dick  Stridn. 


SPORT.S  STAfT:  Bill  King,  Jim  Purk^, 
Jimmy  Harper.  Dave  Wible,.  Charley 
Howson. 


EDITORLAI.  STAFF  —  Wfeody  Seart, 
Frank  Crowther,  Barry  Winston,  Da?id 
Mundy.  George  Pfingst.  Ingrld  Clay, 
CorUand  Edwards.  Paul  McCaoley; 
Bobbi  Smith. 


Staff  Photographer   Norman  Kaotof 

iibranao    .._^$.Sue  Giihntr 


.\C.C.  ComriiLssIoner  Jim  Weaver- 
reminded  Slate  College  Chancel- 
lor Carev  H.  Rostirn  in  a  tele- 
gram leleased  over  the  w'eekend. 
that  'the  chancellor  had  a  copy  of 

the  Moreland  statement. 

*  *  * 

Si  ill.  Chancellor  Bostian  sav's. 
"We  believe  we  (an  make  a  satis- 
fat  t«»rv  explanation  of  all  the  al- 
legations." The  cpiestion  is.  When? 

The  lid  blew  off  the  State  Ci»l- 
lege  reiruiting  situation  several 
weeks  ago  when  the  N<'.AA  {)la(ed 
the  (ollege  on  four-year  athletic 
probation  for  usint;  wroniiful 
methods  of  induttino  Moreland  to 
<ouu'   to   State   to   play    basketball. 

Responsible    vourtcs    have    toUl 

I  lie   Daily    far  Heel   the  evideiue 

usetl    a«^inst    State    was    e\iden<e 

gained    bv    two    private    detettives, 

working   from   Atlanta. 

They  tape  recorded  conversa- 
tions setietly.  Iliev  audited  tele- 
plume  (onversations. 

It  was  this  evident  e.  the  sounes 
say.  ihat  convicted  State  (College. 
\nd  State  (College  officials  are  re- 
potted to  know  just  what  the  evi- 
deiue is. 

^'et  they  still  maintain  an  air 
of  innoceme  a'lM)ut  tlie  whole  mat- 
ter. They  allow  the  lid  to  lifted— 
iK)t  by  themselves  but  l)y  Commis- 
sioner Weaver  an  others  —  from 
the  garbage  can.  in<li  by  iiuli. 

The  odor  is  stifling, 

*  *         * 

It  is  time  for  State  College  of- 
fi<  iais  to  drop  their  air  of  in- 
utKence  and  admit  they  were 
wrong.  By  holding  the  truth  off 
longer  an<l  longer  they  are  allow- 
ing the  .situation  to  smell  even 
^\^ols^^. 

I  he  truth  is  fN>und  to  (ome  out, 
s(M>nei-  or  later.  It  should  come 
out  now.  The  people  who  l)roke 
Clonsolidated  University  rules 
f>osiiions  thev  hold, 
should    be    fired,    no    matter   wfuit 

The  people  who  can  and  wrill 
exert  pressure  r>n  Stale  and  Con- 
solidated I'niversity  officials  to 
keep  the  lid  on  longer  they  must 
be  overlooked.  The  collegje  i.s 
ruining  itself,  day  by  day,  as  long 
as  it  withholds  the  truth. 

Now,  the  critics  of  the  college 
have  enough  evidence  to  last  them 
four  vears.  \ow,  it  is  the  time  for 
truth.  A 


Other  Views  Oh  Christiantity 


Mr.   Edwards: 

I  have  reached  the  age  when 
I  feel  free  to  expres.s  the  way  I 
feel,  especially  to  young  folks 
like  you.  who  are  young  enough 
to  be  my  sons  or  grandsons. 
That  is  one  of  the  comforting 
things  about  passing, fifty.  There 
is  another  comforting  thing  I'd 
like  to  share   with  you,  too. 

When  I  was  your  age,  I.  too, 
held  a  mixture  of  feelings  about 
religi<in.  1  niu.st  have  had  it  con- 
fused with  Christianity,  and  I 
had  to  reach  the  age  of  forty 
past  before  I  began  to  under- 
stand what  it  meant.  What  God 
meant.  I  mean,   to  me. 

You    sav    he    means    work    to 


you.  I'm  not  a  philosopher.  I'm 
not  learned,  but  the  things  I 
know  have  come  from  a  deep 
personal  experience,  a  kind  of 
tn,-  and  fail  effort  that  has  cul- 
minated now  into  a  very  real 
and  presonal  friendship  with  the 
God  I  know. 

I  do  not  see  the  God  of  my 
childhood,  who  watched  me  for 
any  misdemeanor  so  that  quick 
punishment  could  come  my  way. 
Once  I  wrote  a  story  about  that, 
which  Farm  Journal  published, 
and  in  it  I  told  of  trying  to  es- 
cape the  all  seeing  eye.  I  don't 
try  to  escape  Him  now.  When 
affairs  of  life  hit  me  that  I  don't 
know    how    to   cope    with    I   talk 


it  over  with  my  friend  and 
somehow  we  come  to  an  adjust- 
ment  that  satisfies  both  of  us. 

I  agree  with  you  that  God  is 
work.  But  to  me  he  is  more  than 
that.  He  is  interest  in  the  work 
I  do.  whether  it  is  my  regular 
.job  of  .doing  diversional  therapy 
at  a  sanitarium,  teaching  a  Sun- 
day school  class,  or  caring  for 
my  two  grandchildren  while 
their  parents  go  to  school  at  the 
University.  Washing  clothes  is 
fun  with  God  to  talk  to.  I  find 
it  nice  to  have  a  friend  so  near 
and  one  who  is  truly  interested 
in  what  I'm  doing. 

I  spent  so  many  years  as  a 
failure,    depres.sed    and    uahappy 


•  •  • 

'It  works  Fine,  You  Just  Have  To  Push  It,  That's  All' . 


,>vr<  j^'*A50 


About  The  Sheep  Of  The  World 


Mr.    Kirkland: 

I  want  to  speak  of  sheep  Mr. 
Kirkland,  those  sheep  that  you 
make  reference  to  in  your  most 
recent  letter.  They  are  the  shocp. 
the  Christian  sheep,  that  lead 
the  idiots  —  yes  the  idiots  and 
the  mentally  suffering  men  and 
women  of  all  age.s.  And  they  lead 
the  poor,  the  maimed;  they  lead 
them  all  and  they  lead  the 
strong.  There  is  no  prohibiting 
IQ  test  which  they  give  to  de- 
termine whether  or  not  one  is 
eligible  to  worship  Him.  .All  that 
is  a.sked  of  them,  the  strong  and 
the  less  strong,  is  faith.  Those 
are  the  .sheep  to  whose  ranks 
I   aspire. 

They  are  the  remnant,  always 
the  remnant    who    will    remain 


within  the  heart  of  the  people* 
and  are  led  by  the  Lamb  who 
will  take  away  their  sins  and  the 
sins  of  the  world.  They  are  the 
sheep  whom  He  will  shear  of 
sins  and  who,  once  have  lost  this 
heavy  fleece,  will  gain  a  far 
greater  strength  than  even  Sam- 
son ever  knew.  Tliey  are  the 
sheep  of  Ru.ssia,  the  sheep  of 
China,  and  the  slaughtered  sheep 
of   Hungary. 

I  am  glad  that  you  believe  in 
God.  but  I  rather  suspect  that 
you  believe  a  little  more  in  Mr. 
Kirkland  though  I  may  be  wrong, 
ksn't  it  odd  that  you  condemned 
Christianity  as  being  egotistical 
and  then,  as  .seems  to  be  the 
way  of  all  vacillating*  "intellect- 
uals", you  now  claim  that  .vour 
religion   is   egoti.stieal? 


But  I  wanted  to  speak  to  you 
of  sheep,  and  I  intend  to  end 
upon  that  note.  These  sheep  of 
which  I  speak  are  not  weak,  Mr. 
Kirkland.  but  they  are  meek. 
Meek,  if  you  will  check  your  dic- 
tionary which  you  obviously 
failed  to  do  when  writing  your 
first  letter,  means  mild  of  tem- 
per; patient  under  injuries;  long- 
.suffering. 

I  most  certainly  believe  that, 
long  after  Mr.  Khruschev  has 
buried  himself.  Ihese  sheep  of 
which  I  speak  will  truly  inherit 
the  earth  and.  I  might  add.  more 
than  six  feet  of  it.  I  sincerely 
hope  that  you  and  I  are  among 
them. 

JMiics  C.  Reynolds 
.^  312   Grim*s  •  UNC 

• 


Pogo 


5UIT,WgA£lN'AWHITf0eARP. 


L'il  Abner 


^ip  we  CAM!  oom  Hief  id^> 

SerA  umt  WQ^  VOHi  HESE 

mi»ofioPAHommM"  > 

vsf  am  fonmr 


because  of  my  concept  of  God. 
When  He  came  into  my  life  things 
changed  for  me.  and  day  by  day 
I'm  learning  to  do  His  way,  and 
finding  it  fun.  Not  for  me  a  long 
face  and  worry.  Pure  fun. 

Other  folks  havfe  my  concept 
of  God,  too.  I  watch  patients  go 
to  the  hospital  for  surgery,  put- 
ting themselves  into  God's  big 
hand,  as  we  say  there  on  our 
devotional  time,  unafraid  of  a 
frightening  experience. 

I've  seen  soiyie  whom  the  doc- 
tors and  nurses  had  little  hope 
for.  get  well,  and  I've  heard  them 
say  that  it  wasn't  the  medicine 
that  did  it.  Maybe  it's  all  right 
to  have  your  concept  of  God 
while  things  go  well,  with  youth 
and  good  health  to  abet  you, 
but  it  is  when  things  begin  to 
go  stale  that  we  need  something 
oi»tside-inside  us  to  make  life 
open  the  door  to  real  living. 

You  sound  so  earnest  and  sin- 
cere. Mr.  Edwards,  and  so  inter- 
esting. I've  seen  God.  through 
Christ,  take  over  lives  like 
yours  and  make  them  into  some- 
thing beyond  the  imagination  of 
anyone  but  those  of  us  who  know 
the  pure  joy  of  knowing  God. 
through  Christ,  as  our  personal 
advisor  and  friend. 

May  God  bless  you  in  this,  the 
season  He  sent  His  son  to  join 
us,  .^3  that  Christ,  being  in  the 
flesh,  like  uS.  could  understand 
liow  we  feel,  being  in  the  flesh 
ourselves. 

Mrs.  Frances  Bradshtr 

Suggestions 
On  Believing 

.  Mr.  Kirkland: 

What  is  your  God.  sir?  Does 
this  statement  confuse  you?  Let 
me  rephrase  it.  If  your  'God  is 
not  the  God  of  Christianity,  then 
what  i.s  your  God,  sir?  I  quote 
from  your  Qecember  11th  letter 
t.)   James   Reynolds. 

"The  staunch  determination 
....  is  the  desire  to  reach  a 
higher  level  of  understanding  of 
God." 

'i  turned  from  Christianity 
because  it  failed  to  satisfy  me  in 
my   understanding   of  God." 

It  would  .^leem  that  you  have 
no  real  idea  of  just  what  your 
God  is — perhaps  it  is  your  ego- 
tism— and  as  a  result  of  this  lack 
of  knowledge.  I  question  your 
understanding  of  God  at  even 
the  lowest  level.  How  then  can 
you  condemn  Christianity  for 
failing  to  give  you  an  understand- 
ing of  God  at  a  higher  level  if 
you  don't  understand  him  at  the 
lower? 

You  further  stated,  sir,  that 
the  knowledge  of  the  Love  of 
God  should  be  derived  from  gen- 
eral ideas  and  not  from  an  "his- 
torical narrative"  written  by  men 
suffering  from  hallucinations.  I 
ask  you.  "was  God's  existence 
on  earth  incarnate  in  the  being 
of  Jesus  Christ  a  hallucination; 
and  therefore  is  God  such  too? 

Oh!  But.  yes  I  forget  that  you 

don't    believe    in    the    Christian 

*   God    because    he    is    too    limited 

for  the  depths  and  realms  of  your 

intelligence. 

May  I  suggest  Mr.  Kirkland  that 
a  complete  examination  of  your- 
self— egotism  and  all  —  along 
with  an  evaluation  of  that  which 
you  call  your  God,  might  be  in 
order. 

Pttc  Kelley 

■  ^^■:       • 

By  Walt  Kelly 


I  lOiO  HIM  J  WA6  A 


By  Ai  Capp; 


/and  so  vou  most 

I    BE  ABSORBED  BV 
>  SOME  OTHER  CITY. 
(   WE  CALLED  ^.M  ALL 
V  TOGETHER,  AND 
(  PICKED  A  NAME 
I  OUT  OF  A  HAT 


Dulles'  Opinions 
Hurt  the  U.  S. 


Cortland  Edwards 

When,  oh  when  will  somebody,  somehow  get 
rid  of  John  "Bungle"  Dulles.  The  only  chance  for 
world  peace  is  thru  the  joint  efforts  of  the  little 
nations  of  the  world  and  the  United  States.  And 
Mr.  Dulles  is  beginning  to  turn  their  stomachs  too. 

It  was  said  to  this  reporter  the  other  night  that 
they  (the  one  who  spoke)  had  thought  and  hoped 
that  this  last  operation  on  Dulles  might  have  help- 
ed him  and  the  country — ^but  it  didn't.  He  survived. 
There  is  much  wisdom  in  these  words,  words, 
words. 

The  NATO  Council  and  all  the  little  freedom 
loving  nations  of  the  world  got  a  big  jolt  from 
Dulles  last  Thursday.  He  told  the  ministers  of 
NATO  that  America  reserves  the  right  to  act  alone 
in  all  parts  of  the  world  without  consulting  NATO. 

"Hiis  warning  or  threat  puts  America  in  a  very 
odd  position.  The  position  of  having  upbraided 
its  two  closest  allies — Britain  and  France — for  at- 
tacking Egypt  without  con.sultlng  other  nations 
while  at  the  same  time-  resen'ing  for  the  United 
States  the  right  to  do  the  same  thing  if  they  so 
choo.se.  -       "    ^—ivr 

The  United  States'  stand  in  the  Near  East  crisis 
has  been  an  admirable  one,  but  as  usual  with  our 
foreign  policy — there  has  been  no  carry-thru.  How 
can  the  enslaved  peoples  of  the  world  ever  get 
any  encouragement  to  break  those  red  bonds  that 
bind  them  if  the  biggest  and  freest  nation  of  all 
igores  them  completely?  The  same  nation  that  at 
one  time  was  a  colony  itself,  that  revolted  and 
gained  its  own  independence. 

Mr.  Vorontsov,  Third  Secretary  to  the  USSR 
delegation  to  the^UN,  was  asked  the  definition  of 
colonialism  by  the  UNC  Seminar  group.  He  replied 
by  giving  the  example  of  Britain  in  the  Mediteran- 
ean  and  Africa. 

Vorontsov  was  then  asked  what  was  the  dif- 
ference between  ^colonialism  over  the  sea  and 
colonialism  over  the  land  (USSR  in  Europe).  This 
seemed  to  catch  Mm  off  guard  temporarily  for  he 
denied  that  the  USSR  was  involved  i^  cplonialiSBX. 

At  an  interview  later,  I  asked  him  the  ques- 
tion on  colonialists  again  (for  I  was  not  present 
the  first  time  it  was  asked).  He  had  apparently  re- 
membered the  question  and  had  thought  about  it 
for  he  changed  his  answer. 

The  second  time  he  answered,  "By  colonialism 
I  mean- Great  Brjtain  in  the  Medite^rranean  and 
Africa,  or  the  USSR  in  Europe,  or  the  United 
States  in  South  Ainerica  and  in  the  islands  in  the 
Pacific.  There  is  .rio  difference  in  colonialism  over 
the  sea  and  colottialism  over  the  land.  Only .  the 
motives." 

Americans  shoald  sit  down  and  realize  that  the 
United  States  is  not  lily  white  by  any  means.  They 
should  sit  down  and  look  at  the  world  situation 
from  a  more  objeetive  viewpoint.  Are  we  to  stand 
up  with  the  fallen  nations  of  the  world — England 
and  France — and  also  be  counted  out?  Or  shouM 
we  try  and  help  in  every  way  possible*  for  the 
little  people  to  get  out  from  under? 

Are  you  going  to  stand  by  Britain  after  they 
committed  their  atrocities  in  India,  or  stand  by 
Russia  while  they  continue  to  commit  wholesale 
murder  in  Hungary?  Are  you  going  to  sit  down  and 
ay  Israel  is  at  fault,  or  Egypt  is  at  fault,  or  some- 
body else  is  at  fault?  You  can  my  friend,  but  this 
is  not  a  very  realistic  attitude  to  take.  It  will  not 
solve  anything. 

You  should  take  cognizance  of  the  fact  that 
there  are  only  two  nations  of  power  left  in  this 
world  today.  Russia  and  the  United  States.  Britain 
and  France  are  dead  now.  Are  we  to  be  next? 

The  powers  of  the  Africo-Asian  block  in  the 
UN  Assembly  are  not  to  be  forgotten.  Of  the  orig- 
inal 42  members  of  the  Assembly  22  of  them  wei*© 
in  North  and  South  America.  This  block  has  been 
in  control  of  the  UN  ail  along.  But  it  is  changing 
BOW.  There  are  79  members  of  the  UN  with  26 
members  nations  from  the  Bandung  area  along. 

This  is  a  bigger  voting  block  than  the  United 
States  has  had.  And  it  is  getting  larger  all  the  time. 
This  week  Japan  comes  up  for  formal  admittance 
to  the  Assembly.  And  new  ones  are  coming  in 
all  the  time.  By  1960  all  the  countries  that  have 
been  colonies  will  have  a  majority  iiT  the  UN.  It 
is*  this  power  and  these  people  that  we  have  to 
reckon   with  in  the  future. 

It  is  the  time  now,  today,  to  act,  to  start  build- 
ing with  these  people.  It  is  time  for  aid,  and  not 
condemnation.  A  very  good  start  to  show  the  peo- 
ples of  the  world  that  we  are  interested  in  them 
for  ^ther  than  imperialistic  motives  is  by  firing 
John  Foster  Dulles.  What  we  need  is  a  much  more 
qualified  man.  A  man  like  General  Greunth^r  or 
even  Governor  Herter. 

If  each  country  in  the  world  lit  a  matcii  by 
itself  the  flame  would  hardly  be  noticed.  But  if 
all  the  nations  from  Laos  to  Yeman  got  togetlipr  111 
a  block,  then  those  individual  flames  from  the  tiny 
matches  would  light  up  the  sky.  It  is  time  for  the 
United  States  to  start  passing  out  matches  instead  of 
blowing   out  the   existing   ones. 


TUESDAY, 


(Contini 

ship  in  prei 
ia  public  SCI 

President  I 
House  in  a 

'The  .Nat 
tion   is    unc 
program  to 
more  and 
mathemaiic^ 
and  high  scj 
jective  is  to 
ter   trained ] 
the  higli  scl 

W«  art] 
reedy  at 
panded  la| 
science  fac 
in  meetingi 
•tomic  a^el 
th«  Nation] 
has  recognf 
th*  succcs 
program. 

Statement 
ated  with  t\ 

Kenan 
Why  burn  wl 
the  Consolil 
bead  of  tl 
d^t: 

yi  am  es 
these  grantl 
Science  FoJ 
they  providf 
of  great  cor 
can,  but  th( 


ar 


M 


LAR< 


TUESDAY,  DECEMBER   18,  1956 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


PAGE    THREC 


FOUNDATION  GRANTS 


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(Contintted   From  Page   1)     ■ 

ship  in  preparing  science  teachers 
la  public  schools. 

President  Friday  and  Chancellor 
House  in  a  joiat  statement  said: 

"The  National  Science  Founda 
tion  is  underwriting  a  bold  new- 
program  to  acquire  for  this  nation 
more  and  more  good  science  and 
mathematics  teachers  in  colleges 
und  high  schools.  The  ultimate  ob- 
jective is  to  produce  more  and  bel- 
ter trained  scientists,  starting  at 
I  he  high  school  level. 

W«  art  proud  that  w«  arc 
ready  at  Chapel  Hill  in  our  ex- 
panded laboratories  and  other 
science  facilities  to  do  our  part 
in  meeting  the  challenge  of  (his 
atomic  age.  We  are  pleased  that 
the  National  Science  Foundation 
has  recognized  our  potential  for 
the  successful  execution  of  the 
program." 

Statements  from  others  assoc-i- 
iited  with  the  grants  follow: 

Kenan  Professor  William  V.. 
Whyburn  who  is  acting  provost  of 
the  Consolidated  University  atul 
head  of  the  tJNC  mathematic- 
dept: 

"I  am  especially  pleased  with 
these  grants  from  the  National 
Science  Foundation.  Not  only  do 
they  provide  support  for  prograii's 
of  great  concern  to  every  Ameri- 
can, but  they  give  encouragement 


to  all  members  of  the  University's 
faculty  and  administration  as  wc 
^eek 'Jo  bring  to  fruition  our  long 
range  efforts  and  plans  to  advanc 
the  University's  proper  services 
»n  att  areas  of  the  arts  and  scien- 
ces, ^  well  as  in  other  areas  which 
depend  up  on  a  strong  and  weil- 

balanced  arts  and  science  progran: 
While*  this  particurar  support  lies 
heavily  in  the  sciences,  grants  are 
being  sought  in  all  fields  of  con- 
cern ■  to  the  University.  It  is  our 
hope;  and  belief,  that  foundation 
support  for  educational  programs 
widely  distributed  throughout  the 
University  will  increase  during  the 
months  that  lie  just  ahead." 

Kenan  Professor  Arthur  Roe 
who  is  director  of  the  Institute  of 
Natiiral  Sciences: 

"The  two  grants  give  the  Uni- 
versity, through  the  Institute  of 
Natural  Sciences,  a  chance  to  im- 
prove the  quality  of  science  teach- 
ing in  high  schools  and  to  bring 
to  chemistry  teachers  from  small 
colleges  facets  of  modern  develop- 
ments in  their  field  of  teachii.^ 
and  research." 


Covering  The  University  Campus 


FICTION    BOARD 

The  Fiction  Board  of  the  Car;: 
lina  Quarterly  will  meet  today  a 
4  p.m.  in  the  Quarterly  office. 


Ck  El/en/  QiM/)U£. . .  Co/kge,  Msn 
mflOofnen  are  (kco(/er/ng  (<jkf 

f  Viceroys 

are  Smoother 


BECAUSE  ONLY  .VICEROY 
HAS  20,000  FILTERS 

Twice  As 
Many  RIters 

AS  THE  OTHER  TWO 
LARGEST-SELLING  FILTER  BRANDS 


COMPARE! 

How  mony  f  ilt«r»  in  yaur 
filter  tip?  (Remember 
— the  more  filters  the 
unoother  the  taste  i) 


GM  CLOSING  DATE 

Miss  Linda  Mann,  director  of 
Graham  Memorial,  has  announced 
the  building  will  close  tomorrow 
at  6  p.m.  for  the  Christmas  holi 
days.  It  will  re-open  Jan.  2  at  1 
p.m. 
PICTURE  RENTALS 

Pictures  which  have  been  rented 
from  Person  Hall  Art  Gallery  will 
be  due  as  usual  on  Jan.  2.  Al  stu 
dents  and  townspeople  who  are 
planning  to  be  away  during  the 
entire  student  holiday  period  are 
urged  to  return  their  picture  rent- 
als before  leaving  town  by  Curator 

Kidney  Study 
Underwoy 
In  Med  School 

Dr.  Carl  W.  Gottschalk.  assist- 
ant professor  of  medicine  at  the 
UNO  School  of  Medicine,  is  now 
engaged  in  a  study  called  "A  Mam- 
malian Microgunctune  Study  of 
Some  of  the  Physical  Factors  in 
Kidney  Function." 

The  study  is  being  financed  by 
a  grant  of  $7,628.50  from  the 
American  Heart  Assn.  and  an 
additional  grant  of  $12,494  from 
the  U.  S.  Public  Health  Service. 

Dr.  Gottschalk's  project  involves 
measuring  the  pressure  in  both 
the  blood  capillaries  of  the  kidney 
and  the  tubules  where  urine  is 
formed   in   laboratory   rats. 

Dr.  Crotfschalk  has  adapted  an 
instrument  called  a  micromani- 
pulator in  this  work.  It  reduces 
th?  scope  of  movement  from  the 
relatively  large  actions  of  the  re- 1 
searcher's  hand  to  the  highly  re- 
stricted range  for  working  on  the 
microscopic  vessells  on  the  an- 
esthetized rats, 

By  this  means,  while  watching 
through  a  microscope,  the  physi- 
cian puntures  the  kidney  capillary 
or  tubule  with  hollow  glass 
needle,  whose  point  is  the  size 
of  a  red  blood  cell,  and  measures 
the  pressure  being  exerted  there. 

A  study  of  how  these  pressures 
vary  under  different  stimuli  is 
expected  to  tell  much  about  the 
relationship  between  the  circula- 
tory system  and  the  kidneys. 


Lynette  Warren. 

Person  Hall  Art  Gallery  will  ob- 
serve the  office  holiday  schedule 
and  will  be  closed  from  Dec.  21 
thru  De9.  26. 
PHARMACY  SENATE 

The  Pharmacy  Senate  will  meot 
at  7  p.m.  in  room  113  of  Howell 
Hall. 
OE  MOLAY  MEETING 

A  call  meeting  of  the  UNC 
Chaptfer  of  Order  of  the  De  Molay 
will  be  held  at  the  Lodge  Hall, 
202  West  Franklin  St.  tonight  at 
8:30. 
WUtIC 

Today's  schedule  for  WUNC,  the 
University's  non-commercial  FM 
i'adilo  station,  is  a:(  follows: 

7:00  The  Spirit  of  Christmas 

7:15  Over  the  Back  Fence 

7:30  Vistas  of  Israel 

t:45  Variations  on  a  Theatre 
Theme. 

8:00  Christmas  is  Coming 

9:30  Adventures  in  Song 


10:00  .  :xs 

10:15  Evenirsf  Masterwork 
11:30  Sign  Orf 
WUNC-TV 

Wt5^C-TV  will  be  off  the  air  for 
the  University  holiday  period  from 
Dec.  22  thru  Jan.  2.  returning  to 
the  air  on  Jan.  3.  The  schedule 
for  today  is  as  follows: 

12:45  Music 

1:00  Today  on   the  Farm 

1:30  Christmas  Spirit 

2:00  Science  and  Nature 

2:30  Sign  Off 

5:45  Music 

6:00  Magic  Lantern 

6:15  Sports  Clinic 

6:30  News 

6:45  Sports 

7:00  BcK)ks  and  People 

7:15  Bible  Course 

8:00  Dr.  Shivers 

8:45  State  Gov't 

9:30  Musical  Forms 

10:00  Final  Edition 

10:05  Sign  Of 


Library  Now  Housing 
8  Different  Displays 


By   BILL   VAN   TREUREN 

Besides  housing  more  than  635.- 
000  volymes,  the  UNC  Library  is 
housing  a  variety  of  some  eight 
displays  which  are  now  on  ex- 
hibit for  those  who  enjoy  viewing 
collections  on  such  men  as  George 
Mason,  Bernard  Shaw  and  Robert 
Schumann. 

And  who  is  George  Mason?  He 
was  the  American  statesman  who 
forwarded  a  Bill  of  Rights  that 
ultimately  formed  the  basis  for 
the  first  ten  amendments  to  the 
U.  S.  Constitution.  Highlights  of 
his  life.  1725-1792.  are  depicted 
in  a    12-piece  vertical  display. 

Also  on  display  are  47  books 
that  were  eligible  for  the  1956 
Mayflower  Cup,  which  was  recent- 
ly awarded  to  the  best  non  fic- 
tion work  published  by  a  North 
Carolinian  during  the  12  months 
prior  to  Aug.  31.  1956. 

Mrs.  Frances  G.  Patton  won  the 


Help  Fight  TB 


Buy  Christmas  Seals 


And  ffie 
fntimdte 
Bookshop 
Gift-Wraps 
Books       -M 
Free!         ^ 


Transportation  Speaker  Talks  To  UNC  Chapter 

Shown  above  is  Dr.  H.  J.  Harst  (socond  from  r  ight),  educational  adviser  to  the  Commandant,  US 
Army  Transportation  School,  Ft.  Eustis,  Va.  Dr.  Harst  recently  spoke  before  the  UNC  chapter  of  the 
National  Defense  Transportation  Assn.  Chapter  officers  shown  with  him  ar*  (left  to  right)  Roy  W. 
Wilson,  Marion,  secretary-treasurer  and  Stephen  L.  Hayworth,  Asheboro,  president.  Not  pictured  U, 
James  F.  Carlisle,  Guilford,  vice  president. 


Transportation   Training   Of  Army 
Is  Described  For   UNC  Students 


An  educational  institution  with 
emphasis  on  "how"  with  a  mini- 
mum of  "why"  in  its  curriculujn 
is  the  Transportation  School  at 
Ft.  Eustis.  Va..  Dr.  H.  J.  Darst, 
educational  advisor  to  the  post 
commandant  recently  told  a  UNC 
dinner  session. 

Dr.  Darst  was  guest  speaker  for 
the  UNC  chapter  of  the  National 
Defense    Transportation    Assn. 

"The  Transportation  School  at 
Ft.  Eustis"  is  an  educational  insti- 
tution possessing  the  same  funda- 
mental elements  as  all  educational 


DAILY    CROSSWORD 


Viceroy^s  exclusive  filter  is  made 
from  purt  ca)luloM^9oft<  snow- white,  natural  I 


ACROSS 

1.  A  dipt 
6.  Ehigvosscd 

10.  Book  of  Old 
Teatament 

11.  Wlngllke 

12.  EdicU 

13.  Ckrry  on, 
MW&r 

14.  Mai* 
descendant 

15.  Tree 

17.  Soak  VB 

18.  At  home 

19.  Lucid 

21.  District 
Attorney 
(abbr.) 

22.  Close  to 

24.  Native 

■   ofTVoy 

25.  Twilled 
fabric 

28.  Genus 

29.  Side  (Bit  a 
ditshimll.) 

32.City(N.T.) 

35.  Sodhun 
(sym.) 

86.  Uk*  a 
mouac 

38.Kxlst 

39.  Cravat       * 

U.Emfgjt  ., 

42.Gr«cKmter 

43.  Badly 

45.  A  round- 
about way 

47.  Garment 

4  8..  Manacles 

49.  Epochs 

jo.  Taut 

DOWN 

1.  Refal  chair 
2.UuslC«l 
initnunsBt, 


3.  Employ  23.  Curved 

4.  Construe-  line 
tion  material  25.  Jolt 

5.  HQun4do«  27.  Malay- 


e.  Uncookea 

7.  Exda- 
mi^ticm  of 
sorrow 

8.  Sacred 
tenw^f 
(Otimt.) 

9.  A  crown  saw 
(Surf) 

12.  Himlu 

month 
16.  Musical 

instrument 

irXonofnMlk 
20.rUH6fr6otk 


an 
twat 

29.  All 

30.  Seaman 

31.  Learn- 

tirahm- 
an 

33.  Blunt 

34.  Period 
of  time 

37.  Cubic  meter 
40.  Island  of 

Napoleon's 

exile 


i-jjii-j.jj  yaaa 
N-j^i  :i3a  aai3 
[■^nauara 

r.Azn  aara  atsg 


institutions   —    environment,    cur- 
riculum,     instructional     methods, 
students   and    faculty, '    Dr.    Darst  j 
said..  j 

Instruction  in  four  media  of 
transportation — air.  highway,  ma- 
rine and  rail — is  divided  between  ] 
classroom  and  practical  work,  I 
with  the  emphasis  placed  on  ap- 
plying what  the  student  has  learn- 
ed in  the  classroom. 

"The  curriculum  is  reduced  to 
the  bare  essential  of  the  "how" 
with  theoretic^'  background  or 
what  might  be  called  the  "why"' 
largely  eliminated. 

"At  the  Transportation  School 
skill  and  knowledge  is  acquired 
to  perform  the  various  jobs  in 
military  transportation,"  Dr.  Darst 
said. 

The    UNC   chapter    of    National 


Defense  Transportation  Assn.  was 
formed  Nov.,  1955  within  the  Traf- 
fic and  Transportation  Dept.  of 
the  School  of  Business  .Adminis- 
tration. Dr.  J.  C.  D.  Blaine  and  E. 
W.  Schadt  are  faculty  advisers. 

Its  purpose  is  to  foster  better 
understanding  of  various  modes 
of  transportation,  study  methods 
of  improving  the  countrj's  trans- 
portation system,  study  importance 
and  methods  of  operation  in  time 
of  emergency  and  determine  what 
role  transportation  can  play  in 
overall    economy   and   defense. 

"CLASSIFrEDS 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL  WILL 
pay  $  .25  for  each  issue  of  the 
September  28  edition.  Papers  of 
this  date  are  needed  for  adver- 
tising  purposes. 


VMttrday'i  A|i«w«i 

42.  Affca, 
44.  Affirma- 
tive 
reply 
46.  Heavy 
weight 


PRE- 
CHRISTMAS 


HERE  IT  IS! 
Kemp's  Annual 

SALE 


9  a,m.-9  p.m. 

TODAY  &  WEDNESDAY 

EVERYTHING  GOES . . . 

WE  ARE  GIVING  THE  BEST  NOW  .  .  . 
AND  NOT  THE  WORST  AFTER  CHRISTMAS! 

Come  And  Get  Em! 

WWt^  207  E.  Franklin  St. 


award  with  "A  Piece  of  Luck." 
Books  eligible  included  Billy  Gra- 
ham's "Secret  of  Happiness,"  John 
Parris  "Roaming  Che  Mountains," 
and  Burke  Davis  "Gray  Fox." 

An  18-piece  .  exhibit  on  Glen 
Haydon,  American  musicologist 
and  composer,  is  displayed  in  his 
honor  on  his  60th  birthday.  He 
has  ben  head  of  ONC's  music  de- 
partment since  1934. 

A  fourth  exhibit  is  made  up  of 
eight  separate  displays  on  Archi- 
bald Henderson's  collection  of 
Bernard  Shaw.  The  displays  con- 
tain 22  'pieces  on  the  average  and 
include  photographs  of  his  plays 
being  staged,  numerous  letters 
written  by  Shaw  to  Henderson, 
foreign  translations  of 
plays  and  photographs  of  Shaw 
in   various  activities. 

There    is    also    a    15-piece    dis- 
play   on    Robert    Schumann,    who 
died    100    years    ago.    It    includes 
compositions     that     support     evi- 1 
dence   of  his   unusual   interest   in  1 
the  world  of  music. 

Another  display  case  houses 
articles  that  bring  to  mind  the 
350th  anniversary  of  the  birth  of 
Rembrandt,  master  artist.  j 

Then  there  are  three  shelves 
on  the  Carolina  Playmaker's  pre- ! 
sentation  of  Eugene  O'Neil's  "De-  • 
sire  Under  the  Elms."  which  is ' 
being  presented  for  the  last  time  { 
tonight.  Three  more  shelves  dis-  j 
play  articles  in  honor  of  Egon 
Welksz,  composer  and  musicolog-  ] 
ist,  who  recently  spoke  at  UNC  ^ 
and  who  teaches  at  Oxford  Univer- . 
sity.  ' 


Pharmacy  Scfvool  Museum 
Receives  Old'Medicines 

The  UNC  School  of  Pbarmajy 
Museum  has  recently  received  a 
donation  of  thr*^  packages  of  (rfd 
patent   medicine. 

The  medicines  were  given  by 
W.  L.  Lamar  of  Denton.  This  is 
Lamar's  second  such  donation  of 
old  patent  medicines  this  year. 

One  package  is  labeled  Mystic 
Oil  of  Joy.  The  manufacture  claim- 
ed the  product  would  "kill  pain 
in  man  or  beast."  Another  is  a 
package  of  Lane's  Brain  Relief 
Cures.  The  third  Ls  Murphee'4 
Choler.   and   Dirrhoea  Cure. 

Lamar  discovered  the  old  re- 
medies^ during  a  recent  trip  in 
Ahibama. 


TEP  Social  Fraternity 
Chooses  New  Officials 

Sonny  Evans  of  Durham  was  re- 
Shaw's  I  cently  elected  chancellor  of  Tau 
Epsilon   Phi  social  fraternity. 

Arthur  Sobel  of  Neponsit.  N.Y., 
was   chosen   vice   chancellor. 

Other  officers  elected  were 
Steve  Bank,  New  York.  N.  Y., 
Bursar,  and  Richard  Eisenburg, 
Lawrence.  N.  Y..  Scribe. 


Reward  Is  Offered  For 
Child's  Missing  Glasses 

Somewhere  on  campus  a  pair  o' 
child's  glasses  has  been  lost. 

The  glasses  were  lost  by  a  child 
who  was  visiting  the  Planetariun< 
with  a  school  group  on  Dec.  12. 

Anyone  finding  the  glasses  has ' 

been  asked  to  return  them  to  Lon 
nie   Suggs,  Pee   Dee  No.   1.  Rock 
ingham,  N.  C.  A  reward  has  been 
offered  to  the  finder. 


mmm 


The  Dollar 
Table  at 
The  Intimate 
Bookshop 
Solves  More 
Christmas 
Problems 
T/ion 
Santa  Claus! 


NOW  PLAYING 


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OF 


IE 


_  MARK  HFLLINGER  : :.  ^      r^ 

BURT  LANCASTER 
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ALBERT  OEKKER  •  SAM  LEYENE 

Directed  by 

ROBERT  SIODMAK 

SoMUflq  ky  ANTHONY  VEILLER 
Frni  lit  ftxy  k>  ERNEST  HEMINGWAY 
MOiirMARKHELLINGER 

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THE  DAILY  TAR  HfeEL 


TUESDAY,  DECEMBER   II,  195S 


Varsity  Cagers  Beat  Maryland  70-61;  Frosh  Defeat  Duke 


A  Clash  In  Woollen  Gym 

Harmony  reigns  once  more  in  the  st^-ife  stricken  UNC  At^ilelic 
Department.  The  'family  feud"  between  Jim  Tatum  and  Frank  Mc- 
Giiire  that  was  touched  off  by  Durham  Sun  Sports  Editor  Hugo  Ge- 


Rosenbfuthi 
Tallies  16 
In  Victory 

A   late   first   half  scoring  spurt 

by    All-American     Lennie    Rasen- 

bluth    pulled    Carolina    out   of    a 

temporary      shooting     lapse      last 

J  night   as    the   Tar   Heels   piled   up 

i  a    14    point    halftime    spread    and 

;  went    on   to   defeat   the    Maryland 

Terps  70-61  in  Woollen  Gym.  The 

victory  enabled   the   Tar  Heels  to 

take    over    undisputed    possession  i 


mino  has  reportedly  been  resolved,  and  all  is  quiet  on  the  Hill.  (See  j  of  first  place  in  the  ACC. 


Page    1.)   Or  in  other  words,  the  Athletic  Department   will  wash   no 
more  of  their  dirty  linen  in  public. 

What's  the  story?  W*ll,  as  w*  see  it,  it  goes  something  like 
this. 

A  short  while  back.  Coach  McGuire  decided  that  it  would  be  a 
good  idea  to  hold  a  press  conference  at  tne  Pines  after  ever>-  home 


Until  Big  Lennie  hit  his  third 
point  with  6:34  /emaining  in  the 
half,  the  two  teams  battled  on 
fairly  even  grounds  with  the  lead 
cJijmging  hands  several  times,  but 
when    Kosie    started    hitting    the 


game.  Coach  Tatum  had  been  doing  this  everj-  Tuesday  of  the  foot-  j  entire    team    seemed    to    perk    up 
ball  season,  and  McGuire  could  see  no  reason  why  he  shouldn't  be 
allowed  to  do  the  same,  especially  in  view  of  the  fact  that  his  basket- 
ball team  rated  among  the  nation's  best. 

Coach  McGuire  also  made  up  his  mind  that  he  would  like  to 
carry  two  or  three  close  friends  from  th*  school's  admimstretive 
department  along  wiHt  Mm  en  the  New  York  trip.  These  tmn  had 
worked  long  and  indMStriewsly  through  the  years  for  th#  catise 
of  basketball  here  at  UNC,  and  were  entitled  to  ntake  the  trip, 
thought  McGuire.  Again  Tatum  had  set  rhe  precedent  during  the 
football   season. 
So  then  the  Tar  Heei   cage   mentor  presented   his  requests  to 
Athletic  Director  Chuck  Erickson,  the  stocky  boss  of  athletics  here 
at  UN'C,  Erickson  looked  over  the  proposals,  shuddered  at  the  ex- 
pense involved,  and  stamped  them  "Rejected.'' 

Then  the  fireworks  started.  McGuire  was  unhappy,  and  some 
think  rightfully  so.  Huge  Germino  of  the  Durham  Sun  got  wind  of 
the  situation   and  told  all.   He   laid   it  on   the   line,  saying  that 
McGuire  was  dissatisfied  with  the  existing  state  of  affairs  and 
might  even  go  so  far  as  to  leave  for  th*  big  city. 
Rumors  were  rife.  One  said  McGuire  had  already  officially  hand- 
ed in  his  resignation,  and  had  it  refused.  Another  had  Tatum  moving 
in  as  Athletic  Director,  and  still  another  gave  the  job  to  McGuire. 
Then  came  Neil  Bass'  column  in  the  Daily  Tar  Heel.  Accord- 
ing to  this  version  of  the  situat'Mn,  the  'parasitic   monster',  or 
Tatum  as  he  was  refered  to  by  Messrs.  Kraar  and  Yoder  of  DTH 
fame,  had   taken  over  tlie  entire   Athletic   Department   and  v/aa 
bending  tvMirone  and  everything  to  his  will. 
At  this,  the  students  began  to  make  ominous  noises.  Rumblings 
•f  discontent  with  the  iron  handed  methods  of  the  "Tatumian  regime" 
began  to  be  heard.  Support  for  McGuire  began  to  grow  among  the 
students  and  alumni. 

While  all  this  was  going  on.  Sunny  Jim  was  in  Wilmington, 
Mking  to  prospective  football  players  in  blissfull   ignorance  of 
Ibe  rumpus  he  h«d  been  drawn  into  back  in  Chapel  Hill.  But  he 
••on  found  out  what  was  in  the  air  when  he  got  home. 
When  he  did  learn  the  whole  stor>-.  he  became  indignant,  and 


and  the  Tar  Heels  were  able  to 
I  maintain  a  substantial  lead 
I  throughout  the  remainder  of  the 
\  contest. 

Neither  team  waa  particularly 
;  sharp  from  the  floor  and  the 
I  game  several  times  threatened  to 
I  turn  into  a  .fough-house  with  a 
;  total  of  48  personal  fouls  being 
:  committed  throughout  the  con^ 
,  test.  . 
I      The    Tar   Heels   left   the    floor 

at  intermission  with  a  40-26  edge 
I  over  the  Terps  and  only  once  in 

the  final  half  did  the  visitors  from 
\  College   Parte   challenge    the   Tar 

Heel's  margin. 

Top    man    for    the    night    wr^ 
i  Bob     O'Brien,    »     sharp-sAiooting 

Maryland  guard  who  dropped  in 
I  29    points.    Rosenhluth    was   high 

for  the  Tar  Heels  with  26,  follow- 
j  ed  by  Pete  Brennen  who  collect- 
I  ed  14. 

j     This  was  the  last  home   game 
I  for  the  Tar  Heels  until   Jan.   11 

when  the  Tar  Heels  play  host  to 
'  Clemson  Tigers. 


Volleyball  Champs 

Pictured  above  are  the  new  all-campus  Volleyball  champs.  Rep- 
resenting the  Med  School,  they  are,  left  to  right,  first  row:  Brooks 
Page,  Bill  Jung  and  Corwile  Lerey.  Second  row:  Dave  Willia>ins,  Bill 
Cornell,  Frank  White  and  Paul  White.  Med  School  whipped  ATO, 
2-1,  last  night  for  the  title.  (Bil»  Sutrte  Photo) 

Moreiand's  Giri  Was 
Offered  Scholarship 


THE   BOX: 

MARYLAND 

Ilalleck  f 
Ilardiman  f 
Moorhead  f 
Murphy  f 


0 

1 
0 
0 
2 


^JOi  reason.  In  an  exclusive  interview  with  this  reporter,  he  denied    Weingarten  f  I 
having  anything  to  do  with  the  refusal  of  the  McGuire  requests,  and    ^°^^^  ^ 
made  it  clear  that  his  football  program  in  no  way  conflicted  with    McGinnis  c 
basketball.  (See  statement  on  page  1.) 

Tatum  was  unabia  to  understand  why  he  and  hit  football 
team  were  being  crucified  by  the  student  body  for  no  apparent 
reason.  He  maintained  that  he,  as  an  alumnus,  and  coach,  took 
great  pride  in  his  university,  and  wished  to  see  winning  teams  In 
all  sports,  not  just  football. 
The  climax  came  Sunday  night  when  the  two  embattled  Coaches 
met  with  Erickson   and  Sports   Publicity  Director  Jake    Wade   in   a 
three  hour  session.  The  upshot  of  this  meeting  is  revealed  in  the  of- 
ficial tatements  made  by  McGuire  and  Tatum  and  reprinted  on  page 
1. 

Reportedly,  both  of  these  two  kings  of  the  athletic  world  »r% 
now  sontewhat  mollified.  Apparently  the  skillful  diplometic  ma- 
neuvering of  Erickson  and  Wade  paid  off.  The  Carolina  front  is 
still:  «il  has  been  spread  over  troubled  waters.  We  only  hope 
these  waters  remain  calm.  But  that  question  nwrk  still  remains. 
(Tomorrow;   Pert   II,  space  permitting) 


Tar  Heel  Mermen  Meet 
Blue  Devils  In  Durham 


Davis  g 
Nacincik  g 
O'Brien   g 

Totals 
UNC 

Rosenbluth  f 
Brennan  f 
Lotz  f 
Search  f 
Holland  f 
Hathaway  c 
Quigg  c 
Reams  g 
Cunningham  g  3 
Radovich  g  3 
GroU   g  3 

Rosemond  g     0 

Total  21 

Maryland 

North  Carolina 


1 

1 

3 

1 

10 
20 

G 

6 

4 

0 

0 

0 

1 

0 

1 


F 

2-3 
0^ 
(M) 
1-3 
0-0 
2-2 
1-6 

2r6 

4-5 

0-10 

21-34 

F 

14-18 

6-12 

0-0 

OK) 

0^ 

2-3 

OK) 

6-9 

0-2 

(M) 

0-1 

OK) 

28-45 

24 

40 


P 

5 

3 

0 

0 

0 

3 

2 

4 

5 

3 
27 

P 

3 

2 

1 

0 

1 

0 

5 

2 

2 

2 

3 

0 
21 


T 
4 
0 
0 
h 
2 
4 
3 
8 
6 
29 
bl 
T 


Jackie  Mori(land's  girl  friend 
has  admitted  she  was  offered  a 
seven-year  medical  school  scho- 
larship as  part  of  the  arrange- 
ments to  get  Moreland,  a  Minden, 
La.,  high  school  standout  basket- 
ball player,  to  attend  N.  C.  State 
college.     ^ 

This  is  what  the  News  Enter- 
prise Assn.  (NEA)  reported  yes- 
terday in  a  New  York  story. 

The  girl.  Miss  Betty  Clara  Rhea,  j  medical  school 
refused  the  offer.  NEA  repM-ted. 
That's  when  NCAA  officials  step- 
ped in  and  she  admitted  to  them 
that  she  had  been  offered  the 
scholarship,   NEA  said. 

The  case  caused  State  to  be 
placed  on  4  year  probation  in  all 
NCAA   sponsored  events. 

Morehead  was  sought  by  many 
colleges. 

"But  Moreland  decided  to  stick 

close    to   home    and    attend    little 

Centenary    College    at   Shreveport 

j  — whose    campus    is   graced    by   a 

j  Miss  Betty  Clara  Rhea,  who  hap- 

j  pened    to    be   a    bit    more    than    a 


solution:  bring  her  along,  tuo.  llie 
fact  Miss  Betty  Clara  Rhea  hap- 
pened to  be  a  pre-med  student 
didn't  faze  State. 

"  'I  believe  it  was  Mr.  Willis 
R.  Casey,  the  North  Carolina  State 
assistant  director  of  athletics,  who 
mentioned  it  to  me, '  Miss  Rhea 
.says.  She  is  speaking  about  the 
seven-year  scholarship  —  covering 
she  was  ex- 
tended as  part  of  the  deal  to 
bring  Moreland  to  Raleigh. 


Tar  Babies 
Romp  Over 
Imps  82-53 

^y  DAVE  WIBLE 

The  Tar  Babies  broke  back  into 
the  win  column  last  night  when 
they  breezed  by  the  Blue  Imps  of 
Duke  82-53. 

The  Tar  Babies  holding  a  3-1 
record  for  the  season  had  no 
trouble  al  all  from  the  Methodist 
Flat  freshmen.  The  Tar  Babies 
took  the  lead  early  in  the  game 
and  kept  it.  The  halftime  score 
was  47-23. 

Leaping  Lee  Shaffer  was  the 
top  Tar  Baby  scorer  with  22 
points.  York  Larese  followed  with 
!  16  for  the  Carolina  frosh.  Bill 
Gilley  was  the  top  Blue  Imp,  hit- 
ting for  15. 

The  contest  was  a  hot  and  cool 
affair.  At  times  there  were  three 
cr  four  fast  breaks  in  arow  with 
neither  team  having  control,  but 
all  through  the  game  the  Tar 
Ba-bies  were  able  to  settle  down 
and  set  up  and  worked  for  their 
shots.  John  Crotty  the  Tar  Babies' 
shortest  man  played  a  big  part  in 
the  victory  with  his  tricky  floor- 
work.  He  kept  the  Imps  guessing 
all  night  with  his  behind-the-back 
passes   and  fancy  footwoA. 

Last  night's  contest  will  be  the 
last  for  the  Tar  Babies  until  after 
the  holidays,  when  they  meet 
Eastern  Military  Institution  on 
January  4.  .^ys\       ■■■.    ' vl 

THE   SUMARY: 


Hopman  L|>o/cs  For  Wiriy 
But  Fears  Vic  Sexios 


a 
—    (APf — 


By  WILL   GRIMSLEY 

PERTH.  Australia 
Harry  Hopman  said  j'esterday  he 
expects  his  Australians  to  defend 
the  Davis  cup  successfully  aglflhst 
the  United  States  later  this  m<3i|(h. 
But  he  stUI  fears  Vic  Seixas. 

"Vic  is  the  type  of  player  who 
can  reach  form  quickly,"  said  the 
little,  sandy-haired  captain  oflhe 
Aussies.  "Against  the  Indians  he 
looked  as  if  he  was  near  peak 
form.  He  is  a  well-conditioned>,ath- 
lete  and  a  hard  fighter.' 


as  is  able  to  turn  on  good  and  turn 
off  bad  form  like  the  flick  of  a 
light  switch.  Herbie  Flam.  Amer- 
ica's other  senior  player,  has  to 
work  himself  into  shape  through 


Wales  Championships  three  Weeks 
ago.  , 

Hopman  says  he  is  convinced 
Talbert  will  use  Seixas  and  Flam 
in  the  singles  and  Seixas  and 
Giammalva  in  the  doutdes,  al- 
though the  American  captain  has 
maintained  his  lineup  is  "wide 
open." 

"If  Talbert  had  not  planned  to 
use  Seixas  and  Flam  against  us, 
he  would  not  have  used  them 
against     the     Indians."     Hopman 


said,    referring    to    the    interzone 

Hopman  said  that  whereas  Seix-    fina'S-  ^^ich   the   Americans  won 

4-1.   "He  has   to   go   with    them. 

Talbert  responded  that  the  main 
objective  of  the  U.  S.  team  this 
year  was  to  make  the  challenge 
round,  which  carries  with  it  some 


Carolina 

Shaffer  f 

Larese  f 

Kcplcj'  c 

Steppe  g 

Crotty  g 

Crutchfield  g  2 
1 
1 


"    'Well,    anyway,'    she    says,    'I   ^^^^^^^^  f 
refused  it  Would  you  take  some-  j  p^^i^  £ 
thing  for  nothing?  And  I  wouldn't  '■  Ajnslic  f 
want  to  be  obligated  to  anybody.'  j  ^^3^3^   g 

"Once  the  honcy-toncd  girl  said  1  Wilson  g 
no  —  and  Moreland  6aid  yes  —  ■  Griffin  g 
things  started   popping. 


2;?  1  Coke  partener  at  this  stage,"  NEA 

14    reported   yesterday. 
0        The    NE.\  story   stated    further: 
0       "Case,    (N.    C   State   head    has- 
0  !  kctball  coach)   of  course,  thought 
4  .  it  a  shame  that  Moreland's  talents 
0  I  be   buried   in   a  small  school.   He  \ 
8    immediately  .tried    to    rectify    the 
6  i  situation  —  by  bringing  Moreland  I 
6 '  to  State  and  the  big-time. 
6 '      "Somebody    at    Raleigh    had    a 
0  j  notion      that   Miss      Betty      Clara 

70  Rhea  might  prove  somewhat  of  a 
35  —  61 1  stumbling  block  to  this  situation. 
30  —  70    There    was.     however,     a    simple 


Totals 
Duka 

"A  detective  was  hired  and  after '  Morris  f 
he  looked  into  it  for  some  time,  i  Sandmore  f 
the    name    of    Miss    Betty    Clara  Youngkin  c 
Rhea   popped   up.   Next   item:   the  |  Morgan  f 
medical  scholarship.  Walter  Byars  1  Rochello  f 
of   the   NC.\A    promptly  checked  ■  Gilley  c 
into  it,  found  it  was  true  —  and  '  W^ayand  c 
then  asked   the  yuong  lady  about  1  Boyd  g 
it.  Joyce  g 

..    .T    jj  ....  ^u-         ■    '  Nolan  g 

"    'I    didn  t    give    anything    in  i      Tota'i, 

writing.'   she    said.    "But   they   al-  j 

ready    knew    about    it    so    I    just  j      Carolina 

said  it  was  true."  Ouk* 


1 
0 
1 
0 
30 
f9 
1 
0 
2 
1 
1 
4 
5 
2 
1 
0 
17 


ft 
2-2 
2-2 
3-4 
1-3 
0-10 

i-i 

0-1 
1-4 
1-2 
2-2 
2-4 
2-4 

23-40 
ft 
OK) 
1-2 
3-4 
0^ 
0-0 

710 
2-4 
2-2 
4-4 
0-1 

10-27 

47 
23 


Pf 
1 
1 
0 
3 
1 
0 
2 
2 
5 
0 
3 
0 

18 

Pf 
1 
1 
1 
2 
0 
2 
5 
4 
4 
3 

23 

35 


IP 
22 
16 

9 

5 

10 

4 


arduous  training. 

The  challenge  round  is  sched-l 
uled  Dec.  26-28  at  Adelaide  and, 
in  conformity  with  tradition,  both 
captains  named  their  squads  yes- 
terdaj' — 10  days  before  the  meet- 
ing. ,  ! 

Bill  Talbert,  U.  S.  captain,  nomi- 
nated Seixas  and   Flam,   plus   his 
j-oungsters,    Sam    Giammalva,    21,  | 
and  Mike  Green,  19.  ''      j 

Hopman.  surprising  no  One, 
named  Hoad,  Rosewell,  Neale  j 
Fraser  and  Ashley  Cooper — ^thei 
same  squad  which  wrested  the  [ 
cup  from  America  last  year  at  { 
Forest  Hills.  i 

Hopman     said  both     Hoad     and  1 
Rosewall    are     in   top   form      and 
Lew  is  having  no  more  trouble ^ith  I 
his  racket  arm,  which  forced  ;him  I 
to   stay    out   of   the    New    South 


$50,000  in  revenue. 


SPECIAL 
ANNOUNCEMENT 

Advance  notice  of  our. 
after  Christmas  sale  foF 
both  the  Cupboard  and 
Lady  Milton  Shop,  com- 
mencing Thursday  Dec. 
27th. 

MILTON'S 
Clothing  Cupboard 


82 
tp 

2 
1 
7 


15 

6| 
61 
0! 
33 


Wherever  You  Go 
For   Your 

Christmas 
Vacation 


Call 


30  —  53 


UNC's  undefeated  varsity  mer- 
men wil  be  after  win  number 
three  of  the  young  «eason  this 
afternoon  wlien  they  clash  with 
the  Duke  Blue  Devils  at  Duke. 

In  their  first  two  meets,  the 
Tar  Heels  downed  East  Carolina 
and  South  Carolina  by  comfort- 
able margins.  Some  of  their  top 
men  did  not  compete  due  to  sick- 
ness or  injury,  and  they  will  again 
be  missirg  one  of  their  ace  sprint- 
ers. Bill  Roth  is  still  owt  with  a 
shoulder  strain,  but  it  is  believed 
he  will  be  able  to  return  to  action 
after  the  holidays. 

With  Roth  out.  the  400  yard 
freestyle  relay  team  will  be  ham- 
pered in  their  efforts  to  establish 
a  new  conference  record  in  that 
event. 

The  Tar  Heels  return  to  action 
Januarj-  fifth  when  the^.take  on 
the  Virginia  Cavalier*' *ln  Char- 
lottesville. On  Jan.  15  they  meet 
arch  rival  State  in  Raleigh  for 
the  last  away  meet  of  the  season. 


And  the 
Best 

Christmas 
Cards 
Cost  a 
Nickel  at 
The  Intimate 
Bookshop 


I 


Why  Pay  High  Prices? 

I've  Held  Them  Down  Since  July,  '55 
ASK  YOUH  BUDDY! 

SPECIAL  -  7.Up  and  Tru-Ade  $1.00    p^J.  o^ 


ESSO  GAS 

Cash 


YES! 
Cash 


ESSO  GAS 
Cash 


Reg.  29.9         H.T.  32.9 

Plu$ 

Bring  This  Ad  And  Get  1  Cent  Off  Per  Gal.  Gai, 

5  Cents  Per  Qt.  Oil 

?      WHERE      ? 

At  The  Students'  Friend 

WHIPPLE^S  ESSO  SERVICE 


PRE. 
CHRISTMAS 


AT  IT  AGAIN! 
Kemp^s  Annual 

SALE 


9  a.m. -9  p.m. 
Everything  On  Sale... 

TODAY  &  WEDNESDAY      'J  :. 

U     1.;  ,v  - 

WE  DON'T  WANT  ANY  INVENTORY  LEFT 
GET  GOOD  MERCHANDISE  NOW  .  .  . 

y   ^i 

AND  NOT  LEFTOVERS  AFTER  CHRISTMASI 
207  E.  Franklin  St." 


CJiapel 
95806 


Hill 


For   Emergency 
Repairs 
To  Ypur 
*  i  Christmas 
r  :   List 


C:\ 


205  E.  FranKlin  St. 


The    Intimate 
Bookshop 

^  Open  Till  10  P.M. 


SSm 


UNC-NYU  Tickets 

All  those  who  haven't  iHorchased 
tickets  to  the  Capolitwt-NVU  basktt 
hall  ganne  in  New  Yorlt  City  Thurs- 
day night  may  olitain  them  at  the 
50th  Street  ticket  window.  The 
price  will  he  75  cents,  and  any 
student  with  an  ID  card  may  get 
as  many  a<  two  ticket^. 


GOING  PLACES  DURING  THE  HOLIDAYS? 


PATRONIZI  YOMR 
•    ADVERTISillS    • 


DON'T  FORGET  YOUR  tRAVELERS  CHECK! 


.\- 


1^ 


Safe  .  .  .  Spendable  Anywhere  .  .  .  Available  in  all  convenient 
DenQm>n^tior^  .  .  .  Complete  Protection  .  »  .  Only  $1  hor  Each 
$]00  in  Checks. 


!rheB 


apelHill 


MEMBER   FEDERAL   DEPO^li    INSURANCE   CORPORATION 

Chapel  Hill 


Carrboro 

Available  At  All  Three  Offices 


mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmimmmmfiimm 


SSBS5SSSBS8SS 


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■oapns 


Glen  ietrf^ 


V,V.f2.   •  LIBRARY 
SERIALS  DEPT. 
BOX  870 
CHAPEL  KILL,  N.C. 


Merry  Christmas  And  A  Happy  New  Year  To  All 


WEATHER 

Cloudy  «nd  quit«  cool,  rain  wr 
Stat*  by  WcdfMsday  night.  High 
t*mp*raturM  in  40s. 


2r()cDattu  Mar  Heel 


TEAM 

Th*    capytain    is   losing.   Saa   ad! 
torial,  p»^  2. 


VOL.  LV!I     NO.  73 


Complete  (A^  Wire  Service 


CHAPEL  HILL,  NORTH  CAROLINA.  WEDNESDAY,  DECEMBER  19,  1957 


Offices    in    Graham    Memorial 


FOUR  PAGES  THIS  ISSUE 


Lanier  Announces  Winners 
Of  Braswell  Scholarships 


The  1956-57  Braswell  Scholar- 
ships have  been  awarded  to  four 
UNC  freshmen:  Robert  Glenn 
Lewis  of  Morehead  City;  Robert 
Daniel  Ful^hum,  Fayetteville;  An- 
thony G.  Turner  of  Ro<Ay  Mount; 
end  Chester  Winfield  Taylor  ol 
Castle  Hayne. 

This  •  year's  winners,  selected 
from  more  than  100  freshmen  ap- 
plications for  regular  student  aid, 
were  announced  recently  by  Ed- 
win S.  Lanier,  director  of  student 
aid. 

Four  awards  are  made  annually 
to  freshmen  who  demonstrate  fine 
character,  high  scholarship,  all- 
round  development,  and  financial 
need.  Eiach  received  $200  for  a 
one-year  term,  supplementing  any 
other  aid  he  may  already  have.     | 

The  awards  are  made  possible 
by  a  trust  fund  which  was  estab- 
lished in  1938  in  memory  of  Dr. 
Mark  R  .Braswell  of  Rocky  Mount, 
a  member  of  the  UNC  class  of 
1888.  I 

Fulghum.  a  graduate  of  Fayette- 
ville Senior  High  School,  ranked 
in  the  upper  quarter  of  his  sen- 
ior class  and  won  a  $150  scholar- 
ship from  UNC.  During  his  high 
school  days  he  was  president  of 
his  senior  class  and  of  the  school's 
National  Honor  Society  and  par- ' 
ticipated  in  the  band,  intramural 
sports  and  journalism.  | 

Lewis   was   valedictorian   of  his   *^>'  ^  Christmas  party.. 
class     at     Morehead     City     Hi,?h  j     After  meeting  at  the  KD  Hou.»< 
School,  where  he  took  part  in  dra-^  the  KDs  and  St.  A's  took  a  tour  o' 
matics.    journalism,   and    Hi-Y    ac-    *be    Hill,    serenading    the    variou.s 
tivities.  He  holds  a  $250  Univers- ^Professors  and  their  families,  cnd- 
ity  scholarship. 

Winner  of  a  $300  UNC  scholar- 
ship and  also  a  self-help  :;tudent, 


1956-57  Brasweii  Schoiarship  Winners 

Tha  four  UNC  freshmen  shown  above  have  won  Braswell  Schol- 
arships for  195657.  The  recipients,  chosen  from  mora  than  100  fresh- 
men are  (left, to  right)  Robert  Daniel  Fulghum,  Fayattevilie;  Robert 
Giann  Lewis,  Morehead  City;  Anthor^y  G.  Turner,  Rocky  Mt.  a.nd 
Chaster  Winfield  Taylor,  Castia  Hayna. 


Party  Circuit  Continues 
With  Last  Minute  Flings 


By  MARY   ALYS  VOORHEES 

Have  you  had  your  pre-vacalion 
iling? 

Probably  only  a  very  few  Tar 
Heels  can  answer  that  question 
negatively  from  the  list  of  panic  i 
accumulated  for  the  past  two 
days. 

First,  a  look  at  Monday's  diary. 

Over  at  the  Phi  Kap  House  ih'^ 
Phi  Kaps  and  the  ADPis  we.c 
having   a   turkey   dinner,  f.llowe  i 


Ting  up  the  evening   with   refresh 
ments  at  the  St  A.  House. 


ing.  Then  to  end  the  evening, 
brothers  and  pledges  gathered  for 
a  stag  parly  at  which  they  *ex 
changed  prani<  presents. 

Tuesday   night,   the  Sigma   Nu'.s 
and  Pi  Phis  gave  a  Christmas  par- 

(See  HAPPENINGS,   Page  3 


SP  Makes 
Five  New 
Selections 


Taylor  is  a  graduate  of  New  Han- 
over High  School,  ranking  in  the 
upper  10  per  cent  of  his  class. 
He  was  a  delegate  to  Boys'  State 
and  aeiive  in  dramatics,  church 
work  and  various  clubs. 

Turner  also  ranked  in  the  up- 
per 10  per  cent  of  his  class  at 
Rocky  Mount  Senior  High  School 
£nd  won  a  $150  scholarship  to  the 
University.  He  participated  in 
high  school  publications,  student 
government  and  the  scholastic  so- 
ciety. 

All  four  boys  made  two  or 
more  "excellences"  on  their  mid- 
term reports  for  their  first  se- 
mester at   the   University. 


I      The  Student  Party  passed   a  it- 
At  the  Lambda  Chi  House  broih  j  solution  Monday  ni«jht    'that  everv- 
ers  and  pledges  had  a  stag  par;^.      ...  ..  ..... 

.  ,  .  body  have  a  Merry,  Lhristrr.as  and 

exchanging  prank  presents.  ,.,  .,         .,  \     „     , 

^    ^  ^  ^  a    Happy    New    Year.*     A    moti<i:\ 

Entertaining  with  the  KDs  fron.    wi.shing  dimply  a  Merry  Christin.i-. 

Duke,   the    Kappa   Sigs   feted   sev-    was    defeated    and  the   motion    in- 

eral  underprivileged  children.  eluding  a  Happy  New  Year  follow 

^         ed  immediately. 
Another  Yule  party  was  the  one 

ihe  TElP's  had  at  their  house  cdU-.r  I      Chair.iian  Jim  Holmes  made  stv- 

tbe   basketball   game   for   brot he.. ^  j  eral  appointments  before  the  parly. 

and  pledges. 


N.C.  State  To  Renew 
Request  Fo    Probe 

i  College  Will  Appeal 
I  Conference  Penalties  - 


BVP  Prexy 
Is  Accused 
As  Illegal 


Cedar  Tree  SprUtfcj  Up  Y-C6urt 


The  North  Carolina  Employees  Assn.  wished  Season's  Greetings 
to  Unrvarsity  people  vi<«  the  Christmas  tree  pictured  above  in  Y- 
Court.  Tha  tree  came  as  a  donation  from  the  property  of  F.  J.  Le- 
Clair,  Buildings  Dept.  landscape  gardener.  Employees  of  the  Build- 
ings Dapt.  put  tha  tree  up  on  thair  own  time. 


nevs 

in 
hrief 

FROM  RADIO  DISPATCHES 

WASHINGTON  —  The  United 
Slates  has  offered  to  neutralizn 
Vast  areas  of  Central  Europe  to 
guarantee  security  for  Soviet  Rus- 
sia along  her  t>ord«rs.  The  offer 
depends  on  an  agreement  by  Rus- 
.«.ia  of  the  complete  unification  of 
Germany. 

Secretary  of  State  Dulles  said  if 
the  unification  of  Germany  should 
arise  and  the  Russian  satellit-'s 
Were  to  become  independent  the 
United  States  might  consider  a 
Vvhole  new  American  policy,  lie 
said  the  US  might  even  conside." 
pulling  its  troops  out  of  Europe. 

Dulles  said  a  visit  to  the  United 
States  by  the  independent  commu 
ni.st,  Marshall  Tito  of  Yugoslavia, 
would  be  beneficial.  Others  said 
such  a  visit  would  be  of  a.^national 
interest.  '"'' 

The  US.  however,  will  maintain 
its  powers  of  retaliation  against 
Soviet  power  all  around  the  world 
From  the  Pentagon  came  word 
that  the  Air  Force  issued  an  im 
pressive  warning  to  Russia  in  tiie 
form  of  a  gigantic  flight  opera- 
tion of  more  than  1000  atomic  jot 
bombers.  Air  Force  Chief  of  Staff 
Gen.  Nathan  Twining  said  each 
bomber — on  practice  runs — flew 
an  average  of  more  than  8000 
miles  on  a  realistic  nonstop  com- 
bat training  mission. 

At  the  White  House  India's 
Prime  Minister  Nehru  said  he  a.id 
President  lilisenhower  discussed 
many  problems  which  confront  the 
world.  He  said  he  had  profited 
K^eatly  and  hinted  the  President 
may  go  to  India  soon. 


Tuesday  dawned  with  more  par- 
ties. 

Yesterday  afternoon  the  ADPis 
and  the  Phi  Delts  had  an  yrphc4n 
party  at  the  ADPi  House  for  the 
children  from  an  Oxford  Orphan 
age. 

Likewise  did  the  Chi  Pis  ai:d 
Iheir  dates.  They  feted  seve.a' 
children  from  Wright  Orphanage 
iifter  which  the  group  went  carol- 


Miss  Judy  Davis  was  appointed 
file  clerk:  Bob  Carter,  Finance 
Commi'tee  chairman;  Bob  Jone.-;, 
Public  Relation.  Committee  chair- 
man; Don  Furtado.  Membersnip 
Committee  chairman  and  Gary 
Greer,  Program  Committee  Chair  \ 
man. 


IN  THE  INFIRMARY 


Joel  Fleshman  was  chairman  of 
'he  social  committee  which  plan- 
ned the  Christmas  party. 


Studants  in  the  Infirmary  yes 
tarday  included: 

Grady  Phillips,  Bruce  Phillips, 
Baxter  Norton,  Edward  Leigh, 
Philip  Reinhardt,  John  Barto, 
Roy  Coleman,  Robert  Vaggett, 
Robert  Brawley,  George  Stav- 
nitski,  Richard  Jennings  and 
John  Duka. 


Last  Issue 

This  is  the  last  issue  of  the 
Daily  Tar  Heel  until  after 
Cht-i:;fmas  holidays.  The  >iext 
issue  of  the  paper  will  appeat- 
Jan.  4,  1957. 


Carolina  Students  Will  Observe 
Holidays  With  En  Masse  Exodus 

Christmas  holidays  arrive  at  Carolina  today  .xilh  the  otiidents  observing  Ihem  with  an  en  nia.-iso 
departure  from  the  campus  for  home. 

The  Carolina  campu,"^  will  be  virtually  deserted  by  Thursday.  The  mass  exodus  of  students  leav- 
ing UNC,  beginning  today  and  lasting  until  tomorrow,  will  leave  the  campus  quiet,  the  walks  silem 
and  empty. 

For  most  people  (roui,'hly  everybody),  the  two  week  respite  will  come  as  an  opportune  relief,  froni 
studies,  lack  of  sleep,  and  as  a  change  of  .scene. 


Under  the  heading  "Dorm  Pres.  ; 
Iliei,'al^Rumors  of  Impeachment," 
the  Battle- Vance-Pettigrew  Times 
yesterday  accused  dorm  president 
Neil  Bass  of  having  done  "noth- 
ing to  prove  or  even  to  show 
minutely  the  faith  that  the  men 
of  BVP  ha-e  (or  had)  in  him 
whom  they  elected  him  to  be  the 
President."  ; 

The  paper,  edited  by  Cort  Ed- 
wards, a!.so  said:  "Last  spring  el- 
ections Mr.  Bass  ran  for  president 
again,"  (he  had  already  served 
one  term.)  "On  voting  day,  there 
was  no  ballot  box  so  the  presi- 
dent of  the  dorm  (Bass)  took  a 
pad  and  pencil  and  one  afternoon 
vis'ted  each  room  in  the  three 
d;  rms  and  said  who  do  you  want 
for  pres.  —me  or  somebody  else." 

'If  no  one  was  in  the  room," 
the  article  continued,  "that  was 
just  too  bad  becuse  the  vote  pol- 
ler   didn't    return. 

"I   understand  that  he   only   re- 
riirrteo  the  vole  of  6  men  in  Vance. 
ThaCs   all    that    were   in.    6  out   of 
;  32   men. 

"Even      if     this      procedure      is 

highly    illegal as    President, 

I  Noil  Bass  has  done  absolutely  no-, 
'  thing. 

"I  have  heard  words  around  the 
dorm    that    were    speaking   of    im- 
peachment.  I   hope   that  it   doesn't 
come  to  this.  But  I  also  hope  that 
1  Mr.    Bass    will    get    'on    the    stick"  i 
and   do   at    least   the   job   that    he  i 
was  supposed  to  have  been  elect- 1 
ed    for.  I 

"I   have  seen  2  dorm  meetings,  j 

no    dorm    parties,    and  no    dorm  I 

entries    in    anything,    .  .    ."    the ! 

article  concluded.  I 


Raleioh— (.\P)— The  next  art  in  the  Jackie  Moreland 
(h;niia  milolds  in  Cirecnsboro  on  Saturday  when  .North  Ca- 
rolina State  College  will  appeal  penalties  imposed  by  the 
Atlantic  Coast  C^onferenre  and  renew  its  request  Fo'  a  ron- 
lereiue  probe  ot  the  ailair. 

Ch;nuellor  Carev  H,  Bostian  .said  he  was  notified  yes- 
terday that  ACC  faculty  chairmen  would  hear  the  college 
at  noon  Saturday.  The  group  will  meet  in  the  oliice  oi  ACC 
Connnissioner  James  H.  Weaver.^  \'^-^j  1      ,         ^  I 

The  .\C.\.\  has  placed  State  Clollege  on  probation  for 
loin-  years,  the  stiffest  penalty  it  has  cxer  invoked,  for  alleged 
violations  in  recruiting   Moreland.   In  ;iddition.   Weaver  has 

♦levied    a   $5,000    fine    against  the 

college    and    ordered    curtailment 


Cold,  Showers 
Are  Predicted 
For  Holidays 

The  w  eather  promises  to  be  the 
bane  of  many  travelers  winging 
or  riding  their  way  home  for  the 
Christmas    holidays. 

The  balmy,  warm  weather  which 
prevailed  over  Chapel  Hill  during 
most  of  last  week  was  dispelled 
abruptly  by  a  descending  north- 
western cold  front.  Bringing 
showers  and  wet  cold,  the  boggy 
■weather  promises  to  be  in  force 
for  the  next  few  days  over  North 
and  South  Carolina  and  most  of 
Virginia. 

Weather  bureau  officials  at  the 
Rleigh-Durham  airport  predict 
th:it  with  the  expected  drop  in 
temperature,  the  occasional  show- 
ers will  continue  for  the  ne.xt  few 
days.  j 

In  the  northern  part  of  the 
countr.v  extremely  cold  weather 
is  expected  to  move  in  with  the 
cold  front,  spreading  into  New 
England.  In  ^he  North  Carolina 
mountains  the  temperature  is  ex- 
pected  to   drop   to  freezing. 

For  the  next  two  days,  the  tem- 
perture  will  range  from  35  to  40  Vic  Bubas,  State  C  )llege  staff 
in  the  main  portions  of  North  Ca- ',  members  named  it  the  ACC  re- 
rolina.  i  port,    issued    statements    denying 


of    recruiting    by    the    basketball 
coaching  staff  for  one  one  year. 

Moreland,  a  Minden,  La.,  high 
.school  basketball,  star,  enrolled  at 
State  College  after  signing  a  letter 
of  intent  with  Texas  A  &  M  and 
a   grant-in-aid    with   Kentucky. 

Dr.  Bos'tian  said  he  would  be 
accompained  to  the  Oreensl>oro 
meeting  by  President  William  C. 
Friday  of  the  Consolidated  Uni- 
■ersity  of  North  Carolina.  The 
>arent  administratii%  for  Slate 
College.  Whether  others  will  be  in 
the  party  has  not  been  decided, 
the    Chancellor   said. 

College    officials    and    the    Ath- 
letic   staff    have    insisted    that    no 
NCAA   or    ACC   regulations    were 
I  violated    in    the    rctruitmemt    o€ 
I  Moreland.    Dr.    Bcsfian    has   stated 
confidence    that    a    full    investfja- 
fion   by   the   conference   would   re- 
j  suit  in  explanation  of  the  charges. 
I      ACC  faculty  chairmen  previous- 
j  ly  looked  into  certain  of  the  char- 
'  gcs  leveled  by  the  .NCAA.  But  dl'i 
I  not     investigate    all    the    charges. 
i  On  the  basis  of  the  partial  probe, 
the    ACC    group    informed    State 
College  it  ^had  concluded  that  re- 
cruiting regulations  were  violated. 

Asst.  Atliletic  Director  Willis 
Casev  and  Asst.   Basketball  Coach 


A  white  Christmas  is  not  in  view 
for  North  Carolina  as  far  as  wea- 
ther bureau  officials  predict,  for 
they  stated  that  their  predictions 
were  subject  to  change  after  two 
days. 


the  charges.  They  received  the 
support  of  college  officials  who 
announced  that  until  further  evi- 
dence .v.as  produced,  Casey  and 
Bubas  would  remain  in  "perfectly 
good  stiinding." 


Going  Home  For  Christmas? 
Want  A  Ride  ?  Need  Riders  ? 


Suitcases  And  Christmas  Plums 

The  time  to  pack  a  suitcase  is  a  task  nvw  ch«rifhtd  by  many 
stud«hts  leaving  for  home  for  the  Christmas  holidays.  What  thoughts 
go  on  in  the  mind  of  Norman  Kantor  (above)  as  ha  packs  his  bag 
is  not  known,  but  they  are  probably  thoughts  daaiing  with  more 
than  sugarplums. 


With  lasL  m.nute  quizzes  di.-;- 
posed  of  and  bonk  reports  wril- 
ten,  bags  will  be  packed,  cram- 
med w.th  clothes  and  Christma: 
gifts,  and  Yuletide  farewells  wil! 
be  the  last  sounds  heard  on  the 
campus. 

Studi-nts  will  be  heading  {>'v 
home  to  p'aces  as  near  as  Gra- 
ham or  as  far  as  Albuquerque 
N.  M.  and  Ontario,  Canada- -or 
even  as  far  away, as  Formosa,  as 
was  the  case  with  one  foreign 
student  who  almost  went  honio. 

Kenneth  Chi-Kun  Yang  en 
tered  his  name  and  hometown 
— Taipei,  Formosa— in  the  Daii.\ 
Tar  Heel's  Riders-home  service 
to  have  a  good  laugh  n  himsoif. 
The  joke  backfired  when  Ken 
neth  got  offers  for  two  rides.  Ke 
sotn  alter  lifted  his  name  from 
,  the  service  and  decided  to  stay 
on  the  campus. 

Bus  travel,  airplane  and  train 
travel  will  all  be  choked  with 
students  going  hom'\  both  fruMii 
the  Carolina  campus,  and  from 
studep's  fr  m  adjoining  col- 
leges. 

All  facilities  on  campus  wii! 
either  be  closed  or  will  operate 
on  staggered  schedules.  Graham 
Memorial  will  be  closed  until 
Jan.  2  and  the  library  will  b? 
open  during  special  hours 
throughout  the  holidays. 


Priscilla  Roetzel,  106  Kenan,  8 
9172  —  Trenton  or  Newark,  N.  J. 
or  New  York. 


RIDES  WANTED 

Herman    Schultz.    9-2636— Phila 
delphia. 

Bill     .Adcock,    308    Mangum.    8- j      ^.^^   ^j^ria   Ortiz,   Kenan  —  New 
9183— Kno,\ville.    Tenn.  |  York. 

Marion    Harris,   309   Spencer,   8- 1      jj^qcn   Duke,   407A   E.   Franklin, 

9104-      Kng;'Ihard   or   Washinyion. ,  ^{.1273 New  York. 

I  Lynwood  Thompstm,  5  Battle,  8-  \  Washington,  D.  C 
917.) -New  York  To  Chapel  Hill  j  John  Abramson 
after  Christmas.  1  6031— Miami,  Fla. 


Allan  Spader,  218  Graham,  8- 
9085— Parkersburg,  W.  Va. 

George  Grayson,  206  Winston, 
8-7191— Washington,    D..  C. 

Betty  Barnes,  Spencer,  8-9067— 
Washington.    D.  ,C. 

Bill    Porter,    9   Vance.    8-1177— 


N    C. 

Howard  Kahn,  108  .\iexand.>r,  8 
9107--B.ilt.inore,  Md. 

Sara  Humphrey,  Pi  Phi  House 
i-W.Hi     -  Washington,  D.  C. 

Lionanl  Killian.  309  Alexander, 
8-9105-  Ali)uqi!erque.   N.   M. 


LAST   DAY 

Today  is  the  last  day  of  publi- 
cation of  the  Daily  Tar  Heel 
Ride  Service. 


Marjorie  McMahan,  Carr,  3-91uG 
j  'Jhaiiotle. 

John  Dale,  210  Connor    j-9178  — 
.\sheville  or  Knoxville. 
I      Buddy   Clark,   Theta    Chi   8-9123 
j  \lianta,  Ga. 

'      Angela    Aeosta,    218    Kenan    — 
Baltimore. 

Li.ja  Kehor,   224   Kenan   —  New 
York  City. 


George  Schroeder, 
9012— Raleigh. 


ZBT     House. 


431  Cobb,  8- 


RIOERS  WANTED 

Bob  Black,  210  Ruffin,  8-9146  10 
New  York,  leaving  11:00  p.m.  Doc 
24.    Arrive    before    Noon. 

Miss    Irogene    Ficklen,    224    M-'  ' 
St.,    4696— New   York    and 


Herb  Greenblock,  TEP  House. 
8-9007 — New    York    and    vicinity. 

Brad  Seasholes.  215  Caldwell,  9- 
'/68»— to  Syracuse,  N.  Y. 

Susan  Inman,  303  Smith.  8-9133 
— to  Vermont,  western  Mass.,  Conn 
and  N.  Y. 

Chuck  Federspiel,  d-6433  or  9- 
2382— to  central  Michigan. 

R.   E.   Berry,   106  Whitehead,  8- 

I  9066— to  Laurel,  Miss. 

j      Ed  Kiser,  315  Alexander,  3-9105 

— to  Laurinburg  via   Sanfcn    and 

Aberdeen. 

I      Fred  Katz,  9031.  Fjct.  571    -    to 

Washington,  D.  C. 
I 
I      Bryce    Johnson,    State    College, 

!  Raleigh,  TEmple  29363  —  to  Idah.» 

Dick    Potthoff,    216    Connor,   8- 


917"  —  to  Jacksonville,  Fla. 

Louis  Lefkowitz.  TEP  House. 
8-9007 — to  New  York  via  New  Jer» 
s3y  Turnpike     and     Garden  State 


Miss  Pat  Horton,  105  Carr,  8- 
9106 — Asheville    or    vicinity. 

Miss  Mae  Worsham.  2671  or  9- 
1686 — Riehmcnd.   leaving  Friday. 

Miss  Imogene  Ficklen,'  244  Mc- 
Cauley  St.,  4696 — New  York  and 
back.  ■  8-9107— Knoxville.  Tenn. 

Carolina    Hume.    Pi    Phi    House,  I      John  Underwood,  221  Vance  St., 
3  9096  —  Washington,  D.  C.  i  5466— Charleston,    S.    C. 


Ciuley 
back. 
Thomas  L.  Gillette,  303  Alumr.t 
Joel  A.  Snow,  1  Pettigrew.  89174  ^  Bldg.,  8  8462  Kansas  City.  Mo. 
—.St.  Petersburg,  Fla.  |      Warren     Miller  —  Washington,  i  Parkwav. 

Owen  Leland,  108  Connor   89155    d    c.  i      Dot    Hall,    83392— to    Williams- 

— Charleston,  S.  C.  |      ^y.    S.    Brewer.   300   Whitehead,    burg,  Va.  via  Richmond. 

Jerry    Chichester.    215    Aycock,    8-91  l-V-Mansfield,  Ohio,  via  Char-       Ann  McConaughy,  AD  Pi  House, 
8  9126— Macon.    Ga.  j  leston.    W.    Va.     and      Columbus, 

Sue  Rexrode,  321  Mclver,  8  9i:<4    Ohio. 
Roanoke    Va.  |      Mrs.    W.    C.    Hudson.    9-8792— 

Bill    Henshaw.    202    Alexander.    New  York,  leaving  Sunday  or  Mon- 
day. 

David  L.  Heck,  33  Davie  Circle, 
9-2736— to    Shelby,    Ohio,    'ia    M^. 


80983— to  Columbia.  S.C. 

J.  Timothy  Stevens,  208  Ruffin. 
89146— to  Allentown.  Pa. 

Tasso  Spanos,  8-6433.  to  Pitts 
burgh.  Pa.,  via  Pennsylvania- Turn- 
pike, 

James  Aben,  8-7246;  evenings— 


R'^^atrice   Rodriguez.  305   Kenan,  I      Christian     Lefebure,     3     Battle,    Airy  and  Charleston,  W.  ya.,  leav- ,  8-8340 — to     Lancaster,     Penn.    vi: 
8  9076— New  York.  I  89175— New  York  City.  |  ing  Dec.  22.  .  '  Washington,  D.  C. 


PAGl    TWO 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HCfL 


WEDNESDAY,  DECEMBER  19,  1957 


WEDI 


Big  Member  Of  The  Team' 
Has  Been  Losing  Contests 

Now  that  football  Coach  Jim  Tatum  and  basketball  (loach  Frank 
MdJuire  have  kissed  and  made  up  and  CaroBna's  athletics  setup  is  one 
bi'4.  haj)py  team  aj^;  in.  we  xvonld  point  a  finger  at  the  central  iioure  in 
tfie  trouble. 

He  is  C  P.  (Chu<k)  Krickson.  the  University's  direcuJi  oi  ath- 
letics. 


FROM  SCULPTURE  TO   NOTHING 


Erickson,  as  director  oi  atiilc- 
tics.  is  responsible  lor  all  the  athle- 
tics, not  just  football.  Yet  fnmi 
watching  his  office  in  the  past 
year  or  so.  we  would  concl-ude 
that  football  is  prime  in  his  mind. 

We  understand  Avhy.  F(X)tball 
makes  money  for  the  Universily's 
athletic  teams.  Basketball,  base- 
ball, tennis  and  the  other  sports 
don't  make  money:  they  lean  on 
receipts   from   the  Saturday  after- 

non  vspectaculars. 

*  *  * 

But  this  is  no  excuse  for  Erick- 
son to  allow  Jim  Tatum  to  take 
(ner  WiM:)llen  Gym.  to  push  Prank 

But  Hope, 
You  Know, 
Is  Eternal 

Meanwhile,  over  on  the  otlier 
side  of  the  campus,  very  big  things 
arc    happening. 

The  I'niversiiv  has  been  award- 
ed ncarlv  S  joo.ooo  to  sj>end  in 
educatiuLT  people  in  science  and 
mathematics. 

The  .Sjoc>.ooo  comes  in  two 
liiijip>:  SiL^,.ooo  from  the  Nation- 
al Sticnte  FouncLition,  to  be  used 
to  train  hi,ili  srliool  mathem."':ics 
ai;d  M  icncc  r  riclicrs  and  college 
<hcnii,str\  reachers:  and,  $267,600 
for  a  n;  icne  -  mathematics  insti- 
tiuc  durin'4  the  next  school  year. 

\Vh;n  this  means  cannot  bo  c.\- 
(;!riu<l.  (^f  (ouvse,  it  means  we 
will  <^  t  a  !:o;r  of  money  to  sj^end 
on  sciinie  and  mathematics,  lint 
it  means  something  else. 

It  mea?  s  that  the  University 
will  be  able  to  do  something  to- 
ward beating  the  current  slump  in 
science  and  mathematics  instruct- 
ors. .Vnd  it  111  -ans  the  pc'Oj)le  who 
benefit  iv  •■  ihe>e  funds  will  be 
receivi  .,,  :J.c  best  education  possi- 
ble. 

*  *  • 

I  ndonbtedly  this  will  help  Caro- 
lin.'s  reputation  in  college  circles 
all  over  the  coimtrv  and  world.  It 
tvill  mean  something  in  the  minds 
of  educator-;.  l)e  fhev  mathematic- 
ians or  historians,  scientists  or 
Shakespeare    scholars. 

For  the  people  who  worked  so 
that  Carolina  could  get  the  grants, 
rlu-  studeius  and  people  of  the 
Slate  owe  a  grer^t  deal  of  thanks. 

The  Daily  Tar  Heel 

Tht  official  >tudeDt  pubhcation  of  tbe 
Publications  B^»ard  ol  the  University  of 
North  Carolina,  where  it  is  published 
daily  except  Monday  and  examiaatiot 
and  vacation  periods  and  summer  terms 
Entered  as  second  class  matter  in  the 
Dost  office  in  Chapel  Hill.  N.  C,  undei 
ibe  .Act  oi  March  8.  1870  Subscription 
rates  mailed.  S4  per  year.  S2.S0  a  semes 
ter;  delivered  S6  n  year.  $3.50  a  semet 
ter. 


Editor    

FRED  POWLEDGE 

Managing  Editor 

CHARLIE  SLOAN 

X€«s  Editor    

-    NANCY  HILL 

Business   Matiager 

BILL  BOB  PLEl 

Sports  Editor    

LARRY  CHEEK 

Suh.>cnplion  Manager 
Advertising  Manager 
Circulation  .Manager 

.  ...    Dale  Staley 

Fred  Katzin 

Charlie  Holt 

NEWS  STAFF~€iarke  Jones,  Ray  Link- 
er, Joan  Moore.  Pringle  Pipkin,  Anno 
Drake.  Edith  MacKinnon,  Wally  Kuralt. 
-Mary  Alys  Voorhees.  Graham  Snyder, 
Billy  Barnes.  Neil  Bass,  Gary  Nichols, 
Page  Bernstein,  Peg  Humphrey,  Phylli« 
Maultsby 


BUSINESS  ST.\FF— Rosa  Moore,  Johnny 
Whitaker.  Dick  Leavitt.  Dick  Sirkin. 


•  SPORTS  STAFF:  Bill  King,  Jim  Purks, 
•limmy  Harper.  Dave  Wible,  Charley 
Howson. 


EDiTORi.AL  STAFF  —  Woody  Sears, 
Frank  Crowther.  Barry  Winston,  David 
Mundy,  George  Pfingst.  Ingrid  Clay, 
Cortland  Edwards,  Paul  McCauley, 
Bobbi  Smith. 


Staff  Photographer 
L  ibrarian 

Night  Bdilor      _ 

Prfv.f  Reader '" 


Normao  Kantor 
Sue  Gishner 

„_Xarry  Cheek 
.  Graharp  Snyder 


.\lcGuire  off  into  a  cornier  of  the 
building,  to  send  pidjlicist  Jake 
\V;;le  (town  to  the  football  field- 
house.  I  rick.scm,  as  the  director 
of  Carolina's  athletics,  should  have 
spread  fairlv  the  space  and  im- 
poitarue  to  all  of  the  Tniversity's 
monev  they  pull  in. 

.\n  alert  Krickson  coidd  have 
stopped  the  family  feud  between 
football  and  basketlxH  lon»  be- 
fore it  got  tv  the  ears  of  the  press 
and  the  pid)lic.  He  coidd  have 
done  it  fairly,  without  tipping  the 
scales  (See  cartoon  this  pa^e)  ei- 
ther wav. 

If  F.ri(  kson  had  used  all  his 
pressure  and  prestige  as  director 
of  athletics— especia'.lv  in  the  past 
year,  when  Jim  Tatum  was  set- 
tling down  in  Chapel  Hill  —  he 
could  have  stoppecl  some  of  the 
rumors,  the  bad  talk,  the  sugges- 
tions, that  have  been  floating 
around  town   in  lecent   months. 

But,  obviously,   he  didn't. 

*        '      *  * 

When  ]im  Tatum.  who  symbo- 
li/es  professional  tollegiate  foot- 
!>all  as  nuich  as  any  other  coa(  h 
todav,  came  to  this  town  we 
thought  the  University  could  hold 
its  rvademic  side  up  against  any- 
thing he  would  do  to  increase  the 
emphasis  on  the  sport.  Now,  we 
see.  the  I'niversity  has  not  held 
up  its  side  well  enough.  We  will 
have  more  to  say  about  this  after 
Christmas   holidays. 

But.  for  now,  we  can  p(jint  to 
Clni(k  Krickson  as  the  person  who 
sliould.   but  didn't. 

Mavbe  there's  still  time.  May- 
be Krick.son.  by  assuming  his  of- 
fice with  a  new  sort  of  strength 
—  st.tTting  right  now — can  keep 
football  in  its  proper  place.  We 
doubt  It.  however. 

Somebody 
Is  (.poking 
At  Ideals 

vSomebody  in  the  T'nlversiiy 
administration  i<»  an  idealist.  No' 
that  being  an  idealist  is  bad,  but 
this  time  it  could  hurt  somefjcxly. 

The  people  who  piu  the  I'ui- 
vcrsity's  calendar  together  have 
schedided  classes  to  end  at  G  this 
evening.  That  means  there  will 
be  a  rush  of  traffic  toitight  leav- 
ing Ch.pel  Mill.  Now  everybody 
knows  that  driving  at  night  isn't 
(juife  as  safe  as  daylight  driving, 
•uid  most  people  have  a  rough  idea 
of  how  eager  college  students  are 

to  get   home   f(»r   Christnras. 

''  *  *  * 

A  kiirdly  soul  in  South  Building 
explained  the  late  closing  horn'  was 
necessary  because  chi'sses  must 
meet  a  certain  mininrum  of  times 
a  .semester  to  be  accredited;  and 
then  the  i;ood  person  expres.scd  the 
hope  that  studenis  would  wait  un- 
til morning  to  leave  the  campus. 

Classes  ended  at  2  for  the 
I  hairksgiving  recess,  but  the  idea 
was  to  let  the  students  get  honre  for 
Thanksgiving  eve.  It  was  only  a 
fortunate  a(  ( ident  that  the  students 
had  several  liouis  of  daylight  to 
drive  in. 

It  is  too  late  to  do  anythiirg  about 
it  this  year  except  remind  people 
that  night  driving  and  day  drivitrg 
aren't  the  satire,  and  :■'  little  extra 
(are  has  to  be  taken  after  dark.  But 
when  the  time  comes  t(r  make  next 
year's  calendar,  the  c.onmtittee  in 
charge  ouj;ht  to  keep  disirrissal 
times  in  miird,  even  if  it  meas  a 
couple  of  extric  sessions  for  some 
classes. 

Suggestion 

A  suggestion  for  Christmas  Eve: 
Put  away  all  the  textbooks  you 
took  home  but  never  opened: 
close  your  mirrd  to  things  com- 
mercial; shut  off  the  bablile  of  the 
familv  video  set. 

Think,  even  for  a  minute,  of  the 
meaning  of  Christnras.  Remember, 
remember  a  second,  the  things  for 
which  you  are  thankful.  Contem- 
plate, for  a  moment,  on  what  it 
mea'us  to  be  free. 


Letters,  Letters  And  More  Letters: 
Forget  The  Crossword  And  Read  'Em 


I  Religion: 
Some  Rules 
Of  Combat 

Editor: 

^an  1  get  into  this  religion 
squabble,  with  a  few  Marquis  of 
Queen.sbury  rules  that  have 
been  thorouijhly  ignored  by  one 
c«inte.stant   or  another? 

1.     Be  kind  to  your  opponent. 
He  may  be  human  and  you  might 
■even  like  him  if  you  met  him. 
2.   Be    generous.    Give    your 
opponent    the    benefit    of    the 
doubt,  and  don't  read   outland- 
ish   meanings    into    his    letter 
After  all,   he   had   to   condense 
his  thoughts  to  get  them    into 
a   letter. 

3.  Don't  show  off.  Using  big 
'  words  like  "empirical  generali- 
zation" or  "'principle  of  contra- 
diction" do?.sn't  really  impress 
people.  It  just  shows  them  that 
you  haven't  mastered  your  own 
ideas  enough  to  present  them 
simply. 

4.  Don't  stop  thinking.  Every 
college  sophomore  is  apt  to  be 
contemptuou.s  of  the  ideas  he 
held  as  a  freshman.  But  don't 
hold  to  your  new  ideas  loo  stub- 
bornly— some  day  you  will  be 
just  as  contemptuous  of  the 
ideas  you  are  spouting  today  ^n 
in  print. 

5.  Read,  especially  ideal  you 
dont  like.  Ther?  have  been  "better 
thinkers  than  you  in  history,  who 
have  wondered  about  the  mean- 
ing cf  life,  the  claims  of  morali- 
ty, the  existence  of  God.  Be 
humble  enough  to  acknowledge 
that  their  insights  may  not  be 
completelv  outdated.  The  libra- 
ry  is   available;   u.se   it. 

6.      Remember,      you      aren't 
alon«     The    campus    has    plent/ 
«»*   Dhilosr>r>hers,   students,   min- 
isters and  just  plain  smart  peo- 
ple who  may  help  your  growth 
more    than     you     knew.     Don't 
condemn  them  all  because  one 
doesn't    touch    your   condition. 
That     only     stunts     your     own 
growth. 
7.     Talk    it  up.    Letters  to   the 
editor  never  convince   th?   read- 
er  of   ba.sic    issues     unless     the 
reader     is"    already     convinced. 
Real   growth   only     takes     place 
with   sustained     effort     over     a 
long   time. 

And  you  can  begin  to  feel  tJiat 
you-  are  reaching  maturity  when 
you  can  enter  religious  discuss- 
ions with  strong  conviction,  hu- 
mility, charity,  a  desire  both  to 
learn  and  to  teach  and  a  determ- 
ination to  live  by  the  truths  .vou 
profess. 

L.  Merton 
P.S.     Me?   I'm   a  ChrLstian. 

Nothing:  Just  Want 
To  Ruin  Breakfasts 

Editor:  ,•■■  .t- 

We  do  not  wish  to  argue  about 
religion,  coeds  or  the  new  fra- 
ternity court — to  each  his  own. 
We'd  just  like  to  see  thi;;  lot 
tLr  in  print — its  importance  is  at 
least  equal  to  that  of  the  other 
letters  you've  printed  for  the 
last  few  weeks. 

The  vividness  in  some  of 
these  great  intellectual  epistle.*; 
ha»  contributed  toward  the 
ruination  of  four  of  our  break 
fasts.  Perhaps  the  authors  of 
the  letters  will  have  the  oppor- 
tunity of  having  a  meal  ruined 
by  us  today. 

With  kind  regards  and  our 
heartfelt  sympathies  to  others 
who    have   suffered    as   we. 

Dot  Coplon 
Kay    Severance 


The  Feud: 
McGuire's 
Valuable 


Coeds:  Here's  A  Challenge 


Editor: 

I  did   not   read   the   article   in 
The  Daily  Tar  Heel  regarding  the 
supposed     feud     between     Coach 
Tatum   and   Coach   McGuire,   but 
1  did  read  a  recount  of  it  in  The 
Charlotte  Observer.     To     put     it 
mildly,  I  was  very  surprised. 
I    and    the    majority    of    the 
student   body   hate   to   see   this 
friction  develop  between  these 
two  capable   men.   i    think   the 
requests    that    Coach    McGuire 
has   made   are   small   compared 
to  those  of  any  other  big  time 
basketball  coach  .  .  . 
The     football     team     probably 
made  more  money  this  year  than 
'  any  year  since  the'  Justice   era, 
so  it  seems  to  me  that  the  basket- 
ball team  would  get  more  as  a  le- 
sult.  not  less.  There  is  no  reason 
for  this  friction. 

Basketball   has   just  as   much 
a    place    here   as   does   football, 
and  I'm  sure  if  a  poll  was  tak- 
en of  the  student  body  regard- 
ing the   issue,   t  think   the  stu- 
dents'    tastes    would     b«    Mc- 
Guirian   rather  than  Tatumian. 
Ccacl.  McGuire  is  too  valuable 
a   gentleman  and  coach  to   lose. 
Wo   as   students   appreciate  what 
he  has  dojie  for  basketball  here 
and  he  deserves  to  get  as  r^ch 
out  of  basketball  as  he  is  putting 
into  it. 

Donald  McMillan 


Editor: 

May  an  alumna  have  a  few- 
words  with  the  coeds  who  aired 
their  radical  feelings  in  the  Dec. 
15  Lssue  of  The  Daily  Tar  Heel? 
I  agree  with  you  girls  that  the 
typical  Carolina  Gentleman  is 
probably  just  as  you  described 
him,  hut  I  don't  believe  you  are 
looking  in  the  right  corner  for 
what  y-ou  want.  « 

Have  you  tried  being  nice  to 
the  guys  on  campus  who  care 
enough  about  an  education  to 
work   for  it  who  can't  afford  lo 


belong  to  a  frat — who  can't  af- 
ford to  "party" — as  a  matter  of 
fact,  who  can  afford  only  a 
couple  of  Cokes  in  the  Rendez- 
vous Room  or  coffee  in  the  Pine 
Room? 

These  ^uys  are  just  as  inter- 
ested in  girls  as  the  free-spend- 
ers, but  -are  afraid  to  expect  a 
coed  to  spend  an  evening  talk- 
ing over  a  cup  of  coffee  instead 
of  giggling  over  a  bottle  of  beer. 

1  challenge  you  to  give  this 
group  a  chance. 

Name  Withheld  By  Request 


Is  Erickson  Tipping  The  Scales? 


SCULPTURE: 


f 


Two  More  In  Art  Show 


Editor: 


at  Stale  College,  and  Mr.  Grove       Columbia    University. 


In  regard  to  Mr.  Roniiie  Milli- 
gan's  article  of  Dec,  12  concern- 
ing James  Brewer's  sculpture 
and  the  North  Carolina  10th  An- 
nual, in  the  soulfelt  interest  of 
ethics  and  equal  repres^tation. 
I  should  like  t)  point  out  that 
two  other  Carolina  art  students, 
sculptor  Fred  Crisp  and  painter 
William  Mangiim,  were  also  rep- 
resented in  the  exhibition  {whicli 
word  is  preferable  to  "contest'* )- 
Also,  that  Mr.  Mangum  was 
singled  out  as  a  purchase  award 
nominee. 

Of  possible  further  interest  is 
the  fact  that  two  of  the  thr^e 
purchase  awards  were  given  to 
former  USC  art  students.  Mr. 
George  Birelinc,  now  on  the 
faculty  of  the  School  of  Design 


Robinson,  presently  a  student  at 


Thomas   Brame 


Dogs:  Heel,  Writer  Shaw 


Editor: 


\ 


f    " 

Relative  the  article  by  Stan 
Shaw,  Dec.  12,  in  regard  to  the 
dog. 

Wonder  if  Mr.  Shaw  could  not 
have  written  this  article  without 
making  any  observations  about 
how  the  dog-catcher  looked? 
Certainly  he  was  dresSed  for  his 
type  of  work  and  not  as  an  office 
worker.  These  is  a  chance  that 
many  other  people  would  not 
agree  with  the  adjective  Shaw 
used. 

And  suppose  the  dog  catcher 
retaliated    bv  calling   Mr.    Shaw 


a    nincompoop.    How   far   wrong 
would  be  be? 

The  first  part  of  Mr.  Shaw's 
article  relative  to  N.  C.  laws  is 
ridiculous  and  therefore  de- 
serves /lo  mention.  If  Mr.  Shaw 
/wants  to  wage  a  crusade  to 
have  our  laws  changed  he  should 
appear  before  the  N.  C.  Legis- 
lature next  month  and  present 
his  views. 

In  conclusion,  the  roads  are 
open  and  one  who  does  not  like 
it  here  may  move  on.  Chances 
are  th?  community  will  shed  no 
tears  over  such  a  departure. 

W.   H.   Thompson 


WUNC  &  AAANTOVANi: 

Station  Wasn't 
In  Competition 

Editor: 

Several  people  have  mentioned  to  various  mem- 
bers of  our  staff  a  comment  mad^e  by  Wally  Kuralt 
in  his  review  of  the  recent  Mantovani  concert  on 
the  campus.  I  am  writing  in  order  to  clarify  a  point 
made  in  the  review. 

Mr.  Kuralt  said:  "Though  noticable  only  m 
quiet  sections,  WUNC  put  in  its  sounds  via  Me- 
morial Hall's  amplification  system.  The  subdued 
sounds  of  the  station  took  much  away  from  dram- 
atic lulls  in  the  music" 

The  comment  was  misunderstood  by  several 
people  as  implying  an  intent  on  the  part  of  WUNC 
to  feed  its  program  into  the  Memorial  Hall  public 
dddress  system.  Still  others  have  interpreted  the 
comment  to  imply  some  failure  or  malfunction  of 
WUNC  equipment.  Neither  of  these  viewpoints  is 
correct. 

While  it  is  true  that  WUNC  radiates  a  strong 
signal  in  the  vicinity  of  the  Swain  Hall  transmitter, 
the  station's  equipment  is  operating  properly  and 
totally  within  legal  limitation. 

It  is  not  unusual  for  poorly  designed  or  inex- 
pensive amplifiers  to  pick  up  and  and  reproduce 
radio  frequency  signals.  This  fault  results  from  the 
design  or  function  of  the  amplifier— not  necesarily 
of  the  radio  station  which  originates  the  signal. 
Properly     designed      professional      amplifying 
equipment  will   not  reproduce  the  WUNC  signal 
even  at  a  distance  closer  than  the  Memorial  Halt 
amplifier  is  f«e  our  transmitter. 
I  do  not  mean  to  imply  that  the  Memorial  Hall 
sound  installation  is  not  a  good  one.  On  the  other 
hand.  I  am   reluctant  to  see  published  statements 
that  lead  the  public  to  believe  that  WUNC  was  at 
fault,  which  indeed  it  was  not. 

In  any  event,  all  of  us  here  on  the  staff  deeply 
regret  any  interference  with  the  wonderful  Manto- 
vani mu.sic. 

Joseph  B.  Young,  manager  WUNC 

'■ 

PRAAM: 

'Desire'  Set 
A  Precedent 

Now  there  can  be  no  d'Cubts,  if  there  ever  we-» 
any,  that  the  Carolina  Pliymakers  need  a  new  and 
larger  theatre! 

In  the  first  place,  the  actors,  technicians  and  au- 
dience should  be  given  ever>-  possible  advantage 
to  make  the  most  of  and  get  the  most  out  of  the 
productions;  and,  in  the  second  place,  if  the  Play- 
makers  do  another  show  any-time  soon  that  ap- 
proaches the  quality  of  •l>esire  Under  The  Elms." 
then  there  physically  wont  be  room  for  actors 
and  audience  both  in  tho  Playmakers  Theatre. 

"Desire  .  .  ."  1$  the  story  of  two  men,  Ephraihi 
Cabot   and    his    son,    Eten,   and   their   fight   with 
each    other   for   the    possession   of    the   farm   on 
which  they  live  and  which  had  belonged  to  Eben's 
mother;    and    of   a   young    woman,    Abbic,   whom 
Ephriam    takes  for  his  third  wife.        * 
Eden  buys  his  two  brothers'  share  of  the  farm; 
and  when  Ephraim  brings  Abbie  home  as  his  new 
bride,  Eben  at  first  sees  her  only  as  another  persob 
betw^een   him  and  ov%'nership  of  the  farm. 

Animosity  betw-een  Eben  and  Abbie  turns  into 
■'desire,''  and  aided  by  "nature"  this  unicwi  yielus 
a  son  to  Abbie  that  Elphraim  believes  is  his.  Eben 
finally  decides  to  leave  rather  than  torture  him- 
self and  Abbie  by  li\ing  a  lie. 

To  prove  her  love  Abbie  kills  the  child  an  I 
tells  all  to  Ephraim  while  Eben  has  gone  for  the 
sheriff.  Elben  stands  by  Abbie  and  shares  the  guilt, 
and  by  doing  this  wins  the  respect  of  his  father. 

Foster  Fitz-Simon^  as  Ephraim  gave  the  most 
polished,  consistent  and  convincing  performance  of 
the  evening.  In  every  gesture  and  movement  there 
was  strength,  determination  and  unsurpassed  will- 
power that  made  this  this  character  dominate  those 
around  him. 

Jo  Jurgensen  as  Abbie  and  Albert  Gordon  as 
Eben  'ooth  gave  dynamic,  believable  performances. 
In  my  opinion,  this  is  Al  Gordon's  best  effort 
on  the  Playmaker  stage.  Charles  Barrett  as  Simeou 
and  Ken  Lowry  as  Peter — Eben's  half  brothers — 
more  than  fUled  the  bill  with  their  robust  inter- 
pretations of  these  hardened,  lusty,  not-to-brighl 
tillers  of  the  soil. 

Ton>my  Rezzuto  had  the  un-envied  job  of  fit- 
ting a  two  story  house  on  the  Playmaker  state — 
which  has  only  a  19-foot  proscenium  arch.  This 
was  no  small  task  and  Rezzuto  came  up  with  a 
set  that  had  many  areas  easily  accessible  to'light- 
ing  and  playing  and  one  that  was  not  only  a  pro- 
duction necessity  but  an  asset. 

"Desire"  is  the  b<:st  cast  show  I  have  seen  on 
the  Haymaker  stage.   TMs,   plus   experience   and 
talent  in  all  departments,  adds  up  to  a  successful 
•production. 

At  intermission  I  heard  someone  say:  "I  can't 
telJ  where  O'Neill  stops  and  the  Pla\Tnakers  starL" 
To  T-m  Patterson,  cast,  and  crew  I  can  only  say 
that  "Desire  Under  Tho  EUms"  is  proof  thai  the 
Playmakers  are  capable  of  professional  work  ajd 
that  this  should  be  incentive  enough  for  them  to 
quit  resting  on  their  iaurels  and  turn  out  more 
work  of  this  caliber. 

ll  "Desire"  set  the  precedent  I  would  almost  be 
willing  to  bee: me  a    "Theatrical  Conservative.' 


'Kii 

Plaj 
peare' 
11    inl 

Tor 
that 
brougl 
Grahai 
as  a  f4 
progrg 

PI  a  J 
ingtor 
tour 
Japan.) 
sentec 


119,  1957 


't 
ion 


)us  mem- 

Kuralt 

►ncert  on 

y  a  point 

I  only  in 
(via  AA«- 
(subdued 

dram- 
several 
►f  WUNC 

II  public 
etcd  the 
ction  of 
3oints  is 

strong 
ismitter, 
erly  and 

or  inex- 
? produce 
)m  the 
mly 
ignal. 
Mifying 
signal 
i«l  Hair 

ial  HaU 

le  other 

itements 

was  at 

deeply 
11  Manto- 

ir  WUNC 


Two  BVP  Students  Are  Taken 
For  Ride  On  Heavy  BuHdozer 


WEDNKSDAt,  DECEMBER  19,  1957" 

'King  Henry  IV'  Here 

Players  Inc.  will  present  Shakes- 
peare's "King  Henry  IV "  on  March 
11    in   Memorial   Hall.  I 

Tom    Lambeth    has    announced       iv.-^    f  ^     *  • 

that  the   dramatic  group  will  be!  rid?  .n        k  nr'^  *f^^"  ^**'"  ^'     The^'ti'^J^  said:  the  hoys  "ware 
brought   to  the   UNC   campus   byljlv   .^Lh    ^"J^^ff ''^  ^^f    Satur- 1  walking   through    th^    woods     in 
Graham  Memorial  Activities  BoarJ '  J'-':.^"^°'^^^"g  ^^  the  Battle-Vance- 
as  a  feature  of  its  spring"::m^^^^^^^^^  ^^™^^'  ^^^^^  '^'^  '^K 

program.  |      ^, 

Players  Inc    nri«i-n.f«    •     «r    u  '        °^    students.    Bob    Kuhns    and 
ington    D     C    a?d   hi     k"  ^"^^- !  BiU  Porter,   two  BVP  boys,  were 

Japan    "HemC   TV»       n   >f'    *"^  |  <^^««    ^^    taking    a    nice    Saturday! 
sonted  wi^hT^n^^-  ^   ^i  ""^^  ^^'•''"Sh  the  woods,  the  BVP 

sented  wuh  a  speakmg  cast  of  20.   l-imes  reported 


T«»  DAILr  TAB  hCCL 


PAGE    7Hlie# 


PRE- 
CHRiSTAAAS 


HERE  IT  JS! 
Kemp's  Annual 

SALE 

9  a.m. -9  p.m. 

SALE  ENDS  TODAY 

EVERYTHING  GOES . . . 

WE  ARE  GIVING  THE  BEST  NOW  .  .  . 
AND  NOT  THE  WORST  AFTER  CHRISTMAS! 

Come  And  Get  Em! 


207  E.  Franklin  St. 


Q&Cain^ 


with 

(Author  of  "Barefoot  Boy  With  Cheek,"  etc.) 


■ver  we*e 

new  and 

i  and  au- 

idvantage 

ut  of  the 

the  Play- 

that    up- 

le  Elm-s." 

or    actors 

aire. 

Ephrairn 

ght   with 

farm    on 

fo  Eb«n\ 

w. 

e,    whom 

^ 

> 

the  farm; 

4 

s  his  new 

ler  person 

> 

>■ 

I 

turns  into 

ion  yield* 

his.  Ebon 

■tore   him- 

chiid   an  1 

le  for  the 

the  guiit. 

father. 

the   most 

Tmance  of 

nent  there 

assed  wol- 

natc  those 

(iordon    as 

forinances. 

>est   effort 

as  Simeo'i 

brothers — 

bust  intor- 

ot-to- bright 

job  of  fit- 

•r  Stat* — 

irch.   This 

'P   with  a 

•  to'lighN 

iily  a  pro-                   1 

te  seen   on 

rience   and 

' 

successful                ' 

V-     I  can't 

cers  start" 

1  only  wy 

f  that   the 

work  ajd 

. 

T  them  to 

out  mr/re 

almost  be 

■ative." 

THE  GIFT  HORSE 

The  college  life  i.>  a  busy  one,  especially  at  thi.s  time 
of  \-ear.  What  with  going  to  clas.ses  and  .studying  for 
exams  and  pursuing  a  full  .social  schedule  and  construct- 
ing rope  ladder.s  to  foil  dormitory  curfews,  the  average 
undergrad  is  so  pressed  for  time  that  he  cannot  do  justice 
to  his  Christmas  shopping. 

Therefore,  to  aid  yoa  in  youf  Chri.>-tmas  shopping.  I 
have  gone  into  the  market  place  and  selected  fo»-  you  a 
list  of  gifts,  notable  for  their  originality. 

Perhaps  the  most  original  jgift  of  all  this  year  is  a 
carton  of  Philip  Morris  Cigarettes.  "Original'.'"  you  ex- 
claim, your  bushy  young  eyebrows  rising.  "Why,  we 
have  been  giving  cartons  of  Philip  Morris  for  years  I" 

True,  I  reply,  but  each  time  you  give  Philip  Morris, 
it  is  a  new  treat,  a  fresh  delight,  a  pristine  pleasure.  Each 
carton,  each  pack,  each  cigarette,  each  pufF,  is  just  as 
good  as  the  first  one  you  ever  tried. 

Another  gift  destined  for  certain  popularity  this 
year  is  a  gift  certificate  from  the  American  Dental  As- 
sociation. This  certificate,  good  at  any  dentist's  office  in 
America,  is  accompanied  by  a  handsome  gift  card  upon 
which  is  engraved  this  lovely  poem: 

Merry  Christmas,  little  pal. 
Do  yon  ricid  ttome  roof  cunai  f 

Prophylaxis^   Porcelain  capa.'  -  ■^. 

BridgcwoTk  to  close  up  them  gaps? 

Shiny  braces  that  will  straighten?  ., 

Inlays?  Fillings?   Upper  platen? 

Merry  Christmas  to  your  teeth. 
And  the  rosy  gums  beneath. 


Another  gift  that  is  always  welcome  is  a  book,  espe- 
cially to  people  who  read.  This  Christmas  the  selection 
of  books  is  particularly  attractive.  For  lovers  of  an- 
thologies, there  is  William  Makepeace  Sherpa's  A  Treas- 
ury of  the  World's  Great  Treasuries.  For  those  who  fancy 
inspiring  success  stories,  there  is  the  stirring  autobi- 
ography of  William  Makepeace  Pemmican  entitled  HoiO 
I  Got  a  Forty  Pound  Monkey  Off  My  Back  and  Started 
the  Duluth  Zoo.  For  devotees  of  skin-diving,  there  is 
/  Married  a  Snorkel  by  Lydia  Makepeace  Watershed.  For 
calorie  counters  and  wai.stline  watchers,  there  is  Harry 
Makepeace  Wildfoster's  Eat  and  Grow  Fat. 

My  own  favorite  book  this  season  is  a  pulse-pounding 
historical  novel  from  that  famous  author  of  pulse-pound- 
ing historical  novels,  Daphne  Makepeace  Sigafoos.  This 
one  is  called  Egad  and  Zounds,  and  it  tells?  the  poignant 
romance  of  two  young  lovers.  Egad  and  Zounds,  who, 
alas,  can  never  be  married,  for  fiery  Egad  is  but  a  gypsy 
lass,  while  tempestuous  Zounds  is  a  Kappa  Sigma.  They 
later  become  Ludwig  orf  Bavaria. 

My  final  gift  suggestion  is  one  that  a  great  many 
people  have  been  fervently  wishing  for  since  last  year. 
Do  you  remember  the  introduction  last  Christmas  of 
tiny  personal  portable  radios  that  plugged  into  your  ear? 
Well,  this  year,  you  will  be  delighted  to  know,  you  can 
buy  an  ingenious  pick  to  get  them  out. 

(C  Blax  Sliulman,  1956 

Old  Max  uiid  itf  but  it  bears  repeating:  A  carton  of  Philip 
Morriny  made  hy  th^  sponaors  of  tkia  column,  i*  a  Chri»trha» 
gift  that'*  bound  to  please  everyone! 


hack   of   the   hospital   when   they| 
came    across    the     super-highway 
now  in  process  of  being  built  In 
the    excavation  of   the    ariea    aoe ! 
two  bulldozers,"   the  article  said. , 

The  article  continued: 

"One  of  the  boys  used  to  drive ! 
a  'cat'  in  civilian  life  so  thought  j 
he  would   drive  this  one   asx)uA(l 
to  get  the  feel  of  things. 


^fw  hfiercom  System 
Given  UNC  Hospital 

Christmas  carols  and  taU  tales ;  Robbie  Page  Memorial  Fund  was ' 


HappQning^s^ 

(Qontinued  From  Page'l) 


of  that  merry  old  elf  from  tha 
North  Pole  will  be  heard  through- 
out the  childrenls  section  of  the 
North  Carolina  Memorial  Hospital 
during  this  holiday   season. 

This  has  been  made  possible 
by  the  installation  of  new  in- 
teniomfaunication      system      this 


established  in  memory  of  her  son. 
Aside  from  paying  for  the  in 
tercommunication  system,   the  so-  \  ten  years  old 
rority   has  indicated   that  it  \idU 


ly  for  children  at  the  Methodiit 
Orphanage  in  Raleigh  at  the  Sig- 
ma Nu  House.  LatCT  in  the  eve- 
ning Santa  arrived  with  present; 


'Ctfristmas  In  The  Hospital' 
Is  Title  Of  WUNC-TV  Sliow 


for  15  little    boys  from  eight  to  i  .9  p 


"Christmas  in  the  Hospital".  The  "Project  Health"  series  of 
will  be  the  title  of  the  "Project  television  jshows  is  seen  every  oth- 
Health"  television  show  o  v  e  r  '  er  Friday  night  throughout  the  ac- 
^\T;NC-T\^  Channel  4,  Friday,  at  |  ademic  year.   The  series  is  spon- 


giye  future  support  to  the  Pedia- 
trics Service  of  Memorial  Hospi- 
tal. 

Mrs.  H.  W.  Morrison,  chairman 


"He  started  it  up.  but  chicken- '  week  in  the  University  Hospital,  j  of  the  social  services  of  the  so- 


ed   out.  Tlie  other  boy^  was  an»-i 
ious  to  learn  how  to  start  it,  so  ^ 


The    new    unit,    cosfrg 


about '  ^°"^^'  *°*^  ^*  Robbie  Page  Mem 


$1,500,  was  donated  by  the  Sigma 


^J^-^'t'-^oin^ir^bi.l,-----^^l^i;^:^^   m,  .his  summer  and  made  ar- 


buddy.  ,       .  - 

« *  _  T>  u  1    . .  .        social  sorority  and  a  member  of 

'As  Bob  was  lookmg  over  other '  ♦>,«  .xw,«-.t    ».,  v-n     .""J 

pieces  of  equipment  he  heart   a  ■  '«*  i^°"^    Panhellemc    Coun- 

chus-chug-chug  and  looked  up  to'  '"•    ^1  "l?'^  ?J    ^^    '""'^^ 
^«  k;    ,t«          J  _          ,  ^  "'(came  from  the  Robbie  Page  Mem- 
see  his  laO  pound  roomiMte  coat- ;  —ii  ™ a       _J^   *  f   / 

„,:„«   iu-...Ju   *!. ^ .-_    <"^»  P«n«J.  a's<>ronty  project. 


mini:   through   the  woods  on  top 
of  a   150  ton  bulldozer. 

"The  two  boys  were  last  seen 
running  off  through  the  woods 
'just  laughin'  up  a  storm.*  " 


WUNC-TV 
To  OHer 
German 

A   course   in  elementary 


The  control  panel  for  the  sjs- 
tem  is  located  in  the  children's 
plajToom  and  will  be  operated 
by  Miss  Katherine  McLaren  of  the^ 
Pediatrics  Dept.  Miss  McLaren  is- 
the  Coordinator  of  Rehabilitation- 
Activities  for  the  children  who' 
are  patients  at  Memorial  Hospital.' 

I 

j     From  this  central   location  the 
intercommunication     system     will- 

j  have   speakers     in  each    of     the 

j  rooms   on   the   children's     floor. 
Ger-  j  This  will  enable  Miss  McLaren  to 


orral  Fund,  visited  Memorial  Hos- 


rangements  for  the  installation  of 
the  new  system 


TTie  Alpha  Gams  had  ♦heir 
Christmas  party  Tuesday  nignt 
also  but  instead  of  exchanging 
gifts  spent  the  time  wrapping  pre- 
sents Iw  an  underprivileged  child 
they  adopted  for  Christmas. 

ATOs  and  their  datei  celebrated 
vacation  time  with  a  Yule  party, 
as  did  the  SPE's,  Zetes,  Beus 
Pikas,  KA's,  SAE's,  Theta  Chi's 
and  Sigma  Chis.. 


j  sored    by  the   University  Division 

The    program    is    being    staged  i  °^  .^^f"'    ^^'''''-    '^^   division 

by   the  North  Carolma   Memorial  I  "^  "^*^^^  ^"^'"  ^^  composed  of 

Hospital. 


man  will  be  included  in  the  Uni- 
versity's educational  television 
program,  beginning  F*^b.  15,  the 
University  Extension  Division  an- 
nounced today. 

The  new  course  will  be  present- 
ed over  WUNC-TV,  the  University 
owned  non-commercial  station  ser- 
ving 36  of  the  state's  counties. 

Dr.  Herbert  Reichert,  associate 
professor   of    German    and    mem- 


entertain  all  of  the  children  in 
this  section  of  the  hospital  at  the 
same  time.  She  will  tell  them 
stories,  play  phonograph  records 
for  th«n  and  tune  in  children's 
progrms  on  the  radio,  which  is 
part  of  the  system. 

Robbie  Page  was  the  son  of  Mr. 
and  Mrs.  Robertson  Page  of  Doug-  j 
lastn.  New  York.  In  1951  the  child  | 
■entered  school  at  Newton  Center."} 


The  hour-long  show  will  show 
how  Christmas  will  be  observed 
Eft  Memorial  Hospital,  especially  in 
the  chiJldpen's  secticm  of  the  hos- 
pital. 


Memorial  Hospital  and  the  UNC 
Schools  of  Medicine,  Nursing, 
Pharmacy,  Public  Health  and 
Dentistry.  Each  of  the  programs 
is  based  on  some  activity  of  the 
units  within  the  Division  of  Health 
Affairs. 


lou^--  '  «-un3p<5, 

VoutefeUVf^l 


K»^    f  «t.    n     4     r  /^  •    .        I  Mass.  On  the  same  day  he  entered 

ber  of  the  Dept.  of  Germanic  Lan- 1  ^^hool  he  suffered  a  polio  attack.  | 

He  never  returned  Vo  school  and 


guages  and  Literature,  will  teach 
j  the  course.  Dr.  Reichert  will  give 
45-minute  lectures  twice  weekly, 
on  Tuesdays  and  ThursdVi  at  7; 
30  p.  m.  The  study  will  eftd  Jtrne 
13. 

The  German  course  will  be  of- 
fered both  fw  credit  and  non-ere- 
dit,  according  to  Miss  Henry,  head 
of  theExtension  Division's  Bureau 
of   Correspondence    Instruction. 

Two  courses  in  religion  and  po- 
litical science  are  beinf  taogbt 
now  via  TV.  "^  Some  140  persons  ! 
are  enrolled  in  the.  ^uxaes,  25  for 
credit.  '><«f   - 


died   two  weeks   later.  I 

At   that   time.    Mrs.    Page    wasj 
national    president   of    th   Sigma 
Sitma    Sigma    Sorority    and    the  j 


CUSSIFIEOS 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL  WILL 
pay  $.25  for  each  issue  of  the 
September  28  edition.  Papers  of 
this  date  are  needed  for  adver- 
tising_  p^ir^es. 


FlQht  TB 


Covering 


th* 


Campus 


GM  CLOSES 

Grah.im  Memorial  will  elose  to- 
day at  6  p.m.  for  the  holidays  an  j 
will  reopen  Jan.  2  at  1  p.m.,  ac- 
cording to  Miss  Linda  Mann,   di- 
i  rector. 

I  PICTURE  RENTALS 
i      Pictures  which  have  been  rented 
j  from  Person  Hall  Art  Gallery  will 
j  be  due  as  usual  on  ^an.  2.  All  stu 
I  dents    and    townspeople   who   are 
i  planning   to  be   away  during  the 
entire   holiday    period   have   been 
urged  to  return  their  picture  rent- 
j  dls  before  leaving  town  by  Cura- 
tor Lynette  Warren.  The  Art  Gai 
I  lery  will  close  Friday  and  will  re- 
j  open  Dec.  26. 
I  ORANGE  BOWL  TICKETS 
i      Tickets    for    the    Orange    Bowl 
j  game  in  Miami  on  New  Year's  Day 
have  been  made  available  for  UNC 
students.  They  are  priced  at  $8.25 
each  and  all  are  for  reserved  seats. 
Students   wanting  tickets  to  the 
game  have   been  asked  to  go  by 
the  ticket  office  in  Woollen  Gym. 
WUNC 

Today's  schedule  for  WUNC,  the 
University's  FM  radio  station: 
7:00  The  Spirit  of  Christmas 
7:15  Messages  and  Men 
7:30  Songs  of  France 
7:45  Curtain  Gomg  Up 
8:00  Christmas  Is  Coming 
8:30  Georgetown  University  Ra- 
dio Forum  '^ 
9:00  Debussy  the  Master 
10:00  News 

10:13  Program  Preview 
10:15  Evening  Masterwork 
11:30  Sign  Off 
WUNC-TV 

Today's  schedule  for  WUNC-'r\', 
the  University's    educational  tele- 
vision station: 
12:45  Music 
1:00  Today  on  Farm 
1:30  Play  Period 
2:00  Career  for  You 
2:30  Sign  Off 
5:45  Music 

6:00  Ihraw  Me  A  Story  « 

6:15  UN  Review 
6:30  News 
6:45  Sports 

7:00  Industrial  Artisan 
7:30  College  Concert  , 

8:00  Art  EJchibit 
8:30  Living  Together 
9:00  Mental  Gymnasium 
9:30  World  We  Want 
10:00  i'lnal  Edition 
10:05  Sign  Off 


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May  Christmas  bring  joy  in  highest  degree 
To  you  and  to  ail  whom  you  hold  dear. 

May  your  days  be  merry  as  a  Christmas  tree 
And  your  home  and  family  full  of  cheer. 

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M^ 


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Zone.. .~.  ..State.%r.r.r*7;  __ 


■* ';  -w 


or 


("Wiio's  Trying  to  Confvioivis?) 


Many  moons  ago  .  .  .  around  600  B.  C.  .  .  .  there  waa 
a  barkeep  named  Draw  Wun  in  a  little  bistro  off 
rTinoes  Square  in  Shanghai  Now  this  character's 
cashbox  was  loaded  with  loot,  as  Wun  served  up 
llie  greatest  brew  tiiat  aide  of  the  Yangtze. 

•*Murder,"  said  \^uii,  one  p.  m. 
near  9  as  the  cats  were  clamoring  for 
more  beer,  "I'm  getting  afl  shook 
up  trying  to  keep  gung-ho  on  thft  ' 
tap,  take  the  cash,  and  figure 
out  the  change.  I  don't  dig 
that  math." 

Tbe  beer  Wun  was  crying 
in  belonged  to  a  calculua 
prof  firom  the  local  U. 


f 


"Gad,  Dad,"  symiMthlzed  the  math  man,  "keep  coot 
I'll  think  of  something.  You  can  count  on  it." 

So  the  prof  rickshawed  home  and  took  a  bath.  Soon 
he  was  heard  to  shout,  *'Eureka!"  (in  Chinese,  of 
courte).  He  had  solved  the  proUem  by  invraxting  tho 
abacxis.    f  "^::ji^^  "  _._■/_"   '-,    : 

Next  day  he  brought  in  a  counting  gizmo  made  of  bam« 
boo  and  cranberries.  With  this  mechanical  brain,  Wun 
was  able  to  introduce  the  time-payment  plan,  because 
one  day  a  patron  and  Wun  did  this  bit  across  tho 
mahogany: 

**1  have  a  y«a  for  two  cold  ones  to  go,"  said  the  customer; 

**S(»ry,  friend,  we  don't  acc^t  Japanese  currency,*^ 
Wttn  lunged. 

"I'm  flat,  cat,"  came  the  reply,  "got  a  suggestion?" 

Whereupon  Wiui  played  a  few  fast  notes  on  his  abacus; 
figured  the  terms  of  a  loan  for  two  beers  and  said, 
"Borrow  one  and  carry  two", . .  two  terms  still  uaed  in 
modem  mathematics. 

So  you  can  see  that's  how  Wun  got  a  charge  out 

of  his  abacus.  -       '  .- 


MORAL:  When  it  cornea  to  mathe' 

mattes,  you  can  count  on  an 

abacus  if  you  uxtnt  td^But 

when  it  comes  to  beer,  figure 

on  Budweiser,  Ifs  the  best 

draught  beer  any  side  of  the 

Yangtae.  You  can  count  on  iL 


^teooo  ^     ^"^^^e^^^VS^^^ 


€»o^ 


KINO  •#  SllftS  r 

ANHEUSEK-BUSCU.  INC.  •  ST.  LOUIS  •  NEWARK  •  LOS  ANGELES 


V.'GE    FOUR 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


WEDNESDAY,  DECEMBER  19,  195? 


Tar  Heels  Climb  To  Third  In  Associated  Press  Cage  Poll 


By  HUGH  FULLERTON  JR. 
The  Associated  Press 

Although   picking  winners  is  a  risky  business   at  a  time  when 
touring  college  basketball  teams  are  facing  tap-flight  competitioft 


K^        AS  THE   J^ 
Ir2            OCEAN  f 

r^^K*^ 

THE           ^^ 

OAINE  MUTINY 

StsrrWif 

HUMPHREY           JOSE                VAN                     FREB 

BOGART  •  FERRER  '  JOHNSON  *  MacMURRAY 

•dMr«i.d.i  ROBERT  FRANCIS  •  MAY  WYNN  •  c<«b,  TECHNICOLOR 

icntu  Ptij  Oj  ST/WUY  ROBOTS  •  Usti  nfVi  tht  PxlilMf  pnje  wmnini  newt  by  HBWAN  WCW 
OndM  by  EOWARO  OMYTKYK  •  A  COLUMBIA  PICTURE  •  A  STANLEY  KRAMER  PROO. 

almost  every  night,  the  Kansas  Jayhawks  are  a-  solid  first  choice 
in  the  second  weekly  Associated  Press  ranking  poll  of  the  season. 
Kansas  drew  the  first  place  votes  of  63  of  the  93  sports  writers 
and  broadcasters  participating  in  the  poll.  That  gave  the  Jayhawks 
864  points  under  the  usual  scoring  system  of  10  for  first,  nine  for 
second,  etc. 

P«c*d  by  7-foot  sophomore  Wilt  Chamberlain,  Kansas  took 
two  impressive  decisions  from  Washington  last  week,  77-63  and 
92  78,  to  make  it  four  straight  for  the  season.  The  poll  is  based 
on   results  through  last  Saturday,   Dec  15. 

The  record  winning  streak  of  the  University  of  San   Fran- 
cisco, finally  broken  by  Illinois  Monday,  lasted  just  long  enough 
for  the  Dons  to  take  second  place  with  582  points. 
San  Francisco  won  its  fifth  game   of  the  season  and  its  60th 
straight  in  collegiate  competition  by  beat|ng  Chicago  Loyola  in  the 


opening  round  of  the  Chicafo  Invitation  Tournament  last  week. 
Then  the  U.  S.  Olympic  squad,  sparked  by  Bill  Russell,  the  man 
most  responsible  for  the  Dons"  winning  record,  handed  San  Fran- 
cisco an  83-52  setback. 

Tljat  wasn't  counted  because  it  was  regarded  as  an  exhibition, 
but  it  did  count  when  fifth-rated  lUinois  tihipped  the  Dons  62-33 
Monday. 


North  Carolina,  heading  north  this  week  for  games  in  New 
York  and  Boston  before  the  Dixie  Classic  tournament,  moved 
up  to  third  place  in  the  rankings  from  sixth  with  12  first  place 
votes  and  516  points.  Southern  Methodist  and  Illinois,  both  un- 
beaten, advanced  to  fourth  and  fifth  while  once-beaten  Ken- 
tucky and  Louisville  dropped  back.  Others  ranked  in  the  top 
10  were  West  Virginia,  St.  Louis  and  Kansas  State. 


Vic  Seixas  Optimistic  As  Cup  Finals  Near 


Cagers   Northern 
Trip  To  Be  Aired 


ADELAIDE.  Australia— (AP)-^' 
Vic  Seixas  said  yesterday  he  is ' 
using  ids  "Wimbledon  plan"  in  j 
preparing  for  the  Davis  Cup  chal- 1 
lenge  round  and  if  it  works  out  as  I 
expected,  he  may  surprise  by  beat- 1 
ing  both  Lew  Hoad  and  Ken  Rose- 
wall.  I 

"I  feel  I  am  pacing  myself  just 


right  so  that  I  can  reach  my  peak 
the  middle  of  next  week,"  said 
the  33-year-old  Philadelphian,  who 
carries  America's  faint  hopes  of 
recapturing  the  international  ten- 
nis trophy. 

'•In  getting  ready  for  Wimble- 
don last  summer  I  skipped  all  Eu- 
ropean   tournaments   except   Man-  j 


Chester,"  Vic  said.  "Then  I  de- 
cided to  work  myself  into  a  fine 
physical  and  mental  edge  for  the 
tournament.  I  think  I  did.  as  the 
results   show. 

"It  was  the  same  sort  of  condi- 
tioning I  did  in  1954  down  here, 
when  we  won  back  the  cup— not 
too  many  tournaments;  just  work 


when  I  needed  it,  no  more.  I  tet 
myself  be   the   judge."  '7- 

At  Wimbledon  Seixas  gained  tlft 
semifinals  and  led  Rosewall  5-2  « 
the  fifth  set  before  he  became  dis- 
tracted by  a  line  call  and  blew 
!he  match.  In  1954  at  Sydney.  SeuS 
as  worked  himself  into  perfect 
shape  and  won  over  Rosewall  i* 
the  first  match.  "  * 


NOW 
PLAYING 


m 


EfJvecttrB 


Enjoy  Longer  Holidays 

For  Fast,  Convenient  Service 

Bristol-Kingsport 
Johnson  City 

LOUISVILLE 
CINCINNATI 

and  many  other  points 


Call  5160  (Raleigh)  or  Your  Travel 
Agent  For  Reservations,  Information 


■//f 


F/£omonr 


PiiDmonr^ 


Carolina's  highly  rated  cagers 
left  yesterday  for  a  trip  to  their 
old  home  town,  and  for  the  fu-s 
time  this  season,  Tar  Heel  fan^ 
will  be  able  to  follow  their  team 
via  the  medium  of  radio. 

Morty  Schaap  of  radio  station 
WBBB  in  Burlington  will  originate 
broadcasts  of  the  three  UNC  week 
end  games  in  New  York  City  ai.d 
Boston,  and  an  anticipated  net- 
work of  six  or  more  stations  will 
cacrry  ihe  games. 

Three  stations  and  five  cities 
have  already  been  signed  up  for 
the  series,  to  be  sponsored  by 
Siberling  Tire  Co.  of  Akron,  Ohio. 
Committed  stations  are  WBBB  in 
Burlington,  WDNC  in  Durham  and 
WBIG  in  Greensboro.  Station^  'n 
High  Pjint  and  Fayetteville  have 
also  boon  lined  up..  Negotiation.-; 
are  underway  with .  stations  i.i 
Racky  Mount,  Wilson.  Greenville 
and  Henderson. 

The  Tar  Heels  go  against  NYl' 


in  Madison  Square  Garden  tomor- 
row nijht,  and  face  Djjrtmouth 
and  Holy  Cross  on  Friday  and  Sat- 
urday nights  in  Boston.  Tipoff 
time  for  the  NYU  game  is  9.00 
while  the  Boston  games  begin  at 
8:45. 

Coach  Frank  AtcGuire's  squad 
v/ill  carry  a  spotless  5-0  record 
and  a  lofty  national  rating  into 
the  contests.  Both  United  Press 
and  International  News  Service 
place  liie  Tar  Heels  at  numoer 
two,  while  AP  has  them  in  thLi'd 
spot  behind  Kansas  and  San  Fran 
Cisco. 

In  games  to  date,  Carolina  has 
had  trouble  only  with  South  Car- 
olina. In  that  one  last  Saturday 
night  in  Columbia,  the  surprising 
Gamecocks  fought  tooth  and  nail 
before  succumbing,  90-86,  in  ovc"-- 
timc.  Monday  night  the  tall  Tar 
Heels  vanquished  Marjiand,  70-61, 
to  take  full  possession  of  the  ACC 
lead  with  a  perfect  3-0  record. 


Carolina  Mermen  Whip 
Duke  Swimmers,  65-21 


PRE- 
CHRISTMAS 


AT  IT  AGAIN! 
Kemp's  Annudf 

SALE 

9  a.m. -9  p.m. 
Everything  On  Sale  . . . 

SALE  ENDS  TODAY 
WE  DON'T  WANT  ANY  INVENTORY  LEFT 

GET  GOOD  MERCHANDISE  NOW  .  .  . 
AND  NOT  LEFTOVERS  AFTER  CHRISTMAS! 


I^^H^^ 


207  E.  Franklin  St. 


i      Carolina's    unbeaten     swinimeis 
j  racked  np  their  third  straight  vie 

very  of   the  current  campaign    in 

Durham  yesterday  as  they  dowhod 

Duke's  hapless  mermen.  65-21,  oe 

lore  a  handful  of  spectators. 
I      UNC    freestyler    was    the    only 
rr»ouble  winner  of  the  day.  sweep 
}  ing  both  the  220  and  44!d  freestyle 
i  events.     The    Tar  "Heels    captured 

all   but   two  first   places   on  their 

way  to  the  win. 

The  summary: 

400-medley  '  'reliyf  '  T  —  UNC. 

(Krepp.    Zwickcr,    Zickgraf,    Jash) 

Time— 4:03.7. 
220— ireestyle:  1— Schiffman,  C; 

2— Rose,  C;  3— Haffer,  D.   Time— 

2:15.7 

50— Freestyle:  1— Young,  D;  2- 

Maness.  C;  3 — Wetchler,   D.  Time. 

—24.9. 
200— Butterfly:   1— Mahaffey,.  C. 

2— Turner,   C:   3 — Burns,   D.   Time 

—2:24.7. 

t     Diving.     1— Kelso,    C:     2— Mte 
I  kins,    C;    3 — Fisher,    D.    Points— 

206. 
j      100— Freestyle:   1— Rose.  C;  2— 

Ki-epp,    C;    3 — Young,    D.    Time-  - 

53.5.  I 

I      200 — Backstroke:    1— Pace.  D;    2 

— Zickgraf.  C;  3— Butler.  C.  Timt- 

—2:21.6. 

440— Freestyle:     1  —  Schiffma:..  | 

C;    2— ilaffer,    D;    3~Atwater,    C. 

Time— 5:04.5. 


200 — Breaststroke:  1  —  Zwickcr, 
C;  2— Morgan,  D:  3— Tribus.  C. 
Time— 2.37.4. 

400— Freestyle  relay:  1— UNC. 
(Goad,  Nash,  Maness,  Ro.se).  Time 
—3:46.5. 


SPECIAL 
ANNOUNCEMENT 

Advance  notice  of  our 
after  Christmas  sale  for 
both  the  Cupboard  and 
Lady  Milton  Shop,  com- 
mencing Thursday  Dec 
27th. 

MILTON'S 
Clothing  Cupboard 


LET'S  SEE! 


Did   I 


C:- 


Forget 
^Something? 


% 


OH   YES 


WISH   ALL   OF   YOU 


^■■% 


llHE 


MERRIEST  OF  CHRISTMASES 


AND  A 


HAPPY  NEW  YEAR,  TOO  ! 


B  O  B  and  M  O  N  K 
of 

TOWN& 
CAMPUS 

'I  SALUTE 
Athlete  Of  The  Week 


^^Vt^**^ 


A 


TOMMY  KEARNS 

Stubby  Tommy  Kearns,  ac« 
UNC  backcourt  man  from  Ber- 
genfield,  N.  J.,  has  been  named 
Athlele  of  the  Week  for  his  29 
Doint  performance  against  the 
South  Carolina  Gamecocks  last 
Saturday  night.  Kearns  won  the 
game  for  Carolina  in  an  ov«r 
time  period  when  he  convert* .< 
a  fie!d  goal  and  free  throw  to 
give  the  Tar  Heels  •  90-86  d** 


We  want  him  to  drop  by 
rOWN  &  CAMPUS  and  pick  ou» 
a  shirt  to  his  liking — compTt- 
ments  of  the  house. 

We  want  the  eld  and  young 
?like  of  Chapel  Hill  to  make 
TOWN  &  CAMPUS  their  head 
quarters  for  the  finest  in  men's 
clothing.    Drop    in    today 

TOWN  & 
CAMPUS 


HAVE  A  REAL  CIGARETTE...  [MtXjmsl  [ 


lice 


AFTER   SHAVE 
LOTION 


Refreshing  antiseptic  action  heals 
razor  nicks,  helps  keep  your  ikin 
in  top  condition.  1 .00  piui  \m 

SHU  LION        N«w  York  •   Terento 


go  for  Camels  because  \  w<int  a  real  cigarettft-***  not  i$4^t  lads  arid 
fancy  stuff.  Gamers  the  one  smoke  I've  found  that  never  lets  me  down." 

MAMSFIEtft^lPliniCi 


Discover  the  difference 
between ''just  smelting'' and  Camels! 


Taste  the  difference!  Camels     Feel     the 
are  rich,  full-flavored,  and 
deeply  satisfying  —  pack  after 
pack.  You  can  always  count 
on  Camels  for  the  finest  taste. 


difference!  The 
exclusive  Camel  blend  of 
quality  tobaccos  has  never 
been,  equalled  for  smooth, 
agreeable  smoking. 


Enjoy  the  difference!  Try 
today's  top  cigarette.  More 
people  smoke  Camels,  year 
after  3'ear,  than  any  other 
brapd.  They've  really  got  it! 


^* 


-«* 


U.H.r.  •  LIBRARY 
SERIALS  BEPT. 
BOr.  870 
CHAPEL  HILL.  N.O. 


WE ATH  ER 

Considerable  cloudin»ss  and  no^ 
quit*  so  cold..  Expected  high  today 
50. 


3r()c3)aita 


WISH 

For   UNC's  new   year.  .See  edi- 
torial, page  2.  . 


VOL.  LVII  NO.  74 


Complete  (JP)  Wire  Service 


CHAPEL   HILL,  NORTH  CAROLINA,  FRIDAY,   JANUARY   4,    1957 


Offices    in    CToham    Uemorial 


FOUR    PAGES  THIS  iSSUic 


UNC  Coed  Sfill  On  Critical 
List  After  Holiday  Accident 

A  (:;ir«>!iii;i  covd  was  still  in  ciiiical  tondition  yrstcrday 
as  a  result  ol  injinies  sustained  in  a  pic-Christmas  automobile  * 

accident. 

Miss  Stella  Anderson,  junior  from  West  jcflerson.  who 
lost  luT  ri!;hi  !ej^  in  a  hic^hway  mishap,  was  rejjorted  •slightly 
improved,'    yet  still  in  critical  condition. 

Attending  plivsi/  ians  at  Wilkes  (;eneral  Hospital  said  she 
had   regained   consciousness. 


Miss  Anderson,  daughter  of  Mr. 
and  .Mrs.  Ed.  M.  Anderson,  was 
injured  about  9  p.m.  Dec.  23  in 
an  accident  on  Highway  268,  six 
niiies   east   of  North    VVilkesboro. 

The  car  in  which  she  and  Mrs. 
P.    G.    Wright   of    West    Jefferson 


to  the  trunk  of  her  car  to  unlock 
it  when  an  automobile  driven  by 
Lee  Riddle.  23^  of  North  Wilkes- 
boro  ran  into  the  rear  of  her  au- 
tomobile, crushing  her  between 
the  two  vehicles. 
Her  leg  was  almost  severed  and 


were  travelin-  had  a-  flat  tire  and    ^""'^  ^^  »^^  removed  at  the  hospital. 

Miss    Anderson    also    sustained    a 


a  group  of  boys  had  stopped  to 
help  them  fix  it.  The  car  was 
parked  full  lighted,  about  half- 
way off  the  pavement,  on  the 
.shoulder  cl  the  road.  The  boys' 
oar  was  also  lighted. 

State  Hghway  Patrolman  R.  G. 
Potts  said  Miss  Anderson  had  gone 


Cross  Burned 
Where  Graham 
Spends  Night 

.\  University  student  burned  a 
.six-foot  cross  in  the  yard  of  a  Hills- 
boro  home  where  Frank  Graham 
was  staying  during  the  Christmas 
liolidaj'.s. 

According  to  the  Hillsboro  Police 
Department.  William  Polk  Cheshire 
lit  a  cross  in  the  yard  of  Mrs.  Che- 
shire Webb,  Graham's  sister-in-law. 
The  incident  occiured  at  2:43  a.in,, 
Dec.  28. 

Mrs.  WeW)  stated  that  Mr.  Gra- 
ham had  no  knowledge  of  the  cross- 
rurning  until  the  next  'morning 
when  he  came  dowutairs  for- late 
breakfast.  She.  however,  had  been 
fivvakened  at  the  time  of  tl>e  in- 
cident by  an  anon>mnus  telephone 
call,  to  which  her  answer  brought 
no  reply. 

An  anonymous  call  also  brought 
the  HUlsboro  Fire  Dept.  to  the  scene 
to  extinguish  the  Idaze. 

.Mr.  Graham  made  no  statement 
v.hatsoever  concerning  the  incident, 
according  to  .Mrs.  Cheshue. 

Police  DepartmerU  sources  stated 
that  Cheshire  was  arrested  and  re- 
leased on  $100  bond.  He  will  be 
tried  under  a  law  -passed  in  the 
1933  session  of  General  .\ssembly 
making  it  a  misdemeanor  to  com- 
mit any  act  pertaining  to  the  Ku 
Kiux  Klan. 

Cheshire's  traU  will  be  held  Mon- 
day in  Recorder's  Court,  Cheshire 
stated  to  newspaper  sources  that 
the  cross  had  been  burned  as  a 
:>rank  to  Jet  .Mr.  Graham  know  how 
he  felt  about  him. 


broken  left  leg  and  fractures  of 
the  pelvis  and  skull. 

Mr^.  Wright,  who  was  standing 
beside  the  care  at  the  time,  su- 
stained head  lacerations  but  was 
not  hospitalized. 

Riddle  is  being  held  in  jail 
under  Sl.OOO  bond  pending  the 
outcome  of  Miss  .Anderson's  con- 
dition. 


Wife  Of  UNC  Official    | 
Better  After  Accident   I 

The  wile  ol  a  Consoiidried  I'niversity  olli(ial  is  '  reel- 
ing hetter*  alter  having  l)een*ininred  by  an  automobile  a  few 
days  before  Christmas.  j 

.\Iis.  William  D.  (larmichael  Jr..  struck  down  by  a  car 
rhiirsday.  Dec.  20,  sufrcred*a  fractured  vertebra  in  her  lower 
spine.  She  is  weaiinj^  a  brace  which  doctors  .say  may  have  to 
be  worn  lor  scxeral  motiths. 


Resting  at  home  now,  Mrs. 
Carmichael  said  Thursday  although 
i  can't  do  very  much"  with  the 
brace  on,  "at  least  I  can  get  up 
and  get  around."  She  added  she 
was  lucky  not  to  have  received 
worse   injuries. 

Her  husband  is  Consolidated  Uni- 
versity vice  president  and  finance 
officer. 

The    accident    occurred    on    W. 


hit  by  the  right  side  of  a  car 
driven  by  a  woman  who  was  pre- 
paring to  make  a  left  turn  along 
Franklin  St. 

She  threw  her  hands  against 
the  cars  fender  when  she  knew 
she  would  be  hit;  this  saved  her 
from  boing  thrown  underneath 
the  car. 

Mrs.  Carmichael  drove  herself 
home   after  efforts   to   locate   her 


Franklin  St.  opposite  a  local  groc- ,  daughter   were   of   no   avail   after 


STELLA  ANDERSON 

.  .  .  on    critical    hst 


cry    store    as   she    was    marketing. 

Mrs.  Carmichael  had  started 
across  the  street  after  a  traffic 
light  had  stopped  the  traffic  flow 
and  given  her  the  right  of  way. 

After  having  gone  a  little  over 
halfway  to  the  other  side,  she  was 


which  she  was  taken  to  the  hos- 
pital. She  was  permitted  to  re- 
turn home — after  being  x-rayed — 
on  the  condition  she  not  move 
about  much.  ^ 

She    began    wearing    the    b^e 
Monday. 


Dormitory  President  Denies 
Accusation  By  Editor  That 
His  Election  Was  Not  Legal 

Charges  Accusation  "Libelous 
And  Asks  For  Fair  Retraction 


Menon  Speech 
Is  Postponed 

The  speech  by  V.  K.  Krishna 
Menon  has  been  postponed  fc 
the  second  time.. 

Jim  Holmes,  chairman  of  the 
Carolina  Forum,  received  a  tele 
gram  from  the  Indian  delega- 
tion to  the  United  Nations  Tues- 
day, postponing  the  Ca.'QTina 
speech  of  their  chief  delegate, 
previously  rescheduled  for  J«n. 
7. 

Another  speaking  date,  which 
will  be  announced  after  arrange 
ments  have  been  made,  will  be 
made  for  Menon,  according  to 
Holmes. 


International  Meeting 
To  Be  Attended  Here 
By  40  Physicists 

\n  iiHern:iiionaI  lonlcreiKe  on  general  relati\ity  and 
"The  Role  of  (ira\  itation  in  Phvsi(s".  attended  bv;  scientists 
of  II  nations,  uill  be  held  here  Jan.  iS-2s.  it  ua.s  announced 
recentlv  bv  Pies.  William  C.  Fridav  and  Chancellor  Robert 
r>.    Ifonse. 

It  is  the  first  world  (<>nferen<e  on  j>r:n  itational  theorv 
to  be  held  in  the   I'nited  States.   Pre\ions  (onlerences  ha\c 

been  held  at  Bern,  Switzerland  and  i  ...  

Warsaw,   Poland.  |  gra^'tational  researcn  will  be  dis- 

,  '  cussed   bv  scientists  attending  the 
Around     40     physicists^     ^^   ()   j  conference, 
them  from  foreign  countries,  will        ^^^^  ^,^  Research  and  Develop- 

engage     m    .scientific    discussions    „  „,    ,,„„^„„j    ,..(,,     „„„„.^„    , 
.  *   ...  .    .      .    ,  .      '  ment     Command     will     prepare    a 

and    will    pool    their    information     .^ ,    .    ^.    ^.       ^,^„f^r.„,.„„ 

.       ,  formal    report    of    ttie    confcrpnce, 

on  recent  developments  in   gravi- 1  ^^,   ..    .     „.„„„^»„  .  ,i,„,   ;„j;.,;j..„i 

,  I  and  it  is  expected  that  individual 

tational  research.  »•  1  .   r-   j-  n   u         u 

1  articles  and  findings  will  pc  pub- 
Chapel  Hill  was  selected  as  the  i  li^hed  in  'Reviews  of  Modern 
site  of  the  conference  chiefly 
because  of  the  establishment  with 
in  the  UNC  Physics  Department 
he^-e  in  Feb..  1956.  of  a  space-time- 
gravitation  research  project  to 
"find  cut  more  about  the  nature 
of  matter  and  energy."  Dr.  Bryce 
'  DeWitt  and  his  wife,  Dr  Cecile 
Morette  DeWitt,  who  are  directors 
of  the  research,  will  have  a  prom- 
inent part  in  the  conference. 


nevs 

m 

brief 


Visits  Abroad  Are  Planned 
For  This  Spring  And  Summer 


20  College  Students 
Will  Study  In  Germany 


Phvsics'. 


A  group  of  20  selected  Ameri 
can  coll(.ge  students  will  visit  Ber 
lin  this  summer  to  study  the  laii 
guage.    culture,    ai*t,    and    civili?.i- 


WASHINGTON— (  Ai^)  -^  Presi- 
dent Eisenhower  will  appear  be- 
fore Congress  in  person  at v  12:30 
p.m.  (EST)  Saturday  to  present 
his  plea  for  special  authority  to 
prevent  Communist  aggression  in 
the  Middle  East. 

What  he  wants — and  what  he 
appears  likely  to  get — is  approval 
of  a  resolution  authorizing  him  to 
us  American  military  forces  if 
he   should  deem   it   nece.ssary. 

Eisenhower     and     Secretary    of 

State    Dulles   already   have   talked  I       .  •   .       •       , 

...  '     ,  .  „,  _^- 4 undergo  mteiwive   language  tr^;n- 

with   groups  of  senators   and  rep-  1  •*  t»     » 

rescntatives.   Dulles,    for  example,  j  '"«  dmiiig  the  ten-day  boat  trip  to 
has  described  the  situation  in  the  '■  Bremerhaven.     Graded    classes    in 


Great  Oriental  Cities 
Featured  In  Spring  Tour 

The  great  cities  of  the  Orient — 
Tokyo,  Kyoto,  Hong  Kong,  Bang- 
kok, Singapore,  Manila,  and  Bali's 
capital.    Den    Pasar — are    featured 


.\  C^arolina  student,  accused  in  a  dormitorv  newspaper 
Dec.  iH  as  beinj4  elected  flotni  president  in  an  illegal  manner, 
flatly  denied  the  accusation    1  hursday. 

.Neil  Bass,  president  of  the  Batile-\ance-Pettij4re\v  dorin- 
itorv.  said  "the  election  .  .  .  was  coniplctly  legal  in  ever>' 
respect." 

He  tilso  answered  charges,  printed  in  the  li\'P  Times  by 
editor  Clortland  Kdwards  who  said  he  had  "done  afjsolutely 
nothing"  as  dorm  president. 

Edwards"  editorial  said  cm  election  dav  last  spring  "there 
was  no  ballot  box"  so  Bass  "took  a  pad  and  pencil  and  .  .  . 

— ♦visited    each    room    in    the    three 

I  norms  and  said  who  do  you  waat 
!  ior  president  —  me  or  somebody 
else? 

■"If  no  one  was  in  the  room  that 
was  to  uad  because  the  vote  polltr 
didn't  -cturn. 

"I  understand''  said  the  edi- 
torial, "that  he  only  recorded  the 
vote  of  6  men  in  Vance.  That'.?  iM 
that  were  in — 6  out  of  32  men. ' 

Edw^ards  also  called  fey  Bass  to 
gel  "on  the  stick  and  do  at  least 
the  job  that  he  was  supposed    \o 


Fellowship 
Offered  By 
Israellis 

Competition  is  open  for  one  fel- 
lowship to  be  offered  by  the  Gov- 
ernment of  Israel  to  an  American 
student.  It  was  announced  yester- 
day b>  Kenneth  Holland,  President  \  have  been  elected  for. 
of   the    Institute    of   International  j      'j  have  seen  2  dorm  meeting.?, 
Education,  1  East  67th  Street,  New  j  ^o  dorm  parties,  and  no  dorm  en- 
York  Cily.  I  tries  in  anything  ..."  the  editorial 

The  research  fellowship  for  liie  \  said. 
1957-58  academic  year  has  been  ot-  j      Following     is     Bass*     complde 
lered   by   the  Israeli   Governmeiit   statement: 


tion  of  Germany  during  a  six-week  |  on  a  new     tour     announced     for  j 


stay  in  the  former  capital. 

Headed  by  Dr.  Frank  D.  Hirsch- 
bach.  members  of  the  faculty  o 
Yale    tJniversity,    the    group    will 


spring.  1957  by  American  Express 
l^ravel   Service. 


I  UNC  Library 

Ranks  3rd 
I  In  Region 

1      The     UNC     Library,     once   the 
The    DcWitts   are   exploring  an  |  largest  in  the  south,  is  now  third 
extension    to    the     "quantum    do-  |  j^    ^j^p    gnd    from    all    indications 
main"    of    the    theory    of    gravita-  i  ^-m    g^p   back    into   4th     or     5lh 


Bob  Young 
Welcomes 
Students 

President  Bob  Young  yesterday 
issued  a  welcome  to  students  re- 
turned from  the  holidays  and  a 
challenge  to  put  forth  conscienti- 
ous effort  in  the  new  year  1957. 

Young's  statement  read: 

"I  would  like  to  welcome  every- 
one back  for  the  year  1957.  Two 
weeks  of  rest  (or  work  and  sleep- 
le.es  nights  as  the  case  may  be 
for  some  of  us)  should  prepare 
us  for  the  next  few  weeks  ahead. 

"The  year  1956  brought  many 
diverse  situation* — campus  crises, 
slate  and  regional  problems,  na- 
tional election-yeJlr  worries  and 
international  tensions.  There  were 
di.sappointments  for  each  of  ifs, 
I  am  sure.  HoM^ever,  there  were 
also  blessings  for  each  of  us. 

"Final  exams  are  now  upon  us. 
Our  responsibilities  have  finally 
cornered  us  at  this  "eleventh 
hour.'  May  I  challenge  each  stu- 
dent to  make  a  New  Year's  reso- 
lution to  take  advantage  of  the 
many  opportunities  in  the  few  re- 
maining days  before  exams,  and 
to  adequately  prepare  himself  for 
the  te.sts  of  this  period. 

'"My  best  wishes  to  everyone  for 
a  most  successful  and  happy  New 
Y^ar." 


tion  developed  by  the  late  Albert 
Einstein.  Their  efforts  are  sup- 
ported by  the  Institute  of  Field 
Physics  headed  by  Agnew  H. 
Bahnson   Jr.   of   Winston-Salem. 

The  steering  committee  of  the 
conference  includes  Dr.  F.  J.  Bela- 
fante,  Purdue  University;  Dr. 
Peter  G.  Bergman,  Syracuse  Uni^ 
versity;  Dr.  F.  J.  Dyson  of  the  In- 
stitute for  Advance  Study  at 
Princeton  University,  Dr.  John  A. 
Wheeler,  also  of  Princeton  Uni- 
versity, and  the  DeWitts  of  Chap- 
el Hill. 


Physicists    attending   the   work-  j  ^^^^ 


place  by  the  end  of  this  school 
year. 

An  annual  statistical  report 
published  by  the  Louisiana  State 
University  Library  for  the  year 
1955-56  places  the  Wilson  Library's 
volume  count  at  831,119  as  com- 
pared with  1,244,880  for  Duke  and 
1,166.295  for  Texas. 

The  Wilson  Library  received 
4.3Tr  of  the  funds  appropriated 
for  UNC  expenditures  last  year. 
Twenty-five  of  the  47  southern 
academic  libraries  covered  by 
the   report  received   a   larger   per- 


Middlc  Ea.st  as  highly  dangerous 
and  .said  Ru.ssia  "may  well  move" 
to    expand    its    influence    there. 

*  •         • 
BELGRADE— ( AP )— Yugo.slavia 

told  the  linited  States  it  may  well 
lose  the  prestige  gained  during  the 
Suez  crisis  if  it  adopts  President 
Ei.senhower's    Middle    East    plan. 

Borba.  the  Communist  newspap- 
er which  expresses  the  views  of 
the  government,  said  in  an  edi- 
torial that  the  U.  S.  appraisal  of 
the  Middle  East  a.s  presenting  a 
danger  of  .Soviet  "penetration"  is 
wrong. 

Borba  said  by  adopting  the 
Eisenhower  plan  t  h  e  United 
States  would  risk  "appearing  in 
the  eyes  of  the  Arab  countries  as 
an   heir   to   the   colonial    powers." 

*  «  4i 

WASHINGTON— (AP) —A  mo- 
tion aimed  at  changing  the  Senate's 
rules  and  placing  restraint  on  fill 
busters  was  introduced  Thursday 
by  Sen.  Anderson  (D-NM).  The 
Senate  agreed  to  a  showdown 
vote  on  the  i.ssue  at  6  p.m.  (EST)' 
today. 
Two  developments  accompanied 
(See  WORLD  NEWS.  Page  J3) 


Berlin  under  the  supervision  of  na- 
tive Gciman  professors  will  deal 
with  tne  reading  of  classical  anc: 
modern  texts,  the  daily  press,  pub- 
lications on  contefhporary  pro!v 
Icms,  conversation  and  compoo. 
tion,  pronunciation,   and  grammur 

Students  will  also  hear  lectures 
on  German  literature  and  history 
meet  with  outstanding  personali- 
ties who  reside  in  Berlin  and  have 


thi'ough  its  Ministry  of  Eiducatioii.  j 
This  award  is  ofr  a  graduate  3ta  j 
dent  wiio  wishes  to  engage  in  a ' 
research  project. 
I  Closing  date  tor  applications  is 
The  55-day  "Mikado"  Tours  de-  Feb.  23,  1957. 
parts  from  San  Francisco  May  24  [  The  research  fellowship  carrier 
on  the  SS  President  Wilson  and  j  a  supend  of  1800  Israel  pountJ? 
returns  by  Pan  .American  clipper  (appro.xiinateJy  $900)  to  cover  mai.'i- 
from  Honolula  on  July  17.  ;  tenance  and  incidentals.   Free  tu:- 

iion  has  been  offered  bv  the  Ki- 
The  tour  combines  .sea  and  air  j  ^rew  Uuiveisitv  in  Jerusalem,  the 
travel,  offering  the  leisure  of  an  I  Hebrew  Technical  Institute  (Tecl- 
ocean  voyage  but  covering  some  ^  „io„)  ij,  Haifa,  or  the  Weizmann 
of  the  longer  hauls  by  air.  to  |  instituU-  of  Science  in  Rehovoth.  , 
permit  visits  to  all  of  the  major  i  FieJos  of  study  preferred  for  t!ie  ; 
cities   of   the   East   i^  the   55-day  j  award    are   Regional    Middle    East  i 


period.  The  voyage  out  on  the 
President  Wilson  takes  four  days 
to  Honolulu  for  a  visit,  and  then 
the  ship  procreeds  to  Yokohama, 
arriving   on  June   7. 


Sightseeing  in  Japan  includes 
stays  in  Tokyo,  Kyoto,  Kobe,  Bep- 
lull  auditing  privileges  at  the  Free  j  pu,  Nikko  and  Fukuoka.  The 
University.  [  trips  to  Hong  Kong.  Bangkok.  Sing- 

'  arore.  Den  Pasar  and  Manila  are 
by  air.  and  the  return  from  Ma- 
nila   i.^; 


Members  of  ClassrcM)ms  Aboard  ' 
will  livr  with  German  families  and 
will  hi.ve  ample  opportunities  to 
meet  young  Germans  from  student, 
religious,  and  political  organ:^:.- 
tions.  They  will  visit  theatres,  con- 
certs, movies,  operas,  museums,  ]i- 
braries.  factories,  youth  organiza- 
tions, reiugee  camps,  the  East  Sec- 
tor and  the  East  Berlin  universiiy. 
Potsdam,  and  other  sights.  Toe 
Berlin  slay  will  be  followed  by  a 
two-week  tour  of  Germany,  Austri.' 
and  Sv.itzerland  on  which  t."it> 
group  will  be  accompanied  by  .son:c 
Germans. 


ing  conference  will  be  from  uni 
versifies,  and  from  private  and 
governmental  research  laborator- 
ies in  all  parts  of  the  United 
I  States  and  from  countries  includ- 
ing the  following:  Great  Britain, 
France,  Turkey.  Japan,  Sweden, 
Belgium,  Denmark,  Lsrael,  Ger- 
many and  Poland. 

Sponsors  of  the  conference 
are  eight  institutions:  the  Inter- 
national  Union  of   Pure   and  Ap- 


also   by   air.   with    a    five- 
day  visit  in  the  Hawaiian  Islands. 

The  "Mikado"  escorted  tour 
around  the  Pacific  is  described  in 
detail  in  an  illustrated  folder  avail- 
able at  any  American  Express  of- 
fice. The  price  of  $3,793.40  in- 
cludes first  -  class  steamer  and  air 
transportation,  hotel  accommoda- 
tions at  the  best  available  hotels, 
all  meals,  sightseting.  transfers 
and  the  escort  services.  The  trip 
is  available  under  the  American 
Express  Credit  Travel  Plan. 


or  Israel  Studies  ((sociology,  hi-.:- 
lory,  la.iguage,  or  related  subject  . 
Candidates  for  Jewish  studies  a^e 
required  to  kn^Jw  Hebrew.  Other 
candidates  are  not  required  to 
know  Hebrew.  Other  candidai^.s 
are  noi  required  to  know  Hebrcv., 
but  teaching  at  the  three  insti-a- 
lions  is  in  Hebrew.  Candidates  ioi 
regional  studies  with  knowledge  of 
a  Middle  Eastern  language  are  pro- 
lerred.  Candidates  who  vrmh  to  do 
research  towards  a  degree  in  Israel 
are  not  desired. 
JL'andidates   must   be    U.   S.    ci'.i- 


"In  reply  to  a  completely  libel- 
ous, unwarranted  and  maliciousiy 
equivocal  editorial  written  by  Eidi- 
tor  Cortland  Edwards  in  the  Batll.- 
yance-Pcttigrew  T  |  les  on  Dec.  18, 
1  would  like  to  set  the  record 
straighi  by  pointing  out: 
LEGAL  EL€CTiON 

"(I)  Tiiat  the  election  through 
which  I  was  elected  president  cf 
Battle-V.-ince-Pettigrew  by  acclaxiia- 
tion — and  for  a  third  year — was 
completely  legal  in  every  respeti 

"I  was  nominated  by  acclanr-a- 
tion  at  a  dormitory  meeting  at 
which  approximately  25  per  cent 
of  the  dorm  residents  was  presen* 
as  many  as  our  social  room  wi;l 
accommodate.  Thus,  as  far  as  fnc 
presidency  was  concerned,  an  elec- 
tion v»as  virtually  unnecessar>, 
but  was  held. 

•(2)  That  the  approximate  $140 
a  year  which  our  dorm  receives 
from  student  fees  enables  us  to 
have  only  two  socials  a  year.  Thu.<: 
wc  can  I  be  a  blasting  scxrial  club, 
especially  since  $30  of  our  small 
fund  ha.s  already  been  utilized  for 
television  repair."  he  said. 

"When  Cort  was  presented  the 
truth  about  my  three-year  admini.s- 


zeiis,    preferably    unocr  35.   Other    tration  in  BVP.  when  >he  was  con- 


Last  year  the  Wilson  Library 
allotted  $100,000  for  books,  period- 
icals, and  bindings,  a  cut  of  $22.- 
500  from  the  previous  year.  Dur- 
ing the  same  period  Florida  spent 
$247,260,  Duke  $224,963  and  Lou- 
isiana   State  $170,125. 

President  William  Friday  has 
called  the  lagging  library  program 
one  of  the  major  problems  facing 
the  University  today.  He  told  the 
Board  of  Trustees,  soon  after  his 


SPEEDS  UP  TO  80  MPH 


UNC  Grad  Student  Drives  $9000 
LaSalle  -  -  Inexpensively',  He  Says 


requirements  are:  a  bachelors  de 
gree  by  the  date  of  departure; 
demonstrated  academic  abiiity 
and  capacity  for  independent  stu- 
dy: good  moral  chai^acter,  per- 
sonality and  adaptability;  and 
good   health. 

Application  blanks  may  be  se- 
cured from  the  Institute  of  In- 
ternational Education.  1  East  67th 
Street,  New  York  City,  or  from 
the  Institutes  regional  ofifces  in 
Chicago,-  Denver,  Houston,  San 
Franci-sco  and   Washington. 

Institute,  Regional  Office  ad- 
dresses are  as  follows: 

116  South  Michigan  Ave.,  Chi- 
cago 3.  Illinois. 


ironted  with  achievements  such  a.^ 
tiling  of  the  dorm  social  room  aftf^r 
petition  to  the  Buildings  and 
Grounds  dept..  accomplished 
through  the  help  of  a  hustling 
dormitory  manager  and  coopera- 
tive J.  S.  Bennett,  (head  of  the 
Buildipgs  and  Grounds  dept..)  he 
admitted  that  he  printed  the  edi- 
torial without  factual  support. 

"Why  did  Cort.  who  I  like  per- 
sonally." he  said,  "write  an  iin- 
foundeti  editorial  after  I  had  or- 
ganized the  paper  and  asked  hini 
10  edit  it? 
RABBLE-ROUSER 
"(l)  As  he  admitted,  he  imagines 
(  himself  an   iconcla.st;   but  he    haa 


291  Geary  St.,  San  Francisco  2,    gone  further  and  become  a  rabble- 


plied  Physics,  the  National  Science  ,  appointment  as  President  of  the 
Foundation,  the  Wright  Air  De-  |  consolidated  University,  that  the 
'  velopment  Command  of  the  U.  S. ,  ji^rarv  must  be  greatly  strength- 


Air  Force,  the  U.  S.  Office  of  Ord 
nance  Research,  the  French  De- 
partment of  Foreign  Affairs,  the 
I  Institute  of  Field  Physics,  the 
,  University  of  North  Carolina  De- 
1  partment  of  Physics,  and  the  In- 
I  stitute  of  Natural  Sciences,  also 
!  at  Chapel  Hill. 

It  was  stated  that  reasons  for 
j  holding  the  international  confer- 
'  ence  at  the  University  are  three- 
fold: 1.  the  recent  establishment 
j  of  the  DeWitts'  space-time-gravi- 
■  tation  project,  2.  the  "existence  of 
a  young  and  energetic  physics 
I  faculty  at  Chapel  Hill,  and  3.  the 
,  "truly  excellent  conference  facili- 
.  ties"  here. 

!  Most  of  the  conferences  will 
be  closed  work-shop  sessions; 
j  however,  there  will  be  a  "popular 
j  symposium'  to  which  the  public 
'  is  invited  at  which  time  phases  of 


ened  to  stimulate  research  and 
provide  the  equipment  and  mater- 
ials needed  by  the  faculty  and 
students. 


Wrinkled  Doll  Clothes 
l**f*6  To  Tenement  Fire 

NEW  H.WEN,  CONN.  — (./P^-  After 
?.  week's  u.se.  doll's  clothing  can  get 
wrinkled,  too,  and  so  a  little  girl 
yesterday  tcwk  out  her  mother's 
iron  and  ironing  board  and  neatly 
pressed  the  miniature  garments  she 
had  received  for  Christmas. 

Satisfied,  the  10-year-old  girl  put 
away  the  board  and  went  on  to 
other  things.  But.  as  she  admitted 
later,  the  board  was  still  smoking 
and  within  minutes  touched  off  a 
two-alarm  fire  in  a  Chapel  St.  tene- 
ment building.  Firemen  estimated 
damage  at  several  thousand  dollars. 


By   BELL    VAN   TREUREN 

Not  every  graduate  student  at  the 
University  can  afford  to  drive 
around  in  a  $9,000  automobile,  but 
Tom  Gillette  has  found  an  inex- 
pensive way  to  do  so. 

Tom  is  driving  a  $9,000  LaSalle 
to  and  from  classes.  .At  least  that 
is  about  what  it  cost  back  in  1937 
•.vhen  it  was  manufactured.  Actu- 
ally, Tom  only  paid  $100  for  it. 

Tom  Gillette  is  working  on  his 
Ph.D.    in    sociology    under    the    di- 


o!    it   by   adding   seats   to   the   rear    Ph.D.   thesis  around  research  he  is 
compartment."   Tom  added.  conducting    on    interpersonal    corn- 

Besides  working  on  his  Ph.D.,  Gil.-    i>etence     and     its     relationship     to 


California. 

401   Milam  Bldg.  Texas    Ave. 
Milam   St.,   Houston  2,  Texas. 


lette  is  a  part-time  instructor  in 
marriage  and  the  family.  He  also 
acts  as  a  marriage  and  engage- 
ment counselor. 

Gillette  is  27  and  a  native  of 
Missouri.  While  an  undergraduate 
at  the  University  of  Missouri,  he 
had  a  unique  and  fascinating  study 
en  nudism  as  a  facet  of  collective 
behavior. 

Aft^r  serving  two  years  with  the 


lection  of  Dr.  Reuben  Hill,  UNC  i  .Marines  and  getting  his  A.B.,  Gil- 
family  sociologist.  Tom's  wife,  Jan-  lette  completed  his  M.A.  work  at 
et,  teaches  Spanish  at  Duke  Uni-  the  University  of  Kansas  City  in 
versity  and  takes  the  car  to  work !  1953.  He  wrote  his  thesis  on  ""Race 


so  Tom  has  remedied  the  walking 
situation  at  UNC  by  purchasing  a 
big.   black  LaSalle  hearse. 


Relations,"     focusing     it    on    what , 
happens  to  real  estate  values  when 
IViegroes    move    into    white    neigh- 


'It  only  has  49,000  miles  on  it,"  |  borhoods.  He  found  that  the  values 
Tom  said,  "and  will  easily  get  up  Went  up  significantly,  l)ecause  de- 
to  80  miles  an  hour.  It  weighs  about  mand  exceeded  supply  and  because 
4,300  pounds  and  consequently  the  Negroes  were  able  to  pay  for 
rides  nice  and  safe,  gets  pretty  good  and  improve  their  purchased  real 
gas  milage,  too,  for  a  big  V-8.  Later  estate, 
on,  I'll  make  a  station  wagon  out]     .At  present,  Gillette  is  building  his 


marital    adjustment. 

'"After  finishing  my  Ph.D.  work 
at  UNC,  I  plan  to  go  into  full  time 
research  for  two  years  in  the  men- 
tal health  field,  •■  Tom  said.  "'Then, 
!  hope  to  return  to  the  academic 
v.'orld  to  teach  and  carry  on  re- 
search in  mental  health  and  the 
family." 

Before  coming  to  UNC,  Gillette 
v/as  an  instructor  in  industrial  so- 
ciology at  Iowa  State  College  and 
carried  on  research  in  race  rela- 
tions. 

While  lecturing  on  the  importance 
o<  family  budgets  recently  at  UNC, 
Gillette  was  asked  if  the  hearse  he'd 
purchased  was  a  ""need"  or  a 
••'vant."  Gillette  hastened  to  point 
out  the  purchase  was  a  "need"  and 
not  the  hurried  result  of  "impulse" 
buying. 

"Look  at  the  money  we  can  save 
en  camping  trips  by  sleeping  in 
(be  back,"  Tom  said. 


13  Ships  Sail 
Out  Of  The 
Suez  Canal  Sat 

PORT  SAID,   EGYPT  —  (AP)  — 

Thirteen     ships     trapped     in     the 

I  Suez   Canal    for   two    months    will 

!  sail   out   of   it   Saturday  morning. 

U.  N.  Officials  said  today. 
I  U.  S.  Lt.  Gen  Raymond  A. 
i  Wheeler,  director  of  canal  clear- 
I  ance  operations  for  the  U.  N.,  met 
!  with  masters  of  the  trapped  ves- 
sels today  aboard  the  Statue  of 
'  Liberty,  a  U.  S.  — Owned  ship  fly 
i  ing  the  Liberian  flag. 
I  All  were  caught  when  British 
I  and  French  forces  attacked  the 
I  Canal  Zone  last  October.  They 
where  unable  to  move  when  ships 
i  were  sunk  and  bridges  toppled  to 
I  block  the   waterway. 


rouser  who  racks  the  muck  rather 
&  I  than  poiu-s  out  his  convictions.  He 
1  writes,   admittedly,  not   from   con- 
I  viction    but    to   stimulate    thougn*. 
even  to  the  point  of  prevarication. 
"'2)  He  was  being  vindictive  as 
a  result  of  his  failure  to  capture 
dormitory  office  through  disqualifi- 
cation  for   failure    to   maintain    a 
"C"  average. 

"I  decided  against  bringing  3Uil 
against  Cort  before  our  studert* 
judiciary  for  his  libelous  editorial 
because  being  in  newspaper  work 
myself,  '  he  said.  "I  respect  his 
light  to  voice  his  own  opinion.  But 
this  do.?sn't  give  him  a  license  to 
distort  the  truth,  and  in  all  fair- 
ness: 

I  expect   a    public  retracti6n  of 
your  defamatory  lie,  Mr.  Edwards  " 


GM'S  SLATE 

Activities  scheduled  for  Grah- 
am Memorial    today   inciuda: 

Dance  Committee  Court,  4-S 
p.m..  Council  Room. 


ft      * 


PAGI   TWO 


THl  DAILY  TAR  HiiL 


FRIDAY,  JANUARY  4,  1957 


New  Year's  Wish  For  UNC     goettingen  letter-. 
In  A  Crisis,  Think  Freely 


For  Ciaroiina  students,  the  new  year  meant  many  tilings  special.  It 
meant  a  neu  <  haiuelloi  will  be  chosen  soon.  It  meant  a  new  absen(e  rej;- 
iiiation. 

It  meant,  perhaps,  a  settlement  of  the  N.  C  State  College  basket- 
ball scandal.  It  saw  a  Iove-fea$t.  one  that  was  pretty  expedient,  between 
football  <oach  Jim    latinii  and  basketball  coath  Frank     McCiuirc. 

It  meant   McGuire  and  tJic  Carolina  basketball  team  get  deserved 
fame 'in  the  Dixie  Classics  tourna- 
ment.. 


riu"  new  vear  brotight  Eeaas,  too; 
lear>  of  war. 

File  land*  of  the  Middle  Kast. 
\rliiili  even  one  was  happy  to 
stop  worrying  about  a  few  months 
ago.  means  sonjetJiiiig  else,  now 
in  i9")7.  I'residein  Kisenhowcr  is 
asking  Congress  for  authority  to 
n.se  r.  S.  Aimed  forces  there  if 
necessary  to  combat  Comnmnist 
agression. 

What  does  this  meaai  to  the  Car- 
olina student?  Ask  the  fellow  who 
walks  to  'N-Comt  beside  yim  aftei 
his  t|  o{l(Hk  clas.s  today.  .\sk  him 
what  it  means  to  be  a  draft-age 
male,  phvsically  fit,  approaching 
graduation,  knowing  very  little 
.iboiit  the  iumiediate  future,  hav- 
ing  praititally   no  sav  about   It. 

To  him.  the  danger  of  war  in 
the  Middle  Kast  or  anywliere  else 
is  a  \et  V  real  thing.  It  is  more,  than 
something  to  kid  about;  it  is 
sDiiuthing  to  fear,  to  consider  with 
the  same  gravitv  he  lon.siders  his 
work   after   gradua'tion. 

President  Fisenhower.  who  has 
been  remo\ed  fiom  the  national 
picture  siiue  his  reelection  last 
No\ember.  has  not  done  verv  nmch 
to  ( larify  tlie  C  S.  position  as  of 
this  minute.  Fie  lias  done  a  yreat 
(}^■n]  ,,l  r">—<  Miring  to  allow  Hun-  I 
gaiiaii  rerni»ees  to  enter  this  loun- 
ir\.  But  he  .id  his  policv  leaders 
have  been  lakin^;  an  extended 
C^hristinas   holidav. 


Fhev  were  taking  a  holidav.  that 
is.  until  the  announcement  came 
tills  week  that  F.isenliower  would 
ask  Congress  lor  permission  to  use 
.n  ined  tones  if  necevsaiy  in  the 
Middle  FiM. 

Now  the  Carolin;-  male,  draft- 
age  and  physically  fit.  finds  him- 
.seli  in  the  middle  ol  a  great  frus- 
tration. He  knows  verv  little  alxuit 
his  hmne  life. 


Now  is  the  tiine  when  men.  fac- 
ing a  future  that  Isolds  little  se- 
curity, ^tart  giving  up.  They  allow 
their  right    to   diink      freely     slip 


The  Daily  Tar  Heel 

The  official  >ludent  publication  uf  the 
Publications  Board  ol  the  Uaiversity  of 
North  Carolina,  where  it  is  published 
d«iily  except  .Monday  and  examinatioi 
and  vacation  periods  and  summer  terms 
Entered  a.«;  second  cla.s?  matter  in  tht 
O'lst  office  in  (hapol  Hill.  N.  C,  undei 
ihe  Act  01  .March  8,  1870  Subscription 
rates:  mailed.  S4  per  year.  $2  50  a  seinet 
ter;  delivered.  $6  a  year,  $350  a  semea 
ter. 


Editor  _. 


Managing  Editor 
News  Editor 


fUED  POWLEDGE 

CHARUE  SI4)AN 

NANCY  HiLl 


Business  Manager 


BILL  BOB  PL-El 


Sports  Editor    LARRY  CHEEK 


Suhsrnption  Manager Dale  Stalej 

Advertising  Manager Fred  Katzin 

Circulation  .Manager   Charlie  Holt 


NEWS  ST.\FI''— Clarke  Jones.  Ray  Link 
er.  Joan  Moore.  Pringlc  Pipkin.  Ann;! 
Drake.  EdUb  MacKinnon,  Wally  Kuralt, 
Mary  .\'ysi  Voorhees.  Graham  Snyder, 
Billy  Barnes.  Neil  Bass.  Gary  Nichols, 
Page  Bernstein,  Peg  Humphrey,  Phyllia 
Maultsby. 


BLSLNESS  S'iAJ'T— Ro^a  Moore,  Johnny 
Whitaker.  Dick  Leavitt,  Dick  Sirkin. 


SPORTS  STAFF:  Bill  King.  Jim  Purks, 
Jimmy  Harper.  Dave  Wible,  Charley 
Uowson. 


EDnoRlAL  SI AJ-T  -  Woody  Scarv 
Frank  iTuwtber.  Barry  Winston,  David 
Mundy.  George  Pfingst,  Ingrid  Clay, 
CortlaJid  Edwards,  Paul  MeCaulcy, 
Bobbi  Smith. 


from  their  hands.  In  the  midst  of 
their  gi'^at  frustration,  -they  grab 
for  securitv  the  \\:\\i\  a  drowning 
man  giabs  for  the  air. 

It    is  such   times  that   produce  a 
mass   neurosis.    It   can    happen   on 
I  he  campus  as  well  as  throughout 
nition. 

Students  start  dressing  alike. 
J  hey  start  believing  anyone  who 
appears  to  have  authority.  In  bad 
times,  such  things  as  narrow-mind- 
ed profesiiors..  pseudo-public  opin- 
ion and  Time  Magazine  may  ap- 
pear   to    liaxe    that    authovity. 

People,  in  their  gieat  frustra- 
tion, get  panicky  and  start  cafling 
evervone  else  Communists.  They 
shoot  at  Negroes  who  board  city 
buses,  and  they  condemti  as  a 
damn  fool  anvone  who  does  not 
lollow  the  Jayctc  Credo. 

Its  perfectly  natural  for  this  to 
happen,  we  suppose,  in  a  time  of 
near-crisis.   Us  American.   But  a-l- 

s(t.  it's  a  verv  l)ad  sign. 

*  *  * 

Ihe  most  wonderful  new  year's 
resolution  for  this  campus,  we  be- 
lieve, is  also  the  most  impossible 
one.  It  would  be  a  rededication  of 
all  Chapel  Hill  minds  to  the  idea 
III    lieedom  «»f  thou'iht. 


Staff  Photographer 
Librarian 

Night  P'xlit'jr 


. .  Norman  Kaotor 
Sue  Gisbner 

t'orMacd  Edjvards 


Its  impossible  because  we  are 
luinans  and  .\mericans.  It's  im- 
possible because  we  are  wonder- 
ing when  the  war  will  stftrt  and 
when  the  bomb  will  drop  and  when 
we  go  marching  off  again.  It's 
•mpossible  because  there  is  so  nun  h 
badness  in  this  world,  this  natioi>. 
this  state  and  this  town  that  it  is 
unavoidable.  It  has  been-  sopped 
up  by  even  this  state's  grQatesLJed-^ 
iv^'lonal  institution;  it  permeates 
athletics  and  it  ooozes  thiough  the 
various  departments  of  government 

that  diret  t  our  lives.  -  - 

*         .     «  ♦  -'     ', 

But  it  would  be  just  as  bad  if 
we  were  to  forget  that  beneath  al^ 
of  iQ.^/'s  badness  there  is  a  deep, 
(lean  laver  of  goodness:  that  men 
do  have  the  ability  to  think  lor 
themselves  and  that  they  exercise 
tliat  abilitv  everv  once  in  a  while. 
We  should  not  forget  this.  In 
r»M<v  4.1  evireme  (  risis.  it  is  about 
all  we  ]y.i\c. 

So.  h^r  the  Caix>lina  male  stu- 
dent, dra'ft-age  and  physically  fit. 
there  is  more  than  the  armed 
forces  after  giaduatioii.  Ihere  is 
more  than  even  a  (ifreer.  There  is 
the  Ireedom.  that  elusi\e  freedom 
to  think  as  (^iie  pleases,  that  wars 
and  government^  and  rt^  tape  and 
the  Ku  Klux  Klaii  caimot  take 
away. 

It  would  be  nice  to  remember 
this,   as    1^57   starts. 


Gracious 
Living 
Number  10 


Ciacious  Living  in  Chapel  Hill 
(attd  other  places)  was  somewhat 
graciouser  becau.se  of  certain  gov- 
ernment officials. 

They  were  the  men  who  drove 
mail  trucks  and  toted  huge  leath- 
er pouihes  full  of  Christmas  cards.^ 

The    mailmen    of    Chapel    Hill 

(and  other  places)  deserve  a  huge 

card    themselves.    .\iid.    under    the 

tree,  there  should  be  a  pile  of  corn 

plasters. 

Day  after  day.  night  alter  night, 
even  on  Chiistmas  day,  tjiose  gen- 
tlemen (most  of  them  college  stu- 
dents who  needed  a  little  extra 
Christmas  mone\)  delivered  cards. 
They  didn't  complain:  they  even 
smiled  as  they  lifted  piles  of  Christ- 
mas messages. 

A  gracious  thanks  to  the  gentle- 
men  who  H>ad«'  <'hris*tiias  dav   so 


50  Miles  Away  From  A  Revolution: 
UNC  Exchange  Student  Has  A  Plea 


John  Raper 

Dan  Southerland  and  I  finall.v 
arrived  in  Goettingen  recently  U> 
begin  our  school  year. 

In  the  two  weeks  between  the 
lim?  we  finished  our  language 
courst  in  Kochcl  and  arrived  here, 
we  roamed  over  Austria  and  Ger 
many.  We  traveled  first  to  Bcrch- 
tes  Gaden.  Hitler's  mountain  re- 
sort, then  through  Salzburg  and 
Hinic.  Austria,  to  the  city  oi  waltz- 
es, wonderful  pastry  shops  and 
wiener  schnitzel,  to  the  Paris  t;) 
Eastern  Europe — Vienna. 

Vienna  is  the  capital  seat  of 
Austria  and  formerly  the  royal 
seat  of  the  powerful  Hapsburg 
rulers.  It  has  approximately  2 
million  people,  a  third  of  Aus- 
tria's total  population. 

I  expected  to  find  many  old 
buildings  in  Vienna,  but  mo.stiy 
the  government,  cultural  aa;! 
other  structures  have  been  bui't 
since  1870.  . 

Vienna  reminded  me  much  of 
Washington.  D.C..  with  many 
large  buildings  about  100  years 
old.  .something  of  a  city  plan  and 
raai:y  parks  in  between  the  build 
ings.  Most  of  the  ollhu'  buildingi 
were  renovated  in  the  1870-80s. 
and  their  architectural  design 
changed  to  that  of  the  day',  thuj 
dbguising  their  former  appear 
ances. 
SITES  ^        . 

The  interesting  sites  to  sfce  are 
in  walking  distance  of  one  an- 
other in  the  city  center.  Thc^t 
buildiiJtoS  are  laid  out  in  a  circle 
along  what  was  the  old  city  wall; 
thj  center  of  the  city  i.s  known 
all  over  the  world  simply  a.>  "the 
Ring." 

On  "the  Ring"  lie  the  Palace 
of  the  Hapsburgs;  Historical  Mu.  • 
eum  of  Art  (equivalen-t  to  (h" 
Metropolitan  Museum  or  Lauvr|; 
/etc.);  the  National  City  The-iUr 
(nightly  presiinting  the  fi".e-,t 
drama  to  be  had):  the  City  OpTi: 
House  (center  of  Vienna's  culture 
and  ■•cnowned  the  world  over,; 
University  of  Vienna  (Europc'> 
seconc  oldest);  Parliament;  and 
•'"^hers.  -     — 

On  the  north  side  'the  Ring"  i.- 
formeu  by  the  Dcmau  River  (Du!)- 
ube),  which  unfortunately  is  n^t 
blue. 

The  Historical  Museum  of  .\rt 
had  sach  well  known  paintings  a« 
Raphpcr*  The  .Madonna  ir 
<Jreen,'  Titans  "Nymph  an.. 
Shepherd"  and  other  Titians,  Ru- 
bens' The  Venus  Feast"  and 
"Self  Portrait,'"  Holbein's  "Poi- 
trail  of  Jane  Seymour."  Vela/ 
quez's  portraits  of  the  Hapsburs 
children,  and  works  by  Monteegi.j 
Bellini,  Giorgione.  Palma  Vecchio. 
Veronese.  Jan  van  Eyck  and 
Rwger  van  der  Weyden. 

At  the  time  we  were  in  Vienna 
the  museum  had  a  special  Pict.er 
Breugiiel  exhibition.  His  works 
have  large  crowds  of  pepole,  ir>oi.t 
of  whom  represent  a  differppt 
moral  or  .saying. 

While  I  am  putting  forth  this 
big  culture  act,  I  might  as  well 
say  that  I  saw  my  first  opera  in 
Vienna,  Richard  Strauss'  "Sa- 
lome." The  opera  "Salome"  was 
a  bit  different  from  Rita  Hay 
worth's  film  version.  We  saw 
Jchann  Strauss'  "Die  Fleder- 
maus"  ("The  Bat'),  an  operetta, 
which  had  no  bats  but  some 
nice  waltzes. 

• 

L'il  Abner 


Vienna   i.s   a   theter-going.    mu- 
sic-loving city,  and  one  has  to  get 
tickets  .several  days  in  advance  or 
feel  himself  lucky  to  have  slrna- 
ing  room. 

Two  other  vei-y  interesting  V. 
tractions  were  the  armor  aftd 
weapons  collection  and  the  e-KJil 
bit  ion  of  the  Hapsburg  Treasury 
The  former  had  knights  armor 
from  inan>  of  the  great  warno.s 
out  of  the  days  of  chivaJiy 
Among  the  items  in  the  Royal 
Treasury  was  the  crown  of  !hf 
Holy  Roman  Empire  dating  bac'^ 
to  Ch?rlemagne's  time. 

•A  word  over  churehes — wo  ;•;- 
tendeu  a  service  at  St.  Stephe.!'s 
Cathedral,  in  which  a  Mozai't 
Mass  was  given  by  a  pwfessiona' 
choir  and  members  from  the  Vi- 
enna Philharmonic  Orchestra.  St, 
Stephen's  was  said  to  be  bu:lt 
by  Charlemagne.  Another  old 
church  was  St.  Rupreeht's.  dating 


The  director  came  in.  took  us 
into  the  rare  book  room,  brought 
us   not   only    the   Gutenberg   ')ut 
aiso    ihe    first    German    prin'od 
book,  and  allowed  us.  Dan  Soi'th- 
erland  and  me,  to  thumb  throu^li 
both.  The  Gutenberg  alone  (one 
of  tht  two  or  three  with  an  intro- 
duction)  is   worth   $1,500,000.    Jn 
the    room    were    other    scholms 
and  learned  men  translating  di! 
ferent  works  from  their  original 
Latin  or  Greek  manuscripts 
Earlier   in  the  week  we  had 
stopped    by   the   Melk    Cloist'>r 
where  they  had  one  of  Austria's 
three  Gutenbergs,  but  sold  out 
to    Yale    at    over    a    $1    million 
tune  to  repa-r  the  cloister.  The 
loss  did  not  completely  disrobe 
their    library,    while    they    still 
own     many    old     books,    some 
hand-copied  ones  dating  back  to 
the   10th  century  A.D. 
Then  there  was  our  little  lug.'t 


miles  to  Budapest,  until  .  .  . 

The  Hungarians  arose  while  wc 
were  in  Vienna.  The  center  of 
the  rebels  camp  was  not  more 
than  50  miles  or  so  from  us.  The 
Austrians  were  rejoicing  that 
Hungary  seemed  to  be  free  again. 

Thei  e  were  two  reasons  evident 
for  this  hope  among  the  Vier. 
nese  Austrians: 

1.  Much  of  Austria  was  under 
Russia's  control  after  World  War 
11,  and  there  is  no  love  for  Con.- 
munism  in  Austria  (they  say  of  ? 
person  who  says  he  is  a  Com- 
munist. "He  hasn't  been  to  Ru.« 
sia  yet".  2.  Vienna  was  at  its 
height  before  World  War  I  when 
Hunjjary  and  Austria  were  one 
kingdom,  and  many  of  the  old 
Viennese  dream  of  a  r^unific'a- 
tion. 

There  were  trucks  being  load- 
ed in  Vienna  with  donations 
from  the  city's  people  to  aid  the 


'I  Thought  I'd  Surprise  You' 


back  to  the  seventh  century.  The 
Vienna  Choir  Boys  sing  in  a;  - 
other  ol  the  cathedrals.  ' 

These  aesthetic  arts  were  qiiiic- 
tingliir.^-  to  my  mental  and  spifii- 
nal  .senses  of  beauty,  but  iwn 
more  exquisite  WQre  the  pastrio> 
and  confections  that  I  tastfjd 
there.  Wc,  being  typical  tourist.^;, 
went  'tO  Dcmel's.  the  former  p»I 
ace  b;.k-cry.  and  to  other  les.s 
publicized  goody  shops  for  Ih' 
connoiseur   of   goo. 

Probably'  the  most  uniisuil 
thing>  we  -saw  were  one  of  the 
original  Gutenberg  Bibles  and  iiit 
first  bo.^k  printed  in  Gcrmar., 
a  Bible,  too,  in  the  National  Li- 
brary of  Au.slria.  We  had  thoug.jf 
that  the  Gutenberg  Bible  wouid 
be  In  an  airtight  glass  case  sur- 
rounded by  an  armed  guard.  W<> 
asked  in  the  library  if  we  couii 
.see  tne  Bible,  and  they  replied 
that  they  \Vere  not  sure  and 
wjuld  have  to  get  special  permis- 
sion from  the  library  director,  as 
it  was  not   on  public  display. 


excursion  out  to  the  suburbs  li. 
one  of  the  "Heurigens."  A  ■Hcu- 
rigen"  is  an  institution  unique  to 
Vienna  where  new  wine  can  if 
had.  Pine  branches  over  the  doi'i' 
mark  where  you  can  buy  i.u 
"Heuriger."  and  a  bundle  ot 
straw  means  a  locale  which  sells 
last  year's  wine. 
INVITATION 

We  met  a  >oung  doctor  at  ihe 
opera  "Salome"  and  began  >alk 
ir.g.  During  the  conversation'.^ 
course  it  came  out  that  wc  cou!>l 
be  lured  into  one  of  iho.e 
"Heuiigens."  if  we  had  an  invila- 
tion.  He  asked  us  to  come  v.i!.r 
him.  a  friend,  and  his  fricnd^ 
dale  to  one  of  his  fav.irite  "Hcu.i- 
gens." 

We  went.  His  friend's  girl  was 
■from  Budapest,  Hungary,  on  a 
vi-;it  )o  Vienna  to  see  relatives 
HaviUj,  seen  only  the  Gabor  gi'-l.- 
andthis.  young  lady  I  would  hazard 
an  opinion  that  the  Hungari;in 
ladies  are  quite  attractive;  in 
fact,  so  attractive  that  I  \v,.< 
ready   to  travel   another  hiinircd 


Hungarians.  A  large  neon  sign 
downtown    flashed    the     latest 
news.    The    Hungarian    girl    we 
met  said  that  two  weeks  before 
when   she   left   Budapest,  there 
was    hardly    an    indication    of 
what  tok  place  October  27  and 
28. 
I   read    the   newspapers   ever} 
da'y  now.  One  becomes  more  coii- 
scious   of    the     world's    troublc- 
w^hen  ime  is  only  50  miles  away 
from  a  revolution  than  could  dis- 
turb    the     delicately     balanced 
worlo  into  war.  One  begins  think- 
ing over  the  Big  Bad  Bear's  de- 
signs   when    he    begins   to    move 
tanks  into  East  Germany,  and  the 
one  thinking  is  only  si.\  or  sever, 
miles  from  the  Iron  Curtain. 

How  about  wTithig  your  Con- 
gressman and  Senator'?  Tell  the:ri 
to  get  on  the  ball,  to  start  think- 
ing about  how  the  United  Stat.^.s, 
as  the  champion  of  he  democratic 
world,  is  going  to  set  a  trap  fo'- 
the  Big  Bad  Bear's  ever  reaching 
paw.  I'm  no  coward,  but  just 
don't  want  to  get  .stepped  on. 


• 

By  Al  Capp 


AH  RAN  HAWG  McCAU- 
OUTA  DOGFATCH  ONCK,RD' 
HIS  -6"oDdER.':''-SINGIN'-AN' 
AH  KIM  DO  IT  AGIN. r'' 


Pogo 


By  Walt  Kelly 


J*roof  Reader Wally  Korsdt       brijilit. 


CAROLEIDOSCOPE:  ! 

Thoughts  While- 
You  Were  Away  * 

Frank    Ciowther 

In  a  way,  I  didn't  want  to  write  this  piece,  but 
I  suppose  that  it  had  to  come  out  sooner  or  later. 
I  told  myself  that  my  holiday  experience  was  unique 
and  significant  to  me  alone;  after  all,  everybody 
has  had  at  least  one  little  experience  they  wili 
savor  from  these  past  holidays  and  mine,  I  mused, 
v^uld  be  a  personal  souvenir  only. 

But,  then,  spending  the  tftutar  Christmas  vaca-  — 
tion  here  at  the  university  was  an  experience  I     ... . 
shall  hold  singularly  significant  for  •  long  time. 
And  what  is  writing  anyhow,  except  a  form  ol  ex      • 
pressing  ourselves  and  interpreting  the  myriad  »f 
emotional  experiences  we  have  had  or  someone 
has     had,    will     have,    or     would     like    to    have? 
Alors  ... 

The  gauntlet  rdn  something  like  this:  "Relief  in 
«eeing  the  students  stampeding  "that-a  way;"  verg- 
ing on  lonesomeness,  but  sneering  at  it  for  a  while, 
perceiving  the  "new"  Chapel  Hill;  mass  explora- 
tion; extended  prostrate  procrastination;  diligent 
employment  for  the  local  merchants;  one  last  shot 
at  the  4,137  things  I  had  sworn  to  do;  being  appxe- 
hensive  of  the  inevitable  "return  of  the  masses." 
reconciliation,  and,  finally.  I'm  glad  you're  back. 

So  now  the  students  again  replace  the  squirrels 
as  the  intelligentsia — or  do  they? — and  I  can  no 
longer  sit  in  my  spooky  room  in  Old  W'est  while 
the  rain  outside  drips  and  drums  on  the  window- 
sill,  a  slight  breeze  creaks  one  of  the  downstairs 
doors,  and  I  imagine  a  hodge-podge  of  mysterious 
things.  The  proverbial  honeymoon  is  over. 

With  the  new  year  just  having  shown  itself  over 
the  horizon,  it  is  only  appropriate  that  we  (actually  » 
me  and  my  typewriter)  say  a  few  words  about  it. 
Life  magazine  starts  the  new  year  off  by  pictur- 
ing the  California  fires.  Au-stralian  animal  life,  and 
Hungarian  refugees'  progress  in  the  U.S.  Also,  it 
started  a  feature  concerning  psychology  which 
should  cause  Epicurean  mumblings  to  come  forth 
from 'New  West  for  some  time  to  come.  Actuall/ 
kno\vn  that  I'm  a  confusionist,  verging  on  neurones, 
they  didn't  tell  me  anything  new;  I've  always 
striking  for  psychosis.  That's  fundamental  .... 
isn't  it?  ■'  ^ 

OUOTES 

Before  the  New  Year  gro\»s  too  old  or.  better 
yet,  before  the  turn  of  the  year  gets  too  far  be- 
hind us.  there  are  several  quotable  quotes  which 
characterize  this  time  in  the  year,  and  which  I 
haven't  seen  used  at  all  m  the  limited  publications 
which  I  devoured. 

Under  the  sentamentalistic  banner  we  could  put 
the  following: 

"Of  ail  the  sounds  of  all  r?;e  bells— (bells  the 
music  nighest  bordering  upon  heaven)  —  mort 
solemn  and  touching  }»  the  peel  which  rinss  oy» 
the   old   year." — Charles   Latnb 

And  then  there  is  the  faclualistic  or  universalistie> 
edict  of  Thomas  Mann: 

"Time   has   no   divisions   to   mark   its   passage, 

there  is  never  a  thunder-storm  or  blare  of  trump 

ets  to  announce  the  beginning  of  a  new  month  or 

year.  Even  when  a  new  century  begins,  it  is  only 

we  mortals  who  ring  'oells  and  fire  off  pistols. ' 

But  no  matter  how  ^^e  tend  oar  fires,  swim  on 
forges,  or  climb  our  trees,  are  we  net.  as  Tenayson 
lamented,  wailing  children? 

"But  what  am  I? 
An  infant  crying  in  the  night: 
An  infant  crying  for  the  light: 
And  with  no  language  but  a  cry." 
In  a  search  for,  as  Confucius  characterized,  "the 
way,"  I  also  like  to  remember  the  Spanish  pro"erb 
which  I  someday   hope  to  eomplete: 

'You  have  not  lived  a  full  life  until  you  h«ve 
fought  a  bull,  wTilten  a  book,  had  3  son.  and 
planted  a  tree." 

YOU  Said  It: 


On  God's  Definition: 
Love . . .  Perfection 

In  response  to  preceeding  articles   appearing  in 
The  Daily  Tar  Heel: 

"Have  I  been  with  thee  all  these  many  years, 
O  world — dost  thou  not  know  me  even  yet?" 

-    THERE  IS  NO  UNBELIEF 

There  is  no  unbelief; 
^  W'boever  plants  a  seed  beneath  the  sod 
And  waits  to  see  it  push  away  the  clod — 
He  trusts  in  God. 

There  is  no  unbelief; 

Whoever  says  when  clouds  are  in  the  sky. 
"Be  patient,  heart;  light  breaketh  by  and  by,"  ' 
•     Ti-usls  the  Most  High. 

,  .  There  is  no  unbelief;  ' 

Whoever  sees   neath  winter's  field  of  snow. 
The  silent  harvest  of  the  future  grow — 
God's  power  must  know. 

There  is  no  unbelief;  " 

Whoever  lies  down  on  hrs  couch  to  sleep, 
Content  to  lock  each  sense  in  slumber  deep. 
Knows  God  will  keep. 

There  is  no  unbelief; 

Whoever  says    'tomorrow,"  "the  unknown, ' 

"The  future."  trusts  the  power  alone 

He  dares  disown. 


V. 


There  is  no  unbelief;  " 

The  heart  that  loaks  on  when  the  eyelids  close. 
And  dares  to  live  when  life  has  only  woes, 
Gods  comfort  knows. 

There  is  no  unbelief; 
For  thus  by  day  and  night  unconsciously 
The  heart  lives  by  that  faith  the  lips  deny. 
God  knoweth  whv:  i 


God  is   love,   beauty,  undei-standin 
timeless,  spaceless,  law.  perfection 


Elizabeth  York  Case 
rest.  peaci», 


U 
R 


Most 
dents  wi 
But   C| 

vacatior 
irember 

They 
held  all 
at  least 
try. 

The    11 
professor 
ing  of 
elation 

Include 
tending 
VV.  L. 
T.    Hoi 
Vara    \\ 
Sharpe. 
W.   Link! 
qiies 
Romanc^ 

The    f| 
from  the 
ed  the 
Richmor 
^yons, 
Eliason, 
C   How< 

In  adc 
ber.s  frol 
manic 
meeting. 
Kunstmc 


Bi 


Sed 


Name  Withheld   By  Request 


1957 

e 

y 


fc,  but 
later. 

mique 
irbody 
will 
luseil, 

IvAca- 
ice   I 

I  time. 
»f  «x 
■d  of 
leone 
have? 

aef  in 

ver^ 

I  while. 

iplora- 
jli^Pnt 
bt  shot 
lapprt'- 

isses." 
I  back, 
luirrels 
t&a  no 
while 
lindow- 

istairs 
lerioas 


over 
Itually 

)Ut     I*. 

)ictur- 
|e.  and 

iso.  it 
whi'-h 
forth 
^tuall/ 
iroacs, 
always 


better 
far  be- 

which 
[hich    I 

Ica'tionk 

lid  pat 


FRIDAY,  JANUARY  4,  1957 


THI  DAILY  TAR  HIIL 


P^^%  THREE 


hsiic 

k.>a?p. 

mmp 

1th  or 

iiily 

Im  oa 

Jiiyson 


•the 
>ro-  erb 

h..ve 
.   and 


In: 

ring  in 
Sars, 


by,' 


Jw. 


Sep. 


1^' 


close, 


[,   peaci*, 
|eque»t 


University  Faculty  Didn't 
Rest  During  The  Holidays 


Most  of  the  University's  6,500  stu- 
dents went  home  for  the  holidays. 

But  Christmas  holidays  were  no 
\acation  for  many  of  the  faculty 
n^embers.  ■ 

They  were  attending  meetings 
licld  all  over  the  United  States  and 
at  least  one  point  outside  the  coun- 
try. 

The  largest  delegation  of  UNC 
professors  attended  the  annual  meet- 
ing of  the  Modern  Language  asso- 
ciation   in    Washington,    Dec.    27-29. 

Included  among  the  professors  at- 
tending that  meeting  were:  Profs. 
\V.  L.  Wiley,  Sturgis  E.  Leavitt,  U. 
T.  'Holmes  Jr.,  J.  E.  KeUer,  Wil- 
liam A.  McKnight,  Lawrence  A. 
Sharpe,  Sterling  A.  Stoudemire,  R. 
W.  Linker,  N.  B.  Adams  'and  Jac- 
ques Hardre  all  of  the  Dept.  of 
Romance  Languages. 

The  following  faculty  members 
from  the  English  Dept.  also  attend- 
ed the  Washington  meeting:  Pi'ofs. 
Richmond  P.  Bond,  Clifford  P. 
^iyons,  C.  Hugh  Holman,  .\orman 
Eliason,  Robert  A.  Pratt,  and  A. 
C.  Howell. 

In  addition,  several  faculty  mem- 
bers from  the  UNC  Dept.  of  Ger- 
manic Languages  attended  the 
meeting.  They  were  Profs.  John  G. 
Kunstmann,  Werner  P.  Friederich, 


Frederic  E.  Coenen.  Herbert  W. 
Reichert,  Ranson  T.  Taylor  and  in- 
structors Thomas  O.  Pinkerton  and 
James  E.  Engel. 


HISTORY  MEET. 

A  number  of  professors  attended 
the  annual  meeting  of  the  American 
Historial  Assn.  held  in  St.  Louis, 
Dec.  28-30. 

These  included  Profs.  Harold  A. 
Bierck,  James  L 
C.  MacKianey  and  Fletch^  M. 
Green.  Nathaniel  C.  Hughes  Jr.,  a 
graduate  student  from  UXC,  also  at- 
tended the  meeting. 
WENT  TO  PUERTO  RICO 

Four  members  of  the  Dept.  of 
Psychiatry-  attended  the  fourth  In- 
teramerican  Congress  of  Psycho- 
logy at  the  University  of  Puerto 
Rico,  _  Dec.  26-30.  They  were  Dr. 
Lucie  Jessner,  Dr.  D.  Wilfred  Abse, 
Dr.  Harley  C.  Shands  and  Dr.  Ar- 
thur J.  Prange  Jr. 

The  entire  faculty  of  the  Dept. 
of  Philosophy  attended  the  annual 
meeting  of  the  Eastern  Division 
of  the  America  Philosophical  Assn. 
ir    Philadelphia. 

"Rjis  included  Profs.  Everett  W. 
HaU,  E.  Maynard  Adams,  William 
H.  Poteat,  Jason  L.  Saunders,  L. 
O.  Kattsol^".  Samuel  Coval  and 
Stephen  A.   Emery. 


ECONOMICS  MEETING 

A  number  of  members  of  the  • 
School  of  Business  Administration  | 
faculty  attended  the  annual  meet- 1 
mg  of  the  American  Economic  Assn. ! 
held  in  Cleveland,  Ohio,  Dec.  27-29.  j 
They  were  Profs.  Milton  S.  Heath,  | 
Paul  N.  Guthrie,  Lowell  D.  Asbby,  i 
Ralph  W.  Pfouts,  J.  C.  D.  Blaine,  I 
Robert  L.  Banting,  Rashi  Fein  and  i 
Godfrey.   Loren  1  ciarence  E.   PhUbrook. 


Telephone 
AVork 


A  Call  to  Graduates 

in  Engineering, 
Business  Administration,  Social  Sciences, 
Physical  Sciences,  Arts 

for  work  in  the  fields  of:  ' 

Engineering  telephone  buildings,  switching 
facilities,  transmission  facilities,  expansion 
programs — Building  and  maintaining 
systems  and  facilities — Developing 
operating  methods  and  practices — Accounting 
and  finance,  personnel  relations — Customer 
relations,  sales  engineering,  advertising, 
development  of  markets — 

in  an  of mosphere  of:  '  f 

Achievement  of  professional  objectives — 
>  Advancement  and  promotional  recognition — 

Security  in  retirement  and  emergencies — 

•  Southern  Bell  Telephone  and  Telegraph  Co, 

•  American  Telephone  and  Telegraph  Co., 

Long  Lines  Department 

•  Western  Electric  Company 

•  Bell  Telephone  Laboratories 

•  Sandia  Corporation 


Group  MMting  2:00  P^,  Januery  7,  1957 

St«  our  r*|>r*«nt«tiv*  on  Hit  campus  January  7,  8,  A  9  for 

Individual  Intarviaws 


Another  member  of  the  Business 
Administration  faculty,  Arthur  M. 
Whitehill,  Jr.  attended  the  annual 
iiieeting  of  the  American  Business 
Writing  Assn.  in  Oklahoma  City  on 
Dec.  28-29. 

PHILADELPHIA  MEET 

The  entire  faculty  of  the  Classics 
Dept.  attended  the  annual  meeting 
of  the  American  Philological  Assn. 
in  Philadelphia.  They  are  Profs.  B. 
L.  Ullman,  P.  H.  Epps.  J.  P.  Har- 
land,  Walter  Allen  Jr.,  Alber  Suskin, 
Charles  Henderson  Jr.  and  Derrance 
White. 

.\lso  going  to  Philadelphia  were 
six  graduate  instructors  and  as- 
sistants in  the  Classics  Department: 
Chcirles  Gross.  Ben  Reece,  Ronald 
White,  Mary  Martin.  Elizabeth  Hun- 
ter and  Charles  Milhauser. 

LAW  MEET  '     '    ]      ' 

Law  members  of  the  law  school 
staff  went  to  the  annual  meeting 
of  Assn.  of  American  Law  Schools 
in  Chicago  Dec.  28-30.  They  mcluded 
Dean  Henry  Brajidis  Jr.,  Profs.  M. 
T.  Van  Hecke,  Frank  W.  Hanft, 
Joha  P.  Dalz^,  Robert  H.  Wettach, 
Fred  B.  McCall,  M.  S.  Brecken- 
rid^e  and  Miss  Mary  Oliver,  law 
librarian.  Van  Hecke  is  the  asso- 
ciation president  and  presided  at 
the  Chicago  gathering. 

Other  faculty  members  scheduled 
to  attend  meetings  during  the  holi- 
days were:  Prof.  John  F.  Dashiell 
of  the  Psychology  Department  who 
attended  the  annual  convention  of 
the  American  Assn.  for  the  Ad- 
vancement of  Science  in  JSew  York; 
Prof.  Glen  Haydon,  chairman  of 
ttie  Music  Dept..  attaoded  several 
meetings  in  Urbana,  Illinois,  and 
Profs.  Alfred  T.  Brauer  and  W.  Rol)- 
ert  Mann.  Mathematics  Dept.,  who 
attended  the  annual  winter  meet- 
ing of  the  .\merican  Mathematical 
Society  in  Rochester,  N.  Y. 

Prof.  Harry  Davis,  Prof.  Tom  Pat- 
terson and  Prof.  Samuel  Selden  all 
of  UNC  attended  the  annual  meet- 
ing of  the  American  Educational 
Theatre  Assn.  in  Chicago. 

E.  R.  Rankin,  head  of  the  Dept. 

of  School  Relations  of  the  IJ^C  Ex- 

« 

tension  Division,  attended  the  meet- 
ing in  Chicago  of  the  committee  on 
discussion  and  debate  materials  and 
interstate  cooperation  of  the  Nation- 
al University  Extension  Assn. 


New  Show 
/s  Open  At 
Planetarium 

A  "Celestial  iPreview  of  1957*' 
opened  apin^rlately  on  the  first 
day  of  the  New  Year  at  the  More- 
head  Planetarium  on  campus. 

The  presentation  is  a  tailored 
two-fold  demonstration  of  cele^ial 
phenomena  which  will  occur  in  1967- 
and  a  showing  of  models  which  cfui. 
be  made  at  home  by  parents  oe 
children  under  supervision,  of  com- 
mon and  ordinary  things  about  the 
average  house  to  demonstrate  and 
exi^ain  visihle  happenings  in  the 
heavens. 

"The  demonstration  will  be  especi- 
ally appealing  to  children  of  Cub 
or  Boy  Scoiit  age,"  according  to 
Planetarium  Manager  A.  F.  Jen- 
zano.  "And  it  will  be  appealing  to 
do-it-yourself  parents  who  would 
like  to  build  similar  simple  models 
we  will  show  that  can  be  made  £roin 
coat  hangers,  common  boxes,  flash- 
lights and  so  on  to  help  chilctrea 
understand  the  marvels  of  the  uni- 
verse." 

"Celestial  Preview  of  1957"  is 
actually  being  presented  by  the 
Morehead  and  other  planetaria 
throughout  tiie  nation  during  Janu- 
ary in  cooperation  with  the  Boy 
Scouts  of  America,  whose  January 
theme  is  "Look  Skyward."  The  BSA 
has  adopted  that  theme  in  order 
titat  Scouts  may  study  and  know 
\jctXer  the  heavens,  .\lready  Scout 
troops  from  North  and  South  Caro- 
Jroa  and  Virginia  are  writing  in  for 
reservations  to  attend  the  demon- 
stsation  at  the  Morehead  Plane- 
tariimj  here,  which  is  their  nearest 
and  the  only  one  south  of  Phila- 
delphia. 

With  the  opening  of  "Celestial 
Preview,"  the  Morehead  Planetari- 
um will  return  to  its  regular  sche- 
dule of  presentations  nightly  at  8:30 
o'clock  with  matinees  Saturdays  at 
11  a.m.  at  3  p.m.  and  Sundays  at 
3  and  4  p.m.  Special  school  dem- 
onstrations will  be  presented  Wed- 
nesdays and  Thursdays  at  11  a.m. 
and  2  p.m.,  but  the  public  and  other 
groups  are  admitted  after  children 
with  reservations  agne  seated. 


Iiulian  Medical  Officer 
Visits  Health  School 

Dr,  B.  E.  C.  Hopwood  of  Uganda, 
Bnti^  East  Africa  is  visiting  the 
University  School  <rf  Public  Health. 

Dr.  Hopwood's  visit  to  the  United 
States  is  being  sjponsored  by  the 
Unit^  Nations. 

He  has  been  at  Chapel  Hill  smce 
the  middle  of  Detember.  Prior  to 
coming  here  he  spent  several  weeks 
in  Washington,  D.  C.  conferring  ^vith 
government  officials,  especially  in 
the  fi^ds  of  public  health,  indus- 
try and  agriculture. 

,  He  is  a  native  of  England  and 
the  senior  medical  officer  of  Ugan- 
da. He  is  in  the  United  States  to 
study  protdems  in  public  health,  in- 
dustry and  agriculture.  He  said 
many  of  the  problems  found  in  these 
fields  here  were  similar  to  those 
in  Airica. 


CLASSIFIfcOb 


JAZZ  AT  TURNAGES 

Saturday  afternoon,  2:00,  Turn- 
ages  Cabin  in  Durham. — Jazz  by 
Dick    Gables    "All    Stars."    Beer 


KHAKI  -  COLORED  RAINCOAT 
taken  by  mistake  from  Phillips 
Hall.  My  jiame  in  collar.  Call 
Curt  Rogers,  Beta  House. 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL  WILL 
pay  $.25  for  each  issue  of  the 
September  28  edition.  Papers  of 
this  date  are  needed  for  adver- 
tising purposes. 


FOR  SALE:  27  FOOT  ALMA 
house  trailer.  Has  one  bedroom, 
with  Iiide-a-bed  in  living  room. 
It  is  in  excellent  condition.  $1, 
500.  Call  8-6571. 


SEMI  -  ANNUAL 
SALE 
NOW  IN  PROGRESS 


World 
News 

(CoiUinued  From  Page   1) 

Anderson's  move  to  clear  the  way 
for  a  civil  rights  program — ^legisla- 
tion which  filibustering  southern 
senators  have  talked  to  death  in 
the  pail. 

Senate  Democratic  Leader  John- 
son of  Texas  promptly  offered  a 
motion  to  table  Anderson's  pro- 
posal. A  similar  parliamentary 
maneuver  four  years  ago  succeed- 
ed in  killing  Anderson's  1953  at- 
tempt to  change  the  rules.  The 
vote  at  the  time  was  70-21. 

Senate  Republican  Leader 
Knowland  of  California  came  out 
flatly  against  the  proposed  meth- 
od of  changing  the  rules,  although 
not  necessarily  against  putting  a 
checkrein  on  filibusters. 
*        *        • 

WASHINGTON  —  (AP)— The 
White  House  Thursday  refused  to 
confirm  or  deny  a  published  re- 
port that  U.  S.  Marines  in  the 
Mediterranean  area  are  armed 
with  "live"  atomic  artillery  , wea- 
pons. •     *  '-k'M^ 

Press  Secretary  James  C  Hager- 
t}',  apparently  after  consultation 
with  President  Eisenhower,  did 
say  the  President  "'has  given  no 
authority  for  use  oC  atomic  or  any 
other  weapons  in  the  Mid^e  East 

*  41  • 

LONDON— (AP)  —  Communist 
Party  Boss  N.  S,  Khrushchev  was 
listed  as  absent  Thursday  from  two 
important  Moscow  functions  attend- 
ed by  other  top  Soviet  leaders. 

It  was  considered  possible  here 
that  Khrushchev.  62,  fnight  be 
ill.  But  (Hplomats  watching  sucb 
Soviet  manifestations  never  lose 
sight  of  the  possibility  that  the 
absence  of  a  top  leader  from  an 
important  gathering  can  have  deep 

political  meaning. 

•        *        • 

MIAMI— (AP)—  U.  S.  District 
Judge  Dmett  Choate  ruled  Thurs- 
day that  Florida  and  Miami  laws 
requiring  Negroes  to  sit  in  the 
rear  of  Miami  Transit  Co.  buses 
are   unconstitutional. 

The  gave  the  City  of  -Miami  10 
days  tg  file  a  motion  in  answer  to 
his  ruling.  The  city  commission 
went  intda  hufried,  special  sess- 
ion  to  map  future   strategy. 


Eight  Deacons  To  Be 
Installed  Sun.  Morning 

Eight  persons  will  be  installed  as 
new  members  of  the  Board  of  Dea- 
cons of  the  United  Congregational 
Christian  Church  at  the  eleven 
o'clock  worship  service  on  Sunday. 

Retiring  board  chairman,  W.  R. 
Cherry,  wUl  present  the  group  which 
will  include:  Dr.  Edgar  Alden,  B. 
A.  Hoft,  M.  H.  Jennings,  Jr.,  and 
Dr.  George  Nicholson. as  deacons;  j 
^nd  Mrs.  James  Huskey.  Miss  Mar- 
tna.  Jordan,  and  Mrs.  Lindsay  Ne- 
ville as  deaconesses.  i 

S.  H.  Basnlght  will  be  installed 
as  an  honorary  life-member  of  the 
iboard. 


Pfaymakers'Set 
Tryouts  Mon. 

The  Carolina  Playmakers  will 
hold  ti-youts  for  the  casts  of  three 
new  one-act  plays  at  4:00  p.m., 
Monday,  at  the  Playmakers  "Rieatre. 
The  bill  of  plays  will  be  produced 
Jan.  17  and  18  on  the  Playmakers 
stage. 

Written  and  directed  by  UNC 
graduate  students,  the  plays  will  be: 
"Room  For  Rent "  by  MarceUine 
Krafchick  of  Philadelphia,  Pa.,  di- 
rected by  Nancy  Christ  of  Newark, 
j  is.  J.;  "Portrait  of  a  Dragon"  by 
I  Josephine  Stipe  of  Chapel  Hill,  di- 
rected by  Mary  Ruth  Johnston  of 
Eupora,  Miss.;  and  "ChUd  of  Two 
Winds"  by  Peter  B.  O'Sullivan  of 
Valhalla,  N.  Y.,  directed  by  Rich- 
ard Rothrock  of  Springdale,  Ark. 

The  tradition  of  original  one-act 
play  productions  began  at  Chapel 
Hill  in  1919,  with  the  first  two  plays 
by  Elizabeth  Lay  (now  Mrs.  Paul 
Green)  and  Thomas  Wolfe.  Since 
then  the  Playmakers  have  produced 
176  series  of  such  presentations, 
.serving  to  stimulate  and  encourage 
the  writing  of  plays  on  the  campus. 

Tryouts  are  open  to  everyone,  and 
admission  to  the  productions  is 
Tree  of  charge. 


NEW  ADDRESS  &  PHONE 

Lewis  B.  Cucinotta', 
ASPT 

piano  Tuner-T«€hnici«n 

208  Andrews  Lan* 

Chapel  Hill 

Tel.  8-7021 


Musk  Dept.  To 
MusicMeefing 

The  University  Music  Dept.  wUl 
play  host  to  more  than  40  educators 
from  points  throughout  the  state  at 
a  Music  Methods  Confwence  here 
Jan.  11. 

Attending  the  conference,  sponsor- 
ed by  Uie  State  Dept.  ol  Public 
Instruction,  will  be  college  admin- 
istrators and  teachers  who  are  con- 
cerned with  music  methods  and  the 
supervising  of  practice  teachers. 
Miss  Ruth  JeweU  of  Ralei^  is  gen- 
eral chairman. 

The  UNC  Extension  Division  will 
handle  registration  for  the  one-day 
conference.  Dr.  Joel  Carter  of  the 
Music  Dept.  has  released  a  tenta- 
tive program  of  events. 

Dr.  Glen  Haydon,  Music  Depart- 
ment chairman,  and  Dr.  Arnold 
Perry,  School  of  Education  dean, 
wiU  welcome  the  conferees  at  10 
a.m.  general  session.  Speakers  will 
include  Dr.  Arnold  Hoffman,  Ra- 
leigh, state  supervisor  of  music;  Dr. 
John  K.  Wooten,  principal  of  Km- 
ston  High  School;  and  Miss  Jessie 
Baxter,  music  supervisor  of  Ala- 
mance County. 

They  will  discuss  such  topics  as 
the  design  and  accomplishments  of 


Be  Host  At 
Here  Jan.  11 


'Jhe  state  music  program,  what  a 
principal  expects  of  a  music  teadi- 
er  and  the  music  teacher's  role  as 
an  instructor. 

Dr.  Carter  and  Miss  Jewell  will 
.^erve  as  chairmen  at  other  ses- 
sions dealing  with  public  scIhkJ 
music  in  North  Carolina  and  with 
music  method  education. 


Man  Tells  Of  PUn  To 
Assassinate  Truman 

ALBEM.\RLE  —iJP^  A  man  who 
claims  he  is  a  brother  of  the  first 
iVmerican  GI  killed  in  Korea  told 
today  of  his  plan  to  assassinate 
former  President  Harry  S.  Truman 
on  the  seventh  anniversary  of  the 
soldier's  death. 

Leroy  Shadrick,  32,  spoke  in  a 
cell  in  the  Stanly  County  jail  where 
he  is  held  .for  the  attempted  armed 
r^obbery  of  the  Home  Builders  Assn. 
here  last  Dec.  19. 

Shadrick  said  he  holds  Truman 
directly  responsible  for  the  death 
ol  Pvt.  Kenneth  Shadrick,  on  July 
5,  1960,  in  Korea,  reportedly  the 
first  U,  S.  soldier  to  die  there. 


There  It  A  Place  In  This  Pictune  For  Yovl 


OPPORTUNITIES 

for  Students  with  Bachelor  Degrees  in 

•  CHEMICAL  ENGINEERING 

•  CHEMISTRY  * 

•  MECHANICAL  ENGINEERING 


I 
I 
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I 
I 
I 
I 
I 
I 
I 
I      « 


Tbi«  i«  a  chance  to  get  a  head  start  in  your  profassional 
career  with  General  Chemical  Division,  Allied  Chemical  & 
Dy«  Corporation.  Company  representative*  vill  be  on  th« 
l^s  for  inter\'i6wg  . . 

fitma  P*mtmm»mt  •flc«  Faalay  Hr  mm  httmrttmmi 
Jpp«Mi«Mrt  mmd  Ommrt^Hvm  UtarvMr* 

OSNKRAL  CHEMICAL  DIVISION 

MIIED  CHIMICAl  4  DTI  COIFOIAHOM 


DAILY    CROSSWORD 


ACROSS 

1.  Head  cook 
S.  Java  tree 
9.  Smoothing 

tool 
10.  Nut 
I3.0iMin- 
^ked 
14.  American 
Indian 

It.  i\»reM 

It.  Part  of 

"to  be" 


4.  Charge  for 
services 

5.  Overhead 

7.  Land         fi 
measur* 

8.  Seaman 
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decorated 
11.  Cozy 

spoil 
13.  Slope 
17.  California 

laurel 


19.  Enemy  scout  19.  Large 

20.  Old  Testa-  scissors 
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divinity 
24.  Bellows 
27.  Coin 

(Swed.) 
28  Attempt 
29.  Paciflc 

i-iland  group 
31.  Inserts,  as 

a  cartridge 
34.  Type. 

measure 
.35.  Cereal  grain 

37.  Excla- 
mation 

38.  Change 
41.  Mist 

43.  Swerve 

44.  Pushed 
46.  Mistake 
48.  Presages 

MO.  Rational 
,  50.  Girl's 
nickname 

DQWN 

1.  Stylish 
(slang) 

2.  Quantity 
of  yarn 

S.  Concludes, 


23.  For 

25.  Gold  (Sp> 


26.  Brah- 
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title 
29.  Wait 

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to.  Moham 

med-* 

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(var.) 
33.  Unite 

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disc 
33.  Lean-tcs 
36.  Affirmative 

reply 

39.  Girl's  name 

40.  MeUl 


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YMterday'c  Aatwer 

41.  Ones 
dwelling 

42.  Birds  as 
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45.  Mischief 
(colloq.) 
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$13.95 

$35.00 

84< 

$7.95 

$14.95 


These  &  Many  Other  Terrific 

i      ..  ..  .  -  ■ 

Pargsiins  At 
STEVBKS-  8HBPHBRD 


<*AaW   POUR 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


FRIDAY,  JANUARY  4,  195r 


Undefeated  Wrestlers  Face 
Virginia  Cavaliers  Tonight 


UNC's    unbeaten   varsity   wrest- 
ling team  will   meet  Virginia  to- 


TIE 
SPECIAL 

This  Friday  and  Satur- 
day only.  ENTIRE  stock 
$2.50  ties  at  $1.99. 

Clotting  Cupboarb 


night  for  the  toughest  match  so 
I  far  this  season.  The  Freshman 
I  team  will  wrestle  the  Virginia 
I  freshman  at  7:30  p.m.  and  the 
j  Varsity   match  will   start  at   8:30 

p.m.  in  Woollen  Gym. 
1      Last    year    Carolina    was    com- 
i  pletely  overpowered  by  the  strong 
j  Cavaliers.   But  this  year  the  two 

teams  are  considered  equal. 

I     After  practice  yesterday,  spirits 

[  were   high  in  the   Carolina  grap- 

j  piers'    dressing   room.   Capt.    Bob 

Wagner  commented.  "I  think  the 

fans  that  turn  out  surely  won't  be 

disappointed." 

Going  to  the  mat  for  the  Vars- 
ity will  be  Henry  Rhyne  at  123, 
Capt.  Bob  Wagner  at  130,  Perrin 
Henderson  at  137,  Charlie  Boyette 
at  147.  Ken  Hoke  at  157,  Dave 
Atkinson  at  167,  Glen  Daughtry 
at  177.  and  Don  Childs  at  the 
heavyweight  class. 

The  lineup  for  the  Freshman 
will  be  Curt  Champlin  at  123,  Bill 
Suttle  «t  130,  Joe  Perinni  at  137, 
Jim  Welbom  at  147,  Bill  Russell 
at  157.  Jim  Hudson  at  167.  Benno 
Sack  at  177.  and  Mike  Pittman  at 
hea\T»'eight. 


Starting  our  2ndr  Successf Oi  Year 
Bringing  you  the  best  jazz  in  the  South 

JAZZ  AT  TURNAGE'S 


Presents  DICK  GABLE  and  the 

All-Stars^ 
Every  Saturday  Afternoon  2:00 
r  -^  *    Beer  Served 


Milton's  Anniversary 


■«:*'T'  -^^-^^'^ 


S  A  L  E 


Storewide  Reductions  On  The 

Country's  Most  Wanted 

Apparel 


I  hrm- 


Enlir*  stock  SUITS,  SPORT  COATS,  TOPCOATS  and  SLACKS 

subctMitially   r»duc«d.   Large  twnpttng  group  of   women's 

sportswear  drastically  reduced. 

Large  group  HARRIS  TWEED  JACKETS  reduced  from  S4S.00  to 
$34.99;  $32.50  and  $29.99 

Odd  lot  SPORT  COATS  reduced  to  $19.99  and  $14.99 

Entire  stock  ivy  wool  TROUSERS  at  least  $3.00  off— from  $T0.99 

Entire  stock  DRESS  and  SPORT  SHIRTS,  Including  ovv  Enj^lish 
tab  shirts,  all  reduced 

3  of  our  $4.50  ivy  button-downs  for  $10.00    - '  . 
3  of  our  $5.50  English  tabs  for  $12.50 

Entire  stock  SHOES  substantially  reduced,  seme  half  price. 

Group  BELTS,  values  to  $3.00,  reduced  to  79c 

$5.00  TWEED  CAPS  new  $3.50 

Entire  stock  CREW  NECK  SHETLAND  SWEATERS  including  our 
famous  imports  reduced 

Group  iniported  LAMBSWOOL  SWEATERS  reduced  from  $14.95 
to  $6.99 

Group  Spagnoir  Italian  import  SWEATERS  reduced  from  $25.00 
to    $9.99 

AAany  other  noteworthy  reductions  in  our  men's  wear 


OUR   LADY  MILTON   SHOP   HAS  MANY   OUTSTANOiN« 

REDUCTIONS.  ^ 

Entire   stock   of    our  famous   ScoHsh   CASHMERE    SWEATERS 
$4.00  off 

Group  Italian  Spagnoii  SWEATERS  —  short  sleeves— -values  to 
$17.00,  now  $4.99;  long  sleeves— values  to  $2Z00,  now  $1.99 

All  BLAZERS  reduced 

Entire  stock  SKIRTS  including  our   inimjtoble  imports  reduced 
Large  group  of  our  Lady  Hath«way  and  other  shirts  en^  blouses 
reduced 


Heads  Up! 

Joe  Quigg,  41,  Carolina  center,  and  Cal  Ramsay,  37,  NYU  forward,  go  high  in  the  air  for  a  rebound 
in  action  under  the  boards  in  the  UNC-NYU  game  played  Dec.  20  in  Madison  Square  Garden.  In  »he 
background  is  Tar  Heel  forward  Pete  Brennan,  35.  Carolina  survived  a  tight  NYU  xone  defense  to  win 
the  game,  64-59.  Bob  Cunningham  was   high  scorer   with  16  points.  (Photo  by  Larry  Morris.^ 

TAR  HEELS  REMAIN  UNBEATEN:  •  ^  . 


UNC  Cagers  Take  Six  Wins 
Over  Holidays;  Win  Classic 


Frosh  Cagers 
Go  After  Fourth 
ToniteAtEMI 

Carolina's  frosh  cagers,  idle  for  18 
days,  will  go  back  to  the  hardwood  ^ 
tonight    down    east    at    Salemburg  ' 
where  they  wUl  meet  Eastern  Mill-  ; 
tary   Institute.  j 

Although  the  Tar  Babies"  only  get 
together  since   the   Duke   freshmen  j 
game  was  yesterday,  they  will  be 
^eavUy    favored.    An    indication    ot  | 
E.  M.  I.'s  strength  is  a  bad  licking  , 
given  to  them  by  the  Duke  Frosh  [ 
early  in  the  season.  The  Tar  Babies 
gave  the  Blue  Imps  an  85-53  licking  ; 
just   before  the  holidays.  j 

So  far  this  season  the  Tar  Babies  ! 
hold  a  3-1  record.-  They  have  con- 
qurered,  High  Point  J.  V.'s,  Wil- 
mington Junior  College,  and  the 
Duke  freshmen;  and  were  beaten  by 
the  State  frosh. 

Tar  Baby  coach  Vince  Grimaldi 
p-jinted  out  yesterday  that  the  E. 
M.  I.  gym  is  very  small  and  will 
be  a  blessing  to  jjoth  squads  after 
the   long  Christmas   lay-off. 


THIS  WOMAN  m  HIS  ARMS 

I     ^WAS  NOW  THE  WIFE 

OF  THE  MAN  HP 

GALLED  HIS 

.  V     BEST  FRIEND! 


nttenon 


'hejfii^ 


TECHNICOLOR(9 


DOROTtlY 


UDSON  •  STACK  •  BACALL  •  MALONE 


By  LARRY  CHEEK 

Like  or  Man  River,  the  Caro- 
lina basketball  team  keeps  rolling 
along. 

Over  the  holidays,  the  busy  Tar 
Heels  rolled  to  6  consecutive  vic- 
tories on  foreign  courts  to  extend 
their  unbeaten  string  to  11  and 
hang  on  to  the  runnerup  spot  be- 
hind Kansas  in  all  ^e  major  cage 
polls. 

Three  of  the  wins  came  over 
northern   squads  in   games   played 


before  critical  metropolitan  eyes  in 
Boston  and  New  York,  while  the 
other  three  came  in  the  south's 
greatest  hardwood  extravaganza, 
the  Dixie  Classic. 

Juiciest  plum  of  all  for  Coach 
Frank  McGuire  and  his  charges  was 
the  Dixie  Classic  triumph  in  Ra- 
leigh's Reynolds  Coliseum.  The  Tar 
Heels  whipped  Wake  Forest,  63-55, 
last  Saturday  night  in  the  flnaLs 
after  breezing  by  Utah  and  Duke  in 
preliminary  games. 


.  \ 


TH^re^s  a  Vright  future  tor  gou  in 


•5.Si|^ 


A»^ 


N^^^ 


.V^^ 


All  ladies'  SUITS  half  pHco 
Also  other  soloctod  roductions 


.  ..•:/' 


All  ^alos  Cash  oimI  Final  _  Altaratiens  Extra 

Milton's  Clothing 
Cupboard  ^ 

U3  East  Franklin  St.  ' 


TITANIUM 


'■'"■  > 


f'tp 


*0. 


^U 


O/i 


\ 

Check  the  facts 

with  the  man 

from        ■  •/.     -•  •^-^Ir*  *• 

ELECTROMET 

.  .  .  Woritl'a  Larg^at  Prodmrer  o/  JFerro-Alloym 

It's  a  good  place  to  work  ...  and  its  growing. 

More  than  90  per  cent  of  the  U-chnical  people 
>vho  have  joined  us  in  the  last  20  vears  are  » 

still  with  us.  Why? 

Challenging  work  .  .  .  recognition  .  .  .  pleas- 
ant  locations  .  .  .  competitive  salaries,  deter- 
mined fairly  and  based  on  merit . . .  opportunity 
for  personal  development,  working  witli  out- 
standing  men. in  metallurgy  and  related  fields. 

It  will  be  worth  your  while  to  get  the  facts. 
Make  an  appointment  today  with  your  place- 
ment office  few 

Wedntsday,  January  9  and  Thursday,  January  10 


EiECT^O  METALLURGICAL  COMPANY 

A  Division  of 
Union  Carbide  and  Carbon  Corporation 

30  East  42nd  Streot     fTTH     New  York  17,  New  York 


:^ 


It  was  the  first  successful  Classic 
effort    for   Coach    McGuire   in   five  | 
long   and   often   lean   years   on   the  j 
Hill.  Two  years  ago  the  Tar  Heels  ! 
were  Jtnocked  out  in  the  semi-finals  j 
by  N.  C.  State  and  wont  on  to  finish 
third.   Last  year  they  reached  the  ! 
finals  only  to  be  derailed  by  a  red  i 
hot   State  team  again.   This  season  | 
Wake  Forest  took  care  of  the  Ca.se-  j 
men,  and  the  Tar  Heels  marched  to 
the  crown.     •    i^  V     "*    v     ^ 

The  Tar  Heels  got  quit^  a  scare 
in  their  first  northern  game  against 
NYU  in  Madi-son  Square  Garden, 
and  it  Was  all  they  could  do  to 
pull  out  a  64-59  win  over  the  fight- 
ing Violets.  An  airtight  defense  de- 
vised by  canny  Coach  Howard  Cann 
tliat  limited  Lennie  Rosenbluth  to 
nine  points  almost  did  the  trick  for 
NYU,  but  Bob  Cunningham,  Pete 
Brennan  and  Joe  Quigg  look  up  the 
scoring  slack.  j 

The  road  weary  UNC  quint  pulled 
themselves  together  the  ne.\t  night 
in    the    Boston    Garden    to    handily  ; 
trim    Dartmouth,    89-61,    as    Rosen- 
bluth hit  30  points  to  break  the  all-  j 
time  Carolina  scoring  record  form- 
erly  held    by    Al    Lifson.    The    Tar  ! 
Heels  climaxed  their  trip  to  yankee- 
land  one  day  later  by  topping  stub- 1 
l>orn  Holy  Cross,  83-70.   in  a  game 
that  was  close  until  the  final  min- 
utes. 

Then  came  the  biggest  and  best 
holiday  tournament  in  the  land,  the 
«th  annual  Dixie  Classic.  Pre-tourn- 
ey  speculation  had  Carolina  and 
West  Virginia,  both  unbeaten,  run- 
ning as  co-favorites  with  Duke  not 
far  behind.  Utah,  State  and  Wake 
Forest  were  classified  as  dark- 
horses,  while  DePaul  and  Iowa 
didn't   figure. 

And  what  happened?  It  "was  all 
Carolina,  as  the  highly  regarded 
Alountameers  from  the  hills  of 
West  Virginia  lost  three  in  a  row  to 
finish  last  in  the  eight  team  field. 
Duke  did  little  better,  losing  tlieir 
last  two  starts  after  beating  West 
Virginia  to  finish  fourth.  State  took 
third.  Wake  Forest  was  second, 
Utah  fifth,  DePaul  sixth  and  Iowa 
seventh. 

The  tall  Tar  Heels  opened  their 
t-tle  bid  on  Thursday  night  by 
stomping  Utah's  once  beaten  Red- 
.>kins,  97-76.  And  just  to  prove  it 
was  no  fluke  they  powered  past 
highly  rated  Dulte  in  the  semi-final 
round,  87-71,  to  enter  the  cham- 
pionship game  against'  the  Demon 
Deacons,  73-66  conquerors  of  State. 

It  was  in  the  title  scrap  that  Car- 
olina's class  and  poise  became  evi- 
dent. With  Tommy  Keams  spark- 
ing the  attack  from  backcourt,  the 
Chapel  Hillians  jumped  into  a 
quick  lead  and  never  allowed  the 
plucky  Deacs  to  come  any  closer 
than  six  points.  The  final  was  63- 
55.  and  there  was  no  doubt  in  any- 
one 6  mind  who  the  new  Dixie 
Classic   champions    were. 


^^     //  wiltpltasure     \ 

%  you  ia  a  I 

\    hundred  waysf  ^Z 


ALLIED  ARTISTS   p'.MnH 

^Gary 
Cooper 

Williom  Wylen 


Friendly 
Persuasion 


»si.mni  Dorothy  McGuire 

imiooucnf  Anthony  Perkins    il 
M^iNn  Marjorie  Main  >S 


NOW  PLAYING 


Carolina 


WELCOME 
BACK  i 


I 


.:J^-9i- 


Hurry   Over.  And 

Relax   I h   That 
Famous   Relaxery 

The  Intimate  Bookshop 


205  E.  Franklin  St. 


Open  im  It)  P.M. 


Large  Collection 
Imported  Flannel,    - 
Tweed,  And  Shetland 
SUITS 


Were  up  to 
$75 


Now 
$48.75 


From  Our  Regular  Stock 

SPORT  COATS       . 

Shetlands,  Rumson  Tweeds, 

And  Harris  Tweeds 

Were  Now 

$45  ___i^ $34.95 

$55  _       $44.95 


SPECIAL! 

One  Group 

SPORT  COATS 

Were  Now 

$45  $27.95 


ENTIRE  STOCK 

WOOL  SLACKS 

Reduced  $3  Per  Pair 

(Off  Regular  Price) 


TOPCOATS 

Tweeds  &  Shetlands 


Were 
$65  to  $75    '^ 


Now 
$48.75 


COMPLETE  STOCK 
Men's  &  Women's  Cashmere 

.    SWEATERS 

Cardigans  —  Pullovers 
Long  and  Short  Sleeve 

REDUCED  $4  PER  SWEATER 


i  f 


;-i  . 


SHETLAND  CREW  NECK  SWEATERS 
REDUCED  $3  PER  SWEATER 


Julian* 


WEATHER 

Considtrsble  cloudiness  and  n•^ 
quit*  so  cold..  Expoctod  high  tod«y 
50. 


SESIAtS  »EPT« 
.CHAPErC  HILL,    M.   c, 


SThc 


3rtcel 


VOL.  LVII  NO    75 


Corupietc  (i'P)  Wire  Service 


CHAPEL  HILL,  NORTH  CAROLINA,  SATURDAY,  JANUARY  5,  1957 


Offices   in   Grflham   Memorial 


GRAVITY 

Weighty    subject    for    CtreliiM. 
See  page  2. 


FOUR    PACES  THIS  ISSU€ 


Edwards  Defends  Editorial 
On  lllegar  Dorm  Election 


The  editor  of  a  dormitory  no-.\.>- 
papcr  Friday  defended  an  editor- 
ial he  v.rctc  against  the  le«3li  y 
ol  the  c:onnit.ory  presideot's  elec- 
tion. 

Battle  -  Vance  -  Pettigrew  Times 
Editor  Cortland  Edwards.  accMsod 
by  BVP  President  Neil  Bas^  as 
having  written  a  libelous  article, 
said  he  wondered  "  .  .  .wh  >  vas 
in  re  lioelous — me  or  (Bass)." 

Edwards"  answer  foUuweu  Hass" 
statement  yesterda3'. 

The  controversy  began  when  Ed- 
v^ards    editorialized    that    on    elcv 


tion  da>  last  crpring'Bass.^up  for 
reclcciion  lor  dorm  president,  con- 
ducted  the  election  illegally. 

He  "iv^ok  a  pad  and  pencil"'  an'^ 
went  to  each  room  in  the  ihrf.-' 
donns  saying  "who  do  you  want 
ior  president — me  or  somcboity 
else"?"  said  Edwards. 

Bass  answered  the  election  "".  .  . 
wa3  completely  legal  in  every  le- 
spcct"  «nd  called  for  a  retraction 
of  what  he  termed  a  "'defamatory 
lie." 

He  aiso  denied  charges  by  TJ 
wards  of  having  done  nothing  t'cr 


New  Unrest  Among 
Students  Of  Bulgaria 


VIEN.NA— ( AP)— N  e  w    reports  | 
of    student      unrest,     marked      by  | 
Uirciits  against    the   secret    police, 
cam:  out   oL  Communist   Bulgaria 
yesterday. 

The  Sof  a  correspondent  of  the 
Warsaw  newspajwr  Sztander  Mlo- 
dych  said  at  least  300  Bulgarian 
students  have  been  purged  or 
naarked  for  purging  because  of 
Itbstile  utterances  against  the 
G  mmunist  system. 

The  correspondent  said  the  stu- 
dents  had    painted .   crosses     and 
scribbled  threats  on  the  doors  of 
Security     Police     and     prominent 
Bulgarian    Communists. 
Wmong    students    expelled    were 
t5  from  the  Veterinary  School  of 
the  .Academy  of  Medicine  in  Sofia. 
Similar     action     is     contemplated  | 
against  a  group  of  students  at  the  j 
Sofia  Polytechnic  School,  the  cor- 1 
respondent  added.  j 

In  Berlin  a  group  of  18  refugee 
high  school  students  from  East  ( 
Germany  told  Teporlers  only  a  ! 
small  percentasje  of  the  youth  | 
had  succumbed  to  Communist  doc- 1 
trine  being  drummed  steadily  in  j 
their  ears.  ' 

East  Germany  has  cracked  down  i 
on  its  restive  student  population, 
apparently  fearing  they  might 
spark  a  revolt  there  as  they  did 
in  Hungary  and  Poland.  The  Su- 
vi?t  Union  is  also  taking  a  stern 
attitude  toward  any  student  chal- 
lenge  of   Communist    doctrine. 


The  teen-agers,  who  fled  from 
the  small  town  of  Storkow  in  East 
Germany  to  West  Berlin,  said 
mast  of  the  students  do  not  be- 
lieve the  Communist  doctrines  the 
school  authorities  try  to  teach 
them. 

"I  would  say  that  only  5  to  8 
'>er  cent  are  good  Communists," 
one  youth  said.  He  and  15  others 
fled  to  freedom  after  Communist 
authorities  threatened  reprisals 
fcr  a  student  demonstr^ition  on 
behalf  of  Hungary's  Freedom 
F  ghters.  They  plan  to  join  rela- 
tives in  West  Germany  and  pursue 
(heir  studies  there. 

Another  Warsaw  newspaper, 
the  Communist  party's  Trybuna 
Ludu,  reported  that  "Hooligans 
and  hostile  elements "  were  re- 
sponsible for  disturbing  incidents 
in  areas  of  Poland  where  Soviet 
troops  are  "temporarily  stationed." 

The  newspaper  reported  "in- 
sulting behavior  toward  Soviet 
citizens  and  even  of  brutal  be- 
'lavior  toward  members  of  fam- 
ilies of  Soviet  personnel." 

Poland  and  the  Soviet  Union 
announced  an  agreement  last 
month  under  which  Red  Army 
men  and  their  families  are  sub- 
ject t.T  Polish  law  when  they  are 
Tway  from  military  bases. 

The  troops,  stationed  in  Poland 
under  terms  of  the  Warsaw  Pact, 
may  not  b?  moved  about  the 
country  without  the  Polish  govern- 
ment's  knowledge  and   approval. 


the   dormitory   while    ho    was   its 
prt.-ide;-:!. 

Edwards'  statements  is  as  fol- 
lows: 

'One  nf  the  principles  that  I  tiA 
to  adhere  to  is:  Don't  get  invob'cd 
in  petty  arguments,  especially  when 
the  other  person  is  fighting  for  per- 
sonal reasons.  To  argue  objectively 
is  an  ideal  and  should  be  striven 
for,  but  lo  argue  with  a  person  who 
is  completely  subjective  and  whoso 
argument  is  guided  completelv  by 
emotions  is  quite  foolhardy  to  at- 
tempt," he  a-aid. 
NAME  CALLING 

■"In  the  past  history  of  our  coun- 
try a  vc;y  bad  cultural  phenomona 
has  occurred  over  and  over.  It  ran 
be  classified  under  the  heading  of 
'lab?ling  or  name-calling".  V  oi- 
cifi-cs  anytime  another  person  o,- 
person.^,  country,  nation,  etc.  dis 
agrees  v.'ith  the  opinion  of  another 
person,  etc. 

One  year  everybody  was  cither 

an  American  or  a  Fascist.  For  the 

last   10  years  everybody  is  either 

a   "Democrat"  viz.,    believer  in   dv.- 

(See  Edwards,  Page  3) 


lUNC  Dept 
I  Of  History 
I  'Crowded' 

RALEIGH—  (AP)— The   UNC! 
history   department     is     "tremen- 

I  dously      overloaded,"      the      State 
Board    of    Higher    Education    was ; 
told   yesterday. 
Dr.  J.  Harris  Purks,  state  direc- 1 

!  tor  of  higher  education,  said  a  re-  j 
port   shows     the     department     is 
teaching    8,880    student    semester' 

I  hours    of    history.      This,      he      ex-  , 

I  plained,   is   the  equivalent   of   592 
full-time    history    students.  i 

He  said  the  ratio  of  student  to* 
teacher  is  25  to  one  and  that  this 
includes  graduate  students  as  well 
as  undergraduates.  I 

Second  in  the  number  of  semes-  , 
ter  hi)urs  being  taught  is  business 
administration.  A  total  of  7,260 
hours  are  being  taught  in  this 
field,  which  is  the  equivalent  of 
484  full-time  students. 


Take  A  Last  Look  At 
Examination  Schedule 

The  Final  Ebcamination  Schedule  for  the  fall  semester,  as  ap- 
proved by  the  committee  of  Deans,  has  been  released  by  the  Cen- 
tral Office  of  Records,  and  is  printed  below. 

By  action  of  the  faculty,  the  time  of  an  examination  may  not  be 
changed  after  it  has  been  fixed  in  the  schedule.  Quizzes  ire  not  to 
be  given  in  this  semester  on  Ar  after  Monday.  January-  14,  1957. 

No  student  may  be  excused  from  a  scheduled  examination  ex- 
cept by  the  University  Infirmary,  in  case  of  illness;  or  by  his  Gen 
tral  College  Faculty  Adviser  or  by  his  Dean,   in  case  of  any  othe.* 
emergency  compeHing  his  absence. 

All  'I-Yench,  *German,  and    -Spanish  courses  numbered   1,  2.  'Z. 

3X.  and  4,  *Pharm.  Ec.  34.  *BA  177       Mon..  Jan.  21,  8:30  a..r. 
All  11:00  AM  Classes  on  TTHS  Mon..  Jan.  21.  2:00  p.m. 

All  10:00  AM  Classes  on  TTHS  Tues.,  Jan.  22.  8:30  i.m 

All  11:00  A.M  Classes  on  MWF  Tues.,  Jan.  22.  2:00  p.m. 

All  3:00  PM  Classes,  *Chem.  11,  *  BA  71  &  72,     Chem.  43, 
and  all  classes  not  otherwise  provided  for  in  the 
schedule  ^       .         Wed..  Jan.  23,  8:30  a.m. 

All  8:00  A.M  Classes  on  TTHS  Wed..  Jan.  23,  2:00  p.m. 

AH  2:00  PM  Classes  on  MWF,  'Pharm.  15, 

*BA  130      ..  Thur,,  Jan.  24,  8:30  -..m 

All  12:00  Noon  Classes  on  MWF  Thur..,  Jan.  24.  2:00  p.m. 

All  2:00  PM  Classes  on  TTHS,  '  Pharm.  10, 

*Econ.  31,  32,  61,  &  70  Fri.,  Jan.  25.  8:30  a.m. 

All   12:00  Noon  Classes  on  TTHS  and  all 
1    Nav..  Sci.  .  _    Fri.,  Jan.  25,  2:00  p.n; 

All  1:00  PM  Classes  on  MWF,  *Pol.  Sci.  41. 

-Econ.  81  

All  9:00  AM  Classes  on  MWF  : 

All  9:00  -AM  Cla.sses  on  TTHS 
All  8:00  AM  Classes  on  MWT 
All  10:00  AM  Classes  on  MWT 
All  E.xams  resulting  in  conflicts  from  Common  Exam 

scheduled  above  Tues.,  Jan.  29,  2:00  p.m 

*In  case  of  any  conflict,  the  regularly  scheduled- exam  will  take 
precedence  over  the  common  exam.  (Common  exams  are  indicated  by 
asterisk.) 


.Sat..  Jan.  26,  8:30  a.m. 

"  Sat.,  Jan.  26.  2:00  p.m. 
Mon.,  Jan.  28.  8:30  a.nv 
Mon.,  Jan.  28,  2:00  p.ni 

Tues..  Jan.  29,  8:30  .'.n.. 


UNC  Males  Invited  To  Dance 
At  Averett  College  Tonight 


Carolina's    male    students    have 
been  extended  an  invitation  to  at-  \ 
tend    a    dance    tonight    at    .\verett 
College.    Danville,   Va.  | 

Announcement  of  the  dance —  I 
lo  start  at  8  p.m. — came  Friday  i 
from  the  Student  Activities  Com- ! 
mittee    a^t    Averett. 

The    dance    will    be    formal    al- 
though  dark   suits  will  be  accept- 
able,  according    to    the    announce- ' 
ment.  The  theme  will   be  "Winter  ; 
Wonderland." 

Miss     Nancy     Miller,     chairman 
of    the    SAC,    said    "Even    though  , 
th's  letter  comes  as  a  rather  late  j 
invitation,  we  hope  it  will  be  poss- 
ible    for    many    of    the     boys    to 
come." 

Carolina   male  students  who  at- 
tended   a    dance    there    last    fall 
reported  they   had     an     excellent  j 
time. 

Anyone    requesting   more    infor- 1 


mation  has  been  asked  to  see 
either  Mrs.  Norah  Hurd,  office 
secretary  in  the  YMCA  Activities 
Office  or  John  Riebcl,  YMCA  as- 
sociate director. 

Riebel  also  expressed  regret 
the  announcement  came  so  late 
hut  "undor  the  circumstance^." 
he  said,  "it  was  the  best  we  could 
do." 


No  Action  Taken  Yet 
By  Aldermen  On  Ban 
On  Columbia  Parking 

,      -         '      '■  '  By  PHYLLIS  MAULTSBY  '  "       '  r*L' 

riic  Chapel  Hill  aldcniKMi  lia\c  taken  no  adioii  toward  liftino,  \he  t^\<»-lionr  paikillg 
re.stiidion  on  .S,  (.oltnnhia  St.  becan.se  the  Irateiniiies  involved  ha\e  not  presented  a  plan  tD- 
ward  the  .solution  oi  their  pafking  problem. 

Ihe  Chapel  Hill  Board  of  .\Idernien  at  its»\(»\.  i ;,  mectino  voted  to  lilt  the  tu(»-hour 
parkini;  limitation  h)V  Cm  davs,  trom  fan.  >,  to  Mar.  .{."  if  the  seven  fraternities  involved  sub- 
mitted a  leasihle  solution  to  their  parkin^^  problem  bv  Jan.  -^     , 

Town  Manajier  Tom  Rose  stated  that  tiie  only  liaternitv  which  had  calletl  his  oftue  to 
report    any    effective     action    was*  ^  -;      -  - 

Delta   Kappa    Epsilon.   which   con-|         _  ;    .  H  #  •      I      F"  f  ' 

Ike  Presents  Mid-East 
Policy  To  Congressmen 


Sorority  Housemother 
Hospitalized  From  Fall 

Mr^i  Leslie  E.  Babcock.  Pi  Beta 
Phi  sorority  housemother,  enter 
ed  U.  S.  Army  Hospital  in  Ft. 
Bragg  yesterday  after  having  suf- 
fered   a    fractured    hip    Thursday. 

She  rt^eivcd  the  injury  after 
slipping  down  on  a  waxed  floor 
here  at  the  .sorority  house.  Mrs. 
Babcock  is  expected  to  remain 
there  for  several  weeks. 


SOME  FOLKS  SAY: 


Carolina  Should  Offer 
Wives    PHT  Degree 


MR.   AND   MRS.    FRANK   McKEOWN 

.,  .  hvblnj  ^uiys  home 


Some  folks  say  the  University 
may  be  lying  down  on  its  job 
by 'not   offering  P.H.T.   degrees. 

P.  H.  T.  stands  for,  in  case 
you  don't  know,  "Pushing  Hub- 
by Through.  "  College  that   is. 

This  Pushing  Hubby  Through 
has  now  become  an  accepted 
phenomenon  on  college  camp- 
uses throughout  the  nation  and 
UNC  is  no  exception.  At  last 
count,  about  18  per  cent  of 
Carolina's  6,500  students  were 
married  males.  , 

It  follows  that  while  these 
married  men  are  going  to  school, 
their  families  have  lo  eat.  Be- 
cause of  this,  it  usually  falls  the 
I'jt  of  the  wife  to  go  out  and 
earn   the  daily  bread. 

The  University  itself  is  the 
biggest  source  of  bread  for  these 
families.  More  than  half  of  ap- 
proximately 300  secretarial  and 
clerical  positions  are  filled  by 
working  student  wives. 
WORKING  WIVES 

In  fact.  J.  A.  Williams.  UNC 
personnel  director,  says  he  does- 
n't see  how  the  University  could 
function    without    their   help. 

"At  the  salaries  we  can  af- 
ford to  pay,  we  would  have  a 
hard  time  attracting  enough  out- 
side help  to  fill  these  positions." 
he  said.  "'We  need  the  girls  and 
the  girls  need  the  work,  so  it's 
a  case  of  mutual   aid." 

He  added  that  many  of  tlie 
departments  even  prefer  to  have 
student  wives  to  fill  vacancies 
on   their   staffs. 

"Most  student  wives  are  well- 


educated    and  already    trained." 
he   commented. 

However,  there  are  some  dis- 
advantages to  hiring  wives, 
Williams  said,  since  there  is  a 
rapid  turn-over  because  the 
girls  usually  quit  work  when 
their  husbands  graduate.  The 
maternity  rate  among  student 
wives  i.s  also  high. 

The  personnel  office  not  only 
places  student  wives  in  other 
departments,  but  also  has  four 
working   on    its   own    staff. 

The  more  than  150  v  ives  em- 
plo.ved  by  the  University  in- 
cludes a  large  number  who  work 
in  .North  Carolina  Memorial  Hos- 
pital. And  in  addition  to  those 
who  work  at  the  Univei'sity  and 
the  hospital,  many  wives  are 
employed  in  private  business. 

.\bout  75  work  at  the  Hos- 
pital Savings  A.ssociation,  far 
example.  Many  other.';  work  in 
other  businesses  in  Chapel  Hill 
and  neighboring  towns.  They 
do  everything  from  teaching 
school  to  clerking  in  department 
stores. 

NOT  EASY 

Most  married  students  say 
that  it  is  not  easy  to  support  a 
family  while  going  to  school. 

Take  the  Frank  MeKeown  fam- 
il.v. 

Mrs.  MoKeown.  the  former 
Miss  Joan  Glenn  of  Asheville. 
is  employed  at  Wright's  Machin- 
ery in  Durham.  But  since  they 
have  not  been  able  to  get  a 
place  in  Victory  Village,  a  low- 
cf>st  housing  development  for 
(Sue  PUSHING,  Page  3) 


structed  a  parking  lot  directly  bo- 
hind  its  house. 
FRATERNITY   ACTION 

Fraternity  spokesmen  reported 
on  action  by  their  respective 
-•roups  as  follows: 

Sl^^ma  Nu  i.-.  in  the  midst  of  ex- 
pensive repairs  on  the  fraternity 
house,  which  come  first,  accord- 
ing to  President  Bill  Morgan.  The 
fraternity  plans  to  use  any  money 
left  over  after  repairs  to  get  m  a 
bulldozer  and  enlarge  their  pres- 
ent parking  lot. 

Morgan  stated  that  the  group 
had  done  nothing  toward  gelt  in;., 
tiic  two-hour  restriction  lifted  on 
Jan.  3  because  this  action  wou'd 
not  solve  any  problems  and  the 
restriction  would  be  restored  after 
60  days. 
COMPLETE  BOYCOTT 

Pi  Lambda  Phi  President  Dick 
Sirkin  reported  that  his  grx-.p 
plans  to  recommend  a  complete 
bo.vcott  of  Chapel  Hill  merchanis 
at  the  next  Interfraternity  Counoil 
meeting.  'Were  really  up  a  tree." 
said  Snkin.  "and  we  hope  to  <ici 
some  solution  through  economi? 
pre.ssur«\" 

Accoiding  to  Sirkin,  the  solution 
which  the  Phi  lambda  Phis  prei- 
ont'd  tu  the  aldermen  was  lau:?h 
ed  down.  The  fraternity  sug^es^led 
that  a  small  strip  of  the  big  ath- 
letic field  behind  the  Chapel  Kill 
High  School  toe  set  as  a  parkinii  io* 
with  the  fraternities  doing  the  job 
of  fencing  and  leveling.  .Alder- 
men would  charge  a  fee  for  Ih" 
license  sticker  to  the  bo.vs  park- 
ing in  I  he  area  to  cover  costs. 

Pi  Kappa  Alpha  .spokesmen  sta- 
ted that  they  could  not  see  a  .solu- 
tion to  their  parking  problem  short 
of  either  tearing  down  the  house  or 
the  Baptist  Church  for  a  park;ru 
lot,  as  they  have  no  additional 
^pace. 

Sigma  .\lpha  Epsilon  fraterni:y 
could  arrive  at  no  solution  usir.s 
their  own  land  as  they  hold  only 
.ibout  liKJ  square  feet  of  yard  spac 

According  to  SAE  President  Pat 
Hunter,  the  fraternity  would  like 
to  propose  a  plan  whereby  S.  Co- 
lumbia St.  would  be  widened,  u^- 
ing  part  of  the  sidewalk  area  which 
now  covers  approximately  27  fef^i, 
in  order  to  provide  diagonal,  ceii- 
ter-of-the-street  parking  space,  aj 
well  ac*  the  regular  parking  spaces 
along  the  side. 

Beta  Theta  Pi  Hugh  McCall  s.!id 
that  his  fraternity  was  also  inves- 
tigating   the    possibilities   of    mu 
street  parking. 


WASHINGTON— (.\P)— President  Eisenhower's  top  ad^•isers  art> 
reported  to  have  revised  an  emergency  Middle  East  policy  resolution 
he  will  personally  urge  ui>on  Congress  today. 

Officials  indicated  the  latest  draft  deals  not  only  with  Americao 
willingne.-s  to  fight  to  halt  outright  Comaninist  aggression  in  the 
area,  but  also  mentions  a  danger  of: 

1.  "Indirect  aggression"  by  Russia  through  its  support  of  any 
Middle  East  nation  whose  forces  might  iaunch  an  attack. 

2.  Soviet  efforts  to  .-subvert  independent  Mideast  countries  by 
means  short  of  military  aggression. 

Officials  said  the  core  of  the  re.oluti.rn  remains  a  request  that 
Congress  give  Eisenhower  standby  a\ithorit.V  to  use  American  military 
forces  to  stop  any  direct  Communist  aggrt^•.ion  in  the  region. 

It  was  understood  the  newest  draft,  revolted  to  Im?  the  12lh  in  the 
past  five  days,  did  not  ask  Congress  to  allow  use  of  American  troop* 
to  combat   either  subversion   or   'indirect   aggression." 

These  other  two  threats  are  noted  as  serious  problems  which  tht 
Eisenhower  administration  will  seek  to  cembat  ih  its  drive  to  ?»ia 
middle  east  tension. 

As  part  of  that  drive.  Ei;,c'nhower  will  also  propose  at  an  unuraal 
Saturday  joint  session  of  the  Senate  and  House  that  Congress  author- 
ize a  two-year  program  of  economic  aid  to  Middle  East  nations, 
starting  next  July. 

The  President  will  go  before  Congress  to  detail  the  proposed 
resolution  at  12:30  p.  m.  EIST. 


Anti-Filibuster  Proposal  Killed 


IN  THE  INFIRMARY 


Students  in  the  Infirmary  yes- 
terday included: 

Riley  Montgomery,  Robert  Lew- 
is, Robert  Perry,  Robert  Gray, 
and  Misses  Kathleen  White,  Ca- 
rolyn Fowler,  Eleanor  Coopwood, 
and  Sara  Williamson. 

Dance  Committee  Court 
Elects  4  New  Members 

Four  new  members  were  elect- 
ed recently  to  three  1-year  .seats 
and  one  6-months  seat  on  the  U.\C 
Danoe  Committee  Court,  accord- 
ing to  Dance  Committee  Chairman 
Donald    Miller. 

Elected  to  l-.vear  seats  were 
Larry  Harris,  junior  from  Char- 
lotte; Pete  Kelly,  junior  from  Sa- 
vannah, da.,  and  George  Wray. 
junior  from  Charlotte. 

Bill  McLean,  senior  from  Lum- 
berton,  was  elected  to  the  6- 
months  seat. 

The  Dance  Committee  Court  is 
composed  of  six  members  elect- 
ed from  the  membership  of  the 
Dance  Committee  by  its  24  mem- 
bers. 

Other  members  of  the  court  are 
Don  Kentopp,  East  Orange.  N.J.. 
chairman:  Bill  Ta.vlor  .Aberdeen: 
and  David  Michaux,  Jacksonville. 
Fla.  ,    _      _    ._ 


WASHINGTON— (.APi— The  Senate  last  night  killed  the  vaove  to 
revise  its  rules  and  make  it  easier  to  break  filibuster.-.-  against  civif 
irghts,  measures  or  other  legislation. 

On  a  roll  call  vote,  the  Senate  tablen  and  thus  rejected  a  Tio 
tion  offered  by  a  bipartisan  bloc  of  31  Senators  to  take  up  for  im- 
mediate consideration  the  adoption  of  ne.v  rules. 

The  vote  to  table  was  55-38.  T«-ent.\ -.xeven  Democrats*  and  2S 
Kepublicans  voted  to  table.  They  were  opposed  by  21  Democrats  and 
"27  Republicans. 

The  tabling  motion  wa.--  made  by  Senate  Democratic  leader  Lyn- 
don John.son  of  Texas  and  had  the  support  of  Sen.  Knowland  o* 
(  alifornia.  the  Republican  leader.  Southern  Senators  also  votctl  al- 
most solidly  in  favor  of  killing  the  rules  p"opo.sal. 

The  vole  followed  si.v  hours  of  debate  'Juring  which  Vice  Presi- 
dent Nixon,  in  an  opinion  hailed  by  supporters  of  Civil  rights  bills, 
said  a  majority  of  the  Senate  can  chiinac  the  chambers  rules  it 
the  start  of  a  new  Congrosj  if  it  wishes  I" 

Defeat  of  the  proposal  was  a  blow  t«<  Senators  who  had  hnpcti 
to  pave  the  way  for  the  enactment  of  civil  rights  bills,  but  som«>  of 
them  said  they  felt  such  legislation  still  cojld  be  passed  in  the  nc\» 
Congress. 

McCarthy  Attacks  Ike  For 'Purge'        . 

WASHINGTON— (AP)— In  a  shai-p  attack  on  Piesident  Ei-er- 
liower.  Sen.  McCarthy  (R-Wis.)  said  Friday  Democratic  control  of  the 
Senate  "ij  the  direct  responsibility  of  a  so-called  Republican  Presi- 
dent." 

McCarthy  said  Republican  failure  to  win  a  majority  of  the  Senate 
last  Novemt>er  was  due  to  what  he  calico  the  "purge""  of  former 
GOP  Sen.  Herman  Welker  of  Idaho,  and  ho  added: 

■"Eisenhower  did  not  do  it  inadvertently.  He  did  it  deliberately. 
He  knew  what  he  was  doing.'" 

He  blametl  Welkers  defeat  on  a  Collier"s  Magazine  article  Oc!. 
26  by  Paul  Hoffman,  a  close  friend  of  Eisenhowers  which  he  said 
described  Welker  as  "a  man  of  dangerous  thinking  and  recklcsi 
conduct." 

McCarthy  said  Hofiman.  whom  he  d^^scribed  as  "a  real  throin- 
back  on  the  human  race  if  ever  there  was  one,"  wrote  that  Welker 
■  had  no  place  in  the  Republican  Party.'" 

"This  would  not  moan  much  if  it  were  only  Mr.  Hoffman  »-a7- 
ing  it.  "  McCarthy  said.  'But  there  was  a  carefully  planned  nevs 
conference  immediately  after,  at  which  President  Eisenhower  placed 
his  stamp  of  approval  on  the  article  attcinpting  to  read  out  of  the 
party  a  man  who  was  fighting  for  his  political  life  as  a  candidate  of 
the  party." 

Suez  Canal  Partially  Unblocked 

EL  FERD.AN,  Egypt— (.\P)— Two  maniiiloth  German  salvage  ves- 
sels gave  a  mighty  pull  Friday  and  cleared  away  a  165-foot  lon^ 
section  of  the  fallen  El  Fordan  Bridge — one  of  the  two  biggest  ob- 
stacles blocking  the  Suez  Canal. 

With  the  huge  .s+iank  of  twi.sted  sleei  out  of  the  way.  only  the 
western  span  of  the  bridge  blocks  the  canal.  There  is  nou-  enough 
room  for  some  ships  to  pass  up  or  down  the  canal  past  the  bridge. 


Coed  Reported  'Doing  Fine' 


A  Carolina  coed  from  West 
Jefferson,  injured  in  a  holiday 
mishap,  was  reported  "'doing  fine" 
.vesterday  in  Wilkes  General  Hos- 
pital. 

Miss  Stella  Anderson,  daught- 
er of  Mr.  and  Mrs.  Ed  Anderson, 
had  been  placed  on  the  critical 
list  following  an  accident  Dec.  23. 

Hospital  officials  said  Miss  An- 
derson  was    in     "fair    condition"" , 
and   was  "much  improved."  ' 

Miss  .\nderson  was  crushed  be- , 
tween  her  car  and  one  driven  by 


Lee  Riddle.  23.  of  North  Wilk^s- 
boro.  Her  car  had  a  flat  tire  anc 
she  was  opening  the  trunk  wher 
the  Riddle  car  crashed  into  hers, 
nearly  severing  her  right  leg. 
which  had  to  be  amputated,  and 
fracturing  her  left  leg,  pelvis  and 
skull. 

Mrs.  P.  G.  Wright,  a  passenger 
in  the  Anderson  car.  sustained 
head  lacerations  but  was  not  hos- 
pitalized. 

Riddle  is  being  held  in  jail  un- 
der SI. 000  bond  pending  the  out- 
come of  Mi«s  Andersons  condition. 


M6I  TWO 


THi  DAILY  TAR  MtlL 


SATURDAY,  JANUARY  5,  1957 


That  Confab  On  Gravitation 
Isn't  Just  Another  Seminar 

Altli<»iiii»li  most  siiKienis  ;iik1  lUfiuhtis  oi  the  5;enfval  }7ubli(  don't 
know  beans  aix>iit  j^ravitauon  ov  phyvus.  ii  is  \er\  good  news  that  the 
rni\t'isitv  will  hi-  the  site  for  an  international  tonfereine  on  lH)tli  those 
siibjet  ts. 

The  livst  uoi  hi  (onteretue  on  "The  Role  *»!  Ciras  itiition  in  Physics" 
to  be.  held  in  the  I'nited  States,  the  "leetino  will  briu^  to  Chapel  Hill 
JO  top- rate  ph>sitisis  IiVhu  the  I'nited  States  and  foreign  lands. 
This,  not  onlv  Tootball  and  has- 


TIME  FOR  EVALUATION: 


Looking  Over  The  New  Year 


ketball  and  the  I'.'L'K  Clnb.  is  pnb- 
liciiv  lor  tlie  L'ni\e<si»y.  It  means 
those  40  physicists  will  »o  hc»nie 
with  rales  to  tell  abont  their  meet- 
ing in  Cliapel  Hill:  it  means  the 
l-niversiiy  will  l>e  spoken  and 
thoi(ji(ht  ol  and  written  alMUit  more 
th»lt>  e\er  befoie  —  alt!»oiii;h  Hot 
<prite  >o  iniuh  as  a\  hen  Charlie 
I  list  it  e  was  Ivete. 

liest    ol    all   are    the   leasons   the 


ited  Caiolinas  expei  intents  alon«> 
piivsital  lines.  It  nuans  the  phvsits 
lacnltv  here  has  been  ret(><j[ni/ed 
as  vomii*  and  energetic  bv  the  rest 
ol  t4>e  s<ieme"s  fellows.  And  it 
me:uis  the  CaiNersitf  has  establish- 
i<l  itsell  .1'  name  lot  its  ( oideienc  e- 
ijoldinn  r'bilitv. 

All  this  does  the  CniNersity  more 
jicrod  than  a  thousand  ordinary 
news  bmeaii  releases.     It     helps  to 


Woody  Sears 

Now  that  the  Christmas  rush 
is  over  and  we've  had  time  to 
make  our  respective  New  Year'.s 
resolutions,  it's  time  to  wonder 
just  what  the  new  year  holds 
in  store  tor  us. 

And  i,  is  something  to  wonder 
about,  for  so  many  things  are 
happening  now  that  threaten  to 
change  our  lives   dra.stically. 

With  things  having  quieted 
down  some  on  the  Hungarian 
scene,  there  are  -still  many  prob- 
lems to  be  rcsalved  there.  And 
on    the    Egyptian    front,    things 


are  iar  from  normal.  For  awhile. 
thing.v  looked  mighty  bleak,  and 
though  they  now  look  raiich  ros- 
ier, ^here  is  still  the  element  of 
doubt. 

Will  there  be  a  World  War  HI 
and  will  it  come  this  year?  With 
an  abundance  of  optiinism.  our 
leaders  say  that  it  won't  happen, 
but  we  never  know.  We  can  just 
hope  and  pray  that  it  doesn't. 

It's  a  time  to  stop  and  evaluate 
our  way  of  life,  and  be  truly 
thankful  for  it.  And  while  we're 
evaluating,  let's  take  a  look  a 
'"'little  closer  to  the  Carolina  home 
front.  • 


The  Supreme  Court  has  ruled 
that  segregation  on  public  car- 
riers is  in  violation  of  their 
emanicipation  program.  This  has 
brought  the  kind  of  trouble  that 
many  segregationists  have  been 
promising  since  the  i.ssue  become 
one  of  concern. 

\  This  trouble  is  the  sniping  at 
citizens  done  by  over-zealous 
segregations  (we  assume)  down 
in  the  nether  regions  of  the 
Southland.  It  would  seem  that 
those  folks  are  putting  a  little 
too  much  emphasis  on  the  seating 
arrangement    in    the    buses. 


'Oh,  You  Mean  THAT  Salvage  Job' 


(onleieiKe  (onnuilieeehose  Chapel       erase    the    beliel    in    many   peoples 


Hill: 

1.  Kstabtishment  oi 
time-"4ia\  itation  projeet 
l'ni\ersit\    people. 

2.  I  he  ■■vou]);.^  and 
phvsiei  l;vnhv  at   Chapel   Hill." 

;.     The    "tndv    excellent    («>n- 
fereiue    huilities"    heie. 

This  means  the  world  has  not- 


a     spaee- 
here    by 

ener'^etic 


ninds  th.tt  this  is  nothin,<>  more 
than  a  (onntrv  tinb  and  a  haven 
lot    adolesteni    ah  (>h<»li(S. 

C^<wigTatid;-.'tions  to  the  Ciii\ersity 
lor  |i»ettiti»4  itsell  pit  ked  as  the  eon- 
teience  site.  .\ntl  a  bimeh  ol  roses 
10  om-  "vtHini;  atul  ener<.»eti< "'  phvs- 
ies  ladiltv  that  will  be  host  lor  the 
meetin;;. 


Shame   In   The   Libraries 


i  he  North  Caiolina  Ceneral 
A»embl\  should  be  ihorou^hh 
ashamed  (»l  itself.    Hm  it  probablv 

rhe  shame  shoidrl  (ome  fiom 
the  reeentlv  -  reteased  hu  t  that 
C;  rolinas  Wilstm  I.ibrarv  has 
started  slinoin*;  in  rank  with  other 
Soiuhcrn   libraries. 

Jt  used  to  be  first  in  si/e.  rhi> 
vear  it  is  thiid.  Next  vear  it  pr(»ba- 
blv   will   be  e\en   lower. 

The  Cener.al  .Vssend>b  .M>pr(M>- 
liates  monev  for  the  I'nixersity. 
Kor  this  tw.)-ve.n'  period  the  le'j;- 
islatois.  many  ol  ihem  Carolina 
alii'nni.  cut  ih<-  I 'lii\e>siivs  libra- 
r\  bnd'^et  in  h;  !f.  That  left  about 
enonjih  to  tmi  the  librarv.  \eiv  lit- 
tle with  whith  to  buv  Inwiks  lor 
hmt.^rv  student  min<ls. 

The  1  .eL»is!atint»s  sli-iti^hler  was 
an  a<  t  of  i)ure  idiot  v.  Um  the  lei»- 
islaiors  don  I  seiiii  to  mind  at  all. 
\'er^-  few  eiti/ens  oj  this  srafe**t  iiss- 
td  the  (ieneial  Asseniblv  ocu  lor 
tintinji  the  I.ilnaiv  fimds:  e\erv- 
one  seemed  to  feel  the  state's  solons 
werr  wisf  in  (intin;.^  where  tlu'\ 
could. 

lor  \ears  now  the  state  Leijisla- 
tnre  has  luen  unjjiii  to  C.art>lina. 
\erv  lair  to  X.  C.  Stale  Colleuc 
when  it  tame  at^r>nnd  to  m(»ne\. 
For  vears  now  the  I.ej;islatine  has 
4«>t  awa\  .;vilh  it. 


The  Daily  Tar  Heel 

The  official  iludent  publication  of  tbe 
Publications  Board  of  the  University  of 
North  Carolina,  where  it  is  published 
daily  except  Monday  and  examinatiot 
«nd  vacation  periods  and  summer  term* 
Entered  s*.*;  .second  class  matter  in  th« 
o.^st  office  in  Chapel  Hill.  N.  C,  undet 
the  .\ct  01  -March  8.  1870.  Subscription 
rates  mailed.  S4  per  year,  S2  50  a  semes 
ter:  delivered.  S6  a  year.  $3.50  a  »eine< 
ter. 


Editor  1. 

FRED  POWLEDGE 

Managing  Editor    .. 

__  CHARLIE  SLOAN 

News  Editor       

NANCY  HILL 

Business  Manager 

BILL  BOB  PLEl 

Sports  Editor    .    , 

LARRY  CHEEK 

Subscription  Manager  ..    Dale  Staley 

Advertising  Manager  Fred  Katzin 

Circulation  .Manager  _   Charlie  Holt 


NEWS  STAFF— Clarke  Jones.  Ray  Link- 
er, Joan  .Moore.  Pringle  Pipkin.  Anne 
Drake^Edith  .MacKinnon,  Wally  Kuralt. 
Mary  Alys  Voorhees,  Gi^ham  Snyder, 
Billy  Barnes.  Neil  Bass.  Gary  Nichols, 
Page  Bernstein,  Peg  Humphrey,  PhyllU 
Maultsby. 


BUSINESS  STAFF— Rosa  Moore,  Johnny 
Whitaker,  Dick  Leavitt,  Dick  Sirkin. 


SPORTS  STAFF:  Bill  King,  Jim  Purks, 
Jimmy  Harper.  Dave  Wible,  Charlej 
Howson. 


EDITORIAL  STAFF  —  Wocdy  Sears, 
Frank  Crowther,  Barry  Winston,  David 
Mundy,  George  Pfingst,  Ingrid  Clay. 
Cortland  Edwards,  Paul  McCauIey. 
Bobhi  Smith. 


Staff  Photographer Norman  Kantor 

Librarian    _ Sue  Gi«hner 


lint  now  that  the  Cniveisity  I.i- 
brarv has  been  publielv  ranked 
third  in  the  .South,  some  people 
should  st;ri  to  (piestion  the  peo- 
ple who  made  it  that  way.  .-; 

Its  not  the  I.ibiarvs  standinu; 
that  bt)thers  us:  its  the  fact  that 
ue  have  only  8^1.119  volumes 
and  that  Duke  Cniversitv  and  the 
Cnixeisitv  ol  I  evas  ha\e  far  mote 
l><M>ks. 

.\ppiop] ration  time  is  et)minf; 
-:  (»tnul  in  a  month  (M  so.  It  will 
be  interestinjj  to  watt  h  the  l.e<>is- 
lature  and  see  whether  I'.NC's 
l.ibraiy  will  <;roA\  as  it  should  or 
sink  eren  lower.  • 

Square  Off, 
Gentlemen, 


There  are  a  lot  of  folks  around 
who  don't  cotton  to  the  idea  of 
integration,  but  shooting  at  help- 
less people  is  not  the  best  way  to 
cope  with  the  problem.  More 
than  likely,  it's  the  worst  way. 

Will  1957  be  a  Happy  New 
Year  for  the  Carolinas,""  or  will 
it  be  a  year  of  horror? 

As  the  evangelists  say.  ''The 
hour  of  decision  is  at  hand". 

Old  Coached    ' 
Fade  Away 

Editor: 

Lets  face  facts.  Carolina  has 
never  and  will  never  have  an 
outstanding  team  in  any  major 
sport  as  long  as  the  present  ad- 
ministration is  in  power.  This 
has  never  been  more  evident 
than  it  is  today. 

When  a  coach  becomes  too  suc- 
cessful, there  are  those  who  be- 
come resentful,  and  the  screws 
are  applied.  The  latest  to  feel 
the  pinch  is  Frank  McGuire. 
^  Five  .years  ago,  Carolina's  bas- 
ketball team  was  the  doormat  of 
the  conference.  Today,  they  are 
the  number  tw^  team  in  the  na- 
tion. What  thanks  does  Mr.  Mc- 
Guire get?  HivS  budget  is  cut.  and 
all  for  the  football  team,  the  futil- 
ist  of  the  futile. 

Mr.  McGuire.  you  are  a  great 
coach.  Believe  me,  there  are 
many  more  who  are  just  as  dis- 
gusted with  the  turn  of  events 
as  you.  The  smartest  move  that 
you  c.^uld  make  would  be  to 
get  away  from  this  coaches  grave- 
yard and  move  "on  to  a  .school 
which  has  an  athletic  department 
of  the  same  calibre  as  your 
teams. 

Here,  you  will  only  get  a  lot 
of  talk  and  not  much  action,  just 
as  did  the  fans  who  were  conned 
into  buying  last  seasons  football 
tickets.  You  won't  get  your  new 
gymnasium,  and  soon  you  will 
go  the  way  of  Carl  Snaveley  and 
all  of   the  rest. 

Oh   yes.   and   Mr.  Tatum.   take 
heed.  Your  day  will  come  too. 
Name  Withheld   by   Request 


PROSPECT  &  RETROSPECT: 


•ly  ^  V' 


ittL 


..  ■  -     ■»*>*:    '*^:- 


And  Fight        Athletic  Heads  Have  No  Comment 


Sight  Editor 
Proof  R«aa*r 


Ray  Linker 
Gary  Nictiols 


We  hate  to  talk  abont  ouisebes. 
but  e\ei\  once  in  a  while  Hailv 
Tar  Heel  staffers  ;4er  real  non- 
(oidorniist. 

Ueinji  insane  enoHi^h  to  work  on 
a  ne^vsjiaper.  thev  naturalh  <;el  in- 
to troid>le  (piiie  often. 

IWn  two  of  them,  staff  writers 
Neil  (Polities)  Bass  and  C(»rtland 
(R.eli;i>ion)  Kdw;tt(ls.  ha\e  a  fracas 
j;oin|4  ihai  is  worth  (ommeinini" 
on. 

li.iss.  who  also  .  is  jjresident  ol 
r»atlle-\aiue-Petti.nrew  Hormitorv. 
is  an;4r\  at  Kdwaids.  who  also  is 
editoi  ol  the  dointilorv's  news- 
paper. Bass  asked  Kdwards  to  edit 
the  paper.  Kdwaids  i-.-^reed.  Now 
Kdwartls  has  written  a  |)rettv  vio- 
lent editoiial  (hai^in'4  Bass  with 
ijetlinj;  himself  elected  by  tnifair 
means. 

A  recc'in  move  was  a  statement 
bv   Bass  that: 

"I  dec  ided  against  brinji^inn  suit 
.  -ainst  Cort  l>eh>re  our  student' 
jndiiiaiy  for  his  libelous  editoiial 
because,  luiiii^  in  newspaper  work 
mvself.  I  respect  his  ri«;ht  to  voice 
his  own   opinion. 

Kor<:etlin;4  aboiU  who's  ii.«>ht 
and  who's  ufon;.;.  thete  is  some- 
thing alxnn  this  mattei  that  both- 
ers us: 

II  Bass  is  riiiht  and  Kdwards  is 
"uiliv  ol  pimin'4  libel,  then  Bass 
has  to  tmn  Kdwaifls  in  to  the 
Men's  llonoiCloimcil— Bass'  j>led<ie 
to  uphold  the  Honor  .Systein  de- 
mands th:  :   he   must   dt)   so. 

If  Bass  is  rii'ht  alnun  the  libel, 
and  if  he  doesn't  turn  KdwarcLs 
in.  then  someone  nurst  turn  in 
Bass  for  not  tiniiin<>  iik  Kdwards 
foi    breakiijj;    the    titles. 

But  if  Bass  doesn't  turn  Kdwaids 
in.  and  Bass  doesn't  turn  himself 
in.  and  no  one  else  tiniis  Bass  in. 
then  whoever  shoidd  ha\e  tinned 
Bass  in  should  turn  hinrself  in.  If 
he  doesn't,  then  somecme  elser 
should  ttnii  him  in. 

And  so  on. 

Mayl»e  thisdeser\es  a  judiiial  in- 
terpretation by  the  honcn  coiinciU. 
())  maybe  it  woidd  be  better  if 
writers  Bass  and  Kdwards  squared 
off.  armed  with  (()pyj)encils.  and 
dueled  it  tun.  ^« 

Or.  mavbe,  Linotype  slugs  at  f,o 
paces. 


Neil  Bass 

.\thletic  Director  Chuck  Erick- 
son  had  "no  comment'  to  make 
concerning  the  reputed  rift  be- 
tween Coaches  Frank  McGuire 
and  Jim  Tatum  when  questioneji 
Thursday. 

Erickson,  who  dismi.ssed  any 
conversation  with  this  reporter 
very  hastily  by  saying  he  had 
just  "brisked  in  from  Miami" 
and  needed  a  breathing  spell, 
said  he  had  not  read  reports  of 
the   rift. 

This  statement  from  Erickson, 
coupled  wit'a  a  statement  by  Mr. 
Charles  Shaffer  of  the  Educa- 
tional Foundation,  autonomous 
fund-raising  organization  which 
apprjprialL'.s  money  for  athletic 
scholarships,  that  his  orga'niza- 
ti  n  had  no  control  whatsoever 
over  the  athletic  director  makes 
some  wonder  if  Erickson  is  the 
pitching,  driving  athletic  head 
that  UNC  needs.  It  also  raises 
the    question    as    to    whether    or 


not  projjer  control  from  proper 
authority — student  and  admini- 
.stration — is  being  exerted  on 
Erickson  t  1  keep  him  in  line. 

Shaffer's  taking  over  the  purse- 
ccmtrolling  Educational  Founda- 
tion's secretary's  post  from  pro- 
McC.uire  Frank  Hogan  is  an  in- 
dication of  the  current  trend  to- 
ward   Tatumian    policies. 

.And  with  Director  Erickson  in 
the  financial  driver's  seal  at 
Woollen — an  admitted  devotee  of 
Tatum — is  it  not  conceivable  that 
he  might  become  a  puppet  for 
the  man  in  the  grey  felt  hat? 

It  was  evident  that  the  .Ath- 
letic Dept.  made  no  arrange- 
ments for  procurement  of  tickets 
to  the  basketball  team's  games 
on  the  New  York  trip,  the  same 
trip  fur  which  the  Carolina  dele- 
gation was  financially  trimmed 
by   athletic    officialdom. 

.An  interested  student  helped 
proctire  tickets  with;tut  sanction 
from    the    athletic    folks. 

We're   not   trying   to   rack    the 


muck  or  rabble-rou.se;  but  we  do 
feel  that  the  Dixie  Classic  cham- 
pion and  the  No.  2  team  in  the 
nation  deserves  at  least  50-50  at- 
tention along  with  the  football 
team  when  Woollen  purse  strings 
come  into  play. 

Wed  also  like  to  hear  what 
"breathle.ss"  Miami  Traveller 
Erickson  has  to  .say  about  the 
purported  riff. 

While  on  the  subject  of  ath- 
letics, perhaps  a  comment  should 
be  made  on  the  current  relation- 
ship between  athletics  and  scho- 
lastics. 

As  the  News  ^nd  Observer 
pointed  out  Thur.sday.  when  it 
requires  practically  all  of  the 
Consolidated  University  presi- 
dent's time  investigating  the  N.C 
State  "bribe"  episode,  isn't  the 
"tail  wagginii  the  dog?" 

That  is  to  say,  athletics  are  an 
imp  rt:int  part  of  an  educational 
institution;  but  certainly  its  main 
function,  by  virtue  of  it^s  name 
alone,  is  education  of  aur  nation's 


youth — preparation  for  u.seful 
citizenship. 

We  are  not  a.sking  for  de-em- 
phasization.  Athletic  competition 
and  good  sportsmanship  are  cer- 
tainly preparation  lor  useful 
citizenship. 

But  as  the  News  and  Observer 
.says.  "Let's  put  first  things  first!" 

The  University  student  who 
played  cross-burner  for  the  bene- 
fit of  Dr.  t^ank  P.  Graham  cer- 
tainly had   his  wires  crossed. 

Not  only  is  a  man  of.  Dr. 
Franks  tolerant  nature  vitally 
needed  in  his  United  Nations 
advi.sory  capacity,  but  he  is 
completely  harmless  to  both 
white  supremacists  helpless  to 
integrationalists. 

As  a  matter  of  fact,  the  Unit- 
ed Nations,  while  idealistically 
superb,  is  apparently  harmless 
to  everyb'Kl.v, 

That  is  to  say.  now  aren't  the 
aggre.s.sion  upon  Hungary,  for 
which  the  U.  N.  has  done  noth- 
ing shades  of  Mussolini.  Ethi- 
opia and  the  League  of  Nations? 


Pogo 


By  Walt  Kelly 


Wgl,l„tHg 
I  CAN'T  BgACW 


souow 


YOU  Said  It: 


Reader  Comments? 
On  Killing  Dogs 

Editor: 

I  am  not  oversentimental  about   animals.    AJ--  ~ 
though  I  believe  that  the  variety  of  nature  ough;: .,  . 
to  be  preserved   and  regret  such  evils  as  the  ^- 
tinction  of  our  own  Carolina  parakeet,  my  feelings' 
about  the  larger  animals   are   limited  to  this  con*  " 
cem  for  the  preservation  of  the  species- 

The  predatory  ones  also  should  be  encouraged  '• 
in  suitable  surroundings.  It  is  natural  for  the  wolf 
and  the  panther  to  kill  deer,  and  it  is  foolish  to"" 
denounce  them  for  it. 

I   sometimes   hunt    small    game,    and    enjoy   it. 
Hunting,   if    properly  regulated,   stimulates   an   in*-- 
terest  in   the  preservation   of  nature   in    a  region 
densely  settled  by  man.  It  is  the  lack  of  regulation   '■ 
and  education  that  has  led  to  tragedies  in  the  paijt    - 

In  addition  to  hunting  wild  game,  I  have  helped 
to  butcher  hogs,  and  have  killed  my  share  of  chick-'  . 
ens.  I  do  not  make  pets  of  that  sort  of  livestock.  .  . 

When  it  com'es  to  killing  dogs,  by  which  I  mean--" 
killing  domesticated  dogs  that  have  in  some  manner  .. 
known  the  companionship  of  man,  my  feelings  are  ■•• 
not  as  simple.  Dogs  ought  to  be  controlled  by  their  ... 
owners,  and  where  dogs  run  wild,  men  and  women 
are  to  be  blamed  for  the  conditions  of  the  dogs. 

Dogs  ought  not  to  be  let  go  wild,  because  they 
are  not  a  part  of  nature  on  this  continent,  and  tO:-.. 
that  extent  I  can  agree  with  H.  Mack  Owens,  who 
wTote  about  the  subject  in  the  December  issue  of 
"Wildlife  in  North  Carolina." 

However,  I  would  not  care  for  the  task  of  shooi-.  •• 
ing  dogs.  In  particular,  I  would  not  care  for  it  where 
the  dog  is  obviously  very  well  domesticated,  and  i^ 
probably  the  property  of  some  child  who  knows 
little  and  understaneis  less  of  the  dog  confinemer.t 
laws,  or  is  unable  to  obey  them  because  of  a  lack 
of  help  from  the  child's  father  and  mother. 

The  hangman  was  never  a  popular  figure  in  - 
any  society  that  I  have  read  of.  His  is  a  profession 
that  few  men  envy,  and  many  there  are  who  care 
not  for  his  companionship.  In  the  minds  of  boy.s 
and  of  thoughtful  men,  the  dog  catcher  shares  the 
profession  and  the  pyersonality  of  the  hangman.  BotlL 
are  hired  killers  of  helpless  creatures,  profiting  fronr 
the  deaths  of  beings  who  in  most  cases  have  in! 
no  way  offended  them. 

The  afternoon  of  Dec.    10 as  I  walked. 

from  Venable  Hall  across  the  campus  towards  the* 
Post  Office,  I  saw  the  same  thing  described  i;y 
Stan  Shaw  in  Dec.  12th's  Daily  Tar  Heel.  A  small 
gathering  of  dogs  and  people  were  watching  a  fel- 
low who  was  dragging  off  a  good-sized  black  dog 
by  means  of  some  sort  of  noose  about  the  dog's 
throat. 

By  the  time  I  talked  over  there,  he  was  back 
after  the  small  white  one  that  he  had  killed.  He  had 
shot  her.  and  somewhere  there  on  the  grass  by  the 
Caldwell  monument,  in  the  shadow  of  the  Davie 
Popular,  not  far  from  the  place  where  the  Unive.- 
siiy  holds  its  outdoor  concert  in  the  springtime,  she 
had  bled  out  her  officially  unwanted  life. 

It  seems  to  me  that  if  there  are  dogs  to  he 
destroyed,  that  is  hardly  the  place  for  it.  To  kill  one 
there  under  the  trees  between  Person  Hall  and 
the'  Morehead  building  is  a  little  loo  much  like 
shooting  a  man  in  church.  Although  executions  of 
men  are  sometimes  necessary,  they  are  not  usually 
carried  out  in  a  school  yard. 

I  recall  looking  with  some  interest  at  a  hang- 
man's tree  near  an  old  mining  camp  in  Arizona,  but 
my  feeling  is  that  the  Davie  Poplar  would  not  be 
properly  used  as  a  hangman's  tree,  and  that  the  lawn 
nearby  ought  not  to  be  used  for  the  shooting  of 
dogs. 

Aside  from  the  inappropriateness  of  the  setting, 
there  are  a  couple  of  other  points  on  which  I  wou'd 
like  information.  Docs  the  law  make  any  provision 
for  confining  dogs  before  their  killing,  and  what  is 
the  official  attitude  towards  shooting  on  the  campua? 
With  every  Dick  Tracy  of  the  dog-killing  squad 
out  blasting  holes  in  the  lawn,  is  there  not  some 
danger  of  losing  a  few  students  and   professors  to 
stray  bullets?  The  nature  of  a  man  is  such  that  when 
he  finds  himself  living  in  a  continual  gunfire,  he 
seeks  weapons  for  himself.  If  the  men  students  take 
to  wealing  Bowie  knives  and  44  caliber  Peicem bik- 
ers, will  the  adi5ini>tration  object?  *_ 
Loose  dogs  do  not  fit  very  well  into  the  a^ft^ 
of  mechanized    bureaucracy,   but  they  do  serve  asT 
reminders  that  sOme  of  the  rest   of  us  do  not  fit> 
very  well,  either.  Rebellious  Hungarians  do  not  l;f 
and  neither  do  believers  in  the  traditional  American 
form  of  government. 

1  recall  several  pleasant  visits  to  Clinton.  Ten- 
nessee, where  I  sometimes  went  with  friends  to 
look  for  a  good  dinner  served  family  style  at  trie 
little  Park  Hotel,  which  belonged  to  a  level  of  civi- 
lization that  the  '".Atomic  City"  has  not  yet  achieved. 
1  have  no  great  desire  at  this  moment  to  go 
back  to  work  on  a  government  research  project,  and 
it  is  probably  just  as  well  that  I  do  not,  because  1 
should  not  care  to  feel  like  a  traitor  every  time  the 
secret  police  came  to  drag  away  a  few  of  the  ne»g!!i 
bors,  as  they  have  been  doing  in  Clinton  lately,  to 
charge  them  with  impeaing  the  approach  of  the 
great  High  Yellow  Milleiiium. 

What  decent  man  will  be  able  to  w^atch  the 
coming  schedule  of  mass  arrests  and  trials  without 
jury,  already  beginning  in  Tennessee,  without  des- 
pising the  tyranny  of  Washington?  There  is  a  close 
parallel  between  the  demands  of  Soviet  satellite 
student.^  for  classes  in  their  own  languages  and  the 
demands  of  Southerners  for  the  right  to  live  out 
their  lives  among  their  own  people. 

Who  will  be  abie  to  watch  the  local  traitors  be- 
traying their  own  stale  for  the  sake  of  an  alien  fad 
or  a  political  favor,  without  wanting  to  go  home 
after  his  gun? 

-  How  many  will  cringe  at  home  when  the  grand- 
fathers, mothers,  and  little  brothers  of  their  frient^s 
are  dragged  away  by  the  secret  police,  and  when 
children  assembled  in  a  schoolroom  are  threatentd, 
as  they  have  been  threatened  in, Tennessee,  that  the 
all-powerful  Federal  Bureau  of  the  Eyeballs  is 
watching  them?  *  * 

How  many,  at  least  '.n  the  South  and  the  West^ 
will  not  wait  cowering  in  the  dark  for  the  knoc^:  on 
the  door,  but  will  choose  to  die  under  the  polii'cai 
giuis  in  the  broad  light  of  day,  as  the  Hungarians 
died  in  Budapesi,  or  as  the  dog  died  under  the  Davie 
Poplar? 

J»hn  M.  Ruth    - 


SATt 

Gi 
S 


A 

problj 
beinf 
pin^ 
sociol 

Frc 
to  del 
be  d< 
dents] 
servi< 
cental 
ingAc 

"•TH 
re  pur 
deter 
in  rel 
marr^ 

.At 
Chaii 
fair?5 
quest! 
in   D^ 
third 
their 
line  f| 
was 
woult 
time 
ceive | 
uary. 
so  de^ 
tionnj 


SATURDAY,  JANUARY  5,  lf57 


THi  DAILY  TAR  HRBL 


PAGE  THREE 


■^-  Graduate  Sociologists 
)nt5?  Study  Marriage  Here 
gs 


iials.    Ai- 
re (HighJ,, 
the  (if- 

feelings' 
this  con*  ■ 

jcouraged  ' 

the  wolf 

foolish  to" 

enjoy    if. 
■s   an    in* 
a   region 
egulation 
the  past 
ve  helpcij 
of  chick-  ' 
estock.  . 
h  I  meaA" 
e  manner 
lings  art?' 

by  their  . 
d  women 

dogs, 
iuse  they 
t.  and  to. 
t-ns.  ^-bo 

issue  of  - 


of  shoot'.  ■ 

It  where 
and  i^ 
10  knows 
ifinement' 
of  a  lack 
cr 

figure   i»- 
irofessiori'  ' 
who  care-"- 
;   of  hoys 
hares  the 

an.  BotiL 
ting  fronr 

have   in 

I  walked. 

ards  the* 
;ribed    cy 

A  small 
ing  a  fol- 
>lack  dog 
the  dog"s 

was  back 
a.  He  had 
.<s  by  the 
he  Davie 
e  Unive."- 
;time,  she 

gs  to  bt 
u  kill  one 
Hall  and 
Hich  like 
utions  of 
t  usually 

t  a  hang- 
izona,  but 
Id  not  be 
:  the  lawn 
looting  of 

le  setting, 
h  1  wou*d 

provision 
id  what  is 
e  campaaV 
ing  squad 

not  some 
ifessors  to 
that  when 
unfire,  he 
dents  take 
Peaceni  'k- 

0  the  a^^ 

1  serve  as^. 
io  not  fitr 
lo  not  1;^ 
American 

iton.  Ten- 
friends  to 
►ie  at  tile 
el  of  civi- 

achievcd. 
ent  to  go 
roject.  and 

because  1 
time  the 
the  ne'.g^ 

lately,  to 
rh   of  the 

watch  the 
is  without 
thout  id- 
is  a  cJoie 
t  satellite 
s  and  the 
I  live   out 

raitors  be- 

i  alien  fad 

go   honriC 

the  grand- 
fir  friends 
and  when 
hreatcntd. 
t,  that  the 
lyebalis   is 

the  West^ 
knock  en 

le  polii'cal 

[ungariaos 

the  Davie 

M    Ruth     - 


By    PRiNGLE    PIPKIN 

A  comprehensive  study  of  the 
problems  of  married  students  is 
being  conducted  Iv  Kenneth  Top- 
ping and  Thomas  Gillette,  graduate 
sociology  students. 

From  the  report  Topping  hopes 
to  determine  what  services  should 
be  developed  for  the  married  stu 
dents  such  as  a  marriage  counse' 
service  and  to  establish  the  per 
centage  of  married  students  work- 
in^or  the  University. 

"The  eventual  purpose  of  the 
report  is  to  help  the  University 
determine  the  role  it  should  take 
in  regards  to  the  problems  of  the 
married  students,"  said  Topping. 

At  the  request  of  W.  D.  Perry, 
Chairman,  Division  of  Student  Af 
fairs,  the  researchers  mailed  1,420 
questionaires  to  married'  students 
in  December.  At  present  about  a 
third  of  the  students  have  returned 
their  forms.  Originally  the  deauT 
line  for  sending  the  questionnaires 
was  Dvc.  19,  but  Topping  said  he 
would  give  the  students  extended 
time  and  would  be  happy  to  re- 
ceive questionnaires  durin-g  Jan- 
uary. Also,  he  said  that  student"- 
so  desiring  may  turn  in  their  ques- 
tionnaires    without     attaching     a 

FACULTY  CLUB 

Professor  Albert  Coates  will 
speak  at  the  Faculty  Club  lunch- 
eon Tuesday  at  1  p.m.  at  the  Caro- 
lina Inn.  Coates'  topic  will  be  "The 
Institute  of  Government  in  the  New 
Building.' 


n^une  to  th^n.  Any  married  stu- 
dent who  did  not  receive  a  giicir 
tionnaire  should  send  a  card  to 
Topping  Alumni  Bldg. 

A  memorandura  from  Perry  says 
of  the  study,  "this  study  was  deem- 
ed  necessary  because  it  has   be 
come   apparent    that  the  married 
student  in  significant  numbers  is 
here  to  stay  and  that  the  problem 
must  be  dealt  with  on  a  long-t«tfiii 
planning  basis.  In  addition  to  gatn- 
^  ering  certain  statistical  data  about 
{ married  students  and  their  famili- 
i  es,  this  study  will  explore  the  lol- 
I  lowing  areas,  among  glhers:  1)  Edu- 
I  cational   and   occupational     go^.k; 
1 2)  Socio-economic  background;  A) 
I  Housing,  condition  of  current  liv 
j  ing  quarters,  satisfaction  with  tiie 
I  current   living  quarters,   attitudes 
I  relating   to  Victory   Village,   sug 
j  gestions  for  married  student  holla- 
ing;  4)  The  source   and  distribu- 
I  tion  of  income;  and  5)  The  emplo>- 
I  ment  of  the  spouse  and  its  relation 
I  to  the  role  of  the  student.  The  i  c- 
I  suits  of  this  study   should  be   of 
tremendous     aid  in     determining 
long-term  planning." 

To  his  knowIe4ge  this  is  the 
first  study  of  this  type  done  on 
such  a  large  scale  both  at  the  Uni- 
versity and  in  the  United  State&. 
At  present  the  researchers  do  not 
plan  to  publih  their  report  in  <• 
book. 

Gillette  plans  to  use  part  of  the 
report  to  be  completed  in  early 
March  in  carrying  on  doctoral  re- 
search; Topping  will  use  some  of 
the  study  in-working  for  his  mas 
ters. 


QnCinfos 


Mth 
M^Sholman 


(Author  of  "Barefoot  Boy  WitX  Chttk,"  ttt.) 


S03IE  MORE 
LITTLE  STORIES  WITH  BIG  iMORALS 

First  Little  Story 

Once  upon  a  time  there  wa.s  an  Indian  brave  named 
Running  Bear  who  had  a  .squaw  named  Gigglinlr  Water. 
Giggling  Water  wa.s  .sort  of  a  mess,  but  she  sure  could 
make  beaded  mocca.sins.  Every  day  she  whipped  up  a 
brand-new  pair  of  beaded  moccasins  for  Running  Bear 
which  were  so  gorgeous  that  all  the  Indian  maid.s  on  the 
re.seivation  grew  giddy  with  admiration. 

Well  sir.  Giggling  Water  got  livid  about  all  the  girls 
making  goo-goo  eyes  at  Running  Bear,  and  one  night  she 
told  him  .so.  Then  he  got  livid  too,  and  they  had  a  terrible 
rumble,  and  he  !«iapped  her  on  the  wrist,  and  she  .started 
crying  like  crazy  and  moved  out  of  the  wigwam  and 
went  home  to  her  mother  and  never  came  back. 

"Good  riddance!"  said  Running  Bear,  but  he  soon 
found  out  how  wrong  he  was,  for  the  Indian  maids  were 
not  really  interested  in  him,  only  in  his  moccasinH,  and 
when  he  stopped  showing  up  with  a  new  pair  every  day. 
they  quickly  gave  him  the  yo-heave-ho.  and  today  he  is 
a  broken  man,  sitting  all  alone  in  his  tepee  and  muttering 
ancient  Ute  cur.ses. 

MORAL:  Don't  fight  the  hand  that  beads  j/ou.    / 


'/Sl^^^ 


i^_U<i^e^^^i<fM  t^ke  tMlYiif(>  chu/fi 


^cond  Little  Story 

Once  upon  «  time  there  wa.s  a  sweet  old  gentleman 
named  Nathan  who  ran  a  tobacco  counter  at  a  large 
American  university.  All  of  the  students  loved  him 
dearly,  and  they  used  to  come  over  whenever  they  could 
to  buy  Philip  Morris  Cigarettes  and  chat  with  Nathan, 
both  of  which  were  highly  satisfactory  pursuits.  The 
Philip  Morriaee  were  highly  satisfactory  because  they 
are  full  of  natural  goodness  that  is  friendly  and  humane 
and  soothing  and  no  small  consolation  in  this  strife- 
ridden  world  of  ours.  Nathan,  like  Philip  Morris,  was 
also  fuH  of  natural  goodness  that  was  friendly  and 
humane  and  all  like  that. 

Well  sir,  the  students  smoked  Philip  Morris  and 
yocked  with  Nathan,  and  everything  was  lovely.  Then 
one  day  the  university  decided  to  fire  Nathan  and  put 
in  a  cigarette  vending  machine  instead. 

Well  sir,  the  students  did  not  take  that  lying  down, 
you  may  be  sure!  They  organized  a  monster  rally  and 
went  over  to  prexy's  house  and  made  fiery  speeches  about 
good  old  Nathan  and  how  they  loved  him. 

Well  sir,  prexy  was  no  fool,  and  when  he  saw  how 
heartbroken  the  .students  would  be  if  Nathan  went,  he 
decided  that  the  wisest  course  was  to  keep  Nathan  and 
cancel  the  cigarette  vending  machine.  This  he  did,  and 
they  all  lived  happily  ever  after. 

MORAL:  Better  Nate  than  lever. 

Third  Little  Story 

Once  there  was  a  lion,  which  was  a  very  quiet  H«n. 
In  fact,  the  only  time  it  ever  made  a  sound  was  when 
it  had  a  toothache. 

MORAL:  When  it  pains,  it  roars,  ^ 

•  Max  ShutaDU.  IMC 

FhUif  MmriU,  n>ou*or  of  thu  emlumn,  wtM  Uhm  to  pobti  m 
moral  too:  ISolking  ventured,  nothing  gained.  Trjr  a  pack 
of  Philip  MorrU,  and  toin  yourtelf  a  heap  of  pleasurat 


Medical   Fraternity 
Organizes  Lectureship 


AiyPi  Plediges 
Are  Presented 
At  Darke 

The  Pine  Room  of  the  Carolina 
Inn  was  the  setting  last  night  for 
the  Alpha  Delta  Pi  Sorority  An- 
nual Pledge  Dance  whieh  featured 
the  music  of  Jim  Crisp  and  his 
orchestra  from  Durham. 

Ray  Jefferies,  assistant  to  the 
dean  of  student  affairs,  was  master 
of  ceremonies. 

The  highlight  of  the  evening 
came  with  the  preseiitation  of  the 
1956  Pledge  Class. 

Led  by  •  Pledge  Class  President 
M<^  Adams  of  Wilmington,  who 
was  escorted  by  Jerry  Sowers  of  J  scholastic   society.   Election   as   a 
High  Point,  the  pledges  came  out    junior  is  one  of  the  highest  hon- 


An  annual  memorial  lecture- 
ship, to  he  called  the  Adam  T. 
Thorp  III  -  Alpha  Omega  Alpha 
Lecture,  is  being  organized  by  the 
Gamma  Chapter  of  AOA  of  the 
University  Scho(^  of  Medicine. 

The  lecture  will  be  a  memorial 
to  Adam  T.  "Skeets"  Thorp  III  of 
Rocky  Mount,  who  was  killed  in 
an  automobile  accident  late  last 
summer  at  the  age  of  seven. 

Dr.  Adam  T.  Thorp  II,  Skeet's 
father,  was  graduated  from  the 
UNC  School  of  Medicine  last 
June.  He  was  elected  in  his  junior 
year  to  membership  in  the  AOA, 
which    is    an    honorary    medical 


on  a  platform  when  their  names 
were  announced. 

Dressed  in  white  gowns  and 
carrying  nosegays  of  white  carna- 
tions tied  with  blue  ribbon,  the 
pledges  walked  under  the  arch- 
way and  down  the  steps  where 
they  were  met  by  their  dates. 

For  the  figure  .the  couples  form- 
ed an  ADPi  diamond.  Afterwards 
a  dance  was  held  in  their  honor, 
during  which  time  ADPi  charm 
nec)claces  were  presented  to 
them  on  silver  trays. 

Other  pledge  class  officers  to 
he  introduced  were  Secretary 
Margaret  Sherrod  of  Enfield  with 
Darrell  Fleming,  also  of  Enfield; 
Treasurer  Ann  Holt  of  Sanford 
with  Sid  Sparrow  of  Chapel  Hill; 
Social  Chairman  Mary  Lewis 
Kountree  of  Sunbury  with  John 
Griffin   of  Murfree.sboro. 

In  the  center  of  the  room  was 
a  large  blue  ball  covered  in  blue 
tinfoil  with  broken  mirrors — re- 
volving on  a  round  silver  plat- 
form flanked  with  silver  tipped 
magnolia  leaves    and     long    leaf 

pine. 

S..         i. 

In  one  corner  of  the  room  was 
the  refreshment  table,  which  was 
centered  with  a  small  replica  of 
the  floor  centerpiece.  Silver  can- 
delabra holding  blue  tapers  were 
placed  at  one  end  of  the  table 
and  the  silver  punch  bowl — con- 
taining fruit  punch — at  the  other. 

On  the  walls  at  intervals  around 
the  room  were  blue  silhouettes 
of  each  of  the  pledges. 

Lighted  blue  tapers  centered 
the  individual  tables,  and  silver 
magnolia  leaves  covered  the  stair 
banisters. 

As  a  finale  for  the  waekend 
the  ADPis  and  their  dates  will 
have  a  dinner  in  Durham  tonight 
followed  by  a  champagne  party. 


ors  a  medical  student  can  receive. 
In  his  senior  year,  he  served  as 
secretary  of  the  chapter. 

WELL  LIKED 

In  addition  to  this  honor,  Dr. 
and  Mrs.  Thorp  and  their  children 
were  very  well  liked  and  admired 
by  all  who  knew  them  in  Chapel 
Hill.  Dr.  Thorp  is  now  serving 
his  int^m^ip  in  the  Betbesda 
Naval  Hospital  at  Bethesda,  Md. 

The  first  of  the  series  of  mem- 
orial lectures  will  be  given  here 
May  15  by  Dr.  Robert  E.  Olson  of 
the  University  of  Pittsburgh,  who 
has  been  studying  the  biochemis- 
try of  cardiac  failure. 

GIVEN  EACH  YEAR 

The  lecture  will  be  given  eadi 
year  by  an  invited  medical  scient- 
ist or  teacher  chosen  from  the 
most  stimulating  and  talented  of 
the   professfon   in  this  country. 

The  lectures  will  be  held  dur- 
ing the  annual  initiation  of  new 
members  of  the  AOA,  who  are 
selected    on   the   basis  of   leader- 


ship and  independent  scholar^ip 
in  medicine. 

In  announcing  the  memorial  lec- 
tureship, Robert  T.  Whitlock, 
president  of  the  Gamma  Chapter 
of  the  AOA  said,  "We  aU  find  it 
difficult  to  express  ourselves 
when  a  loss  such  as  this  is  suf- 
fered by  a  beloved  friend  and  col- 
league. The  AOA  feels  priviliged 
to  offer  this  opportunity  for  such 
expression  to  those  who  feel  so 
moved.  The  interest  from  our 
pooled  contributions  will  go  to- 
ward paying  the  expense  of  a  guest 
lecturer  each  year,  sufficient  hon- 
orarium to  draw  the  most  excel- 
lent speaker.  In  the  event  the  in- 
terest exceeds  that  needed  for  the 
lecture,  a  memorial  scholarship 
will  be  offered  to  deserving  medi- 
cal students  chosen  by  AOA  with 
the  ^approval  of  the  faculty  and 
dean." 

Persons  wishing  to  contribute 
to  this  fund  may  send  contribu- 
tions to  Adam  T.  Thorp  III  Mem- 
orial Fund.  N.  C.  Medical  Foun- 
dation, Inc.,  Chapel  Hill. 


Musicale  To  Feature 
Soprano  Here  Sunday 

The  Petite*  Musicale  scheduled 
for  Siuday,  Jan.  13  will  feature 
Miss  Martha  Fouse,  soprano.  Miss 
Fouse  will  be  accompanied  by 
Walter  Golde  on  the  piano. 

The  program  will  lake  place  at 
8  pjn.  in  the  main  lounge  of 
Graham  Memorial. 

Miss  Fouse  will  sing  selections 
by    Vivaldi.    Schumann 
and  others. 

The  admission  will  be  free  and 
everyone  has  been  invited  to  at- 
tend. 


Woolley  Stars 
In  Free  Flick 
Today  At  8, 10 

Monty  Woolley  plays  "The  Man 
Who  Came  to  Dinner"  in  GMAB's 
free  flick  feature  of  the  week 
held  in  Carroll  Hall  at  8  and  10 
p.m.  today. 

Starring  in  the  comedy  with 
Woolley  are  Bette  Davis.  Ann 
Sheridan,  Jimmy  Durante,  and 
Billie  Burk.  Woolley  takes  the 
role  ^  of  a  man  who  comes  to  din- 
ner and  extends  his  visit  for  a 
number  of  years. 

The  free  movie  is  being  held 
tonight  because  there  was  a  con- 
flict in  schedules  and  it  could  not 
be  held,  as  is  the  custom,  on  Fri- 
day night. 


Students  And  Workers 
Attend  Study  Meeting 

Eighteen  students  and  four  student  Christian  movements  rec- 
campus  religious  workers  from  ognize  the  importance  of  study  as 
UNC  attended  the  United  Student    a    Christian    calling,    and    enlarge 


'Symphony  Of 
Snow'  Is  Theme 
Of  Dance 

B  y  MARY  ALYS  VOORHEES 

To  a  "Symphony  of  Snow"  theme 
Kappa  Delta  Sorority  presented  its 
1956  Pledge  Class  at  its  annual 
pledge  dance  in  the  ballroom  of 
the   Carolina  Inn  last   night. 

Snowllakes,  snowballs  and  other 
decor  formed  the  winter  setting 
for  the  dancing,  which  was  to  the 
music  of  Bill  Langley  and  his 
Star  Dreamers.  UNC  Coed  Barba- 
ra Prago  was  the  featured  vocalist. 

KD   Vice  President   Melba   Re- 


Christian  Council  Southeastern 
Regional  Study  Conference  held 
at  Davidson  College,  Dec.  27  -  Jan. 
1. 

This  council  is  composed  of  11 
denonSinational  groups  and  the 
student  YMCA  and  YWCA. 

Unique  in  its  empasLs  upon  group 
and  individual  study,  the  confer- 
ence brought  together  students, 
faculty,  and  administrative  offic- 
ials from  15  different  Christian 
denominations  and  126  colleges. 
The  Davidson  conference,  one  of 
seven  regional  conferences  held 
during  the  Christmas  holidays,  at- 
tracted 319  delegates. 

The  conference  theme,  "Our 
United  Witness  on  the  Campus" 
was  explored  in  platform  ad- 
dresses, faculty-led  discussions, 
and  small  group  Bible  study.  Pro- 
fessor Waldo  Beach  of  Duke 
University  in  five  addresses  des- 
cribed the  ideal  of  the  university, 
the  social  and  intellectual  broken- 
ness  and  disimity  on  the  campus, 
and  possible  strategies  for  the 
recovery  of  wholeness  in  the  aca- 
demic community. 

The  student-led  Bible  stud> 
focused  upon  the  brokenness  and 
unity  of  the  Church  in  the  New 
Testament,  ■  under  the  guidance  of 
Professor  Albert  C.  Winn  of  Still- 
man  College.  Evening  interest 
groups  discussed  strategy  for 
Christian  concern  in  fraternities 
mig  (H>ened  the  pledge  present?-  and  sororities,  student  govern- 
lion   program  with  a   few   words   ment.  summer  work  projects,  ecu- 


Edwards   Defends 


FICTION  BOARD 

There  will  be  a  meeting  of  the 
Carolina  Quarterly  Fiction  Board 
Tuesday  at  4  p.m  in  the  Quarter- 
ly office  in  Graham  Memorial. 

ASTRONOMY   CLUB 

The  Chapel  Hill  Astronomy  Club 
will  hold  its  first  meeting  of  the 
year  Wednesday  at  8  pjn.  at 
Morehead  Planetarium.  All  visitor.s 
have  been  invited  to  attend. 


(Contmued  from  Page   1) 

mocracy.  or  a  'Communist.'  If  you 
are  not  a  segregationist'  you  a»-e 
called  a  niggw-lover.'  If  you  are 
not  a  'conformist'  you  are  a  'rab 
ble-rouser.*  These  are  all  very  loo^e 
terms  and  mean  nothing,"  he  said. 

"I  was  going  to  be  sued  for  nanu* 
calling  once.  But  instead  my  nanie 
was  written  up  in  the  papers.  It 
was  even  on  a  petition,  that  was 
being  passed  around  the  dorm— al.' 
this  by  Ike  same  man.  I  used  the 
term  'do-nothing.'  But  I  got  back 
terms  like  "rabblerouser,'  'icono- 
clast" aa'l  'liar.'  I  don't  know  much 
about  law,"  he  said  "but  I  am 
wondering  who  was  more  libelous — 
me,  or  the  man  who  wrote  the  ex- 
pose "Behind  the  Sweat-Shirt  Ciur 
tain"? 

"I  was  wrong  when  I  ;iaid  he 
had  done  absolutely  nothing  for 
he  has  done  two  things  In  his  two 
and  one-half  years  administration 
as  president.  He  has  obtained  a 
tile  floor  for  the  social  room  and 
he  was-  responsible  for  the  Navy 
beds  and  new  mattresses.  All  this 
in  a  two  and  one-half  year  period. 
Wow!  Such  progress. 
ELECTION 

"Re  the  election  for  dorm  presi- 
dent,  it  went  like  this.   Someone 


said  there  would  be  a  dorm  meet- 
ing tonij^ht  (this  was  back  before 
the  election  last  year).  Neither  niv 
friends  aor  I  knew  anything  about 
it.  But  that  was  all  right,  we  we.e 
used  to  it  by  then.  The  president 
claims  there  were  about  25  dorm 
residents  present,  out  of  approxi- 
mately 110.  I  would  imagine  theie 
were  aoout  15  there,"  Eklwarciir 
s^Ud.  "for  that  is  the  usual  num- 
ber that  attend  even  if  they  are 
properly  notified  that  there  is  a 
meotinf.  going  on. 

"The  incumbent  president  was 
nominated  and  seconded  (I  hopej. 
There  were  no  nominations  to  op- 
pose him.  Does  this  make  him  an 
elected  president  by  acclamafjon? 
I  wouldn't  think  so,  but  then  I 
don't  kiiow  law. 

**In  the  president's  denial  he 
didn't  mention  that  he  did  go 
around  the  dorm  on  election  day 
with  a  pad  and  pencil,  And  be 
also  wtll  admit  that  he  visited  the 
dorm     rooms   only   once.   And     I 


to  teU   the   dancers « about   their 
Debussy ,  theme  in    connection  with  their 
pledge  class. 

Pointing  out  that  music  had  be- 
come the  byword  of  the  Amer- 
ican people  and  how  it  was  com- 
posed foi-  different  media,  she  con- 
trasted the  pledge  class  with  a 
symphony  orchestra: 

"Alone  each  instrument  is  an 
Individ u&l  with  special  talent;  spe 
cial  beauty.  But  combined,  these 
instruments  become  a  part  of 
something  bigger,  something  of 
greater  beauty;  of  oneness  and  har- 
mony." 

In  conclusion  she  introduced 
Charles  Bernard,  assistant  direct- 
or of  admissions,  who  acted  as  ma.s^ 
ter  of  ceremonies. 

Dressed  symbolically  in  wkil ., 
the  pleage  class  was  presented  as 
a  symphony  of  snow. 

As  each  pledge's  name  was  calle-l 
she  was  met  by  her  date  ani  es- 
corted liown  the  stairs  through  \he 
white  columns  covered  in  snow 
flakes  and  surrounded  by  snow- 
balls at  the   bottom. 

When  each  pledge  came  out  on 
the  dance  floor  she  was  presenitd 
with  a  single  white  rose  by  KD 
President  Peg  Humphrey. 

Pledge  Class  President  Betsy 
Lyon  of  Durham,  escorted  by  Jim 
Martin  of  Charlotte  was  the  first 
to  be  presented.  Next  to  be  an- 
nounced were  Vice  President  Jane 
Patten  of  Charlotte  with  Ed  Brown 


menieal  relations,  study  groups, 
religious  emphasis  weeks  and  race 
relations. 

Worship  was  according  to  the 
various  traditions  represented  in 
the  conference  and  was  led  by  the 
conference  chaplain,  Rev.  Irvin 
Elligan  of  Richmond,  Va.  Larry 
Eisenberg  of  Nashville,  Tenn., 
served  as  Conference  Fellowship 
Director. 

"This   conference   will   help    all 


their  programs  of  study  on  the 
campus,"  said  Herluf  Jensen,  Ex- 
ecutive Secretary  of  the  USCC. 
"We  have  learned  much  here 
about  our  disunity  and  the  need 
for  more  unity  in  our  witness  on 
the  campus." 

The  Rev.  Malcolm  C.  Mclver 
Jr.,  stated  "This  has  proved  to  be 
an  exciting  experience  in  Christ- 
ian unity,  and  has  proved  that 
Christian  students  can  study  and 
work  together,  dealing  realistical- 
ly with  the  serious  questions  they 
face  on  the  campus." 

Other  conference  leaders  in- 
cluded: William  Scott,  Durham; 
Malcolm  McAfee,  Davidson;  Harry 
Smith,  Chapel  Hill;  Gordon  Ward, 
Hickory;  Robert  Haywood.  New- 
ark, N.J.;  and  Elizabeth  McWhort- 
er,  Richmond,  Va. 

Those  attending  from  UNC  in- 
cluded the  following:  John  Brooks, 
Miss  Joyce  Bryant,  Douglas  Can- 
trell,  Jackie  Cooper,  Zane  Eargle. 
MLss  Jackie  Haithcock,  Thomas 
Iseley,  Bill  Kane.  Larkin  Kirk- 
man,  Jea  Min  La,  Miss  Nancy 
Lattimore,  Ray  Long,  Holland  Mc- 
Swain,  Gerry  Mayo,  Miss  Susan 
Merrick,  JameS^'Merritt,  Clay  Stal- 
naker,  Don  Wells,  Sam  Magill, 
Miss  Ann  Queen,  Harry  Smith  and 
O.  Murray  Unruh. 


^     it  willphosiire      \ 

\  y6u  in  a  t 

\^Awi(ffed  wtysf  j/ 


gold  sequins,  white  holly  sprinkled  i 
in  gold  d«st  and  gold  balls — sit- 
ting in  snow  surrounded  by  snow- 
balls. 

A  silver  jninch  bowl — -garlanded 
in  white  carnations —  of  fruit 
punch  centered  the  refresh-ment 
table  wiiere  Mrs.  Kay  Kyser,  a  KD 
alumna,  and  Mrs.  K  H.  Graham, 
KD  house  mother,  served.  Ehs- 
where  on  the  table  were  white 
cookies  decorated  in  green,  and  a 
five-branched  silver  candelabrum 
holding;  white  tapers. 

On  the  wall  of  the  stage  behind 
the  orchestra  were  white  snow- 
flakes  with  the  pledges  names  writ- 
ten  in   green  letters. 


Pushing  Hubby  Through 


(QomXvKued   from    Page    1) 

married  students,  he  must  also 
work  to  make  ends  meet. 

He  works  nights  and  she 
works  days.  Mrs.  McKeown,  who 
works  in  the  drafting  depart- 
ment of  the  Durham  firm,  gets 
up  at  six  in  the  morning  and 
reports  for  work  at  eight.  Dur- 
ing the  summer,  she  had  to  get 
up  at  fi^re  and  go  to  work  at 
seven. 

By  the  time  she  gets  home  at 
night,  her  husband  is  getting 
ready  to  leave  for  the  hospital, 
where  he  is  Night  Administra- 
tor. The  result  is  that  they  get 
to  spend  very  little  time  togeth- 
er. 

They  feel,  however,  that  the 
price  is  not  too  high  to  pay. 

"We  agreed  when  we  got  mar- 
ried," Mrs.  M<^eown  said,  "that 
Frank  would  finish  his  educa- 
tion. In  the  long  run,  we  feel 
it  will  be- worth  it." 

McKeown  eays  that  the  ad- 
vantages of  ■being  married  while 
you  are  a  student  outweighs  the 
disadvantages. 

"You  feel  that  you  have 
something  to  work  for,  and 
your're  more  stable,"  he  de- 
clared. 

He  doesn't  mind  admitting 
that  Ife  helps  with  the  house- 
work. "I  had  a  first  sergeant 
in  the  Marines  who  tai^^t  "^ 
how  to  make  beds  and  wash 
dishes,"  he  chuckled. 

Another  typical  couple  Is  Mr. 


and  Mrs.  Bob  Gaines  of  Gastonia. 
Unlike  the  McKeowns,  they  have 
one  child. 

Like  McKeown,  Gaines  is  al- 
so a  veteran,  but  his  G.  I.  Bill 
has  expired.  They  were  fortun- 
ate enough  to  get  in  Victory 
Village  after  sweating  out  a 
long  waiting   line. 

OOO  JOBS 

Because  he  is  in  law  school 
and  has  several  afternoon  classes 
a  week,  the  only  woiic  he  has 
done  has  been  odd  jobs.  He  has 
sold  programs  at  the  football 
game  and  done  other  such  work 
around   the  University. 

Because  of  his  afternoon 
classes,  it  is  also  necessary  that 
they  have  some  one  to  take  care 
of  Robbie,  their  three-year-old 
son.  But  Gaines  also  shares  in 
the  care  of  Robbie  and  the 
housework. 

Both  McKeown  and  Gaines 
say  that  if  it  were  not  for  their 
wives,  they  could  not  afford  to 
go  to  college. 

But  both  of  their  wives — and 
most  of  the  other  working  stu- 
dent wives  in  Chapel  Hill — agree 
that  in  the  long  run  they  feel 
that  everyone  will  benefit  by 
their  pushing  hubby  through. 

Their  main  source  of  income 
is  Mrs.  Gaines'  job.  She  puts  in 
a  40*bour  week  at  Memorial 
Hospital  where  she  is  a  dietician. 
She  is  a  graduate  ot  S«l«m 
College  and  did  an  internship 
at  the  Medical  College  of  Vir- 
ginia. 


think  he  will  admit  that  no  more 
than  25  per  cent  of  the  dorm  mem-  j  °^  Anderson,  S.  C,  Secretary  Edith 
hers  h?d  the  chance  to  vote.  Wh*.* !  MacKinnon  of  Charlotte  with  Troy 
kind  of  a  majority   is  this?  I  Brown  of  Tampa,  Fla.,  Treasurer 


"And  since   I  was  granted   the 


Cornie  Whittaker  of  Whittier,  Cs- 


right  to  vote  by  all  kinds  of  con  t  ^'f-  with  Preston  Browning  of  Cul- 
situtions."  he  said,   "and  yet  was  ;  P^PP^''  ^^-  ^'^^  Chaicman  B-r- 
denied  Uie  opportunity  to  vote  l»y  \ 
my  dorin  officers,  then  I  will  yell  j 
my  lungs  out  that  something  is  ret-  j 
ten  someplace.  I  did  not  have  the  j 


bara  Honey  of  Charlotte  with   Eci 
Price     of  Charlotte  and   the     re- 
mainder of  the  class. 
The  couples  then  formed  the  KDs 


^Gary 
Cooper 

Williom  Wylers 


Fripndly 
Persuasion 


t»«»m  Dorothy  McGuire 

in!ra)»cinr  Aothony  Perkins 
c*m.«  Marjorie  Main 

•n  COlOJt 

NOW   PLAYING 


Carolina 


THIS  WOMAN  IN  HIS  ARMS 
^-^  -^*-ii«     .^AS  NOW  THE  WIFP 

OF  THE  MAN  HE 

CALLED  HIS 

;     BEST  FRIEND! 


opportunity  to  vote  that  day.  for  if  i  diamond    after    which   the   active 
I   did  and   had  1  known  that  the  I  f  T^*^  ^^  "^'^^  ?**P  ^°^" 


incumbent  president  was  runnir.g 
unoppoiied  then  there  wouW  have 
been  a  write-in  vote  not  only  by  me 
but  many  others  in  the  dorm  wiio 
feel  the  same  way  so  that  tl4p 
same  man  would  never  get  in  office 
again. 

"Incidentally  the  president  has 
stated  in  the  paper  our  dorm  re- 
ceives approximately  $140  per 
year.  Out  of  this  $30  has  to  go 
for  a  repair  job  on  the  dorm  "IV 
set.  This  leaves  $100  for  social 
functions.  What  I  would  like  to 
know  is  when  are  we  going  to  have 
the  first  party?  Or  are  we  going 
to  wait  until  next  semester  and 
have  two?  And  why  wasn't  tliTe  a 
dorm  entry  in  the  Duke  parade," 
he  said,  "or  a  display  up  for  Home- 
coming? Or  a  coed  sponsored  by 
this  dorm  in  any  of  the  beaul%' 
contestv.'  Maybe  I  just  expect  lOo 
much  from  dorm  officers,  regaro- 
less  of  how  they  got  in  office. 
VIRY  SURPRISED 

"In  conclusion,  1  was  very  sur- 
prised in  the  dorm' president's  art- 
icle. But  as  I  thou^t  about  it' 
for  awhile  I  remembered  here  la 
a  man  who  is  going  to  run  for  thi 
editorship  of  The  Daily  Tar  Heel 
for  next  year,  who  has  received  a 
black  mark  on  his  record.  It  is  al 
leged  tnat  he  became  desperate 
then  and  tried  to  erase  the  black 
mark  in  a  characteristic  methoa. 

"I  wonder  Mr.  President,"  he.- 
said,  "it  you  can't  run  a  dormitory- 
how  do  you  expect  to  run  a  news- 
paper?" 


I  In  My  Heart."  a  traditional  KD 
song  and  a  dance  was  held  in  their 
h(mor. 

Later  in  the  evening  the  pledges 
were  given  KD  charm  necklaces  by 
their  big  sisters. 

Decorating  one  corner  of  the 
ballroom  was  a  symphonic  fan- 
tasy in  an  elegant  wintertime  set- 
ting. Little  cherubs  were  ploying 
various  nstruments  as  they  final, '?d 
about  a  white  and  gold  pipe  or- 
gan— lavishly     embellished       with  I 


mnon 


'^Jjim 


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<^A«I  POUR 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEIL 


SATURDAY,  JANUARY  S,  1«^ 


Carolina  Frosh  Cagers  Take  EMI,  82-65,  For  Fourth  Victory 


Those  Golden  Tar  Heels 

In  the  eyes  of  many  astute  basketball  observers,  the  current  all- 
conquering  UNC  cage  squad  coached  by  Frank  McGuire  is  the  best 
ever  to  represent  this  hallowed  southern  institution  of  traditional  ac- 
ariemic  and  athletic  excellence.  The  1956-57  Tar  Heels,  a  tall  and  oh 
so  talented  aggregation  of  big  city  boys  who  fell  captive  to  Dixie's 
lures,  have  rolled  smothly  along  the  unbeaten  trail  to  11  straight  vic- 
t(»ries  with  only  a  couple  of  minor  scares  along  the  way. 

Talk  of  an  unbeaten  season  can  be  heard  from  all  comers  of 
the  campus.  But  we  would  do  well  to  remember  that  it's  a  long 
tough  grind  from  now  to  ACC  tourney  time  in  March.  And  with  six 
games  to  be  played  in  the  Big  Four,  anything  can  happen  (and  it 
usually  does). 

But  up    til  now.  the  road  has  been  paved  with  gold,  silver,  ann 
tournament  rosej'  for  the  triumphant  Tar  Keels.  Only  South  Carolina 
and  NYU  have  real  trouble,  and  such  powerhouses  as  Duke,  Wane 
Forest.  Utah.  Maryland  and  Dartmouth  have  been  handled  with  eas° 
And  for  the  first  time  in  history,  \JSC  reigns  as  Dixiie  Classic  Champ  -. 
Who  have  been  the  heroes  of  this  pyrotechnical  display  of  early 
season  prowess?  They  are  legion.  1^»pping  the  list  is  the  man  re- 
sponsible for  it  all,  Frank  McGuire.  The  popular   New  Yorker  has 
done  wonders  since  his  arrival  on  the-  hill  five  years  ago,  and  the 
current  Tar  Heel  team  is  testimony  to  tnis  fact. 

McGuire's  prize  pupil  is  Bronx  stringbean  Lennie  Rosenbluth,  sen 
?r,r  captain  who  possesses  one  of  the  softest  pnd  most  deadly  shootin^i 
touches  in  the  land.  Lennie  leads  the  squad  in  scoring  with  a  26.5  a- 
erage  for  11  games  and  a  point  total  of  292.  lie  also  ranks  second  in 
retwunding  with  an  8.8  average. 

Then  come  the  other  members  of  Coach  McGuire's  wrecking 
crew.  There's  the  junior  foursome  of  Bob  Cunningham,  Pete  Brennan, 
Tommy  Keams,  and  Jee  Quigg.  All  »f  marvelously  improved  bail 
players  over  a  year  ago,  and  have  played  a  vital  role  in  the  unbeat«n 
Tar  Heel  record. 

Brennan  leads  Carolina's  awesome  front  line  of  giants  that  do- 
minate.? action  under  the  backboards  in  almost  every  game.  He  is 
runnerup  to  Rosenbluth  'in  scoring  with  a  15.3  mark  and  tops  tearr 
lebounding,  Kearns  and . Cunningham  have  reached  maturity  this  sea 
5on  and  each  is  a  team  leader  from  the  back  line. 

Quigg,  a  stylish  operater  both  inside  and  out  has  been  splitting 
time  at  center  with  Bill  Hathaway,  6-11  soph.  And  providing  the 
reserve  strength  have  been  Stan  Groll,  Tony  Radovich,  Danny  Lotz 
and  Ken  Rosemond. 

If  the  locals  have  a  weakness,  it  has  yet  to  be  dis'covered.  The 
experience  they  so  badly  needed  last  campaign  has  been  gained.  T^-* 
height  is  there  with  five  of  the  ^ix  top  men  standing  over  6-4.  No  one 
denies  the  Tar  Heel  shooting  ability,  and  the  reserve  strength  is  the 
best  it's  ever  been. 

Each  week  the  Carolinians  are  gaining  ground  on  Kansas  in  the 
vress  cage  polls,  and  many  followers  of  the  hardwood  sport  are  coa- 
vjnced  that  Rosenbluth  ami  Co.  have  more  guns  thaa  even  Wilt  (tlj- 
Stilt)  Chamberlain  could  withstand. 

The  Tar  Heel  unbeaten  record  appears  reasonably  safe  until 
Tuesday  night,  Jan.  15,  when  they  step  into  Reynolds  Coliseum, 
scene  of  their  latest  triumph,  to  take  on  Everett  Case  and  his  re- 
iuvanated  Wolfpack.  Although  the  Pack  will  be  certain  underdogs, 
they  are  sometimes  almost  impossible  to  beat  in  their  «<wn  home 
lair. 

Next  week  the  Tar  Heels-  have  three  games  on  tap,  facing  William 
&•  Mary  in  Williamsburg,  Va..  Tuesday;  Clemson  here  Friday,  and 
Vurginia  here  Saturday.  Then  comes  that  long  trip  down  Tobacco  Road, 
cr  Death  Row  as  it  has  come  to  be  known.  And  the  trip  is  sure  to  be 
a  bumpy  one. 

Tatum  To  Leave Sportspourri 

There's  another  rumw  afloat  about  Caro.Una's  controversial  fool- 
ball  coach.  Sunny  Jim  Tatum.  This  .one  has  Tatum  leaving  his  deir 
old  alma  mater  to  take  over  the  head  coaching  duties  at  the  University 
of  Indiana.  Could  be.  Tatum's  reception  among  the  student  body  and 
alumni  in  recent  weeks  has  been  luke  warm  at  best. 

The  whole  thing  got  started  when  Tatum  was  seen  talking  to 
Indiana  officials  in  Miami  during  the  Orange  Bowl.  Now  Tatum's 
name  is  being  ntentiened  as  •  pessiblity  for  other  coaching  jobs 
around  the  country.  And  while  we're  en  the  subject,  it  is  reported 
that  a  certain  pro  basketball  t*am  has  its  eye  on  Frank  McGuire. 

Carolina  senior  halfback  and  co  captam  Ed  Sutton  plays  in  his 
second  all-star  game  of  the  season  this  afternoon.  It's  the  aenitw  bowl 
liamc  in  Mobile,  Ala.,  and  Sutton  will  alternate  in  the  South's  offen- 
sive backfield  with  George  Volkert  of  Georgia  Tech  at  right  halfback. 
Sutton  played  in  the  Blue-Gray  ganae  one  week  ago,  but  found  few 
holes  in  the  Blue  line.  The  Grays,  coached  by  Jim  Tatum,  dropped  a 
two  touchdown  decision. 

The  Charlotte  News  has  voted  Tatum  poorest  prognosticator  of 

the  year Likewise,  Jim  Beauty  the  biggest  disappointment  of 

the  year  for  failing  to  qualify  for  the  Olympics Jerry  Vayda, 

captain  of  last  year's  Carolina  basketball  team,  is  burning  the  twfi 
for  Denver  in  Industrial  League  ptay.  Vayda,  back  at  his  old  forward, 
position,  is  hitting  at  •  50  per  cent  clip. 

Wake  Forest  assistant  coach  Bones  McKinney  doesn't  think  much 
of  Lenme  Rosenbluth's  chances  of  making  the  grade  in  pro  basketball. 
Bones  J^ys  Rosey  couldn't  take  the  physical  beating  night  after  night 

Rosenbluth  is  15  pounds  underweight  right  now  ...  .It  looks  more 

/id  more  like  N.  C.  State  may  get  some  relief  from  the  severe  penalty 
handed  down  by  the  NCAA..  It  couldp't  happen  to  a  nicer  school" 


I  Tar  Babies^ 
Rally  in 
2nd  Period 

Carolina's  freshman  eager  squad 
overcame  an  early  second  half 
slump  to  take  the  iiaster  Military 
Institute  82-65  last  night  at  Salem- 
burg.  , 

The  Tar  Babies,  leading  by  a 
comfortable  40-30  score  at  the 
half,  came  back  to  the  floor  only 
to  lose  the  margin  and  the  lead  in 
the  first  five  minutes  of  the  second 
period.  The  Carolina  yearlings 
pulled  themselves  together  to  take 

;  the  lead  again  and  gradually  pull- 
ed out  to  the  17-point  margin  as 

!  the  game  ended.        ,-';- 

Rebounding  specialist  Lee  Shaf- 
fer too  ktop  scoring  honors  for 
the  Tar  Babies  again  with  21 
points.  Shaffer  has  led  the  team 
in  scoring  all  through  the  season. 

The  Tar  Babies  spread  out  the 
scoring  as  they  have  done  ell 
year.  Four  of  the  starters  hit  for 
12  or  more  points:  Shaffer.  Larese, 


Ed  Sutton  Plays  In 
Senior  Bowl  Today 


Coach  Aiid  Captain 


*i^ 


Above  are  Frank  McGuire  and  Lennie  Roscrbluth,  two  big  reasons  why  Carolina's  basketball  team 
now  possesses  a  11-0  record.  The  Tar  Heel  Coach  and  his  senior  sharpshooter  have  formed  an  almost 
unbeatable  combination  this  season. 


NC  Matmen  Squeak  By  Va. 
16-15  To  Stay  Undefeated 


Carolina's  unbeaten  wrestling 
team  continued  to  be  "bosses  of 
the  mat"  by  winning  their  fourth 
straight  victory  over  a  strong  Vir- 
ginia team   16  to   15. 

The  Carolina  grapplers  closed 
out  the  Cavaliers  in  the  first  four 
matches  by  a  score  of  14  to  0.  But 
in  the  last  four  matches,  Carolina 
got  only  two  points  when  Dave 
Atkinson  fought  a  scoreless  tie 
wifh  Virginia's  Dave  Cheney. 

After  the  match  Coach  Barnes 
said:  "As  the  score  indicates,  it 
was  a  tough  match.  My  boys  were 
in  good  condition,  and  that's  what 


paid   off."  ^ 

Henry  Rhyne.  123  pounder,  took 
Dave  Wall's  spote  last  night  and 
made  ,a  good  showing  as  he  de- 
cisioned  his  opponent.  Wall  is  suf- 
fering from  a  charley  horse. 

Glenn  Daughtry,  regular  177 
pounder  was  shifted  to  the  heavy- 
weight class  because  of  the  ab- 
sence of  Daj|n  Corkey  who  is 
suffering  fromKi.  dislocated  should- 
er. Don  ChilM  177  pounder,  filled 
Daughtrj's  ri;,^i!lar  spot. 

The  fresh.ra'n  grapplers  made 
it   a   double    '•ictory   for  the   Tar 

Heels.  They  ov?rpowered  the  frosh 
. J 


de- 
130, 


Mermen  Meet  Cavaliers 


By  STEWART  BIRD 

Caroima's  undefeated  swimmers 
go  after  win  number  four  this  af- 
ternoon when  they  take  on  the  Vir- 
ginia Cavaliers   in   Charlottesville 

Coach  Ralph  Casey's  charges  sac- 
rificed part  of  their  vacation  to 
get  ready  for  the  meet,  returning 
to  the  campus  for  workouts  Decem- 
ber 30th.  Much  hard  work  has  been 
turned  in  since  then  with  one  eye 
on  the  UVA  encounter  and  the 
other  on  the  all-important  clash 
with  N.  C.  State  January  15th. 


The  squad  departed  from  Wool- 
len gym  at  one-thirty  yesterday  af- 
ternoon,  and   will    return   tonight. 
The    meet   is   scheduled    for    two- 
thirty  Ibis  afternoon. 

Coach  Casey  is  takmg  a  small 
squad  for  this  road  trip.  The  le- 
m^iininj?  members  of  the  team  will 
continue  workouts  under  the  direc- 
tion of  Captain  Charlie  Krcpp. 

Swimmers  making  the  jaunt  are 
Mahaffy,  Maness,  Nash.  Roth,  Tui- 
ner,  Veazcy,  Zickgraf.  Cooper,  Mer- 
cer, Coach  Casey,  and  team  mai*- 
ager  Grodskey. 


Cavaliers  26-10.  '   ' 

THE  SUMMARY: 

Varsity:  123.  Rhyne.  (C) 
cisioned  Silverberg.  11-10: 
Wagner,  (C).  decisioncd  Cooper, 
7-2;  137;  Henderson  pinned  Car- 
ter. 5:04;  147.  Boyette.  (C).  de- 
cisioncd Gregg,  4-0:  157,  Gaudry, 
(V).  decisioncd  Hoke.  2-0;  167. 
Atkinson.  (C),  and  Chener  tied. 
0-0;  177.  Petrilli.  (V).  pinned 
Childs,  1:26;  Hw.,  Jordan,  (V), 
pinned  Daughtry,  2:59. 

Freshmen:     130,    Everett, 
pinned   Champlin.   5:30;    130. 
tie,   (C).  and  Ryan  tied,  3-3; 
Perinni,  (C),  won  by  rorieit; 


Kepley.  and 

Crotty. 

THE  SUMMARY: 

Carolina 

f9 

ft 

Pf 

tp 

Shaffer     f 

8 

5 

4 

21 

Larese  f 

7 

3 

3 

17 

Kepley  c 

5 

2 

2 

12 

Steppe  g 

3 

0 

2 

'  6 

Crotty  g 

6 

4 

4 

16 

Crutchfield 

f        2 

0 

3 

4 

McRakcn    f 

0 

0 

1 

0 

Poole  f 

1 

0 

1 

2 

Griffin   g 

1 

2 

1 

4 

Totals 

EMI     .  ■ 

Totals 

Carolina 
EMI 


33      16      21 


82 


f9 

24 


ft       pf 

17      19 


By  STAN   ATKINS 

MOBILE,— (AP)— The  South  stars 
were  established  last  niglit  as  a 
touchdown  favorite  over  the  North 
in  today's   Senior  Bowl  game.. 

Oadsrnakers  accorded  the  favor- 
ite's role  to  the  Rebels  on  the  ba- 
j;is  of  a  power-Jaden  backfield 
headed  by  TeVas  Christian  quar 
terback  Charley  Curtis  and  a  heity 
defensive  line  anchored  by  All 
America  guard  Bill  Glass  of  Bay 
lor. 

There  was  considerable  dis- 
agreement over  the  choice,  how- 
ever. 

Railbirds  who  watched  the  North 
practice  sessions  were  impressed 
with  the  accurate  passing  of  Pur- 
due quarterback  Len  Dawson  and 
the  running  of  Colorado  fullback 
John  (The  Beast)  Bayuk. 

The  forecast  was  for  cloudy  and 
windy  weather  with  the  possibility 
of  ,a  few  showers  around  game 
time.  This  was  expected  to  hold 
the  crowd  under  the  forcast  36.- 
000  capacity. 

South  Coach  Paul  BroAvn  of  the 
Clevehiid  Browns  named  these 
stars  for  the  Rebel  starting  of- 
fensive lineup: 

Ends  Jack  Johnson,  Miami, 
Fla.  and  Buddy  Cruze.  Tennos- 
seo;  tackles  Earl  Leggett.  Louisi- 
ana State,  and  Sam  DeLuca.  South 
Carolina;  guards  Dalton  Truax, 
Tulane,  and  John  Barrow,  Flor- 
ida; center  Joe  Williams,  TCtJ; 
quai-terback  Curtis;  left  half  Dei 
Shofner.  Baylor;  right  haK  George 
Volkert.  Georgia  Tech:  and  full- 
hack  All  America  Don  Bosseler, 
Miami.  Fla. 

Other  backs«%ho  will  see  duty 
for  the  Rebels  are  Wade  Mitchcii 
of  Georgia  Tech.  Jim  Harris  of 
Oklahoma.  All  America  Johnny 
Majors  of  Tennessee.  Ed  Sutton  of 


North  Carolina,  and  Joel  Wells  of 
Clemson. 

The  two  squads  are  a   standoff 
on  size.  The  North  linesmen  aver 
aged  221  pounds,   the    backs   191 
South  linemen  averaged  out  at  219 
and  the  backs  at  192. 

The  players,'  turn  pro  in  *r 
game,  ihe  winners  receiving  S50a 
each  and  the  losers  $400. 

The  game  will  be  broadcas 
over  a  Mutual  network.  It  will  aot 
be  televised. 

Kickoff  is  at  1:30  p.m.,  CST. 


40 
30 


42  —  82 
35  —  65 


Varsity,  Frosh  Battle 

Basketball  Coach  Frank  Mc- 
Guire announced  yesterday  that 
there  w!ll  be  a  ^ame-condition 
scrimmage  between  the  varsity 
and  freshman  cagers  tomorro#f 
afternoon  at  2  p.m.  This  will  be 
the  third  meeting  of  the  year  of 
the  two  quints.  The  undefeated 
varsity  w»n  b«th  pf  the  first  two 
contests. 


i  Welborn.  (C).  pinned  Rinehart, 
I  4:20;  157,  Russell,  (C).  decisioncd 
i  Strother.  3-0;  167,  Scruggs.  (V). 
j  pinned  Hudson.  3:30;  177,  Sack, 
I  (C).  decisioncd  Trice.  7-4;  Hw., 
i  Pittman.  (C).  pinned  Wilson,  3:25. 


(V). 
Sut- 
137. 
147. 


CLASSIFIEDS 


JAZZ  AT  TURNAGES 

Saturday  afternoon,  2:00.  Turn- 
ages  Cabin  in  Durham. — Jazz  by 
Dick     Gables    "All     Stars. "     Beer 

THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL  WILL 
pay  $  .25  for  each  issue  of  the 
September  28  edition.  Papers  of 
this  date  are  needed  for  adver- 
tising   purposes. 


LOST:  WYLER  WHITE  GOLD 
watch  with  two  small  diamonds. 
Sentimental  value.  Finder  please 
go  to  104  Saunders  or  call  91411 
after   office    hours.    Reward. 


ANNOUNCEMENT  BY 

Illinois  College  of 
OPTOMETRY 

Applications  (or  admission  to 
classes  beginning  Sfptember  9, 
1957    are    now    being    received. 

Three  year  course 

of  professional  study 

Leading  to  the  Degree  of 

Doctor  of  Optometry 

Requirements  for  Entrance: 
Two  yc»r%  (60  semester  hours  or 
equivalent  quarter  hrs.)  in  spe- 
cified liberal  arts  and  sciences. 

WRITE  FOR  BULLETIN 
TO:   REGISTRAR 

-ILLINOIS    COLLEGE 
of  OPTOMETRY 

.^241   So.   Michigan  Ave. 
Technology  Center.  Chicago  16,  111. 


Cornwell  Hopes  NCAA 
Will  Reduce  Penalty 


RALEIGH— (AP)— An  unidenti- 
fied North  Carolina  State  College 
official  wa6  hopeful  yesterday  that 
the  National  Collegiate  Athletic 
Assn.  will,  reduce  somewhat  the 
stiff  punishment  State  received 
in  the  Jackie  Moreland  case. 

The  NCAA  will  meet  in  St. 
Louis  next  week,  and  the  college 
athletic  official  predated  it  will 
consider  a  change  in  its  hy-laws. 
Under  the  change,  punishment  to 
a  college  for  violations  in  one 
sport  would  not  affect  other 
sports. 

O.  K.  Cornwell  of  the  Universi- 
ty of  North  Carolina  and  a  NCAA 
Council  member,  said  there  had 
been  "considerable  discussion"  of 
euch  a  change. 

In    the   widelj-publicizetl  More- 


land  case,  the  NCAA  Council 
placed  State  College  on  probation 
for  four  years  for  alleged  recruit- 
ing violations. 

State's  probation  sentence  af- 
fects all  other  sports  as  well  as 
basketball.  If  the  rules  were 
changed,  presumably  the  proba^ 
tion  would  affect  only  date's  bas- 
ketball teams. 

Cornwell  was  asked  if  he  con- 
siders the  present  NCAA  require- 
ment an  injustice.  He  answered 
that  "Lots  of  people  in  this  part 
of  the  country  feel  tiiat  way  about 
it." 

He  said  faculty  representatives 
of  Atlantic  Coast  Conference 
schools  and  ACC  Commissioner 
Jim  Weaver  are  to  meet  in  St. 
Louis   next  Wednesday. 


Duke  And  State 
Tangle  Tonight 
In  League  Tilt 

DURHAM— (AP)— North  Caro- 
lina State  and  Duke,  idle  since 
State  whacked  the  Blue  Devils  in 
the  Dixie  Classic  tournament  last 
week,  resume  play  here  tonight 
in  an  Atlantic  Coast  Conference 
basketball  game. 

State  enters  the  game  with  a 
7-5  oyerall  record  against  Duke's 
6-3.  Duke,  with  a  2-0  record  for 
conference  pipy,  can  tie  idle  North 
Carolina  for  first  place  if  it  wins. 
State  has  a  1-2  conference  record. 

Duke  entered  the  Classic  last 
Week  rated  among  the  nation's 
top  30  teams,  but  after  losing  to 
North  Carolina  in  the  semi-finals 
■vvas  drubbed  by  State  the  next 
night  102-80  and  dropped  out  of 
the  natioJial  ranking!:. 


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DAILY    CROSSWORD 


ACROSS 

1  City  (Brax.) 
6.  Lofty 

mountain 
9.  Ablaze 
10.  Aegean 
island 

11  Showy 
flower 

12  Foolish  act 

14.  Pronoun 

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B  H  C  Library 
Serials  Dept. 
Cha?el  Hir  ,  N. 


C. 


Ike  Asks  Authority  To  Defend  AAid-East  Against  Agression 


WASHINGTON — '»^ — IVesidenl  Eisenhower  implored  a  solemn, 
largely  silent  Congress  yesterday  to  give  him  gun-behind-the-door 
authority  to  defend  the  Mid-East  against  armed  aggression  by  the 
"ambitious  despots"  of  "power-hungry"'  Communism. 

But  in  brandishing  Ihi.*  iron  fist  under  the  Soviet  nose,  Eisen- 
hower emphasized  that  "we  seek  no  violence,  but  peace."  And  he 
said  that  Russia  need  fiave  no  fear  from  this  country,  in  the  Mid- 
F3ust  or  elsewhere,  "so  long  as  its  rulers  do  not  themselves  first  re- 
sort to  aggression." 

The  President  dramatically  underscored  the  "grave  importance 
cf  hi-  message  to  the  legislators   by  delivering  it  in  persion  to  a 
combined   Senate-House  session   with  overflowing  galleries,  and  to 
the  nation  and  the  world  by  television  and  radio. 

Specifically.  Eisenhower  asked  a  none  too  eager  Congress  to 
cooperate  in'  telling  friendly  and  'jnfricndly  nations  alike  jits^ 
"where  we  stand''  by  authorizing: 

1.  Use  of  "the  armed  forces  of  the  United  States  as  he  deem^ 
necessary  to  secure  and  protect  the  territorial  integrity  and  polit'cai 
independence"  of  any  Middle  Ea.<ern  nation  "against  overt  armed 
aggression  from  any  nation  controlled  by  iiitemational  Communism." 
That  would  be  done  only  if  such  help  was  requested  by  the  en 


dangered  country  and  "subject  to  the  overriding  authority  of  the 
United  Nations  Security  Council." 

2.  American  economic  aid  to  help  the  Mid-East  develop  the 
economic  strength  ecessary  to  the  maintenance  of  national  indepen 
dence. 

3.  Military  aid  to  any  nation  or  nations  in  the  area  which  want 
it. 

4.  Use  of  mutual  security  funds  already  available,  for  •'economic 
and  defensive  niilitary  purposes." 

Eisenhower  proposed  that  200  million  dollars  a  year  be  made 
available  for  two  years,  starting  next  July  i,  for  military  and 
economic  assistance  in  the  troubled  Mid-Ea.st. 

The  resolution  that  was  introduced  to  carry  out  his  program 
also  asked  that  up  to  200  million  be  made  available  from  foreign 
air  fun-ds  already  appropriated. 

Thus  the  Mid-East  s«ir  program  could  theoretically  cost  up  to 
600  million  over  the  next  two  and  a  half  years.  However,  official.s 
said  they  believed  only  about  50  to  75  million  were  available  from 
existing  appropriations  so  the  total  program  might  run  to  450  or 
475  million. 

The  President  candidly  declared  that  the  new  policy  declaration 


he  laid  down  today  "involves  certain  burdens  and  indeed  risks  for 
the  United  States."  He  reknowledged.  too.  that  it  will  not  solve  all 
the  problems  of  the  Middle  East. 

While  Eisenhower  offered  no  direct  pian  for  meeting  indirect 
aggression,  his  words  were  designed  to  meet  in  some  measure,  at 
least,  advance  complaints  on  that  score  from  i-ome  members  of 
Congress.  They  had  said  that  infiltration,  not  outright  aggression, 
was  the  prime  danger,  and  that  the  Eisenhower  program  as  out- 
lined earlier  this  week  did  not  meet  this  menace. 
CONGRESSIONAL  REACTION 

It  was  a  serious  Congress  which  heard  a  serious  P*resident,  and 
it  offered  only  meager  applause  for  his  v.ords. 

Furthermore,  the  reaction  afterward  was  decidedly  mixed.  Some 
legislators  endorsed  the  Presidential  proposals,  some  attacked  them, 
and  others  were  noncommittal  or  had  reservations. 

The  overall  reaction  was  ^ruch  as  to  raise  serious  doubts  about 
the  final  form  of  any  resolution  Congress  may  vote. 

In  an  outpouring  of  comment,  Republicans  generally  gave  their 
endorsement  to  the  Chief  Executive's  proposal.  Some  Democrats  join- 
ed in  announcing  their  support  but  more  Democrats  and  even  some 
Republicans  were  critical. 


WORLD  REACTION 

In  London,  Britain  hailed  the  new  "Eisenhower  Doctrine""  for* 
the  Middle  East  but  there  was  no  echo  from  the  Arab  world. 

Government  leaders  in  Western  Europe  were  caudons  in  com- 
menting at  once  on  the  economic-military  program. 

A  French  Foreign  Ministry  spokesman  said  France  was  informed 
a  week  ago  of  U.  S.  intentions  and  approved  in  general  an  outline 
of  the  proposed  "Eisenhower  Doctrine." 

In  Moscow,  a  communique  disclosing  that  Communist  Party 
Chief  Nikita  Khrushchev  and  former  Soviet  Prenller  Georgi  Malen- 
kov  met  with  Communist  leaders  of  Hungary,  Bulgaria,  Romania  and 
Czechoslovakia  in  Budapest  earlier  this  vveek  said  that  all  blamed 
the  United  States  for  rising  Middle  East  tension. 

In  Cairo,  Egyptian  offici£-ls  waited  lo  study  the  Eisenhower 
speech  carefully  before  commenting. 

Perhaps  the  tenor  of  reaction  from  Arab  states  friendly  to 
Egypt  was  set  by  Foreign  Minister  Salah  Bitar  of  Syria  before  Eisen- 
hower addressed  Congress. 

Bitar  said  in  Damascus  that  Arab  states  were  opposed  to  the 
United  States  acting  alone  in  the  Middle  East  to  oppose  aggression 
But  would  welcome  action  within  the  fromework  of  the  United 
I    Nations. 


WEATHER         ^ 

•   Partly   cloudy   and   colder.    High 
temperatures  40  to  SO  degrees. 


arj)  c  Datly 


Heel 


^^        AIRPORT      • 

Easier  to  fly  than  ride.  See  page 


VOL.   LVII   NO.   76 


Complete  (A*)   V/irt  Serv%c* 


CHAPEL   HILL,  NORTH   CAROLINA,   SUNDAY,  JANUARY    6,   1957 


Offices   in   Graham   Memorial 


POUR    PAGES  THIS   ISSU£ 


Several  Carolina  Pro/essors    Hungarian  Government!  A/ofec/  Political  Philosopher 
Favor  New  Cut  Regulation     |To  Remain  Communist  \  Chosen  For  Weil  Lectures 


By   PATSY 
And    BETTY 


MILLER 
HUFFMAN 


Eight  ll^€  professors  Saturday 
voiced  general  approval  of  the  new 
cut  sy«icm  recently  passed  by  the 
Faculty  Council. 

The  professors,  interviewed  <;n 
their  ideas  about  the  ruling,  favo  - 
ca  it  becaUse  they  feel  it  is  a  step 
towards  liberalization  and  conse 
quently  student  matiu-ation. 

Some  of  these  questioned  antici- 
pated confusion  in  the  classes  at 
fir.st. 

The  new  system  allows  junior./ 
and  seniors'  cuts  to  be  regulated  i  r.Ji  wish  to  have  his  name  use!. 
by  the  individual  instructor^.  Slu  said  juniors  and  seniors  will  have 
der:.s  in  General  College  are  -st-JM  a  chance  to  bo  more  mature  about 
subject  to  the  old  three  cuts  pf  r  j  responsiijility  under  t^  new  rui 
semester  iiiie.  i  ing. 

Ihose  taking  upper  eo««ge  couri- ;      in  the  Journalism  School,  J.  1-. 
es  mu.st  maintain  a  C  average  this  ;  Morrison  said  a  cut  regulation  <vas 


don't  need  any  kind  of  system,  th.-^y 
just  come  anj'way,''  he  said. 

Dr.  Wayne  A.  Bowers  of  Mie 
Phyics  Dept.  and  Dr.  W.  R.  Mann 
of  the  Mathematics  Dept.  will  fc- 
low  liberal  policies.  Dr.  Bowers  will 
leave  uitendance  entirely  up  to  his 
students. 

Dr.  Mann,  who  served  on  the 
Faculty  Council,  spoke  in  favor  of 
the  revision  as  a  "step  in  the  riglit 
direction."  Eventually  he  hopes 
U.N'C  will  have  no  attendance  rul- 
es. «  j^  . 
MORE  MATURE 

An   English   professor   who  did 


semester  to  be  under  the  new  ruk". 
Cut.-  taken  two  days  before  and 
after  holidays  will  still  court 
double  for  General  College  stii- 
dents.  Juniors  and  seniors  are  ii  n 
a'ffecte'^^  oy  this  rule. 

Professors  said  the  reaction    of 
the  clas^  would  be  the  main  factor 
in     determining     what     regulatin  . 
they  would  enforce. 
FREEDOM 

Geology  professor  Dr.  Roy  L-^e 
Ingram  said,  "I  believe  in  giving 
a  pers  n  freedom  to  achieve  liis 
own  success  or  failure."  He  bel'sv 
es  in  the  basic  freedom  of  unlimii 
ed  cuts  out  intends  to  be  stricter 
on  those  students  who  need  ?  li- 
dance. 

Dr.  Robert  E.  Agger  of  the  Poli- 
tical Science  Dept.  is  not  in  favor 
of  the  now  rule  because  be  objocls 
to  any  legulation  of  cuts.  ^ 

•The  danger  feared  in  an  un- 
limited cut  system  is  that  studeftts 
will  take  excessive  cut^  and  get 
into  ^'i-cat'  academic  difficu'.ti".; 
As  in  most  of  the  European  sy.r 
tems  01  education  we  6ught  to  a.^;- 
sume  the;  student  has  responiubi'i- 
ties  and  wll  learn  his  academ.c 
duties  outweigh  his  social  inclin.i 
tions." 

Philosophy  profcyor  Dr.  L  O 
Katsoff  IS  in  favor  of  leaving  l.ie 
regulation  up  to  the  instructor' 
"Gocd  students  who  are  interested 


hard  to  apply  to  courses  involving  i 
writing.  He  also  believes  the  new  j 
rule  is  a  step  in  the  right  direction  i 
as   stuilents   have   the   opportunity 
to  act  more  like  adults. 


Dr.  E.  Earl  Baughman,  Professor 
of  Psychology,  said  he  preferred 
It  to  the  old  system.  He  does  net 
expect  any  problem  to  arise  in 
his  clai-scs. 

Dr.  Agger,  Dr.  Baughman,  and 
Dr.  Mann  said  they  had  never  con-.e 
in  contact  with  cut  regulations  in 
schools  with  which  they  had  pf^- 
viously  been  associated. 

Botanj  Instructor  William  Koch 
said  he  was  glad  the  new  cut  idl- 
ing retained  regulation  of  cuts  for 
General  College.  These  classes  are 
usually  larger  and  (students  ap 
usually  less  interested,  he  said. 


All-College 
Band  Lists 
16  Of  UNC 


VIENNA,  Austria— ( AP )— T  h  e 
Hungarian  government  began 
talking  tougher  yesterday  to  its 
people  a  day  after  Soviet  Com- 
munist Boss  Nikita  Khrushchev 
ended  a  secret  visit   to   Budapest. 

Minister  of  State  Gyoergy  Ma- 
rosan,  the  Hungarian  Communist 
Party  strongman,  said  there  will 
be  an  unceasing  fight  against  "all 
signs  of  counter-revolution." 

In  both  a  newspaper  article  and 
a  speech  broadcast  by  Radio  Buda- 
1  pest   from  the  industrial   town  of 
I  Komlo,  Marosan  declared  Hungary 
can  have  only  a  one-party  govern- 
ment —  ^he    government    ^f    the 
I  CommU|hi$t  Party.  11' 

j      He  said  the  Soviet  Union  crush- 
'  ed  the  irerolt  in  Hunjrarr  fof  •*pro'" 


University 
Institute 
Gets  Award] 

By  ROBERT  H.  BARTHOLOMEW   j 

The  University  has  been  award- 1 
ed  a  training  grant  of  $202,670 
under  the  National  Mental  Health 
Act  by  the  National  Institute  of 
Mental  Health  of  the  Department 
of  Health,  Education  and  Welfare. 

The  announcement  of  the  grant 
was  made  recently  by  Dr.  Gordon 
W.  Blackwell,  director  of  the 
UNC  Institute  for  Research  in 
Social  Science,  and  Dr.  Henry  T. 
Clark  Jr.,  administrator  of  the 
UNC  Division  of  Health  Affairs. 

The  funds  will  be  used  to  sup- 
port a  program  of  doctoral  train- 
ing for  social  scientists  in  the 
field  of  mental  health.  There  are 

(See  INDUSTRIES.  Page  3) 


CARROLLTON,    Ala.  —  (AP)  — 

Robed    nightriders    fired    into    the 

home   of   a    Negro  tenant   farmer 

,  and  ordered  him  to  move  within 

Sixteen    members    of    the    UNC  [  48  hours,  Sheriff  R,  R.  Shields  said 

band  are     participating     in     the !  yesterday.     -       ,     •»!      ••    > 

first    All-College    Band    in    North 


tection   of   the   working  class    and 
Socialist    achievements."' 

.Marosan  said  that  although  Ka- 
dar  is  lo.iking  for  cooperation  with 
other  political  parties,  "it  must  be 
definitely  established  that  the 
working  class  can  and  will  have 
only  one  party." 

Marosan  declared  in  his  broad- 
cast that  the  Soviet  army  protects 
Hungary  from  what  he  termed 
Western  imperialist  aggression 
and  enables  the  Kadar  govern- 
ment to  carry  out  its  program  of 
"rebuilding    Socialism." 

Marosan  himself  is  a  'former 
Social-Democrat  who  went  over 
to  the  Communi-sts.  He  was  main- 
ly responsible  for  the  forced  mer- 
ger of  the  Social  Democratic  and 
Communist  parties 
ago. 

Home  Of  Negro  farmer  ^r«ci  On  '    <  '  -^'no  1 

out  of  line  with  the  Xu  'Klux'"  he 
said. 

Tt»e  sheriff  said  Doughty  had 
been  living  in  adjoining  Fayette 
and  Tii5caloOsa  Counties,  and  ho 
believed  the  nightriders  came 
from  one  of  these  counties. 


seven    yeans 


Dr.  Catlin  To  Give  Talks  Here 
During  First  Week  In  April 

P()litic:il  {)hilo.s()phcr  (rcoige  (■.atiin  will  rielixer  the  i9',7 
Weil  l.ecitire.s  on  American  (iiti/.enship  here  April  4,  -,  and  6. 
C^urrently  a  professor  of  political  .science  at  McGill  Uni- 
\ersity  in  Montreal,  (>anada.  Catlin  has  lectured  widely  as 
"One  ()1  the  worlds  leading  authorities  on  international  af- 
tairs." 

Dr.  ,\lexander  Heard,  chairman  of  the   rXC  Commit- 
♦- '- ♦tee    on    EstablisheG   Lectures,    an- 
nounced  plans  for  the  Weil   Lee- 


Tryouts  Begin 
Tomorrow  For 
Playmokers 


Carolina;  the  band  is  playing  this 
weekend  in  Winston-3alem. 

A  Winston-Salem  music  com- 
pany is  sponsoring  the  band 
which  will  play  works  by  UNC  fac- 
ulty members,  including  Earl  Slo- 
cum's  transcription  of  Frescobaldi's 
Toccata  and  Herbert  W.  Fred's 
Finnish    Rhapsody. 

The  men  selected  from  UNC 
are:  Bill  Roumillat,  oboe;  Johr 
Hanft,  and  Bill  Evans,  flutes;  Ed- 
die Fowlkes,  Harold  Johnson, 
Ronald  Hamilton,  clarinets;  Jer- 
ry Sullivan,  alto  clarinet;  Rex 
Rouse,  Frank  Wilson,  Arty  Sobel, 
bass  clarinets;  Charles  Culbreath, 
alto  sax;  Eddie  Bass  and  Steve 
Keutzer,  cornets;  Dick  Willis, 
i  French  horn  and  Bill  Kellam,  tuba. 

I      Colleges    and    universities    par- 

I  ticipating   in   the    band   are   UNC, 

State    College,    Woman's   College, 

Duke,  East  Carolina  College,   Ap- 

plachian    State    Teachers    College, 

j  Wake   Forest,  Davidson.   Catawba, 

I  Lenion-Rhyne,   and  High   Point. 


Shields  said  the  shooting  and 
threats  were  made  against  Jerry 
Lee  Doughty,  a  tenant  on  the 
farm  of  Ernest  Williams  near  Pa! 
metto  in  North  Pickens  County 
Monday  night.  Shields  said  no  one 
was  injured  and  the  family  still 
occupied  the  house. 

The    nightriders    drove    up    in 


The  house  had  been  occupied 
by  a  white  farmer  in  the  past,  but 
the  white  family  had  bought  a 
nearby   farm  and  moved  to  it. 

The  nightriders  warned  the 
Doughtys  that  unless  they  moved 
by  sundown  Wednesday,  two  days 
later,  they  would  return.  They 
were  not  seen  again,  however,  al- 
seven  cars,  according  to  a  young  '  though  Shields  waited  at  the  house  j 
Negro  man  who  was  staying  with  '  Wednesday  night.  | 


the  Doughtys.  They  wote  hoods 
with  their  faces  exposed  but  none 
of  them  was   identified. 

Shields  said  he  was  at  a  loss 
as  to  the  mfotive  for  the  visit. 
"Doughty  has  had  some  trouble 
with  the  law  but   he  wouldn't  be 


Shield.s  said  some  people  told 
him  a  rumor  had  circulated  that 
Doughty's  children  were  going  to 
ride  a  white  school  bus.  He  said 
this  was  false,  as  arrangements 
had  been  made  for  a  Negro  school 
I  bus  to  pick  them  up. 


IN  PERSON  HALL  ART  GAUERY 


Selected  Prints  From  Collection 
In  Library  Now  Being  Displayed 


By  TOM  lYRD 


The  Person  Hall  Art  Galleiy  is, 
currently  showing  56  selected 
print  •  from  the  Wilson  Library's 
Jacock  and  Emmett  Collections. 
The  prints  were  selected  on  the 
basis  of  their  quality,  rather  tha.i 
on  the  basis  of  any  particular 
theme  or  style,  and  are  fairly  rez- 
re.sentative  of  the  400  years  of 
printm?King. 

The  show  includes  works  by  such 
well-known  artists  as  Rembrandt,  ■  Light." 
Durei ,  Goya,  Piranese,  Picasso  and  ' 
Ko'witz. 

Duress  famous  print  "Melanco- 
iia  I"'  IS  outstanding  both  for  lis 
quality  and  significance.  His  in- 
cisive description  of  the  subject  is 


I  The  international  reputation 
which  uurer  enjoyed,  even  in  hia 
own  time,  was  achieved  through 
the  rap'd  dissemination  of  h.s 
prints,  ilis  influence  can  be  sc»^n 
in  the  exhibition  in  such  artisls 
as  Aldogrever  and  Sanredam. 


British  Leader  Praises  Ike 

PASADENA,  Calif— (AP)— The 
leader  of  Britain's  Labor  Party 
said  yesterday  he  believes  Presi- 
dent Eisenhower  took  a  'very  wise 
and  courageous  step"  in  request- 
ing Congressional  authority  to  use 
American  troops  to  curb  any  "pow- 
er-Hungry Communists"  in  the 
Middle  East. 

"I'm  sure  it  would  be  a  valuable 
contribution  to  peace  in  the  Mid- 
dle East,"  .said   Hugh  T.   N.   Gait- 


skell  in  an  interview. 

He  said  he  has  felt  for  some 
time  that  there  should  be  a  pos- 
itive American  policy  on  the 
Middle  East  and  "this  seems  to 
be    happening." 

He  said  peace  in  the  Middle 
East  is  possible  within  a  year, 
and  added  that  the  United  Na- 
tions buffer  force  between  Israel 
and  Egypt  should  be  extended  all 
around    Israel's    borders. 


p.m. 
!      Tryouts    will    be   viewed    at    the  : 
j  Playmakers'  Theatre.  j 

;      Written    and    directed    by    UNC 
I  graduate   students,    the    plays   will 
j  be:     'Room    for   Rent"    by    Marcel-  j 
•  line    Urafchick     of    Philadelphiia-. 
i  Pa.,   directed    by   Nancy   Christ   of  . 
I  Newark,   N.  J.;     "Portrait     of     a 
I  Dragon'"    by    Josephine    Stipe    of  { 
i  Chapel  Hill,  directed  by  Mary  Ruth 

Johnston  of  Eupora,     Miss.;     and 

"Child   of  Two   V/inds'   by   Peter  ^ 
I  B.   O'Sullivan   of   Valhalla,   N.   Y., 
I  directed    by    Richard    Rothrock    of 

Springdale,   Ark.  j 

Thomas    Wolfe     and     Elizabeth 

Lay  (no,'.  Mrs.  Paul  Green)  found-d 
j  the    tradition    of    original    one-act  1 
!  play  production  in  Chapel  Hill  in  j 

1919.    176    of    such    presentations 
i  have  been  produced  by  the  Play- 1 
table  dealing  to  out- ,  ^^akers  since  that  time  in  an  ef- 1 

fort    to    stimulate    and    encourage  _ 

the  writing  of  plays  on  the  camp-  , 

us. 
I      Tryouts   are   open   to   everyone. 

and  admission  to  the  productions 
i  is  free  of  charge. 


Southeastern  Health  Officials 
Will  Meet  Here  On  Tuesday 


The  exhibit  fncludes  five  etch 
ings  by  Rembrandt.  Of  these  per- 
haps the  most  powerful  in  its  con- 
ception and  execution  is  "The  Des 
cent    from    the    Cross    by    Torch 


With  itrict  adherence  to  the  Bib- 
lical text,  Rembrandt  has  repre- 
sented ihe  descent  as  taking  place 
at  night.  However,  this  was  surely 
a  preference  on  Rembrandt's  part 
as  well,    since   his  work  abounds 


charged  -Aith  an  intensity  which  is  ^^^  ^isM  scenes  illuminated  from 
it.self  expressive  of  the  "tragic  un- !  •^,rithin  the  picture, 
rest    of    human   creation",   which 


scholars  have  found  to  be  the 
sential  theme  of  tius  print. 


The    aquatint    and  etching   "A 
Familial  Folly"  by  Goya  is  ao  at- 


tack on  Ihe  despotism  and  oppres 
sion  oi  his  time.  The  print  cap- 
tures the  universal  spirit  of  revolt 
against  lyranny. 

Three  artists  who  repeatedly  prc- 

1  tested     against     social     injustices, 

I  Goya,  Dyumier  and  Kathe  Kolwitz, 

I  are  seeii  in  first  rate  examples  in 

the  show.  Prints  are  considered  to 

be   a  natural  medium   for  artists- 

who     are     specilleally     concerned 

with  social  values,  since  they  can 

be   reproduced   and    diiseminaled 

easily. 

The  exhibition  also  include-] 
works  of  a  lighter  vein  such  as 
Canaletto's  view  of  Padua  or  Bon 
nar<ls  -Two  Children." 

The  exhibition  was  prepared  by 
"Mrs.  Myia  Lautferer  of  the  Wilson 
LilH-ary's  Graphic  Arts  Room  and 
Prof.  Edgar  Thome  of  the  A.-> 
Dept.  It  will  continue  through  Jan. 
20. 


Key  public  health  officials  from  j 
throughout  the  southea.stern  Unit- 1 
ed  States  will  meet  .in  Chapel  ' 
Hill  Tuesday  for  a  one-day  sess- 
ion of  the  Advisory  Committee  of , 
the  University  School  of  Public 
Health. 

The  advisory  group,  composed 
of  state  health  officers  from  six 
southeastern  states  as  well  as  reg- 
ional officials  of  the  U.  S.  Public 
Health  Service,  will  consider  a 
number  of  problems  relating  tx>  the 
practice  of  public  health  in  the 
South  today. 

Dr.  Otis  Anderson,  assistant 
surgeon  general  of  the  USPHS  i" 
Washington,  D.  C.  will  be  the 
special  -guest  for   the   meeting. 

Items  to  be  discussed  at  the 
gathering  include:  needs  for 
trained  health  officers,  epidemio- 
logists and  other  key  public  health 


personnel  in  the  Southeast:  the 
provisions  of  the  Federal  ptogram 
for  the  training  of  public  health 
workers;  and  the  research  pro- 
grams which  should  be  inaugurat- 
ed to  meet  the  changing  patterns 
of   public  health. 

This  is  the  third  year  in  which 
this  advisory  committee  has  been 
active. 

All  meetings  will  be  held  in 
the  School  of  Public  Health  Build- 
ing. A  luncheon  will  be  held  at 
12:30  p.m.  at  the  Carolina  Inn. 

Representing  UNC  at  the  ses- 
sion will  be  Dr.  E.  G.  McGavran. 
dean  of  the  Scht«>l  of  Public 
Health;  Dr.  John  J.  Wright,  pro- 
fessor of  public  health  admin- 
istration; Dr.  Robert  E.  Coker. 
research  professor  of  public  health 
administration;  and  Dr.  Henry  T. 
Clark  Jr.,  administration,  Divis- 
ion of  Health  Affairs, 


A  6  Moore 

Criticizes 

Recruiting 

"It  is  high  time  that  college 
administrators,  athletic  authorities, 
and  alumni  give  more  serious  at- 
tention to  the  matter  of  maintain- 
ing their  athletic  programs  on 
the  same  high  plane  of  integrity 
and  idealism  upon  which  their 
other  educational  programs  are 
maintained.  It  is  generally  recog- 
nized that  alumni  do  most  of  the 
under  -  the 

standing  athletes,  but  it  is  also 
known  that  where  there  is  much 
of  this  sort  of  thing  being  done 
the  coaching  staff  knows  about 
it  and  approves  it.  Universities 
and  colleges  have  dodged  behind 
alumni   long   enough." 

These  ariticisms  form  the 
substance  of  a  talk  made  by  Al- 
bert Burton  Moore,  graduate  dean 
of  the  University  of  Alabama  who 
recently  ended  a  two-year  term 
as  president  of  the  National  Col- 
legiate Athletic  Assn.  and  is  now 
a  member  of  the  executive  com- 
mittee of  that  body,  at  the  meet- 
ing of  the  Chapel  Hill  Rotary  Club 
Wednesday    night. 

The  controversial  subject  of  the 
recruiting  of  college  athletes  in 
connection  with  the  NCAA  was 
brought  under  fire  by  Moore  as 
the  main  topic  of  his  talk.  Prom- 
inent in  the  public  view  in  the 
last  year,  the  NCAA  has  become 
particularly  recognized  in  North 
Carolina  becau.se  of  its  exposure 
of  extensive  violations  of  rules 
by  universities  and  colleges  and 
the  stiff  penalties  it  has  inflicted 
on   State   College. 

Included  in  the  organization:?! 
set-up  of  the  NCAA  is  a  Coun- 
cil, which  is  the  policy-making  and 
rule-interpreting^  agency  between 
the  annual  conventions  of  the 
Association. 

"It  is  also  charged  with  the 
heavy  responsibility  of  enforcing 
the  rules  and  regulations  of  the 
Association.  It  may  take  any 
punitive  action  against  a  member 
institution  for  violating  rules, 
except  that  of  suspending  or  eject- 
ing it  from  the  Aa-sociation.' 
Moore  explained. 


\' 


IN  SCHOOLS 

Law  Review 
Has  Article 
On  Legislation 

School  legislation,  with  emphasis  1 
on  the  Pearsall  Plan,  is  the  sub- 
ject of  a  lead  article  in  the  fall  I 
issue  of  the  North  Carolina  Law  i 
Review,  published  by  the  Univers-  i 
ity  School  of  Law.  I 

Prof.  Robert  H.  Wettach,  form- 
er dean  of  the  school,  prepared 
the  article  which  presents  both 
sides  of  the  picture  in  school 
legislation.  A  second  major  arti- 
cle, concerning  taxation,  was 
written  by  J.  Duane  Gilliam,  Law 
School  senior  and  a-n  instructor 
in  the  Business  Administration 
School. 

Richmond  G.  Bernhardt  Jr.  of 
Lenoir  is  editor-in-chief  of  the 
Review,  whose  staff  is  selected 
by  the  f-jculty  on  the  basis  of  high 
scholastic  standing.  Bernhardt  has 
a  straight  "A"  average,  as  does 
Jack  T.  Hamilton  of  Smithfield. 
an  associate  editor  of  the  Review. 

Other  associate  editors  are  L. 
Poinde.xter  Watts  Jr.  of  Charlotte 
and  Ted  G.  West  of  Lenoir.  The 
publication's  business  manager  is 
Spencer  L.  Blaylock  Jr.  of  Greens- 
boro. AH  five  men  are  mem'oers 
of  the  senior  law  class. 


Carolina    Symposium      on      Public 

Affairs. 

Originated  at  the  University 
during  the  1914-15  .school  3'ear. 
the  lectures  were  later  endowed 
by  the  families  of  Sol  and  Henry 
Weil  of  Goldsboro.  William  How- 
ard Taft  delivered  the  fir.st  lect- 
ures. 

Catlin,  a  triple  prizeman  while 
an  Oxlord  University  studen- 
came  to  Cornell  University  as  a 
White  Fellow  in  1923-24  and  re- 
gained there  as  professor  of  poli- 
tics until  1935.  He  has  held  var- 
ious lecture  posts  at  Yale,  Cal- 
cutta. Peki"s,  Heidelberg,  Colum- 
bia and  other  univ.ersities. 

While  still  in  his  twentfes  he 
wTote  "The  Science  and  ^^ethod 
of  Politics."  now  con.sidered  a 
milestone  in  the  developm^t  of 
contem.)oiary  political  science. 
Among  his  many  other  writings 
are  'The  Story  of  Political  Phi- 
losophers." -'One  Anglo-American 
NrU'on,"  .^nd  '  A  .Study  of  the 
Principles  ol  Politics.' 

During  1948  Catlin  led  the 
British  delegation  to  the  Luxem- 
bourg Conterence.  which  met  with 
French  and  German  representa- 
tives, headed  by  Maurice  Schu- 
mann and  Conrad  Adenauer.  The 
same  year  he  prepared  memoran- 
da on  international .  coordination 
of  idea  pio.iection,  which  was 
discussed  with  Mrs.  Franklin  D. 
Roosevelt.  General  Dwight  D. 
Eisenhower  and  John  Foster  Dul- 
les. 

Catlin  toured  South  East  Asia 
in  1952.  speaking  on  behalf  of 
the  British  Foreign  office  in  jcv 
eral  places,  and  visiting  Pakistan, 
India,  Ceylon,  Siam,  Malaya,  Au- 
stralia. Burma  and  Indonesia. 

Tar  Heel  Staff  Meeting 

A  special  meeting  of  Daily 
Tar  Heel  staff  writers  and  re- 
porters has  been  called  for  1 
p.m.  tomorrow  afternoon  in  the 
news   room. 

This  will  be  the  last  meeting 
before  exams.  The  fall  semester 
will  be  reviewed,  special  awards 
given,  and  plans  laid  for  next 
semester. 

Charlie  Sloan,  managing  edi- 
tor, has  asked  that  all  students 
whose  names  have  appeared  on 
the  masthead  this  semester  be 
present  for  the  meeting. 

Another  staff  meeting  is 
scheduled  for  the  first  full  week 
of  the  spring  semester,  when  stu 
dents  interested  in  writing  for 
the  p«per  will  be  introduced  t« 
the  steff  and  given  assignments. 


1  tures,  which  have  been  delivered 
i  in  recent  years  by  such  disting- 
I  uished  world  citizens  ,as  Robert  A. 
i  Taft.  Zechariah  Chafee  Jr.  and 
I  Galo  Plaza.  ~ 

!       The     1956     lectures,     given     by 
Auditions  for  the  casts  of  three  j  Gen.    Carlos    Romulo,    Philippine 

one'act    plays^^rill    b*  tield    by    the     delegate     to     the     United    Nations. 

Carotrna   Pla^alcers   tomorrow   at    were  combined  with  the  week-Umg 


PAOl   TWO 


THI  DAILY  TAI  MitL 


SUNDAY,  JANUARY  6,  1957 


Rakigh-Durham  Airport: 
Paradox  In  Conveniences 

<;()iitril)utia^  Kditor  L^uis  Graves  ot  The  Chapel  Hill  Weekly, 
whose  editorial  appears  further  down  in  this  column,  has  been  wrestling 
hard  h)r  several  weeks  alx>ut  the  parking  problem  at  the  Raleigh-Durham 
Airport. 

His  battle  has  not  gone  imnotited.  Several  North  Carolina  news- 
|»apers  have  agffced  with  him  that  free  parking  at  the  airport  is  in  rotten 
(ondition  and  ihat  short-term  parking  near  rlie  administration  building 
^as  when  you  stop     to     iniload     a 


friend    and    the    friends    luggage) 
is   impossible   to  get. 

The  airport  does  offer  nearby 
parking— for  a  price.  The  free 
parking  can  be  had  several  hun- 
dred feet  awav  from  the  administra- 
tion building,  in  a  muddy  lot  un- 
attended bv  anv  sort  of  police  of- 
ficers. 

riie  airport  itself,  which  is  a 
credit  to  Eastern  North  Carolina 
progress,  is  ?^>  fine  and  ultra-coii- 
\enient  addition  to  this  area.  It 
serves  nianv  C  hapel  I^illians  as 
well  as  folks  from  Raleigh  and 
Durham.  As  recognition  of  this 
fact,  one  of  the  major  airlines  has 
installed  a  stniight  telephone  wire 
Ironj    its  airjjort   reservation   office 

THE  CHAPEL  HILL  WEEKLY: 


to  the  Chapel  Hill  telephone  ex- 
change. Now  folks  here  can  call 
the  reser\ation  desk  without  paying 
long  distance  tolfs. 

But.  line  as  the  airport  itself  may 
be.  the  parking  situation  is  awful. 
It  t:omprTes  quite  well  with  the 
rniversitv  s  parking  problem  along 
S.  Columbia  St. 

The  airport  cU^es  not  pav  proper 
attention  tp  the  people  who  drive 
out  to  meet  friends,  or  who  leave 
their  automobiles  at  the  airport 
wliile  thev  leave  the  area  on  flights. 
The  airport  offers  attended  park- 
ing onlv  for  those  who  like  to  pay 
imusually  high   rates. 

Its  bad  that  a  little  tjiing  like 
amomobile  parking  can  l)e  such 
a  smear  on  a  fine  piece  ol  pro,giess. 


Thieves  Find  It  Good  Prey 


The  following  article  appeared 
Wednesday  morning  in  the  Raleigh 
.News   and    Observer: 

Seven  cars  weie  broken  into 
in  the  free  pjirking  lot  ai  Raleigh- 
Durhain  Aiiport  dining  the  week- 
end. 

■■i>eputv  Sherilf  Wilev  Jones 
s.iid  the  ca»s  auparentlv  were  left 
l»\  aJ!  ti;n fl<-«i.  I'^y  >  or  three  bore 
oin-of-state  litenses."  he  said. 

"It  WIS  imi>ossil)lf  to  identitv 
;ni\  stolen  i.iroDeYtv  witlunn  the 
cat  owner's  beijig  present."  the  of- 
{]'■'•<  w.ifj  If,.  ^^\(]  ii,,.  inuount  of 
moncrtv  -folcii  jivohablv  would 
bi-  learned  later  this  week  when 
the  car  owners  returned. 

'■F.iurance  to  six  of  the  cars  was 
gained  through  >>roken  windows." 
Deputy  Jones  said.^_,(.)ne  « .ir.  a  coti- 
^ertibfe,  fivliis^i^teied  bv  tTic  sla.sh- 
iug  of  the  canvas  top." 

No  wonder  thie\es  found  it 
easy  to  take  .ajid  gel  rwav  with 
the  contents  of  cars  in  the  tree 
paiking  lot  at  the  Raleigh-Durham 
Airport.  No.  place  tould  be  more 
inviting  for  (riniinals  to  operate 
at  their  leismx*  without  I)eing 
disturbed. 

\t  the  old  airport  cars  coidd  be 
left  with  perfect  .safety  to  await 
tlie  return  of  their  owners.  At  the 
new   airport    the   free    parking    lot 

The  Daily  Tar  Heel 

The  official  jtudent  publication  of  tbe 
Publications  Board  ol  the  Uuivcrsity  of 
North  Carolina,  where  it  is  published 
daily  except  Monday  and  examination 
and  vacation  periods  and  summer  terms 
Entered  as  second  class  mat'er  in  th« 
Dost  office  in  Chapel  Hill.  N.  C,  undei 
the  Act  oi  March  8.  1870.  Subscription 
rates:  mailed.  S4  per  year.  $2.30  a  8Cm*i 
ter;  delivered.  S6  a  year.  $3.50  a  semes 
ter. 


Editor 


FRED  POWLEDGE 


Managing  Editor 
News  Editor 


CHARUE  SLOAN 


NANCY  HILL 


Business  Manager  BILL  BOB  FUEL 


Sports  Editor 


LARRY  CHEEK 


Subscription  Manager  _ 

Advertising  Manager  

Circulation '.Manager 


_„  Dale  Staley 

.      Fred  Kat2in 

Charlie  Holt 


NEWS  STAFF— Clarke  Jones,  Ray  Unt 
,er,  Joan  Moore.  Pringle  Pipkin.  Annu 
Drake.  Edith  MacKinnon,  Wally  Kuralt, 
Mary  AJys  Voorhees,  Graham  Snyder, 
Billy  Barnes.  Neil  Bass.  Gary  Nichols, 
Page  Bernstein,  Peg  Humphrey,  Phyllis 
MauUsby. 


BLSEVESS  ST-AJ-T— Ro.-5a  Moore.  Johnny 
Whitaker.  Dick  Leavitt,  Dick  Sirkin. 


SPOUTS  ST.AFF:  BUJ  King.  Jim  Parks, 
Jimmy  Harper,  Dave  Wible,  Charley 
^ovson. 


EDITORIAL  STAi-F  —  Woody  Sears, 
Frank  Crowtber,  Barry  Winston.  Darrd 
Mundy,  George  Pfingst,  Ingrid  Clay. 
Cortland  Edwardt;  Paul  McCauley, 
Bubbi  Smith. 

Staff  Photographer Norman  Kaotor 

Librarian Sue   Gishner 


N\ght  Editor  _  __- 
Proof  Reader 


„.  Wally  Kyralt 
._  Clarke  Jones 


has  been  loc^ated  so  lar  awav  from 
the  tertninal  building  that,  as  far 
as  safety  for  car  owners  is  concern- 
ed, it  might  as  well  be  a  mile  away 
in    the   ^voods. 

Furthermore,  it  is  inade<iUo-'tely 
lighted  (if  at  all)  and  has  no  police 
piotection.  This  is  a  situation  that 
the  Raleigh-Duiham  .\irport  .\u- 
thority  ought  to  ino\e  piomptly  to 
( oirec  t. 

The  Bull 
Is  Being 
Shot  Again 

ilangvess,  in  cuso-  you  couldn't 
tell,  is  back ^ in*  action.  •'       -^"^ 

C!haj>el  Hillians  who  get  the 
Congiessional  Record  found  out 
yesterday.  \*ohnne  lo^j.  Number  i. 
cotitaining  the  "proceedings  atid 
debates  of  the  8"»th  Ciongress.  first 
se.s.siou."   <  anie    thnjiigh    the    mails. 

"It  was  iii8  pages,  tiny  type,  thick. 
.And  it  looked  verv  inu(  h  like 
previous     Congressional     Records. 

To  wit: 

The  Hou.>e  oi  Representatives 
received  i!i(>  letters  and  other 
executi\e    comnuniications. 

The  House  intioduced  ^cx)  bills 
and  lesolutions,  among  them  ones 
to: 

\.  .'\dnut  Hawaii  and  .\laska 
to  the  United  States. 

2.  Declare  Oct.  12  a  legal  holi- 
dav. 

;}.  Provide  equal  pay  for  equal 
woik  for  women. 

4.  lo  "provide  thai  the  trans- 
jKjrtation  of  mullusk  shells  (in- 
(luding  clam  and  oyster  shells) 
from  the  point  of  extractioti  to  the 
dockside  shall  be  taken  into  ac- 
count in  computing  percentage 
depletion." 

Ihat  isn't  all.  The  senators  and 
representatives  included  several 
thousand  woicls  in  the  Record  on 
such  matters  as: 

1.  "Religion  in  .\meiica  lodav.  ' 

2.  "Why  Does  the  Name  Mat- 
ter as  Long  as  the  Policy  Works?" 

'{.  "Trubute  to  a  Team,  Coaches 
and  a  Creat  Institution"  (this 
wus  a  speech  by  Rep.  Schwengel, 
Iowa,  abou{  the  I'liiveisity  of 
Iowa's    Rose    liowl   victory). 

4.  "How  TV  Came  to  the  Okan- 
oga«. " 

4.  "Politics  Cleaner  than  You 
Thitik." 

G.  River  .Barges  and  Longer 
Power   Lines." 

7.  "Distinguished  and  Famous 
Los  .\ngeles  County  Sheriff.  Ku- 
geiie  W.  Biscailuz,  Celebrates  His 
Golden  .Ainiiversary  as  a  Member 
of  the  Sheriff's  Dept.  and  His  Sil- 
ver .Anniversary  ;ii  Sheriff  of  Los 
.Angeles    County." 

Ilie  season,  it  appears.  has 
started.  The  public  printer  had 
better  start  watching  his  typesetters 
from  now  on.  There'll  be  more 
laughter  than  work  in  the  govern- 
ment printshop  from  now  on  if 
he  doesn't. 


AN  ACHILLES  HEEL?. 


Scientific  Training  Alone 
Cant  Satisfy  Career  Needs 


Clarence  B.  Randall 

Clarence  B.  Randall  is  former 
chairman  of  the  Inland  Steel 
Corp.  This  speech,  given  by  him 
at  Harvard  University,  was  pub- 
lished first  in  The  St.  Louis 
Post-Dispatch. 

This  is  the  age  of  technology. 
The  scientist  and  the  engineer 
have  revolutionized  industry  by 
their  miracles  of  research  and 
invention,  and  have  given  us  a 
physical  well-being  that  is  the 
envy  of  the  world. 

I  have  the  deepest  admiration 
for  these  achievements,  and  for 
the  part  that  specialized  educa- 
tion has  played  in  bringing  them 
'to  pass. 

But  I  fear  that  as  a  nation  we 
Americans  are  In  danger  of 
yielding  to  technical  hypnosis. 
We  behave  at  times  as  theugii 
we  believe  that  all  problems 
can  be  resolved  by  the  pro- 
cesses of  physical  research  and 
the  application  of  engineering 
methods. 

The  lesson  of  my  own  busi- 
ness experience  is  that  this  i.s 
not  so.  and  the  art  of  manage- 
ment, even  in  an  industry  ihat 
rests  for  its  success  on  the 
.achievements  of  the  .scientist  and 
the  engineer,  requires  a  broadly 
cultivated    mind. 

I  hold  the  view  that  a  gsneral 
education  is  sound  preparation 
for  a  career  in  business,  and  I 
am  unhappy  when  most  of  the 
voices  that  I  hear  ab  ut  me  in 
the  business  world  arc  lifted  in 
prai.se  of  specialized  education 
only. 

*         *         • 

There  is  no  doubt  but  that  the 
scientists  arc  having  their  inn- 
ing.s  and  there  is  danger,  it  seems 
to  me,  that  education  will  get 
top-heavy    with     technology. 

1  am  told  that  the  great  .ship 
^een  Mary  Jists  perceptibly 
when  all  the  passengers  rush  to 
the  port  side,  and  all  that  I  ask 
is  that  education  bo  kept  in  trim 
between  these  (wo  major  a.spccls 
of   our   intellectual   di.sciplines. 

Sit  by  the  desk  of  the  chief 
officer  of  a  large  company  as 
the  day  goes  along  and  .see  what 
typ?  of  problems  come  acro.ss 
his  desk.  Few  there  will  be  in 
the  field  of  management  that  can 
be  solved  by  reference  to  physi- 
cal standards,  or  by  the  labora- 
tory method  of  analysis  and  test- 
ing. 

Most  of  the  problems  would 
be  just  the  same  had  the  atom 
never  been  split.  They  require 
not  knowledge  of  the  nature  of 
matter,  but  a  clear  mind,  the 
power  of  logical  analysis,  wis- 
dom born  of  experience,  and  a 
talent  for  communication. 

Each  day  there  will  be  at 
least  one  that  deals  with  econom- 
ics The  timing  of  a  plant  ex- 
pansion, for  example,  or  the 
carrying  through  of  a  complex 
financial  program,  require  an 
intimate  understanding  of  the 
functioning  of  our  national  econ- 
omy, while  the  implications  of  a 
proposed  new  tax.  or  the  infla- 
tionary   trend    of    governmental 


L'ii  Abner 


policies     are     approached     only 
through   understanding     of     the 

principles  of  economics. 

«         «         * 

Clearly  these  are  subjects 
which  cannot  be  learned  in  a 
laboratory.  They  are  seldom  well 
understood  by  young  men  grad- 
uating in  engineering. 

As  the  day  goes  forward  for 
the  executive,  continuously  he 
will  be  face  to  face  with  the 
great  new  discovery  of  this  gen- 
eration of  business  men.  By  this 
I  do  not  mean  ^uclear  fission 
or  the  electronic  brain.  While 
these  frontiers  of  science  have 
been  under  conquest,  the  in- 
du'^trialist  has  himself  breached 
a   new  barrier. 

He  has   discovered    people. 

.\t  each  point  in  his  life  he 
has  come  to  see  that  human  na- 
ture manifesting  itself  in  an  in- 
finite   variety   of    forms     is     the 


and  that  if  men  can  be  prepared 
at  all  for  them  in  advance, 
their  hope  lies  in  general  edu- 
cation and  the  disciplines  of 
the  liberal  arts. 

At  every  point  to  which  the 
business  executive  turns  in  his 
work,  he  senses  the  necessity 
for  tne  adequate  communica- 
tion of  ideas.  Each  hour  of  the 
day,  from  the  humblest  fore- 
man to  the  chief  executive  of 
the  company,  the  person  bearing 
responsibility  must  engage  in 
telling  others  what  to  do  and 
how  to  do  it.  The  business  man 
today  must  be  able  to  write  and 
speak  the  English  language  with 
clarity  and  felicity,  or  stand 
aside  and  let  his  chair  be  oc- 
cupied  by  someone  who  can. 

The  communication  of  ideas 
is  obviously  a  function  of  general 
education.  One  learns  the  effec- 
tive use  of  the  written  word  bv 


recognize  that  the  responsibilities 
of  leadership  require  the  culti- 
vation of  the  resources  that  are 
to  be  found  in  liberal  education. 

*         *         * 

We  read  continuously  of  the 
tremendous  advanct  which  Russia 
is  making  in  the  training  of 
engineers  and  scientists.  It  now 
seems  to  be  accepted  that  their 
technical  graduates  outnumber 
ours  each  year  and,  although  the 
quality  of  the  training  of  these 
young  men  is  not  altogether 
clear,  there  is  much  evidence  to 
believe  that  it  is  noteworthy. 

I  share  the  general  concern 
over  this  phenomenon,  but  I 
must  point  out  that  nowhere 
have  I  heard  Russia  boait  of 
the  increase  in  the  number  of 
graduates  she  is  turning  out  in 
the   liberal    arts. 

This  may  prove  to  be  the 
.■\chilles  heel  of  the  Communist 


'MY  Answer  To  The  Parking  Problem' 


i'  "1 


element  about  which  he  knows 
least,  and  the  one  which  causes 
him  his  deepest  anxieties,  and 
calls  forth  his  greatest  effort. 

The  executive  has  no  escape 
from  dealing  also  with  group 
problenis.  He  finds  that  the  mass 
behavior  of  human  beings  dif- 
fers in  many  startling  ways  from 
the  actions  of  the  same  people 
when  seen  as  individuals. 

it  seems  to  me  eltofether 
clear  that  knowledge  of  metal- 
lurgy can  make  no  contribution 
whatever  to  the  mastery  of 
these  problems  of  human  atti- 
tudes and  human  behavior 
which  so  flominate  the  walking 
hours  and  thoughts  of  business 
men   every-whore     these     days. 


-soSSfeff 


studying  the  great  literature  of 
the  past  and  by  infinite  practice 
under  skilled  instruction.  One 
learns  to  speak  by  hearing  the 
spoken  word  of  the  masters,  and 
by  daily  practice  under  guidance. 

So  if  seems  to  me  likely  that 
when  the  modern  business  man 
emerges  from  his  present  per 
iod  of  introspection  and  senses 
to  the  full  his  own  inadequacy 
for  the  responsibilities  of  lead- 
ership in  modern   industry,  he 
will  turn  back  to  general  educa- 
tion   for    inspiration    and   guid- 
ance. 
He   will  not   for  a   moment  re- 
lax in  his  effort  to  advance  the 
physical   welfare  of  mankind   by 
scientific    inquiry,    but    he    will 


dynasty.  Their  economy  may 
become  altogether      lopsided 

through  their  worship  at  the 
shrine  of  technology,  and  our 
ultimate  superiority  may  rest 
upon  maintaining  in  our  coun- 
try the  proper  balance  between 
these  two  approaches  to  the  edu- 
cation of  our  youth. 

Let  us  not  relax  for  one  mo- 
ment the  superb  forward  thrust 
of  our  scientific  inquiry,  or  the 
high  quality  of  our  technical  ed- 
ucation, but  let  us  at  the  same 
time  recognize  and  preserve  with 
equal  enthusiasm  the  values  that 
lie  in  a  general  education,  and 
the  liberating  benefits  of  broad 
cultivation  of  the  mind. 


il    '\'j..".:i'ki;!j.-4i'J 


By  Ai  Capp 


MADE  us     AwA^'loL-   i 
THEE.EST    V^^^^ 
OFFER—       U     dCE.7 


Pogo 


By  Wait  Keliy 


I  PINT  <MOW 
VOU  SVA$  A 

6101. 


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TXf  ^NNA  CHANSg  ALLTUg  fUH     f    VOy'H,  gTAST  T  IP  >0U  SONNA  SO 
■    '     '      I  M ----- 


W0  B6BH  HAVIN'->Oii  PgOBiy  '5 
SOWA  JOIN  -mUmSAJD  ANP 
HUSOfJH'^l  AfTjeNOON,  TAtKIN 

mrriH' AN 


A^'TATT/K'  !rAK£OffyOHArf 


On  Summing  Up 
Religion  Fight 

Woody  .Sears 

The  past  few  weeks  have  been  banner  weeks 
for  student  participation  on  the  editorial  page  of 
their  paper.  Asrf  am  now  more-or-less  a  sideline 
observer.  I  can  say  that  the  sUff  of  The  Daily  Tar 
Heel  is  very  pleased  with  the  response  the  stu- 
dents have  been  contributing. 

It  is  also  an  indication  that  the  students  are 
reading  the  paper.  This,  too,  is  gratifying  to  the 
folks   who   spend   their   afternoons    putting   out   a 

paper. 

*  *  + 

There  are  several  schools  of  thought  on  sub 
jects  such  as  religion.  One  is  that  it's  a  subject 
that  is  too  controversial  and  too  personal  to  be 
discussed;  and  another  is  that  it  is  something  that 
should  be  discussed  to  make  people  think. 

Now  whether  or  not  the  people  who  discuss 
such  topics  really  think  is  a  subject  for  debate  in 
its  own  right.  But  let's  not  discredit  the  participat- 
ing students  on  The  Daily  Tar  Heel  edit  page 
they've  made  a  definite  step  in  the  right  direction. 
It  would  appear  that  discussions  on  religion 
must  of  necessity  be  dealt  with  largely  in  terms 
of  personal  prejudices  and  empirical  experience. 
And  sarcasm  or  heated  arguments  rarely  change 
a  person's  mind  .  .  .  but  they  might  open  a  door 
for  new  thoughts. 

Personal  experience  is  the  deadliest  source  of 
prejudice  that  exists,  I  think.  I  think  this  because 
-it  is  so  hard  to  overcome  the  unpleasant  associa- 
tions  which   we   have    made   from   our   own    un- 
fortunate incidents.  If  we  have  been  told  that  we 
should  hate  certain   people  or  groups   of  people, 
it  is  hard  to  unlearn.  But  it  seoms  to  me  that  it 
harder  to  unlearn  the  things  which  we  have  learn- 
ed "the  hard  way,"  or  by  our  own  efforts. 
As  an   example,   suppose   you    lived    next   door 
to  a  Jewish  family  at  one  time   in  your  life.  You 
remember  that  they  were  the  most  despicable  peopu- 
you   have   ever  known.  It^is  hard   not   to  let  that 
association  spread  to  others  of  the  same  race,  or 
conviction. 

Likewise,  suppose  you  had  known  a  '"good" 
Baptist  who  went  to  church  every  Sunday  and  was 
a  deacon  in  the  church.  This  all  looked  very  nice. 
but  you  happened  to  know  that  he  was  doing  a 
little  bootlegging  on  the  side.  Then  he's  a  hypo- 
crite, and  it's  hard  not  to  smile  a  nasty,  smug,  self- 
assured  smile  to  yourself  everytime  you  hear  de- 
vout, church-going  Baptists  mentioned. 

*  »  *  ■  • 

The    Catholics    are    always    good    for    a    load   of 
prejudice   buckshot.     Imagine,     buying    absolution 
.■\nd  of  course,  everyone  knows  that  that's; what  it 
boils  down  to.   And   wh-o  does  that  Cardinal  Spell- 
man  think  he  is.  trying  to  dictate  to  the  mwie  it- 
dustry? 
V*'      These  are  things  we  all  think  at  some  time  or 
other  if  we'll  be  honest  with  ourselves — of  course. 
not  these  very  same  thoughts,  but  along  the  same 
line.  I  suppose  it's  what  they  call  human  natur?. 
But  we  have  to  live  with  each  other,  and  prob- 
ably  the  vast   majority  of   the  time  our   impious 
thoughts  are  lost  in  the   shadow  of  the   struggle 
we  wage  for  subsistence.  However,  the  profession- 
ally  prejudiced  person  cannot  l>e  discounted.    He 
is  always  aware  of  his  supremacy,  and  never  is  to 
busy  to  tell  you  about  it. 
We   can   never   really   be   sure    about   how   Uie 
•    other  fellow  feels,  and  he  is  not  too  likely  to  «*pen 
up  all  the  way  to  tell  you  about  his  feelings  in  de- 
tail.  But   there   is   this  "to  consider:   every  person 
has   a    religion    of  some   kind   or    other,    and   that 
is  the  thing  which  governs  the  things  Jie  does  and 
the  way  he  thinks. 

*  *  * 

My  own  idea  is  that  to  know  a  person  well  you 
must  first  know  what  his  religion  is,  for  it  will 
affect  everything  he  does,  and  by  knowing  this 
side  of  a  man,  you  can  better  understand  him  and 
be  more  tolerant  of  his  shortcomings. 

So  before  you  begin  to  berate  anothor  fellow 
for  his  beliefs  artd  become  too  firm  in  your  con- 
viction that  he  is  all  wrong,  and  elevate  your  own 
ego  in  the  process,  stop  and  think.  How  would  you 
like  to  be  treated?  Would  you  like  for  others  to 
respect  your   beliefs,  even   though   they   are  dif- 
ferent from  your  own. 
Good    old    "Christian    Charity"    enters   the    pic 
ture,  too.  But  I  would  prefer  not  to  consider  it  as  a 
virtue  which   was  reserved   for  Christians.   It,  too. 
is  a  part  of  the  great  idea  of  doing  for  others  as 
.vou  would  have  them,  do  for  you.   It  takes  a   big 
man    to  be   consistently   tolerant   and   generous   in 
this  field. 

And  truly,   such  a  man  is  a  godly  man,  even 
if  he  professes  atheism.  For  if  he  is  a  big  man  in 
this  respect,  he  is  observing  the  greatest  of  ail 
laws,  qoing  his  way  and   letting  you  go  yours. 
Stand  by  your  guns,  to  be  sure,  but  never  fire 
on  another  man  just  for  the  sheer  joy  of  filling  his 
beliefs  full  of  holes.  I  believe  in  a  great  equalizing 
process  that  I  can't  explain  and  won't  attempt  to. 
but  I  believe  it  exists.  Everybody  gets  his  own,  or., 
to  quote  the  "Good  Book:" 

"As  ye  sow.  so  shall  ye  reap." 
The  iconoclast,  or  image-breaker,  wall  some  day 
wallow  in  his  own  disillusionment.         * 

Coeds  Alleged  Change 

Editor:  ^ 

When  I  came  here  as  a  freshman  last  fall,  I  had 
never  seen  such  a  pretty  sight  in  my  life  as  all 
those  beautiful  coeds. 

But  now  when  I  come  back  after  Christmas 
holidays,  all  the  bpauty  is  gone.  They  don't  care 
what  clothes  they  wear  anymore,  and  their  faces 
nave  lost  that  fresh  look. 

What  is  it  with  these  girls?   I'm  going  to  start- 
going  to  Duke,  even  if  I  have  to  thumb  rides. 

Name  Withheld  By  Request 

Nothing  To  Review 

Since  students  didn't  come  back  to  school  until 
Thursday,  and  since  The  Daily  Tar  Heel's  presses 
didnt  start  turning  until  Friday  morning  there 
is  no  Week  in  Review  page  this  morning. 

The  feature  will  be  resumed  next  Sunday 
morning. 


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SUNDAY,  JANUARY  i,.\95T 


THI  DAILY  TAR  HIIL 


PAGE  THREE 


Dean  Luxon  Takes  Qver  7th 
National  Job  As  AEJ  Proxy 


When  Norval  Neil  Luxon,  Dean 
of  the  School  of  Journalism,  took 
over  Jan.  1  as  president  of  the 
Assn.  for  Education  in  Journalism, 
It  made  the  seventh  national  of- 
fice he  has  held  in  professional 
journalism  education  associations 
in  the  past  16  years. 

The  AEJ  is  composed  of  725 
teachers  of  journalism  in  four- 
year  colleges  and  universities. 
Dean  Luxon  was  elected  second 
vice-president  for  1955  and  first 
vice-president  ( president  -  elect) 
for  1956. 

Starting  in  1941,  Dean  Luxon 
served  for  seven  years  as  secre- 
tary-trari^Jurca"  of  the  American 
Assn.  of  Teachers  of  Journalism 
(Which  became  the  AEJ  in  1951) 
and  as  secretarj- treasurer  of  the 
.American  Assn.  of  Schools  and 
Departments  of  Journalism.  He 
was  named  AASDJ  president  for 
1948.  Meanwhile  in  1946,  he  was 
elected  chairman  of  the  Accredit- 
ing Committee  of  the  Amei-ican 
Council  on  Eduction  for  Journal- 
ism, a  job  he  held  until  late  1953. 

Since  1937,  when  his  study  of 
curricula  ;n  AASDJ  schools  appear- 
ed in  the  Journalism  Quarterly, 
18  articles  written  by  Dean  Lux- 
on on  professional  education  for 
journalism  have  been  published 
in  the  Journalism  Quarterly.  Nie- 
man  Reports.  Editor  &  Publisher, 
Higher  Education,  and  other  mag- 
azines, plus  a  chapter,  "Educa- 
tion for  Journalism"  in  the  book 
"Ekiucaiion  for  the  Professioni" 
published  in   1955. 

Dean  Earl  F.  English,  of  the 
School  of  Journalism.  University 
of  Missouri,  and  Dean  Luxon  are 
regarded  anotong  their  colleagues 
as  the  leading  authorities  on  pro- 
fessional education  for  journalism 
in  the  United  Statei^.  They  were 
associated      closely      for     several 


DEAN  LUXON 

. . .  heads  AEJ 

years   in   the  journalism  accredit- 
ing program. 

Dean  Luxon  has  spoken  on  pro- 
fessional education  for  journalism 
before  members  of  the  American 
Society  of  Newspapers  Editors  in 
Washington;  the  Associated  Press 
Managing  Editors  Association  in 
Philadelphia;  the  Board  of  Di- 
rectors of  the  American  Newspap- 
er Publishers  Association  in  New 
York,  and  has  talked  on  this  sub- 
ject at  many  conventions  of  state 
press  associations  and  of  the 
AATJ.  AASDJ,  and  the  AEJ. 

In  April  1956,  Dean  Luxon  went 
to  Paris  as  one  of  three  United 
States  delegates  to  a  UNESCO 
conference  on  Professional  Train- 
ing for  Journalism,  attended  by 
29  delegates  from  24  nations.  A 
paper  he  wrote,  "Recent  Curricula 
Trends  of  International  Signifi- 
cance" was  part  of  the  background 
material  for  the  conference. 


of  journalism  teachers  and  journ- 
alists  for  Fulbright   fellowships. 

In  addition  to  writing  on  educa- 
tion in  his  field.  Dean  Luxon  is 
the  co-author  of  two  widely-used 
journalism  textb'ooks  and  author 
of  "Niles'  Weekly  Register:  News 
Magazine  of  the  Nineteenth  Cen- 
tury." which  in  1939  won  the  na- 
tional Sigma  Delta  Chi  Award  for 
the  most  meritorious  research  in 
American  ,  journalism  completed 
that  year. 

He  has  been  Dean  of  the  School 
of  Journalism  here  since  Decem- 
ber 1.  1953.  Prior  to  that  date,  he 
had  been  on  the  academic  and  ad- 
ministrative staffs  of  the  Ohio 
State  University  for  25  years,  the 
last  seven  as  assistant  to  the 
president.     • 

Since  he  came  to  Chapel  Hill,  ] 
the  School  of  Journalism  has 
added  ten  new  courses  and  has 
changed  a  number  of  existing 
courses.  A  graduate  program, 
leading  to  an  M.A.  degree  with  a 
maior  in  journalism  is  in  its  sec- 
ond yc  r  and  a  number  of  research 
projects  have  been  directed  by 
journalism  staff  members. 

He  is  married  and  lives  at  27 
Mount  Bolus  Road.  He  and  Mrs. 
Luxon  are  the  parents  of  one 
son,  Norval  Neil  Jr..  24,  who  is 
engaged  in  sales  work  in  the  mid- ' 
die  west.  > 

Dr.  Anderson  Presents       \ 
Seminar  At  Oak  Ridge 

Dr.  Carl  E.  Anderson,  associate 
professor  of  biochemistr>-  at  the, 
University  School  of  Medicine. ' 
recently  presented  a  seminar  at  I 
the  Oak  Ridge  Institute  of  Nu-j 
clear  Studies  at  Oak  Ridge,  Tenn. 


Good  Mental 
Health  Is 
Important 

"Nothing  is  more  important  to 
the  state  of  North  Carolina  than 
the  mental  and  emotional  well- 
being  of  its  people."  So  spoke 
Prof.  Gordon  Blackwell  in  a  talk 
this  weekend  before  the  Commun- 
ity Club  of  Chapel  Hill. 

Describing  the  seriousness  of 
mental  illness,  Blackwell  said 
that  "nine  million  people  in  the 
United  States  suffer  from  severe 
mental  difficulty.  Two  out  of  every 
five  rejectees  in  World  War  11 
had  psychiatric  disorders — enough 
man-power  to  provide  177  army 
infantry  divisions.  The  man-power 
loss  in  business  and  industry*  is 
tremendous." 

In  9piie  of  great  increases  in 
public  support  of  mental  health 
clinics  and  hospitals,  the  speaker 
said,  the  number  of  professional 
people  to  treat  the  mentally  ill  is 
far  from  adequate.  Three-fourths 
of  the  country's"  mental  hopsitals 
are  overcrowded. 

"But  bricks  and  mortar  ajul 
more  professional  personnel  in  in- 
stitutions can  never  do  the  job." 
Blackwell  stated.  "The  entire  com- 
munity has  a  responsibility  for 
mental  health — each  of  our  fami^ 
lies,  the  school,  the  church,  the 
work  situation,  leisure-time  op- 
portunities, newspapers  and  tele- 
vision— all  of  these  institutions 
have  a  part  to  play  in  promoting 
sound  mental  health  or  in  spawn- 
ing mental  illness.  The  family  es- 
pecially is   important." 


Elementary  German  Course 
To  Be  Offered  Here  On  TV 


A  course  in  elementary  German 
will  be  included  i^  the  University's 
educational,  television  program, 
beginning  Feb.  15,  the  University 
Extension  Division  has  announced. 


liiicai  science  are  being  taught 
now  via  TV.  Some  140  persons 
are  enrolled  in  the  courses,  25 
for  credit. 


The  new  course  will    be     pre- 
sented  over  WUNC-TV,   the   Uni- 
versity owped  non-commercial  sta- 
tion serving  36  of  the  state's  100    ing  part 
counties. 

Dr.  Herbert  Reichert,  associate 
professor  of  German  and  member 
of  the  Dept.  of  Germanic  Lang- 
uages and  Literature,  will  teach 
the  course.  Dr.  Reichert  will  give 
45-minute  lectures  twice  weekly, 
on  Tuesdays  and  Thursdays  at  7:30 
p.m.  TTie  study  will  end  June  13. 

The  German  course  will  be  of- 
fered both  for  credit  and  non- 
credit,  acording  to  Miss  Mary 
Henry,  head  of  the  Extension  Di- 
vision's Bureaa  of  Correspondence 
Instruction. 

Two  courses  in  religion  and  po- 


Introductorj'  German  will  be 
the  fifth  course  given  by  TV 
since  the  program  began  a  year 
ago.  with  as  many  professors  tak- 


The  work  of  the  North  Carolina 
Association  for  Mental  Heatlh 
was  praised  by  the  speaker.  He 
called  for  the  formation  of  county 
For  the  past  two  .vears  Dean '  ^^^^^'^  ^^""'^^  »^  ^«  »«ag«.  i'^n"- '  mental  health  associations;  ^ch 
Luxon  has  been  chairman  of  the  [  The  subject  was  "Pftwspholipid  Greensboro.  Greenville,  Rileigh 
advisory  committee  on  the  choice  {  Metabolism."  |  and  Winston-Salem,    i 


Seniors  Seeking  Jobs 
May  Find  Book  Useful 

Male  seniors  at  Carolina  who 
are  preparing  to  seek  jobs  may 
find  help  in  a  yearbook  maue 
available  by  the  University  Place- 
Atent  Service. 

The  book,  entitled  Career,  is  now 
being  given  aviray  free  in  211  Gard- 
ner Hall  to  senior  and  graduate 
school  students  in  the  Arts  aild 
Sciences,  Business  \dministration 
and  Journalism  School  depart- 
ments. 


"More  details  about  the  new 
course  will  be  announced  later," 
Miss  Henry  said. 


Covering  The  Campus 


FACULTY  CLUB  ,  p.m.    in    GM.    All    representative? 

Professor    Albert     Coates    will  i  have  been  urged  to  attend, 
speak  at  the  Faculty  Club  lunch-  j  BASKETBALL  CLUB 
eon  Tuesday  at  1  p.m.  at  the  Caro-       W^.A.A.  Basketball  Club  will  hold 
lina  Inn.'  Coates  topic  will  be  "the   its  first  meeting  Wednesday  at  4 
Institute    of    Government    in    the  j  p.m.  in  the  girl's  gym. 
New  Building,'  {  - — 


NY  Academy 
Takes  In  Two 
Science  Profs 


FICTION  BOARD  j 

There  will  be  a  meeting  of  the ' 
Carolina  Quarterly  Fiction  Boaid ' 
Tuesday  at  4  p.m.  in  the  Quarter- ;  five 


Institute 

(Contirvued   from    Page    1) 


traineeships    for    candidates 


Two  University  professors  were 
among  the  scientists  elected  to 
the  fellowship  in  the  New  Yorlt 
Academy  of  Sciences. 


The  two  were  Dr.  Edward  C. 
Curnen  Jr.  and  Dr.  John  Gulick. 

Dr.  Curnen  is  a  professor  and 
chairman  of  the  Dept.  of  Pediatrics 
in  the  School  of  Medicine.  Be- 
fore coming  to  UNC,  he  was  con- 
nected with  the  Harvard  and  Yale 
Medical  schools. 

He  has  done  extensive  research 
in  the  field  of  infectious  diseases. 


Dr.  Gulick  is  an  assistant  pro- 
fessor of  anthropology.  He  is  also 
director     of     the     Cross-Cultural 

Featuring  cross  indexes  to  help  |  Laboratory  and  a  research  assoc- 
seniors   pick  their   best  employer    iate  in  the  Institute  for  Research 
prospects,  the  book  is  hard  bound  |  in  Social  Science, 
and  contains  256  pages  of  written  i      „  ... 

materia'     telling  of     geographical !      "?./*'  ^""-^n^y  headmg  a  study 
breakdown  by  states  o^   positions '  ""^    ''^^    ""^    ^^^    Cherokee    Indian 
with  companies  and  companies  ir.- 
icrested  in  hiring  liberal  arts  ma- 
jors. 

The  book  is  paid  for  by  14fi  lead- 
ing American  companies  "wno 
bring  together  notice  of  all  their 
X>pportitnities  for  ccrflege  men  in 
OQe  place." 


reservation. 


ly  office  in*  Graham  Memorial. 

ASTRONOMY  CLUB 

The  Chdpel  Hill  Astronomy  Club 
will  hold  its  first  meeting  of  the 
year  Wednesday  at  8  p.m.  at  JVioie- 
head  PlJietarium.  All  visitors  have 
l>een  invited  to  attend. 

PHILOLOCrCAL  CLUB 

Profpj-sor  Kai  Jurgensen  of  the 
Dept.  of  Dramatic  Art  will  present 
a  paper  tomorrow  at  a  meeting 
of  the  Philological  Club  in  the  Fac 
ulty  Lounge  of  Morehead  Planela 
rium  at  7:30  p.m.  His  paper  is  ea 
titled  "Toward  a  National  The 
atre.'  Ail  interested  faculty  mem- 
bers and  graduate  students  heve 
been  invited  to  attend.  According 
to  Earnest  W.  Talbert,  president  of 
the  Club,  (the  meeting  is  being 
held  on  Monday  this  month,  rather 
than  on  Tuesday,  when  it  is  usual- 
ly held.   , 

FUTURE  TEACHERS 

The  F-.ank  Porter  Graham  Chap- 
ter of  the  Future  Teachers  of 
America  will  meet  tomorrow  at  8 
p.m.  in  the  Peabody  curriculuin 
lab.  A  short  visual  and  workshop 
will  be  conducted  at  the  meeting 
All  interested  persons  have  been 
invited  to  attend. 

WAA   COUNCIL 

W.A.A.  Council  will  hold  its 
monthly    meeting    Thurday    at    7 


for  Ph.D.  degrees,  one  post-doctor- 
al traineeship  and  two  faculty  po- 
sitiolis  combining  teaching  and 
research. 

The  funds  will  be  allocated  to 
the  Institute  for  Research  in  So- 
cial Science. 

The  program  will  be  directed 
by  Dr.  Harvey  L.  Smith,  director 
of  the  Social  Research  Section 
of  the  Division  of  Health  Affairs. 
Dr.  Smith  also  is  a  research  assoc- 
iate in  the  Institute  for  Research 
in  Social  Science  and  associate 
professor  of  sociology  in  the 
Dept.  of  Sociology  ^nd  Anthropol- 
ogy . 

Two  Excliange  Students 
Will  Speak  Today  At  4 

German  exchange  students  Gu^ 
enter  Tschoepl.and  Rainier  Men- 
king  will  give  a  talk  on  life  and 
culture  in  Germany  at  today's 
Cosmopolitan  Club  meeting. 

The  meeting  will  be  held  in 
the  Assembly  Room  of  the  main 
library  at  4  p.m.  Refreshments 
will    be    served. 


A  MILE-A-MINUTE  CROSS 
COUNTRY  LAUGH  RIOT!! 


lyled  School  Prepares  Handbook  For  Medical  Bxdmiri^rs 


THIS  WOMAN  IN  HIS  ARMS 

OF  THE  MAN  Hf. 

.^.,         '     ■■  CALLED  '.IS 

,      BEST  FRIENO! 


B)r  ROBERT  H.  BARTHOLOMEW 

A  nev.-   handbook  is  being  pre- 
pared at  the  University  School  of 
Medicine  that  will  explain  the  new 
me.'ical  examiner  system  to  coup-  \  lea-^ed  soon, 
ty  officials  throughout  the  state.    \  WINSTON  NATIVE 

The  new  law.  commonly  known 
as  the  New  Medical  Examiner  Act 


the  3ath  article  read.  "That  then 


Under  the  \  hew  law. '  ffiie ,  ^^^flJB 
assista.it  \  shall  be  a  Shertff ,  Coroner  or  Coi*-  i  work  of  a  statewide  sj-stenf  Js"ip- 

•ach  I  vidcd.   Howecver,  "each  •c^nty   nks 
I  the   optibnto  adopt  tl«   ftiiwlnljai 


The  handbook  is  being  prepared 
by   Dr.    W.    W.    Forrest 

professor     of     pathology     at     the  loners,     and     Constables     in 
School  of  Medicine.  U  will  be   .-e- 1  Cotinty  within   the  State." 


Dr.  Forrest  i^•  a  native  of  Wins 
ton-Salem  and    took  two  years  cf 


of  North  Carolina,  went  into  effeci 
Jan.  1.  1956.  The  act  makes  poa-si- 
ble  a  major  reform  in  the  manner 
of  investigating  deaths  of  publ  c 
concern. 

Under  the  new  law.  a  medical 
examiner  must  be  a  physician.  Un- 
der the  old  coroner  system  «.f 
North  Carolina,  the  coroner  was 
not  required  to  have  medical  traic- 
ing  and  in  most  cases  did  not. 


CLASSIFIEDS 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL  WILL 
pay  $  .25  for  each  issue  of  the 
September  28  edition.  Papers  of 
this  date  are  needed  for  adver- 
tising  purposes. 

LOST:  WYLER  WHITE  GOLD 
w;^tch  with  two  small  diamonds. 
Sentimental  value.  Finder  please 
go  to  104  Saunders  or  call  91411 
after   office   hours.   Reward. 


his  medical  work  here  at  the  Uni- 
versity. .\s  a  resident  in  pathology 
at  Charity  Hospital  in  New  Or- 
leans, he  worked  in  the  coroner's 
office  for  two  years. 

FYom  June  1954  to  June  1956, 
while  on  active  military  duty,  Dr. 
Forrest  was  chief  of  the  Forensic 
Pathology  Section  of  the  Armed 
Forces  Institute  of  Pathology  at 
the  Walter  Reed  Army  Medic-1 
Center  in   Washington. 

Dr.  Forrest  said  here  yesterday 
the  new  book  would  explain  to 
county  officials  just  what  th^y 
jieed  tc/  do  to  join  the  new  system 
It  will  also  give  instructions  on 
the  duties  of  medical  examiners 
and  will  direct  physicians  to  medi- 
cal, journjils  and  textbooks  for  fur- 
ther information  on  the  subject  of  I  It  took  him  into  several  European 
legal   medicine.  countries  last  summer,  and  he  ex- 

OLD  SYSTEM  pects  to  journey  abroad  again  next 

Under   the   old    coroner    system    summer,   to  Sweden,    Switzerland, 


Kenan  Professor  Has 
Answer  For  Question 

By  WAYNE   LAMM 

What  is   the  origin  of  the  "humanistic  alphabet'? 

A  Kenan  professor  of  classics  here,  Dr.  B.  L.  UUman,  claims  he 
has  discovered  the  answer  to  this  unusual  question.  And  he  is  pre- 
pared to  back  up  his  claim  after  a  summer  spent  in  various  European 
libraries  and  lecturing  on  the  subject  before  the  wor)d's  foremost 
scholars  of  the  Renaissance. 

I>r.  Ullman  has  more  than  once  been  »he  subject  of  international 
recognition  and  is  considered  one 
of  the  world's  foremost  classicist;*. 
He     heads     the     UNC     Dept'    of 
Classics. 

Origin  of  the  so-called  humanis- 
tic script  has  been  the  subject  of 
extensive  research  for  Dr.  Ullman. 


system 
of  North  Carolina,  framed  in  1776. 


DAILY    CROSSWORD 


ACROSS 

1  Pronged 

utenaii 
5-  Snake 
8.  Public  notlc* 

10.  Great  Lak« 

11.  Show 

13.  KiU 

14.  Barbarity 

15.  Sitting  of 
a  court 

17.  Uke 

18.  Human 
trunks 

jl.Town 

(N.Y.) 
24.  Mouaelik* 

rodent 

27.  Manacles 

28.  Insurgent 
29  European 

30.  Pocket, 
books 

31.  Great  regard 
33.  Murmured 

interjection 
35.  Analyzed. 

as  ore 
39.  Tell 
42.  Large 

volume 

43  Giveconfl- 
dence  to 

44  Child'! 
bedstead 

45  Music  note 

46.  War  god 
fNorse) 

47.  Pronoun 

(pOMS.) 

DOWN 

1  Band  across 
escutcheon 

2  'Voided 
escutchcoa 

3.  Narrow 
inlets  igaol.) 


4.  Vauaaotrs  at 
crowns  of 
arches 

5.  Previously 
•.Bakitif 

cbambars 
T.  MJOte  Itnefwn 
S.ThingadOM 
•.Tunisian 

pashaa 
12.  Nickel 

(aym.) 
16.  Eteetrifled 

particlas 
19.  Vanquish 
30.  Weeps 

21.  Halfway 

22.  Constel- 
Ution 


35.  Soh 
tary 

29.  Shelt- 
ered 
Sid* 

36.  El*, 
vated 

-    trains 
38.  Re- 
grets 
rO.  Plagua 
32.LiRf«r 
83.IUvar 

(Russ.) 
34.  Ftot-topp«d 

.hffl 
86.TIBM 

l>aat 


nca  HHuay  aa 

:TlJii     TTiR.T]     :-lMi:". 
'T.-ri     »i'"'r»     TP.I;- 

an   ur^fi-'yra  z:'^\ 


•starisy's  Aa«w«t 

37.  Arabian 
chieftain 

:$.  Anterlean 
soetaUst 

40.  reatacfflpt 
(abbr.) 

41.  Retired 


and  Italy. 

LAUDED  AS  SCHOLAR 

'  Last  year  when  he  first  made 
known  his  findings  on  the  origin  of 
the  humanistic  script,  the  UNC 
professor  was  lauded  as  a  scholar 
by  the  European  press.  His  fixing 
of  the  date  —1402—  that  "the 
fine  Italian  hand"  was  the  hand- 
writing which  came  to  be  the 
model  used  in  modern  printed  type 
lauded  by  the  Bibliothcque  d'Hu- 
manisme  et  Renassance  in  thcoc 
words: 

"The  mere  statement  that  bet- 
ween 1402  and  1403  Poggio  al- 
ready was  writing  in  humanistic 
script  lo  an  anticipation  so  sensa- 
tional m  the  history  of  palogropny 
and  humanism  that  we  can  be  .sure 
that  yiiman  will  want  to  make  it 
the  object  of  a  new  study." 

Th^  professor  says  that  this  writ- 
ing style  was  invented  by  a  scribe 
known  as  Salutati,  a  chancellor  uf 
Florence  and  a  collector  of  books. 


DR.   B.  L.   ULLMAN 

. . .  international   fame 

and  they  were  referred  in  other 
talks  by  the  pre-eminent  authori- 
ties on  humanism. 

The  professor  is  now  assembling 
his  findings  for  publication.  He  will 
return  to  Eiurope  next  summer, 
where  i.e  already  has  made  sever- 
al lecture  engagements.  He  was 
granted  ..pecial  privileges  at  the  li- 
braries m  which  he  researched  last 
summer. 

Dr.  Ullman  became  head  of  the 
UNC   Classics  Dept.   in '1M4.   Bo 


examiner  syiteip  or  to  regain   the  j 
present  coroner  system.  ' 

Under  the  Aew  act,  the  office  of 
coroner  is  not"  abolished.  What  the 
law  does  do  is  to  provide  a  phy- 
sician to  act  io  such  cases  where 
medical  Hn<>wl«dge  is  needed. 
OBJECTIVES 

The  objectives  of  the  Medical 
Examiner  System  are:  (1)  Protec- 
tion of  the  innocent;  (2)  Recogni- 
tion of  murder;  (3)  Documentation 
of  accurate  unbiased  medical  evi- 
dence for  civil  and  criminal  courts, 
(4)  Protection  against  public  health 
hazards;  (5)  Protection  against  m 
dustrial  hazards;  and  (6)  Acquisi- 
tion of  material  for  teaching  med- 
ical and  law  students. 


Witten 


TECHNICOLjOR^ 


OCIODIJC^OM 


**    BUST 


.DOROTHY 


RATCR£Mt£/ 

MAWE 
ROSENBIOOM 

■ufsr  sr»K 

ANfTA 

mm 

CRfCTfC  By 


TECHhlKOlOlC 

riSTAV 


HUDSON  •  STACK -BACALL  •  MALGNE 


NOW 
PLAYING 


OPENS    TODAY 


Carolina 


r, 


He  presents  facts  which  pinpoint   fore  that,  he  was  head  of  the  Dept.  j 


the  year  1402  as  ^hc  first  time  the 
script  v,  as  used. 
His  findings  on  the  subject  were 
]  the  subjects  of  lectures  he  made 
I  before  two  international  Congres.- 
I  es  on  Humanism  while  in  Italy  la<:t 
I  summer  —  one  at  La  Mendola  on 
humanism  and  the  other  in  Flor- 
ence on  the  Renaissance. 
CENTRAL  FIGURE 


of  Latin  at  the  University  of  Pitts 
burg,  head  of  the  Latin  and  Greek 
departments  at  the  University  al 
Iowa,  a  professor  of  the  American 
Academy  in  Rome,  and  professor 
of  Latin  at'  the  University  of  Chi- 
cago. 

He  was  editor  of  the  MacMillan 
Classical  Series  from  1929  through 
1944.  His  publications  include  scv- 


Accoi-ding  to  notices  in  newspa- '  eral  books:  "Ancient  Writing  ard 
pars  from  that  country.  Prof.  Ull- j  its  Influence,"  "Studies  in  th<j 
man  Wus  one  of  the  central  figures  i  Italian     Renaissance."     Latin     for 


tts  KID  STUFF 

Scaring  Folks  in  the  Dari(! 

Leaping  suddenly  out  of  the  night  might 
be  a  youngster's  idea  of  fun. 

But  when  **kid  stuff"  drivers  shoot  out 
of  the  dark  without  a  light— that's  no 
laughing  matter. 

All  careful  drivers  remember  to  switch 
Ml  headlights  earlier  in  winter's  early  dusk. 
Forgetting  causes  an  appalling  loss  of  life 
each  year  ...  a  loss  that  can  easily  be 
%vmded.      ' 


® 


CARaESS  DRIVING 
IS  KID  STUFF 


tm  oMdol  pvbKc  t*ryic«  n»««sog* 

prapored  by 

Hm  ArfTcrfbing  Cowndf  In  coop*roHM 

«Mi  Mm  HoftoMol  Sofvty  Council 


Contributed  as  a  pabfic  sannc«  by 


of  the.  meetings  in  Italy.  His  lec- 
tures ^cre  widely  acclaimed  among 
the     classics     scholars     attending 


Americans,"  and  several  others. 
He  is  also  the  author  of  several 
hundred  articles  in  scholarly,  pro- 


from  tiiroughout  Western  Europe,  i  ffesslonai,  and  other  type  joiUTtals 


The   Daily  Tar   Heel 


•^A6i   POUR 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HiEL 


SUNDAY,  JANUARY  6,  IWr 


Varsity  And  Freshmen  Cagers  Clash  Today  In  Woollen  Gym 


BILL    HATHAWAY 

starting  varsity  center 


Carolina  Caravan 


By  JAKE  WADE 

IN  THE  MORNING,  after  their 
usual  ham  and  eggs  at  pal  Speros 
Goody  Shop,  about  the  only  down- 
town eiiling  place  open  during  the 
tranquil  holidays  in  this  town, 
they  went  to  their  rooms  and  mojr- 
ly  slept. 

This  was  the  University  of 
North  Carolina  basketball  sguad 
and  the  time  was  last  Saturday. 
That  night  the  Tar  Heels  wouUi 
win  their  eleventh  straight  game 
of  the  season  and  their  first  Dixie 
Classic  championship.  They  had 
gone  into  the  colorful  tourname.it 
as  the  nation's  number  two  team 
and  they  lived  up  to  their  billing 
During  the  day  some  of  the  boys 
did  strange  things. 

Tommy  Kearns,  the  Tar  Heeli" 
back  court  quarterback,  went  doiAu 
town  and  bought,  of  all  things,  a 
hat.  Nobody  knew  exactly  why. 

Big  Billy  Hathaway,  who  before 
going  on  the  recent  northern  trip, 
took  the  battery  out  of  his  car 
and  locked  it  in  the  trunk.  He  had 
found  »♦  dead  on  returning.  So  he 
bought  a  new  one. 

Then  "Hot  Rod"  Hathaway  Je 
cided  his  beloved  auto  needed  a 
washing.  He  went  out  to  the  home 
"Of  "Sarge"  Keller,  U.  N.  C.'s  faitl- 
ful  equ  pment  man,  and  borrowed 
a  hose.  lie  washed  his  car. 

IN     THE     AFTERNOON    of    the 

eventful  day,  after  Idnching  at  the 
Goody  Shop,  they  listened  to  the 
matinee  games  on  the  radio. 

At  5  p.m.,  following  their  cus- 
tom throughout  the  tournament  in 
which  they  turned  back  Utah  anJ 
Duke  before  they  toppled  tho 
Demon  Deacons,  they  had  their 
steak  dinner  at  Leroy  Merritt's 
"The  Pines  '  restaurant.  They  they 
were  of:  in  their  station  wagons 
for  the  Coliseum,  where  they  far- 
ed so  veil  all  week. 

The  win  was  a  long  time  comia£ 
to  the  Tar  Heels  but  all  agreed 
that  they  richly  deserved  the  dia- 
dem. All  likewise  agreed  that  this 
is  a  wonderful  basketball  team.  It 
probably  is  the  finest  in  Carolina's 
history  and  Coach  Frank  McGuire. 
who  did  an  excellent  job  in  guid- 
ing his  team  through  the  colorxul 


meet,  thinks  it  may  be  the  finert 
he  has  coached.  He  has  had  many 
good  teams. 

s-  *  >:; 

LENNIE      ROSENBLUTH.      the 

CIasc?ic's  Most  Valuable"  playe  , 
probably  was  the  calmest  man  in 
the  event.  Carolina's  All-Americi 
star,  the  "man  with  the  golden 
touch,"  took  it  easy  each  day  but 
at  nighi  he  was  there  with  those 
uncanny,  sillo-like  shots  and  all- 
around  brilliance. 

He  V.  as  the  highscorer  of  the 
tournament  and  he  is  the  team's 
high  scorer.  He  should  end  the 
season  as  one  of  the  nation's  high- 
est beci-use  if  the  fine  teams  he 
has  met  so  far  have  been  unable  to 
curb  him,  except  momentarily  and 
with  gang-up  defenses,  it  is  unlike- 
ly future  foes  will  hold  him  down. 

Lennie  s  mom  and  dad  were  on 
hand  at  Raleigh  last  week.  Thty 
are  enihusiastic  Rosenblulh  root 
ers. 

But  Lennie  disclaims  too  much 
credit  for  his-  team's  eleven  tri- 
umphs without  a  setback.  He 
points.  Mghtfully,  to  the  other  lads 
on  the  team.  Tommy  Kearns,  Pete 
Brennaii,  Bob  Cunningham,  Joe 
Quigg  and  Billy  Hathaway  were 
the  workhorses  who  did  the  most 
pjaying  at  Raleigh.  It  was  a  team 
tournament  conquest. 

*         *         * 

THE  TAR  HEELS  face  stern 
business  ahead  before  the  season 
ends.  However,  after  two  busy 
weeks,  three  games  in  a  row  on 
their  northern  trip  and  three  in  a 
row  in  Raleigh,  they  are  happy  to 
get  a  lew  days  re^.•pite. 

They  swing  back  into  action 
against  William  and  Mary  at  Wii- 
liamsburg  Jan.  8  and  then  will 
show  before  the  home  folks  again 
agains*  Clemson  here  on  Jan.  11. 

Befoie  it's  over  in  March  they 
must  meet  Duke  and  Wake  Forest 
again,  along  with  N.  C.  State  in 
the  Big  Four. 

Then  ihey  will  shoot  for  the  At- 
lantic Coast  Conference  champion- 
ship and  hope  for  the  •double" 
that  in  the  past  has  become  loo 
much  of  a  habit  for  N.  C.  State. 

At  present,  at  least,  the  Tar 
Heels  a^c  on  top  of  the  world  a.nd 
it  couldn't  happen,  as  the  old  saw 
goes,  to  nicer  fellows. 


Tip  Off  Is 
Slated  For 
2  O'clock 

It  will  be  brother  against  broth- 
er this  afternoon  in  Woollen  Gym 
when  the  unbeaten  and  nationally 
ranked  Carolina  varsity  cagers 
take  on  the  scrappy  UNC  frosh  in 
a  family  feud  slated  to  tip  off  at 
2  p.m. 

The  scrimmage  will  be  played 
under  actual  game  conditions  just 
as  was  the  case  in  two  previous 
varsity-frosh  battles.  Coach  Frank 
McGuire's  high  flying  veteran-; 
rankeo  second  in  the  nation  be- 
hind Kansas  and  newly  crowned 
champs  of  the  Dixie  Classic,  swept 
both  of  the  first  two  games  in 
pre-season  play.  They  won  the 
first  by  a  narrow  four  point  mar- 
gin, but  ran  up  a  one-sided  score 
in  the  second  fray. 

The  yearling  cagers,  coached  by 
former  UNC  basketballer  Vince 
Grimaldi,  have  posted  a  respect- 
able 4-1  record  for  the  season. 
Wins  have  come  over  High  Point 
Jayvees.  Duke.  Wilmington  Jun- 
ior College  and  Edwards  Militar>- 
Institute.  State's  highly  touted 
frosh  handed  them  their  only  set- 
back by  a  narrow  91-89  margin. 

Pacing  the  Tar  Baby  attack  so 
far  this  season  has  been  "Leap- 
ing Le?"  Shaffer,  the  blond 
from  Pittsburgh,  Pa. 
husky  6-6  youth  has 
both    scoring   and    re- 


bombshell 
Shaffer  a 
dominated 
bounding. 


Another  effective  man  both 
under  the  boards  and  in  the  scor- 
ing column  has  been  Dick  Kep- 
ley.  rangy  6-8  center.  Rounding 
out  the  Tar  Baby  front  line  is 
Bruno  LaRese,  sharp  shooting  6- 
4  forward  from  New  York  City. 

On  the  baekline  the  Tar  Babies 
have  tiny  John  Crotty  and  Mike 
Steppe.  Crotty,  a  5-11  ball  hand- 
ling flash,  is  the  team's  ace  play- 
maker. 

Starting  for  the  varsity  will  be 
the  usual  lineup  of  Hathaway, 
Rosenbluth,  Brennan,  Kearns  'and 
Cunningham,  with  Quigg.  GfoII, 
Radovich,  Lotz  and  Rosemond  lead- 
ing the  reserves. 

The  Tar  Heels  have  not  seen 
action  since  last  Saturday  night 
when  they  beat  Wake  Forest  for 


DICK    KEPLEY 

. .  frosh  pivot  man 


BOSSELER  SPARKS  21-7  WIN 


South  All-Stars  Whip 
North  In  Senior  Bowl 


Qy   STAN    ATKINS 

MOBILE,  Ala.  — olV-  AJl-Ameu. 
ca  Don  Bosseler  of  Miami,  Fia. 
picked  up  yardage  in  hug(  !chunl:.^ 
to  lead  the  South  All-St*irs  to  a 
21-7  victory  over  the  North  in  the 
Senior  Bowl  yesterday. 

The  .'owcrful  200- pounder  fr^m 
PitLsburi.'h.  Pt.,  smashed  over  Idr 
two  touchdowns  in  the  fourth  peri 


the  Dixie  Classic  title.  They  re- 1  od.  He  set  up  the  first  Rebel  scoi-e 
sumed  practice  for  their  next  reg-  in  tho  opening  period  with  a  hiil 
ular  season  game  against  William  I  liant  exnibition  of  hard   running 


&  Mary  last  Thursday,  and  with 
the  Indian  tilt  only  two  days  off, 
the  session  with  the  freshmen 
will  serve  as  a  warmup. 

The  frosh  have  played  one  game 
since   the   holiday  break.   In   that 
one    Friday    night,    they    stopped 
Edwards   Military  Institute,  82-65.  j  ncr  added  23  more  on  three  car- 
They  meet  the  Atlantic  Christian   ries. 

Jayvees  Tuesday  night  in  Wilson.  I  Georgia  Tech's  Wade  Mitchell 
1  converted  after  each  South  touch- 
down. 


Del  Shofner  of  Baylor  carried 
over  from  the  three  for  the  South'.s 
first  period  tally  as  TCU  quarter- 
back Charley  Curtis  faked  a  han '- 
off  to  Bosseler.  The  Miami  full- 
back gained  50  yard  on  three 
rushes  during  the  drive  and  Shof- 


Wilkinson  Says 

He  Won't  Leave! '*^^''^'  ^^9^ 

Oklahoma  Post 


DevilsSinge 
To  Avenge 

;  DURHAM— (AP)— Guard  Bucky 
Allen  tossed  in  34  points  to  lead 
Duke's  Blue  Devils  to  a  92-85  re- 
venge win  over  North  Ca1*olina 
State  last  night  in  an  Atlantic 
Coast  Conference  basketball  game 
before  8,000  fans  in  Duke  Indoor 
Stadium. 

John  Richter  topper  N.  C.  State 


State,  92-85 
Classic  Loss 

with  31  points  before  he  left  the 
game  on  fouls  with  2:30  left  to 
play. 

The  win  gives  Duke  a  3-0  record 
in  the  conference,  and  a  7-3  rec- 
ord overall.  The  Wolfpack  has  a 
1-3  mark  in  the  conference  and 
a  7-6  record  for  the  season. 


NORMAN.  Okla.— (AP)— Head 
football  coach  Bud  Wilkinson  yes- 
terday squelched  reports  he  might 
leave  the  University  of  Oklahoma 
to  coach  the  professional  Balti- 
more Colts. 

"I'm  quite  happy  at  Oklahoma," 
Wilkinson  said  just  before  leaving 
for  Minneapolis  and  a  week's  visit 
with  his  parents. 

At  Baltimore,  sources  close  to 
the  Colts  were  reported  as  saying 
the  club  has  offered  Wilkinson 
$50,000  a  year  to  succeed  Webb 
Eubanks  as  coach.  However,  this 
was  denied  by  Colt  President  Van 
Kellett. 

"I  am  making  no  coaching 
changes,"  Wilkinson  said.  "I  hard- 
ly like  to  dignify  wild  rumors 
with    any  comment." 

Oklahoma  President  Dr.  George 
L.  Cross  also  commented  on  the 
report: 

"I  am  quite  sure  Wilkinson 
would  never  leave  OU  for  another 
coaching  position,"  Cross  said. 
"He  has  a  lifetime  post  of  security 
here  with  the  best  financial  deal 
of  any  coach  in  the  nation. 

"There  is  no  better  coaching 
position  anywhere." 

The  Tulsa  Tribune  said  a  Min- 
neapolis television  concern  has 
offered  Wilkinson  $45,000  a  year 
for  five  years  to  conduct  a  pro- 
gram on  "news  aqd  personalities 
in  the  news." 


Play  Picks  Up 
Full  Momentum 

Intramural  Basketball  will  get 
into  full  swing  tomorrow  with  a 
greater  number  of  teams  partici- 
pating this  year  than  ever  before. 

.There  are  112  teams  this  year, 
comprii^uig  the  dorm,  fraternity 
blue  and  fraternity  white  divisions; 
compared  to  98  teams  last  year. 
Also  there  will  be  two  more  di- 
visions church  and  outlaw,  that 
are  not  completely  organized  yet. 
The  church  division  will  consist 
of  teams  organized  in  the  local 
churches.  The  intramural  depart- 
ment announced  that  there  are 
eight  teams  in  this  division.  The 
outlaw  division  is  made  of  any- 
one teams  without  a  sponsor.  Eight 
teams  will  be  in  this  division.  Any- 
one is  eligible  to  play  in  this 
league  from  Sammy  Ranzino  on 
down.  These  two  divisions  will 
not  be  permitted  to  enter  the  all- 
campus  playoffs. 

The  dorm  and  fraternity  divis- 
ions are  divided  into  leagues: 
eight  in  the  dorm,  six  in  the  fra- 
ternity white  and  five  in  the 
fraternity  blue.  Each  league  will 
play  a  round  robin  tournament  to 
determine  the  best  in  the  league. 
The  league  champions  will  play  a 
single  elimination  tournament  for 
thedivision  championship.  Finally, 
the  division  champions  will  play 
for  the  All-Campus  title. 

The  finals  will  be  played  near 
the  last  of  February.  No  games 
will  be  played  during  the  two 
weeks  of  exams. 


The  North  drew  first  blood  in 
the  opening  quarter  on  sharp  pa.fo 
ing  of  L.  n  Dawson.  Purdue's  gi-cal 
quarterback.  The  score  came  on  a 
14^fipd  toss  to  Terr>-  Barr  of 
Michigan.  Milt  Plum  of  Penn  State 
converted. 

Bosseler,  who  was  named  out 
standing  player,  scored  the  fin<l 
Rebel  touchdown  with  eight  sec- 
onds remaining  in  the  game,  ram- 
ming over  from  the  seven.  The 
drive  came  after  Mitchell  inter 
ceptcd  a  Dawson  pass  at  mid- 
field. 

Bosseler's  other  fourth  periOvl 
tie-brenking  touchdown  was  on  a 
sMiash  trom  t^e  one.  This  dr»ve 
followed  Georgia's  Roy  Wilkinr.' 
recovery  of  a  fumble  by  John 
Bayuk  of  Colorado  on  the  North 
20. 

The  big  Miami  fullback  netted 
190  yards  on  27  carries.  The  game 
drew  ai.  estimated  30,000.. 


When  The 
Icy  Winds 
Blow 
And  The 
Old  Room 
Seems 

'.     K    ■  ■     ■    - 

Dreary,      ':  >  * 

Come  Join 

Your  Friends 

In 

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Tar  Heel  Mermen  Romp  Over 
Virginia  Cavaliers,  50-36 


By  STEWART    BIRD 

,  Carolina's  undefeated  mermen 
kept  the  slate  unblemished  yes- 
terday afternoon  by  downing  the 
University  of  Virginia,  50  to  36 
in  Charlottesville. 

Using  only  eight  swimmers. 
Coach  Ralph  Casey's  charges  took 
eight  out  of  ten  first  places  in 
rolling  to  their  fourth  consecutive 
victory  of  the  season.  AIJ  eight 
Tar  Heel  mermen  took  at  least 
one  first  place  apiece,  with  Nash, 
Mercer,  Mahaffy,  and  Veazey  add- 
ing more  pKiints  by  taking  the 
medley  relay. 

The   squad  returned   to  Chapel 
Hill  last  night,   to  begin   prepara- 
tions for  the  first  real  showdown 
meet  of  the  season  against  N.  C.  • 
State  in  Raleigh  Jan.   15th.  Upon  i 
the  results  of  this  meet  and  the  i 
final  encounter  at  Chapel  Hill  in  i 
Ferbuar>',  undoubtedly  will  hinge  | 
the  decision  of  tht  1957  ACC  con- 
ference   championship.  ( 

The  summary:  | 

400  yard  medley  reliy  —  Nash,  ] 


fy  (UNC),  (2)  Turner  (UNC), 
(3). Doll    (VA).    Time:    2:29.0 

Diving— (1)  Rodge  (VA),  (2), 
Phillips  (VA),  (3)  Hamilton  (VA)C 
Carolina,  no  entries. 

100  yard  freestyle — (1)  Maness 
(UNC).  (2)  Zickgraf  (UNC),  (3? 
Helberg    (V.A.).    Time:    58.0 

440  yard  freestyle— (1)  Mercer 
(UNC),  (2)  Blake  (VA),  (3)  Hel* 


berg  (VA).  Time:  5:38. 

200  yard  breast  stroke  —  (1) 
Cooper  (UNC),  (2)  Phillips  (VA), 
(3)   Bryan    (VA).   Time:   2:51.9 

200  yard  back  stroke  —  (1) 
Nash  (UNC),  (2)  Didderick  (VA). 
(3)   Bryan   (VA).  Time:   2:34.0 

400  yard  freestyle  relay — Bren- 
nan, Saunders,  Doll.  Mudd  (V.\). 
Time;    3:58 


Mercer,  Mahaffy.  Veazey.  (UNC). 
Time:  4:23.0. 

22  yard  freestyle — (1)  Zickgraf 
(UNC).  (2)  Sanders  (VA),  (3) 
Maness  (UNC).  Time:  2:24.1 

50  yard  freestyle  —  ( 1 )  Rath 
(UNC).  (2)  Grinnan  (VA).  (3) 
Cooper   (UNC).  Time:   24.0 

200  yard   butterfly— ( 1 )   Mahaf- 


Mural  Info 

The  Intramural  Department 
announced  y«st»rday  that  there 
will  be  a  meeting  of  intramural 
managers  Monday  night  at  7:30 
in  room  301-A  of  Woollen  Gym. 

Table  tennis  entries  will  be 
due  at  this  meeting.  The  table 
tennis  teams  will  consist  of  two 
singles  and  one  doubles  team. 

Tho  final  organization  for  the 
church  ttnd  outlaw  basketball 
leagues  will  be  Tuesday  night 
at  7:30  in  room  301-A  of  Wool- 
len Gym.  ' 

Tho  hindball  court*  will  be 
open  Tuosday  and  Thursday 
nights  of  \hii  weolc  for  tho  hand- 
ball feurrtment. 


There  Is  A  Place  In  This  Piefore  For  Voo.' 

OPPORTUNITIES 

for  Students  with  Bachelor  Decrees  in 

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This  is  a  chance  to  get  a  head  start  ia  your  pnrfoasional 
career  with  General  Chemical  Division,  Aliiod  Chamical  & 
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Po  Vou  Graduate  This  Year?^ 

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A  Bell  System  Interview 
May  Be  The  Key  #  ; 
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Majors  in  engineering,  accounting,  physical  sciences,  busineM 
administration,  social  sciences  and  liberal  arts  have  a  defimte 
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Administrative  development  is  part  of  your  training. 

Technical  management,  accounting,  public  relations,  personnel, 
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all  are  important  phases  of  the  telephone  industry. 
See  your  placement  officer  today  for  complete  details.  Or  visit 
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BELL  SYSTEM  REPRESENTATIVES  WILL  BE  ON  THE  CAMPUS 

2:00   P.M.  January  7  for  Group  Meeting 
January  7,  8,  &  0  for  Individual   Interviews 

SEE  YOUR  PLACEMENT  OFFICER  FOR  AN  INTERVIEW 

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^  »  C  Library 
Serials  ©eut. 
Chapel    Hir,    u. 


C. 


WEATHER 

G«n«r«lly     fair   and     somewhat 
cold«r  t»oight.    ExpKted   high   31. 


arf)  e  Daitu 


^ar  3<ccl 


COLLEGE 

A      n«w    editorial    pag*    f*atur* 
starts.  S«e  page  2. 


VOL.  LVII  NO.  77 


Complete  (JP)  Wire  Service 


CHAPEL  HILL,  NORTH  CAROLINA,  TUESDAY,  JANUARY  8,  1957 


Offices   in   Graham   Memorial 


FOUR    PAGES  THIS  ISSU£ 


Di   Inauguration   Set 
Tonight,  Poteat  Speaks 


'  Dr.  William  Hardman  Poteat 
UNC  ^VsSJciate  Professor  of  Philo 
sophy.  has  been  scheduled  t 
speak  on  the  subject  of  butll  fight 
ing  at  the  inauguration  ot  the  of 
ficcrs  of  The  Dialectic  Senate 
\\hich  meets  tonight  at  8  on  the] 
.op  floor  of  New  West. 

The  officers  to  b^  inaugurated! 
are  President.  Stan  Shaw;  Presi-] 
dent  Pro  Tempore.  Pat  Adams 
iliitic.  Duve  Mundy:  Clerk,  .Muiiv 
Partin;  Treasurer.  Gene  White 
h?ad:  Sergeant  -  at  -  Arms.  Jimj 
Holmes  and  Chaplain.  Dan   V^n. 

Prcsident-Elcct   Stan   Shaw   will] 
deliver  an   address  on   "The   Role| 
of  the  University  and  its  Respon 
isibilities  to  the  State." 

The  guest  speaker.  Poteat.  re 
ceived  an  A.B..  1941  (Oberlin);| 
B.D.  1944  (Yale);  Ph.D.,  1951 
(Duke).  Born  in  China,  the  lee 
turer  was  the  son  of  a  North 
Carolina    medical    missionary. 

During  the  past  months  Poteat 
libs  been  prominently  mentioned 
as  a  successor  to  Chancellor 
House,   who  retires  in  June. 

President-Elect  Shaw  has  invit- 
ed "the  student  body  as  a  whole, 
the  faculty  and  interested  mem- 
bers of  the  University  community." 


Dulles  Asks  Backing     ! 
For   Mid-East   Plan 

WASHINGTON— (AP)— Secretary  of  Slate  Dulles  said  yester'dav 
ttte  consequences  would  be  'quite  disastrous'  ii  Congress  should  noi  » 
go  along  with  President  Eisenhower's  proposals  for  averting  aggres- 
sion in  the  Middle  East. 

Dulles  made  the  statement  during  4'2  hours  of  testimony  before 
ihe  House  Foreign  Affairs  Committee,  as  i»  opened  hearings  on  Eisen 
Lower-.-  request  for  advance  authority  to  use  U.  S.  military  forces  if 
neccssarj-  to  block  Communist   aggression. 

"The  consequences  in  the  area  of  a  rciusal.  of  a  prolbnged  dela> 
or  a  sharp  division,"  Dulles  said,  'would  be  quite  disastrous." 

The  secretary  said  Congress  can  do  its  utmost  "for  peace  and 
freedom  only  by  quickly  approving  Eio-ei>howcrs  program  for  ti^e 
Middle  East. 

US  Refuses  Kadar  Aid 

WASiUNGTON— (AP)— The  Ifnlted  States  promptly  turned  down 
yesterday  a  Hungarian  Communist  bia  for  economic  aid  to  prop  up 
the  Russian-imposed  governmcDt  of  Pi-emicr  Janos  Kadar. 

"We  will  not  assist  the  present  rcgiint  in  Hungary."  the  Stat* 
Department  said. 

Deputy  Under  Secretary  Robert  .Murphy  made  the  American 
government's  attitude  clear  to  the  Kunga;ian  Communist  Minister, 
Peter  Kos.  who  is  leaving  Washington  so-^n  to  take  a  post  in  the 
foreign  office  in  Budapest. 

The  American  answer  came  less  than  24  hours  after  the  Kadar 
government  said  it  would  "naturally  accep'  every  kind  of  loan.  eve;, 
credits  from  capitalist  countries."  to  bolster  the  revolt-shattero.' 
nation. 

The  State  Department,  in  ruling  out  firancial  help  to  the  puppe. 
regime,  stressed,  however,  it  would  continue  backing  private  Ameri- 
can relief  agencies  which  arc  seeking  to  di>tiibute  food,  clothing  an'; 
medicine  directly  to  the  Hungarian  people  ihrough  the  Intemationa' 
Red  Cross. 

King  Visits  lice 

WASHINGTON— (AP>— King  Saud  of  Saudi  Arabia,  a  monarch 
of  fabulous  background  and  wealth,  will  visit  President  Eiovnhower 
late  this  month  f(h-  a  discussion  of  Middle  East  problems  "of  mutu.'' 
interest  to  the  two  nations.  " 

The  White  House  announced  this  late  yesterday  and  said  King 
Saud  will  be  a  governnwnt  guest  from  Jan.  30  through  Feb.  1. 

Presumably  the  main  topic  of  conversation  between  king  an.: 
president  will  be  EjsenhowtM-'s  propo..vd  program  for  blocking  an> 
communist  aggression  in  the  .Middle  East. 

In  1947.  as  crown  prince  of  the  oil  rich  Arab  state.  Saud  spent 
several  months  in  the  United  States  at   the  invitation  of  Presiden 
Truman.  In  a  visit  to  Washington  he  discussed   "petroleum  and  Palos- 
fine" — two  subject.-  sure  to  come  up  again. 

Ike  Messages  Nehru 

WASHINGTON — (AF> — President  Eisenhower  yesterday  sent  t'» 

India's  Prime  Minister  J^ehiu>i  perstnal  message  de^^ng  with  the 

administratiun's  new   anti  Communist    proa'am   for  the   Middle   Ea.-t. 

While  Hou.H'  Press  Secretary  James  Hagerty  empha.^ized  that  the 

n(.le  was   pcronal   and   said   the  ecntent   would   not   be    made   public. 

Hagert>.  said  the  message  was  specifically  related  to  the  special 

message  on  the  Middle  East  program  whi'^.n  Eisenhower  outlined  ic 

Congre.  i  last  Saturday. 

Ei.-.nhower  anJ  N'.'hru  conferred  iierc  last  month  on  U'le  Middle 
East  situation  and  the  international  picture  generally. 

rorces  Advance 

CAIRG — (AP) — U.  N.  Police  force  troops  have  resumed  their 
advance  across  Sinai  Peninsula  behind  wiUidrawing  Israeli  forces 
the  U.  N.  information  center  said  yesterday. 

The  advance  has  been  held  up  while  L.  N.  authorities  discussed 
details  of  Israel's  withdrawal  with  Israeli  army  ufficer^.  Egypt  has 
accused  Israel  of  stalling. 

The  announcement  indicated  Israeli  fcices  still  occupy  El  Arisli. 
.Major  Egyptian  base  in  the  Sinai  desort.  I'.  N.  occupation  of  all  th 
peninsula  west  cf  El  Arish  would  leave  40  per  cent  of  Sinai  still  in 
Israeli   hands. 

The  announcement  said  Yugoslav  unit,  of  the  U.  N.  force  were 
nrjving  along  the  road  toward  El  Ari.ih.  Other  U.  N.  forces  taking 
part  in  the  advance  arc  the  combined  Danish-Norwegian  battalion 
and  an  Indian  battalion. 


Orientation, 

SEC  Positions 

Now  Open 


The  Orientation  Committee 
and  Student  Entertainment 
Committee  for  next  year  will  be 
set  up  within  the  next  few 
weeks.  Student  Body  President 
Bob  Young  announced  yester- 
day. 

Young  said  it  was  necessarj' 
to  set  up  these  committees  now 
so  that  they  could  begin  work 
immediately  on  plans  for  the 
fall. 

The  Orientation  Committee 
will  ciMisist  both  of  men  and 
women  students.  Five  to  .%-even 
women  and  eight  to  10  men 
students  will  comprise  the  com- 
mittee, which  will  plan  orien- 
tation for  incoming  freshmeoi 
and  transfer  students  for  the 
fall. 

The  Student  Entertainment 
Committee  will  start  meeting 
at  the  beginning  of  next  se- 
mester to  plan  the  entertain- 
ment it  will  bring  to  campus 
next   year. 

Chairmen  for  the  committees 
have  not  been  named.  Young 
said,  as  he  pointed  out  that  the 
positions  were  still  open. 

Counselors 
Sought  For 
Orientation 

k    request    has    been    made    by 


SP  Head 
Raps  Meet 
Showing 

By    JIM   PURKS 

After  making  several  committee 
appointments.  Student  Party  Chan- 
man  Jim.  Holmes  delivered  a  sobei- 
ing  speech  to  the  few  member.-- 
present  Monday  night  during  th-* 
party's  first  meeting  of  1957.  wa'Ti* 
ing  them  of  the  coming  spring  elc?"- 
tiors  and  lamenting  a  tendency  pi 
poor  attendance  and  participati9n 
in  the  party. 

"E\'erybody  in  the  party  is  ea 
pected   to  work.''      Holmes     said. 
'This  springs  election  will  be  even  | 
harder   to   win   than    last   spring.  '  { 
he  warned.   "But  I  have  no  doubt 
we  can  win."   Holmes   added. . 

Holmes  expressed  alarm  at  the 
attendance  of  the  party,  especially 
at  the  important  Sunday  meetings 
of  the  Advisory  Board. 

'  U.;ually  eight  or  nine  peopit 
have  been  at  the  Advisory  Boart! 
meeting-^.'  I  think  this  is  disgrace- 
fill.  K^iit  or  nine  people  out  of  .i 
palty  of  104  can't  do  very  much." 
Ho'nies  said.  "I  would  suggest  th.i' 
these  legislators  try  to  come  to  the 
me"tin'»s." 

Later  in  the  meeting  the  men\ 
bers  continued  a  Student  Party  tra  J 
ditiun  »»f  making  awards  to  out-  1 
going  officer.-*  by  pre.senting  an  a  i 
waid  to  ex-<'hairman  Tom  Lam  . 
beth  in  appreciation  for  his  servit" 
to  the  p-irty.  j 

Lamb- th  was  given  an  attractive' 


BVP  President  Apologizes 
For  'Dirty  Laundry  Airing 

Cites  IDC  Statement 
As  Proof  Of  Legality 


.\til    liass.  ])rcsitUiit   ol    Uattlc-Xaiu  t'-Pcttij;icw.  answered 

\i'siti{ia\     (iortlaiul     Kdwaids    acrusatioiis    ol     iiuompeteiire 

aiul   illegal   picHedure.  and  aj><)l(><4i/ed   to   the  student   bodv 

lor  this  public   airin*;  of  a  little  dirtv  l.iundrv  \\liieli  should 

li.ive  been  washed  privately  ..." 

liasN  (.died  I  lie  diain  ol  e\ents  a  "tempest  in  a  teapot." 
(ksigncd  '"admittedly  to  "stir  up  aiul  arouse'  (un  dormitory." 
lieeause  of<this.  said  liass.  'I  will  apj)i\  the  linal  word  oi  our 
tlormitoiy    residents    and    the    lntei(loiiiiitory    (.oiuuil    ol- 

♦ ^ : ♦  ficialdom."^' 

I  A  statement  signed  by  Sonny 
I  Hallford.  IDC  president.  was 
presented  by  Bass.  Hallford, 
whose  name  was  prefaced  by 
"competent"  in  Bass'  .statement, 
said.  "This  is  to  certify  that  the 
elections"  through  which  Neil  Bass 
becaflie  president  ol  Battle-Vance- 
Pettigrew  was  completely  legal 
with  no  shadows  of  illegality.' 


Phi  Argues 

Mid-East 

Resolution 


NEIL    BASS 

aiisin-is  Edicards 


CORT   EDWARDS 

.   .   aunt  argue 


40  Get  Top  Rating; 

Local  Food  and  Eating  Places 
Are  Given  'A'  And  'B'  Ratings 


gavel  by  Joel  F'leishman  and  See 
this  year's  Orientation  Chairman  ,  n.tan-  E.^ther  Ballentine  presented 
Bill  McLean  for  counselors  who  j  an  album  to  l^mbeth  c(mtaininL; 
win  be  needed  for  the  spring  .-.e-  i  articles  taken  from  the  Daily  Tar 
mester  orientation  of  new ,  stu  j  Heel.  Tlie  articles  concerned  the 
^^^^^-  !  activitie-   and  progre.ss  of  the  .*•''. i. 

A  short   program   of  orientation    d.nt  Party  during  Lambeth's  chaii- i  by   Dr    O.    David   Garvin.   Dlstri.i 
will    be    givn    the    expected    small ;  manship.  '  Hoalth  Officer, 

group    oi    entering     studentj^     t.n  j      Chairman      Holmes      announce<ll      Tliey  are: 
Jan.  30  and  31.  Exams  end  Jan.  29  j  thai  the  j?arty  will  hol4  a  cjur^!      AfMlf*^V  Retrtwrrtint 


Forty  local  eating  estabbshment.s 
have  ret-eived  "  .\ "  (Jrade  healfn 
and  sanitation  ratings  from  the 
l>iKlrict   Health   Departnu-nt   accord- 


Store.  Tar  llix-l  Sandwich  Shop. 
Tempo  Room.  Bius  Terminal  Lunch, 
liniversi.y  Cafe.  Village  Crill.  Vil- 
lage  P^.armacy.   Watts   drill.   Wea 


ing  to  an  announcement  yesterday    vers  Village  Spaghetti  House,  and 

W.  Franklin  St.  Luncheonette. 


and    second     .semester    begins    onion    Thursday    at    6:30    before    the' 
Feb.    1.  I  meeting   of   the      legislature,      and 

Students    who    were    counselors    he'd  a  vate  <m  the  date  on  whicli 
this     year    or   in   past   years     a-v  j  thc-members  will  hold  their  first  . 
eligible,  McLean  said.  Those  eligi- 1  P-Jrty   ol    the   year.    The    member.s  I 
ble  who  plan  to  be  here  over  the    voted  on  .Monday.  Feb.  4  as  being 
semester   break    and   who    are    in-    ^^c  morfi  convenient  date   for    tl'c-  . 
terested     in     being     a     counselor  |  P**''-^'- 

have    been    asked    to    leave    name  j 

and  telephone  number  at  the  Stu-  '     -^        ^m, 

dent  Government  Office  in  Graham  I     ^Jt"     ^fjriTlIf  hfl#^l 

Memorial.    The    phone    number    is  j 

Addresses 
Church  Group 

Dean  of  Women  Katherine  Car- 
michael  was  the  guest  speaker 
Sunday  night  at  the  weekly 
meeting  of  the  young  people  of 
the  Congregational  Christian 
Church. 

Her  topic  was  centered  around 


The    following      restaurants      and 

\  cafe.?     received    a    grade  of    "B": 

Btw^Vs' f;aod»  Shop.  Larry's  Bar  ^t_Gri!'. 


MURAL  MEETING 

Th«re  will  be  a  nteeting  for 
Church  and  Outlaw  basketball 
team  representatives  tonight  at 
7:30  in  room  303-A  of  Woollen 
Gym. 


GM  Will  Give  Lessons 
In  Bridge  Tomorrow 

Bridge  lessons  for  students  will 
be  resumed  tomorrow  in  the 
Rendezvous  Room  from  4:30  to  6 
p.m. 

Instructor  for  the  cour.se  will 
be  .Mrs.  E.  R.  Wade,  who  also 
leaches  the  series  at  Victory  Vil- 
lage Day  Care  Center.  Instruction 
will  be  offered  each  Wednesday 
for  a  period  of  weeks. 

.Mrs.  Wa^e  hopes  to  have  a  large  1 
crowd    for  her   new   series   6f  in-  j 
struction    and    urges    any    student  j 
who  is  interested  in  learning  the 
I  game  to  participate,  she  says. 


Glee  Club 
Will  Give 
New  Award 

The   UNC   Men's  Glee   Club  an- 
nounced yesterday     that     a  loving 
cup  wii!  be  awarded  annually  to 
the    'most  outstanding  member  of    religions   of  the  world, 
the   Glee   Club."  |      "In    men    of    all    nations,    there 

Charles  Shoe,  business  manager  exists  the  desire  to  worship," 
and  spokesman  for  the  club,  re- ;  she  stated,  .\mong  the  slides  that 
leased  the  details  at  yesterday's !  Dr.  Carmichael  showed  were  pic- 
meeting,  stating  that  certificates  tures  of  Buddists  and  Hindu 
suitable  for  framing  will  also  be '  temples  in  the  East,  Christian 
'  pre.sented  annually  to  those  mem- i  churches  in  the  same  locality  and 
bcrs  who  have  served  creditably ;  ancient  religions  monuments  in 
for  four  semesters.  i  Cambodia.      Arungabad.      Luxor. 

'      The  loving  cup  will  be  awarded  ,  Bsalbek  and   Athens, 
to   the  member  who   "contributes !  ~~ 
the     most      towards     attendance. 
ioyal  service  to  the  club,  participj 
.ion  in  all  functions  sponsored  by 
the    Glee    Club,    and    enthusiasm 
and    advancement   of   choral    mus- 
ic,"  Shoe   said. 

Glee  Club  members  will  vote 
by  secret  ballot  at  the  end  of  the 
year  to  choose  the  recipient  of 
the  award,  which  is  being  spon- 
sored  by  the  Glee  Club  itself. 

The  certificates  will  be  award- 
ed under  much  the  same  condi- 
tions but  with  the  prerequisite 
I  stipulation  of  completion  of  four 
semesters  of  Glee  Club  member- 
ship. 

The  awards  will  be  inaugurated 
at  the  end  of  this  year. 


Dairyette.  Brady's,  Carolina  Coffc-- 
Shop.  Carolina  Inn.  Carrboro  Sand- 
wich Shop.  Carrboro  Smoke  Shop, 
i'ollege  Cafe.  Colonial  Drug  Co.. 
t'ofonial  Sandwich  Manufacturing. 
Dairy  Bar.  Dairyland  Farms.  Inc.. 
Danziger's  Candy  Kitchen.  Dan- 
ziger's  Rathskeller.  Greens  Cafe. 
Harry ".s  Grill.  Holl.v\vo(xl  Grill.  I/en- 
oir  Hall.  Lenoir  Pine  Room'  .and 
Long   Meadow   Farms. 

Monogram  Club.  X.  C.  Cafeteria. 
Odeir.s  Drive  In.  The  Pines.  Port- 
hole. Ranch  House.  Reds  Cafeteria. 
Ruby's  Food  Cupboard.  Sloan  Drug 
Store,    Spencer    Hall,    Sutton    Drug 


Injured  Coed  Continues 
To  Mdke  Improvements 

Stella  Anderson,  a  coed  ser- 
iously injured  in  an  automobile 
accident  during  Christmas  vaca- 
tion, continues  to  improve  al- 
though her  condition  still  re 
mains  critical  according  to  Kath- 
erine Carmichael,  dean  of  wo- 
men. 

Mis5  Anderson,  a  journalism 
major,  lives  in  West  Jefferson 
and  staying  in  the  Wilkes  Gen- 
eral Hospital,  North  Wiikesboro. 


M  &  .\  <irill.  and  .Michael'.s  Famous 

l'"«K)ds. 

-Th»»  following  meat  markets  re- 
icived   ".\"   grades: 

.A  &  P.  Andrews  &  Riggsbee, 
Colonial  Store.  Franklin  St.,  Col- 
onial Store.  Glen  Lennox.  Fou.shees 
Or<K-ery  &  Market,  Fowler's  Food 
.Store.  Hard«'e"s  Market.  L.  D. 
llearn.  Mason's  .Market.  Shield's 
Market.  Thrift  ,\  Food  Store,  and 
'.Vest  Franklin  St.  Grocery. 

The  following  meat  markets  re- 
teived  "B"  (Jrades:  f^>wer'.s  Mar- 
ket and  Wea\er's  Grocery  and 
.Market. 


IN  THE  INFIRMARY 


Riely  E.  Montgomery,  Robert 
G.  Lewis,  Shelton  J.  Turner,  Har 
mon  J.  King,  Jr.,  William  H. 
High,  Misses  Anne  C.  Kresge, 
Sally  L.  Simpson,  Suzanne  E. 
Merrick  and  Ann   H.  Bachman. 


GM'S  SLATE 


Little  Easing  Of  Housing  Shortage 
Seen  For  UNC's  Spring  Semester 


Chicago  Dean  Visits 
UNC  Campus  Friday 

Harold  M.  Metcalf,  dean  of 
students  at  the  University  of 
Chicago,  will  be  on  campus  Fri- 
day to  hold  a  meeting  designed 
to  give  information  about  the 
University  of  Chicago's  gradu- 
ate program  leading  to  M.B.A. 
and   Ph.   D.  degrees. 

Dr.  Metcali  will  answer 
questions  concerning  admission 
requirementa,  fmancial  aid. 
placement  services  and  pro- 
grams of  study. 


DawTi  of  a  new  semester  on  the 
academic  horizons  of  the  Univer- 
sity will  find  the  worst  housing 
shortage  in  UNC's  history  only  par- 
tially alleviated  when  February  ar- 
rives. / 

A    normal    slight    drop    in    enroll- 


No  immediate  end  is  in  sight 
for  the  arute  shortage  of  suitable 
quarters  for  the  University's  1,500 
married  students. 


ly   Victory  Village  apartments. 

To  meet  tiie  sei-ioius  campus  hous- 
ing problem,  construction  is  e.\- 
i;ected    to    begin    in    February    on 


A  resolution  favoring  the  Eisen- 1 
hower    Doctrine    in    the    Mid-East 
will    be    debated    by    the    Philan- 
thropic Literary  Siciety  tonight. 

The  debate  will  take  place  at 
8:30  p.m.  in  Phi  Hall  in  New- 
East  following  an  executive  ses- 
sion at  7  p.m.  for  representatives 
and  conditional  i-epresentatives.      , 

The  bill  states  that  the  Phi  "go 
on  record  favoring  the  Ei.senhower 
Doctrine  in  the  Mid-East,  such 
Doctrine  being  defined  as:  a) 
congressional  delegation  of  power 
to  the  President  to  u.se  Ameri- 
can Mililarv  Forces,  if  necessary, 
in  upp'Ml  of  any  country  which 
might  be  'TTlvaded  b.\  t«e  Com- 
munist-^: b)  .such  action  be  con- 
tingent upon  the  invitation  of  the 
country  under  attack;  c)  Con- 
gressional authorization  of  an  en- 
larged program  of  economic  aid 
to  that  area."  J 

The  resolution  states,  "a  power 
vacuum  has  been  crejPted  in  the 
.Mid-Ea.^t  by  the  withdrawal  of 
French  and  British  military  forces 
and  the  expansion  of  Communist 
control  and  influence  into  said 
area    is   eminently    probable.  " 

Eatina  Establishments 
Will  Hold  'Coffee  Day' 

Chap<>l  Hill  and  Carrboro  eat- 
ing establishments  will  observe 
Coffee  Day  this  Wednesday,  when 
all  money  paid  for  coffee  in  their 
enteries  will  be  turned  over  to 
Ihe  March  of.  Dimes  campaign. 
Jesse  L.  West,  chairman  of  the 
observance,  and  E.  Carrington 
Smith,  drive  chairman,  encourag- 
ed everyone  to  "make  a  contri- 
bution toward  this  worthy  cause." 


In  September  500  names  formed ,  t  liroc  projXKsed  mens  dorms  and 
the  waiting  list  for  quarters  in  the  j  an  aildition  to  one  women's  dorm. 
University's  3.t6- apartment  Victory  j  However,  the  new  facilities  to  house 
ment  for  the  spring  semester  is  ex- j  Village  development  for  married  WK)  boarding  men  aiul  7.5  'women 
l>ected  to  sooth  crowded  conditions  [  tudent.s.  There  is  a  current  waiting]  v.  ill  not  l>e  available  until  Septem- 
:n  1.5  of  the  University's  19  men's  ,  list  of  300  names  held  over  from  the  j  ner  19.t8. 
dormitories.  (first   semester.  36  new    applications  |  HAVE  %2  MILLION   LOAN 

.Additional  dormitory  space  made  l  k«r  the  spring  and  other  requests.  A  two  million  dollar  loan  fi'om 
available  by  men  moving  to  silit- '  .lowing  in  lor  the  summer  and  fall '  the  Federal  Housing  and  Finance 
able  off-campus  residence  and  pledg-    terms  ol    19i>7.  .Agency    for    dormitory   construction 

mg  in  fraternities  may  relieve  the    MANY  WITHDRAWN  Aas  granted  in  1955  and  autliorized 

'indesirable  three-men-per-rck)m  con- 1      Some    43    student    families    with-   at  a  special  meeting  of  the  Consoli- 
ditions    in    several    dorms,    accord-    drew    applications    for   Victory  Vil- 
:ng  to  Housing  Director  J.  E.  Wads- i  lage    space    this    term    l)ecause    of 


worth. 

WOMEN  CROWDED,  TOO 

Living  conditions  in  six  women's 
dorms,  with  a  capacity  of  567.  are 
equally  critical  as  three  months  ago 
when  every  available  facilitj  was 
taken  by  the  influx  of  1.500  coeds. 
Total  number  of  women  accepted 
is  alw^ays  limited  by  the  avaiiability 
of  dormitory  space,  in  accordance 
with  L'niversity  policy. 


dim  pro.spects  of  securing  housing. 

The    trend    of   applying   a    year    in 

advance    is    sometimes    fruitless. 

Contributing  to  the  current  uni- 
versity problem  among  married 
students  is  high  cost  of  outlying 
rental  establishments.  Many  stu- 
dent families  are  unable  to  pay 
$95-$100  monthly  rental  fees  typi- 
cal   ot    some    oil  oainpus    rentals, 

'and  clamor  tw  Ihe  $20-S:]rt  month- 


W.R.C.,  7-9,  Grail  Room;  Ches<! 
Club,  8-11,  Roland  Parker  1;  U.P 
7-11,  Roland  Parker's  1  and  2; 
Men's  Honor  Council,  7-11,  Coun- 
cil Room,  Dance  Class,  6:303,  ADnJirntion  FoT 
Rendezvous  Room;  APO,  7  9,  '^Hf-'l  I^U  I  lUI  I  lUI 
APO  Room.  C  I       I 

oummer  Jobs 
Available  Now 

Kegistration  for  summer  place 
ment  is  now  open  through  the 
Placement  .Service.  204  flardner 
Hall 

Every  day  the  Placement  Serv 
ice  receives  information  about  op 
ponunities  in  a  variety  of  ficil.. 
which  will  be  available  to  stu 
dents  during  the  summer  months. 

These  opportunities  include 
shipping  out  to  South  America  on 
a  freighter,  being  a  camp  coun- 
selor in  Maine,  or.  for  science  stu- 
dents, gaining  experience  in  their 
field  by  working  on  a  summer 
program  with  one  of  the  large 
(.ympanies. 

"Summer  work  proves  to  be  an 
dated  University  Board  of  'lYustees    invaluable   experience   whether  or 


In  addition  to  this  Bass  sub-  , 
milted  a  petition  signed  by  '  a- 
proximately  50  residents  of  BVP" 
declaring.  "'We  are  completely 
satisfied  with  the  present  admin- 
istrrition  of  our  president  and 
issue   him  a  vote  of  confidence." 

The  petition  was  pcisted  on  the 
dormitory  bulletin  board  by  Bill 
and  Dave  Wihle  in  an  effort  "to 
clear  this  thing  up." 

Ba.ss  expressed  hope  "the  stu- 
dent body  will  be  subjected  to  no 
more  of  this  somewhat  unpleasant 
episode.  But  if  Mr.  Edwards, 
whose  type  of  journaliiim  we  are 
all  familiar  with,  chooses  to  pur- 
sue the  matter  further,  let  him 
argue  with  a  cold-hard,  officizl 
.statement  from  the  authority  in- 
vi  Ived — the  IDC— and  a  vote  o{ 
confidence  from  the  men  in  B\T*," 
he   said. 

The  statement  concluded  'Til 
go  along  with  them."  dhe  IDC  and 
dorm  residents)  "for  I  am  pledged 
to  their  service.  And  I  will  put 
their  opinion  against  that  of  any 
editorialist." 

Edwards  declined  further  com- 
ment saying  'I  refu.se  to  argue 
about  such  a  ridiculous  situation 
with  sn^all  minded  politicians.' 


UP  Holds 
Exec  Meet 
Tonight 

-  An  executive  session  of  the  Un- 
iversity Party  will  discu.ss  party 
policy,  finances,  publicity,  and 
the  fall  platform  at  a  meeting  to- 
night in  Roland  Parker  Lounge  of 
Graham   Memorial   ai   7:30  p.m. 

The  meeting  is  open  to  all  par- 
ty members.  A  full  meeting  is 
not  being  held  because  there  is 
no  pertinent  busine.-;s  to  come  be- 
fore the  party  since  the  legisla- 
ture has  not  met  recently. 

Al  Goldsmith.  UP  publicity 
chairman,  urges  all  party  member* 
interested  in  publicity  to  attend 
this  meeting.  He  will  take  up 
lulu  plans  for  publicity  at  lo 
night's  ;necting. 

The  fall  platform  will  be  dli- 
cus.sed  in  the  light  of  acti<m  that 
iias  taki  n  place  on  it. 

Future  plans  of  the  UP  include 
an  address  by  Sam  McGill  at  the 
Feb.  5  meeting  of  the  party. 

Mc<;il!,  director  of  student 
activities,  will  .speak  on  the  ".\d- 
inini.stration  Views  On  Student 
Troblems  Pertaining  to  the  .Ci.a- 
pus.  "  Am>mg  hi.v  topics  will  lie 
athletics,  pric-es  and  the  parking 
problem. 

The  IP  hopes  the  students  will 
take  advantage  of  this  opportunity 
This  meeting  will  be  open  to  the 
er-employee  relations,  a  chance  entire  campus.  Mike  Weinman, 
to  assume  responsibility,  and  a  UP  party  chairman,  urges  stu- 
background  of  dealing  with  peo-  dents  to  attend, 
pie  which  will  aid  you  consider-  to  hear  administrative  views  air- 
tions  of  village  units,  of  pre-fab  i  ably  when  the  time  does  come  to  ed.'.said  Weinman, 
design  and  consti-ucted  by  the  embark  upon  a  career  after  gradu- 1  The  meeting  will  be  the  first 
federal  government  for  housiiig  I  ation. '  according  to  the  Place-  one  ot  next  semester  on  the 
\etera;is  10  years  ago.  I  ment   Ser\ice.  Tuesday  followins  c.xams. 


following    the    o\erflow    of    present 
<ampLis  quarters  this  .vear. 

The    University    also    hopes    lo 
erect    200    additional    Victory    Vil- 
lage units  in  the  future  if  construc- 
tion   is   approved. 
These    proposed    units    would   also 
improve  .somewhat  run-down  condi- 


not  you  choose  a  job  that  corre- 
lates with  your  future  career.  In 
addition  to  a  monetary  return,  it 
gives   vou  a  preview  into  employ- J 


rA6i   TWO 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEiL 


TUESDAY,  JANUARY    8,  1957 


TUESD> 


Ike  Should  Get.  His  Check, 
But  Not  Completely  Blank 

The  Pit'sidt'iils  weekend  retjiiest  Ini  a  niililarv  l)lank  rliet  k  was 
imuh-needeil.  But  ue  lear  ihal  when  C;()nj»ress  writes  the  ihe(k,  it  will 
be  givino  the  President  mu<  h  tfw)  imiih  |><)wer.  ^ 

The  letjucst.  as  almost  exervone  knows  hv  now,  was  lor  the  power 
to  use  I'nited  States  armed  forces  a<>ainst  anv  C'.<Miununist  or  Coininunist- 
led  aggiessor  in«rhe  Middle  Kast. 

To  Ik-  snie.  President  tisenhower  needs  this  j)Ower.  or  will  need 
it  exeniualK.     Proj)onents    of    his 


idea  are  ri^ht  in  arj^nin'?  that  the 
slow  ine(  haniis  i»t  C.on;»Tess  wt)uld 
be  nothing  but  a  liitulrance  to  the 
seeuritv  ol  the  I'nited  Sutes  in 
ti'.se  oi  Red  attack  in  the  Mid- 
east. Uut  the  jihrasin'4  of  his  re- 
quest makes  us  wonder  if  the  (lon- 
oiess  should  not  demand  a  im>re 
spctifii  explanation  of  what  Kis- 
enhf)wer  woidd  ^  do.  where  he 
would  do  it.  and  with  how  muth 
(onsent  ^m\  approval  c»f  (".onjiiess. 
.Vs  The  New  York.  Times"  James 
Resion  jxiinted  out  Sunday  morn- 

\  ^^^  *■(  )n    several    im- 

1/ V/^    \       jxntant    points,    the 
/m^I^    \,        Piesident  used  am- 
K»^     '    ~hi<>uous      laiii>uai>e, 
but    it   tan   be   said 
that     this    was    pm- 
ijjostfnl  ambioiiitv. 

"He  did  not.  for 
le  \  a  m  p  1  e.  defitie 
'what  was  meant  by 
the  Mid<Me  last  area.'  He  did  not 
sav  whether  he  wouh'  eonsult  with, 
the  (lou'^ress.  or  wjjether  he  Avouhi 
do  so  betote  or  while  or  after  or- 
dering; I'liited  States  troops  into 
action  in  resjxmse  i<»  an  appeal 
for  help  a<4ainst  armed  ('.(»nuium- 
ist    a;4^re»isi()n.' 

Tor  a  Piesident  uho  has  an  ad- 
ministration siu  h  as  Fisenhower's. 
such  ainbii>uitv  tan  and  pjobablv 
will  i>e  harmlul. 

Consider  the  abilit^  ol  Kisen- 
howei '>  sec  <»nd-in-(  (umnand.  John 
Fosiei  Dulles.  Should  he  be  <me 
to  trust  with  sik  h  an  ambi<>uous 
arr.uiyemeiH  of  armed   fore  e\? 

C'.onsider  the  oarble  W'ashiu'^ton 
L'ot  itselt  into  last  week  o\ei  I'.  S. 
Marines'  haxiu'.;  wiapou-i  \cith 
atojuit  Avarhe.ds  in  the  Middle 
Fast.  M 

Consider  the  immeirse  l>ajrier 
of  administration  secretv:  « onsi<l- 
ei  llie  disloval  men  wh(»  work  un- 
der   Fisenhower. 

fionsidei  the  la<  t  that  the  Pres- 
ident of  the  Cnited  States  knows 
very  little  aluna  public  opinion 
in  the  I'nited  States  and  other 
tountries. 

.\fter  (<>nsiderin»  all  this,  we 
seriously  doid>t  the  wisdom  of 
pla(  in;4  so  mu(h  iinlimited  power 
in  the  hands  of  the  present  ad- 
ministration. Limited,  it  would  "be 


The  Daily  Tar  Heel 

The  official  itudent  publicatioo  uf  tbe 
Publuittioas  tiuard  ol  the  University  of 
North  Carolina,  where  it  is  published 
daily  except  Mundav  and  examinatiot 
and  vacation  pt-riods  and  summer  terms 
Entered  as  second  class  matter  in  tb« 
o.i«t  office  in  rhapel  Hill.  N.  C,  undei 
the  .Act  oi  .March  8.  1870  Subscripticn 
rates:  mailed,  $4  per  year,  $2.50  a  seme« 
ter;  delivered.  $6  a  year,  $3.30  a  semea 
ter. 


Editor     . 

_  FRED  POWLEDGE 

Managing  Editor  _ 

_  CHARUE  SLOAN 

Xews  Editor 

NANCY  HILL 

biisiness  Manager 

BILL  BOB  PL-EL 

Sports  Editor 

LARRY  CHEEK 

Subscription  Manager  _ 

Advertising  Manager 

Circulation  Manager 


.  Dale  Staley 
Fred  Katzir 
Charlie  Holt 


NKW.S  STAFF— Clarke  Jones,  Ray  Unk- 
er.  Joan  .Moore.  Pringle  Pipkin,  Ann.; 
Drake.  Edith  MacKinnon,  WaUy  Kuralt, 
Mary  Alys  Vuorhees,  Graham  Snyder, 
Billy  Barnes.  Neil  Bass.  Gary  Nichols, 
Page  Bernstein.  Peg  Humphrey,  Phyllii 
Maultsb>»  Ben  Taylor 


BUSINESS  STAFF— Rosa  Moore,  Johnny 
Whiuker.  Dick  Leavitt,  Dick  Sirkin. 


SPORTS  STAFF:  Bill  King,  Jim  Purks. 
Jimmy  Harper,  Dave  Wible,  Charley 
Howson, 


EDITORL\L  STAFF  —  Woody  Sear*, 
Frank  Crowther,  Barry  Winston,  David 
Mundy.  George  Pfingst,  Ingrid  Clay. 
Cortland  Edwards,  Paul  McCauley, 
Bobbi  Smith. 


Staff  Photographer Norman  Kantor 

Librarian  .  Sue'  Gishner 

Night  Fvdit-or Cortland  Edwards 

Prooi  Reader Ben  Taylor 


a  fine  idea.'  liiu  sm  h  power,  as 
br(»adlv  desdibed  bv  the  Presi- 
dent last  weekend,  sounds  veiy 
d.uineious. 

It  woidd  not  be  nice  at  all  for 
the  I'nited  States  to  reside  for- 
e\er  on  the  biink. 


Grey-Dark 
University 
And  Exams 

last  weekend  on  the  Caiolina 
(ampus  was  a  dieary   thin<;. 

The  stiulents  were  not  in  e\  i- 
deiK  e.  I'ltev  weie  alwa\s  some- 
wheie  else.  I'hey  weie  part  ol  the 
overall    atmosphere.   ^ 

I'he  sun  tried  to  shine  on  Sat- 
urdav.  saw  what  a  drearv  day  it 
was  aijd  weiu  ba<  k  into  hidinj;. 
.\  mixture  of  fog,  mist  and  dreari- 
ness, tempered  bv  the  middle  of 
wintei.  (()\eted  CItapel  Mill  and 
students"  minds. 

It  was  half!  to  tell  when  the  sun 
.set  Saturdav.  It  just  i;ia<lually  (]uit 
shrninji  sometime  in  the  late  alter- 
iKKHi.  The  sky  was  a  t^rey-dark 
lono  beh)re  the  store-lights  down- 
town stalled  to  advertise,  implore 
and  be(  koti. 

There  were  sotne  students  at 
the  I.ibraiv,  readyinj:;  themselves 
for  linuJ  examinations.  But  they 
liad  a  farawav  look  in  their  eves, 
as  if  to  sav.  "Kxams  woti't  be  heie 
for  more   than    hall    a   moinh.   We 

i'AU  aflord  to  take  it  easv  here  first." 

*  *  # 

People  walked  slower,  and  the 
shops  alon<;  Franklin  St.  looked 
warmer  and  business  was  not  turn- 
ing; oxer  very  raj)idlv.  even  with 
after-Cihristmas  sales.  Cars'  head- 
lii»lits  were  more  blurred  in  the 
oiey-daik   late  alteiiioon. 

Foi  the  fiist  lime  this  academic 
veai,  the  (ampus  did  not  look  in- 
viting. .Maylx-  it  was  the  thimiess 
(»f  the  trees:  maybe  it  was  the  toiuli 
of  ioldness  in  the  aii.  liut  it  sud- 
denlv  was  not  fiui  to  walk  along 
the  bi  i(  k  walks  and  think  about 
natuie.  lor  natute  was  sleejiing 
very  soundly. 

Chapel  }ii\\  and  the  I'niveisity 
are  in  the  middle  of  winter,  ami 
on  top  (»f  that,  examinations  are 
(oming  up  cpiiiklv.  much  more 
(piickly  than  studeius  (an  study 
foi  them.  The  feeling  of  urgeiuy 
is  almost  upcm  us,  and  the  grey- 
dark  afternoons  only  add  to  that 
feelina. 


Baptists'  Anti-Trlbble 
Sentiment  Fades  Out 


,         Lloyd  Preslar 

Juiifor,   Tlir  Old   (.'old  .<.   lihuli 

WINSTON-SALEM— The  po.  ition  of  Dr.  Harold  W.  Tribble.  Wake 
Forest  College's  much-disputed  president,  's  now  apparently  stronger 
than  at  anytime  during  t'ne  last  year. 

It  was  just  one  year  ago  la.st  month  —  on  Dec.  5.  1955--t'ia{ 
hundreds  of  Wake  Forest  students  staged  a  demonstration  whiif. 
marked  the  beginning  of  a  fiery  and  highly  publicized  dispute  over 
the  Baptist  educator. 

Throughout  last  winter  and  into  the  summer  the  college  Board 

of   Trustee.;   investigated    Dr.    Tribble    anil    argued    over   whether    or 

not    ho    would    be    relea.sed.    Hi:^^ 


supporters  among  the  trusics 
held  out  through  two  crucial  vot- 
es, and  despite  the  attacks,  Dr. 
TribbiL  retained  his  job. 

The  last  .serious  threat  came  in 

College  Report 

This  is  the  first  in  a  series 
of  reports  from  North  Caro- 
lina colleges  and  universities 
on  what  their  problems  are, 
whai   makes  them  tick. 

Editor  Presfar  this  year 
heads  The  Old  Gold  and 
Black,  Wake  Forest's  student 
newpaper'  which  itself  under- 
went a  face-lifting  when  the 
college  switched  campuses. 
He  wrote  this  article  especi- 
ally for  The  Daily  Tar  Heel. 

Other  reports  will  be  pub- 
lished later  in  the  year. 
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 

June,  when  the  trustees  vot^d 
20  to  13  against  Ms  discharge. 

:;;  ^  * 

The  factors  which  make  lii.s 
position  seem  stronger  now  a.o 
not  ckar-cut.  In  mid-November, 
when  the  State  Baptist  C.)nven- 
lion.  which  operates  Wake  Fore.^t, 
met  hvre.  nine  new  trustees  wer" 
olecteJ  to  the  boari'.  Spokesmen 
for  both  sides  of  the  Tribble  coii- 
Irover.sy  expressed  satisfac'ii..n 
over  the  choices,  but  at  the  sar/.e 
lime  many  'ol  >(he  ;4nti-Tribi)i( 
murmurings  seemed  to  be  qui;-' 
ened.  ,  v 


Odus  M.  Mull  of  Shelby,  who 
retired  as  president  of  the 
Board  of  Trustees  when  the 
new  members  took  office  J^n 
1,  sa<d  during  the  convention. 
"I  expect  some  minor  opposi- 
tion ro  Dr.  Tribble  to  continue. 
But  tome  disagreement  is  a 
healthy  thing  —  it  keeps  us 
awake  and  working." 
Mull  has  been  one  of  Tribblc's 
most  ;iotrve  sijpporters. 

The  removal  of  the  colleyc 
from,  its  123-year-old  campus  in 
the  little  town  of  Wake  Forest  to 
till.-  bustling  city,  not  the  Tribble 
dispute,  has  been  the  .school's  ma- 
jor claim  to  fame  since  t^he  dooi>; 
on  the  old  campus  were  cIos'mI 
for  thv  last  time  in  May.  It  was 
ihe  job  of  moving  the  college  th;:t 
Tribble  stepped  into  when  he 
came  ir.  1950. 

"When  you  move  a  school  like 
Wake  Koi'est,"  one  of  Tribbles 
stipporiors  has  said,  "somebody'.-- 
toes  arc  bound  to  get  stepped  on. 
He's  done  a  good  job  when  you 
consiuer  all  the  things  he  ha(!  tc 
do." 

And  though  many  trustees  and 
alumni  have  opposed  the  presi- 
dent cpenly,  few  have  .stated  spe- 
cific charges. 

■f      .     *  * 

The  story  of  the  student  ri  .t 
List  December  has  never  be;*:; 
told  ir.  full,  but  there  are  tho.e 
who  will  say  it  was  spon.>or"d 
secretly  by  anti-Tribble  alumni. 
At  an>  rate. '\hose  w)io  look  par' 


were  crying  out  against  what 
liicy  considered  a  threat  to  "big- 
time"    i;thletics  at   Wake  Fore.-i. 

But  the  student  sentiment 
against  him  diminished  almost 
as  quickly  as  it  arose,  for  in  a 
qmitter  of  weeks  a  new  and 
more  expensive  football  coach, 
complete  with  a  five-man  staff, 
had  oeen  hired  and  the  coliege 
appeared  on  its  way  to  bigger 
rather  than  smaller-time  ath- 
letic*. ^ 

And  today,  student  talk  on  tiie 
new  campus  seems  to  be  turning,' 
more  >harply   to   Tribbles  lavai 

Whjit  does  the  faculty  think  o! 
it  J  president"?  .Mlhough  no  facul- 
ty merrber  ever  publicly  criti?iz»u 
Dr.  Tribble.  there  was  much  fet!- 
ing  a?Jiin:U  him.  But  as  the  tactics 
oi  his  enemies  grew  more  and 
more  harsh  last  spring,  faculty 
sentiment  against  him  s-eemed  io 

«often 

*  *  * 

Bowman  Gray.  Wake  Forest's 
school  of  medicine,  was  another 
center  of  anti-Tribble  sentimeat. 


DR. 


HAROLD   TRIBBLE 

.  .  .  /'('   iiiorcd   i{ 


A  SIGN  OF  MODERN  TIMES 

Wake  Fore.sj  College,  transplanted 


Some  Iriends  of  the  mcd  school 
felt  it  had  .suffered  as  the  c;>! 
lege  ■^.-.theied  tunds  for  its  move 
lo  Wiii'.ton-Saleni.  But  since  liii' 
ci;lege  has  settled  here,  announ.c 
auMit  «»;  an  enlargement  program 
at<  Bowman  (Jray  has  been  male 
and  t'.u-  med  schiiol  has  received 
a  large  financial  grant  from  ilie 
.:-ame  Ueynolds  Foundation  which 
sponsoied  the  removal  ol  tht;,  c.'l- 
lege. 

Other  voices  against  TribbI? 
have  been  those  of  a  group  o' 
Baptists  who  claimed  he  does 
not  believe  in  the  virgin  birth 
of  Christ.  But  the  president 
denied  this  last  month  in  a 
speech   before  the  convention. 

The  next  meeting  of  the  Bo;'rd 
cf  Trustees  will  come  early  'his 
year.  Lut  it  is  doubtful  that  ;;:•- 
Tribba  dispute  will  he  aired  - 
at  lea^i  until  his  opposition  ik"ci-; 
new  evidence  again.^l  him  or  nir.s 
new  allies  to  its  fight.  Most  eiv 
.iervers  say  that  should  the  issue 
come  to  a  vote  again,  the  new 
trustees  will  vote  in  about  tin 
.'iaine  ratio  as  did  the  old  board. 

At  least  four  of  the  nine  r.ew 
trustee."^  apparently  are  strongly 
in  Tribbles  tavor.  Little  is  knov  i 
aboui  the  feelings  of  the  other 
five,  iifid  .Judge  Hubert  E.  Olivi". 
who  will  replace  Mull  as  pTe.>  - 
dent  (T  the  board,  has  been  ;i^ 
'.'middkvof-the-roader  ■  in  the 
controversv. 


• 

Sidebar: 
On  Studying 
&  Otherwise 

Charlie  Sloan 

Probably  the  most  unnecessary 
observation  of  the  year  is  that 
exams  are  *  approaching.  But 
the  iact  remains  that  the  week 
(it  reckoning  is  almost  upon  the 
campus,  and  a  major  part  of  the 
student   body   wishes  it  wasn't. 

The  more  eager  individuals 
are  already  framing  excuses  to 
h?  presented  t)  their  parents 
at  the  most  opportune  moments. 
Chances  are  that  somewhere  on 
campus  students  more  violently 
inclined  are  considering  kidnap- 
ing instructors,  and  ^■lopping  all 
mail  leaving  Chapel  Hill  until 
the  nasty  letters  from  South 
Building    :ir;>    intercepted. 

Other  signs  of  the  impending 
catastrophe  are  prevalent.  More 
peoole    are    seen    taking    cigar 
ette   breaks  in  the  Library  foy- 
er,    the     hands     holding     those 
steaming   cups    of   Y-Court   cof- 
fee   are   quivering    just    a    little 
bit  more,  and   appointments  to 
see    instructors    are    becoming 
more  difficult  to  get. 
It  happens  twice  a  year,  every 
year.  It  seems  people  would  get 
used    to    exams,    and    not    devote 
quite    so    much    time    discussing 
their    c;ming.    The    examination 
really    isn't    an    unusual    phenom- 
enon. The  whole  student  body  is 
f.iced  wl1h   it.  .Ground  five  of  it. 
to    be    exact.    And    still    the    pri- 
mary  topic  of  discu.ssion   is  how 
unprepared    we   all   are. 

That's  right,  all.  There  isn't 
a  student  on  this  campus  who  is 
prepared  for  an  exam,  or  any 
quiz,  two  weeks  before  it  comes 
off. 

Si  wUat  if  the  student  doesn't 
know  half  of  what  his  instructor 
thinks  he  does?  .\nd  what  mat- 
ter does  it  make  if  the  other 
half  is  so  hazy  it  could  never.be 
used  in  examination?  \{  least 
the  student  doesn't  know  enough 
to  be  confused.  A  blank-faced 
'stare  can  be  masked,  but  an  in- 
dividual stumbling  all  over  him- 
.self  trying  to  explain  something 
reallv   looks   lousy. 


THE    CAMPUS    IS    BIG    AND    NEW 

in   Winston-Salein,   vustead  of   Wake  Forest 

• 


• 

Vil  Abner 


Pogo 


By  Walt  Kelly 


OK^BP  UP  IN  That  NI6Hn0  A5 
VC?U  1$,  1 16  SOTTA  APMIT  YOU 

VOii  60NNA  HAPTA 

-"CU$$/N  As'$ge5AB$ 
SOrTA  OOf 

r 


WHO  KNOIV^f  ^CA\£  noun:-  INNOCENT 

CHAP  ViSm'T  ZQS\l  A.;:\5  A\'  gg 

PEAury  ■  Hg'i,^  A5)^  PO'  /^A 

YO' nA\0  AS' :P  iT^  3>0r  A      'k^-^ 


I  /(J{  ^e^Aff  'N  IT,  08  iP 


CAROLEIDOSCOPE;  ;  '     >^* 

Soul-Searching: 
Friends  Help 

Frank  Crowther 

For  tho.se  of  you  who  have  troubles — and  can 
any  of  us  say  we.  do  not? — I  v»ould  especially  like 
to  dedicate  this  column. 

f  have  problems — many,  many  of  them.  They 
have  been  with  me  for  some  time.  A  few  of  them 
are  answered  and  disappear;  some  of  them  have 
just  taken  'a  back  seat  and  will  forge  up  again  in 
the  future;  and,  there  are  those  problems  which 
are  with  me  from  early  morning  to  late  evening, 
almost  never  relenting,  save  for  those  few  moments 
when  I  take  in   a   ilick,  exercise   profu.>*aly,  or  in 

lerest  myself  in  .someone  else  and  their  problems. 

*  •  * 

I  have  just  spent  the  afternoon,  or  a  good  por- 
ti;m  of  it.  with  one  ol  my  good  friends  here  at 
school  who  is  a  graduating  senior,  but  is  troubled 
even  yet  by  his  path  in  life  and  what  it  is  to  be. 
I  shall  not  violate  his  confidence  and  coveted 
friendship  by  dealing  in  names  or  specifics.  Those 
things  aie  what  make  and  keep  friends  together. 

He  had  and  has  difficulties,  and  I  saw  many 
of  my  own  problems  tied  in  with  his.  We  dis- 
cussed everything  from  women  to  humanitarian- 
ism  to  philosophy  to  movies.  We  both  let  looss 
a  little  and  broke  down  some  of  the  inhibitions 
which  so  characterize  many  livei  today.  He  told 
me  his  hopes  and  fears,  likes  and  dislikes,  and 
admirations  and   exasperations. 

Without  going  any  further  or  deeper,  the  point 
I  am  trying  to  mako  is  that  it  is  a  satisfying,  re- 
lieving and  comforting  feeling  to  know  that  you 
are  able  to  talk  with  someone  who  can  understand 
you,  symphathize  with  you  and  aid  you.  possibly,  in 
solving,   revising,    ajid    restating   your   problems. 

Alter  all.  aren't  we  all  in  need  of  just  that?  We 
can  only  suppress  things  or  fight  alone  for  so  long 
before  we  have  to  go  to  .someone  or  something  for 
aid,  guidance,  and.  if  nothing  else,  relief  in  sym- 
pathy. 

*  *  ^ 

So  don't  feel  that  nobody  understands  you;  don't 
withdraw  into  the  proverbial  shell;  don't  pity 
yours^f;  but.  look  outward  and  around  you;  seek 
someone  whom  you  think  you  can  trust  and  with 
whom  you  feel  you  can  express  yourself.  Try  taiiv 
ing  about  it. 

Nothing,  to  me,  i.s  more  stimulating  than  a  good 
conversation  and  soul  searching  with  .someone 
who  is  serious  and.  sincere,  but.  above  all,  someone 
who  is  a  friend. 

THE  ST.  LOUIS  POST-DISPATCH:     ' 


Army  Mule's  Departure 
Is  Bad  For  Sergeants 

It  is  a  bid  saddening  to  know  that  after  120 
years  as  a  beast  of  burden  in  the  service  of  its 
country  the  Army  mule  is  mustered  out. 

The  301  mules  of  an  artillery  battalion  and  a 
juartermaster  company  passed  in  a  final  review 
at  Fort  Carson,  Colo.,  as  a  pan  played  "The  Old  Gray 
Mare  Ain't  What  She  Used  to  Be."  Now  they  are 
surplus  and   awaiting  sale. 

An  .A.rmy  mountain  battery  song  refers  to  "That 
grand  old  fool,  the  Army  mule,  who  is  never  known 
to  fail."  The  mule  just  simply  is  the  victim  of  prog- 
ress for  it  is  to  be  replaced  by  the  helicopter. 

It  must  be  admitted  that  the  helicopter  can 
operate  far  better  th.an  a  mule  even  in  treacherous 
mountain  areas. 

But  no  helicopter,  no  matter  how  long  it  re- 
fuses to  whirl  and  get  into  the  air.  can  ever  be  as 
obstinate  as  a  Missouri  mule  that  balks  and  re- 
fu-^s  to  hit  the  trail. 

So  no  helicopter  sergeant  is  ever  going  to  de- 
velop the  rich  proficiency  in  profanity  that  the 
balky  mule  developed  in  the  old  time  pack  sergeant. 


DU 
Engi 

By  CHl 

Delta  L'psi| 
bss  had  a  v( 
The  score,  a< 
included  wr^ 
oak,  propos| 
crnL->'3. 

There   wer 
least  one  oi 
cars,  and  a 
None    of   th^ 
liu:se     niechl 
were  damag^ 


TheAi 

"Every 
but  indeec 
is  beyond 
at  secret  »\ 

PETE  T( 
wish   his 
tomers  th« 
in  the  pastl 
you  in  the  | 

PETI 

"Iv 

133Va 


SPEC 


Bring 


DA 


A< 

1 

Cr< 

lh« 

5 

^> 

of 

S 

Ml 

10 

St) 

po 

12 

Ac 

mi 

13 

Co 

14. 

Bil 

15 

W 

XT 

Se 

18 

P< 

20 

Tl 

21 

Ci 

22 

at 
24  J< 
26  M 

sti 
21 


33. 
36 

38 


40 
42 


TUESDAY,  JANUARY  8,  1957 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


PAGE  THREE 


)int 

rc- 

you 

Itand 

.  in 

We 

tor 
l.svm- 


lon't 
pity 

[seek 
with 
taij'- 

?ood 
leone 
>eone 


120 


ind   a 

eview 

Gray 

V   are 


?an 
(ike 

ley 
lem 
lave 

in 
>ich 
ling, 
•nts 

ic 
mus. 

Ipor- 

|e    at 

IbJed 

be. 

?(ed 

lose 


DU  Fraternity  Has  P innings  And 
Engagements  And   Other  Events 


By  CHARLIE  SLOAN 

Delta  Upsilon  Social  Fraternity 
has  had  a  verj-  busy  three  weeks. 
The  scoie,  added  up  Sunday  nighl, 
included  wrecks,  pinnings,  poison 
Oik.     proposals  and  a     Caribbean 

lTUia'3.  « 

There  were  two  collisions,  at 
lca.st  one  01  which  involved  three 
tar.s.  and  a  minor  fendo'-bending 
None  of  the  people  involved  in 
liicse  mechanical  entanglements 
were  damaged  seriously  enough  to 


be    hospitalized.   One  of  the  men  i  icportedly     about  18  feet     tall,  a 


;  borrowed  his  girl  friend's  father's 

i  car  while  his  was  being  fitted  back 

I  together,    and    shortly     thereafter 

I  found  himself  mired  in  a  swam;; 

{  car,  girl  and  all.  He  claims  he  w^s 

I  two  hours  just  getting  the  car  out. 

j      Another     unfortunate     brother 

found  him^-elf     in  the     infirmar> 

with  poison  oak  contracted  during 

the  holidays.  His  roommate  pulled 

a  sw^itcli  on  three  previously  men 


plcige  did  something  to  his  back 
ond  joined  the  infirmary  crew  yes- 
terday. A  third  man  is  due  to  g  > 
under  the  knife  between  semester;, 
to  have  his  ton^ls  removed. 

Three  pinnings  dotted  the  holi 
day  scene  and  week  following.  One 
lasted  %  hours  and  the  second  24. 
The  third  is  more  permanent.  Ac- 
tually tnere  are  good  reasons  fo^ 
the  two  ^.pparent  cases  of  infidelity. 


The  Art  Of  Tailoring 

"Every  m«n  to  his  business, 
but  indeed  the  craft  of  a  tailor 
is  beyond  ell  lioubt  as  noble  and 
as  secret  as  any  in  the  world.  '' 

PETE  THE  TAILOR  wants  to 
wish  his  many  wonderful  cus- 
tomers the  very  best  in  '57.  As 
in  the  past,  we  are  here  to  serve 
you  in  the  best  menner' possible. 

PETE  THE  TAILOR 

Specializing  m 
"Ivy  Leaguoizing" 

nV/2   E.  Franklin  Street 


tioned  individuals,  and  returned  to  j  oni  the  <ixplanations  are  too  coin- 
1  school  with  his  car  repaired.  Som?  j  P-icated  for  this  reporter, 
i  body  had  put  a  neat  part  in  the  j     Cupid  almost  clobbered  two  other 
j  front  door  of  his  little  vehicle  jusi  j  DU's  with  his  primitive   artillery 
,  before  ihe  holidays.  .  I  In  the  last  minutes  of  leap  year 

i      While     decorating  a     Christmas    these  guy's  gals  popped  the  well 
j  tree  during  the  two  week  vacalion.    known  quec-tion.  Delaying    tactics 

i — — — —    wcie  used  in  both  cases. 

COLUMBIA-SOUTHERN  The   draft  board  sent  the  presi- 


I        CHEMICAL  CORPORATION 
I     interview  Date  January  9,    1957 
j  Opportunities    available    in    seven 
I  plants:   New  Martinsville,  W.   Va 
;  Barberton,  O.,  Lake  Charles,  La., 
!  Corpu^*  Christi.  Tex.,  Jersey  City, 
;  N.  J.,  Bcjtlett,  Calif.,  and  Beauhar 
I  nois.  Quebec.  Canada. 
.  Producers  of  heavy  industrial  cher.v 
j  icals:    Soda    ash,   chlorine,    caustic 
I  sodd,    anhydrous   ammonia,    titani- 
um tetrachloride,   and   other  chlo- 
!  inated    products. 

i  Research,  development,  prodution, 
i  design,  and  maintenance  opportu  i< 
;  ties  op^u  for  men  in  these  cate- 
;  ^ories: 

!  BS.  MS,  Ph.  D.  Chemists,  BS  &  MS 
I  Chem.  E:ngrs.  RSCE's,  BSMEs. 
BSEE's,  BS  indu.  Engrs,  BS  Li- 
'  strumenc  Enacs,  and  Ph.  D.  Phy 
■  .>ici3ts. 


SEMIANNUAL 


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1        . 

arleys 

Mens  Shop 


Why  Pay  High  Prices? 

Tve  Held  Them  Down  Since  July,  '55 
ASK  YOUR  BUDDY! 

SPEOAL  -  7-Up  and  Tru-Ade  $1.00    p*J,  dVp 


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Plus 

Bring  This  Ad  And  Get  1  Cent  Off  Per  Gal.  Gas, 

5  Cents  Per  Qt.  Oil 

?      WHERE      ? 

At  The  Students'  Friend 

WHIPPLE'S  ESSO  SERVICE 


DAILY    CROSSWORD 


ACROSS 

1.  Crown  of 
the  head 
6.  Native 

of  Arabia 
9.  Manj  name 
10.  stairway 

poat 
12  Aquatic 
mammal 

13.  Conscious 

14.  Biblical  city 

15.  Weep 
17.  Sea  eagle 
18  Perch 
20.  Thus 

22.  Caesar's 

warning 

date 
22.  Leaping 

amphibian 
24.  Joke 
26.  Makes 

stronger 
81.  Sanskrit 

school 

(India) 

32.  Let  it  sund 
(print.) 

33.  False 
36.  Type 

measure 

38.  Turkish 
title 

39.  Tears  in 
stockings 

40.  Steal 

42.  Land 
measure 

43.  Size  of  type 
45.  Speak 

47.  Cut 

48.  Wise  men 

49.  Anarchlstj 
CO.  Organs 


DOWN 

1.  Lover  of 
cotmtry 

2.  Perform 

3.  DlgiU 

4.  Spanish 
river  (poss. 

5.  Literary 
scraps 

8.  Ponders 
aicain 

7.  Prize 

8.  CapiUl 
(Switx.) 

9.  Tilts,  as 
a  knight 

11.  Dregs 
16.  dungler 


19.  Sailor 

(Brit.) 
23.  Hated 
^5.  Close 

to 

27.  Nega. 
live 
reply 

28.  Greek 
letter 

29.  NuUi. 
fies 

30.  Gases 
fixedly 

83.  Monk's  title 
(pi.) 

34.  Boring  tool 

35.  Rascal 


Lin^-iPi  aHuasn 
aa3U3H 

IMC       r3L33Ul'SLJW 


YMt«r4s7'*  Aa.war 

37.  Antlered 

animal 
41.  Sound,  as 

a  donkey 
44.  Bitter  vetch 
46.  Mature 


dent  of  the  fraternity  a  congenia! 
Christmas  message,  "Greetings.   ." 

Few  members  of  the  group  cam^^ 
out  totally  unscathed.  A  pledge 
suffering  from  flat  feet,  returned 
to  the  campus  and  found  he  h^i! 
left  his  arch  supports  back  ;ri 
owansboro. 

All  in  all  it  looks  like  1957  i? 
going  to  be  a  busy  year  around 
at  lea.->'t  one  house  on  campus. 


New  Series 
Starts  Over 
WUNC-TV 

An  educational  television  series 
w*ich  received  the  highest  view- 
er rating  of  any  public  service 
program  ever  presented  in  the 
New  York  City  area  will  be  pre- 
sented on  WUNC-TV  Channel  4. 
It  began  last  night  at  9:30. 

The  University's  education^] 
station  scheduled  "Yesterday's 
Worlds,"  which  received  a  rating 
of  4.5.  meaning  that  a  total  of  one 
half  million  viewer;  saw  the  pro- 
gram in  the  metropolitan  area. 

Dr.  Casper  Kraemer.  professor 
of  classics  and  archeology  at 
Washington  Square  College  of 
Arts  and  Science,  is  host  for  the 
series,  which  tells  the  storj'  of 
ancient  cultures  and  societies  as 
revealed  in  the  excav<ations  of 
archeologists. 

Guest  experts  from  New  York 
University,  the  Metropolitan  Mus- 
eum of  Art  and  the  American 
Museum  of  Natural  History  join 
Dr.  Kraemer  in  discussions  of  '.he 
cultures  of  ancient  .A.ssyria.  Egypt, 
G'-eece,  Rome  and  other  countries 
and  cities  of  the  Near  and  Far 
East.  Topics  of  discussion  range 
from  the  Dead  Sea  scrolls  to  the 
position  of  women  in  old  Egyp- 
tian society. 


Contest  On 
For  Queen 
Of  Schools 

College  queens  from  the  48 
states  and  the  District  of  Colum- 
bia will  compete  in  the  national  f 
finals  for  the  title  of  "1957  Na- 
tional Ctonege  Queen"  and  for 
the  accolade  as  the  nation's  most 
beautiful  and  brainy  college  girl 
at  Asbury  Park,  N..I. 

The  National  College  Queen 
Contest  finals  will  be  held  at  Con- 
vention Hall  in  a  three  day  page- 
ant, June  21-23. 

.The  purpose  of  the  contest  is 
to  select  and  honor  the  most  typi- 
cal outstanding  college  girl  in  the 
nation.  Judgings  will  be  based  on 
50  per  cent  beauty  and  50  per 
cent  brains.  Undergraduate  col- 
lege girls,  between  the  ages  of  17 
and  24  years,  we  eligible  to  enter 
the  contest. 

Entrants  will  submit  an  original 
essay  of  250  or  less  words  on  the 
subject,  "What  College  Educa- 
I  tion  Means  To  Me,"  a  recent 
photograph  of  themselves,  an  en- 
try blank  form,  and  a  question- 
naire prepared  by  the  Youth  Re- 
search Institute.  The  question- 
naires deal  with  the  .student's 
overfall  campus  activities  and  a 
wide  variety  of  general  informa- 
tion. 

The  new  College  Queen  will 
also  receive  special  .scholastic 
awards  which  will  include  speech 
and  dramatic  tutorship  if  she  so 
desires;  wardrobes;  luggage;  an 
all-expense  vacation  and  model- 
ing tour;  a  complete  art  supply 
kit;  and„a  choice  of  a  grand  sum- 
mer tour  of  Europe  or  a  Holly- 
wood screen  test.  She  will  also 
win  commercial  modeling  assign- 
ments and  TV  appearances. 

Free  entry  blank  form  as 
well  as  contest  inlormation  may 
be  obtained  by  writing  to:  N:- 
tional  College  Queen  Contest  Di- 
rector. Convention  Hall.  Asbury 
Park.  N.J. 


Fii-e  Fails 
To  Interrupt 


Friday  Will  Visit   , 
Waynesville  Next  Week 

Waynesville  area  alunrnl  will  get 
their  first  look  on  Jan.  17  at  Wil- 
liam C.  Friday  since  he  became 
President  of  the  Consolidated  Uni- 
versity. More  than  300  former  stu- 
dents have  Ijeen  invited  to  a  "meet- 
the-new-preaident-banquet"  which 
will  be  held  in  WaynesvUle's  Cen- 
tral Elementary  School  Cafeteria  at 
6:30  p.m. 


By  PETE   IVEY 

A  nine-alarm  fire  failed  to  in 
terrupt  the  deep  and  broad  discu.^ 
sions  of  philologists  in  Philadelphia 
last  weekend. 

UNC  classicists,  returning  from 
the  88tii  annual  'meeting  of  thi- 
American  Philological  Society 
v.hich  met  at  the  Benjamin  Frank 
lin  Hotel,  report  that  events  ol 
2,000  nnd  3,000  years  ago  were 
so  obsorbing  that  the  professors 
attending  the  conference  paid  ah 
solutely  no  attention  to  the  fire 
trucks,  sirens-  and  the  noises  of 
iiie  fighting— although  the  raging 
fire  was  next  door  to  the  hotel  in 
which  tney  were  meeting. 

Nine  different  fire  houses  'of 
Philadelphia  dispatched  roaring 
vehicles  to  the  scene. 

Yet  the  philologists,  and  the 
archaeologists  who  were  meeting 
in  ♦he  same  hotel  at  the  same  time, 
didn't  turn  a  hair.    , 

The  entire  Dept.  of  Classics  Fac 
ulty  including  Professors  B.  L.  Ul 
Iman,  Preston  E^p»',  Charles  Her 
derson,  and  J.  Penrose  Harland,  at 
tended  the  meetings,  and  listened 
i  aptly  tc  the  papers  being  read.  De- 
spite the  distractions  of  the  threa(- 
ening  holocaust  down  the  street. 

They  paid  close  attention  while 
Dr.  Adam  Perry  of  Yale  spoke  on 
"The  Language  of  Achilles." 

The  sound  of  the  hook  and  lad- 
der trucks  and  shouts  of  fire-fol- 
lowing Philadelphians  caused  no 
restlessness  among  the  classicists 
as  they  calmly  heard  Prof.  T.  C, 
Rosemeyer  of  the  Washington  Uui- 
versity  on  "Hesoid  and  Historio- 
graphy." 


Covering  The  University  Campus 


DEAN  MARTIN 


JERRY  LEWIS 


TECHNICOIOR' 

LAST  TIMES  TODAY 


Carolina 


IT'S  FOR  REAL! 


by  Chester  Field 


i- 


PENNY  WISE* 
POUND  FOOLISH 


"I'm  sad  to  say,"  said  Tootsie  Brown, 

"The  weight,  I  gain  just  gets  me  down 
Each  bite,  each  drop  of  this  or  that, 

Immediately  ttims  to  fat. 
Some  girls,  I  note,  can  eat  !ind  eat 

And  yet  they  still  look  trim  and  neat. 
To  aggravate  the  situation 

I  much  dislike  my  fat's  location. 
I  wouldn't  so  much  want  to  change  me. 

If  only  I  could  rearrange  me." 

MOIALt  Rearrange  yom-  smoking 
ideas  and  find  what  contentment 
means.  Get  real  i^aasuire,  r^ 
satisfaction,  with  Chesterfield— tha 
cigarette  that's  packed  niiore 
smoothly  by  Accu  •  Ray  for  the 
smoothest-tasting  smoke  today! 

Smok*  for  f  I . . .  smok*  Ch«tt«rffl«f«l 

•fSO  gpe*  to  ANN  BLACKMAR,  Bowling  Grttn 
Stattunivtrtity  for  her  ChttUr  Fitld  potm. 

O  Ll«r*n  A  Mxra  TbbMio  Ca 


In-Service 
Groups  Meet 
On  Monday 

Mrs.  Arnold  Nash  will  discuss 
the  topic.  "Dormitory  Leadership 
of  Young  Women  as  They  Date 
and  Contemplate  Marriage."  Mon- 
day at  4  p.m.  in  room  2  of  Carroll 
Hall. 

Students  invited  to  the  discus- 
sion will  include  members  of 
dormitory  and  sorority  house  ad- 
ministrations, dormitory  hostesses, 
sorority  hou.semotherji.  members 
of  the  staffs  of  the  Nursing 
School,  the  Dean  of  Women's  of- 
fice and  the  Department  of  Den- 
tal Hygiene,  as  well  as  represen- 
tatives of  the  YWCA  and  the 
YMCA. 

This  is  the  fourth  in  a  series 
of  meetings  for  In-Training  Serv- 
ice sponsored  by  the  Dean  of 
Women,  and  is  intended  as  a 
training  program  for  those  per- 
sons engaged  in  personnel  work 
with  young  women. 


Graham      Memorial     Activitic;- 1 
Board  will  sponsor  free  dance  ie'  J 
j  sons  todiiy  from  6:30  to  8  p.  m.  in 
the  Rendezvous  Room. 
DEMOLAY  MEETING 

The  UNC  chapter  of  the  Order 
of  'Demolay  will  hold  a  meeting 
tonight  at  the  Masonic  Temple  on 
Franklin  St.  The  meeting  will  be 
held  at  8  p.m. 
W.A.A.  BASKETBALL 

The  Women's  Athletic  Asso.  Bas 
kotball  Club  will  hold  its  first  meet 
ing  tomorrow  at  4  p.  m.  in  the  girl's 
gym.  * 

FACULTY  CLUB 

f*rofessor  Albert  Coates  will 
.■>peak  o'l  "The  Institute  of  Govern- 
ment in  the  New  Building"  at  \n 
oay's  Faculty  Club  luncheon.  The 
group  will  meet  at  1  p.  m.  in  the 
Carolina  Inn. 
SCIENTIFIC  SOCIETY 

Dr.  V/.  .R.  Mann  of  the  Maih 
Dept.  and  Dr.  M.  L..  Granstrom  of 
the  Sanitary  Engineering  Dept.  will 
i.>.peak  at  tonights  7:30  meeting  ct 
ihe  Elisha  Mitchell  'Scientific  So- 
ciety. Mann  will  speak  on  the  "Er- 
lor  Growth  in  Numerical  Approxi 
i  niations'  and  Granstrom  will  speak 
on  "Disproportionation  of  Mono- 
cnloramine." 
WUNC  SCHEDULE 

The  following  is  this  evening's 
WUNC-FM  program  schedule: 

7  rOO — IntermeKzo. 

7:15— Over  the  Back  Fence. 

7:30~Vi«rtas  of  Israel. 

7:45 — Variations    on  a    Theatre 
Theme. 

8:00 — American   Music   Festival. 

9:30 — Adventures  In  Song. 
10:00— News. 

10:15 — Evening  Masterwork. 
WESLEY  CHOIR 

The  V.esley  Choir  will  hold  its 
regular  rehearsal  this  evening  from 
7  to  8  p.  m.  in  the  sanctuary  of 
Ihc  University  Methodist  Church 
CARMICHAEL  TEA 

January  13,  Dean  Katherine  Car 
niichaei  will  entertain  sptudent  lea- 
ders, and  administrative  personnel 
rtiio  work  with  undergraduate  wo- 
men to  a  tea  in  Spencer  Hall. 
UNIVERSITY  CHORUS 

All  .-nembers  of  the  University 
Chorus  are  urged  to  be  present  in 
Ihe  Hill  Hall  auditorium  today  at 
4.30  p.  m.  to  hear  Dr.  Wilton  Ma- 
!>on  play  the  tape  recordings  made 
cf  the  Christmas  Concert. 
GLEE  CLUB 

A9  executive  meeting  of  the  Gice  1 
Club  wi:i  be  held  tomorrow  in  H:1I  I 
Ildll   at    4:30  p.   m.    It  will   be  fo'- 
jowod   by  a  regular  meeting  at  5 
p.  m.,  also  in  Hill  Hall. 


DENTAL  DAMES  1  ing  Of  the  Dentil  Dames   Societ:-. 

Dr.  Kerrait  Knudtzon  of  the  UNC  ;  The  meeting  will  be  held  at  8  p.  ni 
Dental  School  faculty  will  give  ar  I  in  the  University  Library  Assem- 
iliustrated  talk  at  tonight's  meC:    oly  Room. 


\ 


'*  .c, 


iC^e 


TUgrm'a  a  (fright  tutig^for  yon  Im 


^^'o,. 


ELECTROMET 


'^H^-' 


-'  ■*##  ^r 


Wmria^s  Lmrgmat  Fwtiuvmr  o/  Ferr»*AUog9 

It's  a  good  place  to  \rork  ...  and  it's  growing. 

More  than  90  p«  cent  of  tie  technical  people 
who  have  joined  us  in  the  last  20  vears  are  1 

still  with  us.  Why? 

Challenging  work  .  .  .  recognition  .  .  .  pleas- 
ant locations  .  .  .  competitive  salaries,  deter- 
mined fairly  and  based  on  merit . .  .  opportunity       ' 
for  personal  develojMnent,  working  with  out- 
Standing  men  in  metallurgy  and  related  fields. 

It  will  be  worth  your  while  to  get  the  facts. 
Make  an  appointment  today  with  your  place- 
ment office  for 

Wednesday,  January  9  and  Thursday,  January  10 


ELECTRO  METALLURGICAL  COMPANY 

f   f  A  Division  of 

^  *     *    Union  Cafbfde  and  Carbon  Corporoh'on 

30  East  42nd  Street     fTTWl     New  York  ^7,  New  York 


Scheinberg  Visits  UNC 

Dr.  I.  Herbert  Scheinberg,  as- 
sociate professor  of  medicine  at 
Albert  Ein.stein  College  of  Medi- 
cine and  visiting  physician  at 
Bronx  Municipal  Hospital  Center, 
will  visit  the  UNC  Dept.  of  P.sy 
chiatry   Wednesday. 


THE  STORY  OF  THE  GREATEST 
GUNFIGHTER  OF  THEM  ALL! 


the  life 
he  led! 


I    the 
I    lives  he 
I    took! 


and  the 
women 
he  loved! 


^'^wmi>!xmme 


RAOUL   WALSH 

The  director  who  gave  you 
"The  World  In  His  Arms" 


TECHNICOIOR 


STARIiN( 


No  local  stops, 
nd  change  of  bus  with 

Traiiways  express  service 


muTROom 

KQWPPEDI 

A  Traflways  ezpreea  bus 
geta.  you  there  aa  fast 
aa  you  can  drive  it  aafe- 
ly.  Moat  of  theae  are 
equipped  with  modem 
rest  rooms  and  stainleaa 
ateel  lavatoriea.  You  can 
'"freah-up"  aa  you  ride. 
And  you  arrive  relaxed, 
free  from  driving  atraia. 


FROM  CHAPEL  HILL        to    1-way 

•  NEW  YORK  $12.2) 
Thru-Liner  (no  change)  service 

•  WILMINGTON  $  4.2S 
Thrit-Liner  service  via  Paye^tc> 
'ille 

•  ASHEVILLE  %  6.S7 
5  Thru-Liners  including  regula*' 
service 

e  GREiENSBORO  »     $  1.3S 

9  Trips  including  regular  service 

e   RALEIGH  $     .6S 

9  Trips  iRcluding  regular  service 

(plus  tar) 


ROCK  BUDSON  •  JULIA  ADAMS 


USS57JJ2 


TODAY 


mzzjzuzjm 


Request  package  express  shipmenti  faster.   Buses  chartered   for 
to  you  be  made  via  Traiiways.  It's  anywhere  —  any  time. 

UNION  BUS  TERMINAL 

311  W.  Franklin  St. 
Phone  4281 

TRAILlMfAYS 

TiM  f  Mia  ol  llM  Tbni-Llnorvl 


trips 


^AM   POUK 


THt  DAILY  TAR  HBn. 


TUESDAY,  JANUAIIY   |,  1»57 


Tar  Heels  Hold  Second  In  AP  Poll; 
Take  On  William  &  Mary  Tonight 


UNC  Seeks 
To  Protect 
Win  Streak 

By   LARRY    CHEEK 

Well  rested  ancf  riding  the  crest 
of  an  11  game  winning  fftreak, 
North  Carolina's  proud  Tar  Heels 
open  tho  new  year  of  19&7  tonight 
with  an  inter-conference  scrap 
against  the  Indians  of  William  ic 
i'.ar>'  in  Williamsburg,  Va. 

The  Tar  Heels,  newly  -crowned 
Dixie  Classic  champs  and  the.  num- 
ber two  team  in  the  nation,  have 
i!()t  seen  action  since  the  night  of 
Ice.  29  when  they  whipped  Wake 
l-'orest.  63-55,  to  win  the  Classic 
iioviout  to  their  win  over  t.ie 
Dcacs.  the  Tar  Heels  had  roUeu 
to  10  wine-  in  a  row  without  a  se* 
back.  .  » 

Coach  FYank  McGulre  gave  Iwi] 
charges  a  brisk  workout  Sunday  j 
afternoon  against  the  freshmen  in 
a  full  dress  scrimmage  session 
The  varsity  substituted  freely  lu 
.'ain  an  80-69  victory  in  the  game 
conditioti  battle. 

The  Indians  of  Coach  Boy<J  Bai-d  j 
vire  not  expected  to  provide  a  Teai- 1 
]y     top  drawer  test  of  T»r     Hetl  | 
^tiength  but  as  N.  C.  State  has  had 
•he  misfortune  to  find  out  in  re 
cent  years,  they  can  be  annoying'y 
(langeroui-     on  their  home     court  j 
'A&M  has  posted  a  5-5  record  this  i 
season,  trimming  Davidson  in  their 
last   outing  Saturday  night. 

Past  W  illiam  &  Mary  teams  have 
sprung  surprising  upsets  on  their 
own  home  court,  and  this  year's 
.squad  is  cut  from  the  same  pattern 
Last  a-eason  Carolina  ran  up  their 
highest  point  total  in  history,  115. 
in  walloping  the  Indians  in  Woollon 
Gym  with  Lennie  Rosenbluth  hit- 
ting 45  points.  But  the  long  Tar 
iieel  layoff  and  the  W4M  home 
court  advantage  will  both  be  im 
portant  factors  tonight. 


EDDIE   TEAGUE 

iie-iv  head  cotwh  at  The  Citadel 


league  Appointed 
New  Citadel  Coa  ch 


Top  Place 
Still  Held 
By  Kansas 

By  DON  WEISS 
Tht  Associated  Press 

Kansas  and  North  Carolina  con 
tinr.ed  their  domination  of  The  As 
sociateu  Press'  college  basketball 
rankings  today,  with  the  two  un 
beaten  powers  combining  to  head 
all  but  nine  of  83  ballots  cast  by 
sportswnters  and  sportscasters  par- 
ticipating in  the  fifth  weekly  poll. 

'  Wilt  Chamberlain  and  the  .Ja^'- 
hawks,  rated  first  in  pre-scason 
ostimatt's  and  No.  1  in  each  ac 
counting  since,  drew  45  first-plar^. 
votes  and  732  points  on  the.  usual 
basis  of  10  -points  for  first,  9  for 
second,  o  for  third,  etc.  j 

North  Carolina  again  held  the 
lunncrup  position,  topping  29  bal- 
lots and  winding  up  with  684 
points.  i 

Kansuo  made  Missouri  its  10th 
consecutive  victim  Saturday.»Nor'.l: 
Carolina,  idle  last  week,  has  won  \ 
11  in  a  low.  With  UCLA  11-0,  they 
form  the  remaining  trio  of  majo'* ! 
unbeatens.  The  Uclans  were  rated 
eighth,  unchanged  from  last  week.  . 

Kcjitucky,  twice-beaten     but  al 
ways  powerful,  held  third  place  foi-  j 
lowed     by     Southern     Methodist 
Louisville.  Vanderbilt.  Iowa  Stal»\  ; 
UCLA,  Seattle  and  Illinois.  I 


Indoor  Track  Practice 
Swings  Into  High  Gear 

Carolina's  h*ad  track  coach 
Dale  Ranson  announced  yester- 
day that  indoor  track  practice 
will  get  under  full  steam  this 
afternoon. 

Most  of  the  Carolina  tracksters 
have  been  working  out  in  the  Tin 
Can  since  cross-country  season 
was  over,  preparing  for  the  A.C 
C.  indoor  nrreet  which  will  i>e  held 
near  the  end  of  February. 

A  practice  meet  'will  be  hold 
Saturday  with  Duke  and  State 
in  the  Tin  Can.  Such  track  starj 
as  Dave  Sime,  Joel  Shanklo  and 
UNC's  own  Jim  Beatty  will  make 
Saturday's  session  an  attractive 
one  for  local  fans. 


JANUARY  SPECIALS 


The    Southern    Part    of    Heavem, 

the  most  popular  book  ever  writ- 
ten about  Chapel  Hill.  Regularly 
S2.49.  During  January  O'lily    fl.M 


Mexican  Village  —  Chapel  Hill's 
own  Jo.'sefina  Niggli  has  produced 
a  classic  worthy  of  a  place  along- 
side "Cannery  Row"  or  "Sou'h 
Wind".  Regularly  S3.00.  During 
January,  and  while  our  present 
stock  lasts  $1.4^ 


Random  Shots  —  Racy  North  Car 
olma  humor,  collected  by  John 
Bragaw.  Our  regular  price,  $1.98. 


During  January  only 


$14» 


The  Tar  Heels  will  field  the  same 
starting  lineup  that  has  carried 
them  to  11  straight  wins  and  the 
number  two  ranking.  Bill  Hathaway 
is  set  at  center,  Rosenbluth  and 
Pete  Brcnnan  get  the  nod  at  for- 
wards, and  Tommy  Kearns  and  Boo 


CHARLESTON.    S.C.  —  ( AP)  — 

The   Citadel    yesterday   signed    as 

its    head    football    coach    for    five 

'  years   Eddie   Teague,   balding.  .33 


year-old  assistant  to  Jim  Tatum  at 

the   University  of   North   Carolina 

and  before  that  at  the  University 

of   Maryland.    Salarj-    terms    wer« 

not  disclosed. 

Ttaguo  {."ucceeds  John  Sauer  who 

.....  1  resigned    for    "personal    reasons" 

Cunningham  will  open  at  guards.  ji33t     month     after     serving     two 
Joe  Qujgg  heads  a  strong  bench. 

For  the  Indians  it  will  most  like 

ly  be  6-6  Harry  Cornell  at  cente- 


€  1  Captain  Jim  Kaplan  and  63 
Bob  Hoitsma  at  forwards,  and  Dcij 
Engelken  and  BiD  Ouseley  at 
guards.  Tallest  W&M  performer  is 
sub  center  Bemie  Goldstein  at  6-7 
so  the  Tar  Heels  will  have  a  de- 
cided height  advantage.  All  of  the 
William  &  Mary  starters  are  letter- 
raen. 


PATRONIZI  YOUR 
ADVERTIfillS 


CLASSIFIEDS 

THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL  WILL 
pay  $.25  for  each  issue  of  the 
September  28  edition.  Papers  of 
this  date  are  needed  for  adver- 
tising  purposes. 


LOST:  WYLER  WHITE  GOLD 
watch  with  two  small  diamonds. 
Sentimental  value.  Finder  please 
go  to  104  Saunders  or  call  91411 
after   office  hours.  Reward. 


PART  TIME  WAITERS  WANTED: 
Hours  can  be  arranged  with 
your  schedule.  Apply  at  th« 
Tar  Heel  Sandwich  Shop.  110 
N.  Columbia  St 


years  of  a  five-year  contract  with 
the  Southern  Conference  school. 
His  1956  team  won  three,  tied  one 
and  lost  five. 

Gen.  Mark  W.  Clark,  president 
of  The  Citadel,  announced 
Teague's  appointment  to  the  cadet 

Tatum  Praises 
Eddie  Teague 

Coach  Jim  Tatum  of  •  North 
Carolina  yesterday  paid  the  high- 
est tribute  to  Eddie  Teague,  who 
is  leaving  his  staff  to  become 
head  football  coach  at  The  Cita- 
del. 

"He  will  make  The  Citadel  a 
fine  head  coach,"  said  Tatum. 
"We  feel  complimented  that  Gen 
Clark,  Citadel  president,  took  our 
recommendation  and  we  know  he 
will  do  a  fine  job  for  him." 

Tatum  added  that  Teague's  de- 
parture leaves  a  big  vacancy  on 
his  staff.  "His  place  will  be  hard 
to  fill,"  he  aid.  "EMdie  had  work- 
ed with  me  six  years,  at  Maryland 
and  Carolina,  and  we  will  miss 
him  more  than  I  can  tell  you.' 

Tatum  ■  said  a  successor  to 
Teague  will  be  named  from  the 
coaches  who  worjjed  part  time 
here  this  past  season. 


Although  the  makeup  of  the  f^c  ' 
10    remains  the  same,  the    align- 
ment shifted  as  a  result  of  Dlinoia'  ; 
91-88  loss  to  Minnesota  Saturdav  | 
speak  at  tonight's  7:36  meeting  of  | 
lOlh  wit'.i  the  others  moving  up  or  j 
holaing  faa't.  Biggest  advance  was  | 
from  ninth  to  sixth  for  VandCi-- 
bilt,   which   handed   Tennessee   its 
fust  loss  Saturday. 

Oklahfina  teams  lead  the  second 
10,  with  Oklahoma  Cit>-  11th  and> 
the  Oklahoma  Angles  12th.  follow 
cd,  in  order,  by  W^kc  Forest 
Canisius,  Duke,  Tennessee.  St 
Louis,  West  Virginia,  Minnesota 
His   recommendaUons  !  ^^^  Western  Kentucky. 

Duke  and  Minnesota  arc  this 
week's  newcomers,  replacing  Man- 
h'ittan  and  Memphis  State. 


And  In  The  Old  Book  Cornor 

Book    Club    Soloction*   and   other 
easy  reading  —  Regulary  4Se  each. 


Puring  January 


39e  eath 


Stevens  —  Shepherd's 


BIG 


.yii-:- 


January  Sale 

Now  In  Progress! 


Don't  Miss  This  Opportunity 
To   Save  20-50%  md  Morel 

A  large  amount  of  new  stock 
has  been  added  to  our  sale  to- 
day; in  suits,  trousers,  drosi 
shirty  ties  and  other  items. 


STEVBhfS-  SHBPHBRD 


corps  as  it  assembled  in  the  mess 
hall  at   noon. 

He  introduced  Teague,  a  Wash- 
ington. DC,  native,  to  the  cadets 
as  a  '"man  who  will  lead  us  for- 
ward in  a  dignified  way." 

Clark  said  Teague  "is  well  quali- 
fied   for   the   job.    I   went   to  Jim 
Tatum  and  talked  to  many  others 
about    him 
are  truly  fine.'' 

At  a  news  conference  later, 
Teague  said  he  would  use  the 
split-T  formation  and  strive  to 
build  an  offense  similar  to  that 
used  by  both  Oklahoma  and 
Mao'land. 

Teague  served  under  Tatum  at 
Maryland  for  four  seasons  before 
following  him  to  North  Carolina 
last   January.  . 

Tatum  called  the  Citadel  job  "a 
fine  opportunity"  for  Teague,  add- 
ing, "We  are  happy  for  Eddie  and 
wouldn't  lose  him  to  anything  but 
a  head  coaching  job.  He  has  done 
many  fine  things  for  us  here  a* 
North  Carolina  and  for  the  Uni- 
versity of  Maryland." 

Teague  said  he  would  announce 
his  coaching  staff  in  the  near  fu- 
ture. Al  Davis  and  Red  Springer, 
assistants  under  Sauer,  have  re- 
signed. 

Teague  scheduled  a  late  after- 
noon meeting  with  the  players. 


:[ 


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BOOKSHOP 

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Larbe  Collection     - 
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Tweed,  And  Shetland 
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From  Our  Regular  Stock 

SPORT  COATS 

Shetlands,  Rumson  Tweeds, 

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Were  Now 

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$55         _, $44.95 


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One  Group 

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ENTIRE  STOCK 

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.«^ 


The  top  10  teams  with  first 
place  vptes  and  won-lost  records 
through  games  of  Saturday,  Jan. 
S  in  parentheses;  points  on  10 
9-8-7-^  etc.  basis. 

1.  Kansas  45  (10^) 

2.  North  Carolina  29  (11-0) 

3.  Kentucky  4  (9-2) 

4.  So.  Methodist  (11 -1) 

5.  Louisville  1  (8-2) 

6.  Vanderbilt  (8-1) 

7.  Iowa  State  (l-l) 

8.  UCLA  (11-0) 

9.  Seattle  2  (11-2) 
10.  Illinois  (6-2) 


732 
684 
S3S 
427 
301 
251 
220 
219 
141 
136 


Frosh  Cagers, 
ACC  Jayvees 
Meet  Tonight 

Carolina's  Tar  Babies  will  go 
into  action  tonight  against  the  At- 
lantic Christian  College  Jayve^5^• 
at  Wilson. 

The  Tar  Babies,  who  were  beat- 
en by  the  varsity  last  Sunday  by 
only  eleven  points,  hold  a  4-1  sea- 
son record.  They  have  lost  only 
to  the  State  frosh. 

The  ACC  Jayvees  had  trouble 
in  their  last  outing  as  they  were 
defeated  61-41  by  Raleigh  High 
School. 

The  Tar  Babies  have  had  a 
fairly  light  schedule  so  far  this 
season  but  after  tonight's  game 
there  will  be  a  big  change  in  the  , 
caliber  of  the  opposition.  The 
Carolina  frosh  will  meet  the  Wake 
Forest  frosh  Friday,  Stallings  Air 
Force  Base  Saturday  and  then 
will  be  pitted  against  their  only 
conquerors,  State's  Wolflets,  in 
the  next  Jwo  games.  i 

Carolina  will  start  the  >ame  I 
five  freshmen  who  have  had  the 
honor  all  season:  Lee  Shaffer,  top  j 
scorer,  and  York  Larese,  New  i 
York  sharpshooter  at  forwrds;  ' 
Dick  Kepley.  6-8  hok  specialist,  j 
in  the  pivot  position;  and  John  j 
Crotty,  playmaker,  and  Mike  j 
Steppe,  set  shot  ace.  at  guards.      I 


Milton's  Ninth 
Anniversary  Sale 

Deals  galore  that  »r9  hard  to 
beat  and  awfully  tough  to  pass 
up.  Whafs  more,  despite  your 
enthusiastic  reception,  the  sel- 
ections »r9  about  as  good  as 
from  the  start.  Plenty  to  pick 
from  in  suits,  sport  coats,  slacks 
and  shirts. 


« 


We  haven't  neglected  the  las- 
sies— there  t*  some  mighty 
templing  and  very  sizeable  re- 
ductions in  our  Lady  Milton 
Shop  in  Scottish  caahmoros,  im 
ported  and  domostic  shirts.  Lady 
Hathaway  and  ivy  shirts,  and 
ivy  bermuda  shorta  and  blazers. 

Just  break  away  from  those 
books  of  knowledgo  and  get  a 
buy  at 


Clot!)ing  Cupboarb 


MARCH  OF  DIMES  SALE! 


.■'O'r.'t* 


"Music  marches  tor  the  March  of  Dimes" 


Jii 


FOR  EVERY  RECORD  SOLD  DURING  THIS  SALE  THE  CAROLINA  SPORT  SHOP  WILL  CONTRIBUTE 


10^  TO  THE  MARCH  OF  DIMES. 


( 


:^. 


f  • 


Ain2'"lPV' 
All  "E  PV 


Greatly 
Reduced 


^>'*» 


EXTRA  SPECIAL! 


All  Multiple  Record  Albums 30%  off 


l^;#-  vi^.^ 


X  EXTRA  S  FECIAL!     i 

j        I       .        ,  '  .  '  ■'  - 

600  Special  12"  L  P's  (reg.  $5.95,  $4.95,  $3.98) . . 
All  10" L P's{reg. $3.98,  $2.98) :    -^ 


5  BIG  DAYS!  Tues.,  Jan.  8  thru  Sat.,  Jan.  12 


Carolina  Sport  Shop 


M.-- 


|20O 
$1.10 


'  1: 


:-> ' 


12T  E.  FrankHn  St. 


Phone  8-7851 


B  H  C  Library    . 
Qhaoel   Mil' .    «•    ^• 


WEATHER 

Occasional  rain  endinn  tonight 
feilerwod  by  partial  Clearing  anJ 
turning  colder  tomorrow.  HigW 
tomporatures  50-58. 


ar()e  Daily 


OUT-OF-STATERS 

bettor    than    native    Tar    Hool? 
Soc  editorial,  page   2. 


VOL.  LVIi     NO.  78 


Complete  (/P)  Wire  Service 


CHAPEL  HILL,  NORTH  CAROLINA,  WEDNESDAY,  JANUARY   9,  1957 


Offices   in  Graham   Memorial 


FOUR    PAGES  THIS^  ISSUE 


Injured  Sophomores 
Condition  Satisfactory 

Lauiciuc  litii;.  sopliomoic  ln»iii  West  Long  Uiaiuh. 
N.  |..  was  reported  In  Memorial  Hospital  as  being  in  "satis- 
faetor)  condition  "  alter  injuries  sustained  in  a  wreck.  F.x- 
icnt  of  injury  is  reported  as  a  Iractured  venebia. 

At(()i(ling  t,o  Jim  (laldwell.  lieigs  rtM)nnnate.  the  wreck 
(Kcurred  at  12  o'dcuk  Satnrdav  night,  two  miles  east  of 
Smithfield.  The  car  was  traveling  toward  C.hapej   Hill. 

Berg    was    riding     with     N.     C.*— ^ : 

State  College   student  David   Wil-  |      The   car   belonged     to     Wilson, 


Student^s  Trial 
Is  Continued 


son  in  a  1956  Ford.  The  ear.  un- 
able \o  make  a  curve,  ran  on  to 
the  shoulder  of  the  road.  It  over- 
turned as  Wilson  tried  to  pull  it 
back    onto   the   highway. 


who  was  only  slightly  injured  in 
the    wreck. 


A  Carolina  student  charged  with 
birrning  a  cross  in  front  of  the 
Ilillsboro  home  where  tYank  Gra- 
ham wa.s  spending  the  holidayt". 
has  had  his  trial  continued  for  tw  > 
weeks. 

William  Cheshire  haj  admitted 
the  cross  burning,  but  at  the  le 
quest  ox  R.  Percj'  Reade  of  Dur- 
ham, tiie  defendant's  attourncv, 
the  proceedings  have  been  put  oti 
until  Jan.  21. 


AT  Dl  MEETING 


Commissioners  Shaw  Pledges  Library 

Aid;  Dr.  Poteat  Talks 


To  Meet  Here 
January  17-18 

County  commissioners  from  all 
over  Xcrth  Ca^jlina  will  meet 
here  Jan.  17-18  at  a  school  con- 
ducted by  the  Institute  di  Govern- 
ment. Registration  will  begin  at 
the  new  Institute  of  Government 
building  at  noon  on  Thursday. 
Jan.  17.  and  the  school  will  close 
at  4  p.m.  Friday.  Jan.  18. 

The  subject  matter  of  the  meet- 
ing is  designed  primarily  tor 
newly-elected  county  commission- 
ers, but  all  county  commissioners 
:  have  been  invited.  Many  com- 
mission?rs  with  long  years  of  ser- 
vice and  many  board  chairmen 
have  already  notified  the  Insti- 
tute  that    they   will   attend. 

A  part  of  the  Institute  of  Gov- 
ernment's training  program  for 
county  and  municipal  officials,  the 
school  will  be  concerned  with 
the  powers  and  duties  of  county 
commissioners  in  the  field  of 
county  finance  and  property  tax- 
ation and  with  the  duties  of  com-  j 
missioners  in  connet'^ion  with  the 
finaacing  of  public  schools  and 
welfare    programs. 

On  the  agenda  are  such  subjects 
a.s  the  taxing  power  of  counties, 
revenue  from  non-tax  sources  in- 
cluding grants  from  the  state  and 
federal  governments,  and  budget 
procediirc^. 

Henry  Lewis  and  Alex  McMa- 
hon.  of  the  Institute  staff,  will  di- 
rect the  program. 


Speaking  last  night  at  the  inaug  ,  science.    Dr.    Poteat    said    natural 
uration  of  the  new  officers  of  the    science    began    when    Biblical    re- 
Dialectic    Senate,    Dr.  -William    H.  \  ILgian  placed   man  as  the  lord  of 
Poteat  chose  as  his  subject  "The  i  Gods  dominion. 
Pciil  of  the  Person  in  the  Contem- 


i:orary  World." 

President-elect  Stan  Shaw,  pre- 
Lciliug  Dr.  Poteat.  had  for  the  top- 
ic of  hit  inaugural  addre^,-5:  'The 
Role  of  the  University  and  It? 
Responsibilities    to  the   State.  " 

In  his  speech  Senator  Shaw  stal- 
ed "Febiuary  is  to  be  a  period  in 
which  :he  Senator  shall  aid  .Tnd  j 
join  the  cause  of  the  Wilson  Libra-  , 
ly  in  every  manner  . .  .  "'The  new  j 
president  claimed  the  State  ha--  ; 
been  neglecting  the  Librarj'  and  ' 
I'nal  the  .tudent  must  act  to  chan^p  i 
the  situr.tion. 

He  .uid  in  keeping  with  the  DIs 
traditional  interest  in  the  library 
the  Di  would  circulate  a  petition 
which  will  urge  the  ^•tate  legi-^la 
lur^  to  help  the  library.  He  hopes 
to  £;et  5.000  signatures. 


He  wmt  on  to  say  the  love  and 
pr.Hver  attitude  included  sensitivi 
ly  to  other  people  while  the  rate 
and  technicology  inclined  one  to 
want  to  lay  his  hands  on  thingp. 
He  concluded  it  has  become  "in- 
creasingly difficult  for  us  to  .see 
the  world  in  the  posture  of  the  "I 
an<i  thou'  attitude." 


IDC  Meets  Tonight  At  7 

Th«  Interdermitery  Council 
will  ro**t  tonight  at  7  o'clock  in 
Phi  Hall  on  tho  fourth  floor  of 
Now  East  Building. 

This  will  bo  tht  last  Council 
mooting  prior  to  fall  Mmostor 
oxaminations.  All  mombors  Navo 
iMon  particularly  oncouragod  to 
#ttond   by    IDC    Prosidont  fonny 


After  a  brief  and  humoroos  inVF" 

log'ie.   Dr..  Poteat   said   he  wish«»t'i  I 

to    em^pha^ze    'the    person!"    He  | 

went  on  to  say  there  are  two  Uas>  1 

oi>positions  of  the  human  spirit-    | 

(1)   love   and    prayer   and  (2)   rate  . 

ana  tecimicology.  The  speaker  re-  ! 

Idt'd  tb'^  first  disposition  to  the  "I  j 

and   thou'   concept    of  the  Jewish 

philosopher    Buber   and  the  latter 

Bu'^er'^  idea  of  "I  and  it.'  j 

,      Stating  the  ancient  world  con«id-  I 

I  cred   nature   divine   and   therefore 

was     not     interested     in     natural ' 


GM'S  SIATE 


Activitios  scho«l«lod  for  Gra- 
ham Memorial  today  includo: 

Pan  Hollonic  Council  5-6, 
Grail  Room;  Chtorloadors,  4-4:30 
and  Jehovah's  Witnoses,  8-9:30, 
Roland  Parkor  1;  Chem  Fem- 
mos,  8-10:15,  Roland  Parker  3; 
Bridge  Class,  4:30-6,  Rendezvous 
Room;  APO,  7:90-8:30,  APO 
Room. 


HAPPENINGS  ON  THE  HILL 


Yule  Season.  Abounds 
In  Nuptials,  Parties 


By  MARY  ALYS  VOORHEES 

Cupid,  no  doubt  has  had  to  r^^ 
plenish'  his  supply  of  arrows. 

And  from  here  It  seems  he,  was 
perhaps  as  busy  a,-  Santa  Claus 
during  the  holidays, 

evidence  of  this  may  be  se^n 
by  noticing  ail  the  diamond  rings, 
weeding  bamls.  fraternity  pins 
and  wha;  have  you,  which  have  ao- 
pcared  on  the  scene  since  Chris' 
ma<-. 

The  .^Ipha  Gams  head  the  list 
with  six  engagements,  one  pinning 
and  one  wedding,  followed  by  the 
Pi  Phis  uiid  Sigma  Nus.  But  mor ' 
about  that  later. 

HOLIDAY  REVIEW 

First,  while  on  the  ioibjecf  of  the 
holidays,  and  before  we  start  t.i Ik- 
ing of  Easter,  lets  do  a  brief  .e 
view  of  the  Yule  season  and  find 
out  how  the  southern  ladies  and 
gentlemen  passed  the  vacation 
time. 

.  As  s'>on  as  school  was  out  '■'•ic 
Lambda  Chis  began  celebratiug. 
On  Dec.  21  most  of  the  fraternity 
gathertxl  at  Bob  Ferrells  home  i  i 
Graham  After  a  cocktail  party  a 
dame  and  other  social  activities 
took  place. 

Then  after  a  ten  daf  perird 
spent  with  their  families  the  group 
was  off  again,  this  time  to  Nov. 
Yoik  for  a  few  days.  Included  on 
their  itinerary  were  visits  to  Basi/, 
Street  and  Birdland.  where  tfiey 
saw  Louis  .\rmstrong  and  Coun' 
Basie,  and  a  tour  of  Greenwich 
Villagt. 

On  the  other  end  of  the  line- 
Atlanta  had  to  offer  while  allend- 
in-^   the  wedding   of  one   of  th.ir 


brothers  Chi  Phi  Steward  Bird 
and  Duke  Graduate  Edith  Pans 
were  married  Dec.  27  with  13 
brothers  and  the  house  mothe'-. 
Mrs.  Vann  McNair.  present.  In  the 
wedding  party  were  Allen  Holt. 
Tony  Morris.  Collie  Collio'on  and 
Chyrlie  Fitzgerald,  who  sened  as 
yoomsmen.        •  .  .j 

Some  of  the  nuptial  festivities 
on  the  Chi  Psis'  program  were  a 
cocktail  party  and  supper,  rehear- 
.^c^I  party,  wedding  breakfast,  wed- 
aing  and  the  reception,  plus  visil,« 
io  various  Atlanta  night  spots. 

YULE  NUPTIALS 

On  this  same  day,  Dec.  .27.  Kap- 
pa Sig  Bob  Hendley  and  St.  Marys 
graduate  Mary  Elkin^*  of  Raleigh 
were  united  in  Raleigh  with  Kapp;. 
Sigs  Bill  Dameron.  Charles  Sp:l- 
lant  and  Bill  Timlake  ser\'ing  as 
ushers;  ADPi  Ann  Gage  Me 
Conaughy  became  the  bride  o( 
Mitchell  Baker  of  the  University 
of  .South  Carolina;  and  SPE  Ronald 
Fox  wed  Margaret  Smith  in  New 
ton,  her  hometown  with  SPEs 
Harry  Holding.  Jeff  Corbin,  Char- 
lie Daniels  and  Ron  Belk  as  ush 
ers. 

Other  nuptials  taking  place  ove'- 
the  vacation  period  were  the  Dec. 
29  rites  uniting  Pi  Phi  Jane  Ed- 
wards and  former  CNC  ATO 
Chuck  Hauser;  the  marriage  of 
Lambda  Chi  Eddie  Greene  to  Toby 
Johnson  of  Winston-Salem  in  her 
hometown  Dec.  23:  the  wedding  of 
Alpha  Gam  Ann  Gillett  to  Johnn^ 
Burt — former  Duke  Lambda  Chi 
now  in  the  UNC  grad  school — ia 
Enfield  Dec.  28  with  Alpha  Gam 
Presideni  Trudy  Lefler  am  a  brides- 
maid: the  Dec.  30  wedding  of  St. 
A  Lauren  Campbell  to  ADPi  Gayie 
Norman;  and  the  marriage  of  SAE 


Pete  Dell  to  Pi  Phi  Sharon  War- 
rington Dec.  29  with  SAEs  P;u 
Hunter  and  Dudley  Baird  as  ush- 
ers. 

Aiso  during  the  holidays  came 
♦he  announcement  of  the  raarriafee 
of  Ed  Hudgins  to  W.  C.  senior 
Patty  Ann  Mumford. 

.  PINNING  S  .  .  .  DU  Roy  Wood 
'  to  William  and  Mar)'  junior  Coii- 
I  nie  Houren.  .  .  .  Lambda  Chi  med 
i  student    Curtis     Lashley     to     WC 
,  freshman  Pat  McQuade.  .  .  .  Sigm? 
Chi  Sonny  Forbes  to  Stray  Greei< 
,  Ann   Shelly.    .    .    .   Phi   Gam  Doug 
Farmer  to  Ann  Howard  of  Mere- 
dith CoUege. 

Phi  Gam  Jerry  Gardner  to  Gin 
ger  Roney  of  Peace  Junior  C'>i 
lege.  .  .  .  Phi  Gam  Freddie  Byrum 
to  Linda  Downiun  of  Edenton.  .  .  . 
Alpha  Gam  Fredrice  Trull  to  Wade 
Herring,  Duko  Divinity  student, 
former  Delta  Sigma  Pi  at  Wofford 
College.  .  .  .  Pika  Branch  Bobbitt 
to  Louisburg  College  coed  Patricia 
Fcikinson.  .  .  .  Pika  Rick  Cokcr  to 
Judy  Alexander  of  Waynesville 
...  Pi  Lam  Richard  Oresman  tu 
WC  sophomore  Judy  Cooper.  .  .  . 
SPE  Bill  Robbin*  to  WC  sopho- 
moie  Sadie  Anne  Boyd.  .  .  .  DKK 
Shelby  Miller  to  Pi  Phi  Sugtr 
Dudley.  .  .  .  Sigma  Nu  Tommy 
Prewitt  to  Stray  Greek  Page  Loit. 

Sigma  Nu  Harry  Schoen  to  Mar 
garct  Tucker  of  Washington.  D.  C. 
..  .  Theta  Chi  Dave  Wendt  to^WC 
saphomi»re  Patricia  Lentz.  .  .  . 
Kappa  Sig  Bozie  Tart  to  Tri  D?lt 
Maiy  Lee-  Breece. 

ENGAGEMENTS  ...  Chi  0 
Maiie  Tyler  to  Jim  Gardner  ot 
ivocky  Mount.  ,  ,  .  Sigma  Nu  3oc 
brawley.  UNC  med  student,  to 
UNC  grad  student  EHeanor  Rig- 
feins. 

Sigma  Nu  Tommy  White  to  Al- 
pha Gam  Linda  Blayney.  .  .  .  A]- 
piia  Gam  Jackie  Aidridge  to  stu- 
dent  boeiy  President  Boh  Youni; 

(See  H  VPPENINCtS,  Page  3) 


Red  China's  Premier 
Lauds  Soviets  Highly 

MOSCOW  liPi — Premier  Chou  En-Lai  of  Red  China  heaped  praise 
in  a  Kremlin  speech  Tuesday  on  the  Soviet  Communist  Party  as  Uic 
leader  of  the  world  Communist  movement.  ■ 

Chou  conferred  with  both  Soviet  and  East  German  Communis!, 
leaders  on  his  first  full  day  in   Moscow. 

The  Soviet  government  reported  it-:  talks  with  Chou  ranged  from 
Soviet-Chinese  relations  to  "the  international  situation  as  it  affccto 
both  countries." 

Chou  told  a  luncheon  gathering  a*  the  Kremlin  the  purpose  of 
his  visit  to  Moscow  was  "'the  binding  of  closest  unity"  between  the 
two  governments  against  "the  disruptive  effwls  of  the  imperial- 
ists." 

Chou  s'poke  in  answei  to  an  address  by  Soviet  Premier  Nikolai 
Bulganin.  f  i 

"To  defeat  the  enemy,  we  must  strengthen  the  unity  of  the  So- 
cialist camp  headed  by  the  Soviet  Union,"  Chou  said.  "The  piuTWsc 
ol  our  visit  to  the  Soviet  Union  is  just  this  future  binding  of  the 
closest  unity  between  our  two  states.  The  great  friendship  of  our 
countries  is  eternal  and  indestructible." 

Bulganin  in  his  speech  lavishly  prai.-^'d  Red  Chinas  support  of 
Soviet  intervention  in  Hungary. 

"We  value  highly,"  Bulganin  said  with  startling  frankness  "th? 
position  you  took  in  connectcion  with  the  counter-revolutionary  up- 
rising in  Hungary.  Your  fraternal  support  and  your  efforts  aimed  at 
disclosing  the  intrigues  of  the  impcria-iists  in  eastern  Europe  helped 
us  greatly,  as  well  as  the  whole  internatoinal  Communi.->1  movement. 

23  Nations  Press  For  Hungary  Probe 

UNITED  N.\nONS.  NY.— (AP)— The  Hungarian  situation  will 
get  a  fresh  airing  before  the  U.  N.  today  when  the  80-nation  Gen- 
eral At-sembly  discusses  a  new  proposal  to  probe  conditions  in  the 
Soviet  satellite.  -     |       -  _  ' 

The  assembly  is  slated  to  meet  at  10.30  a.m.  (EST)  to  hear  a 
resolution  spon.sored  by  the  l/nited  States  and  22  other  nations. 
The  proposal  aims  at  seeking  facts  from  Hungarian  refugees  on 
Soviet  military  interference  during  Hungary's  short-lived  revolt 
and  other  pertinent  data.         1,^  *  * 

Informed  sources*^.>;ud.  the  .iponsoi-^  have  agreed  on  the  broad 
outline's  of  a  proposal'^which  would  set  up  a  special  five-nation  in- 
vestigating committee. 

The  Russians  already  haw  declared  such  a  move  would  get 
nowhere  and  wamed  thut  no  probe  te-am  could  get  into  Hungary. 

The  sponsors  of  the  re.'syrtfttinn  are  Balgium.  the  Netherlands. 
Italy.  Spain.  Nor\vay,  Ireland,  Argentina.  Peru,  Dominican  Repub- 
lic. EH  Salvador,  Chile,  Colombia,  Pakistan,  Philippines.  Turkey. 
Thailand,  United  States,  Fiance.  Britain,  Canaoa,  and  New  Zealand, 
Japan,  Liberia  and  Sweden.  .    ' 

Israel  Presses  UN  For  Suez  Rights 

UNITED  NATIONS.  NY.—(AP>— Israel  pressed  Tuesday  for 
U.N.  assurances  on  its  long  range  pr.>gram  for  unrestricted  navi- 
gation in  the  Suev.  Canal  and  the  Gulf  of  .\qaba  as  a  price  for  its 
withdrawal  from  the  Sinai  Peninsula. 

Diplomatic  talks  continued  here  on  the  question  of  Lsraela 
rights  in  the  Suez  Canal  as  Britain  an^  France  w-ere  reported  will- 
ing to  allow  the  U.N.  to  be  their  intormeuiar\'  in  talks  with  Eg>pt 
on  ending  the  6-nionth-old  Suez  Cana!  de5olock. 

But  from  Cairo  came  a  n<'w  block. 

Eg>pt  announced  it  would  not  ii?goti;.te  directly  or  indirectly 
with  Britain  and  France  because  of  the  British  -  French  military 
action  in  the  Suez  Canal  Zone. 

Abdel  Kader^  Hateni.  Egypt's  informaiion  director,  announced 
"Egypt  can  only  discus?  the  matter  within  the  framework  of  the 
United  Nations." 


DuPont  Grants  $1,000,000 
To  Colleges;  UNC  Gets  Part 


Final  Bid 
Given  To 
Menon 


A    final    invitation    has    been    is   ! 

i 

sutHi  to  Indian  UN  delegate  V.  K   i 
Krishna   Menon    to  appear  on   the 
UNC  campus  Feb.  11.  according  to  } 
Jim  Holmes,  chairman  of  the  Car 
olina  Forum. 


♦  1  lie-  DiiPont  C'.ouipaiiy  ol   \\iliiiinm<>n,  Del.  .iiiiicMiiucd 

.Monday  that  it  would  <4i\c  nunc  than  .^i,ooe).(MM»  to  122  uni- 
versities and  («)lk-<»es  in  the-  next  acadeiiiii  year,  witli  empha- 
sis on  inj|>ro\  in|n  teat  hin'^. 

.\((<>i-din,i;  to  Dean  .Xniold  Penv  tlie  .Sdiool  of  F.diita- 
tion  received  a  ;,;rant  ol  tuo  .se  holarslilps  troin  the  DiiPont 
iinid.  whieh  are  to  he  used  to  train  teaehers  (»l  in.itheniatics 
or  science  Lor  secoiuhnv  s(  liools. 

Perrv  stated  tliat  this  wil!  he  the  liiird  vear  that  Carolina 
ived   a   DnFoni   ^rani.   He  said  that   INC  h.as  In-en  the 
>l  the  awards  he'iaiise  the  .Sehool  oi    1  diuation  ha* 

♦pioneered   in  .setting     up     courses 

in  mathematics,  chemistry,  botany 


re<  e 

reM  i|)ieiu 


St.  Anthony's 
Hall  Is  Sold 
To  University 


Menon  has  postponed  two  speak- 
ing engagements  here,  one  sche- 
duled l)cfore  Christmas  holiday.s, 
and   an<  ther  set  for  Jan.  7. 

Holmes  said  that  a  telegrffni, 
sent  to  .Menons  office  yesterday, 
staled  that  .Menon  will  be  "expee' 
ed  ■  to  appear  Fe'b.  11,  a.->-  his  of 
tice  had  earlier  stated  thai  ))'_> 
would  ho  available  any  date  heioic 
I'cb.  1.5  with  the  e'xception  of  Ffili. 
4  and  7, 

Menon  will  prot)ably  lie  unable 
to  appc.u  heue  later  in  the  year, 
according  to  Holmes,  as  he  wjll  be 
out  of  this  country  after  the  15th. 

Other  speakers  on  tap  for  the 
icst  of  this  year  will  possibly  in 
cUkIc  Vice'-President  Richard  Ni\ 
on.  Sen.  William  ().  Dougla.<;  'jf 
Illinois,  .'Xdlai  Stevenson,  and  Har 
ry  Cain,  loimer  senator  and  mem- 
ber of  the  Subversive  Activities 
Cetntrol   Board. 

I  Holmes  said  that  according  to 
'  Nixons  office,  the  Vice-Pre.'iiJent 
will  be  in  thi.s  area  in  the  lattc- 
part  of  February  when  he  comes 
to  dddri'ss  the  North  Carolina  Re 
publican   Convention   in   Charlotte. 

Harry  Cain  has  set   no  date   for 
hi.  appearance  here,  but  has  dctii 
itely    stated    that    he    will     conio.  \ 
Holmes  .said.  | 

The  forum  is  attempting  to  sch'*- 
dule  Stewart  Symington  for  an  a,) 
pearancc,  but  has  not  as  yet  sue 
eeeded,    according   to   Holmes. 


St.  Anthony  Hall  has  been  sold 
to  the  University  tor  expansion 
of  the  Carolina  Inn.  The  amount 
was    undisclosed. 

The  fraternity,  whose  $reek 
letters  are  Delta  Psi.,  diclined 
comment  on  the  transaction  Tues- 
day. The  home,  at  the  corner  of 
Camemn  .\ve.  and  Pittsboro  St., 
I  was  sold  along  with  the  St.  An- 
thony Hall  Annex,  ~  the  former 
.M.  C.  S.  Noble  home  on  Pittsboro 
St.  j 

-  With  the  purcha.se.  the  Univers- 
ity   has    adequate    space    for    ex- ' 
pansion    of    the    Inn.    The    project 
will    not    be    undertaken    immed- 
iately,  but   is   a  certain   future  de-  ' 
velopment. 

The  University  and  the  fraterni- 
ty ,have  been  conferring  about 
the  sale  for  several  years.  The 
St.  A's  had  planned  to  build  a 
new  home  on  the  lot  where  the 
present    building    stands. 

The  fraternity  has  acquired  from 
H.  A.  Whitfield,  as  a  site  for  its 
new  home,  the  Whitfield  home  and 
property  and  an  adjoining  lot  on 
Pittsboro  St.,  south  of  Cameron 
Ave. 


Miss  Martha  Fouse  Tp  Sing 
In  Musicale  Program  Sunday 


KA  Celebrates 

ItsDiamond 

Anniversary 

Upsilon  chapter  of  Kappa  Alpha 
this  week  celebrates  the  75th  an- 
niversary of  the  chapters  found- 
ing on   the   UNC  campus.  I 

In  conjunction  with  the  anni-  ! 
versary  celebration,  the  K.\'s  will  1 
hold  their  annual  Convivium,  a , 
banquet  in  the  honor  of  Robert 
E.  Lees  birthday.  The  banquet 
is  .scheduled  for  Tuesday  evening,  ; 
Jan.   15.  at  the  Carolina  Inn.  I 

Dr.    McLeod    Frampton    of    An- 1 
derson.    S.    C.    regional    advisor  \ 
for  Smith   Province  of  the   Kappa 
Alpha    Orde^r.    will    be    the    princi-  ' 
pie  speaker.  K.\  alumni  and  other 
guests  are  to  be  present.  ; 

I'psilon  chapter's  selection  for  I 
Kappa  .-Mpha  Rose  of  1957  will  j 
be  announced  and  crowned  at  ' 
the  banquet.  A  Convivium  party  | 
will  follow  for  brothers  and  their  j 
dates. 


and  zoology  especially  for  the 
training    of    school    teachers. 

Perry  asked  that  anyone  inter- 
ested jn  applying  for  one  of  the 
scholarships  should  contact  him, 
Arnold  Perry,  Dean.  School  of 
Education. 

The  increase  of  some  $100,000 
above  DuPonl  grants  for  the  cur- 
rent year  will  go  almost  entirely 
to  encourage  teaching,  making 
more  than  half  of  the  total  pro- 
.!,'ram  for  that  purpose.  Dupont  of- 
ficials said  the  shift  in  emphasis 
from  science  fellowshijjs  and  funda- 
mental research  -reflects  the 
changing   needs   of    the   schools." 

The  sum  will  be  u.sed  in  three 
ways:  to  improve  undergraduate 
chemical  or  technical  education: 
to  set  up  post-graduate,  teaching 
assistantships:  and  to  pro^^de 
scholarships  f»)r  prospective  teach- 
ers of  high  .school  science  and 
mathematics. 

Chancellor  To 
Join  Faculty 
Next  Year 

■  Chancellor  Robert  House  will 
become  a  member  of  the  facul- 
ty next  year  and  will  teach  two 
j  classes  regularly.  He  will  teach 
1  sophomore  EngM.sh  literature  both 
I  si'mcstvvs. 

I      Hou.se   will   also   teach  a   section 
I  of    Greek     lite^f.iture     and     trans- 
lation   in    the    fall    and    a    section 
of   Latin   literature     and      transla- 
tion  in  the  spring. 

House,  whose  retirement  be- 
comes effective  July  1.  was  ap- 
pointed chancellor  in  1945.  Pre. 
viously  he  served  as  Dean  of  Ad- 
ministration   on    campus. 


Red  Paper 
Hits  Youth 
Of  Russia 

MOSCOW— (AP)—lYud.  the  So- 
viet trade  union  paper,  delivered 
a  blistering  attack  today  on  what 
it  called  the  ''outrageous  behav- 
ior" of  Soviet  .vouth  and  students. 

The  half-page  article  was  one 
of  the  most  sweeping  condemna- 
tions of  the  ideological  unrest 
among  students  in  post-Stalin 
Russia  yet  printed  here. 

It  listed  five  colleges  and  in- 
stitutes from  the  Baltic  to  the 
Urals  where  it  said  students  had 
fallen  prey  to  bourgeois  propagan- 
da   and    "become    infatuated    with '  and    wonded   a   2^-;-ye«r-old    Hun- 


Refugees 
Fired  Upon 
At  Border 


VIENNA  —  (.\P»  —  Hungarian 
border  guards  yesterday  fired  on 


Les  Petites  Musicales  will  pre- 
sent Miss  Martha  Fouse.  soprano. 
as  featured  artist  in  their  con- 
cert to  be  held  Sunday  at  8  p  m. 

Sponsored  by  C.raham  Memor- 
ial .Activities  Board,  the  concert 
will  be  given  in  the  main  lounge 
of  Graham  Mem i rial. 

Miss  Fouse  has  studied  under 
members  of  the  UNC  Music  Dcpt. 
staff  and  now  works  with  the  UNC 
School  of  Social  Work.  During 
her  singing  career  she  has  ap- 
peared in  Mozarfs  opera  "  I'lie 
Marriage    of    Figaro." 


.\ccompanist     for     the     soloist 
will  be  Walter  Golde. 

Featured    on    Les   Petites   Musi- 
cales  program    will    be    works   by 
i  .Antonio  Vivaldi.  Robert  Shumann, 
1  Claude  Debussey.  Paul  Hindemith. 
Gardner  Read,  and  Richard  Hage- 
'  man.  "Poem  for  a  Time  of  Change." 
I  based  on  a  poem  by  Archibald  Mac- 
j  Leish  and  set  to  music  by  Robert 
I  Gould,    will    also   be    sung    by    the 
sjloist. 

No  admission  is  charged  loi  the 
pertormance. 


gutter  bougeois  literature,  formal- 
I  istic  painting  and  wild  jazz  music." 
j  Jn  ren-ent  weeks  the  Soviet 
press  has  cited  other  centers  of 
i  student  ferment  in  the  Ukraine, 
I  the  CaufasiAs  and  Central  .\sia. 
Trud  condemned  student  behavior 
i  in   these   places: 

Leningrad  Institute  of  Precision 
.Mechanics  and  Optics  —  students 
have  ri.sen  in  their  classes  and 
charged  that  "creative  initiative" 
I  among  students  was  being  sup- 
pressed. 

Mo.scow    Sta'te    University  —  the 

student    wall    newspaper,   Tribuna. 

"has  permitted  rude  and  slandering 

I  attacks  against  the  Soviet  press  in  j 

j  phrases      borrowed      from      the 

bourgeois    press."  1 

Pol.vtechnical  Institute  at  Sverd- 
lovsk in  the  Urals  —  students, 
"under  the  gui.se  of  criticism  and  j 
developing  democracy,  have  been  j 
making  demagogic  statements  in  | 
cla.ss  which  place  Komsomol  ( the  [ 
Communist  Youth  Organizations)  ! 
in  opposition  to  the  Communist  j 
Party."  | 

Leningrad     Polytechnical     Insti-  | 
tute — students  engaged  in  "drunk- 
en  debauchery," 


garian  boy  and  his  father  almo.st 
within  sight  of  the  .Austrian  fron- 
tier,  police  reported. 

Despite  heavy  bullet  wounds  in 
one  leg.  the  Hungarian  refugee 
managed  to  reach  .Austrian  terri- 
tory 'With  his  bleeding  son  in  his 
arms.  The  boy  was  .  hit  in  the 
arm. 

During  the  daylight  hours  209 
more  Hungarian  refugees  arrived 
in  Austria,  bringing  the  total  since 
the  beginning  of  the  Hungarian 
rebellion   to   161,587. 

The  Interior  Ministry,  mean- 
while, warned  Hungarian  refugees 
to  respect  Austrian  laws  and  the 
nations  neutral  status.  A  com- 
munique said  any  refugee  engag- 
ing in  political  activities  will  for- 
feit  his  right  of  a.sylum. 


BattaJliou  C  o  m  m  and  e  r  of, 
NROTC  nmt  buying  an  army- 
tcink     'lui1d-it-yoiir!felf"    kit. 


CaroUna  gcntleiiuin  calling 
Cobb  Dorm  foi-  anotlier  Caro- 
liu<i  gentleumn  and  gettin-g  Mr- 
Iver  Dwitt  instead.  Coed  an^-icer- 
ed  and  flubberyn.^ied,  itaid  "'V\'/u> 
did  ymi  suy?" 


IN  THE  INFIRMARY 


Students  in  the  Infirmary  yes- 
terday  included: 

Misses  Betty  Savage,  Eugenia 
Rawls,  Sally  Simpson,  Susan  Me.' 
rick,  Ann  Vachman,  Lauradel 
Lawrence,  and  Riley  Montgom- 
ery, Robert  Lewis,  Shelton  Tur- 
ner-, Garrett  Nichols,  Harmon 
King,  John  Morton,  Stephen 
Mirman,  and   William    High. 


'incorrigible' 
To  Play  Here 
Tomorrow 

Graham  Memorial  Activities 
Board  presents  "Incorrigible"  as 
another  feature  of  its  foreigfn  film 
series  for  the  fall  semester  tomor- 
row in  Carroll  Hall  al  8  p.m. 

The  Swedish  film  reve'hes 
around  Ihe  delicate  theme  of  a 
spoiled  boy  who  develops  into  a 
troublesome  delinquent.  .After  a 
claj-h  with  his  professor,  he  take* 
out  his  revenge  on  the  professot's 
daughter. 

Tickets  for  the  showing  wii'  be 
S.5;)  tor  all  studenl.-^  who  do  :iot 
ha\e  series  tickets. 


! 


M6t  rwo 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


WEDNESDAY,  JANUARY  9,  19S7 


Tar  Heel  Students  Are 
Dropping  Behind  Others 

Sumething  is  uionu  with  the  stiident  b<Kl\.  Out  ol  state  students, 
viewed  through  the  cses  of  a  nati\e.  are  oiilv*good  to  the  I'niveisity  be- 
cause thev  bring  opinions  and  ideas  from  other  regioiu.  If  this  were 
their  cap^uitv  it  would  be  ^vell  wortli  the  tax  payers'  monev. 

But  tlie  tiouble  with  the  student  IxKfy.  t>v  the  Noith  CaroJiniaiis  in 
rhe  student  bodv.  is  that  they  seem  akogetlter  ttK>  wilh'ng  to  sit  back 
and  k't  the  out-of-st.iters  get  all  the  benefits  t>f  tfie  school's  program. 

Mondav  ;ii'4lit  a  distussion  on  the  race  prof)U'm  arose  during  the 
meeting  ol  a  wvM  known  campus  organization.  One  member  of  the  gronp 
stiddenh  tame  up  with  "I'm  from  Newark.  New  |er?«'v."  and  then  he 
contiinied    witft   one   <»f   the   opin- 


ANNUAL  MANHUNT  IS  ON 


iiiirs  the  :uhninistration  would  hke 
to  ha\f  stinuilatiii<4  Noilh  (".aio- 
Hnians.  I  here  was  onlv  one  ttoiil)- 
le:  af)out  a  fourth  of  the  group 
was  not  frtHu  the  Tar  Heel  state. - 

One-fourth  doesn't  soimd  like 
tiM)  bi'.;  a  li'^ine.  but  onlv  18  |.H*r- 
tent  ol  the  student  bodv  does  ihm 
come  Ironi  North  Carolina.  Sou)e- 
where.  down  in  the  d<»rms.  at  the 
Hick.  •»!  tiuunbing  to  (ireensboro 
were  nati\e  Tar  Heels  who  tould 
ha\e  benefited  from  the  disciss- 
ion. I  hev  all  tiuild  have  had  the 
opjxMiunity  to  i^Mijpetf  with  the 
out-of-staters  h»r  a  place  at  the 
nitjetinu  table,  but  thev  were 
somewheie    else. 

This  reallv  do<sn"t  speak  well 
[»»r  the  natives.  I  he;  old  {on<ep- 
tion  that  the  Soiuh  is  a  place  of 
indolent  indi\!duals  sitting  on 
sh.rd\  xeiandahs^^  sipping  mint 
juleps,  is  not  tpiite  true  in  this 
da^  of  blossoming  iiKiustrv  and 
distovery.  But  it  is  beginning  to 
look  like  the  South  is  staving  where 


ii   is.  and  the  Notth  -is  spreading 
south. 

Retinning  to  the  I'niversity 
le\el.  it  is  true  that  the  very  top 
offices  are  held  In  nati\es.  The 
(^f"fi«  es  didn't  c<»me  to  them  just 
btnause  they  were  Tar  Heels— 
thev  ea-ined  tlieir  positions  by 
showing  their  ability.  But  below 
the  t«»p  h-aders.  the  ranks  hold  a 
remarkabk'  number  of  out-of- 
state  students,  who  aie  there  for 
the  same  reasons  as  their  leader. 
Miey  weie  either  more  qualified 
than  their  op|xinents  or  else  weie 
miopposed. 

Now  the  non-(".arolinians  have 
as  mtuh  right  to  the  benefits  and 
j)ii\ileges  of  the  I'niNersiiv  as 
anyone.  But  it  seems  strange  that 
they  aie  able  to  get  so  mu<  h  mote 
out  of  >mIuk>1  than  their  fellow 
stiKieins  fi(»m  within  thetxnders 
ol    the  Stan-. 

It's  time  the  inhabitattts  of  the 
'■\ale_  of  hinnilitv  "  realized  whv 
it   is  th;w   thev  are  heie. 


An  Unsentimental  Sport 

Jatkie  Robinson  >  aiuiounccmeiit  of  his  reiiiement  from  oigaiiized 
baseball,  coming  .is  it  did  aliei  he  had  been  track'd  to  the  New  \'ork 
Ciiaius.  toiK  hed  off  hot  words  beiweejt  the  ((»ntro\ersial  athlete  and 
BrookKn  Dod'^ei   \i(e  presitlent.  r>uz/\    Bavasi. 

Baxasi  (riii<i/ed  Robiiivm  for  gixiir.;  a  national  magazine  exclusive 

ri'jhts    to   his   reiirenient   annouiKemem    before    telling    newspa}>ermen. 

The  vite  presidem  claimed  Rol)inson  beti-aved  newsmen  by  not  telling 

them  first.  '     .       ,  •  1        i»       1  1 

\i    the   same    time    the    BnM^klvn 

from  offiee  should  be  iiiiui/ed 
for  dealini;  with  him  in  the  man- 
ner they  did. 

I  he  ex-stai  did  a  lot  foi  Brook- 
Ivu  and  foi  baseball.  His  greatest 
act omplishment  was  I)  1  e  a  k  i  n  g 
down  the  r;x  iaJ  barriei"  in  tlie  ma- 
jor "l^asJi'iT's."  ""He  also  hel|}ed  the 
DtMlgers  win  six  pennants  and  one 
workl's  i  hampionship.  the  clid»"s 
lirst.  dining  the  ciuirse  of  his  ca- 
reer. 

V 

.\nd    Br<K»klvn  evldentlv  doesn't 

appietiaie   his  efforts   very    much. 


Robinsou  defended  his  p<»>ition 
saving  he  had  a-uieecl  to  give  ex- 
clirsive  lights  "a  lonu  time  ag(t"  to 
tlie  mai>a/uie  \vhen  the  time  came. 

But  whether  or  not  Robinson 
betraved  newspa|)ermen  bv  his 
agreemeiu  t>f  '  a  lony  time  .m</" 
is  somethin<;  we're  not  attetnpting 
to  find  out. 

What  (ojjcerns  us  is  Robinson's 
statement  ".  .  .  there's  .no  senii- 
ment    in    this  game." 

He's  right. 

(loiisidei  the  examj>les  of  Phil 
Ri//ut(t  and  Bain-  Ruth.  Rizzuto. 
outstanding  \'ankef  stortstop  lor 
man\  vears.  was  given  the  gate  last 
year  shoitly  beftne  World  Series 
time,  thus  l>eing.  deprived  iti  an- 
other chaiue  to  partiiipate  in  tfie 
spectat  le. 

Ruth  was  trailed  awav  after  the 
\'ankees  front  (»ffiie  saw  l»e  <ould- 
n't  hit  (|uite  as  many  home  runs 
as  he  once  did.  And  he  was  |>er- 
liaps  the  most  uitts  tan  ding-  per- 
son ever  to  play  for  the  Yankees. 

Both  were  disptt^Ked  of  with  ap- 
p.neiitly  no  leeling;  no  sentimenr. 
AikI  Robinson  said  he  was  determ- 
ined ■  thi^  whs  iK»t  going  to  Itap- 
pen  to  me."  . 

RobinsiMi  shouki  be  praised 
for  not    letting  it  iiappen   to  him. 

The  Daily  TclrHee) 

Th«  official  itudent  pubHevtion  of  tbe 
Publjcations  Board  ol  the  University  ol 
North  Carolina,  where  it  is  published 
dtily  except  Mouday  and  examinatiot 
and  vacation  periods  and  summer  terms 
Entered  as  second  class  matter  to  th* 
t)08t  office  in  Chapel  Hill.  N.  C,  undei 
the  Act  01  -March  8,  1870.  Subscription 
rates:  mailed.  $4  per  year,  $2.50  a  semes 
ter;  delivered.  $6  a  year,  $3.50  a  semei 
ter. 

Editor FRED  POWLEDGE 


The  Sun  Dial 
Isn't  So  Bad 
After  All 


Managing  Editor 


CHARUE  SLOAN 


N«w<<   Editor 


NANCY  HILL 


Business  Manager 


BILL  BOB  PL-EL 


Sports  Editor 


LARRY  CHEEK 


Subscription  Manager  _.    ..     Dale  Staley 

Advertising  Manager  Fred  Katzin 

Circulation  Manager    .  Charhe  Holt 


NEWS  STAFF— Clarke  Jones.  Ray  Link 
er.  J»an  .Moore.  Pringle  Pipkin.  Anne- 
Drake.  Edith  .MacKinnon,  Waljy  Kuralt, 
Mary  A!ys  Voorhees,  Graham  Snyder, 
Billy  Barnes.  Neil  Bas.s,  Gary  Nichols, 
Page  Bernstein.  Ptg  Humphrey,  Phyllia 
Maultsb}*  Ben   Taylor 


BUSINESS  STAFF— Rosa  Moore,  Johnny 
Whitaker,  Dick  Leavitt,  Dick  Sirkin. 

SPORTS  STAFF:  Bill  King,  Jim  Parks, 
Jimmy  Harper,  Dave  Wible,  Charley 
Howson. 

Night  Editor Graham  Snydi-r 

Prool  Re:'der  .__::.ini Guy  jEllis 


Mr.  .Morehead's  soh.r  timepiece 
next  to  his  planetariinn  seems  to 
ha\e  stcMKi  the  test  ol  titne.  and 
is  reallv  not  a  mtally  unpleasant 
acidition   to  the  <ampus. 

-Vs  a  mattei  ol  tact  the  sun  dial 
has  become  another  ol  those  places 
in  ('iKijiel  Hill  where  one's  imagi- 
nation ( an  be  stimulated  and  one's 
ml  Hed  iKM\es  calmed.  The  .strxit- 
lure  has  pi(>\en  it  can  be  a  thing 
ol  Iwautv  in  almost  any  kind  of 
weather.  In  the  rain  its  shinv  lace 
relleets  the  surfoiuiding  area,  and 
adds  a  surrealistic  imerpretaticMi 
of  its  own.  On  a  loggy  night  the 
stylus  looks  like  the  prow  of  a 
giant  swoiflfish  just  breaking  wat- 
er. When  the  sun  shines,  the  whole 
ornament  shinnners  pleasantly,  and 
the  lound  circle  with  the  hour 
glass  is  a  Ix'ady  eye  sizing  up  every 
passerbv. 

'f'he  slic  k  marlile  face  also  makes 
a  nice  skating  link  for  schcH)l  chil- 
dten  visiting  the  planetarium,  and, 
when  it's  wet.  a  dcadlv  trap  for 
iiibbei-soled  students  hurrving  to 
( la.ss. 

This  matter  <»r  whether  or  not 
the  thing  was  designed  h>r  Avalk- 
ing  c  aused  sc»me  sjjec  ulation  at  first. 
.\ow  the  general  (»pinion  seems  to 
Ik-  ill  f:  vor  of  cutting  straight 
acioss  the  thing  il  time  recptires 
it.  l>iu  to  stroll  more  leisurelv 
aicumd  it  when  there  is  no  iiish. 

With  all  the  children  playing 
1  ing-ar«)und-the-ro.sy  on  the  Face, 
and  people  stridii\g  boldv  acrc)ss 
it.  there  is  some  .sculling  and  a  cer- 
tain atncmnt  of  mud  Hacked  across 
the  shiny  dial.  This  isn't  a  'don't 
walk  on  the  sun  dirl  '  editorial, 
bttt  people  might  at  least  wi|>e 
their  feet  off,  and  it  would  be 
irice  if  sotneliody  from  either  tlie 
planetarium  or  (haham  .Memcn- 
ial  could  moj)  it  off  when  it  gets 
nmddy. 


College  Graduates  On  Plateau, 
But  They  Can  Expect  Some  Holes 


Mafvina  Lindsay 

hi    The    IVdsliini^lon  Post 

The  vigor  with  which  industry's 
annual  manhunt  on  campuses  is 
now  .getting  under  way.  si.\ 
months  ahead  of  graduation, 
promises  that  the  current  suc- 
cess ideal  if  the  young  will  con- 
^  tinue  to  get  deeper  rooting. 

Greater  numbers  of  talented 
and  capable  youth  can  look  for- 
ward to  being  well  paid  "organi- 
zation men"  with  growing  fam- 
ilies and  two-car  homes  in  Su- 
burbia, and  with  expectations  of 
secure  futures  through  company 
retirement  plans. 

Industry's  talent  scouts,  now 
out  on  one-night  stands  bidding 
for  senices  of  promising  sen- 
iors, are  reported  offering  sal- 
aries 5  to  10  per  cent  higher 
than  last  year.  The  companies 
prefer  "talented"  students,  but 
v.JU  Settle  in  some  lines  for 
"capable"   one.s. 

The  stufi«nt  rushees,  in  their 
b*rgainin9s,  tend  to  beat  out 
the  picture  sociologists  have 
been  drawing  of  postwar  youth 
What  they  consider  most  im- 
portant to  the  job  are  oppor 
tunity  to  do  interesting  work, 
good  training  programs,  chances 
of  advancement,  salaries  equal 
fo  ethers  in  the  field,  retire- 
ment security,  location  for 
good  living  conditions. 

This  ties  in  with  an  analysis 
of  the  aspirations  of  the  college 
cla^s  of  1955  made  at  the  Cen- 
ter for  Study  of  Leisure  at  the 
University  of  Chicago.  Time  mag- 
azine turned  over  to  the  cen- 
ter its  interviews  with  seniors 
representing  20  colleges.  These 
were  ba.*«ed  on  what  the  .seniors 
expected  to  be  doing  15  years 
iience. 

David  Reisman.  author  of  The 
Lonely  Crowd  and  Faces  in  the 
Crowd,  who  participated  in  the 
study,  contrasts  in  the  fall  issue 
of  The  American  Scholar  the 
ideals  of  this  class  with  tho.se 
of  pre-1946  classes,  especially 
the  one  in  1931  to  which  he  be- 
longed. 

In    his    article.      "The      Found 
Generation."    he    says    that    cla-;s 
reports    of    graduates    of    major 
Ivy     League     colIe<4es     between 
'  1920    and    1946    show    a    certain 
coh?rence.    The.^e    grachiates    re- 
membered    the     depression,    and 
pai-t  of  them  attended  college  in 
a  wartime  era  of  transition. 
Such  9ra<luates,     he     thinks, 
tended  to  have  more  drive   for 
individual  success  or  adventure 
than  those  of  the  postwar  era. 
They  did  less  planning  of  their 
lives,  married     later,     changed 
lobs  more  frequently.  They  had 
less    "floor"    under   them,   also 
Imi  "ceiling"  above. 
While     the     earlier    graduates 
often    looked    to    big    cities,    es- 
pecially  to    New   York,    as    their 
goal.      today's      graduate      looks 
rather  to  living  "outside  the  ul- 
cer belt"  in  a  small  community, 
or  in  a  suburban   area  that   will 
be  suitable  for  child  rearing  and 
for  civic  activities. 

*         «         * 

Today's  graduate  is  gregarious 
and  he  thinks  of  both  his  occupa- 


tional   and    social    future    as   re- 
lated to  groups. 

The  earlier  graduate  was  more 
of  a  lone  wolf,  possibly  because 
the  corporation  had  not  then  be- 
come so  much  the  modernizied 
successor  of  the  feudal  protect- 
or. 

Realistic  though  these  later , 
graduates  are  in  refusing  to  try 
to  hitch  their  wagons  to  stars 
out  nf  reach,  they  yet  naively 
ignore  the  threat  world  condi- 
tions offer  to  their  plans.  For 
them,  says  Mr.  Reisman,  "the 
national  and  international  .scene 


holds  neither  fear  nor  fascina- 
tion." Their  vision  is  that  of 
"life  on  a  plateau." 

But  even  if  serious  internation- 
al explosions  and  domestic  de- 
pressions are  prevented  in  the 
years  ahead,  the  future  pattern 
of  the  good  safe  life  to  which 
many  graduates  aspire  may  meet 
some  alteration. 

The  last  decade  has  been  one 
in  which  new  job  seekers  have 
"never  had  it  so  good."  NeecLs 
of  the  defense  program,  pl'.'s 
the  shortage  of  yiuthful  manpow- 
er, caused     by     low     depression 


birth   rates,     have     provided     a 
sellers'  market  for  graduates. 

But  between  now  and  1960. 
according  to  Census  Bureau  es- 
timates, the  "riumber  of  those 
seeking  their  first  jobs  will  rise 
225,000  a  year.  Ten  years-  hence 
it  will  become  a  flood  with  about 
900.000  newcomers  annually 
wanting  jobs. 

Expansion  of  industry  may 
keep  up  with  this.  But  coming 
graduates  face  the  possibility 
Lfie  plateaus  on  which  they  qx 
pect  to  live  may  have  a  few 
ditches. 


•  •  • 

'We  Must  Protect  Minority  Rights  —  For  Senators,  That  Is' 


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OTHER  NEWSPAPERS  SAY: 


Is  Aid  To  Hungary  Or  To  Kadar? 


The  New  York  Times 

0 

For  the  pa.st  two  months  »he 
United  Nations  has  been  trying 
to  get  observers  into  Hungary. 
The  Kadar  Crovernnient,  which  jn 
Nov.  4  l)egan  to  act  as  Moscow's 
agent  m  Hungary,  has  arrogant- 
ly and  in.>«ultingly  refused.  It 
would  not  even-  permit  a  vihit 
from  Secretary  General  Dag 
HammuTskjold  himself. 

But  last  Friday  a  different  sort 
of  news  became  available.  Mojt 
of  the  Russian  tanks  seeme<l  10 
have  l>een  withdrawn  from  the 
streets,  of  Budapest.   The  bodies 


of  Huiigarian  patriots  killed  in 
the  defense  of  their  country  have 
been  buried.  The  survivors  are 
in  prirson  or  exile.  The  blooJ- 
slains  have  been  washed  away. 

The  Kadar  regime  will  there- 
fore g;aciou.sly  permit  a  U.  N. 
mi.«;sion  of  four  pers-ons.  headed 
by  Under  Secretary  Philippe  do 
Seynes,  to  spend  a  week-end  in 
Budapest. 

.\s  this  newspaper's  corre- 
spondent, Kathleen  Tcltsch,  re- 
ported from  the  Ignited  Nations 
Headquarters  in  this  city:  The 
Hungarian.^  apparently  were  will 
ing  to  waive  their  former  obj"'.- 
tions  to  an  eralier  visit,  particu- 


jaily  if  it  would  call  the  attention 
of  member  states  to  their  giiov- 
ous  need  for  outside  assistance. "' 

There  is  not  one  of  us  who 
would  not  wish  to  help  the  peo- 
ple Hungary  in  their  desperi'e 
hour,  il  there  were  any  way  in 
which  it  could  be  done.  But  cer- 
tainly the  large  majority  of  U.  N 
n>cmbois  who  voted  to  condemn 
Soviet  Russia  for  its  actions  in 
Hungary  will  want  guarantee:* 
that  any  aid  sent  into  the 
stricken  country  will  be  used  for 
the  be-iefit  of  the  people  thereof 
and  not  to  support  the  Kadar 
Kremlin  Government. 


V\\  Abner 


Pogo 


By  Walt  Keliy 


\ke  Deserves 
Military  Power   ' 

C.  S.  Young 

President  Eisenhower  has  asked  Congress  to 
grant  him  the  power  to  use  force,  at  his  owa  dis-  • 
cretion.  to  prevent  the  spread  of  Communism  in 
the  Middle  East,  and  I  guess  to  a  lot  of  people  this  • 
appears  to  be  another  example  of  the  President  s 
course  of  action  in  his  attempt  to  tak<  over  and 
control   everything  in   the  government. 

It  might  appear  lo  some  that  the  President  wan'.'?  ', 
to  be  in  a  position  from  which  he  can  operate  on 
his  own  in  tremendous  proportions,  with  little  ser-  ' 
ious  regard  for  the  judgment  of  the  members  of 
Congress,  or  others  in  important  positions.  And  I  • 
am  here  to  say  that  this  is  exactly  and  perfectly  cor-  * 
rect. 

A  couple  of  days  3go,  North  Carolina's  own 
W.  Kerr  Scott  put  his  two  cents  worth  in  by  stat- 
ing that  he  is  of  the  conviction  tiiat  President  Eis- 
enhower is  trying  to  walk  on  both  sides  of  the  road 
at  the  same  time. 

Now  this,  ladies  and  gentlemen,  is  a  very  pro- 
found outlook,  i  wonder  how  any  many  can  bo- 
come  so  brilliant  in  only  one  lifetime.  Could  it 
be  that  Son.  Scott  implies  that  the  President  is 
attempting  to  observe  and  seek  solutions  to  he 
problems  of  people  other  than  those  in  his  own 
political  party? 

If  this  is  what  Sen.  Scott  means,  then  I  can 
readily  understand  why  it  is  so  exasperating  tor 
him.   "Poliiicians"   just   don't   do  things    like    that. 

Their  primary  concern  is  o  show  themselves 
as  good  party  members,  and  they  are  so  husy  at  it 
that  they  seldom  have  the  time  or  opportunity  to 
do  any  effective  legislating. 

The  peo_ple  of  this  country,  have  been  subjected 
to.  for  want  of  a  more  accurately  descriptive  term, 
the  inaaequate  judgment  of  so  many  "politicians" 
for  so  long,  that  it  is  difficult  for  them  to  see  and 
realize  what  a  God-send  they  have  in  a  man  like 
Dwight  Eisenhower.  So  many  of  the  people  in- 
volved in  politics  are  so  narrow  that  they  do  not 
have  the  dimensional  fortitude  to  cope  with  issues 
ol"  problems  on  a  world-wide  basis. 

It  should  be  cicear  to  those  who  have  looked 
closely  that  Owight  Eisenhower  is  a  politician, 
not  a  "politician". 

They  saw  a  man  put  before  them  who  had  the 
ability  to  control  a  nation,  its  people  and  its  prot>- 
lems.  They  put  that  man  in  office,  and  the  people 
of  the  world  who  are  open-minded  enough  will  be 
thankful  that  thev   did. 


One  of  the  most  difficult  things  for  most  people 
to  underst^ind  is  that  Dwight  Eisenhower  is  not 
operating  for  Dwigh'.  Eisenhower.  He  is  not  operat- 
ing for  the  good  of  the  Republican  Parly,  or  anv 
other  special  and  limited  group.  He  is  operating 
for  the  common  good,  and  the  common  good  in- 
cludes all  the  people  of  the  world. 

If  this  is  a  Utopian  concept,  then  why  not 
strive  for  a  utopia  for  a  change,  instead  qf  dismiss- 
ing the  entire  idea  as  impractical  and  impossible, 
and  even  foolish  to  think  about?  Is  it  so  wrong  to 
be  idealistic? 

When  I  hung  up  my  uniform  a  couple  of  years 
ago.  I  was  of  the  firm  conviction  that  I  wanted 
no  more  of  war  unl^'ss  the  country  was  faced  with 
a  national  emergency,  and  I  am  still  of  the  came 
conviction,  but  there  is  another  thing  of  which  I 
am  equally  as  strongly  convinced,  and  that  is  if 
President  Eisenhower  say*  that  we  are  facing  a 
national  emergency,  then  it  will  be  time  for  all 
of  the  able-bodied  people  of  this  country  to  get 
into  uniform,  t^-hether  for  the  first  time,  or  sec- 
ond or  third. 

And  all  you  skeptics  and  slackert  Vrho  are 
more  interested  in  progress  on  your  own  personal 
behalf  than  on  behalf  of  the  people  of  the  world 
had  better  chartg*  your  way  of  thinking,  drastical- 
ly, and  fast. 

President  Eisenhower  may  have  to  issue  the 
call.  If  and  when  he  does,  I  wonder  how  many 
people  would  willingly  answer.  I  wonder  how  many 
real  Americans  we  would  see. 

A  Rousing  Silence 
For  Brother  Hoover 


The  Reporter 


Soon  the  corridors  of  the  State  Departinent 
will  see  the  last  of  Under  Secretary  Herbwl  Hoover 
Jr..  the  man  who  cacme  in  more  than  two  years  '- 
ago  as  the  son  of  the  Great  Engineer  to  sit  at  Mr. 
Dulles'  right  hand,  artd  who  now  goes  out  of  office 
amid  a  chorus  of  resounding  silence. 

He  hid  been  appointed  not  because  of  his  wide 
knowlledge  of   world  affairs  or  his  experience  at 
large-scale  management — he  had  neither — but  b«>      -v 
cause   an   administration    anxious   to   appease   it> 
own  right  wing  had  thought  that  to  honor  a  Hoover      — 
scion  with  high  office  m'jght  do  the  trick.  DuU«t, 
after  all,  would  remain  his  boss. 
But    .Mr.    Hoover    the     younger,      outwardly     a 
colorless,   silent  man,  soon  displayed  such  an  out- 
standing backstage  ability  at  crossing  up,  slowing.      * 
and  frustrating  his  boss — and,  on  occasion,  the  Pres-   ^  - 
ident  himself — that  the  trick  worked  only  too  well. 

He    opposed    the    scope    of    Dulles'    foreign-aid 
program,    particularly    with    respect    to    India.    He   ^^. 
opposed   Dulles'    plan   for  cultural  exchanges  vnth 
the  Communist   world.        v  w 

As   chairman   of     the     Operations   Coordinating 
Board,  Mr.  Hoover  opposed  the  closer  dejdings  with 
Tito  that  Dulles  had  been  advocating.   During  the    -» 
Suez   crisis,    while    both   the   President    and    Secre-     * 
tary  Dulles  were  absent  from  the  capital,  he  found 
so  many  obstacles  to  throw  in  the  path  of  prompt     * 
U.  S.  oil-tanker  relief  of  Britain  and  France  that     * 
the  several  weeks' -delay  further  embittered  I'nter- 
Allied   relations .... 

He   disappears    from    the    sceiw   with    a      Dear  ' 
Herbert"    Presidential    letter    of    thanks.    We    are 
thankful  too.  ' 


WEDNEi 


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WEDNESDAY,  iAHU^Y  %  iW 


THE  OAlkT  tAR  HEEL 


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FOR  ORADUATE  STUDENTS 

France  Offers  Study, 
Teaching  Opportunities 


Opportunities  to  study  or  teach  | 
in    France    during    1957-58    have 
been    made    available    to    Ameri- 
can graduate  students. 

Announcement  came  recently 
from  Kenneth  TloIIand,  invsident 
of  the  Institute  of  Intematlohal 
Education   in  New  Yoi^^City. 

The  French  government  Is  of- 
fM-ing  approximaiely  30  uiiivei>i- 


Hcippenihigs 

(Continued  from  Page  1) 

.  .  .  Alpha  Gam  Carolyn  Frazier 
ta  Bill  Moxley  of  N.  C.  State.  .  . 
Alpna  Gam  Linda  Von  Wilier  to 
Jack  Taylor,  former  UNC  Pi  Kappa 
Phi.  .  .  .  Alpha  Gam  Marie  Rus  Ic 
Paul  Reynolds  of  Randolph  Macon 
Academy.  .  .  .  Alpha  Gam  Marjorle 
McMahan  to  Ktary  Orr  of  USC. 
.  .  .  KD  Carolyn  Thompson  to  Jin> 
my  Hi^h,  Delta  Sigma  Pi  from 
Whiteville.  ...  Chi  Phi  Charlie 
Fitzgerald  to  Sally  Senert^ia  of 
Miami,  Fia.  .  .  .  Chi  Phi  Jim  Smith 
to  WC  junior  Midge  McMahan.  .  .  . 
Pika  Carter  Mackie  to  Lnnma  Bau- 
oom  of  Raleigh.  .  .  .  SAE  Pat  Hun- 
icr  to  former  WC  student  Annette 
Shaw  of  Charlotte. 
"^SPE^Butch^Smith^to^Jo^n): 
Farmer  of  Raleigh.  ...  Pi  Phi 
Mena  Way  Marsh  to  T.  D.  Stokes 
of  Lexington.  .  .  .  Sigma  Chi  Ray 
Murphy  to  Kathleen  Darwin  of 
Chaitanooga,  Tenn.  .  .  .  Stray 
Greek  Sue  Gichner  to  John  Rosen- 
ihal.  Harvard  graduate  from  Wash- 
ington, D.  C. 


JANUARY   SPECIALS 


The  Southern  P»rf  of  Heavem, 
the  most  popular  book  ever  writ- 
icn  about  Chapel  Hill.  Regularly 
S2.49.   During  January  only     $].9B 

Mexican  Vtltese  —  Chapel  Hill's  1 
own  Joeefina  Niggli  has  produced , 
a  classic  worthy  of  a  place  alonjj- 
side  "Cannery  Row"'  or  "Souh 
Wiud".  Regularly  $3.00.  During 
Januaiy.  and  while  our  present 
slock  laits _....  $1.49 


Random  Shots  —  Racy  North  Car 
oiina  humor,  collected  by  Joha 
Bragaw.  Our  regular  price,  $1.9S. 

During  January  only  .— ... $1.49 

And  In  The  Old  Book  Corner 

Book  Club  Seiectient  and  other 
easy  reading  —  Regulary  48^  each. 


Duriitf  January 


99t  ••'M 


THE  INTIMATE 
BOOKSHOP 


SOS   E.   Frarkrin   St. 


ty  fellowships  through  the  Min- 
istry of  Foreign  Affairs  and  40 
teaching  assistantships  through 
the  Ministry  of  Education. 

The  fellowship  awards  are  for 
students  with  definite  academic 
projects  or  study  plans.  The  as- 
sistantships afford  language  teach- 
ing experience  and  an  opportunity 
to  become  better  acquainted  with 
France. 

Nominations  of  candidates  for 
felilowship  and  /  assistantships 
will  be  made  by  a  joint  commit- 
tee of  French  and  American  edu- 
cators .working  in  cooperation 
with  the  French  Cultural  Services 
and  the  Institute. 

Students    have    been    reminded 
the   closing   date   for    application 
is  Feb.  1. 
REQUIREMENTS 

The  awards  are  open  to  men 
and  women  preferably  under  30 
years  of  age.  according  to  Hol- 
land. Applicants  must  be  Ameri- 
can citizens. 

In  addition,  those  applying  must 
have  a  bachdlor's  degree  from 
an  American  college  or  university 
by  the  time  of  departure;  a  good 
academic  record;  a  good  knowl- 
edge of  French;  a  good  moral  char- 
acter, personality  and  adaptability, 
and  good  health.  Correct  usage  of 
English  is  also  required. 

Candidates  for  assistantships 
must  be  single.  Unmarried  candi- 
dates are  preferred  for  the  fel- 
lowships,  said  Holland. 

Recipients  of  French  teaching 
assistantships  will  teach  conver- 
sational English  in  secondary 
schools  and  teacher  training  in- 
stitutions in  France.  The  posts 
are  intended  for  future  teachers 
of  French. 

A  few  applicants  with  special 
training  in  American  liH^rature 
and  some  experience  in  college 
teaching  may  be  selected  for 
'postes  de  lecteurs',  teaching  as- 
signments in  French  universities. 
Stipends   cover   maintenance. 

Graduate  fellowships  are  open 
to  students  in  ail  fields  of  stu- 
dy. In  the  field  of  medicine,  can- 
didates must  have  the  M.D,  de- 
gree. 

Fellows  will  study  in  French 
universities  and  other  state  insti- 
tutions. The  awards  provide  tu- 
ition and  a  modest  maintenance. 

Applicants  for  the  awards  may, 
if  eligible,  apply  for  Fulbright 
travel  grants.  Since  the  number  of 
supplementary  travel  grants  is 
limited,  applicants  should  be  pre- 
pared to  pay  their  own  travel, 
said  Holland. 

Applicants  for  the  French  Gov- 
ernment awards  have  been  asked 
to  apply  to  the  Institute  if  Inter- 
national Education,  1  East  67th 
St.,  New  York.  N.  Y. 


Scholarship 
To  Brazil 
Announced 

A  fellowship  for  graduate  stu- 
day  and  research  in  Brazil  has 
been  made  available  to  an  Ameri- 
can student  for  the  1957  academic 
year,  it  was  announced  recently 
by  Kenneth  Hilland,  president  of 
the  Institiite  of  International  Edu- 
cation. 

Closing  date  of  the  competition 
is  January  23.  The  period  of  the 
fellowship  is  from  March  1  to 
December  15. 

The  Uniao  Cultural  Bra^il-Esta- 
dos  Unidos  in  Sao  Paulo  offers 
the  award  to  a  young  man  grad- 
uate for  study  in  any  of  the  fac- 
ulties of  the  University  of  Sao 
Paulo  and  in  the  Portuguese 
courses  of  the  Uniao  Cultural. 

The  successful  candidate  is  re- 
quired to  teach  English  a  mhii- 
I  mum  of  six  hours  a  week  at  the 
I  Uniao.  He  must  have  a  good 
j  knowledge  of  Portuguese.  Espec- 
ially well  •  qualified  candidates 
[  who  do  not  know  Portuguese  but 
I  who  have  a  good  knowledge  of 
I  other  romance  languages  may  be 
I  considered. 

j  Candidates  for  the  Brazilian 
award  must  be  U.  S.  citizens,  pre- 
ferably under  35  years  of  age. 
Other  requirements  are:  (1)  a 
Bachelor's  degree  from  an  Amer- 
ican college  or  university  or  rec- 
ognized standing  by  the  date  of 
departure;  (2)  demonstrated  aca- 
demic ability  and  capacity  for  in- 
dependent study;  (3)  good  moral 
character,  personality  and  adapta- 
bility;  and    (4)   good  health. 

Api^ations  may  be  secured 
from  the  Institute  of  Internation- 
al Education  in  New  York  City  or 
its  regional  offices  in  Chicago, 
Denver,  Houston,  San  Francisco 
or  Washington.  D.  C. 


Covering  The  Campus 


PHARMACY  WIVES 

Pharmacy  Wives  will   meet  to- 
night at  8  in  the  Institute  of  Phar- 
macy. 
SOCIOLOGY 

Gordon  W.  Blackwell.  Kenan 
Professor  of  Sociology,  will  speak 
on  the  topic,  "A  Theoretical  Mod- 
el for  a  Community  Study  of  Men- 
tal Health"  at  the  Institute  for 
Research  in  Social  Science  ^taff 
Luncheon  at  12:50  p.m.  today  in 
Lenoir  Hall. 
LAW  WIVES 

The  Law  Wives  will  meet  to- 
night in  the  Victory  Village  Nurs- 
ery. The  program  will  include 
bridge  and  the  election  of  new 
officers. 
PHYSICS  COLLOQUIM 

Dr.     A.     Victoa:       Masket    will 
speak  on  'Terrestrial  Experiments 


in  General  Relativity"     today     at 
4:30  in  room  250,  Phillips  Hall. 
CHEERLEADERS 

The  cheerkadtng  squad  will 
meet  at  4  p.m.  today  in  Roland 
Parker  Lounge  1.  Jim  Bynum  faaa 
urged  all  members  of  the  squad 
to  be  present. 
WUNC  SCHEDULE 

Today's    schedule    for    WUNC, 
the  University's  FM  radio  station: 
7:00    Intermezzo 
7:15    Messages  and  Meh 
7:30    Songs   of   France 
7:45    Curtain  Going  Up 
8:00    I  Hear  America  Singing 
8:30     Georgetown    University 

Radio  Forum 
9:00    Debulsy  the   Master 
lOKH)    News 

10:15    Evening    Masterwork 
11:30    Sign  Off' 


Miami  Family  Menaced 
By  A  Wacky  Quacky 


CLASSIFIEDS 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL  WILL 
pay  $  .25  for  each  issue  of  the 
September  28  edition.  Papers  of 
this  date  are  needed  for  adver- 
tising purposes. 

PART  TIME  WAITERS  WANTED: 
Hours  can  be  arranged  with 
your  schedule.  Apply  at  the 
Tar  Heel  Sandwich  Shop.  110 
N.  Columbia  St. 


DAILY    CROSSWORD 


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four  ArresH 
Made  In  N.  C 
In  Drug  Case 

GREENSBORO— (AP)— Four  ar- 
rests in  North  C^olina  during  the 
past  few  days  appear  to  be  a  fol- 
low-up of  a  national  crackdown 
conducted  in  late  1955  to  stamp 
out  illegal  dispensation  of  stimu- 
lating drugs  to  truck  drivers. 

New  arrests  have  been  in  the 
Greensboro,  Durham  and  New 
London  areas  on  the  same  type 
of  charges  that  were  brought 
against  43  persons,  including  nine 
Tar  Heels,  in  the  1955  crackdown. 

Among  those  named  in  the  new 
cases  is  David  Jackson  Womble, 
a  partner  in  Womble's  Pharmacy 
in  Durham.  The  drug  store  also 
is  n#med  in  the  case. 

Also  charged  are  Harry  G. 
Julian,  operator  of  the  Piedmont 
Truck  Stop  on  the  High  Point  Rd. 
near  Greensboro,  and  J.  M.  Ash- 
ley, identified  a.s  a  worker  at  the 
truck  stop. 


MIAMI.  Fla.—(AP)— Somewhere 
in  this  sprawling  city  some  unsus- 
pecting family  is  harboring  a  dan- 
gerous  visitor. 

He  has  a  reputation  for  worm* 
ing  his  way  into  your  affections, 
then  showing  the  true  colors  of 
a  sooundrel. 

He  is  known  as  weeper,  and  he 
is  a  psycho. 

He  also  is  a  duck. 

The  addled  duck  paddled  out 
of  the  University  of  Miami  Stu- 
dent Lake  a  few  days  ago  and 
made  friends  with  four  little  boys 
visiting  the  campus  Mith  their 
father. 

Pop.  whoever  he  is,  should  have 
known  weeper  was  a  wacky  Quac- 
ky when  he  waddled  after  them, 
hopped  into  the  car  and  stuck  his 
head  out  the  window  like  a  dog 
on  a  joyride. 

A  University  porter  who  wit- 
nessed the  scene  repoted  Weeper 
appeared  delighted  with  his  new- 
found   victims . . .  er.    friends. 

But  Mrs.  Peggy  Brandt  of  Mi- 
ami. Weeper's  former  owner, 
warns  "Pop"  he'd  better  get  rid 
of  the  daffy  duck  nuiei^iL.ii  Ym 
doesnf  want  to  disrupt  the  neigh- 
borhood, lose  his  frienQs,  brealc 
up  his  family  and  maybe  go  wacky 
himself. 

Mrs.  Brandt  said  Weeper  ripped 
her  husband's  best  flannel  pants, 
scratched  his  legs  and  arms,  ate 
a  neighbor's  tropical  fish,  chased 
their  best  friends  and  pecked  a 
sunning  visitor  through  the  bot- 
tom of  a  canvas  camp  chair. 

"I  was  crazy  about  him."  Mrs. 
Brandt  said.  "He  was  fine"  with 
our  2-year-old  daughter,  Debbie, 
but  he  didn't  go  over  .so  big  with 
my  hu.sband.  Bob.  We  bought  him 
when  he  was  just  a  baby  duck 
last  July  at  a  feed  store. 

"Finally  It  was  either  Bob  or 
the  duck  had  to  go  so  I  took 
Weeper  out  to  the  University 
Lake.  He  loved  to  ride  in  the  car 


and  he  was  so  happy  on  the  way 
over,  but  he  was  mad  when  I  left 
him  with   all  those  other  ducks." 

She  returned  the  next  day  to 
see  how  Weeper  waS  getting  along 
and  the  porter  told  her  he  had 
"adopted"  four  boys  and  their 
father. 

"I'm  afraid  they  won't  keep  him 
long,  either,"  she  said.  "The 
trouble  is,  he  takes  a  dislike  to 
certain   people." 

You  can  tell  when  Weeper  does- 
n't like  you.  she  added,  because 
he  flies  at  you  with  bill  bared 
and  webbed  claws  flying. 

"He  wraps  his  claws  around 
your  legs  and  they  really  cut.  You 
should  see  poor  Bob's  legs,"  Mrs. 
Brandt  said.  ,  .,. 

Weeper  also  dislikes  caris.  "He 
chases  them  like  a  dog — only  he 
flj's  around  them  and  zooms  at  the 
driver  like  a  dive  bomber."  she 
said. 

Neighbors  who  like  to  work  in 
their  gardens  also  should  beware. 
Weeper  delights  in  catching  some- 

e  stooping   over. 


Alumni 
Will  Hear 
Friday 


Local  area  alumni  and  friends 
of  the  University  will  get  their 
first  look  here  Jan.  17  at  William 
C.  Friday  since  he  becaiqe  presi- 
dent of  the  Consolidated  Utiiversi- 
ty. 

More  than  300  formef  students 
have  been  invited  to  a  "meet-the- 
new-president-banquet"  which  will 
be  held  in  Waynesville's  Central 
El^nentary  School  Cafeteria  at 
6:30  p.m.  It  will  be  Friday's  first 
appearance  in  western  North 
Carolina  since  he  became  head 
of  the  University  last  Oct.  26. 

Friday  has  been  asked  to 
speak  on  "The  State  of  the  Uni- 
versity: Its  Present  and  Future." 
The  meeting  will  be  attended  by 
alumni  and  guests  from  Haywood. 
Jackson,  Swain.  Macon,  Transyl- 
vania and  Buncombe  counties. 

Those  wishing  to  attend  the 
meeting  have  been  asked  to  send 
reservations  to  David  F.  Felnvet 
of  Waynesville  before   Saturday. 


Mc^rfs  Mkiss  To  Be  Given 
By  Town's  Choral  Club  Today 


Th«  immortal  Catholic  Mass, 
"Missa  Brevis  in  F  Major"  by 
Mozart  will  be  performed  by  the 
60-voice  Chapel  Hill  Choral  Club 
today  at  8  p.m.  on  WUNC-TV. 
Channel  4.  The  Mass.  which  will 
span  30  minutes,  includes  the 
typical  five  parts  of  all  Catholic 
masses. 

The   solo   quartet   will   be    per- 


formed by  Martha  Fonse.  soprano, 
Dorothy  McDonald,  alto,  James 
B.  King,  tenor,  and  Urban  T. 
Holmes  Jr.,  bass. 

Instrumental  accompuiiment  will 
be  provided  by  Edgar  and  Dor- 
othy Alden,  violin;  Mary  Gray 
Clark,  violincelio.  and  Sylvia  P. 
Shannon,    harpsichord. 


Medical  School  Will  Sponsor 
2  New  Postgraduate  Courses 


Two  postgraduate  courses  in 
medicine  will  begin  this  month 
in  the  Ahoskie-Edenton-Elizabeth 
City  area  and  at  Greenville. 

The  courses  are  being  sponsor- 
ed by  the  UNC  School  of  Medicine, 
the  UNC  Extension  Division  and 
local  medical  societies  in  those 
areas. 

The  first  District  Medical  So- 
ciety will  cthsponsoT  the  course 
in  the  Ahoskie-Edenton-Elizabeth 
City  area.  Tlie  Pitt  County  Medi- 
cal Society  will  co-sponsor  the 
Greenville  course. 

Each  course  will  consist  of  six 


fan  American  Sanitary 
Official  To  Visit  Here 

Dr.  Myron  Wegman,  chief  of  ed- 
ucation and  training  of  the  Pan 
American  Sanitary  Bureaji,  Wash- 
ington, D.  C,  will  viait  the  UNC 
School  of  Public  Health  Friday 
and  Saturday. 

Dr,  E.  G.  McGavran,  dean  of 
the  UNC  School  of  Public  Health, 
said  Tuesday  the  visiting  doctor 
would  serve  as  special  lecturer 
in  the  Dept.  of  Maternal  and  Child 
Health. 

Dr.  Wegman.  internationally 
known  authority  on  the  health 
problems  of  chifdren  and  moth- 
ers will  discuss  programs  to  im- 
prove the  health  of  these  groups. 
His  discussion  will  be  based  on 
his  wide  experience  in  Central  and 
South  American. 

The  Pan  American  Sanitary 
Bureau  also  serves  as  the  reg- 
ional office  of  the  World  Health 
Organization  for  this  hemisphere, 
meetings    planned    by    University 


personnel  in  cooperation  with 
members  of  the  sponsoring  medi- 
cal societies.  Credits  earned  in 
these  courses  may  be  applied  by 
doctors  in  general  practice  toward 
the  fullfilment  if  the  requh-ements 
of  the  American  Academy  of  Gen- 
eral Practice. 

Meetings  will  be  held  in  Ahoskie 
Jan.  23  and  Feb.  20.  The  Edenton 
meetings  will  be  Jan.  31  and  Feb. 
27.  Meetings  will  be  held  in  Eliz- 
abeth City  Feb.  6  and  March  6. 

The  course  will  be  held-  in 
Greenville  every  Thursday  from 
Jan.  24  through  March  7,  with 
the  excejrtion  of  Thursday,  Feb. 
14. 

Speakers  at  the  Ahoskie-Eden- 
ton-Elizabeth City  meetings  will 
be  Dr.  J.  Willis  Hurst,  associate 
professor  of  medicine,  Emory  Un- 
iversity School  of  Medicine;  Qr- 
Barnes  Woodhall.  professor  4>i 
surgery,  Duke  University  School 
of  Medicine;  Dr.  Leroy  A.  Cal- 
kins, professor  of  obstetrics  a^d 
gynecology.  University  of  Kanat 
Medical  center;  Dr.  Lows  G.  Welt, 
professor  of  medicine,  UNC 
School  of  Medicine;  Dr.  Milton  S. 
Sacks,  professor  of  clinical  medi* 
cine.  University  of  Maryland 
School  of  Medicine  and  Dr.  Nel- 
son K.  Ordway,  professor  of  pedi- 
atrics, UNC  school  fo  Medicine. 

Speakers  at  the  Greenville  meet- 
ings will  be  Dr.  Hurst;  Dr.  H.  H. 
Bradshaw,  professor  of  surgery. 
BoNvm'an  Gray  School  of  Medicine; 
Dr.  Calkins;  Dr.  Welt;  Dr.  Sacks 
and  Dr.  John  A,  Ewing,  instructor 
in  psychiatry,  UNC  School  of  I 
Medicine.  j 


Proposal  For 
Tax  Changes 
Approved 

RALEIGH— (AP)  —  The  SUte 
Board  of  Conservation  and  De- 
velopment today  gave  qualified 
approval  to  changes  in  the  state's 
Tax  laws  recommended  recently 
by  the  State  Tax  Commission. 

The  Board  adopted  a  resolution 
stating  that  the  report  contains 
"many  suggestions  and  recom- 
mendations" which  if  enacted  into 
law  by  the  1957  legislature"  will 
aid  materially"  in  "bringing  new 
industry  into  the  state  and  retain- 
ing" industries  already  in  the 
state. 

The  board,  however,  refrained 
from  a  blanket  end#rsement  of  all 
the  tax  commission's  proposals  as 
suggested  by  one  of  its  members, 
Hugh  Morton  of  Wilmington.  Some 
of  the  members  indicated  they 
had   not   read   all  the   proposals. 

Tax  proposals  mentioned  by 
the  Board  in  its  resolution  of  ap- 
proval included  one  which  would 
reduce  corporate  income  taxes 
through  amending  the  "alloca- 
tion formula."  The  formula  is 
used  to  determine  the  taxable  in- 
come of  corporations  doii^  busi- 
ness in  more  than  one  state. 

As  the  Board  wound  up  its 
winter  meeting  here,  the  board 
— at  Gov.  Hodges'  urging — decided 
not  to  adopt  a  resolution  critizing 
the  Federal  Civil  Defense  Admin- 
istration for  its  handling  of  hor- 1 
rfcane  drainage  work  in  Eastern 
North  Carolina. 


UNC  Professors  Appear 
On  TV  Guidance  Pgm. 

What  are  the  opportunities  of- 
fered young  people  by  the  field 
of  science?  What  courses  should 
students  take  in  high  school,  col- 
lege, and  graduate  school  in  pre- 
paration for   careers   in   science? 

These  questions  will  be  an- 
swered by  four  University  science 
professors  on  the  wedcly  in-- 
school  career  guidance  program 
for  junior  and  senior  high  schools, 
today  at  2  p.m.  on  WUNC-TV, 
Channel  4. 

The  panelists  are  Dr.  Arthur 
Roe  ol  the  Dept.  of  Chemistry; 
Dr.  Everett  Palmatier.  Physics; 
Dr.  Virgil  Mann.  Geology  and 
Dr.    Melbourne   Carriker.   Zoology. 


BERMAN'S 
JANUARY  SALE 

Ladies'  Blouses,  Ship  'N  Shore  and  Hollovoue, 

Were  $3.98,  Now  $2.98 

Cotton  Challis  Gowns  and  Pafamas, 

Were  $4.00,  Now  $3.39 

Ladies'  Shoes,  Heels  and  Flats,  Deb  Towners, 

Jolene,  and  Trim  Tread, 
Were  $8.95,  Now  $6.89;  Were  $7.95,  Now 
$5.98;  Were  $6.95,  Now  $5.49.  Others,  Wil- 
liams   and    Scamperoos,   Were   $3.98,   Now 
$2.9^,  and  as  low  as  $1.94. 

LADIES  DRESSES  -  Vb  OFF 

One  Rack  Up  To  $16.95^  Now  $2.98 

Ladies'  Hats,  Were  $5.98,  Now  $2.98; 

Were  $3.98,  Now  $1.98 
Nylon  And  Cotton  Uniforms,  White, 

Now  On  Sale. 

Sale  on  Sheets,  Towels,  and  Blankets 

All  Men's  Sport  Shirts,  Were  $5.00,  Now  $3.98; 

Were  $3.98,  Now  $2.98.' 

Men's  Cotton  Pajamas,  solids  and  figures,  Were 

$5.00,  Now  $3.98;  Were  $3.98,  Now  $2.98. 

All  Wool  Sport  Coats, 

Up  To  $29.50,  Now  $19.95 

One  All  Wool  Overcoat,  Size  42, 

Priced  at  $35.00,  Now  V2. 

One  Gabardine  Topcoat,  Size  38, 

Priced  at  $29.50  Now  V^. 

Men's  Dress  and  Work  Shoes  On  Sale. 

Men's  Leather  Jackets,  Horsehide, 

Were  $24.50,  Now  $19.50 

BERAAAN^S 

.  OPEN  ALL   DAY  WEDNESDAY 


A  Campus-to-Career  Case  History 


Pamphlet  By  Henderson 
Has  iust  Been  Published 

A  pMnphlet  ob  "The  Lehmns- 
Steiner-Terquem  Problem  in  Glob- 
al Survey,"  written  by  Dr.  Archi- 
bald Henderson  of  UNC  has  just 
come  off  the  press. 

Dr.  Henderson,  reputed  to  be 
the  leading  authority  in  the  world 
on  this  problem,  is  Kenan  pro- 
fessor emeritus  of  mathematics. 

The  pamphlet  is  composed  of 
a  reprint  of  three  articles  which 
appeared  in  "Scripta  Mathematica." 
llie  East-fndiap  mathematician, 
whose  paper.  "The  Baffling  Rider," 
was  the  immediate  cause  of  the 
articles,  died  before  Dr.  Hender- 
son completed  the  third  article. 


-^T^'.- 

;^^^i^/^ 


Frank  R.  Hofmtm,  B.S.  in  Liberal  Arts.  Hampden-Svdnfy  College,  'S3 

Meet  ah  Assistalit  Manager- Hampden-Sydney/'SS 


Frank  Hoffman  is  Assist«nt  Manager 
of  the  lelephoBe  ofiit«  at  Newport  News, 
Va.  Frank";*  oflice  has  about  25,000  ac- 
counts, and  liandles  S360.000  worth  of 
business  a  month. 

He  joined  the  telephone  company  in 
1953,  only  three  years  ago. 

"My  wife  worked  there  first,"  says 
Frank,  "while  1  wa?  still  in  college.  What 
she  told  me,  along  with  what  I  learned 
from  friends  in  the  business,  pretty  well 
sold  me  on  the  telephone  company  as  a 
place  to  find  a  career.  And  the  interview 
clinched  it.  The  job  opportunities  were 
too  good  tu  refuse. 

"I  began  in  the  Commercial  Depart- 
ment, which  takes  care  of  business  con- 
tacts with  customers.    The  training  was 


continuous  and  excellent.  One  of  the  most 
rewarding  jobs  I  had  was  working  on 
revenue  studies  involving  estimates  of 
population  and  telephone  growth.  This 
experience  is  "really  useful  in  my  present 
position  as  Assistant  Manager. 

"I  supervise  the  personnel  wko  handle 
customer  contact*.  And  1  a8.«ist  in  the 
handling  of  our  public  relations  work  in 
the  community.  In  the  Manager's  ab- 
sence, I  take  over. 

"It's  a  great  job,  full  of  opportunities 
and  satisfaction.  I  like  working  with 
people,  and  I  like  to  see  my  work  con- 
tributing to  the  betterment  of  the  com- 
munity and  the  company.  Choosing  « 
career  in  the  telephone  business  was  the 
best  move  I've  ever  made.' 


Frank  HolTman  choie  a  eareer  with  The  jQiesaiiepik^ 
ft  Potomar  Telephone  Company  of  VirglaAa.  Inter* 
citing  career  opportunities  exist  in  other  Bell  Tele- 
phone Companief,  BeU  Telephone.  L>abaraiorie»T 
Western  Electric  and  Sandia  Corporation.  You»  place- 
ment oftirer  ka«  nmre  JafomMtion  absnt  tken.- 


T^Mip^an* 


.    .,  4 


vl 


„„  *'•  -ttfc  ■     < 


^•1    POUR 


THi  DAILY  TAR  Hlf L 


^^EDNESQ^Y,  JANUARY  1  1»$T 


Carolina  Rallies  To  Take  Indians  71-61;  Frosh  Win 


Tar  Babies  Down  ACC 
Jayvees  Easily,  93-70 


The  Tar  Babies  made  it  win  num- 
ber five  last  night  when  they  bowl- 
ed over  the  Atlantic  Christian  Col- 
lege Ja;>-vees  83-70  on  the  ACC 
iiome  court  in  Wilson. 

The  Carolina  frosh  grabbed  the 
lead  at  6-3  antj  held  it  throughout 
the  contest.  At  one  time  in  the 
second  half  the  Tar  Babies  were 
out  in  front  by  23  point*. 

Carolina's  outstanding  flreshman 
forward  Lee  Shaffer  led  the  tally- 
ing last  night  for  both  teams  wiih 
28  points.  Y.  Larese  followeddo^e 
behind  with  25.  .ACC's  top  man, 
Whatley.  hit  for  19. 

The  Carolina  yeaCrllngs  looked 
sharp  both  offensively  and  defen^i- 
ively  the  first  half  leading  44-26 
when  it  was  over.  The  second  hall 
was  not  quite  up  to  par.  Carolina 
outscored  the  Wilson  boys  by  only 
five  points. 

Tar  Baby  center    Dick    KepJcy 
sewed  IT  points  but  two  wcr«  f'>r 
ACC    The  6-7  pivt*  man  wMil  af  ] 
tor  a  rebound  und«r  tl»  ACC  t»a5- 
kef    ano   acctdently   tapped   it  in 

The   Tar   Babies   will    [rfay  the 
Wike  Korest  Dcaclejs  next  I^iday 
ni}:ht. 
-     -«">^ 


THE  SUMMARY: 

North  CaroiiiM  G      F  P      T 

Shaffer  f  9    10  3    28 

Larese  t  11      33  5    25 

Kepley   c  5    •  1  2    U 

Grotty  tt  5      5  3 

Graham  g    -  10  0 

Wilson  g  0      2  1 

Oriffin   g  0      0  0 

Poole  f  10  1 

Crutchfield  f  0      0  1 

Mcilackeii  f  10  1 

Steppe  g  14  3      6 

Totals  34    25  20    93 

AX.Ci  0      F  P     T 

Kasmer         *'-    *  '  5      4  2 

Price  10  1 

WTialey  9      13 

Dunn       ^            »  1      6  1 

Godfrey  5      3  3 

Ciaft  12  2 

Burnet*  1      0  2 

Phares  10  1 

Hothpeth  2      0  5 

Totals  26     15  22    70 

North  Or*lln«  44        4f  —  93 
AtlMiHc   Christian  24        44  —  70 


P 

#^     ¥%:     ^     0^ 

-.£ 

■ryC 

heak,  Sjjorts  Sditc^r 

14 

2 

19 

18 

13 

4 

2 

2 

4 


MILTON'S  NINTH 
ANNIVERSARY  SALE 

Fabulous  buys  on  the  country's  most  wantod 
apparel.  The  weather  is  right,  the  prices  ere  right, 
so  let's  have  some  fun 

Group  imported  wool  flannel  suits  reduced 
from  $60.00  to  $34.99 

Lucious  group  of  dwarf  herringbone  Shetland 
tweed  suits  in  burnt  olive/black;  brown/black— 
also  dwarf  herringbone  miH  finished  worsteds 
many  with  foulard  linings,  reduced  from  $60.00 
to  $49.99    ^^i^j4/. 

Large  group  Harris  Tweeds  and  imported 
handwoven  Shetland  jackets,  vahies  to  $47.50, 
reduced  to  $34.99 

Entire  stock  flannel  and  worsted  flannel  trous- 
ers at  least  $3.00  off 

Khaki  trousers  reduced  from  $4.93  to  3.99 

Exeter  hose  in  cashmere/nylon  blend  reduced 
from  $3.95  to  $1.99 

Tweed  and  Shetland  wool  caps  reduced  from 
$5.00  to  $3.50 

Good  deals  on  your  favorite  button-down  and 
tab  shirts. 

Ivy  button-downs,  regularly  $4.50,  3  for  $10.00 
candy  stripes  regulariy  $5.00,  3  for  $11.50 
$5.50  English  tabs,  all  ivy  styled,  3  for  $12.50 

Entire  stock  Hathaway  tabs  and  button-down 
shirts  $1.00  off 

Belts,  values  to  $3.00,  yours  for  $.79 

All  topcoaH  at  least  $15.00  off 

Nice  giveaways  on  cordovan  shoes 
Group   rubber  soled,   leather  lined   cordovan 

shoes  reduced  from  $20.00  to  12.99.  Group 

leather  soled  wing-tips  reduced  from  $20.00 

to  14.99 

Many  other  buys  worth  looking  into 

Plenty  of  sugar  and  spice  in  our  Lady  Milton 

Shop  all  at  tA^rific  reduced  prices 
All  Braemar  and  Drumianrig  cashmere  sweaters, 

full  fashioned,  of  course,  and  Imported  fr9m 

Scotland,  all  $7.00  off 

Skirts  further  reduced  as  follows: 
$  9.95  to     7.99 
7.95  to     6.50 
12.95  to     8.50 
14.95  to     9.99 
16.95  to  10.50 
18.95  to  11.99 
21.50  to  12.99 
22.50  to  17.50 
All  Evan-Picone  Skirts  Vi  off 
All  Glen  Har  made  in  Scotland  skirts  from 
$25.00  up,  Va  off 

Many  Other  Startling  Reductions 
All  Sales  Cash  and  Final-Alterations  Extra 


In  The  Spotlight,  The  Minor  Sports 

Don't  look  now.  but  Coach  Frank  McGuire's  nationally  ranked  bas 
ketball  team  doesn't  have  the  winter  sports  spotlight  quite  all  to  i- 
self.  For  both  the  swimming  and  wrestling  squads  have  al^  brushed 
aside  all  opposition  so  far  this  season,  and  stand  ready  to  make  a 
determined  challenge  for  conference  championhips  in  their  respective 
fields. 

Coach  Sam  Barnes'  matman,  hard  working  athiotas  who  somo- 
timet  go  unnoticod  in  tho  shadow  cast  by  King  Baskatball,  have 
chalked  up  four  straight  victories  against  no  losses  and  one  tie  so 
far  this  year,  and  already  are  being  hailed  as  the  finest  Tar  Heel 
wrestling  team  in  recent  years. 

Wrestling  at  Carolina  tnis  year  is  in  truth  a  Cinderella  sport.  Last 
year  the  hapless  Tar  Heel  grapplers  finished  with  a  0-10  record,  and 
failed  to  score  even  a  single  point  in  their  last  three  meets.  But  this 
season,  a  host  of  sparkling  sophomores  and  the  magic  touch  of  Sam 
Barnes  has  meant  the  difference.  Waki  Forest.  Davidjon,  Citadel  and 
Virginia  have  all  been  conquered,  and  powerful  Washington  t  Lee 
could  do  no  better  than  gain  a  tie. 

The  abovt  face  has  been  a  startling  on*,  but  it's  tdo  early  to 
crow.  All  of  the  rough  matches  lie  ahead  with   such  forbidding 
foes  as  State,  VPI,  Maryland,  VMI  and  Duke  yet  to  b*  faced.  And 
remember  the  luckless  Tar  Heel  soccer  team  that  paraded  to  four 
straight  wins  before  losing  the  three  really  important  ones. 
Coach  Ralph  Caseys  tankmen  have  also  won  four  decisionir,  and 
they  haven't  had  to  work  hard  in  doing  it.  The  Tar  Heels,  defending  f 
ACC  co-champions,   have  breezed   by  East  Carolina,  South  Carolin.a 
Duke  and  Virginia,  but  face  a  horse  of  an  entirely  different  color  next 
Tuesday  afternoon.  That's  when  they  tangle  with  State,  co-holder  oi 
last  year's  crown. 

From  here  it  looks  like  the  conference  will  have  just  one 
champ  this  year,  and  it  should  be  Carolina.  The  Tar  Heels,  al- 
though perhaps  outshone  by  State  in  the  matter  of  individual 
stars,  have  fine  depth  in  practically  every  event,  and  should  be 
able  to  outstrip  their  West  Raleigh  cousins. 


iTar  Heels 
Behind  At 
Half,  28-26 

WTLLIAMSBLTRG,  Va.  —  (AP  — 
North  Carolina's  second  -  ranked 
Tar  Heels,  getting  just  10  points 
from  high  scorer  Len  Rosenbluth, 
came  from  behind  in  the  second 
half  last  night  to  defeat  a  scrappy 
William  and  Marj'  basketball  team 
71-ei. 


The  Southern  Conference  In 
dians.  hitting  48  per  cent  (rf  their 
field  goal  tries  before  a  standing 
loom-only  crowd  of  3sOOO,  led  the 
Tar  Heels  the  entire  first  half  af- 
ter pulling  away  to  a  13-5  margin 
in  the  first  six  minutcc;  on  the  sit 
shots  of  Don  Engelken  and  Bill 
Ouselcy. 

Traili^ig  by  28-26  at  intermission. 
North  Carolina  came  back  to  lie 
it  at  the  start  of  the  second  half 
on  seven  straight  foul  shots  — 
foui-  by  Rosenbluth,  who  had  just 
one  field  goal,  and  three  by  Tom- 
my Kcarns. 

That  put  th6  nuK^feated  Tar 
Heels  in  front  by  35-28.  and  the 
Indians  never  got  closer  than  four 
}  points— at  4»-45  and  51-47  wita 
I  about  eight  minutei?  left  to  play. 
At  this  point  Kearns  hit  on  four 
layups  io  a  row  to  pull  North  Car- 
olina into  a  comfortable  lead. 

BRtNNAN  HIGH  SCORER 

Pete  Brennan  led  the  Atlantic 
Coast  Conference  team  with  20 
points,  while  Joe  Quigg  had  18  and 
Ke&ms  14.  Engelken  had  18  points 
for  the  losers,  whose  outstanding 
performer  was  Bob  Hoitsma  wit'a 


Some  tasty  treats  arc  in  store  for  avid  followers  of  the  tank  sport  {  17  points  and    22   rebounds.   The 
in  this  area.  After  the  State  meet  in  Raleigh,  the  UNC  swimmers  re 
turn  home  for  three  dual  meets,  one  n  return  bout  with  State,  and 
three  championship  meets. 

Clemson  and  Maryland  visit  Bowman  Gray  Pool  along  with  State, 
while  the  Carolina  Collegiates,  the  ACC  championship  and  the  NCA.V 
champion;?hips  will  all  be  reeled  off  here. 

Cagers  Have  Five  Games  In  January 

The  month  of  January  is  a  light  one  for  Carolina's  basketball  team 
The  Tar  Heels  have  only  foiu-  more  games  afer  last  night's  clash 
With  William  &  Mary  They  face  Virginia  and  Clf'm.son  at  home  thjs 
weekend.  Western  Carolina  in  a  gym  dedication  battle  at  Cullowhct. 
next  week,  and  State  at  Raleigh  Tuesday  night.  If  the  locals  can  get 
"by  State,  that  winning  streak  and  number  two  ranking  should  be  safe 
'til  February.  . 

Despite  warning  signals  from  Coach  McGuire,  the  Clemson  and 

Virginia   games  don't  look  too  threatening.    The  Cavaliers  have 

backcourt  dandy  Bill   Miller  and  little  else,  while   Clemson   has 

been  weakened  by  the  loss  of  two  top  players  via  the  suspension 

route. 

It  couldn't  happen  to  a  nicer  fellow.  Retired  Carolina  head  babe 
ball  coach  Bunn  Heam  has  been   voted  the  "Will  Wynne  Award   as 
the  North  Carolinian  who  contributed  the  most  to  baseball  in   195(t. 
The  veteran  coach  beat  out  Clyde   King,  Johnny  Temple  and  Enos 
Slaughter  for  the  honor. 

Two  prediction:  Jim  Tatum  wMI  NOT  go  to  Indiana,  and  Eddie 

Teague's  replacement   will  be  Jack   Hennemier.   And  congratula- 
tions to  Teague  for  his  recent  step  upward  in  the  coaching  ranks. 

It  was  a  well  deserved  hpnor. 

It  looks  like  the  end  of  the  road  for  UNC  grad  Vic  Sexias.  The  old 
man  of  amateur  tennis,  Sexias  recently  wound  up  his  sixth  Davis  Cup 
campaign  on  a  losing  note  in  Australia.  Sexias  can  go  vn\h  no  re- 
grets, however,  for  during  his  stay  near  the  top  of  the  ladder  he  won 
just  about  every  tournament  there  was  to  win. 

The  composite  record   of  verity  winter  sports  teams   here  is 

19^1.  How  many  schools  can  top  that  mark? 
Harvey  Salz  is  now  working  in  New  York,  and  reportedly  will  be 
on  'his  way  back  to  Chapel  Hill  come  next  fall.  And  Ray  Stanley  has 
turned  into  the  McCrary  Eagle's  leading  scorer.      « 

Duke  coach  Hal  Bradley  says  Carolina  is  doTmitely  hotter  than 

Kentucky.  Yet  the  Wildcats  are  breathing  down  UNC's  nock   in 

both  major  polls.  Despite  two  losses,  Kentucky  is  rated  third. 
Next  year's  Dixie  Classic  field  will  include  both  St.  Louis  and  San 
Francisco  with  Kansas  a  possibility.  But  the  chances  of  landing  Wilt 
the  Stilt  are  very  slim. 


Tar  Hceis  grabbed  53  rebounds 

10 

38  for  the  Tribe 

but 

shot 

barely 

over  30  per  cent— 30 

of  66  field 

goal  tries. 

THE  SUMMARY: 

North  Carolina 

a 

F 

P 

T 

Rosenbluth  f 

1 

8 

1 

11 

Brennan  f 

6 

8 

3 

20 

Hathaway  c 

0 

1 

0 

I 

Quigg  c  ^^ 

5 

8 

3 

13 

Kearof  g 

6 

2 

0 

14 

Cunningham  g 

1 

2 

4 

4 

iludovieii  g 

1 

2 

2 

4 

Totals  ' 

20 

?H 

13 

7i 

William  4  Mary 

C 

F 

P 

T 

kapian  f 

1 

2 

2 

4 

Hoitsma  f 

5 

7 

4 

n 

Lange  f 

3 

2 

4 

8 

Cornell  c 

0 

0 

5 

0 

Sanacrs  c 

2 

0 

3 

4 

EIngelken  g 

8 

2 

4 

18 

Ouseley  g 

5 

0 

4 

10 

Totals 

24 

13 

26 

61 

North  Carolina 

26 

45  — 

71 

William  A  Mary 

21 

33  — 

*1 

Bethea  Favored  Over  Folley 
In  Television  Bout  Tonight 


SYRACUSE,  N.  Y.  ^^^— Heavy- 
weight Wayne  Bethea  of  New  York 
his  been  installed  a  7-5  favorite 
to  defeat  Zora  Folley  in  their  na- 
tionally televised  IG-rounder  to 
night  at  the  War  Memorial  Audi- 
torium. 

The  tavorite's  role  went  to 
Bethea  despite  his  one-point  lo.vs 
laat  month  in  New  York  to  the  24 
year-old  Chandler,  Ariz.,  boxer. 

Folley,  who  is  expected  to  weigh 
.n  at  162  pounds,  has  been  tabbed 
as  a  stand-up,  classic  style  boxe^- 


To  Sooner-Miami  Meeting 
Oklahoma  Prei^y  Says  Nc 

NORMAN,  Okla.  WV-Cr.  George 
L.  Gross,  president  of  the  Univer 
sity  of  Oklahoma,  yesterday  vir 
tualJy  put  an  end  to  efforts  to 
match  CM^ahoma  and  Miami  in  a 
post-season  football  game  for 
Hungarian  relief.  He  announce^^ 
he  was  against  such  a  contest. 

"I  see  no  possibility  of  such  i 
football  game  and  I  personally 
recommend  that  such  a  game  not 
be  played,"  Cross  said. 

Cross  said  he  would  be  inclined 
not  to  favor  such  a  game  for 
many  reaisons  including  the  fact 
the  season  ha*  been  over  too  long 
to  bring  the  boys  back  into  shape, 
it' would  take  at  least  two  weeks 
and  another  climate  for  prepara- 
tions, and  it  would'  take  the  play- 
ers out  of  scfiool. 


with  a  damaging  counterpunch. 

In  eoptrast,  Bethea,  also  24,  em 
ploys  a  wade-in  attack  that  has 
beaten  12  of  20  opponents,  six  by 
kaiockouts.  Folley  has  a  27-2-1  rec- 
ord, including  18  knockouts. 

The  heavier  Bethea  (200  pound*) 
scored  his  most  impressive  vic- 
tory in  a  decision  o^er  ex-Heavy- 
weight Champion  Ezzard  Charles 
last  year  in  Ne,w  York.  Another 
good  mark  on  Betheas  record  i<-a 
seven-round  knockout  over  Haroid 
Carter. 


^  Walt  Oisney'f  i 

mm 

with  Stokowski 

NOW  PLAYING 


Cardina 


.  •  -•  ^-"'"^^^  ■     ■•'■  W 

>Mfh«ii  !»•  earn*  to  hor'roem  at  nivhtw. 
was  W  to  kiae  or  to  kill..;?' 

COLUIMM  mCTURCS  (MMnts 

JTEWART      „    JEAN 

GRANGER  •  Simmons 


BOB  and  MONK 
of 

TOWN& 
CAMPUS 

SALUTE 
Athlete  Of  The  Week 


PETE  BRENMAN 
Peft  Br*nnan,  6-7  forward 
on  Carolina's  highly  touHd 
basketball  Ham,  has  b««n 
nam»d  Athlafa  of  th«  Wa«k 
following  his  sparkling  de- 
fensiv*  play  and  rebounding 
abilitias  against  Wak*  Forest 
in  the  Dixie  Classic  in  Raleigh. 
Brennan<s  consistent  play  con- 
tributed greatly  to  tbe  Tar 
Heel's  trhimph  •*  the  Classic. 


bv 


We  WOTt  btm  to  drop 
TO^N  I  tAMPUS  and  pick  out 
a  shirt  to  his  liking— -compli- 
ments ot;  tHe  house.  ^    -r^y- 

We  wanttthe  old  end  young 
^Hke  of  Chapel  Hill  to  n>ake 
TOWN  a  CAMPUS  their  heed 
quarters  for  the  finest  in  men's 
clothing.  Drop  in   toda) 

TOWN  & 

CAMPUS 


LENNIE  HAS  26.5  MARK 


Rosenbluth  Still  Trails 
Wallace  In  Point  Race 


GRSENSBORO  —  (AP)  —  South 
Carolina's  Grady  Wallace  slipped 
slightly  in  the  scoring  average 
colunm  this  past  week,  losing 
ground  as  a  result  to  idle  North 
Carolina  forward  Lennie  Rosen- 
bluth, but  the  Gamecock  sharp- 
1  shooter  still  leads  the  Tar  Heel 
]  ace  by  a  solid  three  points  a  game 


N.  C.  State  and  Bucky  Allen  of 
Duke  are  fourth  and  fifth  with 
respective  averages  of  17.9  and 
17.2. 

Through  last  Saturday  night, 
only  three  ACC  player?  averaged 
18  points  or  better,  compared  to 
10  at  this  stage  last  season. 

Individual     shooting     accuracy. 


as  the  season  approached  the  half-    however,  appears  to  be  improved, 
way  mark.  No  less  than  four  players  hit  50 

Wallace,    who    has    been    over)  per  cent  of  their  shots   to  date. 


who  has  been  over 
the  30-point  mark  for  the  past 
three  weeks,  is  now  averaging  29.3 
points  through  11  games  to  lead 
the  Atlantic  Coast  Conferctnce's 
individual  point-producers. 

ACC  Service  Bureau  Compila- 
tions show  Rosenbluth  right  on 
Wallace's  trail  with  a  26.5  average. 
The  two  will  meet  in  a  face-to- 
face  duel  in  Chapel  Hill  Feb.  22, 
and  it  could  take  that  game,  or 
even  a  later  one  in  the  ACC  tourn- 
ament, to  decide  with  finality  the 
ACC  scoring  champion  for  the 
season.  '  !*•  '#B?^ 

I      Vine*  Yockel  of  Clemson  \&  the 
No.  3  scorer  with  an  average   of 

i  19  points  a  game,  John  Richter  of 


These  are  Richter  .566,  Bob  Seitz 
of  N.  C.  State  .510,  Tommy  Kearns 
of  North  Carolina'  .505  and  John 
Maglio  of  N.  C.  State  ,503. 

Three  players  are  shooting  free 
throws  with  greater  accuracy 
than  Wake  Forest's  Jackie  Mur- 
dock  did  (.857)  when  he  won  ACC 
honors  and  placed  second  in  the 
nation  last  year. 

Ernie  Wiggins  of  Wake  Forest 
has  hit  .907  of  his  attempts  from 
the  fwul  line.  Seitz  has  hit  .895  and  lection 


Coaches  Look 
For  Jobs  At 
NCAA  Meet 

By  HUGH  FULLEDTON  JR. 

ST.  LOUIS  wn— A  horde  of  mus- 
cular, greying  football  coaches, 
some  with  their  eyes  glinting  with 
thoughts  of  new  jobs  and  others 
saddened  hy  the  loss  of  old  ones, 
poured  .into  St.  Louis  yesterday 
for  the  start  of  the  34th  annual 
American  Football  Coaches  Assn. 
meeting. 

The  result  was  that  the  talk 
around  hotel  lobbies  rather  over 
shadowed  the  routine  doings  of 
the  51st  NCAA  convention,  which 
still  is  in  the  committee  stage,  and 
the  other  allied  groups. 

About  a  dozen  major  college 
football  coaching  positions  are 
open  at  this  stage  and  there  prob 
ably  are  ^  dozen  people  here  who 
would  like  to  get  each  job.  A  lot 
of  assistant  coaches  probably  will 
be  hired  or  interviewed  this  week, 
too. 

As  usual,  the  men  Who  shouli 
know  the  answers  arc  being  very 
closp  mouthed  about  the  whole 
matter  while  the  ones  who  keep 
hearing  reports  will  tell  almost 
anybody. 

Roughly,  here's  the  situation: 

Missotiri  Athletic  Director  Don 
Faurot,  who  has  to  pick  his  own 
succeijsor  now  that  he  has  retired 
from  active  coaching,  says  that  in 
tcrviews  have  been  suspended  un- 
til ihe  coaches  meetings  end.  Ha 
has  talked  to  some  14  candidates 
so  far  but    hasn't   made   any  se 


Murdock   .895.  I 

Wallace  is  the  top  rebounder  of 
the  conference  with  a  14.5  aver- 
age. Jim  Newcomt-  of  DiLke  ha.s 
14  aM  Richter  13.  I 


Most  prominent  names  recently 
added  to  the  list  were  Frank 
Broylea.  CJeorgia  Tech  assistant, 
and  Phil  Bensl<»n  of  th**  San  Yrnn- 
ci.<c)  49*(.Ms,, 


■t  < 


"i^- 


^!H 


.'•  y 


Large  Collection 

Imported  Flannel, 

Tweed,  And  Shetland 

SUITS 


ia^ 


Were  up  to 
|75 


Now 
$48.75 


From  Our  Regular  Stock 

SPORT  COATS 

Shetlands,  Rumson  Tweeds, 

And  Harris  Tweeds 

Were     ■       :  ^.^■:^\  Now 

$45 $34.95 

$55       u      $44.95 


-V'  SPECIAL! 

One  Group 
SPORT  COATS 

Were       "  "*'  Now 

$45  $27.95 


ENTIRE  STOCK  f"*  v/ 
WOOL  SLACKS        ^ 
Reduced  $3  Per  Pair 

(Off  Regular-  Price) 


TOPCOATS 

Tweeds  &  Shetlands 


Were 
$65  to  $75 


Now 
$48.75 


COMPLETE  STOCK 
Men's  &  Women's  Cashmere 

SWEATERS 

Cardigans  —  Pullovers 
—    Long  and  Short  Sleeve 

REDUCED  $4  PER  SWEATER 


SHETLAND  CREW  NECK  SWEATERS 
REDUCED  $3  PER  SWEATER 


Julian' 


-•^^^»«!^BW- 


U.N.C.   Library 


EJen   Qiils"  "As   British   Prime  Minister;   Blames   Health 


ONDON    ,?i — Sir  Anthony   Etlen,   choking  back   tears,  resigned 
Jnesday  as  Prime  Minister— with  the  explanation  his  health  pre- 
|ited  his  continuing. 

Richard  Austen  Butler,  Conservative  Party  leader  in  the  House 
jf  Commons,  seemed  to  iT\ost  politiciar»s  to  be  Eden's  likely  suc- 
cessor. 

the  leader  of  the  opposition  Labor  Pai-ly,  Hugh  Gaitskell,  called 
for  a  general  election  "because  the  whole  cabinet  has  publicly 
klcntificd  themselves  completely  with  the  foreign  policy  pursued 
',  .  .  in  the  last  three  months  " 

But  there  was  no  indication  the  Laborites  would  get  their  wish 
immediately. 

The  Conservatives  won  their  last  election  in  May,  1«$,  and 
have  three  years  to  go  before  another  is  necessary.  But  a«  th» 
majority  party  they  could  call  one  at  any  time  they  desired,  or 
political  developments  could   force  them  into  one. 

Eden,  50.  stepped  down  while  the  repercussions  still  were  sound- 
ing from  the  iil-staiTod  invasion  of  Egypt  he  authorized  in  October. 
He  resigned  with  "'utmost  regret,"  saying: 

•I  do  not  feel  that  it  is  right  for  me  to  continue  in  office  .  .  . 


knQwin«i  that  I  shall  be  unable 
to  do  my  full  duty." 

The  n*w  Prim*  Ministar  is 
*x|>ectei«i  to  take  efifc*  tomor- 
row. 

Butler,  54,  is  a  cool,  intellec- 
tual type  who  has  spent  most  of 
his  career  as  a  quiet  theorist  in 
politics. 

Both  he  and  Harold  Mac]Mil- 
lan.  another  possibility  for  the 
job,  arc  short  on  what  is  known 
as  "the  common  touch."  But  so 
was  Bkien.  MaoMiilan.  62,  is 
Chancellor  of  the  Exchequer — 
bos?  Oi  the  nation's  austerity 
program. 

There  still  was  «  chwic* 
that  a  dark  horse  might 
om*r90     for     the     job,     ind 


.  among  those  mentioned  in  this   category  was  Duncan  Sandys,  Sir 
Winston  Churchill's  son-in-law. 

Eden  succeeded  Churchill  in  April,  1955. 

The  dominant  party  in  the  House  of  Commons  forms  Britain's 
government.  It  normally  designates  the  Prime  Minister,  subject  to 
the  approval  of  the  sovereign,  in  this  ca^c  Queen  Elizabeth  II,  to 
whom  Eden  submitted  his  resignation. 

Eden,  to  the  end.  stuck  by  his  determination  "never  to  apologize" 
for   the    invasion    o"f   Egypt — a   venture   that   split    Britain   and   im- 
periled this  country's  relations  with  the  United  States. 
,     In  a   farewell  statement,  he  said  only. 


f 


"When  I  returned  to  this  country  a  month  ago  (from  a  three 


SIR  ANTHONY  EDEN 

.  .  .  v>ith  utmoat  regret 


^weeks  rest  in  Jamaica)  I  hoped  that  my  health  had  been  suffl- 
kiently  restored  to  enable  me  to  carry  out  my  duties  effectively 
for  some  considerable  time.    That  hope  has  not  been  realized. 

"I  do  not  feel  that  it  is  right  for  mo  to  continue  in  office  as 
the  Queens  first  minister  knowing  that  I  .=  hall  be  unable  to  do  my 
full  duty, by  my  sovereign  and  the  country. 

"I  have  therefore  decided  with  the  uimost  regret  that  I  must 
tender  my  resignation  to  the  Queen  which   her  majesty  has-  been 


graciously  pleased  to  accept." 

Four  doctors — one  the  Queen's  own  physician — released  a  stit*- 
ment  saying  Eden's  health  "gives  cause  for  anxiety." 

Reaction  to  Eden's  resignation  from  other  nations: 

MOLINi:.  111.  <.¥i — Clement  Attlee,  former  British  Prime  Miirister, 
said  Wednesday  he  is  "ver\-  sorry"  to  hear  that  Prime  Minister  An- 
thony Eden's  health  "has  broken  down."  He  declined  further  com- 
ment. 

WASHINGTON  '-Jf^ — President  Eisenhower  -Wednesday  voiced 
hope  that  his  "old  and  good  friend''  Sir  Anthony  Eden  soon  will 
recover  and  enjoy  '•many  useful  years  of  happines*'. " 

MOSCOW  '.4'— The  Soviet  news 'agency  Tass  (Wednesday)  attribut- 
ed Pi  ime  Minister  Eden's  resignation  to  failure  of  his  policies  rather 
than  ;o  his  poor  health. 

In  Cairo,  unofficial  Egyptian  reaction  to  fVime  Minister  Eklen's 
resignation  was  jubilant. 


WEATHER 

Showers,  possibility  of  snow  to- 
day, with  expected  high  in  40s. 
Low  tonight,  30s. 


VOL.  LVII   NO.  79 


^hc 


EDUCATION 

Is  the  child  growing  away  from 
its  parents?   See  editorial,  page   2 


CampUle  UF)  Wtrf  Servie* 


CHAPf L  HItL,  NORTH  CAROLINA,  THURSDAY,  JANUARY    10,   1957 


Offices   in   Graham   Memorial 


FOUR    PAGES  THIS  ISSUE 


Eden   Saw   'Prize 
Slip  From  Hands 


PRESIDENT  MONTEITH 

.    .    .   of   the    Phi 


LONDON  i^  —  Sir  .Anthony 
Eden  spent  a  lifetime  training 
to  become  Prime  Minister, 
gi-asped  the  glittering  prize  21 
months  ago  and  then  saw  it 
.■<io'.vly  slip  from  his  hands. 

The  one-time  golden  boy  of 
Bnti  h  politics  went  from  crisis 
to  crisis  ai  home  and  abroad  as 
soon  as  he  became  Prime  Mi.i- 
isler. 

This  elegant,  cultured  m:^n, 
the  bc:iu  ideal  of  diplomat:;,  la- 
bored for  years  bringing  Brif'.sh- 
.Vmerjoan  relations  to  blossom. 
Then      this      same      59-vear-old 


Jim  Monteith  Ejected 
To  Head  Phi  Sociefy 

Jtep,  Jim  Monleifh.  senior  from  SyivA,  was  elected  president  o* 
fhr  Philanthropic  Litcrarj  Society  during  an  executive  sessfov  tiK» 
veek.  '  -  ..^ 

Founded  in  ■  1795.  Ihc  Phi  is  one  of  the  two  divisiona*  of  the  old 
(."onrrrtl    Society    and    is    the    sec 


end  oldest  collegiate  debating  so- 


Legislature 
Slates  Last 
Fall  Meet 


Tlie  Student  Legislature  will  roll 
down  the  curtain  on  another  sem- 
ester's action  at  tonights  7:30 
mectin?,'  in  Phi  Hall. 

On  tap  are  two  bills  to  be  deoat- 
ed: 

1.  A  bill  authorizing  the  student 
body  treasurer  to  pay  bills  incur- 
red when  the  Hungarian  relief 
speaker   appeared    on    campus. 

PJxpenditures  were  printed  'eaf- 
iefs.  S12;  banquet  at  the  Carolina 
Inn.  S90.65.  Graham  Memorial  re- 
ception. S13.80:  total.  S116.45. 

2  A  'oiU  establishing  a  commit- 
tee to  contact  students  who  pass 
bad  checks-  to  Chapel  Hill  mer- 
chi.nts. 

This  committee,   the   bill   points 
out,  wi'l  have  no  judicial  authuri- , 
ty  whatsoever.  It  will  merely  turn 
ish     iiason"     between     merchants 
and    student    government    towarJ ; 
counteracting   bad    checks.  I 

Tne  third  item  on  the  legisla- 
tive agenda  is  the  election  of  a 
ser;;:eant-at-arms.  . 

Speaker  Sonny  Evans  particular- 
ly urged  all  legislators  to  attend 
the  las*  ^mesterly  se..yion.  \ 


GM'S  SLATE 

The  foliowirtg  activities  are 
scheduled  for  Graham  Memori- 
al today: 

Student  Council,  6  p.m.,  Grail 
Room;  University  Party  Caucus, 
6:30  p.m.,  Roland  Parker  1; 
Young  Republicans  Club,  7:30 
Pm.,  Roland  Parker  2;  Student 
Party  Caucus,  6  p.m.,  Roland 
Parger  3;  Sound  &  Fury,  2  p.m., 
Woodhouse  Conference  Room; 
finance  Committee,  4  p.m. 
Woodhouse  Conference  Room; 
Dance  Committee  Court,  7  p.m., 
Woodhouse  Conference  Room; 
interdormitory  Court,  7  p.m.. 
Council  Room. 


cicty  in  the  United  States.  It  has 
been  a  continuous  body  since  its 
rigin  except  during  the  Civil 
War'  and  a  short  time  during 
World  Wars  I  and  II. 

!      Until    the    mid    1930s    the    Phi, 
along    with    the    Dialectic    Senate. 
made    up   student   government   on  ' 
the   U\C   campus.   It   became  one  I 
of   th?    original   endowers   of   the 
Louis    Wilson    Memorial    Librarj-.  1 
Among  the  outstanding  alumni  of , 
the  Phi  are  Rufus  King.  Chancel- 
lor    Robert     House     and     Albert 


Coates.    director 
df  Government. 


of    the    Institute 


\, 


Following  the  executive  session 
the  bill  of  the  evening  was  tabled 
on  the  motion  of  Rep.  Jim  Tolbert. 


During     the 
Leon    Frahsin, 
lanta.  Ga..   wa^s 
Phi.    After    the 


executive  session 
freshman  of  At- 
initiated  into  the 
meeting   the    Phi 


went  to  a  local  restaurnat  to  cel- 
ebrate the  election  of  new  officers. 
Other  new  officer-s  are  John 
Brooks,  president  pro  tern;  Don 
Tolbert.  treasurer;  Bitty  Dent, 
clerk;  Jess  Stribling,  parliamen- 
tarian, and  James  Duval,  critic. 


Eden,  by  his  policies,  placed  a 
strain  cu  those  reUtions  without 
precedent  in  this  century. 

Even  Eden's  political  enemies 
coateded  that  few  British  lead- 
ers have  played  in  harder  luck. 
He  was  the  bi^  loser  in  ■'he 
aborti\e  British-Frendi  military 
inlcr\'ention  in  Egypt.  Egyptian 
Piesident  Gamal  Abdel  Nasser, 
whom  the  Briti«^  ^  and  Frencn 
hoped  to  unseat  as  one  product 
of  thcii  Suez  invasion,  still  rides 
secure. 

Eden  s  troubles  started  almo^'i 
at  the  moment  thait  Sir  Winston 
Churchill,  the  man  who  bad 
guided  him  to  t))«  top.  turned 
oxer  the  I»rime  Minfeter's  s'^at 
to  his  care. 

A  nt".tional  newspaper  strike 
waf  in  progress  when  Eden  at- 
taiaed  the  high««t  political  of- 
fice in  iJic  Und  on  A^l  6,  Ifl^. 
J|f  >alled  a  national  elecUn 
tjie  toilaBfittg  saumth  *ad  !% 
Conservative  Party  v(is  rettimed 
to  i>ffice  with  inereascti  stren^h 
ia  the  Houst  of  0>innKMis. 

•ut  evAn  thk  triumph  w^ 
marrM.  Thr««  days  k«f*re  the 
electien  thousand  if  tf*ek 
workers  wni  mi  Btrlk*.  Be- 
ferre  the  new  PlrlfMiMnt  had 
time  te  meet,  iaiMr  tretibles 
on  the  nationality  riilwayv 
causftd  Ed*n  t*  4l«cl«r*  i  stat^ 
of  emervency 

These  disputes  »oa  were  set- 
tled, but  they  left  their  mark 
on  Britain's  economy,  balance 
on  a  knife  edge  as  it  has  been 
since  World  War  U. 

In  the  international  field 
there  were  hapes  irf  happier 
times —also  soon  to  be  dashed. 
The  Geneva  summit  conference 
of  1955  gave  prospects  of  easing 
E:ast-W'est  tensions  but  a  final 
ending  ji  the  old  cold  war  el'id- 
cd  Eden  and  Other  leaders'  of 
the  Western  powers. 

Through  the  last  half  of  1955 
criticism  mounted  against  th« 
administrative  policies  of  Eden's 
government  at  home.  There  was 
concern  because  Britain  had  to 
struggle   so    hard    to   keep    the 

(See  EDEN,  pP4i9  3.) 


IN  TUESDAY  EVENING  CONCEKT; 

University's  Wilton  Mason 
To  Play  2  New  Piano  Works 


The  new  year's  first  concert  ol 
the  Tuesday  evening  series — a 
piano  rci;ital  by  Dr.  Wilton  Mason 
oi  the  UNC  Music  I>cpt. — will  fea- 
lUie  two  piano  works  never  before 
performed  in  Chapel  Hill. 

The  concert  is  scheduled  ^t  8 
p.m.  Tuesday  in  Hill  Music  Hall 
and  is  open  to  the  public  without 
charge. 

0r.  Mason's  first  selection  will 
be  "'Suiti;  in  E.  Minor"  by  Rameau, 
a  French  composer.  Dr.  Mason  ^ 
trai..*cri'oed  the  suite  from  micro- 
film and  enlarged  it  in  order  to 
gel  a  performing  version. 

The  music  is  not  generally 
available  in  print  in  this  country. 
Originaily   it  was  written  for  the 


early 
sic. 
The 


18th  ccnturj'  keyboard  mu- 


second  new   wors.  will   be 


present  concert,  Dr.  llison  will  h'> 
musical  director  for  "Brigadoon,"' 
to   be   presented   by    the  Caj-olina 


new 

in 

brief 


Aldermen  To  Meet  Monday 


\JS  Demands  Committee 
On  Hungarian  Situation 

UNITED  NATIONS.  N.  Y.  — 
(AP)— The  United  States  disre- 
garded mounting  Soviet  bitter- 
ness yesterday  and  demanded  cre- 
ation of  a  special  U.  N.  Commit- 
tee to  seek  out  the  truth  on  the  i 
Hungarian    .situation. 

U.  S.  .\mbassauor  Henry  Cal)ot 
Lodge  Jr.  called  on  the  80-nation 
<}eneral  Assembly  to  adopt  a  reso- 
lution setting  up  a  five-nation 
watchdog  committee  that  could , 
dig  up  facts  an\'\vhcrc>  and  any-  ; 
time  they  could  be  found.  j 


To  Discuss 


Democrats  Propose 
Mid-East  Substitute 

WASHI.VGTO.V  -(AP)—  Ex- 
pressions of  surprise  and  criticism 
yesterday  greeted  a  proposed 
Democratic  substitute  for  the 
Eisenhower  Middle  East  Res«>lu- 
tion. 

The    substitute    could    build    up 
support  later,  but  for  the  moment  i 
no    one    was    predicting    Congress  I 
would   go   for   it. 


Atlanta  Negroes  Ride 
Buses;  Militia  Called 

ATLANTA  — (AP)—  Six  Negro 
ministens.  singing.  pra>*ing  and 
reading  the  Bible  yesterday 
launched  the  first  organized  at- 
tack on  the  traditional  racially 
separate  seating  pattern  on  At- 
lanta  city   buses. 


CAROLYN    CORLEY 

. .  hniivut  ior  nltat  is 


Russian  composer,  Moussorgsky.  It 
is  well  known  in  ita  orchestral 
version  and  arrangement?  for  a 
symphony  orchestra  have  t>een 
made  by  Ravel,  Lucien  Caillet  ant) 
others. 

The  work  is  originally  for  piano 
»olo,  the  way  Dr.  Mason  will  play 
it  Tuesaay.    It  is  a  series  of  tone 
pictures  inspired  by  an  cxhibiiion 
of  paintings  and  sketches  by  the 
composer's  friend.  Harlmann. 
Aft«f  intwrmslshm.  Or.  Mason 
will  play  Listt  Sonat*  in  i.  Mi- 
nor. It  pmploys  Litxf  ft  4«vke  •! 
manipulating     th«m««     ««mpre- 
Kensively    threufhowf    S5    min- 
utes. 

Dr.    Mason    recently    conducted 
the  first  concert  of  the  new  Uni- 
harpsichcrd  and  is  an  example  of  i  ver.iity     Chorus.     Following     the 


Their  initial  attempt  to  take 
seats  in  the  front  section  — norm- 
ally reserved  for  white  people — 
on  an  Atlanta  lYansit  System  bus 
ended  somewhat  lindecisivcl;>- 
when  the  vehicle  was  immediately 
pulled  out  of  service  as  mechani- 
cally  defective.  '  a     journalism     class     in     count-J'' 

Shortly   thereafter.  Gov.  Marvin '  "^^^^PaP^r   <"diling   Wedne-sday. 


Do  You  Love  The  Human  Race? 
Then  Work  For  Country  Paper 


By  JACKIE  HAITHOOCK 

If  you  love  the  luinian  race,  country  iiew.-papering  is  just  the  Ihin 
for  you. 

That's  the  opinion  of  Carlton  Morris,  editor  of  The  Gates  Count 
Index.    He    spoke    to    members    of ' 


The  Dance  Dept.  of  the  Wonien'i 


Griffin    put    the    State   Militia   on 
a   standbj-  basis. 


President  Delivers 
'State  Of  Union'  Today 

WASHINGTON  — (AP)—  Presi- 


•Morris    recently    won    a    $1,500 
first    place   award    in    the   Ted    V. 
Rogers     1956    Journalism 
contest     for    his     highway 


ind  beauty  and  joy.  and  don't  ex- 
pect lile  to  be  handed  out  to  you 

on  a  silver  plattef  of  flowery '  P'l.^'SK'al  Education  Uept.  will  pre 
beds  of  ea.se.  and  you  don  t  mind  |  ^'^'"l  ^  pro-ram  of  original  coin- 
scme  work  that  is  often  hard  and    P<>-^iti«»ns  in  modern  dance  Sundaj 

Award  i  discouraging     and      rather     hope-  i  ^^  "  P'"-  i"  xMeinorial  Hall. 

safety  i  le^s  but  never  dull,  then  vou  will        The  dance  numbers  are  all  first 


make  a  good  country  editor." 

.At    the    conclusion    of    his    talk 
Morris  played  a  tap<'  recording  of '  dividuals    or   groups    dancing    the 


campaign.    A  $500  grant    included 

among    his    rewards,    to    go    to    a 

journalism    school    of    his    choice, 
dent  Eisenhower   and   his   cabinet    ^'-^^  given   to   the   I'NC   School   of    an  intenicw  between  himself  and  '  nu"i'>t'i"-^ 
yesterday    reviewed    the    contents  j  J'*"''"^''"*'"-  |  .Arthur   Godfrey   difring   his   prize 

of  his  State  of  the  Union  message, ,      Morris,     .saying     his     education    trip  to  New  York. 

which   he'll    deliver    in    per.son    to  j  had   been   only   in   the   "univcrsitv  ,  . 

Congress    today,    and    the    Budget    <>*    ^^ard    knock<. "    praLscd    the    lo  ,  Q  '       I    D      ♦ 

Message    which    goes    to    Capitol    t'"'  stli»'ol  for  its  excellent  teach- j  ^060101    KQiGS    .- 
Hill   next   week.  i"i?  I  ■  i*.!,^ 

He  told  students  that  his  great- j  Jgf  FOT   UNC 

est     satisfaction    and    joy    in    his  ' 

business    had     been    in    doing    ai   A*   ^^r\^wr^    QI^^n^ax 

little    to    relieve    the    suffering   of  | '^'    V-ZpeiQ    OlIOW 

the   hunuin   race.  j      .Students     will     receive     special 

Dr.  Lionel  Stevenson.  James  B.  |  "•*  you  are  not  interested  in  j  nites  for  the  Chapel  Hill  Concert 
Duke  Professor  of  English  this,"  he  said,  "you  should  get  j  Series'  presentation  of  the  Chica- 
at     Duke     University,     will     pre-  ;     a  job  on  a  daily."  '  -u  Opera  Ballet  in  .Memorial  Hall 

sent    a     talk    on     William    M.  j      Morris  .cited    some    ot    his   stor- j  Jan.  22  at  8  p.m. 
Thackeray,    "The    Reluctant    No-  \  ies    w  hich    he    felt    had    in    some ''      A  student   rate  of  .S4  has   been 
velist,"  at  the  bimonthly  meeting    way    relieved    this   sulTering.    Out-    •*><^'l    'or  this   performance  and   the 
of   the    English    Club    today    at    8    standing  amoni;  tlie.se  was  a  story  ;  remaining  three   programs  on   the 

p.m.     in     the     Library     Assembly  ;' written  about  a  crippled  man  who,  i  .series.  This  special  price  has  been  I ';"'^^"'*'      Amanda     Meigs,     Hope 
Room.  wanting  a  wheelc^iair..  had   placed    offered  to  students  who  are  inter- 


ing  Ban 

Ey    RAY    LINKER  / 

I  lu'  lioaid  (»l  .\Uloniien 
will  nuei  .Moudav  i(»  tliscus.s 
tlu'  Iil»iiv4  <d  the  .S.  ( .(•iuniljia 
.St.  iwo-liom  |);n"lviii;4  rotiit- 
lioii. 

riif  Im>.U(1  j)i  i\  i(»iislv  had 
;i'.;rce<l  In  lilt  tlu-  U.'iii  as  of 
);m.  •',  l(»i'  (>o  <l;iv>  il  seven 
frill erni lies  —  Sigma  Chi.  I*i  Kap- 
pa .■\lpha.  Pi  Lambda  Phi.  Sigma 
.\lplia  Epsilon.  Delta  Kappa  Epsil- 
on.  Sigma  Nu  and  Beta  Theta  Pi 
—  submitted  a  feasible  solution 
to  their  parking  problem  by  Jan. 
3. 

Town  Manager  Thomas  Rose  yiid 
Wednesday,    however,    the    alder 
(Ser   PARKING.  Page  3) 

UP  Backing 
Additional 
Parking  Lots 

•Were  back  ol  biiiidin;^  addi- 
lional  parking  lots  on  campus  100 
|)eicent."  Chairman  Mike  Wein- 
man said  at  a  University  Party 
meeting   Tuesday   night. 

Weinman  mentioned  the  possi- 
bility of  eonstructins  such  lots 
"west   of  the   Forest   Theater." 

Student  body  President  Bob 
Young  said  .vesierday  that  this 
was  legally  impossible  because  of 
the  terms  of  t.he  deed  which  stales 
that  the  area  must  reamin  a  wood- 
ed area. 

Weinman  criticized  the  Student 
Party  lor  "refusing  to  pass  a  bill 
.setting  up  a  committee  to  study 
the  parking  situation  because 
President  Bob  Young  already  had 
established   such   a    committee." 

The  committee.  Weinman  said, 
has  accomplished  little  or  nothing. 

Student  Party  Chairman  Jim 
Holmes  said  yesterday  the  Young- 
appointed  Traffic  Advisory  Com- 
mittee was  set  up  to  look  into 
the   whole  situation,  including   the 

_,.      ..  ,     ^       possibility  of  having  more  parking 

composi'ions.  The  theme  and  cho- 1  j  . .  *^  * 

ieot;raphy  is  the  choice  of  the  in- 


CoedsWill 

Interpret 

On  Sunday 


Duke  English  Scholar 
To  Talk  On  Thackeray 


The  program  is  undc,r  the  di 
lection  oi  Dance  Instructor  Ruth  I 
Price.  Mrs.  Manly  Wade  Weilman 
will  ;.vMTC  as  piano   accompanist 

Sunday  nights  program  features 
Symphonic  fitudes  Theme:  Varia- 
tions 1  and  IV  by  Schumann  with 
Sipra  Hose.  Carol  Dennis,  Ka 
Smi'h.  Kuth  Watkins  and  Nancy 
Royster. 

Jayne  Beatty  will  choreograph 
■Release"   by  Phillips. 

Betty  Jinette  will  dance  a  solo, 
"Melange"   by  Bernstein. 

•'Desneration  Street"  (an  im 
pression)  by  Bernstein  includes 
-Mu.y  Finley,  Betty  Jinnette,  UuLh 


Young  made  the  fidlowing  .state- 
ment upon  hearing  ot  Weinman's 
accusations: 

•I  will  not  attempt  to  justify 
the  action  or  lack  of  action  of  the 
Traffic  Advisory  Commi.ssion.  but 
will  express  my  complete  feel- 
ings about  the  overall  situation  in 
a  statement  on  Thursday  (today)." 

Chairman  Weinman  .said  he 
had  talked  with  Director  of  Stu- 
dent Activities  Sam  Magiil  and 
confirmed  there  were  ••>everal 
thou.sand  dollars  lying  around" 
which  were  to  be  used  for  pro- 
viding additional  parking  facili- 
ties. 


r  »ller  skates  on  a  rocker  and  used  i  e.sted   in   the   series  spon.sored   bv 


Sparger,  and  Patricia  Wilson.. 
■Son4  for  the  Morning"  by  Bar- 


The    meeting    has    been    '"ovedl       ^^^^    to    maneuver    his    inven- 1  the  Chape!  Hill  organization.  The  ^"'^  ^^'^">^  P'*^-«"»^d  by  Carol  Den- 


from    Friday    to    Thursday    night 
for   this   month 


nis  and  "Lament  for  W-hat  Is",  a 
Hebrew   .Melody,  wil   be  presented 
by  Carolyn  Corley. 
Colleen  Crenshaw.  Carol  Dennis. 


Pictures  at  an  Exhibition  '  by  the  PlaymaVcrs  March  1-3, 


tion.  Fruits  of  the  story  were  not  i  student  series  .seats  are  unres«.n"ved 

only  a  wheelchair  for  the  man.  |  in  the  do\\  nstairs  area  of  Memor- 
Dr.  Stevenson  is  a  former  i  but  al.so  the  comment  from  the  i  ial  Hall. 
Chairman  of  the  Dept.  of  English  man  that  Morris  was  "the  best  j  "Merry  Widow."  with  music  by 
at  the  University  of  Southern  :  fiicnd  I  ever  had."  '  [Franz  Lehar.  and  'Kevengc-."  an  j  ^'''''  -^'^^'bena  .Mairin  will  dance  to 
California.  Among  his  writings!  Morris  felt  the  following  state- !  adaptation  from  "II  Trovatore"  by  j  ""^""^  I^'"  by  Yamada. 
are  such  works  as  "Darwin  Among  !  nient  summed  up  his  attitude  to  !  Isaac  Van  Grove,  are  the  original  ^  Amanda  Meiggs  will  portray 
the  Poets",  "The  Ordeal  of  j  w ard  country  newspaper  produc- '  ballets  to  be  performed  by  the  ;  Briiten's  -Jocasta." 
George  Meredith".  and  -The  |  tion:  •If  you  love  the  human  race  j  company.  The  Chicaso  Opera  Bal- 1  The  performance  will  be  open  to 
Showman  of  Vanity  Fair',  the  life  i  in  all  its  weakne.ss  afld  strength  I  let  is  under  iht  diretlion  of  Kuth  I  the  public.  No  admission  will  be 
of   William  Thackeray.  1  and  glory  and  sadness  and  pathos '  Page.  1  charged. 


IN  THE  INFIRMARY 

Those  in  the  infirmary  yester- 
day included  Misses  Sylvia  Mc- 
Arthur,  Rosemary  Lemm<>nd, 
Maxine  Spitzier,  Delores  Tay<»r, 
Laradei  Lawrence,  Sally  Sim^ 
son.  Scsan  Merrick,  Ann  Bach- 
man,  Jo  Anne  Lesley,  Eugenia 
Rawls;  and  Riley  Montgomery, 
Robert  Lewis,  Sheiton  Turner, 
Harley  Shuford,  John  Hunni- 
cutt,  Harmon  King,  Floyd  Me- 
Lamb,  Edwin  Kearnes,  ChaHes 
Lore,  John  O'Ferreil,  James  Du- 
gan,  Leon  LaSalle  and  John 
Sewell, 


•  *  '  9  mm  ^mmm^fmmmmmmmm^^mmmmmmmm 


pAcft  rwo 


THI  DAILY  TAR^EiL 


THURSDAY,  JANUARmi,  lf57   ..^; 


THURSOi 


New  trend  In  Big  Business; 
Investments  In  Education 

In  this  time  ulirn  pe<»^lf  uptiih  t(.»n>i<:lcr  cUisiiio  tlif  piihlii'  sthuels,- 
it  i>  good  to  sec  soiiu'hodv  taking  an  aciixc  step  toward  improvino  ifie 
state  of  education  ii1  the  nation. 

DuPonls  million  dollar  grant  to  tt»llegcs  and  iuii\crsities  ^\ill  be 
welcomed  in  the  cdiuatioti  world,  attd  shonld  he  greeted  with  equal 
enthusiasm  l»v  c\crv  Ainciiian.  This  nmtpanv  is  a  big  business,  and  bus- 
inc-sses  do  not  tici  biu  b\  taking  loolish  risks,  anil  they  don't  stav  big  by 
making  unsound  inveMineius.    I  his      tiicsc  cndervors.  but  judgiug  troiu 


OTHER  NEWSPAPiRS  SAY: 


CAROiElDOSCOPE: 


million  dollars  is  n»oie  than  a 
boon  tor  education,  it  is  a  vcrte  of 
(onfidence  in  the  I'nited  States. 
In  a  time  nl  internal  struggle  and 
world  <risis  stu  li  a  displa\  ol  se- 
turu\  stands  out  like  a  shining 
bea<  on. 

If.  in  ;;n  era  when  states  wail 
alxuu  M»\e»cit»ntv  (a  word  it 
might  be  well  h>r  somi'  jnilitic  iaiis 
to  look  upi.  maiulaiuini;  the  "pui  i- 
t\""  ol  the  white  ra«  e  flo<»k  at  what 
the  white  rate  did  to  the  puritv 
ol  the  Negroi  and  in  the  s«me 
breath  run  tot  he  federal  gt»yern- 
ment  after  e\erv  explosion,  dt ought 
or  fire.  pri\;iic  Imsine.sses  and  in- 
dustries are  willing  to  take  o\er 
the  maltreated  burden  of  the 
state,  this  nation  is  sine  to  be  here 
a  long  time. 

These  grant<  ate  said  to  be 
"awards."'  in  are  "given  \o."  l>ut 
^\hat  ha\e  the  states  done  t<»  de- 
serve gifts  fM"  awards?  \'eiv  little. 
TNC  retei\ed  grants  beiause  the 
School  of  Kdutation  has  pioneered 
in  setting  up  (ertain  (ourses  specif- 
ically for  the  training  of  stirool 
teachers.  Noith  Clarolina  has  of 
couise  supported     the     s<hoo|     in 


the  niuuber  of  insti  lit  tors  being 
atltled  to  the  ranks  of  the  states 
teathing  piolession  it  looks  like 
the  supfxnt  is  little  tnore  than 
moral.  Is  the  thiltl  growing  awav 
horn  the  }Kuentr  Will  st  ht)ols 
stimedav  be  supjxMted  maiidv 
through  tiie  bejiigh  gifts  t)f  indust- 
ries whit  h  taiinot  piosper  Avithtmt 
etlut  ated    personnel? 

(.eriaiuly  ihe  big  businesses  of 
Aiuerit  ;i  have  no  sut  h  iiueiuions. 
An  edntatitmal  institution  with 
hardtlri\ing  exetutives  tailing  the 
plavs  iirstead  t»f  etliuators  would 
lea\e  a  lt)t   tt»  be  tiesited. 

Ihe  pt>pulatiou  of  the  l/nitetl 
Stale  is  gn>wing  prodigitmslv. 
less  Mtulh  are  tlrt>pping  out  t>f  the 
sthools.  anti  ukii  riage  is  no  lt)nger 
a  tletenent  to  getting  a  college 
edutation.  ^<^ung  people  are  get- 
ting better  itleas  earlier.  An  at - 
fulnulaiion  of  veais  is  nt)  Itmger 
letpiisiie  h»r  wistlom.  When  the 
xeneiable  intlivitluals  in  t  barge  of 
suih  things  realize  this  ;  nd  pio- 
\  ide  ft>r  the  mental^  development 
of  the  natitm's  vouth.  the  soundness 
t)f  investments  from  people  like 
Dul'oui    win    be    ptoven. 


Youth  Deserves  A  Chance 


In  spite  of  ti<»wded  tondiiitut* 
in  the  sthonls  Aniericati  vouth  is 
sht>wing  its  i.dents  t)f  ingeiutity 
autl  learning;  e.uliei  than  ever. 
Abilitv  to  ojyaui/e.  .ithuinister  antl 
maintain  :  le  bctomiiig  evervtiay 
chaiat  teristit  s   (rf  «'yonu«'    people. 

Howevei  it  seems  that  the  l(»ng- 
intumbeius  of  .\merf<an  s<h  iety, 
the  people  who  h.ive  had  to  strug- 
gle agaiirst  ctoiiomit  busts  to  m.ike 
a  wav  in  the  w«i«4tl.  aie  afraiti  to 
let  the  new  voiuh  spe;  '^  out.  (he 
tonttition  takes  on  the  air  ol  try- 
itig  t<»  box  all  vouthlul  e\id)erancc 
in  a  toiuainer  so  ltM»selv  tonstrutt- 
etl  that  teeUagc»sadisui.  mu;4v;<*in^' 
unmairiet!  motheis  aiul  all  the 
t>ther  unpleasantries  ol  I'tuh  ten- 
turv  glowing  up  s|k'\v  oiu  in  a 
tonstaiu    stiCcin. 

i.ookin»  a  little  tieepei  iiuo  this 
imjH-rfett  totitainer  we  find  a  dif- 
ieieiit  elemeiH.  Heaxilv  patkled  bv 
rhvihiu  au<l  blues.  Kl\  is  Pjesley 
retoifls  antl  tlual  exhausts  is  an  in- 
satiable (iiriosiiy.  Bat  k  in  the  so- 
talletl  "loariiig  2o*s"'  this  In'tivtne 
the  (hive  of  ytnith  to  "ti v  anvthiiig 
onte.  '  At  tuallv  this  willingnevs  to 
risk  life  antl  limb  hn  the  sake  ol 
cx|Jerience  is  not  all  batl.  It  gt»es 
farther  than  seerng  h«»w  fast  a  car 
will  go.  how  mut  h  altohol  is  nece*s- 
arv  brr  tomplete  inebrietv.  F.x|>er- 
ieiKe  \>  also  ;.vailable  on  the  ath- 
lerit  fieltl.  working  on  a  entertain- 
ment tioupe.  org.uii/ing  antl  cai- 
ryiug-off  a  finitl  laising  drive  ft>r 
a  tomuHinitv  hospital  t>r  playing 
in  a  bautl. 

Appatently  the  men  and  women 
*"T? 

The  Dailyi'ar  Hed 

The  official  itutlent  publication  uf  tbe 
Publications  Soaid  of  the  University  ol 
North  Carolina,  whei'e  it  is  published 
daily  except  Monday  and  examinatiot 
and  vacation  periods  and  summer  terms 
Entered  as  second  class  matter  in  thi 
oust  office  in  Chapel  Hill,  N.  C,  undei 
the  Act  01  March  8,  1870.  Subscription 
rates:  mailed. "$4  per  year,  $2.50  a  semes 
ter;  delivered.  $6  *year.  $3.50  a  semef 
ter. 

Editor FRED  POWLEDGt: 


Managing  Editor 


CHARUE  SLOAN 


News  Editor  NANCY  HILL 


Business  .Manager 


BILL  BOB  FUEL 


Sportr  Editor 


LARRY  CHEEK 


Subscription  Manager'"- 
Advertising  Manager  .  ^. 
Circulation  Xfanager 


Dale  Staley 
Fred  Katzin 
Charlie  Holt 


NEWS  STAFF— Clarke  Jones.  Ray  Link 
^r.  Joan  Moore.  Pringle  Pitkin,  Ann^' 
Drake.  Edith  MacKinnon,  WaUy  Kuralt, 
Mary  Alys  Voorhees,  Graham  Snyder, 
BilJy  Barnes,  Neil  %ass,  Gary  NJchols, 
Page  Bernstein.  Peg  Humphrey,  Phyllis 
Maultsb}>  Ben   Taylor 


BUSINESS  ST.AFF— Rosa  Moor«.  Johnny 
Whitaker,  Dick  Leavilt,  Dick  Sirkin. 

SPORTS  STAFF:  Bill  King,  Jim  Purks, 
Jimmy  Harfier.  t>i^e  Wible,  Charley 
Howson. 

Night  Editor  Cortland  Edwards 

Proof  Reader  Coral  Goldman 


who  haVe  li»ggeti  a  greater  lunnber 
(»f  years  think  vt>uth  is  all  drag 
Kues  anti  gang  wars.  Ihev  are  \erv 
wrong.  Further,  thev  attribute 
these  tpialilies  to  the  influeiite  of 
totnif  botiks.  thit»bbiiig  musit  antl 
tight  lev  is.  .\t  least  they  are  stand- 
ing on  a  little  firmer  gitjund  here. 
but  they,  are  still  wrong.  This 
tontept  that  the  dress  makes  the 
tlelintpient  is  tme-sidetl.  It  is  more 
a  tpiestiou  of  whith  tame  first, 
the  chicken  <»r  the  egg. 

light  lev  is.  ItMig  hair  antl  the 
t»thei  paraphanalia  leftniuers  ton- 
tent  rate  on  are  only,  extern itms  t»f 
tl»e  intlependent  jK-rst>naliiies  t»l 
the  individual,  antl  really  don't 
make  a  kid  a  t  limin.il. 

It  is  hvjMKraty  h>r  the  eltler 
Antericans  tt)  be  suspicitms  of  all 
\(»uih  betause  t»f  ytJUth's  pugs, 
when  the  eltlers  themselves  can't 
stamp  tint  the  v  it  e.  i.t>rrupiit>n 
and  geneitms  sttnk  <»f  pugs  of  their 
tiwn  age  level. 

1  he  time  has  ttmie  ftn  a  kintl 
«»f  integiatitin  Hot  in  the  headlines. 
.\ii  integration  of  age  levels.  .\ 
green  brat  is  as  t  apable  of  a  brain- 
storm as  a  hf)aiv-hairetl  patriaith. 
antl  he  shtMiltln't  be  lumped  in  a 
t  las-til  it  at  ton  with  teenage  gang>» 
betause  he   is  inferior  in  years. 

Most  voung  petjple  have  nt>t  suf- 
feretl  the  privations  t>f  deprcssitm 
antl  poor  edutational  background. 
I'liis  is  much  to  the  trt^-tiit  of  men 
antl  wtmten  w;ho  have  livetl  the 
llt>ratio  Alger  stories  and  don  t 
want  to  see  their  offspring  dt>  the 
same.  Bin  at  the  same  time  they 
must  reali/e  that  ttiday's  genera- 
tion has  had  a  wealth  t>f  blessings, 
ai'itl  for  the  most  part  are  more 
iiieiitallv  mature  betause  of   it. 

Sure  the  tli  link's  son  at  the  tlepth 
of  the  tiepression  matured  in  a 
hurrv,  but  it  was  a  one-sidetl  ma- 
tuiatit»ji.  It  hKketl  the  notltling  ac- 
tpi;rinteine  with  the  ptiets.  states- 
men antl  great  people  of  literature 
antl  histtny  which  fertilizes  the 
growtJi  of  totlay's  men  antl  wtynen. 

With  this  earlier  antl  more  tt>m« 
piric  '^l»^  v».|oj»MU'lU  the  v<»ud»  yC 
.\meiua  is  tap^lilr  .»?  greater 
things  than  murtler  and  rape. 
Somebotlv  should  give  them  the 
opptirt  unity. 

Tradition 
At  Old 
Dook  U. 

Duke  rniversity  has  a  new  btiok- 
shop. 

What's  the  name  tif  the  ntV/ 
bookshop? 

( iuess. 

"The  (withic  Bookshop. ' 

What  else? 

i  hat's  what  we  like  aliout  Duke: 
It  has  a  Brifley  Murphy  approath 
to  all  'things  modern. 


Race  Problem  Must  Be  Worked  Out    Knowland'sPli 

Disturbing  Knigi 


The  Christian    Science 
Monrter       ^ 

"If   everyone    over    35    would 
just    keep    his    mouth    shut    the  ' 
rest  of  us  would   get   this  thing  • 
worked  out   in     three     or     four 
years." 

This  quote  from  a  young  South- 
erner referring  to  the  issue  of 
desegregation  is  probably  au- 
thentic. But  it  has  been  requot- 
ed  so  often  that  it  has  taken 
on  somewhat  the  dignity  of  a 
folk   .raying. 

There  are  several  significant 
things  about  this  sentiment.  One 
is  the  characteristic  confidence 
of  youth  as  yet  unsobered  by 
the  .stubborness  of  great  prob- 
lems. 

Conversely,  there  is  youth's 
impatience  with  the  generations 
ahead  which  manifestly  haven't 
solved  all  difficulties  with  neat- 
ness and  dispatch. 

These  characteristics  should  be 
taken  account  of  and  the  proper, 
discount  figured.  But  they  must 
not  be  allowed  to  overshadow  the 
positive  content   that   is   there. 

Note,  for  in.stanco.  that  this 
unknown  youthful  sag?  did  not 
say.  "The  rest  of  us  will  abolLsh 
all  consciousness  of  race  in 
three  or  four  years."  He  said, 
we'll  •  have  this  thing  "worked 
out."  He  sonsed  that  here  is  a 
problem  which  could  not  be  dis- 
posed of  simply  by  erasing  the 
figures  from  the  blackboard. 

Perhaps  this  recognition  that 
a  problem  by  definition  has  an 
answer,  and  that  the  answer  is 
findable  is  the  most  important 
thing  about  this  youthful,  off- 
hand statement.  For  it  presup- 
poses the  open  mind.  And  the 
open  mind  is  above  all  the  pro- 
duct of  education. 

This  is  borne  out  by  systematic 
opinion  polling  and  by  just 
shrewd  observation.  It  is  not 
to  say  that  the  "better"  educat- 
ed always  and  automatically  come 
up  with  the  right  answers  to 
the  worlds  difficulties.  That 
would    be  claiming   too   much. 

For  there  is  sometimes  an  over- 
educated  detachment  from  hu- 
man experience  that  can  work 
against  the  necessary  balanet^  of 
vision    and    practicality. 

By  and  large,  however,  and 
in  proportion  to  the  soundness 
and  e-xfe-nt  of  their  .schooling 
educated  people  are  not  afraid 
of  new  ideas;  they  know  that 
while  all  change  Ls  not  progress, 
progress  inevitable  brings 
change. 

So  they  are  more  willing  to 
try  for  solutions  than  are  tht>se 
who.  less  fortunate  in  their  con- 
tact with  ideas  and  with  other 
people's  experience,  fearfully 
e.xpend  their  energies  in  fighting 
back  change — and  with  it.  prog- 
ress. 

This  priceless  virtue  of  the 
open  mind  is  not  a  touchstone 
for  this  one  problem  of  dome.s- 
tic  racial  adjustment  alone.  It 
has  proved  th'»  .solvent  for  in- 
numerable difficulties  that  have 
threatened  to  block  the  onward 
flow   of    progress. 

Nor  is  it  a  product  solely  of 
books  and  laboratories.  The  pro- 
cess of  education  u.sually  brings 
with  it  a  multiplying  of  human 
asst>ciatk»ns  and  a  broatiening  of 
st>t4al  experience — from  stepping 
lieyond  the  family  circle  into 
the  schoolroom,  to  "gding  away" 


to  cf>Jlege.  to  its  modern  extens- 
ion:   exchange    of    students    and 
teachers    between    nations. 
The  educated,  the  open  mind 

• 


may  put  together  better  answers 
because  it  likely  has  amassed 
greater  stockpiles  of  the  ingred- 
ients. Or  it  mav  simplv  provide 

• 


friendly  soil  to  gtwd  answers 
whtn  they  come  along.  For  eith- 
er reason,  it  is  a  goal  worth 
seeking. 


'We're  Hoping  To  Become  Americans  Too' 


«.i.>»^ 


^•r-7  -ntm.  «ar<s»*v*4*TO^  f^turr-  «• 


ir 


PROSPECT  S.  RETROSPECT: 


Bob  Young  Rings  Office  Belle 


Neil  Bass 

Not  many,  if  any.  .schools 
throughout  the  country  can 
btiast  of  t-he  close  working  ar- 
rangement which  our  executive 
branch  of  student  government 
has  at   Carolina. 

This  became  evident  dufring 
Christmas  when  President  Bob 
Young  presented  u  sparkling  en- 
gagement ring  to  Secretar>'  Jack- 
ie Aldridge. 

The  dale  for  official  "stutlent 
union"  in  the  executive  branch 
has  been  set  for  early  surtHner. 
we  understand. 

Heartfelt      congratulations      to 
the    fine   executive. 
OPPORtUNirt 

One  of  the  m,)st  outstanHmg 
opportunities  for  service  to  the 
campus  is  now  open. 

That  is  to  say.  positions  on 
the  Orientation  Committee  are 
now  open   and   available. 

.Nowhere  may  a  student  use 
his  talents,  whatever  they  may 
be.  to  better  advantage  toward 
perpetuating  the  fine  tradition 
which  we  like  to  call  "Carolina 
Spirit:"  and  nowhere  may  stu- 
dent.s  be  more  helpful  toward 
instilling    the    highest    traditions 


of   our   Honor     System      in     the 
forthcoming    student    generation. 

Volunteer  your  services.  You'll 
be  surpri.sed  at  the  advantages 
and  pointers  which  you'll  pick 
up  as  you  serve  others  in  this 
vital  capacity.  The  number  to 
call  is  4352,  or  drop  around  stu- 
dent government  offices  in  Gra- 
ham Memorial. 
HOUSING    SHORTAGE 

Probably  the  leading  candidate 
for  the  dubious  honor  of  "Mtjsl 
ni.scouraging  .^nnouncenient  in 
Short-lived  19.57"  is  the  recent 
headline  in  The  Daily  Tar  Heel: 

"Little  Easing  of  Housing 
Shortage  Seen  for  UNO's  Spring 
Semester." 

This  is  indeed  a  tow  blow  af- 
ter a  publicized  announcement 
earlier  in  the  semester  that 
'  three-man  rooms  would  be  .prac- 
tically nil  after  the  present  se- 
mester. 

The  University  should  proceed 
as  rapidly  as  possible  with  con- 
"struction  of  new  dormitories 
which  a  $2  million  loan  from  the 
Federal  Housing  and  Finance 
Agency    made    possible. 

More  appalling  is  the  housing 
situdlion  for  married  students. 


In  this  area.  University  of- 
ficialdom and  trustees  should 
hurry  through  the  proposal  for 
"200  additional  \'ictory  Village 
units."  Even  this  action  will  far 
from  completely  alleviate  the 
housing  problem. 

Di  WONT  DIE 

Congratulations  to  the  Dialec- 
tic Senate  for  a  superbly  plan- 
ned inauguration.  Fiinctions  like 
this  are  certainly  a  necessary 
shot  in  the  arm  for  the  fading 
oratorical    art. 

.\nd.  with  the  rhetorical  briJ- 
lance  of  men  like  01*  Daniel 
Webster  and  John  C.  Calhoun 
.softly  fading  in  the"  twilight, 
now  Northern  Liberals  within  the 
Democratic  Party  want  to  stamp 
out  the  filibuster. 

Oh.  for  the  golden-tongued  days 
of  old.  when  throats  wer  bold; 
when  Lewis  Brumfield  called  the 
Daily  Tar  Heel  "The  second  Daily 
Worker."  and  Ed  Yoder  and  Lou- 
is Kraar  called  Jim  Tatum  a 
"parasitic    monster." 

We're  being  facetious,  of 
course;  but  let's  rescue  the  art 
of  rhetoric  from  the  gray  ob- 
.scurity  of  To  -  Hell  -  O  -  vision 
screens. 


Pogo 


By  Walt  Kelly 


NOW  gpTTA  lOOi  AT  IT  THii  VVAV, 

"  Hg  ffeE'$PgCK9  MIS  MOMMA" 
fuT>tt6<e5T  A  UN'tAPVl  ■" 

"»»HO,^<;NHgTA<r 


0UTJf$'A$TV6GflANPg 
F^lMAl-gl^WiN'wAJMgpU/. 

y»^($Pi$CCvg8gP?vT*^g 
piAKlNTl^g0BOOMClO$Er 


AN  PfT«NIA$  S«HT  AN  .gPT  _ 

-'Lgprw.rHA0ffo>fg 
I  M6APTAN'nOC«AnC6 
\  ro  WIN  rue  WAlfttH' 
COHTiST-you  \S 


'^ 


Frank  Crowther 

Sen  William  F.   Knowland's  revelation  Mondaj 
that  he  will  not  seek  rt-election  was  not  tt>o  un-1 
expected,  even  though  many  of  the  papers  referred 
to  his  action  as  "dramaiic"   in  its-  nature. 

It  was  reported,  also,  that  the  Senator  refused 
to  close  the  door  on  the  possiblility  that  he  may 
seek  the  Republican  nomination  for  governor  next 
year,  which,  undoubtedly,  would  be  a  stepping  stone 
towards  the  Presidency  in  1960. 

Knowlanti  may  bo  doing  one  of  two  things. 

He  is  either  getting  out  of  the  stew  and  wild 
melee  of  congress  or  he  is  being  a  very  shrewd 
politician  and.  as-  they  say.  "going  for  the  luindle," 
i.e.  the  I*residency  through  the  governership. 

Gov.  GotKiwin  Knight,  the  present  governor  in 
Cjalifornia,  will  untloubtedly  sprout  a  few  mtwe  * 
grey  hairs  now  that  he  suppt)ses  Knowland  is  sneak- 
ing up  from  the  East  and  will  swt)op  down  on  his 
little  domain  within  the  houi.  Knight  has  also  been 
mentioned  as  preparing  a  witches'  brew  whicb 
would  be  digestible  by  the  old  guju-d  Republicans 
who  most  likely  will  have  to  be  pacified  before  con- 
t-enting  the  nomination  ol  1960  .  .  .  even  if  Knight 
is  just  looking  to  'oe  Nixon's  ruirtiing  mate. 

Knowland  won't  accept  such  a  position.  If  he 
goes  at  all,  he  will  go  for  the  top.  This  leads  tme  to 
speculate  that  Knowland  is  being  extremely  fore- 
sighted  by  getting  out  while  the  frost  is  on  the 
cherry  trees.  A  man  who  has  been  btrth  a  senator 
and  a  governor  —  even  if  for  only  a  short  while 
as  the  latter  —  would  mt)st  asiiiredly  be  looked 
upon  as  a  popular,  administratively  well-versed  in- 
dividual. We  shall  see  what  we  shall  see. 
*  *  * 

'Students  have  bcconie  infatuated  with  ^tter 
bourgeois  literature,  formalistic  painting  and  wild 
jazz  music,"  •^ 

So-  charged  the  Trade  Union  paper  in   Moscow    ' 
on   Januar>'  8th,    according  to  an  Asst)ciated   Press 
story. 

It  s-eems  that  the  Russian  students  are  finally 
making  their  mark  known  —  a  mark  that  well  may 
flunk   the   cJoviet   system 

The  Trade  Union  paper  went  on  to  list  five  col- 
leges and  institutes  from  the  Baltit?  to  the  Urals 
which  had  supposedly  di.^graced  themselves  by  con- 
doning to  "rude  and  slandering  atucks  on  the 
Soviet  press."  By  these  attacks,  the  report  went  on. 
the  students  had  placed  the  Komsomol  (the  Com- 
munist youth  organization)  in  a  position  which 
seemed  to  oppose  the  Communist  party,  and,  at  a 
miniitg  institute,  the  students,  who  are  given  money 
to  cover. their  living  costs  for  services  to  the  in- 
stitute, "turned  every  pay  day  into  a  drinking  day.' 

"The  five  institutions  are:  The  Leningrad  Insti 
lute,  Moscow  State  University.  Polytechnical  Insti- 
tute at  Sverdlovsk  in  the  Urals,  Leningrad  Po.'y- 
technical  Institute,  and  The  Moscow  Mining  Insti- 
tute. 

The  Supreme  Soviet  can  pacify  the  i>easants  by 
giving  them  more  consummers  goods,  biit  what  will 
they  offer  the  students  —  salt  mines  or  servitude? 

YOU  Said  It; 

Coed  Defends 
Dress4ng  Habits 

Editor: 

In  reply  to  the  letter  in  the  Sunday  edition  if 
the  Daily  Tar  Heel  from  "Mr.  Name  Withheld  By 
Request"  concerning  the  dress  of  the  UNC  coeds, 
I  Would  like  to  say  a  few  works. 

First  of  all  I  would  like  to  inform  the  vmter  — 
if  he  doesn't  already  know  it  —  it  is  winter,  and 
at  this  time  of  the  year  it  is  a  little  difficult  tor 
a  young  lady  to  try  to  be  oeautifuJ. 

Somedays  it  turns-  so  cold  that  most  of  the  fairer 
sex  would  rather  stay  cuddled  up  beneath  thei- 
blankets,   but   instead   have  to  go  out   to  get   their 

learning  Just  what  does  he  expect  her  to  wear  

a  bathing  suit  so  she  will  appeal  to  his  eyes? 

It  seems  to  me  that  he  must  have  stayed  up 
nights  trying  to  think  this  up. 

First    the    Carolina   men   complain   about    their 
dates  wearing  high  heels-  to  a  football  game  —  when 
I  assure  you  she  is  not  comfortable  but  merely  try- 
ing to  put  in  a  pleasing  appearance  —  saying  they    •*" 
would   like  to  see    their  dates  dressed  more  com 
fortably,  then  they  turn  light  around  and  complain      • 
if  the  coeds  try  to  keep  -.varm  in  the  winter. 

And  certainly  they  do  care  what  they  wear,  for     ; 
they  like  to  keep  warm  just  like  he  does.  (Or  Ls  he 
an  iceberg?) 

But  before  he  starts  worrying  about  the  trash  '' 
in  his  neighbor's  yard,  he  d  bej*  be  cleaning  up  '- 
his  own  yard. 

Coming  from  a  coed  at  another  college  we  coeds 
might  be  able  to  take  it,  but  coming  from  a  Caro- 
lina gentleman"  —  and  a  freshman  at  that  ~  I 
would  say  he  had  best  take  stock  of  his  own  sex  ' 
before  he  starts  critizing  the  others.  Has  he,  I 
wonder  ever  paused  a  moment  to  see  just  hOw  the 
young  men  dress  around  here? 

Of  course  .,«ome  tr>-  to  appear  in  the  latest  Ivy 
League   styles,  but  on  a  closer  observance  he  will      - 
probably  find  their  socks   have   holes  in  them   or      !! 
they  haven't  shaved  in  a  week. 

Then  there  are  those  who  forget  to  have  more 
than  one   haircut   every  three  months,  or  who  ab       ' 
•sent-mindly  come  to  clas.:  with  theb-  shirttails  out.      * 
Even   the    best    of   them   have   faults,    and    yet    h  .• 
spentis  hi.;  time  critizing  t!re  coeds. 

After  all.  he  has  to  .cmember  this   is  more  or      - 
less  a  mans  world  over  here  at  the  Hill,  and  th*      ' 
men  are  our  example.  If  they  can't  do  any  bettc?      ■ 
than  is  evidenced  at  present,  what  does  he  expect 
out  of  a  cf>ed? 

And  in  conclusion.  Mi-.  Name  Withheld  By  Re- 
quest. I  would   like  'o  wish  you  a  bon   voyage  t» 
Durham.  I  sincerely  hope  your  thumb  doesn't  suffer      ' 
from  the  cold  and  that  you  find  the  Duke  ladies, 
who,  according   to  your  insinuations,  do  care  what       ' 
clot  he  J   Lhey  wear.  But,  one  last   word  of  advict- 
Be  careful  how  you  dress,  be  clean-shaven  and  DO       - 
get  that  long  over  due  haircut  —  they  may  kntw 
you   are  a  Carolina   man   if  you   don't! 

NanM  Withheld  By  Raquact 


Four   I" 
aa.  the  po| 
are:    Calvi 


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THURSDAY,  JANUARY  10,  1957 


THi  DAILY  TAR  HttL 


PAGE  THRtft 


)nda)r 
un- 
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wild 
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in- 


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vet    h  • 

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expect 

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ladies, 
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p(^  DO 
'  knorw 

iMUMf 


Police   Blotter 


Four  UNC  students  were  listed '  Paul  Stanley  Green.  Jr..  speeding: 
on  the  police  bioter  Jan.  7.  They  (  Burit  D.  Craven,  speeding;  Matt- 
are:    Calvin   A.   MeUett,   speeding;   hew  Thomas  Wood,  speeding. 


(ktaqns 


(Autkt  o/  ''Btirtftot  B9y  With  Chfk,"  «U.} 

WHO  WENT  TO  THE  PROM 
...AND  WHY 

"Hello,"  said  the  voice  on  the  telephone.  "Thki  is 
Werther  Sigrafoos." 

"Who?"  said  Anna  Livia  Plurabelle. 

"Werther  Sigafoos,"  said  Werther  SIgafooa.  "I  sit 
next  to  you  in  psych.  I'm  kind  of  dumpy  and  I  alwavs 
wear  a  sweatshirt." 

"I'm  afraid  1  don't  remember  you,"  said  Anna  Livia. 

"I'm  the  one  whose  lecture  notes  you've  been  borrow- 
int  for  two  years,"  naid  Werther. 

"Oh.  yes!"  she  said.    "What  do  you  wish,  Walter?" 

"Werther,"  said  Werther.  "What  I  wish  is  to  take 
you  to  the  Junior  Prom  next  April." 

"That's  months  away,  Westnor,"  said  Anna  Livia. 

"Werther,"  said  Werther.  "Yes,  I  know*  but  vou  are 
so  round  and  beautiful  that  I  was  afraid  you  might 
have  a  date  already." 

"As  a  matter  of  fact  I  do,  Wingate,"  said  Anna  Livia. 

''Werther,"  said  Werther.   "Oh,  drat!" 


"^  tnWo(<^tmffdnc/U[w3is^e^3yMirt 


Anna  Livia  did  not  really  have  a  date,  but  she  was 
expecting  to  be  asked  by  Stewart  Stalwart,  athlete  and 
BMOC,  handsome  as  Apollo,  smooth  as  ivory,  driver  of 
a  2.9  litre  Bugratti,  wearer  of  faultless  tweeds,  smoker 
of  Philip  Morris  Cigarettes,  which,  even  without  his 
other  achievements,  would  by  itself  stamp  him  as  a  man 
of  discrimination,  as  the  possessor  of  a  pleasure-oriented 
palate,  as  one  who  smoked  for  the  pure  joy  of  it,  who  had 
.sought  and  found  a  cigarette  brimming  over  with  ze.st 
and  zip  and  hearty  good  fellowship  —  Philip  Morris! 

Well  sir,  Anna  Livia  waited  for  Stewart  to  a.sk  her, 
but  two  days  before  the  Prom,  to  everybody's  amazement, 
he  asked  Ro.se-of-Sharon  Kinsolving,  a  nonde.script  girl 
with  pavement  colored  hair  and  a  briefcase. 

Anna  Livia  sobbed  for  a  .spell  and  then,  not  wishing 
to  mi.ss  the  mo.st  gala  event  of  the  junior  year,  she 
phoned  Werther  Sigafoo.s. 

"My  Prom  date  has  come  down  with  a  dread  virus," 
she  said,  "and  I'll  accept  your  invitation,  Waldrop." 

"Wertfter"  said  Werther.    "Oh.  goody  gaiideit*!" 

The  next  day  Anna  Livia  received  a  phone  call  from 
Stewart  Stalwart.  "My  Prom  date  has  come  down  with 
a  dread  virus,"  he  said.   "Will  you  go  with  me?" 

"Certainly,"  she  said  and  immediately  phoned  Wer- 
ther and  said.  "I  have  come  down  with  a  dread  virus  and 
cannot  go  to  the  Prona  with  you.  Whipstitch." 

'^'Werther"  said  Werther.    "Oh,  mice  and  rats!" 

So  .Anna  Livia  went  to  the  Prom  with  Stewart  and 
who  do  you  think  they  ran  into?  Rose-of-Sharon  with 
Werther.  that's  who! 

Stewart  had  felt  obliged  to  ask  Rose-of-Sharon  be- 
cause she  always  did  his  homework,  but  she  had  weaseled 
out  because  she  really  wanted  to  go  with  Werther  with 
whom  she  felt  a  great  oneness  becau.se  they  were  both 
so  dumpy.  He  fell  wildly  in  love  with  her  at  the  Prom, 
and  today  they  are  married  and  run  a  very  successful 
five-minute  auto-wash  in  New  Bern,  N.  C. 

Anna  Livia  and  Stewart  are  happy  too.  They  are 
still  juniors  and  have  not  missed  a  Prom  in  six  years. 

®  Max  Shulman.  19S7 

AlVa  well  that  end*  icell,  say  the  makers  of  Philip  Mnrris 
Cigarette*-,  tvho  bring  you  thi»  column  each  week  through 
the  tchoal  year.  And,  »peakin$  of  thing*  that  end  well  —  and 
begin  trell  too -^  try  today'*  settful  new  Philip  Morrin! 


DAILY 

AClKIM 

1.  Variety 
^  ef  coff M 

f .  Kurop«»A 
f .  Oldest 
{H-avidiAA 

IftnfMf* 
1».  HinU 

13.  AromaU* 
iMrb 

U.  Girl's 
nickium* 

14.  HftTMS 

(c^lo^.) 
l5.Jo«tl«  ruMy 

'.      Wi»r4or 

'iT.frtnch  rlvtr 

15.  t>cgra4« 
21.  Taunt 

25.  Gown 

26.  Annoy 

27.  prientAl 
nurse 

2t.  Card  gsmt 
2».ChiUed 
31.  fiehold! 
.33.  Behind  4 
.     vessel 
Sd.  Strike 
Sd.  Depart 
3».  Sharp 

40.  Conical  tent 

41.  Waminir 
signal 

42.  Writing 
table 

IS.  Garden  tools 
DOWN 

1.  Turkish 
soldisr 

2.  Among 
t  Work- 

holdinf    ~ 
4«vict 


CROSSWORD 


4.  Malt 

bcversfs 
a.  Rub  bard 

in  washinf 
«.  Intervitwed 

secr«tly 
r  Eject 
«.  UQden 
(Ibur.) 
•.Edible 

reotsteck 
11.  Ob»crv« 
10.8Md« 
of  a 
e<rior 
iT.QuetUoR 
If.  Satkc 
20.  Perform* 


22.  Conflict 

23.  Places 
apart 

24.  Tellur- 
ium 
(aym.) 

25.Musi« 

note 
3«.Man'd 

nick. 

Batno 
28.  Write 
tO.flmaU 

stream 
tt.Not 

ctoffed 
^High 

(mus.) 


•tS 

Testerdsir'f  Aaswat 

S4.  Plant  ovule 
S9.  Ticker  «- 
39.  C<dleir« 
(Ohio) 
37.  Bait 
39.  Tree 


YOUN«  JtCPUELICAMS 

A  brief  meeting  of  the  Campus 
Young  Republican  Club  wiU  be 
I  held  tonight  at  7:30  in  Roland 
Parker  Lounge  No.  2  of  Graham 
M«nonal.  All  members  who  nlan 
to  attend  the  Young  Republican 
conrentio.i  in  v/instotv^Salem  on 
Feb.  8  and  8  are  urged  to  be  pre- 
sent. Also  anyone  who  wishes  to 
attend  the  inauguration  ceremonies 
in  Washington  is  invited  to  the 
meeting. 
OJMAB    FILM 

Graham      Memorial      Activities 


Medical  School 
Professor  Back 
from  Denmark 

Dr.  G-.  P.  Manire,  associate  pro- 
fessor of  bacteriology  of  the  Uni- 
versity School  of  Medicine,  has 
recently  returned  following  a 
year's  research  work  in  Denmark. 

Dr.  Manire,  working  under  a 
Fulbright  Research  Scholarship 
grant,  conducted  studies  on  the 
nature  of  toxic  components  and 
growth  characteristics  of  influenza 
yirus. 

I'he  work  was  done  at  the  State 
Serum  Institute  at  Copenhagen,  • 
Danish  biological  production  and 
research  center.  Dr.  Manire  and 
his  family  left  Chapel  Hill  for 
Denmark    in   December.    1955. 

While  working  in  Denmark  Dr. 
Manire  made  trips  to  England. 
Italy  and  Sweden  to  visit  labora- 
tories and  other  points  of  interest. 


Bioard  will  present  "Incorigihle" 
today  at  8  p.m.  in  Carroll  Hall  as 
another  ffetture  of  its  foreign  film 
series  for  the  fall  semester.  Thf 
Swedish  picture  concerns  a  trouble- 
some delinquent  boy  who,  after  a 
clash  with  his  inrofesser,  takes  re- 
venge on  the  professor's  daughter 
Tickets  will  be  $.60  for  all  stu- 
dents who  do  not  have  series 
tickets. 
WUNC 

Todays  schedule  for  WUNC,  the 
University's  FM  radio  station: 
7:00  —  Sketches  In  Melody 
7:80  —  This  is  a  Friendly  World 
7;  45  —  French  Press  Review 
8.W  —  BBC  Bandstand 
8:30  —  Politics  in  the  Twentieth 

Century 
9:00  —  Masterworks  from 

France 
»:30  —  Reith  Lecture 
10:00  —  News 

10:15  —  Evening  Masterwork 
11:30  —  Sign  Off 


Dr.  Manire  said  there  was  no 
language  barrier  for  Americans 
in  Denmark  as  a  great  many  of 
the  Danes  spoke  English  and  aside 
from  Danish,  English  is  the  most 
widely  used  language  in  the  In- 
stitute where  he  was  doing  his 
research. 

Before  leaving  for  Denftiark,  Dr. 
Manire  received  a  grant  fpoon  the 
U.  S.  Public  Health  Service  which 
will  enable  him  to  continue  this 
work  on  viruses. 

Dr.  .Manire  holds  B.S.  and  M.S. 
degrees  from  North  Texas  State 
College  and  a  Ph.D.  degree  from 
the   University  of  California. 


Pl«n«  for  YM-YWCA 
Conference  Start  Today 

Plans  for  the  YM-YWCA  con- 
ference set  for  March  2-3  get  un- 
derway this  afternoon  as  the  con- 
ference committee  meets  at  4:30 
p.m.  in  the  Library  assembly  room. 

The  session  will  be  under  the 
leadership  of  Kathy  Legrand  and 
Bobby  Newton.  Newton  was  re- 
cently chosen  to  co-chair  the  con- 
ference for  the  YMCA.  replaccing 
Bud    Stalnaker. 

Members  of  the  committee  are: 
Joyce  Bryant.  Jackie  Haithcock, 
Ann  Morgan.  Phyllis  Kraft,  Joyce 
Alligood,  Frances  Reynolds,  Jean 
Crawford,  and  Ginger  Floyd.  Bill 
Lowe.  Paul  Carr.  Wally  Satter 
field,  Kelly  Wallace.  Ted  Edlich. 
Pete  Julian.  Ben  Ulley,  Frank 
Brown.  Bob  Southerland,  George 
Gwinn.  Stewart  Colson.  Tommy 
Farrell,  Dick  Frank,  and  ^laine 
Ward. 


-Eden- 

(Continited  from  Page  D 
pound  iooking  the  dollar  in  the 
face. 

This  criticism  became  so  'oud 
that  in  a  major  policy  speech  in 
Bradford  last  Jan.  18,  Eden  de- 
nied he  was  going  to  resign,  say- 
ing: 

"The  country  is  not  on  the 
way  down,  and  this  government 
is  not  on  its  way  out." 

Then,  as  the  nionths  rolled 
•long,  Eden  found  himself  in- 
volved deeper  in  the  troubles 
of  the  Middle  Esst. 
He  was  acting  as  host  for  King 
i    Faia-al  of  Iraq  last  July  26  when 
he  was  handed   a  dispatch   an- 
nouncing    Egyptian     President 
Nasser's   nationplization   of   the 
never  batted   an   eye.    He   con- 
Suez  Canal. 

Persons  present  said  Ed?n 
tinued  talking  with  his  guests 
and  bade  them  goodby  wtih  tra- 
ditional grace.  But  he  called  an 
immediate  meeting  of  senior 
cabinet  ministers. 

In  the  months  of  negotiations 
among  the  world's  maritime 
powers  and  with  Egjrptians, 
Eden  often  worked  20  hours  a 
day.  He  still  was  as  faultlessly 
dressed  asr  ever,  but  his  fice 
.showed  the  strain  when  he  ap- 
pea*{-ed  in  the  House  of  Com- 
mons. 

British  and  French  troops  in- 
vaded Egypt  Nov.  5,  and  Eden's 
troubles  piled  higher.  From  the 
United  States  came  word  that 
President  Eisenhower  had  not 
been  consulted  about  the  attack, 
felt  it  was  wrong  and  intended 
to  bring  it  to  a  halt.  Some  Brit- 
isii  Commonwealth  countries  ex- 
pressed sharp  criticia-m. 

At  home  the  opposition  La- 
bor Party  hammered  st  Eden. 
Demonstretions  of  trade  un- 
ionists celled  for  "lew — not 
war."  United  Nations  eondem- 
hatien  strenfthened  Eden's 
trikicM, 


-l^arkirtg-    ^ 

(Continued  from  Page  1) 
man  already  had  set  up  the  two- 
hour  restriction  by  law  and  that 
only  the  Board  of  Aldermen  could 
r^cind  »he  law. 

The  nieeting  is  scheduled  for 
the  Chapel  Hill  Town  Hall  Monday 
at  7:30  p.m. 

Rose  -jaid  he  personally  felt  not 
much  evidence  had  been  presented 
tliat  any  action  had  been  taken. 

But  student  body  President  Bob 
Young  said  he  felt  enough  action 
l;ad  been  taken  by  the  fraternities 
to  Warrant  lifting  of  the  ben. 

Voun«  had  written  Rose  a  let- 
ter earlier  outlining  progres.s  ihe 
fraternities  had  made  toward  al- 
leviating the  situation. 

The  letter,  dated  Jan.  4,  said,  in 
part: 

"In  my  opinion,  the  freterni- 
ties  are  making  progress  and 
will,  in  the  matter  of  «  few 
weeks,  heve  the  situation  greatly 
relieved. 

•There  are  foiu-  fraternities 
which  have  no  additional  projfer- 
ly  for  building  pailcing  areas.  They 
are  the  bigma  Chi,  Pi  Kappa  Alpha, 
Pi  Lambda  Phi  and  the  Sigma  Al- 
pha Ep:>ilon  Fraternites.  The  other 
three  fn^ternities  are  making  plans 
lo  use  ai!  the  possible  space  which 
thty  own. 

"The  Delta  Kappa  Epsilon  Fra- 
ternity is  in  the  process  of  build- 
ing a  lot  behind  their  fraternity 
house  Wiiich  will,  as  I  understand 
it,  park  40  cars.  The  Sigma  Nu 
Fraternity  is  in  the  process  of 
raising  funds  to  construct  a  park- 
ing area  beside  their  fraternity 
house.  The  Beta  Theta  Pi  Frater- 
nity is  converting  the  vacant  lot 
'behind  their  house  into  a  parking 
area 

When  the  work  of  these  three 
fraternities  is  complete,  the  park- 
ing area  in  Big  Fraternity  Court 
should  take  care  of  all  the  auto- 
mobiles owned  by  the  other  four 
fraternities.  Therefore,  I  feel  that 
if  the  restriction  could  be  lifted 
as  was*  agreed,  for  60  days,  the 
three ,  fraternities  will  have  com- 
pleted their  work." 


PATRONIZI  YOUR 
•   ADVIKTISiRS   • 


'Incorrigible'  Slated 
For  8  P.M.  In  CarroH 

The  Swedish  film  "Incorrigible" 
is  on  the  bill  for  tonight's  presen- 
tation by  GMAB's  Foreign  Film 
Series  held  in  Carroll  Hall  at 
8. 

Called  "a  close,  imdoctored  lot* 
at  life"  by  the  UCLA  Daily  Bruin, 
the  film  concerns  the  moral  de- 
cline and  fall  of  a  spoiled  young 
student.  The  student,  played  by 
Stig  Olin,  is  exposed  to  the  over- 
indulgence of  his  wealthy  mother: 
He  drinks,  gambles,  cuts  classes 
and  cheats  in  school,  but  his 
mother  refuses  to  believe  that  her 
I  son  is  bad.  Transferred  to  a  new 
I  school,  he  plies  his  mates  with 
!  champagne,  romances  the  barber- 
shop girl,  and  has  a  run-in  with 
disclplin^.ig  instructor  Stig  Jar- 
rell. 

Tickets  for  the  showing  will  be 
$  .50  for  all  students  who  do  not 
have   series  tickets. 


ACrP  Grapefruit , 

SECTIONS 


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16-Oz. 
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You'll  Love  A&P's  Fresh  Fruits  &  Vegetables  \ 

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DSAL  PACK— HEARTY  &  VIGOROUS— OUR  OWS  ANN  PAGE 

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THI  DAILY  TAR  Hf  IL 


THURSDAY,  JANUARY  10,  V957 


Tar  Heels  Swing  Into  Conference  Warfare  This  Weekend 


Surprising   Matmen 
Have  Won  5  Matches 


JANUARY  SPECIALS 

Th«     South«m     Part     of    H*«v*n 

the  most  popular  book  ever  writ- 
ten about  Chapel  Hill.  Regularly 
$2.49.  During  January  only    $1.98 

Mex-san  Villag*  —  Oupel  Hill's 
i.wn  Josef ina  Niggli  has  produced 
a  classic  worthy  of  a  place  along- 
side "Cannery  Row''  or  "South 
Wind".  Regularly  ^.00.  During 
January*,  an-d  while  our  present 
slock  la^ts $1.49 

Random  Shots  —  Racy  North  Car 
olina  humor,  collected  by  John 
Bragaw.  Our  regular  price,  $1.98. 

During  January  only  %yA9 

And   In  The  Old  Book  Cornor 


Book    Club    S«l«ction«  fjid  other 
tasy  reading  —  Regulary  4«c  each. 

During  January ^..   3?f  ta:h 


THE  INTIMATE 
BOOKSHOP 

205   E.   Frarklih  St. 


North  Carolina's  wrestling  team 
has  completed  the  first  half  of 
its  schedule  and  Tar  Heel  fans 
are  still  a  little  amazed  when  they 
examine  the   record. 

The  UNC  grapplers  failed  to 
win  a  match  last  year  and  the 
year  before  they  were  victorious 
only  once.  But  the  times  have 
changed  for  Coach  Sam  Barnes' 
squad.  The  Tar  Heelsitied  Wash- 
ington and  Lee  in  the  opening 
match  and  since  have  toppled 
Wake  Forest.  Davidson.  The  Cita- 
del, and  Virginia. 

Three  North  Carolina  wrestlers 
are  undefeated.  Captain  Bob 
Wagner,  a  130-pound  senior  from 


Lexington,  N.  C,  has  a  perfect  I 
record  in  four  matches.  Another  | 
senior,  147-pound  Charlie  Boyette,  j 
has  scored  four  decisions  and  a  i 
tie  in  five  matches. 

Sophomore  David  Atkinson  has 
scored  three  decisions  and  a  tie 
in  the  167-pound  class. 

It  has  been  a  long  haul  for 
Coach  Barnes  and  it  has  taken 
years  to  build  the  winning  com- 
bination. "We've  had  more  long 
j-ears  than  I  care  to  remember," 
Barnes  said:  "I  just  hope  we  can 
finish  the  season  the  way  we 
started    it." 

The  Tar  Heels  still  have  a 
rough  road  to  travel.  They  re- 
turn to  action  against  North  Car- 
olina State  in  Raleigh  on  January 
18.  The  UNC  squad  then  runs  into 
Southern  Conference  Champion 
VPI  and  Maryland,  the  Atlantic 
Coast    Conference    title    holders. 


THE  NEW  YORK  LIKE  AGENT 

ON  YOUR  CAMPUS 
IS  A  GOOD  MAN  TO  KNOW 

George  L.  Coxhead 


UNC,  '42 
A   Mutual    Company 


Campus  Roprostntativo 
FeundMl  1S45 


NE\Af  YORK  LIFE 

INBURANCm  COMmkNY 


MACHINES  FOR  MAGAZINES  ?  ?  ? 


SigM,  Reginatd..?^ 

another  new  idea  for  ftie  compus. 

And  what  two  populor  campus  weeklitt??? 

SPORTS  ILLUSTRATED  and  TIME,  of  coyrte. 

And  the  machines???  At  your  servic* 

(with  the  /of est  issues) 


ot  the  YMCA  BUIIDIN6 


GET   YOUR  COPIES  TODAY  (AVAILABLE   24   HOURS. A   DAY). r.irs" EASY. 


for  Swimmers, 
Another  Good 
Season  Ahead 

Ralph  Casey,  North  Carolina 
swimming  coach,  apparently  has 
come  up  with  another  big  winner. 
The  Tar  Heel  swimmers  have  had 
little  competition  in  chalking  up 
four  straight  victories  thus  far 
this   season. 

Led  by  Charlie  Krepp.  All- 
America  backstroker,  the  Tar 
Heels  have  soundly  thrashed 
East  Carolina,  South  Carolina, 
Duke   and    "Virginia. 

Krepp  missed  the  first  two 
meets  of  the  season  to  catch  up 
on  his  scholastic  Work,  but  the 
senior  ace  hasn't  lost  any  of  the 
speed  which  made  him  one  of 
the  nation's  top  swimmers  last 
year. 

The  UNC  squad  isn't  a  one-man 
team.  Junior  Bill  Roth  has  prov- 
ed he  is  one  of  the  top  Sprinters 
in  the  Atlantic  Coast  Conference. 
Distance  star  Walter  Rose,  breast- 
stroker  Mac  Mahaffy  and  diver 
Dave  Mclnnis  arc  among  the 
other  top  performers  on  the  Tar 
Heel  roster. 

Last  year.  North  Carilina  shar- 
ed the  ACC  Championship  with 
North  Carolina  State.  The  only 
loss  suffered  by  the  Tar  Heels 
was  a  single  point  decision  to  the 
Wolfpack.  Coach  Casey's  team  re- 
turns to  action  against  N.  C. 
State  in  Raleigh  on  January  15. 


Virginia  And  Ciemson 
To  Visit  Woollen  Gym 


This  w  eekend  marks  the  begin-  j 
ning  of  North  Carolina's  dash 
through  what  is  probably  the 
most  killing  basketball  gauntlet 
in  the  nation,  as  the  Tar  Heels 
entertain  Ciemson  and  Virginia 
in  Atlantic  Coast  Conference 
games  Friday  and  Saturday. 

The  undefeated  Tar  Heels,  71- 
61  victors  over  William  &  Mary 
early  this  week,  play  only  one 
more  non-conference  team  this 
season,  as  they  run  for  the  regu- 
lar season  ACC  roses.  That's  the 
gym  dedication  game  Jan.  30  at 
Western   Carolina. 

The  weekend  stands  against  the 
visitors  from  neighboring  states 
are  the  last  home  games  for  UNC 
until  Feb.  9,  when  the  Tar  Heels 
show  in  Woollen  Gym  against 
Duke.  T^*'o  weeks  on  that  time 
are  taken  up  by  the  exam  layoff. 

Wins  Friday  and  Saturday  can 
send  the  Tar  Heels  into  the  N. 
C.  State  ganie  at  Raleigh  next 
week  with  a  14  0  record  and  a 
firm  hold  on  first  place  in  the 
conference.    The    game    with    the 


UNOEFEATEO  VARSITY   TEAMS 

All  North  Carolina  varsity  v.in- 
ter  sport  teams  went  into  Janu- 
ary undefeated  for  the  first  time 
in  the  whool's  historj'.  Basketball, 
wrestling  and  swimming  are  the 
winter  .sports. 


Carolina  Caravan 


By  JAKE  WADE 

FANCY  THIS,  ALL  North  Caro- 
lina winter  sports  teams  moved 
into  January  without  a  single  de- 
feat chalked  up  against  them. 

Ma>'be  that  doesn't  impress  you, 
but  it  just  happens  that  it's  the 
first  time  in  history  that  it's  hap- 
pened. And  wc  are  right  proud  of 
it.  Hope  this  doesn't  put  a  wham- 
my  on  he  boys  and  cause  them 
to  run  into  a  cycle  of  defeats  on 
the  various  fronts. 

Defeats  will  come,  of  course. 
Coach  Frank  McGuirc  wonders 
when  the  ax  will  fall  in  basketball. 
Coach  Sam  Barnes  says  his  lough 
ones  are  yet  to  come  in  WTcstling 
but  confesses  it  is  a  fine  feeling 
to  be  in  the  winners'  circle  after 
a  long  vacuum.  Coach  Ralph 
Casey  aays  nis  excellent  swimming 
team  niust  face  brother  Willis' 
record  breaking  N.  C.  State  mer- 
mcii  soon. 

Meanwhile,  wc  are  all  having  a 
good  time  in  the  Woollen  woods 
at  Chapel  Hill. 

•  •    • 

HONORS    DISTRIBUTED  —  Lcn 

nie  Rosenbluth  rightfully  has  re 
<eived  most  of  the  headlines  in 
Carolina's  notable  basketball  en- 
deavors this  season.  He  is  the  All- 
Amcrican,  and  he's  the  key  man 
on  the  team. 

Incidentally,  he  has  been  wear- 
ing his  honors  and  acclaim  grace- 
fully. Lennie,  in  his  day,  has  been 
abused  by  unsportsmanlike  gal- 
leries iii  arenas  away  from  home, 
and  at  times  it  has  hurt.  He  i.s  as 
sensitive  as  the  next  one,  but 
you'd  never  know  it  from  his  calm 
demeanor  on  the  court. 

Lennie  has  tended  to  his  busi- 
ness of  playing  basketball,  out- 
wardly has  been  tinmindful  of  the 
enemy's  taunts  and  has  simply 
rolled  up  the  points  and  rebounds 
vvith  grace  and  skill.  The  nation 
has  applauded  with  recognition, 
and  even  jealous  supporters  of 
rival  teams  have  had  to  concede 
that  this  one  is  about  as  good  as 
they  come. 

But  the  Tar  Heels  have  o*her 
stars,  too.  Honors  have  been  dis- 
tributed. 

•  •    » 

ALL     HAVE     COOPERATED!— 

The  tWD  most  improved  players  on 
the  squad  could  be  Tommy  Kearns 
and  Joe  Quigg.  Keams,  who  was 


CLASSIFIEDS 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL  WILL 
pay  $.25  for  each  issue  of  the 
September  28  edition.  Papers  of 
this  date  are  needed  for  adver- 
tising purposes. 

PART  TIME  WAITERS  WANTED: 
Hours  can  be  arranged  with 
your  schedule.  Apply  at  the 
Tar  Heel  Sandwich  Shop.  110 
N.  Columbia  St 


jAzz  at  turnaoes 

Saturday  afternoon,  2:00,  Turn- 
agfes  Catadn  in  Durham.— Jazz  by 
Dick  Gabh'.s  "All  Stars."  Bcur 
Sers'ed. 


usea  only  sparingly  last  season, 
has  been  coming  fast.  In  the  Dixie 
Classic  he  rose  to  heights  as  he 
"quarterbacked"  his  team  to  the 
championship  and  thrilled  the 
crowd  with  his  electrifying  driving 
play  and  uncanny  layups. 

Sophomore  Billy  Hathaway  has 
been  the  starter  at  center  Mith 
Q^igg  the  first  and  usually  quick 
substitute.  Joe  Quigg  showed  great 
promise  last  season  and  seemed  ta 
lack  on'y  a  certain  toughness  and 
flaming  competitive  spirit.  He  ha.-f 
found  the  latter,  either  because  of 
his  nightly  early  minutes  on  the 
bench  or  the  seasoning  in  an  ad 
ditional  year's  experience.  A  mild 
mannered,  taciturn  lad.  he  finally 
haj  acquired  fire  on  the  court  to 
go  with  his  natural  basketball 
skill, 

Pete  Brennan  is  a  smoothie  with 
a  deadly  shot  from  the  side,  and 
he  is  tough  in  the  clutch.  Bob  Cun- 
ningham is  a  torrid  competitor,  o 
workhorse  in  business  every  min- 
ute he  is  in  action,  a  team  man 
who  likes  to  win  and  who  has  the 
ability  to  provide  his  share. 

Tony  Radovich  wc  will  lose 
soon,'  because  his  eligibility  will 
"DC  up,  and  we  will  miss  this 
worthy  because  of  his  first-rate 
marksmanship  and  ofttimcs  amaz- 
ing "clutch"  play.  Speedy  Ken 
Rosemond,  who  would  be  a  star 
first  stringer  on  many  a  club,  Roy 
Searcy.  Danny  Lotz,  Stan  Groll 
and  Gehrmann  Holland  have  not 
seen  too  much  action  except  in 
scrimm::ges  thart.  have  developed 
the  powerful  unit  which  carries 
the  load.  Lotz,  it  seems  to  us.  es- 
pecially, has  tremendous  potential 
for  the  future. 

*     *     • 

CAROLINA     CAPSULUESI— Tar 

Heel  sports  currently  are  flourish- 
ing. .  .  .  What  a  pity  that  a  couple 
of  nagging  fault-finders  on  the 
campus  newspaper  apparently 
seek  to  disrupt  one  of  the  most 
promising  college  sports  programs 
m  America  with  their  misinformed 
diatribes,  charging  disunity  where 
dia-unity  would  not  exist  if  the 
athletic  administration  were  left 
dionc.  .  .  .  Carolina  has  the  great 
coaches  and  talent  to  succeed  in 
all  sports  and  make  the  students 
and  alumni  happpy.  if  only  this 
one  dissenting  voice  could  find  its 
way  to  be  informed,  sympathetic 
and  loyal  and  cooperate  with  the 
big  team  embracing  all  sports  and 
it^  principals. 


Hornung  Signs  Contract 
With  Green  Bay  Packers 

SOUTH  BEND.  Ind  — (AP)— 
Paul  Hornung.  Notre  Dame  quar- 
terback and  winner  of  the  Heis- 
man  Trophy  as  the  nation's  top 
college  player,  sigried  a  three- 
year  Green  Bay  Packer  contract 
yesterday  at  a  reported  $16,000 
annually. 

Hornung  rejected  a  bid  to  play 
\\itb  tlie  Vancouver  club  of  tbt 
Canadian   professional   circuit. 


Wolfpack  at  Raleigh  is  the  final 
one  before  the  exam  shut-down. 

North  Carolina  had  a  red  hot 
first  half  to  lick  Ciemson  94-75  at 
Charlotte.  N.  C.  in  their  first 
meeting  this  year,  as  Pete  Bren- 
nan momentarily  took  the  scor- 
ing spotlight  away  from  Lennie 
Rosenbluth  with  28  points.  It  was 
against  Ciemson  last  year,  how- 
ever, that  Rofenbluth  tied  the 
now-smashed  University  record 
of  45  points  as  UNC  squeaked  by 
103-99  in  overtime.  The  202  com- 
bined points  in  that  game  also 
constitute    a   UNC   record. 

The  Tigers,  who  lost  two  start- 
ers through  disciplinary  measur- 
es last  week,  still  have  stars  Vince 
Yockel  and  Bill  Yarborough,  who 
will  try  to  give  Rosenbluth  com- 
petition in   the   scoring  column. 

The  last  meeting  between  Vir- 
ginia and  UNC  was  almost  a  dis- 
aster for  the  Tar  Heels,  as  the 
Cavaliers  nearly  pulled  the  upset 
of  the  ACC  tournament  before 
losing  81-77  in  the  first  round. 
Other  UNC  wins  over  Virginia 
last  year  were    101-65   and   83-72. 


The  Art  Of  Tailoring 

•  '■'  .  •    , 

"Evtry  man  to  his  butin«ss, 
but  ind*«d  fh*  craft  of  a  tailur 
it  b*yend  «ll  doubt  as  nobi*  and 
•f  »*ct«t  M  any  in  the  world..." 

PETS  THE  TAILOR  wants  to 
wish  his  ntany  wonderful  cus- 
tomers tht  vory  host  in  '57.  As 
in  th«  past,  w  tr*  h«rt  to  s«rv« 
you  in  the  host  manner  possible. 

PETE  THE  TAILOR 

Specielizing  in 
"Ivy  Leasueizing" 

133Va   E.  Franklin  Street 


Carl  Furillo  Inks  Pact 
With  Brooklyn  Dodgers 

BROOKLYN  —  (AP)  —  Carl 
Furillo  joined  Capt.  Pee  Wee 
Reese,  Don  Newcomoe  and  Duke 
Snider  in  the  Brooklyn  Dodger 
fold  yesterday  when  he  signed 
his  1957  contract  calling  for  a 
reported  $27,500.  the  same  salary 
he  received  last  year. 

Furillo  recuperating  from  an 
appendectomy  in  December,  will 
report  to  the  Dodgers  training 
camp  at  Vero  Beach,  Fla ,  next 
month  but  he  has  been  ordered 
by  his  doctor  not  to  touch  a  ball 
until  March  1. 

The  strong-armed  outfielder, 
now  34,  batted  .289  in  1956  hitting 
21  home  runs.  He  is  one  of  the 
few  active  players  with  a  lifetime 
.300  batting  average  in  11  seasons 
with  the  Dodgers. 


Walt  Disney'?    %] 


NOW  PUYING 


Carolina 


;     KING  OF  EVERY  GUN  IN  THE  WEST! 

The  Story  of  proud,  violent  end  gold-hungry  Den  Kehoe — t  n»en  who 

carried  hell  in  his  holsters  .  .  .  swaggering  across  the  preiri* — ^teng- 

ling  with  flesh  and  flam«!  • 


STARTS 
TODAY 


Large  Collection 

Imported  Flannel, 

Tweed,  And  Shetland 

SUITS 


Were  up  to 
$75 


Now 
$48.75 


F 

'om  Our  Regular  Stock 

SPORT  COATS 

She 

tiands,  Rumson  Tweeds, 

And  Harris  Tweeds 

Were 

Now 

$45 

$34.95 

$55 

$44.95 

SPECIAL! 

One  Group 
SPORT  COATS 

Were  Now 


$45 


$27.95 


if  ' 


ENTIRE  STOCK     , 
WOOL  SLACKS 
Reduced  $3  Per  Pair 

(Off  Regular  Price) 


TOPCOATS 

Tweeds  &  Shetlands 


Were 
$65  to  $75 


Now 
$48.75 


COMPLETE  STOCK 
Men's  &  Women's  Cashmere 

SWEATERS 

Cardigans  —  Pullovers    •• 
Long  and  Short  Sleeve 

REDUCED  $4  PER  SWEATER 


SHETLAND  CREW  NECK  SWEATERS 
REDUCED  $3  PER  SWEATER 


Julian' 


WEATHER 

Generally  fair  and  cold  with 
diminishing  winds.  Expected  high 
37  to  43. 


B.V.C.  Library 

Serials  Dept. 
Chapel  Hilj 
8-31-49 


N.    C. 


e  3)aitu 


aTarXccl 


VOL    LVil   NO.   80 


Complete  (JP)   Wire  Service 


CHAPEL   HILL.   NORTH   CAROLINA.   FRH>AY,  JANUARY    11,    1957 


Offices   in   Graham   Memorial 


FOR    PERSONAL  REASONS' 


EDUCATION 

U  th«  child  growing  away  from 
its  parents?  See  editorial,  page  2 


FOUR    PAGES  THIS  ISSUS 


UNC  LIBRARIAN  ANDREW  HORN  RESIGNS  POST 


Air  Force  To  Fly  Foreign 
physicists  To  United  States 

Scientists  To  Attend 
Gravitation  Meet  Here 


By  PETE  IVEY 
The  r.  S.  Air  Force  will  lly  Ibreign  s(  ientisis  Ironi  Eur- 
ope, the  Middle  last  and  the  Orient  into  the  Tnited  States 
ui-xi  week  wliere  they  will  attend  in  Chapel  Hill  the  lirst 
"World  ('.onleieiK  e  on  (ira\  itation"  c\er  to  be  held  in  Ameri- 
(3.   Jan.   i.S  to  2  J.  / 

Fortv  intemationaliv-known  physicists  who  are  workinjr 
in  the  ar/sa  oT  orax  itation:  1  plnsics  ^vi^  cfitulnct  woik  seNsions^ 
«t   Chapel  Hill   and   will   pool   in- 
formatior.   relating  to   the  role  of 
gravity   in    physics. 

The  Air  Fore?  is  one  ti  the 
sponsors  of  the  conference.  Other 
sponsors  include  t  h  e  National 
Science  Foundation,  the  Institute 
of  Field  Physics  ri  which  Aguew 
Bahnson  of  Winston  -  Salem  ,  is 
chairman,  and  the  French  Depart- 
ment of  Foreign  Affairs 

Dr.  Bryce  DeWi4t  and  Dr.  Ce- 
cile  M.  DeWitt  of  UNC  are  hosts 
to  the  conference.  The  DeWitts 
are  in  charge  of  the  year-old  gra- 
vitation project  at  the  University. 

Among  the  .foreign  scientists  ex- 
pected to  attend  arc:  Herman  Bon- 
di.   of   Kings   College.   London;    S. 
Deser,   oi  Copenhagen.    Denmark; 
MademoisJIc    Yvonne    Fouresl    of 
Marseille.  France;  Julas  Geneniau. 
of   Brussels;    Behram    Kursunoglu, 
oC  Ankara.  Turkey;  Bert e-1  Laurenit 
ot  StockWo'iih:   A.  Llohnerewict  of 
the   College   de  Franc°;   A.   Papa- 
pctrou  of  East  Berlin;  F.  A.  E.  Pi- 
rani    of    kinjis    College.    London; 
N.  Rosen  of  Haifa,  Israel;  L.  Ros- 
enfeld  of   the   University   of   .^^an- 
chester;  Helmut  Salacker  of  Frei-*- 
burg.  G'-^many;  Mademoiselle  >Ia- 
rie-Antcninette   Tonnelat.    of    Par- 
is;   Ryoyu   Utiyama   of   Osaka.   Ja- 
pan. 

Among  the  prominent  physic- 
ists in  the  United  States  attend-  ; 
ing  the  conference  will  be  Ed- 
ward Teller  of  the  University  of 
California;  Peter  Putnam.  C.  W. 
Misner.  J.  A.  Wheeler,  and  V.  Barg-  : 
man  of  Princeton  University;  F.  J. 
Belanfante  of  Purdue  University; 
Thomas  Gold  of  Cornell;  Irwin 
Goldberg  of  Syracuse;  Michel  Ker- 
vaire  of  the  Massachusetts  Insti- 
tute of  Technology;  Ezra  Newman 
of  the  University  of  Pittsburgh; 
A.  Schild  of  the  Westinghouse  Re- 
search Laboratories;  A.  E.  Lilley 
of  the  U.  S.  Naval  Research  Lab- 
oratories; J.  N.  Goldberg  of  the 
Wright  Air  Development  Center; 
J.  L.  Anderson  of  the  Stevens  In- 
stitute  cf  Technolbgy.  and  others. 

Most   of  the  meetings     will     be 
closed     work     sessions.     However, 
ther?    will    be   one    "popular   sym- 
posium" to  which  the  public  will  i 
be   invited— at   8   p.m.  Jan.    18   in  I 
Carroll    Hall — and    a    luncheon    to 
be   attended    by   Governor   Luther  i 
Hodges  will    also   take    place    on 
Jan.   18. 


Insfallation  Of  Dorm  Phones 
Will  Be  Resumed  Next  Week 

Telephone  installation  in  dinniiiories  dcsirino;  addition-! 
al  jihones  will  be  resumed  next  week,  according  to  an  an-, 
noinitement  at  Wednesday   night's   Inicrcjormitor)    Council 
meeting.  "  -    ^.       "-  '    '^'tl^    '  * 

Installation  ol  phones  on  the  second  and  fonVth  tl(K>r» 
of  jnen's  dormitories  were  halted  temporarily  dne  to  a  dis- 
turbance arising  from  pl;u  ing  of  long-distance  calls  from  non- 

♦pay  phones. 

Dorm     residents     have     signed 


Dr. 


Bryce  pewit   and   Dr.  Cecil   M.   Dewitt 

.  .  .ho.st  aiid  hostess  to  physicists 


pledges  that  no  such  calls  will  be 
placed  from  non-pay  phones.  Thus 
installation  has  been  resumed. 
ENDORSEMENT 

The  Council  also  endorsed  Mardi 
Gras  weekend— Feb.  15-16.  The 
event  is  being  co-sponsored  by 
€raham  Memorial  and  the  Ger-. 
mans  Club. 

Mardi  Gras  weekend,  according 
to  Chairman  Jim  Armotnmg,  who 
announced  its  organization  to 
Council  members,  will  feature: 

(1)  A  concert  by  the  Mitehell- 
•Ruff  Duo  on  Friday  night  , 

(2)  A  dance  held  in  conJuDction 
•with  the  Germans  Club  on  Satiir-. 
da,  nightij:    _...;_,_     .M>,.J|<" 

7\    on 


Resignation  Set ' 
For  Action  Soon  " 

By  FRED  POWLEDGE 

University   Librarian   .\ndrew   H.   Horn  has  resigned. 

This  was  learned  Thursday  by  The  Daily  Tar  Heel  from 
.se\eral  top  officials  of  the  I'niversity  who  refused  to  let  their 
names  be  made  public. 

Dr.  Horn's  resignation  will  be  handed  to  a  meeting  of 
the  F.xeditive  Coinmittee  of  tlie  Board  of  Trustees  next 
week.  Until  then,  the  Uni\ersity  will  not  release  information 
on  his  leaxing. 

Dr.  Horn  resigned  for  "person;d  reasons."  It  was  not 
known  what  those  reasons  were. 

Questioned  yesterday  about  rejiorts  of  his  resignation. 
Dr.  Horn  said  a  University  regulation  requires  that  all  such 
information  come  from  the  chancellor,  not  from  the  per- 
son resigning.  * 


LIBRARIAN   ANDREW    HORN  .*^  >''    '., 

. . .  leainng,  after  two  mid  onc-/iol(^eqirs  here  "' "         • 

— -^ — ^ — ■. ;  'M.-^'y 

U  N  Creates  Committee 
To  Study  Revolution 


Chancellor  Robert  House,  asked 
about  the  resignation,  had  bo  com- 
ment.. 

However,  it  was  known  that  tne 
resignation  will   be  considered   at 
tne  Executive  Committee  meeting 
♦  next  week. 

I  There  was  speculation  Dr.  Horn 
I  resigned  out  of  despair  becau.,c 
!  the  state  Legislature  cut  Library 
I  appropriations  in  half  for  the 
'  present   biennium  (This  was  done 


Dr.  Horn  has  ben  here  for  tw( 
and  pne-half  years. 

He  is  director  of  University  1- 
braries.  Specifically,  his  main  jol» 
has  ben  the  operation  of  the  Uni- 
versity's Wilson   Library. 

Dr.  Horn.  43,  was  born  in  Ogden^ 
Utah.  He  has  btn  an  instructor  of 
history  at  several  institutions,  and 
has  written  numerous  documents 
concerning  librar\'  work. 

Between  1948  and  the  s-ummer 
of  1954,  Dr.  Horn  was  employed  in 


Opera  Ballet 
Needs  Ushers 
&  Stagehands 


Tn^rrer 


Legislature 
Appropriates 
$129  Figure 


Ushers      and      stagehands      are 
needed  for  the  Chicago  Opera  Bal- 


Other  action  which  appeared  on 
the  Council  agenda  incl«tt«d  an- 
nouncement of  a  new  policy  gov- 
erning Cobb  Dormitory  basement. 

The  basement,  which  has  sonw- 
what  ..elaborate  social  facilities, 
'inay  now  fe>e  reserved  'far  social 
events  by  contacting  Graham  Me- 
morial Information  Ceriter. 

A  Co-ordinating  Committee, 
composed  of  joint  IDC-GM  mem- 
bership will  have  governing  au- 
thority over  the  social  room's  u^e. 

I>ormitorie,rf  have  priority  over 
basement's    usuage,    Council 


UNITED  N.\TIONS.  N.  Y.  —  ^ 
investigate  th«  tragedy  of  Hungarj" 

yesterday  Yty  the  U.  N.  A.«;sembly  despite  Soviet  refusal  to  cooperate 
in  any  manner.  j     j        .  t  ^i  . .  ■  , 

The  assembly  voted  59-8  for  a  resolution  introduced  by  the  United 
States  and  23  other  U.  N.  members  setting  up  a  committee  composed 
Australia,  Ceylon.  Denmark.  Tunisia  and  Urivguay.  i 

The  committee  was  ordered  to  searph  out  the  i^cts  lapywhere  it 
could  and  report  back  as  ^oon  as  possible..  It  cannot  go  inside  Hungary 


;  two  years   ago).  But  reports  from  ^j^^   university  of  California  (Lo^ 

other  quarters  said  his  resignation  ,^geies)  libraries,   where  he  hald 

-  A  special  truth  committee  to     ^me  purely  for  personal  reasons,  ^^e  titles  of  assistant  librarian  and 

abortive  revolution  was  created 


$2  tickets  will  entitle  mt^\aa»iS> 
to   attend   both   functions.  «ccord-ii  ^^  ^^^  ^^  ^j^  country  since  Moscow  continued  its  stubborn  poHry 

NEW  COBB  POLICY  .^hen  counV.es^lJsiained  on  the  v^tci  C^uli^';*'a«ybp^L 


Grail  Gives 
Grants  For 
SelirHeip 


The  Order  ^islie  Grail  awarded 
SI. 300  in  sehslfirships  to  deserv- 
ing freshman  self-help  students  at  j 
its    Monday    night    meeting.  I 

Freshmen  receiving  scholarships  1 


By  NEIL  BASS 

In   the   only   major   action    last  the 
let   performance   to   be   presented   evening,    the    student    Legislature  president  Sonny  Hallford  said. 
Jan.    22    in    Memorial    Hall,    John    appropriated  $129  to  cover  expens- '  ELECTION 

Ludwig   has   announced.  ,  es  incurred  by  presentation  of  the       in  election,  Teddy  Jones  of  Old 

For  their  work,   ushers  will   be  i  Hungarian     refugee     speaker     on   West  Dormitory  was  named  to  the 


!  given   free   tickets,   a   guest    ticket    campus, 
and  a  special  reserved  ssction  for  ;      The  seso-ion  rang  down  the  cur^ 


IDC  Court. 

By  appointment,  Ethan  Tolman 


themselves  and  guests.  Stagehands  |  tain   on   fall    semester    legislative  was  named  to  fill  a  vacancy  on  the 


will  be  issued  two  season  tickets 
for  the  Chapel  Hill  Concert  Series 
in  a  special  reserved  section  sim- 
ilar to  the  ushers'  section. 

Applicants  are  asked  to  call 
Graham  Memorial  Information  Of- 
fice t>etween  9  and  12  a. in.  and 
leave  their  names.  Applications 
will  be  filled  on  a  first-come-first- 
served    basis. 


meetings.  The  body  will  reconvene   Council's  Rules  Committee.  Tolman 


Drama  Group's 
Custom  Kept 
Tomorrow  Nite 


the  second  week  in  February. 

A  bill  establishing  a  committee 
to  notify  passers  of  bad  checks  to 
local  merchants  was  referred  to 
committee  due  to  a  call  for  con- 
tent revision. 

It  was  suggested  that  the  com- 
mittee alsj  be  authorized  to  cover 
notification  of  bad  check  pa^erj 
to  campus  stores  thus  the  refer- 
ment  to  committee. 
ELECTION 

In  electoral  action,  John  Ray, 
Student  Party,  was  elected  ser- 
geant-at-arms  by  acclamation. 


succeeds  John  Affigne  of  Connor 
Dorm  who  tendered  his  resigna- 
tion. 

The  Council  will  not  meet  again 
until  the  spring  semester. 


and  Frederick  Roper. 

Freshmen  receiving  scholarships 
totaling  $100  were  Hiram  Allred. 
Charles  Little.  Ronald  Rowe  and 
Herber  Windley. 

The  Grail  annually  awards 
these  scholarships  to  Carolina  stu- 
dents on  the  basis  of  general  mer- 
it, scholastic  achievement,  char- 
acter and   need. 

trntial   stholarship   n-cipients   are 
still  under  deliberation. 

ine  scnolarsliips  will  be  hand 
led    bv   the   Student   Aid    Office. 


THANK  STUDENTS,  TOWNSPEOPLE: 


Man  Who  Would  Admit 
Nf^TAAs  Is  Reelected 

.\TL.\NT.A  'Jf^  —  Dr.  Harmon 
Caldwell,  who  recently  testified 
in    federal    court    that    he    would 


The    Carolina    Playmakers    will 
present  their  traditional  'Twelfth '^^Ye^,;"-^"-;"-  -jj^^g 
Night  Rjvels"  tomorrow  at  8  p.m. ' 
in    the    Playmakers'   Theater.    Stu- 
dents   active    in    the    UNC    drama 
group  will  celebrate  the  tradition 


Racial  Tension 
In  South 
Is  Growing 

By  The  AMOciated   Press 

New      bombings      in      Alabama 
Oath  of  office  was  administered  j  Thursday  emphasized  the  growing 
to  the  following  legislators:  racial  tension  throughout  the  South 

Butch  TomJinson,  Joe  Hagedorn, '  over  attempts  to  desegreate  schools 

and  public  buses. 


recommend  admission  of  qualified  :  by  burlesquing  their  own  produc- 


\egroes  to  white  colleges  if  such 
applications  came  to  him,  Wednes- 
day was  reelected  chancellor  of 
tWe  university  system  of  Georgia. 


FIRST  DIXIE  TITLE 
When  North  Carolina's  bas- 
ketball team  wen  the  annual 
Dixie  Classic  Chan>pi3nship  in 
December,  it  was  the  first  time 
a  Tar  Heel  team  had  turned  the 
trick  since  the  tournament  be- 
gan eight  years  age. 

GM'S  SLATE 

The  following  activity  is  sche- 
duled for  Graham  Memorial  to- 
day: Wedhouse  Conference 
Room,  3:30  p.m..  Audit  Board. 


tions  of  the  past  season,  including 
"Anastasia,"  'Androcles  and  the 
Lion,"  and  "Desire  Under  the 
Elms." 

Under  the  direction  of  Miss 
Nancy  Christ  of  Newark,  N.  J., 
and  Ted  Parker  of  Clinton,  the 
skits  will  be  entitled  "The  Riddle 
of  Greasy  Annie.  The  Missing  Play- 
maker  Princes,"  "This  Is  Your 
Lion,"  and  "Want  In  The  Woods." 

The  custom  of  holding  'Revels" 
was  instituted  at  UNC  by  Fred- 
erick H.  "Proff"  Koch  29  years 
ago.  It  is  derived  from  the  Twelfth 
Night     Revels    popular    in    Eliza- 


Tomlinson  and  Hagedorn  are 
University  Party  members,  while 
Peele  and  Long  are  3P. 

The  only  opposition  to  the  ap- 
propriation bill  for  the  Hungarian 


The  blasting  of  four  Negro 
churches  and  residences  of  two 
anti-segregation  ministers  in  Mont- 
gomery brought  an  order  halting 
all  bus  seryice  in  Alabama's  capi- 


speaker  came   from   Andy   Milnor  tal  city. 

(SP),  and  Milnor's  opposition  was       Other  bombs  were  thrown  at  Ne- 

not  to  the   bill   it.yelf  but   to  the '  gro  residences  in  Mobile,  Ala.,  200 


"principle." 

Milnor  asserted  Opposition  to  the 
governmental  principle  of  .spend- 
ing money  prior  fo  its  appropria- 
tion. "It's  bad  politic  taste,"  he 
said. 
NEW  MEASURES 

New  bills  introduced  at  the  ses- 
sion were: 

(DA  bill  calling  for  appropria- 
tion of  $14  to  reimburse  Bill  Red- 
ding of  the  Honor  Council  for  ex- 


bethan  England,  when  the  people '  penditure  out    of    (lis    pocket    in 
celebrated    the    twelfth    night    af-   'payment  for  countil  pictures 


ter  every  Christmas  by  crowding 
the  streets,  shouting  songs  and 
tricking  one  another. 


(2)  A  bill  calling  for  appropria- 
tion of  $175  to  the  Orientation 
Committee. 


milej  to  the  southwest.  One  at- 
tempted bombing  at  Mobile  failed 
when  the  fuse  apparency  fell  out 
of  a  homemade  bomb. 

In  Atlanta,  capital  of  Georgia, 
six  Negro  ministers  were  arrested 
for  breaking  state  segregation  laws 
Wednesday  by  riding  in  bus  seats 
normally  occupied  by  whites. 

Taken  to  jail,  they  quickly  made 
bonds  of  $1,000  and  Rev.  W.  H. 
Borders,  leader  of  the  "love,  law 
and  liberation  movement,"  said  no 
further  attempts  would  be  made  to 
integrate  buses.  He  said  the  group 
had  been  successful  in  their  aim 
(  See  Racial  Page  3  J 


sistiag  that 
the  action  was  not  heart>   strong  enoitgh  to  rtiefct  thl^'ilfuatioxi; 

U.  S.  Chief  Delekatc  Henry  Oiijtpt  Lodgb*  Jr.  had  urged  the 
Assembly  to  approve  the  resolution  ai' ti  way  of  ascertaining  the  truth 
aboMt  Hungary.  He  ackn'owledged  the  action  might  appear  mild  but 
said  the  hulh  must  bo  known  and  the  truth  will  prevail. 

Al«cmillan  Takes  Office  As  Prime  Minister  i  for  $i."50    were  .Robert    Heiford. 

LONDON  —  /Pi  —  Bristling  with  confidence,  Harold  Mabniillan  Michael  "KitziaH. '  Robert  Lowder. 
took  over  as  Prime  Minister  last  night  and  set  the  stage  for  e-arly  Rupert  Marsh.  Edward  Jennings 
talks  with  President  Eisenhower  to  heal  the  rift  in  British-American 
relations. 

There    were    indications   the   White   House   was    dueling    off    the 
"welcome"  mat  denied  Sir  Anthony  Eden  after  the  Suez  invasion.  High 
i  Washington  officials  said   Macmillan   will  be  welcome  whenever  he 
decides  to  visit  Eisenhower,  a  longtime  friend. 

Macmillan  served  notice  he  will  not  call  national  elections,  as 
the  Labor  Party  has  demanded.  But  itrseeras  certain  there  will  be  a 
shakeup  in  the  conservative  cabinet. 

President  Eisenhower  Calls  For  American  Unity 

WASHINGTON   —  '»   —   President   Eisenhower    ..Mmn-'^-"''     ' 
American   people   ,vpsterd?.y  la  :itaii'i     'vie'.if.nt  guarr,      igainst  ev^r- 
threatening  inflation  at  home  and  the  menafce  abroad  ci  "armed  im- 
perialistic dictatorship." 

Reporting  to  Congress  and  the  country  on  the  State  of  the  Union 
at  this  moment  in  history.  Eisenhower  urged  business  and  labor  lead- 
ers to  "think  we*lf  on  their  respvonsibility  to  the  American  people  '  and 
go  easy  on  price  and  wage  boosts  that  could  increase  inflationary-  pre.^.'- 
sures. 

"The  national  interest,"  he  said,  'must  take  precedence  over 
temporary  advantages  which  may  be  secured  by  particular  groups  aJ 
the  expense  of  all  the  people." 

While  the  pursuit  of  human  liberty,  welfare  and  progress  "has 
brought  us  to  an  unprecedented  peak  in  our  economic  prosperity,'" 
the  President  said,  the  danger  of  inflation  "is  alway.^  present." 

On  the  international  scene,  he  said,  the  existence  of  a  strongly 
armed  imperialistic  dictatorship  is  a  continued  threat  to  the  secui-'ty 
and  peace  of  the  free  world  and  "thus  to  our  owii."  Amerioa,  l»e 
said,  cannot  stand  ""alone'  and  isolated." 

He  took  a  sort  of  mellow,  moderate,  unspectacular  approach  to 
problems  and  issue.-,-  of  the  day.  For  solutions,  he-  pretty  much  stood 
pat  on  things  he  has  recommended  in  the  past. 

There  were  brief  warmed«over  bids  for  such  things  as  a  school  con- 
struction bill,  civil  rights  legislation,  and  the  authority  requested  only 
last  Saturday  to  use  American  troops,  if  need  be,  against  any  Com- 
munist aggi'c-sion  in  the  Mid-E^st. 

There  were  passing  allusions  to  farm  legislation,  defense,  the 
administration  of  justice,  a  postal  rate  boost,  development  of  natural 
resources,  amending  the  labor  laws,  public  works. 

Eisenhower  called  briefly,  too,  for: 

A  law  granting  permanent  entry  to  Hungarian  refugees,  authori- 
ty for  the  United  States  to  join  the  organization  for  trade  cooperation, 
approval  of  full  U.  S.  participation  in  the  International  Atomic  Energy 
Agency,  and  an  appreciable  increase  in  funds  for  the  U.  S.  informa- 
tion agency. 

Syrian  Government  Renounces  Ike  Policy 

DAMASCUS  —  '.Jfi  —  Syria'c-  government  yesterday  declared  its 
""deep-rooted  belief"  that  maintenance  of  peace  and  security  in  the 
Middle-East  is  "solely  the  responsibility  of  the  people  of  this  area." 

The  government  issued  a  statement  on  President  Eisenhower's 
speech  on  Middle-East  policy  to  the  U.  S.  Congress,  saying  Syria  re- 
jects ""the  theory  of  a  power  vaccum  in  the  Middle-'Cast." 

It  dCi-cribed  as  "serious"  Eisenhower's  request  for  stand-by 
authority  to  send  U.  S.  troops  against  aggression  in  the  area. 

It  asserted  there  is  no  Communist  threat  in  Syria. 

The  Syrian  statement,  however,  welcomed  the  Eisenhower  an- 
nouncement of  "American  all-out  support  of  full  so;^ereignty  and 
the  complete  independence  of  Middle-I^st  nations." 


associate  librarian. 

In  the  summer  of  1954  he  came 
to  North' Carolina  as  head  librarian 
here. 

There  were  no  definite  reports 
Thursday  as  to  who  would  be 
I  chosen  to  replace  Dr.  Horn,  or 
i  where  Dr.  Horn  will  go.  It  appear- 
i  ed .  Ms  resignation  had  been  kept 
under  cover  tor  several  weeks. > 


Colds  Halt 
Attendance 
In  Classes 


.  •.•)rii45 


„,  ;t     /" 


A  seasonal  influx  of  colds  and 
other  respiratory  infections  ac- 
counts for  many  of  the  num.erous 
absences  in   class  attendance. 

Dr.  Edward  Hedgpeth.  UNC 
physician,  said  that  after  Christ- 
mas the  number  of  students  in  the 
the  infirmary  was  usually  higher 
than  at  any  other  time  of  the 
year.  , 


Of  siuaent  ilinessts  but   not   uaj 
,nore  tnan  is  expected.     Kj      _. . 
said    there    are    not    as   many   %s 
have  been  in  previous  years. 


Police  Express  Thanks 
For  Low  Accident  Toll 


crime  rate  would  increase  wiltt  t'  ^ 
approaching  warm  weather,  I.^  ^atu 
weather  conditions  make  little  dif- 
ference. Crime,  he  said,  is  just 
as  liable  to  take  place  in  cold  wea- 
ther as  in  warm  weather. 


By   CHARLES   MATHiS 

*  Chapel  Hill  Police  Chief  W.  T.  | 
SlOdii  expressed  thanks-  yesterday ; 
to  UNC  students  and  townspeople  ] 
for  keeping  the  accident  toll  down  j 
in  1956.  I 

"I  want  to  thank  all  the  students,  | 
townspeople  and  visitors  for  help- ! 
ing    us    out."    Chief    Sloan    said. 
■"With  all  the  cars  here  in  Chapel 
Hill,  we've  really  had  good  luck." 

"No  one  was  killed  in  a  wreck 
in  Chapel  Hill  last  year,  and  no 
pedestrian  has  been  killed  within 
the  city  limits  for  15  years,  "  he 
declared,  displaying  numerous'  cer- 
tificates of  merit  the  police  depart- 
ment has  won  in  the  National  Traf- 
fic Safety  Contest  through  tht 
years. 

He  said  one  person  was   killed         Those  in  the  Infirmary  yester- 
in  1952,  but  otherwise  Chapel  Hill      day  Included: 


Chi  Phi  Fraternity 
Elects  New  Officers 

Ben  Burbridge  cf  Jacksonville. 
Fla.,  was  elected  President  of  the 
Chi  Phi  Social  Fraternity  in  elec- 
tions   held    Wednesday    night. 

Jack  Lewis  was  elected  vice 
president.  Jim  I*urks  secretary. 
Jim  Garrell  treasurer,  and  Al 
Goldsmith    sergeant-at-arms. 


IN  THE  INFIRAAAfiY 


has  been  "pretty  lucky"  for  ma.ny 
years. 

Remarking  about  the  police 
"business"  since  the  new  year  be- 
gan, Chief  Sloan  said  everything 
has  been  "quiet"  so  far,  adding 
with  a  smilej 

"This  i;!  one  business  I  like  to 
see  dull.  * 
WTien  asked  if  he  predicted  the 


Misses  Sylvia  AAcArthur,  De- 
lores  Taylor,  Sally  Simpson,  Ann 
Bachman,  Jo  Anne  Lesley,  Eu- 
genia Rawls,  Nancy  Neble;  and 
Riley  Montgomery,  Robert  Lewis. 
Shelton  Turner,  John  O'Ferrell, 
James  Ougan,  Leon  LaSalle,  John 
Sewell,  Charles  Allen.  James 
Pierce,  Murphy  Conry.  and 
Charles  Lore. 


PAGE  TWO 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


FRIDAY,  JANUARY  11,  1957 


FRIDl 


Safety  On  The  Hig|hw9ys: 
Can  The  Record  Be  Beaten? 

There  are  more  people  killed  on  America's  highways  each  year 
than  there  were  American  soldiers  in  Korea  during  the  three  and  one 
half  ye.irs  of  fighting.  There  were  29,000  boys  killed  in  a  31/^  year  war 
where,  day  after  day,  they  wtfre  shooting  at  each  other  with  annihilation 
specifically  in  mind;  back  in  the  I'niied  States,  where  people  were  just 
out  for  a  Sunday  drive,  off  on  a  pleasure  trip,  or  traveling  on  business, 
they  managed  to  slaughter 'upwards  of  38,000. 
No  mr.tter  how  many  ways  you  • 


CAROLEIDOSCOPE: 


Has  An  Era  Come  To  An  End? 


try  to  justify,  explain  away,  or  com" 
pensate  for  these  sickening  facts, 
they  remain.  The  people  are  just 
as  dead:  we  are  still  to  blarac.  It's 
our  problem,  not  solely  those  peo- 
ple whose  family  was  purged:  it's 
right  here,  not  in  California,  New 
York,  and  Ohio,  where  we,  sup- 
f)osedly,  d(mt  have  to  look  at  it 
or  be  faced  with  it.  It's  here,  now, 
today  and  tomorrow. 

Our  own  state  of  North  Caro- 
lina, however,  can  be  given  a  slight 
pat  on  the  back.  In  the  Associated 
l^ress  analysis  of  the  traffic  deaths 
of  Hj.">fi.  it  found  that  ten  sta>tes 
were  to  be  listed  as  having  lower- 
ed their  total  traffic  faiflalit^es — 
one  of  these  was  North  Carolina. 

The  reasons  ANJiich  were  given 
were  better  traffic  supervision 
and  more  inicnsi\c,  sterner  en- 
fonemcnt.  In  North  C;'rolina,  we 
nnght  also  list  more  competently 
trained  officers  of  enforcement 
and  more  widely  publicized  safety 
measures. 

Further,  with  33.000,000  po- 
tential automobiles  on  the  hisfh- 
wavs  o\ci    ihc  New  Year  hoiidavs, 


10.000.000  more  than  in  1952, 
there  were  409  fatal  accidents  com- 
pared with  407.  in  1952.  After 
setting  a  horrid  record  in  one 
direction  over  tlie  Christmas  holi- 
days, tlie  motorist  reversed  himself 
and  set  a  safety  record  one  week 
later. 

Inunediately  following,  the  Nat- 
ional Safety  Council  comes  out 
with  the  profound  sutement:  "If 
we  can  do  it  for  four  days,  we  can 
do  it  for  363.  "  This  sounds  very 
fine,  and  we  hope,  for  their  sake 
and  for  our  own,  that  ii  actually 
can  be  done.  We  don't  like  losing 
our  Kllcrbecs  and  our  ('illilands. 
.\nd  something  is  stirred  in  lis  all 
when  we  see  a  young  girl  lose  part 
of  her  leg  which  was  brutally 
mangled  out  of  pure  negligence 
and  carelessness. 

\\'erc  all  for  the  National  Safe- 
tv  Council  and  will  give  them  evefy 
benefit  of  the  doubt:  but^  a<  far 
as  tl>eir  claims  that  "we  can  do  it 
Cor'3()3"  go.  all  we  can  say  is, 
"shbw  us."  Possiblv  thev  dp  have 
a  way  to  end  the  liighway  holo- 
caust and  that  may  be  mans  own 
const  ience.  We  shall  see. 


Frank  Crowther 

You  can  accuse  me  of  co«» 
mitting  "the"  deadly  sin ....  I 
read  periodicals.  Not  only  do  I 
fead  them,  but,  occasionally.  I 
find  something  worth  all  my 
supposedly  wasted  time. 

Such  was  the  case  with  the 
20th  anniversary  Jssue  of  Look 
Magazine  in  which  I  stumbled 
onto  a  piece  by  William  Saroyan. 
Ypu  might  say,  "Now  what  in 
the  blazes  is  Saroyan  doing  in 
Look?^'  To  that,  all  I  can  answer 
is  that  writers  have  to  e«t,  too. 

I  wotild  like  to  have  reprinted 
the    article,    entitled     "This    is 

• 


what  20  years  mean,"  in  its  en- 
tirety, bill,  naturally,  space  will 
not  permit.  Some  of  it  was  as 
follows: 

"An  Mm  i$  cvminf  to  pass 
in  our  time.  It  is  so  simpl*  as 
to  seem  overslmple  and  there* 
fore  complex,  and  it  might  be 
revolutienery." 

"In  the  20-odd  centuries  since 
ancient  Greece,  Shakespeare  did 
his  work  and  died.  So  did  Socra- 
tes, Jesus,  Galileo,  Columbus, 
Newton..  ElGreco,  Voltaire,  St. 
Francis  and  millions  of  others, 
named  and  unnamed." 

"In  our  own  time,  in  the  past 
20  y«ars,  Gandhi  did  his  work. 


• 

'However,  We've  Been  Pretty  Successful 
Amefijcan  Newspapermen  Out  Of 


Einstein  did  his.  So  did  White- 
head, Saarinen.  Tascanini.  San 
tayana.  Brancusi.  O'NeiJl,  Sibel- 
ius. Dreiser,  Chaplin,  Nijinski, 
Shaw,  Ford,  Copland,  and  Sch- 
weitzer." 

"Ideas  always  happen,  but  on- 
ly to  human  beings." 

"The  ideas  are  always  about 
birth  and  death,  reality  and  il- 
lusion, right  and  wrong,  truth 
end  falsehood,  love  and  hate, 
acquisition  and  loss,  or  all  of 
these  things  together — as  well 
as  others." 

Saroyan  went  on  reminiscing 
about  the  sayings,  the  under- 
standings     ,the      theories,      the 

• 

In  Keeping 
China' 


A  Bit  Of  Campus  Doggerel 

(Chapel  Hill  (lo.g;s  lia\c  been  Stadiiun.  just  as  the  conmience- 
mistreatcd  in  the  past  month  or  mcnt  spc.\cr  is  nearing  the  cli- 
so.  njax  oi  his  ">pec(  h). 


\\'riters  to  this  newspaper  ha\e 
tended  to  take  the  wonderful  crca- 
r'lrei  olf  their 
clcsrt\e(i  oe- 
destrd,.  to  plac^ 
tiiieiti  a^ngii(i( 

( ouniion,  ,t>ldn, 
e\erv-<lay  do,sjs. 
This  is  wronj^. 
f.hapffi  IfiM 
Js  .'orie.'iof  tlfe 
few  college 
towns  in  the  counrrv  thit  calfi 
boast  that  a  mongrel  is  included  in 
everv  graduation  ceremony  (If 
vou  don't  believe  this,  just  wait 
until  next  June  when  a  Cthjajiel 
Hill     dog     wanders     into     Kenan 


The  Daily  Tar  Heel 

The  official  jtudent  publication  of  the 
Publications  Board  of  the  University  of 
North  Carolina,  where  it  ts  published 
daily  except  Monday  ..nd  examinatioe 
«nd  vacation  periods  and  summer  teruM 
Entered  as  second  class  matter  in  tht 
oost  office  in  Chapel  Hill,  N.  C,  undei 
the  Act  oi  March  8.  1870.  Subscription 
rates:  mailed.  $4  per  year.  $2.50  a  seme» 
ter;  delivered.  $6  a  year.  $3.50  a  aeioe* 
ter. 


Editor 


FRED  POWLEDGE 


Managing  Editor  CHARLIE  SLOA!^ 


News  Editor 


NANCY  HILL 


Business  Manager  ___  BILL  BOB  FUEL 


Chapel  Hill  is  the  one  town  in 
the  countrv  that  can  boast  of  the 
most  intelligent  pack  of  dogs  (If 
you  dont  believe  tiiis.  just  ask  the 
county  dog  warden.).;  ,  ,. 

But  do<irs  have  been   mistreated, 
not  only  with  words.  Georfle— re- 
member  old    George,    the   campus 
'    cijilic?;  rf-  i>vas   banished    a    Couple 
^'Ijtfi  ypaj»5|  iH^V.for   allegedly  ft)ititig 
people.   Of  (ourse.  George  was  as 
I  TiilHiwent  as  a   new-born   ba&y    (U 
itoti    don't    belie\e    this,    ju^t    ask, 
(^for^^.  He  lives    in    the    country 
liow).  ' 

People  —  even  students  —  have 
been  observed  kicking  Chapel 
Hill  dogs.  Now.  this  may  be  ac- 
ceptable in  some  connnunities. 
but  Chapel  Hill  dogs  certainly 
shouldn't  be  kicked.  They  are  too 
intelligent  (If  you  don't  believe 
this,  just  ask  Mrs.  .\.  M.  Jordan,  a 
ni<e  lady  who  believes  in  Chapel 
Hill  dogs).  * 

This,  we  suppose,  is  just  an- 
other sigp  of  the  materialistic 
times.  Dogs,  long  beautiful,  tradi- 
tional creatures  in  C'hapel  Hill, 
arc  becoming  nothing  but  mutts  in 
the  minds  of  the  people  here. 

We  hope  that,  in  retaliation  to 
this^  mode  of  mind,  an  enormous 
pack  of  Chapel  Hill  dogs  desceiids 
on  graduation  ceremonies  next 
June,  demands  recognition  and 
gets  it.  The  situation  as  it  stands 
now  ain't  nothing  but  a  hound 
dog. 


t»3* 


achievements,  the  nature,  and  the 
genius  of  man. 

His  main  point,  the  essence 
of  his  article,  was  that  "a  new 
means  by  which  to  resolve  dif- 
ficult problems  and  basic  dif- 
ferences among  peoples  must 
be  discovered  and  put  to  use.' 
"That  is  the  idea  in  its  simp- 
lest termsJ' 

"How  can  you  win,  if  there 
is  no  longer  any  such  thing  as 
winning,  in  terms  of  force  and 
numbers?  If  physical  force  is 
no  longer  a  usable  power,  except 
upon  time  and  matter,  and  not 
upon  man  himself,  then  the  idea 
must  be  to  discover  and  to  ex- 
ercise other  forms  of  usable  pow- 
er— moral,  intellectual,  spiritual, 
and  cultural." 

"Already,  the  idea  has  com- 
pelled a  lot  of  slowing-down. 
even  while  things  have  been 
made  to  move  faster.  But  the 
faster  things  move,  the  slower 
anger  or  arrogance  may  be  per- 
mitted   to   move. 

•'Unformed   and  unresolved  as 
it    is.    the    potentialities    of    the 
idea    are    great,    and    good.    Its 
.  ever-unfolding    .  fulfillment      ap- 
pears to  be  unavoidable. 

"But  then,  man  can  be  fool- 
i.shly  clever,  and  the  idea  may 
be  frustrated  and  thrust  aside 
for  another  20  years,  another 
century,  or  even  for  ever. 

"On  the  other  hand,  it  may 
b:gin  to  be  truly  fulfilled  dur- 
•  ing  1957.  a  new  year  and  there- 
fore a^ain  the  most  interesting, 
the  mrst  difficult.  ripngerou«i, 
prnmi'^ing  and  wonderful  of  all." 
Hp  ended  his  exegesis  with 
that. 

But,  to  me,  one  of  the  most 
comtemplative  paragraphs  in 
the  article  said  that  Grace  Kel- 
Ey  ended  the  era  as  it  had  b^- 
g\jn — with  a  wedding  (the  first 
wedding  of  the  era  being  that 
'of  Edward  VIII  and  Wally 
Simpson). 

So,   if  we  have  ended   an  era. 
we  must  be  on  the  threshold  of 
I'somethingt  ob^  ,  ap^     exciting. 


A  NORTHERN  VIEW; 

Maligned   Movie 
Slanders  South 

Cortland  Edwards 

In  the  past  few  weeks  the  movie  "Baby  Doll" 
has  been  condemned  by  the  Catholic  Church  in 
the  United  States,  by  Cardinal  Spellman  over  his 
pulpit,  by  Boston,  and  by  many  self-styled  censors 
all  'over  the  country. 

Spellman  said  thst  "Catholic  pc>ople  should  re- 
frain from  patronizing  this  film  under  pain  of  sin." 
He  also  said  that  it  is  a  "contemptuous  defiance 
of  the  natural  law." 

This  picture  was  approved  by  the  Motion  Pic- 
ture Association's  Production  Code  Administration, 
and  also  by  James  Pike,  the  Dean  of  the  Cathedral 
of  St.  John  the  Divine  in  New  York  City. 

Time  Magazine  says  that  it  "is  possibly  the 
dirtiest    American    made    motion    picture    that   has 


A\e're'  starting 
'p^lir   of   -hoes. 


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•' popilTatiort.  which  Will  c  '  '  " 
':•'  Ii.snre  >as  w^e  v.-tic'  bornl  a 

iif  >'  iBZion  lail-out. 

"     •'- ■    Where    are    we,    though?       1- 

•it-rrrifi^^on'^'YnlriuW  bcfofe   r*iji^i^t< 

i'i'i  '-     '  or -haVe  vev  parsed"  throilgjihviid' 

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Tomorrow  Throu  gh  Today's  Facts 


kiknvlng  it?"  ' 


Gordon  W.  Blackweil 

Blackwell  is  director  of  the  In- 
stitutt  for  Research  in  Hie  S«cCai 
Sciences.  Below  is  »n  address 
given  before  the  Adult  Education 
Council  of  Charlotte  and  Meclc- 
lenburg  County  last  December. 
This  \t  the  fir^Tof  several  install- 
ments. 

la  addressing  myself  to  this 
topic,  my  purpose  is  to  talk  about 
trends  and  change;  to  look  back 
ward  a  ways  so  as  more  clearly 
to  see  the  way  ahead. 

As  a  social  scientist,  I  shall  con- 
fine myself  to  analysis  of  the 
facts;  and  to  eirtimates  of  the 
proboble  resuita^  of  today's  policy 
decisions  in  relation  to  goals  for 


1970 — decisions  by  state  and  loqal 
government,  yes;  but  decisions 
also  by  local  citizens,  financiers, 
indujUialists.  civic  leaders,  tax 
payers.. 

These  are  the  decisions  whicn 
will  determine  what  North  Caro- 
lina v.iU  be  like  in  1970.  /Vnd 
these  arc  the  decisions  which  « 
broad  program  of  adult  education 
can  aliect  in  a  very  real  way. 

And  so  at  the  outset,  perhaps 
I  should  disabuse  you  of  any  loss 
that  I  shall  turn  soothsayer  and 
look  into  tea  Reaves  or  a  crystal 
ball.  In  fact,  moirl  of  my  remarks 
will  focus  on  past  trends  and 
present  conditions,  as  I  believe 
those  to  be  the  only  sound  bises 
for  decisions  which  my  deterrtiine 
the  future. 


May  I  suggest  that  the  kind  of 
state  wc  shall  have — the  kind  of 
communities  which  shall  make 
up  North  Carolina — will  be  de- 
termined by  the  interrelationships 
between  five  sets  of  basic  fac- 
tors. So  it  is  with  any  society. 

These  factors  are  natural  re 
sources;  the  people  themselves, 
in  changing  numbers  —  men, 
women,  children — of  several  races 
and  varying  family  backgrounds: 
the  level  of  technological  develop- 
ment including  scientific  re- 
search, capital  wealth  and  income 
as  a  product  of  the  people's  \i- 
bor;  and  support  of  the  basic  in- 
stitutional &-crvices  demanded  by 
the  people — services  such  »s 
law  enforcement,  roads,  correc-^ 
tional  orograms,  education,  he.sl&t' 


welfare,  religion,  the  arts. 

It  is  about  change  within  thi.* 
five-fold  framework  that  I  wish 
to  speak.  As  I  do  so.  it  will  be 
come  clear,  I  hope,  that  a  State 
University — the  Consolidated  Uni- 
versity of  North  Carolina — to- 
gether with  its  .sister  ina'titutions 
throughout  the  state,  both  public- 
ly and  privately  supported — have 
a  serious  responsibility  to  carry 
on  a  continuing  program  of  re- 
search on  these  problems. 

We  mtist  constantly  keep  the 
social  scicntist'.s  microscope  train- 
ed on  the  .=7taie  and  its  people,  so 
ais  to-  provide  sound  bases  for 
policy  determination. 

,     (To  be  continued) 


L'il  Abner 


Sports  Editor 


LARRY  CHEEK 


Subscription  Manager Dele  Stalej 

Advertising  Manafer Fred  KatziP 

Circulation  Manager Charlie  Holt 


NEWS  STAFF— Clarke  Jones,  Ray  Link 
er,  Joan  Moore.  Pringle  Pipkin,  Anne 
prake.  Edith  MacKinoon,  Wally  Kuralt, 
Mary  Alys  Voorhees,  Graham  Snyder, 
Billy  Barnes,  Neil  Bass,  Gary  Nichols, 
Page  Bernstein.  Pei?  Humphrey,  Phyllis 
Maultsby>  Ben   Taylor 


Gracious' 
Living: 
Number  II 


B0T-S»>8.'-JEST  *" 


BUSINESS  STAFF— Rosa  Moore,  Johnny 
Whitaker,  Dick  Leavitt,  Dick  Sirkia. 


SPORTS  STAFF:  Bill  King,  Jim  Purks, 
Jimmy  Harper,  Dave  Wible,  Ckurley 
Howsoa. 


Now  you  don't  even  liav^  tb  ask 
for  your  thought. 

You  can  get  it,  carefully  digest- 
ed Cor  you  and  wrapped  up  in  neat, 
nice,  inverted  sentences,  in  \'- 
Court. 

Just  walk  ui,  lain  a  quarter  in 
the  big  green  Think  Machine  in 
the  middle  of  the  V-Court  floor 
and  get  your  thotight. 


Pogo 


By  Walt  Kelly 


Ilic   machine,    of    ( ourse, 
penses  Time  Magazine. 


dis 


Niabt  Editor 
Pr(k>rReatfer 


Woody  S^ars 
Guy  Ellis 


Time  Mag,izine,  of  course,  con- 
tains thought,  all  predigested  for 
you.  Even  pictures. 

It's  wonderful  what  modem 
science  has  done  for  us. 


AN'  HIM  OfiP  TO  gA«N  A 

peBeiPBHTOfTHB 


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HIM  \e  mBU  THgy  MA6  A 

COMB  'N  CA^  AN'  &OTH     £, 

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,      ;:;fcABY  DOLL 
M'  .  ■ . i'h€\]ii.6ks9i'it   alirays   wear  a   crib 

c\cr   been   legally  exhibited."   But  I  disagree   with 
them  all.  The.ifi^vife^was  an  excellent  one.  and  it  ■ 
was  not  as  tlt^jRoiatei  Catholic  Legion  of  Decency 
declared  a  dtrty^ '  filthy  picture. 

I  will  admit  that,  "Baby  Doll"  does  dwell  with- 
out much  variation  upon  carnal  suggesliveness.  But 
1  really  doubt  that  the  carnality  of  this  picture 
makes  it  unfit  to  be  seen. 

In  the  first  place,  if  the  viewers  had  %)t  been 
■'in  similar  situations  as  the  film  portrays  then  they 
would   not  be  able   to  see   the  carnality   in  it. 

In  the  second  place,  the  film  was  clearly  intend- 
ed to  portray  a  character  study,  with  the  particular 
purpose  to  arouse  disgust  with  the  people  and  the 
way  of  life  it  describes.  The  author.  Tennessee 
Williams,  and  the  director,  Elia  Kazan,  do  a  tre- 
ccndous  job  in  portraying  these  "po'  white  trash" 
of  the  Deep  South. 

The  picture  starts  out  showing  a  rotting  man- 
sion on  the  Mississippi  flats,  which  is  lived  in  by 
Archie  Lee  Meighan  (Karl  Maiden).  Baby  Doll 
(Caroll  Baker),  who  is  Archie  Lee's  wife,  and  a 
crazy  aunt  who  loves  to  cook  "greens."' 

Archie  Lee.  the  owner  of  a  beat-up  old  cotton 
gin^  was  just  put  out  of  business  by  the  competi 
tion  of  an  interstate  syndicated  cotton  ginning 
plant  run  by  Eli  Wallach.  For  revenge  against  the 
syndicate  Archie  Lee  burnt  do\Vn  the  syndicates 
cotton  gin. 

Baby  Doll  got  married  to  Archie  Lee  when  she 
was  19  .vears  old  because  her  father  (who  was  dy- 
ing) wanted  her  t:)  have  security  after  he  was 
gone.  However.  Baby  Doll  said  she  wasn't  "ready 
for  marriage",  so  she  made  a  deal  with  hubby  that 
they  wouldn't  consumate  their  marriage  until  her 
twentieth  birthday,  which  was  due  the  second  day 
of  the  two  days  portrayed  in  the  movie.  During 
this  "hands  off"  period.  Archie  Lee  contents  him- 
self by  staring  lewdly  through  a  peephole  at  the 
ripe-b.dicd  Baby  Doll  as  she  lies  curled  up  in  a 
wroughl-ircn  crib  sucking  her  thumb. 

The  syndicatej  manager  suspected  Archie  Lee 
and  set  out  to  seduce  Baby  Doll  to  obtam  a  writ- 
ten statement  to  be  used  as  evidence  against  her 
husband. 

The  seduction  scene  docs  take  up  the  bigger 
part  of  the  picture,  but  technically  the  acting  was 
excellent  and  was  worth  sitting  through  the  "Wop's" 
technique    (he    was   from    Sicily). 

He  starts  out  in  the  back  yard  and  gradually 
works  up  to  the  swing  in  the  front  of  the  house. 
He  rrally  gets  going  in  the  swing,  where  the  cam^ 
era  closes  in  on  her  face  while  his  hands  are  plain- 
ly busy  elsewhere  ("Oooo."  she  gasps.  "Ah  feel 
so  weak").  From  this  point,  they  both  go  to  the 
hou.>ie  to  play  hide  and- seek. 

As  the  evening  draws  near.  Archie  finds  out 
that  old  E!i  sent  him  on  a  wild  gDose  chase  so  that 
he  could  spend  the  afternoon  with  his  virginal  wife 
Baby  Doll. 

CorroH's  portrayal  of  Baby  Doll  was  a  profess- 
ional one.  This  is  especially  amazing  because  it  is 
only  her  .second  picture  Her  first  role  was  in 
"Giant."  I  am  looking  forward  to  seeing  her  a  lot 
more  in  the  years  to  come. 

The  picture  is  well  worth  going  to,  if  only  you 
go  for  the  wonderful  acting  of  Carroll  Baker,  Eli 
Wallach.  and  Karl  Maiden. 
1  will  give  it  two  bells. 


'*ff* 


R.AIJ 
Jy    2001 
freshmJ 
transfer 
and    ur 
enroll 
Collegel 
spring 

The 
the    car 
be  J,' in 
rcp-.stral 

They 
Class    \i 


Gr 


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mation 
r.T?n's 
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take   pl^ 
Gardner 

Harold 
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talk    at 
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other  qj 


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10 


12. 
13. 
14 

16. 
17. 

18. 
20. 

21. 
24. 

27. 

28 

30. 
31. 
32 
35 

36 

40 


42. 
43. 
44. 

45.1 
46 


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n,   1957 


le 


FRIDAY,  JANUARY  11,  1957 


THI  OAtLY  TAR  HtlL 


PA6I  THRIt 


).v   Doll- 

•:-ft 

urch    in 

.-xi 

over  his 

-•7 

censors 

«       m 

(III  Id  re- 

-  • 

of  sin." 
difiance 

--I        ■ 

ion   Pic- 

stration. 

---► 

athedral 

iblv    the 

hat    has 

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as 

■"re 


ree  with 
.  and  if 
Decency 

II   »nth- 

le.ss.  But 

picture 

jt   been 
en  they 
It. 

iniend- 

irticiilar 

and   the 

?nnessee 

a   tre- 

trash" 

:   man- 

d   in   by 

by    Doll 

and  a 

d  cotton 
competi- 
;inning 
iinst  the 
ndicates 

hen  she 

was  dy- 

he    was 

•ready 

bby  that 

intil    her 

;(>nd  day 

During 

nt^  him- 

j!    the 

up    in    a 

chie  l^e 
writ- 
iinst  her 

bigger 
rting  was 
Wops" 

gradually 
house, 
the  cam* 
in-  plain- 
•Ah  feel 
(1   tf>  the 

finds  out 
ie  so  that 
5inal  wife 

profess- 
luse  it   is 

was  in 
her   a   lot 

only  you 
laker.   Eli 


r 


Covering  The  Campus 


STATISTICS  COLLOQUIUM 

New  methods  of  dealing  with 
serial  correlations  in  time  series 
will  be  described  by  M.  M.  Siddi- 
qui  Monday  at  the  meeting  of  the 
Statistics  Colloquium  at  4  p.m.  in 
Phillips   Hall.    Serial   correlations 


Hargrove  Will  Speak 
As  y  Guest  Monday 


are  measures  of  likness  of  succes-  The  local  YMCA  will  have 
sive  observations  and  are  used  ex- ;  Thomas  HargraVe,  Asso<!iate  Stu- 
tensively  in  economics,  astronomy,  dent  Secretary  of  the  Southern 
and  weather  science.  I  Area  Council  of  the  YMCA,  from 

Siddiqui  is  a  graduate  of  the  Uni- ;  Atlanta,  Ga.  as-i«B  g«est  at  severAl 
verity  of  the  Punjab  in   Lahore, '  meetings  here  Monday. 


State  Prpfessor 
Receives  Two 
High  Honors 

RALEIGH  —  (AP)  —  Dr.  Roy  L. 
Loworn,  acting  director  of  re- 
search in  the  School  of  Agricidture 
at  North  Carolina  State  College, 
has  received  two  of  the  highest 
honors  in  his  profession,  it  was  an- 
nounced twlay. 

He  has  been  elected  a  fellow  of 
the  American  Society  of  Agronomy  j 
and  a  fellow  of  the  American 
Assn.  for  the  Advancement  of^ 
Science.  A  native  of  Woodland, 
AJa..  Dr.  Lovvorn  also  is  currently  ' 
serving  as  national  vice  president ', 
of  Gamma  Sigma  Delta,  honor  so- 
ciety  of  agriculture. 


Hargrave  gradtiate  from  Knox- 
ville  College,  ICnoxVllle.  tem. 
and  has  been  with  the  Southern 
Area  Council  since  the  summer  of 
195A.  He  tours  southern  uhiversi- 
ti«8  visiting  campus  Y.  groups. 


2C0  Students, 
Transfers  To 
Enroll  At  State 

RALEIGH— ( AP)— Approximate- 
ly 200  new  students,  incJudiftg 
freshmen  and  undergraduates 
transferring  from  other  colleges 
and  universities,  are  expected  to 
enroll  at  North  Carolina  State 
College  at  the  beginning  of  the 
spring    semester. 

The  new  students  will  arrive  on 
the  campus  Monday.  Jan.  28.  to 
begin  a  three-day  orientation  and 
rpg'stration  program. 

They  will  register  Jan.  30. 
Class  work  will  start  Jan.  31. 


Pakistan,   and    has   taught   mathe- 
matics and  j>-tatistics  there. 
LANGUAGE  CLU& 

The  Romance  Language  Club  will 
meet  today  at  8  p.m.  in  the  As- 
sembly Ro<Mn  of  the  Wilson  Li- 
brarj'.  Dr.  John  E.  Keller,  associate 
professor  of  romance  languages,, 
will  discuss  the  "Cantigas  de  gf"^  ^^as  much  U>  eontribute  to 
Santa  Maria".  The  presentation,  il- '  the  local  Y  movement  in  loking 
lustrated  with  slides  and  music,  is  :  at  its  role  on  the  CaroUna  campus." 
open  to  the  public.  j     I"  ^^^  meetings  Hargrave  wiU 

NCAA  AT  CHAPEL   HILL  I  <^iscuss  the  role  and  functions  of 

The  Unuersity  of  North  Carolina  '  the    Y.    its    affiliation    with    area 
will  be  host  to  the  NcXa  Swim- 1  headquarters    in   Atlanta,    its    fe- 
ming  Championships  for  the  second 
time.  The  meet   is  scheduled  for 
'March   28-30.   The   Championships 
were   last  held  in  Chapel  Hill  in 
1949. 
WUNC 

Today  s  schedule  for  WUNC,  the 
University's  FM  radio  station: 

7:00— Through  the  Looking  Glass. 

7:30— The  U.N.  Story. 

7:45— Patterns  of  Thought. 

8:00— Lets  Listen  to  Opera. 
10:00— News. 

10:15 — EX'ening  Masterwork. 
11:30— Sign  Off. 

Ohio  State  Prof 
To  Speak  Here 


IfcOO  lunch  with  the  YW-YMCA 
staff; 

2:30  YMCA  Executive  Commit- 
tee; 

4:00  Intercollegiate  Committee 
,to  plan  a  workshop  on  humaa  re- 
latioiu; 

5r30  dinner  with  a  group  of  YM- 
YWCA  students; 

9:00  YMCA  Cabinet. 


Gerry    Majro.    president    of    the } 
local   YMCA,  feels  "Thomas  Har- 


sponsibility  on  campus,  and  pfob- 
lems  within  the  movement. 

Hurgrave^a    schedule    for   Mon- 
day is  as  follows: 

I  Lutherans 
{  To  Show  Film 
jSunckiy  At7 

"Harvest   ol  Yfears",     a     docu- 
jmentary  film  of  the   history  atad 
;  growth  of  the  Lutheran  Church  in 
!  the    United    States    and    Canada, 
I  will  be  siiOMTi  Sunday  at  7  p.m.  at 
i  Holy    Trinity    Lutheran    Chuwh. 
The  film  relates  the  stofy  of  the 
Lutheran  Church  in  North  Ameri- 
ca from  colonial  migrations  to  th« 


Rendezvous 
Round-Up 
time  Tuesday 

II  wiiy  be  roundup  time  in  the 
Hendervous  Room  next  Tuesday 
night,  as  th^  Graham  Memorial 
Activity  Board  sponsors  it's  first 
County  Style  Jam  Session  in  re- 
cent years.  Some  twenty-five  to 
thirty  country  style  musicians  are 
expected  to  take  part  according 
to  Warren  Miller,  the  program's 
co-ordinator. 


International  Relations 
Seminar  To  Be  Held 

A  study  of  international  relations  pean  leaders  in  such  fields  as  gov- 
through  first-hand  experience  will  emment,  education,  arid  civU  ssrv- 
be  provided  by  New  Ywk  Univer-  ice. 


ALBERT  COATES 

. .  .  discusses    InstitiUes'    grofioth 

Institute's  Rise 
Is  Discussed 
By  Director 


sity's  eighth  Seminar  in  Western 
Eiu-ope  during  July  and  August. 


In    England    the    students    will 
tour  schools,  universities,  and  Par- 


I    Lost  And  Found  Articles 

With  eScam  tune  approaching  the 
]  Y    information    office    will    have    a 
I  special   display  of  all  books,   note- 
!  books   and   glasses   that   ha\'e   l)een 
turned  into  its  lost   and  found  col- 
lection. 

ITie*  articles  will  be  exlobited  all 
day  Friday  end  until  noon  on  Sat- 
urday. .\fter  Saturday  the  books  will 
be  turned  over  to  the  library. 


Graduate  students,  teacher*,  and  Hament.  In  Germany  and  Italy  they 
social  workers  enrolled  in  the  '■■  ^jn  visit  the  lygiiiative  bodies  and 
overseas  course  will  visit  England,  the  United  States  -  embassies.  In 
Belgium.  Germai^v.  Italy.  Switzcr-  paris  they  will  tour  UNESCO, 
land,  and  France.  During  the  study  '  NATO,  and  SHAPE  lfeadquarter>'. 
they  .will    hear  lectures  by  Euro-;      jy^^^^,  ^^  the   seminar  is  Dr.  | 

\  Christian  O.   .Arndt,    chairman   of 
j  the  department  of  foreign  langu- 
j  agfes    and    international     relations 
I  education  at  the  NYU  School  of 
Education. 
I      I*rerequisites  for  the  course,  ac  I 
I  cording    to    Professor    Arndt,    in-  \ 
No  one  was  injured  in  the  Ala-   ^j^^^  eligibility  for  graduate  work,  I 
bama  bombings,  which  Gov.  James 
E.  Folsom  denounced  as  the  work 


Racial 

(Continued  fronf  Page  ^) 
to  get  into  the  courts. 


Albert  Coates  discussed  the  jrow- 
th  and  development  of  the  Institute 
of  Government  of  which  he  is  di- 
lei-tor  in  a  speech  at  the  UNC  facu- 
^me  of  the  entertainers  ex-  [  ,y  council  luncheon  this  week. 
peCted  to  appear  include  Hoke !  Coates  pointed  out  nearly  250.000 
Simpson,  who  along  with  Miller  i  cfficials  of  city,  county,  state  and 
appears  on  WTVD  television:  I  federal  governments  have  attended 
Todd  Reece,  formerly  with  George  j  the  Institute  here  for  study  in 
Hamilton,  and  Hank  Scott,  a  re- '  courses  related  to  their  duties  over 
cording  artist  now  at  State  College,  i  the  past  quarter  of  a  century. 
Although  the  program  will  be  in- j     As    one   of    its    founders,    Coates 

said   the  Institute   has   grown   from 
quarters  in  a  small  University  law 


Grad  Study 

A  raeeting  designed  to  give  infer-  , 
mation  about  the  University  of  Chl-  i 
ca?o's  graduate  program  leading 
to  MB.\  and  Ph.t>.  degrees  wH!  , 
take  place  today  at  3  p.m.  in  211  ; 
Gardner  Hall.  ] 

Harold  M.  Metcalf,  dean  of  stu-  i 
dents  at  the  University  of  Chicago,  ' 
will  be  there  to  explain  the  pro-  i 
gram,  [ 

He  wiU  explain  the  admission  re- 
quirements, discuss  financial  aid, 
talk  about  placement  service  and 
the  program  of  study  and  ansWet 
other  questions. 


The  third  in  a  series  of  lectures 
sponsored  by  the  Ciu-riculum  of 
Comparative  Literature  will  be  giv- 
en here  tonight  at  8  p.m. 

Prof.'  Oskar     Seidlin     of     Ohio 
State  University  will  speak  on  the 
•"The  Oresteia   Today:  The  Dehu- 
manization   of  a  Myth  in  German. ! 
French   and    English   Literature."  \ 
The  meeting  will  be   held    in  the  i 
Faculty  Lounge   of   the    Morehead 
Planetarium. 

All  students  of  the  classics.  Ger 
man,  French  and  English  litera- 
ture have  been  urged  to  attend. 


present  (Contemplated  metgers  of 
the  s*<?ts'^  branches. 

Music  for  the  film  was  record- 
ed by  the  choir  of  St.  Olaf  Col- 
lege, one  of  the  church's  endow- 
ed schools. 

The  public  has  been  invited  to 
I  attend  the  showing  of  the  film. 


fomal  and  open  to  all  folk  and ' 
country  musicans.  as  well  as  the  '< 
I  public,  free  of  charge,  in  order  j 
i  that  a  tentative  schedule  of  ap- , 
i  pearance  can  be  formulated,  all 
i  pfospeclive  participants  are  asked ! 
j  to  fill  out  an  application -at  the! 
I  Graham  Memorial  Information 
I  Desk.  I 

Those  who  cannot   fill   out   the  < 
I  blank  in  advance  can  do  so  at  the 
I  door  Tuesday  night.  j 

I      Music     will     start     promptly  at 
"  8:30.  and  run  continuouslv  till . 


Panty  Raid 
Staged  At 
Woke  Forest 


iKi 


DR.  OSKAR  SErOLIN 

Ohioan   spettks    here   tonight 


JAZZ 

AT  TURNAGE'S 

PRBSENTS 

Dick  Gable 

AND  THE 

ALL  ■  STARS 
EVERY  SAT.  2:dO  P.M. 

BEER  SERVED 


DAILY    CROSSWORD 


ACROSS 

1.  Paus« 
S.  Man'i 

nickname 
9.  An  affray 
10.  Island 
group 
(Pac.  O.) 

12.  Of  birds 

13.  Mixes 

14.  Eng Ush 
statesman 

16.  Sea  eagles 

17.  Diocesan 
center 

18.  Crowd 

20.  Id  est 
(abbr.) 

21.  Matchleaa 
24.  Frequtntly 

27.  Oriental 
nurses 

28.  Noble, 
woman 

30.  Music  note 

31.  Little  girl 

32.  Sul»lde 

35.  Dancing  |^1 
r Egypt.)  ■■ 

38.  Quoit  on 
a  peg 

40.  Stringed 
musical 
instrument 

42.  Bird  of  prey 

43.  Boredom 

44.  Variety 
of  wheat 

45.  Chafe 

46.  Spreads  grass 
to  dry 

DOWN 
1  A  stage 
production 

2.  Choice  group 
9.  Fur-bea^f 

animal 


4.  Found  in 
large  citlea 

5.  Donkey 
•.Tardy 
T.  Arabian 

chieftal* 
S.  Of  ComMraU 
9-  Queen  of 

fairies 

(poss.) 
11.  Tax 
15-  Spawn 

of  fish 
1«.  Most 

impudent 

21.  Writing 
impieytsnt 

22.  French 
r**»r 


n.  Water 

cBabyl.) 

24.  Group 
of 
eight 

25.  Balking 
3«.Week 

day 

(abbr.) 
St.  Goddess 

of 

healing 

(Norse) 
32.  Urged 
S3.  Time,  on 

a  ship 
54. Harte. 

vnrtter 


'.^r-irjHH   uc'ia 


Y«t*«r4sy'«  Aaiwtf 

M.  Girl's  namd 
37.  Jewish 

month 
39.  Back  of 

the  neck 
41.  Trouble 


vpas 


Thursday  to  disc|iG3  a  midnight  stu- 
dent ^onstratlan  which  .stirred  up -3"'°  acciaent  u 
the'co^ds.and   broj^ght   domi   the    i^'^    condition^ 
vnnih  of  law  enforcemVw  officcg^*-^  lB«»>t^V,  aftaa^rliHfcgmg .» 


The  event  had  several  hundred 
mate  students  whopping  it  up  on 
the  campus  Thursday  night  and  was 
interpreted  by  some  spectators   as 


The  boys  broke  out  a  window  in 
one  of  the  ground  floor  dormitory 
windows  and  the  girl  occupant 
fled.  She  said  they  took  five  new 
sligis,    several    bras    and    paifs    of 


PATRONIZi  YOUR 
•    ADVERTISERS    • 


Music  Methods 
Conference  j 
Is  Here  Today 

"Developing  a  Sound  Music  Pro- 1 
gram  in  the  North  Carolina  j 
Schools"  will  be  the  first  topic  at 
a  da>'-long  Music  Methods  Confer- 
ence to  be  held  today,  at  the  Uni- 
versity, sponsored  by  the  State  De- 
partment of  Public  Instruction. 

Some  40  college  administrators 
and  teachers  are  expected  to 'gath- 
er at  10  a.m.  for  the  opening  ses- 
sion.  Dr.  Glen  Haydon.  chairman 

of  the  UNC  Music  Department,  will  i  a    panty    raid.    Others    called    it    a 
bring  the  official  UNC  welcome,     j  ietting-off  of  steam  after  Chirstmas 

Morning    speakers    wiU  include  j  holidays,  a  pre-exam  riot  or  i  fl^f- 
€.  VV.  Duggins.  superintendeht.  Ox-  I  ly  for  Hungarian  relief.  ^" 

ford  City  Schools;  L.  V.  Godwin, 
principal.  Asheboro's  Lindley  Park 
School;  and  Miss  Jessie  Baxter,  di- 
rector of  instruction,  Alamance 
County  Schools. 

Three  city  school  music  teachers 
will  appear  on  a  panel,  "Reports 
from  the  Field,"  moderAted  by  Dr. 
Joe.l  Carter  of  UNC.  Paneli.st?  will 
be  William  Tritt,  Concord:  Peggy 
Waldo,  Oxford;  and  Mrs.  Betty  J. 
farrington,  Durham. 

Dr.  Arnold  Hoffmann,  state  mus- 
ic supervisor,  will  moderate  an  af- 
ternoon symposium,  the  final  con- 
ference event.  Miss  Ruth  Jewell  of 
Dr.  Hoffmann's  office  is  general 
chairman  for  the  conference. 

'All  About  Eve'  GMAB 
Free  Flick  For  Tonight 

Academy  Award-winning  "All 
About  Eve"  is  tonight's  free  flick. 
The  picture  stars  Bette  Davis,  Ann 
Baxter,  both  nominated  for  Acad- 
emy Awards  for  thear  roles  in  this 
picture,  and  George  Sanders. 

The  picture  is  a  drama  of  back- 
stage rivalry  and  jealousy,  in  wtlcb 
Miss  Baxter  and  Miss  Davis  are 
the  main  combattants.  Marilyn 
Monroe  makes  a  brief  a(ppear:itice 
in  this  presentation. 

Times  fOr  this  feature  have  b^n 
changed  due  to  the  length  of  the 
picture.  SiMnnoft  G«tflk%,  dhaitmM 
of  the  OMAB^  Ttte  FUih  Camanittiee. 
which  sponsors  the  series,  aniaouhc- 
ed  the  firsi  showing  will  be  at  7:30 
p.m.  instead  of  %.  tliA  soaoiMi  show 
will  start  at  10  p.m. 


office  to  occupancy  of  the  ultra- 
modern $1  million  Joseph  Palmer 
Knapp  Bldg.  with  ample  adminis- 
trative, classroom,  and  dormitory 
space. 

"The  Institute  staff  haa  grown 
from  one  fuUtime  and  one  part- 
lime  man  to  a  staff  of  16  members,  ' 
Coates  said.  Through  the  coopera- 
tion of  University  departments,  the 
Institute  staff  teaches  courses  from 
two  days  to  twelve  weeks  in  length 
in  law,  government  and  criminoKgy. 

Once  the  more  important  schools 
conducted  by  the  Institute  is  the 
training  of  \orth  Carolina  state 
highway   patrolmen. 


;  "a  sincere  and  intelligent  interest 
I  in  international  relations,"  and 
:  the  fulfillment  of  s-pecific  rAding 
and  reporting  requirements  in 
,  preparation  for  the  trip. 

I  Registrants  will  assemble  on 
j  "on  July  1  in  Quebec  where  they 
•will  embark  for  London.  They  will 
sail  to  and  from  Europe  on  the 
Home  Lines"  Flag  Ship  Homeric, 
'leaving  for  the  return  trip  from 
■Paris  to  Canada  on  August  12. 

TOTAL  COST 

The  total  cost  to  an  individual 
participant,  including  fees  for  the 
maximum  number  of  credits  that 
can  be  earned  (eight),  is  estimated 
as  $1,168. 

Persons  who  plan  to  enroll  in 
the  workshop  should  apply  im- 
mediately, Dr.  Arndt  has  pointed 
out,  i'ince  enrollment  will  be  limit- 
ed and  since  the  participant  must 
j  bile  Negroes  to  discuss-  bus  de-  i  complete  his  reading  and  report- 
I  segregation  was  postponed  indel- '  ing  requirements  before  he  goes 
I  initely  Thursday.  '  abroad.  Applications  will   be  con- 

I  One  of  the  uncxploded  bomb.s  j  sidered  in  the  order  in  which  they 
i  was  found  on  Leflore's  front  porch  i  are  received.  Admission  to  the 
I  early  Thursday.  j  seminar  is  granted  after  a  personal 

!      Leflore    said    the    postponement ;  interview  and  exchange  of  corres- 


of  "Negro  hoodlums,  Communist 
hoodlums  or  white  hoodlums,  but 
whoever  did  these  bombings  must 
surely  be  a  hoodlum."  He  offered 
a  $2,000  reward  for  arrest  and 
conviction  of  the  bomb  thrdwers. 
The  bombs  damaged  the  homes 
of  Rev.  Robert  Graetza,  a  white 
minister  who  has  taken  an  active 
part  in  attempt:*  to  strike  down 
racial  barriers,  and  Rev.  R^ilph  D. 
Abernathy,  a  Negro  minister. 

The    four   Negro    churches    had 
walls  blown  in,  windows  shattered 
and  other  damages. 
,      Mobile  police  said  a  bomb  caus- 
ed   slight  damage    to   the    Mobile 
;  home  of  Walter  Johnson,  51-year- 
;  old    Negro,    who    with    his    wife, 
I  daughter  -and    her    five    children 
I  escaped  injury.     •. 
!      J.   L.   Leflore,   a    Mobile   Negro 
j  leader,  said  a  mass  meeting  of  Mo- 


I  Sbphombr^'s  Condition  , . 
wiNSTOfN-SALEM-^yp-'n,*  wilrt  I ' '  P W  ''SflHsf acti>ry'-  ::;:••  1 1 1{  j 

Fowst- college  erecutlre'  «ommltteef  'Sy^more  Law^^nce  Berg.  j*i|l 
sdleduled    fo'.m«et    sometime  i  J-*»*     Branch,     N.J..    is  stjfr'in 


was  agreed  upon  "in  view  of  the 
earnest  desire  of  Mobile  colored 
citizens  to  avoid  a  hasty  strategy 
;  to  effect  \mg  desegregation  which 
persons  here 
order  an   ex 


•  w<tjiy  ^yie! ':  tl^  f dw 
j' bpj^ed  \tx ■  law'ahd 


pondence.  . 

>^ 
Additional    information   can    be 

obtained  by  writing  to  Professor 
C  O.  Arndt,  Steminar  on  Western 
Europe,     New     York     University, 


OLD  BOOK  PRICES 

COME  TUMBLING 

DOWN! 

At  the  Intimate  Bookshop,  Januarv 
is  the  traditional  time  for  revising 
old  book  prices,  and  pal.  how  we 
have  revised  this  year! 

DOZENS  OF  BOOKS  GO  FROM 

$1.50  to  97c 
We've    combed     the    S'helves    for 
sleepers,    and    when    we've    found 
one.   we've  given  it  the  chop! 

OTHER   DOZENS   CUT   FROM  97c 
To  72c 

If  you've  been  tempted  to  buy  one 
of  our  97c  books,  now's  the  time, 
pal.  Most  likely  it's  on  the  72c 
shelf. 

DOZENS  MORE  GO  FROM  72c 
WAY  DOWN  TO  39c 

During  January,  not  only  the  regu- 
lar 48c  l)oks,  but  the  sleepers  from 
the  72c  shelf  are  yOurs  for  a  mere 
39c. 

OTHER  OLD  BOOK  PRICES  DROP 
BY  7Sc  to  $1.00. 

We've  gone  right  through  our  old 
book  stock,  and  whenever  we  found 
a  book  rooted  to  the  shelf,  we've 
applied  the  old  shears  where  it 
'hurts  most.  Had  to,  in  fact,  be- 
cause there  are  a  couple  of  li- 
braries* coming  up.  and  we'll  need 
room  for  them. 

THE  INTIMATE 
BOOKSHOP 


^^- 


^cuse  to  aptJcii  to  hatred  and  incite    Washington  Square,  New  York  3, 


( violence*' 


(Menrorial     Hosfcital    following    an 
auto  accident  last  Saturday  {night. 


;i^ 


New  York 


205  E.  Franklin  St. 
Open  Till  10  P.M. 


RALK 


after 


Hill  with^ 

dent  David  Wilson 


vertebhi. 

"nie  accident  occurred  .  whea 
Berg  was  returning  to  Chapel 
C.  State  College  stu- 
who  was  only 
slightfyMiiJared  in  the  wreck.  Wil- 
'son'S 'carl; went  ,out "  of  coHtrt)!  *tt 
a  curve,  ran  oA  the  shoulder  of 
the  road  and  overturned  when  he 
tried  to  pull  it  back  on  the  high- 
way. 


ciASSineos 


THE  OAILY  TAR  HEEL  WILL 
pay  $  .25  for  each  issue  of  the 
September  28  edition.  Papers  of 
this  dale  are  needed  for  adver* 
rising  puriMtses. 

PART  TIME  WAITERS  WANTED: 
Hours  can  be  arraaged  with 
your  «chedule.  Apply  at  the 
Tar  Heel  Sandwich  Sihop, 'llO 
N.  Columbia  St. 


JAZZ  AT  TURNAGlf 

Saturday  afteratMo,  2:00,  Turtt 
ages  Cabin .  in  Durbaot— ^az)  by 
Dick    Gables    "All    Stars."    Beer' 

Served. 


panties     she    was    saving    for    her 
trousseau. 

One  boy  who  participated  In  the 
•narch  on  the  girls'  dormitories 
said  only  two  pair  of  panties  were 
thrown  from  windows. 


^Wlish. 
is  t^^'t^o.  1  course  of  study  a't"tb<; 
tJ^iversity   of    North    Carolina.'" 
The  State^  Bogrd   of  Higher  Ed- 
1  .ucation '  ^eeatir*  i^leased    figures 
I  showing    English    ranked    lOtl^    at 
I  the   University   in   the   number  of 
I  students    regiilered. 
;      The  highfeiS'board  said  today  it 
i  ^\adc'  a '  lii^st^e  in  tabulating  re^-  i 
istiatiori*  'f igifres   supplied   by  the 
University.  j 

'      The  corrected  figures  show  that ; 
!  English  is  way  out  front  in  reg- 
I  istration.  The  Department  is  tcach- 
j  ing  the  equivalent  of  765  full-time  j 
I  students. 

I      English's    closest    rival    is    hi.s- 1 
tory.  This  department   is  teaching  . 
the  equivalent  of  592  full-time  stu- 
dents. 


rnou 


JANUARY    SALE 


^J 


f>"'"'.' 


i\\ 


TvlirrJ?   <i- 


us  CONTINUES 

o:      WITH 

'    REDUCTIONS 

20%  -  50% 

AND  MORE 


.  11 (11/ 


rijir    ■■■'■ 


STEVEKS^  SHEPHERD 


r-   .,., 


IfiriNSTOlM 

has  the  answer  on  flavor  i 

No  guesswork  here!  Your  first  puff  will  tell  you,  this  filter 
cigarette  tasted  like  rf  cigarette!  There's  rich,  fiill  flavor  here. 
And  a  pure,  snowy-white  filter  that  does  its  job  so  well  the 
flavor  really  comes  through  to  you.  That's  why  Winston 
is  America's  favorite  filter  smoke.  Make  it  yours! 

Smoke  WlflNSTOH-enioy  the  snQw-white  filter  in  the  cork-smocth  tipl 


ro*ACco  CO.. 

WIHSTOM-SAl-eM.   a.   c. 


f  A6I  FOUM 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


FRIDAY,  JANUARY  n,  1957 


Tar  Heels  Meet  Ciemsoh  Here  Tonight;  Frosh  Play  Wake 


(Today's  column  is  written  by  Duly  Tar  H«ol  Sports  Writor  till 
King.) 

Tar  Heel  Cagers  Boast  Balanced  Attack 

It  miglit  !)f  a  little  early  \vi  to  start  presentitij;  the  Car- 
olina tatjers  with  bouquets  because  the  Tar  Heels  still  liave 
a  loti^  road  to  travel  in  order  to  dethrone  i\.  CI.  State  as  ACC 
champs,  but  Coacii  Frank  McGuir^'s  tall  and  talented  ag- 
gregation has  certainly  proven  itself  the  team  to  beat  and 
'  there's  a  verv  good  reason  for  this — the  Tar  Heels  plav  basket- 
ball as  it  should  be  played  —as  a  team. 

The  Carolina  -  William  and  Mary  hox-^core  -will 
serxie  as  a  ^ood  illustration  of  the  point  under  discussion. 
The  Indians  held  high  scoring  I.ennie  Rosenhluth  to 
only  ten  fioinls  and  normally  this  -would  bring  about  de- 
-i-dstating  results  to  a  ball  club  which  features  a  great 
scorer  like  Rt>sy.  But  Rosenbluth's  bad  night  had  little 
efjecl  on  the  final  outcome  because  Pete  Brenaan,  Joe 
Quigg  and  Tommy  Kearns  took  up  the  slack  left  by  Hos- 
enbluth  and  tallied  32  of  Carolina's  'i  f)oin(s. 

This  was  not  tJte  first  time  that  the  Tar  Heels  had  call- 
ed upon  their  clutch  guys.  Up  in  Madison  Square  (iarden 
during  the  Clhristmas  holidays,  Big  l.en  was  held  to  9  points 
against  .\.\  .1'.  and  this  time  it  >vas  Bob  Cunningham,  nor- 
mally not  nuich  of  a  scorer  but  a  teriffic  fl<x)r  man,  who  pro- 
vided the  scoring  punch  for  the  Tar  Heels,  -\gainst  Furman 
Quigg  (ame  off  the  bench  and  shook  the  Tar  Heels  out  of 
a  momcntan  delinuna  with  a  quick  scoring  flurry. 

What  this  all  boils  down  to  is  the  definite  fact  that  the 
Far  Heels  are  far  from  f)eing  a  one  or  two  man  team.  Fvery- 
one  of  ihe  first  seven  men  are  big  scoring  threats  and  it  goes 
without  saving  that  a  leain  with  tliose  qualities  is  one  that 
is  going  to  be  plenty  tougli  to  beat.        ;•„      _    .  -      - 

Jackie  Moreland:  Man  With  A  Problem 

Most  college  studeius  right  now  have  layed  aside  th<^uglits 
of  anything  but  exams  but  there's  one  fellow  over  at  .North 
Carolina  Slate  who  is  proliably  more  coiicerned  aboijt  what 
he'll  be  doing  a  month  from  now  than  Ji^^^^'bis  exams  will 
come  out.  The  fellow  is  one  jaclae  Moreland.  the  "imroftu- 
nate  victim  of  one  of  the  biggest  college  athletic  squabbles 
in  a  long  time.  Jackie,  an  honor  stu<ient\  is  r^tight  between 
the  devil  and  the  deep  blue  sex  novrvtha't  the  ACC^  i»  wn- 
dei  ided  as  to  whether  or  noi;ir,wih  r.eview.his  case  a^in. 

Only  iw the  ptist  feat  days^ has  -Ihererbpen. any  dpttbt 
that  Jackie's  problems  iponldhe  nined-.attt  a^nfj>\it  rwn) 
the  conference  committee  'iS'JifporifeiU^  ftlannung  tf?  call   . 
the  case  closed.  •;?'-  iWtLit,?^-    i.^'u.'i,   3,. .,;..-a<    .<i»f»!.pu  • 

Moreland  admittedly  Itkes  me  Rafeigti  scttooj  'ilnV^vouid 
like  to  Slav  on  if  there  is  any  possibility' that  he  rriis^ht  still 
get  to  wear  the  red  and  white.  On  the  other  h an H  he' prob- 
ably feels  that  he  is  wasting  a  semester  by  sticking  aroiind 
Raleigh  if  the  committee  does  decide  to  call  the  case  a  closed 
matter.  Its  understandable  that  Jackie  would  rather  move  on 
to  another  school  and  establish  residence  in  oider  U)  be 
eligible  to  play  as  quickly  as  possible.  Its  an  unenviable  po- 
siticm  to  be  in  and  a  tough  decision  toy  a  19  year  old  to 
make.  '.'^\  ■.'     !'  ' 

Needed:  More  Games  In  Woollen  Gym 

Seems  a  shame  that  'the  highly  ranked  "Far  Heels  are 
playing  only  eight  games  in  Chapel  Hill  this  season  and  the 
situation  does  not  show  any  signs  of  improving  in  the  im- 
mediate future.  The  story  is  that  the  Woollen  Gym  seating 
capacity  limits  the  number  of  fans  outside  the  students  to 
attend  the  games  and  this  means  that  Carolina  has  very  little 
to  offer  in  the  wa^'  of  nionev  to  its  opponents  for  a  trip  to 
Chapel  Hill.  '  '  '  r»  •} 

,\iany  schools  are  anxious  to  play  tfie  Tar  Heels 
but  their  stipulation  is  tliat  the  game  is  to  be  played  on 
their  own  home  court.  Naturally  the  Tar  Heels  benefit 
from  this  arrangement  financially — and  so  goes  the  sto}^. 
Still  it  seems  that  the  students  are  not  exactly  getting  a 
jair  sliake. 

The  hot  and  cold  Clemson  Tigers  invade  'the  Hill" 
tonight  and  will  be  out  to  pull  a  stunning  upset  as  they  dui 
against  N.  C.  State  early  in  the  season.  Tomorrow  night  the 
\'irginia  Cavaliers  will  be  in  town  and  these  two  contests  will 
give  Carolina  students  a  short  respite  before  they  buckle  down 
to  the  tasks  of  exams. 

Tatum  Says  He  Intends 
To  Stay  At  Chapel  Hill 


*UNC  Quint* 
Goes  After 
Number  13 

ty  LARRY  CHEEK 

That  magic  numt>er  13  ponio.%'  up 
ionight  for  Coach  Frank  MctJuirc's 
Carolifw  basket  bailers  wh«n  the 
undefeated  Tar  Heels  play  host  to 
the  Clemsott  Tigers  in  the  first  of 
a  two  fame  ^otne  stand  again-st 
.\CC  opposition. 


ST.  LOUIS— (JP»— Jim  Tatum.  foot- 
ball coach  at  North  Carolina,  yes- 
terday scotched  a  report  he  was  dis- 
satisfield  there  and  was  interested 
in  the  vacant  head  coaching  job  at 
Indiana. 

Tatum,  here  for  the  American 
Football  Coaches  Assn.  meeting, 
.'aid  he  hadn't  asked  Indiana  or  any 
other  school  for  a  coaching  job. 

Tatum  said  be  left  one  of  "the 
best  coaching  jobs  in  the  country 
at  Maryland"  to  go  to  North  Car* 
olina  last  season  and  be  intended 
to  stay  there. 

At  Louisville.' Ky.,  the  Courier 
Journal  said  that  Jim  Tatum  is  re* 
portedly  dissatisfield  with  his  pre- 
^bjut    position    as    Nortii    Carolina 


I  football  coach. 

The  Courier  said  it  learned  that 
Tatum  conferred  at  lenjcth  Wednes- 
day with  Indiana  University  «{fi- 
cials  about  the  vacant  Indiana  head 
coaching  job.  '^ 

The  paper  said  reports  indicate 
that  Tatum  is  unhappy  ^lout  the 
sudden  sih-ge  of  basketball  interest 
at  North  Carolina  where  thie  Tar 
Heels  are  rated  the  nation's  No.  2 
team  in  the  latest  Associated  press 
poll. 

The  paper  added  should  Tatum 
decbne  the  job  —  or  it.  not  be  of- 
fered to  him  —  it's  likely  that 
Warren  Geise,  an  assistant  under 
Tatum  for  his  eight  yearg  at  Mary- 
land, may  be  piciced. 


The  towering  Tar  Heels,  ranked 
second  in  the  nation  behind 
Kansas,  have  bl'eezed  to  12  con- 
secutive wins  without  a  loss  this 
ieason  and  will  be  looking  for  num- 
bers 13  and  14  against  Clemson 
tonight  and  Virginia  tomorrow 
night.  Both  games  will  tip  off  at  8 
p.m.  after  a  freshman  preliminary. 

In  a  game  played  earlier  this 
season  in  Charlotte,  Carolina  rout- 
ed Clemson,  94-75.  Pete  Brennan 
sparked  the  red  hot  Tar  Heels  in 
their  best  effort  of  the  season,  hit- 
ting for  28  points. 

The  Tigers,  beset  by  per-wnnel 
problems,  have  had  little  luck 
since  that  date.  The  only  bright 
spot  so  far  has  been  an  upset  win 
oyer  N.C.  Sta^  .down  |n  South 
Carolina.  Earlier  this  mqiitb,  Co^ch 
Press  Maravich  suspended  two  of 
his  top  performers  for  disciplinary 
reasons,  but  the  two,  guards,  Tom 
Cameron  and  Dick  Yeary,  have 
since  been  rein.vtated  by  Maravich. 

1'he  Tar  Heels  will  be  more  than 
happy  to  see  their  home  court 
again.  Tuesday  night  they  journey- 
ed up  to  Williamsburg,  Va.,  to  bat- 
tle the  William  &.  Mary  Indians, 
and  barely  managed  to  escape  with 
their  scalps.  The  largest  crowd 
ever  to  see  a  game  in  the  W  &  M 
gym  1^'atched  their  darlings  drop 
a  71-61  decision  to  the  cold  Tar 
Heels. 

The  Indians  hit  48  per  cent  of 
their  shots  while  Carolina  could  do 
no 'better  than  30  per  cent  as  Len- 
nie  Resenbluth  sank  only  1  of  3 
from  *he"  floor.  But  the  tmperior 
tiNC  height  and  all  round  play 
toeant  thei  difference. 
.Clemson  has  one  of  the  ACC's 
leading  soot«rs  in  junior  forward 
Vines- .  yockef,  wlio  is  averaging 
19.0  thimi^  (he  first  10  games. 
Pili  Vorterough,  Cameron  and 
<J«n«  Seay!4re  also  hitting  in  dou- 
ble fisutes! 

•T*e  Tar;  Heels  also  have  four 
men  aveniginf  in  double  figures. 

The  Tar  Heels  also  have  four 
men  averaging  in  double  figures. 
Rosenbluth  leads  the  way  with 
•25.2.  followed  by  Pete  Brennan  at 
15.7,  Tommy  Kearns  at  13.1  and 
Joe  Qnigg  at  11.3.  ITie  starting 
lineup  will  be  made  up  of  Roi'cn- 
Wuth,  Brennan,  Bill  Hathaway, 
Kearns  and  Bob  Cunningham. 


"Here's  How  Its  Done" 

UNC  wrestling  coach  Sam  Barnes  demonstrates  »  new  and  evf- 
dently  amusing  hold  to   his  undefeated  ace.  Captain   Bob  Wa«ner. 


Hungarian  Distance  Runner 
Laszio  Tabori  To  Train  Here 


G«ft«r  It  Favored 

NfW  YORK  —  (AP)  —  Harold 
Carttt*,  72.  an  ambitious,  •nw- 
gatic  Mid  woll  conditioned 
hoavy-wvight  ceftt«n<l*r  is  favor- 
ed t«F  racit  up  kia  fmirth  straight 
victoty  at  t<M  oxpMiM  of  Bob 
B«li4WV  30.  th»  I«t4i«rgic  Pitts- 
burgh 9iant,  at  MadisMi  Square 
GardMi  toitigbt. 


fiM 


Tin  KMG  Plays  Ths  Hottest 
GamtinTlisWMtwItli 
Four  M  Queans! 


eouoN  ^  o«uii« 


IKUWI  »y  «>M  tttfUl 


NOW  PUYING 


^A^rTiz^ 


La.szlo  Tabori,  Hungary's  dis- 
tinguished distance  runner,  has 
shifted  his  training  gi-oUnds  to  UNC 
in  preparation  for  his  .\merican 
debut. 

Tabori  will  make  his  first  Ameri- 
can appearance  in  the  two-mile  run 
in  the  Knights  of  Columbus  games 
at  Boston  Jan.  19.  His  chief  com- 
petition will  come  from  American 
&ce  Horace  .Ashenfelter  in  the  31st 
K.  of  C.  event.  Ashenfelter.  the  FBI 
man  and  veteran  curved  board 
campaigner,  has  won  the  two-mile 
in  Boston  the  past  seven  years. 

Dale  Ran.som.  University  track 
coach,  said  he  had  offered  the 
Hungarian  star  the  use  of  Finley 
goif  course  and  the  indoor  track  at 
Woolen  gym  for  training  purpo.ses. 
The  nearby  University  Motel  aLso 
Would  be  available  as  residential 
quarters.  Ransom  said. 

The  Tar  Heel  coach  said  he  had 
not  been  informed  officially  as  to 
whether  the  Carolina  facilifies  had 
been  accepted. 

Rayisom  said  late  last  night  that 
he  thought  Tabori  would  come  In 
today  oh  the  10:20  or  11:20  plane 
I  fo'  the  Raleigh-Durham  airport  I. 

Last  Tiight  Tabori  denied  reports 
whuth  said  he  wa.s  dissatisfied  with 
training  conditions  at  Miami,  Fla. 
Tabori  said  his  only  problem  at 
his  Miamd  site  was  transportation 
from  his  hotel  to  the  track. 

In  Boston,  a  K.  of  C.  Spokesman 
said  that  Tabori  and  his  48-year- 
old  coach,  Mihaly  Igloi,  settled  on 
the  North  Carolina  campus  here 
alter  conferring  with  Dan  Ferris, 
secretary  of  the  Amateur  Athletic 
Union,  in  New  York. 

Tabori,    who    ran    a    3:58.9    mile 


last  year  and  placed  fourth  in  both 
the  metric  mile  and  5,000  .meter 
run  in  the  recent  Olympic  games, 
says  he  wants  to  train  outdoors. 
Ferris  recommended  Chapel  Hill  as 
having  outstanding  out-door  facili- 
ties, with  comparatively  mild 
weather. 

The  K.  of  C.  said  in  Boston 
Tabori  will  be  making  hLs  first  ef- 
fort on  a  board  track  when  he  meets 
.\shenfelter,  but  that  he  does  not 
plan  any  indoor  running  prior  to 
the  meet.  .A  .spokesman  said  that 
Igloi  told  Ferris  that  Tabori  runs 
40  miles  a  day,  which  is  why  he 
wants  to  train  outdoors. 


Shaffer, 
Larese  To 
Lead  Team 

Carolina's  once  beaten  Tar  Baby 
cagers  face  their  third  Big  Four  oi>- 
ponent  of  the  season  tonight  when 
they  play  host  to  the  Baby  Deacons 
from  Wake  Forest  in  a  6:15  prelim- 
inary to  the  varsity  game  against 
Clemson. 

The  Carolina  frosh  have  won  five 
decisions  while  losing  only  to  N.  C. 
State's  Highly  touted  yearlings. 
They  whiipped  their  other  Big  Four 
rival,  Duke,  by  a  convincing  mar- 


Most  of  the  Tar  Baby  wins  to  date 
have  been  one  sided  romps  over 
junior  colleges,  but  the  competition 
should  be  a  little  stiffer  tonight. 
Wake  Forest  varsity  coach  Murray 
Greason,  with  the  able  assistance 
of  Bones  McKinney,  has  gathered 
together  a  top  notch  group  of  re- 
cruits at  the  Baptist  school.  They 
aho  have  lost  to  State,  however. 

As  usual  the  Tar  Bal>y  starters 
will  be  Lee  Shaffer  «nd  York  Larese 
at  forwards,  Dick  Kepley  at  center, 
^nd  John  Crotty  and  Mike  Steppe 
at  guards.  Grey  Poole,  Wally  Gra- 
ham, Jaek  Crutdifield  and  Bill  Mc- 
I  Racken  are  top  reser\'es. 

Shaffer  and  Larese  have  paced 
the  Tar  Baby  scoring  all  year  long 
with  able  assistance  from  Kepley 
and  Crotty. 

Tomorrow  night  the  Tar  Babies 
will  meet  a  rugged  squad  from 
Stallings  Air  Force  Base  here. 


PERFECT  NAME  FOR  WRESTLER  I  likes    to   talk    about.    He's    a    250- 

North  Carolina  wres-tling  coach  j  pounder  named  Atlas  Buffaioe 
Sam  Barnes  is  proud  of  his  strong  from  Garner,  N.C.  As  Barncaf  puts 
Tar  Heel  wrestling  team,  but  ^  it:  "The  perfect  name  for  a 
Barnes  has  a  freshman  grappler  he    wrestler."    . 


Imported    Flannel, 
Tweed,  and  Shetland 

SUITS 
were  up  to  now 

$75  $48.75 


from  our  regular  stock 
SPORT  COATS 

Shetiands,  Rumson 

Tweeds,  and 

Harris  Tweeds 


were 

$45 

$55 


now 
$34.95 
$44.95 


Entire  Stock 
WOOL  SLACKS 
REDUCED  -  $3 

per  pair 
(off  regular  price) 


TOP  COATS 

Tweeds  and 
Shetlands 


were 
$65  to  $75 


now 
$48.75 


THESE  AND  MANY  OTHER  STARTLING 
REDUCTIONS  AT 


Julian' 


MILTON'S    NINTH 

ANNIVERSARY  SALE 

0 

SPECIAL  FRIDAY  AND 
SATURDAY  ONLY 

.  Entirf  stocM  $2,50  .  ties,  silk 
foulards,  English  hand-blocked 
vroei  chaiiis,  silkrreppi,  all  re 
duced  to  $1.99. 

CUttiina  Cupboar* 


ELIA 
*  KAZAN'S 

production 

TENNESSEE 
WILLIAMS' 

boldest  story!- 


Only  one*  in 
a  great  whila   , 
•  vary  apodal 
new  star  Ilka  \ 
CARROtL  SAKCRI 


rMM  Warner  Bnoe.  tTAimtN* 

KARL  MALDEN  CARROLL  BAKER  ELI  WALLACH 

fttnfMknNPliiliiJtOKESXEaiLUiltS  9n<M**ilOKtJUM  IREffTOMPrtlMtlM 


OPENS   TODAY 


Carolina 


ADULTS  —  6Sc 
ADULT 
ENTERTAINMENT 


MACHINES  FOR  MAGAZINES  ?  ?  ? 


Right,  Rosalind...  ;.- 

another  new  idea  for  the  campus, 
And  what  two  popular  campus  weeklie$???^ 
SPORTS  ILLUSTRATED  and  TIME,  of  course. 
And  the  machines???  At  your  service 
(with  the  latest  issues) 


at  the  YMCA  BUILDING 


CeT  YOUR  COPIES  TOPAY  (AVAILABLE   24   HOURS  A  DAY) . . .  IT'S   EASYT 


-    I 


tf.li.C.    Library 
Serials   Dept. 
Chapel    Hill.    N.    C. 
.  8-31-49 


WEATHER 

G*ner*lly  fair  and  cold  with 
diminishing  winds.  Expectad  high 
37  fo  43. 


ataif  lice  I 


RESIGNATION 

Tha  iegisiatura  was  no  h«lp  in 
pravvnting  en«.  S—  Mlitvrial,  ptg* 


2. 


VOL    LVil  NO.  81 


Complete  (/P)  Wire  Seniet 


CHAPEL  MILL,  NORTH  CAROLINA,  SATURDAY,  JANUARY  12,  1957 


Offices   in   Graham   Memorial 


POUR    PAGES  THIS  iSSUfc 


Dorm  Construction 
To  Begin  March  1 


Bidding  Begins 
Next  Week  For 
Annex,  Dorms 

By   BETTY    HUFFMAN 

The  Operations  Dept.  revealed 
yesterday  that  construction  on  the 
Hicw  dormitories  is  to  begin  by  the 
first  of  March. 

The  department  hopes  to  have  all 
plans  'for  the  three  new  men's 
donns  and  the  Spencer  annex  com- 
pleted by  next  week,  and  adver- 
tising for  bids  will  begin  next 
to  accommodate  73  coeds  and  600 
men  students.  Plans  for  the  derma" 
included  built-m  desks,  bookcases 
and  dressers  on  one  side  of  the 
room.  The  only  movable  furniture 
will  be  beds  and  chairs. 

In  addition  to  planning  for  the 
new  dovms.  the  Oi>erations  Depart- 
ment is  also  continuing  to  keep 
the   campus   in  good   condition. 

During  the  Christmas  holiday* 
the  upstairs  and  downstairs  lobbies 
of  the  Y  received  a  new  coat  of 
paint   while    the 


Segregation  Summary 

( AP)  —  Negro  leaders  asked 
President  EisenhowiBr  and  Vice 
President  Nixan  for  aid  in  their 
fight  for  integration  yesterdaj'.  a 
day  marked  by  new  developments 
in  the  violence-plagued  bus  situa- 
tion and  a  ruling  against  a  Vir- 
ginia law  designed  to  continue  seg- 
regation. 

The  Southern  Negro  Leaders 
Conference  on  Transportation  and 
.Non-violent  Integration  wound  up 
to  a  two-day  conference  in  Atlanta 
by  sending  this  telegram  to  the 
President: 

"We  ask  you  to  come  South  im- 
mediately to  make  a  major  speech 
in  a  major  Southern  city  urging 
all    Southerners    to   abide    by    the 


upstairs  got  now' Supreme    Court's    decision  as   the 
chairs,  couche.-;.  and    lights.  ^^^'  "^   ^^<^   ^«"^'       --.X'  ":    : ,:■ 

The  department  spokesman  said!  \ixon  was  urged  to  take  a  trip 
that  tUe  Y  was  one  of  the  hardest  ;  through  the  South  similar  to  the 
places  to  keep  in  condition.  J  he  one  he  made  on  behalf  of  Hun- 
Vhas  pr:;mised  many  time.>'  to  take  •  garian  refugees  and  report  to  the 
care  of  it,  "but  it  is  hard  to  keep ;  President  on  "economic  boycotts, 
anything  clean  and  in  order  when  !  and  reprisals,  and  bombing  and 
it  is  used  as  much  as  the  Y  is.'  j  violence  directed  against  persons 
The  rounds  are  about  finished  and  homes  of  Negroes  who  assert 
with  brick  walks  and  pavements.  >  their  rights  under  the  Constitu- 
Thg  department  has  finished  plant- ■  tion." 

ing     shrubs    by   the      government  j      The   60   Negro   leaders   from   29 

building  and  on  various  places  on '  communities     in     nine     Southern 

campus.   Grjs.ing  at  various  well- 'states  and   the  District   of  Colunt- 

ncedcd  places  has  also  been  com-    bia   mlso    wirrd   Atty.    Gen.    BroW- 

plctod,     Thcdc    ground     improve^ 'nel  I    reeiussUng  nti  i-hilervimr   '*A 

mcnts  concludes  a    Tftojfict  wlush '  the  MKfitfst  pOf^tlMa  '«tarta."  '       '  - 

Vvas      cqivcFeA    ttee    period    of      ten)       The      conference  i    leaders      told 

ye«rs.  ( Brownell  that  "the  confused  Stile 

Galvanized  posts  and  chains  are    requires  that  we  talk  with  you  in 

to  replace  the  iron  post  and  wire    order     to     secure     a  clarification 

fencing  to  keep   students   pff   the    from    the    highest    legal    authority 


Mordi  Gras 
Is  Set  Here 
For  Feb.  15-16 

Cart>lina  Mardi  Gras,  sponsored 
by  the  German  Club  and  Graham 
Memorial,  will  be  held  the  week- 
end of  Feb.  15-16. 

Among  several  festivities  plan- 
ned in  celebration  of  the  25th  an- 
niversary of  GM,  a  concert  by  the 
Mitchell-jluffduo.  sponsored  by  GM. 
will  be  held  from  8-10  p.m.  at  Mem- 
orial Hall. 

On  Saturday.  Feb.  16.  the  Ger- 
man Club  will  sponsor  a  Louis 
Armstrong  concert  in  the  after- 
noon. The  Winter  German  dance, 
featuring  Louis  Armstrong's  band, 
will  be  on  Saturday  from  8-12  p.m. 
at  Woollen  Gym  under  the  joint 
sponsorship  of  the  German  Club 
and    GM. 

Carolina  Mardi  Gras  Chairman 
Jim  Armstrong  and  Vice  Chair- 
man Gerry  Boudreau  announced 
that  a  bandstand,  using  the  New 
Orleans  theme,  is  being  con- 
structed. They  want  anyone  in- 
terested in  helping  with  the  band- 
stand, ticket  selling,  or  publicity 
for  the  weekend  to  contact  them 
at  the  DU  house,  telephone  9- 
1301. 


Gas  Prices 
Up  A  Cent 
In  Town 


Chancellor  Committee 
Choice  May  Be  Made 


By    GARY    NICHOLS 

The  price  of  gas  at  approximate- 
ly three  local  filling  stations  went 
up  one  eent  a  gallon  yesterday,  and 
many  other  stations  arc  expected  ■ 
to  follow  suit  in  the  near  future. 

Gas  in  town  is  now  selling  for 
34.4  cents  a  gallon. 

Standard  oil  started  the  ball  roll- 
ing by  raising  the  price  of  crude 
oil  and  oil  products  a  penny  a  gal- 
lon to  the  distributors.  At  the  la- 
test report  the  Texas  Co.  has  is- 
sued the  news  they  also  are  raising 
their  prices  by  the  same  amount. 

The  raise  has  been  put  into  ef- 
fect in  18  states  on  the ,  eastern 
seaboard. 

Locally,  the  distributors  who 
have  already  raised  their  prices 
have  done  so  one  cent. 

One  local  distributor  claimed  the 
dealers  will  actually  be  making  less 
than  they  did  before  the  raise 
since  no  allowance  has  been  made 
for  storage  and  such  upkeep..  An- 
other claims  this  will  have  little  J 
or  no  effect  on  their  profits.         i  chord  and  is  an  example  of  early 

The  dealer  said  there  would  pro-    18th  century  keyboard  music.  The 
bably  be  another  increase  in   ga.v' music  usually   is  not   available   in 


Dr.  Wilton  Mason  Plays 
Here  In  Concert  Tues. 


Dr.  Wilton  Mason'  of  Ahe  UNC 
Musip  Dept.  will  feature  two  piano 
selections  never  performed  before 
a  Chapel  Hill  audience  when  he 
plays  in  the  Tuesday  Evening  Se- 
ries, Jan.  15. 

The  concerts  are  open  to  the 
public  and  there  wil  be  no  ad- 
mission charge. 

The  8  p.m.  concert  in  IJill  Mus- 
ic Hall  wil  feature  'Suite  in  E 
Minor"  by  the  French  composer 
Rafmeau  and  "Pictures  at  an  Ex- 
hibition' by  the  Russian  compos- 
er Moassorgsky."   , 

The  third  selection  Dr.  Mason ' 
will  play  is  Liszt's  "Sonata  in  E  ; 
Minor." 

The  selection  from  Rameau  was  , 
originally   written  for  the   harpsi- 1 


An  exhibition  of  paintings  and 
sketches  by  Hartmann.  a  friend 
of  the  (Composer  Moussorgsky.  in- 
spired the  series  of  tone  pictures 
which  comprise  the  piece. 


prices  in  about  a  week. 


Scholarships  For  Austrian 
Study  Available  For  '57-58 


grass.  The  depai-tment  thinko-  this 
will  serve  the  purpose  better  and 
at  the  same  time  add  to  the  ap- 
pearance of  the  campus. 

New  floors  and  fiourescent  light- 
ing have  been  put  in  Peabody  anil 
Phillips  Halls.  New  West,  New 
East,  Davie  Hall  and  Alumni  Hall 
are  to  receive  the  same  operaliors. 

The  department  is  also  in  the 
process  of  constructing  a  new  road 
from  the  by-pasj  to  the  hospital. 
Thi.-i  will  make  it  possible  for  au- 
tomobiles and  ambulances  coming 
from  the  east  to  get  to  the  hospital 
without  having  to  pass  through 
town. 


in   the   land  ..." 

At  Tallahassee.  Fla..  Gov.  Le- 
Roy  Collins  ordered  immediats  re- 
sumption of  bus  service  in  the 
Florida  capital  t'>  test  "the  good 
will  prevailing  among  and  between 
the  people  of  both  races  and  of 
the  ability  of  the  bus  company  to 
furnish  a  needed  public  service 
with  due  regard  to  everj-  citizen." 

The  governor  suspended  city 
bus  operations  Jan.  1  after  a  Neg- 
ro leader's  home  was  stoned  and 
shots  were  fired  at  a  Negro  grocerj' 
store.  Negroes  began  "riding  inte- 
grated" on  Christmas  Eve,  thereby 

(See  WORLD  NEWS,  Page  3) 


Four  scholarships  for  graduate 
*tudy  in  Austria  during  1957-58 
ire  offered  to  American  students 
by  the  Austrian  government,  it 
was  announeed  by  Kenneth  Hol- 
land, president  of  the  lairtftute  of 
int^mtkmal       Education.       New 

March  l.  IM?  is  the  dofting 
date  for  tht  competition,  which 
:s  open  to  unmarried  American 
citizens.  ' 

The  scholarships  include  eight 
monthly  stipends  of  2,600  Aus- 
trian schillings  (approximately 
$100),  enough  to  cover  room  and 
board  as  well  as  tuition  and  in- 
cidental expenses.  One  travel  pay- 
ment of  1.400  Austrian  schillings 
(approximately  $53 i  will  be  of- 
f?red.  Grantees  will  be  responsi- 
ble for  all  other  expeniKS,  includ- 
ing round  trip  travel.  Applicants 
may,  if  eligible,  apply  for  Ful- 
bright  travel  grant*  to  cover  <he 
costs  of  international  travel. 

The  awards  may  be  used  for 
study  at  an  Austrian  university  or 
institution  of  higher  learning  in 
all  fields,  including  history  social 


Lower  Hemlines  Seen 
In  New  Spring  Fashions 


By  PEG  HUMPHREY 

^  Inch    by   inch      hemlinej    are 

'edging  down. 

'Ihis    is   obvious   in   the    new 

.spring  and  summer  fashions  now 
blossoming  in  stores  across  the 
cijuntr\.  Dior's  downward  sweep 
last  fall  has  been  modified  some- 
what in  daily  apparel,  but  his  in- 
nuvatifin  has  influenced  more 
strongly  the  attire  for  after-^-ix- 
fcstivitics. 

FRAGILE  COLORS 
In  accord  with  the  ladylike 
look  of  these  new  fashions,  colors 
are  muted  and  fragile  in  appear- 
ance. Gray  is  making  headlines 
as  is  oatmeal.  Classified  as  de- 
sert colaps  expected  to  loom 
importantly  in  the  coming  mon- 
ths arc  de.scrt-sky  blue,  sunjet 
pink,  .sand    beige,    palm    green. 


IN  THE  INFIRMARY 


Students  in  th*  Infirmary  yes- 
terday included: 

Misses  Nancy  Noble,  Ann  Han- 
ey,  Sally  Simson,  Anne  Bachman, 
^at  Gregory,  Marjorie  London, 
Deiores  Taylor,  Eugenia  Rawls; 
and  Riley  A^ntogomery,  Robert 
Lewis,  Shelton  Turner,  Truett 
Lineberger,  John  Sewfell,  Leon 
Lasalle,  James  Pierce,  John  Wal- 
Lasalle,  J»n>es  Pierce,  John  Wal- 
lace, Cherles  Lore,  and  James 
Mattis. 


Yucca  white,  blazing  red.  oasis 
blue-and-gi'een.  and  sunstruck 
yellow. 

The  cropped  look  is  maintain- 
ing its  foothold.  Suit  jackets 
stay  at  or  above  the  hipline. 
Many  boast  fiarrow  waistline 
be\ts  or  the  illusion  of  a  belt 
at  empire  height. 

Sheerness  prevails  in  wooL- 
while  tweeds  take  on  new  ele- 
gance in  the  fluffy  nubby  wea- 
ves. Mat  jersey  will  be  good  in 
the  spring  and  the  demand  for 
silk  apparel  is  responsible  for  a 
new  silk  with  th?  look  of  linen. 

Dresses  appear  most  often 
with  gentle  draping  and  the  blou- 
son  look.  The  classic  i-hirtdress 
is  seen  in  somewhat  softened  ver- 
sions this  spring. 

TALL  SHORTIES 

Handbags  remain  large  and 
slim  while  shoes  have  the  long 
lean  silhouette  of  a  wolfhound. 
In  glove  J,  the  tall  shortie  has  ta- 
ken over,  with  the  cuff  extended 
to  cuddle  wrists. 

As  for  jewelrj%  pearls  in  mu- 
ted neutrals  are  important.  They 
usually  appear  in  20-inch  long 
strands.  Pearl  gray  and  cool  bei- 
ges may  be  worn  effectively  to- 
gether as  well  as  white  and  pearl 
gray. 

For  the  more  advetituroois 
there  are  wide  headbands  cur- 
rent which  can  be  worn  smack 
on  the  hairline. 


sciences,   language   literature, 
other    liberal    arts    subjects. 


and 


Elibigility  requirements  include: 
V.  S.  citizenship;  bachelor's  de- 
gjve  by  date  of  departure;  demon- 
strated   academic   ability    and    ca- 

weUy  tor  indep— d»Bt  <twiy;  •p*<*'-" 'ffttj^.g!^    ¥ki% 
moral    character,  '^onall^    and^    »n015»CJ    D© 


adaptability:  profioiency  in  the 
German  language:  1  )  at Xidt  J|C«M- 
health. 

Application  I^Jan^s  .  may  be  se- 
cured frooi^  the>  iostitutc  of  Inter- 
national Education.  1  East  67th 
Street.  New  York   21.    New  York. 


Institute  Regional  Offices: 

116   South    Michigan   Ave. 
cago  3,  Illinois. 


Chi- 


291  Geary  St..  San  Francisco  2. 

California. 

401   Milam  Bldg.,  Texas  Ave.  & 
Milam  St..   Houston  2,  Texas. 


1530  P.  Street.  N. 
ton  5.  D.  C. 

1605    Pennsylvania 
3,  Colorado. 


W..  Washing- 


St..    Denver 


this  country. 

Dr.  Mason,  in  order  to  get  a  per- 
forming version,  transcribed  and 
enlarged  the  suite  from  micro- 
film. 

"Pictures  at  an  Exhibition"  was 
written  as  piano  solo  though  it 
is  well  known  is  its  orchestral 
vs^siun.  Musicians,  including  Ravel 
and  Lucicnt  Caillet,  have  ar- 
ranged ^t  for  symphony  orchestras. 


Here  Today 
By  March 

20  Names  Under  Discussion; 
Poteat  And  Godfrey  On  List 


By   CLARKE   JONES 


Selection  of  a  new  chancellor 
may  be  made  by  late  February  or 
early  March,  it  was  disclosed  Fri- 
day. 

R.  Mayne  Albright,  chairman  of 
the  nominating  committee  for  UNC 
chancellor,  said  his  committee  "is 
hoping  to  have  some  report"  to 
make  by  that  time. 


DR.  WILTON  MASON 

.  . .  plays    Tuesday 


Army  Calls  For 
14,000  Men 
During  March 

WASHINGTON  —  (AP)  —  The 
Army  yesterday  issued  a  draft 
call  for  14.000  men  during  March. 
The  quota  is  the  same  as  that 
prevously  announced  for  February. 
Monthly  draft  calls  were  for  17,- 
000  men  from  last  October  through 
this  January. 

The  new  call  brings  to  2,180.430 
the   total   number  drafted   or  ear- 
marked   for    induction    since    the 
I  res«mption    of    Selective     Service 
I  in  September.   1950. 


Presentation  Of  Plays 
By  Students  Feb.  17-18 


I      Three     one-act      plays     recently 


Student  Cars 
Stickered 


and  Barbara  Battle  of  .Miami,  Fla. 
written  by  UNC  graduate  students  |  The  story  involves  an  embittered 
in  Dramatic  Art  will  have  their  1  woman  who  is  detern^ined  to  es- 
first  production  by  T^hc  Carolina  V*aPe  ««  unsuccessful  *«empt  to 
I  Playmakers  xm  Thursday  and  Fri-  ^i"*'  *«^'^-  "»*'^  »^ 
day  evanings,  Jan.  J7  ^ijd  18.  all  "^'^Shbov  tclU'hiBr' something  that 
7:30    in    the    PlaymaJcers    Theatre.  I  changes  her  Ipims. 


The  committee  meets  here  today 
at  9:30  a.  m.  in  the  Morehead 
Bldg.  to  discuss  names  under  con- 
sideration for  the  position.  It  will 
also  meet  next   Saturday. 

Present  Chancellor  Robert  B. 
House  will  retire  this-  summer  due 
to  a  compulsory  retirement  age 
of  65.  The  Board  of  Trustees  en- 
acted the  regulation  last  year. 

Albright  said  there  are  "'roughly 
20  names  still  before  the  commit- 
tc."  He  saw  "no  reason  why  we 
(the  committee)  can't  make"  a  re- 
port by  late  February  or  early 
March. 

When  the  report  is  ready  it  will 
be  submitted  to  Consolidated  Uni- 
versity President  William  C.  Fri- 
day. Friday  has  asked. the  commit- 
tee to  submit  three  names  or  more. 

The  president  will  then  mak? 
hij  recommendation  to  the  Board 
of  Trustees. 

UNC  faculty  members  definitely 
under  consideration  for  the  job  in- 
clude Dr.  William  H.  Poteat.  as- 
sociate professor  of  Philosophy  and 
Dr.  James  L.  Godfrey,  professor  of 
Historj'. 

Albright  confirmed  these  two 
were  under  consideration.  He  would 
make  no  further  comment,  how- 
ever, other  than  "I  can  only  say 
the  committee  will  discuss  both  of 
these."       , 

Dr.  Alexander  Heard  of  the  Po- 
litical Science  Dept.  wai-  also  re- 
ported to  be  on  the  committee's 
list.  ^  ^,1   .  .   ,■■ 

Members  of  thfe  eomimtee  are  dl- 
interestedl^^^*^  ^"*°  ^^^^  groups —  trustees, 


alumni  and  VNC  faculty  members. 


Student*  who  hive  breuflht 
cart  to  the  cantpua  f  el  lowing  the 
helictovB  H*v*  been  rentfnded  that 
these  car*  mutt  be  reoUtered  and 
exhibit  stickers. 

Ray  Jefferies,  assistent  to  the 
Deen  of  Stufient  Affairs,  has  an- 
nounced that  students  who  have 
new  cars  on  campus  should  come 
by  the  Dean  of  Students  office 
to  register  these  cars. 

If  the  student  has  already  re- 
gistered a  cer  end  neMto  a  new 
sticker,  he  will  be  issued  one 
free   of   charge,   Jefferies   said. 

Stickers  for  cars  which  have 
not  been  previously  registered 
will  cost  $2.50. 


t  UNC  campus.  Under  thp  g,uidance 
of  Dramatic  Art  Professor  Foster, 
Fitz-Slmons.  an  all-student  staff 
will  do  the  designing,  acting-,  di- 
recting   and  technical  work.  Each 

presentation  will  be  followed  ]^y  \  Sar^i^  Cannon  as  ■  ~  stx  de.sign&r. 
a  brief  discussion  period  during  i  '^«'^*>""'"S  in  the  play,  set  in  a 
which    the   audience   is   invited    to    Victorian  living  room,  arc  Carolyn 


T^stccs  on  the  committee  are 
•Porliraitorf  a  Drafton."  the  isec- 1  j.  Sjiencer  Love.  Greensboro;  John 
oMd  pla.v.  was  written  byJosephirtej  w.  Umsfead.  ChapcJ  Hill;  Carl  Vco- 
Stipe  of  :Phapol  Hill.  It  is  direct- 1  ters.  Jacksonville;  Hill  Yarborough. 
^d  by  .Mary  Johnston,  with  Page  [  Louisburg:  R.  Fl«yd  Crouse.  Spar- 
Williams    as    stage   ihanager    and    tg'  and  Kemp  D.  Battle,  Rockv  Mt. 


^ 


evaluate    the   script   and    the    pro- 
duction. 

Opening  the  series  will  be  "Room 
Rent"  by  Miss  Marcellinc  Kraf- 
chick'of  Philadelphia,  Pa.,  direct- 
ed by  Nancy  Christ  of  Newark. 
N.  J.,  with  Ted  Parker  of  Clinton 
as  stage  manager  and  RusselT 
Link  of  Jamaica.  N.  Y..  astset 
designer.  Acting  in  the  short 
drama,  set  in  New  York,  are  Rose 
Christoff  of  Newark,  N.  J..  Jean 
Van    Si.sc    of    Huntington.    N.    Y., 


.Meredith  of  Raleigh.  William 
White  of  Chapel  Hill.  Virginia 
O'SuUivan  of  Valhalla.  N.Y..  and 
Ann  Brooke  of  Staunton.  Va.  The 
story  is  a  fantasy-ocmedy  about 
two  eccentrics  who.  by  ringing 
a  bell,  invoke  the  spirit  of  the 
mistress  of  the  house  to  return, 
via  her  portrait,  and  then  can- 
not get  rid  of  her. 

The  public  is  invited  to  attend 
the  performances  and  participate 
ill  the  discussions.  There  will  br 
no  admission  charge. 


IN  EVENTFUL  HISTORY: 


Carolina  Forum  Has  Had  Many 


4    I, 


Alumni  mcmbe.'-s  include  William 
D.  Snider.  Greensboro;  Terrj'  San- 
ford.  Fayetteville:  Frank  Parker, 
Asheville,  A.  M.  McDonai  i.  Char- 
lotte and  Chairman  Albright. 

.Members  of  the  faculty  arc  Dr. 
Dougald  MacMillan.  Eiiglish;  Dr. 
Rupert  B.  Vance.  Social  Science; 
Di.  John  Couch.  Botany;  Dr.  Paul 
Guthrie,  Bu^-iness  Administration; 
Dr.  Ernest  Craige.  School  of  Medi- 
cine and  Dr.  M.  T.  Van  Hecke, 
Ichol  of  Law. 


'    ^  ..^'  n,}  <»-/ 

peakers  Here 


By  NEIL  SAtS 


men  such  as  Volt  Giimore,  present  i  best  remembered  for  his  tireless 
I  mayor  of  Southern  Pines.  Dr.  I  efforts  t.)  bring  .Adlai  E.  Steven; 
j  Alexander  Heard  of  the  UNC  Po-  ;  son  to  the  campus. 

litical  Science  Dept..  Tom  Lam- !  Other  interesting  names  appear- 
!  beth,  current  chairman  of  Graham  ing  in  the  23-year-old  Forum-CPU 
I  Memorial  Activities  Board  and  files  include  then  Gen.  Dwight  D. 
The  Forum  became  the  official  |  Joel  Lawrence   Fleishman,  who  is '  Eisenhower,    who    in     1946    could 


The   Carolina  Forum,  currently 

headed   by  Jim  Holmes     of     Mt. 

Airy,  has  had  a  full  aod  rich  his- 
tory. 


by  the  student  Legislature. 

The  Forum  is  appropriated  ap- 
proximately $1,300  per  year  by 
the  student  Legislature  and  at- 
tempts to  bring  six  speakers  to  the 
campus    annually.     Students    have 


HECTIC  LIFE 

Th?  life  of  a  F,3rum  chairman 
i.«  a  hectic  one.  as  present  Chair 
man    Holmes   will    toll   you. 

An  example  is  his  attempt  to 
bring  V.  K.  Khrishna  Menon.  am- 


studcnt  government  speaker  pro- 
curement agency  in  1949,  Prior  to 
that  time,  speaker  procurement 
for  the. campus  had  been  handled 
by  the  Carolina  Political  Union, 
which  came  into  being  In    1934. 

The  CPU  became  a  discussion 
group  exclusively  after  the  For- 
um's designation  to  htltig  speak- 
ers here  by  the  studfeni  Legisla- 
ture.   It   is  currently   inactive. 

Speakers  contacted  to  address 
the  campus  by  the  two  agencies, 
whose  files  are  among  the  most 
complete  and  valUthle  of  any 
similar  organization  anywhere  in 
the  country,  include  such  notable 
names  as: 

Leon  Trotsky,  Saot  Rayburn, 
George  C.  Marshall,  Charles  A. 
Lindbtirgh,  John  L.  Lewis  and  John 
Gunter. 

The  list  of  outstanding  and 
prominent  figures  who  were  con- 
tacted by  the  agcnclga  but  who 
were  unable  to  speak  probably  ex- 
ceeds the  list  of  speakers  who 
were    successfully   contacted. 

A  multiplicity  of  letters,  tele- 
grams, etc.  in  the  colorful  Forum 
files  addressed  to  tentative  speak- 
ers who  had  conflicts  reflects  the 
conscientious  nature  of  past  chair- 


HARRY   S.  TRUMAN 

. . .  then  a  senatw 


not  speak  due  to  an  "inordinate 
amount  ^f  work"  confronting  him; 
.\ndrei  Y.  Vyshinsky.  who  had 
"pressing  duties;"  and  Albert  E. 
Eien.stein.  who.se  "poor  health" 
forced  him  to  remain  in  New 
Jersey. 
SPEAKERS 

Speakers  who  have  addressed 
the  campus  include: 

Former  President  Harry  S.  Tru- 
man, then  a  senator;  former 
President  William  Howard  Ta*t; 
Attorney  General  Herbert  A. 
Brownell  Jr.  and  Sen.  Russell 
Long. 

The  speech  of  former  President 
Franklin  Delano  Roosevelt  in 
Kenan  Stadium  on  Dec.  5.  1938  is 
one  of  the  high  s-pots  in  the  For- 
um-CPU career. 

Numerous  requests  from  Forum 
Chairman  Voii  Giimore  pursued 
Roosevelt  where©\er  he  went  un- 
til he  finally  consented.  The  con- 
tacts began  during  Oct.,  1937.  and 
persisted  down  to  his  acceptance 
during  early  Dec.,    igu. 

Expenditures  for  ^s  addre.« 
and  accommodations  amounted  to 
S698.95.  considerably  above  the 
present  approximate  $150  approp- 
riated  per  speaker  to  the   Forum 


been  invited   to  attend   the   speak-    ba.^sador  Ir.  m  India,  to  the  camp- 


ers'   addr:s.scs    without    charge. 

Speakers  are  honored  at  Caro- 
lina Inn  banquets  immediately 
before  addresses  and  receptions 
in  Graham  Memorial  and  immed- 
iately  after   ll\f^ 


us.  Holmes  has  already  set  two 
dates  which  the  ambassador  can- 
celled at  the  last  moment.  Now 
Feb.  11.  has  been  set,  and  as 
Holmes  .says: 

"We   hope   he'll   make   it." 


FRANKLIN  0.  ROOSEVELT 

. . .  spofie  in  Keiian 


Britain  Plans 
To  Produce 
Own  Gasoline 

LO.\DO.\— (AP)— A  consoltin? 
•ngineer  from  Sheffield  tonigh 
claimed  the  mat  s.^nsational  de- 
velopment yet  in  Britain's  battle 
to  beat  the  gasoline  shortage  short- 
age. He  said  he  had  found  a  way 
to  produce  his  own. 

William  Harthill,  47.  said  he  al- 
ready has  been  given  permission 
by  the  Ministry  of  Fhel  to  go  in- 
to business  of  making  synthetic 
motor  fuel.  He  did  not  disclose 
his  formula. 

"I  expect  to  be  able  to  supply 
about  30.000  gallons  a  week  at 
first  and  later  .  greatly  increase 
the   figure."   HarthiH   said. 

There  was  not  official  comment 
from   the  Ministry  of  Fuel. 

The  Ministry  and  other  govern- 
ment circles  have,  however,  sought 
to  encourage  any  and  all  efforts 
to  lick  the  gasoline  shortage  ever 
since  clo.sing  of  the  Suez  Canal 
choked  off  much  of  Britain's  nor- 
mal supply  from  the  Middle  East. 

Harthill  said  his  mixture  looks 
and  smells  like  gasoline  aod  a 
Sheffield  driving  school  already 
has  put  it  to  a  test.  It  behaved 
just  like  ordinan-.  85  octane  gas- 
oline, he  claimed. 

Harthill  offered  only  a  few 
clues  as  to  how  his  synthetic 
ga.soline  is  made.  The  components, 
he  said,  are  three  liquids  which 
are  not  in  short  supply. 


PAGE  TWO 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


SATURDAY,  JANUARY  12,  1957 


Library  Head's  Resignation 
Was  Surprise  To  Students 

Aiintmncemeiit  «|t  tlie  resionation  of  Carolin.Vs  efficient  vouii"  head 
librarian  was  an  inter  shock- to  manv  fatnhv  members,  students  and 
friends  of  the  Wilson  l.ibrarv. 

AndreAv  Hord  had  made  manv  friends  in  the  two  and  one-half  vears 
he  was  here.  .Now.  lor   ■jjersonr.l  reasons. '  be,  is  going  away. 

-    Dr.  Horn's  resignation  came  as  a  shock  to  manv  p>eople  because  of 
the  small   time  he  has  been   here.   In  addition,  manv  members  of  the 


NORTH  CAROLINA  1970-PART  2: 


facultv  had  jj^ven  hitii  their  com- 
plete acceptance;  they  Watched 
him  at  work  for  the  past  two  and 
tmc  hall  \c;us.  and  thev  liked  what 
thev   saw. 

His  leaving  also  hurts  betause 
it  is  another  case  of  a  young,  cap- 
able .uid  well-liked  administrator 
leading  the  I'niversity  of  Nonh 
Carolina  fen  stune  other  i<.)b.  I's- 
uallv.  the  "some  othei  ie)b"  pavs 
far  more  than  the  state  Ixgislatine 
will  let  INC  offer. 


ficuh  to  get  a  man  who  approaches 

the   <alibei    of   Andrew    Horn. 

*  *  * 

povtaiH  lo  the  issue,  was  pointed 
portant  tot  he  issus.  was  {Hiinted 
up  by  the  ;:nnoun(  ement  of  Dr. 
Horn's  resignation: 

The  news  was  not  gi\en  t>ut.  It 
was   leaked  t»ut. 

The  l'ni\ersitv.  in  past  years. 
ha>  adopted  a  Pentagon  system  of 
answering  reporters"  (juestions. 
It     replies.     "  .\o,  (ojmneiH."    The 


Neither  the   Tniversity   nor  Dr.      reporter  must  leati  on  a  system  of 

spies  througlu>ut  the  I'niversity, 
j>eople  who  come  across  rumor, 
ask  questituis  about  it.  report  it  to 
the  reporter. 

Of  (ourse,   miuh   of   the   rumor 
tuins  out    to  be   imaginrtion.   But 


Horn  ha\e  stated  what  the  "per- 
sonal reasons"  are.  But  it  is  imder- 
stood  that  lu'tter  treatment  of  the 
library  b\  the  state  would  not 
have  hurt  matters  at  all. 

l^st  bieiinimn  the  <ieneral   As- 


sembh,  in  a  particularly  stupid  who  is  to  believe  whom  when  ques- 
move.  chopped  the  Library's  ap- 
propriations request  evactlv  in 
half.  This  meant  the  l.ibiary  tvx)uld 
not  be  :-ble  to  function  properly,  in 
the  interest  of  scholars,  students 
and  tacidtv  members. 

.\o\\.  what  will  candidates  for 
Dr.  Horh'i  pKisition  think  when 
thev  are  interviewed  bv  the  l^rii- 
versitv?  Chances  are.  it  will  be  dif- 


tions  are  answered  bv  a  chorus  of 
".\o  Comments?" 

Ihe  Pentagon  ssstem  was  used 
in  rejjorting  Dr.  Horns  resigna- 
tion. 

It  i:s  a  pretty  silly  wav  to  rim  a 
imiversitv.  .\nd  the  nnfotinded 
riunors  that  result  fiom  a  "No 
comment*  imiversitv  create  far 
more  harm  than  good. 


A  Memo  To  The  Legislature 


North  Carolina  had  better  get 
conceited.  F\  ervbody's  favorite 
void  is  pio^re.ss.  and  some  of  the 
more  optimisiii  stJuls  have  added 
peace  and  prospiiiiv  to  tfieir  vo- 
cabulary, lint  .North  Ca.olina  is 
suffering  from  a  passion  fot  re- 
maining its  simple.  ;igi^iiaR.  rhoiu- 
ble  self.  ■;:■  -fh  .. 

<»o\ .  Hod^c^  IiJts  ,bevn  lU'tl^i^g 
every  effort  to  tlraw  bi'.^.bnsij^c>s 
to  the  stat^.  Some  small  incfustries 
have  beg li  11  to  sh<»w  iniVresi.  Aiid 
a  few  liave  :^'readv  Net'iqv-  tf^eir 
plants,  l^nfortimatcly.  interest  iri 
la  revitalized  and  compef^iiye  ^'artU. 
Carolina  stops  only  a  few  bnices 
down   froni  ihe  (foverum's^. 

the  iejjjislatoiif  is  riKiintrimtxig.  the 
status  quo.  One  tr>ual  observjet;^ 
the  body's  a<tions  says  the  most 
prevalent  attitude  is  one  of  "what 
^\as  good  enougii  Un  me  is  good 
enough  for  m\  diildren.  jutting 
from  (onstant  efforts  to  lower  taxes 
at  the  expense  of  education  and 
development  this  observation  is 
altogether   t<M)  ac<  urate. 

Oci'^sioiiiklly  the  legislatme  is 
the  victim  of  legitimate  ill  winds. 
Wlien  the  I'ln'versiiN  asked  for 
money  to  build  new  living  quar- 
ters. Ixuli  d<>i"iit<>i"if*>  ^tid  apart- 
ments for  married  students,  the  re- 
quest was  ( ut  to  the  bone.  On  the 
surface  this  makes  the  legislature 
seem  like  a  prettv  dose-pursed 
group.  However  the  nation's  econ- 
omy was  balancing  on  the  edge  of 

The  Daily  Tar  Heel 

Tbe  official  itudent  publication  of  tbe 
Publications  lioard  of  the  University  of 
North  Carohna,  where  it  is  published 
daily  except  Monday  and  examinatiot 
and  vacation  periods  and  summer  terms 
Entered  as  second  class  matter  in  thi 
cost  office  in  Chapel  HilJ,  N.  C,  undei 
the  Act  oi  March  8.  1970.  Subscription 
rates:  mailed,  S4  per  year.  $2  50  a  semes 
ter;  delivered.  $6  a  year,  $3.50  a  lemef 
ter. 

Editor    FRED  POWLEDGt 


Managing  Editor 


CHARLIE  SLOAN 


News  Editor.     .  NANCY  HILL 


Business  Manager 


BILL  fiOB  tUEL 


Sports  Editor 


LARRY  CHEEK 


Subscription  Manager Dale  Staley 

Advertising  Manager  Fred  Kntzin 

Circulation  Manager   .  Charlie  Holt 

^EW'S  STAFF— Clarke  Jones,  Ray  Link^ 
er.  Joan  Moore.  Pringle  Pijikin,  Ann.,* 
DraJ:e,  Edith  MacKinnon,  Wally  Kuralt, 
Mary  .\lys  Voorhees,  Graham  Snyder, 
Billy  Barnes,  Neil  Bass,  Gary  Nichols, 
Page  Bernstein.  Peg  Humphrey,  Phyllis 
MauJtsby»  Ben  Taylor 


BUSINESS  STAFF— Rosa  Moore,  Johnny 
Whitaker,  Dick  Leavitt,  Dick  Sirkin. 

SPORTS  STAFF:  Bill  King,  Jim  Parks, 
Jimmy  Hamper.  Dave  Wible,  Charley 
Howson. 

Night  Editor     CharUe  Sloan 

Proof  Reader Mauley  l^rings 


an  economit  slump  at  the  time,  and 
the  soloiis  didn't  know  whether  a 
period  of  ■'bust'  was  toming  or 
not.  Ihe  conser\ati\e  n.iture  f»l 
the  group  no  doubt  enlaigcd  the 
situation,  but  they  still  had  a  legiti- 
mate reason  for  their  action.  The 
ecpn<wui(  dip  did  not  continue. 
;an^  the,  I  lUNeisiiy  touud  itsell  in 
as  tight  ;.  position  ;u  ever  as  far 
as  hou'sing  its  students  was  con- 
WWiied.''*''  ^^^'  '•    ■        I 

'•-  ■    4 1  •;•'  I ..  ■»  r.i*.     '    k         • 

-  iWfw  the  time  lias  (oiiie  for  an- 
,  .ovUer  ,\e!rsion.  Alreadv.  pressui  e 
groups  are  brushing  off  their  sales 
faTlis'an'd  tnaking  the  rounds  of  of-/ 
fi<es  in  .in  effort  tt>  get  favorable 
T^et^gniff^n  tinder  the  (apitol 
doivift;, . iioo\\  .>ome  .interests  will  be 
^rifm^iiijjjfpi-  iegisiators  to  find 
lutle  giftv  in  the  burifau  fhawers 
'iii  their  hotel  rooms. 

There  will  be  much  back-slap- 
ing  aiul  ( igai-passing  in  <apitol 
s(|uare.  f  obacto  <  tops.  (  ars  a  n  d 
babies  will  be  subjected  to  the 
usual  <nmj)ara'ti\e  striitiny  of  own- 
ers and  fathers.  K\entualv  the  top- 
it  oi  dis(ussi«»n  will  ge  around  to 
the    welfirre   of   North    Carolina. 

.\ltliough  the  world  i.<  in  a-  state 
of  <  iisi>  the  nation  is  still  prosper- 
ous and  tlimbitig  i<»  greater  eco- 
nomic heights.  So  now  there  will 
be  liothing  to  blame  but  the  jietty 
t(uiservatism  of  the  legislators  if 
the  (lose  of  hJie  next  session  does 
not  find  North  C'arolina  back  in 
serious  competition  with  other 
states.  This  state  tan  have  the 
best  schools,  the  most  jitosperous 
farmers,  the  smoothest  highways, 
the  largest  industries  and  the  most 
bmiming  towns  of  any  in  the  na- 
tion. 

All  it  has  to  do  is  st(jp  trying  to 
oe    the   most   unassuming   one. 

Dormitory 
Newspapers 
Look  Good 

It  seems  to  lie  the  season  of  the 
of  the  yer-i  when  the  editors  of 
dormitory  newspapiers  dust  off 
their  typewriters  and  finally  get 
around  to  piuting  out  one  last  edi- 
tion  befoie  exams. 

Occasionally  an  editor  will  step 
on  somebody's  toes  and  stir  the 
whole. dorm  and  part  of  the  camp- 
us into  a  brief  emotional  uproar. 
However,  on  the  whole,  the  dorm- 
itory ne^vspaper  is  a'  source  of  good 
jokes,  bad  puns  and  general  infor- 
mation on  the  doings  of  the  dorm. 

These  |>a|>ers  are  a  g<KKl  sign 
They  are  a  sign  that  the  man  in 
the  lower  quad  is  a  little  more 
than  a  blind  coustituent  of  student 
politicians.  We  are  looting  for- 
ward to  seeing  more  dorm  papers 
after  exams  are  over.  < 


The  Theory  Of  The  Balanced  State 


Gordon  W.  Blackwell 

This  is  the  second  part  of 
Dr.  Bieck'WeU's  speech  on  North 
Carolina  1970.  .Below  he  con- 
tinues his  discussion  of  the 
state's  popvtation. 

High  birth  rates  since  1940 
and  continually  lowering  death 
rates  have  resulted  in  *a  trend 
toward  more  children  and  more 
aged  people  to  be  supported  by 
our  labor  force.  For  example, 
in  1950  one  North  Carolinian  in 
every  18  was  over  65  years  of 
age;  by  1970.  this  ration  will  be 
one  in   12.  For  every  worker,  we 


are  coming  to  have  more  mouths 
to  be  fed.  more  backs  to  be 
clothed,  more  bodies  to  be  kept 
healthy,  and  more  pupils  to  be 
educated. 

Our  population  has  been  ex- 
tremely mobile.  Between  1940 
and  1.9o0,  w^  suffered  a  net  loss 
through  migration  df  209.000 
people,  with  the  rate  of  out- 
migration  being  especially  high 
for  Negroes.  It  has  been  as 
though  a  giant  eggbeater  has 
been  stirring  in  the  state,  spew- 
ing out  peopk"  to  other  parts 
o^  the  nation,  mostly  northward, 
.sending  people  from  farms  to 
towns  within  the'  state,  and  suck- 


ing- in   many   people   from  states 
to   the   south   of   us. 

Out  of  all  this  movement  of 
people  has  come  the  so-called 
balanced  state,  with  a  third  of 
our  population  on  farms,  a  third 
living  in  the  country  but  not  en- 
gaged in  agriculture,  and  a  third 
living  in^  towns  and  cities. 

The  most  significant  trend  in 
the  past  generation  in  North 
Carolina  has  been  the  growth  of 
the  more  than  100  towns  and 
cities,  and  the  urbanization  of 
rural  areas.  The  extension  o^ 
good  roads  and  power  lines  into 
farming  areas  have  been  an  im- 


•  • 

'Well,  It's  Sort  Of  New  With  Us' 


Qf  Man's  Inhumanity  To  Man 


The  New  York  Times 

An  all  too  apt  illustration  of 
man's  inhumanity  to  man — and' 
to  himself — can  be  found  in  the  - 
grim  statistical  record  of  40.200 
persons  killed  "la.st  year  in  traf- 
fic accidents.  A  small  percentage 
of  the  toll  properly  can  be 
charged  to  mechanically  de- 
fective vehicles,  to  bad  roads, 
to  inadequate  highway  engineer- 
ing safeguards  and  to  unexpect- 
ed weather  hazards.  A  larger 
responsibility  rests  with  official 
indifference  that  makes  a  mock- 
ery of  driver  licensing  qualifica- 


tions in  som?  slates,  weak  en- 
fc  rcemcnt  at  the  police  level  and 
minimum  punishment.  >f  any.  at 
the  court  level. 

But  withal,  the  greatest  re- 
spon.'5ibility  for  the  ever-rising 
traffic  toll  must  be  placed  square- 
ly where  it  is  the  least  explain- 
able— at  the  motorists'  doorstep. 
Hard-working  traffic  investiga- 
tnrs  have  come  a  long  way  in 
.searching  out  the  surface  causes 
of  accidents,  but  it  is  obvious 
that  that   way  is  not   enough. 

It  is  all  well  and  good  to 
know  that  a  vast  nambor  of  road 


mishaps  occur  because  drivers 
arp  in  a  hurry;  not  necessarily 
speeding  per  se  but  going  too 
fast  for  conditions.  But  until  we 
know  the  motivation  for  the  act 
there  seems  little  hope  of  radi- 
cally reducing  the  perils  of  the 
highway.  A  nation  that  will  spend 
millions  on  medical  research 
should  be  willing  to  spend  more 
than  a  pittance  on  scientific  traf- 
fice  research  as  is  the  case  now, 
particularly  when  it  is  realized 
that  four  times  as  many  persons 
were  killed  in  motor  crashes  last 
year  as  were  afflicted  with  polio. 


portant  part  of  this  urbanization 
process. 

Farming  communities  have  be- 
come suburban  fringe  communi- 
ties inhabited  largely  by  part- 
time  farmers,  or  families  who 
farm  not  even  a  little.  There  are 
more  than  200.000  part-time  farm 
families  in  North  Carolina.  En- 
tire rural  communities,  especially 
in  the  iPedmont.  have  become 
essentially  urban  and  suburban, 
with  coantless  string  towns 
spread  out  along  the  four-lane 
highwajs  and  the  railroads.  Our 
33  percent  urban  population  is 
expected  to  incr?ase  to  40  per- 
cent by  1970. 

Study  of  a  spot  map  of  North 
Carolina  population  reveals-  a 
crescent  of  urbanized  counties 
extending  from  Raleigh  through 
Durham.  Burlington,  Greensboro, 
Winston-Salem,  High  Point, 
Thomasville,  Lexington,  Salis- 
bury. Kannapolis,  Concord,  Char- 
lotte, Gastonia.  Along  this  route 
a  new  form  of  metropolitan  reg- 
ion is  taking  shape.  Rural  people 
are  becoming  part  of  urban  com- 
munities and  are  participating  in 
the  institutions  of  town  and  city. 
And  many  of  these  cities  are 
finding  that  they  are  mutually 
interdependent  and  have  prob- 
lems which  must  be  solved  co- 
operatively. For  example,  the 
Raieigh-Durham-Chapel  Hill  area 
is  being  integrated  around  Gov- 
ernor Hodges'  concept  of  a  re- 
.search  triangle.  Greensboro, 
Winston-Salem,  and  High  Point 
are  finding  that  they  must  co- 
operate on  problems  such  as  air 
transportation.  On  water  re- 
sources, these  three  cities,  along 
with  Burlington.  Thomasville. 
and  Lexington,  are  finding  it  de- 
sirable to  cooperate.  Charlotte, 
of  course,  at  the  anchor  point  of 
the  crescent,  is  the  large.st  met- 
ropolitan area  in  the  state. 

LEVEL  OF  TECHNOLOGY 

There  are  several  signs  that 
North  Carolina's  economy  is  coin- 
ing of  age.  F3r  ;xamp|le.  the  de- 
cline oi  the  proipotitian  pf  peo- 
ple :e»ig:\gedv^n'!rarfi^i^g  Frort 
34'percep^,tn J9s^ :jt|oi?j<  pjer^nt 
in  1350  may  Tie  leicpecti^^  to  con- 
jljitae  through  1^7(X  Increasing 
rfclianco  upon  t<*hnolpgy::is  ior, 
^icated  in  the -increAse  fr(Mn  2^i' 
jjerbeni  to  34  percent  oif  the  labor 
force  in  North  Ciaroiinai  Ep^age^ 
,u)  manufacturii]s.i  I^irifi^r  the 
past  decade,  for  the  firsl  time 
V^'  have  come  to  have  more 
workers  engaged  in  manufactur- 
ing than  in  farming.  And  these 
people  in  maifufacturing  are  ex- 
pected to  increase  by  150,000  to 
to  200,000  during  the  next  15 
years. 

During  a  7  year  period  follow- 
ing World  War  II,  19  counties 
in  the  state  increased  in  the 
number  of  people  in  manufactur- 
ing by  more  than  one-half,  yet 
North  Carolina  has  not  been 
keeping  pace  with  other  south- 
ern states  in  this  industrializa- 
tion. 

Although  factories  have  been 
located  out  over  the  state  in  in- 
creasing numbers  with  consider- 
able decentralization,  we  still 
have  a  concentration  of  half  of 
our  non-agricultutal  workers  in 
10  counties  of  the  state.  All  but 
one  of  these  industrialized  coun- 
ties is  in  the  urban  crescent  |»*- 
viously    mentioned. 

(To  Be  Continued) 


Pogo 


By  Wait  Kelly 


yoonoO'"^OM 

\erHBMAHOp 

THE  HOU0B 


A  NORTHERN  VIEW: 

Ike's  Big  Stick: 
A  Stitch  In  Time? 

Cortland  Edwards 

Congress  has  been  asked  by  President  Eisen- 
hower for  the  authority  to  commit  the  United  States 
to  a  new  program  designed  to  fill  the  power  vacuum 
in  the  Middle  Elast  and  to  counter  Soviet  Communism 
abroad.  / 

He  has  asked  for  permi^ion  to  commit  the 
United  States  into  an  arena  that  has  been  ridden 
with  strife  since  the  dawn  of  civilization.  What  ls 
he  getting  the  U.  S.  into?  ». 

•niis  proposal,  called  the  "Eisenhower  D*- 
trine,','  is  in  three    »arts. 

1.  To  serve  notice  to  the  world  that  the  United 
States  will  defend  any  area  (particularly  the  Near 
East)  that  is  atacked  by  Communist  aggressive 
forces. 

2.  To  i^tep  up  the  economic  aid  to  those  coun- 
tries in  the  Near  Elast  that  so  desire  it.  Dee  estimated 
that  it  would  cost  approximately  $400  million  dollars 
in  the  next  two  fiscal  years. 

3.  In  addition  to  the  military  assistance  in  part 
one,  came  the  doctrine  of  using  American  troops 
to  help  obtain  peace  in  the  world. 

'^he  terms  that  might  more  aptly  label  the  tkt 
Doctrine  are  either  the  "Big  Stick  Policy"  (do  yjM; 
remember:  Speak  softly  but  carry  a  big  stick)  or  A- 
day's  equivalent  to  the  "Monroe  Doctrine"  (remem- 
ber the  warning  to  European  nations,  "Hands  Off). 

Let  Hj  look  deeper  into  what  position  the  Uni- 
ted States  really  finds  itself. 

The  U.  £.  has  pledged  to  resist  immediately  any 
armed  aggression  in  Western  Europe  under  the  N 
ATO  agreetment.  Under  this,  we  have  eommitmenbi 
with  Turkey,  Portugal,  Norway,  Netherlands.  Lux- 
emburg, Italy,  Greece,  Germany  (West),  Denmark, 
Canada,  Belgium,  France.  Iceland,  and  the  United 
Kingdom. 

We  have"  equally  pledged  ourselves  to  the  sup^ 
port  of  the  SEATO  nations.  They  include  .\ustralia. 
France,  New  Zealand,  Pakistan,  Phillipine^,-,  Thai- 
land, and  the  United  Kingdom. 

The  main  idea  behind  the  "Big  Stick  Policy" 
seems  to  be  the  plugging  of  the  gap  in  America];? 
global  sy.stem  of  defense.  The  one  remaining  gap 
at  the  present  time  is  in  the  Middle  East.  The  coun- 
tries involved  are  Israel,  Egypt,  Iraq,  Jordan.  Syria. 
Lebanon,  and  Saudi  Arabia.  In  addition,  there  are 
Sudan  and  dther  small  shiekdoms  aroiund  the  Ara" 
bian  Penninsula,  but  these  are  of  small  importance. 

In  addition  to  NATO  and  SEATO.  we  have  A-n^e 
rican  artn.^  and  military  iri/.-ti-uct^rs  i^n; Iran,  and' S)l 
ail  base  in  Saudi  .Axabia.  We  also  havfe,  in  addition 
to '^ater'il  treaties  with  Nationalist  China,  the  Re- 
pu*»lic  of  Korea,  and,  Formosa,  the  friendship  and 
support  of  ;|pan  and  li-aq. 

This  reaves^  unattenr'sd  five  countries.  Elgypt 
and  Syria  have  'demo.nstraled  strong  opposition  to 
the  Ike  Doctrine  and  refuse;  to  accept  it.  This  leave* 
only  Israel,  Jordan,  and  Lebanon. 

These  three  countrie.v.  which  are  adjoining  each 
other,  are  surrounded  by  Syria,  Iraq,  Saudi  Arabia. 
and  Egypt.  The  only  path  between  the  USSR  and  the 
middle  East  is  through  Iran,  Turkey,  and  Pakistan. 

Since  we  have  a  treaty  with  Turkey  and  Pakis^ 
tan  as  shown  above,  this  leaves  only  Iran.  If  the" 
commitments  of  the  US  were  solidified  with  Iran 
in  the  form  of  a  mutual  defense  pact,  there  would 
be  no  possible  way  tha  the  Communists  could  In- 
vade the  Near  East. 

So,  therefore,  what  does  all  thi:>-  mean?  What 
is  the  real  reason  for  this  policy?  Is  it  becaui»e  this 
area  contains  two  thirds  of  the  world's  total  oil  re- 
serves? This  certainly  has  something  to  do  with  it 

Or  is  Mr.  Eisenhower  completely  naive  to  think 
that  Russia  will  actually  send  troops  to  invade  a 
territory  that  wants  to  remain  neutral  (except  Is- 
rael). This  is  the  whole  point  these  nations  have 
indicated  that  they  don't  want  to  be  pushed  into  d*^ 
ciding  which  side  of  the  fence  they  are  going  15? 
jump  to.  This  policy  of  Ksenhowers'  is  forcing  the 
issue. 

Actually,  what  shojild  happen  is  for  the  United 
States  to  iign  the  Baghdad  Pact.  This  is  a  mu- 
tual protection  agreement  between  Britain,  Turkev 
Iran,  Pakistan  and  Iraq.  If  the  U.  S  did  this  then 
there  would  be  a  complete  block  of  allied  nations 
running  from  Norway  right  around  to  Indo  China 
♦without  a  gap  any  place.  This  would  stop  US.SR 
from  invading  any  other  countries  than  they  already 
have.  And  would  fulfil  what  the  President  desires 

The  new  plan  will  serve  notice  to  Russia  that 
force  will  be  met  with  force  in  the  Middle  East  it 
will  stimulate  the  will  to  resist  Red  subversion  bv 
a.iuring  peoples  that  Red  invasion  isn't  likely,  and 
It  will  bolster  the  will  to  resist  with  economic  aid 

But  It  will  not  solve  the  problem  of  opening 
the  Suez  Canal  and  it  will  not  solve  the  Arab-Isra- 
eli dispute.  It  will  not  put  a  stopper  on  Red  infil- 
tration anywhere  in  the  Middle  East  in  fact  it 
probably  will  encourage  it  more  than  anjthing  It 
will  not  eliminate  the  possibility  of  non-Communist 
Arab  countries  from  going  to  war  over  Jordan  and 
possibly  dragging  other  nations  in. 

Instead  of  a  new  policy,  what  the  United  States 
should  do  !„•  to  back  up  all  the  old  policies,  treaties 
and  agreements  that  it  has  created  in  the  past  100 
years.  Th.s  would  inform  the  people  of  the  world 
that  we  have  finally  grown  up  and  are  wiUing  at 
last  to  follow  through  on  a  precious  commitment. 

YOU  Said  It:  ^ 

A  Suggestion 

Editor: 

You'i*  in  Graham  Memorial.  Why  don't  vou 
run  out  and  mop  the  Sun  Dail  when  it  get^  muddy 
if  that's  what  you  want  done? 

Fr^ncM  McKnisht 


SATURO 

Ne 

By 

UNC  has! 
society,  fo| 
•Journalism 
day  night 
^ng  a  chaptl 
women's  he 
ority,  in  thJ 

a  Two  Thei 
'Mrs.  Guionj 
the  L'niver 
Mrs.    Willis 

of  the  Univ< 
rB^  the  gix 
Society.  Th( 
■visors  for 

The  groui 
Neil     Luxoi 
'Schol  of  J( 
ty  advisor. 

_  Mr.s  Johni 
,of  Theta  Si| 
tige  to  the 
ism.    "Theta 


OLD 
COM! 


At  the  Intir 
is  the  tradit 
Old  book  pij 
have  reviset 

DOZENS  OF 

$1  SO  »4 

WVve  comi 
sleepers,  ai 
one,  we've 

OTHER  DOl 

To  72c 

If  you've  be| 
of  our  97c 
paL    Most 
siiHf. 

d6zens 

During  Juin 
far  48c  boksl 
the  72c  shel 
39c 

OTHER  OL( 
BY  75e| 

We've  gone  I 
book  stock, 
a- -book  rootl 
applied  the 
hurts  most. 
cause  ther^ 
bijBrie.-;  coml 
room  for  th( 


TH 

bI 

205 
Opei 


DA 

^.        ACR< 

1.  Sett 

•"  «.  Tear 

- 11.  Skin 

•pel 

u  sak 

(BcelJ 
-li.  Fault 
■14.  Old  CI 
f.       gvne  \ 
■^5  £nc« 
tered 
^'16.  Like 
t  17.  Obser 
,^8.  Mujiic 
■  19.  A  coil 
^^       aiat 
^tl.  Unl 
..J4.  At  or 
■"28.  Adjv 
'-29.  Trap  I 
■""JO.  CookJ 
f  SI.  Frog] 

S2.  Midd 
^  M.  Affir 
"•        vote 
"-35.  Sphed 
M.  Publil 
notic 
'39.  LJttU 
*41.  Ror 
J'        hous« 
»,«3.  Streel 

iircl^ 
*  45.  Centi 
plant] 
46.  E:xist 
47  Spec 
pena^ 
-*♦«.  Apj 

1.  Kcalt 


li. 


i  Sp«ci| 

raidei 

.    8.  A  Gt 

Lake! 

i^  4.  Cocyj 

•.  Larf  4 


SATURDAY,  JANUARY  12,  1957 


THE  DAItY  ria  HiiL 


PAGI  THREf 


sive 


»UII- 

kted 
lurs 


>art 
>ops 

lice 

ft 

ff). 


Iicy 

Wa 

|oun- 
-ria. 
are 

lAra-» 

Id  ii 

lit  ion 
Re- 

aa4 


iStcM 

ibiA. 

the 

stao- 

the' 

Iraft 

>u)d 

In- 


the 

Jnited 

mu- 

rkev, 

then 

ktions 

.hina. 

.S.R. 

?ady 

►sires. 

that 

1st,  it 

)n  by 

and 

aid. 

•ning 

-Isra- 

infil- 

:t.   it 

>g.  It 

iimist 

and 


New  Club  Organized 
For  Coed  Journalists 


By  ANNE   DRAKE 

UNC  has  a  new  club.  The  Matrix 
society,  .for  women  n^ajoring  in 
journalism  jtras  organi^d  TTiurs- 
day  night  with  the  idea  of  becom- 
ing a  chapter  of  Theta  Sigma  Phi, 
women's  honmrary  journalisjn  sor- 
ority, in  the  future. 

Two  Theta  Sigma  Phi  alumnae. 


rary  professional,  group  with  pro- 
fessional standards."  s^id  Mrs. 
Johnson. 

Theta  Sigma,  Pjii  has  four  types 
of  member.-,:  alumnae,  active,  hon- 
orary members  who  have  won  a 
national  reputation  in  journalisni, 
and  associate  members  who  have 
distinguished  themselves  in  jour- 
nalism in  their  community  or  state. 

Among  the  famous  Theta  Sigma 


Covering  The  Campiis 


Mrs.   Guion   Johnson,   gi-aduate   of ;  Phis   are   Etoris   Fleeson    and   Ines 


the  University  <rf  Missouri,  and 
Mrs.  William  Caldwell,  graduate 
of  the  Uniwarsity  of  Minnesota,  hel- 
p^  the  girls  organize  the  Matrix 
Society.  They  will  be  alumnae  ad- 
visors for  the   new  club. 

The  group  elected  Dean  Norval 
Neil  Luxon,  head  of  the  UNC 
Schol  of  Joumalisffn,  for  its  facul- 
ty advisor. 

^  Mrs.  Johnson  said  that  a  chapter 
<qI  Theta  Sigma  Phi  would  add  pres- 
tige to  the  UNC  ScJiol  of  Journal- 
ism. "Theta  Sigma  Phi  is  an  bono- 


OLD  BOOK  PRICES 
'^    COMI:  TUMBLING 

DOWN! 

v. 

Xt  the  Intimate  Booksh<^,  Januarv 
is  the  traditional  time  for  revising 
old  book  prices,  and  pal,  how  we 
have  revised  this  year! 

DOZENS  OF  BOOKS  GO  FROM 
$1.50  t«  97c 

We've  combed  the  s'helves  for 
sleepers,  and  when  we've  found 
one,  we've  given  k  the  chop! 

OTHER   DOZENS   CUT   FROM   97c 
To  7ic 

M  youve  been  tempted  to  buy  one 
of  our  97c  books,  now's  the' time,  { 
pai.   Most   Wtely   it's   on    the   72c 
sbe^tf. 

d6zCNS  WORE  QO  f;ROM  72c 
.„,  WAY  DOWN  TO  39c     _  ;^.^ 

rhiring  January,  not  only  the  regu- 
far  48c  boks,  but  the  sleepers  from  j 
the  72c  shelf  are  yours  for  a  mere 

39c.  ■:-,    •      •   ;• 

OTHER  OLD  BOOK  4>R1CES  DROP 
BY  75e  to  $1.00. 

We've  gone  right  through  our  old 
book  stock,  and  whenever  we  found 
a-'feook  rooted  to  the  shelf,  we've 
a{>plied  the  old  shears  where  it 
liurus  most.  Had  to,  in  fact,  be- 
cause there  are  a  couple  of  li- 
br^riej  coming  up,  and  we'll  need 
room  for  them. 


THE  INTIMATE 
BOOKSHOP 

205  E.  Franklin  St. 
Open  Till  10  P.M. 


Robb. 

Officers  elected  at  the  first  meet- 
ing of  the  Matrix  Society  are:  Joy 
Brown,  president:  Jackie  Haith- 
cock,  vice  president:  Anne  Drake, 
secretary;  Jlary  Alys  Voorhees, 
treasurer:  and  Nancy  Suttle,  keep- 
er of  the  archives. 

The  Matrix  Society  plans  to  hav* 
three  business  and  three  profes- 
sional meetirt^s  a  semester.  The 
professional  meetings  will  feature 
talks  and  discus^ons  by  competent 
journalists. 

The   organizational   meeting     of 
the  new  society  was  held  in    the 
j  home  of  Dean  and  Mrs.  Norval  iJeil 
Luxon  on  Mt.  Bolus  Road. 


STUDENT  WIVES  CLUB 

The  Student  Wives  Hub  will 
meet  Tuesday  at  8  p.  m.  in  the  Vic- 
tory Village  Nursery.  The  group 
has  invited  all  stod^nt  wives  to 
attend. 

WRC 

The  Women's  Residence  Council 
will  meet  Tuesday  at  6:45  p.  m. 
in  the  Grail  Room  in  Graham  Mem- 
orial. 

WAA 

The  Women's  Athletic  Associa- 
tion volley   ball    entries    are  d'ie 
in  the  women's  gymnasfum  bfflcfe 
by  4  p.  m.  Monday. 
GM 

Graham  Memorial  Activities 
Board  will  offer  free  juke  box  mu- 
sic for  dancing  tonight.  Music  will 
last  from  9  to  12  in  the  kendcz- 
vous  Room. 
WUNC 

Today's  schedule  for  WtJNC,  the 
University's  FM  radio  station: 

7:00— Paris  Star  Time 

7:30— This  is  Jazz 

8:0(>--Take  It  From  Here 

8:30— Showtime 

9:00 — ^Horizons  in  Music 
10:00— News 

10:15 — Evening  Masterwork 
ll:30-^ign  Off 


STATISTICS  COLLDbUtUM 

New  methods  of  dealinf  with  ser- 
ial correlations  in  time  series  will 
be  described  Monday  at  4  p.  m. 
in  PhiUips  HaU. 

^bhgreis  Senki 
Ihtbrrhaiibh 
Flow  Ihtrbds^ 

WASHINGTON— (AP)— An  at- 
tempt to  increase  the  flow  of  in- 
formation from  government  agen- 
cies was  launched  today  in  both 
the  Senate  and  House. 
I 

Sen.    Hennings    and    Rep.    Moss 

said  they  would  ask  Congress  to 
tighen  what  they  describe  as 
purely  a  "housekeeping'  law  by 
dddihg  these  words: 

"This  section  does  not  autho- 
rize^ withholding  infdrmation  from 
the  public  or  limiting  the  availa- 
bility  of  records   to   the  public." 

Moss  repeated  a  previous  charge 
that  some  agencies  have  exploited 
the  law  to  hold  back  nonsecurity 
Information  to  which  the  public 
is  entitled. 


WORLD  NEWS  IN  BitlEF 


(Contimted  from  Page  ^) 

ending     a     seven-month-long  bus 
boycott. 

TTie  Tallahassee  buses  operated 
under  an  amendment  to  a  city 
franchise  ordinance  authorizing 
drivers  to  assign  passengers  to 
numbered  seats  if  necessary  as 
a  means  of  maintaining  the  seg- 
regation pattern. 

US  Soi-plus  Plan 

UNITED  NATIONS,  N.  Y.— (AP) 
— The  U.   S.  announced  yesterday 
a  new  plan  to  grant  surplus  farm 
commodities    to    needy    countries 
so  they  can  set  up  reserve  stocks 
against  famine  or  other  emergen- 
cies. : 
The    announcement    was    made  j 
by     Sen.     Hubert   H.    Humphrey,  j 
US  delegate  to  the  80-nation  eco- 
nomic   Committee    of    the    U.    N. 
General  Assembly. 


Humphrey  said  thii  aid  would 
be  granted  for  'reasonable  and 
realistic  programs"  in  keeping 
with  the  principle  of  avoiding 
"harmful  iliterference  with  the 
normal  patterns  of  production  and 
international   trade. " 

The  US  pledge  came  as  an  al- 
ternative to  a  plan  for  creation  of 
a  world  -food  reserve,  supplied  by 
pledges  by  U.N.  member  nations. 
The  United  States  opposes  such 
a  program. 


Tass  Hits  US  Plan 

MOSCOW— ( AP )—T  h  e  Soviet 
news  agency  Tass  yesterday  call- 
ed President  Eisenhower's  state 
of  the  union  message  "A  frankly 
imperialistic  program  to  impose 
US  Jule  over  the  world." 

"The  President's  words  show 
that   this   world    must    be    placed 


under  control  of  the  United 
Slates,"  the  Tass  dispatch  from 
Washington   said. 

"Eisenhower,  in  fact,  called  for 
a  speedup  in  the  armaments  race, 
while  at  the  same  time  admitting 
the  armed  might  of  the  United 
States  is  the  greatest  in  history 
in    peacetime." 

The  dispatch  interpreted  Eisen- 
hower's call  for  closer  coopera- 
tion with  other  western  powers 
as  a  rallying  cry  to  "such  aggress- 
ive military  blocs  as  NATO  and 
SEATO." 

"In  the  concluding  part  of  his 
message.  Eisenhower  renewed  his 
request  for  acceptance  of  his 
program  for  the  Middle  East, 
which,  as  is  well  known,  carries 
the  openly  imperialistic  aim  of 
imposing  US  rule  on  that  area," 
Tass  added. 


Magazine  Has 
Article  By 
Local  Author 

The  December  issue  of  the 
"North  Carolina  English  Teach- 
er," just  published,  features  an 
article  by  Mrs.  Doris  Betts.  Chap- 
el Hill  short  story  writer.  Dr. 
E.  H.  Hartsell  of  Chapel  Hill  and 
U.N.C.  is  executive  secretary  of 
the  association  which  sponsors  the 
publication. 

Mrs.  Betts'  article     is  one     of 

three  which  grew  out  of  a  panel 

on  creative  writing  held  in  Aug- 
ust at  Duke  University. 

Copies  of  the  magazine  may  be 
obtained  from  Dr.  Hartsell,  Bing- 
ham Hall. 


5# 


ANNUAL 


> 


u-i\^or 


ASTRONOMY  AT  HOME 


the 


John  T. 
current 


Briltain  (Jeft)  and  James  Gat»s  discuss  models  being  exhibited  during 
Planetarium  show.   "1957    Celestial    Preview."    Brittain   and    Gates    are 


members  of  the  Morehead  Planetarium  staff  of  narrators  and  technicians. 


CLASSIFIEDS 


JAZZ  AT   TURNAGES 

Saturday  afternoon,  2:00,  Turn- 
ages  Cabin  in  Durham. — Jazz  by 
Dick  Gables  "All  Stars."  Beer 
Served. 

FOR  SALE:  1954  27  FOOT  HOUSE 
trailer,  l^  miles  north  of  Chap- 
el Hill  on  Airport  Road.  Sloan's 
Trailer  Court.  Maurice  L.  Clegg. 


Home-Made  Astronomy 
Instrument  Is  Devised 


FOR  SALE:  1949  NASH  IN  GOOD 
condition.  Sharp  looking  and 
smooth  riding — a  real  buy  from 
the  ground  up.  Call  Bob  Perry 
at   8-9027. 


DAILY    CROSSWORD 


ACB06S 

1.  Settinc 
'  <.  Team* 
11.  Skin 

opcninca 
It  SUk  veU 

(EmI.) 

18.  Faultily 

14.  Old  card 
game  (Sp.) 

Is.  S!iicoun« 
tered 

15.  Uke 
17.  Observe 
28.  Music  note 

19.  A  controvar> 
aial  spot 

-  21.  Unfasten 
24.  At  one  ttIM 

28.  Adjust 

29.  Trap 
^.Cooked 
51.  Frog 
32.  Midday 

'34.AffimM«ive 
vote  (var.) 
■  35.  Sphere 

38.  PufoUc 
notice 

39.  Little  child 
'-41.  Roman 

house  gads 
.  43.  Street 
urchin 

45.  Century 
plant 

46.  Existent 

47.  Speeding 
penalties 

48.  Apportioned 

DOWN 

1.  Health 
resort 

2.  Specialised 
raider  (Mil) 

,    S.  A  Great 

Lake 
- '  4.  Cocy  spot 
•.  Larf  •  worm 


6.  Mrt.  29.  Short 
Crat^iit's  sleep 
bird  24.  Pro- 

7.  fortify  ductive 

8.  Seises  27.  Wierd 
I.  Kerriment  (var.) 

10.  Wftherad  29.  Japan. 

(var.)  ese 

Id.  fUffhUeas  coin 

bird  31.  Seed 
18-  f'ermor  vessel 

feKy|>tiaa  33.  Fertile         Yealerdsy's  Aaiwar 

klli^  spots  39.  Story 

Id.  tfa&tual  in  deserts        40.  Leave  out 

drunkiard  35.  N&rse  name     42.  Consort  ot 

to.  Division  of  3€.  Eaat  Indian  Adam 

the  earth  cereal  grass    43.  Herd  of 

t2.  Chinese    ^  (var.)  whales 

AyrmaV  37.  Breakfast        44.  Man's 
23.  VnroU  food  nickname 


You'd  be  surprised  at  the  num- 
ber of  astronomy  '"instruments" 
one  can  malt^  with  everyday  things 
found  about  the  home. 

A  Quaker  Oats  cartoon  with  a 
hole  in  the  bottom  large  enough 
to  accommodate  a  fla|hlil{ht  can 
be  used  to  study  the  constellations 
in  the  night  skies.  Just  perforate 
some  black  paper  with  the  holes 
in  the  approximate  positions  of 
the  stars  in  the  consteltatlons,  use 
it  as  the  lid  and  shine  the  flash- 

I  light   through   the  bottom   of  the 

I  carton. 

I  Bent  coat  hangers  covered  with 
black  paper  with  bright  thumb- 
tacks representing  the  stars  can 
also  be  used  to  study  the  constel- 
lations. 

A  flashlight,  coat  hanger,  a  rub- 
ber ball,  and  a  fishing  cork  mount- 
ed on  a  piece  of  wood  can  dem- 
onstrate eclipses,  and  a  light, 
tight  corrugated  box  with  an  old 
lightbulb,  a  flashlight  and  a  small 
ball  can  be  used  to  demonstrate 
motions  of  the  celestial  bodies. 

Those  are  only  fouir  of  the 
numerous  examples  of  models  of 
astronomy  "instruments"  demon- 
strated daily  in  the  Morehead 
Planetarium's  January  presenta- 
tion of  "1957  Celestial  Praview." 
The  models  were  made  to  demon- 
strate to  children,  especially  Bpy 
and  Girl  Scouts,  things  they*  them- 
seiv£s  can  nake  to  further  their 
January  Scout  theme  "Look  Sky- 
ward." 

Although  the  current  Planetar- 
ium show  was  tailored  for  children 
of  Cub  and  Boy  Scout  iges  and  is 
playing  to  almost  capa^ty  houses 
daily,  ^dults  apparently  are  en- 
joying seeing  what  they  can  build 
or  help  their  children  to  build  to 
understand  the  marvels  of  the  un- 
iverse. 

Therefore,  reservations  are  de- 
sirable for  the  daytime  perform- 
anc?s  at   11   a.m.   and  2   p.m.  on 

Wednesdays  and  Thursdays,  at 
11  am.  and  3  p. A.  Saturdays,  and 


3  and  4  p.m.  Sundays,  because 
they  are  the  shows  children  us- 
ually attend  in  numbers.  The 
nightly  8:30  o'clock  performances 
are  not  crowded. 


Write  In       ^ 
Courses  Are 
Now  Open 

Correspondence  courses  are 
available  to  those  students  who 
will  not  attend  school  during  the 
spring  semester  the  Bureau  of 
Correspondence    said    yesterday. 

The  University  offers  more 
j  than  100  correspondence  courses 
j  from  which  a  student  may  choose 
!  to  earn  degree  credit  and  quality 
I  points.    , 

I  Students  may  enroll  at  any 
I  time  provided  they  are  not  at- 
I  tending  regular  University  classes. 

I  Lessons  assignments  may/  be 
sent  in  at  the  students'  convenience 
I  so  long  as  no  more  than  four  are 
submitted  in  a  seven  day  period 
I  although,  students  are  allowed  13 
I  months  in  which  to  finish  a  course 
j  they  may  complete  a  three  se- 
I  mester-hour,  course  i^i  a  minimum 
'  of  seven  weeks.  Two  courses  may 
j  be  taken  at  one  time. 
I  Those  interrupting  their  educa- 
I  tion  to  enter  the  armed  services 
{  my  acquire  college  credit  while 
I  they  .serve  their  country  by  tak- 
'  ing  correspondence  courses,  the 
!  bureau  said. 

I  As  much  credit  as  30  .semester- 
,  hours  may  be  earned  by  corres- 
j  pondence. 

Complete  information  regard- 
ing correspondence  courses  may  be 
obtained  from  the  Bureau  of  Cor- 
respondence Instruction,  Abernethy 
Hall.  Student  who  will  not  be  at- 
tending regular  classe-,-  this  spring 
may  begin  enrolling  for  courses 
after  classes  are  over  on  Jan.  19. 


^^P 

m 


^    Ai«ijV08.'^' 


rW, 


li' 


V;;;N||}M  ,, 

■  .'mII' i.iarnous  cfeams'  by 

Dorothv  urav 


i  ■    nil 

t 

'.i    ■       1' 


i 


now  at  y2  P^^  r>l  '"f 


SAVE  DOt.LAR3 

OB  Hetona  BobiiiAtoin's 

ltotft»g<nifl  HomMme  Treatments 

for  Yonagor  Looartng  Skin 

Hdent  Rubiitftein'*  Estrogenic  Hormone  Cream  and 
Oil  smooth  away  »fs  signs,  tenaion  lines-help  you  lock 
years  youoger.  H^ey  help  the  under-skin  to  hold  essen- 
liai  moirture,  lilting  o«t  the  'iuiiace  and  smooUiing 
wrinkles.  And  it  costs  lo  little  M  look  yoiinger -during 
this  limited>time  offer  you  jsavc  doUarsl  Try  a  complete 
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TNI  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


SATURDAY,  JANUARY  12,  1*57 


Tar    Heels    Whip 
Clemson,    86-54 
For  13th  Straight 


By   LARRY   CHEEK 

North  Carolina's  relentless  Tar 
Heels,  second  ranked  nationally 
and  determined  to  stay  there,  cap- 
tured consecutive  victory  number 
13  last  night  in  Woollen  Gym,  out- 
classing the  Clemson  Tigers,  86- 
54.  in  an  ACC  basketl>all  game. 

It  was  Carolina's  fourth  win  in  | 
ACC  play  and  left  them  safely  atop  1 
the  standings  far  ahead  oi^  the , 
pack.  { 

Lennie  Rosenbluth  and  Bob  Can- 1 
ningham  were  the  heroes  of  the  j 
Tar  Heel  attack  as  Rosenbluth  hit 
for  34  points  while  Cunningham, 
an  unsung  playmaker  «t  guard, 
popped  in  18  valuable  markers, 
most  of  them  coming  at  crucial 
moments.  Joe  Quigg  had  17.     ■ 

The  game  was  won  from  the  free 
throw  line  and  off  the  backboards. 


The  Tar  Heels  pumped  in  34  chari- 
ty tosses  to  only  18  for  Clemson, 
and  Qiiigg;,  Brennan.  Rosenbluth 
and  Co.  cleaned  the  boards  for  a 
wopping  46  rebounds  to  a  mere  17 
for  the  shorter  Tigers. 

The  contest  was  close  only  in  the 
game's  opening  minutes  when  the 
Tigers  were  hitting  their  shots. 
With  9:^  remaining  in  the  opening 
half,  Carolina  possessed  only  the 
slimmest  of  one  point  margins,  21- 
20., 

Then  Clemson  hit  a  disastrous 
dry  spell,  going  for  nearly  8  min- 
utes Without  a  single  point.  Caro- 
lina took  advantage  of  this  gold- 
en opportunity  and  ran  up  a  33-20 
lead  before  the  Tiger's  Vince  Yoc- 
kel  hit  a  short  jump  shot  at  the 
1:41  mark  to  break  the  ice. 

Joe   Quigg  sent   the  Tar  Heels 


--.»••  V 


"^ery  Happy^^  With  SiBtup 

Hungarian  Ruhiieir  And 
Coach  Arrive  At  UNC 


By   LARRY    CHEEK 

Hungarian  -distance  runner  L^s- 
zlo  Tabori  and  his  trainer-coach 
Mihaly  Igloi.  both  refugees  from 
the  Soviet  Russia  blood  hath  in  Bu- 
dapest, arrived  in  this  little  col- 
lege community  thousands  of  miles 
from  their  homeland  yesterday.  anS 
settled  down  for  a  long  stay  in 
this  new  world  of  peace  and  free- 
dom. 

Tabori  is  one  «f  38  Hungarian 
athletes  who  chose  tiberty  over  :^ . 
ranny     after  the     1966     CAyiniUCi 
Games   in   Melbourne.     Adisl^alia,  [ 
and  defected  to  this  country,  H« 
first  went  to  Miami,  Fla.,  butmovr! 
ed  on  to  Chapel  Hill  when  condi- 1 
tions  in  Miami  were  found  to  be 
unsuitable. 

The  slender  Hungarian  jmnith, 
one  of  nine  men  to.nm  a'^nile.in 
less  than  four  minutes;, rpsUcDs  ^^o 
stay  in  Chapel  Hill  for  am»n)zima- 
tcly  two  months  4tu*iag  whidi  time 
he  will  go  tlurough  twice  a  day 
wwkouts  on  Finley  Golf  Course 
and  the  Fetzer  Field  track  in  pre- 
paration for  a  numkcr  of  big  in- 
door meets  in  which  he  plans  to 
participate. 

Tabori  and  iiis  coa^.  neither  of 
whom  speak  English,  wiU  make 
their  headquarters  at  the  Univer- 
sity motel,  right  next  to  the  golf 
course.  Tabori  went  through  a  bri|k 
50  minute  workout  on  the  course 
yesterday,  running  with  UNC  dis- 
tance men  Jim  Beatty,  Wayne  Bb- 
hop  and  E>?erett  Whatley. 

His  traning  schedule  is  a. rigor- 
ous one,  at  least  fjctd  the  Ameri- 
can point  of  view.  Wcifking  under 
the  direction  of  Igloi,  he  plans  to 
run  up  to  30  miles  «  day  7  days  a 
week,  with  two  sessiiMSs  each  day. 

According  to  Ij^,  this  is  the 
secret  that  has  carried  his  star  pu- 


pil to  such  amazing  achievements 
in  the  track  world. 

"Conditioning  is  the  important 
thing,"  said  Igloi  yesterday  through 
his  interpreter.  Dr.  Ransom  Taylor 
of  the*  University  pepartment  of 
Germanic  Languages.  "A  runner 
must  devia-e  the  right  training  me- 
thods and  then  work  all  the  time 
all  year  long,"  he  siid.  And  the 
foiir  minute  mile  is  the  result. 

Taboris-  best  time  for  the  mile 
is  3:58.9  while  his  .best  in  the  two 
Mle  is  8:37.  He  foxmeprly  held  the 
world  record  in  the  - 1,500  meter 
run.  b^focie  one.of  his  Hungarian 
t&sunmates.  .-broke  I  it.  Jn  the  just 
completed  Olympic  gant^  .he  fin- 
ished lourth-  in  the  1300  meters 
and  sixth  hi  the  5.00Q  meters. 

His  itinerary  for  the  upcopiing 
American  indort  ae^f'-i  is  stili  not 
oomplete,  but ,  he  •definitely  ,  will 
run. in  at  dieast  .eight  meeta.  His 
deinit  in  this  "country  will .  come 
Da  Jan.  19  when  hetTuns  the  .two 
mHein  the  Knights  o|  Columbus 
games  in  Boston.  On  the  25th  and 
26th  of  this  month,  he  will  com- 
pete in  the  Philadelphia  Inquirer 
meet  and  the  Washington  E^vening 
Star  games.  Later  on  he  will  run 
in  the  Milrose  Games  in  New  York 
City  and  the  National  AAU  meet 
in  addition  to  several  others. 

The  Amateur  Athletic  Union,  or 
AAU,  is  sponsoring  Tabori's  stay 
in  Chapel  Hill  with  the  financial 
"backing  of  Sports  Illustrated  ma- 
gazine and  the  Himgarian  free- 
dom fimd. 

Through  his  interpreter,  Igloi 
told  a  group  of  neVsmen  yester- 
day that  he  was  "verry  happy" 
with  the  setup  here.  And  to  con- 
clude the  interview,  he  paid  tri- 
bute to  his  athletic  protoge,  call- 
ing him  "the  finest  person  and 
all  round  athlete  I  have  ever  coach- 
ed." 


to  intermission  with  a  39-24  bulge 
when  he  connected  on  a  jump  Shot 
just  as  the  horn  went  off  ending 
the  half. 

Rosenhluth  and  Quigg  pooled 
their  talents  at  the  beginning  of 
the  second  stanza  to  push  the  mar- 
^n  up  to  19  points,  55-36,  with 
11:35  remaining.  At  this  point 
the  Tigers  splurged  momentarily 
to  clim^  within  15  points  at  5540. 
but  the  Tar  Heels  gathered  their 
forces  and  built  their  lead  up  to 
20  points,  8S46  with  5:52  remain- 
ing. 

The  game  then  degenerated  in- 
to a  rout  with  Rosenbluth  and  his 
teammates  sewing  almost  at  will 
to  run  up  the  final  margin,  86-54. 

The  Tar  Heels  return  to  action 
tonight  when  they  play  host  to  Vir- 
ginia in  an  ACC  tilt  beginning  at 
8  p.  m.  in  Woollen  Gym. 


th«    ftox: 
CLiMSON 

Yockel  f 
arinkley  f 
Hitman  f 
S6ay  c 
Moncrlef  c 
Yarborough  g 
CamerAn  g 
Totals 


9 
fi 
3 

0 

s 

1 

9 

1 


6« 

O-l 

0-2 

4^ 


T 
16 
6 
O 
6 
8 
14 
4 


PATROiilZC  YOUR 
•    ADVERTISERS    • 


18     18-24    24     54 


N.   CAROLINA 

Rosenbluth  f 
Brennan  f 
Lotz  f 
Searcy  f 
Holland  f 
Quigg  c 
Hathaway  c 
Kearns  g 
Cunningham  g 
Radovich  g 
Groll  g    , 
Roscmond  g 
Totialatj 
C^iBtson 
North   Caroliiif 


o 

10 

1 
1 

0 
0 
5 
1 
2 
9 
0 
1 
0 
20 


F 

14-19 

1-4 

^^ 

(H) 
00 
7-9 
0^ 
24 
84 
OO 
(MH 
0-0 

3? 


T 
34 

3 

4 

0 

0 
17 

t 

2! 


iy  -^  .  '•       Rosenbluth  Hits  Free  Throw 

L*nni«  Rosenbluth,  Carolina's  high  scoring  basketball  captain,  is 
shown  above  as  he  sinks  one  from  the  freei  throw  line  in  last  night's 
gaiTM  with  Clemson.  The  Tar  Heels,  paced  by  Lennie's  34  points,  won 
»n  8434  decision. 


MiJton's 

Ninth  Annhrersary  Sale 

SPECIAL— TODAY    ONLY 

Entire  stock  $2.50  ties,  silk 
foulards,  Englrsh  hand-blocked 
wool  chaliies,  silk  repps,  all  re- 
duced to  $1.99 

All  items  on  sale  continued 
at  reduced  prices  through  next 
week  -^  „-■■     v-/ 

ClotbittS  CupboarlJ 


The  KING  Plays  The  Hottest 
Game  in  The  West  with 
Four  ,M.  Queens! 


QuaiM  '  pmuaR 
TwsJGtto 

mi  FOUM  f^UEEia 

COLOR  by  OaUx*  •  ON«MAEec#€ 

NOW  PLAYING 


Frosh  Cagers  Defeat 
Wake  Freshmen  87-60 


47— •♦ 


Beatty  Receives  Award 

Roy  Armstrong,  director  of  adnusslens,  presonts  an  All-Ajti*ri- 
can  award  to  di»t«>co  XMnnt  Jim  Beatty  during  helf-time  c*r^ 
monies  at  last  night's  game. 


Pro  Bow/  Nof  To  Be  Te/ecasf 


LOS  ANGELES— (AP)— The  an- 
nual Pro  Bowl  Ail-Star  football 
game  here  Sunday  will  not  be 
televised  nationaly  or  regionally 
because  of  inability  of  networks 
to   get   time   clearances. 

Commissioner  Bert  Bell  of  the 
National  Football  League  said  in 
Philadelphia: 

'•Ev«r>  effort  wag  aude  to  get 


network  •clearance  for  the  pro 
bowl  game  by  everyone  connect- 
ed with  the  game.  Until  late  this 
week  we  thought  it  could  be  ac- 
complished." 

The  pro  bowl's  seventh  annual 
game  features  64  picked  players 
from  the  Eastern  vsA  Western 
conferences  of  tb«  NFL,  32  to  a 
squad. 


resfl'mg: 
torn  Rags 
Riches 


fty  DAVE  WieLC 

Call  it  the  UNC  athletic  success 
story  of  the  year:  the  rise  of  Caro- 
lina wrestling  from  the  depths  of 
a  wittless  season  to  a  pink  doiki 
of  w^ai  apears  to  be  a  threat  for 
the  conference  crown. 

For  the  p9st  two  season,  the 
charges  of  Coach  Sam  Barnes  were 
able  to  find  only  one  victory.  This 
year  With  the  season  jiist  under- 
way the  grappUhg  squad  i$  unde 
feated  and  has  already  scored  more 
points  than  they  did  the  whole  of 
la^  season. 

The  reasons  for  the  sudden  chan- 
ge of  fac^T  Coach  BAmes  says,  "We 
have  more  es^riente  on  this  years 
squad,  and  l^ve  giotten  unusual 
milage  from  the  sophomores.  Also 
the  boys  are  fighting  for  the  close 
ones." 

Wrestling  has  never  been  a 
strong  sport  at  Carolina,  Coach 
Barnes  pointed  out,  "There  has 
been  a  wrestling  team  at  Carolina 
for  over  thirty  years,  but  the  good 
seasons  can  be  counted  on  the 
fingers  of  one  hand:  '26.  '42,  '46, 
and  '47."  The  '42  and  '47  squads 
were  conference  champions.  There 
has  never  been  an  undefeated 
team  at  Carolina.  The  team  with 
the  best  record  was  the  '47  squad, 
which  finished  the  season  with  sev- 
en wins  and  one  loss." 

Coach  Barnes*  has  been  at  Caro- 
lina since  1851.  He  is  a  regular 
member  of  th^  English  department 
here.  Before  he  came  to  Ciroiina 
he  was  wrestling  coach  at  VMI.  It 
is  itttftresting  to  note  that  the  two 
years  Carolina  was  conference 
champion,  the  Tar  Heels,  defeated 
Coach  Barnes'  VMI  teams  in  the 
finals,  in  '47  by  ojily  one  point 

Sever^  T»r  Heels  are  strong  can- 
didates for  conference  champion- 
ships this  year. 

Captain  Bob  Wagner,  Charles 
Boyotte,  srenioTB,  and  Perrin  Hen- 
derson, sopheisiore,  have  compiled 
impressive  ^^cofcia;  this  year.  All 
three  of  these  fiwpplers  have  a 
chance  of  h^reakins  the  school 
scorlni;  record  fA  29  points. 

The  Vairpit^  has  sijt  more  mat- 
ches. The  Itir  ones:  VMI  and  Mary- 
lind.  The  T«rp6  were  conference 
ehan^ps  lAst_  jreir.  Tba  Tar  Heels 
know  tiiAt  match  will  be  their  acid 
test. 


The  Tar  Babies  played  a  fiile 
second  half  last  night  to  beat  the 
Baby  Deacs  of  Wake  Forest  87-60. 

The  Carolina  frosh  leading  by 
onl>'  one  point  at  the  half  came 
back  fired  up  and  sharp  the  second 
period.  Led  by  Lee  Shaffer  and 
Dick  Kefpley.  the  Tar  Babies  scored 
53  l^iij^^,  The  Baby  Deacs  27. 

Shaffer,  showing  his  skill  a.s  a 
rehoundej-aAd  tap-in  artist,  again 
led  the  Tar  J&abies  in  scoring,  hit- 
ting f4»-  25  points.  6-7,  center.  Dick 
Kcpley  was  runner  up  for  the  Ca- 
rolina yearlings   with  20. 

■  '■   '  *    .  . 

The  first  half  was  played  in  a 
sl^'lF,  easy-going  manner,  each  team 
playtpg  a .  possesion  game.  After 
the  intermission,  the  Tar  Babies 
got  hot,  getting  20  quick  points 
against  the  Baby  Dcacs'  5  in  the  j 
first  five  minutes,  and  ran  away 
tHth  the  game. 


Carolina 
Wake  Forest 


34       53 
33       27 


WON  MEDAL   THREE  TIMES 

Jerry  Vayda.  University  of  North 
Carolina  captain  in  1955-56.  is  the 
only  player  ever  to  win  the  Foy 
Roberson.  Jr.,  ^Memorial  Meds3 
more  than  -one  time  since  it  was 
initiated  in  1943.  He  won  it  three 
years  in  a  row.  The  medal  i^-  award- 
ed to  the  player  making  the  great- 
est contribution  to  team  morale 
and.«i>ortsmanship. 


ntOM  VMkMNCit  exes  rrARniNa 


KARLMALDEN-Glii)SDllBAK{r, 


EIIWAIUCH  ^.-S^ 


ADULT    ENTERTAIN r*^^^ 
ADULTS  65c      *^^^^ 


Ciirolina 


LATE  SHOW 

TONIGHT 
SUN.-MON. 


Last  night' 

s  win 

was 

the 

fifth 

for  the  Tfeir 

Babies   again&t 

one 

lost  The  Bab  yDcacs  left  the  floor 

with  a  3-3  record. 

Tonight  the  Tar  Babies  will 

meet 

Stallings     Air  Force   Base. 

The 

game  will  start  at 

six  in  Woolen 

Gj^. 

The  Summary: 

Carolina 

f9 

ft 

Pf 

tp 

Shaffer  f 

10 

5 

3 

25 

Larese  f 

,  4 

1 

3 

9 

Kepley  c 

7 

6 

3 

20 

Steppe  g 

3 

6 

0 

12 

Crotty  g 

6 

3 

4 

15 

Gl-aham  g 

1 

0 

1 

2 

Crutchfield  f 

1 

0 

1 

2 

Poole  f 

0 

0 

0 

0 

Ainslie  f 

0 

0 

0 

0 

Griffin  g 

0 

0 

0 

o' 

Totals 

33 

21 

15 

87 

Wake  Forest 

f9 

ft 

pf 

tp 

Fronte  f 

3 

2 

3 

8 

Bailey  f 

1 

0 

0 

2 

Budd  c 

6 

4 

3 

16 

Wiggins  g 

4 

2 

4 

10  : 

Mitchell  g 

2 

0 

0 

4 

Ritchie    g 

3 

2 

2 

8 

Murtay  f 

1 

0 

1 

2 

Tj'son  g 

0 

0 

0 

0 

Simpson  g 

0 

0 

0 

o! 

Griffin  g 

4 

2 

4 

10  1 

Totals 

24 

12 

17 

80| 

JOHN  COLLINS. 
ST    PtTIN'S  COLLtGI 


/arred  Bard 


WHAT  Ate  DANCING  ERROKSt 


TID  IIXLER. 
nLONIDA  ST«T( 


WalU  Fault* 


LIGHTING  A  LUCKY?  You  might  rub  two  sticks  together: 
— but  it'll  take  you  hours  to  see  the  light.  You  mighty 
use  ten-dollar  bills — if  you've  got  money  to  bum.  Or  you 
might  insist  on  matches— in  which  case  you'll  be  a' 
Lighter  Slighter!  Any  way  you  light  it,  a  Lucky  tastes  out., 
of  this  world.  It's  all  cigarette  .  .  .  nothing  but  fine,  mild, 
good-tasting  tobacco  that's  TOASTED  to  taste  even' 
better.  Try  a  Lucky  right  now.  You'll  say  it's  the  best-, 
tasting  cigarette  you  ever  smoked!  .T 


OONT  JUST  STAND  THERE  . 


Tubbs,  McDonald  Deny 
Signing  With  Edmonton 

ST.  LOUIS— (AP)— All  Ameri- 
cas Jerry  Tubbs  and  Tommy  Mc- 
Donald of  Oklahoma  yesterday 
denied  i-eports  they  had  signed 
professional  contracts  with  Ed- 
monton of  the  Western  Interpro- 
vincial  Football  Union  in  Canada. 

Tubbs.  center  and  defensive 
signal  caller  fo  the  Sooners,  •  said 
he  had  signed  to  play  pro  ball 
With  the  Chicago  Cardinals  of  the 
National  Football  League. 

The  Montreal  Herald  reported 
that  Tubbs  and  McDonald,  a  half- 
back, had  signed  with  Xht  Cana- 
dian club  and  said  they  probably 
wouldn't  be  offfcially  announced 
as  members  of  the  club  'tor  a 
M-eek  to  10  da/s.'*  '  - 


WHAT  IS  A  NORSEMAN  WHO 
MISSED  THE  «OAT» 

-■, 

^ 

-  6^2^ 

Mi 

LM^Lz: 

J^- 

^^ 

tot  CUBDIHIC. 

Hiking  Viking 

ST 

LOUIS  U. 

STICKLE!  MAKE  $25 


Sticklers  are  simple  riddle« 
with  two-word  rhyming  an- 
swers. Both  words  must  have 
the  same  number  of  syllables. 
(No  drawings,  please!)  We'll 
shell  out  $25  for  all  we  use — 
and  for  hundreds  that  never 
see  print.  So  send  stack.s  of 
'em  with  your  name,  address, 
college  and  class  to  Happy- 
Joe-Lucky,  Box  67A,  Mount 
Vernon,  N.  Y. 


Luckies 
Taste  Better 


"ITS  TOASTED**  TO  TASTE  BETTER  .  .  .  CLEANER,   FRESHER,  SMOOTHER! 


WHAT  IS  WIND  FROM  A 
RAGWEED  PATCH  f 


Sneete  Breeze 


HAROLD  FISCHItCK. 
U.  OF  COLORADO 


WHAT  IS  A  CRAZY  KIlTt 


RUDOLFH  KAOIKII. 
rURDDC 


Mad  Plaid 


WHAT  IS  A  MAN  WHO 
STEALS  ClASSWARCt 


JIM   MAYNARD. 
IOWA  STATE  COLLEGE 


Pitcher  Snitcher 


WHAT  IS  A  NEW  ENGIANO 
tOVER  BOYt 


TONI  HOB*. 
mCNICAH  STATE 


Maine  Swain 


•  A.  T.  Co. 


PRODUCT    O 


f  i/nct^i 


it4<can(7o 


■  '     4 


AM£RICA  S    LKADINC    MAN  V  FACT  U  R  L  R    Or    CIQARKTTBS 


'^mmmmmHfimm^^^ 


»,«  C  LIBRARY 
SERIALS    DEPT. 
CHAPEL   HILL.    N.    C. 
8-31-49 


WEATHER 

P»rtiy,   cloudy    and    mod«rat»ly 


cold.   Exp«ct«d   high  44. 


2r(ic 


REVIEW 

If  was  *  busy  wMk  for  just  aiMtit 
(Everybody.  See  page  2. 


VOL.  LVn    NO.  82 


Complete  {/Pi  Wire  Servtet 


CHAPEL  HILL.  NORTH  CiUlOLINA.  SUNDAY,  JANUARY  13,  Ifj/ 


Oificea   in   Graham   Memorial 


FOUR    PAGES  THIS   ISSUfe 


Dulles  Warns  Against 
Bloodless  Domination 

WASHINGTON  —  i^^—  A  warning  by  Secretary  of  State  Dulles 
that  Soviet  Communism  is  likely  to  gain  bloodless  domination  (wer 
western  Europe  unless  the  United  Slates, rushes  aid  to  the  Middle 
East  yesterday  sharpened  the  big  debate  over  foreign  policy. 

Dulles,  in  testimony  made  public  yesterday,  said  that  unless  the 
U.  S.  aet.  fast  with  help  for  the  strategic  Mideast  "it  is  our  definite 
belief  that  this  area  is  very  likely  to  be  lost.'" 

"And  if  it  is  last."  Dulles  said,  "it  will  be  the  greatest  victorjT 
that  the  Soviet  Communists  could  ever  have  gained  because  if  they 
get  this  area  they  in  effect  will  have  gotten  Western  Europe  without 
a  war." 

Dulles  painted  this  grave  picture  of  the  situation  in  a  closed  ses- 
sion of  the  Hcuo-e  Foreign  Affairs  Committee  last  Tuesday.  The  com- 
mittee made  puhfic  his  testimony  tonight  after  making  security  ditl?- 
tions. 

He    was  testifying  for  President   Eisenhower's   plan  for  eco- 
nomic aid  to  Middle  East  Nations  and  for  authority  to  fight  if  neces-  j 
sar>  to  counter  any  overt  Communist  aggression  in  the  arei. 

Soviet  Tanks  Patrol  Budapest  ^       '  *• 

BUDAPEST  -'/?»—  Soviet  tanks  and  armored  cars  patroled  the 
Budapest  area  yejierday  in  a  show  of  force  befitting  Premier  Janos 
Kadar's  aim  to  curb  renewed  unrest  among  workers  and  students. 

The  Russian  armored  units  were  out  for  everyone  to  see. 

Eight  tanks  and  six  armored  cars  parked  near  the  postoffice  on 
Csepel  Island,  the  iron  and  steel  center  in  the  Danube  where  at  least 
two  workers  were  killed  and  five  wounded  Friday  in  a  clash  between 
Hungarian   Communiol   militiamen  and  demonstrating  workers. 

An  undisclosed  number  of  Csepel  workers  continued  their  de- 
fiance. Radio  Budapest  announced  men  in  the  tool  machinery  shop 
"did  not  resume  work  today"  and  the  work  force  of  a  sewing  machine 
shop  mostly  stood  around  and  talked. 

The  Csepele  workers  council  resigned  in  protest  against  dis- 
missal of  many  workers  and  unfulfillment  of  wage  demand^-. 


WORLD  MEET  OPENS  FRIDAY: 


Gravitation  And  Gravity? 
They're  Often  Confusing 


Bevan  Hits  Macmitian  Appointment 


LONDON  — Jt —  Aneurin  Bevan,  leader  of  the  Labor  Party,  Left 
Win^  said  yesterday  appointment  of  Harold  Macmillan  a^i  Prime  Min- 
istti"  amounts  to  little  more  than  a  game  of  "musical  chairs"  by 
Britain's  Conservative  Party. 

i  Breaking  a  four-day  silence  on  Sir  Anthony  Eden's  resignatiwi 
d^Prinie  Kinister.  Bevan  said  it  i»^  unlikely  that  ManiiHIju  will  hri«£ 
tntny  new  faces  tniQ  the  gpyemment. 

••■We  are,  therefere,  faced  with  a  new  goverranent  compo^d,  in 
the  main,  of  the  same  old  faces  and  the  same  guilt.,"  the  60-year-old 
no.  2  man  in  Britain's  Labor  Pferty  said  in  an  article  written  fbr  the 
Weekly  News  of  the  World.  ' 

B  van  repeated  his  party's  call  for  new  national  el^ctibiis.  Me 
also  added  his  voice  to  previous  labor  charges  that  Queen  EHizabeth.  in 
picking  a  new  Prime  Minister.  al.so  was  required  to  designate  the 
leader  of  the  Consen'ative  Party. 

Because  the  Conservative  Party  itjelf  had  provided  no  clear  cut 
ohoice.  he  said,  some  quarters  will  now  contend  that  whenever  the 
tabor  Party  attacks  Macmillan  it  also  attacks  the  wisdom  of  the 
Queen's  choice. 


Mrs.  Fouse 
Sings  Here 
At  8  Tonite 


Soprano  Martha  Fouse  of  Chap- 
el Hill  is  featured  soloist  in  to- 
night's production  by  Les  Petites 
Musicales  held  in  Graham  Mem- 
orial's main  lounge  at  8. 

Sponsored  by  Graham  Memorial 
Activities  Board,  the  program 
will  present  works  by  seven  com- 
posers. 

Mrs.  Fouse  is  a  pupil  of  Walter 
C^lde  and  works  on  the  office  staff 
of  the  UNC  School  of  Social  Work. 
Her  previous  musical  appearances 
include  roles  in  the  Music  Dept.'s 
production  of  "Marriage  of  Figa- 
ro" and  Les  Petites  Musicales.  Al- 
so during  her  musical  career,  Mrs. 
Fouse  has  sung  with  The  Playmak- 
ers,  featured  as  Magnolia  in 
"Showboat"  and  as  the  bride  in 
'Blood   Wedding." 

Accompanist  for  the  soloist  will 
be  Walter  Gold*. 

Selections  from  tonight's  pro- 
gram include  'Vieni,  Vieni  0  Mio 
Dilett3"  by  Antonio  Vivaldi.  "Fra- 
uen  Liebe  and  Leben"  by  Robert 
Shumann.  Claude  Debussy's  "Beau 
Soir,"  "Envoy"  by  Paul  Hindemith, 
Gardner  Read's  "At  Bedtime,"  and 
"Miranda"  by  Richard  Hageman. 

The  Mloist  wlU  also  cin<  'Tocm 
for  •  fl^  of  Chanfe,"  based  on'an 
ArrMbald  MacLeMi  poem  and  sei 
to  mu<iic  by  Robert  Gould. 

Les  Petites  Musicalei  afe  pre- 
sented without  charge  for  all  stu- 
dents and  other  interested  persons. 


Chancellor   Group 
Holds   Interviews 


By  FRAKIC  CROWtHE* 

The  first  Wold  Conference  on  Gravitation  opens  on  the  18th  of 
January,  and  persons  in  Chapel  Hill  can  look  with  pride  —  and  possi- 
bly with  confusion  —  at  the  assemblage  of  world  reaowncd  scientists 
who  will  gather  here  to  theorize  on  the  fol^  of  gravity  in  physics. 

What  is  gravitation,  though,  and  grayity,  and  how  are  they  inter- 
related? Is  there  any  difference  between  gravitatton  and  gravity? 
What  good  are  the  theories? 

These  «e  a  few  of  the  quesitions  which  may  be  propounded  by 
students. 

All  of  the  bodies  in  the  universe,  from  heavenly  bodies  to  the 
smallest  particle  of  n>atter,  have  a  mutual  attraction  for  6ach  toher, 
and,  if  free  to  move,  will  nrwve  toward  ohe  another.  This  is  the  gravi- 
tational theory.  Because  it  itivblves  all  kinds  of  bodies,  it  Is  often  re- 
ferred to  as  universal  graviiation. 

The  force  of  attraction  is  in  direct  proportion  to  the  product  of 
the  ma^'ses  of  bodies  under  consideration  and  varies  inversely  as  the 
square  of  the  distance  between  them. 

Gravitation  is  always  working,  and  in  no  way  can  it  be  destroyed. 

In  formula,  a  gra^/itational  constant  is  the  force  a  body  weighing 
one  gram  exerts  on  a  body  of  the  same  proportion  at  a  distance  of 
one  centimeter. 

Sir  Isaac  Newton,  English  phjrsicist  and  philosopher,  is  given 
credit  for  discovering  gravitation;  he  was  greatly  affected  by  Johannes 
Kepler's  work  and  the  exp^rtm^nttf  of  Henry  jCavendish  helped  estab- 
lish imiversal  application. 

Many  times,  gravitation  is  thorouyhlj-  confused  with  gravity.  Al- 
though the  latter  is  used  almost  synonymously  with  gravitation,  there 
is  a  definite  distinction. 

Gravitation  is  the  attractive  force  acting  to  draw  bodies  together; 
gravity  indicates  that  specific  force  of  gravitation  operating  between 
the  earth  and  other  bodies  which  are  drawn  to  the  earth.  This  latter 
force,  which  focuseo;  on  a  central  point  within  this  body  or  any  body 
and  which  is  referred  to  as  the  center  of  gravity,  is  the  causation  of 
this  body's  weight. 

Gravity's  force  varies  in  different  locales,  but  the  generally  ac- 
cepted velocity  of  a  falling  body,  i.e.  the  acceleration  of  gravity,  used 
as  a  standard  for  normal  calculations  is  32  ft.  (or  980cm)  per  second 
at  sea  level.  This  means  a  freely  falling  body,  e.g.  in  a  vacuum, 
falls  at  the  rate  of  32  fe.  per  second  at  the  end  of  the  first  second, 
64  ft.  per  second  at  the  end  6t  the  second  second,  etc.  Galilee's  ex- 
periments with  iron  balls  is  a  classic  example  of  this  theory. 

Physics  is  the  science  which  desls  with  matter  and  energy  and 
t}ie  relationships  between  them  —  matter  being  anything  which  has 
weight  and  occupies  space. 

So  gravitational  physics  is  the  study  of  the  energies  of  matter  as 
related  in  the  universa  and,  eypecialljM^atomip  thecHry  where  matter 
is,  in  accordance  wilh  the  kiheiic  nxo^tiset'  theory  and  the  nature 
and  internal  structure  of  the  jneleculeft  rtiemseires,  deals  with  matter 
in  the  more  general  way,  withinarterial  bodied  «nd  the  fortes  acting 
j  upon  and  between  them,  coaaidering  their  metien  and  measuHrig  their 
energy.  , 


WUNC-TV  Celebrates 
Second  Anniversary 


"Mr.  Macmillan  can  rescue  us  all  from  this  dilemma,"  Bevan  add- 
ed. "He  can  advise  an  early  general  election.  Whatever  would  be 
the  outcome  of  it.  the  decision  would  be  the  people's  where  it  must 
always  be  in  a  parliamentary  democracy." 


Coeds  Learri  Results  Of  Teits^*^ 
Given  During  Orientation  Week 


WUNC-TV  is  moving  ahead  on 
the  observance  of  its  second  an- 
niversary. 

"Quite  a  few  programs  now  on 
will  be  moved  and  new  courses 
will  be  added,'  said  a  station 
source. 

WUNC-T\'  Channel  4  is  primar- 
ily an  educational  station.  Since 
its  opening  January  8,  1955,  the 
station  has  broadcast  college  cred- 
it courses,  the  special  session  of 
the  Legislature,  and  a  number  of 
other  remote    telecasts. 

Director  Earl  Wynn  and  assist- 
ant director  John  Young  of  the 
Chapel  Hill  Station  plan  the  pro- 
grams with  William  Young, 
Greensboro  director,  and  Roy 
Johnston,  Raleigh  director.  The 
chief  engineer  of  WUNC-TV  is 
Alan  McIntjTe. 

WUNC-TV  has  the  only  active 
remote  unit  in  this  area.  Through 
this  u;iit  it  has  made  available  a 
number  of  special  public  interest 
programs  which  have  been  carried 
on  a  statewide  basis. 

A  complete  new  schedule  is 
planned  for  the  new  semester  be- 
ginning Feb.  3.  This  includes  a 
new  German  course  and  Legisla- 
tive reports  beginning  in  Febru- 
ary, according  to  a  WUNC-TV 
spokesman. 

"Quite  a -few  programs  now  on 
will  be  moved  and  new  courses 
will  be  added,"  said  the  station 
source. 

One  of  the  newest  highlights 
coricerrtlng  the  edttcatlonal  pro- 
gram is  the  station's  plan  to  re- 
la.v  NBC  educational  jirograms  to 
North  'Carolina  audiertces!  These 
programs  will  begin  in  March 
and  are  offered  exclusively  to  ed- 

Excellent 


ucational   stations   throughout   the 
nation  by  NBC. 

Remote  telecasts  include  sym- 
phonic concerts  from  Greensboro, 
the  semi-monthly  "Project  Health" 
series  from  the  Division  of  Health 
Affairs  of  UNC,  and  the  weekly 
church   service  from   Raleigh. 

The  church  service  and  the 
daily  "Today  on  the  Farm"  are 
rebroadcast  by  other  stations  in 
the  area. 

College  credit  courses  enroll- 
ment has  increased  with  each 
course  offered  on  the  station.  The 
past  curriculum  also  has  included 
in-school  programs  since  the  fall 
of    1955. 

Dr.  David  G.  Monroe  of  the 
UNC  Political  Science  Depart- 
ment taught  the  first  college  cred- 
it course. 

Since  WUNC-TV  has  been  on 
the  air.  programming  has  evolved 
to  the  present  balance  between 
formal  education,  general  interest 
programs, ,  and  cultural  entertain- 
ment. 


Drivers  Assign  Bus  Seats 


By  EDITH  MACKINNON 

"Would  you  rather  be:  (I)  A 
ranch  hand?  (2)  An  author?  (3)  A 
dishwasher  salesman?"  This  is  the 
type  of  question  posed  to  new 
coeds  when  they  entered  in  Sept. 
in  a  series  of  tests  given  by  the 
TALLAHASSEE.  Fla.  — .4^—  Tallahassee  bu.-  drivers  yesterdaj^  Dean  of  Women'a-  Office, 
tegan  assigning  riders  to  seats  as  the  city's  transit  system  mov«|  Coeds  who  underwent  a  maze  of 
back  to  normal  after  an  ll-day  shutdown  caused  by  racial  violence]  f  such    psychological     and    interest 

There  were  few  riders  and  no  incidents  in  the  first  experiences' 
with  a  new  seat  assigning  plan  ordered  into  effect  by  the  city  comr 
mission  to  reduce  friction  and  preserve  peace. 

As  passengers  boarded  buses,  drivers  pointed  to  seats  which  they 
Were  to  occupy  —  a  requirement  of  the  new  operating  rules. 

The  old  segregated  seating  requirement  set  forth  in  the  bus 
franchise  agreement  wa,  tossed  out  by  the  commission  last  week  as 
having  "doubtful  validity"  and  the  new  ordinance  makes  no  reference 
to  race.  y 

In  determining  where  passengers  are  to  sit,  the  drivers  are  sup 
posed  to  take  into  account  such  factory  as  weight  distribution  and 
the  need  for  preventing  violence. 


'  |test^  at  the  opening  of  the  school 
year  are  now  beginning  to  see  the 
results. 

Miss  Martha  Decker  and  Mrs. 
Richard  Neill  of  the  staff  of  the 
Dean  of  Women's  Office  are  in 
the  process  of  holding  personal 
interviews  with  each  new  coed  on 
campus  to  explain  the  individual 
te^^ts  score.s.  Interviews  are  con- 
ducted by  alphabetical  listing,  and 
work  has  now  progressed  through 


University 
Met   With 

By  GLENN   KEEVBR 

Members  of  the  UNC  English 
Dept.  took  a  busman's  holiday  ov- 
er   Christmas    vacation. 

They  met  with  colleges  from 
across  the  nation  to  exchange  new 
ideas  in  their  field. 

GM'S  SLATE 

The  following  activities  are 
acheduled  for  Graham  Memorial 
tomorow. 

Graham  Memorial  Activities 
Board,  4-6  p.m.,  Grail  Room; 
Grail,  9-11  p.m.,  Grail  Room;  Stu- 
dent Party  Caucus,  7:30-9:30 
p.m..  Roland  Parker  1  and  Re- 
land  Parker  2;  Air  Ferce  ROTC, 
7-10:30  p.m.»  Roland  Parker  3; 
Elections  Beard,  4-S  p.m.,  )Noo6- 
house  Conference  Room;  U.N.C. 
Dance  Comm.,  7-9  p.m.,  Wisod- 
he  use  Conference  Room;  Treffic 
Con>m.,  9-11  p.m.,  WdOdhouse 
Conference  Room;  Bridge  Club, 
7-11  p.ni.  A.P.O.  Room. 


English  Professors 
Colleagues   Christmas 


I      Playing    an    important    role    in 
I  the    Modern    Language    Assn.    of 
j  American  meeting  in  Washington 
I  Dec.  27-29  was  Professor  C.  Hugh  j 
^  Holman.  Holman  read  a  paper  en- 1 
titled      "Christian     Allegroy     in 
I  Faulkner's  'Light  ih  August' "  be- 
fore the  American  Literau  Litera- 
I  ture  Group,  one  of  the  more  im- 
!  portant  segments  of  the  Assn. 
i      He  also  .served  as  a  member  of 
j  a  discussion  panel  representing  a 
conference    on    "Problems   in   the 
Study     of     Sr>uthern     Literature." 
The   panel,     composed     of     four 
members,   used  agrarianism  as  its 
theme  in   the  discussion. 

Holman  was  elected  chairman  of 
this  conference  for  the  next  an- 
nual meeting,  which  will  be  held 
in  Madison,  Wis.  next  September. 
Thirteen  other  members  of  the 
Dept.  also  attended  the  meeting. 
Prof.  R.  P.  Bond  was  chairman  of 
a  conference  on  "A  Subject  Matter 
Index  to  18th  Century  British  Per- 
iodicals." 
Prof.  C.  P.  Lyons  .was  a  mem- 


ber of  the  executive  council  of 
the  Assn..,  a  capacity  he  baa  served 
in  for  the  last  four  years. 

Prof.  R.  A.  Pratt  wSs  an  officer 
in  the  Chaucer  section  of  the 
Assn.  and  Prof.  Pe^er  G.  Phialas 
was  secretary  of  the  conference  on 
"Opportunities  for  Research  in 
the  Field  of  Renaisiance  Drama." 

Other  members  who  attended 
were:  Professors  Dougald  MacMil- 
lan,  A.  P.  Hudson,  A.  C.  Howell, 
R.  B.  Sharp,  N.  E.  Eltoson  and 
E.  W.  Talbert;  A.<i80ciate  Professor 
G.  F.  Horner;  and  Aislstant  Pro- 
fessors Robert  B.  Voltle  and 
George  M.  Harper. 

The  Modern  Language  Assn.  of 
America  is  an  Assn.  of  people  who 
are  teaching  or  are  actively  en- 
gaged in  the  study  of  modern 
languages  in  American  colleges 
and  universities.  English  is  the 
largest  single  section  of  the  as- 
sociation, but  various,  other  con- 
ferences are  held  otl  $  wide  va- 
riety of  modern  language  studies 
during  the  conference. 


those  names  beginning  with  "M". 

The  two  main  tests  which  were 
given  in  Sept.  were  the  Ohio  State 
University  Psychological  Examina- 
tion (OSU)  and  the  Kuder  Test. 
The  latter  test  is  particularly  valu- 
able in  revealing  vocational  areas 
in  which  the  girl  has  definite  in- 
terests. 

Results  of  the  testing  program, 
plu^*  other  information  gained  dur- 
ing the  coed's  interview,  are  plac- 
ed on  a  personal  file  in  the  Dean 
of  Women's  Office.  An  active  file 
is  kept  in  that  office  during  the 
girl's  stay  at  the  University.  Fol- 
lowing graduation  of  the  student, 
the  file  is  placed  on  a  graduate 
file  record  for  two  years  and  is 
finally  transferred  to  che  Central 
Records  Office,  where  it  is  kept 
indefinitely. 

All  information  gained  in  the  in- 
terviews and  all  personal  records 
are  maintained  on  a  confidential 
basis  and  are  not  revealed  outside 
the  Dean  of  Women '^  Office. 

These  records  have  been  found 
found  to  be  very  useful  in  aiding 
the  student  after  graduation.  Pro- 
spective employers  may  obtain  cer- 
tain information  from  the  records 
by  writing  to  the  Dean  of  Women's 


Office.  In  addition  to  providing 
help  in  job  siecuring,  the  records 
are  often  valuable  to  girls  who  go 
on  to  enter  graduate  or  profession- 
al schools. 

Dean  of  Women  Katherine  Car- 
michael  considers  the  interviews 
"an  integral  part  of  the  work  of 
this  office."  Two  such  interview.-, 
are  held  with  each  girl  during  her 
work  at  the  University,  one  in  the 
junior  year  and  a  departure  con- 
ference  held  in  the  senior  year. 

"It  is  a  very  good  opportunity 
for  the  girls  to  tell  the  University 
what  they  do  and  do  not  like  about 
its  program,"  stated  Dean  Car- 
michael. 


Nobody's  Headed  Yet 
For  Moon,  But  A4aybe 

WASHINGTON— (AP)— It  isn't 
that  somebody's  going  to  the 
moon  tomorrow,  but  Rep.  Karsten 
(D.-Mo.)  wants  Congress  to  be 
prepared. 

So,  he  has  introduced  a  bill  to 
create  a  joint  congressional  com- 
mittee on  extraterrestial  explora- 
tion. 

"And,  I  grant  you  there'll  be 
very  little  junketeering  on'  that 
committee,"  Karsten  said,  sitting 
in  his  earthboupd  office  here. 

He  said  he  had  the  idea  before 
President  Eisenhower  mentioned 
agreements  to  control  "outer  space 
missile  and  satellite  development" 
in  his  state  of  the  union  message 
last  Thursday.  The  president  Was 
talking  about  international  control 
as  a  disarmament  measure. 


UNC  Prof 
Book  One 
Of  Best 


A  book  written  by  a  UNC  pro- 
fessor of  English  haa-  been  select- 
ed as  one  of  the  "best  1956  South- 
ern books  of  the  year." 

"The  Kenan  Professorships"  by 
Dr.  A.  C.  Howell  was  announced 
as  among  the  25  winners   cho.sen 
by  the  Southern  Books  Conunittee 
of  the  Southeastern  Library  Assn. 
i  The   jury  consisted  of   a   number 
ol  prominent  bookmen  from  out- 
j  iide  the  Southern  region. 
!      Published     by     the     University 
j  Press,  Dr.  Howell's  book  contains 
illustrations    by    WilUam    Meade 
Prince  and  Adrian  Lamb. 
I     Selection  is  based  on  "excellence 
j  of  design  and  format,"  with  con- 
]  tent  being  considered  "only  inso- 
far as  the  design  reflects  the  sub- 
ject. During  las?,  several  sets  of 
winning  book^  will  be  sent  out  as 
a   travelling    exhibit   to   Southern 
college,   university   and   public   li- 
braries. 

Olan  V.  Cook  of  the  UNC  Libr- 
ary, is  a  member  of  the  Southern 
Books  Committee. 


Writers 
Are  Rare 

"The  strangest  fact  about  tlie 
writing  of  novels  is  that  only  a 
few  people  in  any  generation 
have  the  innate  creative  power 
that  can  produce  great  fiction,  and 
that  these  rare  people  arc  totally 
unlike    one    another." 

This  is  a  statement  made  by 
Lionel  B.  Stevenson.  James  B. 
Duke  Professor  of  English  at  Duke 
University,  when  he  addressed  the 
UNC  EnglLsh  Club  here  l->iday 
night. 

Novelists  are  "usually  not  aware 
that  they  possess  the  gift. "  Steven- 
son stated.  "They  start  in  other 
professions,  or  in  writing  other 
kinds  of  literature,  and  discover 
their  genius  for  fiction  more  or 
le-ss  by  accident.  The  people  who 
begin  their  careers  confidently 
planning  to  be  novelists  seldom 
achieve  the  highest  quality  of  their 
work."  he  said. 

Stevenson  cited  as  one  of  the 
best  examples  of  this  William 
Makepeace  Thackeray,  who  was  the 
topic  of  Stevenson's  talk  entitled, 
"Thackeray:  the  Reluctant  Novel- 
ist." 

Reviewing  Thackeray's  career, 
Stevenson  stated  that  the  author's 
first  ambition  was  to  be  an  artist. 
Before  he  produced,  "Vanity 
Fair,"  his  first  novel,  he  had  work- 
ed as  a  newspaperman  and  writer 
of  books  of  travel,  criticism,  and 
humor. 

Stevenson  stated  that  many  of 
the  dlftinctive  quaUties  of  his 
novels  arise  from  this  diversity  of 
interest. 

No  other  type  of  literature  has 
ever  given  the  impression  of  cov- 
ering the  whole  range  of  human 
experience  as  fully  as  the  novels 
of  Thackeray's  time,  just  a  cen- 
tury ago.  Modern  novelists  have 
tried  to  give  better  artistic  unity 
to  their  work  but  have  thus  lost 
the  scope  that  was  brought  into 
each  book  by  Thackeray,  the  Duke 
professor   said.  


Draftee  Is.  Homesick 
For  Punchy  Kangaroo 

FT.  CARSON,  Colo.  —  (AP)  — 
Know  what  Pvt.  Louis  Casazza 
says  he  misses  most,  now  that 
he's    in    the   Army? 

Boxing    with    a    Kangaroo. 

That  wa^.  hi», favorite,  i»sttJme, 
as  well,  as  a  ipeans  of,  raisijig 
ready  c^sh,  unt^l  the  ^raf^  ^t  him 
last'  September. 

Casazza  ar)^,^i4ney.  jth^  )>ang^ 
roo,  began.  Jradin^.,  .PiUflchftSj  in 
J^puary.  1955,  wh^  Casawf  wi^s 
a  student  at  San  Francisco  Uni- 
versity. 

They  even  appeared  in  movies 
and  on  television.  Now  Casazza  is 
a  buck  private  here  and  Sidney 
is  in  a  zoo  at  San  Franci-sco,  the 
last  he  heard. 


Committee 

Still  Mum 

On  Candidates 

The  nominating  committee  for 
UNC  chancellor  Saturday  spent 
practically  "most  of  the  day" 
conducting  interviews  of  candi- 
dates  for  the   position. 

The  committee's  chairman.  R. 
Mayne  Albright  of  Raleigh,  gent- 
ly sidestepped  questions  of  who 
was  interviewed. 

He  confirmed  reports,  however, 
that  among  those  considered  thus 
far  were  Dr.  J.  L.  Godfrey,  history 
professor  and  Dr.  Wiliam  H.  Po- 
leat,  associate  professor  of  Phi- 
losophy. Godfrey  met  with  the 
committer  a  few  weeks  ago;  Po- 
teat   was    interviewed    Saturday. 

He  hinted  these  two  were  not 
necesarily  higher  rated  than  were 
others.  'The  committee  has  made 
no   rankings  yet. '   he    said. 

Present  UNC  Chancellor  Robert 
B.  House  will  retire  in  June. 

The  committee  —  divided  into 
three  groups,  (trusteesC  alumni 
and  UNC  faculty  members)  —  has 
reported  it  hopes  to'  have  a  report 
on  its  work  to  turn  over  to  Con- 
solidated University  President 
William  C.  Friday  around  the  first 
of  March. 

Friday  would  then  make  his 
recommendation  to  the  Board  of 
Trustees. 


Akka  Removed  Soon 

SUEZ,  Egypt,  — ff>—  Lt.  Gen. 
Raymond  A.    Wheeler    said  yes- 
terday the  Egyptian  LST  Akka— 
.Biggest  qbstmction  blocking  the 
Suez,  CanaJ  —  wil  be  removed  in 
t±u;ee  more  weeks.  Previous  erti- 
mates  said  it  would  take  one  to    i 
,|hree  jnonLhi-  to  complete -salvage  : 
,\\-Q,rl^.,,on  ,,the   Akka.   which  went >t 
,(^owp  loaded  with  cements.   ■.    i    a 
Whee,ler,  the  retired  U.S.  Army    • 
General,  who  is  supervising  clear-' 
ing    operations    for    the    United 
Nations,   arrived   by    plane  from 
Port    Said    to    inspect    clearance 
work  at  the  southern  end  of  the 
canal. 


{> 


Newspaper  Institute  Will 
Bring  Well-Known  Speakers 


The  32nd  annual  North  Caro- 
lina Newspaper  Institute  at  Chap- 
•A  Hill  and  Duke  University  Jan. 
24.  25,  and  26  will  leature  nation  J- 
ly-promincnt  newspapermen  as 
speakers,  and  Governor  Luther 
Hodges  will  present  press  awards, 
it  was  announced  yesterday  by 
Publisher  Thomas  L.  Robinson  of 
(he  Charlotte  News  who  is  presi- 
dent of  the  .N.  C.  Press  Associa- 
tion. 

Mont?»om?ry  Curtis,  associate  di- 
rector 01  the  American  Press  In- 
stitute in  New  York,  is  the  main 
speaker  at  the  mornin:4  session  in 
Chapel  Hill.  Friday  morning,  Jan. 
25. 

Paul  Miller  will  spiti  Friday 
evening  at   Duke  University. 

The  annual  press  awards  for 
dailies  and  non-dailies  will  be 
(See  NEWSPAPER,  page  3i 


MONTGOMERY   CURTIS 

. . .  Institute  Speaker 


Father  Of  Prospective  Coed 
Checks  Up  On  Carolina  Life 


By  PATSY  MILLER 

"Are  you   a  coed   at  Carolina?" 
After    all    the    controversy    be- 
tween coeds  and  UNC  males  this 
year,   a   man   stopped   a   coed   on 
the  street  and  asked  her  that  ques- 


tion. Smilingly  she  answered  "yes 


,.  1 


"How  do  you  like  it  here — I 
suppose  there  ai^  enough  men!" 

The  man's  daughter  wants  to 
transfer  here  next  year  from  a 
girl's  school.  Like  all  fathers,  he 
wanted  a  girl's  opinion  of  the  so- 
cial situation. 

"She  has  a  wonderful  back- 
ground. I  wouldn't  worry  about 
her  grades  at  all." 

•'Would  she  need  a  car?  I  no- 
ticed all  these  cars  and  thought 
they  must  belong  to  students." 


Then  he  asked  about  Duke  coeds. 
After  a  discussion  clearly  favor- 
ing the  \j:^C  coed,  Jie  said  that 
he  always  thought  Carolina  was  a 
fine  school. 

And  the  men.  "Well,  if  there 
are  7,000  of  them.  I  guess  you 
girls  can  manage  two  or  three  at 
a  time." 

So  Carolina  will  be  blessed  with 
one  more  perfect  female  next  year. 


IN  THE  INFIRMARY 


Those  in  the  Infirmary  yes- 
terday included  Misses  Patricia 
Gregory  and  Marjori*  Jean 
London;  and  Robert  Lewis,  Shel- 
ton  Turner,  Leonard  Knox,  Jam- 
es Pierce,  John  Wallace  end 
Gene  Otter. 


PAGE  TWO 


THE  OAIL-Y^TAR  HEEL 


SUNDAY,  JANUARY  13,  1957 


REVIEW: 

CAMPUS 
STATE 


WORLD 


DR.  DEW  ITT 

.  big   conference 


DR.  DEWITT 

.  plantiing  a . 


Last  Week  On  Campus 
Was  One  Of  Contrasts 

'  Charlie  Sloan 

Personalities  made  news  in  Chapel  Hill  last  week  in  a  wide 
range  of  suDjects.  The  two  venerable  campus  debating  societies 
inaugurated  their  new  leaders,  a  phyjicist  family  was  completing 
plans  for  the  first  "World  Conference  on  Gravitation"  ever  held  in 
the  United  States,  a  dorm  president  and  the  editor  of  his  dorm's 
newspaper  squared  off  and  exchanged  verbal  punches,  and  the  en- 
tire csmpus  was  shocked  by  the  resignatibn  of  one  of  its  best-liked 
administrators. 

University  Librarian  Andrew  H.  Horn's  resignation  was  announc- 
ed Thixrsday  afternoon.  Although  a  University  regulation  requires 
that  announcemenls  of  resignations  be  made  by  the  Chancellor, 
several  top  officials  agreed  that  the  genial  administrator  is  leaving 
Chapel  Hill  after  two  and  one-half  years. 

Horn's  resignation  was  for  "personal  reasons,"  but  it  is  un- 
derstood that  poor  health  and  lack  of  cooperation  form  the  state 
legislature  contributed  to  his  decision.  At  the  last  session  Df  the 
legislature  the  Library's  badget  was  cut  in  half. 

*  *  * 

Two  Doctors  DeWitt,  a  scientifk  husband-wife  team,  will  host 
an  international  conference  on  gravitation  in  Chapel  Hill  Jan.  18  to 
24. 

Dr.    Brj-ce    De- 
Witt  and  Dr.  Ce- , 
cile     M.     DeWitt, 
ue  in  charge  of 
he  year-old  grav- ; 
tation  project  at 
t  h  e     University. 
Their  guests  for. 
t  h  e     conference 
*ill  include  forty 
internation- 
illy   known    phy 
iicists     who     arc 
Aorking     in     the 
irea    of    gravita- 
[tional  phy  sicfe.- 
I  They  •  will    wof^ 
I  sessions     at     the 
conference,     and 
will  pool  informa' 
tion    relating    iq 
the  role  of  gravity  in  physics. 

Sponsoring  the  conference  are  the  Air  Force,  the  National  In- 
stitute of  Field  Physics,  the  National  Science  Foundation  and  the 
French  Dept.  of  Foreign  Affai^. 

*  *  ♦ 

A  brief  flare-up  occured  in  Battle-Vance  Pettigrew  when  Cort- 
land Edwards,  editor  of  the  B-V-P  Times,  accused  Neil  Bass,  the 
dormitory's  chief  executive,  of  being  neglect  in  his  duties  and  of 
being  illegally  running  an  election. 

When  Eklwards'  editorial  appeared  Bass  an.^'wered  with  a  state- 
ment calling  him  an  iconoclast  and  a  rabble-rouser.  Bass  flatly  denied 
Edwards'  charges. 

Edwards  commented  that,  after  reading  the  article,  he  wondered 
".  .  .  who  was  more  libelous  —  me  or  (Bass)." 

Two  residents  of  Pettigrew  then  drew  up  a  petition  giving  Bass 
a  vote  of  confidence.  Later  Bass  pointed  out  that  he  had  received  60 
signatures  on  these  petitions,  and  that  IDC  President  Sonny  Hallford 
had  signed  a  statement  declaring  the  B-"V-P  election  legal. 

When  asked  to  produce  the  50  signatures  Bass  reported  that 
petitions  circulated  in  Vance  had  disappeared,  and  he  was  only  able 
to  produce  17.  He  was  quick  to  add  that  he  did  not  suspect  Edwards 
of  any  misconduct  in  the  matter.  Bass  repeatedly  declared  that  the 
affair  was  only  a  family  squabble,  and  criticized  The  Daily  Tar 
Heel  for  reporting  the  series  of  events. 

The  dispute  is  currently  deadlocked.  Both  parties  are  back  on 
friendly  terms,  but  the  second  issue  of  the  B-V-P  Times  carried 
an  editorial  by  Edwards  saying  that  because  of  lack  of  cooperation 
he  was  forced  to  resign.  Neither  side  will  adjnit  fault  in  the  in- 
cident, which  brought  threats  of  Honor  Council  action  from  boh 
sides. 

•  ♦  ♦ 

Dr.  William  Poteat,  UNC  Associate  Professor  of  Philosophy  spoke 
at  the  Dialectic  Senate's  meeting  Tuesday  night.  The  society's  of- 
ficers were  inaugurated  at  the  meeting. 

Prcsident-Elect  Stan  Shaw  delivered  an  address  on  "The  Role 
of  the  University  and  its  Responsibilities  to  the  State."  In  the  speech 
he  said  the  Di  will  circulate  a  petition  urgiog  the  state  legislature 
to  help  the  library.  He  said  he  hopes  to  get  5,000  signatures. 

Shaw  charged  that  the  state  has  been  neglecting  the  Library 
and  that  the  students  must  act  to  change  the  situation. 


The  official  student  publication  of  the  Publications  Board  of  the 
University  of  North  Carolina,  where  it  is  published  daily  except  Mon- 
day and  examination  and  vacation  periods  and  summer  terms.  Entered 
as  second  class  matter  in  the  post  office  at  Chapel  Hill,  N.  C,  under 
the  act  of  March  8,  1870.  Subscription  rates:  Mailed,  $4  a  year.  $2.50 
per  semester;  delivered,  $6  a  year,  $3.50  a  semester. 


Editor 


FRED  POWLEDGE 


Managing  Editor 


CHABUE  SLOaN 


Night  News  Eidtor  


WaUy  Kuralt 


Business  Manager 
Night  Editor  


_  BILL  BOB  PE^EL 
— Clarke  Joncs 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL  WEEK  IN  REVIEW 

Staff  Writers  —  Frank  Crowther,  Charlie  Sloan,  Mary  Aiys  Voorhees 


Around  The  World:  State  Of  The  Union 
Shake  Up  In  London  And  Riots  In  Dixie 


Night  Eidtor  


Graham  Snj^der 


Chou  Goes 
¥isiting  And 
Ike  Speaks 

After  a  weekend  of  contempla- 
tion— Congress  of  Eisenhower's 
Mideast  Plan  and  the  Hungarian 
puppet  government  of  its  di- 
lemma— a  few  reactions  and  de- 
cisions were  reached  on  Mon- 
day. 

Congress  thought  it  best  to 
proceed  slowly  in  granting  the 
president  any  "big  stick"'  powers 
regarding  the  Middle  Eastern 
problem.  Many  officials  wanted 
to  hang  restrictions  onto  any 
such  frea  hand. 

Blue  Monday  became  even  more 
tainted  when  Premier  Janos  Ka- 
dar  knocked  the  props  from  un- 
der the  hopes  for  general  liberal- 
ization pjlicies  in  the  new  gov- 
ernment, by  proclaiming  a  back- 
to-Stalinism    program. 

In  Hollywood,  a  bruised  and 
battered  "body,"  Marie  McDon- 
ald, related  a  terribly  tragic,  if 
totally  unbelievable,  story  of  her 
abduction. 

In  the  Suez  Canal,  a  string  of 
ships,  m'arooned  for  two  mjnths, 
began  to  move  slowly  through 
the  locks  and  into  the  Mediter- 
ranean. 

Tuesday,  Sen.  Knowland  stole 
the  headlines  in  announcing  that 
he  was  going  to  retire  from  the 
Senate  to  spend  more  time  with 
his  family.  That  may  have  been 
true,  but  many  observers  be- 
lieved that  he  wanted  to  spend 
that  time  in  the  White  House 
with  them  in  1960.  by  way  of  the 
California    Governorship. 

At  Nukovov  Airfield  just  out- 
side Moscow,  with  fur  hat  and 
fur  collared,  coat.  Red  Chinese 
Premier  Chou  En-lai  decendcd 
from  his  sleek  new  Russian  .jet 
(which  had  been  sent  to  China 
as  a  taxi  to  bring  the  Premier 
to  Mo.scow)  and  grinned  a  toothy 
grin  at  his  Russian  counterpart. 
Premier  Bulganin. 

Wednesday,  Rep.  Hays  (D. 
Ohio)  walked  out  on  Secretary 
of  State  Dulles,  charging  that 
Dulles  had  asked  for  unwarrant- 
ed secrecy  necessitated  by  an 
executive  session,  when  he  was 
of  the  opinion  that  the  meeting 
should  have  been  kept  open  to 
the  public. 

F-ench  Foreign  Minister  Pi- 
neau  was  on  his  way  to  Washing- 
ton to  seek  the  same  Dulles'  aid 
in  trying  to  break  the  present 
deadlock  over  the  Suei  canal. 

In  Madrid.  Spain,  Luis  Arrcse 
Magraz.  boss  of  the  Falangc  par- 
ty, supposedly  caused  a  govern- 
ment crisis  by  offering  dictator 
Francisco  France  his  resignation 
from  the  Cabinet. 

^Thursday  morning  screamed 
headlines  across  the  country  of 
Prime  Minister  Sir  Anthony 
Eden's  resignation  from  the  head 
of  the  British  goverment  the 
night  before.  It  seemed,  that 
coins  would  be  flipped  to  choose 
between  R.  A.  Butler  and  Har- 
old Macmilian  as  Eden's  sue- 
cessor^  Hugh  Gaitsk«^l,  Laboi' 
Party  leader,  was  caught  with 
his  pants  down — he  was  at  Har- 
vard delivering  the  Godkin 
lectures. 

In  the  United  Nations,  the 
Hungarian  debate  was  being 
fired  up  by  Ambassador  Lodge, 
who  again  called  for  a  special 
neutral  U.N.  committee  to  inves- 
tigate  the   Hungarian   situation. 

Gov.  Marvin  Griffin  of  Georgia 
had  called  his  militia  to  a 
stand-by  during  the  night  to 
guard  against  "riots,  insurrec- 
tion, and  breaches  of  the  peace" 
when  six  Negro  ministers  made 
a  move  to  end  segregation  on 
Atlanta's  traditionally  segregated 
busses. 

Harold  Macmilian,  62  year  old 
Conservative  Party  member  and 
former  Foreign  Secretary,  took 
over  Friday  as  the  new  Prime 
Minister  of  Britain  —  his  first 
problem  was  to  patch  up  the 
British-American    relations. 

President  Eisenhower,  in  his 
State  of  the  Union  message  of 
the  day  before,  had  sounded 
new  warnings  against  inflation 
and  dictatorships  in  a  compar- 
atively short  (33  minutes)  mess- 
age to  Congress. 

By  the  week's  end.  the  north- 
west portion  of  the  country  was 
digging  aut  from  a  bliamrd  which 
had  blocked  roads  and  crippled 
schools.  The  snow  was  mo\ing 
eastward,  a.ad  North  Carolina 
had  begun  t&  feel  its  affects  by 
Friday. 


Peacetime  Censorship 
In  The  State   Dept. 


Arthur  Krock 

III  The  Xexc  York  Times 


MISS   SUSAN    WALKER 

.a   Pi   Phi  /rem    Wilmington 


HOLDS  MANY  TITLES: 


■*#' 


Coed  Planning  Teaching   Career; 
Is  Aciive^ampus  Personalii 


\         '.iMary  Atyi^  Voiorhees 

Somewhere  in  one  oft  the  North  Carolina  schools 
there's  a  lucky  group  of  styde^t*; 


jjienccment  marshal  a.nd  president  of  the  AFROTC 
■Sponsor  Squadron,  giving  her  the  title  of  Hoijorary 
Cadet  Colonel. 

Back  in  the   fall,   rhost  of  the  coeds  would  re- 


Next    semester   they    will    have   Stisah  ^rflket.  '   rtiember  her  work   as   a  counselor   for  Orientation 


senior  coed   from  Wilmington,     as    'tileii*     s-ftident" 
teacher.  -l  i    ■ 

For  not  only  has  she  been  recognized  for  her, 
beauty,  but  probably  wt)ald  be  rated  as  "tops"  in 
versatility  and  TJanopali|»ii  .V       "   '  ' 

Right  now  Siisan.  who  will  receive  hfer'A.B.  in 
English  in  June  with  a  teaching  Certificate  in 
English  and  biolog^v,  docsnt  know  where  she  will 
do  her  practice  teaching,  but  undoubtedly  her  stu- 
dents will  welcome  her  as  their  instructor. 

However,  this  isnot  just  one  person's  opinion — 
her  fellow  students  voiced  their  opinion  by  se- 
lecting her  for  the  many  honors  she  has  received. 
Her  classmates  back  at  New  Hanover  Hfgh  School 
in  Wilmington  were  probpbly  among 'tHe  first  to 
recognize  her  talents  and  elected  her  as  president 
of  her  class,  to  the  May  Court,  as  well  as  rtriny  other 
offices. 

In  the  summer  before  she  graduated  she  was 
named  to  represent  her  school  at  Girls  State,  and 
then  her  classmates  chose  her  the  gilj^^h  the 
best  personality  in  the  Senior  Class  ^'HW  superla- 
tives were  elected.  i 

But  this  was  not  the  end  of  her  many  outside 
participations — evidenced  by  her  many  activities 
here  at  the  "Hill." 

Hardly  had  she  been  here  a  month  when  she 
was  elected  a  junior  class  officer,  and  before  the 
year  was  out  she  had  added  such  homirs  as  "Queen 
of  the  1936  Military  Ball,"  vice  president  of  Pi 
Beta  Phi  Sorority,  a  vice  president  of  GMAB,  com- 


Wc'ek  by  dt'votinglohg  hours  to  the  new  coeds- 
felling  them  about  the  "Carolina  Way  of  Life." 

Perhaps  one  of  the  members  of  her  orientation 
group  put  it  in  better  Wofds, when  she  was  talking 
to  another  new  coed:  "My  counselor  is  Susan  Walk- 
er, and  I'm  telling  you,  she  i^  a  grand  person.  If 
air  the  coeds  are  as  fine  as  she  i.s.  I'm  really  go- 
ing to  enjoy  it  up  here ..." 

Other  activities  which  have  consumed  much  of 
Susan's  time  this  year  are  her  work  on  the  Biparti- 
san Board  for  Honor  Council,  being  co-chairman 
of  the  marriage  and  courtship  study  group  of  the 
Y^TA.  working  with  the  Girl  Scout  branch  of  the 
YWC.\  and  the  Class  Cuts  Committee. 

And  right  now  she  is  one  of  the  busiest  coeds 
on  campus,  for  not  only  does  she  have  the  school 
activities  in  which  to  participate,  but  she's  spend- 
ing quite  a  bit  of  time  picking  out  her  silver  and 
china   and   preparing   for  a   June   wedding. 

Her  husband-to-be  is  Bruce  Gustafson  of  Wash- 
ington, D.  C,  a  '56  UNC  graduate  and  former  DKE 
who  is  now  serving  in  the  U.  S.  Marine  Cops,  c 

But  a  closer  look  at  what  she  does  in  her  spare 
time — when  she  has  some. 

Asa  crreat  lover  of  sports,  no  doubt  a  few  hours 
are  devoted  to  tennis,  horseback  riding  and  folf — 
and  sailing  and  swimming  in  the  summertime  down 
at   Wrightsville  Beach. 

Then  there's  her  favorite  hobby — sketching  and 
writing  poetry  and  short  stories — which  she  hopes 
to  do  something  with  in  the  future.  At  other  times 


WASHINGTON,  D.  C— Wl»en 
the  State  Department  announced 
it  would  severely  penalize  mem- 
bers of  the,  United  States  press 
for  reportorial  activity  behind 
the  Bamboo  Curtain  that  the 
Communist  Chinese  Government 
had  at  last  agreed  to  permit,  de- 
partment spokesmen  offered  the 
following  reasons  for  this  indi- 
rect exercise  of  peacetime  cen- 
sorship   of   the    press: 

If  an  American  reporter  en- 
tered Ccmmunist  China  pn  a 
United  States  passport,  that 
would  violate  the  restriction  of 
tile  document  on  travel  in  one 
of  three  countries:  Bulgaria, 
Albania  and  Red  China. 

The  President's  Geneva  pro- 
gram that  urge  dthe  expansion 
of.  East- West  exchanges,  in- 
cluding the  free  flow  of  in- 
formation and  access  to  its 
sources,  applied  only  to  Soviet 
Ru.ssia  and  its  European  satel- 
lites. 

The  United  States  cannot 
extend  such  exchanges  to  na- 
tions "where  our  citizens  lie 
in  dungeons";  to  do  so  would 
be  to  vitiate  a  section  of  our 
foreign   policy. 

It  is  all  very  well  for  the 
press  to  be  willing  to  take  any 
'  risks  involved  in  engaging  in 
professional  activities  in  Red 
China.  But  the  Government 
cannot.  And  "if  one  of  these 
reporters  is  locked  up."  said 
one  official  (as  quoted  in  this 
space  under  date  of  Aug.'  6. 
'1956),  "his  family,  if  not  his 
boss,'  will  bombard  the  Govern- 
ment with  demands  to  get  him 
out.  demands  that  could  not 
be  met  short  of  measures  that 
could  precipitate  a  state  of 
war  close  to  war  itself." 

Secretarj'  Dulles  is  determ- 
ined on  these  poipts,  and  no 
criticism  will  "budge"  him'. 
This  last  statement  was  veri- 
fied when,  after  three  rc^esent- 
atives  of  the  American  press  eh- 
-tered  Communist  China  for  news- 
gathering  purposes,  the  depart- 
ment revoked  their  passports 
and  asked  the  Treasury  to  de- 
termine if  the  three  had  also 
violated  the  Trading  with  the 
Enemy  Act  of  1917.  And  mean- 
while the  remainder  of  the 
American  press,  which  abided 
by  the  ban  of  the  State  Depart- 
ment, must  continue  to  depend- 
for  news  about  Communist  Chi- 
na on  dispatches  from  reporters 
of  other  Western  nations  who 
availed  themselves  of  the  oppor- 
tunity offered  by  Peiping. 

INTERNATIONAL  SEQUELS 

The  State  Department  has  not 
developed  its  policy  of  indirect 
censorship  of  the  American  press 
to  the  direct  censorship  of  revok- 
ing the  passports  of  publishers 
who  have  circulated  these  for- 
eign dispatches  and  citing  them 
under   the    1917  act.   Nor  has  it 


announced  that  if  dispatches 
from  the  three  Americans  in 
China  are  published  it  will  ar- 
raign them  and  their  publishers 
uiider  the  act.  Yet  this  second 
move  could  be  inferrible  fron^ 
a  Government  action  that  re- 
strains the  American  press,  ful- 
ly aware  of  its  responsibilities 
and  willing  to  assume  the  haz- 
ards of  news  gathering,  from 
opening  to  the  American  people 
the  flow  of  inf-wmation  from  a 
large  part  of  the  world  that  has 
been  closed   for  years. 

But  though  an  attempt  at  di- 
rect censorship  is  an  inferrible 
development  of  the  indirect  fomj^ 
no  one  in  Government  has  pro- 
posed it.  And  if  anyone  did. 
however  high  his  position,  the 
essentia!  approval  of  President 
Eisenhower  is  inconceivable. 
There  is  some  reason  to  believe 
he  is  not  enthusiastic  about  the 
steps  the  dapartment  has  taken. 
And  it  will  be  interesting  to  note 
what  the  President  will  do  if. 
in  addition  to  revoking  the  pass- 
ports of  the  three  who  went  into. 
Communist  China,  the  depart- 
ment makes  the  revocation  per-.-- 
manent  and  prosecutes  under  the 
act  of  1917. 

Should  the  policy  be  carried  to 
any  of  these  extremes.  Reporter. 
Worthy   of  The   Baltimore   Afro- 
American    and    the    two    others 
that  are  now  reporting  in  Com- 
munist China  should  be  added  to 
the  r?Il  of  those  who  have  made' 
historic  contributions  to  the  free- 
dom of  reporting  and  publicatiort'' 
in    the    United    States.    Thus    far 
the   American    press   has    unwill- 
ingly conforfried     t&    the  ' '  hki¥,0 
though    not   conceding    the   con- 
tention of  the   State  Department 
that  to  challenge  it  would  serve 
the'  international      interests     of 
Communist  China     against     our 
own."  But  the  questioning  of  the  - 
soundness  of  this  policy  in  peace- 
time is  mounting,  and  the   view  - 
it  impinges  on  the  guarantees  of 
the  First  Amendment  is  gaining 
support.  ■  ' 

The  situation  arose  w'hen  15,, 
United  States  news  reporters, 
s.  me  of  whom  had  requested 
professional  access  to  Commun- 
ist China,  were  informed  by  the 
Peiping  Government  that  en- . 
trance^  visas  would  be  available 
in  Moscow.  No  conditions  were 
imposed  —  the  American  press 
would  reject  them  anyhow.  And 
this  made  it  possible  that  for 
the  first  time  since  the  Com- 
munists took  over  China  the 
American  people,  including  the 
State  Department,  could  learn 
at  first  hand  of  conditions  in 
China  from  reports  in  their  own 
press,  written  according  to  the^ 
standards  of  American  journal- 
ism. This  clearly  would  be  a 
great  advance  toward  the  free 
flow  of  information  the  Admini- 
stration  has   been   advocating. 


In  The  State: 
Court  Rulings^ 
&  Dam  Protests 


North  Carolina's  pupil  assign- 
ment plan  will  not  be  affected 
by  the  Federal  court  ruling  that 
Virginia's  pupil  assignment  law 
is  "unconstitutional  on  its  face." 
said.  'Attorney  General  George 
B.  Patton  last  Friday   ■ 

A  ruling  of  the  Fourth  Circuit 
Court  qf  Appeals  nas  held  North 
Carolina's  plan  legal,  he  said. 

On  a  different  front  discussion 
grew  stronger  as  Chatham  Coun- 
ty citizens  protested  the  pro- 
posed Cap  Fear  Basin  Dam.  Most 
of  the  49,400  acre  lake  created 
b.f  the  flood  control  project  will 
cover  the  east  comer  of  the 
cotmty.  - 

Downstream  from  New  Hopfe 
B.iver  people  seem  to  be  in  favor 
or  the  project  .sinc^  it 'will  aid 
flood  control  in  a  17-county  area. 


ft3S0  A^Ae^lgP  to 

ALBBRTf"  HiA\,  A$  WAS  /N  -n^g 


ANtpmT  wA^cHiiBCHV  mn'^  wtuf  B&oes  i  ^preap^ 

T  /■-■'•'■ 


■  TBIAff&.B 


OH,lM^ACk^ 

10  SO  OS  UMCg 

WkY  SH0UL.1? 


AfOOl 


PR«^»  6W  ^6  W«AT  W£K  I 


At 
is  tl 

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hav( 

DOJ 

Wc'l 

slec 

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of 

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iihel 

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IrY  13,  1957 


SUNDAY,  JANUARY  13,  1957 


riM  BAtLY  TAt  MNL 


PAGE  THRif 


hip 


dispatcht'S 

Americans   in 

it   will   ar- 

^r  publishers 

this   second 

jrrible  fronaj 
\n  that  re- 
press, ful- 

sponsibilities 

lie  the  haz- 
lering.     frcm 

rican  people 
Itinn  from  a 
jrld  that  haS 
lr> 

lempt   at   di- 
In    inferrible 
idircct  fon^^ 
?nt    has   pro- 
knyone     did. 
Position,    the 
M    President 
pconceivable. 
to  believe 
|c  about  the 
has  taken. 
^ling  to  note/i 
will    do    if^i 
ig  the  pass-o 
Jo  went  intqi'. 
Ithe    deparl- 
|ocation  per-Q 
under  the 

be  carried  to 

Reporter.^^ 
Smore   Afro- 
two    others' 
In^  in  Com- 
ibe  added  to  _ 
have  made* 
to  the  free-*** 
publication*^ 
^     Thus    far 
has    unwill- 

the  >'kat».0 
\g    the    ccn- 
Department 
J  would  serve 
Interests      at 
against     our 
3ning  of  the  ■ 
[icy  in  peace- 
id  the   vie*-' 
jarantees  of 
is  gaining 

-  ^  -J 
when    15 ., 
reporters, 
requested 
la   Commun- 
rmed  by  the 
It     that     en-  - 
|he   available 
iitions  were 
:'rican    press 
Inyhow.  And 
)le    that    for 
the     Corn- 
China     the 
jcluding    the 
I  could    learn 
)nditions     in 
in  their  own 
[ding   to   tlg^ 
:an   journal- 
,ouId    be    a 
|rd    the    free 
the  Admini- 
Idvocating. 


■»pp 


,/ 


.RTH 


[elly 


7/r 


UNC  Profhssor  C^wihkm^ 
Gymnasium  With  CJg^pom 

By  BOB  lAYERS 

Address  Sam  Barnes  as  Doctor  of  Wrestling  or  Coach  of  English.  It's  all  t|ie  s»jpie  tp 
the  only  collegiate  wrestling  coach  in  the  country  with  a  Ph.D.  in  £nglish. 

If  people  with  split  personalities  tend  to  be  unstable  and  iinhappy,  Barnes  is  an  ex~ 
ception.  Hhis  personality  is  divided  right  down  the  middle.  With  .'the  gyijuuisium  and  class- 


room sharing  equal  traits 

At  the  gym,  the  UNC  head  wrestling  mentor 
witfj  n  pep  talk  in  free-flowirtg  Victorian  Verse. 


may  charge  his  tewi  of  .burly  matmcn 


Cmfmmg  The  Campus 


ip 


And  it's  vComjonon  .jitaetice  4or  i 
Barnes  to  illnsti«te  'simple  and  ! 
compound  sentences  to  his  Eag-  j 
lish  scholars  with  ineUphors  s4 1 
the  locker  .room  vaaiety.  j 

In   predominately  male  classes,  1 
the  system  clicks.  Oiifortjttia^lely,  |  stuoent'wives  CLUB 
in  others,  are  coeds  whodan't  jive  I     ^^  ^^^^^^   ^.^^^  ^j^^ 

meet  Tuesday  at  8  p.m.     in 


CAMRUS  CHRISTIAN  COUHCIL 

-The   Cantpus   Christian   CoanciJ 
will   meet     tomorrow  at    5:45  in 
Lenoir   HalL    All   members    have 
been  jiFged  to  attend. 
WUNC 

Todays  schedule  for  WUNC,  the 
University's  FM  radio  station: 

7:00— Music    from   Germany. 

7:30~Let  There   Be  Light. 

7:45 — The  Organ  Rom. 

S-^SS-^aOOO  .A.D. 

9:00— The   Third   Programme. 
10:00— News. 

10:15 — Evening  Masterwork. 
11:30— Sign   Of. 


sports  jargon. 
PERFECT  SETUP 

Barnes  believes  his  is  the  per- 
fect setup.  Coaching:  relieves  the 
monotony  of  cohtinuous  class- 
room endeavors  and  relaxes  tkf: 
mental  faculties.  And  .teachii^ 
provides  a  break  frpm  -the  stalie 
attnosphere  of  gymnasiums. 


will 
the 

Victory     Village      Nursery.    The 
group     has    invited    all     student 
wives  to  attend. 
WRC 

The  Women's  Residence  Coun- 
cil wll  meet  Tuesday  at  6:45'  p.m. 
in     the     Grqil  .Rop.m   in   Graham 


SAM    BARNES 

Ph.  D.  in  torestling 


"   OLD  BOOK  PRICES 
';   COME  TUMBLING 
DOWN! 

At  the  Intimate  Bookshop,  Januarv 


Plane  Bomber's 
Body  Cremated 


i  Memorial.  * 

Barnes,  the   assistant  professor,  i  y^pj^ 

teaches  Victorian  and  contempor-       ^.^^^^.^   athletic   A^sn.    x^lley 
ary  literature  and  advanced  com-  j  ^^jj  ^„^^j,^  ^^^  ^^^  -^  ^^  ^^.^ 
position  to  100  students.  Normally, 
that's  an  eight-hour  ta^k,  especial- 


ly in  the  absence  this  year  of  a 
regular  professor. 

Duties  of  Barnes,  the 'wrestling 
coach,  .are  so  numerous  and, mixed  | 
up  that  comparing  them  to  a  fam- 
ily    tree,    he's   his   own    grandpa.  ( 
DENVER— (AP)— The    body    of    This  year,  Barnes  doesn't  ha.ve  a 
24-year-old  John  Gilbert  Graham.  |  freshman  coach;  consequently,  .thjc 


©mnasium  office  .by  4  p.m.  Mon- 
day. '-■- 


ASfN.^OR  AGING 

F.  A-  Brandon,  field  representa- 
tive of  the  Durham  Office  of  the 
Bureau  of  Old  Age  and  Survivors 
Insurance  and  Prank  J.  Schwent- 
ker,  Julian  Price  Lecturer  in  life 
Insurance  for  the  Schpol  of  Busi- 
ness Administration  will  address 
the  Assn.  for  the  Aging  and  Com- 
munity Relationships  at  its  meet- 
ing in  the  auditorium  of  Gard- 
ner .Hall  on  Jan.  17  at  8  p-m. 

Insurance  and  the  Federal  So- 
cial .Security  Program  will  be  dis- 
cussed as  factors  in  the  economic 
security  of  retired  people.  Mem- 
bers of  the  Assn..  ^and  all  others 
int<^Sted  in  the  topic,  have  been 
invited  to  attend. 
BSU 

Dr.  Fred  W.  Ellis,  associate  pro- 
fessor of  pharmocologj'  of  the 
U.N.C.  School  of  Medicine,  will 
speak  tonight  at  the  Baptist  Stu- 
dent Union  Supper  Forum  at  the 
Chapel  Hill   Baptist  Church. 

Dr.  Ellis  will  speak  on  "The 
Physiological  "EliezX.  of  Alcohol 
on  the  Human  Body.  A  discussion 
period  will  follow. 

Supper  will  be  served  at  6  p.m. 
and  the  forum  will  begin  at  7  p.m. 


Addled  PacMer  Homeless 
Due  To  Maimed  Monners 


whose  dynamite  bomb    killed    44 
persons  aboard  an   exploding  air- 


is  the  traditional  time  for  revising  \  •i"^^.   ^  as  cremated   yesterday.     |l  Barnes. 


olti  book  prices,  and  pal,  hew  we 
have  revised  this  yearl 

DOZENS  OF  BOOKS  GO  FROM 
$1.50  to  97c 

We've  combed  the  shelves  for 
sleeper-;,  and  when  we've  found 
one,   we've  given   it  the  chop! 

OTHER   DOZENS   CUT   FROM  97c 
To  72c 

If.you^ve  been  tempted  to  buy  one 
of  our  97c  books,  now's  the  time, 
pfi.   Mo^  Mkely  it's,  pn,  ,the  72c 


The  body  was  brought  here  fromj 
Canon    City    where    Graham    was 
put  to  death  in  the  Colorado  pris- 
on's ga^  chamber  Friday  night. 
i      Only  a  handful  of  mourners,  in* 
j  eluding    Graham's   widow,    Gloria. 
23,  were  at  the  brief  services  in 
I  Fairmount   Cemetery. 

A  Methodist  minister,  the  Rev. 
I  Lloyd  C.  Kellams,  read  two  chap- 
i  ters  from  the  book  of  Psalms  that 
I  he  said  the  condemned  murderer 
:  had  requested. 

The    minister    spent    last   night 
with  Mrs.  Graham  at  the  home  of 
a  friend  he  declined  to  name. 
"She   held    up    very   well,"    the 


coach,    assistant   coaeh,  ..mana^r 
and     towel     ilisj:!enser    vis    .Sam 


Hopes  are  pointing  skyward. 
"One  boy  already  has  applied  ior 
the  managerial  slot  since  we  won 
four  matches  and  tied  another." 
said  Barnes. 

When  the  Tar  Heels  pinned  Vir- 
ginia 16  to  15  on  Friday,  Jan.  4. 
it  was  Dr.  Barnes  swapping  holds  | 
with    the   only    oUier    "Doctor   of' 
Wrestling"     in  the  country.    The 
Virginia  chi«f  is  Dr.  (of -Psycholo- 
gy) Frank  Finger. 
REWARD 

Perhaps  the  most  rewarding  as- 


MIAAII  —  liP  —  Well,  We^er 
liasn't  reformed.  Here  jie  is,  ivime- 
less  again. 

Weeper,  in  case  you  didn't  know, 
is  a  psychopathic  duck.  Just  a 
erazj*.  mixed-up  jwetofoot  who  can't 
learn  to  mind  his  maimer^-.  He 
now  has  misbehaved  his  way  Tight 
out  of  two  homes. 

This  addled  paddler  is  back  — 
much  to  Ms  dolight  —  with  other 
ducks  on'the  University  of  ISiami 
^udent  Lake.  Weeper  doeanitilike 
other  diioks.  He  doesn't  lild  ihOst 
people,  either.  But  he  gets  a  fien- 


pect     of     Barnes'    position(s)    isj^ish  delight  in  making  th^mmiw 

Draws 


getting  to  know  and  better  under- 
.stand    a    greater    number    of   stu- 


DOZENS  MORE  GO  FROM  72c 
WAY  DOWN  TO  39c 


Rev.    Mr.    Kellams      said.      "She  \  dents  than  the  average  professor. 


was  calm  and  composed.  There  was 
no  official  notification  that  drabam 

During  January,  not  only  the  regu- 1  had  died  while  I  was  there. 

lar    48c    books,   but    the   sleepers',      "We  sat  and  talked  quietly  for 

from  the  72c  shelf  are  yours  for !  about  two  hours.  That  was  all." 

a  mere  39c. 


OTHER  OLD  BOOK  PRICES  DROP , 
,.    BY  75c  to  $1.00. 


The  two  Graham  children,  Al 
len>  3.  and  Suzanne,  almost  2, 
were  cared  for  by  other  friends. 
The  minister  staid  Mrs.  Graham's 
plans  for  the  future  are  uncertain. 
W^e've  gone  right  through  our  old  I  She  has  a  stenographic  position 
book  stock,  and  whenever  we  found  \  with  a  Denver  sales  firm, 
a  book  rooted  to  the  shelf,  we've  ~~~ 

applied  the  old  shears  where  it 
hurts  most.  Had  to,  in  fact,  be- 
cause there  are  a  couple  of  li- 
braries- coming  up,  and  we'll  need 
room  for  them. 


THE  INTIMATE 
BOOKSHOP 

205  E.  Franklin  St. 
Open  Till  10  P.M. 


CLASSIFfEDS 


FURNISHED  ROOM  FOR  RENT. 
Private  entrance,  near  Victory 
Village.  Parking  for  car,  garage 
for  bicycle.  $25  per  month. 
Phone  4646. 


FOR  SALE:  1954  27  FOOT  HOUSE 
.    trailer.  Wk  miles  north  of  Chap- 
el Hill  on  Airport  Road.  Sloan's 
Trailer  Court.  Maurice  L.  Clegg. 


FOR  SALE:  1949  NASH  IN  GOOD 
condition.  Sharp  looking  and 
smooth  riding — a  real  buy  from 
the  ground  up.  Call  Bob  Perry 
at  8-9027. 


DAILY    CROSSWORD 

5.  Profltted  25.  Source 

6.  Mop  26.  Labo- 

7.  Not  strict  r»- 

8.  Sick  tory 

9.  Bill  of  (short, 
an  anchor              enad) 


ACROSS 

1.  Native  of 
Havana 

«.  Petticoat 
10.  Custom 
tl.  Mark  on  akin 

12.  Trust 

13.  Automobile 
part 

14.  Help 

15.  Pieree 

17.  Behold: 

18.  Branch 

19.  Health 
resort 

22.  Wild  sheep 

(Ind.) 
24.  aty  (N.  C) 
26.  Fibl>ers 

28.  Turbid 

29.  Append 

31.  Open  (poet.) 
32. Secondary 
33.  A  relative 
35.  Sergeant  at 

Law  (abbr.) 
37.  River  (It.) 
88.  Luzon  native 
39.  Macaws 

(Braz.) 
42  Calamitous 

44.  Desert 
(Asia) 

45.  City 
(Pruss.) 

1 46:  Ancient 

Jewish  title 
47.  English 
novelist , 
DOWN 

1.  Meddle- 
someness 

2.  Employed 

3.  Not  good 

4.  Pasture  for 

a  sum  (Law) 


12.  A  U.  S. 
President's 
tiietaMme 

16.  River 

13.  iQrl'a  Mine 

19.  Vessel 

20.  Land  of 
Canaan 

21.  Girl's  name 
23.  Detest 


rix 
•aO.Nimrod 
34.  Scandi. 

naviaji 
36.  Varnish 

substance 
37.' Land  of 

the  tiger 

38.  Grew  old 

39.  Moslem  title 


annaE 

'--inTOTl 

8at«r4»|r'i  Aasver 

40.  Steal 

41.  Warp-yam 
43.Kin^0f 

Judah 


"Unfortunately,  few  college  i»ro- 
fessors  are  afforded  ttiis  privi- 
lege," Barnes  said. 

But  some  students  have  found 
it  unwise  to  know  both  the  schol- 
astic and  athletic  sides  of  Barnes 
simultaneotisly.  "For  the  most  part 
my  A^Testlers  steer  clear  of  my 
English  classes  and  seldom  are 
my  English  students  wrestlers," 
Barnes  said. 

As  ah  exception,  however,  one 
of  Carolina's  top  wrestlers  this 
year,  Charlie  Boyette  of  Chad- 
bourn,  is  a  prodoct  of  one  of 
Barnes'  English  sessions. 

Pedantry  is  iu)t  a  Barnes  trait, 
but  he  does  consider  .scholarly 
knowledge  <ai\  asset  in  coaching 
wrestling.  "College  wTestling  is 
both  scientific  and  inteUectuaL 

Wrestling  helps  establish  a  aet 
of  values  in  young  men  and  my 
teachings  are   based   on    that   as- 
sumption. 
NOT  UNLAWFUL 

"It's  not  against  the  law  for 
an  athlete  to  be  intelligent.  I  don't 
mean  there's  anything  scientific  or 
intelligent  about  this  Saturday 
night  TV  stuff— I  have  to  fight 
that."  Jhe  said. 

•Tarents  bombard  me  with  let- 
ters asking  if  t]|«ir.j«0R8Jfu«  en- 
gagipg  here  in  ^psendo' jUities  typ- 
ical of  the  professionals.  I  reply 
>«rith  an  emphatic  'no',"  the  pro- 
fessor-coach said. 

fine  4oesn*t  qeed  ttyk^ow  wrest- 
ling to  teach  TEnjtllsh,  or  a  doc- 
tors' 4^81^  'to  .ooaeh  -wrestling, 
but  .Sam  £aiu«es  ilinds  JntKTelat- 
ing  the.two  mo«t-us«£ul. 


•Me  with  all  sorts  •  of' 
nerve-shattering  antics, 
•blood,  too,  sometimes. 

Wecpcars  original  owner,  -Mrs 
•Peggy  Bran<tt.  exiled  him  to  tHe 
lak.e  when  forced  to  choose  b^ 
tween  the  wack^'  waddler  and  <^^ 
of  his  favorite  victims  —  her  hus- 
band, Bob- 
Unhappy  with  his  "birds  of  a 
featl^er"  life.  Weeper  "adoptetl"  a 
father  and  four  young  boys  {about 
a  week  ago  when  they  visited  the 
lake.  He  hopped  into  their  car  and 
rode  away,  quacking  gleefully. 

But  Weeper  wore  out  his  wel- 
come with  his  .new  family  —  yrho- 
ever  it  was  —  in  short  order., He 
probably  began  pulling  some  of  the 
.unpleasant  stunts  which  prom^d 
his  expulsion  from  the  ^andt 
household.  Like,  for  instance,  — 
—  -Hurling  himself  commando- 
style,  bill  'bared,  and  webbed  daws 


Screening 
To  .Begin 

Critical  selection  of  potential 
Morehead  Scholarship  recipients 
for  studies  at  UNC  will  come  late 
this  month  .with  elimination  of  112 
from  a  total  of  154  candidates. 

Eliminations  on  a  district  level, 
which  will  cull  all  but  42  names 
passed  on  by  county  interviewing 
committees,  will  begin  late  in 
January  and  should  be  completed 
early  next  month. 

Morehead  Foundation  Executive 
Secretary  R.  A.'  Fetzer  said  that 
each  of  the  state's  seven  districts 
can  nominate  six  candidates  for 
further  consideration  by  a  cen- 
tral committee  which  convenes 
here. 

The  committee,  after  personal 
interviews,  nominates  to  the  five 
trustees  of  the  Nforehead  Foun- 
dation "such  candidates  as  arc 
judged  qualified  for  a  scholar- 
ship," Fetzer  said. 


FOR  HODGES'  INAUGUARTION 

MC  Symphony  To  Play 
JTwo  Raleigh  Concerts 

I      The    North    Carolina    Symphony .  tion   festivitites   adds  fillip  to  the 

I  Orchestra   will   play  two   concerts  |  observance  this  year  of  the  2oth 

*in  Raleigh  on  February  6  as  part  i  anniversary  of  the  Symphony. 

!  of  the  official  program  foj:  the  in-  j      The   evening   concert   from  7:30 

■  auguration     of     Governor    Luther ;  to  8:30.  to  be  televised  by  WUNC- 

:  Hodges,  it  was  announced  recent-  j  TV.  will  feature  a  brilliant  young 

ly  by  Dr.  Benjamin  F.  Swalin,  di-  j  Korean    piania,    Han    TonU.    who 

rector.  |  will  play  the  first  movement  from 

I  Beethoven's    Third    Piano   Concer- 
I  An  afternoon  program  will  be    .  _ 

The  15-.vear-o!d  pupil  om  Ma- 
dame Rosa  Lhevinye  of  the  Juil- 
liard  School  of  Music  in  New 
York  City,  is  being  educated  in 
this  country  on  a  special  scholar- 
ship. It  is  also  expected  that  a 
soprano  soloist  will  appear  with 
the  orchestra  at  the  evening  con- 
cert. 

Program  for  the  4:30  to  6  o'- 
clock reception  at  the  Art  Mu- 
seum  will  consist   of  Handel's  Ov- 

'  have  started  the  12th  annual  tour    erture   to  an   Occasional  Oratorio, 
with  two  concerts  at  Roxboro.  Re- '  Vivaldi's     Concerto      Grosso      for 

I  quest   for  the   state's   own   orches-  j  Strings   and   a    number   of   lighter 

I  tra  to   play  for  the   pre-inaugura- '  selections. 


given  at  a  reception  at  the  North 
Carolina  Art  Museum.  The  even- 
ing concert  at  Memorial  Audi- 
torium will  precede  the  Gover- 
nors, Ball,  for  which  the  orche.s 
tra  will  play  the  grand  march  and 
a  few  familiar  waltzes  befor  sur- 
rendering the  stage  to  a  dance  or- 
chestra. 

Both  programs  will  be  given  by 
the  Little  Symphony  of  25  music- 
ians, which  the  preceding  day  will 


^lailiing,  at  family  friends  when 
th^  came  to  call  and  chasing  them 
away. 

— -  .Gobbling  up  the  neighbors' 
tropical  fish. 

—  Attacking  the  man  of  the 
roan  of  the  house  and  shredding 
his  legs  —  not  to  mention  his  best 
flannels. 

—  Sneaking  up  behind  someone 
stooping  over  in  the  garden  and 
scoring  a  duckbill  bull's  eye  on  the 
most  logical  target. 

—  Shattering  nerves  of  passing 
motorists  witii  dive  bomber  attack 
tactics;      j  '"  '. '  '  . 

Mrs.  Brandt,  who  said  she  and 
tier  2-year-old  daughter,  I>ebbi<, 
got  along  I  fi^e  ^h  Weeper,  thas 
'hi^n  visiting  the  Jake  to  aee  how 
iiosne    life 


And  once  a  candidate  gets  past , 
the    final    step,    he's    assured    of 
one  of  the  nation's  most  attractive  | 
undergraduate      scholarship:      $1,  j 
250  per  annum  for  the  equivalent 
of  four  years'   study. 

Last  year  the  five-year  old  pro- 
gram awarded  30  undergraduate 
scholarships  from  a  total  of  wlMt 
began  as  571  candidates  on  the 
first  round  of  coipo^etition. 


would  last 


''l^didtlt^MuoM  they'd  Jieep  him 
k>n^  —  h^  can  be  a  terror,"  she 


j  .^aid  today.  "Sure  enough,  he  was 
back  on  the  lake  day  before  yes- 
terday. 

"We  know  it's  Weeper.  One  of 
our  neighbors  — .jn  woman  he  just 
loved. to  chase  —  went  over  to  the 
lake  -wHh  ns.  There  were  several 
other  people  around  but  Weeper 
paid  no  attention  to  them.  He  just 
took  out  after  our  neighbor.  It's 
Weeper,  all  Tight." 

Does  Mrs.  Brandt  plan  to  reclaim 
the  nuty  acquatic? 

"Oh,  no!  I'm  .afraid  that  would- 
n't do  at  all,  now.  He's  probably 
real  mad  at  us  for  putting  him  in  { 
the  lake.  He'd' probably  be  meaner 
than  ever.      ' 

"Besides,  Tm  not  in  the  market  | 
for  a  4i<'orce.*'  .  .  I 

Weeper,  old  duck,  it  seems  you- 
ve  had  it.  ,  l 


Npbody  Gave  A  Hoot  For  J.  Paul  Sheedv*  Till 
Wildroot  Cream-Oil  Gave  Him  ConfidcBce 

"Wl««  •v«rybody  avoid  me  so.'"  h-owled  J.  Paul.  "Because  you're  such  a 

raffled  old  bird",  replied  his  best  buddy.  Well  that  really  opcoed  Sbeedy's 

eyes.  He  took  a  taxidermist  dowji  to  the  store  and  pcck^  up  a  bottle 

of  Wildroot  Cream -Oil.  Now  he's  the  picture  ot 

confidence  because  he  knows  bis  hair  always  looks  its 

Jitfft-6so»,morning  till  iMgkt.  So  if  people  have  been 

'hooting  a*yoi*r,«i«syiMiiir,  screech  for  a  bo^tlfft^^r 

'  fiibe  pf  Wildcoot  Cr^Ajn'rOil.  It's  guaranteed  ^iiilie#p 

iVi»«rb«if>0eait:bBti.'M<iijgrfc«sy.  A*d  all  the  gals  l^^^lk;" 

<-t»at  of  their  wky.  iwi  beak  «>  youv 


t^PJU 


enc9 


What  young  ptop/e  aire  doing  at  General  Electric 


For.Bifthcby 

Louis  Ronnd  'YfQsQn,  for  31 
years  head  of  the  University  of 
North  Carolina  Library,  celebrat- 
ed his  80th  birthday  r^ently. 
And  at  just  abont  the  came  time, 
workmen  fini^ed  carving  his 
name  in  the  stone  lace  of  the  li- 
brary. 

Dr.  Wilson  has  been  with  the 
University  :4liB(Wt  .continuously 
since  he  received  his  first  degree 
in  18S0.  As  professor  of  -library 
science  and  administration,  he 
still  j^fends  a  let  of  his  time  on 
the  campus  to  which  he  devoted 
most  of  his  life- 
tie  recalls  tbbt  until  1805,  the 
Sti^  did  myt  apend  a  ccent  for  j  "tben  ^n  'U29,  '<tbe  new  l^ary 
building  purpotes.  The  teiildings  j  wa!(i  eoiniiieted.  It  -vas  plani^ 
wafi  finaneed  .imtil  .that  time  by  by  Dr.  1¥ilson  and  is -novr'know-n 
gifts,   escheats,   and   lotteries,  as  the   "Louis  Round   Wilson  Li- 

When  Dr.  Wilson  became  librar-  1     brarj .'' 


(Continued  from  Page  A} 

presented  at  Caroll  Hall  at  8:30 
p.m.  Thursday,  Jan.  34. 

Awards  ior  spot  reporting,  ipat- 
ure  writing,  editorial  writing,  pho- 
tography   and    community  service 
will  be  announced,  along  ^ith  other  ' 
q>ecial  awards  and  prizes. 

Prior  to  the  awards.  UNC  will 
give  a  reception  at  the  Carolina 
Inn  at  5  pjn.  Thnrsday  in  honor 
of  Governor  and  Mrs.  Hodges,  and 
the  ^aress  awanis  winners,  with 
Chancelor  .and  |trs.  Robert  B. 
HoM^fAs  J&osts. 

Grotip  4aeetings  of  ihe  afternoon 
dailies  and  Ihe  "non-dailies  will  be 
hefid  ~«t-4E:36  pnn.  on  Friday,  Jan. 
45. 

The  annual  press  luncheon  at 
the  Inn  will  be  held  at  12:30  p.m. 
Friday,  with  Chancellor  House 
presiding  and  a  brief  sketch  offer- 
ed by  the  Carolina  Playmakets. 

The  dinner  at  Duke  Umvyrsity 
ballroom  in  the  Duke  Union  will 
be  held  <at  7  ~p.m.  on  Friday. 

The  Press  Institute  will  be  con- 
cluded Saturday  mdming,  Ian.  26. 
at  8:30  aun.  at  a  breakfast  ior  past 
presicknts  of  the  North  CacoUna 
Press. Assn..  with  a  business  oieet- 
ing  to  ioUow. 

ian  in  1901.  the  library  was  lo- 
cated in  a  «mall  building  which 
is  now  the  Playmakers  Tibeatre. 
Largely  through  his  efforts,  ihe 
Carnegie  Foundation  contributed 
funds  for  the  constructton  Oif  a 
new  library,  later  to  be  occupied 
by  p\(fMmicl>epartmrtit 


Young  engineer 

pioneers  new  ways 

to  use  x-i^ 


A  new  x-ray  inspection  system  which  intensi- 
fies an  x-ray  image  more  than  10,000  times  in 
brightness  and  transmit?  it  to  a  conventional 
TV  screen  has  been  developed  rt"ceiitly  by 
General  EltfCtric.  Vl'hcn  perfected,  it  niav  en- 
able medical  speciialists  to  perform  "long-dis- 
lanre"  diagnosis  on  patient?  in  remote  areas. 
One  of  the  principal  men  who  developed  x-ray 
leJeviiiion  -  called  TVX  for  fhort  -  is  Dr.  John 
E.  Jacobs.  Manager  of  the  Advanced  Develop- 
ment Laboratory  of  General  Electiic's  X-Ray 
Department  in-Milwaukee.  Wisconsin. 

Jacobs'  Work  Is  Important,  Rosponsible 

As  an  electronics  specialist.  Dr.  Jacobs'  work 
in  the  past  has  been  devoted  to  the  study  of 
pholocon^uctors— substances  whose  properties 
cliange  under  the  influence  of  radiation  —  and 
the  use  of  x-ray  in  industci;  inspection.  This 
in  turn  led  to  his  development  of  the  x-ray- 
sensitive  camera  lube  used  in  TYX. 

His  present  administrative  duties  with  tlie 
Advances!  Development  Lab  allow  him  more 
■time  for  teaching. others  what  he  has  learned. 
He  now  teaches  the  second-year  graduate  course 
at  Northweatern  in  vacuum-tube  networks,  and 
has  recently  been  named  McKay  A'isiting  Pro- 
fessor for  .1957  by  tlw  University  of  California 
at  Beskeley,  ;^'hcre  he  will  give  a  two-week 
jgcrics  of  lectures  on  photoconduction. 

ZTMi  Colloge  Graduates  at  BaoeralHectiic 

Since  his  youth,  wlien  he  was  a  .licensed  radio 
**ham7'  John  Jacobs  has  been  devoted  to  tlie 
study  of  electricity  and  electronics.  Like  each 
of  our  27.000  college  graduates,  he  is  being 
given  the  chance  to  grow  and  realize  his  full 
potential.  For  General  Electric  has  long  be- 
lieved this:  when  fresh  young  minds  arc  given 
the  freedom  to  develop.  everybod\"  benefits  — 
tlie  iadividual,  the  Company,  and  tlie  country. 

Educational  Rrlatinns.  Cfveral  F.lrririr 
I  "fiiputi),  ScheiieiUiJ)  5,  i\cu    1  u//. 


I   I 


PA6I  poisn 


THI  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


SUNDAY,  JANUARY  13,  lV$7  J 


Varsity 

Rosy  Bags 
30  In  Win 
Over  Va. 


By    BILL    KING 

Carolina  unleashed  a  torrid 
first  half  scoring  attack  and  an 
Equally  effective  offense  to  throt- 
tle the  Virginia  Cavaliers  102-90 
in  Woollen  Gym  last  night.  The 
victory  gave  the  Tar  Heels  a  14-0 
season  record  and  made  them  5-0 
in  conference  play. 

Led  by  AU  -  American  Lennie 
Rosenbluth,  who  dropped  in  22 
points  in  the  first  half,  but  was 
held  to  8  in  the  second,  the  Tar 
He!s  hit  their  first  six  field  goal 
attempts  and  at  the  10:00  mark 
held  a  33-10  advantage  over  the 
hapless   Cavaliers. 

The  Tar  Heels  continued  their 
dominance  in  the  final  ten  minutes 
of  the  half  with  a  consistly  great 
shooting  accuracy,  and  the  happy 
fans  roared  their  approval  oh 
every  goal.  At  intermission.  Coach 
Frank  McGuire  had  cleaned  his' 
bench  and  the  tall  Tar  Heels  still 
held  a  58-30  lead. 

McGuire,  who  usually  starts 
Tommy  Kearns  and  Bob  Cunning- 
ham at  guards,  replaced  Keams 
with  Tony  Radovich  who  was  play- 
ing his  last  game  in  WooUeq  ' '  '  .  * 
Gym.  Tony,  whose  eligibility  runs*  ' 

out    at   the   end   of   the   semester,  |   J/^R  HEELS  ARE  FAVORED 
was  the  first  Carolina  player  in- 
troduced and  he  received  a  stand- 
ing ovation  from   the  crowd  that 
lasted  about  two  minutes. 


Cavaliers  102-92;  Frosh  Wid 


A  Jump  Shot  For  Two 

Lanni*  Rosenbluth  is  shown  going  up  for  »  jy  np  shot   in    the  Carolina-Virginia   game  last  nihgt. 


R<Hy  ^d  the  Tar  Heels  with  30  points. 


(Norman  Kantor  Photo) 


Defensively,  Carolina  became  a 
little  lax  in  the  second  half  and 
the  Cavaliers  were  able  to  make 
the  final  outcome  respectable 
against     the     second-ranked     Tar 


Sellout  Crowd  To  Witness 
State  UNC  Battle  Tuesday 


Win  Gives 
Frosh  7-1 
Record 

By  JIM  HARPER 

Carolina's    freshman  hoopsters 

met   and  defeated     the  Stallings 

Air   Force   Base   cagers  here    last 
night,  84-43. 

The  Tar  Babies,  with  a  7-1 
record  in  regular  season  play,  had 
little  trouble  in  downing  the  air- 
men, taking  the  lead  from  the  init- 
ial toss  and  remaining  unheaded 
throughout  the  contest. 

Ccach  vlnce  Grimaldi  used  his 
complete  squad  in  the  first  half, 
substituting  a  complete  squad 
with  over  9  minutes  remaining. 
The  score  stood  at  the  end  of  the 
first  frame  34-18. 

After  intermission,  the  starting 
five  returned  and  remained  until 
13  minutes  had  elapsed.  At  this 
time  the  second  stringers  return-  ■ 
ed  and  in  the  final  three  minutes, 
completely  swamped  the  Flyers , 
last  ditch  effort.  Sub  guard  Wally 
Graham  was  outstanding  in  this , 
burst.  Twice  in  succession  he  stole  ■ 
the  ball  and  broke  away  to  score  , 
unchallenged.  I 

Leading  the  Tar  Babies  in  the  ; 
scoring  department  were  Mike 
Steppe  with  14  points,  and  John 
Crotty  with  13.  Crotty  led  the 
frosh  with  his  outstanding  floor 
play  and  ball-hawking.  Big  Dick 
Kepley  was  the  only  other  Tar 
Baby  in  double  figures,  but  every 
man  on  the  squad  entered  the 
scoring  column. 


^ 


Tony  Sings  Swan  Song 

Pictured  above  is  Tony  Radovich  "as  he  was  introduced  to  the 
crowd  last  night.  Tony  played  his  last  home  game  for  the  Tar  Heels 
and   received  a  standing  ovation  from  the  fans. 


RALEIGH  — The   season's    most  i 


For  the  first  time  in  ten  years, 
Heels.  But  the  Caxolina  offense' ^^^:^!*^*^«*°?*  *"^  ^  played:  the  Tar  Heels— ranked  second  in 
was  still  plenty  sharp  Respite  the  i '^W»»^  "^^^  ft  8:15,  and  a  sell- j  the  natioiir-will  be  favored  over 
fact  that  Rosenbluth  m^aged  on- i  ^^m???^  '**'*2.;«0  (and  maybe  Mhe  homestanding  Wolfpack.  Un- 
Iv  eight  points  in  the  final  ^aif,  i  a  «»»*««»»):  hwiHl  Iw  on  hand  t«  |  defeated.  Coach  Frank   McGuire's 

,.      'See  fur  fly.  i  UNC     quint     has     rolled     to     14 

The  Tar  Heels  had  56.7  per  cent  |      We're  talking,   of  course,   about  I  straight  victories, 
shooting  accnracy  from  the  'floor  1  the    State-Carolina    game    in    Key- '      The  meeting  is  a  sharp  reversal 
as   they   passed  the  centur>'  taark  J  holds    Coliseum.    It    will    be    the    of    last    year's    first   contest   when 
for    the  tirst-iime      this      season,  ffirat    game    of    the   year    between !  State  carried   a    10-0  mark  against 
Froni   the  ir'ee   &row  ^n^j   fatfal^ 
Una  had  a  58.2  per  cent  accu^^cy: 
The '  Cavaliers  niaiW  iinty  &   pef 
cent    of    tbeic   shots  in,  the  iir^t 
half  but  finished  with 47  percent 
from   the   flopr  and   77   pef^.  cent 
from  the  charity  line.  Beth  (e^ms 
hit  30  free  throws. 

The  Box 


Chapel    Hill    brethren    82-60 
'  the    tournament    championship. 


VIRGINIA 

G 

F 

p 

T 

Stobbs    f 

0 

0 

3 

0 

Underwood    f 

4 

4 

3 

12 

Siewers   f 

2 

0 

5 

4 

Nelliganf 

X 

0 

1 

2 

Hickson  f 

0' 

0 

1 

0 

Cooper   c 

11 

4 

5 

26 

Netzger  c 

3 

1 

0 

7 

Miller  g 

3 

12 

3 

18 

Hardy  g 

6 

9 

2 

21 

Butler   g 

0 

0 

0 

0 

Totals 

30 

30 

25 

90 

N.  CAROLINA 

G 

F 

P 

t 

Rosenbluth  f 

12 

6 

3 

30 

Lotz  f 

1 

0 

1 

2 

Brennan  f 

T 

3 

4 

17 

Searcy  f 

0 

2 

1 

2 

Hathaway    c 

0 

0 

1 

0 

Quigg  c 

7 

1 

2 

13 

Keams  g 

3 

10 

2 

16 

Radovich  g 

2 

5 

3 

9 

Rosenwnd  g 

0 

0 

2 

0 

Cunningham  g. 

0 

1 

2 

3 

Groll  g 

1 

2 

1 

4 

Holland  g 

1 

0 

0 

2 

Total 

36 

30 

22 

102 

VIRGINIA 

30 

ec 

— 

90 

N.  CAROLINA 

58 

44 

— 

Fall 

102 

Warren  Giese 

To  ' 

C 

With  Houston  Officials 

ii^  k»nff-Um«  rlvab  and  ItTsbonld  .  the  Tar  Heela  in  the  finals  of  the 

i»e"a""diliy.    '■"■'"'         "''  '        I  Dixie    Classic    and    blasted    their 


Hands  Across  The  Sea 

Pictured    above    are    Hungarian    runner   Laszio   Tabori    and    his 
coach,  Miahaly   Igloi.   Flanking   Tabori   (first  row  center)   are    Caro- 
lina trackmen  Wayne   Bishop   (left)  and  Jim   Beatty   (right.  On    the 
back   row  (left  to   right)   are   Igloi,   UNC    track  coach   Dale   Ranson 
and  runner  Everett  Whatley. 


COLUMBIA.  S.  C.—(AP>— War- 
ren Giese.  University  of  South 
Carolina  football  coach,  plans  to 
go  to  Houston,  Tex.,  next  week 
probably  to  discuss  the  possibility 
of  filling  the  head  football  coach- 
ing vacancy  existing  at  the  Uni- 
versity of  Houston. 

Giese  said  upon  his  return  from 
the  national  coaches  meeting  in 
St.  Louis  Friday  nigl^t  t)iat  he  had 
also  been  approached  by  Indiana 
University  official.  But,  he  add- 
ed, "I  am  not  actively  seeking  the 
Indiana  job  or  any  other  for  that 
matter." 

"I  am  tremendously  satisfied, 
Giese  commented,  "with  my  jp%- 
sition  at  South  Carolina ..  ."The 
treatment  I  have  receive^  an4<  the 
fine  conditions.  The  people  here 
have  been  wonderful,  but  you 
still  cannot  close  your  eyes  to 
other   powiWlities." 


Beatty  And  Sime  Shine 
In  Indoor  Track  Meet 


The  Wolfpack.  plagued  by  grad- 
'  nation,    injuries  and    NCAA   trou- , 

ble.  doesn't  own  one  of  the  na- 
I  tion's  better  won-lost  m;arks,  but 
'  Coach  Everett  Case's  hungry  Wolf- 
i  pack  is  anxious  for  a  crack  at 
1  the  Tar  H<?els.   State  will  carry   an 

8-6  mark   into  the  gattie.  i 

It's  no  secret  that  State  would  j 
like  to  extend  its  one-sided  series  j 
advantage  over  the  Tar.  Heels. 
The  Wolfpack  held  a  15-0  lead 
over  Carolina  until  McGuire  took 
over  in  1952.  Since  that  time,  UN'C 
ha.s  won  three  times  while  the 
Wolfpack  ha.s  triumphed  on  nine 
occasions,  bringipg  the  10-ycar 
total  to  24-3  in  favor  of  the  Pack. 

But  it  will  take  a  superb  team 
effort   by    State   to   turn   back   the 
tall  and  talented  Tar  Heels,  spark- , 
cd  by  All-America  Lennie  Rosen- ; 
bluth.      The     lanky     sharpshoter   - 
is   scoring    at    a   26.5    clip    and    is  i 
getting  plenty  of  point-making  help  ' 
from  forward  Pete  Brennan,  cen-  j 
ter  Joe  Quigg  and  guards  Tommy 
Kearns   and   Bob   Cunningham.         j 

Forward  John  Richter.  State's  : 
sophomore  hustler,  is  leading  the  . 
Pack  scoring  with  a  17.3  average,  } 
followed  by  Bob  Seitz  and  John  j 
Maglio.    each    with    14.6   marks.      > 

In  addition  to  the  intense  rivalry  ; 
between  the   schools,     the     game  [ 
looms  as  a  battle  of  "the  big  boys." 
Personal     duels     between     seven-  i 
footer  Bill  Hathaway  of  UNC  and  i 
the    6-11*  Seitz    are    being    talked, 
about,    while      6-10      Joe      Quigg 
squares     off     against  Richter,  who 
is  6-8.  I 

The  freshmen  teams  of  the ' 
schools  will  get  things  underway  ' 
at  6  o'clock.  In  an  early  season  ; 
meeting.  Coach  Lee  Tcrrill's  State  j 

I  frosh  beat  Carolina  91-88  in  over- j 

I  time. 


The  box: 
CAROLINA 
Larese  f 
forj  Shaffer   f 
£epley  c 
grotty   g 
Steppe   g 
Ainlsie  f 
McRacken   f 
PQp^e   c 
Graham  g 
Wil.son  g 
Crutchfield 
griffin  ^ 


McGuire  Receives  Award 

!  Frank  McGuire,  head  basketball 
coach  at  North  Carolina,  the  na- 
!  tion's  number  two  college  baskel- 
'  ball  team,  is  this  week's  winner 
j  of  the  Harry  Wismer-General 
j  Sports  Time  Hats  Off  Award,  pre- 
'  sented  each  -week  to  the  outstand- 
I  ing  personality  in  the  country's 
I  sports  picture  as  judged  by  the 
I  selection  committee. 

i  McGuire,  nominated  by  Stewart 
,  Rogers  of  Greensboro,  won  the 
:  award  because  of  the  fine  job  he 
'  has  done  with  the  Tar  Heels  this 
season,    according    to   Wismer. 

The  award  will  be  presented  to 
McGuire  on  Wismer's  General 
Sports  Time  broadcast  over  the 
Mutual  Network  on  Sunday,  Jan. 
13  at  6:45.  • 


The  University  of  North  Caro- 
lina's first  All-America  basketball 
player  waa-  Cart  Carmichael,  who 
won  that  honor  in  1923  and  1924. 
The  last, is  current  captain  Lennie 
Rosenbluth,  who  was  a  selection 
last  year  and  on  most  pre-season 
teams  this  winter. 


Pfeiffer  Colieg 
Tramples  UNC 
Frosh  Matmen 

By    RON  MILLICAN 


The  Carolina  freshman  wrestling 
team  dropped  a  31  to  5  decision  to 
Pfeiffer  Junior  College  last  Frida> 
night  in  a  return  match  in  the 
Pfeiffer  Gym. 

Bill  Suttle,  130  pound  Tar  Baby, 
was  the  only  wrestler  to  score 
points  for  the  frosh,  racking  up 
all  five. 

Less  than  a  month  ago  the  frojh 
matmen  spanked  the  Pfeiffer  team 
19  to  13  and  sent  them  home. 

Coach  Sam  Barnes,  doing  a  bit  of 
experimenting  with  his  reserves, 
used  only  two  men  in  his  lineup 
Friday  that  he  had  used  in  the  pre- 
vious match  with  Pfeiffer.  ^ 

The  summary: 

123  lb.,  (C)  forfeit  to  Plott;  130 
lb.,  Suttle  (C)  pinned  Cuthbertson; 
137  lb..  Wells  (P)  pinned  Yopp; 
147  lb.,  Sides  (P)  pinned  Gautier; 
157  lb.,  Spoon  (P)  pinned  Turner; 
167  lb.,  Whitesides  (P)  pinned  Rue- 
sell;  177  lb.,  Griffith  (P)  decision- 
ed  Sack;  heavyweight,  Thomas 
(P)  decisioned  Buffaloe  (C). 


tt^ials 

sViiLLINGS 
$at4rfield  1 
Vargo   t 
^Iftipan  c 
Jo^ph  g 
Skillings  g 
Baymler  f 
Andrews  g 
Mellttt  g 
Geor.fe  f 

Totals 


32      20      15      84 


15      13      16      4S 


»i»oM  WrkHNER  Bros  mTA«RiNC  « 

KARL  MALDEN- CARROLL  BAKER 
ELIWALLACH 


UKIrCSSd  «lllltllS    ' 


ADULT    ENTERTAINMENT 
ADULTS  65c 


Carolina 


Indoor  track  season  opened  un- 
officially yesterday  afternon  in 
the  tin  can  when  the  Carolina 
tracksters  played  host  to  Duke's 
Dave    Sime   and  Company. 

No  scoring  tabulations  were 
kept,  the  meet  being  run  only  for 
individual  performances.  The 
dashes  were  run  several  times 
apiece  to  give  the  sprinters  a 
chance  to  practice  their  starts  in 
competition. 

Sime,  woi^ld  record  holder  in 
three  events,  entered  only  one 
race:  the  60-yard  dash.  He  ran 
three  heats  with  times  of  6.2,  6.3, 
and  6.3.  His  6.2  time  is  only  a 
tenth  of  a  second  off  the  world 
record  of  6.1,  tied  by  Sime  last 
spring. 

In  the  70-yard  high  hurdles.  Tar 
Heel  Lyndon  Deborde  was  top 
man  in  the  varsity  division  with 
a  9.2  mark.  Carolina  freshmen  Lou 


Glasscock  and    Ward  Sims    split  ball  46  feet. 


heats  in  the  frosh  bracket.  Sims 
won  the  first  heat  with  a  9.3,  and 
Glascock  won  the  next  one  in 
9.2,  thus  equaling  the  varsity  time. 

All-American    Jim    Beatty    took 
the   three-quarter   mile  with   ease. 
Turning   in    a   god    time   of   3:06. 
Sophomore     Wayne     Bishop     won  i 
the  l\i  mile  run.  clocking  at  7:03.  } 

Soph  Dave  Scurlock  was  the  | 
work  horse  for  Carolina.  Scurlock  } 
entered  and  won  three  events:  the 
330,  660,  and  the  eight  lap  relay. 
Anchor  man  for  the  relay  team, 
he  passed  the  leader  in  the  last 
lap  to  give  Carolina   first  place. 

In  the  field  events,  Carolina's 
Ward  Sims  won  the  pole  vault  with 
a  12  foot  jump.  Duke's  Laverty 
won  the  broad  jump  with  a  leap 
of  28'8".  Duke  swept  the  first 
three  places  in  the  shot  put.  Speer 
was    first,    tossing    the    15-pound 


il^^ 


Rock, 

PRETTVi 
BABYf 


\ 


^ 


TO 


LUANA 

MliriO .  SIIXCW .  PATTIM 


suhmo 


.EOWAID  C.  niOT  •  Mr  \MtXr  •  ROD  McKUEN 

A  UNIVERSAL-INTERNATIONAL  PICTURE 


LATE  SHOW 

TONIGHT 
SUN.-MON. 


UMSJOLU 


Pre-  Medical  Senior  I  '^ 


WANTED 


to  serve  as  campus  representa  tive  for  the  y^orld's  largest  tx 
elusive   manufacturer  of   microscopes.  '     ,  .  . 


For    further    information    write 

~  T    .i^  .•• 

♦-             ,.    --   ^.4-.:.  .^-^^ 

•  '■''.:{^'j    ' 

Reiehert  Optical  Work* 

-   -.-<•  • 

82  Beaver  Street 

'           r    -i  ■'>           •' 

New  York  5,  N.  Y. 

HERE  ARE  THE  CORRECT 
ANSWERS  TO  THE  OLD  GOLD 


»?l?T"4|d|'; 


PUZZLES 


Check  the  record  of  your  answers  against  these,  to  see  if  you  an  automatically 
eligible  to  compefe  in  the  tie-breakers. 


1.  Smith 

2.  Purdue 

3.  Tulane 

4.  Beloit 

5.  Rollins 

6.  Rutgers 


7.   Oberlir 


8. 

9. 
10. 
11. 
12. 


Harvard 
Colgate 
Stanford 
Bryn  Mawr 
Grinnell 


13.  Stephens 

1 4.  Princeton 

15.  Dartmouth 

16.  Wellesley 

17.  Notre  Dame 

18.  Vanderbilt 


Enough  entries  have  been  checked  to  show  that  many  players  have  correctly  solved  all 
24  puzzles,  thereby  creating  a  tie  for  all  prizes. 

If  the  record  of  your  answers  to  the  first  24  puzzles,  mailed  on  or  before  December  19, 
conforms  with  the  correct  answers  published  herein,  you  are  automatically  eligible  to 
compete  in  the  tie-breaking  puzzles.  The  series  of  tie-breakers  will  be  published  in  this 
paper,  commencing  on  or  about  February  1st.  Watch  for  the  tie-breakers! 

Please  note  Rule  2  as  published  in  the  official  Tangle  School  rules  at  the  beginning  of     « 
the  contest .  .  .  which  reads  as  follows: 

^  Ritle  2{b)  In  case  more  than  one  person  solves  correctly  the  same  number  of  puzzles,  the 
prize  tied  for  and  as  many  subsequent  prizes  as  there  are  persons  tied,  will  be  resetted  and 
those  so  tying  will  be  required  to  solve  a  set  of  tie-breaking  puzzles,  to  determine  the  order       ', 
in  which  the  reserved  prizes  will  be  awarded.  ,  " 

YOU'LL  GO  FOR  OLD  GOLDS 

Today's  Old  Golds  are  an  exclusive  blend  of  fine,  nature-ripened  tobaccos  ...  no  rich 
'.  .  .  so  light  ...  so  golden  bright. 

That's  why  Old  Gold  Regulars  and  King  Size . . .  without  a  fi'ter . . .  TASTE  GREAT  STRAIGHT. 
For  the  same  reason,  OLD  GOLD  FILTERS  give  you  THE  BEST  TASTE  YET  IN  A  FILTER 
CIGARETTE. 


'l.-i- 


iii'i- 


015  GoW 


CIGARETTES 


OlDGol5 


riCARtTTF.  S 


Old  Gold 

CIC AKSTTBS 


*       FILTER  KINGS 


KING  SIZE 


ascuLAR  sizK 


t  (^t  a  ftudt 
I  ...  or  o 
j  carton  and 
i  st0  if  you 
i  oon'tofyoo. 


-hT 


NO  OTHER  CIGARETTE  CAN  MATCH 
THE  TASTE  OF  TODAY'S 

OLD  GOLDS 


J. 
\ 


'     " '  ■'<«  a 

r  -J 


rmiUM  i»M.  Mm**r  m.  m»m*itt 


U  H  C  Library 
Serials  Sept. 


l-Torn's  Resignation  Approved  By  Executive  Committee 


WEATHER 

Continued   Cold.    Expoctod    high 


3r()  c  Dally  11 2rar  Heel 


BLAST 

A    Durham    Sportswriftr    blAst* 
from  tho  wrong  corner.  So*  pa^  2. 


VOL.  LVII  NO.  83 


CompleU  (>P)  Wire  Strvict 


CHAPEL    HILL,  NORTH  CAROLINA,  TUESDAY,  JANUARY   IS,  1957 


Offices   in   Graham   Memorial 


FOUR    PAGES  THIS  ISSUt 


Hallford  Elected 
New  SP  Chairman 


Jim  Holmes  ifsij^iitd  .i's , 
Sludiiit  Party  chaiiinan  last  | 
niglu.  He  was  rcplaiecl  l)V  j 
Soiinv  Halituicl. 

Holmes  tendcieii  his  resig- i 
nation  cine    to   ■■personal    rca-  j 
sons."      riie     parly     aitordcd 
him  a  standing  ovation. 

In  his  opening  speech  to  the 
party,   Halifcrd    said: 

"This  year.  tJierc  is  a  pioneer 
who  is  leading  the  way  into  phas-  ' 
cs  of  student  government  which 
have  long  remained  unexplored. 
We  arc  the  settlors  who  will  come 
behind  and  benefit.  It  is  up  to 
us!" 

Chairman  Hallford  also  called 
fr^r  "uivity"  and  asked  party  mem- 
bers to  "lend"  to  th?   party: 

1.  'Your  abiliiv. 

2.  "Willingness  to  dj  whatever 
c:nrrnnts  us:  ! 

3.  •■Part  of  your  time.'"  i 
"With  these,  we  can't   lose."  he 

concluded. 

Ffolmcs  expressed  his   "joy   and 

Tickets  To  WCTC-UNC 
Game  Are  Now  On  Sale 

Ttclcets  to  the  Carolina — West- 
ern Carolina  basketball  game  to 
be  played  in  Cullowhee  Jan.  30 
are  now  on  sale  at  the  informa- 
tion desk  in  Graham  Memorial. 
Approximately  70  tickets  »r»  on  . 
sale  »t  $1.50  each.  100  tickets  | 
were  originally  alloted  to  UNC 
for  tfte  game  but  at  least  30  have 
been  sold  since  yesterday  morn- 
ing. 


gratification"  at  being  able  to , 
serve  the  party  and  sounded  the  j 
optimistic  note  that  he  felt  the ; 
new  chairman  would  "be  reward- 1 
ed  by  a  continued  showing  of : 
voter  approval  in  the  spring  dec-  j 
tion." 

Hallford.  a  senior  from  Rocky 
.Mount,  was  recommended  to  party 
members  by  the  group's  advisor}* 
boa?4^ 

The  rrrl-etina  was  a  special  one 
called  exclusively  for  the  purpose 
of  naming  a  new  chairman. 


■ 

^^^^^H 

^^^^^^^^^^1 

^^^^^K               ^j^P^'i  "l^^s 

^iHPl^^H 

^KSfei   ^^"^ 

^^^K  '1^  ^^^^^H 

^^^■iwi       i«- 

^St  '       .^i^^^^^^H 

siiiK  t'j^^^^K 

^^^^l^r^'^P 

^^i^^^^^^^V 

^^hh 

.<u^» 

-^^^^^^B 

4^^hB 

'<  <^J^^^[^^H 

I'f  mm    m 

^sCIwi 

Hioh  Court  Finds  Error 

JuS^ESGH—iAP)  —  A  case  in 
which  a  Chapel  Hill  man  wanted 
to  test  the  authority  of  officers  to 
check  his  driver's  license  failed 
to  achieve  its  purpose  in  the  State 
Supreme  Court. 

The  high  court  found  errors  in 
the  warrant  again;>'t  Theodore   M.  j 
Danziger  and  halted  judgement  in 
the  case. 

Danziger  was  charged  with  ■un- 
lawfully and  willfully  failing  and 
refusing  to  show  his  driver's  lic- 
ense to  an  officer.  .  ." 

The  Supreme  Court  said  the  war- 
rant should  have  stated  that  a  per- 
son is  required  to  exhibit  his  lic- 
ense only  when  operating  a  car 
or  when  in  charge  of  a  car.  The 
court  also  said  the  warrant  should 
have  named  the  officer  to  whom 
Danziger  refused  to  show  his  lic- 
ena-e. 

Danziger  appealed  the  case  from 
the  February,  1956  term  of  Orange 
Superior  Court. 


Army  Announces  Cut  In  Time 

for   Draft-Age   College  Men 

*  Law  Also 
Affects  The 
Nat.  Guard 


rmen 


JIM    HOLMES 

.  .  .  rcsignx 


Last  Concert 


the  final  Tuesday  Evening  Con- 
ccrl  cf  the  Eall  semester  at  UNC 
will  be  presented  today  by  Ur. 
Wilton  Mason,  associate  professor 
of  music. 

Dr.  Mason  will  appear  at  8  p.m. 
iu  Hill  Music  Hall,  presenting  two 
piano  selections  never  performed 
previously  on  the  campus:  "Suite 
in  E  Minor"  by  French  composer 
Rameau.  and  "Pictures  at  an  Ex- 
hibiticn"  by  the  Russian  compos- 
er   Mou.ssorgsky. 

The  Tuesday  Evening  Series, 
open  to  the  public  without  charge, 
is  sponsored  by  the  UN'C  Music 
Dcpt. 


Menon  Here 

V.  Krishna  Menon  will  speak 
here  Feb.  11,  provided  his  work 
at  tlie  Unit»4  Nations  *mm»  not 
necessitate  his  proeence  tb»e*. 
according  to  Jim  H»l|n*s,  Cheir- 
n^en  of    tti«    Carolina   Forwnt. 

Menon  has  tMen  forced  to  can- 
cel his  appearance  at  Carolina 
twice.  The  confirnMtion  of  Men- 
on's  February  11  appearance  was 
made  my  R.  BhajrKUr,  prhrate 
secretary  to  the  minister,  in  a 
letter  to  Holmes. 

Bhandar  states  that  the  debate 
on  Kashmir  will  come  up  next 
week,  and  that  there  is  r»o  indica- 
tion when  it  will  end.  However, 
he  adds,  there  are  no  other  im- 
portant matters  before  the  Uni- 
ted Nations  which  have  not  been 
disposed   of. 


Bogart  Dead 

HOLLYWOOD—  (AP)  —  Mo\ie 
tough  guy  Humphrey  Bogart  finally 
^avc  in  .Monday  to  the  foe  he 
couldn't  lick — cancer.  He  died  at 
his  home  at  the  age  of  56. 

Saudi  Arabia  Protests 

UNITED  NAnOiSS.  N.  Y.— (AJ') 
— Saudi  Arabia  called  on  the  Uni- 
ted Nations  Monday  to  intervene 
in  what  it  called  armed  Israeli  ag- 
gression in  the  Qulf  oX  v^qaba.  In 
letters  to  Secretary  General  Dag 
Hammarskjold  and  the  Security 
C4>uncil,  Saudi  Arabia's  delegation 
accused  Israel' of  Launching  two  at; 
tacks  «»  the  &ti^' Arabian  matn- 
laod  iQ^.tKe.  p«ist  tht,-ee  .tlaj'ft.    "' 

Frwich  Hit  R«b#ls 

ALGIEaiS-^Al*)— French  forces 
supported  by  planes  and  helicop- j 
ters  shot  jlown  about  40  Nationalist 
rebels-  io;a  ityoHlaj-  cBJjy-^ftoh  near 
Ne'dr<»niah,  *  in  Westert  '^Mgeria. 
reports  reaching  here  Monday  said. 

I    Dulles  Apptals 

I      WASHINGTON    —(AP)— Secre- 
tary of  State  Dulles  said  Monday 
(See  WORLD  NEWS,  page  3.) 


PETITION  STARTS  UP 


Students  Ask  Return 
To   Quarter   System 


''^'  A  petition  to  re-establi.sh  the 
quarter  system  has  been  drawn 
up  by  Julian  Sessoms.  a  UNC 
student.  The  semester  system 
was  begun  here  in  the  fall  of 
1953. 
i 

This  petition  does  not  have  a 

necessary  majority  of  the  stu- 
dent bo<ly's>  signatures,  but  a 
later  petition,  according  to 
Sessoms.  could  embody  the 
force  of  the  student  body. 

The  petition  states  that  the 
quarter  system  would  give  the 
student  more  time  to  study  and 
relieve  the  pressure  of  having 
five  to  six  courses  at  once.  The 
petition  lurther  states  that  the 
quarter  system  would  allow  the 
faculty  to  eover  the  course 
more  thoroughly.  and  also 
would  reduce  strain  by  com- 
pletion of  all  exams  before  holi- 
day periods. 

The  petition  asks  that  stu- 
dents see  their  legislative  rep- 
resentative and  have  the  legis- 
lature vRte  favorably  on  this 
matter. 

The   petition   is   as   follows: 
To  the  Student  Body: 
We    the    undersigned    believinj. 
that    the    re-establishment    of    tht 
quarter  system,  to  replace  the  in 
effectual    semester   system,    to    be 
beneficial    to    every    student    anc! 
to    the    faculty    also,    be    adoptee 
immediately.  The  benefits  of  three 
courses     at     once     meeting     fivt 
hours   a   week   allows   the   student 
to    do   better   work    and    to    learn 
more.    It    al.so    give*    h;m    more 


ime  to  study,  and  relieve  the 
ressure  of  five  to  six  courses  at 
nee,  where  one  doesn't  learn  as 
iiuch.  Also  the  faculty  would  have 
he  advantage  of  covering  the 
ourse  more  thoroughly,  and  hav- 
ug  more  time  for  their  activities 
The  completion  of  all  exams  be- 
jre  holiday  periods  would  reduce 
he  strain  and  waste  of  time  of 
he  students. 

We  believe  that  the  students 
hould  see  their  legislative  rep- 
esentatives  and  have  the  legisla- 
;ire  vote  favorably  on  this  sub- 
ect.  Also,  a  petition  with  the 
lecessary  majority  of  the  student 
)od^  signatures  should  be  start- 
d  immediately. 

We  believe  that  this  would  be 
he  benefit  of  the  stucjents.  facul- 
y,  and  administration.  When  you 
.3e  your  representative,  tell  him 
>f  your  desires,  sign  the  petition, 
nvoke  the  faculty,  and  when  you 
ice  the  trustees,  demand  your  de- 
sires. 

All  those  who  favor  this  should 
et  it  be  known  through  their  leg- 
slature  and   paper. 

We  submit  this  to  the  univer- 
ity  administration,  faculty,  and 
;tudent  body. 

Names  thus  far  attached  to  the 
letition  are  Julian  Sessoms,  Lew- 
s  Pallet,  Roland  Mayberry,  Oliver 
Bloomer  Jr..  Malcom  Portia,  Jim- 
Tiy  Cranford.  Rush  L.  Bradshaw, 
lames  E.  Fox.  Ben  Harding,  John- 
ay  Reece,  Mation  Hoffler,  Bruce 
V.  Hight.  Wade  M.  Smith,  Charles 
D.  Grav.  .Jim   Carroll. 


McKeel  Will 
Speak  On 
Wednesday 

The  do's  and  dont's  of  employ- 
ment seeking  and  interview  tech- 
nique will  be  discussed  at  the 
second  in  a  series  oi  Career  Meet- 
ings to  be  hold  Wednesday  at  8 
p.m.  in   103  Gardner  Hall. 

C.  A.  McKeel,  manager  of  the 
Personnel  Administration  Depart- 
ment Manufacturing  Division  of 
Vick  Chemical  Company,  will  be 
the  guest  speaker.  The  meetings 
are  being  sponsored  jointly  by  the 
Placement  Service,  Alpha  Kappa 
Psi,  and  Delta  Sigma  Pi.  honorary 
commerce   fraternities. 

McKeel  will  present  a  sample 
interview  between  a  supposed  em- 
ployer and  his  prospective  em- 
ployee. He  hopes  to  show  not  only 
the  probable  questions  <asked  in 
such  a  situation,  but  also  the  un- 
derlying facts  an  ertiployer  would 
be   seeking  through   them. 

Many  a  chance  for  a  job  is  lost 
by  a  person  who  has  a  poor  tech- 
nique for  applying  when  actually, 
he  is  very  well  qualified  for  the 
position  according  to  the  local 
Placement  Service. 

'This  information,  provided  bj 
one  who  is  an  authority  in  hi? 
field,  should  prove  invaluable," 
the  service  said.  "Anyone  inter- 
ested is  invited  to  attend." 

McKeel.  a  native  of  Greene 
County,  attended  Duke  Universi- 
ty. Prior  to  his  association  with 
Vick  Chemical  Company,  he  was 
a  special  agent  with  the  North 
Carolina  Rating  and  Inspection 
Bureau  and  served  in  General  In- 
surance, Mortgage  Loan  and  Prop- 
erty Management  McKeel  is  also 
a  member  of  a  number  of  profes- 
sional organizations  and  of  the 
Greensboro     Chamber     of     Com- 


Aide 
Remove 
Restrict  ion 

The  Chapel  Hill  Board  of  Al- 
dermen voted  Monday  night  to 
suspend  until  March  15  the  two- 
hour  parking  restriction  on  S. 
Columbia  Street. 

At  the  end  of  the  60-day  period, 
the  present  regulation  will  go 
back  into  effect. 

Town  Manager  Tom  Rose  refer- 
red to  a  letter  written  him  by  stu- 
dent body  President  Bob  Young. 
Young's  letter  outlined  progress 
made  by  a  number  of  fraternities 
.in  the  area  toward  solution  of 
the  problem. 

Young's  letter  said  two  of  the 
fraternities  —  Delta  Kappa  Ep- 
silon  and  Beta  Theta  Pi  —  are  in 
the  process  of  building  parking 
lots  behind  their  houses.  A  third. 
Sigma  Nu,  is  currently  raising 
funds  for  a  lot. 

Four  others  —  Sigma  Chi.  Pi 
Kappa  Alpha.  Pi  Lambda  Phi  and 
Sigma  Alpha  Epsiloa  —  have  no 
properly  of  their  own  for  parking 
lots. 

.  Young's  letter  said  ".  .  .  when 
the  work  of  these  (bc^e  fraterni- 
tips  is  complete,  the  parking  asi^ 
is  poniplete.  the  ptarkiag  area  in 
•Big  -WeternHy  Court  should  take 
care  oi>/^  thq- evi<'QB*atti)es  own- 
ed by  Jtbc;. other.  lour- iv«tMmities." 

Young  expressed  gratitude  to 
thvjboard  for  its  decision.  He  call- 
ed it  a  nice*  gtslUre  of  cooperation 
on  fhc  town's  part. 

The  aldermen  placed  the  re- 
striction on  S.  Columbia  Street 
last  summer.  It  limits  parking  to 
two  hours  from  Caneron  Avenue 
to   Franklin   Street. 

Aside  from  reporters.  President 
Young  was  the  only  University 
student  evident  at  the  hearing. 


Local  Restaurant  Changes  Hands 

Shown  above  are  the  present  owners  of  the  Carolina  Coffee  Shop,  Mrs.  Sophie  Livas,  and  Donald 
Bolton,  a  local  resident  who  will  beepme  the  restaurant's  owner  Feb.  \.  Belton  hps  bt^Ki  living  in  Chapel 
Hill  since  1953  where  he  has  been  employed  at  a  salesrhan  for  ah  orthopedic  supplies  firm.  He  plans  a 
fowl.  raintod«Uas«hafi0^  to  increase  the  .see»i»iy  "lap  arlfcsi  rf  the  rOeieureati'Mrer-'kwae  hat  operated  the 
rostaurattt,  opened  94  Wars  ago  by  th*  lata  Qeorfe   Lfvas,  sincto  the'dVafh  of  iV^r'nukband  last  year. 

■-■,^.     T,.r>:-       Uv^Mf-.'       ■  i     .-•.HH.-      .  -H-  :    '.     ,v.,-..,cm.      h       .-    ^ 

'  ^  ^•„t'i*'»Ji  ^"»^      .-...1-  -  =iv'f.'  ■      «  j_«t». 


Of  College  On  West  Coast 


Jobs  Avoiloble 
For  Next   .,     , 
Semester  Now 

students  interested  in  working 
next  semester  should  make  ap- 
plications at  the  Student  Aid  Of- 
fice as  soon  as  possible,  the  office 
aimounced  yesterday. 

Most  jobs  available  will  be  in 
the  dining  hall  due  to  a  change 
in  class  schedules,  according  to 
the   office. 

Several  scholarships  will  also  be 
available.  Transfer  students  from 
four  year  colleges  wil  be  eligible 
for  scholarships  if  they  obtain  a 
"C"  average  for  the  fall  semester. 
Students  transferring  from  four 
year  colleges  arc  not  eligible  for 
scholarships  until  they  have  com- 
pleted one  semester. 

Approximately  400  stAidcnts 
working  part-time  on  campus  ob- 
tained jobs  through  the  Student 
Aid  Office.  Approximately  the 
same  number  hoW  scholarships 
awarded  through  the  office.  Over 
half  of  these  students  hold  both 
scholarships   and    part-time  jobs. 

A  part  of  the  sdiolarship  fund 
is  set  aside  for  emergencies.  The 
office  estimates  that  from  20  to 
40  scholarships  are  awarded  s, 
semester  through  the  emergency" 
fund  supply. 

Scholarships  and  part-time  jobs 
are  granted  primarily  on  financial 
need  and  scholastic  achievement. 
These  students  should  not  normal- 
ly have  a  car  or  belong  to  a  so- 
cial fraternity  or  sorority. 

Scholarships  are  renewable 
each  semester  if  students  maintain 
a  "C"  average.  If  a  person  fails 
to  make  this  average,  he  may  be 
placed  on  probation  for  a  semes- 
ter. He  must  then  make  up  the 
lacking  auality  points  or  lose  the 
scholarship. 


By   CLARKE   JONES 

Special  to  The  Daily  Tar  Heel 
R.\LEIGH  —  The  resignation 
of  UNC  Librarian  Andrew  Horn 
was  approved  ^tonday  by  the 
Executive  Committee  of  the 
Board  of  Trustees. 

Dr.  Horns  Resignation.  *offer- 
ed  s-everal  ^»^eeks  ago.  will  be- 
come effective  June  30..  Ht  will 
then-  become  librarian-  df  'Occi- 
dental College,  a  private  school 
near  Los  Angeles. 

His  resignation  was  due  to 
■personal   reasons.' 

There  was  speculation  last 
week  Dr.  Horn  resigned  out  of 
despair  because  the  state  Legis- 
lature two  years  ago  cut  library 
Ifunds  in  half  for  the  l»55-57 
bienni«iy\. 

However,  other  reports  said 
he  resigned  for  purely  personal 
reasons. 

UTAH   NATIVE 

Dr.  Horn.  43.  is  a  native  of 
Utah.  He  has  taught  history  at 
several  institutions  and  has  wTit- 
ten  numerous  documents  about 
librarj-  work. 

From  1948  to  the  summer  of 
1954,  he  served  as  assistant  lib- 
rarian and  as.:wciate  librarian  at 
the  University  of  California  in 
Los  Angeles  (UCLA). 

He  came  here  as  head  librar- 
ian in  the  summer  of  1954. 

Included  among  his  accomplish- 
menLs  here  are  establishments 
of: 

1.  "Library  Notes, "  a  we^ly 
journal  to  inform  library  em 
ployees  of  activities  in  the  lib- 
rary. 

2.  An  administrative  manual— 
widely  acclaimed  throughout  the 
country— to  assist  library  per- 
sonnel  in   adminia'trative   work. 

3.  A  television  program, 
■Books  and  People,'  which  ha» 
introduced  the  library  into  homes 
of  several  thousand  of  the  states 
citizens. 

There  are  12  libraries  current- 
ly  on   campus,    largely    througTi 
Horns    efforts. 


OTHERWISE   ROUTINE  j 

The      Elxecutive      Committee  I 
meeting  wa^;  otherwise   routine. 

In      addition    to    accepting     Dr.  I 

Horn's  resignation,  the  commit-  ' 


tee.   meeting  with  Gov.   Hodges, 
also: 

1.  Set  May  8  as  the  inaugura- 

(See    HORN,  Page   3) 


Opera  Ba//ef  Here  to  Present 
'The  Merry  Widow/  'Revenge' 

VvMV/  I.c'liar.s  "  IIk*  Mcnv  Widow"  and  "l\.c\cii|.;c'"'  .irc 
tlio  prcKiiuiion.s  to  he  sta^id  jii  ilic  (iliica^o  Opera  Uallcts 
appearance  on   fan.  22  in   \leni()ii;il  Hall  at  S  p.m. 

Rutli  Paoe  N  (.ompany  will  present  ilu-  ori'.;inal  l)allet^ 
Avitli  a  i()mj)aiiv  ol  jS  soloist.s.  (orps  de  ha'llet.  (<)m|)lele  seen- 
eiv,  e<').stmne.s  and  oKiiesiia. 

Soloists  lor  the  perloiniaiue  will  he  Mavjoiie  'r:dlihiel 
■■  —♦and  Gecrgc  Skibinc.  leading  dan- 
cers of  the  Marquis  de  Cuevas  Bal- 
let of  P.'ri»:  Both  artists  have  not 
been  seen  in  America  in  several 
years  and  have  obtained  a  lea%e 
of  absence  from  the  Cuevas  Bal- 
let to  join  the  Chicago  Opera  Bal- 
let. 

In  addition  to  these  solo  danc- 
ers, the  cast  includes  Sonia  Arova. 
•Job  Sanders.  Barbara  Steele,  and 
Kenneth  Johnson. 

The  works  chosen  by  Ruth  Page 
for  the  initial  Chicago  Ballet  tour 
have  been  given  a  new  interpre- 
tation by  the  producer.  "The  Mer- 
ry Widow."  ■•Revenge'^  is  a  melo- 
dramatic talc  adapted  from  Ver- 
di's opera    "II   Trovatore." 

A  student  rate  of  S4  has  been 
set  for  this  performance  and  the 
remaining  three  prograriis  on  the 
Chapel  Hill  Concert  Series.  The 
student  series  seats  are  unreserv- 
ed in  the  downstairs  area  of  Me- 
morial  Hall. 


WASHINGTON— The  .\rmy  Mon- 
day announced  a  major  r^\ision  of 
the   military   senice   and   training 
program  that  will  allow  college-age 
men  to  escape  the  draft  altogether. 
The  men,  between  the  ages  of 
of  18  and  one-half  and  25,  can 
volunteer  for  six   months  active 
duty.  Men  who  take  this  option 
will  spend  5  and  one-half   years 
in  the  ready  reserve,  less  nearly 
four   months   waiting    period    be- 
fore they  start  their  six  months 
training. 

The  revision  requires  all  Na- 
tional Guardsmen  to  take  six  mo- 
nths  active  duty  training. 

The    announcement    brought    an 
immediate   protest    from     the   Na- 
tional Guard  .\ssn.  which^hreaten- 
ed  to  carry  the  fight  to  Congress. 
The  Army  decision,  described  as 
ba:,-ed  on  a  directive  from    Secre- 
tary of  Defense  Wilson,  sutomati- 
cally  will  reduce  the  military  ser- 
vice obligation  of  all  except  career 
soldiers    and   will   provide    a   way 
for   most   youths    to    escape    draft 
duty  altog-ither. 

Under  the  new  order,  three  years 
of  training  and  sen-ice  in  the  read}' 
reser^-e  M-ilJ  be  cut  from  the  mili- 
tary  obligation  of  pre-dnft  agt 
men  who  volunteer  to  take  six 
j  months    of   active   duty   training. 

Young  men  who  entered  the  re- 
serves through  this  option  will 
hereafter  serve  4  and  one-half  in- 
stead of  7  and  one-half  years  in 
a  ready  reserve  unit  after  complet- 
ing training,  and  then  have  threi 
.veari-  in  the  standby  resenc.  Thi* 
latter  duty-  requires  no  regulat 
training  or  organized  militarj-  ef- 
fort. 

The  new  order  also  reduces  from 
two  to  one  year  the  required  ser- 
vice in  the  ready  reserve  for  draft- 
ees and  others  who  spend  two 
years  on  active  duty. 

Men  who  spend  three  years  of 
voluntary  active  duty  with  the 
Vrmy  will  heieatler  have  one  year 
nstead  rf  two  years  in  the  ready 
•eservc  and  will  then  be  transfered 
.0  the  standby  reserve. 


Cold  Wove 
To  Continue 
Til  Wednesday 

Old  man  winter  will  continue 
to  plague  the  Chapel  Hill  area 
with   his   presence   today. 

The  present  cold  wave  has  been 
predicted  by  the  Raleigh-Durham 
Airport  Weather  Bureau  to  con- 
tinue today  with  temperatures 
ranging  from  a  low  of  20  this 
morning  to  the  upper  30's  later 
today. 

Relief  may  be  in  sight,  however, 
if  a  predicted  slow  warming  trend 
starts   Wednesday.     , 

.No  rain  or  snow  is  expected  to 
accompany  the  present  cold  wave. 
Precipitation  is  not  expected  to 
be  over  a  quarter  of  an  inch  from 
today  through  Saturday.  There  is 
a  possibility  of  rain  about  Friday, 
the  weatherman   said. 

The  present  cold  wave  is  due  to 
a  low  pressure  area  off  the  North 
Carolina  coast  inviting  north  and 
northwesterly  winds  in  from  a 
high  pressure  area  in  the  western 
part  of  the  state. 

Temperatures  will  probably 
range  from  4  to  6  degrees  below 
normal  during  the  present  cold 
period. 


McLean  Needs 
2nd  Semester 
Counselors 

Counselors  are  still  needed  for 
second  semester  men's  orientation 
which  will  be  held  Jan.  30-31,  ac- 
cording to  Orientation  Chairman 
Bill    McLean. 

Mclean  said  second  semester 
counselors  will  not  have  to  meet 
until   the   night   of  Jan.   29. 

•'All  those  men  students  who 
were  counselors  this  fall  or  in  pre- 
vious .vears  are  eligible."  he  said. 
-The  program  itself,  because  of 
the  time  limit,  will  be  very  brief 
as  compared  to  the  fall  program." 

He  asked  Ihase  interested  in 
being  counselors  to  leave  their 
names  and  addresses  with  Mrs. 
Grassman  in  the  student  govern- 
ment office  on  the  second  floor 
of  Graham  Memorial.  The  tele- 
phone number  is  4352. 

GM'S  SUVTE 


Spring  Elections 
Now  Set  For  April  2 

The  tentative  .  date  for  the 
spring  elections  has  been  .set  for 
Tuesday,   .\pril   2. 

Elections  Board  Chairman 
Ralph  Cummings  made  the  an- 
nouncement yesterday. 

Cummings  said  that  any  run- 
offs necessary  after  the  election 
would  be  conducted  ou  April  9. 


Activities  scheduled  for  Gra- 
ham Memorial  today  include: 

Graham  Memorial  Board  of 
Directors,  4:30,  Grail  Room;  Wo- 
men's Residence  Council,  6:30 
Grail  Room;  Chess  Club,  S-11, 
Roland  Parker  1;  University  Par- 
ty, 7-11,  Roland  Parker  2—3; 
AAen's  Honor  Council,  7-11,  CotNV 
cil  Room;  Dance  Class,  6:30-1, 
Rendezvous  Room;  Gm^sb,  t, 
Rendesvous  Room;  APC..  7-9, 
APO  Room. 


M6E  TWO 


^     •    V      .«*v*t-    -^v  f 


THE  DAILY  TAK  HEEL 


^        c     «t^     >>:W      V 


TUESDAY,  JANUARY  1$,  \Kt 


Better  Schools  Campaigner 
Has  Just  A  One-Sided  View 

The  W\\\\  r.n  Htcl  is  sorry  to  sec  that  Gov.  Hodges  has  named 
Holt  Ml  Phersou.  a  High  Pomt  newspaper  editor,  to  the  chairmanship 
ot  a  North  (iarolina  (iiti/ens'  Connnirtec  lor  Better  Schools. 

M(  Phcrsoji.  Tar  fleets  xvill  renieniher.  headed  a-  similar  committee. 
als*»  a{)[M>inted  hv  the  m)\;^rnor,  which  ad\()cated  the  eventual  destruc- 
tion ot  tl\e  state's  s(  hool  system. 

It  was  M(  Pherson  who  headed  a  committee  favorinj;  pas.sat>e  of  the 
Pearsall    Plan,   which    provides   for 


'Want  To  Know  How  It  Ertds?' 


private    s<  hools    in    case   ot    racial, 
educational   integration. 

It  appears  unlikely  that  the  C'.it- 
i/ens'  ('.oinmittee  lor  Better  Schools 
could  make  nnidi  pro^iess  when 
it  is  oiiided  hv  a  man  who  i»uided 
the  Pearsall   Plan. 

The  Pearsall  Plan,  yet  to  reath 
it>  final  test  in  court,  is  a.  treach- 
erous danj^er  to  the  -,o  years. of 
education  svstem     this     state     has 


of  this  newspaper  and  verv  few 
ethtors  of  other  papers,  opposed 
the  Pearsall  Plan  for  obvious  rea- 


\\\\\  McPherson.  himself  a  news- 
pa|K'rinan.  led  a  <amp;ii3;n  to  make 
the  plan  an  at  t.  He  succeeded. 

•NoAv  the  i»overn<>r  <jf  this  state 
has  named  .McPherson  to  another 
{Kist  because  of  his  "deep  interest 
in  public  education,  and  in  the 
welfare  of  our  children." 

0 

Mcpherson's  itnerest  in  educa- 
tion is  luideniable.  But  we  and 
many  other  .North  Carolinians  dis- 
agree totallv  with  his  fdeas  about 
welfare  of  children. 


For  Carti[!>us 
Television: 


Congrats! 


EDITOR  McPherson 

.    ,   .    Xhe    irroitg    job 

hin'lt  u{)..  It  -4i\es  jxtlitit  ians  and 
rabble-rouserN  a  tluuue  to  shut 
down  our  j)ubli(  st  hools  in  the  hue 
of  "intol^al>le  '  situations,  name- 
h .  attempts  at   Ne^ro  entrain  e. 

St*%eial  proinintiit  North  Caio- 
linians  wh«  doiWt  want  inteoration 
opposed  the  Pear>all  i^lan.  Thev 
feared  thelplan  be(  au^e,|  they  s;iid. 
it  would  phu  e  the  statels  scho<)l 
s\stem  in  )eopard\. 

Those  who  believe  no  harm  will 
<(>nie  iroin  racial '"ThWe«»Tat'idrt  in 
the  scho<)ls,.  including  liie.  editors 


l  he  (Consolidated  Tniveisity's 
.*ducati()nal  television  s  t  a  t  ion' 
^\  rNC-r\'.  has  »rown  up  a  great 
deal    in  /two   vears. 

When  it  started,  it  threatened 
to  flo<Ml  the  air  with  attempts  to 
jolfege-tvpe  Jackie  (ileasonvision. 
But  after  it  suffered  a  severe  bud- 
get (in  and  askaiue  lotAs  from 
s(»me  im|)ortain  pe<)ple  in  the  state, 
it  started  being  what  it  was  in 
nante:    KdiKational   tele\  ision.         ;. 

_  ■  •  m;;  •  ■  :  .Klf! 
C-ongratulations  and  two  big 
candles  to  the  folks  in  SwjajiiV  Hall 
who  are  turning  out  a  (finest ibie'.' 
c(»lorful.  e(Uicational  pa^oduct.  tor 
tile  future:  \forc  hou^,?iriore  ihH, 
t  ere« t,.  mvf.^^^ec|HC/%tion. 


Can  A  Woman 
Be  President? 


Editor: 


SOMEBODY'S  MISINFORMED: 


Some  Erroneous  Rumors  Righted 


Blasts  From  Wrong  Corner 


A  Dm  ham  sportswriter  has  fired 
from  his  corner  a  few  nmnds  of 
ammimiti(m  at  The  Dailv  Tar 
Heel.  To  keep  the  record  straight, 
we"  11  remiiul  those  who  read  these 
editorials  alwuit  the  newspajier's 
|>oIi(v. 

I  he  sportswriter  is  named  Jack 
Homer.  From  his  (ornet  of  the 
Durham  Moiuing  Hejald  he  has 
written  >>c\eral  things  about  this 
newspaper  whit  h  are  highly  imagi- 
native. Hut  one  thing  he  mention- 
ed dcserxes  (omuient. 

"It's  general  kno\\'ledge,"'  ivrites 
Horner.        The     Daily    Tar    Heel 

The  Daily  Tar  Heel 

The  official  itudent  pii|>licatioir  of  tbe 
Publications  Board  of  the  University  of 
North  Carolina,  where  it  is  published 
daily  except  Monday  and  examinatiot 
and  vacation  periods  and  summer  termx 
tntered  as  second  class  matter  in  tht 
post  office  in  Chapel  Hill,  N.  C.  undei 
•h*  \n  ni  March  8.  187».  Subscription 
rates:  mailed,  $4  per  year,^92.50  a  seme« 
irr.  a*ri*vt!i  t'<».  3*  d  year,  S3. 50  a  seiner 
ter. 


Kditur 


FRED  POWLEDGE 


Managing  Editor 


CHARUE  SLOAN 


News  Editor 


NANCY  HILL 


Business  Manager 


BILL  BOB  PLEL 


Sports  Editor 


LABRY  CHEEK 


Subscription  Manager Dale  Stalej 

Advertising  ManSger Fred  Katzin 

Circulation  Manager Charlie  Holt 

NEWS  STAFF— Clarke  Jones,  Ray  Link- 
er. Joan  Moore.  Pringle  Pipkin,  Anno 
Drake,  Edith  MacKinnon,  Wally  Kuralt, 
Mary  Alys  Voorhees,  Graham  Snyder, 
Billy  Barnes,  Neil  Bass.  Gary  Nichols, 
Page  Bernstein,  Peg  Humphrey,  Phyllis 
Maultsby*   Ben   Taylor 


BUSINESS  STAFF— Rosa  Moore,  Johnny 
Whitakcr,  Dick  Leavitt,  Dick  Sirkin. 


SPORTS  STAFF:  Bill  King,  Jim  Purks, 
Jimmy  Harper,  Dave  Wible,  Charley 
Howson. 

Night  Editor Cortland  Edwards 

Proof  Reader  :    Manley  Springs 

Night  News  Editor  _  Fred  Powledfe 


]){)FS  NOr  (capitals  his)  speak 
lor  the  student  body  in  its  editor- 
ial hlasts  at  (head  l(M)tball  Coach 
|im»    latum. " 

Horner  apj)ears  t<»  he  inuover- 
iiig  one  ol  rhe  Daily  Tar  Heel's 
darkest  secrets.  In  truth,  however, 
it  is  a  hu  t  that  is  broadcast  by  this 
newspaper  <piite  o  I  i  e  n.  We'll 
broadcast   it  again. 

It  would  be  toolish  to  claim 
(and  Ihiruer  claims  this  cpiite  of- 
ten) to  represent  the  opinion  of 
auv  si/eable  group  ol  jieople.  It 
Avoiild  be  strictly  idiotic  to  claim 
to  represent  the  opinions  ot  al- 
most 7.00CJ  students— students  aie 
nnic  h  to  indixidualistic.  too  wide- 
spread in  their  heritages  and  their 
beliefs  to  all  think  the  same  thing. 

lor  that  leason.  1  he  Dailv  Tar 
Heel  has  lor  a  long  time  insisted 
that  its  editorials  (the  things  in 
thi.s  column)  do  not— can  not— re- 
flect the  leelinj^s  ot  the  whole  stu- 
dent bodv.  They  reflect  the  opions 
only  of  the  editor  of  this  newspa- 
per, a  stitdent  elected  in  spring 
elections. 

Hecause  the  editor  Is  never  as 
sine  as  Horner  obviouslv  is  that 
he  is  dead  right  on  all  is.<»iie»,  the 
test  of  this  page  and  the  rest  of 
this  newspaper  is  thrown  complete- 
Iv  open  to  anv  and  all  students 
who  wish  to  presein  their  opin- 
ions. Those  opinions  must  meet 
oidy  three  recpiirements: 

1.  They  must  be  signed  and 
written    Icgiblv. 

# 

2.  They  must  not  be  libelous. 

'{.  They  nnist  not  be  lewd,  ob- 
scene, or  in  bad  taste. 

They  can  be  in  the  form  of  let- 
ters, columns,  poetry  or  artwork. 
They  do  not  have  to  agree  with- 
an\one — the  editoi  or  artyone  else 
on  the  face  of  this  earth. 

riiis,  we  believe.  Brother  Horn- 
er   should    learn    before   he    starts 
any   more  crusades.    Most  things- 
even   more  circulation    in   Chapel 
Hill  for  the  Morning  Herald — are 
worth  a  little  investigation. 


,  Clarke  Jones 

!| A  ^porte, editor  .4^f  a  neirb.v 
newspaper  Saturday  devoted  in 
:ful|  9  column  strongly  denying 
'rOmArs  Football  Coach  Jim  Tat- 
um  iWtU,  leave  Chapel   Hill. 

jack  Corner,  sports  editc^  of 
^y^f  ..Durham  Morning  Hefald, 
wrote  ".  .  .  regardless  of  what 
you  read  or  hear  to  the  contrary 
Sunny  Jitn  won't  move  agairi  any 
time  soon  .  .  .*'  ^;, 

Horner  wrftes  Tatum  will  ^t 
only  stay  at  Carolina  but  will 
••.stick  around  until  his  mission 
(to  build  a  winning  team  here) 
has  been  accomplished  before 
he'll  give  another  thought  to  ac- 
cepting another  coaching  posi- 
tion." 

He  9ay.s  "To  pick  up  and  move 
now.  he  would  be  a  quitter,  Ta- 
tum is  no  quitter.  Hell  get  the 
job  done." 

Horner'.s  denial  in  itself  is  per- 
fectly all  right  with  us.  He's  got 
a  right  to  his  opinion.  But  the 
concern  of  this  article  lies  in 
four  paragraphs  of  his  column 
in  which  he  has  printed  some 
questionable  statements  about 
The  Daily  Tar  Heel. 

Speaking  of  some  'anti-Tatum 
factions  still  on  the  campius."  he 
says  "It's  g<;npral  knowledge  The 
Daily  Tar  Heel  DOES  NOT  (sic) 


V\\  Abner 


sp^ak  foi*  Ihe" "  student  l»ody  '  ^ 
its  editorial  blasts  at-  Tatum>  ' 
•As  a  matter  of  fact.t.U;s  |ivrt 
seeret  reader  interest  in  The  Daiib' 
Tar  Heel  ius  at  an  all-tim^  hyW 
amortg  students  becawe-  of  jits 
distasteful   editorial   pojicy.  r  •■•v 

"Sources  cldse  t.>  'the'  student 
publication  say*(ine  o'f*tH^'"pa^ferV 
top  editors  Has  boa.steri  ifhat 
hell  make  it  so  hot  for  Tatum 
that  he  (T'Oluiii)  will  wish  n.e 
i  Jj|*l  never  se*h  Chapel  Hill. 
•  '^'"How  stupiitt  can  youth  be.'" 

We  take  issUif  with  these  st^te: 
ments. 

In  the  first  place.  The  Daily 
Tar  Heel's  editorial  policy  cer- 
tainly does  not  mirror  student 
opinion.  Nor  should  it.  The 
space  in  the  left  two  columns  of 
the  editorial  page  in  each  paper 
is  for  the  editor's  opinion,  not 
the  opinion  of  Ihe  student   body. 

Students  wishing  to  express 
opinions  have  practically  the 
rest  of  the  paper  in  which  to  do 
so.  Especially  do  they  have  the 
opportunity  on  editorial  page 
columns  other  than  those  .  re- 
served  for  the  editor.  > 

.About  reader  interest.  We 
think  he's  wrong.  Ju.st  from  our 
own  observations,  reader  inter- 
est seems  to  be  generally  toward 
the  other  end.  One  student  here, 
for    instance,    wrote    a    series    ot 


'    coluBiivsirecantly  expressingi  |»is  , 
•  views  on'  religion.       . ;    • 

,,      J^ese,  (.-ol^imnsj  touched    off   a 
ContrQvej-sy  "w|iich     fasted     f6r' 
several     wee'ks.  '  Many     student^ 
^.wfotjC  _    Icttei-js-to-the-editor      ex- 
pressing their  views  ort  fhe  .sub- 

'  "ject.  sometimipsin  complete  dis- 
agreement With  ttie  6rigitiad^^  ulrt- 

-      '    .       •      ».-.  1,--    ;    .    ' 

About  Uje  third  paragraph. 
'  We'd  merely  like  to  know  the 
fcource  of  the  statement.  •'. .  .  one 
ol  the  paper's  top  editors  has 
lyoasled  that  hell  make  it  so 
hot  for  Tatum  that  he  (Tatum) 
Will  wish  he  had  never  seen 
Chapel   Hill." 

No  editor  here  has  nor  will 
make  such  a  boast  without  hav- 
ing sound  reason  to. 

But  if  Tatum  deserves  it.  we'd 
like  to  .see  things  made  hot  for 
Tatum.  After  all,  what  is  the  tme 
*4unction  of  a  university?  Is  it  to 
educate  people  or  is  it  to  pro- 
vide big-time  athletics,  all-win- 
:  ning  teams,  etcu?  We  much  pre- 
fer the   former  question. 

How  stupid  can  youth  be? 
That's  a  good  question.  It  might 
be  answered  before  too  long  it 
Tatum  stays  here  and  his  brand 
of  athletics  pulls  down  the  aca- 
demic standards  as  it  did  at 
Maryland. 


YOU  S»id  It; 

Newspaper's  Coverage 
Criticized   By   Reader 

Editor:  '■'•-mmm^wl■■ 

For  some  months  now  I  have  been  an  avid  reader  of  The  Daily  Tar  Heel.  My 
morning  cup  of  coffee  at  Lenoir  has  become  a  haiyjy  ritual,  enchanced  greatly  by  the 
news  of  University  life  at  Chapel  Hill. 

Unfortunately  my  only  other  experience  with  college  newspaper  has  been  with 
the  Harvard  Crimson,  a  stuffy  newspaper  that  limits  itself  to  international  and  na- 
tional news,  discussion  of  college  policy,  art  and  literary  criticism  and  the  like.  They 
don't  even  have  a  "Campus  Scene"  column  and  they  refuse  to  reprint  articles  from 

other  (Boston)  newspapers. 

'Vou  can.  I  suppose,  understand  why  it  is  that 
I  enjoy  reading  The  Tar  Heel.  Although  you  never 
pretend  to  have  any  serious  opinions  or  write  any 
original  copy,  your  newspaper  accurately  reflects 
the  temper  and  interests  of  the  student  body.  U  your 

paper  seems  childish,  it  is  because  the  students  are 

Would  the  students  be  so  kind  usually  pretty  childish.  If  you  concern  yourselves 
to  answer  these  following  ques-  ^yith  the  social  and  athletic  functions  at  UNC,  it  is 
tions  for  me?  because  these  are  the  overwhelming  interests  of  the 

Would  .vou  be   in   favor  of   a    students  for  whom  you  wTite. 
woman  running  for  President  or 

Vice  President  of  the  United  It  is  possible,  of  course,  that  there  are  some 
States  in    \9Q0'>  students    at    UNC   whose   interests    and   tastes    are 

If  vou  had  to  make  a  choice  not  represented  in  The  Daily  Tar  Heel,  but  after 
of  two  women  for  President  and  all.  a  college  newspaper  is  not  an  organ  to  eom- 
Vice  President  in  1960,  what  municate  the  views  of  a  minority  of  the  student 
two  women  in  the  United  States  body.  In  fact  The  'Tar  Heel  undoubtedly  gives  a 
would  vou  pick  and  why?  consistent  and  adequate  coverage  of  thfe  college  af- 

Do  you  think  that  we  have  fairs  of  interest  to  the  vast  majoWty  of  students  and 
any  women  brave  and  smart  this  is  all  a  college  newspaper  can  be  expected  to 
enough  to  be  President  or  Vice    do. 

Qr  is  it?  Is  if  not  an  equally  important  function 
of  a  newspaper  (any  newspaper)  to  bring  to  light 

'^!  r  *  *       „A^   and  discuss  issues  relavant   to  its  readers?    If  so. 

The  governor  of  our  state  made  """  "  ,  ^  „  1  •  _  1.,  ^^t  ^^wf^rmina  itc 
a  statement  recently  that  it's  the  then  the  'Tar  Heel  ts  surely  not  periormtng  its 
drc^am  of  every  American  boy  to   ^""^tion  as  a  newspaper. 

be  President  some  day,  where  j^  ^^  attempt  to  be  informative.  The  Tar  Heel 
does  that  leave  our  American  ^^^  become  more  a  bulletin  board  than  a  news- 
girls.  Must  they  be  deprived  of  p^por.  in  fact  The  Daily  Tar  Heel  would  more 
that  dream?  logically — and     far   more   economically — serve     its 

Please  help  me  find  the  answ-   erstwhile  purpose  if  it  were  placed  each  day   (ex- 
ers  to  these  questions.  I  will  ap-    ^^^^  Monday  of  coiu^e)  on  the  bulletin  board  in  V 
predate   it    ver\'   much   and   can   ^.q^j^ 
be  reached  at  this  address.  Thank 

you!  The    Tar  Heel,  thus  far.  has  never  taken  a  con- 

sistent and  effective  stand  on  any  issue.  It  has,  it 
is  true,  mentioned  that  there  are  issues  and  even 
named  the  men  who  are  dealing  with  them  (usually 
Bob  Young  and  Sonny  Evans  and  their  committees), 
but  this  it  nothing  but  description,  no  analysis. 

If  you  are  stuck  for  issues,  can  I  mention  a 
few:  the  parking  problem,  many  obvious  viola- 
tions of  the  academic  and  personal  privileges  that 
students  in  other  colleges  enjoy,  the  apparent  dif- 
ficalties  with  the  •Honor  System."  high  prices  of 
all  luxury  goods  in  Chapel  Hill,  deferential  treat- 
ment of  athletes,  the  relative  lack  of  cultural  Stim- 
ulation (Fats  Domino  and  Montovani  don't  quite 
measure  up),  you  could  mention  integration  in 
the  school  system,  the  lack  of  stU-ciy  space,  etc. 


President  of  the  U.S.?  Any  at 
the  University  of  North  Caro- 
lina? 


Frank   Pes«k 
2041  Yenka  St. 
Detroit   34,   Mich. 


A  New  Kind 
„;:  Of  Unicorn 

'  the  Christian  Science 
I.  ,  .;  .;    Monitor 

since  It  is  'impossible  to  hunt 
Ur'jicttrn^  i/nd  lie'ep  '  one's  self • 
respect  nOW'adays,  iMo  '  Abomin- 
able Sinowman  provides  a  necsded 
"out"  lor  zotiridgists  vrlth  a  bent 
7/rK^lfor-  r^hrantic  expedltionlng 


All  colleges  have  problems  and  UNC  is  far  from 

_   -,. „  a  paradise.  The  purpose  of  a  college  newspaper  is 

The  elusive  man-animal  of  the    to  bring  these   issues  to   light,  finalize '  them,  janH 
Himalayas   has 'turned    up  again   offer  useful   opinions  about  them, 
despite  the  determined  attempts  -         ?''."ii 

of  sev;ral  recent  scientific  ex-  '  ^  the  future  I  will  be  hesitant  about  allowmg 
pediti>ns  to  push  him  into  the  my  share  of  The  'Tar  Heel's  budget  to  be  taken 
realm  of  mythology.  An  Amen-  from  the  matriculation  fee.  It  seems  a  wasta  of 
can-Australian  group  of  explor-  money.  Although  it  would  ruin  my  breakfast.  1 
ers  and  researchists  has  an-  would  be  willing  to  race  over  to  Y  court  every 
nounced  that  it  will  start  tramp-  morning  to  read  "Campus  Scene."  At  present  the 
ing  around  the  rafters  of  the  roof  most  constructive  thing  The  Daily  Tar  Heel  couid 
of  the  world  next  spring  in  the  do  is  to  disband, 
hope  of  sighting  the  Yeti.  as  the 
Sherpa  guides  call  him.  '   , 

Several  Sherpas  claim  to  have 
seen  the  Yeti  at  the  abominably 
close  range  of  from  10  to  25 
yards.  But  none  of  the  impressive 
expeditions  that  have  set  forth 
to  find  him  has  met  him  or  had  a 
chance  so  far  to  photograph  him. 
So,  bear  or  man  or  ape — 
whatever  he  is — the  Yeti  remains 


Sheldon  F    Gardntr 


*( 


More  Comment 
On  Clothing 


Perhaps  you  will  see  some  worth  in  this  writ- 

wiiaiever  rie  i> — me    leii  rtriiidius  ...» 

a  mysterious     figure     with     just   ^"i^^'  «  "P^^  ^^  the  coed  who    "Defends  dressing 

enough    evidence    of    reality    to 

make    him    a    legitimate    target 

fur  grown  men  bent  on  scientific 

research. 


habits. 
My  dear  Coed, 


By  Al  Capp 


Pogo 


■^^""Hffyy%- 


vmt)vfti„^aiAvgB/>ovvtAN;    ' 


By  Wait  Kelly 


I  certainly  admire  your  defensive  spunk  It's 
a  trait  some  of  your  feminine  friends  would  do 
well  to  cultivate. 

You  did  make  a  few  .statements  in  your  bit  of 
journalism  which,  I  admit,  had  a  l:>t  of  the  truth 
in  them.  I  wonder  if  you  noticed  a  paragraph 
under  "Youth  Deserves  a  Chance"  which  is  per- 
tinate  to  our  situation?  , 

"Tight  levis,  long  hair  and  the  other  para- 
phanalia  reformers  concentrate  on  are  only 
extentions  of  the  independent  personlities  of 
the  individual,  and  really  don't  make  a  kid  a 
criminal." 

/• 

Although  I  am  a  member  of  the  brogan  set, 
I   do    manage    to    get    my   hair   cropped    closely 

about  even*  two  weeks.  However  if  you'll  sup- 
ply your  name  and  phone  number,-  I  may  be 
persuaded  ta  listen  to  a  personal  lecture  on  the 
advantages  of  the  shave-a-day  habit.  Surely  I 
will  not  have  to  go  to  Duke  for  such  informa- 
tion. 

Jack  S«cr*tt 


An    Accusation 

Editir: 
Dear  Cort. 


I'm  much  in  favor  of  movie  reviews  in  The 
Daily  Tar  Heel,  but  in  the  future  would  you 
please  plagiarize  from  another  magazine.  I 
subscribe  to  Time. 

Ilianlcs  a  bunch 
A  Fan 
Nam*  withhaid  by  ra^uast. 


*      - .    J 


'CV 


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TUESDAY] 


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WESLEY  Cl 

The  Weslj 
from  7  to  8 
versify  M< 
YOUNG  Al 
The  Youi 
C-hapel  Hill 
meet  Tuesdj 
church. 
WUNC 

Todays  scj 
1  Jra versify  sf 
7:0a— Mus 
7:30— By 
7:46— Vist 
8:00— HiU  I 
10:00— Nei 

Coffee 
To  Man 

Coffee     t^ 
to  the  Marc 
Wedcerfday 
tablishments 
their  coffee] 
drive.  Jesse 
phase  of  the 
linii  Coffee 
biggest  rece 
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The  Univl 
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tuition  sch< 
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ship  candidJ 

Eligibility! 
(1)    U.   S. 
sion   of    BA| 
degree, 
working  kn<i 

Deadline 
cation  for  tl 
15.  Scholars 
either  the 
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WESLEY  CHOIR 

The  Wesley  Choir  will  rehearse 
from  7  to  8  p.  m.  today  at  the  Uni- 
versity  Me<hodist   Church. 
YOUNG  ADULT  GROUP 

The  Young  Adult  Group  of  the 
Chapel  Hill  Methodist  Church  will 
meet  Tuesday  at  8   p.  m.  at  the 
fhurch. 
tVUNC 

Todays  sched^ule  for  WUNC,  the 
Ir.nersitys  FM   radio  station: 

7:00 — Mu^4c  in  the  Air. 

7  30— By  Heart. 

7.45— Vistas  of  Israel. 

80O— HilJ  Hall  Concert. 
10:00— News. 


10:15— EJvening   Masterwork. 
11:30— Sign  Off. 
MCPA 

The  Phi  I>elta  Kappa  profession- 
al fraternity  will  present  a  pro- 
gi»m  on  "The  Future  of  Pharmacy" 
at  8  p.  m.  tonight  in  Howell  Hall. 


School  Of  Educdtioh.  Lists 
Scfi^drships,  Fellowship 


2  International 
Schools  Honor 
Statistics  Prof 


Coffee  Day  Adds  $500 
To  March  Of  Dimes       ^ 

(oflee  toppers  added  $500 
to  the  .March  of  Dimes  kitty  last 
\\edr.ec/day  wh^n  local  eatings  es- 
tablishments turned  over  all  of 
their  coffee  receipts  to  the  polio 
drive.  Jesse  West,  chairman  of  the 
phase  of  the  drive,  said  the  Caro- 
linu  Coffee  Shop  brought  forth  jthe 
biggest  receipts,  including  a  few 
pieces  of  folding  money. 


Cuban  School 
To  Offer  Five 
Scholarships 

The  University  of  Havana,  Cu- 
ba, will  offer  to  U.  S.  citizens  five 
tuition  scholarsh1p9  for  its  sum- 
mer session  of  1957.^  The  Division 
oi  Education  of  the  Pan  Ameri- 
can Union  will  select  the  scholar- ! 
ship  candidates. 

Eligibility      requirements      are:  I 

II   U.   S.  citizeAship;    (2)   posses- 1 

sion  of   BA  or  BS  or  equivalent! 

degree,    as    of    June,    1957:     (3)  I 

working  knowledge  of  Spanish.       j 

Deadline    for    receipt   of   appli- 
cation for  the  scholarships  is  May  | 
15.  Scholarships  may  be  used  f or  j 
either  the  short  sessi<>n  (July  15 
to  .\ug.  9)   or  long  session    (July 
15  to  Aug.  2a). 

Application  ^Jianks  and  further 
information  may  be  obtained 
from  the  Section  of  Education  In- 
terchange. Division  of  Education, 
Pan  American  Union,  Washing- 
ton, 6.  D.  C. 


Dr.  Harold  Hotelling  of  the 
UNC  Dept.  of  Mathematical  Sta- 
tistics has  been  honored  by  two 
universities  in  Austr%lia  and  In- 
dia. 

The  Indian  institution  request- 
ed personal  information  and  a 
list  of  Hotelling's  work  to  include 
in  a  display  beittg  planned  for 
the  university's  centennial  observ- 
ance. 

The  University  of  Australia, 
which  includes  a  big  statistics 
dept..  has  written  for  a  portrait 
I  of  the  UNC  professor  for  place- 
I  ment  in  the  department. 
i  In  1940  Dr.  Hotelling  was  presi- 
j  dent  of  the  Indian  Statistical  Con- 
i  gress.  He  at  that  time  was  in  In- 
dia advising  the  government  on 
statistical   problems. 

At  UNC  since  1946,  Dc  Hotell- 
ing is  associate  director  of  the 
Institute  of  Statistics  and  profes- 
sor of  statistics.  He  formerly 
taught  at  Princeton.  Stanford 
and   Columbia   universities. 

Among  his  degrees  are  an  hon- 
orary doctorate  of  laws  from  the 
University  of  Chicago,  A.B.  and 
M.S  degrees  from  the  University 
of  Washington;  and  a  Ph.  D.  from 
Princeton. 


The  UNC  School  of  Education 
Sunday  relea^  a  list  of  scholar- 
ships and  fellowships  now  avail- 
able for  the  1S57  summer  session 
an^  the  1957-58  academic  year. 

The  summer  session  scholar- 
ships available  include  75  scholar- 
ships for  high  school  scieoce  uid 
mathematics  teachers  provided 
by  the  National  Science  Founda- 1 
tion.  "Hiese  are  for  $450  each  plus  ' 
tuition,  fees,  and  allowaiiee  for  I 
transportation     and      dependents,  i 


GMA^  Ros 
Jam  Sei^lb'h 
Atom  Tonight 

Graham  Memorial  Activities 
Board  will  sponsor  its  first  Coun- 
try-Style Jam  Session  in  recent 
years  tonight,  according  to  the  * 
program's  coordinator,  Warren 
MUler. 

Miller  stated  that  J25  to  30 
country-style  entertainers  are  ex- 
pected to  be  on  hand  for  tonight's 
event,  which  begins  at  8:30. 

"The  point  that  I  want  to  get 
across  is  that  this  is  not  a  dance 
or  rehearsed  show,  but  rather 
an  informal  sessioa  for  all  the 
folk  and  country  singers  and  mu- 
sicians at  Carolina,  which  num- 
ber somewhere  over  50,"  Miller 
said. 

All    prospective    participant* 


Further  infornution  on  these 
scholarships  may  he  obtained 
from  the  Institute  of  Natural 
Science  at  UNC. 

Also  available  for  the  summer 
session  are  30  scholarships  for 
elementary  and  high  school 
teachers  worth  $100  each  and  five 
scholarships  for  schol  admims- 
scholarships  for  school  adminis- 
trators for  $150  each.  Recipients 
of  the  scholarships  for  elementa- 
ry an<^  high  school  teachers  must 
be  class  room  teachers.  Rcipients 
of  the  school  administration  schol-  j 
arships  must  be  actively  engaged] 
in   that  field. 

The  awards  available  for  the 
1957-58  academic  year  include  50 
scholarships  for  high  sdMol 
science  and  math  teachers  worth 
$3,000  each  plus  tuition,  fees  and 
allowance  for  dependents,  travel 
and  boks.  These  are  provided  by 
the   National  Science  Foundation, 


[  and  more  information  concerning 
them  pan  be  obtained  from  Prof. 
E.  C.  Markham  of  the  Institute  of 
Natural  Science. 

There  are  also  two  graduate 
non-  service  fellowships  available 
in  educational  administration 
worth  $1500.  In  addition  there 
are  two  du  Pont  fellowships  for 
high  school  science  and  math 
teachers,  worth  $1,200  eac'h  plus 
tuition  and  fees,  and  one  graduate 
fellowship  in  education  available 
for  the  1957-58  academic  year. 


have  been  asked  to  iHck  up  an 
entry  (arm  at  the  Graham  Mjmu- 
orial  Informatioa  Desk  and  have 
it  fill^  out  for  the  program 
tonight.  On  the  form  are  places 
for  songs,  keys,  and  arrange- 
ments of  each  participant  or 
group. 

Each  entrant  will  be  given  a 
number  and  will  perform  when 
the  number  is  called  in  order 
that  as  much  music  as  possible 
can  be  heard,  Miller  said. 

Entry  forma  will  also  be  avai- 
lable at  the  door. 


Horn 

(Contrnited  from  Page  1) 


TrafHc  Counf  Conviction 
Arrested  By  High  touri 


Have  You  Forgotten 
Something? 


tion  date  for  Consolidated  Uni- 
versity President   William     Fri^ 
day.  Friday  who  was  elected  to 
I    the   presidency  last  fall  by  the 
I  full  Board  of  Trustees. 

2.  Heard  routine  repocts  from 
■  the  respective  chanoeliors  of  the 
I  three  Consolidated  University 
units.  Woman's  College,  State 
College  and  UNC. 
I  3..  Heard  an  interim  report 
I  from  the  adminijtration  concern- 
I  ing  what  had  been  done  on  the 
I  recent  Jackie  Moreland  baske.t- 
**  j   ball  controver:^. 


Pete      the  Tailor   has    loads 
clothins  that  has  been  brought  Ini^j^^^ 
for   Peto'«  first  class    repairs  and  . 

has  boon  left.  CoR  You  Bind 


Are  You  Guilty? 

Pet*  surely  would  hato  to  havo 
to  sell  those  clothe*.  How  about 
coming    by   and   picking   up  yours 


Books? 


AT 


PETE  THE  TAILOR 

SPECIALIZING   H4 
'IVY  LEA6UEtZIN6" 

133</i   E.    FRANKLIN  ST. 


If  you  cwn  one  of  the  book- 
binding kits  that  have  been  so 
popular,  wo  have  the  innards  of 
•emo  roally  good  books  at  low 
prices,  suitable  for  binding.  Ask  to 
soo  tttonv 

THE  INTIMATE 
BOOKSHOP 

205  East  Franklin  Street 
Open  Till  10  P.  M. 


Theodor  M.  Danziger,  local 
restaurateur,  has  in  infect  won  an 
appeal  to  the  Statte' Supreme  Court 
of  j^, local  tra[ffic  vi^l^tion  convic- 
tion. 

In  a  decisi6h  handed  down  this! 
past  weekend  the  hi^h  court  ar- 
rested the. judgment  qi  the  Orange] 
County  Sui^rior  Court,  th^t  Mr. I 
Danziger  be  fined  $15  and  court 
costa  OB  charges;  of  failing  to 
show  hifr  motor  vehicle;  operator's' 
license.  •  | 

Harold  Eklwards.  )It.  Danziger's 
attorney,  said  that  the  Supreme 
Court  in  its  decision  declared 
"The  law  only  requires  the  hold- 
er of  a  driver's  license  to  exhibit 
his  license  when  operating  a  mo- 
tor vehicle,  to  an  officer  in  uni- 
form . . .  The  warrant  in  this  case 
did   not  charge  a  crime  and  did 


not  name  the  officer." 

Mr.  Danziger  was  diarged  on 
Jan.  10,  1956,  with  failing  to  show 
his  operator's  license  to  Carrboro 
Patrolman  A.  L.  Peodergrasa.  who 
also  charged  him  with  passing  a 
si:op  sign  aad  failing  to  have  an 
operator'^  license. 

Recorder's'  Court  Judge  William 
S,  Stewart  found  the  defendant 
guilty  of  failing  to  sbow  his  ope- 
rator's license  to  an  officer  in 
uniform  and  fined  him  the  costs 
cf  court.  Mr.  Danziger  was  given 
a  no  pros  on  the  no  operator's 
license  charge  and  found  innocent 
of  passing  a  .stop  sign. 

Key  point  of  the  case  was  that 
Mr.  Danziger  would  not  surrender 
his  license  to  the  patrolman,  but 
said  he  did  exhibit  it  so  that  the 
officer  could  see  it. 


Orchestra 
To  Receive 
Salutations 

At  the  call  of  Governor  Luther 
Hodges.  North  Carolinians  are 
this  week  saluting  their  own  Syra- 
period  set  aside  as  "North  Caro- 
lina Symphony  Week." 

The  orchestra  staff  makes  head- 
quarters the  year  around  ia 
Chapel  Hill,  but  the  orchestra 
from  early  February  until  late 
M«y  tours  the  state  from  Banner 
Elk  to  Elizabeth  City.  Symphony 
Week  is  the  state's  gesture  of  ap- 
preciation to  an  organization 
which  is  dedicated  to  the  purpose 
of  bringing  good  music  to  all  the 
people. 

Ih  the  majority  of  the  44  towns 
and  cities  of  the  state  in  which 
the  Symphony  Orchestra  will  play 
concerts  during  the  1957  touring 
season  of  February  5  to  May  22 
special  programs  will  be  carried 
out  in  observance  of  Symphony 
Week.  * 

Membership  drives  in  the  ma- 
jority of  these  communities  were 
concluded  in  the  fall,  but  three, 
those  of  Smithlield,  Kinston  and 
Banner  Elk, '  are  running  concur- 
rently with  Symphony  Week,  and 
RoKboro  is  holding  mopping-up 
opergtfons.  Raleigh  will  haive  its 
membership  enrollment  starting 
Jan.  21.  and  Rocky  Moun%  Salis- 
bury and  Kinston  will  have 
February  drives  to  conclude  this 
phase  of  Symphony  operation. 


Florida  Girl  Is  Added 
To  Music  Dept.  Staff 

An  addition  to  the  UNC  Music*— 

Dept.  staff  for  this  academic  year 
has  been  announced  by  Dr.  Glen 
Haydon.    departmental    chairman. 

Miss  Quillian  White,  a  graduate 
of  Randolph-Macon  College  in 
Lynchburg,  Va.,  and  for  several ' 
years  a  student  at  the  Mannes  | 
Music  School  in  New  York  City, 
is  now  teaching  here.  M^  White 
is  currently  working  toward  an 
M.A.    degree    in    musicology.         '  j 

A  native  of  West  Palm  Beach,  ' 
Fla.,  she  plays  the  piano  and  the  j 
organ,  and  is  presently  studying ! 
the   viola.  ■ 

Although  Miss  White  has  done ' 
extensive  soprano  solo  work  and  j 
was  in  the  Collegiate  Chorale  for  I 
two  years  under  Robert  Shaw,  her  j 
aim  is»  college  teaching.  "As  a  i 
practical      preparation      for      this  j 

goal,"  Dr.  Haydon  .said,  'she  con-  j  ■ 

siders  the  position  of  graduate  as- 
sistant in  voice  a  stepping  stone  I    Missile  Controls 

to   larger   responsibilities."  —The  United  Stales  Monday  pro- 

Her  first  teaching  at  UNC  was  Posed  international  controls  of 
done  during  the  second  term  of  I  outer  space  missiles  as  part  of  a 
summer  session,  1956,  and  .she  j  new  five-year  disarmament  plan 
has  had  a  busy  schedule  of  private  j  approved  and  blessed  by  President 
lessons  for  the  fall  term.  I  Eisenhower.  * 


Friday's  Inauguration 
Is  Set  For  May  8  ^ 

RALEIGH— (AP)—  Formal  in- 
auguration ceremonies  for  Wil- 
liam C.  Friday  as  President  of 
the  Consolidated  University  of 
North  Carolina  will  be  held  on 
May  8. 

This  was  decided  yesterday  by 
the  Executive  Committee  of  the 
Board  of  Trustees  at  a  meeting 
held  in  Gov.  Hodges'  Office. 

The  Executive  Committee  also 
acted  on  a  number  of  personnel 
changes  at  the  three  branches 
of  the  University — North  Caro- 
lina State  College,  the  University 
at  Chapel  Hill  and  Woman's  Col- 
lege at  Greensboro. 


PAO*  TNIIW^ 


International 
News 

(Contimied  frogi  Page  1) 

"evidence  is  accumulating"  that 
the  Communists  are  trying  to 
take  over  the  Middle  East. 

Appealing  for  Senate  backing 
of  Preside  tt  Eisenhower's  re- 
quest for  standby  militpry  au- 
thority to  cope  with  possible  Red 
aggression,  he  said  the  Soviet 
threat  to  Middle  East  security  is 
dangerous    and    real. 

"I'd  say  that  this  is  the  moSt 
serious  threat  we  have  faced  over 
a  period  of  10  years."  Dulles  told 
the  Senate  Foreign  Relations  and 
Armed  Services  Committees  in 
joint    session. 


Anglo- Yemen  Talks 

LONDO.N  —  (AP)  —  Britain 
disclosed  Monday  it  has  initiated 
negotiations  with  Yemen  aimed  at 
peace  talks  to  end  the  fighting 
along  the  wild,  mountainous  and 
ill-defined  Aden-"\^men  border. 
Britain  administers  by  treaties 
the  Aden  protectorate  on  the 
southwest  tip  of  the  Arabian  Pen- 
insula  dominating  the  vital  Red 
Sea  trade  route  between  Europe 
and  the  East. 


Public  Health 
Head  Assumes 
National  Post 

Dr.  B.  G.  Greenberg.  professor 
and  head  of  the  Dept.  of  Biosta- 
tistics,  UNC  School  of  Public 
Health,  has  assumed  the  duties 
of  chairman  of  the  Statistics  Sec- 
tion of  the  American  Public 
Health  Assn. 

Dr.  Greenberg  was  elected  to 
this  office  at  Atlantic  City  last 
November.  The  Statistics  Section 
is  one  of  the  oldest  sections  in  the 
American  Public  Health  Assn. 


British  Talks  Start 

BEIRUT,  Lebanon  —  (\P)  _ 
The  Lemeni  legation  said  Monday 
it  has  received  offers  from  Arab 
j  and  Foreign  volunteers  "to  fight 
{  against  British  aggression  on  Ye- 
men." 

The  legation  said  the  offers 
came  from  "'Arab  technicians  and 
military  men  and  from  people  of 
other  nationalities"  and  were  be- 
ing cosidered  by  King  Imam 
Ahmed. 

LONDON— (AP)— Prime  Minister 
Harold  MacMillan's  new  govern- 
ment plunged  Monday  into  talks 
ranging  from  the  Suez  Canal  crisis 
to  setting  up  a  free  trade  market 
in  Western  Eiurope.  The  new  cabi- 
net was  sworn  in  before  Queen 
Elizabeth  n  at  Buckingham  Palace. 


Soviet  To  Meet 

CAIRO  —CAP)—  Yemen's' min- 
ister to  Egypt  aeiiKised  Britain 
Monday  of  new  tanJissnd  jet  plane 
attacks  along  the  vaguely  drawn 
frontier  of  the  la«d  where  the 
Queen  of  Sheba  once  ruled.  The 
minister,  Abdel  Rahman  Abu 
Taleb,  told  reporters  the  British 
should  stop  their  attacks  before 
beginning  discussions  with  Ye- 
men to  end  fighting  along  the 
Aden-Yemen  frontied.  He  chal- 
lenged Britain  to  agree  in  the 
UN  to  a  neutral  commission  to 
survey  the  disputed,  damaged 
areas. 


'     Evierybne  is  having  one.  *  .in  January,   , 
Bring  your  BABY  DOLL  and  come  to  our 


j  i     George  L.  Coxhead 

I  ^  U.N.C.  '42 

Campus  Representativo 


i..t) 


SALE  AtThe 
RATHSKELLER 


NEW  YORK  UFE 

INSURANCE    COMPANY 


FOR  WUNC-TV: 


Television  Scheduling 
Is  Complicated  Affair 


DAILY 

ACB09S 

l.Cocy  spots 
e.  Chances 

10.  Engliah 
author 

11.  Persia 

12.  Whips 

13.  Female 
horse 

It.  Repast 
17.  Simian 
19.  Uzard 

21.  Plrmamtint 

22.  Compaiia 
point 

24.  Shooter 

( marbles) 
2«  Looks 

•okOBce 
28.  Copy 
32.  Sweet 

potato 
34.  Lamprey* 

like 
as  Type 

measardi 
3I(.  Man's 

nickname 

40.  Excla- 
mation 

41.  Capital 
(Peru) 

43,  Contest 
of  speed 
48  ShowtoMOO 
4».  River  (Oer.) 

30.  Incendl> 
arism 

31.  Vent 

92  Plant  ovules 
DOWN 

1.  Medieval 
veasel 

2.  Building 
addition 

S  Of  Thailand 
4  Roman 
gamMot 


CROSSWORD^ 


5.  Cubic  meter 

6.  Luhrictto 

7.  Unit  at 
wo^bt 

6.  Fruits, 
.  of  polma 
#.  liurk 

13.  Remaining 

14.  Cunning 
17.  HoU-pi«re» 

.  ingtool 

15.  Bill  oC^ 
An  anchor 

at.  Byquelfke 
.    oap.     .. 
22.  Attooipt 
25.  SbrrAW 
27.  Perched 
St.  Protection 


30.  High 
priest 

31.  Sub- 
stance 
used 
inaoap- 
making 

33.  Member 
of 

Moslem 
U-ibe 
(P.I.) 

35.  Sprite  . 

36.  Measures  of     42.  Large 
distance  pulpit 

il.  Tiny  44.  Anxiety 

39.  Yucatan  4«.  Wager 

Indian  47.  Fish 

<po88.)  48.  Half  ems 


Yctter4«y't  Aatwtr 


By  DORIS  WEAVER 

Four  men  met  during  the  past 
week  to  work  a  puzzle. 

The  puzzle  involved  the  WUNC- 
TV  program,  schedule  in  view  of 
a  new  semester  at  the  Consoli- 
dated Univ«rsitjf  of  North  Caro- 
lina, the  convening  of  the  State 
Legislature,  and  the  coming  of 
NBC  exclusive  live  programming. 

The  men  were  Earl  Wynn  and 
John  Young,  director  and  assist- 
ant director  of  WUNC-TV*s  Chap- 
el Hill  studio;  William  -Young  di- 
rector of  the  Greensboro  studio; 
and  Roy  Johnston,  director  of  the' 
Ralegh  studio.  They  met  on  the! 
Chapel  Hill  campus.  i 

A     new     program   .  schdule     is  | 
set  up  on  Channel  4  at  the  begin- 
ning of  each  semester.  This  falls 
early  in  February. 

Daily  reports  on  happenings  oi  i 
the    Legislature   will    briag   addi- 
tional programming  to  Channel  4 
j  later  in  February, 

NBC  begins  educational  TV  pro- 
gramming Mondays,  Wednesdays 
and  Fridays  from  6:30  until  7:00 
in  mid-March. 

A  schedule  of  almost  entire 
iive  programming  has  previously 
been  set  up  by  the  three  studios, 
including  2  hours  and  40  minu- 
tes of  college  credit  teaching.  En- 
rollments are  already  being  made 
with  the  Extension  Divisions  of 
Woman's  College  and  the  Univer- 
sity at  Chapel  Hill. 

The  question  before  the  group 
is  how  to  keep  times  and  pro- 
grammljig  consistent  througliout 
the  spring. 

For  instance,  the  four  men  who 
must  juggle  the  programs  from 
their  respective  studios  to  fall 
into  a  pattern  that  is  both  pro- 


gram "wise"  and  agreeable  to 
all,  meet  conflicts  like  this:  "6:30 
Report",  which  has  been  telecast 
each  evening  for  more  than  a| 
year,  will  obviously  have  to  be 
moved  when  or  before  NBC  starts 
programming  at  this  time  in 
March.  Birt  what  time  is  better  for 
a  "6:30  Report"  than  6:30?  It 
c&nnot  become  "7  o'clock  Report", 
because  this  time  is  already  filled 
each  night  with  live  programming. 
Th«  same  goes  for  7:30,  8:00,  8:30. 
Anyone  for  a  mid-night  "6:30  Re- 
port"? 

the  Legislature,  '6:30  Report" 
will  also  include  the  daily  report 
from  the  Legislature,  so  tbe  pro- 
gram must  be  moved,  not  cancell- 
ed. 

It  cannot  be  rolled  back  to  6 
p.m.  because  the  daily  children's 
programs  in  this  bloc  cannot  be 
nsoved  back  to  5:30,  because 
"Solid  Geometry"  is  scheduled  to 
begin  in  February  at  this  time. . . 
and  so  on. 

Nevertheless,  the  puzzle  is  be- 
ginning to  fall  into  place,  and  by 
the  beginning  of  the  new  Febru-^ 
ary  program  change,  viewers  may 
expect  to  see  the  same  program 
each  week  at  the  same  time. 


Phi  Not  Meeting;  Di 
Holds  Executive  Session 

The  Philanthropic  Literary  So- 
ciety will  not  meet  tonight  #hiDe 
the  Dialectic  Senate  will  have  an 
executive  session  for  the  election 
of  new  officers. 

The  Di  will  meet  on  the  top 
floor  of  New  West  at  8  p.m.;  only 
members  have  been  requested  to 
come. 

Both  debating  societies  will  re- 
.sume  their  regular  meetings  when 
the  second  semester  begins. 


^  r'.iss 


Irs 


LATE  DATE  WITH  A  BIRTH  RATE 


^}:>^- 


JUNIOR'S  driving  the  combine  tonight.  He's  got  a  date 
with  the  10,7  53  new  Americans  who'll  be  born  bj  next 
sundowo.  A  birth  rate  that  has  upped  our  population  30 
million  since  1940 — while  2  million  farmers  have  left  the 
farm  for  other  jobs. 

How  can  2  millioa  fewer  farmers  £eed  30  miUioa  more 
people.'  Machines — millions  of  them — arc  the  answer.  To- 
day's farmer  still  has  to  work  late  when  his  crops  are 
ready.  But  "hired  hands"  of  steel  enable  him  to  produce 
more.  Tractors  do  the  work  of  40  men.  Grain  combioet 
reduce  labor  85%.    . 

Today's  farm  production  depends  on  the  trouble-free 
operation  of  these  machines.  That's  why  every  make  of 
farm  tractor  uses  Timken*  tapered  roller  bearings;  why 
more  and  more  implements  are  using  them,  too. 

Timken  bearings  reduce  breakdowns  because  they  roll 
the  load.  They  practically  eliminate  friction,  require  less 
maintenance,  minimize  wear  to  keep  farm  machinery  on 
the  go. 

Keeping  farm  equipment  rolling  smooythly  is  just  one 
exaivple  of  how  the  Timken  Company  keeps  America  on 
the  go.  We  work  hand-in-band— arawing-board-to-draw- 


iog-board— -with  aU-iodustry  to  increaso  speed  and  pro* 
cision.  Decrease  wear  and  aaaintenaoce.  Improve  the 
machines  that  are  ioapcoving  your  way  of  life. 

This  spirit  of  cooperation  and  progress  has  helped 
make  "Timken"  the  best-known  bearing  in  America.  It's 
helped  make  us  the  world's  largest  manufacturer  of  tapered 
roller  bearings. 

And  it's  kept  os  moving  ut>.  If  yoa  waat  to  kt^f  aoviog 
«^,  you  might  be  iatercstca  ia  what  we  can  offer  you. 
Write  for  our  booklet,  "Career  Opportunities  at  the 
Timken  Company".  The  Timken  Roller  Bearing  Cooapaoj, 
Canton  6,  Ohio. 


TIMKEN 

TnAOK-MAIW  MM.  Ik  a.  PAT.  crv. 

TMRiD  ItOLLlR  BEAKmU 


Timkin*  bearings  keep  America  on  the  GQ . . .  ond 
yfiU  keep  going  uR  when  you  go  with  the  Timken  Company 


FASI  POUR 


THt  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


TUESDAY,  JANUARY  IS,  1957 


Tar  Heels  Favored  Over  Wolfpack  In  Coliseum  Tonight 


,» 


McGuire  Holds  Trump  Card  in  Big  Battle 

Frank  McGuire  and  Everett  Case,  the  coaching  kings  of  Atlantic 
Coaat  Conference  basketball,  renew  their  often  tempestuous  rivalary 
tonight  in  Reynolds  Coliseum,  and  for  a  change  it's  McGuire  vho  holds 
the  tinimp  card. 

Every  ywr  sine*  McGuir*'s  arrival  on  the  Hill,  it'$  lM«n  Stat* 
on  top  of  th«  heap  with  Carolina  way  down  under.  The  Tar  H—lt 
were  often  forcod  to  re$ort  to  "deop  freeze"  tactics  in  an  offort  to 
slow  down  ttie  race  horse  Wolfpack. 

Case  has  had  all  the  better  of  it  in  past  years.  He  and  McGuire 
have  crossed  wits  from  the  coaching  bench  12  times  in  the  lac?t  five. 
years,  and  nine  of  those  times  it  was  State  on  the  long  end  of  the 
score. 

But  this  looks  like  the  year  of  reckoning.  And  Case  is  the  first  one 
to  admit  it,  although  the  silver  haired  Wolfpack  mentor  undoubtedly 
has  an  ace  up  his  sleeve. 

"Carolina  has  a  marvelous  ball  club",  said  Case.  "They  have 
height,  weight,  speed  and  exporience.  And  they  have  some  gheat 
shooters  too." 

Just  what  tactics  the  wily  State  coach  will  cniploj;  is  a  mystery. 
Some  think  he  will  try  to  slow  dou-n  the  action  just  like  the  Tar  Heol? 
have  done  against  his  dubs  in  past  years.  Others  think  he  will  turn  ' 
bis  fa.t  break  boys  loo,se  and  tr>"  to  run  Carolina  out  of  the  Coliseum 


*  NC  Cagers 
$eek  Win 
Number  15 


By  4.ARRY   CHEEK 

RALEIGH— N.  C.  State's  crippled 
Wolfpack,  the  hard  luck  team  of 
A<X  basketball,  take  on  the  na- 
tion's number  two  team  tonight 
in  Reynolds  Coliseum,  and  for 
once  find  themselves  in  the  role 
of  underdog  on  their  own  home 
court. 

The  mighty  visitor  to  Coliseum 
confines  is  of  course  North  Caro- 
lina, the  New  York  teed  team  fa^^ 
hioned  by  that  smiling  Irishman 
Frank  McGuire.  The  Tar  Heels  are  » 
currently  riding  the  crest  of  a  14 
game  winning  streak  and  are  push- 
ing Kansas  for  top  spot  in  the 
weekly  ratings.  And  many  think 
they  are  heir  apparent  to  the  ACC 
crown  now  worn  by  State. 

Coach  Everett  Case  is  in  his  10th 
year  at  State,  and  from  all  indica- 
tions it  looks  like  his  worst  one. 
Hard  hit  by  graduation  and  the  in 
jury  bug.  State  has  chalked  up  a 
mediocre  8-6  record  including  three 
conference  iosscc*.  Only  W'ake  For- 
est has  beaten  in  the  Coliseum, 
however. 


The  Wolfpack  will  go  into  to- 
night's game  without  the  services 
of  their  number  one  rebounder  and 
top  scorer,  h\isky  John  Richter. 
Kichter.  a  9^  sophomore  with  a 
17.3  scoring  average,  sprained  his 
ankle  in  practice  Saturday  and  will 
Right  now  all's  right  with  the  world  in  the  Carolina  camp.  The  ,  definitely  sit  out  tonight's  contest. 


Whatever  Case  pulls  out  of  the  hat,  it's  a  sure  bet  that  AAcGuire 
and  his  Tar  Heel  warriors  will  spring  some  tricks  of  their  own  in 
return.  There's  little  tho  Carolinions  can't  do,  and  with  the  shrew- 
dest coach  in  the  business  guiding  them,  they  should  be  tough  to 
beat. 


Tar  Heels-  are  first  in  the  ACC,  second  in  the  nation  and  unbeaten  in 
fourteen  starts.  And  if  they  can  stop  Slate  tonight,  that  unbeaten 
siring  just  might  carry  over  into  the  last  week  of  the  season. 

That's  when  the  other  two  toughest  assignments  on  the  UNC  sche- 
dule come  up.  In  that  one  week,  the  Tar  Heels  must  meet  Dxikc  in 
Durham  and  Wake  Forest  in  Winston-Salem. 

Loss  Of  Richter  Could  Be  Disastrous 

A  mortal  blow  to  States  chances  in  tonights  game  was  struck  when 
star  soph  John  Richter  pulled  up  lame  with  a  sprained  ankle.  Richter, 
tabbed  by  expexls  as  State's  next  Ali-American.  has  'been  a  vahtable 
man  in  both  rebounding  and  scoring  all  year  long,  anrt  he  <wiA  he 
sorely  missed  by  the  Pack.  -         •  .  i .  <       .    . 

With  Hick  Pond^  Mnd  Bet  McCilfvary  also  on  tho  sideline*,  the 
piefuf  looks  dark  A»r  Statai.  On  tiMefhor-  hand,  if s  M  knemmi  #a«t  ihat- 
it  takes  olnwct  a  super  town  to  liiek  S^ate  on  their  >n»yitolds  Co*iMuiii 
homo  court.  <      «  i'  •jj.tiittn  ia?;**   i^iryjvi' 

".!'■•  T"- I'."  .'  »■-  ■.:  j'.r  •..!  . 
This  was  convincingly  demonstrated  last  year  when   UNC  paid  a 

visit  to  West  Raleigh  for  a  regular  season  gajire;  The  Tar  Heels  watched 

a  1(^  point  lead  dwindle  down  to  nothing  that  night  as  the  red  hot 

Pack  came  storming  from  behind  to  take  the  win. 

The  thundering  noise  generated  by  the  State  student  section  had 
more  than  a  little  to  do  with  this  last  minute  spurt  by  the  Wolfpack. 
The  roof  on  Reynolds  Coliseimi  actually  seemed  to  tremble  as  the 
tumult  turned  into  frenzy  when  State  went  ahead.  The  poor  Carolina 
players  must  have  felt  slightly  outnumbered. 


EarHer  in  the  season  State  loat 
-tarting  forward  Nick  Pond  with  a 
broken  wrist  and  soph  star  Bob 
McGilvary  via  the  scholastic  route. 

The  loss  of  Richter  leaves  the 
Pack  with  only  one  big  man  to 
throw  agai*n^t  Carolina's  towering^ 
front  line.  He's  senior  Bob  Seitz, 
a  b-ll  hbok  shot  specialist.  Start- 
ibg  in  Richter's  place  at  forward 
will  be  another  sophomore.  6-4  Ken 

I^airing  wUH' .Cl&i^  at  fbrwafd 
is  tliff  Hafer,  lean  senior  with  the 
sp*fWr '  o¥  i'  ^i^yhotthd. '  John  Ma- 
glib.  '^  tekdi's  pl^rmaker'  'and 
clutch  man,  and  Whitey  Bell,  fiery 
ex^serviceinan,  will  te^m  af  the 
guardk.     "    "  '  ■ ' 

Carolina^  called  by  dase  a  *;ma- 
veious  bkll  cJub".  will  feature  a 


Kansas  Loses  39-37 
To  Iowa  State  In  Upsft 


AMES,  Iowa— (AP)— Don  Med-' 
sker  flipped  in  a  20-foot  push  shot 
as  the  game  ended  to  give  Iowa 
State  a  39-37  Big  Seven  Confer- 
ence basketball  upset  over  the  na- 
tion's No.  1  team,  Kansas,  last 
night. 


STUDYING 
FOR  f  XAMS? 

Take   A 

Pizza 
Break 

(Home  Made,  Tool) 
At 

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ELIA  KAZAN'S 


production  of 

TENNESSEE  WILLIA(«S^ 

i  boldest  story! 


KARLMALOEN'CAeROllBAK.ER 


ADULT   ENTERTAINMENT 

ADULTS  65c 

.  HELD   OVER 


BOB    CUNNINGHAM 
...  Spider  ^in^ 


That  same  thing  could  happen  this  season.  State  has  a 
team,  one  that  is  better  than  its  8-6  record.  If  they  get  hot  like  they 
did  against  Duke  -in  the  Dixio  Classic  semi-finals,  it  could  be  ft  in- 
teresting session.  - 

But  the  Tar  Heela  still  rate  as  overwhelming  favorites  in  every- 
lK>dj''s  book.  And  the  question,  "What  will  Case  do?",  still  remains. 
He  once  threatened  to  let  the  air  out  of  the  ball.  One  never  knows. 


Irrosh  Seek  Revenge 
Over  Wolf  lets  Tonite 


By    BILL    KING 

iCaVeliAja'^  7'^shmaii  j  basketball 
telMJirWill  bebuf  to  a^jfnge  its  piify 
defeat  of  the  season  tonight  as  the 
Tar  Bahoes-go  against, the  taicptcd 
Uokh  'C^rolitie  State  'yearlings  in 
pfeliminary  action  before  the  ca- 


well  balaiie'i^  attack  built  around   gerly   awaited   clash   between   the 


Carolina,  State  Battle 
In  Swim  Meet  Today 


By  STEWART  BIRD 

The  perennial  giants  of  south- 
ern swimming,  N(«th  Car<dina 
ai}d  N.  C.  State,  square  off  at 
3:30  this  afternoon  n  another  one 
of  their  dog-eat-dog  affairs  in 
Raleigh. 

To  predict  the  outcome  is  sheer 
fanasty  on  one  fact  alone.  No 
one  will  ever  find  out  from 
Ralph  Caicy  at  Carolina  or  his 
brother  Willis  at  State  who  they 
are  going  to  pit  again^-t  each 
other  in  each  event. 

With  some  of  the  finest  talent 
in  the  country  to  work  with,  they 
can  shuffle  their  swimmers  like 
chess  players  with  a  swimming 
pool  for  a^  chess  board. 

Going  on  past  records  alone, 
it  shapes  up  as  another  typical 
Carolina-State  meet  with  the 
final  result  hinging  on  the  out- 
come of  the  final  event.  All  the 
preceding  events  merely  add  to 
the  suspense,  point  by  point. 

In  the  220-yard  freestyle,  Frank 
Nauss  of  N.  C.  SUte  is  the  de- 
fending conference  champion 
and  must  rule  the  favorite.  Tony 
Schiffman  and  Jim  Atwater 
from  Carolina  will  push  him 
hard,  and  there  could  be  an  up- 
set in  the  making  by  Schiffman. 


Dick  Mclntyre  of  State  is  the 
favorite  in  the  50-yard  freestyle 
but  if  Bill  Roth  and  Brent  Nash 
swim  this  event  for  Carolina,  it 
could  be  very  close.  The  same 
is  true  of  the  100-yard  freestyle. 
Dick  Fadgen  of  State  rules  the 
breast^oke  events,  but  he  could 
be  riding  for  a  fall  in  the  person 
of  Mac  Mahaffy  of  Carolina. 
These  two  will  probably  have  one 
of  the  closest  duels  of  the  entire, 
meet. 

With  three  top-flight  divers  to 
pick  from,  Carolina  will  undoub- 
tedly sweep  the  diving  event. 
Carolina's  strongest  threat  for  a 
first  place  will  be  Charlie  Krepp 
in  either  the  200  yard  back- 
stroke, or  any  other  event  Casey 
decides  to  send  this  versatile 
star  into. 


that  human  scoring  machine,  Len- 
nie  Rosenbluth.  Rosey,  a  sure  fire 
All-American  bet  in  his  senior 
year,  has  averaged  an  even  26 
points  per  game  in  leading  the  Tar 
Heels  down  victory  trail. 

Four  juniors,  all  graduates  of 
what  most  people  think  was  the 
finest  Carolina  freshman  team  in 
history,  provide  a  highly  skilled 
supporting  cast  for  Rosenbluth. 
Two  of  them,  Pete  Brennan  and 
Hoc  Quigg,  round  out  the  UNC 
front  line  of  giants  at  forward  and 
center  respectively,  while  the  other 
duo  of  Tommy  Kearns  and  Bob 
Cunningham  run  the  team  from  the 
back  line. 

Heading  the  strong  Carolina 
bench  is  T(wy  fttdevich,  veteran 
guard  who  will  be  playing  his  next 
to  last  game  in  a  Carolina  uniform 
Radovich,  a  starter  for  most  of  last 
season,  graduates  at  the  end  of 
this  semester. 

Aluo  included  on  the  reserve  list 
are  a  trio  of  sophomores:  Bill  Hath- 
away, until  recently  a  starter,  Dan- 
ny Lotz  and  Stan  GroU. 

A  sellout  crowd  of  12,400  is  ex- 
pected for  the  headline  attraction. 
A  freshman  game  between  yearling 
representatives  of  the  brother  in- 
stitutions will  precede  the  8:15 
varsity  tipoff. 


CLASSIFIEDS  ' 


FOR  SALE:  1949  NASH  IN  GOOD 
condition.  Sharp  looking  and 
smooth  riding^a  real  buy  from 
the  ground  up.  Call  Bob  Perry 
at  8-9027. 


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Radio-Heater-Overdrive  Splen- 
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PATRONIZi  YOUR 
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varsiticrf  of  the  two  schools. 

The  Tar  Babies  have  run  through 
seven  opponents  already  this  sea- 
son, the  only  stopper  being  the 
Wolfpack  frosh  in  a  thriller  earlier 
in  the  season.  The  Wolflets  topped 
the  Tar  Babies  91-89  in  an  over 
time. 

Tonights  freshman  action  will  be 
the  first  of  two  contests  between 
the  two  schools  this  week.  Saturday 
night  the  two  clubs  will  meet  in 
Greensboro. 

Coach  Buck  Freeman  will  prob- 
ably build  his  defense  around 
State's  forward  Bob  Cole  who  drop- 
ped in  36  points  in  the  initial  out- 
ing between  the  consolidated  bro- 
thers. 

Backing  Cole  at  the  starting  tap 
wilt  be  Walter  Bortka  at  the  re- 
maining forward,  6-4  Don  Gallag 
her  in  tlje  pivot  slot,  and  the  duo 
of  Bill  Haig  and  Bob  McCann  hand- 
ling the  backcourt  chores. 

The  loss  of  two  6-7  centers;  Jack- 
ie Moreland,  ruled  ineligible  by  the 
ACC,  and  John  Wessells,  who  drop- 
ped out  of  school;  has  left  the 
Wolflets  with  out  a  big  man  to 
offset  Tar  Baby  giants  Dick  Kep- 
ley,  measuring -6-8;  and  Lee  Shaf- 
fer .one  inch  shorter. 

The  Tar  Babies  will  probably  go 


with  the  same  starting  lineup  that 
I  bsfi  proven  so  effective  in  their 
fijfst,  eight  games'.  Tiib  tneup  will 
have  high  scoring  Shaffer  and  York 
Larese  at  forwards:  Kepley  at  cen- 
ter.;' and  Mike  Steppe  and  John 
Grotty  at  the  guard  positions. 
A  big  crowd  is  expected  to 
on  hand   for  the  6:15   tip  off. 


be 


ALL  TIME   RECORD 

All-America  Lennie  Rosenbluth, 
the  North  Carolina  basketball  sen 
sation.  now  holds  the  University 
all-time  scoring  record. 


The  Wholesalers  Did  It! 

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WEATHER 

Continued   Cold.    Expoctod    high 


Chapel    Hill,    N.    C. 


31. 


^iiieDsdium^dxMtti 


ATHLETICS 

An  oditorial  sorios  start*  today. 
S*«  pa9«  2.      -^ 


VOL    LVII  NO.  84 


Complete  OP)  Wirt  Servic* 


CHAPEL  HILL,  NORTH  CAROLINA,  WEDNESDAY,  JANUARY  16,  1967 


Offices  in  Graham   Memorial 


FOUR    PAGES  THIS  ISSUfi; 


OF  COLUMBiA  ST.  BAN: 

Frats  Still  Want 
Permanent  Lifting 

'  By  NEIL  BASS  '  Columbia  St.  between  Franklin  St 

General    consensus   from   frater- 1  and  Cameron  Ave.  time  to  "aJlc 
nities    affected   by    the    Board    of  |  \  iate"  their  parking  problem. 
.Mdermcns  60-day  lift  of  the  two-'      ^^^^    ^^^^    two-hour    limit,    im- 

I  posed   initially   last   summer,   will 
be  reimpo;-ed  at  that  date. 


hour  parking  restriction  on  Colum- 
bia St.  revealed  yeterday  they 
were  •'pleased'"  but  still  prefer  a 
permanent  lift. 

The  aldermen  voted  at  a  Monday 
night  meeting  to  lift  the  ban  until 
March  13.  to  allow  fraternities  on 


Ballet  Co. 
To  Appear 
Tuesday 


REACTION 

C.  H.  Rand.  Delta  Kappa  Epsilon 
vice  president,  said  he  was  "pleas 
ed"  with  the  tempcwary  lifting 
■for  the  sake  of  othlcr  Iraterni 
ties."  The  Dckcs  have  no  parking 
problem  due  to  recent  construc- 
tion of  a  parkin?  lot  capable  of 
accommodating  some  23  cars. 

Hugh  McColl.  Beta  Theta  Pi 
president,  said  he  was  glad  the  re- 
striction had  l>een  lifted  l>ecau.se 
it  would  temporarily  "relicx'e  pres- 
aure  en  the  other  houses  '* 


Tar  Heel  Cagers  Stage  Late  Scoring 

Spree  To  Rack  Up  One-Sided  83-57 
Decision  Over  Wolfpack  In  Raleigh 


"I  would  prefer  that  it  be  lifted 
permanently,  however."  McColl 
said.  This  was  the  general  com- 
ment    of     all     other      fraternit\ 


Franz       Lehar  .•       "The      Merry 

Widow"    and    "Revenge  "    are    ihe 

productions    to    be    staged    in    the 

Chicago  Opera  Ballef.s  appearanco 

lucsday  in  Memorial  Hall  at  8  p.m.j  spokesmen  questioned 

Ruth   Page's   company  will    pre- 
sent   the    original    ballets    with    a 

company  of  48  soloists,  corps  de 

ballet,  complete  scenery,  costumes 

and  orchestra. 
Scloists     for     I  he     performance 

will     be     Marjorie     Tallchiel     and 

George  Skibine.  leading  dancers  of 

the    Marquis   dc   Cuevas    Ballet    of 

Pari :.   Both   artists   have  not   been 

seen   in  America  in  several  years 

and  have  obtained  a  leave  of   ab- 
sence  from    the   Cuevas    Ballet    to 

JQin  the  Cllicacgo  Opera  Ballet. 

In  addition  to  these  :>olo  danc- 
ers, the  cast  includes  Sonia  Aro\a. 
Job  Sanders.  Barbara  Steele,  and 
KeniUiUi  Johnson. 

The  works  chosen  by  Ruth  Page  j 
for  tiie  initial  jClUca&o  Ballet  tour  j 
have  been  given  a  new  interpre- ' 
tation  by  the  pro<lucer-  ''The  Mer- ' 
■xy  Wid«w."  "Revenge  '  is  a  melo- 
dramatic tale  adapted  from  Ver- 
-ii*8  opera  "B  Trovatore.  " 

■>   A  student   rate   of    S4  has  betn 

set  for^lhis  perlormance  plue  the 

remaining  three   programs  on   the 

Chapel    Hill    Concert    Series .   The 

styjden^  S9i7<^  seats  are  unreserved 
'  in  tne  downstairs  area  of  Memorial 

Hall. 


Ho.sea  Wilson,  Sigma  Chi  vice 
president,  said  he  was  "definitel> 
pleased  "  with  the  60-day  lift,  but 
thought  the  ban.  in  its  original 
form,  is  "definitely  unfair  to  peo- 
ple living  in  Big  Fraternity  Court." 

Dan  Clark.  Pi  Kappa  Alpha  pres- 
ident, said  he  was  "very  pleased" 
with  the  temporary  lifting  but  was 
"heartily  in  favor  of  complete  ban 
rfcmoval." 

■\Ve  are  financially  unable  to 
purchase  any  land  for  construc- 
tion of  a  parking  lot  .  .  .  thus  we 
can  do  nothing."  Clark  said. 

LenniiQ  Sack^v  Pi  Lambda  Phi 
treaurer,  told  a  reporter  ho  was 
"very  *WV?"  «ilk  MM?JJWIi|Jlffm- 
porary  lift  tnit  hoped  "for  com- 
plete lifting  of  the  ban." 

Jack  Jooos,  Sigma  .\tpha  Epsilcn 
vice  president,  said  he  was  pleased 
with  the,  lift  but  he  felt  it  'only 
helps  relieve  the  crowded  situa- 
tion during  the  temporary  60-day 
period."  No  permanent  relief  ha^ 
been  brought,  he  stressed. 


Rosey  High  Scorer 
Brennan  Tallies  22 


Israett  Troops 

To  Leave  Sinai 

1 

UNITED  NATIONS.  N.Y.— (AP) 
— An  Isriieli  delegation  spokes- 
man announced  last  night  Israeli 
troops  will  pull  out  of  the  Egyp- 
tian Sinai  Peninsula  by  .Ian.  22 
except  for  one  point  commanding 
the  Gulf  of  Aqaba. 

He  said  U.N.  Secretary  General 
Dag  Hammarskjold  was  informed 
of  the  decision  by  Israeli  Ambass- 
ador Abba  Eban  today. 

The  development  came  signifi- 
cantly just  before  the  return  here 
of  Mrs.  Golda  Meir;  Israeli  for- 
eign minister,  and  as  the  African- 
Asian  block  in  the  UN  moved  to 

(See  WORLD  NEWS.  Page  3) 


By  LARRY  CHEEK  I 

RALEIGH    —    North    Carolina's' 
proud  and  classy  Tar  Heels,  play-  [ 
ing    like   the   champions    they   are.  i 
held  their  position  as  the  nation's 
only    major    unbeaten    team    here 
last    night    as   they   rang   the    bell 
for  30  points  in  the  last  seven  min- 

McGuire  Calls 
Game  Tack 
'Plenty  Tough' 

By    BILL   KING 


C. 


j  DKE  Parlcing  Lot 

.i*.A'|Mrkirt9  Jet  which  D»it«  Kappa  Epsiton  fr«}«nttfy  U  presently   consfrucfing.  ThV 
DKE^  and  two  •tl|*r  fratefi^Uies — Sigma  Nu  and  Beta  Thirt*  Pi  eiso  plan  to  build  lots  as  •  result  of  • 
fwy  4iirt    lH^Hilny' raatrfcVioiV  in   front  of   Big.  f^ rate rnity    Court.    The    three    lots,   when    completed,    mr» 
•JCfmeimb'fo   lake   care   of   parJcing    probleips  of   four  other  fraternities  ifr  the  area  affected  by  the    re- 
fttrictffn.  T.he  regulation  was  put  into  effect  U^.  Rummer  by  the  local  Board  of  Aldermftn. 


UNC  Gridders 
To  Be  Moved 
In  Cobb  Dorm 

Tar  Heel  football  players  will 
live  together  in  a  University  dorm- 
itory next  year. 

This  was  announced  by  Chan- 
cellor Robert  House,  who  said  he 
favored   the   idea. 

The  athletes  will  room  togeth- 
er in  Cobb  Dormitory,  said  House. 
Their  rooms  will  adjoin  each  oth- 
er. 

Purpose  of  the  move  is  to  allow 
the  athletes  to  get  rest,  peace  and  : 
quiet — hard  tj  get  in  most  dornf^  | 
itory   setups,   said   House.  j 

The  chancellor  said  the  move ' 
"won't  violate  any  right  of  any  i 
man  who  is  (in  the  dormitory)  I 
now."  Football  players  will  move  1 
in  "as  vacancies  occur."  said  ! 
House.  I 

Chancellor     House     said     head  I 
football  Coach  .Tim  Tatum  had  re-  I 
quested    such    an    arrangement    a  I 
year    ago.    "It    has    long    been    an 
idea  that  it  was     better     to     shift 
(football      players)      around     the 
campus."  said  House. 

"But  I  see  nothing  sacred  in 
the  idea.  Therefore,  I'm  perfectly 
willing  to  experiment." 

Cobb,  the  latest  and  biggest 
dormitory  for  men  here,  was  chos- 
en because  it  is  convenient  to 
Woollen  Gymnasium  and  the  Mon- 
ogram Club,  said  the  chancellor. 


SPACE  LACKING     .  •    / 

Bill  Morgan.  Sigma  Nu  presi- 
dent, said  he  was  "glad"  the  alder- 
men had  seen  fit  to  lift  the  ban 
on    a    temporary    basis,    but    felt 


Old  Man  Winter  Gives 
Snow  For  Exam  Season 

Holding    to    tradition,    old    man '  formed     over     Louisiana     caused 


winter   offered     a     sp/inkling    ol 


there    wao-    not    much    his    group  j  snow  to  the  Chapel  Hill  area  yes- 


could  do  for  permanent  alleviation 
due  to  the  lack  of  necessary  land. 


"The   parking   situation   is 
pretty  bad, "  Morgan  said. 


>till 


The  aldermen  lifted  the  restric- 
tion for  60  days  due  to  ,a  "prog- 
I  ress  report"  made  by  the  seven 
j  fraternities  involved  to  President 
j  Bob  Young.  Voung  outlined  the 
I  progress  in  a  letter  to  town  man- 
ager Tom  Rose. 


terday  to  start  off  the  exam  sea- 
son. 

The  slight  flurries  of  snow. 
!  mixed  with  sleet,  began  at  dawn 
I  yesterday,  changing  to  'freezing 
I  rain  by  the  end  of  the  day. 

According  to  the  Raleigh-Dur- 
ham Airport  Weather  Bureau,  a 
very  cold  air  mass  moved  over 
N.C.  Monday  night,  followed  by 
a  low  pressure  area  which  swarm- 
of     the 


They  voted  in   Nov.   to  lift  the 
ban  for  the  60-day  period  if  fra- ,     ,     ,  ,      ^        .    . 

ternities    proved    they   could    take '  ^^  «'°"g  ^^e  boundaries 
action  to  alleviate  their  congested    cold  front  over  the  south  eastern 
parking    problem.  ■  states.  A  low  pressure  area  which 


rain  over  most  of  the  south  east 
and  brought  snow  to  North  Car- 
olina. 

The  storm  is  expected  to  turn 
to  the  north  east  along  the  N.  C. 
coast  today.  Snow,  freezing  rain 
and  sleet  are  predicted  to  end  by 
early    this    morning. 

Temperatures  yesterday  ranged 
from  a  low  of  23  to  a  high  of  26. 
Today's  temperatures  are  expect- 
ed to  be  in  the  upper  30's,  with 
no  snow  foreseen.  Below  normal 
temperatures  are  predicted  to  con- 
tinue   for   several    more   days. 


Competition  is 
Open  For  Delta 
Scholarships 

Applications  are  now  available 
for  competition  for  Delta  Delta 
Delta  scholarship,  according  to  in- 
fomation  released  today  by  the  Of- 
fice of  the  eDan  of  Women. 

Eligibility  for  the  scholarships 
requires  that  a  women  student  be 
on  a  campus  having  a  Tri  Delta 
Chapter,  and  that  she  be  "Well- 
qualified  as  a  student,  showing 
premise  of  valuable  service  in  the 
future." 

Announcement  of  award  win- 
ners will  be  made  by  May  15.  ac- 
cording  to  the   Dean's  Office. 

Applications  deadline  is  Febru- 
ary 23. 

Applications  are  available  from 
Mrs.  Charles  C.  Perrin.  Box  925. 
Paoli.  Pa. 


RALEIGH  — The  smiling  Irish- 
man with  the  proverbial  sham- 
rocks was  smiling  but  he  was  al- 
so heaving  a  big  sigh  of  relief. 
"I'm  glad  that  one  is  ever,"  said 
Coach  Frank  McGuire  after  his 
club's  SS-d"?  victory  over  N.  C. 
State  in  the  Coliseum  last  night. 

McGuire.  atwve  all  peTSple.  knew 
that  the  firtal  score  was  no  indi- 
cation of  what'wfehfoh  in  the  tre- 
mendous Wolfpack  stomping  j  scoring 
'  grounds,  '  Coach  Evcrette  Case 'it 
pqyit  vfen^Aoa^and  Me6uif«  knew. 

"Th<*}'ie  got'  a'toiighfeall'  club." 
said  tJio  friendlv  Ta^  fi'eel  coach; 


Ernie  Pyle 
Award  Goes 
To  Kurom 

Charles  Kurait,   a   fdriilei^  'editor 
of  The  Daily  Tar  Heel,  has  won  a 

Sl.OOO  Ernie  Pyle  awaiid  ^wywrit- |."Of   coUTSe    IdsiiVg   Richter   was   a 

tremendous  blow  to  iKem  ( State ).''• 


utes  to  turn  back  stubborn  N. 
State.   83-57. 

It  was  consecutive  victory  No. 
15  for  Carolina  and  their  fifth 
without  a  loss  in  Atlantic  Coast 
Conference  play.  They  are  assur- 
ed of  remaining  unbeaten  for  at 
least  two  more  weeks.  Their  next 
game -is  with  .Western  Carolina  at 
Cullowhee  Jan.  30. 

The  final  score  is  no  true  indi- 
cation of  what  the  Tar  Heels  had 
to  go  through  to  walk  out  of  Rej'- 
nolds  Coliseum  victorious.  With 
seven  minutes  to  go,  it  was  any- 
body's ball  game,  as  Carolina 
possessed  only  a  three  point  lead. 
53-50. 

But     then     Lennie     Roscnbluth, 
the    night's    high    scorer    with    29 
points,    and    Pete    Brennan    l>egail 
to  hit  on   free  throws  to  put  the 
Carolinians  out  of  reach.  Between 
the   two  of  them,   they   poured  in 
1  11   straight  free     tosses     to     give 
I  their;  learn    a   10-point   lead,  64-54. 
1  And  for  all  practical  purposes,  the 
I  game    was    out   of    reach    for    the 
'  desperately    trying    Wolfpack. 
Roset^Muth    led    both   teams    in 
hitting  6  out   of   16  from 
^^, floor  and  17l of  19  at  the  free 
Jhrow  line.  Brennan  collected' fwir 
field    goals   and    14   charity   tobses 
Thd  Tar -Heels 


to  finish   with   22 


ing  hailed  as  '"seri^itixc.  ^arm ; 
with  affection  for  "  oHscufe  peo- 
ple, and  with  excellent  touches  of 
humor  where   that   is   needed."        i 

Kurait,      22-year-old      reporter-  I 
columnist  for  the  Charlotte  News, 
was    announced    today    as    one    of 
two    national    winners.    The    other ' 
is    Gordon    S.    Bish    Thompson    of 
the    Evansvllle,   Ind..    Press.    They  ] 
received  bronte  medallion  plaques  ' 
in  addition  to  their  cash  awards. 

The  Scrippfi-Howard  Newspaper 
Alliance  contest  judges  decided : 
that  their  writing  and  reporting 
"most  nearly  e.Nemplified  the 
style  and  craftmanship"  of  the 
late  Ernie  Plye,  famed  World  War  . 
II   reporter  and   columnist.  | 

At    UNC    Kurait      moved      from 
managing  editor  of  The  Daily  Tar 
Heel      to     the     editor's   desk    for  i 
the   1954-55  school  year.   In   addi-  j 
tion    to    his    newspaper    activities ; 
he    was   a   member   of   the   Order 
of  the  Golden  Fleece  and  the  So- ; 
ciety  of  the  Holy  Grail.  i 


he  continued,  "but  trur  boys  play- 
ed a  fine  ball  game.  We  didn't 
press  too  much  when  they  closed 
in  on  us  in  the  last  half;  the  boys 
always  seem  to  play  better  ball 
in  the  clutch. 

Asked  what  he  considered  the 
turning  point  in  the  ball  game  was. 
McGuire  said:  "I  think  the  turning 
point   definitely   came   when   Scitz 


fS^e'  TAR  HEELS,  Page  4) 


Drama  Group's 
Plays  Slated 
For  This  Week 

Three  student-written  plays  have 
been  slated  for  their  initial  pro- 
duction   tomorow    and    Friday    by 


fouled  out.  He  is  a  good  man  under  !  ^^e  Carolina  Playmakers. 


those  boards." 

McGuire  was  also  highly  compli- 
mentary of  Ken  Clark.  Uie  boy 
who  did  such  a  fine  job  of  filling 
in  for  the  injured  Richter.  "Ken 
is  a  good  ball  player  and  a.  nice 
kid."  he  said:  "we've  known  Ken 
a  long  time — he  really  found  him- 
self   out    there    tonight." 

Now  the  Tar  Heels  take  lime  out 
for  a  two  weeks  battle  with  the 
books  before  returning  to  action 
Jan.  30  in  Cullowhee  against  West- 
ern Carrlina  in  a  dedication 
game. 


ACCORDING  TO  F.  C.  SHEPARD: 


Graduate  Students  Can  Benefit  From  Revised  Program 


IN  THE  INFIRMARY 


Studonts  In  the  Infirmary  yes- 
terday  included: 

Misses  Gwandolyn  Lemly, 
Mary  Curtis,  Sa»ah  Hudson,  An- 
na Gtddie  and  Robert  Lewis, 
Shelton  Turner,  Leonard  Knox, 
Warwick  Porter,  Barry  Weaver, 
James  Pierce,  CherUr  Loughlin, 
Robert  Beerner,  Robert  Babb, 
John  Alley,  Michael  Martin,  Jo- 
seph Dalton,  Alan  Biggerstsff 
and  Dewey  Johnson. 


By  GRAHAM  SNYDf R 

College  graduate  students  can 
derive  optional  benefit  from  the 
Army's  new  revision  of  the  mili- 
tary service  program. 

F.  C.  Shepard.  Veterans  and 
Military  Advisor,  said  Tuesday  the 
new  order  represent^'  an  option 
for  military  service  to  the  college 
graduate — either  electi6n  of  the 
six  months  active  duty  and  SVa 
years  reserve  duty  or  two  years 
draftee  active  service  and  one  year 
reserve. 

"One  advantage  lies  in  the  fact 
that  the  graduate  will  be  able  to 
avoid  the  draft,  if  he  elects  to 
serve  the  voluntary  six  months 
and  the  5V2  years  compulsory  ac- 
tive reserve  duty,"  Shepard  said. 

Shepard  added,  "When  they 
graduate,  a  few  students  may  take 
advantage  of  thi.:,'  opportunity." 

Shepard  stated.  "I  have  not  re- 
ceived a  copy  of  the  proposed  bill, 
and  therefore  my  opinions  are 
based  on  what  came  out  in  the 
newspapers." 

An  anonymous  source  on  the 
campus  explained  that  the  bill,  is- 
suing Ircm   a   directive  bj    Army 


Secretary  Brucker  Monday,  was  an 
apparent  move  to  strengthen  the 
reserve  forces. 

The  new  bill  represents  an  ex- 
tension in  the  age  limit  of  volun- 
teers for  six  months  duty  over  the 
original     bill     presented    by    the 


Army.  This  former  bill  enabled 
youths  of  pre-draft  age  to  volun- 
teer for  six  months  active  duty 
and  S'-z  years  duly  in  the  ready 
reserve. 

The  new  bill  enables  men  from 
18>2    to   25   to   volunteer   for   six 


months  active  duty  and  spend  5*2 
years  compulsory  active  reserve 
duty,  thus  escaping  the  draft. 

But  the  new  order  also  reduces 
from  two  yeaiw  to  one  the  reserve 
duty  period  for  draftee  serving 
two  years  active  duty 


» -^v  .                                             ,*■'.,->                   ,            t^#^ 

Jk~«^'A  .  * 

A  sample  of  student  thought 
here  on  the  issue  varied.  The  ma- 
jority of  students,  questioned  ex- 
pressed approval  of  being  able  to 
avoid  draft  call  and  many  were  un- 
decided because  of  an  incomplete 
understanding  of  the  ramifications 
of  the  Army's  -new  order. 

A  junior,  Johnny  Reece.  said.  "I 
think  (the  revision)  is  an  excel- 
lent idea,  because  the  two-year 
draft  period  has  been  s-horn  of  all 
its  former  benefits  and  the  volun- 
tary duty  offsets  this  disadvantage 
by  virtue  of  the  shortened  active 
duty  and  the  nominal  pay  given  to, 
the  reservist  throughout  the  5*2 
years  reserve  duty. " 


A  negative  opinion  voiced  oppo- 
sition to  "the  tedium  of  having  to 


No  UP  Meeting 


COL     SHEPARD 

. .  "one    advantage" 


CAROLINA   STUDENTS    AT   GRADUATION 

iHuit   doi's  the  daift    mean   this  year? 


The    University    Party    did    not 

meet     last     night,     according     to 

Chairman  Mike  Weinman,  because 

of    the    Carolina-State    basketball 
j  game. 

I  The  party  will  hold  its  next  i  attend  reservist  meetings  for  six 
!  meeting  Feb.  5.  Weinman  said  years,  when  I  would  only  have  to 
j  Sam  Magili.  director  of  student  |  attend  one  year  of  meetings  after 
j  activities,    will    speak    belore    the ,  two  years  active  duly,   it   1  were 

group  at  that  time.  1  drafted." 


The    one-act    plays,    written    re- 
j  cently  by  graduate  students  in  the 
UNC  Dcpt.   of   Dramatic   .\rt,   will 
be    presented    at   7:30   p.m.    both 
nights.  Open  ic  the  public  without 
charge,  the  performances  arc  slat- 
ed for  The  Playmakers'  Theatre. 
I      All-student   casts,  under  the   di- 
I  rection  of  Foster  Fitz-Simons.  will 
'  do  the  designing,  acting,  directing 
and   technical   wcrk. 

Opening  the  .ories  will  be  "Room 

for     Rent."     by     Mi.ss     Marcelline 

Krafchick  of  Philadelphia.  Pa.,  di- 

I  reeled    by    Mis,s    Nanc\    Christ    of 

Newark.  N.  J.,  with  Ted  Parker  of 

Clinton  as  stage  manager  and  Rus- 

!  sell  Link  of  Jamaica.  N.  Y..  as  set 

!  designer.     Acting     in     the     short 

drama,  set  in  New  York,  are  Misses 

Rose   ChristoTf   of  Newark.   N.   J., 

Joan  Van  Sise  of   Huntington.  N. 

Y..  and  Barbara  Battle   jf   Miami, 

Fla. 

Next  on  the  .series  will  be  "Por- 
trait of  a  Dragon."  written  by  Miss 
Josephine  Stipe  of  Chapel  Hill.  It 
is  directed  by  Miss  Mary  Johnston 
of  Eupora,  Miss.,  with  Misses  Page 
Williams  of  Fort  Thomas,  Ky.,  as 
stage  manager  and  Sarah  Cannon 
( f  Canton,  as  set  designer. 

Performing  in  "Portrait  of  a 
Dragon."  set  in  a  Victorian  living 
room,  are  Mia-s  varolyn  Meredith 
of  Raleigh,  William  White  of  Chap- 
el Hill.  Miss  Virginia  O'Sullivan 
of  Valhalla.  N.  Y..  and  Miss  Ann 
Brooks  of  Staunton.  Va. 


GM'S  SLATE 


Activities  scheduled  for  Gra- 
ham Memorial  today  include: 

Pan  Hellenic  Council,  5-6  p.m., 
Grail  Reom;  Jehovah's  Wit- 
nesses, 8-9:30  p.m.,  Roland  Par- 
ker 1;  Honor  Council,  7-11  p  m., 
Woodhouse  Conference  Room; 
Bridge  Class,  4:30-6  p  m ,  Ren- 
deivous  Roem 


M6I  TWO 


flW  OAILY  TAiH  '♦WW* 


WCDNeSDAY,  JANUA«Y  ^6,  HJ7 


Modern  College  AHiietics  1 
An  Unheeded,  Rotten  Mess 

Cf)llc'!j;c  athktits  preseiitK  arc  in  a  rotten  mess. 

Football  and  hasketbaJl.  the  two  bio<TCst  money  spoils  tor  most  col- 
leges and  universities.  brin«»  in  millions  ol  dollars  from  thousands  ot 
faas.  .And  aloiio  uith  the  people  and  money,  football  and  foaAketbrvll 
brin«  in  corruption,  dishonesty  and  the  worst  thing  of  all:  A  forgetting 
of  the  purpose  of  an  educational  institution. 

This  has   happened   here  at   flarolina.   It   has  lKi])pcned  at   the   Ivy 

League  tolleges  and  imiversities.  have  got  out  of  the  field  of  stu- 
It  has  happened  in  the  Big  Ten.  dent  jjportii.  If  football  is  the  major 
and  it  has  happened  on  the  Pacific  sport,  the  average  Ireslunaii  feels 
Coast.  '  no    more    a    part    of    his    team    on 

Saturday   than   he   feels   he  is  part 
It   is   no   longer  possible   to  <iay      ol  the  Supreme  Soviet.  He  is  ji»st 
that  everyone  else  mry  be  wrDng.      a   pr.'viiig  customer.  • 

that  we  are  right.  There  are  evi- 
dences of  the  decaying  power  of 
college  athletics  riglit  in  our  own 
back   and   fiont   yards. 


WHICH  ONE  ARE  YOU? 


The  Daily  Tar  Heel  will  report 
on  the  .situation  at  Carolina  in  a 
later  edition.  But  now.  these  are 
the  main  issues  in  college  athletics 

today: 

*  *  • 


The  team  that  j)Iays  on  Satur- 
days is  not  his  team.  It  is  the  don- 
ors" team,  the  coaches'  team,  the 
sportswr iters'  team,  the  team  that 
belongs  to  the  "friends  of  the 
team." 

Students  who  plav  on  the  team 
are  athletes  first,  students  second. 


Thev   ate.  bv  definition,  njoney 
sports.      Athletic      directors      live, 


Regardless  of  what  coaches  say. 
regardless  of  what   study,  halls  are 
breathe  and  sleep  bv  gate  receipts,      set    up  and   what   academic  stand- 
Schools  schedide.  or  trv  to  sched-      ards  are  required  of  athletes,  those 


ule.  games  with  such  institutions 
.iS'  .Notre  Dame  and  Armv  not  be- 
cause the  tw;c»  instituticms  are 
nearly  equal  in  fooil)all  power,  not 
because  c:otderence  rides  say  ihev 
must  plav.  not  to  give  students  a 
chance  to  see  a  really  top  team 
plav.  bin  because  ^t  often  means  oi  university 
iinancial  siuvival  of  an  athletic 
progiam.  The  Iniversitv  of  North 
Carolina,  iov  instance  *»ains  much 
moie  m<mey  fiom  getting  beat  b\ 
Notre  Dame  than  it  does  from 
whipping    X'irL^inia. 


who  participate  in  the  big-time 
spc»rts  gennally  are  not  studeirts 
of  the  college  or  university.  They 
are  athletes,  picked  bee  ause  of  their 
athletic  ability  while  they  are  in 
high  school,  asked,  begged  and  in- 
duced  to    attend    a    certain   colliic 


The  recruiting  season  starts  al- 
most a  year  ahead  of  time.  Whv? 
I  veryone  else  is  recruiting. 


If  j»ate  receipts  are  not  up  high 
enough,  athletic  directors  start  to 
sweat.  Iheir  cipiijiment  costs  more 
than  it  used  to:  c<»a(lies  cost^more: 
players    must    be    given   grantvs-in- 


The  l)ette«  athletes  are  asked  to 
attend  several  institutions.  They 
hive  to  make  their  choice.  It  is 
obvious  th:«t  the  high  school  ath- 
lete, surroiuided  bv  recruiters, 
j^ives  little  thought  to  academic 
^standards     when      he      picks      his 


aid:    press    limcheons    and    p;»rties     school, 
must   be  given:   airplanes  must   be 
charteied.  .,  .....     T' 

If  .iiate  receipts  are  not  up  hii;!! 
enough,  colleges  and  universities 
canncK  keep  up  with  their  neigh- 
boring imiiiuiicms.  .-Mumni  get 
angry.        "ScJiooJ      spirit"      wages.  When  lie  mipacks  hi^  ba«>  in  Sep- 

Coaches  are  hard    t*^  :^|t.'  PiMVrs     Wupfcrvl>4  s^ffs; l»|i  '^e  as  an  atfi- 
are  hardei^  to  rec  ruit.  Jete  urst;   sfudent'  second. 


Ht;  is  tOtt^»«yi»*^I  bv  alumni, 
biYiiight  tci  tlie:  college  or  imiversi- 
tv  for  an  inspection  tour,  educated 
in  the  way  ol  liie  of  that  particular 
ihit'Jtution. 


So.  the  athletic  directors,  or 
their  names;tkes  in  present-dav. 
colleges  and  universities,  iind 
themselves  swept  up  in  the  swift 
waters  of  modern  college  athletics, 
whether   they    like    it    m    not.  AVe 

suspect   they  do. 

*    '  *  # 

.\ll  across  the  countiv— and  Car- 
olina    is     no     exception— athletics 

The  Daily  Tar  Heel 

The  official  itudent  pubUcation  of  tbe 
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Editor 


FRED  POWLEDGE 


Managing  Editor 


CHARUE  SLOAN 


iNewi  Editor 


NANCY  HILL 


Busioess  Manager 


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Sports  Editor 


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Subscription  Manager 

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_  Dale  Staley 

-    Fred  Katzln 

Charlie  Holt 


«:\VS  STAFT— Clarke  Jones.  Ray  Unk 
er,  Joan  Moore.  Pringle  Pipkin,  Aniic 
Drake.  Edith  MacKinnon,  Wally  Kuralt, 
Miry  Alys  Voorbees,  Graham  Snyder, 
Billy  Barnes,  Neil  Bass,  Gary  Nichols, 
Page  Bernstein.  Peg  Humphrey,  Phyllit 
MauUsby»    Ben   TayJor 


BUSINESS  STAFF— Rosa  Moofe,  Johnny 
Whitaker,  Dick  Leavitt,  Dick  Sirkin. 

SPORTS  STAFF:  Bill  King.  Jim  Purks, 
Jimmy  Harper,  Dave  Wible,  Charley 
Howson. 

EDITORiAL  STAFF  —  Woody  Stun. 
Frank  Crowther,  Barry  Winston,  David 
Mundy.  George  Pfingst,  Ingrid  Clay, 
Cortland  Edwards,  Paul  McCauley, 
Bobbi  Smith. 


Staff  Photographer 
Librarian  


Norman  Kantur 
..      Siie  Gishner 


Night  Editor 

Proof  Reader  

Night  News  Editor 


Waily  Kuralt 

Guy  Ellis 

CliarUe  Sloan 


Hdis  j^ven  special  handlin<>  bv 
tlwp  ccillt^eor  university.  He  often 
has  special  livini>  (juaiters.  tutors. 
speci.Tl  eatin54  arran«;enienis.  inanv 
benetits  that  the  aveiaj;j;e  student 
only  hears  about.  His  •«iaiit-in-aid 
takes  care  ot  most  ol  the  financial 
worries  i>{  his  collej;e  career.  .\11 
he  has  to  do  is  play  fcMitball  or  bas- 
ketball und  ^tay   in   sch«M>l. 

Who.   then,   is  ros|x)n«ible? 

It  is  easiest,  and  most  accinate. 
to  blame  the  situation  on  the  >*en- 
eial  public.  Cri^duates  of  an  in- 
stitution do  not  remember  their 
college  or  university  because  of  its 
scholastic  average  or  faculty  integ- 
rity: they  remember  the  football 
or  basketball  team  and  the  coache*. 

riie  s^Mirtswryeis.  who  place 
far  too  much  emphasis  on  individ- 
ual players  and  individual  coaches, 
are  to   blame. 

The  coaches  and  players  them- 
selves are  to  blame.  But  not  too 
much.  X^^y  3^^  merely  taking  ad- 
vantage of  a  situation  that  ha^ 
lH"e|i  offered  to  them.  In  modern 
times,  it  would  be  considered  fool- 
ish for  them  to  do  otherwise. 


Primarily,  it  is  the  insLttution 
that  has  failed.  The  iiistitiuion, 
through  representation  in  athletic 
conferences,  through  its  simple 
power  to  decide  athletic  policies, 
could  do  what  it  pleased  about  the 
rottenness  of  present-day  collegiate 
athletics. 

The  institutions  do  not,hing,  or 
very  little.  Carolina,  jjerhaps,  does 
more  than  the  average.  Hut  a  big 
reason  for  that  is  memories  of  what 
is  happening  at  N.  C.  State  Col- 
k*2e  in  what  has  been  called  the 
.\roreland  c.ise. 

Carolina  is  not  iniKKent.  Bin 
neither  are  any  other  institutions. 
Carolina,  however,  could  do  some- 
thing about  the  present  merall 
athletic«  situation. 

TOMORROW:    The    blame. 


Other-Directed    People    Nowadays 
Are  Bringing  Nqw  Danger  To  U.  S. 


New  Cut  Rule 
Starts  Soon 

(At  the  start  of  the  spring  semester,  Carolina 
juniors  and  seniors  will  have  a  new  absence  reg- 
ulation. Here  is  the  regulation,  printed  in  full.) 


Cortland  Ed«^afds 

In  David  Riesman's  boak  The 
Lonely  Crowd  an  analysis  of 
our  contemporary  American  so- 
ciety can  be  found.  In  this  ana- 
lysis, the  author  describes  three 
types   of  social    characlers: 

1.  The  tradition-directad.  2. 
The  inner-directed,  and  3.  The 
other-directed. 

E««h  Off  these  types  is  brought 
•tout  by  the  economic  system 
•of  the  society,  which  in  turn  i& 
directly  influenced  by  the  edu- 
cationel  system.  This  economic 
system  >then  determines  the 
•political  system. 

The  tradition-directed  is  the 
mo-st  primitive  ot  the  three.  It 
is  represented  by  these  coun- 
tries or  societies  v^hich  have  e 
high  birth  rate  and  high  death 
rate.  These  people  live  mostly  in 
small  clusters  and  are  usually 
led  by  the  elders  of  the  tribe 
or  society. 

The  inner-directed  man.  ac- 
cording to  Riesman.  came  into 
existence  about  the  time  of 
the  Renaissance.  His  main  am- 
bition in  life  is  to  succeed  and 
excel. 
BACKBONE  ^ 

It  was  these  inner-directed 
men  that  were  the  backbone  of 
our  nation  at  one  time.  They  ar? 
the  ones  who  manned  the  fron- 
tier. They  are  the  ones  who 
struck  out  for  what  they  believed 
was  right. 

It  was  these  type  of  men  who 
led  the  world  in  politics,  relig- 
ion, science,  philosophy  and  just 
about  all  disciplines. 

Characteristics  of  the.se  inner- 
directed  men  miglit  be  listed  as 
self-reliance,  independence,  non- 
conformity to  a  degree,  direct- 
ne.ss.  determination,  caring  lit- 
tle for  what  others  say  or  think, 
and  usually  going  their  own  ways 
without   much  hesitation. 

The  third  type  is  the  ether- 
directed^  These  are  the  ones 
that  sensitive  and  react  to  the 
iudgement  of  others.  He  is  the 
modem  consumer  who  has 
much  leUur*  tinne  end  is  trying 
to  figur*  out  a  way  how  to  get 
more. 

When  he  is  in  a  peer  group, 
which  Rei.sman  defines  as  any 
number  of  people  who  associate 
with  each  other,  this  type  of 
man  will  conform  every  time.  He 
will  wear  the  grey  flannel  suit 
if  he  is  in  business,  or  he  will 
wear  Ivy  League  clothes  if  he 
is  in  college.  You  know,  the  buck- 
le on  your  bottom,  with  ihe  but- 
ton on  your  back. 

It  is  this  man  that  does  not 
want  to  change  politics,  but  in- 
stead he  wants  to  understand 
them.  He  is  the  one  who  sits  in 
Political  Science  41  class  and 
says  our  government  is  lou«y. 
but  instead  of  trying  to  correct 
it  he  says.  "C'est  la  vie." 
PEOPLE  TURNING 

People  today  in  the  Uirtted 
States  are  turning  into  the  other- 
directed  type.  We  are  turning 
into  bunch  of  conformists.  We 
are  pa.ssing  responsibilities  on 
to  others.  Wc  are  grabbing  at 
titles,  and  ranks,  but  we  are 
shirking   our  responsibilities. 

This  evidence  of  the  peopio 
of  the  U.  S.  turning  toward 
other-directedness  Is  dangerous 

• 

L'ir  Abner 


end  c«n  load  only  io  iHe  fell, 
fell,  fell  of  "white  suprenteey." 

Inner-directed  men.  like  Ein- 
stein, are  slowly  dying  out  and 
no  one  is  taking  their  place.  This 
is  mainl}  the^*  fault  of  our  edu- 
cational system,  but  Ihere  are 
many  other  things  to  blame  as 
well.  Let's  just  put  the  cause  to 
the  downfall   of  our  institutions. 

Confoi-mity  nowadays  is  the 
iviie  rather  than  the  exception, 
and  it  is  very  important  in  get- 
ting- along  in  the  world.  Of 
course,  we  are  all  non-conform- 
ists to  a  certain  degree,  but  the 
attachments  to  groups  are  de- 
pending  too   much   on   confoim- 


ing   to  certain   things. 

Belonging  is  one  of  the  funda- 
mental desires  of  a  great  major- 
ity of  the  population,  and  con- 
formity. I  am  sorjj^-  to  say.  is  the 
biggest  ingredient  in.  belonging. 
And  it  is  this  conformity  that 
may  very  well  lead  us  into  a  de- 
cline. Jt  has  happened  before, 
mj-  peers,  to  the  Hebrew.  Greek, 
and  to  the  Roman.  It  can  happen 
again. 

People,  nowadays,  seem  to  be 
more  aware  of  their  peers  than 
any  other  time.  People  today, 
including  those  on  our  campus, 
are  not  motivated  to  do  some- 
thing  by  what  they  think   but 


what     they     think    others    will 
think  of  them. 

Although  it  is  gotid  to  know 
and  respect  the  opinion  of  others 
it  is  better  to  follow  ones  own 
ideas  and  thoughts. 

If  other  -  dirscted  people  —  in- 
cluding about  97  percent  of  the 
student  body,  faculty  and  admin- 
istration— would  discover  and 
evalute  their  own  thoughts  as 
much  as  they  do  of  those  of 
their  peers  and  those  who  aren't 
afraid  of  speaking  out,  they 
would  pay  more  attention  to 
their  own  feelings  and  aspira- 
tions, and  revert  to  inner-direct- 
edness. 


'Darn  Good  Speecli,  But  I  Didn't  Catch  All  Of  It' 


i. 


BY  THE  MEN  RESIDENTS . . 


Movement  For  Coed  Dorm 


Yehudi 

("Yehudi,"  an  unnamed  col- 
umnist, made  his  appearance 
recently  in  The  Everettonian, 
mimeographed  newspaper  for 
residants  of  Everett  Dormitory 
here.) 

There  are  many  students  here 
at  Carolina  who  feel  that  there 
should  be  some  reforms  brought 
about  by  the  housing  office. 

One  of  the  least  talked  about, 
but  without  a  doubt  the  most  de- 
sired of  these,  is  co-educational 
dorms. 

We  in  Everett  are  volunteering 


our  services  as  an  experimental 
dormitory.  This  is  a  .sacrifice,  but 
someone  must  be  willing  in  this, 
the  most  liberal  and  progressive 
ot  all  dorms  at  UNC.  to  give  it. 
if  you'll  pardon  the  trite  express- 
ion, "the  old  college  try." 

Then,  there  appears  the  ques- 
tion of  how  to  ntake  the  change. 
First  of  all,  there  will  be  assign- 
ed to  each  room,  with  the  ex- 
ception of  the  social  room, 
head,  and  broom  closet,  one 
male  and  one  female. 
But.    mind   you,   there   can   be 

no   fraternization    in    the   rooms. 

This  would  be  a  violation  of  all 


existing  moral  codes  and  princi- 
ples. 

For  some,  this  will  prove  a 
temptation,  no  doubt,  but  you 
must  always  remember  that  you 
are  on  youi  honor  not  to  violate 
the  rulings  .set  down  by  our  ad- 
mini.stration.  , 

I  am  sure  that  we  could  count 
on  the  male  population  of  this 
dorm  and  the  rest  of  the  men's 
dorms,  but  I  am  not  so  trusting 
when  it  comes  to  the  girls,  but 
be  mindful  of  the  fact  that  as 
students,  you  will  be  bound  by 
the  honor  system  to  report  any 
violations    by   your   roommates. 


^^rrouTA 

\  TH' 
)  TH'l 

)  COMING.    .. 


1.  Regular  class  attendance  is  a  student  obli- 
gation, and  a  student  is  responsible  for  the  work, 
including  tests  and  written  work,  ot  all  class  meet- 
ings. The  privilege  of  making  up  work  missed  be- 
cause of  class  absence  is  extended  only  to  students 
whose  absence  from  the  class  is  excused  by  the 
proper  authorities. 

All  instructors  shall  keep  accurate  records  of 
attendance  in  all  classes. 

A  student  must  attend  at  least  75  percent  of 
the  meetings  of  a  course  to  receive  credit  for  it. 

2.  -All  students  enrolled  in  courses  numbered 
under  30  and  in  courses  listed  as  General  Col- 
lege electives  shall  be  governed  by  the  following 
attendance  requirement  in  these  courses:  A  stu- 
dent whose  unexcused  absences  equal  the  numbei 
of  regularly  scheduled  class  meetings  (exclusive 
of  laboratory  meetings)  in  the  course  in  a  normal 
week  shall  automatically  be  on  atten.iance  pro- 
bation: and  his  instructor  shall  so  infor.'^.n  the  stu- 
dents  dean.  An  additional  unexcused  absence  shall 
be  reported  to  the  student's  dean,  who  .vhall  drop 
the  course  with  a  grade  of  F  unless  one  or  more  of 
the  absences  is  excused. 

For  students  under  these  freshman-sophomore 
regulation  the  day  before  and  the  day  after  holidays 
shall  be  counted  as  double  absences. 

3.  Regulation  of  attendance  in  upper  college 
'    courses  and  in  courses  in  undergraduate  profess- 
ional  schools   shall    be    the   responsibility    of   the 
instructor,    who    has   the    authority    to    determine 

.'<  evhat   absences   are   allowable.    The    instructor    or 
the    departrpent    may    make    uniform    attendance 
regulations. 
When  a  student  has  been  absent  as  many  times 
as  seems  to  the  instructor  academically  reasonable, 
the    instructor    .shall    inform    the    student    that    he 
will  be  expected  to  be  present  at  all  future  class 
meetings.    In    the   event    of  an   unexcused    absence 
after  such   a   warning,   the  instructor  shall   request 
the   student's  dean   to  drop  him    from   the   course, 
without  grade  if  his  performance  up  to  that  point  is 
clearly    passing,    otherwise    with    a    grade   of    F. 

Students  in  the  upper  colleges  or  in  the  last 
two  years  in  professional  schools  whose  grade  aver- 
age on  all  courses  undertaken  in  the  preceding 
semester  was  not  up  to  C  (1.0)  shall  be  subject  to 
the  regulations  governing  freshman  and  sophomore 
courses  under  Section  II.  or  the  uniform  require- 
ments in  force  in  the  course,  whichever  Is  the 
more  exacting. 

4.  Students  who  receive  Honor  Roll  academic 
^.standing  in  the  previous  semester  have  tt»e  privi- 
lege of  optional  attendance  up  to  the  limit  of  2S 
per  cent  of  the  total  class  meetir»gs. 

5.     Excuses  are   issued  only  by  the  Central   Of- 

an  pfHcial'  notifitatio4fi)t  ei!fti^se[yhd''4fJ>^H}«-|fo 

'^er  the,;sii«d^?rt;;S;;j?|*«ipa>|Cf»  ^.^s   aJJ.<5r   absence. 

(The.  issuing  of  excQses  for  illness  can  t)e'  authbriaed 
only  biy:  th^iliniyersity  Physjpian;  for  special  cme^-  ■ 
gert&l&s '  "aird  -  exlra-ctirricuiar  acJtlyiti^^"^  ofrtier  .w^9li , 
athletic  only  by  the  dean 'of  the  3cho<rf  of  «eilege 
in  which  the  student  is  registered;  and  for  partici- 
pation bv  eligible  team  members  in  regularly^  .sched- 
uled intercollegiate  contests,  by  the  appropriate 
dean  on  the  recommendation  of  the  athletic  dircictor. 

YOU  Said  It:  New 
Age,  New  Religion 

Editor: 

Perhaps  too  much  has  already  been  written  on 
the  private  world  of  our  religious  beliefs,  but  in 
writing  this  I  do  not  claim  to  be  arbiter  elegantiar- 
um.  but  wish  to  present  argumentum  and  hominem 
Hu  Shih,  a  Chinese  philosopher. 

No!  All  these  beliefs  expressed  by  so  many 
Cftristian  fanatics  so  far  presented  in  this  paper^ 
only  further  shew  man's  continued  wish  to  believe 
in  these  hypnotic  religions  which  belong  to  ttte 
age  when  man  had  reached  senility  and  felt  him- 
self impotent  in  coping  with  the  forces  of  na- 
ture. 

Therefore,  he  gave  up  the  fight  in  despair  and, 
like  the  disappointed  fox  in  the  ancient  fable  who 
declared  the  grapes  sour  because  he  could  not  reach 
them,  began  to  console  himself  and  teach  the 
world  that  poverty  and  misery  are  something  to  be 
proud  of. 

From  this  it  was  only  a  step  to  the  idea  that 
life  itself  was  not  worth  living  and  that  the  only 
desirable  thing  was  the  blissful  existence  in  the 
world  beyond— "the  pie  in  the  sky."  And  when 
wisemen  (Ha!)  calmly  taught  these  ideas,  fanatics 
A-ent  further  and  practiced  self-denial,  sell-torture, 
and  even  suicide. 

It  took  over  1,000  years  for  a  portion  of  man- 
kind to  emerge  from  the  civilization  which  glori- 
.  fies  poverty  and  sanctifies  disease,  and  slowly 
build  up  a  civilization  which  glorifies  Ufa  end 
combats  poverty  as  a  crime.  Let  us  not  let  present 
day  fanaticism  lead  us  to  the  mistake  of  destroy- 
ing this  as  some  of  the  writers  en  this  subject 
have  advocated  in  the  past  weeks. 

As  we  look  around  today,  the  religions  of   the 
Middle   Ages  are   still   there,   the  churches  and   ca- 
thedrals  are  still   there,  the   monasteries  and   nun- 
neries  are   still   there.    Humanum    est    errare.   The 
change   in    thought   and    outlook     hasn't     radically 
changed   since   then,    even    with    the   realization   by 
.  man  that  he  is  master  oi  himself  and  his  destiny. 
I  do  not  advocate  a  deity  of  technology,  but  if 
wc  look  closely  we  can  see  ourselves  deifying  our- 
selves this  very  thing  . . . 

Thus  the  new  civilization  of  ti^  new  age  has 
given  to  men  a  new  religion,  the  religion  of  self- 
reliance  as  contrasted  with  the  all-too-popular  re- 
ligion of  defeatism  of  the  Middle  Ages.  When  we 
read  these  loyal  articles  wriTten  by  the  advocates 
of  this  defeatism  let  us  remember;  I  present  this 
a  fortiori,  than  those  ascetic  advocates — the  reason 
for  the  good  of  men. 

Julian  L.  Sessoms 


WEOMESOi 


Co 


COUNSELOf 

Counselors! 
second  seme^ 
which  will 
cording   to 
Bill     McLeai 
have    l>een 
names    and 
Grassman   in 
ment  office, 
ham   Memori] 
ber  is  4352. 
JOBS  AVAIL 

Students  iJ 
next  semestej 
make  applic^ 
Aid  office 
Most  jobs  avj 
dining  hall 
class  scheduj 
office.  A  C] 
ej«ary  to  rej 
each  semestej 

Proh 


Is  Hoi 

-' 

BySc 

Fletcher   A 

fessor  of  his 

one    of    fhe 

.. 

Phi  Alpha  "; 

society  in  hii 

is  a  charter 

of   the    foun 

Chapter    est 

versity  in   1 

Phi  Alpha 

the  number 

among  the  2 

stitute   the   i 

Honor    Soci( 

consists  of  s 

undergradua 

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i-    ! 

universities 

the    study   o 

Chapter  has 

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faculty  men 

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sponsored    i 

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versity    by 

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WEDNESDAY,  JANUARY  16,  19S7 


THE  DAILY  TAK  MBfiL 


FAGI  TMtM 


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Coveting  The  Uni versify  Campus 


COUNSELORS  NEEDED 

counselors  are  still  needed  for 
scoond  semester  men's  orientation 
which  will  be  held  Jan.  30-31.  ac- 
cording to  Orientation  Chairman 
Bill  McLean.  Those  interested 
have  been  asked  to  leave  their 
names  and  addresses  with  Mr^. 
Orassman  in  the  student  govern- 
ment office,  second  floor  of  Gra- 
ham Memorial.  The  phone  num- 
ber i.s  4352. 
JOBS  AVAILABLE 

Students  interested  in  working 
next  semester  have  been  asked  to 
make  applications  at  the  Student 
Aid  office  as  soon  as  possible. 
Mo  :  jobs  available  will  be  in  the 
dining  hall  due  to  a  change  in 
clas.-;  schedules,  according  to  the 
office.  A  "C"  average  will  be  nec- 
essary to  renew  the  scholarships 
each  semester. 


Professor  Here 
Is  Honored 
By  Society 

Fletcher  M.  Green.  Kenan  Pro- 
ie5.>or  of  history,  has  been  chosen 
one  of  Che  three  Councillors  of 
Phi  Alpha  Theta,  national  honor 
society  in  history.  Professor  Green 
IS  a  charter  member  and  was  one 
(it  the  founders  of  the  Delta  Pi 
Chapter  established  at  the  Uni- 
versity in   1954. 

Phi  Alpha  Theta  stands  first  in 
the  number  of  active  chapters 
among  the  27  societies  which  con- 
stitute the  Association  of  College 
Honor  Societies.  Its  membership 
consists  of  students,  graduate  and 
undergraduate,  and  faculty  mem- 
bers of  American  colleges  and 
universities  who  participate  in 
'.he  study  of  history.  Delta  Pi 
Chapter  has  60  members,  of  which 
30  are  undergraduates.  18  are 
graduate  students,  and  12  are 
laculty  members.  During  the  past 
>eme.ster  the  local  society  has 
sponsored  addresses  at  the  upi- 
versity  by  the  two  distinguished 
historians.  Bell  I.  Wiley  and  Sidney 
nev  Painter.  , i    ... 


CHRISTIAN   FELLOWSHIP 

The  Carolina  Christian  Fellow- 
ship will  meet  for  Bible  study  to- 
day at  7  p.m.  in  the  choir  rehears- 
al room  of  Hill  Hall.  The  passage 
for  study  will  be  the  first  chapter 
of  Colossians. 

WORK  PARTY  '  I 

The      Community      Church      of  j 
Chapel  Hill  is  calling  a  work  par- ' 
ty  on  the  property  on  Purefoy  Rd.  ; 
for  Saturday.  The  work  will  start  i 
around   10  a.m.  Anyone   planning  | 
to  come  ha^.'  been  asked  to   bring  j 
wieners    and    rolls    for    a    wiener  j 
roast;    there    will    be    a    fire    and 
plenty  coffee.  There  will  be  work , 
for  both  young  and   old.  Weather 
permitting,   everyone   should   have 
a  good  time,  according  to  an  an- 
nouncement. 

QUARTERLY   MEETING 

The  Carolina  Quarterly  Fiction 
Board  will  hold  its  final  meeting 
for  the  second  issue  today  at  4 
p.m.  in  the  Quarterly  office. 

WAA  ACTIVITIES 

WAA  basketball  'entries  for  the 
WAA  basketball  tournament  are 
due  in  the  W^omen's  Gym  Office 
by  4  p.m.  on  Thursday. 


Pennsylvania  Starts 
New  System  Of  Grants 

PHILADELPHIA,  Pa.— The  Uni- 
versity of  Pennsylvania  now  has  a 
group  of  freshman  scholarships 
that  will  be  renewable  after  grad- 
uation for  up  to  four  years  of 
graduate  or  professional  study. 

President  Gay  lord  0.  Harnwcll 
of  the  university  said  the  grants 
are  intended  "to  attract  unusually 
gifted  students  to  the  university 
and  encourage  them  to  enter  pro- 
fessional, scientific  or  academic 
careers  calling  for  advanced  edu- 
cation." 

Renewal  of  the  scholars-hips  for 
study  beyond  undergraduate  years 
is  depyendent  on  a  student's  hav- 
ing a  superior  acadepic  record 
and  qi^ajifying  for  admission  to 
on^  of,  the  universiiy's'  graduate 
,  or  professional  sci^ools. 


WAA  table  tennis  entries  are 
requested  to  check  the  bulletin 
board  in  the  Women's  Gym  for 
listing  of  matches. 

The    Women's    Bas'ketball    Club 
will  meet  in  the  Gym  on  Wedpes- 
j  day  at  4  p,m 

'  WUNC 

Today's  schedule  for  WUNC,  the 
University's  FM  radio  station: 

7:00 — ^Intermezzo 
7:15 — Messages  and  Men 
7:30 — Songs  of  France 
7:45— Curtain  Going  Up 
8:00 — ^Music  Program 
8:30 — Georgetown   University 
Radio  FOTTim 
9:00 — Debussy  the  Master 
10:00— News 

10:15 — ^Evening  Masterwork 
ll:30-^ign  Off 


■■r.i 


MARLON  BRANDO 


^^  ll^Mtn^l^n^ 


M  tiui  KAZAN  mwniw 
UUU.  MklKN  •  Itt  I.  CBBI  w  noui "»'  •- 


m^MAIKSAWT 


Lecturer  Says 
Old  Legends 
Often  Retold 

The  story  of  Orestes,  Iphigenia. 
and  Electra,  prominent  characters 
of  Greek  mythology,  has  been 
told  and  retold  dozens  of  times 
since  the  days  of  Homer,  said 
Prof.  Oskar  Seidlin  in  his  lecture. 
"The  Or^steia  Today,"  given  to 
Humanities  students  here. 

The  lecturer,  professor  of  Ger- 
man literature  at  Ohio  State  Uni- 
versity, dealt  with  three  contem- 
porary versions  of  the  old  legend 
by  the  American  poet  Robinson 
Jeffers,  the  French  dramatist-phi- 
losopher Jean-Paul  Satre,  and  the 
German  playwright  Gerhard 
Hauptmann. 

Professor  Seidlin  demonstrated 
how  the  old  story,  once  a  message 
of  man's  faith  and  hope,  has  in 
our  times  become  a  lament  at 
man's  despair  and  destruction. 
"Yet,  even  in  the  interpretation 
by  these  three  contemporary  au- 
thors." Seidlin  said,  "the  old 
myth  is  a  testimonial  to  the  di- 
vine order  of  the  Greek  god:  'Know 
Thyself." 

.<!  '  '.  '*i 


WORiD  NEWS  IN  BRIEF 


CAROLINA'S  NROTC  UNIT 

.  .  .to  march  at  Diauguration 


UNC  Midshipman  Unit 
In  Inaugural  Parade 


:»!<i 


^^^ 


«H  tfltttt  su«.  P;« »,  ■«  ymam  »uv. .,  iiiwi  whim  o.'.c<m  »i  b*  um 


% 


NOW 
PLAYING 


Carolina 


NOW  PLAYING 


!k.m 


IN  Cinemascope 


AND  IN  COLOR!         . 


STARRING 

FRANK  SINATRA-MAftLON  BRANDO 


'jt  \ri 


i 


DAILY    CROSSWORD 


ACROSS 

1  Currency 
(Port.) 

6  Avoid 
10.  Egg-shaped 
il.  Cavity 

12.  European 
country 

13.  Stunted 
animal 

14  Voided 
escutcheon 

15.  Subtle  ema. 
nations 

16.  Music  note 

17.  Yearn 

19.  Newspaper- 
man 

22.  Choking  bits 

26.  Undershot 
waterwheel 

2T.  Reigning 
beauty 

28  Allowance 
for  waste 

29  Incoherent 
uproar 

30.  Implement 

32.  River 
(Chin.) 

33.  Senate 
messengers 

36.  Final 

38.  Acro.ss 

39.  Chinese 
laborer 

41  Solitary 

42  Muisical 
instrument 

43.  Was  in  debt 

44.  Plump 

DOWN 

1  Hall 

2  Elliptical 

3  Not  any 

4  Muscular 
iwitch 

5.  Pi 


4.  Moved  the 
shoulders 
in  doubt 

7.  Unit  of  time 

8.  Forearm 
bone 

9.  Snares 
12.  Instigate 
15.  IndeHnlU 

article 

17.  African 
worm 

18.  Conjunction 

20.  Anger 

21.  Giggled 

23.  Entire 

24.  Strong, 
transparent 
paper 


25  De. 

acend- 

ent 

of 

Shem 
27  Chief 

deity 

( Babyl. ) 
29.  Fellow 

(slang) 
31.  Esker 

(geol.) 

33.  Game     > 
on 

horse< 
back 

34.  Affirm 

35.  Man's 
nickname 


y;ji3   rijji'i   ^^.T«»i 

.^Zlid    UST:    i-inMl 

nana   uaa.M   ■ 
■m30  ui5i^f.u\ 


Yettcrdsy'i  A««w«r 

26.  Theater  *t» 
37.  Exfilama- 

tion  of 

sorrow 

39.  Cry  of 
a  dove 

40.  Sphere 


^Prof^fleciffli' 
Orfg  I  nates  Live 
ThfsFfkkiy 

The  "Projept  Health"  series  of 
TV  shows,  sponsored  by  the  Uni- 
versity Division  of  Health  Affairs, 
will  originate  live  this  we^  from 
th«  School  of  Public  Health. 

''Sanitary  Scientists  For  To- 
morrow" will  be  the  title  of  the 
show^  which  will  be  seen  Friday 
at  9  p.m.  over  WUNC-TV,  Chan- 
nel 4. 

This  program  of  the  series  will 
deal  with  water  and  sewage,  milk 
and  food,  and  air  hygiene.  The 
hour-long  program  will  show  how 
students  are  trained  in  the  field 
of  sanitary  science  and  sanitary 
engineering. 

Television  views  also  will  see 
six  scenes  of  actual  research  pro- 
jects un(|erway  at  the  School  of 
Public  Health.  This  will  be. a  live 
program  from  the  School  of  Pub- 
lic Heal^  on  campus. 

The  "Project  Health"  series  of 
programs  are  seen  on  WIJ£<C-TV, 
Channel  4,  ^vevy  other  Friday 
night  during  the  academic  year. 

Each  prog|:am  is  presented  by 
some  unit  within  the  UNC  Divis- 
ion of  Health  Affairs.  The  Division 
of  Health  Affairs  is  composed  of 
MenwriHl  Hospital  and  the  Schools 
of  Nursing,  Pharmacy,  Public 
Health,  Dentistry  and  Medicine. 


A  detachment  of  100  midship- 
men from  the  UNC  NROTC  unit 
<^rill  march  with  other  armed 
forces  units  in  the  inauguMl  pa- 
rade for  President  Ei.serthower 
Monday.  '-f 

According  to  Capt.  Alex  «f  Pat- 
terson, commanding  officer  6l  the 
NROTC  unit  and  professor  of 
Naval  Sciences  here,  the  detach- 
ment of  NROTC  midshipmen  from 
UNC  will  stare  the  honor  fd  rep- 
resenting the  53  NROTC  units  in 
the  country  with  a  similar  group 
from  Pennsylvania  State  Univers- 
ity. 

This  will  be  the  .first  inaugural 
parade  in  which  NROTC  units 
have  participated. 

The  detachment  from  UNC  will 
be  under  the  command  of  Mid- 
shipman Capt.  Gordon  B.  Hall, 
midshipman  battalion  commander, 
of  Evanston.  HI. 

He  will  be  assi8tie4'|iy'tHt!.iof*i 
lowing  members  oil  I  th^g'^iuiUioh 
staff:  Executive  Officer.  Mid.ship- 
man  Commander  Don.  E.  Kentopp 
of  East  Orange,  N.  J.;  Operations 
Officer,  Midshipman  Lt.  Comman- 
der Luther  H.  Hodges  Jr.  of  Ra- 
leigh* and  Midshipman  Lt.  James 
K.   Bryant,   of  Elkin.      - 

The  midshipman  detachments 
will  march  with  some  12.000  per- 
sonnel of  active  and  reserve  units 
of  the  armed  forces,  as  welL.as  de- 
tachments of  cadets  and  midship- 
men from  the  three  service  aca- 
demics and  the  Coast  Guard  and 
Merchant  Marine   academies. 

In  addition  to  these  military 
units,  representatives  of  the  fed' 
era]  government,  the  states  and 
territories,  various  educational  in- 


stitutions   and    veterans    organiza- 
tions will   particiapte. 

All  units  will  parade  under  the 
command  of  Admiral  Arthur  W. 
Radford,  USN.  chairman  of  the 
Joint  Chiefs  of  Staff,  who  has 
been  named  grand  marshal!  by 
Eisenhower. 

It  has  been  indicated  the  pa- 
rade will  be  televised  by  all  major 
networks. 

The  UNC  detachment  will  be 
under  the  general  supervision  of 
Maj.  Lawrence  C.  Norton  of  Clay- 
ton, Ala.,  assisted  by  J.  W.  Scar- 
borough, chief  gunner's  mate,  of 
Marion,  La.  Both  are  members  of 
the  NROTC  staff  here. 

They  will  leave  for  Washington 
on  Sunday  and  will  travel  by  bus. 
The  group  will  return  to  Chapel 
Hill  the  following  evening  after 
the  ceremonies. 


.Officials  Concerned 
•iOver  Taking  Of  Books 

•'  Wilson  Library  officials  have  ex- 
pressed concern  over  students 
who  removo  books  and  magazines 
from  the  library  without  permiss- 
ion. 

Olau  C.  Cook.  Associate  Libra- 
rian, said  -that  classes  had  been 
hindered  "because  books  had  been 
taken  from  the  Re-serve  Reading 
Room.  "Also  periodicals  have  been 
taken  or  articles  clipped  from 
them,"    Cook    said. 

"The.se  practices  may  aid  an 
individual  student  momentarily. 
but  it  denies  many  other  students 
the  right  to  use  the  material." 
"Such  practices  arc  misdemeanors 
and  all  offenders  will  be  turned 
over  to  the  Honor  Council."  he 
said. 


Gravitation 
Lectures 
Here  Friday 


An  evening  of  public  lectures, 
in  which  current  problems  in  re- 
search on  gravitation  will  be  dis- 
cussed in  non-technical  terms, 
will  be  held  here  Friday  at  8  p.m. 

Three  distinguished  scientists 
will  endeavor  to  discuss  the  topic, 
"Gravitation  in  Physics  and  As- 
tronomy' in  terms  that  can  be 
understood  by  the  average  lay- 
man. The  lectures  will  be  hold  in 
UNC's  Carroll  Hall. 

The  scientists  are  Dr.  T.  Gold 
of  the  Royal  Greenwich  Observa- 
tory. England;  Professor  L.  Ros- 
enfeld  of  the  University  of  Man- 
chester, England;  and  Dr.  J.  A. 
Wheeler,  former  UNC  faculty 
member  but  now  of  Princeton 
University.  •    '        :  . 

. . ,  Dr,  Everett  .Palra^tier. .  chairman 
of  ,,the^  UN,C,Degt.  ^f  .Physics 
Vk'.hich  is  .sPjOn^oring.  the  ^.lectures 
sai^  evej;yo;ie .  inj.e|i;eg|;^^ ,  is  in- 
vited-. Thf;  ^e9,tfir!es  i^yij^c^/ne  dur- 
4ng  .  a  ,  ,>^ieeH-,loi^ , ,  §eftsi,op  ,  ,on  gen- 
ial r^^tiyjty,  Jor  ,ui{t\jfi^..]JNC  is 

host.  »ti»rn 


Harvard  Professor'"" 
To  Visit  Here  Friday 

Dr.  Donald  Augu.stine  professor 
and  head  of  the  Dept.  of  Parasito- 
logy- and  Comparative  Pathology 
of  the  Harvard  School  of  Medi- 
cine and  School  of  Public  Health. 
will  be  a  visitor  at  the  University 
School  of  Public  Health  Jan.  18- 
19.  While  here,  he  will  confer 
with  Dr.  John  Larsh.  head  of  the 
UNC  Dept.  of  Parasitology  of  the 
UNC  School  of  Public  Health,  and 
other  members  of  the  teaching 
and  research  faculty  of  the  school. 


•  CCJontinn^d  from  Page  1)         j 

get  UN  censui^e  of  Israel  for  slow 
withdrawal.  The  Israeli  cabinet 
has  been  under  strong  domestic 
pressure  not  to  yield  any  further 
ground. 

In    Jerusalem,    informants  *■  said  ; 
Eban    would    hand    Hammarskjold 
a  proposal  that  the  UN  guarantee  : 
freedom      for      Israeli      shipping  ' 
through  the  Red  Sea  Gulf  of  Aqaba  ' 

in  exchange  for  further  withdraw- ' 

I 
als. 

U.  S.  Ready  To  Begin        \ 
Disarmament  Program 

UNITED  NATIONS.  X.  Y.— (AP) 
— The  United  States  yesterday  was 
reported  ready  to  take  disarma- 
ment steps  without  waiting  for  set- 
tlement of  major  East-We.st  polit- 
ical differences. 

The  new  approach  departs  from 
a  previous  U.  S.  position  that  any 
reduction  of  armed  forces  must 
be  accompajiied  by  similar  reduc- 
tions of  Communist  Chinese  armed 
strength. 

But  there  is  no  change  in  the 
U.  S.  attitude  on  another  major 
question — effective  controls  and 
inspection. 

The  Soviet  Union  has  opposed 
most  control  proposals  on  grounds 
they  would  infringe  on  national 
sovereigntv. 


Library  Has  Exhibition 
On  Wilson  Centennial 

The  Wilson  Library  is  currently 
showing  a  four-case  exhibition  on 
Woodrow  Wilson  in  commemora- 
tion of  the  centennial  of  his  birth 
on  Dec.  28. 

The  exhibition  centers  around 
Wilson's  writings,  with  many  first 
editions  being  shown.  Also  in- 
cluded are  many  writings  about 
Wilson,  pictures,  and  a  copy  of  an 
address  he  made  at  UNC  \n  1909. 

Two  books  by  Arthur  S.  Link, 
a  Carolina  graduate  and  a  noted 
new  authority  on  Wilson,  are  in- 
cluded in  the  exhibition.  A  book 
edited  by  another  Carolina  grad- 
ute,  William  S.  Myers,  is  also 
shown. 


The  U.  S."  clarifications  came  as 
aew  U.  S.  proposal  to  bring  space 
Britain  announced .rSupport  for  a 
missiles  under  internationa!  con- 
trol. The  U.  S.  plan  was  contain- 
ed in  a  five-point  proposal  present- 
ed to  the  U.   iN.  yesterday.  t 

The  plan  is  understood  to  have 
been  decided  by  President  Eisen- 
hower and  cleared  with  all  perti- 
nent U.  S.  Governmi.it  agencies. 

Foreign  Pocket  Books 
Popular  With  Students 

Foreign  pocket  books,  which  the 
Bull's  Head  Bookshop  first  began 
offering  for  sale  last  summer, 
have  been  quite  popular  with  the 
students,  according  to  the  Shop's 
Director.    Mrs.    Jessica    Valentine. 

Mrs.  Valentine  received  the 
idea  of  offering  foreign  editions 
for  sale  at  a  convention  of  Amer- 
ican  booksellers    last    spring. 

"I  cautiously  introduced  the 
idea  at  the  Bull's  Head  by  offer- 
ing French  books  for  sale."  she 
said.  The  students  liked  the  idea, 
so  we  expanded  to  include  Ger- 
man editions  also." 

Most  of  the  books  are  by  con- 
temporary prize-winning  French 
and  German  authors.  Some  Amer- 
ican authors  are  also  included  in 
the  foreign  editions  such  as  Hem- 
ingway's   "L'Adieu    Aux    Armes." 


Can  You  Bind 
Books? 

If  you  own  one  of  the  book- 
binding kits  that  have  been  so 
popular,  we  have  the'  innards  of 
some  really  good  books  at  low 
prices,  suitable  for  binding.  Ask  to 
see  them. 

THE  INTIMATE 
BOOKSHOP 

205  East  Franklin  Street 
Open  Till  10  P.  M. 


l;, 


.Mil 

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Last  4  Days 

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,   20%-50%&More 


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^ 


STEVEKS-  SHEPHERD 


HAVE  A  REAL  CIGAREnE  \M(Xjmdi 


Graduale  AAusic  Student 
Will  Preient  Paper 

Miss  Caroline  Sites,  a  graduate 
music  student,  will  present  a 
pap«r  on  Benedetto  Marcello's 
"L'Estro  Poetico  -  armonico"  at 
the  monthly  meeting  of  the  South- 
eastern Chapter  of  the  American 
Musicological  Society  tonight  at 
8:00  p.m.  in  Hill  Hall. 

The    program   will   also   include 
a  report  -by  Dr.  Glenn  Haydon  on  \ 
the  national  meeting  of  the  AMS 
which  he  attended  recently. 

A  rare  set  of  Marcello's  psalms 
printed*  in  Venice  in  1724-26  and 
now  owned  by  the  Music  Depart- 
ment Library  served  as  basis  for 
Miss  Sites'  research.  Tape  record- 
ings of  Marcello's  psalms  will  be 
played  at  the  presentation. 


■g^^JJI^jM^Jblcc^ompanyTwiiiiton  Slim.  NorUi  Oirollo. 


Discover  the  difference  between 
""just  smoking"...and  Camels! 


Taste  the  difference!  No  fads.     Feel  the  difference!  The  ex- 


frills,  or  fancy  stuff  —  simply 
the  finest  taste  in  smoking. 
Camels  are  rich,  full-flavored, 
and  deeply  satisfying. 


elusive  Camel  blendusf  quality 
tobaccos  is  unequalled  for 
smooth  smoking.  Gamels  never 
let  you  down. 


Enjoy  the  difference!  More 
people  smoke  Camels,  year 
after  year,  than  any  other 
cigarette  of  any  kind.  Try 
Camels  —  they've  really  got  it! 


.'^V%vi^ 


»An  pouw 


TMI  DAILY  TAR  HtCL 


WEDNESDAY,  JANUARY  16,  1W7 


Tar  Heels  Victorious 


f Continued  from  Page  }) 

hit  only  20  of  55  field  goals  for 
u  36.3  percentage,  while  State  had 

19  out  of  46  for  41.3  per  cent. 

Ken  Clark,  an  unknown  sub  fill- 
ing hi  for  injured  John  Richter,  al- 
most polled  the  game  out  of  the 
fire  for  State  in  the  opening  mo- 
ments of  the  second  half  as  he  col- 
lected   13  of  the  Wolfpack's  first 

20  points  to  cut  Carolina's  lead 
to  four  points,  47i43.  Clark  was 
high  scorer  for  the  Pack  with  16. 

State  started  off  like  Carolina 
teams  of  old:  holding  the  ball. 
But  it  went  to  no  avail  as  the  Tar 
Heels  took  advantage  of  the  Pack 
possession  tactics  to  run  up  an  8-0 
lead  before  their  West  Raleigh 
cousins  could  break  the  ice  on  a 
Whitey  Bell  free  throw  with  4:16 
gone  in  the  opening  stanza. 

It  was  five  minutes  later  before 


Don't  Lef  Exams 
Buffalo  You! 

Brush  up  with  our  high-poiwer«d 
Outlin««  and  nick  off  an  A.  W«SI, 
a  B  maybe. 

THE  INTIMATE 
BOOKSHOP 
205  East  Franklin  Streef 
Open  Till  10  P.  M. 


the  Pack  could  scratch  from  the 
floor.  Cliff  Hafer  did  the  honors 
at  the  10:34  mark  with  short 
jump  shot  to  trim  the  Tar  Heel 
lead  to  10-4. 

Bell  pumped  in  another  quick 
jump  slfot  a  few  seconds  later, 
and  and  the  Pack  trailed  by  four, 
10-6.  Things  began  to  liven  up  a 
bit  as  the  two  teams  stepped  up 
the  scoring  pace.  But  when  half- 
time  came,  it  was  still  only  26-23 
in  favor  of  the  Tar  Heels. 

Carolina  began  to  slowly  open 
up  a  gap  in  the  second  half.  With 
Brennan  and  Rosenbluth  doing 
most  of  the  damage,  they  built  up 
a  47-36  lead,  their  biggest  •f  the 
night  to  that  point.  But  then  Clark 
hit  two  field  goals  and  a  free 
throw  and  Bob  Seitz  added  two 
free  throws  to  narro^v  the  lead 
to  four  points,  47-43. 

Things  stayed  tight  until  just 
aboirt  the  six-minute  mafk  when 
Rosenbluth  and  Brennan  started 
taking  advantage  of  a  bevy  of 
State  fouls.  The  last  few  minutes 
were  mere  formality  as  Carolina 
ran  up  their  final  26  point  margin 
over  the  frantic  Pack. 

A  death  blow  was  dealt  to  State's 
chances  when  Big  Bob  Seitz,  their 
only  big  man  in  the  absence  of 
Richter.  fouled -out  of  the  game. 
Tom  Hopper  and  Bell  both  follow- 
ed Seitz  to  the  sidelines  in  the 
next  few  ipinutes.  ^.  . 


MILTON'S  NINTH 
ANNIVERSARY  SALE 


t.w  r- 


''Baby,  it's  cold  outside/'  but  Milton  has  plenty 
of  hot  buys  inside.  You  can  now  purchase 
those  clothes  you've  been  drooling  at  this 
fall  at  greatly  reduced  prices. 

Large  group  Harris  tweed  sport  [ackets  reduced 
from  $45.00  to  $34.99  and  $29.99 

Large  group  suits  6^' impotti^d  ^fi^rits— tweeds, 
worsteds— reduced  from  $60.00  to  $49.99 

Lar,ge  group  4ni^pO|ireci|,shetU|ind>/|ackets  reduced 

...,fftOm;$4^4Q  t»  -$3)2^4^    .,  ;  ,^.,|..     lurif.qf.iri    c 

Grpup  Viy^l^spprt  shifts  by  Hathaway  reduced 

En|ir>»  iStock  ^ref »  apflj  sport  shirts,  including  our 

MEnglUh'f»bsl||i^,4|n>fiq!^fj|i(f»d|HtiM^,L«  M;qr<f«, 
3  of  our  $4.50  ivy  button-downs 

^for'$io.(to''" '^'' '"'  :  "^'^'^^'f-  '"  -^ ■'^■^^' 

r      3  of  our  $5.^0  EngtisW  tiibi '^or  $11^ 

Entire  stock  cordovan  and  other  shoes  reduced— 
some  half  price 

Group  belts,  values  to  $3.00,  including  wool 
challis  and  elastic  repps,  reduced  to  $.79 

Entire  stock  cr^w  nech  Shetland  sweaters  includ- 
ing our  famous  imports,  all  reduced 

Entire  stock  men's  Spagiioli  iipported  Italian 
sweaters,  V'^n^cks  and  long  sleeve  polo  styles, 
values  to  $25.00,  ff  criizy  prke  of  $9.99 

Entire  stock  ivy  wool  trousers  substantially,  re- 
duced-$l8.95  to^|15.99;  $16.95  to  $13.99? 
$13.95  to  $10.99 

Many  Other  Noteworthy  Reductions 
"^^  In  Our  Men's  Wear 


IN  OUR  LADY  MILTON  SHOP  YOU'LL  FIND 
AAANY  ITEMS  AT  GIVE-A-WAY  PRICES 

Entire  stock  Br#emar  and  Drumlanrig  cashmeres 
from  Scotland— take  your  choice  of  the  new 
rich  shades*-$7.00  off 

All  blazers  substantially  reduced 

Ail  skirts  further  reduced,  including  our  Glen 
Har  skirts  from  Scotland 

Large  group  of  Our  Lady  Hathaway,  ivy  shirts, 
and  other  shirts  drastically  reduced 


ALL  SALES  CASH  AND  FINAL- 
ALTERATIONS  EXTRA 

MUton'si 
Clatdtng  Cupboarb 


Jayhawks  Retain  Hold 
On  1st;  UNC  Second 


By  THE  ASSOCIATED  PRESS 

A  high  national  rating  doesn't 
necesijarily  bring  the  kiss  of  death 
to  a  college  basketball  team,  but  it 
often  brings  out  those  special  ef- 
forts and  defensive  setups  that 
spell    trouble. 

Top-ranked   Kansas,  fourth-rated 
j  Kentucky   and   No.    10   Vanderbilt 
can  show  proof. 

The  votes  had  barely  been 
;  counted  in  the  Associcated  Press 
poll  of  sports  wTitera'  and  broad- 
casters, giving  Kansas  the  No.  1 
spot  for  the  sixth  consecutive 
week  when  the  Iowa  State  Cy- 
clones came  up  with  a  way  of 
handcuffing  Wilt  Chamberlain  and 
handed  Kansas  its  first  defeat  in 
a  39-37.  hold-the-ball  tussle. 


Tulane  stopped  Kentucky  68-60 
and  Mississippi  State  conquered 
Vanderbilt  63-62  in  other  low-score 
Monday  games.  j 

The  sixth  AP  poll  of  the  season,  | 
taken  just  after  Kansas  had ' 
racked  up  its  12th  straight  victory, ! 
found  the  Jayhawks  on  top  by  a  , 
bigger  margin  than  the  previous 
week. 

Second  place  North  Carolina, ! 
whose  record  still  is  unsmirched  j 
after  14  games,  drew  30  first  and  i 
828    points.  j 

Drawing  49  of  a  possible  94  first  j 
place  votes,     Kansas    compiled    a 
total  of  923  points  on  the  basis  of 
10  for  each  first,  nine  for  second,  i 
etc.   Second-place   North   Carolina, 
and     North     Carolina     three     last  i 
week. 


"He  Weren't  Nuthin'  But  A  Houn'  Dog' 


Tar  Babies  Suffer  Second 
Loss  To  State  Frosh  74-89 


By  BILL  KSMG 

RALEIGH  —  State's  freshman 
basketball  team  continued  to  hold 
the  magic  number  over  the  Caro- 
linp  Irckb'^ist' niglk  aaithq  IfioU^ 
lets  puliediaWay  fcim  the)  Tar  Ba- 
bies midway  the  first  half  and 
went  on  to  an  89-74  victory  in 
Reynolds  CoUi&eum. 

The  lose  was  the  second  straight 
to  the  State  fro^  and  gave  the 
Tar  Babies  a  7-2  record 

i^e  WoU^ete  Ivaip^  «if  ,to  an 
^  lead  early  in  the  first  half  but 
the  Tar  Babiet  fought  back  to  tie 
the  score  dt  10-10  \dtb  16  minutes 


left  in  the  half.  The  contest  was 
nip  and  tuck  for  the  next  7  min- 
utes but  with  9-16  remaining,  State 
guard  hit  a  free  throw  to  put  State 
ahfBad  y}6-2&  and -the  Wplfp^ck 
ytarlHJfes  increase*!  that  leddMo 
49-4Y  at  intermission. 

«  .1  .      .  .  . 

.  In  the   second  half  the  Kaleigb 

club  continued  to  your  it  on  the 
outplayed  Talr  Babies.  The  WoU- 
lets  eould  do  no  wTong  and  the 
Tar  Babies  no  right,  and  only* 
once  ih  the  steond  half  did  the 
Ch  Ape!  Hi]  Hans  even  challenge 
State.  The'  Tar  Babies  pulled  to 
within  six  points  at  67-61  with  8:59 


■t-  !|  ■ 


UNC  Takes  Over  Lead 
In  ACC  Scoring  Race 


GREENSBORO— (AP)  —  North 
Carolina's  tall  Tar  Heels,  who 
put  their  unbeaten  record  on  the 
line  against  North  Carolina  State 
in  Raleigh  last  night,  took  over 
the  team  scoring  lead  in  the  At- 
lantic Coach  Conference  with 
their  102-point  splurge  against 
Virginia  Saturday  night.     .  • 

According  to  ACC  Service  Bu- 
reau figurei  thrpugh  games  of 
Saturday,  the  Tar  Heels  led  the 
league  with  an  average  of  83.7 
points  a  game,  and  Wake* Forest 
continues  to  lead  team  defense 
with  an  average  yield  of  only 
39.9  points  a  game. 

Both     have    close    challengers, 

South     Carolina    averaging    81.5 

points    offensively    and    Maryland 

60.7    defensively.    But    the    Tar 

Heels  have  a  big  lead  in  average 

margin   over     their     1*4     victims. 

North  Carolina  has  averaged  166 

points  more  than  its  foes,  and  no 

other  team  is  within  10  points  of 

that  average. 

North  Carolina  and  State  went 

{ into   last  night's  game  waging  a 

I  torrid  battle  for  field  ^oal  shoot- 

i  ing  honors.  TTie  Wolfpack.  though 

beaten  six  times    in     14     games, 


boasted  a  shooting  average  of  44.3 
per  cent,  with  the  Tar  Heels  right 
behind  at  43.4   per  cent. 

From  the  foul  line.  Wake  Forest 
is  the  master  with  an  accuracy 
mark  of  74.6  per  cent.  Clemson 
is  next  at  73.3  percent.  South 
Carolina  third  at  72.6  and  Mary- 
Ind  a  close  fourth  at  72.2. 

In  rebounding  South  Carolina 
leads  with  an  average  of  51.3  a 
game.  State  is  second  at  49.3.  fol- 
lowed by  Duke  at  48.9  and  North 
Carolina  at  48.1. 

Team  records  at  the  halfway  al- 
so show  the  ACC  teams  with  36 
victories  against  only  15  losses 
in  games  with  non-conference 
foes.  Wake  Forest  and  North  Car- 
olina lead  this  group  with  res- 
pective records  of  9-0  and  7-0 
against    non-league    opponents. 


remaining  in.  the  game,  but  the 
Wolflets  went  into  semi-freeze  and 
grabbed  two  quick  baskets  to  re- 
gain their  margin. 

Playing  before  an  almost  com- 
pletely partisan  crowd  in  the  colli- 
scum.  the  Tar  Babies  had  one  of 
thcik-  poorer  nights,  nothing  can 
be  taken  a^^•ay  from  the  hustling 
State  bunch,  though  much  the 
shorter,  the  Wolflets  grab  thej 
lion's  share  of  the  rebounds  and 
exhibited  some  sterling  floor  play. 
With  one  iriinute  left  in  the  garte 
o'erjone  of  the  starting  five  for 
the  *Tar  Babies  had  gone  out  vfa 
the  foul  route  except  Dick  Kepley 
and  by  that  time  the  Tar  Babies 
were  hopelessly  behind  87-74. 

High  scoring  honors  for  the 
night  went  to  Lee  Shaffer  who  col- 
lected 24  points.  Forward  Bob  Cole 
led  the  Wolflets  with  22  points 
but  was  followed  closely  by  Bob 
McCano  and  Haig  who  contributed 
20  points  each  to  the  winning 
cause. 


Harriei*  Banquet 

Th«r*  will  b«  a  barwiuct  h*Id 
at  6  o'clock  tetiighf  in  Lenoir 
Hall  for  mon>bor«  of  tho  fr««h- 
man  and  varsity  cross-country 
toonts  Thoro  is  •  list  of  oligiblo 
montbors  postod  in  the  track 
dressing  room. 


THE  BOX 

CAROLINA 

C 

F 

PF 

TP 

Shaffer,  f 

-10 

4 

5 

24 

Laresc,  f 

4 

2 

5 

10 

Kepley.  c  

7 

5 

4 

19 

Steppe,  g  — 

5 

2 

5 

12 

Grotty,  g  

3 

0 

5 

6 

Cnitchfleld,  f 

0 

0 

0 

0 

McRacken:,  f    — .-. 

..  0 

0 

0 

0 

Poole,  f  

.  0 

0 

1 

0 

Alnslie,  f  . 

0 

0 

0 

0 

Graham,  g    .       . 

1 

1 

1 

3 

Totals    '. 

30 

14 

26 

74 

.-.A*:     . 

stAte"*' 

G 

F 

PF 

TP 

Bortko,  f   _ 

3 

1 

4 

7 

Cole,  f .,  -^.. 

Gallagher,  f  — P- 

..  7 

8 

3 

22 

.,  4 

6 

4 

14 

Estis.  g  '.Ju. 

1 

0 

2 

2 

Haig,  g    -1.. 

6  , 

8 

1 

20 

McCann,  g 

9 

6 

1 

24 

Atkins,  f  

0 

0 

0 

0 

Troutman,  g 

0 

0 

0 

0 

Totaljf   . _... 

30 

29 

15 

89 

Carolina    

41 

31- 

-74 

•Stato    



49 

40-49 

UNC  Fish  Dunk  Sfate,  48-38 


Strategy  broke  the  heart  of 
N.  C.  State  yesterday  afternoon 
and  Carolina  took  its  sweetest  dual 
meet  victory  in  history,  48  to  38. 

According  to  expectations,  State 
held  a  five  point  lead  after  three 
events.  It  was  at  this  juncture  that 
Coach  Ralph  Casey  of  UNC  pulled 
his  surprise  move  by  placing  AU- 
American  Charlie  Krepp  in  the 
200-yard  butterfly  along  with  his 
ace  in  that  event.  "Mac"  Mahaffy. 
Opposing  these  two  was  State's 
AIl-American  and  collegiate  Cham- 
pion, Dick  Fadgen.  Krepp  set 
such  a  terrific  pace  for  the  first 
six  laps  that  he  wore  Fadgen  to 
•a  frazzle.  $tri^t  by  strolce.  Ma- 
hatiy  overtook  the  St^te  ace  in 
the  last  ten  yard^  to  take  second  i 


by  scant  inches.  The  eight  points 
garnered  by  the  Tar  Heels  in  this 
event  offset  every  effort  of  the 
Wolfpack  to  close  the  gap. 

The  two  squads  were  even  in 
first  places,  with  five  apiece,  it 
was  in  the  all  important  second 
place  department  that  Carolina 
proved  its  team  depth,  taking 
seven  dueces  to   State's  one. 

Coach  Casey  admitted  that  this 
was  the  turning  point  of  the  meet, 
but  he  emphasized  that  "it  was  a 
great,  all-around  team  effort  in 
each  event,  and  all  the  boys  rose 
to  the  occasion  with  fine  perform- 
ances." 

Carolina  will  meet  Maryland 
here.  Saturday,  January  I9th. 

The  Suifimarj': 

400  Medley   Relay:    Nash,    Mer- 


cer, Zickgraf.  Maness,  (C),  4:14.8; 
220  Freestyle:  1— Nauss,  (S),  2 — 
Rose,  (C).  3 — Schiffman.  (C), 
2:11.6;  50  Freestyle:  1 — Mclntyre, 
(S).  2— Roth,  (C).  3 — Robertson, 
(S),  23.5;  200  Butterfly:  1— Krepp, 
(C),  2— Mahaffy.  (C).  3 — Fadgen, 
(S),  2:15.9; 

Diving:  1— Meekins.  (C),  2— 
Mclnnis,  (C).  3— Marks,  (S);  100 
Freestjie:' 1— Mclntyre.  (S).  2— 
Rose.  (C).  3— Robertson.  (S),  51.4; 
200  Backstroke:  1— Krepp,  (C),  2— 
Nash,  (C),  3— James,  (S),  2:27.5; 
440  Freestyle:  1— Nauss,  (S). 
Schiffman.  ( C ) .  3i— Ruppenthal, 
(S),  4:55.1:  200  BreastBtroke:  1— 
Fadgen,  (S),  2— Mercer,  (C).  3— 
Clime,  (S).  2:31.1;  400  Freestyle 
Relay:  Roberttton.  Nauiis.  Mcln- 
t.vre.   Fadgen    (S).  3:45.3. 


SALS 


Imported   Flannel, 
Tweed,  and  Shetland 

■  SUITS  -■.^4^.::j^ 
weFe  up  to  now" 

$75  $48.75 


From  our  regular  stock 

SPORT  COATS 

Shetlands,  Rumson 

Tweeds,  and 

Harris  Tweeds 

were  now 

$45  $34.95 

$55  $44.95 


Entire  Stock 
^L  WOOL  SLACKS 
R€DUGiO-$3^. 

yi/.f^;- per  pair-' 
(off  regular  price) 


TOP  COATS 

Tweeds  and 
Shetlands 
were  now 

1  $65  to  $75  $48.75 


THESE  AND  MANY  OTHER  STARTLING 
M^h:  reductions  AJii.i'i'**^^        - 


B  O  B  and  M  O  N  K 
of 

TOWN  & 
CAMPUS 

SALUTE 
Athlete  Of  The  Week 


Julian* 


LENNIE    ROSENBLUTH 

Lennie  Rosenbluth  has  been 
named  Athlete  of  the  Week  for 
his  play  against  Clemson  and 
Virginia  last  «»ekend  .^  n  d 
«gainst  State  last  night.  Rosey 
hit  34  points  in  the  Clemson 
game,  30  in  the  Virginia  tilt  and 
29  last  night  against  th«  Wolf- 

^^-  V  •   '--^'^y 

We  want  him  to  drop  bv 
TOWN  &  CAMPUS  and  picJt  out 
a  shirt  t«  his  liking — compli- 
ments of  the  house. 

We  want  the  old  and  young 
;>like  of  Chapel  Hill  to  m«k« 
TOWN  A  CAMPUS  their  head 
quarters  for  th*  finest  in  men's 
clothing.   Drop   in    toda> 

TOWN  & 
CAMPUS 


lUtU^ii*, 


A  Caftipus-to-Career  Case  ■Hi^tpry./- j^,<    ;i<      i 


k^ 


'■J>.   V        Claire  Hruiha  {left)  discusses  progress  of  a  new  telephone  building  uith  the  contractor. 


v', 


\h 


What's  a  civil  engineer's  job 
in  the  telephone  company? 


Claire  Hruska  graduated  in  lO.i.'^  from 
the  University  of  \^  a>hington  whh  a  B.S. 
in  ('ivil  Knpini'erinjr.  Toila\  lie's  uith 
The  Pacific  'I'l'lephoiie  and  Telegraph 
Conipaii). 

"1  snpervi!?e  construction  at  every 
stage."  Claire  says.  "Every  teiejdione 
building  is  designed  around  the  equip- 
ment that  will  be  in  it.  When  a  building 
is  needed.  I  work  clo?ely  with  the  archi- 
tect to  make  sure  his  plans  fit  the  needs. 
Then  I  check  the  contractors'  bids,  When 
the  contract  is  let,  it's  ray  responsibilit> 


to  see  that  the  builder  sticks  to  the  plans 
in  (lelail. 

■■Right  nou  I'm  handling  the  construc- 
lioii  of  se\tMal  telephone  p\challge^.  a 
large  olfice  bnikliiig  in  downtown  Seattle, 
and  additions  to  other  buildings.  It's 
salisfx  ing  work,  because  I'm  on  my  own  a 
lot.  and  getting  the  jobs  done  is  up  to  me. 

'■pve  got  a  career  that  offers  big  as- 
signments and  responsibilities,  and  real 
opportunities  to  get  ahead  in  a  business 
that's  growing  rapidly.  That's  what  I 
was  Ipoking  for." 


1 


Ky, 


•I  ■-. . 
I    -^ 


ft 
« 

.1 

i  > 

I 


i 
4*- 


Claire  Hruska  is  typical  of  the  many  young  men 
who  are  finding  rewarding  careers  in  the  Bell  Tele- 
phone  System.  For  more  Information  on  career 
opportunities  in  the  Bell  Telephone  Companies. 
Bell  Telephone  Laboratories.  \^e8tern  Eleotriq  and 
Sandia   Corporation,   see   your   placement   officer. 


m 


T«f*phon» 
System 


tm 


WEATHER 

Considtrable  cloudinass  And 
cold.  Expected  high  39.  See  weath- 
er stories  this  page  and  p«ge  4. 


^.W.C.  Library 

Serials  Dspt. 
Ch 


Chan^yiilLfJI.    C.  ^       -^  ^ 

mbcDavty 


VOL.  LVII  NO.  85 


Complete  {Jf)  V/trt  Service 


afar  Heel 


BLAME 

It's  en  the  cowards.  See  editorial 
series,  page  2. 


CHAPEL   HILL,  NORTH  CAROLINA.  THURSDAY,  JANUARY   17,   1957 

..    u 


Offices   in   Graham'  Memorial 


SIX   PAGES  THIS  ISSUE 


Marriage  Professor  j  neVf 
To  Give  Resignation  jhricf 


By  FRED  POWLEDGE 

Dr.  Reuben  Hill,  widely-known 
sni-Jologist.  is  Planning  to  leave  tl;c 
Ur^ixers'ty. 

Be  will  resign  to  join  the  sociology 
^•al'f  at  the  University  of  Minne- 
-.01  a. 

^>>ws  of  Dr.  Hill's  forthcomhij^ 
res-gnation  came  from  several  high- 
ly informed  sources  here.  The  re- 
-istnatlon  has  not  yet  landed  on  of- 
firi.-l  desks. 

X>r.  HiJl  could  not  be  reached 
toe  comment  Wednesday. 

It  was  understood  that  the  reason 
for  Dr.  Hill's  resignation  was  fin- 
hni-es.  The  University  of  Minnesota 
has  offered  him  far  more  than  he 
rould  make  here,  the  sources  said. 
Dr.  Hill  is  a  professor  of  sociology 
snd  research  professor  in  the  lu- 
si'tuie  Uv  Reasearch  in  Social  ♦ 
£-ien<e.  •  I 

Ills  responsibilities  include  teach- 
Jag  and  research  in  marriage  and 
the  familv.  He  supcivises  the  Uni- 
VersJiy's  marriage  counseling  ser- 
tite  and  direct  the  graduate  train- 
in?  .orogrrm  lor  students  of  the 
family.  '  ■ 

*  Ks  lt£s  taught  marriage  and  allied  [ 
Jou.ses  at  ihe  University  of  Wiscon- 
sin. University  of  South  Dak;)ta  and  \ 
Iowa   Slate  College. 

He  \\a>  led  family  life  institutes 
i'l  -C'. erjl  states,  and  has  paitici- 
p.nted  as  consultant  and  director  of 
,^vo:k5hops  for  teachers,  research- 
trs  and  other  leaders  in  family  life 
in  io.va.  Virginia,  We.st  Virginia.  II- 
Jiiiois.  Utah  and  North  Carolina.  He 
hajs  served  a.s  po-director  of  the 
i^'ioscs  Confe  ence  on  marriage 
iMii  the  frm.i.,  which  brinsjs  mai- 
liage  eduLBiors  and  coiniselors  to- 
Svibcr  aauublly  for  advanced  sem- 
iuiirs. 

Dr.  Hili  is  co-author  of  Marriage 
••ud  lire  Fami.'y.  The^jtmUy.  Mar- 
li.  ate  aitd  PareuCtcoa.'  ami  a  beat- 
-  .!tT.  When  You  Marrj .  He  is  -eu- 
tlior  o:  Families  Untier  Stress  and 
Tin?  Family.  .\  Dynamic  Interpre- 
ti-tion. 

'..;    a<ldit.on    to    articles    And    re- 


DR.   REUBEN  HILL 

. .  leaving  Univer^ty 


Winter 
Has  Hold 
On  State 

By  THE  ASSOCIATED  PRESS 

Winter  weather  continues  to  hold 
a  tight  grip  on   North  Carolina. 

Snow  flurries  were  expected  in 
most  of  the  state  last  night  and 
in  the  mouraains  today.  Along 
with  thi'.  the  outlok  was  for  con- 
siderable cU>udines.-  with  lerapera- 
turcs  in  many  cases  e-Hceeding  last 
hight\s  low. 

Sun  and  warmer  weattter  yes- 
terday   melted    most    of   the    ice 
and   sleet    which   blanketed    the 
state   Tuesday    night,   disrupting 
Tar  Heel  transportation  facifities 
and  giving  thousands  of  school 
childrmn  «  holiday. 
Tjbe    Hisrinvay    Patrol    reported 
foitr  hi&PSaiy  de»«iis  cau.«d  by  the 
udusual     weather    conditions    .audi 
many  more  minor  wrecks  than  us-l 
'  ual.  I 

Thc;Ralcigh-Durham  and  Greens- 
.    .  -  i  boro-High     Point     airports,    whose 

(^ze   ALA^AOg   PROF,  pQgg  Sy  icy  runways  made  landings  impos- 
~~  ;  siblc,    were    opened    for   business 

J  again  around  noon  Wednesday. 
!      The    1.800   paratroopers   of    the 
101st  Airborne  Division  who  were 


Solon  Asks  Curb 

WASHINGTON— J:Pi— Rep.  Burle- 
son (D-Tex)  introduced  yesterday  a 
bill  to  report  many  of  the  Hungari- 
an refugees  who  have  been  admit- 
ted to  this  country. 

This  measure  also  would  curb 
further  entry  of  Hungarian  refu- 
gees, would  prohibit  any  special 
stilus  itpr  those  now  here,  and 
would  provide  for  a  "full  and  com- 
plete" congrec;sional  inquiry  into 
the  HuT>garian  refugee  situation. 

President  Eisenhower  has  re- 
commended legislation  to  give  the 
Hungarian  refugees  a  status  allow- 
ing them  to  stay  in  the  U.S.  perm- 
anently. He  also  has  said  he  will 
send  Congress  a  special  message 
concerning  the  refugee  situation. 
It  is  expected  to  ask  that  more  ref- 
ugees be  admitted. 

Burleson  said  the  Hungarians  de 
serving  "a  hero's  applause"  are 
"those  who  remain  in  Hungary 
and  fight  their  Russian  oppressors" 
— not  thos«  who  flee. 

A  .House  immigration  subcom- 
mittee specialist  .^aid  the  Burleson 
Bill  would  provide  for  returning 
e.xtra-quota  refugees  here  to  the 
countrj  from  which  they  came  — 
mostly  to  Austria,  in  the  case  of 
the  Hungarians. 

The  bill  would  have  the  depor- 
tations candied  out  'at  the  earliest 
date  on  which  the  Attorney  Gener- 
al finds  thai  the  emergency  rea 
sons  for  their  temporary  admis.sion 
to  the  U.  S.  no  longer  exists." 

Tito  Visit  Argu«d 

WASHINGTON  —  *.  _  Rep.   0' 
J  Konski  (R.Wis)  told  the  House  yes 
'  torday  he  would  resign  from  Con- 
1  gress   if   President  Tito  of   Yugo- 
slavia comes  to  the  U.  S.  as  an  of- 
ficial guest. 

'If  the  invitation  is  extended  and 
if    he    comes    to    tfiis    cowntrj," 
»n^    "I   Mm    resigning 
the   air 


Freezing  Weather  To  Continue 

^^^      i  .  0  

During  Next  Two-Three  Days 


Bus,  Plane  Services 
Not  Badly  Affected 

By  CLARKE  JONES 

I  he    u iiitry    ueatlici    cotirlitions    experienced    Tuesday 

and  Wedne.sdav  in  this  area — and  throiiohoiit  the  Caiolinas 

— aie  expected  to  contimic  for  the  next  two  or  three  dav.s. 

The    roreca.st    lor   Chapel    Hill    and    vicinity    was   continued 

(old  and  cloudy  at   lea.st   untih  the  weekend. 

Snow  flurries  were  predicted  in  this  area  lor  Wedttesdav 
*  ♦  :iight.    Weathermen    anticipated    no 

trouble,   however. 


The  Sleep  Of  The  Just 


Carolina  students  could  snooze  until  10  a.m.  yesterday  with  no  fear  of  over-cutting.  But  not  all  of 
them  were  this  happy — some  ventured  into  the  cold  before  they  found  out  that  classes  had  been  sus- 
pended for  the  day  due  to  icy  walks  and  roads. 


jcy  Sheets 
On  Streets 
---  Trouble 


By  NEIL  BASS 


QUESTIONS  AND  ANSWERS: 


Cager  Coach  Says  Winning  Team 
Is   Like   'All  Money   In   World' 


By  BILL   KING 


th(>n    you're    more    rc- 


O'Kotuki 

from   Uda  bckly-  'the  '^h^r 


See    WORLD    NtTW*    Page 


Ihe    first; 
)a.\cd. 

Q.    This    is    a    hot    one    coach. 

There  has  been  some  speculation 

abeut  the  Tar  HeeU  going  wnde- 

WaoUi^n    Qsrm.    As..«w»l    ttl9U«h^,i^„^,.,^    WoulH   yo«   eare  to  »Jv« 

any    verbal    thought    to    the    mat- 


The   Tar   Heel    ba.skctbaU   coach, 
was  about  ready  to  leave  for  New 
YcMrk  when  called   at  his-  office  in 


time  they  are  seniors  they  should 
be  very  good. 

Q.   What  team   has    given   you 


(see    CAQj^n  CO^CH, 


PCJ<K'     3) 


Winning  Film 
Flays  At  8 
In  Carroll  Hall 


(    See    WI.XTElt    Page    4 


I  twill 


^PO  Men 
Will  Sell    ^ 
Used  Books 


"Arsenic    and    Old  .Lat;c."    tho 
Hast    of    Ihia    semester's    Forcii^n 
l-ilm    Series,    will    be    shown    to- 
n;;;hl  at  3  in  Ca:roll   Hall. 

The   comedy  tells    the    s'.ory    of 

Mo  o;'l  uiuics  v\iio  ieel  it  is  their 

duty  to  rid  tlic  world  of  unnecess- 

r 

«ry    inhabitants    by    means    of    a 


SMU  Students  Shiver 
As  Boilers  Give  Out 

D.\LL.\S—/P»— Southern  Methodist 
University  students  shivered  in 
.•lass  ooms  after  two  of  the  school's 
■jjile.s  failed  in  23-degrcc  weather. 

.^  third  boiler  h(>ated  dormitories. 
Son^e  professors  dismissed  classes 
>ut  most  of  them  donned  coats  an^ 


"bottle  of  Elderberry  wine  genero-    carmuffs  and  carried  on. 


u-:ly   .spiked   with    arsenic    to   help 
the   aging. 

In  th;s  prizcwinning  film  two  of 
the  B:'oad\»ay  original  stars.  Boris 
Karloff  and  Josephine  Hull,  repeal 
thoir  performances.  In  addition 
to  these  stars.  Cary  Grant  and 
Pettcr  Lorr2  are  also  featured. 
Next  .«iem:ster'.s  Foreign  Film 
Scries  is  to  be  announced  .so;n. 


The  building  .superintendent. 
S;anlcy  Patterson,  said  repairs 
would  be  completed  late  yesterday. 

GM'S  SLATE 

Student  Council,  6-11  p.m. 
Grail  Room;  UP  Caucus,  6-7:30 
p.m.,  Roland  Parlcer  1  A  2;  IDC 
Court,  7-9:30,  Council    Room. 


Alpha  Phi  Omega,  the  National 
Service  Fraternity,  has  announced 
that  it  will  sell  uMd  text  books 
as  a  non-prcfit  sevvi^e  to  U.VC  stu- 
dents. 

Books  may  be  brought  to  the 
.New  East  Anne.\  (housing  office), 
the  student's  own  price  s:.'t.  and 
the  books  will  be  sold.  Ih  case  the 
books  are  not  sold,  the  student 
can  pick  them  up.  If  the  books 
are  sold,  the  student  will  be  noti- 
fied to  pick  up  hif  money. 

According  to  AJpl^a  Phi  Omega, 
this  is  the  opportunjiy  for  students 
to  sell  books  at  th«!  highest  price 
and  to  buy  books  at  the  lowest 
price. 

The  book  cxchaiMIe  will  be  ope- 
rated January  31.  Felwruary  1.  2. 
4.  and  5  between  ^ir.)h.  and  4:30 
p.m.  -    ' 


the  coKgcnial  Frank  .McCIuire  haii 
lime  to  answer  a  few  question.^ 
concerning  his  basketball  team  bf- 
fore  he  left  for  a  few  days  in  the 
big  city. 

He  gave  concise  answers  to 
questions  put  to  him  over  the 
phone.  The  conversation  went 
something  as  follows: 

Q.  Coach,  now  that  Kansas  has 
been  knocked  from  the  ranks  of 
the  unbeaten  leavina  your 
team  with  the  only  unbeaten 
record  among  major  colleges, 
you're  an  almost  certainty  to 
move  into  first  place  in  the  na- 
tional polls.  Do  you  feel  that  ffiis 
is  a  dubious  distinction  psychol- 
ogically speaking? 

A.  Psychologically  speaking,  it's 
like  the  fellow  having  all  the 
money  in  the  world;  everybody 
wants  to  take  it  away  from  him. 
In  biiskctball  the  same  is  true. 
Everybody  will  naturally  be  shoot- 
ing to  knock  us  off 

0.  Now  that  the  Tar  Heels 
have  gained  national  prestige, 
do  you  think  that  your  boys  will 
be   pressing? 


ter? 

A.  1  think  that  we  could  lose  as 
many  as  three  in  a  row  becau.vc 
we're  in  a  very  tough  conference. 
By  no  stretch  of  Ihe  imagination 
do  I  expect   to  go   undefeated. 

Q.  Speaking  specirica.iy  of  the 
Big   Four,   we   know   that   all    of 
the    teams    can    be    tough    en    a 
given  night.  Which  of  the  other 
three  teams  do  you  fear  most? 
A.  1  feel  the  same  about  all  of 
Ihehi.  I  tear  one  as  much  as  I  do 
the    other.    The    nice    thing    about 
this  game  of  basketball  is  thai  in 
an  area  like  tlie  Big  Four  all  th? 
kids   get   to  know   each   other   and 
are  friendly,  but  very  compelilix  e. 
They  like  to  beat  each  other,  and 
they  can  all  be  real  rugged  at  any 
time  csptcialiy  against  one  anoth- 
er. II  s  hard  to  narrow  it  down  to 
the  Big  Four  though,  because  the 
whole  conference  is   good.  They'll 
all  be  hard  to  beat. 

Q.    Do    you    think    that    your 
club    has    matured    a    great    deal 
since  the  season   began? 
A.  I  definitely  do.  The  boys  are 


A.   Yes.   they'll    l>c   prossins   as    a  little  ahead  of  my  expcclalions- 


long  as  they're  winning.  1  believe 
it's  better  to  lose  a  few  games  al 


they've  really  been  hustling.  Ve're 
•improving  as  years  go  by. 'By  the 


Jim  Bur roy^gj^]^ '  Hbmds 
Delta  Sigma  Pi  Frat 

In  recent  elections  of  the  Al 
pha  Lambda  Chapter  of  Delta' Si^- 
ma  Pi.  Internationa!  professional 
business  fraternity,  Jim  Burroughs 
of  Reldsvllle  was  elected  prejildenl 
for  the  coming  year  i 

Jim  High  of  "WhiteviHe  was 
elected  first  vice-president  arvd 
Joe  Kaminski  of  Norco,  Calif.,  was 
elected   second   vice-president.  ' 

Other  officers  are:  Leonard 
Long  of  PVanklin,  secretary;  Fred 
Daniels  of  Oxford,  treasurer;  Lloyd 
Smith  of  Shelby,  historian:  and 
Norman  Cogins  of  Kannapolis. 
chancellor.  I 

IN  THE  INFIRMARY       I 

Students  in  the  infirmary  yes- 
terday included:  i 

Misses  Gwendolyn  Lemly, 
Lucy  Luffman,  Geraidine  York, 
Mary  Curtiss,  Sara  Hudson,  An- 
na Geddie,  Donna  Anderson,  and 
Robert  Lewis,  Sheldon  Turner, 
Leonard  Knox,  Warwick  Porter, 
James  Pierce,  Charles  Locklin, 
Robert  Babb,  John  Alley,  Mi- 
chael Martin,  George  Irvin  and 
Allen  Bickerstaff. 


.\  low  of  18  was  predicted  for 
Wednesday  night.  Today's  high  will 
be  in  the  30's  . 

The    icy    conditions    which    gave 
University  students  a  day  off  from 
classe.s  Wednesda.^  apparently  didn't 
For   the    weather   outlook   for 

the  rest  of  the  state  and  nation 
see  page  4. 
;:!.ect  bus  and  airplane  traasporta- 
tlon  as  much  as  would  be  expected. 

The  bus  station  in  Chapel  Hil! 
veijoited  schedules  were  running 
ri,i;ht  on  time. 

There  were  some  delays — mostly 
from  the  north— in  plane  flights  at 
the  Raleigh-Durham  .Mrport.  The 
majority  of  flights  from  the  South 
were  on  time. 
TUESDAY  STORM 

The  storm  Tuesday  niglit  was  the 
result  of  two  air  masses — one  from 
the  north  and  one  from  the  south 
—which  collided. 

\  movement  of  .\rctlc  air  coming 
Irom  the  north  was  met  by  a  moist 
air  moving  up  from  the  lower  areas 
of  Louisiana  and  .Mabaina. 
j      .\11  schools  in  the  Chapel  Hill  area 
"were  closed  Wednesday  due  to  the 
!  icy   road  conditioiis. 
';      Chancellor   Robert    B.   'House    an- 
I  Roimced  early   Wednesday  morning 
off'      Airport      Road  i  '''as.ses     would    not    be    iiejd    in    the 
fUm   were   no   i„-  ,  L'nh'ersfty   WetUKsday. 


All  is  not  frozen  beauty  when  old 
man  winter  spouts  flurries  of  snow 
and  ice  over  the  countryside,  trans- 
forming it  into  a  winter  wonder- 
land. 

Students  with  battered  cars  and 
inangled  limbs  will  atte-st  to  this 
brutal  fact. 

Yet  there  have  been  "surprLsing-  ^ 
ly    few"    persons    admitted    to    the  ! 
University   Infirmary,   according   to 
Uni\ersity    Physician    Dr.    Edward  j 
Hedgpeth.  } 

Two  students,  one  with  a  fractur- 
ed ankle  and  one  with  a  sprained 
ankle,  .compose  the  current  crop  of 
casulties  temporarily  residing  in 
the  Infirmary. 
VICTIMS 

.Vnwng  students  victimized  by  ley 
{  sheets  eovecin^  tlie  nwds  .yiere^  L<es- 
I  li^  Scott  «nd  Herman  Schultz  whose 
car      catreened 
TiKfsday   nlgKt 
juries  involved,  a  spoke.«man  said. 

Four,  other  accidents  involving 
^ludcnts  were  investigated  b.v  Of- 
luers  Charles  Byrd  and  Herman 
jStone.     . 

".\11  accidents  reported  could  have 
been  avoided  it  road  conditions,  ice  | 
and  snow  sheets,  weren't  so  hazard-  I 
ous."   Ofiicer  Byrd  said. 

.Specific  accidents  are  listed  be- 
lo\\. 

\   car  ownied   by  William    R.    Bal- 
ew.    Kaopa    Sigma    from    Hickory,  \ 
was   struck    bv   a    truck   as   it    sat  i 
i>arked  on  Cameron  Ave.   Damages 
te  Ballows  auto  amounted  to  $100. 

\  car  driven  by  James  G.  Hill. 
Sigma  .\lpha  Epsilon  from  Smith- 
field  skidded  on  Raleigh  Si.  la.st 
')i:^ht  and  struck  a  .'>arked  car. 
Homages  to  Hill's  1956  Dodge 
;i mounted  to  appix)ximately  $42.i.  of- 
fice r.s   reported. 

A  1M8  Dodge  driven  b>  Carl  L. 
B.own  of  Charlotte  careened  into 
■he  back  of  a  1956  Chevrolet  being 
driven  b\  Mrs.^  .Mildred  Moneyham. 
'.OLal  high  school  principal,  on 
Cameron  \\c.  last  night. 

Damages     amounted     to     roughly 


(See   ICY   SHEETS   Ptge   3i 


Ice,  Snow 
Make  For  '' 
Big  Holiday 

By    EDITH    MACKINNON 

Carolina  students  took  advantage 
of  their  day  of  no  classes  yester- 
i  day,  and  not  all  of  the  liesure  time 
I  was    spent  in   pre-exam    study. 
i      Following  an  early  morning  an- 
'  n  uncement     by    Chancellor    Rol>- 
ert     House    that     the     University 
i  would  .suspend  all  cla.sses  for  the 
I  day   as   q   result   of    bad   weather, 
word   spread  in  a   hurry   through- 
out the  campus  and  the   town  of 
I  Chapel  Hill. 

Some  heard  the  news   by  radio 
broadcasts,  breathed  a  sigh  ^f  liap- 
I  py  relief  and  turned  back  over  for 
I  i  few  more  winks.  Others  weren't 
so  f(  rl^inatc  —  quite  a  number  of 
j  .slecp.v-eyed  people  slid  their  waj 
'See  IC;-:  .\XD  SNOW  Page  3' 


Icy  Weather  Proves  To  Be  Photographer's  Holiday 


not  ahcays 


STALAGMITES 

,,»he-re  today,  drip  tom-orroic 


Photos    by    Sorman    Kanlur 


STILL    LIFE 

. .  ti/picul 


phystca,   lUiyOiic 


fc 


I 


#40i  TWO 


THE  C^li-Y  TAR  HEEL 


THURSDAY,  JANUARY  17,  1t$7 


THURi 


rcJ 

t(^8  a] 
>urpris 

ThoJ 
linger 

m   Lei 

George 
noir 
break f  I 
linle  ll 
of  busi! 
ably  nd 

For 
of  app| 
offcrc 

and   qi{ 
who  tc 
size  cr| 
the   bu 
hcurs 
week. 

Bui 
deal  oJ 
co\ere«| 
cd  Chs 
derlan^ 
•f  the 
pal  CI 
frozen 
um  par 
a  skiti^ 
py   sm| 
fate. 

Grah 
lirtle  H 
(hose 
ih.c  col 
lii-fi 
I|arti:(» 
Ia^;t  y( 
will 
ductio^ 
piano. 


^Qd|$f  h  C^lkge  Athletics:  2 
Iducational  Cowards'  Fault 

The  pt-t»iilc'  \\1k>  art*  lo  b1aiu<  for  the  piesent  conditkni  of  colle5»t' 
athleiit.s  are  ciiher  ii»iioram  of  tlieir  bUiinc.  proud  of  it.  hsjpDy^a»»'^  Hipr 
p?nf  ar>out  it  «lr  R>a  Vveak  to  t  hani^e  it.  \ 

Thev  are  ilie  general  public  .the  sportswriters  of  the  nation's  press, 
the  toathes  a|id  the  plaver.>  uid  the  eclu<  aiimial  institutions  that  tolera'te, 
«ven  add  to.  if  false,  golden  ha/e  buih  around  big-time  aihletits— that 
allow  the  oihereleniepts  ot  blame  to  push  atltJetits  o(it~ol  their  proper 


'EVERYBODrS  TEST  TUBE' 


A  Study  /n  Desegregation. 
Clinton,  Tenn,,  And  John  Kasper 


perspeitixt.    When    that    happens, 
^duration    iiieviiably   snffeis. 
It  is  suf fei  iii^  nt)\v .    ^ 


I  he  j>eiura1  [>ubli( .  s|K>rts\vritefs 
iind  pJavtis  taut  Ik-  blamed  for 
eveivihhi«>.  T|»ev.aie  tlie  result, 
not  the  (ause.  of  thr  f.ilse.  :i»oldc« 
ha/e.  Thev  aiT  enteiinj;  a  siuia- 
tion  that  h.is  beVii  buih  alreu'dv  foi 
them. 

Ill  the  saiue  ihanHet,  we  < amiot 
rondennt  the  Kiaches  h>r  taking; 
A'h^t  is  ottered  them.  A  (oath 
vould  lose  his  sell-respe(t  and  his 
job  il  he  were  offered  a  job' run - 
nin<»  a  in<»deni  unixersitv  athletics 
nt^rhtiie  and  turned  it  down,  on 
the  i;roiuids  that  it  was  oNer-pio- 
f*ssionali/e(i. 

He  would  be  booed  from  the 
sidelines.  Hf  \if'buld  be  lau'^liesj.  91 
bv  other  tDathes.  And  he  would 
be  without  a  contiait. 

Al|    these  .  cjemi'^^s.  .  howe\e^^— 
the  piiblit .  press,  t  oaihes  and  play- 
ers— at  ear  fault  td  some  ex  tent., Ue 
suppose  it  is  fooli^hlv  idealistic   10 
beli^Ne  someivheie  there  are  peo- 
ple who  don't   take  what   is  offer- 
ed  to   tliem.    But   e\erv   once  in   a 
^vhile    some    of   these    people    pop 
up.    rhe\.  not   the   Atlantic    (loast 
C'.onferenie  «»r   in>tiiinional    rules, 
ate  the  answer  to  the  mcxiern  arh- 
^letics  pioblem; 

.  Ptrliaps  rhe<e  jnople  can  culti- 
vate in  the  piiblic  an  inteiest  in 
tbe  edut  ;nion;4".iasjKc  t<.  ol  an  edu- 


a  cjuick  m;ni  wjth  litiances.  a  p<»li- 
tician.  a  tast^talkci.  a  lecruiter,  a 
\ei)^  hiij  mafi  on  the  ca'tiipus. 

fic'  nshallv  makes  more  money 
-^(ffic  iallv— than  the  college  or 
iuii\crsity  president.  He  alwa>^ 
n);^kes  more— uiml fic  ia II v— than  the 
jnc'sidcni. 

I  Jie  se\erar  athletes  who  are  to 
blame  are  the  hardest  to  bl^iUie. 
Koi  iluv  Stan  out  as  impression- 
able hinli  school  Nouths.  filled  with 
a  desire  to  contiinie  their  brief 
ptri<»cls  of  fa-me. 

\\  heti  tame,  in  the  form  of  a  cdl- 
le^e  01  university  ;MhIftie  recruit- 
er,  comes   kiUHkiun.    those   youths 

are   bound   to  answer. 

*  *  « 

f  he  institmicMis  themsebcs  have 
the  key.  I  hey  »,an  5  uf  oiu  the  cor- 
iiiption  in  moidlierli  "athletirs  swilt- 
Iv.  iusHI.  :  .nd  certainlv.  But  they 
do  not.  The  obN  ious  que.stion  is, 
\Vhv  iiotr  .    , 

The  answer,  we  beliexe,  is  in 
the  f ;« t  that  institutions  of  edu- 
cation are  made  up  of  some  lou- 
rageous  |:)eople.  some  coivards. 
Rip^ht  now  the  cowards  outnumber 
the  others. 

The  cc»wauls  in  top  educational 
c»ftijes  are  weakl>no>  \\\\o  will  do 
what  anv  alumnus  with  a<  fistful 
ol  monev  asks  thent  to  do.  I  hey 
Aif  onlv  t(X>  happy  to  h>ow  to  what- 
ever the  ptd)lic\  press,  coaches  and 
athletes  demand. 


The  cowards  nrC-  icsju'cted  by 
(urioiial  iuvtiLt^c^on.  I'eilmps  tltey  i,t!ur  cowards  and  bv  pe(>ple  who 
aie  rhe  oiks  who  ci^M  extiir  people  .^o  i)ot'  und<jj]^i]di'fhe  situatioti. 
o\€i  a  w»»rld-'A\'t(t(^''ic\tilerenc;e  ,(jft  -jJut  tliev  uve  iiif^rlld  'at  bv  the  le\v 
Gravitation,  as  well  as  a  j-ame  be-  ,-c.ura<Aeous  inejufcvij'of  roile<^e 
tween  (ilarolina  and  .Notre- Dante.  .  ■  !.:■;;.;    '    .   1 

Perha]J^    these    people- . « an    help 
the  spcjrtsuriters  ol    the"  itarictb    to      ^^^^^  ^^^.^s  aifUfvc  a  niaioiuy,  stattcl 
look  a»j<?ii|.t|r?lilU-.'e  ail.leii.s  ad^j  'i|j|j,i^^'jiof,''i|n%a>jt'  i^te  ^ffeiideia 

ibie   3^^^ji^0nf   <luiies.*Maffer,*5<*^   -^    ^    '^  T       "f-* -* 
riie\   can   It  am  lo  cut  out  the  cute 


find  university  a'dHijliUttxttioh^. 

WliN.  then,  do  ttoi  the  couraj»e- 

>tat)d 


phriisr^  titt*  1^?r(r-'Wc>r>«^rifjpf»'» 
headiiirp.s  that  feed  a  huu|j;rv  ptib; 
lic^  whiV  it-^Aes  not  de>etve  to Vatl 


If  •  rhere  were  more  in texrity 
amofi"  coaches  afnd  playeis,  too.  it 
woidd  help  the  situation  c^uite  a 
bit.  But  rowa-lay*,  "»  0--a  h  Is  not 
rfspfctecl  as  a  builder  of  men  and 
character.  He  is  a  shrewd  operator. 

The  Daily  Tar  Heel 

The  official  student  publication  of  tbe 
publications  Board  ul  the  University  of 
North  Carolina,  where  it  is  published 
daily  except  Monday  aiul  examinatioi 
ind  vacation  periods  and^iummer  ter«ft 
Entered  a.s  second  class  matte."  in  thi 
oost. office  in  Chapel  Hill.  N.  C,  undei 
the  Act  Of  March  8,  1870  Siibscfiptioe 
rates:  mailed.  $4  pec  jeftr,  42  30  a  seme* 
t^r:  delivered.  S6  a  year,  $3.90  k  temti. 
ter.  .-.  > 


editor. 


FRED  POWUEDGI 


kanaging  Editor CHARLIE  SLOAN 


Kihs  -Editor 


NANCY  HILL 


fiaainess  Manager  ..      BILL  BOB  PLSS. 


SporU  Editor 


LARBY  CHEEK 


Subscription  Manager Dale  Stiley 

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CirculaUon  .Vlanager  „..         Charlie  Holt 

— — ■ — — -^--t ■ _ 

tEffS  STAFF— Clarke  Jones,  Ray  Link 
ir,  Joan  .Moore.  Pringler  Pipkin^  Annt 
DraJc«,  Editli  MaeKhuioa.  W^y  Kiiralt, 
l|a?jr  AJya  Voorhees,  Graham  Snjrder, 
Billy  Barnes,  Neil  Bass,  Gary  Nichofa, 
Page, Bernstein,  ^g  Humphrey,  Phyllia 
MauHsby'  Ben  Taylor 


BUSINESS  STAFF-^lkosa  Moorei?  Jdlumy 
Whitaker,  Dick  Leavitt.  Dick  Sirkin. 

SPORTS  STAFF:  ^iU  King,  Jim  Purlci. 
Jimmy  Harper.  Dave  Wible,  Chirley 
Howson. 

Er]iIT<^RIAL  STAF#  —  Woody  Sita%. 
Frank  Crowther,  Barry  Winston,  Datid 
kundy,  George' Pfingst.  Jngrid  CI»^. 
Cortland  Edwards,  Paul  McCauley, 
Bobbi  Smith. 


Staff  Photograpj^eg-. 
Librarian  -'M^- 


Norman  K^ii.tor 
.. .  Sue  Gishner 


Niiht  News  EditoFj.^..^.- Wally  txtnlt 

Nijht' Editor Cortfiind  Ed#irds 

Proof  Reader  Mtoley  Spriaga 


■Aft»si  of  the  cbui^eous  ones  aie 
really  seiiu-cA»waid«i.  I  hey  are  af- 
fic  ted  bv  pressures  hom  state  le<»is- 
lati^reji  (tkis  i^  the  case  here  at 
(!;iic»lina).  fic»m  boards  of  trustees 
ov»f«oHiU;"*ii»ih  cowardlv  super- 
iors, from  pid)lic  opinicm  and 
from  the  opinion  of  their  co-work- 
rri 

It  is  imuli  c.oiei  l»  j^o  alon;; 
Willi  the  lest,  thev  ha\e  Loimd.  e\en 
if  the  rest  Ik-  wrc»n«».  than  to  be- 
come an  obstacle  in  the  Avay  of  the 
rest.  • 

A  few  c)f  the  ccHuajieous  ones 
are  reallv  ccmraf^ecms.  They  say 
what  tfiey  lliink,  thev  tell  pressure 
organisations  they  are  sorry,  but 
they  must  dc»  what  ihev  feel  is 
ri'.»ht.  Thev  stand  up  to  adverse 
t^jnioii.  and  they  are  exjiemely 
fair   to  the  compel itioti. 

I  ht:i<'  people ar^pjTui tic  aljy  non- 
existent. ()nce  th^y  arj*  found  (un 
by  ihe'ccMvarfH  tlrey^  iire  either 
branded  as  ladkhls  (>r  C'ommunists 
or  mental  perverts.  c»r  thev  are  le- 
m«»ved  Irom  the  campus. 

This  lemoval  can  be  handled  ex"* 
ttemeJv  nicelv.  It  cati  come  in  the 
form  oJ  a  scKial  snobbery,  a  delay 
in  promotions,  refusal  on  the  part 
of  the  administration  to  appoint 
the  coura^»eous  ones  to  im{>ortant 
college  or  university  ccmnnittees. 
-Salaries  can  be  kept  down:  jobs 
can  be  made  downri«;ht  intolerable. 

.So  tJjf  reallv  ccunaj^eous  ones 
aren't  arc>und  very  imuh.  Most  of 
them  Vra^  foimd  there  is  no  place 
for  them  in  academic  circles  any 
moie.  Thev  have  tViinid  employ- 
ment at  tlu*  United  Nations,  as 
uriiers  of  fxHiks,  or  as. poets  or 
artists.  In  tlujse  positions  they  are 

ccmsidered  iid(\  by  evcryfxKly. 

*■■•*'  '  * 

So  the  academic  connnimity 
tumbles  aion^.  fi<;htin*4  over  petty 
thin<»s,*  ignoring  one  of  the  sit- 
iiations  that  threa-tens  its  whole 
definition— mcKlern  athletics. 

Professors  and  chaihcllors  and 
presidents  find  it  is  inueh  easier 
to  turn  their  heads  and  notice  the 
rotten  situation.  .\nd  the  situation 
}j;rows  bigger  and  f)ij{ger. 

AFTER  KXAMS:    The  situation 
at  Carolina. 


Clinio..  '"^.iiin.s,,^.^  J,  small  lUml  ciniuminiiv  biiili  aio  mid  a  (om  iliouse  in  the  eastern  coal-minino  hills  of  tlie  state, 
seems  in  many  resp^j's  more  like  a  Northern  town  than  a  .Soniliern  one.  1  here  i.v.lor  iasiai,uc,  lew  Ne-^roes  c^n  the 
streets:  one  sees  whites  ;u  janitoiial  duties;  and  last  .No\ember  the  most  (onsj)icii(uis  political  headqnarteis  housed  Re- 
publicans. CMinton   has  Ireciueiiilv  elect"'!   Rej)ublitans  to  local  offices  and  the  state  Jej»i^lanne. 

Clintons  Negroes  comprise  less  than  lu.  -^'itent  ot  the  population,  and  accordin<4  to  the  mayor's  son,  "These  arent 
like  the  Deep  South  Nei;roes..  We  haven't  had  intCGp*a::on.  l;ut  they've  ne\er  been  like  the  bowing-rdown  ones,  always  tip- 
ping their  hats  and  sttppinj^  aside  on  the  street  corner.  1  I  use.  ;i  re  people  who  \otc.  who  call  u>  by  our  names,  and  who 
ha\e  self-respect."  '         = 

Indeed,  C.linlon  became  the  site  lot;  lennessee's  first  Stat  e-.\upporte(l  svnwC'  ' -♦f'<>tatton  because  li\e  yeais  a<ifo  its 
-Nej^ioes  decided  flu\  were  tired  <»f  sendinj>  their  childen  20  miles  away  to  a  sej»Tejia.vd  It ij>h  school  in  Knoxville.  So- thev 
.stalled  a  loni*  coiirse  ol  lifii^ation  foi  admission  to  ("linton  II  iiih.  in  the  middle  oTwhicli  the  Snj)ie1iie  ("oint  lianded  down 
its  scho<»l  dec.ison.  .  '' 

Federal   Jucl,i;c'    RobeU    I..     r,i\  lor    ilieii    ordered    inteyr.i  lion  ol  the  hii^h  s(  liool  to  oil  iiiulei   w;iv  in  the  tall  ol    H),")*!. 


CLINTON  MOB  ATTACKS  NEGROES  IN  CAR 

a/fcr  (I  M'grepcjtJo'ia'iAt  delivered  speech  condeivuing  NA'ACP 


Given  the  court  order.  Clinton 
prepared  peaoefull.v  —  if  not  vol- 
untarily— to  carry  it  out.  The  im- 
pact of  the  doci.sion  was  discus.-- 

(inlli,{i^^;,   the  civic   clubs,   and  the 

IdCttl     weekly,     hyt      In     forums 

.:^ji|Wong    the   students    themselves. 

.;■;.'■  ••There's  been  no  trouble  here 

at  all."  high-school  principal  D.  ,1. 

Brittain  Jr.  told  me  oh  the  dve  of 

regktratior..  "The  people  may  not 

J^i\ff  thii't)y;choiCc".  but  they  real- 

^  ^z^^  it^  J*  JC"""^  orHer  anid  if.s 
what  we  have  to  do.  I'm  not  ex- 
pecting  any   trouble." 

LK>aking  back  altec  four  mon- 
th.;, the  principals  optimistic  pre- 
diction has  proved  drastically 
wrong.  Twice  in  that" period  Clin- 
ton ha.s  verged  on  the  bring  of  a 
etumplete  breakdown  of  law  and 
order. 
REASONS 

There  are  .several  reasons  for 
the  breakdown:  an  outsider  who 
came  in  to  pr;)be  beneath  the 
surface  of  calm  until  he  touched 
the  raw  nerves  of  suppres.sed  re- 
sentment; a  subsequent  split  in 
the  white  community  over  an  is- 
sue so  fraught  with  emotion  thnt 
almost  everybody  directly  involv- 
ed ha^'  guarded  an  uneasy  silence 
about  it:  and  finally  the  experi- 
mental nature  of  Clintons  deseji- 
regirtton-^— a  case  of  great  impor- 
tance as  a  precedent  to  a  num- 
ber  of   interested    parties. 

Two  forces  with  a  good  deal 
more  at  stake  than  the  education 
of  680  white  and  Negro  students 
have  fought  back  and  forth  across 
th^   field  of  battle. 


"People  ask  me  why  Clinton 
hasn't    been    able    to    solve    its 
own    problems,"    one    city    of- 
ficial   said.    "I'll    tell    you    why 
— because  no  one  wants  us  to, 
and   no   oiie   will   let   us.  Were 
everybody's  test  tube.''  ■ 
When    ha    operated     a    Green- 
wich    Village     bookstcH'e     a     few 
years   ago.  a   young   man    named 
Freiierick   John    Kasper   liked    to 
talk  with  his  .Ne;4rt)  friends  al>out 
mans    role 'in    history.    In    'Cach 
great,  man'sjife.  he^^id^  ^ftijpes.a 

moment    when    he    seizes    great- 

) 
ness.  , 

"The.  .strong  Negroes  must  lead 
the  wcSker;  ones,  if  I  were  a 
Xegro.  I'd  lead  a  march  on  Wa.-^h- 
ington  to  gcit  something  done  for 
my  people. ■*"  He  told  one  Negro 
friend,  an  artist  named '  Ted 
Joan.s:  "Why  don't  you  hang  one 
of  yuur  paintings  in  the  Museum 
of  Modern  ,\rt''  Everyone  .steals 
paintings,  but  no  one  hartgs*them. 
Think  of  the  publicity  >/»u;il  get 
Joans  never  hung  that  painting, 
but  on  Aug.  25.  1956.  tfic  week- 
end before  school  started  in 
Clinton.  John  Kasper.  now  execu- 
tive secretary  of  the  Seaboard 
White  Citizens'  Council  of  "W'jash- 
ington.  D.  C.  seized  the  niomeni 
he  thought  would  bring  his^owa 
moment    of   greatness. 

Kasper   came   to   Clinton    un- 
announced,  sleeping  in  his  car 
the   night   before   like   a   seedy 
traveling    salesman.    Then    Sat- 
urday and  Sunday  he  canvassed 
the   town,    looking    for   cfissent. 
No  less  an  authority  on  Kasper 
than  Kasper  himself  gave  this  ac- 
count of  his  purpose:  "I'm  a  rab- 


ble rouser.  The  people  of  ClLitton 
needed  a  leader,  so  I  went  there 
to  lead  them. 

Leo  Burnett,  an  accountant  at 
the  local  Magnet  .Mills.  Ava.  wash- 
ing his  car  that  Saturday  aftet^- 
noon  when  a  tall  young  .stranger 
cut  through  his  back  yard.  'W'itn- 
out      introducin,"*     himself,     the 

Writer    Halberstam,    a    Nash- 

■    Ville  Tennessean   staffer,  wrote- 

•this    article    for    The     Reporter 

"Magalirte.   The  tJarty   Tar  "Heel 

feels  his  article  is  an  excellent 

interpretation     of    one    of    the 

major     integration     events     in 

America.    The    article    will    be  ";; 

concluded   tomorrow.  .   ...r- 

*         >  .  I 

•-stranger  asked   BiJrnett.-\kha4*he 

thought  about  Negroes  going 'lo 
the  high  school 

"Well.  I'm  like  mrst  ot -Ific 
people^  here,  "  Burnett  answered.' 
■  Im  not  for  it,  but  my  personal 
feelings  don't  enter  into  it.  Its 
inevitable.  The  court  ordered  it" 

WILL  SUPREME 

Then  Kasper  introduced  him- 
self and  discussed  his  purpo.ve. 
"You  don't  have  to  obey  the  laAV.  ' 
he  said.  "The  will  of  the  people 
is  supreme. 

"Will  your  wife  picket  the  high 
school  Monday"?  "  he  went  on. 
Tve  talked  to  a  lot  of  other  peo- 
ple who  .said  they  would."  Bur- 
nett said  she  w'()uldnt.  and  they 
argued  about  if  for  a  while.  "'If 
our  forefathers  took  .vour  atti- 
tude," Kasper  said,  "we'd  itill 
be  ruled  by  England."       ^    *'"''  . 


Associated  Press  Photo 

'I'm  not  interested  in  starting 
a  revolution,"  was  Burnett"s  an- 
s".ver. 

Kasper  continued  his  house-to- 
house  campaign,  telling  the  peo- 
ple they  didnt  have  to  obey  the 
.law  if  they  didnt  want  to.  By  the 
end  of  the  week  Clinton  was  a 
battleground.    , 

There  vvere  jiots,  cars  were 
rocked,  citizens  and  travelers  mo- 
lested. The  fol:wing  Saturday,  a 
week  after  Kasppr's  arrival,  the 
mob  seemed  to  lake  over,  ^nd 
only  a  hastily  organized  home 
.  guard  of  the  town's  leaders  throw- 
ing tear  gas  could  keep  it  down 
until  100  state  troopers  arrived. 
fo'llowe{(  soon"  hy  600  National 
'  Guardsmen.  wT^o  had  been  order- 
ed ill  Isy  Governor  Frank  Clem- 
ent.       ,  •  \     .   ■ 

.'\o  AP  photographer,  looking 
back  on  the  riotji,  laid  "That 
was  worse  than  Korea.  In  Korea 
we  understood  that  there  was  a 
calculated  risk,  but  we  never 
knew  what  to  expect  here,  and 
where  to  expect  it  from.  " 

The  sheriff  of  .Anderson  Coun- 
ty said  recently  that  if  the  troop- 
ers hadn't  arrived  ju.st  in  time, 
at  least  three  or  four  people 
would  probably  have  been  killed.. 
On  .\ug.  31.  Kasper  was  convict- 
ed of  violating  a  Fe.deral  injunc- 
tion again  interfering  with  racial 
integration  in  the  Clinton  high 
school.  ■ 

It  is  almost  four  months  since 

the  riots  now,  and  the  people  of 

Clinton  still  cannot  quite  tinder 

t-land    w'hat    happened    to    their 

■•  peaceful  little  town. 


Pogo 


;.\B  WHAT  YOU  WA^ 

ONNAf 


/iT'^A       ) 

]  Tgeei0Lg ) 

BUHPBH.  J 


r 


VkHVNOT 
ANTCU 

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C»N'T 


MPty 
WHAT*rD 

PC" 


1\<B  O^OHB 

pp  THe\\ 
c/cU'MAiy^ 

C0UCH63 

11  \\m:b   s 


By  Walt  Kelly 

lOOKAUV'g/ 

.i-^ee  co^B&, 

A  ^'JZlAZVf 


rig 


Depressing  Facts 
About  Tar  Heelia 

Dr.  Gordon  W.  Blackwelt 

This  is  the  third   installntent  of  Dr.  Gordon  W. 

Blackwell's    speech    before    the    Adult     Education.'^ 

CouneiP'of  Charlotte  and  Mecklenburg  County.    Th« 

-  last   installment    appeared    in    Saturday    morning's 

Daily  Tar  Heel.  ,„, 

Here  one  can  only  repeat  some  of  the  depres-'iog 

facts  which  have  been  talked  so  much  in  recent  years. 

Our  net  cash  income  per  farm  family   in   1950  was 

SI. 304,  placing  us  in  40th  position  among  the  states. 

vSomewhat  offsetting  this  low  figure,  however,  is  the' 

fact  that  North  Carolina  farmers  have  a  larger  value 

of  home  consumption  than  do  all  of  the  11  far  weM^^' 

ern  states  combined. 

.»» 

Our  farms  are  generally  too   small   in  six*  and,, 
our    agricultural    people    are    too    often    underem- 
ployed  on   these   farms.    This   is   one    reason   why 
three-fifths   of   our    farmers    engage    in    some    off- 
'.'--^  employment. 

Oui  ar^rage  weekly  .earnings  for  non-agriculturitl 
workers  in  1954  was  $54.54,  much  below  the  national 
average.  In  our  urbanized  crescent  in  the  state,  these 
figures  were  above  the  average  for  the  rest  of  tlw 
state.  Looking  specifically  at  manufacturing,  we  find< 
that  only  Mis.,*issippi  has  a   lower  wage  level. 

The  fact  is  that  the  industries  which  we  have 
generally  pay  low  wages  wherever  they  are  locatejj^l 
Also,  there  are  indications  that  our  industries  have 
not  had  the  advantage  of  sufficient  re.searoh  facit:. 
ties  and  technical  personnel. 

To  sum  up  the  income  situation,  we  may  rely  upou 
per  capita  income.  Here  1  may  say  that  we  have  d*'-' 
voted  considerable  effort  to  checking  the  validity 
and  accuracy  of  the  figures.  In  general,  these  facts' 
appear  to  be  reliable.  Any  improvement  in  their 
accuracy  could  only  .vlightly  change  North  Can>lina's 
rtiaiive  rank  among  the  .states.  "' 

Our  per  capita  income  of  $1,236  in  1955  was  be- 
low the  nations  average  of  $1,847.  Only  four  states 
rank  below  lis:  Mississippi,  Arkansas,  South  Carolina, 
.\labama. 

IS  IT  OUR  G)pAL? 

But  is  a  high  per  capita  income  our  goal?  This 
should  be  r^ognized  as  only  one  index  of  much 
more  important  conditions  in  the  way  of  life  of  four 
million  people.  We  are  concerned  with  the  extent  to 
which  our  wealth  and  income  enables  us  to  support 
the  basic  institutional  services  demanded  by  North 
Carolinians  at  this  mid-century  point  in  the  state's 
development. 

. .  «     .  *    .  * 

Here  I  must  be  selective  and  shall  concentrate  on 
only  three  of  our  more  crucial  institutional  services: 
Education,   health  and  welfare.  1 

As  a  state,  we  may  have  shown  more  concera  for 
the  health  of  our' people.  At  any  rate,  on  vanouv 
statistical  indices  our  ranking  among  (he  states  is 
somewhat  better..  Generally  we  are  not  too  far  off 
the  average  for  the  country,  either  in  public  health, 
in  hospital,  facilities,  or  in  the  increasingly  cnicical 
problem  of  mental  health. 

We  still  do  not  rank  too  well  if^infant  mortality 
rate,  perhaps  the  single  most  sensitive  index  of  the 
level  of  development  of  a  society.  In  1953  North 
Carolina's  rate  of  32.7  deaths  per  1,000  live  births 
waj  noticeably  atK)ve  the  nation's  rate  of  27.8.  Only 
10  states  had  a  higher  infant  mortality  rate.  This 
problem,  however,  is  largely  confined  to  our  Negit 
pOt^a.jt.jn. 

In  maternal  morlaliVj  .-avv,  only  four  states  had 
a  higher  rate'  than  North  Carolina  in  1953. 

North  Carolina  has  a  long  tradition  hi  accepting 
its  responsrbility  for  welfare  services.  However, 
we  are  not  doing  as  well  as  most  other  states 
either  in  proportion  of  our  state  budget  which  goes 
for  public  welfare  or  in  the  size  of  payments  to 
needy  individuals  and  families. 

Other  nerby  Southern  states-  are  doing  consider- 
ably better.  For  example,  for  a  number  of  years  we 
have  ranked  at  the  bottom  in  proportion  of  fiscal 
responsibility  for  the  aid  to  dependent  children  pro- 
gram which  our  state  supports. 

In  spite  of  capable  administrative  leadership  in 
public  welfare  over  two  generations,  the  state  still 
lags  in  the  provision  of  adequate  public  welfare  serv- 
ices. Again  our  relatively  low  income  level  highlights 
this  problem  and  at  the  same  time  partially  explains  . 
our  lag. 

This  is  not  to  minimize  the  importance  of  sup- 
port for  other  functions  of  govemn\ont,  for  reli- 
gion, the  arts,  snd  other  facets  of  a  well-rounded 
society. 

Our  situation  in  education  is  already  well  known 
to  all  of  us.  North  Carolina  ranks  4«th  in  the  pro- 
portion of  our  people  who  have  completed  high 
school,  29  per  cent.  In  1950  only  65  per  cent  of  -our 
youth  between  the  ages  of  16  and  17  were  enrolled 
in  school. 

Our  expenditurco-  per  public  school  pupil  was  $141 
as  compared  with  the  nations  $209.  Teachers'  sal- 
aries continue  to  be  shockingly  low.  Yet  we  are 
spending  more  of  our  total  income  in  North  Carolina 
for  public  education  than  is  true  of  most  of  the  so- 
called  progressive  states.  Here  our  low  income  level 
offers  the  explanation. 

HIGHER  EDUCATION  PROBLEM 

The  900,000  children  and  youth  in  schools  and 
"colleges  in  the  state  in  1950  are  expected  to  increase 
to  1,270,000  by  1970.  Thi;^-  is  part  of  the  problem  fac- 
ing the  State 'Board  of  Higher  Education.  New  pat- 
terns of  college  education  and  advanced  technical 
training  will  be  needed  by  then  if  the  needs  are  lo 
be  met  with  potentially  available  resources. 

For  example,  a  sgecial  committee  recently  re- 
ported that  North  Carolina  industry  will  need  5,400 
additional  technicians  each  year  for  the  next  fi^e 
years.  Personnel  and  facilities  for  training  people  in 
these  numbers  are  not  presently  available. 

In  spite  of  excellent  professional  leadership  at 
the  top,  our  educational  programs  have  lagged  far 
behind  our  needs  and  achievement  levels  of  other 
£,-tatcs. 

(To  Be  Continued) 


i 


l?V 


f-. 


t. 


17.  IW 


:ts 
lia 


W. 
lucation 

>rnin9*s 


>pres..-ing. 
^nt  years. 
1950  was 
le  states, 
k,  is  the 
|er  value 
Far  west-' 

[iz«  and ,. 
lertm- 
why 
off. 

hcultur2tl 
national' 
Ite,  these 
It  of  th*' 
we  Had' 
A. 

^ve    havf 

locate^! 

hes  have 

:'h  lacit:. 

lely  upow 

Ihave  rf^'- 

vatidity- 

?se  facts' 
|in   their 

irohna  j 

[was  be- 
kr  states 
Tarolina, 


il?  This 

much 

of  four 

ttent  to 

support 

North 

stale's 


rate  on 
Tvices: 

periv  for 
variou-c 

Itates  is 
far  off 
health. 

irrucical 

lortality 
of  the 
North 
births 

|.8.  Only 
.  This 
Negit 

^tes  had 

eepting 

stat*s 
gees 

tnU  to 

tonsider- 
rears  we 
)f  fiscal 
ren  pro- 

Irship  in 
late  still 

ire  serv- 
kghlights 

explains 

of  sup- 
■or  roll- 
[oundad 

ll  known 
the  pro- 
led    high 

f\  of  -our 
!  enrolled 

k'as  $141 

liers'  sal- 

we    are 

Carolina 

If  the  so- 

Inie  level 


>ls   and 

increase 

>lem  fac- 

lew  pat- 

(echnical 

Is  are  lo 

?ntly  re- 
?ed  5.400 
iext  fi'^e 
>eople  in 

srship   at 

^gged  far 

of  other 


THURSDAY,  JANUARY  17,  1f$7 


THI  DAILY  TAR  HIRL 


PA«I  THRU 


ICE,  SNOW 


(Contimied  frmn  Page  \) 

tcf8  a.*.,  clases.  only  to  find  them 
surprisingly  empty. 

Those  who  got  up  found  time  lo 
linger  over  j  second  cup  of  coffee 
at  Lenoir  or  a  town  restaurant. 
George  Pi-illaman.  manager  of  Le- 
noir Hall,  stated  that  "the  usual 
breakfast  crowd  a-eemed  to  stay  a 
little  longer,  but  the  total  volume 
of  business  for  the  day  would  prob- 
ably not  be  up  to  normal." 

-  For  those  who  felt  the  pressure 
of  approaching  exams,  the  library 
offered  a  source  of  relative  peace 
and  quiet.  And  there  were  those 
wiio  took  advantage  of  it.  A  good 
size  crowd  swelled  most  rooms  of 
the  building  during  the  morning 
hoiu*s  to  hit  the  books  before  next 
week. 

But  all  was  not  work;  a  good 
deal  of  play  was  done  on  the  ice- 
covered  streets  and  walks  that  turn- 
tid  Chapel  Hill  into  a  winter  won- 
derland. Mr.  David  Yatca-.  Rector 
«f  the  Chapel  of  the  Cross  Episco- 
pal Church,  evidently  enjoyed  the 
frozen  condition  of  the  Planetari 
urn  parking  lot,  as  he  turned  it  into 
a  skiting  rink  and  slid,  with  a  hap- 
py smile,  across  its  slippery  sur- 
face. 

Graham  Memorial  rounded  up  a 
little  impromptu  entertainment  for 
those  who  fled  the  elements  to 
tij.e  comfort -^if  the  soft  chairs  and 
hi-fi  music  of  the  lounge.  Cecil 
Uartsoe.  who  wrote  the  music  for 
last  year','  "Sound  and  Fury"  and 
will  write  again  for  this  year's-  pro- 
diK*tion.  displayed  his  talent  at  the 
piano,    playing    a    number    of    his 


works.  Miss  Linda  Mann,  director 
of  Graham  Memorial,  announced 
that  the  ping-pong  tables  did  a 
good  business  and  the  pool  rootn 
was  full  during  the  day. 

j  Marlon  Brando  enjoyed  a  return 
to  fame,  playing  in  both  town  mov- 
;  ies  to  crowds  of  those  who  >^alited 
i  to  forget  it  all.  The  two  theaters 
I  reported  above-normal  crowds  for 
I  early  shows. 

I  Aiked  how  they  managed  to 
!  spend  their  welcome  free  hotirs 
I  yesterday,  these  students  replied: 

Sonny  Evans:  'Td  be  embarrass- 
ed to  say.  At  my  9  a.m.  class  I  made 
the  discovery  that  there  were  no 
classes.  But  we  had  a  lecture  any- 
way. Five  of  us  sat  there  and  list- 
ened ior  an  hoiu*.  In  a  class'  of  90, 
85  were  absent," 

EUizabcth  MacKay:  "My  room- 
mate and  1  spent  most  of  the  day 
listening  to  'My  Fair  Lady.*  Some 
study!" 

Whit  Whitfield:  "All  I  can  say 
is  that  I  think  the  librarians  must 
be  blindl" 

Buzzy  House;  "The  University 
won't  give  us  a  reading  day,  but 
the  good  Lord  will." 

All  in  all,  the  weather  man  and 
old  Mother  Nature  conspired  to 
give  us  a  pretty  good  break  before 
exams  Set  in.  We're  grateful! 


The  Appalachian  Mounts  r^ 
^on  ot  North  Carolina  it  tkft  ciil- 
minating  regl<M)  of  that  motmtala 
system  and  contains  its  largest 
masses  and  hijllMt  Bumniill 


^^OiiCainpis 


'.s^^i^ 


Mil 


(AutX«r  of  "Bart/oot  B»y  Vruh,  Chttk,"  tte.) 


THE   DRESS   PARADE 

>>  liat  will  the  American  colleger  student  wear  this 
spring".'  Gather  round,  you  ra.scals,  and  light  a  good 
i'hilip  Morri.x  Cigarette,  and  puff  that  rich,  natural  to- 
bacco, and  posi«e.ss  j-our  houI.s  in  .»<Aveet  content,  and  listen. 

As  we  know,  college  fashions  have  always  been  casual. 
This  spring,  however,  they  have  become  makeshift. 

The  object  is  to  look  madly  improvised,  gaily  spur-of- 
the-moment  !  For  example,  girls,  try  a  peasant  .«ikirt  with 
H  dinner  jacket.  Or  matador  pants  with  a  bridal  veil.  Or 
lici-muda  shorts  with  bronze  bi-eastplates.  Be  rakit^h! 
Ue  impromptu!    Be  devil-take-the-hindmostl 


JOBS  AVAILARLE 

Students  interested  in  working 
n«xt  semester  have  been  asked  to 
make  applications  at  the  Student 
Aid  Office  as  soon  as  po^ible. 
Most  jobs  available  will  be  in  the 
dining  hall  due  to  a  change  in 
class  schedules,  according  to  the 
office.  A  *'C"  average  will  be  nec- 
essary to  renew  the  scholarships 
each  semester. 
WORK  PARTY 

The  Community  Church  of 
Chapel  Hill  is  callinf  a  work 
party  on  the  property  on  Pttrefoy 
Rd.  for  Saturday.  The  work  will 
start  around  10  a.m.  Anyone  plan- 
ning to  come  has  been  asked  to 
bring  wieners  and  r6lls  for  a 
wiener  roast.  There  will  be  a  fire 
and  plenty  of  coffee.  There  will 
he  work  for  both  young  and  old. 
WAA  ACTIVITIES 

WAA  basketball  entries  for  the 
WAA  basketball  toumamient  are 
due  in  the  Women's  Gym  Office 
by  4  p.m.  on  Thursday. 

WAA  table  tennis  entries  are  re- 
quested to  check  the  bulletin 
board  in  the  Women's  Gym  for 
listing  of  matches. 

The  Women's  Basketball  Club 
will  meet  in  the  gym  today  at  4 
p.m. 

COUNSELORS  NEEDED 

Counselors  are  still  needed  for 
second  semester  men'a'  orientation 
which  will  be  held  Jan.  30-31,  ac- 
cordiaf  te  OrieatoJdffi  Ghairntx 
Bill  McLean.  Those  interested 
have  beea  asked  to  leave  their 
names  and  addlresaw  tInUi  llr& 
Orassman  in  the  student  goveni> 
toent  office,  second  floor  of  Gra- 


Editorial  AppKcants 
AAay  Look  Ov^r  Files 

Ail  £^licaiKs  for  the  editorship 
^  pt"  the  Woman's  Handbook  have 
been,  invited  to  come  bf  to  look 
(.ver  the  files  of  the  Wonaen»s  Resi- 
dence Council,  which  will  be  open 
to  all.  those  interested  from  3  to 
Z  on  Feb.  5th,  6th.  7th,  and  8th. 

If  tliis  time  is  inconvenient  Peggy 
*Funk  at  the  Chi  O  House  will  ar- 
range for  a  special  meeting. 

Applications  for  the  editorship 
must  be  subnlitted  to  the  Dean  of 
Women's  office  no  later  than  Febr- 
uary nth,  according  to  the  Dean's 
Orflce.  , 

IntcTviewg  will  be  given  by  aj>- 
pointment  only  during  the  IbUorw- 
Ing  week,  Jan.   ia-23. 


ham   ^lemorial.   The  phone   num- 
ber is  4352. 
ANTHROPOLOGY  CLUB 

The  Anthropology  Club  will  meet 
at  ft  p.m.  tonight  in  the  lounge  of 
the  Alumni  Building.  Dr.  Tom 
Pettigrew,  a  professor  of  psj'chol- 
ogyr  will  speak  and  ^how  slides 
of  his  research  on  the  Zulus  of 
South  Africa. 

CAGER  COACH 

(CoiMiniijed  from  Page  ^) 

th*  mo«t  tr»iibl*  this  sMMnT 

A.  I  guess  I'd  have  to  say 
South  Carolina,  although  we've 
had  several  dose  games.  The 
Gamecocks  had  us  beaten  and  we 
were  very  lucky  to  come  back  and 
win  in  an  overtime. 

0.  Would  you  My  that  ydvr 

curr*nt  ball  foam  U  on*  of  th« 

bMt  youVo  ovtr  ce*ch«^? 

A.  Definitely  yes!  The  amazing 
thing  is  that  the  kids  are  so  young. 
It's  really  nice  to  have  a  young 
bunch  of  clean-cut  boys  who  play 
so  well  under  pressure.  They've 
been  great  in  the  clutch.  "The  boys 
didn't  come  from  a  pro  team^— 
they'rQ  just  a  normal  ^roup  of 
students,  doing  good  school  work 
and  playing  good  basketball.  They 
are  a  handsome  group  of  felloWs. 

Coach  McGuire  wa^  driving  one 
o(  the  autos  that  got  hooke^  up  i 
in  the  tremendous  tralHc  Jam  be- 
tween Raleigh    and    Chapel   Hill  I 
Tuesday  night  and  he  was  sliding  I 
along  on  the  ice  just  Ilk*  every-  j 
one  else.  For  the  last  iniiuiry  hi 
was  aakfllE  %  j 

Q.  How  did  you  fmi  about  n«    t 

having  your  k«  skate*  on  the  ra 

turn  trip  Tuosday  night? 

A.  I  know  that  question  is 
meant  to  be  a  joke,  bul  kt  Me 
tell  you  i(  was  really  great.  Her^ 
was  what  seehied  like  half  of  our 
student  body  out  there  clipping 
around  on  the  ice  in  freezing 
weather  and  actually  joking  about 
it.  Everybody  just  felt  great  after 
our  victory  and  nobody  seemed  to 
care  what  time  we  got  back  to 
Chapel  Hill.  I  never  thought  Td 
ever  see  anything  like  that;  if  peo- 
ple could  have  only  seen  that 
spirit,  ril  guarantee  one  thing; 
that  win  go  down  as  the  latest 
pep  rally  in  history.  There  we 
were  at  about  midnight  walking 
and  shouting  up  and  down  the 
highway.  Believe  me,  it  was  really 
a  great  experience. 


And.  men.  you  be  the  same.   Try  an  opera  cape  with 
.xweat  pan^  Or  a  letter-sweater  with  kilts.  Or  a  strait- 

attraction! 


boots.  Be  bold  I   Be  daring  I  Be  a  tourist 


ON  CAREER  SELECTION: 


.  •  v 


Public  Health  Schoql 
Gets  Research  Project 


"^KMt/^tii  Snm  w  To  h^'mt 


But  all  is  not  innovation  in  college  fa!shions  this 
spring.  In  fact,  one  of  the  highlights  of  the  season  turns 
time  backward  in  its  flight.  I  refer  to  the  comeback  of 
the  powdered  wig. 

This  charming  accoutrement,  too  long  neglected,  has 
already  caught  on  with  style-conscious  students  all  over 
the  country.  On  hundreds  of  campuses  rock-and-roll  is 
giving  way  to  the  minuet,  and  patriotic  undergraduates 
are  dumping  Briti.sh  tea  into  the  nearest  harbor.  This,  of 
cour.se,  does  not  sit  well  with  old  King  George.  For  that 
matter,  a  lot  of  our  ow-n  people  are  steamed  up  too,  and 
there  has  even  been  some  talk  of  revolution.  But  I 
hardly  think  it  will  come  to  that.  I  mean,  how  can  we 
bieak  with  the  mother  country  when  we  are  dependent 
on  her  for  so  many  things  —  linsey-woolsey,  minie  balls, 
taper  snuffers,  and  all  like  that?  She,  on  the  other  hand, 
relies  on  us  for  turkeys,  Philip  Morris,  Cinemascope,  and 
other  valuable  exports.  So  I  say,  if  Molly  Pitcher  and 
those  other  Bryn  Mawr  hotheads  will  calm  down,  we  may 
yet  find  an  amicable  solution  for  our  differences.  But 
let  not  our  British  cousins  mistake  this  willingness  to 
negotiate  fur  weakness.  If  fight  we  must,  then  fight  we 
will !  Paul  Revere  is  .saddled  up.  the  rude  bridge  arches 
the  flood,  and  the  ROTC  is  ready! 

But  I  digress.  We  were  smoking  a  Philip  Morris 
Cigarette -O,  darlin'  cigarette!  0,  happy  smoke!  0, 
firm!  O,  fresh!  O,  fragrant!  O,  long-size!  0,  regular! 
0,  get  some !  -  and  talking  of  new  spring  fashions,  let 
us  turn  now  to  the  season's  most  striking  new  feature:  ^ 
pneumatic  underdrawers.  The.se  inflatable  rubber  gar- 
ments make  every  chair  an  easy  chair.  Think  how  wel- 
come they  will  be  when  you  sit  through  a  long  lecture! 
They  are  not,  l^owever,  without  certain  danfi^6rs.  Last 
week,  for  example,  Rimbaud  Sigafoos,  a  University  of 
Pittsburgh  sophomore,  fell  out  of  an  18th  story  window 
in  the  Tower  of  Learning.  Thanks  to  his  pneumatic 
underdrawers,  he  suffered  no  injury  Avhen  he  struck  the 
sidewalk,  but  the  poor  fellow  is  still  bouncing  and  it  is 
feared  that  he  will  starve  to  death, 

<&  )t«x  Shulman,  1957 

Fashion*  come,  fashUmt  go,  but  year  ufter  year  the  Philip 
MorrU  tompany,  apongora  of  thta  codimii,  bring  you  the 
taatieat^  pleaaingeat  cigarette  your  money  esh  b^  —  P1Mp 
Morria,  of  rorrial 


A  long  range  research  project 
designed  to  determine  the  factors 
which  favor  the  selection  of  ca- 
reers in  public  health  has  been 
awarded  to  the  University  School 
of  Public  Health  it  was  announced 
today  by  Dr.  E.  G.  McGavran,  dean 
Off  the  institution. 

The  award,  in  excess  of  $200,000 
was  made  by  the  American  Pub- 
lic Health  Assn.  and  will  provide 
for  a  three  year  nationwide  study 
dcc'igncd  to  reveal  why  phj'sicians 
select  professional  careers  in  state, ! 
local,  and  national  public  health 
agencies. 

Dr.  McGsvran  also  announced 
that  the  director  of  the  research 
team  being  iMembled  at  Chepel 
Hill  to  conduct  this  prelect  l« 
Dr.  Rebect  E.  Ceker  Jr.  who  re- 
signed as  director  of  the  Coun- 
ty Health  DefMrtmonf  of  Butler, 
Pa.  and  lecturer  in  public  health 
practic*  at  the  University  of 
Pittsburgh  School  of  Public 
Heelth  to  accept  the  eppeint- 
ment. 

Dr.  McGavran  revealed  that  the 
project  design  provides  for  three 
major  areas  of  investigation.  The 
fira*  will  deal  with  determining 
the  time  during  medical  training 
that  a  physician  decides  on  a  field 
of  specialization  as  well  as  the  fac- 
tors which  influence  choice  of 
various  specialties. 

"The  second  phase  will  be  de- 
voted to  determination  of  those 
factors  which  have  lead  to  the  se- 
lection of  a  career  in  public  health 
by  those  physicians  who  are  cur- 
rently active  in  public  health 
work,"  Dr.  McGavran  said. 

"And  the  final  portion  of  the 
study  will  attempt  to  learn  why 
physician.;  have  left  public  health 
to  practice  some  other  medical 
specialty."  he  said. 

Stwdy  d^a  will  be  ebtainod 
threugti  interviews  with  medical 
students,  physicians  in  hospital 
and  private  practice  as  well  ^s 
those  employed  in  hoalth  de- 
partments. 
Before  his  service  in  BuUer 
Coumy,    Dr.   Coker   was   associate 


director  of  the  Local  Health  Divi- 
sion of  the  N.  C.  State  Board  of 
Health  and  prior  to  that  be  served 
as  health  officer  in  Alamance 
County  North  Carolina. 

Dr.  Coker  has  been  naihed  re- 
search professor  in  the  Depart- 
ment of  Public  Health  Admin- 
istration in  the  iXJNC  School  of 
Public  Health. 

Dr.  Coker  received  both  his 
medical  and  master  of  public 
health  degrees  from  Johns  Hop- 
kins University.  He  is  a  diplomat 
of  the  American  Board  of  Preven- 
tive Medicine  and  is  presently  sec- 
retary of  the  Health  Officer's  Sec- 
tion of  the  American  PuUic 
Health  Assn. 

Agisting  Dr.  Coker  in  this  in- 
vestigation will  be  a  staff  of  pro- 
fessional workers  which  includes 
a  biostatistician  and  two  so<rial 
psychologists. 


John  Adams  Is 
Elected  Head 
Of  Di  Senate 

John  Patrick  Adams,  a  junior 
from  Asheboro,  was  elected  presi- 
dent of  the  Dialectic  Senate  Tues- 
day  night. 

Other  new  officers  include  Nancy 
lioMischlld,  president  pro-tempore; 
Gerry  Boudreau,  critic;  Malcolm 
Partin,  clerk;  Irvin  Avery,  sergeant- 
at-arms;  Gary  Greer,  representa- 
"ive  to  Carolina  Forum;  and  Stan 
Shaw,  chaplain.  Oene  Whitdiead 
will  continue  as  treasurer. 

Former  President  Shaw  said  the 
Di  will  launch  its  library  campaign 
immediately  after  examjB. 

The  Di  and  the 'Phi  will  hold 
their  regular  meetings  after  exacs. 


PATRONIZi  Tout 
•    ADViRTlilil 


im^mitmv^i^^iii^>^^m^^ii^k^>^^9mifi0i^n^t,0m»i*i^Mmi»if*^*f^f^^fi^i^^^^ 


u 


RIC3B  AND  FULL  BODIED  COFFEE 


RED  CIBCLE  ^^r  91c  3  »^«  S2.67 

HEABTT  AND  VIGOROUS 

BOKAR  C0FFEE^^.95c  3i^$2.79 


■LENDED  A&P 

COFFEE 


VACUUM 
PACKED 

1-Lb. 
Can 


99 


^^^^^^^^^^MMMMMM^^^<M»^^»^MM^^»*»^N*»^^^^M»^»^M^^M»^M^^MN^»»%^N^^N<»^^^MMM»i*»rf»^M^^M^^NrfN^^^^^^^»A^^^MMMMMM^MMMMMMM^M^MM> 


Each 
Coke 


30 


Niblet's  Golden  Corn....  2  H.?^  33c 

GRAND  VALUE!    liNH  i>^AGE 

Spaghetti  or  Macaroni .  %■?&"  19cj 

Grand  Lov^  Price!  Fancy. — —y 

No  2/ 


SfiCiAL  PRICE!  Jane  Parker 

Spanish  Bar 

im 

A&P 

special  Low  Price!  Fresh 

(IRISPO  FIG  BARS 

Jaiie  i^rker  White  Enriched  Bread^i5e'^21c 


SPECIAL  LOW  PRICE 

A&P  Fancy  Grapefruit  Juice  2'c£',45c 

GRAND  LOW  PRICE! 

Wolker's  Aiistex  I5^ef  Stew  "i^  25c! 

MHOLE  KERNEL  ^  v*  '  ' 


•  CRUSHED --25c 

•  SLICED    c»  29^ 

•  CHUNK    -°29d 


1-Lb. 
Boxes 


49 


»<^y^»<»»^M^^»^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 


■i^^^^^^^^^^W^^W^W^^^^^^^ 


;  V 


Super  Suds 

32c  P^i   79c 


Vef  Powder 


Package  J  1  \. 


Nabisco  PremiHin  Crackers  ...  t^:    23c 

SuRshiRe  Cheez-its '^i^'  1 9c 

39c 


ChickeR  Of  The  Sea  Trra  ^1'a¥  '  °' 


Can 


Fab  Powder 

it:  3lc  &  75c 


Detergent 


M 


37c 


Gt. 
Pkg 


73c 


Ajax  Cleanser 

2  ?.'f,  25c  "ci!'  17c 


Florient 
""79c 


Room 
Deodorant 


Lux  Scop 
2^l?;!fM7c 

Lux  Soap 
2  i:S  25c 


Lifebuoy  Soap 
3  "&"  28c 


Lifebuoy  Soap 
14c 


Bath 
Bar 


Swan  Soap 

Medium    Q/- 
Bar       ^^ 


Swan  Soap 

^llf  15c 


Vel  Liquid 


Dstergent    3Q/> 
l2-0z.  Can   ^^^ 


Swift's  Meats 


tun 

BABIKb 


"^  23c 


'»^>^^^^»^i^»^^^^^f*^**»0*^i>^^ 


Mild  AmmcaN  CheeM  "^ggl^    ^   48e 
Creslmont  Ice  Cream  ..--. 
Worthmore  Royal  Lusters  _- 
Warwick  Chocolate  Cherries 


Va-Gai. 
Carton 

14Qz. 
Pkg. 

1-Lb. 
Box 


Allsweet 

KARGARINE 


la  ^'1      1-Lb. 
Pkg. 


30c 


Kraft  Chieese 
50c 


Save  on 

MEATS 


fish  Sticks  '^l?^'i£'  'fS.  29ei 


"Super-Right"  Heavy  Western  Gram  Fied  beef  —  Boneless 

ROUND  STEAKS  -  t^.  69 

Plate  Stew  Beef  irvy"^^  2  "»  25c 
StewBeef  "ISe^f  .....    i*.   53c 

"Supar-Right"  Heavy  Be«f  —  CiNick  Biod* 

ROASTS  ^33 


Per 

Lb. 

"Sui>er-»^a^"  Hmtj  Wtttcra  BeeC^ 
CLUB  "    ^  .,^'';,, 

STEAKS     ""J":"'  Lb.  79c 


'»'l^Wl^>^^WW^WW^WI<l"W">i»^>  » <n 


1-Lb. 

.. .  .  •    Cam 

1    ftb. 

•       B« 


25e 


Harsliey  Chocolate  Syrap 

SiHaHa  Driod  Ptmos  . . . 

AtP Small GroM Poas . . .t. . .  ?^r  23e 

Apple  Jelly  ^'JIaSS'-^^  '^  I7e^-^  3le 

Log  CabiR  Syrup ^e  29e 

ioRa  WMIe  HoRiiRy  .......  2  &'  Ite 

FroRck's  iRslaRt  Potafott *^:  29e 


Fresh  Florida  Juicy 


Oranges  -  8  ^  43c 


^^^^l^^^i^^l^^^^VMMMM^^^^^ 


Juicy  Winesap 

Bag  47c 


Apples 


^^^^M»<MMMMN^«i«^»^M^^M^M^ 


Crisp  Regalo  Salad  Mix  _.  ?»«•   \9c 
Fresh  Cauliflower  hmS  ---  f^  '  27c 

ANN  PAGE  PURE  PEACH- 
PINEAPPLE —APrilGOT 

Preserves 


krey 


FORK         C«a     ~^^ 


Krey 


BEEF         Can       »^^ 


Krey 


CBOPPED    10-Ot.    \1q 


■BEEF 


Cao 


Krey 

BEEF 
SANDWICH      12  Oz.     3(% 
STEAKS  Can       J^V 


Kraft  Cheese 

OLD  E.\GL1SB   -5  Oz     IQ^ 
SPKEAD  Jar    ^^V. 


Kraft  Cheese 
35c 


AMERICAN 
SUCES 


80«. 
Pkg. 


Cheez-Whiz 


EBAirr 


•^r  33c 


Cream  Cheese 

IJ 


KKAFT 
BBAND 


Pkg.      *  •'*" 


l^»^»^»^N^»i»i<>^M>i«»IMMI 


4c  OFF  LABEL  DEAL 


1-Lb. 
Jar 


25 


Prices  This  Ad   EffectiYe  Through  Satarday.  Janvary  It 
$  roMMOit  roo»  htakh  . , .  stNa  its* 


^oper  ^arkets 


wi  Mixt  txumK 


a  PMUnc  n^  coavAMT 

210  W.  Franklin  St. 


PA»I  POUR 


THt  DAftY  TAR  HfCL 


THURSDAY,  JANUARY  17.  1957 


Ike  Delivers  Record  Peacetime  Budget  Of  $71  Billion 


DAILY    CROSSWORD 


ACBOSS 

1.  Currency 

(Port.) 
6.  Avhid 
io.  Bgg-«haped 

11.  Cavity 

12.  European 
country 

13.  Stunted 
.    animal 

M.  Voided 
escutcheon 

15.  Subtle  ema. 
nations 

16.  Music  note 
IT.  Yearn 

19.  Newspaper- 
man 

22.  Choking  bits 

20.  Undershot 
waterwheel 

27.  Reignmg 
beauty 

28.  Allowance 
for  waste 

29  Incoherent 

uproar 
30.  Implement 

32  River 
(Chin  ) 

33  Senate 
messengers 

.36  Pmal 
3S.  Across 
39  Chinese 
laborer 
41.  Soliury 

42  Musical 
Instrumeiit 

43  Was  in  debt 
44.  Plump 

DOWJf 

Hall 

ElhpUctl 

Not  any 

Muscular 
'    twitch 
S.  Poem 


e.  Moved  the 
shoulder* 
in  doubt 

7.  Unit  of  time 

8.  Foreairm 
bone 

9.  Snares 
12.  Instigate 
15.  Indefinite 

'article' 

17.  African 
worm 

18.  Conjunction 

20.  Anger 

21.  Giggled 

23.  Entire 

24.  Strong, 
transparent 
paper 


25  De. 

scend- 

enl 

of 

Shem 
27.  Chief 

deity 

(Babyl.) 
29.  Fellow 

(slang) 
31.  Esker 

(geol.) 

33.  Game 
on 

horse- 
back 

34.  Affirm 

35.  Man's 
nickname 


'ja\3  S3U  s'^n 

yi'H  as2  ana 

ar'i'^trtDTririiiaa 
•L=t(i[iir=i   ymaaa 


T ei*«rday'«  Answer 

36.  Theater  sea 

37.  Exclama- 
tion of 
sorrow 

39.  Cry  of 
a  dove 

40.  Sphere 


WASHINGTON  —tfit—  FresMient 
Eisenhower  submitted  Wednes- 
day to  a  Congress  ringing  with 
calls  for  economy  a  budget  that 
will  push  government  spending 
to  an  all-time  peacetime  peak  of 
871.807,000,000. 

He    asserted    the    outlays    are^ 
designed,  in-  large  part,  to'  'de- 
ter, and  if  need  be,  to  defeat  ag- 
gression. " 

But  Secretary  of  the  Treasury 
Humphrey  promptly  declared 
the  upward  ^.-pending  trend 
"should  promptly  be  stopped." 
While  he  insisted  he  is  not 
criticizing  the  administration  of 
which  he  is  a  part.  Humphrey 
said: 

"If  we  don't  begin  taking 
less  out  of  this  economy,  I 
predict  we  will  have  •  depres- 


Can  You  Bind 
^oks? 

If  you  own  one  of  the  book- 
binding kits  that  have  been  so 
popular,  w*  have  the  innards  of 
some  really  good  books  at  low 
prices,  suitable  for  binding.  Ask  to 
see  them. 


sion  that  will  make  your  hair 
curl.*' 

He  also  told  questioning  re- 
porters that  if  a  depression 
should  come  and  the  admin- 
istration rco-orted  to  red-ink  fi- 
nancing to  combat  it,  he  prob- 
,ably  would  resign. 

Though  Eisenhower  predicted 
that  income  would  be  even  high- 
er than  outgo,  key  Senate  and 
House  members  voiced  economy 
sentiments  similar  to  Hum- 
phrey's. Two  Democrats  with  a 
hand     on     the     federal     pur.^e 


sidings  tagged  the  budget  as  in- 
flationary. 

The  ipending  outlay,  lor  the 
19S8  fiscal  year  that  starts 
next  July  1,  is  nearly  3  billion 
dollars  over  this  year's  total. 
Eisenhower  forecast  in  his 
Ien9tl)y  budget  message  that 
revenue  will  mount  to  $73/> 
620,000,000,  leaving  a  surplus 
of  $1,813,000,000.  This  would 
spell  the  third  balanced  budg- 
et if\  is  row. 

The  President  rejected  any 
general  tax  cut  at  this  time.  Sur- 
plus cash,   he   said,  will   be  ap 


plied  to  the  vast  oational  debt. . 

JJearly  two-thirds  of  the  budg- 
et and  seven-tenths  of  the  in- 
crease are  eafmarked  for  pro- 
yi-ding  "a  wise  and  reasonable 
degree  of  protection  (or  the  na- 
tion." Tbe  total  cost  of  this  pro- 
tection in  the  year  ahead  was 
put  at  $45,300,000,000.  This  cov- 
ers military  and  economic  aid 
Kor  friendly  nation^  and  puLe< 
heavy  emphasis  o;i,  guided  mis- 
siles and  nuclear  weapons  for 
this  couDtrjr's  armed  forces. 
So  the  billions  in  the  budget 

are  dedicftod  primarily  to  orf* 


Co 


NEW  YORK— ^iiw- The  great  con- 
ductor. Arturo  Toscanini,  died 
Wednesday. 

Death  came  to  him  peacefully 
in  his  .-deep  at  the  age  of  89. 

In  the  world  of  fine  music,  Toji- 
canini  was  the  king  of  the  20th- 
century. 

For  nearly  70  years,  his  baton 
has  been  shaping  the  .scores  of 
operas  and  symphonies  into  grip- 
ping magic. 

Millions,  in  this  country  and 
abroad,  have  sat  breathless  as  he 
led  orchestra;^'  to  the  heights  oj 
nm.sical  expression. 

The  dedicated  and  fiery  maestro 
died  at  8:40  a.m.  at  his  home  in 
tbe  Broox'd  Riverdale  section, 
overlooking  the  Hud.son  River. 

His  son.  Walter,  said  be  Itad 
suffered  a  stroke  on  New  Year's 
day  and  had  not  fully  recovered. 


Pnct«  Codd  Thr\. 
'  Saturday,  Jan.  19. 
At   Stores    BeloW   Only 


Start  the  JSew  Year  Right . . . 

I^r^^with  Famous-Brand 
GIFTS  FREE  with 


PUh^f-ihe-JHe«t 


Tmstjr  AmerUmm 
Cheddar 


Full   of   Juice 

FLORIDA 
ORANGES 


Locally -G  rown 

FRESH 
COLLARDS 


CTN 
DOZ 


47 


LB 


49 


5  '-^^  35*^  I   2  '-^^  15^ 


BISGVtVS 

2  »«••  25« 


m 


— — iiwiii I II  I        iiiiiii(iii  iiiiiiiiiii  wmmmmi^mmmmmimmmmi 


wm>mmim*^-mmm>'».Mi4tm»tf 


REiX;ATE  CLT  CREKN 


SMOiCEP 


Wilson's  Certified,  6  to  8  Lba. 
Average.    Whole   or   Half 


Cedar  Farms  Sliced 

BAGdN 

3  »..  $|.o6 


3  TO  3>/i  LBS.  AVC.  WT.  RQAS3SNC 


BEAMS  6  c- 75. 

STOKtXV  TINY   CREFN  , 

LIMAS  4  °"t^ 

PEAS     6 -^r^f, 

DKL  MONTE   E.XHI.Y   C.ARDE.V  SWEET 

PEAS     5  °  H°  9t 

REDr..\TE  EAHLY   JL'NE 

PEAS     6^-87 


Nut  real  Fioiver-Rich 


CniGKElirs    >  43c 

FRESH  r.ROUNU  

BEEF     3  '^  n-^ 

lE.NDER,   ECONOMICAL 

PORK  snjiKS  L.  49c 


ICE 


y:% 


Ranano-^  hocolale-^y anilla — S^berry 

PINT  <rrN.         J        "i-GAf-  <:tn. 


zo 


tMa>mmmf%i\mm}m\i\timn 


m^ 


■«lS*'**^-*»*^"»*.' 


^:s2sssm3saes&tsssss^si^i 


^^^mmMims&im.:vf^!&>=i>t.-^p^mssmmm 


75 


•i--^ 


Toscaniril  Is  Dead 


hV  f'elt  no  p«in,  his  son  said,  and 
was  not  awate.  that  the  end  was 
near.  ' 

It  was  the  "fiftii*"  of  a  career, 
on  the  air,  recordings  and  in  con 
cert  halls,  that  hac|  marked  Tos- 
canini a$  the  pre-eminent  wizard 
o^  liis  ^t  in  modern  times. 

In  priyat*.  a  rhodtst  and  g«n- 
tie  man,  the  littlo,  whito-hairtd 
Toscanini  wit  «h  axactin^  ind 
tfinp*r  amenta  I  tyrant  on  the  po- 
dium. 
But    his    masicians    loved    him. 


It  embraces  such  items  as: 
A  continuation  of  s-ome  S2.- 
300,000.000  in  expiring  corpo- 
rate and  excise  taxes:  a  $654,- 
000.000  boost  in  postal  rates  and 
a  5  cent  stamp  for  letters;  high- 
er interest  rates  on  some  of  \\fe 
hians  the  government  makes  or 
guarantees,  including  veterans* 
housingloans:  a  natural  gas  bill 
much  like  one  the  President  ve- 
toed last  year,  a  school  con.slruc- 
tio'n  program;  a  limited  housing 
program:  more  highway  con- 
struclion  financed  outside  the 
budget. 

the  Act  i  prelude  to  "Die  Meistcr- 
singer."  As  the  last  note  faded, 
Toscanini  dropped  his  baton  to  the 
led  with  the  thunder  of  volcanoes  i  "o«^-  ^n  «rcjiestra  member  pick- 
lifetime  of  conducting'  ^^.  ''  "P  ^"^  hf"^^  '^ .  \«  ^"" 
With  head  bowed,  Toscanmi  walk- 


overriding  goal:  To  discourage 
or,  if  necessary,  to  fight  Com- 
munist aggressidn. 

Speaker  Rayburn  remarked 
that:  "In  times  like  this  we 
don't  usually  cut  budgets- 
much." 

Wrapped  up  in  the  budget 
package  was  the  Eisenhower  ad- 
ministrations  administrative  pro- 
gram for  the  year  ahead,  in  mi- 
nute, enormous  detail.  Much  of 
it  had  been  recommended  be- 
fore, in  other  years  or  in  Eisen- 
hower s  State  of  the  Union  ad- 
dress to  Congreso-  last  Thursday. 


After  a 
here,  in  his  native  Italy  and  other 
European  countries  and  on  road  , 
tours  of  America,  he  gave  his  last  [ 
concert  on  April  4,  1954.  I 

This  was  at  Carnegie  Hall  with 
the  National  Broadcasting  Co. 
Symphony  Orchestra,  which  hud 
been  formed  especially  for  him 
and  which  he  led  since  Christmas 
night,  1937.  , 

None  knew  then  that  it  was  his 
farewell   performance,   but    it   had 


ed  away. 

The  audience — unaware  that  it 
was  his  farewell — stood,  clapped 
and  cheered.  But  Toscanini  did 
not  reappear.  NBC  said  later  that 
he  did  not  return  because  he  was 
too  moved. 


Winter  :t 

(Continued  from  Page  1 ) 

weathered  in  at  Pope  .\ir  Force 
were  expected  to  gel  aloft  today 
to  return  to  Stewart  Air  Force 
Base  near  Nashville.  Tenn.  The 
men,  based  at  Fort  Campbell,  Ky.. 
wore  stranded  at  Pope,  where  they 
had  been  engaging  in  maneuvers. 

The    major  commercial  bus   lin- 
es,  some   of  which   had    to  cancel 
UNITED    NATIONS,   N.    Y.   —  demolitions  by  retreating  Israelis  i  their   schedules   because   of   Mpti- 


And  he  .^'hepherded.tbem  to  grand  j  elo.sed  with  poignant  drama, 
perlorroanoes^   that    whispered       The    last    concert    wa^-    an    all- 
with  the  voice  of  angels  or  crack- 1  Wagner  program  and  ended  with 

UN  Chief  Says  Israel 
Must  Leave  For  Peace 


^AP)  —  Secretary  General  Dag 
Hammarskjold  reported  to  the  UN 
Assembly  Wednesday  the  com- 
plete withdrawal  of  Israeli  forces 
from  Egypt  is  an  essential  step 
to  peace  hetweien  Israel  and 
Egypt. 

He  made  public  a  report  show- 
ing that  Israeli  forces,  more  than 
two  months  after  the  assembly 
repeatedly  requested  them  to 
leave  Egypt,  have  not  yet  with- 
drawn. Shortly  afterwards,  the  as- 
sembly was  called  to  meet  at 
10:30  a.m.  EST  Thursday  at 
Egypt's  request  to  consider  the 
situation. 

Asian-African  countries,  mean- 
while, campaigned  for  support  i 
for  a  resolution  to  be  put  before 
the  ^isembly.  It  demands  that  | 
Israel  get  out  of  Egypt  within  j 
five  days  on  penalty  of  economic,  | 
financial    or    militarj-   restrictions.  ! 

The  United  States  isl  studiying  j 
this  proposal  but  gave  no  hint  1 
of  its  Etand  at  this  time.  i 

The  U.  S.,  however,  gave  full; 
backing  to  Hammarskibld's  views.  : 
A  U.  S.  delegation  spokesman  ! 
commented  that  the  United  States  j 
stands  for  the  full  compliance  by  | 
Israel  with  the  assembly  resolu-  ( 
tions.    The    spokesman    also    said  | 

believe  Probe 
Is  Baseless 


violated    the   cease-fire    agreement '  days    storm,    reported    they    were 
in  Egypt.  I  running  on    normal   schedules   bv 

Some  "  delegates     from      other  |  ^f^  "^^^^ .'"  ^"  ^'^^^^  ^^^*  ^^  ^^ 
areas,  especially  Western  Europe,  |  ^^"^• 
showed  irritation  at  what  they  call-  j 

ed  the  slow  rate  of  Israel's  with- 1  <'=°''  '"°''«  '"^^•■'"'♦'o"  on  tho 
drawal  I  *'*'**  '"  weather  around  these 
'. " ^   parts,  turn  to   Page  One.) 


WASHINGTON  —(AP)— Three 
labor  union  officials  Wednesday 
challenged  the  authority  of  the 
Senate  Investigations  Subcom- 
mittee to  probe  their  affairs  in  a 
.«»each  fof  evidence  of  '"labor  rack- 
eteering." 

fYank  W.  irewster,  head  of  the 
11-stiite  western  conference  of 
th*  Teamstiris  Union,  and  Nugent 
Lapoma,  secretary-treasurer ,  of 
Teamsters  LOcal  174  in  Seattle, 
r^ft^ed  point  blank  to  surrend- 
er trtiion  ^inawcial  itecords  thie 
Senate  grotip  had  subpoenaed. 

6en.  Mc<bl^tman  (I>-Ark),  siib- 
comHtee  chairman,  said  the  third 
challenge  came  from  Arthur  Santa 
Maria,  sect'etary-treasurer  of 
Loical  227,  Allied  Iftdustrial  Work- 
e^a  of  Ai-erlCa,  NeM?  York  City. 

The  Senator  said  Santa  Maria 
"invoked  the  Fifth,  Amendment" 
in  refusing  to  answer  many  ques- 
tions, but  also  contended  the 
Seniors  had  no  right  to  conduct 
the  inquiry.  The  Fifth  Amend- 
ment of  the  Constitution  provide? 
nobody  can  be  forced  to  incrim- 
inate himself.       .  J 

McCldian  iiititii  the  three 
witnesses,  plus  half  a  dozen  other 
officials  of  the  New  York  Local, 
to  appear  before  the  subcommit- 
tee again  Thursday  for  question- 
ing in  a  Public  hearing.  He  said 
the  subcommittee  also  voted  to 
make  public  Thiarsday  a  transcript 
of  die'  testimony  taken  behind 
closed  doors  Wednesday. 

SfcCfellan      told    reporters     "I 

will   let   you   speculate"   on   what 

Woul^   happen   if  witnesses   insist 

in   conttsiini   the   subcorairiittee's 

authority. 


STUDENTS   SUNNING   ON   SOUTH   BUILDING   STEPS 

.  .  .  it'll   be  a   long   time  before  tltcy  do   it  again 


DONT  /MENTION  RUSSIANS: 


Poles,  ftec/  Chinese 
End  Top-Level  Talks 


WARSAW,  Poland  iv»^— Poland 
and  Red  China  ended  their  talks 
Wednesday  with  a  compromise 
statement  which  avoided  any 
"mention  of  Soviet  Russia  as  the 
leader  of   the    Communi.st  bloc. 

But  the  Poli.>h  leadership  join- 
ed Red  China's  Premier  Chou 
En-Lai  in  lambasting  U.  S.  policy 
in  the  Middle  and  Far  East,  and 
in  supporting  the  Moscow-made 
regihie  of  Janos  Kadar  in  Hun- 
gar>'. 

The  document,  the  outcome 
of  fi«»  days  of  ideological  dis- 
cussions betv^een  Chou  and 
Polish  party  chief  Wladyslaw 
Gomuika,  thus  brought  the 
Poles  in  line  with  their  Com- 
munist neighbors  on  th«  most 
important  issues  in  current  in- 
ternational affairs. 

In  xeturn,  Chou  temporarily 
dropped  the  references  to  So\iet 
leadership  which  embarrassed 
Polish  Communists  on  his  ar- 
rival last  Friday.  He  also  gave 
approval  to  Gomulkas  internal 
policies.  These  break  away  from 


Moscow's  tutelage  in  that  they. 
stress  a  decentralized  economy, 
a  greater  degree  of  personal 
freedom  and  watered-down  po- 
litical liberty. 

In  his  farewell  speech  at  the 
airport,  however,  Chou  again 
emphasized  his  theme:  "Long 
live  the  solidarity  of  the  social- 
ist countries  headed  by  the  So- 
viet Union." 

Then  he  took  off  in  a  gleam- 
ing Soviet  jet  airliner  for  talks 
with  Kadars  puppet  regime  in 
Budapest  before  returning  ttf 
Moscow  to  report  on  his  mis-  - 
sion.  ;' 

The  statement,  signed  by  Chou 
and  Poli^,h  Premier  Josef  Cyran- 
kiewicz,   said    they    had   reached* 
"complete   agreement."   A    simi-* 
lar   "complete   agreement"    was 
announced    here   Dec.    30   after 
talks  between  the  ruling  Polish-. 
United     Workers"     (Communist) 
Party  and  Yugoslav  Communists; 
The    Chinese    have     denouni^edMi 
Yugoslavia's  policies  as  a  danger" 
to  socialisju. 


^ 


mad« 
of  a 


<( 

^250,  a( 

the  set 

Cars 


^■W     i 


"Satui 
ages  (1 
Dick 

"Nerved  I 

WANT] 
sonvi 

Thiii 

RetuI 
Wedl 


WO-t; 

^ost 

*^ing: 

Jo.st 

3fo< 


Th 

20! 


17.  1957 


as: 

3mc    S2.- 

corpo- 

a   S654.- 

kues  and 

(rs:  high- 

of  tjje 

lakes  or 

,  eterans' 

jas  bill 

lidcnl  ve- 

Lon^-truc- 

housing 

uy     con- 

Iside    the 


le  Meistcr- 
|()lo  faded, 
iton  to  the 
iil)er  pick- 
It  to  him. 
mini  walk- 

\vi'  that  it 
.  clapped 
anini  did 
later  that 

>e  he  was 


Ihie  1) 

Air    Fore? 
lluft   today 
kir    Force 
r«-nn     The 
tibell.  Ky.. 
,here  they 
jneiivers. 
\l  bus  Un- 
to caneel 
of    Mo.n- 
Ihey    were 
•diile>    b> 
It  of  Ashe 


on  th* 
^d     these 


i 


[EPS 


that    they 

economy, 

^f    personal 

[d-down   po- 

■ech  at  the 
t'hoii     again 
fine:      "Long 
the  social-  : 
by   the  So- 

lin  a  slcam- 

|er  for  talks 

regime   in 

nurning     to 

his    mis-, 

[ted  by  Chou 
Fosef  Cyran- 
lad    reached. 

It.'   A   simi-' 
jment  "    was 

k..    30   alter 

[•uling  Polish 
(Communist) 

I  Communists, 
denount'e^ 
as  a  dangef 


THURSDAY,  JANUARY  17,  1957 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


PAGE  FIVE 


KENAN-IN-THEWOODS 

.  .  .  another  Diviclicin   vieu 


Sun  Dial-On-The-Parking  Lot 


^his  unusual  view  of  the  »r9a  surrounditHi  the  sun  dial  was 
made  frr^  a  Piper  Pacer  with  a  Sp«ed  Graphic  set  at  fS  at  1/250th 
of  a  second.  Thf  buildings,  from  the  top  of  the  picture  down,  are 


the  president's  mansion,  the  Episcopal  Church,  the  plan«tartmn<  Hi* 
Alumni  Building  and  Graham  Memorial. 


— JiX. 


S' 


icy  Sheets 


( Continued  jrom  Page  1 ) 

?250.  according  to  officers  called  to 

the  scene. 

"Cars  driven  bv  William  Jones  and 


m 


Larry  Frederick  of  Goldsboro  col- 
I'de**  on  Old  Raleigh  St.  la.st  night 
W!tK  unascertained  damages,  of- 
fice rs  said 

Othej"   accidents    are   in   the   pro- 
cess of  being  in.'estigated,   ofricers 
reported.    Drivers   Involved   haven't 
■^■""■"■^^■■■"^^^""■■■"^■'""    reported  full  details,  they  said. 
""       JAZZ  AT  TURNAGES  '      Fapts  concerning  other  accidents 

,  "Saturday   afternoon,  2:00,  Turn-    "'^J'^red   in   with   the   onslaught   of 
ages   Cabin    in    Durham.— Jazz   by    ^^^   elements   will    be  released   to- 
Dick     Gables      "All     Stars."     Beer    "'O^tow. 
'>erv'ed.  ; 


CLAbbif-lfcUb 


WANTED:     DRIVER     TO     JACK-  } 

sonville,     Fla.     Leaving     Chapel  * 

wHill   Tuesday   morning.  Jan.   29.  * 

^Return    by    air,    train,    or    bus  i 

■'  Wednesday,   as   preferred.    Con- 


George  L.  Coxhead 

U.N.C.  '42 
Campus  Representative 


! 

(.Jlanrice,  Sanders.    Qmiim^^^iirr 


•^O-TIME  LOSER  SEEKS  SOL- 
*~1ce  by  return  of:  small  wallel 
wost  in  Pine  Rootn  Sunday  evc- 
"^ing:  grey  cashmere  sweater 
MixA  early  in  fall..  Contact  Lydia 
^JSoQdy,  108  AIHerman.,  (1-881-1) 


NEW  YORK  LIFE 

INSURANCE    COMPANY 


3  One- Ad  Plays 
Scheduled  Tonight 


••••••  •-*•••••••  •••••^••••■•••.•■••««..^.| 


WE  NEED 

USED 
TEXTS 


As  soon  as  Exams 
are  over,  trot  over 
with  the  old  text. 
It  means  folding 
money  for  you,  and 
a  break  for  the  next 
guy! 

The  Intimate  Bookshop 


205  E.  Franklin  St. 


Open  Till  10  P.M. 


The  Carolina  Playmakers  will 
present  a  bill  of  three  new  oneact 
plays,  written,  directed,  acted  and 
produced  by  students  in  UNC's 
Dramatic  .Art  Dept.,  tonight  and  to- 
niorrow  night  at  7:30  in  the  Play- 
makers  Theatre, 

The  public  Ls  ii-it»»'J  free  of 
charge. 

The  three  plays  scheduled  a;*- 
•Room  For  Rent"'  by  Marcelliifc 
Krafchick  of  Philadelphia,  Pa  ,  di- 
rected by  Nancy  Christ  of  .\ewark, 
X.  J.;  "Portrait  of  a  Dragon"  by 
.fo.sephihe  Stio*  of  ChajSel  Hill,  di- 
rected by  Mary  Ruth  John.son  ot 
Eupora.  Mis-s.:  and  'Child  of  Two 
Winds"  by  Peter  B.  O'Sullivan  of 
Valhalla.  .\.  Y..  directed  by  Rich- 
ai-d  Rothrock  of  Springdale.  Ark. 

Appearing  in  the  casts  are:  Bar- 
bara Bpttle  of  Miami.  Fla..  Joan 
Van  Sise  of  Huntington.  N.  Y.,  and 
Rose  Christoff  of  Newark,  N.  J.,  in 
the  first  production;  Carolyn  Mer- 
edith of  Raleigh.  William  White  of 
Chapel  Hill.  Virginia  OSuliivan  ot 
Valhalla.  N.  Y.  and  .\nne  Brooke  ol 
Sl'i'intoD.  Va..  in  the  second  pro- 
r'uidon.  and  William  Jones  ol 
(hapel  Hill,  William  Oliver  of  Ra- 
leigh, Elizabeth  Gardner  of  Roch- 
ester, N.  v.,  Hope  Sparger  of  Scars- 
dale,  N.Y.,  Mary  Van  Finley  of  Ma- 
rion, and  Michael  Casey  of  Chapel 
Hill  in  tile  third  production. 

Stage  managers  ar^  Ted  Parker 
of  Clintoir;  Page  Williams  of  Et. 
Thomas.  Ky..  and  John  Whitty  of 
-Vew  Bern.  Set  designers  are  Rus- 
sell Link  of  Jamaica,  N.  Y.,  Sarah 
Cannon  of  Canton,  and  John  Sneden 
of  Tenafly,  .\.  J.  Lighting  for  all 
three  productions  is  by  JameK  Arm- 
acost  of  Baltimore.  Md.  The  pro- 
gram is  under  the  guidance  ol 
Dramatic  Art  Professor  Foster  Filz- 
Simons. 

The  Playmakers  began  their  tra- 


jdition  of  original  one-act  play  pro- 
ductions in  1919.  Since  then  they 
have  produced  176  series  of  such 
]-roductions,  serving  to  stimulate 
and  encourage  the  writing  of  plays 
on  the  campus,  according  to  a 
Playmakers  spokesman. 


Abouf  250 
Expected 
At  Dinner 


Between  200  and  250  newspaper 
men  and  women  from  throughout 
North  Carolina  are  expected  to  at- ' 
tend  the  annual  Duke  Press  Din-  \ 
ner     at     Duke     University  Friday  | 
night.  Jan.  25. 

The  dinner  is  a  regular  feature ! 
of  the  North  Carolina  Press  Assn.'s  ! 
annual    Midwinter    Institute    held  i 
under    the    joint    sponsorship    of 
Duke  University  and  the  Univers- 
ity of  North  Carolina.     The     in- 
stitute this  year  is  .set  for  Jan.  24- 
26. 

Featured   speaker   at   the   Duke 


Gov.  Discusses 
St(^eAidTo 
I  ocoi  Colleges 

K.^fcEl^W  — fffM— -Proposetf  .statP 
aid  for  community  colleges  was  dis- 
CLi;^sed  with  Gov.  Hodges  t<>dAy  by 
a  delegation  from  Wilmington, 
Cliarlotte  and   Asheville. 

The  group  cxpre.«M?ed  interest  in 
iuiving  the  state  provide  pft-manent 
improvement  funds  without  requir- 
ing matching  local  money  on  a  SO- 
SO  basis,  as  proposed  by  the  State 
Board  of  Higher  Education. 

However,  Piesident  Stowe  Moody 
o(  the  Charlotte  Chamber  of  Com- 
merce said  the  Governor  indicated 
he  tavor^  aid  for  the  community  col 
le^es  as  rer'>mmended  by  the  Board. 
There  was  a  hint  college  supporter* 
may  press  for  a  change  through  lo- 
cal legislators.  .Moody  said  lawmak- 
ers from  the  areas  .served  by  the 
colleges  will  lx>  kej)t  informed  on 
the  discussions. 

The  Board  of  Higher  Education 
nas  recommended  that  the  next  leg- 
islature appropriate  money  to  aid  in 
operating  the  community  colleges,  as 
well  as  matching  funds  fbr  build- 
ings. 


Business  Wives 
To  Meet  Here 
This  Weekend 

Wives  of  businessmen  attending 
'"The  Executive  Program"  at  UNC 
will  come  to  Chapel  Hill  Friday 
and  Saturday  to  find  out  what  it's 
all  about. 

"We  think  that  you  are  entitled 
to  know  the  truth  about  what  goes 
on  here  on  these  weekends."  wrote 
Professor  Willard  Graham,  Di- 
rector of  the  Executive  program 
in  an  invitation  to  the  wives. 

Thirty  -  four  executives  —  from 
North  Carolina  and  from  nearby 
stales — areengaged  in  an  advanced 
management  program  in  the  UNC 
School  of  Business  Administra- 
tibn.  They  attend  classes  here  on 
alternate  weekends  from  October 
to  April. 

The  special  "Weekend  for 
Wives"  Ls  designed  to  acquaint 
the  executive's  wives  with  the 
routine  of  business  courses  offer- 
ed here  in  the  program — and  in- 
cidentally to  have  a  social  occas- 
ion, including  a  dinner  and  dance 
at   the   Carolina   Inn. 


World  h4ews 

(Contimved  from  FageJ) 

nouncement  is  made." 

O'Konski  made  the  statement 
after  a  speech  by  Rep.  Keating 
(R-NY)  blasting  Tito  and  voicing 
concern  over  reports  that  Tito 
might  be  invited  to  vi-rtt  this  coun- 
try. 

"It  is  impossible  for  ine  to  be- 
lieve that,  now  or  at  any  other 
time,  a  common  criminal  should  be 
idolized,  or  lionized,  in  a  land 
which,  under  God,  pledges  its  al- 
legiance to  honor,  ifreedom  and 
the  principles  of  representative 
government."  Keating  said. 

Tortures  Related 

WASHINGTON— OPi— A  Hungari- 
an refugee  has  told  Senate  investi- 
gators that  the  Russians  cut  out 
the  tongues  and  punctured  the  ear- 
drums of  200  to  300  captured  Ger- 
man and  Spanish  scientists'  who 
took  part  in  Soviet  atomic  research. 

Ths  purpose,  the  refugee  said, 
was  to  prevent  the  scientists  from 
divulging  anything  about  their 
work. 

The  witness,  who  testified  he 
had  been  imprisoned  by  the  Rus- 
sians after  World  War  II,  said  he 
learned  of  this  when  he  and  other 
Hungarians  granted  amnca-ty  were 
taken  to  a  Soviet  pri.son  camp  at 
Kiev  on  May  10,  1953,  on  their 
way  home. 


Press  Dinner  will  be  Paul  Miller 
of  Rochester,  N.  Y.,  executive  vice- 
president  of  Gannett  Co..  Inc., 
which  controls  23  newspapers, 
four  radio  stations  and  two,  tele- 
vision stations  in  New  York,  New 
Jersey,  Connecticut  and  Illinois. 

Duke  Vice  President  Herbert  J. 
HeVring  will  preside  at-  the  din- 
ner, and  Earl  Porter,  assistant  to 
the  president  of  Duke  University, 
will  welcome  the  newspaper  peo- 
ple. NCPA  President  Tom  Robin- 
son, president  and  publisher  of 
The  Charlotte  News,  will  respond 
on  behalf  of  the  association,  with 
former  president  Josh  Home, 
publisher  of  the  Rocky  Mount 
Evening  Telegram,  intt^oducjng 
Miller.  Music  will  be  furnished 
by     the     Duke     University  Triple 


iVlARRIAGE 
PROF 

(Contimied  from  Page  }) 
M^iews  published  in  scholarly  journ- 
als Dr.  Hill's  work  has  appeared 
i|[  Readers  Digest,  Parents'  Mag- 
•/zine.  National  Parent  Teacher, 
MoCalls,  Better  Homes  and  Gardens 
and   Look  Magazine. . . 


Carolina 


Baiket  Street 


Jiiil'iiiwniii II >»  I iiiiiiii»i wiiinim—— — 

coio*  tv  M  luxk  'OINEAMaScOPB- 

|l».UrrintpBG|L  PARKER 

k    NOW  tovTiisib 


-JT>  <  ^>.  >kaii^  K*^ 


STARRING 

FRANK  SINATRA-MARLON  BRJ^NDO 


i/'T 


WHEN  THE  LUCKIES  are  gone,  you've  still  got  the 
memory  of  some  great  smoking.  You've  also  got  a 
Slack  Pack.  Chin  up,  though,  you  can  get  more  down 
at  the  store— and  every  Lucky  tastes  like  a  million 
bucks.  That's  because  every  Lucky  is  made  of  fine  to- 
bacco—mild, good-tasting  tobacco  that's  TOASTED 
to  taste  even  better.  Have  you  tried  a  Lucky  lately? 
It's  the  best-tasting  cigarette  you  ever  smoked! 


WHAT  IS  A  GERMAN  CHEERLEADER  t 


Sootin'  Teuton 


ROTH  HAriK. 
FRANKLIN  AND  HARtHALL 


WHAT  IS  A  FRESH  FRUIT* 


Brazen  Raitin 


JAHCI  HALL. 
HARVARD 


WHAT  IS  A  SORCERESS'  COZY  NOOK  I 


Witeh  Niche 


LUCILLE  SUTTHIIER. 
CORNELL 


WHAT  IS  BUG  euSSi 


Flea  Glee 


HAROLD  LINK, 
.  OF  NORTH   DAKOTA 


"irs 

TOASTED'' 

to  taste 
better! 


WHAT  IS  A  MEMEVAL  UND-CRAMER» 

^■[/N.            A    ▲ 

^^ 

W\ 

'^rifiV 

'^!^' 

FETER  SRAM 

STANFORC 

Fief  Thief 

WHAT  IS  A  SAO  ANTElOFEf 


Blue  Gnu 


EDWARD  FRICE.   III. 
U.  OF  NEW   HAHFtHIRE 


WHAT  IS  AN  UNWASHED  HOBOI 


RODERTA  MARAOLIN. 
C.C.N.Y. 


Fragrant  Vagrant 


Luckies 
Taste  Better 

CLEANER,    FRESHER,    SMOOTHER   I 


STUCK   FOR  OOliGN? 

START  STICKLING! 
i^  MAKE  $25 

We'll  pay  S; 2 5  for  |^ery  Stickler  we 
print— and  for  hundreds  more  that 
never  get  us>^d!  So  stan  S.ickling  — 
they're  so  (.asy  you  can  t  hink  of  dozt^na 
in  seconds!  Strcklersare  simple  riddies 
with  two-word  rhyming  ana  .vera.  Boi  h 
words  must  Ijave  thi-  siime  number  of 
syllables.  (F^on'l  do  drawi.igs.  Send 
'em  all  with  your  nan>e,  addreso, 
rbllege a tul  ti;is.^  to  H,ipp\  -  loe-Lucky, 
Box  G7A.  Alc.unt  Vernon.  N.  Y. 


<£)A.T.  Ci>. 


PRODUCT  0 


r  t/Ag' t.^^n»ue<m  Jv^Msei>-Ci») 


frnytaaiy'    amerxcas  L^AOiwe  MAMui%.ciuF£R  or  cieAK«ix»i 


PAGE   SIX 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


THURSDAY,  JANUARY  17,  195* 


For  Oijr  Tar  Heels.  The  Number  One  Soot 

Cr/rolina  s  unbeaten  Tar  Heels  staked  out  an  almost  undisputable 
claim  to  the  nations  number  one  ranking  in  collegiate  basketball 
circles  Tuesday  night  in  Reynolds  Cdliseum  when  they  walked  off 
Mdtth  a  26  point  victory' over  the  once  mighty  State  Wolfpack. 

The  Tar  Heals  were  second  in  both  mejor  polls  this  week,  but 
the  rankings  came  out  b*for*  previously  undefeeterf  >nd  top  rated 
Kansas  fell  by  the  wayside  Monday  night,"*  toeing  39-37  to  Iowa 
State.  And  at  the  same  time,  highly  regarded  Kentucky  was  drop- 
ping a  one  point  decision  to  Tulane. 

Then  Carolina  managed  to  resist  the  upset  trend  long  enough  to 
wallop  State,  83-57.  So  for  all  practical  purposes  the  Tar  Heels  are  :  they  were  the  only  freshmen  play- 


First  McGui re  Player 
Here,  Tony  Radovich 
Ready  To  Call  It  Quits 

By  PRINOLE  PIPKIN 

Scoring  three  field  goals  out  of  four  attempts  and  making  five 
crucial  free  throws  out  of  five,  Tony  Radovich.  UNC  star  guard,  played 
13  minutes  in  the  State  game  Tuesday  night,  the  next  to  last  game 
in  which  he  uill  be  eligible  to  play. 

Carolina  fans  will  see  Radovich  is  his  last  game  for  the  Blue  and 
White  when  the  Tar  Heels  meet  Western  Carolina  on  Jan.  30. 

Radovich  began  his  Carolina 
basketball  career  in  the  1953  sea- 
son, the  same  year  that  UNC  ac- 
quired Coach  McGuire.  In  fact, 
Jerry  Vayda,  UNC  captain  last 
yeai,  and  Radovich  were  the  first 
two  boys  to  come  to  Carolina  on 
scholarships  offered  by  McGuire. 
Both  the  boys  began  on  the  fresh- 
man  team,   but  by   late    January 


the  nation's  numl>er  one  team  with  Iowa  State  and  Southern  Method- 
ist shaping  up  as  the  strongest  contenders.  And  Kansas  is  still  to  be 
reckoned  with  in  future  weeks. 

The  win  over  State  sends  Coach  Frank  McGuire's  club  into  the 
long  two  week  exam  poriod  with  a  1S-0  record  and  top  place  in 
the  ACC  with  a  6-0  merk.  Major  obstacles  yet  to  be  faced  are 
Maryland  at  College  Park,  Duke  and  Wa^e  Forest  in  two  games 
«9ch,  and  State  at  Chapel  Hill. 

Cool  Heads  And  Free  Throws  Make  Difference 

The  Tar  Heels  didnt  have  an  easy  time  of  it  in  Raleigh  Tuesdaj- 
night.  The  Wolfpack  stayed  close  on  their  tail  all  the  way  until  thai 
fatal  7-minute  mark  when  (^arolii^a  start^  <;^shing  in  on-  layups  and 
Joul  shots  to  turn  the  game  into  a  runaway. 


The  loss  of  John  Richt*r  couldn't  have  hurt  much,  because  l)is 
replacement,  soph  Ken  Clark,  •was<.nething  short  of  sensational  m 
his  starting  debut.  Clark  ledState  scorers  with.  16  points  and  in 
addition  topped  both  teams  in  rebounding  with  12. 

The  Wolfpfick  grabl)cd  the  opening  tipoff'and  immediately  started 
•tailing,  but  .-•oon  changed  their  minds  as  Carolina  jumped  off  to  an 
!J-0  lead.    Thfy  switched  to  a  modified  fast  break  for  "the  rest  of  the 
night,  but  were  continually  stymied  by  an  aggreesive  Carolina  defense. 
With  Clark  doing  most  of  the  damage,  the  Pack  pulled  to  with-' 
i>i  three  points,  5S-50,  with  7  minutes  to  go,   but   when  Whitey 
Beit  missed  an  opportunity  to  pull  his  team  within  one,  the  Tar 
Heels  began  to  make  their  skill  and  experionce  known  with  a  burst 
of  point  making  that  applied  ice  water  to  Wolfpack  hopes. 
Free  throw  shooting  and  cool  heads  made  the  difference.   The  Tar 
Heelo"  hit  43  of  51  from  the  line  and  seldom  missed  when  the  pressure    coach. 
was  on.    The  unerring  accuracy  of  Tar  Heel  shocters  from  the  free  I      Radovich 


ing  for  the  varsity.  (This  was  pos- 
sible at  the  time,  since  UNC  was 
still  in  the  Southern  Conference.) 

Radovich  stt  a  UNC  all-time 
season  record  for  free  throws 
last  year,  hitting  63  tut  of  76  for 
an  average  of  .129. 

In  the  Virginia  game  two  years 
ago,  he  scored  30  points  for  hij 
highest  total. 

The .  guard    is    from    Hoboken. 
N.  J.,  where  he  attended  Demarisl 
High   Scshool.  He   received  offero 
of  about  fifty  scholarships,  but  he 
so.in  narrowed  the  field  down   to 
Annapolis,    Duquesne,    and    UNC. 
He  chose  Carolina  because  "Coach 
McGuire  was  hero;  there  is  a  good 
physical  education  department;  it 
was  possible  to  play    varsity   bas- 
ketball in  the  freshman  year." 
Prtsontly   Radovicb   is   ma  for- 
ing   in   physical   education    and 
will    graduate   tliis  sf^ring.    For 
the  rest  of  the  batktHyall  season 
after    h*  leaves  the   varsity   he 
will  help  the  freshman  team. 
After  he  graduates  he  plans  to 
return  to  Hoboken   to  teach   and 


Sime  Will  Be  Honored 


DURHAM  — (AP)—  Duke  Uni*   down    Clubs    amateur    track    ath- 
versity's    sensational    sprint    star.  I  iete  of  the  year  award. 
Dave    Sime.    will    be    honored    at 
Newark,    N.    J.,     tonight    as   ISew 
Jersey's    college    athlete    of    the 
year. 


Sime,  whose  home  is  in  Fair-  i 
lawn,  N.  J.,  was  touted  as  the ; 
world's  fastest  human  last  sum-  j 
mer  but  failed  to  make  the  Olym- 
pic track  team  when  he  pulled  a  ' 
groin  muscle.  j 

On   Friday    night   Sime   wUl   be 
in  Columbus.  Ohio,  where  he  will  j 
be  awarded  the  Columbus  Touch- 


Don't  Let  Exams 
Buffalo  You! 

Brush  up  with  our  high-powered 
Outline'  and  nick  off  an  A.  We!1, 
a  B  maybe. 

THE  INTIMATE 
BOOKSHOP 
205  East  Franklin  Street 
Open  Till  10  P.  M. 


Dixie  Baseball  Classic 
Out  For  This  Season 


Tlic  Baseball  Di.vie  Classic,  a 
spring  sports  feature  in  this  area, 
will  not  be  held  this  year  but  wQl  be 
revived  in  1958.  Chairman  Walt«: 
Kabb.  North  Carolina  baseball 
coach,  announced  yesterday. 

'"We  regret  that  we  will  be  unable 


has     no     immediate 


throw  line  was  all  the  more  remarkable  in  the  face  of  feet  .stamping 
and  catcalls  from  a  partisan  and  unspovtsmanlike  State  student  bodj'. 

Case:  A  Fine  Team)  But  Not  Unbeatable '^ " 

Everett  Case,  silver  haired. State i mentor  who  had  just  watched  his 
team  absorb  one  of  their  worst  lickings  in  history,  called  Carolina  a 
"fijae  team"  but  warned  that  somebody  would  knock  them  off  .beforr 
the  seajon  ended.  And  Frank  McGuire.  though,  hoping  for  the  he.st. 
seems  to  agree  with  him*  (See  fronV  page.^ 

Nmxt  titm  Ctrolin*  and-^St»t0  get.  tosether,  there  will  likely  be 

personnel  changes  on  each  squad.  The  Wolfpack  wiir  be  strengtii- 

♦ned  by  the  return  of  John   RJchtcr,  out  now  with  a   sprained 

i    ankle;  Nick  Pond,  victim  of  a  broken  wrist;  and  Bob  MeGilvary, 

a  scholastic  casualty  the  first  sentester. 

On  the  Carolina  side,  things  arcnt  so  bright.  Tony  Radovich. 
poised  veteran  who  •  chipped 'in  ilfti^  lH  Vi!6&f>l^  (points  again.i  State, 
graduates  at  the  end  of  this  semester,  while  big  Billy  Hathaway,  6-11 
soph,  seems  destined  to  go  out  via  the  scholastic  route..  But  Ray 
Stanley,  a  starter  on  last  year's  frosh  squad  will  become  eligible  at 
the  beginning  of  next  semester.  Whether  or  not  Coach  McGuire  will 
elect  to  use  him  i.>-  strictly  a  matter  for  conjecture. 

On  The  Sidelines,  A  Tug  Of  War 

Carolina  and  State  cheerleaders  staged  a  battle  royal  over  a  UNC 
blanket  that  the  Wplfpack  pep  prodders  had  somehow  gotten  posses 
.^ion  of.  The  thing  sUrted  when  Jim  Fountain  and  the  State  head 
cheerleader  got  in  a  tug-of-war  over  the  blanket.  Things  began  fo 
liven  up  pretty  quickly,  however,  as  another  UNC  bov  and  three  State 
youths  got  into  the  act. 

state  soon  began  to  wear  down  the  Tar  Heel  representatives 
by  sheer  weight  of  nuntbers,  but  v4ctory  was  denied  to  both  eon- 
tending  parties  when  the  local  gendarme  stepped  in  and  took 
possession  of  tbe  eontrovorsial  blanket.  When  last  heard  from 
said  article  was  unrfor  lock  «n«l  koy.;.^;^  ^  .^  ...  :..       , 


plans  for  marriage;  however,  at  the 
time  he  is  going  steady*  with  Miss 
Jotfn  Willsey,  a  Carolina  physical 
education  major  frora  Norfolk.  Va. 
Radovich.  who  stands  6-3  and 
weighs  182,  belhsve^-  that  Stanly 
Groll  will  fill  in  his  old  spot  at 
guard.  Radovich  thinks  that  the 
Maryland.  Wake  Forest  and  Ehike 
games  on  their  home  courts  will 
be  the  toughest  for  the  Tar  Heels. 
He  said  the  freshman  team,  al- 
though it  needs  some  more  experi' 
ence.  should  give  excellent  support 
to  the  varsity  next  year.  "Without 
Lcnnic  Roscnbluth  they  will  need 
help  next  year, '  he  stated. 

He  said,  "It  has  b«on  great 
playing  on  •  foam  that  is  th« 
only  undoftated  foam  in  the  na- 
tion. I  hope  they  stay  thst  way." 


to  put  it  on  this  year  on  account  of 
the  lateness  of  the  Easier  holidays 
and  the  difficiUfy  in  securing  out- 
side teams,"   Rabb  said. 

•'We  definitely  will  hold  it  in 
1958  and  already  have  received  in- 
<|t»iries  from  several  outside  teams, 
including  Michigan.  Colgate,  La- 
favette   and   Connecticut." 


Have  You  Forgotten 
Something? 

Pete  the  Tailor  has  loads  of 
clothing  that  has  been  brought  In 
for  Pete's  first  class  repairs  and 
has  been  left. 

Are  You  Guilty? 


to 


Pete  surely  would  hate  to  have 
sell    these    clothes.    How    about 


/: 


%0  R  T/^ 
^ROLIM/l 

WALTER   RABB 
•. .  .call's   off  Classic 


The   Big   Four   teams   fill   out   the  j  coming    by   and    picking    op   yours 
'oiiinament.  j  ^^^^ 

The    Baseball    Dixie   Cla.ssic    was  i 
held  the.  first   time  two   years   ago 
:'t     Durham    but    last    season    firs! 
round    games   were  played  on   the 
Big  Four  campuses. 

Rabb  said  committeemen  arc  giv- 
ing some  consideration  '  to  holding 
ll'.e  1958  event  at  Winston-Salem, 
:iew  home  of  Wal(e  Forest  College. 


AT 


PETE  THE  TAILOR 

SPECIALIZING    IN 
•IVY  LEAGUEI2ING" 

13316   E.   FRANKLIN  ST. 


Imported    Flannel, 
Tweed,  and  Shetland 

$UITS 
were  up  to  now 

$75  $48.75 


Prom  our  regular  stock 
SPORT  COATS 

Shetiands,  Rumson 

Tweeds,  and 

Harris  Tweeds 

were  '     ^  novy 

$45  ^4  _       $34.95 

$55      *  $44.95 


Entire  Stock 
WOOL  SLACKS 
REDUCED  -  $3 

per  pair 
(off  regular  price) 


TOP  COATS 

Tweeds  and 
Shetiands 
were      '' '    ' '-  now 
$65  to  $75  $48.75 

THESE  AND  MANY  OTHER  STARTLING 
REDUCTIONS  AT 


Julian' 


t^lm 


;r.^T. 


On  The  Road  To  Home.  Confusion. 

12,200  fans  braved  the  icy  elements  of  nature  to  sit  in  on  the  ACC 
and  Big  Four  battle.  And  many  of  the  ardent  hardwood  addicts  didn't 
make  it  home  until  the  wee  hours  of  the  morning. 

Few  car  in  the  caravan  winding  their  victorious  way  home  to 
Chapel  Hill  had  chairts,  so  there  was  plenty  of  slipping  and  sli2- 
ing.  Just  after  the  line  of  cars  turned  off  the  Raleigh  road  onto 
highway   54,  somebody  way  up   in  front  had   the  misfortune  to 
slide  amidships  of  the  road.  A  terrific  snarl  of  traffic  ensued  and 
at   last  report,  the  throng  of  students,  townspeople  and  athletic 
officials  were  having  the  time  of  their  lives. 
Coach  McGuire  and  his  ba.<ketball  players  were  among  the  group 
that  fell  victim  of  the  slick  and  treacherous  pavement.    But  eventu- 
ally they  managed  to  find  their  way  home,  some  going  around  by 
way  of  Durham  and  others  hitching  rides  with  more  fortunate  folks 
possessmg  chains.  Yours  truly,  though  falling  in  the  latter  group  was 
forced  to  detour  around  by  Durham  and  barely  slipped  under  the 'wire 
with  the  game  story. 


Kansas,  UNC 
Meeting  Said 
NoWkely 

\  total  of  95  points  separated  Kan- 

.sss    and    North    Carolina    in    this 

week's  Associated  Press  basketball 

poll,  but  a  lot  of  folks  have  been 

^■.  ondcring  how  tlje  two  teams  would 

slack  up  If  they  played  each  other. 

Kansas,  rated  No.  1,  has  lost  only 

j  oucc.  while  the  Tar  Heels  are  un- 

I  defeated,  sporting  a  15-0  record. 

North  Carolina  Coach  Frank  Mc- 

CJaire    says    his    Tar    Heels    would 

I  do  okay  against  Kansas,  especially 


Rosie  Hits  46.1%  Of  Shots 


The   Atlantic  Coast  Conference's    hit  on  88  of  116  chances  for  75  9 
^aBketbaU    scoring .  leaders.   Grady  I  per  cent.   Rosenbluth  has  convert- 
ed. 126  of  162  for  77.7  per  cent.  Ad- 
ditionally.   Wallace    has    averaged 


Wallace  of  South  Carolina  and  Len 
Rosenbluth  of  North  Carolina,  are 
far  from  timid  when  it  comes  to 
shooting,  but  both  have  outstand- 
ing averages  as  prime  examples 
of  today's  efficient  basketball  star. 

Wallace,  according  to  ACC  Serv- 
ice  Bureau  figures,  has  shot  307 
times  and  hit  133  tor  a  field  goal 
average  of  43.3  per  cent  in  amas- 
sing his  ACC-leading  scoring  av- 
erage of  29.5  points  a  game. 

Rosenbluth  is  even  better  with  a 
field  goal  shooting  mark  of  46.1  per 
'cent,  having  fait  120  of  260  shots 
from  the  floor.  He  is  averaging  26.1 
points. 

ivom  the  foul  linOf  W^aUace  has- 


14.3  rebounds  to  lead  the  ACC  in 
that  department,  hnd  Rosenbluth 
has  averaged  8.5  rebounds  second 
best  for  the  Tar  Heels. 

Perry  Moore  of  Maryland  and 
John  Richter  of  State  rank  one-two 
in  field  goal  shooting  with  53.2  and 
53.1  per  cent,  respectively.  Bob 
vSeitz  of  S^te  and  Jackie  Murdock 
of  Wake  Forest  stand  one-two  Irom- 
the  foul  line  with  88.8  and  88.4  per 
cent. 

Jim  Newcome  of  Duke  is  seeohd 
in 'rebounding  with  14.1  recoveries 


if  the  game  was  played  in  the  lim- 
ited confines  of  Woollen  gym  here. 

"Oh.  we'd  have  to  build  a  fence 
around  Wilt  (The  Stilt)  Chamber- 
lain. Some  sort  of  w>ne  to  worry 
him.'  said  Irish  Frank,  the  Brook- 
lyn fashion  plate.  "On  Kansas' 
court,  though,  I'm  not  sure  how 
we'd  do." 

Despite  Chamberlain's  7-foot 
stretch,  McGuire  says  the  Jay- 
hawks  wouldn't  have  anything  on 
las  Tar  Heels  la  this  connection. 

With  BiU  Hathaway  (6-11),  Joe 
Quigg  (6-9»,  Pete  Brennan  (6-6)  and 
Lennie  Rosenbluth  (6-5),  on  the 
floor,  says  McGuire,  "we're  pretty 
big  and  everyone  of  these  boys  can 
iihoot.  We'd  do  okay." 

McGuire  admits  that,  right  now. 
the  game  would  be  the  season's  top 
attraction. 

But  McGuire  says  there's  only 
one  slim  chance  the  two  clubs  may 
meet  this  year— in  the  NCA.\  jrfay- 
offs  in  March.  And  he  points  out 
that  both  clubs  may  have  trouble 
stayinfi  In  the  running  f^r  NCAA 
playoff  berths^aside  from  stajing 
on  top  of  the  basketball  polls.  Big 
S«\^n  aad  ACC  league  play  is 
amonf  t)bp  best  in  the  nation. 

Nortii  Caroiina  has  10  league 
?ame«  to  piay  and  must  win  or 
place  aecopd  to  North  Carolina 
State,  which  is  on  NCAA  probation 
•and  not  eligible. lor  plaj-off  berths 
iit  the  confftrenoe  tournament  March 


Beotty,  Tabori 
ScurlockSet 
For  Boston  Run 

By  DAVE  WIBBLE 

UNC  tracksters  Jim  Scatty  and 
Dave  Scurlock  will  travel  to  Bos- 
ton, Mass..  Saturday  to  participate 
in  Knight  of  Columbus  indoor 
games  Saturday  night. 

This  meet,  one  of  the  largest  in- 
door track  meets  in  the  country 
(  is  an  inviation  af- 
fair and  will  fea- 
ture some  of  the 
top  track  men  in 
the  world. 

Beatty.  recent- 
ly named  All 
American  for  the  second  lime  for 
his  outstanding  performances  in 
track  last  year,  will  run  in  the  two- 
mile  event.  Scurlock,  Carolina's 
top  half-milcr,  will  make  his  ap- 
pearance in  the  1000-yard  run. 

Beatty,  who  has  been  clocked  at 
9:04  in  the  two-mile  will  be  pitted 
against  vsuch  runners  as  Horace 
Ashenfelter.  the  winner  of  the  Bo,,-- 
ton  K  of  C  two-mile  event  for  the 
past  seven  years,  and  Hungarian 
track  man  Laszlo  Tabori. 

Tabori,  one  of  nine  men  to  run 
the  one-mile  in  less  than  four  min 
utes,  will  be  competing  on  United 
States  soil  for  the  first  time  at  this 
meet.  He  is  currently  working  out 
in  Chapel  Hill  with  the  UNC  run 
ners. 


What  a  MATHEMATICIAN 

ca7i  do  at  IBM  ,.o.r^ ',.  ...  m  s,,,  '' : 


Mathematics  is  an  ancient  but  ever-advancing  science  that  contains  mo^y 
forms.  It  shouldn't  surprise  you  then  that  it  took  some  time  befere  J^iiin 
Jackson  discovered  the  one  brand  of  mathematics  that  seemed  custom- 
tailored  to  his  ability  and  temperament.  John  is  an  Applied  Science  Repre- 
sentative, v^orking  out  of  the  IBN^  office  ctt  122  East  42nd  Street,  N.  Y.  C 


'**^' 


First  of  all.  what's  it  all  about?  What 
does  a  fellow  like  John  Jackson  do 
all  day?  In  his  own  words,  "I  keep 
in  touch  with  the  e.\ecutives  of  many 
difTerent  companies— advising  them 
on  the  use  of  their  IBM  electronic 
data  processing  computers.  I  person- 
ally consult  with  these  customers, 
and  analyze  their  scientific  and  tech- 
nical problems  for  solution  by  IBM. 
Occasionally,  I'm  asked  to  write 
papers,  and  give  talks  and  demon- 
strations on  electronic  computing. 
All  in  all,  it's  pretty  fascinating  .  .  . 
something  new  pops  up  every  day." 
In  other  words,  John  is  a  fuU-fiedged 
computing  expert,  a  consultant  .  .  . 
and  a  very  important  person  in  this 


The  aircra(t  people  decided  that  they 
couldn't  afford  to  wait  that  long,  so 
they  called  in  IBM.  After  discussion 
with  top  executives,  John  helped  to 
map  out  a  computer  program  that 
saved  the  organization  over  100  days 


mathematical  background  in  both  of 
those  areas.  It  was  not  until  he  was 
interviewed  by  IBM  that  field  com- 
puting whetted  bis  scientific  appetite. 
A  few  months  later,  John  ^launched 
his  own  IBM  career  a»  an  Applied 
Science  trainee. 

Promotionwise,  John  has  come  a 
long  way  since  that  time.  He's  now 
an  Applied  Science  Representative  in 
one  of  the  busiest,  most  responsible 
offices  in  the  IBM  organization  .\  . 
mid-town  Manhattan.  *.  - 

With  his  wife,  Katharine,  and 
daughter.  Lisa,  20  months,  and  John, 


7-9  to  get  hito  the  national  tourna- 
ment. 

-McGuire's  dark  —  haired,  dark, 
browed  shooting  star.  Rosenbluth, 
has  his  own  idea  of  how  the  Tar 
Heels  would  do  against  Chamber- 
lain Si  Co.  Rosie  played  against  the 
Stilt  when  the  Philadelphia  youth 
was  a  junior  in  high  school.  This 
was  in  summer  ball  in  the  Catskill 
resort  area. 

"Another  fellow  and  I  were 
guarding  Chamberlain,"  said  Ro- 
senbluth. "He  was  pretty  fantastic. 
He  got  36  points.  He  was  just  a  kid 
then." 


During  the  summer,  three 
fourths  of  all  precipitation  fall- 
ing on  North  Carolina  evaporates 
into  the  atmosphere,  with  only  one- 
fourth  returning  to  the  ocean.   <■'     i 


Calling  on  a  cu«l*m«r 

coming  age  of  automation  through 
M  electronics. 

Since  the  IBM  laboratories  are 
-  al  ways  devising  easier  an  d  faster  ways 
to  solve  the  problems  of  science,  gov- 
ernment, and  industry,  an  Applied 
Science  Representative  can  never  say 
he's  learned  his  job  and  that's  the 
end  of  it.  At  least  once,  every  two 
months,  he  attends  seminars  to  be 
updated  on  the  latest  developments  in 
engineering  and  operations  research. 

Introduces  new  methods 

During  the  two  years  that  John 
has  spent  with  IBM  in  Applied  Sci- 
ence, he  has  guided  innumerable  IBM 
Customers  to  new  and  better  ways  of 
doing  things  electronically.  For  ex- 
ample: about  a  year  ago,  a  leading 
aircraft  manufacturer  wanted  to  ex- 
periment with  a  radically  different 
design  for  a  ni<clear  reactor.  Although 
the  basic  format  had  been  established, 
the  project  still  required  many  months 
of  toil  with  mathematical  equations. 


Mopping  out  o  compotor  program 

of  pencil-chewing,  nail-biting  arith- 
metic. Later,  for  this  same  company, 
John  organized  the  establishment  of 
computer  systems  for  aircraft  per- 
formance predictions  ...  for  data 
reduction  of  wind  tunnel  tests . . .  and 
for  wing  stress  analysis.  At  the  same 
time,  he  worked  with  this  company's 
own  employees,  training  them  in  the 
use  of  IBM  equipment.  John  still 
drops  around  to  see  that  everything 
is  running  smoothly. 

Another  service  that  John  performs 
is  the  constant  reappraisal  of  each 
customer's  IBM  operation.  Occasion- 
ally, a  customer  may  tie  himself  in 
knots  over  a  procedural  "stickler." 
Periodically,  in  fact,  John  brings 
IBM  customers  together  .  .  .  just  to 
talk  over  what's  happening  in  each 
other's  business— how  everybody  else 
handled  that  old  bugaboo  in  any 
industry  .  .  .  details. 

New  field  for  Mathematicians 

John  is  exercising  his  mathematical 
know-how  in  a  field  that  was  prac- 
tically unheard  of  ten  years  ago.  Even 
now,  this  kind  of  work  may  be  news 
to  you.  It  was  to  John  Jackson  a  few 
years  back  when  he  was  an  under- 
graduate at  the  University  of  Colo- 
rado. At  that  time,  he  was  considering 
actuarial  work  or  mathematical  re- 
search. But  John  liked  the  excitement 
and  diversification  of  science  and  in- 
-  dustry  and  he  wanted  to  use  his 


Ditcucting  a  preblom  with  c»H>egu»t 

Jr.,  6  weeks,  he  enjoys  his  suburban 
Port  Washington  home.  He's  happy 
and  he's  satisfied.  And  then,  too,  John 
knows  a  few  vital  statistics  kbout 
IBM  .  .  .  such  as  the  fact  that  the 
Applied  Science  Division  has  quad- 
rupled during  the  past  three  years, 
and  that  in  1956  alone,  over  70  pro- 
motions were  conferred.  If  ever  a 
future  held  promise,  here  is  one. 


IBM  hopes  that  this  message  will  help 
to  give  you  some  idea  of  what  a  mathe- 
matician can  do  at  IBM.  There  are  equal 
opportunities  for  E.E.'s,  M.E.'s,  physi- 
cists and  Liberal  Arts  majors  in  IBM's 
many  divisions— Research,  Product  De- 
velopment, Manufacturing  Engineering. 
Sales  and  Technical  Services.  Why  not 
drop  in  and  discuss  IBM  with  your  Place- 
ment Director?  He  can  supply  our  latest 
brochure  and  tell  you  when  IBM  will 
next  interview  on  your  campus.  Mean- 
while, IBM  will  be  happy  to  answer  your 
questions.  Just  write  to  Mr.  P.  H .  Bradley, 
IBM,  Room  0000,  590  Madison  Avenue 
New  York  22,  K.  Y. 


■^^ 
'% 


IBM 


INTEINATIONAL 
BU8INIM  MACKIMU 
COirOIATION 


3 


DATA  PAOCCSSINC     •     SLeCTIIIC  TYMWaiTtHS     •     TIMS  COUIPMCNT     •     IMUTARV  PMOOUCTS     • 


s^cciAL  CNGiNceaiwo  rnooucTs 

Dopt.  No.  1701 


•« 


TT.^.C.    '  LIBRARY 
SERIALS   DEPT. 
BOX  370 
CHAPEL    HILL,    N.^ 


WEATHER 

»     Croudy  and  cold.  Expected  high 


35. 


mt  Dailu  a  ^Tatr  Heel 


'  CAMPAIGN 

All  it  takes  is  a  lattar.  Sm  ad* 
*  teriai,  paya  2. 


VOL.'  LVII  NO.  86 


CorrcpXtte  (/Pf  Wire  Service 


CHAPEL    HILL,    NORTH    CAROLINA,    FRIDAY,    JANUARY    18,    1957 


Offices   in   Graham   Memorial 


FOUR    PAGES  THIS  ISSUt 


Adams  Wants  Di 
On  Student  Level 


"I'd  lik2  to  bring  the  Di  down 
more  to  the  student  level,"  newly 
elected  Dialectic  Senate  President 
John  Patrick  Adams  said  yester- 
<Jay. 

Adams,  a  junior  self-help  stu- 
dent from  Asheboro,  succeeds 
Stan  Shaw  c.i  Ashcville. 

*'I  realize  that  tradition  is  great 
but  new  innovations  and  liberali- 
zations must  be  made  to  pravide 
future^  leadership  for  the  campus," 
Adams  said. 

Other  new  officers  elected  Tues- 
day night  are;  ' 

Miss  Nancy  Roth5|hild.  presi- 
den  pro-tempore:  Gerr>  Bou- 
dreau.  critic;  Malcolm  Partin, 
clerk;  Irvin  Avery,  sergeant-at- 
arms;  Gary  Greor,  representative 
to  Carolina  Forum;  Stan  Shaw, 
chaplin.  Gene  Whitehead  will  con- 
tinue  as  treasurer. 

President  Adams  served  as  pres- 
ident pr  -temnore  last  s?mester. 
H"  is  currentlv  a  member  of  Phi 
Alpha  Beta,  honorary  history  fra- 
ternity. 

The  Di  will  meet  again  the  first 
Tuesday  in  Feb.  at  eight  o'clock 
p.m.  in  New  West. 

Topic  for  discus iicn  will  be 
"The  E-sThower  Doctrine  in  the 
Middle  E:st." 

Former  President  Shaw  said_ 
the  Di  woul.i  launch  its  library 
assistance  driv3  immediately  after 
exams. 

Pre.-idcnt  Arlanvss  inauguiatiiin 
will  be  held  immediatCiV  after 
exams,  h?  said.  Tentative  speaker 
for  the  occasion  is  C  -nsolidated 
University  President  William  Fri- 
day. 


Victory  Villag  e  Heating  Plant  Pamaged 
By  Afternoon  Blaze;  16  Units  Affected 

Occupants  Move  Out 
While  Plant  Repaired 


JOHN   PATRICK   ADAMS 
. . .  new  Di  head 


news 

in 
brief 


COLLEGE  PAIIK,  Md— (API- 
Democrats  and  Republicans  bat- 
tled to  ■  lO^IM  tio  on  the  bas- 
kotball  court  Wodriosday  night, 
M»«<«  •diotn'rwd  for  •  rfn»eh-n*«d- 

Thero  <wdro  nino  |M«y*ri  on 
•'the  floor  for  each  team  through- 
'  out  the  contest,  but  that  didn't 
account  for  the  astronomical 
score.'  Out  oi  respect  to  their 
congressional  positions  or  their 
basketball  ability,  each  team  was 
given  100  p;>ints  to  start  the 
game. 


Khrushchev  Lauds  Stalin 

MOSCOW—  .^1— Communist  Party 
Boss  Nikita  Khrushchev  Thur.^ay 
praised  Stalin  as  a  model  Commun- 
ist in  his  fight  f jr  the  workers. 

Nearly  a  year  ago  Khrushchev 
denounced  the  late  dictator  as  a 
mass  murderer  assailed  "the  cult  of 
the  inlividuai,"  and  que.stionc'.l 
Ftalins  Communism. 

Rf  ars  of  approval  by  the  audi- 
ence and  wild  applause  by  visitia;; 
Chine  -*  Premier  Chou  Eln-Lai 
greeted  Khrushchev's  statement  jil 
a  (reception  given  by  Chou  for 
Kremlin  leaders. 

The     Soviet    Party    and   govern- 
ment leaders  looted  *hiM».  i^%fOtii^- 
ful   and   acted   more  playful   than 
at   any   other   time   in   public   since  j 
th«    Hungarian    Revolution    broke  ,  ■ 
out  three  month.s  ago. 

Soviet  ex-Premier  Georgi  Malcn-  I 
kov.  who  had  been  a  Stalin  secrc  ' 
tary  and  is  regarded  now  as  one  of 
the  moderating  influences  in  the  \ 
Kremlin,  stood  by  silent  aqd  un-  \ 
.miling  as  Khrushchev  wildly  wav-  | 

(.fee    WORLD    NEWS,    page    3)    ' 


Say; 


,       Firemen  Examine  Damage  To  Vi 

iChapel    Hill    Firemen    use   a    flashlight    te   find    their   way    in  the 
tmok»4iiiaAbuildiiiVi ' -Because  of  the  smaD  windows  the  hr^tk  struc^' 
tur«   *omained  filled   with   oil    smoke    long    after   the    fire    was   eixtin- 


ctory  Village 

guished.    In   the 

"aTt  faintly  visibi 


Heating  Plant    -♦. 

f oreyround   a   ch»rrm^^iiA!^-<^i^m^  j^jf^  j^n  ttil   heater 
e  through  the  pall  of  smbRi;*'  ^hoVo'By   Charlie  Sloan 


IN  THE  INFIRMARY 


Students  In  the  Infirmary  yes- 
terday  included: 

Misses  Gwendolyn  Lemly,  Ger- 
aldine  York,  Donna  Anderson, 
Margaret   Smith,    Ruth    Watkins, 


and  Robert  Lewis,  Shelton  Turn- 
er, Warwick  Porter,  Kenneth 
Grogan,  Richard  Natoli,  Leslie 
Evans,  William  Armstrong,  John 
Curtiss,  Ralph  Cummings,  George 
Irvin,  and  James  Pierce. 


Conference  On  Gravitation 
Opens  Here  This  Morning 


The  International  Conference  on 
the  Role  of  Gravitation  in  Physics 
opens  here  today  with  physicists 
from  11  nations  participating. 

The  fir.-t  official  session  will 
open  at  10  a.m.  today  in  Carroll 
Hall  with  Dr.  Bryce  DeWitt  of 
the  UNC  Physics  Department  pre- 
siding. Technical  discussions  will 
be  held  during  two  -morning  and 
afternoon    sessions. 


Gov.  Luther  H.  Hodges  will  pre- 
side at  a  luncheon  Ftiday  in  the 
Morehead  Planetarium.  The  40- 
odd  conferees  will  attend  along 
with  special  representatives  of  the 
seven  agencies  sponsoring  this  six- 
day  conference. 

The  layman  will  hslve  an  op- 
portunity "to  find  out  what  the 
world's  foremost  scientists  are 
currently  doing"  at  a  Friday  night 
program.  Entitled  a  "Popular  Sym- 


posium," the  non-technical  public 
address,  will  be  held  at  8  p.m.  in 
Carroll  Hall. 

Speakers  will  include  Dr.  T. 
Gold  of  Rrvval  Greenwich  Obser- 
vatory, England;  Dr.  L.  Roscnfeld 
of  the  Univei'sity  or  Alanchester, 
England;  and  Dr.  J.  A.  Wheeler  of 
Princeton   University,    formerly  of 

^  UNC.  • 

Dr.   Cecile   DeWitt.   secretary   of 

[  the    conference    Steering    commit- 


.-i,.^.^•^^  *.«.>> 


tee.  announced  that  special  guests 
at  today's  luncheon  will  include 
these  men: 

Dr.  Raymond  J.  Seeger  of  Wash 
ington,  D.  C,  representing  thi' 
National  Science  Foundation  :'f 
which  he  is  acting  assistant  di 
rector 

Dr.  .loshua  N  Goldberg  of  Day 
ton.  Ohio,  a  conference  partici- 
pant, representing  the  Wright  A;r 
(See    PHYSICS   Pa.ge  3' 


SP  And  UP  Chairmen 

Sonny  Hallford,  left,  and  Mike  Weinman  will  steer  the  Student 
Party  and  the  University  Party  throughout  the  coming  semester  and 
Spring  Elections  April  2.  Hallford  was  recently  elected  to  the  chair- 
manship cf  the  Student  Party  to  replace  Jim  Holmes,  who  tendered 
hie  resignation  for  "personal  reasons."  Weinman  is  serving  his  second 
term  as  chairman  of  the  University  party  following  his  recent  re- 
election to  the  post  . 


Pysicist  A  nd  Layman 

Bob  Myers,  rl»ht,  undaunted  by  Einstein's  Theory  on  Gravitation,  by  gravitation.  .However,  Myers  was  very  perceptive  in  an  interview 

hears   Or.   Behram   Kwrsunoglu   of  Turkey   discuss   anti-metter   as   it  with   Dr.    Kursunoglu.   He  observed   that  the   Turkish   physicist   was 

may  exist  in  another  universe.  Myers,  a   journalism  student  and   an  -wearing  two  wrist  watches — one  Ankara,  Tut  key,  time  atid  the  other 

employee  of  the  News  Bureau,  admitted  frankly  that  he  i«  puxzled  American  Eastern  Standard  time. 


Quarterly 
On  Press 
Today 

Th?  ncrt  issue  of  the  Caro- 
lina Quarterly.  UNC  literary  mag- 
azine, goes  to  press  today  and 
will  contain,  among  other  literary 
gems,  a  unique  adventure  stjry 
by    an    eight-year-old    boy. 

The  issue,  which  is  scheduled 
for  publication  around  the  middle 
of  February,  will  also  announce 
the  annua!  Quarterly  liction  con- 
test. The  contest  is  open  to  every- 
one but  staff  members  of  the  mag- 
azine. 

Quarterly  editor.  Miss  Mareelline 
Krafchick.  said  the  rules  would 
be  explained  in  full  in  the  com- 
ing issue.  The  winner  of  the  eon- 
test  will  be  announced  in  the 
May  issue. 

Prizes  for  the  contest  have  not 
been  announced,  but  last  year's 
winner  got  $100  and  the  second 
place  finisher  collected  $50.  There 
were  several   smaller   awards. 

This  year  will  mark  the  seventh 
time    the    contest    has    been    held. 

Deadline  for  entrance  into  the 
contest  will  be  April  1,  Miss  Kraf- 
chick said. 


By    CLARKE    J0t4ES 

Fire  gutted  a  heating  unit  in  X'irtory  \illage  Thursday 
.tlternoon  leaving  iG  liou.sing  units  without  heat. 

Occupants  of  the  units  quickly  made  preparations  to 
stay  uiih  friends  in  Cihapel  Hill.  Canlxjio  and  other  village 
housing  units  until  ilic  plant  is  repaired.  It  was  prechVted  this 
will  take  two  or  three  davs  at  the  most. 

There  w^is  speculation  the  fire  started  as  a  result  of 
tucl  oil  running  o\cv  and  overhearhig  the  plant. 

fhe  amoinit  of  damage  was  not  estimated  as  of  late 
I  Inn  Sclav  afternoon.  \'i<  torv  \illage   Maintenance  Foreman 

— — ♦  H.   L.   Hackney    told    a    reporter 

"Your  guess  is  as  good  as  mine."' 

There  were  no  injuries  suffered. 

One    housing   unit   next    to    the 

plant   was  filled   with   smoke    and 

soot   but  did  not  catch  fire.  One 

occupant    said    some   cl3thes    and 

bedsheets  were   slightly  damaged. 

Several   persons  carried  out  all 

furniture  in  the  adjacent  unit   in 

case   the   fire    spread. 

Chancellor  Itobert  B.  House  said 
'a  flood  of  invitations'"  came  in, 
•  mostly  from  the  people  in  the  Vil- 
r'ie." 

All  of  Chapel  Hill  responded  and 
it  res'wnded  verv  quickly,  and  we 
appreciate    it.  " 

House  said  the  University  will 
f.nd  a  place  for  the  fire  victims 
to  live  until  the  units  are  repaired. 
Itepairs  on  the  furnace  will  take 
a   week   to   ten  days. 

The  plant  caught  fire  at  apprc«-. 
imatcly  4  p,m    Local  fiiremen  1»4 
I  the  bleze   under  contT«l  ^tKia  a 
half  hour  after  arriving. 
,       The    boiler    inside    the    building 
j  had   been   partially     crushed     In. 
The    combination    of    cold    water 
from   tile  powerful  fire  hoses  jtod 
the  bailer's  intense  heat  caused  it 
tt)  collapse. 

Housing  Officer  J.  E.  Wads- 
worth  hoped  this  would  bring  on 
plans  for  construction  of  per- 
manent houses  in  the  develop- 
ment area. 


CU  Prexy 

s  Losses 
Dangerous 

WAYNESVILLE— President  Wil- 
liam Friday  of  the  Consolidated 
University  told  a  gathering  of  \ 
VKC  alumni  here  last  night  that  i 
a  danger  confronts  the  higher  ed-'j 
ucatijnal  system  of  North  Caro-  • 
Una  because  of  criti<Jal  losses  in  I 
faculty  in  the  past  18  months.         i 

President  Friday  '  asked  for 
alumni  understanding  and  sup- 
port of  the  University's  position 
in  requesting  funds  to  increase 
salaries  and  maintain  distinguish-  \ 
ed  faculties  at  Raleigh;  Greens-  | 
:  boro  and  Chapel  Hill.     ""'^        -      j 

Slating  that  199  faculty  mem- 
bers have  been  lost  by  resigna- 
tions in  the  past  year  and  three 
quarters.  Friday  said  that  the  Uni- 
versity's requests  to  the  1957  Gen- 
eral   Assembly    are    fourfold: 

1.'    Substantial  increases  in  sal-  ; 
ary  for  faculty. 

2.  Greater  support  for  the  li- 
braries to  maintain  the  ncxsition 
of  the  library  among  great  uni- 
versity institutions  of  the  coun- 
try. ._  j 

3.  Research  grants  to  perform 
essential  research  befitting  a  uni-  j 
versity.  I 


4.  Adequate  equipment,  includ- 
ing laboratories,  to  aid  research. 

Friday  traced  the  growth  of 
the  Consolidated  University  since 
it  was  begun  luidcr  the  G  ncruor- 
ship  of  O.  Max  Gardner,  and  he 
expressed  his  conviction  of  the 
success   of   consolidation. 


Handbook  Ed 
Applicants  ^^ 
May  See  Files 

All  applicants  for  the  editor- 
ship of  the  Woman's  Handbook 
have  been  invited  to  come  by  to 
look  over  the  files  of  the  Women's 
Residence  Council,  which  will  be 
open  to  all  those  interested  from 
3  p.m.  to  3  p.m.  on  Feb.  4.  5,  6. 
7  and  8  in  the  Dean  of  Women's 
Office. 

If  this  time  is  inc  jnvenient.  ap- 
plicants have  been  asked  to  con- 
tact Peggy  Funk  at  the  Chi  O 
House  who  will  arrange  for  a 
special  meeting, 

Applications  for  the  editorship 
must  be  submitted  to  the  Dean 
of  Women's  office  no  later  than 
the  week  of  February  11.  accord- 
ing to  tl^  Women's  Residence 
Council. 

Inlervitws  will  be  given  by  ap- 
pointment only  during  the  week 
of  Jan,  18-23. 

The  Women's  Handbook  was  edit- 
ed last  year  by  Virginia  Hughes. 
The  section  editors  were  Winifred 
Martin  and  Joy  Brown  while  Margie 
Cook   was  art  editor. 


Surgery  Dept 
Adds  Three 
To  Faculty 

Three  new  faculty  members  have 
been  appointed  in  the  Dept.  of 
Surgery  of  the  University  School 
of  Medicine,  according  to  an  an- 
nouncement today  by  Dr,  Nathan 
A.  Womack,  professor  of  surgery 
and  department  head. 

The  new  faculty  members  are 
Dr.  Baxter  H.  Byerly.  Dr.  Gab- 
riel F.  Tucker  Jr,  and  Dr.  Claude 
A.  Tait.  I 

Dr.  Byerly  is  a  native  of  Lenoir. 
He  did  his  undergraduate  and  pre- 
medical  work  at  UNC.  His  M.  D 
degree  was  granted  by  the  Mecli 
cal  College  of  Virginia  in  1953. 
His  internship  was  served  at  Duke 
University. 

Dr.    Tucker   recei\-ed   his   A.   B. 
degree  from  Princeton  Univerjity 
in  1947  and  his  M.  D.  degree  from 
Johns  Hopkins  in  1951.  He  served  ; 
his    internsKip    at    the    University 
of      Pennsylvania.       Dr.       Tucker  \ 
taught  pharmacology  at  UNC  dur-  j 
ing    1952-53.    Following    his    resi-  1 
dency  in   otolaryngology  at  Johns  j 
Hopkins   Universitj*.    he   has  been 
appointed    instructor    in    otolaryn- 
gology. 

Dr,  Tait  attended  school  at 
Georgetown  University,  receiving 
his  M.  D,  degree  in  1952.  Follow-  j 
ing  two  years  of  surgical  resi-  j 
dency  at  UNC.  he  entered  the  resi-  j 
dency  program  in  anesth-esiology  | 
which   he   recently   completed,        \ 


Ballet 
Here  Stars 
Two  Artists 


.Marjoric  T.;lkhief  and  George 
Skibine  take  the  leading  rjlcs  in 
the  Chicago  Opera  Ballet's  pre- 
sentation o{  •"The  Merry  Wicfow" 
and  "Revenge"  to  b?  held  Jan,  22 
in  Memorial  Hall  at  8  p.m. 

B:)th  artists  .>«tar  in  the  two  pro- 
ductions with  a  full  company  of 
48,  including  soloist,  corps  de  bal- 
lot, complete  scenery,  costumes 
and  orchc>stra.  Orchestration  is  un- 
der the  direction  of  Leo  Kupp. 

The  works  chos:n  by  producer 
Ruth  Page  for  the  initial  Chicago 
Opera  Ballet  combine  the  gaiety 
of  Franz  Lchars  tuneful  "Merry 
Widow"  with  the  melodramatie 
Gypsy  talc  of  "Revenge."  adapted 
from  Verdi'  opera    '11  Trovatorc." 

Briefly,  the  ston  of  'The  Merry 
Widow"  deals  with  the  kingdom 
of  Marsovia.  a  mythical  realm  from 
which  Prince  Danilo  came  to  Paris 
and  fell  in  love  with  the  beautiful 
Merry  Widow.  Since  the  Widow 
was  as  rich  as  she  was  beautiful. 
Danilo  also  succeeded  in  twister- 
ing  up  his  country's  fainting  fi 
nances. 

For  ''Revenge,"  a  ballet  in  a 
Prologue  and  four  scenes.  Isaac 
van  Grove  has  made  a  special  ar- 
rangement of  the  Verdi  score. 

A  special  student  rate  of  $4  in- 
cludes tickets  for  this  perform- 
ance and  the  remaining  two  pro- 
ductions sponsored  by  the  Chapel 
Hill  Concert  Series.  Information 
concerning  tickets  may  be  gained 
at  Graham  Memorial  Information 
office. 


Exam  Schedule 

Th«  Daily  Tar  H«*l  will  ^rint 
th*  University  exam  Mh«4uf« 
temerrow.  Tomorrow's  issue  will 
be  the  lest  H«is  semester.  Fub- 
licetien  will  resume  foHowinf 
exeme. 


^AGE  TWO 


THi  DAILY  TAR  HEei 


FRIDAY,  JANUARY   T8,   1957 


FRIDAY 


Let's  Write  Some  Letters 
To  The  General  Assembly 

The  j>|x()niin|[;   ic.sij>nati()n   (tl    Dr.   Rcuhtn    Hill  should   shiikc   tlie 
I'niveisiiy  to  its  lomulations. 

l>r.  Hill,  it  is  iiiuU'vstoocl.  is  rc"sit;nini>  hotaiise  anotlicM   educational 
institution ^>ftered  him  nioif  nioiiev  than  lie  (oidd  possil)Iv  t>ei  Iktc. 

This  is  no  (ondttnnaiioii  ol   th<    rni\t'i>itv  administration:  (»n  the 
rontrai V.  intoiined  stmites  say  the  L'nivci^ity  Ix'iit  ovei  bat  kward  to  niai( It 
the  salarv  <iHcrcd  Vir.  Hill.  But  the  rnixevsitv'.s  treasury  is  jtist  so  deep, 
and     deep     Uw   'tis  is  shallow  for 
manv  othei    iniiversities.  hu.t^e  puhlic    outdV. 

It  will  not  be  a  j>i()tevt  resij;iia-  \\V.    the   siudeius,    lan    perlorm 

tion:  the  I'nixersitv  has  done  all  it  a  ':>reat  and  uood  dvcd  in  tliis  re- 
lan  to  make  excellent  s(  holars  /spec  t.  We  (an  write  letters,  button- 
like Dr.  Hill  want  to  Slav  here.  T'ne      hole    le<>islators,    and    talk    to    the 


whole    ihiu'^,    in    most   cases,   boils 

doAvn   to  a  ni;  tier  ol   linante*. 

*  *  * 

The  states  (.eneral  Ass«■mb^y 
does  not  appro|M"iate  enouj^h  monev 
to  the  I'niNersitf^  to  keep  u;<K)d 
professors  antl  administratois  here. 
Aroinid  the  noddle  <»l  eat  h  aia- 
demit  vear  rciruilers  irom  other 
instituti<»ns  start  enticin;^  our  bn - 
idi\  membeis  away.  Tliev  usually 
hold  prontises  ol  lar^e  salaries. 
1  hev  usually  i^et  their  man. 

In    this    manner    the    rni\ersitv 


lolks  back  home  aboiu  the  need 
lor  moie  money  lor  the  I'nixersi- 
Iv.  Chances  are  most  ol  us  uon't. 
but  it  woidd  be  extrinielv  helpful 
il   we  (lid. 

In  t  lew  years  this  universitvs 
preseiu  student  bodv  will  l)e  alum- 
ni. And  in  a  lew  years  ti>e  alumni 
will  look  bai  k  on  Chaj)el  Hili  and 
wonder  il  what  thev  did  was  ri,t;ht. 
and  wonder  what  thev  tan  do  lor 
the   rni\ervity; 

We  suggest    that    the   .\lumni   of 
lew   vears   IVtMU    now    undertake 


has  lost  sexeral  "(mmI  lat  uhv  mem-      a   little   |>rojet  t    to    do    somethinj; 
1  •  .      ' \ ..  J    •     *     I J    r K,.    I'.,:. :... 


hers  in  retent  years.  And  it  is  los- 
ing l)i".  Reuben  Hill  in  the  same 
manner. 

.  There  is  one  tdut  Itision.  one 
answer  to  this:  The  state's  (ien- 
eral    Assemblv.    whith    meets   next 


\er\   oood   lor  the   I'niversity. 

W't  su,i>!4est  that  the  Student 
Letjislature  dralt  ajid  pass  a  resolu- 
tion askini;  the  state  (ieneral  .As- 
semblv to  ap|>ropriate  more  monev 
lor  the  rni\eisity's  latiiltv.    Fhen, 


moiuh    in    Raleigh,    nurst    approp-      we    siij>i;est.    members   ol    the    Stu- 


tlent  I.e^iislature  shoidd  address 
personal  letters  it)  their  lepresenta- 
tives  in  the  state  Lc<rislature.  ask- 
ing   b)r   the   appropriation. 

1  he  ('.aidl)o:nd.  the  Kiank  (ira- 
JKun  (;ha|)ter  of  Future  Teachers 
ol  .\nurita.  Chapel  Hill  .Minister- 
ial .\ssn..  members  of  Pi  Kappa 
Alpha  sot  iai  fraiernitv.  Pla\  makers. 
I-'ieshman  Kellowsliip  and  memfx-rs 
ol  the  h>otball  .s(]u:id  tan  tio  the 
same  thini*. 

Sut  h  .11  tion  would  surprise  the 
Ct^ncral  .\ssembly.  xvhith  some- 
times allons  itself  to  believe  stu- 
tlents  are  necessarv  e\ils  in  nm- 
niiV4   a    unixeisity.    \\'e    jireditt    it 

...    - ,.     ..        would  make  the  (.eneral  .\s.seiTibly 

lhi>seiwiio    w(»uld    slash    the    I'ni-       think  a  little  about   the  fat  ult\   pav 
vevsity's   appi()priations      pist      be-      situation.  .  ;. 

cau.Neithey  know  there  would  be  no  Who   knows?    It   mij^lu    pay  «^fil'; 

How  To  Beat  Book  Racket 


riate  more  mone\  lor  fat  ulty  mem- 
f)ers  heie  ^rnd  at  t)ther  state  in- 
stitutions. 

Kir>t.  the  (General  .\sscmblv  must 
be  t:(^n\ inter!  th;it  those  facnitv 
members  are  wottli  kecjiiny.  riic 
I'niversitv  is  cm  rent  Iv  inxoKetl 
in  a  camjjaiii^n  to  do  just  this. 

But  afiei  the  (ieneial  Assemblv 
is  tonxiiiietl.  pressure  must  be 
plated  on  it  until  the  ('onst)lidated 
I'nixersitv  '.^ets  xvhat  it   needs. 

To  di»  th-'is.  legislators  are  s^oittj^ 
to  have  to  stand  up  to  ihe  critics 
tif  the  Cni\ersitv.  >i;:jd.  up  to 
those  who  believe  monev  should 
be  used  elsewhere,     stand     ui)     to 


We  ur'^e  all  itud«:iHs  win*  want 
to  sell  their  books  at  the  end  t)f 
the  semestei  to  sell, them  throiijih 
.\lpha  Phi  Omegas  jum-prolit 
l)<^)k    ext  hange. 

The  service  frrrfrtiiitv  has  an- 
nomu  etl  it  will  .i^ain  sell  used 
texts  at  the  tiifl  of  the  semester  on 
a  non-profit    basis. 

P>v  now.  most  stutlelHs  have 
fomid  that  thev  get  robl>ed  Avhen 
thev  sell  l>ooks  at  the  I'niversitv's 


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Hook  F\t  han^e.  To  be  sine,  part 
ol  the  b(M»k  monev  there  uft>es  to- 
waitl  St  holai. ships  Moi  needy  .stu- 
tleiiis.  IJut  far  too  nnit  h  of  it  goes. 

Ihf  studem  who  sells  his  text 
to  the  liook  K\thani»e  receives 
onlv  a  hat  lion  of  his  orij»inal  otit- 
lav :  when  the  F.\t  hans»e  resells 
the  book  it  marks  up  a  tremendous 
peiteina^e.     .  ^ 

.So.  peiliaps  to  »;ive  the  folks  who 
tun  the  l)ook  l*\(hant;e  a  little 
worrv-wirt.  we  suy!;;est  studeins  sell 
books  ihroush  Alpha  Phi  Omej^a's 
ext  hani:»e.  Better  prices  can  be  ha<l. 
.\imI  you  tan  l)uy  your  lH)oks  theie, 
loo.  at  so'methin;;  t  lose  to  a  detent 

P»i«C.  ^  y 

Gracious 

Living: 

Number12 

One  of  the  most  .^lacious  thinj;s 
this  university  town  has  to  offer 
is  its  tia^lition. 

There  is  a  tradition  about  hon- 
or.'one  alMHit  .sttjppin*;  by  the  Old 
Well.  (Sue  about  ie-Ia\in^  the  (^Id 
fast  Cornerstone.  .\nd  there  is  a 
tradition  about  snow  and  fold 
weather  at    exam-time. 

This  vear.  however,  the  snow 
tame  a  little  bit  eatlv.  It  tame 
while  students  were  still  attending 
(lass,  trying  to  get  their  professors 
to 

1.  .Spot   their  exams. 

2.  Deliver  a  tapsule  sunnuary 
of  the  touise  the  students  have 
been  sleepin<;  thioii^h  all  semester. 

While  an  obvious  oveisii>ht  on 
the  |)art  of  the  weatherman,  we 
think  it  is  tpiite  unfair  of  the 
weather  tt  .start  so  .soon.  Snow  and 
sleet  antl  mud  and  frozen  sitlewalks 
antl  streets  are  for  the  exam  per- 
iod. 

(iratious  I.ivinj;  in  Chapel  Hill 
has  suffered  an  abrupt  and  ill-tim- 
ed t  hanj»c.  The  only  way  the 
weathermaii  tan  torrett  himself  is 
for  him  to  tleliver  some  more  snow, 
alont;   about    the    middle   of   next 

week. 


STUDY  IN   IRONY 


A  Man  Named  Kasper  Came  To  Town 
And  Clinton  Turned  Inside  Out 


Kasi>er  is  a  study  in  irony:  a  27  year-old  firebrand  overpowere*! 
by  a  sense  of  history  antl  his  own  relation  to  it  but  still  goiug 
against  one  of  its  strongest  currents:  the  militant  anti-Communist 
writing  a  tragedy  that  can  give  complete  s-atisfaetion  only  to  the 
Communists:  the  political  crusader  with  a  states'  rights  pin  on  his 
lapel  who  interrupts  his  pleas  for  local  sovereignty  with  prolonged 
attacks  on  Tennessee's  governor  and  all  of  Clinton's  elected  officials. 


David  Halberstam 

///    lilt'  Reporter 

incident,  he  is  a  thin,  bespectacled,  hunched,  and  slightly  balding 
man.  "D.  J,'$  taken  more  pressor*  than  you  or  I  could  ever 
imagine,"  a  friend  said  ."He's  surrounded  and  sobnoergtd  by  it, 
wakes  up  with  it,  and  goes  to  bed  with  it — I  don't  see  how  he 
keeps  going."  ' 


'There  are  a  few  sincere  segregationists  in  his  group,"  says 
Buford  Lewailen,  the  mayor's  son,  "but  I'm  afraid  that  they're 
mostly  people  opposed  to  anyone  who  has  achieved  a  little  ma- 
terial success.  "I  giiess  this  is  letent  in  any  community,  and  it  just 
took  an  anarchist  to  bring  it  out.  These  people  aren't  so  much  for 
segregation  as  they  are  against  something.  It  happens  to  be  inte- 
gration, but  they're  against  authority   and   looking  for  excitement. 

"Kasper  talks  to  them  about  Blackstones  commentaries,  al)put^ 
Eira  Pound,  and  about  his  own  interpretation  of  the  Constitution, 
and  they  love  it.  even  though  they  never  heard  of  the  first  two  and 
don't  understand  the  third." 

Occasionally,   during  the  tedium  of  Kasper's  trial.  I   would  slip 
out  and  talk  to  his  supporters.  "John'll  show 
just  as  smart  as  Buford  or  any  ot  them." 

I  asked  two  of  them  what  had  happened  in  Clinton.  ."The  trouble 
was.  a  lot  of  people  thought  they  were  better  than  we  are.  N\'hen 
one  bunch  rules  the  roost  too  long  that's  bad.  and  history  shows  .  .  ." 
The  sentence  was  not  completed.  Kasper '^■  followers  aldiost  never 
mention  Negroes  except  indirectly  in  the  epithet    "nigger  lover." 


"He's  a    modern  ThovMS  Jefferson,"   another  said  of   Kasper. 


"He  wants  us  to  have  a  university  so  we  can  all  lOftCA  How  fO  h'i<^' 

.....  .   -T^-    ■    ■  -'  '.  i.  .Xi^J 


a  goverrMnent  and  run  it. 


On  the  night  of  Nov.  5  Kasper  spoke  to  his  followers  on  temper- 
ance, since,  aside  from  an  election,  there  was  to  be  a  liquor  referen- 
dum the  next  day.  Ka.-jper  said  he  favored  temperance  because  alco- 
hol was  a  part  of  the  Communist'  <?onspiracy. 

"If  you  scan  some  of  the  lesser  known  writings  of  tlie  top  Cotn- 
munist  officials  you  find  that  youth  should  be  encouraged  to  wealth 
and  luxury  and  alcohol  so  that  they  can  be  easily  manipulated  and 
enslaved.'"  Kasper  went  on  to  attack  Buford  Lewailen  for  drunken- 
ness' and  to  charge  that  Lewailen  had  an  interest  in  setting  up  a  liquor 
store  150  feet  from  a  church. 

Kasper  had  in  hi:^  hand  a  petition  that  would  set  up  a  minimum 
of  1000  feet  betv/een  the  two.  Then  the  college  graduate  who  says 
he  distrusts  all  educated  men  told  his  audience  that  "th^  "^peotrfe 
who  cdn  afford  to  go  to  college  arc  out  to  get  the  peiiple  whol  hikvcn't' 
been  and  can"t  afford  ;  to  go,"  and  tfiat,  Uiis, .  1,99,  wasj  par^  *^r^*i^  ■ 
Communist  conspiracy.:  .  .         ..,    .is.*%., f  ■■"'''    ••" 

.Then  came  the  peroration:   'T  Vvatit  to  teM'^oli  -peOpIe  thaf'you"'" 

:li»we  tnade  history  here!,  that  people  all  over  th<^  woi;ld  are  watching 
W'iiat  ydu  do  and  applauding  it.  and  that  you  ;httv^,  built  a  great ' ret^brd 

,  and  a  greut 'history.   Biit   I  don't   want   you  to   ^top.   1  want  V*u  \(^ 
make  Anderson  County  the  leader  lor  ttie  entire  .Southland 


Perhaps  it  was  a  kind  of  hopeless  desperation  that  made  Brit- 
tain  resist  the  pressure  with  such  determination.  "Right  now."  he 
said  at  the  height  of  the  riots,  "the  only  thing  between  that  mob 
and  those  Negro  children  is  me.  " 

Brittain  has  received  so  many  threats  that  he  has  changed  his 
unli.s4ed  telephone  number  four  times.  "But  now  thcyre  trying  to 
hurt  me  not  only  by  threatening  me, "  he  said,  "but  by  boycotting 
the  stores  where  I  do  business,  and  threatening  the  faculty  and  try- 
ing every  other  means  of  intimidation  they  know,  ft  makes  a  man 
feel  terrible  when  he  sees  his  friends  hurt  because  of  him." 

As   the    crisis   Increased   Brittain    became   more   and   more   out 

spoken.  Hi..'  bitterness  extends  not  only  to  Kasper  and  his  followers 

but  to  the  law-abiding  citizens  of  the  whole  community,  including 

the  Anderson  County  School  Board:    'How  can  I  feel  the  same  way 

_  ^        towards  people  I  knew  all  my  life  as  friends  when  they  refused  to 

em,     they  said.  "He'd  I    stand  up  for  what  is  right  and  found  the  nearest  hole  and  said,    I 

■'    hope  it  doesnt  hurt  business".'" 

Brittain  feels  that  he  has  learned  ^•ome  lessons  from  his  painful 
experience.  "There  are  two  things  about  this  desegregation, "  he  has 
said.  "Integrate  on  a  wider  basis  when  you  start  in  the  community, 
and  in  the  state  if  possible.  We  were  the  only  school  in  Tennessee, 
aside  from  Oak  Ridge,  and  the  only  school  in  the  community  which 
tfesegregated. 

It  allowed  the  segregationi^rts  to  concentrate  all  their  efforts 
and  attention  here — and  remember  the  people  south  of  us  consider 
T^nnessipe  a  key  state  in  which  was  the  trend  goes.  So  they've  thrown 
in  a  lot  here.  We're  not  fighting  these  people  for  Clinton  or  Anderson 
<^ounty.  We're  fighting  for  the  entire  South.  The  Citizens'  Councils 
«re  trying  to  show  the  South  that  desegregation  will  be  so  unpleasant 
that  no  place  will  want  to  try  it.  ..''./ 


a./t 


-  \  - 


■t,  4.i.«»J 


"The  other  thing,"  he  v)ent  on,  "is  that  before  you  go  into  It, 
be  sure  you  have  your  board  clearly  behind  you  and  know  wiiere 
they  stand  and  where  you  stand.  Otherwise  it  iust  isn't  worth  it." 

For  until  the  second  series  of  outbreaks,  no  group  in  the  com- 
munity assumed  a  more  neutral  position  than  the  school  board. 
Then,  when  Brittain  and  half  his  staff  threatened  to  resign  unless 
they  got  help  and  when  the  Negroes  refused  to  attend  school  unless 
they  got  some  guarantee  of  protection,  the  board  was  forced  to 
take -a' position. 

-■    AU  first  If  offered  tp  pay  the  Negroes"  transportation  and  tuition 

t  to 'Knox  County -schodls,  an  offer  the  Negroes  quickly  rejected.  Then 

lit- i-e^-ealod.  a,  devep  dilemma  that  many  Southern  communities  may 

have  to  deal  with  in  the  future:   Each  of   the  six   board   members 

f-avors  segj-egation.   but   each  suddenly  foun^  himself  the  reluctant 

a«ynl  laf  desegregatiun-. 

Uniiloe  Brittain  and 'others  who  had  been  comp.ell'cd  to  take  public 


You  have  the  best  people  in  the  world  to  dq  it.  Peoile  #o\iid  ::j*l«nds,lhQ  board  m^nbers  had'neyer  taken  any  stand  at  all.  But 
come  from  "ill  over  tlie  world  just  to  stje  Antjcrson,  CoJrttyf"a^-a';  ^hWJ  thr-c^Hps  ,<w»re*<Jown.|  the  board  announced'  that  it  would  sup- 
touric-t  attraction  just  because  they  have  heard  what  a  Utbfia -it  i.^. '    Jiort  BiriUain  completely.  '   '  '  .      '  -  ' 

This  fs  not  a  pipt'  dreani.  This  can  be  done."       "  — ^'  ;;;t 'v%  L<r  sc.vjBut-Jww  do.y-ou  support   a  man  ctimHl^tely   at  this    point?   Give 

Wtn^P^wer  to  expel  the  .stiideiits  ^nd  get  himself  beaten  up?  Since 


The  second  of  three  articles 
by  writer  Halberstam,  this  inter- 
pretation of  John  Kasper  will  be 
concluded  tomorrow.  •< 


When  you  ask  Buford  LewaUen  whif  Ki^iW  has  done  to  hie 
life,  he  says:  "I'm  no  different  from  anyone ^IfCf  here.  He's  shat- 
tered  it.  You  start  up  the  street  and  ye«i  donH  Idtlow  whether  you'll 
get  there  or  not.  He's  set  up  animosity  between  people  mnS  groups, 
and  thrown  the  whole  town  off  its  center  .  .  .  ." 
When  Kasper  wa.s  acquit- 
ted after  his  sedition  trial  in 
November,  the  wounds  wero 
reopened    and    Kaspcrs    fol- 
lowers began  talking  tougher 
than  ever.  "Things  are  going 
to  be  different   around  here 
from  now   on!"  one  shouted 
as  the  verdiet  was  announced. 

The    next    step   f(»r   them  v 

was  simple  and  direct:  ^  chapter  of  White  Youth  for  America  was  ' 
formed  to  start  an  anti-Negro  campaign  within-  the  school,  where  up 
to  then  racial  incidents  had  been  infrequent.  It  wa.v  thLs  campaign' 
that  put  Principal  Brittain  in  his  most  difficult  position.  How  does 
a  man  who  does  not  have  official  backing  discipline  or  expel  some 
ft>rty  students?  The  egg  throwing  and  pushing  kept  increa.sing  until 
the  Negroes  refused  to  go  to  school.  Pressure  also  increased  against 
Brittain. 

"We  wonder  how  long  the  people  of  Clinton. "'  wrcUe  H.  V.  Weli^ 
Ji.,  editor  of  the  local  weekly,  "are  going  to  continue  to  sit  idly  by 
and  see  their  elected  officials  kicked  around  merely  because  they 
insist  that  peace  be  maintained.  " 

At  this  Rpint  Brittain  became  the  main  target.  A  native  Ten- 
nessean   and  the  principal   of  Clinton   High  for  ten   years  wifhout 

•  • 

L'it  Abner 


:tbe  ikclutol  wjis  lUjidtii:  a  F*ederal  ortfcr  and'thei-e  was  an  injunction 
preventing  anyone  from  violating  that  oifder,  the  board  met  and 
asked  for  Federal  aid,.  "The  boartl's  position,"  it  wrote  to  U.S.  At- 
torney Creneral  Herbert  Browncll.  "is  that  it  haa-  complied  with  the 
law  in  opening  the  school  to  all  children  and  that  it  is  the  responsi- 
bility of  others  to  enforce  the  injunction  if  it  is  to  be  enforced. 
The  board  feels  its  duty  is  to  obey  orders  from  the  Federal  govern- 
ment, not  to  enforce  them."' 

"Look,  were  in  a  tight  spot  on  this,"  .said  J,  M.  Burkhart,  a  hard- 
ware dealer  and  board  member.  "We  need  help  on  it.  Its  just  too 
contrt>versial  and  too  hot  for  us.  The  government  told  us  what  to  do, 
but  it  didnt  tell  us  how  to  do  it.  We're  jud  a  little  town  with  no 
experience  in  this  and  we  need  someone  who  has  the  experience.  I 
don't  know  what  kind  of  Federal  a.ssistance  we  can  get— but  I  knov.- 
we  need  it.  Its  too  hot  for  our  local  police  10  handle." 

Brownell  answered  that  the'  Federal  government  would  arrest 
"all  persons"  who  blocked  integration  at  Clinton,  although  at  the 
same  lime  he  said  that  primary  rejjptHisibilily  for  the  protection  of 
students  rested  with  local  and  state  qfficers. 

The   next  day  Anderson  County  officials  met  with  Federal   of- 
ficers in  nearby  Knoxville  and  drew  up  a  list  of  sixteen  anti-inte- 
gration leaders,  who  were  prontptty  arrested  and  charged  with  con- 
tempt   of   court.    Officials    also    served    notice    that    the    injunction 
would   apply   to   students   using    any   sort   of   pressure   against   the 
Negroes  within  the  school. 
.Just  as  Gov.  Clement's  decision  to  send  the  National  Guard  into 
Clinton  was  the  first  invocation  of  state  power  to  protect   an   inte- 
grated school,  this   was   the  first   use   of   the   Federal   contempt-of- 
court  power  to  a-top  agitation  against  desegregation. 


Capp 


s^uil: 


DUMNO  WHUT  TlS  OP  THAR,    >; 
BUT  ITS  <30NNA  &E  MAH 
60B-7- TOMBSTONE  ff 


HAIN'T  ET  NO  MUb 
MUSHROOM^  BECUZ 
TMEV  MAKES  FOLKS 
FAT,  pASXrf 


&UT,  NOW  THET  ALL  HOPE'S 
tSONE,  AH  MIGHT'S  WELL  DIE 
K I    1—        HEALTHV  — 


t! 


Pogo 


#OIKNOCK^PONTH«O0OlSr 

>N'WAir£pAN'\W*IT^0UT 

AT  PlB«T  r^iZB  >mtHO 

^Hit&l-'fO  Id£NT;,V 

VOet  AN'  MW 
af^oATM*  *ua»« 


If— :^ 


By  Walt  Kelly 


■tf  nt*^  9»^e»m,  IMC . 


SEGREGATIONALIST   JOHN   KASPER 

...  "a  Diodirn  Thcymas  Jefferson"        y"^ 

•  -It.-" 

NORTH  CAROLINA  T970~PART  3 

Facts  Concerning 
N.C/s    Progress 

Gordon  W.  Blackwell 

What  about   1970? 

Perhaps  I  have  taken  too  long  in  getting  around 
to  a  more  detailed  look  at  1970.  But  this  has  been 
intentional.  Not  being  a  soothsayer,  I  can  merely 
develop  the  facti  which  saggest  alternative  courses 
of  action,  given  certain  goals  for  the  state  itt  1970. 

Some  of  these  goals  may  be  suggested. 

(1)  To  keep  more  of  our  most  capable  young 
people  in  the  state. 

(2)  To  improve  the  education  of  all  our  peo- 
ple, young  and  old.  Our  educational  system  at  all 
levels  must  rank  with  the  best  in  the  nation.  We 
cannot  afford  to  be  medioor^  in  education,  much 
less  40th  or  42nd  among  the  states.  Furthermore, 
educational  opportunities  for  adults  are  essential 
in  a  democracy. 

(3)  To  .improve  the  healfh  and  health  ser- 
vices of  all  the  people. 

(4)  To  provide  mt^re  adequately  for  the  un- 
fortunate among  US  through  increasingly  skilled 
professional  techniques  and  more  adequate  finan- 
cial assistance- 

_^'   (To  be  continued)     ^    ,j 

Sportsmanship ; 
Asked  By  Staffer 

Bill  King     ' 

King  is   a    Daily    Tar   Heel   sports    irriter    wJw 
7CUS  present  at  Tn-esday's  game. 

Here  is  a  plea  to  the  Carolina  student  body.  When 
the  Statf  College  basketball  team  comes  to  Chapel 
Hill  Feb  19.  let's  show  it  the  courtesy  that  was 
denied  us  by  the  Wolfpack  fans  in  the  Coliseum 
Tu3sday  night. 

In  the  opinion  of  this  writer  the  attitude  of 
the  State  fans  was  dow^nright  disgu.sting.  The  Tar 
Heels  were  booed  and  jeered  at  every  turn  and 
this  type  of  support  can  hardly  be  considered  in- 
spiring to  any  team.  The  Wolfpack  will  never  take 
any  sportsmanship  awards  with  that  attitude. 

It  is  certainly  a  shame  that  the  State  fans  had 
to  show  themselves  in  such  a  rpvolting  manner  since 
their  ball  club  played  such  a  great  ball  game  against 
the  Tar  Heels.  This  type  of  verbal  jeering  can  bring 
nothing  but  the  most  infamous  publicity  to  a  school. 
When  the  two  Carolina  cheerleaders  tried  to  get 
in  a  yell  during  the  game,  ths  State  fans  began 
to  stomp  their  feet.  This  wasn't  so  bad  in  itself, 
but  the  climax  came  when  a  Stale  cheerleader  got 
up  and  implored  the  fans  to  continue  stomping. 
This  is  sportsmanship? 

The  referees  also  received  more  than  their 
share  of  the  jeers.  The  Wolfpack  partisans  booed 
practically  every  decision  that  went  against  tl»«?m, 
even  the  most  obvious  ones. 

Whenever  a  Carolina  player  .stepped  to  the 
.'oul  line  for  a  shot,  the  gym  was  practically  rocked 
with  jeers  and  cat-calls.  With  6:18  remaining  in  the 
game,  Carolina  forward  Pet  Brennan  was  fouleH. 
When  he  went  to  the  free  throw  line  he  was  booed 
so  loudly  that  the  referee  permitted  him  to  step 
off  the  line  and  wait  ui^til  the  noise  had  subsided. 
Knowing  that  bedlam  would  continue  to  grow,  Bren- 
nan received  s  signal  from  the  Carolina  bench  to  go 
ahoad  and  shoot. 

When  he  stepped  back  up  to  the  line,  he  was 
?reeted  with  the  loudest  round  of  boos  of  the  night. 
Brrnnan.  h,^wcver.  droppedv  in  both  of  his  shots. 

Th?  home  fans  finally  gave  their  visitors  a  break 
when  big  Joe  Quigg,  the  Carolina  center,  fouled 
ou;;  at  the  2:36  mark.  Quigg  received  a  reluctant 
and  modest  round  of  applause  and  there  were  still 
a-  good   many   jeers   and   waving   handkerchiefs. 

Evidently  the  Wolfpack  fans  were  feeling  sorry 
for  themselves  over  their  recent  misfortunct 
(Moreland,  Pcnd.  Richter,  and  McGillavery)  and 
decided  to  take  offense  with  the  Tar  Heels.  Too 
bad  they  can't  realize  that  in  all  their  basketball 
splendor,  they  too  must  face  the  breaks  .of  the  game. 
So  once  again  this  scribe  urges  the  Carolina 
«tuclent  body.  Let's  don't  let  this  same  thing  hap- 
pen in  Chapel  Hill.  Let  the  poor  sportsmanship  re- 
main in  tli€  confines  of  Beynolds  Coliseum. 


i 


f 


Th 


205 


6 
11 
IJ 
IJ. 
14 
15 


16 
18 


19 

22 


23 
26 
28 

SO 

31. 
33. 
34 

36 
39. 

42 

43. 
45 

46 


47. 
4S 


9S7 


FRIDAY,  JANUARY  It,  19S7 


TMI  OAILY  TAft  HIIL 


FA6E  TMRCl 


PHYSICS  CONFERENa 


(Contirmed  from  Page  ^) 
Development  Center  of  the  U.  S. 
Air  Force. 

Dr.  George  Glockler  of  Durham. 
Office  of  Ordinance  Research  of 
the  U.  S.  Army. 

M.  Morot-Sir.  French  cultural 
attache  in  the  United  States,  for 
the  Ministry  of  Foreign  Affairs 
ot  France. 

Agnew  H.  Bahnson  Jr.  of  Win- 


stdn-Salem,  founder  and  president 
of  the  Institute  of  Field  Physios. 

Dr.  Arthur  Roe  of  UNC,  director 
of  the  Institute  oi  Natural  Science. 

Professor  John  A.  Wheeler  of 
Princeton,  past  vice  president  of 
the  International  Union  of  P\ire 
and   Applied   Physics. 

The  International  GravitatiWi 
Conference  will  continue  through 
Wednesday.  * 


CarStlhd  !Social  Life  Low 
Bui  Lamhdd  Chis  Celebrcife 


fv 


*^ 


- 


OUk  FAMOUS 


banaNNa  royal 


SPECIAL 
THIS  WEEK 


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Phone  9-8851 


By  MARY  ALYS  VOORMBES 

Tbe  bariotjMill  team  is  still  on  tap, 
exams  are  Just  tiire«  days  off.  and 
Catoliaa  social  lite  is  at  an  afi-time 
low. 

jBut  after  mai^  teiephnne  calls, 
we  did  manage  to  scrap  up  a 
little  news  to  pass  on  before  you 
bury  yourself  in  ibe  boc^s. 

The  only  it*m  on  the  agenda  fw 
for  this  week  is  the  Lambda  Ciu 
pre-exam  party  to  be  held  Satorday 
night  at  the  house,  but  taming  the 
calendar  back  to  last  weekend,  we 
find  a  little  more  activity. 


KA  J«ba  MooM-e  of  SeaOaed  to 
ifLieens  college  Phi  Mu  Sylvia  Jobn- 
£loB  .  .  .  KA  FT«d  Bardia  of  Dur- 
liam  to  WC  Junior  Kay  C«>vington 
...  Pi  Lam  Diek  Sirki^  of  ^Siajm, 
Fla.  to  Caroli^  Stray  Greek.  Ruth 
Sind^  of  Miami  Beach,  Fla.  .  . 

Chi  O  pledge  Catherine  Bm>wn  to 
!N.  C.  State  Kappa  Sig  David  Bara- 
hardt  ...  Phi  Delt  Galen  Hobbs  oi 
Chapel  Hill  to  lilarie  B«ers  of  At- 
lanta .  .  .  Lambda  Chi  ptodge 
Louis  Davak)fi  of  New  York  City  to 
tMaria  OHxtovez  of  Quito.  Ecuador. 

MARRIAGES  .  .  .  Pika  Ray  Mann 


After  the  Carolina-Virginia  game  1  of  Elizabeth  City  was  married  Dec. 


liie  Sigma  Nus  i:t>Ued  out  the  wel- 
come mat  as  did  the  ZBTs  and 
their  dates. 

Celebrating  the  75tfa  anniversary 
of  the  Upsilon  chapter,  tbe  KAs  had 
a  combo  party  Saturday  night  oi^ 
at  the  ScbooUHHise,  a  jiart  of  a 
series  of  events  plaimed  for  the  an- 


22  to  former  UNC  Pi  Phi  Prip  Par- 
ham  ot  Oxford  .   .  . 

And  along  this  line:  Just  back 
from  an  European  hooeymoon  are 
St.  A  J.  Brooks  Gardiher  who  is 
working  on  his  Ph.D.  in  chemistry, 
aa4  hi«  bride,  th«  former  Beth 
'Moydw   a  UNC  graduate.   Recently 


9 
s 


Iround 

been 

merely 

>urse5 

1970. 

|>  oung 

peo- 

at  all 
We 

much 
rmore. 

Isential 

Ih    ser- 

iin- 

kkilied 
f  inan- 


er 


nho 


When 

.hapel 

It    wa.s 

lliseum 

ide  of 
Tar 
rn  and 
red  in- 
;r  take 

1.S  had 

br  since 

■against 

bring 

|. so  hoc!. 

to  yet 

began 

itself, 

sr  got 

)mping. 

their 

booed 

|t   them, 

to    the 

rocked 

in  the 

fouleW. 

^s  booed 

to  step 

ibsided. 

Bren- 

;h  to  go 

he   was 

\e  night. 

shots, 
a  break 

.  fouled 
reluctant 

rere  still 

liefs. 

Ing  sorry 
Hortunes 
^ryi  and 
^els.  Too 
[asketball 
|he  game. 

Carolina 
king  hap- 
inship  re- 


I 


WE  NEED 

USED 
TEXTS 


As  soon  as  Exams 

are  over,  trot  over 

vs^ith  the  old  text. 

\t  means  folding 

« 
money  for  you,  and 

a  break  fbr  ttl^  Bl^t 


'$'•-1, 


guy! 


*   ^ 


The  Intimate  Bookshdp 


205  E.  Franklin  St. 


Open  Till  10  P.M. 


DAILY    CROSSWORD 


ACROSS 

1   Artiticial 
wateiuiiy 

6.  Work  hard 
11  Betel  palm 
1-'.  Fruil  lit.) 
IJ.  Black  snake 

14.  Quoted 

15.  Member  of 
a  fraternal 
order 

16.  Sculptors 
chisels     , 

18.  Synthetic 
ruby 


4.  One-apot 
card 

5  Very  slow 

(muM.) 

6  Not 
gener«Uy 

7  Uv\Rg' 

8  Morsel 
of  food 

9  Across 

10.  Anarchists 

17.  Reg,et 

18.  Chief  deity 
(Babyl.) 

19.  Greek  letter 


19.  Skin  opening  30  Unit  of 
22  Elevated  electrical 


train 
(coHoq.) 
23.  Sash  (Jap.) 
26  Ledge 
28,  Alaakan 
river 

30.  Mischievous 
person 

31.  Behold! 

33.  Unite 

34.  Religion 
(Ind.) 

36.  A  beau 
39.  Man's 
-     nickname 
42.  A  ward 
-  43.'  Subside 

45.  Mountain 
chain 

46.  Page 
number 
(Print.) 

47.  Bearded. 
as  rye 

48.  Rama  down 

DOH'N 

1.  Caution 

2.  Inland  sea 
(Asia) 

3  Heftd 
su£porU 


resistance 
21.  Twilled 
fabric 


23  Super- 
nat- 
ural 
object 
(Am. 
Ind.) 

•Z4.  Fe.stival 
(Jap.) 

25,  Writing 
fluid 

27  Co- 
quetted 

29.  Eskimo  tool 

32.  Undivided 

34.  Door  joint 

35.  Current 
of  air 

36.  Location  of 
Tal  Mahal 

37.  Delineate 


k'  ..  iC: 

'-.'iMaap 

IliJi!!:S> 

jfflnvri 

(i^il^'M. 

dnD^3[^ 

Ul-t    '  '' 

-',      ■  UOCi 

ii'T'. 

'jare  ■  rjK 

i,VL]U 

aiiani'i-^-:J 

■  zjy.t 

\\l\\iU 

iU'v  iti:^    aiiL'fii 

C5J.!      :■ 

li-j   rarcm 

[•jai-^. 

■»'gu  .ki:d 

a[i'.': ;; 

iiw;-]W'i 

flyu  -1  • 

-«'-::^DU 

awa'  i  1 

1  .j-^cn 

Yc«teH*y'«  Aa*w«r 

38  American 
educator 

39.  Unruffled 

40.  Sloping 

41.  Man's  name 
(poss.) 

44.  Snake 


World 
News 

{Continued  from  Pi^e  1> 

ed  his  arms  and  the  party  explod- 
ed laughter  aod  applause. 

It  was  the  second  time  Khrush- 
chey  defended  Stalin  in  less  than  a 
month. 

H*  spoke  up  for  Stalin  and  Sta- 
Uni^n  at  a  Kremlin  banquet  New 
Year's  Eye.  startling  his  listeners 
but  setting  what  is  obviously  a 
new  Kremiin  policy  toward  the 
late  dictator. 

Tonight's  events  were  strong 
coniirmatioo  the  new  policy  is  here 
to  stay,  tor  at  least  the  foreseeable 
future. 


niversary  cdebration  last  we(ricead  j  Brooke  gave  a  party  fOr  the  St.  As 
and  this  week.  i  io  honor  of  his  bride. 

Meanwhile  the  SAE  juniors  eel©- 1 

brated  Oscar  Davis'  birthday  with 
a  .supper,  after  which  a  party  for 
the  entire  chapto*  and  thiplr  dates 
wa§  held  at  the  house. 

Also  on  Saturday's  program  were 
two  juke  box  partie.<^— one  at  the 
Chi  Phi  House,  and  the  other  at 
the  Lambda  Chi  house. 

CUPID'S  CORNEft 

Pr>™TNGS  .  .  .  Pika  Jack  Warner 
of  Raleigh  to  ADPi  Jill  O'Donneli 
of  Camp  Kill,  Pa  .  .  .  ATO  Sandy 
Sanders  of  Benson  to  Pi  PM  jdedge 
Settle  Kell  of  Bristol,  Va.  .  .  . 

SPE  Jeff  Corhin  of  Florence.  S 
C.  to  WC  sophomore  Lynn  Pyatt . . . 
past  Lambda  Chi  President  Bob 
Harrington  of  ThomasvHle  to  KD 
Vice  President  Melba  Remig  of 
Clearwater,  Fla.  .  .  .  Liambiiia  Chi 
Gary  Shenill  of  TbomasvUle  to  WC 
sophomore  Emma  Rue  Xnnoy  of 
ThomasyiUe  ... 

Beta  Bob  RatcUff  «f  ReidsvQle  to 
Peace  sopbomore  Carolyn  Wise  . . . 
Delta  Sigma  Pi  Perry  "hirner  of 
Hickory  to  Lenoir-Rhyne  freshman 
coed  Ann  Goodman  of  Hipfcory  ,  .  . 
Deha  Sig  Jim  Howey  of  i/iomce  to 
Meredith  ^senior  Corinnc  hgimj  of 
Wiiigate  ...  >      ' 

Delta  Sig  Bobby  M^  'of  Er- 
win  to  Qwmus  College  ^eoMir  Carole 
Prask  of  Chaflotte  .  :  Jbs^  8ig 
David  Veasey  of  Durham  to  WC 
freshman  Barbara  Howley  of  Dur- 
ham .   .   . 

Delta  Sig  Fred  Isenhower  of  Con- 
tord  to  Carolina  coed  Adeliah 
Crouch  of  Newton  .  .  .  Delta  Sig 
Jerry  Smith  of  Statesvllle  to  Sylvia 
Stroud  of  Mocksville. 

E.VGAGE.VIEXTS  ...  St.  A  Al 
Williams  of  Chapel  Hill  to  Jane  Lee 
Robbins  of  Bryn  Mawr  College  . 
Kappa  Sig  Joe  Shook  of  Hickory 
to  ADPi  Polly  Clarenbach  of  Mi- 
ami Shores,  Fla.  .  .  Zete  Jimmy 
Cheatham  of  Greenville  to  Bren 
Burch  of  Salem  College  .  .  . 


Covering  The  Campus 


t  I  I'  '  II         J  I 

CAMP  SEQUOYAH 

C,  Walter  Johnson  will  be  in 
Chapel  Hill  today  and  tomorrow  to 
interview  students  who  are  inter- 
ested in  counselling  at  Camp  Se- 
quoyah. Johnson  will  be  available 
for  interviews-  at  9  a.m.  at  the  Caro- 
lina Inn. 

A  Camp  Sequoyah  Reunion  will 
be  held  at  the  home  of  Dr.  and 
•Mrs.  W.  B.  MeCutcheon,  66  Oak- 
wood  Drive,  at  7:30  tonight. 

John  Riebiel  at  the  "Y*  will  an- 
swer    any     questions     concerning 
Camp  Sequoyah. 
PHARMACOGNOSY   EXHIBIT 

The  Pharmacognosy  class,  under 
the  direction  of  Dr.  H.  F.  Totten 
of  the  Botany  Department,  is  just 
finishing  a  semester  in  the  study 
of  drug  plants.  An  exhibit  of  their 
individual  projects  will  be  in 
Rf>ora  10  of  Davie  Hall  from  Thurs- 
day, January  24th  through  Wednes- 
day, January  30  between  9  a.m. 
and  5  p.m.  The  public  is  invited 
to  attend  this  exhibit. 
JOBS  AVAILABLE 

Students  interejrted  in  working 
next  semester  have  been  asked  to 
make  applications  at  the  Student 
Aid  Office  as  soon  as  possible. 
Most  jobs  available  will  be  in  the 
dining  hall  due  to  a  change  in  class 
schedules,  according  to  the  office. 
A  "C"  average  will  be  necessary 
to  renew  the  scholarships  each  se- 
mester. 
COUNSELORS  NEEDED 

Counselors  are  still  needed  for 


second  semester  mens  orientation 
which  will  be  held  Jan.  30-31,  ac 
'  cording  to  Orientation  Chairman 
'  Bill  McLean.  Those  interested  have 
been  asked  to  leave  their  names 
and  addresses  with  Mrs.  Grassman 
in  the  Student  Government  Office. 
The  phone  number  is-  4352. 

WUNC 

7:00 — ^Through  the  Looking  Glass 
7:30— The  U.N.  Story 
7:45— Patterns  of  Thought 
8:00 — Let's  Listen  to  Opera 

10:00— News 

10:15 — Elvening  Masterwork 

11:30— Sign  Off. 


SALE  ENDS  SATURDAY! 

Get  Your  Bargains 
While  You  Can 

SAVINGS  OF 

20% -50%  AND  MORE 
STEVEKS  -  SHEPHERD 


Congress  Assured 

WASSaS<yrGN  -4m—  secretary 
of  State  I>ulles  has  assured  Con* 
gressmea  Ifresident  E3^enhower 
will  "lean,  ove;  backward"  to  keep 
firom  using  Ameriean  armed  forces 
in  the  Middle  East. 

Hie '  statement  came  in  secret 
tcstiniABy  heimre  the  House  Foreiga 
Affairs  Committee  Jan.  9.  The 
committee  made  it  public  Thurs-i 
day-  after  editing  Dulles'  remarks 
in-  the  name  of  national  security. 

Dulles  has  been  sttylng  all  along 
that  Elisenhower  would  not  abu^ 
any  Middle.  East  country  that  is 
oVertly  attacked  l>y  Communists, 
and  asks  for  help. 

The  testimony  released  Thurs- 
day .said  Eisenhower  would  "lean 
over  backward  not  to  interpret  the 
facts  ss  justifying  the  use  of  arm- 
ed forces  unle»s  there  was  real 
danger  lO  the  United  Stateacin  the 
situation." 


Health  Affairs 
Adds  Members 
To  Faculty 

Chancellor  Robert  B.  House, 
with  the  approval  of  President 
William  C.  Friday  and  the  Board 
oi  Trustees,  has  announced  two 
new  faculty  appointments  in  the 
UNC  Division  of  Health  Affairs. 

Dr.  David  G.  Sharp  was  appoint- 
ed professor  of  biophysics  in  the 
School  of  Medicine. 

He  received  his  B.  S.  degree 
from  Rutgers  University  in  1932. 
His  M.  A.  degree  was  awarded  by 


Hii^ory  to  JusHfy  \ 

LONDON  ~AJH-~  Prime  Minister 
Harold  MacmiUan  said  Tjfyursday 
night  he  believes  history  will  Justi- 
fy last  fall's  BritishnPreneh  inva 
sion  o^  .the  Mid^e  East. 

The  Prime  Minister  made  only 
passing  reference  to  the  >llddle 
East  venture  which  led  to  the 
downfall  of  hi«  predecessor,  SM' 
Anthony  £>deo,  Bttt^ii  a  si>e^  de- 
voted largely, to  th*  .future  of  Bri 
tain  a^  a  nation,  he  aaid.  "I  be 
lif&ve  history  wltl  justify  what  we 
did."  > 

"The    difficulties    we    ;arfe    up 
aiafaist  are  the  pt'ice  we  are  i>ay 
ing  for  action,"  he  said  in  a  nation- 
wide TV  and  radio  address.  "But 
^  ,      .,  .  the  price  ^ofinafition,  jLhe   price 

Duke  Umversity  in   1937   and  his   we  yffiiJOi  hiMt  had  to  pay  for  iet- 
Ph.D.  degree  by  the  same  s<aiool ;  Uhg  thiilri  altde;  that  mi^ht  have 
m  1939.  He  comes  to  UNC  from    b«c«  very  h)^  indeed." 
Duke  University     where    he    has!     As  to  the  future,  Macrolllan  said 
taught  since  1939.  ^ith  emphasis  Britain  is  a  great 

Dr.  Dwight  L.  Clark    was     ap-   nation  that  is  detemritied  to  stay 
painted  assistant  professor  of  oral   great. 


surgery  in  the  school  of  Dentistry. 

He  received  his  D.D.S.  degree 
from  UNC  in  1954  and  has  been 
engaged  in  private  practice  sihce 
that  time. 

Three  resignations  al$o  were  an- 
nounced. The/  were  Prof.  Lucille 
Spalding,  School  of  Nursing;  ^f- 
A.  Price  H^Ufn«r,  Si^od  Of  medi- 
cine; and  Dr.  Soger  W,  Howell, 
School  of  PuUie  Health. 

The  resignations  of  Professor 
Spal<i!ng  and  Df.  Heusner  were  ef- 
fective t>ec.  31.  The  resignation 
of  Dr.  Howell  was  effective  Jan. 
15.  . 


W^iami 


JAZ2  AT  ruirlAGcs 

Saturday  afternoon.  2:00.  Turn- 
ages  Cabin  in  Durham. — 3&u  by 
Dick  Gables  "All  Stars."  Beer 
Served. 

FOB  SALE:  1954  27  FOOT  HOUSE 
trailer,  m  miles  north  ot  thkv 
el  Hill  on  Airport  Road.  Sloan's 
Trailer  Court,  Maurice  L.  Clegg. 


He  9aid  the  partnership  with  the 
United  States  wil  be  preserved,  and 
i^eogt^ened,  hut  added:  "we  idoh't 
inteiid  to  be  saiellUes." 

He  said  ili^lriuiti^ally  no  new 
election  will  M  called,  1>ut  he  and 
his  hew  govetftm^ti,  propose  to 
"get  cfih  with  tiie  jo5".  w'^  great 
enetty.  The  ConserYatiye  nandiite 
has  three  yeirs  to  nin. 


T0it«fi|ni  Mourined 

NEW  V«6ijt --(J^-Ptinces  and 
commoners,  m/u^iciaiu;  and  singers, 
housewiyea  ,an4  students  -aM  Pi\T 
tribute  T%iirsday  to  Arturo  tosca- 
nini,  t&e.mec^  emineot  conductor 
of  his  ag«.. 

In  bitini  eeld»  a  long. line  of 
mouring  iiuis|c  loyer^  formed  at 
the  Manhattan..  Funeral  kome 
where  the jpreat  Ztaiiaii  conductor's 
body  lay  in  state. , 

He  lay  In  a  lH*ooze>fihish  pasket, 
slightly  open  to  show  the  silk  con- 
ductor's jacket  with  vetvei.,c8liar 
and  cuffs — the  kind  he  hajL^orn 
countless  '  times  over  the  Tu-year 
course  of  his  remarkable  career. 


ANNOUNCEMENT  BY 

Illinois  College  of 
OPTOMETRY 

Applications  for  admiMion  to 
dsMCs  bcKtnning  September  9, 
1957    arc    now    being    received. 

Three  year  course 

of  professional  study 

Leading  to  the  Degree  of 

Doctor  of  Optometry 

Kequir^fcnta  for  Entrance: 
Two  yaara  (60  semester  hours  or 
equivalent  quarter  hrs.)  in  spe- 
cked liberal  arts  and  science*. 

WRITS  FOR  BULLETIN 
TO:   REGISTRAR 

ILLINOIS  COLLEGE 
of  OPTOMETRY 

3241    So.    Michigan   Ave. 
Trrhnolofy  Center.  Chicago  16,  HI. 


KEMP'S 
GONE 
MAD! 


WHILE   THEY   LAST  — 

LONG   PLAYING   RECORDS 


vox 

LONDON 


90c 


MGM 
ALLEGRO. 


A'i  '»■ 


AND  MANY  MORE!  . 

LP's  at  the  Price  of  Single  45' s   n 
While  They  Last  -  No  End  in  Sightl 


207  E.  Franklin  St. 


WHAT  IS  YOUR  FUTURE  IN  THE  EXECUTIVE  LINE-UP? 


Do  TOU  HAVE  IDEAS?  Are  joQ  willing  to 
take  reepoBsibility?  Can  jon  conTince 
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executive  has  aU  these  qualities  . . .  and  more. 

Many  of  the  snccessful  executives  of  the 
future  are  in  this  year's  graduating  class.  We 
hope  yonVe  one  of  them,  and  that  you're 
looking  for  a  place  where  yon  can  put  yonr 
ambitions  and  talents  to  work,  where  yon  can 
develop  qnalities  oi  executive  leadership, 
where  yon  can  train  for  a  position  of  responsi- 
bility on  a  manageinent  team. 

Investigate  a  dynamic  fbture  with  Union 
Carbide.  It  offers  diversified  opportunities  in 


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ates  who  look  to  the  fatnre  with  eonfideoee 
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If  yon  are  that  kind  of  mail,  see  yonr  plaee* 
ment  director  about  Unioa  Carbide,  or  writ* 
Mr*  Yer^n  0.  Davis,  Co-ordinator  of  Colieg* 
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"Union  Carbide 

AJ\ri>    CARBON  CORPORATION 

tn  EAST  «2HD  STBKET       HTgJ       ■&«   TOKC  IZ.  K.   I. 


Umon  Carbide's  Divisions  include:- 


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Carbide  and  Carbon  CbemicaU  Company     •    Haj  nee  Stellite  Company    •    National  Carbon  Company     •     Silicones  Div 


PA9I  FOUt 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HBBL 


FRIDAY,  JANUARY  II,  1957 


Cage  Coaches  Favor  Killing  ACC  Tourney 


CHABLOTrE,  (APV- Seven  of  the  eight  basketball  coaches  of  the 
Atlantic  Coast  Conference  want  a  change  in  the  present  method  of 
deciding  a  conference  cage  champion. 

The  title  now  is  decided  in  a  sudden  death  tournament,  held  in 
early  March  every  year  in  Re>'nolds  Coliseum  in  Raleigh.  That's  the 
home  court  oi  North  Carolina  State  College's  Wolfpack. 

A  poll  of  coaches  disclos<ed  that  the  vast  majority  of  the  coaches 
consider  the  present  system  unfair  because  a  team  may  go  unbcateii 
through  the  regular  system,  then  lose  the  crown  in  a  single  loss  in 
the  tournament. 

The  results  of  its  poll  of  coaches  were  announced  today  by  The 
Charlotte  News. 

The  lone  supporter  of  the  system  now  in  vogue  is  crafty  Everett 
Case,  coach  of  N.C.  State. 

One  of  the  most  vociferous  opponent*  of  the  plan  is  Frank  Mc- 
Gwire, skipper  of  the  undefeated  University  of  North  Carolina  Tar 
Heels. 

One  of  the  polled  coaches  described  the  present  plan  as  the 
"$60,000  slot  machine."  That's  the  approximate  amount  of  money  the 
conference  takes  in  from  the  tournament  each  year.  This  is  the  ACC's 
biggcjt  lump  of  income.  Part  of  it  supports  minor  sports.  Part  supports 
the  conference  commissioner's  office  at  Gre'cnsboro. 

In  the  poll  coaches  were  asked:  "Would  you  personally  favor  de- 
ciding the  league  champion  by  repular  season  play  rather  than  the 
present  tournament?" 

Case:  "I  wouldn't  want  to  get  into  a  controversy  like  that.  Its 
always  been  this  way  and  nobody  is  going  to  change  it.  The  money 
from  the  tournament  is  too  important.  Why  make  so  much  noise  over 
nothing?" 

McGuire:  "The  way  it  is  neoiir,  these  regular  season  games  mean 


FRANK 

. . .  uauts 


MCGUIRE 

a  c}uinge 


nothing.  We're  just  providing  entertainment  for  the  students.  I  told 
my  boys  before  the  N.C.  State  game  last  Tuesday  night:  "Don't 
worry.  If  we  lose,  accept  it  gracefully.  The  game  means  little."  Why? 
Because  the  regular  season  games  in  this  conference  are  meaning- 
kss.  You  tell  coaches  from  other  parts  of  the  country  that,  and  they 
don't  believe  you.  Why  should  anyone  play  14  league  games  two 
each  against  each  other  conference  member  that  will  be  junked  at 
the  season's  end?" 

Bud  Millikan,  University  of  Maryland:  "It  has  been  my  feeling 
since  the  inception  of  the  Atlantic  Coast  Conference  that  the  true 
champion  is  the  winner  of  regular  season  play  .  .  .  Don't  do  away 
v-ith  the  tournament.  Move  the  tournament  to  the  Christmas  holidays 
I  he  period  in  which  the  Dixie  Classic  now  is  played  at  Reynolds 
Coliseum,  then  start  league  play  after  Jan.  1.  But  regardless,  I  am 
fiefinitely  in  favor  of  our  National  Collegiate  Athletic  Assn.  repre- 
.sontative  being  the  true  winner  of  our  conference." 

Murray  Grea.  on.  Wake  Forest  College:  "I've  always  thought  this 
was  the  wrong  system.  The  best  way  to  deceide  the  champion — and 
the  way  it  was  once  done — is  this:  If  a  team  finished  first  in  regular 
.season  play  and  was  then  beaten  in  the  tournament,  the  regular  sea- 
son champ  would  play  the  tournament  champ  for  the  title." 

Other  coaches  who  voiced  opinions  that  league  play  should  decide 
the  issue  were  Harold  Bradley  of  Duke,  Press  Maravich  of  Clemson, 
Bus  Male  of  Virginia,  and  Frank  Johnson  of  South  Carolina. 

McGuire  asserted  he  is  not  pleased  with  ttie  prospect  of  playing 
for  the  title  on  State's  floor  "State  has  17  games  there  before  the 
tournament,  and  that  has  a  tremendous  advantage".  McGuire  wants 
the  tournament  abandoned  and  the  NCAA  team  to  be  decided  by 
the  round-robin  schedules  which  all  ACC  teams  play. 

"I  <k»n't  think  it  will  be  long  before  you  te«  a  change,"  he  added. 


Tickets  On  Sale  ) 

Tickets  for  the  North  Carolina- 
Western  Carolina  basketball 
game  to  be  played  in  Cullowhee 
on  January  30  are  now  on  sale 
at  the  information  desk  in  Gra- 
ham Memorial.  They  are  priced 
at  $1.50  each.  The  Tar  Heels  and 
Catamounts  will  meet  in  a  game 
to  dedicate  the  new  Western 
Carolina  gym. 


HOT  NIGHT 

The  hottest  night,  percentage- 
wise, experienced  by  a  North  Caro- 
lina basketball  player  in  the  first 
five  games  was  Tommy  Kearn»-' 
streak  against  South  Carolina. 
Kearns  hit  10  of  11  from  the  floor 
to  get  29  points  and  lead  UNC 
to  a  90-86  victory. 


Carolina  Caravan 


By  JAKE  WAOf  j 

Carolina     students    will    swing  i 
more  merrily  into  their  examina- . 
tions  'as  the  result  of  what  happen-  i 
ed   on   the   icy  day  and   night  of 
January  15.  | 

On  that  date  two  varsity  sport-; ; 
teams  which  were  hazardously  dis- 
patched to  nearby  Raleigh  emerg- 
ed  with    handsome   victories   over ', 
Old  rival  N.C  .State.  In  giant  bas-i 
ketball  it- was  by  83-57.  The  swim-' 
mers  didn't  get  the  headlines,  but 
they  won.  too,  4&38,  to  give  Caro- 1 
lina's  swimming  enthusiasts  a  big  | 
charge.  j 

It  was  a  big  day  f  pr  the  Tar ' 
Heels.  Frank  McGuire's  talented ' 
iigtrs  had  a  big  winning  streak,} 
14  straight,  on  the  line,  which  they  ; 
were  risking  and  they  kn«w  they  | 
had  a  dangerous  foe  on  their ; 
hands.  Also  psychologists  reasoupd  } 
that  the  setting  was  perfect  for  tht ' 
team  to  take  a  fall. 

*        *        *  "  :  ■■  .|  :i  >  ^u 

GREAT  SPIRIT!— CoaUi  Fntek 

McGuire.  who  left  the  following 
day  on  a  brief  basioess  trip  to 
New  York,  giving  his  squad  a  few 
days  off,  said:  "Our  boys  have  if?c 
water  in  their  veins.  They  took  'the 
game  in  stride  and  never  once 
showed  any  signs  of  ch<^ng,  even 
with  State's  fine  team  breathing 
on  our  necks,  just  three  points  be- 
hind." 

What  McGuire  was  e^ecially 
pleased  about  was  the  support  his 
team  received  from  admirers. 
Locals  braved  almost  impossible 
weather  and  driving  conditions  to 
follow  the  Tar  Heels  to  Raleigh. 
In  the  face  of  frustrations  on  the 
return  trip  of  students  to  Chapel 
Hill,  backed  up  on  the  highway 
with  stalled,  skiddinc  cars,  they 
celebrated  with  a  bon  lire  and  pep 
rally. 

"Actually  we  had  a  good  time 
and  enjoyed  it,"  remarked  one 
player.  Ken  Rosemond,  who  was  in 
Coach  McGuire's  car.  "I  haven't 
seen  such  enthusiasm  around  here 
in  a  long  time." 

THIS  AND  THATI— .There  was  a 


lot  of  ma.stcrminding  in  the  entry  ^ 
lists    at    the    Carolina-State   swim- , 
ming     meet     between     the     rival 
brother  coaches.   Ralph   Casey    of 
the  Tar  Heels  and  Willie'  Casey  of  I 
the  Wolfpack  .  .  .  Stale  handed  the  ; 
Tar  Heels   their   only  defeat    last ' 
year  and  before  that  season  inter- 1 
rupted  Carolina's  long  domination 
as  swimming  kings  in  the  area  and 
conference. 

Everything's    off    for    examina- , 
tions  now  ...  On  January  30,  the  ! 
high   riding  cagers   return   to    the , 
wars  against  Western  Carolina  at  j 
Cullowhee,  a  game  which  calls  for  ! 
some  sort  of  explanation  .  .  .  West- 1 
ern  Carolina  is  a  smaller  school  not  i 
included  on  Carolina's  sports  sche- 
dules, but  the  Tar  Heels  were  in- 
vited to  help  the  school  cclc'irate 
a   g>mnasium  dedication    and    ac- 
cepted ...  A  few  years  ago  they 
helped  dedicate   a  field   house   at 
Elast  Carolina  College.  Greenville. 

Kext  conference  foe  is  Maryland 
at  College  Park  on  Feb.  5,  and  this 
!  Will  be  a  rough  one  .  .  .  After  that 
'  it's  all  Big  Four  with  the  excep- 
tion of  Virginia  at  Charlottesville 
on  Feb.  11  .  .  .  The  big  business 
still  remains  ahead  for  Carolina's 
j^eat    team,    and    especially    the 
"sudden  death"  windup,  the  con- 
ference   tournament     in     Raleigh 
March  7-9. 

♦     *     • 

BASEBALL    CLASSIC    OFF!    _ 

Although  the  Dixie  Classic  in  base- 
ball has  been  canceled  for  this 
year,  it  definitely  will  be  bade  on 
the  boards  in  1958,  says  Chairman 
Walter  Rabb  .  .  .  Schedules  could 
not  be  arranged  by  the  out-of-state 
teams  for  1957,  due  to  the  lateness 
of  the  Eastern  vacation  period  .  .  . 
There  has  been  daily  excitement 
here  out  in  the  open,  and  so  the 
presence  in  town  of  the  Hungarian 
Olympic  star.  Laszlo  Tabori .  .  .  Ta 
bori's  training  got  a  bad  break  in 
the  weather  here,  but  he  has  stuck 
grimly  at  it ...  A  New  York  maga- 
zine (Sports  nistratod)  had  a  pho- 
tographer here  Tuesday  making  a 
cover  photo  of  Tabori,  who  runs 
like  a  feather  in  a  breeze. 


Unbeaten  UNC 
Faces  Rugged 
Stretch  Drive     I 

If  you  had  tried  to  convince  1 
anyone  connected  with  the  North  j 
Carolina  basketball  team  in  gen- 1 
eral,  and  Coach  Frank  McGuire  in 
particular,  that  the  Tar  Heels , 
would  go  into  the  e.xam  break  with 
a  15-0  record  an  pushing  for 
first  in  the  nation,  you'd  have 
wasted   your  breath. 

The  arguments  would  have  fall- 
en on  ears  deafened  by  too  maiiy 
beatings  on  too  many  alien  At- 
lantic Coast  Conference  courts  in 
past  years. 

Observers  and  pre-season  poll- 
sters thought  enough  of  Tar  Heel 
potential  this  fall  to  rank  them 
well  up  before  a  basket  was  shot, 
but  none  really  suspected  that  the 
tall  and  talented  club  would  got 
this  far  in  the. ACC's,  lough  com- 
petition without  a  loss. 

A\  this  point,  holding  wins 
over  every  team  remaining  on 
their  schedule  except  North  State 
Conference  school  Western  Caro- 
lina, the  '^'ar  Heels  can  breathe 
easy  basketball-wise  for  awhile 
and  concentrate  on  the  books. 

But  after  exams  there's  the 
homestretch  with  Wake  Forest 
(twice),  N.  C.  State,  Duke  (twice), 
Maryland,  Couth  Carolina  and  Vir- 
ginia of  the  ACC  itching  to  trip 
up  high-flying  UNC. 

Before  the  season  started,  Mc- 
Guire and  his  associates  figured 
the  Tar  Heels  good  for  wins  up 
to  the  Northern  trip  right  before 
Christmas.  During  those  three  days 
and  the  three  days 'of  the  Dixie 
Classic  immediately  following,  a 
lot  would  be  learned  about  the 
likes  of  Lennie  Rosenbluth.  Pete 
Brennan,  Joe  Quigg.  Bob  Cunning- 
ham and  Tommy   Kearns 

When  the  Tar  Heels  swept 
three  wins  up  North  and  return- 
ed to  claim  their  first  Dixie 
Classic  crown,  most  folks  were 
amazed. 

But    to    pass    in    the    ACC,    you 


UNC-State  Mat  Meet 
Postponed  Til  March 

By  RON  MILLIGAN  ]  tMeen  Carolina  and  State,  previous- 
U.NC  wrestling  coach  Sam  Barnes  j  ly  scheduled  for  tonight  in  Raleigh, 
has  announced  that  the  battle  be-  i  has  been  po.stjwned  until  Marc-h  4. 
.  I  -The  match  had'tiot  been  official- 
must  beat  annual  kingpin  N  C.  j  jy  sehedulod  with  State  s  coach,  Al 
State    at    Raleigh.   The   Tar    Heels  i  (  pg^n-jord ;     it    wa;!    only    a    verbal 


Rosenbluth  Tops 
Scorers;  Brennan 


UNC 
2nd 


Lennie  Rosenbluth.  Carolina's  i 
Ail-American  basketball  captain,  j 
continues  to  lead  his  teammates  in  j 
scoring  through  the  season's  first' 
15  games.  j 

Rosenbluth,  6-5  stringbean  from 
Greenville,  Tenn.,  has  scored  395 
points  in  15  games  for  an  average 
of  26.3  per  contest.  He  holds  a  big 
lead  over  his  closead  rival,  6-7  for- 
ward Pete  Brennan  who  has  amass- 
ed 231  points  for  a  15.4  average. 

Two  other  Tar  Heels,  Tommy 
Kearns  and  Joe  Quigg,  are  averag- 
ing in  double  figures-  I^eanrs  has 
posted  a  12.6  mark  while  Quigg  is 


at  11.7. 
THE  SCORING: 

RocMbluth  15 
Bronnsn  15 
Kearns  15 

Quifg  .  15 
CunninghMn  15 
15 
15 
10 
8 
8 
7 
6 
15 
15 


Radovich  ^ 
Hathaway 
Groll    _ 
Rosemond 
LotT 
Holland 
Searcy    ,. 
UNC  Totals 
Opp  Totals 


126  143 

76  79 

63  64 

64  52 
40  24 
19  20 
16  11 


422  411 
344  329 


395  26.3 

231  15.4 

190  12.6 

176  11.7 

104  6.9 

58  3.9 

43  2.8 

24  2.4 

13  1.6 

12  15 

6  0.8 

4  0.6 

12S5  83.6 

997  66.4 


Carolina 


IN  'Cinemascope* 

AND  IN  COLOR!  fi^^ 


STARRING 


FRANK  SINATRA-MARLON  BRANDO 


CAMPUS  REPRESENTATIVE 
A  AA^TEUR  COED  CREW 
wanted  for 
VAGABOND  SCHOONER 
summer  college  cruises 
third  season 
2  Wek  Bahamas  Cruise  $230 
write  qualifications  if  applying 
as  representative,  or  request  for 
brochure  to:  Vagabond  Schoon- 
er, 1 1307  Church  St.,  Chicago  4o 
Illinois. 


did    so    early   this   week,    in    their 


agreement.     State    scheduled    their 


final  appearance  until  the  Jan.  3(\  inatch     with     .Maryland    tomorrow; 
date  with  Western  Carolina.  |  Micrefore.  it  would  be  hard  to  meet 

The  convincing  83-57  licking,  I  two  strong  teams  in  two  da.v.s.  1 
coming  on  the  heel.s  of  losses  by  j  tried  to  have  the  match  this  past 
other  highly  ranked  teams,  leaves  Wednesday,  but  Crawford  and  I 
UNC  a.s  the  only  undefeated  ,  finally  ai;reed  to  meet  on  March 
major  college  team  in  the  nation..;  4     in    Raleigh."    Barnes    .said. 

Though  many  are  amazed  by  The  undefeated  USC  grapplers 
the  UNC  15-game  win  streak,  it  '  so  iar  boa<t  wins  over  Wake  For- 
is  no  freak.  It  has  come  at  the  est.  Davidson.  Citadel,  and  Virgin- 
behest  of  the  scoring  touch  of  Ml-  i  ia.  They  have  one  tie  with  Wash- 
America  feosenbluth-  C26;3):'  and  tv^on  and  Le^/  ,  , 
the  scrapping  and  double-figure  i  it  wa^  two  weeks  ago  that  grap- 
icoAl^g  of'  KcAiBS.  jEir^ahoh;  indj|  piers  Itfte  Capt.  Bob  Wagner,  Hen- 
Quigg.  '  i  Ty  RhJ^e.  Pcrrln  Henderson,  Char- 

*  North  Carolina  holds  at  lea.st  one|'  Ik?  Boyelte'.  Dave  Atkinson,  Ken 
win  over  each  team  remaining  on  j  Hike..  Bill- CJhpd$..an^,(iieq^,  p^ugh- 
its  schedule,  with  South  Carolina  j  tfy  lfl<i-the 'Tar'Heel  tdiA*»feffk)se 
(90-86  in  overtime)  and  Wake 
Forest  (63-55  for  Classic  title) 
having  given  them  the  best  scraps. 


necision  over  the  strong  Cavaliers 
of  Virginia.  Since  then  everyone  on 
the  team  has  continued  to  practice 
h.'ird  every  afternoon,  preparing  for 
tlio  cancelled  State  match  and  the 
oiliers  to  follow.  j 

After  exams  the  grapplers  will  1 
travel  to  Virginia  to  meet  VPI  (Vir- 
ginia Poltechnical  Instituted  which 
haf  been  the  Southern  Ck)nference 
Champion  for  the  past  two  years.  ] 
.Although  many  of  VPl's  last  year 
starters  are  gone,  they  still  claim 
t:>nsiderable  strength. 

On  February  8.  the  two  strongest 
elements  in  the  .ACC  will  mix  when 
<.arolina  plays  host  in  their  last 
home  mateh  to  Maryland,  ACC 
rhampions  last  year. 


Imported    Flannel, 
Tweed,  and  Shetland 

SUITS 
were  up  to  now 

$75  $48.75 


from  our  regular  stock 
SPORT  COATS 
Shetiands,  Rumson 
Tweeds,  and 
Harris  Tweeds 
were        ^  now 

$45  $34.95 

$55  $44.95 


Entire  Stock 
WOOL  SLACKS 
REDUCED  ~  $3 

per  pair 
(off  regular  price) 


TOPCOATS;       : 

Tweeds  and 
Shetiands 
were  now* 

$65  to  $75  $48.75 


THESE  AND  MANY  OTHER  STARTLING 
REDUCTIONS  AT 


Julian* 


Milton's  Ninth 
Anniversary 

SALE 

Hot  Values  for  Cold 

Days  for  Both  Lads 

and  Lassies. 

Calling  all  you  AAacintosh  rain- 
coat lovers — effective  February 
1st  the  men's  raincoats  will  be 
advanced  $1.50  and  the  ladies 
$3.00.  We  have  all  sizes  in  stock 
now  so  you  can  make  your  se- 
lections before  the  price  in- 
crease. 

Good  luck  on  those  exams,  and 
drop  in  during  your  breaks 
when  our  reduced  prices  on  all 
sale  items  will  still  be  «n  effect. 

Clotfiins  Cupboarb 


A  LOVE  STORY 
FOR  EVERY  WOiVlAN! 

The  spark liiiii  story  of 
flL        eatfcr  yoimg  beauties 
^•k9  f%  in  si-arch  of  money 
,,,j      1^^         ...men  ...and 
l^fL    /^  niarriaUf! 


GEORGE  NADER  •  JULIE  ADAMS 
MARIANNE  COOK-  EISA  MARTINELU 
GIA  SCALA  •  SYDNEY  CHAPLIN 
GRANT  WILLIAMS  •  JOHN  GAVIN 
TODAY  -  SATURDAY 


'lir^  K 


.if""'  vir-: 

^1^''^'  •  mm 


'II 


TAKE  A  "STUDY  BREAK' 

JAZZ 

AT  / 

TURNAGE'S 

'Featuring  -  Dick  Gable's  All  Stars 
Every  Saturday  Afternoon  —  2:00 

In  Durham  Beer  Served 


STARTS  SUNDAY 


Mysteries  of 
Nature  Brought 
to  the  Screen 
for  the  First 
Time  in  a 
Motion  Picture 
You  Will 
Never  Forget  I 


\i:'y':H\  i\ 


•^i*,^'  ■ 


K 


^':-i.. 


■»?•' 


MACHINES  FOR  MAGAZINES  ?  ?  ? 


Right,  Reginald...       "       " 

another  new  icfea  for  the  compus. 

And  what  two  popular  campus  weeklies??? 

SPORTS  ILLUSTRATED  ond  TIME,  of  course. 

And  the  machines???  At  your  service 

(with  the  latest  issues) 


ot  the  YMCA  BUI1DIM6 


GIT  YOUR   COPIES  TODAY  (A\(AILABLE   24   HOURS  A  DAY)  . . .  IT'S   EASV;" 


.■,'^- 


i  WEATHER 

JRktr  «nd  becoming  a  littl*  war- 
mer. Expected  high  38. 


«.tJ.C.  library 

Serials      Oept. 


TOWERS 

Now  is  the  time  to  build  them. 
See  page  2. 


VpL.  LVII  NO.  87 


Complete  {fi^  Wi/rt  Service 


CHAPEL  HILL,  NORTH  CAROLINA,  SATURDAY,  JANUARY  19,  1957 


Offices  in  Graham  Memorial 


FOUR   PACES  THIS  ISSUft 


Soot  Causes  Considerable  Damage  To  Housing  Units 


Two   Freshmen    Get   General   Motors   Award 


John  Gardiner, 
Wilson  Partin 
Local  Winners 

Two  freshmen  here  have  re- 
ceived awards  under  the  College 
Scholarship  Plan  set  up  this  year 
by  the  General  Motors  Corp.  of 
Detroit.  Mich,  'to  help  higher  ed- 
ucation and  develop  talent." 

John  Alden  Gardiner  of  Greens- 
boro and  Wilson  Burton  Partin 
Jr.  of  Scotland  Neck  are  1956-57 
recipients  of  the  awards,  accord- 
ing to  Dr.  C  O.  Cathey  of  the 
UN'C  Faculty  Committee  on  Schol- 
srships.  which  selects  the  local 
winners. 

TItc  Geniral  Motors  awards  arc 
renewable  for  each  succeeding  un- 
dergraduate year  providing  that 
the-  student  maint«iins  the  scholas- 
tre".  standards  cf  the  Scholarship 
Committee    and    the    University. 

Ranging  in  value  from  $200  to 
$2U)0p  the  grants  ar3  being  given 
in  ,146  colleges  and  universities 
in;38  states. 

Two  awards  will  be  made  an- 
ntfSJly  at  UNC  to  freshman  stu- 
tfenls.  either  male  or  female. 
(Salifications  include  U.  S.  citi- 
zenship, an  outstanding  high 
s*6ooJ  record,  high  academic  aver- 
age talsnt.  a  sense  of  responsi 
htlil^  and  need  for  financial  as- 
si<ftrtnce  in  obtaining  a  higher  edu- 
ca^on.  ♦■ 

iin  unrestricted  grant  was  also  i 
given  to"  the  University  for  each ; 
G^-  the  two. ^dcnt  awards.'  .  | 
/^ehn  Gardiner  to  the  aoa-  ol  1 
"ii*.  and  Mrs.  A.  P.  Gardiner,  o! ' 
2803  Spring  Garden  St..  Greens- 
b-To.  H?  graduated  in  the  top  10 
pet" 'cent  of  his  high  school  class 
at*  GreCnsboro  High;  played  in  the  ! 
band  and  orchestra  each  year:  \ 
was  president  of  his  junior  high  i 
school  student  body:  was  clas"*  : 
president  in  two  high-school  years:  j 
was  a  member  of  the  Student  l 
Council.  Key  Club.  Nfllional  Hon-  * 
or  Society.  He  hopes  to  be  a  { 
physicist.  At  UNO  he  is  enrolled  j 
in  ihc  class  for  advanced  fresh-  i 
mon.  has  -made  three  cx?ellents  '■■ 
artd  two  parses  on  I^Js  mid-term 
rPr>oHs.  '. 

Wilson  i*  the  son  of  Mr.  and  ■ 
Mis.  W.  ti.  Partin.  St..  of  541  N. ; 
V->'Ti  St..  Sfotlnd  Neck.  N.  C.  In 
Scotland  Neck  high  school '  he 
ptavd  the  piano,  edited  the  school 
paper  .  was  vice-president  and 
president  of  the  Student  Council, 
graduated  as  salutatorian.  He 
hopes  to  be  librarian.  At  Caro- 
lina he  has  made  five  excellents 
on.,  his  mid-term  reports. 


'.■'iU.>   .   > 


Cleaning  Cost  Estimates  Range 
From  $200-$500  For  Each  Unit 


The  fire  in  a  Victory  X'illage  heatiii,^  pi 
more  damage  tli;  ]i  was  reported  originally. 

Articles  ol  tlotlung  and  pieces  ol  finni 
l)v  soot  from  the  blaze.  It  was  estimated  the  c 
Sl'oo  to  S500  per  unit. 

The  fire — wliidi  originated  late  Thuisd 
fmn;  ;e  leaving  if3  units  without  heat  for  sev 

I  he  fire  was  thought  to  have  started  :is  a 
ing  the  furnace. 

Occupants  living  in  the  units  are  current 
in  the  area  ;  ;id  in  |)ri\aie  liomes  in  Chapel  H 

Those  married  students  having  childre 
tv  their  parents'  homes  up.til  repairs  are  mad 
home. 


ant    riunsday  caused    i(j  housing  units  miirh 

iine  were  ni  many  cases  complfted  enveloped 
ost  of  (leaning  would  range  anywhere  from 

IV  afternoon— kno(ked  out  the  heating  plant 
eral   da  vs.        .   . 
result  of  fuel  oil  1  luuiing  over  and  overheat- 

ly  staving  witli  friends  in  other  housing  units 
ill  and  Carrhoro. 

n  under  two  vears  of  age  planned  to  send  them 
c.    .\i    least    three   diildren    \vere    to    l>e    sent 


Recently  Formed  Duo 
To  Play  At  Mard'i  Gras 


UNC  Scholarship  Recipients 


;.4 


■'». 


John  Alden  Gardiner,  left,  and  WliMn  Burlon  Partin  are  congra  tulated  by  Dr.  C.  C.  Cathey  of  the  Faoil'ty  CommiHee  on  Scholarships 
upon  receiving  scholarships  from  General  MotfTf  Corp.  Tfie  scliolar ships  are  part  of  a  pikn  established  this  year  by  GM  for  college  and 
university  students  who  possess  talent  »nd  have  liifh  academic  standards.  Gardiner  and  Partin  will  be  eligible  for  renewal  of  the  awards 
if  they  maintain  high  scholastic  standards,  According  to  GM. 


The  Mitchell-Ruff  Duo.  concert 
attraction  for  Mardi  Gras  week-end 
Feb.  15-16.  brings  with  it  a  record 
for  a  newl^-forraed  but  impressive 
musical  career. 

Playing  here  for  the 
Mardi  Gras,  jaintly  sponsored  by 
the  German  Club  and  Graham 
Memorial,  the  Duo  will,  present  a 
concert  to  b?  held  on  Feb.  15  from 
8  10  p.m.   in  Memorial   Hall. 

One  of  the  newest  in.strumental 
combinations  to  hit  the  popular 
music  field,  the  Duo  features 
Dwight  Mitchell  on  piano  and 
Wilie  Ruff  on  bass  and  French 
horn  in  a  cDloi-ful  variety  of  tonal 


time  bring  along  a  new  interpre- 
tation of  both  old  and  new  fron- 
tiers of  jazz. 

Meeting  while  in  the  Army. 
j  AUtchel  and  Ruff  formed  their 
Carolina  first  experiments  during  their 
military  service.  Their  initiar  ap- 
pearance as  a  duo  was  made  while 
with  the  Lionel  Hampton  Orchestra 
on   his  second   tour  of  Europe. 

In  1955  the  Mitchell-R-uff  Duo 
made  its  debut  as  a  single  unit. 
Since  that  time  the  Duo  has  play- 
ed engagements  in  Las  Vegas.  The 
Embers  in  New  York,  and  the 
jazz  mecca  of  Birdland.  Their  run 
at  Birdland  resulted  in  a  five-year 


combinations.  Building  their  mus- 1  contract  for  11  appearances  a  year, 
ic  on  a  firm  foundation  of  the  1  The  Duo  is  now  recording  for  Epic 
classics,    the    artists    at   the    same '  Records. 


LIBRARY 

The  Library  wjll  remain  open 
Saturday  night,  Jan.  U  untlT  10 


Student 
Lounge  Is 
Open  In  Y 

A  new  student  lounge  has  been 
rstablishcd  on  the  second  floor  of 
the  Y  building  and  is  now  open 
for  use. 

Plans  for  the  newly-dccoratcd 
room  wepc  drawn  up  by  Norman 
Gillis,  who  carried  out  the  pro- 
ject with  a  committee  of  Mary 
L:u  Wells.  representing  the 
YWCA.  and  Curtiss  Daugniry,  rep 
resenting  the  YMCA..^  ;   .-, 

A  particular  need  for  the  in- 
door lounge  was  seen  for  the 
winter  months.  After  conferring 
with  J.  S.  Bennett  of  the  Building 
Dept..  the  redecorating  committee 
succeeded  in  getting  the  Build- 
ing Dept.  to  supply  furniture  for 
the  room. 

The  furniture  will  continue  to 
be  added  depending  on  how  the 
room  is  treated.  Student  coopera- 
tion has  been  urged  in  keeping 
the  loun;,'e  clean  and  in  good  con- 
dition. 


ON  STUDENT  UFE  AND  THOUGHT: 


BSU  Retreat  Schedule  For  Feb,  2<h 


-^ 


Rus$i%>4its  lka.>  Plan 

MOSCOW— (AP)— The  Soviet  Un- 
ion and  Communist  China  yester- 
day jointly  condemned  President 
Eisenhower's  Middle  East  policy. 
They  pledged  the  peoples  of  that 
area  "any  necessiry  support"  to  av- 
ert aggression  and  interference  in 
their  affairs. 

Premier  Cho\i  Bin-Lai  of  Red 
China  and  Soviet  Premier  Bulgan- 
in  set  forth  their  views  in  a  2.000- 
word  communique  signed  by  them 
at  the  conclusion  of  Chou  s  visit 
in  Moscow. 

In  reference  to  the  Elisenhowei 
plan  for  military  and  economic  aid 
to  the  Middle  East  to  meet  any 
Communist  aggression,  the  com 
munique  said: 

"The  government*  of  the  Soviet 
Union    and    the    Chinese    people's 
Republic  resolutely  condemn   thio  1 
policy  of  the  United  States.  1 

"They  arc  prepared  to  continue  1 
to  give  any  necessary  srupport  to  \ 
the  peoples  of  the  Near  and  Mid- 1 
rle  East  in  order  to  avert  aggres-  I 
sion  and  interferenc?  in  the  affairs.  I 
of  the  countries  of  that  region."  j 
(See  WORLD  fiEWS,  Page  3) 


The  Baptist  Student  Union  will 
hold  its  annual  Winter  Retreat  Feb. 
2-3  at  Camp  New  Hope.  The  pro- 
gram will  be  based  upon  Student 
Life  and  Thought  and  Christian 
leadership  and  participation. 

Leading  the  first  discussion  will 
be  Dr.  William  H.  Potcat,  associa- 
te professor  of  philosophy,  who  will 


.speak  on  'What  Students  arc 
Thinking  and  Why."  Rev..  Warren 
Carr.  pastor  of  Watt.:,-  St.  Baptist 
Church  of  Durham  will  talk  Sa- 
turday night  on  'Campus  Evanga- 
lism  ■■  A  planned  social  will  end 
activities  for  that  day. 

Dr.    WUliam   C.    Friday,   newly 
elected    president    of    the    Univer- 


sity, will  speak  on  "Baptist  Stu- 
dents and  Campus  Affairs."'  Clay 
ton  Stalh^kc,  president  of  the  lo- 
cal B.  S  .U.  will  lead  the  last  dis- 
cussion group  on  "The  Biblical  Mo- 
tivation for  Work." 

The  retreat  will  conclude  Sun 
day  afternoon  with  a  worship  ser- 
vice  led   by  the  Rev.   William   W. 


Kinlator,  pastor  of  the  Piillen  Mem- 
orial Baptist  Church  of  Raleigh.      ( 

"The  retreat  promio-^s  to  be  one 
of  the  most  outstanding  ones  plan- ' 
ncd  by  the  Carolina  B.S.U..  and 
as  many  Baptist  students  as  pos- 
sible are  urged  to  come.''  Rev-. 
James  0.  Cansler,  minister  to  Bap- 
tist  students,   said.  I 


DR.  POTEAT 

.  cavipns  affairs 


REV.  MR    CARR 

. .  .to  lead  worship 


;.<' JiLU  FRIDAY 
.ioha/t  students  think 


REV.  MR.  FINLATOR 

.  . .  campus  cvavgelism 


■♦     Thursday's     fire     marked     the 
fourth   in   Victor>'    Village    in    the 
last  three  years. 
I        The     Day   Care     Center      he* 
caught      fire    twice — once      two 
!    years    ago   artd   again    last   year. 
Last  year's  fire  there  caused  da- 
mages   up   to    $10,000.    A    small 
blaze   broke    out    in   a    unit    last 
year  on  Mason  Farm  Rd. 
Several   of   the   occupants   spent 
Thursday  night  and  Friday  morn- 
ing inspecting  soot   on   refrigera- 
tors,  food   shelves,  stoves,     sinks, 
chairs,  couches,  the  walls,  etc.     » 
In  one  house — Law  student  ^ott 
Spradlcy'i,' — soot  covered  a  crib  in 
one  corner  of  the   fropi   room.'  A 
lamp     shade — ordinarily     green- 
was     completely   blackened.     TM 
scene  was  a  similar  one  in  many 
of    the    other    units.    A    few   werfi 
not  bothered  much. 

Meanwhile  workmen  were  biisi^ 
clearing  away  debris  in  the  heating 
plant.  The  furnaee  which  had  been 
partially     collapsed     when     water 
1  from  fire  hoses  sprayed  it  Thurs- 
1  day,    was  not   expected  to  be  re- 
i  paired  for  several  more  days. 
•A  new  KNNiece  vfili  eventvaHy 
be    installed.   Concerning   why   i 
new  one  would  not  be  iitsfaUHJl 
now.  Victory  Village  Manager  P. 
L.  Burch  said  it  would  take  about 
three  weeks  to  do  that  and  "we 

couldn't  wait   that    long."     : _ 

Help  came  from  man.v  quarter^r' 
for  occupants  in  the  units.  Two 
local  dry  cleaning  establishments 
and  the  University  Laundrj'  arc 
providing  free  services. 

Arrangements  were  made  to  al- 
low them  25  cents  off  the  regular 
price  for  meals  in  Lenoir  Hall. 
HOPE 

Several  persons  expressed  hope 
there  would  be  construction  o£ 
more  permanent  hou.sing  units  in 
the   future. 

The  University  asked  for  over 
$1.5    million    last  summer    in    its 
budget    request    for    housing    for 
married  students.  University  Bus- 
iness    Manager  Claude     Teague 
said  Friday  $1.5  million  was  re- 
quested for  buildings  and  $240,- 
000  for  equipment. 
The  appropriations  will  be  grant- 
!  ed  not  month  by  the  state  Legis- 
!  lalure  if  it  sees  fit. 
j      Tcague  said  the  University's  rc- 
j  que  •    was  for  money  to  build  200 
I  units.  He  said.  "We  will  build  »i" 
I  many  units  as  the  money  will  pre 
vide." 


Victory  Village:  Scenes  Of  An   Almost  Disaster 


V'^ 


PEOPLE  MOVED— FAST 

.porvit  )aili)i{is  were  Knocked  do^wn 


VICTCinV  VILLAGE   RESIDENT  JAME?"POTTER  T»^E  INCIDENT  MADE  A  MISS 

. .  .   ■vicrphody  heliwd    )itove   the  finnitiirc  out"      pi, otos  by  CHARLIE  SI.OAN        .  .  .  jtuttprims   in    tfm  .N-o<>f 


.a  .■<iiio!;e-fill<'(l    rooiit 


^AGE  TWO 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


SATURDAY,  JANUARY  !9,  19S7 


Between  Exams  It's  Time 
To  Build  An  Ivory  Tower 

Most  >tii(k'nis  }ia\t*  a  dav-or-so  hreak  sonit'uIjtMe  bt'twt'cn  exami- 
nations nt'vt  ufck.  It'll  lie  too  told  lo  speiui  very  nimii  time  outside, 
and  the  elfe(  t  t*i  the  nunics  will  wear  oft  alter  li\e  or  six  shows.  So  we 
ha\e  a  su^inestion  lor  those  who  have  time  to  waste  belVjre  the  sprini»  se- 


YOU  Said  It: 


NORTH  CAROLINA  1970- 


Those  Who 
Stay  Here: 
Thank  You 

\\'!iile  we  are  jusiiliably  worrv- 
inj;  about  the  exodus  ol  laeultv 
metnheis  IVom  the  I'niversity  to 
pliiV  es  where  monev  is  more  plenti- 
lul.  let  us  not  Torget  another  otoup 
ol  ))eople  whidi  deserves  just  as 
inuih  ihoui;ht. 

We  veler  to  the  lat  iilt\  members 
(►I  tlu'  rnixeisiiv  v\ho.  even  tiiough 


mester. 

(loniemplation  is  one  ol  tiie  most  bea'utilul  f()rins  ol  livinj^J  When 
exereised  with  moderation,  it  lan  turn  in  tremendous  lewards  tor  people 
—even   stiulents. 

As   history   Prot.  j.   C.   Sitterson 

eniphasi/ed  Friday  to  his  students. 

the    Ivory    Tower  isnt   bad  at  all. 

^It  mav  be  the  hope  lor  the  luture. 

.Sitttn«»  in  an  Ivory  Tower  does 
n(»t  ne<essarilv  mean  vou  hrjre  to 
wear  tweeds  and  subsist  on  wine 
and  s{arli<  biead  a\u\  read  no 
books  pid)!ished  .dier  1700.  Some 
|>eopIe  do  iliat.-  and  enjov  it  verv 
nuieh.  but  their  jjjodiut  is  often 
linv  and  hard  lor  the  normal  per- 
,>oi]   to  understand. 

Ihe  Ivorv  Tower,  as  we  see  it, 
is  a  j)Iaee  where  studeins  can  with- 
draw thetnselves  h»r  self-( otnem- 
plaiion.    Theie.  lemoved  Irom  the 

'         .  1   •  1  ""    I'll    V    iii\ii5ii\    »\ini,  c"\cii   iii«>ii^ii 

ordinaiv    stieam     o      tlnif's,    thev        ,,   ,.    i   ,    .      -./^     .    •       .  ^lI. 

,        V  •-< .  ollered   templing     ban     i)v      othei 

s(  hools.  retuse     to     leave     (.hapel 

Hill. 

These   people  do  what    thev   do 

lor   a   variety   of   reasons,    rsiially. 

however,  the  reasons  boil  down   to 

the  lat  t  that  here  thev  have  a  tlial- 

Ieni>e.   Ileie  is  the  ( emer  ol  ihink- 

inj;    lor    the    whole    state,   and    for 

muih    ol    the    South.     Here    these 

la(  uitv    members    have   det  ideil    to 

stav.    10   help  ethuate   the   enibrvo 

nvinds  of  this  slate  and  the  test  of 

the  South. 

*  *  *         ■  '  " 

Meie  (onyiatulations  are  pitiful 
when  tompared  with  the  tremen- 
dous jobs  ol  faith  .md  sweat  these 
])eople  have  done.  Hii;her  salaries 
would  help  a  gieii.t  deal,  but  even 
lliMse  would   be  ntateiial   rewards. 

North  Caiohna  is  the  most  pro- 
j^iessive  in  the  Southern  tier  <)f 
states.  And  these  fatuity  mendjers 
are  slaving  here  to  see  that  this 
Slate  somedav  puIK  itself  (omplete- 
Iv  out  of  the  riu  that  late,  jjohtits 
and  the  Civil  War  h:  ve  left  us  in. 

To  them,  the  I'liiversity  shoultl 
j;ive  a  ;,>,reat  tU-al  of  thanks. 


tan  ponder  what  makes  this  uni- 
verse tit  k.  what  makes  people  fi<;ht 
and  theai  and  steal,  whv  do  people 
da  these  things.  And.  with  tonstaiu 
.searching  after  the  word  Why?  ' 
soineihin,ii  i>reat  iikia  tosie  about: 

l-Or  <»ntf  v\e  understanti  whv 
people  tlo  what  thev  dt).  we  will 
be  t ominLi  t  lose  to  an  answer  h)r 
war.    an    answer    lor    t  heatini;    and 

stealing. 

*  *  * 

Bin  this  is  somethin,'L»  that  tan  be 
gt>l  t)nlv  through  siTf-t outemjjla- 
tit>n.  It  tannol  be  learned  from 
l>ooks  (»i  hom  professors  t»r  frtnn 
keeping  vour  own  i  het  kiui;  at - 
toiuit.  It  nnist  tonte  fn)m  an  Ivorv 
Tower.       ■  ^ 

Perhaps  it  is  too  unit  h  to  ask  of 
A  siudein  bodv  hopjj«^l  up  t)n  \o- 
I)t)/  pills.  Milltowii^  auti  callous 
t»l  tollee.  r.ui  somewhtle.  some- 
lime.  durin<4  the  examinatit>n  jxrr- 
ioti,  the  lime  and  materials  exist 
with  whith  the  stutlents  tan  build 
lv»»tv     Towers. 

Without  them,  wtr;  (.uniot  get 
viiv  lar.  . 


Let's  Wait  For  Next  Fire! 

nn„,,no  Oiinn  J.  /:.  lltulsiro, l/i  i,<>j,fd  ihis  icould  hnni^  on 
fjhuis  tin  coiishiuliou  of  fH-muwcnl  houses  in  tin-  drvclofnnrnf  area. 
Kiom  a  news  stt)iv  alM)ut    Thursdays  \'it  ton   \'illaoe  fiie. 


Wadsworths  ht>|)e  is  a  fine  one. 
May  be  it  will  be  realized.  But 
meanwhile  the  rniv^sity  ol  .Ncmh 
Caitilina.  along  with  the  state 
(ieneral  .\ssend)lv.  *ht)uld  be  mor- 
tally ishamed  of  the  fire  Thinsdav 
in  \ittorv   \illa''e. 


The  Daily  Tar  Heel 

The  official  itudent  publication  of  the 
Publications  Board  oi  the  University  of 
North  Carolina,  ftrhere*  it  is  published 
daily  except  Monday  and  examinatioc 
•Pd  vacation  periods  and  summer  ternns 
Entered  as  second  class  matter  in  tht 
Dost  office  in  f'hapel  Hill,  N.  C  ,  undej 
Ihe  Act  oi  .March  8.  1870.  Subscription 
rates;  mailed.  $4  per  year,  S2  50  a  semen 
ter;  delivered.  $6  a  year.  $3.50  a  seme* 
ter 


Editor 


FRED  POWLEDGE 

Managing  Editor CHARLIE  SLOAN 


N«ws  Editor 


;  NANCY  HILL 


Business  Manager   ._.  ^JLL  BOB  PLEL 


Sports  Editor 


—  LARRY  CHEEK 


Subscription  Manager Dale  Staley 

Advertising  Manager Fred  Katzir 

Circulation  Manager  Charlie  Holt 


VEWS  STAFF— Clarke  Jones.  Ray  Link- 
er. Joan  Moore.  Pringle  Pipkin,  Ann^ 
Drake,  Edith  MacKinnon,  Wally  Kuralt, 
Mary  Alys  Voorhees.  Graham  Snyder. 
Billy  Barnes,  Neil  Bass.  Gary  Nichols, 
Page  Bernstein.  Pes  Humphrey,  Phyllit 
Maultsby.  Ben   Taylor 


BUSINESS  STAFF— Rosa  Moore,  Johnny 
Whitaker,  Dick  U^avitt,  Dick  Sirkin. 

SPORTS  STAFF:  Bill  King.  Jim  Purks, 
/Jimmy  Harper,  Dave  Wible,  Charley 
Howson. 

EDITORIAL  STAFF  —  Woody  Sears, 
Frank  Crowther,  Barry  Winston,  David 
Mundy.  George  Pfingst.  Ingrid  Clay. 
Cortland  Edwards,  Paul  McCauley, 
Bobbi  Smith. 


Staff  Photographer  _. 
Librarian  


Norman  Kantor 
Sue   Gishner 


Night  News  Editor  ^     Wally  Kuralt 

Night  Editor   ..._    ,     Cortland  Edwards 
Proof  Reader  Manley   Springs 


J  hrou^h  stMiie  .sort  of  lutk.  no 
thilflreii.  stutlents  tir  studeins" 
wives  were  iitjurctl  or  killed  in  the 
fire. 

Ilui  it  was  the  same  storv  last 
year.  Through  some  more  link, 
plus  last  work  on  the  part  of  a  few 
people,  no  one  was  killed  or  in- 
jined  when  fire  ate  iiUt)  the  \'it - 
torv  \  illa;4e  Day  Care  Center  last 
sprin^;.  The  rniversitv  had  its 
warnini-  then,  and  vet  ii  tlid  noth- 
inif  to  t  Iian,i»e  the  pitiful  livin-; 
londiiions    in   \'ittory    X'illase. 

The  reason,  as  usual,  was  monev. 

'The  l.ei^islature  wont  allow  us 
any  money  h)r  married  students' 
housing,"  said   I'liiversity  offitials. 

Of  tttyrse.  I'niversity  tiffitials 
tlidn't  adtl  that  they  hat!  tlt)ne 
pranically  nothing  to  talk  the  state 
I.egislaiure  i  n  1 1>  appropriating 
money  h)i  marrietl  students'  hous- 
ing. 

*  *  * 

.So.  meiinwhile.  \'it  torv  \'illagc 
rati  alt)ng.  with  its  tlilapidatcti 
buildings  (t)nstrutted  many  years 
ago  as  temporary  ht)using  units, 
with  its  wt)oden  walls  yt)u  eould  see 
through,  with  its  outmoded  heating 
systems. 

It  was  pure  lutk  that  \'it  torv 
X'illage  difln't  burn  down,  witli 
loss  of  lives,  behne  this.  It  was 
pure  lutk,  aided  by  Chajjel  Hill's 
efficient  fire  department,  that  this 
week's  fire  didn't  burn  dt)wn 
homes  antl  pet>ple. 

St),  going  altmg  with  Htiusing 
l)ire(tt)r  Wadswt)nh's  reastining. 
maybe  the  fire  will  help  prove 
the  point  that  we  need  new  and 
better  housing  fat  ilities  Un  the 
I 'niversity's  marrietl  |>opulation 
(it  is  20  percent  t)f  the  whole  en- 
lollment). 

Whv  not  wait  until  we  have  an- 
other   fire?    Maybe   somebf)dv   will 
get  killed,  and  then  we'd  have  an 
air-tight  case.    The  Ceneral  Assem- 
bly toultl  Jiardly  refuse. 


In  Defense  Of  Campus  Athletics 


Editor: 


First  of  all,  may  I  ask.  why  do 
you  not  tran^sfer  to  a  school 
where  athletics  are  frowned 
upon,  say  Washington  and  Lee, 
and  then  your  purely  educational 
m>nd  would  be  at  ease. 

Why  not  drop  by  the  Placement 
service  and  see  which  graduate 
a  business  prefer.^;  one  with  a 
straight  "A"  average  and  noth- 
ing else,  or  one  with  a  "C"  aver- 
ajje  and  a  lot  of  extracurricular 
activities.  You  may  be  surprisedl 

I  presume  that  you  have 
enough  intelligence  to  know  that 
athletics  are  one  of  the  best  way,s 
in  which  to  learn  to  work  with 
ptH)ple  that  mankind  has  de- 
vised of  as  yet. 

Since  you  are  against  giving 
needy  students  aid.   why  do  you 


not  start  a  petition  discriminating 
against  the  non-athletic  students 
on  the  campus  who  work  to  pay 
their  way  through  school?  Have 
you  ever  thought  that  an  athlete 
could  be  as  much  in  need  of  as- 
sLstanee  as  these  non-athletes? 

If  you  will  check  the  enroll- 
ment record  of  the  schools  that 
have  de-emphasized  one  good  for 
another,  namely  sports  for  edu- 
cation. You  will  find  that  the 
enrollment  has  dropped.  A  well 
riundcd  student,  not  a  bf>ok- 
worm.  wants  to  go  to  a  school 
where  he  will  be  jible  to  get  a 
well  rounded  education,  not  one 
irT  just  one  field. 

Speaking  of  gate  receipts, 
where  does  the  money  that  is 
spent  on  the  intramural  depart- 
ment come  fr.^m  and  for  that 
matter,  a  lot  of  the  other  depart- 


ments in  school  arc  able  to  pro- 
Vide  better  facilities  because  of 
this  so  called  "Rotten  Mess." 

Have  you  ever  added  up  the 
expenses  of  the  minor  sports  at 
Carolina  and  wondered  where 
this  money  came  from  to  support 
them?  Obviously  not.  if  you  had. 
you  would  know  that  this  so  call- 
ed "Rotten  Mess"  actually  pro- 
vides opportunities  for  hundreds 
of  students  to  participate  in  sports 
that  would  not  be  able  to  if  the 
Board  of  Trustees  or  the  state 
allotted  the  money. 

So  Sir!  Please  come  down  from 
your  tower  of  learning  and  .ioin 
us  nonnal  people.  We  can  not  all 
be  geniuses  like  yourself. 

Carl  Andrew  Spicer 


'We  Forget  How  It  Got  There,  But  It's  Sacred' 


f^  ' 


'>.■' 


j-V 


64-VOTE  RULE 
LiMlTlNii  PEBATE 


^tM(7    y^K.  Ui*0'»4»»l*TO*i  V'^Sr  Cm 


CLINTON,  TENN.-PART  3: 


John  Kasper  And  His  Followers 


...  to  be  .sure.  Kasper  was  an 
outsider,  and  so  were  the  other 
speakers,  and  the  mob.  well,  there 
were  license  plates  from  Ala- 
bama. Georgia.  Mississippi.  Vir- 
ginia, and  North  Carolina,  and 
other  parts  of  Tennessee.  But  you 
cant  get  acound  the  fact  that 
there  were  people  from  Clinton 
behind  Kasper,  and  there  still 
are. 

As  the  lines  hjive  ;«)lidified  in 
the  town,  it  becomes  increasingly 
evident  that  this  i§  net  just  a 
split  of  segregationists  and  inte- 
grationists;  that  to  a  large  degree 


^il  Abner 


it  is  a  class  split  between  Kas- 
per's  followers  and  the  re^it  of 
the  white  people  in  Clinton,  in 
particular   the   city   officials   and 

This  concludes  the  article  by 
newspaperman  Halberstam  on 
Clinton,  Tenn.,  and  segrega- 
tionalist  John  Kasper.  The  arti- 
cle appeared  in  The  Reporter 
Magazine.  ' 

the  more  prosperous  businessmen 
of  Clinton. 

While  the  Negro  issue  touched 
off  the  demonstrations  and  the 
Negro  remains  a  symbol  to  Ras- 


per's group,  the  hatred  of  Negro- 
es is  only  a  superficial  symptom 
of    the    deeper    resentment. 

■'We're  segregated,  the  while 
community  is  segregated."  one  of 
the  city  officials  told  me.  "Were 
broken  off  into  different  groups 
that  eye  eaeh  other  with  distrust 
and  suspicion  and  arc  fighting 
each  other" 

Numerically  the  Kasper  group 
ranges  from  about  250  to  350,  but 
it  is  determined  and  vocal,  turn- 
ing out  for  every  occasion,  such 
as  Kasper's  trial  for  sedition  in 
November. 


Some  Striking 
Similarities 
In  Reviews  • 


Editor: 

FUNNY  COINCIDENCE 
DEPARTMENT 

He  really  gets  going  in  the 
swing,  where  the  camera  closes 
in  on  her  face  while  his  hands 
are  plainly  busy  elsewhere 
C'Oooo,"  she  gasps,  ''Ah  feel  so 

weak")  

— Time    Magazine    reviewing 
•'Baby    Doll,"    December 
24.    1956 

He  really  gets  going  in  the 
swing,  where  the  camera  closes 
in  on  her  face  while  his  hands 
are  plainly  busy  elsewhere 
C'Oooo."  she  gasps,  "Ah  feel  so 
weak"). 

— Cortland  Edwards  review- 
•    ;     '         ing  "Baby  Doll"  in  The 
Daily    Tar  Heel,    Janu- 
ary 11.  1957 

Time,  Magazine,  of  course,  con- 
tains    thought,     all     predigested 
for  you.   Even   pictures .... 
,»?  •/ -^From  an  editorial   in  The 
'•,  "^  Daily    Tar    Heel,    same 

issue 

Tammy  Morrison 
University  of  Michigan 

tteader  Offers 
Advice  How 
To  Interview 

Editor: 

Tuesday,  my  sore  throat  and 
I  were  sitting  in  the  student  in- 
firmary waiting  to  see  the  doc- 
tor, and  I  was  deeply  engrossed 
in  a  review  of  "Baby  Doll"  in 
Time  .Magazine. 

Suddenly,  the  corridor  w^as 
shaken  by  a  noise  which  sounded 
like  a  Canada-wind  coming  south 
on  high  heels.  A  ^irl  descended 
on  me.  and  asked  me  a  que.stion 
which  I  did  not  understand  (mind 
y;iu.  my  thoughts  were  still  dwell- 
ing on  what  Time  said  about 
what  Baby  Doll  said  when  she 
was  lying  in  her  baby-crib). 
When  I  shook  my  head  blankly, 
the  girl  and  her  Jwo  companions 
stormed  three  other  students, 
and  started  hailing  forth  ques- 
.tiuns.  It  seemed  they  were  in- 
volved in  an  interview  pro.iect. 
One  question  I  overheard  sound- 
ed like,  "What  is  your  opinion  of 
psychoanalysis'.'"  Fi-om  another 
direction.  I  heard  an  "inter- 
viewee" answerr  "Well,  I  guess 
Id  go  to  the  AA." 

Now  I  don't  know  what  class 
these  girls  were  representing,  but 
I'd  like  to  give  them  a  tip  on 
interviewing  techniques. 

Gals — next  time  you  wish  to 
conduct  a  survey,  don't  sweep 
down  on  your  victims  like  a  hoard 
of  locusts  lighting  on  a  wheat 
field.  Take  a  quieter  approach. 
Buzz  around  a  while — like  a  mos- 
quito— and  give  your  host  a 
chance  to  get  slightly  prepared 
lor  your  bite. 


Cherry  Parker 


w 


By  Ai  Capp 


THE 
DANGEROUSLY 
HIGH 
CALORIE 
CONTENT 
OF  MUD 
MUSHROOMS 
NOT  ONLY 
ADDS  FAT 
TO  THE 
BODY- 
BUT  ALSO 
TO  THE 
BRAIN. 

II? 


J{^J^ 


WHAT 
EFFECT    { 

WILL 

THIS  FAT 

PRESSURE 

HAVE 

ON 

Ll'L 

ABNER  ^S 

Ll'L 


BRAIN 


J 


Pogo 


SLt  17 


By  Walt  Kelly 


The  State's  Heart 
U  The  University 

Dr.  Gordon  W.  Blackwell 


This    is   the    final    portion    of    Dr.    BlackwelTs 
speech. 

(5)  In   order  to  accomplish  these  and  similar 
objectives,  we  must  raise  the  general  income  level 
of   the  people   of  the   state,   so   that   the   basic   in- 
stitutional   services    can    be    more    adequately    sup-    . 
ported. 

(6)  Increases  in  income  will  call  f*r  consider- 
able reorganization  in  agriculture,  involving  larger 
size  farms,  increasing  ratio  ol  capital  to  labor,  and 
changes  in  marketing  arrangement^-,  among  other 
things. 

(7)  But  most  important  in  raising  income  will 
be  ttie  future  mdustrial  development  of  the  state  on 
a  selective,  decentralize  basis.  A  considerable  in- 
crease in  wages  is  essential.  Without  this,  we  shall 
remain  a  colonial  area,  as  it  were,  producing  raw 
materials  and  processing  these  materials  in  only  - 
the  first  stages,  requiring  only  unskilled  or  semi-  " 
skilled  labor.  ^ 

It   is   not   sufficient   for  North   Carolina  to   in- 
dustrialize at   wage  levels   only   slightly  above   ag-    ' 
ricultural  income  levels.  The  proposals  for  changes     , 
in  the  state's  tax  structure  made  recently  by  the 
Tax    Study   Commission,      warrant      very      careful 
consideration.  ,^ 

'^  «i 

Tax  revision  may  encourage  needed  industrial-  * 
ization.  while  at  the  same  time  cutting  down  on  ^ 
revenues  desperately  needed  to  support  services  "" 
at  more  adequate  levels.  .Somewhere  a  balance  must  1. 
*  be  realistically  struck  between  these  seemingly  op-  ■" 
posing  policy  issues. 

Furthermore,  the  Governor's  Research  TYiangle 
Committee,   focusing  on  the  Raleigh-Durham -Chap- 
el   Hill    area,    has    important    implications    for    in-    . 
dustrialization  throughout  the  state. 

(8)  Rounding  out  our  goals  for  1970,  we  should  _ 
plan  for  the  ordered,  controlled  growth  of  the  100  • 
towas  and  cities  of  the  state  so  that  they  will  offer 
suitable  environments  for  more  than  one-half  of 
the  state's  population.  Without  rational  planning 
and  control,  the  rapid  urbanization  which  surely 
lies  ahead  will  mean  that  larger  proportions  of  our 
people  will  be  forced  to  live  in  undesirable  com- 
munity situations.  Adult  education  programs  should 
gear' in  closely  with  both  city  planning  and  rural 
community  development. 

ROLE  OF   THE  CONSOLIDATED  UNIVERSITY 

And,  finally  may  I  return  to  my  earlier  sug- 
gestion that,  along  with  our  sister  colleges  and  uni- 
versities throughout  the  state,  the  Consolidated 
University  of  North  Carolina  has  a  key  role  to  play 
in  the  unfolding  development  and  goal  achieve- 
ment of  North  Carolina.  For  more  than  160  years 
the  University  at  Chapel  Hill  has  been  a  significant 
force  in  the  state.  More  recently  it  has  been  joined  - 
in  enlarged  responsibilities  by  North  Carolina  State 
College  and  the  Woman's  College.  ^ 

Perhaps  it  is  not  too  far-fetched  to  compare  the   *" 
Con.solidated    University   to   the   heart   in   a   human 
being.    The   University    pumps   life   blood    into    all 
parts  Of  the  state  and  into  all  segments  of  its  social 
and  economic  structure.  .    .  , 

This  life  blood  consists,  first,  of  the  trained  peo- 
ple. There  are  approximately  11.000  young  men 
and  women  enrolled  in  the  undergraduate  schools, 
most  of  whom  return  to  North  Carolina  communi- 
ties, many  lo  assume  positions  of  local,  stale,  and 
national  leadership  in  the  future.  T^iere  are  also 
about  2.500  men  and  women  each  year  who  are 
working  toward  graduate  or  advanced  professional 
degrees  in  these  three  institutions,  rnost  of  whom 
again  will  return  to  North  Carolina  positions  in 
teaching,  in  research,  and  in  other  professions. 

The  life  blood  of  the  state  consists,  secondly, 
of  the  findings  of  the  research  which  goes  on  in 
the  halls  of  the  Consolidated  University,  in  its  li- 
braries, in  its  laboratories. 

These  additions  to  knowledge  enrich  the  way  of 
life  "bf  the  people  through  the  transmission  of 
cherished  values  in  the  humanities  and  the  cultural 
arts;  improve  the  health  and  extend  the  longevity 
of  the  people;  advance  the  technology  and  scientific 
know-how  in  the  state's  agriculture,  industry  and 
business;  and  bring  increased  understanding  of  the 
problems  of  human  behavior  and  social  relations 
all  the  way  from  that  most  intimate  group,  the 
family,  to  the  international  scene,  and  all  kinds  of 
human  relations  in  between. 

Finally,  this  life  blood  for  the  state  becomes 
evident  in  the  extension  of  University  services  into 
every  nook  and  corner  of  the  state — through  agri- 
cultural extension;  general  extension  programs;  cor 
respondence  courses;  in-service  training  programs 
for  public  officials  and  leaders  in  business  and  •«- 
dustry;  the  circulation  of  educational  films  and 
books;  and  in  countless  other  ways. 

In  thi^  essentially  adult  education  role,  radio 
and  more  recently  television  are  being  used  with 
increasing  effectiveness.  Perhaps  there  is  need  for 
closer  working  relationships  in  this  endeavor  b»?- 
tween  the  University  and  local  adult  education  pro- 
grams. 

The  goals  for  1970  will  not  be  achieved  easily, 
but  they  are  npt  beyond  our  grasp.  North  Carolinians 
have  ever  been  challenged  by  the  difficult  and  the  _ 
imaginative,  as  witness  our  pioneering  in  state  sup-   *    ' 
port  for  a  i>€opl€'s  symphony  orchestra  and  an  art  •    • 
museum  for  the  living  enrichment  of  all  the  peo- 
ple. 

Local  adult   education  groups  can  do  much   to 
enlighten    citizens    concerning    the    problems    and 
the  issues  .and   to  chart  the  way  ahead  for  local      ___ 
communities  and  for  the  state.  \         UL 


SATURDAY, 


UNCSJ 

InDurl 

Four    foreis 
from    UNC 
panel  dLscussic 
tion  in  their 
tries  at  a  \nni 
in    Durham 
Gamma  Societ 

The  panel 
Dr.   Katherint 
ael,  UNC  dej 

The  four  stj 

:^  Di  Senatj 

The  Daily 
ror  yesterday 
Chapel  Hill 
Graves  capti^ 
Adams." 

John  Patric 
president  of 
in  elections 
picture   is   bej 


JOHN 


ANNOL 

Illino 

OPT 

AppHcatio 

classes  be) 

1957    are 

1 

"Hire 

of  pre 

Leading 

Docto! 

Requirei 

» 

Two  years 

equivalent 

ciBed  libe 

WRITE 

TO 

ILLIN< 

of  O 

3241    : 

Technologj 

Th 

205 


SATURDAY,  JANUARY  19,  19S7 


THi  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


PAGE  THREE 


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----£*•■ 


UNC  Students  Will  Participate  . 
In  Durham  Luncheon  Meet  Today 


Four    foreign    women    students 
irom    UNC    will    take    part    in    a 
panel  discussion  concerning  educa- ] 
tion  in  their  several  native  coun- 
tries at  a  luncheon  meeting  today  [ 
in    Durham    of    the    Delta    Kappa  i 
Gamma  Society.  i 

The  panel  will  be  moderated  by  ' 
Dr.   Katherine    Kennedy   Carmich- 
ael.  UNC  dean  of  women. 

The  four  students  to  appear  be- 

Di  Senate's  New  Head 

The  Daily  Tar  Heel 
ror  yesterday  printed  a  picture  of 
Chapel   Hill   Weekly   editor  Louis 
Graves    captioned     "John    Patrick 
Adams." 

John  Patrick  Adams  was  elected 
president  of  the  Dialectic  Senate 
in  elections  earlier  this  week.  His 
picture  is  below. 


JOHN   PATRICK   ADAMS 

. . .  THIS  IS  Di  head 


ANNOUNCEMENT  BY 

Illinois  College  of 
OPTOMETRY 

Applications  for  admission  to 
classes  beginning  September  9, 
1957    are   now    being    received. 

Three  year  course 

of  professional  study 

Leading  to  the  Degree  of 

Doctor  of  Optometry 

Requirements  for  Entrance; 
T'wo  ye*Ts  ^60  semester  hours  or 
equivalent  quarter  hrs.)  in  spe- 
cified liberal  arts  and  sciences. 

WRITE  FOR  BULLETIN 
TO:   REGISTRAR 

ILLINOIS    COLLEGE 
of  OPTOMETRY 

3241    So.    Michigan   Ave. 
Technology  Center.  Chicago  16,  III. 


fore  the  group  of  women  educa- 
tors are  Misses  Inez  G.  Belleza, 
Lily  Pan,  Liselotte  Pauline  Rehor 
and  Mrs.  Monique  Hugh  Brock- 
mann. 

Miss  Belleza.  a  graduate  of  the 
University  of  the  Philippines  in 
1951,  was  an  instructor  there  be- 
fore coming  to  America  as  an  ex- 
change student  on  Fulbright  and 
Smith-Mundt  grants  and  a  tuit- 
ion scholarship  from  UNC.  She  is 
working  for  a  Master  of  Arts  de- 
gree in  mathematics  and  is  a  mem- 
through  er-  ber  of  two  international  honor 
societies — the  Phi  Kappa  Phi  and 
Pi  Gamma  Mu. 

Miss  Pan  was  graduated  from 
the  University  of  Taiwan  in  1954, 
becoming  an  employe  of  the  Amer- 
Jcan  Military  Advisory  Group  and 
a  tutor  and  teacher  of  English 
in  Taipei.  Formosa.  There  she 
passed  a  highly  competitive  exam- 
ination in  order  to  become  eligi- 
ble for  a  tuition  scholarship  to 
study  sociology  at  UNC.  She  is 
working  for  a  second  bachelors 
degree. 

Mrs.  Brock  mann,  born  and  edu- 
cated in  Paris,  is  the  wife  of  an 
American,  Mr.  Charles  B.  Brock- 
mann.  who  has  been  granted 
bachelor's  and  master's  degrees 
from  UNC.  Mrs.  Brockmann  holds 
a  BA  degfee  from  the  Universi- 
ty of  Paris  and  a  business  school 
diploma.  She  taught  for  three 
years  in  Tennessee,  and  is  now  at 
UNC  working  on  a  master's  degree 
in  French. 

Miss  Liselotte  Rehor,  bprn  and 
reared  in  lower  Austria  is  a  grad- 
uate student  in  the  UNC  Dept.  of 
English.  She  holds  a  teacher's  di- 
ploma for  elementary  school  teach- 
ing from  a  teacher's  training  col- 
lege in  Vienna.  She  has  studied  at 
the  University  of  Vienna,  working 
towards  a  teacher's  diploma  for 
secondary  school  teaching. 


In  GM 

All  applicants  for  the  editorship 
of  the  Woman's  Handbook  and  for 
the  Women's  Oientation  Chairman 
may  lo<^  over  files  and  reports  in 
the  Council  Room  of  Graham  Mem- 
orial from  3  p.ntL  to  5  p.m.  Feb.  4, 
5,6.7  and  8,  the  Office  of  the  Dean 
of  Women  has  announced. 

It  was  erroneously  reported  in 
The  Daily  Tar  Heel  yesterday  that 
the  files  were  in  the  Dean  of  Wo- 
men's office.  The  article  should 
have  stated  that  they  were  in  tht 
Council  Room. 

It  was  al9»  reported  incofrectly 
that  interviews  by  the  Dean  of  Wo- 
men's office  for  these  positions 
will  be  conducted  the  week  of  Jan. 
18-23.  However,  the  interviewing 
will  not  take  place  until  after  the 
deadline  for  handing  in  applica- 
tions, which  is  Feb.  11. 


'Strangers  On  Train' 
Is  Today's  Free  Flick 

Alfred  Hitchcock's  "Strangers 
on  a  Train"  is  tonight's  free  flick 
feature  to  be  held  in  Carroll  Hall 
at  8  and  10. 

The  bizarre  murder  plot  stars 
Farley  Granger.  Ruth  Roaum  and 
Robert  Walker. 


Covering  The  Campus 


The  Chapel  Hill  Bird  Club  will 
meet  Sunday  afternoon  in  Wilson 
Hall  auditorium.  Meeting  is  3  p.m. 
Color  slides'  will  be  exhibited.    • 
CAMP  SEQUOYAH 

C.    Walter    Johnson   will    be    in 
Chapel  Hill  today  to  interview  slu-  j 
dents  who  are  interested  in  coun- 
seling at  Camp  Sequoyah.  Johnson 
will  be  available  for  interviews  af-  j 
ter  9:30  a.m.  in  the  Carolina  Inn. 

John  Riebel  at  the  "Y"  will  an- 
swer    any     questions     concerning 
Camp  Sequoyah. 
PHARMACOGNOSY    EXHIBIT 

The  pharmacognosy  class,  under 
the  direction  of  Dr*  H.  R.  Totten 
.of  the  Botany  Dept.,  is  just  finish- 
ing a  semester  devoted  to  the  study 
of  drug  plants.  An  exhibit  of  their 
.work  and  individual  projects  is  cur- 
rently featured  in  room  10  of  Davie 
Hall.  The  public  is  invited  to  view 
their  display,  on  exhibit  from  9 
a.m.  to  5  p.m.  through  Jan.  30. 
JOBS  AVAILABLE 

Students  interested  in  working 
next  semester  have  been  asked  to 
make  application  at  the  Student 
Aid  Office  as  soon  as  possible. 
Most  jpbs  availab^  will  be  in  the 
dining  hall  due  to  a  change  in  class 
schedules,  according  to  the  office. 


A   "C"   average   will   be  requisite 
for   renewal   of  scholarships   each 
s«m«ster.   .       , 
COUNSELORS  NEEDED 

Counselors  are  still  needed  for 
second  semester  men's  orientation 
which  will  be  held  Jan.  30-31,  ac- 
cording to  Orientation  Chairn^n 
Bill  McLean.  Those  a-tudents  inter- 
ested have  been  requested  to  leave 
theif  name  and  address  with  Mrs. 
Grassman  in  the  Student  Govern- 
ment Office  in  Graham  Memorial. 
The  office  phone  number  is  4352. 
PLANETARIUM  TALK 

G.  W.  Owens  will  present  a  gal- 
lery Valk  at  7:30  tonight  in  the 
Planetarium  concerning  the  exhibit 
currently  on  display  in  the  Plane- 
tarium. 
WUNC 

WUNC  is  a  non-commercial  FM 
radio  station  operated  by  the  Uni- 
versity of  North  Carolina  at  Chapel 
Hill.  Its  broadcasting  schedule  for 
tonight  is  as  follows: 

7:00— -Paris  Star  "Hme 

7:30— This  is  Jazz 

8:00— Take  It  From  Here 

8:30— Showtime 

9:00 — 'Horizons  in   Music 
10:00— News 
10:15 — Evening  Masterwork 


SERvi Yourself— 


EVERY  SUNDAY 


Lutheran  Student  Assn. 
Will  Have  'Study-Brealc' 

The  Lutheran  Student  Assn.  will 
sponsor  a  "study-break"  Sunday 
at  6  pjn.  at  Holy  Trinity  Lutheran 
Church,  corner  of  Pickard  Lane 
and  Rosemary  Street.  A  cost  sup- 
per (50c  per  student)  will  be 
served  at  6  o'clock. 

Due  to  the  examination  sched- 
ule, no  formal  program  has  been 
planned. 


5:30-7:30  P.M. 


KEMP'S 
GONE 
MAD! 


WHILE   THEY    LAST  — 

LONG   PLAYING    RECORDS 


vox 

LONDON 


90c 


MOM 
ALLEGRO 


BUFFET 

At  Th* 

RANCH   HOUSE 

HOME  OF  CHOICE  HICKORY-SMOKED  CHARCOAL  BROILED  STEAKS 


AND  MANY  MORE! 

LP's  at  the  Price  of  Single  45's 
While  They  L6st  -  No  End  in  Sight! 


.« 
Sv 


//*, 


207  E.  Franklin  St. 


WORLD  NEWS 


(ConUmted  from  Page  }) 
By  the  phrase  Near  and  Middle 
East    the    Russians    mean   to    dis- 


CLASSIREDS 


JAZZ  AT  TURN  AGES 

Saturday  atternoon,  2:00,  Turn- 
ages  Cabin  in  Durham— Jazz  by 
Dick    Gables    "All     Stars."     Beer 

MT\etl. 


FOR  S.-VLE:  1954  27  FOOT  HOUSE 
trailer.  14  mile.s  north  of  Chap- 
el Hill  on  .Airport  Road.  Sloan's 
Trailer  Court.  Maurice  L.  Clegg. 


FOR    S.\LE:     36"     GAS     RANGE, 
good  condition.  Call  8-0678. 


Stock  Up  and  S(ive  .  •  .  Canned  Vegetahle  Sale! 


WE  NEED 

USED 
TEXT 


As  sooH  3i  Exams 
are  over,  trot  over 
with  the  old  text. 
It  means  folding 
money  for  youy  and 
a  break  for  the  next 

guyl 

^ 

The  Intimate  Bookshop 


205  E.  Franklin  St. 


Open  Till  10  P.M. 


tinguish  between  Arab  states  and  j 
the  non-Arab    areas*,  placing     Af- 
ghanistan and  Ifan  in  the  category  i 
of  SCddle  East  and  the  Arab  states 
in  the  Near  East.  ' 

The  two  powers  demanded  1^1 
indemnification  to  £gypt  by  Biri- 1 
tain,  France  ant}  Israel  8(emn>lng 
t^tm  tiM  invasion  ctf  Bgypt  in  Oct. 
and  Nov.  This  is  a  reiteration  of  I 
previous  Soviet  views  supporting 
Egyptian  claims  for  damage  to  ci- 
ties from  bombardment  and  losa  of 
military  equipment. 

The  statement  expres^d  opposi- 
tion to  "any  intrigues  by  the.  im- 
perialists to  place  the  Suez  Canal 
under    international   control." 

US  To  Press  Plan 

WASHINGTON  —  (AP)  —  The 
Eisenhower  administration  intends 
to  go  on  pressing  for  jts  Middle 
East  resolution  despite  the  Russian- 
Red  Chinese  pledge  to  "protect" 
the  area  from  "aggression." 

Top  officials  here  arhowed  no 
alarm  at  the  denunciation  signed  by 
Premier  Bulganin  of  Russia  and 
Red  China's^  Chou  Qi-Lai.  They 
said  it  had  been  expected,  antl  that 
the  U.  S.  government  most  certain- 
ly would  push  along  its  \Dddlc 
East  plan  if  Congress  approves  it. 
The  Russian-Red  Chinese  move, 
they  said,  is  obviously  intended  to 
compete  with  the  American  pro- 
posal to  protect  the  Middle  East 
from  Red  aggression. 

These  officials  expressed  confi 
dence  the  people  of  the  Middle 
East  would  not  be  fooled  into  ac- 
cepting Communist  "protection" 
rather  than  the  shield  offered  by 
the  U.  S. 

Many  members  of  Congress  cata- 
logued the  Moscow  communique 
as  more  Communist  propaganda. 
Most  of  them  expresiwd  the  opin- 
ion the  U.  S,  must  determine  its 
Mideast  poli^cy  entirely  apart  from 
this   development. 

Rep.  Byrd  (I>-Va)  said  he  thought 
the  Red  communique  would  have 
a  favorable  effect  on  Eisenhower's 
request  for  standby  authority  to 
use  tro<^  in  the  Middle  East  to 
repel  aggression. 

"It  is  all  the  more  reason  why 
the  Congress  s<hould  pass  a  resolu- 
tion expressing,the  feeling  of  the 
Am^ican  people,"  Byrd  said  when 
asked  about  the  JMoscow  pro- 
nouncement. 

Missilei  Get  Priority 

WASHINGTON  —  (AP)  —  The 
government  yesterday  gave  its  bal- 
listic missiles  program  top  priority 
in  purchase  of  materials  over  all 
other  defense  a<id  civilian  buying. 

The  action  was  taken  by  the 
Commerce  Dept.  on  avthorization 
of  the  Office  of  Defense  Mobiliza- 
tion. 

The  top  priority  rating  applies 
to  procurement  of  materials  by 
contractors  and  subcontractors  en- 
gaged in  the  production,  construc- 
tion and  research  and  iev^op- 
mept  for  the  b^jllistlc  missiles 
programs. 


Dozen  UnU»,r.^fSmve  Mwrt!'  --  •       jJC»tOJIUl  jfjAf  S  || 

I 


J 


REDG.4TE   GOLDEN    CRE.AM 

NO    303 
CAN 


CORN 

KEDGATE   CANVED 

Tomatoes 

WEOG.ATE   GBEEN   &    \MII 

UnffAS 


NO 
303 


At   SlorfM    Below 


Qfor  I  JI 


^y^  .Start  the  ISew  Year  Right  .  . 

.'■  y\ 

^    with  Famous-Brand 


Extra  Large  Firm  Green  Iceberg 


GIFTS  FREE  with 


LETTUCE 


Heh-of-th*-!Se»i 
Grad*  "A" 

LARGE 
ECGS 

47c 


C7N 
DOZ 


Tmtty  Amwiemm 
Cheddar 

MILD 
CHEESE 

•  49c 


Fult  of  Juice 

FLOItlbA 
OSAltGES 


LIS. 


iMcaUy-Grown 

FtlESH 
COLLJUIDS 

15 


2 


wmfK*rntmi»im:m»»meimmmum* 


SM09CBP 


LBS.      m^SC 


Our   Pride  Buttermilk 

BISCUITS 

2  >^«-  25^ 


WUaon^a  Certified,  6  to  8   Lb«. 
Average,   Whole  er  Half 


29 


.;i.UGATE  CUT  GREEN 

BEANS  6 

STOKELV  TINT  GREEN 

UMAS  4 

GOLC^N  ISLE  FIELD 

PEAS     6 

1>EL  MONTE  EARl-Y  G.ARDEN  S 

PEAS     5 

REDCATE  EARLY  JUNE 

PEAS     6 


NO   303 
CANS 


NO.  303 
CANS      ^P^VC 


NO.  303 
CANS 


75 
99 
89< 
99< 
87 


Cvdar  Farms  Sliced 

BACON 

I  ^  $1-00 


ii  TO  3H  LBS.  AVC.  ^J.  M)AST1NC 


|pR?-->%i;-»:«few^'^? 


CHICKENS     '  43c 

FRESH  GBOVND  '* *  .  - 

BEEF     3  >^  n^ 

TENDER.  ECONOMICAL 

POmL^VB'U^S  '>  49c 


Nutreat  Flavor-Rich 

ICE  CREAM 

Banana     Chorolate — Vanilla — S'' berry 
PINT  CTN.  I  i^-GAL.  CT*i. 


20 


75 


West  Franklin  St. 


Glen  Lennox  Shopping  Center 


f  AOI  FOUt 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


SATURDAY,  JANUARY  19,  ^9S7 


IN  THE  GATE  CITY: 


Yearling  Cagers  Play  Pack 
Tonight  In  Revenge  Battle 


By  DAVE  WIBLE 

Carolina's  freshman  cage  squad 
went  through  a  lengthy  scrimmage 


Rock 
yourself 
into  your 
Happiest 

Time 


TOM  EWELL 

'         JAYNE 
MANSFIELD 

^  EDMOND 
^O'BRIEN 


THE 

Girl 

OiNT 

Help 


CiNemaScoPE 


lUllE  LONDON 
m  tNTHONY 
Wm  GORDON 

HENRt  K»«S 
FATS  DOMmO 
THEPUTTOS 
UTTURICtUM'S 
CENEVMCBITJSI 
THE  TRENCIS 
EDDIE  FORnUNE 
THE  CHUCKLES 
ABBEY  LMCOLN 
ieNNNTOUm 
NINO  TEMPO 
EDDIE  CeCMRAN 


Late  Show  Tonight 
Sun.— Mon.— Tue. 


Carolina 


NOW  PLAYING 


\imM 


H 


ii!.,  *■  ^■•"««| 


Carolina 

Wednesday  -  Thursday 

"IRON  PETTICOAT" 

with 

Bob  Hope 

Katharine  Hepburn 

FRIDAY  -  SATURDAY 


CLASHING...  IN 


HEAD-ON  CONFLICT ! 


CHAROONHESm 
ANNE  BAXTER 

GllBERTROIAND 
TOMTRfON 

LATE  SHQW  SAT. 
SUN..MON.-TUES. 


yesterday  afternoon,  smoothing  the 
rough  edges  in  preparation  for  to- 
night's contest  in  Greensboro  with 
their  only  conquerors,  States  Wolf- 
lets. 

Tonight's  game  marks  the  third 
in  a  series  of  four  meetings  be- 
tween the  two  teams.  The  State 
frosh  have  taken  top  position  in 
the  series,  winning  the  first  at 
Kinston  91-89.  and  the  second  on 
their  home  court  89-74.  Thca^  are 
the  only  two  losses  the  Tar  Babies 
have  suffered. 

Carolina's  frosh  coach  Vince  Gri- 
maldi  said  about  the  two  State 
games.  "The  first  game  on  a  neu- 
tural  court,  could  have  gone  either 
way.  We  exchanged  baskets  all 
through  the  game  but  they  mana- 
ged to  come  out  on  top.  .The  last 
game  was  played  on. State's  home 


court  which  is  rough  on  anybody. 
But  that  didrf" t  make  the  differ- 
ence. The  State  boys  were  a  lot 
faster  than  us  and  they  made  up 
their  deficiency  in  height  by  out 
scrapping  u^-."  The  W^olfle^s  tallest 
man  is/only  6-4,  while  the  Tar  Ba- 
bies have  several  boys  of  equal 
height  plus  6-7  Lee  Shaffer  and 
&8  Dick  Kepley. 

The  Tar  Babies  will  be   led   to- 
night by  high  scoring  forward  Lee 
Shaffer.  The  blond  bombshell  has 
averaged   22.6  points   a   game   for 
the  Carolina  yearlings.  Supporting 
Shaffer  at   forward  will   be   York 
Laresc,  a  star  in  his  own  right  hit- 
1  ting     16.1  per  game,  and     center 
I  Dick  Kepley,  who  is  right  behind 
j  Larese,  scoring  157  a  game.  Tak- 
I  ing  positions  in  the  backcourt  will 
be  John  Crotty  and  Mike  Steppe. 


Mermen  Meet  Terps 
In  Bowman-Gray  Pool 


Wbatley  Named  Captain 


Take  A  Study  Break 
See  A  Flick 

According  to  the  Central  Office  of  Records,  the  time,  of  an  e.\ 
amination  may  not  be  changed  after  it  has  been  fixed  in  the  schedule 

No  student  may  be  excused  from  a  scheduled  examination  except 
by  the  University  Infirmary,  in  case  of  illness;  or  by  his  General  Co' 
lege  Faculty  Adviser  or  by  his  Dean,  in  case  of  any  other  emergency 
compelling  his  absence. 

.\il 


.\11 


*French,     German.  and'Spanish  courses  numbered 

1.2,3,3x.  and  4,    Pharm.  Ec.  34.  *BA  177        Mon.,  Jan.  21.  8:30  a.m. 

11:00  a.m.  Clas.ses  on  TTHS  Mon.,  Jan.  21.  2:00  p.m. 

All  10:00  a.m.  Classes  on  TTHS^ Tues.,  Jan.  22,  8:30  a.m. 

All  11:00  a.m.  Classes  on  MWF Tues.,  Jan.  22,  2:00  p.m 

All  3:00  p.m.  Classes,     Chem.  11.  *BA  71  &  72.  *Chem.  43, 
and  all  classes  not  otherwise  provided  tor  in 

the  schedule .. :„...  AV^d. 

All  8:00  a.m.  Classes  on  TTIIS _ _ .  Wed 

All  2:00  p.m.  Classes  on  AIWF,  *Pharm.  15, 

"BA  130 Thur. 

All  12:00  Noon  Classes  on  MWT     _       Thur.,  Jan.  24.  2:00  p.m 

All  2:00  p.m.  Classes  on  TTHS,   *Pharm.   10, 

*Econ.  31.  32,  61.  &  70         _ Fri.,  Jan.  25,  8  30  a.m. 

All  12:00  Noon  Classes  on  TTHS  and 

all  Nav.  Sci Fri.,  Jan.  25,  2:00  p.m. 

All  1:00  p.m.  Classes  on  MWF,  *Pol  Scl  41, 

' Sat.,  Jan.  26,  8:30  a.na. 

— Sat.,  Jan  26,  2:00  p.m. 

Mon..  Jan.  28,  8:30  a.m. 

-  -' Mon.,  Jan.  28,  2:09  p.m. 

___  Tues.,  Jan.  29,  8:30  a.m 

All  Exams  resulting  in  conflicts  Irom  Common 

Exam  scheduled  above  Tues.,  Jan.  29.  2:00  p.m. 

*In  case  of  any  conflice.  the  regular  scheduled  exam  will  take 
precedence  over  the  common  exam.  Common  exams  are  indicated  oy 
an  asterisk.) 


DAVE   SCURLOCK 

. . .  runs  tonight 

Scurlock  And 
Beotty  Run  In 
Boston  Tonight 

Jim  Beatty  and  Dave  Scurlock, 
one  an  experienced  veteran  of  the 
track  wars  and  the  other  a  rela- 
tive newcomer,  step  into  big  time 
competition  tonight  in  Boston 
when  they  take  part  in  the  Bos- 
ton   Knights   of   Columbus   Meet. 


Carolina's     undefeated     varsity ' 
swimming  team  goes  after  victory 

I  number  six  tonight  when  they 
play  host  to  Maryland  at  eight  o'- 

;  clock  in  Bowman  Gray  pool. 

I  Tuesday  afternoon  tlie  Tar  Heels 
surmounted  their  first  great  hur- 
dle of  the  season  .  by  downing 
i\.  C.  State,  48  to  38.  Previously 
they  held  victories  over  East  Car- 
olina.   South    Carolina,   Duke   and 

I  Virginia. 

For  the  Terripans.  this  is  their 
first  year  of  competition  in  the 
sport,  and  they  are  still  in  the 
building  stage.  ' 

The  meet  may  see  another  at- 
tempt to  crack   the  existing  con- 


Hogan  Is 
To  Leave 
Aid  Fund 


ference  record  in  the  400  yard 
freestyle  relay  event  Providing 
his  ace  sprinters,  Roth  Rose,  Zick- 
graf  and  Charlie  Krepp  are  not 
needed  in  other  events,  Coach 
Ralph  Casey  may  turn  his  "speed- 
merchants"  loose  against  the  cur- 
rent mark  of  13  set  by  the  Tar 
Heels  last  season. 

Following  Qxams,  the  mermen 
return  to  action  against  East  Car- 
olina on  Feb.  1. 


Everett  Whatley,  rising  senior 
from  Atlanta,  Ga.,  has  been  elected 
captain  of  the  Carolina  cross  coun- 
try team  for  1957. 

Whatley  succeeds  Jimmy  Beatty 
of  Charlotte,  North  Carolina's  bril- 


of  this  yfear's  track  team. 

Whatley  runs  the  mile  and  two- 
mile  on  the  track  team  and  wai 
one  of  the  top  runners  on  North 
Carolina's  1956  Atlantic  Coast  Con- 
ference championship  cross  coun- 


liant  dis'tance  runner,  a  co-captain    try  team. 


Beatty.    the    old     warhorse     of 


The  Educational  Foundation,  an 
organization  which  raises  funds ' 
Carolina  distance  runners,  makes '  ^^j.  University  of  North  Carolina  ] 
his  '57  indoor  debut  in  the  two-  j  athletic  grants-in-aid.  announced 
mile  event,  his  speciality.  The  5-6  ,  today  the  resignation  of  executive 
All-American  from  Charlotte  has  \  secretary  George  Hogan.  who  has 
a  long  and  illustrious  career  be-  j  gjyen  up  the  work  to  go  into  bus- 
hind  him.  and  -last  season  also  jnoss 
made  the  swing  around  the  in- 
di>or  circuit   as.  a   two-miler. 


Jan.  23.  8:30  a.m 
Jan.  23,  2:00  p.m. 

Jan.  24,  8:30   a.m. 


•Econ.  81  

All  9:00  a.m.  Classes  on  MWT 
All  9:00  a.m  Classes  on  TTHS 
All  8:00  a.m.  Classes  on  MWT 
All  10:00  a.m.  Classes  on  MWT 


H  gan.  a  UNC  graduate,  Class 
of  1943.  has  held  the  post  nine 
years.  In  accepting  his  resignation, 
the  Fouiidation's  board  of  direc- 
tors recognized  his  "long  and 
faithful  service,  and  constant  and 
devoted  attention  to  his  work, 
which  was  always  for  the  best 
interests  of  the  Foundation  and 
its  objectives." 

As  a  graduate  student  at  the 
University  in  1947,  Hogan  was 
manager  of  the  varsity  football 
team.  He  was  doing  graduate  work 
w'hcn  he  received  his  appointment 
with  the  Foundation.  Foundation 
for  the  past  week  in  preparation  i  presidents  under  whom  he  served 
for  this  meet-^  ••    •    ■'■-       ^     '        j  ^-ere    Claude    Rankin   of   Fayettc- 

ville,  J.  T  Barnes  of  Winston- 
Salem  «nd  Marshall  Cooper  of 
Henderson. 


Dandy  Jim  was  a  perennial  sec 
ond  place  finisher  a  year  ago  as 
old  tinier  Horace  .\shenfelter 
usually  outran  him  to  the  finish 
line.  This  season  Ashenfcller  is 
not  expected  to  run.  but  the  com- 
petition looms  even  more  formid- 
able. 

The  reason  for  this  is  the  pres- 
ence in  this  country  of  one  Laszlo 
Tabori.  a  slender  Hungarian  with 
a  feather  light  stride.  Tabori,  one 
of  the  world's  best  distance  men, 
has  been  training  in  Chapel  Hill 


Milton's  Ninth 

Anniversary 

SALE 


fj' :  i 


Hot  Values  for  Cold 

Days  for  Both  Lads 

and  Lassies. 

Qeod  luck  on  thos«  •xams,  and 
dr»p  in  during  your  breaks 
whtn  our  reduced  prices  on  all 
sale  items  will  still  be  (n  effect. 

•  - 

Clottiing  Cupboarb 


CONTINUING  THROUGH  EXAMS! 


.   Imported    Flannel, 
Tweed,  and  Shetland 

SUITS 
were  up  to  now 

$75  $48.75 


I  from  our  regular  stock 

SPORT  COATS 

Shetlands,  Rumson 

Tweeds,  and 

Harris  Tweeds 

were   '       '  now 

$45  :_!__       $34.95 

$55  $44.95 


Entire  Stock 
WOOL  SLACKS 
REDUCED  -  $3 

per  pair 
(off  regular  price) 


TOP  COATS 

Tweeds  and 
Shetlands 
were  now  • 

$65  to  $75  $48.75 


THESE  AND  MANY  OTHER  STARTLING 
REDUCTIONS  AT 


Julian* 


J  .r'  \  ):.*■ 


h  .u-:^\i 


Scurlock.  a  sophomore  from 
Greensboro  running  in  his  first 
really  big  race,  will  compete  in 
the  1.000  yard  run  against  some 
of  the  country's  best  middle  dis- 
tance runners.  In  his  freshman 
year,  Dave  ran  the  880  in  1:566. 


Jack  May  of  Burlington  is  the 
newly  elected  president  of  the  or- 
ganization. A  successor  to  Hogan 
has  not  yet  been  named. 


[B 


.  iJtV 


LAST  TIMES  TODAY 


N^. 


*  UIII«RS»L  INT£R»I»II0IUL  PlCTU»f 

SUAOAY-MGNDAY 


Motion  Pietur*  m 

.Entertainment  /  '^■' 


has  a  Motion  Picture 
so  Entertainingly  Revealed 
Nature's  Most  Intimate  Secrets  . .  . 
A  Wondrous  World  of  Sheer  Drama 
.     . . .  Stark  Conflict . . .  Delightful 
Hymor. . .  and  Startling  Beauty! 


~'f^. 


,WIS  t||;if|  MOTION  PICTURE  YOU'LL  NCVER  FORGET  j 


! 


^Mnt  ky  T«CMNICe<.ei> 


TUESDAY  -  WEDNESDAY 

•tniai 

UHOMI 
MiUfilll 

iimtiiiin 


THURSDAY 


}Olh  C«filiir)r.FoM 
WIlllAM 

HOLDCN 


TJONES 


1 


LOVE    IS    A    MANY- 
SPLENDORED    THINO 
ClNrMAScQPC 


I  nia  laOfltf  ar  «f 


srmoSioHCsouNO^      / 


Tin;  ^\o'^\ /[Mfizim  and  M/ffficacoa^ 

.  TKIK-UFK  ADM'NTIRF.  lEATl  KK:    - 


M  tr  itolNKOlOR  •  IWini  br  10  »une  •  IritN  iri  Or^ 
SUNDAY-MONDAY 


FRIDAY-SATURDAY 


«v.vra.>pi«s»..vvs.rs59H»H'>&»>x*f.- ■^'^"^'■■'■^r^x.n"^^^   ,  ji.t  i.ct- "•'^tg^J:^ 


MACHINES  FOR  MAGAZipS  ?  ?  ? 


Right,  Reginald.,.  .^       .j?^  j. 

onother  new  idea  for  the  campus.  '     t. 

And  what  two  popular  campus  weeklies ??T 
SPORTS  ILLUSTRATED  and  TIME,  of  course. 
And  the  machines???  At  your  service 
(with  the /ofesf  issues)  '^ 


ot  the  YMCA  BUILDINO 


aiT   YOUR   COPIESTODAY  (AVAILABLE   24   HOURS  A   DAY)  .  ._JT'S   EAST 


J<^ 


WEATHER 

Partly     cloudy  and  colder.     Ex 
p«cted  high  in  the  50's. 


^^I  BR  ART        ^.^^^v^^ 


Keel 


TURNOVER 

Hail  and  farewell  at  the  middl* 
•f  the  school  year.  See  editoriaU, 
page  2. 


VOL.   LVII    NO.  88 


Complete  (JP)  Wire  Service 


CHAPEL  HILL,  NORTH  CAROLINA,  FEBRUARY   2.  1957 


Offices  in   Graham   Memorial 


FOUR     PAGES  THIS  iSSUfr 


Work  Has  Begun 
On  Hospital  Wing 

$300,000  Psychiatric  Wing 
Will  Provide  Research  Space 

Construttion  on  a  new  S^ioo.ooo  wing  on  the  Psychiatric 
Center  of  Memorial  Hospital  has  gotten  nnderway. 

Tlic  addition  to  the  Center  will  provide  more  spare  for 
research  and  service  Inn.tions.  Contracts  lor  the  new  two- 
story  addition  to  South  Wing,  which  houses  the  Center,  were 
awarded  on  Jan.  ;{. 

The  new  addition   is  located  on  the  east  side  of  South 

Wing.  It  will  occupy     a     ground* — 

area  that  was  fornverly  used  as  a 


NBC's  Monitor  Will  Cover 
Mardi  Gras  Here  Feb.  15-16 

Event  To  Be  Biggest 
In  Hill  Social  History 


recreation  area.  The  new  addition 
will  measure  approximately  36  by 
70  feet. 

The  money  allotted  to  the  pro- 
ject will  provide  for  both  build- 
ing and  new  equipment.  ; 

One  half  of  the  $300,000  came 
from  the  State  of  North  Carolina 
and  the  other  50  per  cent  was 
furnished  by  the  Federal  Govern 
ment  under  the  Hill-Burton  Act 
The  Hill  -  Burton  Act  provides 
matching  funds  for  the  construc- 
tion of  hospitals  and  other  health 
facilities. 

The  new  structure  is  scheduled 
to  be  completed  by  Oct..  1957. 

As  a  part  of  the  project,  extens 
ive  alterations  will  be  made  in 
the  existing  two  lower  floors  oJ 
South  Wing,  which  is  a  five-story 
building  connected  to  N.  C.  Me 
morial  Hospital  by  an  enclosed 
passageway. 

The  present  unfinished  ground 
floor  of  South  Wing  will  be  made 
into  laboratory  space,  offices  and 
interview  rooms.  Resaarch  labora- 
tories to  be  built  include  those 
with  facilities  for  bio-chemical  in- 
vestigation for  electro-physiologi- 
cal studies.  Also,  space  for  th» 
detailed  examination  of  patients 
for  both  investigational  and  teach- 
ing purposes  will  be  provided. 

The  ground  floor  of  the  new  ad- 
dition will  be  largely  occupied  by  . 
an  extension  of  the  occupational 
therapy  area.  One  large  room  here 
is  designed  to  have  many  func- 
tions including  that  of  an  auditor- 
ium for  large  conferences  and 
classes. 

On  the  present  first  floor  of 
South  Wing,  there  will  be  extens- 
ive alteration  both  to  increase 
the  number  of  treatment  rooms 
and  to  improve  the  soundproofing 
for  greater  privacy. 

The  corresponding  floor  of  the 
new  wing  will  have  a  number  of 
offices  and  interviewing  rooms  to 
extend  the  area  of  the  present 
occupational  adult  and  child  psy- 
chiatrj-  area. 


Drop-Add 
Period 
Ends  Mon. 

Registration  and  admissions  are 
being  concluded  as  the  new  se- 
mester gets  underway,  according 
to  University  officiaLs. 

Registration  along  with  drop- 
adding  for  the  spring  semester 
will  end  at  4:30  Monday  after- 
no:>n. 

About  115  new  students  have 
been  accepted  for  admission  to 
the  general  college.  Roughly  two- 
thirds  of  the  students  are  trans- 
ferring from  other  schools,  ac- 
cording to  the  .\dmissions  Office. 
Approximately  100  former  students 
will  be  re-enrolling  in  the  Uni- 
versity. 

The  Graduate  School  will  grad- 
uate 55  students.  Eighty-three  new 
scholars  will  enter  the  graduate 
school    this    semester. 

The  Division  of  Health  Affairs 
did  not  disclose  any  figures  at  the 
present  time. 

Next  week  the  office  of  Central 
Records  will  release  final  figures 
on   the  spring  enrollment. 


By  MARY  ALYS  VOORHEES 
Monitor,   .MiC.s  weekend  radio,  will  ])e  at  Chapel   Hill 
Kel).   i-,-i()  to  cover  the  Carolina  Mardi  (iras.  atcordin"   to 
an  announceniein  made  vesterdav  by  George  Ra'4.sdale,  Ger- 
man Club  vi(c  jiresidcnt. 

The  nationwide  indio  will  re(()rd  at  various  intervals 
duriiit;  the  dame  weekend  and  play  back  the  entire  retord- 
in,i>  the  tollowin,«>  weekend.  Rai>sda'le  pointed  out  that  this 
was  (he  first  (()lleL;e  daiKe  in  this  area  to  be  co\ered  by  Mon- 
itor, to  bis  knowled^^e. 

I  vpected  bv  Mardi  Gras  (hairman  Jim  .\rmstrono  -'"f^ 
Ra;>(lale  to  bt  ihc  biyj^icst  social  weekend  in  the  history  of  the 
University,  the  event  will  be  spon-  ♦  "" 

sored  by  the  German  Club  in  obser- 
vance of  Wintor  Germans  and  G.M 
AB  in  celebration  of  its  251h  an 
niversary. 

According  to  .Armstrong.  GMAB 
had  been  planning  a  dance  for  the 
entire  student  body  for  over  a  yeir 
and  therefore  arranged  to  be  co- 
sponsors    with    the    German    CI  Lib 


Village  Residents 
Return  To  Homes 

No  Active  Campaign  Planned 
For  Better  Housing  Conditions 

By   PHYLLIS  MAULTSBY 

Sixteen  families  displaced  by  the  fire  which  «;utted  a 
heating  unit  in  \'ictory  \'illage  ha\e  moved  bac  k  into  their 
homes  on  the  heels  of  a  c  lean-up  job. 

The  heating  unit  fire,  which  flared  up  late  on  the  af- 
ternoon of  Thursday,  January  19,  left  the  housing  units 
temporarily  without  heat  and  caused  considerable  soot  dam- 
age. 


APO 

Available  For 
Sale  Of  Texts 


LOUIS  ARMSTRONG 

Siitciiiuo  vu    ilie   hill 


GM  Spring 
Calendar    ! 
Distributed  i 

By    TOM   BYRD  | 

The  Graham  Memorial  Calendar  i 
for  the  spring  semester  is  now 
ready  for  distribution.  This  repre- 
sent.- the  first  time  that  the  cal- 
endar has  been  ready  on  the  first 
day  of  a  new  semester. 

Linda  Mann,  GM  Director,  prai.s- 
ed  the  Calendar  Committee  for  this 
accomplishment.  "They  started  ear- 
lier and  pushed  harder,"  she  said. 
"Not  only  is  this  one  on  time,  but  , 
it  is  more  complete  than  previous  '■ 
calendars."  i 

The  calendar  is  published  and 
di'lribuled  by  the  Calendar  Com- 
mittee of  GM  Activities  Board.  Tom  ■ 
Lambeth  is  president  of  the  Board. 
Esther  Ballentine  and  Lloyd  Shaw 
are  chairmen  of  the  Calendar  Com- 
mittee. 

Early  in  the  fall  semester  all  the 
departments  of  the  University  were 
asked  for  a  schedule  of  their  events 
for  the  coming  semester.  A  combin- 
ed schedule  of  campus  activities 
was  gathered  and  was  ready  for 
the  publisher  immediately  after 
Chri.imas. 

This  semester  4500  copies  of  the 
calendar  were  printed  for  distri- 
bution. 


MITCHELL  RUFF  DUO 

.  f(yr  Carolina  progressives 


for  the   Winter  Germans. 

A$  a   highlight   of  the  weekend,  ; 
rhe  .co-sponsors    will    present    the 
music  of  Loiii..-  Armstrong  ;ind  the 
Mitchell-Ruff  Duo.  | 

Two  types  of  ticki'ts  will  he  av-  | 
ailabJe  for  the  weekend  events: 

The  GMAB  ticket— which  sells  j 
for  $2  per  couple — will  entitle  the 
holder  to  attend  the  concert  by 
the  Mitchell-Ruff  I^uo  Friday  from 
8  p.m.  to  10  m  Memorial  Hall  and 
the  formal  dance  Saturday  from 
8  p.m.  to  12  in  Woollen  Gym  fea- 
turing the  music  of  Louis  Arm- 
strong and  his  All  Stars. 

German  Club  members  will  u.se 
their  bids,  which  arc  for  the  Louis 
Armstrong  concert  Saturday  from 
3  p.m.  to  5  in  Memorial  Hall  and 
hte  formal  dance  at  Woollen  Gym 
Saturday  night. 
'^Tnr  Louis  .\iin>tr(inu  cniuci"  on 
Saturday  altfrnooii  will  be  for 
German  Club  members  only.  How- 
ever, German  Club  membt-rs  may 
attend  the  Mitchell-Ruff  Duo  C(;n- 
cert  Friday  by  purcha.-,ing  the  ,S2 
GMAB  ticket  in  addition  to  the 
German  Club  bid. 

GM.\B  tickokts  are  now  on  sale 

(See  MARDI  GRAS,  Page  3) 


The  Alpha  Phi  Omega  Book 
Exchange  will  be  open  through 
Tuesday  for  students  who  want 
to    buy    and    sell    textbooks. 

The  exchange,  located  in  Gra- 
ham Memorial  Cabinet  Room 
from  9  a.m.  to  4  p.m.  daily  except 
Sunday.  . 

There  is  a  good  selection  of 
books  in  most  of  the  depart- 
ments, according  to  an  announce- 
ment from   APO. 

Students  selling  books  have 
been  asked  to  bring  in  their 
books  and  estimate  themselves 
what  they  think  the  books  are 
worth.  They  have  been  asked 
to  return  on  Tuesday  to  collect 
money   from   those  books  sold. 

APO  is  a  national  service  fra- 
ternity and  is  a  non-profit  oV- 
ganization. 


According  to  Housing  Director 
James  Wadsw^rth,  everyone  co- 
operated in  the  house  cleaning.  The 
families  moved  out,  and  the  in- 
teriors of  the  homes  were  clean- 
ed and  then  repainted. 

The  University  Laundry  Depi. 
washed  all  the  soiled  garments  and 
linen  which  would  stand  soap  and 
water  treatment,  and  a  local  dry 
cleaner  provided  free  cleaning  ser- 
vice. Lenoir  Dining  Hall  reduced 
the  price  of  meala'  for  those  af- 
fected by  the  fire. 

Students  unable  to  find  tempor- 
ary lodging  with  friends  in  Victory 
Village  or  in  Ci^apel  Hill  were 
sheltered  in  the  old  Institute  of 
Government  Bldg.  on  Franklin  St. 

Victory  Village  Manager  P.  L. 
Burch  said  the  heating  system  had 

'Brigadoon^ 
Auditions 
Here  Mon 

The  Carolina  Playmakers.  UNC 
drama  group,  will  hold  tryouts 
for  their  March  production  of  the 
popular  musical  show.  "Briga- 
doon".  on  Monday  at  4  and  7:30 
p.m.  in  Memorial  Hall.  Director- 
choreographer  Foster  Fitz-Simons. 
UNC  Dramatic  Art  professor,  and 
Musical  Director  Wilton  Mason. 
UNC  music  professor,  will  conduct 
the   auditions.  ,,  • 


day 


been  going  for  a  week  or  more  and 
the  housing  units  had  been  ready 
i  for  the  students  to  move  back  in  by 
last  Sunday  at  the  latest. 

Burch  said  the  damaged  furna- 
ce had  been  reworked,  and  new 
parts  had  been  added.  He  said  it 
was  unnecessary  to  replace  the 
furnac'i,  a-*  had  first  been  indicat- 
ed, since  extent  of  the  damage  was 
not  as  serious  as  early  estimates 
had  shown  them  to  be.  Burch  stat- 
ed any  new  furnace  for  the  heat- 
ing system  would  have  to  be  spec- 
ially made. 

Most  of  the  Victory  Village  dwel- 
lers affected  by  the  fire  indicated 
they  planned  no  active  campaign 
for  better  conditions. 

In  answer  to  a  question  concern- 
ing rumored  petitioning  of  the  state 
i  legislature  for  better  hou.3'ing,  Vic- 
j  tory  Villager  James  Potter  quoted 
I  Housing     Director  Wadsworth     a? 
I  saying   "it  was  a  good  thing  to  put 
before  the  legislators,"  but,  accord- 
ing to  Potter,  no  action  has  been 
taken  along  these  lines  thus   far. 


Student  Aid 
Issues  Spring 
Instructions 


ROSENBLUTH  ONLY  SENIOR 

Carolinas  groat  basketball  team 
should  be  even  better  in  1958.  The 
only  senior  listed  on  the  present 
roster    is   All-America    Lennie   Ro- 

senbluth.. 


Noted  Pianist  Is  Featured  Artist 
In  Petite  Musicale  Tomorrow  Night 

»       •>      T-u^       r   r>„..u       D *u n I      I     D...,  x'.^       „J™:^„;„„       ;.. 


t?n  speaking  parts,  including  one 
male  and  one  female  singing-acft- 
ing  role.  Twelv'e  dancers  ^stui  a 
mixed  chorus  of  tiiirty  will  be 
needed,  as  well  as  some  children 
as  extras.  .   - 


doon"  are  on  reserve  in  the  li- 
brary. The  production  will  be  giv- 
en at  Memorial  Hall  the  weekend 
of  March   1.  2.  3. 


Salisbury 
Editor  Will 
Speak  Here 

The  University  Press  Club  will 
meet  Monday  night  to  hear  an  in- 
formal talk  by  Spencer  Murphy, 
editor  of  the  Salisbury  Post. 

The  mseting  will  be  held  at  the 
home  of  Walter  Spearman,  418 
Whitehead  Circle,  at  7:30  p.m. 
Transportation  will  be  available 
at  Bynum   Hall  at  7:15  p.m. 

Refreshments  will  be  served. 
All  Journalism  students  and  stu- 
dents planning  to  major  in  Journ- 
alism have  be€n  urged  to  attend 
by    President    Charlie    Johnson. 

Murphy  graduated  from  UNC  in 
1925  with  an  A.B.  He  has  won 
state  awards  several  times  for  his 
editorial  writing.  WTiile  attending 
UNC.  he  was  editor  of  the  Yack- 
ety  Yack  and  also  worked  on  the 
.staffs  of  The  Daily  Tar  Heel,  the 
Carolina   Buccaneer  and  the  Car 

olina  Magazine.  He  was  one  ol  ^  ^,  ^, 
the  founders  of  the  Carolina  Buc-  tions  announced  a  bloodless  armed 
caneer  a  UNC  humor  magazine,  cfiash  took  place  yesterday  be- 
'_ ' . . tween  an  Israeli  army  patrol  and 

-—^^^-g^^a^mmmmm'm^mmmmmm^mm      3     SwedLsh     patrol       Of       the       U.N. 

Emergency  Force  at  the  Gaza 
Strip. 

It  was  the  first  shooting  report- 
ed between  UNEF  and  Israeli 
troops.  The  official  account  from 
the  U.N.  Information  Center  in 
Cairo  (and  the  Israeli  version  in 
Jerusalem)  said  there  were  no 
casualties. 

(An  Israeli  army  spc^esman 
said  an  Israeli  border  patrol  had 

(See  WORLD  NEWS,  Page  3) 


nev5 

in 
brief 


UN,  Israeli  Forces  Clash 

CARIO— (AP)— The   United  Na- 


GM'S  SUTE 


Organizations  who  wish  to  con- 
tinue their  room  resorvations  at 
Graham  Memorial  should  contact 
the  GM  office,  according  to  Dir- 
ector   Linda   Mann. 

Many    organizations   who    had    \ 
reservations   for  the   fall   senws- 
♦er   have  failed   to    ronow   them 
for  the  spring  son»ostor,  sho  said. 


Pianist  Helen  McGraw  will  be 
the  featured  artist  in  Les  Petites 
Musicales  concert  tomorrow  night 
at   8. 

Sponsored  by  Graham  Memorial 
Activities  Board,  the  recital  will 
be  held  in  the  main  lounge  of 
Graham  Memorial 

As  an  interpreter  of  modern 
music.  Miss  McGraw  has  played 
extensively  in  this  country  and 
abroad,  in  concerts,  as  soloist 
with  orchestras,  and  with  other 
artists  in  chamber  music.  Her 
American  tours  have  brought  her 
to  Chapel  Hill  on  a  number  of 
occasions. 

As  a  music  student.  Helen  Mc- 
Graw studied  under  the  Russian 
pianist.  Alexander  Sklarevski,  at 
the  Peabody  Conservatory  in  Bal- 
timore, where  she  was  granted  pi- 
ano scholarships  and  awarded  its 
Artists  Diploma.  She  later  contin- 
ued her  studies  in  Paris. 

Winner  of  the  Walter  Naumburg 
Foundation.  Miss  McGraw  was 
given  the  honor  of  opening  the 
first  annual  Festival  of  Ameri- 
can Music,  held  at  the  National 
Gallery  in  Washington  in  1944 
and  broadcast  to  South  America. 
Ths  success  of  the  program  led 
to  her  reengagement  to  open  the 
second  Festival  in  1945. 
In  selecting  her  music  Miss 
McGraw  frequently  choo.ses  to 
present  th?  first  performances  ol 
contemporary  works.  While  not 
neglecting  the  great  works  of  the 
past,  she  seeks  out  the  best  of 
new  piano  music. 

Highlighting  tomorrow  night's 
program  will  be  a  work  which 
concert  audiences  in  this  country 
have  had  few  opportunities  to 
hear  the  Sixth  Sonata  by  Serge 
Prokofieff.  Critics  have  termed 
the   sixth    sonata   as  "one   of   the 

few  monumental  and  philo.sophical- 
ly  profound  works  for  piano  writ 


ten    in    recent    years.'    The    pro- [Bach,   Beethoven.    Ravel    and    Bar- 
"ram      also      includes     works     by    tok. 


No     admission 
the   concert. 


is    charged     f-  r 


The  Student  Aid  Office  has  is- 
sued new  instructions  for  the  com- 
ing semester. 

^,  J. Thdse   holding   University  schol- 

The    prodiictjon    includes,  aboi^igrshnis      and      scholarships      paid 

through     the     Student  Aid  Office 

,j?ach'. semester   should      come      to 

i  the  Student  Aid  Office  during  the 

week  of  Feb.  1-8  in  order  to  pick 

Hp. ^ehalarship   tickets   or  checks, 

.     .   ,  .     '  according  to  Miss  Edith  Winslow, 

Copies  of  the   script   of  ''Briga      .^^,    r\ .         r  .u     e«   j     .    a-j 

^  *        Assl.   Director  of  the   Student  Aid 

Office. 

Those  having  part-time  jobs 
awarded  by  the  Student  Aid  Of- 
fice or  under  its  jurisdiction  are 
to  come  by  during  the  weeks  of 

n  I      r  l^  ^^^-   1"14   to  renew  their  job  as- 

DOOK    tXCriange    signments. 

Flooded  After 
Rains  Thursday 

Two  to  three  inches  of  watL'r 
flooded  the  low  spots  in  the  back 
of  the  UNC  Book  Exchange- 
Thursday  night. 

The  water,  brought  by  the 
heavy  rains,  entered  the  book 
exchange  through  a  pipe  enclos- 
ing two  .:,;eam  mains  coming 
from  the  Playmakers"  Theater. 
The  flood  damaged  approximate- 
ly S40  to  S50  worth  of  books,  es- 
timated one  employee. 

The  water  was  cleaned  up  yes- 
terday morning.  One  clerk  said, 
"it  was  a  mess." 


■mku^im.i^ 


MISS  HELEN  MCGRAW 

, . .  puinmi  here  tomorrow 


-X. 


UNC  Librarian  Horn 
Serves  As  Assn.  Head 

Dr.  Andrew  H.  Horn.  UNC  Li- 
brarian who  recently  tendered 
his  resignation,  is  serving  as  the 
Chairman  of  the  Joint  Commit- 
tee of  Canadian  and  American 
Library  Assn.  at  the  mid-winter 
meeting  of  the  American  Library 
Assn.   in   Chicago. 

He  is  attending  the  convention's 
meetings  of  the  Assn.  of  Research 
Libraries  and  Assn.  of  Southeast- 
ern Research  Libraries. 

He  will  return  to  Chapel  Hill 
Feb.  3. 


IN  THE  INFIRMARY 


Students  in  the  infirmary  yes- 
terday included: 

Misses  Celia  Hahn,  LuRuth  Sut- 
ton, Alice  Reavis,  Glenna  Megin- 
nis,  Jane  Stainback  and  William 
Stem,  William  Atkinson.  Patrick 
Leonard,  Douglas  Sharp,  Jef- 
ferson Bulla,  Marvin  Cowan,  Kee 
Yoo,  Robert  Williams,  and  Ken- 
ntth  Alvord. 


Orientation 
Files  Open 
This  Week 

Orientation  and  Handbook  files 
will  be  open  Monday-Friday  in 
the  Council  Room  of  Graham 
Memorial   from  3:00  -  5:00  p.m. 

Applicants  who  find  this  time 
inconvenient  should  notify  Peggy 
Funk  at  the  Chi  Omega  House  to 
make  individual  arrangements. 
AH  girls  who  are  interested  in 
either  position  should  look  through 
these  files  before  filling  out  an 
application,  according  to  Miss 
Funk. 

After  becoming  familiar  with 
the  records,  the  applicant  should 
submit  with  her  application,  orig- 
inal ideas  and  a  plan  for  this 
year's  Handbook  or  Orientation 
program.  These  are  to  be  turned 
into  the  Dean  of  Women's  Office 
•  no  later  than  Feb.   16. 

Applicants   will    be    notifi^   by 
,  the     chairman      of    the    Women's 
i  Residence   Council    to    appear   be- 
fore   an    interviewing    committee. 
At  this  time,  the  applicant  w^ll  be 
given    the    opportunity    to    discuss 
her  earlier  submitted  plan  a|hd  to 
I  answer    any    questions    pertaining 
to    it.    Th?    committee    will    look 
:  for  originality     and     organization 
,  and    will   consider   the   applicant's 
j  critical  analization  of  past  Hand- 
books or  Orientation  programs.  A 
i  theme    should    be    suggested    for 
'  the  Handbook,  Miss  Funk  said. 
I      Anyone    wanting   further   infor- 
mation about  either  position  should 
j  call  Peggy  Funk  or  the  personnel 
staff  in  the  Dean  of  Women's  Of- 
fice.  _^j 


M6E  TWO 


THE  DAILY  TAK  HEEV 


SATURDAY,  FEBRUARY  2,  1957 


SATl 


Spring  Semester  is  Best 
And  Coutd  Be  Even  Better 

Welcome  to  aiioihcr  scuiesier  in  CIuipcl  Hill.  Or  if  this  is  voin  lirst 
time:  welcome  to  Chapel  Hill,  rXC.  and  all  the  traditions,  lads  and 
states  of  mind  found  here. 

Those  students  who  ha^e  been  fortunate  enough  to  have  already 
exp>erienced  a  spring  semester  on  the  Hill  know  that  the  best  part  of 
the  school  year  is  still  ahead.  Npw  there  are  many  things  to  look  for- 
ward to  instead  of  cold  mornings,  icy  weather  and  the  untomlortable 
beauty  of  fall  and  winter. 


THE  LIVESP1KE: 


cause  students  don't  want  to  be 
Ixjthered  with  action  they  are  for- 
gcttin;^  what  action  can  accomplish 
and,  worse,  they  are  forgetting  how 
to  think. 

Maybe  if  the  hackneyed  old 
promises  concerning  the  fresh, 
young  and  as  yet  imblemished  se- 
mester were  fulfilled  for  a  change 
this  alarming  trend  could  be  re- 
versed. Only  one  group  on  campus 
can  accomplish  it  —  the  student 
body. 

Obituary 
Of  A  Busy 
Semester 

.\  few  brief  woids  of  farewell 
should  be  offered  for  the  recently 
departed  seiaesler,  but  the  IJni- 
versitv  has  been  the  scene  of  so 
luuch  acti\ity  that  a  sunnnary 
would  take  many  more  kind  words 
than  are  practical  for  a  four-page 
paper. 

1  here  have  been  a  few  sore 
spots,  but  all  in  all  the  campus 
and  student  body  conducted  itself 
in  an  admirable  manner.  Except 
for  an  unexpected  panty  raid  the 
studeiu  have  been  content  to  sit 
back  in  their  crowded  looms,  read 
the  books  on  two-hour  reserve  from 
the  library  and  make  disparaging 
remarks  alK)ut  the  under-paid  in- 
structors in  their  over-crowded 
cla.sses. 

The  University  is  becoming  a 
place  of  negative  superlatives. 

Ike  Scores  ^rtn  Doctrinef 

'•'•'' 'The  Ndvi^Yprk  Times      /'-.        '    '^  ]^1^''' 

The  Eisenhower  Doctrine"for  Ihe  de-  rfesolution  for  the  .protection  of  Taiwan 
fense  ol"  the  Middle  East  against  Com-  passed  by  the  House  two  years  ago 
munist  aggression  scored  a,. resOOnding  wfth  only  ihree  opposing  votes.  That 
victory   Wednesday  when' the  House  of  -- fesaltition  ^leiji^tl  to  prftserver- peace  in- 

the  Far  East" and  there  is  hope  that  the 
present  resoju^pn  will  do  as  much  for 
the  Middle  East. 


Looking  ahead  in  the  spring  is 
a  very  pleasant  thing.  Plans  are 
already  in  the  works  for  big  dances, 
parties,  beach  weekends  and  so  on. 
Students  are  writing  letters  to  their 
patents  promising  better  grades. 
Roonnnates  are  assuring  each  other 
that  "this  semester  I  will  not  get 
behind."  Coeds  are  grooming 
themselves  for  cupids  big  spring 
rush  and  Carolina  bachelors  who 
want  to  stay  that  way  for  awhile 
are  working  on  a  new  batch  of  ali- 
bis. 

Even  the  campus  itself  seems  to 
be  waiting  impatiently  for  sojne- 
thing.  .\  few  adventurous  buds  are 
pushing  themselves  into  the  open 
alreadv.  As  soon  as  the  vernal 
e(juinox  rolls  into  place  the  campus 
will  spring  out  at  the  world  with 
renewed   \igor   and   beauty. 

(^f  course  the  exact  time  of  this 
figurative  leap  depends  on  the 
Aveaihcr.  but  eventually  the  jump 
will  come.  A  little  less  promising, 
though,  are  the  remarks  made  by 
the  students  lor  the  new  semester. 

Every  term  the  same  promises 
are  made.  tlM^ parents  are  appeased, 
for  another  gemester  and  within  p- 
couple  ot  d^'s  the  rare  Co  Chapel, 
Hill's  establiMunents  of  beer  and 
good  felk)wship.  The  bare  truth  of 
the  matter  is  that  new-semester 
resolutions  aren't  much  better  kept 
than  the  new-year  kind. 

If  students  would  remember 
what  it  is  they  are  here  for  the  task 
of  getting  an  education  would  be- 
(ome  much  easier.  But  because  of 
tiiat  great  campus  panacea  called 
rj)athy  the  smallest  emotional  bhxk 
becomes  a  wall  of  frustration.  lie- 


Representatives  approved  by  aa  over- 
wh?lming  bipartisan  majority  a  resolu- 
tion to  give  effect  to  it  in  substantially 
the  form  proposed  by  the  Administra- 
tion. Only  61  out  of  the  433  members  of 
the  House  opposed  the  resolution.  The 
great  majority  bowed  to  the  imperative 
necessities  of  the  situation,  and  despite 
various  misgivings  about  so  important 
and  far-reaching  a  step  declared  them- 
selves  in  favor  of  it. 

The  Eisenhower  Doctrine  is  design- 
ed to  fill  the  power  vacuum  created  in 
the  Middle  E^st  vis-a-vis  Soviet  Russia 
by  th?  collapse  of  British  and  French 
influence,  and  thereby  to  erect  a  shield 
against  Communist  aggression  behind 
which  specifically  Middle  Eastern  prob- 
lems like  the  Arab-Israeli  conflict  and 
the  Suez  Canal  can  be  solved  in  separate 
actions,  in  cooperation  with  the  United 
Nations. 

For  that  purpose  the  resolution  ap- 
proved Wednesday  gives  the  President 
Congressional  stand-by  authority  to  em- 
ploy the  armed  forces  of  the  United 
States  in  protecting  any  Middle  East- 
em  nation  requesting  such  aid  against 
overt  armed  aggression  from  any  coun- 
try controlled  by  international  com- 
munism, which  means  Soviet  Russia  and 
its  present  or  potential  satellites,  and  to 
allocate  from  already  available  foreign- 
aid  funds  up  to  S200.000.000  in  military 
and  economic  aid  to  such  nations  to  op- 
pase  indirect  Communist  aggression 
through  subversion.  In  its  military  as- 
pects the  resolution  thus  resembles  the 

The  Daily  Tar  Heel 

The  official  itudent  publication  of  tbe 
Publications  Board  ol  the  University  of 
North  Carolina,  where  it  is  published 
daily  except  Monday  and  examinatiot 
and  vacation  periods  and  summer  terms 
Entered  as  second  class  matter  in  tht 
Dost  office  in  Chapel  Hill,  N.  C,  undei 
the  Act  oi  March  8,  1870.  Subscription 
rates:  mailed,  $4  per  year,  $2  50  a  semes 
ter;  delivered.  $6  a  year,  $3.50  a  semet 
ter. 

Editor FRED  POWLEDGE 


Wanagiog  Editor 


CHARLIE  SLOAN 


News  Editor  _  NANCY  HILL 


Buciness  Manager 


BILL  BOB  PLEL 


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Night  Editor  - 

Proof  Reader  

Night  News  Editor  _ 


Cortland  Edwards 
Guy  Ellis 

Graham  Snyder 


There  was  more  skepticism  regard- 
ing the  need  of  economic  aid  to  a  reg- 
ion rich  in  oil.  But  nobody  advanced  a 
fesible  alternative,  and  this  made  de- 
feat of  the  resolution  unthinkable.  For, 
as  Democratic  Chairman  Gordon  of 
the  House  Foreign  Affairs  Committee 
said,  a  defeat  would  have  been  misinter- 
preted throughout  the  world,  with 
grave  consequences  to  peace  and  to 
cur  own  national  interests  and  security. 

The  resolution  now  goes  to  the  Sen- 
ale,  two  of  whose  committees  have  al- 
ready been  considering  it,  but  with  a 
rather  less  realistic  appraisal  of  the  sit- 
uation and  with  a  greater  display  of 
partisanship  than  the  House.  Indeed, 
some  members  of  the  Democratic  ma- 
jority appear  to  be  more  concerned 
with  denying  President  Eisenhower  a 
"blank  check"  and  overthrowing  Secre- 
tary Dulles  than  with  meeting  the  dan- 
gers of  the  Middle  East. 

The  attempt  to  forestall  action  on 
the  resolution  by  interposing  first  a 
Senatorial  investigation  of  the  Admin- 
iiitration's  whole  Middle  Eastern  poli- 
cy has  been  checked  by  the  Administra- 
tion's agreement  to  an  investigation 
separate  from  action  on  the  resolution 
and  covering  not  only  the  last  tour 
years  but  the  last  decade.  But  as  spokes- 
man for  the  Democratic  majority,  and, 
to  its  applause.  Senator  Manslield  at- 
tacked the  resolution  as  both  inadequate, 
and  yet  too  strong,  and  offered  a  sub- 
stitute resolution  which  would  at  onco. 
water  down  the  President's  authority 
and  yet  expand  it  to  an  attempt  to  dic- 
tate to  the  United  Nations. 

Thus,  instead  of  giving  the  President 
the  specific  authority  to  use  troops  ia, 
the  Middle  East  the  Mansfield  resolu- 
tion would  merely  declare  that  the. 
United  States  is  "prepared"  to  do  so, 
subject,  as  its  author  explained,  to  our 
constitutional  processes,  which  nnight 
involve  prolonged  Senatorial  debate. 
Since  the  Administration  is  now,  thpu^ 
somewhat  belatedly,  working  for  a 
solution  of  the  Suez  dispute  and  Arab- 
Israeli  conflict,  within  and  outside,  of 
the  United  Nations,  the  inclusion  oi 
these  issues  in  a  resolution  providing 
for  military  aid  would  seem  to  be  ttot 
only  superfluous  but  also  unwise.  But 
if  such  a  proposal  helps  to  develop  a 
bolder  and  more  positive  Americasi 
stand  in  the  United  Nations,  the  em- 
phasis put  on  these  problems  in  the 
Senate  may  yet  contribute  to  further 
progress  iii  solving  them'. 


ucation  Statistics  Lie 


Fred  Powledge 

RALEIGH  —  Dr.  J.  Harris 
Purks.  a  quiet  man  who  knows 
a  lot  about  education,  is  worried 
about  it. 

The  director  of  the  state's 
B:ard  of  Higher  Education  is 
wcwried  about  the  appearance  of 
educational   statistics. 

Th*  st«ti»tics  say  3  million 
paopit  are  •nrolltd  in  educa- 
tional programs  beyond  Hie  12th 
srad*— nermelly  referred  to.  as 
"higher  education." 

But  the  actual  number  of  peo- 
ple who  are  learning  to  be  scien- 
tists, mathematicians,  teachers 
and  professors  is  very  small — "II 
amounts  to  a  relatively  small 
trickle."  says  Dr.  Purks. 

What  worries  Dr.  Purks  is  the 
fact  that  people  are  likely  to  ju- 
dge their  methods  of  higher  edu- 
cation by  the  3  million  figure 
alon?.  "This  demands  that  peo- 
ple look  at  what  they're  tak- 
ing." says  Dr.  Purks.  "We  can't 
evaluate  the  s.vstem  adequately 
until   then.' 

The  rest  of  the  3  million  peo- 
ple, once  the  trickle  has  been 
subtracted,  are  involved  in  oc- 
cupational education  —  every- 
thing from  upholstering  to  pow- 
er sewing,  as  directories  of  col- 
lege curricula  will  show. 

Dr.  Purks  emphasizes  that  he 
and  the  Board  of  Higher  Educa- 
tion are  not  looking  down  their 
noses  at  the  occupational  arts — 
but  he  is  afraid  the  "integrity 
and  the  purpose  ol  the  institxi- 
tions"  are  in  danger  so  long  as 
all  Courses  are  grouped  together 
into  01^  educational  lump. 

What's  his  answer?  Dr.  Purks 
offers  two  answers. 

1.  A  selective  program  of 
courses.  This  moans  thp  cqfl,- 
leges  and  universities  of  the  na- 
tion should  decide  what  their 
objectives  are — ^whether  they 
want  to  present  an  academic 
program  or  an  occupational  arts 
program-  This,  Dr.  Purks  belie- 
ves, would  help  to  clarify  tht 
purposes  of  American  education. 

2.  Entrance  requirements. 
These  would  tend  to  sort  out 
prospective  students  and  further 
clarify    the    aims    of    education. 

.While     Dr.. Purks    does     not 

want  to  look  down   his  nose  at 

the  occupational  courses,  at  the 

same    time    he    emphasizes    the 

value   of  a  basic  education.   He 

has  said  in  comments   made   to 

the  Board  of  Higher  Education: 

"Effcication   is  considered,  to 

bo  ■   ferm  of  preparation   for 

something.  Preparation  likewise 

can  be  plotted  along  two  axes: 

"1.  A  vertical  axis  marking 
preparation  for  unexpected  and 
unforseen    situations. 

"2.  A  horizontal  axis  marking 
preparal^n  Cor  expected  and) 
forseen   situations. 

"The  way  to  prepare  for  un- 
expected situations."  he  feels. 
"is  to  build  up  an  inner  potent- 
ial of  basic  knowledge,  to  ob- 
tain a  measure  of  acquaintance 
vfiih  and  mastery  of  the  scien- 
tific and  cultural  heritage  which 
has  resulted  from  centuries  of 
observation,  thought  and  crea- 
tive genius,  to  learn  how  to 
study,  and  to  practice  abstract 
thinking.  .  .  . 

*.       ♦.        • 

"'Phe  way  to  prepare   for  ex- 

• 

l-UAbner 


pected  situations  is  for  the  in- 
dividual to  select  from  the 
countless  possible  occupational 
or  vocational  or  avocational 
areas  one  or  more  which  may 
be  assumed  to  lie  ahead,  and 
then  proceed  to  master  the  tech- 
niques and  skills  involved." 

Here,  Dr.  Purks  feels,  is  where 
North  Carolina  needs  to  make 
a  decision.  He  cites  the  distinct 
.shortage  of  teachers,  and  asks, 
"If  it  is  not  possible  to  obtain 
adequate  supply  of  teachers  for 
existing  curricula  in  existing  in- 
stitutions, how  can  we  expect 
to  understand  successfully  a 
vast  expansion  in  the  diversity 
of  offerings? 


Plumbing,  Radio  .  .  . 


'Where  Do  You 


"A  few  of  the  curricula  which  have  already  found  their 
way  into  California  junior  colleges,  and  which  are  currently  re- 
ceiving support  from  both  state  and  local  sources  there,  are: 

"Preosteopathy,  building  trades,  pi-echiropody,  prenursing, 
business  education, 

"Auto  mechanics,  Diesel  mechanics,  metal  work,  recreational 
leadership,  grocery  merchandising,  upholstering,  real  estate  sign 
painting, 

"Secretarial,  power  sewing,  merchandise  display,  household 
service,  telephone-PBX,  bindery,  hand  composition,  offset  press- 
work, 

"Presswork,  auto  body  and  fender,  foods,  cosmetology,  police 
science,  radio,  distributive  education,  petroleum  technology,  or- 
namental  horticulture, 

•Plumbing,  plastering.  .  .and  on  and  on. 

•  *    .  "  ■v^'- 

Suppose  They  Get  Ideas  Uke  That?' 


LEAVING  AS  UNC  LIBRARIAN: 


Dr.  Horn  Answers  The  Question 


Andrew  H.  Horn 

III  Lilnai\  \oU\s 
Last  Monday  (Jan.  14)  the 
Trustees  accepted  my  resigna- 
tion as  University  librarian,  ef- 
fective June  30.  As  you  have 
heard,  I  have  already  had  the 
good  fortune  of  another  excel- 
lent appointment — as  Ub«arian 
at  Occidental  College,  one  of 
the  great  and  progressive  liberal 
arts  colleges  of  the  United  Sta- 
tes. 

Many  of  the  Library  staff,  the 
faculty  and  other  friends  have 
expressed  regret  in  my  decision 


to  leave  Chapel  Hill;  and  I  have 
most  sincerely  appreciated  your 
expressions  of  confidence  in  my 
part  of  our  work  here  together. 
This  work  will,  of  course,  con- 
tinue without  interruption  as 
long  as  I  am  here,  and  after  that 
time  too. 

Some  of  the  rumors  of  the 
past  week  may  lead  persons  to 
ask  you  whether  you  know  of 
my  reaction  to  the  1955  Legisla- 
ture's reduction  of  the  Library 
book  budget;  and  1  should  like 
you  to  be  able  to  give  the  cor- 
rect answer. 


I  was  disappointed,  naturally, 
but  I  am  not  resigning  now— two 
years  later — for  that  reason. 

In  my  opinion  the  1955  Legis- 
lature made  a  very  serious  mis- 
take; but  thanks  to  the  current 
efforts  and  the  emphatic  1957- 
59  recommendt'.ons  of  the  Uni- 
versity administration,  the  Con- 
solidated Universit.v.  and  the 
State  Board  of  Higher  Educa- 
tion, it  seems  most  unlikely  to 
me  that  the  1957  Legislature  will 
fail  to  approve  the  minimum  of- 
ficial book  budget  request  of 
$165,000  per  annum. 


'  DA/SV  MAE.7-ASAV/OOMIN  O' 
!  TH  v/0P,lAAHGanAAX>^K3' 
I    AEMBXRRASSlvrQUESTlOM.^ 


fNAMELV-WMOFFO'lS     S 

^  TMET  FAT  ftACHKLOR   ^ 
MANGiN'  'ROUND 
YORE  Mouse? 


Pogo 


By  Wait  Kelly 


H'wo.TUBRs.  AH'coae0m  coo 

TO  10U,  HONey  WNNV  PUCKV 

uPi.'#v#inwvW 

jeuUYffSAN 


UNC  Reputation  ] 
Is  Being  Hurt 

The  Greensboro  Daily  News 

Authority  for  the  proper  management  of  in- 
tercollegiate athletics  at  the  Consolidated  Uni- 
versity of  North  Carolina  lies  in  the  hands  of  the  , 
chancellors  at  Raleigh  and  Chapel  Hill.  These  of-  . 
ficers  are  charged  with  carrying  out  Atlantic  Coast 
Conference  regulations  and  seeing  that  each  insti- 
tution abides  by  the  letter  and  the  spirit  of  con- 
ference rules. 

For  many  months  now  the  administrative  lead- 
ership of  N.  C.  State  College— and  the  Consolidat- 
ed  University    itself— has   been   embroiled    in    the 
comple.xities  of  the  notorious  Jackie  Moreland  case.- 
It  is  no  exaggeration  to  say  that  more  hours 
have  been  spent  investigating  and  discussing  this 
case  of  alleged   recruitment   violation   than   have    . 
been  devoted  to  any  dozen  routine  matters  of  ad- 
ministration. 

The  case  itself  has  besmirched  the  University's 
reputation.  It  has  invoked  the  heaviest  penalties 
allowed  by  the  National  Collegiate  Athletic  Assn. 
and  the  Atlantic  Coast  Conference.  Both  these 
groups  have  acted  on  information  supplied  them 
by  individuals  in  Moreland's  home  town,  by  affida- 
vits sworn  to  by  all  persons  involved  including 
Moreland  and  the  assistant  basketball  coaches  at 
N.  C.  State. 

Both  have  concluded  that  recruitment  rules 
were  violated  and  therefore  penalties  are  demand- 
ed. 

That  the  University  administration  has  waited 
as  long  as  it  has,  either  to  accept  this  verdict  or 
come  up  with  a  different  and  more  valid  one,  is 
indicative  of  the  tremendous  pressure  profession- 
aliied  athletics  and  alumni  sports  freniy  have  ex- 
erted. 

There  are  reasons  enough  for  the  University 
to  investigate  the  case  on  its  own.  From  the  be- 
ginning the  N.C.A.A.  refused  to  release  ^the  source 
of  information  about  the  case  contained  in  its  files. 
When  the  Atlantic  Coast  Conference  decision  came 
down,  there  was  further  confusion  about  evidence 
on  which  the  decision  was  based. 

It  was  entirely  proper  for  the  University  to 
seek  substantial  evidence  proving  a  violation  of 
rules  before  it  acted. 

Now,  it  seems  to  us,  the  time  has  passed  for  ca- 
tion, of  one  kind  or  another.  The  case  no  longer 
sp*jcifically  concerns  N.   C.   State  College. 

It  is  a  test  of  strength  between  powerful  forces 
of  athletic  pressure  and  university  leaders  who 
fear  the  Impact  of  a  solid  crack-down.  In  any  such 
struggle  an  act  of  appeasement  merely  leads  to 
more   flagrant  violations. 

GOAL  IS  BEFOULED 

That  principal  goal  is  befouled  when  a  state 
lets  its  athletic  craze  run  away  with  its  good  sense. 
The  University  cannot  teach  standards  of  truth, 
honor  and  justice  when  some  of  its  own  officials 
seem  willing  to  tolerate  violation  of  duly  authori- 
zed rules  governing  athletic  recruitment. 

This  indictment  extends  beyond  the  State  Col- 
lege campus  to  Chapel  Hill  and  elsewiiere.  Nobody 
is  relieved  of  its  stigma  by  pointing  out  that  every- 
bDdy  else  is  involved  in  the  same  activities.  It  is 
no  credit  to  any  of  the  institutions  involved  that 
only  some  of  the  violations  are  brought  to  light  and 
delt  with. 

Trustees  and  officials  of  the  University  of 
North  Carolina  face  one  unavoidable  course  of 
action: 

They  must  settle  the  Moreland  case  on  the  basis 
of  rules  and  ethics  involved: 

They  must  set  forth  a  policy  w^ich  demands 
compliance  with  duly  constituted  rules  of  athle- 
tic recruitment  as  adopted  by  the  conference: 

They  must  back  up  the  chancellors  at  State  Col- 
lege and  Chapel  Hill  in  any  show  of  strength  -with 
pressures  of   professionalized  athletics. 

Only  in  that  manner  will  the  good  name  and 
reputation  of  the  Consolidated  University  of  North 
Carolina  be  cleared. 

you  Said  It:  UNC 
Sits  On  The  Pivot 

Editor: 

I  have  been  reading  in  your  paper  and  in  sev- 
eral others  from  North  Carolina  about  the  alarm- 
ing exodus  of  professors  and  men  of  learning  from 
your  campus  to  other  parts  of  the  country. 

At   the  same  time,   I  have  been  hearing  other 
reports    of   the    gradual    and   emphatic    new   trend 
towards  big-time  college  athletics  in  your  area 
The  athletics  trend  is  not  new;  it  has  been  go- 
ing on  for  a  long  time.  But  the  accompanyment 
of   the   professors'    exodus    is   relatively   new.    i 
think  the  two  trends  can  be  contrasted  and  cenv 
pared. 
The    people    who   run    the   University    of   North 
Carolina    at    Chapel    Hill — i.e..    Chancellor    Robert 
House.    W.    D.    Carmichael    and    William    Friday- 
appear  to  be  peddling  on  both  sides  of  the  street: 
They  scream  on  the  one  hand   (or  at  least  Presi- 
dent Friday  does;  I  have  not  heard  much  of  this 
from  the  other  two)  about  the  exodus  of  teachers, 
and  on  the  other  hand  they  allow  the   people  of 
North  Carolina  to  pay  Jim  Tatum  $15,000  a  year  to 
run   a   professionalized  football   system. 

The  two  things,  to  me,  do  not  coincide  logically- 
Certainly  the  more  important  thing  about  the 
University  is  academics.  Football  can  wait.  (In  fact 
academics  could  be  treated  well  financially  and 
football  could  still  be  played  if  you  took  football 
out  of  the  professional,  three-ringed  atmosphere 
the  colleges  have  put  it  into).  But  academcis  must 
be  taken  care  of. 

I  am  a  histroian  by  trade.  I  shudder  to  think 
what  the  history  books  of,  say,  50  years  from  now 
will  say  about  mid-century  American  higher  edu- 
cation. Football,  they  will  report,  had  its  heyday. 
Academics  started  its  decline. 
I  understand   your  state   legislature   is  meeting 
soon.  Could  not  something  be  done  with  the  poli- 
ticians   of   your    state   so    academics   will    not    be 
hurt  too  seriously? 

Name  Withheld  By  Request 


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SATURDAY,  FEBRUARY  2,  1957 


THI  DAILY  TAR  HIIL 


PAGI  THRM 


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Former  UNC  Coach,  Player 
Succumbs  In  Fayettevllle 


Former  UNC  assistant  football 
coach  and  player,  James  Christo- 
pher MacRae.  77.  (L.L.B.  1900), 
died  in  Fayettevllle  Friday  after 
a  long  illness. 

Playing  seven  years,  he  was  on 
the  first  State  Team  in  1893.  In 
the  next  three  years  he  played 
for  the  University  of  Nashville, 
then  three  years  for  UNC.  Law- 
yer MacRae  was  a  member  of  the 
1898  team  which  won  nine  games, 
lost  none  and  scored  201  points 
against  the  opponents'  eight  In 
a  game  against  the  University  of 
Georgia  he  threw  one  of  the 
earliest  forward  passes. 

While  still  in  graduate  school. 
MacRae  was  mayor  of  Chapel 
Hill  from  1900-02.  For  50  years 
he  practiced  law  in  Asheville  and 
then  in  Fayettevllle. 


Funeral  services  will  be  at  St. 
John's  Episcopal  Church  in  Fay- 
ettevllle at  3  p.m.  Sunday. 


Chancellor  Selection 
Group  Is  On  Vacation 

The  University's  chancellor  s«» 
lection  committee  is  taking  a  tem- 
porary vacation  from  its  work,  ac- 
cording to  Committee  Chairman 
R.  MayTie  Albright  of  Raleigh. 

Albright  said  Friday  the  com- 
mittee is  in  a  "sort  of  recess"  now. 

The  next  meeting  has  not  been 
scheduled  yet.  he  said. 

The  committee  met  recently 
with  Consolidated  University  Pres- 
ident William  C.  Friday  and  dis- 
cussed some  names  of  candidates 
with  him. 

Within  a  month  the  group 
should  have  a  list  of  three  names 
or  more  to  present  to  Friday,  Al- 
bright  said. 

Chancellor  Robert  B.  House  wili 
retire   in   June. 


W3TI01S  OIA»a*~"      > 

MHiaii(Hi3tGMV)l:!0)m 


PATRONIZE  YOUR 
•    ADVERTISERS 


e' .- 


LAST  TIMES  TODAY 


LAST  TIMES  TODAY 


Carolina 


MtSMTa  »*  .««»,..,        .^^  _      .     MAXWELL  ANDERSON  »nd  ANGUS  UkPHML 


Directed  b»  ALFRED  HITCHCOCK 


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(Continued  from  Page  \) 

strayed  about  300  meters  across 
the  line  into  UNEF-controUed 
territory  by  mistake.  He  said  an 
Israeli  liasion  officer  had  apolo- 
gized to  the  UNEF  commander, 
but  he  expressed  regret  the  UNEF 
unit  had  opened  fire  "so  hastily.") 
The  UNEF  commander  protested 
to  the  Israeli  Defense  Dept. 


Covering  The  Campus 


UN  Given  Israel  Plan 

UNITED  NATIONS,  NY.— (AP) 
— The  United  States,  India  and 
five  other  countries  put  before 
the  Assembly  yesterday  a  two-part 
plan  to  move  Israel  out  of  Egypt 
and  bring  peace  to  the  uneasy  Is- 
raeli-Egyptian border. 

This  action  was  taken  as  amazed 
U.N.  delegates  and  officials  re- 
ceived via  news  wires  an  official 
U.N.  announcemnt  in  Cairo  tell- 
ing of  the  first  shooting  clash  be- 
tween Swedish  soldiers  of  the  U.N. 
emergency  force  and  Israeli 
troops. 

The  7-nation  proposal  is  made 
up  of  two  resolutions.  The  first 
calls  attention  to  previous  re- 
quests of  the  U.N.  Assembly  for 
Israel  to  withdraw  from  all  of 
Egypt,  deplores  the  non-compli- 
ance of  Israel,  and  calls  upon  Is- 
rael to  complete  its  withdrawal 
without  further  delay. 

The  second,  to  be  voted  upon 
after  the  first  resolution  has  been 
approved,  recognizes  that  the 
withdrawal  of  Israel  must  be  fol- 
lowed by  action  which  would  as- 
sure progress  toward  the  creation 
of  peaceful  conditions. 


PHYSICS  COLLOQUIUM 

There  will  be  a  joint  UNC -Duke 
Physics  Colloquium  at  UNC,  206 
Phillips  Hall,  Wednesday,  Feb.  6, 
8  p.m. 

Dr.  R.  F.  Taschek,  of  Los  Ala- 
mos Laboratory  will  lecture  on 
the  subject  of  "Recent  Work  in 
Nuclear  Physics  at  Los  Alamos." 

MARDI   GRAS  WORK 


in  any  way  on  the  Mardi  Gras  at- 
tend  a  meeting  Tuesday.  7  p.m.,; 
Roland  Parker  Lounges  1,  2,  &  3  j 
in  Graham  Memorial.  ' 


7:00_Wings  to  Italy. 

7:30— Frontiers  of  Health. 

8:00 — Insurance. 

8:3a-World   We  Want. 

9:00— Sign  Off. 
PHILOLOGICAL  CLUB 

At  the  meeting  of  the  Philolo- 
gical Club  Professor  Loren  C.  Mac- 
ICinney  of  the  department  of  his- 
tory will  present  "Medieval  Medic- 
al Illustrations  in  Non-Medical 
Manuscripts"  illustrated  with  color 
Jim  Armstrong.  Chairman  of  the  I  sli^^es  in  Faculty  Lounge,  More- 
Carolina  Mardi  Gras,  has  asked  that  I  ^^^^  Planetarium,  Tuesday,  Feb.  5. 

all  persons  interested  in  working   "'"^^  ^  '"• 

'     The  club  has  invited  all  faculty 
members  and  graduate  students. 
FUTURE  TEACHERS 

The  Frank  Porter  Graham  Chap- 
ter of  the  Future  Teachers  will 
have  a  panel  discussion  on  exper- 
iences in  "Student  Teaching."  The 
meeting  will  be  in  the  Peabody 
Cirriculum  Lab.  8  p.m.,  Monday 
night. 


Johns  Hopkins 
Prof  Lectures 
At  Med  School 

Dr.  Gilbert  Mudge  of  Johns  Hop- 
kins University  Medical  School 
will  lecture  to  the  combined  staff 
of  the  UNC  School  of  Medicine 
here  Wednesday  at  4  p.m.  or 
"Mercurial   Diuretics." 

Dr.  Mudge  will  explain  new 
methods  involved     in     traditional 


ways  of  getting  rid  of  certain  body 
wastes  in  coniMctioB  with  treat 
ment  of  severe  diseases. 

Dr.  Charies  H.  Burnett,  head  oi 
the   Dept.   of   Medicine,    said   Dr. 


Mudgie  will  be  in  Chapel  Hill 
from  Tuesday  through  "Riureday 
as  a  visiting  profe»or.  Dr.  Mttdge' 
is  a  pharmacologist  and  an  in- 
ternist at  Johns  Hopkins. 


He  has  particularily  invited  co- 
eds to  help  plan  and  work  on  de- 
corations, which  include  the  con- 
struction of  masks. 

WUNC-TV  *^ 

Today's  schedule  for  WUNC-TV, 
the   University's   educational    tele'-! 
vision  a-tation  Channel  4:  { 

6:20— Sign  On.  | 

6:30— Yesterday  s  Worlds. 

UNC  Is  To  Get 
Georgia  Snails 

Snails  from  Sapelo  Island  in 
Georgia  are  coming  tomorrow  to 
the  University  in  time  for  the 
Spring  semester  laboratory  re- 
search. 

Dr.  Charles  E.  Jenner,  UNC 
marine  zoologist  who  led  a  semi- 
nar yesterday  at  the  University  of 
Georgia  in  Athens  made  a  side 
trip  today  to  Sapelo  Island  which 
is  owned  by  Richard  J.  Reynolds 


University  of  Georgia  maintains 
a  marine  laboratory  at  Sapelo 
Island,  and  Reynolds  is  one  of  the 
laboratory's  benefactors. 

Dr.  Jenner  will  bring  addition- 
al snails  from  the  island  for  close 
observation  and  for  laboratory 
experiments  on  photoperiodic  con- 
trol of  reproduction. 


Tito  Visit  Cancelled 

BELGRADE  — (AP)— President'  ^^  Winston-Salem 
Tito   called  off  his   state   visit  to 
Washington   yesterday  but  a  gov- 
ernment spokesman  emphasized  it 
may  be  only  a  postponement. 

Yugopress,  a  news  agency  hav- 
I  ing  close  ties  with  the  foreign 
ministry,  said  tonight  Tito's  de- 
cision against  going  to  meet  Pres- 
ident Eisenhower  now  should  not 
damage  relations  with  the  United 
States. 

The  agency  was  quick  to  com- 
ment on  the  official  announcement 
that  Tito  will  not  go  "for  the  time 
being."  ^ 

The  government  spokesman, 
Branko  Draskovic  disclosed  for 
the  first  time  that  the  U.  S.  and 
Yugoslav  governments  had  agreed 
to  the  visit  but  had  stopped  short 
of  the  point  of  announcing  it. 

He  said  it  was  postponed  because 
of  "the  conditions  and  atmosphere" 
in  the  United  States. 


Morelant} . 
Drops  Out 

Of  State 


AAARDI  GRAS 

(Continued  from  Page  }) 
at     the  GM  information     center, 
Kemps,  the  Y  information  office 
and  through  IDC  representatives. 

During  the  Saturday  night  dance, 
German  Club  members  and  their 
dates  will  be  presented  in  the  tra- 
ditional figure. 

Carrying  out  the  New  Orleans 
theme,  a  bandstand  will  be  con- 
structed. Anyone  interested  in 
working  on  the  bandstand — which 
includes  lighting,  scene  painting, 
etc. — are  asked  by  Mardi  Gras  com- 
mittee members  to  contact  either 
Charlie  Sloan  or  (Jerry  Boudreau 
at  the  DU  House,  telephone  9-1301. 

Jim  Armstrong  has  invited  all 
persons  interested  in  working  on 
the  Mardi  Gras  in  any  capacity  to 
attend  a  meeting  at  7  p.m.  Tues- 
day in  Roland  Parker  Lounges  1,  2 
and  3  in  GM.  He  has  particularily 
invited  coeds  to  help  plan  and  work 
on  decorations  which  include  the 
construction  of  masks. 


GM  Basement 
Is  To  Sport 
New  Machines 

Ice  cream  and  milk  will  soon 
join  the  array  of  refreshments  ob- 
tainable in  the  basement  of  Grah- 
am  Memorial. 

By  Monday  afternoon  an  ice 
cream  machine  serving  assorted 
flavors  and  varieties  of  ice  cream 
will  be  installed  in  the  basentent 
of  the  student  union  building.  Be- 
side it  will  be  a  milk  machine  con- 
taining chocolate  and  sweet  milk. 
In  addition  to  milk  the  machine 
will  also  serve  orange  juice. 

Miss  Linda  Mann,  Graham  Mem- 
orial Director,  said  that  the  ma- 
chines will  be  installed  on  some- 
what of  a  trial  basis. 

"If  a  mess  is  created  by  ice 
cream  papers  and  milk  cartons, 
we  will  have  the  machines  taken 
back." 


-  i                    1 

^^1 

Typewriting 
Shorthand 

New  term  begins  Feb.  4 
Register  now. 

Phone 

9-2681 

Located    over 

Sutton's 
Drug  Store 

town  classes 

Chapel  Hill,  North  Carolina 

THE  HOME  OF  COLLEGE  STYLES 

of  Amherst,  Massachusetts 
proudly  presents 

YOUR  AUTHENTIC  IVY  SLACKS. 

A  new  concept  in  comfort,  mkI  silhouette  styling. 

NO  CROTCH  SAGGING 
A  quality  standard  accepted  by  college  men  who  dem«nd 
the  very  best. 

BILL  JOHNSON  wears  the  autfientic  IVY  SLACKS  he  says, 
Oen't  wear  just  any  slacks — ^Wear  IVY  frem 

THE  HOME  OF  COLLEGE  STYLES 

Amherst,  Massachusetts. 
-v  ;^^5  ■  Bill  Jahnson 

Cairtpus  Representative 


I  Dulles  Accepts  Changes 

WASHINGTON  — (AP)  — Secre 
i  tary  of  State  Dulles  has  agreed  to 
I  accept  two  "checkrein"  amend 
'  ments  to  the  Middle  East  resoiu- 
I  tion,  Sen.  Johnson  (D-Tex)  report- 
ed yesterday. 

Johnson,  the  Senate's  Democratic 
leader,  said  one  amendment  would 
require  15  days  advance  notice  to 
the  appropriate  congressional  com- 

I  mittees  before  the  Administration 
spends  any  part  of  a  proposed  200 

j  million  dollar  Military  and  Econo- 

j  mic  Aid  Fund. 

I  The  second  amendment  would 
!  make  certain  that  emergency  pow- 
ers for  handling  the  aid  money 
would  expire  next  June  30,  the  end 
of  this  fiscal  year.  Sen.  Byrd  (D- 
Va)  --as  expressed  fear  the  resolu- 
tion as  now  worded  might  be  in- 
terpreted as  permanent  authority 
for  foreign  aid  s-pending  in  the 
years  to  come. 

Byrd  and  Sens.  Russell  (D-GA) 
and  Long  (D-LA)  said  they  intended 
to  try  to  kill  the  economic  aid  sec- 
tion of  the  resolution,  leaving  only 
the  authority  for  President  Eisen- 
hower to  use  U.  S.  armed  forces 
in  the  Middle  E^st,  if  necessary, 
against  Communist  aggression. 


Request 


RALEIGH— (AP)  —  Freshman 
basketball  sensation  Jackie  More- 
land  has  dropped  out  of  scljiiol  at 
North  Carolina  State  College  and 
is  reported  to  be  on  his  way  to 
his  home  in  Minden,  La.,  tire,  col- 
lege athletic  publicity  office  an- 
nounced yesterday. 

Vt': 

Moreland  had  been  ruled  in- 
eligible to  play  at  State  by.  the  At- 
lantic Coast  Conference.  The  ACC 
action  came  after  the  National 
Collegiate  Athletic  Assn.  placed 
State  on  probation  for  alleged  re- 
cruiting violations  in  presuading 
Moreland  to  come  here. 

The  athletic  publicity  office 
said  Moreland  had  told  friends  he 
was  dropping  out  of  sciiool  and 
vacated  his  dormitory  room  dur- 
ing the  night. 

"He  did  not  tell  the  athletic  de- 
partment he  was  leaving  and  his 
future  plans  are  unknown,"  the 
announcement  said. 


Recital  Set 
In  Hill  Hall 
For  Tues. 

Donald  Pease  will  present  a  pi- 
"ano  recital  in  Hill  Music  Hall  au- 
ditorium  Tuesday    at   8    p.m. 

His  program  will  consist  of  the 
Bach-Liszt,  "Organ  Prelude  and 
Fugue  in  A  Minor;"  Beethoven's 
"Sonata.  Op.  53  in  C  Major" 
(Waldstein);  Scriabine's  "Sonata, 
Op.  30,  No.  4",  in  F-sharp  Major; 
and  "Images,  Book  I",  and  "L'isle 
Joyeuse",  by  Debussy. 

Donald    Pease    graduated    from 
Berea    College,    Berea,    Kentucky, 
in  1955.  He  began  his  studies  in 
the  Music  I>ept.  at  UNC  as  a  grad- 
uate assistant  the  same  year. 
Bach  originally  wrote  the  "Pre- 
1  lude  and  Fugue"  on  Pease's  pro- 
gram for  organ.  As  a  result  of  the 
I  revival  of  interest  in  Bach  during 
j  the  19th  century,  Franz  Liszt  tran- 
I  scribed  this  music  for  the  piano. 
i      The   "Sonata,   Op.  53  in  C.  Ma- 
I  jor"  by  Beethoven  was  dedicated 
to  the  Count  Ferdinand  von  Wald- 
stein. 

Scriabin,  a  Russian  composer 
and  pianist,  is  akin  to  Chopin  in 
his  preference  for  minature  forms. 
The  well-known  "Images,"  often 
played  by  the  late  Walter  Giese- 
king,  and  the  "L'isle  Joyeuse", 
both  by  Debussy,  constitute  the 
last  group  on  the  program. 


Architectural  Designs 
On  Exhibit  In  Gallery 

Architectural  designs  submitted 
for  the  North  Carolina  (Chapter  of 
American  Institute  of  Architects 
Honor  Awards  are  now  being  ex- 
hibited, in  the  Person  Hall  Art 
Gallery.  The  exhibition  is  being 
made  in  connection  with  the  an- 
nual meeting  of  the  NCIAA  being 
held  this  week  at  the  Carolina 
Inn. 

The  Gallery  is  also  showing  a 
collation  of  terrazzo,  brick  and 
wood  building  materials  prepared 
by  ^.  C.  State  and  designed  to 
promote  the  use  of  North  Caro- 
lina resources. 


la  r< 


IT  S  FOR  REAL! 


Left  Holding 
The  Bag? 

Bring  your  dropped  texis 
in,  and  we'll  salvage  what 
we  can  for  you. 

The  Intimate 
Bookshop 

205  E.  Franklin  St. 
Open  Till  10  P.  M. 


by  Che.ster  Field 


THOUGHT 

If  a  dentator  married 
a  mermaid  flair. 
What  kind  of  children 

would  she  bear? 
Would  they  have  hide 

or  would  they  have  scales? 
Would  they  have  hooves 
or  long  fishy  tails? 
W<Hikl  they  eat  seaweed 
or  would  they  eat  hay? 
It's  one  of  the 
problems  of  the  day^ 


MORAL:  When  heavy  thinking  gets 
you  down,  relax  and  take  your 
pleasure  BIG  with  a  Chesterfield! 
Packed  more  smoothly  by 
Accu'Ray,  it's  the  smoothest 
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O  U»r«tt  A  My«T«  Tobac' 


CLASSIFIEDS 


JAZZ  AT  TURNAGES 

Saturday  afternoon,  2:00,  Turn- 
ages  Cabin  in  Durham. — Jazz  by 
Dick  Gables  "All  Stars."  Beer 
Served. 


FOR  RENT:  FURNISHED:  TWO 
rooms  and  bath  (used  as  two 
bedrooms  or  as  bedroom  and 
living  room) — private  entrance. 
Completely  and  attractively 
furnished.  Near  Hospital.  Call 
9-1761  for  appointment. 


LOST— GOLD  BENRUS  "CITA- 
tion"  Men's  Wrist  Watch.  Night 
of  January  29th.  Reward.  George 
LawTcnce.  Psychology  Dept.  or 
phone  9  2471. 


Interviews  tor: 

iALU  MANAGEMENT  TRAINING  PROGRAM 

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HOME  OFFICE  ADMINISTRATIVE  OPENINGS 

Our  Sales  Management  Training  Program  is  designed  to  de-^ 
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for  future  sales  management  openings  at  our  Home  Office.  It 
starts  with  a  four-mcMith  school  at  Hartford  aad  another  eight 
months  are  spent  as  a  field  service  representative  before  mov« 
ing  into  a  period  of  sales  work. 

Attractive  opportunhies  are  also  available  to  hmo  who  wish 
to  start  directly  in  well-paid  sales  work  (which  may  also  lead 
lo  management)  and  in  a  limited  number  of  Home  Office  jobs. 

The  Connecticut  Mutual  is  a  110-year-old  company  with 
500,000  policyholder-members  and  over  three  billion  dollars 
of  life  insurance  In  force.  Aggressive  expansion  plans  provide 
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each  year. 

Can  the  placement  office  for  an  appointment  with: 


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f»A6t  POUt 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


SATURDAY,  FEBRUARY  2,  1957 


UNC  Tankmen  Swamp  East  Carolina  66-20 


The  Art  Of  Tailoring 

"Every  nvan  to  his  business, 
but  indeed  the  craft  of  e  tailor 
is  beyond  all  doubt  as  noble  and 
as  secret  as  any  in  the  world." 

HAVE  OTHERS   FAILED? 

With  expert  workmanship  and 
the  best  service  possible  Pete 
The  Tailor  has  and  will  continue 
to  give  you  the  ultimate  in 
tailoring  needs. 


PETE  THE  TAILOR 

Specializing  in 
"Ivy   Leagueizing" 

133V3   E.  Franklin  Street 


Krepp,  Roth  Pace  UNC 


ANNOUNCEMENT  BY 

Illinois  College  of 
OPTOMETRY 

Applications  for  admission  to 
classes  beginning  September  9, 
1957    are    now    being    received. 

Three  year  course 

of  professional  study 

Leading  to  the  Degree  of 

Doctor  of  Optometry 

Requirements  for  Entrance: 
Two  years  (60  semester  hours  or 
equivalent  quarter  hrs.)  in  spe- 
cified liberal  arts  and  sciences. 

WRITE  FOR  BULLETIN 
TO:   REGISTRAR 

ILLINOIS    COLLEGE 
of  OPTOMETRY 

3241    So.   Michigan   Ave. 
Technology  Center,  Chicago  16,  DL 


Milton's  Mid-Winter  Carnival 

WE'VE  JUST  BEGUN  OUR  GIVE-A-WAY.  ALL 
THOSE  TEMPTING  REDUCTIONS  IN  JANUARY 
WERE  JUST  A  GOOD  START.  NOW  YOU'LL  FIND 
AAANY  ITEMS  PRICED  INSANELY  LOW.  IN  ADDI- 
TION TO  ALL  THESE  PRICE  CUTS  ON  YEAR 
ROUND  CLOTHES-A  LARGE  GROUP  OF  NA- 
TIONALLY ADVERTISED  LIGHTWEIGHT  SUITS 
ARE  ADDED.  ALL  YOU  HAVE  TO  DO  IS  PICK 
YOUR  SEASON-YOU  CAN'T  MISS. 

Large  group  of  suits  that  were  $60.00,  on  sale 
in  January  at  $49.99,  are  now  further  reduced  to 
$42.99, 

One  group  flannel  suits  reduced  from  $60.00 
to  $34.99 

Cotton  gabardine  suits  in  suntan  or  olive  re- 
duced from  $32.50  to  $22.99 

Dacron/cotton  poplin  suits;  dacron/cotton 
cord  suits,  reduced  from  $39.75  to  $27.99 

Group  cotton  cord  suits  reduced  to  $18.99 

Crew  neck  Shetland  sweaters  further  reduced 

Nationally  advertised  cotton  pin  check  suits 
reduced  from  $28.75  to  $22.99      •  t    ^'\' 

One  group  sport  jackets,  values  to  $50.00  re- 
duced way  below  $20.00 

LARGE   REDUCTIONS  ON  SOUTHWICK  BRAND 
SUITS  IN  ALL  PRICE  RANGES— 
Sufts  formerly  to  $95.00,  further  reduced  to  $^. 
Suits  formerly  to  $75.00,  now  reduced  to  $47.50 

For  a  real  tr^at  you  can't  put  off  any  longer— 
you  can  save  $5.00  on  our  better  trousers— 

Our  finest  $18.95  slacks,  now  $13.99;  these 
formerly  $16.95  now  $11.99;  from  $13.95  to 
$9.99 

Ivy  button-down  oxford  or  batiste  shirts,  re- 
gularly $4.50,  3  for  $10.00;  English  tab  shirts 
regularly  $5.50,  3  for  $12.50 

Just  about  every  dress  and  sport  shirt  $1 .00  off 

AAany  cordovan  shoes  at  least  40%  off,  especi- 
ally those  with  rubber  soles.  Luisa  Spagneli 
sweaters  from  Italy,  formerly  to  $25.00,  final 
closeout-$8.99;  MANY  OTHER  STARTLING  RE- 
DUCTIONS IN  OUR  MEN'S  WEAR 


THIS  GIVE-A-WAY  IS  BY  NO  MEANS  LIMITED  TO 
THE  MEN  FOLK 

YOU  DON'T  HAVE  TO  JOURNEY  TO  SCOTLAND 
TO  GET  A  REAL  BUZ  ON  A  SUPERB  CASHMERE 
SWEATER.  Cashmeres  are  going  up  another  $3.- 
50  this  spring,  so  we've  decided  to  close  out  our 
entire  stock  of  the  finest  sweaters  obtainable. 
Your  choice  of  our  BRAEMAR  OR  DRUMLANRIG 
—$10.00  off  each  and  every  sweater—  actually 
a  saving  of  $13.50  per  sweater 
ENTIRE  STOCK  EVAN-PICONE  SKIRTS  INCLUD- 
ING IRISH  LINES-40%  OFF 
MADE  IN  SCOTLAND-33y3%  OFF 
ENTIRE  STOCK   OF   OUR   GLEN-HAR    SKIRTS 
Large  group  of  Lady  Hathaway  and  other  fine 
ladies  shirts  at  greatly  reduced  prices. 
OTHER  AMAZING  REDUCTIONS 


ALL  SALES  CASH  AND  FINAL ALTERATIONS 

EXTRA 

Milton's  Clothing  Cupboard 


(AP) — All-America  Charlie  Krepp 
and  sprinter  Bill  Roth  paced  North 
Carolina's  unbeaten  swimming  team 
to  a  66-20  victory  oyer  East  Caro 
lina  here  last  night. 

The  victory  was  the  seventh  in 
a  row  for  the  Tar  Heels,  and  the 
second  this  season  over  East  Caro- 
lina. 

Krepp  finished  first  in  the  220- 
yard  freestyle  and  the  200-yard 
backstroke.  Roth  copped  the  50  and 
100-yard  freestyles. 

The  only  East  Carolina  victory 
was  scored  in  the  400-yard  free- 
style relay  when  the  UNC  team 
was  disqualified  for  an  illegal 
start. 

THE    SUMMARY: 

400-yard  medley  relay  —  UNC 
(Mercer,  Rose.  Zickgras,  Nash)  4: 
10.0. 

220-yard  freestyle  —  1  Krepp 
(UNC);  Schiffman  (UNC);  3.  Wil- 
liamson (EC)  2:13.3 

50-yard  freestyle— I.  Roth  (UNC); 
2.  Maness  (UNC);  3.  Meads  (EC) 
:22.8. 

200-yard  butterfly— 1.  Mahaffey 
(LrNC);  2.  Turner  (UNC);  3.  Oliver 
(EC)  2:22.0. 

Diving— 1.  Mclnnis  (UNC);  2. 
Mekins  (UNC);  3.  Midyette  (EC; 
236  points. 

100-yard  freestyle— Roth  (UNC); 

2.  McKee  (EC);  3.  Meads  (EC)  :52.5 
200-yard   backstroke— 1.     Krepp 

(UNC);  2.  Sawyer  (FX?);  3.  Veazey 
(LINO  2:10.8. 

440-yard  freestyle — 1.  Schiffman 
(UNC);  2.  Roa'C  (UNC);  3.  Williams 
(EC)  4:55.1. 

200-yard  breastroke — 1.  Mercer 
(UNC)    and   Mahaffey   (UNC);   tie: 

3.  Kobberling   (EC)  2:35.1. 
400-yard    freestyle  relay  —  EC 

(Sawyer,  McKee,  Denton,  Gartman) 
3:47.1. 


Rebounding  Tar  Babies  Meet 
Bullis  School  Here  Tonight 


Howard  Johnson  Restaurant 


BREAKFAST 
LUNCH 
DINNER 

SNACKS 


landmark  For  Hungry  Tarheels' 


Carolina's  Tar  Babies,  whose 
record  over  the  exam  period  was 
both  pleasing  and  discouraging, 
will  attempt  to  regain  the  winning 
touch  tonight  when  they  play  host 
to  Bullis  Prep  School  in  a  game 
slated  to  get  under  way  at  8  p.m. 
in  Woollen  Gym. 

The  Tar  Babies  saw  action 
twice  over  the  exam  period,  and 
split  the  two  games  against 
Four  opposition.  Two  weeks  ago 
on  Saturday  night,  the  basketball 
yearlings  turned  the  tables  on  a 
favored  State  team  in  Greensboro, 
93-74  in  a  revenge  win.  In  two 
previous  meetings,  the  W^qlflets 
had  walked  off  victorioiis.  Lee 
Shaffer  paced  the  Tar  Baby  scor- 
ing with  29  points. 

Thursday  night  the  frosh  took 
the  floor  for  the  first  time  in  two 
weeks,  and  the  result  reflects  this 
fact.  Wake  Forest  gave  the  Tai 
Babies  a  sound  93-67  trouncing  in 
Winston-Salem,   thus  avenging  an 


earlier    87-60    defeat    suffered    at, 
Chapel  Hill. 

That  loss  was  admittedly  unan- 
ticipated, but  Coach  Vince  Gri- 
maldi  yesterday  brought  out  sev- 
eral points  that  played  a  vital  part 
in  determing  the  outcome.  "Every- 
thing was  against  us,"  said  the 
youthful  Tar  Baby  mentor.  "Weath- 
er conditions  held  us  up  and  we 
Big  I  didn't  get  to  Winston  until  5:45, 
only  15  minutes  before  gametime. 
We  got  exactly  five  minutes  warm- 
up,  and  when  Wake  blew  hot,  we 
didn't    have    a    chance." 


Unbeaten 
Grapplers 
Meet  VPI 

By  RON  MILLIGAN 

One  of  the  big  tests  for  Caro- 
lina's undefeated  wrestling  team 
coiner  tonight  when  they  meet  the 
Virginia  Politechnical  Institute  in 
Virginia. 

Coach  Sam  Barnes  said  yester- 
day, "I  don't  like  to  be  pessimis- 
tic about  any  match,  but  we  are 
certainly  meeting  some  tough  com- 
petition tonight.  Since  we  have 
lost  several  of  our  regulars,  Dave 
Corkey,  Glenn  Daughtry  and  Bill 
Childs,  we  will  be  slightly  weaker 
in  the  heavier  weight  divisions. 

VPI  has  been  the  Southern  Con- 
ference Champion  for  the  past  two 
years.  During  that  time,  they  have 
won  18  matches  straight  without 
a  tie. 

Four  of  Carolina's  wrestlers, 
probably  Perrin  Henderson,  Char 
lie  Boyette,  Dave  Atkinson  and  Ed 
Hutchins,  will  be  facing  VPI  in- 
dividuals who  are  conference 
champions  Barnes  said. 

Despite  the  worry  of  exams  and 
final  grades,  the  grapplers  have 
found  time  to  practice  and  keep 
in  pretty  good  condition.  The  boys 
seem  to  be  up  for  this  match  even 
though  they  know  it  will  be  a  tough 
one. 

The  freshman  wrestling  team 
will  travel  with  the  varsity  to 
meet  VPI's  freshman. 

Coach  Barnes  said,  "The  fresh- 
man team  will  be  considerably 
weaker  for  this  match  also.  Three 
of  our  regulars,  Beno  Sack,  Ron 
Purdy  and  probably  Atlas  Buffa- 
loe,    will 


Beatty  To  Run 

In  Boston  AA    | 

i 

Carolina's  All  -  American  two- ' 
miler  Jim  Beatty  will  be  out  to 
redeem  himself  tonight  when  he 
matches  strides  with  some  of  this 
country's  classiest  distance  run- 
ners in  the  Boston  Athletic  As- 
sociation two-mile  run. 

Two  weeks  ago.  Jim  also  ran 
the  two-mile  in  Boston,  this  time 
in  the  Knights  of  Columbus  games. 
The  tiny  Tar  Heel  developed  a 
stitch  in  his  side,  was  unable  to 
come  up  with  his  usual  peak  per- 
formance. Inspite  of  this,  he  still 
managed  to  finish  a  distant  fifth. 

Fred  Dwyer,  America's  top 
four  minute  mile  hope,  heads  the 
field  in  tonight's  race.  Dwyer  won 
the  Knights  of  Columbus  two 
mile  by  a  narrow  margin  over 
Hungar>'s  La.szlo  Tabori.  Olymp- 
ic star  who  is  now  training  in 
Chapel  Hill.  Tabori.  a  victim  ol 
stomach  trouble  and  sore  feet, 
will  not  compete  in  tonight's  meet 

Horace  Aahenfelter,  the  fleet 
FBI  agent  who  has  won  the  event 
four  years  running,  figures  to  be 
Dwyer's  closest  challenger.  Gor- 
don McKenzie  of  Nev/  York  and 
Alex  Breckenridge  of  Villanova 
will    also  compete. 

Betty  ran  last  Saturday  in  the 
Washington  Evening  Star  games 
in  the  nation's  capitol.  He  served 
as  anchor  man  for  the  UNC  two 
mile  relay  team  that  lost  a  thrill- 
ing duel  to  Georgetown  for  first 
place.  Other  members  of  the  team 
were  Wayne  Bishop,  Dave  Scur- 
lock  and  Everett  Whatley. 


Tonight's      game      with      Bullis 
will    find    Tar    Baby    center    Dick  I 
Kepley  opposing  some  of  his  old 
teammates.     Kepley,     the     newly  j 
elected     team   captain,      attended : 
Bullis    before    he    entered    Caro- 
lina. Pacing  the  Bullis  squad  this 
year  will   be  Doug  Moe  and  Jim  I 
Luce.   Both   these   boys  were  top 
i  high   school    players   and   are    be- 
I  ing   eyed    by    the    UNC   coaching 
staff   as   material   for   next   year's 
frosh   squad. 


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Open  Till  10  P.  M. 


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Cupid's  Choice 
COSMETICS 

A  lovelier  gift  you  could  not 
find.  .  and  one  she'll  love.  Sut- 
ton's has  the  widest  d'Qje.cti,on. 
We'll  help  you  select  for  her.  And 
gift  wrap,  too!  ''  •♦<•-•• 


SUTTON'S  DRUG  STORE 


159   E.   Franklin   St. 


For   Prescriptions    Phone   9-8781 


Big  Four  Game 
Tickets  To  Be 
Issued  Monday 

student  tickets  for  the  Carolina- 
Duke  game  next  Saturday  night 
and  the  Carolina  -  W^ake  Forest 
game  on  Feb.  13  will  be  available 
to  passbook  holders  Monday 
through  Wednesday  of  next  week 
at  the  W'oollen  Gym  box  office. 

Passbook  holders  whose  names 
begin  with  the  letters  A  through 
L  will  have  priority  on  tickets  for 
the  Duke  game  up  until  4:30  Wed- 
nesday afternoon.  Beginning  Thurs- 


ay   tickets   will   be   issued   on   a 
be  out   for   the    rest   ol  |  first  come  first  served  basis. 


the  season." 

The  probable  starting  ilneup 
for  the  varsity  will  be:  123  lb  Hen- 
ry Rhyne  or  Dave  Wall,  130  lb. 
Capt.  Bob  Wagner.  137  lb.  Perrin 
Henderson,  147  lb.  Charlie  Boy- 
ette. 157  lb.  Ken  Hoke.  167  lb. 
Dave  Atkinson,  177  lb.  Ed  Hutch- 
ins or  Rob  Boyette,  and  Lew  Hayes  ; 
at  the  heavyweight  spwt. 

The  freshman  lineup  will  prob- 
ably be:  123  lb.  Bill  Suttle.  130 
lb.  Charlie  Whitfield.  137  lb.  Joe 
Perrini,  147  lb.  Jim  Welborn,  157 
lb.  Don  Russell,  167  lb.  Jim  Hud- 
son, 177  lb.  Mike  Pittman  and  a 
forfeit  in  the  heavyweight  divis- 
ion. 


Tickets  to  the  Carolina-State 
game  to  be  played  on  Feb.  19  will 
be  issued  on  a  strictly  first  come 
first  served  basis  with  no  priori- 
ty given  to  anyone.  These  tickets 
may  be  obtained  Feb.  11  through 
the  14th. 


Grid  Drills  Postponed 

Rain  and  wet  grounds  have 
forced  a  postponement  of  the 
beginning  of  spring  football 
drills  originally  scheduled  to  get 
under  way  this  afternoon.  Coach 
Jim  Tatum  announced  yesterday 
that  practice  will  begin  next 
Saturday,  Feb..  9  instead. 


FINAL  DAY  OF  SALE 
Many  Drastic  Reductions! 


-ii 


SUITS 

imported  Flannels, 
Tweeds,  and  Shetlands 
were  up  to  now 

$75  $48.75 

SPORT  COATS 

Shetlands,  Rumson 
Tweeds,  and  Maris  Tweeds 
frem   our   regular   stock 


WOOL  SLACKS 

Entire   Stock   of 
Stripes  and  Solids 

REDUCED-  $3 

per   pair 

TOP  COATS 

Tweeds 
and  Shetlands 


were  up  to 

$55.00 


now  as  low  as 

_   _  $34.95 


were   up  to 

$75.00 


Now 


$48.75 


Shetland  Crewneck 

SWEATERS REDUCED  $ 


3.00 


THESE  AND  MANY  OTHER  STARTLING 
f :  REDUCTIONS  AT 


Julian' 


JUST  MOHT  FOR  YDUR 


The  Card  Of  Your  Choice 
From  Our  Fantastic  Selection 


^•^^1^*^ 


Ledbetter  -  Pickard 


O.N.C.   Library 
Serials   Dept. 
Chapel    Hill.    N.    C. 
8-31-49 


WEATHER 

.Cloudy  and  cool  with  occassion- 
•I  rain  9r  drini*.  ExpactMl  high 
high  in  th«  M's. 


©)  c  3)aUu  ftSTat  Heel 


CIRCLES 

Student  rasponsibility  exists,  but 
docs  it  roolly?  Se«  oditoflat,  pa«o 


VOL.  LVII  NO.  89 


Complete  (A*)  Wire  Service 


CHAPEL   HILL,  NORTH  CAROLINA,  SUNDAY,  FEBRUARY   3,   1957 


Offices   in   Graham   Memorial 


FOUR    PAGES  THIS  ISSUt 


WORLD  NEWS 


Eisenhower  To  Give  Military 
Assistance  To  Saudi  Arabia 


Menons   Address   Is   Rescheduled 

* 

Here   For   February   11    By   Forum 


WASHINGTON  —  ( AP)  —  Presi- 
dent Eisenhower  is  understood  to 
hlive  assured  King  Saud  that  the 
United  States  is  prepared  to  help 
expand  and  modernise  Saudi 
Arabia's  military  force. 

But  there  is  no  agreement  yet 
on  how  much  aid  the  United 
States   will   give. 

Meanwhile,  the  prospect  for  a 
program  of  economic  assistance  to 
Sauiii  Arabia  is  growing;  wraker. 
Informed  officials  said  Congress 
could   be  shown  that   military   as- 


sistance wauld  be  in  this  coun- 
try's interest.  But  they  said  it 
wculd  be  hard  to  sell  Congress  on 
econ  mic  aid  for  a  king  who  draws 
300  million  dollars  a  year  in  oil 
royalties. 

Romarks  by  Secretary  of  State 
Dulle>  and  Eisenhower  Friday  in- 
dicated they  feci  Saud's  visit  here 
is  proving  to  be  a  great  aehieve- 
ment  in  the  struggle  to  keep  So- 
viet influence  from  taking  over 
in  the  Middle  East. 


US,  Bri'-lin  Pledge  Solidarity 


WASIIINCTON  —  (AP)  —  The 
United  Slat?s  and  Britain,  whose 
reiaticns  were  chilled  by  the  Suez 
ctsis.  pledged  anew  Saturday 
their  "solidarity'"  in  def?nse  aims. 

Th;.t  was  amon;?  the  points  list- 
ed in  a  joint  communique  list- 
.«eries  of  talks  hold  by  Secretary 
of  Defense  Charles  E.  Wilson  and 
Defense  Minister   Duncan   Sandys. 

The  m-etings.  \^e  official  an- 
nountement  and  the  subsequent 
in-formal  rcma'-k.s  of  Sandys  seem- 
ed to  show  thjt  some  warmth  is 
r.;turning  to  the  Angb-American 
relation.';,  damaged  by  the  Brit- 
i.-h-French  attack   :n  Egypt. 


The  communique,  issued  as 
Sandys  departed  for  home,  also 
said  that  "the  possible  adoption 
by  Britain  of  certain  American 
weapons  was  explored,  and  thi.- 
ni.itter  Ls  being  referred  to  the 
t'.vo  governments  for  further  con- 
s'der^tion." 

Officials  of  the  twi  govern- 
p^ents  declined  to  elaborate  on 
\h\'i.  However,  there  were  reports 
that  one  of  the  main  topics  in  the 
talks  r'onc"rned  Britain's  desire  to 
n'^nnire  some  American  guided 
missMes.  including  anti  -  aircraft 
weanons  and  short  r  ange  bom- 
bardment mvssiles  which  could 
use   nuclear   warheads. 


Egypt  Agrees  To  UN  Border  Troops 


UNITED  NATIONS,  N.Y.— (ArP) 
— Egypt  agreed  Saturday  to  hav- 
ing IJ.y.  emergency  forces  on  the 
uneasy  armistice  border  line  with 
Israel  bat  remained  non-commit- 
tal ubout  putting  them  on  peace 
patrol  in  the  Gulf  of  AQaba  area. 
Mahmoud  Fawzi,  foreign  minis- 
ter of  Egvpt,  briefly  staled  to  an 
extra-ordinary  Saturday  se-ssion 
Of  the  Gensral  Assembly  his  gov- 
ernment's stand  in  answer  to  a 
plea  by  the  United  States  to  Israel 
and  Egypt  to  accept  a  compromise 
peace   plan. 

Israel  was  silent  but  has  been 
reported  cool  to  the  plan.  U.S. 
chief  delegate  Henry  Cabot  Lrdge, 


Jr.  made  two  appeals  for  accep- 
tance of  the  plan.  At  the  end,  he 
said  solemnly  ho  could  not  pre- 
dict the  coR'rrquences  if  If^ael . 
fails  to  comply  with  the  will  of 
the  Assembly  and  withdraw  from 
all  of  Egypt. 

Lodge  appealed  also  to  the  A»vj 
sembly  for  support  birt  ran  intn 
adamant  obiections  from  the  So-  , 
viet  blfic.  Speakers  from  the  So-  , 
viot  Ukraine,  Czechoslovakia  and 
Albania  hit  part  of  the  plan  as 
a   new    attempt     by     the     United 


To  Begin 
At  8  Following 
Banquet  At  Inn 

The  Carolina  Forum  has  re- 
scheduled V.  K.  Krishna  Menon  to 
speak  Feb.  11.  at  8  p.m.  in  Hill 
Hall. 

Before  the  speech  Menon  will  at- 
tend a  banquet  in  the  main  hall  of 
.'arolir.a  Inn.  Student   leaders  and 

ome  faculty  members  will  be   ui- 

ited,  according  to  Whit  Whitfield. 

Jecretary  of  the  Forum. 

After  the  address  there  will  be  a 

■luestion   and   answer  session   and 

.hen   a    reception   at   Graham    .Me 

.norial. 

Menon,   chief  of   India's   dolega- 

ion    to    the    United    Nations,    was 

riginally  scheduled  to  talk  Dec. 
10.  but   the  Hungarian  crisis    and 

he  special  session^  of  the  United 

^atioi  s  forced  him  to  postpone  his 

ngagcment. 

In  1928  Menon  reactivated  the 
xndia  League  of  the  United  Kin;^- 

lom,  an  organization  which  sup 
ported  India's  struggle  fi^r  inde- 
:)endence.  From  that  time  until 
1947  he  remained  secretary  of  the 
'.eague,     carrying     on     a    vigor,  us 

ampaigi.  for  the  independence  of 
.ndia. 

Menon  is  regarded  by  some  as 
leing  second  only  to  Nehru  on  th.' 

ndian  political  scene. 

Mer.on  will  be  the  second  speak- 
er this  sch.:ol  year.  No  definite 
announcement  -has  been  set  for 
he  third  speaker. 


Kincald  Named  " 

Carolina  Forum    Naval   Unit 

Head  Jan.  19        Jq  Appear 

In  Parade 

The   University's   Naval  Reserve 
Officers  Training  Corps  unit,  first 


Dorms  Still 
Overcrowded 

Enrollment 


Brandon  Kincaid.  a  junior  from 
Statesville,  was  elected  Chairman 
of  the  Carolina  Forum  by  a  unan- 
inicus  vote  during  a  Forum  meet- 
ing .Ian.  18. 

He  will  replace  Jim  Holmes,  who 
re.vLjned   his  position  Jan.  14. 

Kincaid  was  appointed  a  mem- 
ber of  the  Carolina  Forum  to  rep- 
resent President  of  the  Student 
Body  Bob  Young.  The  new  Carolina 
Forum  Representative  from  the  Di- 
alectic Senate,  Gary  Greer,  nomin- 
ated Kincaid  for  the  chairmapship. 
No  other  nominations  were  made. 

Whit  Whitfield  was  the  only 
other  member  present.  Jim  Holmes 
presided  over  the  meeting  but  did 
not  vote. 

Carolina  Forum  Representative 
from  the  Philanthropic  Literary 
Societj,  Jess  Stribling,  was  the 
only  mem'oer  absent. 


Decline  Is 
Little  Help 

By    EDITH   MACKINNON 

The  slight  decline  in  enrollment 
to  represent  the  NROTC  in  a  Pres-  for  the  spring  semej.er  is  expect- 
idential      inaugural      parade      last    ed    to    have    little    effect    on    the 

crowded    dormitory   situation    still 
present  on  campus. 

According  to  J.  E.  Wadsworth, 
housing  director,  the  drop  in  en- 
rollment is  not  enough  to  make  a 
great  difference  in  the  worst  hous- 
ing shortage  in  the  history  of  the 
University. 


week,  will  do  a  repeat  performance 
in   Raleigh   Thursday. 

The  local  unit  will  send  its 
precision  drill  team,  drum  and 
bugle  corps  and  color  guard  to  ap- 
pear in  Gov.  Hodges'  inaugural 
parade,  Capt.  A.  M.  Patterson, 
commanding  officer,  announced 
Friday. 

The  34-man  precision  drill  team 


The   115   new  students   entering 


will    be    under    the    command    of   tor  spring  semester,  plus  about  the 


V.   K.   KRISHNA  MENON 

foiiiiu  speaker  Monday  nigiit 


States  to  impose  imperialism 
the  Middle  East  in  the  form 
the  Eisenhower  Doctrine. 


on 
of 


Death  Toll  From  CriAhes  At  51 

(AP) — Six    more    A  Ih  e  r  i  c  a  n  The    collision    of    two    U.S.    Air 

planes  went  djwn  in  fatal  crashes  Force  KB29  aerial  tankers  in  the 

Saturday   at   home     and     abroad,  air  above  a  Normandy  field  near 

bringing  the  toll  since  Thursday  to  St.  Lo.  France, 

at. bast   51    dead  and   nearly    150  The  crash  of  an   .Mr  Force  F86 

injured.  jet  during  a  landing  at  Hanscom 

Eleven   planes,   including  a   pri-  AFB  near  Bedford,   Mass.,  killing 

vate   craft,   singleseater   jet    fight-  the   pilot,'  Capt.    Gordon     E.     De- 


ers  and  an  airliner  carrying  101 
persons,  were  destroyed  in  nine 
separate  accidents,  two  of  them  in- 
volving in-llight  collisions. 
Counted  yesterday  were: 
The  crash  of  an  F9F  Panter  jet 
j)n  the  side  of  Mt.  Baldy,  south- 
east of  Palmdale,  Calif. 


Are  Needed  At  Hospital 


workers   are   needed 
H'^pital,    according 
officials. 


I'hi  To  Discuss 
Eisenhower^s      | 
Mid-East  Plan 

r    A  resolution  favoring  the  ELsen- ' 
hower  doctrine  in  the  Middle  East 
will  come  before  the  Philanthropic  i  for  workers   in   the   admitting  of 

,  .»            o  „•  .    J        -  »u  •         «.   i  fice  and  the  hospitalitv  shop.  Wo 

Litcrarv  Society  during  their  meet-  i              ...       ,    ^  ,           .  ^, 

■                                                •  men  wishing  to  take  part  in  vol 

ing  on  the  top  floor  of  New  East, 


Q\  Resolvfion ^ 
Asks  Officials' 
l^esignotions 

The  Dialectic  Senate  will  debate 
a  resolution  calling  for  the  resign- 
ation of  Secretary  of  Defense  Wil- 
son and  Secretary  of  State  Dulle-; 
at  the  meeting  Tuesday  at  8  p.m. 
on  the  top  floor  of  New  East.  | 

The  resolution  states  that   "thei 
Dialectic  Senate   go  on   record   a.^ ; 
favoring  the  resignation  of  Secre- 
tary  of  State  John    Foster   Dulle.> 
and     of     Secretary     of     Defense 
Charles  Wilson." 

In  defense  of  the  resolution  the 
•'whereas"  clauses  say,  "Secretary  I 
of   State    Dulles    ha^   bungled    our 
foreign      policy     throughout     ihr 
world;  the  gross  miscalculation  in  i 
trusting    Nasser   and    his    neutral.> 
which  placed  the  United  States  in  \ 
a  dangerous  position  is  part  of  Dul- , 
i  les's    bungling;    the    Secretary    of  ; 
^  I  State  has  alienated  our  allies  and 

More   Women   Volunteers ^^e  neutral  countries   by  his  con 

flicting    statements    and     actions; 


WCRKS  OF  FIVE  MEN: 


Pianist  To  Play  Today 

Works  by  five  leading'  com-  Gav.)tta"  by  Bach.  Beethoven's 
posers  will  be  featured  on  to-  "'Sonata  A  Major  Op.  101,"  "Les 
night's  Les  Petites  Musicales  con-  Qisoaux  Tristrs"  by  Ravel.  Bar- 
cert  by  piantst  Helen  McGraw.  tok's  "Valse,"  and  the  Sixth  So- 
[^lAtfi  ^Ititos  HusicalM^  wiU.  be  >4(»4a.  I»|^- Serge  PrskofieSL  •-. 
pres?ntcd  in  flraham  Mcniorials  No  admis.sion  is  charged  for  the 
main  lounge  at  8  p.m.  GMAB-sponsored  program. 


Groat,  31,  Nutting  Lake,  Mass. 

The  explosion  in  flight  and 
crash  of  a  Navy  F7U  Cutlass  jet 
fighter  on  the  Camp  Matthews 
rifle  range  near  San  Diego,  Calif. 
The  pilot  was  killed  and  a  sbed 
set  afire. 


Secretary  of  Defense  Charles  Wil- 

Additional      women      volunteer   son  has  continually  shown  his  ad 

at   Memorial    ministrative    inability    in    the    dc- 

to      hospital    fense   department;    Wilson's    bliinl 

statements     about     the     National 


There   are   openings   for   volun-  i  Guard    and   General    Motors  show 
teer   workers    in    all    branches    of   that  he  lacks  integrity  in  govern- 


Callod  'a  pianist  of  the  great 
school"  by  a  French  critic,  Aliss 
McGraw  has  done  extensive  con- 
cert work  with  orchestras  and  as 
soloist  both  in  this  country  and 
abroad.  She  has  appeared  nine 
times  at  the  National  Gallery  of 
Art  in  Washington,  playing  at  her 
last  performance  the  Beethoven 
Fourth  Concerto  in  G  Major  with 
the  National  Gallery  Orchestra. 

A  pupil  of  the  Russian  pianist 
Alexander  Sklarevski.  Helen  Mc- 
Graw c(!i.atinued  her  studies  at 
Pcabndy  Conservatory  in  Balti- 
more and  in  Paris.  Honors  which 
she  has  won  during  her  musical 
career  include  the  Peabody  Con- 
I  servatory  Arti.sts  Diploma,  the 
Walter  *  Naumburg  Foundation 
award,  and  the  opening  of  the 
rir<<t  annual  Festival  of  American 
Music. 

In  tonight's  concert  Miss  Mc- 
Graw will  play  the  "Toccata." 
"Corrente."       ".'ijarabande,"      and 

Student  Party  To  Hear 
Cummings  Tomorrow 

Student  Party  members  will 
hear  a  talk  by  recently-appointed 
Elections  Board  Chairman  Ralph 
Cummings  tomorrow  night,  ac- 
coiding  to  SP  Chairman  Sonny 
Hallford. 

Cummings    will    speak     on     the 


dtaH  Meeting 
To  Be  Held 
On  Tuesday 


A  meeting  of  Th'.'  Daily  Tar 
Heel  staff  has  been  scheduled  for 
Tuesday  afternoon  at  2  in  the 
newsroom. 

All  reporters,  columnists,  sports 
reporters  and  members  of  tiic  edi- 
torial staff  have  been  asked  to 
attend.  Charlie  Sloan.  Daily  Tar 
Heel  managing  editor,  has  also  in- 
vited everyone  who  meant  to  ap- 
ply for  reportorial  work  last  se- 
mester but  never  got  around  to  it 
to  attend  the   meeting. 

Reporters  who  did  outstanding 
work  during  the  last  ^.semester 
will  be  assigned  regular  news 
beats 


Petitioning 
Begun  For 
Comic  Strip 


A  petition  to  have  the  comic 
strip  "Peanuts"  placed  regularly 
in  the  Daily  Tar  Heel  has  beon 
drawn  up  by  two  UNO  students. 
Bob  Gedney  and  Joe  Adams. 
^"  Atfonfing  to"  Gedney,  another 
student.  Fred  W.  Biirrill,  was  re- 
sponsible for  starting  the  campaign 
to  bring    "Peanuts"  to  Chapel  Hill. 

250  names  ware  attached  to  the 
petition  yesterday  when  it  was  cir- 
culated in  "Y"  court. 

Originally,  the  students  planned 
to  circulate  a  petition  to  replace 
•Pogo  '  with  '"Peanuts".  Due  to 
the  largo  number  of  "Pogo  "  fans 
however,  the  petition  now  s-tates 
that  the  Daily  Tar  Heel  will  carry 
three  comic  strips,  "Pogo,"  "L'l 
Abner,"   and  '"Peanuts." 


Midshipman    Lt.   James   K.   Bryant 
Jr.  of  Elkin. 

Commanding  the  32-member 
drum  and  bugle  corps  will  be  Midn. 
Lt.  Fredric  C.  Byrum  of  Eden- 
ton. 

The  color  guard  will  be  com- 
posed of  the  following;  Midn. 
•Chief  Petty  Officer  Maurice  Glat- 
7.er,  national  color  bearer,  of 
Kensingt.-n,  Md.;  Midn.  C.  P.  0. 
Telfair  Mahaffy.  unit  color  bear- 
er of  Jacksonville,  Fla;  and 
color  guards  Midn.  P.  0.  First 
Class  Walter  T.  Rose,  Jr.  of  S.  Mi- 
ami. Fla.  and  Grady  C.  Pridgen 
Jr.  of  Sbarpsburg. 


Colloquium 
Will  Hear 
Dr.  Stace 


Band  Concert 
Scheduled  Here 
At  4  p.m.  Today 


Approximately 
mu  Velars,     comprisinj 
Central  N.  C.  All-State  High  School 
Band  will  present  a  concert  in  Hill 
Hall  today  at  4  p.m. 

According  to  Professor  Earl  Slo- 
Edit<^r  Fred   Powledge   said    cum   of   the   UNC   Dept.   of   Music. 


W.  T.  Stace,  professor  emeritus 
of  philosophy  at  Princeton  Univer- 
sity, will  present  a  paper  at  a 
meeting  Wednesday  of  the  LHMC- 
Duke  Joint  Colloquim  in  Philoso- 
phy. 

Dr.  Staces  paper  i.^-  entitled 
"Some  Reflections  on  Empiricism." 
The  meeting  will  be  at  8  p.m.  in 
the  Morehead  Bldg.  Faculty 
Lounge. 

Professor  Stace  was  born  in  Lon- 
don, England,  in  1886.  He  was  edu- 
cated at  Fettes  College,  Edinburgh, 
100  high  school  and  majored  in  philosophy  at  Trin 
the  East  •'>'  College,  Dublin,  where  he  re 
ceived   his   B.A.   in    1908. 

From  1910  to  1932  he  served  ^n 
the  Ceylon  Civil  Service,  holding 
appointments  as  magistrate,  dis- 
trict   judge,    private    secretary    to 


ame  number  of  former  students 
not  enrolled  in  the  fall,  brought 
the  spring  enrollment  to  approxi- 
mately 6,615.  This  figure  is  some 
350  students  less  that  the  near 
record  fall  enrollment  of  6,971. 

Wadsworth  stated  that  there 
were  no  dormitory  vacancies  for 
men  in  double  rooms,  and  that  . 
quite"  a  number  of  men  still  re- 
main in  triple  rooms.  The  room.^, 
originally  designed  for  two  men, 
provide  crowded  living  quarters. 

The  smaller  spring  enrollment  is 
expected  to  bring  little  change  in 
the    dormitory    ^.pace    for    coeds, 

;  many   of   whom   are   still   sharing 

\  three  girl  rooms. 

"The  only  way  to  really  help  the 
situaiion  is  lo  get  new  dormitory 
space  which   is  stilJ   in   the  offing, 

I  or  to  have  a  terrific  drop  in  en- 
rollment, which  is  not  expected," 
stated  Wadsworth.  ""In  fact,  the  op- 

:  posite  is  expected,  it  is  predicted, 

i  that  the  enrollment  will  continue 

I  to  increase  next  year,"  he  said. 

I  Work  will  continue  throughout 
the  semester  to  alleviate  the  situ- 
ation in  the  three  ma/i  rooms, 
where,  according  to  Wad^-worth 
•"the  men  should  not  have  been  in 
the  first  place." 


there  will  be  several  revisions  in 
staff  organization  made  at  the 
meeting. 


Leqislature  To  Meet 

The  Student  Legislature  will 
meet  Thursday  night  on  th?  fourth 
flo;!r    of    New    East    at    7:15.     it 


the    volunteer    program,    officials   ment  and  the  confidance  of  his  su  j  policies  and  operation  of  the  elec-    was  announced  yesterday  by  Son- 


said.  At  present,  there  is  a  need   periora' 


tions  board. 


ny  Evans,  speaker. 


musicians  participating  in  the 
event  represent  the  select  mem- 
bers ;)f  bands  in  16  high  schooKs  in 
Central  North  Carolina. 

The  musical  presentation  will 
climax  a  three-day  East  Central 
All-State  High  School  Band  Clinic 
which  l)egan  here  Friday.  The 
group  will  be  directed  by  Herbert 
\\ .  Fred,  recently  appointed  di- 
rector of  hands  at  UNC. 


Elsewhere  In 
US  It's  Clear 
And  Snowing 

.V— Skie«  cleared  in  the  east  and 
northeast  Saturday  but  rain  and 
snow  fell  in  central  and  western 
f^ections  of  the  country. 

The  di  urbance  that  brought 
new  snow  to  much  of  the  east 
whisked  out  into  the  Atlantic 
the  governor,  mayor  of  Colombo.  Ocean.  New  York  City  had  5.8 
and  member  of  the  Legislative  inches  of  sflcw  in  a  13-hour  period 
Council.  In  Ceylon  he  acquired  an  that  ended  early  in  the  day.  But 
interest  in  Buddhism  and  Hindu  rising  temperatures  indicated  The 
religions  and  philo^-jphies.  snow  cover  wouldn't  last  long. 

In  1929  Dr.  Stace  obtained  a  Litt.  Skies  also  cleared  in  the  Appa- 
D.  from  Trinity  College.  Dublin,  lachian  flood  area, 
presenting  his  book.  The  Philo.*iO-  Rain  fell  again  in  a  belt  that 
phy  of  Hegel,  as  thesis.  In  1932  he  stretched  along  the  Gulf  Coast  and 
retired  from  the  Ceylon  Civil  Ser-  curved  up  into  South  Carolina, 
vice  and  came  to  Princeton  Uni-  Snow  was  reported  in  the  Upper 
versify  as  lecturer,  where  he  has    Mississippi    Valley.    One    and    two 


^Tuesday,  8  p.m. 

*  The  bill  explicitly  states:  "The 
a.ssemb!y  of  the  Philanthropic 
Literary  Society  go  on  record  fav- 
oring the  Eisenhower  doctrine  in 
the  Mid-East,  such  doctrine  be- 
ing defined  as  (a)  congressional 
delegatiDn  of  power  to  the  Pres- 
ident to  use  American  military 
forces,  if  neces.sary.  in  support  of 
any  country  which  might  be  in- 
vaded by  the  Communists;  (b) 
such  action  be  contlngDnt  upon 
the  invitation  of  the  country  un- 
der attack;  (c)  ccngressional  au- 
thorization of  an  enlarged  pro- 
gram of  economic  aid  to  that  area." 

In  support  of  the  resolution  the 
preface  clahns.  "a  power  vacuum 
has  been  created  in  the  Mid-East  I 
by  th?  withdrawal  of  French  and  { 
British    military    forces,    and    the  i 
expansion    of   Communist    control  j 
"and    influence    into    said    area    is 
eminently   iH*obable."  | 


unteer  work  have  been  requested 
to  call  Mrs.  Viola  Jacobs  at  the 
hospital. 

The  need  was  also  cited  for  do- 
nations of  current  magadines  or 
magazine  subscriptions.  The  mag- 
azines will  be  placed  in  the  hos- 
pital waiting  rooms. 


Umbrella 
X Season  To 
End  Tuesday 

B*tt«r  keep  the  raincoat*  and 
un*brelles  hendy  —  at  least  un- 
til Tuetdey. 

Mere  rain  is  expected  today 
and  tonwrrow,  accord  inf  to  the 
Weather  Bureau  at  the  Raleigh- 
Durham  Airport.  It  is  expected 
to  begin  clearing  up  on  Tuesday. 

The  temperature  today  and  to- 
morrow will  be  cool  but  not  espo- 
cialiy  cold. 


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HHJK:':; 

J 

*  N**, 

^^^^^^ 

■  ■■'■•■■' ^-^ 

been  professor  of  philosophy  since 
1935. 

He  is  the  author  of  Time  and 
Eternity,  a  philosophical  study 
of  religion,  published  by  t>,e 
Princeton  University  Pres.:.-;  The  gion 
Destiny  of  Western  Man,  for  which 
he  obtained  a  prize  offered  by 
Reynal  and  Hitchcock  for  any 
book  on  any  subject  written  by  a 
college  professor;  A  Critical  His- 
tor>  of  Greek  Philosophy;  Religion 
and  the  Modern  Mind  and  a  num- 
ber of  more  technical  philosophical 
books. 


inch  falls  occurred  in  Wisconoin 
and  Minnesota.  There  were  scatter- 
ed areas  of  freezing  drizzle  and 
light  snow  between  Kansas  and 
Nebraska  and  the  Great  Lakes  Re- 


One  UNC  Student  Wins 
f^ational  Contest  Prize 


A  NEW  SEMESTER   IS  BORN 

TV  gazing^  flick  perusal — things  of  the  past  as  it's  back  to  books 


IN  THE  INFIRMARY 

Students  in  the  Infirmary  yes- 
terday included: 

Misses  Jane  Patterson  Stain- 
beck,  Sylvia  Sue  'Yelten,  Pan 
Laura  Lu,  and  Howard  Martin 
Kahn,  Patrick  Jackson  Leonard, 
Douglas  Wilson  Sharp,  Marvin 
Russell  Cowan,  Marvin  Byron 
Smith,  Kenneth  Bamum  Alvord, 
R&bert  Ranson  Williams  end  Kee 
Yoo. 


Curtiss  W.  Daughtry.  junior 
from  Smithfield,  was  the  only 
UNC  student  to  win  a  prize  in 
the  Reader's  Digest  College  Con- 
test last  fall. 

R-ader's  Dige.«t  announced 
Daughtry,  number  50.  would  win 
SIO  in  book  credits  at  college  book 
stores  for  being  in  the  first  112 
entrants  and  $10  more  in  book 
credits  for  being  the  best  entry 
from  his  university. 

'  In  all,  four  people  attending 
college  in  North  Carolina  won 
priz?s  in  this  contest  to  choose 
to  choose  the  six  articles  in  the 
October  issue  of  Reader's  Digest 
which   a   later   readership   survey 

j  would  find  most  interesting. 


..~-..  itniPWII 


MCE  TWO 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEv 


SUNDAY,  FEBRUARY  3,   1957 


Going  Around  In  Circles 
With  A  Well-Worn  Topic 

ResfKinsibility  is  a  biuj  responsibility.  Some  people  have  too  niudi. 
some  don't  have  enough  and  some  don't  know  what  to  do  with  what 
they've  jjot.  Some  people  think  they  can  ']U(.lre  how  nuich  resjX)nsibility 
other  folks  can  have  or  how  nuu  h  they  do  have,  but  most  people  aren't 
willinor  to  take  large  amoinits  of  responsibility  fcjr  therasclvcs. 

A  lot  of  folks  claim  that  college  youth  are  irresponsible.  But  actual- 
ly college  students  have  taken  on  more  responsibility  than  all  but  a  very 


THE  PRESIDENT  ON  EDUCATION: 


CAROLEIDOSCOPE: 


small  minority  outside  of  school. 
In  the  big  outside  world  a  mail 
is  responsible  to  his  employer  on- 
ly dufing  the  working  day,  and  if 
he  has  to  work  overtime  he  gets 
paid  extra  for  it. 'College  students 
on  the  other  hand  are  responsible 
to  their  parents  and  themselves 
all  aroinid  the  clcKk.  even  during 
their  liesure  time  'they  are  prob- 
ably neglecting  something  more 
important  to  their  college  careers. 

"When  the  final  bell  of  the  last 
class  of  the  day  rings  the  students 
working  day  is  far  from  over. 
There  are  assignments  to  be  com- 
pleted and  \research  to  be  done. 
Personal  needs  have  to  be  taken 
care  of.  Shopping  ha^  to  be  done. 
e\en  the  dorm  man  has  to  find 
time  to  buy  personal  items.  Let- 
ters hrt've  to  be  written;  the  college 
man  is  probably  reponsible  for 
carrving  on  more  personal  corres- 
pondence than  the  busiest  execu- 
ti\e.  The  student  employed  by 
himself  and  his  parents  never  gets 
a  full  break  when  all  his  responsi- 
bility can  be  channeled  in  another 
direction.  In  other  words,  when  the 
student  is  doing  anything  except 
study  he  is  trying  to  do  two  things 
at  once.  The  results  of  this  sort  of 
activitv  is  well-known,  yet  thous- 
a-nds  of  college  people  accomplish 
it  every  year.  ' 

Flicks,  dates,  long  bulJ-sessions 
in  the  dorms  and  parti^  aren't 
the  onlv  digressions  taken  from 
responsibiiitv.   Many  students  sue- 


even  farther  than  the  parent -off- 
spring relationship  de.scribed  above. 
When  a  student  takes  a  position  of 
responsibility  in  an  extra-curricu- 
lar he  t)ecomes  responsible  to  the 
entire  student  body,  and  most  of 
this  group  doesn't  really  care  im- 
less  someone  makes  a  glaring  er- 
ror. 

And  vet  with  all  this  on  his 
mind  the  average  student  mrin- 
tains  the  air  of  conscience  apathy 
and  youthful  exuberance  expected 
of  him.  Instead  of  pointing  to 
-such  incidents  as  panty  raids  as 
examples  of  irresponsibility,  peo- 
ple should  try  to  figure  out  liow 
yoiuig  people  so  laden  with  re- 
sponsibility can  find  time  to  have 
such     "outbursts." 

There  are  exceptions  of  course, 
riie  young  people  may  be  laden 
with  responsibility  but  how  they 
carry  the  bin  den  is  what  counts. 
The  responsibiiitv  is  there,  it  is 
reliability  that  is  frequently  miss- 
ing. When  the  critics  of  the  col- 
lege generation  say  "irresponsibile" 
they  mean  'unreliable."  This  word 
association  game  could  be  carried 
oiu  cAen  farther — reliability  is  a 
trait  of  maturitv.  Now  the  circle 
is  closing  up.  Too  many  college 
students  are  immature,  and  as  a 
result  cannot  be  relied  upon  to 
carry  out  responsibility.  And  the 
confusion  is  still  not  ended,  for 
one  wav  to  mature  a  person  is  to 
give    him    responsibility.    But    re- 


cessfiilly  take  part  in  positions  of  sponsibility  is  a  big  responsbility. 
responsibility  in  extra-curricular  It  is  time  soiriebody  found  a  way 
activites.    This    responsibility   goes      to  get  inside  the  circle. 

Drop-Add  Can  Be  Improved 


When  drop-acid  closes  tomorrow 
a  semesterly  ritual  and  nuisance 
will  be  over  until  September. 
I.\ery  semester  finds  healthy  young 
students  bottled  up  in  the  halls  of 
South  Building  waiting  to  see  their 
advisers  for  schedule  adjustments. 
These  usuallv  vibrant  personalities 
sit  sulIenK  on  their  hard  chairs, 
il  thev're  lucky  encju^h  tcj  find 
one,  and  stare  at  the  individuals 
sitting  sullenlv  ii:ross  fiom  them. 

Instead  of  the-**sual  bright  con- 
versation of  college  youth  such 
topics  as  the  relative  tpialiiies  of 
H  and  ()  ochxk  classes  and  instruc- 
tors not  worth  having  are  discuss- 
ed. This  talk  of  instructors  isn't 
really  seditious,  for  personality 
clashes  occur  at  all  levels  of  hu- 
manity. 

Obviously  this  atmosphere  is 
unpleasant,  causes  jagged  nerves, 
hard  feelings  and  generally  ruins 
a  time  of  the  year  that  should  be 
characterized  most  by  peaceful 
preparedness  and  open  minds.  The 
problem  can  be  solved  in  many 
wavs,  bin  there  is  one  solution  that 


The  Daily  Tar  Heel 

The  official  itudetot  publication  of  tbe 
Publications  Board  ot  the  University  of 
North  Carolina,  where  it  is  published 
daily  except  Monday  and  examinatiot 
and  vacation  periods  and  summer  terms 
Entered  as  second  class  matter  in  thi 
cost  otfice  in  Chapel  Hill.  N.  C„  undei 
the  Act  oi  March  8.  1870.  Subscription 
rates:  mailed,  $4  per  year.  $2.50  a  semes 
ter;  delivered.  $6  a  yeaE.  $3.50  a  seme* 
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Editor 

.  FREI>  POWLEDGE 

Managing  Editor  _. 

_  CHARLIE  SLOAN 

News  Editor  _ 

- NANCY  HILL 

Bu.siness  Manager 

.  ,    BILL  BOB  PL-EL 

Sports  Editor 

LARRY  CHEEK 

EDITORIAL  STAFF  —  Woody  Sear?, 
Frank  Crowther,  Barry  Winston,  David 
Mundy,  George  Pfingst,  Ingrid  Clay. 
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Bobbi  Smith. 


BUSINESS  STAFF— Rosa  Moore,  Johnny 
Whitaker,  Dick  Leavitt,  Dick  Sirkin. 

SPORTS  STAFF:  Bill  King.  Jim  Parks, 
Jimmy  Harper,  Dave  Wible,  Charley 
Howson. 


Staff  Photographer 
Librarian  


Norman  Kantor 
-  Sue  Gishner 


Subscription  Manager 
Advertising  Manage  . 
Circulation  Manager  _ 


Dale  Staley 
Fred  Katzin 
Charlie  Holt 


Night  Editor t^-^- 

Proof  Reader .^ 

Night  News  Editort!__ 


Wally  Kuralt 
Wally  Kuralt 
._  Clark  Jones 


can.  with  proper  handling.  be 
completed  by  next  fall. 

All  the  South  ^Building  folk 
have  to  do  is  take  a-  hint  from  the 
meat  counters  of  grocery  stores  all 
over  the  nation.  When  the  butcher- 
men  have  crowds  of  customers 
swarming  f>efore  their  sparking 
white  bulwarks  they  use  a  number 
system  to  assure  the  use  of  the 
"fir^t  come,  first  served"  policy. 

It  each  desk  of  each  adviser's 
secretarv  were  equipped  with  a- 
stand  from  which  the  students 
could  lift  a  numbered  piece  of 
plastic  correspc^nding  to  his  place 
in  line,  life  would  l)c  made  much 
simpler.  If  number  '^o  is  in  the  ad- 
viser's office  and  the  new-coiricr 
is  number  jcj,  he  has  time  to  stop 
in  ^'  Court  for  a  c  up  of  coffee. 

Of  course  since  people  have  a 
tendency  to  lose  track  of  time  some 
way  of  reminding  them  when  they 
are  tcj  appear  in  their  adviser's  of- 
fice is  necessary.  .\  public  address 
system  could  be  installed  |in  Y 
ccnirt  for  this  short  period  of  time 
with  little  trouble.  .\  central  con- 
trol board  could  call  the  adviser's 
name  and  the  next  three  numbers 
and  everyone  could  enjoy  the  cof- 
fee and  friendly  talk  of  \  court 
and  only  have  to  wait  in  South 
liuilding  fcjr  a-bout   lo  minutes. 

It  wcjuld  be  a  much  more  pleas- 
ant way  to  start  the  semester  and 
it  would  cut  the  crowd  in  South 
Building  down  to  a  more  comfort- 
able nimiber. 

Gracious 
Living: 
Number  13 

Ancjther  contribution  hr.-j  been 
made  to  gracious  living  at  the  Un^ 
iversity.  Ciraham  Memori^,  the 
folks  who  have  done  so  much  to 
make  the  student  body  feel  more 
at  home,  has  ordered  milk  and  ice 
cream  machines. 

With  the  warm  spring  months 
almost  here  it  is  nice  to  know  that 
somelxKly  is  making  available  wh^t 
the  advertising  copy  writers  call 
■  .America's  favorite   food." 

This  lesson  in  advance  prepara- 
tion could  well  be  taken  by  other 
sections  of  the  University.  Waitiitg 
until  the  last  minute  does  not 
contribute  much  to  gracious  liv- 
ins. 


Federal  Role  Is  To  Facilitate 


W^ASHINGTON—CAP)— Follow- 
ing is  the  text  of  Presid?nt  Eis- 
enhower's message  to  Congress 
Monday. 

To  the  Congress  of  the  United 
States: 

In  several  previous  messages 
t&  the  Congress,  I  hav3  called 
attention  to  the  status  of  Amer- 
ican education  —  to  accomplish- 
m?nts  of  the  past  and  to  certain 
prohlems  wluch  deeply  involve 
the  national  interest  and  welfare. 
Today,  more  .Americans  ar? 
receiving'  a  higher  level  of  edu- 
cation than  ever  before. 

Pregr»is    has  been   mad*   in 
iMiiWing       ntor*      and      b«tt«r 
schools  and  in  providing  more 
•nd   bottor   toachors.   And   yet 
problonu  in  education  still  per- 
sist, and  time  has  more  clearly 
defined  their  scopo  and  nature. 
The    educational    task    in    this 
country  is  basically  a  state  and 
local     responsibility.     Looking 
ahead,  that  task  is  unprecedent- 
ed in  its  sheer  magnitude. 

Elementary  and  secondary 
schools  already  are  overflowing 
under  the  impact  of  the  greatest 
enrollment  increase  in  our  his- 
tory. 

The  number  of  pupils  in  public 
schools  has  increased  by  5»i  mill- 
ion in  the  past  5  years,  and  will 
further  increase  by  about  6  mill-' 
ion  in  the  ne.xt  5  years. 

We  have  already  reached  an 
all-time  peak  in  enrollment  in 
colleges  and  universities.  Yet, 
in  the  next  10  to  15  years,  the 
number  of  young  people  seeking 
higher  education  will  double, 
perhaps  even  triple. 

Increasing  enrollments,  how- 
ever, by  no  means  represent  the 
whole  problem. 

Advances  in  science  and  tech- 
nology, the  urgency  and  '  diffi- 
culty of  our  quest  for  stable 
■world  peace,  the  increasing  com- 
plexity of  social  problems — all 
these  factors  compound  our  ed- 
ucational needs. 

One  fact  is  deer.  For  the 
states*  localities,  and  public  and 
private  educational  institutions 
to  provide  the  teachers  and 
buildings  and  equipment  need- 
ed from  kindergarten  to  col- 
lege, to  provide  the  quality  and 
diversity  of  training  needed  for 
all  oOr  young  people,  wTtt  re-  ' 
quire  of  them  in  the  next  dec- 
ide the  greatest  expansion  of 
ejducational  opportunity  in  our 
history.  It  is  a  challenge  they 
must  moot. 

State  and  local  responsibility 
in  education  nurtures  freedom 
in  education,  and  encourages  a 
rich  diversity  of  initiative  and 
enterprise  as  well  as  actions  best 
suited  to  local  conditions. 

There  are.  however,  certain 
underlying  problems  where 
states  and  communities — acting 
independently — cannot  solve  the 
full  problem  or  solve  it  rapidly 
enough,  and  where  federal  assist- 
ance is  needed. 

But  the  federal  role  should  be 
merely  to  faciliatate  —  never  to 
control — education. 

Solutions  to  all  the  other 
problems  in  education  will  be 
empty  achievements  indeed  if 
good  teaching  is  not  available. 
It  is  my  earnest  hope  that  the 
states  and  communities  will  con- 
tinue and  expand  their  efforts 
to  strengthen  the  teaching  pro- 
fession. 

Their  efforts  already  have  ac- 
complished much. 


Progress  has  b3en  made  in 
reducing  the  teacher  shortaige. 

There  are  encouraging  in- 
creases in  the  numt)er  of  persMis 
tra-ning  to  teach  and  the  pro- 
portion of  those  so  trained  wiho 
ent:^   the    profession. 

Still,  this  year,  thousands  of 
emer.cvcy  teachers  with  sub- 
standard certificates  had  to  be 
employed. 

Far  more  needs  to  be  done  in 
our  various  communities  to  en- 
hance the  status  of  the  teacher 
— in  salary,  in  comiVfunity  es-, 
teem  and  support — andthereby 
attract  more  people  to  the  pro- 
fession and,  equelly  important, 
retain  thosi^  who  bear  so  well 
the  trust  of  instructing  our 
youth.  » 

,  By  providpg  statistics  and 
analyses  on  trends  in  education, 
and  by  administering  other  ser- 
vices, the  U.S  S.  Office  of  Educa- 
tion performs  a  valuable  role 
in  helping  oublic  and  private 
educational  institutions  better  to 
perform  thei  •  tasks. 

A  significant  first  step  was 
taken  last  year  toward  stren^- 
ening  the  office  of  educati(>h,  ^ 

The  appropriation  for  the  of- 
fice was  increased  to  implement 
a  cooperative  research  pro|[ram, 
and  to  expand  statistical  wfd 
professional  advisory  services 
and  studies. 

This  year  I  am  asking  for  in- 
creases in  funds  for  these  activi- 
ties, because  they  hold  such 
promise  for  real  progress  toward 
solving  some  of  the  baste  and 
long-standing  problems  fit  fdv- 
cation. 

If  the  states,  localities  and 
public  and  private  educational 
institutions  are  successfully  to 
meet,  in  the  next  decade,  the 
increasing  needs  for  education 
beyond  the  high  school,  their 
effort  must  begin  now. 

The  federal  government,  how- 
ever, can  take  certain  appropri 
ate  stejjs  to  encourage  such  ac- 
tion. 

Already  the  Congress  l)as  en- 
acted legislation  for  long-term 
loans  by  the  housing  and  home 
finance  agency  to  help  colleges 
and  universities  expand  their 
dormitory    and    other    self-liqui- 

Last  year  I  appointed  a  com- 
mittee on  education  beyond  the 
high  .school,  composed  of  dis- 
tlnquished  educational  and  lay 
leaders,  to  study  and  make  rec- 
ommendations in   this  field. 

The  cnmmittee's  interim  re- 
port of  last  November  delineates 
issues  that  should  have  the  most 
careful  attention. 

It  pointed  out  that  much  more 
planning  is  needed  at  the  state 
level  to  meet  current  and  future 
needs  in  education  beyond  the 
high  school. 

The  Congress  at  the  past  ses- 
sion enacted  Public  Law  813, 
which  authorized  federal  funds 
to  help  the  state  establish  stale 
committees  on  education  beyond 
the  high  school. 

The  funds,  however,  were  not 
appropriated,  i  recommend  that 
the  Congress  now  appropriate 
the  full  amount  authorized  un- 
der this  legislation. 

The  state  committees  can  do 
much  to  promote  discussion,  de- 
fense problems,  and  develop  rec- 
ommendations. 

Their  recommendations,  how- 
ever, must  be  supplemented  by 
detailed   plans   to  meet   specific 


needs  for  expansion  of  physical 
facilities,  enlargement  of  facul- 
ties, and  other  adjustments  which 
may  provide  new  or  different  in- 
stitutions. 

Such  detailed  planning  re- 
quires the  coordinated  effort  to 
both  public  and  private  educa- 
tion in  each  state  —  and  time, 
personnel,  and  funds. 

I  recommend  that  the  Congress 
amend  Public  Law  813  so  as  to 
authorize  grants  to  the  states  of 
$2.5  million  a  year  for  three  years 
for  these  purposes. 

Of  all  the  problems  in  edu- 
cation, one  is  most  critical. 
.^  In  1955,  and  again  last  year. 
I  called  attention  to  the  critical 
shortage  of  classrooms  in  many 
communities  across  the  coiintrj'. 

The  lack  of  physical  facilities 
is  a  temporary  emergency  situ- 
ation in  which  federal  assistance 
is  appropriate. 

Unquestionably,  a  very  consid- 
erable portion  of  the  shortage  is 
due  to  World  War  11  restrictions 
on  all  types  of  civil  construction 
including  schools. 

With  federal  help  the  states 
and  communities  can  provide 
the  bricks  and  mortar  for  school 
buildings,  and  there  will  be  no 
federal  interference  with  local 
controLof  education. 

I  again  urge  the  Congress  to 
a%t  quickly  upon  this  pressing 
problem. 

Today  there  are  enrolled  in 
our  public  schools  about  7V* 
million  children  in  excess  of  the 
normal  cap«city  of  the  buildings 
in  use.  These  children  are 
forced  to  prepare  for  the  future 
under  the  handicap  of  half-day 
sessions,  makeshift  facilities,  or 
grossly  overcrowded  conditions, 
further,  ntany  classrooms  which 
may  not  be  overcrowded  are 
too  old  or  otherwise  inadequate. 
They  should  be  promptly  re- 
placed. 

The  need  for  federal  assistance 
in  eliminating  this  shortage  is 
not  theory,  but  demonstrated 
fact. 

It  cannot  now  be  said  —  real- 
istically —  that  the  states  and 
comqiunities  will  meet  the  need. 

The  classroom  shortage  has 
been  apparent  for  a  number  of 
years,  and  the  states  and  com- 
munities have  notably  increased 
their  school  building  efforts. 

Each  year,  for  several  years, 
they  have  set  a  new  record  in 
school  construction.  And  yet,  in 
the  face  of  a  vast  expansion  in 
enrollments  each  year,  many 
areas  are  making  inadequate  pro- 
gress in  reducing  the  shortage 
accumulated  over  many  past 
years. 

The  rate  of  state  and  local 
construction  is  spotty,  with  no- 
ticeable lags  in  areas  where 
needs  are  expanding  most  rap- 
idly. 

I  propose,  therefore,  a  com- 
prehensive program  of  federal 
assistance.  The  program  is  de- 
signed iQ  accomplish  in  four 
years  what  last  years  proposal 
would  have  done  in  five,  since 
one  year  has'alrcday  been  lost. 
I  urge  the  Congress  to  authorize: 

(1)  Federal  grants  to  the  states 
for  school  construction,  at  the 
rate  of  $325  million  a  year  for 
four  years,  a  total  of  $1.3  billion. 

(2)  the  authorization  of  $750 
million  over  the  four-year  per- 
iod for  federal  purchase  of  local 
school  construction  bonds  when 
school    districts    cannot    market 


tliem  at  reasonable  interest  rates. 
,         The  loon  funds     would      be 
made  available  to  the  states  on 
the  basis  of  school-age  popula- 
tion. 

The  state  educational  agencry 
would  determine  the  priority  of 
local  school  districts  for  federal 
loans  b^ed  on  their  relative 
need  for  financial  aid  in  the  con- 
struction of  needed  school  facil- 
ities. 

(3)  advances  to  help  provide 
reserves  for  bonds  issued  by 
state  school-financing  agencies, 
r*)  the  expenditure  of  $20 
million  in  matching  grants  to 
states  for  planning  to  strengthen 
state  and  local  school  construc- 
tion programs. 

As  I  indicated  in  my  message 
on  The  State  of  the  Union,  1 
hope  that  planning  to  strengthen 
slate  and  local  school  construc- 
tion programs. 

As  I  indicated  in  my  message 
on  The  State  of  the  Union,  I 
hope  that  this  school  construc- 
tion legislation  can  be  enacted 
on  its  own  merits,  uncomplicated 
by  provisions  dealing  with  the 
complex  problems  of  integration. 
Certain  basic  principles  must 
govern  legislation  on  federal 
grants  for  school  construction,  if 
they  are  to  serve  the  cause  of 
education  most  effectively. 

First,  the  program  must  be 
recognized  as  an  emergency 
measure  designed  to  assist  and 
encourage  the  stales  and  com- 
munities in  catching  up  with 
their  needs. 

Second,  federal  aid  must  not 
infringe     upon     the     American 
precept  that   responsibility   for 
control  of  education  rests  with 
the     states     and     communities. 
School   construction    legislation 
should   state   this   policy   in   no 
uncertain  terms. 
Third,  federal  aid  should  stim- 
ulate greater  state  and  local  ef- 
forts for  school  construction. 

Further,  to  increase  total  funds 
for  school  construction,  federal 
grants  should  be  matched  by 
state-appropriated  funds  after 
the  first  yetir  of  the  program. 

Fourth,  the  allocation  of  fed- 
eral funds  among  the  slates 
should  take  into  account  school- 
age  population,  relative  financial 
ability  to  meet  school  needs,  and 
the  total  effort  within  the  states 
to  provide  funds  fot  public 
schools. 

An  allocation  system  which 
provides  more  assistance  to 
states  with  the  greatest  finan- 
cial need  will  help  reduce  the 
shortage  more  quickly  and  more 
effectively.  ' 

Fifth,  in  distributing  grants 
under  this  program  within  each 
stale,  priority  should  be  given  to 
local  districts  with  the  greatest 
need  for  school  facilities  and  the 
least  local  financialability  to 
meet  the  need. 

Collectively,  the  educational 
equipment  of  the  whole  popula- 
tion contributes  to  our  national 
character — our  freedom  as  a  na- 
tion, our  national  security,  our 
expanding  economy,  our  cultural 
attainments,  our  unremitting  ef- 
forts for  a  durable  peace. 

The  policies  I  have  recom- 
mended in  education  are  design- 
ed to  further  these  ends. 

DWIGHT  D.  EISENHOWER. 
THE  WHITE  HOUSE, 
JANUARY  28,   1957 


L'il  Abn^r 


TH'  SOUUTIOJ  TO  TH^»-~sv 
HOWARD  R.  MUSHROOM       A 
■p-^ ^^d,  P«OBL(JM  IS     } 


Ppgo 


By  Walt  Kelly 


C<  INeiP^  APTCI?  MAtCIN* 

AUCt  '"TO  com  AACK  NOIV 
WOO  3f^BA<  1HS  &tO\M'H06, 
n  CR6ED. 


>&U  M5AN  Hg  AIN  r  'OH,  IT  RJNij 

^'lomf  wtftcf  /  WITH  /(Ames 


Looking  Backward 
To  See  Forward 


\  By  FRANK  CROWTHER 

I  guess  you  could  call  this  the  summing  up  of 
a  semester,  but  I  would  like  to  think  that  it  goes 
a  little  further  than  that.  Rather  than  having  a 
personal  connotation  as  this  must  have,  I  wish  it 
might  have  some  interpersonal  relationship  with, 
as  David  Reisman  termed  it,  "we  happy  few" — not. 
however,  with  the  same  inference. 


My  thoughts  at  present 
are  concerned  with  three 
things:  the  teacher,  the 
student,   and  time. 

Suddenly,  our  profess- 
ors take  on  the  appear- 
ance of  some  kind  of  chi- 
mera, lo  some  of  us,  and 
they  are  j»o  longer  in- 
struments, but  "Gods," 
if  we  may  use  such  an 
application.  Their  hands 
have  placed  a  symbol  on 
a  piece  of  paper  which 
will  be  coupled  with  sev- 
eral symbols  of  other 
"gods,"  and  the  combina- 
tion of  these  said  symbols 


CROWTHER 

. .  defending    this 
profession 


will  constitute  the  material  result  of  one  semester's 
work  in  the  University.  The  old  cries  of  -well,  we 
were  at  the  mercy  of  our  professors"  and  "there 
is  nothing  more  we  can  do"  are  to  be  heard  from 
hither  and  yon. 

Now,  also,  is  the  time  when  such  phrases  as 
Mencken's  ^*The  average  schoolmaster  is  and  al- 
ways must  be  es.senlially  an  ass,  for  how  can  one 
imagine  an  intelligent  man  engaging  in  so  purile 
an  avocaticn?"  will  be  heard  from  many  who  will 
undoubtedly  spit  out  at  those  men  of  power  who 
couldn't  seem  to  understand  that  you  have  had 
problems,  are  under  an  emotional  strain,  couldn't 
miss  a  certain  party,  and,  therefore,  haven't  been 
quite  "up  to  par"  this  past  semester.  He  turned  out 
to  be  the  ingrate  you  alwa.vs  thought  he  was:  he 
flunked  you. 

I  would  like  to  take  the  professor's  side  for  once 
— this  will  be  good  practice,  for  I,  too,  hope  to 
teach  and  should  begin  my  defensive  already  for 
those  who  "just  can't  quite  see  it  all" — and  show  you 
that,  in  may  cases,  it  has  been  a  case  of  breakinf 
the  student's  5hell  of  insensibility  and  defference 
toward  all  attempts  lo  transpose  the  fire  in  the 
ashes   into   a   blazing   inferno. 

Plato  once  said.  "Those  having  torches  will  pass 
them  on  to  others."  That  may  very  well  be  the  pur- 
pose which  the  majority  of  our  educators  have  in 
mind,  but  the  flammability  of  the  mind  is  often  void 
of  all  endeavors  to  create  a  catalystic  reaction.  The 
torches  are  passed  on.  but  only  after  they  have 
been  carefully  prepared  and  properly  ignited,  the 
latter  sometimes  proving  the  most  difficult.    ■ 

The  lasting  affects  of,  a  teacher  are  immeasur- 
able: he  may  light  the  fi%.  or  just  add  another  log 
to  the  assemblage.  But  he  is  not  going  lo  give  you 
life's  answer  or  pass  on  tS  you  a  specific  key  to 
knowledge;  the  awakening  must  come  from  with- 
in. 

As  KahlH  Gibran,  the  Lebanese  prophet,  said, 
"No  man  can  reveal  to  you  aught  but  that  which  lies 
half  asleep  in  the  dawning  of  your  knowledge."  So 
what  wc  are  looking  for  is  not  knowledge  per  se. 
but  insight,  enlightenment,  and  self-undersland- 
ing. 

This  understanding  is  hard  coming,  however, 
and  it  is  all  very  well  lo  say  that  this  is  what  yoii 
need  and  here  is  how  you  are  supposed  to  get  it. 
There  are  no  prescribed  formulae;  each  man  lives 
within  himself  and  must  do  his  own  searching. 
Outword  demonstration  is  considerably  removed 
from  inner  belief  and  satisfaction. 

One  way"  we  may  reach  this  inner  "something", 
be  what  it  may.  is  by-(as  my  dad  wrote  me  once) 
getting  outside  of  lime.  Remove  yourself  from  the 
strict  boundaries  of  lime  on  occasion,  and  lose 
yourself  in  something  creative  or,  if  you  are  like 
me  and  have  trouble  creating  something,  gel  lost 
in  a  book,  or  in  writing  something,  or  exercising 
profusely,  or  by  doing  anything  which  will  lose  all 
sense  of  time  for  you  and,  therefore,  will  sup- 
posedly  get   you   outside  time's  boundaries.  . 

Wc  are  caught  in  todays;  we  can  only  go  back 
through  memories  of  yesterdays  and  go  forward  by 
dreaming  of  tomorrows.  It  is  a  strange  thing  to 
realize  that,  if  we  take  it  confiningly  within  the 
strict  limits  of  the  word,  we  can  never  physically 
get  outside  of  today. 

What  I  am  trying  to  say — and  1  realize  that  I 
cannot  say  clloquently  and  completely  what  men 
have  been  expounding  upon  for  hundreds  of  years 
— can  be  found  in  the  Old  Testament  Ecclesiaslies: 
"To  everything  there  is  a  season,  and  a  time  to 
every  purpose  under  heaven:  A  time  to  be  born, 
and  a  time  to  die;  a  time  to  plant  and  a  time  to 
pluck  up  that  which  is  planted  . . ." 

We  have  almost  a  negligible  control  over  birth 
and  death.  But  we  can  control  the  planting  and 
the  harvesting.  Wc  can  learn  how  to  plant,  and 
where,  and  when  ....  and  why;  and  then  we  will 
know  how  to  harvest  and  where,  and  when  and 
even  why. 


SUNOJ 

G 

A  coll 
mentarv] 

Alle'. 
over  W 
vision   si 

With 
Dr.    Herl 
will  run  I 
June    i; 
ex-ery 
7:30  p. 

"Deut 
credit   ci 
man, 
course. 
three    s« 
graduate 
Accord 
associate 
here,    ll 
designed| 
to  "Lerr 
over  th( 
summer.! 
Dr.    r\ 
for  that 
Alle"   hi 
Those 
course, 
from  th( 
Fundal 
course   i:| 
read    G( 
is    place 
conversa 
mar  is  ll 
Credit! 
Fur  All{ 
Feb.    19.1 
rollment 
date. 

The  Tl 
fundams 
lecture 
tra    feat 
well    as 

Virtual 
will  cenj 
selectior 
which, 
teacher, 
petent 
speakers 


U 


Bring: 
in,  an| 
>ve  c< 


1957 


SUNDAY,  FEBRUARY  3,  1957 


THI  DAILY  TAR  HitL 


FAOt  THIttff 


up  of 

It  goes 

ing  a 

nsh  it 
with, 
—not. 


)resent 
three 
|r.    the 

^rofess- 
ippear- 
lof  chi- 
^s.  and 
ier  in- 
foods." 
ich   an 

hands 
|bol  on 

which 
Ih  sev-' 

other 
kmbina- 
lymbols 

lester's 

?11.  we 

■'there 

from 


ises  as 
ind    al- 

^an  one 
purile 

|ho  will 
?r  who 
.-e   had 

bouldn't 

I't  been 
led  out 
ras:    he 


for  once 

lope   to 

lady   for 

jow  you 

freaking 

fere nee 

in   the 


,'ill  pass 
I  the  pur- 
have  in 
hen  void 
ion.  The 
;y  have 
Ited.  the 


imeasur-' 

>tber  log 

Jive  yoa" 

key  to 

|>m   with' 


let,  said, 
|rhicb  lies 
Jdge.'  SO 
per  se. 
derstand* 


however, 
what  you 
to  get  it. 

lan  lives 
searching. 

removed 


mething". 

me  once) 

from  the 

and     lose 

are  like 

get  lost 

exercising 

ill  lose  all 

will    sup- 

rie^ 


y  go  back 

or ward  by 

thing   to 

within   the 

physically 


hz/e  that  I 

what    men 

Is  of  years 

cclesiasties: 

a   time   to 

to   be   born, 

il  a  time  to 


1  over  birth 
lanting  and 
plant,  and 
len  we  will 
K'hcn       and 


German  Is  Offered  On  TV 


A  college  credit  course  in  ele- 
mentary German  "Dutesch  Fur 
Alle".  will  begin  February  12 
over  WUNC-TV.  educational  tele- 
vision  station   of  the   University. 

With  lectures  twice  weekly  by 
Dr.  Herbert  Reichert.  the  colirse 
will  run  for  18  weeks  through 
June  13.  Lectures  will  be  held 
every  Tuesday  and  Thursday  at 
7:30  p.m. 

'•Deutsch  Fur  Alle'"  is  a  college 
credit  course  in  elementary  Ger- 
man, equivalent  to  the  resident 
course,  German  L  and  carries 
three  semester  hours  of  under- 
graduate credit. 

According  to  the  lecturer,  an 
associate  professor  of  German 
here,  the  course  also  has  been 
designed  as  a  continuation  course 
to  'Lernen  Sie  Deutsch."  offered 
over  the  Chapel  Hill  station  last 
summer. 

Dr.  Reichert  said  it  is  largely 
for  that  reason  that  ''Deutsch  Fur 
Alle"  has  been  entirely  changed. 
Those  who  took  last  summer's 
course,  he  said,  should  bfl(nefit  I 
from  the  new  course. 

Fundamental  purpose  of  the  TV  ■ 
course  is  to  teach  the  student  to  i 
read   German,    but    emphasis   also 
is    placed    on    pronunciation    and 
conversation  and.  therefore,  gram- 
mar is  likewise  undertaken. 

Credit  enrollment  for  "Deutsch 
Fur  Alle"  must  be  completed  by 
Feb.  19.  However,  non-credit  en- 
rollment is  possible  a4  er  thet 
date. 

The  TV  course  is  built  around  a 
fundamental    textbook,    but    each 
lecture  will  in  addition  contain  ex-  j  land,    president 
tra    features    having    cultural    as    of   International 
well    as    linguistic    value. 

Virtually  every  other  lecture 
will  center  about  a  conversational 
selection  taken  from  the  textbook, 
which,  after  discussion  by  the 
teacher,  will  be  enacted  by  com- 
petent speakers.  Some  of  the 
speakers  will  be  native  Germans. 


Variety  Of  Exhibits  Is 
On  Dispiay  In  Library 


Covering  The  Campus 


A  new  display  of  exhibits  has 
be<;n  placed  in  the  library,  accord- 
ing to  Mrs.  Myra  lauterer,  Pre- 
parator  of  Exhibition*  for  Wilson 
Library. 


in     the     Administration  |  UNIVERSITY   SCHOLARSHIPS        !  en  the  Mardi  Gras  attend  a  meet  . 

All  holders  of  scholarships  and  I  ing  Tuesday  at  7   p.m.  in  Roland  i 
scholarships  paid  through  the  Stu- 1  Parker  Lounges  1,  2.  and  3. 
dent    Aid    Office    each    semester  j  PHILOLOGICAL  CLUB 
should  come  to  that  office  during  1      At  a  meeting  of  the  Philological 


The    following 
now  on  display: 


exhibitions    are 


DR.   HERBERT  REICHERT 

.  .  .  Gennan   om   telenision 


•1956  Southern  Books  Compe- 
tition." foyer:  an  exhibition  of 
the  25  winners  in  the  annual  com- 
petition sponsored  by  the  South- 
eastern Library  Association.  This 
year  the  UNC  Press  is  one  of  the 
winners  with  "The  Kenan  Pro- 
fessorships." by  A.  C.  Howell, 
Professor  of  English  here. 

"Contemporary  German  Book 
Design,"  ground  floor:  an  exhibit 
in  three  cases  of  selected  German 
books  of  excellent  design,  print, 
and  binding.  This  traveling  exhibi- 
tion, sponsored  by  the  University 
of;  Kentucky  Library,  will  be  on 
view  throught  out  February.  Cat-  j 
alogs,     written     in     English,   are  I 


Grad  Students 
Have  Chance 
At  Cuban  Grant 

Competition  for  the  Father  Fe- 
lix Varela  Fellowship  for  study 
'in  Cuba  is  open  to  American 
graduate  students,  it  was  an- 
nounced recerttly  by  Kenneth  Hol- 
of  the  Institute 
Education. 

Offered  by  the  Cuban-American 
Cultural  Institute,  the  award 
honors  the  widely-known  Cuban 
educator   who  lived     more     than 


SHOWN  IN  CARROLL  HALL: 


■\ 


half  his  life  in  the  United  States  i  Frida\    February  8 


GM  Spring  Free  Flick 
Schedule  Is  Announced 

The  Graham  Memorial  Activities  Board  Free  Flick  schedule  Tor 
the  spring  semester  has  been  released  by  Miss  Linda  Mann,  GM  di- 
rector. Free  Flicks  are  shown  at  7:30  and  10  p.m.  in  Carroll  Hall  on 
the  dates  stated  below. 

The  complete  semesters  schedule  is  as  follows:  . .'"_    ,  ' 

Fridaj    February  1 

The  Cruel  Sea:  Jack  Hawkins.  Donald  Sinden.  Virginia  McKenna. 
Saturday,  February  2 

Take  Care  Of  My  Little  Girl:  Jeanne  Crain.  Mitzi  Gaynor. 


available 
Office. 

"Western  Books  1956,"  main 
floor,  in  three  cases:  a  traveling 
exhibition  of  49  books  to  be 
shown  here  only  through  Feb. 
15.  This  is  the  15th  Annual  West- 
ern Book  Show  consisting  of  books 
chosen  for  typographical  excell- 
ence, which  were  submitted  by 
printers  and  publishers  in  British 
Columbia  and  Hawaii  as  well  as 
from  the  western  states.  Twenty- 
five  trade  books  are  balanced  by 
24  fine  or  limited  editions. 

"Robert  E.  Lee  Sesquicentennial: 
1807-1«57."    foyer. 

"Woodrow  Wilson  Centennial: 
1856-1956,"  main  floor,  in  four 
cases. 

"Books-of -the- Week."  foyer.  Jan. 
28:  "Robert  Russa  Maton  of 
Hampton  and  Tuskegee."  edited  by 
W'illiam  H.  Huges  and  Frederick 
D.  Patterson;  published  by  the 
UNC  Press.  Feb.  4:  "Community 
Organization:  Action  and  Inac- 
tion," by  Floyd  Hunter.  Ruth  Con- 
nor Schaffer  and  Cecil  G.  Sheps; 
published  by  the  UNC  Press. 


ney  of  the  Dept.  of  History  wHl 
present  "Medieval  Medk^  Illus- 
tratiens  in  Non-Medical  Manu- 
scripts" in  Faculty  Lounge.  More' 
fcead  Planetarium,  Tuesday  at  7;30 
p.m. 

QUARTERLY   STAFF 

I  The  staff  of  the  Carolina  Quar- 
terly will  meet  in  the  Quarterly 
office  this  afternoon  at  3  to  rea'J 


Fqb.    1-8    to   pick    up    scholarship  i 
j  ticketj^  or  checks   for   the   spring 

semester. 

Students  holding  part-time  jobs 

awarded  by  the  Student  Aid  Office 
!  or   under    its   jurisdiction    should 

come  by  during  the  week  February 
I  1-11  to  renew  their  job  assign- 
1  ments. 

MARDI   GRAS  WORK 

Jim  Armstrong,  chairman  of  the 
Carolina  Mardi  Gras,  has  asked 
that  persons  interested  in  working 


Club.  Professor  Loren  C.  MacKin- }  proof  for  the  forthcoming  issue. 


I  SERVE  YOURSELF— 


EVERY  SUNDAY 


5:30-7:30  P.M. 


BUFFET 

RANCH    HOUSE 

HOME  OF  CHOICE  HICKORY-SMOKED  CHARCOAL  BROILED  STEAKS 


Mr.  and  Mrs.  Don   Belton 


of  the 


Left  Holding 
The  Bag? 

Bring  your  dropped  texts 
in,  and  we'll  salvage  what 
we  can  for  you. 

The  Intimate 
Bookshop 

205  E.  Franklin  St. 
Open  Till  10  P.  M. 


as  Auxiliary  Bishop  of  Baltimore 
and  New  York. 

The  fellowship  iii  for  study  at 
the  University  of  Havana  during 
the    1957-58   academic   year. 

Closing  date  for  the  competi- 
tion is  April  1.  1957.  The  award 
covers  tuition  and  most  mainten- 
ance expenses.  The  successful  ap- 
plicant must  provide  his  own 
travel,  jslus  funds  for  incidentals 
and    other  expenses. 

Candidates  in  the  fields  of  phi- 
losophy. Spanish  and  Spanish- 
.Am.erican  literature,  history,  edu- 
cation, social  sciences,  and  law 
are  preferred.  Preferences  will  be 
given  to  students  under  30  years 
of  age  not  primarily  interested  in 
research. 

Applications  may  be  secured 
from  the  Institute  of  Internation- 
al Education  in  New  York  City  or 
its   regional     offices    in     Chicago. 


I 


Phone 

9-2681 

Located    over 

Sutton't 
Drug  Store 


Typewriting 
Shorthand 

New  term  begins  Feb.  4 
Register  now. 


town   classes 

tor    co//»Ce    men    »nd    womon 

Chapel  Hill,  North  Carolina 


It  Happens  Every  Spring:  Ray  Milland.  Jean  Peters.  Paul  Douglas. 
PYiday,  February  22 

The  Wild  Ones:   Marlon  Brando, 
Saturday,  February  23  '         „. 

Decision  Before  Dawn:  Hildcgardc  Ncff,  Gary  Merill. 
Friday,  March  1  '■ 

The  Mudlark:  Alec  Guinness,  Irene  Dunne..       .  i 

Friday.  March  8 

Pandora  And  The  Flying  Dutchman:  Ava  Gardiner.  James  Mason. 
Wedneo-day.  March  13 

A  Tree  Grows  In  Brooklyn:  Dorothy  McGuirc,  James  Dunn. 
Friday,  March  15 

Unchained:   Elroy  (Crazy-Legs)  Hirsch.  Barbara  Hale. 
Saturday,  March  16 

The  Crimson  Piiale:   Burl  Lancaster.  E^'a   Bartok. 
Tuesday.  March  19 

New  Faces:  Eartha  Kitl.  Ronnie  Graham,  and  the  rest  of  the  origin- 1 
al  cast. 
Saturday,  March  23 

Blackboard  Jungle:  Glen  Ford,  Louis  Calhern. 
Friday,  March  29 

Executive  Suite:  William  Holden.  June  .\llyson,  Barbara  Stanwyck, 
Fredric  March.  Walter  Pidgeon.  Shelley  Winters,  Paul  Douglas.  Louis 
Calhern.  •   ■  .*■ 

Friday,  April  12     '"  ' 

Birth  Of  A  Nation:  Yankee.  Go  Home!!!  Confederate  Day. 
Saturday,  April  13 

The  Band  Wagon:  Fred  Astaire,  Cyd  Charisse;  Color. 
Friday,  April  26  .  '" 

Kismet:  Ann  Blyth.  Howard  Keel.  Dolores  Gray;  Color.      '- 
Saturday.  April  27 

The  High  And  The  Mighty:  John  Wayne,  Laraine  Day;  Color. ' 

Friday,  May  3  . 

South  Sea  Woman:  Virginia  Mayo.  Burt  Lanca^-ter.  !.«.' jI-  t. > 
Saturday,  May  4  .""■    / 

\         People  Will  Talk:  Jeanne  Crain,  Cary  Grant.  "'> 

j  Friday,  May  10 

j  The  Green  Pastures:  Rex  Ingram.         H  ^    .    *    * 

Saturday,  May  11 

Seven  Brides  For  Seven  Brothers:  Jane  Powell,  Howell  Kcelj  Color. 
Friday  May  17  •»."'", 

Titanic:  Clifton  Webb,   Barbara  Stanwyck. 
Friday.  May  24 

Battle  Cry:  Tab  Hunter,  Van  Heflin.  Aldo  Ray;  Color 


Wesley  Players  To  Hold 
Tryouts  For  Play  Roles 

The  Wesley  Players  will  hold 
trj-outs  for  the  one-act  drama, 
"This  Night  Shall  Pass,"  tomorrow 
and  Tuesday  at  5  p.m.  in  the  Wes- 
ley Lounge  of  the  University  Meth- 
odist Church.  All  interested  per- 
sons have  been  urged  to  attend,   i 


If  He  Really 
Loves  You 
Hell  Give 
You  a  Book 

The  Intimate 
Bookshop 

205  E.  Frankfin  St. 


CAROLINA  COFFEE  SHOP 


'-— /  i  .  .^  ^• 


CORDIALLY    INVITE   EVERYONE 

.    4  s-    ^'  ■  '  to    have   a 

^'  '^        "^  MEAL   WITH   THEM 

AT   WHICH    TIME    FAVORS   WILL    BE    GIVEN 
ORCHIDS  FOR  THE   LADIES  .  .  .  PENS  FOR  THE  MEN 
-     •    •,  (as  long  as  they  last)  '  ..   -. 


FREE 


ALSO 


ICE  CREAM  WITH   EVERY  AAEAL 


NEW  SUNDAY  HOURS: 
BREAKFAST  -  9  A.M.  UNTIL  10:30  A.M. 
DINNER  -  1 1:45  A.M.  UNTIL  7:30  P.M. 

CONTINUING  THE  SAME  GOOD  QUALITY  FOOD, 
REASONABLE  PRICES  AND  EXCELLENT  SERVICE  .  . 


138  E.  Franklin  Street 


Phone  5436 


f 


Modern ! 


Pick  the  Pack  that  Suits  You  Best ! 


^H>>s' 


_A       L^M  BOX 


*l 


©^^fike 


HAIR    GROOM 
TONIC 


IN    UNBREAKABLE 
PLASTIC  I 

Grooms  your  hair  while  it  treats  your 
scalp.   Controls   loose   dandruff.    1.00 

SHULTON       N«>»  York     •     Toronto 


fife  Loss  Total 
InChapstlHj^ 
Hfihedin'56^ 

Fire  damage  in  Chapel  Hill  de- 
creased 50  pef  cent  in  195d  over! 
the  previous  year.  ** 

A   total    damage    of   $3S.686   in  j 
95  alarms  and  fires  to  whicli  the  j 
Department  resjJondcd  durihg  the  | 
year  was  reported  by  Chief  J.  S. 
Boone  in  his  annual  tally  of  fire 
losses  here.  This  was  considerably 
under  the  average  annual  damage 
for  the  last   four  yearK'-^48,021. 
Here  ar?  the  individual  year  totals } 
during  this  period:  1933— $68,617;  i 
1954-^18,525;    1953— $68,258;  and' 
1956— $36,686.  | 

The  breakdown     on     types     of ; 
alarms  showed  there  were  69  by 
phone.  23  by  automatic  box,  and 
three  verbal.   Eight  alarms  were 
sounded   for   the.  Greater  Chtpel' 
Hill     (Suburban)     Fire     District, 
which   was  organized  during  the  I 
ycar.s  There   were  alito   two  ta\sAl 
alarms.  '  ' 

Chief  Boone  reported  that  two! 
firemen  attended  the  Fire  School  { 
in  Charlotte  and  otte  man  at-  j 
temled  the  Institute  of  G^rerw- j 
mcnfs  Arson  School  here  during  I 
the  year,  and  that  call  mm  ^f  the  j 
Department  responded  to  72  per 
cent  of  all  alarms. 


'    V 


■V. 


e  19S7,  LiccETT  •  Mraw  ToMcco  Cow 


Smoke  modern  L^M  and  always  get 

full  exciting  f  I  d vo  r 


...PLUS  THE  PURE  WHITE  MIRACLE  TIP 


with  L*M  .  . .  and  only  L*M  . . .  can  you  pick  tha  pack 
that  suits  you  bast.  And  only  L*M  gives  you  th« 
flavor ...  the  full,  exciting  flavor  that 

AMERICA'S  FAsresr  GftowfNO  etGARerre 


^A«l  POUII 


THl  DAILY  TAR  MBIL 


SUKDAY,  FEBRUARY  3,  1957 


Grapplers  Drop  Match  To  VPI,  Frosh  Cagers  Whip  Bui  lis 

~*  Kepley's 


Drop 


Wrestlers 
First 
Tilt,  29-5 

Virginia  Tech's  all  -  powerful  ■ 
wrestling  team,  king  of  the  South-  i 
ern  Conference  mats  for  many; 
years,  handed  North  Carolina's  up- 
start Tar  Heels  their  first  setback; 
of  the  season  last  night  in  Blacks- 
burg,  Va..  whipping  the  Carolin- 
ians 29-5  in  a  runaway  match. 

It  was  the  first  loss  of  the  sea- 
son for  Coach  Sam  Barnes'  ACC 
entry,  while  it  was  consecutive 
victory  number  20  for  the  Gob- 
blers. They  have  won  four  matches 
this  season. 

The  outclassed  Tar  Heels  man- 
aged only  one  win,  that  coming 
in  the  177  lb.  class  where  McGhee 
pinned  Burruss  in  2:48.  Undefeat- 
ed UXC  ace  Bob  Wagner  met  his 
downfall  in  the  person  of  Bran- 
don Glover.  VPI  star  who  had  pin- 
ned three  straight  opponents  go- 
ing into  last  night's  match.  And 
Wagner  was  no  exception. 

In  a  preliminary  to  tJie  main 
event,  the  VPI  freshmen  edged 
Carolina.  20-18.  in  a  match  that 
was  decided  when  Carolina  was 
forced  to  forfeit  the  heavyweight 
match.  j 

The  varsity  summary:  ! 

123— Bowman.  VPI.  decisioned 
Rhyne.  16-4. 

130 — Glover,  VPI,  pinned  Wag- 
ner. 1:09. 

l37_Ty)or.  VPI,  decisioned  Hen- 
derson. 10-4. 

147_Vandevender,  VPI.  pinner 
Boyette,  0:38. 

157— Smith,  VPI.  pinner  Hoke. 
3:47 

167— Vaughn.  VPI.  decisioned, 
Atkinson,  6-4. 

177_McGeehee.  N.  C.  pinned 
Burruss.  2:48. 

HeavTweight  —  R.  Wright.  VPI, 
pinned  Hayes.  1:29. 


^'f  f;^  li  |Ji<n^  jsii^-i^S" 


i>  ,..i^t»^  4q|fc.niH.>.«iwg, '•<»S9a«fJ«lpSa"«**^«3'(rT"'"~"' 


■\ 


■m: 


jKjS^  *v.,-  ^.^ 


Students  May 


"I  Have  A  Feeling  rm  Being  Followed' 
HATHAWAY.  RADOVICH  MISSING 


Get  uNC-wake  Young  May 

Ducats  Monday  ^  ' 

For  League 


Starting  tomorrow  morning, 
passbook  holdors  whoso  names 
bogin  with  tho  lottort  A  through 
L  may  pick  up  thoir  Carolina- 
Duko  gam*  ticktts  at  tho  Wool* 
Ion  Gym  box  office.  Th««e  peo- 
ple will  have  special  priority  un- 
til the  box  office  closes  at  4:30 
Wednesday  afternoon.  After  that 
tinve,  tickets  will  be  issued  on  • 
first  come  first  served  basN  up 
until  game  time  Saturday  night. 

Also  during  the  same  Monday 
through  Wednesday  period,  stu- 
dents w^ose  names  begin  with 
the  letters  M  through  Z  must 
pick  up  their  tickets  to  the  Car- 
olina-Wake Forest  game  at  the 
box  office.  Beginnihg  Thursday, 
these  tickets  will  also  go  on  e 
first  come  f ifst  served  basis.  The 
UNC-Wake  clash  is  set  for  Feb. 
13.  All  tickets  to  the  State-UNC 
geme  will  be  issued  9n  a  first 
come  first  served  beeis. 


Rejoin 
Stretch 


Cagers 
Drive 


29  Paces  ^ 
Tar  Babies 

I  By  LARRY  CHEEK 

Carolina's  Tar  Babies  answered 
a  sudden  scoring  spurt  by  Bullis  | 
Prep  School  here  last  night  with 
a  savage  burst  of  their  own  to : 
rack  up  a  93-78  decision  in  a  bit- ; 
tcrly  fought  battle  played  before  | 
a  large  turnout  in  Woollen  Gym. 

The  Tar  Babie.;  took  the  lead  at 
the  opening  whistle  and  held  it 
all  the  way,  but  it  took  some  clutch 
.i^hooting  by  stringbean  center  Diqk  j 
Kcpley  and  forward  Lee  Shaffer  to  j 
maintain  the  status  quo.  i 

\V'ith_  11  minutes  left  in  the! 
;,'amc,  Bullis  had  closed  the  gap| 
to  cnly  four  points,  69-65,  and  ap-  ^ 
peared  well  on  their  way  to  an 
upset  with  thoir  skillful  fast  break  | 
ai.  J  ball  hawking.  But  then  Larese  ^ 
and  Kepley  began  to  hit,  and  with 
a  little  help  from  their  teammates, 
they  stretched  the  margin  up  to 
8G-70.  This  was  too  much  to  over- 
come, and  the  prep.sters  ^Aiccumb- 
ed  by  the  final  15  point  margin, 
S3-78.  ' 

Kepley.  6-9  youth  from  Roanoke,  i 
Va..  -took  high  .scoring  honors  for , 
the  night  with  29  points.  Lare.se,! 
hitting  with  deadly  accuracy  on  a ' 
variety  of  long  one  banders,  com- 
piled 22  while  the  big  blond,  LeCj 
Shaffer,  had  20.  Guard  John  Crot- 
ly  also  hit  in  double  figures  with 

10.  ■  ! 

Shaffer  ^ot   the   Tar  Babies  off 
to  an  early  lead   by  hitting   11   of 
Ihe  first   13  points  .sc.)red  by  Car-  j 
ulina  to  make  the  tally  read  13-8. 
Kepley  chipped  in  with   a  couple,  i 
but   Bullis  rallied  at  this  point  toj 
close  the  gap  to  only  3  points,  21- 
18. 

The    Larese     hit     two    long    one 
hai.ders  to  build  up  a  7  point  mar- 
'  gin,    and    the    Tar    Babies    quickly 
1  ran  it  up  to  43-28.  Then  the  .vubs 
I  took  over  and  the    halftime  score 
I  narrowed  to  48-40. 
!      Bullis  rallied  in  the  second  half, 
but  could  not  close  the  gap.  Guard 
I  Lou  Lace  pumped  in  26  points   to 
I  take    high   scoring   honors   for   the 
prepsters.     while     Carolina    bouod 
center  Dough  Moe  collected  23. 
THE  BOX: 


MiilcMes  Top  Duke 

•  ANNAPOLIS,  Md.— <yp>— Sepho- 
meret  Okk  Johnson  and  John 
Mescel^  stepped  off  the  bench 
yMterday  to  lead  Navy's  basket- 
ball f*«m  to  a  71-69  overtime  vic- 
tory over  Duke. 

It  WM  Navy's  first  victory 
since  19$1  ever  Duke,  which 
w*s  ranked  19th  nationally  in 
this  w*«lt's  AP  pell. 


Howard  Johnson  Restaurant 

BREAKFAST 


LUNCH 


DINNER 


SNACKS 
''Landmark  For  Hungry  Tarheels'' 


CLASSIFIEDS 


FOR  BENT:  FURNISHED:  TWO 
rooms  and  bath  (used  as  two 
bedrooms  or  as  bedroom  and 
living  i»om) — private  entrance. 
Completely  and  attractively 
furnished.  Near  Hospital.  Call 
9-1761  for  appointment. 

LOST— GOLD  BENRUS  "CITA- 
tion"  Men's  Wrist  Watch.  Night 
of  January  29th.  Reward.  George 
Lawrence.  Psychology  Dept.  or 
phone  9-2471. 


WM^  M0S.«.fT5i.V"ou*-*aScf»«r.  Ptay  by  MAXWELL  ANDERSON  and  ANGU$  Ma^/taJL' 
(fiviiKn  wmor-  . Directed  b>  ALFRED  HITCHCOCK 


FOR  SALE:  HOUSETRAILER;  35 
feet,  2  bedrooms,  shower.  1950 
Iron  wood.  Taylors  Trailer  Ct. 
Airport  Rd.,  J.  L.   Lane. 


Hafer,  Maglio 
Pay  Penalties 

RALEIGH— ( AP )  —  Payment  of 
more  than  than  $200  in  student 
parking  tickets  yesterday  cleared 
the  way  for  co-captains  Cliff  Haf- 
er and  John  Maglio  to  lead  the 
North  Carolin  '  State  basketball 
squad  against  Clemson  last  night. 

The  two  athletes  delayed  settle- 
ment of  the  tickets  for  on-campu.s 
parking  violations  until  shortly  be- 
fore noon,  when  the  college  busi- 
ijess  office  closed.  Failure  to  meet 
the  deadline  would  have  made 
them  ineligible  to  play  in  last 
nights  Atlantic  Coast  Conference 
game. 

Maglio.  a  guard,  had  been  tab- 
bed with  $132  in  parking  tickets. 
Hafer.  a  forward,  had  accumulated 
$102    worth 


By    LARRY    CHEEK 

North  Carolina's  number  one 
ranked  Tar  Heels,  their  bench 
thinned  by  the  locs  of  two  front 
line  reserves,  may  receive  help 
from  an  unexpected  quarter  in 
the  torrid  conference  stretch 
drive  that  i.s  yet  to  come. 

The  key  man  in  this  case  in 
Bob  Young,  a  6-6  senior  who 
was  suspended  by  Coach  Frank 
McGuire  before  the  season  start- 
ed for  disciplinary  reasons. 
Young  is  now  set  to  rejoin  his 
teammates  for  the  la.-X  few  weeks 
of  action  if  his  credits  are 
enough  to  make  him  eligible. 
According  to  a  reliable  source, 
the  verdict  on  whether  or  not  he 
will  play  will  be  reached  tomor- 
row. 

The  return  of  Young  would 
do  much  to  fill  the  hole  left 
by  Bill  Hathaway.  6-11  sopho- 
more center  who  pulled  up  stakes 
after  flunking  out  of  school 
and  enrolled  at  the  University  of 
Dayton.  Hathaway  enrolled  at  the 
Dayton  night  .school  to  make  up 
courses,  he  will  be  admitted  to 
regular  school  next   fail. 

Also  missing  from  the  UNC 
lineup    this    semester    \a    Tony 


Radovich,  eagle  eye  guard  wh'j  ♦ 
many  considered  to  be  the  team's 
best  shot.  Radovich  used  up  his 
eligibility  last  semester,  and 
will  .assist  in  coaching  the  fresh- 
man team  until  season's  end. 


FUTURE  TEACHERS 


The    big    one    comes    up 


The  Frank  Porter  Graham  Chap- 
ter   of    the    Future   Teachers    will 
have  a  panel  discussion  on  experi- 
ences in  "Student  Teaching. "  The 
for   I  meeting  wil  be  in  the  Peabody  Cur- 


Coach  McGuire'.-r  dribble  dandle 
Tuesday  night  in  College  Park. 
Md.,  when  they  tangle  with  the 
upset  minded  Maryland  Terp,> 
on  the  Terps  home  floor.  That's 
the  court  where  the  other  three 
Big  Four  teams.  Wake  Forest, 
State  and  Duke,  met  disaster  at 
the  hands  of  Coach  Bud  .Milli- 
kan's  well  trained  squad. 

To  prepare  for  this  important 
trip  north,  the  Tar  Heels  have 
played  in  one  game  since  beat- 
ing State  almost  three  weeks 
ago.  And  that  one  was  against  a 
stage  fright  stricken  Western 
Carolina  team  at  Cullowhee  last 
Wednesday  night.  The  final  score 
was  77-59  as  Lennie  Rosenbluth 
hit  26  points  to  lead  the  way. 

After  the  Maryland  clash,  the 
Carolinians  can  look  forward  to 
a  two  §ame  stand  on  their  home 
grounds.  They  meet  Duke  here 
Saturday  night  and  Wake  Forest 
here   the    following   Wednesday. 


"^    :  riculum  Lab  at  8  p..m.  Monday. 


R,  D.  Redfern,  Extension  dairy  j 
specialist  at  State  College,  says  ' 
manufacturiu'g  milk  is  milk  from  | 
clean,  healthy  cows,  produced  in  j 
a  clean  barn,  under  approved  san- ' 
itary  methods.  It  \<f  used  to  make 
butter,  cheese,  condensed  milk, 
dry  milk  powder,  ahd  ice  cream,    i 


PATRONIZE  YOUR 
•    ADVERTISERS    • 


CAROLINA 

G 

F 

PF 

TP 

Larese.  f 

10 

2 

4 

22 

Shaffer,  f 

7 

6 

5 

20 ' 

Poole,  f 

2 

1 

0 

5 

McCracken,  f 

0 

0 

1 

0 

Kepley,   c 

12 

5 

2 

29 

Ainslic,  c 

0 

0 

0 

0| 

Crotty.  g 

5 

0 

3 

10 

Graham,  g 

1 

0 

3 

2 

Steppe,  g 

2 

0 

5 

4 

Crutchfield.  g 

0 

1 

0 

1 

Totals 

39 

13 

23 

93 

BULLIS 

G 

F 

PP 

TP 

McAteer,  f 

0 

2 

0 

2 

Mack,  f 

0 

0 

0 

0 

Booth,  f 

3 

0 

0 

6 

Lamond.  f 

1 

0 

0 

2 

Moe,  c 

8 

7 

4 

23 

Kavanagh,  c 

0 

0 

0 

0 

Zayotti,  g 

0 

1 

1 

1 

Dunn,  g 

3 

0 

5 

Luce,  g 

8 

10 

4 

26 

Reidy,  g 

5 

2 

1 

12 

Totals 

28 

22 

15 

78 

DAILY    CROSSWORD 


Mural  Cage  Teams  End 
Regular  Season  Play 


Intramural  basketball  moves  in 
to  the  final  week  of  regular  play 
Monday  afternoon  with  a  full 
schedule  to  begin  at  4  o'clock.  The 
two  top  teams  in  each  league  will 
Both    are    stars    for !  then  battle  it  out  for  the  division 


championships. 


Coach  Everett  Case's  Wolfpack. 
The  boys  had  a  talk  yesterday 
with  Dr.  Carej-'H.  Bostian,  college  ;  These  final  games  will  be  the 
chancellor.  He  told  them  no  ex- 1  deciding  contests  as  to  who  will 
ceptions  would  be  made  to  a  re-  [  represent  each  of  the  leagues  in 
quirement   that     the     tickets     be ;  the  playoffs.  The  leagues  are  com- 


paid  before  students  receive  a 
permit  to  register  for  the  new  ae- 
mester. 


posed,  of  either  five  or  six  teams. 
Play  is  on  a  round  robin  basis. 
There  will  probably  be  a  necessi- 
ty of  several  play-off  contents  to 
Manager  Meeting         i  decide     the     two     representative 

Intramural   managers   will    hold  j  ^^""^',  ^^^f  ?"''  *'u  ^  ''^^'^' 
^  '  uled  for  Monday,     February     11. 

Drawings   for   the   single  elimina- 


their  first  meeting  of  the  new  sem- 
ester Monday  night  at  7:30  in 
room 


301-A  Woollen  Gym.  Entries  |  *'°"  tournament  play  will  be  held 
are  due  in  soccer,  badminton  and  °"  f„.^^^  ^^  ^f.  ^founced  by 
^ot«r  ««io  B-„«,i  i ^ont  ii.^c  I  ^^^  »ntramural  office  foUowmg  the 


water  polo.  Several  important  items 
of  important  buiine^  will,  be 
brought  before  thf  group. 


play-off  games. 
Winners  of  the  White  and  Blue 


Fraternity  divisions  and  the  win- 
ner of  the  Dormitory  division  will 
then  battle  it  out  for  the  campus 
championship.  T.MA  is  the  de- 
fending  champion. 

Outlaw  and  Church  league  play 
is* getting  into  full  swing.  These 
newly  organized  leagues  "will  not 
be  completed  for  several  weeks 
yet.  The  Outlaw  league  is  com- 
posed of  10  teams  and  the  Church 
league  has  six  member  teams. 

Students  are  cordially  invited 
to  attend  these  games  and  cheer 
their   team    to   victory. 


Soccer  Clinic  Set 

Soccer  officials  are  needed  l^  { 
the  intramural  department.  Persons 
interested  in  officiating  soccer  are 
requested  to  sign  up  at  the  office 
in  315  Woollen  Gym.  The  clinic 
will  be  held  Monday  and  Tuesday, 
Feb.  11  and  12, 


ACROSS 

1.  Genuine 

5  Garden 
amphibian 
:  •  Great  Lake 
1 10.  Island  - 
I       Napoleon's 
I       exile 
[11.  Grudge 
{12.  Oxlike 

antelope 
1 14.  Fowl 
(IS.  Posture 
•  1«.  River   (Lat) 
;  17.  Persian 
ruler 

19.  River 
(Eng  ) 

20.  Burned 
.22.  String: 

2,3.  Shore  recess 

24.  Chinese 
dynasty 

25.  Final 
27.  Pendant 

ornament 

30.  Past 

31.  Young  horse 

32.  Possessive 
pronoun 

33.  Evergreen 
tree 

35.  Thrice 
(mus.) 
3«. A  sense 
37.  Worship 
3».  TheHiro- 
ahima  bomb 
40.  Part  of 
a  plane 
1 41.  Stitches 
42.  Fencing: 
sword 
DOWN 
1.  Abrogation 
S.Ireland 


3  River  islet 

4.  Sheltered 
side 

5.  Incisors 

6  Bulging  jar 
7.  Deserts 
8  Ray 
Bolger 
11  Chases  ball 

(colloq.> 
13.  Feat 
15.  Unhappy 

17.  Strike 

18.  Excla. 
mation 

21.  Disused 
22  Throw 


24.  Man  s 
nick- 
name 

25.  Labors 
tories 
(Short- 
ened) 

26  Liz- 
ards 

27.  Mal« 
cat 

tS  Ap- 
pear 

29  Stringed 
instrument 

31.  Soothes 

34  Delay 


aC3HHnHH    fJL'9 

HHtana  Honaa 


Satardsy'*  Aaaw«r 

35.  Resiiiency 
3".  Solemn 
wonder 
38.  Immerse 


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205  E.  Franklin  St. 


Open  Till  10  P.M. 


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Serials   Dept. 
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8-31- 


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HONOR 

When  in  s«cr*t,  on*  may  worry. 
Sto  oditorial,  p»g*  2. 


VOL.  LVII  NO.  fO 


Complete  OP)  Wire  Strviee 


CHAPEL  HILL/NORTH  CAROLINA,  TUESDAY,  FEBRUARY  5,  19S7 


Offices   tit   Graham   Memorial 


FOUR    PAGES  THIS  iSSUt 


Last  'Duke   Painting  Still  Remains 
On  Library;  Maintenance  'Surprised 

Work  Thought 


Completed 
Last  November 

By   WALTER   SCHRUNTEK 

When  will  the  last  'Duki' "  paint- 
ing bi^  removed  from  the  entrance 
of  Wilson  Library? 

According  to  G41cs  Horney.  UNC 
mainlenarcc  .upcrvisor.  the  work 
was  supposed  to  have  been  com- 
pleted last  ."Vwveinbcr.  He  express 
ed  surprise  at  the  knowledge  that 
the  entrance  of  the  librar>-  still 
bears  the  remains  of  last  Novem- 
ber's vandalism  which  marked  nu- 
mcroii.-.  campus  sites.  includini>  the 
pilla  •  jI"  Morchcad  Planetarium 
aod  the  Old  Well. 

Horney  felt  that  the  "  Duke  ' 
painlin;^  on  the  entrance  of  the 
library  has  remained  during  these 
past  months  as  the  result  of  :i 
serious  oversight.  He  said  that  he 
will  set  his  crtws  to  work  imme- 
diately on  correcting  a  situation 
which  has  existed  as  a  campus 
eyi.     re  these  past  several  months. 

The  work,  he  said,  will  require 
special  attention  because  of  the 
nature  of  limestone.  Each  case  of 
defacement  requires  separate  at- 
tention and  treatment,  but  Horney 
felt  that  the  same  process  used^ 
on  the  columns  of  the  planetarium 
would  remove  the  paint  now  on 
the  library  wall.  | 

Work    is    expected    to    start    to-  j 
day. 


!^i  j^O 


'Dxtke'  art 


THE  LIBRARY  FRONT 

t'uit    K«7,s-    thought    qone    since 


Norciiiher 


Sfucffent  Fined 
By  Court  For 
Cross  Burnmg 

William    P.   Cheshire.    L  NC   stu- 
dent   from    Hillsboro.    was      fined 


Law  Grant 
Interviews 
On  Friday 

I 

\  Dr.  Brainard  Currie  of  the 
.University  .of  Chicago  School  of 
Law  will  be  here  Friday  to  inter- 
view prospects  for  law  school  ' 
scholarships  there,  according  to 
the   UNC    Placement    Service.  ! 

Dr.  Currie  will  be  at  the  Place- 
ment Service,  204  Gardner,  from 
10  a.m.  to  4  p.m.  to  talk  with 
Interested   students. 

For  the  second  year  the  Univer.s-  ' 
\Xy  of  Chicago  Scho;>I  of  Law  is 
offering  a  three  -  year  $1500  per 
year  tuition  scholarship.  The 
scholarship  is  autom-itically  ret- 
ncwable  for  the  second  and  third 
years  upon  satisfactory  completion 
of  the  first  year. 
,  Interested  students  have  been 
asked  to  make  an  appointment  at 
the  Placement  Service  beforehand. 
Those  who  cannot  g.i  by  should 
call  in  their  appointment  at  9-3751. 
according  lothe  Placement  Ser- 
vice. 

Thos?    students    who    have    not 
decided    where    they    want    to    go  i 
but  want  to  go  to  law  school  have 
been  asked  to  see  Dr.  Currie. 

Anyine  desiring  more  informa- 
tion has  been  asked  to  check  with 
anyone  in  th?  Placement  Service. 


Heard  Accepts 
For  Year's 


Post 


Teaching, 
Research  At  Harvard 


Year's  Absence  Leave 
Was  Effective  Feb.  / 

Dr.  .\k\;uultr  Hc.iKtl.  piok.s.sDi  ol  |x>liti(al  science  at 
l.\C"..  has  aiupttd  ,\  \W\l'nvj,  rcscan  h  jirorcvNorsliij}  at  Ilai- 
\ar(l    luivfrsity. 

Mf  will  be  on  leave  ol  ;;l>seii(c  Ironi  his  duties  at  Chapel 
Hill  lur  one  year,  effeitivf  Pel),  i.  ic)-,7,  it  has  been  au- 
iioiimed   joinllv  bv  MaiNaid   rniveisit)   and   INC". 

Rumor  has  been  persistent  in  ^y^.^^  ^|„  ,^  ^^„  ;„  jy^.  ^hen 
the  past  few  weeks  that  Dr.  Chancellor  Robert  House  retires. 
Heard  is  being  considered,  along      TO  COMPLETE    BOOK 


DR.    HEARD 
.  Harvard  visitor 


with  several  others  from  the  Uni- 
versity and  out-of-state,  for  the 
position  of  chancellor  here.  A 
committee  of  the  Consolidated 
University  is  currently  interview- 
ing   prospects    for    the  j>osition. 


Over  WUNC-TV 


Coed  Improves 
Elections   Board   Head   From  Holiday 

Doubts  Law  Efficiency  '  "*°    '^  °^ 


Broadvision  Will  Cover 
Games  With  Duke,  Wake 


By    NEIL    BASS 

Elections  Board  Chairman  Ralph 


Revolt  Hinted 

BUD.\PEST  ~  ^  —  Hungary's 
Soviet-supported  premier  took 
note  Monday  of  signs  that  a  new 
Hungarian  revolt  may  break  out 
in   March. 

In  a  speech  made  at  Salgotarjan 
and  broadcast  by  Budapest  Radio. 
Premier  Janos  Kadar  said  the 
revolutinary  movement  has  mov- 
ed from  the  towns  to  the  villages 
and  farms. 

,.  He  called  on  Hungarians  to  be 
"watchful,  for  though  the  coun 
ter-revelution  has  been  broken,  it 
can    still    incite    disturbances." 

Kadar  told  the  communist  mili- 
tia it  should  '"beat  down  only  the  ', 
counter-revclutijcnaries      and      noi 
make  a  public  show  of  strength." 

His  speech  came  as  Budapest 
university  students  returned 
quietly  to  classes  with  a  new  form 
of  greeting:  'Mak."  The  three  let- 
ters are  initials  of  a  Hungarian 
phra.se  meaning.  "We'll  start 
esain   in   March." 

Underscoring  the  mutterings 
v.as  a  disclosure  that  weapons 
CAchcs  are  being  found  daily  in 
Budapest   university   buildings. 

A  student  dem«ns*rafion  last 
(K-t.   23   led   to   the   first   violence 

(See  WORLD  NEWS,  Page  3) 


SIO  and  coJts. in  County  Recorder  s    Cummings  said    Monday   night   he 
Jourt    yesterday    moraing    as    thefwaa.  "uncertain  j>*the  •fiieieiicy"  i 

tirst    person    to    be    tried    for    vio- 
"ation      of    the    State's      anti-cross    places    ballot 
)urning  law.  dormitories. 


areas  to  determine  platform  plank 
for  the  coming  sprinn  election: 

Joel     Fleishman.  John      Broolu, 


Stella    Anderson,     junior    from 

West   Jefferson    injured    in   a    pre- 

Christmas  automobile   accident,   is 

reported  to  be  making  progress  to- 

'"*•  I  ward  recoverj-. 


„      „     _ Qardxer  Foley,  Gar>  Greer.  «'-"— ^^y  ■ 

of  the 'current  "klpcti'ons  Law  which  James.    Miss    Babs    Moore.    DavidT    "'Her  mother  wrote  me  that  she 

Laxes    in    individual  Evans.  Don  Furtado  and  John  R^.    is    improving."    reported    Dean    of    '^n   «^om   ano   \mii   siari 
t    '  i  Women   Katherine  Carmichael. 

Appointed  to  succeed  Fleishman 

The  defendant,  represented     by        Cummings  was  guest  speaker  at  as  Social  Committee  chairm:in  waj ;      Miss    Anderson    asked    that    the 

iitorncy  Percy   Hcade  of  Durham,    the     regularly  scheduled     Monday  M»ss  Phyliss  Krafft. 
ilcaded     nolo  contendere   to     thv    night   Student  Party  meeting. 


charge,  before  Judge  L.  J.  Phipps.  Elaborating,  Cummings  referred 
'heshire  presented  several  char  to  "discrepancies"  which  occurred 
icter  witnesses   but   did    not   take    during  the  past  fall  election  over 


the  stand  in  hij  own  behalf. 

He  was  charged  with  burning  the 
cross  in  the  yard  of  the  Cheshire 
vVebb  home  in  Hillsboro  on  the 
light  of  Dec.  27  to  show  Frank 
Jraham — who  was  visiting  there 
—how  he  felt  about  him. 


which   the   current   Elections    Law 
exerted  controk  vv  . 


Chairman  Hallford  also  appoint- 
ed Miss  Betty  Huffman  as  party 
file  clerk.  Miss  Huffman  succeeds 
Miss  Judy  Davis. 

During  the  period  designated  for 


TAR  HEEL  express. her  gratitude 
for  the  letters,  cards,  and  roses 
which  she  has  received  "I  espec- 
ially appreciated  them  considering 
the    time    of    the    semester." 

The    Women's    Residence    Coun- 
cil also  is  sending  her  The  Daily 


Chairman  Cummings  said  these 
discrepancie,*;  necessitated  disquali- 
fication of  numerous  ballot.s  which 


Bob  Carter  reported  the  group  was 

some  S50     in  the  red."  Carter  re- 

,    ,  ,    quested    contributions   from    inter- 
in  turn  lowered  the  percentage  of        .    .            . 

*^  ested  members, 
voting  students. 


committee  reports,  party  Treasurer   ^^'"   Heel.  i 

In  a  letter  to  Dean  Carmichael 
Mrs.  Anderson  said  that  letters 
from  friends  at  the  uiuversity  had 
meant  a  great  deal  to  Stella. 


Two  of  UNCs  last  four  home 
basketball  games  will  be  televised 
over  WUNC-TV.  according  to  an 
announcement  Saturday  by  John 
Young,  assistant  director  of  the 
station.  - 

Televised  will  be  the  UNC- 
Duke  game  on  Saturday  and  the 
UNC-Wake  Forest  game  Wednes- 
day^ Feb.  13.    . 

The  casts  will  be  live  from  Wool- 
at     7:55 
p.m. 

Young  indicated  there  is  a  pos 
sibility  the  UNC-N.  C.  State  game 
here  Tuesday.  Feb.  19.  may  also 
be    televised. 

"Broadvisi.  n'  will  be  used  in 
coverage  of  the  games.  This  com- 
bines t,he  telecasts  with  radio  play- 
by-play  and  is  worked  out  with 
other  radio  stations  in  the  state. 

WU.\C-T\'  will  transmit  pictures 
of  the  game  action  while  differ- 
enr  radio  stations  will  carry  the 
play-by-play. 

Youn 


us   that   a    large   number   of   their 
games  are  scheduled  on  the  same 
evening  and  that  their  athletic  pro- . 
gram  would  suffer  from  the  tele- 
cast."   he    said. 

"We  are.  of  course,  anxious  to 
cooperate  with  the  schools  and  do 
not  want  to  interfere  with  their 
basketball  program.  If  a  satisfact- 
ory solution  can  be  found  we  will 
add  the  State  game  to  the  'broad- 
visioJi."  schedule."  he  said. 


UP  To  Hear 
Sam  Magill 

On  Woes    Free  Flicks 

May  Cease  In 


Ui.Jcr  a  grant  from  the  Ford 
F(Aindation.  Professor  Heard  will 
complete  a  book.  "Money  in  Poli 
tics"  during  his  year  at  Harvard. 
He  has  been  assembling  material 
for  more  than  three  years  on  the 
flow  of  money  in  politics  in  a  pro- 
ject financed  by  the  Edgar  Stern 
Foundation. 

The  year  at  Harvard  will  enable 
Dr.  Heard  to  put  hi..-  findings  in 
book  form.  He  has  already  present 
ed  preliminary  findings,  with  con- 
clusions, in  magazine  articles  and 
in  testimony  as  a  consultant  to  a 
Congressional   Committee. 

While  at  Harvard  Dr.  Heard, 
author  of  "A  Two-Party  South?" 
and  co-author  of  "Southern  Po- 
litics in  State  and  Nation,"  ntay 
also  lecture  to  students  in  th«. 
Dept.   of   Government. 

At  Chapel  Hill  Dr.  Heard  is  Pre- 
sident of  the  Faculty  Club,  ^hauT' 
1  man  of  the  University's  Committee 
on  Established  Lectures,  and  has 
been  a  member  of  fue  Political 
Science  Dept.  at  UNC  since  1950. 
j  A  native  of  Savannah,  Ga..  the 
I  39  year  old  professor  graduated 
from  UNC  in  1938.  and  received 
his  M.  A.  and  Ph.D.  degrees  at 
Columbia  University.  He  became  a 
staff  member  of  the  American  Em- 
bassy in  Quito.  Ecuador,  and  .served 
with  the  Navy  in  World  War  II. 


Director    of    Student     Activities 
Sam   Magill   will  addre.'S  the   Uni- 
versity Party  tonight  at  7:30  in  the 
said  "In  view  of  the  fine    Roland  Parker  Lounges  of  Graham 


I 

Annual  Jenkins  Lecture 
<9iven  Today  By  Intern 

Dr.  Gilbert  Mudgc  of  Johns- Hop 
kins  .Medical  School  will  give  thi. 
year's  Lee  B.  Jenkins  Memorial 
lecture  Wednesday  at  the  UNC 
Clinic  Auditorium. 

Dr  Mudge  will  appear  before 
the  combined  staff  of  the  Univer 
sijy's  School  of  medicine  at  4  p.m. 
to  explain  new  methods  involved 
in  traditional  ways  of  removing 
iwdy  wastes  in  the  treatment  of 
severe  diseases. 

Dr.  Mudge.  the  third  lecturer  in 
this  annual  scries,  is  a  pharmacolu 
gist  and  interni- .  at  John  s  Hop- 
kins University. 


IN  THE  INFIRMARY 

MIsMS  Sylvia  Yalton,  Elizabeth 
Meloy,  Jane  Stainbacic,  Nancy 
Stockwail,  and  Jphn  Crittenden, 
Ket  Y©o,  Lawranca  Barnard, 
Thomas  WMte,  Michel  Cap,  Wil- 
liam Gautiar,  Rebart  Williams, 
John  Jehnaon,  Kannath  Albord, 
Patrick  Leonard,  Oowflas  Sharp. 
Marvin  Smith,  Robart  Bims, 
James  Emerson,  and  Richard 
Oresman. 


Cossacks 
Dance  Here 
On  Feb.  12  \ 

The  original  Don  Cossack  Chor-  • 
us  and  Dancers  will  be  brought 
to  the  UN'C  campus  en  Feb.  12. 

Presented  by  the  Student  Enter- 
tainment Committee,  the  program 
vill  be  held  in  Memorial  Hall  at 
3  p.m. 

With  Serge  Jaroff  as  conductor, 
the  Russian  performers  are  now 
on  a  world-wide  tour  which  began 
in  the  spring  of  1956  and  will  end 
in  May  of  this  year.  During  1956 
their  tour  took  them  through  12 
countries,  including  appearances 
in  Berlin,  Paris.  Tokyo,  and  Lon- 
don. 

Since  their  first  concert  in  Vi- 
enna in  1923.  the  Don  Cossacks 
have  sung  in  every  country  in  the 
world  except  Red  China  and  So- 
viet Russia.  The  troupe  first  visit- 
ed the  U.  S.  in  1930  and  has  ap- 
peared   in    this    country    annually 

for  26*  seasons.  .     ,.  ,■  .  vj  .,i\ 

rn'     ■■<.  . 

In  their  concerts  the  Don  Cos-  j 
sacks    present    a    wide    variety    of ; 
Russian   folk   songs,   operatic  mcl-  ' 
odics.  and  old  Russian  church  mus-  , 
ic,  spiced   with  lightning-fast  Cos  ' 
sack   dances.   Frequently  included 
on  their  programs  is  the  musical 
version  of  the  Origin  and  History  , 
of  the  Don  Cossack  Chorus,  illus-  j 
trating  their  part  in  the  Russian 
Revolution.   Civil   War   and   flight 
from   their  home  country. 

The   Choruij    is   now   well-repre-  : 
sented  on  LP  records,  having  at 
present  seven  albums  on  the  mar-  ■ 
kel.  i 


In  electoral  action,  Harold  O  Tuel 
was  named  over  Don  Jacobs  to  fill 
a  seat  vacancy  in  Dorm  Mens  III. 
The  seal  was  vacated  by  the  resign- 
ation of  Dick  Gustafson. 

The  race  for  Gustafson's  vacated 
seat  was  a  close  one.  O'Tuel  de- 
feated Jacobs  by  a  narrow  margin 
of  5  votes. 

I  APPOINTMENTS 

I  Chairman  Sonny  Hallford  named 
the    following    SP    members    on    a 


Also   during    the    period.   Chair- 
man   of    the    Advisory    Committee  ■ 
Whit  Whitfield  announced  revision  j 
of  the  Elections  Law  was  being  de- ' 
liberated  by  the  committee. 

Whitfield  said   discussion     was 

being   held  on    the    ptissibility   of 

limiting  the  number  of  run-off  el- 
'  ections. 

The  party  will  not  meet  ne.xt 
week  due  to  a  conflict  with  the 
presentation      of  Carolina     Forum 


committee  to  investigate     campus  Speaker  V.  K.   Krishna  Menon. 


Miss  .\nderson.  a  journalism 
major,  was  injured  Dec.  23  on 
Highway  268  near  North  Wilkes- 
boro. 

.\  car  driven  by  Lee  Riddle.  23, 
of  .\orth  Wilkesboro.  struck  Mi.ss 
Anderson  while  she  was  unlock- 
ing the  trunk  of  her  car.  She  was 
crushed  between  the  two  vehicles. 

Hei-  leg  was  almost  severed  and 
had  to  be  removed  at  the  hospital. 
Miss  Anders;)n  also  sustained  a 
broken  left  leg  and  fractures  of 
the  pelvis  and  skull. 


showing  the  Big  Four  teams  are 
making  again  this  year,  particular- 
ly the  first-place  Tar  Heels,  we 
know  there  will  be  an  unusual 
amount  of  interest  in  these  games, 
and  we  are  particularly  glad  to 
be  able  to  tvlecast   them. 

He  said  he  appreciated  "the  co- 
operation of  the  broadcasters  in 
the  state,  which  made  the  tele- 
casts  possible." 


Memorial. 

Magill  will  speak  on  the  admin- 
istration views  on  several  campus 
problems,  such  as  parking. 

The  entire  student  body  i.<  cordi- 
ally invited  to  attend,  party  Chair- 
man -Mike  Weinman  said. 

This  promises  to  be  ;m  extrem- 
ely interesting  and  worthwhile 
talk."  Weinman  said. 

No  party  busines.,-  will  be  trans 


Carroll  Hall 


Younu'  said  he  is  hopeful  some  acted  with  the  exclusion  of  commit 
arrangement  will  be  worked  out  tee  reports  and  a  short  review  ol 
to  televise  the  UNC-State  game.  „ld  business  at  the  session,  accord- 
•High    school    officials'  have    told    i„g  „>  chairman  Weinman. 

The  UP  chairman  expres.sed  ex- 
ireme  pleasure  that  the  Columbia 
St.  parking  ban  had  been  lifted. 
The  UP  pledges  continued  atten- 
tion toward  getting  student  park- 
ing lots  this  year."  Weinman  con- 
cluded. 


AFROTC  TO  BE  IN  INAUGURAL  PARADE 


The  UNC  Air  Force  Officer  Training  Unit,  will  represent  Caro- 
lina at  the  Inauguration  Parade  of  Gov.  Hodges  Thursday  in  Raleigh. 


The   b«nd  (bottom   left)  will    lead  the   unit,  followed   by   tha  Color 
Guard  (right)  and  tha  Drill  Team  (top  left). ^ 


Company  Representative 
For  Rings  To  Be  Here 

The  Balfour  Company  repre- 
sentative will  take  orders  for  class 
rings  in  "Y"  Court  on  Monday 
and  Tuesday.  Feb.  18-19.  from  9 
a.m.  to  4:30  p.m.  .\11  juniors  and 
sicniors  are  eligible  to  place 
orders,  according  to  Bob  Hornik, 
Graii  class  ring  chairman. 

The  Balfour  ring  is  recognized 
as  the  only  official  Carolina  class 
ring  by  the  Vniversity  administra- 
tion and  the  Order  of  the  Grail. 

For  further  information.  Hor- 
nik requests  that  he  be  contacted 
at  the  Zcta  Beta  Tau  House, 
phone  6031. 

gm's  slate 

Faculty  Committee  on  Frater- 
nities and  Sororities,  3:30-5, 
Grail  Room;  Woman's  Residence 
.Council,  3-5,  Council  Room  and 
6:30-8:30,  Grail  Room;  Mardi 
Gras,  7-11,  Roland,  Parker  Loun- 
ge; W.A.A.,  7:00,  Woedheuse 
Conference  Room;  Men's  Honor 
Council,  7-11,  Council  Room. 


There  is  a  strong  possibility  that 
showing  of  free  movies  in  Carroll 
Hall  will  he  discontinued  unless 
.>1udents  stop  littering  the  audi- 
torium. Graham  .Memorial  Activi- 
ties Board  Ch,i.'irman  Tom  Lam- 
■  befh  said  yesterday. 

Lambeth  made  it  clear  that  this 
I    hreat  <iid  not  come  from  GM  but 
irom  CaiToll  Hall  custodians.  Lam- 
I  i)eths  statement  in  luu  reads: 
'      'G.MAB  is  able  to  sh<iw  free  niov- 
,  ies   in   Carroll    Hall    through   cour- 
tesy ol  the  building's  management. 
'Ac  do  nr>t  pay  rent  lor  use  of  the 
auditorium  nor  do  we  pay  for  jaui- 
torial  services  in  the  buuuing. 

'Carroll  Hall  has  certain  rules 
regarding  use  of  the  auditorium. 
\  One  01  them  is  that  there  is  to  be 
I  no  eating,  drinking  or  smoking 
I  within  the  auditorium.  Whatever 
i  we  may  think  about  the  reasonable- 
;  nes.-  of  the  rule  or  any  pait  of  it, 
I  it  is  a  rule  which  we  must  obey  if 
I  free  movies  are  to  continue  sbow- 
'  ing  in  Carroll. 

'       "We    know    that    many      people 
!  smoke  during  free  movies  becaube 
1  they  do  not  realize  that  it  is  against 
the  rules.   In  the   future.      GM^VB 
j  will  do  its  best  to  remind  audien- 
I  ces  about  them.  We  hope  that  stu- 
I  dents    attending    the    movies    will 
cooperate     with   Carroll    Hall     at- 
tendants so  that  it  will  not  be  ne- 
ces.  ary  for  them  to  forbid  future 
use  of  the  auditorium  as  they  have 
warned  they  may." 

I    Wake  Forest  Faculty 
Boots  Pmty  Raiders 

WEVSTON-SALEM— ( AP)-  livo 
men  have  been  suspended  and  two 
coeds  placed  on  probation  in  con- 
necti«»n  with  a  panty  raid  at  Wake 
Forest  College  Jan.  9. 

'  The  men  had  been  tried  by  the 
Men's  Honor  Council  and  given 
warnings.    But   the   faculty   execu 

:  live  committee  overruled  the 
council    and    suspended    the    men, 

I  None  of  the  names  was  released. 


^AGE  TWO 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


TUiSOAY,  FEBRUARY  i.  19S7 


Assumptions  About  Honor: 
They're  Easy  To  Make  Now 

riu'  sUKliMts  uli(»  liavf  tlu-  most  power  al  tliis  univt'isity  are.  stir- 
prisiiiwly.   not    tite   stiult-nt    Ici^islators. 

Tlie\  are  the  meiubeis  of  the  three  juditial  uv^anl/atioirs:  The  Men's 
(.oiin<il.   the  \\dme!rs|(  ,otnn  il.  and   the  Stiideni  C.oiunil. 

Ihev,  i)v  siiii|)lv  iioddiiii;  their  a[)pi<)\al.  can  leiHoNe  stutlenishoin 
tl»e  I'nixersity.  Ilieii  siihoidinate  branches,  such  as  tlie  coeds"  various 
house   tonntils.    tan    impose  "earlv 


InreSENT  SYSTEM  'SICK': 


VOICE  FROM  COBB: 


<  nrlew  hoai>  on  women  students. 
I  hi\  (an  phi(  e  stu<lents  on  }>r«»l)a- 
tion.  Ihey  can  e\en  take  siudeins 
to  ci\il  (ourts,  as  was  witnessed  at 
Hillsboro  a  few  weeks  ago  when 
(.;j()lina"s  (heaiinii;  rini>  tase  came 
to  a  head. 

J  he  most  latent  thin<»  alMHiu  the 


l)od\     what    thev    ha\e    or    Iiaven't 
done.  ^ 

(.onsecjueinly  it  is  very  easy  to 
assmne  that  the  (oinicils  haven't 
done  anvthinji.  It  also  is  easv  to 
sup{K)se.  what  with  tlu*  increasing 
amoinu  ol  tumor  going  around, 
that  ntemhers  of  the  councils  are- 


jndiiial  powei   is  "that  it  is  wielded      n  t    Km)    honoiable    themselves.    If 

in   set  ret.    I'nless   fat  ts  and  names 

escape  the  council  mc^etings    (and. 

of    c<Mn>e.     thev    do)    l)v    word   *ot 

mouth,  the  names  of  offenders  ate 

ne\er    known    to    the    rest    of    '.he 

l'tii\eisitv's    sludetit    popidation. 


they  ale.  you  might  ask.  why  is  it 
so  easv  to  get  the  details  of  almo.st 
anv   trial? 

We  hope  the  al)o\e  assumptionvS 
ate  wiong.  lint  theie's  reallv  no 
wav  to  tell,  is  there? 


Koi  this  reason,  the  councils 
>honl(f  l)e  careful  in  what  thev  do 
and  how    thev  do  it. 

TheiCN  another  go<Kl  reason 
A\h\  the  councils  should  keep  on 
tip-toe.  Ihev  staiHl  ahvavs  in  the 
shadow   ol    the   administration. 

If  the  administratic^n  feels  there 
is  too  much  cheating,  stealing  or 
King,  or  notices  that  too  manv 
people  are  getting  oft  tcK>  easiK.  it 
can  inst."iuane(»uslv  c  lamp  down. 

This  was  e\  idenced  a  vear  or  so 
ago  when  the  student  courts  gave 
two  men  light  penalties  for  a  in- 
ic'^r-college  crime. 

riu-  other  college  in\oI\ed  i^ot 
not  undei  the  lace  collar,  called 
Chapel  Hill  and  demanded  stifter 
punishmeius.  So  the  achninistra- 
tion  (Dean  of  Student  Aff:iirs  Fred 
.Weaver,  now  on  leave  of  absence) 
■"appealed"  the  case  to  a  facult\- 
administiation  council.  vvhich 
handed  down  the  stifter  punish- 
ment. 

*       *       * 

Along  with  this  tight-rope 
Avhich  the  coiuicils  have  to  walk, 
there  is  the  huge  resp<»nsifiilftv  fif 
informing  tiie  student  Ixxly  (»f 
what  is  going  on. 

By  tradition,  the  councils  ate 
supposed  to  lelea'se.  thrmigh  this 
newspapei.  jx-riiKlic  ie|)orts  of 
theii  acixities — how  many  cases 
thev"\e  tiied.  what  the  outcomes 
have  been:  everyiliing  except 
iiameN  and  fat  is  Avhich  might  tetid 
to  identif\  offenders. 

The  coimcils  have  trod  ujxui 
this  tradition  in  the  past  year. 
Thev  ha\e  tondm ted  their  affairs 
—the  students"  affairs— in  seciet, 
not   botheiinu   to  tell   the  student 


The  Daily  Tar  Heel 

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Balloon: 
Just   Don't 
Burst   It 


Presideiu  Kisenliowei'.s  adniin- 
istiation  watued  to  invite  a  ("om- 
ininiist.  .Maishal'  lito  of  Vu^o- 
sla\ia.  o\er  for  conferences.  But 
the  adniini.stration  was  afraid  pub- 
lic sentiment  might  be  against 
sue  li  a  visit.  So  the  administration 
let  j;()  .1  la\orite  modern  political 
de\ice:     The   trial   ballcxm. 

riie  balloon  is  used  like  this: 
.Scuneone  in  Washiiv^ton  "leaLs" 
inforinati(»n  to  a'  favorite  neus- 
papeiinan.  The  neuspapermans 
newspaper.  h;ippv  with  an  exclu- 
si\e  storv.  ])iints  it  under  big 
headlines.  Other  papers  probe  the 
"leak."  <Tet  more  information. 

Public  opinicyi.  in  the  form  of 
lesohitibons.  petitions,  manifestos, 
letteis-to-theedito'i'  and  editorials, 
staits  pourini;  in. 

The  adminiitrali<»n,  «>au,t;in*»" 
puf)lic  reaction,  decides  whether 
to  carry  out  the  |)oli<v  or  drop  it. 
If  the  balloon  proves  popidar,  the 
administiation  takes  the  credit,  li 
it  bursts,  the  administiation  can 
deny  it  ever  had  any  siu  h  thoiit^hts. 

Ihis  is  piobabh  what  happen- 
ed o\er  Nhnshal  I'ito.  .Such  a 
stoiin  was  raised  bv  the  public  that 
Kisenhowei  and  his  advisors  im- 
mediately dropped  all  plains  for 
brin<4ing  the  Clonnniniist  here  foi 
talk.s.  '.  ■ 

This  is  bad.  F(»r  one  thin*^,  the 
;.',o\ernment  sidesteps  the  respon- 
sibilitv  of  step|)in<j  foiward  with 
new  polic  ies.  It  makes  a  bunch  of 
liars— aitd.  almost  as  Ixid,  a  bunch 
of  deniers— out  of  the  highest  ad- 
ministiation officers. 

It  causes  the  government,  and 
the  executive  branch  of  the  gov- 
ernment, to  shirk  one  of  its  major 
duties:  l.eadino  the  peojile  of  the 
I'nited  States  into  new  policit'S. 
new  decisions,   new   progressivism. 

Tito's  arrival  here  would  not 
mean  the  IJ^.  (iovennnent  sanc- 
tions his  way  of  government.  It 
Avould  merely  mean  that  President 
Kisenhower  and  his  atlministration 
leali/e  and  accept  the  fact  that  the 
I'nited  States  mu.st  do  biisinesa 
with  tlie  whole  world,    ^tdl^gimi^ 

Trial  balloon  tactlcf,  1l$  (8lts 
case  at  least,  have  indicatea  that 
the  public  doesn't  feel  this  way. 
Rather,  the  public  feels  an  Ike- 
Tito  conference  stands  for  en- 
dorsement of  the  marshal's  way  of 
life. 

Tisenhower  atid  his  fellows 
should  be  ashamed  of  the  wAy 
thev  reacupd  tcj  the  balloon's  re- 
action. If  thev  really  wanted  to 
talk  world  matters  over  with  Tito, 
thev  should  have  done  so.  with 
or  without  the  approval  of  tlon- 
■uress  r.nd  th^  \oters  who  write  let- 
ters-to-the-editor. 

It's-really  very  silly,  sitting  here 
and  refusing  to  recognize  scjme- 
thing  that  is  very  big,  merely  be- 
cause we  don't  agree  with  it. 


Adviser  System  Needs  Revamping     Gridders  Dorm   * 


TUI 


G 


Woody  Sears 

Our  present  adviser  system  is 
.sick  and  seemingly  ineffectual  in 
many  instances.  Something  should 


be  done  about  it.  for  at  present 
it  i.s  unfair  both  to  the  instruct- 
ors who  serve  as  advisers  and  to 
the  students. 
Granted,    there*    are    exceptions 


•  * 

'Are  You  Sure  You're  Getting  The  Whole 


to  the  rule,  which  now  seems 
to  be  in  chaos.  Some  of  us 
have  had  very  good  luck  with 
our  advisers,  but  too  many  peo- 
ple are  not  so  luckv.  However,  it 

• 

Picture  Here?' 


».-   'i^'      I 


CAROLEIOOSCOPE 


Notre  Dame  Condemns  Baby  Doll 


Frank  Cro>vther 

I  hate  to  rehash  old  stew,  but 
my  temperature  is  rising  and  my 
doctor  told  me  to  relax. 

When  the  Manchester  Guard- 
ian's film  critic  came  out  with 
a  statement  which  went  under 
the  assunifhion  that  Baby  Doll — 
in  the  picture  of  the  same  name 
— had  been  seduced  and  that  the 
entire  picture  had  been  built 
around  the  seduction,  I  was  per- 
turbed, especially  .since  I  hold 
the  Guardian  in  high  esteem. 

Now  I  pick  up  a  copy  of  the 
Notfe  Dame  Scholastic,  edited  by 
Charles  XIcKendrick.  and  read 
through  an  editorial  by  .said  edi- 
tor concerning  Baby  Doll.  Well, 
if  I  ever  read  a  narrow-minded 
piece  of  writing,  that  would  cer- 
tainly rank  w^ith  the  best. 

McKendrick  said.  "The  story 
revolves  around  her  (Baby  Doll) 
husband's  struggle  with  a  cot- 
ton ginning  .syndicate,  and  the 
seduction  of  Baby  Doll  by  the 
manager  of  the   syndicate. " 

The  editor  went  on  to  say  that 
...he  had  not  seen  the  film: 
it  had  been  secreted  into  South 


Bend  with  no  atfv*^arjje  publicity 
so  that  "pastors  did  not  have  op- 
portunity to  warn  their  congrega- 
tion.s;  ■  attendance  by  a  Notre 
Dartie  student  could  give  rise  to 
.scandal  among  the  South  Bend 
residenl.s  who  might  see  him 
there:  and  Francis  Cardinal  Spell- 
man  had  banned  the  film  under 
"pain  of  mortal  .sin."" 

He  concluded  by  urging  all 
students  to  ps.s  up  the  show.  or. 
tor  those  'whose  moral  fiber  is 
t  10  weak  to  resist,  please  leave 
your  Notre  Dame  jacket  in  the 
closet."' 

On  page  16  <>(  the  same  .pub- 
lication, under  the  .s<?ction  label- 
ed "At  The  Movies."  and  at  the 
very  bottom  was  the  following 
piece: 

.WON   (name  of  theater) 
Baby  Doll.    (C)   THIS   ME.\NS 
CONDEM.NED.     Actually     this 
picture  isn't  worth  .seeing  any- 
how, so  stay  away. 
Fir.st.    let    me     add     that     Elia 
Kazan,  wh  >  directed  the  picture, 
said   that   Baby  Doll  was  not  se- 
duced. .\lso.  I  saw  the  film,  en- 
Joyed   it   thoroughly    (mostly  the 
realistic    photography     and      the 


acting  of  Karl  Maiden),  and  was 
not  given  the  impression  that 
Baby  Doll  was  seduced.  It  .seem- 
ed more  that  Baby  Doll  was  sud- 
denly ready  to  become  a  woman, 
and  had  her  po.s.session  crazed 
husband  taken  away  for  arson, 
and  her  potential — and  only  po- 
tential—lover leave  her  with 
promi.ses  of  his  return.  In  other 
words,  she  was  left  in  the  lurch 
when   the   picture   ended. 

ThLs  boy  McKendrick  is  cer- 
tainly one  of  the  brainwashed: 
he  Uiok  the  ball  from  his  Cardi- 
nal in  New  York  and  played  the 
game. 

I  think  he  should  have  left 
his  pure,  untouchable  chapel 
and  gone  to  see  the  film  .  .  .  but. 
he  has  his  right  tf>  opinion,  and 
it  is  a  Catholic  school. 

But  does  he  have  the  right 
to  assert  an  opinion  formed  un- 
d?r  a  false  premise?  .\nd  who 
is  ST  thin-skinned  to  believe  that 
.seeing  a  motion  picture  which 
has  a  realistic  and  slightly  exag- 
gerated script  will  be  a  mortal 
sin?  How  do  they  know  the  pic- 
ture "isn't  worth  seeing  any- 
how?" 


is  never  a  matter  of  the  adviser's 
intentional  inefficiency,  but  al- 
ways that  the  adviser  had  too 
much  to  do  and  too  many  people 
to  advise  and  keep  up  with. 

Quite  often  we  hear  of  people 
who  go  into  their  adviser's  of- 
fice as  complete  strangers, 
though  they've  been  there  many 
times  before.  The  poor  adviser 
just  can't  remember  all  the  peo- 
ple he  has  to  handle.  And  if  he 
can't  remember  names,  it  is  rea- 
sonably safe  to  assume  that  he 
can't  remember  the  individual 
problems  of  each  of  hi&  charges. 
And  certainly,  to  advise  wisely 
and  effectively,  one  must  know 
the  problems  which  his  advisees 
face. 

We  hear,  too.  that  no  one  real- 
ly wants  to  be  an  adviser,  and 
that  isn't  strange  at  all.  Who 
would  want  to  willingly  subject 
himself  to  the  administrative 
purgatory  which  every  adviser  " 
faces  at  registration  time? 

The  saddest  tale  of  woe  we 
hear  comes  from  people  who  ex- 
pect to  graduate  at  a  given  date 
only  to  discover  at  the  last  min- 
ute that  they  can't  graduate  be- 
cause th?y  haven't  taken  a  re- 
quired c:)urse  which  should  have 
been  complete<l  .  .several  years 
previously. 

Actually,  the  studei\t  caught  in 
this  predicament  is  not  entirely 
without  blame,  but  a  good  advis- 
er would  have  discovered  that 
deficiency  long  before  dream.s  of 
graduation  came  so  near.  In  view 
of  the  added  expenditure  which 
the  student  must  bear,  this  al- 
most constitutes  criminal  negli- 
gence. 

There  are  always  many  people 
who  must  suffer  the  ordeal  of 
drop-add.  There  are  lines,  lines, 
and  more  lines.  Quite  often  one 
must  .stand  in  line  for  several 
hour.s  to  get  his  adviser  to  sign 
a  .slip  of  paper  so  that  the  student 
can  do  exactly  what  he  would 
have  done  anyway,  and  then  he 
must  stand  in  line  f  )r  several 
hours  more.  The  lines  in  Hanes 
are  possibly  a  necessary  evil, 
but  lines  fifty  and  sixty  feet  long 
to  see  one  or  two  advisers  are 
shining  examples  of  administra- 
tive   inefficiency. 

It  is,  in  the  truest  sense  of 
the  word,  nonsense. 

The  idea  that  anyone  could  get 
any  degree  of  real  advice  and 
solid  counseling  under  those 
condition.?  is  nonsense. 

The  idea  that  one  man  can.  in 
th"  true  sense  of  the  word,  coun- 
sel twenty  to  fifty  men  in  one 
day  is  nonsense. 

And  the  idea  of  completely 
cluttering  the  main  building,  the 
the  campus  nerve-center,  with 
long  lines  of  people  is  nonsense. 

The  need  is  evident.  W^e  need 
more  advisers  to  handle  the  load. 
No  one  adviser  should  have 
more  than  twenty  men.  No  one 
man  should  be  expected  to  meet 
the  demands  upon  our  advisers 
luider  the  present  system. 

With  smaller  groups  of  advis- 
ees, the  advisers  could  get  to 
know  their  'men  and  their  in- 
dividual problem.s.  They  could 
afford  to  spend  more  time  with 
each  man,  and  prevent  last  min- 
ute messes. 

The  need  is  evident,  and 
everyone  is  aware  of  it.  How 
long  will  it  be  before  some  ac- 
tion is  taken?  ,;.    .      •.' 


1  0BBN  WTTIN' 
MESe  61VIN'     I 
THAT  A  POW'PUWV 
PUNCH  OP     A 

ruoi/wrr, 


By  Walt  Kelly 


«ieeM  nice  qtf.cHURCHy 

SAtr-flTTEK  -  AN',  A-b 
Hie  HOMHSUR,  I  CAN  MAKC 
A  &CCIOPeAt.  WITM^'jtXl 

W«ATU6IV|^A 

C\^CONe»TANT 
S       \      0A&V 
<£         <-^JpWATCHfK, 


BAIv  CHI  up  ANP,  Ae  HE  NggPS 
WAtC><iN'  MOef N  A«»f/ IT  ^^ 

i  ^  /  N^o^ct'H  I  owe  -iokx  ^ 


May  Be  Noisy 

Graham  Snyder 

Daily  Tar  Heel  reporter  Snyder  lived  in  Cobb 
dormitory  last  semester.  Below  he  offers  his  viows 
on  the  decision  to  room  the  football  squad  in  that 
building. 

At  the  beginning  of  the  next  academic  year,  it 
has  been  announced,  the  entire  football  team  will 
be  gradually  moved  into  Cobb  Dormitory  and  will 
live  in  adjoining  rooms  on  one  floor. 

Change  makes  news  and  this  announcement 
is  interesting  and  noteworthy.  And  yet  there  ap- 
pear slight  contradictions  and  a  few  shades  of  puz- 
zlement in   it. 

For  the  announcement  states  that  the  reason 
for  the  gradual  move  is  motivated  by  a  seeking  for 
"rest,  peace  and  quiet — hard  to  get  in  most  dorm- 
itory setups." 

In  its  strictest  sense,  "rest,  peace  and  quiet" 
are  not  to  be  found  in  any  dormitory  setup  .where 
large  numbers  are  involved.  Noise  is  produced  by 
the  proximity  and  the  number  of  people  in  a  closed 
area.  Noise  is  a  pain  and  is  erased  only  by  separa- 
tion of  the  noise-making  elements. 

On  a  college  campus  ideal  separation  for  peace 
and  quiet  is  impossible.  Therefore  dormitories  are 
constructed  with  the  idea  in  mind  that  if  they  are 
built  and  placed  at  an  adequate  distance  from  each 
other,  most  of  the  resulting  noise  will  be  fed  to 
empty  air. 

But  then  there  is  Cobb  and  a  different  situation. 
Cobb  is  a  large  dorm— the  largest  o'n  campus.  Its 
four  floors,  shaped  like  a  giant  "H."  house  488 
students,  give  or  take  a  few. 

Infused  with  a  Ireedom-loving  j.>y,  these  stu- 
dents are  vigorous,  strong-voiced;  they  are  prone, 
at  times,  to  give  prodigious  vent  to  their  youthful 
joys. 

Their  interests  are  diverse:  they  range,  among 
other  things,  from  the  playing  of  hi-fi  phonographs 
to  the  exploding  of  firecrackers  in  bathrooms  to 
the  mutual  enjoyment  of  a  reasonant  conversation 
which  bounds  and  rebounds  between  the  inside 
walls  of  that  giant  H. 

Life  around  Cobb  is  touched  with  poetic  mo- 
ments. One  can  hear — unless  one  tries  to  shut  it 
out — woozy  minstrels  baying  at  the  moon  as  they 
cling   to   the   dorm  streetlight   on  Saturday  nights. 

Pot  a  few  students  the  tedium  of  continuous 
hours  of  study  can  impair  a  hearty  moral  and 
mood.  Tension  of  such  a  malady  is  relieved  by  the 
bright  rattle-roll  of  drink  bottles  skittering  down 
the  receptive  marble  floors  which  ''"p  the  dorm. 

The  brief  interims  of  quiet  silea«  uetween  the 
periods  of  continual  noise — their  brevity  etches 
them — are  markedly  heard  in  the  lightning  pause, 
after  the  din  is  rudely  interrupted  by  a  soft-mellow, 
but   firm  demand  for  quiet. 

Now  here  a  plaguing  question  arises.  These  mem- 
bers of  the  football  squad:  will  they  find  quietetude 
hou.sed  in  this  massive  dorm,  or  will  they — irritated 
and  perplexed  by  400-odd  other  voices — turn  and 
only  increase  the  volume  of  noise? 

I  think  that  the  latter  result  will  be  the  case. 

Cobb  is  represented  by  a  few  football  players 
who  live  in  it.  What  total  effect  these  few  have 
on  the  dorm  as  a  whole  would  be  hard  to  describe. 

True  enough,  Cobb  is  in  a  good  location,  ad- 
vantageous to  the  football  team:  the  dorm  is  be- 
tween the  Monogram  Club  and  the  Woollen  Gym- 
nasium. 

But  if  it  is  this  singular  peace  and  ideal  location 
that  is  sought  as  a  final  objective,  a  more  perman- 
ent solution  to  the  problem  could  be  found  by  rip- 
ping down  one  section  of  the  adjoing  tennis  courts 
and  building  a  small,  private  dormitory  for  the 
football  team. 

This  latter  possibility  suggests  a  statement.  The 
move  of  the  football  team  will,  in  all  probability, 
be  favorable  to  that  body.  Collection  in  a  group 
and  constant  living  together  will  not  produce  dis- 
agreeable commotion  among  them,  but  for  the  stu- 
dents living  in  the  same  dorm  with  them,  it  will 
probably   be.   at   times,  pure  anathema. 

It  would  seem,  therefore,  that  Cobb  dorm  is  not 
a  facility  which  can  be  exploited  to  the  full  benefit 
of  the  football  squad.  A  smaller  dorm  in  the  same 
general  area  would  provide  a  more  feasible  answer 
to  the  problem  of  providing  peace  and  quiet. 

In  the  case  of  Cobb,  the  combination  of  a  foot- 
ball team  and  a  much  larger  student  element  can 
only  aggravate  the  clamor  and  the  sound  already 
existing.  •  ,\ 

OTHER  NEWSPAPERS  SAY: 

History  Behind 
Inevitable  Tip 

The  St.  Louis  Post-Dispatch 

What  is  a  tip?  When  Sam  Johnson  frequented 
a  coffee  house  in  Fleet  Street  two  centuries  ago  it 
was  'To  Insure  Promptitude."  and  these  words  were 
printed  round  a  bowl  on  the  table,  their  initials 
eventually  coming  together  in  a  word  to  designate 
the  gratuities  left  there. 

To  the  Journeymen  Barbers  International  Union 
of  America  in  1896  a  tip  was  'humiliating  and  de- 
grading." To  a  New  York  State  Industrial  Commiss- 
ioner in  the  present  decade  it  was  •unwx)rthy  of 
labor  in  the  twentieth  centurj."  To  the  Netherlands 
Federation  of  Hotel,  Restaurant  and  Cafe  Organi- 
zations a  tip  (foot)  should  be  a  service  charge 
ibedieningsgeld)  and  it  was  so  ordained  six  years 
ago. 

Now  to  the  Union  Helvetia  of  Switzerland,  an 
organization  of  hotel  employes  following  the  Dutch 
example,  a  tip  is  15  per  cent  added  to  the  bill  if 
the  guest  enjoys  the  hospitality  one  or  two  nights, 
12  per  cent  if  he  enjoys  the  large,  economy-size 
ttirte-nights-and-upward   stay. 

And  so  what  began  as  a  gift  to  insure  prcmpti- 
tude  becomes  a  service  charge  to  insure  payment. 
Aha  there,  Sam  Johnson,  old  lexicographer' 


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5,  19S7 


TU6S0AY,  FEBRUARY  5,  1957 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


PAGE  THREE 


»*e» 


in  Cobb 

lis  vi*ws 

in  that 


year,  it 
team  will 
and  will 

[iincement 
(there  ap- 
?s  of  puz- 

reason 
beking  for 
lost  dortn- 

id    quiet" 
flip  where 
)duced   by 
a  closed 
.   separa- 
tor f>eace 
Itories  are 
they  are 
lirom  each 
Ibe    ted   to 


situation.  •"  • 
^mpu.s.  Its  -  ', 
louse    4^8  3 

« 
these    stu-  * 

re   prone.     •'  • 

youthful    ' »  3 

—  ■ 
i 
te.   among  •  •    « 

>nographs    '     * 

irooms   to     •    • 

k 

iversation     -  /, 

Ihe    inside        ♦ 
I  * 

poetic    mo-  . "  * 

to  shut    it        • 
as   they    ,.'  « 

ly  nights, 
t^ontinuous        • 

loral  and  ' 
led  by  the  "  • 
ping   down        I 

le   dorm. 

rween  the 
Ity  etches 
ing  pause, 
Kt-mellow. 

lese  m^ra- 

luietetude 

-irritated 

-turn  and 

case, 
ill  players 
few  have 
describe, 
ration,  ad- 
>rm  is  be- 
Uen   Gym- 

tal  location 
re  perman- 
ind  by  rip- 
»nis  courts, 
for    the' 

fment.  The 
|probability, 

in  a  group 
Iroduce  dis- 
^or  the  stu- 
[em.   it   will 

lorm  is  not 
I  full  benefit 
In  the  same 
lible  answer 
quiet, 
of  a  foot- 
flement  can 
ind   already 


nd 


itch 

frequented 

turie.s  ago  it 

words  were 

their  initials 

to  designate 

tional  Union 
ting  and  de- 
ial  Commiss- 
"unworthy  of 
Netherlands 
Cafe  Organi- 
rvice  charge 
led  six  years 

^itzerland.  an 
ng  the  Dutch 
to  the  bill  if 
•r  two  nights, 
economy-size 

* 
sure  prompti- 
ure  payment, 
apher' 


Graham  Memorial  Has 
Information  On  Tours 


People  who  are  interested  in  I 
tours  abroad  and  desire  some  in- 
formation here  on  the  campus  I 
should  contact  Jackie  Aldridge.  at 
the  Student  Government  Office  in ; 
Graham  Memorial,  it  was  announc-  j 
ed  yesterday.        •  ; 

Miss   Aldridge   has   information ; 
on  scholarships   for  study  abroad 
and  commercial  tours  of  Europe.  ^ 
\t    present    there    is   information , 
on    a    tour    conducted    by    Mary  | 
Branham.      Fort      Sumner.      New  ■ 
Mexico,  lasting  56  days  and  cost- ; 
ing  $987.   The   Catholic   Digest   is  ! 
.sponsoring     a     study-travel     tour,  j 
lasting  46  days  and  costing  $1348. 
A  travel  and  optional  study  (for 
3   semester   hours)    tour   is   being 
sponsored     by     Miami     University 
and    will    last   57   days    and   cost 
S1295.     Covering     71     days,     the 
Volkswagen  Student  Tour  will  cost 
S1389.   There    is   also   some   infor- 
mation on  trips  organized  by  Gen- 
eral Tours. 

Stanley   Shaw,   who  can   be   lo- 


cated at  the  National  Student  As- 
sociation Office  in  the  basement 
of  Graham  Memorial,  has  data 
pertaining  to  N.S.A.   tours. 


THE  GOTHIC 
BOOKSHOP 

Next  To  Quadrangle  Theatre 
Duke  University,  Durham,  N.  C. 

Bruce  Catton.  eminent  histori- 
cal writer  and  Rilitzer  prize 
winner  will  be  at  the  Gothic 
Bookshop  3-5  p.m.  Thursday, 
t'ebruary  7th,  and  will  auto- 
.,Taph  copies  of  his  noteworthy 
)  0  o  k  s  :  Tins  HALLOWEl) 
GROUND,  A  STILLNESS  AT 
APPOMMATOX.  GLORY  ROAD 
t  MR.  LINCOLN'S  ARMY. 

Come  and  meet  Bruce  Catton. 
and  look  around  this  well-stock- 
ed new  Bookshop,  a  branch  of 
Jeremy  North's  Friend.hip 
Bookshop. 

The  Gothic  Bookshop  is  open 
every  weekday  from  10  a.m.  to 
9  p.m.. 


Hoover  Claims 
Inflation  Now 
May  Not  Last 

WASHINGTON  .—  (A?)  —  For- 
mer President  Hoover  said  Monday 
that  the  current  inflation  shows 
signs  of  a  depression  "agony" 
like  that  which  beset  his  own  ad- 
ministration 

In  an  appeal  for  governmental 
reform  and  economy,  delivered  at 
the  third  national  reorganization 
conference,  Hoover  repeated  Sec- 
retary of  the  Treasury  Hum- 
phrey's recent  forecast  that  big 
federal  budgets,  if  long  continued, 
will  produce  '"a  depression  that 
will  curl  your  hair." 

"Mine  has  already  been  curled 
once — and  I  think  I  can  *betect  the 
signs,"  the  83-year-old  Hoover 
said  in  a  speech  prepared  for  500 
conferees  here  and  a  nationwide 
radio   audience. 


Covering  The  University  Campus . 


PERMANENT 
PART-TIME  WORK 

Young  man  with  a  car  to  work 
3  evenings  and  Saturday.  Must 
have  neat  appearance.  Some 
college  preferred..  This  means 
$30  per  week.  Call  Mr.  B.  W. 
Garska,  Carolina  Inn,  for  ap- 
pointment for  personal  inter- 
view. 3:30—7:00  Wednesday  or 
Thursday. 


To  The  Young  Man 
Who  Loves  The  Sea 


NURSERY  COMMITTEE 

A  meeting  of  the  Holmes  Day 
Nursery  Committee  of  the  YWGA 
will  be  held  tomorrow  at  4  p.m. 
in  the  library  of  the  Y.  Anyone 
interested  in  the  committee  has 
been  urged  to  attend.  Interested 
persons  unable  to  attend  the  meet- 
ing have  been  asked  to  contact  Miss 
EJsther  Ballentine  in  Mclver  Dorm. 
DANCE  LESSONS 

Dance  lessons  will  be  sponsored 
by  GMAB  tonight  in  the  Rendez- 
vous Room.  Instructions  will  be  of- 
fered from  6:30  to  8  p.m. 
DEMOLAY 

The  UNC  Chapter  of  the  Order 
of  the  Demolay  will  meet  at  the 
Masonit  Temple  on  W.  Franklin  St. 
tonight  at  8,  according  to  Master 
Councilor  George  Stefanoll. 
WRC 

The   Women's    Residence    Coun- 
cil will  meet  tonight  at  6:45  in  the 
Grail  Room  of  Graham  Memorial. 
It  will  be  a  regular  meeting. 
WAA  BASKETBALL 

The  Basketball  Club  will  meet 
tomorrow  at  4  p.m.  in  the  Women's 
Gym.  The  g>'m  will  be  open  through 
Monday  for  team  basketball  prac- 
tice. Three  practices  per  person 
are  required  before  tournament 
participation,  according  to  WAA 
officials.  Basketball  tournament 
begins  Feb.  12. 
STUDENT  WIVES 

There  will  be  a  meeting  of  the 
Student  Wives  Club  tonight  at  8  at 
the  Victory  Village  Nursery.  This 
ia  the  first  meeting  of  the  new. 
semester.  .\11  student  .wives  have 
been  invited  to  attend. 
WESLEY  Ch40IR 

The  Wesley  Choir  will   hold   its 
regular  rehearsal   tonight   at   7   in 
the    sanctuary    of   the    University 
Methodist  Church. 
SCHOLARSHIP  HOLDERS 

All  holders  of  University  Scho- 
larships and  scholarships  paid 
through  the  Student  Aid  Office 
each  seme..ter  have  been  asked  to 
come  to  that  office  during  this 
week  to  pick  up  scholarship  tic- 
kets or  checks  for  the  spring  se- 
mester. 

All  students  holding  part-time 
jobs  awarded  by  the  Student  Aid 
Office  or  under  its  jurisdiction 
have  been  asked  to  come  by  from 
now  through  Feb.  14  to  renew  their 
job  assignments.  ...,.„ 

WUNCTV 

Todays-  schedule  for  WUNCTV, 
the  University's  educational  tele- 
vision station: 

12:44— Sign  On  "^     - 

12:45— Music 
1:00— Today  on   the   Farm 
1:30 — Music  in  the  Air 


2:00— Sign  Off 

5:45 — Music 

6:00— News 

6:15— Sports 

6:30— Magic  Lantern 

6:45 — Building  with  Rain 

7:00 — Books  and   People 

7:15— Bible  Cours^ 

8:00— Dr.  Schriver 

8:45 — State  Government 

9:30 — Music  for  Young  People 

10:00— Final   Edition       ^       . 

16:15— Sign  Off 

WUNC  • 

Today's  schedule  for  ^WUNC,  the 
University's  FM  radio  station: 

7:0|0— Music  in  the  Air 

7:30— Muoic  by  Heart 

7:45— Vistas   of  Israel 

8:00 — Music   from  Interlochen 
8:30— Highlights  from  Opera 


9:00 — America   on  Stage 
9:30 — The  Concerto 
10:00— Ne\ys 

10:15 — Evening  Masterwork 
11:30— Sign  Off 


Y  Planning  Committee 
Meets  In  Library  At  4 

There  will  be  a  meeting  of  the 
YM-YW  Spring  Conference  Plan- 
ning Committee  this  afternoon  at 
4:30  in  the  Y  Library.  According 
to  Co-chairmen  Cathy  Legrand 
and  Bobby  Newton,  plans  for  the 
March  1,  2  and  3  conference  on 
conscience,  compromise  and  con- 
formity will  be  completed.  All 
members  of  the  committee  have 
been  asked   to  attend. 


Coeds  Eligible 
To  Apply  For 
Tri  Delta  Grants 

Applications  are  now  available 
in  the  dean  of  women's  office  to 
women  students  here  for  the  1957 
Delta  Delta  Delta  general  fund 
scholarship  competition,  according 
to  an  announcement. 

The  scholrship,  awarded  to 
women  students  in  college  where 
there  are  Tri  Delta  sorority  chap- 
ters, is  worth  up  to  $200.  Applica- 
tions will  be  accepted  through 
Saturday,  Feb.  23. 

Tnose  applying  may  or  may  not 
be  sorority  members  but  they 
should  be  well-qualified  students, 
showing  promise  of  valuable  serv- 
ice in  their  future  communities, 
the  announcement   said. 

Completed  applications  must  be 
sent  to  Mrs.  Charles  C.  Perrin, 
Box  925.  Paoli,  Pa.  by  Feb.  23  ac- 
cording to  the  announcement. 
The  successful  candidates  will  be 
notified   by  .May.   15. 


(Continued  from   Page   1) 

in  the  revolt.  By  some  estimates, 
32,000  Hungarians  and  Russians 
have  been  killed.  The  revolt  was 
crushed  by  Soviet  tanks  thre#' 
months  ago. 


Pineau  Warns  UN 

UNITED  NATIONS,  N.  Y.— (AP) 
— ^Foreign  Minister  Christian  Pin- 
eau warned  Monday  France  would 
ignore  any  recommendations  the 
U.  N.  might  make  on  turbulent  Al- 
geria. 

In  a  20,000-word  speech  to  the 
U.  N.  political  committee,  Pineau 
stressed  anew  that  France  regards 
Algeria  as  a  purely  internal  mat- 
ter. He  blamed  Egypt,  the  Soviet 
Union,  and  international  commun- 
ism for  terrorism  in  the  Norlli 
African  possession. 


these  expressions  but  was  engaged 
in  extensive  consultations  with  de- 
legations from  various  parts  of  the 
globe. 


0|ip«rt«iifty  awaits  Qwalifitd  Marina  Draftsman  in  a  ytar- 
rmmrf  clinata  af  caailart  mrf  aasy  living  an  tha  Gulf  Caast. 

Tht  Ingalls  Shipbuilding  Corporation,  operating  the  largest  ship- 
yard on  the  Gulf  Coiist,  offers  a  promising  future  to  qualifiecf  drafts- 
men  who  join  this  progressive  organization  —  long  term  contracti^ 
pleasant  working  conditions,  liberal  benefits,  valuable  training. 

Address  inquiries  to  Chief  Engineer,  Room,   100 

THE    INGALLS    SHIPBUILDING    CORPORATION 

Pascagoula,  Mississippi  - 


DAILY    CROSSWORD 


ACROSS 

1  Brother 

of  Abel 
5  Bang 

k  Heart  artery 
le  Biblical 

name 
12  Seaport 

(Fr.) 
13.  Way 
14  "Land  of  the 

free"  (abbr  ) 
15.  Gasped 
1«  River 

(Chin  ) 
17  Unrolls 
19  Sea 

captain's 

concern 
21  Man's 

nickname 

24.  Valleys 
(poet  ) 

25.  Dropsy 

27.  Conclude 

28.  Environ- 
ment 

30.  Youn^  girl 

31.  Palm 
(Asia) 

22.  Parts  of^ 

doors 
35  Comrade 
Z%.  By  oneself 
37.  Lariat 
39  Lucky 

number 

4*  Laim 

meaaures 
4 1  The  Orient 
42.  Dampens 
DOWN 
1.  Napoleon's 
nationality 
2  Region         , 
3.  Contraction 


4  Mr.  Cole 

5  Visitor* 
tK  Aquatic 

birds 
7.  Border  on 
»  PM-ticle 

(colioq.) 
9.  Vitupera. 

live 


21  Bev- 
er- 
age 

22  Copies 

23  Philip- 
pine 
capital 
(posa.) 

26.  Arid 


11  Spread  gr»»«  29.  Large 

to  dry  worm 

15.  Through  30.  Lion's 

17  West  Indies  heavy 
charm  (var  )         hair 

18  TrouWs.  <pl) 
some  32.  Dance  step 

20  Old  times  33.  Opposite  of 
(archaic)  aweather 


uQUia 

UHOK 

aUDQ 

HHU^J 

EdI;dllUl^ 

miuiii>: 

OKul       ^ 

jHESESL^ 

ql:  uGjaci  wiat^ 

a»anHt5   Hasr*;! 

aan 

□aa 

guE^y  aa^;3[-4ii 

uEiB  Bissau  en  a 

[•janiaf33      uaii 

BaMHS 

DWBL.^ 

UH^a 

aiiTiv. 

tisiiia 

auLjii 

Baptists  Buy 
Downtown 
Trotter  Land 

The  Chapel  Hill  Baptist  Church 
will  buy  for  one-quart«-  millioq 
dollars  the  John  Scott  Trotter 
properties  which  surround  it  in 
downtown  Chapel  Hill. 

The  decision  to  accept  a  two- 
months-old  purchase  offer  at  that 
price  was  reached  by  an  over- 
whelming vote  of  the  congrega- 
tion at  a  business  conference  fol 
lowing  a  family  night  supper  last 

j  Thursday. 

j  The  Church's  Board  of  Deacons 
recommended      the     purchase   — 

i  which  will  give  the  church  a  two- 

i  acre  square  in  the  heart  of  town 
— in  order  to  provide  needed 
room    for   expanding   the   35-year- 

I  old  physical  plant. 


CLASSIFKOS 


34.  Kind  of  star 

35.  Portion 
17.  Uncooked 
58.  Frozen 

water 


FOR  RENT!  FURNISHED:  TWO 
rooms  and  bath  (used  as  two 
bedrooms  or  as  bedroom  and 
living  room) — private  entrance. 
Completely  and  attractively 
furni.shed.  Near  Hospital.  Call 
9-1761   for  appointment. 


LOST— GOLD  BENRUS  "CITA- 
tion"  Men's  Wrist  Watch.  Night 
of  January  29th.  Reward.  George 
Lawrence.  Psychology  Dept.  or 
phone  9-2471. 


FOR  SALE:  HOUSETRAILER;  35 
feet,  2  bedrooms,  shower.  1950 
Iron  wood.  Taylors  Trailer  Ct. 
Airport   Rd.,  J.  L.   Lane. 


LAW  BOOKS,  VOLUMES  1  through 
155  (except  22  volumes)  S.  E. 
reporter  41  through  50  Sup.  Ct. 

'  Reporter  190  volumes  CYC.  CJ 
and  Digest  $160.00 

FOR     SALE:      1954   27"     HOUSE- 
trailer.  1  '2  miles  North  of  Cha-  \ 
pel  Hill  on  Airport  Road.  Sloan's 
Trailer  Park.  Maurice  L.  Clegg.  j 


LOST:  A  BLUE  POCKETBOOK 
with  a  brown  billfold,  contain- 
ing money  and  papers.  On  Col- 
umbia St.  Please  return  to  S.  I 
Merrick,  Nurses  Dorm.  J 


DROP  ADD  IS  OVER 

The  last  stragglers  in  the  drop  add  line  that  wound  through 
Hancs  Hall  for  thra^  days  contemplate  final  changes  in  spring  sche- 
dules. 


MISS  ANNE  HOLDFORD: 


North  Carolina  Educator  To 
Teach  Elementary  Ed  Here 


I  Anne  Holdford.  well  known 
'  North  Carolina  educator,  will 
:  teach  classes  and  lecture  in  ele- 
1  mentary  education  in  the  Univer- 
i  sity  School  of  Education  during 
:  the  Spring  Semester,  it  was  an- 
nounced today  by  Dean  Arnold 
i  Perry. 

Miss  Holdford  received  her 
bachelor's  degree  from  George 
Peabody  College,  her  master's  de- 
gree   from    Columbia    University, 

]  and  did  two  years  of  work  beyon4 
the    masters   degree   at    Columbia 

j  University.  While  a  student  she 
was  awarded  a  General  Education 
Board  fellowship  and  later  the 
Frank  Ross  Chambers  Fellowship 
at   Columbia    University. 

Her  professional   experience   in- 
cTudes  teaching  in  the  elementary 
and    secondary   schools    of    North 
Carolina     and     twelve     years     as 
supervisor    of    the    Wake    County. 
North     Carolina,     public     .schools  I 
From   1935  to   1941   Mi.ss  Holdford  j 
was  supervisor  of  schools  in  Del-  , 
m^r.  New  York,  and  left  there  to  ! 
become  supervisor  of  schools  with 
the  Stat  3  Dept.  of  Public  Instruc- 1 
tion  in  Albany.  New  York.  For  the 
past     two     years     she     has  .  been  1 
supervisor  of  scho.ols  in  the  Tar- 1 
boro  City  and  Edgecombe  County  | 
schools.  I 

•  ,j 

Miss  Holdford  has  been  a  col- 
lege teacher  in  several  institutions  j 
including  Adelphi  College  for 
the  last  five  years.  She  has  b€>en  j 
visiting  instructor  during  the  sum- 
mer terms  at  the  University  of 
Florida,  Alabama  Woman's  Col- 
lege at  Montevallo,  Alabama, 
Duke  University,  and  North  Caro- 
lina State  College. 

She  belongs  to  several  profes- 
sional societies  including  Delta 
Kappa  Gamma  and  Kappa  Delta  Pi. 
Ir'or    many    years    she    has    been 


Delegates  Look 

UNITED  NATIONS,  N.  Y.— (AP) 
— Worried  by  Israel's  firm  refusal 
to  get  out  of  Egypt  without  guar- 
antees, U.'  N.  delegates  looked  tc 
the  United  States  Monday  to  take 
the  lead  in  a  new  assembly  debate, 
perhaps  Thursday,  on  the  deteri- 
orating Middle  East  crisis. 

The  view  was  expressed  by  sever- 
al delegates  in  private  talks  that 
it  was  up  to  the  United  States  to 
bring  pressure  on  Israel  in  order 
to  obtain  compliance  with  six  U.N. 
resolutions  requesting  withdrawal. 
The  U.S.  delegation  was  silent  on 


TO  A  NICE  LITTLE 
GAL 

Who  Wishes   Boys   Had 
More  Gumption 

Chickabiddy,   if  you   plea^-e, 
hear  the  parable  of  bees.  Bees 
devote  their  shining  hours  to 
bussing,   as  it  were,  the  flow- 
ers. They  smack  each  flower,  but 
pass   the   buds,   which,   to   bees' 
eyes,  look  like  duds.  Humming 
in  their  twos  and  threes,  go 
the  merry,  boy-like  bees! 

Now  flowers,  in  their  girlish 
way,  seeming  just  to  stand  and 
sway,  plan  their  ever>'  move  to 
please  silly,  buzzing  boy-like 
bees.   Perfumes   subtler  than 
Chanel,  subtle  shades  to  match 
each  smell — these  they  pass 
around  for  (tee.  not  for  any 
special  bee.  For  the  girlish 
flower^f  have  found  bees  like 
rivals   buzzing   'round. 

THE  MORAL— If  you  want  a  bee, 
set  your  sights  at  least  on 
three.  Send   them  each   a   Valen- 
tine from  the  bookshop  with 
this  sign: 

THE    INTIMATE 
BOOKSHOP 

205  E.  Franklin  Street 
Open  Till   10  P.M. 


Civil  Rights  Urged 

WASHINGTON  — (AP)—  Atty 
Gen.  Brownell  declared  Mondaj 
there  would  be  no  federal  en 
croachment  on  states'  authority  in 
the  administration's  civil  rights 
proi^ram.  He  urged  passage  of  the 
legislation  to  "affirm  the  Congress' 
determination  to  secure  equal  jus- 
tice under  law  for  all  of  our  citi- 
zens." 


Left  Holding 
The  Bag? 

Bring  your  dropped  texts 
in,  and  we'll  salvage  what 
we  can  for  you. 

The  Intimate  < 
Bookshop  .    I 

205  E.  Franklin  St.       ' 
Open  Till  10  P.  M. 


YOUR     TRIP     IS     MUCH     MORE     FUN 
WITH     FRIENDLY    FOLKS 


G 


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Trailwoys  goes  THRU  to  most  destinations! 

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Thru-Liner  (no  change)  service  daily  t 

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3  Thru-Liner  (no  change)  trips  daily 

RALEIGH     ^         %     .€5 

9  Convenient  trips  daily 

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Express  service  via  Charlotte  (Plus  Tax) 

UNION  BUS  STATION 
311   W.  FRANKLIN   ST.  PHONE  4261 

Atk  shippers  to  send  package  express  to  you  by 
Trailways.  It'sfaater.  Buses  Chartered  for  tripe 
anywhere — any  time. 


TR  A  ALWAYS 

Ttie  route  ot  ttie  Thru-Liners! 


offers 
rewarding 
career  opportunities 
to  : 


iors  and  Graduate  Students 


fS 


MISS  HOLDFORD 

.  .  .  to  teach  here 

active  in  Ihc  As.sn.  for  Childhood 
Education  International  and  was 
.stale  president  in  New  York  from 
1944  to  1946.  She.  has  written 
many  articles  which  have  appear- 
ed in  the  journal  ".\merican 
Childhood"  and  in  other  profe.s- 
sional  journals. 


What  you  should  know 

about 

International  Business  Machines 

Corporation 


Ping  Pong  Play  Begins 

W.A.A.  has  just  begun  a  table 
tennis  tournament.  Fifty-two  girls 
have  entered.  The  first  round  of 
the  straight  elimination  tourna- 
ment must  be  played  by  Monday. 
February  18.  Sorority  and  Dorm 
W.^.A.  representatives  have  been 
urged  to  check  with  the  bulletin 
br:ard  in  the  Womens'  Gym  for 
the  schedule  of  matches.  (Games 
may  be  played  anywhere  on  cam- 
pus where  there  is  a  table  tennis 
table.) 


A  world-recognized  leader  and  pioneer 
in  tile  fastest-growing  and  perhaps  the 
one  "unliniited"  field  in  electronics  to- 
day: digital  computer  development, 
manufacture  and  sales.  Builder  of  the 
world's  largest  computer. 

IBM  leadership  is  based  on  a  42^ 
year  recort}  of  steady  achievement  and 
growth,  with  sales  doubUngon  an  aver- 
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IBM's  excellent  salary  and  employee 
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Advancement  is  based  solely  on  in- 
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positicms  of  responsibility. 

IBM  Laboratories  and  manufactur- 
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keepsie,  Endicott,  Owege,  and  King- 
ston, N.  Y.,  San  Jose,  Caiifornio^ 
Lexington,  Ky.,  and  Rochester,  Minn. 
Sales  and  service  offices  in  190  prin-  • 
cipal  cities  throughout  tfie  U.  S. 


PUS 
INTERVIEWS 

FEBRUARY  5,  1957 


If  yew  decree  er  maior  is: 

Liberal  Arts  •  Business  •  Accounting 
Engineering  •  Mathematics  :  .  ,  .  , 

Accounting  •  Adniinistratioa 
Management  •  Auditing 

Physics  •  Mathematics  •  Engineering . 

Physics  •  Mechanical  •  Electrical  ^ 
Engineering  Physics •  , 

Industrial  •  Electrical  •  Mechanical. 


Si0i  ietarview  lolndiiU  fen 

r  '       ■  ■ 

•  •  oaies 

,  .  .  Business  AdministntiM 
,. .  .  Applied  Science 


Engineering  Reseacdl 
and  Developmeot 

Manufac(Mt«i 


CONTACT  YOUR  C0LLE6E  PLACEMENT  OFFICE 
FOR  APPOINTMENT,  TODAY! 

If  you  cannot  attend  interv  iews,    = 
write  for  nwre  uifonnation  to: 
R.  W.  Hubner,  Director  of  Recniitment, 
IBM  Corp.,  590  Mudisou  Avenue,  New  York  22,  N.  Y. 


IBM 


INTUNATIONAL 
BUSINESS  MACHINES 
COirOBATION 


j»f T*  pnocMeiM*  •  ■ncTig  TYymmrw  juTimc  tawtFWKHT.s_iMMTAiiv  rmowtcw^ 


Wk9M  POUI 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEiL 


TUESDAY,  FEBRUARY  5,  1W7 


Unbeaten  Tar  Heels  Face  Terps  In  College  Park  Tonight 


The  Man  Has  A  Problem 

Frank  McGuire  is  a  man  with  a  problem,  but  it  is  one  that  many 
a  less  successful  basketball  coach  would  give  a  7  foot  center  to  have 
The  genial  Mr.  McGuire  is  coe<h  of  the  nation's  number  one 
basketball  teanr>,  and  his  probltm  is  how  to  keep  his  Tar  Heels  un- 
defeated and  on  top  of  the  collegiate  cage  heap. 

E^'ery  team  on  Carolina's  schedule  from  here  on  out  would  be 
eager  to  become  the  first  to  burst  the  Tar  Heel  victory  bubble,  and 
Coach  McGuire  is  faced  with  the  difficult  task  of  keying  his  sqund 
up  for  every  game. 

The  long  road  from  a  16-0  record  to  the  NCAA  title  begins  to- 
night in  College  Park,  Md.,  and  ends  nobody  knows  where.  Perhaps  in 
the  first  geme  of  the  ACC  tournament,  or  maybe  in'  the  last  game 
of  the  NCAA  championship  playoffs. 

But  the  first  obstacle  to  bo  hurdled  is  a  dangerous  University  o! 
Maryland  team,  a  team  that  has  become  something  of  a  terror  on  their 
home  court  where  they  meet  the  Tar  Heels  tonight.  The  Terps  have 
disposed  of  Wake  Forest.  Slate  and  Duke  in  convincing  fashion  or. 
their  own  floor,  and  this  home  court  advantage  could  play  a  big  part 
in  determining  the  outcome  of  tonight's  game. 

The  Tar  Heels  are  supposedly  weaker  with  Bill  Hathaway  and 
Tony  Radovich  gone.  But  we  don't  see  any  reason  why  this  should 
necessarily  be  the  case.  Hathaway,  although  he  started  a  number  of 
games,  was  never  any  valuable  asset,  and  Radovich  should  be  quite 
adequately  replaced  by  sophomore  Stan  Groll. 

Groll  displayed  tremendous  promise  last  year  a.-  a  freshman.  i\n<l 
hasn't  really  had  a  chance  to  put  his  talents  to  good  use  this  season 
as  McGuire  has  chosen  to  go  along  with  his  more  experienced  men. 
But  with  Radovich  gone,  Groll  is  now  the  number  one  sub  at  guard. 
and  should  see  a  lot  of  action. 

To  fill  Hathaway 's  shoes,  McGuire  can  call  on  Bob  Young,  a  6-6 
senior  who  was  recently  restored  to  good  disciplinary  standing  by 
the  Tar  Heel  coach,  and  Danny  Lotz,  a  6-7  soph  who  has  been  picking 
up  splinters  on  the  bench  along  with  Groll  up  to  now.  Young  is  a 
proven  performer  who  can  rebound  and  shoot,  while  Lotz  needs  only 
experience. 

After  tonight,  the  going  gets  even  tougher  with  five  games  s'tijl 
to  be  played  in  the  Big  Four.  And  Wake  Forest  is  looking  better  all 
the  time.  . 

On  The  Underground  Railroad 

The  recent  article  in  Sports  Illustrated  on  basketballs  "under- 
ground railroad"  has  been  blasted  from  all  sides  by  N.  C.  spwrts  wri- 
ters, and  several  have  accused  the  N.  Y.  scribes  of  being  jealous  at  see- 
ing all  the  good  boys  spirited  away  to  Dixieland.  This  writer  agrees 
with  Frank  McGuire  about  the  story.  We  got  quite  a  kick  out  of  it.  and 
thought  it  to  be  interesting  and  well  worth  reading. 


UNC  Quint 
Seeks  Win 
Number  17 

By    LARRY    CHEEK 

Powerful  North  Carolina,  the 
nation's  best  basketball  team  ac- 
cording to  popular  concensus  of 
opinion,  steps  into  the  lion's  lair 
up  at  College  Park.  Md.  tonight  to 
!  do  battle  with  Coach  Bud  Milli- 
kan's  Maryland  Terps  in  an  ACC 
headliner  that  could  assume  na- 
tional   significance. 

Game  time  is  set  for  8  p.m.  with 
a  capacity  crowd  of  over  12,000 
expected  to  sit  in.  The  game  will 
be  piped  back  to  Xorth  Carolina 
via  radio  station  WPTF  in  Raleigh 
with  Jim  Rcid  handling  the  play 
by   play. 

The  contest  is  a  crucial  one  for 
both  contending  parties.  Coach 
FYank  .McGuires  Tar  H?els  will 
be  1  -oking  for  their  17th  straight 
victory  without  a  lo.ss.  and  their 
7th  in  conference  play.  The  Tar 
Hc:ls  top  the  ACC  with  a  6-0 
mark  while  the  Terps  are  cur- 
rently running  in  fourth  place 
with  6  wins  and  3  losses. 
'  One  of  those  three  Maryland 
losses  was  dealt  them  by  Caro- 
lina in  Chapel  Hill  before  the 
Christmas  holidays.  The  score  in 
that  one  was  70-61.  but  the  Tar 
Heels  prevailed  only  after  a  hard 
struggle. 

Other  Maryland  losses  have  also 
comt"  on  the  road.  They  lost  an 
early  decision  to  South  Carolina 
in  Columbia  and  last  week  suffer- 
ed a  72-60  drubbing  at  the  hand;> 
of  Duke  in  Durham. 

But  their  record  at  home 
against  Big  Four  opposition  is 
enough  even  to  make  the  nation's 
number  one  team  shudder.  The 
!  Terps.  playing  efficient,  posses- 
.  sion  basketball,  have  romped  over 
Wake  Forest,  State  and  Duke  with 
effortless  e^se  on  their  home 
floor,  and  they  need  only  to  add 
Carolina  to  make  it  a  perfect 
sweep. 

Maryland  has  had  a  two  game 
warmup    period    since    the    exam 


STAN   GROLL 

.    L'A'C  soph   guard 


Kansans  Close  Margin 
But  UNC  Holds  Lead 


Grid  Slate 
Lists  Six 
Home  Tilts 


A  10-game  1957  football  sched- 
ule was  announced  yesterday  for 
North  Carolina.  | 

The  Tar  Heels,  who  will  play  | 
six  home  games,  will  meet  each  ' 
of  their  seven  Atlantic  Coast  Con- ; 
ference  rivals  and  outsiders  Ijavy,  i 
Miami  and  Tennessee. 

Notre     Dame.  Oklahoma     and 

:  Georgia,     1956  opponents,     have 

i  been    replaced  by    Navy.    Miami 

!  and    (Uemson.  Athletic    director 

C.   P.   Erickson  said  Notre   Dame 

will    return    to  the    schedule    in 

1958. 

The    Duke    game,    normally   the 
final  test  of  the  season,  has  been  j 
moved    up   a   week,  with   Virginia  ! 
taking  the  closing  date.  j 

The  game  with  North  Carolina 
State,  originally  set  for-  State's 
stadium  at  Raleigh,  has  been  mov- 
ed to  Chapel  Hill  because  of  the 
greater  seating  capacity  of  the 
Tar    Heels'    Kenan    Stadium.  j 

The  schedule:      ' 

Sept.  21— Norbli  Carolina  State; 

28 — Ciemson* 

I 

'      Oct.  5— NaVyi  IT'-^t  Miami;  19 
';  —at  Maryland:   26— at  Wake  For- 
est. 

Nov  2 — Tennessee;  9  —  South 
Carolina;  16— Open;  23— at  Duke; 
30 — Virginia. 


McGUIRE'S  GREATEST  TEAM 

North  Carolina  basketball  coach  i 
Frank  McGuire  had  many  great  | 
teams  while  coaching  at  St.  John's- , 
in  Brooklyn,  but  the  Tar  Heel  I 
coach  says  his  1956-57  team  is  th^  \ 
best  he's  ever  coached.  ! 


By   HUGH   FULLERTON   JR.       4 
The  Associated   Press  , 

It's  North  Carolina  all  the  way  i 
again  in  the  weekly  college  basket-  j 
ball  ratings,  but  Kansas  refuses  to 
Wilt.  Wilt  The  Stilt,  that  is.  Wake  I 
Forest  is  10th  and  West  Virginia  j 
is   11th.  I 


. 


Cef^ainly  it  is  not  a  concfemnation,  or  even  an  "expose".  It  is 
r»fher  a  colorful  story  of  modern  day  basketball  recruiting  and  the 
men  who  work  behirtd  the  scenes. 

The  men  described  in  the  story  live  and  breathe  the  game  of 
ba>>ketball.  and  the  only  reward  they  receive  is  the  satisfaction  oi 
landing  a  good  prospect  for  the  school  they  represent.  Most  of  thee 
men  have  large  private  incomes,  and  can  afford  to  deal  in  the  basket 
ball  manpower  market  without  thought  of  monctaay  con.sidcration. 

It's  a  cutthroat  business,  a  business  in  which  Frank  McGuire  and 
his  aides  are  remarkably  proficient.  Witness  Carolina's  number  one 
ranking.  But  basically  it  is  an  honest  business  with  friends,  connec- 
tions and  all  round  know-how  meaning  more  than  cash  on  the  barrel 
head  offers. 


but  the  Jayhawks  picked 
up  enough  points  to  make  the  race 
closer. 


Milton's  Mid-Winter 
Carnival 

Further  reductions  on  the  coun- 
try's most  wanted  epparel 

Further   reductions  on     crew 
neck   sweaters  as   follows: 

$7.95  to  $5.99 
$9.95  to  $7.99 
One  group  $13.95  to  $8.99 
Sheggy     shetlands     from 
$13.95   to  $10.99 

$11.95    Imported    Shetlands 
To  $8.99 

Many  out  of  this  world  rtduc- 
tions.  -     ' 


Due    largely    to    Wilt    Chamber- 1 

Iain's      invaluable      contributions. ' 

Kansas'    victory    over    Iowa    State 

last    week    made    a    stronger      im-  i 

break"  While  The   Ta7  HeVls   have  '  P^ession  on  the  voters  than  North  : 

seen  action  onlv  once.  The  Terps  I  Carolina's  easy  decision  over  little  ! 

were    unimpressive    in    losing    to  ,  Western  Carolina.  It  wasn't  enough  | 

Duke    on    their    first    outing,    but    to  shake  North  Carolina's  hold  on  I 

Saturdav  night  they  ran  away  from  '  "^st  place  in  the  Associated  Press  | 

Ceorge  "  Washington.    84-57.    Caro-  j  PO"   of  sports  writers  and   broad-  ' 

lina   ran   through  what    was   little  I  casters 

more    than-  a    scrimmage    session 

last    Wednesday    night    in    Cullo- 

vvec.      beating   Western     Carolina.  |      q^^  ^f  93  experts  voting  in  the 
77-59.  ninth   weekly   poll    of   the    1956-57 

This  semesters'  UNC  squad  is  college  season.  53  li.sted  North 
not  quite  the  same  as  the  one  :  Carolina's  Tar  Heels  on  top  and  22 
fielded  by  (loach  McGuire  during  j  y„(pcj  Kansas  first.  That  was  a 
the  fall  session,  although  it  .should  j  ggi^  in  first  for  Kansas  and  a  loss 
pack  the  same  knockout  punch,  j  f^j.  North  Carolina,  but  both  re- 
Bill  Hathaway  and  Tony  Radovich.  1  corded  higher  point  totals  than  last 
two  frontline  reserves,  are  now ,  ^^^1^  ^ue  to  a  heavier  vote, 
among  the  departed,  and  big  Bob' 

Young,   a  6-6  senior,  was  dismiss-  i     On  the  basis  of  10  points  for  each 
ed  by  McGuire  before  the  season  i  first  place  vote,  nine  for  second, 
A    pickup    squad    o'f    Tar    Heel    for   disciplinary   reasons,   but   was    etc..  Carolina  tallied  871  pom^^^ 

reinstated    Sunday.  •  Kansas  773.   Each  won  one  game 

Stan  Groll  and  Danny  Lotz  are  during  the  week  which  ended  with 
also  expected  to  see  a  good  deal  last  Saturdays  games.  North  Caro- 
of  action  in  tonight's  game  and  j  Una  walloped  Western  Carolina.  77- 
through  the  remainder  of  the  ■  54  for  its  16th  straight  victory, 
season.  With  Radovich  gone.  Groll  I  Kansas,  beaten  only  by  Iowa  State 

1  •    •  J     ■  .1  nrLM,   is   thp   number   one    reolace-    this  season,  did  a  fair  job  of  wip- 

knee    iniurv    during    coss-country    now   is   tne   numoer   um    ici^iav-^-  .    ^u  .    j  r    .    1      . 

jnent  at  guard.  '"S  out   that   defeat   by  trimming 

Despite  all  the  shifts,  the  start-    the  Cyclones  75-64  as  seven-footer 
ing     lineup     remains     the     same.  |  Chamberlain  .scored  19  points  and 
Heading  the  list   is  senior  sharp-  j  grabbed  24  rebounds, 
shooter  Lennie  Rosenbluth.   while  j      Louisville's     loss*    to     Memphis 

defeat   by  Purdue, 


THE  NEW  YORK  LIKE  AGENT 

ON  YOUR  CAMPUS 
IS  A  GOOD  MAN  TO  KNOW 

George  L  Coxhead 


-iINC,   '42 
A    Mutual    Company 


Campus  Representative 
Founded  1845 


NEW  YORK 

INBURANCm  COMFMiY 


UNC  Runners 
Take  Part  In 
VMI  Relays 


trackmen  attended  the  VMI  Re- 
lays Saturday  night,  and  managed 
to  come  off  with  a  pair  of  second 
place   medals. 

Wayne    Bishop,    soph    distance 
runner  who  was  sidelined  with  a 


season,  turned  in  a  blazing  per- 
formance to  take  second  place 
close  behind  Dave  Pitkethley  of 
Richmond   in    the    two    mile    run. 


Ail  sales  cash  and  final- 
ferations  extra 


il- 


I 


iWilton'ja; 

Clotiiing  CupiipArD 


The  sprint  medley  relay  team  com- 
posed of  John  Fox.  Jim  Moss.  Dick  1  providing  the  supporting  cast  are  '  g^^^^    Illinois 
McFadden  and  Dave  Scurlock  also    Pete  Brennan.  Joe  Quigg,  Tommy   ^^^^j  jq^,^  states  setback  resulted 
took    second   behind    the   winning   Kearns  and  Bob  Cunningham,  all  ,  -^^  another  fast  shuffle  among  the 
Maryland  quartet.  juniors.  other  teams  in  the  first  10. 

All-American  Jim  Beatty.  who  I  Maryland  will  put  on  display  a  Kentucky,  winning  three  games 
had  been  scheduled  to  run  in  the  j  well  balanced  scoring  punch  built  |  ^^  ^.^^^.  fajj^ion,  inherited  third 
Boston   AA   meet,    did    not    make  |  around     forward      Bob      O'Brien.  1  pj^^.^     ^^^^  Louisville. 

the   trip  but  remained   in  Chapel  1  Others  in  the  starting  lineup  will  i _ 

Hill    due    to    pressing    academijq    be   Perry  Moore   at   center,   John  jx^s^ 

duties.  I  Nacincik    at    the    other    forward. 

The  track  squad  will  travel  to  I  and  Nick  Davis  and  Jim  Halleok 
Raleigh's   State   Fair  Cow  Palace,  I  at  guards. 

scene  of  htis  year's  ACC   indoor!      A    loss    tonight,    or   any   night 
games,  for  a  practice  meet  Satur-    from  here  on  out  for  that  matter, 


HENRY  FONDA  VERA  MILES 

in  ALFRED  HiTCHCOCKS 


day  at  2  p.m.  with  N.C.  State. 


would    almost    surely    knock    the 

Tar  Heels  from  their  exalted  post 

ROUGH   SCHEDULE  as  the  number  one  team   in  the 

Laszlo     Tabori,  the     Hungarian '  country.  Kansas,  their  closest  pur 

Olympic  track  star  who  is  train-    suers,   whipped    Iowa    State   in    a 

ing  in  Chapel  Hill  follows  a  rigor- 1  revenge  win  Saturday  night,  and 

ous  schedule.  Tabori  runs  about ;  stands  ready  to  move  in  should 

40  miles  every  day.  the  Tar  Heels  falter. 


, ..  . ,-  -1  .-'-o...  o  ..II    D"»tHd  b»  ALfREO  HITCHCOCK 

LAST  TIMES  TODAY 


Carolina 


JU 


THE  STAR  DREAMERS 

COMBO  OR  ORCHESTRA 
wish  to  announce  that  they  will  have  available  several  dates  in 
February  and  March  for  .your  special  party  or  dance.  Be  sure  to 
call  before  the  la»t  minute  to  avoid  being  left  out.  Any  sixe  band 
furnished  on  request. 

CALL  OR  WRITE: 
Bill    Lenfley  Chris   Reynolds 

Box   1342  Box  262 

Durham,  N.  C.  Chapel   Hill 

Phone  8-3741 


Green's  Restaurant 

Home  of  the  famous  Dixieburger 
Pit-Cooked  Barbeque—Brunswick  Stew 

123  Coluntbia  Street 
(Betide  Western  Union)  ,  Phone  9-3411 

We   sorve   dinner  consisting   of   your   choice   of    meat   anc 
three  vegetables.  Free  seconds  on  coffee  or  tea  with  nteals. 
OPEN  FROM  8:00  A.  M.  TILL  2:00  A.  M. 


The  wholesalers  Did  It! 

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Credit  Cards  Honored  Again 

At  The  Students'  Friend 

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— Alton   Cook, 
World  Tele-Sun 


The  J.  Arthur  Rank 
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— Justin  Gilbert,  Daily  Mirror 

''Brave  action  on  the  bounding 
sea,  which  the  English  know, 
love  and  handle  so  well!" 

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Frpm  the  author  and  producers 
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but  indeed  the  creft  of  •  »eiU>r 
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— very  light  and  cool,  yet  as  strong 
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Philadelphia  with  ds  much  regard 
for  your  comfort  as  for  your 
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coat  and  trousers  in  midnight 
black — /■«  the  natural-shoulder. 
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fi 


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'cloudy     and     cetd»r.     ExMct'd 
hiffh  52. 


VOL.  LVII  NO.  91 


Compter  OP)  Wir9  Strviet 


m  t  Alailu  |i  ^Tat  Mtti 


GARBLE 

That's    th*    pass¥ford    at    South 
Building.  Sea  oditorial,  |>a9t  2. 


'^  \U.. 


CHAPEL  HILL,  NORTH  CAROLINA,  WEDNESDAY,  FEBRUARY  6,  1957 


Offices   in   Graham   Memorial 


FOUR    PACES  THIS  ISSUI 


HalHord  Will  Propose 
Fines  For  Offenders 

Br  PRINGLE  PIPKIN 

Sonnv  Malllovd.  President  of  the  IDC,  said  along  with 
oihcj  aimoinucnicjits  thui  he  will  j)iesei'ii  before  the  Student 
Lej^iilaiuit.  a  bill  to  enipouer  the  lUC  to  incorjX)raie  into 
Hs  ID  {  uurt  l>y-l.au.<j  the  power  to  lew  a  tine  (iij>  to  Sio) 
against  oHendci>."' 

He  xvtiu   on   to  say   that   this   bill   is  directed  primarily 

at     those    who    chronically    com-* • 

nut  snirll  offenses.  i 

Committee 
Pondering 
Librarians  ' 

A  nine-man  faculty  ccmmittee, 
headed  by  Dr.  B.  L.  Ullman.  lias 
l>:en  appointed  to  consider  a  suc- 
•ossor  to  retiring  UNC  Librarian 
v.  H.  Horn. 

Tac  committee  met  Jan.  14.  to 
••evipw  the  qualifications  nece«i- 
sary    to    fi'.l    the    position    and    to 


NO  PHONES 

Ilailford  stated  that  there  re- 
main 14  dormitories  which  do  not 
have  phones  on  the  second  and 
fourth  floors.  .Although  the  in- 
stallment of  the  phones  was  pro- 
mised in  the  early  part  of  the  first 
s?mesler.  only  five  dorms  hav: 
received  attention.  He  said  that 
he  understood  that  the  use  ct 
non-pay  phones  for  long  distance 
tails  had  caused  a  delay,  but  the 
president  had  not  heard  of  this 
prarfce    recurring    lately. 

One  of  tha  problems  ne-w  fac- 
ing the  IOC  if  the  maintenance 
of  the  dormitory  television  sets. 
He  said  that  the  dorms  did  not 
have  the  money  to  repair  aging 
sets. 

FIRECRACKERS 

Concerning  the  llirecracker 
throwing  in  the  dormitories.  Hall- 
ford,  said.  "Due  to  the  fact  that 
thtre  is  an  ever  increasing  amount 
of  shooting  of  fireworks  on  the 
campus.  I  would  lik?  to  lake  this 
opportunity  to  remind  the  ones 
responsible  that  they  arc  violating 
not  only  Campus  and  Dormitor>- 
r?gulations  but  a!s.i  x\arth  Care 
lina  law. 

"To  prevent  any  serious  acci- 
dents from  happening,  we  wouki 
like  to  request  that  such  future 
activities  be  rrfralned.  Those  who 
are  caught  will  be  dealt  with 
through  the  proper  channels  and 
receive  the  just  punishment.  We  of 
th  IDC  would  like  to  ask  for  yow 
cooperation  in  this  matter.'* 


Pgnty  Raiders 
Stopped  After 
Carolina  Win 

Last  night's  victory  over  Mary- 
land nearly  set  off  a  panty  raid. 

When  the  game  ended  a  crowd 
of  student.'  gathered  in  the  lower 
quad.  About  50-75  men  milled 
around  the  area,  shouting  and 
shooting  firecrackers. 

A  resident  of  Mclver  said  a  few 
of  them  gathered  in  the  wooded 
area  bohind  the  dorm  and  some 
.^hout3  of  "'panty  raid"  were  heard. 
Student  Body  President  Bob 
Young  and  Student  Party  Chair- 
man iSonny  Hallford  approached 
the  crowd  and  told  the  men  to  go 
back  to  their  dorms.  Young  could 
not  be  reached  for  comment  on 
tht  disturbance. 

A  few  students  were  seen  in 
the  women's  quad,  but  the  only 
disturbance  in  the  area  was  caus- 
ed by  firecracker.;  thrown  from 
cars. 

The  near-panty  raid  was  first 
reported  by  a  resident  of  Alder- 
man at  10.  By  10:15  the  only  per 

•stablish     a     preliminary     course  i  son  seen  in  the  women's  quad  was 

nd   scope   for   the   committe.    ac-  ;  a  campus  policeman.. 

•:rdin-.j  to  Dr.  Ullman.  |      Two  police  officers  were  seen  in 

Any    candidate    considered     for    the    lower   quad    at   the   time    the 

he   position   must   measure   up  to  \  disturbance     first     erupted.     The 

he  .standards  and  qualifications  of  I  Chapel  Hill  Police  Dept..  reported 

he    ccmmittee.   Dr.    Ullman    said,    that  it  had  not  been  officially  no- 

?'or.^most    among    these    consider-  \  tified  of  the  incident. 

itions  3re:  1 — the  personal  aspect 

n  dealing  and  getting  along  with 

leopl?,  2 — an  administrative  abii- 

ty.  3 — a   knowledge   of   and  sym- 

lathy  with   functions  of  the   Uni- 

ersity     Library.    4 — a     wide     ac- 

uaintance    with    libraries    and    li- 

>rarians.   and   5 — imagination  and 

enthusiasm   tor    the   library. 
Dr.    Ullman    stressed    the    third 

onsidcration     in     its     importance 

md  application  to  supporting   the 

'osearcb   needs  of  the-   library. 
Initiative    in    the    selection    and 

•oview    oi    candidates    is    usually 

.iken   by  the  committee  although 


Magill  Emphasizes  Crisis  In  Students  Initiative; 
Explains  Administration  Views  To  UPMembership 

Prices,  Parking  Lots 
Discussed  At  Meeting 


School  Aid  Needed 


nd  considered.  Normal  procedure 
nvolvcs  the  committee's  writing 
0  various  schools  and  institutions 
or  recc-mmendations  and  back- 
round  and  then  reviewing  likely 
andidates. 

Leading    candidates     arc     asked 

<>  c^mo  to  Chaptl  Hill  where  they 

^^  I      -.*■,,  ■-1-1   rfc.  ^'"^     personally     interviewed     by 

JLy  If  ^^  I  ■  I  y  iflp  if  I  '*^P    committee    and    other    people 

i  n  the   University. 

The  committee  is  expected  to 
meet  again  this  month  in  order 
o  expand  on  the  functions  and 
vork  undertaken  at  the  first 
•neeting. 

With  Dr.  Ullman  as  chairman, 
the  committee  members  are  as 
follows:  J.  E.  Adams.  A.  G.  Engs- 
trom.  Glen  Haydon.  A.  K.  King. 
Young  said  that  he  had  "con-  H.  Q.  Lang?nderfer,  H.  Lefler. 
sidered  several  peopk  for  thislE.  D.  Palmatier,  N.  A.  Womack. 
"position  and  discussed  it  with  Dr.  Ullman  expressed  the  hope 
•many  people  before  making  thei  that  the  position  will  be  filled-be- 
decision.  I  feel  that  Larry  will  ca- !  fore  July  I  when  Librarian  Horn 
^ably  handle  the  responsibilities :  retires, 
-of   this    position."  i    "~ ' 


Harris  Now 
Committee 
airman 

Larry  Harris,  a  junior  from 
Charlotte,  has  been  appointed 
chairman  of  the  Sfcdent  Enter- 
tainment Committee  by  Student 
Body    President   B>b   Young. 

Before  Harris  takes  office  his 
appointment  must  be  approved  by 
the   Student    Legislature.. 


WASHLNGTON  —  (AP)  —  Sec- 
retary of  Welfare  Folsom  told 
Congress  yesterday  the  nation  will 
be  .short  of  public  school  class- 
rooms   "for    many    years"    unless 

,  the   Federal   Government  steps  in 
pplicatJons    are    bemjf    accepted    („  j,p|p  >  , 

^  ■  J  Testifying  before  the  House  Ed-! 

ucation       Subcommittee.       Folsom 
urged  approval  of  Prcsidsnt  Eisen-  j 
bower's     four-year     program     for ; 


Three-Hour 
Study  Lab- 
To  Begin 

Applications  for  a  three-hour 
non-credit  course  designed  to  as- 
sist students  in  improving  their 
reading  and  studying  efficiency 
are  being  taken  In  room  08  Pea- 
body  Hall. 

Paul  Irvine,  director  of  the 
reading  program,  said  the  course 
will  be  offered  every  hour  of  the 
day  between  9  and  3.  He  said 
there  has  been  sonic  misunder- 
standing in  the  past  conccrnin<4 
who   was   eligible   for   the   course 

According  to  Irvine  there  was 
a  rumor  that  graduate  and  pro- 
fessional students  were  taken  in- 1 
to  the  course  first.  Actually,  hej 
pointed  out.  "In  the  past  about! 
85  per  cent  have  been  undergrad-  j 
uates."  The  course  is  open  to  all  ' 
University  students. 

Approximately  200  students  can 
be  enrolled  this  semester.  Irvine 
said  about  100  have  already  been 
accepted  on  the  basis  of  applica- 
tions made  in  September.  Stu- 
dents interested  in  taking  the 
course  have  been  asked  to  apply 
to  the  reading  office  between  the 
hours  of  9  and  4. 

Irvine  said  students  interested 
in  checking  their  reading  profic- 
iency but  not  interested  in  taking 
the  reading  course  may  report  to 
the  main  testing  service  in  room 
03  Pea body. 


By  NEIL  BASS 

"Students  must  {.uc  the  \a!iu'  of  intcsrity  if  thev  are  to 
oNciconif  the  (urrciit  ciisi.s  in  student  initiative."  Director 
ol  Student  .\etivitie.s  Sam   .Magill  said  last  nigiu. 

.Magill  addre.ssed  the  I'niver.sity  Party  at  its  regular 
1  ucsday  night  meeting.  He  spoke  on  .\(hninistration  .Views 
on  Student  (.o\ernment   Prol)lems. 


premises  upon  wliich   the  I'niversity  adminis- 
its  student    government    |5oliry.    according    to 


The  two 
t  rat  ion  l)ases 
Mr.gill.  are: 

(I)    The  demonstrated  abiliiv  ol  students  to  distiplinc 
themselvej  which   is   the   basi.s   of 
student  self-government. 

(2)  That  student  self-government 
is  educationally  sound  toward  pre- 
paration of  students  to  accept  their 
role  in  later  life. 


SAM  MA~ILL 

.  on  st}uient  problems 


Dick  Grable's  Group 
Appears  Here  Feb.  14 


UNC  Library 
Places  26th 
Of  38  Polled 


PROBLEMS 

After  stipulating  these  adminis- 
tration premises.  Magill  went  into 
a  detailed  discussion  of  the  various 
problems  confronting  c-tudent  gov- 
ernment currently..  The.se  were: 


helping    the    states    build    needed 
classrooms. 

The   cabinet    members   said    the 
Eisenhower    proposal    —    $1,300.- 
000.000     in     construction     grants ' 
plus  uther  aid  to  make  a  total  of 
nearly  2'i   billions — is  "adeijuate"  j 
to  meet  the  situation.  I 

He  thus  hit  at  democratic  critics  | 
of    the    plan   who   contend    larger 
federal    expenditures   are    needed. 

Folsom  also  repeated  Eisenhow- 
er's request  that  the  racial  inte- 
gration issue  be  kept  out  of  con- 
gressional consideration  of  the 
legislation. 


Question  is 
Ho>v  Long  To 
Wait  For  Prof 


MacmUlan  Backs  Doctrine 

LONDON    —(AP)— Prime    Min- 
ister Harold   MacmlUan  last   night  ' 

(Sec  WORLD  NKU'S,  Page  3) 


If  a  professor  is  late  in  com- 
in9  to  class,  how  long  must  stu- 
dents wait  in  class  before  they 
arc  able  to  leave? 

Opinion  among  students  seems 
to  be  anywhere  from  five  min- 
utes to  20  minutes. 

A  check  with  Chvncelhor 
Houses  office  and  Or.  C.  P. 
Spruill  revealed  by  custom — 
there  is  no  written  law  concern- 
ing this — students  must  wait  at 
least  10  minutes  before  leaving 
in  the  event  the  professor  fails 
to  show  up  before  then. 


A  third  attraction  has  been  add- 1 
ed    to    tlie    Carolina    Mardi    Gras. 
Mardi    Gras    Chairman    Jim    Arm-; 
strong    announced    yesterday.  j 

Thur.sdy  night,  Feb.  14.  Dick 
Grablci  .\il  Stars  will  present  an  i 
informal  jam  session  in  the  Main  , 
Lounge  of  Graham  Memorial.  The  ; 
exact  time  of  the  concert  has  not  1 
been  set.  said  Armstrong.  No  ad- 1 
mission  fee  will  be  charged  for 
the  jam  sess.ou. 

Tickets  art'  L;oiitg  weU'"  for 
the  thrL"c-ti;i\  tcstival,  according 
to  Armstrong,  he  reminded  stu- 
dents that  G.M.\B  has  only  a  lim- 
ited niimber  oi  tickets  for  the 
.Mitchell-Ruff  cc;t,-ert  Friday. 
Feb.  15,  and  the  formal  Louis  j 
Armstrong  dance  Safurday,  Feb. 
16.  night.  Tickets  are  an  sale  at  j 
the  Graham  Memorial  Informa- 1 
tion  Office.  Kemp's.  The  Y  In- 1 
formation  Office  and  through  In-  i 
terdormilory  council  represenla-j 
lives.  I 

The  (Germans  Club  and  GM.\B 
have  combined  their  efforts  for 
the  weekend.  Students  wishing  to 


attend  the  Louis  .\rmstrong  con- 
cert will  have  to  have  Germans 
Club  bids.  Germans  Club  mem- 
bers will  not  have  to  buy  a  ticket 
to  attend  the  dance  Saturday  night. 
Mardi  Gras  is  being;  presented 
in  connection  with  Graham  Me- 
morial's 2fith   anniversary. 

Meet  Team? 

A  group  of  students  was  plan- 
ning to  celebrate  last  night's 
basketball  victory  over  Maryland 
by  meeting  the  returning  team 
at   6:50   this   morning. 

Bob  Stanley,  the  group's  spok- 
esman, said  he  and  others  were 
going  from  room  to  room  in 
dormitories  and  fraternities  In 
an  effort  to  recruit  1,000  stu- 
dents. He  wanted  to  meet  the 
team's  train  as  it  pulled  into  the 
Raleigh   railway   station. 

I        The     team's     airplane     was 
grounded    in    Washington    after 
.     last    night's   game,    and    the   trip 
'    had   to    be   continued   by   rail. 


Loui.s  Round  Wilson  Library 
placed  26th  among  the  list  of  38 
libraries  in  the  Assn.  of  Research 
Libraries    in    number   of    volumes. 

This  figure  was  quoted  in  a  re- 
port in  Library  Notes,  a  news  bul- 
letin for  Library  personnel.  The 
statistics  are  for  the  1955-56 
school  year  and  were  collected  by 
j-the  Princeton  University   Library. 

i       According     to     Library      Notes. 

j  Carolina  moved  up  from  a  stand- 
ing of  27th  which  it  h2ld  during 
the  l954-.i5  pcri>d.  Wilson  Li- 
brary ranks  25th  in  the  amount 
spent  for  book.^.  periodica!  and 
binding. 

Number  one  on  the  list  was  Har- 1 
vard.  with  6,085.761  volumes.  Caro- ' 
lina    is    li^ted    as    having    831.119 
volumes.    S139.934    was    spent    for 
books,     periodicals,     binding     re-  j 
binding    as    opposed    to    Harvard's 
.S.'i95.374.      The      average      ameuni  . 
spent   wa.->   approxmately  S218,667.  i 

Of  th?  38  libraries  listed  21  had 
over   a    million    volumes    in    their  | 
collections.  Duke  University  rank-  j 
ed  number  13  in  the  list. 


Harris  "has  served  on  the  com- 
mittee for  the  past  year  and  has 
shown  an  intense  interest  in  the 
program  of  the  comnnjttee,"  said 
■young.  j 

As   chairman   he    Is   responsible 
for  the  planning  of  all  SEC  activi- 
ties, and  is  the  host  at  all  func- 
titms    involving    the    guest    enter- , 
,.tainer. 

In  addition,  his  main  duty  is 
to  bring  top-flight  entertainers  to 
the  campus  which  the  students 
can  see  free  of  charge. 

This  semester  the  SEC  will 
bring  several  different  entertain- 
ers to  UNC.  Among  them  will  be 
the  Don  Cos.sack  Chorus  and 
Dancers.  Henry  Hull,  and  Jose 
Limon. 


Yankee  celebrating  his  birth- 
.day  in  the  Caroliva  Coffee  Shop 
tcith  a  one  candle  cremned  cup 
cvke  to  the  tune  of  five  harmoni- 
ous   male   voicex. 


Comment  on   tlie  flooding   leak 
in  the  Bookettria  .  .  .  /  can't  un- 

dtfstcnd  it.  TIk:  good  Lord  pro-j^gUg  Each  different  situation,  he 
»ti.sed  never  again  to  pttnv<U  .nn  yaid,  requires  a  different  treat- 
f'^th   axcter.  ment. 


'DUKE'  AND  TRI-DEIT';     , 

Paint  On  Library  Front 
Removed  By  Crew 

Work  begun  late  Monday  on  the       He  expressed  a  hope  that  in  the 
removal  of  "Duke"  and  "Tri-Delt"'  I  future  such  defacement  of  Univer- 
paintings    from    the    entrance    of   sity   property   will    be   held   at   a 
Wilson     Library     was     completed    minimum.    He    stated    his    regret  i 
yesterday  by  building  mainlenan:;c    concerning  the  tardy  removal   of ! 

the  library  paintings  and  added 
that  ^Mch  oversights  will  not  occur 
in  the  future. 

American  Law 
Meeting  Here 
Set  Feb.  22-23 

The  Fourth  Circuit  of  the  Ame- 
rican Law  Student  Assn.  will  have 
its  confersnce  here  Feb.  22-23,  ac- 
cording to  UNC  law  student, 
Henry  M.  Whitcsidcs,  presiding 
officer  of  the  Fourth  Circuit  of 
the  ALSA. 

About  50-70  law  students  from 
12  law  schools  in  North  and  South 
Carolina,  West  Virginia  and  Mary- 
land will  converge  on  the  campus 
for  lectures  by  men  noted  in  the 
legal  fi-eld.  for  discussions  and 
banquets.  The  conference  will  be 
climaxed  with  tbe  election  of 
new  officers  for  the  Fourth  Cir- 
cuit. 


crews. 

The    work,    overlooked    since 
lest     Noventber     when     several 
campus  sites  were  similarly  van- 
dalized, leaves  the  campus  virtu- 
ally  free   from    eye-sores,  nrMin- 
tenance  Supervisor  Giles  Horney 
said. 
Removal  of  the  painting  was  a 
long  aiMi  arduous  process  accord- 
ing  to   Horney.   Two   varieties    of 
paint  were  used.  Of  the  two,  the 
"Duke'"   marking   was   the   easiest 
treated    and    was    completely    re- 
moved Monday  evening. 

The     "Tri-Delt"     marking     was 
much  more  difficult  and  required 
a  different  treatment  as  well   as  <■ 
more   time   and   energy   before   it 
was  removed  late  yesterday  after- 1 
noon,  Horney  said. 

Horney  again  stressed  .the  many 

difficulties   encountered  in  clean-  ■ 

ing    and   treating   the    variety    of| 

paint  products  which  from  time  to 

time    mark    campus    walks    and 


Orientation 
Files  Open 
This  Week 

Orientation  and  Handbook  files 
will  be  opun  today  through  Friday 
in  the  Council  Room  of  Graham 
Memorial    from   3-5   p.m. 

Applicants  who  find  this  time 
inconvenient  should  notify  Peggy 
1'  unk  at  the  Chi  Omega  House  to 
make  individual  arrangements. 
All  girls  who  are  interested  in 
cither  position  should  look  through 
these  files  before  filling  out  an 
application,  according  to  Miss 
Funk. 

After  becoming  familiar  with 
the  records,  the  applicant  should 
submit  witlj  her  application,  orig- 
inal ideas  and  a  plan  for  this 
year's  Handbook  or  Orientation 
program.  These  are  to  be  turned ' 
into  tha  Dean  of  Wome's  Office 
no  later  than  FeV   16.  i 

Applicants  will  be  notified  by 
the  chairman  of  the  Women's  \ 
Residence  Council  to  appear  be- 
fore an  interviewing  committee.  ■ 
At  this  time,  the  applicant  will  be 
given  the  opportunity  to  discuss 
her  earlier  submitted  plan  and  to 
answer  any  questions  pertaining ' 
to  it.  The  committee  will  look  for 
originality  and  organization  and 
will  consider  the  applicant's  cri- 
tical analization  of  past  Handbooks 
or  Orientation  programs.  A  theme 
should  be  suggested  for  the  Hand- 
book, Miss  Funk  said.  I 


Two  UNC  Students  To  Take  Part 
In  Exchange  With  N.Y.  College 


Two   UNC   students   will    reprc- ^ 
sent    the    University   in   a   student , 
exchange  program  which  has  been 
arranged     with  ,  Sarah     Lawrence 
College  of  Bronxville.  N.  Y. 

IVo  coeds  from  Sarah  Lawrence 
will  come  here  as  part  of  the  pro- 
gram. 

The   program    will    he   held   dur- 
ing   the    two    week    perio<i    from 
Feb.   14  to  March  8.  according  to 
Miss    Faith    Learned,    chairman    of , 
the  .'.udent  exchange  committee  at  j 
Sarah  Lawrence. 

The  program  is  a  feature  of  a 
two  week  program  planned  by 
the  student  exchange  committee 
of  Sarah  Lawrence.  Included  in' 
the  exchange  are  one  northern, 
one  southern  and  one  midwest- 
crn  college. 


Business,-  Ad-Selling 
Positions  Are  Listed 

Positions  arc  now  open  in  The 
Daily  Tar  Heel's  business  and  ad- 
vertising offices. 

This    was    announced    yesterday 
by  Businej-j  .Manager  Bill  Bob  Peel 
and     Advertising     Manager     Fred , 
Katzin. 

Peel  announced  an  opening  for 
a  coed  '"who  can  type  and  who 
does  not  have  afternoon  classes. 
It  takes  about  one  and  one-half 
hours  a  day  for  five  days  a  week.  ' 

The  job  pays  a  "small  token  sal- 
ary.' .said  Peel.  "It's  good  busi- 
ness experience,  "  he  said. 

Katzin  invited  student.-.-  who 
want  to  sell  advertising  to  contact 
him  at  the  newspaper's  office  in 
Graham  Memorial  any  afternoon 
between  4  and  5. 


The  two  students  from  UNC  will  | 
ngt  go  for  the  iiui  period,  how- j 
ever,  according  lo  Student  Body  | 
President  Bob  Young.  | 

WEEKEND  , 

Young   explained  in   a  letter  to' 
Miss   Learned    Ihe   students   would 
probably  slay  only  over  the  week-  i 
end    of    March    3.     He    said    there 
was   a    possibility   of   the   ^•ludcnls 
staying    there    for    one    week     but  I 
definitely  not  for  two.  I 

The     tight     academic     schedule 
here  prevents  sluoenis  irom  going  ; 
lor   the    full    period,   according    to  j 
Miss    Katherine    Carmichael,    dean ! 
of  women. 

Miss    Learned    expressed    hope    i 
to    Miss    Peggy    Funk,    chairman 
of  the  UNC  Women's  Residence 
Council,     that     if     the     students 
from   UNC   could   not  attend   for 
the    whole    period,    they    would    I 
come  during  the  March  3- week- 
end. 
During    this    weekend,    she    ex- 
plained, Sarah  Lawrence  would  be 
holding  an  educational  conference 
to    which    thirty    or    forty    eastern 
colleges    will    be    invited.    Robert 
Hutchins,  former  president  of  the 
University  of  Chicago,  will  be  the 
keynote  speaker,  she  said. 
INTERVIEWS 

Four  UNC  student  officials  will 
hold  interviews  for  those  interest- 
ed F'riday.  Feb.  15  in  the  Wood- 
house  Conference  Room  of  Gra- 
ham .Memorial..  The  interviews 
will  start  at  4  p.m. 

Conducting  the  interview.*  will 
be  Inlerfraternity  Council  P/esi- 
dent  Ed  Hudgins.  Interdormitory 
Counc;!  President  Sonny  Hallford. 
Miss  Funk  and  Young. 


Interested  students  have  been 
asked  to  contact  the  student  gov- 
ernment office  in  Graham  Me- 
morial to  give  the  time  they 
would  like  lo  appear  oeiore  the  se- 
lection committee. 

Young  said  he  would  like  to 
sei.J  one  male  and  one  female 
student  to  the  program. 

The   purposes   of  the   program 
are   to   better    relations    between 
colleges,   to   broaden    and    evalu- 
ate educational  goals  and  to  pro- 
vide an  opportunity  for  compar-    , 
ing    and    discussing    student    ac- 
tivities    and     organizations,     ac- 
cording to  Miss  Learned. 
While    the    students    are    taking 
part  in  the  program,  they  will  at- 
tend   classes,    meetings    and    other 
campus    activities    which    will    be 
helpful    in   providing   a   better   un 
dcrstandins  of  the  college. 
EXPENSES 

The  only  expenses  for  those  go- 
ing   to    Sarah    Lawrence   would    be 
for  transportation.  Young  said  leg- 
islation would  be  introduced  at  the 
student  legislature  meeting  Thurs- 
day   night    to    provide    transporta- 
tion money  for  those  chosen. 
Miss  Learned   said   in   a   letter 
to   Young   she   felt   the   exchange 
would   be   "an   especially    profit- 
able  way   of  comparing   the    dif- 
ferent  problem   of   a   small   pro- 
gresive    wonien's    college    and    a 
large  coeducatioal  university.  ' 

UNC  Chancellor  Robert  B. 
House.  Director  of  Student  Affairs 
Sam  Magill  and  Dean  Carmichiei 
also  agreefl  the  program  would  be 
worthwhile.  They  urged  L^C  jtu- 
dents  to  participate.  j 


(1)  Crisis  in  Student  Initiati\'c: 
.^t  this  point.  Magill  said  student 
government  was  in  a  "depression" 
and  mentioned  increasing  violations 
of  the  Honor  Code,  cosumpton  of 
alcoholic  beverages,  unwillingness 
of  students  to  discipline  them- 
selves. 

(2)  Traffic  Problm;  .\long  this 
line,  Magill  suggested  construction 
of  a  "multi-level  parking  lot"  north 
of  the  University  medical  area.  He 
also  said  that  limitation  of  stu- 
dent autos  was  only  a  "temporary 
relief"  and  that  more  permanent 
action  must  be  taken  soon. 

I  (3i  Prices  in  Chapel  Hill:  Con- 
cerning this  area,  Magill  said  he 
felt  downtown  prices  were  a  bit 
high,  but  that  the  University  should 
not  delve  into  the  situation.  He 
al.-o  mentioned  the  Umstead  .\ct 
which  prohibits  ihe  University's 
entrance  into  competition  with  lo- 
cal merchants. 

(4)  New  Fraternty  Court:  Here 
Magill  said  work  on  the  new  court 
had  been  halted  due  to  complaints 
from  residents  on  Cha.sc  Ave.  He 
?mphasized,  however,  that  he  felt 

i  construction  should  be  resumed  to 
provide  for  necessarj-  expansion. 
-Magill  said  that  complaining  resi- 
dents s4iould  consider  the  Univer- 
sity's necessity  for  growth. 

(5)  Book  Exchange:  During  dis- 
cussion on  this  subject.  Magill  said 
he  felt  the  exchanges  profit  of 
845,000  per  year  was  not  unreason- 
able sindb  ihe  profits  were  going 
for    student    scholarship..    Several 

tudcnt  agencies  have  requested 
>orlicns  of  the  cxchancrc's  profits. 

(6)  Student  Union:  Here  Magill 
called  construction  of  a  new  ex- 
panded  student    union    building    a 

"priority  need."  He  also  expressed 
opinion  that  provision  of  funds  for 
the  building  should  come  from  the 
itate  legislature.  The  current  build- 
'nu  wa  •  built  through  private  con- 
tributions, Magill  said. 

Following  Magill  s  talk,  party 
Chairman  Mike  Weinman  urged 
members  to  begin  thinking  of  can- 
didates for  the  coming  election 
April  2. 

Tryouts  Held 
In  Hill  Hall 
For  Glee  Club 

Tryouts  for  membership  in  the 
UNC  Men's  Glee  Club  for  the 
spring  semester  are  being  held 
daily  in   Hill  Hall. 

Joel  Carter,  director  of  the 
club,  will  hold  the  tryouts  daily 
from   4-6  p.m.   in   208   Hill    Hall. 

President  Zane  Ergle  announced 
Monday  at  the  club's  regular  meet- 
ing that  the  auditions  will  con- 
linu?    through    Wednesday.     Feb. 

13. 

A  tour-day  concert  tour  through 
North  and  South  Carolina,  a  .ioint 
concert  with  the  Woman's  College 
Chorus  in  Greensb  ro.  campus 
concerts  and  parties  are  on  the 
agenda   for  the  spring  .semester. 

Any  men  interested  in  singin? 
with  the  Glee  Club  this  semester 
have  been  asked  to  contact  Car- 
ter at  Hill  Hall. 


1 


I   I 


^AGE  TWO 


Someone  In  South  Building 
is  Letting  Mule  Run  Wild 

One  ol  tl>e  things  that  makes  <^'.liapel  Hill  so  quaim  was  exhibited 
t!ie  other  dav  hv  tlie  riii\tMsitvs  m:\iiitenaii( e  men. 

riu'v  were  surpiisetl.  the  story  read,  to  lind  that  the  three  tri- 
;uv4ies  atul  a  nuke."  ins(  rihed  on  the  Iroijt  ol  t!ie  Wilson  l>ibrarv.  were 
there. 

The  e\ti;u  in  I  i(  (liar  |)ainliM;4  was  done  la>l  .\o\eiid)err  The  main- 
ten;inec    men.    who    had    rejno\ed 


similar  markings  Irom  (iraham 
Memorial  and  the  Planetariunt. 
didji  t  notice  the  markin«>s.  \«»- 
IkkIv  told  them  until  a  reporter 
Avondered  oia  lond  \\hv  thev  Avere- 
nt   remoM-d. 


ham  \femorial  are  washed  onie  a 
vear.  whethei  they  need  it  (H  nor). 

When  the  ,  I'nixersitv  linally 
makes  ainiouni  ements,  they  otten 
(<>idli(t  Avith  themsehes'  or  other 
annomuements. 

II  this  were  a  huge  nuuhitie,  we 
wotdd  nndetstand  why  the  I'ni- 
\ersitv  tan  o\erlook  vandals'  paiiit- 


"Wliile.    as    we    said    in    the    first 

parau;iaph,   this   is.  another  svmbol  -                                                     , 

ol    tjie  (piaimness  ot   ('.haj>el    Hill,  marks  on  the  Iroiu  ol  the  Library. 

it  also  shows  how  sloppilv  the  I'ni-  whv   trairseripts  are  loided  up  and 

\trsitv   is  operated.  whv      inlormation      is      hopelessly 

*  #    *        *  oral  bled,    lint    this    is    not    a    huge 

IntcKampiis  mail    is   the   laugh-  madiine. 

ing  stork  ol   the   TniveisitN   oHiees  It    is  a   inii\ersii\    ol   aroimd   7.- 


(sometimes  it  takes  two  days  to 
( ross  the  eampus). 

Siudein>  who  transfer  here  from 
other  s(h(M»ls  find  out  what  Pen- 
tagon-t\pe  red  tape  reallv  is.  Thev 
are  treated  badly,  their  trairst  ripts 
are  messed  up,  their  advisers  tell 
them  one  thing  and  their  deans 
tell   them  another. 

It  takes  a  decade  for  anything 
t<»  get  done  (for  instaiue.  win- 
dows on  the  second   floor  <»f  (ira- 


(M>o  students. 

That  isn't  big  ai  all.  It  is  cer- 
lainlv  small  enough  so  that  South 
linilding  lan  be  run  efficiently, 
liui    it    isn't   run   that    wav. 

South  lUiilding  is  run  like  an 
enoiinous  mule.  Someone  gives  it 
a  push,  and  everybody  is  innnense- 
Iv  pleased  if  it  goes  the  right  way. 

11  it  doesn't,  then  that's  too  bad. 

We  ufvd  some  good  imde-skin- 
ners. 


There  Was  A  Little  Hazing 


It  shoidd  be  got  on  the  reeoid 
that  Carolina  didn't  get  through 
the  winter  withoiu  a  little  frater- 
nity   ha/iu^. 

Ha/ing  is  otitlawed  here,  as  it 
iN  ;u  most  iuii\ersities  and  colleges 
ni)W  days.  Hazing  is  practiced  here, 
as  it  is  at  most  universities  and 
colleges   nowadays. 

lieloie  (hiistmas  ('.ha^je!  Hill 
|)Oli(  emeu  on  the  1  1  p.m.  to  7  a.m. 
^ft  started  noticing  groups  ol 
students,  ntale.  (t>ld  and  lunigry. 
wandering  around  the  wooded 
areas  of  the  village.  The  stiulents, 
w-ho  were  pledges  at  some  ol  the 
I'niversiiy  s  Iraternities.  were  hulk- 
ing for  notes  under  tertaiu  iiuks. 
The  certain  ro<  ks  were  jilaced 
quite  far  from  eadj  (»iher. 

Just  to  make  sure,  the  initia- 
tors had  instructed  the  students 
not  to  tome  back  tt)  the  fraternity 
house  l>efo>e  a  certain  iioiu,  usu- 
ally -,  a.m. 

A  aentlcnian  front  the  aiea.  dri- 


ving along  Farrington  Rd.  one 
night,  reported  a  gang  of  hooded 
m<msters  near  tlie  road.  The  hood- 
ed monsters  were  actually  jiuiiors 
aufl  seniors. 

S<»me  I'entlemen  were  observed 
r«»aming  through  the  Clhapel  Hill 
(emetery.  tarrying  lanterns,  ear- 
ly one  December  morning.  They 
weren't  ghosts,  because  one  of 
them  had  a  textbook  inider  his 
arm. 


Regardless  of  what  the  Tniver- 
sitv's  rules  are,  fraternity  ha/ing 
is  a  stupid  pastime.  It  is  a  slap  at 
the  tiignity  of  die  individual,  a 
practice  we  sJiould  be  learning 
to  avoid  while  in  tollege. 

It  also  reflects  a  somewhat  poor 
light  tm  the  initiators.  It  shows 
them  to  be  children,  eager  to 
blindfold  and  tortuie  petiple  a 
little  bit  voiuiger  physically  than 
themselves. 

Christian  Science  Monitor: 


The  Daily  Tar  Heel    5^^^^  Fq||^5 


The  official  itudeot  publication  of  tbe 
Publications  Board  of  the  University  of 
North  Carolina,  where  it  is  published 
daily  except  Monday  and  examinatiot 
and  vacation  periods  and  summer  terms 
Entered  as  second  class  matter  in  tht 
D08t  office  in  Chapel  Hill,  N.  C,  undei 
the  Act  oi  March  8,  1870.  Subscription 
rates:  mailed,  $4  per  year,  $2.50  a  semes 
ter;  delivered,  $6  a  year,  $3.50  a  semes- 
ter. 


Like  It 
However 


Qi 


Editor 

_  FRED  POWLEDGE 

Managing  Editor  _ 

CHARLIE  SLOAN 

News  Editor  

NANCY  HILL 

Business  Manager 

Bn.i,  BOB  pim. 

Sports   Editor 

LARRY  CRKKK 

EDITORIAL  STAFF  —  Woody  Seari. 
Frank  Crowther,  Barry  Winston,  David 
Mundy,  George  Pfingst,  Ingrid  Clay, 
Cortland  Edwards,  Paul  McCauley, 
Bobbi  Smith. 


NEWS  STAFF— Clarke  Jones,  Ray  Link- 
er, Joan  Moore.  Pringle  Pipkin,  Anne 
Drake.  Edith  MacKinnon,  Wally  Kuralt, 
Mary  Alys  Voorhees,  Graham  Snyder, 
Billy  Barnes,  Neil  Bass.  Gary  Nichols, 
Page  Bernstein,  Peg. Humphrey.  Phyllis 
Maultsby  Ben  Ta0or 

BUSINESS  STAFF— Rosa  Moore,  Johnny 
Whitakcr,  Dick  Leavitt.  Dick  Sirkin. 

SPORTS  STAFF:  Bill  King.  Jim  Purks, 
Jimmy  Harper,  Dave  Wible,  Charley 
Howson. 

Staff  Photographer Norman  Kantor 

Librarian Sue   Gishner 


A  majority  ol  Ireshmen  at  Hof- 
stra  College  (on  Long  Islaiid.  .New 
York)  have  voted  to  bring  back 
some  ol  the  geiuler  aspects  ol  the 
oft-<  riti(  i/ed  practi(e  of  college 
ha/ing.  This  may  not  amount  to 
uuKh  more  than  wearing  g^een 
skullcaps  or  "beanies."  but  it  il- 
lustiates  a  dilliculty  o[  some  re- 
form movements. 

Elimination  of  crude  and  some- 
times even  dangeioirs  liorscplay 
from  initiations  in  (<)llege  socie- 
ties is  (ertainly  an  advance,  es- 
pecially where  constructive  activi- 
ties have  taken  its  place.  But  the 
change  runs  into  a  human  ten- 
dene  v  observed  in  other  fields. 

^V'hen    some    industrial?^ 


Subscription  Manager  — 

Advertising  Manager 

Circulation  Manager  


.  Dale  Staley 
Fred  Katzin 
Charlie  Holt 


Night  Editor Graham  Snyder 

Proof  Re;'der  G"y  EUis 

Night  News  Editor'     _  Charlie  Sloan 


tiying  to  lelieve  the  monotony  of 
routine  prod  net  ion -line  jobs,  one 
personnel  man  foiuid  many  work- 
ers did  not  want  to  be  rotated 
from  jobs  in  which  the  roiuine 
had  become  easy.  For  generations 
societv  tried  to  get  away  liom  child 
marriages;  then  yoimgsters  staTt- 
ed  a  v(»gue  of  ■going  steady"  in 
eailv  teens.  Sch(M)ls  u^ing  the 
honor  system  in  exaniinaticms 
foimd  some  students  woidd  rather 
be  |)oliced  bv  instructors  than  tell 
on  cheating  asscniates. 

The  human  species  likes  a  bit  of 
protection  from  the  more  obvious 
abuses  in  its  experience,  litit  it 
doesn't  like  to  sii«f^)ect  that  it'« 
missing  something  along  the  way. 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


REACTION  PIECE: 


We  Got  The  Bell  And  The  Cat. 
Now,  Who'll  Do  The  Catching? 


David  Mundy 

Once  upon  a  time  there  v^'as  a 
whole  passel  ol  mice.  nice,  edu- 
cated intellectual-type  mice.  Not 
only  that,  but  these  mice  were 
studving  and  teaching  at  a  uni- 
versity. Some  of  th?ni,  the  bi;i? 
ones  who  were  doing  the  teach- 
ing, wore  even  quite  famous 
among  the  mice  of  other  institu- 
tions. 

Now  it  just  happened  that  the 
mice  and  their  university  were 
menaced  by  a  horrible  old  cat. 
name  of  "Big-Time  -\thletics." 
Some  of  these  mice  sort  of 
realized  that  something  or  the 
other  should  be  done  about  this 
cat.  before  they  were  gobbled 
up  and  the  institution  ruined. 
One  or  two  of  them  came  up  with 
the  idea  of  putting  a  bell  on  the 
cat.  so  they  could  at  least  tell 
what  it  v\-as  doing. 

But  vn'ho   will   put   the   bell   on 

the  cat? 

*  *  * 

T^us  ended  the  parable,  and 
thus  arises  one  of  the  greatest 
problems  facing  the  University 
of  North  Carolina.  The  purposes 
of  a  university  are  education  and 
research,  education  of  students 
for  more  resFK)nsible  life  in  their 
society,  and  research  into  the 
secrets  of  nature  and  of  that 
society. 

Other  organizations  are  design- 
ed to  function  in  bringing  about 
satisfaction  of  man's  other  needs 
and  interests.  Under  entertain- 
ment there  are.  for  example,  pro- 
fessional ball  clubs.  TV.  drive-in 
movies  etc.  But  just  who.  or 
what,  is  this  "Big-Time  Athlet- 
ics''" 

In  its  broadest  sens*,  it  is 
the  view  that  an  educational 
institution,  namely  a  university, 
showM  hire  a  semi-professional 
«rou^  ef  fteople  to  present  en- 
tertainment in  the  form  of  ath- 
letic contests. 

In  practice  it  is  the  building 
up  ot  a  tremendous  "naachine" 
within  the  university,  a  machine 
devoted  to  big-time  athletics,  and 
in  no  way  related  to  either  edu- 
cation or  research.  This  'ma- 
chine" is  to  have  its  way  on  all 
matters  in  which  it  comes  into 
conflict  with  the  faculty  or  ad- 
ministration. - 

At  UNC  this  "cat"  is  still  a 
"kitten",  albeit  already  feroci- 
ews.  The  question  "Who  will 
l»ut  the  bell  on  the  cat?"  is 
liable  to  meet  little  response, 
professorial  chatter  and  Daily 
Tar   Heel  editorials  excepted. 

The  students  will  do  very  lit- 
tle "to  put  the  bell  on  the  cat" 
and  to  preserve  the  academic 
standing  of  their  university. 
Tlieir  horizons  are  pretty  weM 
limited  by  the  three  S's":  SEG. 
SPORTS,  SLEEP  and  occasional 
discussions  about  "God."  They 
will  be  satisfied  only  with  ob- 
taining their  degrees,  joining  the 
alumni  ranks,  and  making  more 

money. 

*  *  •    / 

The  administration  will,  like- 
wise, do  nothing  to  harm  the  in- 
terests of  big-time  athletics.  Re- 
call   the    Moreland     case:      The 


NCA.A.    and    the    ACC    say    that 

State  College  is  guilty  of  illegal 
recruiting  procedures.  When  the 
NCA.A  slapped  on  it.s  suspension, 
no  one  in  the  administration. 
from  President  Fridav  on  down 
t>  the  BVP  janitor  (or  vice  ver- 
.sa).  knew  anything  about  the 
matter. 

Then  it  was  blamed  on  "t'ormer< 
members"  of  the  athletic  staff. 
When  two  present  staff  mem- 
bers were  named,  the  admini.stra- 


tion    proclaimed     its     innocence, 
and   promised   to  protect   them. 

So  this  pretty  well  leaves  the 
matter  of  the  "cat"  up  to  the 
faculty.  First  step  should  be  the 
identification  of  those  individuals 
who  are  the  leaders  of  the  big- 
time  athletics  machine.  Tatum, 
who  did  so  much  in  ruining  Mary- 
land, is  one  obvious  leader.  Di- 
rector of  .athletics  Erickson, 
who  indulged  in  the  most  asinine 
remarks  ever  to  be   issued   from 


.'TKe  Trouble  With  You,  Charlie,  Is 
\-"    You  Say  What  You  Think' 


any  administration  official  in 
criticism  of  other  student  activi- 
ties, is  another  one.  (McGuire  I'll 
omit.  After  all,  his  "boys"  have 
to  eat  in  Lenoir  Hall  with  the 
rest  of  the  campus  proletariat.) 
Sabotaging  and  opposing  these 
individuals  should  be  but  part 
of  the  faculty  "save-the-Univers- 
ity"  movement.  They  had  better 
begin  putting  on  more  weight 
and  muscle,  because  it  will  be 
"a    hard   cat    to    fight." 


That 


■c  -       ■  ■« 


.  i 


YOU  Said  It: 


••♦sn  tH« 


AAM^4AT«M  P»ST  £*. 


UNC  Losing  Face  And  Facu 


Editor:  ' 

I  know  very  little  about  the 
mechanics  of  biii  time  athletics, 
but  your  editorials  on  the  sub- 
jt'ct  seem  to  be  very  timely. 

I  believe  that  I  enjoy  a  good 
football  or  basketball  game  as 
much  as  the  next  person  and  I'm 
inclined  to  agree  ^s  with  Coach 
McGuirc  that  his  team  is,  in  his 
words,  "a  bunch  of  clean-cut 
boys." 

,  When  one  reads  the  rest  of 
the  newspaper,  however,  it  is 
not  difficult  to  feel  that  some- 
thing Is  amiss  in  our  higher 
educational  systems.  Thtrs  frt 


examples  all  over  the  nation  as 
you  say  In  your  editorials,  but 
it  brings  it  close  to  home  to 
think  of  Carolina. 

1  am  not  a  native  of  this  state, 
but  I  have  always  had  the  im- 
pression that  U.N'C  was  the  best 
university  in  the  South  and  re- 
spected for  its  academic  standing 
all  over  the  nation.  I  wonder, 
now  that  I  am  a  student  here, 
how   long   this   will   last. 

We  read  of  appropriations  be- 
ing slashed,  of  a  capable  and  ef- 
ficient librarian  leaving  after  on- 
ly a  short  term,  and  now  it 
seems  we  are  losing  a  man  who 


is  one  of  the  leading  sociologists 
in  the   nation,  Dr.  Rueben  Hill. 

Men  like  these  are  what  has 
given  Carolina  its  reputation. 
How  long  can  the  University 
maintain  its  reputation  without 
them?  I  certainly  cannot  blame 
them  for  leaving  when  they  can 
go  to  a  place  where'  the  state 
seems  to  appreciate  their  talents 
more. 

It  must  be  rather  discouraging 
for  a  coascientious  professor  to 
know  that,  all  things  taken  into 
account,  the  football  coach  is 
worth  more  financially  than  he 
is. 

Ed  Viser 


ir 

By  A\  Capp    / 


IT  GIVES  ME 
A  CHANCE  T' 
VISIT  WIF  HIM. 
r-Xv'-s'G '>'.'■ 


MAH  CHILE  DESARVES 
SOMETHIN'I-ESS  LIKE  A 
HAWG  THAN  VO'  IS,  MlSTAH 
MUSHROOM.     MAM  C.MILE 
DESARVES  TH'  S^P.V 

~^J)_J^    H  HE 

SHOKE  [X?, 
WlCOER 


Pogo 


By  Walt  Kelly 


RHOMKNCEPHALOM    MA<&$  Mg 
ALONe  \Cy  gNOU&M 
TO  eAUIYATe,  THE 
A^OUTM  Or  Any 


!  0UT  1    J 
•w  merest?  1 


BUT 

Auu  ouMpy-  *\  ^EeP 
you  IP  x'P   4  Fije^T. 

1?- 


WEDNESOAY,  FEBRUAKY  (,  \H7 


Chapel  Hill 
&  Integration 


Interracial    Fellowship 

Last  fall   the   Town   of   Chapel    Hill   surprised  " 
many  North  Carolinia.ns  i»y  iMing  one  ©f  file  v«ry 
few  areas  to  vote  against  the  Pearsall   Plan,  the 
state's  answer  to  the  Supreme  Court's  racial  de- 
segregation   decision    concerning    public    schools. 
Here     is   a    statement   from     Interracial    News,   a 
monthly    bulletin    of   the    Chapel    Hill    Interracial       ' 
Fellowship  for  the  Schools.  Rev.  David  Yates  and 
Sam  Boyd  are  co-chairmen  of  the  fellowship.,  and        " 
Betty  Monroe  Is  editor  of  the  bulletin. 

Since    the    school    amendment    vote    of    Sept.    8."  ^ 
1956.   this  organization   (the  Interracial  Fellowship)- 
has  given  careful  consideration  to  what  should  be 
the  course  of  action  in  Chapel  Hill  in  view  of  the  '  ■  • 
57   percent    vote   against   the  amendment   to    make 
legal    the    Pearsall    Committee    proposals,    and    in    ' 
light  of  conditions  and  sentiments  here  as  we  in-     > 
terpret  them. 

We  are   concerned    about    the    uhsettled    public 
issue   which   leaves   citizens   and   officials  confused.,,,, 
divided  and  mostly  silent  on  this  question,  as  well 
as    the   needs   and    rights   of   those    who   may   seek,^ 
school    reassignment.    Open    discussion    and    clear 
decision  are  needed. 

Our  reexamination  of  the  whole  situation 
growlnf  from  the  Supreme  Court  decision  outlaw-  •■■» 
ing  racial  segregation,  as  conditioned  in  our  com- 
munity by  the  local  Pearsall  vote  and  the  low 
legal  fact  of  the  local  option  provisions  on  this 
issue,   leads   us   to    the    following    assumptions: 

1.  This  community  would  not  vote  to  close  its 
schools.  *' 

2.  The   Supreme  Court  will  not   change  its  de-  '• 
.  cision. 

3.  There  is  compelling  evidence  of  the  likell-'" 
hood  of  more,  rather  than  less,  court  pres.sure  to-.- 
ward  school  desegregation. 

4.  There  may  be  legal  and  legitimate  requests 
from  local  Negroes,  though  likely  few  at  the  oiit- 
set,  lor  school  reassignment,  beginning  with  the 
next  school  year. 

5.  Chapel  Hill  people  want  to  avoid  school  con- 
fu.sion,    disturbance   of   community    peace    and   dis- 
ruption   of   schooling — which    can   be   avoided   with-^^ 
foresight   and    planning;    they   would   prefer  to  act— " 
from  deliberation,  planning  and  local  decision  rath- 
er than  under  pressure  of  court  order.  * 

6.  That  better  schools  can  be  realized  only  by  • 
planning  based  on  present  knowledge  and  realistic  | 
expectations;  such  planning  is  difficult  as  long  ai  • 
local  policy  on  desegregation  is  unsettled.  \ 

7.  Few  communities  of  this  size  have  .so  many  • 
local  citizens  professionally  qualified  lor  leadership   . 

in  public  education.  ' 

*  *  *  f 

We  ask  the  .school  board  to  request  its  advisory  . 
committee  to  chart  a  course  of  action  for  Chapel  * 
Hill  that  can  serve  as  our  own  response  to  the  local  . 
option  gvien  us  by  the  now  legal  Pearsall  Plan.  \ 

The  course  to  be  followed  should  be  based  on  ■ 
answers  to  the  following  questions: 

1.  Following  established  principles  of  school  ad-  | 
ministration,  considering  local  conditions  and  dis-  • 
regarding  race  as  a  consideration,  what  kind  of  \ 
positive  and  clearly  stated  school  assignment  and  • 
attendance  area  plan  is  desirable? 

2.  In  view  of  the  above,  is  a  reevaluation  of  \ 
proposed  locations  of  schools  for  expansion  and  • 
replacement  necessary?  This  ^ould  include  an  esti-  ; 
mation  of  total  community  school  population  • 
growth,  in  number  and  location,  for  the  next  decade  . 
or  two. 

3.  Following  the  above,  how  can  more  efficient 
use  of  capital  and  current  expenditures  be  effected?  ; 

4.  What  early  adjustments  in  classroom  and; 
teacher  a.ssignment  will  be  necessary  following  a. 
clearly  stated  .school  board  policy  of  non-segrega- ; 
tion   in   pupil  a.ssignment?  \ 

5.  Beyond  the  physical  and  fiscal  problems., 
what  kinds  of  preparation  for  school  integration; 
should  be  undertaken  in  Chapel  Hill  by  school  au-. 
thorities  so  that  the  transition  shall  be  orderly  and; 
result  in  better  community  relations?  How  can- 
Chapel  Hill  organizations  such  as  P.T..\..  teacher 
associations,  civic  and  church  organizations  and 
university  facilities  help  in  this  regard? 

6.  How  can  the  many  professional  resources 
among  our  citizens  be  utilized  in  the  neces^•ary  stu- 
dy and  planning  for  the  changes  facing  us? 

7.  How  can  we  profit  from  the  experiences  of 
similar  communities  that  have  faced  these  prob- 
lems already?  This  might  involve  actual  vistis  to 
such  places. 

We  have  noted  that  In  the  areas  where  deseg- 
regation has  been   successful,  courageous  profes- 
sional  school   leaders,   backed   by   a   firm   and   in- 
formed school  board,  have  led  the  way.  Peaceful 
and  constructive  change  can  fellow  only  from  in- 
formed  planning  and  firm   leadership. 
The  planning  for  and  administration  of  a  crucial 
public  facility  such  as  the  public  schools  should  be 
genuinely  interracial   in  character. 

Ttie  advisory  committee  has  been  well  chosen 
and  should  be  utilized  not  only  to  look  toward 
the  long  range  development  of  education  in  Chapel 
Hill  but  to  help  the  School  Board  with  our  im- 
mediate  problems   in  regard   to  desegregation. 

YOU  So/d  W:  Plants 
Need  Sweeter  Food 

Editor: 

Whereas  I'm  a  farm  boy  and  have  been  around 
the  barnyard  in  my  time,  when  I  came  to  the  Uni- 
versity I  thought  perhaps  I  had  left  my  farm  ele- 
ments behind. 

Imagine  my  chagrin,  then,  when   I  discovered 
the  compost  under  my  dormitory  shrubbery. 
Mow,  I  don't  mind  the  University's  preening  a 
bit — matter  of  fact,  I'm  in  favor  of  it. 

But,  please,  let's  use  a  deoderized  fertilizer.  I 
keep  thinking  my  feet  need  washing. 

Name  Withheld  By  Request 


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By  Raquaat 


Covering  The  Universify  Campus 


BRIDGE  LESSOMS 

GMAB  will   sponsor  bridge  lea*- 
sons  in  the  Rendezvous  Room  to- 
day from  4:30  to  6  p.m. 
WAA  TABLE  TENNIS 

First  round  matches  of  the  ta- 
ble tennis  tournament  must  be 
played  off  by  Feb.  18  according 
to  Sue  Gichner,  manager  of  the 
tournament. 

There  are  twenty  matches  to  be 
played  by  this  deadline.  Entries 
have  been  asked  to  consult  the 
bulletin  board  in  the  Women's 
gym  for  the  schedule  of  their 
matches. 
WAA  BASKETBALL 

The   Ba.-,-ketball   Club   will   meet 
today   at   4  p.m.   in  the   Women's 
Gym.     The     gym     will     be     open 
through  Monday  for  team  basket- 
ball  practice.  Three    practices  per 
person    are    required    before    tour-  j 
nament  participation,  according  to  { 
WAA  officials..  Basketball  tourna- 1 
ment  begins  Feb.   12. 
NURSERY  COMMITTEE  ! 

\  meeting  of  the  Holmes  Day  I 
Nursery  Committee  of  the  YWCA  i 
will  be  held  today  at  4  p.m.  in ' 
the  library  of  the  Y.  1 


Everj'one  interested  has  been 
urged  to  attend.  If  they  are  un- 
able to  come,  they  have  beei^asked 
to  contact  Miss  Elsther  Ballentine 
in  Mclver  Dorm. 
WUNC-TV 

Today's  schedule  for  WUNC-TV, 
the   University's   educational   tele- 
vision station: 
10:30    Travelogue. 
11:00    North  Carolina  Senate. 
12:00    Nwth  Carolina  House.. 
1:00    Journey  of  A  Tree. 
A  Career  For  You. 
Music. 
News. 
6:15     Sports. 
6:30    Fallefi  Eagle. 
Mediterranean. 
Governor's  Ball. 
9:30     Wings  To  Italy. 
10:00     Final  Edition. 
YOUNG  ADULT  GROUP 

The  Young  Adult  Group  of  the 
Methodist    Church    will    meet    to- 
night in  the  church  lounge  at  8. 
LAW  WIVES- 

The  Law  Wives  Assn.  will  have 
the  first  meeting  of  the  Spring 
Semester  tohight  at  8  p.m.  in  the 
Victory  Village  Day  Nursery. 


1:30 
5:45 
6:00 


7:00 
7:30 


A    short    business    meeting    is 
planned  with  a   bridge  game  aft- 
erward. 
SCHOLARSHIP  HOLDERS 

All  holders  of  University  Schol- 
arships and  scholarships  paid 
through  the  iStudent  Aid  Office 
each  ^mester  have  been  asked  to 
come  to  that  office  during  this 
week  to  pick  up  scholarship  tick- 
ets or  checks  for  the  spring  se- 
mester. . 

All  students  holding  part-time 
jobs  awarded  by  the  Student  Aid 
Office  or  under  its  jurisdiction 
have  been  asked  to  come  by  from 
now  through  Feb..  14  to  renew 
their  job  assignments. 
WUNC-FM 

TodayV  schedule  for  WUNC-FM, 
the  University's  FM  radio  station: 

7:00    Sketches  In  Melody. 

7:30    The  UN  Story. 

7:45    French  Press  Review. 

8:00     BBC  Bandstand. 

8:30    Politics  In  the  Twentieth 
Century. 

9:00     Masterworks  from  France. 
10:00    News. 

1§:15     Evening  Masterwork. 
11:30     Sign  Off.  I 


Students  To  Have  Lounge  In  Y 
For  Between  Classes  Study  Hall 


By  H-JOOST  POLAK 

After  conferences  with  J.  S. 
Bennett,  director  of  the  Univer- 
sity's Operations  Office,  the  Caro- 
lina YMCA  has  begun  redecoration 
of  their  second  floor  lounge  into 
a  convenient  study  haven  for  stu- 
dents between  classes. 

Pain-tings,  a  planter,  and  indi- 
rect lighting  are  planned  to  lend 
a  neo-modern  Japanese  effect  to 
the  chamber. 

According  to  Miss  Eleanor  Rig- 
gins  of  the  Y  office  administra-  j 
tion  apprehension  over  student  | 
treatment  of  the  proposed  lounge  i 
places  new  furniture  installation ' 
on  a  tentative  bas^s.  j 

Due  to  the  Operations  Office's 
experience  with  the  quick  death 
of  the  furniture  installed  annually 


in  University  dormitories,  new  j  Also  planned  by  the  Y  in  con- 
sofas  and  coffee  tables  will  not  be  junction  with  the  churches  of  the 
put  in  until  the  lounge's  users  dem- 1  community  is  a  prayer  room- 
onstrate  a  willingnesj^  to  keep  the  [  chapel  in  the  Town  Women's  Room 
lounge   neat    and   respect   its   fix- }  on  the  second  floor.  Norman  Gil- 

i  lis,  YMCA  interior  decorations  ad- 
visor is  leading  this  project,  which 
he  said  should  be  completed  with- 
in a  month. 


tures. 


Y  members  are  working  on  the 
lounge  each  Tuesday  night,  paint- 
ing, dismantling,  and  installing. 


Britain  Says  H-Boinb 
Tests  Vital  To  Defense 

LONDON  ■>*— Britain  today   de- 
scribed   hydrogen    bomb    tests    as 
important  to  the  nation's  defense  | 
until  some  comprehensive  disarm-  j 
ament  agreement  is  reached.  j 

The  assertion  by  foreign  under- 
secretary  Ian   Harvey   clearly   im- 
plied rejection  of  a  Japanese  re-  j 
quest  to  suspend  tests   scheduled  i 
for  sometime  after  March  1  in  the  j 
Pacific.  I 

Tokyo   expressed   fears   of   fall- 
out from  the  tests. 


Averett  College  Will 
Sponsor  Dance  Saturday 

AvweVL  College's  junior  class  is 
sponsoring  a  Valentine  Dance  Sat- 
urday night,  Feb.  9  from  8  to  12' 
p.m. 

According  to  a  letter  receiwd 
by  John  Riebel,  associate  director 
of  the  YMCA,  the  dance  will  be 
formal,  but  dark  suits  are  accept- 
able. 

Music  for  the  dance  will  be  pro- 
vided by  Bob  Cleaveland  and  his 
band. 


BROTHER  COMBINATION 

The  North  Carolina  wrestling 
team  has  the  only  brother  combi- 
nation participating  in  var.sity 
competition.  Charlie  and  Robert 
Boyette  of  Chadbourn  wrestle  in 
the  147  and  157  pound  classes  re- 
spectively. 


Guaranteed 
Valentines 

If  not  fully  satisfied  with 
the  results,  bring  us  the 
girl  and  the  card,  and  get 
your  quarter  back  .  .  . 

The  Intimate 
Bookshop 

205  E.  Franklin  St. 
Open  Till  10  P.M. 


Edith  Green  Speaks  Here  On  World  Affairs 


U.  S.  Representative  Edith 
Green.  ^Democrat  from  Oregon, 
will  deliver  the  main  address  at 
the  seventh  annual  Conference  on 
World  Affairs,  scheduled  here  for 
Thursday,  Feb.  14. 

Mrs..  Green  will  speak  before 
some  500  persons  at  the  day-long 
program  based  on  "Toward  a 
World  at  P.eace.  "  Her  address  is 
set  for  10:30  a.m.  in  Carroll  Hall. 

Twehty-one  civic,  religious  and 
educational  organizations  are  par- 
ticipating in  the  conference,  which 
L-  arranged  by  the  UNC  Extension 
Division. 


IT'S  FOR  REAL! 


by  Chester  Field 


CONVERSATION 
WITH 
YOURSELF 


"Now  there's  an  interesting  face— 
'  Ugly,  but  not  conunonplace  .  . . 

Full  of  diarm,  I  must  admit 
■  Full  of  character  and  wit! 
•  Why  on  earth  can't  women  see 

All  the  things  I  see  in  me?" 

MORAL:  No  matter  what  face  you 
live  behind,  it  will  look  happier 
with  a  rml  satisfying  Chesterfield 
out  front!  Enjoy  that  BIG  full 
flavor  plus  the  smoothest  taste 
today,  because  it's  packed  more 
smoothly  by  Accu'Ray!  You'll 
be  smoking  smiles! 

Smoke  for  real . . .  smoke  Checterfleld ! 

S50  fur  €umry philotophictd  uerte  accepHJ  for 
publication.  ChetterfieU,  P.  O.  Box  21, 
yew  York  46.  N.  Y. 
eLi<«*tt  *  1tf^n^ah^etu  Co. 


Special  guests  for  the  day  will 
be  foreign  students  who  are  at- 
tending institutions  of  higher 
learning  in  North  Carolina. 

Mrs.  E.  P.  Gibson  of  Laurel  Hill 
conference  chairman,  will  preside 
at   the    10   a.m.    opening   session. 


World  News 

(Continued   from   Page   1) 

praised     President     Eisenhower's 
Middle  East   Doctrine. 

The  proposals  in  President 
Eisenhower's  statement  are,  in 
the  first  i|istance,  dfesigned  to 
provide  a  legislative  basis  for  fu- 
ture action,"  the  Prime  .Minister 
said. 

This  was  Macmillan's  first  state- 
ment  on   the   Eisenhower   policy. 


The  conferees  will  then  hear  Mrs. 
Green,  who  is  now  serving  her 
second  term  in  Congresa-  from 
Oregon's  Third  District .  She  is  a 
member  of  the  American  Assn.  of 
University  Women,  the  League  of 
/Women  Voters,  the  -American 
Assn.  for  the  United  Nations  and 
the  Business  and  I^ofessional 
Women's  Organization. 

Five  afternoon  discua-sion  groups 
will     consider     these     problems: 
•'American     Foreign     Policy     and 
I  Eimerging  Peoples,  '    'The  Control 
I  and  International   Use  of  Nuclear 
j  Energy,"    'The  Economics  of  Mili- 
;  tary  Power, '  "The  Relationship  of 
I  Technical    Assistance    to    Disarma- 
ment" and    "The  East-West  Politi- 
cal Conflict." 


Chou  Mentions  Prisoners  | 

CALCUTTA  —{fi>r-  Red  Chinas  j 
Premier  Chou  En-Lai  said  last 
night  the  release  of  10  Americans  I 
held  in  China  depends  on  their  I 
good  behavior  and  has  nothing  to  I 
do  with  any  U.  S.  Government  at-  \ 
titude.  I 

Chou  talked  with  reporters  on  j 
his  arrival  from  Ceylon,  where  he  i 
and  Prime  Mini.yter  Solomon  Ban- 1 
daranaike  signed  a  pact  of  "peace- 1 
ful  cooperation  and  resistance 
against  aggression  and  expansion ! 
of  the  imperialist  and  colonial  for- 1 


Egyptians  Sent  Home 

TEL    AVIV.    ISRAEL    _(AP)— 
The    last    202    of    5,800    Egyptian 
soldiers     taken     prisoner     in     the ', 
Sinai    and    Gaza    Strip    campaign  j 
last   October-November   were    sent  I 
home   yesterday.  | 

They  were  handed  over  to  a  | 
Finnish  unit  of  the  U.N.  Enrergen-  ( 
cy  Force  for  repatriation. 


DAILY    CROSSWORD 


1 


ACROSS 

Winter 

weather 

report 
5.  Mix 
9  Dwelling 

10  Mineral 
deposit 

11  Crippled 

12  Run  away 
and  marry 

14  Related 

15  Knocked 
down 

16  Male  adults 
17.  A  dandy 

18  Public 
notice 

19  Capital 
(Czech.) 

21  Skillfully 

23  Metal  can 

24  Greek  letter 
25.  Gardener's 

plague 
27.  Make  firm 

30.  Hewing  tool 

31.  Young  bear 
32  Malt 

beverage 
33.  Say  again 

36.  Petty 
quarrel 

37.  A  sewer 

38  Percolates 

39  Weary 

40  Imprisoned 
Nazi 

41.  Snow 

vehicle 

42  Peker  stake 

DOWN 

1  MillennUl 

church         fl^ 

member 


2.  Nam*  a 

candidate 
3  Foreboding 
4.  Marry 
5  Slumber 
6.  Brtdgc  far* 
7  H«at»ftn 

ima^e 
8.  Revocation . 
11  Light  aoorc* 
13.  Whirlpool 
15.  Enemy 
17.  Merriment 
20  Diaeas* 
ofshicep 
21.  Swiss 
river 


22  Capital 

(Hun- 
gary! 
24  Flap 
25.  Division 

^f 

a...- 

tiospit&l 
26  Puts 

forth 

effort 

27.  Rud* 
Shelter    * 

28.  Slip  away. 
MiUm* 

Zi.  Snares 
31.  Beaten 


ja-^^-i.i  tjaaiua, 
tin  r-jaaa^i     _' 

(::;[•:   UHuiir^ama 
■.iamia  tan 

►  j,4:'(i4iii   aMw;^n 


YMUrdsy't  AMwar 

34.  Bucket 
36.  Ireland 
36.  Obser\'*<l 
38  Wild  sheep 

(Ind.» 


British  Destroy  Cache 

NICOSIA,  CYPRUS  —  (AP)  — 
The  British  yesterday  destroyed 
I  the  biggest  bomb  cache  yet  found 
I  on  Cyprus. 

I  Taking  no  chances  with  possi- 
'  ble  booby  traps,  they  blew  up  the 
\  whole  house  that  contained  the 
:  explosives  found  under  th€  bed- 
■  room  of  a  Greek  Cypriot  newly- 
wed   couple. 

Sappers  counted  53  bombs,  800 ' 
i  stocks  of  TNT,  large  stocks  of 
;  other  explosives  and  36  revolvers 
;  and  pistols  in  a  secret  room  before 
'  they  stepped  gngerly  away  and 
;  set  off  the  works. 


Education  t'rof 
Gets  Kellogg 
Summer  Graint 

Dr.  Wilmer  M.  Jenkins,  faculty 
member  of  the  School  of  Educa- 
tion, has  been  notified  that  he  has 
been  selected  as  one  of  five  col- 
lege profcosors  throughout  the 
United  States  to  receive  a  W.  K. 
Kellogg  Foundation  grant  to  study 
this  summer  in  a  special  program 
at  the  University  of  Oregon.  j 

The  other  recipients  are  faculty  j 
members  at  the  University  of  Chi- , 
cago.  University  of  Georgi^»»Michi-  J 
gan  State  University  and  the  Uni- 
versity of  California. 

The  Oregon  program  is  designed 
to  blueprint  new  patterns  for  the 
professional  preparation  of  school 
administrator^'  through  the  inter- 
disciplinary approach.  Dr.  Jen- 
kins and  the  other  participants 
will  study  in  special  seminars 
which  will  be  led  by  specialists 
from  the  fields  of  psychology,  an- 
thropology, economics  and  politi- 
cal science. 

Dr.  Jenkins,  who  had  the  dis- 
tinction of  receiving  the  first  Doc- 
tor of  Education  degree  awarded 
at  UNG,  is  currently  the  director 
of  s'tudy  teaching  in  the  Education 
School.  Prior  to  joined  the  UNC 
staff  in  1951,  he  had  extensive  ex- 
perience in  the  public  schools  as 
a  science  and  mathematics  teach- 
er, principal,  supervisor  and  super- 
intendent. 


Christians  Discriminated 

CAIRO  —Uf^ —  The  weekly  Roman 
Catholic  newspaper  Le  Rayon  D' 
Egypte  said  yesterday  there  are 
signs  of  discrimination  against 
Chriftans  in  Egypt. 

The  paper  said  the  word  at  many 
firms  is,  "we  do  not  hire  Christians 
any  more.  We  have  instructions  to 
hire  only  Moslems." 


CLASSIFIEDS 


FOR  SALE:  HOUSETRAILER;  35 
feet,  2  bedrooms,  shower.  1950 
Iron  wood.  Taylors  Trailer  Ct. 
Airport   Rd.,  J.   L.   Lane. 

FOR  «ALE:  1954  27'  HOUSE- 
trailer.  IV2  miles  North  of  Cha- 
pel Hill  op  Airport  Road.  Sloan's 
Trailer  Park.  Maurice  L.  Clegg. 

LOST:  A  BLUE  POCKETBOOK 
with  a  brown  billfold,  contain- 
ing money  and  papers.  On  Col- 
umbia St.  Please  return  to  S. 
Merrick,  Nurses  Oorm. 


Radio  Station 
Will  Sponsor 
Review  Contest 

Opera  listeners  and  appreciative 
students  of  music  will  be  able  to 
put  their  talents  and  enthusiasm 
to  good  use  in  a  forthcoming 
Opera  Review  Contest  to  be  held 
by  station  WUNC. 

Verdi's  "Rigoletto"  will  be 
broadcast  by  WUNC  at  8  p.m.  on 
Friday.  Feb.  15.  Maria  Callas.  Tito 
Gobb  and  Guiseppe  di  Setfana  will 
be  the  featured  performers. 

The  contest  will  open  on  the 
night  of  the  performance  and  end 
at  mid-night  of  Feb.  15. 

Reviews  of  200  words  or  less, 
on  unmarked  paper,  should  be 
submitted  to  either  Norman  Cor- 
don, Chapel  Hill,  or  Radio  Station 
WUNC.   Chapel   Hill. 

Three  first  prizes  of  recordings 
of  Puccini's  "La  Tosca"  will  be 
awarded  to  the  best  three  re- 
views. Awards  will  be  announced 
by  WUNC  on  March  1  during  a 
performance  of  "La  Tosca". 


J.  B.  Robbins . . .  The  House  of  Fashion 

announces 

A  NEW  CONTEST 

Each  month  it  has. been  the  practice  to  select  by  popular  vote  a  coed  from  the  campus  to  rep-^ 
resent      .  ..,,..    .:,..  ^.      •      V 

-      '  MISS  FASHIONPLATt 

^  Gifts  and  rewards  were  presented  to  all  contestants.    Now  ...  in  addition  ...  we  will  select  a 

GRAND  ANNUAL  FASHIONPLATE 

At  the  end  of  the  school  year,  a  GRAND  ANNUAL  FASHIONPLATE  will  be  selected  from  all 
the  winners  of  the  Miss  Fashionplate  title,  also  by  popular  vote.  The  GRAND  ANNUAL  FASH- 
IONPLATE will  receive  a  complete  ensemble  from  the  HOUSE  of  FASHION  as  her  reward,  and 
will  rule  as  FASHION  QUEEN  for  the  following  year. 


announcing 

Miss  Fashionplate 

for  February 


Mary  Batten 


Wearing  a  Will  Steinman  orig- 
inal Taffeta  Ballerina  length  eve- 
ning frock,  in  frosted  apple  two- 
toned  with  red.  "'7-' 

A  complete  line  of  Will  Stein- 
man originals  are  featured  at 
Robbins  all  during  the  year. 

A  senior  from  Mt.  Gilead,  Miss 
Batten  is  a  Radio-Television  ma- 
or  and  a  member  of  Kappa  Del- 
ta Sorority. 

J.  B  Robbins  House  of  Fashion 
is  happy  to  present  Miss  Mary 
Batten  as  Miss  Fashionplate  of 
February. 

In  honor  of  her  election,  Miss 
Batten  will  receive  a  gift  from 
the  House  of  Fashion,  as  will 
both  of  the  other  contestants. 


These  Are  Contestants  For  March 

Vote  Now  For  Your  Favorite 


*.  1- 


The 


HOUSE  OF   FASHION 


j^ 


MISS  PENN  ANTHONY 

Miss    Anthony    is    a    senior    from 

Hartsville,  S.  C,  majoring  in  Elng- 

lish.    She    is    a    meral^r    of    Chi 

Omega.  Sororty. 


MISS  LIBBY  NICHOLSON 

Miss    Nicholson    is    a    sophomore 
nursing  student  from  High  Point. 


MISS  JANE  BROCK 

Miss    Brock    is    a    freiliman   from 

Atlanta,   Ga.,   majoring   in   d^tal 

hygiene. 


of  Chape!  Hill 


PA«I  POUI 


THl  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


WEDNESDAY,  FEBRUARY  6,  1957 


Carolina  Defeats  Terps  In  Two-Overtime  Thriller,  65-61 

Tar  Heels 


Dave  Sime  Will  Run  For 
State  Dept.  In  Burma 


NEW  YORK  _(AP)—  Speeds- 
ter Dave  Sime  will  miss  most  of 
the  indoor  track  season  to  answer 


Fencers  Resume  Work 

Th3  fencing  team  will  resunie 
practice  today  at  3:30  at  Woollen 
Gym.  Anyone  interested  in  join- 
ing the  team  is  urged  to  come  to 
today's  practice  session.  Plans 
have  been  made  to  hold  the  first 
meet  of  the  season  on  Feb.  23 
against  Augusta  Military  Acade- 
my. 


MILTON'S 
Mid-Winter   Carnival 

Just  added  to  the  carni- 
val—large group  of  polo 
shirts  added  to  the  give- 
a-way. 

One  group  tweka  polo 
shirts  imported  from 
Holland,  reduced  from 
$4.50  to  $1.99. 

Another  group  of  polo 
shirts  in  assorted  hori- 
zontal candy  stripes, 
values  to  $4.50,  reduc- 
ed to  $2.99. 

Plenty  of  good  buys  on 
warm  weather  and  year 
round  clothing- 
Ladies  cashmeres  at  or 
below  wholesale  prices. 

Many  tempting  insane 
reductions.  .  •  .< 

All  sales  cash  and  final 
—alterations  extra. 

Clothing  Cuplioarb 


a  call  of  the  U.S.  State  Depart- 
ment. 

Dan  Ferris,  executive  secretary 
of  the  Amateur  Athletic  Union, 
said  yesterday  the  Duke  Univer- 
sity Sprinter  would  leave  Thurs- 
day to  run  in  Rangoon.  Burma, 
not   returning   until   Feb.   20. 

''He  will  substitute  for  shotput- 
tcr  Perry  O'Brien  who  couldn't 
make  the  trip, "  Ferris  told  the 
Metropolitan  Track  Writers  at 
their  weekly  luncheon.  "Rangoon 
wanted  a  topflight  athlete.  The 
State  Department  asked  for  Sime 
specifically  becau.se  he  missed  the 
Olympic  Games." 

Sime  was  forced  to  withdraw 
from  the  Millrose  Games,  New- 
York  Athletic  Club  and  National 
Indoor  Track  and  Field  Cham- 
pionships at  Madison  Square  Gar- 
den. 


Who  Wishes   Boys  Had 
More  Gumption 

Chickabiddy,  if  you  plea.,-e. 
hear  the  parable  of  bees.  Bees 
devote  their  shining  hours  to 
bussing,  as  it  were,  the  flow- 
ers. They  smack  each  flower,  but 
pass   the    buds,   which,    to    bees 
eyes,  look  like  duds.  Humming 
in  their  twos  and  threes,  go 
the  merry,  boy-like  bees! 

i  Now  flowers,  in  their  girli.vh 
way.  seeming  just  to  stand  and 
sway,  plan  their  every  move  to 
please  silly,  buzzing  boy-like 
bees.   Perfumes   subtler  than 
Chanel,  subtle  shades  to  match 
each  smell — these  they  pass 
around  for  free,  not  for  any 
special  bee.  For  the  girlish 
flower.s  have  found  bees  like 
rivals  buzzing    round. 

THE  MORAL— If  you  want  a  bee, 
set  your  sights  at  least  on 
three.  Send  them  each   a   Valen- 
tine from  the  bookshop  with 
I  this  sign: 

TH£   IN'TIMATE 
BOOKSHOP 

205  E.  Franklin  Street 
Open  Till  10  P.M. 


Howard  Johnson  Restaurant 


BREAKFAST 


LUNCH 


DINNER 


'   ^     I  ''  SNACKS 

"Landmark  For  Hungry  Tarheels" 


Rally  For 
Great  Win 


COLLEGE    P.\RK,    Md.  —  ./P^  —  . 
North  Carolina,  No.  1  team  in  (he 
nation,     extended      its     unbeaten 
string  to   17   with   a   thrilling  65- 
61    double    overtime   victory   over ; 
Maryland  last  night.  ! 

Lenjiie  Rosenbluth  scored  8  ol 
the  teams  12  points  in  the  two 
overtime  periods  to  enable  the  Tar 
Heels  to  keep  their  sti'eak  alive. 
He  got  in  all  of  25  points  before 
fouling  out  with  1:09  left  to  play 
in  the  second  overtime. 

The  regulation  game  ended  53- 
53.  Each  team  scored  six  points 
in  the  first  overtime  and  Mary-, 
land  missed  -winning  when  Bob 
OBrien's  la^t  second  shot  after  a 
one-minute  freeze  bounced  off  the 
back  of  the  rim. 

The  Terps  muffed  a  similar  op- 
portunity with  eight  seconds  re- 
maining in  the  regulation  game 
after  a  freeze  of  a  minute  and  a 
hall. 

Nick     Davis,     Maryland's     high 
scorer    with    20    points,    drove    in  i 
toward  the  basket  and  passed  off 
but   center  Perry   Moore   fumbled 
the  ball  under  the  basket.  i 

Tommy  Kearn. ,  5-foot-ll  North 
Carolina  guard,  twice  came 
through.  He  tied  the  regulation 
game  at  53-aIl  and  then  made  the 
basket  which  put  North  Carolina 
ahead  63-61  with  3:12  to  go  in  the 
last  overtime. 

A    record    crowd    of    l-KOO    saw 
North    Carolina    win     its    seventh 
straight  Atlantic  Coast  Conference 
game.  Maryland  has  won  6  and  lost  i 
4  in  the  loop. 

John  Nacinick  was  second  to 
Davis  in  Maryland  scoring  with  16. 
Rosenbluth  got  support  from  Pete 
Brennan  with  14  points  and  10  each 
from  Kearns  and  ,Ioe  Quigg. 

THE   BOX   - 

UNC 

Rosenbluth  f 
Brennan  f 
Lotz  f 
Quigg  c 
Kearns  g 
Cunningham  g 
GroU  g 
Young  g 

Total 
MARYLAND 
Nacinick  f 
Halleck  f 
Weingarten  f 
Moore    c 
Davij  g 
OBrien  g 
Murphy  g 
Hardiman 

Totals 
UNC 
Maryland 


Paul  Amen  Is  Signed  To 
New«Five  Year  Contract 


Monogrammers  Meet  _** 

There  will  be  a  meeting  of  thir 
!  Monogram    Club    tomorrow    night 
WINSTON-SALEM    —    (AP)    —  |  ^^   7.30   p  „,    pia,is   for   the    Blue- 
Paul    Amen,    head    football    coach  \  white  football  game  will  be  drawn 
at  Wake  Forest,  has  betn  signed  ,  up  and  it  is  urgent  that  all  mcm- 


to  a  new  five-year  contract  which 
carries  through  the  1961  season. 
Athletic  director  Bill  Gibson  an- 
nounced yesterday. 

The  new  agreement  replaces  the 
three-year  contract  which  Amen 
signed  when  he  left  his  post  as 
assistant  coach  at  West  Point  to 
take  over  the  Wake  Forest  reins 
last  fall. 

Contract  terms  wei;e  not  dis- 
closed, but  Gibson  said  Amen  and 
his  five  assistants  —  Bill  Hilde- 
brand,  Elmer  Barbour.  Len 
Wable.  Gene  Gibson  and  Jim  Hi- 
ctikko — were  given  pay  increases. 


bers  be  present. 


UNC  Wrestling  Team 

Pictured  above  is  the  once  beaten  Carolina  wres  Ming  squad  with  their  coach,  Sam  Barnes.  First  row, 
left  to  right:  David  Wall,  Capt.  Bob  Wagner,  Perr  n  Henderson,  Bill  Adcox,  Ron  Milligan,  Charlie  Boy- 
ette  and  Jim  Pyatte.  Second  row:  Ken  Hoke,  Rob  Boyette,  Dave  Atkinson,  Coach  Barn*s,  Glenn  Daugh- 
try,  Lew  Hayes  and  Dave  Corkey.  '  ■.:j   ^,  , 

THE  BIG  ONE  IN  WOOLLEN:  ' 

Fallen  UNC  Matme     Point  For 

« 

Battle  With  Terrapins  Friday 

got  the  jump  on  us!  Besides  mak- 
j  ing  mistakes,  I  think  one  of  the 
I  main   troubles  was   that    my   bo^s 

•weren't  in  their  best  physical  con- 
;  dition." 


By  RON  MILLIGAN 

Quickly  recovering  from  the 
bruises  of  their  first  defeat  of  the 
season  by  XTI.  the  Tarheel  wres- 
tlers  are  pointing  confidently  for 


the  biggest  ACC  match  of  the  sea- 
son when  they  meet  Maryland  Fri- 
day night  in  Woollen  Gym. 

Someone  asked  Coach  Sam 
Barnes  what  happened  at  VPI  last 
week,  and  *e  replied:  "They  just 


Freshman  Cagers  Meet 
Davidson  JVs  Tonight 


By  BILL   KING 

Carolina's  freshman  cage  team 
will  be  out  to  better  its  second 
semester  record  tonight  as  the  Tar 
Babies  go  against  the  Davidson 
junior  varsity  at  Davidson. 


G  F     P  T 

11  3-5     5  25 

3  8-16     3  14,      Coach  Vince  Gramaldis  talented 

0  0-0     0  0   aggregation,  boasting  a  9-3  record 

2  6-7  3  tO'  thu.!  far,  bounced  back  with  a  93- 
5  0-12  10  78    victory    over    Bullis    Saturdiiy 

3  0-12  61  night  after  being  humiliated  by 
0  0-0  0  0  the  Wake  Forest  Baby  Deacs  93- 
0  0-0    0  0  67  last  Thursday, 


24  17-30  15  65 
G       F     P     T| 


2-3 

3-4 

0-0 

4-6 

4-7 

4-5 

0-1 

0-0 

22  17-26  17  61 
30  23  6  6—65 
30    23     6    2-61 


Sutton  Inks  Pact  With 
Washington  Redskins 

WASHINGTON— (AP)—  I^ay- 
back  Ed  Sutton.  North  Carolina's 
leading  ground  gainer  .since  Char- 


Gramaldi.  speaking  of  the  Wake 
Forest  loss  said:  'It  was  the  worst 
game  that  we've  played  this  sea- 
son. We  just  can't  be  that  bad 
again.  The  bo.vs  were  dull  after 
a  two  weeks  layoff  for  exams,  hut 
I'm  not  taking  anything  away  from 
Wake  Forcvt.  they  were  hot  and 
they  played  us  a  fine  ball  game. 
You  can  be  sure  of  one  thing 
though,"  he  added,  "we're  lookint- 
forward  to  playing  them  again." 

Gramaldi  thought  the  Tar  Babies 
did  a  fine  job  against  Built.';. 
•"They  showed  a  lot  better  that 
night."  he  commented.  "They 
seemed  to  have  snapped  out  of 
the  layoff  fatigue." 

Referrmg   to   the    Bullis    game. 


j      As  far  as  the  ACC  standing  goes, 

the   defeat   for  the  Tarheels  doea 

not  hurt  them  since  VTI  is  not  in 

I  the     conference.      Carolina      and 

i  Maryland  are  the  leading  contend- 

\  ers  for  the  conference  champion- 

'  ship.  Carolina  has  wins  over  Wake 

;  Forest  and  Virginia,  while   Mary 

i  land  has  wins  over   Virginia  and 

N.  C.  State  in  the  conference. 

[  Charlie  Boyette,  one  of  the 
leading  figures  for  the  Tarheels 
ran  up  against  some  bad  luck  at 
VPI  when  he  was  pinned  by  a 
Southern  Conference  champion. 
Friday  night,  Boyette  will  certain- 
ly be  more  cautious  because  he 
will  face  Maryland's  Rodney  Nor- 
Dick  Kepley  at  center;  and  John  j  ris,  Southern  Conference  cham- 
Crotty  and  Mike  Steppe  at  guards  pion  in  1953  and  AC  Conference 
tonight.  In  the  Bullis  game.  Kep- j  champion  in  1955. 
lev    dropped    in    29    points    with ! 

Larese  and  Shaffer  getting  22  and  j      ^^u^e.  one  of  the  stronger  ACC 

teams,    has   been    beaten   by   Vir- 
ginia. Carolina  and  Maryland  both 
.\s  a  parting  .N'hot  Gramaldi  was  j  have  beaten  Virginia.  From  these 
asked  what  his  over  all  opinion  of   results,  we  conclude  that  the  ACC 
the  Tar  Babies  was.  "They  ve  im- j  champion  will    be  the  winnner  of 

Friday  night's  tilt  in  Woollen  Gym 
since  both  teams  have  Duke  to 
meet  in  the  future  Barnes  said. 


at  the  last  to  sew  up  the  game." 
Asked  about  tonights  game, 
Gramald  said:  "I  dont  know  much 
about  the  David.son  team  but  I 
imagine  they're  small.  We  will 
start  with  the  man  to  man  and 
switch  to  the  zone  if  the  going  getF 
tough." 

Gramaldi  will  go  with  Lee  Shaf- 
fer and  York   Larese   at   forwards; 


20  respectively. 


proved  a  great  deal."  he  answered. 
"They  seem  to  be  getting  used  to 
each  other  and  they've  certainly 
learned  a  lot  about  college  basket- 
ball." 

"^Shaffer  and  Kepley  are  shoot- 
ing much  better  and  we  have  a 
very  strong  bench."  he  continued. 
"Wally  Graham,  Jack  Crutchfield. 
and  Gray  Poole  have  been  espe- 
cially outstanding." 


The  wrestling  room  is  a  place  of 
much  activity  this  week.  As  the 
young  grapplers  prepare  them- 
selves to  meet  the  Terrapins,  they 
know  that  Friday  night's  match 
with  Maryland  i:*  one  that  could 
make  wrestling  more  than  one  of 
the  university's  minor  sports. 


CONVENltNJ   DAILY   SERVICE 


TO 

WINSTON-SALEM 
HICKORY 
WILMINGTON 
LOUISVILLE 
CINCINNATI    * 
COLUMBUS,  0. 

and  maw/  other  points 


lie    Justice,    has    come    to    terms   Gramaldi  added:  "We  played  them 
with  the  Washington  Redskifts.  the ,  man  to  man  although  we  probably 

club    should  have  thrown  up  a  zone  de- 


National     Football     League 


said  yesterday. 

The  Redskins  said '  Sutton  re- 
ported by  telephone  he  has  signed 
and  put  in  the  mail  a  contract 
for  the  1957  season.  No  figures 
were  given. 


•••••• 

rOR  KSnVATKMK 
Can  year  Tia«al  A|Mt  m 

TCnpli  2-flll  ••••••••••••••* 


Last  Call  For  Tickets 

Today  is  th*  last  day  that  stu- 
dents in  th*  priority  bracket  A 
through  L  may  pick  up  their 
tickets  to  the  Carolina-Duke 
game  here  Saturday  night.  It  is 
also  last  call  for  students  in  the 
M  through  Z  bracket  to  get  their 
tickets  to  the  Wake  Forest 
game.  Beginning  tomorrow 
morning,  all  tickets  will  go  on 
a  first  come  first  serve  basis. 
The  box  office  closes  today  at 
4:30. 


fense.  Bullis  was  small  and  fast 
and  we  have  two  big  men  (Kepley 
and  Shaffer)  who  are  not  fast 
enough  for  a  real  good  man  to 
man.  but  I  wanted  the  boys  to  get 
some  experience  with  that  type 
defense.  We  did  s-witch  to  the  zone 


VALENTINE 


Give 


.6..- 


Whitmans  Candy 

We  Pack  And  Mail 

Eubank's  Drug  Co. 


\ 


A* 


i^ 


MINA  RAKASTAN 


*«« 


o^^^ 


^ 


►»*' 


,r^^^ 


% 


<0. 


'*f 


'>h 


Cy 


DANZIGER'S 


tCi^^ 


o%<» 


»<</ 


/ 


<?- 


o^ 


WORLD'S  Wm  NOVEL 
NOW  ON  IHE  SCREEN! 


;'A  SPECTACULAR 
MOVIE!"-U. 


RECOMMENDED! 


HOURS   OF    SHOWS 

1:00—4:45—8:30 

PRICES   THIS   ATTRACTION 

ADULTS  85c      CHILDREN  25c 

HOURS  OF   :hows 


Carolina 


''BRISK 

AND 

VIOLENT 

ACTION!" 


— Alton   Cook, 
World  Tele-Sun 


The  J.  Arthur  Rank 
Organization  presents 

NICHOLAS 
MONSARRAT'S 


— JuaHn  Gilbert,  Daily  Mirror 

"Brave  action  on  the  bounding 
sea,  which  the  English  know, 
love  and  handle  so  well!" 

—Archer  Winsten,  N.  Y.  Poat 

SUSPENSEFUL! 
ABSORBING!' 

— Rote  Pelswick,  Journal  American 

From  the  author  and  producers 
of  "The  Cruel  Sea,"  another 
great  tale  of  suspense  and  high 
adventure! 


WSMm^^ 


LAST  TIMES 
TODAY 


E 
S 

Now  Northwestern  Mutual'sl 
Quantity-Earned  Savings  can 
reduce  your  premium  rate  on 
life  insurance! 

New  price  structure  steps] 
down  the  pcr-thousand  rate 
on  all  policies  of  $5,000  and 
over.  Ih  amounts  of  $10,000 
and  over  the  rate  steps  down, 
still  more. 

For  information  on  liow  this 
new  development  can  save 
you  money,  call  or  wtite: 


Matt  Thompson 
Arthur    DeBerry,   Jr. 

Special  Agents 

The  Northwestern 
Mutual  Life  Ins.  Co. 

Tel    9-3691   or  8-5381 
405  W     Franklin   Street 


BOB   and   MONK 
of 

TOWN& 
CAMPUS 

SALUTE 
Athlete  Of  The  Week 


Lennie  Rosenbluth 

Captain  Lennie  Rosenbluth 
has  been  named  Athlete  of  the 
Week  for  his  sparkling  play  in 
Carolina's  thrilling  double  over- 
time victory  over  Maryland  last 
night.  Big  Len  tallied  25  points 
and  pMyed  a  great  floor  game 
before  fouling  out  in  the  final 
overtime. 

> 

We  want  him  to  drop  by 
TOWN  &  CAMPUS  %n6  pick  out 
a  shirt  to  his  liking — compli- 
ments of  the  house.. 

We  want  the  old  and  young 
alike  of  Chapel  Hill  to  make 
TOWN  &  CAMPUS  their  head- 
quarters for  the  finest  in  men's 
clothing.  Drop  in  today. 


TOWN& 
CAMPUS 


Perfect  in  style 
as  well  as  comfort. 


!J!K**«S»<C*  -94t*-*«fc«« 


FLORSHEIM 

Tassel  Sliv-ons 


These  carefree  slip-ons  are  handsomely  proper  for  al! 
round-the-clock  o<casions.  Jhankis  to  the  special  lasts 
designed  by  Florsheim  just  for  the«c  shoes,  tbev  fit 
snugly  all  over  without  slipping  or  binding.  Slip  into 
a  pair  sooa. 

IN  BLACK  CORDOVAN  AND  BLACK  CALF 

.       FOR  FORMAL  WEAR 


Julian' 


MiK 


••rials  Beyt* 

•liapBl  Bill,   N.   C. 


WEATHER 


Warmer.  Hifih  •xp«ct*d  58. 


®)  c  Dally 


xMtd 


HUNGARY 

A   n*w  angle  on   tht   revolution. 
See  editorial  page. 


VOL.  LVIi   NO.  92 


Complete  (/P)   Wire  Servict 


CHAPEL   HILL,   NORTH   CAROLINA,   THURSDAY,   FEBRUARY   7,   1957 


Offices   in   Graham   Memorial 


FOUR   PAGES  THIS  ISSUt 


Violations  Rumors 
Denied  By  Young 

By  PHYLLIS  MAULTSBY  ;    «"  .  • 

A  niiinber  of  rumovtcl  violations  oj  the  Honor  Svsteni 
uhi(  h  (Irilted  aioiind  tanipiis  durino  the  exaniinatioii  period, 
h.ivc  been  denied  by  Bob  ^  oiini;,  student  bodv  president. 

One  of  the  widespread  reports  rone eiiied  supposed  t I>eat- 
inj;  on  the  part  of  members  of  the  freshman  f)ask.etball  tea-m  Van  Wyk  from  the  Department  of 
— or  ol  the  lootball  team,  depcndin;;  upon  tlie  varyini^  versi-  Pediatrics  at  the  UNC  Medical 
ons  of  the  storv.  The  freshman  athletes  involved  were  nimOr-  School.  Dr.  Van  Wyk  will  talk 
ed  to  have  been  caiijiht  toijether  over  a  lan,Q[iia,oe  exam  in  a  and  show  slides  illustrating  how 
doiiniiorv  room.  The  freshmen  were  snpposediv  tricfl  bv  the    ch?mistry  is  becoming  ever  more 


Pre-Med  And 
Dental  Frat 
Holds  Meeting 

Alpha  Epsilon  Delta,  national 
honorary  pre-medical  and  pre- 
d?ntal  fraternity,  is  holding  its 
first  open  meeting  of  this  semes- 
ter in  Hanes  Hall  at  7:15  tonight. 

The    speaker   will    be    Dr.    J.    J. 


Sam  AAagiirs  Statements 

By  Mixed  Reactions  From  Leaaers 

Three  Student  Leaders 
State  Views  On  Speech 


anfl  quietlv 


I  lonor  (!oun(  il 
SPANISH  EXAM 

Another  popular  rumor  was  that 
President  Young  walked  into  the 
Spanish  4  exam,  at  the  request  oi 
the  professor  who  reported  mns- 
ing  copies  of  the  exam,  collected 
all  the  quiz  book.->'  from  the  stu- 
dents, flipped  through  the  pages, 
and  then  did  not  return  all  the 
books  when  the  exam  finally  re- 
sumed. 

Concerning  the  Spanish  4  ex- 
am. Young  stated  that  on  the 
basis  of  a  rumor  reported  to  him 
the  night  before,  he  and  his 
roommate  coliected  the  blue 
books  of  all  the  students  at  the 
exam  and  went  through  them  to 
determine  whether  they  could 
find  evidence  of  cheating.  All 
the  books  were  returned,  as 
nothing  suspicious  was  found  in 
the  investigation. 
STATEMENT  BY  YOUNG 

A'  for  the  first  rumor,  and 
others  which  have  been  spread 
during  and  since  the  last  exami- 
nation period,  but  none  of  which 
have  been  proven  true.  President 
Young  made  the  following  state- 
ment to  the  Daily  Tar  Heel: 

"During  the  past  few  days,  di- 
verse rumors  have  circulated 
around  the  campus  with  regard  to 
questionable  violations  of  the  Hon- 
or System  which  I  witnessed.  I  will 
not  reveal  the  names  of  the  per- 
sons involved,  but  I  feel  tliat  I 
•r-uld  Clarify  the  situation  and 
put  an  end  to  these  malicious  ru- 
mors. 

One  night  during  the  exami- 
nation period  my  roommate  and 
I  were  led  to  a  scene  where  one 
student  was  found  making  notes 
in    a     blue    quiz    book.     It    was 

(See  VIOLATIONS,  Page  2) 


hipped  home. 


UNC  Azalea 
Festival  Queen 
Is  Selected 

Miss  Marian  Lou  Dickens,  junior 
from  Tomasville.  was  recently  se- 
lected to  represent  tne  Universi- 
ty at  the  1957  Azelea  F^'stival  in 
Wilmington. 

The  heads  of  the  six  major  wo- 
men's organizations  selected  Miss 
Dickens  from  the  number  of  cam- 
pus queens  chos;n  during  the  fall 
semester. 

Mi.s,s  Dickens,  an  elementary  ed- 
ucation major,  was  lest  fall's 
1956  Dukathon  Queen.  She  is  also 
an  Air  Force  ROTC  Sponsor  and 
a  member  of  the  YACK  Beauty 
Court. 


important    in    the    field    of    medi 
cine. 

The  meeting  is  open  to  all  pre- 
medical  and  pre-dental  students, 
but  AED  has  welcome  sophomores 
who  are  now  eligible  for  member- 
ship in  this  society.  New  members 
will  be  taken  in  within  the  next 
few  weeks. 


AN  tDITORIAL: 


BY  6-4  VOTE 


Choral  Club 
Will  Perform 

Among  the  events  of  the  1957 
Commencement  W?ek  will  be  a 
performance  by  the  Chapel  Hill 
Choral  Club,  accompaincd  by  the 
University  Symphony  Orchestra. ! 
o[  Verdi's  Requiem  Mass.  \ 

A  chorus  of  90  \o  100  singers  is 
anticipated  for  this  year's  per- 
formance. 

The  Chorus,  opvn  to  students, 
staff,  and  all  local  residents,  be- 
gins practice  for  the  spring  semes- 
ter, Feb,  11.  Interested  persons 
have  be?n  invited  to  attend  re- 
hearsal from  7:30  to  9:00  p.m.  in 
Hill  Music  Hall.  There  are  no 
'  tryouts. 


Novelist  Will  Speak 
At  Bull's  Head  Tea 


Manly  Wade  Wellman  will  speak 
on  his  latest  book.  "Rebel  Boast." 
at  the  third  Bull's  Head  Tea  of 
the  sea.son  this  afternoon  at  3:45 
p.  m.  in  the  Library  Assembly 
Room. 

Mi.ss  Helen  Parker  of  the  UNC 
Press  will  introduce  Wellman. 
Mrs.  Wellman  and  Mrs.  E.  H.  Hart- 
sell  will  p-ur  tea. 

Wellman  was  t>orn  in  Africa, 
where  his  father  was  a  medical 
missionary.  He  lived  and  attended 
school  in  various  parts  of  the 
United  Sates  before  settling  in 
Chapel    Hill    in    1951. 


Singing 
Lessons 
Offered 


UN  Keeps 

V.K.Menon 

Away 

V.  K  Krishna  Menon,  scheduled 
by  the  Carolina  Forum  to  speak 
here  Feb.  11,  haj  cancelled  his  en- 
gagement for  the  third  time. 

According  to  a  letter  from  Men- 
on's  Private  Secretary,  the  Indian 
Minister  will  not  be  able  to  make 
his  address  in  Chapel  Hill  because 
ot  an  important  session  of  the  UN 
General  Assembly. 

The  question  of  Kashmir  is  now 
before  the  Security  Council  with 
meetings  concerning  the  question 
held  throughout  next  week.  As  In- 
dia's representative  to  the  Security 
Council  for  thL-  question,  Menon 
has  been  declared  essential  to  the 
meetings  both  durinf  and  l>cf ofe 
ihe  debate. 

.Menon,  chief  of   India's    delega- !      The   debate 
tion    to    the    United    Nation.s.    was!  when      Guest 
originally    scheduled    to    talk    Dec. !  Kirkuk.    Iraq. 
10,   but   the  Hungarian   crisis   and 
the    special    sessions    of    the    UN 
forced  him  to  postpone  his  engage- 
ment. 

The  Indian  representative  is  re- 
garded by  a-ome  as  being  second 
only  to  Nehru  on  the  Indian  politi- 
cal scene. 

In  announcing  the  cancellation 
of  Menon's  address,  Brandon  Kin- 
caid.  chairman  of  the  Carolina 
Fnrum.  stated  that  "the  Forum  i.» 
very  disappointed  that  Mr.  Menon 
is  not  to  be  with  us.  We  hope  that 
he  will  be  able  to  come  later  on 
in  the  year,  but  we  aren't  sure 
whether  or  not  he  will  be  able  to 
come  at  all.'' 


SeveiT'l  l'\(;  siudcni  ;jt(>\e! nmeiit  olli<iais  Wednesday 
greeted  with  mixed  reactions  siatements  made  Tue.sday  night 
hv  Director  of  Student  .Mlairs  .Sam  Magill. 

.\Iaoill  said  there  was  a  "current  crisi.s  in  student  ini- 
tiative" and  students  were  unwiilins  to  dis(  ipline  themselves. 
He  mentioned  incieasin;^  violations  of  the  Honor  Code  in 
tomu'ction  with  this. 

Me  made  the  statements  in  a-n  addre.ss  to  the  I'niversity 
Party  in  which  he  spoke  of  the  administration's  \  iews  on  stu- 
dent uoxernment. 

Mr';ill  pointed  out  two  premises  upon  wliith  the  Tni- 
versltv     administration    bases     its 


student 
are: 


government   policy.  They 


MIKE  WEINMAN 

.''there  is  a  crisis' 


JIM  EXUM 
"deluge  of  cases' 


1.  The    demonstrated   ability   of 
students   to   discipline   themselves 


'Crisis'  &  Administration 


SEE  PAGE  TWO 


Phi   Kills 
Doctrine 


Eisenhower 
Resolution 


Debating    a    resolution    favoring 
the    Eisenhower    Doctrine    in      the 
Mideast,    the    Philanthropic    Liter- : 
ary  Soci«t7   killed    the    bill    by    a 
vote   of  6-4,   Tuesday   night 

The   debate    reached    its    climax 
Ted    Youhanna      of 
questioned    Repres- 
entative   Jess    Stribling.    who    had 
spoken      affirmatively.       Y.iuhann 
a.sked  h^w  there  could   be  a  pow- 
er vacuum  in  a  country  in  which 
fifty    million    people    live:     along 
with  other  questions  and  remarks 
he  went  on  to  say  that  it  was  no 
wor.se  to  die  from  Western  bullets 
than    Russian    and    that    most    of : 
the    Mideast    countries   were   insti- 1 
tuting  measures  against  the  Com-  j 
munists. 


In  introducing  the  resolution. 
Representative  Je.ss  Stril^linfi 
spoke  briefly  on  the  two  concepts 
of  the  Soviet  policy  and  then  said 
the    United    States    must    envoke 


the  Eisenhower  Doctrine  in  order 
t  )  keep  from  being  encumbered 
by  red-tape  which  would  block 
^UHy  quick  aciioa. 

Representative  Hill  Jjhnslon 
said  that  he  believed  that  the  Ei- 
senhov\or  Doctrine  was  just  an  ex- 
tension of  the  Truman  policy.  He 
claimed,  "the  bill  actually  cov- 
ers the   U.   S.   power  vacuum." 

Claiming  that  the  I  nited  States 
could  not  use  Russian  methods  to 
stop  C  mmunism  in  the  Mideast, 
Representative  Lawrence  stated, 
"it  is  n;it  the  right  of  the  United 
States  to  enforce  its  own  will." 
He  believed  that  the  peopl?  had 
their  right  to  choo.se  their  own 
government. 

Representative  John  Brooks  ur- 
ged thai  the  United  States  place 
its  military  aid  at  the  disposal 
of  the  United  Nations.  He  felt  that 
the  aggressor  nation  might  not 
be  a  Communist  nation. 


Resignation '  I^^^  "°"°" 

r^ir\ii  Coed  Workers 

Of  Officials  with  Coffee 

Asked  By  Di 


The  Dialectic  Senate  met  Tues- 
day night  t)  consider  a  bill  call- 
ing for  the  resignation  of  Secre- 
taries Dulles  and  Wilson  of  the 
State  and  Defense  departments. 

Senator  Huffman  began  the  de- 
bate with  an  indictment  of  the 
two  Secretaries  for  miscalculation 
and  bungling  of  .Foreign  affairs, 
alien  of  our  traditional  allies,  and 
gross  overspending  iu  the  peace- 
time defense  buildup. 

The    negative    view    was    upheld 
by    Senator   Shaw    who   cited    Dul- 
les for   his  acquisition  of  new  al- 
I  lies  and   his  forthrig-ii  poiicy  and 
'  praised    Secretary    Wilson's    inte- 
grity  and    frankness. 
I 

j      The  bill  was  about  to  be  placed 
I  I;)    a    vote    when    jhe   question    of 
■  the  presence  of  a  quorum  was  rai- , 
!  sed   by  Senator  Shaw.  I 

A  count  of  Senators  present  was 
i  taken  and  the  quorum  found  to  be 
lacking. 

President  Pat  Adams  adjourned 
the  meeting  and  a  motion  was 
put  forward  and  passed  that  un- 
e.xcused  Senators  be  fined  50 
cents  each   for  their  absence. 


The  Hospital  Service  Committee 
of  the  YMCA  will   give   an   infor- 1 
mal    coffee    honoring    the      coeds  | 
who    worked    on    this    committee 
last  semester  this  Friday  at  4  p.m. 
in  the  cabinet  room  of  the  Y. 

The  committee  is  composed  of 
75  coeds  under  the  direction  of 
Miss  Dottie  W^ood  who  visit  the 
hospital     IVi     hours     each     week 

In  the  past  the  hospital  has  de- 
pended on  the  work  of  these  girls 
■  in    assisting    the    regular    nurses 
by  feeding  and  reading  to  pationLs 
,  and  helping  to  transport   them. 

Th-rse  women  provide  valuable 
service  to  the  hospital  and  re- 
ceived practical  training  in  the 
care  of  the  sick. 

Coeds      interested    in      working 
with   the  committee  this  semester  , 
have    been    urged    to    sign    up    in. 
Miss  Elea  or  Riggins  office  in  the 
Y  this  Saturday  from  9  to  12  a.m.  [ 
and    attend    the    orientation    pro- 
gram   in    Memorial     Hospital,    to 
be  held  on  the   12th  and    I3th   of j 
February  at   1:30  p.m.  ! 


WORDS  OF  COMFORT: 


Ducats  Available  To  All 

Tickets  to  the  Carol ina-Duke 
game  Saturday  and  the  Carolina- 
Wake  Forest  game  next  Wea:fes- 
day  are  now  being  given  out  on 
a  first  come  first  served  basis  to 
passbook  holders  at  the  Woollen 
Gym  ticket  office. 


which  is  the  basis  of  student  self- 
government. 

2.  That  student  government  is 
educationally  sound  toward  pre- 
paration of  stuc-onts  to  accept 
their  role  in  later  life. 

Magill    th9n    touched    briefly 
on   several    problem    points. 

AUTO  PROBLEM 

Included  in  these  points  was  a 
short  statement  on  the  automo- 
bile problem  here.  Concerning 
this,  he  suggested  construction  of 
a  "multi-level  parking  lot  north 
of    the    University    medical    area. 

He  also  said  limitation  of  stu- 
dent autos  was  only  a  "temporary 
relief"  and  more  permanent  ac- 
tion must   be   taken  soon. 

Student  Body  President  Bob 
Young  and  Mens  Honor  Council 
Chairman  Jim  Exum  both  felt 
there  was  not  a  "crisis."  Univer- 
sity Party  Chairman  Mike  Wein- 
man  agreed  with  Magill.  -r 

Young  said  "1  do  not  feel  that 
'  there  is  a  'crisis'  in  students'  in- 
itiative." We  have  made  mistakes. 
'  certainly.  There  is  more  work  to 
be  done,  undoubtedly.  Most  stu- 
dent leadrrs  have  fallen  short  of 
their  goals;  however,  the  year  is 
not  yet   over,"  he  said. 

"I  think  records  will  prove  that 
the  Honor  Council,  excluding  the 
■cheating  ring  case.'  has  tried  con- 
siderably fewer  cases  this  year 
than  last  year.  In  my  opinion,  the 
Honor  Council  members  have 
done    a    most    satisfactory   job. 

"With  proper  cooperation 
among  students,  members  of  the 
administration  and  faculty  mem- 
bers. 1  feel  that  we  can  continue 
a  year  of  beneficial  results  for 
the    students,"   he    said. 

Young  said  he  was  not  attempt- 
ing "to  defend  my  own  actions  as 
president  of  student  government" 
but    f:lt    he   must    speak    for  'stu- 

(Sec  MAGILL,  Page  3) 


Shepard  Advises  Students  Not  To  Ask  \  Gordon  Gray  Selected 
For  Deferment  Until  They  Receive  Notice  For  Government  Post 


In    response    to    a    gr^iwing    de- 
mand   for    voice    training    among 
UNC    students    class   singing    less- 
ons  will   be  offered   for  the   first  ' 
time  this  semester. 

The  U.\C  Music  Dept.  made  the 
announcement  Wednesday. 

Professor  Joel  Carter,  chairman 
of  instruction  in  voice,  will  teach 
the  course. 

The  course  will  carry  hjurly 
credit  on  the  same  basis  as  other 
music  study,  the  announcement 
said. 

In  addition  to  class  sessions, 
each  student  will  meet  privately 
each  week  with  the  coach-accom- 
panist.   Hunter    Tillman. 

Interested  students  have  been 
a.sked  to  apply  for  the  class  at 
once.  Registration  will  be  limited 
to  12  men.  half  of  whom  have  al- 
r  e  a  d  y  preregistered,  the  an- 
nouncement said. 

The  first  session  will  be  held 
tomorrow  at  2  p.m.  in  room  207, 
UiU  Hall. 


WELLMAN 

;^" '  ■"  .  .  .speaks  on  book 

'•Rebel  Boast"  is  the  story  of 
five  confederate  infantrymen 
frorti  Enfield,  N.  C.  told  from 
the  viewpoint  of  the  ordinary  so- 
ldier. In  writing  the  book  Well- 
man  relied  on  personal  letters 
and  diaries,  many  ot  which  came 
from  the  Wilson  Library's  South- 
ern  Historial  Collection. 

All  interested  persons  have 
been  invited  to  attend. 


GM'S  SLATE 


Activities  at  GM  today  are  as 
fellows: 

Woman's  Residence  Council, 
3-5,  Council  Room;  Student  Fac- 
ulty orum,  3:303-5,  Roland  Par- 
ulty  Foruno,  3:30-5,  Roland  Par- 
ker Lounge  No.  2;  Rules  Com- 
Mardi  gras,  4-6,  Roland  Parker 
Lounge  No.  3;  Finance  Commit- 
tee, 4-5,  Woodhouse  Conference 
Room;  UP  Caucus,  6-7,  Roland 
Parker  Lounge  No.  I;  SP  Caucus, 
6:30-7:15,  Roland  Parker  Lounge 
No.  3;  Man's  Honor  Council, 
7-11,  Woodhouse  Confaranca 
Room. 


By  NEIL  BASS 

Sweating  the  draft? 

If  so.  Gen.  F.  C.  Shepard  had 
comforting  words  of  advice  yester- 
day. Shepard  is  the  University  co- 
ordinator of  military  affairs. 

The   general    had   two   primary  I 
points  of  advice  to  University  stu- 
dents who  are  wary  of  Selective 
Service: 

(1)  Do  not  raiiuast  deferment 
until  you  receive  notice  to  re- 
port for  physical  examination. 
By  doing  so  you  may  increase 
your  draft  eligibility  by  ten 
years. 

(2)  Keep   in  close  contact  with 
your  local  selective  service  hoard. 
It   solely  can  inform  you   of  your 
possibility  for  induction. 
REQUIREMENTS 

Concerning  necessary  scholastic 
requirements  to  enable  students  to 
remain  in  school,  Shepard  released 
the  following  information. 

Students  may  not  ba  drafted 
during  their  freshman  year. 
They  may  net  ba  drafted  during 
their  sophomore  year  if  they 
were  in  the  upper  S0%  of  their 
freshman  class,  upper  66%  of 
their  sophomore  class,  upper 
I  75%  of  their  junior  class,  and 
upper  25%  of  their  class  in  grad- 
I    uata  school. 

An  important  statement  released 
[by    Shepard    was    that    Selective 


Service    is    calling    no  men    below 
the  age  of  22.  j 

DEFERMENT  { 

Students    who    fail    to    maintain  | 
the    neces.-ary    .scholastic    average 
are    classified    "I-S"    for    one    aca- 
demic vear.  This  clause  in  the  Se 


leclive  Service  Regulations  i.> 
called  the  "Compassionate  Clause." 
It  allows  students,  according  to 
Shepard,  one  acaaemic  year  to 
raise  their  scholastic  average  to 
the   necessary   level. 

This'    i-S  '    cla..'jificati()n,    Shep- 


—      ^  t  iifi...i. 


GEN.   SHEPARD 

,  adviaes  on  the  draft 


ard  said,  is  good  only  for  one  aca- 
demic year.  If  at  the  end  of  this 
probationary  year  the  necessary 
average  is  not  attained,  then  the 
student  automatically  becomes  "I- 
A  "  and  subject  to  the  draft. 

Other  classifications  are  "ID'' 
which  entities  students  to  "mili- 
tary deferment"  by  virtue  of  par- 
ticipation in  the  Reserve  Officers 
Training  Corps,  "H-S"  which  en- 
titl  ■  students  to  deferment  by  vir- 
tue of  successful  maintenance  of 
the  necessary  academic  average. 

Students  who  have  not  been 
previously  called  to  report  for 
physicals  may  not,  under  any 
circumstances,  be  called  out  of 
school  until  they  complete  the 
academic  year  in  which  they  are 
enrolled. 

Concerning  deferment  in  gener- 
al Shepard  said,  "Do  not  request 
deferment  unless  you  are  certain 
you  will  be  called.  Once  you  are 
deferred,  you  become  subject  to 
the  draft  until  you  are  36  years 
of  age,  rather  than  the  customary 
26-year-old  limitation." 

Concerning  contact  with  re.-pec- 
live  local  selective  service  boards 
Shepard  said,  "Your  local  board 
can  call  you  only  when  you  attain 
a  certain  age  (now  22).  Thus  it  is 
the  best  place  to  go  to  get  infor- 
mation about  the  possibility  of  be- 
ing called  and  when.''  ' 


WASHINGTO.X  — (AP)  —Presi- 
dent Eisenhower  Wednesday  ac- 
cepted the  resignation  of  Defense 
Mobilizer  Arthur  S.  Flemming 
and  announced  the  post  will  go  to 
Gordon  Gray,  who  was  Secretary 
of  the  Army  in  the  Truman  ad- 
ministration. 

Flemming  will  resume  the  presi- 
dency of  Ohio  Wesleyan  Uni^'er- 
sity  after  a  leave  of  almost  four 
years. 

Gray,  a  47-year-old  North  Caro- 
lina Democrat-for-Eisenhower,  has 
been  assistant  secretary  of  de- 
fense for  international  security 
affairs   since   mid-1955. 

In  his  Pentagon  assignment. 
Gray  worked  in  a  field  closely  al- 
lied with  his  new  post  as  director 
of  the  office  of  defense  mobiliza- 
tion  (ODM). 

The  defense  mobilizer  is  res- 
ponsible for  mustering  the  resour- 
ces needed  to  meet  current  de- 
fense requirements,  and  to  plan 
for  a  speedy  mobilization  oi  in- 
dustrial capacity  in  the  event  of 
a  war  emergency.  ODM  allocates 
scarce  materials  and  stockpiles 
others  that  would  be  needed  in 
wartime. 

Gray's  selection  was  announced 
by  Eisenhower  at  his  news  con- ' 
ference.  The  nomination  could 
not  be  submitted  to  the  Senate 
Wednesday,  however.  because 
that  body  was  not  in  session. 

A  former  president  of  the  Uni- , 


versity  of  North  Carolina,  Gray 
is  former  publisher  cf  the  Win- 
ston-Salem Journal  and  the  Twin 
City  Sentinel.  Once  state  presi- 
dent of  the  Young  Democrats,  he 
has  said  he  voted  for  Fiisenhower. 


Legislature  Acts  Tonight 
Cn  Bad  Check  Measure 

A  bi.l  concerning  bad  checks 
'  passed  by  students  in  Chapel  Hill 
and  to  the  University  will  come 
before  the  Student  Legislature  to- 
night at  7:S0. 

Also  on  the  agenda  are  two  fi- 
nance bills,  according  to  speaker 
of  the  Legislature  Sonny  Evan.v. 


IN  THE  INFIRMARY 

Students  in  the  Infirmary  yes- 
terday included: 

Misses  Carolyn  Frances  Rob- 
erts, Nancy  Jane  Stockwell  and 
Michael  Paul  Cap.  Bobby  Ray 
McDuffie,  John  Ashby,  Robert 
Williams,  Ronnie  Waters,  Asa 
Van  Moore,  J«n>es  T.  Alley,  Ed- 
ward L.  Adams,  Marvin  Smith, 
James  Emerson,  Richard  SSrkin, 
Jamas  Bynum,  Jasper  Memory, 
WilMam  Q.  Oerrah,  Kee  Chun 
Yeo,  Richard  Oresman,  John  W. 
Johnson,  Lewis  Hardee,  Charles 
Ross,  Charles  Baldwin,  Alvin 
Ward  Smith  and  Bobby  Beam. 


^AGE  TWO 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEV 


THURSDAY,  FEBRUARY  7,  ]9S7 


Students  And  Their  Crisis: 
South  Building  Guilty,  Tqo 

"StiidiHfs  iinist  fare  I  he  value  of  ifileirrily  if  I  hey  are  to  over- 
ronie  Ihe  cinrevl  crisis  in  student  niit ialive. "—DneLloi  of  Student 
Acti\itics  Saimicl   Mauill.  .sijeakinii  to  Inivcrsitv  Party  this  week. 

i 

Th<^  crisis  Director  Magi  1 1  mentiontd  was  created  not  only  by  the 
students.  The  administration  is  helping  a  great  deal.  too. 

In  very  many  ol  the  tense  situations  that  have  laced  student  govern- 
ment in  recent  years,  the  administraticm  has  taken  away  student  gov- 
ennnents  freedom  and  integrity. 

Student  government,  Magi  11  told  the  l'ni\ersity  Party,  is  in  a  "de- 
pression." In  the  same  breath  he  talked  about  increasing  violations  of 
the    honor   (ode,    increased   drink- 


THE  LIVESPIKE: 


ing  and  unwillingness  of  students 
to  discipline  themselves. 

Let  us  examine  how  the  students 
—  and  the  administration  —  have 
ha-ndled  themselves  in  crtses  in 
the  past: 

I.  Increasing  violations  of  the 
honor  code:  Not  too  long  ago,  two 
Carolina  students  traveled  to  Wo- 
man's College  and  did  something 
\ery  nasty.  They  returned  to  the 
Carolina  campus. 

Woman's  College  officials  dis- 
covered the  crime,  identified  the 
two  students  and  called  South 
Building.  The  students  were  tried 
through  student  judicial  channels 
here. 

1  hev  were  given  sentences— one. 
probation:  the  other,  a  stem  warti- 


Woman's  College  officials,  who 
wanted  to  wring  the  most  p>ossible 
piMiishmciit  out  of  the  case,  and 
South  Building,  which  disagreed 
\\ith  the  honor  council's  decision, 
clledcd  the  "appeal"  of  the  case 
to  a   fiu  iiltv-administration  court. 

i  IiL  two  studciHs     were     gi\en 
much    harder   sentences.    One,   we 
rerall.    was   suspended      from      the 
University. 
,*  *  *  * 

t.  Increased  drinking:  Just  how 
Director  Magill  got  liis  statistics 
on  increased  drinking,  we  do  not 
know.  Bm  we  will  wager  there  is 
no  more  drinking  here  lliis  vear* 
than  there  was  two,  three  or  five 
years  ago,  when  the  iiKreased  en- 
rollment is  taken  into  considera- 
tion. 

Rather,  M^agill  has  just  started 
to  look  around  him  and  notice  that 
students  arc  drinking  intoxicating 
beverages. 

The  I'niversity  has  a  lule  which 

The  Daily  Tar  Heel 

The  official  itudeot  publication  of  the 
Publications  Board  of  the  University  of 
North  Carolina,  where  it  is  published 
daily  except  Monday  and  examinatiot 
and  vacation  periods  and  summer  terms 
Entered  as  second  class  matter  in  the 
Dost  office  in  Chapel  Hill,  N.  C.  undei 
the  Act  of  March  8,  1870.  Subscription 
rates:  mailed,  .$4  per  year.  $2.50  a  semet- 
ter;  delivered,  $6  a  year.  $3.50  a  temef 
ter. 


Editor 


FRED  POWLEDGE 


Managing  Editor CHARLIE  SL0AI4 


News  Editor  — 


NANCY  HILL 


Business  Manager BILL  BOB  FUEL 


SforU  Editor 


LARRY  CHEEK 


EDITORIAL  STAFF  —  Woody  Sear», 
Frank  Crowther,  Barry  Winston,  David 
Mundy,  George  Pfingst,  Ingrid  Clay, 
Cortland  Edwards,  Paul  McC«uley, 
Bobbi  Smith. 


VEWS  STAFF— Clarke  Jones,  Ray  Link- 
er, Joan  Moore.  Pringle  Pipkin,  Annvi 
Drake,  Edith  MacKinnon,  Wally  Kuralt, 
Mary  AJys  Voorhees,  Graham  Snyder, 
Billy  Barnes,  Neil  Bass,  Gary  Nichols, 
Page  Bernstein,  Peg  Humphrey,  Phylli* 
Maultsby  Ben  Taylor 


BUSINESS  STAFF— Rosa  Moore,  Johnny 
Whitaker,  Dick  Leavitt.  Dick  Sirkin. 

SPORTS  STAFF:  Bill  King,  Jim  Purks, 
Jimmy  Harper.  Dave  Wible.  Charley 
Howson. 


Staff  Phott>grapher 
Librarian     


Norman  Kantor 
.—    Sue  Gishner 


Subscription  Manger Dale  Staley 

Advertising  Manager Fred  Katzip 

Circulation  Manager Charlie  Holt 


Night  Editor 

Proof  Reader 


Night  News  Editor 


Larry   Cheek 

Manley  Springs 
—  Clarke  Jones 


it  does  not  enforce.  The  ride  pro- 
hibits drinking  on  the  campus. 
Other  rules  outlaw  drinjciilg  in 
fraternity  houses  when  there  are: 
coed  guests  present. 

Both  rules  are  farces,  lip-serviced 
l)y  the  l-niversity  because  the  Uni- 
versity knows  the  trustees  would 
blow  their  tops  if  the  rules  were 
not  t)n   the  books. 

It  is  illegal  to  possess  alcoholic 
beverages  in  dormitory  rooms,  just 
as  it  is  illegal  to  possess  food  there 
and  to  stick  cellophane  tape  on  tlie 
walls  and  woodwork.  But  any  stii- 
detit  who  wants  to  keep  his  bottle 
in  his  room  has  no  more  trouble 
that  the  student  who  cooks  coffee 
there  or  tapes  Marilyn  Monroe 
Hillei    in  front  of  his  desk. 

The  fuiniy  thing  is.  South  Build- 
ing knows  that.  Vp  until  this  week 
South  Building  had  not  admitted 
it,  however.  It  was  a  sort  of  silent 
compact  between  the  student  af- 
fairs office  and  the  students.  The 
ride  was  there,  and  it  could  be 
broketi  at  will.    -  ,  ..^*v-   '  ' 

We  admire  Director  Magill  for 
noting  that  students  are  drinking 
alcohol  i{  beverages.  We  would  ad- 
mire him  even  more  if  he  would 
either    enfoice   the    rules    or  cam- 

p  ign  for  their  repeal. 

*  *  *•'■'■ 

i^.  rnwillingness  of  students  to 
iliscipline  themselves:  Consider 
the  case  of  a  coed  who  came  into 
her  dormitorv  a  little  bit  tight 
one  night. 

She  was  turned  in  to  the  proper 
student    judiciary  group. 

The  judiciary  group  felt  the  girl 
needed  counsel,  since  she  obvious- 
Iv  was  not  the  type  of  coed  who 
was  incorrigible.  So  the  judiciary 
group  asked  the  dean  of  women's 
office  for  help. 

The  dean  of  wotnens'  office 
helped,  all  right.  The  coed  was  im- 
mediately punished,  and  punished 
severely.  Justice  had  been  dealt. 

Why  should  student  groups  at- 
temp  to  discipline  themselves  if 
they  know  they  will  get  little  help 

from  the  administration? 

«  *  • 

It  is  true  that  student  initiative 
has  been  very  slack  during  the  past 
academic  year.  But  when  student 
governmeiit  has  attempted  to  exer- 
( ise  its  inherent  (we  feel;  obvious- 
ly South  Building  doesn't)  powers 
of  self-government,  and  when  at 
the  same  time  South  Building  has 
disagreed  with  the  students,  there 
has  been  cmly  one  answer:  South 
Building's  answer. 

*  *  «  ' 

iMagill's  statement  this  week  can 
and  should  be  interpreted  as  an  ill 
oinen  for  student  government.  It 
means  South  Building  is  thinking 
seriously  about  limiting  student 
freedom— probably,  starting  with 
the  student  courts. 

Once  South  Building  has  con- 
trol of  the  student  courts,  frecdoiu 
will  be  a  day-to-day  thing,    g. 

The  University  of  NortK  Caro- 
lina will  not  be  worth  attending. 

*  *  * 

But  while  student  leaders  and 
students  in  general  are  consider- 
ing Magills'  policy  statement,  Ma- 
gill and  the  others  employed  in 
the  Division  of  Student  Affairs 
might  well  consider  what  they  have 
done  in  past  months  to  meet  the 
"crisis." 

If  they  would  perhaps  eiKourage 
siudeiu  initiative  instead  of  cut- 
ting it  to  pieces  whenever  they 
don't  agree  with  the  students,  the 
"crisis"  might  not  be  a  crisis  af- 
ter all. 


The  Menace  Of  The  Video  Screen 
And  The  Downfall  Of  Newspapers 


Fred  Powledge 

Television,  which  was  a  baby 
indtistry  not  too  lon^  ago,  still 
is. 

Even  worse,  it  appears  to  have 
hurl  the  American  mind  far 
more  than  it  has  helped. 

When  it  started,  it  was  exper- 
imental of  necessity.  Polls  and 
the  obnoxious  rating  companies 
often  held  the  industry's  pulse 
in  their  hands,  because  the  com- 
panies honestly  didn't  know  what 
would  make  a  hit  with  the  view- 
ing pnblic  and  what  would  go 
undigested. 

But  the  television  industry  has 
had  enough  time  since  its  incep- 
tion to  decide  what  is  a  good 
product  and  what  isn't. 

Wl^at  is  being  s«en  now  is 
definitely  a  bad  product.  Most 
of  the  television  shows  now  be- 
ing produced  during  the  "good" 
evening  hours  are  pure  trash, 
seldom  better  than  comic  books. 

The  product  consists  of  money 
giveaway  shows,  putrid  dramas 
which  have  little  plots  and  no 
acting,  a  few  semi-decent  talent 
shows  and  spectaculars  which 
are  spectacular  only  because  of 
their  lack   of  quality. 

Television  does  not  inform  as 
it  should.  It  satisfies  wants,  and 
most  of  the  wants  arc  merely 
sensual. 

Compare  The  New  York  Daily 
News  with  The  New  York  Times. 
That's  the  difference  between 
what  television  Ls,  in  my  opin- 
ion, and  what  it  should  be. 

How  has  TV  hurt  the  Ameri- 
can mind? 

Welt,  think  what  would  hap- 
pen if  everybody  in  the  United 
States  started  reading  only 
The  New  York  Daily  News. 
Pretty  soon,  everybody  would 
be  thinking  about  murders, 
rapes,  incest,  gambling  scan- 
dals, sordid  affairs  in  cafe  so- 
ciety and  a  smattering  of  the 
mere  glittering  world  and  na- 
tional news. 

They  would  be  thinking  about 
these  things  because  they  would 
be  deprived  of  information  about 
the  important  things:  The  Amer- 
ican government  (which  would 
be  a  wonderful  subject  for  a 
television  documentary  series), 
other  nations'  governments,  meet- 
ings of  the  caliber  of  the  Geneva 
Summit  Conference,  tense  world 
situations,  documentary  stories 
in  pictures  of  the  situations  in 
our  very  own  states. 

In  the  last  category,  think  of 
the  television  shows  that  have 
gone  unproduced  —  segregation, 
the  dust  bowl,  crop  failures, 
floods,  local  government,  munic- 
ipal improvement  and  plain  old 
small-town  life  which  is,  after 
all,  at  the  core  of  America. 

Instead  television  brings  into 
the  American  home  visions  of 
pure  magic — the  magic  of  win- 
ning $64,000,  the  magic  of  a 
movie  star  marrying  a  prince  the 
magic  of  a  hastily-  and  sloppily- 
written  love  story  that  could 
never  happen  in  real  life,  the 
magic  of  countless  hours  of  puns 
and  punch  lines  that  are  bound 
to  have  an  ill  effect  on  the 
American  mind. 

Television  does  not  cover  the 
real   human   emotions,    the   real 


f 


I'll  Abner 


TH'  SELECTION  O'  POSSIBLE 
PAPPYS  IN  DOGFV^TCH  IS    ,7' 
MIGHTV  PORE— SO  AH 
ISOFFTDTH'CITV 
TO  TRAP  ONE . 


human  actions,  that  make  the 
wculd  turn.  Instead  it  covers 
the  glassy,  fake  emotions  of  a 
formula  writer  and  it  injects 
sickening  blasts  of  hot  air  about 
hand  creams,  soap  suds  and 
mouthwash  that  are  supposed  to 
keep  people  from  being  reject- 
ed by  society. 

Every  once  in  a  while,  televis- 
ijn  does  something  right.  The 
Columbia  Broadcasting  Sjstem 
does  this  once  a  year  when  it  pre- 
sents "World  in  Crisis,"  an  af- 
ternoon interpretation,  by  com- 
petent interpreters,  of  the  world 
situation. 

But  it  happens  only  once  a 
year. 

:;;  :;;  * 

One  of  the  most  pitiful  reac- 
tions to  the  continuing  infanl- 
hord  of  t:levi.sion  has  been  that 
of  .\mcriean   newspapers. 

When   publi,shers  started  read- 


Publishers  started  offering  the 
public  recipes  and  shallow  feat- 
ure stories  instead  of  news.  They 
starting  adding  a  "Daily  Maga- 
zine" to  their  newspapers,  and 
they  shoved  the  news  right  off 
their  front  pages. 

They  put  puzzles  and  circula- 
tion-building cont2sts  in  place 
of  the  front-page  news.  And  on 
the  inside  they  added  more  col- 
umns of  stories  about  television 
personalities   and    movie   people. 

The  pull-out  weekly  television 
guide  became  a  standard  part  of 
tlie  Sunday  paper.  The  news  got 
smaller  and  smaller.  It  is  pres- 
ently  continuing   its   shrinkage. 

It  is  now  so  small  that  one 
northern  newspaper  (neither 
The  Times  nor  The  Daily  News) 
last  week  had  its  entire  front 
pa.^c  covered  with: 

1.  A  feature  story,  very  en- 
tertaining,    about     a    Protestant 


le-column    inches    (as  long  as   a 

column-and-a-half   in  The   Daily 
Tar  Heel). 

* '  *  *     '    ' '" 

The  northern  newspaper  just 
mentioned  is  not  alone.  Most  of 
its  sisters  behave  the  same  way. 

Publishers  are  certain  that 
they  can  compete  with  television 
by  offering  the  same  tripe  tele- 
vision offers.  They  are  spiting 
their  own  faces. 

Right  now,  the  newspapers  of 
this  country  are  the  only  organs 
of  objective  reporting  of  infor- 
mation. Radio  and  television  and 
the  "news"  magazines  are  cer- 
tainly not  doing  this  job.  Only 
the  newspapers  are  left. 

The  newspapers  showed  a 
long  time  ago  that  they  are 
capable  of  efficiently  and  ob- 
jectively selecting  the  real, 
significant   information   from   a 


t: 


'We  ^(^[irit  T<?>  l^ook  A*  This  Very  Carefully' 


ing  indexes  of  television  view- 
ers, they  started  getting  worried. 
The  advertisers  were  pushing 
more  of  their  ad  budgets  toward 
television,  where  a  larger  and 
more  imprisoned  audience  could 
be  had. 

So  the  publishers  decided  to 
try  to  beat  television  at  its  own 
game:  Entertainment.  They 
started  forgetting  about  infor- 
mation, something  that  televi- 
sion forgot  altogether. 

--:.- -Kiv.,^   ;!^v  ..-.■  .'  ■.:.;• 


girl  who  posed  as  a  Jew  to  see 
if  people  were  prejudiced. 

2.  .\  banner  headline,  very 
sensual,  about  airplane  crashes. 
With   long  story. 

3.  A  story  about  nude  women. 
I  forget  the  details. 

4.  A  huge  picture  of  the  win- 
ner of  the  latest  Tangle-Towns 
puzzle. 

The  world  news,  I  found,  was 
on  Page  10.  It  ran  about  15  doub- 


day's  events  and  placing  it  in 
cold  type.  A  few  good  papers 
still  show  it.  But  their  ranks 
are   thinning. 

I  have  an  idea  that  television, 
which  is  a  young  and  flexible  in- 
dustry, will  someday  realize 
what  is  going  on.  If,  when  this 
time  comes,  the  newspapers  have 
thrown  away  their  right  to  gath- 
er and  publish  significant  news, 
television  will  have  a  perfect 
right  to  take  over  the  license. 


•  > 

By  A!  Capp 


EF  vo'  WAS  rn' 
KIND  O  BOV  AH 
WANTED,  W- WOULD 
VO'  FLI«T  BACK 


l/s. 


5HOP,k- 

OUUP, 


WIF  MATRIMONY  «^    7  "^r" 
AS  TN'OBOECK-?  vj./  ^  / 


'M%, 


Poge 


By  Walt  Kelly 


Until    then,    South 
guilty  of  hipocrisy. 


Building   is 


Students  Taught 
Elders  To  Die 

Gunnar  D.  Kumiien 

///   7  he  Commonweal 

In  streams  of  blood  and  unspeakable  agony 
something  new  has  been  born  in  Hungary,  and  is 
so  new  that  it  does  not  even  have  a  name. 

Like  hundreds  of  other  Westerners,  mostly  dip- 
lomats and  journalists,  I  was  caught  m  the  midst 
of  the  fighting  in  Budapest  and  witnessed  the  few- 
days  of  freedom,  until  it  was  submerged  but  not 
killed  by  a  tempest  of  steel  and  fire. 

Communism  seems  to  be  terrified  by  what  it 
has  been  breeding  and  it  is  unable  to  kill  it.  The 
whole  Eastern  bloc   is  shaken  by  it  and  for  the 
West  it  appears  to  be  too  new  to  be  understood. 
But  everything  Indicates  that  what  has  happened 
now  in  Hungary  will  later  on  be  called  a  turning 
point  in  history.. 
I  do  not  think  that  ever  before  has  an  uprising 
been  more  "pure"  in  spite  of  its  horrors  and  in  a 
way  more  absolute.  It  was  not  prepared  and  was  a^ 
great  a  surprise  for  the  Hungarian  freedom-fighter,^ 
themselves  as  for  the  rest  of  the  world.  No  maternl 
or  political  interests  had  had  time  to  infiltrate,  in 
order  to  push  the  uprising  in  this  direction  or  the 
other.  It  just  erupted  like  a  volcano.. 

For  Communism  the  most  ghastly  meaning  of 
the  revolt  is  that  precisely  those  who  were  sup- 
posed to  be  the  new  humanity,  trained  and  formt-d 
to  build  up  the  radiant  Communio-t  world  of  to- 
morrow, the  youth  and  the  workers  of  the  brain 
and  of  the  hand,  took  the  initiative  and  fought  with 
a  super  human  spirit  although  without  hope. 

I  will  never  forget  all  those  faces  of  high  school 
boys  and  girls,  with  the  heat  of  the  battle  rcflectrd 
in' them,  and  their  smiles  which  were  not  of  this 
world  any  more.  It  was  simply  imperishable  beauty. 
They  taught  their  elders  how  to  die. 

At  the  same  time,  it  was  not  all  senseless  sac- 
rifice,   and  the  youngsters  had  a  surprising  sense 
for    realities.     Their    great   overwhelming   desire, 
right  from  the  first  day  was  for  bazookas.   I  re- 
member them  swarming  around  me  in  a  backyard, 
where  we  were  protected  from  the  gunfire,  push- 
ing and   asking  for   bazookas. 
Most  of  these  youths  have  no  recollection  of  the 
capitalist  world  and  therefore  cannot  look  back  to 
it.    For   them    the   only   reality    is   the   Communist 
W(  rid.  which  they  reject  with  passion.  They  reject 
all   of   it — the    study   of   Russian,   the  textbooks  of 
Marxism-Lenini.-m,    the    Marxist    "revaluation'    of 
history,  of  geography,  of  economics,  of  everything. 
For  years  they   had  given  passive  resistance  to 
all  this  and  now.  finally,  they  had  a  chance  to  hit 
back.  They  were  sick  of  the  lies  more  than  of  any- 
thing else. 
PITY 

And  when  the  Russians  turned  up,  looking  for 
"Fascists"  and  "white  terrorist^',"  obviously  expect- 
ing an  American  attack  from  Austrian  territory  aX 
any  moment,  these  Hungarian  youngsters  could  not 
even  hate  the  Russians  any  more,  but  could  only 
pity  them. 

There  was  something  ghostlike  about  these  Rus- 
sians, prisoners?  of  their  own  terminology.  Don't 
they  have  an  uneasy  feeling  of  what  they  are  head- 
ing   for? 

A  strange  thing  happened  when  the  Russians 
had  struck  for  the  second  time  and  curbed  the  up- 
rising. They  discovered  that  infantry  plus  armor 
was  not  enough,  if  there  were  not  enough  inhabi- 
tants ready  to  act  as  quislings. 

The  Communists  had  seen  the  sign  on  the  wall 
and  those  of  their    leaders  who  were   not  killed 
either  did  not  dare  to  take  any   responsibility  or 
were  most  reluctant  to  do  so.  The  Russians  meas- 
ured the  basic  impotence  of  sheer   might. 
The   desperate   Communist    attempt   to   stop  the 
landslide  halfway  seems  doomed  to  failure  all  over 
the  ^tellite  countries. 

When  the  uprising  had  reached  its  peak  and 
the  Russians  at  first  did  not  seem  to  react,  many 
Hungarian  refugees,  having  lived  in  Western  Eu- 
rope ever  since  the  war.  returned  to  Hungary.  It 
was  easy  for  them  for  the  border  was  practical'y 
open  several  days. 

Many  of  the^-e  returnees  had  belonged  to  the 
old  ruling  class  of  land-owners  or  had  been  owners 
of  big  industrial  enterprises.  But  in  the  middle  of 
the  general  chaos  only  two  things  seemed  to  be 
firm  for  those  who  made  the  uprising:  no  Com- 
munism and  no  return  to  things  as  they  were  before. 
•  *  * 

The  farmers,  killing  off  their  Communist  bo.ssc.-. 
as  if  they  were  animals,  starting  to  break  up  the 
collective  farms  with  a  sort  of  silent  fury,  showed 
themselves  at  the  same  time  hostile  and  even  mena- 
cing to  the  returning  big  landowners  or  to  their 
representatives.  The  farmers,  too,  proved  to  be  the 
hard  core  in  the  pas-sive  resistance  after  the  second 
Russian  onslaught. 

One  night  in  Budapest  just  before  the  Russian> 
struck  for  the  second  time,  somebody  knocked  at 
the  door  of  my  hotel  room.  It  was  an  engineer  fiom 
Eastern  Germany.  It  was  a  night  full  of  evil  fore 
bodings  for  the  heavy  Russian  tanks  were  moving 
without  interruption  around  the  center  of  towTi. 

The  German  engineer  settled  down  and  opened 
hij  heart.  He  was  not  a  Communist.  In  a  low,even 
voice  he  told  me  about  the  plight  of  Eastern  Ger- 
many and  that  the  general  feeling  there  was  that 
-things  simply  cannot  go  on  as  they  are  now." 
When  he  spoke  about  the  young  Hungarian 
fighters  for  freedom  his  eyes  filled  with  tears. 

"They  and  only  they  keep  me  from  despairing." 
he  said.  "Did  you  see  what  dignity  and  pride  and 
coui-age  they  have?  What  an  example  they  are 
for  us  reasonable  cowards!  It  is  not  only  in  Hun- 
gary that  the  youth  is  like  this.  It  i^-  the  same  in 
all  the  other  satellite  countries. 

"Very  many  of  us,  their  elders,  have  been  crush- 
ed. ..Many  of  us  could  not  stand  it,  but  yielded— 
for  the  sake  of  our  fsmilies,  for  the  sake  of  bread 
and  shelter.  Our  bones  and  our  muscles  were  not 
strong  enough,  for  we  were  brought  up  under  other 
circumstances.  But  their  bone^-  and  their  muscles 
are  strong  enough.  I  can  see  it  in  my  own  children. 
And  this  fills  me  with  joy  and  fear,  a  joy  and  fear 
you  probably  cannot  even  imagine.  .  ." 

He  stopped  for  a  while  and  we  listened  again 
to  the  sinister  noises  of  all  that  steel,  which  some- 
times made  the  walls  tremble. 


THI 


4' 


AroJ 


D 


,  1 

;  6 

I 

ju 
12 

13 

14. 

115 

16 

;18' 

21 

,23 

24. 

;25| 

'291 
31 
3; 

'33  I 
34 
35-1 

s: 

38 1 

4li 
43 

45 1 
47 

49.1 

50. 

•  ^H 

52. 


7,  1957 


ht 


THURSDAY,  FEBRUARY  7,  1957 


THl  DAILY  TAR  HIRL 


agony 
and    is 

|tly  dip- 
le  midst 
It  he  few 
|but  not 

rhat  it 
lit.  The 
ror  the 
Irstood. 
med 
purning 

uprising 

|nd  in  a 

was  as 

[fighte'-s 

nateml 

|rate,  in 

or  the 

ining  of 
tre  sup- 
formed 
of  to- 
|e  brain 
;ht  with 
)t'. 

■school 

|cflect«>d 
of  this 
beauty. 

^ss  sac- 
sense 

desire, 
I   re- 

:kyard, 
push- 

of  the 

back  to 

imunist 

|>   reject 

3oks    of 

ion"     of 

[rything. 

lance  to 

|e  to  hit 

of  any- 


ung  for 
expect- 
htory  at 
>uld  not 
lid  only 

•se  Rus- 

Don"t 

re  head- 

lussians 

the  up- 

i    armor 

inhabi- 

\h»  wall 

killed 

»ility  or 

ks  meas- 

|stop    the 
all  over 

[eak  and 
let,  many 
jtern  Eu- 
Ingary.  It 
ractical'y 

to   the 

In  owners 

liddle  of 

led  to   be 

no   Corn- 
re  before. 

ist  bosses- 
Ik   up  the 
showed 
rcn  mena- 
to   their 
|to  be  the 
le  second 

Russians 

locked  at 

leer  from 

evil  fore- 

^e  moving 

town, 
id  opened 
low.even 
tern  Ger- 
was  that 
nuw." 
fungarian 

tears. 
Espainng." 
[  pride  and 
they  are 
ly  in  Hun- 
fv  same  in 

cen  crush- 
yielded — 
c  of  bread 
I  ucre  not 
ndcr  other 
ir  muscles 
n  children. 
>y  and  fear 

cncd  again 
hich  some- 


Around    4O0^ok7were    sold  I  S"/ PH  V'^'^'T  T'''^^'^  ''^1'°  ^^^  ^  ^""^*"S-  1  had  no  objection  to  the  students 

sold  I  Alpha  Phi  Omegajor^thre^days       Ted  Jone..  a  member  of  APOs  j  operating  an  exchange.  "But  I  do 

_  _____  ^^^'^    Exchange    Committee 

LITERATURE  CAN  BE  SCREAMS ! 


PAGR  THRU 


(AuXhT  »f  "BartfQ^t  Boy  With  Ck««k.-  tte.f 


said   believe  that  they  are  u'^sting  their 
the    fraternity    was    very    pleased  |  time,"  he  said., 
with  the  results  of  their  project. 


To  save  you  tiresome  days  of  reading,  days  that  can 
be  more  happily  devoted  to  healthful  winter  activities 
like  skung,  tobogganing,  and  three  card  monte,  this 
column  today  presents  digests  of  some  classic  novels  that 
are  sure  to  come  up  in  your  lit  courses. 

The  Scarlet  Letter 

This  is  a  heart  rending  story  of  a  humble  Boston  lass 
named  Hester  Prynne  who  is  so  poor  that  she  does  not 
have  enough  to  eat.  nor  a  roof  to  cover  her  head.  But 
she  IS  a  brave,  brawny  lass  and  she  never  complains  and 
by  and  by  her  patience  is  rewarded :  in  the  summer  of 
1859  she  wins  a  football  scholarship  to  Alabama. 

Hester  works  hard  and  makes  the  varsity  and  wins 
her  letter.  Everybody  says  she  is  a  shoo-in  for  All-Con- 
ference honors,  but  along  comes  the  War  Between  the 
States,  and  football,  alas,  is  dropped  for  the  duration. 


Poor  Hester  goes  back  to  Boston.  It  is  a  bitter  cold 
winter,  and  poor  Hester,  alas,  does  not  have  a  roof  over 
her  head,  and  the  only  warm  clothing  she  owns  is  the 
football  sweater  from  Alabama,  but  that,  alas,  has  a 
big  scarlet  "A"  on  the  front  of  it.  and  she  can  hardly  wear 
such  a  thing  in  Boston  where  Union  sentiment  runs 
so  high.  :-  . 

Poor  Hester,  alas,  freezes  to  death.  ^\^ 

Little  Ifotnen 

The  Marches  are  a  very  happy  family  -  and  for  no 
rca-on  whatsoever.  They  aie  poor  as  snakes:  they  work 
from  cotkcroW  to  even.song;  their  dear  old  father  Philip 
i?<  away  with  the  Union  armies ;  and  their  mattresses  are 
lumpy. 

Still,  nothing  can  dampen  the  spirits  of  madcap  Meg. 

■  jix'ular  .Jo,  buoyant  Beth,  animated  Amy.  and  crazy  old 
Marmee.  as  the  merry  March  girls  lovingly  call  their 

■  lovable  mcfther. 

Well  sir.  one  Christmas  the  March  girls  get  an  in- 
vitation to  a  ball.  But  Beth  reminds  the  si.xters  that  they 
can  hardly  go  traipsing  off  and  leave  poor  Marmee  alone 
at  Christmas  time.  The  sisters  swear  a  lot,  but  they 
finally  agree  with  Beth. 

Marmee,  however,  will  not  hear  of  it.  "Land's  sake, 
little  women  I"  she  cries.  "You  must  go  to  the  ball  and 
have  some  fun.  There  will  be  punch  and  ginger  snaps 
and  confetti.  Best  of  all.  there  will  be  morris  dancing. 
Oh.  how  your  father  and  I  used  to  love  that !" 

"I  never  knew  father  could  dance,"  cries  Meg, 

"Oh.  yeah?"  cries  Marmee.  "You  should  have  seen 
Philip  morris  I" 

'-*  "AVas  Philip  a  good  morriser?"  cries  Jo. 

"The  best,"  cries  Marmee.  "Philip  could  morris  in 
long  size  and  regular  and  was  full  of  natural  goodness 
and  fresh  and  firm  and  unfiltered  too." 

The  girls  are  cheered  to  hear  this  and  go  to  the  ball. 
Marmee  stays  home  all  alone,  but  soon  gets  a  wonderful 
sui*prise:  Philip  comes  back  from  the  war! 

When  the  girls  return  from  the  ball,  they  find  Marmee 
and  Philip  morrising,  and  they  cry  "Huzzah !"  and  throw 
their  bonnets  in  the  air,  where  they  are  to  this  day. 

©Hux  Shalnan.  1957 

Speaking  of  books,  in  our  book  today's  new  Philip  Morrig, 
made  by  the  sponsors  of  ihig  column,  is  the  smoothest,  tastiest 
cigarette  ever  offered  anywhere! 


I 


DAILY 

ACROSS 

1.  Climb 
«.  Breakfast 
'       food 
IX.  Ecclesias- 
tical decree 

12.  Conscious 

13.  Wine  cups 

14.  Light 

1 15.  Music  note 

;  16.  Appendage 

f  18.  Indian 

'.       weight 

{ 19.  River 

(Chin.) 
21.  Bird's  home 

i  23.  Seed  vessel 

!  24.  Erbium 

!        (sym.) 

i  25.  Exclama- 

;       tion  of  relief 
29.  Permit 
31.  River  fFr  ) 
32  Antlered 
animal 

'  33.  Music  note 

34.  Youth 

35.  Part  of 
the  face 

S7.  Public 
notice 

38.  Wiarp-yam 
^41.  Concludes 
,  43  Hawkeye 
state  (abbr.) 

45  Bellowed 

47.  W»rmth 

49.  Penned 

90.  City  (Mont.) 
i  81.  Feats 
'  52.  Anesthetic 

DOHA' 

1.  Begorii*! 

2.  Undervaist 
3  Mother  Of 

Irish  gods 


CROSSWORD 

27  Shoot 
forth, 
as  hght 
rays, 

28.  Marry 

30.  Gram- 
pus 

Si.  Dis- 
embark 

33.  Dis- 
cover 

86.  Pays 
attention 


4  Absorbed, 
in  thought 

5.  Half  an  em 

6.  Pail  handles 

7.  ^eard  of  rye 

8.  Bounders 

9.  Voided 
escutcheon 

10.  Contraction 

(poet.) 
14.  Bleaching 

vat 
17.,  Afresh 
20.  Not  working  38.  Dry 

22.  Number  39.  Canine's 

23.  Cushion  tidbit 
26.  Nuclei  of          40  Cook,  in 

starch  an  oven 

grains  42.  Close 


[iu::igM  Hr^aaw 
aaaa  aawfiiaE 

anna  c]L3^J3 


Teatertey'a  Aaaww 

44.  Biblical 
name 

46.  Color 

48.  Angle- 
Saxon 
letter  (var.) 

50.  Exist 


"We  have  operated  art  exchange 
for  four  years  and  this  has  been 
our  best  year,"  he  said. 

The  exchange  handled  800 
books.  Those  books  not  sold  will 
be  returned  to  the  students. 

"Wa  plan  to  centinu*  the  sarv- 
iea  for  tha  students,"  said  Jonas. 
"Prices  are  fast  too  hi^h  a>  the 
University's  Book  Exchcnse  and 
we  want  to  Relp  provide  some 
r»fief  " 


BOOKS  TRADED 

"Books  are  traded  In  many 
places:  fraternity  bouses,  dwnni- 
tories,  and  even  in  the  lobby  of 
our  exchange."  "This  additional 
trading  has  a  negligible  affect  on 
our  exchange,"  said  Ritchie. 

"I  agree  that  books  are  too  high, 
just  as  everything  else  is  too  high, 
but  the  students  don't  try  to  un- 
derstand our  problems."  "We  have 
-,    _     „.  ,  our  overhead  to  meet  and  it  is  the 

H.   R.    Ritchie,    University    book    professors  and  not  us  who  change 
exchange   manager,   said   that    he  |  the  text,"  he  said 


Sam  AAogtH 


(Continued  tram  page  I) 
dent  government  and  student  lea- 
ders in  general.' 

Exum   said   he   was   "not     con 
vinced  there  is  a  crisis  in  student 


PSYCHOLOGY  CLUB 

.«.•♦.«♦,•     «    TT         •.    .        ,  I      '^^^  Psychology  Club  will  meet 

initiative.      He    said    he    thought ;  tonight  at  7:30  p.m.  in   the  Grail 


'crisis'  was  "too  strong  a  word." 

About  the  increasing  violations 
of   the    Honor    Code,    Exum    said 

"I  agree  with  Magill  that  there 
has  been  a  recent  deluge  of  cases 
before  Honor  Council,  especially 
during  the  exam  period.  In  my 
eyes  this  increase  is  an  evidence 
that  the  students  are  not  govern- 
ing themselves  as  they  should  and 
are  not  living  up  to  the  honor 
code. 

"I  do  not  think  that  all  tho.se 
who  cheated  have  been  caught," 
he  said. 

"There  was  a  good  record  up 
until  exams.  Before  that  time 
there  were  only  five  or  six  cases, 
except  for  the  cheating  ring. 


Room  of  Graham  Memorial.  Dr. 
Grant  Dahlstrom  of  the  psychology 
department  will  speak  on  "Anx- 
iety and  Visual-Motor  Perform- 
ance." All  interested  students  are 
invited  to  attend. 
W.A.A.  TABLE  TENNIS 

First  round  matches  of  the  table 
tennis  tournament  must  be  played 
by  Feb.  18,  according  to  Sue  Gich- 
ner,  manager  of  the  tournament. 
There  are  20  matches  to  be  played 
by  this  deadline.  Entries  have  been 
asked  to  consult  the  bulletin  board 
in  the  Women's  Gym  for  the  sched- 
ule of  their  matches. 
SCHOLARSHIP  HOLDERS 

All  holders  of  University  Schol- 
ar-hips     and      scholarships      paid 


,  "  =        ,      ;  "».."•^'o       aiiu       atiiuiai  snips       paiQ 

There   were  more  cases  of  stu-  |  through   the    Student    Aid    Office 


dents  turning  in  other  students 
for  cheating  than  before,"  he 
.said.  Last  year  there  was  not 
more    than    one    such    case." 

Weinman  said  he  thought  there 
is  "a  definite  crisis  in  student  re- 
sponsibility and  unless  we  learn 
our  responsibility  to  turn  in  oth- 
ers, the  student  government  is  on 
the  way  out. 

"I  feel  .Magill  didn  t  pull  any 
punches.  He  did  state,  as  the  UP 
has  maintained,  that  the  restrict- 
ion on  freshmen  cars  is  no  good. 
The  UP  is  still  working  on  this 
situation."   he   said. 

"I  feel  that  the  situation  con- 
cerning the  new  fraternity  court 
is  bad,  but  nevertheless  it  is  Uni- 
versity property.  It  you  live  in  a 
university  town,  you  never  know 
what  will  happen  next."  Weinman 
said. 

(Magill  said  the  work  on  the 
new  court  had  been  halted  due  to 
complaints  from  residents  on 
Chase  Ave.  He  felt  the  construc- 
tion work  should  be  resumed  to 
provide  for  the  necessary  expan- 
sion.) 

Interdormitory  Council  Presi- ' 
dent  Sonny  Hallford  and  Chair- 1 
man  of  the  Women's  Honor  Coun-  j 
cil  Miss  Pat  McQueen  both  declin-  i 
ed  to  make  a  statement. 

Hallford  said  he  had  talked 
with  Magill  but  as  a  "retaliation 
remark  there  is  none." 

Miss  McQueen  said  she  "really 
did  not  have  a  statement  right 
now." 


each  semester  have  been  asked  to 
come  to  that  office  during  this 
week  to  pick  up  scholarship  tick- 
ets or  checks  for  the  spring  se- 
mester. 


Invites  Soon 

Will  Go 

On  Sale  Here 

Senior  invitations  may  be  pur- 
chased in  Y  court  bet,weei\.  Feb. 
6-8  and  between  Feb.  13-15.  ac- 
cording to  Doug  Farmer,  chair- 
man  of   the    Grail-sponsored    sale. 

Invitations  will  be  sold  from 
9    a.m.    to  4    p.m. 

Three  different  kinds  of  invi- 
tations are  offered:  dutch  fold, 
15  cents  each;  cardboard,  35  cents 
each:  and  leather.  75  cents  each. 
Persionally  engraved  cards  are 
three  dollars  per  100;  extra  over 
100  are  $1.50  per  100. 


Violations 

(Contirmed  from  page  I) 
proven  that  the  student's  actions 
were  not  in  violation  of  any  Ac- 
cepted practice.  The  student  was 
making  notes  about  an  examina- 
tion  paper  given    in    1953.   The 
notes   were   in   a   course  which 
the  student  was  not  taking. 
The  students-  involved  have  ex- 
plained the  entire  situation  to  me 
and  to  members  of  the  Men's  Hon- 
or Council..  The  situation  is  still 
under  investigation  by  the  Mens 
Council 

Let  me  emphasize  that  no  ex- 
amination papers  are  bought,  sold 
or  exchanged  at  any  time.  I  chal- 


Jr.  WACs 
Set  Program 
For  College 

With  a  look  to  the  future  for 
young  college  women,  the  Wo- 
men's Army  Corps  has  announced 
a  program  called  "WAC  Summer 
Training  Program  for  College 
Juniors." 

Here  is  how  the  program  works: 

If  selected  for  training,  the 
young  women  will  be  sworn  into 
the  WAC  Enlisted  Reserve  as  a 
corporal,  and  called  to  active  duty 
at  the  WAC  Center,  Fort  McClel- 
lan.  Alabama,  for  a  4-week  per- 
iod. For  this  time,  she  will  re- 
ceive $122.30  payable  at  the  end 
of  training.  She  will  be  furnisJied 
meals  and  first-class  commercial 
round-trip  transportation  between 
home  and  the  WAC  Center.  While 
in  training  she  will  have  no  ex- 
penses other  than  the  personal 
items  she  wishes  to  purchase  for 
herself.  Clothing,  meals,  and  hous- 
ing are  all  furnished  free. 

After  training  the  young  woman 
will   be  given   the  opportunity  of 


lenge  any  student  who  is  responsi        ..     _.   „ .^^ ^ 

ble  for  conveying  rumors  about  applying  for  a  commission  in  the 
'examinations  for  sale'  to  come  to  I  WAC  during  the  senior  college 
me  and  reveal  any  name  or  names  i  year. 

involved.    If   you    are    responsible  '  

for  any  rumors,  in  my  opinion  you 

are  guilty  of  violating  the  spirit     Chicago  Lawyer  Here 

of  our  Honor  System  and  should  ;     J^^^  ^^^  Interviewt 
become   aware    of   your   responsi-        n     n  ^        T  l™      7^\, 

*^  ""'  j  Dr.  Brainard  Currie  of  the  Uni- 
versity of  Chicago  School  of  Law 
will  be  here  tomorrow  to  interview 
prospects  for  law  school  scholar^ 
ships  there,  according  to  the  UNC 
Placement  Service. 

Dr.  Currie  will  be  at  the  Place- 
ment Service,  204  Gardner,  from 
10  a.m  t.o  4  pm..  to  talk  with  in- 
terested students. 


bilities." 


Vandals'  Triangles 
Weren't  Sorority's 

Due  to  a  reporter's  oversight, 
a  news  story  in  The  Daily  Tar 
Heel  Wednesday  erroneously  call- 
ed three  triangles,  painted  on  the 
Wilson  Library  by  vandals,  a  "Tri- 
j  Delt"    marking 

t  The  marking,  which  consisted  of 
I  three  overlapping  triangles,  has 
I  nothing  to  do  with  Delta  Delta 
!  Delta  Sorority,  which  has  a  chap- 
1  ter  here.  The  sorority's  Greek  i 
letter  emblem  consists  of  three 
I  triangles,  side  by  side. 


Monogram  Club 

The  Monbgram  Club  will  meet 
tonight  at  7:30.  Plans  for  the 
Blue-White  football  game  will  be 
discussed,  and  it  is  urgent  that 
all  members  be  present. 
UN  KEEPS— 


MP'S  FARM  FRESH  FRUITS  &  VEIiETABiTS 


Florida  Fresh  Juicy 


Crisp  Fresh 

Slaw  Mix...  »«    15c   Grapefruits   Kg  39c 

Golden  Tender  Fresh  Corn  4 '"  25c 
Plump  Ripe  Tomatoes  -  -  2  vr  29c 


i^   F-'resh  Fully  Ripe  —  Large 


Cmban  Pineapples--^? 32 


COMK  SFE  YOU'LL  SAVE  AT  A&P  WHERE  YOU  GET  MORE  LOW  PRICES  ON  MORE  ITEMS  MORE  DAYS  OF  THE  WEEK 


OUR    FINEST    QUALITY"    SHREDDED 

A&P  Sauerkraut 


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No.  303 

16-Oz. 

Can 


All  Meat  Franks  -  - 


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NO  LIMIT  —  STOCK  UP!    'Otir  Finest  Quality" 


A&P0RANGEJUICE2-58C 

NO  LIMIT—  STOCK  UP!  Yellow  CItng  HoJves  or  Sliced 

lONA  PEACHES  -2  "55c 


I 


Log  Cabin  Syrup  ..  '^.  31c  I1;g£  57c 
Downyfloke  Waffles 2  t?i.  29c 


REDIWBIP  CREAM    7-0?     53  w  GREEN  GIANT  ^'^ 
JIFFY  WE  CRUST  MllL  "*   ISc 

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BhM  BonneC  MargariM    V^J;  3«e      peas      ^    Can 


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Dill  Pickles     25^"   37c 


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Keichan  '!„?   25c 

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Sauce      '£l   29c 


Each 
Cake 


BURRY   VANILLA 


Wafers 


8-Oz. 
Pkg. 


2le 


:OLD  STREAM 


Pink  Salmon  "c'a.'  53c 


PERFECT  STRIKE 

Chum  Salmon  ""can' 49c 


Sugar  Honey  Grahams  nabisco  ^^^  37c 

Strie.fnann  Lir.-.amon  Crisp       ^*'''*"^'    ^^^^-  3vc 

Excelsior  Cheeseburgers^RozENf^-g-  43c 
Angelus  Marshmallows  -._   pS'   19c 


Swift's  Prem  ^^SS^^ ^c.^  39c 


Swift's  Hamburgers 


Swift's  Pork  Sausage 


^2  45c 


lo-oz  35^ 


Can 


Swif f  s  Beef  Steaks  '^I?.^e^    '%^   49c 


Dulany  Green  Peas /r*oYe^  .  _  2SX  33c 
DuJany  Sliced  Peaches  f';(^Te\  ^Iff  23c 
Swift^s  Meats  For  Babies  .  _ .  ^  23t 


Old  Dutch  Cleanser  _.__.  2  ?an"s  25c 


Sweetheart  Soap 2  Kfs    17c 

Trend  Detergent ._._  2  p^Is   39c 

Ivory  White  Soap ^lif  15c 

Ivory  White  Soap ^^et™    9c 

Ivory  White  Soap 4''Ta?r'25c 

Ivory  Flakes Pa?kfge32c 

Ivory  Snow Pa?klge32c 

Camay  Toilet  Soap 2%'^"  17c 

Camay  Toilet  Soap  j.*...-  2  eJrs  25c 

Lavq  Soap ^aJi"  lie 

Polmolive  Soap 2^Ba"rs"  17c 

Polmolive  Soap 2  b«s   25c 

Cashmere  Bouquet  Soap  .  2%?r'r  17c 
Cashmere  Bouquet  Soap  .  2  11%  25c 

Octagon  Toilet  Soap  _ ^T^"   7c 

Octagon  Laundry  Soap ^T  10c 

Air  Wick  Room  Deodorant  .   bS!*  55c 


'RvT 


SUPER-RIGHT"  SLICED   -   PICKLE  —     - -^ 


PIMIENTO  LOAF 


SPICED      iiFAT 

JN  CHEON     iVl  L  A  I 


COOKED  SALAMI  -  -^^  23c 


Turkey  II  Vi 


Grade  "A"  Young  Dressed  k   Drawn 


12 


Hens    Lb    10c 


Roasts 


FREE  TOOTHBRUSH 


"^ufier-ItighV'  Heavy  Western   Beef 


CHUCK  BLADE 

Lb. 


33 


TVith  The 
Purchase  Of 


DENThKISS 
TOOTH  PASTE 


2 


4-OZ.  TUBES 

AND  FREE 

TOOTH  BRUSH 


49 


210  W.  FRANKLIN  ST. 


ktMMMOtT   MM  MTMilf  .  .     MtCf    IM* 


5uper  Markets 


■•  MIAt  •KUMC  S  >ACI*K  MA  CSaWMir 

PH-^^  "^1  •    »•'  ^'fettive  Throasii  Sat..  Feb.  ffth 


i 


MOI  fOUR 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEfL 


THURSDAY,  FEBRUARY  7,  1957 


latum  Turns  Down  Indiana  Post  Due  To  'Unfinished  Job 


f 


Frosh  Mermen    Drop  Decision 


UNC's  freshmen   mermen  drop- 1  dual  medley.  The  frosh  quartet  of 
ped      a    close    37-31    decision      to 
Greensboro    High    Tuesday    after- 
noon in  Greensboro. 


Younts.  Pittman.  Rosen, 
Mooore  captured  the  160 
medlev  relay. 


and 
yard 


The  Tar  Baoies  were 
garner  only  three  first 
Moore  took  the  40  yard  freestyle 
in  20-1  and  his  teanunate.  Paul 
Wachendorfer,  took  the  only  other 
individual  first  place  with  a  time 
of  1:16.0  in  the   120  yard  indivi- 


Guaranteed 
Valentines 

If  not  fully  satisfied  with 
the  results,  bring  us  the 
girl  and  the  card,  and  get 
your  quarter  back  .  .  . 

The  Intimate 
Bookshop 


able    to  1      Randy 
places,  i  set     his 


Dodson.  of  Greensboro, 
second  National  High 
School  record  in  four  days,  tak- 
ing the  100  yard  breast  stroke  in 
58.9.  In  addition  to  shattering  the 
standard  of  1:00.5  set  in  1955,  he 
defeated  Wachendorfei«,  number 
one  Prep  School  swimmer  last 
year  in  that  event. 


Carolina-Wake  Game  At 
Winston  Is  Sellout 

WINSTON-SALEM.  N.  C— (AP) 
— The  North  Carolina  and  Wake 
Forest  basketball  game,  slated  for 
Memorial  Coliseum  here  Feb.  26, 
is   a   sellout. 

Assistant  Athletic  Director  Jess 
Haddock  said  today  that  all  8,000 
tickets  for  the  Coliseum  had  been 
said  and  that  no  tickets  will  be 
available. 

He  also  reported  that  excellent 
tickets  for  the  Maryland  (Feb.  18) 
and  Eastern  Kentucky  (Feb.  20) 
games  are  available. 


'Owed  It  To  My  Family 
And  Friends' ,  Says  Jim 


205  E 

Open 


Franklin  St. 
Till  10  P.M. 


PERAAANENT 
PART-TIME  WORK 

Young  man  with  a  car  to  work 
3  evenings  and  Saturday.  Must 
have  neat  appearance.  Some 
college  preferred..  This  means 
$30  per  week.  Call  Mr.  B.  W. 
Garska,  Carolina  Inn,  for  ap- 
pointment for  personal  inter- 
view. 3:30 — 7:00  Wednesday  or 
Thursday. 


Howard  Johnson  Restaurant 

BREAKFAST  , 

LUNCH     T  '  V     /       ' 

" !:  V^-^    V        .         DINNER  :  /  ['. 

. :__ SNACKS 

"Landmark  For  Hungry  Tarheels" 


THE  STAR  DREAMERS 

COMBO  OR  ORCHESTRA 
wish  to  announce  ttiat  they  will  have  available  several  dates  in 
February  and  March  -for  your  special  party  or  dance.  Be  sure  to 
call  before  the  last  minute  to  avoid  being  left  out.  Any  size. band 
furnished  on  rM)uest. 

CALL  OR  WRITE: 
Bill    Langley  Chris    Reynolds 

Box   1342  ;.  ;  -        .    *    :  Box   262 

Durham,  N.  C.     .,,.     ., j Chapel  Hill 

/•     '  Phone  8-3741 


MILTON'S 
Midwinter  Carnival 
Just  added  to  our  give- 
a-way  Cotton  baby  cord 
trousers,  ivy  model,  re- 
duced from  $4.95  to 
$3.99  and  $5.95  to 
$4.99. 

Khaki  trousers  in  tan, 
black,  or  olive,  reduced 
from  $495  to  $3.99 
Our  better  wool  ivy 
trousers,  $5.00  off. 
Just  received  beautiful 
shipment  of  dacron/ 
wool  suits  with  inter- 
esting foulard  linings— 
$56.95. 

Exeter   cashmere/nylon 
blend   socks    reduced 
from  $3.95  to  $1.49 
Importred    burlap    jack- 
ets     reduced      from 
$29.95  to  $21.99. 
Plenty  of  buys  on  sum- 
mer   and    year    'round 
suits  and  sport  jackets 
at  unheard  of  prices. 
All  Sales  Cash  and  Final 
Alterations  Extra 

Milton*^ 

C(ott)ing  Cupboarb 


\ 


•^ 


Or 


A 


^^ 


'^>v 


\^ 


^' 


\ 


MINA  RAKASTAN 


'-♦a 


H^' 


►X^ 


^^^' 


,^^^^ 


^o. 


Ai 


Cy 


DANZIGER'S 

CANDIES 


tv^^ 


.'f.^'- 


*<» 


% 


.<?• 


# 


.Ju.st  look  around  campus.  VouT]  see  that  the 
custom  details  of  this  Arrow  "University"  shirt 
set  it  apart  from  the  average  .  .  .  can  give  you 
that  air  of  uncommonly  good  taste.  The  box 
pleat,  the  soft-roll  button-down  collar,  and  the 
back  of  collar  button  are  basic  requirements. 
Yours  in  white  or  blue  oxford  cloth,  just  $5.00. 

—first  in  fashion 


From  any  angle  — 
here's  style  authority 


I  By  BILL  KING 

I  We  hadn't  seen  Sunny  Jim  since 
I  the  last  game  of  the  1956  football 
I  campaign  the  other  day  when  wc 
^  dropped  by  his  office  for  a  little 
:  chat.  The  husky  Tar  Heel  football 
\  mentor  looked  well-rested  and 
j  greeted  the  writer  with  a  hearty 
I  handshake.  Could  he  spare  a  lew 
I  minutes,  he  was  asked?  He  sure 
'  could,  and  he  seated  himself  be- 
I  hind  his  desk  ready  for  the  in- 
I  evitable  question. 

•'What's    the   real    story    on    the 
Indiana  affair  coach?' 

We  were  referring,  of  course,  to 

i  the  recent  rumor  that  Tatum  was 

j  going  to  take  over  the  head  coach- 

i  ing  job  at  Indiana.  In  fact,  it  was 

:  believed    in    some    quarters    that 

j  Tatum   had   definitely   decided  to 

'  take   the   job;    a    rumor   that    was 

I  squelched  a  few  days  later  when 

I  Phil  Dickens  signed  a  contract  as 

head  coach  at  Indiana. 

j      "Well    in    the    first    place,"    he 

i  said,"  "I  think  there  has  been  too 

j  much  to  do  about  the  whole  thing. 

There  is  a  wonderful   opportunity 

for  a  coach  at  Indiana,   but  I  had 

to  consider  many  other  things.  " 

"In  the  first  place,,  I  had  to 
con^'ider  my  family.  I  went  out  to 
Indiana  and  compared  living  condi- 1  ton 
tions,  etc.  with  those  in  North  Car- 
olina. Now  I  want  it  understood 
that  Indiana  is  a  fine  place,  but 
I  just  could  not  see  mvoing  my 
family  way  out  there  after  we  d 
been  in  Chapel  Hill  such  a  short 
while."  This  point  Tatum  empha- 
sized. 
Another  primary  factor,,  accord- 


made  on  the  Indiana  administra- 
tion. To  this  Tatum  declared  that 
"I'm  sure  the  Indiana  administra- 
tion does  not  feel  that  I  made  any 
unreasonable  demands  upon  it. 
Every  request  that  I  made  was 
okayed  by  Indiana  before  I  went 
out  there.  I  knew  exactly  what  the 
situation  was  before  I  left  Chapel 
HUI." 

To  our  satisfaction  Big  Jim  also 
cleared  up  the  matter  of  the  sup- 
posed animosity  between  football 
and  other  sports  here  on  campus. 
"I  think  the  Carolina  administra- 
tion will  verify  the  fact  that  I  did 
not  use  the  Indiana  matter  to  gain 
any  personal  concessions  or  to  put 
football  ahead  of  anything  else," 
he  commented. 

'As  for  being  unhappy  at  Caro- 
lina, I  am  not.  Naturally  Tve  had 
disappointments,  but  who  hasn't.'V 

So  thafs  the  story  as  we  have 
it  to  date.  The  storm  has  passed 
over  and  Jim  Tatum  is  still  head 
football  coach  at  Carolina.  How 
close  he  came  to  leaving  Chapel 
Hill  is  something  only  Tatum  i 
knows.  In  any  case,  the  matter  is 
closed  and  we  sincerely  hope  that  | 
it  will  remain  as  such.  i 

Having  just  learned  that  Ekl  Sut- 
was  about  to  sign  a  profes- ' 
sional  football  contract  with  the ; 
Washington  Redskins  (he  a-igned  j 
Tuesday  night),  we  asked  Tatum ' 
what  he  thought  about  it.  | 

'I  think  Ed  did  the  right  thing,"  } 
he   said.   I'm   very   happy   that   he  I 
will  be  able  to  attend  Med  School 
during    the    off    season."    (Sutton , 
will  alend  .Med  School  at  the  Uni-  I 


ing  to  the  Tar  Heel  coach,  was  an 
obligation  to  friends,  students,  and 
alumni  of  Carolina.  I  felt  that  at 
Carolina  I  hadn't  completed  the 
job  that  I  came  here  to  do.  "  he 
said.  "I  guess  I  felt  that  I  owed 
it  to  my  friends  to  stay  here." 
Tatum  admitted  that  the  Indiana '  ^he    problems    that 


po.-'t  looked  "mighty  lucrative." 
"The  conditions  of  the  job.  includ- 
ing the  salary.  looked  very  good," 
he  stated.  "There  is  a  good  oppur 
tunity  to  produce  out  there.  But  I 
did  twt  want  to  betray  the  confi 
dence  that  my  friends  and  the 
administration  had  put  in  nie,  so 
I  turned  down  the  offer.  ' 

Tatum  declined  to  quote  any 
salary  figures  saying  only  that  the 
offer  was  "satisfactory.  " 

The  story  goes  that  Tatum  had 
decided  to  accept  the  offer  when 
he  received  a  phone  call  from  a 
friend  back  home  and  was  con- 
vinced that  he  should  remain  in 
Chapel  Hill.  Tatum  denies  that  he 
received  a  call.  "The  only  call  was 
one  that  I  made  to  my  wife  to 
talk  over  the  situation,"  he  said. 

Another  point  in  the  rumor  that 
moved  like  hot  fire  for  a  few  days 
concerned    demands    that     Tatum 


versity  of  Tennessee).  "The  Red- 
skins plan  to  use  him  on  offense 
and  I  don't  think  that  there  will 
be  a  better  offensive  rookie  in  the 
league  next  season." 

With  that  we  left  the  Tar  Heel 

mentor  at  his  de^  to  ponder  over 

will    confront 

practice    com- 


him    when    spring 
mcnces  Saturdav. 


GMAB  Pool  Tournament  j 
Set  For  February  13th       { 

The  CMAB  sponsored  Prelimi- 
nary Billiards  Tournament  will 
get  underway  in  the  Graham  Mem- 
orial pool  room  Feb.  13  and  tour- 
nament director  Lonnie  Stephen- 
son urges  anyone  who  is  interest- 
ed in  competeting  in  the  event  to 
come  down  and  sign  up. 

The  preliminaries,  which  begin 
at  1  p.m..  will  be  held  to  select 
the  top  six  men  for  the  finals  to 
be  held  Feb.  22.  Prizes  will  be 
awarded  the  top  three  men  and 
they  may  win  an  opportunity  to 
represent  Carolina  in  the  National 
Intercollegiate  Billiards  Tourna- 
ment at  the  University  of  Iowa 
Mach  23.  Those  interested  are  in- 
vited to  come  down  and  practice. 


CLASSIFIEDS 


FOR  SALE:  HOUSETRAILER;  35 
feet,  2  bedrooms,  shower.  1950 
Iron  wood.  Taylors  lYailer  Ct. 
Airport    Rd.,  J.   L.   Lane. 


FOR  SALE:  1954  27'  HOUSE- 
trailer.  l'^  miles  North  of  Cha- 
pel Hill  on  Airport  Road.  Sloan's 
Trailer  Park.  Maurice  L.  Clegg. 


TO  A 


NICE 
GAL 


LITTLE 


LAW  BOOKS,  VOLUMES  1  through 
155  (except  22  volumes)  S.  E. 
reporter  41  through  50  Sup.  Ct. 
Reporter  100  volumes  CYC.  CJ 
and  Digest  $160.00 


JAZZ  AT  TURNAGES 

Saturday  afternoon,  2:00,  Turn- 
ages  Cabin  in  Durham. — Jazz  by 
Dick  Gables  "All  Stars."  Beer 
Served. 


SUMMER  HELP  WANTED:  MAN 
and  Wife  or  two  hays.  Operate 
amu.sement  business  for  sum- 
mer. Mountain  resort.  $35  week- 
ly, free  living  quarters.  Sec  Dan 
Sherill,   Taylor's  Trailor   Park. 


RIDERS  WANTED  TO  WHEEL- 
ing,  Virginia  through  Wash.  D. 
C.  and  Hagerstown,  Maryland. 
Will  leave  7  or  8  a.m.  on  Sa- 
turday, Feb.  9.  Call  Mrs.  Free- 
man at  9-1581  between  9  and 
4:30. 

LOST:  MAROON  AND  BLACK 
Jacket  left  in  Carroll  Hall  Sa- 
turday night.  Reward  offered. 
Return  to  Mangum  Dorm  or  to 
the   Pilam    House. 


Who  Wishes   Boys   Had 
More  Gumption 

Chickabiddy,   if  you   plea^-e. 
hear  the  parable  of  bees.  Bees 
devote  their  shining  hours  to 
bussing,  as  it  were,  the  flow- 
ers. They  smack  each  flower,  but 
pass  the   buds,   which,    to   bees' 
eyes,  look  like  duds.  Humming 
in  their  twos  and  threes,  go 
the  merry,  boy-like  bees! 

Now  flowers,  in  their  girlis-h 
way,  seeming  just  to  stand  and 
sway,  plan  their  every  move  to 
please  silly,  buzzing  boy-like 
bees.   Perfumes  subtler  than 
Chanel,  subtle  shades  to  match 
each  smell — these  they  pass 
around  for  free,  not  for  any 
special  bee.  For  the  girlish 
flowera-  have  found  bees  like 
rivals  buzzing  "round. 

THE  MORAL — If  you  want  a  bee, 
set  your  sights  at  least  on 
three.  Send   them  each  a   Valen- 
tine from  the  bookshop  with 

this  sign:  .       ' 

THE    INTIMATE 
BOOKSHOP 

205  E.  Franklin  Street 
Open  Till   10  P.M. 


Freshmen  Win,  86-52     With  Strong  2nd  Half 


DAVIDSON — Carolinas  fresh- 
men stymied  overconfidence 
Wednesday  night  to  defeat  the 
Davidson  freshmen,  86-52.  Ahead 
by  only  31-26  at  halftime,  Caro- 
lina defeated  the  scrappy  Wild- 
kittens  by  sheer  height  and  shoot- 
ing strength. 

It  was  nip-and-tuck  during  the 
first  two  quarters  but  the  Tar 
Babies  opened  up  a  wide  margin 
in  the  second   half. 

Scoring  leaders  for  the  Caro- 
lina freshmen  were  Lee  Shaffer 
with    22,    Dick    Kepley    with    14 


and  York  Larese  with  12. 
scorer  for  Davidson  was 
Ferguson  with    14. 


High 
Bill 


A  WEATHERCOAT 
YOU  CAN 


WOIIID'S  GRMTESI  NOVEL 
NOWONTHESCREEtl! 


i 


"A  SPECTACULAR 
MOVIE!"-bfe 


MUMOUIIWSIIIS 


AyofiiYllulJuliN 

•M[liLili[l. 


I  FROM  THE 

YEAR'S  MOST 

EXCITING  NOVEL 

COMES  THE  MOST 

EXCITING  PEOPLE 

THE  SCREEN  HAS 

EVERKNOWN- 

THE  PEOPLE 

WHO  KNEW 

THE  TRUTH 

ABOUT  THE 

'     GREAT  MAN! 


THE 


IMIiklN' 


Wa^k! 


HOURS   OF    SHOWS 
1:00—4:32—8:09 

PRICES    THIS    ATTRACTION 
ADULTS  85c      CHILDREN  25c 

NOW   PLAYING 


Carolina 


CO-STARRING 

DEAN  JAGGER  •  KEENAN  WYNN  •  JULIE  LONDON 
JOANNE  GILBERT  ,«i  ED  WYNN  .nh  russ  mokmh 

A  UNIVERSAL  INTERNATIONAL  PICTURE 


LATE  SHOW  SAT. 
STARTS  SUNDAY 


Lonoor 


crJvecLtrB 


«*The  fun  grows 
steadily  more  hilariousr* 

-Cook,  Woitd  TH.  6  Sm» 

in.ec  Outoness 


NOW 
PLAYING 


fintthnntnum 

An  eztdusiTe  {abric.  Waithinc- 
machine  teste  prove  I.rf>ndoa 
Fog  Weathercoate  bold  their 

ahape.  won't  fade,  pucker,  or 
shrink — drip-dry  in  two  hours 

to  smooth,  smart  wrinkle- 
free  appearance  wi^icut  ironing' 

Matching  Cap  $3.95 
In  White  And  Natural 

Julian's 

COLLEGE  SHOP 


WHETHER 
NEAR  OR 
APART  GIVE 
A  GIFT  CLOSE 
TO  THE  HEART! 

VISIT    WITH 

.    WENTWORTH 
SLOAN 

Chapel  Hill 


Jewelers 


<MltT  m«HT  FOR  YOUR 

mm 


The  Card  Of  Your  Choice 
From  Our  Fantastic  Selection 


Ledbetter  -  Pickard 


r 


fHAP^  HILL*    N.    O. 


WEATHER 

Cloudy    wid    warmer.    Expected 
ligh  58. 


QTar  Xccl 


INITIATIVE 

Doldrums  rising  from  the  Sowth; 
Building,  that  is.  See  editerial, 
page  2. 


VOL.  LVII  NO.  93 


Complete  UP)  Wire  Service 


CHAPEL  HILL,  NORTH  CAROLINA,  FRIDAY,  FEBRUARY  8,  1957 


Offices   in   Graham   Memorial 


FOUR   PAGES  THIS  ISSUfc 


David  Small,  Adele  Lippert 
Chosen  As  Singing  Leads  In 
Production  Of  'Brigadoon 

Held  man  And 
Sparger  Play 
Comedy  Leads 


The  cast  of  -Brigadoon '.  the 
Caioiiua  x"ia>  inakei  s  tortncoming 
musical  production  scheduled  lor 
Maixn  l-d  111  jkicnjorial  nail,  Has 
i*vcu  aiiiicuiiceu  Dy  foster  l-'itz- 
Miiiojj).  uiuiiiatic  an  protessor  and 
stage  directed- chor»;ographer  oi 
lav.-  anow.  anu  vv'iilon  Mason,  music 
pioiessor,  musical  duecior  ot  tne 

i  luuU^ti.Jl. 

L>aviU  Small  ot  Mcrehead  City 
auu  .Uia.  .-\aL'le  Lippija  ui  Lin- 
c.iuia.i,  uhio.  will  appear  as  the 
Sinking  leads.  Tommy  and  Fiona. 
wJia  render  such  numbers  as  "Al- 
most i^ike  Being  in  Love."  "Heatn- 
er  on  the  Hiii,  '  "Tnere  But  for 
You  Go  i.  ■  and  "'VVauin'  tor  My 
Dearie." 

Small  has  sung  leading  roles  in 
in  the  Haymakers'  '•Showboat" 
and  "Seventeen."  Mrs.  Lippert, 
wile  ol  a  UNC  graduate  stuaent. 
has  been  tealurcd  with  the  Cin- 
cinnati Light  Opera  Company. 

James  Hsldman  of  Durham  and 
Miss  Hope  Sparger  of  Scarsdalc. 
N.  Y..  will  play  the  comedy  leads, 
Jeff  and  Meg.  with  .Miss  Sparger 
singing  the  novelty  numbers  "Love 
of  .My  Lite"  and  ".My  .Mothers 
Wedding    Day." 

H^ldman.  an  .Air  Force  veteran 
and  currently  a  graduate  assist- 
ant in  Dramatic  Art,  has  appeared 
in  lead  roles  in  "OndinL''  and  "The 
Rainmaker."  Miss  Sparger  has  been 
seen  in  two  of  the  three  produc- 
tions this  year.  "Anastasia  '  and 
"Andrucles  and   the  Lion." 

Miss  Blynn  Durning  of  Louis- 
villo.  Ky..  known  lor  her  chore- 
ography and  ballet  performance 
in  la»t  year's  "Sound  and  Fury." 
wi'l  play  the  rub  of  Jean,  whose 
wedding  to  Charlie  is  celebrated 
in  the  show.  Charlie  will  be  acted 
and  sung  by  Gene  Strassler  of  the 
music  dept.,  who  will  sing  the  well- 
known  -Come  To  Me,  Bsnd  To 
Me  " 

Major  roles  will  be  played  also 
bv  Harvey  Knox  of  Greensboro,  as 
Harry  Beaton,  the  rejected  suitor 
who  nearly  brings  disaster  to  the 
town  of  Brigadoon:  John  Sneden 
of  Tenafly.  N.  J.,  as  the  wise  Mr. 
Lundie:  and  Miss  Yvonne  Parker 
of    New    York.    NY.,    as    unhappy  [ 

(See  PLAYMAKEKS,  page  3) 

Wake  Forest 
Honor  Council    | 
Votes  To  Quit 

WL\STON-S.\LEM— ( AP )— The 
13-member  men's  Honor  Council 
of  Wake  Forest  College  has  voted 
to  resign  in  a  body  in  pro- 
test of  the  faculty  committee's 
suspension  of  two  men  students  \ 
and  placing  two  girls  on  proba- 
tion as  an  aftermath  to  the  recent 
panty  raids. 

The  faculty  committee  overruled 
the  Men's  H.nor  Council  which 
had  at  first  given  the  students 
l.gnt    sent:nccs. 

The  honor  council  had  reprim- 
anded the  participants  in  the  raid. 

Then  the  faculty  took  over  the 
investigation  and  ordered  suspen- 
sion for  twj  men  and  probation  for 
two  girl.s  they  charged  with  hav- 
ing encouraged  the  panty  raiders. 

The  names  of  those  suspended 
and  put  on  probation  were  not 
announced. 

Last  night  the  student  legisla- 
ture of  the  college  voted  unanim- 
ously to  request  a  joint  meeting 
with  the  faculty  executive  com- 
mitt?e  to  "save  the  remaining 
link"  between  the  students  and 
the  afculty.  The  group  said  it  felt 
a  meeting  was  justified  in  order 
to  establish  the  position  of  stu- 
dent government  at  Wake  Forest. 


DAVID  SMALL  AND  ADELE  LIPPERT 

.X.lcada  m   "Brtgadaon" 


New  Head 
For  GM 
Approved 

Howard  Henry  of  the  University 
of  Wisconsin  has  been  nominated 
and  approved  by  the  Graham  Mem- 
orial Board  of  Directors  a.s  the 
new  director  of  Graham  Memor- 
ial. 

In  a  meeting  held  Thursday 
by  the  G.M  Board  of  Directors,  it 
was  decided  that  Dr.  William  Po-* 
teat  would  send  a  letter  to  Henry 
offering  him  the  job  as  director  of 
the  Student  Union  to  succeed  the 
present  director.  Miss  Linda  .Mann.  'i 
Henry's  nomination  by  the  Board 
of  Directors  has  been  approved 
by   Chancellor   Robert   House. 

Henry,  present  director  of  the 
Student  Uniun  at  the  University 
of  Wisconsin,  was  interviewed  in 
the  spring  of  1956  and  was  offer- 
ed th?  G.M  post  beginning  Sept.. 
1956.  This  offer  was  rejected  by 
Henry  for  reason  ot  salary  and 
tther  differences. 

The  present  salary  which  is  be- 
ing oflerod  Henry  by  the  GM 
Board  is  S8.000  annually.  If  Hen- 
ry accepts  this  offer,  it  is  report- 
ed by  the  Board  that  he  will  be  j 
taking  a  SI. 200  cut  in  salary  from 
his   present    positiim.  i 

Provided  Henry  accepts  the  of- 
fer he  would  take  over  his  GM  i 
duties  in  July.    1957.  j 

Student  Body  President  Bob  i 
Young  announced  that  he  would  i 
send  a  telegram  to  Henry  urging 
him  to  accept  the  directorship  and  i 
assuring  him  of  the  Board's  sup- 
port. 


Legislature  Sets  Up  Group 
To  Notify  Bad  Check  Passers 

"  Extends  Welcome  To 
Visiting   President 


By  NEIL   BASS 


'-      '  '  SINGING  IN  THE  RAIN    ■:  :    :  .:   ;- 

Sandy  Thomas  prepares  to  protect  Miss  Eleanor  Riggins  from 
the  elements  as  the  two  leave  the  Y  in  yesterday's  afternoon  rain 
The   rain   was    expected   to    do   a    repeat   performance   today. 


ON  XRISIS'  REMARKS 


JAMES  HELDMAN   AND  HOPE  SPARGER 

...  the  comedy  angle 


IN  CHARLOnE  SPEECH: 


House  Says  Americans 
Lacking  In  Resources 


GM'S  SLATE 

^Oneactlvity  is  tehtduledfor 
Graham  Mentorial  today: 

Women's     Residence     Council, 
3-5  p.m.,  Council  Room. 


Americas  greatest  weakness  is 
inadequate  resources  for  relaxa 
tion.  recreation  and  use  of  the 
creative  imagination.  Chancellor 
Robert  B.  H:>use  said  Wednesday 
in  Charlotte. 

Addressing  a  luncheon  meeting 

of    the    Charlotte    Woman's    Club, 

he  said  '"America  is  long  on  exhi- 

I  bition  games  and  athletics  partici- 

[  pated  in  by  the  few   and  enjoyed 

I  almost    to    a    fanatic    extreme    by 

the   many." 

"Ai    the    same    time,    the    great 

movement    in    physical    education 

j  is  in  the  participation  of  the  many 

'  in  all  sports  which  have  a  carry- 

I  over  value   into  mature   life." 

Ho-use  said  Americans  need  more 

•'matter-of-course    instruclion"    in 

!  music   and    art. 

He  said  a  ihiru  weakness  is  in 
the  field  of  books  and  reading. 

The  absence  of  books  from  liv- 
ing rooms  of  North  Carolina — or 
the  "equally  disconcerting"  look 
of  unused  books  —  is  partly  to 
blame  for  a  shortage  of  literary 
interest  in  Tar  Heel  schools,  he 
said. 

"Education  will  grow  better  in 
an  atmosphere  in  which  all  of  our 
institutions — home  church,  com- 
munity, government  and  business 
as  well  as  .schools,  colleges  and 
universities — are  believed  in  and 
used    more. 

"In  other  words."  he  said.  "I  be- 
lieve  we  do  not  nsd  ne\V  institu- 
tions,  but   need   to   man   the   insti- 
,  tutions  whch  we  have." 


House  said  every  educational 
institution  is  in  a  state  of  crisis 
because  of  teacher  shortage  and 
lack  of  suitablo  classrooms. 

•'Nevertheless,  parents,  teachers, 
home,  school,  church  and  commun- 
ity all  need  to  go  deeper  than 
crisis    thinking,"   he   said. 

'"What  we  need  is  happy  con- 
centration on  the  basic  and  funda- 
mental values  which  lie  deeper 
than  any  crisis  and  will  la.st  long- 
er than  the  solution  of  any  cris- 
is." House  said. 


Old  Attendance 
Rule  In  Effect 
In  Journalism 

The  Schi;ol  of  Juurnalism  has 
completely  reinstated  the  old  class 
attendance  regulation  limiting  stu- 
dents to  three  unexcuscd  absences. 

According  to  the  new  regula- 
tion passed  by  the  Faculty  Coun- 
cil on  Dec.  7,  this  is  within  the 
letter  of  the  law. 

In  effect,  it  nullifies  work  done 
by  a  student  government  commit- 
tee which  strove  for  liberalization 
(f  class  cut  regulations. 

The  new  class  atli-ndance  regu- 
lation has  in  actuality  effected  no 
changes  in  the  School  of  Journal- 
ism's cut  policy.  The  new  regula- 
tion states,  in  part: 

"Regular  class  attendance  is  a 
student  obligation:  and  a  student 
is  responsible  for  the  work,  includ- 
ing tests  and  written  work,  of  all 
class  meetings  . . .  The  instructor 
or  the  department  may  make  uni- 
form   attendance    regulations." 

The  Scho.>l  of  Journalism  policy 
on   absences  states: 

1.  A  student  is  permitted  three 

(See  ATTENDANCE,  page  3) 

AT  IDC  MEETING: 


Magill  Not  Criticizing 
Student  Administration 


I    "  Director  of  Student  .\ffairs  Sam 
I  .Magill    said    Thursday    his    recent 
!  statenienls  concerning  a  "crisis   in 
i"wuleiTt  Initiative"  were  wot  meant 
as    criticism    of    the    current    stu- 
dent  administration, 
j       He  said  his  rcmarK.-«  referred  to 
"the  initiative  of  students  in  gen- 
eral   in    reference    to    their    will- 
ingne.ss    to   discipline    them.selves.' 
Magill   told   thi'   University   Par- 
i  ty  Tuesday  night  he  felt  there  was 
a    "crisis     in     student     initiative" 
and    students    were    unwilling    to 
discipline  them.se/ves.  He  spoke  oi 
an    increase    in    violations    of    the 
honor  code. 

Student     body      President      Bob 

'  Young   and    Men's    Honor   Council 

Chairman     Jim     Exum     disagreed 

Appreciation  Is  Extended 
By  Village  Rental  Office 

The    Victory   Village    Rental    Of- 
fice this  week  expressed  apprecia- 
tion "to  the  many  pcoolc  in  Chap 
el  Hill.  Carrboro  and  Victory  Vill- 
age   who    offered    and    gave    their 
I  .services    and    housing    facilities    to 
I  the    16    families    on    King    St.    af 
I  fectL'd    by   the    recent    fire    in    the 
Village. 


The  student  Legislature  estab- 
lished a  committee  last  night  to 
contact  students  who  write  bad 
checks  to  Chapel  Hill  merchants. 

Legislators,  in  an  abbreviated 
session,  also  pasocd  a  resolution 
welcoming  Feltcher  Fleming,  presi- 
dent of  the  University  of  Florida 
student   body,  to  the   campus. 

P'Icming  spoke  briefly  to  the 
body  and  emphasized  his  plans  for 
.studying  Carolina  student  govern- 


Merchants 
FindChecks 
Not  All  Bad 

By   WALTER    SCHRUNTEK 

I  "Cashing  checks  is.  good  busi 
ncss"  seem..'  to  be  the  consensus  of 
opinion  among  Chapel  .Hill  mer- 
chants polled  yesterday.' 

But   it  can    also  be  a  headache, 

they  would  almost  invariably  add. 

Almost      everyone      interviewed 

stated  his  belief  in  the  basic,  hon- 

with    Magill    in    statements    issued    esty   of  the  students  and   most   of 

Wednesday.    Both    felt    there    was   them     felt     that     so-called     •'bad" 

not  a  "crisis."  ,   jcheek,s  are  for  the  m,pst  part  noth- 

Magiil's      statements      Thursday 


were: 

1.  "1  believe  tiiere  is  a  crisis 
in  the  initiative  of  students  in 
general  in  reference  to  their  will- 
in.uness    to    di.sciplnc    them.selves." 

2.  "I  have  no  crticism  what 
ever  tj  make  of  our  present  stu 
dent  leadership.  Rather,  the  Uni- 
versity has  every  conlidence  in 
the  present  student  administra- 
tion.' 


Senior  Invite 
Sales  Continue 
Through  Today 

Sales  of  senior  invitations  will 
continue  through  today  and  Feb. 
11-13  in  Y  court,  according  to 
Doug  Farmer,  chairman  of  the 
Grail-sponsored  sale. 

Farmer  has  urged  seniors  tj  buy 
their  invitations  as  soon  as  possi- 
ble. Invitations  must  be  paid  for 
as  the  order  is  made,  he  said. 


ing  more  than  oversights-  or  the 
results  of  bad  bookkeeping  by 
the  students. 

Experience  over  a  period  of 
years,  according  to  the  merchant.^, 
seems  to  substantiate  this  impres 
sion.  Still,  there  persists  the  fact 
that  processing  student  checks  is 
generally  considered  a  "headache 
by  the  merchants.  Students  are  us- 
ually easily  located  and  "'bad" 
checks  are  almost  always  made 
good,  they  point  out. 

Most  local  merchants  believe  the 
risk  run  in  cashing  student's  per- 
sonal checks  is  off.,et  by  the  good 
will  which  results. 

But  a  number  of  Chapel  Hill 
storekeepers  will  temper  this  risk 
by  limiting  the  amounts,  and  in 
.some  instances,  for  whom  they  will 
cash  checks. 

A  survey  of  merchants  polled 
yesterday  indicated  that  an  a\-er- 
age  of  8-to-lO  checks  are  returned 
invalid  during  any  given  month. 
Depending  on  the  volume  of 
'check  business."  which  fluctu- 
ates during  holidays  and  toward 
the  end  of  the  month,  upward  of 
15  checks  daily  are  cashed  in  somt 
establishments. 


ment  and  the  campus  integration 
:  situation. 

'<  Student  representatives  alo-o 
i  passed  bills  appropriating  5175  to 
I  the  Orientation  Committee  and  $14 
i  tj  reimbiu-se  Bill  Redding  of  the 
i  Men's  Honor  Council  ior  expenses 

!  incurred. 

I 

I  CHECK  COMMITTEE 

1 

I  The  notification  committee  es 
I  tablished  to  contact  student  pass- 
j  ers  of  bad  checks  will  have  no 
•  judicial  authority  whatsoever.  Its 
three  members,  appointed  by  the 
I  .\udent  body  president,  will  sim- 
;  ply  serve  as  liason  group  between 
i  Chapel  Hill  merchants  and  indi- 
I  vidual  students. 

.According    to    its   creation    bill, 

I  the  committee  will  •'inform  stu- 
dents of  their  error  and  recom- 
j  mend  that  they  clear  up  the  mat- 
I  ter:  the  committee  shall  simultane- 
1  ously  inform  the  merchant  that  the 
student  has  been  informed." 

The  finance  bill  appropriating 
j  SI 75  to  the  Orientation  Committee 
I  will  close  out  expenditures  iocur- 
I  red  during  last  spring's  orienta- 
,  tion  program. 

I  The  appropriation  to  Redding  of 
I  the  Men'.-  Council  will  pay  for  pic- 
i  tures  of  past  council  chairmen. 
j  The  pictures  are  placed  in  the 
I  Council  Room. 
i 
APPOINTMENTS 

I  Presidential  appointments  ap- 
proved    by    the    legislators    were 

i  Whit  Whitfield  as  legislative  rep- 
resentative to  the  Carolia  Forum; 

'  Misses  Barbara  Stockton  and  Mary 
Lou  Wells.  Bob  Furiauo  and  Tom 
Overman  to  the  Elections  Board. 

NEW    BILLS 

New  measures  introduced  at  the 
ses.'ion  which  will   be  voted  upon 

I  next  week  are: 

(1)  .\  bill  to  set  up  a  committee 
to  accept  and  select  insurance 
company  bids. 

I  (2)  A  bill  establishing  a  commit- 
tee to  study  the  student  Constitu 
fion  and  make  suggestions  toward 
revision. 

(3)  A  bill  to  pay  for  transporta- 
!  tion  expenses  for  two  student    who 

will  visit  Sarah  Lawrence  College 
to  exchange  governmental  ideas. 

(4)  A  bill  to  appropriate  funds  to 
Hungarian   Student  Pro.1ect. 

(5)  A  bill  setting  up  a  Summer 
.\etivilies  Council. 

(6)  A  resolution  urging  the  Con- 
solidated University  Student  Coun- 
cil to  return  to  its  original  pur- 
pose. 


Tafums  Plan  Is  Criticized 


Di  Senate  Was 
In  A  Quandary 
Over  Quorum 

The  Di  was  in  a  bit  of  a  quan- 
dary the  other  night.  They  had 
a  bill,  two  speakers,  a  host  of 
guests,  but  no  i.ieeling. 

The  bill,  calling  for  the  resig- 
nation of  secretaries  Dulles  and 
Wilson  had  been  debated  and 
was  about  to  be  put  to  a  vote 
when  the  quorum  was  ques- 
tioned. 

A  roll  count  was  taken  and. 
due  to  a  lack  of  Senators, 
President  Pat  Adams  was  forced 
to  declare  the  meeting  non- 
existent, very  much  disappoint- 
ing the  large  gathering  which 
wasn't  really  there, 


By  PRINGLE  PIPKIN 

Jim  Tatums  plan  of  quartering 
all  the  football  players  in  Cobb 
was  sharply  criticized  at  the  IDC 
meeting  Wednesday  night. 

"I  am  against  having  the  foot- 
ball   players    in    Cobb    although 
the    idea   of    having    them    in    a 
smaller  dormitory  near  the  AAos- 
ogram    needs    further    investiga- 
tion," said  Sonny  Hallford,  Presi- 
dent of   IDC.  About  half  of  the 
members    of    the    IDC    took    the 
same  position.  Some  did  not  want 
to  see  the  football  players  group- 
ed together  in  any  domitory. 
The  IDC  discussed  the  profit  of 
the    UNC    book   exchange    but    de- 
cided to  leave  the  investigation  ol 
the  matter  up  to  a  committee  al- 
ready established  for  that  purpose 
by  Bob  Young.  Bill  Brach.  Joynei 
IDC     Representative,     commented 
after  the  meeting,  "Why  should  I 
put  .someone   else  through  school 
when  I  have  a  hard  enough  time 
putting  myself  through.  If  the  Uni 
versify    inists    on     charging    high 
prices,  why  don't  they  use  the  mon- 
ey for  the  benefit  of  every  one.  They 
ought  to  spend  it  to  keep  the  lop- 
notch  faculty  whom  South   Build- 
ing says  are  leaving  because  they 
can't  match  other  .schooL-'  offers." 
FINES 


Hallford  has  decided  not  to  pre- 
sent to  the  Student  Legislature  a 
bill  which  would  empower  the  ID 
Court  to  levy  fines  up  to  SIO.  The 
ID  Court  has  fined  a  student  S8; 
the  student  appealed  the  sentence 
to  the  Student  Coueil  on  the 
grounds  that  he  did  not  know  that 
the  ID  Court  had  the  right  to  fine 
people.  The  Studeni  Council  up- 
held the  student. 

Halllord  plans  to  go  before  the 
Studcnl  Council  to  argue  that  the 
ll>  Court  has  the  right  to  incor- 
porate changes  into  its  by-laws  if 
the    changes    do    not    violate     the 

Recommendations  Made 
By  Chancellor  Differ 

Chancellor  House  nas  received 
from  the  Council  of  Student  .Af- 
fairs and  the  Administrative  Board 
of  Student  Affairs  recommenda- 
tions concerning  his  original  state- 
ment that  he  would  back  the  pro- 
posal of  housing  all  of  the  foot- 
ball players  in  Cobb  Dormitory. 

William  D.  Perry.  Chairman  of 
the  Division  of  Student  Affairs, 
commented  only  that  the  two  rec- 
ommendations dilf.'red  in  their 
conclusions.  Chancellor  House 
could  not  be  reached  for  com- 
ment. 


j  rights  of  a  studeni.  If  Hallford  is 
j  backed    by    the    Student    Council, 
violators    will    be    subject    to    the 
!  fine  in  the  future  cases. 
'         Hallford  plans  to  clamp  down 
I    on   those   throwing    firecrackers. 
'     He  urged  the  members  to  inform 
I    their   dormitories  of   the   policy. 
I      The    IDC    Depresentativcs    were 
!  giver,  eight  tickets  apiece  to  sell  to 
the  Mardi  Gras. 

Tom     Johnston,     Supervisor     of 
Dormitory  Managers,  had  made  a 
proposal    that   a   whole   floor   of   a 
dormitory  be  held  responsible  tor 
,  any  major  damage  until  the  exact 
i  people    involved    are    known.    This 
,  measure    meet    with    general    dis- 
I  favor.  I 

I  PETITION  ' 

i  A  petition  to  have  the  Director 
i  of  Operations  maintain  the  televi- 
I  sion  sets  in  the  dormitories  has 
I  j-eceived  good  .support,  according 
I  tc  Hallford.  The  petition  will  be 
[  presented  to  the  director  of  Opera- 
tions some  time  next  week. 
{        The   IDC  moved  to  co-sponsor    ■ 

a    concert    with    the    sophomore 
I    class  in  order  to  get  a  big-name 
band  here  for  the  proposed  soph- 
omore weekend  March  22-23. 
I      Ai  the  meeting  Duncan  .Mclver. , 
I  new    president    of   Old    East,   was  i 
I  sworn  into  office  by  Neil  Bass.       { 


Cossack  Dancers  Here 
Feb.  12  Have  History 

.\  long  history  of  appearances  Jarotf.  the  troupe  will  present  a 
before  czars  of  Russia,  the  crown-  program  of  Russian  folk  songs, 
heads   of   Europe,  and   world-wide  *  operatic   melodies,    and    old   Russ- 

^   „-. , .  _.        ian   church   music,  combined   with 

renditions    of    Cossack    dances. 

Originally  the  Cossacks  were 
horsemen  of  Tartar  and  Slavonic 
origin  which  supplied  the  czars  of 
Russia  with  cavalry  divisions  from 
the  Don  River  Valley.  Following 
the  Russian  Revolution  and  Civil 
War  the  Cossacks  were  forced  to 
flee  their  country  and  tske  ref- 
uge in  Crimea. 

In  1922  the  chorus  was  erystal- 
ized  as  a  singing  group  in  Bul- 
garia and  gave  their  first  con- 
cert in  1923  in  Vienna.  Since 
that  time  they  have  sung  in  every 
country  in  the  world  except  Red 
China  and  Soviet  Russia  and  have 
been  presented  in  more  than  7.- 
800  concerts. 
Sponsored  by  the  Student  En- 
I  tertainment  Committee,  the  Don 
'  Ccssack  concert  will  be  presented 
audiences  follow  the  Don  Cossack  free  to  .student  upon  presentation 
Chorus  and  Dancers  when  they  of  I.  D.  cards.  A  $1  admission  is 
come  to  Memorial  Hall  Feb.  12  at  charged  to  student  wives,  with  a 
8   p.m.  S2    charge    to    others.    Doors    will 

Under  the  direction     of     Serge    open  at  7  p.m. 


SERGE  JAROFF 

.  .  heads   Cos.'^acks 


^AGE  TWO 


THB  DAILY  TAR  HE£\. 


FRIDAY,  FEBRUARY  i,  1957 


PRiOAY,   F 


REACTION  PIECE: 


GRAHAM  MEMORIAL  STUDENT  UNION 

...a  ueu-  Cite  in  dead  in  coniiiiittee 

How  Students'  Initiative 
Was  Killed  In  Conference 

Diictior  ol  Siti.kni  Adixiiics  S.miml  Magill.  who  Npokt-  out  this 
AM'tk  ;il)oiit  the  I;.  Iv  ol  >iii(uiu  iniiintivf.  is  himself  invohed  in  a  n:e- 
iiuixloiis  sii|jj)ies>i(:ii  ot    that   sanu-  initiatixe. 

Ir  i>  ilif  t  iiokinji  tlic-  (ioiim  il  on  Siiidfiit  Allairs  '^a\c  a  stiuk-ni  plan 
to  (itatt  a  lU'W  smdeiif  union   hnildinji. 

Ihc  prcscni  sludcni  iniiou  huildin^.  (iraham  Nfcniorial.  sci\es  stn- 
(!  -iitv  f\<  flk-ntlv.  liiu  it  is  so  stiiall  phvsiialh  ihai  onh  a  liiiriion  (»t  the 
>iiidciiis  who  piv  iMiion  lei-s  (an  he 


act  r.inodatfd  there. 

Mi^liil  has  said  iipeatedK  he 
laxo.  ih"  idea  ol  a  new  student 
unir:n  huildin'4  that  caii  tr-ke  caic 
&i  Dio  e  s}iuKnt>.  I'lievcloie  it  is 
stran;;e  that  he  allowed  tlte  idea  ol 
a  seltlicjuidatinj;*  i>uild:>i'4  he  kill- 
ed m  eonieieiKe  in  .South  iUiiJd- 
ino;.  "".'^^  ^\r ;"  li^i'^^ 

The.st()iv  stiyjted  seveiiul  .iiionihs 
n,!4<)  when  people  interested  in'  the 
smdent  tntion  started  inxesti'^atlh'^ 
tlie  idea  ol  a  seir-li(|uid.n  iui^  huild- 
in^.  r  lie  .t^ioup.  the  (.laiii'.ni  Mem- 
orial    Board    ol     Diredors.    tumeti 


A  hike  in  student  lees  neiessiuv 
to  li(|uida'le  a  loan  Ironi  the  led*- 
eial    4o\erinnent.  ■:' 

1-stahIishnient  ol  a  sinking   lund 

nc((.ssai\   loi  operation  ol  ihe  loan: 

*  *  *  •       . 

It  shoidd  f)e  iutderst»»<>d  tha't 
while  sjiidenis  would  pav  lor  the 
ouildin;^  in  imieased  lees,  tliey 
wDuld  Ik-  asked  to  \<)ic  lor  <n 
aj^aints  ihe  proposal  in  a  eantf^iiu 
ejcfrli(iii.  V         •      7^ 

"Th6- bit])  M-lb  ^iyen '- to^'  ftit)?GU>r 

\l    ;ill  to  ( arrv. 

lie  tarried  it   lo  the  (lointcil  oii 


(.ut    a    rep..rt     that    has    rennined      Student  Atiairs.  a  -roup  whieh  de- 


heretotore  loididenii.d.    The  lepovt 
asked   lor: 

Permission  of^  ihe  l'ni\crsity 
administration,  "student  (\ia  elec- 
tion i,  tiustee  and  (ieneral  Assem- 
My  approxal   loi**liie  i)ro|eLt. 

The  Daily  Tar  Heel 

The  official  jintteru  pubhcatiun  uf  tbt 
Pubhcations  Hoard  ot  the  University  of 
North  Carolina,  wlu-re  it  iS  published 
daily  except  Monday  and  examinatior 
ard  vacation  ptriods  and  summer  tenns 
Entered  as  second  class  matter  in  tht 
post  oifice  in  fhapcl  Hill,  N.  C,  undei 
the  Act  oi  March  8,  1870.  Subscriplioc 
rates:  mailed,  $4  per  year,  S2  50  a  semes 
ter;  delivered.  $6  a  year,  $3.50  a  seme» 
ter. 


Editor 


FRED  POWLEDGE' 


Vlanaging  Editor 


iSewg  Editor 


CHARLIE  SLOAN 
_.   NANCY  HILL 


Biir.iness   .Manager 


BILL  BOB  PLEL 


iports  Editor 


LARRY  CHEEK 


EFjITORIAL  staff  —  Woody  Sears, 
Frank  Crowther,  Barry  Winston,  David 
.Mundy,  George  Pfingst,  Ingrid  flay, 
Cortland  F^dv.ards,  Paul  McCauley, 
Bobbi  Smith. 


VFAVS  STAFF-  Clarke  Jones.  Ray  Lime- 
er,  Joan  .Moore.  Pringle  Pipkin.  Ann-i 
Drake.  Edith  .MacKinnon.  Wally  Kuralt, 
Mary  Alys  Voorhees.  Graham  Snyder, 
Billy  Barnes.  .Neil  Bass.  Gary  Nichols, 
Page  Bernstein.  Peg  Humphrey.  Phyllis 
Mauitsbyv       Ben  Taylor 

BUSINESS  STAFF— Rosa  Moore,  Johnnj 
Whitaker,  Dick  Leavilt,  Dick  Sirkin. 


SPORTS  STAFF:  Bill  King.  .Jim  Purks, 
Jimmy  Harper.  Dave  Wible.  Charley 
Howson. 


Staff  Photographer 
Librarian 


Norman  Kantor 
Sue    GishniT 


Siih>irription   Manager 
Advertising  Manager 
Circulation  .Manager 


Dale  Staley 
Fred  Kalzip 
Charlie  Holt 


Night  Editor 
Night  News  Editor 
Proof  Header  


Graham  Snyd^T 

Fred  Powledge 
Waily  Kurait 


(  ided  politv  on  student  aeli\ilies. 
There  is  ronsideiahle  doubt  thai 
tlie  (ouiuil  was  the  torrect  place 
to  ask  hir  adminisiraiixf  approxal 
ol   the  project. 

J  he  (oinuil.  alter  heariii;;  lesti-- 
iiion\  Iroiu  MaL;il|  and  none  Iroui 
the  pla'u's  hac  ker».  delivered  its 
sriitiiKe:  (.uiltv.  .No  (hame  lor  a 
siudciii    \ote  iin    the    lmildin<^. 

Here  was  an  extelleut  examj>le 
ol  >iudent  iniiiati\e.  diretted  and 
led  In  a  lew  student  le:iders.  hac  k- 
ed  1)\  main  more  thinkiuL";  stu- 
dents. Ihe  oiiK  Haw  was  that  the 
members  ol  the  (;<Miiuil  <»n  .Stu- 
dent .MTairs  didn't  teel  a  new  stu- 
dent union  biiildinj;  is  necessary 
.' t   this  lime. 

Why?  ;;' 

The  answer  (ouidn't  be  the  hike 
in  student  activities  lees.  That 
would  be  endorsed  or  rejected  hy 
the  students  themsehes.  in  a  camp- 
us c'leclion.  \u(\  the  I'liiversity 
hasn  t  been  leelin;^  too  bad  alniut 
iaisinj4  dormitory  rent  to  p;iy  icir 
new  dormitories  that  aie  more  thau 
.1  yeai  oxerdue  and  that  prcjmise 
to  be  at  least  two  years  in  the 
luturc. 

The  I'liiversity  hasn't  hestitaied 
about  raisinj^  virtually  every  other 
lee  that  is  tacked  on  the  lM)ti«)ni 
ol  the  student's  bill.  It  has  j>leetid- 
ly  lou<i[ht  for  the  new  dormitories 
(whit  h  aren't  here),  and  it  happily 
raised  dormitory  rent  so  rauch 
that  it  is  actually  cheaper  to  live 
in   town. 

lint  let  the  students  themselves 
projjose  someLhiiv^  new.  some- 
thiuf^  new.  somethinj^  lar-re;  vhing. 
soinethiiij.;   that  requires  initiative; 

and  the  scpieic  h   is  a])plied. 

*  *  * 

.All  this  makes  it  iiuieasin^K 
dillicult  lor  us  to  believe,  wlti^ 
the  prevailing  South  Uuildin|^ 
winds,  that  the  students  I'n  general 
have  piloted  student  jiovermueftt 
into  a  crisis.  , 

It  makes  it  consideiably  easier 
loi  us  to  believe  that  tlvere  h  9 
sev  ei  e  c ;  ,e  oi  doldrinns  up  in  South 
Uuiidinu. 


Abolish  The  Honor  System? 


Dave  Mundy 

Abolish  the  'Honor  System?" 
Such  a  suggistion  will  be  greet- 
ed with  aslnaishmeut  and  dis- 
agreement, or  ignored  as  liie 
'honor  system"  itself  is  ignored 
h\    many   stuU?nis. 

Tliis  so-calkMJ  "h  noi-  .sy.slem." 
part  of  the  touted  "Carolina  way 
.  i  lo.  iiiu  aev-rilioLss  bc.ome 
a  hypocrisy  -  laden  shibboleth. 
With  it  most  of  the  students  and 
faculty  have  for  years  chosen  to 
blind  themselves  to  the  realities 
of  student  behavior. 

It  was.  uncloubtjclly,  f  unded 
on  good  intentions;  students 
should,  as  a  matter  of  course,  be 
trusted  to  behave  themselves. 
Many  sincere  and  able  people, 
inciubitably.  have  d  v.ited  great 
amounts  of  time  and  energy  to 
the  working  of  the  "hono.r  sys- 
tem." 

But     tht     administration     of 
rults    and    th*    punishmont    of 
offenders  should  be  carried  out 
with  justice     and     efficienciry. 
The  "honor  system"  fails  on  all 
counts. 
In  purpc)se  the  system  is.  grant- 
ed, good.  It  eases  the  burden  of 
the     University     administration, 
and  at  the  same  time  removes  a 
possible    cause    of    student    com- 
plaint   against    "the    administra- 
tion." It  may  even  give  some  peo- 
ple a  sense  of  responsibility,  but 
that  remains  ta  be  demonstrated. 
None    of    the    other  attributes 
a.scrib^il  the  "honor  .system"  are 
in     that     respect     unique.   They 
could   be  ascribed   to  almost   any 
system  of  rule  enforcement. 
In  effect  the  "honor  sy stern' 
seems  designed  to  provide   re- 
ward for  hypocrisy  and  dishori- 
esty.  and  thus  penalize  anyone 
who  would   abide  by     all     the 
rules. 
Does     this    central     institution 
of  the  "honor  system."  the  hon- 
or council,  dispense  justice  ade- 
quately?   F'ar    from    it.    Students' 
very   futures     are     on     occasion 
placed  in  the  hands  of  fellow  stu- 
dents  who.   while    well-intention- 
ed, have   little   or  no  knowledge 
of   the   rules  of   evidence,  of   the 
administration  of  justice,  or,  ap- 
parently, of  the  rules  themselves. 
A     faculty     council     could     do 
a   far  more  adequate  job   of  ad- 
ministering the  rules  with  some 
degree  of  ju.stice. 

:::  »  * 

Even  aside  from  the  instances 
where  the  honor  council  may 
make  mistakes  in  the  administra 
tion  of  justice,  consider  the  num- 
ber of  instances  where  rule.>;  are 
broken,  even  by  council  members 
thcntselvt's.  and  no  action  is 
taken.  Two  of  these  most  flagrant 
instances  involve  drinking  and 
athletic   passbooks. 

Everyone  knows  that  there 
is  a  trustee  rule  against  the 
possession  or  use  of  aUholic 
beverages  by  students  of  thf 
University.  Have  any  honor 
council  members  ever  taken  a 
drink?  Have  they  ever  reported 
any  of  their  "brothers"  to  the 
honor  council?  The  very  idea 
sounds  ludicrous,  if  not  down- 
right funny.  Ridiculous  as  rules 
n»ay  be,  the  fact  that  "every- 
one" ignores  them  does  not  in- 
validate them. 

Everyone  who  can  read  knows 
that  athletic  passbooks  are  not 
transferable.    Were    rules    to    be 


enforced,  each  basketball  game 
would  pr  )vide  dozens  of  cases. 
Only  a  fraction  of  the  vipU- 
tions  are  actually  reported  to 
the  council.  A  system  which  has 
such  effects  is  certainfy  not  ^n 
efficient  one.  For  th^f  reaspn 
^an$   it   should   be   abolished 


and  replaced  by  a  system  of 
rule  enforcement  which  would 
provide  justice. 

Even  fcr  the  r^'ported  cases 
justice  is  uncertain,  when  the 
composition  of  th?  council  is 
considered. 

Worrst   of  all.  the  council  en- 


gage>  in  this  selective  enforce- 
ment of  the  rules.  If  they  suspend 
a  person  from  school  because  he 
breaks  a  rule  and  cheats  on  a 
quiz,  why  don't  they  take  similar 
action  against  people  who  get 
drunk,  or  make  use  of  other 
peopls's  pa.ssbooks?   Why? 


•  •  • 

'Coiwfe  On,  Old  Boy  —  Let's  See  Your  New  Tricks' 


m  \: 


•«W^v**'„.'-.., 


v:».-.;^^.:/-: 


PROSPECT  &  RETROSPECT: 


Segregation  In  The  Dormitories 


Neil  Ba$$.^;  ^X 


The  colunin  in  Tuesday's  I>aily 
Tar  Heel  entitled  "Gridders" 
Dorm  May  be  Noi.sy"  was  good, 
but  failed  lo  hit  the  problem's 
crux,  we  feel. 

It  is  no  established  fact  that 
f:jotballers  are  more  noi.sy  than 
other  students.  But  more  import- 
ant, should  any  specific  student 
yroup  get  pr<'lerential  trcatn\ent 
by   the   administrati   n? 

Footballers  lead  a  strenuous 
life,  to  be  sure;  but  if  they  are 
given  a  housing     area     all     to 
themselves,  wouldn't  it  be  valid 
foi   the  basketball  team  to  ask 
for  separate  quarters? 
And    couldn't    the    track    t3am 
and    tlie    Diak'ctic     .Senate      and 
the  Chess  Club  just  as  legitimate 
ly  ask  for  a  specific  housing  area? 
What    we're    driving    at    is    this; 
The    campus    community    should 


never  bi'  compartmentaliied  and 
.segmented! 

One  campus  organi'ialion  has 
been  created  to  promote  better 
feeling  between  fraternity  and 
n^n-fraternity  men  on  campus — 
the  Order  of  the  Grail. 

Now  will  it  become  necessary 
to  create  an  organization  to  pro- 
mote a  bi'tti'r  working  relation- 
ship between  lootball  players  and 
non-lootball  players,  track  men 
and  non-track  men,  and  so  on 
down  the  line? 

,  We  are  sure  that  Carolina's 
tradition  of  housing  classes, 
rich.  p:)or.  etc.  all  together  with- 
out prejudice  or  preferential 
treatment  is  in  danger. 

Eventually  even  freshmen  may 
be  stuck  into  one  dormitory  and 
handed  b?anies  as  is  the  case  at 
Duke. 

To  the  administration:  let's 
not  segmentalized  the  campus. 


We're  too  proud  of  our  camp- 
us community  to  create  .segments 
and  split  it. 

This  isn't  disagreement  day, 
but  we  feel  we  must  also  disagree 
with  the  edit;>rial  ''Assumptions 
.-Vbout  Honor"  in  Tuesday's  pap- 
er. 

The  editorial  writer  was  primar- 
ily and  legitimately,  we  feel, 
criticizing  the  judiciary  bodies 
for  failing  to  report  their  actions 
to  this  paper.  But  insinuation 
that  data  was  escaping  from 
judiciary  members  themselves  is 
not  valid  per  se,  it  is  felt.  The 
data,  names,  etc..  is  escaping 
more  from  convicted  non-serious 
oflenders  than  from  the  council 
itself,  wc  contend. 

Students,  whether  they  have 
had  experience  with  the  judic- 
iary or  not.  must  take  honor  more 
s3riously  if  student  self-gqverQ- 
ment  is  tj  survive.-       .:     , 


Pogo 


MlNP  IP  I  iOOKtO 
HOOP? 


By  Walt  Kelly 

MV.'tMi^  I^n'TA  YlT't&  A] 

GRl6UE/-TOEpue,  l/i46AS4#l 

$  IT?  mATi&/rP/  OUfif/M! 

»_,^-r>-.— ^<  TMAT»  WHAT 
ITI$!-A«7 

,^  ,  SMOULONTSB 


In  Russia: 
Indoctrination 

Radio  Free  Europe 

special    lo    The  Daily    Tat    Heel 

MUNICH— Under  the  title  "Nurture  a  Worthy 
Youngsr  Generation,"  M.  Tsutskov,  Russian  director 
of  the  trade  union  representing  higher  education 
and  scientific  institutions,  has  called  for  more  ac- 
tive participation  of  union-members  in  the  task  of 
student  indoctrination. 

Tsutskov  recalled  that  the  party  and  government 
have  recently  adopted  a  number  of  important  de- 
crees designed  to  effect  a  basic  reorganization  of 
the  work  of  Soviet  higher  educational  institutions, 
which  have  a  total  enrollment  of  2  million  stu- 
dents. 

However,  he  complained,  this  reorganization  has 
so  far  been  put  into  practice  slowly.  For  one  thing, 
students  are  overloaded  with  classroom  obligations 
and  homework  assignments.  Insufficient  attention 
)s  being  given  to  the  problem  of  on-the-job  train- 
ing- 

Tsutskov  made  clear  in  his  article  that  the  main 
(JiiFficulty  lies  with  students  who  are  not  sufficient- 
ly heeding  vc\  admonition  by  the  Party  Congress: 
"Although  the  thesis  of  the  possibility  for  peace- 
iful  coexistence  i$  absolutely  valid,  it  does  not  less- 
en the  need  to  battle  against  'bourgeois  ideology' 
ind  remnants  of  capitalism  in  peoples'  minds.  The 
stiite  has  not  fought  hard  enought  against  students 
who  have  fallen  under  the  influence  of  bourgeois 
propaganda  and  who  have  deliberately  expressed 
false  and  politically  unhealthy  views." 

To  prove  his  point.  Tsutskov  pointed  to  the 
st.ory  of  Comrade  Gorelik.  a  student  at  the  Lenin- 
grad Institute  of  Precision  Mechanics  and  Optics, 
who  had  "not  accepted  criticism  of  youth  organi- 
zations in  its  proper  spirit,  spoke  of  suppression  of 
the  students'  creative  iniative." 

At  Moscow  University.  "Crude  and  slanderous 
attacks  on  the  Soviet  press,  borrowed  from  the 
bourgeois  press,"  were  allower  to  get  into  the  wall- 
newspaper  "Tribune."  (This  appears  to  be  indirect 
confirmation  of  press  reports  that  students  were 
posting  foreign  news  about  Hungary  on  the  premises 
of  the  University.) 

"In  recent  times,"  Tsutskov  continued,  "we 
have  repeatedly  witnessed  the  fact  that  part  of  the 
young  students  are  deriving  pleasure  from  vulgar 
bourgeois  literatures.  ft>rmalistic  art  and  wild  jazz 
music." 

The  day  when  allowances  are  disbursed  has  be- 
come a  "day  of  traditional  drinking-bouts."  And 
referring  once  more  to  the  Leningrad  Technological 
Institute,  Tsutskov  reveals  that  two  students  there 
who  were  arrested  for  a  "drunken  debauch"  not 
cnly  did  not  receive  condemnation  from  the  stu- 
dents' council  but  actually  were  given  good  ref- 
erences. 

Tsutskov  appealed  to  trade-union  organizations 
to  combat  this  situation  with  "painstaking  indoc- 
trihational  work."   He  noted  that  the  problem   is 
jlarticularjy  complicated  by  the  fact  that  most  stu- 
df hti  have  never  had   jobs  and  "have  never  ex- 
perienced  the  beneficent   influence  of   labor." 
In  this   last   connection.   "Kompravda"   (Russian 
periodical)  reported  a  recently  held  plenum  of  the 
Moscow   City   Committee   of  the   Komsomol,   which 
included    specially    invited    Komsomol    secretaries 
and   "activists"  from     educational     institutions     as 
well  as  directorij  and  faculty  members. 

The  participants  were  "unanimously"  in  favor 
of  drawing  students  into  "useful  public  work"  at 
Moscow  enterprises  and  construction  sites  during 
th?  forthcoming  holidays.  The  plenum  supported 
a  suggestion  to  create  no  fewer  than  500  student 
brigades    for    rendering    of    assistance    to    Moscow 

builders. 

*  *  *         , 

"Bulgaria  is  purging  universities  and  youth  or- 
ganizations of  rebellious  students,"  according  to 
the  Sofia  correspondent  of  a  Warsaw  newspaper. 
The  correspondent  wrote  in  the  issue  of  Szmildar 
Mlodych  that  at  least  300  students  have  been  ousted 
or  marked  for  ouster  for  "antiproletarian  attitudes" 
and    "hostile    utterances    against    the    Communists 

system." 

*  9  ♦ 

A  Hungarian  writer  summarizes  feelings  of  in- 
tellectuals regarding  rejection  of  Communism: 
"Not  only  was  there  a  stagnation  in  their  fields, 
but  a  n>ovement  backward  under  the  Communists. 
We  strongly  objected  to  hearing  only  one  side  of 
the  arguments,  to  having  our  opinions  manufact- 
ured for   us,  to  not  being   permitted   to  have   an 
original  thought  of  our  own." 
"It  was,"  the  escapee-writer  .said,  "the  Commun- 
ist attempt  to  kill  individual  initiative,  to  prevent 
creative  thought,  to  suppress  the  natural  expression 
of  the  human  mind  that  caused  Communism  to  lose 
its  battle    with    the    intellectuals   of    Hungary." 

He  predicted  that  Communism  in  Hungary — 
and  elsewhere — is  doomed  to  eventual  failure.  "If 
a  regime  is  built  on  a  foundation  that  suppresses 
individual  thought  and  expression,"  he  said.  "Then 
that  regime  is  bound  to  fall.  It  is  inevitable." 

YOU  Said  It:  Don't 
Kill  Student  Courts 

Editor: 

If  the  administration,  in  this  case  Sam  Magill. 
thinks  the  student  government  is  in  a  crisis  right 
now,  let  them  wonder  what  will  happen  a  few 
years  from  now  after  South  Building  bogwigs  have 
taken  over  the  student  honor  courts. 

That  is  obvously  what  Magill  was  hinting  at.  It 
was  hinted  at  also  last  year  by  Fred  H.  Weaver. 

The  students  should  take  fair  warning  from 
these  ill  winds.  They  should  strive  to  make  the 
honor  system   stronger  and  mere  deeply  effective. 

But  I  think  the  people  up  in  South  Building 
should  consider  the  cau.se  of  student  freedom, 
something  they  would  kill  if  they  took  over  the 
courts.  Too  many  good  people  and  too  many  hard 
hours  of  work  have  gone  into  the  court  system, 
and  m:!st  of  it  has  come  from  the  students  them- 
selves— some  of  them  who,  because  of  their  train- 
ing at  Carolina,  have  become  nationally-known 
figures. 

Name  Withheld   By   Re«|uest 


CANTERBU 

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|57 


PRIOAY,   FEBRUARY. 8,  1957 


THE  DA«.Y  TAR  HEEL 


PAGE  THREE 

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Covering  The  University  Campus 


CANTERBURY  CLUB 

The     Canterbury     Club 


will  begin  at  6  p.m.  Sunday  at  the 
supper    Episcopal  Parish  House.  A  discus- 


^  WORLD'S  GREAIESI  NOVEL 
NOW  ON  THE  SCREEN 


iuAMCAMPeaL- KAREN  SHAM 
AMIAEKBERC 


NOW  PLAYING 


sr/tecttr^ 


HOURS   OF    SHOWS 
1 :0a— 4:32— «:09 

PRICES    THIS    ATTRACTION 
ADULTS  85c      CHILDREN  2Sc 

NOW   PLAYING 


Carolina 


FROM  THE  YEAR'S  MOST  EXCITING  NOVEL 
COME  THE  MOST  EXCITING  PEOPLE  THE 
SCREEN  HAS  EVER  KNOWN! 


COSURRING 


DEAN  JAGGER  •  KEEKAN  \»VYNN  •  JULIE  LONDON 
JOANNE  GILBERT  and  ED  Vv^'NN  with  jim  backus  •  russ  morgan 


LATE  SHOW  SAT.  NITE! 

Regular     Showing 

STARTS 
SUNDAY 


DAILY    CROSSWORD 


.ACROSS 

'     1   Pointing 
figure 
5  Cut  finely 
9  City  (Viet- 
nam ( 
10  Pulla 

12  Herbs  of 
rose  family 

13  Indian 
i  (Mex.J 
in   Meadow 

15  Enemy  scout 

16  Credit 
(abbr.) 

17  On  the  way 
( 2  wds. ) 

■20  Greek  letter 
21   Arid 
.22.  Musical 

instrument 
23  Particle 
26.  Short-billed 
raiLs 
■^,27.  Merit 

28.  Little  girl 

29.  Polynesian 
drink 

30.  Woods 
34.  Smallest 

state  (abbr.  1 

35  Splicing  tool 

36  Bind 
37.  Come  in 
39.  A  job 

41  Apportion.s 

42  Ventilated 
43.  Sediment 
44   Require 

DOWN 
1   Port 

2.  Near  (poet.) 
3  Not 
(prefix) ' 


4  Underworld 
god 

5  Trimming  of 
a  scabbard 

6  Foggy 

7  Not  in 
8.  Guitar 

picks 
9  Robust 
11.  Fragments 
15.  Pig  pen 
18  Norse  god 

19.  Vase 

20.  Audience 
22.  Stockings 
23   Equipped 


an  aaaii  Edsi^ 

[iL-^.'^u  ae  HUB 
ssaHas  naHii 


24.  Gully- 
like 
de- 
pres- 
sions 

25.  Constel- 
lation 

26.  Title 
Of 
respect 

28  Turf 
30.  Fore- 
most 
31    Shop 

32.  Weary 

33.  Plant  ovule       40  Hasten 


Yeiterd*y't  Aatw*» 
35  Dropped 

38  Fish  (Jap  ) 

39  Is  able 


jion  will  follow  oo  "The  Theology 
of  Martin  Buber"  by  the  chaplain 
and  a  panel  of  students  ending 
with  an  evening  prayer  in  the 
chapel  at  8  p.m. 

W.A.A.  TABLE  TENNIS 

First  round  matches  of  the  table 
tennis  tournament  must  be  played 
by  Feb.  18,  according  to  Sue  Gich- 
ner,  manager  of  the  tournament. 
There  are  20  matches  to  be  played 
by  this  deadline.  Entries  have 
been  asked  to  consult  the  bulletin 
board  in  the  Women's  Gym  for  the 
schedule  of  their  matches. 
SCHOLARSHIP  HOLDERS 

Ml  holders  of  University  SchPl- 
arships  and  $cholar:>4iips  paid 
through  the  Student  Aid  Office 
each  semester  have  been  asked  to 
come  to  that  office  diuring  this 
week  to  pick  up  scholarship  tickets 
or  checks  for  the  spring  semester. 
WUNC 

Todays  schedule  for  WUNC,  the 
University's  non-commercial  FM 
radio  station,  ia-  as  follows: 

7:00  Through  the  Looking  Glass. 

7:30  This  is  a  Friendly  World. 

7:45  Patterns  of  Thought. 
8:00  Let's  Listen  to  Opera. 
10:30  News. 

10:35  Evening  Masterwork. 
11:30  Sign  Off. 
USHERS  NEEDED 

Anyone  desiring  to  usher  for 
the  Carolina  Playmakers  produc- 
tion of  ■"Hrigadoon"  Mar.  1-3.  has 
been  asked  to  contact  Charlie  Bar- 
rett at  80381  or  the  Dramatic  Art 
office  in  Saunders  Hall  or  Aber- 
nathy  Hall. 
EVENING   SKETCH  CLASS 

The  Evening  Sketch  Class  will 
be  held  again  this  semester  in 
Person  Hall  Art  Gallery  for  towns- 
people and  students  interested  in 
drawing  for  pleasure.  Registration 
and  the  first  drawing  period  will 
be  held  Feb.  13,  7-9  p.m.  The  fee 
of  $13  will  include  all  materials 
and  models.  The  class  will  run  for 
13  weeks  and  the  instructor  will 
be  Robert  Howard  of  the  Art  Fac- 
ulty. 
MODELS  NEEDED 

Any  students,  men  or  women,  in- 
terested in  modeling  for  art  class- 
es call  2801  or  go  by  Person 
Hall  Art  Gallery  and  list  his 
name.  The  pay  is  one  dollar  per 
hour.  Bathing  suits  are  worn.  The 
time  varies  from  two  to  four  hours 
per   class   period. 

WUNC-TV 

The  WUNC-TV  schedule  for  to- 
day is  as  follows: 
12:45  Music. 

1:00  Today  on  the  Farm. 

1:30  Engineering  Visit. 

2:00  Sign   Off.  / 

5:45  Music. 

6:00  New^- 

6:15  Sports. 

6:30  Children's  Corner. 

7:00  Biological  Brain.storms. 

7:30  The  Humanities. 

8:00  Know  Your  Schools. 

8:30  Prelude. 

9:00  Hospitality.  . 

9:30  Petroleum. 
10:00  Final   Edition. 
10:05     Sign  Off. 


Attention 

(Continued  from  pagre  1) 

cuts    from    class    sessions    during 
one  semester. 


2.  When  a  student  has  unex- 
cused  absences  from  two  class 
sessions,  his  instructor  shall  in- 
form him. 

3.  In  the  event  of  more  than 
three  unexcused  absences,  the  stu- 
dent will  be  dropped  from  the 
course. 


Jam  Session  Planned  1  Symposium  dn 

PublicAffairs 
Is  Discussed 


By  Ail  Stbrs  Thursday 


Director  of  Graham  Memorial, 
Linda  Mann,  has  announced  that 
Dick  Gable's  All  Stars  will  pre- 
sent an  informal  jam  session  in 
the  Main  Lounge  of  Graham  Mem- 
orial  next   Thursday  night. 

Admission  to  the  session  is 
free  and  it  will  last  from  8:30  to 
10  p.m. 

Mardi  Gras  Chairman  Jim  Arm- 
strong said  that  the  band  will  be 
the  third  attraction  offered  dur- 
ing the  Carolina  Mardi  Gras  cele- 
bration set  for  next  weekend. 

The  Mardi  Gras.  according  to 
Armstrong,  is  a  three  day  event 
to  celebrate  the  25th  anniversary 


of  Graham  Memorial. 

On  Friday,  Feb.  15  the  Mitchell- 
Ruff  Duo  will  present  a  concert, 
and  on  Saturday,  Feb.  16  Louis 
Armstrong  will  play  for  a  formal 
dance  and  a  concert. 

The  dance  is  given  thru  the 
combined  efforts  of  the  Germans 
Club  and  GMAB.  Students  wish- 
ing to  attend  the  Louis  Armstrong 
conceit  in  the  afternoon  must 
have  Germans  Club  bids.  Germans 
Club  members  will  not  have  to 
buy  a  ticket  to  attend  the  dance 
Saturday  night. 

The  tickets  are  $2.00  and  may 
be  obtained  at  the  Informtion  desk 
in  Graham  Memorial  and  in  the 
"Y",  Kemp's  and  through  Inter- 
dormitory  Council  representatives. 


WASHINGTON  — ^*—  The  State 
Dept.  said  Thursday  any  new  ship- 
ments of  arm.v  by  Russia  to  Egypt 
"could  be  regarded  as  a  violation" 
of  a  United  Nations  resolution 
against  putting  weapons  into  the 
area. 

The    United    States    and    other 
Western  governments  have  receiv- 
ed  reports  that   the  Soviets   have' 
resumed  arms  shipments  to  Egypt ! 
since  the  fighting  there  in  Novem-  i 
ber.  I 

Press  Officer  Lincoln  White  said  j 
at  the  State  Dept.  that  on  Nov.  2  j 
the  UN  General  Assembly  adopted  | 
a  resolution  by  a  vote  of  64-5  ask- 
ing all  nations  to  "refrain  from  in- 1 
troucing  military  goods  in  the  area 
of  hostilities."  Russia  voted  for  I 
this  resolution.  . 

White  said  the  United  States 
would  consider  any  such  arms 
shipments  as  those  which  have 
been  reported  to  be  "poo-sibly  in 
violation"  of  the  resolution.  He 
also  said  delivery  of  arms  would 
"not  contribute  to  the  restoration 

of  peace  and  stability  in  the  area,    j 

I 
I 

WASHINGTON  —  '-3  —  Thej 
United  States  announced  Thursday  | 
it  will  open  negotiations  with  Com-  ' 
munist  Poland  soon  on  that  coun-  | 
try's  proposal  to  borrow  American 
dollars  and  buy  American  goods.  I 
The  idea  is  to  shore  up  Poland's 
newly-won  independence  of  Rus  ^ 
^ia.  i 

The  State  Dept.  said  the  Polish  | 
government    has    l>een    invited    to 
hold  economic  talks  in  Washington  i 
and  has  accepted. 

The  Warsaw  government  hopes 
to  get   trade  credits  here  totaling 
about    $100    million    at    least.     It 
wants    these    to    finance    the    pur- ' 
chase   of   lurgently    needed   cotton. : 
modern  farm  machinery,  new  min- 1 
ing  equipment,  fats  and  oils,'chem-  j 
ical  fertilizer  and  grains  for  cattle 
ioo6.  I 

WASHINGTON  — (>P»—  Kijttg  Saud  ' 
of  Saudi  Arabia  said  Thursday  > 
"there  is  no  real  danger  of  Com- 
muni.'^m  in  the  Middle  East."  But  i 
at  the  same  time,  he  said  Presi-  \ 
dent  Eisenhower's  anti-aggression  | 
program  for  that  area  is  "a  good 
proposal  worthy  of  consideration." 

"The    Arabs    know    how    to    re-  i 
main  firm,  "  Saud  said. 

WASHINGTON— (AP)— An  en- j 
voy  from  Hungary's  freedom  fight- 1 
ers  testified  Thursday  they  will  j 
rise  again — aqd  soon — in  a  fight  | 
to  the  death  "if  the  United  Nations 
and  the  West  will  not  help." 


English  Club 
Guests  Of  Duke 
Club  Tonight 

The  English  Club  will  be  guests 
of  the  Duke  English  Club  at  a 
meeting  tonight  at  8:15  p.m.  in 
Room  207  of  Duke's  Flowers 
Building.  The  Flowers  Building 
adjoins  the  west  side  of  the  Duke 
chapel. 

Richard  Walser.  professor  of 
English  at  N.  C.  State  and  authori- 
ty on  N.  C.  poets,  will  speak  to  the 
joint  meeting  on  Thomas  Wolfe. 

Club  members  who  have  extra 
places  in  their  cars  or  who  de- 
sire transportation  to  Duke  have 
been  asked  to  sign  the  list  on  the 
bulletin  board  in  Bingham  203  or 
303  or  get  in  touch  with  Ray  Mc- 
Knight.  * 


Three  Students 
Will  Face  Trial 
Last  Of  Month 

Special  to  The  Daily  Tar  Heel 
GREENSBORO— Three  UNC  stu- 
dents will  go  on  trial  here  late 
this  month  in  Guilford  Superior 
Court  on  charges-  of  crimes  against 
nature. 

A  grand  jury  this  wek  returned 
true  bills  against  the  .students. 
Fifteen  other  men  will  also  face 
trial  on  the  charges. 

The  three  students,  all  from  High 
Point,  are  Jimmie  Dale  Tedder, 
sophomore,  601  Woodbury  Ave.; 
Marvin  L.  Williams,  freshman,  405 
Woodrow  Ave.  and  William.  B. 
Bailiy,  junior,  618  Gatewood  Ave. 


Playmakers 

(Continued  from  page   i) 

Maggie,  who  loves  Harry  in  vain. 

Miss  Louise  Fletcher  of  Birm- 
ingham. Ala.,  as  Jane,  and  Morgan 
Jackson  of  Charlotte  as  Frank, 
the  bartender,  will  represent  the 
America  Tommy  and  Jeff  left  be- 
hind. 

Vinson  .McNeill  of  Chapel  Hill, 
Peter  B  O'Sullivan  of  Valhalla, 
N.  Y.,  and  Dick  Newdick  of  Au- 
gusta, Me.,  will  portray  other 
members  of  the  Scottish  town  with 
Dee  and  .Mike  Casey  and  Bobbie 
Bounds  of  Chapel  Hill  as  Brida- 
doon  youngsters. 

Final  selection  of  the  singing 
and  dancing  choruses  will  be  an- 
nounced in  a  few  days. 

Reserved  seats  will  got  on  sale 
to  season  ticket  holders  Feb.  15 
and  to  the  general  public  Feb.  20. 


CLASSIFIEDS 


FOR  SALE:   HOUSETRAILER;   35 
j      feet.  2   bedrooms,    shower.   1950 
j      Iron    wood.    Taylors   Trailer   Ct. 
Airport   Rd.,  J.  L.  Lane. 


CHEMISTRY  PROFESSOR; 


FOR  SALE:  1954  27*  HOUSE- 
trailer.  I'i.  miles  North  of  Cha- 
pel Hill  on  Airport  Road.  Sloan's 
Trailer  Park.  Maurice  L.  Clegg. 


Dr.  Arthur  Roe  Heddk 
Faculty  Club  For  Year 


Plans  for  the  1358  Carolina 
Symposium  on  Public  Affairs  were 
discussed  Wednesday  afternoon 
by  the  Interim  Committee. 

Faculty  and  student  members 
of  the  committee  include  Fred 
Cleaveland,  faculty  advisor,  Jim 
Exum.  student  chairman,  Claude 
Shotts,  George  Nicholson.  David 
Basile,  Russell  Grumman,  Luther 
Hodges,  Charlie  Dean,  Stanley 
Shaw,   and  Peg  Humphrey. 

Last  year  the  Symposium 
brought  to  the  campus  such 
speakers  as  James  Reston  of  the 
New  York  Times.  Dr.  Ralph  E. 
Lapp,  physicist.  Dr.  Frank  Grah- 
am, former  UNC  president  now  at 
the  United  Nations,  and  Dr.  Ralph 
Bunche,  recipient  of  the  1950 
Nobel  Prize  for  Peace. 


JAZZ  AT  TURNA6ES 

Saturday  afternoon,  2:00,  Turn- 
ages  Cabin  in  Durham. — Jazz  by 
Dick  Gables  "All  Stars."  Beer 
Served. 


SUMMER   HELP  WANTED:   MAN 
and  Wife  or  two  bays.  Operate  j 
amusement    business    for    sum- 1 
mer.  Mountain  resort.  $35  week- 1 
ly,  {ree  living  quarters.  See  Dan  j 

Sherill,   Taylor's   TYailor   Park,    i 

. I 

LOST:  MAROON  AND   BLACK ' 

Jacket  left  in  Carroll  Hall  Sa- 
turday night.  Reward  offered. 
Return  Id  Mangura  Dorm  or  to 
the    Pilam    House. 

NIGHT  WAITER  WANTED  —  4 
nights  per  week.  Tar  Heel  Sand- 
wich Shop. 


Dr.  Arthur  Roe.  Kenan  profess- 
or of  chemistry,  was  elected  this 
week  to  head  the  University  Facul- 
ty Club  during  the  coming  year. 

Other  new  officers  are  Dr.  Joel 
Carter  of  the  Music  Dept..  vice 
president:  Dr.  Sydenham  B.  Alex- 
ander, Division  of  Health  Affairs, 
secretary;  and  Dr.  Maurice  Whit- 
tinghill,   Zcology  Dept.,   treasurer. 

The  Faculty  Club  elects  a  seven- 
man  bo^^rd  of  governors,  wbict^  in 
turn  selects  the  officers.  New 
board  members  are  Edgar  Alden, 
Music  Dept.;  Dr.  Gordon  Black- 
well.  Institute  for  Research  in  So- 
cial Science;  Dr.  Alexander  and 
Dr.   Whittinghill. 

Retiring  board  numbers  are  Dr. 
Alexander  Heard,  Political  Science 
Dept.,  who  is  outgoing  president; 
Dr.  Andrew  Horn,  recently  resign- 
ed as  UNC  librarian,  outgoing  sec- 
retary; Herbert  Baer,  Law  School, 
outgoing  treasurer;  and  Earl  Slo- 
cum.  Music  Dept. 

Dr.  Roe  is  chairman  of  the  Dept. 


DR.  ROE 

• . .  beads    faculty 

of  the  -Natural  Sciences  and  is  di- 
rector of  the  Institute  of  Natural 
Science,  located  in  Chapel  Hill, 
of  Chemistry  and  of  the  Division 


for  The 

Deeply 

Smitten 

We  Offer  V 

Tliis  Is  My 

Beloved 

In 

Valentine 

Wrapping 

The  Intimate 
Bookshop 

205  E.  Franklin  St. 
Open  Till  10  P.  M. 


WEEKEND  y^ 

FOUNTAIN  FEATURE     ^ 

DELUXE    CHERRY   SUNDAE 
WHITMAN'S  VALENTINE  CANDIES 

Dairylond  Farms 

Glen  Lennox  Phone  9-8851^ 

Plenty  Of  Free  Parking 


college  man's  choice--  : 

"IVY  LEAGUE" 
tuxedo 


This  fraternity  favorite 
features  a  straight 
hanging  coat  with 
natural  minimunk 
padded  shoulders-r- 
Skinner  satin  lapels-^-r 
flap  pockets— center 
vent— and  plain  froni 
unpleated  trousers. 
Imported  lightweight 
worsted  in;"  *" 


BLACK 


$62.50 


SEE    OUR    COMPLETE    LINE    QF 
ACCESSORIES  ...  .^ 

CHAPEL   HILL'S  PORMAL 
WEAR  HEADQUARTERS 


STEVENS  -  SHBPHEM> 


A  Campus-to-Career  Case    History 


Planning  for  growth.  Joe  Hunt  (left)  talks  uith  Jim  Rohmson  (ceiper),  District  Construction  Fore- 
man, and  O.  D.  Frishie,  .Supervising  Repair  Foreman.  In  Jjoe's  di^trici  alone,  600  new  telephones  are 

put  into  sen  ice  every  month,  __  .[^    .  ,..',:.       ..  L    .      .  _  .  ... 

,.     X-     ,^     ■«■  .'.i!-vr  "•?■  i^v'<^'<^">jli- ■■■■■'•  ■.      ■■■;■      '  .-■-->•< 

:r"ril  take  a  gropng^  lompany'' 


70.000  telephoneii  to  keep  in  operation 
, . .  .S20,000.000  >yorth  of  telephone  com- 
pany property  to  watch  over  ...  160  peo- 
ple to  supervise  —  these  are  some  of  the 
salient  facts  about  .loe  Hunt's  present 
job  with  Southwestern  Bell.  He's  a 
District  Plant  Superintendent  at  Tulsa. 
Oklahoma. 

"It's  a  man-sized  job,"  pays  Joe,  \>ho 
graduated  from  Oklahoma  A.  &  M.  in 
1949  as  an  E.E.  "And  it's  the  kind  of  job 
1  was  looking  for  when  I  joined  the  tele- 
phone company, 

"I  wanted  an  engineering  career  that 
would  lead  to  management  responsibili- 


ties.' -Morewer,  I  wanted  that  career  to 
be  vn  a  growing  company,  because  growth 
creates  real  opportunities  to  get  ahead. 

■  ^But  to  take  advantage  of  opportunir 
lie*  as  they,  come  along,  you  must  havjc 
i«ound  training  and  experience.  The  tele- 
phone company  sees  that  you  get  plenty 
of  both.  Really  useful  training,  and  ex- 
perience that  gives  you  know-how  and 
confidence.  Then,  when  bigger  jobs  come 
your  way.  you're  equipj)ed  to  handle  them. 

"If  I  hafi  it  to  do  all  over  again.  I'd 
make  the  s^me  deci.'^ion  about  where  to 
find  a  career.  Now  —  as  then  —  I'll  take 
a  growing  company." 


Joe  Hunt  is  wit|i  SQuthwestern  Bell  Telephofie  Coin- 
pany.  Interesting  career  opportunities  exist  in  other 
Bell  Telephone  Companies,  and  in  Bell  Telephone 
Laboratories,  Western  Electric  and  Sandia  Corpora- 
tion.  Your  placement  officer  pan  give  you  more  infor* 
mation  about  these  companies. 


L*.- 


«««»«W" 


!!«9«««««9ei 


i 
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I 
I 
I 
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M«l  POUR 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


FRIDAY,  FEBRUARY  I,  1»57 


For  The  Swimmers,  Some  Loyal  Support 

A  small  but  loudly  vocal  group  of  campus  swimming  enthusiasts 
are  pushing  vigorously  for  more  support  for  the  unbeaten  Carolina 
swimming  team.  Led  by  coed  Caroline  Hume,  the  little  group  started 
a  petition  calling  for  better  turnouts  at  home  meets  and  more  back- 
ing for  what  looks  like  one  of  the  nation's  best  teams. 

During   the  single  day  the   petition   was  circulated,   some   47 
names  were  affixed  to  it.  The  petition  said  in  part  that  "the  fact 
that   only  a    handful   of   rooters   appears   at  each   meet   proves   it 
takes  an  amazing   team  and  coach   to  maintain   the   fighting   and 
winning  spirit  displayed  at  the  meets  this  year". 
The  petition  i.v  essentially  a  plea  for  the  UNC  students  to  fulfill 
their    'obligation'     and  support   the  unbeaten   swimming  team    by   at 
tendig   every   meet   they   are   able   to. 

This  sentiment  is  a  noble  and  worthy  one,  and  certainly  the 
UNC  swimming  team  is  deserving  of  better  things  than  they  have 
received  in  the  past  in  the  matter  of  student  interest.  But  let's 
face  it.  Swimming  is  a  minor  sport,  and  as  such,  cannot  possibly 
attract  the  crowds,  interest  and  attention  that  is  accorded  to  bas- 
ketball and  football. 

Many  students  on  campus  are  not  interested  in  the  minor  sports, 
and  would  rather  watch  a  losing  football  team  than  a  winning  swim- 
ming team.  And  it  is  impossible  to  blame  them,  for  this  is  their  priv 
i'ege. 

Carolina  has  a  fine  swimming  team,  and  in  a  few  weeks  the 
UNC  campus  will  play  host  to  the  NCAA  Swim  Championships 
with  teams  from  all  over  the  country  taking  part. 

This  will  be  a  good  opportunity  for  students  who  know  next  to 
nothing  about  the  aquatic  sport  to  come  on  out  and  get  a  look  at  the 
best  in  action.  May'oe  they  will  l>e  convinced  that  watching  a  swim- 
ming meet  is  more  interesting  than  they  thought.  But  if  they  go  away 
unimpressed,  who  can  say  nay? 

From  Here  And  There,  Tidbits 

The  presentation  of  a  1957  Cadillac  to  Frank  McGuire  has  report 
edly  been  delayed  until  the  last  game  of  the  sea^-Jn.  It's  been  learned 
that  the  big  figure  behind  the  movement  is  a  Burlington  business  man 
who  contributed  some  S3.000  to  the  kitty. 

Only  one  of  Coach  Jim  Tatum's  footballers  ran  afoul  of  the 
textbooks  last  semester.   He  was  Wally  Vale,  first  string  fullback 
who   has  been   known  to  kick  a  football   a   mile.   Vale   reportedly 
has  left  school  for  good. 
The  Tar  Heel   football  ^hedule   ne.xt   year   is    an    attractive   one 
with  six  home  games  listed.  Local  fans  will  get  a  good  look  at  such 
teams  as  State,  Navy,  Clemson.  Virginia.  Tennessee  and  South  Caro- 
lina. .Notre  Dame  returns  to  the  UNC  schedule  in  '58.  while  Southern 
California  is  set  for  a  couple  of  years  from  now. 

Currently  the  hottest  prospect  on  the  Carolina  track  team  is 
sophomore  sprinter  Jim  Moss.  Moss  ran  away  from  eveiTbody  in  the 
VMl  Relays,  and  his  coaches  say  he  could  rank  with  the  be.->l  if  he 
really  works  at  it. 

Carolina  has  a  quartet  of  milers  on  campus  who  could  easily 
shatter  the  collegiate  four-mile  relay  record  if  they  were  given  a 
chance.    A    combination    of    Jim    Beatty,    Wayne    B»hop,    Everett 
Whatley  and  either  Dave  Scurlock,  Ben  Williams  or  Howard  Kahn 
should  have  little  trouble  smashing  the  old  mark  if  they  could  be 
entered  as  a  team  in  an  AAU  sanctioned  meet.  How  about  giving 
the  boys  a  break.  Coach  Ranson? 
Clemson  basketball  coach  Press  Maravich  thinks  Wake  Forest  has 
the  edge  on  Carolina  in  team  coordination  and  backcourt  men.  but  the 
Tar  Heels  have  the  guns  up  front  in  Pete  Brennan.  Lennie  Roaenbluth 
and  Joe  Quigg.  Overall.  Maravich  thinks  Carolina's  best. 


Tar  Heels,  Duke  Open 
Grid  Drills  Tomorrow 


Grapplers 

Entertain 

Terrapins 

By    RON    MILLIGAN 

Will  Maryland  retain  their  title 
as  ACC  wrestling  champions  or 
will  rising  Carolina  become  the 
new  titlist?  The  answer  to  thus 
question  could  easily  be  given 
this  afternoon  when  the  two  teams 
meet  in  Woollen  Gym  at  4  p.m. 

Both  teams  have  Duke  to  meet 
in  the  future.  Both  teams  have 
already  met  and  defeated  Virgin- 
ia who  has  beaten  Duke  this  sea- 
son. Carolina  beat  Virginia  16  to 
15  while  Maryland  beat  the  Cava- ; 
liers  25  to  9.  This  is  the  only  com- ; 
parison  that  can  be  made  between  ' 
the  Tar  Heels  and  the  Terps  if! 
it  is  comparison  at  all.  j 

Coach  Sam  Barnes  recently 
said;  "I  don't  think  .Maryland  is  I 
as  tough  as  VPI.  Maryland  has 
some  good  individuals,  but  re-  i 
member  we  are  a  lot  stranger  this  I 
yesterday:  "Last  year  Barnes  told  j 
vear  ourselves."  ] 

Maryland's  Coach  Krause  said 
me  that  he  had  a  good  freshman 
team  and  since  he  has  lost  only  one 
match  this  season.  1  believe  him. 
Even  though  we  ran  up  a  big 
score  on  Carolina  last  year,  the 
match  was  really  a  lot  closer  than 
the   score   indicated. " 


Spirits  were  very  high  in  thv  t 
Tar  Heel  dressing  room  yester-  • 
day  afternoon  after  practice.  The ! 
grapplers  seem  confident  and' 
realize  the  importance  of  this' 
match  this  afternoon.  I 

Charlie   Boyette.   winner   of   the  | 
Benjamin    Soloman     Wrestling 
.Award    and    trophy    in    1955    and  i 
Capt.  Bob  Wagner,  winner  of  the 
sambe  award  last     year     will     be 
fighting   their   last   time   at  home  \ 
today   on   the   Carolina   mat.   Both  i 
boys  are  seniors  and  will  certainly 
be  hard  to  replace  next  year.  In- ! 
cidentally.    Boyette    has    been    ac- 1 
cepted  in  the  UNC  Medical  School ; 
and    will    begin   his  studies   there  i 
next  fall.  ' 

The  Maryland  team  arrived  late  I 
i  yesterday  afternoon.  They  used  the  i 
I  gym    for   workouts    last    night    to ; 
'  prepare  for  this  afternoon's  event. 
Last   year   Maryland  had    7    out  | 
I  of   the   ten   ACC  champions.   This 
'  year    they    have      two     of     those 
'■■  champions  back.  They  are  123  lb. 
1  Frank    McHugh    and    heavyweight 
j  Mike  Sandusky.  They  also  have  a 
1955  champion  Rod  Norris.  a   147- 
j  pounder. 

I  In  the  Carolina  lineup  there 
will  be  123  lb.  Henry  Rhyne,  130 
I  lb.  Capt  Bob  Wagner.  137  lb.  Per- 
I  rin  Henderson.  147  lb.  Charlie 
I  Boyette,  157  lb.  Ken  Hoke.  167  lb. 
i  Bill  McGehee.  177  lb.  Dave  At 
j  kinson.  and  heavyweight  Lew 
Hayes. 


Stan  Groll  Dtops  Out  Of  School 


By   LARRY    CHEEK 

Carolina's  number  one  ranked 
Tar  Heels,  currently  running  N. 
C.  State  a  close  race  for  hard 
luck  honors  in  the  ACC.  sutler- 
ed  another  severe  blow  yester- 
day when  it  was  learned  ihal 
sophomore  guard  Stan  Groll  has 
withdrawn  from  school  dm  to 
academic  difficultiea". 

Coach  Frank  McGuire  an- 
nounced yesterday  that  Ciioll 
had  failed  to  qualify  for  future 
play  under  the  University's  sciio 
lastic  regulations,  although  he 
was  still  eligible  by  Conference 
standards. 

Groll  is  the  third  player  Car- 
olina has  lost  since  the  beginning 
of  the  second  semester.  Guard 
Tony  Radovich  used  up  his  cli^i 
bility  after  the  fir..'t  session,  and 
soph  center  Bill  Hathaway  flunk- 


ed out  of  school. 

Groll  would  have  been  the 
back  court  replacement  for  Rad- 
ovich in  the  important  league 
games  to  come.  Junior  speedster 
Kenny  Rosemond  is  now  the  only 
other  guard  remaining  on  the 
UNC  roster  with  the  exception 
of  the  starters.  Tommy  Kearns 
and  Bob  Cunningham. 

The  squad  has  now  been  re- 
duced to  10  men  going  into  the 
seasons  stretch  drive.  The  10 
remaining  are  starters  Lennie 
Rooenbiuth.  Pete  Brennan.  Joe 
Quigg,  Kearns  and  Cunningham, 
and  subs  Danny  Lotz.  Bob  Young, 
Roy  Searcy  and  Gehrmann  Hol- 
land. Young,  an  experienced  sen- 
ior, and  Lotz,  a  promising  sopho- 
more, are  the  leading  reserves. 

Groll  IS  the  sixth  eager  to  be 
lost  since  the  beginning  of  fall 
practice    Oct.    15.    The    list    in- 


cludes Young  and  Frank  Good 
win,  both  suspended  for  discipli- 
nary reasons,  Harvey  Salz.  who 
left  s-chool  because  of  academic 
troubles,  and  Groll,  Radovich 
and  Hathaway.  Young,  of  course, 
has  since  been  reinstated. 

There  has  been  speculation 
that  McGuire  would  turn  to  new- 
ly eligible  sophomore  Ray  Stan- 
ley for  added  bench  strength  in 
the  deciding  days  ahead,  but  the 
Tar  Heel  coach  squelched  the 
idea  yesterday.  "It  wouldn't  be 
fair  to  the  kid  to  play  him  in  the 
last  seven  games  of  the  season 
and  sacrifice  a  whole  year  of 
eligibility,  "  he  said.  "It  would 
be  a  purely  j,'alfish  thing  to  do.  " 

Stanley,  a  6-5  New  Yorker,  en- 


tered his  sophomore  year  at  the 
beginning  of  the  second  semes- 
ter and  is  now  eligible  for  var- 
sity competition.  He  has  kept  in 
shape  this  season  by  playing  with 
the  McCary  ^^agles. 

GroU's  loss  comes  on  the  eve 
of  the  Tar  Heel's  big  test  again^-t 
the  Duke  Blue  Devils  here  to- 
morrow night  Coach  McGuire 
said  yesterday  that  Rosenbluth 
jmight  take  over  some  of  the 
backcourt  duties  if  the  neerj 
arose. 

Groll  had  played  sparingly  this 
season  but  had  shown  consider- 
able promise.  He  averaged  two 
points  a  game  for  12  game.,  but 
excelled  in  ball  handling  and 
play  making. 


STAN  GROLL 

. .  leaves  school 


By    The   Associated    Press 

Arch  rivals  .North  Carolina  and 
Duke    get    the   jump    o    their   At-  j 
lantic    Coast    Conference    football  j 
foes    tomorrow    when    they    open  1 
20  days  of  spring  drills.  ! 

If  the  week-long  rains  continue  j 
the  boys  should  have  an  opportun- 1 
ity  to  develop  their  skill  in  hand-  ■ 
ling  a  wet  football.  | 

Within  10  days  the  four  other  I 
CaroUnas  members  of  the  eight- ! 
school  conference  will  be  at  work  ; 
preparing    for    next   season. 

Virginia  and  Maryland,  two 
northernmost  members  of  the 
ACC,  will  1)€  the  last  to  start 
"Workouts.  Virginia  begins  its  drills 
Feb.  25  and  Maryland  starts  on 
March   11. 

Coach  Jim  Tatum  had  planned 
to  start  North  Carolina  workouts 
last  week,  but  postponed  the 
opening  in  hopes  of  gaining  more 
lavorable  weather.  But  the  almost 
daily  rains  have  continued.  He 
looks  for  a  turn  out  of  about  90 
candidates. 

Duke  coach  Bill  Murray  has  in- 
dicated he  may  set  back  the  open- 
ing to  Tuesday  if  the  rains  con- 
tinue. 

Wake  Forest  and  North  Caro- 
lina State  open  their  drills  on  Sat- 
urday of  next  week.  South  Caro- 
lina and  Clenr^on  move  into  action 
two  days  later,  on  Monday,  Feb. 
18. 
Intra-squad  games  will  wind  up 


the    sessions.    Most    schools    plan 
five  workouts  weekly. 

Wake  Forest  has  added  a  new 
twist  —  a  two-day  high  school 
coaching  clinic.  It  will  be  held 
March  22-23.  the  last  two  days  of 
the   practice    period. 

A  year  ago  five  ACC  schools 
started  spring  drills  with  new 
head  coaches.  This  time  all  eight 
head  men  of  last  season  are  on 
the  job.  although  two  of  them 
listened  to  tempting  outside  of- 
fers last  month.  Tatum  was  sought 
by  Indiana  and  South  Carolina's 
Warren  Giese  made  a  trip  to  Hous- 
ton to  listen  to  an  attractive  prop- 
osition. 


UNCDuke  Is  Sold  Out, 
Some  Left  For  Deacons 

There  are  absolutely  no  tick- 
ets left  for  tomorrow  ight  s  car- 
olina-Ouke  game  in  Woollen 
Gym.  All  remaining  tickets  were 
sapped  up  soon  after  the  box 
office  opened  yesterday  morning, 
and  there  are  no  nrwre  to  be 
had.  Around  1,000  still  remain 
for  the  Wake  Forest  game  Wed- 
nesday night,  however. 

The  ticket  office  has  a  limited 
number  of  tickets  on  sale  for  the 
Carolina-Duke  game  in  Durham 
and  the  Wake  Forest  game  in 
Winston-Salem.  Approximately 
200  are  on  hand  for  the  Duke 
game,      while      around      50      are 


Lennie  Paces 
UNC  Scoring, 
Brennan  Next 

Carolina's  great  .-Ml  -  .\mcrican 
Lennie  Rosenbluth,  holder  of  the 
school's  all-time  scoring  record 
has  maintained  his  26  point  plus 
scoring  average  since  the  two 
weeks  exam  layoff.  Rosenbluth 
hit  26  points  against  Western  Car- 
olina last  Wednesday  and  added 
25  more  against  Maryland  Tues- 
day night.  .Accordinji  to  the  latest 
statistical  release.  Rosy  now  holds 
a  26.2  average:  i^ood  for  second 
place  in  the  .Atlantic  Coast  Con- 
ference. 

Pete  Brennen.  Rosenbluth's  for- 
ward counterpart,  holds  second 
place  among  Tar  Heel  scorers  with 
an  even  15  point  average.  Guard 
Tommy  Kearns  and  center  Joe 
Quigg  are  close  behind  Brennen 
with  averages  of  12.7  and  11.5 
respectively. 

In  the  rebound  department, 
Brennen  has  grabbed  173  to  lead 
the  field.  Quigg.  who  played  sixth 
man  behind  Bill  Hathaway  fur  the 
first  part  of  tht'  season,  has  pull- 
ed down  140  rebounds — just  three 
more  than  Rosenbluth  who  has 
137.  Junior  guard  Bob  Cunning- 
ham, who  has  a  6.7  .scoring  aver- 
age has  101  rebounds  to  his  credit 
and  Kearns  has  47. 

Kearns  is  the  team's  leading 
field  goal  shooter  with  a  490  per- 
centage. Rosenbluth's  .469  is  good 
for  second  place.  Quigg  is  the  only 
other  starter  to  hold  a  .400  or  bet- 
ter percentage  with  .415.  Brcn 
nen  is  shooting  293  percent  and 
Cunningham   is   .366. 

From  the  free  throw  line  Ros- 
enbluth has  hit  158  of  198  for  a 
.798  percentage.  Following  him  is 
Quigg  with  .774,  Kearns  at  742 
and  Brennen  with  .681. 

available  for  the  Wake  game 
which  is  a  sellout  at  Winston- 
Salem. 


McGuire  Issues  Appeal 
To  UNC  Student  Body 


Greatly  concerned  over  campus 
n^ports  that  some  students  with- 
out tickets  planned  to  attempt  to 
force  their  way  into  the  Carolina- 
Duke  basketball  game  here  Satur- 
day night.  Basketball  Coach  Frank 
McGuire  and  Athletic  Director 
Chuck  Erickson  last  night  made 
a  general  appeal  to  the  student | 
body  to  desist  from  any  such  j 
idea. 

"I.  hope  the  rumors  are  without 
foundation."  said  McGuire.  'How- 
ever, in  the  event  there  is  any 
such  movement  on  foot.  I  would 
like  to  appeal  ta  the  .students  as 
the  team's  coach  to  forget  it. 
Great  harm  could  be  done  to  the 
team  and  to  the  school  by  any  such 
demonstration. 

•'We  all  regret  that  we  do  not  i 
I  have  seating  space  for  all  the  stu-  j 
I  dents  and  we  can  understand  the 

disappointment  of  those  who.  un-  j 

der  the  priority  system,  will  be  I 
]  unable  to  see  the  game.   Also  we 

appreciate  the  student  enthusiasm 

and   interest   in   the  team. 

'On  the  other  hand,  the  authori- 
ties have  worked  it  out  the  best 
way  they  could  and  the  students 
should  cooperate  in  good  spirit. 
It  would  be  a  great  disappoint- 
ment Ij  me  if  they  didn't.  We  are 
responsible  for  the  behaviour  of 
the  crowd  and  such  a  demonstra- 
tion would  give  Carolina  a  very 
black  eye  in  addition  to  jeapordiz- 
ing   the   game  " 

Erickson  made  a  similiar  appeal. 
"We  regret  that  all  the  students 
cannot  see  our  fine  team  play  all 
its  home  games."  he  said.  "We 
gave  the  situation  a  great  deal  of 
thought  and  worked  out  the  best 
system  we  knew  how.  the  one 
used  here  in  other  years  and  at 
other  schools  with  gymnasiujns 
unable  to  take  care  of  all  the 
.students. 


"We  also  approved  the  broadvis- 
ion'  plan,  thinking  of  the  students 
as  well  as  alumni  and  friends  un- 
able t;)  buy  tickets.  The  game  will 
be  telecast  (picture)  and  broad- 
cast over  several  stations.  We 
urge  those  without  tickets  to  watch 
and  hear   over    broadvision.' 

"We  are.  of  course,  making 
every  preparation  to  guard  against 
any  such  attempt  but  feel  it  would 
be  a  sad  thing  if  there  is  such  a 
demonstration.  We  are  responsi- 
ble for  crowd  behavior  here.  There 
is  always  the  possible  of  a  forfeit 
ure  if  a  situation  gets  out  of  hand.' 


The  Art  Of  Tailoring 

"Every  man  to  his  business, 
but  indeed  the  craft  of  a  tailor 
is  beyond  all  doubt  as  noble  and 
as  secret  as  any  in  the  world." 

HAVE   OTHERS   FAILED? 

With  expert  workmanship  and 
the  best  service  possible  Pete 
The  Tailor  has  and  will  continue 
to  give  you  the  ultimate  in 
tailoring  needs. 


PETE  THE  TAILOR 

Specializing   in 
"Ivy    Leagueizing" 

133V2   E.   Franklin   Street 


Howard  Johnson  Restaurant 


BREAKFAST 


LUNCH 


DINNER 


SNACKS 
landmark  For  Hungry  Tarheels'' 


MILTON'S 
Midwinter  Carnival 
Plenty    of    lightweight 
suits   at   absurd   prices. 
Dacron/cotton  cords; 
dacron /cotton    poplins, 
formerly  $39.75,  reduc- 
ed to  $27.99. 
Group  nationally  adver- 
tised dacron/cotton  pin 
check      reduced      from 
$47.50  to  $37.99. 
Year     round     sounds 
formerly  $60.00,  reduc- 
ed in  January  to  $49.99, 
now  further  reduced  to 
$42.99.  v^ 

in  our  lady  Milton  Shop, 
pienty  of  sensational  re- 
ductions Entire  stock 
Braemar  and  Drumlin- 
grig  pure  cashmere 
sweaters  $10.00  off. 
Many  other  out-of-this 
world  buys 

Clotfting  Cupboard 


S 


♦ 


Ca. 


A 


•?: 


^^ 


'^^ 


<^ 


^' 


% 


Any  Message    m 
In  Any  Language  j|| 
On  One  Of  Our 
Personalized 
^  Valentines  //A 


ai^ 


.^^^ 


,^^*^ 


io. 


MINA  RAKASTAN 


'"iO 


'M 


'♦-P 


A'< 


cv 


DANZIGER'S 

CANDIES 


Move  Over,  Tar  Heels 

Carolina  is  not  the  only  bas- 
ketball team  in  Chap«l  Hill  with 
an  undefeated  record.  The  Chap- 
el Hill  Hi«h  School  Wild- 
cats have  rolled  to  14  victories 
in  a  row  this  season,  and  will  be 
after  number  15  tonight  when 
they  travel  to  the  county  seat  to 
battle  the  Hillsboro  High  team. 
Hew  about  a  national  title  for 
one  and  a  state  crown  for  the 
ether  to  climax  a  perfect  season? 


Inter uieivs  for: 

SALES  MANAGEMErn  TRAINING   PROGRAM 

SALES  TRAINING   PROGRAM 
HOME   OFFICE  ADMINISTRATIVE  OPENINGS 

Our  Sales  Management  Training  Program  is  designed  to  de- 
li^elop  men  to  head  our  sales  offices  throughout  the  country  and 
for  future  sales  management  openings  at  our  Home  Office.  It 
starts  with  a  four-month  school  at  Hartford  and  another  eight 
months  are  spent  as  a  field  service  representative  before  mov- 
ing into  a  period  of  sales  work. 

Attractive  opportunities  are  also  available  to  men  who  wish 
to  start  directly  in  well-paid  sales  work  (which  may  also  lead 
to  management)  and  in  a  limited  number  of  Home  Office  jobs. 

The  Connecticut  Mutual  is  a  1 10-year-old  company  with 
500,000  policyholder-members  and  over  three  billion  doUars 
of  life  insurance  in  force.  Aggressive  expansion  plans  provide 
unusual  opportunities  for  a  limited  number  of  men  accepted 
each  year. 

CaU  the  placement  office  for  an  appointment  vith: 


1^ 


WILLIAM  T.  BEATY 
^A'-  6^         f«bruory  11,1957 


'//.' 


21^  ^^^nnecticnt^Mutual^ 

l^IPS  IKSURAK.CB  COMPAHy*  ffAJcrroiip 


WIIMSTOISI 

gives  you  the  break  on  flavor ! 

Time  out  for  flavor!  — and  what  flavor!  This  filter  cigarette 
tastes  rich  and  full.  And  its  pure,  snowy-white  filter  does  the  job 
so  well  the  flavor  really  comes  through.  Winston  is  the 
filter  cigarette  you  eAi/oj— that's  why  it's  America's  favorite! 

Smoke  WINSTON  ...enjoy  the  snow-white  filter  in  the  coric-smooth  tip! 


HiVNOLO* 
TOBACCO   CO  . 
WINSTON-SALUM,  K.  C. 


Serials  »ev%« 
Chapel  Hill,    H.    C. 
8-31-49 


WEATHER 

Rain.  Expected  high  50. 


arj)  c  Datlu  ^^Tat  Keel 


ROBBED 

Want*    get    that   way?    See   edi- 
torial, page  2. 


VOL.  LVil  NO.  94 


Complete  i/f)  Wire  Service 


CHAPEL   HILL,  NORTH   CAROLINA.  SATURDAY,   FEBRUARY   9,    1957 


Offices   in   Graham   Memorial 


FOUR   PAGES  THIS  iSSUfr 


Oppenheimer  To  Be 
Orientation  Head 

Young  Named 
Junior  From 
Birmingham 

Jerry  Oppenheimer,  junior  from 
Birmingham,  Ala.,  has  been  named 
orientation  chairman  for  1957-58, 
President  Bob  Young  announced 
yesterday. 


VOTE  COMES  NEXT  WEEK 


Oppenheimer    is   a    member 
Zeta  Beta  Tau  Fraternity. 


of 


Appointments  to  Oppenheimer's 
Orientation  Committee  will  be 
announced  within  the  t%*xi  »wo 
weeks.  Young  anounced. 

Concerning  his  appointment  of 
Oppenheimer,  Young  said: 

*'He  has  expressed  a  sincere  and 
serioi.  •  interest  in  this  and  he  has 
proven  himself  to  be  most  capable 
in   p  sitions  of  responsibility. 
BEST  WISHES 

■"As  I   malce  this  appointment," 
Young  said,  "I  wish  to  extend  be.st 
wishes   to  Jerry    and   members   ot^ 
the  connnittee  who  will    plan   the 
orientation  program."  ! 

Plani  for  the  fall  orientation  pro- 
gram will  be  begun  in  the  near  fu- 
ture. Young  said.  | 

C  ncerning  Oppenheimer^,-  posi- 
tion  Young  said:  | 

■•I  have  yiven  this  particular 
position  very  much  thought.  I  have 
,  talked  with  several  people  and  ha'e 
gotten  many  opinions  about  persons 
who  could  be  named.  From  the  lisi 
ol  eliigble  junior  students,  Jerry 
and  cnc  other  student  were  moat 
outstanding.  For  many  reasons,  I 
have  finally  selected  and  am  now 
appointing  Jerry  to  the  position 
of   orientation   chairman. "" 


Bill  Introduced  Establishing  Group 
To  Investigate  UNC  Constitution 


Integration  At  UNC 
Termed  A  Success 


By  NEIL   BASS 

The  most  far  reaching  measure 
introduced  at  Thursday  night's  stu- 
dent Legislature  session  wa»'  a  biil 
creating  a  committee  to  "examine" 
the  student  Constitution. 

The  bill  was  introduced  by  Stu- 
dent   Party      chairman-floorleader 
'  Sonny   Hallford   upon   the  sugges- 
!  tion     of   Attorney    General     Sam 
I  Wells. 

I      According  to  Wells,  it  is  the  com- 
j  mittee's  intention  to  make  the  con- 
stitution more  "fluid." 

Wells  said  the  present  Consti- 
tution was  too  specific  and  en- 
tailed too  n>uch  red  tape  for 
change.  "We  shouid  have  a  state- 
ment of  general  principles.  .  . 
with  specifics  In  individual  sta- 
tutes, '  Wells  said. 


As  for  specific  changes  which 
Wells  and  his  four-man  committee 
plan  to  make,  the  attorney  general 
had  no  comment. 

The  committee's  composition  will 
consist  of  Wells,  chairmen  of  the 
two  political  parties  and  two  leg- 
islators appointed  by  the  student 
body  president. 
WELCOME 

The  Legislature's  passage  of  Spe- 
cial Orders  to  enable  passage  of  a 
welcoming  resolution  to  visiting 
University  of  Florida  student  body 
president  Fletcher  Fleming  was 
significant. 

Fleming  told  representatives  he 
was  honored  by  the  warm  "hos- 
pitality" which  he  had  l>een  shown 
during  his  stay  here. 

The  U.  F.  student  pre.-ident  will 


]  return  to  the   campus   Mar.    1,   to 
{  study  Carolina  student  government 
and  the  integration  situation  here. 
j        Financial  bills  still  are  the  top 
heavy  item  on  the  legislative  doc- 
ket, and  Thursday  night's  session 
was   no  exception.   1189  was  ap- 
propriated from  student  govern- 
ment's general  surplus. 
Absent    from    the   session    were: 
Frank    Farrell    (SP).    Andy    Mil- 
nor  (SP),  Ben  Peele  (SP).  Bill  Rnb- 
bins  (University  Party),  Leo  Ward- 
rup  (SP). 

The  Legislature  will  reconvene 
next  Thursday  night  at  7:30  on 
the  fourth  floor  of  New  East  Build- 
ing. 

All  representatives,  according  to 
Speaker  Sonny  Evans,  are  urged 
to  attend. 


First  Meet 
To  Be  Held 
Tomorrow 

The  Cosmopolitan  Club  will 
hold  its  first  meeting  of  the  new 
semester  Sunday  at  4  p.m.  in  the 
Assembly  Ro  m  of  the  Wilson  Li- 
brary. 

Members  of  th?  club  have  ex- 
tended a  cordial  invitation  to  in- 
terested students  and  townspeo- 
ple' to  attend,  according  to  an  an- 
nouncement. 

The  meeting  will  include  a  so- 
cial hour  at  which  time  old  and 
n2w  members  and  their  friends 
will  become  acquainted.  Light  re- 
freshments will  be  served,  the  an- 
nouncement .said. 

After  the  sr>cial  h  ur  all  officers 
for  the  current  s  mester  will  be 
introduced  and  business  for  the 
new   term    will   be    discussed. 

The  ofiJcers.  recently  elected, 
are  President  Pij.:sens  Gane- 
watte.  Ceylon;  Vice  President  Sip- 
ra  Bose,  cf  India;  SecrCjtary  Miss 
Lucie  I>caring,  Haddonfield,  N.  J. 
and  Treasurpr  Ted  Youhanna. 
Iraq. 

New  committee  chairmen  ap- 
pointments will  also  be  announced 
a.  the  meeting,  the  announcement 
.said. 

The  fir^t  plan  on  the  agenda 
is  the  international  dinner  to  be 
prepared  by  foreign  members  of 
the  club.  It  will  probably  be  sched- 
uled in  two  weeks,  the  announce- 
ment said. 

The  Cosmopolitan  Club  is  made 
up  of  many  of  the  foreign  stu- 
dents and  exchange  professors 
and  their  families  here.  A  large 
group  of  American  students  here 
are  also  members,  the  announce- 
ment  S3  id. 

Club  members  have  in  common 
an  interest  in  international  re- 
lations and  the  interchange  of  cus- 
toms and  ideas  from  all  parts  of 
the  world. 


JERRY   OPPENHEIMER 

. .  .  orientation    head 

Invitations      - 
Will  Be  Sold 
In  "Y"  Monday 

All  students,  regular  seniors 
or  seniors  in  the  professional 
schools,  are  urged  to  purchase 
graduation  invitations  at  the  "Y" 
next  Monday  through  Thursday, 
a   Grail   spokesman   said   today. 

Til?  Order  of  the  Grail  is  spon- 
s  ring  the  invitation  sale  in  the 
"Y"  lobby  from  9  a.m.  O  3  p.m. 
Th"  invitation  sale  will  be  termi- 
nated Thursday,  the  spokesman 
said.  I 

Members  of  thf  Gr-ii!  will  help 
s'u  lenls  select  inv'tations  from 
a  B;illour  Co.  as?orim:-nt.  I 


Talent  Show  Is  To 
Repeat  Performance 


Present 
AtWC 


By   CHARLIE   SLOAN  <    ,_ 

Iiitremation  at  I'NC".  unquestionably  has  been  .s»icccs.s- 
ful,  the  president  ol  tlie  l^niversity  of  Florida's  student  body 
said  yesterday.  .'  /. 

The  student  leader.  Fletcher  FleiTiin<r,  and  Paul  Rillinffs, 
as.soc.  student  secretary  of  the  Southern  .\rea  YMC.A.,  are  in 
Chapel  Hill  to  prepare  for  a  conference  intended  to  find  out 
exactly  what  incidents  and  events  occurred  at  the  University 
prior  to  intejj^ration. 

Flcmino  said  thev  hope  to  adapt  the  solutions  to  Car- 
olina's integration  problems  for  use  when  NegTo  students  are 

^ ♦admitted  at  Florida.  There  is  a  case 

I 

being  heard  in  the  Florida  Supreme 
Court  now  on  intergration.. 

On  Feb.  28  and  March  1  and  2 
a  delegation  of  six  student  leaders 
and  two  faculty  members  will  visit 
Chapel  Hill  to  .iudy  Carolina's  in- 
tegration problems.  The  visit  this 
week  is  mainly  for  the  purpose  of 
setting  up  a  schedule  and  making 
appointments  for  the  conference  at 


Seminar  To 
Work  Here 
Feb.  15-17 


Rain  Expected 
Daily  For 
Next  Five  Days 

The  rainy  weather  experienced 
in  this  area  for  the  past  several 
days  shows  no  si'^n  of  letting  up 
for   the   next   five   days. 

Occasional  rain  is  expected  al- 
most daily  through  Wedn?sday.  ac- 
cording to  the  Weather  Bureau  at 
the    Raleigh-Durham    airport. 

It  is  expected  to  be  cool  today 
followed  by  rising  temperatures. 
It  will  turn  colder  Tuesday  or 
Wednesday. 

IN  FOUR  YEAR  DRIVE: 


By   GRAHAM    SNYDER 

A  talent  show  which  began  as 
the  combination  of  two  ideas  and 
two  show.'  will  travel  to  Woman's 
College  on  Feb.  26  to  stage  a  re- 
peat performance  of  its  original 
sh(,w. 

The  Car.lina  Cavalcade  of  Tal- 
ent, branching  out  from  its  perfor- 
mance here  December  13,  will  pre- 
sent the  entire  show  at  7:30  p.m. 
in  Elliott  Hall  at  WC.  . 

In  March  the  talent  shew  will 
make    a    third    appearance    when 
it     presents    an    hour-long    show 
here  on  WUNC-TV. 

Initiated  from  suggestions  by  G.^ 
C."  f'ridgen,  the  Cavalcade's  co- 
directoi.  the  WC  show  will  hv  held 
in  c>;-l unction  with  GM.AB  and  El- 
liott Hall,  WC's  stuilent  union  of 
activilie  •. 

JOHN   YOUNG 

In  co-operation  with  John  Young, 
WtjNC-TV  assistant  Director,  the 
university's  educational  station  will 
present  the  hour-long  presentation 
of  the  show  on  March  8,  from  8:30 
■9:30  p.m.  Young  will  direct  the 
television   performance. 

Pridgen    said    that    the    Caval- 
cade will  be  presented  as  a  com- 
plete variety  show,  instead  of  in 
its  original  inception  as  a  collec- 
I    tion  of  talent  acts. 

The  number  of  acts  to  be  u^-ed 
in  the  WC  show  will  be  a  tentative 
14  to  16,  according  to  Pridgen.  The 
I  co-director  said  that  one  or  two 
members  of  the  original  show  may 
not  be  able  to  make  the  trip. 
AUDITION 
At   the  same   time  Pridgen   an- 


FLETCHER  FLEMING 

. . .  front    Florida 


The  United  Stales  National  Stu- 
dent   Association    Seminar   on    In- 
ternational  Student   Relations  will    the  end  of  the  month 
be  held  here  Feb.  15,16,17. 

Twenty-eight  member  schools 
of  th2  Carolinas  -  Virginia  NSA 
region  have  been  invited  to  at- 
tend, according  to  seminar  Chair- 
man  Whit  Whitfield. 

Discus.sion  and  seminar  leaders 
are  Allen  R.  Janger,  overseas  pub- 


Israell  Sanctions  Asked 


UXITED  NATIONS.  N.Y.-(AP)  ^.^^.^^  '^^  ^^^  ^.gj^g^  ^j„  f^,^^. 
—The  leader  of  the  A.\an-African 
group  called  yesterday  for  effec- 
tive measures,  including  sanction.^ 
to  force  Israel  to  withdraw  finally 
and  totally  from  Egypt. 

Ambassador  Abdul  i\L'nem  Rifai 
of  Jordan,  president  of  the  27-na- 
tion  group  for  February,  told  nevs 
men  he  had  expressed  to  Secre- 
tary General  Dag  Hammar.<kjo]d 
at  a  40-minutc  conference  the 
•'deep  concern'  of  the  group  over 
Israel's  defiant  stand. 


This  is  not  a  crusade  to  bring 
it»gration  to  the  Florida  camp- 
us, Fleming  emphasized.  He  said 
the  inquiry  »t  Carolina  is  not  in- 
tended to  "bring  it  about  any 
sooner  or  any  later." 

"I  think  it  to  our  advantage  to 
licity  director  of  th?  NSA.  Irv  know  in  adA'ance  what  to  expect,"' 
Diasnin.     administrative     assistant    j^g  added    .    ^  -     \   ■■ 

on    international    affairs  and   Miss  '  '  '      '     .' 

Helen  Jean  Rogers. 

A  b:ok  of  working  papers  pre- 
pared   by    the    International    Com 


UNC  is  the  only  campus  the  dele- 
gation U  visiting.  Fleming  said  it 
was  chosen  by  the  students  above 

other  integrated  schools  becausi 
ish  background  on  such  ma^^ers  as  ^^  ^^^  ^^^^^^^  ^,.^^  ^^.^.^^  -^  ^^^ 
student     exchange,     problems     of    . 

American     students    abroad,    pur-   ^"  ^^^^  ^  '  -^    -    . 

poses  of  the  Communist-dominated  He  said  he  also  hopes  for  an 
Ipternalional  Union  of  Students. '  exchange  of  ideas  with  Duke  and 
The  USNSA  is  a  confederation  State,  but  he  has  not  planned  to 
of  student  governments  at  320  visit  their  campuse^-.  At  Carolina 
American  colleges  and  universi-  fj,e  group  will  try  to  contact  stu- 
some     700.000   ^^^^j   leaders,   student   government 


ties,    representinj 


students. 


leaders,  student   religious  leaders, 


PEE  WEE  BATTEN  AND  COMBO 

.  .  .  Cnralcadc's  irinners 


nounced  that  a  single  audition  will 
be  held  Feb.  18  from  7-10  p.m.  in 
the  Rendezvous  Room  of  GM.  Prid- 
gen said  that  at  that  time  new 
talent  which  failed  to  audition  for 
the  original  show  may  do  so  at  this 
one  opportunity.  As  a  result  of  this 
hearing  Pridgen  said  there  is  a  pos- 
sibility that  one  or  two  new  act.: 
may  be  included  in  the  show. 

The  WC  presentation  will  include 
such  performers  as  the  winners  of 
the  show.  Miss  Mary  "PeeWec" 
Batten,  Hoke  Simpson,  and  Bruno's 
Combo. 


The  music  for  the  Cavalcade  will 
be  provided  by  Don  Jefferson  and 
t  h  e  E  m  b  e  r  s.  Cecil  Hartsoe  will 
be  the  pianist  for  the  show. 

Both  the  WC  and  the  televis- 
ion shows  will  be  equipped  with 
a  new  master  of  ceremonies, 
Frank  Crcwther. 

In  conjunction  with  the  idea  of 
the  trip,  Pridgen  said  that  "the 
show  will  not  be  presented  for  the 
purpose  of  making  money.  We  hope 

(See  TALENT  SHOW  Page  3) 


Rifai  said  he  had  asked  Ham 
marskjold  for  a  report  and  for  a 
meeting  of  the  General  A.jembly 
by  next  Tuesday  to  consider  what 
next  to  do.  The  Assembly  last  Sa- 
turday asked  Israel  for  the  sixth 
lime  to  get  (,ut  of  Egypt  and  re- 
quested Hammarskjold  to  report 
at  the  appropriate  time. 

Some  members  of  the  group,  es- 


Students   wishing   to  participate  administrative     leaders,  students 

in   the  seminar  may  contact  Whit  working    en    publications  and    as 

Whitiield     througn     the     student  "lanj'    Negro    and    white  student.s 

government  office  in  Graham  Mem-  ^s  po.yible. 


orial,  the  chairman  said. 


June,  Summer  Graduates 
Must  File  For  Degrees 

All    students   in    the    College   of 
Arts   and    Sciences   who   expect   to 
be    graduated    in   June   or   in    the 
pecially    the    Arab    countries,    are    summer   and    who   have    not   filed 


Local  government  and  civic 
lead«i*s  will  also  be  contacted 
and  interviewed  by  the  group. 
Fleming  pointed  out  the  majority 
of  the  people  of  Gainesville, 
where  the  University  of  Florida 
is  located,  tr»  opposed  to  ming- 
ling the  races,  most  of  them  vio- 
lently so. 


pushing  for  such  sanction^-  as  com- 
plete economic,  financial  and  mil- 
itary restrictions  on  Israel.  Others 
are  studyin;4  mauler  moderate  steps. 
While  the  United  States  and 
other  leading  delegations  here  con- 
sulted   on    the    next    move    in    the 

(See  WORLD  NEWS.  Page  3) 


for  a  d?gree  have  been  asked  to 
do  so  immediately  in  order  to  get 
their  degree  en  tune. 


Rillings,  whose  organization  is 
helping  to  pay  for  the  trip,  said, 
■p  s  their  project.  I  certainly  think 
it's  worthwhile."  Both  he  ami 
Those  having  to  file  for  their  Fleming  expressed  their  appreclu- 
degree  have  be?n  asked  to  come  tion  of  the  cooperann  they  have 
by  the  office  of  the  College  of  received  from  the  Carolina  admin- 
Arts  and  Science.  203  South  Build-  i  ration,  YM-YAVC.\  and  student 
ing.  leaders. 


Student  Union  Plans  Are  At  Standstill 


HAPPENINGS  ON  THE  HILL 


GM'S  SLATf 

Activities  in  Graham  Momorlal 
today  include: 

Mardi  Orw.  71 2,  Roland  Per- 
ker  Loong«  No.  1  and  2;  Class 
Group,  n  a-m.,  Roland  Parker 
Loungo  No.  3  and  WoodhouM 
Cenforonco  room.  


By    EDITH    MACKINNON 

Continuing  in  a  four  year  long  ' 
drive  to  acquire  funds  for  a  new  . 
Student  Union,  the  Graham  Mem-  1 
orial  Student  Union  committee  | 
has   arrived   at   another   standstill. 

A  plan  which  had  been  propos-  j 
ed  to  finance  th?  S2  million  pro- ' 
ject  by  a   program  of  .self-liquida-  j 
tion   has   been   vetoed    by   a  coun- 
cil of  the  Division  of  Student  Af- 
fairs. 

It  was  reported  by  the  Student 
Union  Committee  that  Consolidat- 
ed University  President  William 
Friday  had  stated  this  was  ''not 
the  time"  for  such  a  .self-liquida- 
tion program. 

In  a  Thursday  meeting  of  the 
GM  Board  of  Directors,  Joel 
Fleishman,  chairman  of  the  new 
student  union  committee,  an- 
nounced permission  had  been  de- 
nied to  borrow  the  necessary 
money.  At  the  same  time  Fleish- 
man stated  William  D.  Carmichael, 
University  vice-president  and  fin- 
ance officer,  had  endorsed  the  stu- 
dent union  program  and  promised 
to  lend  his  support  in  getting  a 
high  priority  for  the  issue  on  the 
list  of  Consolidated  University  re- 

,  quests  of  the  1959  session  of  the 
N.  C.  advisory  budget  committee. 

1      Recent    discussions    among    stu- 


dent leaders  and  administrative 
officials,  particularly  Director  of 
Student  Affairs  Sam  Magill  and 
President  Friday,  have  seemed  to 
re-cmphasize  the  fast  growing 
need  for  a  new  Student  union 
building,  adequate  in  size  and 
central  in  location. 

T\vo  alternatives  were  drawn  up 
by  the  committee  to  study  needs 
of  new  student  union  to  acquire 
funds  for  the  project. 

Plan  one  proposed  an  appropria- 
tion from  the  1957  session  of  the 
N.  C.  General  Assembly.  This 
plan  failed  to  be  brought  up  be- 
fore the  1957  se&sion. 

The  second  alternative  was  to 
receive  permission  to  borrow  the 
necessary  money.  When  the  plan 
was  vetoed  by  the  council  of  the 
Division  of  Student  Affairs.  Pres- 
ident Friday  maintained  the  new 
student  union  was  an  integral  part 
of  the  University  and  should  be 
within  the  province  of  the  state 
legislature. 

Opposition  was  also  brought  up 
by  President  Friday  to  the  sug- 
gestion the  project  be  financed  by 
a  private  gift. 

It  is  felt  by  the  Student  union 
committee  the  new  union  should 
be  located  in  the  vicinity  of  Emer- 
son Field.  The  $2  million  project 
would  be  able  to  accomodate  a 
needs  for  a  new  union,  and  possi- 


bly a  suggested  architectural  plan,  i 
student  body  of  from  8,500-10,000. 
Suggested  facilities  would  in- 
clude offices  for  student  govern- 
ment and  official  student  activities, 
meeting  ro.Tms  for  campus  organ- 
izations, informal  lounges  and  a 
TV  room,  a  ballroom  usable  for 
banquets,  bowling  alleys,  and  a 
campus   night  club. 

With  Carmichael's  help,  the 
drive  for  building  funds  is  now 
hoped  to  go  through  the  Com- 
mittee on  student  union  and  local 
administration  to  the  N.  C.  ad- 
visory  budget  committee. 

A  deadline  of  April.  1958  has 
been  .'let  for  the  presentation  of 
the  student  union  committee's  re- 
port to  the  local  administration. 
Providing  this  report  is  approved 
locally,  it  will  then  appear  before 
the  N.  C.  advisory  budget  commit- 
tee in  July.  1959. 

Until  that  deadline,  a  perman- 
ent student  union  committee,  con- 
sisting of  Fleishman,  Sonny  Evans. 
John  Brooks.  Don  Furtado,  and  Dr. 
;  G.  A.  Barrett,  has  been  set  up  to 
plan  a  prospectus  to  present  be- 
!  fore    administrative    officals. 

Included      in      that      prospectus 
will  be  pictures  of  other  student 
j  unions,   both   external   and  intern- 
i  al  features,  statements  of  past  and 
i  present    student    leaders    and    ad- 
ministration leaders,  statistics  on 


In  reviewing  the  chances  for 
the  new  student  union.  Chairman 
Fleishman  made  this  statement: 
"The  committee  was  deeply  dis- 
appointed in  the  lack  of  admin- 
istrative support  in  our  efforts  to 
secure  for  the  University  a  new 
union  building  through  appropria- 
tion, self-liquation,  or  donation. 
HovvevEr.  we  have  been  greatly 
heartened  by  the  many  offers  of  j 
a.ssistance  from  various  officers  of 
the  University."  he  said.  i 

"As  was  pointed  out  by  Mr. 
Carmichael.  who  re-affirmed  his 
support  for  our  efforts  to  secure 
appropriated  funds  for  a  new 
structure,  the  planning  during 
the  next  two  years  should  be 
painstakingly  and  meticulously 
done.  The  Committee  can  lead  the 
driv?  for  a  student  union,  but  it 
will  take  active  assistance  by 
tho.se  who  are  most  vitally  con- 
cerned in  this  project— the  UNC 
students — in  bringing  to  the  at- 
tention of  their  representative* 
to  th?  N.  C.  general  assembly  our 
desperate    need    in    this    regard. 

"We  welcome  and  will  be  seek- 
ing the  active  aid  and  advice  of  the 
students,  the  faculty,  Ihe  admini- 
stration, and  interested  alumni  in 
planning  and  carrying  through  to 
fruition  this  vital  project,"  Fleish- 
man said. 


Fraternity  Pledge   Festivities   To 
Crowd   Carolina   Social   Calender 


By  MARY  ALYS  VOORHEES 

Exam  schedules  have  found  their 
way  to  the  tra.li  cans,  students 
have  found  their  way  home  and 
back  again,  and  now  the  Carolina 
social  calendar  has  found  itself 
slightly  crowded  with  more  events 
than  students  have  time  to  attend. 

Perhaps  the  most  noteworthy  is 
the  growing  number  of  dances  and 
parties  each  weekend. 

Back  in  the  fall  when  one  step- 
ped out  in  evening  attire,  it  wasn  t 
hard  for  others  to  guess  where  the 
party  or  dance  was.  But  now  when 
evening  clothes  are  the  order  of 
the  day  one  cannot  merely  a„*k 
where  the  party  is,  but  which  dance 
is  the  friend  attending. 

Last  weekend  offered  three  big 
events  for  party-goers  plus  num- 
erous other  socials  sufficient 
enough  to  leave  the  dorms  and 
frat  houses  vacant  and  put  most 
party  attire  in  use. 

TO  START  OFF  their  weekend 
the  Kappa  Sigs  opened  the  pro- 
gram with  a  banquet  Friday  night 
at  the  house.  Black  and  white  ma- 
tches and  napkins  bearing  the  fra- 
ternity letter^  marked  the  places. 


Later  in  the  evening  the  actives 
entertained  the  pledges  and  their 
dates  out  at  the  Schoolhouse  at  a 
cabin  party. 

Then  on  Saturday  after  a  steak 
dinner  and  champagne  party  at  the 
Ranch  House  with  the  N.  C.  State 
Kappa  Sigs,  the  LT^C  chapter  was 

'  ivited  over  to  Durham  for  the  An- 
nual Black  and  White  Ball  in  the 

j  Crystall  Room  of  the  Washington 
Duke  Hotel. 

'      During   the   evening   both   chap- 

'  ters  presented  their  1956  pledge 
classes  and  dates.  Leading  the  UNC 
pledge  class  were  President  Ric- 
hard Frazier  iof  Goldsboro  with 
Dotty  Pear.jn  of  St.  Mary's,  Vice 
President  Ira  Hardy  of  Raleigh 
with  Marian  Dickens  of  Thomas- 
ville   and   Secretary -Treasurer   Jim 

I  Furr  of  Port  Washington,  N.Y. 
with   Randy   Burnett. 

Immediately  after  the  presenta- 
tion the  pledges  and  their  dates 
formed  a  Kappa  Sig  crest  and  sang 

i  the  Kappa  Sig  sweetheart  song. 
Bill  Langley  and  his  Star  Dream- 

;  ers — featuring  the  songs  of  UNC 
coed  Barbara  Prago — presented  mu- 
sic for  the  occasion. 


.\.s  an  aftermath  the  UNC  chap 
ter  closed  out  the  weekend  with 
a  party  Sunday  at  the  house.  As 
a  souvenir  they  presented  their  da- 
tes with  goblets  engraved  with  the 
fraternity  crest. 

THE  CHI  PHIS  were  responsible 
I  for  another  series  of  events  during 
j  the  Friday-Saturday  period.  .To 
open  their  pledge  weekend  they  en- 
j  tertained  the  1956  pledge  class  and 
j  their  dates  at  a  banquet  and  pledge 

i  (See  SOCIALS.  Page  3) 


IN  THE  INFIRAAARY 

Students  in  the  Infirmary  yes- 
terday  included: 

Kee  Chun  Yoo,  Maxie  Welch. 
Richard  Oresman'  John  Johnson, 
Richard  Oresman,  Joh  Johnson, 
Charles  Baldwin,  Alvin  Smith. 
Burbridge,  Robert  Fessberg,  Ric- 
hard Sirkin.  Louis  Hardee,  Char- 
les Ross,  and  Misses  Carolyn  El- 
len Roborts,  Carolyn  Frances 
Roberts,  Caroline  Hum*,  Nancet- 
U  Steckwoll,  and  Carolino  War- 
ren.. 


^v 


^ACi  TWO 


tl<t^A«Y;THli  MflV. 


SATURDAY,  FEBRUARY  9,  1957 


SATI 


Robbery  At  Book  Exchange: 
It  Turns  You  Intp  A  Cynic 

I  he  l'n!ve«>nys  IWiok  txthaiigc  is  lublnn;^  ilic  studcnis.  This  is  a 
wi'll-kiiow II  tact. 

l\  is  also  knoun  ihnt  the  iexrh;tnj;'e  tnakcs  a  ptofit  ol  about  .^15.000 
a  year.  Di\i(lc  the  riilvtMsiiys  :•  linost  i\.i\oo  siiidetus  into  thai  ligiue;  , 

The  c\^halJ^c•  makes  al)oui  SO. 30  froitj  each  student. 

If  vou  remcinlKr  that  not  cvcrv  sludtni  biivs  His  books  at  llic  Book 
r.\i  lian-^e.  the  lleecing  percentage  i^ues  even  lii|il»er. 

The  S().."io  li'j^ire  does  not  rep 


lesciH  the  axer.r^e  amount  each 
suident  pays  Tor  Ijooks  j>er  year.  It 
is  the  amoinit  :  student  '^ves  the 
rni\e'sit\  when  ht-  attclnois  t<* 
sill  used  texts  l)a(  k  to  the  ex- 
t  han'4e.  atul  ii  is  the  natural  piofit 
the  ext  hau'ie  mr-kes  hoin  each  book 

sold! 

*  ♦  * 

I'nixersitv  ol  North  C.aioli«ia 
textlx^oks.  tiierelore.  ate  probably 
the  jnosj  valuable  books  in  the 
world.  By  the  time  the  Book  Ex- 
(hange  h.i-s  resold  them  a  half-dozen 
times,  thev  have  reached  a  piolit- 
iMakin."  plateaii  comparable  to 
(•eneral    Motors  stink. 

riie  studeins  do  not  like  the 
s(  tup.  That  is  apjiarent  in  the  latge 
nundjer  of  books  sold  early  this 
semester  bv  the  studeiu  oj)eiated 
Alplia  Phi  ()me;4;  book  exchange. 
ANJieie  the  j.iofits  are  considerably 
lower. 


( h  ii">e  sjiuatioii  \erv  long,  one 
would  bcioine  cviiiial  earlv  in  his 
life.  lor  this  is  another  situation 
in  whiih  the  rni\erstty  alwavs 
wins  DIM. 

Almnsi  yearlv  students  . :  -jail 
the  high  pi  ices  of  books.  Coiniiiiss- 
ioiis  and  committees  are  appoint- 
ed,   reports   are   drawn    up. 

Student  leaders  tneet  with  ad- 
ministrators. I'.vervbody  agrees  this 
is  the  only  way  to  solve  problems: 
All  get  together  and  discuss  them. 

The  students  formulate  tlieir 
proposals,  submit  them  to  the  ad- 
ministiati(»n.  The  ?dministration 
glances  at  the  proposals,  files  them 
in  the  waste  basket  and  the  stu- 
dents still  get  fleeced  at  the  Book 
Kxchange. 

The  student  body  is  taxed 
thiough  Ix.xjk  sales,  and  it  has  no 
rejVresent^tion    on  ,the    body    that 


Where  doc>  the  money  go?  fatip    J»&s  dccicied  to  jacic  .upjlxwk  prices 
"( h(»]ar>lui)s.    replies    the    I'niVeis^ 


i;v  (heerfullv,  everv  time  tlie 
(juestion  is  asked.  'The  L'niversit-v 
feels  scholarships  arc  sat  red. -and 
people  "pisi  cant  toinplain  al>atn 
.tnvthing  that  gives  money  to  needy 
students. 

Stholarships  are  fine.  But  the 
pnicnt:i;e  of  profit  at  the  Bocifk 
I  \(  han^e  is  i(j]>berv.  It  may  lie 
Ivohin  Hood-tvpe  robbery,  but  it 
uinains  robberw 

II  one  in\ estimated  the  Book  F.x- 


.  The  only  answer  is  a  getieral 
student  bovcott  of  tfte  Book  Kx- 
chan-te.  and  that  probal^h*  \voOld 
t«*t  woik.  It's  loo  easy  to  biiy  books 
there. 

Reallv.  though,  just  in  the  tiaiu^ 
of  tradition,  we  should  piotesl  the 
exicessive  prices.  The  yearly  pro- 
tect keeps  South  Building  trim 
and  on  its  toes,  and  what  would  the 
South  Building  wastebasket-emp- 
tieis  do  if  the  students  stopped 
submitting  proposals? 


Worry  About  The  Language 


While  Norih  ("arolitia  s(  hfMjl 
teatiiers  and  theit  professional  or- 
ganizations are  ruinnng  around 
asking  for  more  p;iy  and  Ix-nefits. 
we  suggest  another  problem  th^it 
needs  attention. 

Some  people  will  feel  it  is  a 
small  problem.  But  we  belie\e  tiie 
State  of  .North  Carolina  will  cc»n- 
tiniie  dragging  millions  of  young 
minds  until  it  is  solved. 

We  speak  of  the  pioblem  of  iije 
English  Ir'iiguage.  ;     "^^  - 

Students  don't  undctstand  it. 

Thev  don't  ktiow  what  a  comma 
is.  miuh  less  where  it  should  be 
used.  They  dont  follow  any  specif- 
ic rules  of  eapHali/ation  or  punct- 
uation or  spelling. 

#  #  * 

riie  problem  is  apparent  to  any 
professor  here  at  the  I'niversity. 
I'ull-grown  seniors  and  graduate 
students,  handing  in  semester's- 
end  work  last  month,  filled  with 
papers  and  exivmi nations  with  as- 
saults fipon  the  Knglisli  language 
tfiat   would  make  eveti   the  liberal 

The  Daily  Tar  Heel 

Ttae  offiL-ial  jtudent  publicatiun  oL  tbe 
Publications  Board  of  the  University  of 
North  Carolina,  where  it  is  published 
daily  except  Monday  and  exatninatiot 
and  vacation  periods  and  summer  terms 
Entered  as  second  class  matter  in  th( 
Dost  01  f ice  in  Chapel  Hill,  N.  C,  undei 
the  Act  01  March  8.  1870.  Subscription 
rates:  mailed,  S4  per  year.  S2  50  a  semes 
ter;  delivered.  $6  a  year.  $350  a  semer 
ter. 


Editor 


FRED  POWLEDGE 


Managing  Editor 


CHARUE  SLOAN 


N€«s  Editor  NANCY  HILL 


Business  Manager 


BILL  BOB  PLEL 


Sports  Editor 


LARRY  CBESl 


EDITORIAL  STAFF  —  Woody  Sear«, 
Frank  Crowther,  fcarry  Winston,  David 
Mundy.  George  Pfingst.  Ingrid  Clay. 
Cortland  Edwards,  Paul  McCaulej, 
Bobbi  Smith. 


VEWS  STAFF— Clarke  Jones,  Ray  Lint 
er,  Joan  Moore.  Pringle  Pipkin,  Alin^ 
Drake,  Edith  MacKinnon,  Wally  Kuralt, 
Mary  Alys  Voorhees.  Graham  Snyder, 
Billy  Barnes,  Neil  Bass.  Gary  Nichols, 
Page  Bernstein.  Pec  Humphrey,  Phyllis 
Maultsby.  Ben   Taylor 


BL'SLN'ESS  STAFF-^Rosa  Moore,  Johnny 
Whilaker,  Dick  Leavitl,  Dick  Sirkin. 


SPORTS  .STAFF:  Bill  King.  Jim  Purks, 
Jimmy  Harper,  Dave  Wible.  Charley 
Uowsun. 


Subscription  Manager  — 

Advertising  Manager 

Circulation  Manager  


.  Dale  Staley 
.  Fred  Katzii* 
Charlie  Hop. 


Proof   Reader  

Night   Editor 

Night  News  Editor 


Guy  Ellis 

Clarke  Jones 

Graham  Snyder 


linguist  Hank  .Mencken  wince  and 
light   a   new  cigai. 

The  people  responsible,  ^of 
(ourse.  are  the  people  who  teach 
North  O'Tolitia  students  in  gram- 
mar and  higb  sehools.  They  pb- 
viouslv  are  not  doing  a  complete 
job  of  teaching.  .\nd  where  did 
thev  get  their  training?  Here,  or 
at  Duke,  or  at  the  other  education 
.s(  hools  around  the  state.  ;  J 

It's  an  endless  ciicle:  Tfcachifers 
who  have  a  ha/y  idea  of  the  lang- 
uage can  teach  their  pupils  only 
Avhat  thev  themsehcs  know;  the 
students  catuiot  be  expected  to 
ride  far  above  the  level  of  their 
teacheis. 

The  result  is  a  .North  Carolina 
that  capitalizes,  punctuates  and 
spells  far  worse  than  most  of  her 

sister  states. 

*  #  «  , 

Ue  know  teacheis"  pay  is  more 
important,  but  could  somebody 
wbny  a  little  bit  about  the  old 
language? 

Foster's  W'M' 
No  Good 
As  Newsman 

The  I'.  S.  Stale  Dept.  is  Ujoking 
sillier  and  sillier.  .\nd  good  old 
.American  justice  and  freedom  are 
going  fa-rther  and  farther  down 
the  drain. 

It  started  when  the  government 
derided  tliat  U.  S.  newsmen  could 
go  into  Red  China  to  report  the 
news.  .\  couple  of  Americaai  publi- 
cations shortly  sent  correspondcrns 
into  the  country. 

Now  the  State  Dept.  is  attempt- 
ing to  revoke  the  correspondeuts* 

passports. 

#  •  ^       ^ttf 

The  government  obviously  is 
not  content  to  reside  on  the  brink 
while  talking  isolationism,  to  tell 
everyone  from  labor  to  manage- 
ment to  farmer  to  housewife  how 
to  live:  now  it  must  balance  the 
press"  news  report  and  decide 
u  hether  it  .should  rerch  the  .\mer- 
ican  people. 

W'c  ]>elie\e  the  current  State 
Dept.  admuiisf ration  is  patently 
incapable  of  doitig  this  with  any 
degree  of  intelligence. 

Our  best  wishes  go  to  the  news- 
men, who  are  planning  to  take 
their  cases  to  court.  \Ve  hope  the 
Constitution  counts  for  something, 
even  without  John  Foster  Dulles* 
per  mission  and  approval. 


SO  THEY  SAY 


H 
Wh 


ling'  Is  Underway  At  Yale, 
Well-Rpunded  Men  Study 


Websfe.  Says:  'HEEL— Close  At  The  Heel.  Obediently  Following.' 
Bu.  At  Grey-Fianneiled  Tale,  Word  Means  Something  Different. 

Richard  Rhodes 

In    'I'lu'    Ydlc    Daih    \rui 


Rumor  has  it  that  heeling  is  a 
time  when  sleep  is  iorjiotlt  n, 
classes  a  vague  thing  of  the 
past;  r.  time  of  intense  effort, 
convivial  griping,  prayer.-  and — 
sometimes — tears. 

Rumor  will  also  tell  you  th-t 
the  News  is   second  only  to  the 
Student   Outline   for   inaccuracy; 
that     the  Record  slopped     being 
funny  when  P^'er  Ai-no  left  s^^mc 
years  ag6;  tiiat  vrVBC  is  'all  right 
-^if  anyone  ever  listens  to  it." 
But,  c>i«nc*s  are  that  you  will 
afse  fiiid  these  rumor-mongers 
scanning    the   News   for    news 
each  niorning,   reciting   Record 
jblces   when    they    think    their 
friends    are    drunk    enough    to 
find  them  humorous,  and   per- 
haps even  tuning  in  occasional- 
ly to  wysc. 

All  of  which  sccnis  to  attest 
that  there  is  more  than  a  little 
dependence  on  these  organiza- 
tions—  and  a  greater  misunder- 
standing of  their  function — than 
most  "experts"  are  williug  to 
admit 

tieeling  is  not  a  monstrou.-. 
time-oi-lrustration.  It  can  and 
should  be  a  rewarding  and  ma- 
turing experience.  "So."  you 
ask,  "if  I  should  heel,  then  which 
organization?  How  much  time 
will  it  take?  Do  I  n«ed  any  spe- 
cial skills?" 

There  is  a  myriad  of  extracur- 
ricular activities  at  Yale..  Consi- 
dering primarily  the  time  require- 
ments one  can  list  four  major  or- 
ganizations: The  News.  \VYBC, 
Banner  Publications,  and  the  Yale 
Record.  These  four  offer  an  8 
week  "heeling"  program  unique 
in  the  Ivy  League. 

The  heeling  program  of  each 
organization  has  it.^-  own  peculiar- 
ities, the  Record  claims  the  only 
"daytime"  competition,  while  the 
Bannci-  offers  the  only  "night- 
time" program.  WTBC  and  the 
News  require  similar  amounts  of 
time,  usually  in  both  the  after- 
noon and  evening. 

Freshmen  with  an  interest    in 
writing  humor,  in  cartoon  work, 
or  in  the  business  problems  of  a 
monthly  magazine  can  find  ample 
opportunity   to   flex   their   fledg- 
ling skills  with   the  Record. 
Heelers  are  required  to  spe- 
cialize  from   the   beginning   of 
their  comp:  the  writer  turns  in 
a  minimum  of  one  story  ■  week, 
receiving  criticism  from  *n  edi- 
tor for  hit  «vorfc;  the  art  board 
heeler  is  C6«ched  in  the  same 
way  on  his  minimum  of  two  car- 
toons each  week;  the  business 
heeler  must  sell  advertising  ac- 
counts and  subscriptions. 
The  Banner  publishes  a   large 
selection   of     booka-.     from     the 
school     yearbook    of   the     same 
name  to  Going  Places,  a  review 
of   feline    hunting    locations    for 
the  sports-minded.  Writing  is  lar- 
gely    expository,   and      business 
work  much  the  same  as  in  the 
other   two   publications. 

WYBC  offers  all  the  variety  of 
activities    that    go    into    a    radio 


station's  werk.  .\  heeler  pcrfornLs 
most  of  these  functiv,ns  during 
his  competition — „usiness  work, 
announcing,  sL-ripi-writing,  eo- 
-inL'oring — bring  all  these  skills 
into  play  each  Saturday  when  the 
h'jelor.s  atlually  :  ake  over  the 
station. 

A!  thi>  cm!  (if  the  competilion, 
ele<.ti<ij:  is  intlutnccd  Xaj  a  large 
0X1  chl  l)y  doiuirlniont  rwommen- 
disti^ns.  and  'cxctrutive  inter- 
view.'  time  cjc(iil  anJ  variau-i 
skill  I    •  ,. 

WJ.h  a  broad  program  includ- 
ing business  training,      special 
projects,    editorial,      n*  vs    and 
feature   writing,   the     News   is 
perhap*  the  most  representative 
examoie  of  tlie  heeitng  system. 
.\ffr/    a    peiioil    of    drirntaliun 
w  h<  n  iho  jirt!spv.clivc  hocler  has 
an     o.  P'<r;uniiy   to   study     sty.c 
rules,  th-'  'art'  tif  headline  wri- 
tia..  :     ■    ^*>s  pn.ceilure.  aud  to 
i.mi  la.izL-  hlnK.Ml  with  the  prp- 
ces>'  oi  fli-ttiai'iv  iTuttir.^  together 


heeler  achieves.  .  .  . 

The  amount  of  time  spent  in 
heeling  any  one  of  these  organi- 
zations depends  on  the  individu- 
aKs  scholastic  program,  his  own 
iniliative,  and  his  skill  in  work- 
ing quickly  and  accurately.  The 
Record  and  Banner  provide  com- 
petilufn  at  a  more  relaxed  pace 
thai  either  of  the  other  two; 
W\  BC  and  the  News  are  similar 
in  time  requirements. 

This  much  can  be  counted  on: 
it  i  •  time  consuming  to  heel.  But 
incst  heelers  find  that  the  first 
week  trains  them  in  the  budget- 
ing tf  their  time,  and  they  dis- 
cover just  how  much  spare  time 
they  actually  have — time  previ- 
c.u-Iy  .-(pcnt  on  p:ker,  "flicking 
out."   or  hull-sessions.  .  .  . 

Olten  a  student  will  discover 
that  his  academic  schedule  pre- 
c.uries  a  'full-time"  extracurri- 
cular activity  or  that  his  inler- 
L  ■  5  lie  somewhere  ali'ld  of  the 
four  major  organizations.  Several 


to   air   gripes   or  just   talk.   The 
attitude  today  is  one  of  relative 
equality — much  more  so  than   in 
those  intense  times  of  the  past.  . . 
Graduates   who    have    looked 
back  on  their  college  experien- 
ce are  unanimous  in  their  agree- 
ment that  the  heeling  period  is 
a      maturing    one,  where      one 
learns  to   investigate  and    esti- 
mate a  situation  and  then  com- 
municate his  experience  so  oth- 
ers too  will  understand  it. 
The  exchange  of  idqas  gained 
through      working      with      other 
members    of   an    organization   is, 
perhaps,     the     most     important 
value  of  heeling  and  membership, 
for    it    is    through    this    kind    of 
communication    that    maturity   is 
developed. 

It  is  this  valu'j — the  exchange 
of  ideas,  which  perhaps  most  ef- 
fectiv?ly  answers  the  faculty  chal- 
lenge. Yale's  ideal  of  "the  well- 
rounded  man"  could  find  no  bet- 
ter proving  ground. 


Yale's  Paper 

The  Yale  Daily  News,  which 
is  as  dignified  as  a  college 
newspaper  can  be,  calls  itself 
"the  oldest  college  daily." 
staffers  on  The  News  are  se- 
lected by  the  ''hfeiing"  {»re- 
eess. 


a  daily  paper,  he  plunges  into  the 
five-day  heeler  UTek. 

Two  day.s  each  week  the  heeler 
is  "signed  out,'*  and  is  not  al- 
lowed to  do  Ne^vs  work. 

The  remaining  days  he  reports 
to  the  business  office  each  af- 
ternoon and  spends  varying 
amounts  of  time  contacting  lo- 
cal r.i:Tchants  for  advertising. 
Special  project^,  advertising  make 
up.  subscription  selling  and  an 
occasional  trip  to  New  York 
round  out  the  business  education 
of  the  heeler. 

The  evening  pericd  is  taken 
up  with  actual  news  and  feature 
writing.  .Many  of  the  news  stories 
are  releases  from  the  University 
news  bureau,  but  the  active  heel- 
er collects  "unassigned  .vtories' 
— news  items  he  has  discovered 
without  the  intci'veation  of  an 
editor. 

Approximately  once  every  two 
weeks  he  serves  as  office  heeler, 
working  primarily  on  the  details 
cf  the  issue. 

The  heeler  is  credited  for  all 
his  work  through  an  elaborate 
point  system.  There  are  boni 
for  exceptional  or  "beyond-the- 
call-of-duty''  work,  and  an  oc- 
casional dock  to  punish  neglect 
and  error.  Election  is  based 
wholly  en  the  point  totals  each 


campus  activities  satisfy  a  wider 
variety  of  interests. 

The  Dramat  offers  an  unusual 
heelinii  program  for  those  inter- 
ested in  theater  work.  The  Dra- 
mat heeler  sets  his  own  pace- 
starting  whenever  he  wishes  and 
working  at  his  own  discretion. 
When  hi  •  point  total  (which  i.> 
accumulated  in  acting,  business 
and  publicity  work,  or  scene  de- 
sign) reaches  a  prescribed  figure, 
lie  is  eligible  for  election. 

The  Yale  Literary  Magazine 
is  one  of  the  most  venerable 
literary  publications  in  the 
country,  and  offers  a  major  op- 
portunity for  all  those  interest- 
ed in  creative  writing  and  cri- 
ticism. 

Heeling  the  Lit  consists  of  aoib- 
mitting  at  least  one  original  piece 
of  writing  for  editorial  criticism 
and  working  ijr  specific  periotls 
of  time  in  the  business  depart- 
ment. In  addition  to  his  cwn 
work,  the  heeler  is  asked  to  cri- 
ticize other  stories,  and  poems.   . 

Difficulty  ha  ■  plagued  the  heel- 
ing system  since  its  inception 
(for  the  News)  in  1883.  At  that 
time  there  was  not  only  indivi- 
dual competiticn  of  the  most  cut- 
throat nature,  but  such  tactics 
as  'combinations.'  where  groups 
of  heelers  banded  together  against 
others,    were    practiced. 

E\cn  a,-  late  as  1920.  News 
Chairman.  Briton  Hadden.  com- 
mented the  heeler  has  always 
been  a  slave." 

Happily,  this  situation  no  long- 
er exists.  Members  work  closely 
with  the  heeler,  helping  him  in 
the  problems  of  time-budgeting 
and  conflicting  interests,  often 
sitting  down  together  over  a  beer 


How  Safe  Is 
Victory  Village 

(The   Chspel    Hill    News   Leader) 

.According  to  statements  made 
by  the  recent  victims  cf  the  heat- 
ing unit  fire  in  Victory  Village 
when  16  families  were  driven  out 
by  flames,  no  petition  to  the 
Stat'.?  legislature  for  betterment 
and  no  campaign  for  improve- 
ment  is    in    contemplation. 

Victory  Village  was  at  one  time 
almost  a  suburb  and  was  out  on 
a  limb  from  Uie  standpoint  of 
community  growth.  But  it  is  now 
one  of  the  towns  chief  avenues,  it 
is  not  far  from  the  center  of 
town,  and  occupies  a  vital  spot 
in  the  community. 

The  wooden  dwellings  borrow- 
ed from  the  government  were  in- 
stalled to  meet  an  emergency. 
All  the  equipment  was  intended 
to  meet  a  quick  and  temporary 
need.  But  the  passage  of  years 
has  brought  age  and  deteriora- 
tion to  houses  and  to  equipment 
as   well. 

The  (ieneral  Assembly  should 
be  made  acquainted  with  Victory 
Village  as  it  stands.  It  is  not  too 
much  to  ask  that  a  committee  of 
legislators  be  brought  from  Ral- 
eigh to  inspect  and  study  the 
Village's  equipment  and  facili- 
ties. 

The  safety  of  Victory  Village  is 
a  State  concern  and  the  time  to 
bring  it  forcibly  to  the  State's 
attention  is  now  while  the  legis- 
lature is  meeting. 


■  V-  '..•-^<v,';-.'V..-. 


DEAN  OF  STUDENT  AFFAIRS  FRED  H.  WEAVER 

....  champion  of  and  obstacle  for  student  freedom 

Administrations 
Frustration 

The  writer  cf  this  letter  was  attorney  gen- 
eral of  the  student  body  during  the  last  acade- 
mic year.  Presently  Reid  is  a  law  student  here. 


Editor:  -     '.  it 

Allow  me  to  congratulate  you  for  what  I  con- 
sider the  most  isignif leant  editorial  which  has  ap- 
peared in  The  Daily  Tar  Heel  during  my  nearly 
f(,ur  \cars  as  a  student  at  Carolina. 

I  refer  to  the  editorial  entitled  "Students  .\nd 
Their  Crisis:   South  Building  Guilty,  Tco.  " 

I  learned  a  great  deal,  and  I  think  greatly  be- 
nefited from  my  four  years  in  student  govern- 
ment. However,  the  most  lasting  impression  i  re- 
ceived was  the  frustration  student  government 
leaders  encounter  when  attempting  to  negotiate 
with  the   administration   in    South   Building. 

The  paradox  of  it  all.  I  felt,  was  that  the  adnnn- 
islralicns  most  articulate  champion  of  student  seil- 
determinaUon  was  himself  the  greatest  single  ol)- 
stacle  to  it:  Dean  of  Student  .affairs  Fred  H.  Weav- 
er (presently  on  leave). 

Apparently  the  Eleventh  Commandment  in  the 
Division  of  Student  Affairs  is  "thou  shall  maintain 
the  status  quo."  It  is  easy  to  see  why  such  is  the 
case. 

It  is  hard  work  to  make  any  appreciable  improve- 
ment..' in  the  area  of  student  affairs.  Change  always 
makes  someone  unhappy.  It  is  much  more  pleasant  to 
handle  things  as  they  have  always  been  handled. 

This  is  not  only  the  comfortable  position  for 
the  dean  of  student  affairs  to  take;  it  is  also  the  sa- 
fest. Everyone  knows  it's  safer  to  avoid  a  problem 
than  face  it  squarely.  And  there '*•  always  the  out- 
side chance  that  the  problem  will  go  away  and  solve 
itself. 

If  anyone  (i.e.  trustees,  alumni  or  legislators) 
question^  why  these  problems  are  being  avoided  it 

s  convenient  to  blame  this  inac- 
ion  on  the  "crisis"  or  "apathy"'  m 
tudent  government. 

Publically  the  dean  of  ^-tudent 
if  fairs  (now  on  leave)  praises  the 
nerits  of  student  government  and 
he  educational  value  of  student 
;elf-determination.  Yet  he  fails  to 
officially  recognize  the  very  basis 
REID  of  our   student     government— our 

constitution. 

Not  only  is  our  constitution  only  •tolerated  '  by 
the  administration:  it  is  directly  overruled  when 
some  agency  of  student  government  fails  to  adhere 
prcci.-ely  to  the  wishes  of  the  dean  of  student  af- 
fairs. 

The  effect  of  this  is  a  student  government  al- 
lcv>red  to  function  only  when  it  follows  the  "word'* 
handed  down  from  South  Building. 
Someone  more  callous  than  I  might  well  conclude 
that  student  governments  sole  function  in  the  eyes 
of  South  Building  is  to  perform  the  administrations 
dirty -work — principally  the  honor  system. 

It  Mr.  Magill  really  wants  to  see  some  student 
initiative  (and  Im  ^-are  he  does),  why  doesn't  he 
try  giving  student  government  some  independent  au- 
thority? 

Why  doesn't  he  recommend  to  the  chancellor 
that  the  student  constitution  be  officially  recognized 
and  respected?  Why  doesn't  he  have  prominent  stu- 
dent representation  on  the  Council  on  Student  Af- 
fairs? 

Why  doesn't  the  Book-X  committee  meet  more 
than  once  or  twice  a  year  to  see  why  prices  in  the 
Uiversity  stores  can't  be  lowered 

If    the    dean    of    student    affairs    would    make 
some    encouraging    gestures    such    as    mentioned 
above,  I  believe  he  would  discover  a  new  and  re- 
freshing  initiative  and   incentive  for   accomplish- 
ment on  the  part  of  student  government. 
A  student  leaders  time  in  school  is  short.  He  can 
hope   to  accomplish  very  little  when  met  with  the 
red  tape  and  resistance  that  South  Building  is  so 
expert  in  placing  in  his  path. 

Ii  there  is  a  crisis,  I  l>elieve  it  i^,-  in  South  Build- 
ing, and  it  is  caused  by  the  sole  desire  to  maintain 
the  status  quo. 

Dave  Reid 


Letters 


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The  Daily  Tar  Heel  welcomes  letters  from  its 
readers  on  any  subject.  Only  three  restrictions:  Tliey 
must  be  non-libelous.  in  good  taste  and  signed. 
Names  will  be  withheld  upon  request. 


{Y  9,  1957 


SATURDAY,  FEBRUARY  9,  1957 


THl  DAILY  TAR  HEBL 


PAGE  THREE 


WEAVER 

ht   freedom 


m  s 


fney  gen- 

|st  acade- 

snt  here. 


I  hat  I  con- 
:h  ha^.  ap- 
[my    nearly 

idents  And 

greatly  be- 
lt govern- 
tsion  I  re- 
pvernment 
negotiate 
fng. 

he  admin- 
ludent  <eil- 

Inglc  ob- 
k!  H.  Wcav- 

fi-nt  in  the 
It  maintain 
5iich  is  the 

imprnve- 
|nge  always 
pleasant  to 
itidled. 
jsition  (or 
iso  the  sa- 
a  problem 
s  the  rut- 
and  solve 

[legislators! 
avoided  it 

this   inac- 

apalhy  in 

of  -tiidcnt 
praises  the 

Irnment  and 
of  student 
he  fails  to 
very   basis 

rnmenl — our 

jlerated  ■  by 
ruled    when 
to  adhere 
studint  af- 

srnment  al- 
|the  "word" 

,cll  conclude 
in  the  eyes 
jinistration's 
?m. 

lomc  student 

doesn't   he 

|ependent  au- 

le   chancellor 

ly  recognized 

rominent  stu- 

Studont  Af- 

meet    more 
pricf^  in  the 

/ould  make 
mentiftned 
new  and  re- 
accomplish- 
lent. 

short.  He  can 
net  with  the 
uilding  is  so 

South  Build- 
'  tu  maintain 

Dave  Reid 


;ters  from  its 

nctions:  They      | 

and    signed.       ) 


Socials 

(Continued  from  paffe  1) 

dance  Friday  night  in  the  Washing- 
ton Duke  Crystal  Ballroom. 

Pledge  Claso*  President  Bobby 
Mauldin  of  China  Grove— escort- 
ing Lou  Chapman— Vice  President 
Dewitt  Dowdle  of  Asheviile  with 
Joan  Jordan  and  Treasurer  Sandy 
Jarrell  of  Norfolk,  Va.  with  Judy 
Walker  ;led  the  presentation  rtf 
pledges  who  were  introduced  by 
Chi  Phi  Collie  Collison  of  Anna- 
polis, Md. 

Among  the  guests  at  the  Durham 
banquet  were  Director  of   Admis- 


World  News 


(Continued  from  page  1) 

worsening  situation,  word  came 
from  Tel  Aviv  that  Israel  is  stand- 
ing firm. 


ike,  Saud  Make  Deal 

"WASHlNtJTON  --<APf  —  Presi- 
dent Ei.:::.?nhower  and  Saudia  Ara- 
bia's King  Saud  coupled  announce- 
ment of  a  long  heralded  air  base- 
for-arms  deal  today  with  a  pledge 
to  oppose  any  use  of  force  in  the 
Middle  East. 

Their  announcement  incorporat- 


Prior  to  the  Bermuda  trip  the 
I  President  probably  will  hold  a 
'  round  of  talks  here  with  Premier 
i  Guy  Mollet  of  France. 

I      These  talks  will  be  the  first  top 

j  levci  conferences  held  among  the 

;  Western  Allies  since  their     wide 

open  break  last  fall  following  the 

British-French  attack  on  Egypt. 


Frosh  Beat 
High  Point 
Jayvees 


Wake  Forest 
Legislature 
Asks  Meeting 


Covering  The  CamRUS 


Students  Demonstrating 

MADRID,  Spain  —  (AP)  —  Police 
thumped  demonstrating     students' 


WLVSTON-SALE.M— ( AP )  — The 
student   legislature   of  Wake   For- 

Th„    /-„     I-       «      u  u    1    ♦  i  ^^^    College      voted     unanimously 

The   Carolina  freshman   basket-   Thursrto,.  ♦„  -^     „  .  •  . 

ball  team  jumped  off  to  a  10-2  lead  ]  ^^'^^  'L'T    u    '         T 
in  tv,..  «•!..♦      -     .        t      .•  A     ^  ^^""   ^"^     faculty     executive 

m  the  last  minutes  of  action  and    pommift^^  ...  *il 

tivon*  ««  »     J  <•     .  *u     TT    ..  T.  ■  »  '  '^'^'""iittee  to  "save  the  remaining 
went  on  to  defeat  the  Higk  Point  i  i:_u..    u„«...„        .u        .  j     .  Z 

jin..-ttz.e  i„uur».i!r       u*  between    the    students    and 

Jayvees  in  High   Point  last  night,  I  fu.  fa„,,,«,. 

103-74.  I  ''""•'• 


The  Tar  Babies  had  one  of  their  j      '"     ^     quiet     two-hour    session 
heads  yesterday  while  the  Spanish  •  best  nights  of  the  season  as  they  |  brought  about  by  the  resignation 
cabinet  sought  a  solution  of  grow-  j  ran  up  a  48-35  half  time  lead  and 
ing  difficulties  which  have  caused    really    poured    it    oh    after    inter- 
three   high-cost-of-living     boycott^■  mission. 

within  a  month.  i      n,.^„u    it-  r^         u  ,        .  i. 

I      Coach     Vmce     Gramaldi's     club 

^  .  ,  -     „     -        The  cabinet  met  throughout  the  j  ^'t  over  50  percent  of  its  shots  in 

I  ^  K    lA     ^  «   dancing  was   ment  on  the  Dhahran  air  base  and ;  day  with  Gen.  Francisco  Franco  at    coasting   to   its  tenth   win   of   the 

provided  by  Don  Jefferson  and  his  ,  military  assi.iance.  i  his  Pi-ado  palace  just  outside  Mad- 1  season.  The  Tar  Babies  have  lost 

This  agreement  has  been  an  open  j  rid.  There  was  no  announcement !  ^^  State  twice  and  have  dropped 
secret  for   a  week.  Under  it,  the  1  of   matters   discussed   but   sources !  °"^  *«  the  Wake  Forest  frosh. 
U.  S.  Air  Force  will  continue  us-  j  close  to  the  government  said  the  |      ^'S  Lee  Shaffer  paced  the  Tar  j  cter    to    establish    the    position    of   Carolina 

1,     J        '°^  ^^^  Dhahran  air  field  for  five !  wave     of  unrest   throughout     the^^^'  attack  against     the     hapless  |  student  government  at  Wake  For- 

AS  a  nnaie  lor  the  weekend  a ,  more  years,  and  Saudia  Arabia  will ;  country  was  at  the  head  of  the  ag- '  "'g^    Point   club  with  27   points,  i  est. 

get   "military   equipment,  services !  enda.  i  Shaffer   was    followed    closely    by  j      t- 

and  training."  |     |  Mike  Steppe  who  dropped  in  25  "  ^"'o-P^''^  "i»tion  calling  for 


SCHOLARSHIP  HOLDERS  ,  of   -Brigadoon"  March  1-3  has  been 

Today  is  the  last  day  for  holders  :  asked  to   contact    Charlie   Barrett 
of  University  scholarships  and  sch- 1  at   80381   or   the   dramatic   art   of- 
olarships     paid  through  the     stu-  j  fice  in  Saunders  Hall  or  Aberna- 
dent    aid   office  to   pick   up  their '  thy  Hall, 
scholarship   tickets  or  checks   for    WUNC 

ine  spring  semester.  Those  hold-  Today's  schedule  for  WUNC,  the 
ing  scholarships  have  fc>een  asked  I  University's-  non-commercial  radio 
to  come  by  the  student  aid  office ;  station,  is  as  follows: 

7:00— Paris  Star  Time ^ 

7:30-— This  Is  Jazz 


Social  Work 
3choo|  Gets 
Special  Course 


o;,.r.^  R,,,.  A^.«o«-«  ^        1.  ,_       I  ed  a  boost  for  Saud  as  a  Middle 

sions  Roy  Armstrong — who  is  chap-    c^.,,*  ,     ^  .  u     . 

4„..   ^A..\.,.r.     ^„-i    »?        A        .  ^st  leader,  a  bow  in  the  d.iection 

ter  advisor— and  Mrs.  Armstrong. '    r  ♦!,     ..»     j  ,    .,        , 

"Of  the     Bandung  principles     and 

A.-  favors,  the  Chi  Phis  gave  cop- 1  applause  for  Eisenhower's  Middle 
per  mugs  with  the  fraternity  crest  j  East  resolution.  But  the  core  of 
to  their  dates.  |  jj^g  announcement  was  the  agree-  i 

Music  for  dinins 


orchestra. 

Party  clothes  were  tucked  away 
Saturday  when  costumes  came  in 
vogue. 


in  the  basement  of  Hane:;  Hall. 

CANTERBURY  CLUB 

The  Canterbury-  Club  supper  will 
begin  at  6  p.m.  Sunday  at  the  Epi- 


last    night   of  all    13   members   of 

the   mens    honor   council    in    pro- 1  ^^^jp^j  p^^sh  House.  A  discussion 
est   over   faculty    disciplinary    ac-    ^j^  fallow  on     The    Theologv  of 
tion.   following   a    panty   raid    the 
student   group   stressed    its   desire 
for  full  cooperation  with  the  col- 
lege   faculty   and    administration. 


masquerade  party  was  held  out  at 
the  American  Legion  Hut  with  cou- 
ples dressed  in  a  large  variety  of 
costumes. 

ANOTHER  PLEDGE  event  last 
weekend  was  the  Beta  pledge  party 
out  at  Larry's. 

Taking   a    break    from    all 


Thi'     group     said,     however,  it 
felt  a  meeting  was  justified  in  or- 


Martin  Buber"  by  the  chaplain  and 
a  panel  of  students.  This  will  be 
followed  by  the  Service  of  Even- 
ing Prayer  in  the  chapel  at  8  p.m. 

USHERS  NEEDED 

Anyone  desiring  to  usher  for  the 
Playmakers'     production 


8:00— Take  It  from  Here 

8:30 — Showtime 

9:00 — ^Horizons  in  Music 
10:00— News 

10:15 — Evening  Masterwork 
11:30— Sign  Off 
WUNC-TV 

6:30— Yesterday's  Worlds 

7:00— Mexico 

7:30— Frontiers  of  Health 

8:00— LTNC  vs.  Duke 


The  U.  S.  State  Dept.  has  desig- 
nated the  University  Schoof  of  So- 
cial "Work  for  a  special  course  of 
instruction  and  demonstration  in 
behalf  of  a  visiting  Iranian  so- 
cial welfare  director,  and  the 
Universitj'  will  acquaint  the  visitor 
with  specialized  work  especially 
relating   to  work   in   orphanages. 

Hossein  Shojaie,  who  is  director 
of  a  children's  home  and  is  con- 
nected with  the  Ministrj-  of  Labor 
in  Iran  is  enrolled  for  the  Spring 
semester  at  Chapel  Hill,  and  will 
pursue  his  studies  and  investiga- 
tion under  the  direction  of  Pro- 
fessor Alan  Keith-Lucas. 


While  the  ministers  met.  the  Ca-    steppe  made  fifteen  of  his  points  I 


kA  -11  iL      »i        *   ■>     i^"^''^  P^'^*^^  ^^'^'^^  "P  3  ^^'"O"-    from  the  free  throw  line  in  fifteen 

fViacnilllan,   Ike  Plan  TaikSj-'tration  of  university  students  with;  attempts. 
WASHINGTON  —  (AP)  — Presi- !  rubber  truncheons.  It  was  the  sec- 
j  dent  Eisenhower  probably  will  fly !  ond  such  conflict  in  two  days, 
theh-    to  Bermuda  about  March  21  for  a  i      „    .     .       ,. 
pledge  duties,  the  1956  pledge  class    conference  with  British  Prime  Min-  i  ^''^^'^  ^"""^^^  ^^""^  '^'^'^ 


ai  .1  their  dates  spent  the  evening  ister  Harold  Macmillan,  according 
dancing  to  the  music  of  the  na-  to  plans  now  being  worked  out  be- 
tion's  top  recording  artists.  I  tween  Washington  and  London. 


Green's  Restaurant 

Horne  of  the  famous  Dixieburger 
Pit-Cooked  Barbeque— Brunswick  Stew 

123  Columbia  Street 
(Beside  Western   Union)  Phone  9-3411 

We    serve   dinner    consisting    of    your    choice    of    meat   •ni 
three  vegetables.  Free  seconds  on  coffee  or  tea  with  meals. 
OPEN  FROM  8:00  A.  M.  TILL  2:00  A.  M. 


on  the  alert  since  4  a.m.  Thursday 
and  have  intervened  energetically 
at  any  sign  of  disorder.  Their  me- 1 
thods   were   considerably   tougher! 
than  yesterday  and  several  students 
got  their  heads  pounded  hard.  They 
are  expected  to  be  ruthless  tomor- ; 
row. 


Tonight  the  Tar  Babies  will  go 
against  the  Duke  University  frosh  : 
in  a  preliminary  game  before  the  ! 
eagerly  awaited  varsity  tussle  at  j 
8  p.m.  "nie  freshman  game  will  \ 
begin  at  6  p.m.  .         *  | 


PATRONIZE  YOUR 
•    ADVERTISERS    • 


Former  UNC  Physics  Prof 
Takes  AEC  Research  Job 

ARTHLTl  RUARK  OF  THE  mil- 

versity  of  .Alabama  physics  faculty 
has  been  given  the  research  job  of 
taming  the  hydrogen  bomb  reaciton 
Tor  peaceful  uses  by  the  Atomic 
Energy  Commission.  He'll  admini- 
.«vter  the  AEC  program  known  as 
"Project  Sherwood."  Prof.  Ruark 
hpaded  the  UNC  Physics  Depart- 
ment until  taking  a  two-year  ap- 
pointment to  the  Naval  Research 
Laboratory  in   19*4. 


By  ;.■'-:.-■-. 

American  Greeting  Card  Co. 

For  everyone  on  your  ''love  list'',  choose 
here  from  a  gay  array  of  Valentines.  *  .  . 
Sentimental  or  sophisticated.  .  .  .Cute  or 
comic.  Just  right  cards  for  sweethearts, 
family,  friends,  or  what-have-you.  .  .  .1<  to 
$1.00 


.-«^..,  ..  ._.,..*>• 


OLD  DOMINION 
She'll  love  you  for  these  delicious 

chocolates.  .  .  .Beautifully  gift-wrapped.  In  Valentine  Boxes.  . 
10<  to  $500 

YOUR  VALENTINE  HEADQUARTERS 
Free  gift  wrapping  and  mailing 


Drug  Store 


159  E.  Franklin  St. 


Free  Delivery 


TALENT   SHOW 

(Continued  from  Page  1j 

that  the  trip  will  establish  closer 
relationships  with  the  two  schools." 

SELECTED  ACTS 

Pridgen  said  that  since  time  will 
not  allow  a  fall  television  produc- 
tion of  the  show,  selected  act  will 
appear  in  the  hour-long  perform- 
ance. Of  the  acts  in  the  presenta- 

[  tion,  Pridgen  said  that  the  three 
winners  probably  will    be   on   the 

,  show.  I 

One  of  the  judges  of  the  original 
show  heartily  endorsed  the  idea  of 
the  repeat  performance.  Samuel  i 
Selden,  Carolina  Playmakers  Di- ' 
rector,  said  that  "the  quality  of ; 
the  show  is  more  tlian  high  enough  ' 
I  to   make   a   good    impressioh. 

'The  show  is  a  go*d   idea   as    < 

being      representative     of     this    ' 

branch  of  the  consolidated  uni-    I 

versify,  and  it  is  a  nice  gesture    I 

I    on  the  pert  of  the  talent  show, 

i    one  thta  Women's  CoNege  might    i 

I    one  day  return."  I 

The  staging  and  planning  of  the 
presentation    will    be    handled    by  | 
the  co-directors,  Pridgen  and  Miss  | 
Eleanor  Riggins,  and  by  Miss  Doris  ' 

;  Atkins,  Dottie  Wood,  and  Buddy 
Strickland,    Dave   Davis.    Norman 

I  Gillis  Ed  Crow.  Jim  Raugh,  and  ; 
Lou  Roscnstock.  ! 


the  joint  conference  was  followed 
by  another  requesting  a  meeting 
time  and  date  of  2  p.m.  this  Sun- 
day. 

Latin  Club 
Convention 
I  Here  Today 

Latin     is     no     "dead    language" 
I  for  R50  North  Carolina  high  school 
i  students  who  will  gather  in  Chap- 
.  el  Hill  today  for  the  annual  meet- 
ing of  the  N.  C.  Junior  Classical  j 
League. 

The    students    from    throughout  I 
the    state   will    mix   entertainment  j 
\  with  business  at  sessions  in  Mem- 
\  orial  Hall.  Pantomines  on  old  Ro- 
!  man  subjects  will   be  staged  dur- 
[  ing    the    afternoon    session   which 
will    include    a    business    meeting 
and  election  of  state  officers. 

Dr.  Dorrance  S.  White,  visiting 
professor  of  classics  at  UNC.  will 
address  the  students  at  10  a.m. 
A  welcome  will  be  brought  by 
Dr.  E.  L.  Ullman.  chairman  of  the 
UNC   Classics  Dept. 

Other  events  planned  for  the 
day  are  vocational  meetings,  dis- 
cussing various  professions,  and 
attendance  at  two  Morehead 
Planetarium   shows. 


CLASSIFIEDS 


FOR  SALE:  HOUSETRAILER;  35 
feet.  2  bedrooms,  shower.  1950 
Iron  wood.  Taylors  Trailer  Ct. 
Airport  Rd.,  J.  L.  Lane. 

FOR  SALE:  1954  27'  HOUSE- 
trailer.  I'-i:  miles  North  of  Cha- 
pel ffill  on  Airport  Road.  Sloan  s 
Trailer  Park.  Maurice  L.  Clegg. 


JAZZ  AT  TURNAGES 

Saturday  afternoon,  2:00.  Turn- 
ages  Cabin  in  Durham. — Jazz  by 
Dick  Gables  "All  Stars."  Beer 
Served. 

SUMMER  HELP  WANTED:  MAN 
and  Wife  or  two  hoys.  Operate 
amusement  business  for  sum- 
mer. Mountain  resort.  $35  week- 
ly, free  living  quarters.  See  Dan 
Sherill,  Taylor's  Trailer  Park. 

LOST:    MAROON   AND      BLACK 
>  Jacket  left  in  Carroll   Hall  Sa- 
turday   nighL    Reward    offered. 
Return  to  211  Mangum  Dorm  or 
to  the  Pilam  House. 

NIGHT  WAITER  WANTED  —  4 
nights  per  week.  Tar  Heel  Sand- 
wich Shop. 


FOR  RENT:  QUIET  ROOM  TO 
quiet  man.  Close  in.  206  Vance 
Street,  Phone  87871. 

FOUND:  A  PAIR  OF  DARK  RIM- 
med  glasses.  Owner  please  con- 
tact 3  Old  West. 


for  The 
Deeply 
Smitten     : 
We  Offer 
This  Is  My 
Beloved 
In 

Valentine 
Wrapping 

The  Intimate 
Bookshop 

205  E.  Franklin  St. 
Open  Till  10  P.  M. 


DAILY    CROSSWORD 


ACROSS. 

1.  Invaders  of 

Scotland 
6.  Leaves  as  is 

(print.* 
11  Worship 

12.  Heathen 

13.  Only  this 

14.  Intermix 

15.  Girl's  nam« 
16-  Meadow 

•  Eng.) 

17  Water  fod 
(Babyl.) 

18  Endeavor 
I  Scot.) 

30.  Writing  fluii 
21.Tnisted 

23.  Poker  stake 

24.  Rub  out 
25  Bury 
2«  Man's 

nickname 
27.  Raises 

28  Female 
sheep 

29  Appears 
30.  Excla- 
mation 

.31  Open  (poet.) 
32.  Siouan 

Indians 
35.  Choice 

morsel 
37.  Part  of 

a  church 
38  English 

author 

39.  Measure 

.  of  length 

40.  Sand  hills 

41.  River  (Fr.) 

DOWN 
l.Kn&vesdf 
Chita  CLao) 


2.  Concept 

3.  Connect  sys- 
tematically 

4.  Argument 
in  writing 

ft  Compaas 
point  (abbr.) 

6.  Backbone 

7.  Strong  taatt 

8.  Size  of  coal 
«.  Gifted 

10.  Tennis  shoes 
14.  Not  strong 
19.  Gdf  mound 
20  Not  having 
a  Will 


21.  Said 
again 

22.  Some 
time 
ago 

4 archa- 
ic) 

23.  Flouers 
25.  A.nger 
27.  A 

source 

•f sugar 

2»  PoinU 

of  land 

XI.  Hautboy 

23.  Acrofla 


aN2      yaw  3t..i 

CD    3tl^        CH'-l 

133:i 


V«*ter4ii)-'*  Aatw»r 

34.  Withered 
I  <var.» 

i      56.  Clamor 
Jk    39  Music  nott . 


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SIT  DOWN  in  the  common  room,  take  out  your  Luckies — 
and  who  pops  up  to  share  the  fun?  None  other  than  that 
friendly,  familiar  figure,  the  Lounge  Scrounge!  He's  a  sly 
guy,  too:  he  knows  which  cigarettes  taste  best— and  he 
knows  just  who  carries  'em.  Luckies  taste  better  to  buyers 
and  borrowers— and  no  wonder!  A  Lucky  is  aU  cigarette 
.  .  .  nothing  but  fine,  mild,  good-tasting  tobacco  that's 
TOASTED  to  taste  even  belter.  Light  up  a  Lucky  right  now. 
You'll  say  it's  the  best-tasting  cigarette  you  ever  smoked! 


Old  Mold 


WHAT   DID  THEY.CAIL   THE 
TIfOJAN  MORSE f 


Phony  Pony 


FARRIS    MOTCHKISS. 
WASHINGTON   &   LE€ 


WHAT  IS 

A  97-U.   ARAt? 

'fe^ 

^<^Jqg\ 

rv^ Jen 

jGl^v  /O*/ \ 

U^43 

^^^V^ 

nT 

"^V^ 

In  -T 

^^^sj^ 

V^^j^ 

ji' '    ^  ^ 

V/eak  Sheik 

JOHN    NU6CIEK0 

YOUNGSTOWN    U 

Cigarettes 


Limp  Shrimp 


WHO  KEEPS. THE. NAVT  IN    SnTCMCSf 


JOHN    aOADY. 
WIOVIDSNCE    COLLEGf 


Sailors'  Tailors 


_WHC1tE  DO  YOU  KEEP  A  HIGH  HOCSEf 


Tali  Stall 


ROBERT   LO»!S. 
M'SSiSSIPW    SOlJTHtRN 


STUDENTS!  MAKE  ^25 


Do  yon  like  to  liurk  work?  Here's  some  easy  money — 
start  Stickling!  We'll  pay  $25  for  every  Stickler  we 
print — and  for  hundreds  more  t^at  never  get  uaed. 
Sticklers  are  simple  riddles  with  two-word  rhyming  answers.  Both  words 
must  have  the  same  number  of  sytlables.  (Don't  do  drawings.)  Send 
your  Sticklers  witii  your  name,  addovse,  ooUege  and  class  to  K«mpy-Joe- 
Lucky,  Box  67A,  Mount  Vernon,  N.  Y. 


Luckies  Taste  Better 


WHAT  DO  YOU  GET   WHEN  YOU 
fOUCET  TO  SHAVE? 


j€AN  SHAW.  Stuhble  Trouble 


"IT'S  TOASTED"  TO  TASTE   BETTER  .  .  .  CLEANER,  FRESHER,  SMOOTHER! 

©AT  Co.       rRO!>icT  OF    t^e  .Ji^ruiar-an  <J/^c<-  C^-^^^    amkkica's  i.kading   manufactpfbr   of  cigarettes 


PAGI  P>OUR 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


SATURDAY,  FEBRUARY  f,  T»57 


Unbeaten  Tar  Heels  Meet  Duke  Tonight;  Seek  Number  18 


AT  4  P.  M. 


Unbeaten   Mermen 
Meet  Clemson  Here 


By   STEWART   BIRD 

Relaxed  and  ready  following  last 
week's  resounding  victory  over 
East  Carolina,  Ralph  Casey's  all- 
conquering  Tar  Heel  mermen  will 
shoot  for  their  seventh  consecu- 
tive win  of  the  season  when  they 


WORLD'S  GREATESI  NOVEL 
NOW  ON  THE  SCREEN! 


."ASPECTACUUR 
MOVIEI'UJt 


Waja&d 


take  on  the  Clemson  Tigers  at  4 
p.m.  today  in  Bowman  Gray  Pool. 

The  news  from  the  Palmetto  state 
indicates  that  the  Tigers  are  weak 
in  a  few  events,  but  Coach  Ca»ey, 
as  usual,  is  not  taking  things  too 
lightly,  nor  are  his  charges. 

The  Tar  Heels  are  undefeated 
this  season  and  are  determined  to 
keep  it  that  way.  They  have  taken 
East  Carolina  into  camp  twice, 
along  with  wins  over  South  Caro- 
lina, Duke,  Virginia  and  powerful 
'  N.  C.  State. 


i'lJ 


HOURS   OF    SHOWS 
1:00— 4:32— «:09 

PRICES    THIS    ATTRACTION 
ADULTS  85c      CHILDREN  25c 

NOW   PLAYING 


Carolina 


I      Their    win    over    State    January 
1  15th  was  important  and  impressive; 
!  important  in  that  State  is  the  chief 
i  threat  to  the  Tar  Heels  complete 
!  dominance  of  Southern  swimming; 
imprejsive  in  that  the  10  point  vic- 
1  tory  was  the  largest  margin  by  ei- 
ther team  over  the  other  in  many 
years.  Should  the  Tar  Heels  take 
their  remaining  meets  and  the  cri- 
tical   encounter    with    SOite    here 
Feb.  22nd.  Carolina  will  be  undis- 
'  puted  champion  of  the  ACC  and  a 
!  serious  threat  to  eastern  dominance 
i  of  the  National   Collegiate  Champ- 
[  ionships. 

Wake-UNC  Is  Sellout 

The  Wake  Forest-Carolina  game 
to  be  played  here  Wednesday 
night  is  a  sellout  it  was  learned 
today.  The  ticket  office  also  an- 
nounced that  tickets  to  the  Caro- 
lina-State game  Feb.  19  will  go 
on  sale  Monday  on  a  first  come 
first  serve  basis. 


Beatty  To  N.Y.; 
Trackmen  Run 
At  State  Today 

Coach  Dale  Ransons  Carolina 
trackmen,  both  varsity  and  fresh- 
men, will  go  through  their  pre- 
liminary paces  for  the  ACC  In- 
door Games  in  State  College's 
Cow  Palace  later  this  month  when 
they  travel  to  Raleigh  today  for  a 
Big  Four  practice  meet. 

The  Tar  Heels  will  be  without 
the  services  of  their  ace  Jim  Beat- 
ty who  will  participate  in  the 
Wanamaker  Mile  of  the  Melrose 
Games  in  New  York  tonight.  Beat- 
ty will  be  up  against  such  out- 
standing performers  as  Olympic 
1.500  meter  champ  Ron  Delaney, 
Hungarian  Laszlo  Tabori,  and 
UCLA  ace  Bobby  Seaman. 

Coach  Ransom  will  carry  a  soph- 
omore laden  group  to  Raleigh  for 
the  warm  up  in  which  no  score  will 
be  kept. 

In  the  high  jump  the  Tar  Heels 
will  be  led  by  veteran  Ken  Bry- 
ant and  sophs  Dick  McCallister 
and  Ray  Stanley.  John  Jones  and 
John  Bilich  will  lead  the  way  in 
the  shot  put  event,  with  Stanley 
and  Eddie  Brawley  doing  the  hon- 
ors  in   the   broad  jump. 

In  the  mile  event,  the  Tar  Heels 
will  be  led  by  Everett  Whatley, 
Howard  Kahn.  and  Marion  Grffiin. 
Wayne  Bishop  and  Alec  Coffin 
will  set  the  pace  in  the  two  mile 
relay.    Both    are    sophomores. 

Speedsters  Larry  McMullen  and 
Jim  Moss  will  be  the  top  men  in 
the  60-yard  dash  with  Dick  Mc- 
Fadden.  John  Sylvester,  and  John 
Fox  leading  the  way  in  the  600. 
Dave  Scurlock.  Ben  Williams,  and 
Howard  Kahn  are  tops  in  the  880. 


Sellout  Crowd  To  See 
Big  Four  Battle  Here 

By  LARRY  CHEEK 

.North  Caroliiiiis  icscr\f  tliiu  I  ar  Heel.s,  .still  shaking 
from  tlu'  .s(ait'  ilicv  ifci-ived  at  Maryland  Iiicsday  night,  go 
against  another  potenti;il  spoiler  tonight  when  thev  Face  the 
hot  and  eold  Hiike  Bine  Devils  in  Woollen  (iym. 

A   sellom   erowd   ol    r,,()oo   will   be   in    the   stands  while 
thousands  tiiore  will  watch  the  game  over  \VU\C-TV  Chan- j 
nel    j.  The  game  is  being    "broa'dx  ised"   with   armchair   fans  I 
watching    prtneedings    on    television    and    listening    to    the, 
game  on  radio. 

Carolina,  the  tunions  top  ranked  team,  goes  into  the 
game  with  a  spotless  17-0  record  ,uu]  a  7-0  reading  in  c on- 
feience  plav.  The  lilne  Devils  are  lo-fi  overall  and  5-2  in 
the  conlerence.  Thev  arc  currently  rimning  in  second  place 
l)ehind  the  leading    1  ar  Heels. 

The  two  teams  met  once  before,  Bobby  Joe  H.irris  or  Bob  Vernou 
this    season   in    the    Dixie   Classic,    at  the  guards. 


Tar  Heel  Matmen  Beaten 


By   RON   MILLIGAN  !      This   is    the   way  the   individual 

The  Carolina  wrestling  team  i '"^^'"^^^  ^'^"^-  ^23  lb.  John  Mc- 
went  down  fighting  yesterday  I  Hugh  (Md.)  pinned  Henry  Rhyne 
afternoon  as  Maryland  over- 
powered them  24  to  6  before  one 


Carolina,  with  giants  Pete  Bren- 
nan,  Joe  Quigg  and  Lennie  Rosen- 
bluth  in  the  lineup,  will  have  a 
decided  height  advantage.  The  blue 
Devils  do  not  have  a  man  over 
6-6.  while  Brennan  and  Quigg  stand 


FROM  THE  DARING    rMfl     BEST  SELLER 


UNIVERSAL-INTERNATIONAL 


presents 


Jose  Ferrer 


DEAN  JAGfiER  •  KEENAN  WYNN  •  JULIE  LONDON  •  JOANNE  GILBERT 

and  ED  WYNN  with  JIM  BACKUS  •  RUSS  MORGAN  •  ROBERT  FOULK 
Directed  by  JOSE  FERRER  •  Screenplay  by  AL  MORGAN  and  JOSE  FERRER  •  Produced  by  AARON  ROSENBERG 


LATE  SHOW  TONIGHT 
SUNDAY 

AND 
MONDAY 

NOW  PLAYING 


HUGH    O'BRIEN 
NANCY    GATiS 


In  ''BRASS  LEGEND'' 


Carolina    won    that    one    by    a    17 
point  margin,  88-71. 

The  Tar  Heels,  hard  hit  by  the 
book  bug.  have  lost  two  sopho- 
more reserves  since  last  .semester 
via  the  "flunk  out"  route.  Bill 
Hathaway,  a  6-11  center,  and  Stan  [  6-7  and  6-8  respectively. 
Groll.  a  6-0  guard  were  the  cas-  ou^e  has  beaten  State.  Mary- 
ualties.  Tony  Radovich.  another  |  ja^jj  clemson  (twice)  and  South 
man  who  saw  heavy  duty  during  \  Carolina  in  the  conference  while 
the  first  semester  has  used  up  his  \  x^^^^a  to  Maryland  and  Wake  For- 
eligibility  and  is  not  with  the  ^^t.  Notable  wins  against  outside 
*^3m  competition  have  come  over  Ken- 


To  offset  the  losses.  Coach  Frank 
McGuire  has  reinstated  suspended 
center-forward  Bob  Young.  Young, 
given  the  boot  by  McGuire  for  dis- 
ciplinary reasons  before  the  sea- 
son started,  saw  action  in  the 
Maryland  squeaker  Tuesday  night. 
Danny  Lotz  is  the  only  other  re- 
maining front   line  reserve. 

Duke  is  reportedly  at  full 
strength  for  the  first  time  since 
the  beginning  of  the  season.  Hayes 
Clement  and  Bucky  .Allen,  who 
both  have  been  sidelined  by  injur- 
ies at  various  times,  are  in  good 
health  and  should  be  ready  to  go. 

The  Blue  Devil  starting  lineup 
will  probably  find  Clement  at 
center,  rugged  Paul  Schmidt  and 
bespectacled  Jim  Newcome  at 
forwards,    and    Allen    along    with 


latum  Will 
Hold  First 
Drill  Today 


Although  the  weather  is  still  a 
bit  on  the  rainy  and  wintry  side.  | 
the  Carolina  Tar  Heel  Pootball 
team  will  begin  spring  practice  on  j 
Navy  Field  this  afternoon  as  j 
Coach  Jim  Tatum  goes  into  his  1 
second  year  with  the  Tar  Heels.      ! 

This  will  be  Tatums  first  look 
at  his  ball  club  since  the  Tar  Heels 
climaxed  a  rather  dreary  1956 
schedule  with  a  loss  to  Duke  Nov. 
24.  The  Tar  Heels  were  able  to  \ 
come  out  on  top  only  twice  dur- 
ing the  '56  season  and  later  had 
those  wins  taken  away  from  them  i 
because   of   an    ineligible   player.    | 

Under    the    conference     ruling, ' 
spring   practice   may   last   only   20 
days    and    this    must   come    within  ■ 
36  days.  Tatum  has  set  up  a  prac-  . 
tice    schedule    whereby    he    w^ll  \ 
hold    practices  every     other     day 
and   Saturday.  This  is  to  give  his 
players  time  to  study  and  still  be  j 
able  to  attend   practice. 

Another  problem   the  Tar  Heel 
mentor  faces     is     finding     a     re- 
placement for  assistant  coach  Ed-  i 
die    Teague    who    is    now    athletic ' 
director  and   head   football   coach 
at   the   Citadel.  According  to  Tat- , 
um    he   hasn't   been    able   to   find 
a    man    of    the    desired    qualifica- 
tions yet.  but  he  is  "in  no  hurry." 

Freshman  Coach  Fred  Tullai  and 
graduating  seniors  Don   Lear  and 
George    Stavnitski   will   assist    thai 
regular      varsity     coaching      staff 
during    spring    practice    .sessions. 


tucky.  Alabama.  West  Virginia  and 
Pittsburgh. 

Carolina  just  barely  got  by 
their  closest  call  of  the  season  in 
College  Park,  Md..  Tuesday  night 
when  they  whipped  Maryland. 
65-61.  in  two  overtimes.  Coach  Mc- 
Guire called  the  effort  a  "team 
victory"  but  singled  out  Bob  Cun- 
ningham for  his  excellent  defens- 
ive work  on  Terp  star  Bob  O'Brien. 

McGuire  has  also  asked  the  stu- 
dents to  conduct  them.selves  in  the 
mo.st  sportsmanlike  manner  possi- 
ble tonight.  "Let's  set  a  good  ex- 
ample for  the  other  schools  in  the 
conference,"  he  said.  "I'd  like  to 
.see  Carolina  win  the  sportsman- 
ship trophy,  and  the  only  way  we 
can  do  it  is  by  .showing  respect  and 
courtesy    for    the    other    team." 


of  the  largest  crowds  ever  to  at- 
tend a  wrestling  maicn  in  Woollen 
Gym. 

Approximately  300  spectators 
watched  one  of  the  most  exciting 
collegiate  wrestling  msrtches  ifn 
the  country  yesterday. 

The  winner  of  this  match  emer- 
ges  almost   certainly   as   the   ACC  \ 
champion   for   1957.    Thus     it     is ; 
quite   possible   that   Maryland   will  | 
continue  to  be  the  champion.  ! 

In  the  dressing  room  after  the ! 
match  yesterday,  someone  asked 
Coach  Sam  Barnes  what  he  thought  ; 
about  the  results.  Barnes  replied:  | 
"I  think  we  are  one  year  away ; 
from  giving  Maryland  a  good , 
match.  You  see,  my  sophomores , 
looked  exceptionally  well  this  af- 1 
ternoon."  •  j 

Only    a    sophomore.     Carolina's 
Bill   McGehee   looked  exceptional- ' 
ly  well  against  ACC  champion  Rod  \ 
Norris    until    the    closing    minutes 
of   the    last    round.    One    mistake 
caused  McGehee  to  get  pinned. 


in  2  nun.,  130  lb.  Ray  Haney  (Md.) 
decisioned  Capt.  Bob  Wagner  7:0. 
137  lb.  Perrin  Henderson  decis- 
ioned Berle  Cohen  (Md.)  6:1,  147 
lb.  Tom  Oberholtzer  (Md.)  decis- 
ioned Charlie  Boyette  7:6,  157  lb. 
Ken  hoke  decisioned  Leroy  Ken- 
nedy (Md.)  3:2,  167  lb.  Rodney 
Nori-is  (Md.)  pinned  Bill  McGehee 
in  7  min.  45  sec,  177.  Dick  Dean 
(Md.)  decisioned  Dave  Atkinson 
11:0,  and  heavyweight  Mike  San- 
dusky (Md.)  pinned  Lew  Hayes  in 
50  seconds. 


"Now  is 
fthe  time.." 

Make  your  future  succew  ctrXavn. 
Choose  GIbbsthorouirh  »ecr*Un»l 
training  . . .  tbe  ctioice  of  ■man 
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natius  employers. 
Special  Courw  tor  Coll«|»  Wocntn.  Writ* 
College  Dean  for  GIBBS  GIRLS  AT  WORK 


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4> 


What's  it  like  to  be 

AN  IBM  SALESMAN? 


Selling  fo  management  is  perhaps  the  best  training  for  management,  and 
it's  the  reason  Gene  McGrew   joined   IBM.   Today,   he   possesses   o 
^        thorough  practical  Business  Administration  education,  responsibility,  an 
4       excellent  income— all  at  age  27.  Read  about  an  unusual  caree^ 


You're  Gene  McGrew . . ,  high  Khool 
footballer  and  class  officer.  You  won  a 
scholarship  and  went  through  Prince- 
ton in  the  top  third  of  your  class  .  •  • 
managed  varsity  track . . .  commanded 
an  artillery  battery  in  Korea.  •• 
^'When  ycu  put  a  lot  of  preparation  in- 
to your  career,"  Gene  McGrew  feeU, 
"you  should  expect  a  lot  of  opportunity 
in  return." 

Meets  IBM  representotiv* 

Out  of  the  Army  in  1953,  Gene  met 
an  IBM  representative.  It  sounded 
like  opportunity.  A  few  interviews 
later,  Gene  was  sure.  Although  sales 
was  only  one  of  the  many  jobs  he  felt 
he  could  handle,  this  kind  of  selling— 
(IBM  machines  are  as  much  an  idea 
as  a  product)— promised  to  occupy 
every  talent  he  possessed.  Besides, 
he's  learned  that  "no  other  form  of 
training  produces  so  many  top  busi- 
.ness  managers."   - 


Makes  first  sale 

Gene's  first  sale,  to  a  bank,  required 
thorough  study ;  consultations;  a  writ- 
ten recommendation.  The  climax 
came.  Gene  remembers,  when  he 
submitted  his  analysis  to  the  vice 
president  and  received  that  gentle- 
man's signature. 


WUNC  Will  Carry  Game 
At  Virginia  Monday 

It  was  learned  yesterday  that 
WUNC-FM,  the  university  FM  ra- 
dio station,  will  broadcast  the 
Carolina-Virginia  basketball  game 
from  Charlottesville,  Va.,  Monday 
night. 

Larry  Saunders,  a  senior  radio 
major  from  Norfolk.  Va.,  will 
handle  the  play-by-play.  WUNC  is 
located  at  91.5  on  the  FM  dial, 
and  you  must  have  an  FM  radio 
to  pick  up  the  broadcast.  This  is 
the  first  time  the  university  sta- 
tion has  covered  a  basketball 
game.  Station  manager  John  Young 
said  that  because  no  other  station 
is  broadcasting  the  game,  it  was 
decided  that  WUNC  would  do  it 
las  a  service  to  the  students. 


G*na  «utlin*(  pregramming  t«tt 

Then  began  a  13  months'  training 
program  marked  by  merit  salary  in- 
creases. First— 3  months'  schooling 
and  observing  operations  in  Pitts- 
burgh (Gene's  hometown).  Next— 2 
months'  studying  the  applications  of 
IBM's  electronic  data  processing  ma« 
chines  in  business,  science,  govern- 
ment, and  defense.  Followed  by  7 
months'  practical  training  in  the  field, 
with  customer  contact.  Followed  by 
IBM's  famous  course  in  selling  meth- 
ods. Finally,  assignment  to  a  sales 
territory  near  Pittsburgh,  responsible 
for  about  14  companies  and  their  ex- 
ecutives who  used  IBM  equipment, 
and  a  dozen  or  so  more  who  were 
logical  prospects  for  it. 


Oitcwtting  cw«tom*rt  inttollotion 

Gene's  latest  sale  was  to  a  large 
industrial  corporation.  He's  now  pre- 
paring this  customer  for  the  installa- 
tion of  an  IBM  electronic  system 
designed  to  simplify  financial  pro- 
cedure; inventory  and  other  systems 
problems.  At27,  Gene  finds  himself  top 
man  on  an  important  account.  He'„ 
educator,  salesman,  administrator. 

How  would  Gene  define  selling? 

"We  feel  the  best  way  to  sell  is  to  be 
able  to  consult.  The  best  way  to  con- 
sult is  to  know  something  of  value 
your  customer  doesn't.  IBM's  'some- 
thing of  value'  is  profit  through 
automation." 

Gene's  thoughts  on  competition: 

"The  entire  Office  Machine  Industry 
feels  the  lead  pencil  is  the  biggest 
competitor.  You've  no  idea  how  many 
time-consuming  clerical  jobs  can  be 
mechanized,  thus  freeing  people  for 
important,  creative  jobs.  IBM's  suc- 
cess in  the  field  is  due  to  service, 
knowledge,  'know-how'." 

Does  Gene  find  his  youth 
a  handicap? 

"It's  what  you  know— not  how  old 
you  are— that  counts.  I  deal  with 
executives  twice  my  age  on  a  basis  of 


equality,  because  they  respect  my 
training  and  my  business  judgment." 

Future  wide  open 

"I'm  getting  married  soon,  and  I  was 
amazed  to  realize  how  much  security 
IBM's  growth  (sales  have  doubled  on 
the  average  every  five  years  since 
198Q)  and  benefits  represent.  But  I 
think  my  real  security  lies  in  the 
chance  to  use  my  own  ability  fully 
and  freely.  There  are  nearly  200 
Branch  Managerships,  15  District 
Managerships  and  executive  positions 
in  5  other  divisions  ahead  of  me.  IBM 
is  introducing  new  machines,  systems 
and  concepts  so  fast  that,  every  Mon- 
day, we  have  a  'new  ideii'  meeting 
just  to  keep  up." 

IBM  hopes  this  message  will  give 
you  some  idea  of  what  it's  like  to  be  a 
salesman  at  IBM.  There  are  equal 
opportunities  for  E.E.'s,  I.E.'s, 
M.E.'s,  physicists,  mathematicians, 
and  Liberal  Arts  majors  in  IBM's 
many  divisions— Research,  Product 
Development,  Manufacturing  En- 


Chtcking  out  n«w  cli«nt'«  »y»l«m 

gineering,  Sales  and  Technical  Serv- 
ice. Why  not  drop  in  and  discuss  IBM 
with  your  Placement  Director?  H« 
can  supply  our  brochure  and  tell  you 
when  IBM  will  interview  on  your 
campus.  Meanwhile,  our  Manager  of 
College  Relations,  Mr.  P.  H.  Bradley, 
will  be  happy  to  answer  your  (lytee- 

tions.  Write  him  at  IBM,  Room^ 

590  Madison  Ave.,  New  York 22,  N.  Y. 


IBM 


INTEINATIONAL 
BUSINESS  MACHINES 
COBruSATION 


i 

i 
i 

i 
i 


4 


PATA  f  nOCSSSINO 


ij^        ILSCTMC  TVPKWMTCIIS 


TIMS  CQUIPMKNT 


MIUTAKV  ^HeOWCTS    ' 

-     -   . ; 


S5EXALS  DEFT. 

BOX  870 

CSAPSL  HILL,    N.C. 


WEATHER 

Warmer    with    widely    scattcrMi 
showars.  Expactad  high  65. 


VOL.  LVII  NO.  95 


®)  c  Datly  WMdiX  Med 


REVIEW 

Tha   waak   in   raviaw.   Saa   paga 


Complete  OP)  Wire  Service 


CHAPEL  HILL,  NORTH  CAROLINA,  SUNDAY,  FEBRUARY  10,  1957 


Offices   in   Graham   Memorial 


FOUR  PAGES  THIS  ISSUI 


Ml-Will  Is  Seen     Tommy  Kearns  Sinks  Two  Free  Throws 

Between  Editor  < 

And  Merchants  With  16  Second s  Left  To  Give  UNC 


By   JIM    PURKS  I 

Ill-will  between  several  of  the 
Chapel  Hill  merchants  and  the  edi- 
tor of  the  Chapel  Hill  Weekly. 
Louis  Graves,  is  currently  making 
ilseil  evident. 

.\nd  the  controversy  which  is 
likoly  lo  ci:  Mc  all  stems  from  a 
miaun..crslanJing.  according  to  Joe 
Air^i'slinc,  chairman  of  the  Trade 
I  .omoiions  Ccmmitiee  jf  the  Assn. 
The  cause  of  the  ill-will  was  an 
editorial  in  the  Weekly  in  which 
Giavcs  attacked  the  merchants" 
idea  of  constructing  'billboards" 
outside  the  city  limits  in  order  to 
promote  more  trade. 

As    «    result   of    the   editorial, 
three  petitions  were  sent  to  Au- 
gustine,   all    of   them   vigorously 
oppcsing  the   idea  of  billboards. 
One   petition   was  signed   by   67 
University  faculty  members,  and 
two  were  signed  by  local  garden 
clubs. 
Jjc  Ausustine  slated  today  that 
the  facts  which  Graves  based   his 
editorial  on  "actually  were  rumors 
from  start  t"  finlM." 

'"The  thing  we've  proposed 
would  not  be  in  the  nature  of  bill- 
boards, put  painted  signs.  Wove 
h  .(t  agcnjies  uiauing  up  samples 
for  us."  Augu -.ine  pointed  cut 
thai  liiere  would  be  no  paper  used 
t-u  ihe  signs.  He  said  the  sign> 
would  be  painted  and  would  pic- 
tu.o  some  aspect  of  University  life. 
"Our  idea  wasn't  from  the  com- 
mercial view,  but  with  the  inten- 

AFROTC  Units 
Marched  Well 
In  Inauguration 

The  AFROTC  Marcning  Band. 
Color  Guard,  and  Precision  Drill 
Team  from  UNC  made  "excellent 
showings"  at  the  Inaugural  Pa- 
rade in  Raleigh  Thursday  despite 
bleak  weather  conditions  and  a 
freezinp  downpour,  according  to 
Major  Jack  Gabus,  Commandant 
of  AFROTC. 

The  band  was  led  by  Cadet  Capt. 
Don  Jefferson  and  the  Drill  Team 
by   Cadet    Capt.    Bob   Harrington. 

"I  think  the  new  white  helmets 
supplied  th?  Drill  Team  helped 
immeasurably  in  tho  performance 
of  my  boys,  as  they  not  only  felt 
but  looked  sharper,"  said  Capt. 
Ilnrrington. 

Tho  parade  began  at  1  p.m. 
headed  by  a  cavalcade  of  20  cars 
lead  by  Gov.  and  Mrs.  Hodges. 
Also  included  in  the  cavalcade  of 
cars  were  Gov.  and  Mrs.  Stanley 
of  Virginia  and  Gov.  and  Mrs. 
Georgt?  B.  Timmerman  of  South 
CarJina.  followed  by  Mayor  and 
Jlr.s.  Wheeler  of  Raleigh. 


tion  of  trying  to  attract  people  to 
see    the    University    and   we   hope  j 
thoy'il  shop  while  they're  here."     I 

"We're  not  going  to   put  any- 
thing up  that  'Mill  be  detrimental    j 
(See  ILL-WILL,  page  3) 

N.C.  State  \ 
Loses  Its    j 

i 

Captains     | 

Co-Captains  Cliff  Hafer  and  John 
Alaglio  Saturday  were  lost  to  N.  C. 
Slate's  basketball  team  because 
ot    s;;h3lastic  difficulties. 

Slate  Chancellor  Carey  H.  Bos- 
lian.  in  making  the  announcement, 
said  the  two  were  placed  on  proba- 
tion, effective  immediately.  This 
means  they  may  remain  in  school 

\  oy  paying  their  own  expenses,  for- 

'  leiluig  any  aid. 

'  Bo  Man  said  both  were  "not  eligi- 
ble lo  represent  the  college  in  any 
t.jm  oi  intercollegiate  competi- 
tith."  I 

iloslian's  action  followed  reports 
from    the    college    committee    on 
scholarships   and   student   aid   and 
the  faculty  athletic  committee.        i 
The    scholarship    committee    re- 1 
comn^cnded  the  athletic  grants  for 
Mdgiij    ajul    Hafer    "be    cancelled 
because    of    unsatisfactory    grades  i 
and  class  attendance  for  the  first 

j  seme  ■  cr." 

i      Ihe    faculty   athletic   committee  | 

j  recommended  probation.  | 

Maglio  and  Hafer,  both  seniors,  | 
were  not  available  for  comment  as 
to  whether  they  would  remain  in 

School. 

Maglio,  a  six-foot  guard,  is  from 
Havertown,  Pa.  and  Hafer.  a  six- 
tour  forward,  is  from  Middletown. 
Ohio. 

The  loss  of  the  co-<:aptains  al 
this  critical  time  apparently  dooms 
State  to  finish  in  the  second  div- 
ision of  the  Atlantic  Coast  Confer- 
ence race.  If  they  finish  the  sea„ jn 
still  ir,  fifth  place  where  they  are 
now  their  first  round  opvonent  in 
the  ACC  tournament  will  be  UNC, 
currently  rated  the  top  team  in 
the  country. 


75-73  win  Over  Duke  Blue  Devils 


nev5 

m 

brief 


New  Middle  East  Crisis 

WASHINGTO.N^— (AP)— A  new 
crisis  over  the  Middle  East  sent 
President  EisenJtawer  and  Secre- 
tary of  State  DuUes  into  a  long 
distance  tcleplione  huddle  yester- 
day. 

Besides  talking  to  Eisenhower, 
who  is  quail-shooting  in  Georgia, 
Dulllcs  also  conferred  urgently 
with  top  advisers  here 

Officials  are  intensely  worried 
about  the  prospect  that  the  Presi- 
dent and  Dulles  will  be  caught  in 
a  bad  squeeze  some  time  next 
week  ove  r  the  issue  of  sanctions 
against  Israel.  This  could  happen 
unless  Israel  pulls  its  forces  im- 
mediately out  of  the  Gaza  Strip 
and  the  Gulf  of  Aqaba  region,  as 
demanded  bv  the  United  Nations. 


Moscow  Invitation 

LONDON— (AP)— Premier  Nik 
olai  Bulganin  has  invited  Prime 
Minister  Harold  Macmillan  to  vis- 
it .Moscow  and  has  asked  the  Brit- 
ish leader  t  >  suggest  a  convenient 
date. 

The  text  of  letters  between  the 
two.  broadcast  tonight  by  Mos- 
cow Radio,  made  It  evidelit  Bul- 
gsnin  did  not  intend  to  take  "no " 
for  an  answer.  Macmillan,  is  .N-hunt- 
ing  aside  an  earlier  inviiation  to 
his  predessor,  Sir  Anthony  Eden, 
to  visit  Moscow  in  May.  left  open 
ihe  po.ssibility  of  some  future  visit.  1 

Moscow  Radio  broadcast  the 
letters  a  day  after  Washington 
sources  said  Macmillan  and  Pres- 
ident Eisenhower  were  working 
on  plans  for  a  meeting  in  Bermuda 
March  21. 


Rosy  Nits  35  As  Tar 
Heels  Win  Number  18 

By   LARRY   CHEEK  ^     *        ' 

(iiiard  lOinmy  Reams  dropped  in  a  pair  of  free  thro^vs 
with  i()  seconds  left  iiere  last  ni.^hi  in  Woollen  Gym  to  give 
ihc  liij>lily  favored  Carolina  Tar  Heels  a  ~yj'^  victorv  over 
an  inspired  Duke  Tniversity  team  that  relused  to  roll  over 
and  play  dead  before  the  nations  top  ranked  basketball  team. 
The  t losing  moments  of  the  rouj^h  r-nd  lumble  slugfest 
left    some   5.;)Oo   hishlv    partisan    fans   breathless.    With    less 

^ — "   ' ♦than   a   minute   remaining,   Coach 

Frank  McGuires  Tar  Heels  were 
riding  smoothly  along  with  a  6- 
point  lead.  73-67.  but  the  Blue 
Devils  struck  for  3  baskets  in  21 
seconds  to  knct  the  count  at  73 
all    with   only  24  seconds   left. 


Artistry  And  A  Basketball 

•  Lennie   Rosenbluth    (right)    leaps   to   roll   the   ba  I  over  the  blocking  attempt  of  Duke's  Jim  Newcome. 
Paul   Schmidt  (15)   looks  on   as  the  ball  drops  in  for  two  points. 


AAcGuire   Sweated   Through   That 
One;  Close  Game  Bad  On  Heart 


ON  WUNC  RADIO 

University  raoio  station 
WUMC-FM  will  carry  a  play-by- 
play broadcast  of  the  Carolina- 
Virginia  game  in  Charlottesville 
tomorrow  night.  WUNC  is  locat- 
ed at  91.5  on  the  FM  dial.  Larry 
Saunders  wil  voice  the  game. 
Anyone  wishing  to  hear  the  game 
must  have  access  to  an  FM  ra- 
dio. 


Several  Are  Planning 
To  Attend  UN  Seminar 


A  group  of  students  from  UNC 
is  planning  a  trip  to  New  York 
Ciiy  for  a  U.iited  Nations  Seminar 
on   March   6-9. 

U.\  Seminar  Chairman  Wally 
Satlerfield  announced  Thursday 
there  were  approximately  20  seats 
open  for  any  students  interested 
in  gjing. 

The  purpose  of  this  seminar  is 
to  study  the  United  Nations  and 
i(s    problem    of   "Disarmament". 

Sattcrfield  said,  "We  plan  to 
visit  with  ten  different  delega- 
tions to  the  UN.  in  addition  to 
meeting  with  other  government  of- 
ficials. At  each  delegation  we 
v.ant  to  get  first-hand  information 
as  to  how  the  particular  country 
it  represents  feels  toward  dis- 
armament  and   what     have     they 


Student  Party  Will  Hold 
Meeting  Tomorrow  Night 

The  Student  Party  will  meet 
Monday  night.  Chairman  Sonny 
Hallferd  announced  Friday. 

The  meeting  was  originally 
postponed  doe  to  V.  K.  Krishna 
Menon's  scheduled  appearance 
on  campus.  Menon  canceled  the 
engagement  earlier  this  week. 

Hallford  stated  the  party  will 
discuss  nomination  procedures 
within  the  party  for  the  coming 
election. 


done,    if  anything,    to   obtain    this 
end?" 

The  group  will  leave  Chapel 
Hill  at  5  p.m.  Wednesday,  March 
6.  and  will  return  to  UNC  no 
later  than  10  p.m.  Sunday,  March 
10. 

The  headquarters  for  the  group 
wil  be  in  the  Hotel  Taft,  while 
most  of  the  meetings  will  take 
place  in  either  the  individual  del- 
egate's embassy  or  in  the  UN 
building    on   the    East    River. 

Norman  Gillis,  the  planning 
committee  cliairman.  said,  "I  have 
received  many  pamphlets  and 
background  material  for  all  those 
that  plan  to  go.  If  you  want  to 
read  some  of  them  over  they  are 
available  during  the  day  in  Anne 
Queen's  YWCA  associate  director 
office  in  the  YMCA." 

In  addition,  Monday  night  Sam 
Levering  of  Virginia,  will  speak 
in  106  Hanes  Hall  at  7:30.  He.  as 
chairman  of  the  American  Friends 
committee  on  national  legislation, 
will  speak  on  the  UN,  and  the 
problems  brought  about  by  dis- 
armament. 

Levering,  an  expert  in  the 
field  of  the  functions  of  the  UN, 
has  traveled  all  over  the  United 
States  giving  lectures,  discussions. 

(See  SEMINAR,  page  3) 


McCarthy  Speaks  Out 

CHICAGO— (AP)— Sen.  McCar- 
thy (R.-Wis. )  yesterday  said  that 
under  a  proposed  treaty  the  Unit- 
ed States  could  give  away  enough 
atom  bomb  material  to  "destroy 
every  major  city"  in  the  United 
States. 

McCarthy  spoke  before  a  rally 
of  conservative  Republican  rank- 
and-filers  sponsored  by  the  Abra- 
ham Lincoln  National  Republican 
Club,  an  organization  which  has 
no  official  connection  with  the  Re- 
publican party. 

He  said  the  proposed  "atoms  for 
peace"  treaty  would  set  up  an  in- 
ternational agency  to  distribute 
uranium  235.  The  agency,  he  add- 
ed, would  exchange  know-how  and 
atomic  material  to  nations  which 
lack  them. 


By    BILL    KING 

A  warning  to  people  with  weak 
hearts!  When  the  Carolina  Tar 
Heels  come  to  town — move  out.  If 
the  Tar  Heeb  have  many  more 
games  like  the  one  last  night  in 
Woollen  Gym.  there's  going  to  be 
a  heart  specialist  boom  in  Chapel 
Hill,  and  the  first  patient  is  going 
to  be  the  Carolina  basketball  chiei- 
tian  Frank  McGuire. 

The  personable  Tar  Heel  coach 
walked  into  the  dressing  room  fol- 
lowing last  night's  fracas  with 
Duke  looking  like  a  man  who  had 
just  had  the  jjare  of  his  life.  And 
rightly  so.  McGuire  had  just  watch- 
ed his  Tar  Heels  squeeze  out  a 
75-73  victory  over  the  Duke  Blue 
Devils  in  a  game  that  sent   blood 


pressures  soaring. 

"I've  pa.ssed  the  stage  of  worry- 
ing now."  said  McGuire,  "I'm 
numb.  It  happened  so  fast  I  didn't 
know  what  had  happened.  "  He  was 
referring  to  the  la..-;  frantic  mom- 
ents of  the  game  in  which  he  saw 
his  team  lose  a  six  point  lead  with 
less  than  a  minute  to  play.  Tommy 
Kearns,  who  probably  mi.sscd  more 
foul  shots  than  he  ever  has,  drop 
ped  in  two  from  the  charity  line 
with  l(i  seconds  remaining  to 
clinch  it  for  Carolina. 

"Duke  is  a  good  ball  club,  "  he 
stated.  "Wc  can  never  seem  to 
catch  them  on  an  off  night.  They 
were  hot  out  there  tonight." 

McGuire  went  for  his  handker- 
chief to  wipe  the  per.piration  from 


his  face.  "This  is  the  longest  streak 
I've  ever  had  and  I  hope  it  con- 
tinues, but  I  don't  want  another 
one  after  this.  Its  too  hard  on  the 
heart."  ! 

The  smiling  Irishman  knew  that 
his  boys  were  pressing.  "The  pres- 
sure has  really  gotten  to  us,"  he  ' 
continued.  If  we  went  into  the 
ACC  Tourney  like  we  were  tonight 
wed  get  beaten  on  the  first  night. 
The  boy^-  look  like  they  need  a 
good  rest."  j 

McGuire  seemed  happy  to  change  : 
the  subject  for  a  minute  when  he 
was  told  that  his  AU-American 
forward  Len  Roscnbluth  had  bag- 
ged 35  points,  he  quipped"  you 
know,  I  believe  we're  gonna  mis.^ 
Lennie  next  season.  " 


Protest  Meeting 
Set  For  Today 
At  Wake  Forest 

j  WINSTON-SALEM— vAP)— The 
'  Wake  Forest  College  faculty  exec- 
!  utivc  committee  and  student  legis- 
lature will  meet  at  2  p.m.  today 
1  to  discuss  "the  overall  program 
,  of  student  government."  Dean  D. 
B.  Bryan,  chairman  cfthe  faculty 
;  group,   announced   Friday. 

Today's  conference  is  the  re- 
su'.t  of  a  wave  of  angry  protest 
at  the  college  over  faculty  dis- 
ciplinary action  taken  earlier  this 
week  against  several  students  who 
took  part  in  last "  month's  panty 
raid  at  Wake  Forest. 

The  meeting  was  requested  by 
the  legislature  Thursday  during 
a  special  session  brought  about 
when  the  entire  Wake  Forest  men's 
honor  council  resigned  in  protest 
of  what  they  termed  "unjust"  ex- 
pulsion  of   two   male  students. 

Dean  Bryant  said  he  met  with 
.several  members  of  the  student 
legislature  Thursday  afternoon  in 
what  he  described  as  a  "pleasant, 
co-operative  session." 

The  women's  honor  council 
Thursday  night  joined  the  protest 
by  attacking  the  executive  com- 
mittee for  increasing  punishments 
the  council  had  meted  out  to  two 
coeds   involved   in  the  panty   raid. 


HAPPENINGS  ON  THE  HILL: 


7f7ree  Pledge  Dances  Held 


Alliance  Ended 

AMMAN,  Jordan  —(AP)— Brit- 
ain and  Jordan  have  drafted  a 
joint  communique  fixing  March  1 
as  the  date  for  ending  of  their 
mutual  defense  alliance,  Abdul- 
lah Rimawi  said  today.  Rimawi. 
Jordan's  state  minister  for  foreign 
affairs,  said  in  an  interview  the 
hope  is  negotiations  over  the  end 
of  a  British  subsidy  and  cancella- 
tion of  British  base  rights  in  Jor- 
dan will  be  completed  by  the  end 
of    February. 


U.  S.  Reds  Split 

NEW  YORK— (AP)— Top  Amer- i 
ican   Communists  split  sharply   in 
the  party's  national  convention  to- 1 
day  on  what  policy  the  party  should 
follow — the  Moscow  line  or  a  so- 
called  "American  Road."  | 

Eugene   Dennis.  General   Secre- 1 
tary  of  the   party,   said  American  ■ 
Communists  would  make  their  own  | 
decisions  based   on  their  own   in- 
terpretation   of    Marxism — despite 
misgivings    expressed    by    French 
Communist  leader  Jacques  Duclos.  I 

But  William  Z.  Foster,  the  par- ; 
ty's  national  chairman,  said  Due- 1 
los  was  correct  in  warning  against 
"revisionist    tendencies." 


By   MARY    ALYS   VOORHEES 

Pink  hearts  and  carnations  form- 
ed the  Valentine  setting  Friday 
evening  in  the  Carolina  Inn  Ball- 
room f 3r  the  Annual  Chi  Omega 
Pledge  formal,  at  which  time  the 
1956  pledge  class  was  presented. 

About  the  walls  of  the  ballroom 
were  large  pink  hearts  with  fluffy 
edges  decorated  with  the  Gre  k- 
letters  Chi  and  Omega.  On  the 
wall  of  the  stage  other  pink  hearts 
formed  a  background  for  Jim  Crisp 
and  his  orchestra,  which  provided 
music  for  dancing. 

Presentation  of  the  1956  pledge 
class  came  at  10:30  p.m.  Led  by 
pledge  Class  President  Tog  San 
ders  of  Charlotte,  who  was  escort- 
ed by  Dick  Taylor  of  Oxford,  the 
class  was  introduced  by  Ray  Jef- 
feries,  assistant  to  the  dean  of 
student  affairs. 

WHITE  GOWN 

Dressed  in  billowing  white 
gowns  and  carrying  nosegays  oi 
pink  carnations  on  silver  dolies 
and  tied  with  pink  ribbon,  the 
pledges  stepped  through  the  en- 
trance— which  banked  with  spiral 
candelabra  and  greenery— to  be 
presented. 

Other  pledge  class  officers  to 
be  introduced  were  Social  Chair- 
man Margaret  Brunson  of  Albe- 
marle with  Jimmy  Hill  of  Smith- 
field   and   Treasurer  Jane  Johnson 


of    Spindale    with    Paul    Carr    of 

Hillsburo. 

SERENADE  ' 

When  each  pledge  and  her  es- 
c;rt  had  been  presented  the 
group  formed  the  sorority's  greek 
letters  after  which  the  actives 
-serenaded  them  with  the  tradi- 
tional Chi  O  song.  "My  One  Chi 
O   Girl." 

Fruit  punch  was  served  in  one 
corner  of  the  room  from  the  re- 
freshment table  which  was  deco- 
rated with  silver  candelabra  hold- 
ing pink  tapers  and  flanking  an 
arrangement    of   pink   carnations. 

Prior  lothe  dance  a  banquet  was 
hold  at  the  Inn  for  the  Chi  Os  and 
their  dates. 

Like  the  dance,  the  spotlight 
was  also  on  presentations,  al- 
though of  a  different  nature. 

The  most  outstanding  pledge 
award  was  presented  by  Chi  O 
President  Josephine  Ruffin  to 
Katherine  Coe  of  Washington.  DC. 
Scholarship  Chairman  Virginia 
Tilly  presented  the  scholarship 
award  to  Sarah  Hudson  of  Atlanta. 
Ga. 

A  pajama  party  at  Hoenig's  Cab- 
in got  the  weekend  going  for  the 
Kappa  Psis  Friday  night,  but  the 
maia  item  on  their  pledge  week- 
end program  was  the  banquet  and 
fornuil  last  night  at  the  Carolina 
Inn. 

After  the  banquet — which  was 
attended      bv       faculty.       alumni. 


pledges,   actives,    dates   and    wives 
— the  party  moved     to     the     Ball- 
room fir  dancing  and  the  presen- 
tation  of   the   1956  pledge  cla.ss. 
MUSIC 

Music  for  the  occasion  was  pro- 
vided by  The  Embers  and  feat- 
ured the  vocals  of  UNC  coed  Pee 
Wee   Batten. 

President  Whit  Moose  of  Mount 
Pleasant,  escorting  High  Point  Col- 
lege coed  Dot  Ridenhour.  was  the 
first  to  be  introduced,  followed 
by  Secretary  -  Treasurer  Joe  Fer- 
rell  of  Elizabeth  City  with  Lu 
Ruth  Suttvi  of  Raleigh:  Chap- 
lain David  Cooke  of  Hildenbran 
with  Nancy  Stiliwell  of  Hildebran; 
and  Soical  Chairman  Ronald  Free- 

I  mand  with   Betty   Davis  of   WC. 

!      As    the    names    were    called    by 

I  Kappa  Psi  Social  Chairman  Bob 
Cromley.  the  pledges  were  pre- 
sented    a     fraternity    paddle     and 

I  their  dates  were  given  a  carna- 
tion  corsage. 

Among  the  guests  at  the  dance 
were  six  Kappa  Psi  brothers  from 
the  chapter  at  Howard  College 
of  Pharmacy  in  Birmingham.  Ala.. 

I  who   are   visiting   the   UNC   chap- 

j  ter  for  the  weekend. 
CRYSTAL  ROOM 

The  Crystal  Room  of  the  Wa.sh- 
ingtcn  Duke  Hotel   was  the  scene 

j  Friday  night  for  the  third  pledge 

I  dance  taking  place  this  weekend. 
The  Lambda  Chis  held  their 
(See   HAPPENINGS,  page  3) 


Cossack  Group 
Completing 
World  Tour 

The  1956-57  t  ;ur  of  tae  Don  Cos- 
-sack  Chorus  and  Dancers,  which 
brings  them  to  Memorial  HaU 
Tuesday  at  8  p.m.,  completes  a 
vvorld-wide  tour  which  has  taken 
the  Chorus  to  a  total  of  15  coun- 
tries. 

Now  in  the  first  month  of  their 
U.  S.  and  Canada  tour,  the  Russ- 
'an  troupe  has  been  presented  in 
more  than  7.800  concerts,  has  ap- 
peared in  movies,  radio  and  tele- 
vision and  ha^  been  featured  in 
LP  albums  for  three  major  re- 
cording companies. 

The  Don  Cossack  Chorus  pre- 
sents a  program  of  music  which 
is  primarily  Russian  in  origin, 
flavored  with  frequent  renditions 
of  original  Cossack  dances.  Se- 
lectons  from  Tchaikovsky,  Gret- 
chaninoff.  Bortniansky.  and  Shve- 
doff  are  often  chosen  for  their 
concert   presentations. 

In    addition    to    Russian    church 
music,    folk     song,     and     cavalry 
marching  songs,  the  Don  Cossack's 
feature  a  special  interpretation  of 
the  origin  and  history  of  t'..e  Chor- 
us itself,   relating   its   part  in    the 
Russian     Revolution,     Civil     War. 
and  flight  from  their  home  coun- 
'  try.    Beginning    their    career    as 
I  cavalry  divisions  for  the  Czars  of 
i  Russia,    the    group   was    organized 
I  a-;    a    chorus    in    1922    after   their 
flight    from    the    persecutions    of 
the  Revolution. 
I      Sponsored  by  the  Student  Enter- 
tainment Committee,  the  Don  Cos- 
''  sack  concert  will  be  free  to  stu- 
:  dents    upon    pres-entation    of    JD 
cards.   A  $1   admission  is  charged 
'  to   student    wives,    with    a   S2   ad- 
mission   for    others.      Doors      will 
,  open  at  7  p.m. 


Carolina  put  the  ball  in  play 
after  Bob  Vernon  had  tied  the 
score,  and  Kearns  was  fouled  by 
Duke  guard  Bobby  Joe  Harris  with 
16  seconds  to  go.  The  stubby 
Kearns.  who  had  missed  5  in  a 
row  from  the  line  up  to  that  point, 
calmly  sank  the  two  big  ones  to 
give  Carol i.ia  the  win  and  keep 
them  atop  the  Atlantic  Coast  Con-- 
ference   standings.  •-' '     ■  ^  i    , . 

\  -■'■'  J:  ^ 

Duke  brought  the  ball  down 
the  floor  and  missed  a  pair  .of 
shots  at  the  basket  in  the  ^al 
16  seconds. 

Lenate  Rosenbluth  rolled-^ in  35 
points  to  take  high  scoring  honors 
for  the  Tar  Heels.  Kearns  fol- 
lowed with  14  while  Pete  Brenoan 
had  11.  Bucky  Allen  topped  Duke 
with    16. 

Duke  grabbed  the  lead  on  a  Jim 
Newcome  layup  at  the  opening 
tipoff  and  held  it  till  the  12:11 
mark  when  Rosenbluth  hit  a  three 
pointer  to  put  the  Tar  Heels  out 
Iront.  18-17.  The  two  teams 
swapped  baskets,  then  Brennan 
gave  Carolina  their  biggest  lead 
of  the  first  half  at  22-19.  Then 
Duke  dropped  6  straight  free 
throws  to  take  a  25-22  lead,  and 
they  never  trailed  in  the  opening 
stanza   after  that 

Duke  led  28-27  with  a  little 
over  7  minutes  to  go,  but  a  sud- 
den scoring  spurt  ran  the  margin 
up  to  37-29.  their  biggest  lead  of 
tiic  night.  Carolina  trimmed  it  tf> 
39-36.  but  a  pair  of  Blue  Devil 
tree  throws  2  seccids  before  half- 
time  made  the  score  41-36  at  in- 
t:rmi-sion. 

Rosenbluth  and  Brennan  hit  for 
7  points  at  the  start  of  the  sec- 
ond half  to  knot  the  count  at  43-43. 
Then  with  14:18  remaining.  Kearns 
converted  a  pair  of  free  throws  to 
put  Carolina  out  in  front  for  good, 
49-47.  The  Tar  Heels  began  to  run 
up  a  confortabl?  margin,  and  with 
7:50  to  go.  led  by  11  points  at  66- 
.55. 

Duke    hacked    slowly    away    but 

(See  TAR  HEELS,  page  4) 


THE 

BOX 

DUKE 

G 

F 

P 

T 

Newcome  f 

4 

4-9 

4 

14 

Schmidt   f 

3 

4-6 

5 

10 

Miller  f 

2 

0-0 

3 

4 

Barrett  f 

0 

2-2 

2 

2 

Clement  c 

3 

3-4 

4 

9 

Robertson  c 

0 

0-0 

5 

0 

Allen  g 

5 

6-9 

2 

16 

Harris  g 

2 

6-6 

4 

10 

Vernon  g 

4 

0-0 

1 

8 

Totals 

23 

27-36  30 

73 

UNC 

G 

F 

P 

T 

Rosenbluth   f 

11 

1321 

1 

35 

Brennan  f 

2 

7-8 

5 

11 

Lotz  f 

0 

0-0 

2 

0 

Quigg  c 

1 

0-1 

4 

1 

Young  c 

1 

2-3 

3 

4 

Kearns  g 

4 

6-12 

1 

14 

Cunningham  g 

4 

13 

4 

9 

Rosemond  g 

0 

0-1 

0 

0 

Totals 

23 

29-49 

20 

75 

DUKE 

41 

M- 

-73 

NORTH  CAROLINA 

36 

3»- 

-75 

^AGE  TWO 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEE^ 


SUNDAY,  FEBRUARY  10,  195? 


REVIEW: 

CAMPUS 
STATE 


WORLD 


The   Campus   Week; 
Action,   Reaction 

It  was  fi  week  of  momentous  actions  and  statements  which 
evoked  a  series  ol  equally   responsive  reactions. 

'Ih.  University  administration's  view  on  student  government 
problem-  WuS  presented  on  Tuesday  by  Director  of  Student  Ac- 
tivities Sam  llagill  in  an  address  to  the  University  Party. 

Citini;  a  crisis  in  student  initiative'.  Magill  listed  a  "depres- 
sioi.  in  slutent  government,  u  rise  in  violations  of  ♦'  e  honor  code, 
consumption  ol  alcoholic  beveragej.  and  an  unwillingness  of  stu- 
d<.n{s  to  discipline  themselves. 

ifagills  statements  elicited  retaliatory  remarks  from  several 
student  leaders,  representing  various  departments  of  student  gov- 
ernment. 1 
Student  Body  Pi'csident  Bob  Young  disagreed  in  the  crisis  in  ; 
student  initiative,  defending  both  the  responsibility  shown  by  stu-  ! 
dents  and  the  satisfactory  job  of  the  Honor  Council.  Young  at  J 
the  same  time  listed  the  shortcomings  and  mistakes  of  student  \ 
body  leaders  but  added  that  "the  year  i.---  not  yet  over."                     ? 

From  Men's  Honor  Council  Chairman  Jim  Elvum  came  agree- 
ment with  Magill  that  there  has  been  "a  recent  deluge  of  cases" 
involving  violations  of  the  Honor  Code.  However.  Elxum  agreed 
with  Younjj  that  he  was  "not  convinced  that  there  is  a  crisis  in 
student  initi-ative."  He  added  that  he  thought  "crisis  was  too  strong 
a  word.  " 

The  temper  of  the  several  student  leader  responses  prompted 
Magill  ne.xt  day  to  clarify  his  original  statements.  While  reaf- 
firming  his   contention    of   a   crisis    in    student    inititative    Magill 
made  it  clear  that    he  had  no  criticism  to  make  of  the  student 
leadership  and  administration.  • 

A  committee  was  appointed  Thursday  by  the  Student  Legis-  ' 
laturt  to  investiiiate  the  U\C  con.litution  with  the  aim-of  making 
it  more  flexible  in  its  authority.  The  committee's  intention  as  stated 
by  Attorney  General  Sam  Wells  will  be  an  attempt  to  broaden 
the  -too  specific"  construction  of  the  laws  itno  statements  of  gen- 
eral nrincipks  By  limiting  specifics  to  individual  statutes,  it  ia- 
hoped  that  the  "entailed  red  tape",  required  to  cut  through  to 
maki-  any  changes,  will  thus  eliminated. 

The  University  of  Florida's  studet  bwly  President  left  Chapel 
Hill  Friday  after  stating  that  integration  at  UNC  has  been  an 
••unquestionable  success."  Fletcher  Fleming  made  the  statement 
tm  conjunction  with  the  trip  to  UNC  that  six  .Ludents  and  two 
faculty  members  of  the  college  will  make  to  hold  a  conference 
here. 


PERSONALITY: 


y.  tK*'y  ^V-j^>V-i 


Mardi  Gras  Leader 

Charlie  Sloan 

Jim  Armstrong  admitted  to  holding  at  least  14  titles  in  extra- 
curricular activities  during  the  course  of  his  scholastic  career.  At 
least  this  was  the  total  he  reached  when  he  stopped  to  figure  out 
what  he  had  left  out. 

His  current  office,  one  which  demands  all  his  spare  time,  is 
that  of  Chairman  of  the  Carolina  Mardi  Gras.  Armstrong  has  work- 
ed on  the  project  since  the  idea  was  formulated  a  year  ago.  He  i^ 
trying  to  make  it  a  social  event 
that  will  give  to  every  student 
the  opportunity  of  having  a  cam- 
pus-wide social  weekend. 

Among  the  offices  which  Arm- 
strong has  held  in  past  years 
are  Student  Party  Legislative 
Whip.  Sgt.  at  Arms.  Social  Chair- 
man and  Student  Legislature 
Floor  Leader. 

In  his  freshman  year  he  was 
treasurer  of  Ruffin  Dormitory. 
His  powers  of  the  purse  strings 
stayed  with  him  and  he  later 
became  treasurer  of  Delta  Upsil- 
on  Social  Fraternity.  Then.  too. 
he  has  served  two  y^ars  at  the 
State  Student  Legislature,  was  a 
delegate  to  DU's  1955  National 
Convention  at  Evanston.  III.,  and  , 
has  worked  on  two  GMAB  com- 
mittees. 

Armstrong  is  majoring  in 
American  history,  but  he  has  also 
taken  many  art  courses.  He  spent 
part  of  last  summer  in  art 
school  and  working  for  a  com- 
mercial photographer.  Several  of 
his  paintings  are  hanging  in  the 
DU  house. 

Right  now.  though,  all  his  tal- 
lents  are  devoted  to  the  Mardi 
Gras.  All  year  Armstrong  has 
been  rarely  seen  without  his 
brief  case  of  facts  and  figures 
on  what  he  intends  to  make  Car- 
olina's biggest  weekend. 

He   says    he    hopes    the    Mardi 
Gras  will  establish  a  tradition  for 

The  official  student  publication  of  the  Publications  Board  of  the 
University  of  North  Carolina,  where  it  is  published  daily  except  Mon- 
day and  examination  and  vacation  periods  and  summer  terms  Entered 
as  second  class  matter  in  the  post  office  at  Chapel  Hill.  N.  C,  under 
the  act  of  March  8,  1870.  Su'iscriptirr  rates:  Mailed.  $4  a  year.  $2.50 
per  semester;  delivered.  $6  a  year.  $3.50  a  semester. 


JIM  ARMSTRON<» 

. . .  art.  history  and  politics 

Carolina  socials.  Yet  with  ail 
this  enthusiasm  he  remains  real- 
istic, and  has  repeatedly  called 
the  event  an  experiment.  It  is 
still  in  the  "feeling  process"  to 
see  what  students  want  in  the 
way  of  a  big  social  event,  he 
says. 

A  senior  now.  Armstrong  has 
lived  all  of  his  22  years  in  North 
Carolina.  On  several  different 
occasions  he  has  traveled  out- 
side the  state  and  his  experiences 
on  these  trips  have  often  given 
his   friends   much  amusement. 


Editor      ._ .-— 

_;__.    FRED   POWLEDGE 

Managing  Editor       .             

CHARUE  SLOaN 

Night  News  Eidtor                — . — 

.i. _ !-. ._ Charlie  Sloan 

Night  Eidtor 

-  .'-:      — -    :.J-. .: '  Graham  Snyder 

Activity 
All  Over 
The  World 

A  nice,  normal  week,  that's 
what  it  was  with  a  covey  of  apolo- 
gies, blasts,  demands,  barrings, 
accusations  and  small  rilts  here 
and  tiiore. 

'llie  week's  op-eniiig  was  focused 
up^.i  the  riit  beiw^en  PccsiUonl 
Eisenaovver.  Secretary  of  Defense 
\>  il^on  (and  his  wiie)  and  tui- 
Naiioi.a.  Ciuard.  and  a  slight  bit 
oi  s.aijjing  g.v^'n  vis. ting  King 
bauvj  i  1  Saudi  Arabia  by  toe 
Mavor  ;..id  officials  of  New  Yvnk 
City. 

It  seems  that  old  Charlie  Wil- 
son has  held  up  to  be  a  man 
who  holds  true  to  form  in  tne 
Eisenhower  Cabinet,  by  again 
showing  that  he  is  most  adept  ai 
tii-e  antiquated  "shoe  in  the 
mouth"  game. 

He  will  undoubtedly  be  given 
some  kind  ol  award  wht.i  he 
leaves  Washington  for  beiiiy  the 
only  Secretary  of  Defen.se  to  go 
through  an  entire  term  in  office 
with  his  foot  habitually,  unfal 
terably  square  between  his 
teeth. 

Ike  smoothed  things  out.  os- 
tensibly, when  he  benevolently 
offered  the  Wilsons  a  ride  south 
as  the  three  skipped  town  for  the 
weekend.  A  friendly  "cabin  chat" 
was  had  by  all. 

By  the  middle  of  the  week,  it 
looked  obvious  that  the  United 
Nations  had  failed  for  the  'ump- 
teenth" time  to  get  Israel  to 
withdraw  from  their  entrench- 
ings  in  the  Gaza  strip.  A  resolu- 
tion Sunday  had  been  snickered 
at  by  the  Israelis-  who  demand- 
ed that  Egypt  give  certain  as- 
surances before  anybody  would 
budge.  Secretary  of  State  Dulles, 
on  his  "semi-annual  stop-over  in 
the  United  States."  and  Secre- 
tary General  Hammarskjold 
were  in  conference  with  the  dele- 
gate from  Israel  while  London 
and  Paris  were  screaming  for  re- 
newed talks  to  hasten  the  canal's 
reo|>ening. 

Prime  Minister  Nehru,  to  a 
crowd  of  thousands  of  cheering 
Indians,  said  that  he  would  never 
allow  the  U.  N.  to  enter  Kashmir. 

A  Vietnamese  scientist  had 
isolated  a  substance  in  cigarette 
smoke  which,  when  injected  into 
mice,   invariably  caused  cancer. 

Tuesday.  French  Foreign  Min- 
ister Pineau,  in  a  few  words, 
told  the  U.  N.  to  keep  their 
no.ses  out  of  Algeria;  Albert 
Schweitzer  even  wrote  a  person- 
al letter  to  the  President  back- 
ing the  French  up  on  thi.s  matter. 

Wednesday  the  teachers  who 
had  g  me  on  strike  in  Manchest 
er.  N.H.  were  ordered  back  to 
their  jobs  by  a  state  Supreme 
Court,  but  the  movement  seem- 
ed to  have  spread — another  group 
of  educators  in  Bonners  Ferry. 
Idaho  put  down  their  chalk  and 
stompxed  out.  The  crux  of  the 
matter:   money,  as  usual. 

Wednesday,  while  the  .\rmy 
was  bickering  with  the  National 
Guad  over  superiority  and  Dave 
Beck  was  taking  a  fast  plane  to 
the  Bahamas  when  his  Interna- 
tional Brotherhood  of  Teamsters 
came  under  investigation  by  a 
Senate  Committee  investigating 
labor  racketeering,  the  town  of 
Keno,  Nevada  was  shattered  by 
a  .series  of  propane  gas  blasts. 
Two  were  known  dead,  three  in 
critical  condition,  and  upwards 
of    sixty    were    in    the    hospital. 


L'il  Abner 


COMING   NEXT   WEEK:    VALENTINE'S   DAY 

Kappa  Delta  pledgee  prepare  )or  cupid's  liappy  hunting  day. 


• 

fNSIDE  STORY: 


Coed  Comments 
On  Panty  Raids 


State  Legislature 
Opens  '57  Session 


Edith  MacKinnon 


From  the  coeds"  pjjnt  of  view, 
a  panty  raid  can  bring  a  mixture 
of    emotions. 

Although  most  of  us  won't  ad- 
mit it  .hidden  under  the  squeals 
of  apprehension  and  rushing  to 
slam  down  windows  and  lock 
doors,  are  small  feelings  of  ex- 
citement and  anticipation  wh3n 
the  Carolina  Gentlemen  c  me 
calling. 

The  question  in  most  of  the 
feminine  minds  is:  "Will  they 
succeed  this  time'.'"  Judging  from 
the  r^'suUs  of  this  year's  attempts, 
the  answer  to  that  question 
would  seem  to  be  definitely  in 
the   negative. 

Granted  that  panty  raids  can 
be  malicious  and  are  generally 
frowned  upon  by  adininistrative 
officials,   at    the   .same   time  they 


a  panty-raid?  .Accjrdingly.  a  few 
celebrants  gathered  in  front  ol 
Mclver  dorm  at  the  end  of  the 
game. 

N.i  harm  was  done.  After  a  few 
m  ments  of  shouting,  added  to  by 
the  cracks  of  exploding  lire- 
crackers,  the  crowd  of  50-75  gar- 
ment-seekers was  broken  up  by 
Student  Body  President  Bob 
Y  ling  and  Student  Part\  Chair- 
man   Sonny    Hallford. 

What  is  the  coed  reaction  in 
the  dorms  to  such  a  disturbance? 
No  great  excitement  is  cau.sed. 
A  few  listening  souls  wander  in- 
to the  halls  t  >  vp?  what's  going 
on.  But  primarily  the  lingerie 
owners  rrmiiin  in  thPir- .rooms, 
knowing  t1iat  the  "laTd"  will  be 
confined  mostly  to  shouts.  As  a 
few  frank  coe<is  have  put  it,  "We 
know    n'^thing   .serious    will    hap- 


The  two-day  inaugural  program 
began  Feb.  6  and  was  climaxed 
Thursday.  Feb.  7  as  Luther  Hod- 
ges, the  liist  Tar  Heel  governor 
of  modern  times  to  succeed  him- 
self,  took   his  cath   of  office. 

Gov.  Hodges'  inaugural  address 
was  one  of  inspiration  rather 
than  specifics.  Traditionally  the 
addre.ss  outlines  a  detailed  attack 
on  the  Slate's  major  problems. 
Instead  Gov.  Hodges  presented 
what  h?  called  a  "broad  look  at 
N.  rth  Carolina,  our  government, 
our  people,  our  heritage  nd  our 
future." 

"It  shll  be  my  purpose  to  do 
e\er\lhing  possible  to  raise  the 
s'tandirrd  of  living  for  the  people 
.of  this  good  state."  Hodges  said. 

Monday  night  the  Governor 
will  outline  his  legislative  pro- 
gram before  a  joint  session  of 
tiio  General  .Assembly. 

The  1957  session  of  the  Leg- 
islature opened  Feb.  6  with  a 
fight  over  a  pay  raise  for  Coun- 
cil of  State  members.  Senator 
•Joe  Egles  of  Wils:)n  produced  a 
bill  that  would  rai.se  the  pay  from 
SlO.OOO  to  .S12.000  a  year.  The  bill 
passed. 


The  bill,  calling  for  a  $2,000 
a  year  pay  boost  for  Council 
Members  and  Sl,420  for  the  At- 
torney General,  was  rushed 
through  the  House  and  Senate  so 
officials  could  receive  the  in- 
crea.ses  during  their  fcur-year 
terms.  The  pay  of  elected  state 
officials  cannot  be  changed  dur- 
ing term  of  office. 

Kep.  J.  Kemp  Doughton  of  Al- 
leghany was  elected  Speaker  of 
the  House  for  the  1957  session, 
and  Senator  Claude  Currie  of 
Durham  was  elected  president 
pro  tern  of  the  Senate. 

R.  J.  (Jack)  Blylhe.  68-year- 
old  state  senator  from  Mecklen- 
burg County,  resigned  his. seal 
in  the  new  General  Assembly,  for 
health  reasons. 

Gordon  Gray,  prominent  in 
North  Carolina  and  Washington 
politics,  will  have  a  new  federal 
position  soon,  as  director  of  the 
Office  of  Defense  Mobilization. 
P*resident  Eisenhower  accepted 
the  resignation  of  Arthur  S. 
Flemming  as  ODM  director  and 
aid  that  he  would  name  Gray,  a 
Democrat,   to   succeed  him. 


ROTC 
Got  Wet 
In  Parade 


Jose  E.  Stuntz 

The  faces  in  the  crowd  throng 
ing  Fayetteville  St.  in  Raleigh 
Thursday  were  slightly  chilled, 
though  full  of  expectancy  over 
the  coming  inaugural  parade 
for  Gov.  Hodges. 

An  air  of  festivity  fought  its 
way  through  the  cold,  heavy 
air,  and  reached  up  into  the  of- 
fice bu  -.igs,  whose  windows 
were  packed  with  supposedly 
working  employes. 

At  the  same  time  the  members 
of  ROTC  units  representing  Car- 
olina in  the  parade  were  stamp- 
ing  their   feet    nervously,  await- 
ing the  beginning  of  the  parade. 
At  the  last  minute  a  decision  was 
made   that  they   not  wear  their 
raincoats,  as  it  looked  as  if  the 
weather  was  not  going  to  break. 
Suddanly     the     cavalcade  of 
cars  turned  from  Lenoir  St.  on- 
to   Fayetteville      St.,      and    the 
parade  had  begun. 

Twenty  one  cars,  with  Gov. 
and  Mrs.  Hodges  in  the  lead  car. 
passed  up  to  the  reviewing  stand. 
The  main  body  of  the  Parade 
followed  15  minutes  later,  at  1:30 
p,m„  led  by  a  company  of  the 
82nd   Airborne. 

An  hour  and  15  minutes  after 
the  parade  had  started  it  was 
time  for  the  Carolina  boys  to 
get  ready  to  move.  The  AFROTC 
Marching  Band  led  the  AFROTC 
Color  Guard  and  band  out  onto 
Fayetteville  St,,  and  the  nervous- 
ness felt  by  all  gave  way  to  the 
thrill  of  participating  in  the 
spectacle. 

Only  until  they  were  half  way 
between  the  auditorium  and  the 
Capitol  was  the  thrill  tempered 
by  regret.  Just  as  they  were  at 
that  point  and  coming  before 
the  reviewing  stand  it  began 
drizzling.  No  sooner  were  they 
directly  before  the  reviewing 
stand  than  it  began  to  pour  in 
great  freezing  drops. 

The  AFROTC  drill  team, 
equipped  with  new  helmets,  had 
a  fair  measui-e  of  protection  for 
their  heads,  but  the  rest  of  the 
unit  could  hardly  see  for  the 
rain  dripping  down  into  their 
eyes. 

By  the  time  they  reached  the 
Capitol  every  man  was  soaked 
to  the  skin. 

The  crowd  had  by  that  time 
dispersed,  the  flags  that  had 
been  waving  all  up  and  down 
Fayetteville  St.  now  hung  limp, 
heavy  with  rain. 

To  put  it  mildly,  a  dampener 
had  been  put  on  the  party.  The 
boys  were  glad  to  get  back  to 
Chapel  HilL 


AND  IN  ORANGE  COUNTY: 


Drama  In  The  Courtroom 


PANTY    RAIDS 

-Ci       ;'       ^  ■,;.'.  need  organization     _.'  ,   ,. 
are   a    phase  of  "coU'ege  life  and       pen.   It   never  does.' 
can  serve  a  purpose — even  if  il's 
just  to  let  off  sicam  or  create  ex- 
citement.   Last    Tuesday    night's 
attempt  was  such  a  case. 

Carolina  had  just  won  a  hard- 
fought.  ten.se  game  against  Mary- 
land. A  celebration  was  called 
for,  and  what  could  be  more  ef- 
fective in  releasing  tension  thai) 


In  a  week  of  reactions,  what 
is  [h:  Carolina  Gentleman's  re- 
acti<m  t.j  this  apparent  lack  ot 
faith  in  their  raiding  attempts'? 
This  di.strust  is  not  an  invitation 
to  an  opcn-h  "ru.se  for  panty-raid- 
ers  on  the  part  of  the  coeds.  But 
as  some  had  dared  to  say.  "Caro- 
Uha.  l»o>:s  need  to  .organize!" 


Chapei  Hill  News  Leader 

Hillsboro  and  Orange  County's 
glorious  heritage  and  its  illustri- 
ous soUc;  of  antiquity  received 
eloquent  homage,  "eviin-handed 
justiee"  of  distingui.sh('d  jurists 
in  the  past  got  a  baost.  the  late 
Bishop  Cheshire  "than  whom  no 
one  was  ever  finer"  came  in  for 
new  glory,   and  25-year-old   Wil- 


Pogo 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL  WEEK  IN  REVIEW 
Staff  Writers  Charlie  Sloan,  Edith  MacKinon,  Frank  Crowther, 

Patsy  Miller,  Graham  Snyder 


By  Wait  Kelly 

A  IGNOMINY  WOff^S'N  OSAfM    J    f        /    lUm  YOU  WAS 


liam  Polk  "Billy"  Cheshire,  a 
UNC  student,  was  fined  $10  and 
costs  for  burning  a  cross  last 
December  in  the  yard  of  Mrs. 
Eliza  Webb. 

It  all  happened  last  week  in 
Orange  County  Recorder's  Court, 
Judge   L.   J.   Phipps   presiding. 

Other  characters  with  speak- 
ing parts  in  the  play  included 
Lawyer  R.  Percy  Reade  of  Dur- 
ham, who  "always  considers  it  a 
privilege  to  ccme  to  Orange 
County"  and  even  "appreciated 
the  opportunity  to  represent  this 
young  boy."  Sheriff  Odell  Clay- 
ton. Solicitor  Roy  Cole  Rev.  Law- 
ton  W.  Pettit,  the  minister,  and 
others. 

The  sheriff,  the  only  witness 
for  the  state,  told  of  the  cross 
burning      episode,      details      of 
which  are  new  well  known,  of 
the  tracing  of  the  oil  drippings 
and  the  tell-tale   laundry   mark 
which  led  to  Cheshire's  admiss- 
ion of  guilt. 
Rev.    Pettit    said    he   could   af- 
firm   Billy   to   be   faithful   in   his 
devotion    and    attendance    at    St. 
Matthews  Episocpal   Church  and 
a  communicant  in  good  standing. 
Another  witness,  who  said  he  was 
slightly  deaf,  spoke  his  lines  well 
and  drew  good  laughter.  Said  he 
had   known    Billy  since    "he   was 
knee  high  to  a  duck"  and  consid- 
ered   his    general    character    and 
reputation     good.    Another    one. 
who     hadn't     known     him     quite 
that  long,   just     since     he     was 
ihrce.   had  always  found  him    'f 
friendly    and    polite    boy"    and 
considered    him    welcome    in   his 
home. 

Reade  then  addressed  himself 
to  the  bench,  said  there  was  "no- 
thing inherently  wrong  in  what 
he   did,"   said  he   had  just   "un- 


willingly" or  "unwittingly"  (the 
acoustics  went  bad  for  the  re- 
porter at  this  point)  violated  the 
law,  didnt  intend  to  "intimidate 
or  frighten"  anybody,  drew  a 
tear-jerking  analogy  between  the 
Cheshire  cross  burnig  and  some 
"Buffaloes"  back  at  Trinity  Col- 
lege in  1917  who  later  fought  in 
the  first  World  War  and  brought 
glory  to  North  Carolina,  and 
ended  with  dramatic  pleas  lib- 
erally sprinkled  with  Longfellow 
and  13th  Corinthians 

Solicitor  Cole  said  he  couidn't 
"aqree  with  Mr.   Reade  whole- 
heartedly," that  respect  for  pri- 
vacy was   pretty   cherished   all 
around   and  the     whole     thing 
"sorta  sounded  in  the  area   of 
political  activity"  and   not  "in 
the     category     of     a     childish 
prank"  at  all. 
Judge     Phipps    then    h.ad     his 
day,  wondering  out  loud  how  Mr. 
Reade  knew  he  was  so  partial  to 
those  cherished   words  in  Corin- 
thians having  to  do  with  "chari- 
ty." He  said  what  disturbed  him 
was  the  lawlessness  going  about 
the   country   and    newspaper   re- 
ports of  ministers  exhorting  their 
flocks    to    violate    the    law    and 
churches  passing  resolutions  urg- 
ing  the  same  thing. 

Continuing,  the  judge  allowed 
as  how  he  thought  people  like 
Billy  Cheshire  ought  to  go  about 
righting  social  wTongs  by  chang- 
ing the  law  in  a  legal  way 
rather  than  cross  burnings  and 
reckoned  Frank  Graham  himself, 
if  he  were  there,  would  want  to 
be  charitable  as  admonished  to 
be    in    Corinthians. 

So,  he  said,  let  the  defendant 
pay  a  fine  of  $10  and  cost. 

And.  as  the  Royal  Mounties  .say 
on  TV,  "This  case  is  closed." 


SUNOAYJ 


fCouf 

annual    d| 
the    1956 
ed     the 
at  the  LaJ 
Music 


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|1957 


SUNOAYj  FEBRUARY  10;  1957 


THf  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


PAGE  TKREC 


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after 
It  was 
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tROTC 
"ROTC 
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|to  the 
the 

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Id  the 
ipered 

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began 
they 

hewing 
>ur   in 

team. 
s,  had 
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their 

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lat  had 
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nnpener 

rty.  The 
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ly"  (the 
the  re- 
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ween  the 
and  .some 
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childish 


Happenings   On   The  Hill 


(Contintted   from    Page    I) 


was  presented  by  The  Embers  with 
songs  by  Pee  Wee  Batten. 

Each  pledge  and  his  date  were 
presented,  after  which  the  group 
formed  a  figure  of  the  cross  and 


annual    dinner-dance    in   honor   of 

the   1956  pledge  class  and  follow-  i 

ed     the  occasion  with  a  breakfast 

at  the  Lambda  Chi  house.  j 

Music    for    dining    and    dancing    crescent,  symbol  of  the  fraternity. 

. I  This  was  followed  by  a  dance  in 

I  honor  of  the  class  and  its  dates. 
j  The  officers  of  the  pledge  class 
j  and  their  dates  are  President  Ciir- 
I  tis  M.  Fields  of  Thomasville  with 
i  Pat  Miller  of  Durham;  Vice  Pres- 
I  ident  Perry  M.  White  of  Spindale 
j  with  Betty  Goode  of  Rutherford- 
i  ton;   Secretary   Don   Koontz   of   El- 


Find  out 
why  their 
storyhaj 
to  win 


Pulitzer 
Prize! 


kin  with  Mary  Francis  Hart  of 
Elkin;  Treasurer  James  K.  Teague 
of  Thomasville  with  Sandra  Jar- 
rette  of  Thomasville;  and  Sergeant 
at  Arms  Stewart  Arnold  of  Decat- 
ur. Ga.  with  Kanela  Maydanis  of 
Charlotte. 

A  hij^hlight  of  the  evening  came 
when  it   was  announced  that  Don  . 
Dries  of  Wycmissing.  Pa.  had  been 
elected   pledge   of   the   year. 

The    weekend    came    to    a    close 
with   an   informal    party   given   by  [ 
the  pledges  for  the  brothers  last 
night  at  Larry's. 


Covering  The  University  Campus 


Statistics  Meetings  Set  Here 


COSMOPOLITAN  CLUB 

The  Cosmopolitan  Club  will  hold 
its  first  meeting  of  the  new  sem- 
ester today  at  4  p.m.  in  the  Assem- 
bly Room  of  the  Wilson  Library. 
A  social   hour  will   be   held  after 

which  officers  for  the  current  sem-  j  Work  on  Conservation  of  Parity. 
ester  will  be  introduced.  All  per- ; 


physics;  colloquium 

The    local    Physics    Colloquium 
will   be  held  Wednesday  at   4:30' 
p.m.  in  250  Phillips  Hall.  Dr.  Eu- 1 
gen  Merzbacher  will  speak  on  "Re- ! 
cent  Experimental  and  Theoretical 


8:30  Governor  Hodges 

9:30  Yesterday's  Worlds 

10:00  Final  Edition 

10:05  Sign  Off 


FROM  THE  YEAR'S  MOST  EXCITING  NOVEL 

COME    THE  MOST    EXCITING    PEOPLE    THE 
SCREEN  HAS  EVER  KNOWN! 


EVERYBODY 
LOVED      . 


NOW  PLAYING 


Carolina 


COSTARRING 

DEAN  JAGGER  •  KEENAN  WYNN  •  JULIE  LONDON 
JOANNE  GILBERT  and  ED  WYNN  w,th  jim  backus  •  russ  morgan 


NOW 
PLAYING 


tssssiin 


HERE  ARE  THE  FIRST  TWO  TIE-BREAKERS  IN 

OLD  GOLD'S 


PUZZLES 


IP  YOUR  answers  to  the  first  24  puzzles 
conformed  to  the  correct  list  of 
answers  published  at  the  end  of  the  past 
semester,  you  can  and  must  submit 
answers  to  eight  tie-breaking  puzzles,  in 
order  to  compete  for  the  prizes  in  the  tie. 

Remember— first  prize  is  a  tour  for 
two  around  the  world,  and  there  are  85 
Other  valuable  prizes. 

The  first  two  of  the  eight  tie-breakers 
are  published  herein,  according  to  rule 
2(bj  of  the  official  Tangle  Schools  rules: 

2(b)  In  case  more  than  one  person 
solves  correctly  the  same  number  of 
puzzles,  the  prize  tied  for  and  as  many 


subsequent  prizes  as  there  are  persona 
tied  will  be  reserved  and  those  so  tying 
will  be  required  to  solve  a  set  of  tie- 
breaking  puzzles  to  determine  the  order 
in  which  the  reserved  prizes  will  be 
awarded. 

Each  of  the  tie-breaking  puzzles  will 
contain  scrambled  letters  forming  the 
names  of  either  one,  two  or  three  Ameri- 
can colleges  or  universities. 

Do  not  mail  these  tie-breakers  now! 
Save  them  until  you  have  completed  all 
eight  tie-breaking  puzzles.  Details  on 
when  and  where  to  mail  the  tie-breakers 
will  be  published  with  the  eighth  puzzle. 


TIE-BREAKING  PUZZLE  NO.  1 


CLUE:  A  leading  experimental  college  for 
women,  this  New  England  school  fea- 
tures workshops  as  part  of  the  regular 
social  .science,  literature  and  performing 
arts  programs.  There  is  a  10-week  non- 
resident term  here. 

ANSWER 

Name. 
Address^ 

City 

College^ 


.suite. 


TIE-BREAKING  PUZZLE  NO.  2 


CLUE:  This  university,  located  in  the 
Southwest,  was  originally  named  Add- 
Ran  for  its  two  founders.  Its  present 
name  dates  from  1902.  One  of  its  divi- 
sions is  Brite  College  of  the  Bible. 


ANSWER. 

Name 

Address 

City 

College 


.State. 


NO  OTHER  CIGARETTE 

CAN  MATCH  THE  TASTE 

OF  TODAY'S 

OLD  GOLD'S 

Regular,  King  Size,  or  Filters, 
today's  Old  Golds  taste  terrific  .  . 
thanks  to  an  exclusive  blend  of  the  finest 
nature-ripened  tobaccos  .  .    so  rich 

so  light ...  so  golden  bnghtl 


sons  have  been  invited  to  attend. 
INVITATIONS 

Regular  seniors   and   seniors  in 

the  profeso-jonal  schools  have  been 

,  urged  by  the  Order  of  the  Grail  to 

I  purchase  graduation  inviations  thi.s 

I  week.  They  will  be  on  sale  Mon- 

j  day  through  Thursday  in  Y  Court 

from  9  a.m.  to  3  p.m.  . 

CANTERBURY  CLUB 

The  Canterbury  Club  supper  will 
begin  at  6  p.m.  today  at  the  Epis- 
copal Parish  House.  Following  the 
supper  wil  be  a  discussion  on  "The 
Theology  of  Martin  Buber"  by  the 
chaplain  and  a  student  panel.  The 
meeting  will  conclude  with  the  ser- 
vice of  evening  prayer  m  the  chap- 
el at  8  p.m. 
DEGREES 

All  students  in  the  College  of 
Arts  and  Science^-  who  expect  to 
be  graduated  in  June  or  in  the 
summer  and  who  have  not  filed 
for  a  degree  have  been  asked  to 
do  immediately  in  order  to  gel 
their  degree  on  time. 

Students  have  been  asked  to 
come  by  the  office  of  the  College 
of  Arts  and  Sciences,  203  South 
Building. 

DENTAL   DAMES 

The  Dental  Dames  Society  will 
meet  Tuesday  at  8  p.m.  in  the  As- 
sembly Room  of  the  Wilson  Li- 
brary. Dr.  Harry  Chamberlain  of 
the  Pediatrics  Dept.  will  be  guest 
speaker. 


WUNC 

Today's  schedule  for  WUNC,  the 
University's     non-commercial     FM 
radio  station,  is  as  follows: 
7:00  Music  from  Germany 
7:30    Let  There  Be  Light 

The  Organ  Room 

The  Symphony  Hour 

The  Third  Programme 

News 

Evening  Masterwork 

Sign  Off 
Monday's  schedule  includes: 
7:00    The  Music  Box 

Window  on  the  World 

The  Gilbert  Highet  Pro- 
gram 

Promenade 

Music  Now  and  Then 

News 

Evening  Masterwork 

Sign  Off 


7:45 

8:00 

9:00 

10:00 

10.15 

11:30 


7:30 
7:45 


Seminar 

i  (Continued  from  page  I) 

:md  seminars  to  various  groups 
on  the  UN;  its  policies,  functions, 
and  powers. 

He   is  speaking  at   Carolina  un- 
der   the    auspices      of     the      YM- 
YWCA    who    are    sponsoring    the 
student    UN     Seminar     group     to 
New  York. 
According   to   Gillis,   'the   meet- 
;  ing   is  free   and   everyone   is  invit- 
ed  to  attend  and  to  participate  in 
i  the   question    and    answer    se^i^ion 
j  afterwards." 

Satterfield  said.  'In  addition, 
I  Dr.  Shepherd  Jones  and  Dr.  Fred 
I  Cleveland  will  also  speak  to  the 
I  group  .sometimes  during  the  next 
j  three  weeks  to  further  the  or- 
I  ientation  of  those  attending  the 
I  seminar  in  March. 
I  In  regards  to  the  cost  of  the 
;  trip  another  spokesman  of  the 
I  group.  Cortland  H.  Edwards,  said, 
I  "The  minimum  cost  will  be  $22. 
This  will  include  hotel,  travel, 
:  and  the  registration  fee.  If  you 
j  want  to  eat  it  will  be  extra." 
I  Edwards  added  that  for  a  real 
\  nice  trip  "I  would  plan  on  spend- 
\  ing  a  total  of  $35.  This  would  in- 
j  elude  three  good  meals  a  day.  two 
I  plays,  a  trip  to  Birdland.  and 
I  nightclubbing  in  Greenwich  Vill- 
j  age.  ■ 

He    then    added   hastily.    "Don't 

I  get  us  wrong.  We  will  be  in  one 

discussion  group  or  another  from 

I  9   a.m.   to   10   p.m.   each   day.   All 

!  the  rest  of  the  activities  will  have 

to   take    place   at     the      price     of 

sleep." 

"If  anyone  is  interested  in  join- 
ing the  group,"  Satterfield  said, 
"Please  get  in  touch  with  either 
Anne  Queen.  Cort  Edwards,  Phyl- 
lis Krafft.  or  myself  as  soop  as 
possible." 


8:00 

9:00 

10:00 

10:15 

11:30 

WUNC-TV 

Today's     schedule     for    WUNC- 
TV,  the  University's  education  tele- 
vision station,  is  as  follows: 
9:45     Man  to  Man 
Sunday  School 
The  Pastor 
Organ  Prelude 
Church  Service 
This  Is  the  Life 
Sign  Off 
Big  Picture 
American  Album 
Shakespeare 
UN  Review 
Writers  of  Today 
Sign  Off 
Monday's  schedule  includes: 
12:45     Music 

Today  on  Farm 

Science  and  Nature 

Sign  Off 

Music 

Solid  Geometry 

Legislative 

News 

Travelogue 

Science  and  Society 

Majea-ty  in  the  Air 


10:00 

10:30 

10:45 

11:00 

12:00 

12:30 

6:30 

7.00 

7:30 

8:15 

8:30 

9:00 


1:00 
1:30 
2:00 
5:15 
5:30 
6:00 
6:20 
6:30 
7:00 
8:00 


Ill-Will        j 

(ContJTi7<ed  jro\n  Page  \)         • 

I 
•r  that  will  take  away  from  the 
baauty  of   Chapal   Hill,"   Augus- 
tine said. 

The  idea  started  five  years  ago. ! 
Last  year  it  went  into  the  planning 
stages  and  the  Board  of  Directors  j 
authorized    me   to    look   into   it, "  | 
Augustine  said.  | 

In  referring  to  Graves,  Augustine  1 
said:  "He  opposes  anything  that ' 
proposes  progress.  It's  just  the  rep- 
utation he's  gotten." 

"I  think  it's  unfortunate  that  the 
article  the  other  day  was  as  er- 
roneous as  it  was.  The  Board  of 
Directors  will  take  this  up,  and 
I've  asked  for  an  apology  on  his 
part.  He's  stirred  up  a  lot  of  mer- 
chants and  is  cutting  his  own 
nose." 


Prof.    S.    N.    Roy    ad    Dr.    Ram 

Gnaadesikan  wtU  discuss  new  me- 
thods of  statistical  measurement 
ad  evaluation  at  the  next  two  .^a- 
tijtics  Colloquium  meetings  here. 

Roy  ad  Gnanadesikan  are  speci- 
alists in  the  statistics  field. 

Roy  will  speak  tomorrow  at  4 
p.m.  on  "Multivariate  Analysis  of 
Variance."  A  graduate  of  the  Uni- 
versity of  Calcutta,  Roy  has  been 
on  the  \jNC  faculty  since  1950  and 
is  a  professor  in  the  Dept.  of  Math- 
ematical Statistics. 

Dr.    Gnanadesikan    will    discuss 

'Components  of  Variance  in  One 

or    More    Dimensions''    Feb.     18. 

Gnanadesikan   recently    completed 


work  on  his  Ph.D.   degree  under 
Roy.  Both  are  natives  of  India. 


CLASSIHEOS 


FOUND:  A  PAIR  OF  DARK  RIM- 
med  glasses.  Owner  please  con- 
tact 3  Old  West. 


SUMMER   HELP  WANTED:   M.AN 

and  Wife  or  two  boys.  Operate 
amusement  business  for  sum- 
mer. Mountain  resort.  $35  week- 
ly, free  living  quarters.  See  Dan 
Sherill.   Taylor's  Trailor   Park. 


LOST:  MAROON  AND  BLACK 
Jacket  left  in  Carroll  Hall  Sa- 
turday night.  Reward  offered. 
Return  to  211  Mangum  Dorm  or 
to  the  Pilam  House. 


SERVE  YOURSELF— 


EVERY  SUNDAY 


5:30-7:30   P.M. 


BUFFET 

.,  .     At    Tha 

RANCH   HOUSE, 

HOME  OF  CHOICE  HICKORY-SMOKED  CHARCOAL  BROILED  STEAKS 


'^^. 


M 


C/r 


1^ 


)P 


.»^° 


A1//V4 


'^KAs 


>>fe 


«^^ 


Ar, 


cy    DANZIGER'S 

CANDIES 


Why  Be  A 
One-Man  Dog? 


Send  out  dozens 


of  our  irresistable 
Valentines  and       ' 
prepare  for  a  Kectic 
Spring. 


The  Intimate 
Bookshop 

205  E.  Franklin  St. 
Open  Till  10  P.  M. 


II  with  his  new 

SONIC  ^V^ 


£ver  since  Jack  bought  his  new  Sonic 
CAPRI  phonograph  at  the  loc^l 

I  college  store—  he's  become  the  biggest 
B  M  O  C  ever.  You  can  join  him  and 
be  the  biggest  ever,  too,  for  you 
can  buy  a  Capri  phonograph  for  as 
little  as  $19.95.  This  month's 
special  buy  is  the  Capri  330.  It's  a 
portable  -1 -speed  hi-fi  phonograph 

'  with  WEBCOR  automatic  changer 
Features  are  twin  speakers,  a 
quality  amplifier  and  a  smartly 
styled  cabinet  in  attractive 

I  Two- Tone  Forest  Green.  Specially 
priced  at  your  local  dealer. 


SONIC   INDUSTRIES,  INC.     1 9  Wilbur  Sfrttt.  lynbrook.  N.  Y. 


American  Greeting  Card  Co.v^^  ■ '/" 


By 


For  everyone  on  your  "love  list",  choose 
here  from  a  gay  array  of  Valentines.  *  .  . 
Sentimental  or  sophisticated.  .  .  .Cute  or 
comic.  Just  right  cards  for  sweethearts, 
family,  friends,  or  what-have-you.  .  .  .1<  to 

$1.00      ■.  .w^:^,,/ • -J:X :  ■.:-:•■  '  ' 


By 
OLD  DOMINION 
She'll  love  you  for  these  delicious 
chocolates.  .  .  .Beautifully  gift-wrapped.  In  Valentine  Boxes. 
10<  to  $500  ■      ^ 

YOUR  VALENTINE  HEADQUARTERS 
Free  gift  wrapping  and  mailing 


159  E.  Franklin  St. 


Free  Delivery 


f  A«l  POM 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HHL 


SUNDAY,  FEBRUARY  10,  1957 


By  BILL  KING 

The  Carolina  Tar  Babies  snapped 
bick  in  the  second  half  after  a 
t  hilly  first  period  to  overcome  the 
Duke  University  frosh  83-71  in 
Woollen  Gym  last  night. 

The  Tar  Babies  couldn't  buy  a 
basket  before  intermic;3ion  as  the 
Baby  Dukes  controlled  both  boards 
and  hit  with  amazing  accuracy  in 
nmning  up  a  37-29  halftime  ad- 
vantage. 

But  in  the  second  half  the  tide 
turned  quickly  as  coach  Vince  Gri 
maidi's  Tar  Babies  dropped  in  ten 
points  to  the  visitors  two  in  a  little 
over  two  minutes,  and  at  the  14:56 
mark  went  ahead  to  stay  on  a  field 
goal  by  York  Larcse. 

The  rejuvenated  Tar  Babies  were 
just  as  accurate  in  the  second  halt 
as  the  Duke  frosh  had  been  in  the 
fir.'t.  and  led  by  the  shooting  and* 
rebounding  of  Lee  Shaffer,  the  Tar  ; 
Babies    took    complete   control    of ; 
the  boards  in  moving  to  their  twelf- ; 
th  win  of  the  season  against  three  j 
losses.  i 

Shaffer  was  the  big  gun  in  the : 
Tar  Baby  attack  collecting  27  ■ 
points.  York  Larese  dropped  in  18  i 
to  follow  Shaffer  in  the  scoring  and  ' 
guard  Mike  Steppe,  high  man  in 
Friday  nights  win  over  the  High  , 
Point  Jayvees.  collected   16. 

Top  man  for  the  Baby  Dukes 
was  guard  Jack  Boyd  who  used  a  '" 
deadly  set  shot  to  bag  22  points.  | 
Loyd  was  followed  by  Marty  Joyce  | 
and  Carroll  Youngkin  who  hit  14  i 
each.  ! 


Tar   Heel   Frosh   Rally  To   Defeat   Blue   Imps,   83-71 

Tar  Babies 
Rally  After 
Halftime 


The  Reach  And  The  Attempt 

It  is  a  long  arm  which  Bob  Cunningham  extends  to  tap  in  the  ball  for  two  points,  while  an  un- 
identified Duke  player  makes  a  futile  gesture  at  b'ocking  the  ball.  Hayes  Clement  (left)  looks  on  at 
the  aftermath. 


THE  BOX 

DUKE 

FG 

FT 

F 

P 

(.Jilley  f 

3 

3 

3 

9 

Morris  f 

1 

0 

0 

2 

"N'olan  f 

0 

0 

2 

0 

Morgan  f 

3 

2 

4 

8 

W  ay and  f 

0 

2 

3 

2 

Youngkin  c 

3 

4 

2 

14 

Boyd  g 

7 

8 

2 

22 

Joyce  g 

6 

2 

4 

14 

Totals 

25 

21 

22 

71 

'JNC 

FG 

FT 

F 

P 

Shaffer  f 

9 

9 

2 

27 

Tinslie  f 

0 

0 

0 

0 

« Yutchfield 

F         0 

0 

0 

0 

Larese  f 

7 

4 

4 

18 

McRacken  f 

0 

0 

0 

0 

Kepley  c 

3 

2 

1 

8 

Poole  c 

1 

4 

1 

6 

CYotty  g 

4 

0 

4 

8 

Trraham  g 

0 

0 

3 

0 

Griffin  g 

0 

0 

0 

0 

Steppe  g 

4 

8 

2 

16 

Wilson  g 

0 

0 

0 

0 

Totals 

28 

27 

17 

83 

Score    at 

half:    Duke 

J7    UNC 

Frosh  29. 

State  Uses  Sophomores 
To  Turn  Back  Gamecocks 

RALEIGH  — ..l^—  North  Carolina 
State  turned  loose  4  red  hot  soph- 
"mores  and  a  junior  in  Reynolds 
Coliseum  last  night  to  rout  South 
Carolina,  98-95.  in  an  Atlantic 
Coast  Conference  game  before  7,- 
000  fans. 

Playing  without  the  services  of 
co-captains  John  Maglio  and  Cliff 
Hafer,  who  were  declared  ineligi- 
ble this  morning  by  college  offici- 
als, the  Wolfpack  got  double-fig- 
ure performances  from  all  five 
starters. 


Swim  Meet 
Held  Monday 

By  STEWART  BIRD 

The  cream  of  southern  collegiate 
swimmers  meet  here  on  Monday 
night  when  UNC  stages  its  third 
annual  Carolina  Collegiate  Cham- 
pionships at  8:00  p.m. 

This  u  strictly  an  individual 
championship  affair,  with  no  team 
crown  at  stake.  Medals  will  be 
awarded  to  the  men  with  the  six 
fastest  times  in  each  event.  The 
mermen  will  compete  in  heats  ac- 
cording to  their  previous  best  time. 

Besides  the  host  Tar  Heels, 
teams  expected  to  compete  will  be 
N.  C  State.  Duke.  East  Carolina, 
Wake  Forest,  Maryland,  demson 
and  South  Carolina. 

A  galaxy  of  atars  will  vie  for 
the  twelve  championships  at  stake. 
UNC  will  be  headed  by  Ail-Ameri- 
can Charlie  Krepp,  Sprinter  Bill 
Roth,  distance  man  Walt  Rose,  and 
breast-stroker  "Mac"  Mahaffy. 

Three  All-Americans,  sprinter 
Dave  Mclntyre,  Dick  Fadgcn, 
hreaststroke,  and  distance  ace 
Frank  Nauss  will  lead  the  Wolf- 
pack  aggregation. 

These  are  but  a  few  of  the  out- 
standing competitors  who  will  clash 
in  what  stacks  up  to  be  a  very  in- 
tere^fting  affair  all  the  way. 


Krepp  Paces  Swimmers  To 
65-24  Win  Over  Clemsoh 


Tar  Heels  | 

(Continned  from  \taige  1) 

still  traiiled  by  six  with  less  than 
a  mLnute  left.  Then  Jim  Newcome 
made  two  free  tlirows  to  reduce 
the  lead  to  73-69  with  45  seconds 
remaining.  Bob  Vernon  shocked ; 
the  crowd  by  stealing  the  ball  from  ' 
Bob  Young  and  connecting  on  a 
long  jump  shot  to  make  the  score  ' 
73-71   With  33  seco:nds   to  go.  [ 

Then  Bobby  Joe  Harris  took  the  j 
ball  away  from  Rtfsenblulh.  and  : 
fed  to  Vernon  under  the  basket  ■ 
for  the  two  points  that  knotted ! 
the  cbunt.  Harris  became  the  goat  ' 
a  few  momenLs  later  when  he 
loulod  Kearns  as' the  lar  Heels; 
br.ught  the  ball  up.  Kearns  sank 
his  two  gratis  .shots,  and  the  Tar 
Heels  were  home   free. 

Carolina  made  47.9  per  cent  or 
their  shots  while  the  Blue  Devils 
hit  34.3  p:r  cent.  Duke  lost  start- 
or  Paul  Schmidt  and  top  reserve  ; 
Jerry  Robertson  via  the  foul 
route.  The  Tar  Heels  lost  only 
Pete  Brennan,  although  Joe  Quigg 
and  Bob  Cunningham  played  much  ; 
cf  the  game  with  four  personals  j 
charged  against  them. 


By   STEWART   BIRD 

All-American  Chanie  Krepp 
rcwTOte  the  record  books  in  Bow- 
man Gray  pool  yesterday  after- 
noon with  twoi  glittering  back- 
stroke performances  as  he  led 
the  still  undefeated  Tar  Heel 
swimmers  to  a  65-24  lacing  of 
Clemson. 

The  Tar  Heel  Captains  initial 
record  came  in  the  first  event 
as  he  swam  the  100  yard  back- 
stroke leg  of  the  medley  relay 
in  the  time  of  5S.5;  breaking  the 
pool,  university,  and  AsC'C  re- 
cord of  57.2,  set  just  last  week 
by  Krepp  in  the  East  Carolina 
meet.  His  time  also  tied  the 
National  Collegiate  record  set 
in  1965. 

Five  events  later  he  brought 
300  frenzied  spectators  to  their 
feet  in  ovation  with  a  blazing 
2:06.3    for    the    200   yard    back- 


stroke. This  erased  the  pool  time 
\if  2:07.8,  university  record  "f 
.>;07.0.  and  the  ACC  standard  ol 
2:08.7.   all   held   by   Kicpp. 

Ralph  Casey's  charges  swept 
all  first  places  in  coasting  to  their 
eigthth  consecutive  victory.  Mac 
.Mahaif  was  the  only  other  double 
winner,  taking  the  200  yard  but- 
terfly and  the  200  yard  breast- 
stroke  to  rfhare,  scoring  honors 
with  Krepp.      X'  ^^■■■ 

The  Tar  Heels  swing  back  into 
action  tomorow  night  -as  they 
play  hosts  for  the  Carolina  Col- 
Icgiates,  and  wind  up  their  dual 
meet  season  against  N.  C.  Stale, 
February  23rd. 

THE   SUMMARY 
400    medley     relay:     (1)     Krepp, 

Ck)ad.    Zickgraf.    Nash    (UNC).    No 

Clemson  entries.  Time:  4:00.0 
220     yard     freestyle:     (1)      Rose 

(UNC).  (2)  Millard  (C).  (3)  New  (C). 

Time:  2:11.8. 


50  yard  freestyle:  (1)  Roth  (UNO 
(2)  Dowdle  (C)  (3)  McCaken  (C). 
Time:  23.2. 

200  yard  butterfly:  (1)  Mahaffy 
(UNC)  (2)  Ackerman  (C)  (3)  Gil- 
mar  (C).  Time:  2:20.8.      ?    .\^..^'. 

Diving:  (1)  Parker  (UN(*)  (2) 
Cashwell  (UNC)  (3)  McCajTc/i  (C) 
Score:  168.7  point.v 

100  yard  freestyle:  (1)  Maness 
(UNC)  (2)  Ackerman  (C)  (3)  Stover 
(C).  Time:  56.6.  ,♦ 

200  yard  backstroke:  (1)  Krepp 
(UNC)  (2)  Dowdle  (C)  C^  Veazey 
(UNC).  Time:  2:06.3. 

440  yard  freestyle:  (1)  Schiff- 
man  (UNC)  (2)  Millard  (C)  (3)  At- 
water  (UNC).  Time:  4:49.2. 

200  yard  breaststroke:  (1)  Mahaf- 
fy (UNC)  (2)  IMercer  <UNC)  (3; 
Gilmer  (UNC).  Time:  2:32.1. 

400  freestyle  relay:  (1)  Rose. 
Nash,  Zickgraf,  Roth  (UNC).  Time: 
3:31.8. 


^1 


Bf  RlGHl 
IN  STYLE  FOR 

GERMANS 

LOOK  YOUR  BEST 

AND   FEEL  AT  EASE 

IN   THIS   TUX   OF  THE 

FINEST  WORKAAANSHIP 

AND  MATERIAL   BLACK 

AND  MIDNIGHT  BLUE, 

IVY  LEAGUE  Or  CONVENTIONAL. 


A  Complete  Line  Of  Accessories 
For  Sale  Or  Rent! 


Grid  Drills  Postponed 

Co«ch  Jim  Tatum  announced 
ycsttrday  that  the  start  of  winter 
football  practice  sessions  has 
been  postponed  until  next  week 
because  of  heavy  rains.  Coach 
Tatum  said  he  plans  to  start  His 
Tar  Heels  to  work  Monday  if 
weather  conditions  permit. 


Howard  Johnson  Restaurant 


BREAKFAST 


I 


LUNCH 


DINNER 


SNACKS 
landmark  For  Hungry  Tarheels" 


McGuire  Is  Named  To       ! 
Coach  East  All-Stars 

NEW  YORK— (AP)— Frank  Mc- - 
Guire.  whose  nation-leading  Uni- 
versity of  North  Carolina  cagers 
laid  their  unbeaten  record  on  the  , 
line  against  Duke  last  night,  will  I 
coach  the  East  team  in  the  an-  \ 
nual  East-West  college  all-star  | 
basketball  game  this  year.  ! 

The  all-star  game  will  be  play-' 
ed  xMarch  30  in  Madison  Square  j 
Garden  here,  an  .  afternoon  game  | 
for  the  first  time  in  the  11-year : 
histor>'  of  the  contest. 

E.  O.  Doc  Hayes  of  Methodist 
will  coach  the  West  entry. 

The  Herald  Tribune  Fresh  Air 
Fund,  which  took  over  sponsor- 
ship of  the  game  last  year,  an- 
nounced the  coaches  today. 


pH^  HAIR   GROOM 
I   :  TONIC 


U  N  B  R  E  A  K  A  B  L E^l 
PLASTIC!  Jl 

Grooms  your  hair  while  It  treots  yoor.'>    *•£ 
scalp.   Controls   loose   dandruff.    1.00' 

plus  lax 
SHULTON       Ne>«  York     •     Toronto     ' 


>.-.;(:;•, 


;:/:,'^..w- 


&■ 


BRADY'S   RESTAURANT 


NOW  REMODELED  BOTH  INSIDE  AND  OUT 


S^SK'ife**^-*^' 


i      . 


FROM  THE  COMPLETELY  NEW  FRONT  TO  THE  EXTENSION  OF  OUR  PRIVATE  DINING 
ROOM,  YOU  WILL  FIND  AN  ENTIRELY  REMODELED  RESTAURANT  THAT  EXCELLS  IN 
BEAUTY,  CONVENIENCE,  AND  COMFORT.  WE  HAVE  EXPANDED  OUR  BANQUET 
DINING  ROOM  TO  ACCOMODATE  125  PEOPLE,  MODERNIZED  OUR  KITCHEN  TO 
PROVIDE  FASTER  SERVICE  WHILE  MAINTAINING  OUR  HIGH  STANDARDS,  AND 
COMPLETELY  REDECORATED  OUR  DINING  ROOMS.  YOU  ARE  INVITED  TO  EAT  WITH 
US  FOR  THE  EVENING  MEAL  OR  SUNDAY  DINNER,  AND  INSPECT  OUR  NEW  QUAR- 
TERS. 


\ 


SPECIALIZING  IN 


DELICIOUS  SWIFT  PREMIUM  STEAKS 


GOLDEN  GROWN  CHICKEN 


FRESH  PIT  BAR-B-QUE  -  COUNTRY  HAM  STEAK 

^     GRILLED  PORK,  LAMB  Or  VEAL  CHOPS       SEAFOOD  i   .:     :   _  1 

BREADED  VEAL  CUTLET  BARBECUED  CHICKEN 

BRADY'S  RESTAURANT 


DURHAM  ROAD 


SINCE   1934 
CHAPEL  HILL 


PHONE  9-8071 


«  s  e  iti¥f  iU7 

eiiapel  Mill,   M.    C. 


WEATHER 

Cooler.  Expoctod  high  58. 


mt 


aTar  Xccl 


GRAPHIC 

Tho    artist    views    th«    "crisis. 
Set  editorial  page. 


VOL.  LVII  NO.  96 


Complete  (JP)  Wirt  Service 


CHAPEL   HILL,  NORTH   CAROLINA,  TUESDAY,   FEBRUARY   12,  1957 


Offices   in   Graham   Memorial 


FOUR   PAGES  THIS  ISSUI 


BUDGET  RECOfMMENDS  $8  MILLION  FOR  UNC 


Hodges  Requests  Changes 
In  Tax  Structures,  Wages 

RAI.FIC.H— (AP)— Here  are  lii<;hli,nhts  ire  n  die  le-^islaiixe  prof-raiii  which  Ciov.  Hodi^es 
].i»i   iii,i;ht   placed  before  tlie   H)'i-j  (ieiieral   Ascinhh: 

lax  revisions— nearly  one-third  oi  the  29-j);ine  nie.s.sa,i;e  the  (iovernor  read  to  the  lej^is- 
l.mne  dealt  uiih  t  han^^es  in  the  tax  sirmiures  retonnnended  by  a  special  study  commission. 
Nod:.4cs  laid  heaw  stress  on  the  need  to  revise  iiuonu  taxes  on  industav  as  "another  tool  in 
oin  eH(»rts  to  raise  per  capita  inioine  .  .  ,J'  ''* 

Public    education — Hodgos    ur-  ^  — .  


WUNC-FM'S  GAME  BROADCAST: 


Commercial  Complaint 
Caused  Cancellation 


No  Provisions  For  Union, 
Married  Students  Housing 


ged    that    the    state    provide    "A 
good  minimum  on  an  equal  basis 
for  all  children  in  our  100  coun- 
ties "  He  also  declared  that  state 
leadership  and  support  must  be 
'supplemented  by  funds  from  lo- 
cal   sources."    He    recommended 
increased  appropriations  to  meet 
rising  enrollment  and  a  pay   in- 
crease raise  for  school  teachers. 
Highways —  Recommendations  of 
a   study   commission   for   a   seven- 
member  highway  body   to  replace 
the  present  14  commissioners  and 
to  reorganize  the  highway  depart- 
ment  was  .vrongly   urged   by  HoS- 
gcs. 

Prisons — Another  report  recom- 
mending that  the  prisons  system 
Im?  separated  from  the  highway 
commission  also  was  "strongiy" 
endorsed  by  the  Governor.  Diver- 
son  of  highway  revenue  'to  take 
care  of  a  legitimate  expense  of  the 
general  government  ought  to  jlop 
as  soon  as  reasonably  practical. "* 
he  said. 

Highway  Safety — "Major  Pro- 
posals" of  the  Motor  Vehicles 
Oept.  were  recommended  by  the 
Governor.  These  include  addi- 
tional patrolmen,  a  mechanical 
inspection  program,  use  of  chem- 
ical biocd  tests  as  binding  evi- 
dence in  the  trial  of  drunken 
driving  cases,  and  others. 

Minimum  wage— A  jlate  minim- 
um wage  law  was  urged  to  raise 
"the  level  of  our  very  low  income 
earners,  something  we  badly  need 
to  do." 

Reorganization —    The    Governor 
asked   for  creation  of  a  new  stale 
Dt'pt.   of  administration,  to  conso- 
lidate    service  agencies      of  state 
government.    He    also    urged    that 
the   commission    or   reorganization 
of  state  government  be  continued. 
In  addition,  Hodges  asked  for 
creation    of    a      capitol    building 
commission  to  consider  a  new  ca- 
pitol building  for  the  state,  and 
suggested  that  a  commission   be 
set    up    to   submit   rcc<>mm«nda- 
tions  for  changes  in  the  state  con- 
stitution. 
Hodges  repeated  to  the  legisla- 
ture    recommendation^-     from   his 
1955  legislative   message   that   the 
civilian  absentee  ballot  provision^ 
i^T   the   general   election   be   abol- 
ished, and  that  the  question  of  le- 
gal liquor  sales  be  submitted  to  a 
vote.  i 


Class  Ring  Co.   i 
Representative 
Here  Feb.  18       I 

The  Balfour  Company  represen 
tativc  will  take  orders  far  class 
rings  in  "Y"  Court  on  Monday 
and  Tuesday.  Feb.  18-19.  from  9 
am.  tf  4:30  p.m. 

All  juniors  and  seniors  are  eli- 
gible to  place  orders,  according 
to  Bob  Horntk,  Grail  class  ring 
chairman. 

The  Balfour  ring  is  recognized 
a.s  the  only  official  Carolina  class 
ring  by  the  University  adminis- 
tration and  the  Order  of  the 
Grail. 

For  further  information.  Hor- 
nik  r?quests  that  he  be  contacted 
at  the  Zeta  Beta  Tau  House, 
phone  6031. 


GM'S  SLATE 


Activities  in  Graham  Memorial 
today  include: 

UP  Caucus,  3-5  p.m.,  Grail 
Room;  Psychology  Club,  7:30  9: 
30,  Grail  Room;  UP,  7-11,  Roland 
Parker;  Men's  Honor  Council, 
7-11,  Woodhouse  Conference 
Room;  Dept.  of  Dramatic  Art, 
2-4,  Rendezvous  Room;  Dance 
Class,  6:30-8,  Rendezvous  Room, 
W.R C,     6:30-9:30,     APO   Room. 


DON  COSSACK  DANCERS  AND  CHORUS 

•  ; ;.  .  ...  appear  here  tonight 

Jaroff  Leads  Cossack 
In  Appearance  Tonight 


Serge  Jaroff.  diminutive  direc- 
tor of  the  Don  Cossack  Chorus 
and  Dancers,  will  put  his  men 
through  their  fast-stepped  paces 
tonight  when  the  Russian  troupe 
appears  in  Memorial  Hall  at  8. 

Sponsored  by  the  Student  En- 
tertainment Committee,  the  pro- 
gram will  feature  folk  sangs, 
church  music,  and  operatic  melo- 
dies delivered  with  an  originai 
Russian  flavor.  Added  to  the  vocal 
music  are  traditional  Cossack 
dances  performed  by  members  of 
the  chorus. 

Cossack  is  a  Mongolian  word 
meaning  "man  on  horseback."  but 
in  their  world-wide  tours  the  Don 
Cossacks  have  girdled  the  globe 
by  almost  every  available  means. 
The  troupe  first  visited  the 
United  States  in  1930  and  has  ap- 
peared in  this  country  annually 
for  26  s3asons.  As  a  result  of 
their  growing  success,  they  have 
been  obliged  to  rename  them- 
selves the  Original  Don  Cossack 
Chorus  to  avoid  confusion  with 
imitators. 

Doors    will    open    for    tonight's 


program  at  7  p.m.  The  concert  is 
free  to  students  upon  presentation 
of  I.D.  cards.  A  $1  admission  is 
being  charged  to  student  wives. 
with    a    $2    cliarge    to    others. 


nev5 

in 
brief 


U.S.-lsraei  Plan 

WASHINGTON  —  (AP)  —  The 
United  States  proposed  to  L-racl 
Monday  a  new  two-point  plan  aim- 
ed at  meeting,  at  least  in  part, 
Israels  conditions  f-r  withdraw- 
ing its  forces  from  the  Gaza  strip 
and  the  Gulf  of  Aqaba. 

Secretary  of  State  Dulles  pres- 
ented the  proposal  to  Israeli  Am- 
bassador Abba  Eban  in  a  70-minute 
conference  at  the  State  Dept.  The 
two  points  are: 

1.  The  United  States  would  pub- 
licly declare  its  support  of  free 
navigation  in  the  Gulf  of  Aqaba, 
from  which  Egyptian  gun.,-  have 
barred  Israeli  ships  for  six  years, 

(See  WORLD  NEWS,  Page  3) 

Team  Candidates 

All  candidates  for  both  the 
freshman  and  varsity  baseball 
teams  are  requested  to  meet  at 
2:30  Thursday  afternoon  in  Room 
304  Woollen  Gym.  Varsity  prac- 
tice will  begin  following  the 
meeting. 


Charges, 
Are  Denied 
By  Graves 

By  JIM  PURKS 

Louis  Graves,  editor  of  the 
Chapel  Hill  Weekly,  calmly  de- 
nied yesterday  a  statement  by  Joe 
Augustine  of  the  Trade  Promo- 
tions Committee  that  he  was  op- 
posed to  progress  in  Chapel   Hill. 

"I'm  not  against  progress  at 
all,"  Graves  said.  He  reiterated, 
however,  his  opposition  to  the 
merchants'  idea  of  putting  adver- 
tising signs  outside  the  city 
limits  of  Chapel  Hill. 

Graves  pointed  out  that  he  was 
"just  one"  of  a  great  number  of 
people  in  Chapel  Hill  who  think 
it  is  not  appropriate  for  Chapel 
Hill  to  have  billboards.  He  said 
that  the  merchants'  plan  of  using 
painted  signs  instead  of  billboards 
would  not  lessen  the  opposition. 

"I  think  the  merchants  should 
consider  the  good-will  of  the  peo- 
ple in  Chapel  Hil||.  their  regular 
customers,  who  are  more  valuable 
to  the  merchants  than  an  occa- 
sional stranger  who  may  buy 
something."  ^ 

Graves  repeatertl  tie  was  'hearti- 
ly" in  favor  of  progress  in  Chapel 
Hill,  but  believes  the  merchants 
will  hurt  their  business  if  they  go 
against  the  wishes  of  the  Uni- 
versity faculty  and  the  residents 
of  Chapel  Hill.  | 

Augustine  said'  Saturda«  that 
Graves'  editorial  in  last  ^lleek's 
Chapel  Hill  Weekly  in  which  he 
opposed  the  merchant's  idea  of 
putting  advertising  signs  oOtside 
Chapel  Hill  was  "unfortunate" 
and  had  incurred  ill-will  against 
Graves  amoiig   the   merchants. 

Augustine  is  chairman  of  the 
Trade  Pgf.Qffli)t>tions  Committee  of 
the  Merchants"  assn.  and  has  been 
authorized  by  the  Board  df  Di- 
rectors to  look  further  \ntb  the 
possibilities  of  a'dvertising  otitside 
the    immediate    limits,  of    dhapel 


By  CHARLIE  SLOAN 

Cancellation  of  WUNC  -  FM's 
basketball  coverage  planned  for 
last  night  came  as  the  result  of 
a  misinterpretation  of  the  Uni- 
versity's broadvision  agreement 
with  commercial  radio  and  tele- 
vision stations. 

WUNC  Radio  Director  John 
Young  explained  that  when  Uni- 
versity officials  met  with  repre- 
sentatives from  radio  and  tele- 
vision stations  in  WUNC-TV's 
broadcast  area  it  was  agreed  that 
three  games  would  be  broadvised. 

Since  then  the  proposed  broad- 
vision  of  the  State  game  has  been 
cancelled. 

When  Young  discovered  that  no 
radio  or  television  stations  in  the 
area  were  planning  to  cover  the 
Virginia  game  in  Charlottesville 
last  night  th?  WUNC-FM  staff 
started  making  arrangements  to 
report  the  play-by-play.  , 

Sunday  morning,  after  wide- 
spread publicity  was  released  on 
WUNC-FM's  coveragp  Cbrtsoli- 
dated  Univei-sity  Vice  President 
and  Finance  Officer  William  Car- 
michael  notified  Young  that  the 
University  had  received  a  com- 
plaint that  the  coverage  was  in 
violation  of  the  broadvision  agree- 
ment   made  Jan.    15. 

UP  To  Discuss 
Procedures  For 
Election  Today 

The  University  Party  will  meet 
tonight  at  7:30  in  Roland  Parker 
Lounges  1  and  2  in  the  Graham 
Memorial. 

All  members  have  been  urged  to 
attend  as  election  plans  will  be  dis- 
cussed and  a  new  and  more  string- 
ent nominating  procedure  will  be 
explained  by  Chairman  Mike  Wein- 
man. 

Nominations  for  the  spring  elect 
ions  begin  March  5th  and  all  peti 
tions  for  members-hip  and  dues 
must  be  in  no  later  than  February 
26th.  according  to  Weinman.  No 
one  who  has  not  turned  in  a  peti- 
tion for  membership  or  payed  dues 
will  be  allowed  to  vole  on  the 
party's  nominees,  he  said. 

Benny  Thomas.  U.P.  floor  leader, 
will    report   tonight    on    a    special  ^ 
caucus  to  be  held  this  afternoon. 


Young  said  the  University  group 
had.  not  meant  for  radio  to  be  in- 
cluded in  the  agreement,  but  that 
the  University's  policy  is  to  "work 
cooperatively  with  all  groups." 

According  to  Young  the  Uni- 
versity was  faced  with  the  decis- 
ion of  whether  to  go  back  on  the 
publicity  to  their  audience  and 
can*el  the  game  or  go  ahead  and 
broadcast  the  game  and  appear  to 
break  faith  with  the  commercial 
stations. 

a;  group   of   WUNC-FM   staffers 
had    already    been    sent    to    Char- 
lottesville   when    the    cancellation 
was    made.    The    Athletic    Associa-  \ 
tion  had  arranged  to  pay  the  line: 
charges,    and    were    offering   com-  I 
plete  cooperation,  said  Young. 

Speaking  of  the  broadcast's  un- 
expected cancellation.  Young  said, 
"I  regret  very  much  we  can't 
carry   it."'  I 

The    broadvision    of     the    State  , 
ganie    was    cancelled    because    of  j 
heavy    conflicts    with    high    .school  i 
gam:s  the  same  night.  Young  ex- 
plained   that    for    most    schools    it 
will    be    the    final    ni?ht    of    the 
season    and   WUNC-TV  could    not  I 
compete  with  commercial  stations  ' 
carrying  high   school   games. 


By   CLARKE   JONES  i 

Special   To  The  Daily  Tar  Heel    \ 

IIALEIGH — .\n  appropriation  of  ! 
over  S8  million  dollars  was  reconi-  j 
mended  here  to  the  General  As-  ] 
sembly  Monday  night  for  the  Uni- 1 
versity  of  North  Carolina  at  Chap- ' 
el  HilL  I 

There  were   no  recomniedations  j 
made  for  houjlng  for  married  stu- ; 
dents  or  for  a  new  student  union 
building  at  UNC.  .  j 

The  recommended  appropriations 
were    part   of   the   North   Carolina ' 


budget  for  the  1957-59  biennium 
submitted  to  the  General  Assem- 
bly by  Gov.  Hodges  and  the  Advis- 
ory Budget  Commission. 

The  exact  total  recommended 
for  the  University  at  Chapel  Hill 
came  to  $8,051,751.  UNC  had  asked 
for  over  SIO  million. 

Requests  by  the  University  for 
married  student.^-'  housing  and  a 
new  student  union  building  were 
SI. 740,000  and  $1,242,500,  respec- 
tively. 

The     Consolidated       University, 


Armstrong  Headlines 
Weekend's  Performers 


By   EDITH  MacKINNON 


wishing  to  attend  the  Louis  Arm- 


composed  of  UNC,  Woman's  Col- 
lege at  Greensboro  and  N.  C.  State 
at  Raleigh,  received  a  recommen- 
dation for  general  administration 
of  S225.922. 

A  S50.000  appropriation  was  also 
recommended  to  the  Consolidated 
University  for  alterations  and  re- 
pairs to  the  former  Institute  of 
Government  building  where  the 
Consolidated  offices  may  move. 

UNC  received  £  recommendation 
of  approximately  $5*^  million  for 
capital  improvements.  It  had  re- 
quested over  S16  million. 

Included  in  the  improvement  re- 
commendations are  SI. 150,000  for 
a    pharmacy    building,    SI    million 
for  three   new  men's   dormitories, 
$1,200,000  for   a    physics    building 
j  and  $790,0|d  for  a  dormitory   for 
j  men  students  in  health  affairs. 
i      The   Division   of  Health  Affairs 


The    torrid    tones    of    trumpeter !  strong  concert  will   have   to  have    at   UNC  received   ^   recommended 

Germans  Club  bids.  Germans  Club  |  appropriation  of  $3^648.000.  It  had 


Four  Players 
Drop  Out  Of 
School:  latum 


Louis  "Satchmo "  Armstrong  head- 
line the  entertainment  tor  this 
week-ends,  Feb.  14-16,  gala  Mardi 
Gras   festivities. 

For  a  week-end  of  sound,  the  j 
Mitchell-Ruff  Duo  and  Dick  Ga- j 
ble's  All  Stars  join  Armstrong  to  i 
round  out  the  musical  bill  of  fare.  I 

An  informal  jam  session  by  the] 
Dick  Gable  group  wil|||^e  held 
Thursday  night  in  Graham  Me- 
morial's main  lounge.  On  Friday 
the  Mitchell-Ruff  Duo  will  present 
a  concert  in  Memorial  Hall.  Arm- 
strong will  be  featured  for  the 
formal  dance  Saturday  in  Woollen 
Gym. 

Called  the  U.S.'s  "trumoet-blow- 


members  will  not  have  to  buy  a 
ticket  Id  attend  the  dance  Satur- 
day   night. 

Tickets  for  the  Mitchell-Ruff 
Duo  and  "  the  Louis  Armstrong 
dance  are  still  available  to  the 
public  at  Graham  Memorial, 
Kemp's,  and  through  IDC  repre- 
sentatives for  $2. 


cflnpus 


v- 


li 


Four  football  players  who  were 
expected  to  report  for  Spring  prac- 
tice will  not  be  returning  to  school. 
Coach  Jim  Tatum  said  yesterday. 

He  added  that  he  had  no  infor- 
mation concerning  the  alleged  sus- 
pension of  four  players  for  Honor 
Council  violations  and  expressed 
concern  over  the  rumor. 

"Academic  difficulty'  was  cited 
by  Tatum  for  the  four  players  drop- 1 
ping  out  of  school.  | 

He  would  not  elaborate  further 
on  the  situation,  but  indicated  that 
he  expected  three  of  the  four  boys 

who  dropped  out  thi.v  Spring  to  re-  j  j-pj^n,  millions  of  dollars  in  an  ef 

'  fort   to  sell  the  American  wav  of 


ing  ambassador."  Louis  Armstrong 
has  spread  his  musical  fame 
throuijhout  Europe  and  other 
parts  of  the  world.  One  of  hi.^ 
greatest  suec'csses  came  in  Britain, 
where^  his  jazz  fans  included  such 
notables  as  Princess  Margaret  and 
the   Duke  of  Kent. 

The  quotable  Satchmo  has  his 
own  colorful  views  on  jazz  and 
the  musical  world.  When  he  was 
asked  the  rea.sons  for  the  return  i 
in  popularity  of  Dixieland  jazz. '. 
Louis  grinned.  "Daddy,  it  ain't : 
never  been  away."  i 

Part    clown    and    part    musician.  '• 
.Armstrong  firmly   believes   in   the 
saying   "When   you   play   jazz,  you 
don't    lie.      You    play      from    the 
heart." 

The  U.S.  State  Dept..  which  ha 


One  fraternity's  solution  oi  the 
parking  problem.  .  .  .  .had  four 
cars  parked  on  the  front  porch  of 
the  house  one  day   last   week. 

.■\    Carolina    Coed    discovers    the 
alphabet  in  a  bowl  of  soup  served 
at      a    down-town      eating      place: 
•look:  Ifo-  got  letters  in  it!  "  she  ^ 
said.  ! 


turn  in  the  Fall 

The  four  who  dropped  out  for 
"academic  reasons"  were  Ron- 
nie Koes,  sophomore  center  from 
Duryea,  Penn.;  Wally  Vale,  sen- 
ior fullback  from  Ellerson,  Va.; 
Fred  Mueller,  sophomore  of  Isel- 
in,  N.  J.;  and  Jack  Menahan  of 
Bela-Cynwyd,  Pa. 


life  to  foreigners,  thinks  of  .Arm- 
strong as  an  unofficial  envoy.  Said 
a  spokesman  of  the  11. S.  Embassy 
in  Lorvdon,  "He's  very,  very  use- 
tul.   and  hcs   most   helpful."  ; 

The  Germans  Club  and  GMAE 
have  combined  their  efforts  for 
the  Mardi  Gras  weekend.  Students 


Spring  Prelude 
Evidenced  By 
Forecast  Here 

A  prelude  to  Spring  is  evi- 
denced in  the  latest  long-range 
weather  forecasts  hj|^e  Ra- 
leigh-Durham  Weat^^^^^eau. 

Continuing  cool  amm^  wea- 
ther is  expected  for  the  Chapel 
Hill  area  according  to  yesterday's 
long-range  forecasts. 

Temperatures  today  are  expect- 
ed to  reach  the  upper  40's.  Fair 
skies  and  cool  preSpring  breez- 
es are  expected   to  continue. 

Rain  is  not  to  be  seen  in  the 
immediate  weather   horizon. 


requested  $4,236,544. 

The  total  for  administration  and 
general  Expense  at,  UNC  comes  to 
$535,048.  khis  included  the  salar- 
ies of  the  chancellor  and  the  con- 
troller and  busincs..-  manager.  $13 
thousand  and  $12  thousand,  res 
pectively.  Both  positions  received 
the  amount  asked  for. 

The  .salaries  of  Consolidated 
University  officers  include: 

President.  $18,000  as  requested; 
vice-president  and  finance  officer, 
815,000  as  requested;  vice-pre.n- 
dent  and  provost,  $15,000  from  a 
request  of  $16,500  and  business 
officer  and  treasurer,  512,000  from 
a  S13.000  request. 

The  University's  buctget  requests 
are   ted    through    three      differeat 
channels    which    accounts    for    the 
usual    practice    of   receiving   lower 
recommendations  than  were  origi- 
nally asked  for. 
The  University '.i-  first  request  is 
I  made  to  the  Board  of  Higher  Edu- 
I  cation  wl^gi^  then  makes  a  recom- 
'  mondation  to  the  Advisory  Budget 
Commission. 

The  Budget  Commission  then  re 
commends   appropriations     to   the 
;  state  legislature  through  Gov.  Hod- 
I  ges. 

The  Budget  Commission  recom- 
mends what  it  figures  to  be  the 
Uiiiversitys  total  requirements  — 
,  almOo-L  $14  million— and  subtracts 
'  its  recommended  estimate  of  re- 
ceipts—almost S6  million.  This 
gives  the  Commission  its  rccom 
mondation. 


Budget  Asks 
For  Record 


SP   Will      Grant 
Nominafe 


Hill. 


^  ii  ■■ 


Protectors  of  Life,  Limb,  and  Parking  Spaces.  .  .  . 

These  three  gentlemen  are  policemen.  They  are  more  affectionately  known  as  "Campus  Cops.''  They 
stop  traffic  at  the  South  Building  crosswalks  so  that  students  can  cross  safely.  They  stop  drivers  who  en- 
ter the  danger  zone  going  too  fast  and  give  them  lectures  of  the  follies  of  driving  too  fast.  They  also  give 
parking  tickets.  They  are  our  friends.  '  - 


By  NEIL   6ASS 

March  eleventh  has  been  desig- 
nated nomination  date  for  major 
campus-wide  offices  by  the  Stu- 
dent Party,  it  was  announced  at 
last    nights    party   meeting. 

Feb.  25.  is  the  date  set  for 
nomination  of  party  legislative 
candidates  and  Mar.  4.  the  date 
for  .selection  of  party  class  of- 
ficer   candidates. 

All  these  dates  were  establish- 
ocl  b.\  the  party  Advisory  Board. 
MEMBERSHIP 

Party  Chairman  Sonny   Hallford 
gave     a     resume     of     membership 
and  voting  requisites.  These  were: 
( 1 )     Attendance    at    two    party 
j  meetings    for    membership. 
.      (2)    Attendance   at    party  meet- 
!  ing  three  weeks  prior  to  nomina- 
j  tion  night  to  entitle  vote  for  ma- 
i  jor  campus-wide  office  candidate-s. 
I      (3)    Attendance   at   party    meet- 
I  ing  one  week  prior  to  nomination 
night    to    entitle    vote    for    Legis- 
lature and  class  office  candidates. 
REPORTS 

Under  agenda  time  allocated  for 
committee  reports,  it  was  an- 
nounced that  the  party  was  0|>er- 
ating   some   $50   in   the   red.   Con- 

(See  NOMINATIONS,  Page  3) 


RALEIGH— (.\P)— The  record 
state  budget  presented  to  the  Gen- 
eral .Assembly  tonight  recom- 
mended total  appropiiations  of 
S42.541.474  for  permanent  im- 
provements by  state  agencies  and 
institutions. 

The  bulk  of  this.  S26.852.985. 
would  go  for  higher  education, 
with  the  biggest  sum,  $7,755,260. 
earmarked  for  North  Carolina 
State  College.  A  total  of  $5,513,875 
was  recommended  for  the  Univcr- 
.sity  of  .\orth  Carolina. 

The  proposed  permanent  im- 
provement program  includes  $33.- 
055.471  in  direct  appropriations 
and  159,486.000  in  a  "revolving 
fund"  arrangement  under  which 
instituticns.  mainly  colleges 
would  borrow  the  money  for  such 
facilities  as  dormitories  and  re- 
pay it  at  3  per  cent.  The  institu- 
tions would  be  given  up  to  30 
years  or  longer  to  repay. 

The  state  agencies  and  institu- 
manent  improvements  totaling 
tions  had  put  in  requests  for  per 
$89,051,205.  Of  this  S55.495.77B 
crmprised  requests  from  the  col- 
leges. 

In  its  recommendations  the  ad- 
visory budget  commission  called 
for  S7.728.480  for  the  states  hos- 
pitals    and     mental      institutions, 

{See   BUDGET.   Page   3) 


^AGB  TWO 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEV 


TUESDAY,  FEBRUARY  12.  1957 


'You  Know,  Boys,  There  Appears  To  Be  A  Crisis  In  Student  Initiative' 


'Crisis'   In   Initiative: 
Several   Major   Examples 

Hfvc.   to  a(  ( <)ni|>aiiy   the   \M'%t:  t'ditoiial   (artoon   ahoxc.  arc*  a   fcxv 
fxainjjUs  of    stiuknt   initiative    in   the   past    year.    (Hiiettor  ol   Student 
A(ti\iiies   Samuel    Mai^ill    sj)<)ke    last    week   about   a    "crisis"    in    student 
initiatixe.i    The  examples   were   submitted   bv   President    Hob  Youn'4: 
1.  C.ixil   service  in   llie  executive 


Spreading  The 
Blame  At  WF 

The  News  &  Observer        Editor: 


YOU  Said  It: 


Television's  No    So  Bad  Oft  After  All 


braju  ii    ot    student    i»«)vennnent. 

2.    Honor    System    Commission. 

;>.  S200  student  government 
scholarship. 

j.  Student  I.ej^islature  apj)ro- 
priation    to   the   TNC    Band. 

The  Daily  Tar  Heel 

The  official  ifudent  publication  of  tbe 
Publications  Board  of  the  University  of 
North  Carolina,  where  it  is  published 
daily  except  Monday  and  examinatiot 
and  vacation  periods  and  summer  teriis 
Entered  as  second  class  matter  in  tht 
Dost  office  in  Chapel  Hill,  N.  C,  undei 
Ihe  Act  oi  March  8,  1870.  Subscription 
rates:  mailed,  S4  per  year,  S2.50  a  semes 
ter:  delivered.  S6  a  year,  $3.50  a  seme* 
ter 


Clul) 
'"  <  )a  1 


ProsedJtioii     ol     the       Tuly 


Campus  Chest  —  doubled  its 


Editor  

.   FRED  POWLEDGE 

Managing  Editor  - 

—  CHARLIE  SLOAN 

News  Editor  

NANCY  HILL 

Business  Manager 

_      BILL  BOB  PLTX 

Sp»rU  Editor 

LARRY  CHEEK 

EIJITOKIAL  STAFF  —  Woody  Searv 
Frank  C'rowther.  Barry  Winston,  David 
Mundy,  George  Pfingst,  Ingrid  Clay, 
Cortland  Edwards,  Paul  McCauley, 
Bobbi  Smith. 


^EWS  STAFF— Clarke  Jones.  Ray  Link 
er,  Joan  Moore.  Pringle  Pipkin,  Ann- 
Drake.  Edith  MacKinnon,  Wally  Kuralt, 
Mary  Alys  Voorhees,  Graham  Snyder, 
Billy  Barnes,  Neil  Bass,  Gary  Nichols. 
Paae  Bernstein,  Peg  Humphrey.  Phyllit 
Maultsbv'  Ben  Taylor 


SPORTS  STAFF:     Dave  Wiblc,     Stewart 
Bird  and  Ron  Milligan. 

BUSINESS  STAFF— Rosa  Moore,  Johnay 
Whitaker,  Dick  Leavitt,  Dick  Sirkin. 

Night  Editor  Wally  Kuralt 

Proof  Reader  Manley   Springs 

Night  News  Editor -Fred  Powledge 


7.  Muii'^arian  student  rebel 
sjjoke  here. 

S.  Reduced  prices  lor  dates' 
h)otball    i>ame   tickets. 

().  Prompt  action  in  the  'A'ince 
Olen   Case.' 

10.  The    Chancellors    Report. 

11.  Freshman  automobile  re- 
striction. 

\'j.  200  books  for  the  Wilson  Li- 
brary. 

ivj.  Dormiiorv  telephones,  read- 
ing day   before   examinations. 

14.  Columbia  Street  parkins;  sit- 
uation. 

I -,.  StudeiH  leaders'  bieakini;  up 
j)antv  raids. 

i(>.  700  names  on  a  petition  to 
drop  compulsory  physical  educa- 
tion lor  veterans  ot  the  :ntned 
lorces. 

17.  Wake  Forest-lWC  meetin<; 
ol  student  lea<lers  to  curb  \ic)lence 
at  inter-school  contests. 

18.  The  new  absence  rule* 

ic).    Carolina's   "cheating;  ifeff.** 

20.  Leadership  retreat  (planned 
for  the  spring). 

21.  .\Iardi  (iras  —  cooperation 
amotij;  (Jraliam  .Memoi'ial,  frater- 
nities and   independents. 

22.  Cr;  Iiam  .Memorial  —  at- 
temjjis  to  jL;et  a  new  i)uildin;4  and 
a   lieu    director. 

2;',.  V^K:.A-^  \VC.\-(.raham  Vfe- 
morial  Acti\ities  Board  coopera- 
tion in  the  Campuswide  Talent 
Show. 

2j.  (.lee  Club  tour,  with  ex- 
penses j)aicl  by  Student  Le<;isla- 
luie. 

2;,.  Hunj;arian  refugee  student 
scholarship. 


Wake  Forest  College  auth. ci- 
ties ivem  to  have  gotten  into  a 
jurisdictional  dispute  with  tho 
student  government  organization 
over  punishment  meted  out  fol- 
lowing a  "panty  raid"  at  the  in- 
stitution. 

If  the  punishment  sticks,  how- 
ever, it  will  probably  reduce,  if 
not  prevent,  such  silliness  in  the 
future.  The  punishment  included 
girl.^  who  '"encouraged"  the  raid 
as  well  as  the  boys  who  invaded 
the  girls'  dorniitorie.v. 

Wherever  college  girls  make  it 
clear  that  they  disapprove  such 
antics,  there  are  few,  if  any, 
■'panty  raids." 

• 

L'i!  Abner 


I  was  very  interested  in  your  review  of  the  pro- 
sent  stale  of  television.  I  must  take  exception  to 
your  viewpoint,  however. 

Actually,  mo.st  of  your  statements  would  have 
been  valid  as  recently  as  a  year  or  so  ago;  at  that 
time,  the  syndicated  columns  of  .M.->^rs.  Gould  a.nd 
Crosby  were   hypercritical,   if  anything. 

They  soundly  spanked  the  infant  medium,  and 
their  then  timely  comments  were  far  more  pertin- 
ent and  perceptive  than  yours. 

U  personal  observation  is  not  enough  to  demon- 
.strate  that  TV  has  improved  in  both  content  and 
techniciue,  perhaps  the  fact  that  both  of  these  critics 
have  changed  their  tone  con.viderably  in  recent 
months  is  worth  something. 

In  your  rather  superficial  deprecation  of  tele- 
vision programming  (you  neglected  to  mention  tech- 


nique), you  overlooked  one  rather  pertinent  factor 
— individual  selection. 

.\o  one  has  to  watch  television,  or  any  particular 
program  on  television,  any  more  than  one  is  forced 
to  buy  The  New  York  Times  in  preference  to  The 
Daily  Ne\,s,  and  vice-versa.  Even  if  it  is  true  that 
television  presents  a  'bad  product,'  then,  no  one 
ha^  to  tune  it  on. 

The  terrible  truth,  sir,  i.-?  that  it  is  impossible  to 
force  any  number  of  people  to  watch  something  in 
which  they  have  no  interest  and  which  they  do 
not  consider  a  "good  product."  Should  the  TV' 
p>.wers-that-be  do  a  complete  about-face  and  present 
24  hours  of  "good  product"  every  day,  you  and  I, 
sir.  would  be  among  the  very  few  who  would  bother 
to  watch. 

And.  as  a  philo.5'ophicaI  quibble,  I  wonder  if 
"good"  mustn't  be  measured  in  terms  of  how  many 
people  like  it  —  whether  or  not  it  satisfies  a  need. 


\i 


it'. 

By  A!  Capp 


^    AH  P.CKED  VO'OUT 
&ECUZ  ^O'  UOOKS  LOVAU, 
SINCERE,  AN'  HONEST" 
AN'  &EST  OF . 
VO'  HAIN'T 
FAT.':'' 


f^ 


By  Wait  Kelly 


wen.,  ^'^Hjmf  ^''^^^ 


Many  find  Presley  as  "good"  as  Puccini,  and  I  for 
one  decline  to  disagree. 

Obviously  the  majority  of  television  viewers  are 
not  interested  in  the  ''good  products."  of  which 
plenty  are  afforded  each  week.  And,  equally  obviou> 
is  the  fact,  cold  and  hard  though  it  is.  that  the  ad- 
verlic^ers  who  support  television  must  reach  a  cer- 
tain audience  to  justify  their  expenditure. 

But  you  take  exception  to  this  "comfnerciaf  con- 
trol, without  suggesting  any  preferable  alternative. 
The  truth  is  that  if  financial  concerns  do  not  de 
termine  to  a  great  extent  the  content  of  television. 
then  government  cont.ol  must  be  instituted. 

So  the  general  character  of  television  is  not 
liable  to  change  any  too  fast.  The  "bad  product" 
will  prevail.  But,  as  I  st«ted  before,  there  is  still 
plenty  of  worthwhile,  even  "weighty, '  program- 
mi»g.  I  gather  that  you  would  disagree. 

Unfortunately,  I  do  not  have  access  to  any  pro- 
gram lists  with  which  to  supplement  any  argument, 
but  as  examples  of  fine  television  program^'  which 
have  appeared  fairly  recently  I  submit  the  followini; 
recollections:  The  Taming  of  the  Shrew.  A  Man  I.' 
Six  Feet  Tall,  Patterns,  Oedipus  Rex.  Richard  UI, 
Mayerling,  Omnibus,  Wide  W'ide  World.  Odessv. 
NBC  Opera,  The  Skin  of  Our  Teeth.  Our  Town.  The 
Late  George  Apley,  etc. 

These  are  in  addition  to  many  programs  of  e.K- 
ceptional  quality  which  have  appeared  on  weekly 
Khows  of  generally  inconsistent  merit,  as  well  i> 
segments  of  most  variety  shows  which  have  not  in 
frequently  risen  above  the  usual.  (Sullivan's  fre- 
quent presentations  of  entire  operatic  scenes  and 
his  consLlent  guesting  of  fine  popular  performers, 
for  instance.) 

You  also  enumerated  several  areas  of  interest 
which  you  .ay  have  been  neglected.  I  disagree.  Once 
again  my  lack  of  a  complete  file  of  TV  listings  puts 
me  at  a  disadvantage,  but  I  do  remember  seeing 
extensive  coverage  and  commentary  on  segregation, 
dust  bowl,  crop  failures,  and  all  the  rest. 

Enough  for  television.  As  far  as  the  newspapers 
go,  the  same  principles  apply  av  did  to  television, 
or  to  any  mass-media,  for  that  matter.  The  great 
mass  of  people  want  just  what  you  say  most  news 
papers  deliver  —  scandal,  light  reading,  features, 
etc.  Ii  the  newspaper.,-  don't  produce  these  things, 
tf  they  don't  satisfy  the  need  for  them,  then  they 
ju."i  don't  sell  at  all. 

You  and  I,  sir,  are  in  a  strong  minority.  We 
can  support  only  a  few  weighty  journals,  and  a  few 
high-type  TV  shows.  Luckily,  I  read  only  two  peri- 
odicals regularly,  and  I  watch  only  a  few  hours  of 
TV  per  week. 

There's  plenty  of  "'good  product"  around  to  .st't- 
isfy  such  demands  as  mine  —  and  yours,  too. 

Anthony  Wolff 


TUESO 


(Cmi 
compare 
$20,962.) 

A  tot/ 
mendedj 
training] 
for  SI.*; 

In    1! 
CommisI 
manent 
becaus?] 
.situatior 

One 
the  proj 
lor  Sl( 
general' 

Proc^ 
Jomi 

The 
Team  wj 
Thursdj 
a.m.  to 

The 
counsel, 
test    th( 
cadet  fll 


Brii 


5nic 


.13. 
14 


15 


22. 
t24. 
26 


1957 


TUESDAY,  FEBRUARY  12,  1957 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


^AGE  THREC 


id  I  for 

rers  are 

which 

obvious 

the  ad- 

Ih  a  cei-- 

[ciaf  con- 

lernative. 

not   de 

;leviiion, 

i»  not 
»rofiuct" 

is  still 
program- 
any  pro- 
ir^ument. 
which 
[following 

Man  t 
;hard  UI. 

Odessy. 
Town.  The 

of  ex- 
^n  weekly 

|s  well  a-i 
/e  not  in- 

Ivan's  fre- 
irenes  and 
jrformers. 

\{  interesi 
iree.  Once 
^tings  puts 
?r  seeing 
sgregation, 

Newspapers 
television. 

[The  great 

lost  news 

features, 

?se  thinfeS: 

then  they 

lority.    We 
and  a  few 
two  peri- 
hours  of 

ind  to  s?t- 
I  too. 
ly  Wolff 


Budget 


(Contimied  jroon  'page  one)  \ 
compared  with  actual  requests  of  [ 
S20.962.411.  j 

\  total  of  SI. 117.000  was  recom- 
mended for  correction  and  the 
training  schools  which  had  asked 
for  SI. 752.000.  i 

In    195.5.    the    Advisory    Budget 
Commission  recommended  no  per-  i 
manent   improvements  for  1955-57 
becaus?    of    thje    state's    financial 
.•situation  at  that  time. 

One  of  the  recommendations  in 
the  proposed  1957-39  budget  calls 
for  $109,109  to  the  state  adjutant 
general'.^  department  for  purchase 

Procurement  Team  Here 
Tomorrow,  Thursday        \ 

The     Air     Force     Procurement 
Team  will  be  here  Wednesday  and  ; 
Thursday    of    this    week    from    9 1 
a.m.  to  4  p.m.  j 

The   purpose  of   the   visit   is   to : 
counsel,     advise,     interview     and } 
test    those    interested    in    the    air 
cadet  flying  training  program. 


of  an  airplane  for  use  of  the  gov- 
ernor's office. 

The  commission  recommended ; 
an  appropriation  of  $3,100,000  for 
the  state  ports  authority  to  use 
in  improvements  at  the  Wilming 
ton  port.  Of  this,  $2,175,000  would 
be  for  an  1,100-foot  dock  exten- 
sion and  S575.000  for  a  transit 
shed.  I 

Th?  commission  said  'expansion 
in  dock  and  transit  shed  facilities 
at  Wilmington  is  a  necessity  due 
to  continued  growth  at  that  port."  ; 

The  recommended  appropria-  ; 
tion  for  higher  education  includes 
a  total  of  \^2  million  dollars  for 
community  colleges  at  Charlotte. 
Asheville  and  Wilmington.  They 
had  asked   for  $3,249,432.  \ 

The  big  items  in  state  college's  j 
recommended     appropriation     in-  ! 
dude  two  million  for  dormitories. 
$1,411,000   for   a    gymnasium    and 
$1,125,000  for  two  classroom  build-  j 
ings.    The    college    had    requested 
$13,962,080.  ! 


World    News 


(Continued   from   Page    1) 

thereby  blocking  the  Israeli  pori 
of  Elath. 

2.  The  United  States  would  de- 
clare its  purpose,  and  use  its  in- 
fluence as  a  member  of  the  United 
Nations  to  have  UN  forces  or  UN 
observers  in  large  numbers  take 
up  positions  in  the  Gaza  Strip  i« 
order  to  prevent  its  use  as  a  base 
for  Egyptian  military  forays  info 
Israel. 

•Eban  is  understood  to  have  pro- 
mised quick  referral  of  the  pro- 
posal to  his  government  and  an 
answer  in  the  next  24  to  48  hours. 

Meanwhile,  it  is  also  understood 
that  the  Arab-Asian  bloc  in  the  UN 
General  Assembly   has    agreed   to 


delay  the  showdowB  on  its  demand 
for  sanction^'  against  Israel. 

There  is  considerable  belief  here 
that  if  Israel  will  accept  this  pro 
position  with  respect  to  the  Gulf, 
and  in  the  case  of  the  Gaza  SI  rip, 
other  countries  will  follow  the  U.S. 
lead  on  both  points  of  its  Declara- 
tion, thereby  creating  a  body  of 
opinion  and  strong  support  of  Is- 
rael's interests. 

UN  Veto  Ban  Urged 

WASHINGTON  —  CAP)  —  Sen. 
Knowland  (R-Calif)  Monday  called 
on  the  United  Nations  Security 
Council  to  ban  use  of  the  veto  by 
any  nation  involved  in  an  inter- 
national dispute. 


Johnny  And  The  Sigma  Nus 


Johnny,    representing   a    tobacco  company     soon  to  sponsor  competition  on  campus  for  a  hi-fi  sot, 
pesos  with    Joe  Quigg   and   the   Sigma   Nu   fraternity  during  a  recent  visit  here. 


The  Wholesalers  Did  it! 

But 
I've  Still  Got  ESSO  EXTRA 

At  Downtown  Regular  Price 

And 

Regular  3c  Under  That 


PI 


us 


Bring  This  Ad  and  Get  1  Cent  Off  Per  Gal.  Gas, 
5  Cents  Per  Qt.  Oil 

Credit  Cards  Honored  Again 

At  The  Students'  Friend 

WHIPPLE'S  ESSO  SERVICE 


ITS  FOR  REAL! 


by  Chester  Field 


HE-MAN  DREW 

Rich  man  of  the  campus  was  Danny  Drew 
Because  of  his  wonderful  chest  tattoo— 
A  beautiful  lady  exquisitely  etched— 
When  he  fiexed  his  muscles  she  got  up  and  stretched 
His  buddies  all  gave  him  their  hard-earned  dough 
For  the  pleasure  of  watching 
bi8  pectoral  show. 

MORAL:  Accept  no  substitute  for  real 
enjoyment.  Take  your  pleasure  BIG. 
Smoke  Chesterfield  and  smoke  for  real. 
Made  better  by  ACCU-RAY,  it's  the 
smoothest  tasting  smoke  today. 

Smek*  for  real . . .  smoke  Chesterfield 

$50  for  •very  philosophicat  verse  acrcpted  fur 
publication. 'Chesterfield,  P.O.  Box  21.  New  York  46,  N.Y 


DAILY    CROSSWORD 


ACROSS 

1.  Cabbag* 

salad 
5.  Sums   up 
9.  Gaze 
fixedly 
10.  Uprisings 
12.  Kind  of 
TV  ahQW 
;i3.  Refresh 

14.  Over 
(poet.) 

15.  Tickhsh 
(Scot.) 

16.  Sun  j^od 

17.  Animals' 
pelts 

19.  Music  note 

20.  Pierce  with 
sharp 
stake 

« var. ) 
22.  Scorch 
•24.  Trip 
26.  Great 

Lake 
28.  Cam«  iato 

sight 

31.  Music 
note 

32.  A  gUu 
sound 

33.  Greek 
le'tter 

34.  Intellect 

37.  Opal 

38.  Girl's  name 

39.  Ccnsciovis 
,41.  Greek 

letter 
,42.  Door  loclrs 
'[43.  Apportion 
jki  Buzaiog 
.    insects 

.'    DOWN 
l.B,reok 


2.  Den 

3.  Fortify 

4.  Tiny 

5.  Molding 
edge 

6.  Fare 

7.  Common 
contraction 

S.  Girl's 
name 
9.  Tally 
11.  Take  an 

oath 
15.  Citad«l  of 
Moscow 

17.  Destiny 

18.  Eskimo 
knife 


21.  Greek 
letter 

22.  Impede 

23.  Gar- 
ment 
border 

25.  Japan- 
ese 
holiday 

26.  BluD- 
d«rcd 

27.  Stag- 
gerad 

29.  Puts 
forth 
effort 

30.  U.  S.  coina 
32.  Of  sound 


ua:i   iii3u  ai^m 
jDHiiuwi^ia  wa 

a^ki  MOW  a;:3'j 
ViO'-'i^ra   [3iiwi-:ri 


35.  River  (G«r.) 

36.  Bristla 

37.  Strong      .5' 
wind 

?9.  Warp-yam 
40.  Sorrow 


Covering  The  University  Campus 


PSYCHOLOGY   CLUB 

The  Psychology  Club  will  have 
as  lis  speaker  tonight  Dr.  Grant 
Dahlstrom  of  the  Psychology  de- 
partment. His  subject  will  be  '"An- 
xiety and  Visual  Motor  Perfor- 
mance." All  psychology  majors 
have  been  invited  to  the  meeting, 
to  be  held  at  9:30  in  the  Grail 
Room  in  Graham  Memorial. 
PHARMACY  SENATE 

The  Pharmacy  Senate  will  meet 
tonight  at  7  in   room   113  Howell 
Hall. 
PHARMACY  WIVES 

The  Pharmacy  wives  will  meet 
at     8  tonight  at  the  Institute     of 
Pharmacy.  The  members  have  been 
urged  to  attend. 
DEMOLAY 

The   UNC   Demolay  will  hold  a 
meeting  at   the   Masonic  lodge  on 
,  West  Franklin  St.  at  8  tonight.. 
WUNC 
Today's  schedule  for  WUNC,  the 
I  University's  non-commercial  radio 
J  station,  is  as-  follows. 
j      7.00 — .Music  in  the  Air. 

7:30— By  Heart. 
I      7:45 — Vistas  of  Israel. 
I      8:00 — Highlights  from  Opera. 

j      9:00 — America  on  Stage — 

j    10:00— News. 

10:15 — Evening  Masterwork. 
I    11:30— Sign  Off. 

WUNC-TV 
.    12:45 — Sign  On  and  Music. 
1:00— Today   on   Farm. 
1:30 — Music  in  the  Air. 
2:00— Sign  Off. 
5:15 — Music. 
I      5:30— Buckskin  Bob. 


6:00 — Legislative  Review. 
6:20— News. 
6:30 — Magic  Lantern. 
6:45 — Rice  for   Moderns. 
7:00 — Books    and    People. 
7:15— Sports. 


7:30 — German  Course. 

8:15— Dr.  Schriver. 

9:00— Men  and  Idea:.-. 

9:30 — Institute  of  Government. 
10:00— Final   Edition. 
10:05— Sign    Off. 


English   Language  Is 
Not  Good;  Gets  Worse 


The  English  language  just  ain't 
as  good  as  some  folks  would  like 
for  it    to   be. 

And  seems  its  gettin'  worser, 
what  with  much-used,  grammati- 
cally wrong  words  being  accepted 
as  part  of  the  tongue. 

That,  anyway,  is  the  opinion  of 
Dr.  Dorrance  White.  Iowa  profes- 
sor now  teaching  in  the  Classics 
Dept.    here. 

He  told  a  Junior  Classical 
League  delegation  here  Saturday 
that  a  much-needed,  more  per- 
fected speech  "will  result  from 
thf  study  of  Latin  grammar." 

"Such  phrases  as  He  acted  like 
he  was  crazy",  or  'He  ain't  such  a 
bad  guy',  will  someday  be  con- 
sidered   good    English,"    he    said. 


NOMINATIONS 

(Continued  frovi  page  one)        \ 

tribution    from     individual    mem- 
bers   was    encouraged    by    Chair- 
1  man    Hallford. 

Also  under  committee  reports. 
Chairman  Gary  Greer  of  the 
j  party  Program  Committee  an- 
'  nouqced  that  next  Monday  night's 
,  meeting  had  been  designated 
I  '"Visitor's   Night." 


aASSIFIEDS 


FOUND:  A  PAIR  OF  DARK  RIM- 
med  glasses.  Owner  please  con- 
tact 3  Old  West. 


RIDE  TO  ATLANT.A— WANTED 
this  week-end.  .  .two  boys.  Call 
89162,  Joe  Brown. 


Representative 
For  Seminar 
Here  This  Week 

Miss  Judy  Alberti,  fiel<|  direc- 
tor of  the  Scandinavian  *iSeminar, 
will  visit  UNC  Wednesday.  Thurs- 
day and  Friday  of  this  week  to 
talk  with  students  interested  in 
studying  in  Denmark  or  the  Scan- 
dinavian countries   next  year. 

Persons  interested  in  having  an 
interview  with  her  are  asked  by 
John  Riebel  to  schedule  their  in- 
terview at  the  Y  Information  Of- 
fice with  Mrs.  Adele  Lippert  Tues- 
day or  Wednesday. 

The  seminar  is  a  year  of  study 
in  the  folk  schools  in  one  of  the 
Scandinavian  countries.  The  stu- 
dent lives  with  two  different  fam- 
ilies for  one  month  each,  learn 
ing  the  language  thoroughly,  and 
then  goes  to  the  folk  school  for 
six  months. 

The  schools  are  residential  col- 
leges in  the  liberal  arts. 


adding: 

"I'm   glad   I'm  going  to  die  be 
fore  that  happens." 

Dr.    White    asserted   that    a   dic- 
tionary   "must    serve    as    a    guide  1 
for  better  speech  and  not  merely  I 
as    a    source    of    recording    a    lan- 
guage." 

But  how.  Dr.  White  asked,  could 
a  dictionary  serve  as  a  guide  for 
better  speech  and  at  the  same 
time  list  gramatically  incorrect 
wordi;   used   in   a   language? 

'"I    am    going    to    suggest    that  ^ 
such   words  found   in   the  diction- ' 
ary    be    italicized    to    indicate    the  ^ 
barbarism      or      incorrectne.<;s      of 
them  " 


Lost  Session 
Of  Training 
Program  Held 

The  fifth  and  final  session  of 
this  year's  In-Service  Training 
Program  was  held  in  Hanes  Hall 
last    week. 

The  training  program  was  of- 
fered for  members  of  the  Dean 
of  Women's  staff,  for  dormitory 
and  sorority  personnel,  and  for 
other  persons  on  the  campus 
whose  areas  of  work  involve 
women  students  in  the  University. 

Miss  Barbara  Bernard,  associ- 
ate professor  of  psychiatric  nurs- 
ing, and  Miss  Evangeline  Soutsos, 
assistant  professor  of  psychiatric 
nursing,  both  of  the  School  of 
Nursing  faculty,  were  featured  on 
the  program. 

The  general  subject  for  the  pro- 
gram was:  "Guiding  Students  to 
Mental    Health. " 

The  In-Service  Training  PW)^ 
gram  is  offered  each  year  by  the 
Office  of  the  Dean  of  Women  for 
interested  personnel. 


u 


^indftamd  SieM  01  '57 


BILLY/iifeCOUNTlSARAH 


u 


ECKSTII 


BASIE  IVAUGHAN 


\H 


pt«SO*'. 


AND  ORCHESTRA  featuring 

JOE  WILLIAMS 


SOUTHERN 


\^, 


BUD  POWELL  TRIO       /  PHINEAS  NEWBORN  jr.  QUARTET 
CHET  BAKER  i  TERRY  GIBBS  QUARTET 

LESTER   YOUNG    •  featuring  TERRV  POLLARD 

ZOOT   SIMS         SELDON  POWELL   '   ROLF  KUHN 
JIMMY  JONES      •      ROY  HAYNES      •     RICHARD  DAVIS 


JIMMY  JONES 


RALEIGH  MEMORIAL  AUD.  MONDAY 

8:15  P.M. 
FEB. 


MAIL  ORDER  AND  TICKET  SALE     ^„   5  Reserved 

THiEM'S  RECORD  SHOP  '*"   ^®^'^  Keserveo 

HAMLIN   DRUG   CO.  ^2.00,   2.50,   2.75,   3.00,   3.50 

Positively  The  Only  Date  In   Eastern  North   Carolina 


25 


To  The  Young  Ma  if 
Who  Loves  The  Sea 


v(a 


WATt 

MARtNi  D 

<iif[f<ifir  ViiiiTiiiftj^ 


Oppertimity  awaits  Qualified  Marint  Drafttmtn  In  a  ytar< 
rt uad  climat*  aff  comfort  oihI  tosy  living  en  tlio  0aK  Coast. 

The  InoallsShh'Building  Corporation,  operating  the  largest  ship- 
yard on  the  Gulf  Coast,  offers  a  promising  future  to  qu^ifisd  dr^ti' 
men  wko  join  ttU*  progrcstive  organization  —  long  term  contract^ 
pleasant  working  conditions,  liberal  benefits,  valuable  tnininf . 

Address  inquiria  to  ChM  EngineK,  Koov;^:    ^^.  .         .       ,  • 

THi    INGALLS    SHIPBUUDlNa   CORfOIIATIoit; 

Pascagoula,  Mississippi 


Aptitude  Report 


NEW  YORK  —  (AP)  —  A  re- 
port of  a  scholarship  project  sfi:s 
southern  negroes  from  segregated 
high  schools  show  up  poorly  on 
college  aptitude  test,s  but  catch  -up 
quickly  once  they  get  into  college. 

T^e  report  was  based  on  a  two- 
year  project  in  45  southern  cities. 
It  also  included  a  follow-up  study 
of  167  out  of  523  Negro  student* 
who  were  helped  by  the  project  to 
go  lo  colleges  outside  the  South- 


Only  the 
Infin^afe 
Bookshop 
Positively 

J-' 

Guarantees 
ftesuhs 


from  ifs 
Swanky 
Valentines 


By 


American  Greeting  Card  Co^^^^^f?^?^^^::  7?"  r^; .  : 

For  everyone  oil  your  'Move  list",  choose 

here  from  a  gay  array  of  Valentines.  •  .  . 

Sentimental  or  sophisticated.  .  .  .Cute  or 

J    .  Jcomic,    Just  right   cards  for   sweethearts, 

family,  friends,  or  what-have-you.  .  .  ,U  to 

$1.00    ''■:':':' i     ''".■'.,.■':::  :  -  / 

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,;   t.-. 


'  ,     .'-rt-  ■'-''..  •-..^-»'- ".'':^?''V«^. ';-'-.";■      y^ 


'■*•■?.  ■»  r  i-i' 


OLD  DOMINION^  '■' %'~:^^!Mi^, 


*  - 


She'll  love  you  for  these  delicious 
chocolates.  .  .  .Beautifully  gift-wrapped,  iii  Valentine  Boxes.  .  • 

10<to$5.00  ^       ^.-.^.^>    ^: 

YOUR  VALENTINE  KEADQUARTIrS  ^f ' 
Free  gift  wrapping  and  mailing 


159  E.  Franklin  St. 


Free  Delivery 


FA«I  POUI 


THR  DAILY  TAR  HEf  L 


TUESDAY,  FEBRUARY  12,  1«7 


Tommy   Keams  Sparks   68-59   Decision   Over  Virginia 


Tar  Heels  Come  From 
Behind  To  Win  No.  19 


Carolina  At  Top  Of  Five  Year  Climb 


Virginia,   which    has   won   only 


CHARLOTTESVILLE.  Va  —  (AP)  j  59  for  its  19th  victory  without  de  ♦ 
— North  Carolina's  No.   1  basket- ;  feat 
ball   team,   trailing   at    the     half. 

came    back   after   intermission   on    ,  ,  ,„  ,      »  ^u 

♦  k«     .K„«f; <■  T-  Tj-  i  four  of  17  games,  kept  the  pres- 

the     shooting  of  Tommy     Kearns '  ,,      _      „     ,       ... 

sure  on  the  Tar  Heels  with  accu- 
rate shooting  by  big  Herb  Busch, 
a  20-point  man,  in  the  firs't  20 
minutes  and  forged  a  30-26  half 
time  advantage.  , 


shooting  of  Tommy     Kearns 
here  tonight  to  down  Virginia  68- 


UNC  Retains 
Top  AP  Spot 

By  HUGH  FULLERTON  JR. 
The  Associated  Press 


!      That     margin,    howevtr,     didn't 
i  last  long  once  the  second  half  be 
gan  and  Kearns  took  charge  of  the 
jittery  Tar  Heels. 

The    Big   Three   of  college  bas- '     ^^^  "^^^  ^""^^^  Carolina  gimrd 
ketball— North    Carolina.    K.fnsas  !  collected  ever>-  one  of  his  15  points 


in  the  last  half,  most  of  them  on 
long  set  shots  from  outside. 


One  of  these  shots  gave  North 
Carolina  the  lead  at  37-36  with 
three  minutes  gone  after  interaiii;- 
sion.  Kearno-  promptly  followed  up 
with  another  basket  and  a  free 
throw  to  make  it  40-36  before  sop- 
homore John  Siewers  sank  a  point  i 


and  Kentucky — kept  on  winning 
last  week  and  their  positions  at 
the  top  of  the  weekly  Associated 
Press  ranking  poll  remained  un- 
changed. Wake  Forest  fell  a  notch 
to  11th.  and  West  Virginia  climb- 
ed to  10th. 

Duke   broke   into  the  second    10 
again,  and  is  17th. 

In  the   10th   weekly  AP  poll  of    for  the  Cavaliers 
sports    writers    and    broadcasters, 

the  unbeaten  North  Carolina  Tar  i^nnie  Rosenbluth  then  canned 
Heels  maintained  their  margin  of  ^  ^^^^  ^^'"^^  ^"^  ^^^  Brennan 
about  100  points  over  the  Kansas  !  ^*°  "^"^^  ^°^^  ^^^^^  ^^  make  it 
Jayhawks.  Coach  Adolph  Rupps  }  ^'^^  ^"*^  Virginia  never  got  any 
Kentucky  Wildcats,  who  have  lost  |  ^^^^^^  ^^^  '"^^t  of  the  way. 
only  once  in  their  last  14  games.  Rosenbluth,  with  23  points.  12 
maintained  a  strong  hold  on  third  of  them  in  the  second  half,  topped 
P  the  North  Carolina  scoring.  Bren- 

North   Carolina  rang   up  a   pair  ,  nan  had  10  for  the  Tar  Heels,  who 

lifted  their  Atlantic  Coast  Confer- 


Buc/ Corson /s  j  Tar   Heel   Cage  Team   Manned 
NamedToUNC  By   imported    New   York   Talent 

Coaching  Staff  \ 


of  victories  by  rather  close  scores 
to  make  it  18  straight  this  season 
up  through  last  Saturday.  Once- 
beaten  Kansas  and  three-time 
loser  Kentucky  each  won  one 
game  during  the   week. 

The  three  teams  that  had  been 
just  behind  them  in  the  ratings 
each  won  one  and  lost  one  during 
♦he  week,  but  they  slipped  down 
two  places  to  make  room  for  ris- 
ing Seattle  and  Bradley. 


The  Art  Of  Tailoring 

"Every  man  to  his  business, 
kut  ind»md  th*  ermH  of  a  tailor 
I  is  hmymnd  mil  ileiA*  ma  noble  and 
f  ma  secret  as  any  in  the  world." 

HAVE   OTHERS   FAILED? 

With  expert  workmanship  and 
the  best  service  possible  Pete 
The  Tailor  has  and  will  continue 
to  give  you  the  ultimate  in 
tailoring  needs. 


PETE  THE  TAILOR 

Specialixing  in 
"Ivy   Leagueizing" 

133Va  E.  Franklin  Street 


ence-leading  record  to  9-0.  Vir- 
ginia now  is  1-7  in  the  ACC. 

North  Carolina's  winning  marg- 
in actually  came  at  the  foul  lie, 
where  the  Tar  Heels-  meshed  30 
of  41  charity  shots  against  21  of 
29  for  the  Cavaliers.  Each  team 
had  19  field  goals. 

Virginia  put  four  players  in  dou- 
ble figures.  Besides  Busch.  they 
were  Bill  Miller  with  12  points. 
Bobby  Hardy  with  10  and  Jerry 
Cooper  with  10. 


BUD  CARSON 

neiv  assistant  coach 


WITH  NEW  COACH: 


Tatum's  Tar  Heels 
Begin  Grid  Drills 


"Sign  Of 
The  Pagan 

'  with 

RITA  GAM 

JEFF   CHANDLER 
JACK  PALANCE 
LUDMILLA  TCHERINA 


// 


Howard  Johnson  Restaurant 

BREAKFAST 

LUNCH 

DINNER 
"     -   •  SNACKS 

"Landmark  For  Hungry  Tarheels" 


as    did    freshmen    Jack    Monohan 
and  Fred   Mueller. 

Graduation    has    also    taken    its 
toll,  although  Tatum  has  not  been 
hit    extremely   hard    by   it.    Chief  | 
among  his  graduation  losses  is  Ed  ' 
Sutton,  the  hard  running  halfback 
from  Cullowee  who  recently  sign-  ; 
ed    a    professional    contract    with  j 
the     Washington     Redskins.     Sut- 1 
ton's  running  male  Larry  McMul- 1 
Icn  has  also  played  his  last  game  j 
with  the  Tar  Heels  and  this  leaves  [ 
a    big    gap   at    the    halfback    slots. 
At    the    all    important    quarter- 
back position  the  Tar  Heels  have  | 
suffered     very    little.    Only    Doug  | 
Farmer,   a  hot  and  cold  pefform-  j 
er.  is  gone  and  last  year's  one-two  , 
combination    of    Dave    Reed    and  j 
Curt  Hathaway  is  back  fighting  it 
out    for    the    number    one    signal 
calling  slot. 
The  loss  of  Vale  coupled  with 
were  able  to  win   but  two  games  I  the  graduation  of  Don  Lear  leaves 
and    later    had    them    taken    away  I  a   vulnerable   spot   at   fullback  for 
because  of  an  ineligible  player,      j  the  Tar  Heels.  At  present,  junior 
But    1957   is   a   new  season   and    John  Haj-wood  seems  to  have  the 
Tatum    is    "very    optimistic"    de- ,  best  shot  at  that  position, 
spite  the  fact  that  graduation  and  ;      Now    that   Kocs    and    Stavnitski 
acedemic  troubles  has  tjiken  away  ]  are    through,    center    will    prove 
several    of    the    old    hands    who '  another   problem    for   Tatum.  Top 
shouldered    the    burden    last    sea-    candidate   for  that  post  is  junior 
son.  '.  Fred   Swearingen   who  saw   limit- 

The  most  severe  blow  struck  by   cd  action  with  the  Tar  Heels  last 
the    scholastic    element    was    the  I  season. 


^  ^y  BILL- KING. 

All  fixed  up. Willi  a  new/assistant 
coach  and  a  long  awaited  break 
from  the  weather  man.  Coach  Jim 
Tatum  held  his  first  spring  foot- 
ball practice  on  Nav>'  Field  yester- 
day. 

The  new  coach  is  Leon  (Bud) 
Carson,  a  former  Carolina  defen- 
sive back  of  the  two-platoon  era 
who  succeeds  the  recently  depart- 
ed Eddie  Teague.  Teague  has  as- 
sumed duties  as  head  football 
coach  and  athletic  director  at  The 
Citadel. 

With  the  sun  finally  shining  its 
blessings  on  spring  practice,  the 
Tar  Heels.  approximately  90 
strong,  went  through  their  initial 
work  out  on  Navy  Field  with 
Tatum  gelling  his  first  look  at 
his  ball  club  since  the  dismal 
1956   season   when   the  Tar  Heels 


Leon  (Bud)  Carson  a  native  of 
Frccport.  Pa.,  and  former  Uni- 
versity of  North  Carolina  lumin- 
ary, has  been  added  to  the  Tar 
Heel  coaching  staff.  Coach  Jim 
Tatum   announced    today. 

Carson,  who  for  the  past  three 
\ears  has  been  a  successful  high 
school  coach  at  Scottsdale,  Pa., 
replaces  Eddie  Teague.  who  re- 
signed recently  to  become  head 
coach  at  the  Citadel.      '  ^      .  . 

Talum's  young  (26)  new*  assist- 
ant played  here  under  Carl 
Snavely  in  1948-51.  In  Snavely'a 
two-platoon  single  wing.  Carson 
for  two  years  was  the  No.  1  tail- 
back on  the  defensive'  team.  A 
fast  and  clever  runner,!  he  dis- 
tinguished himself  on  JJunt  re- 
turns and  in  1951  brought  back 
25  for  318  yards.  j 

After    graduating    from    North 
Carolina    in    1952.    he    joined   the  j 
Marines  and  played  on  the  Quan- 
lico  team  two  seasons,  .1952-53. 

As  a  coach  at  Scottsdale  Hi^ 
School  he  ha.s  used  the  split  T 
formation,  which  Tatum  employes 
here. 

Carson  will  join  the  staff  next 
Saturday  and  be  ready  to  work 
beginning  the  second  week  of 
winter  drills. 


By  HARRY  CRONIN 

(In  The  New  York  News) 
If   the   southern   ivy   league  Uni- 
\ersity  of  North  Carolina   were  to 
adopt     W    Smith's    "Sidewalks    of 
New    York"    as    a    fighting     song.  ! 
chances  are  no  one  in  Dixie  would 
think    it    inappropriate    these   days.  ; 
I-'or   Greenwich   Village's   own  ' 
I'rankie  McGuire.  son  of  one  of  the 
Finest,    has   led   the  Carolinians   to  ' 
No.  one  rank  in  basketball  at  a  time  ] 
raging  hoop  fever  has   gripped  the  j 
southland.    .\nd    to    do    it,    Frankie  \ 
has    imported    the   cream    of    New  | 
York  area  high  school  talent  right  ' 
from  under  the  noses  of  metropoli- 
tan  college  coaches  who  grew  sick  : 
at  the  sight  of  it.  j 

Carolina,  reaching  the  peak  of  a 
five-year  climb  that  began  when 
McGuire  hit  the  Chapel  Hill  cam- 
:^us.  was  rated  among  the  first  five 


in  the  pre-season  dope.  But  first 
place  was  unanimously  conceded 
to  seven-foot  Wilt  (the  ^ilt)  Cham- 
berlain and  his  Kansas  Jayhawks. 
Iowa  State  did  the  supposedly  im- 
jX)ssible  by  knocking  off  Wilt  and 
Co.  That  left  North  Cai-olina,  go- 
hig  into  its  game  with  Western 
Carolina  last  week,  the  only  un- 
beaten major  team  in  the  country. 

McGuire  and  his  regulars,  all 
from  metropolitan  New  York, 
have  cau.sed  such  a  stir  that  the 
university  television  statton,  WU- 
NC,  telecasts  games  from  the 
home  floor  in  response  to  fans* 
demands. 
The    Chapel    Hill    gjon.    capacity 

5  C32.    starts   turning    'em   away   at 

6  P.M.  for  home  games  which  be- 
gin at  8.  When  the  Carolina  Blue- 
rnd-white  squad  takes  the  floor,  the 
pandemonium  is  so  overpowering 
that   the  opposing   team,   says   Mc- 


Guire.   is   often   beaten  right   there 
and  then. 

'The  support  we  get  here  is  un- 
believable," says  McGuire.  "If  we 
had  room  for  25.000  we'd  be  filled. 
.\s  it  is.  tickets  have  to  be  ration- 
ed among  the  7.000  students. 


IZOD'S     FAMED 


y^o<^^ 


Sets  Record 

Charlie  Krepp  (UNC)  set  a  new 
NCAA  national  collegiate  swim 
record  last  night  in  the  100-yard 
butterfly  with  a  time  of  56.6. 

Krepp  also  set  a  n>eet   record' 
for  the  220-yard  individual  med- 
ley  in    the   fourth    annual    Caro- 
linas'  swim  championships  here. 


SHIRT 


loss  of  center  Ronfiie  Koes,  a 
sophomore  last  fall  who  took  over 
when  George  Stavnitski  was  in- 
jured in  the  second  game  of  the 
season  and  turned  in  a  very 
creditable  season.  Wally  Vale,  a 
fullback  who  could  kick  a  football 
a  mile  on  a  given  afternoon,  also 


Carolina  should  be  just  about 
as  strong  at  tackle  and  guard  this 
season,  having  lost  only  John 
Bilich  at  tackle  and  John  Jones  at 
guard. 

The  big  loss  at  end  for  the  Tar 
Heels  is  Larry  Muschamp  who 
gets    his    sheepskin    in   June    but 


Why  Be  A 

One-Man  Dog? 

- .  .-'■  -.  ■    •    .■  \ '  ■'•.  ' 

Send  out  dozens 
of  our  Irresistabie 
Valentines  and 
prepare  for  a  hectic 
Spring.  ' 

The  Intimate 
Bookshop 

205  E.  Franklin  St. 
Open  Till  10  P.  M. 


NO)Ar  in  hond-wa$hable  worsted  Jersey  .  .  .  ribbed 
collar  and  cuffs  . . .  long  shirt  toil . . .  eight  handsome  colors. 
Sizt»:  S,  M,  L,  XL  Longfleeve,    ^12*° 

RED,  HEATHER  GREY,  NAVY,  BLACK,  CARO- 
UNA  BLUE,  TAN  HEATHER,  WHITE  and  CANARY. 


Julian* 


THE  MOST      i 
OARINB  picture' 
On957!        1 


Short  Orders 


Regular  Dinner 


Featuring  The 

OOELL-BERGER 

(A  meal  in  itself) 


Modern 

Soda 

Fountain 


ODELL'S 

Drive-ln  Restaurant 

Next  to  Carboro  School 

CARRBORO 
(Open  11  a.m — Midnight) 


Curb  Service 
(5-11) 


went  out  via  the   acedemic   route  i  Buddy  Payne  is  back  for  his  final 

; j  season  and  should  be  outstanding 

at  the  flank  position. 

One  of  the  main  sources  of  op- 
timism in  the  Tar  Heel  camp  is 
the  fine  freshman  team  of  last 
season.  The  Tar  Babies  had  a 
very  successful  season  and  some 
bright  new  stars  appeared  on  the 
horizon.  Tatum  should  receive  a 
great  deal  of  help  from  some  of 


^BRgg 


IREN 


CtitiiqrFM 


MILLAND 
BORGNiNE 

CIMbmaScopC 


LAST  TIMES  TODAY 


Carolina 


these  boys. 


% 


'^^. 


''% 


%        'o 


rAN 


S'A/O 


oW^' 


x*o 


,t»' 


,»Kt^ 


M 


IOb, 


^vv 


.v**^ 


>t<» 


iU 


'''^c^     DANZIGER'S     / 

CANDIES 


Trackmen  Wallop  State 
In  Raleigh  Warmup  Meet 

The  Carolina  track  team  part,  in 
New  York  and  part  in  Raleigh,  did 
itself  proud  Saturday. 

All-american  Jim  Beatly,  com- 
peting against  some  of  tire  best 
runners  in  the  country,  took 
fourth  place  Saturday  night  in  the 
Wannamaker  Mile  of  the  Millrose 
Games  in  New  York  City.  Beatly 
finished  behind  the  great  Ron 
Delany  of  UCLA,  Hungarian  star 
Laszlo  Tabori,  and  Bobby  Seaman 
of  UCLA.  Beatty's  time  was 
4.10.25,  his  best  indoor  time  ever, 
e  In  Raleigh,  the  trackmen  warm- 
ed up  for  the  ACC  Indoor  Meet 
Feb.  23  by  trouncing  the  State 
trackmen  73-24.  The  Tar  Heels 
were  led  by  Wayne  Bishop  who 
took  first  place  in  the  two-mile 
event.  Everette  Whatley  in  the 
mile,  and  Dave  Scurlock  and  Ben 
Williams  in  the  880. 

Dick  McFadden  led  the  600  yard 
dash,  and  Bill  Lyons  took  honors 
in   the  hurdles. 


MILTON'S  MID-WINTER 
CARNIVAL 

Pick  your  season  —  you  can't 
miss.  Plenty  of  choice  items 
reduced  in  both  year  round 
and  summer  weights. 

Wonderful  opportunity  to  get 
a  dacron/cotton  suit,  either 
hairline  or  poplin  fabric,  re- 
duced from  $39.75  to  $27.99. 

Imported  burlap  sport  jackets 
reduced  from  $29.95  to  $21.99 

Imported  tweed  suits,  worsted 
flannels  with  blask  stripes, 
formerly  $60.00,  now  going  for 
low  price  of  $42.99. 

Imported  Harris  Tweeds;  im 
ported  handwoven  Shetland 
sport  coats,  values  to  $50.00, 
reduced  to  $29.99. 

Our  $18.95  trousers  reduced  tc 
$13.99;  those  that  were  $13.95, 
cw  $9.99. 

$4.50  Ivy  buttort-downs  in  either 
oxford  or  batiste,  3  for  $10.00 

$5.50  candy  stripe  oxford  tabs, 
3  for  $12.50 

Exeter  cashmere/nylon  blond 
socks,  formerly  $3.95,  reduced 
to  $1.49. 

Large  group  rubber  soled  cor- 
dovan shoes  reduced  from 
$20.00   to   $12.99. 

Cotton  cord  trousers  reduced 
from  $4.95  to  $3.99;  $5.59  to 
$4.99;  khakis  reduced  to  $3.99. 


When  You 
-    Beautiful 

At 


See  The 
Gifts 


Jewelers 


WENTWORTH 

& 
SLOAN 

-:-  Chapel  Hill 


We  haven't  forgotten  the  las- 
sies— just  imagine — $10.00  off 
on  each  and  every  Braemar 
and  Drumlanrig  sweater  in 
our  Lady  Milton  Shop.  They 
are  now  much  cheaper  than  in 
Scotland. 

Entire  stock  Evan-pjcone  skirts 
40%  off— this  includes  im- 
ported Irish  linens  reduced 
from  $14.95  to  $9.00. 

Large  group  Lady  Hathaway 
and  other  shirts  substantially 
reduced. 

All  blazers  drastically  cut. 


All   sales  cash  and   final— al- 
terations extra. 

MILTON'S  CLOTHING 
CUPBOARD 


^im^mmmt 


If  II  e  &ibc4ry 

Serial 8  l«tt« 
Ckap«X  an:.  N.  C^ 


Horn  Blasts  Budget-Makers  For  Cutting  Book  Request 


By  FRED  POWLEDGE 

I  lie  l'ni\ci.sity'>  resigning  head  librarian  IHesday  ai- 
uukcd  the  state's  budgci-niakers  for  cutting  requests  for 
more   books. 

H  I  had  not  aheadv  resigned  from  my  position  here 
I  woidd  do  st»  todav  after  reading  the  reconnnendations 
ol  the  budget  tommission  which  were  j>id:)<i|hed  this 
morning,"  said  Andrew  H.  Horn. 

Dr.  Morn  has  resigned  effective  |inie  for  "personal 
reasons."  Prime  among  the  reasons  was  his  health. 

Dr.  Horn  said  "I  have  failed  in  what  I  tried  to  do 
lliese  past   two  veuis."     ile  has  been  head  librarian  since 


WEATHER 

Cooler.  Expected  high  5S. 


the  sunnner  of   H)-,4. 

"I  was  really  shocked,'  lie  told  Ihe  Daily  lar  Heel 
yesterday.  "  Fhis  puts  us  back  to  the  book  budget  we  had 

He  pointed  out  that  increased  ccrsts  of  running  a  li- 
I)raiv  now  make  the  recommended  U),")7-;,()  l)udget  e\en 
less  than  a  similar  budget   five  vears  ago. 

The  state's  budget  loi  the  fiscal  year  n)')7-.')«)  shows 
Si.'.'»o.ooo  was  recommended  for  library  books  and  journals 
by  (he  state  .\d\isoiv  liiulget  Commission.  The  I'nixersity 
had   recjuested  S'j'^o.ooo. 

During  the  biennium  i<););)"''7  the  libraiv  got  S'-', ",0,000. 


It  u<| nested  .S^j-io.ooo. 

During  the  biennium  i93.'?-5.'>  t'ltf  librarv  got  S250,- 
i>o<J  also.   It  requested  .S2-,o,i8o  for  books  and  joiniials. 

Di .  Hoi  II  delivered  part  of  his  connnent  at  a  meeting 
of  tlie  (iraduatc  History  Club  Tuesday  aftcrncxm.  VUc 
purpose  of  the  meeting  was  to  counsel  giaduate  students 
oil  j«»b  opportiniities  in  the  librarian  field. 

In  an  iiuerview  later,  he  said  he  was  "leallv  shocked" 
at  the  lack  of  increase  for  books  and  journals.  "Were 
ix-allv  going  backwards,"  he  said. 

'       "I  didn't  think  that    (the  .\dvisoiy  liudget  C-ommis- 
s^Hi)  would  ignore  the  leconnnendatiotrs  of  the  State  lioard 

1    .   ,     •  • 


i^air 


of  Higlier  Kducation."  Dr.  H<»rn  sr.id.  The  higlier  educa- 
tion l>oard  last  year  fiuineled  the  I'nixersitvs  budget  re- 
quests, along  with  those  of  othet  institutions  of  higher 
learning,  to  the  Advisory  Budget  Connnission.  In  many 
cases  the  connnission  honored  the  Iward's  requests. 

".\oi  th  Carolina  has  a  verv.  very  conservative  budget- 
ing j>r<Kedine."  Dr.   Horn  said. 

On  Jan.  11  it  was  revealed  that  Dr.  Horn  woidci  te- 
sign  his  post  here  for  "ixMsonal  reasons."  Since  then  it  was 
learned  that  his  health  figured  in  his  1  esignation.  .\ftcr 
leaving  the  l^nixersity.  he  will  direct  the  library  at  Occi- 
dental College  in  California. 


3ri)  c  JJaily  «  ^Tar  Heel 


LEADER 

Young's   fhe   man   to  do   it.   See 
editorial,  page  2. 


VOL.  LVII     NO.  97 


Complete  {JP)  Wire  Service 


CHAPEL   HILL,  NORTH  CAROLINA,  VI^ONEsbAY,  FEBRUARY   13,   1957 


Offices   in   Graham   Memorial 


POUR    PAGES  THIS   iSSUft 


IN  GENERAL  ASSEMBLY:  I 

UNC  TO  SEEK  MARRIEI^  STUDENTS'  HOUSING 


University    A ppmvies    Hiring  ^Of    New     Union    Director 


Answer  From  Henry 
Hoped  In  Ten  Days 


I  he  hiiin-.;  cjI  llowajcl  Henrx  of  the  l'ni\ersit\  of  Wis- 
consin as  pcrmanein  director  of  (»raham  .Memorial  was  ap- 
proved  vesterday   bv    the    I'niversity   a.lministiation. 

Heniv  was  nominated  h)r  the  positicjii   bv  the  Craham 
Memorial  lioard  of  Directors  last    Ilunsday.  He  is  Ijeiu'^  ot- 
tered the  job  at  a  salar.v  of  S8.000 
a   year. 

Henry    has   informed    the    board 
he     will     announce     his     decision  • 
within  the  next  10  days. 

Dr.     William     Potcat     contacted 
Ilonry    following    last    Tbursdays 
board    mcctino'.   and    offered    him 
IiL'  position  w-ilh  the  endorsement 
ol    Chancellor    Robert    House.    Di- 
rector  of   Student   .Vctivitic.    Sam- 
NEW  YOKK  —  (AP)  —  The  In-  '  uel  Magill.  and   William  D.   Pczzy. 
trrnational    Long-Shoremen's    A?sn.  ^  chairman   of   the   Division   of   Stu- 
(IXD)    last    nigiit    ordered    an   At-    dent  .Xf'airs. 


nev5 

m 

i>rief 


Dockers  Strike 


^  i^-w** 


Enabling  Act  Would  Set 
Self-Liquidating    Plants 

CLARKE   JONES  .  ,  , 

Ihe  (ieneial  Assemblv  will  be  asked  bv  I  \(.  lor  seU-licpiid;  ;ing  fimds  for  married 
students'  hoiisin'^.  it   was  ieaiiied    Tnesday. 

No  ftirihei  re(|nests  lot  a  new  student  union  Ixiildinj^  will  be  made  dniiit;^;  the  c  nr- 
iciit    le;.4islatnre  session. 

Aniioinuement    came    Ivom    Consolidate  1    I'liivcrsiiv    President    Williatn    C"..    Friday. 

William  1).  ("ai  niic  hael.  Consolidated  I'.tivcisitv  Nice  President  i\n\  finance  officer, 
said   an   enablin-;  act    woidd    be   inlKKhued   duiin.;;    the    session    for    f^onstrnc  lion    of    self- 


••C I  Jl  iSi%  f  m  S^  M  \25P*^ 


.'>*-    ..._    -XT'- 


lantic  coast  strike  of  45.000  dock- 
ers from  Muiiic  Id  Virginia.  Scor- 
es of  ships  were  caught  in  the 
tiriip. 

IIov\cvcr.  the  negotiations  con- 
tinurd  with  the  union  reported 
very  clo~c  to  an  agreement  vvith 
shipp<Ts.  A  ciuick  settlement 
would  nip  almost  in  the  bud  the 
renewal  of  la.st  .Nnvembcr's  gov- 
ernment-irrtrrrupted     strike. 

USSR  Claims  Aggression 


Poteat's  offer  stated,  "I  do  not 
bclreve  there  is  a  more  exciting 
'    place    in    America    for    someone 
to    come    in    and    build    a    new 
union   program   plant." 
If  Henry  accepts  the  position,  he 
will    take    over    July    1.    He    is    at 
present   assistant   director  of  Wis- 
consin Union  at  the  University  of 
Wisconsin. 

Bob   Young  student   body   pre..-.- 
dent  and  chairman  of  the  Graham 
-Memorial    Board   of   Directors,  ex-  i 
pressed  gratitude  yesterday  to  Uni- 
U.XITED     NATIONS.    N.    Y.    —  i  vcrsity  officials  responsible  for  the 
*AP)    —    The    Soviet    Union    last '  off ^r. 

night    accused    the    United    States  |      Young  called  the  offer  to  Henry 
of    aggressive    actions    around    the .  .-3    ^ajor    step    toward    improving 
world    and    called    for    a    General    ,he   future    program    and    building 
Ajjscmbly    debate    on    the    situa-    facilities  of  a  student  union." 
'  'Jfi-  I      In   a  statement    issued   Tuesday. 

Soviet  Deputy  Foreign  minister  j  Young  said.  "For  several  years 
V;i*sily  V.  Kuznctsov  made  the  udents  and  administration  have 
chargfs  in  a  letter  to  Prince  Wan  '  worked  on  the  problem  of  direc- 
Waithayaknn.  president  of  the  torship  of  G.M.  We  have  all  agreed 
N.  N.  G:ner?.l  Assembly.  He  asked  that  it  is  a  most  important  area 
for  acticn  by   the  Assembly  with-    of  student  life. 


%s^  MM 


liquidating  housing  units  both 
here  and  at  Stale  College  in  Ra- 
leigh. 

The  amount  and  numl>cr  of  tmits 

t  )  be  asked  for  ha\c  not  vet  boon 
determined.  Carmichael   said. 

Th(>  .Advisory  Budget  Commis- 
sion .Monday  turned  down  Univer- 
sity requests  of  SI. 740.000  for  mar- 
ried students'  housing  and  Sl,242.- 


several  weeks  ago  when  a  heat-    1 
ing  plant  fire  in  Victory  Village 
caused  severe  damage  from  soot 
to.  16  housing  units. 

Occu/)anls     of     the     units     were 
it>rx?cd  t-o  St  a  J-  with  friends  in  Vic- 


two  years  ago. 

A  sunall  blaze  broke  out  in  a 
housing  unit  there  last  year  on 
Mason  Farm  Road. 

Several  of  the  married  students 
affected  b.v  (he  heating  plant  fire 


toiy  Village  mul  Chapel  Hill  untii  were  indignant  and  demanded  bet- 
tho  heating  unit  boiler  plant  had  I  ter  conditions.  It  was  reported  a 
been  repaired.  Some  .vayed  in  the  petition  had  been  started,  but  no 
In.stitute   of  Government    Building  1  action  was  taken. 


000  lor  a  new  sturieni  union  ouiki-    <iuarlers.  | 

I  iiig.  The  fire  was  the  fourth  in  V^ie- ! 

I        For     several     hours     Tuesday      lory     Village     in    the     past     throe  ' 
,    trtere  appeared  to  be  confusion    ]  years.  The  Day  Care  Center  caught 
\    in  South  Building  as  to  whether   !  'ire  twice,  once  last  year  and  once  I 


Mardl  Gras  Preparations 


This  typical  New  Oreans  ginger-gread  balcony  will  form  part  of  decoraticns  for  this  weekend's 
Mardi  Gras  festivities.  The  balcony  is  the  work  of  the  decorations  committee,  headed  by  Jim  Arm- 
strong and  Charlie  Sloan.  (Photo  by  Woody  Sears) 


By  WALTER  SCHRUNTEK 

The    University    of   North    Caro- 
lina   is    a    composite    of    people. 


I  legislation  would  be  sought  for 
'  new  student  union  building 
I    funds. 

I      It    was    thought    Tuesday    after- 
noon   President    Friday    had    said 
I  there  would  be  a  new  request   for 
a  new  building. 

Approximately  an  hour  later 
j  UNC  Chancellor  Robert  B.  House 
I  said  he  knew  of  "no  move  that 
j  way  at  this  time.  II  we  had  a  \ 
I  chance  to  open  up  anything  at 
I  all."  he  said,  "it  would  be  on 
j  married  students"   housing."  , 

There  are  over  1.400  veterans  of  this  country  and  the  world — j  Friday,  having  left  by  that  tim-j 
iinale  and  female)  who  bring  with  give  life-blood  to  the  numbers,  to  i  for  an  out-of-town  trip,  could  not 
them,  in  addition  to  their  divers:-  the  buildings  and  to  the  tradi- 1  be  reached  then.  Consolidated  Uni- 
i:ackgrounds  and   training,  the  ex-   tions. 


University  Is  Composite  Of  People 
Cultures,  As  Shown  By  Statistics 


buildings  and  traditions  rolled  up    perienjcs  and  fruits  of  world  trav        ihev 


into  a  way  of  life. 


out    delay. 

Ku/netsov  charged  that  the 
United  States  has  committed  ag- 
gres.sive  actions  by  building  mili- 
tary bases  in  Western  Europe. 
Turkey,  Iran.  Japan  and  Okinawa  handle  this  position.  With  con- 
tinued cooperation  from  the  local 
administration.  I  feel  that  a  man 


The    Univer.-ily    is    the    admin- 
•Now  I  feel  that  we  have  made    istralion.  the  faculty  and  the  stu 


el  in   addition   to   a   knowledge  of    ministration,   the    faculty   and   tht 

foreign  lands  and  customs.  student.  They  add  features  to  the 

These    people — the    future    law-    faces  and   lend   depth   to  the  per- 


I  vcrsity  .Acting  Vice  President  and 
give    purpo..v    to    the    atl- 1  Provost  William  M.   Whyburn  said 


Griffin  Says 
NAACP,  Reds 
Are  Aligned 

ATLANTA  —  (AP)  —  Gov. 
.Margin  Griffin  Tuesday  charged 
an  affiliation  between  the  Nation- 
nl  .\ssn.  for  the  -Advancement  of 
Colored  Pople  and  the  Commun- 
ist pr.rly  and  declared  that  many 
liave  knawn  of  it  for  a  long  time. 

Any  such  eonneetion  was  vigor- 
ously denied  by  Roy  Wilkins. 
N.\.\CP  president.  He  declared 
that    his    organization    had    never 


LATE  PEliMlSSION 

UNC  coeds  wishing  to  attend 
the  Louis  Armstrong  concert  in 
Raleigh  tonight  will  have  late 
permission  until   12  midnight. 

The  announcement  came  yes- 
terday  from  the  Dean  of  Wom- 
en's Office. 


a    ma.ior    step   towards    improving '  dent.    It    is   the    people,    the   faces  >t'i*s.    businessmen,    doctor.-,    poll-  scnalities.  They  are  the  University 

the   future    program    and    building   and     personalities    who    come    to  ticians,  writers,   educators,  nurses,  of   North    Carolina.    They    are    the 

facilities  of  a  student  union.  Chapel   Hill  to  join  in  a  common  .Journalists,   ministers  and  citizens,  'CaroUpa  Way  of  Life,'  ^ 

"Mr.  Henry  is  most  qualified  to    undertaking.  ■    "  '  ~  ^        ^ ~:~"  v  .''■  •" ~r— — 


he    thought    legislation    would    be 
•.>ught  for  a  now  uni.n  building. 

Friday    was    later    reached    and 
clarified  the  situation. 

The   requests  for  married   stu- 
dents'  housing   received  a   boost 


Hallford 
For  Accord 
In  Dorms 

By  PRINGLE   pipkin 

C!  ser  eooperaticn   between   the 
sought  or  received   anv  assistance    dormitnry    advisors   and    managers 


from   communists  and   r?jects   any 
such   suggestion. 

In  Greensboro  Tuesday  the  ex- 
ecutive committee  of  the  local 
N.A.ACP  chapter  sent  a  telegram 
[1     the     Communist     party     Daily 


with  the  dorm  officials  was  urged 
at  a  meeting  of  th-  se  groups  Tues- 
day by  Sonny  HaHford.  president 
of    the    Interdormitory    Council. 

Ray    .jL'fferies.    assistant    to    the 
dean  cf  student  affairs,  said  while 


its  proper  level  on  our  campus. 


capable  of  using  atomic  weapon:^. 

American  Communists 

yirw  YORK  —if—  The  Ameri- 
can Communist  Party  yesterday  de- 
clared its  independence  of  Moscow 
It  voted  ovci-whelmingly  in  the 
final  session  of  a  four-day  con- 
vention to  do  its  own  interpreting 
of   .Marxist-Leninist    principles. 

Such  action  —  following  a  Com- 
murist  course  along  independent 
and  national  lines  —  is  commonly 
called      -Titoism.'     although     the 

American  Communists  did  not  use    ^oro   Police   Chief   Paul   Calhoun 
that    theme.  ;  announced  today  that  "A  phase  of 

..-,    -       .  I     I  %»#        ■     J         ^^^   investigation    which ...  result- 
UN  Avoided  War:  Lodge    ed  in  a  series  of  arrests  for  crime 
NFW  YORK  — '.P—  Henry  Cabot    against  nature"  has  ended  here. 
Lodge   Jr.,    U.    S.    Amba.iador   to       Calhoun  said  that  rumors  of  "a 
the  United  Nations,  said  last  night    wholesale  arrest  of  additional  per- 
that  if  the  United  Nations  had  not     sons  . .  .  and    rumors    that    investi- 


It  is  a  mixture  of  all  these  into 
a  campus,  many  schools  and   c><l- 


of   his   capabilities   will    bring   the    '^^^^'     ^    "^"^^^    °^    department 
program  of  the  student  union   to' ^"^^^^•^'^^''*'  ^"^  ^  P"^'^   '"   ^'^- 


Crime  Against 
Nature  Arrests 
Have  Ended 


longing.  University  life  is  the 
:  education  of  mind  over  matter.  It 
'  is  meeting  and  knowing  and  get- 
I  ting    alonj 


Dr.  John  Nelson  Selected  Main 
Speaker  For  Y  Spring  Meeting 


Dr.    John    0.    Nelson,    professor    lism  program  of  the  National  Coun-    outstanding    ability 

cil  of  Churches),  and  chairman  of    (-ate   with  students, 
the  Church  Planning  and  Strategy 
Committee      of     the     Connecticut 


with    many    different    ^f  christian  vocation  at  Yale  Uni- 
people,  altitudes  and  ^-ituation.s.       ^^,5^,.   divinity   School,  has   been 
The  University  is  a  great   melt-   selected   as  the   main  speaker  for 
ing  pot.  It  brings  together  people    ''^^  YM-YWCA  spring  conlFerence.    Council   of  Churches, 
from  different  sections  and  locales        scheduled    for    March    1-3.    the        A  native  of   Pittsburg.   Dr.   Nel- 
of  the  country  and  world.  It  is   a   conference  will  be  held  at  Bricks,    .son    graduated    mauna    cum    laude 
GREENSBORO— (AP)— Greens-   fl?!"?,!.,?,!/^^"^^"'"'^^'  backgrounds    n.   C.   Th-  Y  conference   is   plan-    from     Princeton     University.     His 

o  .,t.., ,..  ^^^  ^^^  Carolina  students  and  will  j  B.  D   degree  was  form  the  Univer- 

deal  with  the  topic  "Conscience,  sity  of  Edinburgh  in  Scotland 
and  Conformity."  with  emphasis  \  and  McCormick  Seminary  in  Chi- 
on  particular  areas  of  concern  on  i  cagu-  followed  by  a  Yale  Ph.D.  in 


to    communi- 


and  attitudes. 


existed  when  fighting  broke  out  in 
the  Middle  East  -we  might  very 
well   be  at  war  today." 

Lodge,  in  a  speech  at  a  Lincoln 
Dav  dinner  of  the  National  Repub- 


Currently,  over  7,600  students 
are  registered  in  the  various 
branches  and  schools  of  the  Uni- 
versity. This  number  includes 
representatives  from  43  of  the 
48  states  (Kansas,  New  Hamp- 
shire, New  Mexico,  Vermont  and 
Wyoming   are   excluded). 


gation    will    be    definitely    discon- 
tinued   immediatiely .  . .  are    both, 
like  most  rumors,   entirely  erron- 
cneous." 
Police  records  show  32  persons    University      rolls      boairt      student 
lican  Club,  said  that  in  the  Middle    have  been  arrested  and  a  total  of    delegates  of  good  will  from  Aus- 
East    "the     effectiveness     of    the    60  warrants  served  as  a  result  of    tria,  the  Bahamas.  Denmark,  Eng- 


the   Campus. 

In  his  work  at  the  Yale  Divinity 

School   Dr.  Nelson  deals  with  the 

minister's    calling    as    related  to  i      t^,,-;„„  u-                 .u     v  1     ,.«„ 

,,    .      r    ,               „      .  During  his  career  the  Yale  pro- 

that    of    laymen.    Serving    also  as    .^,„„   k..o    1  j    u      j      1       r    „„r. 

....                                 .  .1  fessor    has    led    hunderds    of   con- 


philosophy  of  religion  and  later 
a  Litt.D.  from  Westminster  Col- 
lege  in    Pennsylvania. 


United  Nations  was  again   demon- 
strated in  a  crisis.  .  . 


the  investigation  into  the   alleged  '  land,   India.   Switzerland   and    Tai 


crimes  against  nature. 


This  figure  further  includes  ^''-''^  ""'^  director,  he  counsels 
representation  from  19  foreign  *^^  graduate  students  in  training 
countries    and    U.    S.    possessions.    J^^^  during  their  seminary  course. 

Dr.  Nelson  is  now  serving  as 
chairman  of  Assn.  Press  (the 
publishing  wing  of  the  YMCA). 
chairman  of  the  University  Christ- 
ian   Mission    (the   student   evange- 


wan  to  name  a  few. 


ferences  and  gatherings  dealing 
with  the  religious  approach  to  vo- 
cation. 

Conferenre  co-chairmen  Kathy 
Legrand  and  Bob  Newton  stated 
that  the  Y  Conference  Commit- 
tee   selected    Dr.    Nelson    for    his 


JOHN   O    NELSON 

. .  cvnjierence   speaker 


Worker  saying  that  rather  than  dormitory  advisers  are  ncjt  pro- 
have  "any  rotten  Red  infiltrate  ctors.  they  are  supposed  to  help 
to  join  forces  with  the  NAACP."  student  officials  quell  any  distur- 
the    Greensboro    chapter    of    the    bances. 

National  .\ssn.  for  .Advancement  Hallford  said  students  in  the 
of  Colored  People  "would  rather  dorms  would  have  to  take  more 
give  up  the  fight  on  integration."    responsibility    in    enforcing    quiet 

I  hours   and    preventing  destruction 

I  of    propert.v.    He    said    many    stu- 
dents   felt     matters    of    discipline 
were    the    sole    responsibility    of 
the  dorm  officials. 
I      The    IDC    president    said    it    is 
"not     Young's     responsibility     to 
I  break   up  panty  raids."   He  asked 
!  that     dormitory     officials     try     to 
stop  the  raids  from  forming. 
Hallford    went    on    to   say.    "the 
{  ID    Court    is    definitely    improved 
I  over   last   year,   but    there   is   still 
room     for     more     improvement." 
Si    f:»r    the    court    has    tried    no 
firecracker    cases,     although     two 
are    coming    before    it.    La.«;t    year 
j  students     convicted     of     shooting 
I  firecrackers    were    expelled    from 
I  all  dorms 

I  In  order  to  aid  the  dorm  offi- 
I  eials  to  maintain  quiet.  IDC  Vice 
j  President  Neil  Rass  recommended 
I  each  dorm  floor  have  a  counselor. 
On   the  question   of  commercial 

(See  IDC.  Page  3) 


Y  Leadership 
Program  Starts 
Here  Thursday 

The  YWC.\  Leadership  and  Ori- 
entation Program  will  be  initiated 
Thursday,  at  4  p.m.  in  the  Library 
.A.<sembly    Room. 

Miss  Xola  Hatten  will  be  in 
charge  of  the  first  program  which 
will^  feature  the  presentation  of 
"Family  Tree."  an  original  skit 
written  specifically  for  the  pro- 
gram. 

The  purpose  of  the  program  is 
to  acquaint  all  girls  with  the 
structure,  purpose,  characteristics 
and  duties  of  the  YWC.\  so  that 
they  can  become  an  integral  part 
of  the  organization  through  com- 
mittee work,  and  chainman.-hip. 
according   to   Y  officials. 


^ACe  TWO 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEv 


WEDNESDAY.  FEBRUARY  13,  19S7 


W 


Right  To  Self-Expression: 
President  Young's  Logical 

K<»r  the  snulems  licjc  who  leel   tJicir  rij;lu  to  sf ir-fXjiirvsion    will 
iu"\<M   \k'  h;niiK(l.  wi-  suoocni  a  l(M»k  :  t  Wake  l-oicsi  C".ollei;e. 

I  lure,  a  lew  stiideiilN  \\t  re  iiie^l  hv  llie  honor  (ouiu  il  loi  j>ai  tiei|>a<- 
\n'^  in  .1  paiity-raid.    The  hon<»i  <oniuil  <4a\e  ilutii  li^lit  senteiues. 

The  l.uiiliv  e\etuti\e  tonunittee  lelt  not  enough  justiie  had  been 
dealt  <Mit.  So  tlie  fa<iilly  exeitui\e  (oniinittee  "appealed"  tlie  ease.  <>-a\e 
the  studeMi>  loiinhei  senteiues. 


The  same  ihin'n  Ir  •.  hapiKiu'd 
at  Carolin:i.  It  happened  last 
si>rin'i.  and  prohahK  happened 
tilis  fall  a  (oujTle  of  times.  It  has 
hipjuiud  (.noit^ili  to  «(>n\incf  ns 
thai  sitideiit  svII-.4(»\  eminent  lasis 
here  jii^t  as  Um\>,  as  Samuel  M;  - 
!'ill.  Roherr  l|ons«".  I-" red  \\\a\er 
(now  on  I<ia\e).  Katheiine  Cai- 
inidiael  and  \arions  lacnltv  meni- 
heis  want    it   to  last. 

'l^his  is  a  pitilnl  uav  t<»  rnn  a 
university,   lint   ii    is   the   uav  that 

peais  to  he  most  popniar  no\va- 
(la\s. 

I  Ikm-  are  sexeral  altemali\es. 
all  of  uhirh  need  not  involve  the 
pr<»stitntion  of  tl'<e  student  hodv 
to  tlie  administration.  Only  one 
ol  tluni.  howexci.  \vil|  work.  Ihev 
in*  hide: 

1.  A  'general  sindeni  re\oliition 
a'.'aiijNt  the^iministraiion.  .Model- 
ed, aftei  the  HiUJ'jfaiian  revolution, 
this  woidd  last  ahont  ;'s  Ion<4  as  it 
takts  t«»  'jjet   a   letter   from   home. 

2.  StreiV4ilujn"n«»  the  student 
Court,  administrative  and  leifisla- 
ti\e  svstem  to  force  the  arlministia- 
lion  to  ijiNe  to  stndents  the  rights 
ih  M  v:r>'rl('.>ts  riesevxt'. 

;>,.  Installation  in  Soinh  Bnild- 
hv^  of  administrators  wiio  are 
sirono  enoni;h  to  A\ithstantl  wron<j- 
f:  I  iMi'ssiires  fioiii  oittside.  fiom 
•|i  '  Ivnlrv.  from  pr«rents  and  fn»m 
nie*rh'ints  and  townspeople.  This. 
v\e   Kil.    i>   iinp(><sil>h-. 

riie  oiilv  wav  out   is  a  stren^tli- 

oviinmeni.    f*er- 

!i.it>s    il    student   i;o\erninent   <<»nld 


make  i\»  (  asc  siron'.>  enon<4h  it  eould 
apjH.d  to  ilu-  l»(»aicl  of  Trustees 
I'l  eient  •!  ni(>te<  lion  from  suspen- 
sion  of  ri^ihts. 

Il  would  he  \ri\  dilli(iilt  to 
(  •  vii'c  tin-  l>o:ird  oj  Itnstees 
ihii  the  siiidcnis  are  mature, 
ilrnkiiej  and  i  espitnsihie  individ- 
ual', oxer  «  oHnter-dem:  .ids  liom 
S'Miili  riiiildiit'j:.  I'xit  with  the 
ii'.ihi  kind  ot  leadeishij)  and  hack- 
ing, wi-  «()iild  do  it. 

Student  hodv  I'resident  l»ol) 
^'oinii"  is  the  most  populai,  re- 
siH(  ted  and  hard-woikin'.;  presi- 
dent in  ie(ent  history.  He  is  the 
logical    ni.ui    i(»    lead    the  ( iiisade. 

Mardi  Gras 
Better  Than 
New  Orleans 

It  is  usual,  at  this  timi-  of  vear, 
to  see  iiuieased  »(Hial  and  extia- 
cuiriciilM    activity  on   the  (ampiis. 

Students  are  pnttinj;  off  stndv- 
iii!4  '•>  h>v(ti  of  the  (ampus  life  that 
is  mole  fun. 

lint  we  hardly  ex  pec  led  a  sot  ial- 
eiitertainmeni  fuiution  with  the 
s(()j)e  of  thf  Mardi  (iras  weekend 
ujK  omini;. 

lo  oinani/er  )im  Annstroiij" 
and  all  the  pe(»ple  who  work  with 
him.  Iraiernitv.  independent  and 
(riah;  III  Memorial-tvpe  people,  we 
iciidei  a  salute,  riiev  are  tiniiin;^ 
out  one  of  the  finest  ;4et-to»ethers 
ill    I   loiii"   while. 


The  Pinch  Helped  The  Truth 


Most  people,  we  suppose,  were 
sluM.cd  over  the  weekeiul  when 
ihev  heard  that  two  top  State  Col- 
lege basket  hall  plavers  had  bee'J 
dropped  lioin  iIu-  nam  betaiise  <*{ 
"scholastic    diflit  iillies."' 

People  who  li.ite  \.  C.  State  (Col- 
lege were  h;  jij)v  because  ol  the 
tscandal  value  and  beiaiise  the  loss 
of  Cliff  Hafer  and  John  Maylio 
will   hurt   the  basketball   team. 

Pe<»ple  who  love  the  « olle*;e  were 
relieved      that      the     <«)lle<»e      hatl 

The  Daily  Tar  Heel 

The  official  student  pubUcatioD  uf  tbe 
Publications  Board  of  the  University  ot 
North  Carolina,  where  it  is  published 
daily  except  Monday  and  examinatioi 
»nd  vacation  periods  and  .summer  terms 
Entered  as  second  class  matter  in  th« 
Do«t  office  in  Chapel  Hill,  N.  C,  undei 
the  Act  oi  March  8,  1870.  Subscription 
rates:  mailed,  S4  per  year,  $2.50  a  semes 
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ter 


Editor  

FRED  POWLEDGE 

Managing  Editor  _ 

CHARLIE  SLOAN 

News  Editor     

NAVCV  HTTJ. 

Business  Manager  . 

„-   BILL  BOB  PL-EL 

Sp*rt«  Editor 

LARRY  CHEEK 

EDITORIAL  STAFF  —  Woody  Sear*. 
Frank  Crowther,  Barry  Winston,  David 
Mundy,  George  Pfingst,  Ingrid  Clay, 
CorUaxid  Edwards,  Paul  McCauley, 
Bobbi  Smith. 


•lEWS  STAFF— Clarke  Jones,  Ray  Link 
er,  Joan  Moore.  Pringle  Pipkin,  Annii 
Drake,  Edith  MacKinnon.  WaJJy  Kuralt, 
Mary  Alys  Voorhees,  Graham  Snyder, 
Billy  Barnes,  Neil  Bass,  Gary  Nichols, 
Page  Bernstein.  Peg  Humpbrey,  PhyUia 
Maultsby'  Ben  Taylor 


BUSINESS  STAFF— Rosa  Moore,  Johnny 
Whitaker,  Dick  Leavitt,  Dick  Sirkin. 


SPORTS  STAFF:   Bill   King.  Jim  Purks, 
Jimmy   Harper.   Dave    Wible,   Charley 

HOWSMI. 


Subscription  Manager Dale  Staley 

Advertising  Manager  Fred  Katzir 

Circulation  Manager  Charlie  Holt 

Sta/X  photflgrapher Norman  Kantof 

librarian  Sue   Gishner 

Proof  R*ad«r  ..._.. Guy  EJlis 

^.ght    Editor   ^., Clarke    Jons," 

Night  Editor Graham  Snydsr 


j)uri>ed  itsell  ol  two  hii^hlv  riskv 
plavers  who  mi!.;ht  have  taused 
ivoul»le   for   Slate    later   on. 

I\oplr  who  ;.ie  indifteieiil  to- 
ward State  (!olleoe  weren't  sin- 
prised  at  all.  I'hey  had  been  hear- 
ing about  how  aihk'tes  j^et  through 
s(  hool  all  aloiif^. 

*  *  # 

I  lie  liist  thought  that  struck  us 
when  we  heard  the  news  was 
luitlui   hate,  love  nor  iridiflerent  e. 

K.iiJu'i.  we  wondered  if  the  <o|- 
I' "«■  W(.iild  Ii:ive  droppe<l  the  two 
plavers  il  it  were  Ji(»t  involved  in 
the  now-lamoiis    ■.Morek'nd  Ose." 

(haiues  are.  il  AViuildn't  have 
dropped  them.  It  has  appeared 
«\i(Ieiii  lor  cpiiie  some  lime  tliat 
itoli  ilic  i-lavcis  were  no  more 
siii(!(  Ills  than  ihe  basketballs  thev 
diibbhd  to  fame.  .\u(\  the  lollei'e 
did   notliin;^  about    il. 

Jt     was    probablv     leal     oi  wha't 

iiiiL^ht    lia|)pen     that     (aiised  State 

(;olIe!4e  to  suspend  the  two  from 
the   basketball    team. 


Off  Record' 
Won't  Work 
Any  Longer 

It  i.s  time  lor  Ihe  Dailv  far 
Heel  to  leavseit  a  jiolity  that  will 
hurt   some   news  sounes.  *  ■; 


.Most  officials  of  anvtliin;»,  in 
this  VfsMdison  Avenue  dav  and 
time,  find  it  increasingly  diflieidt 
<o  tell  the  truth,  even  to  tell  any- 
thin".  Consequently  ttiey  Kiort  M 
a  device  that  was  invcBled  by 
Satan: 

".\ow.  vou  realize,  this  is  off  t)^ 

letord  .  .  .  .  " 

#  *  * 

Iuasmu(li  as  jieojjle  who  go  <>ft 
the  record  are  n:suallv  making 
eowards  out  of  themselves  as  uell 
as  assist in'4  the  spread  of  rumor 
iiud  sometimes  bald  lies,  this  news- 
|)a|>er  feels  it  (annoi  honor  Muh 
retjuest.s  wi<hoiu  the  express  agree- 
ment of  the  ie(K»rter  involved,  be- 
fore the  statement   is  made. 

.And  the  reporter  will  very  sel- 
dom  aiircc. 


Abolish  The  Honor  System?  A/o, 
Says  Exum;  We  Can  Do  The  Job 


Jim  Exum 

Writer  Exum  is  chairman  of 
the  Men's  Honor  Council.  Here 
he  is  answering  Daily  Tar  Heel 
columnist  Dave  Mundy,  //ho 
suggested  last  week  that  the 
honor  system  be  abolished. 
Mundy,  at  the  bottom  of  his 
column  today,  answers  Exum. 
The  Daily  Tar  Heel  welcomes 
and  encourages  all  expression 
ot  student  sentiment  on  the 
honor  system,  along  with  any- 
thing else  of   interest. 

Th:rL'  have  been  belter  rea- 
sons presented  f  r  aboli-ihin;.i 
the  honor  s.vstejn  than  l)ivi>  Miih- 
d.v  so  thoughtlessly  outlined  in 
The  Daily  Tar  Heel  last  Frida.v. 
A  few  paints  he  iiK'ntio.i'd,  how- 
ever, should  be  cleared  up  lor 
the  studentii. 

The  councils,  first  ol  all.  aiv 
quite  able  to  decide  h  nor  ca.ses 
with  justice  and  e.\pediency.  Mat- 
ters involving  a  man  s  hoaor  do 
not  recjuire  an  LLB  dc.^r.o  t-j 
adjudicate.  Knowledge  ol"  t'le 
rules  of  evidence,  so  nc-c  ?ssar.v 
for  the  practicing  court!0(»ni  bw- 
yer.  would  be  unapplicable  to 
hi  nor  cod?  cases  which  almo.st 
always  involve  only  the  e.xam- 
ination  of  test  papers  and  the 
testimony    of    defendants. 

\  council  member  needs  nvost- 
ly  a  matured  attitude  toward 
what  is  ri^ht  and  wronj;  and  an 
ability  to  rea.son  from  facts  tti 
a  conclusion.  The  hon  r  syst  m 
is  not  couched  in  technicalities 
of  procedure  or  rules  of  evi- 
dence; the  honor  councils  have 
only  to  judge  whether  or  not  a 
student  has  lied,  stolen  or  clu;at- 
ed. 

Certainly  a  board  of  college 
students  would  be  as  able  to 
decide  these  questions  as  Dave's 
suggested   "faculty  council." 

The  rules  moreover  which 
Dave  says  are  flagrantly  violated, 
are  not.  after  all.  violations  of 
the  honor  system.  Drinking  in 
itself  is  not  now  nor  never  has 
been  a  violation  of  any  student 
regulation.  The  Honor  System. 
we  must  remember,  is  only  c  in- 
cerned  with  tho.se  rules  set  up 
by  the  students  themsslves;  oth- 
erwise it  could  not  be  ii  .sell-im- 
po.-^ed   .system   of  government. 

Neither  does  tbe  rule  against 
pa.ssbook  transference  tall  under 
the  purview  of  the  honar  system. 
The  honor  system  i.s  primarily 
concerned  with  upholding  aca- 
demic honesty  in  the  classroom, 
gentlemanly  conduct  and  major 
lying  and  stealing  violations 
where  no  other  university  system 
of  control  exists,  i.e.  where  a 
student  is  completely  on  his  hon- 
or, .so  to  speak,  to  be  honest. 

With     regard     to     passbooks, 
however,  there  is  an  established 
system  of  checking  them  at  all 
ball    games.    A    student    caught 
with    someone    else's    passbook 
should  not  be  admitted  to  the 
games. 
It  Ls  not  an  honor  system  vio- 
lation and  no  responsibility  rests 
with    the    councils   to   enforce    it 
as    such.    The   responsibility    lies 


with  th?  .Athletic  Assn.  They 
hav;e  set  up  machiivery  to  pre- 
vent violation,  and  they  have 
stipulated  the  punishment  for  a 
\  ioialion. 

The  councils,  of  course,  highly 
recommend  that  students  abide 
by  the  passba;k  r:gulations,  but 
her:',  in  fact,  is  where  our  au- 
thority  begins  and  ends. 

There  is  always  a  danger  in 
trying  to  spread  our  honor  sys- 
tem "too  thin,"  and  weaken  it 
r^r  ;i!l  purposes.  It  is  now  and 
has  f.lwa's  been  prim.Trily  con- 
c  mod  with  academic  honesty  in 
Ih?  cla.ssroom  and  gentlemanly 
conduct   fut.side.  Onlv  thus?  reg- 


ulations which  the  students, 
themselves,  make  or  agree  to. 
and  for  which  no  ether  universi- 
ty system  of  control  exists,  are 
enforceable  by  the  honor  coun- 
cils. 

Wherever  a  student  is  found 
to  be  breaking  faith  with  these 
self-imposed  rules  by  cheating, 
lying  or  stealing,  he  will  be 
dealt  with  severely  by  the 
councils. 

It  seems  to  me  that  the  most 
significant  statements  made  by 
Dave  are  'AbDlish  the  honor 
system"*  Such  a  suggestion  will 
b?  greeted  with  astonishment  and 
disagreement,  or  ignored  .  .  ."  and 


"in  purpose  the  honor  system  is 
....  good." 

When  the  final  end,  or  pur- 
pose of  anything  is  good,  it 
should  bii  supported,  nui^ured. 
strengthened  and  encouraged  by 
all  means  possible.  Let  us  not 
weaken  and  destroy  this  most 
prized  possession,  simply  because 
it.  like  human  beings,  is  not  per- 
fectly efficient. 

\or  should  we  forget  its  cen- 
tral objectives  while  picking  it  to 
pieces  by  calling  attention  to 
flagrant  "fringe  violations" 
which  many  times  do  not,  as  those 
cited  above,  concern  the  honor 
system   at   all. 


'How  Dare  You  Disregard  Our  Instructions!' 


THE    \A//Nv    or- 

THe  ^  TRANSCTRFSSOf^ 
IS      HA.KP 


4-i- es  «  ^  Z_  <:3  c  K^ 
«»V7  7»te  LJA£M/Ai<»rO/vi   -p»JT  «- 


THE  MANCHESTER  GUARDIAN: 


Wheel's  Full  Circle  In  Commie-Land 


\\  various  times  in  most  Com- 
munist countries  it  has  been  a 
mark  of  virtue  for  children  to 
denounce  their  parents.  The  pre- 
sumption has  been  that  parents 
are  counter-revolutionary  if  given 
half  a  chance,  especially  if  their 
children  do  not  keep  an  eye 
skinned    upon    them. 

Chinese  enmmunism  has  never 
been  half-hearted  in  its  import 
of  the  Ru.ssian  system,  and  for 
a  time  the  infant  informers  were 


a  part  of  the  Chinese  scene.  But 
it  put  a  strain  of  the  traditional 
instinct  of  the  Chinese  to  worship 
their  ancestors  and  venerate  their 


is  quite  alien  to  Communist   mo-    , 
ralit.v.  I  ! 

But  it  requires  all  young  Com- 
munists from  now  on  to  turn  a 


fathers,    and    there    are    signs    of    le.ss  withening  eye  not  only  upon 


a  change. 

The  recent  issue  of  "China 
Youth"  has  a  leading  article 
called  "Stop  the  Maltreatment 
and  Non-support  of  Parents."  To 
save  everybody's  face  it  .says  that 
lack  of  respect  for  parents  is  a 
relic     from     capitalist     days,     and 


their    parents    but    upon    elderly 
relatives.  » 

Another  newspaper  sa.vs  that 
Communist  children  must  be 
brought  up  with  the  idea  that 
it  is  their  destiny  to  support 
parents  in  old  age.  The  wheel 
has   come    full   circle. 


• 

L'il  Abner 


Some  Rules 
Not  Enforced 


Dave  Mundy 


By  Walt  Kelly 


>OU  PON'T    V    AIN'T  VOU 
1DUNP6C'     ,    <k)TNO, 

TA«AH«?N'r 

lAT  MgAT- 

F»«TSJ.VM6TA«'65  i-^>») 
AN'M6Wg^H0C0WrE5,#fT. 

!52 


n*  itu  Sti^-e<T^,  we  < 


C^giN'A    .|    dUMMINT 

eoTAiu6HrJ 

•TO  HAVE  StTS 

TBgTH^fr> 


ffiBB  MAlBCUT^'"  Pegg    > 
T6ETM  "•  THAT'5  WHAT  OUR 

COUNteVOUSMT  7D  f>7CN\0tJ, 

MlSgRAatg  50Ut.  VmH 
ANWffTWFWgf 


1  * 


Why  are  some  rules  severely  enforced,  and  oth- 
ers  enforced   not   at  all? 

The  "University  of  North  Carolina  Record." 
Number  561,  says:  "By  order  of  the  Board  of  Tru.s- 
tees  the  faculty  is  directed  to  discipline  or  dismiss 
from  the  University  any  student  who  is  known  to 
engage  in  drinking  intoxicating  liquors,  gambling, 
hazing  in  any  form  (presence  at  hazing  is  regarded 
as  participation),  or  to  be  guilty  of  dissolute  con- 
duct." 

"The  privileges  represented  by  this  book  are 
not  transferable."  says  paragraph  three  on  the  in- 
side cover   of  everyone's  athletic   passbook. 

Are  these  rules  about  liquor,  gambling,  haz- 
ing or  transferring  passbook  privileges  enforced 
by  the  student  courts,  the  agencies  which  have 
been  entrusted  with  their  enforcement?  They  are 
not  being  enforced  to  any  degree. 

But  the  student  courts  should  be  able  to  effect 
a  cure,  at  least  as  far  as  their  own  activities  ex- 
tend. Here  are  the  possibilities: 

1.  If  they  really  propose  to  enforce  all  the 
rules,  if  they  know  of  all  the  violations,  the  follow- 
ing sources  of  information  on  violations  are  offer- 
ed: 

HAZING:  See  The  Daily  Tar  Heel,  Wednesday, 
Feb.  6,   1957,  or  ask  any  fratty-club  boy. 

G.AMBLING:  Any  fraternity  or  dormitory,  any 
night  of  the  week. 

DRINKING:   Anyplace,  anytime.   I'll    be  happy 
to  demonstrate  how  it  is  done.  I'll  even  bring  my 
cwn,  taxpaid  or  non-taxpaid,  as  they  prefer. 
PASSBOOK    VIOLATIONS:    Names   of    violators 
supplied  on  request.   (No  convictions  yet.) 

PLAGIARISM:  Corltand  Eklwards"  "Baby  Doll" 
rev'ew  in  The  Daily  Tar  Heel. 

2.  If  they  are  not  going  to  enforce  these  rules, 
they   should    publicly   announce: 

.A..  That  they  will  convict  no  person  of  hazing, 
gambling,  drinking,  passbook  violations  or  plagiar- 
ism: ' 

B.  That  they  will  resist  any  faculty  or  ad-.' 
ministration    discipline    of    such    violators. 

3.  The  student  courts  should  resign  and  turni 
all  their  respon.sibilities  over  lo  a  faculty  council. 

Will  any  of  these  proposals  be  considered? 
No.  U.C.  or  a  few  years  more  there  will  be  con- 
tinued explanations  o  fthe  "honor  system"  and 
the  "Carolina  Way  of  Life,"  occasional  speeches 
and  statements  by  members  of  the  honor  council,  t 
and  more  speeches  on  the  "crisis  in  student  gov- 
ernment." 

Some  rules  will  be  enforced,  and  others  won't, 
with  the  net  result  that  all  rules  have  less  and  less 
respect.  Faculty  enforcement  of  the  most  necessary 
rules  (cheating,  stealing,  etc.)  will  increase.  The 
end  effect  will  be  a  faculty  council  which  can  ad- 
minister the  rules. 

• 

In  answer  to  Jim  Exum  (see  column  this  page): 

Jim  is  .just  confusing  the  issue. 

He  agrees  that  a  person  is  "on  his  honor  to 
1  be  honest."  When  a  person  violates  the  rules  on 
drinking,  hazing  or  an.vthing  else,  he  is  not  being 
honest.  When  he  does  that,  he  is  subject  to  disci- 
pline by  the  student  courts.  Just  because  the 
courts  haven't  disciplined  these  people  in  the  past 
doesn't  mean  that  they  shouldn't. 

We  probably  agree  that  these  rules  on  drinking, 
gambling,  et  cetera,  ad  infinitum,  should  be  abol- 
ished. If  the  head  of  the  honor  council  says  that 
they  aren't  enforcing  these  rules,  then  I  guess  it  is 
all  right  for  a  person  to  be  dishonest  and  violate 
the    rules. 

Closed  Circuit 
TV  'Significant' 

Gov.  Luther  Hodges 

//;   His  Bu'iinuU  Message 

Mov'ing  into  the  field  of  higher  education,  we 
find  definite  rea.vins  for  encouragement  and  at  the 
same  time  many  challenging  problems.  The  Board 
of  Higher  Education,  although  barely  underway  in 
its  activities,  is  beginning  to  provide  the  much 
needed  coordination  among  the  states  institutions 
of  higher  learning.  This  board's  review  of  institu- 
tional budgets  prior  to  consideration  by  the  Ad- 
visory Budget  Commission  has  been  of  great  help 
to  us. 

One  of  the  most  significant  developments  in 
the  area  of  finance  for  our  colleges  is  to  be  found 
in  the  construction  of  certain  kinds  of  capital  im- 
provements on  a  self-liquidating  basis.  This  type  of 
financing  will  require  the  establishment  of  a  re- 
volving fund  to  finance  the  construction  of  the 
buildings  with  provision  made  for  receipts  from  the 
use  of  buildings  to  be  paid  back  into  the  fund. 

Another  significant  possibility  in  this  area  ha;; 
to  do  with  the  use  of  closed  circuit  television  for. 
instructional  purposes.  The  television  operations  at 
the  Consolidated  University  are  already  doing  a  fine 
job  of  providing  courses  by  regular  television  for 
which  college  credit  may  be  received.  This  is  a 
commendable  program  being  carried  on  by  WLT^C- 
TV. 

Expenditure  of  this  appropriation  would  be  sub- 
ject to  the  approval  of  the  Advisory  Budget  Com- 
mission, a-  well  as  the  governor  and  the  Council 
of  State.  This  is  a  long-range  project  and  one  which, 
if  feasible,  could  provide  great  savings  to  the  state 
over  the  years,  and  be  a  partial  answer  to  shortages 
of  teachers  in  the  public  schools  and  colleges  .  .  . 


linl 
opj 
drJ 

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frt 
al 
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Ti 
thd 
Hal 


m 


lY  13,  1957 


WEDNESDAY,  FEBRUARY  13,  1957 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


PAGE  THREE 


:ed 


-(i.  and  oth>- 

Record." 
ird  of  Trus- 
or  dismiss 
known  to 
ijambling, 
IS  rogarded 
ssolute  con- 

v    book    are 
on  the  in- 

KM)k. 

ibling,  h«z- 
s  enforced 
>hich  have 
?  They  are 

)le  to  effect 
•tivities   ex- 

rce  all  the 
the  follow- 
are  offer- 
Wednesday, 

niitnry.    any 

be   h«ppy 
bring  my 
refer. 

ol    violators 

M.) 

Baby    Doll' 

these  rules. 

of  hazing, 

or  plagiary 
J 

iilty  or  ad-l 
rv  1 

n  and  turt^ 
ty  council.  ? 
:onsidered?  |  i 

rill  be  con-  '         | 
stem"    and  I 

il   speeches  ' 

»r  council,  >    ^'^ 
udcnt  fov-  f 

hers  won't. 
?ss  and  less 
it  necessary 
:rease.  The 
ich  can  ad- 


this  page): 


s  honor  to 
e  rules  on 
;  not  being 
t  to  disci- 
ecause  the 
m  the  past 


on  drinking, 
uld  be  abol- 
:\\  says  that 
I  guess  it  is 
and  violate 


liif 
wnf  : 


duc-ation.  we 

t  and  at  the 

The   Board 

underway  in 

the    much 

institutions 

of  institu- 

by   the   Ad 

f   great   help 

lopmcnts   in 
to  be  found 
capital  im- 
This  type  of 
nt   of   a   ra- 
tion   of   the 
pts  from  the 
he  fund, 
us  area  ha^ 
levision  for 
perations  at 
doing  a  fine 
elevia-ion  for? 
d.   This   is   a; 
by  WUNC- 

lould  be  sub- 
Budget  Com- 
the   Council 
id  one  which, 
to  the  state 
to  shortages 
olleges  .  .  • 


World  Affairs  Meeting 
Opens  Here  Tomorrow 

The  seventh  annual  North  Caro- 
lina World  Affairs  Conference 
opens  here  tomorrow  with  an  ad- 
dress by  Rep.  Edith  Green,  of  Or- 
egon. 

Recently  elected  to  anew  term 
from  Oregon's  Third  Congression- 
al District,  Congresswoman  Green 
will  explore  the  conference  theme. 
"Toward  a  World  of  Peace"  in 
the  10  a.m.  meeting  in  Carroll 
Hall. 

About  500  conferees  represent- 
ing 21  civic,  religious  and  educa- 
tional organizations  are  expected 
to  attend  the  day-long  meeting, 
arranged  by  the  University  Ex- 
tension  Division. 

A  second   highlight   of   the  con- 
ference   is    a    closing    address    by 
Dr.  Bernard  Boyd.  James  A.  Gray 
Professor     of     Biblical     literature.    Foundation  for  International  Poli- 
who     will    speak     on     "A    Moral    tics"  at  3:30. 


HAPPENINGS  ON  THE  HILL: 


Winter  House  Party  hIighUghts 
Typical  Carolina   Social   Week 


EDITH  GREEN 

.  speaka  tomorrow 


NBC  Will  Broadcast  Germans 
On  New  Nationwide  Production 


Additional  ination-wide  atten- 
tion will  be  directed  at  the  forth- 
coming Germans  Concert  by 
"NIGHTLINE."  a  new  NBC  broad- 
cast production.  George  Ragsdale. 
vice-president  of  the  Germans 
Club,    said    yesterday. 

NBC  proposes  making  informal 
tapes  of  students  talking  with 
Bandleader  Armstrong,  studv^ts 
commenting  among  themselves 
about  the  program  and  student  re- 
action to  the  program.  Ragsdale 
said. 

Its  purpose  will  be  to  canvas 
campus  opinion  which  will  in  turn 
be  supplied  to  the  entertainment 
featue    of    NIGHTLINE.    A    high- 


CLASSIFIEPS 

RIDE  TO  ATLANTA— WANTED 
this  week-end.  .  .two  boys.  Call 
89162,  Joe  Brown. 


light  of  the  program  will  be  a 
special  campus  section,  he  added. 
Recording  of  the  tapes  will  be 
directed  by  announcer  Jimmy 
Capps  through  the  facilities  of 
station  WPTF  (Raleigh).  The  tap- 
es are   to  be   played  on  a  nation- 

i  wide  broadcast  of  NIGHTLINE  in 
early   March.  Ragsdale   said. 
In  addition  to  NIGHTLINE.  an- 

:  other  NBC  coverage  —  MONITOR 
—  will  also  direct  its  activities  to 
the  Carolina  campus  and  to  this 
year's  annual  Spring  Germans. 


5  ROOM  BRICK  HOUSE.  3  BED 
rooms  all  modern  conviences.  3 
miles  on  Old  86  Hyway.  Stove 
and  Frigedaire  furnished.  Call 
»7377  after  4:30. 


MEN'S  GLEE  CLUB 

A  sectional  rehearsal  of  the 
Mens  Glee  Club  will  be  held  in 
Hill  Hall  at  5:00  this  afternoon. 
The  purpose  of  the  meeting  is  to 
practice  for  the  forthcoming 
spring  tour  through  North  and 
South  Carolina.  Members  have 
been  urged  to  contact  Jim  Sham- 
blee  or  Don  Murphy  in  Hill  Hall. 
W.A.A.   BASKETBALL 

The  W.A.A.  Ba^"ketball  Club  will 
meet  thid-  afternoon  at  4  p.m.  in 
the  Women's  Gym.  Everyone  in- 
terested has  been  urged  to  attend,  j 


Here's  A  Give-Away! 

Anybody  Who  Buys  An 
LP.  Gets 

2  FREE  L.P.'s 

From 

R.  C.  A.  VICTOR 

In  Honor  Of 

Mardi  Gras  Weekend 


!#► 


207  E.   FRANKLIN  STREET 


By  MARY  ALYS  VOORHEES      | 

Carolina  has  often  been  dubbed  | 
a  fashion-minded  s-chool.  j 

But  from  the  fashions  seen  dur- : 
ing  the  past  weekend,  a  visitor  j 
might  very  well  do  a  double-take  | 
and  wonder  just  what  was  in ! 
vogue  on  the  "Hill."  | 

For  the  most  part  milady  and 
her  Carolina  gentleman  were  at- 
tired in  dinner  jackets  and  form- 
als  for  the  three  pledge  events  of 
the  weekend.  But  it's  the  other 
half  of  the  UNC  population  that 
might  have  worried  a  visitor. 

Walking  down  the  street  he 
might  have  run  into  most  any-type 
of  fashion  from  a  caveman  to 
Daniel  Boone. 

SEASONS  are  often  a  good  ex- 
cuse for  a  party,  as  the  Chi  Ps-is 
will  agree. 

Summer  was  so  far  away,  they 
decided,  and  house  parties  are  so 
much  fun;  thus,  why  not  a  winter 
house  party?  and  a  winter  house 
party  it  was — and  from  most  re- 
ports  quite   a  fabulous     "shindig." 

Probably  the  most  outstanding 
event  during  the  weekend  was 
their  'artisti-  and  models"  costume 
party  Friday  night  with  Barbara 
Prago  and  company  (Bill  Langley 
and  his  Star  Dreamers)  on  hand 
to  provide  the  background  music. 

Undoubtedly  most  couples  spent 
the  majority  of  the  evening  look- 
ing at  others'  costumes  and  try- 
ing to  decide  who  was  who. 

Among     the     masqueraders     at- 
tracting a  good   deal  of  attention  ; 
were   Jack    Lewis    as    a    Hawaiian 
beachcomber  with  Claudia  Milahm, 
who  was  trying  her  best  to  look 
like  a   beer  can.   Fred  and  Nancy ; 
Harriss    dug    back    in    history    to 
represent    Mr.    and    Mrs.    Daniel 
Boone  while  John   Hunnicutt   and  j 
Jean    Crawford    were    dressed    as 
Chinese. 

George  Darmstatter  came  as  an  j 
officer    of    the    gestapo,    bringing 
along     his     Marlboro     cigarette —  | 
Shirley  Williams;  while  John  and  | 
Sally   Dean   and   Nelson   Lavergne 
spent  their  time  winding  about  the  [ 
crowd    as    a    clothesline    (clothes, ' 
clothespin.^'  and  all)  and  Chi  Psis 
and    their    dates    marveled    over 
Tommy    Johnson    and    Sarah    Van 
Weyk's  masquerade  as  the  "Presi- 
dent  of    the    Ugly    Club"    and    his 
"Campus  Queen."' 

Hot  Tottie  and  his  Dixieland 
band  started  out  the  festivities 
Saturday  afternoon  at  the  house — 
with  costumes  replaced  by  Ber- 
mudas. 

Then,  that  evening,  after  a  tur- 
key dinner,  thoughts  turned  to 
UNC'a'  famed  cage  quintet,  and 
pronto,  a  basketball  party.  Some 
party-goers  went  to  the  game,  bul 
the  majority  enjoyed  the  contest 
on  TV,  after  which  a  party  was 
held  in  honor  of  the  team's  vic- 
tory. 

Bill  Langleys  Star  Dreamers 
closed  out  the  weekend  for  the 
Chi  Psis  with  a  combo  concert 
Sunday  afternoon. 


welcoming  party  for  SAE  alumni, 
followed  by  a  buffet  supper  and 
informal  party  at  the  house  for 
alumni  and  their  wives,  SAEs  and 
their  dates. 

Late  Saturday  afternoon  brought 
the  highlight  of  the  weekend  with 
the    centennial    banquet     at    the 


Hope  Valley  Country  Club  in  Dur- 
ham. 

After  a  basketball  party  Satur- 
day evening  with  Bruno's  Combo 
presenting  the  music,  the  weekend 
came  to  a  cloa-e  with  a  buffet  din- 
ner and  farewell  party  for  alumni 
Sunday  afternoon. 


Women  On  Board  Of  Trustees 
Will  Visit  Carolina  Coeds 

A    selected    group    of    80    UNC  i  Mclver     Stanford.     Chapel     Hill, 
coeds    will  attend   a   meeting  to- 1  and    Mrs.    Mebane    H.    Burgwyn, 
morrow   in   order   to  make   plans  |  Jackson; 
for  a  two-day  visit  here  late  this  j     Smith  Dormitory 


month  by  several  women  members 
of  the  Board  of  Trustees. 

The  meeting  will  be  held  at  5 
p.m.  in  Gerrard  Hall,  according  to 
an  announcement  from  the  dean 
of  women's  office.  Chancellor 
Robert  House  will  speak  at  the 
meeting. 

A  final  planning  meeting  will 
be  held  the  following  Thursday 
at  5  p.m.  in  Gerrard  Hall. 

The  women  trustee  members 
will  be  guests  of  the  women  stu- 
dents of  UNC  Monday  and  Tues- 
day,  Feb.   25-26. 

Trustee  members  coming  here, 
including  where  they  will  stay 
while  here,  are  as  follows: 

Alderman  Dormitory  —  Mrs. 
R.  S.  Ferguson,  Taylorsville,  and 
Mrs,  Ed  M.  Anderson;  Mclver 
Dormitory  —  Mrs.  Albert  H.  Lath- 
rop,  Asheville,  and  Mrs.  May  L. 
Tomlinson.  High  Point;  Alpha 
Delta   Pi    Sorority   —   Mrs.    Mary 


—  Mrs.  Nancy 
Hall  Cc^eland,  Murfreesboro, 
and  Mrs.  B.  C.  Parker,  Albemarle; 
Carr  Dormitory  —  Mrs.  J.  B.  Kit- 
rell,  Greenville,  and  Mrs.  Grace 
Taylor  Rodenbrough,  Walnut 
Cove;  Nur.ses'  Dormitory  —  Mrs. 
C.  W.  Tillett,  Charlotte,  and  Mrs. 
Oscar  Barker.  Durham.  Mrs.  P.  P. 
McCain  of  Red  Springs  will  stay 
at  the  Carolina  Inn. 

The  visitors  each  will  have  five 
women  student  hostesses.  The  80 
coeds  are  made  up  of  student 
leaders  and  the  groups  of  five 
hostesses. 


UGLY-CLUB  LEFTOVER 

for   the  Ch'i  Psi  house  party 


Jordan  Cabinet,  King  Tiff 

BEIRUT.  Lebaon  —  (AP)  —I  They  quoted  an  unidentified 
Reports  reaching  here  Tuesday  |  source  close  to  the  royal  palace 
say  King  Hussein  of  Jordan  is  at  j  as  saying  a  crisis  had  been  reach- 
odds  with   his  cabinet  over  Presi-  j  ed.     The    .source     said     the     King 


IDC 


dent     Eisenhower's 
program. 


Middle     East 


Library  School 
Receives  Grant 
For  Recruiting 

Lucille  Kelling.  dean  of  women 
at  the  UNC  School  <jf  Library 
Science,  has  announce^  the  school!  JL"" 


agrees  with  the  Eisenhower  doc- 
trine but  that  "the  government 
does  not  .seem  enthusiatic  about 
combatting    Communism." 

The  young  king's  inclination  to 
accept  the  U.  S.  proposal  became 
apparent  10  days  ago  when  he 
ordered  Premier  Suleiman  Nabul* 
si  to  combat  the  rise  of  Com- 
munists   in   Jordan. 


(Conthiued  from  page  one)        \ 

solicitation.  Jefferies  said  solici- : 
tation  is  not  allowed  (except  for 
newspapers  at  the  beginning  of  j 
the  semester.)  To  sell  anything  in 
the  dorms  the  salesman  must  have 
a  definite  appointment  or  be 
asked  to  come  by.  Any  company 
which  does  not  follow  this  law 
should  be  reported  to  the  dean 
of  student  affairs  office,  he  said. 
Hallford  asked  the  meeting  to 
lok  out  for  "suspicious  people," 
especially  as  the  end  of  the  year 
came  closer.  He  also  said  the  IDC 
favored  renumeration  of  intramu- 
ral managers. 


Letter  Today 

RALEIGH  (/K— A  letter  con- 
taining findings  of  Atlantic 
Coast  Conference  faculty  repre- 
sentatives in  the  Jackie  More- 
land  basketball  case  arrived  at 
N.  C.  State  College  Tuesday  and 
will  be  released  today. 

ACC  faculty  rc|>resentative» 
met  at  Greensboro  Sunday,  but 
ACC  Commissioner  Jim  Weaver 
said  the  members  decided  to  let 
State  College  announce  results 
of  the  investigation,  which  it  re- 
quested after  being  penalized 
for  recruiting  AAoreiand. 


Only  the 

Intiniate 

Bookshop 

Positively 

Guarantees 

Results 

from  its 

Swanky 

Valentines 


George  L.  Coxhead 

♦  U.N.C,  '42  * 

Campus  Representative 


has  received  a  $500  scholarship 
gift  from  the  H.  W.  Wilson  Co.. 
publishers  of  many  library  in- 
dexes and  reference  books. 

The  contribution  is  part  of  a 
nationwide  effort  to  interest  more  i 
young  men  and  women  in  becom- 
ing librarians.  The  amount  in  con- 
tributions totalling  over  $17,500 
was  announced  at  the  midwinter 
meeting  of  the  American  Library  ^ 
Assn.  in  Chicago.  111.  i 


CoufLacation       of       Communist ' 
literature    in    Amma^n    bookshops 
|nd   a   ban   on  the   Soviet  agency 
Followed. 


NEW  YORK  LIFE 

INSURANCE    COMPANY 


CONVENIENT  DAILY  SERVICE 


HY 


TO 

• 

WINSTON-SALEM 

• 

HICKORY 

WILMINGTON 

LOUISVILLE 

CINCINNATI 

■:  ■  ■■  •'' 

COLUMBUS,©. 

•  ■ 

•i 

and  mMy  other  points 

•1 

•1 

^icnmnn. 

r\ 

FOfi  KSCRVATtONS 
C«M  yaw  Tfival  AfMt  ■ 

Tbwiit-nii 


•  •  •  • 


•••••••••* 


DAILY    CROSSWORD 


32. 
.S3. 

36. 

38. 

39. 

41. 
42. 
43. 
44 


ACltOSS 

Shatter 
Of  the  Pop* 
A  can 
(var.) 
Conscious 
Fortified 
Estimates 
Evergreen 
tree 
Over 
Man's 
nickname 
Raised 
Innate 
Stitchbir4 
Nasal 
ao'ind 
More 
infirm 
Sum  up 
"Land  of 
the  Free" 
NaUvc 
village 
(S.Afr.) 
Indefinite 
article 
Want  of 
feeling: 
Perched 
Mother-of- 
pearl 

Christmas 
song 
Mistake 
Lizard 
Cries 
Cat 

DOWN 
Wfld 
sheep 
(India) 
Old  Unt 
State 
Duicing 
girl 

t««npt) 

Killed 


5.  Mortar  22.  WurU 
trough  tern- 

6.  Distributed  berf 
by  parts  mea«> 

7.  Prize  ure 

8.  Muscovy  23.  A 
duck  great 

9.  God  of  slaugh* 
war  (Gr.)  ter 

10.  Minus  24.  Persia 

1«.  Constella-  27.  Land 
tion  meas- 

17.  Handle  ure 
(Rom.)  30.  Month 

18.  Piuses  for  31.  Razor 
breath  strap 

20.  Old  weight  33.  Afresh 
(wool)  34.  Peel 

21.  Biblical  35.  Piece  U 
city  land 


aa-iiMHTj      a^zi 

i:^iflr^m  tiaii;:;u 


1-11 

YMtcrdsx'i  Aaiww 

36.  Medieval 
story 

37.  Native  of 
Middle 
East 

39.  A  pet 
'      40.  Pl*c4 


PRE-raSTORIC  days  at  UNC? 
Sounds  frightful,  doesn't  it? 

But  the  very  mention  of  the  fact 
to  the  Sigma  Chis  and  their  dates 
brings  mirth. 

The  occasion  warrenting  atten- 
tion was  the  annual  Sigma  Chi 
costume  party  staged  Saturday 
night  at  the  house  for  actives, 
pledges  and  their  dates — with  ev- 
eryone dressed  as  cave  men  and 
cave  girls. 


A    CAT    AND    HOOD 
party    with    the    Tri-Delts 
off  the  SAP's  centenial  celebration 
this  weekend. 

Held  out  at  Beulahs  SAEs  and 
their  Tri-Delt  dates— dressed  a^- 
"hoods"  or  "cats"  in  peg  pants 
and  blue  suede  shoes — rocked  and 
rolled  the  evening  away. 

The  100th  anniversary  of  the 
founding  of  the  UNC  chapter  got 
underway  FYiday  afternoon  with  a 


Every    library    school    who    has 
become  a  member  of  the  ALA  will 
receive    a   $500   scholarship   fund. 
There   are    now    35    accredited   li- 
brary scTiools;  ten  of  these  schools 
will     receive     their     scholarship 
funds  in   1958,   10  in   1959  and  the 
other   five   in    1960.   UNC  will   re- 
ceive its  scholarship  fund  in  1959. 
In    announcing   the   grants.   Wil- 
son   Co.    President    Howard    Hay- 
craft    said     'Sharing    with    all    li- 
brary-minded   persons   the   serious 
concern    in    the    currently    acute 
problem  of  library  recruiting,  and 
in    the    hope    of    making    a   useful 
contribution,  the   directors  of  the 
H.  W.  Wilson  Co.  have  voted  these 
scholarships. 
'      "Each  .scholarship  is  to  be  used 
I  by    each    receiving    institution    as 
costume  {  and  when  it  deems  most  suitable," 
started  i  he    said,    "but    preferable  in   such 
a    manner    as    to    further    recruit- 
ment.' 


Gift 
Items 


Select  yours  from  the  House  of  Fashion  . 

A  Large  Variety  And  Assortment  To 

Choose  From,  Including ... 

FOR  HER  !    ^  vv..:  -V ;•',:.  ■ 

V\0^t  t'NGre/E 

SKlRfS 


O 


os-^ 


oH^^ 


y^t^ 


jAP^ 


jkG^ 


^L 


^ 


tfOV 


Vfs 


^ 


oo. 


Sp. 


^Ss 


O^-A 


Covering 


the 


Campus 


Bugle  Owners 
To  Register 
With  Advisors 


Bugle  and  trumpet  woners 
have  been  asked  by  Ray  Jeff- 
eries, Dean  of  Student  Affairs, 
to  give  their  names  to  the  dorm- 
itory advisers. 

Advisors  are  to  give  the 
names  to  Jefferies,  who  will 
•••  the  students  at  his  office 
mnd  explain  the  consequences  of 
using  or  lending  their  instru- 
ments to  start  or  lead  a  panty 
raid. 

He  commented  that  bugles  or 
trumpets  had  been  used  in  the 
past  during  most  raids. 


PHI  ALPHA  THETA 

Phi  Alpha  Theta,   an  honorary 

history  fraternity   announced  that 

a  speech  by  Dr.  George  V.  Taylor 
I  on  "History  and  Human  Nature:  A 
i  Discussion  of  the  Relationship  Be- 
I  tween  History  and  Psychology" 
\  will  be  given  Thursday  at  8   p.m. 

in  the  Library  Assembly  Room. 
WUNC 
Today's  schedule  for  WUNC,  the 
University's  FM  radio  station,  is  as 
follows: 

7:00     Voices  in  Chorus  Sing. 

7:15     Curtain  Going  Up. 

7:30     Songs  of  France. 

7:45    Over  the  Back  Fence. 

8:00     A  Little  Night  Music. 

8:30    Georgetown  University  Ra 
dio  Forum. 

9:00     B.B.C.  Concert  Hall. 
10:00    News.. 
10:15    Evening  Masterwork. 

11:30     Sign  Off. 


FOR  HIM 

JEWEL  BOXES  FOR 


Choose  From  The 

"ESSEX,"  "ASCOT,"  or 

// 


GLOVES 


SWEATERS 


STUDS      -    ^ 


^o^ 


^^^^ 


ieNN^^' 


.?:< 


CAVALIER"'  in  jet  or  brown  or  natural  pig  skin 

^  The  ideal  gift  for  him  . . . 

IT'S  NEVER  TOO  LATE  AT  ROBBINS 

We  Appropriately  Gift  Wrap  In  VALENTINE  Packaging,  Ribbon  s,  and  Bows 


Also 
VOTE  FOR  YOUR  FAVORITE  FOR 

FEBRUARY  FASHION  PLATE 

BALLOTS  AND  BOXES  INSIDE  STORE 


Chapel  Hill's  Gift  Headquarters 


PAOt  POUR 


THl  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


WEDNESDAY,  Fi:BRUARY  13,  1957 


Tar  Heels  Battle  Wake  Forest  Tonight;  Frosh  Play 


Cagers  Seek  20th  Win 
Against  Tough  Baptists 

By  LARRY  CHEEK 

(".arolinas  dog  tired  Tar  Heels,  their  unbeaten  streak 
now  streached  to  a  precarious  length  fate  what  could  be  a 
rather  stickv  rhote  tonight  in  Woollen  (iyni  when  thev  en- 
teriain  the  Wake  Forest  Demon  Deacons,  long  known  iw  the 
spoilers  ol    Big  Four  basketball. 

(ianietinie  for  the  sellout  clash  is  <S  p.m.  following  a 
freshman  preliminarv.  .\s  was  the  Duke  game  Saturday  night, 


this   game   will   be  televised  over  i 
WUNC-TV    with    the    play-by-play 
account  being  furnished   by  radio 
stations  in  the  area. 

The  Tar  Heels  extended  their 
winning  string  to  19  Monday  night ' 
in  Charlottesville.  Va..  by  beating 
back  the  Virginia  Cavaliers.  68-59. 
They  are  number  one  in  the  ACC 
85  well  as  the  nation  with  a  9-0 
league   mark. 

Wake  Forciit  has  won  16  games 
while  losing  four,  and  one  of 
their  losses  came  from  Carolina  in 
the  finals  of  the  Dixie  Classic  in 
Raleigh.  Since  that  setback,  they 
have  dropped  only  one  decision, 
that  coming  last  week  when  they 
dropped  a  54-49  verdict  to  South 
Carolina. 

The  Carolianians,   although  still  i 
w  inning,  have  shown  signs  of  sue- 1 
lumbing  to  the  pressure  of  their  \ 
exalted    position    as    the    nation's 
number  one  team.  Last  week  they  ! 
barely  managed  to  edge  by  Mary- 
land and  Duke,  and  Monday  night 
Virginia  led  for  much  of  the  game  ; 
before   losing  out. 


Carolina 


OPENS  TODAY 


RODGERS  & 
HAMMERSTEIN 

Oklahoma 


7?^ 


V 


CiNemaScoPE  Q 

Colw  b>  TECHNICaO* 

PRICES  THIS  ATTRACTION 

Adults   85c— Children  25c 

HOURS  OP  SHOWS 

1:20-3:52-6:26-8:59 


Lennie  Rosenbluth  and  Tommy 
Kearns  have  been  two  big  reasons 
why  the  Tar  Heels  are  still  un- 
beaten. In  each  of  the  last  three 
games,  these  two  have  come 
through  with  the  baskets  when 
they  were  needed  to  keep  Caro- 
lina  uoscatiied. 

With  the  first  stringers  feel- 
ing the  tension  more  with  each 
passing  game.  Coach  McGuire  has 
little  or  nothing  in  the  way  of 
reserve  strength  to  give  his  start- 
ers a  breathing  spell.  Bob  Young, 
recently  reinstated  center-for- 
ward, saw  considerable  service  in 
both  the  Duke  and  Virginia  games, 
and  will  likely  see  even  more  to- 
night. Danny  Lotz  and  Kenny 
Rosemond  also  should  see  action. 

Wake  Forest  will  come  to  Chap- 
el Hill  with  fire  in  their  eyes, 
determined  to  atone  for  that  63- 
55  loss  to  the  Tar  Heels  in  the 
Dixie  Cla.ssic.  'We  played  lousy 
in  that  one."  Jackie  Murdock. 
brilliant  little  playmaker  for  the 
Deac.'i.  remarked  recently."  W'e 
got  away  to  a  bad  start  and  were 
never  able  to  catch  up.  although 
we  outplayed  them  during  the 
I  second  half."  he  added.  j ' 

The  Deacons  will  field  a  vet- ' 
eran  aggregation  with  many  years 
of  accumulated  experience  be- 
hind tliem.  Jack  Williams  is  their 
leading  scorer  with  a  16.2  average.  ' 
Murdock  is  second  at  15.2  while 
Ernie  Wiggins  is  13.2  and  Jim 
Gilley  is  at  12  even.  Wendell  ' 
Carr  is  the  fifth  starter. 

GMAB  Pool  Tourney 
Begins  This  Afternoon 

Th*    preliminary    round    of    the 
i  GMAB    sponsored    Billiards    Tour- 
nament   will    get    underway    this 
afternoon  at  one  o'clock  according 
to     tournament     director     Lonnie 
i  Stephenson. 

'      The      preliminary      action      will 
i  last   for   two   days   and   out   of   it 
i  will   come    six    winners   who    will  , 
j  advance    to    the    final    round    to , 
I  be  held  Feb.  22. 

Prizes  will  be  awarded  the  top 
three  player.s  and  they  may  also 
win  the  right  to  represent  Caro- 
lina in  the  National  Intercollegi- 
ate Billiards  Tournament  at  the 
University  of  Iowa.  March  23. 


By   JACK   HAND 

MIAMI  BEACH.  Fla.  iiPi-Joe 
Brown's  right  hand  and  Wallace 
(Bud)  Smith's  legs  are  the  main 
factors  in  tonight'o*  15-round  light- 
weight title  match.  Brown  is  a 
lopheavy  favorite  to  retain  the 
crown  he  took  from  Smith  in 
August. 

Chris  Dundee,  co-promoter  with 
the  International  Boxing  Club,  ex- 
pects a  sellout  crowd  of  4.000  and 
a  S20.000  gross  gate  at  the  Miami 
Beach  Auditorium  which  will  be 
housing  its  first  championship 
fight. 


Greensboro  Fish  Whip 
UNC  Freshmen.  50-32 


Record  Breaking  Merman 


Pictured  above  is  Charlie  Krepp,  Carolina's  All-American  swim- 
mer who  in  the  past  few  days  has  smashed  or  equaled  a  pair  of 
NCAA  records.  Krepp  tied  the  100  backstroke  record  Saturday  and 
Monday  he  shattered  the  standard  in  the  100  yard  butterfly. 


IN  CAROLINA  COLLEGIATES: 


Krepp  Sets  Record 
In  100-Butterfly 


By  STEWART  BIRD 

(Due  to  circumstances  beyond 
our  control,  this  story  was  not 
printed  in  yesterday's  Daily  Tar 
Heel,  and  is  t>eing  run  today 
instead — Ed's  note.) 

Carolina  All-American  Charlie 
Krepp  blazed  his  way  to  a  new 
national  record  of  56.5  in  the  100 
yard  butterfly  and  cracked  his 
own  meet  standard  in  the  indivi- 
dual  medley  to  pace  the   field   in 


Climo    (NCS),    (6)     Ernull     (NCS). 
Time:  2:33.2. 

200  backstroke  —  (1)  Sawyer 
(ECC),  (2)  Najh  (L^NC).  (3)  Pace 
(D).  (4)  Thompson  (D),  5)  Veazey 
(UNC).  Time:  2:22.5. 

440  freestyle— (1)  Nauss  (NCS), 
(2)  Schiffman  (UNC),  (3)  McKee 
(ECC),  (4)  Langer  (D).  (5)  Kcmplor 
(D).  (6)  Auman   (D).  Time:  4:47.4. 

100  freestyle  —  (1)  Mclntyrc 
(NCS).  (2)  Rose  {USO.  (3)  McKee 
(ECC).    (4)    Robertson    (NCS).    (5) 


First  Year 
Teams  In 
Prelim  Tilt 

By  BILL  KING 

The  busy  Carolina  Tar  Babies* 
will  get  an  opportunity  to  avenge 
the  one  defeat  that  has  marred 
their  second  semester  record  to- 
night as  Coach  Vince  Grimaldi's 
talented  club  plays  host  to  the 
Wake  Forest  frosh  in  a  prelim- 
inary contest  to  the  varsity  game 

^  in  Woollen  Gym  at  6  o'clock. 
The  Tar  Babies  will  be  out   to 

;  turn  the  tables  on  the  only  team 
that    has    beaten   them   since   the 

i  exams  layoff,  a  game  which  Gri- 

I  maldi  called,  "the  worst  game  we 

j  have     played     this     season.     "The 

i  Baby  Deacs  walloped  the  frosh  9.S- 
67. 

Since  then,  the  Tar  Babies  have 
ripped  through  opponents  by  con- 
vincing   scores.    The    only    really 

j  tough  competition  the  Tar  Babies 

I  have  encountered  since  early  Janu- 

'  ary  was  against  the  Duke  Blue 
Imps  Monday  night..  The  Duke 
frosh  ran  up  a  37-29  halftime  lead 
but  the  Tar  Babies  came  back  with 
the  kick  of  a  shotgun  to  complete- 

I  ly   overwhelm   their  Durham   visi- 

itors.  83-71. 

The  talented  Tar  Babies  will  lay 

I  a  handsome  12-3  record  on  the  line 

t  tonight   in   the   opener  of   a   two- 
game  extravaganza  which  sees  the  i 
highly   regarded   varsities   of   the 

}  two  schools  lock  horns  at  8  p.m. 
in    a    game   that   should    prove    a 

,  real  thriller. 

I  Despite  the  fact  that  the  Baby 
Deacs  have  been  the  hottest  fresh- 
man club  in  the  state  of  late,  Gri- 
maldi  is  anxious  to  get  another 
crack  at  them.  "We  could  never 
play   as   badly   as   we   did    in   the 

I  first  game,"  he  said.  "Were  look- 

I  ing  forward  to  meeting  them 
again."    " 

Grimaldi  will  go  with  the  same 
talented  lineup  that  he  has  used 
throughout  the  season.  High  scor- 
ing Lee  Shaffer,  who  was  the  star 
of   the   second    half   in    the   Duke 

,  same,  will   be   the   starter  at   one'  f'"f'o''fer  (C),   (2)   Burwell    (G),   (3) 

j  forward  post  with  York  Larese  at  1  Schiffman  (G).  Time:  2.38.1. 
the  other.  Lanky  Dick  Keplcy  will  j  . 

get    the    call    at    center    and    Mike    "'■~~— ■~~~~^~~~^^--^-^^— 
Steppe  and  John  Crotty  will  go  at 
the  guard  positions. 


Why  Be  A 


Brown  And  Smith  Clash  One-Man  Dog? 
For  Lightweight  Crown 


Miami  and  the  surrounding  area 
will  be  blacked  out  of  the  TV  pic- 
ture but  the  rest  of  the  nation 
will  get  network  (ABC)  coverage 
on  radio  and  TV  starting  at  10 1 
p.m.  EST. 

W^hen  Brown,  30,  stripped  Smith, 
27,  of  his  title,  Aug.  24  at  Ncv/ 
Orleans  the  battle  was  scored  by 
rounds  and  resulted  in  a  split  de- 
cision. Under  Miami  Beach  rules, 
scoring  will  be  by  the  "must  10" 
point  system  in  which  the  winner 
of  a  round  gets  10  points  and  the 
loser  9,  8  and  so  on. 


By  STEWART  BIRD 

Carolina's  luckless  Tar  Baby 
mermen  lost  their  second  dual 
meet  of  the  season  to  powerful 
Greensboro  High,  50  to  32.  yester- 
day afternoon  in  Bowman  Gray 
Pool. 

Departing  from  the  usual  pro- 
gram of  events,  the  two  teams 
swam  regular  collegiate  distances 
in  the  ten  even  t  program.  The 
Flyers  outnumbered  the  frosh  in 
iivjl  places,  six  to  four,  one  less 
than  they  garnered  in  their  last 
meeting  with  the  Tar  Babies. 

High  point  honors  were  shared 
by  Nance  of  Greensboro  and 
Wachendorfer  for  Carolina.  Nance 
took  the  220  freestyle  and  the  200 
backstroke,  while  the  UNC  frosh 
star  captured  the  220  butterfly  and 
220  breaststroke  events. 

100  yard  freestyle— (1)  Burwell 
(G).  (2)  Roo-en  (C),  (3)  Hubner  (G). 
Time:  55.3. 

200  yard  backstroke— (1)  Nance 
(G),  (2)  Younts  (C),  (3)  Jobes  {C). 
Time:  2:29.0. 

200  yard  breaststroke— (1)  Wach- 


400  yard  freestyle  relay — (G) 
Hubner.  Nance,  Hudgins,  Stout. 
Time:  3:54.1. 


THURSDAY 


-NOW  PLAYING- 

The  Bad  Seed  Is  The  Big  Shocker! 

"THE  BAD  SEED'' 

Starring 

Nancy  Kelly— Patty  McCormack 


the   fourth   annual   Carolina  CoUe-  j  Roth  (UNO.  (6)  Young  (D).  Time: 

giates  held  .Monday  night  in  Bow-    50.6.  New  meet  record.  Old  record. 

man  Gray  Pool.  j  50.8  Mclntyre  (NCS)  1956. 

I  Diving— (1)   Mclnnis.    (2)    Midyette 

'  (ECC).     (3)     Meekins     (UNC),     (4) 

,  .  .    ,     ,  ,   ,        Parker    (UNO.    (5)    Marks    (NCS), 

time  of  58.8  which   had  stood  fori 

two  years.  In  the  last  event  of  the 
program,  the  200  individual  med- 
ley,   he    lowered    his    meet    record 


The  Tar  Heel  captain's  perform- 
ance  in   the   butterfly   erased   the 


(6)  Dyer  (I-X'O. 
100  buttcrilv 


Foreign  Film 
Tickets  Are 
On  Sale  At  GM 

Foreign   Film  Series   tickets  for 
the    spring    semester   are   now    on 


i      .^^  ^.....     (1)  Krepp  (UNC), 

1(2)    Fadgcn     (NCS).     (3)     Zickgraf  I  sale  in   the  Graham   Memorial    in 

formation    office. 


^      (UNO.  (4)  Goad  (UNC),  (5)  Climo 
by  two  full  seconds,  swimming  the  ,  ^^^    ^g,  ^^.^^^j,  ^^^,^^    ^^^^^^,  ^^ 

distance  in  2:10.1.  ^qq     breaststroke-(l)     Mahaffy 

For  Krepp,  it  was  his  fourth  I  (UNO,  (2)  Koebcrling  (ECC),  (3) 
record  in  two  days.  Saturday  aft-  j  Mercer  (UNO,  (4)  Goad  (UNO.  (5) 
ernoon  against  Clemson  he  tied  Climo  (NCS).  Time:  1:08.7. 
the  National  Collegiate  standard  of  i  100  backstroke— (1)  Mclntyre 
56.5  for  the  100  yard  backstroke  !  (NCS).  (2)  Sawyer  (ECC),  (3)  Nash 
and  broke  hi.v  own  ACC  Ume  for  i  (NC),  (4)  Pace  (D),  (5)  Veazcy 
the  200  backstroke  with  a  time  of  |  (UNO,  (6)  Thompson  (D).  Time: 
2:06.3.  j  1  01-8. 

Carolina  completely  dominated  I  ^0  freestyle-(l)  Roth  (UNC), 
the  meet,  sweeping  7  of  the  13|'2>  Mclntyre  (NCS).  (3)  Robertson 
first  places  and  a  host  of  seconds 


and  thirds.  Other  outstahding  per- 
formers in  addition  to  Krepp  were 
Bill  Roth,  winner  over  Dick  Mc- 
lntyre of  State  in  the  50-yard  free- 
stylo,  and  gold  medal  winners  Mac 
Mahaffey,  Mac  Mclnnis,  and  Tom 
Goad. 

"^'^  SUMMARY 

400  freestyle  relay— (1)  Krepp, 
Zickgraf,  Rose.  Roth  (UNC).  (2) 
Duke  (3)  ECC  time:  3:340.7. 

200  butterfly— (1)  Fadgen  (NCS) 
(2)  Mahaffy  (UNC)  (3)  Turner 
(UNC)  (4)  Gartman  (ECO,  (5)  Oliv- 
er (ECC).  Time:  2:17.4. 

200  breaststroke  —  (1)  Goad 
(UNC),  (2)  Mercer  (UNC),  (3)  Mor- 
gan (D),  (4)  Koebcrling  (ECC).  (5) 


I  (NCS),  (4)  Young  (D),  (5)  Meades 
(ECC),  (6)  Manco's  (UNC).  Time: 
22.9. 

220  freestyle— (1)   Nauss   (NCS), 

(2)  Rose  (UNO.  (3)  Schiffman 
(NO,  (4)  Soule  (D),  (5)  McKee 
(ECC),  (6)  Hattler  (D).  Time: 
2:10.1. 

200      individual      medley  —  (1) 
Krepp   (UNO.    (2)   Fadgen    (NCS). 

(3)  Zickgraf  (UNO.  (4)  Mahaffy 
(UNC),  (5)  Schiffman  (UNO,  (6) 
Roberts  (D).  Time:  2:10.1. 


Tickets  arc  priced  at  $2  for 
the  showing  of  eight  foreign 
films.  The  films  will  be  shown  on 
Thursday  nights  in  Carroll  Hall 
at  8  p.m.  throughout  the  semester. 
Included  in  the  schedule  are  films 
from  Mexico,  France,  Italy  and 
Russia. 

Presented  by  the  Foreign  Films 
Committee  will  be  "The  Young 
and  the  Damned."  "The  Little 
World  of  Don  Camillo."  "Open 
City."  "Symphonic  Pastoral,"  "Po- 
temkin,"  "Film  Without  a  Name." 
"Lcs  Parents  Terrible."  and  "You 
Can't  Take  It  with  You." 


BOB   and   MONK 
of 

TOWN  & 
CAMPUS 

SALUTE 
Athlete  Of  The  Week 


Baseball  Meeting 

Baseball  coach  Walter  Rabb 
has  urged  all  freshman  and  var- 
sity baseball  candidates  to  meet 
in  room  304  Woollen  tomorrow 
afternoon  at  2:30.  Varsity  prac- 
tice will  get  underway  imme- 
diately following  the  meeting. 


%. 


W4, 


c/. 


% 


''f  r-  AIMS 


TAN 


%f 


% 


SlNo/^ 


DANZIGER'S 

CANDIES 


5,"^ 


Kemp  Is  Having 

AAARDI  GRAS' 

Too! 
Thursday^-Friday—Saturday— Monday 


ALL  KINDS  OF 


A  2 


PRICES 


12"  LP's  At  Lowest  Ever  .  .  . 
$2.90  and  $3.90  .  .  .  Some  LP's  At  $2.50 

Special  ''Mardi  Gras''  Rack 

10.  LP's  For  $7.00 


\^ 


207  E.  FRANKLIN  STREET 


CHARLIE  KREPP 

Swimmer  Charlie  Krepp  has 
been  named  Athlete  of  the 
Week  for  his  four  record  break- 
ing performances  of  the  past 
week.  On  Saturday  the  Carolina 
All-American  tied  the  National 
Collegiate  mark  for  the  100 
yard  backstroke  with  a  time  of 
56.5  and  broke  his  own  pool, 
university  and  ACC  standard 
for  the  200  yard  backstroke 
with  a  time  of  2:06.3.  Monday 
night  he  shattered  the  National 
Collegiate  record  of  58.8  for  the 
100  yard  breaststroke  with  a 
time  of  56.5  and  broke  his  own 
Carolina  Collegiate  meet  mark 
in  the  200  yard  individual  med- 
ley with  a  clocking  of  2:10.2. 

We  want  him  to  drop  by 
TOWN  A  CAMPUS  and  pick  out 
a  shirt  to  his  liking— con>pli- 
monts  of  the  house.. 

We  want  the  old  and  young 
alike  of  Chapel  Hill  to  make 
TOWN  A  CAMPUS  their  head- 
quarters for  the  finest  in  men's 
clothing.  Drop  in  today. 

TOWN& 
CAMPUS 


Send  out  dozens 
of  our  irresistable 
Valentines  and 
prepare  for  a  hectic 
Spring. 

The  Intimate 
Bookshop  ^ 

205  E.  Franklin  St. 
Open  Till  10  P.  M. 


Howard  Johnson  Restaurant 

BREAKFAST  r     , 


LUNCH 


DINNER 


:    :    :        SNACKS 
landmark  For  Hungry  Tarheels" 


IN  THE  FINEST 
TRADITION 

Natural  Shoulder 
Formal  Clothes . .  v 


The  peaked 
ivy  lapel, 
subtly  treat- 
ed to  assure 
complete 
correctness 
for  the  most 
demanding 
gentleman. 


The  fabric 
.  .  .  comfort- 
able, light 
weight 
worsted 
wool  .  .  .  the 
color  .  .  . 
black,  as  al- 
ways. 


Handsome 
matching 
cummer- 
bund and 
set.  New 
black  cor- 
dovan or 
calf  formal 
loafers. 


tie 


4 


Julian' 


^■•■^^^i^PW^^^^P^il"^ 


^•^^^f^^^^^^^^^^mm^f^^i^m 


^^■•PP^iP^iWPPPi 


«4jtl  ItXl,  M.  C. 


ACC  Finds  State  Guilty  On  Two  Counts  Of  Moreland  Aid 


R.VLEIGH— <AP)— The  Atlantic  Coast  Conference  has  reaffirmed  that 
^'orlh  Oarolina  State  College  was  guilt.v  on  two  charges  of  giving 
aid  to  ba   .etball  star  Jackie  Moreland  and  has  closed  the  case. 

This  was  disclosed  Wednesday  in  the  ACC  findings  released  by 
I)..  Carey  H.  Bostian,  State  College  chancellor.. 

The  NCAA  slapped  a  four-j'ear  probationar>-  sentence  on  State 
College  for  alleged  recruiting  violations  in  the  case. 

Dr.  Bostian  issued  a  long  prepared  statement  in  which  he  said 
he  was  writing  "'all  of  those  principal  witnesses  whose  names  were 


given  to  us  by  the  NCAA"  asking  them  to  appear  in  a  hearing  in 
Louisiana  on  or  about  Feb.  23  before  a  committee  representing  Stale 
College. 

"I  am  asking  them  to  confront  the  individuals  who  have  been 
charged  with  the  violations  of  NCAA  and  ACC  rules,'  he  stated. 

Bostian  released  a  copy  of  a  letter  from  ACC  Commissioner  Jiin 
Weaver  containing  findings  of  the  ACC  faculty  representatives  at  a 
meeting  in  Greensboro  Sunday. 

Th«  faculty  committee  ruled  that  the  ACC  will  not  sponsor  an 
open  hearing  on  the  Moreland  case  as  State  had  requested.  It  wras 


pointed  out  the  ACC  does  not  have  the  authority  to  subpoena  wit- 
nesses for  an  open  hearing. 

Weaver,  the  statement  said,  had  contacted  certain  witnesses  and 
had  learned  that  some  of  them  would  not  appear  to  give  evidence 
at  an  open  hearing.. 

In  reaffirming  its  findings.  The  ACC  held  State  was  guilty  of 
offering  Moreland  $80  to  pay  his  way  to  Raleigh  for  enrollment  in 
the  college  and  offering  him  a  5-year  unrcolricted  scholarship. 

Originally  the  ACC  imposed  a  $5,000  fine  on  State  College,  which 
was, to  be  paid  if  Moreland  left  school.   The  former  high  school  star 


at  Minden,  La.,  dropped  out  of  school  recently. 

in  its  ruling,  the  ACC  reduced  the  penalty  fro  $5,000  to  $2,500. 
It  said  the  college  had  "partially  fulfilled  the  intent  of  the  com- 
missioner's   ruling"   by    stating    that    Moreland    could    retain    the 
grant-in-aid   whether  he  was  eligible  or  not. 
The  ACC  ruled  in  December  that  Moreland  was  ineligible.   At 
the  same  time,  it  imposed  the  basketball  staff  would  not  be  allowed 
to  recruit  off  campus  for  one  year. 

Going  i'till  further,  the  ACC  said  the  college  will  not  be  allowed 
(see   MORELAND   page   6) 


WEATHER 

Sunny  and  cool,  with  an  expect- 
ed high  of  55. 


VOL.  LVII  NO.  98 


2r()  c  Daily 


ATHLETICS 

The    series    is    Underway    again. 
See  editorial  page. 


Complete  (>f*)   Wire  Serwei 


CHAPEL  HILL  NORTH  CAROLINA,  THURSDAY,  FEBRUARY  14,  1957 


Officeg   in   Graham   Memorial 


SIX   PAGES  THIS   ISSUE 


Cagers  Stop  Late 
Deacon  Spurt  To 
Take  72-69  Win 

By   LARRY   CHEEK 

North  Carolina's  scrambling  Tar    wii.j  a  litlle  over  a  minute  left. 
ficcLs  ainioat  blew  an  11  point  lead        Then  Kearns  repeated  his  stunt 
in  the  last  3  minutes  last  night,  but    of  the  Duke  game  by  sinking  two 
huiu   on   to  eke   out   a   72-69  win    free  throws  to  put  the  Tar  Heels 
over  Wake  Forest  before  a  scream-  1  up   by   three.   70-67.   This   was   the 


iiig    crowd 

G.vm.  * 

The  thrilling  win  was  Carolina's 
20th  without  a  loss  and  their  10th 
ill  conference  play.  Wal^c  Forest 
is  now  6-4  in  the  conference. 

The  margin  between  the  two 
teams  was  airtight  all  the  way  un- 
til UNC  gua-d  Bob  Cunningham 
iK'gin  hitting  late  in  the  game 
to  op?n  up  a  Tar  Heel  g^p.  The 
Ca'olinjan?  led  by  two  points. 
58-,">6.  with  7  minutes  to  go.  but 
thon      C'.;nn-n^hnm      dumped      in 


of    5.600    in    Woollen  j  clincher    as    each    squad    hit    for 
j  two  more  points. 

Carolina  fought  off  the  Deacon's 
blazing  stretch  drove  with  two 
starters.  Lennic  Rosenbluth  and 
Pete  Brcnnan.  riding  the  bench, 
uosenbhith.  the  night's  high  scor- 
er with  24  points,  fouled  out  with 
3:07  to  go.  while  Brcnnan  suf- 
fered a  sprained  ankle  in  the  first 
h-alf  and  played  only  sparingly 
in  the  .socc-nd  .<t•^nz3. 

Rosrnbhith  made  10  of  15  shots 
from  the  floor  and  4  of  5  from 
6  straight  points  to  stretch  the  lead!  five  line  to  ama'^s  his  total.  Joe 
t ;   R4-.")7.  I  Q-jtg^r    and    Cnnningham    tied    for 

Bob  YoT<n:r  and  Tommy  Kearns  j  rnnnenip  honor.'^.  each  with  14. 
c-h  srirjk  a  ba^kot.  and  the  Tar ,  q.j-,^;..  dragred  do'vn  11  rebounds 
Heeds   I""!   m-M   mth   3:36  to  go.    j     i^^d  «t  that  dcoartment. 


Then  Wa'^c  Foce^t 
inr  Ih"  orn«s.  and 
Iccri   d'vindled   to    1 


began  apply- 
th**  Carolina 
point.    68-€7, 


McGuire: 
Team 
As  Ti 


No 


ght 


Jim  Cf'iUpy'  and  Jackie  Murdock 
each  Had  18  points  for  tlw?  Dea- 
cons. „    ,  t 

Carolina    had    a   field   goal    pev- 

con'agc  of  only  36  4  for  the  first 

hall,  but    upped   it  to  4a.'5   for  tlv 

I  -nMrc  game  with  some  hot  second 

I  hali"   marksmanship.    Wake    Forest 

'  bit  41  9. 

i  The  Tar  Hecl«  led  at  haiftime. 
I  31 -21).  gaining  the  margin  on  a  last 
i  5cccii  1  basket  by  Ro.sen  :luth. 


By    BILL    KIN& 

The  Tar  llcel  coach  looked  a 
lif.lc  mi.Tc  reaxcd  af'er  that  one 
la.-i  nisht  th;in  ;hc  cii'l  S.Tlurday 
ni?hl  dgain-l  Ih?  Duke  Blue  Devi'  , 
am;  .so  did  his  ball  club.  "Th"y 
were  n.'t  as  ti^ht  tonight  as  thty 
w.rc  again.-;!  Duke."  said  co.Kh 
I'Vank  JTcGuirc  after  his  team's 
72-6P  win  over  Wake  Forest,  liie 
20  h  straight  for. the  Tar  HocL. 

The  team  had  just  lilcd  into  i-s 
dressing  room  i.n  Woollen  Gym  fol- 
lowing another  spinc-linalcr  against 
ai:  .MJanlic  Coa-.  Conference  foe. 
1  h'>!>c  spine-tinglers  are  getting  to 
».!•  a  ha'uit  wit  the  Tar  Heels  now- 
a'iay^  l^st  nighis  thriller  was  ihc 
lourth  .straight  of  such  heart  stop- 
pf'.i  thai  has  proba  jly  given  many 

(See  McGVIRE,  Page  6) 


THE 

BOX 

Wak*  Forest 

G 

F 

P 

T. 

Williams,  f 

4 

1-2 

4 

9 

tarr.  f 

3 

4-7 

4 

10 

Odrm.  f     , 

1 

0-0 

0 

2 

Cilley.  c   j^.^  „ 

4 

8-13 

3 

16 

Wiggins,   g.   .  . 

4 

4^4 

2 

12 

Aiurdock,  g    .      . 

4 

8-9 

1 

16 

Bioai..v.a>,  g 

2 

0-0 

0 

4 

Totals  ,     , 

22 

25-35 

14 

69 

N.  Carolina 

G 

F 

P 

T 

Riscnbluth.  f 

10 

4-5 

5 

24 

Brcnnan.   f 

1 

01 

1 

2 

Lotz.   f 

1 

1-2 

1 

3 

Qiiigg.  g     

6 

2-3 

3 

14 

Young,  c    

I 

2-2 

4 

4 

Kearns.   g    . 

3 

5-7 

3 

H 

Cunningham,  g  . 

6 

23 

3 

14 

Tcta's 
Wake   Forest   . . 
North  Carolina 


28 


16-23 
29 
31 


20  72 
40—^9 
41—71 


ON  SELF-UQUIOATING  BASIS: 

Student  Leaders  Favor 
Married  Housing  Move 


Student  government's  executive  i 
branch  su;)poils  the  administra- j 
tion's  proposal  for  coiutrucUon  of  { 
marred  student**  housing  units  on  ^ 
^l  sclf-liquidaling  basis.  President 
Bob  Ycung  said  yesterday. 

Young  .said  he  hoped  the  Gen  , 
cral  .^sscmbly  might  appropriatr 
funds  for  such  construction.  As  nc  j 
suh  appropriation  was  made,  j 
Young  said,  the  self-liquidating  j 
proposal  is  now  the  "quickest  so-  j 
lution "         r  1 

UP  Floorleador  Bonny  Thomas  | 
said  he  thought  tho  plan  was  j 
"feasible"  If  "rent  ewW  be  kept  i 
low  enough  to  bo  within  reach  j 
cf  the  average  marrlod  eouplo." 
Thon«as  emphasliotl  the  "Im-  ; 
portance"  of  the  married  $eg-  1 
mont  of  tho  campui^  ! 

Spokesmen  for  the  Student  and 
University  Parties  concurred  with 
President  Young. 
PARTY  SPOKf SMAN 

SP  floorleader-Chalnnan  Sonny 
Hallford  said  he  felt  the  move 
^as  a  -positive  step  being  under- 
taken to  remedy  a  need  and  should 


receive  full  endorsement  of  all 
oncerncd."  Hallford  also  urged 
legislative  consideration  of  the 
new  student  union  building  in 
'the  near  future." 
RESOLUTiaN 

Legislature  floorleaders  Hall- 
lord  and  Thomas  said  they  would 
propose  a  resolution  at  tonight's 
session  endorsing  the  self-liquida- 
ting plan  for  marriled  housing. 

It  is  probable  that  special  or- 
iers  will  be  moved  to  enable  the 
•esolution's  passage  at  the  session. 
STUDENT  UNION 

President  Young  said  he  would 
talk  to  Consolidated  University 
President  William  Friday  this 
morning  to  determine  a  method  of 
expressing  the  student  body's  sen- 
timent to  the  Genera]  Assembly 
on  the  proposal  and  the  rejected 
proposal  for  a  student  union  build- 
ing. 

Young  said  If  no  action  coulrf 
bo  taken  on  tho  new  buiMIng 
this  year,  ho  plans  "to  got  tho 
request  placed  at  the  top  of  the 
budget  list  in  1959." 


Doctrine  Passes 

WASHINGTON  —  (AP)  —  A 
revamped  Middle  Eastern  reso- 
lution, proclaiming  the  readi- 
ness of  the  United  States  to 
fi.?ht  Communist  aggression  in 
the  strategic  area  if  President 
Eisenhower  deems  that  neces- 
sary, was  approved  Wednesday 
by  two  powerful  senate  com- 
mittees. 

Israel  Withholds 

JERUSALEM  — (AP  —Israel 
put  off  any  momentous  decision 
on  the  Aqaba  Gulf  and  Gaza 
strip  issues  Wednesday.  Instead, 
she  asked  Washington  for  clari- 
fication of  the  United  States 
position  on  those  barriers  to 
Middle    East    peace. 

The  Israeli  foreign  ministry 
s?ught  further  information  on 
details  it  considered  vague  in  a  - 
plan  Secretary  of  State  Dulles 
presented  .Monday  to  get  Israeli 
troops  out  of  the  last  of  the 
Eg?ptinq  territory  they  seized 
la^^t  fall.'.       .....,_  .'.   .  .       Ji^ 

To  promote  the  troop  with- 
dr^'val  demanded  by  UN  reso- 
lutions, Dulles  conditionally  of- 
fered US  support  for  free  navi- 
gation in  the  Gulf  of  Aquaha 
long  closed  to  the  Israelis  by 
Egypt'an  guns,  and  for  a  UN 
force  of  some  kind  to  sec  Gaza 
is  not  used  again  fcr  Arab  raids 
on  Israel. 

South  Gels  Respite 

WASHINGTON  —  (AP)  — 
Southerners,  battering  at  Civil 
Rights  legislation  as  evil,  dan- 
gerous and  a  "bunch  of  gar- 
bage," wrung  from  a  House  pudi- 
ciary  subcommittee  Wednesday 
a  12-day  respite  before  hearings 
are  halted. 

The  time  element  is  important 
to  chances  of  passing  such  legis- 
lation. Delaying  tactics  at  every 
turn  are  a  Southern  stratagem. 

The  subcommittee  i^  consider- 
ing bills  to  give  the  federal  go- 
vernment stronger  powers  to 
combat  any  violations  of  civil 
rights   in   the  states. 

Southerners  conteid  this 
would  trample  on  the  rights  of 
the  states:  that  ..they  already 
are  handling  the  problem  ade- 
quately. An  aVay  of  them  ap- 
peared before  the  subcommittee 
Wednesday. 

tngland  Ups  Bombs 

LONDON  —  (AP)  —  Prime 
Minister  MacMillan's  govern- 
ment won  Parliamentary  ap- 
proval Wednesday  for  an  eco- 
nomy defense  program  stressing 
niiclear  weapons  to  discourage 
attacks  by  swift  Sftviet  strato- 
sphere atom  rockets. 

Sales  Tax? 

RALEIGH— (iP— The  General  As 
sembly  was  told  Wednesday,  in 
effect,  that  if  it  is  determined 
to  raise  salaHes  of  teachers  and 
state  employees  above  the  levels 
proposed  by  Gov.  Hodges  it 
should  look  into  elimination  of 
sales  tax  exemptions  in  order 
to  find  the  money. 

Dock  Strike  Again 

NEW  YORK  —(AP)—  The  sec- 
ond dock  strike  in  three  months 
yesterday  held  tight  grip  on  At- 
lantic ports  from  Maine  to  Vir- 
ginia. Mile  upon  mile  of  busy  wa- 
terfront subsided  to  almost  ghost- 
like silence. 

The  International  Longshore- 
men's Assn.  (Ind)  said  its  renewed 
contract  strike  was  lOo  per  cent 
effective  among  its  4fi,000  dockers. 

No  om;  disputed  the  cotimate. 


VALKYRIES  CURTIS,  FLOYD,  HAMMOND,  LeGRANDE,  MOORE,  SILLAY   AND  WA  DSWORTH 

•■  .j;''\  j^,  ...new  vieinbers  of  Carolina's  highest   irom-cn)>  honorary  organization  .J'  " 

Six  Sembrs,  One  Grad  Student 
Receive  Coeds'  Highest  Honor 


"'J*  .-"f  if  f 


mmimmmimmit^mimmiimmi' 


or  T<5T 
25.0 


11.11  C.  CHN«kf?E4   ^«I4.- 


r    fi 


IVEWSftY-      $  8»05U7$f 


Valkyrie    Initiation 
Held    Before   Dawn 

Six  st'Jiioj  (.occls  and  one  ^raduaic  student   were  tap|>ed 
into  C.avoliii;  "s  hii>hcsi   \v«»n»eiv's  himoravy   this  mominji. 


riie  orqrani/.atioii  is  the  N'alkviifs.  founded  here  i(»  veavs 


;i'4(). 


'm^:% 


bjd  €.  WOIIAN*S     COLLEGE  rr    $2,701,776 

EAST    CAROUH*!  feOtLtek  -    $2,324,343 

AST    COLL£g£*^      *    i,  S8I.776 

HORTM    GAROLliw   OC^Ll-EeE    At   tkifefiM—   $  1,75^ Ot I 

APPAL ACMAN   $tA:Ce    Tf  A<|HCRS    ^<5U-t3^  ~    $  I,e74,440 

WESTERN   CA«OUl«ACeLL EG c—     $1^77.751 

IWHSTON-SALEW   TEACtttBS    COLLEGE-    $624,177 

FAYETTE VrLLE      STAt£    TEACHERS   GDLLeeE-    $4$3.6iO 

ELJr.ASETrf    CITY     STAtE     TEAGMERS    COLLEGE—    $430,2$$ 


P€  t*^HQiiE    ^r.Ajs,    C^  UL  £  ^.£  ~  $  2  2€j06:7 

'_   .  TOTAL    S£MfO=R      O0iL£65:S    -.#  ^1,569,  » 55.  9g.| 

COl»A*Uf^tV    'colleges-   STATE   0RjM«TSli**A»  606, 8  SO  ,1.9 

TO^ftt-»lSTrtUlK)WS  OF  Hi»€RE«IC^^      $^17^^33      lOO 

t  jfjwec.t. ...  ^...^.>». ..v.... .^ —  - ■ 

Recommended  Budget  For  Education 

Listed  above  in  graph  form  art  the  recommended  appropriations  before  the  legislature  for  education 
and  institutions  of  higher  learning  for  1957-59.  Th  i  sums  above  do  not  include  funds  for  adjustment 
of   salaries   nor   general   fund   appropriations   for   ca  ^ital   improvements. 

UNC  Budget  Appropriation 
Goes  To  1 3  University  Areas 


Ifte  ( ords  arc  l.ce  .Viin  Ctirti.^,  mafheinatJf?  st'iiior  horn 
.\orlolk.  \a.:  (iini^er  L.  Floyd.  poliiKal  x  ieiu  e  soiiioi  from 
Haines  (;it\.  Ma.; 

Margot  Carrington  Hammond.  |  spiration  to  those  with  whr)m  she 
elementary  education  senior  from  '  ha>   worked." 

Greensboro;  Kathryn  Jewel  Le-  Miss  Hammond:  •.  .  is  recog- 
Grande.  hist:ry  senior  from  Day- ;  nized  for  her  quiet  manner  and 
lona   Beach,   Fla.;  |  genuinene.ss  in   working  with   (fth- 

Barbara  Gail  Moore,  medical  j  ers.  While  she  is  always  willing 
technology  senicr  from  Canton;  to  lend  a  helping  hand,  she  ac- 
Martha  Jeanne  Sillay.  English  sen-  ,  -epts  only  what  she  can  cfficient- 
ior  from  .\tlanta.  and  Barbara  i  ly  fulfill,  and  has  been  most  eon- 
Wadsworth.  School  of  Education  j  tribiitivc  in  this  unrecognized  scr- 
graduatc    student    fr:  m    the    Uni- 1  vice." 


vcrsily    of    Toronto    and    Hender- 
sonville. 

The    purpose    of    the    Valkyries 
is   t:)    'unite    in    a    common    bond 


Mi«s  Floyd:  'Through  dedicated 
lurnose  she  has  shswn  strength 
of  character  and  depth  of  con- 
viction  as   a   leader.   We   feel   she 


those  wom3n  who  have  shown  by  I  has    completely    given    of    herself 


their  lives  such  a  devotion  to  the  j 
ideals  of  character,  attitude,  ser- 1 
vice,  sound  judgment,  leadership  ^ 
ard  s  holarship  thit  thy  may  in  | 
spire  t'vs  devotion  in  oth?rs  an-  | 
th;;t  they  msy  strive  together  to-; 
ward    these   ideals." 

Cit:itions  road   by  th?   Valkyries 
to   the   new  members  were:  I 

Miss  Wadsworth;   "In  her  .short  | 
re>idence   here   she   has  given    un-  | 
selfishly  of  h:r  tim?  and    energies  j 
in  fostering  good  will  and  coopera- . 
ti   n  in  the  groups  with  which  she 
has  worked.   Her  devotion   to   the 
betterment  of  sU'dent  life  and  the 
community    is    expressed    by    her 
concern  and  consideraticn  for  oth-  ; 
ers   and   action.      Eager     to     help  ; 
when     needed     in     'litlle'     things.  ( 
and   responsible,   reliable   capacity 
in    'bigger"    duties,    she    demon-, 
strates   an   unselfish   spirit  of  giv- ' 
ing." 


*o\hcr   campus     obligations     and 
hrough  her  contributions  has  ren- 
'"-' >'t    iint~ld    Service." 
Miss  Cur:  e;  "A  vHacious  leader 

"th  a  sincorf*  and  svmpath'tic  in- 
'-^r^st    'n    ctb^^^,    Her    reliability 

nd  consricnt'  iisness  have  been 
•loted  i.i  hrr  contributions  to  stu- 
'ent  "overnnT-nt.  VWC.\  work 
^nd  the  beJtermont  of  sorority 
•'fe." 


UP  Sets  Up 
Method  To 
Nominate 


By    CLARKE   JONES 

The  $8  million  budget  recom- 
mended Monday  for  UNC  by 
the  Advisory  Budget  Committee 
will  be  apportioned  to  13  se- 
perate  areas  within  the  Univer- 
sity. 

The  appropriations,  if  approv- 
ed by  the  General  Assembly 
now  in  session  in  Raleigh,  will 
be  divided  among  the  follow- 
ing: 

Administration  and  general 
expense;  instruction  and  depart- 


mental research;  summer  school: 
extension  and  public  services: 
publications,  publicity,  public 
information  and  public  occas- 
sions;  student  welfare; 

.Maintenance  and  operation 
of  plant,  custodial  care;  air- 
pcrt;  additions  and  betterrhents; 
debt  ser\'ice;  reserve  and  merit 
salary  increments  and  salary 
increases. 

The  total  recommendations  to 
UNC  by  the  Budget  Commis- 
sion   actually    came    to    almost 


$14  million.  The  S8  million 
figure  was  arrived  at  after  sub- 
tracting the  estimated  receipts 
— about  S6  million — from  the 
different   divisions. 

The  Consolidated  University 
appropriaticn  recommendations 
total  S255.922.  to  be  divided 
among  the  administration  and 
general  expense:  instruction  and 
departmental  research;  main- 
tenance and  operation  of  plant; 


A    new      and      more      stringent 
lo.mination  procedure  has  been  set 

Miss  Moore:   "One   whose  camp- 1  up    for    the    University    Party,    it 
us    activities    have    evidenced    ef-  j  J^•as  announced  by  Chairman  Mike 
ficient.      unselfish      service      and  |  Weinman  at  Tuesday  nights  nicet- 
whose    energy     is    ccistantly     re- 1  ing. 
vealed    in    her    contributions    and  | 

rcsponsibile  work.  Her  friendly  -"^la'"^''  5  '^  the  date  set  for 
spontaneity,  spirit  of  helpfulness  nomination  of  senior  class  offi- 
and  sincerity  of  purpo.se  have  been  "^''^  ^"<^  "^6"  and  women's  dorm 
felt  in  student  gover.iment.  stu-  P^sts.  and  March  12.  the  date  for 
dent  church  work  and  in  the  bet- 1  >electicn  of  town  men  and  wo- 
lerftient    of   dormitory    life."  j  '"P"    representatives    and    student 

Miss  Sillay:  "One"  who.se  gen- 1  government  candidates, 
uine  qualities,  understanding  tol-  \  By  the  Feb.  26  meeting  all  peti- 
erance  and  warmth  of  personality  j  ions  and  dues  must  be  in.  and  all 
have  been  evidenced  in  many* wo- }  )rganizations  must  be  on  the  roles, 
man's  activities.  Her  ability  to  ful-  3CCording  to  Weinman.  On  that 
fill  responsibility  and  at  the  .same  date  ,  membership  cards  will  be 
time  inspire  cooperaton  has  been  ^'iven  out  to  th  se  who.se  mem- 
an  asset  to  her  dormitory  leader- 1  bsrship  is  vn  order.  Those  per- 
ship."  I  sons  who  have  not  turned  in  com- 

Miss    LeGrande:    ''Who    is    the  I  pleted    petitions   or  dues  will   not 
epitome  of  unselfish  service  on  our  |  be  issued  cards. 


campus.  In  her  humble  and  quiet 
manner  she  is  active  in  numerous 
phases  of  student  life  at  Carolina 
— expecting  no  praise  for  her  end- 
less hours  and  efforts.  She  has 
(See  U.VC  BUDGET  Page  5)         been    a    consistent    source    of    in- ^ 


Weinman  slated  that  no  one  will 
be  allowed  to  attend  the  April  5 
nominating  meeting  without  mem- 
bership cards.  The  cards  will  be 
good  for  UP  membership  until 
.spring  elections  of  1958. 


^A6f  rwb 


THS  DAILY   TAR  HEEL 


TMWRSOAY,;FfBRyARY  H    IWJ. 


Who  Is  To    Blame  For  Rottenness  Of  UNC    Athletics? 


The  Story 
So  Far 


Present -day  colle-e  athletic^ 
The  Daily  Tar  He^l  has  said  so 
l.ir.  are  in  a  rotten  mess. 

Collegiate  sports  are  money 
sj>  rts.  and  that  accounts  f.  r 
niiic-h  (-f  th;  trouble  that  comvs 


from  athl^tics.  Gate  receipts 
fiiiue  far  more  than  academics. 
Gate  receipts  often  make  of- 
ficials of  colleges  and  uni- 
versities lower  thar  ideals  quite 
a  l^t. 

Tho  pr.^sent-day  athlete  is  an 
a'hL-te  fir^t.   student  second. 

The   people   to  blame   for  the 
m.ss  are  the  general  public,  the 


s:iorts'.n'itL>rs  of  the  nation's 
|.'ross.  the  c: aches  and  the  plac- 
er., and  the  educational  insti- 
tutijns  that  ■  t-lerate  and  add 
to  a  false,  gilden  haze  built 
ar,  und  athletics. 

And  wh?n  that  happens,  edii- 
eat'.on   suffers. 

The  jjf>n?ral  public,  coaches 
and  players  can't  be  blamed  for 


the  whole  ntfss.  Thtjj-  u.-;ually 
are  prcvUuts  of  ih^'"'fn'jss.  an  1 
tx.si  b.'.-acsv'  of  it.  Thi  publ  c 
is  soaked  full  of  hero-worsh  p 
and  false  s,h  ol  spirit:  t  le 
oca  hcs  a.e  paid  tj  ope:ute  pro- 
fess'ona!  athletes  on  a  collegi- 
aU*  ba.<is.  and  the  athletes  a  e 
nu'r  ]y  t  skihg  advantage  of 
what   is  offered   them. 


Tlie  .  spoiUs.\riters  are  to 
b  ame  lor  tiiey  have  contributed 
gr.  .ly  to  tile  la  .se  sen.'^  of 
S' hool  spirit  vcr  at!ilctics. 
T!iey  have  poured  happed -up 
verbs  and  adjectives  int.T  the  r 
str'os:  th?y  have  called  teams 
coafihes*  teams,  not  schools'  or 
s.u^^'ents'    tams. 

The     in-titutions     themselves. 


however,  are  the  real  ones  to 
blame.  If  they  possessed  the  type 
of  administrators  who  would 
stand  up  to  the  menace  that 
athletics  now  present,  the  men- 
ace WDuid   die  quickly. 

Bu  t  administrators,  being 
modern  people,  are  subject  to 
pressures.  They  buckle  under 
these    pressures.    They    become 


cowards.  They  let  coaches  and 
fat,  rich  alumni  have  their  way. 
They  do  not  want  to  cause  any 
trouble. 

As  one  X\riter-to-the-editor  on 
a  different  subject  said  the 
other  day,  they  do  nbt  want  to 
change  the  status  quo. 

So  the  academic  community 
rolls   along,   ignoring     the     in- 


creasing importance  —  and 
threat — of  athletics,  which  is 
getting  more  and  more  corrupt 
every  day.  For  some  time  L^ni- 
versity  of  North  Carolina  of- 
ficials have  been  happy  to  re- 
port that  "it  can't  happen  here" 
— but  it  has  happened  h?re.  and 
unless  changes  are  made,  more 
of  it  will  happen. 


Modern  College  Athletics: 
latum  And  t|ie  'Only  Thing' 

M<>>;i  j)i<t|)U'  think  tln'  m  ijt  hi  rliui'^t-oi  liiiNtisitA  ol  .North  ('.;iro- 
litKi  ;tT)iUti«s  In  C.  IV   (Cluickt  KiukMni. 

(.limL  Iiiiksoii  woiriis  move  ;il>oiu  ;  .lilotits  th:iii  ;m\  otiui  man 
lu-ir.  hilt  he  isji  t  in  <  kaixi".  Clhttiicellor  R<>l>ert  iTaiise  is  in  <4iar«[c. 

lim  lioust*  »ifli*'4.itcN  a  lot  i»r  his  authority  nt  Krirkson,  thf  diitu  tm 
of  .ithlrtu  s.  Fritk.s(>n.  who  maiin  jol>  is  keepinj*  Woollen  (iym's  financ  ia/ 
fcKittdils  cUan.  drles^atts  a  lot  ol  his  authovitv  to  jim  Tatuni.  the  head 

tlircat  «»1  ilu-  .National  (iolle^iate 
.Vthk'tit  .\ssn.  have  kept  VSC  in- 
fraitiiHis  at  a  minimnm. 


Inothall  (iKuh.  Frank  Mifiuire. 
the  head  basketball  toath.  and  oili- 
er  lower   otiicials. 


It  i.s  neiessaiv  in  this  stieamin*;. 
w  ide-open  biKsiness  of  bij;-time  aih- 
let  its  that  the  coaches  make  a  lot 
ol  policy,  .\frer  all.  they  are  hij, 
nionev  men  —  Tatnin.  ttfliciaMy. 
makes  as  umk  h  money  per  vcar  as 
(  onsolidated  I'nivcrsity  Picsident 
William  Ki  iday— and  theii  players 
r.'id  their  audiences  must  re-ipect 
them. 

Ci<»aches  lor  a  lon;^  time  have  at- 
t.  lupird  to  make  poli<y  that  was 
11  •!  in  the  best  iinevests  ol  a<a- 
tKniiis.  Thev  lia\e  been  known 
to  in\i;e  ji^tospecti\e  athletes  to 
li(|uor-aiul-w-pmen  parties,  to  slip 
an  ot  I  .isionaPlumdied  inulcr  the 
table,  to  m:s<a1culate  on  the  iiuuj- 
bi  1  ol  tiuiuin'.;  days  and  similar 
j"'(iie..i.  .\  larie  percenta;^c  of 
t'lvir  audieuie  likes  this,  leels  it 
is    part    ol    the    s^oiHl^  old    collej^e 

tl  V. 

We  hi\e  not  di.-aoxered  all  of 
the  tt  iideiH  ies  listed  alK»ve  in  I'ni- 
veisit\  ol  .North  (!ar<.»lina  athletits. 
But  there  .lie  .some. 

'  The  folate  to  l<H»k  i,s  in  the  ioot- 
jball  team.  C.oa.h  Tatum  has  a  rec- 
ord ol  evtiavatjanci'.  iuid  it  was'as- 
sumed.  when  t4u  I  iiixersity  plead- 
etl  w  ith  him  to  come  here,  that  he 
would  (ontinue.  Bnt  an  alert  fat - 
ultv    and    student    lH>dv    and    the 


The  Daily  Tar  Heel 

The  official  itudeot  puf>ltcati<i|i  of  tbt 
PublicaMuns  Board  ol  the  Univ^rsitj  of 
North  Carolina,  where  it  is  publisheti 
daily  except  Monday  and  eiaminatiot 
and  vacation  periods  and  summer  ternaA 
Entered  as  second  class  matter  in  th( 
Dost  office  in  Chapel  Hill.  N.  C,  undei 
the  Act  oi  .March  8,  1^0.  Subscriptiolt 
rates:  mailed,  $4  per  year.  S2.50  a  temei 
ter;  delivered.  $6  a  year.  $3.50  t  itmtt 
ter. 


Editor    

FRED  POWIKDCr 

Wanagmg  Editor   

-  CHARLIE  S1/)AJ« 

News  Editor  .^. 

„  _  NANCY  KtLt 

Buiines&  Manager    ^ 

.     BILL  B06  PLfX 

Sp»rts  Kditoi'           * 

.        LARRY  CHEEK 

-        .                                       _j 

EDITORIAL  STAFF  —  Woody  Sevf, 
Frank  Crowther.  Barry  Winston.  Dtirid 
liundy.  George  Pfiogst,  Ingrid  Clay. 
CortJand  Edwards,  Paul  McCauIey. 
Bobbi  Smith. 


VEWS  STAFF— ClarJte  Jones,  Ray  LfiA 
er,  Joan  Moore.  Pringle  ^pkin,  Ann« 
Drake,  Editb^acKinQon,  WalTy  kttttlt, 
Mary  Alya  Voorhees,  Graham  Snyd^, 
Billy  Barnes,  Neil  Bass,  Cart  KidioI$, 
Page  Bernstein.  Peg  Humphrej,  I1i;^lUl 
Maultsby<  Ben  Taylor  ,        «< 


BUSINESS  STAFF— Rosa  Moore,  Joiia^r 
Wbitaker.  Dick  Leavitt,  Dick  Sirkifi. 


Sports  Staff:  Bajve  Wible,  Stewart  ^ird, 
Ron  Milligan. 


Subscription  Manager  - 

Advertistag  Manasc^r 

Circulation  Manager   ,_. 
Assistant  Sporb»  EditM* 


Dale  Staley 

Fr«d  KaUtP 

Charlie  fTolt 

Bill  Kias. 


Staff  Photngrapber 
Librarian  . 


._  Norman  Kantor 
Sue  Gishner 


froof  Reader  ^--.- 
Night  Fxhtor  ^ 
Night  News  Editor. 


Maniey  Springs 
Cortland'  Edwards 
Fred  Powledge 


Ffank  \l((iuire.  on  the  other 
hand,  is  pretty  nearly  universally 
lo\ed  and  trusted  in  (Mia{H'l  Mill 
.md.  now.  throuiihoui  the  nation. 
He  has  a  re(ord  lor  booting  his 
basketball  playeis  when  they  be- 
have unlike  si^entlcmen  and  wh^n 
theii  academic  averapfes  fall  too 
far. 


I  he    ((uestion     about     bi<j;-tiuie' 
:  .liletits  at  Chapel  Hill,  therefore. 
i>  also  the  question  about  Bii»  Jim 
Tatum. 

Hete  are  S4»me  of  The  Daily  Tar 
lletl's   fcelin<;s  about    Tatum. 

1.  lie  is  excessively  pauspered. 
.Many  of  the  members  of  the  local 
administration,  and  the  more  in- 
fluent i  1  members  of  the  C.onsoli- 
tlaictl  I'liiversity  staff,  have  treated 
1 .  um  ver\  well — too  well.  His 
.salajj    is  indicative  of  that.        ^^ 

2.  He  has  e>tablished  a  system 
of  retruitino  that  jxises  th^  bijj;srest 
till  eat  to  I'niversitv  of  .North  Car- 
olina academics. 

'V  He  has  tuiiied.  and  is  still 
turninjLT.  athletes  into  machines. 
-Stilf  eatin'4  liour>  and  places, 
"study  halls"  and  now  a  special 
dt)rmitorv  .section  for  f<K>tball 
playeis  all    indie,  te   this. 

■  v' 

J.  He  has  taken  the  athlete 
awav  fi<»uj  the  I'niversity.  an<>  he 
has  turned  the  I'niveisity's  student 
bodv  into  just  another  group  ol 
( iisi(»meis  who  pay  to  stt  the  team 
in  action. 

-,.  He  has  taken  iIk*  sports  set- 
up at  Carolina  out  of  its  old  lovable 
rut  and  has  turned  it  into  a  Grid- 
iron Clid>.  complete  with  chicken 
ctinners  for  the  press,  off-and-cm- 
the-iecord  stories,  conflicting  state- 
ments and  a  j^enerally  obscure  re- 
lation to  the  taxpayeis  of  North 
Carolina  who,  after  all.  pay  his 
salary. 


Yet  all  ei  this  i.s  not  entVajj^h  to 
reafly  condenm  Jim  Tatiim.  He 
is  real  I  v  not  at  tault. 

He  Ls  the  ptcKiuc  t.  and  a  "\ery 
"ood  one.  of  modern  college  ath- 
letics. His  credo,  as  he  has  empha- 
sized at  many  pid>lic  occasions,  is 
"Winning  is  the  biily  thin^." 

He  is  paid  to  feel  that  way. 

•'     •       •       •  li*  7.'* 

He-  was  paid  to  feel  that  way  at 
Oklahoma,  and  at  Maryland,  and 
he  earned  his  pay.  .Some  of  the  gen- 
uinely humorous,  but  also  libelous, 
stoiies  that  drift  down  form  .\or- 
mah  and  College  Park  aie  enough 
to  assme  anyone  that  Jim  Tatum 
believes  winning  is  the  cmly  thing. 

One  might  even  get  the  impress- 
ion that  academics  is  nothing. 

TOMOnHOn\    (alum   and.  re- 
ciuitinti. 


Spirit 
V  Vs. 
Letter 

Neil  Bass 

Just  v*hat   is  the*  Univcroiiva 
policy  ca  class-attend.uice.* 

Or.  more  .  aptly    v^orjed.    h  * 

the  University  really  g,i[  a  ela-s. 
attendance   regiilatipn. 

With  installation  ■  oi  ihc  new 
class  cuts  policy  this  .somcstor, 
a  policy  Icrmulated  b\  lae  t'dj- 
lUtv  Council,  .stu  lents  u-.t  l.iL':e 
would  be  a  lib.ralization  in 
class    attendance    requirt-menis. 

Certainly  some  siu..  Is  are 
not  mature  enough  to  realize 
that  they  must  attend  .lass  rv,'g 
ularly  enough  to  ak-quately 
prepare  themselves  foi-  .vvainina- 
tion  and  extract  as  miu'h  ;i.s  pas.*;- 
ible  from  any  particular  coiir.se. 

But  shouldn't  these  >lULlents 
have  their  decaying  infhu-iiie  re- 
moved from  the  appU'  barrel 
anyway?  Or  wouldn't  the  class 
cuts  policy  most  students  felt 
was  N'oted  in  at  the  Dec.  7  Fac- 
ulty Cv>uncil  meeting — unlimit:d 
ciKs  as  long  as  students  aiain- 
tained  a  satisfactory  average — 
apply  an  effective  check  ri'in  on 
students  who  cut  excessively  and 
irrationally? 

It  is  definite,  we  feel,  that  the 
presidentially  appointed  student 
committe  which  made  sugges- 
tions to  the  Facult.v  Council 
through  its  Committee  on  das';; 
.\ttfendance  was  striving  for  an 
•"unlimited  cuts  as  long  a>.  a  "C 
average   is   maintained'"   policy. 

.  An4    it   it   definite,   w«   f*el, 

policy  was  going  into  offoct  this 
somostor. 

What  was  the  point  in  giving    ' 
students  this  fal.se  ray  of  hope — 
the    new    regulation — if    the    old 
policy    is    actually    still    in    the 
driver's  seat? 

To  the  .<*tudent  commiitfe  which 
con.scicQtiou.sly  devoted  its  tim.^ 
and  effort  toward  helping  fannu- 
late  the  new  regulation,  and 
whose  suggestions  were  partially 
incorporated  by  the  Faculty 
Council,  this  must  appear  like 
formulation  of  a  dagg  r  which 
the  faculty,  in  turn,  plunged  into 
its  back. 

II  the  faculty  is  to  betray  stu- 
dent trust  this  way.  is  to  plunse 
a  atudent  -  created  dagger  into 
the  student's  back,  is  to  ignore 
that  class  attendance  is  the  stu- 
dent's obligation,  is  to  deny  that 
students  are  mature  enough  to 
judge  the  necessity  of  class  at- 
tendance on  the  basis  of  individ- 
ual ability,  is  to  deny  that  .stu- 
dents who  cut  class  iiTationally 
are  a  decaying  influence  which 
should  be  removed  from  the  ap- 
ple barrel,  then  we  advocate  re- 
installation of  the  old  "three 
cuts"  rule,  which  at  least  made 
for  a  uniform,  if  arbitrarily  un- 
fair, class  attendance  regulation. 

* 

Til  Abner 


'Uh  —  I  Was  Saying  —  Great  Decisions 
Are  In  the  Offing' 


^  >  X       '^-_i- ::: 

*«"^>-%  ...V.:. 

CAROLINA  CARblEIDOSCOPF: 


«A. 


Population:    Just    Wait 


Frank  Crowlher 

Several  aitii.K's  in  a  variety 
of  newspjpers  and  magazines 
during  the  last  few  w^eTis  have 
reiterated  the  growing— or  rath- 
er continued — concern  Over  the 
increa'sc  in  the  world's  pc^pula- 
tion. 

AVc  have  reached  a  stuffy  2.- 
700.000.000  in  toto.  Every  min- 
ute, appro.ximately  ^  new  faces 
appear.  During  a  24  hour  period. 
130.000  serei'ching  babie.s  come 
into   our   already   troubled  globe. 

You  think  we  have  ffoiibles  in 
the  United  States?  Prime  Min- 
ister .\ehru  is  greeted  every 
morning  at  his  breakfast  table 
with  l.^i.OOO  neutral  little  Indians 
to  fc!ed  in  addition  to  his  other 
hungry  millions. 

Experts,  glowering  in  the  shad- 
ow of  Malthus.  who  in  the  19th 
century  predicted  that  the  world 
would  eventually  starve  itself  tJ 
death,  are  facing  up  to  the  facts 
that  the  world  population,  unless 


cheeked  in  sonu'  way  in  the  ne.\t 
vears.  will  completely  double  in 
42  years — this  means  that  by  cir- 
ca 2000.  our  total  mouths  will 
county  5.500.000.000.  li  takos 
quite  a  few  Pizza  pies  and  many 
mere  bo.\es  of  popcorn  tj  quell 
the  cries  of  such   a   mass.  • 

.Now  the   "'special  experts"  are 
.saying  with  aplomb  that  we  can 
work    things    out    all    right    and 
there  is  no  need  to  worry.  They 
have    placed   their  confidence    in 
tile  technolo^uists  and  are  content 
I)   sit    in    ihcir   sott    chairs   after 
a  gluttenou.s  meal  and  mu.se  that 
there    isn't    the    slightest    chance 
of  our  being   plagued   by  such   a 
silly   thing  as   overpopulation. 
I  don't  suppose  that,  as  many 
people   have   thought   and    pub- 
licly iterated   as  of   late,  we   in 
the  University  have  a  monopoly 
on  apathy. 
One  expert,  however,  seems  to 
have  been  a  little  more  prophci-/ 
ic:     ". . .  unles.s    we    are    reali.stic 
enough    to    hold    Ijack    the    birth 


f  THEPtE'SA 
MA^4  IhJ  TH' 
MOUSE /.'^ 


TH'  SWEETEN 
EXPERIENCE 
O'MAH 
LIFE  HAS  BIN 
KNOWIN'  VCJ' 


rale  with  the  same  objectiveness 
with  which  we  fought  to  hold 
back  the  death  rate,  and  frankly 
rcc  g.iize  the  ^logic  which  binds 
the  two  together  (we  will 
starve. )" 

.\nd  besides  that.  Just  think 
of  the  poor  student  body  presi- 
dent and  the  hapless  dean  of 
student  affairs  trying  to  cope 
with  an  unestimatable  number 
of  student  automobiles  in  the 
1970's  and  80's.  .\nd  if  you  think 
that  the  drop-add  lines  are  un- 
bearable now.  just  stick  around; 
South  Building  will  look  like  a 
beehive   in   springtime. 

Teacher  to  student  discussing 
Milton:  "Would  you  rather  be 
second  in  Heaven  or  first  in 
Hell?  " 

Student:  "1  think  I'd  rather  be 
first   in   Hell.  ' 

Teacher  (rolling  with  the 
punch):  'Keep  trying,  you're 
just  the  one  who  is  liable  to  make 
it." 

...■;^*    • 

By  A!  Capp 


AN'  NOV>J  - 

AH'LL  COMC  , 
TO  TH'POlHTfr 


Calm 


By  Walt  Kelly 


WHMr  <w 
Of  J,  s\c<v/, 

dOOAN 


WHBNTMgy 
HgAPf  iN$i9E 


IT  PONT 


WgH,,  TOCIAy'S 


THw<  OP    *pe  Nif  isAWtnMerj 

eOMgTHIM' 


illfht  yANPl.0  TW;$: 


A  Few  Letters 
To  The  Staffers 

Graham  Snyder: 

If  the  hospital  doesn't  protest  against  the  noi.se. 
our  new  football  team  housing  plan  looks  as  though 
it  will  keep  the  noLse-makers  out  of  Cobb. 

I  have  talked  with  Sam  at  Sam's  Surplus  Stcrre 
and  he  said  he  has  a  whole  batch  of  eight-man 
tents.  I  thi-:ik  we  can  get  them  for  a  song.  "Tar 
Heels  on  Hand"  should  get  them  for  lis.  I  fugiire 
we'll  need   10  of  them. 

I've  a'so  talked  with  a  number  of  th?  football 
players.  They  seemed  much  impressed  with  the 
report  I  gave  them  on  tent-life.  I  explained  the 
way  tent-life  will  toughen  up  a  man's  physical  con- 
dition and  also  the  privacy  it  offers.  (I  didi^'t 
mention  mildew,  insects,  faulty  heating,  etc..  Grah- 
am. Why  tell  them  bath  sides  of  a  story?  Thi^y 
haven't   had   it   that   way  thus  far  this  year.) 

Looking  about  Kenan,  I  think  five  tents  behind 
each  goalpost  will  solve  our  problem  and  still 
leave  120  yards  be'/veen  \in\  rows  for  spring 
training  and  the  romping  room  needed  for  that; 

W'e  still  have  a  few  mirtor  problems  to  work 
out.  -Graham.  Perhaps  you  can  solve   them. 

1.  We  need  to  find  a  cheaper  type  of  midnight 
oil.  It's  going  to  cost  like  everything  to  instjH'a 
surplus  generator. 

2.  Th<?  lowest  price  on  C-rati.ns  at  Sam's  is 
S30  a  case.  Since  we  can't  go  that  high  and  still 
compete  with  the  training  table,  maybe  you  can 
figiu-e  out  which  you're  going  to  feed  these  pro- 
fessional noisemakers.  ' 

3.  The  administration  will  give  us  no  opposi- 
tion. Grahom.  They  are  already  troubled  with  three 
men  to  a  room  now  and  they  will  need  the  extra 
rooms  next  fall. 

4.  This  last  problem  I  leave  entirely  in  your 
hands,  Graham.  How  the  hell  are  .vou  ever  going  to 
get  "'Big'  '"Sunny"  "Jim"  J.  M.  Tatum  (never  Mr. 
Tatum  or  Coach  Tatum,  Graham.  Neverl)  to  give  up 
his  present  offices  and  accept  the  quiet  and  peace 
of  the  pines  at  our  new  Tent  City  on   the  Kenan? 

(I  especially  like  the  title,  don't  you.   Graham? 
«  «  * 

Frank  Crowther: 

I  agree.  Baby  Doll  is  reali.sticarlly  photographed. 
(What  do  we  mean  by  this,  Frank?)  .A^nyway,  I 
like  the  sound  of  the  phrase.  I  liked  Baby  Doll's, 
too.  Frank.  Especially  since  I've  learned  that  she 
was  not  seduced.  Man! 'That  has  been  worrying  .me 
every  .since  I  put  my  cloak  back  on  and  da.shed  out 
th?  rear  exit. 

Thanks  for  the  bit  at>out  Notre  Dame,  Frank. 
I    just  can't  understand   an   editor  who  is  so  nar- 
row-minded   that    he    stands    up   for   his    religion 
and  the  religious  foundation  of  his  college.   Kind 
of  foolish,    isn't  he,  Frank?  After  all,  who  ever 
heard  of  religious  tolerance  among  college  journ- 
alists, anyway? 
Yes-sir-ree,  Frank.  No  matter  what  the  issue  is. 
or  how  sacred  the  foundations  of  an  institution,  or 
the   way   the   editor   of   the  institution's  newspaper 
supports  it.   I'll   ridicule   them  all.  any  time.  You 
will  too.  won't  you.  Frank. 

is  if  * 

Larry   Cheek: 

Damn  glad  to  see  it  (The  Sport.s  Illustrated 
story)  Mr.,  genial,  likable.  Coach  Frank  McGuire's 
(Never  Mr.  Big-Time  Basketball  Inc.,  Larry,  never!) 
way.  I  never  expected  you  to  support  one  of  our 
major  sports  here  at  UNC  after  reading  your  foot- 
ball articles  last  fall.  •■ 

Sheer  guts.  Larry.  (Internal  fortitude  in  your 
Ivory  Tower  League.)  Sheer  guts,  boy!  Proud  oi 
you.  (Did  you  lose  your  coffee  allowance  because 
of  it.  Larry?) 

By  the  way,  Larry,  don't  you  graduate  thi^ 
year?   Good   boy! 

Name  Withheld  By  Requeit 

The  writer  of  the  above  letter(s)  wanted  his 
name  signed  Erv.  To  the  Hr%\  student  or  professor 
who  can  outline  what  Erv  is  attempting  to  say. 
The  Daily  Tar  Heel  will  award  a   modest  prize. 

,.   YOU  Said  It:  Story 
Should  Not  Have  Been 

Editor: 

What  call  did  The  Daily  Tar  Heel  have  to 
publicize  the  prosecution  in  Greensboro  of  three 
U.\C  students  en  charges  of  crimes  against  nature? 
Are  we  all  to  join  in.  like  the  flock  of  farmyard 
chickens  pecking  an  outsider  to  death,  on  a  savage- 
ly efficient  and  thorough  destruction  of  these  un- 
fortunate students,  wherever  they  are? 

Is  not  their  plight  wretched   enough   without 
this  added  haressment?  Apropos  of  what  was  this 
disp«tch?  To  serve  as  a  reminder?  Might  that  not 
be  done  withevt  revealing  names? 
The   truth   is  this:   Here  is  a   last  minority.   Mi- 
norities recognizable   on  the   basis  of  religious  or 
racial  differentiation   have,  for  one   reason  or  an- 
other, ceassd   to  serve   as  convenient   victims  of  a 
f'"'iiliar  human  urge. 

Here  is  our  last  minority,  against  whom  all 
the  rest  of  us  can  unite  to  nurture  a.i  "in"  feel- 
ing. Minorities  by  sexual  orientation  serve  thLs 
purpose  as  conveniently  as  ever. 

The  special  insidiousness  of  this  situation  is 
that  no  one  dares  raise  his  voice  in  their  behalf, 
lest  he  also  receive  the  taint  of  suspicion.  So  aiuch 
is  this  true  that  I  must  ask  that  my  name  be 

Withheld  by  Request 


.It 
Tl 
4yzii 
bet\ 
Tra< 
the 
Loul 

of 
G| 

idci 

outs 

for 

in 

pas^ 

ly 

•r 


14,  195?. 


-    a  ad 

which  is 
\e  corrupt 
Itime  rni-  t 
jrolina  of- 
Ipy  to  re- 
jpfn  here'' 
h?re.  and 
ide.  more 


rs 


It  he  noise. 
las  though 
|bb. 

>lus  Store 

leight-man 

long.   "Tar 

I   fugiire 

?   football 
with    the 
lainsd    the 
iical  coh- 
(I    didrt't 
?tc..  Grah- 
)r\?    They 
.ear. ) 
Its  behind 
land    still 
spring 
for  that: 

to  work 
lem. 

midn'ght 
install'  a 

Sam's    is 

and   still 

j^ou   can 

these   pro 

lo   opposi- 

|\vith  three 

the  extra 

V    in   your 

Ir  going  to 

[never  Mr. 

|to  give  up 

nnd  peace 

\e  Kenan? 

Graham? 


atographcd. 
Anyway.  I 
laby  Doll's. 
Jd  that  she 
lorrying  me 
[dashed  out 


THURSDAY,  FEBRUARY  14,  1957 


THR.  DAILY  TAI|  HEIL 


^Aet  THR10 


%  toUND-UP: 


Editorial  By  Louis  Graves  Began 
Controversy  Over  Local  Billboard 


By  JIM  PURKS 

■.  It  all  started  with  an  editorial. 
That's  what  can  be  said  in  ana- 
■iyaing  the  recent  verbal  exchange 
between  Joe  Augustine  of  the 
Trade  Promotions  Committee  of 
the  Merchants  Association  and 
Louis  Graves,  contributing  editor 
of  the   Chapel  Hill  Weekly. 

Graves  heard  of  the  merchants' 
idea  ot  constructing  "billboards" 
outside  the  limits  of  Chapel  Hill 
for  the  purpose  of  luring  motorists 
in  to  Chapel  Hill  who  normally 
pass  the  town  by. 

As  a  result.  Graves  immediate- 
ri-ly  wret*  a  aditorial  in  the  Week- 
ly  in   which    he   made   clear   his 
-.  «<Mrn  opposition   to  the   idea.    In 
the  san>e  editorial  he   urged   all 
■  ttiese  who  were  also  opposed  to 
the  idea  to  let  their  objections 
be  known  in  the  form  of   peti- 
, . , lions. 

Many  residents  of  Chapel  Hill 
..wasted  little  time  in  responding 
Xq  Graves'  editorial  appeal.  .Aug- 
ustine soon  received  a  petition 
.^rom  67  faculty  members,  and 
one  from  two  local  garden  ciubs. 
OPPOSITION 

__  The  petitions  cvplicitly  stated 
opposition  over  the  idea  of  the 
mcrchanLs"  using  "billboards"  on 
the  highways  leading  out  of  Chap- 
..<?]  Hill. 

Augustine    rctailiated    Saturday 

,  to     Graves'     editorial.      He  •   said 

Graves'    editorial    ws^    "unfoptu- 

nate"   and   had   caused   ill-will   be- 


tween Graves  and  the  merchants.  ; 
Augustine  then  leveled  a  charge  I 
at  Graves,  accussing  him  of  being' 
opposed  to  "anything  proposing 
progress  in  Chapel  Hill.  Graves 
calmly  denied  this  accusation  Mon- , 
day.  { 

Graves  and  the  petitioners  also  ' 
had  partly  misinterpreted  the  in- 
tentions   of    the    merchants.    The 
petitions  strongly  stated  opposition  , 
to    "billboards"    on   the   highways 
of  Chapel  Hill.  | 

Augustine  set  things  straight  in  . 
this  respect  by  pointing  out  that  | 
the  merchants  had  no  intentions  I 
of  using  billboards,  but  were  more  ! 
favorably  inclined  toward  the  use ', 
of  painted  signs.  Augustine  said  1 
the  painted  signs  would  show  some ! 
aspect  of  the  University  of  North  j 
Carolina  and  urge  the  niotorist  to ' 
visit  Chapel  Hill. 

But.   on   the  basis   of  a   sample 
poll  taken  of  some  of  those  who 
signed    the    petition,    the    use    of ' 
painted  signs  instead  of  billboards 
does  Hfiot  lower  the  number  of  the  ! 
opposition — it  only  lowers  the  de- 
gree cf  the  €S)position 
FACULTY  POSITION 

Phillips  Russell,  for  example, 
who  signed  the  faculty  petition, 
said  Monday  night  the  painted 
sort  of  signs  were  not  "objec- 
tionable" as  long  as  they  didn't 
take  away  from  th^  present  beau- 
ty of  the  highways. 
"But  anything  beyond  that." 
Russell   said,   "is  open  to   serious 


QiiCair$Qs 


(Author  of  "Barefoot  Boy  Vitk  Cktok,"  tU.) 


DIARY  OF  A  COED 


question  because  once  the  bars 
are  let  down  there's  no  telling 
what   might  happen." 

Another  faculty  member  said 
he  was  "opposed  to  any  big  bill- 
boards" or  any  signs  that  districts 
attention.  He  said  the  idea  of 
smaller  painted  signs  was  not-  as 
bad.  but  if  he  had  a  choice  he'd 
vote   against   any  'type   of   sign. 

Dr.  Harold  Hotelling's  State- 
ments represented  generally  the 
feeling  of  most  of  the  petition 
signers.  "I'm  against  billboards 
primarily.  It'd  be  distressing  to 
see  billboards  cluttering  up  the 
landscape.  Any  kind  of  advertis- 
ing sign  is  objectionable,"  Hotell- 
ing  said. 

Mrs.  J.  C.  Lyons  .secretary  of  one 
of  the  local  Chapel  Hill  garden 
clubs,  stated  that  the  idea  of  bill- 
boards was  definitely  objection- 
able, but  if  the  signs  were  "neat" 
and  "not  unsightly"  she  didn't 
think  opposition  would  be  too 
strong. 

Judging     from     the     opinion's 
gathered  by  a  sample  poll  it  is 
obvious    the    idea    of   billboards 
is   out  of  the   question,   but   at- 
tractive painted  signs  may  have 
a  chance  of  winning  the  approval 
of   Chapel    Hill    residents;   how- 
ever, it  is  also  obvious  that  Chap- 
el Hill  residents  are  very  reluct- 
ant to  accept  any  type  of  sign. ' 
The  merchants  will  have  to  give 
due  consideration  to  this  element 
of  Chapel   Hill  before  they  adopt 
any  type  of  plan  because,  as  Graves 
pointed    out    Monday,    these    resi- 
dents are  the  merchants  most  reg- 
ular  and    valuable   customers.   To 
alienate    them    could    mean    trou- 
ble. 


ne,  Frank. 

.«» 

is  so   nar- 

s    religion 

**f 

lege.  Kind 

w* 

wtie  ever 

ege  joorn- 

•        -»»-. 

he  issue  is. 

-. 

stitution.  or 

»« 

newspaper 

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MONDAY:  Prof  Pomfritt  sprang  quiz  in  English  lit 
this  morning.  If  Shakespeare  didn't  write  Canterbury 
Tales,  I'm  back  in  the  steam  laundry. . . .  Lunch  at  the 
house  —  turkey  hash.  Question:  how  can  we  have  turkey 
hash  when  we  never  had  turkey  ? . . .  Smoked  a  good, 
natural  Philip  Morris  after  lunch.  Yum.  yum!  .  . .  Played 
bridge  in  the  afternoon.  When  game  was  over,  Mildred 
OUiphant  stabbed  me  .several  times  with  hatpin.  Munt 
learn  weak  club  bijd- ••- Dinner  at  house  —  lamb  hash. 
Question:  how  can  we  have  lamb  hash  when  we  never 
had  lamb ']  .  . .  Smoked  a  Philip  Morris  after  dinner.  Good- 
0 1  -  no  filter,  no  foolin' !  .  . .  Chapter  meeting  at  night. 
Motion  made  to  abolish  capital  punishment  for  pledges. 
Motion  defeated. . . .  Smoked  some  more  Philip  Morrises. 
Natural !   Dreamy ! . . .  And  .so  to  bed. 

TUESDAY:  Faculty  tea.  Spilled  pot  of  oolong  on 
Dean  of  Women.  She  very  snappish.  Offered  her  a  Philip 

Morris.   Still  snappish.   Offered  skin  graft.   No  help 

Dinner  at  Kozy  Kampus  Kafe  —  14  hamburgers.  But  no 
dessert.  Have  to  watch  waistline. . . .  And  so  to  bed. 

WEDNESDAY:  Got  our  marks  in  English  lit  quiz. 
Lucky  for  me  Shakespeare  wrote  Canterbiiry  Talcs!  . . . 
Date  with  Ralph  Feldspar.  Purely  platonic.  Ralph  wanted 
to  talk  about  love  trouble  he's  been  having  with  Mady 
Vanderklung.  I  said  things  were  bound  to  improve.  Ralph 
said  he  hopes  so  because  the  last  four  times  he  called 
on  Mady  she  dumped  vacuum  cleaner  bag  on  him.  Smoked 
Philip  Morri.s.  Yummm !  Dinner  at  house-bread.  That's 
all;  just  bread.  .  . .  And  .so  to  bed. 

THURSDAY:  Three  packages  from  home-  laundry, 

cookies,  records.    So  hungry  I  ate  all  three Quiz  in 

American  history.  If  James  K.  Polk  didn't  invent  cotton 
gin,  I'm  in  big  trouble. .  . .  Had  afternoon  date  with  Envin 
Trull,  pre-med.  Nice  boy  but  no  loot.  Took  me  to  see 
another  appendectomy.  Ho-hum! . .  .But  we  had  Philip 
Morrises  afterwards  Goody,  goody,  gumdrops!  . . .  Din- 
ner at  house.  Big  excitement  —  Vanessa  Strength  an- 
nounced >her  engagement.  While  girls  flocked  around  to 
congratulate  Vanessa.  I  ate  everybody's  mackerel. . . . 
Then  smoked  a  good,  natuial  Philip  Morris.  Divoon! . . . 
And  so  to  bed. 


>*?^cs»g;^*^- 


NSA  Meet 
Convenes 
Today         ! 

Approximately  100  students  re-  '■ 
presenting  colleges  and  universi-  ; 
ties  throughout  the  Carolinas  and  ; 
Virginia' will  convene  here  to- 1 
day  for  the  annual  spring  meet-  } 
ing  of  the  National  Student  Assn. 

Registration  for  the  assembly 
will  begin  Thursday  afternoon..  I 
Proceedings  will  start  with  an  op- 
ening plenary  session  Thursday 
night  at  8:30.  with  introductory 
speeches  by  UNC  student  body 
President  Bob  Young  and  Direc- 
tor if  Student  Affairs  Sam  Ma- 
gill.. 

.'Vftcr  a  speech  presenting  the 
general  theme  of  the  meeting  by 
UNC  law  student  Joel  Fleischman 
at  9:30  Friday  morning,  the  as- 
sembly will  break  up  into  discus- 
sion grou'ps  to  consider  problems 
common  to  the  various  campus- 
es   represented. 

1  A  banquet  for  the  assemblage 
will  be  held  Friday  evening  at  7, 
and  the  Spring  ni^eeting  will  be 
terminated  in  a  closing  plenary 
session    on    Saturday    morning   at 

111.  ■  '^ 

The  National  Student  Assn.  was 
created   in   1946   and   is   a   policy 
forming    body    for    student   legis- 
,  latures  throughout  the  country. 


FACULTY  LUNCHEON  CLUB 

Mijhneer  Raphael  den  Haan. 
lecturer  from  the  Netherlands 
New  Guinea  Information  Service 
will  speak  before  the  Faculty  Club 
luncheon  Tuesday  at  1  p.  m.  in 
the  Carolina  Inn. 
PHI   ALPHA 

Phi  Alpha  Theta  Honorary  His- 
tory Fraternity  will  present  a 
speech  by  Dr.  George  V.  Tay- 
lor on  "History  and  Hyman  Na- 
I  ture:  a  Discussion  of  Relations 
'  between  History  and  Psychology", 
at  8  p.m.  today  in  the  Library  As- 
sembly Room. 
UNITED   CONGREGATIONAL 

A  Valentines  "Get  Acquainted 
Party"  will  be  held  tonight  at  8 
p.m.  in  the  United  Congregationa. 
Church  on  West  Cameron  Avenue. 
Visitors  and  guests  have  beow 
invited 
WUK'- 

The  following  is  a  listing  of  pro- 
grams today  from  the  University's 
FM  radio  station: 

7:00 — Sketches    in    .Melody. 

7:30 — Tarheel    Voices. 

7:45 — French   Press  'Review. 

8:00 — BBC    Bandstand. 

8:30— Politics   in  .  the  Tvirentieth 
Century. 

9:00 — Masterworks  frorat  France. 

9:30 — Reith    Lectures.    '*' ■ 
10:00— News.  i^      '*?■" 

10:15 — Evening    Masterwork. 
11:30— Sign  Off. 
WUNC-TV 
12:44— Sign   On. 
12:45 — Music. 

1:00 — Today  on  the  Farm. 

1:30— Play  J»eriod. 

2:30— Sign    Off. 

5:14— Sign  On. 

5:15 — Music. 

5:30 — Childrens   Corner. 

6:00 — Legislative    Review. 

6:20 — News. 

6:30 — Draw  Me  a  Story. 

6:45 — Easier  Way. 

7:00 — Museum    of   Art. 

7:30 — German  Course. 

8:15 — Dr.    Schriver. 

9:00— World   of  Man. 

9:30— Lecture   Hall.  « 

10.00 — Final    Edition. 
10:05— Sign   Off. 


WRC  Files  Open  Today   ~ 

Women's  Residence  Council  files 
will  be  open  today  from  8  to  10 
p.m.  in  the  Council  Room  of  Grah- 
am Memorial  for  all  girls  interest- 
ed in  applying  for  chaif^anship 
of  women's  orientation  and  edi- 
torship of  th  cWomen's  Handbook. 

Applicants  will  be  notified  by 
Peggy  Funk  of  the  time  for  their 
interview. 

Orientation  chairman  ip  respons- 
ible for  planning  summer  and 
fall  orientation  programs  but 
docs  not  have  to  be  in  summer 
school,  according  to  the  WRC. 

She  should  plan  to  be  in  Chapel 
Hill  for  the  orientation  program 
of  the*  first  session  of  summer 
school,  however,  the  Council 
said. 


'Young  And  Damned'  is 
Today's  Foreign  Film 

The  Foreign  Film  Service  will 
offer  'The  Young  and  the  Damn- 
ed." a  Mexican  film,  as  its  first 
movie  of  the  season  today  at  8 
p.m.  in  Carroll  Hall.  Season  tick- 
ets-are two  dollars. 

"The  Young  and  ihe  Damned." 
awarded  the  Grand  Prix  at  the 
Cannes  Film  Festival,  is  the  story 
of  the  juvenile  delinquent  gangs 
that  roam  the  streets  of  Mexico 
City.  It  stars  Estele  Inda,  Alfonsa 
Mejia,  and  Jesus  Mavarro. 


Liielan  Freundilch  To  Be  First 
Soloist  Of  Series  This  Spring 


■^tooicJ^eto  iec^wlhc'!-  Jppenieci 


FRIDAY:  Got  our  marks  in  American  history  quiz. 
Was  dismayed  to  learn  that  James  K.  Polk  did  not  invent 
cotton  gin.  He  wrote  Canterbury  Talets.  .  .  .  Odd!  .  .  . 
Lunch  at  the  house  -'bread  hash. . . .  Philip  Morris  after 
lunch.  Grandy-dandy ! . . .  Spent  afternoon  getting  dressed 
for  date  tonight  with  Norman  Twonkey.  Norman  is  tall, 
dark,  loaded  -  a  perfect  doll !  Only  thing  wrong  is  he 
never  tells  girl  where  he  is  goiag  to  take  her.  So  I  put 
on  a  bathing  suit,  on  top  of  that  an  evening  gown,  and 
on  top  of  that  a  snowsait.  Thus  I  was  ready  for  a  splash 
party,  dance,  or  toboggan  slide. ...  So  what  do  you  think 
happened  ?  He  entered  me  in  a  steepiechatje,  that's  what ! 

SATURDAY  AND  SUNDAY:  Days  of  rest,  play, 
quiet,  meditation,  and  -  aaah  I  —  Philip  Morris ! . . .  And 

so  to  bed.  ©Mux  Bhulman.  In57 

Coedt  —  and,  of  course,  eds  too  —  in  your  buay  euntpus  «eek, 
a  companion  ever 'Constant,  ever-true,  and  ever-icelcome  ia 
today's  ntttc,  natural  Philip  Morris  Cigarette,  made  in  regular 
and  long  size  by  the  sponsor*  of  this  column. 


The  Tuesday  Evening  concert 
series  will  open  for  the  spring 
^  semester  with  Lillian  Freundlich, 
i  pianist.  Miss  Freundlich  will  pre- 
I  sent  her  recital  at  Hill  Music  Hall 
j  Tuesday  at  8  p.m. 

Lillian  Freundlich's  appearances  ' 
I  have    included    not    only   solo    re-  i 
i  citals  and  radio  performances  feat- 
i  uring    music    from    the    pre-Bach 
I  period   to    important   present   day 
i  American   works,   but  also   cham- 
I  ber  music   programs. 
I      Her   reviewers   have  repeatedly 
recognized     her     seriousness  and 
i  vitality    as    a    musician    and    her 
'  complete    devotion    to    impoftanit 
I  works    of    all    periods,    qualities 
!  constantly    reflected    in    her    per- 
I  formances. 

j  Lillian  Freundlich,  formerly 
known  as  Lillian  Lefkofsky,  has 
had  a  number  of  di^stinguished 
musicians  as  her  teachers.  She 
studied  with  Franklin  Carnahan 
in  Cleveland,  Ohio,  her  birthplace. 
A  graduate  of  the  Oberlin  Con- 
servatory under  Dr.  Frank  H. 
Shaw,  she  was  later  a  fellowship 


holder  at  the  Juilliard  Graduate 
School.  Alexander  Siloti.  Josef  and 
Rosina  Lhevinne,  and  Edward 
Steuermann  have  also  been  her 
teaciiers. 

Miss  Freundlich  has  served  on 
the  faculties  of  the  Oberlin  Con- 
servatory and  the  Juilllwd  Sum- 
mer School.  Recently  she  has  been 
active  in  New  York  City' teaching 
privately  and   concertizing. 

Miss  Freundlich  Tues.  will  play: 
Beethoven,  "Sonata  Op.  2  No.  3;" 
Leon  Kirchner,  "Sonata"  (1948); 
Schu/nann.  "DavidsbundlertAnze;" 
and  Debussy,  "L'isle  joyeuse." 

The  Tuesday  Evening  Series  pro- 
grams for  the  remainder  of  the 
semester  will  include: 

March  5:  Concert  of  Chamber 
Music,  by  members  of  the  Uni- 
versity String  Quartet.  ^ 

March  19:  University  Concert 
Band.  '^'  '    - 

April  9:  UNC  Men's  Glee' Club 
and  Woman's  College   Chorus. 

April  30:   University  Symphony 
Orchestra. 
I      May  14:  University-  Chorus. 


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THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


ON  THE  HILL; 

Baskethtiil  ' 
Parties  Are 
Seasoh's  kdge 

By  MARY  ALYS  VOORHEES 

Basketball  seems  to  be  playing 
a  prominent  role  on  the  campUs 
this  year — hence,  many  basketball 
parties. 

Woollen  Gym  was  literally  pack- 
ed with  fans  Saturday  night  for 
the  Duke-Carolina  game,  but  pro- 
bably they  had  a  much  larger 
audience  outside  of  the  gym. 

Many  of  the  SPE's  could  be 
spotted  throughout  the  audience 
with  their  dates,  but  for  the  most 
part  the  SPEls  were  watching  the 
game  on  broadvision  over  in  Wake 
Forest. 

Since  all  the  fellows  couldn't 
obtain  tickets,  the  occasion  call- 
ed for  a  party  where  they  could 
watch  the  game,  and  Harry  Hold- 
ing was  elected  host  for  the  even- 
,  ing. 

After  the  contest  the  remaind 
er  of  the  SPEs  joined  the  group 
over  at  Harr>'s  home  for  an  in- 
formal party. 

With    three    members    of    the 
first     string— Joe     Quifs,     Pete 
Brennan  and  Bob  Cunninshem — 
numbered    emony    their    frater-  j 
nity,  the  Sipma  Nus  roHvd  out  i 
th«  welcome  mat  Aft«r  fh«  game    j 
to  celebrate  the  victory. 

Although   some    of   their   metn- ! 
bers   had    departed   to   spend   the 
weekend  with   fraternity  brothers ; 
at   U.   Va.,   that   ZBTs  also  found 
the  victory  a  good  occasion  for  a ' 
party  Saturday  night.  [ 

The  TEPS.  too.  can  very  def ini-  j 
tely    be   called    sports   as   well   as 
social-minded. 

Playing  host  for  some  100  out- 
standing basketball  stars  from  all  j 
over  the  state,  the  TEPs  not  only  I 
sponsored  a  championship  gamej 
with  the  boys  playing  against  one 
another,  but  entertained  them 
over  at   the   house   during  the   af 


THURSDAY,  FEBRUARY  U.  1957 


What  Makes  Typical  Carolina  Coed? 


TWEEDS  AND  CASHMERES: 


•A^ 


Casual  And  Formal  Elegance 
Reign  Over  Mardi  Gras  Fun 


By  MARY  MOORE  MASON        i 

What  is  a  typical  Carolina  coed? 
Is  she  sugar  and  spice  and  every- 
thing nice,  or  is  she  a  conceited, 
dated-up-months-ahead  party  girl? 
Or  even  more  important,  is  there 
such  a  thing  as  a  typical  Carolina 
co:d? 

These  questions  arose  after  an 
article  in  The  Daily  Tar  Heel  in 
which  some  of  the  girls  said  that 
they  didn't  object  to  imports,  but 
that  they  thought  that  too  many 
Carolina  gentlemen  had  a  stereo- 
typed idea  of  Carolina  ladies. 

What  do  boys  think  about  this 
accusation?  After  questioning 
numerous  boys  this  seemed  to  be 
the  general  consensus  of  opinion: 
there  is  no  such  thing  as  a  typical 
coed;  most  of  the  coeds  are  nice, 
friendly  girls,  but  the  tactless, 
unfriendly,  and  conceited  attitude 
of  a  few  sometimes  puts  all  the 
coeds  in'  a  bad  light  with,  some 
boys.  ,  I 

"Ifs  the  bad  ratio,"  said  .John 
Kerr,  president  of  the  Junior  class, 
"most  of  the  girls  are  pretty  nice. 
but  there  are  some  fhat  are  snobs." 

However,  some  of  the  boys  did 
have  a  somewhat  unfavorable 
opinion   of    the   coed.  I 

Duane  Howe,  a  sophomore,  said, 
"I  think  that  some  of  them  are 
very  unfriendly.  If  you  are  not 
in  a  fraternity  you  are  out.  The 
coeds  are  also  partial  to  what 
class  a  boy  is  in." 

He  used  as  an  example  the  at- 
titude of  a  girls'  dorm  when  ask- 
ed to  a  party  by  .Alexander  Dorm 
last  year.  Only  half  of  the  girls 
came  to  the  party,  h?  said,  and 
those  that  came  hrfd  to  be  forced 
to  come. 


On  being  a-sked  what  he  thougm 
the  purpose  of  the  average  girl 
was  in  eomi'ng  to  Carolina,  Doug 
Wilson,  a  veteran  student,  answer- 
ed. "To  get  rushed,  to  rai.se  hell. 
and  to  have  a  good  time." 

Chris  Williamson,  a  freshman, 
said  that  although  he  hadn't  met 
a  va.st  number  of  coeds,  the  ones 
that  he  met  left  him  with  a  favor- 
able impression.  ; 

Sandy  Mnffett  defended  the 
Carolina  ladies  by  saying.  "The 
idea  of  the  typical  Carolina  coed 
as  being  a  conceited  party  girl 
comes  from  the  boys  that  just  sit 


arcund  and  won't  ask  a  girl  for 
a  date.  Although  ifs  natural  with 
the  ratio  for  the  girls  to  be 
choosy,  it's  not  so  impossible  as 
a  lot  of  boys  think  to  get  a  date 
with  a  coed.  Must  of  the  boy:^  are 
just  afraid  to  call  a  coed  for  a 
date." 

Sonny  Forbes  stated  that  he 
thought  the  average  coed  was  nice, 
friendly,  and  congenial.  "Tlie  more 
you  know  them  the  better  you  like 
them.  '   he   said. 

He  further  stated  that  the 
ones  that  were  ridiculed  for  be- 
ing   stuck-up     were      usually      the 


ones  that  were  the  most  popular, 
ano  had  to  turn  down  dates.  He 
explained.  "If  they  weren't  pop- 
ular they  might  not  be  ridiculed 
for  being  stuck-up.  I  don't  think 
anyone  forms  an  opinion  on 
something  that  he's  not  interested 
in.  Otherwise,  if  a  boy  didn't  have 
an  opinion  of  or  interest  in  a  coqd 
he    wouldn't   talk   about   her. " 

Rand  Baily  summed  up  his  opin- 
ion by  saying.  "Those  that  you 
know  are  pretty  nice  young  ladies, 
but  it's  hard  to  get  to  know  then}. 
The  nurses  are  much  nicer.  They 
are  a  friendlier  type  of  girl." 


w 


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BILLY/>iCOUNT\SARAH 


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and 
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ECKSTINI 


BASIE  IVAUGHAN 


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AND  ORCHESTRA  featnrinc 

JOE  WILLIAMS 


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B'JO  POWELL  TRIO      '  PHINEAS 

CHET    BAKER  NFWBOPN 

LESTER  YOUNG  QUARTET 

S^-JsPOwL      TEPRY  GtBBS  QUARTET 

JIMMY   JDNIS  .    ROY   HAYNtS  .    B1CH*RD  DAVIS 


Positively  Only   Appearance 
In   Eastern  No.  Carolina 


J£R[  SOUTHERN 

raleigh  memorial  aud. 

m6n 

FEB. 


^m' 


i.-«p-  f 


All   Seats  Reserved 

$2.00,   2.50,   2.75,   3.00,   3.50 


MAIL  ORDER  AND  TICKET  SALE 

THIEM'S    RECORD    SHOP 

HAMLIN   DRUG  CO. 


25 


8:15 


ternoon  and  evening  as  well.         I 

THIS  WEEK  has  been  a  tfusy  one 
for  the  KDs. 

On  the  schedule  for  Monday 
was  a  coffee  break  with  the  AK 
Psis  over  at  the  AKPsi  House. 

Then  on  Tuesday  the  KO 
pledges  were  hostesses  et  a  des- 
sert party  for  pledges  frefin 
other  soronties — an  event  which 
is  scheduled  again  en  Thursday 
in  order  that  ell  the  new  pledges 
be  able  to  attend. 


By  PEG  HUMPHREY 

Casual  informality  and  elegant 
formality  will  reign  during  the 
Mardi   Gras-Germans  festivities. 

Coeda  will  have  an  opportunity 
to  appear  graced  In  thfeir  inform- 
al best  at  the  concert  Thursday 
ofevening  in  the  Graham  Memorial 
Main  Lounge.  Tweedy  skirts  and 
kitten  soft  cashmeres  will  run 
rampant.  Luxury  loving  coeds  will 
I  take    advantage    of    this    occasion 


definitely  be  out  of  place  as  ar- 
rangements have  been  made  to 
seat  spectators  on  the  floor. 


to  don  their  finest  in  casual  wear. 
Heels,   earrings  and  the   like  will 


Phi  Downs 

Federal 

Measure 


And      last    night    the    Chi     Psi 


In  their  second  meeting  of  the 
semester  Tuesday  night  the  Phil- 
pledges  were  host  to  the  KD  pled- ,  ..^ropic    Assembly    considered    a 

bill    calling    for    the    decentraliza- 


ges  over  at  the  Lodge  for  a  party. 

Among  other  social  events  was 
the  rush  party  Saturday  aftei^ 
noon  at  the  Tempo  Room  held  }fy 
the  Delta  Tau  Delta  Fraternity 
from  Duke,  with  the  UNC  Pi  Phis 
helping  host  the  party. 

PINNINGS.  .  .  .Phi  Gani  John 
Keais  Hoyt  of  Washington  to 
Rosemary  Moore,  WC  sophomore 
from  Elizabeth  City.  .  .  .Sigtris 
Chi  Claude  Plurolee  of  Charlotte 
to  Barbara  Durham  of  Salem,  .  . 
Sigma  Nu  Ji^i  Kiczey  of  Brevard 
to  Duke  coed  Artis  Messick  of 
Washington.  .  .  .KA  Ray  NewBOme 
of  Winston-Salem  to  ADPi  Mary 
Burgwyn  of  Jackson.  .  .  .SPE  Jim 
Westbrook  of  Goldsboro  to  form- 
er UNC  coed   Bobbie  Turpage  of 


tion  of  the  federal  gfavernment  and 
the  alloting  of  one  billion  dollars 
annually  to  finance  its  dispersal. 

The  debate  was  opened  by  Rep. 
John  Brooks*  comparison  of  the 
relative  safety  of  one's  living 
amongst  the  head  hunters  and  can- 
nibals of  Ecuador  with  the  pre- 
carious oi  the  United  States'  gov- 
ernmental centre  in  these  precar- 
ious times.  Recalling  the  devasta- 
tati6n  wreaked  upon  Hiroshima 
and  Nagasaki  in  the  last  World 
War,  he  pointed  out  that  if  Wa^- 
ington  should  be  bombed  the  gov- 
ernment wetuld  be  destroyed  and 
leadership  of  an  American  retalia- 
tory efort  would  go  with  the  city. 


Goldsboro.  .  .  .Delta  Sigma  Pi  Her- 
man Bunch  of  High  Point  to  KD 
Mary  Gillian  of  Gilkey.  .  .  .Beta 
President    Hugh    McCoU    of    Bed- 


Rep.  Duvall  countered  these  arg- 
uments by  pointing  out  the  exist- 
ence of  an  underground  Pentagon 
_  .  _^      _    .      in  which  duplicates  of  all  govern- 
nettsville.  S.  C.  to  Tri-DfeH  Betty   ^^  documents  are  kept  on  mic- 


BeU. 

*  •  *  . 

ENGAGEMEPTTS.  .  .  .Pika  Duttr 
can  Coker  of  Hartsville,  S.  C.  to 
Tri  Delt  Molly  frautmann  of  Glen 
Ridge.  N.  J.  .  .•  .Pi  Phi  Vtf^hla 
Shalibo  of  Signal- Mountain,  tenn. 
to  Fred  Mars)iM  L.S-.U. 

MARRIAGES.  .  .ADPi  Pbll^ 
Clarenbach  of  Miami  Shores.  Fla. 
to  ksippa  Sig  Joe  Shook  of  Hic- 
kory February  1  in  Dillon,  S.  C. 


roflim.  and  the  presence  of  emer- 
ittuty  plans  of  attack  in  the  hands 
.of  nil  military  units  of  the  United 
States. 


1 

Gable  Cancels 
AppedrdHte 

Hefi  fanipt 

Dick  Gable  has  canceled  his  ap- 
pearance scheduled  for  tonight  at 
S.M  in  Graham  Memorial  main 
loutoge. 

Gable  caQCelo^,  the  engagement 
yesterdiQr,  according  to  GM  direc- 
tor Linda  Mano, 

Gable's  comW>  was  to  present 
an  informal  j^ae«isioii  from  8:- 
30  to  10  p.m.  toSnght  in  GM  as  the 
first  event  of  the  Mardi  Gras 
weekend. 


Rep.  Jac«l»l  futher  negated  the! 

bill   by  slating   that    its  emphasis ; 
was  faulty  and  before  our  govern- 1 
mental  agencies  were  decentralized 
Dur  stategic  resources,  such  as  the 
Pittsburgh  steel   mills,   should   be 
dispersed.  . 

;  After  Rep.  Howerton  briefly 
pointed-  o^t  the  •  importance  of 
Washidgton  and  its  inhabitants  in 
ma.V^taining  the  morale  of  the 
country, , the -bill  was  brought  to 
a  vote  and  ddwhed  by  a  majority 
of  6-2. 


Polished  inforriiality  will  be  the 
keynote  of  the  attire  f(^  the  con- 
certs f  riday  evening  and  Saturday 
afternoon.  Wool  sheaths  and  suits 
will  take  the  spotlight. 

BRILLIANT  ACCENTS 

Sparking  the  basic  uncluttered 
look  that  Carolina  ladies  love 
will  be  dashing  lean  pumps,  dazz- 
ling pins,  ey^-cfatching  earrings, 
and  fine  kid  or  leather  gloves  or 
perhaps  gloves  in  a  shade  that 
'  blend  with  shoes  or  jewelry. 

In  accord  with  the  gayiety  at- 
j  tached  to  the  Mardi  Gras  season. 
I  coeds  with  a  spark  of  imagina- 
I  tion  will  brighten  up  sagging  win- 
j  ter  wardrobes  by  a  frivolous  use 
j  of  color  in  their  acces.sories. 

I  The  ultimate  in  formality  will 
I  be  reached  Saturday  evening.  Fair 
ladies  of  the  campits  will  blossom 
in  their  most  flowing  and  flatter- 
ing finery.  Evening  dresses  this 
season  boast  feminine  elegance 
with  waist  hugging  cumberbunds, 
and  draping  and  flowing  lines  em- 
bellished J)y  accents  of  glimmering 
sequins  and  precious  stones.  The 
achieved  effect  is  much  like  that 
cf  a  precious  crushed  flower 
whose  beauty  and  fragrance  is 
pleasantly  permeating  but  not  ov- 
erpowering. 

DELICATE   LUXURY 

Delicate  touches  of  queen-like 
plushness  are  demanded  in  form- 
al attire.  These  delicious  additions 
may  be  arhieved  by  the  perfect 
placement  of  a  particularly  de- 
lighttul  sunburst  pin,  shimmer- 
ing strands  of  beads,  a  flower 
carefully,  placed  on  a  cumberbund. 
or  a  dashing  satin  headband. 

Even  footwear  may  Be  tirahs- 
formed  in  accord  with  the  fair 
lady  approach  to  dressing.  Satin 
bows  may  be  added  to  plain  satin 
pumps  or  sequins  and  sparkling 
stones  may  be  sprinkled  on  heels 
or  toes  of  shoes.  Extra  skinny 
heels  and  sharply  pointed  toes 
reign  in  the  ballroom  this  season. 


d66ir|«  L.  (^oxhead 

tf.M.C.  '42 
Campus  Representativs 


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d? 


st  popular. 

dates.   He 

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);>   ridiculed 

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nicer.  They 

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THZ  DAILY  TAR  HEIL 


N 


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PAGE     FIVE 


UNC  Budget  Goes  To  13  Areas 


(Continued  from  po&e  one) 

nurses'  residence  hall;  salary  in- 
creases and  reserve. 

The  Consolidated  University 
Requested  $357,624. 
'The  Division  of  Health  Af- 
fairs recommendations  of  $3.- 
648  will  be  apportioned  to  the 
administration  and  general  ex- 
pense; instruction  and  depart- 
mental research;  maintenance 
and  operation  of  plants  nurses' 
residence  hall;  salarj-  increases 
and  reserve.  $4,236,534  was  re- 
quested. 

The  largest  slice  of  the  ap- 
propriations for  each  of  the 
areas  listed  above  will  go  for 
salaries  and  wages.  Poinds  be- 
sides the  ones  for  salaries  and 
wages  will  be  divided  among 
supplies  and  materials;  pos- 
tage, telephone  and  telegram 
costs:  travel  expense;  printing 
and  binding  funds;  repairs  and 
alterations   and    equipment. 

The  recommendation  for  sum-, 
mer  school  is  S460.525  as  re- 
quested. 

The  Extension  and  public  ser- 
vice area  received  a  recommen- 
dation of  $945,854  as  against  a 
request   of  $1,063,848. 

Included  in  this  area  are  the 
University  extension:  the  In- 
stitute of  Government;  the  Com- 
munication     center;      extension 


short  courses,  institutes,  etc. 
and  the  Chapel  Hill  WUNC-TV 
studio. 

The  recommendation  for  pub- 
lications, publicity,  public  infor- 
mation and  public  occasions  is 
$287,014.  for  the  biennium. 
$287,014    was    requested. 

Student  welfare  received  a  re- 
commendation of  $352,456  for 
the  biennium.  The  request  was 
for  $352,456. 

This  includes  the  dean  of  stu- 
dents' office,  the  student  aid 
office,  the  YMCA  and  YWCA 
and   scholarships  and  prizes. 

The  University's  servce  plants 
received  the  .amount  requested 
—53,842,372.  Its  funds  will  go 
to  the  water  department;  tele- 
phone department;  contract  and 
job;  laundry;  rental;  service  and 
repair  shop; 

Dupiicating  shop;  general  of- 
fice: operating  stores — utilities 
and  service  shop  and  a  trans- 
fer to  1943  permanent  improve- 
ment fund  (item  4-a,  utilities 
expansion.) 

The  administration's  main 
appropriation  funds  are  the  sa- 
laries of  the  chancellor  and  the 
controller  and  business  mana- 
ger, $15,000  and  $12,000,  re- 
spectively. Both  positions  re- 
ceived the  recommendations  re- 
quest3d. 

The  salaries  and  wages  recom- 


OWN 


i 


DORIS 
BETTS 

SCORES  A  BULL'S  EYE 

WITH  HER  NEW 

NOVEL 


.V  ; 


SEE  IT  AT 


•n;^. 


The  Intimate 
Bookshop 


'205  E.  Franklin  St. 


Open  Till  10  P.M. 


DAILY    CROSSWQRU 


ACROSS 

1.  Coffee  house 
5.  Chmae 

( coUoq. ) 
9.  Sound,  as  a 

partridge 
10.  General  drift 

12.  Moaes' 
broUMr  , 

13.  Additional 

14.  Chew  upon 

15.  Excla- 
mation 

K.  Coin  (J4p.) 

17.  Fiah 

18.  Cock's  creM 
10.  Spanish 

article 

21.  Marsh 

22.  Russian 
rivet 

26.  Calyx  le*f 
2S.  Ablaxe 
2i».Jor 

30.  Awfcy 

31.  Music  note 

32.  Rabbit's  Uil 

34.  CoArse  hemp 
flber 

35.  Arabian 
Ifarment 

31.  Close  to 
3f .  heroic 

narrative 
40.  Italian  coins 
42.  Of  the  sun 
4J.Ctty  (Mich.) 
44.  Correct 
49.  Youths 
46.  Direction 

DOWN 

1.  Candle. 

maker 
3  tubUc 

emanations 


3.  Cleaving:  tool 
(U.S.) 

4.  Sea  eagle 

5.  Vapor 
9.  Employ 

witchcraft 
7.  Knmets 
S.  Pierce,  with 

horns 
9.  Foxiest 
11.  Flowed 
13.  ftwine 

18.  Mountain 
pass 

19.  A  color 
21.  Clubs 
23.  Smallest 

state  (abbr.) 


24.  Dis- 
dain- 
ful 

28.  Oppo- 
site 
to 

wind- 
ward 

27.  River 
(It.) 

28.  Astern 
30.  Not  in 

office 

33.  Throws 

34.  Stories 

35.  Mr.  Landon 

36.  Bird's  beak 

37.  Melody 


B3nam  aaar^a 
aanaa   uaarda 

2,'J  -J-df-i    U'Jl  I'-iri 


Ye*ter4»y'*  Amtwr 

39.  Part  but 
not  all 

41.  Conjunction 

42.  Cutting 
tool 


mendations  in  the  chancellor 
and  business  offices  total  al- 
most $400,000  compared  to  a 
request   of  $438,644. 

The  rest  of  the  appropriation 
funds  will  handle -supplies  and 
materials;  postage,  telephone 
and  telegraph  and  telegram  fees; 
t^'tvel  expense;  printing  and 
binding  costs;  repairs  and  al- 
terations; general  expense  and 
equipment. 

The  general  university  expen- 
se received  recommendations  of 
S62.040  as  against  a  request  for 
$62,040. 

In  the  general  university  ex- 
pense, the  largest  amount  of 
funds  —  $30,000  —  will  go  for 
alumni  records.  Other  funds  will 
be  apportioned  among  the  cage 
gories  of  general  travel  expense; 
subscriptions  and  dues;  insur- 
ance and  bending;  the  admis- 
sions testing  program  and  the 
building  survey. 

The  appropriation  funds  for 
the  instruction  and  departmen- 
tal research  areas  will  go  to  the 
various  schools  and  departments 
within    the   University. 

The  schools  and  departments, 
with  their  requests  and  recom- 
mendations, are  as  follows: 

Admissions,  registration  and 
records  department —  $277,968 
requested.  $262,968  recommend- 
ed. 

School  of  Business  Administra- 
tration  —  $732,680  requested. 
$730,110    recommended. 

School  of  Education —  $347- 
530  requested.  $347,470  recom- 
mended. 

School  of  Journalism  —  $138,- 
988  requested,  $137,858  reocm- 
mended. 

School  of  Law  —  $282,610  re- 
quester, $277,650  recommended. 

School  of  Library  Science  — 
$99,350  requested.  $99,230  re 
commended. 

School  of  Social  Work  —  $98,- 
888  requested,  $98,578  recom- 
mended. 

Dept.  of  Statistics  —  $100,032 
requested.  $99,452  recommend- 
ed. 

Dean  of  the  Graduate  School 
—$18^6  requested,  $18,146  re- 
commended. 

Division  of  Humanities  —  $2.- 
114.809    requested.     v$2.064.0aB 
recommended. 

Division  of  Social  Sciences — 
$735,248  requested,  $719,368 
recommended. 

Division  of  Natural  Sciences — 
$2,051,531  requested,  $2,023,611 
recommended. 

Physical  Education— ^246,254 
requested.  $245,754  recommend- 
ed. 

Air  Rorce  ROTC  — «7.694  re- 
quested.   $7,644   recommended. 

Naval  ROTC-^10,188  request- 
ed.   $10,028    recommended. 

.  Dean  of  the  College  of  Arts 
and  Sciences  —  $30,746.  request- 
ed,  $30,646  recommended. 

Dean  of  the  CJeneral  College — 
$56,020  requested,  $55,554  re- 
commended. 


Louis  R.  Wilson  Library  — 
SI. 098,262  Requested,  $1,032,162 
recommended. 

Organized  research  —$286,672 
requested,  $224,772  recommend- 
ed. 

Occupancy  — ^$533,548  request- 
ed,   $533,548   recommended. 

Morehead  Building  — $40,158 
requested.  $39,958  recommend- 
ed. 

Dean  of  the  Faculty  —$12,264 
requested,  $12,164  recommend- 
ed. 

Maintenance  and  operation 
of  the  plant  received  more 
than  was  requested.  The  Budg- 
et Commission  recommended 
838,802.  The  University  asked 
for  $824,802. 

Included  in  this  are  the  care 
of  buildings;  grounds  upkeep; 
motor  transport;  police  and  fire 
protection;  the  superintendent's 
office  and  physical  maintenance. 

Custodial  care  received  a  rec- 
ommendation by  the  Commission 
of  $1.,021.840  compared  with  a 
request  for  $1,035,562.  This  in- 
cludes residence  halls  of  men 
and  women,  .Spencer  Hall  dining 
room  and  the  health  service. 

Recommended  for  the  airport 
wa.;  $10,468.  The  University 
asked  for  $13,552. 

Additions  and  betterments,  in- 
cluding equipment  and  emer- 
gency repairs,  received  no  rec- 
ommendation. $10,000  was  re- 
quested. _^ 

Debt  service,  a  recommenda- 
tion of  $258,286  as  requested. 

No  recommendation  was  made 
lor  reserve.  $27,832  was  asked. 

Merit  salary  increments  and 
salary  increases  were  recom- 
mended $105,000  for  the  bien- 
niimi.  Requested  wa.v  $1,300,142. 
CONSOLIDATED  UNIVERSITY 

In  the  Consolidated  Univer- 
sity, the  administration  and  gen- 
eral expense  recommendations 
totalled  $233,558.  $246,348  wa^ 
requested. 

Salary  recommendations  of 
the  Consolidated  University  offi- 
cers are  as  follows: 

President — $18,000  as  request- 
ed; vice  president  and  finance 
officer — $15,000  as  again^l  $15,- 
oOO  reque^'ted;  vice  president 
jnd  provost — $15,000  as  compar 
ed  to  a  request  of  $16,500. 

Vice  president  in  charge  of 
graduate  studies  and  research — 
$15,0(X),  $16,500  requested  and 
business  officer  and  treasurer — 
$12,000  as  against  $13,000  re- 
quested. 

The  Consolidated  University 
staff  salaries  and  wages  will 
retal  $21,593  per  year  as  re- 
quested, t^- 

Maintenance  and  operaflon  of 
ihe  plant  will  total  $10,460  per 
year  as  requested.   . 

The  recommendatl«B  for 
\\TJNC-TV,  transmitter  opera- 
tion, is  $37,720  per  year  for  the 
biennium.  llie  request  wtL-  for 
$37,920.  -J 


Heavy  Docket  Faces 
Student  Legislature 


By  NEIL  BASS 

.  The  Student  Legislature  con- 
venes tonight  with  the  heaviest 
docket  of  the  current  assembly 
confronting   it. 

The   session   will   begin   at    7:30 
on  the   fourth  floor  of  New  East 
Building. 
DOCKET 

Most  important  measure  on  the 
docket  is  a  bill  establishing  a 
tfomm^ttee  to  study  the  student 
Constitutio-n  and  make  sugges- 
tions toward  revision. 

According  to  Attorney  General 
Sam  Wells,  the  committee  will 
make  the  document  more  "fluid" 
by  making  it  more  general.  Spe- 
cific items  should  be  contained 
in  individual  statutes  which  are 
easily  changed.  Wells  said. 
OTHER  BILLS 

Other  measures  slated  to  be 
voted  upon  tonight  are: 

(1)  A  bill  establishing  a  com- 
mittee to  accept  insurance  com- 
pany bid.s. 

Ct  AS^IHPD!S        "" 

RIDE  TO  ATLANTA— WANTED 
this  week-end.  .  .two  boys.  Call 
89162,  Joe  Brown. 


(2)  A  bill  to  pay  transporta- 
tion expenses  for  two  students  who 
will  visit  Sarah  Lawrence  College 
"to  exchange  governmental  ideas." 

(3)  A  bill  to  appropriate  funds 
to  Hungarian  Student  Project. 

(4)  A  bill  establishing  a  Sum- 
mer Activities  Council. 

(5)  A  bill  urging  the  Consoli- 
dated University  Student  Council 
to  return  to  its  original  purpose. 
OPEM  MEETING 

Concerning  the  session  Speak- 
er Sonny  Evans  said: 

"All  legislative  meetings  are  op- 
i  en  to  the  entire   student  body. 
!      AH  interested  students  are  cor 
I  dially    invited    to    see    the    Legis- 
lature machinery  in  operation." 


JAZZ  4T  TURNAOES 

Saturday  afternoon.  2:00,  Turn- 
ages  Cabin  in  Durham. — Jazz  by 
Dick  Gables  "All  Stars."  Beer 
Served. 

LOST:  SHAEFFER  PEN  BLACK 
and  ^gold.  Lost  in  or  between 
CalJii'ell  and  Library  at  8.S0 
a.m.  Contoct  Charles  Suggs  at 
5091^2  A  N^rth  Street. 


Scandinavian  Studies 
Representative  Here 

Miss  Judith  Alberti.  field  rep- 
resentative for  the  Scandinavian 
Seminar  for  Cultural  Studies,  will 
be  on  campus  through  Friday  at 
9  pm. 

Miss  Alberti  will  interview  per- 
sons interested  in  spending  their 
junior  or  graduate  year,  gr  pro- 
fessional people,  for  a  year's  liv- 
ing and  studying  in  Denmark. 
Norway,  or  Sweden.  A  litliited 
number  of  scholarships  are  being 
offered,  she  said. 

The  representative  is  available 
to  talk  or  show  slides  on  the  first 
floor  of  the  Y  buildintf  today  ,4 
to  5:30  p.m.  and  Friday  4  to  5 
p.m. 

Information  may  be  obtained 
from  the  secretary  in  the  Y  build- 
ing. 


SUPER  SAVINOS  FOR  YOU  ON -^ 


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OPEN  TIL8:30  f*^"^  ^  y  and  Saturday  only 
All Men'sCATALINA  SWEATERS  V2  PftlCE 


Regular  Values  From  $8.95  To  $19.95 


All  Men' 


Sport  Coats  Reduced 


Regular  $19.95  Value 
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Regular  $34.95  Value 


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Plastic  Jumbo 

Garment  Storage  Bags 
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Large  Group 

Muslin  Sheets 


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Special  Purchase  Irregulars 


72x99 
81x99 


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Men's 


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One  Group 

One  group 


Sport  Shirts 


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2  for  $3.00 
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Ail  Men's 


Jackets  Reduced 


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Pillows .::...  $Loo    I 


21x36 


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$1.79  Value 


Ladies'  CATALINA   SWEATERS  V2  PRICE 

Special  Group  Drastically  Reduced 

Wools,  Orlons,  Cashmere,  and  Belgemiere  , 

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Ladies'                               •     v 

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special  Group 

Ladies^  Blouses 

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Lc!dies'  Stoles 


Values 
To  $4.95 


$1.00 


Large  Group  Ladies'  ' 

DRESS  SHOES 

By  FASHiON  LANE 


Regular 
$7.95  Values 


$5.00 


$1.98  Value     L^_:lJ___1   :  $1.44 
$2.98  Vilua     __„__^___^__  $2.00 

$3.98  Value  _. l___1__   $2.77    •- 

$5.^5  Value ^Ji:^^  $3.77 


'  Ladies' 

Nylon  Lingerie 

Pajamas,  Slips,  Shcrtie  Gowns,  Shortie 
Pajamas,  Long  Gowns. 
Values 
To  $5.95      :    / 

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Ladies'  Sweaters 


Regular  $1.98 
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Ladies' 


•"-••▼»>«*'_<•  YIN^  - 


Cotton  Bras 
2  for  $1.00 


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Ladies' 

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Panties 


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3elk-Leggett-Horton  Go. 


^AGt  SIX 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEt 


» 
t 

THURSDAY,  FEBRUARY  14,  IfST* 

^  I 


Tar  Babies  Get  Number  13 
Larese,  Shaffer  Lead  Way 


Action  Under  The  Boards  S^     .  •* ' 

Joe  Quigg  p^fd  an  unidentified  Wake  Forest  player  battle  for  a  rebound  in  fierce  action  during  last 
nights  Ca.oHna-Wake  Forest  game  in  Woollen  Gym.  The  Tar  Heels  survived  a  late  Woka  rally  to  win, 
72-69. 


By  BILL  KING 

The  Cai-olina  Tar  Babies  used  a 
deadly  eye  from  the  free  throw 
line  to  humble  the  Wake  Forest 
frosh  88-70  and  get  their  thir- 
teenth win  of  the  season  last  night ; 
in  Woollen  Gym.  j 

The  victory  was  sweet  revenge  I 
for  the  frosh  who  had  iuffered  a 
humiliating    93-67    defeat    at    the  I 
hands    of    the    Baby    Deacs    two 
weeks  ago  in  Winston-Salem. 

The  Tar  Babies  dropped  in  36 
shots  from  the  charity  line  in  tak- ; 
ing  their  second  win  of  the  sca.son 
over    the    Wake    Forest    club    in 
Woollen  Gym.  ' 

Carolina  took  control  of  the 
game  early  in  the  first  half  when  I 
Lee  Shaffer  hit  a  jump  shot  with  j 
five  minutes  gone  to  put  the  Tar , 
Babies  out  front  9-7.  Prom  there  j 
t)Ut  it  was  Carolina's  ball  game ; 
iill  the  way  and  the  visitor  j  were 
able   to   make   it   close   only   once ' 


more  throughout  the  game.  They 
tied  the  score  at  21-21  with  8:39} 
rerjiaining  in  the  first  half,  but  the  I 
Tar  Babies  got  seven  quick  points  | 
tt  pull  away  for  good.  Carolina  led  j 
at  the  half  38-32. 

In  the  second  half  the  Tar  Ba- 1 
bies  were  hitting  much  better  j 
from  the  floor  but  it  was  their  j 
consistency  from  the  free  throw  j 
line  that  put  the  game  on  ice  from! 
thenii:The  frosh  took  51  foul  shots.  I 

Coicb   Vince  Grimaldi   used  his| 
usual  starting  five  but  substituted 
freely  with  Grey  Poole  and  Wally 
Graha^n  who  dropped  in  18  points 
betw^een  them.  Poole  collected  nine  j 
of  eleven  from  the  free  throw  line  i 
and    collected    11    points.    Graham  I 
had  7.  I 

Loading  the  way  for  the  Tar  Ba- 
bies  were    forwards   York    LaresCj 
and.   Lee    Shaffer.    Larese    hit    22 1 
points  Avith  8-8  from  the  charity  | 
line,  Und   Shaffer   dropped   in    21 
points/  Center    Dick    Kepley    was 


good   for   16   points   for   the   Tar 
Babies. 

Guard  Charlie  Forte  was  the 
high  man  for  the  Baby  Dcacs  with 
19  points.  He  was  followed,  by 
George  Ritchie  and  David  Budd 
with  15  and  14  points  respectively. 
Budd  waj  ejected  from  the  game- 
in  the  last  few  minutes  for  a  brie^ 
scuffle  with  Kepley. 

The  next  game  for  the  Tar  Ba- 
bies is  Feb.  19  when  they  go 
against  N.  C.  Stale  in  Woollen 
Gym.  f>tate  has  beaten  the  Tar 
Babies  twice.. 


The  box: 
Wake  Forest 


Moreland  Case 

(Continued  from  Hage  1 ) 

to  pay  transportation  for  visits  to  the  campus  by  prospective   bas- 
ketball players.  ^ 

The  ACC  report  showed  that  its  investigation  "revealed  cfm- 
firmation  of  the  original  admissions  made  by  .Moreland"  that  he  had 
been  promised  certain  additional  inducements  l^y  representatives  >f 
State  College. 

"T^iis  confirmation,"  the  report  stated,  "wa.v  given  to  us  on  a 
confidential  basis  and  is  not  available  for  public  release.  Howeve;-. 
details  of  the  confirmation  are  available  toeNortb  Carolina  State 
College  on  a  confidential  basis." 

The  NCAA  charged  that  the  college  offered  cash  grants  to 
Moreland  and  the  promise  of  a  7-year  medic»l  scholarship  for  his 
girl  friend. 

In  his  statement  Wednesday,  Dr.  Bostian  s-aid  "We  are  deeply 
disappointed  with  the  failure  of  the  faculty  chairmen  to  conduct  the 
complete  and  full  investigation  in  this  case,  on  all  charges,  which 
we  had  urgently  requested  them  to  do.  ' 


FG      FT      F  Pts 


Wiggins,  f  4 

Murray,  f :  2 

.Mitchell,  t  .-  0 

Budd,  c  _ 6 

Forte,  g 4 

Bailey,  g  ...., 1 

Ritchie,   g    5 


2-3 

5 

5-7 

2 

1-2 

3 

2-5 

4 

11-12 

5 

00 

2 

5-6 

4 

Totals    22     26-35  25     70 


SPORTS 

Urv/  Cheek,  Sports  Editor 


A  Door  Slammed  Shut 

Atlantic  Coast  Conference  Commissii'ner  Jim  Weaver  slammed  the 
door  shut  on  the  Jackie  Moreland  case  once  and  for  all  yesterday,  bui 
the  hue  and  cr\-  from  the  Stat?  campu.^  continue.-  unabated 

We  for  one  are  more  than  weary  of  seeing  Jackie  Moreland's 
name  splashed  across  the  pages  of  the  state  newspapers,  and  it's 
a  great  relief  to  see  the  concluding  chapter  written  in  ths  soroid 
story  of  Srate's  great  recruiting  debacle. 

But  a  shafidw  of  doubt  still  flickers  acro.-j  our  mind.  If  the  State 
people  are  guilty  as  charged,  why  the  nevier-say-die  protieslations  and 
shuuts  of  resistance  from  Chancellor  Carey  Bo?tian  r.nd  o'her  officials 
at  the  Raleigh  Institution? 

We  don't  know  the  real  facts  behind  the  story,  but  we  wonder 
if  State  isn't  getting  something  of  a  raw  deal.  The  NCAA  was  un- 
doubtedly too  severe  n  their  penalty,  and  the  ACC  didn't  hove  ths 
courage  to  do  anything  but  follow  suit. 

State  officials  are  now  demanding  a  public  hearing,  but  there  i.s 
little  or  no  likelih::od  they  will  get  one.  The  ACC  faculty  chairmen 
have  said  "no"  to  Siatc,  and  they  arc  not  likely  to  speak  ajiain. 

And  so  justice  in  this  era  of  big  time,  high  pressure  athletics 
is  done.  The  Little  boy  with  his  fist  in  the  cookie  jar  has  been 
slapped.  But  all  over  America,  other  not-so-nice  little  beys  are 
gorgipg  themsaives  gleefully  on  th3  contents  of  saij  cookia  jar. 

The  hand  of  retribution  hangs  suspended. 

•■  ^        i 

..  ,V-        Around  The  Sports  Beat  j 

The  move  to  present  Coach  Frank  McCuirc  with  a  n?w  Cadillac 
is  primarily  a  student  affair,  and  m  outsi-ler  has  given  anything  like 
the  S3.000  reported  in  the  Daily  Tar  Heel  last  week.  R  was  1  nrn"d 
later  by  this  writer  that  the  Burlington  busincs.-.nan  referred  to  con- 
tributed something  closer  to -$100  than  $3,000. 

There  is  little  chance  of  Stan  Groll  rejoining  th?  Carolina  bas- 
ketbaM  team  next  semester,  but  Harvey  Salz  should  retu-n.  V/ith 
Groll,  Salz  and  Bill  Hathaway  out  of  school  and  Danny  Lotz  spend- 
ing most  of  his  time  on  ths  bench,  last  year's  fabulouc'  freshman 
team  has  been  of  little  help  to  the  varsity  this  year.  They  were 
the  talk  of  Chapel  Hill  a  year  ago,  but  now  nothing  remains  but 
memories. 

Next  Tuesday  night's  UXC-State  game  is  a  sellout,  and  this  time 
there  will  be  ho  broadvision  for  the  unlucky  ones  without  tickets. 
Seems  the  high  schools  and  small  colleges  objected  to  the  telecast. 

A  few  short  sighted  radio  stations  in  the  area  brought  about 
the    cancellation    of   WUNC's    broadcast    of    the    Carolina-Virginia 
game  Monday  night.  And  from  the  reports  we've  had,  the  students 
-  weren't  too  happy  about  it. 

Carolina's  basketball  team  has  been  receiving  wide  coverage  since 
their  arrival  to  the  number  one  i>osition.  Even  Rome  newspapers  have 
turned  the  spotlight  on  Chapel  Hill  and  its  adopted  sons  of  the;  hard- 
wood. 

» 

The  three  afvaj or  sports  are  all  sharing  the  spotlight  these  days. 
Coach  Jim  Tatum's  footballers  have  just  begun  winter  drills,  the 
baseball  team  goes  through  its  first  practice  session  today  and  the 
cagers  are  struggling  to  keep  their  win  streak  intact. 


McGUIRE 

(Continued  jrom  page  1) 

a  Carcfiina  fan  high  blood  pressure 
by  now. 

Were  things  getting  a  little 
tough  on  him,  .McGuire  was  asked. 
Nat  only  on  me,"  he  answered," 
I  know  people  who  wouldn't  even 
go  t(  the  game  or  watch  it  on  TV 
ilicy  were  .-j  nervous.'' 

ilcGuire  complimented  the  play 
of  subs  Bob  Young  and  Danny  Lotz 
vvho  finishod  the  game  for  the  Tar 
Heels,  filling  in  for  Lon  Rosen- 
tluth  and  Pete  Brennan.  "I  thought 
both  boys  looked  real  good  out 
there  tonight,"  he  said.  I'm  glad  j 
ihey  could  get  into  action;  Its  good 
experience  fctr  them." 

The  smiling  Xrishmjui.  and  he 
was  smiling  again  tonight,  also  had 
an  enlhsiastic  word  about  the  Ca- 
rolina student  body.  *  Did  you  hear 
hat  crowd?"  he  asked.  "Why  when 
uc  gut  ahead  by  11,  I  thought  it 
was  New  Year'j  Eve.  It  was  great." 

McGuire  evidently  doesn't  put 
much  stock  in  the  number  13  su- ; 
perstition.  When  informed  that 
yesterday  was  the  13th,  he  smiled  i 
and  said:  "Voh.  I  know,  and  to- 
rn rrows  the  14th  and  I  didn't  even 
buy  ,my  wife  a  valentine." 

Above  all  people,  McGuire  knows 
the  pressure  that  thi;s  trcmendou.s 
winning  ftrtak  ha.s  brought  aixjui. 
'Why  every  one  of  our  opponents 
play  •  like  it  was  in  a  world  series. 
They're  all  out  to  knock  us  off  and 
it's   really   tough." 

The  eld  saying,  "no  rest  for  the! 
wt>ary"  is  quite  applicable  to  the 
i  ai  Heels.  Ntxl  Tuesday  the  N.  C. 
Slate  W^olfpnck  invades  Chap'-l 
"Tii!  (leterniinod  tfi  make  amends 
for  a  humiliating  licking  over  in 
'?iI«iL;h  Jan.  15.  So  nww  the  lar 
Hcc'l  coach  faces  another  w.'^ck  of 
headaches  and  after  that  mere 
htadaclcs  with  South  Carolina. 
Wake  Forest  and  Duke. 

Fencers  Meet  AMA ' 

The  Carolina  fencing  club  will 
open  its  season  Saturday  after- 
noon at  1:30  in  Woollen  Gym 
against  Augusta  Military  Acad- 
emy. Captain  Don  Corbin  has 
urged  all  fencers  to  bn  on  hand 
for  final  practice  sessions  today 
and  tomorrow. 


Spring  Baseball  Drills 
in  This  Afternoon 


Carolina 

Shaffer,  f 
Larese,  f  . 
Kepley,  c  . 


FG      FT      F  Pts 


._.  7 


Beg 


Spring  baseball  drilLj  will  get 
underway  this  afternoon  on  Em- 
erson  Field. 

Head  coach  Walter  Rabb  will 
hold  a  meeting  of  all  varsity  and 
fre.shman  candidates  at  2:30  p  m. 
in  Woollen  Gym  and  then  move 
to  Emerson  for  the  first  workout 
of  the  year. 

The  Tar  Heels  open  their  season 


.March  20  when  they  travel  to  Flo- 
riday  for  a  four  day  sta>-  to  meet 
Florida.  Georgia  Tech,  Ohio  State 
and  Rollins.  ; 

Carolina  has  been  hard  hit  by 
losses  at  first  base,  center  field 
and  catcher,  but  a  strong  pitching 
staff  and  the  return  of  some  of 
last  year's  top  stars  are  factors 
on  the  plus  side. 


Poole,  c  .j:^....,:.i. .  1 
Crotty,  g  ;.:,..li:   0 

Graham,  g  _  2 

Steppe,  g  :.   3 

Totals   .  26 

Score  by  periods: 

;  Wake  Forest  

UNC „. . 


7-10 
8-8 

4-e 

9-11 

1-4 

3-5 

4-7 


2     10 


Howard  Johnson  Restaurant 

BREAKFAST  V  j 

LUNCH  -     " 

DINNER 

SNACKS 

"Landmark  For  Hungry  Tarheels'' 


36-51  21     88 

..    32     38-70 
.     37     51—88 


PATRONIZE   YOUR 
•    ADVERTISERS    • 


M  the  '57  Casual  Look- Arrow  Style 


.V 


This  Arrow  Squire  jtport*  a  pattern  with  decided 
freshness.  Black  on  white  available  in  three  different 
sized  plaids.  New  medium-spread  collar  has  button* 
down  front  plus  button  at  back.  Ex*ct  sleeve  length. 
(This  same  shirt  is  also  available  in  White  Tartan 
— six  new  miniature  plaids.)  Arrow  Squire, 
"Sanforized"  gingham,  $5.95. 

MANDKIRCHlin  •  UNOCRWIAR 


*»■       *' 


ARROW- 
CASUAL  yVEAR 


'"^ 


FOR    YOUR 

VALENTINE 


-i  ;  "*-_ 


MUSICAL    FOOTBALl 

;  •     Plays 
"HARK  THE  SOUND" 
Only 

$3.50 


■■^^■■^^i^ 


1 6tiop 


:•; .   You  smoke  refreshed 

A  new  idea  in  smoking... all-new 


'^Jf: 


::i 


em 


SAE's  Celebrate  100 
Years  Of  Organization 

The  Iwal  chapter  of  Sigma  Al- 
pha Epsilon  fraternity  today  ce- 
lebrates the  one-hundredth  an- 
niversary p£  the^N.  C.  Xi  chap- 
ter, founded  on  Feb.  14,  1857  by 
Thomas  Jarrett,  Wily  W.  White- 
head,  and   Thaddeus   Belcher. 

In  celebrating  their  centennial 
the  SAE's  provided  entertain- 
ment last  weekend  for^the  alumni 
and  their  wives.  Included  in  the 
weekend's  activities  were  a  wel- 
coming party,  a  buffet  supper,  a 
business  mectinig,  the  UNC-Duke 
ba-sketball     game,  and     a  combo 


^RODGERS&HAMMERSTEIN 


present 


OKLAHOMA! 

OnkmaScoPE 


Color  by  rECHNICOLOR 

A  MA6NA  ProdiiCtion 

D<UliMti  by  20tli  CENIUKY  F0> 

PRICES  THIS 
ATTRACTION 
ADULTS  85^ 

HOURS   OF   SHOWS 

1:20—3:52—^:26—8:59 

NOW  PLAYING 


IVAN  MOFFAT  Ml  HARRY  BKOWN 


NOW  PLAYING 


Jl^im 


*-  menthol  fresh 

•  rich  tobacco  taste 
•  most  modern  filter 


Take  a  puff— it's  Springtirael  Light  up  a  filler-tip  5.\lem  and  hnd  a  smoke 
that  refreshes  your  taste  tlie  uay  Springtime  does  you.  Its  a  new  idea  in  smok- 
ing—menthol-fresh  comfort . . .  rich  tobacco  taste . . .  pure,  while  modem  filter! 
They're  all  in  Salem  to  refresh  your  taste.  Ask  for  Salem  — you'll  love  'em! 

Salem  refreshes  your  taste 


•^•yy^^y^^^v^^r^  •  •  •  •  •  I  I  I  I  \  w  wv^wwww^^p^^^^i«^wwwp99«wwwwwOT9«w«9pi 


WEATHER 

Fsir  and  colder,  with  an  expect- 
cd  high  in  the  30$. 


VOL.  VLII   NO.  9? 


3r(ic 


Complete  {/P)   Wire  Service 


^Tar  Keel 


WASN'T 

It  wasn't  what  you  thought.  See 
editorial,  p»g*  2. 


CHAPEL  HILL,   NORTH  CAROLINA,  FRIDAY,  FEBRUARY   15,   1957 


Budget  Asks  Over 
$5  Million  For 
University  Here 

Main  Request  Would  Go  For 
Three  New  Men's  Dormitories 

i     Appiopiiaiioii!*  Joi   the  Clliapel^HiU  bramh  of  the  Clon- 
Nolulaicd  I  n!\eiMiy.  a.s  rerominended  by  tlje  .\dvisoiv  Bud- 
-it   (.oiiimisMon.  tome  to  a  total  ol   more  than  ,S-,.-,  inillion 
for  the   iy:,7-->9  bieniiium. 

Rc^'ular  ;  .ipiopriations  total  over  5:}.-,  luillioi).  Revolvin^r 
Ipiid  appr(j->  laiioiiv,— in.iinlv  Si  million  lor  three  luens  doi- 
iniiones— biina;   the   total    to  S;,.;,   niillioii. 

Mail)   ret cnimeiidat ions   lor  the   I'uiversitv  are  Si 
:>'".  I'M-  a  n.n    PIianiKuy  l)iiildinir  and  Si.-joo.ooo  lov 
Pli\si(s   biiildiii" 


Offices   in   Graham   Memorial 


SIX   PAGES  THIS   ISSUE 


Chancellor  Recommendation  May  Come 

Feb.  24 ,  CU  President  Friday  Says 

Selection  Committee  Recommends 


-,o.- 
iiew 


The    University    asked    for    $!.-♦ 
57.">.000  and  .Sl.600.000    respective- 
ly,,  for  the  two  new  buildings.        i 

The-  Pharmacy  build-ng  will 
hnc  a  floor  space  cf  63.400  sq. 
fori  a.s  recommended  by  thr  State 
Eoard    of    Hi-liier    Education. 

The  Physics  b'ild4rg  —  to  be 
Ircrted  in  the  \ici'iity  of  Phillips 
HaFI — -.vill  have  lloor  space  of 
7.">.000   square    feet.  '    ' 

Ten  other  areas  within  the 
University  received  appropriations 
for    capital    improvenienls. 

At  t  U\  of  S222  000.  as  request- 
ed, was  reeommended  for  remodel- 
in?  Howell  Hall.  The  fundi  will 
so  for  building  and  equipment. 

Tho  Budget  Commssion  ex- 
plained Howell  Hall,  which  has 
bueii  used  for  many  years  as  the 
I'luaniaey  building,  is  now  inade- 
fjtialc  for  that  purpose. 

Tile    Comniis->ion    reported    the 

building:  waii  now    ''felt   t?   be  sat- 

L'iactory    and    to    have    sufficient 

space"  far   the   S::hool  ol  Jcuraai- 

istu."  i 

An  acldil  on  lo  Pcnbody  Hall 
will  be  constructed  with  funds 
from  an  S865.000  recommendation 
cs  .".lain.-t  a  request  of  S866.779  I 
Th.'>  Commis^;  -n  explained  th- 
buildJn,:?  floor  s:)acc  was  now  in  ' 
aflc'iua^e.  j 

."^ZOOOO  v-.-is  r'jpommcnded  for  in  I 
tramual  fields  and  tennis  courts 
T!ie   renucst    wa^    for  S-lOO.OOO. 

Th"  Commi  sion  cut  this  figur  i 
severely  because  it  felt  "due  t  I 
the  ^rov'h  and  construction  r  j 
ne  V  buildings,  it  has  been  neces  j 
^a  y.  in  the  proper  ioeatin?  c  ! 
thcs?  bul  !in.?s  to  use  a  number  o 
playing  fields  and  tennis  courts 
for  b'l'lding  sites.  ] 

An   increase   in   the  .-ize   of  thr  j 
student    body    h^s    decreased    "ii 
sirp.ihe  facilities  for  outdoor  ac- 
tivities....'   the    Commissi -n    ex- 
plained. 

The  School  of  Dentistry  receiv 
ed  a  r2c;:nimendation  of  S3000  for 
a  ventilat'ng  system  for  thirci 
floor   labo."a{o:ics. 

The  Budget  Commission  rccom 
mended  .S7000  and  .S5000  for  Wcol 
len  Gymnasium.  The  appropria 
tUm-  will  go  for  exhaUst  fans  foi 
the  main  building  and  rocf  re 
piirs  for  Navy  dressing  room,  re 
spcetively. 

Venahlc  Hall  was  recommended 
S'ln.OOO  to  furnish  room  13-1  as 
a  frp'.hman  chemistry  lab.  It  also 
received  a  recommendation  of 
$1875  for  new  hoods  and  desks  in 
room  14. 

Davie      Hall     received      recom- 
mend 3t  ions  for  a  recommendation 
for  .S30.000  for  partitions,  flooring 
and  lighting. 
.'Rin.OOO    was    recommftnded    for 
(See  UNC  BUDGET,  Page  5) 


$3  Million 
Asked  For 
Health 


Four  Names  For  Chancellorship 


ma)   lia\e  a  ret oiiinieiida  ion   lor  a  new  diaiuellor  l)y  Feb.  :.'-,.  it  was 


The   rni\er.sit\ 
rned    1  hnrsday. 
Koiir  names   have  been   snbmiited   to  C'.on.solidated    I'nixersity    Presitlcnt    William 
Iriday   by   R.   Mayne  .Mbrisiit  ol    Raleigh,  eh  airman  of   the  ehaiuellor  selection  f;Tt>"P- 
l"rida\  .said  he  "hoped  to  make    (his)  recommendation  to  the  Board  ()l 


I  rnstecs  meeting 


.\eilhei     .Mbrij^hl    or    l"i  idav    \v()nld    relea.se   the   names.   .Mbri^ht   said. 
sni)milted   to   lrid:«.\    iiuliided   members  of  tlu-   I'.VC  laeiihy  and  others. 

Ill  snbniittini.;  the  names  Kj  Friday,  the  eommiiie  did  not  ex|)ie,ss  any  ] 
indicated  they  would  approve  any  selection   Friday   would   make. 

The  committee 


those 


neleiences 


but 


MEN'S  HONOR  COUNCIL: 


Report  Of  Activities 
Is  Released  By  Exum 


One-Way  Str  2et  To  Go 


Work  is  now  underway  to  widen  both  Rosemary  and  Henderson  Streets.  Town  Manager  Rose  says 
that  widening  Henderson  St.  will  facilitate  two-way  traffic  down  by  the  post  office.  The  bulldozer  here 
is  shown  cutting  away  part  of  the  back  end  of  the  post  office  lot.         i. 


IN  MEMORIAL  HALL: 


Mardi  Gras  Here  Today 


The  University  Division  of 
Health  Affair,  received  a  recom- 
mendation Jlonday  from  the  .Ad- 
vise ry  Budget  Commission  of  ov- 
er S3.5  million  for  the  1957-59 
bicHiiium. 

T^ie  exact  total  recommendation  , 
is  S3.643.000  far  the  two  year  per-  I 
iod.    The    Division    of    Health    Af- 
lairo    requested   over   $4   million. 

The    Hoa'th    Affairs    Division— : 
headed    by    Administrator    Henry  | 

T.   C.arJi— includes  the   Schools  of  j  ^_^_____^^___._^^^_ 
ilcdic'nc.  Dentistry.  Public  Health,  i  ' 

Alcnlorial   Hospital   which   operawSf —  --  .    ^  i.    ;^„*  .  ,.  • 

imder    a   separate    budget.  j 

The  Division  was  'ct  up  for  the 
purpose    of    "integrating    and    cor- 
clating   t'lc    work    of    tiiese    pro- ' 
:>ssional  sch:ols.  the  hospital  and  I 
"i?ir   teaching   and    research    pro-  | 
trams    with    the    University."    ac- 
irding    t-    th?    Budget    Commiss- 
on's    report     for    the    next    bicn- 
ium.  I 

The  Division's  medical  admin- 
stratcn*  and  advisory  committee 
■e  the  means  through  which  an 
1t?mpt  is  made  to  "correlate  the 
caching,  research  and  service  ■. 
nmdatinns  rf  the  University 
ic-ilth  Center  with  th?  hospital  j 
■nd  wi<h  health  a'.'encics  and  ser- 
ices  throughout  the   state.  [ 

The  advisory  ccmmittee  includes 
he  deans  of  the  professional 
■hools.  the  hospitil  director  and 
he    medical    administrator.  i 

The      Division's      recommenda- 
(See   HEALTH.    Page    5) 


4^ 


Petition  For 
Housing 
un 


By  EDITH  MacKINNON 

Carolina's  Mardi  Gras  weekend  of 
nnisic  and  uancing  starts  off  tonight 
^^  'th  the  moclerii  jazz  of  the  Mitchell- 
luiff  Duo  setting  the  mood  in  its 
,  oncert   a'   Memorial  Hall. 

Mitchell-Ruff  concert  time  has 
been  set  for  8-10  p.m.  The  fes- 
tivities will  continue  on  Satur- 
day with  the  trumpet  mastery  of 
Louis  "Satchmo"  Armstrong  be- 
ing featured  at  the  formal  dance 
held  in  Woollen  Gym  from  8-12 
p.m. 

With  Dwike  ALtchell  on  piano. 
»'nd  Willie  Ruff  on  bass  and  Frencli 
i.orn,  tile  Duo  provides  music  mak- 
:i!at  is  partly  jazz,  partly  serious 
music,  with  the  best  beat  brougiU 
:o  a  minimum.  Building  on  a  firm 
l.>undation    of    classical    music,    the 


STATE  CHANCELLOR'S  LETTER: 


TB 


I  :)ii()    sots    up   a    colorful    variety   of 

i  li  nal     combinations     and     explores 

l-i)th  old  and  new  frontiers  of  jazz.     ; 

CONDUCT  , 

CJcrnFin      Club      President      Keith 
I  Palmer.     Dance     Committee     Chair- 
I  :iian    Don    Miller,    and    Mardi    Gras 
I  Chairnmn   .lim    .\i-mstrong.   released 
j  statements      yesterday      concerning 
I  .(hkIucI  at  the  Winter  CJermans  and 
!  ihe  Cafoliiui   Mardi  Gras. 
I         Palmer     said,     "The     German 
I     Club   has   spent   much    time   and    | 
I     preparation  to  bring  the  nation's 
most    popular    college    band    to 
our  campus,  and  from  all  indica- 
tions this  siiould   be   the  biggest    , 
weekend  in  recent  years.   I  hope    , 
that  the  German   Club   members    j 
will  conduct  themselves  in  such    I 
(See  CONCERT,  Page  3)  \ 


Plans  lor  a  petilun  to  the  N.C. 
Legislature  stressing  the  import- 
ance of  an  appropriation  for  mai- 
rie<l  students"  housing  units  are 
now    in    progress.  i 

Mrs.  John  Crittenden,  a  resi- 
dent of  Victory  Village,  has  stated 
that  she  and  a  group  of  student 
wives  have  formed  tentative  plans 
lor  drawing  up  such  a  petition 
and  are  seeking  further  aid  fcr 
the  move. 

The    petition   would   be   primari-  | 
ly  devoted  to  .\.  C.  signatures,  but 
would   not   be  limited   to  students. 
The   group   is   attempting  to  con- 1 
tact   Kep.  John   Umstead   to  enlist  \ 
his    aid    in    introducing    the    bill 
before  the. General   Assembly. 


Jim  Exum.  chairman  of  the  Mens 
Honor  Council,  yesterda.v  released 
a  report  of  activities  of  the  Honor 
Council   this  year. 

.\ccordinu  to  Exum,  other  reports 
of  Honor  Council  cases  will  be  re- 
1-^nsed  from  time  to  time. 

The  rciwrt  released  yesterday  is 
K.s  follows:  i 

Five  students  were  brought  bc- 
Inre  the  Council,  which  here  we  will 
t.Tm  defendants  X.  B.  C,  D  and  E. 
Kach  of  them  was  involved  in  se- 
i  iiring  illegally  some  final  examin- 
.ilions  during  the  fir.sl  se.ssion  of 
••immer  school.  1956.  None  of  the 
boys,  however,  were  connecteo  with 
il>e  activities  of  Herbert  G.  An- 
t'.iews.  which  have  already  been 
pitbliriza(j. 

Defondants   D   and    E    testified 
that  they   were  studying   in   the 
Political    Science    Library    for    a 
final  exam  this  summer  when  a 
student    unknown    to    either    of 
them  entered   the   room   and   of- 
fered them  an  exam  for  a  course 
which   they   were   not  taking. 
■|'hc.\-    replied    that     the\     iculdn't 
use    the    exam,    hut    that    they    had 
some    friends    who    could    and    they 
vould.    therefore,    take    it    for   them. 
No  money  was  asked  or  given    De- 
fendants D  and  E  testified  that  the 
unknown     student     seemed     merely 
anxious  to  rid  himself  of  the  exam.  I 
.After  receiving  the  exam,  deicnd-j 
ant    D   took    it    immediately   to   thcj 
'.vwm  of  defendant  C  where  C  was 
suidyinji  for  his  exam.  He  took  and 
."liidied     the    exam    which    D    had 
iMonght.    .\fter   D   left,   defendant    .\ 
cune  in  and  studied  tiic  same  oxiMii 
\»ith    C. 


The  abo\e  events  occurred  the 
night  before  the  exam  was  given  the 
f'jllowing  afternoon. 

The  next  morning  defendant  B 
I'jme  to  the  room  of  C  in  order  to 
study  with  C  and  .\.  since  all  three 
were  taking  the  same  exam.  C  then 
showed  defendant  B  the  exam  and 
3  studied  it  for  a*  while,  but  B 
testified  that  he  already  knew  most" 
<r|  the  questions  from  previous 
sludyin'j. 

The  really  important  consider- 
ation in  this  case  was  the  peni- 
tent and  cooperative  attitudes  of 
the  students  involved.  This  had 
much  bearing  on  the  Council's 
,     decision. 

1      The    facts    are    that    defendant    A 
icr.dily    admitted    his    guilt     to    the 
I  Coimcil   Chairman   when   oe   was   be- 
.Mij    qne.stioned    .'jbout    a    completely 
(iifferent    m.Httcr    regarding   Herbert 
.Andrews.    It    is    tiue   that    llie   Coun- 
lil    had    .A's    name   on    file    with    i"e- 
u.ird    to   a   po.ssible   honor  code   vio- 
i.ition   in   that   we  suspected   him  o; 
iiaving    i!legall\'    acquired    and    stu- 
i!ied  the  Miial  exam  in  question. 

A.  however,  freely  admitted  his 
i)art    in   the   matter,   confirming,  the 

(Sec  HONOR   COUNCIL,  Page  5) 


made  up  of  17 
I  alumni,  faculty  members  and  trus- 
I  tees — were  requested  by  P'riday 
to  submit  at  least  three  names  lo, 
him.  Under  the  administration 
c.de.  the  president  has  the  duty 
to  nominate  a  chancellor  for  ap- 
proval by  tlie  Board  of  Trustees. 

Albright  said  the  committee  had 
considered  more  than  75  persons 
since  President  Friday  appointed 
:  the  committee  last  August.  Ap- 
proximately 20  interviews  were 
conducted  by  the  committee^  Al- 
bright said. 

Present  chancellor  R^^bert  B. 
House  will  retire  this  summer. 
Known  to  have  been  under 
consideration  by  the  committee 
are  UNC  faculty  members  Dr. 
William  H.  Poteat,  associate  pro- 
fessor of  Philosophy,  Dr.  Janf>es 
L.  Godfrey,  professor  of  History, 
Dr.  Alexander  Heard  of  the  Poli- 
tical Science  dept.  and  Dr.  Paul 
N.  Guthrie  of  the  Business  Ad- 
ministration  School. 

M^Mbcrs  of  the  selection  com- 
mittee  are: 

Trustees  J.  Spencer  Love. 
Clreensboro;  Carl  Venters.  Jack- 
.sonvi/le;  Hill  Yarborou;?h.  Louis- 
burg;  Jnhn  W.  L'ni.stead.  Chapel 
Hi/I    and   Floyd    Crou.se.    Sparta. 

-Alumni  William  D.  Snider. 
Greensboro;  Terry  Sanfjrd.  Fa}- 
etteville;  Frank  Parker.  .Asheville: 
Dr.  .\.  M.  McDonald.  Charlotte 
and  Chairman   .Albright. 

U.VC  Faculty  members  Dougald 
MacMillan.  Rupert  Vance,  John 
N.  Coiieh.  Ernest  Craige  and  M.  T. 
Van  Hecke. 


Legislature  Establishes 
Revisional  Committee 

'    '■      By  NEIL  BASS  '  dert    Constituli  n    at    last    night 

Student     lawmakers    established    session 


1  committee  to  investigate  the  stu- 


Bostian  'Disappointed  At  Moreland  Investigation 


Supper  Meet 
Planned  By  Di 
Monday  At  6 

The  Dialectic  Senate  will  hold 
a  supper  meeting  Monday  at  B 
pni.  in  Lenoir  Hall. 
I'at  Adams,  president  'Of  the  Di. 
unnounced  this  afternoon  that 
;4uests  speakers  wili  be  retiring 
C'laneell'jr  Robert  Houae  and  re- 
firin,'    librarian      Andrew      Horn 

Clianeellor  House  will  speak  on 
;'i  unannounced  topic,  while  Dr. 
II  rn  will  speak  on  the  needs  of 
"i<-  library. 

The  public  has  been  invited  to 
tile  meeting,  in  conjunction  with 
\'hich  the  Di  wil  Ibegin  circula- 
tit>n  of  a  petition  calling  for  res- 
torati  n   of   funds    to   the   library. 


RALEIG-H — (.AP)— Following  is  the  complete  statement  of  Dr. 
Carey  ii.  Bostian,  State  College  chancellor,  concerning  the  action  of 
the  ACC  Conference  in  the  Moreland  case: 

'the  report  of  the  action  taken  in  the  Moreland  case  by  the 
faculty  chairmen  of  the  Atlantic  Coaj..  Conference  at  their  Feb  10 
meeting  was  received  by  me  in  yesterday's  mail.  (Tuesday's)  The  full 
text  of  this  report  is  herewith  made  public. 

We  are  deeply  disappointed  with  the  failure  of  the  faculty 
chairnr>en  to  conduct  the  complete  and  full  investigation  in  this 
case,  on  all  charges,  which  we  had  urgently  requested  them  to  do. 

In  response  to  my  request  of  Jan.  25,  I  was  notified  by  the  com- 
missioner of  the  Atlantic  Coa.t  Conference  on  Jan  28  that  'the 
faculty  chairmen  are  of  the  opinion  that  no  different  form  of  in- 
vestigation should  be  considered  until  the  results  of  the  investigation 
now  under  way  have  been  determined.  " 

On  the  same  day,  Jan.  28,  I  replied  to  the  commissioner  anrl 
renewed  our  request  that  the  confcfrence  have  a  complete  and  open 
iiivestigation  which  we  felt  was  necessary  to  resolve  the  many  con- 
flicts in  this  ca„v.  I  said:  "Is  it  possible  that  the  ACC  could,  on  the 
basis  of  a  closed-door  investigation,  make  findings  of  fact  which 
would  conflict  with  those  already  made  by  ACC  and  NCAA,  wilhuiit 
identity  of  witnesses  on  which  the  new  findings  v^ere  based".'" 

We  interpret  the  report  of  the  conference  action  on  Feb,  10  as 
revealing  these  three  things: 

(1)  Without  the  full  and  complete  investigation  which  we  had 
requested,  the  conference  "reaflirms  iij  position"  with  respect  to 
the  two  charges  on  which  State  College  had  previously  been  founrl 
guilty  by  the  conference, 

(2)  With  reference  to  the  other  charges,  the  faculty  chairmen, 
without  the  full  and  complete  investigation  which  we  had  re- 
quested, do  not  expressly  find  that  State  College  is  guilty  nor  do 
they  find  that  State  College  is  guilty  on  some  of  the  other  charg'es. 

(3)  The  faculty  chairmen  reduce  the  penalties  heretofore  assess- 
ed oy  the  commijjioner  by  cutting  the  fine  of  S5,000  in  half. 

(In  stamping  an  implication  of  greater  guilt  on  the  represen- 
tatives of  State  Co%ge,  the  faculty  chairmen  do  so  only  on  informa 
tion  given  to  them  on  a  "confidential  basis,"  and  this  information  is 
now  available  to  officials  of  State  College  only  "on  a  confidential 
Iwsis."  In  this  respect,  our  conference  officials  now  strangely  follow 


in  the  pr.scedural  footslep.s  of  the  \C.AA.  To  obtain  an  explanation 
of  this  "confidential  basi.-"  on  which  the  conference  would  make 
its  inlorniation  available  to  us.  1  telephoned  the  commissioner  and 
he  inioinied  me  that  Director  Clogston  and  I  may  go  to  Greensboro 
tt  see  the  conference  file  on  their  latest  investigation  but  that  the 
individuals  of  our  staff  who  are  accu.sed  of  the  violations  may  not 
gj  with  us  so  that  we  can  review  the  file*  together,  giving  me  an 
opportunity  to  question  them  directly  on  its  contents.  Further,  if 
Mr.  Clogston  and  I  did  see  the  file,  it  would  be  on  the  understand- 
ing that  its  (jonlciits  would  be  revealed  to  no  one  except  to  Presi- 
dent Friday.) 

It  would  have  been  easy  for  the  officilas  of  this  college  several 
montl^s  ago  to  accept  the  conclusions  of  the  NCAA  as  to  the  guilt 
of  the  member.-  of  our  staff,  and   simply   ignore  the   sworn   state- 
ments  of    denial   given   lo  us   by   those   same    individuals.   Notwith- 
standing  the   iact    that   we   may   have   had   the   most   serious   doubts 
as  to  whether  we  were  doing  right,  we  could  have  served  up  the.se 
individuals  as  a  sacrificial  offering,  and  marked  the  case  closed. 
We  did  not  take  this  easy  way  out  .We  continued  to  try,  with- 
in the  framework  of  first  the  NCAA  and  then  our  own  conference, 
to  resolve   the   issues  of   fact   in   a    just  and  equitable  proceeding 
v/hich  would  have  demonstrated   both   to  the   individuals  accused 
and  to  the  public  at  large  that  they  had  had  a  fair  and  just  hear- 
ing. 


See   page   5   for   text   of    report   of   ACC    Faculty    Chairman 
Weaver  to  Stare  Chancellor  Carey  H.  Bostian. 


Jim 


The  administrative  officials  of  this  college  may  be  criticized  by 
.some  for  dragging  this  matter  out  over  a  period  ot  months.  It  has 
been  our  effort  all  along  to  work  Under  procedures  of  both  the 
national  a...n.  and  our  own  conference  to  resolve  disputes  as  to 
facts,  when  the  very  procedures  with  which  we  were  confronted  in 
both  organizations  served,  in  the  final  analysis,  to  aggravate  these 
disputes  rather  than  to  resolve  them. 

In  ihe  Moreland  case,  1  have  at  least  these  two  duties  as  chan- 
cellor of  .State  College: 


(1)  To  get  all  of  the  facts  possible.  rc;:;aidlc  .>  ot  whether  those 
facts  are  favorable  or  not  to  Slate  College  representatives; 

(2)  To  confront  our  staff  members  with  these  fads  and  then  to 
make  the  administrative  decisions  which  the  fads  and  evidence 
support  and  justify. 

We  have  not  been  succestiil  with  either  the  NC.A.A  or  the  At- 
lantic Coast  Conference  in  obtaining  the  full,  complete  and  open 
inve.-.igation  which  this  case  has  needed  from  its  very  beginning. 
We  are  now  told  that  '"as  far  as  the  conference  is  concerned,  the 
case  is  closed.  " 

I  am  today  writing  all  of  those  principal  witnesses  whose 
names  were  given  to  us  by  the  NCAA.  I  am  asking  them  to  appear 
in  a  hearing  in  this  matter  in  Louisiana  on  or  about  Feb.  23  before 
a  committee  representing  State  College,  and  I  am  asking  them  to 
confront  the  individuals  who  have  been  charged  with  the  viola- 
tions of  NCAA  and  ACC  rules. 

We  are  told  that  "some"  of  these  witnesses  have  declined  invi- 
tation of  the  conference  commissioner  for  such  a  hearing. Those  wh* 
have  declined  to  so  appear  will.  1  hope,  reconsider  their  decision 
and  honor  my  request.  1  hope  that  they  will  have  a  decent  regard 
for  the  efforts  ot  this  institution  to  find  the  truth. 

We  are  frank  to  say  that  any  individual  who  charges  another 
with  conduct  resulting  in  penalties-  against  an  educational  in.stitu- 
lion  such  as  have  been  as.sessed  against  State  College  should  have 
the  courage  to  come  out  in  the  open  and  tell  his  or  her  story. 
That  person  should  at  least  have  the  courage  lo  confront  the  accused 
individuals  in  a  fair  and  impartial  hearing.  11  is  also  our  opnion  that 
procedure,  of  the  national  assn.  and  of  our  own  conference  which 
permit,  and  even  promote,  the  sort  of  "confidential  "  testimony 
which  characterizes  this  case  throughout  are  completely  unjustified, 
and  these  proeedutWs  justly  merit  our  condemnation. 

When  1  have  fulfilled  my  duty  of  doing  all  that  1  can  reasonably 
da  in  trying  to  gel  the  full  and  complete  evidence  in  this  case,  I 
will  then  do  my  best  to  make  these  decisions  in  the  matter  that  are 
supported  by  the  facts  and  evidence  made  available  to  me.  Such 
face  and  evidence  as  1  finally  obtain  wilJ  not  be  dealt  with  on  a 
■"confidential  basis.' 

This  statement  is  made  with  the  full  knowledge  and  approval 
of  President  Friday. 


0-4 '  • 

The  cortim'ttee  will  propose 
!  changes  making  the  Conslilulion 
I  more  'tlexible,"  according  to  -Al 
torney-general  Sam  Wells.  Wells 
I  suggested  \h2  committee's  cre- 
I  ation. 

j  Legislators  also  approved  a  rcs- 
'  )lut::n  favoring  construction,  on 
a  self-liquidating  basis,  of  addi- 
I  ticnal  hou.sing  facilities  for  mar- 
I  ried  students. 

j  Consolidated  University  Presi- 
dent    William    Friday     announced 

;  Tue.sday  his  intention  to  seek  ap- 
proval from  the  state  General  As- 

i  sembly  for  such  a  proposal. 

I  Other  measures  acted  upon  by 
student   representatives  were: 

( 1 )  A  bill  appropriating  $200 
"travel    expense    money"    for    two 

1  students  who  will  swap  govern- 
mental   ideas    at    a    conference    at 

i  Sarah   Lawrence  College:   passed. 
(?)     A    bill   appropriating   S220 

[  to  defray  room  rent  expenses  for 

1  a  Hungarian  exchange  student; 
passed. 

(3)  A  resolution  urging  return 
of  the  Consolidated  University 
Student  Council  to  its  original 
purpose:    tabled   indefinitely. 

(4)  .A  bill  establishing  a  Sum- 
mer .Activities  Council  to  pro\nd€ 
summer   entertainment;    passed. 

(5)  A  bill  establishing  a  com- 
mittee to  accept  insurance  com- 
pany bids;  not  reported  out  of 
committee. 

According  to  Attorney-general 
Wells,  the  constitutional  re\isional 
committee  will  make  the  Consti- 
tution more .  "fluid"  by  extracting 
specific  statutes  and  leaving  only 
"general  priniciplcs. ' 


I  i 


PAGi  TWO 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEl 


FRIDAY,  FEBRUARY  15,  1fS7 


W 


Modern  College  Al;hletics: 
Clarification  About  Tatum 

'\ 

A  'y\\'At  <It;ii  ol  stiuiiiit  Nt  ntiiut'iii.  1  lie  Daily  lav  Mctl  loiiiid  out 
ytstcidav;  is  with  Ik-.kI  t«M)il>;  11  Cloa^li    jiiii    r.miin. 

\  large  nuuii^v]  <>!  jn'oplc  toinplaiuod  that  this  rohiinii  l»ad  niis- 
rc|>iesrntefl  Iiitmn  and  his  relation  to  athletits  here.  The  Daily  Tai 
Heel  did" not  mean  to  say  a  U»i  ol  thiiv^.s  people  thought  it  said.  Through 
a  eoiubination  ol  liad  U'riting  and  reatlers"  niisinterjjretation  ol  what 
the\  read,  we  suppose,  th's  tiewspaper';*  stand  on  the  (oacli  was  niis- 
und.vsioo*!. 

athletic  polie\  that  goes  even  high- 
ei  at  ])ieseiit— and  at  pieseiit  it  is 
highei  than  ((»nleien(e  regulations 
state.  I  hen  we  w(»uld  never  need 
to  woirv  ;ilM»ut  inline  tions.  Fhen. 
T: '  mn.  instead  ol  spendit)g  a  great 
deal  ol  Itis  time  worrving  alxnit 
his  pla\ei"s  a(adenii<  standings, 
their  oll-ihe-rieUI  l)eha\i«>r  and 
j.re\aiIiM'.;  siiidcnt  leeling  about 
tlu'iii.  (oiiid  get  down  tf>  the  job 
lie  was  hired  t<^)  do — 1(»  turn  (UU  a 
good  tootball  team.  Ihe  (Ulier 
|)t"(»l)lenrs  would  be  alie;idv  solved. 
We  lijid  the  laidt  with  the  ad- 
ministration, not  with  I  rium.  The 
toach  has  done  everything  he  (ould 
do  to  keep  the  I'niversitN's  name 
high  on  the  list  <»l  still-honorable 
iustitutiojrs.  With  the  administra- 
tion's help,  he  eould  take  it  to  the 
t<»p  ol   the  list  permanently. 

II    \ester<ia\'s    editorial    implied 
or  said  ainihing  else,  we  ajK»logi/e. 


THEY'RE  REALLY  INTERESTED 


do  not  l>eHe%c  liiai:  latuni, 
In  an  i>gif  vxlio  will  retruit  IVxu- 
ball  taleiu  here  at  any  rosl.  On  the 
(;;>ntrajy,  he  ha.s  .sta\ed  bv  l^nivers- 
\l\.  (ontere^ne  atid  .\('A.\  lules 
like  ro.sin  •■n  :•  tree-trunk.  He  has 
stiixen  to  atcept  players  who  lit  in- 
ti)  tlie  I'niversity's  ioneeption  ol 
a  NtufUut.  and  when  thev  ha\e 
shov  n  nnw  il^lingnes  t(»  stav  in  line, 
he  has  diM  iplined  them. 

All  this  time  (.oadi  latum  has 
been  under  the  pr<ssiuf  that  nuul- 
em-dav  athletics  demands  ol  a 
toath.  As  a  loaeh  under  these  eon- 
dilions.  he  has  <l«»ne  an  admirable 
job. 

lie  has  instituted  study  halls  tor 
mend)ers  <>  I  the  hnttball  team:  he 
has  bee^i  espeiiallv  wateliful  over 
his  plaveis  when  they  have  been 
open  to  the  temptations  that  <(mi- 
trom  all  students.  He  has.  by  all 
available  ie|jo»ts,  kept  his  record — 
and  the  I'liiNersity's  record— eleani. 

Some  readers  thought  The  J^ailv 
I  ar  Heel  was  accusing  Tatum  ol 
indidglng  in  corrupt  pr;uii(t'S.  We 
did  not  mean  this.  \\'e  ulfeied  the 
examples  ol  parties,  bribes  and 
similar  pi  act  ices  as  examples  of 
the  tactics  othci  coache>  in  the 
I'nit^d  States  have  used  in  tlie  past 
to  secme  talented,  much-soughl- 
aliej  plavers  lor  their  football  and 
biNketball   teams. 

rheie  is  no  indicaticm.  and  we 
did  not  mean  to  ijnply.  that  Tatinn 
was  one  <»f  these  coaehes. 

Some  readers  ilioug^ht  we'  were 
sa\ing  Tatinn  is  disliked.  Nothing 
c<udd  be  more  misle;;ding.  He  is 
likrd  a  -^reat  deal,  'both  on  this 
campus  and  ilnoughout  the  sjH>rt- 
iu'.'  world.  H^r  is  respected  as  a 
eoac  h  and  as  a  human  bv  most  ol 

the  people  who  IfMVe  ever  met  him. 

*  #  * 

Tatum.  as  Iiead  IcMxbalJ  coach, 
is  the  paid  agent  «»f  thelTfiveis- 
it  v whose  job  is  to  pjoduce  a 
gcMxl  football  team.  and.  at  the 
same  time,  to  stav  within  the 
l)ounds  of  what  the  Tnixersity  and 
its  c;onterence  feel  are  i^ockI  ethics. 
}le   does  his    job   well. 

But  Ihe  Dai  I V  Far  Heel  feels 
the  I'niveisity— not  Tatum,  but  the 
University— sliould  attempt  to  raise 
its  standards  even  higher  than 
they  are  now.  In"  that  wav. 
none  of  the  horror  of  situations 
like  those  near  home  and  on  the 
AVest  (loast  woidd  come  to  ('aro- 
lina. 

We  feel  the  I'niversity,  using 
sheer   willpower,  shcHijd  rreate   an 


The  Daily  Tar  Heel 

The  official  itudeot  pubhcation  of  tbe 
Publications  Boarci  of  tbe  University  ot 
North  Carohna,  where  it  is  published 
daily  except  Monday  and  examlnatioe 
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Entered  as  second  class  matter  in  the 
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editor 


FRED  POWLEDGE 


Managing  Editor 


CHABUE  SLOAN 


News  Editor  NANCY  HILL 


Buainess  Manager 


BILL  BOB  PL'EL 


Sparts  Editor 


LARRY  CHEEK 


EDITORIAL    STAFF  —  Woody    Sear*. 

Frank  CroM-ther.  David  Mundy,  Cort- 
land Edwards. 


NEWS  STAFF— Clarke  Jones.  Pringle 
Pipkin.  Edith  MacKinnon.  Waliy  Ku- 
ralt.  Mary  AJys  Voorhees,  Graham 
Snyder,  Neil  Bass,  Page  Bernstein, 
Peg  Humphrey.  Phyllis  Maultsby.  Ben 
Taylor.  Walter  Schruntek,  U-Joost  P»- 
lak.  Patsy  Miller. 


BUSINESS  STAFT— Rosa  Moore,  Johnny 
WhitaJcer,   Dick   Leavitt. 

SPORTS   STAFF:    Dave   Wible,   Stewart 
Bird.  Ron  Milliagn.    • 


Subscription  Manager Dale  Staley 

Advertising  Manager Fred  Katzir 

Circulation  Manager j^, Charlie  Holl 

Assistant  Sports  Editor..  Bill  King 


Staff  Photographer 
Librarian    , 


Norman  Kantor 
...Sue  Gishner 


Proof  Reader  Manley  Springs 

Night  Editor  .  .^-f  f  ,  Graham  Snyd-.r 
Night  News  Editor  Charlie  Sloan 


Dr.  Horn's 
Words  Will 
Be  Missed 

It  is  almost  unnatural  to  hear  a 
rnixeisity  official  stand  up  like  a 
inan  and  sa\  what  he  believes.  Yet 
that  is  what  retiring  I'niversitv  Li- 
brarian .\ndrew  Horn  did  this 
week. 

He  cimdemned  the  States  \d- 
\is<My  liudget  Commission  for  not 
ha\ing  the  good  .sense  to  give  the 
I'niversitv  what  it  neecis  for  li- 
braiy  books  and  journals. 

He  sounded  like  a  man  who 
had  just  about  given  up  all  lu>f>e 
lor  North  Claroliua's  ability  to 
j>rogi"e.ss. 

We  agree  with  Dr.  H(>rn.  And 
his  siaiemeiu  makes  us  remember 
that,  when  he  is  gone,  there  will  be 
one  less  man  on  this  campus  wiio 
exercises  the  freedom  to  sav  what 
he  t)elieves.  That  makes  the  total 
less  that!  a  do/en. 

h^      .'     "  .   . 

'Merit'  Won't 
Help  Solve 
Pay  Raises 

The  state  budget  h)r  the  next 
l)ieimium  which  went  to  the  legis- 
latme  .Mojiday  night  calls  for  a  pay 
raise  ol  cj.i  per  cent  lot  teachers 
and  S  per  c  eiu  for  other  state  em- 
ployees. , 

The  ccmtrasi  between  t!io.se  pro- 
posed raises  and  the  substamial  one 
c»f  2o  per  cem  acccnded  the  Coun- 
cil  of  .State  membeis  cannot  help 
but    be   striking. 

Uui  jjiobablv  subject  to  e\eil 
inoie  cpiestioti  will  be  the  lecom- 
mendation  as  to  "base  rates  of  pav" 
which  would  grant  increases  only 
"on  merit". 

Is  there  to  be  no  (piestion  of 
"merit  about  the  members  of  the 
Council  of  State  who  have  just 
got  their  no  per  cent? 

Who  is  to  deteiinitjr  the  (jues- 
tion  of  merit  tor  teac  heis  and  other 
state  employees  and  the  amoinii 
of  it?  And  will  the  merit  f>e  meas- 
ured by  immediate  superiors  or 
fjy  some  committee  veised  in  the 
loie  of  merit?  And  hoW  is  merit 
in  one  field  to  be  \\eighed  against 
merit  in  a  different  one? 

ihe  across-the-board  method 
which  the  .AcUisoiy  Budget  Com- 
mission now  wants  to  abandon  may 
be  subject  to  criticism,  but  it  is 
not  likefy  to  raise  any  such  hornet's 
nest  its  that  suggested  under  the 
head   of  "merit". 

Ihe  n;';ional  average  in  teach- 
ers' pay  is  .'S  j,2SJo.  Ihe  preseiu  aver- 
age   .North   Caic>lina   salary   is   $3,- 

^{OO. 

There  is  still  much  groitnd  to 
be  made  up.  but  it  can't  l)e  made 
up  In    niggling  niethorls. 


Long  Lines,  Advisers  And  South  Building. 
A  Dean  Writes,  And  A  Columnist  Wonders 


Woody  Sears 

It  is  not  often  that  a  member 
or  the  administration  will  take 
his  time  to  write  a  letter  ii  the 
Editor  ill  an  attempt  to  e.vplain  a 
situation   to   the   students. 

As'  students,  we  often  feel  that 
South  Building  is  a  fortress  of 
super-secrecy,  manned  with  un- 
caring administrators  who«e  time 
is  devoted  largely  to  giving  the 
stu^lenLs  a' hard  tiir.e.  Due  ti)  the 
very  nature  of  many  of  the  s  t 
nations  which  ari.se.  it  is  almost 
impos-^ible  not  to  l;;rmiilate  tli-^i 
opinion  at  least  oiu-e  during  oui 
stay  here  at  the  University. 

However,  at  l'-'a-;t  one  of  these 
"part-time  ogres"  has  answered 
the  call  of  the  students,  honest 
ly   and    impartially. 

In  a  chiit  with  Hean  Ceeil  John- 
son oi  the  General  College.  I 
had  an  opp;,rtuiiity  to  reaffirm 
a  fact  which  ha.*;,  on  occasion. 
eluded  me.  ^ 

Th»  fact  is  that  the  folks  in 
South  Building  really  are  in- 
tertsted  in  the  students,  in  a 
wholesome,  non-academic  fash- 
ion. 

On  the  c|uesti(tn  of  the  long 
lines  of  people  who  wait  Ho  see 
their  advisors.  Dean  Johnson 
said  that  the  student  who  needs 
a  course  he  couldn't  yet  has  a 
right  to  gripe  abnut  having  to 
wait  in  line.  But  as  he  points 
out.  the  majority  of  those  who 
clutter  the  halls  with  long  lines 
are  those  who  have  flunked  a 
course  and  couldn't  use  the 
previously  arranged  schedule. 
And  this  is  one  tif  those  situa- 
tions which  is  pretty  1  much  un- 
avoidable, a  ne<'essary  evil,  so 
to  speak.  This  explanation  for 
the  lines  is  a  valid  one.  and 
shouldn't  be  taken  as  an  offense 
by  anyone,  since  the  best  of  us 

slip  occasionally. 

«  ♦  * 

As  Dean  John.s()n  points  out  in 
his  letter.  11  advisors  are  hardly 
enough  to  handle  the  Genera) 
College  students.  The  problem 
behind  th'fe  problem  here  i.s  tjie 
lack'  of  funds  (o  provide  addi- 
tional advisors.  He  mentioned 
that  four  years  ago  a  plan  was 
adopted  to  set  up  a  group  of 
faculty  counselors  who  would 
work  with  20  or  .so  students 
apiece,  on  a  non-pay.  non-official 
status.  Fifty  faculty  men  volun- 
teered, and  the  plan  vva.s  a  mis 
erable  failure  in  spite  of  the 
faculty    cooperation. 

Many  of  those  faculty  men 
took  the  program  very  serious- 
ly, and  at  the  end  of  the  year 
wore  very  disappointed.  Dean 
Johnson  said  that  one  profess- 
or ovon  invited  his  whole  group 
of  advisoos  out  to  his  home  for 
suppor,  but  none  of  them  show- 
ed up. 

These  men  were  not  acting  as 
official  advisors,  and  it  was  not 
exactly  supposed  to  be  a  "big 
brother"  relationship  either.  The 
idea  was  to  give  the  students  an 
opportunity  to  iron  out  their 
problems  with  someone  before 
they  had  to  go  to  their  official 
advLsor  to  make  out  their  sched- 
ules. 

The  dean  said  that  while  a  lot 
of  good  was  accomplished  by  the 
faculty  men  who  participated,  the 
plan  on  the  whole  was  a  miser- 


L'il  Abner 


AH'LL  COME  RIGHT  TO  TH 
POINT.":'  AM  ISA  WIDDER 
.  WJFOUT  NO  HUSBIN,  AM' 
HE  IS  A  BABV  VSrtFOUT 
NO  PAPPV-   , 

re 


able  failure.  .\nd  needless  to  say. 
it  was  very  disappointing  to 
everyone  concerned. 

Every  now  and  then  the  ad 
mini.stration  comes  up  with  an 
idea  to  aelp  th:>  students  help 
themsi-lves,  whjch  is  what  it  all 
boils  down  to.  And  as  in  the 
case  m'-'ntiv:ned,  the  students  re- 
fuse to  take  the  iniative.  And 
this  is  not  only  true  .'•f  admin- 
is;r:;tion-planned  functions  or 
pro;.'rams. 

There  i.s  a  verj  poyr  pr  gnosis 
cnceriiing  the  long  lines  at 
drp-add  tim-e.  Dean  Johnson 
■;aid  that  another  prcblcm  be- 
h'nd  the  obvidus  one  is  the  lack 
of    available    class    tickets.    And 

'I'm  Fine. 


he  says  that  the  situation  will 
grow  steadily  worse  as  the  stu- 
dent enrollment  grows  . . .  until 
such  time  as  money  is  made 
available  to  get  more  instruct- 
ors  and   more   classroom   space. 

The  folks  up  in  South  Build- 
ing are  vitally  interested  in 
every  student,  and  they  are  very 
sympathetic  with  the  students' 
problems  . . .  even  the  ones 
which  the  individual  student 
brings   upon   himself. 

If  things  are  going  to  get 
worse,  as  Dean  Johnson  says,  it 
is  inevitable  that  one  of  two 
things  must  happen.  Either  there 
will  have  to  be  a  mass  reorienta- 
tion   of    student    opinion    to    the 


end  that  they  will  be  more  tol-^ 
erent  of  the  unfortuaate  situa- 
tion which  e.vists  or  they  will  go 
al.^ng  in  the  present  frame  ol 
mind,  despising  the  administra- 
tive "inefficiency."  and  grow  in- 
creasingly bitter  as  the  various 
problems  grow  more  pressing.    ^ 

We  are  too  quick  to  condemn 
oftentimes.  We  must  look  be- 
yond the  cbvious  and  see  the 
whcle  story.  It  looks  as  though 
our  greatest  need  at  the  present 
is  for  the  Legislature  to  give 
the  University  about  a  zillion 
dollars. 

Looks  as  though  patience  and 
understanding  are  going  to  have 
to  bo  the  bywords  for  the  next 
few  years. 


Of  Course,  Every  Orxce  In  A  While 
I  rt-  Ul<#»  This-' 


ON  HONOR  SYSTEM  CONTROVERSY: 


Men's  Council  Member  Speaks 


Paul  Carr 

Because  of  the  attack  on  the 
honor  system,  I  lc?el  compelled 
to  express  my  views  as  an  bou6i 
council  member. 

It  Is  the  opinion  of  this  coun- 
cil member  that  the  students 
themselves  have  not  endorsed 
the  .system.  Students  get  the 
feeling  that  it  is  not  their  sys- 
tem, because  they  don't  feel  a 
part    of   it. 

When  students  come  before 
the  council,  they  have  no  guilt 
feeling — the  feeling  that  they 
have  broken  their  own  system. 

Students  <iten  turn  other  stu- 
dents in  bi'cau.se  "they  were 
mes.sing  up  a  curve  on  a  quiz.' 
not  because  they  .see  their  fellow 
student  violating  the  system  and 
feel  that  they  are  helping  the 
itudent  by  turning  hijn  in. 

The  biggest  trouble  with  the 
system  i.s  that  students  just 
won't  turn  other  .students  in. 
They  feel  that  they  may  "get 
themselves  into  trouble."  But  let 
me  assure  you.  that  you  will  be 
doing  your  fellow  student  a  ser- 
vice, and  certainly  you  will  not 
get    ypurself    into    trouble.  -^, 


Some  .students  feel  that  ihe 
student  that  they  turn  in  will 
be  very  mad  and  consequently  a 
friendship  will  be  lost.  This  isn't 
the  case,  either.  Again,  same  stu- 
dents fcc'l  that  if  they  see  a 
fellow  student  cheating,  there 
won't  be  enough  evidence  to 
have  a  trial.  Contrary  to  popular 
belief,  this  is  not  always  true. 
Usually,  enough  evidence  can  be 
g  tten  by  comparing  the  papers 
and   one    persons   testimony. 

Let  me  say  now  that  if  any- 
one .sees  anything  suspicious, 
they  ^ihould  tell  Jim  Exum,  Ray 
Jefferies.  or  any  member  of  the 
council.  That's  all   there  is  to  it. 

It  is  my  opinion  that  many  stu- 
dents on  this  campus  don't  know 
what  the  honor  code  is.  Most  stu- 
dents can't  state  it.  and  tho.se 
who  can  don't  realize  its  far 
reaching  effects.  This,  my 
friends,   is  bad. 

Every  student  on  this  campus 
should  know  how  the  honor 
c  uncil  operates,  how  to  state 
the  honor  code,  and  should  be 
aware  of  every  pos.sible  viola- 
tion of  the  honor  code.  How  can 
one  be  expected  to  abide  by  a 
system    which    he    doesn't    know 


about?    Education   is  the   big  an- 
swer to  our  problems. 

Following  are  a  list  of  ways 
in  which  we  could  educate  the 
students  on  this  campus: 

1.  Set  up  a  schedule  by  which 
the  council  members  would  go 
around  to  the  dorms,  frats  and 
sororities  and  talk  to  the  stu- 
dents about  the  importance  of 
the   honor  system. 

2.  Continued  articles  in  The 
Daily  Tar  Heel  so  that  students 
will  kn.'w  what  is  happening  on 
the  council. 

3.  Let  the  student  leaders  on 
campus  express,  through  The 
Daily  Tar  Heel,  their  own  per- 
sonal convictions  about  the  hon- 
or svstem. 

These  educational  ideas  should 
not  instill  fear,  but  it  would  be 
to   make   more   students   aware 
of   the    importance   of    personal 
honor  and  integrity. 
If  we  dont  develop  our  honor 
here  in  c  liege,  whare  will  it  be 
developed?  Students  should  grow 
in  their  honor  just  as  they  grow 
in  their  knowledge  of  other  sub- 
jects. 
/      It  is  my  opinion  that  by  educa- 
tion of  the  system,  the  system  it- 
self will  become  more  efficient. 


BUT-ANSWER    ) 
ME  ONE         ^y 
QUESTION-  ) 


Pofpo 


Rv  Walt  Keiiy 


Supplementary 
Comments 


Editor: 

I  have  read  with  interest  and  appreciation  the 
article  of  Mr.  Woody  Sears  in  the  Februar>-  5,  1957. 
issue  of  The  Daily  Tar  Heel.  Mr.  Sears  writes  with 
understanding  and  there  is  much  point  to  wiat 
he  has  to  say.  I  would  like  to  offer  the  following 
supplementary  comments  by  way  of  completing 
the  picture. 

The   ratio   of  advisees  to   General   College    atf- 
visers   is  of   course   far   too   great   for    maximum 
effectiveness  in  student  guidance.  It  goes  witNout 
saying  that  11   odvisers  all  of  whom  also  have  im- 
portant duties  other  than  those  in  the  General  Col- 
lege  are   too   few   for   2,500   students. 
It  is  also  true  that  an  attempt  to  counsel  50  slu-* 
dents   a   day    in    a    drop-add   or   registration    period 
when  class  tickets  are  not  available  in  many  courses - 
is  sometimes  little  short  of  a  nightmare. 

It  should  be  pointed  out,  however,  that  though 
advisers  are  thronged  during  bottle-neck  periods, 
they  also  have  p>eriods  of  comparative  leisure  when 
they  aer  available  for  unhurried  consultation.  In 
they  are  available  for  unhurried  consultatioiL  In 
these  periods  their  offices  are  frequently  guiltless 
There  are  no  doubt  too  many  cases  of  adviser 
ineptitude  (if  there  is  one,  that  is  too  many)  which 
result  in  a  student's  not  getting  courses  he  needs. 
It  sometimes  happens,  however,  that  the  con- 
ditions are  beyond  the  control  of  the  adviser.  A 
class  ticket  is  simply  not  available  or  is  available 
only  at  a  time  when  the  student  has  another  key 
course.  It  not  infrequently  happens  that  a  student 
changes  his  objective  and  such  changes  sometimes 
cause   considerable  confusion. 

I  once  made  a  check   of  124  General  College 
students   who   had   begun   as   premeds.   After   the 
passing   of   a   year   or   more  43   had   changed   ob- 
jectives once  and  nine  had  changed  twice. 
The  long  lines  in  front  of  advisers'  offices  are 
a  pain  to  all  concerned.  Yet  these  lines  are  com- 
posed   largely  of   students   who   are   there   becau.se 
they    have    not    met    academic    obligations:"   Those 
who  have  failed  courses;  those  who  having  failed 
to   meet  eligibility   requirements   need   to  get   back 
into  school;   those   who   are   in   difficulties  beacuse 
of  a  quality  point  deficiency. 

If  these  groups  were  not  in  the  lines,  the  lines 
would    not    be    so    formidable.    These    stucj^ts,    of 
cour.se.    deserve    aid    and    consideration    in    making 
necessary    adjustments.    But    it    is    regrettable  .'^hat 
they   cause   a    student   w-ho  has   to   see   his   acfviser 
because    he    has   been   frozen   out    of    an  essential 
course  at  registration  or  for  some  other  reason  be- 
yond  his   control   to   be  subjected   to   such   an  or- 
deal, 
no  break  between  semesters  to  allcw  for  the  grad- 
ing of  papers  and  the  assembling  of  grades, 
ing  of  papers  ad  the  assembling  of  grades. 

So  much  of  a  student's  activity  in  the  spring 
semester  is  dependent  upon  his  grades  of  the  fall 
semester.  Professors  with  classes  which  sometimes 
number  100  or  more  do  not  have  time  to  get  in 
grades.  The  Office  of  Central  Records  does  not 
have  time  to  as.semble  and  process  30.000  grades 
belonging  to  6,000  students. 

In  the  General  College  (more  than  10  days  af- 
ter the  opening  of  the  semester)  we  are  still  chang- 
ing schedules  of  those  who  failed  courses  and  are 
stiil  finding  students  who  did  not  pass  enough  work 
for  eligibility. 

These  observations  will  serve,  I  h(»pe,  to  help 
us  understand  some  of  the/ hardships  and   incon- 
veniences which  we  have  experienced  in  getting  a 
new  semester  under  way. 
Perhaps  these   conditions  may  be  alleviated   to 
some  extent  by  an  increase  in  the  number  of  advis- 
ers and  of  class  tickets,  or  classroom  spaces.  These 
remedies  are  dependent  upon  an  increase  in  funds 
and    the    availability    of    suitable    advisers   and    in- 
structors should  funds  be  forthcoming. 

Suggestions  and  comments  from  faculty  and 
students  are  cordially  invited. 

Cecil  Johnson 

Dean,   General   College 

THE  NEW  YORK  TIMES: 


The  Times  Reminds: 
Spring  Is  Coming 

A  thaw  in  February  has  a  different  feel  from 
that   of  the   January-  thaw.   The  bite   of   February 
.  cold  and  the  drift  of  February  snow  are  not  so  dif- 
ferent, but  a  few  warm  February  days — and  it's  a 
rare    February    without    them — persuade    one   that 
April  and  May  as  well  as  March  lie  just  ahead. 
Ponds  are  still  iced,  ice  stiil  lies  on  river  and 
chokes  the  brooks.  It  miy  go  out  and  come  back 
again.  There's  still  skiing  for  those  who  look  for  it. 
A   few   days   ago   there   was   snow  back   in   the 
hills,  and  even  a  warm  spell  will  not  soon  melt  it 
from  all  the  hemlock  groves. 

But  on  warm  afternoons  the  trickle  of  flowing 
water,  which  was  all  but  silenced  from  end  to  end 
of  January,  can  be  heard.  Hill-country  farmers  still 
^  getting  out  saw  logs  know  that  they  haven't  much 
more  time.  Maplesyrup  makers  take  a  look  at  their 
pails  and  pans  and  spouts,  thinking  that  it  won't 
be   very   long  now. 

Each  day  is  another  day  toward  spring.  We  still 
have  weeks  of  impatient  disappointment,  for  we 
always  want  April  before  March  has  arrived.  But 
even  that  yearning  has  its  reassurance. 

T';?  important  thing,  as  we  creep  toward  mid- 
February,  is  that  now  the  time  is  measured  in 
longer  days  and  shorter  nights.  Now  the  sun  is 
noticeably  swinging  north.  Nuw  sunrise  comes  earl- 
ier and  sunset  later.  Now  we  can  count  the  time 
ahead  in  weeks,  not  months. 

It's  less  than  six  weeks  till  the  vernal  equinox. 


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FRIDAY,  FEBRUARY  15,  1957 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


FA6E  THRU 


Concert  Opens  Mardi  Gras 

(Contimied  from  Page  \)  ? ponse  to  the  Mardi  Gras  weekend,   during  the  weekend.  Dance  Commit- 

a  manner  as  to  make  this  possi-    [and  are  confident  that  the  conduct   tee  Chairman  Don  Miller  announced, 

ble  again  in  the  future."  •  j  at    the    concert    and    dance    will    be      Tlie   Dance   Committee   will   be   ia 

Mardi  Gras  Chairman  Jim  Arm-    ,n   the   Carolina   tradition."  'full    strength    at    the    concerts    and 

Mrong  stated,   'We  at  Graham  Me-   RULES  -  |  dance      to     enforce     the     follov/ing 

inorial  are  mighty  happy  at  the  re-      Concerning   rules    to   be   followed   rules : 


1    No  one  will  be  allowed  to  leave 
» 
ihe  dance  or  concerts  with  the  in- 

/ 
lention  of  returning. 

2.  Any  one  showing  any  signs  of 
drinking  or  other  misconduct  ^h^Ii 
be  dealt  with  at  the  discretion  of 
the  Dance  Contimittee  Court.  | 

3.  Anyone  bringing  intoxicating 
beverages    within    the   concert   hall 


or  on  the  dance  floor  will  autopiatic- 
aily  be  suspecded  from  Carolina 
dances  indefipflely.  ! 

It  was  emphasized  by  Mardi  Gras 
officials  that  the  dress  for  the  Louis 
Arnvstrong  dance  wpiild  be  formal. 


Figures  may  not  lie,  but  some 
get  snarled  up  in  statistics. 


FOR   DRESSY   OCCASIONS 

. .  Cathy  Woodarc  of  Scotland  Neck 


FOR   LOUNGING   AROUND 

. .  .:Barbura   Prago  of   Greensboro 


Cure  For  Mid-Winter  Blues  Is  Lift 
For  Sagging  Fall,  Winter  Wardrobes 


Singing  the  mid  winter  blues? 

If  so,  it's  time  to  liven  up  winter 
wardrobes  which  always  appear  a 
bit  drab  by  this  time  of  the  year. 
Everyone  seems  to  hit  a  sort  of 
slump  during  the  bleak  wet  windy 
weeks  of  February  and  March. 
However,  those  mid  winter  blues 
can  be  swept  quickly  away  by 
simply  a  period  of  re-evaluation 
in  which  imaginative  coeds  can 
concoct  ways  of  revitalizing  droop- 
ing winter  finery  and  take  a  new 
approach  to  their  appearances. 
A   NEW   APPROACH 

Why  not  embark  on  a  new  beau- 
ty routine  which  will  pay  off  in 
rewarding  results  in  time  for  the 
new  spring  and  summer  fashions? 
An  exciting  new  shade  of  lipstick 
or  a  different  hair  style  help  boost 
spirits.  And.  while  waiting  for 
April,  you  can  concentrate  on  those 
certam  meticulous  touches  which 
can  add  new  life  to  aging  fashions. 

Colors  carefully  assembled  can 
work  magic  with  sagging  personal- 
ities. Costumes  can  t>e  ammassed 
around    one   basic  color  with   var- 


ious tones  of  this  color  providing 
unity  and  interest.  Or.  color  can 
appear  in  one  startling  splash.  The 
more  daring  may  prefer  to  try  a 
medley  of  color  perhaps  assemb- 
led by  using  colors  from  an  off 
beat  print  handbag  or  scarf. 
DASH   OF   ORANGE 

Try  a  dash  of  orange  or  cina- 
mon  to  accent  tans  and  browns 
or  a  mixture  of  beiges  and  grays. 
Experiment  with  various  new 
skirt  and  sweater  combinations. 
Grasp  the  flavor  of  springtime  by 
striving  for  an  exciting  but  gen- 
tle medley  of  shades  and  colors. 

Accessories  need  to  be  coor- 
dinated not  only  with  a  costume 
but ,  also  with  a  personality.  Cer- 
tain colors  as  well  as  certain 
styles,  no  matter  how  well  they 
may  fit,  just  seem  to  clash  with 
certain  personalities. 

Jazz  up  your  classics  and  your 
iipirits  as  well.  Try  a  vibrant  cum- 
berbund  with  a  plain  wool  dress, 
a  throat  full  of  dancing  beads  or 
a  brand  new  hem  length.  The 
darkest  rainiest  days  are  the  days 


FOR  SCHOOL  DAYS 

. . .  Evalyn  Hostemian  of  Baltimore 

for  brilliant  sweaters  and  skirts. 
This  is  definitely  a  time  for  fem- 
inine whims  to  indulge  in  the  dar- 
ing, but  always  rememl>ering  that 
garish  gaudiness  is  to  be  avoided. 


Covering  The  University  Campus 


FACULTY  CLUB  LUNCHEON 

Mijnheer  Raphael  den  Haan.  lee- 
urer  from  tlie  Netherlands  New 
(luinea  Information  Service,  will 
.sj^ak  before  the  Faculty  Club  lun- 
cheon Tuesday  at  1  p.m.  in  the  Caio- 
l:na    Inn.  ;.    -  ;         ■'  ^ 

VALENTINE   PARTY 

.*x  Vaicnlmes  Get  .Acquainted 
Party  will  be  held  tonight  at  8  p.m. 


in  the  United  Congregational  Church 
on  West  Cameron  .Ave.  Visitors  and 
guests  have  been  invited. 
PSYCHOLOGY    COLLOOUlM 

-Dr.  Dorothy  C.  .Adkins  of  the  UNC 
Department  of  Psychology  will 
tl)eak  on  Factor  .Anaslysis  in  the 
Realm  of  Rea.s«n  at  the  University 
o.'  Virginia  tonight. 
WUNC 

The   following   is   a   listing  of  to- 


Carolina  Coeds  Still  Appreciate 
Sir  Walter's  Type  Of  Chivalry 


day's  program   for  tlie   University's 
r'M  radio  station: 
7:00    Through  the  looking  glass 

This  is  a   Friendly  World 

Pattern  of  Thought 

Lets  Listen  to  Opera 

News 

Evening  Masterwork 

Sign  Off 


7:30 
7:45 
8:00 
10:30 
10:35 
!1:30 


Jim  Johnson  To  Head 
Lambda  Chi's  For  Year 

Jim  Johnson  has  been  announced 
as  the  newly  elected  president  of 
Lambda  Chi  Alpha  for  the  ^pring 
'  and  fall  semesters. 


By    PATSY    MILLER  < 

Coeds  at  U.NC  still  appreciate 
the  Sir  Walter  Raleigh  type  of 
chivalry,  it  seems.*  In  fact  one  of 
the  first  things  a  girl  notices  about 
a  boy  is  his  manners. 

When  asked  her  opinion  of  the 
status  of  male  chivalry  on  camp- 
us Jill  ODonnell  said.  "I  think 
their  is  still   a  lot  of  it  around.'' 

Another  coed.  Sue  Whitely. 
quickly  retorted.  "Chivalry?  It's 
dead." 

Chivalry  aruund  her  includes  a 
broad  meaning.  One  coed  defined 
it  as  an  attitude  that  a  boy  has 
towards  a  girl,  chiefly  one  of  con- 
sideration and  respect  for  her  as  a 
girl. 

A  boy  can  make  a  girl  more 
aware  of  his  masculinity  and  her 
femininity  by  opening  doors  for 
her.  helping  her  across  streets, 
carrying  her  books,  and  lighting 
her  cigarettes. 

JEOUALITY 

However,     the     modern    girl    is 
apt  to  do  things  for  herself  in  a 
subconscious   effort   to   gain   mas- 
culine   equality.    Often    she    will 
criticize  a  boy  for  lack   of   man- 
ners when  she  herself  is  to  blame. 
But,  even  though   our  modern 
coed  is  torn  between  the  desire 
for   masculine   equality   and   the 
desire  to  be  the  weaker  sex,  the 
iatttr  desire  is  always  the  strong- 
er off  the  two. 
Many    girls    staled      that      they 
thought  UNC  boys  could  be  a  lit- 
tle more  friendly. 

The  most  effective  way  for  a 
boji  to  impress  a  girl  is  through 
his  manneis.  particularly  .on  a 
blind  dale.  She  may  base  her  en- 
ire  opinion  of  him  on  that  ele-' 
ment. 


Legislature  Passes  On 
15  Measures  Since  Nov. 


By  NEIL  BASS  | 

The  current  22nd  legislative  as- 
.'^embly  has  snowballed  into  action.; 

The  assembly  had  taken  action  on 
only  nine  measures  until  Thursday' 
ii'/ht's  session  when  six  measures | 
were  voted  upon.  This  makes  a  to-| 
lal  of  15  bills  and  resolutions  upon^ 
which  legislators  have  voted  since' 
Nov.   29.  j 

The  assembly  has  met  three  times 
prior  to  last  night.  It  convened  initi 
i'lly   on   Nov.    29.    after   the   second 
run-off     election     determined     final! 
legislature  membership  on  Nov.  ^  | 

Fall  election  returns  deadlocked! 
legislature  membership — 25-25.  Thei 
University  Party  had  a  one-member; 
plurality  during  the  21st  assembly 
-—25-24-1.  One  legislator  was  doubly 
endorsed. 
SCOREBOARD 

The  bill-passage  scoreboard  for 
the  current  assembly  reads  like  this: 

Student  Party  bills  introduced— 
10. 

University  Paiiy  bills  introduced 
-1. 

Bills  doubly  introduced — 4. 

».\ll  measures  introduced  have 
been   passed. 

-Appropriations  allocated  after  in- 
.^pection  by  the  legislature  finance 
committee  total  $2,579.49. 

Of  this  total,  the  largest  appropri- 
ation went  to  the  Men's  Glee  Club 
■to  defray  travelling  expenses  — 
&1.000. 

^      The  bill  which  led  to  this  al- 
location  was   doubly    introduced 

by  UP  floorleader  Benny  Thomas 


and   SP   floorleader   Sonny   Hall- 
ford. 

The  second  largest  appropriation 
went  to  the  Yackety  Yack.  Thi:s 
figure,  according  to  the  bill's  stipu- 
lation, was  used  to  print  200  addi- 
tional yearbooks  for  an  increased 
student  enrollment.  The  1956-57  en- 
rollment increased  396  persons  over 
the    1955-56   figure. 

This  measure  was  introduced  by 
Publications  Board  Chairman  Frank 
Farrell   <SPi. 

Legislators  probably  deliberated 
more  over  the  glee  club  appropria 
tion  than  any  other  measure. 

Careful  attention  was  also  giv- 
en to  a  measure  creating  a  com- 
mittee to  contact  student  pass- 
ers of  bad  checks.  The  bill  pro- 
vides for  a  liason  between  local 
merchants  and  student  Govern- 
ment. It  has  no  judicial  power. 
Officers  for  the  22nd  assembly 
are: 

Speaker,  Sonny  Evans;  speaker 
pro  tempore.  Bill  Redding:  parli- 
amentarian, Jack  Lewis;  clerk.  Miss 
Kathey  Legrand;  sergeant-at-arms, 
John  Ray. 

Chaii-men  of  the  three  major 
standing   committees   are: 

Ways  and  Means,  Al  Goldsmith; 
finance  Committee,  Jerry  Oppen- 
I'eimer;  Rules  Committee.  Bill 
Paum. 

.\11  three  committee  heads  are 
University  Party  members. 

The  current  assembly  will  con- 
tinue in  power  until  the  .April  2  elec- 
tions. 


<'.      ^^     A?.  J^-  i*  i,: 


CHAPEL    HILL 


DOLLAR  DAYS 


;t 


Extra  Big  Values  At  SUHON'S  Fri.  &  Ss^. 


Reg.  $1.59  Pound 


Bridge  Nuts 
98c 


16c   Delsey 

Toilet  Tissue 
8  for  $1.00 


4  ONLY  ^ 

Bath  Crystals 

Regular  $1.00  Value  jj. 

2  for  $1.00 


33c  Size  (400$)  .^      ^ 

Yes  Tissues 
4  for  $1.00^    . 


Reg.   89c    Formula   20 

Hair  Tonic 
2  For  $1.00 

Reg.  79c  Formula  20 

Cream  Oil 
2  for  $1.00 

One   Ass't.   Values  to  98c 

Baby  Pants 
2  for  $1.00 


: 


LADIES'  $  DAY 
SPECIALS 

t  $1.50  Value  Lucien  Leiong 

GIFT  SOAP    $1.00  bx. 

$1.50  Value  Lucien  Leiong 

BATH  POWDER   $1.00  bx. 

•  Reg.  $2.50  Value 

HAND  CREAM    $1.00 

Reg    $2.00  Value 

COLD  CREAM    $1.00 

Reg    $2.00  Value 

DRY  SKIN  CREAM    $1.00 


Res.  1.09  Quart 


Mineral  Oil 
$1.00 


(69c  pint  free  with  ea.  quirt) 


.  Reg.  1.39  Pint 

Cod  Liver  Oil 
$1.00 

(plain  or  flavored) 


12  ONLY 

Lunch  Boxes 

All  metal  —  $1.98  Value 

$1.00 


$2.00  Valus   Cheramy 

Skin  Balm 
9P^ 


•  ^. 


TOYS  &  GAMES 

REDUCED  TO  MAKE  ROOM 

FOR  SPRING  MERCHANDISE 

REG.  VALUES  TO  $2.00 

$1.00 


98c  Whect  Germ  OU 

Capsules 
2  for  $1.00 


10c  Jergens  Soap  ...  15  for  $1 

16c  Jergens  Soap 9  for  $1 

10c  Woodbury  Soap  14  for  $1 
16c  Woodbury  Soap    9  For  $1 


One  Ass't.  Values  to  $1.00 


Stationery 
2  for  $1.00 


$100  Seaforth  Spice 

Shaving  Lotion 
2  for  $1.00 


2  ONLY 


"   > 


Baby  Feeding  Sets 

\  (Reg.  $1.98  Value) 

$1.00 


ENTIRE  STOCK 

COSTUME 

Jewelry 

2  for  $1.00 

2V3  POUND 


Fruit  Cake 


(Reg.  1.75  Value) 


$1.00 


Reg.  79c  Value 

PODO  BRUSHLESS  SHAVE  CREAM 


Reg.  69c  Value 


2  jars  for  $1.00 


PODO  SPEED  SHAVE  BOMB 
2  for  $1.00 


These  Big  Values  Good  For  Two  Days  Only  At 

SUTTON'S  DRUG  STORE 


159  E.  Franklin  $t. 


Phones  5531  and  9-8781 


m. 


mt 


T 


PAGE  POUR 


TH«  0A4LY  TAR  HEIL 


FRIDAY,  PEBRUARY  15,  19S7 


SOUND  AND  FURY: 


New,  Original'  Comedy  Scheduled  For  Late  March 


CECIL  HARTSOE,  NANCETTA  HUDSON,  JOHN  LUDWIG 

.  three    directors:    vmsical,    technical,    production 


Exchange  Interviews  Begin  At  4  Friday  In  GAA 


Interviews  for  the  Sarah  Law- 
rence College  exchange  program 
will  begin  Friday  at  4  p.m.  in  the 
Woodhouse  Conference  Room  ol 
GM. 

Two  UNC  students  will  repre- 
sent the  University  at  the  Bronx- 
ville,  N.  Y.  college.  whil«  two  co- 
eds from  Sarah  Lawi-ence  will 
come  here. 

The  two-week  program  planned 
by  the  student  exchange  commit- 
tee of  Sarah  Lawrence  will  include 
one  northern,  one  southern  and 
one  midwestern  college.  It  will  be 
held  from  Feb.  14  to  March  3,  ac- 


cording to  Miss  Faith  Learned. 
I  chairman  of  the  Student  exchange 
I  committee  at  Sarah  Lawrence. 
!  Conducting  the  interviews  will 
1  be  Interfraternity  Council  Presi- 
i  dent  Ed  Hudgins.  Interdormitory 
j  Council  President  Sonny  Hallford. 
i  WRC  Chairman  Peggy  Funk,  and 
I  Student  Body  President  Bob 
j  Young. 

Interested  students  have  been 
j  asked  t^  contact  the  student  gov- 
1  ment  office  in  Graham  Memorial 
j  to  give  the  time  they  would  like 
'  to  appear  before  the  selection 
committee.  Young  said  he  would 


THROUGH  5  P.M.  FRIDAY; 

Representative  For 
Scandinavia  On  Campus 


Miss   Judith   Alberti,    field    rep- 1 
resentativc    f  jr    the    Scandinavian ! 
Seminar     for     Cultural     Studies, 
will  be  on  campus  through  5  p.m. 
Friday  at  the  Y  building  to  inter-  j 
view   students     and      professional 
people  for  a  year's  living  and  stu- ; 
dying    in    Denmark.     Norway     or  j 
Sweden.  ) 

Juniors  aivd  -fraduate  students 
would  be  able  to  receive  college 
credit  for  their  studies.  A  limited 
number  of  scholarships  are  being 
offered. 

The  nine-month  program  in- 
cludes an  orientation  session, 
two  home  stays  of  one  month 
each  in  a  rural  and  an  urban 
community,  and  a  six-nnonth  en- 
rollment in  one  of  the  small  , 
residential  liberal  arts  colleges 
in  Scandinavia. 

"The  major  emphasis  is  on  be- . 
coming  a  part  of  the  culture  tor 
the&e  nine  manlhs.  The  student 
also  work.s  on  a  project  in  his 
major  field  of  interests."  said  Miss 
Alberti 
CREDIT 

The  project  and  the  language 
would  count  towa.ds  junior  year 
college  credit. 

The   program   begins   with    inde- 
pendent  language  study.  More  ex- 
tensive   language    instruction    and 
lectures  are  given  on   board  ship 
after  it  leaves  New  York  City. 
At    the    capital     city    of    the 
country  of  his  choice  the  student 
wfill  spend  a  week  on  language, 
lectures  and  tours.  He  then  be- 
gins his  first  family  stay  and  be- 
comes   a    rural    family    member 
for  a   month,   at   the  seme    time 
seeing   points  of   interest   in   the 
area. 

The  entire  study  group  will  come 
'ogether  for  the  first  time  since 
disembarkment  for  more  lang- 
uage instruction,  lectures,  reports 
and  evaluation  of  the  community 
stays  at  the  Engelsholm  Folk 
School  (an  old  castle)  in  Jutland. 
After  living  with  an  urban  fam- 
ily lor  a  month,  the  group  re- 
unites for  a  second  session. 
COLLEGE 

Sometime  in  November  the  stu- 
dent enrolls  for  six  months  in  a 
,.mall  residential  liberal  arts  col- 
lege chosen  with  reference  to  his 
major  field  of  interest. 

"In  these  schools  there  are  no 
exams,  grades,  or  flegrees."  re- 
ported Miss  Alberti.  "the  student 
studies  in  close  •  cooperation  with 
his  teachers  and  fellow  students." 
It  is  hoped  that,  the  student  will 
become  a  better  citizen  in  his 
own  country  as  a  result  of  this 
program. 


Expenses  without  a  scholar- 
ship, including  board,  room,  and 
all  travel  range  from  $1425  to 
$1650. 

Miss  Alberti  will  talk  to  inter- 
ested groups  of  persons  concern- 
ing the  program.  Miss  Susan  Fink 
is  available  for  information  after  j 
Miss  Alberti  leaves.  Miss  Fink  may  ' 
be  contacted  by  telephone  at 
2971.  I 


like  to  send   one   male    and   one 
female  student  to  the  program. 

PURPOSES 

The  purposes  of  the  program 
are  to  better  relations  between 
colleges,  to  broaden  and  evaluate 
educational  goals  and  to  provide 
an  opportunity  for  comparing  and 
discussing  student  activities,  ac- 
cording to  Mi.ss  Learned. 

While  the  students  are  taking 
part  in  the  program,  they  will 
attend  clas.ses.  meetings  and  other 
campus  activities  which  will  be 
helpful  in  providing  a  better  un- 
derstanding of  the  college. 

The    UNC    students    would    not 
go  for  the  whole  period,  however,  j 
said  Young.   They   probably  would  | 
stay  only  over     the     weekend     of 
March   3,  though  it  may  be  possi-  | 
ble  for  them  to  stay  for  one  week.  ' 

The  tight  academic  schedule] 
here  prevents  students  from  go-  j 
ing  for  the  full  period,  according  \ 


to  Dean  of  Women  Katherlne  Car- 
mi(?hael. 

Miss  Learned  expressed  hope 
to  Miss  Peggy  Funk,  chairman 
of  the  UNC  Women's  Residence 
Council,  that  if  the  students  from 
UNC  could  not  Attend  for  the 
whole  period,  they  would  come 
during    the   March    3   weekend. 

During  this  weekend,  she  ex- 
plained. Sarah  Lawrence  would  be 
holding  an  educational  conference 
to  which  thirty  or  forty  eastern 
colleges  will  be  invited.  Robert 
Hutchins.  former  president  oi;  the 
University  of  Chicago,  wjll  be 
the  keynot  speaker,  she  said. 
LEGISLATION 

Transportation  would  be  the  on- 
ly expen.se  for  those  going  to  Sarah 
Lawrence.  Legislation  will  be  in- 
troduced at  the  student  legislature 
meeting  tonight  to  provide  trans- 
portation money  for  those  chosen 
according   to   Bob   Young. 

Miss  Learned  said  in  a  letter  to 
Young  she  felt  the  exchange  would 


By  WALLY   KURALT  j 

"An    entirely    new    and    original 
comedy  in  two  acts"  will  take  UNC  ; 
by  storm  next  month,  according  to 
John  Ludwig.  director  of  the  show. 
Sound  and  Fury,  a  comsdy  with  ' 
music,  completely  written  by  Car-  ^ 
olina    students,    will    be   presented  ' 
in    Memorial    Hall    March    30    to 
April   1.  I 

The  script  for  the  show  has 
just  been  finished,  said  Ludwig. 
and  the  music  and  lyrics  are  be- 
ing  written   by   Carolina    talent. 

An  11  piece  orchestra  and  a 
jazz  band  are  being  employed  for 
the  show,  and  new  sets  and  equip- 
ment  arc   being  added. 

"We  are  greatly  enlarging  the 
scope  of  the  show,"  said  Ludwig. 
"because  this  year  we  are  having 
only  one  show.  Sound  and  Fury  | 
has,  in  years  past,  been  presented 
in  the  fall  and  spring.  This  year 
all  resources  have  been  pooled  in- 
to one  mammoth  production." 
LARGENESS    ■ 

Ludwig.  citing  the  largeness  of 
the  show,  included  such  features 
"*as  an  800  square  foot  backdrop — 
with  280  feet  of  seams — and  four 
complete  settings.  He  said  125 
people  will  take  part  in  the  show. 
Tryouts  for  the  production  will 
be  "an  especially  profitable  way  be  held  March  4-5. 
of  comparing  the  different  prob- 1  Help  is  needed  now  for  paint 
lems  of  a  small  progressive  wo- 1  ing  sets,  said  Ludwig.  Later  stu 
men's  college  and  a  large  coedu-  ;  dents  will  be  asked  for  aid  in  ♦.he 
cational    university."  '  crews  and  chorus. 


Ludwig  also  issued  a  cell  for 
a  master  electrician,  a  box  of- 
fice manager,  a  house  manager, 
and  for  members  of  the  con- 
struction crew.  Students  inter- 
ested in  working  on  the  shew 
have  been  asked  to  contact  hini 
at  St.  Anthony  Hall  at  1  p.m.  or 
7   p.m. 

PERSONEL 

Cecil    Hartsoe,    a    junior    from 

Newton,  will  serve  as  music  di- 
rector. Peter  O'Sullivan  is  assist- 
ing with  the  designing  of  the 
show.  Miss  Fou  Fou  Semmes  is 
designing  the  costumes. 

Jim  Thompson.  Nancy  Stephen.«; 
and  .John  Steed  wrote  the  entire 
script  for  the  show.  Prof.  Foster 
Fitz-Simmons.   previously   associat- 


ed with  Sound  and  Fury,  is  again 
assisting  in  in   advisory   capacity. 
Nancetta    Hudson    will    produce 
the   show. 

.  Sound  and  Fury  was  started  to 
provide  an  outlet  for  amateur 
talent.  It  was  begun  several  years 
ago,  discontinued,  then  revived  in 
1954.  The  fall  show  of  that  year 
used  plots  and  music  from  several 
Broadway  shows.  Since  then,  Cat- 
olina  students  have  written  the 
show. 


FRIDAY 


(Contir 
tions    will 
the    areas 


PATRONIZE   YOUR 
•    ADVERTISERS    • 


HERMAN  SCHULTZ,  NANCY  STEPHENS 

the  matiaging  e^id:   nianager  and   prodfjtccr 


•:(•■#>•?  • 


Cookies— 20c  doz. 
Pastries— 60c  doz. 
Sweet  Buns— 50c  doz 
Fudge— 40c  doz. 


THELUS    BAKERY 


Carauna  ^port  ^kop 


ALL  YOU  CAN  EAT!! 


FISH 
$1.25 


B.B.Q. 

Brunswick  Stew 

$1.75 


State  Game 
Won  t  Be 
Broadvised 


N.    C.    Slate's     basketball     game  j 
with  the  first-place  Tar  Heels  will  j 
not  be  telecast  on  Channel  4  when  ! 
the    Wclfpack   comes     to     Chapel 
Hill   next  Tuesday   night.  The  de- 
cision   was    made    by    WUNC-TV I 
olficials  following  a  study  of  other  1 
games  scheduled  that  evening,  ac- 
cording  to  John   Young,   a.ssistant 
director    of    the    station's    Chapel 
Hill  studio. 

"Our  original  "broadvision"  pro- 
posal proviiilfed  that  no  games 
would  be  telecast  on  Tuesday  and 
Friday  evenings,  when  most  high 
school  games  are  played."  said 
Young. 

"We  talked  with  Hap  Perry  of 
the  North  Carolina  High  School 
Athletic  Assn.  before  making  the 
cancellation  decision.  Perry  told 
us  that  about  300  high  school 
games  are  scheduled  throughout 
the   State   that   night.   '.\t   least   a 

\  hundred'    are    in    the    WUNC-TV. 

I  Channel    4    coverage    area,    Perry 

.  estimated. 

j      "For   most   of   the   schools,   the 

I  game  that  night  is  the  final  one  of 
the  season,  and  in  many  cases, 
their  biggest  game.  Perry  feels 
that  a  telecast  of  the  Carolina- 
State  game  would  seriously  hurt 
the  attendance  at  these  high  school 
games.  Although  wc  should  like 
to  'broadvise'  the  game  from 
Chapel  Hill,  we  don't  want  to 
hurt  the  high  schools'  athletic 
nrogram.  We  have  eliminated  the 
telecast    from    our   schedule." 

Two  other  Tar  Heel  games  have 
been  telecast  this  season  under 
the  "broadvision"  plan.  The  Car- 
olina-Duke game  was  shown  last 
Saturday,  and  the  Carolina-Wake 
Forest  tilt  was  on  Channel  4  Wed- 
nesday night. 


RED'S  CAFETERIA 

Main  St.  —  Carrboro 

(this  ad  worth  25c  on  any  meal) 


UNCS 
OWN 


DORIS 


,:=iuf>^->';    :    '■-'f-T 


BETTS 


SCORES  A  BuIl'I  eye 
WITH  HER  NEW 
NOVEL        *^^ 

SEE  IT  AT 

The  Intimate 
Bookshop 


■^i 


Clings  to  the 

road  like  a 
stripe  of  paint! 


The  '57  Chevy  cau  give  lessons 
on  taking  curves  and  holding  the 
road  to  just  about  any  car  going. 
Few  cars  at  any  price  are  so 
beautifully  balanced  and  so 
smooth,  sure  and  solid  in  action. 

A  car  has  to  have  a  special  kind  of 
build  and  balance  to  keep  curves 
under  control.  And  nobody  outdoe.^ 
Chevrolet  in  that  department!  It 
"comers"  with  all  the  solid  assur- 
ance of  an  honest-to-goodness  sports 
car.  Chevy  doesn't  throw  its  weight 
around  on  turns  because  it  carries^ 
its  jxjunds  in  the  right  places. 

And  if  the  road  should  turn  up- 
ward. Chevy  can  take  care  of  that 
nicely,  too— with  up  to  245  h.p.* 

Come  on  in  and  take  a  turn  at  the 
wheel  of  a  new  Chevrcrfet.  ' 


CH 


m-t 


*270-h.p.    hi^k-prrfoTmance    \' 
eniitit  tUo  m»ilabU  at  extra  <.i 


-      i. 


Su-i'Cl,  sn„H,lh  and  sassy-ihafs  Chevrolet  all  over.  Above,  you're  looking  oJ  the  Bel  Air  Sport  Coup.. 


205  E.  Franklin  St. 


Open  Till  10  P.M. 


Only  franchised  Chevrolet  dealers 


CHEVROLET 


F    display  this  famous  trademark 


See  Your  Authorized  Chevrolet  Dealer 


Sp. 


Flai 


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Fi 


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1957 


/) 


Jacity. 
hoduce 

led  to 

\ateur 

years 

/ed  in 

year 

leveraJ 

Cat- 

the 


FRIDAY,  FEBRUARY   15,  1957 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HE£L 


PAGE  FIVE 


Health    Budget 


(Continved  from  paffe  1)  |  general    expense;    instruction   and  j  nurses   'residence  hall;    salary   in- 

tions   will   be   apportioned    among  |  departmental    research;    mainten-  \  creases   and    reserve. 


the    areas    of    administration    and !  ance   and  operation  of  plant;   the 


Cheeseburger 
20c 

GREEN'S    RESTAURANT 


Dress  Fabrics 
3  yds.  $1. 

Fcim  Rubber  Pillows 
$1.  each 


Carolina  Fabric  Shop 


OTOOG 


SALE 
VILLAGE    GRILL 


2  for 
25c 


i   laving* 


AT 


CHAPEL   HILLS   ONLY   EXCLUSIVE   SHOE   SfOftC 

HOSE  -  $1 .  OFF  on  Tv»/o  Pair 
BAGS  —  Suede  and  Faille  —  V2  Price 
SHOES  -  $1  OFF  on  Any  Pair 
SOCKS  -  $1  for  2  Pairs 
SUPPER  SOCKS -1/2  Price 


Chapel  Hill's  Only  Exclusive  Shoe  Store 


I  ? 


Sfevens  -  Shepherd 

DOLLAR  DAY 
SPECIALS! 

Sport  Shirts . . . 

Regular  Values  to  $4.95 
Only    $199 

Flannel  Slack  Selections 
Regular  Values  to  $16.95 
Only  $9.95 

Silk  Repp  and  Print  Ties 
Regular  Values  $2.50 
Only  $1.99 

Save  —Shop  on  Dollar  Day 
friday  and  Saturday  Only 


^ 


The  administration  and  general 
expense  recommendation  is  $117.- 
851  for  the  biennium  as  against  a 
request  of  $175,125. 

The  total  biennium  recommen- 
dation for  instruction  and  de- 
partmental research  comes  to  $4,- 
729.344.  The  University  asked  for 
H,882.932. 

These  funds  will  be  divided 
among  the  Schools  of  Medicine, 
Dentistry,  Pharmacy,  Public 
Health,  Nursing  and  the  Division- 
al Library. 

Recommendations  for  the  bien- 
nium to  the  different  schools,  with 
their  requests,  are  as  follows: 

School  of  Medicine— $2,314,065 
'•ecommended.  $2,336,397  request- 
ed. 

School  of  Dentistry— $1,198,380 
recommended.  $1,263,742  request- 
ed. 

School  of  Pharmacy —$225,613 
recommended,  $226,293  requested 

School  of  Public  Health— ^53. 
876  recommended.  $600,604  re- 
quested. 

SchoM  of  Nursing— $358,888  re 
commended,    $377,374    requested. 

Divisional  Library — $78,522  r( 
commended.  $78,522  requested. 

The  largest  amount  for  each 
area  will  go  for  salaries  and  wages 

Also  included  are  costs  for  sup 
plies  and  materials;  postage/  tele 
phone  and  telegrams;  travel  ex- 
pense; printing  and  binding;  re 
pairs  and  alterations;  general  ex 
pense;  equipment;  library  book; 
and  journals  and  transfers  to  oth 
er  divisions. 

Recommendations  for  mairvten 
ance  and  operation  of  plant  comr 
to  a  total  of  $218,450  for  the  bien 
nium  as  requested. 

For  the  nurses  residence  hall 
the  University  received  a  recom 
mendation  of  $68,607  as  against  : 
request  of  $68,699. 

Recommended  for  merit  salary 
increments  and  salary  increases  i' 
$27000.  The  University  asked  fo- 
$404,400. 
\For  reserve  the  recommenda 
tion  is  $5,161,252  compared  to  r 
request    for  $5,749,806. 


FROM  ACC  PROBE: 


STEVBKS^  SHBPHBRD 


UNC 
Budget 

(Continued   fiom    Page    I) 
relocating      and      ventilating     tht 
three    transformers    for    Memoria' 
Hospital. 

The  areas  listed  above  from  th« 
School  of  Dentistry  through  the 
three  transformers  all  received 
what  was  requested. 

The  Budget  Commission  turned 
down  requests  for  23  other  areas 
within  the  Consolidated  Universitx 
Chapel  Hill  branch. 

The.se  areas,  with  their  request 
ed   funds  are  as  follows: 

Health  Affairs  library,  $1500  for 
reference  counter  and  shelving 
School  of  Medicine.  $25,000  for 
renovating  of  ground  floor;  Wool 
!en  Gymnasium.  $6,000  for  plast- 
t.ering  and  painting  Bowman  Gra.* 
Pool;  Wilson  Library.  $27000  foi 
equipment  for  microfilm  and  other 
phot,^  duplication  and  $11,680  for 
renovation  of  the  main  reference 
room; 

i      Old   Venable  Hall.  $155,000   for 

{  new   laboratory  desks  and  equip 

ment  in  five  main  laboratories  and 

I  $3000  and  $4000  for  floor  and  rool 

j  repairs,    respectively. 

I      School  of   Dentistry,  $60,000   to 

i  improve  the  ground  floor;  Botan.^ 

!  greenhouse,  $600     for     an     addi 

j  tional  section;  Peab^dy  Hall,  $4. 

I  650   for  air  conditioning   and   de 

I  humidifyin"?   the    basement   room 

radio  stati.on  WUNC.   $16,600   for 

antenna     for     a     10.000  watt  F\! 

transmitter; 

Swain  Hall,  $8000  for  basement 
excavation  and  construction: 
School  of  Public  Health,  $1  mill 
ion  for  building,  equipment  and 
utility  connections  and  roads: 
School  of  Nursing,  $200,000  for  an 
addition  to  wing  A  for  building 
equipment  and  utility  connections 
Hill  Hall  annexaton,  $498,000  for 
building  and  equipment; 

Division  of  Health  Affairs,  $329. 
000  for  library  enlargement  build- 
ing; Housing  for  ambulatory  pa- 
tients and  relatives  of  ir^patients, 
$500,000  covering  building,  equip 
ment,  utility  connections  and  ac- 
cess to  areas  and  grounds;  student 
union  building,  $1,242,000  for 
building  and  equipment; 

Wing  on  School  of  Medicine 
building.  $925,000  covering  build 
ine,  equipment,  and  roads,  drive." 
and  utilities;  hosn'tal  T-wing,  $1,- 
680  000  for  building,  equipmen* 
and  utility  connections,  roads  and 
drives,  married  students'  housing 
$1,740,000  for  building  and  equip 
ment  (an  enabling  act  will  be  in 
troduced  to  the  General  Assemblv 
however,  to  attempt  to  get  funds 
for  housing). 


Here's  Text  Of  Report 
To  State  Chancellor 

RALE7IGH — (AP) — Following  is  a  copy  of  the  text  of  the  report 
of  the  ACC  faculty  chairmen  sent  by  ACC  Commisjioner  Jim  Weaver 
to  Dr.  Carey  H.  Bostian,  State  College  chancellor: 

Feb.  10,  1957 

Report  to  North  Carolina  State  College  of  the  Atlantic  Coa^-l  Con- 
ference faculty  chairmen's  meeting: 

That  since  the  Atlantic  Coast  Conference  does  not  have  the 
authority  to  subpoena  witnesses  for  an  open  hearing,  the  commis- 
sioner having  been  in  contact  with  certain  witnesses  and  having 
ascertained  that  some  of  them  will  not  appear  to  give  evidence  at 
an  open  hearing,  therefore,  the  faculty  committee  rule.-  that  they 
will  not  sponsor  an  open  hearing  on  the  Moreland  case. 

That  North  Carolina  Stat*  College  bo  notified  that  the  confer- 
once  reoffirms  its  position  reiativ*  to  the  two  charges — nanr>ely, 
illegal  transportation  and  the  illegal  fivo  year  scholarship  vtrhich 
are  violations  of  the  by-laws  of  the  Atlantic  Coast  Conference: 

With   reference   to  illegal   transportation: 

At  the  time  the  $80  was  given  to  Moreland,  which  wa  •  in  the 
presence  of  and  with  the  knowledge  of  Case  and  Bubas,  in  our 
opinion,  they  knew  that  Moreland  was  going  to  North  Carolina  State 
College  with  the  idea  of  staying  permanently.  This  is  a  violation  of 
rule  12  (A)  of  the  Atlantic  Coast  Conference  by-laws. 

With  reference  to  the  five  year  scholarship: 

In  our  opinion,  the  statement  that  a  five  (5)  year  scholarship 
would  he  available  in  case  of  need  con.vitutes  a  violation  of  article 
3-rule  12  of  the  Atlantic  Coast  Conference  by-laws. 

With  reference  to  the  charges  dealing  with  excessive  aid  in  other 
forms: 

Moreland  has  admitted  the  promi.se  of  certain  additional  induce- 
ments by  representatives  of  State  <:ollege,  later  repudiated  these 
statements.  Copies  of  both  admission  and  repudiation  are  in  the 
hands  of  re.,>onsible  State  College  authorities.  The  investigation 
conducted  by  the  Atlantic  Coast  Conference  revealed  confirmation 
of  the  original  admissions  made  by  Moreland.  This  confirmation 
was  given  to  us  on  a  confidential  basis  and  is  not  avaiiable  for 
public  release.  However,  details  of  the  confirmation  are  available 
to  North  Carolina  State  College  on  a  confidential  basis. 

Penalties: 

1.  It  is  ruled  that  since  North  Carolina  State  has  violated  Article- 
9— Rule  12  that  Moreland  u  inelii^ible — Article  11,  Section  F-5. 

2.  With  reference  to  the  basketball  staff  not  being  allowed  to 
recruit  basketball  players  for  one  year: 

This  penalty  stands  and  is  interpreted  to  mean  that  members 
of  the  State  College  basketball  staff  not  be  allowed  to  recruit  off 
campus  for  one  year.  Further,  that  the  college  not  be  allowed  to 
pay  transportation  for  visitations  to  the  campus  by  prospective 
basketball  players. 

3.  It  is  ruled  that  since  the  full  scholarship  or  grant-in-aid  was 
made  available  to  .Moreland,  and  State  College  staled  that  the  boy 
could  retain  the  grant-in-aid  whether  he  was  eligible  or  not  and 
has  thereby  partially  fulfilled  the  intent  of  the  commissioner's  rul- 
ing, the  faculty  chairmen  of  the  Atlantic  Coast  Conference  rule 
that  the  penalty  of  $5000  assessed  against  State  College  be  reduced 
to  $2500.  . 

The  Atlantic  Coa.-t  Conference  at  its  meeting  on  Feb.  16,  1957 
has  decided  that  the  rulings  contained  ia  this  report  conclude  the 
conference  investigation  in  the  Moreland  case  and  rules  that  as  far 
as  the  conference  is  cooceroed  the  case  is  closed. 

Oliver  K.  Cornwell,  ' 

Secretary-TreattirjBtrf*  '*-•'    ..  -    -■  •.       .-    -   / 

Atlantic  Coast  Conference. 

HONC^       I 
COUNCIL 

(Co^itinued  from  Page  1)         j 

I 

-ouncil's     suspicions     before     Ihe 

'        i 
C'ouncU  had  officially  opened  inves-, 

tigations  on  this  aspect  of  his  case.' 

The  Council  was  willing  to  con- 1 

^id^^  this  a  case  of  a  student's  turn- 1 

ing  himself  in  for  a  violation  of  the  I 

honor  code. 

Tire    Council    also   bad    defendant. 

C  under  suspicion,  which  suspicions' 

.vere  confirmed  by  the  testimony  ofj 

V  before  the  Council  Chairman. 

Upon  being  visited  by  the  Couaicl; 
chairman,  C  readily  admitted  his| 
4iult,  and  testified  that  there  were  I 
(iHjer  stud<fnts  ir^volved,  but  insisted 

liat  he  wctuld  rahter  tr,y  to  persuade 

hat  he  would  rather  try  to  persuade 

ran  give  the  names  himself. 
Several  days  after  this  vu.it  withj 

lefendant    C,   defendants   B   and   D 

visited    the    Coiuicil    Chairman    of, 

heir  own  accord  and  adftiilted  their; 

»art  in  the  affair.  Soon  after  this,  | 

efendant  B  came  to  the  Council  j 
Jhairman's    room    and    readily    ad- 

nitted  his  part.  j 

Were    it    not    for   this   completely  [ 

onorable    admission   of   their  mis- 

akes    and    their    willingness    to   re- 
port ihemselves  for  thier  violations,' 
jach  student  would  likely  have  re- 

eived  a  sentence  of  suspension  with 
rhe  possibility  even  of  being  ex- 
jelled  from  school,  never  to  return 

lere. 

Because,    however,,  defendants   A, 
J.   D  and  E  did  report  themfielves 

0  the  Council  and  because  defend- 

nt  B  readily  admitted  his  guilt  and 

/as  instrumental  in  securing  the 
.onfessions  of  th<>  other  sUMtents, 
.hey  were  sentenced  by  the  Council 
as  follows: 

Defendants  /k,  B,  D  and  E  re- 
ceived sentences  of  prc^atioa./er 

two  full  semesters.  Oofervdent  C 

received  a  sentence  of  probation 

for  three  full  semesters. 
The  Council  cannot  stress  enougl) 
the  fact  that  if  leniency  is  ever  to 
*)e  granted  lor  Honor  Council  viola- 
tion, it  will  be  to  those  students  who 
,-eport  themselves  to  the  Council 
ind  readily  admit  their  guilt. 

eral     adminiatration     received     it 
.ecommendation  of  $50,000  as  re- 
luested  for  alterations  and  repairs 
y  the   former   Institute    of   Govt,  i 
juildng.    The    Consolidated    Uui- j 
/ersity   officers  may     be     moved 


Answer   To   ERV 


By  LARRY  CHEEK 

Glad  you  saw  fit  to  drop  me  a 
line.  Your  learned  comments  will 
prove  an  inspiration  to  me  when 
I  find  myself  feeling  blue  and 
down  in  the  dumps. 

In  passing:.  I  don't  drink  cof- 
fee. Too  strong  for  my  ivery 
tower  system.  And  whether  or 
not  i  graduate  is  strictly  up  to 
the  gods,  or  perhaps  I  should  say 
the  venerable  professors  who  fre- 
quent the  hallowed  halls  of  this 
institution. 

Hey  Erv.  Did  you  read  Fred 
Powledge's  editorial  expose  yes- 
terday? No?  You  should.  It's 
very  informative.  Tells  all  about 
big  time  athletics,  an9  what  a 
rotten  mess  things  are  in.  Very 
spicy  reading.  Even  better  than 
"Confidential". 

A  Tent  City  on  the  Kenan? 
Sounds  good  to  me,  Erv.  And 
Erv.  Wasn't  Baby  Doll  seduced? 
You  spoiled  my  whole  day. 


MUSICAL    FOOTBALL 

Plays 
"HARK  THE  SOUND" 


Julian 


0"'y   $3.50 


e  £^tiop 


In  Cooperation  with  Chapel  Hill  Merchants 


.i^. 


Will  feature  Many^  Many  Dollar  Day  Specials 


Visit  Us  and  See  for  Yourself 


■sK- 


of  Chapel  Hill 


Careers  Grow— Through  Science 


'i . 


From  the  elements  of  nature— a  limitless  fron- 
tier—scientists develop  new  products  and  processes 
that  benefit  everyone.  To  the  college  graduate,  these 
new  things  mean  career  opportunities  that  did  not 
exist  before. 

Tlie  acienliste  of  Union  Carbide  have  introduced 
nn  average  of  one  new  product  per  month  for  over 
25  years.  They  are  now  introducing  them  at  the  rate 
of  two  a  month. 

Today,  more  than  one-third  of  the  work  of  the  peo- 
ple of  Union  Carbide  all  over  the  country  is  in  pro- 
viding products  and  processes  that  did  not  exist  in 


commercial  quantities  15  years  ago. 

Nearly  3,000  scientists,  in  23  Union  Carbide 
laboratories,  devote  full  time  to  research. 

For  more  information  about  opportunities  with 
Union  Carbide,  s^e  your  placement  director,  or  write 
to  Mr.  V.  0.  Davis,  Coordinator  of  College  Re- 
cruiting. , 

Union  CaiIbide 

AJSri>    CARBON   CORPORATION 

S«KAST4aND    STREET        flHW  "KW     YORK     17,     N.     T. 


IJCC  Divisions  irudude 


The  Consolidated  University  gen-  there. 


Bakelite  Company  •  Carbide  and  Carbon  Chemicals  Company  •  Electro  Metallurgical  Company 
Hayues  Stellite  Company  *  linde  Air  Products  Company 
Rational  Carbon  Company  *  SilicooM  Diviuoa  •  Uaioii  Carbide  iSudear  Company^  ' 


^■f-4_*  v-irt^  V  V  V  V-  s/v*v  >*'J>.->«v  : 


PASB  SIX 


THf  DAILY  TA«  HEiL 


FRIDAY,  FEMUARY  15,  1W7 


Gym  Officials 

Light  Fixtures 

.  Like  Old  Ones 

They're  having  light  problems 
at  Woollen  Gym. 

More  light  fixtures  arc  needed 
to  illuminate  t!ic  entrances  which 
;iccommodiate  .  overflow  crowds 
everj-  time  the  basketball  team 
plays   at   home. 

What's  the  problem?  They 
can't  find  any  more  like  the  cnes 
they  have.  Why?  Because  no  one 
knows  where  the  fixtures  came 
from  or  who  made  them.  They 
are  20  years  old  and  cost  over 
S150  a  piece  and  are  hand  made. 

So  you'll  know  what  the  prob- 
lem is  when  Woollen  Gym  starts 
looking  like  a  display  for  mis- 
collanioas    light    fixtures. 


MILTON'S 

DOLLAR  DAY  SPECIALS 

Entire  Stock  Jewelry 

Values  to  $5.50 
Take  your  pick  for  $1 

$4.00  Exeter  Cashmere 

Blend  Socks 

Dollar  Days  Only  $1. 

Milton's  Carnival 
Special  Still  In  Effect. 

iWiltott'g 

Clothing  Cupboart 


MINUS  COACHES  HEARN  AND  HOUSE: 


UNC  Diamond  Squad 
Begins  Spring  Work 


Tar  Hee\  Mound  Ace 

Jim  Raugh,  strapping  senior  righthander  from  Rosempndt,  P«., 
will  form  the  backbone  of  what  should  b«  a  ftreng  Carolina 
pitching  staff  this  year.  The  Tar  Heel  baseballers  opened  spring 
practice  yesterday. 


By   BILL    KING 

Spring  ba>ct>:iil  practice  got  an- 
del  way  yesterday  and  a  couple  of 
the  eld  faces  in  the  coaching 
ranks  weren't  around  for  the  firat 
time  in  a  long  while. 

Head  coach  Walter  Rabb  held  a 
meeting  cf  all  varsity  and  trcsh- 
niaii  candidates  at  2:30  p.m.  in 
Woollen  Gym  and  then  moved  to 
Emerson  Field  for  the  first  Work- 
out of  the  vear. 

But  missing  'in  the  spring  prac- 
tice drills  were  a  couple  of  fel- 
lows wh^  should  know  Carolina 
ba.seball  pretty  thor  ughly.  Bunn 
Ilearn    and    Henry    House. 

Hoarn  retired  during  the  off  sea 
son  as  official  head  coach  of  the 
Tar  Heels  after  27  years  of  ser- 
vice. Rabb  received  official  ap- 
pointment as  head  coach  although 
he  has  been  the  varsity  coach  for 
several  year.s  since  the  failing 
health  of  Hearn. 

House,  freshman  coach  for  sev- 
eral years,  has  had  to  resign  from 
that  po.st  l>ecau.se  of  his  work  as 
a  general  college  advi.sor.  Said 
R.ibb  of  his  resignation,  "We'll 
certainly  miss  Coach  Hoose.  He 
has  done  a  lot  for  the  freshmen 
teams  since  he  has  been  coach, 
and  he's  wrrked  hard  anil  effic- 
iently at  a  job  that  doesn't  receive 
much    recognition." 

The  new  freshman  coach  is 
Wayne  White,  a  1953  Physical  Ed- 
ucation graduate  at  Carolina  and 
a  former  ba.seball  co-captain. 
White,  an  outfielder,  since  has 
played  professional  baseball  and 
service  ball. 


Two    new    graduate    assistants  riglithandcr   with    good    potential, 

form  the  crux  of  what  could  be- 
come an  outstanding  pitching 
itaff.  In  addition  to  Raugh  and 
Saine.  Rabb  will  have  left  banders 
Charlie  Cross  ahd  Ben  Harding,  | 
and  right  banders  Doug  Stinson.  | 
Charles  .\ycock.  and  Tom  Maults 
by. 


have  aJso  been  named,  according 
to  Rabb.  Neville  Coper,  a  grad- 
uate (jf  Catawba,  is  doing  his  grad- 
uate work  here  and  will  assist 
with  the  freshmen.  Rabbs  new 
assistant  i.«  Billy  Wilhelm.  also 
a  graduate  student  who  last  year 
playe<l  pro  ball  with  the  Atlanta 
Crackcis  in  the  South  Atlantic 
League. 

Coach  Rabb  will  have  a  tough 
road  to  travel  in  getting  his  club 
in  shape  before  the  Tar  Heels 
travel  to  Florida  March  20  for  a 
frur-day  slay  in  which  thoy  will 
meet  Florida.  Georgia  Tech.  Ohio 
Slate,  and  Rollins.  But  the  bur- 
den should  be  lessened  somewhat 


Howard  Johnson  Restaurant 


BREAKFAST 


LUNCH 


DINNER 


SNACKS 
landmark  For  Hungry  Tarheels" 


Of  course  Rabb  can  make  no 
predictions  this  early  in  the  sea- 
son but  he  does  concede  that,  "we  ■ 
should  have  an  improved  club.  I  | 
was  well  pleased  with  the  club  j 
last  season;  they  made  good  prog-  j 
ress.  This  season .  our  pitching  : 
should  be  stronger."  { 

Rabb  continued  that,  "I  believe  ; 
the  boys  are  very  anxious  to  play  j 
by    the    return    of    some    of    last   baH  and  I  am  confident  that  we'll  j 


FROSH  AND  VARSITY: 


65GricldersWin 
Football    Letters 


0mn^'?*t^ 


Short  Orders 


Regular  Dinner 


Featuring  The 

ODELL-BERGER 

(A  meal  in  itself) 


Modern 
Soda 
Fountain 


ODELL'S 

Drive-ln  Restaurant 

Next  to  Carboro  School 

CARRBORO 
(Open  VI  ••m. — Midnight) 


Curb  Service 

(5-11) 


I  Thirty-seven  varsity  and  28 
I  Ircihman  football  players  have 
!  been    named   by  Athletic  Director  i  Lowe 

iC.  P.  Erickson  to  receive  letters 
and  numerals  for  their  play  last 
fall. 


.\rlington.      Va.:      Luther 
Linebcrger,        Belmont; 

North    Wilkesboro. 


Truett 
Nelson 


year's  top   stars   and   a   promising 
pitching  staff. 

The  "Ta-  Heels  will  suffer  most 
at  f'rst  base,  center  field,  and 
cafhcr.  The  loss  of  Delon  Lam^ 
bert  in  center  field  leaves  a  big 
gap  there.  Lambert  was  a  hitting 
and  fielding  star  last  season.  Jack 
Wowls.  who  captained  the  Caro- 
lina nine  last  season  has  grad- 
uated and  first  base  is  wide  open. 
The  Tar  Heels  will  be  weak  be- 
hind the  plate  due  to  the  lack  of 
established  depth  Jim  Love,  a 
fine  receiver  but  a  questionable 
hitter,  w  ill  probably  have  first 
crack   at   that  po.<:ition. 

But  despite  tho.se  primary  losses. 
Rabb  will  bo  able  to  count  on 
veteran  infieldcrs  Roger  Honey- 
cutt.  Chuck  Hartman.  Bomber 
Hill.  Carsrtn  Oldham,  and  Don 
Lewis.  And  in  the  outfield,  the  re- 
turn of  Joe  Shook  and  Dick  Hud 
son  gives  a  big  boost  to  the  out- 
look tbere. 

Pitching,  the  one  department  in 
whicii  the  Tar  Heels  were  severely 

t  lacking   last  year,   appears   to   be 
much    more    promi.sing    this    sea- 

1  s^:  n  due  to  the  arrival  of  several 
new  hurlers  and  a  couple  of  start- 
ers from    last    year's   aggregation. 
Jim    Raugh.    the    workhorse    oi 
last   season,   and      Don     Saine.      a 


have  a  lot  of  hustle.  I'm  certainly 
not  conceding  anything  to  any- 
body. It  will  take  a  lot  of  work  for 
us  to  be  outstanding  but  we'll 
just  have  to  wait  and  see." 

In  regards  to  the  conference. 
Rabb  thinks  that  over  all  it  will 
be  stronger  th\s  season.  "Virginia 
and  Clcmson  will  be  better,"  he 
said:  "and  I  think  Duke  will  be 
too. 


Kemp  Is  Having 

'MARDI  GRAS' 

Too! 
Thursday— Friday— Saturday— Monday 

ALL  KINDS  OF        C    "^    A    Z     ^    PRICES 

12"  LP's  At  Lowest  Ever  .  .  . 
$2.90  and  $3.90  .  .  .  Some  LP's  At  $2.56 

Special  ''Mardi  Gras''  Rack 

10  LP's  For  $7.00 


I^^^B^^ 


207  E.  FRANKLIN  STREET 


Michael    Richard    McDarie,    Ro- 
chester.   Pa.:    Feed    Otto   Mi;cllcr. 
Iselin,  N.  J.:  Richard  Finch  Nead. 
The   list    includeii      ten      varsity    .\lbany,    N.   Y.:     Bruno     Anthony 
players  who  will  gra4uate  in  June.    Raso.  Sewickley.  Pa.;  Phil  Joseph 
The  complete  list:     .•?   •'.,:        I  Reinhardt.    Harrisburg.    Pa.;    Paul 
■         I  Russell.  Bridgeport.  W.  Va.:  Clay- 
ton Bernard  Smith.  Jr.  Elizabeth- 


\\ 


SATCHMO 

WOULD  FLIP 


ff 


At 


JAZZ 


At 


TURNAGES 

Every  Saturday  2:00  P.M. 
AT  TURNAGE'S  CABIN  IN  DURHAM 


DICK  GABLES'  "ALL  STARS' 


BEER  SERVED 


Here's  A  Give-Away! 

Anybody  Who  Buys  An 
LP.  Gets 

2  FREE  LP/s 

From 

R.  C.  A.  VICTOR 

In  Honor  Of 

Mardi  Gras  Weekend 


w 


207  E.  FRANKLIN  STREET 


Varsity  awards:  Phillip  Paul 
Blaper.  Whitaker,  Pa.;  Einil  Joseph 
DeLantis,  Scran. jn.  Pa.;  William 
Banks  Ellington.  High  Point:  Carl 
Douglas  Farmer,  Pulaski,  Va.; 
Rowland  Daley  Goff,  Dunn;  Curtis 
Harcum  Hathaway.  Norfolk,  Va.; 
William  Louis  Hardison,  Jr..  Eden- 
tcn;  John  Robert  Haywood.  S. 
Norf  ili.  Va.;  Donald  Kemper.  Hat- 
boro.  Pa.;  Ronald  Paul  Kocj.  Dur- 
yca.  Pa.;  Ronald  James  Marquette 
Pennsville.  N.  J.;  Stewart  Lamar 
Pell.  Lykens.  Pa.;  William  Paul 
Pulley.  Jr..  Durham;  Donald  San- 
born Redding,  Ashebo-ro;  Leo 
Joseph  Russavage,  Duryca,  Pa.; 
Fred  Jones  Swearingen.  Jr..  Pet-' 
crsburg,  Va. 

Clyde  McRae  Turlington.  Dunn; 
Bob  Dillard,  (mgr.).  Chapel  Hill; 
Bill  Parks  (mgr.).  Fayette ville; 
Giles  John  Caca,  West  Mifflin, 
I'a.;  William  Holmes  Johnson,  Jr. 
(mgr.).  Reidsville;  James  Harold 
Jones,  Greensboro;  Roland  Wil- 
lian  Payne.  Jr.,  Norfolk.  Va.;  Dav- 
id Robert  Reed.  Shamokin,  Pa.; 
Charles  Fillmore  Robinson.  Mars 
Hill;  George  Freeman  Sasser.  Con- 
way. S.  C;  Willis  Marshall  Sctzcr. 
Lenoir;  Richard  Wayne  Smith, 
Pottsville,  Pa.;  Wallace  Handel 
Vale.  EUerson,  Va.;  James  Wilson 
Varnum,  Supply;  John  Matthew 
Bilich.  Aliquippa,  Pa.;  John  Co- 
lumbus Jones,  Richmond,  Va.; 
Donald  Joseph  I^ear.  Hatboro.  Pa.; 
Larry  Daniel  McMullen.  Lumber- 
ton;  Larry  Herbert  Muschamp,  Mt. 
Berry.  Ga.;  George  Joseph  Stav- 
nitski,  Fairfield.  Conn.;  Edward 
Wyke    Sutton,    Cullowhee. 

Freshman  numerals:  Earl  But- 
ler, Payetteville;  James  Nelson 
Buzzard,  Pcnnsboro.  W.  Va.; 
Charles  Thomas  Cotton,  Provi- 
dence, R.L;  Jack  Cummings,  Penn 
Wynee,  Pa.;.  James  Edwin  Davis. 
Elca,  Pa.;  Francis  Joseph  Dob- 
rowlski,  Natrona,  Pa.;  Edward 
Francis  Furjanic,  Bresslet,  Pa.; 
Frederick  Harris,  Rocky  Mount; 
Ronald  Herbert  Hopman,  Salem, 
N.  J.;  James  M.  Jeftrett,  Ports- 
mouth, Va.;  Harry  Cornell  John- 
son. High  Point;  George  Kirk, 
Scwicklpy,  Pa.;  David  Lee  Leffler, 


town;  Wade  Marvin  Smith.  Albe- 
marle; Donald  A  Stallincs.  Rocky 
Mount;  Ralph  Thomas  Steele.  N. 
Wilkesbnro:  James  Warren  Stev- 
ens, Hazelwood;  John  Francis 
Stunda.  Molossen,  Pa.;  D.  Ellis 
Wooldridge.  Cuyahoga  Falls,  Ohio. 


EVERY  POINT  A  RECORD 

Evjery  tihie' North  Carolina's  All- 
America  basketball  star  Lejpnie 
Rosenbluth  scores  a  point,  he  sets 
a  new  University  career  scoring 
record. 


The  Art  Of  Tailoring 

"Every  man  to  his  bu«in«ss, 
but  indeed  the  creft  of  •  tailor 
is  beyond  all  doubt  as  noble  and 
as  secret  as  any  in  tlie  world." 

HAVE  OTHERS   FAILED? 

With  expert  .workmanship  and 
the  best  service  possible  Pete 
The  Tailor  has  and  will  continue 
to  give  you  the  ultimate  in 
tailoring  needs. 


DOLLAR    DAYS 

At 

BERMAN'S      I 
SHIRT    SALE 

^*    '■';■.' 

Our  best  advertised  brand.  Sample  line     ^ 

bought  special.  v-  -^   ;/ 

Shirts  up  to  $6.00,  SPECIAL $3.39 

Also  best  advertised  handkerchiefs,  Pure    i; V^^V 
Silk,  %\.5Q  values,  and  cottons  with      >*  \_ 
\n\\\Sk\  SkTxd  fancy  pr\n\,  79c  to  $1.00 
values,  3  Handkerchiefs  for _,  ^  ^  $1.00 

Same  brand  of  underwear  shorts,  woven  "  :7~ 

madras,  values  up  to  $3.00,  NOW  $1 .29 

4   Rugs-9xl2-were  $10.95~NOW  $7.95 

4  Rugs-8xlO-were    $8.95-NOW  $5  *"" 

4  Russ-3x6  -were  $1.98-"NOW  $1.2^ 
Cotton  Rugs,  skid  resistant,  were  $2.25, 

NOW                                          $1.6? 

Extra  heavy  cotton  tufted  rugs,  skid  re- 
sistani,  $3.98,  $4.98,  $5.95,  and 
$0.95  values,  NOW     ._^-^l__V-     V2  Prke 

Drapery  Material,  48"  wide,  SALE  PRICE  $1.19 
Indian  head  rug,  solid  colors,  54"  wide 

SALE  PRICE  __.^_._  $1.19 

Pure  Irish  linen,  36",  SALE  PRICE  '   '  $11? 

Men's  sport  shirts,   long   sleeve,   $4.98, 

$3.95,  $3.39,  $2.79  values,  2  for  $5.50 

White  duck  pants  (with  buttons)  $4.50 

and  $3.98  values  2for  $5.50 
Laundry  mailing  case  (tan)  one  to  a  cus- 
tomer       '^4^.L $1.50 

Swea:  socks  (Ball  Band)  JLl_       2  for  $1  .CO 

Towels  22x42,  Regular  69c    .  _i,       2  for  $1j60 

Towels  20x40  3  for  $1.00 

Pillow  cases 3  for  $1.00 

Ladies'  jewelry,  regular  $1.00  2  for  $1.50 

Men's  union   suit   B.   V.   D.  style,  were 

$1.98-NOW   $1.00 

Men's  raincoats,  were  $4.00— NOW  $1.00  OfF 
Blankets,  were  $7.00-NOW  $5.00 

Corduroy  jackets  (only  5),  were  6.95,NOW  $2.00 
Rug  yarn,  cotton  crochet  thread  .  .  4  for  $1,9P 
Exquisite  Form  bra,  style  5502  were  $1 .50 

NOW  ^__     $1.00 

All  ladies'  hose,  3  pairs  to  a  customer  $1 JQO 

One  table  piece  goods,  were   69c  and 

higher  i.^-._^_      _       3  for  $1.00 

Big  lot  ladies'  shoes  i  ^  $1.00 

Men's  shoes,  were  up  to  $10.00 $3.39 

Children's  Keds  and  PF's  high  top  tennis 

shoes,  sizes  5  to  1 1 $1.99 

Men's  pajamas,  were  $5.00 $1.00  OFF 

Men's  sweaters,  odd  lots,  were  up  to  $12  $4.98 
Men's  robes  $1.00  OFF 
Sampson  card  tables,  SPECIAL $3.98 

BERAAAN'S 


DEPARTMENT  STORE 


*c- ■/'<{- »^ 


1 


Xj^jq^-J     -Q-U"^ 


'^•^^^^^m^^^^^^^^^ 


PWWW^^Vi 


"v^v^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^MM^^^VVOVWVVWIViVVOTHIOTPmSVPWWVi 


tr.H.C.     tlBRidlT 
SSRIALS  DEPT. 
BOX  870 
CSAPEL  HILL,    N.C< 


WEATHER 

Warmtr  with  possible  rain   and 
•n  •xpectad  high  of  50. 


2r()  c  3)aitu  a^Tar  Keel 


FINIS 

Recommtndations    about     athi«* 
tics.  See  editorial,  page  2. 


VOL.  VLII,  NO.  100 


Complete  {A')  Wtre  Servtce 


CHAPEL  HILL,  NORTH  CAROLINA,  SATURDAY,  FEBRUARY   U,  1957 


Offices   in   Graham   Memorial 


FOUR  PAGES  THIS  ISSUft 


AAARDI  GRAS  WEEKEND 


Satchmo  Plays  At  Concert  And  Dance  On  Campus  Today 


•Ji^iit^^if  'Sf^t^K, 


F^i- 


15  SponsorsTo Share 
Spotlight  With  louis 


sou 


It'll    he    "Slecin     liinc    Down    Soutli"     uhcn    i-,    pictiy 


•  I  ■■  1*1  jii.i.jj>  1  iiii«.-  17V/IMI  ouum  uiifii  I;,  picii 
tlicrn  belles— the  Ciernian  ('lub  sponsors— share  the  linu 
It  with  Ja//  K'mv^  Louis  "Sate'         "    *  •   .      • 

>ollen  Gvin  at  ihe  Carolina  M 

l-xiJ-ettetl  hy  olliii;!s  to  surpass  anvMxial   weekend   in 


:  .i'    i-H 


LOUIS  'SATCHMO-   ARMSTRONG 

.  . .  i^leepy  tiiuf  on  the  hill 


l,'^.''^'"  "' 


Soviets  Name  Gromyko 


Three  Thefts 


lAjyv-iiin  i<>  (.;iiui,',>  m  Mil  pass  .ui\.so(iai  \>eeKenci  iii 
(  arolinas  history,  the  Mardi  (iras  is  heinj;  jointly  sponsored 
h\  thi-  (ieynian  Club  in  observaiue  ol  Winter  Ceauians  and 
(.MAI)  in  celebration  ()l  their  2Jlh  amiiversarx. 

Prior  to  the  dance,  the  (.crnian  Club-sponsored  (otuert 
Icatiuino  the  nuisie  of  Anusironir  and  his  All  Stars,  will  be 
stained  this  ;«!iernooii  Ironi  '{  to  ;,  p.m.  in  .\I^uu)rial  liall  lor 
students  with  (iernian  Club  tickets. 

Another  hij;hlii>;ht  will  be  the  coveiajie  ol  the  conceit 
.uul  daiue  by  .Monitor.  NBC*.s  weekend  ladio.  which  will 
make  tape  re<'ordin,q,s  at  vaiious  inter\als  durinj;  the  weekend 
lor  playback  in  the  futine. 

Amoni;  the  personalities  fo  be  interviewed  bv  \S  P  IF 
dis(  jockey  [imniy  Capps  h)r  the  re((»rdin<;  are  All-Amet  icans 
I.ennie  Rosenbluth  and  Charlijt-  krepp.  loot  ball  and  basket- 
ball head  coaches  )im  I  atum  and  Fiank  Mc(iuirc.  Student 
HikIv  President  I>ob  ^■olu^^;.  (ierman  Club  Presidein  Keith 
P.  !mer,  (.M.\U  Diredor  I.inda  Maiui.  anil  l.ouis  Arnrstronn- 

Last  niyht  oid\  m|  CM  tickets  were  lelt.  and  Mardi 
Cias  olliiials  \vere  expectinj"  aromid  I'.ooo  peisinis  at  the 
daiue. 

Membeis  ol  the  Cieniiiui  Club  and  iheir  sponsois  will 
be  piesented  in  the  traditional  liuutc  at  the  dance,  alter 
which  the  master  ol  cetentonies  will  rec o^iiiire  tiM  olliceis 
and   M:  ;cli  (iras  ollicers  and  their  elates. 

(iennan  Club  sponsors  arc;  .Miss  .Diana  Ashlev  of  Creen- 
wood.  .Miss.,  witi)  Keith  Palmer  of  LinunonsN  illei.  S.C..  a  Kay- 
|x»  Si;^ina  and  pre!?ident  of  the  (ierman  Clid):  Miss  Hannah 
Kirin  ol  Louisville.  Kv..  with  (;eoP4e  Raosdaje  c|i  Ralciujyj 
Dell;    Kappa   Kpsiloii.  dul)  \ ice  president.        ':' 'i ![.'!;; 'ji 

Miss  KIlie  Mc  Donalcf  of  C:liatianoo-j.i.  renn..Avith  Mark 
Cherrv  c.f  Mcunt  Olive.  Phi  Helta  Theia.  did)  secielary:  Miss 
liess  Mart  ol  \\  inst«)n-Salem  wjth  (iordon  Brown  of  Durham, 
lieta  Theta  Pi..«JUiU>irca»vu'jtx4-::  .    r.^.    ...  ..(.-.,    ^.-i.  -.     - 

Miss  Maltha  IWiitv  ol  Maiion  with  I  had  S.  liojitit  of 
Koiest  Citv.  kappa  Alpha:  Miss  Pat  Lveiton  ol  Columbia  xvjtli 
Iidiati  Winslow  ol  Hertford.  Pi  Kappa  Alpha:  Miss  (.innv 
MacPharsou  of  Littleton  witli  (.i-orye  \\  ra\  ol  CIvarluite, 
Kapp;    Si;4nia; 

(See  MARDI  GRAS,  Page  3) 


Occur  In 


Scrambled  Schedule 


As   Foreign   Ministet       I  Cobb,  Conner   Delays  Duo's  Debut 


MOSCOW— <  .AP  )— T  h  e  Soviet 
government  changed  foreign  min- 
isters Friday,  relieving  bushy- 
haired  Dmitri  Shepilov  after  on- 
ly eight  months  in  the  office.  Un- 
smiling Andrei  Gromyko  succeed- 
ed him. 

Westerners  in  Moscow  believe 
the  reshulfie  is  a  signal  for  a  re 
turn  to  the  lough  old  policies  o^ 
former  Foreign  Minister  V.  M. 
Molotjv.  Dour,  noncommittal  Gro- 
myko rose  to  prominence  undei 
Molotov.  and  is  regarded  as  a  fol- 


Student  Party 
Plans  Meet 
^  For  Members 

The  Student  Party  will  welcome 
visiters  Monday  with  a  program 
desi;,'ncd  t.)  introduce  the  part> 
to  j,'uesls  and  stimulate  present 
members  in  the  student  govern 
mcnt   program   at   Curolina. 

The  program  will  incorporate  a 
si>cefh  by  former  party  chairman 
Tom  Lambeth,  a  summary  of  pres 
rnt  party  pDlicy  by  Student  Body 
President  Bob  Young,  and  a  'chal- 
leaire  to  the  future  cf  studenl 
government  by  Charles 'Bernard. 
Aiisislant    Director   ol   .\dmissions 

After  the  program,  refreshments 
will  be  served  in  the  Rendezvous 
Boom  to  give  visitors  an  oppor- 
tunity to  meet  the  members  of 
the   party. 

Parly  chairman  Sonny  Hallford 
said  that  he  h.ped  that  "many 
visitors  wculd  attend  the  meeting. 
not  to  become  intero'-ted  in  the 
Student  Party,  but  to  become  in- 
terested in  student  government" 
Chairman  Hallford  added  that  "if 
these  people  are  interested  in  stu 
dent  government  activities,  they 
will  find  a  hearty  welcome  in  the 
Student   Party". 

The  meeting  will  be  at  7:30  p.m. 
on  Monday  in  Roland  Parker 
lounge,  second  floor  of  Graham 
Memorial. 


lower  of  Stalinist    lines.  i 

On  the  other  hand,  easy-spoken 
Shepilov  '  was  regarded  as  a  pro-  | 
lege  of  Nikita  Khrushchev,  first  ■ 
'secretary  cf  the  Communist  Party.  I 
Party  Last  vear  Khrushchev  down-  i 
graded   Stalin  and   adopted   a  let- 

ive     policy     toward     independent 
•ommunists  in  the  satellites — poli- 

ies   from  which   the  Soviet  Party 
;hows  signs  of  retreating. 


US  Reaction 

WASHINGTO-V— ( AP )  —U.S.    of- 

icials  sought  in   Russia's  internal 

'roubles  Friday  the  reason  for  re- 

•noval  of  Dmitri  Shepilov  as  Soviet 

oreign    minister. 

The  most  informed  speculation 
here  is  that  Shepilov's  new  assign- 
ment as  one  of  the  eight  secre- 
taries of  the  central  committee  of 
the  Communist  Party  means  that 
ie  has  been  given  some  important 
job  dealing  with  Soviet  idealogical 
ind    propaganda    problems. 

Russian  broadcasts  and  publica- 
tions have  recently  emphasized  a 
need  for  m^re  vigorous  propagan- 
da inside  the  country  and  more 
•ffective  leadership  on  the  idea- 
logical  fr;  nt.  This  emphasis  has 
developed  following  reports, 
vvhich  wore  widely  published  al- 
ter the  Hungarian  and  the  Polish 
rri.ses  last  fall,  that  there  was  con- 
siderable unrest  among  intellect- 
uals and  particularly  among  uni- 
versity students  in  .Moscow  and 
other  Soviet  centers. 


GM'S  SLATE 

The  following  activities  are 
scheduled  for  Graham  Memorial 
today: 

NSA,  9-10  am.,  Grail  Room; 
NSA,  9-11  a.m.,  Roland  Parker, 
Faculty  Newcomers,  8-12,  Roland 
Parker;Group  11,  Roland  Parker 
3,  and  Woodhouse  Conference 
Room. 


Thefts  of  two  record  players 
and  $7  in  a  billfold  occurred  re- 
cently in  Cobb  and  in  Conner. 

James  Gaskins.  108  Cobb,  lost 
his  hi-fi  set  during  Jan.  26  to 
Feb.  1.  Thomas  Edwards.  146 
Cobb,  was  robbed  of  a  three  speed 
record  player  valued  at  S80  while 
he  was  at  the  morning  exam  Jan. 
28.  Peter  Maydanis.  124  Conner, 
lost  his  wallet  containing  S7  and 
papers  between  4:00  -  5:30  in  the 
morning  of  Feb.  13;  his  door  was 
unlocked  and  the  billfold  was  ly- 
ing on  the  chest  of  drawers. 


German  Club  Sponsors 

Gerntan  Club  sponsors  who  will  be  presented  tonight  at  the  Carolina  Mardi  Gras  formal  dance  art 
top  row  (I  to  r):  Miss  Diana  Ashley,  with  Keith  Pal  .Tier;  Miss  Hannah  Kirby,  with  George  Ragsdale; 
Miss  Ellie  McDonald,  with  Mark  Cherry;  and  Mis;  Sess  Hart,  with  Gordon  Brown.  Second  row:  Miss 
Martha  Twitty,  with  Thad  Bostic;  and  Miss  Pat  Everton,  with  Julian  Winslow.  Third  row:  Miss  Ginny 
MacPharson,  with  George  Wray,  Mrs.  Eric  Haste,  w  ;th  Mr.  Haste;  Miss  Patricia  Lee  Poythress,  with 
Sam  Yancy;  and  Miss  Kay  Musgrave,  with  .Robert  Timberlake.  Fourth  row:  Miss  Ruthie  Metts.  with 
David  Watson;  Miss  Beverly  Campbell,  with  Dav ;  Moye;  Miss  Mary  Lou  Brincktrhoff,  with  Kelly 
Maness;  Miss  Carolyn  Seyffert,  with  Charles  Oyer;   and  Miss  Sue  Hancock,  with  John  McKee. 


Housing 
Petition 
Circulated 

A  local  petition  to  get  the  N.  C. 
General  Assembly  to  pass  legisla- 
tion enabling  the  state  to  float 
bonds  to  finance  married  students' 
housing  units  has  now  made  def- 
inite   progress 

Student  Body  President  Bob 
Young  staled  Thursday  that  he 
would  'co-operate  100  per  cent" 
with  the  petitioning  group,  head- 
ed by  Mrs.  John  Crittenden  ol 
Victory  Village. 

A  meeting  of  the  petition  back- 
ers will  be  held  Monday  to  dis- 
cuss further  plans. 

Working  with  Mrs.  Crittenden 
on  the  petition  are  Mrs.  Robert 
Griffin,  Mrs.  Mike  Pinney.  Gaither 
Wal.ser.  Benny  Thomas  and  Sonny 
Hallford. 

Mrs.  Crittenden  stated  that  the 
group  hopes  to  have  the  petition 
in  circulation  by  Feb.  19.  Circu- 
latiL>n  would  continue  through  Feb. 
22.  on  the  UNO  campus. 

The  petition  would  be  primari- ' 
ly  devoted  to  N.  C-  signatures,  but 
would  not  be  limited  to  students. 
The  group  is  attempting  to  con- 
tact Rep.  John  Umstead  to  enlist 
his  aid  in  introducing  the  bill  bo- 
fiire  the  General  .\s.semblv.  i 


By  CHARLIE   SLOAN 

The  postoffice  depl.  has  nothing  i 
on  the  Mitchell-Ruff  Dup.  Traffic  j 
jams,  delayed  planes  and  snow 
plagued  the  two  gentlemen  cnroule  | 
to  Chapel  Hill  for  their  concert  | 
in  Memorial  Hall  la.st  night.  i 

Willy  Ruff,  the  bass-and-french  1 
horn  half  of  the  duo.  arrived  a ' 
mere  thirty  minutes  late.  He  could-  j 
n't  help  it;  his  plane  was  delayed. 
Dwike  Mitchell,  the  piano  half,  i 
was  still  in  the  air.  Somewhere  be-  j 
tween  New  York  and  Ralcigh- 
Durham   Airport.  | 

According  to  Ruff  the  pair  had  \ 
split  chores  yesterday  morning  in 
New  York  to  hurry  things  up.  One 
had  seen  their  manager  and  the 
other  their  agent.  Numerous  long 
New  York  blocks  separated  them 


and  a  tralfic  tie-up  threw  their 
schedule  awry. 

Ruff  caught  the  scheduled  flight 
in  order  to  be  in  Chapel  Hill  •■n 
time  for  a  dinner  engagement.  Mi- 
tchell caught  a  plane  scheduled  to 
arrive  at  Raleigh-Durham  at  7:20 
p.m. 

At  least  800  members  of  the  stu- 
dent body  know  that  he  finally  ar- 
rived "flt  Memorial  Hall — and  ap 
peared  almost  immediately  on  the 
stage — at  8:25.  It  seems  that  al- 
though Washington.  D.  C,  was 
clear  when  Ruff  flew  over,  snow 
wa.  falling  by  the  time  Mitchell  s 
flight  was  in  the  area.  \ 

What  sort  of  music  the  pair  play 
when  they  are  not  separated  by 
co.iditions  beyond  their  control  is 
hard  to  say.. When  asked  to  classify 


NSAs  Relationship  To  World 
Scene  Is  Under  Discussion 


By  EDITH  MACKINNON  i  came   under  discussion   this  vveok- 

The  U.  S.  National  Student  s  .\s-  end  at  the  meeting  of  the  Inter- 
sn.  and  its  relation  to  the  inter-  national  Student  Relations  Semi- 
national    student    scene    of    today    nar. 


100  Delegates  Here 
For  Regional  Meeting 


(See   DUO,    Page   3) 


,  Willie  Made  it,  but  Dwight  was  late 

Willie  Ruff,  half  the  Mitchell-Ruff  duo,  is  shown  here  at  supper 
with  the  DU's.  Both  artists  were  to  be  feted  at  the  evening  meal, 
but  due  to  a  mixup  in  New  York,  Willie  got  here  on  time,  leaving 
Dwight  Mitchell  behind  in  the  iMg  city.  Mitchell  finally  arrived  half 
an  hour  late  for  the  concert.  The  DU  shown  here  is  Charlie  Sloan, 
DTH   managing   editor. 


By    WALT    SCHRUNTEK 

Over  100  student  delegates  from 
the  Carolinas  and  Virginia  filled 
:  the  conference  rooms  of  Graham 
Memorial  ye.lcrday  for  the  first 
1957  regional  meeting  of  the  Na- 
tional Student  .^ssn. 

The  Carolinas-Virginia  Regional 
of  the  -IVSA  is  listed  as  one  of  the 
largest  in  the  organization  with  re- 
spect to  member  schools.  Of  29 
listed  members,  delegates  from  24 
schools  were  in  attendance  at  jes- 
terday  s  assembly. 

The  a.'jombly,  which  was  term- 
ed extremely  successful  by  Region- 
al Chairman  Jim  Peden.  Jr.  Of  N. 
C.  State,  was  laid  in  part  to  the 
fact  that  many  of  the  delegates 
came  with  experience  and  enthus 
iasm  from  last  summer  s  National 
Congress  at  Chicago. 

The  great  interest  and  partici- 
pation of  non-member  or  "observ- 
or"  schools  was  also  cited  as  a 
contributing  factor  to  the  success 
of  the  program  by  Chairman  Pe- 
,  den. 

He  pointed  out  that  one  of  the 
basic  purposes  of  the  bi-annual  re- 
gional fbeetings  i-s*  to  orient  and 
explain  the  functions  and  purpos- 
es of  the  NSA  and  to  promote  the 
advantages  of  membership  in  the 
organization, 
the   presence    of   several     student 


I      Another  contributing  factor  was 
!  body  presidents.  Peden  went  on  lo 
say. 

The    basic    function    of    this    a.- 
i  seinblage    was    to    discuss    specific 
student  problems  in  the  region  as 
well  as  student  relations  with  Ad- 
ministration, Peden   said. 

.\mong  the  subjects  discu.-sed  by 
yesterdays  Assembly  were  1)  hon- 
or sy.stems.  2)  campus  newspapers. 
3)  student  government,  faculty  and 
Administration  relations  and  4) 
rising  enrollments. 

Peden  pointed  out  that  on  the 
national  level,  the  NSA  strive.^-  lo 
give  student  government  a  voice 
in  federal  legislation.  .\s  an  ex- 
ample of  this  political  expression 
by  NS.\  meml>ership.  Peden  cited 
student  interest  in  the  recent  draft 
bill. 

On  tile  international  level,  the 
NS;\  attempts  to  further  good  wiil 
and  relations.  The  Regional  Chair 
man  cited  a  recent  NS.\-sponsored 
lecture  tour  h\>  a  Hungarian  Vico- 
dom  Fighter  to  various  regiouiil 
member-schools. 

.\c(fording  to  Peden,  regional  or- 
ganizations are  financed  by  pay- 
ment of  members-hip  fees.  The  na- 
tional organization,  which  func- 
tions as  an  information  center  of 
files,  records  and  first-hand  data. 
i.N  similarly  financed  by  dues  from 
member  schools. 


.  twenty-five  reprc>enlativcs  of 
the  Carolinas-Virginia  Region  an; 
meeting  here  this  weekend  to  di  • 
cuss  problems   and    forces   behind 

:  the     international  student     move- 

;  ment. 

Speakers  and  discussion  leaders 
or   the    three-day   conference   arc 

I  Irv  Drasnin.  administrative  assi.» 
tant  on  International  Affairs.  .\l 
Jangcr.  Overseas  Publicity  Direc- 
tor of  USNSA.  Mi.  ,  Jean  Warner. 
Regional  Representative  of  World 
University  Service,  and  John  Sim 
ons.  Director  of  Student  .Xffair'. 
for  the  Foundation  of  Youth  and 
Student  .\ffairs. 
PURPOSES 

.According  to  Drasnin.  the  Se- 
minar serves  a  multiplicity  of  pur- 
poses. Its  main  objectives  are  thre" 
fold: 

1)  to  provide  the  backgroiin-i 
and  history  of  the  NSA; 

2)  to  discu.-s  and  understand  pi " 
♦)lems  facing  the  NSA  on  the  m 
ternational    level; 

3)  to  discu.'3  alternative  solutions 
to  such  problems  and  '.-.ays  to  car 
ry  them  out. 

Drasnin  pointed  out  yesterday 
that  many  Americans  fail  to  real- 
ize the  importance  of  the  student 
movement  throughout  the  world. 
Part  of  the  purpose  of  the  Semi- 
nars is  to  bring  out  student  aware- 
ness of  his  role  and  the  role  of  the 
NSA  in  the  international  scene. 

'The  Asian  and  African  student 
groups  are  growing  in  importance. 
..ated  Drasnin.  The  NS.\  is  now  co- 
operating with  these  groups  thro- 
ugh the  International  Student  Con 
ference. 

One  problem  which  faces  the  in- 
ternational student  conferences  to 
day  is  the  cleavage  between  Com 
munist  and     non-Communist     stu- 
(Sce  .VSA,  Payc  3) 


*^rt 


PAGt  rwo 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HECt 


SATURDAY,  FEBRUARY  U,  1957 


SATURI 


Modern  College  Athletics: 
A  Request  For  Chancellor 

Not  the  plavers.  nor.  the  roadies.  n«)r  the  taxpayers  are  to  blame  for 
wU.ii    The  Daily  Tar  Heel  feels  is  the  rottemiess  of  present-clav  college 

athleiiis. 

At  most  pl.ues  it  is  the  adminisiraiioi)  ol  the  (ollei^es  and  universi- 
ties. F<»r  fhe  administrations  are  the  hodies  whidi  (an  make  athletic 
|)oli(  V  and  c  .1  enlorte  it.  I"he\  are  the  bodies  which  send  repvesentati\es 
to  naiional  (onxentions.  to  conferences,  to  assfu  iations. 

At  Carolina,  our  athletit  j)olicy 
.ippears  to  be  far  abo\e  the  nation- 
al level..  For  this  we  are  proud.  We 
aie  pioud  of  the  men  who  made  it 
th;  :  uay  —  piimarih.  C'.hamellor 
Robert  Ilou>e  and  former  Presi- 
(Unis  Frank  (iiahani  and  (ionlon 
(.rav. 


YOU  SAID  IT: 


TELEVISION  ROUNDUP 


also  proud  of   the  men 
it    that    wav— primarily. 


We  are 
who    keep 

Athletics    Director   C    P.    F.rickson 
.ind    (.oadtes   jim    Tatinii.    Frank 

McCuiie  and  crt1»ers. 

*  *  * 

W  hat  we  ask  is  that  the  I'niNeis- 
ii\  administration  raise  its  stand- 
AuU  e\en  hii>her  than  they  are 
now.  We  leel  the  I'niversity  should 
make  a<ademic  re<|uirentents  even 
iiii4;her  lor  pr<»specti\e  athletes  and 
those  alieatlN  emolled.  The  grants- 
in-aid  program  should  be  even 
moie  selective. 

The  administration  is  the  onlv 
bodv  Avhit  h  (an  do  this. 

The  Iniversity.  headed  bv  its 
chan(ellor.  (an  effect  a  gradual 
revolution  in  the  nmiving  of  io\- 
Jciiiate  spoils.' 

The  revolution  should  empha- 
.si/e  putting  sjxirts  more  into  the 
liands  of  the  students,  insm  ing  that 
athletes  also  be,  real  students,  and 
taking  the  moi>ev  pressine  off  the 
big  sports. 

riie  I'jiiveisitv  and  its  thaiuel- 
l.ir  (an  do  this,  and  at  the  same 
time  it  (an  retain  all  the  respe(  r 
aiul  dii»nitv  the  Iniversity  has 
(oinmaiided  since  it  beiran.  People 
will  hr"ve  faith  in  the  I'nixersitv. 

*  *  *  V 

ChHiucllor  Hoifte  said,  in  an  .\t- 
I  Mi'it  Coast  Conference  meeting  in 
h)cccmber: 

"We  are  getting  into  trouble 
and  we  stink.  Not  one  of  us  has  a 
reas<in  to  look  down  his  nose  at 
another  •  one."  He  was  speaking 
about  "the  recruiting  racket  all 
over  the   I'nited  States." 

Chan(elloi  House  was  (orred. 
It  just  is  not  li^ht  for  a  iniiversity 
to  start  re(ruitin;;  athletes  years 
before  thev  even  finish  high  sc1uk»I. 

A  iniiversiiv.  and  this  I'niversi- 
ty.  takes  part  in  the  ie(ruiting 
program,  in  the  grants-in-aid  pio- 
^am  and  in  all  the  other  programs 
sinipiv  fjccause  it  i.s  in  com^x-tition 
with  all  the  other  iniiveisities  and 
colleges    in    the    tiat ion— every bocb 

else  does  it. 

*  *  * 

But  tlie  I'niversity  of  North  Car- 
olina, because  of  the  respe(  t  peo- 
ple have  for  it.  because  it  fias  rea- 
sonafjlv  St  roni;' leaders  and  be(ause 


The  Daily  Tar  Heel 

The  official  itudent  publication  of  tbe 
publications  Board  of  the  University  uf 
North  Carolina,  where  it  is  published 
daily  except  Monday  and  examinatioe 
and  vacation  periods  and  summer  terms 
Entered  as  second  class  matter  in  the 
Dost  office  in  Chapel  Hill,  N.  C,  uodei 
the  Act  o(  March  8,  1870.  Subscription 
rates:  mailed,  $4  per  year,  $2  50  a  semes 
ter;  delivered.  $6  a  year,  $3.50  a  seme* 
ter. 


Editor 

.  FRED  POWLEDGl 

Managing  Editor  _ 

_  CHARLIE  SLOAN 

News  Editor     

NANCY   HILL 

Business  Manager  . 

BILL  BOB  PEEL 

Spsrtt  Editor 

LARRY  CHEEK 

EDITORIAL    STAFF  —  Woody    Se«r«, 

Frank  Crowther.  David  Mundy,  Cort- 
land  Edwards. 

NEWS  STAFF— Clarke  Jones.  Pringle 
Pipkin.  Edith  MacKinnon.  Wally  Ku- 
ralt,  Mpry  Alys  Voorhees,  Graham 
Snyder,  Neil  Bass.  Page  Bernstein, 
Peg  Humphrey.  Phyllis  Maultsby,  Ben 
Taylor.  Walter  Schruntek.  H-Joost  Po- 
lak.  Patsy  Miller. 


BUSINESS  STAFF— Rosa  Moore,  Johnny 
Whitaker,   Dick  Leavitt. 


SPORTS    STAFF:    Dave   Wible. 
Bird,  Ron  Milliagn. 


Stewart 


Subscription  Manager Dale  Staley 

Advertising  Manager Fred  Katzir 

Circulation  Manager  Charlie  Holt 

Assistant  Sports  Editor  Bill  King 


Staff  Photographer 
Librarian    . 


Norman  Kantor 
—  Sue  Gishner 


Night  Editor    _ 

Night  News  Editor 
Proof  Reader  


ASIIFO» 


CHANCELLOR   ROBERT   HOUSE 

. .  .  he    is    the    oiuf    man 

its  skirts  are  reasonably  dean  so 
far.  can  I>e  the  leader  in  a  grad- 
ual   revolution. 

Cliancellor  Robert  House  will 
let  ire  this  June  after  serving  the 
I'niversitv  more  than  a  quarter  ot 
a  (entury  as  an  administrator. 

rhe  Dailv  Tar  l^eel  asked  the 
(hancell(jr  to  leave  his  office  vvkh 
a  l)ang.  We  ask  hiin  to  turn  his 
energies  toward  a  revolution  in 
(ollege   athleli(s. 

If  he  lea(is  the  ( rusade  in  the 
next  few  liionths.  mayf)e  other  • 
(haiKellois.  other  presidents,  will 
noii(e  what  the  Cniveisity  is  do- 
ing and  will  follow  suit.  We  are 
sure  (>ther  institutions  will  resjiett 
the  (haiuellor  and  the  I'niversitv 
for  doiuL;   it. 

It  would  l>e  a  wonderful  gift  for 
Chaiuellor  House  to  leave  behind. 
It  would  be  a  blessing  for  -the 
future. 

Petition: 
Everyone 
Sign  Names 

It  is  good  to  see  people  are  ctm- 
videring  a  petition  for  married 
students"   housing  heie. 

riie  petition  (ame  after  the 
I'liiversity  aiUKnimed  it  will  push 
lor  self-li()uidating  housing  units 
hn    married  students. 

If  legislation  hits  the  state  (ien- 
eral  .  Assembly  this  .session  asking 
ioi  |>ermission,  to  erect  such  hous- 
ing, one  of  the  I'niversitv's  majoi; 
of)sta(  les  to  progress  will  be  on  its 
way  to  removal. 

For  la«k  of  married  students' 
housinii  Ik'.s  been  a  (i>ntinual  sore 
spot  at  this  university.  Without 
some  sort  of  help  from  the  state, 
it  will  (ontinue  even  longer  that 
v.av. 

.\((()rding  to  the  information  re- 
leased so  far,  all  we. are  asking  the 
Cieneial  .Vssembly  is  this: 

We  want  pemiission  to  borrow 
money  (probably  ftom  the  federal 
government)  to  build  the  houses. 
7  he  loan  woidd  be  paid  off 
through  increased  rents,  tuition  or 
in  some  other  wav.  We  do  not 
kiK)w  this  detail  nou',      • 

In  this  way,  married  students' 
housing  would  be  a  burden  on  no 
one.  It  woidd  be  f>enefi(ial  for 
(veiyone.  ^ 

\N'e  wish  the  petitioners  much 
success   in   their  (ampaign. 

It  would  be  extra-nice  if  sirrgle 
students  who  reajize  the  plight  of 
their  married  classm;ites  sign  the 
petitions  as  well,  along  with  pro-  , 
fessors,  administrators  and  towns- 
people. The  (.eneral  .\ssenibly 
should  l)e  iidormed  that  the  prob- 
lem of  married  students  and  their 
housing  is  everyone's  problem,  nnt 


Unhappy  But  Proud  Soph  Comments       Critics  Task 


Editor: 

I  am  proud  to  be  a  sophomore 
at  the  University  of  North  Caro- 
lina: proud  to  be  a  part  of  this 
University:  proud  of  the  ten  or 
twelv^e  guys  who  make  up  the 
Nation's  best  basketball  team: 
and  proud  of  nearly  every  ac- 
tivity  of  the   school   life   here.  / 

Yet  it  seems  abominable  to  me 
that  in  the  midst  of  all  should  be 
an  editDrial  page  of  ;;uch  poor 
taste,  of  such  bias  opinion,  of 
such  misinterpreted  and  unin- 
formed information.  1  am.  of 
course,  referring;  to  the  notor- 
ious second  page  of  The  Daily 
Tar  He<?l  which  has  to  date  an 
unblemished  record  for  sorry 
editorials. 

All  of  last  year  and  until  now 
this  year,  I  reluctantly  refrain.^  1 
from  entering  into  what  seemed 
a  futile  battle  of  opinionated  let- 
ters "to  the  editor."  .A.bout  two 
we«ks  ago  I  knew  I  had  reached 

A  Revolution* 
In  Campus 
Honor  Council? 

Editor: 

It  is  unfortunate  that  the  ques- 
tion as  to  whether  or  not  the 
honor  system  should  remain  has 
come  up  at  all.  although  the 
strengthening  effect  on  the  sy.s- 
tem  that  may  result  puts  the 
question    in    a    better    light. 

David  Mundy.  defender  of  de- 
mocracy in  Goettingen  has  cer- 
tainly gone  to  extremes  in  his  re- 
quest for  the  abolishment  of  the 
system. 

His  requests  that  all  rules  be 
enforced  suggest  that  he  would 
•pprove  the  setting  up  of  a 
kind  of  campus  police  state  to 
roploce  the   Honor   Council. 

His  ignorance  and  or  ignoring 
of  the  stated  function  of  the  co- 
uncil by  Jim  Tatum  (Daily  Tar 
Heel.  Feb.  13)  certainly  does,  not 
add  weight  to  his  argument. 

The  disregard  of  the  adminis- 
tration for  certain  Honor  Coun- 
cil decisions  in  the  past  does  not 
speak  well  for  the  faith  of  that 
body  in  student  government. 

It  is  time  for  a  revolution 
which  will  give  student  govern- 
ment a  more  honored  position — 
and  the  revolution  can  only  come 
through  the  dedication  of  stu- 
dent officers  and  the  student 
body  to  the  principles  of  sell 
government,  which  significantly 
,is  one  of  the  important  free 
doms  of  this    University. 

Name  Withheld  By  Request 

UNC  Campus 
Seeks  New 


Collosus 


J , 


Editor: 

The  eager  young  "femme  •  fa- 
tale"  who  has  written  of  her  de- 
sire for  us  chaotic  UNC  males  to 
organize  must  be  very  anxious 
for  the  success  of  the  next  pan- 
ty  pillage.' 

What  we  troopers  need,  as  she 
has  so  well  stated,  is  a  Napoleon 
Lower-Quad.  Rise  leader,  the 
campus  awaits  you  Corsican  Col- 
losus. Soldiers  of  Carolina,  mar- 
ch, you  have  nothing  to  lose  but 
your  past  regrets! 
Ecrasez  les  femmes! 

'  Julian    L.    Sessoms 

* 

L'ii  Abner 


my  rope's  end  when  I  read  the 
.•jws  story  concerning  "unria- 
tural  acts:"  f.)rtunately.  though. 
I  waited  long  enough  to  read 
Thursday's  article  on  Jim  Tatum: 
it  was  even  worse. 

I  like  to  think  that  I  am  able 
to  look  at  both  sides  of  an  ar- 
gument, to  reason  logically  about 
a  dispute,  but  I  can  see  no  ex- 
planation whatever  for  the  for- 
mer  being   printed. 

(Arc).  .  .you  a  psychiatrist? 
A  physician?  Or  even  ha.s'  the 
slightest  bit  of  medical  know- 
ledge? I  am  neither  a  psychiatrist 
nor  a  physician,  yet  I  know  that 
hom'jsoxuality  is  a  mental  dis- 
order, and  can  often  be  attribu- 
ted   to'  physical    defi'cts. 

You    have    printed    the   names 

* 

'Don 


of  two  homolexuals  on  the  cam- 
pus. Aside  from  perhaps  ruin- 
ing their  livel.  you  have  cut  open 
murderously  personal  veins.  May 
I  suggest  that  next  week  you 
make  mention  of  tho^e  students 
who  have  only  one  arm,  those 
who  take  a  course  in  Ascetics? 
After  all.  they  are  all  "differ- 
ent." 
•  To  turn  to  Mr.  Tatum  is  a  dif- 
ficult task,  for  this  controversy 
is  perhaps  above  all  our  heads. 
1  would  raise  only  one  point 
here.  It  appears  your  ma.ior  gri- 
evance lies  in  "fact"  that  our 
academic  standards  are  being 
lowered  by  the  innovation  (in  re- 
cent years,  that  is)  of  big  time 
football. 

I   doubt  that   any   of   us  know 


if  this  is  actually  the  caje  or  not. 
but  from  all  I  have  been  able 
to  gather  it  is  definitely  not.  If 
.  .  .  .you  have  ever  talked  to  Mr. 
Talum.  you  vn'ould  know  that  it 
is  his  sincere  desire  and  sought 
after  determination  to  improve 
academic  achievement  among  his 
athletes  as  well ,  as  to  build  a 
football  team  of  which  we  can 
all  be  proud  (hence,  a  dormi- 
tory for  his  players). 

I  am  not  happy  to  have  writ- 
ten this.  It  is  an  unfortunate  si- 
tuation for  a  newspaper  to  have 
to  resort  to  worthless,  trivial 
and  trashy  matters  to  insure  its 
circulation  or  to  stimulate  its 
readers  into  providing  space  for 
its  second  page. 

Robert   Hastings    Perry 

■       ■      • 


't  Say  rm  Not  A  Good  Watchman— 
I  Watched  The  Whole  Thing' 


* 
REACTION  PIECE:    " 


■  A 


On   Chapel   Hill's   Reputation 


David  Mundy 

WHat  happened  to  Chapel 
Hill's  reputation  as  the  "libera! 
capital  of  the  South?"  For  years 
it  was  even*  .supposed  to  be  a 
center  of  socialists,  communists, 
and  wild-eyed  radicals  who  were 
going  to  force  racial  integration 
on    the    South. 

Whatever  leadership  Chapel 
pel  Hill  might  have  shown  in 
desegregation  has  failed  to  ma- 
terialize. All  over  the  South, 
from  big  cities  to  backwood 
towns   like   Clinton,   Tennessee, 


desegregation  in  schools  and  the 
use  of  public  transportation  and 
recreational  facilities  has  been 
accomplished. 

Why  has  desegregation  taken 
place  in  these  socially  "back- 
ward'' areas,  with  violent  results, 
rather  than  in  a  place  like  Cha- 
pel Hill  where  a  large  segment 
of  the  "socially  enlightened"  po- 
pulation is  in  favor  of  integra- 
tion? 

'"Lack  of  leadership"  is  the 
only  possible  answer.  With  that 
answer   Chapel    Hill    has  lost   its 


■•  ^m 


right  to  proclaim  itself  a  ''cen- 
ter of  liberal  .thought"  or  any- 
thing  else   of   the   sort. 

If  Dr.  George  has  become   a 
leader  of  the  Patriots  of  North 
Carolina  Inc.,  why  haven't  some 
of      the    more    liberal      faculty 
members  provided  some  leader- 
ship  toward    racial    integration. 
It  cant  be  the  climate,  or  the 
altitude      in    the    schools      which 
their    children    attend?    Possible 
answers  would  be   lack  of  inter- 
est, opposition  to  integration,  or 
cowardice.  None  of  them  reflect 
favorably   on   Chapel   Hill. 


ACCORD iN'  TOTH'  CODE  O"  TH' 
j  HILLS  VVIDDSRS  GOT  TO  PICK 
OP  TH'  CHECK  FO'  THAR 
SECOND  ». 
WEDDiM'S.  i 


/gotta  pav  marp:vin'  sam 
IN  advance,  an'  bring  HIM 
V    back,  meanwhile, VO' KIM 
f  GIT  ACQUAINTED  WIF  VORE 

Vfutuf^  LI 'l  son  .'7 


Pogo 


By  Walt  Kelly 


Walt  Schruntek 
Charlie  Sloan 
—  Ben  Taylor      just  that  of  a  special  interest  group. 


Bur  BvBttrHihiS  Otieur 

ID  eg  IN  IT^  PUCB" 
"\PllOH6Tfi^iiBayOUt! 

tS09  Of  Pty/N'  AI?DUNP, 

1.00KlN'PEI?ryAN'60lN 


^  I  ooH'r 
30  rwBBr 

rHAT'6 


AeamBHr  poh't 
uoiomre(i,poeo 

WHAT 
15  CHAP  i 


mmffm  MUJtmfgfUrx.a^^     L. 


-f         I 


Is  Difficult 

Wolff 

This  is  the  first  in  a  series  of  columns  that  will    •»■ 
appear  once  a  week  in  The   Daily  Tar   Heel.  Co- 
lumnist Wolff  will  also  prepare  outlines  of  future 
TV  fare. 

The  critic  practices  a  pariah  trade,  without  any 
clearly  defined  s-tatus—  to  some  he  is  a  parasite,  to 
others  a  misanthrope.  In  view  of  this  I  feel  obligated, 
to  both  myself  and  the  reader,  to  essay  some  defini- 
tion of  this  critic's  function,  some  valid  delimiting 
of  what  I  shall  henceforth  consider  my  particular 
province.  ■ 

Such  an  attempt  is  often  considered  to  be  "bad 
form' —putting  one's  self  on  the  defensive  rather 
prematurely.  This  is  probably  due  to  the  fact  that 
the  critic'^-  position  is  usually  so  undefined,  indeed 
so  indefinable,  that  it  behooves  him  to  retain  ;, 
vague  status  and  so  escape  criticism  himself.  The.- 
convention  to  refrain  from  such  a  declaration  of 
function  is  one  that  I  do  not  respect. 

Let  me  list  some  of  the  things  which  I  shall  con 
sider  'off  bounds"  and  some  of  the  areas  into  which 
I  ^'hall  seldom  if  ever  trespass;  by  this  negative 
approach  I  may  come  close  to  characterizing  that 
which  I  consider  my  job. 

First,  though  i  shall  often  attempt  to  lead  the 
horse  to  water,  I  shall  never  try  to  make  him 
drink.  The  weekend  editions  of  this  paper  will 
carry  my  guess  as  to  the  best  of  the  following 
week's  shows. 

I  shall  be  as  discriminating  as  I  can  and  still  try 
to  mention  from  ten  to  twenty  hours  worth  each 
week.  On  the  other  hand.  I  shall  do  my  best  not  to 
limit  my  selections  to  my  own  preferences,  but 
rather  to  cover  all  areas  of  programming. 

Nor  shall  I  ever  tag  any  honest  effort  with  an" 
unqualified    'good"  or  "bad".  And  I  consider  valid 
my  own  value  judgements,  I  aJso  respect  the  right 
of  anyone  to  his  own  opinion. 

I  shall  refrain  from  making  statements  concern- 
ing the  "function"  of  television.  I'believe  that  tele- 
vision, like  any  mass  media,  has  the  sole  function 
of  satisfying  the  viewing  needs  of  its  audience. 

I  thoroughly  concur  with  the  opinion  that  the 
viewing  preferences  of  the  American  audience  trt 
not  as  sophisticated  as  they  might  be,  but  televi- 
sion itself  can  change  them  to  a  very  limited  ex- 
tent only. 

Each  show,  by  virture  of  Its"  own  assertions,  it? 
choice  of  subject,  and  its  personnel,  chooses  for  it- 
self a  standard,  and  it  is  against  this  standard  that 
it  must  be  judged.  The  only  thing  that  could  be 
called  the  function  of  the  medium  as  a  whole  is  its 
responsibility  to  sati.^fy  the  needs  of  as  many  of  the 
viewers  as  possible,  and  when  it  fails  in  this  respect 
it  should  and  will  be  criticized. 

From  time  to  time   more   "do's"   and   "Donts" 

will  probably  occur  to  me  and  I  shall  mention  them 

as  they   do.  For  now.  this  is  wljat  I  consider  my 

function  to  be.  *.»  *    *      ?  ..  ;.    -,-,,-. 

Until  next  week,  then.  .  .  "  *  ^  ' 

CHARGES  &  COUNTERCHARGES:  .' 

Shaw  'Charges' 
South    Building 

Shaw 

It  seems  to  be  the  custom  these  days  for  var- 
ious members  of  the  administration  and  the  student 
body  to  make  charges,  counter-charge*-  and  clari- 
fications about  who  has  or  hasn't  intiative,  foresight, 
integrity  and  intelligence. 

We  sit  around  and  impune  each  others  motives 
with  the  greatest  of  delight  while  an  event  of  such 
importance  to  University  is  coming  about  that  we  ara 
for   the   first   time,  really   frightened. 

We   have   found    out   that   the    legislature    has 
generously   granted    the   University   $100,000.   less 
than   was   requested   for   the   Wilson    Library.      It 
seems  that  neither  the  administration  nor  the  stu- 
dent body  has  taken  any  great  note  of  this   fact, 
although   Mr.   Horn,  the   present,   but   not   future. 
University  Librarian  has  stated  that  a  move  such 
as  the  present  one  would  seriously  hinder,  if  not 
destroy  the  future  of  our  library. 
The  University  of  North  Carolina   ha.>  long  en- 
joyed a  position  of  leadero*ip  among  Southern   in- 
stitutions of  higher  education,  but  it  is  quite  clear 
that  this  position  of  being  "the  mind  of  the  South- 
is   gone  forever. 

We  are  faced  with  an  administration  which  lacks 
the  guts  to  handle  even  its  own  petty  and  internal 

'Z  y."  ui  '"  '^'  ^^^"'■"'^"'^  ^^^*'''  ^"«i  ^  student 
body  which  has  become  enamoured  of  bureaucracv 
Sputh  Building  has  become  a  refuge  for  per- 
sons who  are  either  unable  or  unwilling  to  face 
the  outside  world  and  Grah««  Memorial  is  the 
official  resid«,ce  for  the  Chapel  Hill  Chapter  of 
the   Junior   Bureaucrats  Club. 

nf  ilm  r'"''  u^  ""'^^  ^'^'^  ^'■^"P^  ^«'-  ^heir  lack 

\  ul"'  '^l*"""^^  '^'  "'"'^""^^  ^PP^«^  to  be  less 
at  fault  than  the  administration  (for  thev  get  paid 
for  what  they  don't  do.) 

It  is  nevertheless  for  both  groups  to  drop  their 
ridiculous  and  petty  competitio  for  the  local  head- 
lines and  start  ^-omething. 

A  movement  has  been  initiated  to  circulate  a 
petition  to  implore  the  General  Assembly  to  fulfill 
Its  obligations.  It  is  hoped  that  every  s  udent  f  - 
cuUy  and  administration  member  who  has  the  rp- 
portunity  to  sign  will,  but  in  the  meantime  we  mu!t 
realize  exactly  how  much  good  petitions  do 

The  petition  to  keep  the  Quarter  Svstem  cot 
less  than  a  warm  reception  a  few  years  back  and 
a  IS  reasonable  to  expect  that  this  one  will  get  no 

wVsriha't"  ^^"^  '"^^'^^  rnuTL'Tr::. 

we  oeiieve  that   a  mass  of  letters  tn.  mo,«K 
Of  the  North  Caro.ta,  Genera,  Assem  ,>!  Jg^T . l" 
be   of   benefit.   It  always   hein.;  t«   k/  '"'8"\«"''' 

where  it  hurts,  and   that  is    to   it     k    ^'      '"" 
that  hP  will   hi  1  ^     "^^^^  ^^^  believe 

oe  aone  IS  for  a  courageous  and  fighting 


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01  SUPPER  MEET 

The  Dialectic  Senate  will  hold 
■a  supper  meeting  Monday,  6  p.  m 
in  Lenoir  Hall.  j 

RETREAT  j 

Registration  for  the  YMCA-Ywi 


CA  Retreat  at  Bricks,  N.  C.  March 
1-3  will  open  Monday.  Those  in- 
terested in  attending  the  confer- 
ence have  been  asked  to  register 
in  the  "Y"  at  the  special  registra- 
tion table  or  in  the  "Y"  office. 


Editor  Will  Visit  UNC 
Campus  AAon.,  Tues. 


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Brunswkk  Stew 
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Cookies— 20c  doz. 
Pastries— 60c  doz. 
Sweet  Buns— 50c  doz. 
Fudge— 40c  doz. 


THELL'S    BAKERY 


Edward  L.  Nestingen,  editor  of 
the  Intercollegian  magazine,  will 
visit  the  UNC  campus  Monday  and 
Tuesday  while  on  a  scheduled  trip 
to  the  South  to  view  various  stu- 
dent Christian  associations  at 
work. 

Nestingen.  a  member  of  the 
national  YMCA  staff,  will  meet 
with  the  YMCA-YWCA  leadership 
training  group  Monday  at  7:30  p.m. 
He  will  talk  with  the  group  as 
they  make  plans  for  this  spring 
and   next  semester. 

He  will  discuss  the  frontiers  of 
program  and  action  in  the '  con- 
temporary student  Christian  move- 
ment with  the  YMCA  Cabinet  at 
a  9  p.m.  meeting  Monday  night. 

Nestingen  hopes  to  meet  and 
talk  informally  with  students 
around  the  "Y""  Tuesday  morn- 
ing. Y  officials  said.  He  is  also 
scheduled  to  meet  with  the  "Y" 
staff  Tuesday  morning. 

Nestingen's  visit  will  be  high- 
lighted by  a  dinner  with  ^culty 
members.  "Y"  staff  members  and 
members  of  the  "Y"  Advisory 
Board  Tuesday  at  noon.  The  pro- 
gram will  center  around  a  discuss- 
ion of  the  total  student  Christian 
movement  on  the  campus. 


.  The  local  student  Christian  as- 
I  sociation  is  one  <rf  the  few  ^est- 
j  ingen  will  visit  while  on  his  sched 
uled  trip  to  the  Sotith,  according 
to  YMCA  President  Gerry  Mayo. 
Mayo  also  pointed  out  that  local 
students  should  be  interested  in 
meeting  Nestingen,  particularly 
those  who  subscribe  to  the  Inter- 
collegian through  the  "Y". 


fting  Orders  Taken  Wfext  Week 


Mardi  Gras 

(Continved  from.   Page  1) 

Mrs.  Erk  Haste  Jr.  with  Mr. 
Haste  of,  Chapel  Hill  and  Eden- 
ton,  Phi  Gamma  Delta;  Miss  Pa- 
tricia Lee  Poythress  of  Chapel  Hill 
with  Sam  Yancey  of  Marion.  Al- 
pha Tau  Omega;  Miss  Kay  Mus- 
grave  of  Lexington  with  Robert 
Timberlake  of  Lexington.  Sigma 
Chi: 


The  Balfour  Company  repre- 
sentative will  take  orders  for  class 
rings  in  "Y"  Court  on  Monday  and 
Tuesday,  from  9  a.m.  to  4:30  p.m. 

All  juniors  and  seniors  are  eligi- 
ble to  place  orders  according  to 
Bob  Hornik,  Grail  class  ring  chair- 
man. The   Balfour   ring   is  recog- 


nized as  the  only  official  Carolina 
class  ring  by  the  University  ad- 
ministration and  the  Order  of  the 
Grail. 

For  further  information,  Horn- 
ik requests  that  he  be  contacted 
at  the  Zeta  Beta  Tau  House,  phone 
6031. 


Toy/or  Says  No  Attempt  Made 
To  Link  History,  Psychology 


Dr.  G.  V.  Taylor,  UNC  assistant  torians  have  tried  to  avoid  human 


pr«fessor.  delivered  Thursday  night 
am  address  to  Phi  Alpha  Theta, 
history  fraternity,  on  the  subject 
of  pyschology  and  history. 

He  said  that  there  has  been 
very  little  attempt  to  link  history 
and  pyschology  and  that  many  his- 


Duo 


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M^ 


STEVENS  -  SHEPHERD 


5.  Of  the  Pop* 

6.  SUrch 

7.  ResouiMttnf 

8.  Hanfinf 

'  mmament 
11.  Father 
13.  Evei^een 

shrubs 
15.  Wheel  inaric 
17.  Greek  letter 

20.  Of  the  brain 

21.  Openings 
(snat.) 

22.  Shallow 
vsssel 

24.  Merriment 

25.  Menu  item 


26.  Makes 
void 

27.  CHiasas 
l^mMty 

28.  Obtain 

by 

▼Mrience 
2».  En*  ■■ 

4lang«r 
31.  French 

port 

34.  Moun. 
tain 
(Thessaly) 

35.  Projecting: 
end<rfa 
church 


DAILY    CROSSWORD 

ACROSS 

1.  Botch 
5.  Portion 
9.  DuUpain 

10.  R^on 

11.  Excla- 
mation 

12.  Little  oat 
,14.  Particle 

15.  Branched 

16.  Greek  letter 

17.  Afghanis- 
tan coin 

18.  Frerti 

19.  Approach 
22.  Comrades 

.  23.  Assam 

silkworm 
24.  Cooling 

device . 
,25.  GirVa  name 
27.  Nimrod 

30.  SiBffte  \uiit 

31.  Forbid 
•32.  Greek  letter 
-33.  Future 
35.  Performa 
37.  Pocketbook 
38  Cheat 
,29.  YoiU)(firl 
40.  Stringed 

inatrument 

(Hth.) 
4i.P«rtof      , 

chair  back 
42.  Compass 

point 

DOWN 

;  1.  Tree 
(S.Eur.) 

;  2.  Reverbe- 
rate 

>  rr»ia» 

4.  ttttcH ' 


Y««t«r4s]r'i  Aaawae 


36.  Saunds,  as 

a  dove 
38.  Cutting    , 

tool  ' 


(Continued  from  Page  1) 

it  Ruff  said  "to  define  is  to  limit." 
He  added  that  if  the  dog  claim- 
i  ed  .one  style  they  would  be  bound 
I  by  it  and  if  they  wanted  to  change 
I  to  something  else  it  would  be  hard 
j  to  explain  the  switch  to  the  public. 
;  Their  piano  and  f rench  horn  or 
;  bass  combination,  said  Ruff,  ia-  the 
;  only  duo  of  its  type  in  operation. 
j  They  play  the  music  called  mo 
'  dern  jazz  but  also  have  arrange- 
i  menls  of  classical  music.  Or,  a> 
I  Ruff  put  it,  material  that  is  more 
;  "stuffy."  He  dropped  names  rang 
I  ing  from  Bach  and  Beethoven  to 

Debussy. 

It  was  Mitchell,  however,  who- 
I  summed  up  the  activities  of  the 
j  duo  for  \aA  night.  Before  he  step- 
j  ped  on  the  stage  he  covered  the 
I  entire  evening's  confusion  with 
j  "who's  got  the  french-horn?" 


CLASSIFIEDS 


JAZZ   AT  TURNAGES 

Saturday  afternoon,  2:00,  Tiu:n- 
ages  Cabin  in  Durham. — Jazz  by 
Dick  Gables  "All  Stars."  Beer 
Served. 


LOST:  SHAEFFER  PEN  BLACK 
and  gold.  Lost  in  or  between 
Caidwell  and  Library  at  8.50 
a.m.  Contact  Charles  Suggs  at 
509 '2   A  North  Street. 


ROOM   BRICK   HOUSE.   3   BED 
rooms,  all  modern  conveniences. 
3  miles  on  Old  86  Hyway.  Stove 
and    Frigedaire    furnished.    Call  '  ^' 
Fred  Katzin  after  6:00,  8-9025. 


NEWSPAPER  WOMAN  WANTED: 
Young  woman  for  newspaper 
job  now  or  on  graduation;  need 
not  necessarily  have  studied 
journalism,  but  desire  a  per- 
son interested  in  North  Carolina 
community  life  who  can  write 
acceptably;  general  reporting, 
with  emphasis  on  women's  ac- 
tivities at  home  and  in  commun- 
ity; semi-weekly  in  lively  East- 
ern North  Carolina  town  of  5,- 
000,  with  reportorial  staff  of 
three  and  modern  equiptment 
and  air  -  conditioned  offices. 
Write  and  will  interview.  Ad- 
dress, Editor,  Herald,  Ahoskie, 
N.  C. 


Mi-ss  Ruthie  Metts  of  Savannah, 
Ga.  with  David  Watson  of  Raleigh, 
Delta  Kappa  Epsilon;  Miss  Bever- 
ly Campbell  of  Danville,  Va.  with 
Dave  Moj-e  of  Snow  Hill,  Sign* 
Nu;  Miss  Mary  Lou  Brindcerhoff 
of  Louisville.  Ka.  with  Kelly  Ma- 
ness  of  Grensboro,  Beta  Theta 
Pi;  Miss  Carolyn  Seyffert  of  Chap- 
el Hill  and  New  Castle.  Pa.  with 
Charles  Oyer  of  Wolcolt,  N.Y.  St 
Anthony  Hall:  and  Miss  Sue  Han- 
cock of  Charleston,  W.  Va.  with 
John  S.  McKee  of  Morganton.  Zeta 
Psi. 

Carrying  out  a  New  Orleans 
theme,  the  gym  will  be  decorated 
with  a  bandstand  front  symbolic 
of  a  New  Orleans  house.  DecM*at- 
ing  lobby  of  the  gym  will  be  ba- 
loons.  serpentine,  etc.  Souvenir 
masks  in  keeping  with  the  theme 
will  be  presented  to  dates  at  the 
door. 

For  work  done  toward  the  week- 
end event,  German  Club  president 
Palmer  recognized  the  efforts  of 
the  German  Club  and  had  a  great 
deal  of  praise  for  Jimmy  Capps. , 

"He  has  been  extremely  help- 
ful and  cooperative  in  working 
vfrith  Monitor  in  planning  the 
show."  he  reported. 

Mardi  Gras  chairman  J 
strong    recognized    the    ihiitj*^ptb- 
pie  who  have  worked  to  maike  the 
weekend  a  success.  ** 

Among  them  were  Gerry  Boufl- 
reau.  vice  chairman;  Charlie  ■ 
Sloan,  set  designer;  Tom  Lotig,  tic- 
ket chairman;  Lucie  Crosslantf. 
secretary;  Nancy  Rothschild,, 
masks  chairman;  Frank  Phillips, 
poster  chairman. 

Others  who  worked  with  him 
included  members  of  Chi  Omega 
and  Kappa  Delta  sororities — wot* 
on  fire  proofing,  making  display 
letters  and  stenciling;  set  work- 
ers—Kitty Corr,  Jim  Tyndall.  Guy 
Ellis.  Roy  Wood.  Phyllis  Maults- 
Jim  Menzcl,  Joho  Dalton  and 
Jim  Vance;  masks— Walk  Schrun- 
tek  and  Joost  Polak;  and  posters 
— Lou  Hardy,  Bob  Barrow  and  the 
Lambda  Chi  pledges. 

He  extended  his  appreciation  to 
Interdormitorj'  Cotmcll  President 
Sonny  Hallford  and  IDC  social  \ 
chairman  Benny  Thomas  and  IDC 
representatives  who  helped  sell 
tickets  in  the  dorms  and  to  Kemp's 
and  the  Y  Information  Office,  and 
all  other  connected  with  the  week 
end. 


NSA 

(Continued  from  page  1) 

dent  organizations.  The  Commun- 
ist group,  the  International  Union 
of  Students,  and  the  nonCommun- 
ist  group  constantly  vie  for  the 
political   allegiance   of   the  world. 

POLITICS 

"We  try  to  avoid  tangling  in  po- 
litics," commented  Drasnin,  "but 
student  problems  neces^-arily  re- 
flect national  ten&ions.  We  face 
the  same  problems  as  the  UN,  with 
tension  among  Afro- Asian  group.s," 
he  continued.  ; 

As  a  spaeific  example  of  Inter- 
national  Student  Relations  Semi- 
nar work,  Drasnin  cited  the  sup- 
pert  which  the  Seminars  has  giv- 
en to  Hungarian  students.  "Not 
just  giving  ntoral  support,"  the 
Senunars  aided  Hungarian  stu- 
dents in  securing  scholarships  to 
schools  in  this  country,  and  con- 
trilMited  monetarily  to  Hungar- 
ian student  funds,  according  to 
Dresnin. 

In  addition  to  holding  discus- 
sion groups,  the  Seminar  leaders 
are  looking  for  qualified  people  to 
attend  the  eight-week  summer  ses- 
sion held  each  year  at  Harv^<l  Un 
iversity.  Delegates  to  the  summer 
.  sessibn  receive  all-expenses-paid 
scholarships  to  finance  their  stay. 

Finance  for  the  international 
seminarrf  are  provided  by  the  Ford 
Foundation..  : 


nature  by  concentrating  in  docu- 
mentary history  or  economic  his- 
tory. The  lecturer  continued  that 
when  historians  considered  human 
nature  they  assumed  a  pyschologi- 
cal  uniformity.  Giving  a  brief  out- 
line of  the  schools  of  pyschology 
and  their  value  to  the  historian, 
he  concluded  that  history  could 
best  be  interpreted  by  consider- 
ing the  events  in  relation  to  the 
pyschological  attitudes  of  the  peo- 
ple at  the  time. 

Samuel  Wells  was  elevated  from 
vice-president  of  the  fraternity  to 
president.  Bill  Baum  was  elected 
vice-president  and  Joanne  Saun- 
ders secretary-treasurer. 


J.  B.  Robbins 


In  Cooperation  with  ChapeJ  Hill  Merchants, 


Will  Feature  Many,  Many  Dollar  Day  Specials 


Visit  Us  and  See  for  Yourself 


STUDENT   W.VES   CLUB 

There  will  be  a  meeting  of  the 
Student  Wive!»  Club  Tuesday  at 
8  p.  m.  at  Victory  Village  Nursery. 
All  student  wives  have  been  in 
vited  to  attend. 


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THI  DAILY  TAR  HIIL 


SATURDAY,  FEBRUARY  K,  1«7. 


WACHENDORFER  TIES  RECORD: 


Cross-Country, 

Soccer  Squads  Ftosh  Mermen  Rally  To  Top 

Get  Letters 


Death  Of  A  Crusade 

Fred  Powledg^s  editorial  campaign  against  Mr.  Football,  other- 
wise known  as  Jim  Tatum  and  big  time  athletics  has  died  'aboring.' 
and  we  for  one  are  glad  of  it. 

We  w»r«  beginning  to  feel  sorry  for  Mr.  Tatum,  who  is  a  nicer 
fellow  then  he  Sometimes  is  fMCtured  in  print.  The  genial  Mr. 
Tatum  has  been  ducking  the  "slings  and  arrows  of  outrageous  for- 
tune" (to  quote  the  bard  of  Avon)  ever  since  his  arrival  on  the 
Hill,  and  it's  no  wonder  he  seriously  considered  leaving  his  alma 
mater  for  greener  and  perhaps  more  peaceful  pastures. 

Mr.  Powledge  is  the  third  Daily  Tar  Heel  editor  in  the  past  four 
years  to  gnaw  on  the  bone  of  big  time  athletics,  and  to  s-omeone  who's 
been  here  all  four  of  those  years,  its  beginning  to  get  a  little  bit  tire- 
some. 

Rolfe  Neil  started  it  all  three  years  ago,  Ed  Yoder  and  Lewis 
Kraar  picked   up  their  cue   last  year,  and   Powledge  has  carried 
on  gallantly  in  the  old  tradition.  But  even  he  has  now  apparently 
pulled  in  his  clav/s.  Now  we  may  have  to  wait  till  next  year  for  the 
next  chapter  in  the  anti-athletics  story.  Or  maybe  Neil  Bass  will 
show  us  what's  behind  the  sweat  shirt  curtain. 
We  wouldn't  be  in  this  position  as  Sports  Editor  of  the  Daily  Tar 
Heel  if  we  weren't  in  favor  of  big  time  athletics.  But  we  are  broad 
minded  enough  to  recognize  the  fact  that  something  might  be  wrong 
with  the   system  as  it  stands  today.  Certainly  some  evils  exist.  But 
Rome  wasn't  built  in  a  day,  and  such  a  firmly  entrenched  system  of : 
athletics  as  exists  on  this  campus  and  many  others  will  not  be  changed 
overnight,  regardless  of  the  efforts   of  crusading  college   newspaper 
editors.  j 

Needed:  A  Palace  For  McGuire 

The  University  of  North  Carolina  needs  a  showcase  for  its  prize 
display;  the  unbeaten  and  number  one  ranked  basketball  Tar  Heels. 
Last  Wednesday  night,  5,600  people  crowded  close  together  in 
the  cramped  confines  of  antiquated  Woollen  Gym  and  watched  the 
nation's  best  team  whip  Wake  Forest,  75-73.  These  5,600  fans  sat 
on  rickety  bleachers  with  no  added    luxury  devices  such  as  arm 
rests  or  backrests,  and  considered  themselves  more  than  fortunate 
to  be  there. 
Many  other  avid  but  not  so  lucky  basketball  fans  sat  by  the  tele- 
vision screen  and  watched  their  Tar  Heels  via  the  miracle  of  sighl 
without  sound.  They  too  would  like  to  have  been  there  in  person,  but 
n    little  matter  of  student   priority  and   limited   seating   space  inter- 
vened. 

Some  say  tickets  could  have  been  sold  to  as  many  as  15  to  20      i 
thousand  people.  But  there  was  nowhere  to  put  them. 

Big  time  basketball  in  the  form  of  Frank  McGuire  and  his  Yankee 
legions  has  come  to  Chapel  Hill,  and  the  Univers-ity  has  not  met  the  j 
challenge.  No  progress  has  been  made  toward  the  construction  of  an  ! 
athletic  plant  large  enough  to  accomodate  the  growing  young  giant,  i 
This  is  not  especially  surprising,  for  the  University  is  becoqiing  widely  i 
known  for  its  conservative  attitude  and  ever  tightening  purse  strings,  i 
Frank  McGuire  was  promised  a  coliseum  when  he  came  here 
five  years  ago.  That  promise  has  not  been  kept.  i 

Everyone  seems  to  recognize  the  need  for  a  big  new  field  house 
or  coliseum,  but  nobmly  seems  lo  know  just  what  to  do  about  it.  Ath- 
letic Dii-eetof  Chuck  Erickso/i  pt>jnted  out  the  real  bottleneck  recently 
I  when  he  said  that  2  million  dollars  would  be  needed  for  the  consl'ruc- ; 
tion  of  such  a  building,  and  there  was  no  way  to  lay  hands  on  that 
amount  of  money. "Granted.  Two  million  dollars  cannot  be  had  ju.,t  for! 
tbe  asking.  But  why  didn't  someone  think  of  this  10  years  ago?  Or 
even  five"  .A.t  least  we  might  have  been  moving  in  the  right  directiou  • 
now.  1 

There  seems  to  be  only  one  way  out.  Somewhere  in  the  teem- 
Ing  masses  there   is  a  John  Motly  Morehead  or   a   William   Ranfl 
Kenan  with  money  to  burn,  and  avid  passion  for  basketball  and  a 
soft  spot  in  his  heart  for  good  old  UNC.  And  even  now  this  some- 
one may  be  dreaming  of  seeing  his  name  spelled  out   above  the       | 
entrance  to  the  basketball  showpiece  of  the  nation. 
Perhaps  in  the  not  too  distant  future  the   "house  that  McGuire  : 
emit    will  become  a  reality. 


Fifty-three  men  have  been  rec- 
ommended for  varsity  and  fresh- 
man soccer  and  cross  country 
awards  for  the  1956  season,  it  was 
announced  today  by  Athletic  Di- 
rector C.  P.  Erickson. 

The  varsity  participants  will  be 
awarded  block  letters  or  stars,  the 
freshman  will  receive  numerals. 
j      Th  ecomplete  list: 

I  'Varsity  cross  country:  James 
j  Tully  Beatty,  Charlotte;  Marion 
i  'iVilson  Griffin."  Davidson;  Perrin 
I  Quarles  Henderson.  Charlotte; 
i  Howard  Martin  Kahn,  Baltimore. 
'  Md.:  John  William  Reaves.  Char- 
!  lotte;  David  Caesar  Scurlock.  Jr.. 
j  Greensboro;  James  Everett  What- 
!  ley.  Atlanta.  Ga.;  Ben  George  Will- 
;  iams.  Chicago,  111. 

Freshman  cross  country:  James 
Ficklen  Arthur.  Jr..  Greenville; 
James  Ed  Aycock.  Currituck;  Wil- 
lard  Ray  Bagwell.  Raleigh;  John 
Wesley  Kennedy,  Jr.,  Rocky 
Mount;  Cowles  Liipfert.  Winston- 
Salom;  James  Ambrose  Packard. 
Providence.  R.I.;  William  Middle- 
ton  Porter.  Orchard  Park,  N.  Y.; 
Frank  Joseph  Sirianni.  Long 
Branch.  N.  J.;  Lawrence  Randolph 
Withrow,  Charlotte. 

Varsity   soccer:    Coleman   Bryan 
Barks,    Chattanooga.    Tenn.;    Will- 
iam  James  Blair.  Morehead   City; 
Robert  Hanes  Borden.  Goldsboro; 
Robert    Boyd    Bruggeworth.    Chat- 
ham.  N.  J.;   Wilson  Reid  Cooper, 
Jr..  Signal  Mt..  Tenn.;  Leif  Erick- 
son    (Mgr.).     Spruce   Pine;     John 
Sanford  Foster.  Bridgeport.  Conn.; 
Richard     Irvin     Grausman.     New- 
York.  N.  Y.;  Robert  Peter  Killing 
er.  Washington.  D.  C;  James  Har- 
ris   Purks,     Raleigh;     Tom   Slade 
Rand.  Fremont;   David  C.  Corkey. 
Charlotte;       G  rover    Cleveland! 
Brown.   Harrington.   Del.;   Charles 
Van     Orden      Covell.    Jr..    Christ 
church.     Va.:     Harvey    Theodore 
Jones.    Gary;   John      Patrick     Mc  '. 
Cormick,   Monroe;   Theod<M'e  You 
hanna.  Kirkuk.  Iraq;  Charles  Fos- 1 
ter   Hartman.   Gastonia:   Mike  Ga  \ 
lifianakis   Jr..   Durham;   Theodore  j 
Roosevelt    Smith.    Jr..    Sea    Cliff.  | 

X.  Y  ; 

Freshman  soccer:  Curtis  Cham[}-  ' 
lin.   Summit.   \.  J.;  Dixon  Christ- 
ian.   Vicksburg.    Miss.;    Joel    Dim- 
mette.   Lenoir;   John  Ghanim.   Ra-  i 
mallah.    Jordon;    Hugh    Goodman. ' 
Signal   Mt.,   Tenn.;   John   Hellard,  I 
Sali.ibury;    Merritt    Mitchefl.    Rye.  j 
N.   Y.;     Tate  Robertson.  German- ! 
town.    Pa.;    William    Stem.    Chat 
tanooga,     Tenn.:     Gordon     Street. 
Chattanooga.  Tenn.;  William  Mich- 
ael     Thompson.      Augusta.      Ga.; 
Charles    Lyne   Whitfield.    Atlanta. 
Ga.;  .    George     Heard      Batchelor, 
Greensboro;   Ian  MacBryde.   Ashe- 
villc;    William    Crutchfield.    Look- 
out Mt..     Tenn..     Thomas  Cordle. 
Charlotte. 


Staunton  Military  Academy 


lOO-yd.  freestyle:  l-Stern,  SMA; 
2-Moore,  UNC;  3-TerriIl,  UNC 
Time:  56.5. 

Diving:  1-Goldwater.  SMA.  No 
UNC  entries.  Points  139.4. 

150-yd.     individual   medley:      1 


UNC;  3-Dean.  SMA.  Time  1:34.6 
200-yd.     medley     relay:     1-UNC 

(Jo'oes,    'Pittman,  Rosen,     Moore;., 

Time:  2:01.9. 

200-yd.    freestyle   relay:      1-S.M^, 

(Stern,     Dean,     Dole,     Cuibreth  )f 


Wachendorfer,   UNC;      2- Mcintosh,   Time:  1:43 


Carolina's  freshman  swinuners 
swept  two  of  the  last  three  events 
j  in  Bowman  Gray  pool  yesterday 
I  afternoon  to  take  a  narrow  37-36 
,  upset  win  over  Staunton  Military 
:  Academy. 

j  The  Tar  Babies  trailed  by  six 
I  points.  28-22,  with  three  events  to 
'  go.  but  a  one-two  finish  in  the  150 
;  yd.  individual  medfey  and  a  win  in 
^  the  200-yd.  medley  relay  gave  them 
;  a  37-29  lead  going  into  the  laist 
event  which  was  won  by  Staunton. 
Paul     Wachendorfer.  top     prep 


school  swimmer  in  the  country  la^ 
year,  paced  the  Tar  Babies  with 
two  first  places.  Wachendorfer  won 
the  100-yd.  butterfly  in  59.2  and 
the  individual  medley  in  1:34.6. 
His  time  in  the  butterfly  tied  the 
University  freshman  record  set  by 
Phil  Drake  three  years  ago. 
THE  SUMMARY: 

SO-yd.  freestyle:  1-Saffer,  SMA; 
2-Rosen,  UNC;  3-Culbreth,  SMA. 
Time:  24.3 

100-yd.  butterfly:  l-Wachendor- 
fer.  UNC;  2-Davidson,  SAL\;  3-Ev- 


ans,  SMA.  Time:  59.2 

200-yd.  freestyle:  1-McIntosh, 
UNC;  2-Goldwater,  SMA;  3-Smith, 
SMA.  Time:  2.07.8 

lOQ-yd.  backstroke:  1-Jobes, 
UNC;  2-Blank.  SMA;  3-Davidson, 
SMA.  Time:   1:10.8. 


Frosh  Tracksters  Win 
Intra-Squad  Squabble 


Carolina's  freshman  tracksters 
treated  their  upperclass  big  broth-  ! 
ers  with  the  utmost  disrespect ! 
yesterday  in  the  Tin  Can  as  they  j 
powered  their  way  to  victory  in  i 
an  intra-squad  meet  between  the  j 
four  classes. 

The  frosh.  paced  by  Ward  Sims' 
three  first  places,  compiled  48% 
points  to  42  li     for    the    second 


place  juniors.  The  sophomores 
were  third  with  30  points,  while 
the  seniors  brought  up  the  rear 
with  only  4''3   points. 


The  meet  served  as  a  warmup 
for  the  ACC  Indoor  Games  to  be 
held  in   Raleigh   next  Saturday. 

Sims  won  the  broad  jump  and 
low  hurdles  and  tied  for  first  in 
the  pole  vault.  He  was  also  third 
j  in    the    high    hurdles   to   run    off 
I  wih  individual  honor§. 
j  *'junior  '  Everett     Whatley     was 
I  second  high  |)oint  man  as  he  ran 
I  off  with  the  mile  and   two   mile. 
Whatley  won  the  mile  in  4:23.5  and 
the   two   mile   in   a   casual    10:03. 
I  Frosh  Cowles  Liipfert  finished  sec- 
Over  150  of  the  best  high  school !  ond   in  the   mile  with  a   time   of 
and  prep  school  swimmers  in  the  \  4:28.6. 

south  will  corap-te  here  this  af-  {  Other  first  place  winners  in- 
ternoon  in  the  11th  annual  South- 1  <^luded  frosh  Lou  Glascock  in  the 
em  Interscholastic  Swimming  I  ^i^b  hurdles,  soph  Jim  Moss  in 
Championships.  i  the     60  yard   dash,     frosh     Dick 

Time  trials  begin  this  morning  !  Stbker  in  the  shot  put.  junior  John 
at  9:30  a.m.  in  Bowman  Gray  j  Sulvester  in  the  600  yard  run  and 
Pool  with  the  finals  set  for  4  p.m.  [  soph  Dave  Scurlock  in  the  880 
Defending  champion  Greensboro  I  yard  run.  There  was  a  three-way 
and  Staunton  Military  Academy,  |  tie  for  first  in  the  high  jump  be- 
last    year's    prep    sch,ool    winner. '  Jween    Ken    Bryant.    Dick    McCal- 


Interscholastic 
Swim  Meet 
Set  Here  Today 


MILTON'S 

DOLUR  DAY  SPECIALS 

Entire  Stock  Jewelry 

Values  to  $5.50 
Take  your  pick  for  $1 

$4.00  Exeter  Cashmere 

Blend  Socks 

Dollar  Days  Only  $1. 

Milton's  Carnival 
Special  Still  In  Effect. 

Cloti)tng  Cupboarb 


Six  Advance  To  Finals 


Six  men  have  advanced  to  the 
final  eliminations  of  the  GMAB 
Pocket  Billiards  Tournament  which 
will  be  held  Feb.  22  at  7:30  p.m. 

I  Top  men  in  the  first  round  held 
Wednesday  and  Thursday  were: 
J.    D.    Herring,    Gino    Cain.    Don 

j  Miller.   Chuck   Hartman,   Jim   Du- 

i  pree,  and  Ray  Stanley. 


In  the  final  eliminations,  the 
top  three  scores  of  these  partici- 
pants will  be  submitted  to  the  Nat- 
ional Pocket  Billiards  Tournament 
Director  and  they  may  win  the 
right  to  represent  Carolina  in  the 
National  Billiards  Tournament  at 
the  University  of  Iowa  in  March. 


along  with  Raleigh  and  Georgia 
Milityy  Academy,  rule  as  favor- 
ites  in    the    11-team    meet. 

This  y?ar  prep  and  high  school 
teams  will  be  competing  against 
each  other.        ,  ■     :        • 

use  and  the  Nortli  Carplina 
High  School  Athletic  Association 
are  joint  sponsors  of  the  meet. 

Other  teams  e-vpected  to  com- 
pete include  Athpos.  Ga..  West- 
mister  of  Atlanta,  High  Point.  My- 
«rs  Park  and  Qentral  of  Char- 
lotte. New  Hanover  of  Wilming- 
ton and  Chapel  Hill,  all  high 
schools. 

Outstanding  individuals  in  the 
meet  include  Rolfs  Pinkerton  of 
GMA.  ranked  fourth  on  the  prep 
school  All-America  team  la.st  year 
in  the  50-yd.  freestyle.  Owen  Gan- 
zel  of  GMA.  5th  in  the  150-yd.  in- 
dividual medley,  and  Randy  Dod-  j 
son  of  Greensboro,  defending ; 
champion  in  the  100-yd.  breastroke 
and    the    individual    medley. 


lister  and  Bill  Lyons. 


Fencers  To 
Meet  AMA 

The  UNC  fencing  team  v/ill 
cross  swords  with  the  fencers  of 
A.M.A.  at  one  o'clock  today  in 
Woollen  Gym.  The  meet  will  con- 
sist of  27  bouts,  9  with  each  weap- 
on: foil,  sabre,  and  epee. 

Captained  by  Don  Corbin,  the 
fencing  tearn  includes  Gerry  May. 
Guy  Ellis.  Bob  Clay.  Steve  Mer- 
man, Stu  Marder.  Jim  Proctor. 
John  Lowery,  and  Bill  Parker. 

In  upcoming  events,  the  Tar 
Heels  are  s.lated  to  meet  Vander- 
bilt  and  Vir^nia  Military  Acad- 
emy. 


RODGERS&HAMMERSTEIN 


'OKLAHOMA  f 


Cttw  by  tECHNICOLM 

A  MAGNA  ^roOt/ctKn 
O-KrikutM  t>r  20th  CINTUIV  FOI 

PRICES  THIS 
ATTRACTION 
ADULTS  tSt 

HOURS   OF   SHOWS 

1:20—3:52—^:26—8:59 

NOW  PLAYING 


Carolina 


Howard  Johnson  Restaurant 


BREAKFAST 


LUNCH 


DINNER 


SNACKS 
"Landmark  For  Hungry  Tarheels" 


.^<^ 


HSJ^^OWfy 


(lMHt^*?n^ 


'% 


^A4n^  'Pi^ductim 


^-4 


r:->'        •^fii'-Jft.. 


One  Group  Hand-  framed 
Argyle  Socks 

At  $1.50 
Now  A  Dollar 


Julian* 


tWm 


Short  Orders 


ri«:»^<;    V  fiui,.f^'*%wi 


Ftaturing  The 


ODELL-BERGER 
Rtguler  Dinner  **  ij  Sp-TT     '^  ^'^  "'**'  '"  '***"' 


;  1-  Jn^  4  I    v*i  »*,«» 


T 


ODELL'S 


-'r*"" 


Drive-In  Restaurant '^^  ■;-<••.    , 

Med«rn Next  to  Cerbore  School  Curb  Service 

^^*  '     ^'  \*  ,    "  CARRBORO  (5:11) 

Fountain      '  (Op.on  11  a.m.-«Midnlght) 


Beatty,  Bishop 
To  Run  Tonight 

Jim  Beatty  and  Wayne  Bishop. 
twQ  of  Canolina's  finest  distance 
runners  in  years,  step  into  the  big 
time  tonight  when  they  match 
strides  with  the  nation's  best  in 
the  New  York  Athletic  Club 
track  meet  in  New  York  City. 

Beatty.  the  "Jim*  Dandy"  of 
Carolina  athletics,  will  run  in  the 
mile  against  such  luminaries  as 
Olympic  1.500  meter  champion 
Ron  Dclaney.  Villanova  grad  Fred 
Dwyer,  Phil  Coleman  of  Chicago. 
George  King  of  Boston.  Ike  Matza 
of  New  York  University  and  Burr 
Grim  of  Marj'land,  an  old  arch 
rival  of  Beatty's. 

Laszlo  Tabori.  popular  Hungar- 
ian who  has  yet  to  hit  his  stride  in 
this  country,  will  compete  in  the 
two  miler  tonight  along  with  Hor- 
ace Ashcnfeltcr.  perennial  king 
of  American  distance  runners. 
Bishop,  a  wet-behind  -  the  •  ears 
newcomer  to  the  big  time  track 
scene,  will  run  in  the  two  mile  ev- 
ent. 


Mickey  Mantle  Golfs 
Despite  Knee  Injury 

MIAMI.  Fla.  —  (AP)— Mickey 
Mantle  is  having  trouble  again 
with  an  old  knee  injury,  but  it's 
not  serious  enough  to  keep  Wm 
off  the  golf  course. 

The    New    York    Yankees'    out- ^ 
fielder  was  among  40  major  Icagu- ' 
ers  who  teed  off  yesterday  in  the 
National  Baseball  Players  Tourna- 
ment, j 

Mickey  used  a  golf  cart  between 
holes  in  order  not  to  agitate  the  1 
right    knee,    which    fo^    the    last] 
several    years  has   been    bothered^ 
periodically    by    o.«itpoimyelitis.    a 
bone  infection. 


Spring  Bargains 
Are  Here 


There  are  lively  goings-on  in  the  bargain  corner 
of  North  Carolina's  favorite  browsery.  New  faces  are 
appearing  all  over  the  place— new  noveU  on  the  dol- 
lar table,  new  non-fiction  in  the  $1.25-and-up  case. 

For  instance,  there's  a  nice  copy  of  the  works  of 
Lafcadio  Hearn,  reduced  from  $4.00  to  $1.89,  there's 
a  fat  volume  of  Cryil  Connolly's  choice  of  6reat  Eng- 
lish Short  NoveU,  down  from  $6.00  to  $3.69,  and 
there  are  a  few  copies  of  Ethel  Park  Richardson's 
American  Mountain  Songs  cut  down  to  $2.69. 

Our  patented  budget-stretcher  is  working  over- 
time this  week.  Come  qh  over  and  join  the  fun! 


\^  ScnMpIo  ky  RrCKAW  MAIiAUM  .  Uu*  en  i  Nml  by  «  )  lcv«N 
DirKM  br  TDtENU  YOUNC 
'.       t'tittt  »f  IKVIHC  tUlM  mi  HKtn  I  gtOCCOll 

*  wAtwicx  Mwoucnon  •  a  coiuiniA  f  ictuu 

LATE  SHOW  TONIGHT 
SUN.  -  MON. 


The  Intimate 
Bookshop 


205  E.  Franklin  St. 


Open  Till  10  P.M. 


fredMacMURRAr 

JeffreyHUNe 

Janice  RULE 

ChillWIliS 

DeanSTOCKWElL 


UN  FOR 
ACOWARO 


*.^^4&Sm,< 


LAST  TIMES 
TODAY 


m         * 

"I 


9  «  e  Library 
Serial 9  Bept. 
Chapel   Hii:.    S.    C. 


WEATHER 

Partly  cloudy  and  cold,  with  an 
•xpMted  high  of  44.  ^ 


3r()  c  3)altu 


./• 


CHANCELLOR 

Who'll    he   be?    See    the    r*vi«w 
page   for   Crowther's   analysis. 


VOL.  LVII,  NO.  101 


Complete  (JP)   Wire  Service 


CHAPEL  HILL,  NORTH  CAROLINA,  SUNDAY,  FEBRUARY  17,  1957 


Offices   in   Graham   Memorial 


FOUR    PAGES  THIS   ISSUI 


'Wesley  Weekend'  And  Its  Phnners 

The  Central   Planning  CommiHee  which  formed   and  planned  the   "Wesley  Weekend  ',  Feb.  24-26  is 
pictured   above.   Seated   left  to   right   are   Phyllis   Kraf;,   Caria  Smith,  Frankie  Stafford,  Babs  Moore,  and 
hton  Johnston.  Standing  left  to  right  are  Zane   F  argle,    John    Brooks,    Jane    Brock.     Ed    Sutton,   Mr. 
Charles  Hubbard,  Larkin  Kirkman,  Murray  Unruh,   Bob  Young,  Ray  Long,  chairman,  Paul  Carr,  and  Son- 
ny Hallford. 

'WESLEY  WEEKEND'  a     *' 

Methodist  Student  Program 
Opens  In  Chapel  Hill  Sunday 


AT  CONCERT 

Jazz  Universal  Music, 
Says  Louis  Armstrong 

By  CLARKE  JONES 

-••Mail,  we  ain't  never  had  no  tiouhle  uiih  our  nuisic. 
K's"  pm  your  iiioiith  to  it  and  l)I()u." 

I  hat  was  I.ouis  .Armstrong  at  (  oik  en  intermissioji  on 
Saturday  aitetnoon.  He  was  talking  about  whv  jazz  imisir  has 
been  al)le  to  maintain  its  popidaritx  lor  so  long  without  h)s- 
in;;  its  appe:'.  j 

■"It's  iniiversai  musi(.  speaks  all  lanoiia->es.  .\int'  no  one 
;onna  rhanfte  that  style,  '  he  said,  [ 

.  The  jaz/doni  kins  ^^^  '»•'*  -^'l  Stars  were  here  for  the 
Mardi  (iras  weekend  sponored  jointly  by  the  (iernir.n  Club 
n  observaiuc  ol  Winter  Germans  and  the  Graham  .Memorial 
\.rti\iiies  lioard  in  (elebration  of  (iM's  2r,th  anniversary. 

Members  of  his  band  iiuhided  pianist  Billy  Kyle,  bass 
•)layer  Scjiiire  (iersh,  clarinetist  Fdmund  Hall,  trombonist 
rnnnmy  Vomio  and  dnmimer  Barrett  Deems  (whose  set  of 
Iriuiis.  lie  .said,  is  valued  at  roughlv  ,Si20o). 

While  relaxing  at  the  iiuermission,  he  answered  a  lew 
'|uestions  about   hinrsell   and  his  band. 

.\sked  if  he  were  plannino  any  more  tri[>s  abroad  as  the 
recent  successful  \enture  to  Africa,  he  {riavel-voiccd  ■"We're 
loins  '•>  South  .\merica  in  .April  oji  oin  next    bon  voyage.  ' 

He  grinned  and  asked   "That's  what  vou  rail  it?  "Hon  xoy- 

"Pops."  as  he  is  sometimes  called,  indicated  the  possi- 
bility of  a  trip  to  other  countries  inc  luding  K-sypi-  linl'-i  ^md 
Russia.     But  right  now   it  looks  pretty  rough  over  there."      ! 

Elvis  Presley?  ♦— ^ • | 

"Me   and   Elvis   is  gettin'  ready 


NSA  Assembly,  Seminar 
Close  After  Session  Here 

Delegates  to  this  week's  joiiu-conventioa  cjf  the  Garolinas-X'irsinia  Regional  .Asseni,- 
biy  and  the  International  Student  Relations  Seminar  closed  shop  in  (iraham  .Memorial  late 
yesterday  after  two  di^scussion-filled  days  of  activity*.  ^ 

Prior  to  the  final  meetings  of  the  .Assem!)Iy  and  Seminar  di.scussion  groups  yesterday. 
a  Thursday  evening  banquet,  sponored  by  tlie  .\S.\  Regional,  was  held  for  the  delegates 
in  attendance. 

Featincd  speakers  ai  the  dinner  were  Jin  Wallace,  a  Carolina,  graduate.  :  ml  one  of 
the  foiniders  of  XS.A  and  .Ann  lieckner,  vice  piesident  ol   KcUk  ational  .Aflairs  lor  XS.A. 

Wallace  s]K)kc  on  thf  growth  of  the  NSA  and  Miss  licckner  disc  ussed  the  \alue  of  Reg- 
ional Assemblies.  Mi.ss  lieckner's  talk  was  designed  to  enlighten  the  group  as  to  the  opera- 
tion of  the  national  office  and  to  inform  it  ol  some  of  the  projects  being  carried  on  by 
NSA. 

1  he  final  cliaptei    to  the  first   nj^y  Regi.jnal  .Assembly  was  roun«4ed  out  bv  three  dis- 
cussion groups:    (1)   Student  Gov- 
ernnment  legislative  bodies,  led  bv 

Jim   Lazenby  of  N.   C.   State.    (2)  j  ">■   "^"   ""^^^^  "^  ^-  ^-  ^^^^^■ 
student    health    programs. ^led    by  j      -phe   Assembly    closecJ     with     a 
Bob  Lane  of  N.  C.  State  and   (3)    plenary  session  which  adopted  sev- 

eral  changes  to  the  Regional  con- 
stitution. Also  established  was  the 
second  meeting  oi  the  Carolinas- 
Virginia  Regional  which  was  set 
at  April  20.  HoUins  College. 


problems  of  rising  enrollment,  led   of,  the  convention  will  be  publish- 


ed -  in  a  forthcoming  Regional 
Roundup  or  Newsletter,  according 
ta    NSA    officials. 


Dorm  Officers 
Complain  Of 
TV  Repair  Costs 


A  three  day  .student  Methodist 
religious  program.  "Wesley  Week- 
end"'  opens  here  next  Sunday  at 
the  University  Methodic-:  Church, 
Feb.  24-26. 

Spearheaded  by  its  main  speak- 
er. Dr.  Carl  Sanders,  the  encom- 
passing program  will  co-ordinate 
tbfee  days  of  sermons,  meetings, 
and  stbclent  .^iscussions  with  its 
purpose  of  "re-em^hatixing  tlie 
ideas  of  reli.^ioa  »JMy^i.;Jaiuty.    j 

SERMONS  < 

Dr.    Sanders^    pisttiet    Supt.    of ' 
Methodist   churchts  in    Richmond, 
Va..   will    open   the   weekend   with 
the  initial  one  of  four  worship  ser 
mons  at  ll  a  m.^  in' the  University' 
Methodist  Church. 

At  7:30  p.m.  the  same  night  and 
at  the  same  time  on  the  following , 
Monday  and  Tuesday,  Dr.  Sander? 
will  deliver  his  remaining  sermoni. 
His  talks  will  center  around  the 
context  fo  the  pronounced  theme ' 
Oi  liie   prc>gram,  "" — And  God." 

Di'.-ussion  groups,  according  to 
O.  Murray  Unruh,  Wesley  Founda 
tion  Director,  will  hold  "'coffee 
ccniabs"  in  the. church  and  ■bull 
sessions"  in  dorms,  fraternity  and . 
sorority  houses. 

Composed  of  students,  faculty 
members  and  townsmen,  the 
groups,  said  Unruh,  will  attempt 
tt  stimulate  the  ideas  beyond  the 
.•.K)ken  stage. 

In  the  projected  broad  scope 
or  the  program,  Unruh  said,  the 
purpose  will  b«  carried  bayond 
the  reception  of  Mathodists 
alone.  He  said  that  the  cHscuss- 
ien  sessions  in  the  church  and 
in  the  dorms  "witi  b#  open  to 
alt  townspeople  and-Htodents."        | 


SECOND   YEAR 

This  will  be  the  second  year  that 
the  now  annual  program  haj  been 
held.  A  student  central  planning 
committee,  headed  by  Ray  Long, 
has  been  in  consultation  since  last 
October  in  preparation  for  the  re- 
ligious program. 

Faculty    and    townspeople     who 


will  lead  discussions  in  the  several 
dorms  are:  Rev.  J.  Paul  Edw'ards, 
Di.  E  M.  Gitlin.  Jim  Tatum,  Rpv. 
Charles  Hubbard,  Lt.  Commander 
Howard  Childress,  USN,  Dr.  Guy 
Juhnson.  Dr.  O.  D.  Garvin.  Rev.  A. 
K.  King,  Dr.  Earl  Peacock,  Jr..  Dr. 
Frank  Hdnft.  Dr.  J.  Kempton 
Jones,  and  Murray  Unruh. 


WoMt^O§  Prayer 
Is  Observed  Today 


By   JACKIE,  HAITHCOCK 

Students  from  six*  nations  will 
take  part  on  the  program  of  the 
World  Day  of  Prayer  service  at 
the  Lutheran  Church  today  at  7:15 
p.m. 

This  service  will  be  one  of  many 
student  services  all  over  the  globe 
observing  the  UnUiversity  Day  of 
Prayer  for  Students.  The  day  of 
prayer  is  a  yearly  observance  call- 
ed for  by  the  World  Student  Christ- 
ian Federation. 

The  Campus  Christian  Council, 
the  local  expres\,ion  of  the  World 
Student  Christian  Federation,  is 
sponsoring  tonight's  service.  Fran- 
ces Reynolds  is  chairman  of  the 
planning  committee  for  the  service. 

Students  from  Germany,  Jordan, 
Korea,  India,  Canada  and  the 
United  States  will  give  the  loc^l 
service  an  international  atmos- 
phere as  they  take  part  on  the  pro- 
gram. The  main  speaker  for  the 
service  will  be  Ram  Desikan,  a 
graduate  .-.udent  from  India.  He 
will  deal  with  the  subject  of  the 
World  Day  of  Prayer.. 


Five  other  foreign  students  will 
pray  intercessory  prayers  for  stu- 
dei.:s  in  their  homelands.  These 
include:  Gunler  Tsehople  from  Ger- 
many; Laila  Khury,  Jordan:  Yoon 
Kim.  Korea;  Challie  Iralu,  India 
and  Barbara  Wadsworlh,  Canada. 

An  offering  will  be  taken  at  the 
service  to  forward  the  work  of  the 
World  Student  Christian  Federa- 
tion. 

I 

j      Miss  Anne   Queen,   associate   di- 
'  rector  of  the  YWCA,  said  that  "  thi..- 
is    not   a   program   being   "put   on"' 
<  but  it  is  an  opportunity  for  us  to 
come  together  and  experience  uni- 
ty through  worshipping  together." 

The  Intercollegiate  magazine  ex- 
plains this  Universay  Day  of  Pray- 

^  er  as  a  "'family  activity  within 
which    students    of    many    nation.^ 

I  will  be  praying  for  each  other  with 

I  informed  understanding."  It  goes 
on  to  explain  tha*  their  understand- 
ing stems  from  the  fact  that  ""stu- 
dents  are   united   throughout   the 

'  world    by    common    circum.,\ances 

!  and  aims. 


.D  make  a  record  together.  About 
."ock  n"  roll  he  said    "That  music's 
been    played     for    generations    in 
sanctified  churches.   I  think  it's  a 
good  thing  he  kept  it  in  mind.'"        | 
Shortly    before    going    on   stage 
again  for  the  concert's  second  half, 
he  handed  out  a  three  page  sheet  i 
en  how  to  lose  weight  the  "Satch- 1 
mo"  way.  ^  j 

In   it  he  strongly   recommended  ; 
orange  juice.  'Orange  juice  is  so 
delicious    you    should     never    get 
tired  of  drinking  it. 
SURE  THING 

"It's  a  sure  thing.  If  .vou  dig  this 
set  up  .  .  .  you  will  automatically 
lose  all  the  wei^^t  you  don't  need. 
.And  no  one  should  want  a  lot  of 
exccivs  weight  when  here's  an 
easy  way  to  get  rid  of  it." 

"Orange  juice  is  famously  known 
to  kill  that  hungry  desire  for  food 
at  the  wrong  time.  In  moments 
such  as  those  drink  all  the  juice 
that  you  want  to  drink,"  he  urged. 


Heart  Drive 
Starts  Here 
Tuesday 

By  JIM  PURKS 

Tuesday    will    be    an    important 

day  in  Chapel  Hill  for  the  annual 

Heart     Fund    drive    sponsored    by 

the     American   Heart     Assn.      for 

funds  to  fight  heart  disease. 

:      On   Tuesday    afternoon,    13    Car- 

!  olina  coeds  belonging  to  the  Delta 

!  O^ltB    Delta    sorority     which    vol- 

!  unteered  to  take  part  in  this  year's 

j  campaign,   will   "invade"   the   busi- 

j  ness  district. 

J       The  Tri-Delts  will  .solicit   all   the  i 

I  merchants      in      the      Chapel    Hill  ' 

j  business   district    for  contributions: 

I  tf)  the  annual  drive. 

j      Students   and    Chapel    Hill    re.si- j 

I  dents  getting  a  hair  cut  on  Tiies- 

I  day   will   also   be   indirectly   taking 

j  part   in  contributing  to  the  drive.  ; 

!      The    Chapel    Hill    barber    shops' 

j  have  volunteered  to  contribute  the  i 

-»,        __  ,  ,  j  entire  income  made  on  Tuesday  to 

Six  Dormitories  '^'  ^''''  f^""^ 

I      Chapel   Hill  is  part  of  the  Dur-  j 

i  ham-Orange  Chapter  of  the  Amer- 

'  ican  Heart  Association.  The  chap- 

'  ter    is    under    the    supervision    of 

i  Dr.  E.  P.  Hiawtt. 

„  _     .  ,       .     I  Y.    Z.    Cannon,    chairman    of    the 

ander,     Everett,   Graham,     Lewis, 

and   Whitehead  dormitories. 

This  new  set  up.  he  said,  should 
lighten  the  burden  on  the  first 
and  third  floor  phones  in  these 
dormit::rics. 

Their  numbers  are  listed  and 
he  urged  their  use  in  phoning 
second  floor  residents  to  cut  down 
on  the  confusion.  i 

The  IDC  is  continuing  in  its  ef- , 
forts  to  get  second  floor  phones 
installed  in  the  few  drrms  which  ^ 
do   not   now  have   them.  i 


Dormitory  officals  have  com- 
plained that  the  cost  of  repairs 
to  aging  television  sets  have  de- 
pleted  social  funds. 

Approximately  S400  has  beeri 
spent  on  television  sets  by  seven 
men's    dormitr:ries    this    year. 

Mangum  took  a  collection  of 
$1.2.5  cntribi'ted  by  about  95% 
of  the  dorm  to  buy  a  new  tele- 
vision set.  Using  money  from 
the  social  fund  consisting  of  $  .75 
per  sludent  per  semester,  Cobb 
spent ;the  mcst.  that  being  $67.98. 

At  present  there  are  four  tele- 
vision sets  in  dorms  not  tunc 
tinning  correctly. 


Activity  in  Ine  International 
Student  Relations  Seminar  includ- 
ed discussions  of  the  Hungarian 
student  problem,  the  structure  of 
the  International  Union  of  Stu- 
dents and  student  activity  in  for- 
eign  countries. 

Discussions  further  indicated 
that  student  organization  and  ac- 
tivity in  foreign  countries  is  much 
more   powerful   than   in   the   U.   S. 

Discussions  on  these  subjects 
brought  out  that  students  to  a 
large  degree  ignore  the  dictates 
of  the  communist-associated  IDS, 
which  is  controlled  and  operated 
by  various  ministries  of  educa- 
tion in  communist-bloc  countries. 

A  resume-report  oi  all  activities, 
accomplishments    and    attendance 


Chemist  Here 

Given  Grant 

For  Research 


A  grant  of  $7,500  for  "unin- 
hibited" research  has  been 
awarded  Dr.  Charles  N.  Reilley, 
analytical  chemist   here. 

Announcement  of  the  grant 
was  made  here  today  by  Kenan 
prof.  Arthur  Roe  Director  of 
the  UNC  Institute  of  Natural 
Sciences.  The  money  was  given 
by  the  research  corporation,  a 
national  foundation  dedicated 
to  scientific   research. 

Althougn  he  is  free  to  use  the 
money  any  way  he  chooses  to  aid 
his  research.  Dr.  Reilley  will 
possibly  use  it  in  one  of  many 
areas  in  which  he  is  already  en- 
gaged. 


LEGISLATURE  ROUNDUP 


nr 


."^ntr^^-" 


Legislators   Act   On   Sever)   Bills 
In   Active   Session    Thursday   Night 


New  Phones 
Placed  In 


Interdormitory  Council  Presi- 
dent Sonny  Hallford  issued  a  state 
ment  today  calling  attention  to 
the  new  telephones  installed  on 
the  second  floors  of  Avcock,  Alex- 


local  drive,  expressed  apprecia- 
tion to  the  D^lta  Delta  Delta  so- 
rority for  volunteering  to  help  out 
in  the  campaign  against  the  dread 
ed  disease  which  accounts  for 
53'';    of  the  tntal  yearly  deaths. 

Cannon  said  no  definite  goal 
had  been  set  for  this  year.  Last 
\ear  $2,100  was  collected,  but  Can- 
non hopes  the  total  will  be  ""in- 
crea.sed    a    lot    this   year." 

The   drive   will     culminate     on 

(See  HEART  DRIVE,  Page  3) 


By    NEIL    BASS  I 

Legislators  rolled  up  their  sloev-  ] 
es  Thursday  night  and  took  action  ; 
on  seven  measures.  j 

Prior  to  Thursday  night,  student  1 
representatives  had  acted  upon  ' 
only  nine  bills  in  four  meetings. 

Thursday    night    the    legislative  i 
machine    seemed    well    oiled    and 
ready  to  serve  the  student  body. 

Legislators   were,   however,   sub- 
jected    to   a    mild    verbal    lashing : 
Ircm  Univer.^ty  Party  Floorleader  ; 
Benny  Thomas.  1 

Thomas  argued  that  when  stu-    , 
dent  fees  were  a,  stake,  student    I 
representatives     should     be     on    ; 
their   feet   expressing   their   con-    | 
stituency's  views.  j 

RECOGNITION 

Student  lawmakers,  whose  exten- 
sion of  hospitality  included  a  wcl-  ; 
coming    resolution    to    the    Univjr-  [ 
•  [y  of  Florida's  student  body  presi- 
dent last  week,  this  week  recogniz- 1 


ed  visiters  from  East  Carolina  Col- 
lege who  attended  the  session. 

The  most  far-reaching  measure 
passed  by  legislators  was^a  bili 
creating  a  committee  to  study  the 
present  Constitution. 

The  only  argument  presented 
againjL  the  committees  creation 
was  that  the  student  body  presi- 
dent was  given  too  much  power. 

To  some,  the  argument  seemed 
hardly  logical  in  that  Representa- 
tive Bill  McNaull,  who  presented 
the  argument,  said  he  did  not  ques- 
tion the  present  presidents  inte- 
grity. The  bill  provides  only  for 
this  year's  constitutional  revisional 
committee,  not  for  suceeding  year. . 

Appointment  of  committee  mem- 
bers was  placed  in  Speaker  Sonny 
Evans'  hands  in  lieu  of  the  presi- 
dent. 
NEW  MEASURES 

New  .Measures  inlmduced  at  th? 
session   arc: 

1.   A   bill    establishing   a    com- 
mittee to  investigate  Lenoir  Hall 


I     wages     and     working     conditions 
i    for  students;  introduced  by  Whit 
Whitfield,  Student  Party. 

I  2.  A  resolution  urging  that  fre^-h- 
;  men  and  sophomore  nurses'  cur- 
■  lew  hours  be  the  same  as  other  wo- 
men students;  introduced  by  Ben- 
I  ny  Thomas,  University  Party. 

3.  A  bill  asking  for  $10  to  defer 
'  expenses  incurred   by  the  Legisla- 
ture Rules  Committee;   introduced 

!  out  of  the  Rules  Committee  by  Van 
Woltz  (UP). 

4.  A  resolution  discouraging  »-tu- 
'  dent  organlrations  from  overspend- 
ing  their   budgest;   introduced   by 
Bill   McNaull   (SP). 

HUMOR 

Legislators  turned  from  their 
serious  business  long  enough  to 
guffaw  at  a  verbal  mistake  made 
by  Representative  McNaull. 

McNaull    introduced    a    resolu- 

'     tion    and    asked    that    copies    be 

seni    to    The    Daily    Tar    Heel    tr. 

hcpef  it  ^ould  "repent,"  not  "'re- 

p.>-int '  as  he  intended  to  say. 


WINTER  GERMANS:  WHAT  MAKES  A  CONCERT? 


'v^-o  a:  li 


L.. 


THE   CONDUCTOR 

coMght  by  surprise  backstage 


A  BIG  CROWD 

.  o/  enthusiastic  fans 


Photos  by  Woody  Sears 


SOME    RED   HOT   JAZZ 

bumps  and  grinds 


Mr«u»    MO  I  U\»K>«t'MS    AF-lfcRVVAROS 

.  Salchino  in  dressing  rOom  with  admirers 


i  i 


rAGl    TWO 


THE  DAILY  TAR  H^EV 


Sl/NDAY,  FEBRUADY  17,  1957 


SUNDA' 


REVIEW: 

CAMPUS 

STATE 


WORLD 


-  TAKE  YOUR  PICK:  THE  RACE  IS  ENDING  - 


ARMSTRONG 

.  .he  loas  here 


It  Was  A  Big  Week: 
Conflict  &  Satchmo 

Peg  Humphrey 

Although  various  crntroversies  bristled  about  the  campus,  the 
weekend  brought  a  flurry  of  social  aciivites. 

Mardi    Gras-Germans   festivities   highlighted    the   weekend   with 
a  concert  by  the  Mitchell-Ruff  duo  concert.  Louis  (Satchmo)  Arm- 
strong appeared  for  a  concert  yes- 
terday  afternoon   and   played  for 
the  formal  dance  in  the  evening. 
NBC's  now-famous  Monitor  was 
on  hand  to  tape-record  the  var- 
ious events. 

Two  more  victories  appeared  on 
the   slate   of   the   nation's  number 
one    basketball    team    as    the   Tar 
Heels     defeated     Virginia     68-59 
Monday    in    Charlottesville    and   won   ofer  Wake   Forest   72-69   here 
Wednesday.  The  games  brought  North  Carolina's  record  for  straight 
victories  to  20. 

The  annual  spring  regional  assembly  of  the  Carolinas-Virginia 
region  of  the  National  Student  Assn.  was  held  Thursday  and  Friday. 
Discussion  groups  were  held  dealing  with  student  government  fin- 
ances, honor  systemj,  athletic  programs,  campus  newspapers,  .stu- 
dent government,  faculty,  administration  relationships  and  student 
unions.    • 

Early-nwrning  Valkyrie  tapping  took  place  Thursday  morning. 
Rites  were  held  for  the  initiation  of  Lee  Ann  Curtis,  Giner  Floyd, 
Margot  Hammond,  Kathryn  LeGrande,  Barbara  Moore,  Jeanne 
Sillay  and  Barbara  Wadsworth  into  the  highest  woman's  honorary 
social  nn  campus. 

North  Carolinas  legislative  budget-maker.s  were  criticized  sharp- 
ly by  resigning  University  Librarian  Andrew  H.  Horn.  Horn,  speak- 
ing at  a  meeting  of  the  Graduate  History  Club,  pointed  to  the  Ad- 
visory Budget  Commission's  recommendations  for  library  books  and 
journals,  alongside  what  the  University  hadjequested  for  them,  and 
said  "We're  really  going  backwards"  The  1957-59  allocation  will 
put  the  University  back  on  its  boi^k  budget  of  1953.  he  said:  with 
the  increased  c :st«  of  running  the  Library,  the  budget  won't  stretch 
as  far  as  it  did  five  years  ago. 

The  General  Assembly  will  be  asked  by  UNC  for  self-liquidat- 
ing funds  for  housing  for  married  students.  Student  wives  have 
dr».vn  up  a  petition  requesting  that  the  assembly  allow  the  Uni- 
versity to  float  ajoan  for  new  housing  facilities. 

Other  money  matters  included  appropriations  for  the  Chapel 
Hill  branch  of  the  Consolidated  University  (recommended  by  the 
Advisory  Budget  Commission)  of  more  than  $5.5  million  for  the 
1957-59  biennium^.  A  new  pharmacy  building  and  physics  building 
were  included. 

Student  legislators  plan  to  investigate  the  possibilities  of  re- 
vising the  Constitution  to  make  it  more  flexible,  according  to  Sam 
Adams,  attorney-general,  who  .agge'st^d  the  creation  of  a  committee 
to  deal  with  this. 

In  regard  to  the  "crisis"  situation  cited  by  Director  of  Student 
Activities  Sam  Magill.  student  body  President  Bob  Young  replied  by 
listing  25  examples  of  student  initiative  as  evidence  in  the  past  year. 
Among  these  examples  Young  mentioned  civil  service  in  the  execu- 
tive branch  of  student  government,  the  S200  student  government 
scholarship,  han^ng  of  the  "Ugly  Club**  and  Vince  Olen  cases,  in- 
stallation of  dormitory  telephones,  addition  of  a  reading  day  before 
exams,  student  leader  action  on  breaking  up  panty  raids,  the  stu- 
dent efforts  to  get  a  new  student  union  and  a  director  for  Gtaham 
Memorial,  and  the  new  absence  rule. 

The  Hiring  of  Howard  Henry  of  the  University  of  Wisconsin 

for  permanent  director  of  Graham  Memorial  was  approved  by  the 

University  Administration.  Henry's  decision  is  exp«cted  this  week. 

Other  events  of  the  week  included  the  visit  of  Miss  Judy  Albert!, 

field  representative  for  the  Scandinavian  Seminar  for  Cultural  Stud-. 

ies,  for  two  days,  during  which  she  spoke  to  students  interested  in 

studying  in  the  Scandinavian  countries  on  either  an  undergraduate 

or  graduate  level  ...  the  beginning  of  spring  baseball  practice  on 

Thursday  ...  of  the  Don  Cossack  Russian  choral  and  dancing  group. 

Moreland  Case  Ends  Phase; 
ACC  Says  State's  Guilty 


The  "Moreland  Case,"  the  cause 
for  great  unpleasantness  at  North 
Carolina  State  College,  took  an- 
other turn  last  week. 

The  Atlantic  Coast  Coast  Con- 
ference held  a  meeting  a  week, 
ago.  On  Wednesday  it  released  a 
report: 

State  College,  in  the  ACC's 
opinion,  is  guilty  on  two  charges 
of  giving  aid  to  basketball  stor 
Jackie  Moreland. 

The  charges  were  that  the  col- 
lege had  offered  Moreland  $80 
to  pay  his  way  to  Ralei^  for  en- 
rollment at  the  college,  and 
that  agents  of  the  college  had  of* 
fered  the  Louisiana  boy  a  five- 
year    unrestricted    scholarship. 

The    ACC    faculty    committee 

which    issued     the    report     also 

agreed  that  it  would  not  sponsor 

an  open  hearing    on     the     case. 

State   had   requested  one. 


Carolina's  Next  Chancellor: 
The  Rumors  Are  Flying  High 


Sunday  Video  Guide: 
Murrow,  Baxfer,  Tab 


So  State  Chancellor  Carey  H. 
Bostian  said  he  was  writing  "all 
of  those  principal  witnesses 
whose  names  were  given  to  us 
by  the  NCAA,"  asking  them  to 
appear  at  a  hearing  around  Feb. 
23.  The  hearing  will  be  held  in 
Louisiana. 

The  ACC  was  asked  by  Starte 
College  to  conduct  an  investiga- 
tion of  the  case  after  the  Nation- 
al Collegiate  Athletic  Assn.  put 
the  college  on  a  four-year  pro- 
bation for  alleged  recruiting  vio- 
lations. Mentioned  by  the  NCAA, 
along  wltb  the  $80  payment  and 
the  five-year  scholarship,  were 
cash  grants  to  Moreland  and 
promise  of  a  medical  scholarship 
for  his  girlfriend. 

Moreland,  previously  declared 
ineligible  by  the  ACC,  drar^ed 
out  of  school  recently. 


Frank  Crowther 

In  the  forthcoming  week,  we 
will  undoubtedly  hear  mere  argu 
ments.  more  rumors  and  more 
.^peculation  than  have  abounded 
from  the  creaky  old  buildings 
and  the  crowded  corners  of  Chap- 
el HLl  in  many  moons. 

This  is  the  week  in  which 
President  Friday  will  make  his 
choice  of  the  man  whom  he  will 
name  as.  the  next  chancellor  of 
the  University  of  North  Caro- 
lina —  the  man"wlth  whom  I 
shall  sink  or  swim/'  as  Friday  so 
aptly  put  it. 

Walk  up  to  any  professor,  and 
you  can  get  the  new  chancellor's 
name;  at  least  you  will  get  a 
very  biased,  uncorroborative  opin- 
ion with  a  quixotic  list  of  sup- 
porting "facts"  about  his  man 
and  why  h^  is  a  natural. 

Trying  to  get  some  information 
from  South  Building — that's  the 
inner  sanctum  usually  found  in 
the  vicinity  of  Y-Court — is  like 
attempting  to  open  up  a  fresh, 
watertight  crab.  They  have  been 
well  schooled  in  the  fine  art  oi 
the  finesse. 

So,  going  along  with  the 
crowd,  we'll  just  speculate  with 
the  rest  of  them  and  see  if  any 
light  can  be  directed  frQm  our 
months  of  constant  association 
and  concern  regarding  this 
critical  decision. 

Friday  has '  had  the  commit- 
tee's recommendation  in  his 
hands  for  quite  some  time  now; 
if  you  were  to  inquire  about  this. 
however,  nothing  but  "pooh 
poohs''  would  be  returned.  But 
don't  you  believe  it;  the  commit 
tee  made  an  oral  report  to  the 
president  several  weeks  ago  and 
presented  four  names  to  him  al- 
ter the  committee  was  polled  in 
a  very  democratic  manner:  Each 
member  submitted  a  list  of  four 
names;  a  tabulation  was  taken; 
and,  the  four  men  with  the  most 
votes  were  submitted  to  Presi- 
dent   Friday    for  consideration. 

At  that  time,  Friday  iterated  to 
the  committee  that  he  was  very 
appreciative  of  their  work  and 
would  highly  regard  their  rec- 
ommendations; but.  he  stated 
that  he  would  not  consider  him- 
self bound  by  their  considera- 
tions. ' 

What  did  this  mean?  It  might 
mean.  "Thanks  a  lot,  fellows,  but 
I've  been  doing  some  of  my  own 
interviewing  and  will  come  up 
with  my  own  selection."  In  oth 
cr  words,  he  reserved  the  right 
to  renege. 

All  this  past  semester,  names 
have  been  bouncing  off  of  so 
many  sounding  boards  that  one 
could  have  had  a  fine 
game  of  charades  with  them.  To 
mention  a  few  that  have  been 
discussed,  prominently  and  in- 
famously, as  you  like:  Armstrong. 
Spruill.  Biackwell,  Heard.  Po- 
teat,  Godfrey,  Roe.  Turner.  Ran 
son.  Aycock. 

Now  the  question  is  which  of 
these  have  remained  after  the 
committee  separated  the  men(??  ) 
from  the  boys?  And  will  Friday 
select  one  of  these  names  or  will 
he  reach  outside  the  list?  Is  the 
man  to  be  a  local  or  an  import? 


First  according  to  the  best  re- 
ports (O.K..  rumors)  the  four 
names  submitted  were:  Heard. 
BiadiA'e.l.  R-e  and  Turner. 

Second.  President  Friday  most 
likely  is  planning  to  disregard 
this  list  which  the  committee 
spent  long  and  arduous  hours 
compiling. 

Third,  there  is  almost  no  doubt 
that  the  man  will  be  a  local. 
By  tlie  time  that  an  import  coulc 
get  himselt  polilicaliy  or'entated. 
much  time  will  h.ive  been  lost. 
It   j'.'st    doc.«n't    >-eem   feasible. 

So  where  does  that  leave  us? 


The  official  sttHient  publication  of  the  Publications  Board  of  the 
University  of  North  Carolina,  where  it  is  published  daily  except  Mon- 
day and  examination  and  vacation  periods  and  summer  terms.  Entered 
as  second  class  matter  in  the  post  office  at  Chapel  Hill.  N.  C,  under 
tile  act  of  March  8,  1870.  Su'>scriptirr  rates:  Mailed,  $4  a  year.  $2.50 
per  semester:  delivered,  S6  a  year.  $3.50  a  semester. 


Editor 


FRED  POWLEDGE 


• 

111  Abnar 


It  appears  that  the  man  most 
suitable  for  the  job  is  going  to 
bf  overlooked:  Dr.  Poteat."An 
opprrtunity  to  put  the  "chapel" 
back  in  Chapel  Hill  and  to  add 
unqu?  tionable  distinction  and 
comf)ct?ncc  to  the  office  may 
V.  itber  away. 

At  this  moment,  it  seems  that 
William  Aycock  has  the  clearest 
inroad  to  the  position.  President 
Friday  went  to  see  Aycock  in 
Chsrl  tl-sville,  Va.  (the  Univers- 
ity of  Virginia)  last  week,  and 
so:n  cft'er  Aycock  turned  up  in 
Chapel   Hill. 

Last   Thursday,    the  ^ife   of   a 

• 


South  building  official  seeming- 
ly let  some  kind  of  cat  out  of 
the  bag.  When  she  was  told  by  a 
friend,  "Well.  I  hear  that  Bill 
Aycock  is  going  to  be  chancel- 
lor." She  blurted,  "yes.  but  you 
aren't  supposed  to  know  yet." 
Significant  or  non  sequitor.  it 
was  said. 

So  we  must  wait,  now,  for  the 
"official"  word.  But  whomever 
Friday  chooses  —  be  it  Heard, 
Aycock,  Biackwell  or,  we  still 
faintly  hope,  Poteat— the  future 
trend  of  the  university  may  be 
indicated  by  thi.;  selection. 


Spring's  Not  Too  Far  Away 

That's  the  thought  that  struck  Daily  Tar  Heel  Photographer  Woody  Sears  as  he  was  driving  through 
Nelson  between  here  and  Raleigh.  The  son  was  set  fing  behind  a  big,  naked  tree,  and  it  didn't  look  at 
all  like  a  winter  sun.  \  ,-  A    l 

,#...,.^....   ...       ,    ..    # •   'f-ft 

The  Grail  And  Your  Class  Ring: 
Why  It  Ought  To  Be  Official 


Bob  Hornik 

Ciiail    Ritii^    ChaniiKin      .  . 

.Monday  is  the  first  day  members  of  the  1958 
graduating  class  will  be  eligible  to  order  the  of 
ficial  Carolina  class  ring.  As  class  ring  chairman. 
1  have  been  subjected  to  many  inquiries  during 
the  past  fiv:;  months  concerning  the  Grail  and 
administration  ring  policy.  Many  students  wish  to 
know  why  the  Grail  limits  .sales  to  all  classes 
■previous   to  second  semester  juniors. 

Bof..re  answering  this  question,  the  Grail's  pur- 
pose in  acting  as  ring  agent  for  a  com'mercial  com- 
pany should  be  made  clear.  The  Order  of  the 
Grail  is  primarily  a  service  organization;  and 
as  such,  it  serves  the  students  by  bringing  them 
the  finest  quality  college  ring  at  minimuni:<^'ices. 
A  local  merchant  is  also  offering  class  rings 
for  sale.  With  his  permission,  the  Grail  had  his 
ring  and  a  Balfour  official  ring  of  the  same  com- 
parative price  carefully  eramined  by  three  in- 
dependent Durham  jewelers.  In  each  case,  the 
Balfour  ring  was  proclaimed  the  finer  piece  of 
jewelry  mainly  because  of  the  delicate?  design 
which  is  hand  wrought  in  each  ring  and  not 
stamped  as  most  college  rings  are. 

u.  *h\  '■.-■  .-.J. 


Anthony  Wolff 


If  vou  can  get  to  your  feet  by  1  p.m.  and  have  enough  strength 
to  twist  the  dial,  Edward  R.  Marrow  and  the  "See  It  Now"  .taff  have 
compiled  a  highly-touted  film  called  "Burma,  Buddhism  and  Neu- 
tralism". To  anyone  interested  in  this  type  of  thing,  the  title  should 
be  self-explanatory.  Suffice  to  say  that  Burma  may  prove  to  be  the 
cornerstone  of  the  troubled  East. 

The  air-minded  will  enjoy  "Wide  Wide  World's"  excursion  into 
the  realm  of  jets.  It's  on  Channel  5  at  4  p.m. 

After  dinner,  if  you  have  any  interest  in  the  South.  Southern 
writers,  the  American  novel,  etc.,  you  might  settle  down  with  Nobel 
Prize  winner  William  Faulkner  at  7  p.m.  on  Channel  4. 

The  one  "Must"  for  the  evening  is  Dr.  Frank  C.  Baxters 
"Summary  Lecture"  on  the  basis  for  the  greatness  of  Shakes- 
peare's reputation. 

Everyone  in  school  comes  face  to  face  with  the  Bard  many  times, 
and  it  is  cheating  one's  self  to  ignore  this  series.  Dr.  Baxter  is  on 
the  faculty  of  UCLA,  and  the  course  is  given  for  credit  for  students 
of  that  University.  One  of  the  pioneers  in  educational  TV,  Baxter  is 
a  charming,  literate  and  most  intelligent  interpreter  of  his  subject. 

'  At  8  p.m.  on  Channel  2  Ed  SuIUvan  presents  his  usual  diverse 
assortment.  The  basketball  fans,  and  that  includes  most  of  us.  might 
enjov  seeing  Goose  Tatum  and  Marcus  Haynes  (once  great  stars  of 
the  Globetrotters)  and  their  Karlem  Magicians.  In  addition.  Sullivan 
presents  Peter  Genftaro  and  Ellen  Ray.  two  of  the  newest  dancing 
stars  on  the  Broadway  scene. 

I  assume  that  they  will  do  their  stuff  from  the  current  "The 
Bells  Are  Ringing",  in  which  case  I  guarantee  a  good  shoMt-.  Also 
featured  are  Hugh  O'Brian  (Wyatt  Earp).  Jeannie  Carson  (Hey. 
Jeannie),  and  a  couple  of  opera  singers. 

Steve  Allen,  at  the  same  hour  on  Channel  5,  takes  his  show  into 
a  New  York  gym  to  engage  in  a  set  of  doubles  with  Pancho  Segura 
against  Ken  Rose  wall  and  "Pancho"  Gonzales.  Somehow  he  intends 
to  integrate  Frankie  Laine  (complete  with  athletic  dancers,  et  al) 
with  this,  though  it  sounds  rather  forced  to  me.  Singer  Martha  Car- 
son and  comedian  Alan  Young  are  also  on  hand. 

Pretty  Tab  (Young  Love)  Hunter  looks  from  this  corner  to 
be  the  only  interesting  guest,  and  so  I'll  stick  with  Sullivan  this 
week.  '^ 

Nothing  looks  too  good  from  then  on,  although  the  Alcoa  Hour 
has  an  adaptation  of  Philip  Barry's  "The  Animal  Kingdom"  at  9 
p.m.  on  Channel  5.  It  sounds  from  here  like  the  usual  competent 
TV  fare,  but  there  are  classes  tomorrows 


ll.«tt4l<ll 


14  4  1 1 « ««.««<♦•■  i  to  ir<  n« < .  1  <  » I « • 


nini.ii.iivj  i: 


ie 


The  $1  Grail  charge  for  each  ring  is  the 
major  source  of  income  for  the  Grail  scholar- 
ship program.  This  past  semester  the  Grail  p.-e- 
sented  over  $1,500  in  awards,  based  on  need  and 
scholastic  ability,  to  Carolina  undergraduates 
for  use  this  coming  year. 

Now  finally  back  to  the  main  question  con- 
cerning the  restrictions  of  sales  to  classes  above 
second  semester  juniors.  The  policy  is  a  simple 
one.  The  purpose  of  a  class  ring  is  to  represent 
the  scholastic  achievement  of  attaining  a  four- 
year  college  degree.  As  such,  it  reflects  the  pres- 
tige which  our  groat  Alama 'Mater  give  to  all  its 
sons  and  daughters.  It  shows  kinship  with  an  il- 
lustrious alumni  and  identifies  the  wearer  with 
his  classmates  and  the  wonderful  friendships  he 
has  made. 

The  Grail  and  the  administration  feel  that  the 
student  who  has  completed  five  semesters  of  col- 
lege i,'  worthy  of  the  -prestige  the  official  Balfour 
ring  l>estows  upon  him.  and  will  in  all  proba- 
bility complete  his  degree  requirements. 

In  conclusion,  allow  me  to  unge  every  eligible 
student  to  place  an  order  this  Monday  and  Tues- 
day in  "Y"  Court  for  a  class  ring  to  be  worn 
proudly  as  a  fitting  symbol  of  his  Chapel  Hill 
undergraduate  wojk. 

'■■      ■         •  ■■■-•: 

By  A!  Capp 


Manarging  Editor 


CHARLIE  SLOaN 


Nt^t  News  Editor 


Charlie  Sloan 


Night  Editor 


Graham  Snyder 


THr  DAILY  TAR  HEEL  WEEK  IN  REVIEW 


Staff  Writers 


Peg  Humphrey,  Frank  Crowlber. 


In  TheWorld:  Gromyko 
Goes  In  ¥6r  Shepilov 

Probably  the  week's  most  significant  news  item  came  just  as 
Carolina  stijdents  were  about  to  close  the  books — Dmitri  Shepilov 
resigned  as  the  Foreign  Minister  of  Soviet  Russia  and  was  succeeded 
by  the  man  who  had  been  many  times  a  bridesmaid,  but  never  the 
bride,  Andrei  Gromyko.     „  ..  ,.    ;      , 

The  new  foreign  minister,  who  has  held  such  positions  as  Am- 
bassador to  the  United  States  and  Great  Britain  as  well  as  repre- 
sentative to  the  United  Nations,  wasted  no  time  in  getting  into  his 
position;  on  the  first  day.  he  received  several  foreign  representatives 
and  prepared  his  first  pmlicy  release. 

Earlier  in  the  week,  Shepilov  had  put  forth  a  Russian  Middle 
East  doctrine  which,  apparently,  has  flunked  the  course;  he  has 
been  expelled  from  school,  and  will  join  the  ranks  of  those  happy 
few  who  have  fallen  to  the  wayside. 

For  the  second  week  in  a  row,  Israel  was  kicking  up  dust  with 
the  United  Nations,  the  United  States,  Egypt  and  the  Arabs — and 
with  a  certain  aplomb. 

The  Senate. .  after  carefully  scrutinizing  the  President's  Middle 
East  Doctrine,  offered  a  new  version  which  denied  direct  authoriza- 
tion for  use  of  troops,  but  asserted  that  we  would  use  "force  if 
necessary."  Word  from  Georgia,  where  the  President  was  vacation- 
ing, indicated  Ike  was  satisfied  with  the  bill. 

All  was  not  well  for  the  President  last  week,  howiever.  for  So- 
viet Gen.  Zhukov.  his  wartime  fricmi  and  recent  correspondent, 
broke  publicly  with  Ike  over  his  doctrine,  and  said  he  would  dis- 
continue their  correspondence. 

The  White  House  announced  Tuesday  President  Eisenhower 
would  meet  in  Washington  with  French  Premier  MoUet  in  the  latter 
part  of  February,  and  would  fly  to  Bermuda  for  talk.*  ^••'♦'i  n^"'^  a*^- 
pointed  British  Prime  Minister  Macmillan  ia  «ar]jr  Mack.  AkMb  M 
invitation  was  extended  to  German  Chancellor  Adenauer  to  meet 
with  the  President  in  late  spring  or  early  summer. 

Other  items  in  the  news: 

Sunday:  King  Saud  departed  for  his  oil-rich  Saudi  Arabia  after 
his  lengthy  visit  here,  and  the  U.  S.  Communist  Party  opened  its  first 
official  meeting  since  1950. 

Tuesday:  Democrats  attacked  Eisenhouers  doctrine  as  un- 
constitutional; the  stock  market  took  its  deepest  plunge  in  two  years; 
and  Parris  Island,  the  Marine  Corps  training  depot,  was  once  again 
in  the  news,  when  a  recruit  accused  a  drill  instructor  of  clubbing 
him  on  the  head  with  a  metal  pipe — later  in  the  week,  the  recruit 
.stated  that  he  was  sorry  that  he  had  caused  so  much  commotion  and 
was  sorry  he  had  even  opened  his  mouth. 

Wednesday:  The  east  coast,  from  Maine  to  Virginia,  was  crippled 
by  heavy  walkouts  of  the  International  Longshoremen's  Assn.  after 
an  80-day  Taft-Hartley  injunction  expired;  Dmitri  Shepilov,  the 
soon  to  be  deposed  Soviet  foreign  minister,  proposed  his  own  Middle 
East  peace  plan  to  counter  that  of  the  United  States,  and,  the  Com- 
munist Party  of  the  United  States  voted  to  sever  all  ties  with  the 
^oscow  government. 

Thursday:  Harrj'  Truman  tried  to  get  into  the  act  by  offering  his 
plan  for  the  Middle  East  through  economic  cooperation,  and  Hai^ld 
Stassen  said  he  will  resign  his  job  as  disarmament  director  and  run 
for  the  governorship  of  Pennsylvania. 

Friday:  R.  T.  Ross,  the  assistant  defense  secretary,  resigned  his 
job  under  frre  when  there  were  some  inequities  over  his  wife's  co- 
operation's being  granted  $5  million  in  government  contracts. 


Y 

al 

Ad 


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H 


N 
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01 


1957 


SUNDAY,  P6BRUARY  17,  19S7 


?ngth 
have 
N^u- 

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In  into 


ithern 
Nobel 


kkts- 


I  times, 
is  on 
idents 
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might 

lars  of 

illivan 

lancing 


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(Hey. 

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at  9 

ipetent 


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Jhepilov 

cceeded 
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as  Am- 
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jntatives 


(iddia 
y  has 
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lust  with 
lbs — and 

s  Middle 

luthoriza- 
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vacation- 

r.  for  So- 
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kould  dis- 


lisenhower 
the  latter 


to  meet 


rabia  after 
ed  its  first 


le  as  un- 
two  years; 
once  again 
clubbing 
the  recruit 
notion  and 


as  crippled 
Asin.  after 
fpilov,  the 
rwn  Middle 
the  Com- 
with  the 

fering  bis 
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r  and  run 

ligned  his 
wife's  co- 
:ts.. 


THI  DAILY  TAR  HllL 


PAGE  THRU 


Y  Lepdership 
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Monday  Night 


Covering  The  Campus 


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He  de  Prance,  United  States,  Libert^,  Satorma, 
Guilio  Cesare,  Flandre.  $1,448  up 

Also  Regular  Tours  ...  42  days  .  . .  $1,301  ap 

You  can  always 
TRAVEL  NOW— PAY  LATER 
when  you  fo  American  Expre». 

For  complete  information,  see  your 
Campus  Representative, 
local  Travel  Agent  or 
American  Express 

Travel  Serrice, 

member:  Institute  of 

International  Education  and  Council 

on  Student  Travel 
.  .  or  simply  mail  the  handy  coupon. 


American  Expreiss  Travel  S^yici^ 


65  Broadway,  New  York  6,  N.  Y.  efo  Trmti  SaU*  Ditinan 

Yes!  Please  do  s^nd  me  complete  information 
about  1957  Student  Toiirs  to  Europe? 

Name , 

Address 

City 


C-50 


Zone State. 


rwTtcT  Yoot  T«»vtt  njitos  with  ««w»ic<«n  txpws*  twaveiehs  cheques- spend abie  tvtimfwitiic 


COME    TO 

n..        t.    VARLEY'S  MEN'S   SHOP 

'  For    Yoor 

COOPER'S   PRODUCTS 


HERE  IS  THE  THIRD  TIE-BREAKER  IN 

., '.   OLD  GOLD'S 


The  first  in  a  series  of  leader- 
ship training  meetings  for  YMCA 
YWCA  work  will  be  held  toroor^ 
row  in  the  Library  Assembly  Room 
at  7:30  p.m. 

These  sessions  are  being  held  to 
orientate  new  workers  for  the 
"Y"  program  this  spring  and  next 
year.  The  "Y's"  have  urged  all 
freshmen,  sophomores  and  juniors 
interested  in  "Y"  work  to  attend 
these  meetings. 

Larkin  Kirkman  and  Jackie  Aid- 
ridge,  co-chairmen  for  the  orien- 
tation program,  will  lead  the  pro- 
gram. They  have  presented  the 
following  topics  for  consideration 
during  the  orientations:  What  are 
the  cumpas  needs?,  what  can  be 
done  to  meet  these  needs?  and 
where  docs  Hie  "Y"  fit  in? 

Informal  discussion  and  a  ques- 
tion and  answer  session  will  fol- 
low the  formal  program.  Coffee 
and  refreshments  wiU  be  served 
at  the  conclusion  of  the  one-hour 
session. 

The  meeting  will  be  followed  by 
two  others  «n  Thursday,  Feb.  21 
and  Tliursday,  Feb.  28.  These 
meetings  will  deal  with  possible 
soIotioBs  to  problems  diseossed  and 
a  plJissible  "Y"  program  for  this 
spring  and   next  semester. 


Heart 

0 

(Continued  from  Pate  I) 

Sunday  Feb.  24.  when  around  100 
Chapel  Hill  volunteers  will  make 
door-to-door  solieitattons  in  the 
residential  areas. 

After  the  drive  officially  ends 
on  Sunday  the  28  district  captains, 
inchidinf  a  Tri-Delt  representa- 
tive, will  meet  and  hand  over 
wliat  they  collected  to  the  Heart 
Flind. 

The  13-  TriDelt  coeds  who  will 
canvas  the  business  district  Tues- 
day are: 

Ginger  Floyd.  Sandy  Clarke. 
Catherine  Berrj-hill,  Louise  De- 
Witt,  Adele  Hagood.  Dottie  Wood. 


I  FACULTY  CLUR 

I 

I  The  Faculty  Club  will  meet  Tues- 
I  day  at  1  p.m.  at  the  Carolina  Inn 
j  for  luncheon.  Speaker  for  the  oc- 
casion will  be  Raphael  den  Haas, 
lecturer  from  the  Netherlamlj, 
j  New  Guinea  Information  Service. 

I  STUDENTS  WIVES 

I     The    Student    Wives    Club    will 

I  meet  Tuesday  at  8  p.m.  in  the  Vic- 

'  tory  Village  Nursery.  All  student 

wives  have  been  urged  to  attend. 

WUNC 

Following  is  today's  schedule  for 
WUNC,  the  University's  non-com- 
mercial FM  radio  station: 
7:00    Music  Prom  Germany 

Let  There  Be  Light  | 

The  Organ  Room 
The  Third  Programme 
This  Week 
Sign  Off 
WUNC-TV 

Following  is  today's  schedule  for ' 

WUNC-TV.  the  University's  educa-  j 

tional  television  station,  Channel  4: 

&:45    Man  To  Man  ! 

Sunday  School  ! 

The  Pastor  i 

Organ  Prelude  j 

Church  Service       '  I 

This  Is  The  Life  j 

Big  Picture  j 

American  Album .. 

Shakespeare  on  iV 

UN  Review 

Writers  of  Today 


Dl  SUPPER  MEET 

The  Dialectic  Senate   will    hold 
a  supper  meeting  Monday  at  6  p.m. 
n  Lenoir  Hall. 
RETREAT 

Registration  for  the  YM-YWCA 
retreat  at  Bricks  March  1-3  will 
open  tomorrow.  Those  interested 
in  attending  the  conference  have 
been  asked  to  register  at  the  Y  at 
the  retreat  registration  table  or  in 
the  Y  office. 


CLASSIFtEDS 


7:30 

7:45 

8:00 

10:00 

11:30 


ROOM  BRICK  HOUSE.  3  BED 
rooms,  all  modern  conveniemjes. 
3  miles  on  Old  86  Hyway.  Stove 
and  Frigedaire  furnished.  Call 
Fred  Katzin  after  6:00.  8-9025. 


10:00 

10:30 

10:45 

11:00 

12:00 

6:30 

7:00 

7:30 

8:15 

8:30 


Lutheran  Studentt  to 
Attend  WC  Meet  today 

Dr.  Franklin  Clark  Piry,  j>resi- 
dent  of  the  United  Lutheran 
Church  in  America  will  conduct  a 
morning  worship  service  at  Wo- 
men's College  this  morning. 

The  members  of  Chapel  Hill's 
Lutheran  Student  Assn.  will  at- 
tend the  service.  Following  the 
service  they  will  be  the  gueats  of 
Women's  College's  Lutheran  Stu- ! 
dent  Assn.   at  a   luncheon. 


Joanne  Satrnders,  Pat  Brandt.  Ann  . 
Barber.  Lucinda  Holderncss,  Di-j 
ana  Ashley.  Mary  Ruth  Mitchell, ' 
and  Sarah  Adams. 


PUZZLES 


TIE-BREAKING  PUZZLE  NO.  3 


CLUB:  This  West  Coast  state  university, 
chartered  in  1868.  has  campuses  at  various 
locations  throughout  the  state.  Degrees  in 
ocfcanography  are  among  those  conferred 
by  this  institution. 

ClUE:  Named  for  its  founder,  who  also 
founded  the  Western  Union  Telegraph 
Company,  this  eastern  univerrity  has  many 
schoola,  among  which  is  one  for  hotd 
admim.stration. 


ANSWER  1. 
ANSWER  2. 
Same 


Address. 

City 

College  _ 


.atale. 


Here's  A  Give-Away! 

Anybody  Who  ^ys  An 
LP.  Gets 

2  FREE  LP.'s 

From 

R.  C.  A.  VICTOR 

In  Honor  Of 

Mardi  Gras  Weekend 


!#► 


207  E.  FRANKLIN  STREET 


Nof9:  Above  puzzh  requires  2  answers. 
Hold  answers   for  mailing   msfrvcfions. 

AJl  participants  who  completed 
the  initial  set  of  twenty-four 
puzzles  correctly  are  required 
,to  solve  a  sepes  of  eight  tie- 
breakers, in  order  to  compete 
for  the  prizes  in  the  tie. 

Remember— first  prize  is  a 
tour  for  two  around  the  world 
and  there  are  85  other 
valuable  prizes. 


NO  OTHER  CIGARETTE 
CAN  MATCH  THE  TASTE 
OF  TODAY'S 

OLD  GOLDS 

liogulara— Kings— or  Filters, 
today's  Old  Golds  taste  terrific  . . . 
tlianks  to  an  exclusive  blend  of  the  finest 
nature-ripened  tobaecoB  ...  so  rich  . .  • 
60  light ...  BO  golden  bright! 


JOCKEY  UND^WEAR 

AVAILABLE   AT 

BERAAAN'S  DEPT.  STORE 


Spring  Bargoins 
Are  Here 


There  are  lively  goings-on  in  the  bargain  corner 
of  North  Carolina's  favorite  browsery.  New  faces  are 
appearing  all  over  the  place—new  hovels  on  the  dol- 
lar t^ble,  new  non-fiction  in  the  $1.25-and-up  case. 

For  instance,  there's  a  nice  copy  of  the  works  of 
Lafcadio  Hearn,  reduced  from  $4.00  to  $1.89,  there's 
a  fat  volume  of  Cryil  Connolly's  choice  of  Great  Eng- 
lish Short  Novels,  down  from  $6.00  to  $3.69,  and 
there  are  a  few  copies  of  Ethel  Park  Richardson's 
American  Mountain  Songs  cut  down  to  $2^69. 

Our  patented  budget-stretcher  is  working  over- 
time this  week.  Come  on  over  and  join  the  fun! 


The  Intimate 
Bookshop 


205  E.  Franklin  St. 


Open  Till  i6P.M. 


NEWSPAPER  WOMAN  WANTED: 
Young  woman  for  newspaper 
job  now  or  on  graduation;  need 
not  necessarily  have  i^udied 
journali^,  but  desire  i  per- 
son interested  in  North  Carolina 
community  life  who  'can  write 
acceptably:  general  reporting, 
with  emphasis  on  women's  ac- 
tivities at  home  and  in  commun- 
ity; semi-weekly  in  lively  East- 
ern North  Carolina  town  of  5,- 
000,  with  reportorial  staff  of 
three  and  modern  equiptment 
and  air  -  conditioned  offices. 
Write  and  will  interview.  Ad- 
dress, Editor.  Herald,  Ahoskie. 
N.  C.  . 


ANNOUNCEMENT  BY 

Illinois  College  of 
OPTOMETRY 

Applications  for  admission  to 
classes  beginning  September  9, 
1957    are    now    being    received. 

Three  year  course 

of  professional  study 

Leading  to  the  Degree  of 

Doctor  of  Optometry 

Requirements  for  Entrance: 
Two  years  (6*  semester  hours  or 
equivalent  quarter  hrs.)  in  spe- 
cified Kb«ral  arts  and  actcncea. 

WRITE  FOR  BtJLLETIN 
TO:   REGISTRAR 

ILLINOIS   COLLEGE 
of  OPTOMETRY 

3241    So.   Michican   Ave. 
Tcchaolocy  Center.  Chicago  16.  IIL 


A  Campus-to-Career  Case  History 


Manager  Joseph  S.  Manning  discusses  a  customer  service 
request  with  Office  Supervisor  Catherine  Uodetvn. 


"Like  having  your  own  ^3,000,000  business" 


Joseph  S.  Manning  graduated  in  1950 
from  We!«le)  an  University  with  a  B A.  de- 
gree and  a  major  in  Bto-Chemiatry.  But 
chemistry,  lie  decided,  was  not  to  be  his 
career.  He  became  intrigued,  instead,  by 
the  opportunities  hi  the  telephone  busi- 
ness, and  joined  New  York  Telephone 
Company  in  1951. 

Today  Joe  Manning  is  Bufiiness  OfiBce 
Manager  in  Farkchester,  Bronx,  New 
York.  In  this  position  he  is  responsible 
for  about  27.000  telephone  accounts 
which  bill  some  $250,000  a  month.  35 
people  work  under  him. 

"It's  like  having  your  own  $3,000,000 
business."  Joe  says.  "And  it's  pretty  much 


an  independent  operation,  which  f  enjoy. 
I'ra  in  charge  of  all  businese  ofiBce  func- 
tions, and  of  personnel  trainmg  and  de- 
velopment. I  also  spend  a  lot  of  time  out 
with  my  customers,  making  sure  that  they 
have  the  telej^one  service  they  want  and 
need.  It's  an  absorbing  job. 

"The  phenomenal  growth  of  the  busi- 
ness is  one  of  the  reasons  why  advance- 
ment opportunities  are  so  good  in  the 
telephone  company.  Since  1943.  for  ex- 
ample, the  number  of  telephones  in  our 
area  has  almost  tripled.  Growth  such  as 
this,  going  on  all  over  the  country,  makes 
the  telephone  business  especially  attrac- 
tive to  anvone  seeking  a  career  with  a 
future." 


Bell  Telephone  Companies  offer  many  interesting 
career  opportunities,  as  do  Bell  Telephone 
I^ahoratorieH.  Western  Eieetric  and  Sandia  Cor- 
poration. Your  placement  officer  has  more  in- 
formation ahout  all  Bell  System  Companies. 


.,t.-.i*-4Kiiii*'-. 


SYSTEM 

— -I- '— 


STUCK  FOR  MONEY?  DO  A 


SEND  IT  IN  AND 

MAKE 


Dragon  If  agon 


WHAT  ARE  WISf  MEN'S  EARMMCS* 

&•     jCcTi 

J 

^/JW  "* 

Sage*'  K'aga 

NANCY  SMITH. 

U    OFCHICACO 

DO  YOU  like  to  shirk  worii?  Here's  some  easy  money— staiii 
Stickling!  We'll  pay  $25  for  every  Stickler  we  print— and  for 
hundreds  that  never  get  used.  Sticklers  are  simple  riddles 
with  two-word  rhyming  answers.  Both  words  have  the  same 
nimiber  of  syllables.  (Don't  do  drawings. )  Send  your  Sticklers 
with  your  name,  address,  college  and  class  to  Happy-Joe- 
Lucky,  Box  67A,  Mount  Vernon,  N.  Y.  And  remember— 
you're  bound  to  Stickfe  better  when  you're  enjoying  a  Lucky, 
because  Luckies  taste  better.  Luckies'  mild,  good-tasting  to- 
bacco is  TOASTED  to  taste  even  better.  Fact  is,  you'll  say 
Luckies  are  the  best-tasting  cigarette  you  ever  smoked! 


WHAT  IS  AN  ANGRY  EMPLOYER « 

^ 

K 

Ml 

n|pK|l«5i 

r 

'^PHIPI 

<^ 

Crett  Bois 

NOURICI  «IENN. 

CACISHTON  U 

WHAT  IS  A  COWAROlY  MOf 


Ctm:e%  Htuut 


eilMORI  JENNINAS 
HOiDHS  COllMC 


WHAT  a  AN 

ACHE  MSCCTf 

S 

M 

h 

1^       •  ^^rC^ 

m 

■7* 

SpryFlf 

•  ItMN  NVSTMM. 

«.  OF  aiNN. 

Luckies  Taste  Better 

"irs  TOASTED**  TO  TASTE  BETTER  .  .  .  CLEANER,  FRESHER,  SMOOTHER! 


•A.T,  Co.       FBODOCT  OF 


AMSBICa'S    LSAPIMO    KAHUFACTXTRBK    of    CIOAKSTtSa 


f  A61  FOUR 


THl  DAILY  TAR  HiiL 


SUNDAY,  FEBRUADY  17,  1*57 


New  Faces,  Job  Switches  Headline  Scrimmage  Session 


AAAA  Whips  UNC  Fencers        J'^n  JoneS 


The  Augusta  Military  Academy 
fencing  team  scored  strong  in 
the  saber  division  yesterday  to 
hand  the  Carolina  club  a  14-13 
setback  in   Woollen   Gym. 

Capitalizing  on  the  absence  of  a 
pair  of  Tar  Heel  saber  men  due 
to  sickness,  the  cadets  won  that 
divijsion.  6-3  to  sew  up  the  match. 
Carolina  won  the  dueling  sword 
competition.  6-3  and  AMA  captur- 
ed the  foil  division,  5-4. 


Don  Corbin  and  Bob  Clay  paced 
the  Tiir  Heels,  while  AMA.  team 
captain  Harmon  and  sabremao 
Aguiar  paced  the  Cadets. 


Officials  Meeting 

Th»r«  will  be  an  officials 
mating  tomorrow  aftarneon  in 
room  301-A  Woollen  Gym  at  4 
p.m.  for  anyone  who  is  interest- 
ed in  officiating  intramural  soc- 


SUSAN  HAYWARD  AND  KIRK  DOUGLAS  ARE  HAVING  A  "TOP 
SECRET  (LOVE)  AFFAIR"  AND  IT'S  THE  LAUGHIEST  LOVEAflAK- 
ING  SINCE  COMEDIES  GREW   UPi 


\,  Stnwfiti  h  llCIUtO  tUilMW  ■  lu«<  «  •  Nml  k,  *.  J.  KVM 

htctM  ky  mna  touhc 
V     httnat  *t  mum  ma  wa  mmit  i  moccoii 

\       A  W««NICX  HWOUCriOlt  ■  A  COIUMIM  rtCTUtt 


TODAY  AND 
MONDAY 


Susan.  Kirk 

Hayward  and  Douglas 

are  having  a 

Ibp  Secret  Affair  *| 


•<"Wif^rp  muiii, 


.1  ^rmo.c 

I  with  his  new 


\ 


SONIC  Cuuu. 


Ever  since  Jack  bought  his  new  Sonic 
CAPRI  phonograph  at  the  local 

I  college  store  —  he's  become  t)ie  biggest 
B  M  O  C  ever.  You  can  join  him  and 

^  be  the  biggest  ever,  too,  tor  you 
can  buy  a  Capri  phonograph  for  as 
little  as  119.95  This  months 
special  buy  is  the  Capri  "150  It's  a 
portable  4-speed  hi-fi  phonograph 

iwith  WEBCOR  automatic  changer 
Features  are  twin  speakers,  a 
quality  amplitier  and  a  smartly 
styled  cabinet  in  attractive 

I  Two-Tone  Forest  Green.  Specially 

i  priced  at  your  local  dealer. 

'sonic   .'NDUSTR/ES,  INC. 


QUIMBY,  Wise.  (March  3). 
Police  today  arrested  the  foul 
felon  who  heisted  the  cash  reg- 
ister at  Jones'  Gas  Station. 
When  arrested,  the  base  serv- 
ant of  the  devil  kept  mutter- 
ing,* "Drat  the  shirt,  drat  the 
shirt." 

Let's  look  at  the  events 
leading  up  to  this  story.  After 
the  holdup,  the  police  xjuizzed 
Victim  Jones.  Jones  couldn't 
identify  the  yegg.  "The  wan- 
ton jackdaw  who  cabbag«d  my 
cash  \core  a  maxk,"  said  Jones. 
"The  only  distinguishing  fea- 
ture about  him  was  his  ^hirt. 
A  beauty!  The  collar  was  ab- 
solutely free  of  wrinkles.  Oh, 
he  was  a  neat  one!" 

Meanwhile,  the  scoundrel, 
knowing  that  his  wrinkle-free 
and  enviably-neat  collar  was  a 
dead  giveaway,  tried  desper- 


Is  Shifted 
To   Flank 


New  fac«s  and  shifted  positions 
were  the  most  noticeable  features 
this  afternoon  as  Jim  Tatum  sent 
his  Carolina  football  team  through 
a  long  scrimmage  to  wind  up  the 
first    week    of   spring   drills. 

Amog  the  most  promising  of  the  ! 
new  faces  was  fullback  Bob  Shupin,  | 
a    f vur-year    Navy    veteran    from  j 
Pennsylvania  who  played  his  fresh- 
man    ball     at     the     University  of 
Georgia. 

The  210-pound  bulldozer  who 
sat  out  last  season  because  oi  eligi- 
bility rules  wp  on  Tatum's  No. 
1  unit  and  time  after  time  crack 
ed  through  a  tough  defense  for  j 
gains  of  from  five  to  20  yeards.     i 

I 

Another  new  face  on  the  varsi-  I 
ty  was  Cornell  Johnson,  a  brilliant  j 
freshman  halfback   last  year   who  • 
teamed  with  veteran  Emil  DeCant  > 
is  to  give  the  Tar  Heels  a  pair  of 
shifty  speed  demons  at  the  halves. 
.Quarterback    Dave    Reed    seemed 
to  have   shaken   the   knee    injury 
which   kept   him   on   the   sidelines 
most  of  last  season  and   ran   and 
passed    well   in   directing   the   top 
unit.  ^ 

The  most  noticeable  position 
shift  involved  All-Atlantic  Coast 
Conference  guard  Jimmy  Jones. 
Tatura  has  shifted  Jones  to  left 
end  and  the  Greensboro  junior 
was  one  of  the  defensive  stand- 
outs in  this  afternoon's  drill. 

The  Tar  Heels  begin  their  sec- 
ond week  of  apring  practice  Mon- 
day afternoon  and  are  scheduled 
to  work  out  every  Monday.  Wed 
nesday,  Friday  and  Saturday  in 
preparation  for  the  annual  Blue 
White  game  on  March  16. 


Frosh  Swimming  Meet 
Set  Here  Tomorrow 

Carolina's  Tar  Baby  Swimmers 
will  play  host  to  freshman  teams 
from  around  the  state  tomorrow 
night  when  the  Freshman  Colle- 
giate Swimming  Championships 
are  run  off  beginning  at  8  p.m- 
in  Bowman  Gray  Pool. 

Teams  from  State,  Ouke,  East 
Carolina  and  possibly  Wake  For- 
est will  compete  with  the  Tar 
Babies  for  the  13  championships 
at  stake.  No  team  champion  will 
be  decided. 


Howard  Johnson  Restaurant 


BREAKFAST 


LUNCH 


DINNER 


SNACKS 
landmark  For  Hungry  Tarheels" 


HAIR   GROOM 
TONIC 


UNBREAKABLE 
PLASTIC  I 

Grooms  your  hair  while  it  treats  your 
scalp.   Controls   loose  dandruff.    1.00 

plus  ta< 
SHULTON        Nev  York     «     Toronto 


it 


What's  it  like  to  be 


-'.?s 


A  PHYSICIST  AT   IBM?"^^^-^^ 


Five  years  ago,  college  senior  Nick  Hemmer  asked  himself  this  quosKon. 
Today,  as  Administrative  Assistant  to  the  Quality  Control  manager,  Nick 
reviews  his  experience  at  IBM  and  giyes  some  pointers  that  may  be  helpfy'  .^a. 
to  you  in  taking  the  first,  most  important  step  in  your  career  as  a  phystcifff. 


tm 


HOW  WAS  THE  CROOK  TOOK? 


ately  to  slip  some  wrinkles  into 
it.  He  st^miped  on  it  with  hob- 
nail boots.  He  slugged  away 
at  it  with  a  club.  But  not  a 
wrinkle!  So  later,  as  he  skulked 
down  Main  Street,  his  shirt 
was  noticed,  admiringly,  by  a 
detective  and  he  was  arrested 
lickety-split.  Good  work, 
copper ! 

By  now  you  will  have 
guessed  that  the  miscreant 
wore  a  Van  Heusen  Century 
Shirt.  But  of  course!  Il's  Liie 
only  shirt  in  the  world  with  the 
.xo//  collar  that  won't  wrinkle 
ecer.  It  never  needs  stanch, 
so  it's  always  comfortable.  The 
Van  Heusen  Century  also  la.sts 
up  to  twice  as  long  as  ordinary 
shirts,  yet  costs  no  more.  $4.00. 

Phillips-Jones  Corp.,  417 
Fifth  Ave.,  New  York  16,  N.Y. 


*'I  was  tremendously  impressed,"  says 
Nick,  "by  my  first  plant  tour.  When 
you  go  through  the  facilities— meet 
the  men  and  get  an  idea  of  the  prob- 
lems they  handle—you  can't  help  but 
become  interested.  Add  the  friendly, 
informal  work  atmosphere,  and  you 
know  right  off  the  bat  these  people 
hare  a  story  to  tell." 

Nick  came  to  IBM  in  1951  with  a 
P.S.'in  physics.  He  started  as  a  Tech- 
nical Engineer— in  Teat  Equipment 
Engineering— working  on  an  analog 
bombing  system.  When  that  project 
moved  from  the  Endicott  to  the 
Poughkeepsie  plant,  Nick  followed  it, 
b«coming  first  an  Associate  Engineer, 
then  a  Project  Engineer.  As  the  lat- 


tion  of  alloys  ...  or  of  the  properties 
of  metals,  such  as  the  resistivity  of 
germanium.  Then,  there  are  the  im- 
portant 'analysis  of  failure'  and 
reliability  studies,  in  which  you  seek 
to  determine,  for  example,  the  'life 


WE   ARE   THE   EXCLUSIVE 

VAN   HEUSEN 

DEALER  IN  CHAPEL  HILL 


Hoarftnc  up  Quality  Engincarina 

ter,  he  worked  on  IBM's  first  transis- 
torixed  electronic  computer— the  608. 

By  November,  '55,  Nick  was  head- 
ing up  Quality  Engineering  in  the 
Quality  Control  Division  of  the 
Poughkeepsie  plant.  Recently  pro- 
moted to  Administrative  Assistant  to 
the  Quality  Control  manager,  Nick 
now  concerns  himself  with  the  funda- 
mental operations  and  policies  of  this 
450-man  division.  Quality  Control  is 
responsible  for  the  performance  of 
IBM's  vast  array  of  business  ma- 
chines—from simple  sorters  and 
punches  to  the  ."electronic  brains." 

What  an  IBM  physicist  does 

"The  problems  of  Quality  Control 
In  this  business  are  endless,"  Nick 
reports,  "and  fascinating  to  the  phys- 
icist. There's  process  control— of  the 
manufacture  of  components  such  as 
transistors  and  cores  ...  of  the  con- 
tents of  a  gas  ...  of  the  concentricity 
of  an  etch  solution  ...  of  the  diffrac- 


Prebl«m«  fatcincting  to  th«  physicist 

expectancy'  of  a  device,  the  mean 
time  between  failures,  or  perhaps 
which  step  in  a  process  has  the  great- 
est effect  on  the  equipment  involved. 
You  may  be  asked  to  control  the 
deposit  of  glass  on  X-ray  tubes  to 
avoid  spill-over,  or  microscopic  spot- 
ting. Or  you  may  be  dealing  with 
arc-suppression,  or  gaseous  electron- 
ics, the  grass  roots  of  instrumentation ; 
or  in  the  estimation  of  tolerances,  or 


tration  and  concentricity  of  colloidal 
solutions?"  "Present  a  job  in  terms 
of  actual  problems,"  believes  Nick, 
"and  you'll  get  the  man's  interest— 
for  it's  his  career  and  his  future  that 
have  top  priority." 

Hew  about  further  study? 

Nick  has  taken  full  advantage  of 
IBM's  extensive  educational  facilities 
to  get  ahead  at  IBM.  He  took  at  least 
one  course  each  semester  on  subjects 
within  his  immediate  work  area- 
courses  on  digital  and  analog  com- 
puters and  on  their  components  such 
as  cores  and  transistors.  He  found 
time  to  take  management  courses  as 
well.  "If  you  want  opportunity  for 
study,"  Nick  says,  "IBM  will  provide 
all  you  want." 


Exfantiv*  •ducationol  faeilitiat 

in   correlation   coeflUcients— that   is, 
in  physically  sound  numbers." 

Niclf  has  been  instrumental  in 
encouraging  many  college  physics 
majors  to  come  to  IBM.  "I  find 
they're  interested  in  questions  like 
these,"  he  says:  "How  would  you  go 
about  determining  the  'life'  of  elec- 
trons in  transition  from  the  valence 
to  the  conduction  band?"  Or,  in  the 
manufacture  of  magnetic  inks,  "How 
can  the  grain  size  of  the  iron  content 
be  controlled  ...  or  its  viscosity  regu- 
lated over  wide  temperature  ranges? 
Hownvould  you  control  the  concen- 


Promotien  olmett  incviMM* 

Asked  about  opportunities  for  ad- 
vancement at  IBM,  Nick  iiaya,  "The 
situation  could  hardly  be  better  in 
that  respect.  With  sales  doubling 
every  five  years  on  the  av(»rage,  pro- 
motion is  almost  inevitable." 


IBM  hopes  that  this  message  will  help  to 
give  you  some  idea  of  what  it's  like  to  be 
a  physicist  at  IBM.  There  are  equal  op- 
portunities for  E.E.'s,  M.E.'i.,  mathema- 
ticians and  Liberal  Arts  majors  in  IBM's 
many  divisions— Research,  Manufactur- 
ing Engineering,  Sales  and  Technical 
Services.  Why  not  drop  in  and  discuss 
IBM  with  your  Placement  r)irector?  He 
can  supply  our  latest  brochure  and  tell 
you  when  IBM  will  next  interview  on 
your  campus.  Meanwhile,  our  Manager 
of  Engineering  Recruitment,  Mr.  R.  A. 
Whitehome,  will  be  happy  to  answer  your 
questions.  Just  write  him  at  IBM,  Room 
9301    ^^^  MadisonAve.,New'i'ork22,N.Y. 


IBM 


INTIINATICNAL 
BUSINISS  MACHINES 

CORPOIATtON 


•ATA  FHOCSaSiNe     •     SLKCTHIC  TVPSWRITCM     •     TIMS  CQUIPMKNT     •     MILITARY  PRODUCTS    '.SPSCIAL  KNOINURlNa  PRODUCTJ     •     SUPPLII 


tJ.S.C.  'LIBRARt 
SERIALS   ©EFT. 
BOX  870 
CSLk?SL  HILL,    N.C. 


52. 


WEATHER 

Colder  with  expected  ra!n    High 


Sri)  c  Daib 


VOL.  LVII,  NO.  102 


aTat:  Heel 


WEEKEND 

Methodists  have  •  good  idee.  See 
editorial,  page  2. 


Complete  {JF)  V/ire  Service 


CHAPEL   HILL,  NORTH   CAROLINA, .TUESDAY,   FEBRUARY    19,   1957 


Offices   in   Graham   Memorial 


FOUR    PAGES  THIS   ISSUI 


Death  Of  UNC  Student 
Here  Saturday  Ruled 

i. 

Suicide  By  Coroner 


A   IJ.XC:  student  hanged  himself  late  Satmdav   afternoon*- 
in  the  houei  room  of  his  rooming  house  at  2i()  Maeauley  St. 
in  Chapel  Hill. 

Funeral  services  were  held  Monday  at  {  p.m.  lor  Ridiard 
Wily  Fowler,  a  ?i-year  old  junior  from  Durham,  at  the  Hou- 
ei Km  Bryan  Memorial  Church  in  Diuham. 

Conducting  ,he  service  were  the  Rev.  Vergil  K.  Queen, 
pastor  of  the  Duke  Memorial  Methodi.st  Cluuch  an^  Dr. 
H.  F.  Spence,  professor  emeritus  of  Duke  Tniversity  Divinity 
Si'hooJ.  Interment  was  in   Maplewood  Ciemetery,  annex  B. 

He    was    the    son    of    Mr.    and* — — '- — ^ — 

Mrs.    Marian    B.    Fowler    of    1021 


Monmouth  .\ve.,  Durham. 

Fowler's  body  was  found  hang- 
ing at  the  end  of  a  belt  tied 
around  a  shower  curtain  rod.  His 
roommate,  medical .  student  Ken 
W'eaver.  discovered  the  body  at 
ti.58  p.m.  Saturday. 
RULED  SUISIDE 

Orange  C:unty  Asst.  Coroner 
George  Cannady.  who  ruled  the 
death  a  suicide  ,said  he  thought 
Fowler  had  taken  his  life  between 
5  and  6  p.m.  No  one  else  was  at 
home  at  the  time. 

Cannady  said  no  note  was 
found  and  no  reason  could  be 
found  for  the  suicide.  Ho  said 
Fowler  h.-.d  given  no  indication 
he  planned  to  commit  the  act. 

He  als:>  said  he  understood 
Fowler  '  was  doing  all  right  in 
hb,   Studies." 

At  tlie  time  the  student  com- 
mitted suicide  a  recording  of 
•'Come  Sweet  Death"  by  the  Phil- 
adelphia Symphony  Orchestra 
was  playing  on  a  record  player. 
ARTIST 

Fowler,    who    had    expressed    a 
desire    ta    become    a    creative    ar-j 
tist,  had  been  reading  a  book  en-.' 
titled  La   -Vature   Morte   de   L'An 
Vique    A    No«   J6uf« 
hv  Charles  Sterling 

He  recently  remarked  to  his 
roommate  that  if  this — referring 
to  the  book — wis  what  it  took  he 
couldn't  make  it. 

Weaver  said  these  facts,  how- 
ever,    were     not     anything     "you 

(See   DEATH,   page  3) 


UP  Cancels 
Meet  Due 
To  Game 


House  Urges  Change 
In  Aims   Of  Debate 


By  NEIL  BASS 

"Maintain  your  organization,  de- 
fine your  principles  and  above  all 
capture  the  office,""  spoke  assistant 
director  of  admissions  Charles  Ber- 
nard last  night. 

Bernard  was  one  of  three  speak- 
ers addres„*.ng  a  special  ""Visitors 
Night""  Student  Party  meeting.  He 
spoke  on  the  "Future  of  Student 
Government.' 

Speakers  on  the  "'Past  and  Pre- 
sent in  Student  Government"  were 
Former  party  Chairman  Tom  Lam- 
beth and  student  body  Vice  Presi 


Eventual  Accomplishment  Of      t 
Proposals  Predicted  By  Horn; 

Di  To  Circulate  Petition 

Student  Party  Holds 
Visitors'  Night  Meet 


The  University  Party  has  can- 
v'elled  its  scheduled  meeting  for 
.onight   due   to   tlie   Stato-Carolina  1  ^"^  So"ny  ^vans.  respectively 

iasketball  game.  ! 


_  .    .      ,     presentation 
an   art    book  ,     * 

card. 


Party  Chairman  Mike  Weinman 
yesterday  outlined  the  Parly's  new 
nominations  procedures  as  follows; 

1)  All  petitions  lor  membership! 
and  all  member..-  must  be  on  Party 
rolls  by  Feb.  26lh. 

2)  .-VU  dues  must  be  paid  by  Feb.  j 
2()th.    No    organization    may    have 
voting  representatives  unless  theu 
dues  have  been  paid  bv  this  date. 

3)  To  be  eligible  to  vote  each 
member  must  have  a  membership 
card.  These  cards  will  be  issued  by 
party  secretary  Harriet  Bobbitt  at 
the  UP  meeting  room  at  6:30  Tues- 
day, Feb.  26th. 

4)  No  one   will   be  admitted    to " 
the    nominating    sessioni-    without 
of     his 


Bajlad  Singer 
Will  Appear 
Here  Sunday 

Ballad  singer  Earle  Spicor  will 
be  the  featured  attraction  in  Le? 
Petites  Musicales  program  to  be 
held  Feb.  24  in  Graham  Memorial".*- 
main  lounge   at  8  p.m. 

Having  appeared  in  1000  engage- 
ments at  over  400  colleges  and  uni- 
versities, Spicer  now  specializes  in 
the  singing  of  ballads  which  he 
originally  began  as  a  hobby.  His 
pi-ogram    is    considered    ideal    for 


Speaking  on  student  govern- 
ment"s  past,  Lambeth  touched  on 
what  he  called  the  three  significant 
party  actions  since  World  War  II. 
Lambeth's  listings  were: 

(DA  reform  movement  in  1946- 
47  which  took  the  party  out  of  the 
hand.*  of  "special  interests"  and 
diverted  its  actions  to  benefit  the 
"entire  campus."' 

(2)  Appropriation  of  a  portion  of 
a  519,000  Publications  Board  sur- 
plus to  render  social  improvement.^ 
to  the  campus  in  1953. 

(3)  .\ssumption  of  a  "positive 
stand"  in  last  -years  argument  over 

'dual  editorshiiV'  of  The  Daily  Tar 
Heel  wiiich  culminated  in  a  recall 
movement  against  Co-editors  Louis 
Xraar  and  Ed  Yoder. 

PRESENT 

Vice-Pre..ident  Evans,  speaking 
>n -student  government  at  present, 
listed  what  he  termed  this  year's 
signal  achievements.  These  were: 

(1)  Regaining  the  respect  of  "all 
concerned"  after  the  reign  of  an 
administration  which  Evans  inti- 
mated was  lax. 

(2)  Institution  of  'civil  service 
type  plan"  for  appointment  of  stu- 
dent government  personnel. 

(3)  Appointment  of  a  chancellor 
selection  committee  to  make  sug- 
gestionw*  to  Consolidated  University 


By  GRAHAM  SNYDER  And    H.  Joost  Polak 

The  I'liixersitYs  rt'si^iiin^  head  librarian  .stated  last  night 
that  tlie  recomnieiulaiioiis  he  made  to  the  taeulf.  for  cliafl^es 
ill  ihe  present  library  system  ■"will  probably  l)e  implement- 
id.  sooii'jr.  or  later,  by  the  new  librarian." 

Ill  1  eemp^asizint;  his  orij^ina!  six  propo.sals  lor  asifrinent- 
ini;  I  he  lacilities  ol  the  library.  Dr.  .Andrew  Horn  said  that 
he  lelt  '"all  tenijjorarv  set  Ijaiks  will  be  rectified."  He  added 
ihat  he  was  "snre  that  the  new  librarian  will  oo  lorward 
with   the  recommendations." 

Si/eakini;  with  Chancellor  Robert  Honsc  bctore  the  Hin'- 
le(  ti(  Senate  at  Lenoir  Hall.  Dr.  Horn  listed  the  insiifiicient 
lacililies  of  the  library  system  "which  will  be  doid^led  by 
"the  gO'i^r    increase  of  elisible  col- 


CHANCELLOR   HOUdE  AND  LIBRARIAN   HORN 

.  .  .  spoke  before  Di  tnipper  meeting 


„,c.,^or.hip  l^r^riS'l-^rir:!^'"-' ««- ^«»-".— -f- 


esting  to  English  Dcpls.  where 
5)  For  all  offices  except  student    ballads,   Shakespeare   and   creative 

body  and  class  presidents  the  can- ,  writing  are  taught. 

didate  with  the  most  votes  will  re-  ,      jhe  New  York  baritone  has  stu- 

ce.ve  the  nomination.  !  ^,^^  j„  London  and  Paris  and  has 

The    following    nomiation    dates    been   guest    soloist   with    many    of 

were  announced  by  the  W:  March    the  leading  Symphony  Orchestras. 

5.  Town  .Men,  Town  Women,  Dorm  ;  por  three  years  Earle  Spicer  was 

Women,  sophomore  class   officers; 


Orientation 
Interviews 
Set  This  Week 

Interviews  for  students  inter- 
ested in  working  on  the  Orienta- 
tion Committee  next  fall  will  be 
held  Thursday  and  Friday.  2  to 
4  p.m.,  in  the  Woodhouse  Con- 
ference Room  at  GM,  according 
to  Jerry   Oppenheimer,   chairman 


request  of  the  Albright  Committee. 

(4)  Institution  of  an   "unlimited 
cuts"    class   attendance   policy    fori 
juniors  and  seniors. 

The    party    will    reconvene    next 


MIDSHIPMEN  AND  PETTY  OFFICERS^  • 

92  Student  Officers 
\  Announced  For  NROTC 


lege   students  by    1970." 

To  counteract  the  defereasing 
capacity  in  dormitories  and  the 
seating  limit  in  the  library.  Dr. 
Horn  again  listed  three  possible 
solutions  to  the  problem:  1)  dou- 
ble its  physical  size  by  the  addi- 
tion of  an  undergradute  library 
♦  with  a  100,000  volumes  open  to 
undergraduates.  2)  devise  of  new 
ways  of  ii.istruction:  sc,lf-educa- 
tion  through  suggested  reading, 
closed  circuit  television,  etc.  3) 
introduce  selective  admission: 
either  by  stiffer  entrance  require- 
j  ments   or   by   making   the   college 


Capt.  A.  .M.  Patterson,  command- 
ing officer  of  the  Naval  ROTC  at 
UNC.  has  announced  92  student  of- 
ficer.,-, for  the  current  spring  semes- 


Monday  night.  At  this  session  Leg-    ter. 

islature  candidates   (or   the  group '      The  new  midshipman  and  petty 

will    be    named.    Don    Jacobs    was    officers  include  a  total  of  57  men. 


the  featured  soloist  with  Donald 
March  12,  Dorm  Men,  .-^nior  class  |  tj'oorhee..  and  his  orchestra  on 
officers,  and  student  body  officers,  i  ^f.B  C 

~  [      Included  on  his  program  are  ar- 

of    the    Orientation    Committee.       i  rangements  of   traditional  English' 

People    wha    have    already    ap-j  ballads,    selections    from    Shakes- 
plied    will    be    notified    of    what  i  peare  and  Gilbert  and  Sullivan,  and  i 
time  to  come  for  an  interview.        |  American   ballads  and   folk  songs,  j 

More     applicants     are     needed.   The  singer  accompainies  himself  at  j 
however.,   especially    women.     "I  ^  the  piano  and  makes  brief  informal 
would  like  to  take  this  opportuni-  j  comments  stressing   the    contribu- 
ty  to  encourage  all  interested  peo- ,  tion    folk   music  hatf  made   to   art 
pie  to  join  with  me  in  this  under-   music. 

taking,  which  is  one  of  the  most  j  Les  Petites  Musicales  programs 
important  activities  of  Student^  are  open  to  the  public,  with  no  ad- 
Government,"    said    Oppenheimer.  mission  charged.  ■ 


named  last  night  to  fill  a  legiiHa- 
tive  vacancy  in  Dorm  Mens  HI. 


or  62  per  cent,  from  North  Caro- 
lina. 


Top  assignment  in  the  Drill  and 
Command  Section  goes  to  Cadet 
Capt.  Gordon  B.  Hall,  Evanston.  111.  j 
He  will  be  assisted  by  Cadet  Cmdr.  i 
Donald  E.  Kentopp.  Ea.vt  Orange, 
N.  .!.;  Lt,  Cmdr.  Luther  H.  Hodges  ' 
Jr..  Raleigh;  Lt.  David  L.  Ward.  I 
New  Bern;  Lt.  Carter  G.  Mackie,  | 
Point   Pleasant,    N.    J.;    Lt.    James  I 


open     only     to 
year   students. 


third     and    fourth 


The  new  officers  and  their  new  E.  Martin,  Charlotte;  and  Lt.  Fred- 
ranks    are    listed    below    by    their   ric  C.  Byrum,  Edenton. 


Rain  Expected 
To  Start 
Here  Toddy 


hometowns,  with  students  from  this 
state  being  listed  first.  j 


Battalion    Cammander    is    Capl. 
(See  92  STUDENTS,  pageS) 


He  added:  "As  a  librarian.  I 
think  that  the  library  is  the  cen- 
ter of  the  educational  process, 
and  I  think  that  more  teaching 
will  be  done  in  the  library  than 
in    the    clas.^room    in    the    fyture." 

j 

Chancellor  House.  appearinji  j 
with  Dr.  Horn,  urged  a  renewal  j 
and    change    in    the    original    pur- 


pose of  the  two  debating  societies]  in    the    library    by    the 
on   campus.  and  the  two  societies." 


Appealing  for  a  change  in  the 
issues  which  the  two  debating  so- 
cieties engage  in.  House  called 
for  "a  new  fellowship  which  will 
produce  a  mutual  emulation  and 
discipline,  and  an  incalcuable  in- 
fluence on  education." 

Following  the  speeches.  Di 
President  Stan  Shaw  announced 
that  a  petition  will  be  circulated 
around  to  the  student  body,  urg- 
ing the  North  Carolina  General 
Assembly  to  readdress  itself  to 
the  obligations  of  the  University 
Library. 

The  petition  will  specifically 
"implore  the  legislators  to  realize 
its  obli;<(atial.'i  in  providing  the 
minimum  necessities  for  a  pro- 
gressive and  forward  looking  H- 
■;  J»rary  program  which  is  the  basis 
for   any   L'ni versify." 

Dr.  Horn  endorsed  the  Di's  pe- 
tition saying.  "I  think  that  the 
petition  is  a  good  thing;  it  will  be 
a  strong  move  if  it  is  signed  by 
most  of  the  student  body." 

Speaking  of  the  connection  be- 
tween the  two  debating  societies 
and  the  Librar\'.  Dr.  Horn  said 
that  there  has  always  been  "a 
warm  tradition  of  interest  shown 
students 


Y  Leadership  Program  Has 
Session  For  Men,  Women 


Chapel  Hill  weather  is  expected 
to  return  to  its  traditional  normal 
today. 

The  weather  outlook  is  rain  early 
in  the  day  and  increasing  cold, 
Raleigh-Durham  Airport  said  yc-s- 
Raleighg-Durham  Airport  said  yes- 
terday. 


Professor  Hasn't  Quit  In  Protest 
Over  Ackland  Art  Museum  Architecture 


The  second  session  of  the  current 
Y  Leadership  and  Orientation  Pro- 
grams was  held  for  men  and  wo- 
men last  night  in  the  Library  As- 
sembly Room. 


brary     Assembly     Room.     Martha    Student    Body,    according    to    Miss 
Richardson,      president      of      the    Aldridge. 

YWCA,  will  introduce  the  present '     The  current  leadership  programs 
cabinet  and  explain  their  jobs. 


The     purpose     of     the     Student    terested  in  the  Y  and  interested  in 

It  was  the  second  session  for  wo-   Christian  Association  movement  is  '  helping   in   carrying  out   the   pur- 
men  and  pos.-;bly  the  only  one  for    to-  install   Chri^vian  ideals  in   the   pose  and  program  of  the  Y. 
men. 

The  purpose  of  these  program 
is  to  acquaint  non  seniors  with  the 
W  its  history  and  purpose,  its  pro- 
gram, and  the  purposes  behind  the 
program,  according  to  Jackie  Al- 
dridge. 

Larkin  Kirkman  and  Jackie  Al- 
dridge, co-chairmen  of  the  YWCA 
Leadership  and  Orientation  Pro- 
gram, directed  the  session  last 
night  dealing  with  the  purpose  of 
the  Y  and  its  program. 

The  principal  topics  of  discuss- 
ion were  whether  the  cabinet  and 
executive  officers  have  met  the  Y's 
spurposes;  whether  the  programs 
have  been  wasted  time  and  energy; 
has  the  Y  program  failed;  has  the 
"Y  lived  up  to  its  purpose  or  4ias 
it  reached  the  sfige  of  being  just 
a  place  for  a  cup  of  coffee  and  a 
newspaper;  hav*  the  Y's  purposes 
been  effective  in  carrying  over  to 
the  remainder  of  the  campus. 

Nola  Hatten  was  in  charge  of 
the  first  Y  Leadership  Program. 
She  explained  the  history  and  back- 
ground of  the  Y. 

The  third  and  last  program  will 
be  held  Feb.  25  at  4  p.m.  in  the  Li- 


A  cooler  air  mass  moving  m 
from  the  Northwest  brought  tem- 
peratures down  to  the  upper  SO's 
Monday  night,  with  an  expected 
high  today  in  the  low  50"s.  The 
midday    temperature    for    Monday 

are  being  conducted  for  people  in-   ^^^  ^^' 


Chancellor  Robert  B.  House  sJfld 
yesterday  that  Professor  John  All- 
cott  has  not  "resigned  in  protest" 
his  position  as  chairman  of  the 
UNC  Art  Department  becau.se  of 
the  architecture  of  the  new  Ack- 
land Ar^t  Museum  in  Chapel  Hill. 

Hou..v''s  statement  was  in  reply 
to  an  article  appearing  in  yestcr- 


days  Raleigh  News  and  Observer, 
in  which  Dr.  Joseph  L.  Cain,  head 
of  the  Art  Department  at  Rhode 
Island,  said  Dr.  Allcott  had  told 
him  he  was  resigning  from  his  po- 
sition in  protest  of  the  Williams- 
burg-style  architecture  which  has 
been  adopted  for  the  new  museum. 


House's  statement,  anci  p:  inted  out 
other  inaccuraciCo-  regarding  a  con 
sulation  held  between  himself  and 
Cain  in  Chapel  Hill  last  Saturday, 
and  reported  in  a  newspaper  in- 
terview with  Cain. 


Allcott  pointed  out  that  Dr.  Cain 
was  probably  referring  to  the  re- 
signation of  the  chairman  of  an- 
other art  department  at  Wheaton 
College  in  Massachusetts  in  1938. 
Reference  to   that  resignation  wa.s 


"Apparently     he    misunderstood    made  by  Cain  in  the  conversation 
some  of  the  things  I  said,'"  Allcott    between   Cain  and  .\Jlcutt.  Allcott 


Allcott       affirmed       Chancellor    stated. 


The  Wednesday  forecast  is  part- 
ly cloudy  and  cooler  with  rain 
Wednesday  night. 


LARKIN  KIRKMAN  AND  JACKIE  ALORIOGE 

•  .  .  Y  leadership  heads 


Technician's 
Photographs 
Are  Published 

Pat  Cook,  a  student  technician 
at  the  University  of  North  Caro- 
lina Memorial  Hospital,  has  priae- 
winning  photographs  featured  in 
the  fifth  isue  of  "American  Illus- 
trated," a  magazine  publication  of 
the  U.  S.  Information  Agency. 

The  photos  ^-how  the  delicate  in- 
ternal geometry  of  various  kinds 
of  shells  belonging  to  several  sea 
creatures,  namely:  Chambered 
Cautilus,  Sea  Horse,  Cowrie,  Sand 
Dollar,  Land  Snajl,  and  Top  Shell. 

Mr.  Cook  worked  six  weeks  in 
obtaining  the  photographs. 

"America  Illustrated"  is  a  Rus- 
sian Language  magazine  which  is 
printed  by  the  U.  S.  I.  A.  for  dis- 
tribution in„-ide  the  Soviet  Union. 
Each  month,  50,000  copies  are  sold 
at  news  stands  located  in  80  Soviet 
cities. 


ACKLAND  MUSEUM 

wp  to  its  windows  m  brick  and  controvers-y 


_-a. 


a!    J  pointed  out  that  Cain,  who  is 

I  visiting    art    schools    all    over  the 

j  country,   misquoted    him    in   reler- 

ence  to  certain     plans  .sent  to  the 

}  Chancellor.'" 

I      "I  i^ever  made  any  plans  for  the 

building,"  Allcott  .said.  "Mr.    Cain 

'  is  very  much  interested  in  new  art 

buildings,    and    I    showed    him    a 

study  I  had  made  of  them.  " 

"Cain  asked  if  the  University 
had  seen  this.  I  said  I  sent  it  to 
the  Chancellor  and  he  transmitted 
it  to  the  Buildings  and  Groumii 
Committee." 

The  News  and  Observer  article 

also  quoted  Prof.  Allcott  as  saying 

h?  had  seen  President  Friday  about 

the    plans    and    that    Friday    said 

.  "nothing  could  be  done.'"  Chancel- 

j  lor  House  made  four  points: 

I       1)   The   plans   for   the   new   mu- 

j  seum  have  been  arrived  at  by  con- 

I  ferences    with    many    people,    and 

finally    approved    by    the    trustees 

of  the  Ackland  bequest. 

2)  Prof.  Allcott  ha-  not  resigned 
as  department  chairman. 

3)  At  Allcott's  own  request,  he 
will  devote  his  entire  attention  to 
teaching  and  art  research  as  soon 
as  the  University  can  expand  its 
art  departmet.  The  University  i.s 
seeking  a   new  chairman. 

4)  It  is  not  at  all  unusual  that  u 
department  chairman  will  ask  to 
be  relieved  of  his  duties  in  order 
to  devote  more  attention  to  teach 
ing  and  research  a^-  Allcott  hai 
done. 


f.-/ 


,f 


^AGC  rwo 


TH6  OA!LY  TAR  HEBv 


TUESDAY,  FEBRUARY  ^%  1957 


The  Wesley  Weekend: 
It  CouW  Turn  Out  Helpful 

Stiultnts  arc  pitttN   imi\t'isallv  dismrbed  aI)oiit  religion. 

Ask  ;m\  ol  tlic  Fhilosoj^liy  Dept.  piolevsois  who  teach  (omscs  in  tlic 
priests.  iahl)is  and  anvohc  you  meet  on  the  street— most  ol  them  will 
;.  lice  that  religion  and  (iod  {(imprise  a  very  toudiy.  ajid  very  ct)ntro- 
philosophy  oj  religion.  .Vsk  anxone  in  the  Religion  l)c|)t.  .Ask  ministers. 
\ersial,  sidjject. 


The  discussion   that  (amc   uj)  on 
example    ol     the     unsteadiness    ol 

college-age   people  al)oiit  (»od. 

*        *       « 

Therefore,  we  aie  very 'happy  to 
see  the  coining  ot  Wesley  \Veek- 
cnd.  The  weekend  opens  next  Sat- 
in day  at  the  l'ni\ersity  .Methodist 
Church. 

W'e    expected    a    run-ol-ilic-mill 

retreat"     that     included     \arious 

talks  and  speeches  by  people  who 

are  jjine  of  their  (iod.   \'ery   litt'e 

(omes  of  such    meetings. 

Uut  the  weekend  olfers  lai 
more  than  that.  Accord iiig  to  its 
sponsors,  there  will  be  coffee-ty}:e 
bull  sessions  all  o\er  the  camp,:s. 
The  meeting  wiU  l)e  open  to  ail 
students—  not    just     Methodist.s. 

We  hojje  the  meeting  will  c»)n~ 
sist  more  of  students'  airing  their 
problems  than  anvthing  else,  sup- 
j)lemented  bv  short  inter\als  ol 
adxice  from  more  learned  people 
who  understand  students"  prob- 
lems and  have  dealt  with  them 
before. 

The  pvciblem  of  understanding 
(iod  personalK  is  a  huge  prob'ein. 
It  is  almost  too  huge  for  an  a\ei- 
age  college  student  to  take  on. 
AVe  liope  the  Weslev  Weekend  A\il! 
help   lighten    the   load. 


this   page  se\eral   weeks  iig<^)  is  one 

Miracles 
Happen, 
Even  Here 

K\er\  oiue  in  a  while  a  sort-of- 
mir.icle  happens  on  the  avatleuii( 
front. 

One  happened  the  other  day. 
when  a  research  scientist's  dream 
(ame  true.  Dr.  (iharles  N.  Reille\, 
,  ;alvti(al  chemist.  re(ei\ed  .S7.500 
Irom  the  Research  Corp..  a  na- 
tional foundation. 

There  was  rmlv  one  tatch:  Fhe 
grant  had  no  siring  attached.  l)i . 
Reillev  tan  spend  the  money  in 
anv  wav  he  wants,  so  long  as  it 
promotes  iese;rcii. 

The  I'niversitv  and  Dr.  Reillex 
were  verv  lortunate  to  receive 
suih  an  honor.  The  grant  should 
gi\e  an  idea  li\  someone  who 
wants  to  helj)  the  I'niversitv  and 
liie  state,  too:  Whv  not  set  up  a 
foundation,  or  a  re\(>l\ing  trust  ol 
some  sort,  to  do  the  >aine  thing  on 
;i   wider  basis? 


Lenoir  Workers  Need  Raise 


riie  .Student  Legislature  this 
week  will  receive  three  ies(^liuions 
and  one  bill  that  deserxe  passing. 

riie  measures  arc: 

1.  .\  bill  to  establish  a  (onnnit- 
tec  to  effect  negotiatioiis  between 
l.enoir  Hall  officials  and  seli-hel}) 
students  "on  the  matter  of  \u\ 
me 
(btu.ns. 


sdtnts    "on    the    matter   of    |\iv- 
*nt   of  wages  and   woiking  tffiii- 


1'.  A  resolution  askitrg  the  deati 
of  Avonien  to  gixe  -f«:\shman  and 
sopliomore  innsing  students  the 
same  curlew  hours  as  the  othei 
tocfis. 

'{.     .\    rest)lution     notilving  the 

State    (.eneral    .\ssemblv    that  the 

Student      Legislature     laxors  the 

seH-liquidatiijg    housing    plan  lor 
man  ied  students. 

I.  .\  lesolmion  telling  campus 
organiza'tions  that  thev  can't  go 
tunning  to  the  Student  Legisla- 
ture when  thev  run   into  debt. 

Of  the  bate!  .  the  resolution 
aboiu  married  students'  housing 
and  the  bill  about  Lenoir  Hall 
workers  arc.  in  our  (jpinion.  the 
most  important. 

The  importance  of  nnnied  stu- 
dents' ^housing  in  Cihanel  Hifl  is 
f)bvious.  It  would  l)e  g(»od  to  see 
the  Student  legislature  vote 
unanimously  to  back  the  sell- 
litjuidation  project.  Sui  h  ;;;tion. 
((jupled    w'ith    a    raft    of    petitions 


The  Daily  Tar  Heel 

The  official  itudent  pulilieaiiun  uf  ib<. 
Publications  Board  ol  the  I'niveisitv  nl 
North  Carolina,  where  it  is  publisheri 
daily  except  Monday  and  examinatiur 
and  vacation  periods  an.-i  siininier  ierm> 
Entered  as  second  cias.s  mattei  in  tht 
post  office  in  Chaprl  Hill.  .\  C,  undci 
the  Act  ol  March  8,  18TU  ,  Suthscriptinc 
rates:  mailed,  $4  per  year.  S2  rio  ^  >vme* 
t€r;  delivered.  $6  a  year.  %:i  Mi  ^  «em«'» 
ter. 


RHitnr 

.  FRED  POUI.Enr.f 

Managing  Editor  _ 

_  CHARLIE  SLO.AN 

News  Editor  

NANCY   HILL 

Bu.'iness  Manager  . 

__   BILL  BOB  PLKI 

SpoJ-rs  Editor      .     - 

_  _      LARRY  CHEFF 

EDITORI.AL'  STAFF  -  W.iodv  .Srar* 
Frank  Crowther,  David  Mundy,  Cort 
land   Edwards. 


BUSINIriSi*  STAFF— Ro.sa  Muure,  Jobna; 
Whitaker.   Dick  Leavitt. 


SPORTS    STAFF:    Dave    Wible,   Stewart 
Bird,  lion   Miliiagn. 

Subscription  .Manager Dale  Staley 

Advertising  Manager Fred  KatziP 

Circulation   Manager      Charlie  Holt 

As.sistant  Sports  Editor  Bill  King 


Staff  I'hutographtjr 
Lii>iariaii        .    .-    ,-. 


Norman  Kantui 
Sue  Gishner 


Proof  Reader    ,  Guy  Ellis 

Night  News  Editor  Wally  Kuralt 

Night  Editor Manley  Springs 


signed  bv  both  married  and  single 
studenis,  iiia\  help  convince  the 
C.eneril  .\sseinbly  of  the  crying 
need   for  housing — right  now. 

I.enoii  Hall  workers  have  had 
a  meager  existent  e  for  many  years. 
riiev  work  aboin  two  and  one- 
1  '!  hours  a  da\  at  mealtimes,  and 
ihev  get  .Si. 90  worth  of  Lenoir 
Hall    lood   as   payment. 

Student  .\id  Office  people  fig- 
ure this  amounts  to  about  73  cents 
an  lioiu'. 

71f  the  state  rould  be  -Imjug+^t 
under  inteistate  (Dinmerce  regu- 
i.itions.  the  I'lnxersity  would  have 

to  j)ay  a  dollar  an  hour.) 

*        *        * 

This  is  a  ridicidous  figure  to 
be  paying  student  workers  who 
must   work   such   fn"'Cturtd  hours. 

Wi  the  I'niveisity  has  student 
workers  caught  in  a  bind.  If  thev 
want  emplovment  on  the  campus 
—in  the  I.ibrarv.  in  the  eating 
places  and  in  the  offices  -  they 
must  work  for  the  pittaiue  the 
rni\etsity   pays. 

We  hope  the  bill  i>asses,  but  we 
ui^h  theic  would  be  one  amend- 
meni  to  it.  The  bill,  as  it  now 
rviads.  talis  for  ;■.  report  from  the 
pn-posed  (ommitiee  three  weeks 
frcm  M.jssage  date. 

^\  hv  not  make  the  date  two 
weeks  heme?  The  issue  shoidd  be 
\\(Mketl  ()n.  worked  on  hard,  and 
it  siiould  reuK.in  in  tlie  students' 
tniuds.  I'o  wait  three  weeks 
w.mKl  be  to  invite  putting  oil. 
and  we  all  know  what  happens 
whiii  Mi(  h  thin.;s  ate  allowed  tc 
gaiiui    (hist. 

Television: 
On  Slate 
Fgr  Today 

Anthony  Wolff 

vVt  ;{  p.m.  on  Cihannel   11  theie's' 
another  presentatiofT  which  should 
aupcd    to    file    Shakespearians    on 
iIk:  (anrnis. 

It's  -ihc  s'-d'iid  h  ill  ol  Sir 
I  at  net  ue  OliAier's  fiinons  M)|'^ 
film    prodiution    of    'Ha' -let." 

Fcr    t!ir)s-'    who    h  t\e  1  ast    a 

\ague  knowledge  of  the  plot,  com- 
ing in  .the  middle  should  pro\c 
onlv  mildly  and  temporarily  dis- 
( one  citing.  This  film  was  widely 
atdainied  when  it  fii'-t  appeared 
iiui]  is  now  considered  by  many 
to  be  something  of  a  landmark  in 
mo\ie  production.  It  should  be  a 
lifesaver  for  those  who  find  read- 
ing the  play  a  chore. 

For  tliose'  who  like  him,  Phil 
Silvers  continues  his  weekly  shan- 
nanigans  on  Channel  2  at  8  p.m. 
Ihis  week's  episode  concerns  a 
speed-up  at  the  recruiting  center. 
In  the  process,  a  chimpanzee 
comes  close  to  joining  the  ranks. 
Sounds  a  wee  bit  raucous  to  me. 


What  Is  All  This  Talk  About? 
Exum  Writes  On  The  Honor  System 


JIM  EXUM 

.  .  .  tlie  rules 

• 

Bditor 
Can  Go 
To  Hell 


Jim  Exuni 

C'Jluinnaii,  Men  .\  Cvuncil 

I  received  a  letter  the  other  day  jigned  "an 
admirer,"  which  I  greatly  appreciated  because  of 
its  Sincerely  of  interest  in  our  honor  system.  Then, 
too,  it  gives  me  the  opportunity  to  say  some  things 
about  tlie  system  which  evidently  need  saying. 

The  core  of  the  letter  consisted  of  a  .series  of 
oui^sfions:  "  'What  i.;  the  b  nor  system,  and  (what) 
is  its  value?  .  .  .  Does  evcr>-  case  have  to  be  brought 
before  the  council  by  someone  else  or  can  the 
council  act  on  its  own  when  it  has  evidence  to  merit 
such.'.  Does  tne  dule  against  plagiarism  only  apply 
in  the  classroom  or  does  it  apply  throughout  the 
student  life  on  campus?  Doe.,  the  rule  against  lying 
and  gambling,  not  at  all  enforced,  only  apply  when 
an  instructor  is  the  witness  and  reports  the  vio- 
lation?" 

Probably  the  most  important  aspect  of  any  de- 
finition of  the  h  nor  system  is  that  it  is  a  self- 
imposed  system  of  student  control.  The  student.-.' 
wiy   back   in    1875   were    granted   the   authority   to 


Editor: 


In  your  anti-Tatum  campaign 
do  you  have  any  facts  or  are  you 
as  previously  basing  it  on  un- 
founded rumors'* 

If  you  have  any  information 
of  wrong  doings  by  the  UNC 
Athletic  Dept.  send  your  facts 
to  the  NCAA,  and  if  you  don't, 
just  shut  up. 

In  your  latest  editorial  you 
speak  of  our  coaches  and  say 
"They  have  been  known  to  invite 
prospective  athletes  to  liquor-and- 
womcn  parties,  to  slip  an  occa- 
sional hundred  under  the  table, 
to  miscalculate  on  the  number  of 
training  days  and  similar  practic- 
es." We  inxite  you  to  state  the 
facts  on  just  one  such  infraction 
like  this  at  the  ^niver^Hy  of 
North  Carolina.        ' 

Don't  complain  so  much  about, 
football  players  receiving  scholar- 
ships. Football  is  hard  work;  they 
earn  those  scholarships. 

So  do  the  baskotball  players. 
You   get   paid    (not    much,   but 
still  m6re  than  you  are  worth) 
for    your    work    on    The    Daily 
Tar  Heel,  so  why  shouldn't  the 
athletes    get    an    education    for 
those  long  hours  of  practice? 
We  like  to  watch  college  foot- 
ball whether  we  win  or  loo-e,  we 
like  basketball,  we  like  Coach  Ta- 
tum,  we  like  Coach  McGuire. 

And  if  you  continue  your  rum- 
or-spreading factless  editorials 
you  can  go  to  hell. 

Charles    K.    Capps 
Jimmy  Harwell 
Richard  H.  Smith 
Robert  J.  Price 
James  B.  Wells 

Since  a  lot  of  people  thought 
The  Daily  Tar  Heel  was  accus- 
ing UNC  athletic  officials  of  en- 
gaging in  corrupt  '  practices, 
while  The  Daily  Tar  Heel  ctoes 
not  feel  that  way,  we  htvc  cla- 
rified our  position  on  the  sub- 
ject. See  editorial  last  Friday 
morning.  This  letter  was  dated 
Thursday. 

* 

L'll  Abner 


'"acuity  the  responsibility  for  making  and  enforcing 
♦heir  own  rules  dt  conduct.  No  other  univeroily  sys- 
Leni  i,i  coiiirol  exists  in  areas  where  the  honor  sys- 
tem applies  except  that  perpetrated  by  the  students 
themselves.  The  honor  system,  therefore,  can  nev- 
er work  well  until  students  of  the  modern  genera- 
tion are  willing  to  accept  the  responsibilities  for 
which  our  progeqitor.-  so  successfully  fought. 
VALUE  OF  THE  SYSTEM 

Much  cculd  be  said  about  the  value  of  the  honor 
system.  The  mos^  salicl  value,  though,  is  that  the 
system  is  in  line  with  this  Univer.-ity's  unique  educa- 
tional phioloshipy  that  all  students  (including  the 
freshman)  should  be  treated  as  men  capable  of 
di  •  iplining  themselves,  and  that  students  learn  by 
doing. 

Ernest  Thompson  Seton  once  said.  "Manhood, 
not  scholarship,  is  the  first  aim  of  education."  Cer- 
tainly manhood  is  impossible  in  the  broad  and  true 
sense  without  a  deep  sense  of  honor  and  integrity. 
It  is  the  purpose,  therefore,  of  education  to  incul- 
cate these  principles  into  every  student.  Unless  a 
student  is  given  the  opportunity  to  be  honest  and 


'Man,  You  Must  Be  Out  Of  Your  Mind' 

1  yiSAi 


^■Hfc-riHiJr^il-.V 


.,.;t. 


control  classroom  behavior  'on  quizzes  and  exams 
and  to  try  and  punish  violators  of  their  own  cheat- 
ing regulations. 

They  had  pleaded  for  this  authority  for  many 
years  before  the  Civil  War;  it  was  finally  granted 
in  1875.  It  was  not  until  around  1915,  though,  that 
the  students  began  to  take  responcibility  for  con- 
duct outside  the  class,  namely  a  vague  idea  of  what 
constituted  gentlemanly  conduct. 

In  1926-27,  Student  Body  President  S.  C.  Chap 
pell  said,  "The  honor  system  simply  means  that 
every  man  is  upon  his  honor  to  conduct  himself 
in  a  mahner  to  be  expected  of  a  man  and  to  report 
violations  of  others."  Around  1930  the  sludents  fin- 
ally stated  in  definite  form  the  honor  and  campus 
codes  as  we  know  them  today. 

Thus  the  honor  system  is  that  system  under 
which  the  students  asked  for  and  received  from  the 


•  • 

rely  on  his  own  integrity,  the  most  important  aspect 
of   his   education   is   likely   to  wither   and  die'  from 
lack   of  use. 

The  honor  system,  then,  gives  this  opportunity 
to  every   student.   Not  only  does   it  allow  one  to 
exercise  his  own  honesty  and  thereby  strengthen 
it,  but  the  honor  system  also  helps  develop  within 
a   man   a   sense   of    responsibility  for   the   actions 
of  others,  a  sense  of  responsibility  to  the  group 
of  which  he  is  a  part. 
This  last,  of  courc-o.  is  the   most   difficult  type 
of  responsibility  to  realize  ^nd  accept.  Once  it  be- 
comes a  part  of  the  character,  however,  one  can  be 
sure  he  is  well  on  his  way  toward  manhood. 

In  these  considerations,  then,  lies  the  value  of 
the  honor  system. 

The  an.swer  to  the  third  question  becomes  evi- 
dent when  we  consider  that  the  res-ponsibility  for 


By  A!  Capp 


/ 


HONEST 
ABE  .'.'- 
v^iP  A  SMOKIN'GUN.':^- 

W-VJHAR'S  TH'  O^AP  VORE 
DEAR  VIAMMV'S  GONNiA 
MARRV,  ON  ACCOUNT 
HE  HAllsTT-fiULP.'l'-FAT'-' 


/V^^   ■??- RECKON 


I..  Sl-i' 


(BUT  VOP.E  DEAP  k/iAMMV 
iS-'.'-WlF  A  WEDDlt^J' ALL 
PAID  FO'-IN  ADVANCE.':'' 


-^ -AN' MARKVIN    S/\^'i 
DOKiT  GIVE  NJO  REFUNI)-..'.' 
OH,  WHUT'LLVOP^-  PQV'L 
MAMMV  DO  NOW? 


enforcing  the  honor  system  lies  with  every  student 
who  lives  under  it.  This  means  every  student  at 
the  University,  not  merely  the  president  of  the  stu- 
dent body,  or  the  honor  councils,  but  every  single 
student  from  the  most  exalted  graduating  senior  to 
the  humblest  freshman  (if  any  such  animal  exists 
nowadays).  The  councils,  being  composed  of  ordin- 
ary students  certainly,  have  an  inherent  right  to 
initiate  action  where  honor  code  violailions  seem  ap- 
parent. 

Therule  against  plagiarism  is  mainly  concerned 
with  papers  handed  in  for  classroom  assignments 
and  a  grade,  in  other  words  its  purpose  prinr»arily 
is  to   insure  academic    honesty. 

Since,  however  this  question  was  probably  aimed 
at  a  specific  instance  of  seeming  plagiarism  which 
occured  in  The  Daily  Tar  Heel  .vveral  weeks  ago. 
I  will  add  that  to  plagiarize  publicly  before  all  the 
students  in  the  official  student  publication  is  cer- 
tainly not  in  the  best  spirit  of  the  honor  system, 
especially  since  it  puts  before  the  younger  students 
quite  a  bad  example  of  good  journalism.  The  .stu- 
dent in  question  will  be  properly  investigate'd  and 
dealt  with  according  to  the  disposition  of  the  honor 
council. 
GAMBLING— A  VIOLATION 

A.  for  the  last  inquiry,  let  me  say  that  gambling, 
in  itself,  is  not  now  considered  a  violation  of  the 
honor  systent.  In  the  early  days  of  the  honor  system 
it  was  considered  distinctly  ungentlemanly  to  do  so 
and  was  dealt  with  accordingly  by  the  early  coun 
cils. 

Who  today,  however,  would  consider  a  small 
friendly  poker  game  in  opposition  to  the  code  of  a 
gentleman?  Few%  I  would  guess.  If,  however,  garni 
ling  growa-  all  out  of  proportion  to  its  proper  place, 
ii  it  becomes  a  dishonest,  cutthroat  type  of  thing, 
and  if  it  actually  begins  to  threaten  the  existance 
of  some  students  at  the  University,  certainly  gamb- 
ling then  would  fall  under  the  realm  of  ungentle- 
manly  conduct. 

It  is  really,  you  see  a  matter  of  degree.  Where 
the  line  should  be  drawn  is,  of  course,  decided  by 
the  proper  student  court  in  a  specific  situation. 
Gambling  in  a  general  sense  cannot  be  considered 
a  violation  of  any  code.  In  a  specific  case,  certain 
sorts  of  gambling  may  he  a  violation. 

Again  the  word  '"lying"  covers  a  broad,  sweep- 
ing concept.  To  be  realistic,  we  must  realize  thai 
lying  can  be  of  many  different  sorts.  There  is  the 
little  "white"  lie,  or  better  termed,  the  social  lie 
in  which  use  everyone  should  be  well-versed. 

Certainly  in  the  best  interest  of  all,  one  would 
,not  tell  a  blind  date  how  "stuck"  one  felt  he  was, 
although  this,  indeed,  is  often  the  case.  Nor  would 
you  remark  to  your  hostess  how  horribly  greasy 
were  her  French  fried  potatoes,  although  yev 
know  you'll  get  indigestion  from  eating  them. 

At  the  other  extreme  there  are  those  lies  told 
with  intended  malice  and  forethought  which  do  real 
harm  to  the  people  involved.  Such  types  are  lying 
about  your  real  name  when  checking  out  library 
books.  This  causes  endless  worry  and  fret  to  libr- 
arians a.?  well  as  encouraging  the  theft  of  many 
books.  Such  lies  are  obviously  violations  of  the 
honor  code. 

Again,  however,  the  line  must  be  drawn  by  the 
student  judiciary  acting  in  a  specific  case.  No  gen 
eralization  about  lying,  as  such,  can  be  made. 

Beyond  these  considerations,  any  student  may 
report  any  action  which  to  him  seems  a  violation  of 
the  honor  system.  The  decf^aon,  of  course,  rests  with 
the  councils.  An  instructor  doesn't  have  to  witness 
anything.  In  fact,  the  responsibility  for  reporting 
violations  doesn't  rest  with  the  faculty  at  all,  al- 
though in  cases  where  they  may  be  suspicious  01 
cheating,  it  is  their  duty  to  let  the  honor  council 
decide  the  case. 

They  ^'hould  not  dock  grades  or  take  any  action 
until  their  suspicion  has  been  confirmed  or  denied 
by  the  student  court.  It  cannot  be  emphasized 
enough  that  the  responsibility  for  reporting  violatonv 
of  the  honor  system  lies  with  the  students,  them 
sfeives;  not  with  officers  of  the  student  body  or  even 
the  student  courts,  but  with  every  single  member  of 
the  student  body. 

I   hope  this  answers  the  questions  of  "an  ad- 
mirer." If  you  would  like  to  talk  at  length  with 
me  about  these  nMtt«rs,  please  let  me  know. 
ONE   EXCEPTION   TO   LETTER 

I  wQuld  like  to  take  exception,  however,  to  one 
statement  made  in  the  letter.  It  reads  "The  honor 
code'  can  and  will  only  be  what  you  the  chairman 
of  the  Honor  Council  make  it  while  you  are  its  ci 
capitan.'  ' 

The  truth  is  that  each  of  us  here  at  Carolina  is 
•el  capitan'  of  our  honor  system.  It  can  be  no  mo: : 
that  what  we  make  of  it.  I,  as  chairman  of  the  .Men  .>^ 
Conucil,  together  with  the  council,  all  elected  rep- 
resentatives of  the  student  body,  must  try  and  pun 
ish  violators  of  the  system.  It  is  also  the  councils 
duty  to  promote  the  general  worth  of  the  svstem 
in  the  minds  of  the  students. 

I,  as  a  student,  have  the  responsibility  not  fro 
.e,  cheat,  nor  steal;  to  act  a,  a  gentleman,  and 
to  report  those  v»rho  in  my  eyes  are  not  so  doing. 

The  primary  purpose  of  the  honor  sysem.  more- 
over, is  not  to  try  and  punish  violators  but  to  in- 
culcate a  sense  of  honor,  to  educate  students  in 
he  value  of  honesty,  by  giving  them  the  opportuni- 
ty to  be  honest.  Not  the  work  of  the  councils  in 
punishing  violaJors,  therefore,  but  the  work  of  the 
student.,  in  living  up  to  the  demands  of  the  honor 
system  is  the  important  consideraUon 

The  honor  system,  then,  will  forever  be  not  what 
or  the  councils  make  of  it,  but  rather  no  more  or 
less  that  we,  the  students,  can  make  it  mean. 

Ban  Dictionaries 

The  Communist  government  in  Hungarv  has 
found  a  new  way  of  striking  back  at  Hungarian  refu 
gees-by  cutting  off  their  dictionaries'.  A  Budape-t 
newspaper  reports  that  the  regime's  national  bank 
has  decided  that  Hungarian-English,  Hungarian 
French,  and  Hungarian-German  dictionarie-s  badlv 
needed  by  refugees  learning  a  new  language,  will  no 
longer  be  sold  for  shipment  abroad  — UNCs  Li- 
brary Notes,  published  by  the  Wilson  Librarv  staff 


i 


Fror 

•  \Al 

•  N| 

•  c| 

f    V 

311 


D 

1 

10 


12 

13 
14 

15  I 

16  1 
IT 
18J 
IS*. 
23 
24| 

3ui 


341 


U 


9,  1957 


student 

|udent   al 

the  stu- 

y  single 

senior  to 

|al  exists 

)f  ordin- 

right   to 

|seem  ap- 

tcerned 
inmcnts 
rinurily 

|ly  aimed 

which 

beks  ago. 

\c  all  the 

is  cer- 

system. 

students 

I  The  stu- 

late'd  and 

Ihe  honor 


[lanibling, 
►n  of  the 
|>r  system 

to   do   HO 

riy  coun- 

a  small 
code  of  a 
Jr.  gamb 

|er  place, 

lof  thing. 

lexistance 
ily  gamb- 

[uQgentle- 

Where 
fcided  by 
Isituatioi). 
)n3'idered 

certain 

sweep- 
ilize  that 
Ire  is  the 
bocial   lie 
Irsed. 
he  would 
he  was, 
>r  would 
■y  greasy 
lugh    y»u 
1  them. 

lies  told 
^h  do  real 
(are  lying 
Jt  library 
^t  to  lihr- 
of  many 
ks    of    the 

^Ti  by  the 
No  gen- 
kade. 

lent  may 
lolatlon  of 

rests  with 
to  witness 
i  reporting 

It   all,  al- 

>icious  of 
^r  council 

kny  action 
lor  denied 

iphasized 
violators 

Its,  them- 
fy  or  even 

lember  of 

*'»n  ad- 
■th  with 


r,  to  one 
he  honor 
chairman 
are  its  "el 

Carolina  is 
no  more 
the  Mens 
ected  rep- 
and  pun- 
council's 
he  system 

ty  not  to 
man,  and 
doin9. 

jem,  more- 
but  to  in- 

tudents  in 
opportuni- 

rouncils  in 

ork  of  the 
the  honor 

le  not  what 
10  more  or 
mean. 

ingary  has 
Sarian  refu- 
K  Budapest 
lional  bank 
I  Hungarian- 
Uries,  badly 
Bge,  will  no 
-UNCs  Li- 
brary staff. 


TUESDAY,  FEBRUARY  19,   1957 


THE  DAILY  TAX  HEEL 


FAGi  THREE 


In  Cast  Of  'Brigadoon' 

Above  are  Gene  Strassler,  John  Sneden  and  BIynn  Dunning  in  a  scene  from  the  forthcoming  Caro- 
hna    Playmakers   production    of   'Brlgadoon.'    Tickets  for  the  musical  go  on  sale  tomorrow  at  Ledbetter- 
Pickard  and  the   Playmaker's  business  office. 


RELAX     BEHIND     DRIVERS     PROUD 
OF    THEIR     SAFETY     RECORDS... 

QoTRAILWAYS 

.-opecialists  in  Triendiy 
irst -class  -travel  ! 


92  Student 

(Coniinued  from  Page  1) 

James  J.  Bynum,  Raleigh,  assisted 
by  Cnidr.  J.  K.  Bryant,  Hkin;  Lt. 
Cmdr.  Mebane  Pritchett,  Lenoir; 
Lt.  W.  S.  Pate,  Pikeville;  Lt.  Gor- 
don R.  Brown,  Durham:  and  Lt. 
(jg)  J.  M.  Ludwig,  New  Orleans, 
La.; 

Color  guard  members  are  Mau- 
rice Glatzer,  Kensington,  Md.;  Tel- 
fair Mahaffy,  Coral  Gables,  Fia.; 
Walter  T.  Rose.  South  Miami.  Fla.. 
and  G.  C.  Pridgen.  Sharpsburg,  all 
of  petty  officer  rank. 

Cadet  Lt.  C.  Stuart  Dawson  of 
Charleston.  S.  C.  commands  the 
Drum  and  Bugle  Corps,  for  which 
William  C.  Roth  of  EUkin  is  drum 

:  major  and  E.  L.  Houa-e  Jr.  of  Lin- 

I  colnton  is  petty  officer. 

The  Drill  Team  officers,  com- 
manded by  Lt.  Walter  E.  Barbee  of 
Durham,  include  Edward  W.  But- ' 

I  chart,  Greensboro;  Henry  J.  Som-  ! 


^. 


1-way 
$7  10 

S5.35 

$9.65 


J'railways  goes  THRU  to  most  destinations! 

From  CHAPEL  HILL  to:    • 

•  WASHINGTON  -   ' 

Thru-Liner  (no  change)  express  service  daily 

•  NORFOLK 

7  Departures  daily 

•  CHATTANOOGA 

5  Departures  daily  including  2  Thru-Liners 

•  WILMINGTON  $4.25 

Daily  Thru-Liner  service  (plus  tax) 

UNION  BUS  STATION 

311  W.  FRANKLIN  ST.  — :—  PHONE  4281 

Ask  shippers  to  send  package  express  to  you  by 
Trailways.  It's  faster.  Buses  Chartered  for  trips 
anywhere — any  time. 


TRAILWAYS 

The  route  of  the  Thru-Liners' 


DAILY    CROSSWORD 


ACROSS 

1.  Insensible 
state 

S.  Sudan 
gazelle 

9.  Shade  of  red 
10.  Egg- 
shaped 
figures 

12.  Harangue 

13.  Combine 

14.  Exclusively 
13.  Aviator 

16.  Greek  letter   20.  Measure 

17.  Footed  vaae  (Chin.) 

18.  Place 


5.  Rules 
arbitrarily 

6.  Affirm 

7.  School  

(pi.) 

8.  Seaweed 
(pi.) 

9.  Barrel- 
maker 

11.  Dispatched 
15.  Land 

measures 
17.  Fen  marks 


19.  Obscures 

23.  City  (FY.) 

24.  Poem 
28.  Repeated 
30.  Goddess  of 

harvests 
(It.) 

33.  Property 
(I-) 

34.  Music 
note 

35.  Army  froup 
37.  Girl's  name 

39.  In  a 
vertical 
hne  (Naut.) 

40.  Slow 
(music) 

41.  Immense 

42.  aty  (Ohio) 

43.  Dregs 

44.  Not  Uvingr 

DOWN 
1.  Room 

decoration 
2  Verbal 

3.  Native 
servant 
(Ind.) 

4.  Malt 


21.  Wurttem- 
berg 
measure 

22.  Resort 


25.  Old 
Test- 
a- 
ment 
(abbr.) 

26.  Child 
of 

a 

god 

(myth.) 

27.  Famous 
inventor 

29.  Lam- 
prey 

30.  Pre-      ' 
cious 
stone 

31. 

States 


□;:][:iOU    USJllSiia 

IS     aacawaa 


Yesterday'*  AB«w«r 

32.  Cubic 
meter 

36.  Storm 

37.  Body  of     ' 
water  *. 

38.  Odd  (Scot.) 
40.  Youth 


Death 

(Contitmed  )ioui  page  1) 
could    put    your    finger    on."    He 
said   they   "just   added   to   his  de- 
pression." 

Active    pallbearers    at    the    fu- 
neral  were  Gordon   Rosser.   John 
Stinespring,   John    S.    Coman    and 
Richard    T.    Chesson,    all    of    Dur- 
ham; Weaver  and  R.  L.  Powler  Jr. 
of   Chapel    HilU    R.   L.   Brooks  of 
Grensboro   and   C.    K.   Brooks   Jr. 
of  Richmond.  Va. 
j      Fowler    was    a    native    of    Dur- 
j  ham   and  bad   lived   there   all   his 
;  life.  He  attended  the  Durham  city 
i  schools   and    was   graduated    from 
I  Durham     High     School     in     1954  ' 
where  he  had  been  a  member  of  ; 
the  National  Honor  Society. 

After  graduation.  Fowler";  a 
member  of  Duke  Memorial  Meth- 
odist Church,  entered  the  Uni- 
versity. 

He  served  last  year  as  program 
chairman  of  the  International 
Relations  Council.  He  also  chair- 
ed a  council  for  better  student 
government,  a  group  which 
sprang  up  last  year  during  the 
recall  election  of  former  DaUy 
Tar  Heel  co-editors  Louis  Kraalr 
and  Ed  Yoder.  He  was  a  history 
ma.jor  in  the  college  of  arts  and 
sciences. 

Surviving,  in  addition  to  his 
parents,  are  four  brothers.  Marion 
B.  Fowler  of  Durham.  William  H- 
Fowler  of  Chapel  Hill,  Thomas 
D.  Fowler  of  the  Air  Force,  sta- 
tioned at  Pope  AFB  and  Dapiel 
G.  Fowler,  his  twin  brother,  at 
UNC; 

One  sister.  Mrs.  Gilbert  M. 
Farrior  of  MarjviUe,  Tenn.  and. 
several    nieces   and   nephews. 


Covering  The  Campus 


Psychologist 
Will  Speak 
Here  Tonight 


Dr.    W.    G.    Dahlstrom.    of    the 

Women's      College,      Oreenaboro, 

Dcpt.    of    Psychology    will    speak 

here    tonight    at    8:30    on     '"Die 

Psychological     Effects     of     Tran- 

quilizing  Drugs."  j 

c„  ,.      .  u      11      T^       T-    ,.1.      I      D"*-  DahLstrom  will  be  sponsor- 
Smith.    AsheviUe;    Don    E.    Miller,    ed  here  by.  Pa  Chi. 


mer,    Aberdeen,    Md.;    Canie    B. 


;  Cedar   Rapids, -Iowa;    and   Chester 
'  C.  Davis,  Habana,  Cuba. 
j      Other  North   Carolinians  among 
i  the  student  .pfficeis.  ace  G.  Patrick 

Hunter  Jr.,  John  B.  Roberts  and 
I  EdmtInd   D.    M.    Schachncr,   all    of 

Charlotte;   Charles   K.   Massey   Jr.. 

David  M.  Connor  and  Eli  N.  Evans, 

Durham;     Thomas     Hugh     Upton, 

Donald  Steine,  Clarence  E.  Smith 
j  Jr.  and  Charles  F.  Rouse,. Raleigh. 
I  &vin  E.  Lampert,  C.  Stedman 
i  Morris,  Charlie  V.  Stevens  and 
!  James  R.  McCartney  ID,  Salisbury;. 

Thomas  E.  Capps  and  Arthur  D. 
:  John,  Wilmington;  William  H.  Red- 
j  ding,  Asheboro",  William  K.  Wible, 

Greensboro;  Clarl  A.  Barrington  Jr., 
I  Fayetteville;  Paul  Fulton  Jr.,  Wal- 
j  nut    Cove;   John   N.    Blackweldcr, 
I  Statesville. 
'     Fred  G.  Eidson,  Elkin;  William 

F.  Snell  and  Donald  E.  BuUard, 
!  Winston-Salem;  Rupert  Hines  Jr., 
j  Kinston;  George  B.  Cashwcll  and 
j  James  L.  Merritt,  Mt.  Airy;  Wil- 
I  liam  R.  Rand,  Wilson;  William  N. 
j  Keever,  Hitidenite;  David  C.  Jliven- 
:  bank,  Lexington;  John  J.  Murphy 
I  Jr.,  Hamlet;  Jack  F.  Lewis,  High 
{  Point;  Samuel  F.  Wells,  Reidsvillt; 
i  Robert  L.  Fowler  Jr.,  Chapel  Hill; 
j  Donald  W.  Nichols,  Neuse;  James 

T.  Cheatham  HI,  Greenville;  Stan- 
I  ley  G.  Cook,  Pinehurst;  Harold  D. 
j  Shepherd,  N.  Wilkesboro;  and 
1  Robert  L.  Staplcton,  Gastonia. 


A     I5-minute    color-sound    film 
comparing    the    effects    of  4)ento- 
barbital     and     reserpine     on     the  j 
Phe.sus   monkey   will    prtceefl   Dr. 
Dahlstrom's  address.  -•     —     j 


CLASSIBEDS 


.5  ROOM  BRICK  HOUSE.  3  BED 
rooms,  all  modem  conveniences. 
3  miles  on  Old  86  Hyway.  Stove 
and  Frigedaire  furnished.  Call 
Fred  Katzin  after  6:00.  8-9025. 

NEWSPAPER  WOMAN' WANTED: 
Young  woman  for  'newspaper 
job  now  or  on  graduation;  need 
not  necessarily  have  studied 
journalism.  Aut  desire  a  per- 
son interested  in  North  Carolina 
community  life  who  can  write 
acceptably;  general  reporting, 
with  emphasis  on  women's  ac- 
tivities at  home  and  in  commun- 
ity; semi-weekly  in  lively  East- 
ern North  CaroUna  town  of  5,- 
000,  with  reportorial  staff  of 
three  and  modern  equiptment 
and  air  -  conditioned  offices. 
^  Write  and  will  interview.  Ad- 
dress, Editor.  Herald.  Ahoskie. 
N.  C. 


LAW  WIVES 

Law  Wives  Assn.  will  meet  Wed- 
nesday at   8  p.m.   in   the  Victory 
Village  nursery. 


FOR  SALE:  RUGER  SINGLE-SIX 
.22  caliber.  Contact  Jim  Potter 
at  11€  King  St.  or  Phone  8089-3. 


WANTED  —  SOMEONE  WHO  IS 
interested  in  doing  advertising 
work.  No  experience  necessary, 
but  preferred.  Contact  Fred  Kat- 
zin, The  Daily  Tar  Heel,  between 
1:00  and  5:00  p.m. 


beverage 


To  The  Yoiing  Man 
Who  Loves  The  Seq 


Opptrtmity  cwaltt  Qwlificd  MAwiiw  DrafflniM  la  ■  yMr-' 
revad  cKmat*  •i  comfort  oad  oosy  living  on  Iho  9M  Coast. 

The  Inoaixs  SHinuuj>iNG  CbiiPORATioNi  operating  the  largest^ip- 
yard  on  the  Gulf  Coast,  offers  a  promising  future  to  qoelifitd  draftt- 
men  who  join  this  progressive  organization  —  long -term -cpntfMtfc 
pleasaiit  working  conditions,  liberal  beociMl,  «|ll#bi«  *U>¥^^ 

AMrui  itupiiritM  to  duef  Engineer,  Rooov  100 

THI.INGAILS    ^HIMUIIPIHH  COtfOIATi^J^ 

'    PaiafouU,  Mis»isuppi 


^^P«^ 


USHERS  NEEDED 

Ushers  are  need  for  the  produc- ' 
tion    of   'Brigadoon"   March    1.   2. \ 
3.  Those  interested  have  been  ask-  i 
ed    to   contact    Charlie    Barrett    at 
8-0381    or   the    Playmaker'^'  office 
jn  Saunders  Hall.  j 

WESLEY  CHOIR  j 

The  Wesley  Choir  will  rehearse 

tonight  and  Wednesday  at  7  p.m. ! 

in  the  sanctuary  of  the  Universitj  i 

Methodist  Church.  There  will  be  a 

joint    rehearsal    with    the    church ' 

choir  at  7:30  Thursday  evening,     j 

STUDENT  WIVES 

There  will  be  a  meeting  of  the 

I 
Student  Wives  Club  tonight  at  8  in 

the   Victory   Village    nursery.   All  i 
student   wives    have    been   invited 
to  attend. 
ORIENTATION 

Application  blanks  for  orienta- 
tion are  available  in  the  Student! 
Government  office,  according  toj 
Jerry  Oppenheimer,  orientation ' 
chairman.  Interviews  for  positions ' 


will  be  held  Thursday  and  Friday 
from  4-5  p.m.  in  Graham  Memorial 
Wocdhouse  Conference  Room.  Op- 
penheimer haj  urged  all  interested 
persons  to  apply. 
WUNC-TV 

WUNC-TV.  the  University's  edu- 
cational television  station,  channel 
4; 
12:45     Music 

1:00    Today  en  the  Farm 

1:30     Music  in  the  Air 

5:15     Music 

5:30     Buckskin  Bob 

6:00     Legislative  Review 

6:20     News 

6:30     Magic  Lantern 

6:45     Ice  Cream  Dream 

7:00    Of  Books  and  People 

7:15     Sports 

7:30     German  Course 

8:15     Dr.  Schriver 

9.00     Men  and  Ideas 

9:30    Travelogue 
10:00    Final  Edition 
10:05     Sign  Off 


JAMES  HELDMAN  AND  HOPE  SPARGER 

.  .  .  comedy  leads  in  'Brigadoon' 


The  Wholesalers  Did  It! 

But 

',     I've  Still  Got  ESSO  EXTRA 

At  Downtown  Regular  Price 

And 

Regular  3c  Under  That 

Plus 

Bring  This  Ad  and  Get  1  Cent  Off  Per  Gal.  Gas, 
5  Cents  Per  Qt.  Oil 

Credit  Cards  Honored  Again 

At  The  Students'  Friend 

WHIPPLE'S  ESSO  SERVICE 


IT'S  FOR  REAL! 


by  Chester  Field 


lOUIE, 

THE  LOUSE 

He  strolled  through  a  keyhole  into  my  house, 

A  dignified,  well-bred  upper-class  louse; 
He  smiled  in  a  most  superior  way 

And  said,  "Man  has  just  about  seen  his  day. 
If  you'll  take  my  advice  for  vrhat  it's  wcMth 

Treat  insects  nice,  they'U  inherit  the  earth! 
TVj^  to  be  beyond  reproach 

In  your  dealings  with  the  roai^  ... 
Bedbugs,  ants  and  spiders,  too. 

Pon*«  forget .  .  .  WE'RE  WATCHING  YOU! 


MORALt  Well  . .  .  until  Louie  takes 
over,  take  your  pleasure  BIG.  Smoke 
Chesterfield  .  .  .  and  smoke  for  reidi 
Packed  more  smoothly  by 
ACCU.RAY,  it's  the  smoothest 
tasting  smoke  today. 


Sm9k«  for  r*^ 


wmtlkm  Cli*M*rfl«MI 


$60  far  motry  phSoaephiea!  wtrae  oeetpte^  for  puUica- 
tion,.ChmHrrfitU.  P.O.  0<»(  Zl,  New  York  46,  NY. 

^  U«r«*t  a  Hr«r.  Tobwco  Oo. 


ESSO  RESEAltCH^^drki^watider^  with  <hI 


Laces  and  leathers  and  dozens  of  things 


Ski  boots  lace  better,  stay  safety-tight.  They  do  so  because  the  rawhide  leather  has  been  made  tougher, 
yet  more  pliant  with  a  special  oU  perfected  by  Esso  Research.  The  leather  in  the  skiers  boots, 
ihe  wool  in  his  socks  —  even  the  lacquer  on  his  skis  —  tvere  also  made  better  with  the  help  ^^  ^ 

of  products  derived  from  oil.  ESSO  RESEARCH  works  wonders  with  oU,  vCSSO. 


PAGE  FOUR 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


TUESDAY,  FEBRUARY  19,  1957 


Tar  Heels  Gun  For  Number  21  Tonight  Against  Wolfpack 


UNC  Quint  Will  Face 
Revamped  State  Five 

The  slightly  tarnished  N.C.  State  Woltpack,  in  the  midst 
of  their  worst  season  in  ten  years,  will  be  out  to  regain  some 
ot  their  lost  luster  tonight  when  they  invade  Chapel  Hill 
for  a  shot  at  imbeaten  North  Carolina,  toast  of  the  country 
and  the  ccmference. 

Another  sellout  rrowd  of  ri,6oo  will  pack.  \Voollen  Gym 
for   the   ACC   and   Big  Four   bat 


tie.  the  second  of  the  season  be- 
tween these  two  clubs.  Due  to  a  ^ 

conflict    with    high*  schools    and  |  p»_._ ., 

small    colleges    of    the    area,    the 
"ame  will  not  be  broad  vised. 


bone  of  the  team,  would  not  be 
eligible     for     further     basketball 
This     silenced     the 
State  mentor. 


The   loss   of   Hafer   and   Maglio 

has  brought  about  an  entirely  new 

and    revamped    State    lineup,    one 

,   ,,  u       *!.  11  J I  made  up  of  four  sophomores  and 

of   the    season   when    they   rolled        ...        «      n         .:„     j..:k 
,.      ,„  ,,      .     «« __  .v    <  a  junior.  Lou  PuciUo,  a  tiny  drib- 

over  the  Wolfpack,  83-57.  on  the       ■' 


Back  on  Jan.  15.  the  Tar  Heels 
won   their   15th  consecutive  game 


ble  dandy  from  ^  Philadelphia, 
stepped  into  Maglio's  place  at 
center.  Whitey  Bell  is  the  fifth 
starter.  Backing  up  these  five  are 
Bob  Seitz  and  Nick  Pond,  only 
remaining  seniors. 


Reynolds  Coliseum  floor  in  Ra- 
leigh. Since  that  date,  the  Tar 
Heels  have  added  five  more 
schools  to  their  ever  increasing 
list  of  victims,  and  tonight  go  in 
quest  of  win  number  21. 

Both  teams  have  undergone  i  The  youthful  Pack  breezed  by 
drastic  personnel  revisions  since  j  their  first  two  opponents  after 
that  earlier  meeting.  The  Tar  j  the  loss  of  Hafer  and  Maglio,  but 
Heels  have  lost  three  men  and  j  ran  into  trouble  Saturday  night, 
added  one.  while  State  has  lost  1  and  dropped  a  56-49  decision  to 
two  men,  their  co-captains,  and  Mar>ian3. 
added  four.  !  ,  ,, 

The  Tar  Heel  bench  strength  ha. '  Carolina  followers  are  in  a 
dwindled  to  the  barest  minimum :  state  of  shock  aiter  watching 
following  the  departure  of  front  *  their  Tar  Heels  survive  three  hair 
liners  Tony  Radovich,  Stan  Groll  i  raising  finishes  in  recent  weeks 
and  Bill  Hathaway.  To  offset  the '  to  keep  their  win  streak  intact, 
losses  veteran  forward  Bob  ;  Maryland.  Duke  and  Wake  Forest 
Young  has  been  pressed  into  serv- 1  i^ave  pushed  the  UNC  quint  to 
ice  by  Coach  Frank  McGuire.         j  the   limit   while   Virginia   was    no 

This  will  in  all  probability  go  easy  victim, 
down  as  the  vear  Lady  Luck  turn-  j  Coach  McGuire's  club  has  had 
ed  her  back  on  Everett  Case.  Be-  j  the  benefit  f  a  week's  rest  since 
fore  the  season  started,  the  State  \  whipping  Wake  forest  last  Wed- 
Coach  lost  two  men.  Bob  McGiU-  j  nesday  night,  and  shouW  be  fresh 
varv  and  Marvin  Kessler.  through' I  for  tonight's  encounter  with  the 
scholastic  difficulties,  and  an- 1  dangerous  Wolfpacl^  Pete  Bren- 
other.  Nick  Pond,  via  the  broken ,  nan  suffered  a  slight  ankle  in- 
wrist  route.  W^ith  the  coming  of  I  jury  against  the  Deacons,  but  is 
the  second  semester,  these  early  [  expected  to  be  ready  for  heavy 
casualties  returned  to   harness,  as  [  duty  tonight. 

did  soph  center  John  Richter. '  Lennie  Rosenbluth.  everybody's 
who  missed  the  firet  Carolina  |  Ail-American,  Joe  Qui^g.  Tommy 
game  because  of  an  injured  ankle. '  Kearns  and  Bob  Cunningham. 
With  his  team  at  full  strength  hero  of  the  Wake  Forest  game. 
for  the  first  time,  Coach  Case  ,  will  round  out  the  starting  lineup, 
was  issuing  warnings  to  opposing  ;  After  tonight's  game,  the  Tar 
coaches  to  look  out  for  the  Pack  I  Heels  face  South  Carolina  here 
come  tournament  time.  But  then  |  Friday.  Wake  Forest  in  Winston- 
it  was  annouced  that  John  Maglio  j  Salem  next  Tuesday,  and  Duke 
and  Cliff  Hafer.  the  two  senior  j  in  Durham  in  the  last  game  of  the 
co-captains  who  fornrjed  the  back-  j  season  on  March  1. 


He  Made  The  Grade 


Pictured  above  is  junior  guard  Tommy  Kearns  who  has  played 
a  vital  role  in  the  success  of  the  undefeated  Tar  Heels  this  season. 


Tar  Babies 
Meet  State 
Frosh  Here 

By  BILL   KING 

W'ith  a  revenge  win  over  the 
Wake  Forest  freshmen  already  by 
the  boards,  the  Carolina  Tar 
Babies  will  get  an  opportunity  to- 
night,to  stop  the  only  other  team 
that  has  conquered  them  this 
season,  N.C.  State.  The  Wolflets 
invade  Woollen  Gym  for  a  pre- 
liminary scrap  with  the  Tar 
Babies  at  6  o'clock  prior  to  the 
8:00  p.m.  varsity  struggle  be- 
tween   the    consolidated    brothers. 

Of  the  three  losses  that  coach 
Vince  Gramaldi's  freshman  club 
has  suffered  this  season,  two 
hafe  been  at  the  hands  of  the 
powerful  Raleigh  club;  the  Tar 
Babies  have  defeated  the  wolflets 
once. 

Carolina  will  carry  a  13-3  rec- 
ord into  the  affair,  their  only 
other  defeat  coming  at  the  hands 
of  the  Wake  Forest  Baby  Deacs, 
Jan.  31,  a  loss  that  it  avenged 
convincingly    a    week    ago. 

In  tonight's  action,  Gramaldi 
will  go  with  his  usual  lineup  of 
Mike  Steppe  and  John  Crotty  at 
guards,  Dick  Kepley  at  center, 
and  York  Larese  and  Lee  Shaffer 
at  forwards.  Guard  Wally  Gra- 
ham and  forward  Grey  Poole,  who 
were  at  their  best  against  the 
Baby  Deacs  Tuesday  night,  will 
probably  see  a  good  deal  of  ac- 
tion  in  tonight's  contest. 

Coach  Lee  Terrill's  Wolflets, 
greatly  rejuvenated  since  the  last 
meeting  of  the  two  clubs,  will 
probablv  have  as  his  starting  line- 
up. Bob  Cole  and  Don  Gallagher 
at  forwards.  Harold  Atkins  at 
center,  and  Bob  McCann  and  Sam 
!  Coley  at  the  guards. 


Beatty  Has  Best  Race; 
ACC  Meet  Starts  Sat. 


Tommy  Kearns:  Spark  Behind 
The  Top  Ranked  Tar  Heels 


Blue-White 
Plan  Made 
At  Meeting 

The  Monogram  Club  held  its 
spring  •  elections  last  Thursday 
night.  John  Bilich.  Bob  Young, 
Ed  Sutton,  and  Ken  Bryant  were 
re-elected  to  the  posts  that  they 
held  during  the  past  year,  all  by 
acclamation. 

Main  item  on  the  Agenda  was 
the  planning  of  the  Club's  annual 
project  of  the  year,  the  Blue- 
White  Game.  Several  committees 
vvere  organized  to  carry  out  plans 
for  this  annual  event. 


Swim  Records 
Set  Last  Week 

By  STEWART  BIRD 
With  no  competitive  meets  to 
enter  over  this  past  weekend, 
Ralph  Casey's  varsity  and  fresh- 
men swimmers  busied  themselves 
by  cracking  three  records  in  spe- 
cially  sanctioned    time    trials. 

Bill  Roth,  ace  varsity  sprint 
man.  swam  50  yards  freestyle 
during  the  UNC  freshmen-Staun- 
ton  Military  Academy  dual  meet 
Friday  afternoon.  His  time  of  22.5 
seconds  erased  by  three  tenths  of 
a  second  his  own  university  rec- 
ord of  22.8  and  tied  the  pool 
standard  held  by  Dave  Mclntyre 
of  N.  C.  State. 

During  the  Southern  Inter- 
scholastics  Saturday  afternoon  the 
400     freestyle     relay     quartet     of 


Charlie  Krepp.  Walt  Rose.  Bill 
Buddy  Payne  and  Giles  ^  Gaca  I  Roth  and  Dick  Zickgraf  lowered 
were  appointed  to  design  the  pro-  j  their  own  school  record  of  3:27.0 
graips,  John  Bilich  was  put  in  to  3:26.0  and  erased  the  pool 
charge  of  adds  in  the  Chapel  Hill  j  standard  of  3:27.3. 
area,  and  the  sale  of  the  pro- !  Later  in  the  program  Paul 
grams  it  was  decided,  would  be !  Wachendorfer.  star  freshman 
handled   by  the  new  members  of '  breaststroker,    splashed   200  yards 


the  club. 

President  Bilich  announced  j 
sale  of  tickets  will  get  underway '. 
soon.  He  urged  all  students  to ' 
buy  their  tickets  early.  "We  want  j 
to  have  as  large  a  crowd  this 
year  as  we  had  last  year,"  he  said. 

It  was  also  announced  that 
there  will  be  a  large  group  of 
high  school  students  attending  the 
game  this  year  and  Bilich  added 
that  it  is  the  responsibility  of  the 
Monogram  Club  to  treat  them 
with  hospitality.-  "The  .student 
body  should  also  try  to  make 
these  guests  feel  welcome,"  said 
Bilich. 

Plans  were  also  made  for  the 
election  of  the  Blue-White  beauty 
queen.  The  penny-a-vote  method 
will  be  used  again  this  year  and 
Bilich  urged  student  cooperation 
in  this' also. 


breaststroke  in  2:27.3  to  crack 
current  varsity  breaststroker  Mac 
Mahafify's  university  and  fresh- 
man records  of  2:30.7  and  2:34.7. 
respectively. 


Frank  McGuire  had  a  sad  note 
in  his  voice  last  winter  when  he 
looked  out  on  the  court  and 
saw  a  stocky  little  man  popping 
in  jump  shots  from  around  the 
foul  circle. 

"That  kid  could  be  one  of  the 
best  backcourt  men  in  the  nai- 
tion  if  he'd  get  squared  away 
with   himself.  ' 

And  it  looked  to  many  as  if 
Tommy  Kearns.  then  a  sopho- 
more, might  not  ever  "get 
squared  away"  after  a  brilliant 
freshman    season. 

That  enigmatic  youngster  is 
the  same  Tommy  Kearns  who 
scrapped  his  way  into  the 
starting  line-up  this  winter  and 
has  been  the  sparkplug  that  has 
kept  the  Tar  Heels  undefeated 
in  20  games  and  tops  in  the  na- 
tion. 

You  cannot  underrate  Lennie 
Roscnbluth's  brilliant  scoring 
(26  ppg  plus),  or  the  alj-around 
ability  of  the  Joe  Quiggs  and 
Pete  Brennans.  but  it  has  been 
Kearns  whose  coming  around 
has  made  the  big  difference  in 
success  or  failure  for  North 
Carolina. 

Little  Tommy's  value  was 
clearly  pointed  up  in  the  Tar 
Heels'  last  four  games.  Starting 
down  the  Atlantic  Coast  Con- 
ference homestretch.  UNC  had 
the  pressure  on.  Kearns'  heroics 
in     the     real     pressure     games 


make    Frank    .Merrivvell    shrink. 
Briefly  Kearns: 

1)  Scored  the  tying  basket  to 
throw  the  Marylend-U.NC  game 
into  overtime  and  hit  one  in  the 
second  overtime  to  put  UNC 
ahead  to  stay  63-61. 

2)  Scored  two  free  throws 
with  the  score  knotted  73-73" 
again.st  Duke  with  only  16  sec- 
onds remaining  to  win  again 
for  UNC. 

3)  Scored  15  points  in  the  sec- 
ond half  against  Virginia  to  pull 
li\C  from  a  halftime  deficit  to 
a  victory. 

4)  Scored  two  free  throws  in 
closing  minutes  to  put  UNC 
ahead  of  Wake  Forest  for  good 
in   that  thriller  last  week. 

While  Keams'  spectacular 
pressing  playing  has  been  a 
major  factor  in  the  last  four 
games,  he  is  no  Johnny-come- 
lately  to  the  hero's  seat.  In  the 
only  real  scare  for  UNC  before 
the  exam  break.  South  Carolina 
forced  the  Tar  Heels  into  an 
overtime  before  falling  90-86. 
Kearns  had  a  magnificant  29-  ♦- 
point  night,   including  three  in 


«Bl«tt«ul  Stew  Oi  •£? 


BILLY 
ECKSTINE. 


COUNT 
BASIE 

AND  otcHESTiA    featuring 

JOE  WILLIAMS 


SARAH 
lVAUGHAN 


■*. 


\. 


MCGUIRE  WINS  AWARD 

North  Carolina  basketball 
coach  Frank  McOuira  racantly 
r*c*iv*4l  th*  Harry  Wismar  "Hats 
Off  Award".  Tha  Tar  Haal  man- 
tor  was  th*  first  basketball 
coach  to  racaiv*  th«  waakly  hon- 
or this  y—r. 


JERI  SOUTHERN! 

BUD  POWELL  TRIO     PHINEAS  NEWBORN  jr.  QUARTET 

CHET  BAKER  I      TERRY  GIBBS  QUARTET 

LESTER  YOUNG  •  featnrinc  TERRY  POLLARD 

ZOOT   SIMS  «    SELDON  POWELL 
ROY  HAYNES         • 


JIMMY  JONfS 


•     ROLF  KUHN 
RICHARD  DAVIS 


the    final    minute    of    tlie    over- 
time. 

He  also  was  good  enough  in 
the  three  important  Dixie  Clas- 
sic games  to  rate  first  team  AH- 
Tournan^ent  along  with  Rosen- 
bluth. 

Keams  averaged  better  than 
20  points  per  game  as  a  guard 
on  one  of  UNC's  fine.st  fresh- 
nian  teams.  Added  weight  to 
his  stocky  frame'  and  an  atti- 
tude flaw  hurt  his  chances  as  a 
sophomore,  in  addition  to  the 
presence  of  seniors  Jerry  Vayda 
and  Tony  Radovich.  at  guards. 

He  rode  the  bench  most  of 
last  year,  playing  only  a  few 
minutes  in  any  games. 

He  came  back  with  pep  and 
scrap  this  season,  however,  and 
won  a  place  with  his  shooting, 
ball  handling  and  quarterback- 
ing.  A  McGuire  basketball  trade 
mark  is  a  tough,  driving,  quar- 
terbacking  guard.  He  had  one 
on  his  great  St.  John's  teams  in 
Jack  McMahon  and  has  one  now 
in  Kearns. 

We 

ha-ha-heartily 
urge  you 
to  see 

Top  Secret 
Afffoir 


.»! 


UNC  distance  runner  Jim  Beatty 
ran  what  was  perhaps  the  greatest 
race  of  his  career  Saturday  night 
in  New  Yrk  City  as  he  whipped  to 
a  third  place  finish  in  the  mile 
run  of  the  NYAC  Games  behind 
Delaney  and  Fted  Dwyer. 

Beatty  toured  the  distance  in 
4:08.9,  and  was  only  a  short  dis- 
tance behind  the  two  leaders  at 
the  finish.  The  Tar  Heel  ace  actu- 
ally gained  on  Delaney,  posse^'sor 
of  a  powerful  kick,  in  the  last  lap, 
but  the  lead  built  up  by  the  fleet 
Irishman  was  too  much  to  over- 
come. 

Another  Carolina  runner,  sopho- 
more Wayne  Bishop,  didn't  fare  so 
well  as  he  placed  sixth  in  the  two- 


ALL   AMERICAN   AGAIN 

Jimmy  Beatty,  North  Carolina 
track  star,  has  been  named  to  the 
All-American  Track  Team  for  the 
second  straight  year. 


mile.  His  time  was  9:34,  some  41 
seconds  behind  winner  Laszlo  Ta- 
bori,  who  was  timed  in  8:53.4. 

Meanwhile  back  in  Chapel  Hill, 
work  continued  at  a  feverish  pace  , 
as  the  Carolina  track  team  bentj 
their  efforts'  on  getting  ready  for  | 
the  ACC  Indoor  Games  scheduled  j 
to  come. off  in  Raleigh  Saturday,     j 

The    meet,    which    will    involve ' 
'  both  freshman  and  varsity  teams, , 
.  will   get   under   way   on   Satiirday 
morning  and  last  through  the  after-  i 
noon. 

"Well  step  up  our  preparations  j 
today  and  tomorrow,"  said  Coach 
Dale  Ranson  yesterday,  "then  tap- 
er off  Thursday  with  light  work- 
outs and  a  squad  meeting  at  3:30 
p.m. 


Bearcats  Accept  Invite 
To  Invational  Tourney 

NEW  YORK— (AP)— The  Uni- 
versity of  Cincinnati  today  ac- 
cepted a  bid  to  the  National  Invi- 
tation Basketball  Tournament 
starting  in  Madison  Square  Gar- 
den March  If  I. 

The  Bearcats,  with  a  13-5  sea- 
son's record,  are  the  third  team 
to  enter  the  12-club  field.  Seattle 
University  and  Memphis  State 
joined  earlier  this  month. 


The  Art  Of  Tailoring 

"Every  man  to  his  business, 
but  indeed  the  craft  of  a  tailor 
is  beyond  all  doubt  as  noble  and 
as  secret  as  any  in  the  w/orld." 

HAVE  OTHERS   FAILED? 

With  expert  workmanship  and 
the  best  service  possible  Pete 
The  Tailor  has  and  will  continue 
to  give  you  the  ultimate  in 
tailoring  needs. 


PETE  THE  TAILOR 

Specializing  in 
"Ivy    Leaguelzing" 

133V2    E.   Franklin   Street 


RCJSfCH 


MEN'S 


SHOES 


flawless  fashion 
complete  comfort 
exacting  construction 


See  i^im  today! 


Black 

^    Custo?n"^ade, 

Wing  tip  Oxford. 

Handsome  Albion  Grain. 

Meticulously  crafted 

details  throughout. 


Julian's 

COLLEGE  SHOP 


Howard  Johnson  Restaurant 


BREAKFAST 


LUNCH 


DINNER 


SNACKS 
'Landmark  For  Hungry  Tarheels" 


BARGAINS  IN  HUMAN  LIVES  .  .  . 


Raleigh  Memorial  Auditorium 

ONE  NITE  ONLY  MON.  EVE  FEB. 

25 


Mail  Orders  —  Ticket  SaU 

THIEMS  RECORD  SHOP 

HAMLIN  DRUG  CO. 


Reserved   Seat  Admission 
$2-$2.50-$2.7S-$3  &  $3.50 


call  ^'"^ 


.GARY  MERRILL 

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by  Guido  Orlando.  The  man  Frank- 
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Contacts  "  tells  all,  with  pictures. 
Lively  reading  about  our  bizarre 
world.  Published  at  $3.50. 

Our   Special    $1.49 

Madame  De  Pompadour,  by  Nancy 
Mitford.  England's  wittie^i  writer 
turns  her  pen  .on  the  mistress  of 
Louis  XV,  apd  provides  a  jolly 
afternoon's  reading.  Published  at 
$4.75. 

Our   Special    $2.48 

Rebel  Rose,  by  Ishbel  Ross.  The 
full  fascinating  story  of  Rose 
ONea]  Greenhovv,  beauty,  wit,  and 
Confederate  spy.  Published  at  $4.00 

Our    $pecial      $2.49 

Looking  Beyond,  by  Lin  Yutang. 
The  Chinese  thinker  ^-peculates  on 
the  future  of  Western  Civilization, 
in  a  book  that  belongs  beside  Bel- 
lamys "Looking  Backward".  Pub- 
lished at  S4.95. 

Our    Special  $1.49 

As  I  Remember  Him,  by  Han. 
Zinnser.  A  very  great  American 
physician  in  a  thinly  disguised  au- 
tobiography, written  at  a  time  when 
he  knew  death  was  imminent.  Pub- 
lished at  $5.00. 
Our   Special       $2.49 


YOU  MEET  THE  NICEST  PEOPLE  IN 

The  Intimate 
Bookshop 


205  E.  Franklin  St. 


Open  Till  10  P.M. 


MiLTON'S 

Mid-Winter  Carnival 
Pick  Your  Season— You 
Can't  Miss  —  Both  Year 
Round  And  Summer 
Weight  Clothes  At 
Greatly  Reduced  Prices. 

If  you've  any  gold  left 
over  from  the  Mardi 
Gras,  we  have  fine  se- 
lections in  year  roujnd 
suits  that  formerly  were 
$60.00,  now  selling  for 
$42.99  Harris  Tweeds, 
imported  Shetland  sporf 
coats— formerly  to  $50.- 
00,  now  $29.99. 

Dacron/cotton  suits  in 
hairlines,  poplins— val 
ues  to  $39.75,  now 
$27.99.  Cotton  pin 
check  suits  by  famous 
maker,  were  $28.75, 
now  $22.99. 

Only  tVi  doz.  Exeter 
cashmere-nylon  socks 
left  —  last  chance  to  get 
a  $4.00  sock  for  only 
$1.00. 

Shirt  fiesta  going 
down  home  stretch— at 
least  $1.00  off  every 
shirt  except  v^hite  ox- 
ford tab. 

Just  received  the  ulti- 
mate in  a  fine  dress  cor- 
dovan —  an  English  im- 
port we  have  been 
VHorking  on  for  a  year— 
in  a  terrific  plain  toe  in 
mahogany  or  black, 
double  leather  soles  — 
one  piece  tongue  sew- 
ed to  the  shoe  —  wilt 
compare  with  any  $32.- 
50  cordovan  made  in 
this  country  —  special 
introductory  price  — 
$20.00 

Also  from  England, 
cordovan  loafers  in  ma- 
hogany or  black,  only 
$15.95.  Entire  stock 
shoes  still  on  sale  for  a 
short  while  longer. 
In  Our 
Lady   Milton    Shop 

Those  cashmere  sweat- 
ers are  going  fast,  but 
^he  assortments  9ixe  still 
quite  good.  Still  $10.00 
off  on  each  ^nd  every 
Braemar  and  Drumlan- 
rig  cashmere. 

Elliot  cashmeres  — full 
fashioned— short  sleeve 
pullover-reduced  from 
$14.95  to  $8.99. 

Skirts  at  greatly  reduc- 
ed prices-for  example 
-$12.95  skirts  at  $7.50, 
$21.95  skirts  at  $12.99. 

Plenty  of  good  looking 
shirts  at  reduced  prices, 
including  many  Lady 
Hathaways. 

All  Sales  Cash  And  Final 
Alterations  Extra 

Clotting  Cupboart 


WEATHER 

Partly  cloufiy  aitfl  a  littla  cold- 
er with  possible  high  of  50. 


VOL.  LVII  NO.  103 


mt 


STarlKccl 


Complete  (/P)  Wire  Strvtee 


CHAPEL  HILL,  NORTH  CAROLINA,  WEDNESDAY,  FEBRUARY  20,  1957 


Officet   in   Graham   Memorial 


Student  Council  Rules 
Fines  Constitutional 

By  NEIL  BASS  *  ^ 

t 
The  Studi'iit  Council  ruled  at  a  Monday  night  meeting  that   fines 

levied    by    the    Interdormitory    Council    Coui't    were    constitutionally 

sound. 

The  Council  ineorpor;iied  a  provision  in  its  court  by-laws  last  spring 

which  alljws  it   to   fine   Dl'lendcrs   up    to  SIO  concurrent   with   other 

penalties  inflicted. 


Housing  Petition  Circulated 
For  Married  Student  Needs 

By  EDITH  MacKINNON 

I  he  final  (Ivalt  of  a  lotal  petition  lo  !;tt  ilic  North  (iarohna  (iciural  .\sscn>l)lv  to  pass 
k^^giilaiion  enabling  the  state  to  float  bonds  to  finance  nunried  stndents  honsini;  miits  is  noW 
in  tirculation.  ,    •    . 

('.iienhuion  thron<;liont  the  canipns  will  (oniiinie  ihron^h  Fel).  22.  The  petitioning 
group,  headed  by  Mrs.  John  Crittenden  and  Mis.  Rol)ert  (.riflin,  plans  to  ha\e  the  peti- 
tion brou;jht  t(j  the  attention  of  the  ii)-,7  N.C.  plans  to  have  the  petition  brought  lo  the  at- 
icniion  of  the  i();,7  N.  C.  Cieneral  Assciid)ly.  Ceneraj  .Vsseinbly.   Ihc  petition  is  as  iollows: 

In  aciovdance  with  the  following  leaous  (onierning  housing  facilities  h»r  married 
sludeiu*.  at  the  Inivcisitv  ol  North  Carolina'  it  Chapel  Mill,  we  feel  compelled  toiircuiate 
an<l  picsein   this  petition: 

1.  Wc  realize  that  there  is  a^ 
severe  shortage  of  housing  for ' 
married   students. 

2.  Married  students,  many  of 
whom  have  children,  are  forced 
lo  live  in  sub-standard  housing 
which  is  dangerously  unsafe,  as 
has  been  evidenced  by  recent  ev- 1 
ents.  ' 

3.  Wc  realize  this  problem  must 
be  rcm-odied  to  m?et  the  continu- 
ing and  increasing  enrollment  of 
married  students  at  the  University 
of  N'orth  Carolina  at  Chapel  Hill. 
OBLIGATION 

4.  Wo  feel  that  it  is  the  obliga- 
tion of  the  state  of  North  Carolina 
to  recognize  and  remedy  the  hous- 
ing problem  of  matried  students 
at  the  University  of  North  Caro- 
lina  at   Cbape4.  Hill. 

Therefore,  we   the   undersigned, 
students      at    the    University      of 
X-^rth  Carolina,  strongly  urge  the 
General  Assembly  of  thi-  State  of 
North    Carolina    to    approve    legis- 
lation  cnablin,'   the   University    of 
Norih    Carolina    to    obtain    funds 
for    self-liquidating    housing      for 
married  students  at  the  University 
of  North   Carolina   at   Chapel  Hill. 
In  draM-ing  up  the  petition.  Mrs. 
Griffin    reprrted    that    m.:ny    facts 
co^Dccrning    the    present    situation 
at    Victory   Village   had   been   sup- 
plied   by  .Jarnes   Wadsworth,    UNC 
Housing  Officer.   These  facts  will 
placed    before    the   N.    C.   General 
Assembty. 

Concerning     th«     shortage     of 

housing       in      Victory       Village, 

Wadsworth    noted    that    at    pres- 
ent there   are   356   units,  with   a 

waiting  time  of  one  year  for  en- 
trance. As  of  Oct.  30,   1956,  334 

applicants   were   on   the   waiting 

list.  Of  that  numl>or,  46  persons 

withdrew   or   did   not   come   due 

to    lack    of    housing.    Thirty    of 

these     334    students    commuted 

from    such    towns    as    Pittsboro, 

-Raleigh,    and     Durham.     Sixteen 

students  were  obliged  to  live  in 

(See    PETITION,    Page    3) 


A   trial   case    recently    in   which 
an  offender  of  IDC  regulations  was 
fined  monetarily  by  the  IDC  Court 
resulted    in    the    affirmative    deci-  , 
.sion  by  the  Student  Council. 

The  offender  appealed  his  case 
lo  the  appellate  Student  Council 
and  .Monday  night  s  council  action 
ruled  that  the  IDC  was  acting 
within  bound  ■  of  the  student  Cun- ' 
stilulion.  ' 

RESERVE 

IDC-  Fresid.nl  Sonny  Hallford 
said  of  the  monetary  fine  provi- 
sK'n:  ' 

■".Monetary  fines  will   not,   in  all 
probability,  be  imposed  frequently. 
They    are    merely    to    be    held    in 
reserve  in  case  frequent  and   flag- 
rant violations  occur."  1 
Fines  are  to  be  inflicted,  accord-  > 
ing   to  IDC  Court    By-laws,  at   the 
dcseretion   of   the   court   chairman. 
The  provision  for  moneta''v  fines 
was  suggested  by  last  year's  Coun- 
cil    Rulej     Cammittee     and     was 
passed     overwhelming     by     repre- 
sentatives of  all  men's  dormitories. 
YOUNG 

President  Bob  Young  issued  this 
statement  concerning  the  Student 
Councils  ruling: 

"I  feel  Sonny  (PresidcEl  Hall- 
ford)  is  much  closer  to  the  situa- 
tion, and  if  he  and  the  IDC  Court 
feel  this  will  provide  the  neces- 
sary machinery  for  an  improved 
dormitory  life,  then  I  wholeheart- 
edly endor^v  the  idea. 


Misses  Jackie  Aid  ridge,  Dorothy 
Pressly  Named  Exchange  Students 


Jliss  Jackie  Aldridge  and  Miss 
Dorolhy  Pressly  have  been  named 
as  Ih?  UNC  delegates  to  the  stu- 
dent exchange  program  arranged 
with  Sarah  Lawrence  College  of 
Bronxvillc.  N.  Y. 

The    committee    to    select    dele- 
gates to  the  Sarah  Lawrence   pro- 
gram   met    on    Feb.    15    to    inter- 
view    candidates.      Composrd     of 
Student      Body      President      Bob 
Young.    Miss   Peggy    Funk,    chair- 
man of  Womens  Residence  Coun- 
cil.   Sonny   Hallford.    President    of 
Mens  Intcrdprmitory  Council,  and 
Dave    Ward,    representing    Inter- ' 
fraternity  Council,   the   committee  ' 
cho.se  Miss  Pressly  and  Miss  Aid-: 
ridge  from  a  group  of  eight  possi-  [ 
ble   persons. 

The  original  intent  was  to  select , 
one  male  and  one  female  student.  I 
However,  after  discussing  the  sit- ' 
uation.  the  committee  decided  that  1 
it  would  be  best  to  send  two  fe-  ' 
male    students    as   rsprcsentative.s. . 

In  announcing  the  selection  of  1 
Mi«s  Aldridge  and  Miss  Pressly.  ' 
the  c^mm'tttee  reported: 

"The  calibre  of  students  who  a^- 
p?arcd   before   the  committee  was  ^ 
extremelv   high    and    the   commit-  1 
tee  felt  that  most  anyone  from  the  : 
group   would    have    been    a    good  ; 
repre'-entative.    However,    because 
of  active  student  activity   partici-  , 
pation  and  interest  in  the  program 
on  the  part  of  Mi8&  Aldridge  and 


•Miss  Pressly.  the  committee  felt 
that  tho  University  would  be  ex- 
tremely well  represented  by  these 
two  outstanding  students. 

'The  two  students  who  were 
chosen  were  well  aware  of  the 
responsibilities  and  significance  of 
this  project.  Since  this  is  the  first 
time  Carolina  has  participated  and 
since  Carolina  is  the  only  South- 
ern school,  the  importance  of 
proper  representation  is  of  ex- 
treme significance.  The  commit-  j 
tee    feels    most    confident    in    an- 1 


nouncing   that   these   two  students 
will    be   our   representatives.    " 

The  UNC  delegates  will  attend 
the  Sarah  Lawrence  meeting 
March  1-3.  The  purpo.ses  of  the 
program  are  to  better  relations 
between  colleges,  to  broaden  and 
evaluate  educational  goals  and  to 
prcvide  an  opportunity  for  com- 
paring and  discussing  student  ac- 
tivities and  organizations,  accord- 
ing to  .Miss  Faith  Learned,  chair- 
man of  the  student  exchange  com- 
mittee at   Sarah   Lawrence 


Number  One  Tar  Heels  Top  Si 


PAGE  THREI 

*0  Says  Students  May 
frieve  Books,  Money 

tie  APO    Book    Exchange    an- 

^ncied    yesterday    that    students 

V  reclaim  unsold  books  and  re- 

:s    at    the    Housing    Office    to- 

—   through  Friday. 

_     APO   representative  will  be 

and    at    the    Housing    Office 

to  12  in  the  morrtng  and 

to  4  each  afternoon. 

pne      who     has     not     yet 

Vioks  or  money  has  been 

'op  by  the  APO  office. 


86-57;  For  21st  Straight  Win 


•fj-ey 


Rosenbluth  Hits  28  To  Lead 

UNC  Quint  Hits  50% 
Of  Shots  To  Clip  Pack 


Elections  Head 
Will  Address 
(DC  At  7:30       | 

Elections  Board  Chairman  Ralph  : 
Cummin-.^s  will  address  the  In- 
terdormitcry  Council  meeting  to- 
night. 

The  council  meeting  will  get  un- 
derway at  7:30  on  th?  fourth  floor 
of   New   East   Building. 

Cumming-;  will  discuss  pro- ' 
cedures  f  r  the  coming  .spring 
election. 

The  Council's  budget  for  the '. 
coming  academic  year  will  also 
come   up  for  approval. 

Revisions  in  the  council  by-lai^s  i 
proprr  and  /  revisions  in  "the  Il>r^ 
Court's  by  laws  will  be  presented  I 
for  approval  or  rejection  by  coun- 
cil   meml>ership. 

Council  President  Sinny  Hall- 
ford has  urg*d  all  members  be 
present. 

ASTRONOMY  CLUB  ' 

The  Chapel  Hill  Astronomy  Club 
will  meet  tonight  at  8  in  the  facul- 
ty lounge  of  Morehead  Planetar- 
ium. Speaker  for  the  meeting  wili 
be- Harvey  Daniell,  who.sc  subject 
will  be.  "The  Construction.  Launch- 
ing and  Tracking  of  the  Artificial 
Satallite." 


By  LARRY  CHEEK 

.\oith  (.atoliiia  basketball  (loach  I'laiik  MK.iiirc  re- 
laxed lor  the  liist  time  in  weeks  last  iiii'ht  as  he  watthed  his 
hardw(K)d  juggernaut  toll  (J\cr  \.  (1.  State  tor  the  ,se(ond 
lime  this  seas<jn.  Hr>--,7.  on  the  Woollen  (iym   lloor. 

rhe  tall  and  slightly  terrific  Tar  Heels  oiii-shot.  oiii- 
leboiuided.  and  out-played  their  old  rival.s  Ironi  West  Ra- 
leigh in  .sweeping  their  21st  (onset iiti\e  win  ol  the  season 
wtihont  a  U)ss.  thus  insuring  their  hold  on  the  natiotj's  ninn- 
bei  one  position  among  college  basketball  teams. 
It   was  chiefly   an   amazing  dis-    even  50  per  cent,  compared  to  on- 


play  of  shooting  skill  and  accuracy 
that  turned  the  trick  for  Carolina. 
For  the  entire  game  they  hit  33 
of  66  shots  from  the  floor  for  an 


Tar  Heels 
Found  The 
Formula 


Hold  It  There  Bob 

Carolina  guard  Bob  Cunningham  teams  to  be  ga  ^ting  a   little 
cillo  (left)  and  Nick  Pond.    The  Tar  Heels  beat  State  86-57. 


discouragentent  from  State's  Leu   Pu- 
Norman  Kantor  t'hoto 


ACKLAND  MUSEUM: 


*fr  u- 


There  Is  '  High  Optimism ' 


By  JIM  PURKS 


comment  on  an  article  in  the  Mon-, 
day  Raleigh  News  and  Observer  in 
which  Dr.  Joseph   L.  Cain,  of  the 
University   of   Rhode   Island,   criti- 
cized   the    new    .\ckland    building 
and  said  Allcott   had   "resigned  in 
I  protest"    because    of    the    architec- 
ture of  the  art   building.  , 
NOT  WORKABLE 
•Allcott  emphatically  pointed  out, ;      Cain,   currently   visiting   the   art 
however,   that   there   is   "high   op  i  departments  of  all  the  major  uni- , 
timism"  in  the  department  despite  ■  vcrsitics  in  the  United  States,  said 
these  objections.                                    the  new  building  was  "not  a  work- 
able  type   of   structure"   and   was 
•■It's  not  the  building  that  could  ,  .-aH  ^rong  from  the  e.-;hetic  point 
Allcott  I  of  view   • 


Dr.  John  V.  Allcott,  chairman  of , 
the     UNC     Art     Department,     af- 1 
firmed  ycaterday   that   the  aj't  de- 
partment  did   have   some   definite 
cjbjections      to      the      architecture  • 
adopted    for  the   new   Ackland  art 
building  now  under  construction. 


be  of  most  service  to  us,' 


GM'S  SIATE 


The  activities  schedule  for 
Graham  Memvrial  today  is: 

Bridge  lossenn;  Rendezvous 
Room;  4:30-4:00  is.m. 


DOROTHY  PRESSLY  AND  JACKIE  ALDRIDGE 

•    .  .  .thry  f]o  to  Sa^ah  Lcacrence 


pointed  out. 

Allcott  said  the  art  depart- 
ment feels  the  colonial  style 
which  has  been  adopted  restricts 
the  planning  of  interior  corri- 
dors and  walls,  and  gives  a  par- 
ticular lighting  which  may  be 
bad  for  work   inside. 

Allcott  said  one  of  the  chief  ob- 
jections to  the  building  is  the  fact 
that  small  windows  will  be  em- 
ployed. 

"The  school  unit  has  a  library 
and  pamting  studios  along  an  al- 
le\.  We  had  hoped  that  these 
rooms  could  have  large  windows  lo 
admit  good  north  light." 
COLONIAL   STYLE 

"We  felt  that  the  colonial  style, 
in  calling  up  historical  thought.^, 
would  not  seek  to  inspire  ^aidents 
through  expression  of  a^  spirit  of 
our  times,"  Allcott  said. 

"The  University  has  adapted  the 
colonial  style  for  recent  building.-^ 
in  the  belief  that  adherence  to 
this  style  secures  harmony.  We 
.see  in  architectural  history  that 
beauty  is  not  so  tyrannical,"  he 
.•jid. 

■'In  spite  of  such  feelings  as  I 
have  noted,  I  want  to  state  our 
optimism  about  the  building.  We 
intend  to  make  the  building 
work." 

"It   brings   us  together   under 
one    roof    after    years    of    opera- 
tion   in    widely    scattered    build-   j 
Ings — at  present   we   are   in  five 
buildings,"  Allcott  said. 
"The  building  literally  opens  up 
a    new   day    for   art    on    our   cam- 
pus, "  Allcott  added. 

Dr.  Allcott  made  these  state- 
ments   yesterday    when    asked    to 


Cain  also  made  other  fiery  stale- 
:  ments   concerning   the   new    build- 
ing.   He   particularly   criticized   the 
I  fact  that  trie  museum  was  going  to 
he    located    in    front    of  the   cla.-.-s- 
'  room    building,    stating    it    was    a 
"terrible  arrangement   for  an   art 


.school." 

Allcott  did  not  totally  disagree 
with  Cain's  criticism,  but  said  the 
arrangement  was  favorable  from 
the  public  point  of  view. 

"The  public  won't  have  to  look 
for  the  museum.  It's  in  a  good 
place  as  far  as  the  public  i.v  con- 
cerned, "   Allcott   said. 

.\llcott  also  pointed  out  thai 
Cain  made  these  statements  short- 
ly after  he  had  a  short  talk  with 
Cain. 

"Cain  said  that  the  art  work 
here  was  better  than  he  had 
seen  so  far  on  his  tour,"  Allcott 
said.  Allcott  explained  that  evi- 
dently Cain  got  the  impression  a 
great  injustice  was  being  done 
to  the  UNC  Art  Departn>ent 
over  the  new  art  building  and 
was  distressed  that's  its  good 
work  would  i>e  wasted. 


Horn  Says  Triangle  Is 
Lopsided'  For  Library 


Gov.  Hodges'  "Research  Tri- 
angle" is  becoming  lopsided  as 
far  as  libraries  aie  concemed, 
the  University  of  North  Carolina's 
retiring  head  librarian  said  yes- 
terday. 

"Libraries  do  not  remain  great 
unless  they  ^re  nourished."  wrote 
.Andrew  H.  Horn,  who  will  finish 
his  job  here  in  June.  He  recently 
resigned  for  "personal  reasons.  ' 
including  reasons  of  health. 

Horn  attacked  the  state's  -Ad- 
visory Budget  Commis..-ion  last 
week  for  cutting  UNC  requesLs 
for  library  books  and  journals. 

Yesterday,  in  this  week's  edi- 
tion of  "Library  Notes."  publish- 
ed by  the  UNC  Library.  Horn 
warned  the  state  is  not  putting 
enough  money  into  the  library 
here.  He  referred  to  the  "Reserch 
Triangle"  plan  pushed  by  Gov 
Hotlges  for  coordinating  research 
on  the  campuses  of  the  University. 
Duke  University  and  N.  C.  State 
College   in   Raleigh. 

He  said: 

"Many  of  us  have  read  with 
pride  the  material  which  has  been 
published    on    Gov.    Hodges"    'Re- 


search Triangle."  We  librarians 
had  special  satisfaction  in  noting 
that  the  combined  research  libra- 
ries of  Duke.  UNC  and  State  Col- 
lege were  credited  as  being  one 
of  the  major  assets  of  the  Re- 
search Triangle. 

"Libraries  do  not  remain  great 
unless  they  are  nourished.  A  1953 
book  budg'.t  will  not.  in  1957-59. 
contribute  much  toward  support- 
ing the  governor's  progressive 
program. 

"The  Duke  library,  fortunately, 
has  steadily  increased  its  book 
budget  and  thus  helped  offset  the 
irregular  and  reluctant  support 
given  by  the  state  to  its  Universi- 
ty Library. 

"The  events  of  last  week  re- 
minded ujs  a  little  of  those  last 
summer — when  the  governor  spoke 
of  encouraging  industry  in  North 
Carolina    while     the     Division    of : 

;  purchase     and     Contract    awarded  , 
the  library  binding  contract   to  a 

I  firm  in  Indiana  rather  than  to  the  , 

'  one  in  Greensboro  which  had  the 
contract  the  year  before.'' 
The  statement  was  titled  "Forg- 

i  ing  Ahead  With  the  Governor".'"     I 


:>      By  BILL  KING 

'  '  i 

Last  night,  for  the  first  time  in 
a  couple  of  weeks  that  mixture  of  , 
tension  and   relief  was  missing  in 

^tbo   Carolina    locker    room    foUow- 

I  ing  a  ball  ^amc;  for  the  Tar  Heels- 1 
had  finally  found  that  knock  cm  I 
down  and  hold  em  down"  formula 

I  that  was  cO   prevelant  until  about ; 

I  two,  weeks  ago  when  obvious  ten  ! 
sion  suddenly  gripped  the  club.       j 

I  Coach  Frank  McGuircs  methodi-1 
cal  basketball  machine  had  jifit 
rolled  to  an  86-57  win  over  the 
State  Wolfpack.  It  was  win  num- 
ber 21  for  the  nations  number  one 
basketball  team  and  coach  Mc- 
Guire  came  into  the  dressing  room 
looking  and  obviously  feeling 
much  better  than  he  has  for  some 
time. 

Despite  his  complacent  appear- 
ance. iMcGuire  admitted  that  the 
tension  wao-  still  there.  "I've  never 
been  hunting  before  in  my  lite,' 
he  smiled,  ""ijui  I  think  III  grab 
a  gun  and  go  bear  hunting  to  get 
away  trom  it  all." 

Althjugh  the  Wolfpack  went 
down  to  a  humiliating  defeat  at 
the  han|<  of  the  powerful  Tar 
Heels.  McGuire  was  not  boastful 
over  the  victory."  Slate  is  coming 
along,"  he  observed,  "ril  bet 
they'll  beat  two  teams  in  the  ACC 
Tourney." 

.McGuire  was  asked  if  he  tlmughl 
the  loss  of  John  Maglio  and  Clili 
Hafcr  had  hurl  the  'Pack.  The  an- 
swer was  pretty  obvious.  "Cer 
tainly  that  hurt  them  tremendous- 
ly. They're  both  veterans  and  tine 
ball  players.  " 

Over  in  the  State  drejiing  room^ 
things  were  pretty  quiet.  About 
all  that  Everette  Case  had  to  say 
was.  "how  can  you  win  when 
they're  hitting  like  that".'"  The 
question  is.  was  it  speaking  of  his 
clubs'  inaccuracy  or  of  the  Tar 
Heels  accuracv'.' 


ly  35  per  cent  for  Slate.  In  the 
first  half,  the  Tar  Heels  burned 
tho   nets  for  55   per  cent. 

The  win  was  Carolina's  third  in 
a  row  on  their  home  court  over 
Big  Four  rival*;,  but  it  was  far  and 
away  the  easiest  one.  Duke  and 
Wake  Forest  botn  pushed  the  de- 
cision right  down  to  the  wire. 

Earlier  in  the  season.  Carolina 
demolished  the  Wolfpack.  83-57. 
in  Raleigh  in  a  game  that  was 
close  until  the  final  minutes.  To- 
night there  was  never  any  doubt 
as  to  who  had  the  superior  team. 

The  Tar  Heels  jumped  off  to 
an  early  lead  over  the  youthfuL 
jittery  Wolfpack.  With  ,6:08  gone. 
,lhc  score  was  14-4  with  Carolina 
on  lop.  State  could  do  Vittle  to 
halt  the  floor  of  Tar  Heel  points 
althcugk  canny  coach  Everett 
Case  substituted  freely  in  an  ef- 
fort   to  improve   matters. 

Tommy  Kearns  and  an  apparent- 
ly     rejuvanated      Pete      Brennan 

(Sec  TAR  HEELS,  Page  4) 


■      THE 

BOX 

N.  C.  STATE 

G. 

F. 

P. 

T. 

Clark,   f   

2 

3-5 

3 

7 

Hjpper,  f ,— . 

0 

1-2 

0 

1 

.MacGillivray,  f 

0 

2-2 

2 

2 

Pond,  f 

4 

0-0 

3 

8 

Richter,  c  

6 

2-8 

3 

14 

Seitz,  c  ..      . 

2 

0-0 

4 

4 

Pucillo,   g 

9 

0-1 

0 

6 

Waters,,   g. 

0 

1-2 

1 

1 

Bell,  g   

6 

O-I 

3 

12 

Kessler.  g  .  . 

1 

0  1 

0 

2 

Totals 

24 

922 

19 

37 

CAROLINA 

G 

F. 

P. 

T. 

Rosenbluth.  f 

11 

«-8 

4 

2.1 

Lotz.   f   . 

0 

0-0 

0 

0 

Brennan.   f 

6 

8-10 

3 

20 

Searcy,  f  

0 

0-0 

1 

0 

Quigg,  c  .: ^... 

5 

2-4 

2 

12 

■Voung,  c 

1 

1-1 

1 

3 

Kearns.  g 

7 

1-2 

2 

l.'> 

Rosemond.  g 

0 

0-0 

0 

0 

Cunningham,  g 

3 

2-3 

3 

C 

Holland,  g 

0 

00 

1 

0 

Total 

33 

20-28 

17 

80 

N    C.  State 

23 

34—57 

North   Carolina 

3t 

41- 

-•6 

Final  Entrance 
Exams  Will  Be 
On  March  23 


IN  THE  INFIRAAARY 

Those  in  »he  Infirmary  yes- 
terday irtcluded: 

Misses  Francis  Longest,  There- 
sa Brown,  Ann  Reddle,  Martha 
Osbourne,  Ann  Brown,  Partica 
Carter,  Sue  Ballantine,  Harriet 
Herring,  Sally  Patterson,  and  Mi- 
mas Charalambous,  Ralph  John- 
son, Kenneth  Walker,  William 
Crowley,  Robert  Forest,  Robert 
Livingston,  Robert  Heath, 
Charles  Baldwin,  Douglas  De- 
Bank,  Robert  Burge,  William 
Ballard,  Eugene  Whi^tehead,  John 
Mcintosh,  William  Craig,  Wil- 
liam Marcoux,  Eldward  Pridgen, 
William  Bost,  Ed  Schenck,  Hall 
Johnston,  Luther  Green,  Sidney 
Seymovr. 


The  final  of  three  statewide 
testing  programs  for  entrance  to 
units  of  the  Consolidated  Univer- 
sit>  will  be  held  March  23 
throughout  the  state. 

The  day-long  exams  will  be 
held  in  10  centers  stretching  from 
Elizabeth  City  to  .Asheville.  ac 
cording  to  Dr.  W.  D.  Perry,  direc- 
tor of  th?  University  Testing  Ser- 
vice. 

High  school  sttidents  in  the  state 
who  plan  to  take  this  test  must 
register  by  March   16.   Perrj    said. 

The  examinations  were  estab- 
lished last  year  »<  requisites  for 
entrance  to  U.\C.  State  College 
in  Raleigh  and  Woman's  College 
in    Green.sboro. 

The  exams  will  be  held  in  Char- 
lotte. Greensboro.  Raleigh.  A.she- 
ville.  Kinston.  Salisbury.  Winston- 
Salem.  Chapel  Hill.  Wilmington 
and  Elizabeth, 


/ 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEBt 


WEDNESDAY,  FEiRUARY  20,  1f57 


Budgeting: 
Is   Sinking 

hraiA    ilu-v   are   talkin;^   al)«)iir    "tieHduater 
[ho    Atekly  staff  publitation   there,  defines 

[etiu,!;>   in   uhith   one  ktej)s  liis  head  abo\e 
.where  and  «*Neimially  he  just  oet^  tired  and 


Fa<>e(>iis  liti 
V    l)nd.i;et 
method  of 
for  the  lihia- 


.ihrarv  has  been  a  victim 
Fieadvxaiei  hudgetin;^"'  for  a 
^  time.  It  <i;ot  its  bi«4<>e^'  slap- 
fi-tl;e-faie  last  week  when  the 
Advisorv  l)iid_i>et  (iommissiou  re< - 
ommended  only  S2',<>.m)o  he  ap- 
propriated for  two  years"  worth  of 
lihraiv  l)ooks  and  joinnals.  Tlie 
l.ihrarv    Iiad    re<|tiested    S",{o.ooo. 

The  reaition  from  one  lil)rary 
oflicial  was  preitv  definite.  Andrew 
H.  Horn,  reliriiit;  head  hhrarian, 
said:  "I  was  reallv  shotked.  This 
puts  lis  ha(  k  to  the  book  L»nd;4et 
we  had  in   h).'):',. 

Of  course,  it  is  prattitallv  im- 
p<issible  to  ujet  out  <^f  S'ir^o.otwi  this 
vear  the  same  thiui*  we  <;ot  out  ol 
it   li\e  \ears  a^o. 

♦  *  »  V.      . 

flow  did  the  Ijud^et  uet  <  ut  so 
diasticallv  and.  apparently,  so 
tm>Iishl\r  w 

This  state  opetates  fiuam  iall\  on 
a  t)ieiniium  basis.  Fund^  are  ap- 
propriated l)V  the  Cieneral  Assem- 
blv.  meetinii  no\\  in  R.ileioh.  on 
a   iwo-vear   sclicdide. 

Ifie  l'ni\ersit\.  alon,;  with  all 
III  her  >tate  institutions  .uid  agen- 
«  ieN.  lelU  the  Stale  lioard  of  High- 
er K(hu;,ion  how  much  mone\  it 
\vant^  lor  its  \ariouN  huKtiotrs.  in 
unreal  delail. 

I'hc  Siaif  Board  of  Hi'^ilui  Kdu- 
<  '"Hfi  MiMviders  .ill  sU(  h  re(pie>ts. 
adjust  fi'^ures  (usually  tlowuw .nd. 
«»Ht  ol  necessiiv.  sinte  e\er\biKlv  re- 
«|ues;s  more  money  than  there  is 
a\ ail.ib'c  i.  and  sends  its  rci  om- 
mended budget  to  the  .\d\is()rv 
PiudtiCi   Cf>mmissiou. 

j  he  Advisory  lludyei  (Commiss- 
ion jxilorms  nuuh  the  same  task 
as  the  hi'ilier  education  boaid.  but 
tiu  a  mu(  h  lari^er  scale.  It  must  rc- 
leixf  and  appro\e  bjid^ei  recpiests 
from  all  st.Ue  a^eiuies. 

Since  j)i.i(  ticaHv  all  state  auencies 
ri((uest  l;<r  more  than  ihev  (oiild 
iecei\e  withoiu  douliliivr  :il|  statf 
taxes,  tlie  budg;et  connnission  must 
do  considerable  shapiii'^  ol  the  re- 
(juests.  It  nnist  cm  where  it  leels 
budgets  can  stand  (Utiiu'4.  .\\u\.  .is 
(•o\.   Hod;4;es  said  this  week.  We 

The  Daily  Tar  Heel 

The  official  itudent  putiluation  of  tbe 
Publications  Board  of  the  University  ul 
North  Carolina,  where  it  i.s  published 
daily  except  Monday  and  examinatior 
•nd  vacation  periods  and  >iinitner  ter'n> 
Entered  as  second  class  maiif-r  m  th- 
oost  office  in  Thapel  Hill.  N  C  undei 
the  Act  oi  March  8.  1870  ."subscription 
rates£  mailed,  $4  per  year.  S2  .50  a  seme* 
ter;  delivered.  $6  a  year.  M  .50  a  «eme» 
ter. 


Editor FRED  POWLEDGE 

Managing  Editor CHARLIE  SLOAN 

News  Editor _..     NANCY  HILL 

BuMaess  Manager BILL  BOB  PL^I 

Sp«rtt  Editor LARRY  CHEFK 

EDITORIAL  STAFF  —  Woodv  <5#»?r« 
Frank  Crowther,  David  Mundy.  Cort- 
land  Edwards. 

NEWS  STAFF— Clarke  Jones.  Prin^'le 
Pipkin.  Edith  MacKinnon.  Wally  Ku- 
ralt.  Mary  AIy\s  Voorhees.  Graham 
Snyder.  Neil  Bass.  Page  Bernstein. 
Peg  Humphrey.  Phyllis  Maultsby.  Ben 
Taylor.  Walter  Schruntek.  H-Joost  Po- 
lak.  Patsy  Miller. 

BUSINESS  STAFF— Rosa  Moore,  Johnny 

Whitaker,    Dick   Leavitt. 

SPORTS  STAFF:  Dave  Wible,  Stewart 
Bird,  Ron   Milliagn. 

Subscnptiun  Manager Dale  Staled 

Advertising  Manager  Fred  Katzip 

Circulation  .Manager    Charlie  H0II 

Assistant  Sports  Editor  Bill  King 

Staff  Photographer Norman  Kantor 

Librarian  - _ Sue   Gishner 

Night  Editor Graham  Snyder 

Night  News  Editor  -.  Charlie  Sloan 

Proofreader —  Bill  Weekes 

0 


le  journal,  was  speaking  a'bont  the 

had  to  (onsider  the  whole  picture 
io;»eiher."" 

*  »  * 

Uut  whv  should  the  Xdvisovv 
l»ud«>el  (.ouunission  cut  the  librarv 
books  and  jotunals  budi^et  so 
drasiiiallv? 

No  one  reallv  knows.  \o  one 
has  .  iisweied  ihe(piesiion  puf^licly. 

but  it  is  \ery  disheat  tenino  to 
see  that  the  state — or  at  lea.st  one 
aL-encv  ol  the  statt — has  more-or- 
k's  disowueil  the  rniversitys  Wil- 
son  librarv. 

#  '  •  * 

l*ia«ii(all\  .ill  ediu.ition  ronies. 
eitlur  dire(tlv  or  indirtitb.  fron> 
books.  Aristotle  and  Freud  conW 
not  be  I  Mi'^ht  or  e\en  undevstrtod 
todi\  wiihoin  the  simple  ctpiip- 
meni    of   the   p  iniid   pa^e. 

Whit  \\<ml(i  Social  Si  i(  it*  <•  1  be 
without  library  books?  What  wonld 
theses  and  tevm  papers,  rcsean  li 
and  rek'sation  icadin<i  be  wirhoiH 
the  resources  of  the  Wilson  l.ibva- 
-17?  ■  -r^r'  -.  -' 

We  woidd  be  nowhere.^  F.ven 
the  most  e\<elleiH  of  professors 
cannot  yet  alono  wiihoiu  those  le- 
soinies.  The  Wilson  l.ibrarN  will 
n.it  be  able  to.  buv  essential  books 
and  journals  dini>i<»  the  next  two 
liM  il  \eirs  uidess  it  uets  inoie 
money,  one  wav  or  another. 

The  I  riciids  (►!  the  Library  have 
'''«n<-  about  all  thev  ca-n  do.  Fimds 
fiom  lent  (»f  certain  I'niversity- 
(>wned  pioperty  <»oes  to  the  l.i- 
biaiv.  but  that  is  not  enouijlt. 

Ihe  simple  answer  is  this:  The 
{.eneial  AssembK  uuist  appropri- 
ate more  money  for  library  Ixx^ks 
and  joinnals.  or  the  I'niversiiy  will 
suffer.  It  will  suffer  from  the  vooL>. 

We  ask  the  mendK-rs  of  the 
(^^ttieiaJ' Assembly  to  introduce 
legislation  amendino  the  I'N'C 
budfjct  to  provide  more  funds  for 
library   bcH>ks. 

We  a'>k  the  two  represeinatives 
from  this  a.ea.  Kdwin  l.anier  (di- 
lettoi  of  ten  1 1. 1 1  records,  on  leave) 
and  i  >hn  I'mstead,  to  (onstrnvi 
and  push  su<  h  legislation.  We  feel 
lertain  both  men  are  aware  of 
the  Library's  critical  need  for  tuoie 
money  and  more  books.  If  thev 
aren't,  surely  Libr;irian  .Andrew 
I  bun  will  show  them.  Any  fresh- 
man (onld  yive  a  first-hand  report 
(in   ihe   s«  luiiv  ol    bo(»ks.   too. 

Wc  liaxe  been  t reading  die  wat- 
er Ion.;  I  iiou^h.  We  aie  i^etting  Nery 
tired,  and  ai  e  about  to  sink. 

Speakers: 

Untapped 

Resources 

l\(ii  ilioiinh  it's  (»idy  before 
sprii)'4  ek(  lions  that  this  happens, 
it  is  nocd  lo  sec-  the  canijMt*  po- 
ntic al  pal. ics  turn  out  some  in- 
ltrt-stin'4  p  00     ins. 

Two  weeks  au<»  it  was  the  I'ni- 
Ncisitv  Party  which  in\  ited  Direc- 
tor ol  Student  -Activities  Samuel 
\?  I  ill  to  speak  at  a  meeting;  of  the 
paitv. 

I  1  ;.  ..  ,•',  ilu-  Sindcin  I\irty 
heinl  (iharles  IVernanl.  assistant 
director  of  admissictus. 

Lhis  i^  y;fMMLi»^o\ernmei''.  It  is 
nood  h>r  the  studems  who  ;•■•  -nd 
such  meetings,  and  it  is  g4>od  for 
those  who  hear  or  read  re[X>ns  of 
the  meetings. 

We  li;i\e  a  lar^^e  and  heretofore 
untapped  source  c»f  infonuation 
liuht  lieie  011  the  campus.  The 
Lniveisity  is  loaded  wifh  men  and 
women  who  iiave  dedicated  their 
li\c's  to  education  or  to  some  rordl- 
laiy  of  education.  Ihey  Will  not 
speak  to  the  students  unfil  tftt 
students  invite  them. 

Coii'rni'tulations  to  l>oth  parties 
for  :isking  Magill  and  Bernard  to 
sj)eak.  We  hope  there  will  be  more 
imitations  in  the  futurf — even  af- 
ter elections. 


YOU  Said  It:  Reader  Tears  Apart 
'Unwarranted  Arid  Wanton    Attack 


Erfiter: 

I  shall  make  it  clear  from  the 
beginning  of  this  letter  that  I  do 
not  wish  to  appear  as  a  "Defend- 
er of  the  Faith."  but  I  do  be- 
lieve it  is  the  duty  of  anyone  who 
see.s  unwarranted  and  wanton 
material  Vj  defend  the  side  that 
is  wronged,  and  who  cannot 
answer  back. 

Mr.  Editor,  for  weeks  now  you 
have  been  arguing  that  athletics 
at  Carolina  are  rotten,  but  con- 
sistently you  have  evaded  stating' 
why  the.sc  athletics  as  so  rotten. 
You  have  attacked  them  on  the 
grounds  that  they  are  money 
sports  and  that  this  same  thing 
leads  to  the  end-view  and  cor- 
ruptness. 

Certainly,  anyone  can  see  that 
the  money  entorin.L;  into  the  cost 
at  games  is  necessity,  or  else 
how  could  the  gym  be  kept-up. 
imiform.i  bought  and  many  other 
things.  I  think  your  .statement 
that  'the  athlete  i.s  an  athlete 
first,  a  student  second'"  is  an  un- 
•  warrant-?d  attack,  for  these  boys 
keep  their  grades  as  respectable 
as  siorae  of  these  fraternity  broth- 
er.s.  and  .some  even  higher  than 
t."hrR?. 

This  Is  stupid,  for  w*  se*  that 
C»»  h  McGutrfe  released  recent- 
ly two  oi  his  star  pUyers  for 
these  low  grades,  hnd  we  all 
lrnH»w  how  much  this  must  have 
tturt. 

And  again  I  see  no  caiu«e  for 
the  printing  of  the  allusion  tl^at 
sportswriters.  coaches,  etc.  have 
erected  a  golden  haze  around 
athletics.  .Athletics  has  always 
had  a  place  in  the  American 
way  of  life,  and  certainly  it  was 
n.it  built  or  put  there  by  writ- 
ers, but  the  reverse  of  this,  the 
athletics  have  put  the  coaches, 
sportswriters  and  others  in  their 
positions. 

Again.  I  see  no  hero-wor.ship- 
pens  on  this  campus,  and  I  see 
no  ppofe.<«ional  athletics,  unless 
.  you  consider  the  recent  "•foot- 
ball" incident  that  led  to  the  re- 
leasee of  the  player  involved. 
therefort>  that  lead.'  to  no  con- 
clusion that  there  is  corruption 
in  athletics.  You  have  made  com- 
ments that  our  administration  is 
doing  nothing  about  this,  and  lh.it 
they  are  subject  to  pressures, 
but  our  administration  has  been 
quite  firm  in  its  policies,  and  J 
am  further  assureil  that  there 
ar?  no  pressures.  Your  papers 
policies,  it  is  evident,  seem  to 
attack  the  administration  con- 
stantly  for  no   leasons. 

I  suppose  that  you  fee!  quite 
safe  behind  "the  freedom  of  the 
press"  rights,  but  it  seems  tiial 
you  are  prostituting  a  basic  free- 
dom, which  Ls  one  of  the  most 
abysmally  contemptible  things  1 
can  see. 

So.  all  your  arguments,  if  we 
respect  them  enough  to  call  them 
such,  are  against  ju.st  one  in- 
dividual— Mr.  Tatum.  You  have 
no  argument,  but  constantly  yell 
empty  words  of  corruption,  vice, 
etc.  You  then  start  upon  ?.lr. 
Tatum  himself. 

'  It  is  obvious  that  the  state- 
ments made  do  not  reflect  any- 
one's views  but  your  own.  Mr. 
Tatum  is  in  no  position  to  answer 
in  defease  of  him.self,  so  it  is 
someone's  duty  to  do  it  for  him. 
It  is  obviously  stupid  to  say  that 
the  coaches  have  "'made  policies 
that  are  not  in  the  best  interest 
of  academics,"  since  you  can  not 

• 

L'il  Abner 


validate  them.  I  have  heard  of 
no  liquor-and-women-parties  thai 
any  coach  has  ever  had.  and  this 
seems  to  be  the  most  unethical 
thifig   anyont'   could  say. 

You  contrasted  Mr.  Tatum 
with  Mr.  McGuire  in  such  a  way 
that  you  lead  one  to  believe 
that  Mr.  Tatum  is  a  dirty  back- 
guard  and  Mr.  McQuire  a  pussy- 
footer.  This  is  the  most  un- 
heard of  thing  I  can  conceive, 
for  both  gentlemen  are  liked 
in  this  commiviity, 

Mr.  Tatum  is  not  pampered, 
he  has  made  n.)  Crid-Iron  Club, 
the  atlilete  has  not  becHi  taken 
away  from  the  University,  and 
certainly  these'  athletes  are  not 
machines. 

Your  arguments  are  baseless, 
attd  if  they  do  have  a  base  they 


are  on  emotion.  You  seem  to  dis- 
like athletics  so  much  you  stick 
your  neck  out  so  far  as  to  make 
a  ridiculous  farce  of  yourself. 
Because  of  your  dislike  for  Mr. 
Tatum.  which  is  without  doubt 
unwarranted,  you  attack  athletics 
and  call  them  corrupt  without 
cause. 

It  sedms  that  once  before  Mr. 
Tatum  was  attacked  by  this  pa- 
per, and  it  seems  that  the  people 
who  elect,  and  pay  for  the  same 
took  the  action,  which  wisely  de- 
termined the  course  of  a  new 
policy:  but  it  seems  that  you  want 
to  revive  ill-will  between  students 
and  faculty  and  athletics.  You 
cannot  u.se  an  organ  of  the  stu- 
dent body,  such  is  The  Daily  Tar 
Heel,  for  a  personal  argument; 
this  violates  the  purpop.se  of  the 


paper,  which  is  to  express  the 
news,  and  not  the  falsity  of  an 
emotional  argument. 

Perhaps  your  whole  argument 
is  based  upon  "sour-grapes",  and 
that  you  feel  badly  because  you 
are  no  public  hero,  but  this  is 
not  to  be  an  accusation  on  per- 
sonality; but  an  accusation  of 
your  unwarranted,  slovenly  and 
wanton  attack  on  an  individual 
through  the  organ  of  the  student 
body,  based  on  your  own  opin- 
ions, with  no  validity  to  them. 

Fm  sure  that  you  owe  an 
apology  to  Mr.  Tatum  and  to 
athletics;  because  you  have  cer- 
tainly lowered  the  editorial  poli- 
cies of  your  paper  by  printing 
base  slander,  and  false,  emotion- 
al argument. 

.-"   'v   tl-  Julian    L.    Sessoms 


'Here's  Another  One  We  Can  Cut- 
No  So^cial  Need  That  I  Can  See' 


• 

YOU  Said  It: 


Set  Up  Campus  Police  State? 


Editor: 

It  is  unfortunate  that  the  ques- 
tion as  to  whether  or  not  the 
honor  system  should  remain  has 
come  up  at  all.  although  the 
strengthening  effect  on  the  .sys- 
tem that  may  result  makes  the 
question  in  a  better  light. 

David      Mundy.     defender  of 

democracy  in  Goettingen.  has 
certainly  gone  to  extremes  in  his 

request   for  the  abolition  of  the 

£j£tem.    Hiis    requests    tihat  all 


rules  be  enforced  suggest  that 
he  would  approve  the  .setting  up 
of  a  kind  of  campu.v  police  state 
to  replace  the  honor  council. 

His  ignorance  and  or  ignoring 
of  the  stated  function  of  the 
council  (The  Daily  Tar  Heel. 
Feb.  13)  certainly  does  not  add 
weight  to  his  argument. 

The  disregard  of  the  admin- 
istration for  certain  honor  coun- 
cil decisions  in  the  past  does  not 


speak  well  for  the  faith  of  that 
body  in  student  government.  It 
is  time  for  a  revolution  which 
will  give  student  government  a 
more  honored  position — and  the 
revolution  can  only  come  through 
the  dedication  of  student  officers 
and  the  student  body  to  the  prin- 
ciples of  self-gogvernment,  which 
significantly  is  one  of  the  im- 
portant freedoms  of  this  uni- 
versity. 

Name   Withheld    By    Request 


• 

By  A!  Capp 


?^-E,uT-a;m  Pm^ 
RD'TMiS  WEDDiN)'- 

IN  ADVANCE.':'- 

vi-mam  last  four 
d-dollahs.':''- 


i^    -f-HET  FOUR     *     N  /  AH  GOTTA  GiT   J 

DOLLAHS  EMTiTLES  )/^   A  RAPPV  FC 
VO'TOONE  S       MAH  CKILE.'.'- 

WEDDIN'-TODAV.C'A   MOW  -  OR  TH' 
MONEV'S 
MO 
ft£FUNDS.V 


^1 


Fogd 


By  Walt  Kelly 


WHAT*  tVg  VIEW  Of 


ANpiTgOT  CAUGHT 

N  A  f  tee 
J. 


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Z' HOV  CAN  A  PiCTUffg  Llle:^ 

THAT- vvgr>N'ALU"'P8Dr:y 

CONPlpgfCg  7 


J7  <5or  A -ndOTH 

;  ACHgAN[?>t3U'gH 


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^^9ieyoocroQ,  voy  pacS6  ^  csywrHpeiiekrAK'- 

,5\    AffOUNP  ACWVCIN' THE 
eyg  LIGHTS  ON  THI6 

picTiJBe-*»«4r,*vou 
gxaAiM,*'jsrHAr?*' 

JHg  NUe^g  SAYS, 

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''11    e\ 


Tatum  Has  Got 
The  Bad  Break 


Woody  Sears 


We  have  indeed  reached  a  sorry  state  when  we 
cart't  see  beyond  the  ends  of  our  noses.  It's  bad 
when  we  can't  find  the  garbage  for  the  sm^l.  It's 
almost  comical. 

So  let's  get  down  to  the  crux  of  the  matter. 
What  is  it?  Why  it's  "big  time"  athletics,  of  course. 
And  what  is  "big  time"  athletics?  There  are  prob- 
ably as  many  definitions  as  there  are  people  to  give 
them. 

Mr..  Tatum  seems  to  be  the  syn>bol  of  "big 
time"  athletics.  Those  who  are  in  favor  of  what- 
ever it  is  like  him,  and  those  who  are  opposed  to 
the  idea  don't..  And  in  the  middle,  sitting  en  the 
fence,  are  those  who  don't  like  the  idea  but  don't 
dislike  Mr.   .Tatum. 

This  interpretation  makes  the  whole  thing 
sound  rather  simple,  but  it's  about  the  best  I  can 
do.  I  don't  want  to  get  into  the  discussion  of  money, 
either  over  or  under  the  table,  and  I  don't  want 
to  discuss  the  pros  and  cons  of  segregated  athletic 
societies. 

What  I  would  like  to  mention  is  this  business  of 
fighting  over  whether  or  not  Mr.  Tatum  is  a  good 
man  or  a  bad  man.  like  in  the  Saturday  afternoon 
western  flicks. 

And  that's  all  it  is  when  ^vou  strip  all  the  fancy 
terminology  off  the  surface.  Terms  like  "prostitu- 
tion of  scholastic  standards"  and  ''succumbing  to 
financial  pressures"  are  not  uncommon  to  this 
topic.  Questions  about  where  the  athletes  shall 
eat  and  where  they  shall  .-4eep  become  very  im- 
portant. And  honestly,  actually,  factually,  does  it 
make  a  great  deal  of  difference? 

I'm  going  to  perch  on  the  top  rail  of  the  fence 
for  a  moment  to  make  one  statement.  As  I  see  it. 
there  Ls  only  one  question  worth  considering,  and 
that  is  the  question  of  academics.  And  I  speak  of 
academics  alone,  not  of  academics  vs.  athletics, 
"big  time"  or  otherwise.  Can  this  monster,  this 
ogre,  this  whatever  it  is  become  detrimental  to  the 
academic  .standards  of  the  University  of  North  Caro- 
lina? This  is  the  question,  and  as  I  see  it,  it  is  the 
only  question  which  mer  ts  more  than  a  pa.ssing 
glance. 

No.w  I'm  going  to  hop  off  the  fence,  itick  my 
neck  out  and  let  go  wi*h  strictly  personal  opin- 
ions. 

It  is  my  opinion  that  there  is  no  one  man  in 
the  whole  Greater  University  who  could  single- 
handedly  corrupt  the  academic  system  or  standard 
ol  any  part  of  the  University.  It  is  ridiculous  to 
a.ssume  that  one  man.  especially  one  who  is  not 
in  the  administrative  unit,  could  perform  such  a 
monstrous  undertaking.  That  would  call  for  a  real 
superman. 

-And  in  my  opinion.  Mr.  Tatum  is  no  superman, 
whatever  else,  g^ood  or  bad.   he  may   be. 
HOW  COULD  HE  DO  IT? 

I'm  not  sure  exactly  why  he  would  want  lo 
tamper  with  the  academic  situation,  but  for  the  sake 
of  argument,  let's  say  that  Mr.  Tatum  has  this  in 
mind  for  his  'modusoperandi"  to  bring  "big  time" 
athletics  to  Chapel  Hill.  Now  that  we've  made  that 
broad  assumption.  I  want  someone  to  tell  rae  how 
he's  going  to  do  it .  .  .  by  himself  or  otherwise. 
Seems  to  me  (as  a  not  particularly  brilliant  ob- 
server) that  he  would  need  some  help,  and  it  looks 
to  me  as  though  the  help  would  have  to  come  from 
an  administrative  source. 

I  thirrk  that  implication  should  be  lucid  enough. 

There's  another  point  I'd  like  to  mention.'  Mr. 
Tatum  has  been  roundly  criticized  for  his  state- 
ment to  the  effect  that  "Winning's  not  the  most 
important  thing,  it's  the  only  thing."  In  my  (not 
necessarily  unique)  way  of  thinking,  this  establisbe.'i 
Mr.  Tatum's  character ...  as  a  man. 

I  frankly  admire  him  for  saying  it.  People  raise 
their  eyebrows  in  askance  at  such  a  statement . . . 
because  they're  not  used  to  hearing  people  tell  the 
truth.  Do  you  think  for  a  moment  that  an  insurance 
man  gets  his  salesman's  endurance  from  his  desire 
to  keep  you  from  leaving  a  destitute  widow  in  the 
event  of  your  untimely  death? 

Do  you  think  that  the  Ford  sales  man  wants  to 
.sell  you  a  Ford  because  he  thinks  that  you'll  be 
safer  in  a  Ford  than  in  a  Chevvie.  or  that  he  can 
save  you  money? 

If  these  two  questions  deserve  yes  answers,  then 
Ive  got  the  wrong  slant  on  life  and  human  nature. 
So  I  think  that  if  Mr.  Tatum  is  the  "bad"  man 
in  this  pathetic  melodrama,  there  is  a  rich  banker 
or  a  "big  time"  administrator  behind  him.  But 
personally,  I  don't  think  he's  the  ."bad  guy"  he's 
bc^en  painted  to  be  by  some  parties..  It  has  been 
my  observation  that  few  people  ever  are. 

I  mentioned  in  the  first  paragraph  that  this  was 
althost  cortiical,  and  the  comical  aspect  is  that  there 
are  so  many  people  who  are  in  this  thing  as  I.  not 
knowing  Mr.  Tatum  or  a  dozen  football  players. 

But  it  rankles  my  hide  to  li.sten  lo  all  this 
drivel. 

.\nd  I  hate  to  see  a  man  crucified  by  know- 
nothing,  see-nothing  do-gooders.  The  way  I  see  it. 
Mr.  Tatum  was  brought  here  to  do  a  job.  and  the 
people  who  brought  him  here  messed  around  with 
it  so  long  that  they  probably  knew  what  kind  of 
toothpaste  he  uses.  I  have  heard  it  said  that  if  he 
has  ever  done  anything  or  ever  does  anything,  it 
would  be  like  calling  the  gun  guilty  because  some- 
one got  shot. 

Mr.  Tatum  is.  after  all.  an  employee.  II  you 
don't  like  him.  get  after  his  bosses,  for  no  one  is 
so  big  that  there  isn't  someone  a  little  higher  up 
the  ladder. 

I  think  we're  giving  this  fellow  a  bad  break,  and 
there  is  little  evidence  of  fair  play  about.  It's  time 
for  a  change  of  attitude  on  the  part  of  a  lot  of 
oeople. 

And  if  all  this  ruckus  is  for  the  good  of  ol' 
UXC.  then  there  should  be  some  unity  of  purpose. 
I  think  it  would  be  of  the  same  sUnk  if  Adolf  Baba- 
luehi  was  the  coach  instead  of  the  controversial  Mr 
Tatum. 

Frankly,  it's  time  to  change  mounts.  Let's  ride 
someone  else  for  a  while.  We  could  devil  a  whole 
lot  of  folks  if  we  got  together  on  it. 


WEf 

GUESl 

To 

By 

Dr.  S^ 
the  Nati 
way  stc 
yesterdaj 
cross-coi 
peums  ai 

The  Nl 
of  the  ij 
pacity  of 
and  art 
the  statl 
virtually! 
country. 

Aithd 
been 
weeks,  | 
ferenc< 
phase 
gallerid 
gian  aj 
He  cii 


VI 


SI 

the 


throd 


^H7 


WEDNESDAY,  FEBRUARY  20,  1957 


THE  DAILY  TAR  MCtL 


PAGE  THREI 


GUEST  OF  STATE  DEPT. 


len  we 
It's  bad 

-n    It's 

I  matter. 
I  course, 
prob- 
to  give 

If   "big 
what- 
^sed  to 
m  th* 
don't 

thing 
h   I  can 

money, 
kt   want 

athletic 

liness  of 

a   good 

fternoon 

fancy 
irostit  li- 
mbing  to 
to    this 
shall 
^ery    im- 
does    it 

le  fence 
see  it. 
ing.  and 
speak  of 
ithletics, 
ter.  this 
)l  to  the 
th  Caro- 
it  is  the 
passing 

ick  my 
il   epin- 

man   in 
single- 
standard 
bulous   to 
^o   is   not 
such    a 
r  a  real 

superman. 


want    to 

the  sake 

this   in 

)ig  time" 

lade  that 
me  how 

)therwise. 

Iliant  ob- 
it looks 

)nve  from 

enough. 

ition."  Mr. 

|his  state- 
the  most 
my   (not 

htablishes 

>ple  raise 
Itement . . . 
\e  tell  the 

insurance 
[his  desire 
low  in  the 

wants  to 
you'll   be 
lat  he  can 

wens,  then 

nature. 

ad  "  rvMn 

h  banker 

him.    But 

guy"  he's 
has  b««n 

ra. 

at  this  wai 
that  there 

g  as  I,  not 
player.s. 
■to    all    this 

by  know- 
y  I  see  it. 
b.  and  the 
round  with 
at  kind  of 

that  if  he 

nything,  it 

cause  some- 

yee.  If  you 
r  no  one  is 
higher  up 

break,  and 
ut  It's  time 
of    a    lot   of 

good   of   ol' 

of  purpose. 

Adolf  Baba- 

"oversjal  Mr. 

s.  Let's  rid€ 
tv\\  a  whole 


FroshCamp 

Touring  Norwegian  Remarks  On  L/S|  Planning 

To  Begin  Toddy 


By  WALTER  SCHRUNTEK 

Dr.  Sigurd  Willoch,  director  of; 
the  National  Gallery  of  Oslo.  Nor-; 
way  stopped  off  at  Chapel  Hill 
yesterday  on  the  second  leg  of  his  i 
cross-country  tour  of  U.  S.  mu- 
.seums  and  art  galleries. 

The  Norwegian  visitor  is  a  guest ; 
of  the  U.  S.  State  Dept.  in  the  ca- 
pacity of  obijerver  of  American  art  \ 
and  art  institutions.  His  tour  of' 
the  states  will  take  him  through  \ 
virtually  every  section  of  the  i 
country.  i 

Altliough  Dr.  Wiiloch  has 
b«en  in  the  country  only  four 
weeks,  he  has  noticed  some  dif- 
ferences in  the  organizational 
phase  of  American  museums  and 
galleries  as  opposed  to  Norwe-  '' 
gian  art  institutions. 
He  cited  the  American  approach 

GUADALAJARA 
.      SUMMER  SCHOOL 

The  accredited  bilingual  school 
sponsored  by  the  Universidad  .'luto- 
noma  de  Guadalapara  and  mem- 
bers of  Stanford  University  faculty 
will  offer  in  Guadalapara,  Mexico. 
July  1-Aug.  10,  courses  in  art,  folk- 
lore, geography,  history,  language 
and  literature.  S225  covers  tuition, 
board  and  room.  Write  Prof.  Juan 
B.  Rael.  Box  K,  Stanford  Univer- 
iity.  Calif. 


In  educational  art  in  the  mu.s-eum. . 
•'In  this  country,  I've  noliced  a| 
pronounced  stress  of  organized] 
education  in  the  museum,"  he 
said.  He  mentioned  the  larger 
scale  and  scope  of  art  education 
and  appreciation  both  in  the 
schools  and  galleries. 
COMPETITION 

"In  Norway,"'  he  said,  'an  an- 
nual national  competition  among 
children  in  the  younger  age  groups 
is  designed  to  promote  interest  in 
art  and  art  functions.  We  have  not 
the  facilities  and  organization  to 
handle  the  lecture  and  group-edu- 
cation aspect^;  peculiar  to  Ameri- 
can museums  and  gallerjes."    . 

UNC  is  the  first  campus  Dr. 
W^illoch  has  visited  on  his  tour 
thus  far.  His  previous  two  stops 
were  Washington,  D.  C.  and  New 
York. 

When  asked  what  he  thought  of 
Chapel  Hill  and  the  University,  the 
Norwegian  smiled  and  .vaid  that  he 
was  favorably  impressed,  but 
'  wished  that  he  had  seen  it  under 
more  favorable  conditions  (minus 
the  rain). 
DIFFERENCES 

Questioned  about  differences  be- 
tween the  American  and  Norvve- 
gian  university  system.  Dr.  Wil- 
loch replied  in  terms  which  should 
bring  gleams  to  the  eyes  of  many 
'  UNC  students. 


BASKETBALL  CHAMPION.  SAYS: 

WICEROYHAS 
THE  SMOOTHEST 

TASTE  OF  ALL! 


n 


SMOOTH  !   From  the  finest  tobacco  grown.  Viceroy  selects  only 
the  Smooth  Flavor  Leaf . . .  Deep-Cured  golden  brown  for  extra  smoothness: 


SUPER    SMOOTH!    Only  viceroy  smooths  each  puff 
through  20.000  filters  made  from  pure  cellulose— soft,  snow-white*,  natural! 


He  pointed  out  the  alraos't  com-  j 
plete  freedom  of   the  student  un-  i 
der  the   European   university   sys- } 
tern — his  freedom  of  attendance  as 
opposed  to  the  limited  cut  systems 
"enjoyed"    here    at    Carolina    and 
other  U.  S.  schools. 

He  also  cited  the  closer  student- 
teacher  relationship  which  exists 
in  Europe.  He  added  that  univer- 
sity work  in  Europe  is-  confined 
strictly  to  graduate  study,  which 
in  part  explains  the  freedom  and 
relationship  listed  above. 

After  leaving  Chapel  Hill  late 
yesterday,  the  Norwegian  observ- 
ed tfaveilfed  further  south  to  Flor- 
ida and  Rollins  College,  where  he 
expects  to  attend  a  special  show- 
ing of  Norwegian  Art. 

His  itinerary,  which  includes  a 
clock-wise  tour  of  states  after 
Florida,  will  be  completed  some- 
time in  April  after  two  final  stops 
in  New  York  and  Washington, 
D.  C. 

Dr.  Willoch  said  that  he  is  not 
expected  to  present  any  formal  re- 
port to  the  State  Dept.,  but  that 
he  will  present  his  informal  find- 
ings to  the  U.  S.  ambassador  in 
Oslo. 


Petition 

(Continued  jrom  page  I) 

men's  dorms,  leaving  their  fami- 
lies at  heme. 

In  a  letter  to  the  UNC  Trustees 
Visiting  Committee,  Wads^^rth 
pointed  out  that  the  present  pre- 
fab units  are  approximately  ten 
years  old  and  were  originally  con- 
structed for  a  maximum  period 
of  seven  years.  The  Housing  Of- 
ficer announced  that  he  was  sub- 
mitting plans  for  the  construction 
of  200  additional  units  for  mar- 
ried  students. 

"Even  with  this  total  of  556 
appartments.  we  would  be  far 
short  of  supplying  the  need."  re- 
ported Wadsworth. 


Planning  for  the  1957  Freshman 
Camp  will  begin  tonight  at  9  in 
200  Carroll  Hall. 

YMCA  President  Gerry  Mayo 
said  yesterday  the  camp  program 
will  be  evaluated  from  several 
angles.  Among  the  topics  to  be  dis- 
cussed are  "Why  is  the  Y  interest- 
ed in  stionsoring  Freshman  Camp," 
and  "In  what  ways  does  the  con- 
tent of  the  camp  program  reflect 
the  stated  purpose." 

Mayo  called  this  the  'first  big 
meeting"  on  next  fall's  camp  pro- 
gram and  asked  all  interested  stu- 
dents to  attend. 

A  more  convenient  time  for  la- 
ter meetings  will  be  discussed, 
said  Mayo.  Agendas  for  later  meet- 
ings will  be  planned  tonig'ht.  At 
these  later  meetings  a  Freshman 
Camp  chairman  will  be  elected, 
committees  establi^ed  and  train- 
ing sessions  scheduled. 

Claude  Shotts,  General  Secre- 
tary of  the  YM-YWCA  will  lead 
tonight's  evaluation  session.  Ma- 
yo will  conduct  the  meetings  un- 
til a  camp  chairman  can  be  chos- 
en. 

Mayo  stressed  the  fact  that  it 
is  important  for  those  interested 
in  working  with  the  camp  program 
to    attend    this   meeting. 


Senate  Urged  To  Adopt 
Modified  Mid-East  Plan 

WASHINGTON  —  (AP) —  Ma- ,  against  any  military  aggression  in 
jority  Leader  Johnson  (D-Tex)  ur-  j  the  Middle  East  by  'any  country 
ged  the  Senate  yesterday  to  adopt  \  controlled  by  international  com- 
the   modified   Middle  East  resolu-    munism." 

tion    and   tell    the    communists   to :      It  also  empowers  the  President 
"keep  out"  of  thta  strategic  area,    to    launch    a    200    million    dollar 

Submitted    by    President    Eisen-  i  economic    and    military    aid    pro- 
hower,  the  resolution  was  rewTit- '  gram  for  nations  in  the  region, 
ten   by   the   Senate's   Foreign   Re- 1      Johnson  coupled  his  support  of 
lations  and  Armed  Services  com-    the    legislation    with    criticism    of 
mittees.  ^  :  the  administration  for  the  way  in 

Johnson    said    that    in    its   new  i  ^^^^^  ^^  said  administration  lea- 
form  it  serves  notice  that  aggres- 1  ^^^^  presented  it  to  Congress, 
sive  communism   will  be   opposed 


Hammarskjold  Receives 
Suez  Canal  Use  Proposal 

UNITED  NATIONS,  N.  Y.,  — 
(.AP)— The  United  States,  Britain, 
France  and  Norway  transmitted 
today  to  U.  N.  Secretary  General 
Dag  Hammarskjold  proposals  for 
a  temporary  arrangement  for  use 
of  the  Suez  Canal.  He  is  expected 
to  pass  them  on  to  Egypt. 

This    was   reported    by    authori- 
tative   sources    after     representa- 
tives of  those  four  countries  held" 
a  30-minute  conference  with  Ham- 
marskjold. 


APO  Says  Students  May 
Retrieve  Books,  Money 

The  APO  Book  Exchange  an- 
nounced yesterday  that  students 
may  reclaim  unsold  books  and  re- 
ceipts at  the  Housing  Office  to- 
day through   Friday. 

An  APO  representiitive  will  be 
on  hand  at  the  Housing  Office 
from  9  to  12  in  the  morrting  and 
from  2  to  4  each  afternoon. 

Everyone  who  has  not  yet 
claimed  books  or  money  has  been 
asked  to  stop  by  the  APO  office. 


BARGAINS  IN  HUMAN  LIVES 


Godfrey  Voted 
Vice-President 
At  History  Meet 

Prof.  James  L.  Godfrey  has  been 
-hoBen  vice-president  of  the  So- 
•iety  for  French  Historical  Studies 
at  a  -meeting  of  the  society  held 
in  Hunter  College.  New  York. 
Prof.  Harold  T.  Parker  of  Duke 
University  was  elected  president 
)f  the  organization. 

Prof.  George  V.  Taylor,  who  al- 
so attended  the  meeting,  read  a 
paper  which  was  regarded  as  a  re- 
vision of  the  traditional  class- 
.struggle  interpretation  of  the 
French  Revolution,  because  of  a 
denial  of  the  Marxist  classification 
of  French  businessmen  during  the 
18th  century. 

Questioning  the  existence  of  a 
pre  -  revolutionary  bourgeoisie  in 
the  Marxist  sense.  Professor  Tay- 
lor pointed  out  that  many  of  the 
btfeitw^smen  enjoyed  the  social 
statuis  of  nobles.  "Those  who  per 
formed  bourgeois  economic  func- 
tions differed  greatly  from  one 
another  in  point  of  wealth  and 
economic  interest,  and  many  of 
them  counted  as  landowners,  bu 
i^ucrats.  rentiers,  or  professional 
persons  rather  than  as  capitalists." 


Health  Man 
Nurse  To 
Speak  Here 

Dr.  John  C.  Cassel,  M.B.,  B.Ch.. 
M.P.H.,  Associate  Professor  of 
Epidemiology  in  the  UNC  School 
of  Public  Health  and  Mary  King 
Kneedler.  R.N.,  B.S.P.H.N.,  M.A.. 
Chief  of  the  Public  Health  Nurs- 
ing Section,  North  Carolina  Board 
of  Health  will  be  speakers  in  a 
program  to  be  held  on  Feb.  21 
in  the  Louis  Round  Wilson  Li- ! 
brary  Assembly  Room  at  R-  P-m. 
•The  Problem  of  Chronic  Dis- 
ease Today"  will  t>e  presented  by 


"not  by  just  one  man,  and  not 
by  just  one  branch  of  government, 
but  by  thie  institutions  represent- 
ing the  united  will  of  the  Amer- 
ican  people." 

Republicans  also  got  behind  the 
resolution  as  the  Senate  opened 
what  is  expected  to  be  a  two-week 
debate  on  Middle  Eastern  policy. 

Se».  Saltonstall  (R-Mass)  said 
that  while  he  thought  Eisenhow- 
er's original  language  was  more 
"effective"  the  revised  resolution 
should  make  it  apparent  to  Rus- 
sia that  "any  aggression  on  her 
part  will  bring  consequences  which 
are  both  immediate  and  devasta- 
ting." 


Tallulah,     by    Tallulah    Bankhead.    The  Missing  Macleans,  by  Geoffrey 
No  branch   of  government,   the  i  The  stages  most  colorful  lady  lights   Hoare.  The  true-life  detective  story 


Democratic  leader  said,  should 
try  to  "operate  on  a  put  up  or  shut 
up  basis*'  and  ask  another  branch 
to  "do  it  my  way.  or  els-e." 

Congress  is  not  a  rubber  stamp, 
Johnson   asserted. 


into  her  friends  and  contemporari-  of  the  traitorous  Brilia^  diplomat, 

es,   while    the   verbiage   flies    like  Published  at  $3.75. 

autumn  leaver'.  Published  at  $3.95  Our  Special    $1.39 

Our   Special       $T.29  The  Tigers  of   Trengganu,   by  Lt. 

Somebody     Up    There    Likes    Me,  Col.  A.  Locke.  Informative  and  ex- 

the  life  of  Rocky  Graziano,  as  told  citing  fore  of  a  tiger  hunter.  Pub 

Originally  Eisenhower  asked  forj  ^o  Rowland  Barber.  The  rough  road  lished  at  $3.50 

specific   congressional    "authority"   "P  ^^^"^  s^"'"  ^'^  ^«  '"•'^'"P-  ^"^^^  *^"''  ^****''' 


to  employ  U.  S.  troops  in  the  Mid- 
dle East  if  necessary.  The  house 
voted  him  such  authority  last 
month,  but  the  language  was 
changed  by  the  Senate  committees 
to  delete  any  specific  mention  of 
a  grant  of  authority. 

Soviet  Premier  Bulganin  lashed 
out  at  the  Eisenhower  program  to- 
day as  a  "colonial  trap  prepared 


In   its  present   form   the  resolu 
tion  expresses  the  readiness  of  the !  by  U.  S.  oil  monopolies." 
United    States   to   use   armed    for- 
ces,  at  the  President's  discretion, 


In    a    fiery    Kremlin    speech    he 


Parents'  Club 
Is  Proposed 
For  Med  School 

A  new  organization,  to  be  call- 
ed the  Parents  Club,  has  been 
proposed  for  the  School  of  Medi- 
cine. 

This  announcement  was  made 
this  week  by  Dr.  Samuel  E.  Howie, 
minister  of  the  Highland  Presby- 
terian Church  of  Fayetteville, 
chairman  of  the  organization 
committee.  The  committee  met  at 
the  School  of  Medicine  this 
weekend. 

An  organizational  meeting  for 
the  proposed  new  club  will  be 
held  here  on  April  13.  Parents 
of  medical   students   now   enrolled 


Dr.  Cassel.  Mrs.  Kneifdlef,**  the  'Ml^  ^^^°°^  ^^^  alun)ni  of  the 
second  speaker  of  the  evening,  ["MOTtH  School  will  be  asked  to 
will    explore    the    topic    from    the    attend. 

.standpoint     of     "Home    Nursing. '  I      Present  at  the  committee  meet-  ] 
which  she  believes  gives  a  partial 


answer  to  the  problem. 

Dr.  Cassel.  who  is  a  nati''e  Cf 
Johannesburg,  Union  of  South 
Africa,  where  he  received  his 
doctor's    degree,    has    been    living 


ing  were  Dr.  Howie;  John  S.  Pat- 
terson,    deputy     administrator    of 
veterans     affairs.     Veterans     Ad-  i 
.ninistratiun,    Washington,    D.    C. 
J.  'P.    Hobson,    Charlotte    banker; 
Dr.  Palmer  A.  Shelburne.  Greens- 


in  this  country  for  two  years  and  |  boro  physician;  Victor  G.  Herring 
took  a  Master  of  Public  Health  de- '  Jr  •    Goldsboro    businessman;    Dr. 


gree  in  1^3  from  the  UNC  School 
of  Public  Health. 

Mrs.  Kneedler,  a  registered 
nurse,  received  a  B.S.  in  Public 
Health  Nursing  frort  this  Uni- 
versity in  1947  and  subsequently 
did  graduate  work  in  public 
health  nursing  at  Teacher's  Col- 
lege, Columbia  University.  She 
has  been  Chief  of  the  Publi^ 
Health  Nursing  Section  of  the 
State  Board  of  Health  in  Raleigh 
since  July   1954. 

This  program  is  being  present- 
ed under  the  auspices  of  the  As- 
sociation for  Aging  and  Communi- 
ty Relationships  of  Chapel  Hill. 
The   public  is   invited  to   attend. 


P 1997,  «te«s  k  WBIluuw  T*taGC9  C«rp% 


dt(iie)«tATioM 

Interviews  for  students  interest- 
ed in  working  on  the  Orientation 
Committee  next  fall  will  be  held 
tomorrow  and  Thursday  from  2- 
4  p.m.  in  the  Woodhouse  Confer- 
ence Room  of  Graham  Memorial. 
Committee  Chairman  Jerry  Oppen- 
heimer  urged  all  students  interest- 
ed to  apply  for  the  committee. 
LAW  WIVES 

The  Law  Wives  Assn.  will  meet 
today    at   8   p.m.    in    the    Victory 
Village  nursery. 
WESLEY  CHOIR 

The  Wesley  Choir  will  rehearse 
today  at  7  p.m.  in  the  sanctuary 
of  the  Methodist  Church.  There 
will  be  a  joint  rehearsal  with  the 
church  choir  Thursday  at  7:30  p.m. 
USHERS  NEEDED 

Ushers  are  needed  for  the  pro- 
duction of  Brigadoon  March  1-3. 
All  interested  persons  have  been 
asked  to  contact  Charlie  Barrett 
at  80381  or  the  Playmakers'  office 
in  Saunders  Hall. 
LAW  WIVES 

There  will  be  a  meeting  of  the 
Law  Wives  Association  today  at 
the  Victory  Village  Day  Niusny. 
The  meeting  will  be  held  at  8  p  pi 
COLLOQUIUM 

There  will  be  a  joint  Duke-UNC 
Physics  Colloquium  today  at  8  p.m. 
in  the  Physics  Building  at  Duke 


W.  Reece  Berryhill,  dean  of  the 
UNC  School  of  Medicine  and  Dr. 
Carl  Anderson  and  Dr.  William 
Fleming,  faculty  members  of  the 
UNC  School  of  Medicine. 


Alpha  Kappa  Psi  Hold 
Pledging  Ceremonies 

Alpha  Tau  Chapter  of  Alpha 
Kappa  Psi.  professional  fraternity 
in  business,  recently  held  pledg- 
ing ceremonies  for  its  spring 
pledge  class. 

The  spring  pledge  class  includ- 
ed:   John    H.    Solomdn,    Wilming- 
ton;   L.    Edward    Evans,    Winter- 
ville;     Johnny     G.     Poplin,    Albe- 
marle; John  P.  Moller,  Charlotte; 
Harold  Wray,  Reidsville;  Carl  W. 
Barbour,      Durham;      Hubert     H. 
Sharpe,    Winston    Salem;     Robert 
C.  Smith,  Clinton;  Robert  D.  Har- 
ford,     Michael      K.      Hayes      and 
Charles   M.    §parrow,   Greensboro. 
University.    Dr.    Bryce    S.    Dewitt 
will  speak  on  "Problems  in  Rela- 
tivity Theory  in  the  Light  of  the 
Chapel  Hill  Conference."- 
D.A.A.  TABLE  TENNIS 

Sue  Gichner,  Manager,  reminds 
all  participants  to  play  their  sec- 
ond round  matches  by  today  at  5 
p.m. 

HOLMES  DAY   NURSERY 
A  brief  meeting  of  tite  Holmes  j  duction    "Brigadoon"    will    go 


Tickets  To  Go 
On  Sale  Here 
For  Brigadoon 

Tickets   for   the    Carolina    Play- 
makers'  forthcoming  musical  pro- 


Day  Nursery  Committee  of  the 
YWCA  will  he  held  today  in  the 
Y  library  at  5  p.m.  All  interested 
pers:>ns  have  been  ufged  to  at- 
tend. 
WUNC-TV 

Today's  schedule  for  WtJNC-TV, 
the   University's'  educational   tele- 
vision station: 
12:45     Music 

1:00    Today  on  the  Farm 

1:30     A  career  for  You 

2:00     Sign  Offf 

5:15     Music 

5:30    Solid   Geometry 

6:00     Legislative   Review 

6:20     News 

6-30     Wings  to  Vikinabnd 

7:00     Industrial    Arfi«;:in 

7:.Sn     Cnlleac    Cnncert 

8:00     Children  of  the  Sun 

8:30    Living  Together 

9:00     Russia:    Past    and   Present 
IOtOO*  Final    Edition 
10:05    Sign  Off 


sale  to  the  general  public  today. 

The  $2  tickets  for  the  musical, 
scheduled  for  March  1-3,  in  Me- 
morial Hall,  may  be  purchased  at 
the  Playmakers'  business  office 
and  at  Ledbetter-Pickard. 

Heading  the  cast  of  60  will  be 
David  Small  and  Mrs.  Adele  Lip- 
pert  as  the  singing  leads,  with 
James  Heldman  and  Miss  Hope 
Sparger  as  the  comedy  leads. 
Small  has  sung  leading  roles  in 
the  Playmakers'  "Showboat"  and 
"Seventeen."  Mrs.  Lippert.  wife 
of  a  UNC  graduate  student,  has 
been  featured  with  the  Cincin- 
nati  Light    Opera    Company. 

As  the  comedy  leads,  Jeff  and 
Meg,  James  Heldman  and  Miss 
Hope  Sparger  provide  the  humor- 
ous angle  for  the  situation  in 
the  town  of  Brigadoon.  Miss 
Sparger  sings  the  novelty  num- 
bers "Love  of  My  Life"  and  "My 
Mother's  Wedding  Day," 


f1.» 

lished  at  $3.95,  The   Confessions   of  a   SceundreL 

Our  Special   _.._.  -...  $1.49  by  Guido  Orlando.  The  man  Frank- 

The  Game  of  Hearts  ^r-  Harriette  lin   D.   Roosevelt   called    "King   of 

Wilsons  Memoirs,   edited  by  Les-  Contacts"  tells  all,  with   pictures, 

lie  Blanch.  Brought  'out  as  black-  Lively  reading   about   our    bizarre 

mail,  a  wild-fire  best  seller  in  the  world.  Published  at  S3.50. 

London  of  it's  day,  it  is  surprising  Our   Special                                $1.49 

that  this  book  of  candid  and  witty  Madame  De  Pompadour,  by  Nancy 

memoirs    of   the   ruling   courtesan  Mitford.  England's  wittieat  writer 

of  Regency   England   should   have  turns  her  pen  on  the  mistress  of 

waited  until  now  for  an  American  Louis    XV,    and    provides    a    jolly 

edition.  Scholarly  but   perky.  Pub-  afternoons    reading.   Published    at 

lished  at  S5.00.  S4.75. 

told    people.":    of    the    Middle    East  i  Our   Special     $1.98    Our   Special     $2.48 

nation"  by  the  United  States  might  j  Athony  Eden,  by  Lewis  Broad.  The  Rebel    Rose,  by   Ishbel   Ross.   The 

plunge  them  into  the  "hell  of  ato-    man  who  almost  restored  England  full     fascinating     story     of     Rose 

,  to  her  traditional  position,  pictur-  O'Nea)  Greenhow,  beauty,  wit,  and 

j  ed  in  all  of  hi.^-  great  integrity.  Pub-  Confederate  spy.  Published  at  $4.00 

j  lished  at  $5.00.  Our   Special                                 $2.49 

j  Our   Special    $1.49  Looking  Beyond,    by    Lin    Yutang. 

I  Last  Voyage,  by  Ann  Davidson.  A  The  Chinese  thinker  ^-peculates  on 

'  saga  of  adventure  at  sea.  lUustrat-  the  future  of  Western  Civilization, 

I  ed    with   flnaps    and    photographs,  in  a  book  that  belongs  beside  Bel- 

;  Published  at  S4.00.  lamy's    'Looking  Backward".  Pub- 

;  Our   Special                           _       $1.29  lished  at  S4.95. 

I  The  Life  and  Cases  of  Mr.  Justice    Our   Special    : $1.49 

i  Humphreys,    by    Stanley    Jackson.  As    I    Remember    Him,    by    Hans 

England's   greatest   living   authori-  Zinnser.    \    very    great    American 

ty  on  Criminal  Law,  pictured  with  physician  in  a  thinly  disguised  au- 

I  skill  and  legal  understanding.  Won-  tobiography,  written  at  a  time  when 

derful  reading  for  lawyer  or  crim-  he  knew  death  was  imminent.  Pub- 

inologist.  Public-hed  at  S3.00.  lished  at  $5.00. 

Our   Special $1.29    Our   Special    _...:_ $2.49 


mic  and  hydrogen  war." 


MUTINY!  MAIDENS! 
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Based 

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CHARLES  UUGHTONi 
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PA61  FOUR 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


WEDNESDAY,  FEBRUARY  20,  1f?7 


(Today's  column  is  written  by  Assistant  Sports  Editor  Bill  King- 
Ed's  note.) 

Now  that  the  hullabalrw)  of  C.aiolinas  four  recent  heart- 
stopping  games  has  subsided,  lets  look  this  win  streak  straiglit 
in  the  eve:  whv  ca-nt  the  lar  Heels  go  on  to  an  undeleated 
season  and  win  tiie  ACX:  chanipioiisliip  and  perhaps  the 
XCAA? 

Affri  all.  an  rindcfealcd  scasoti.  though  a  rarity,  is  not 
nti  nnfjossibility.  Look  at  the  tremnxdoiis  string  of  victories 
that  the  San  Frandsco  Dons  had  run  nj)  until  the  first  of 
tlif  \{)j('^-y,~  season.  Fiftysix  in  a  .row.  to  he  exact.  .And  did 
the  l)on>  have  any  better  material  than  the  Far  fleets  have? 
\ot  in  the  ofnuion  of  tins  leriter. 

It  s  pretty  evident  that  the  Tar  Heek  ha\e  proxen  iheni- 
ches  worthv  of  the  number  one  spot  in  tlie  nation.  Few  teams 
r.{\\  say  that  they  have  faced  a  tougher  siliedule  than  Caro- 
lina. It's  also  ol)\ious  that  the  .Atlantic  Coast  ('onference  is 
one  of  the  stronger  leagues  in  the  eountuy  and  to  have  l)eat- 
en  everv  team  in  it  at  leat  once,  is  pietty  thorough  evidence 
that  the  roiigenial  Frank  MtGuire  has  hiifiself  a  prettv  fair 
hall  dub— one  that  "ould  go  all  the  way. 

)".7  ex'e}-yone  shudders  at  the  thought.  We  have  to  admit 
guilt  to  panic  ourselves  evetjtinte  we  think  about  an  un- 
defeated .seaso)!.  File  hoys  up  in  Xew  M'est.  that's  the  psy- 
<  holog\  building,  are  probably  haviyig'a  field  day  figii>inili 
out  reason  lehy  such  an  accomplishment  is  unattaiimble.  In 
fact  that  element  ol  p.\\cholog\  is  inevitably  tnentioned  when 
the  subject  is  discussed.  Hut  the  Tar  Heels  have  prox'cn  that 
they  can  win  under  pressure. 

Maybe  the  ball  club  has  realized  that  an  inidefeaied  .sea- 
son is  not  impossible  after  all,  and  has  decided  to  kick  su- 
perstitions and  psychologv  and  g(»  out  and  win  iise'f  a  lew 
t  hampicjiiships. 

Sidiuire.  like  all  irinning  coaches,  is  pf  ssnnistic—and 
tightly  so.  Xobody  can  actually  reali:.e  the  mental  and  phy- 
sical beating  that  he  ami  his  boys  are  taking:  but  they're 
still  winiiiiig  ball  games. 

.\attnallv  if  the  Tar  Heels  are  going  to  lose  one.  the 
sooner  the  better.  Itll  certainly  relieve  a  lot  of  tenioii  be- 
lore  the  .ACC  toinnev — the  one  thing  tha't  counts  most.  .Still 
the  thought  of  an  unbeaten  sea.son  is  a  lucrati\e  one. 

Whether  or  not  the  lar  Heels  can  go  ail  the  way  is 
something  that  only  time  will  tell.  But  in  any  case.  Frank 
.Mcf.uire  has  already  f)een  assured  one  heck  ol  a  successlul 
season:   and  it  couldnt   hapiKMi   to  a  nicer  guv. 

The  varsitv  isnt  the  only  basketball  team  that's  repres- 
enting Carolina  well  this  season.  Coac  li  X'ince  (.rimaldi's 
Ta'r  Babies  have  done  a  fine  job  in  rolling  up  a  i ;{-,',  record 
tlurs  far.  Onlv  the  State  and  \Vake  Forest  freshman  teams 
have  been  able  to  stop  the  talented  Tar  Babie>.  Wake  did 
it  oncc'  and  the  Wolflets  twiic.  Carolina  has  beaten  the 
liabv  Deacs  twice  and  State  twice. 

7  he  frosh  are  bles.sed  leith  an  array  of  versatile  talent; 
talent  -which  makes  Carolina's  btisketball  future  mighty 
bright. 

It  will  be  haid  to  keep  boys  like  I.ee  Shaffer.  Hick  Kep- 
lev.  and  ^'ork  l-iuese  off  the  varsitv:  Shaffer  in  hut.  is 
already  bein;^  tabbed  as  a  successor  to  Fennie  RosenbUith. 
Keplev  could  develop  into  a  very  fine  center,  and  l.aiese 
is  piobably  the  most  impro\ed  bdllplayer  on  the  .sc|uad.  John 
Crottv  and  Mike  Stepj;e  will  also  be  right  in  the  thick  of 
tilings  when  varsity  practice  begins  for  next  season. 

Tar  Heels  Trip  State 

(Continued  from  Page  1) 
»parked  the  UNC  scoring  in  the 
early  moments  as  a  tight  Pack 
defense  kept  Lennie  Rosenbluth 
.scoreless  from  the  floor  until  the 
half  was  at  the  midway  point. 
Lennie  collected  only  9  points  in 
the  first  half,  but  came  back  with 
19  in  the  second  to  take  high  scor- 
ing honors  with  a  total  of  28. 
Brennan  got  20.  Kearns  15  and 
Quigg    12. 

UNC  led  at  intermission.  38-23, 
but  that  relatively  narrow  15  point 
margin  balloned  in  the  second 
half  as  the  Tar  Heels  continued 
to  bombard  the  basket  from  all 
angles.  With  Rosenbluth  and  Bren- 
nan doing  most  of  the  damage, 
the  score  mounted  to  62-32,  then 
71-42  with  7:43  to  go.  State  hack- 


NUAABER  14  FOR  FROSH 


Tar  Babies  Plaster 
State  Frosh,  86-56 


-  Two  For  Lennie 

Lennie  Rosenbluth  goes  up  for  two  points  in  last  night's  action  against  the  State  Wolfpack.  Looking 
on   are   Bob  MacGsllivray   (81)   and   John    Richter   (84),  Norman  Kantor  Photo 


IN  AP  POLL: 


By   BILL   KING 

The  Carolina  Tar  Babies  display-  j 
ed  a  scoring  attack  that  would  . 
befit  Carolina's  illustrious  varsity 
last  night  as  they  completely  out-  1 
classed  the  hapless  State  College  i 
frosh.   86-56   in   Woollen    Gym. 

The  Wolflets  were  never  able  1 
to  match  their  taller  opponents 
as  the  Tar  Babies  controlled  both  ; 
boards  and  hit  with  probably  their  j 
most  deadly  precision  of  the  year  i 
in  evening  the  series  with  the  j 
the  Wolflets  at  two  each.  j 

Dick  Kepley's  field  goal  with  i 
16:10  left  in  the  first  half  broke  | 
an  8-8  tie  and  sent  the  Tar  Babies  j 
ahead  foV  good.  From  there  on  \ 
the  talented  Tar  Babies  hold  the  ' 
upper  hand  3«  "-  \  a  i  j 
;  crwhelniinK  -  >  -«>  •«•••  ••«^  "*'• 
i      The   State   ir(»sn,   gred..y   v.t;ak- 

THE  BOX  I 

N.  C.  Sta»«  G.      F.  P.    T. ' 

I  Cole,  f 11       4-7  0     26 

Kitchen,  f  _.    0      0-0  1      0 

Scott,  f    0      1-2  11 

Atkin.s  f    - -    2      5-6  2      9 


ened  since  the  last  meeting  of  the  ' 
two   clubs,    could   never   find   the 
range,  and  had  to  do  most  of  their 
shooting  from  the  outside  because 
of  the  tight  defense  the  .Tar  Babies  { 
threw  up.  Very  seldom  could  the  : 
Wolflets    get    in    more    than    one 
shot    as    Carolina's    two    rebound 
wizards.      Dick    Kepley    and      Lee 
Shaffer,  had  the  Wolflet  backboard 
pretty   much    under   control. 

The  win  was  number  fourteen 
for  coach  Vince  Grimaldj's  Tar 
Babies  against  three  losses — two 
at  the  hands  of  the  Wolflets.  The 
frosh  now  have  remaining  games 
with  Atlantic  Christian,  Wake  Fo- 


rest,  and    two   against    Di^ke. 

The  Tar  Babies  scoring  attack 
was  led  by  John  Grotty  and  York 
Laresc.  two  fellows  who  aren't 
used  to  topping  the  scoring  for  the 
frosh.  Grotty  dropped  in  23  points 
and  Larese  was  good  for  21.  For- 
ward Lee  Shaffer  chipped  in  18 
points  to  the  winning  cause,  and 
Dick    Kepley   had    12. 

High  man  for  the  visiting  State 
club  was  forward  Dick  Cole  who 
bagged  26  for  high  scoring  hon- 
ors for  both  clubs.  Next  high  for 
the  Wolflets  were  Harold  Atkins 
and  Don  Gallagher  with  9  and 
8  respectively. 


Tar  Heels  Hold  First  PI 
By  Narrow  Edge  Over  Kan 


Frosh  Golfers  Meet 

All  candidates  for  the  fresh- 
man golf  team  have  been  asked 
to  attend  a  meeting  at  the  Finley 
Course  clubhouse  Friday  at   1:15. 


ed  away,  but  when  the  gun  sound- 
ed the  margin  was  again  29  j)oints, 
86-57. 

Coach  McGuire  went  along  with 
his  first  five  until  the  11:35  mark' 
when   he    replaced    Brennan   with 
Bob  Young.  The  UNC  second  unit  I 
took  over  to  mop  up  with  2:45  re-  i 
maining.  ! 

Carolina  used  a  zone  defense  all 
the  way,  and  the  State  sophs  could 
do  little  to  penetrate  it.  John  1 
Richter  was  the  most  successful, ) 
dunking  6  field  goals  and  2  foul  ] 
shots  for  14  points.  Whitey  Bell  | 
had  12,  all  in  the  second  half.  The  ; 
Pack  made  only  9  of  24  foul  shots,  j 

Rosenbluth,  Brennan  and  Quigg! 
dominated    the    backboard,    giving' 
Carolina  a  49-36  edge  in  that  de- 
partment. I 

Monogram  me  rs  Meet     ! 

There  will  be  a  meeting  of  the 
Monogram  Club  tomorrow  night 
at  7:30  p.m.  Club  president  John 
Biiich  has  urged  alt  members  to 
be  present. 


By  THE  ASSOCIATED  PRESS 

Collecting  62  per  cent  of  the 
fir.-i  place  votes.  North  Caro- 
lina's unbeaten  Tai-  Heels  re- 
mained the  top  club  m  the  Asso- 
ciated Press  weekly  college  bas- 
ketball poll  today  with  the  Kan- 
sas Jayhawks  a  close  second. 

Winners  of  20  games  in  a  row, 
the  Tar  Heels  picked  up  806 
points  on  the  usual  basis  of  10 
for  iirA  place,  9  for  second,  etc. 
The  nation's  sportswriters  and 
sporiscasters  gave  Kansas  17 
firsts  and  756  points. 

The  Jayhawks,  who  lifted 
their  season's  mark  to  17-1  by 
beating  Oklahoma  last  night,  had 
48  second-place  votex  to  17  for 
North  Carolina,  Kansas  next 
takes  on  Oklahoma  A&M  Thurs- 
day niyht.  They  beat  the  Aggies 
62-52  on  Feb.  12. 

Kentucky,  which  squeezed  past 

Wachendorfer 
Sets  Two  New 
Swim  Records 

L\C  swimmer  Paiil  Wachendor- 
fer splashed  his  way  to  tw,j  new 
records  here  Monday  niMht  in  the 
third  annual  freshman  invitation- 
al swimming  championships  held 
in   Bowman  Gray  Pool. 

No  team  scores  were  kept  biit 
Duke  and  East  Carolina  won  four 
firsts   apiece. 

Wachendorfer  set  set  a  new  re- 
cord in  the  100-yd.  breastrokc  and 
a  new  school  freshman  record  in 
the  200  yd.   individual   medley. 

The  meets  only  other  double 
winners  were  East  Carolina's  Mike 
Williamson,  who  won  the  220  and 
440  freestyle,  and  Duke's  Ed  El- 
s?y,  who  finished  first  in  the  100 
and   200  backstrokes. 

The  only  other  Tar  Baby  to  grab 
a  fir.;.!  place  was  sprinter  Teddy 
Moore,  Mciore  captured  the  .50  yd, 
freestyle  and  was  second  in  the 
100-yd.  freestyle. 


Vanderbilt  80-78  last  night,  hold 
on  to  third  place  with  474 
points.  The  Wildcats  are  follow- 
ed by  Seattle,  Bradley,  and 
Southern  Methodist,  The  ballot- 
ing was  based  on  games  throu^^h 
Saturday.  Feb,  16. 

Louisville's  Cardinals  moved 
up  a  notch  to  seventh  place  and 
dropped  UCLA  to  eighth,  Iowa 
State  and  Vanderbilt  round  out 
the  fir^ft  ten,  Vandy  was  tied  for 
the  No,  18  position  a  week  ago. 

Mississippi  State,  a  surprise 
victor  over  Kentucky  last  week, 
was  one  of  three  teams  whicli 
moved  into  the  second  ten,  Kan- 
sas State  and  Memphis  State 
were  the  other  graduates.  Mis- 
sissippi State  i.N-  19th.  Kansas 
State  17lh  and  .Memphis  Stale 
20th 

The  top  ten  teams  with  first 
place  votes  and  won-Iost  records 


through    Saturday,    Feb. 
parer.thcses   points  on   10, 
7,  6.  5.  4.  3.  2.  1  basis: 
TOP  TWENTY 

1.  UN.C.  (55)  (20-0) 

2,  Kansas  (17)  (16-1) 
Kentucky  (2)  (18-4) 
Seattle  (4)  (19-2)    ' 
Bradley  (5)  (17-3) 
S.M.U.  (17-3) 

7.  Louisville  (2)  (17-4) 

8.  UCLA  (18-2) 

9.  Iowa  State  (15-5)  

10    'Vanderbilt  (15-4) 

11.  Indiana  (11-6)        .. 

12.  W,  Forest  (16-6)        . 

13.  Okla,  City  (1)  (15-7) 

14.  W.  Virginia  (19-4) 

15.  California  (15-2) 
16   Duke  (11-8) 

17,  Kansas  State  (12-6) 

18,  W.  Va,  Tech  (3)  (21-1) 

19.  Miss.  State  (13-7) 

20.  Memphis  State  (19-4) 


16    in 
9,   8, 


806 

756 

474 

401 

387 

341 

289 

238 

'130 

99 

86 

82 

79 

71 

70 

61 

60 

48 

47 

45 


Gallagher,  c  _ 

Coley,  g  ..l-^jj 
McCann.  g 
Troutman,  g 
Stainback,  g 
Totals 

U.  N.  C. 

Shaffer,  f  

Ainslie,  f  

Larese,  f 

McRackan,  f 

Kepley.  c  ... .. 

'  Poole,  c    .. 

|Crotty.  g 

Graham,  g 

Steppe,  g 

Crutchfield,  g 


0-2 
0-0 
0-1 
0-0 
2-2 


22  12-20     20     56 
G.      F.       P.     T. 


he. .  -  jrd  Johnson  Restaurant 

BREAKFAST  ,  . 

LUNCH  - 

^   -       DINNER 

;  SNACKS 

'     ^     "Landmark  For  Hungry  Tarheels" 


6-7 
0-0 
5-6 
0-0 
0-0 
0-0 
7-9 
2-3 
4-6 
2-2 


18 
2; 

21  i 
0 

12 

0 


1     23 


Totals       .    _  30  26-33     17     86 

Time  Changed 

The   final    eliminations    in    the 
billiard    tournament    now    being 
held   will    be    run   off   tomorrow    ] 
night   at   7:30   instead    of    Friday 
night     as     had     originally     been 
planned.  The  shift  was  made  be-    ' 
cause  of  a  conflict  with  the  Car-    ' 
olina-South     Carolina     basketball 
game.  j 


Beatty,  Sime  Headline 
Cast  Of  Indoor  Games 


RALEIGH~(AP)— Duke  speed- 
stir  Dave  Sime  and  North  Caro- 
lina miler  Jim  Beatty  head  the 
field  for  the  Atlantic  Coast  Con- 
ference Indoor  Games  in  the  State 
Fair  arena  here  Saturday, 

A  total  of  160  athletes  from  the 
eight  ACC  schools  have  entered 
the  meet.  Three  divisions  will  be 
held,  conference,  non-conference 
and  freshman.  Twenty  colleges  arc 
expected  to  have  entries  in  the 
non-conference    division. 

Sime,  who  shattered  and  equal- 
led world  records  last  year  in  tlie 
100-yard  and  220-yard  sprints  and 
220-yard  low  hurdles,  will  run  in 


the  60yard   dash   and   70-yard   low 
hurdles. 

Beatty   entered    in    the   one-mile 
and    two-mile    events, 

(Joach  Jim  Kehoe's  Maryland 
team,  is  the  defending:  champion. 
The  Terps  have  another  strong 
team  but  will  get  tough  competi- 
tion from  Duke  and  North  Caro-. 
lina,  I 

Preliminaries    will    .start    at    10 
a,m.  with  the  finals  set  for  2  p.m. 

The  meet  will  mark  the  first  ap- 

;  pcarance    for   Sime    since    leaving 

Feb.   7  to  go  to   Rangoon.   Burma, 

to  run  at  the  request  of  the  state 

department. 


DAILY    CROSSWORD 


CLASSIFIEDS 


BILLY     /mm\    SARAH 
ECKSTINE  /  ^l  \  VAUGHAN 


IN  PERSOM! 


^AND  ORCHESTRA  featuring^ 

JOE  WILLIAMS 

JERI  SOUTHERN 


>^^^ 


BUD  POWELL  TRIO 
CHET  BAKER 
LESTER  YOUNG 
ZOOT  SIMS 

JIMMY  JONES     • 


PNINEAS  NEWBORN  JR.  QUARTET 
TERRY  GIBBS  QUARTET 

feataring  TERIIY  POLLARD 
SELDOM  POWELL       •       ROLF  KUHN 
ROY  HAYNES     •     RICHARD  DAVIS 


Raleigh  Memorial  Auditorium 

ONE  NITE  ONLY  MON.  EVE  FEB. 


5  ROOM  BRICK  HOUSE.  3  BED 
rooms,  all  modern  conveniences. 
3  miles  on  Old  86  Hyway.  Stove 
and  Frigedaire  furnished.  Call 
Fred  Katzin  after  6:00,  8-9025. 

NEWSPAPER  WOMAN  WANTED: 
Young  woman  for  newspaper 
job  now  or  on  graduation;  need 
not  necessarily  have  studied 
journalism,  but  desire  a  per- 
son interested  in  North  Carolina 
community  life  who  can  write 
acceptably:  general  reporting, 
with  emphasis  on  women's  ac- 
tivities at  home  and  in  commun- 
ity; .semi-weekly  in  lively  East- 
ern North  Carolina  town  of  5.- 
000,  with  reportorial  staff  of 
three  and  modern  equiptment 
and  air  -  conditioned  offices. 
Write  and  will  interview.  Ad- 
dress. Editor,  Herald,  Ahoskie, 
N.  C. 

FoR~SALE:  RUGER  SINGLE-SIX 
.22  caliber.  Contact  Jim  Potter 
at  116  King  St.  or  Phone  8089-3. 


Mail   Orders  —  Ticket  Sale 

THIEM'S  RECORD  SHOP 

HAMLIN   DRUG  CO. 


Reserved   Seat   Admission 
^2-^2.50-$2.7i-$3  &  $3.50 


25 


WANTED  "  SOMEONE  WHO  IS 
interested  in  doing  advertising 
work.  No  experience  necessary, 
but  preferred.  Contact  Fred  Kat- 
zin, The  Daily  Tar  Heel,  l>etween 
l:tA;  and  5:00  p.ni,  | 


.4CROSS 

1,  Sleeveless 

garment 
5.  Turkish 

title  (pi.) 
9,  Taste 
10.  Volcanic 

rocks 

12.  Call  forth 

13.  City  fNeb.) 

14.  Harmonize, 
as  color 

15.  Purchase 

16.  Close  to 

17.  Land 
measure 

J  8.  Succor 
19.  Constella- 
tion 
to.  Moral 
practice 

23.  Scheme 

24.  The 
meantime 

26.  Twilight 
28,  Resin  (pi.) 
SI.  High   (mus. 
.32.  Pigpen 
(33.  Exclama. 
'       tion 
.34.  State  of 

l>eing 
'35.  Compass 

point  (abbr. 
36.  River 
I       ( Ruas. ) 
38.  Blemish 
'  40.  Late 

41.  Cries  out 

42.  Adieu 
I        (Sp.) 

43.  Charge 
.44.  University 

officer 
DOWN 
1.  Prance 
(colloq.) 


2,  Shake- 
speare'ft 
river 

3,  Prod 

4,  Before 

5,  Loudly 

6,  Plucky 

7,  Polynesian 
4rink 

6.  African 
desert 

9.  Bristles 
11,  DeviJ 
l.'i,  CuU  in  two 

18,  Perform 

19.  Girl's  name 

21.  Be  silent! 

22.  Writing 
fluid 


23.  Apple 
seed 

25,  Man's 
name 

26,  Flower 

27,  Pro- 
vince 
(ID 

29.  CapiUl 
(Eng,) 

30.  Amer- 
ican 
rev- 
olu- 
tion- 
ist 

32.  Mean. 

ing 
35.  Sediment 


HaEiHS  aprgsa 


\nUrtm}f't  Aatwar 

36.  Bail 

37.  Aas&m 
silkworm 

39.  Wing 

40.  Little        ( 
child 


I 

X 

3 

A 

^ 

5" 

* 

7 

T- 

^ 

9 

% 

(O 

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la 

% 

13 

(^ 

% 

15 

\<. 

17 

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% 

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'9 

20 

21 

la. 

% 

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27 

% 

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32. 

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V» 

37 

38 

39 

%, 

AO 

41 

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4X 

45 

m 

44 

^ 

BOB   and   MONK 
of 

TOWN& 
CAMPUS 

SALUTE 
Athlete  Of  The  Week 


LENNIE  ROSENBLUTH 

All-America  eager  Lennie  Ro- 
senbluth has  been  named  Ath- 
lete of  the  Week  for  his  play 
in  the  Wake  Forest  game  last 
Wednesday  night  and  the  State 
game  last  night.  Against  the 
Deacons  he  scored  24  points, 
hitting  10  of  15  field  goals. 

We  want  him  to  drop  by 
TOWN  &  CAMPUS  and  pick  out 
a  shirt  to  his  liking — compli- 
ments of  the  house.. 

We  want  the  old  and  young 
alike  of  Chapel  Hill  to  make 
TOWN  &  CAMPUS  their  head- 
quarters for  the  finest  in  men's 
clothing.  Drop  in  today. 

TOWN& 
CAMPUS 


by 


Smartest  coat  going .  . .  in  any  weather! 
PLAID-LINED  COTTON  POPLIN  'XRUiSER"* 

LONDON  FOG 

. . .  the  one  coat  you  neod 

Bright  look  for  a  gray  day  .  .  .  right  look  for  any 
day :  The  coat,  the  under-collar,  the  pocket  flaps  are 
all  lined  in  the  same  exclusive  tartan  plaid-  Th« 
"Cruiser"  keeps  out  wind  as  well  as  rain,  8tay,s 
wrinkle-free  and  crisp  looking  through  rea!  rugged 
wear.  Natural.  Sizes  36  to  46.  Regular,  Long.] 

IN  NATURAL  AND  WHITE 

COAT  $29.50  MATCHING  CAP  $a.95 


Julian' 


WEATHER 

Continued   cold   with   an   expect- 
ed high  in  the  40's. 


ty.ir.c.  'timm 

SERIAL  DSPT. 
BOQC  870 


3r()c  Datty  Mar  Xcct 


46 

That    many    didn't    come    back. 
See  editorial^  page  2. 


VOL.  LVII   NO    104 


Complete  (JP)  Wire  Servict 


CHAPEL  HILL,  NORTH  CAROLINA,  THURSDAY,  FEBRUARY  21,  1957 


Officei  in  Graham  Memorial 


FOUR   PAGES  THIS  ISSUt 


Village    Two-Story    Units    Called    'Hazardous' 


nevs 

m 
brief 


Eisenhower 
Calls  For 
Pressure 


Has  No  Choice'  | 

'United  Nations' 

WASHINGTON  —  (AP)  —Presi- 
dent Eisenhower  declared  Wednes- 
day nii,'ht  "the  United  Nations  has 
no  choice  but  to  exert  pressure 
upon  Israel"  to  get  her  troops  out 
ot  disputed  Mid-East  areas. 

Eisenhower  thus  threw  out  an 
apparent  hint  that  the  United  Sla- 
tes stands  ready,  if  a  ^-howdown 
comes,  to  support  some  kind  of 
United  Nations  sanctions  against  I 
Israel  for  her  failure  thus  far  to 
heed  U.N.  demands  to  withdraw. 

But    the   President   coupled   tlie 
hint    with    a    statement    that    "we 
still  hope"  Israel  will  accept  United 
States  assurances  and  go  along  with  i 
the  U.N.  demands. 

Eisenhower  spoke  out  in  a  half- ' 
hour  radio-television  report  to  the 
nation  on  his   administration's  ef-  i 
forts — so  far  unavailing — to  settle  i 
the  latest  Middle  East  crisis  with- 
out sanctions  against  Lvael.  j 

He  opened  his  talk,  broadcast 
world  wide  by  the  Voice  of  Ameri- 
ca, with  the  solemn  statement; 

The  future  pf  the  United  Na- 
ticns  and  peace  in  the  Middle  East 
may  be  at  stake." 

EUsenhower's  talk  went  step  by 
step  over  the  situation  as  he  saw 
it.  In  a  warning  to  Israel   he  said: 

'The  United  Nation^  must  not 
fail.  j 

"I  believe  that — in  the  interests ! 
of  peace — the  United  Nations  has 
no    choice    but,  to    exert    pressure 
upon    Israel    to    comply   with   tho 
withdrawal  resolution. 

And  then  he  offered  the  Israeli's 
a  way  out: 

•  Of  course,  we  still  hope  that  the 
government  of  Israel  will  see  that 
its  best  immediate  and  long  term 
interests  lie  in  compliance  with 
the  United  Nations  and  in  placing 
i[  •  trust  in  the  resolutions  of  the 
Ui.ited  Nations  and  in  the  declara- 
tion cf  the  United  States  with  re- 
fcrenqp  to  the  failure.' 

Eisenhower  spoke  shortly  after 
the  U-N.  announced  a  postpone- 
ment, the  third  this  week,  of  Gen- 
eral .\ssembly  debate  on  the  ques- 
tion of  sanctions  against  Israel. 
Ihc  announcement  said  that  at 
United  States  request  debate  was 
being  put  off  from  today  until  to- 
morrow on  an  Asian-African  bloc 
move  to  impo„'j  U.N.  economic  | 
strictures  against  Israel  in  an  ef- 
fort to  force  withdrawal  of  Israeli 
forces  from  the  Gaza  Strip  and  the 
Gulf  of  Aqaba. 

The  President  held  a  conference  , 
with  congressional  leaders  Wed- 
nesday morning  on  the  grave  Mid- 
east situation.  After  that  meeting 
reports  spread  that  he  was  consid- 
ering some  kind  of  "moral  sanc- 
tions' against  Israel,  though  their 
nature  was  not  defined. 

He  said  it  was  "the  general  feel- 
ling"  at  his  meeting  with  the  con- 
gressional  leaders  that  the,  whole 

(Se^  WORLD  NEWS,  Page  3) 


Victory  ViHage  Children  Piay  In  Hazardous  Surroundings 


The  three  Victory  Village  children  shown  here  at  play  are  at  th  e  side  of  one  of  the  recently  "condemned"  two-story  barracks  In  the 
Village.  Fuel  oil  drums  are  stacked  against  the  side  ef  the  building,  and  the  ground  is  littered  with  dog-strewn  garbage  which  over- 
flcws  the  cans  between  the  periodic  garbage  collections.  The  wooden  fire  escape  in  the  background  is  tinder-dry  and  run  through  with 
cracks.  There  are  signs  of  decay  all  about  the  bui(<^ing.  Photo  by  Woody  Sears 


TwO'Story  Units  To  Be  Discontinued 
After  Current  Semesters  Use:  House 

By  CLARKE    JONES 

All  two-story  housing  units  in  X'ictorv  X'illage  will  be  discontinued  alter  the  current 
semester,  arcordinR  to  an  announcement  Monday  by  I'NC  C:hancellor  Robert  B.   House. 

House's  announcement  followed  a  recommendation  Feb.  8  by  the  Sta>e  Insurance  Dept. 
in  Raleigh  that  the  two-story  units  be  discontinued  'in  the  immediate  huure"  because  of 
their  " hazardous"  nature.  "  ... 

The  insinance  dept..  after  making  an  inspection  of  the  Victory  A'dlage  favihties,  made 
its  recommendation  in  a  letter  to  University  Rusiness  Manaoer  Cilaude  Teat^ue. 

House,  in  a  letter  to  Consolidated  University  President  William  C.  Friday,  said  "What 
we  really  need  is  to  begin  tearing  down  the  two-sto?y  structures  and  to  begin  some  sort  ot 
permanent   construction.  " 

He  meniionqd  in  the  letter  to  Friday  the  wax  has  been  opened  for  an  approach  to 
the  (;eneral  Assembly  on  quarters  for  the  married  students." 

The  .-\dvisorv  Budget  Commission  made  no  appropriation  recommendations  for  mar- 
ried students'  honing  in  its  recent  report.  The  University  hs  I  requested  Si.rjo.ooo   for  the 

'0')7"')0  biennium.  . 

Consolidated  Univcrsitv  \'ice  President  and  Finance  Ofliccr  William  1).  -Carmichael 
announced  the  University  would  seek   passage    of  an   enabling   act    for   married    students' 

Fhe  act,  if  passed,  would  allow  the  Uni.er.sity  to  build  move  permanent  housing  on 
1  sclf-li(piidating  basis.  ..  l^'^^t 

•'The  State  Insurance  Dept.,  which  ^^^  one-story  apartments  are 
handles  the  University's  insuran-^^^  ^^  hazardous  as  the  two-story 
ce,  found  the  two-story  family  un-    ^^^.^^^   according  to  the  dept..  but 

.  still  have  som?  danger. 

House  indicated  the  one-story 
units  will  not  be  affected  immedi- 
ately and  said  he  did  not  believe 
"they  are  any  more  dangerous 
than  the  usual  type  of  one-story 
wooden    construction." 

Concerning  this,  the  dept.  said 
"Since  a  portion  of  the  multiple 
family  apartments  are  of  frame 
construction    and    have    individual 


its  to  be  "direct  violation  of  the 
state  law  which  states  that  a  dor- 
mitory of  frame  construction  shall 
be  only  one  story  in  height." 

The  dept.  also  said  the  "exists 
as  tojocation  and  construction  are 
entirely  inadequate"  and  "in  case 
a  major  fire  occured  in  any  of 
these  two-story  frame  dormitories 
that  loss  of  life  would  be  inevi- 
table." 

The  dept.  also  said  the  Univer- 
sity should  plan  for  the  eventual    heat  units,  naturally  a  certain  dan- 
removal    of    the    one-story    units,    ger  does  exist. 


STUDENTS  COUNCIL  REPORT: 


Hodges  Releases  Results  Of 
Couhcirs  Load  Of  Ten  Cases 

The    Student    Councils    load    of    minimum  of   one  semester,   issued    primand  for  public  drunkness. 
casw's  was   fairly   light  last    semes-    official    reprimands    to    four    .stu- ,      An  official  reprimand  is  placed 
tcr.  acccrding  to  a  report  released    dents,    issued    council    reprimands    on   the   back    of   an   offender'.s   oi- 
by    Chairman    Luther    Hodges    Jr.    to   five   students,    put   one   student    ficial    record    in    South     Building, 
yesterday.  :  on  probalion  and  rendered  a    'not  [  A  council  reprimand  is  not  put  on 


for  each   of  the   trials. 
CAMPUS  CODE 

The    Student    Council    has    ori 
ginal  jurisdiction  over  all  cases  in- 


The    r:sult.s   of    ten    trials   were    guilty"   verdict  to  one  student, 
presented    in    Chairman     Hodges'        Individual    cases    and      verdicts 
report.  |  are  as  follows: 

Although    only    ten    cases    were        (1)   Suspension   of  two   students    tra-curricular  activities, 
handled  by  the  council.  Chairman    from  school   for  breaking  and  en  '      Reason    for    disparity    in    pena 
Hodges    emphasized     th?     lenghty    tering  a  student's  room  and  beat- 
deliberation    which   was   nc'cessary    ing  him. 

(2)  Issuance  of  four  official  re- 
primands, one  council  reprimand- 
and  rendering  one  not  guilty  ver- 
dict   to    students    involved    in    a  !  peace,  while  one  was  merely  sleep- 
volving    legislative    and    executive    case    Of    fighting    in*  a    fraternity    ing  off  a  drunk, 
acts.  It  also  has  original  jurisdic- ;  house. 

tion  over  violations  of  the  Cam-  (3)  Suspension  of  two  students 
pu.s  Code  which  calls  for  students  from  school  fo  breaking,  entering 
to   behave   in   a   gentlemanly   fas- ,  and   assault. 

hion  and  report  other  students  |  (4)  Issuance  of  two  council  re- 
who  are  behaving   ungentlemanly.  ,  primands    for   disorderly    conduct. 

In -addition    the    council    hears        (5)  Issuance  of  one  council  re- 
appeal      cases      from      subsidiary  ;  primand  for  obcene  language, 
courts  and  appeals  concerning  the        (6)  Suspension    of    one    student 
Eleoti-^ns  Law.  .    .  i  from    .school    for    "peeping   Tom" 

RESUME  -  -  .  !  offense. 

As    a    resume    of    action,      last        (7)  Issuance    of    one    probation 
.semester    tl>e    council    suspended    penalty  for  public   drunkness. 
five   students   from   school   for   a '      (8)  Issuance  of  one  council  re- 


the    offender's    record. 

Probation    penalty    entails    pro- 
hibition  from  participation   in  ex- 


lities      between    the    two      public 
drunkeness  violations  was  the  dif- 
ferent     circumstances    the     cases 
were  couched  in. 
One  violater  was  disturbing  the 


Council  File 
Released  By 
Honor  Clerk 


Seminar  Meet 
Scheduled 
At  4:30  Today 

Students    interested    in    attend- 1 

I 
ing  a  YMC.A  Seminar  in  New  York 

on    disarmament   should    meet    in 

the    "Y"    this    afternoon    at    4:30, ' 

it    was   announced    yesterday.  j 

Approximately  10  students  are  i 
signed  up  to  make  the  tf'ip.  "Y"  | 
spokesman  Wally  Satterfield  said.  | 
10  vacancies  on  the  delegation  are  ' 
still  open,  ho  .said.  I 

Students  attending  the  seminar. ; 
to  be  held  March  7,  8,  9,  should  | 
pay  a  $3  registration  fee  before  j 
this    Saturdav.    Satterfield    said. 


Housing    Petition 
Now  Being  Circulated 


In  conjunction  with  the  New  j 
York  seminar,  University  Law  j 
School  Dean  Henry  B.  Brandis  will  I 
speak  on  "Disarmament"  in  the  j 
library  as.sembly  room  next  Wed- 
nesday night  at  7  o'clock. 

All   .students  are   invited   to   at-  , 
tend,   according  to  Satterfield.       ■! 


Circulation  of  the  local  married 
students'  housing  petition  will  be 
centered  on  campus  in  a  booth  lo- 
cated in  Y  court  today  and  Fri- 
day. 

According  to  Mrs.  John  Critten- 
den, leader  of  the  petitioning 
group,  the  booth  will  be  open 
throughout  the  two  days  for  those 
who  are  interested  in  signing  the 
petition.  Copies  of  the  petition 
have  been  sent  to  the  vice-presi- 
dents of  all  dorms  on  campus. 

A  canvas  of  Victory  Village  resi- 
dents concerning  the  petition  was 
made  last  night  and  wiil  continue 
tonight.  Circulation  will  end  on 
Feb.  22. 

The  purp.";se  of  the  local  request 
is  to  get  the  North  Carolina  Gen- 
eral Assembly  to  pass  legislation 
enabling  the  state  to  float  bonds 
to  finance  married  students'  hous- 
ing  units. 

According    to    Housing    Officer 


James  Wadsworlh.  20  per  cent  of 
the  total  UNC  enrollment  is  made 
up  of  married  students.  In  a  letter 
to  the  UNC  Trustees  visiting  Com- 
mittee, Wadsworth  stated  that  he 
was  submitting  plans  for  the  con- 
struction of  200  additional  units 
lor  married  students. 


'University  In  Danger' 
Says  UNC  Publication 


GM'S  SLATE 

^AetivitiS^uhMuiT^fo^G^r 
ham  Mtmerial  today  are  at  fol- 
lows: 

Debate  Squad,  4:30-6  p.m., 
Grail  Room;  WRC,  6:45-10  p.m., 
Grail  Room;  UP  Caucus,  6-7:30 
p.m.,  Roland  Parlctr  No.  1;  D.  A. 
Dept.,  7:30-11  p.m.,  Roland  Par- 
ker No.  1;  SP  Caucus,  6:30-7:15 
p.m.,  Roland  Parker  No.  3; 
Orientation  Salactien  Commit- 
tee, 2  6  p.m.,  Woodhouse  Con- 
ference Room;  IDC  Court,  7-10 
p.m.,  Woodhouse  Conference 
Room;  Carolina  Symposium,  4-6 
p.m..  Council  Room:  Women's 
Honor  Council,  6:30-8  p.m.. 
Council  Room;  Dramatic  Arts 
Dep:.,  2-4  p.m.,  Rendexvout 
Room. 


The  January  issue  of  the  bi- 
monthly University  Report,  a  Uni- 
versity Development  Office  pub- 
lication, gave  "stark  warning  that 
the  University  at  Chapel  Hill  is 
in  danger  cf  slipping  from  its  high 
position  in  comparison  'with  other 
great    universities." 

The  publication,  devoted  to  the 
financial  problems  of  the  Univer- 
sity, was  issued  in  coincidence  with 
'he  current  meeting  of  the  State 
Legislature. 

Devoting  its  complete  four  pages 
to  vhe  crisis  at  Carolina,  the  Re- 
port further  stated  that  "the  Uni- 
vsrsity  is  in  danger  Faculty  salar- 
ies must  be^aised  if  we  are  to 
hold  our  position  in  competition 
with  other  ranking  institutions  of 
higher  learning." 

Stressing  the  need  for  raises  in 
faculty  salaries,  the  critical  condi- 
tion of  the  Library,  the  need  for 
augmented     research     funds,  and 


much  as  50%  increases  in  salary 
to  induce  Carolina  instructors  to 
other  institutions,  the  recent  Lib- 
rarians Report  of  resigning  Head 
Librarian  Andrew  Horn,  and  Har- 
vard President  Nathan  Pusey's 
prediction  that  "it  will  not  be  suf- 
ficient simply  to  survive,  limping 
along,  wounded  by  inflation,  mak- 
ing crippled  response  to  a  great 
challenge." 


Following  the  system  of  report- 
ing action  of  the  Men's  Honor  j 
Council  to  the  Daily  Tar  Heel,  the  j 
ensuing  report  was  made  yester- 
day by  George  Ragsdale,  clerk  of 
Mens  Honor  Council,  containing  a 
compilation  of  action  taken  on 
cases  by  the  Men's  Council  since 
May  3,  1956,  and  ending  Feb.  19, 
1957.  I 

The  report  does  not  include  ac- ' 
tion    taken   on  cases  during  sum- 
mer school,  1956.  The  report  is  as  j 
follows:  I 

Since  last  May  the  Men'.s  Coun- ! 
cil  acted  on  a  total  of  82  cascj.  j 
A  verdict  of  guilty  was  returned  ' 
in  48  of  these  cases.  That  is  to  i 
say,  of  all  cajes  tried,  58  per  cent  | 
involved  persons  who  were  found 
guilty  by  the  Council.. 

Forty-two  of  those  persons  who 
were  tried  were  suspended  indefi- 
nitely from  Carolina.  One  student 
was  expelled,  or  permanently  sus- 
pended. 
NOT  GUILTY 

Twenty-nine   of    the   82    person* 
tried  were  found  not  guilty  by  the 


Pledges  Will  Compete 
For  Greek  Week  Honors 


!  capital    for    maintenance    and    in- 

'  creases  in  University  facilities,  the    organization,    and    training 

I  Report     cited   offers   bearing     as  ^  for  campus  leadership. 


Y  Group  Meets 

Discovering  the  role  of  the  cam-  j  ^,^^;^^j,  j,.^^  students  who  were 
pus  leader  and  attacking  the  real  ^^^^^  ^^-^^^^  ^^^^  ^^^^^^  „„  j^. 
problems  of  campus  life  will  be  ^^^.^-^^  probation.  No  student  dur- 
the  subjects  discussed  at  tonight's  ,  -^^  ^^-^  ^^^^^  ^^^^^^  p^^iod  was 
7:30  meeting  of  the  YMCA's  new  ,  gj^.^^  ^„  ^^.^.^j^,  reprimand.  • 
leadership  training  group  for  men  ,  ^he  present  Council  has  handed 
in  the   Y's  upstairs  lounge.  ^^^„   ^.^^  sentences  of  probation 

Under  the  direction  of  Vice  Pre  compared  to  the  16  similar  sen- 
tences rendered  by  the  Council 
last  year  and  has  given  no  repri- 
mands compared  to  the  seven  or 
eight    rendered     last    year.     This 

I  (See  COUNCIL,  Page  3) 


sident  Roy  Taylor  and  Membership 
Cjhairman  Larkin  Kirkman.  the 
program  is  directed  at  bringing 
Carolina  student.*  into  the  YMCA 

them 


By  JIM  PURKS 

All  the  pledge  classes  of  UNC's 
social  fraternities  will  begin  com-  \ 
peting  for  top  honors  this  coming 
Monday,  Feb.  25,  which  marks  the 
opening  day  of  Greek  Week.  j 

Greek  Week  is  an  annual  affair : 
at  the  University  in  which  all  the 
fraternity    pledge    classes    partici- 
pate in  various  social  and  competi- 1 
five  activities  over  a  period  of  five ; 
days.  j 

On    Monday    exchange    dinners 
between    pledge    classes-    will    be ! 
held,  in  which  the  pledges  go  to| 
another    fraternity    as    guests    for  | 
dinner.  j 

On  Tuesday,  Work  Day,  one  of 
the  most   beneficial  affairs  of  the ' 
week  will  take  place.  The  pledge 
classes    will    do    some    work    for  [ 
Chapel  Hill  churches  and  Victory  | 
Village.     Their     participation     on : 
work     day    will    be    graded    and ' 
counted  toward  the  awarding  of  a 
trophy  for  the  best  over-all  pledge 
class.  I 

Wednesday    and    Thursday    will 
mark  the  more  competitive  part  of 
Greek   Week.  A  field  day  will  be  j 
held  on  the  intramural  fields  Wed- 
nesday   featuring   several    athletic  i 
events,  and  a  carnival  will  be  held  . 
Thursday  night.  ! 

The  week  will  culminate  on  Fri- 


Student  Pays 
Heavily  For 
Big  Weekend    \ 

The  Mardi  Gras  weekend  proved 
to  be  more  expensive  for  UNC 
senior  Shelton  W.  Henderson  of 
Lynchburg  than  for  most  other 
UNC  stud'>nts.    . 

The  weekend  cost  Henderson 
a  tot.ll  of  S213.00,  not  counting 
other  expenses,  wh-n  he  was  found 
guilty  of  six  charges  in  Recorder's 
Court   this   Tuesday. 

Henderson  was  arrested  by  a 
highway  patrolman  Saturday  night. 
The  six  charges  on  which  he  was 
found  guilty  are: 

Malici>  us  damage  to  property 
(S7.80),  speeding  "tS38.30).  driv 
ing  while  intoxicated  (SI  18.90). 
the  main  dining  room  of  Lenoir  |  disregarding  signals  ($3330).  il 
Hall  where  trophies  for  scholar- ,  legal  possession  of  whLskey  ($7. 
ship  and  the  best  over-all  pledge    80).   and    disorderly   conduct    (S7. 


'Others  of  the  apartments  have 
a  central  boiler  room  which  feeds 
hot  air  heat  to  eight  unit  dormi- 
tories on  either  side.  It  was  a  fac- 
ility such  as  this  in  which  a  re- 
cent fire  occurred  in  V^ictsry-  Vil- 
lage causing  a  considerable  smoke 
damage. 

"This  dept,  recommends  that 
the  immediate  planning  of  the 
University  be  to  install  smoke  de- 
tectors in  the  hot  air  system  of 
this  type  of  dormitory  with  dam- 
pers  so   that   a    loss   such   as   this 

(See    CONDEMNATION,    Page    3) 

( 

Summer  School 
Registration 
\  SlafedJune6  . 

j      iJegistratJon    for    the    iirst    term 
j  of    the    1957    summer    school    ses- 
1  sion   at  UNC  will   be  held  Thurs- 
day June  6.  Classes  will  begin  the 
following  day. 

Classes  will  end  July  11.  Final 
exams  will   be  on  July   12  and   13. 

The  second  .session  registration 
for  new  students  will  be  held 
Monday.  July  15  with  classes  be- 
ginning the  next  day. 

Monday,  August  19.  will  be  the 
last  day  of  classes  with  exams 
following  the   next    two  days. 

Late  registration  for  the  first 
session  will  be  held  June  7  and 
8  and  until  4:30  p.m.  in  June  9. 
Students  registering  after  June 
6  will  be  charged  a  fee  of  $5. 

Second  session  late  registra- 
tion will  be  held  on  July  16  and 
17  with  the  same  provisions  hold- 
ing  as    the    first   session. 

Saturday  classes  will  b?  held 
June  8  and  22  during  the  first  ses- 
sion and  July  27  and  Augu.st  17 
in  the  second  term. 


day,  March    1,  with  a  banquet  in 


class  will  be  awarded. 


80). 


Light  Docket  To  Face 
Student  Solons  Tonight 


By  NEIL  BASS 

After  a  top-heavy  agenda  last 
wfifek,  the  Legislature  convenes  to- 
night with  a  somewhat  lighter 
docket  confronting  it. 

Lawmakers  meet  on  the  fourth 
flo^r  of  New  East  at  7:30. 

Four    measures    are    slated    to 
come    up    for    vote    tonight,    com- 
pared to  seven  bilL-  last  week. 
FAVORABLE  RESPONSE 

Of  the  four  measures,  two  ap- 
pear certain  to  meet  favorable  re- 
sponse from  legislators. 

One  of  these,  introduced  by 
Whit  Whitfield,  Student  Party, 
calls  for  an  investigation  of  wages 
and  working  conditions  for  stu- 
dents employed  by  Lenoir  Hall. 

The  bill  will  establish  a  com- 
mittee to  confer  with  Lenoir  Hall 
officials  if  it  is  passed.  The  com- 
mitvee  must  report  its  findings  lo 


the  Legislature  three  weeks  after 
bill  passage. 

The  other  measure  is  a  resolution 
asking    that  freshmen   and   sopho- 
more nurses  be  allowed  the  same 
curfew  hourc'  as  other  University, 
women  students. 

A  routine  bill  on  the  legislative  i 
agenda  calls  for  a  $10  appropria- 
tion to  thc'iiegislature  Rules  Coni- 
mittee  to  defray  supply  expenses.  I 

The    final    measure    on    tap    for 
student  representatives  is  a   reso- 
lution discouraging  student  organ- 
izations    from    overspending   their ' 
allotted  budgetj. 

A  bill  passed  during  last  year's  I 
legislative      assembly      calls      for 
prosecution     by     student     govern- ' 
ment's   attorney-general   of   organ- ; 
izations  which  spend  more  money 
than  is  apt)ropriated    by  the  stu- 
dent legislature. 


Bill  Downed 
For  World 
Government 

A  bill  calling  for  the  establish- 
ment by  1965  of  a  world  socialist- 
ic government,  with  its  capital  in 
Denver  Colorado,  was  defeated  by 
a  4-3  vote  of  the  members  pres- 
ent, at  what  Phi  Critic  Duvall 
termed  one  of  the  year's  most 
spirited    meetings,   Tuesday   night. 

In  the  absence  of  a  quorum  the 
assemblage  moved  into  a  commit- 
tee of  the  whole  and  began  debate 
of  the  bill.  The  first  affirmative 
speaker.  Representative  John 
Brooks,  began  the  discussion  by 
praising  the  proposed  social  struc- 
ture as  a  solution  to  the  poverty 
of  many  of  the  world's  peoples, 
as  such  a  socialistic  government 
would  provide  for  a  more  even 
distribution  of  world  resources. 

Representative  Mathews  counter- 
ed by  stating  that  such  a  gov- 
ernment would  be  detrimental  to 
popular  initiative,  in  which  view- 
he  was  .supported  by  Representa- 
tive Charles   Howerton. 

Representative  Jacobs  aided  the 
negative  cau.se  by  recalling  Amer 
ica's  Irng  fight  for  freedom  and 
sovereignty,  which  he  said  would 
be  sacrificed  by  the  enactiment 
of  this  bill. 

Representative  Pruitt  urged  the 
bill's  passage  as  the  only  way  to 
insure  world  c^peration  and  bring 
an  end  to  the  present  arms  race. 


pAQt   rwo 


THE  DAILY  TAR  Hit! 


THURSDAY,  FEBRUARY  21,  ^9S7 


Two  Of  The  Saddest  Facts 
On  UNC  Married  Students 

Tuo  facts,  which  comprise  the  most  pitiful  aspects  of  UNC  mar- 
ried students'  liousin^.  were  quoted  in  a  news  story  yesterday. 

Out   of  all   the   facts  garnered   by  proponents  of  married  students, 
housing;,  tliese  were  hy  far  the  saddest: 

Of  liu"  y!,\  names  on  the  waiting  list  for  Victory  N'^illa'^e  last  fall, 
40  withdrew  or  did  not  coure  biitk  to  stliool  for  lack  of  housing. 

Sixteen  of  these  students  had  to  live  in  dormitories  here.  They  had 
to  leave  their  families  behind  while 

they  got  their  education.  problem   here.   If  this   is   the  case, 

*  *  *  we  would  like  to  point  out  thfec 

It  is  difficult  for  the  dormitory     tacts: 
or  off-campus  resident  te  conceive  ^ 

of  a  husband  who  must  live  in  a  1.     Twenty  percent  of  the  stu- 

men's  dormitory  because  he  can-  dents  here  are  married.  It  is  now 
not  find  a  place  for  his  wife  and  quite  ordii^ary  to  start  married 
family  to  live  in  Chapel  Hill.  life  aixi  cnie's  education  at  the  same 

time.  Twenty   percent  is  approxi- 
When  we  think  of  such   things      match    the  national  average,   too; 
we   usually   think  ^bout    Hungary      C-arolina  is  not  an  exception  to  the 
or  some   other   place   that   is   very      rule, 
far   awav.    It   never   could    h.ippen 

2.  Forty-six  people  who  placed 
their  names  on  the  \'ictory  Village 
waiting  list  last  fall  gave  up.  The 
I'niversitv  lost  them  and  what 
thev  could  contribute  to  the  I'ni- 
^t•rsitv  and,  ultimately,  to  North 
C'.iirolina. 

",.  Sixteev  jr:  ]yM\iU  a.c  living 
in  men's  (lovnii:(Mi;^s  I>tc  hi.sc  there 
is  no  room   lor  their   families. 

Museum,  - 
Education 
And  Stress 

A  Norwegian  art  gallery  direc- 
tor. xisiiiuiJ  the  campus  the  other 
d.iy.  'cmarkt-d: 

■  In  this  country,  I've  noticed  a 
proiviunced  stress  of  organized  ed- 


DECONSOLIDATE  THE  CONSOLIDATED  UNIVERSITY? 


A  Suggestion  About  Chancellor- 
Let's  Abolish  All  Three  Of  Them 


here,  we  think.  But  it  is  happen 
ing.  Not  only  is  the  shortage  of 
housing  separating  families;  it  al- 
so is  catling  the  University  to  lose 

qualified  students. 

*  *  ♦ 

The  t'niversity,  after  j«rti:vlly 
ignoring  the  problem  too  many 
years,  is  now  trying  to  do  some- 
thing about  it.  it  is  going  to  ask 
the  State  General  .\ssembly  for  an 
enabling  act.  allowing  I'NC:  to  bor- 
row monev  with  which  to  build 
such  housing. 

W  hether  or  not  the  (ieneial  .\s- 
sembly  should  giant  such  an  en- 
abling act.  or  whether  its  diitv  is  to 
appropriate  inonev  directly  lor 
such  housing,  is  anoihei' cjuestion. 
C'hances  are  about  i.poc)  to  1  that 
the  Cieneral  .\ssemb1y  would  just 
huigh  at  legislation  asking  direct 
appiopi  iation.  But  there  is  little 
reason  whv  it  should. turn  down  a 
request  for  an  enabling  act. 


II  it  does  tuin  the  lecjuest  down, 
the  re. on  probal^h  woidd  be  that      ncation  in   the  museum. 
I  he  (.'.-ncral  Assembly  was  not  suf- 
licieutlv   informed  ol   the  housing 


fudging  ftrnn  scnne  of  the  le- 
cent  comments  about  the  layout 
of  1I1C  rniversitv's  new  Ackland 
art  museum,  one  might  transpose 
iiK   statement  to  read: 

At  C-rolina,  there's  pronounced 
stress  of  mtlStum  ill  T'lit  edncatron. 


Pity  The 

Unmarried 

Ones,  Too       Television:  you  Said  it: 


Louis  Graves 

In  The  Chapel  Hill  Weekly 
Tbere  is  a  lot  ol  speculatioii 
about  who  shall  be  the  chancellcr 
of  the  University  to  succeed  Mr. 
House. 

President  Friday  appointed  a 
committee  to  aijvise  him  on 
whom  to  recommend  to  the  Board 
of  Trustees  for  th3  post.  The 
committee,  of  which  Mayne  Al- 
bright was  chairman,  was  com- 
posed of  trustees,  alumni,  and 
faculty  members.  17  in  all. 

In  its  report  to  the  President 
it  has  submitted  th?  names  cl 
four  persons  for  him  to  choose 
from  in  his  recommendation  to 
the  Trustees. 

I  have  a  suggestion  to  make 
about  the  appointment  of  a  chan- 
cellor. I  am  not  making  it  to  the 
president.  wh">-  has  had  plenty 
of  advice  from  his  committee, 
but  to  the  Legis'ature.  which  has 
the  S3.V-S0  on  all  appointments 
through  its  control  cf  the  bud- 
get. 

My  tuygestion   is  that  th*r« 
be  no  Chancellor  at  all  to  suc- 
ceed  Mr,    House,   and    none    at 
ei»h»r  the  State  College  in  Ra- 
leifh   or  the   Woman's  College 
in   Greensboro;   that   the   head- 
ship of  the  University  in  Chap- 
el  Hill   and  each  of  the  other 
institutions    be    restored    to    a 
IM-esident;  and  that  each   have 
its     own     separate     Board     of 
Trustees. 
This  would  mean  the  abolition 
of    the    present    University    con- 
solidation,  and   that    is  just   the 
action    the    Legislature    ought   to 
take.  Whatever   merit   consolida- 
tion had  when  it  was  established 
a    quarter   of    a    century    ago.    it 
has   been    made    purposeless    by 
the  creation  of  the  State  Board 
of    Higher   Education. 

The  purpose  of  University  con- 
solidation was  to  coordinate  the 
three  leading  State  institutions 
of  learning.  The  new  Board  is 
now  dovQg  all  the  coordination 
that  is  needed,  for  these  three 
and  the  nine  other  state-support- 
ed institutions. 

Consolidation   is   a    useless   ex- 
*^pense.   The   budget   presented   to 


the  Legislature  by  the  governor 
last  week  shows  a  recommended 
appropriation  for  consolidation, 
for  salaries  and  other  expenses, 
of  $128,000  for  next  year  (1957- 
58)  and  the  same  amount  for 
1958-59,  making  $256,000  for  the 
biennium. 

I  believe,  and  well-informed 
persons  who  have  talked  to  me 
about  it  believe,  that  a  large 
part  of  this  could  be  saved  by 
the  abolition  of  consolidation. 
And  the  alaolition  of  consolida- 
tion would  not  only  save 
money;  it  would  lift  moral  and 
intprove  performance  at  ajl  the 
three  institutions. 


State  officialdom  from  the 
governor  down  and  large  ele- 
ments in  both  the  Board  of  Trus- 
tees and  the  Legislature  have  ac- 
cepted without  quastion  the  rec- 
ommendations of  a  small  num- 
ber of  persons  about  consolida- 
tion. 

No  blame  for  this  should  rest 
upon  the  governor  and  other 
state  officiers,  trustees,  and 
members  of  the  Legislature.  They 
are  not  educators,  they  cannot 
be  expected  to  -understand  the 
j  meaning  and  the  realities  of  con- 
solidation. 

They  have  to  depend  upon  what 
they  are  told  by  a  few  Universi- 


'Ain't  We  Something!' 


ty  administrators  and  inner-circle 
Trustees. 

The  members  of  the  Legisla- 
ture would  be  surprised  if  they 
knew,  as  I  know  from  talking 
with  the  members  of  the  faculty 
here  and  with  visiting  educators, 
and  from  all  I  learn  from  my 
correspondence  with  people  in 
the  state,  what  a  large  body  of 
well-informed  opinion  is  against 
the  present  University  consolida- 
tion. 

The  opinion  is  based,  and 
soundly  based,  largely  on  the 
fact  that  the  creation  of  the  State 
Board  of  Higher  Educatipn  has 
made  University  consolidation 
useless  and  wasteful. 


While  we're  on  the  subject  ol 
liousins,.  we  should  rememl>er  that 
the  Iniveisity  asked  lor.  and  sot, 
n>oney  a  year  and  one-halt  ago, 
with  whi(  h  to  ccmstruc  t  more  hous- 
ing  loi    men   and   women. 

.\   year   ago   the    I'niversity    was 
supposed   to  start  constructicm. 
It  hasn't  ^started  yet. 

Fortunately,  no  students  froze 
during  the  winter. 


The  Daily  Tar  Heel 

The  official  itudeni  punln-alion  >if  iIm 
Publications  Board  of  the  University  uf 
North  Carolina,  where  it  i>  puolisnt-n 
daily  except  Monday  and  examtnatiur 
and  vacation  periods  and  summer  term> 
Entered  as  Second  clas>  maltei  id  tn- 
DOst  office  in  Chapel  H'lt  N  C  undn. 
the  Act  of  March  8,  1870  Subscription 
rates:  mailed.  .S4  per  \>ar  .152  M)  ^  >tiii<'. 
ter;  delivered.  $H  a  ypar.  $;<  .Sli  »  '«cm«»» 
ter 


Editor 


¥^Wh  POWLEDGl 


Managing  Editor Cir|.RLIE  SLOAN 

News  Editor  _ KANCY  HIU. 


BuaiaeM  Manager  ^    BILL  BOB  PI. TCI 
Sp«rts  Editor L.VRRY  thefk 


EDITORIAL  STAFF  —  Wc.dv  <.!♦••« 
Frank  Crowther.  David  Mund\.  Cort- 
land Edwards. 


NEWS  STAFF— Clarke  Jones.  Pruifflf 
ripkin.  Edith  MacKinnon,  Wally  Ku 
rait.  .Mary  Alys  Voorhees,  Graham 
Snyder.  Neil  Bass.  Page  Bernstein. 
Peg  Humphrey.  Phyllis  Maullsby,  Ben 
Taylor,  Walter  Schruntek,  H-Joost  Po- 
lak.  Patsy  Miller. 

BUSINESS  STAFF— Rosa  Moore,  Joban; 
Whitaker.   Dick   Leavitt. 


SPORTS   STAFF:    Dave   Wible,   Stewart 
Bird,   Ron   Milliagn. 


aubscnptiun  Manager Dale  Staiejc 

A(1vertii>ing  Manager Fred  Kat2iP 

Circulation   Manager  Charlie  H0II 

.Assistant  Sports  Editor  ...Bill  King 


Staff  PholKgrapher 
Librarian  


Nornaao  Kantor, 
Sue  Gishaer 


Proof  Reader 
Night  News  Editor 
Ni{<bt  Editor 


Guy  Ellis 
Clarke  Jones 
^J^arry   Check 


Like  Art  ? 
Channel  4 

Anthony  Wolfe 

Tonight's  educational  offerhig 
(»n  Channel  4  is  aimed  particular- 
Iv  at  those  interested  in  art.  It's 
a  show  called  "Museum  of  Art," 
telecast  at  7  p.m.  The  commentai7 
will  be  l>\  lames  Byrnes,  associate 
director  ol  the  N.  C.  Museum  ot 
.\rt.  with  the  visur-l  ellects  consist- 
ing ol  slide  reproductions  from  the 
museum  collection. 


In  a  dav  when  contemporary  art 
is  f  !ten  obscure,  to  say  the  least, 
■A\n\  yet  is  manifested  so  strongly 
in  Si.)  n>anv  areas,  irhis  show  should 
j  ruve  illuminating  to  anyone  with 
aii\  sumiat  h  whatsoexer  lor  things 
i^lti^ti< . 

Ihc  test  ol  the  evening  is  tak- 
en up  bv  .w  »  ol  the  wi'ekly  drama- 
tic sho^v.s  wlinsc  cjuality  has  been 
i'eonsi'.u  M'  u  Ust.  \\  8:30  on 
Channel  ^  is  the  long-lived  "Cli- 
in:i\.'  lonii^hi  pie^CMtiMg  a  story 
aNjut  a  fighter  who  is  sii\ed  from 
ciiioti'iial  co-lai)>e  by  a  loxely  wo- 
inui.  Souiuh  slightly  soupy  to  me, 
aWhoi;'4h  ii   m;ty  be  the  we;iher. 

'"n  ihf  saiiif  (tnniul  at  <»:  ;"  '"« 
ilu-  ■  I'li\hou''e  <jo'  p  cjclifrficn  e\\- 
I'^lecT  ''One  Coat  «'l  W'httc."  vvm— 
ring  Claudette  Co'U-ii  aiil  I'.utl 
Iknieid. 

I  his  was  I  he  first  hour-and-a 
half  weekly  dramatic  show,  and  at 
its  debut  la^  vear  the  hopes  ran 
high  thrft  it  would  fulfill  its  pro- 
mise of  consistent  high-quality.  It 
has  seldom  lived  up  to  its  advance 
publicity. 

Tonight's  play  is  billed  as  a  co- 
medy about  a  middle-aged  widow 
who,  goes  to  France  on  a  guided 
tour  in  a  search  for  elle  ne  sait 
quoi.  That  she  finds  it  may  well 
be  the  only  remarkable  thing  about 
the  whole  show.  Good  luck  to  those 
who   watch,   and  good   night. 


V.Sinatra,  Day 
Nominated 

Editor: 

I  have  just  been  thinking  about 
the  world  situation  over  a  Schlitz. 
and  have  come  up  with  a  very 
good  solirtion  to  the  problems 
which  are  presently  facing  Amer- 
ica. 

I  submit  to  the  general  pub- 
lic this  solution:  The  United 
States"  cf  America  elect  Frank 
Sinatra  as  President  of  our  re- 
public, and  Doris  Day  as  vice 
president. 

We  then  send  our  two  chief 
executives  for  a  year  tour  of 
Europe  and  the  U.S.S.R.  If  by 
this  time  wc  have  not  solved  the 
problem  of  peace,  we  shall  never 
do  it,  and  we  might  as  well  give 
up  hope. 

In  payment,  I  would  like  to  re- 
ceive the  money  spent  for  one 
damn  engine  on  a  B-52. 

Al  McSurely 


RAY  ERWIN  in  EDITOR  &  PUBLISHER: 


It  Haunts  You  To  Your  Dying  Day 


Death  of  a  newspaper  is  a 
tragedy,  personal  and  profound, 
which  haunts  crew  members  of 
the  sunken  ship  with  poignant 
sorrow  and  lingering  nostalgia 
until  their  own  dying  day  .  .  . 

With  heavy  heart  and  hot  tear.s. 
I  had  to  slay  the  child  of  my  own 
creation,  Newsworld.  a  weekly 
newspaper  in  the  old  hometown. 
North  Wilkesboro,  N.  C.  a  war 
casualty.  I  shall  never  forget  the 
black  misery  of  the  final  banner 
line:  "NEWSWORLD  GOES  TO 
WAR." 


Then  there  was  the  awful  day 
e  Sun  went  down — Jan.  4,  1950, 
^'hen  the  117-.vear-old  New  York 
^un  .--hone  and  sank  to  rise  no 
more.  Sunmen,  inheritors  of  a 
great   tradition,   brave  and   bold, 

Jecame  within  one  shellshocking 
our  bewildered  boys  without 
iome  or  purpose. 
Syndicated  columnist  Robert  C. 
Ruark,  deep  in  the  African  bush 
|rhen  he  learned  of  the  deaths  of 
Collier's  and  other  magazines, 
wrote:  "A  paper  or  magazine  has 
a    pcrsonalitv  that    is   not   to   be 

• 


found   in  ordinary  business  ven- 
tures.  It   has   heart,  personality, 

.nostalgic  reputation — things  that 
you  feel  as  deeply  as  if  some  per- 
son you  loved  has  died." 

All   of    us  can   help  see  to   it 

that  newspapers  which  have  every- 
thing in  our  power  to  give  such 
strength  and  health  to  current 
newspapers  that  they  will  go  on 
living  and  serving  indefinitely. 
Let'.'  make  every  cooperative  ef- 
fort and  sacrifice  to  keep  all  seg- 
ments of  the  press  among  the 
quick. 


Constitution 
Revamping  Good 

Neil  Bass 

At  last  a  move  is  underway  to  revamp  the  pres- 
ent outdated   and   wordy   Student  Constitution, 

The  move,  initiated  at  the  reqt'.est  of  Attorney 
General  Sam  Wells,  is  a  good  one. 

The  Constitution  should  and  must  be  modern- 
ized and  streamlined,  but  several  things  must  be 
taken  into  consideration  by  the  legislative-appoint- 
ed  Constitutional   Revisional  Committee: 

1,  Specific  powers,  such  as  legislative  power 
to  levy  fees  not  exceeding  S20  per  semester, 
should  Im  left  intact  as  a  Constitutional  guarantee 
to  the  student  body. 

Financial  provisions  should  not  be  tampered 
with. 

2.  Only  unnecessary  provisions,  such  as  com- 
position of  individual  organizations  within  student 
government's  jurisdiction,  should  be  extracted  and 
re-formed  as  statutes. 

The  reason  for  this  is  that  -individual  statut*e5 
may  be  changed  by  the  legislature  without  being 
subjected  to  a  referendum  of  the  student  body. 
Thid,  of  course,  would  take  some  control  of"  stu- 
dent government  out  of  the  people's  hands  and 
dump  it  into  the  laps  of  50  legislators. 

Legislators,  on  the  average,  are  capable  stu- 
dents; and  they  are  a  representative  cross-section 
of  the  campus.  Thus  they  should  be  able  to  change 
details  concerning  student  government's  machin- 
ery without   having  to  go   to  the  entire  student 
body  for  even  the  slightest  change. 
But  what  we're  emphasizing  is  this: 
That  anytime  a  body  is  established  which  may 
alter  our  constitutional  guarantee  of  written  laws, 
every  small  alteration  should  be  weighed  and  ana- 
lyzed carefully. 

Certainly  the  document  should  be  shortened  and 
made  less  ambiguous  and  detailed.  For  sure,  a  con- 
stitutional referendum  should  not  be  necessary  to 
change  membership  of  the  Dance  Committee  or 
Budget  Committee.  But  committee  members  should 
not  make  the  slightest  change  without  thorough 
deliberation. 

3.  Thus  tlic  five-man  committee  stipulated  in 
the  bill  which  created  the  revisional  group  should 
begin  work  immediately. 

It  should  seek  advice  from  the  Political  Science 
Dept.  It  should  consult  and  talk  with  other  stu- 
dent government   officials. 

If  the  committee,  composed  of  attorney  general 
Wells,  chairmen  of  the  two  political  parties  and  tvvo 
representatives  appointed  by  the  legislature  speak- 
er, hits  a  stalemate,  it  should  ask  the  advice  of 
the  Student  Legislature   assembled. 

The  committee  has  a  lot  of  responsibilitv  on  iis 
back.  This  could  be  one  of  the  signal  student  go\'- 
crnment    achievements    this    year. 

And  perhaps  with  a  clarified  and  shortened 
constitution,  the  Board  of  Trustees  might  even 
stamp  approval  on  the  document. 

It  has  never  been  approved  by  the  trustees 
Thus  student  government  has  been  and  is  operat- 
ing without  official  recognition  by  the  Universi- 
ty's highest  governing  body,  excluding  the  state 
legislature. 

When  Wells'  Committee  finishes  work,  the 
legislature  ratifies  and  the  student  body  approves, 
seeking  trustee  approval  should  be  the  next  step. 

You've  got  the  ball,  revisional  committee.  And 
we've  got  faith  in  you.  So  don't  fumble. 


On  Humility 
And  The  NAACP 

Stan  Shaw 

This  little  gem  could  have  been  called  "Where 
is  the  Humility  of  Yesteryear?"  It  appears  that  a 
movement  is  on  foot  to  keep  every  child  in  Metro- 
politan New  York'  from  being  denied  "the  privilege 
of  an  integrated  education.". 

The  NAACP.  united  with  other  elements,  has 
come  to  the  conclusion  that  no  person  should  be 
denied  the  great  educational  and  denrocratic  op- 
portunity to  go  to  school  with  persons  of  all  races, 
creeds  and  places  of  national  origin. 

We  remember  the  simple  humility  that  wa» 
the  keyword  of  the  NAACP  a  few  years  back. 
Such  phrases  as  "We  do  not  desire  social  ming- 
ling." or  "All  we  desire  are  our  rights  as  guaran- 
teed in  the  Constitution." 

And  now  we  see  that  the  New  York  city  au 
thorities.  under  pressure  from  the.  NAACP.  is  in 
the  business  of  gerrymandering  school  districts  so 
that  all  schools  will  be  integrated. 

It  IS  maintained  that  so  long  as  any  kind  of  sep- 
aration, be  it  mental  or  economic  or  acadcm  c 
exists,  even  if  this  occurs  through  a  natural  pro- 
cess that  segregation  exists.  Segregation,  per  se.  is 
bad.  No  matter  how  this  segreagtion  came  about 
it  must  be  eliminated,  and  it  must  be  eliminated 
at  all  costs. 

If  a  child  is  forced  to  walk  an  extra  mile  to 
school  in  the  morning  this  is  all  right.  If  the  tax- 
oayers  of  New  York  must  support  the  added  cost 
uf  running  extra  school  buses  twice  a  day  to  achieve 
a  false  and  foolish  integration  this  is  all  right.  In 
fact  most  anything  goes  if  it  can  be  ascribed  to  the 
elimination  of  the  separation  of  white  and  colored. 

Although  we  have  no  intentions  of  c?Jling  the 
NAACP  a  Communist  organization,  in  any  way. 
we  are  reminded  of  the  days  of  World  War  II 
when  anything  or  anyone  who  was  anti-German  (not 
just  Anti-Nazi)  was  considered  good. 

If  a  person  speaks  up  against  this  sort  of  thing 
he  is  instantly  labelled  as  prejudiced,  narrow, 
chauvanistic,  jingoistic,  an  isolationist  and  a  Nazi. 
*ft  many  cases  he  is  also  called  a  Communist 
»mce  Nazi  is  no  longer  strong  enough. 

The  whole  while  that  this  goes  on  we  seem  to 
remember  somewhere  in  the  dim  past  that  the 
problem  of  integration  should  nbt  be  approached 
with  em.tion,  and  thrt  there  was  no  intention  of 
trying  to  force  any  issue. 

Moderation  was  preached  with  the  fervor  of 
a  religion.  This  quiet  voice  seems  to  have  been  lost 
to  the  NAACP  in  its  current  days  of  victory  in 
the  courts. 


TMUBJ 

Lif' 

"The 
that  the 
and   Negi-| 

separate 
tegration 
cation,' 
told  the 
ium    here 

Dr.  Gui\ 
Johnson, 
team  spec 
study,  rei 
pattern 
"friendly' 
race    coni 

Mrs.  Jo| 
adjustmer 
and  the 
dents. 
she  said. 
of  avoidaj 
as  possibj 
militant 

There 
white  stui 
said,    "rul 
Negro  at! 
of  compl^ 

C[ 
SUi 

The   ac| 
sponsorec 
noma    del 
bers  of  si 
will  offer 
July  l-Aul 
lore,  geo/ 
and  liters 
board  anc 
B.  Rael. 
«ity,  Calif 


pa 

frl 
mj 

PJ 


hW7 


THURSDAY,  FEBRUARY  21,^957 


THB  DAILY  TAt  HlfL 


PAOI  THRei 


pres- 

)rney 

lern- 
be 
joint- 

fr 
it»r, 
«tte« 

Ipered 

com- 

ludent 

and 

stute^ 

I  being 

[body. 

stu- 

an(^ 

stu- 
etion 

:hin- 
M*nt 


may 

laws. 

ana- 

\d  and 

con- 

»ry   to 

?e    or 

^ould 
^rough 

led  in 
should 

:ience 

Stu- 

kenerai 
id  two 
Ispeak- 
hce   of 

v>a  Us 
II  go\*- 

tmrfd 
•v*n 

ustees 
Dperat- 
liversi- 
!    state 


Where 

that  a 

Metro- 

rivUege 


lat  wa» 
back. 

gu»r»n- 


Sociologists  Say  Social 
Life  Is  Crucial  Point 

•The  common  undersUnding i  The  extremes,  however,  "have 
that  the  'social  worlds'  of  white ;  actually  shown  very  little  overt  ef- 
and  Negro  students  shall  remain  I  fort  to  promtoe  their  positions, 
separate  is  a  crucial  factOT  in  in-  j  and  the  majority  of  the  white  stu- 
tegration  in  Southern  higher  edu-  dents  may  be  characterized  as 
cation."  two  University  sociologists  either  indifferent  or  slightly  faror- 
told  the  Psychology  Dept.  CoUoq-.  able  in  attitude  toward  the  Neg- 
jum   here   Tuesday.  ro  students  on  the  campus."  she 

Dr.  Guy  Johnson  and  Dr.  Guion  said 
Johnson,  a  husband  and  wife 
team  specializing  in  desegregation 
study,  reported  that  the  Southern 
pattern  of  being  "persbnal"  and 
'friendly'  has  "made  for  ease  in 
race   contacts    on    the   campus." 

Mrs.  Johnson  discussed  both  the  \  means  that  the  gravity  of  the  of- 
adjustment  of  the  Negro  students  \  fenses  so  far  this  year  has  ex- 
and  the  reaction  of  the  white  stu- 1  ceeded  the  gravity  of  offenses  last 
dents.  The  Negroes'  adjustments, '  year,  or  at  least  the  present 
she  said,  'range  from  one  extreme  j  Council  has  judged  them  in  that 
of  avoidance  of  contacts  as  much  j  light. 
as  possible  to  another  extreme  of 
militant  equaliterian   integration"       '^^  Council  feels  that  it  is  m- 

There  are  extremes  among  the  *  ^^***  unfortunate  for  42  former 
white  students  also.  Mrs  Johnson  i  s^^d^'^ts  to  have  been  suspended 
said,  "running  from  strong  anU- i  ^'■°'"  ^''^°°'  ^^  ^^^^^  ^^^^  ^^'^ 
Negro  attitude  to  strong  advocacy  ^  °'''"^*''"  °^  suspensions  is  a  re- 
of  complete  'social  equality"." 


Council 


(Continued  from  page  1) 


GUADALAJARA 
SUAAMER  SCHOOL 

The  accredited  bilingual  school 
sponsored  by  the  Universidad  Auto- 
noma  de  Guadalajara  and  mem- 
bers of  Stanford  University  faculty 
will  offer  in  Guadalajara,  Mexico, 
July  1-Aug.  10,  courses  in  art,  folk- 
lore, geography,  history,  language 
and  literature.  S225  covers  tuition, 
board  and  room.  Write  Prof.  Juan 
B.  Rael,  Box  K.  Stanford  Univer- 
sity. Calif. 


suit  of  laxity  and  complacency  on 

i  the  part  of   the  student  body.  It 

I  is  also   unfortunate  that  students 

'.  who  are  mature  enough  to  grasp 

the  problems  of  college  academic 

work  are  not  yet   mature  enough 

to  realize  that  an  education  with- 

i  out   the   basic   principles   of   hon- 

I  esty  is  a  total  and  complete  fail- 

I  ure. 


PATRONIZE   YOUR 
•    ADVERTISERS    • 


"^^■^^  (Author  of  "Barefoot  Bog  With 


Mth 

Cheek,"  etc.) 


av 


TWO  CAN  LIVE 
AS  CHEESILY  AS  ONE 


.    Now  in  the  final  months  of  the  school  year,  one  thing 
is  certain:  you  and  your  roommate  are  not  speaking. 

But  it  is  not  too  late  to  patch  thing.s  up.  Examine  the 
rift  calmly.  Search  your  soul  with  patience.  Perhaps 
the  fault  i.-*  yours.  Perhaps  you  are  guilty  of  violating 
some  of  the  basic  rules  of  roommate  etiquette. 

For  instance,  in  decorating  your  room,  have  you 
forced  your  preference.^  on  your  roommate  without  re- 
gard to  his  or  her  ta.^tes?  This  is  a  common  cause  of 
friction.  Indeed,  it  once  happened  to  me  back  in  my  f re-^h- 
man  year  when  I  was  sharing  a  room  with  a  boy  named 
Rimsky  Sigafoos  who  covered  every  inch  of  our  wall 
with  850  pictures  of  James  Dean. 

"Rim.sky,"  I  .said  to  him  in  gentle  reproof,  "plea.se 
don't  think  me  unduly,  but  I  had  hoped  to  put  a  picture 
of  my  fiancee  Mary  Beth  XHermidor  on  the  wall." 

Rimsky  examined  the  picture  of  my  fiancee  Mary  Beth 
Thermidor.  "You're  kidding,  of  cour.se,"  he  said  and 
dropped  the  picture  in  the  wa.stebasket. 

Well,  that  got  my  dander  up,  and  I  was  mad  as  a  wet 
hen  till  Rimsky  gave  me  a  Philip  Morris  Cigarette. 

As  we  all  know,  there  is  nothing  like  a  mild,  natural, 
Philip  Morris.  Treats  a  man  right.  No  filter,  no  foolin'! 
Anger  melts  and  frowns  become  smiles  with  Philip 
Morris,  all  seems  right  in  the  world,  and  no  man's  hand 
is  turned  against  you,  nor  yours  against  any  man. 

So,  puffing  a  pacifying  Philip  Morris.  I  forgot  all 
about  Rim.sky's  slight  to  Mary  Beth  Thermidor.  In  fact, 
with  her  picture  out  of  sight,  I  soon  forgot  all  about 
Mary  Beth  Thermidor,  too,  and  one  night  at  the  Fresh- 
man Frolic,  spying  a  round  young  coed  over  in  a  corner, 
I  came  up  to  her  and  said  with  a  fetching  leer,  "Excuse 
me,  miss.  We  don't  know  each  other,  but  I  would  like 
to  rectify  that  sad  omission."  And  she  said,  "Oh,  you 
horrid,  horrid  youth!  I  am  your  fiancee  Mary  Beth 
Thermidor."  With  that  she  stomped  furiously  away,  and 
though  I  tried  to  win  her  back  with  Philip  Morrises,  she 
was  beyond  recall.  I.  utterly  shattered,  signed  on  as  a 
cabin  boy  with  the  Cunard  Line  and  am  today,  aged  53, 
the  oldest  cabin  boy  on  the  North  Atlantic  run. 

But  I  digress.  We  were  talking  about  roommate  eti- 
quette. Let  us  turn  now  to  the  matter  of  share  and  share 
alike.  Have  you  shared  everything  equally?  Drawer 
space?  Closet  space?  Study  space?  And  here's  one  that 
often  causes  trouble  —  hobby  space. 


When,  for  example,  I  roomed  with  Rimsky  Sigafoos, 
my  hobby  was  stamp  collecting^  I  did  not  take  up  much 
room.  All  I  needed  was  a  small  corner  for  my  stamps, 
my  album,  my  magnifying  glass,  and  my  tongue.  Rimsky, 
on  the  other  hand,  was  by  hobby  a  cat  burglar.  Hardly 
a  night  went  by  when  he  didn't  burgle  twenty  or  thirty 
cats.  You  can  imagine  how  crowded  our  little  room  used 
to  get !  Many's  the  time  I  got  so  exasperated  that  it  took 
two  or  three  rich,  natural  Philip  Morrises  to  re.store  my 

native  sweetness.  ©Max  Shulman.  1957 

Pe,  the  mmkmn  of  Philip  Morria  and  tponaors  of  thi»  column, 
Icnotr  that  you  and  your  roommate  are  getting  along  juat  fine. 
But  if  you  ever  do  hmve  a  tittle  tiff,  don't  try  a  peace  pipe. 
Try  m  good,  mitmnd  mmoho-FhiUp  MonUt 


Covering  The  Campus 


W.AJk.YABl.E  TENfQiS 

Tlie  dea(fline  for  Second  round 
table  tennis  matches  has  been  ex- 
tended until  this  afternoon  at  3 
p.nt.  All  matches  not  played  will 
forfrit  both  players. 

ORIEMTATION 

Interviews  for  students  interest- 
ed in  working  on  the  Orientation 
Committee  next  fall  will  be  held 
today  from  2  to  4  p.m.  in  the 
Woodhouse  Conference  Room  of 
Graham  MemoriaL  Committee 
Chairman  Jerry  Oppenheimer  has 
urged  all  students  interested  to 
apply  for  the  committee. 

PHYSICS  CLUB 

Dr.  Merzbacher  will  speak  at 
8  p.m.  today  in  Room  250  of  Phil- 
lips Hall  on  "What  is  the  Matter 
with  Parity?"  Everyone  interest- 
ed has  been  invited  to  attend. 

WESLEY  CHOIR 

There  will  be  a  joint  rehearsal 
of    the    Wesley    Choir    and    the 


DU  Fraternity  Elects 
New  Chapter  Officers 

G.  E.  Boudreau,  ^r.  was  elected 
President  of  Delta  Upalon  social 
fraternity  in  last  night's  chapter 
meeting.  Boudreau,  a  junior  from 
North  Augusta,  S.  C.  1^  a  pre-law 
student. 

Other  officers  elected  at  the 
meeting  included  Jim  Menzel,  so- 
phomore from  Southern  Pines, 
Vice-President;  Ernst  Kemm,  so- 
phomore from  New  York,  treasur- 
er; Andy  Vanore,  a  sophomore  from 
Robbins,  recording  secretary. 

Buddy  Shapard,  sophomore  from 
High  Point,  graduate  correspond 
ent;    Don    Gray,    sophomore   from , 
Fort   Stewart,   Ga.,   corresponding ' 
secretary  and  Charlie  Sloan,  soph- 1 
omore  from  Arlington,  Va.,  ass-oc- ' 
iate   editor  oi  the  Delta  Upsilon 
Quarterly. 

Condemnation 

(Continued  jrom  page  1) 
may  not  occur  in  the  future." 

The  department  ^id  it  felt  UNC 
was  "assunjing  a  tremendous  res- 
ponsibility in  providing  buildings 
of  this  nature  to  house  students." 

Kenneth  P.  Di.\on,  engineer  in 
the  insurance  dept.,  said  Chancel- 
lor House's  statement  "was  a  wise 
decision   on   his  part." 

It  was  not  known  late  Wednes- 
day afternoon  whether  the  plan- 
ned more  permanent  construction 
housing  facilities  would  be  ready 
for  occupancy  by  next  fall. 


church  choir  at  7:30  p.m.  today  in 
the  sanctuary  of  the  University 
Methodist  Church. 

USHERS  NEEDED 

Ushers  are  needed  for  the  pro- 
duction of  Brigadoon  March  -13. 
All  interested  persons  have  been 
asked  to  contact  Charlie  Barrett 
at  80381  or  the  Playmakers'  office 
in  Saunders  Hall. 

WUNC-TV 

Today's  schedule  for  WUNC-TV, 
the   University's   educational  tele- 
vision station: 
12:45     Music 

1:00    Today  on  the  Farm 

1:30    Play  Period 

5:15    Music 

5:30    Mr.  Murgle's  Musee 

6:00    Legislative  Review 

6:20    News 

6:30    Draw  Me  A  Story 

6:45    Pacific  Northwest 

7:00    Museum  of  Art 

7:30    German  Course 

8:15    Dr.  Schriver 

9:00    World  of  Man 

9:30    Lecture  Hall 
10:00    Final  Edition 


George  L.  Coxhead 

U.N.C.  '€2 
Campus  R«|»r*s«nfativ« 


NEW  YORK  LIFE 

INSURANCE    COMPANY 


CLASSIFIEDS 


WoridNews 

(Continued  jrom   Page  1) 


5  ROOM  BRICK  HOUSE.  3  BED 
rooms,  all  modern  conveniences. 
3  miles  on  Old  86  Hyway.  Stove 
and  Frigedaire  furnished.  Call 
Fred  Katzin  after  6:00,  8-9025. 

NEWSPAPER  WOMAN  WANTED: 
Young  woman  for  newspaper 
job  now  or  on  graduation;  need 
not  necessarily  have  studied 
journalism,  but  desire  a  per- 
son interested  in  North  C^olina 
community  life  who  "^can  WTite 
acceptably;  general  reporting, 
with  emphasis  on  women's  ac- 
tivities at  homo  and  in  commun- 
ity; semi-weekly  in  lively  East- 
ern North  Carolina  town  of  5.- 
000.  with  reportorial  staff  of 
three  and  modern  equiptment 
and  air  -  conditioned  offices. 
Write  and  will  interview.  Ad- 
dress, Editor,  Herald,  Ahoskie, 
N.  C. 


problem. should  be  laid  before  the  j  gg^yg^ 


JAZZ  AT  TURNAGES 

Saturday  afternoon,  2:00,  Turn-  \ 
ages  Cabin  in  Durham. — Jazz  by  j 
Dick    Gables    "All    Stars."    Beer! 


American  people. 

Esenhower  said  in  his  talk  Wed- 
nesday night  that  the  U.N.  "has 
made  considerable  i^ogress"  in  try 
ing  to  solve  Middle  East  problems. 
But  he  said  Israel's  refusal  to  obey 
U.N.  resolutions  calling  for  with- 
drawal poses  "a  fateful  moment." 

"We  are  approaching  a  fateful 
moment  when  either  we  must  re- 
cognize that  the  United  Nations  is 
unablC'to  resrtore  peace  in  this  ar- 
ea, or  the  United  Natioivs  must  re 
new  with  increased  vigor  Its  ef- 
forts to  bring  'about  Israeli  with- 
drawal," Eisenhower  said. 


WANTED  —  SOMEONE  WHO  IS 
interested  in  doing  advertising 
work.  No  experience  fi*es«ary, 
but  preferred.  Contact  Fred  Kat- 
zin, The  Daily  Tar  Heel,  between 
1:00  and  5:00  p.m. 


FOR  SALE:  SIMMONS  SOFA  BED 
and  kroehler  sofa  bed  with  chair 
to  match — all  in  good  condition. 

ROOM  FOB  RENT:  NICE  SINGLE 
room,  close  in,  for  student  or 
professional  man — also  room  for 
girls  on  weekend.  Call  9-8482, 
Mrs.  Haithcock. 


DAILY    CROSSWORD 


ACROSS 

1.  Donkey's 
cry 

5.Bhirt 
fiDoUahly 
(colloq.) 

».  River  (Fr.> 
10.  Kind  of 

pneumonia 
12.  Wide- 
mouthed 
Jan 

15.  CuatMn 
14.  A  mawurc 
15.nace 

16.  Gcnnanium 
(iym.) 

17.  Good  luck 
antmale 

SCOulded 

21.  Klcvmtcd 
railroad 
(coUoq.) 

22.  PoiseMive 
pnxioun 

23.Uttl< 

children 
24.  Devilish 
29.  Simpleton 
2t.C0B]unc. 

tion 
29.  Neuter 

pronoun 

31.  Sum  up 

32.  Things 
added 

34.  Fish 

35.  Belonging 
to  him 

'96.X^ofty 
mountain 

ST.ICdre 
mature 

99.  lUyer  em- 
bankment 

4l.CuMc  meter 

42.  Measures 
(Heb.) 

fS.  KdcUmum 


44.  A  cat 
DOWN 

I.Satan 

2.  Small 
streams 

3.  Mother  of 
IHitfi  gods 

4.  Affirma- 
tive reply 

ft.L«w  spirits 
9.  Absorbed  In 

thought 
7.  Arattian 
farment- 
(.Labeled 
9.  River  (Fr.) 
ILBambooUke 

grasses 
15.  Arms  of 
the  ocean 
18.  Fuel 


19.  Um- 
pire's 
call 

20.  Sub- 
stance 
in 
shellac 

23.  Weary 
2«.  Turf 
25.  Greet 
casual- 
ly 
2«.Ex. 
hibi- 
tions 
27.  Singu- 
larity 


aaTir^   i-jun  f^n 
affltiHiiiu- 

'□BO    KiiZi       ^^ 


T*at«r4«|r't  Aaawer 


33.  Church 
sections 
35.  Mister 

29.  Non-workers  38.  VegeUbte 
80.  Narrow  39.  Trim 

strips  40.  Ostrichlike 

S2.  Ventilated  bird  ^ 


PRICED  LOW!  A&P  FRESH 


THE  NEW  MAGAZfHE 


Instant  Coffee^"  ^^^^  I  Woman's  Day  c^^Tc 


u 


••# 


_  K.:y^&wuuu^fQ 

.EQUAL  TO  THE  BEST  —  YET  COSTS  YOU  LESS  —  A&P'S  OWN  PURE  VEGETABLE  SHORTENING 

dexo  -  ■  -  -  ^^  32«  3-85« 


Lg. 
Cake 
Each 


39e' 


S£Ail«OQK  FJJKIIS  FJtOZEN 

Black    Eye  Peas 
»0-Oz.    Pkg.   25c 


PsPECIAL!  Ami  Page  Creamy 

'  Mayonnaise    ^ 


Jar 


Potato  Chips 


1 

55c  < 


i  SPECIAL!   Jane  Parker 

i»  Angel  Food 

I  RinO    Cake  ^^c^      WVl  special  y%   Price  Sale  |  "^  I 

1  ™..:  .»„.  P„.„  ,c—  p,E  APPLES    I  rT-T  ""''''"•'      ■•       I 

iCherry  Pic  -'-c^  39c|',V:"%r  BothForsse  ;Pori(&Beans2c-35c, 

I  KXTRA  SPECIALI   Crisp  Fresh                          .  Barry  VaalUa  WirfeM~_  *^^^  2l«  l  ^Y^^'  Ana  Page  with  Cheese  Sauce 

Jane   Parker            goz      QQa  Sunshine  diees-its  _-  "^  19c  *  Prepared                                                         t 

I  0.._^_    ^i   •_             Pkg       jgC  I  Nabisco  Fancy  Crest  -     ^ir    2TC  I  ||^-^^--.-J        ^  15H  Oz  ^Q      | 

I  STRIETMANN              1-Lb.     0*1..  I  Iwldval  Ulll         ^     ^^°^    fcvU  I 

_•        mT»    r^WArnrVDC  DU-,  WIC        1,1^     m^     ^m     m^     ^m      m^  m^  mml 


CLUB  CRACKERS       Pkg. 


Cluclcen— Turkey— Beef   Frozen 

Swanson  Pot  Pies  2  ^k?s    49c 

Chicken  or  Turkey 

iSwanson  TV  Dinners  piS"  65c 

Small 

A&P  Green  Peas     '*car23c 


Sunnyf ield  In  1  /4's  Creamery 

Butter  t^  70 

*  SPECIAL  LOW  PRICE!  Wisconsin  Mild 


American  Cheese  ^^  43 


SPECIAL!  Red  Sour  Pitted 


DEAL  rhXMAGM  —  PittsbngjL  8c  0£f  Sale 


A&P  CHERRIES  -  -  2  ^>?-  43c    PIE  CRUST  STICKS  •  2  ^  30< 

Voo   Con    Ptit   Your    Trust   In  "SUPER-RIGHT"  QuelHy  Meats\ 


'SUPER-RIGHT"  Heavy  Western  Groni  F«4  iMf— CHUCK  BLADE 


Lb. 


29 


'O 


■T  .t   ?  \. 


"Super-Right;;  Freshly  Ground  Beef  ^  37c    p^ol^^RlfioUSrSTEAK?  in9c^^^P 

Super-Right    Pure  Pork  Sausage  r„i,  35c     -s^per  R«m  Heaw  we.,.™  cr,™  f«.  B.ef 
jMorrell's  Yorkshire  Sliced  Bacon  Vfc^'   43c    BONELESS  ROUND  STEAK  l.  69c      ; 


FOOD   FOR   BABIES 

Cerbers 

STRAINED  3    Jars    31c 
CHOPPED  2     Jars   29c 

A&P'S  OWN  ALL  PURPOSE 

dexola  Oil 
30c 


pt. 

Sot. 


St.  57c 


Wesson  Oil 


Pt 

Bot 


37c  Bi  65c 


SHORTENING 

Snowdrift 


^■"^  34c  ^tS  93c 


Can 


I   A&P  Fresh  Fruits  &  Vegetables   [ 

CRISP  —  TENDER  —  GOLDEN 

CARROTS  2  a.  12c 

Fresli  Crisp  Regalb  F^esli  Tender  Regalo 

Slaw  Mix   Pkg  15c   Salad  Mix  p^g  I9c 


LARGE  FRESH  TENDER 

LEHUCE 


DOG   FOOD 

Ideal 

2      Cans     ZVC 


lb         Hds.       ^v^ 
^IPP,  FIRM,  FRESH     * 

Bananas 


Protex  Soap 

2      Bars     4-jC 


Protex  Soap 

2.      Bars     JjC 


Lb. 


10c 


^    \ 


Blue  Cheer 


Pkf 


31c 


Gt. 
Pkg 


75c 


CHEESE 


CHEOuO-SIT 

PASTEURIZED 

PROCESSED 

AMERICAN 

or  PIMIENTO 


2  ^  75 


Ivory  Snow 


Large     39 
Package  *#^u 


Tide 


Pkg.   3iC  Pkg.  75c 


Dosh  Detergent 


Large     3Q^ 
Package  J^t 


Rflfl  fP^iifJi 


Large     a]  _ 
Package  JlQ 


CHICKEN  OF  THE  SEA  BITE  SIZE  TUNA f^-oz.  tarn  ItC 

WALKER   AUSTEX  TAMALES i*!SJcm    •« 

WALKER  AUSTEX  CHILI  WITH  BEANS  no  M  IS-OC  eaa  STc 

WALKER  AUSTEX  PLAIN  CHILI __.  no.  300  15-oz.  can  35c 

WALER  AUSTEX  SPAGHEITI  ft  MEAT  MMIS  is^ok.'o^  <^ 
WALKER  AUSTEX  PREPARED  BEEF  STEW  is^*^  tfc 
GOLDEN  WHOLE  KERNEL 

Riblet's  Cora  ^^^^_^^^^^^.  2  gS  38e 

SWIFT'S— IN  Vi  POUND  PRINTS 

Allsweel  Margarhw p^  Ms 

WHITE 

Northern  Toilet  Tissna J  *^  28e 

Jof  Liqwd  Delergent ^Ifn    39c 

STORE  ^  ^"^  ^  •«wcA^ 

ADDRESS       MB  ^  »J 

210  w.^        M*r 

Franklin  -^^F'        n«  o«i«T  «iu»mc «  mcmc 

St. 

Prices  This  Ad  EffecUve  Ttev  Sat.  Fek.  23 


WHITE 


Ivory  Soap 

Medium     Q^ 
B«r       ^C 


Ivory  Soap 

^   15c 


Ivory  Soop 

4  ^bY/s  25c 

Ivory  Flokes 


Large    39 
Package  JsLS., 


^AOI  POUR 


THi  DAILY  TAR  HilL 


THURSDAY,  FEBRUARY  2T,  1957 


Moreland  Case:  No  Public  Hearing 


ROSENBLUTH  fS  SECOND: 


THE    NEW   YORK   LIFE   AGENT 

ON  YOUR  CAMPUS 
IS  A  GOOD  MAN  TO  KNOW 

George  L  Coxhead 


UNC,   -42 
A    Muh>«t    Company 


Campus  Rtpr*>«ntativ« 
Founded    IMS 


NEW  YORK  UFE 

SMBURAMCm  COMPlfkHY 


ir«<t  from  the  glamour 
spot  whero  casual 
living  is  on  ort' 


$7.95    ' 

«.  SiMy  blotM* 

$10.95 

b-  CiNMMrbufld  liurt. 
Si?M  10  »o  16 


-!•; 


i^: 


four  parts  with  o  talent 
for  looking  like  many  more! 

GOLD-FLASHED  GINGHAM 

Who  else  but  Cal1fornian$  would  flash  country- 
checks  with  threads  of  gold!  See  how  the  sim- 
plest foshion  idea  fakes  on  new  drama,  how  you 
can  change  the  scenery  to  fit  the  mood  from 
the  little-girl  appeal  of  the  cummerbund-waisted 
skirt  to  the  sleekness  of  contoor-cut  corduroy 
pontsl  Pink,  Woe,  buttericotch  . . .  m-m-w  colorsi 

Open  FricJay  Nights  Til  8:30 

Belk-Leggett-Horton 


^  Refusal  Of  Witnesses 
To  Testify  Halts  Plan 

RALEIGH-^-(AP)— North  Caro- 
lina State  College  will  not  hold 
a  public  hearing  in  the  Jackie 
Moreland  basketball  recruiting 
case.  Dr.  Carey  H.  Bostian,  Col- 
lege Chancellor  announced  yester- 
day. 

Bostian  had  ptH>poseH  that  a 
hearing  be  conducted  by  the  col- 
lege. He  made  the  proposal  after 
the  Atlantic  Coast  Conference  re- 
jected the  college's  request  for  the 
ACC  to  conduct  a  public  hearing 
into  the  matter. 

On  Feb.  13.  Bostian  released 
ACC  findings  in  which  the  con- 
ference faculty  committee  reaf- 
firmed Slate  College  was  guilty 
on  two  charges  of  giving  aid  to 
Moreland,  a  former  high  school 
basketball  star  at  Minden,  La.  The 
conference  had  ruled  him  ineli- 
gible. 

Moreland  dropped  out  of  school 
shortly  before  the  present  semes 
ter  started  and  announced  he  was 
enrolling    at    Louisiana    Tech. 

The  NCAA  placed  a  four-year 
protwtionary  sentence  on  State 
for  alleged  recruiting  violations 
in  the  case. 

In  its  findings,  the  ACC  said 
it  was  closing  the  case. 

In  preparation  for  the  proposed 
hearing  by  the  college.  Dr.  Bos- 
tian. in  letters  dated  Feb.  13.  in- 
vited principal  witnesses  in  the 
Moreland  case  whose  names  were 
provided  to  the  institution  by  the 
^CAA  "to  appear  in  a  hearing 
in  this  matter  in  Louisiana  on  or 
about  February  23  before  a  com- 
mittee representing  State  College." 

Bostian  said  he  has  received  on- 
ly one  affirmative  reply  to  his  in- 
vitation and  has,  therefore,  called 
off  plans  to  conduct  the  investiga- 
tion. 

Bostian  explained,  however,  that 
he  will  submit  a  report  covering 
the  ca^■e  to  President  William  C. 
Friday  of  the  Consolidated  Uni- 
versity of  North  Carolina,  who,  in 
turn,  will  present  the  report  to 
the  board  of  Trustees. 


Wallace  Puts  Lock  On 
League  Scoring  Crown 


THE  GKAnST  TRUE  ADYENTUIIE 
IFEATUREOFOURTIME! 


GREENSBORO  —   (AP)   —  The 
big   individual   race    remaining  in ' 
the  Atlantic    Coast  Conference   is' 
not  for     season  scoring     average , 
honors  but  for  shooting  efficiency 
laurels. 

According  to  latest  ACC  Service 
Bureau  figures,  through  games  of  i 
last  Saturday  night,  Grady  Wal-  j 
lace  of  South  Carolina  has  all  but  | 
locked  up  the  scoring  aver«ige  j 
crown  with  30.6  average.  Len  Rorf- ] 
enbluth  of  North  Carolina  i,s  his 
closest  challenger  at  26.4  points  aj 
game.  { 

But     in   free     throw     shooting,. 
Jackie    Murdock   of   Wake  Forest,  I 
88.7  per  cent.  Bob  Seitz  of  North 
Carolina     State,   88.5    and     Ernie  = 
Wiggins  of  Wake  Forest,  88.0,  all  i 
stand  in  good  position  to  win.  Like- ; 
wise    N.    C.    State's    John    Richtcr 
and  Maryland's  Perry  Moore  each 
have    a   chance    at   the   field   goal 
shooting  crown.  They  are  tied  ati 
present  with  52.3  per  cent  accu- 
racy marks. 

In    individual   rebounding.    Wal- 

■ —I 


lace  is  No.  1  with  15  recoveries  a 
game,  trailed  by  Richter  with  13.1 
Jim  Newcome  of  Duke  with  11.7 
and  Fred  Lentz  of  South  Carolina 
with  11.0. 

Vince  Yockel  of  Clem^wn  is  third 
in  scoring  with  19.9  points  a  game. 

ANN  SHERIDAN -ROBICUMMINGS 
RONALD  REAGAN -BETTY  FIELD 


Howard  Johnson  Restaurant 


BREAKFAST 


LUNCH 


DINNER 


SNACKS 
landmark  For  Hungry  Tarheels" 


«.  CHAKLES  COBIWN  i 
RwmJudittiAndtfsonftarKyCotMnM  I 

■MM*  MMt  •    IMII*  OUtMRtlUM  .    MMT  MWWW 


NOW  PLAYING 


SILENT 
WORLD 

Wirnw  i(  TMs  f  mi'i  Cnnn  Fntinl  top  •owl TIM  toMM  Ma 
A  COLUMBIA  PICTURE 

LAST  TIMES  TODAY 


Frosh  Baseball  Begins 

All  freshmen  baseball  candi- 
dates are  requested  to  meet  in 
room  304  of  Woollen  Gym  tfiis 
afternoon  at  2:30.  Practice  will 
begin  immedaitely  following  the 
meeting. 


Rosey,  Kearns 
Are  Named  To 
All-ACCTeam 

Lennie  Rosenbluth  and  Tom- 
my Kearns,  two  big  reasons  why 
Carolina's  Tar  Heels  ^f  unbeat- 
en at  this  late  stage  of  the  sea- 
son, have  been  named  to  the 
1956-57  All-ACC  basketball  team 
as  chosen  by  the  Associated 
Press. 

Others  on  the  six  man  team 
are  Grady  Wallace  of  South  Car- 
olina, Jackie  Murdock  of  Wake 
Forest,  Jack  Williams  of  Wake 
Forest  and  John  Richter  of 
North  Carolina  State.  Kearns 
and  Richter  received  the  same 
number  of  votes  to  finish  in  a 
tie  for  the  fifth  spot,  so  both 
were  named  to  the  team. 

Rosenbluth  and  Wallace  top- 
ped   the    voting. 


Carolina  HIM^^I^ 


Come  And  Get  'Em! 

Anybody  Who  Buys  An 
L.P.Gets       u 

2  FREE  LP.'s 

From 

R.  C.  A.  VICTOR 

In  Honor  Of 

MARDI  GRASV 


SALE  CONTINUES  THRU   SAT. 

207  E.   FRANKLIN   STREET 


Monogrammers  Meet 

There  will  be  a  meeting  of  the 
Monogram  Club  tonight  at  7:30 
p.m.  Mon>)gram  president  John 
Bilich  has  urged  all  members  to 
be  present. 


THE  WILD   WIERD 

WORLD  AT 
BARGAHM    PRICES 

The  Devil's  Chemists,  by  Josiah  C. 
Dubois  Jr.  The  .story  of  the  I.  G. 
Farben  cmobine,  and  ifs  sinister 
interest  in  war.  Published  at  $3.75. 
Our  Special  S1.29 

Glands,  Sex  and  Personality,  by 
Herman  Rubin.  There  ia-  a  E>estiny 
that  shapes  our  Endocrines.  Pub- 
lished at  $2.95, 

Our  Special         $1.W 

I  Creation  and   "iscovery,  by  Eliseo 
Vivas.  Professor  Vivas  in  a  series 
fo  essays  on  modern  problems  in 
aesthetics.  Publisljed  at  $5.00. 
Our  Special  .  $2.49 

The  Great  Rehearsal,  by  Carl  Van 
Doren.  Doctor  Van  Doren  is  the 
uncle  of  the  great  TV  prize-win- 
ner. Ours  are  B*>ok-of-the-Month 
Club  editions. 

Our  Special  ..u .  $1.29 

A  Train  of  Powder,  by  Rebecca 
West.  These  studies  of  crime  in- 
clude a  North  Carolina  lynching. 
A  treat  for  good  writing  and  keen 
perception.  Published  at  $3.75. 
Our  Special  $1.49 

The  Making  of  France,  by  Marie- 
Madeline  Martin.  The  winner  of 
the  Grand  Prix  d'Histoire  of  the 
French  Academy,  in  a  needed  re 
fresher  on  French  history.  Pub- 
lished at  $4.00. 

Our  Special         ^  $1.49 

New  York's  100  Best  Restaurants, 
by  Harry  Botsford.  A  mine  of 
savoir  faire  for  the  hungry  visitor 
to  New  York.  Chowan  from  Es- 
quire's columns.  Published  at  $2.50 
Our  Special  $1.29 

The  Pursuit  of  Happiness,  by  How- 
ard Mumford  Jones.  A  sprightly 
and  thorough  study  of  our  chang- 
ing ideas  of  the  good  life.  Ours  is 
a  Book  Club  edition. 
Our  Special     .  $1.00 

Join   Your  Friends 
In  A  Treasure-Hunt  In 

THE  INTIMATE 
BOOKSHOP 
205  East  Franklin  Street 
Open  TiiriO  P.  M. 


Co-Rec  Entries 
Close  Tuesday 

Entries  for  the  tenth  annual  Co- 
recreational  Carnival  will  close 
Feb.  26th  it  was  announced  yes- 
terday. 

The  event,  which  last  year  drew 
2,000  participants,  will  be  held 
Tuesday.  March  5.  Any  organiza- 
tion may  enter  a  minimum  of  11 
persons    and    a    maximum    of    15. 

Interested  organizations  may 
.secure  entry  blanks  and  informa- 
tion at  the  Intramural  Office  in 
room  315   Woollen   Gym. 


9  social 
butterfly? 

TmI  ShK*  I  ftartad  wMring  CUnte 
SiMMl  I'M  cat  pimti  af  pa* 
Mtcvw-fwiandnc! 


i^ 


WAA  Cage  Results 

Alpha  Gam  topped  Mclver  Dorm. 
34-20,  and  Carr  edged  out  Pi  Phi, 
19-14.  in  tile  first  games  of  the 
W.A.A.  basketball  tournament. 
High  scorer  for  the  evening  was 
Trudy  Lefler,  Alpha  Gam,  with ! 
sixteen  points.  Judy  Dockery  made 
II  points  for  Mclver.  In  the  Carr- 
Pi  Phi  game  Sue  Ballantine.  Carr, 
and  Susan  Walker.  Pi  Phi.  both ! 
scored   8   points._  I 

Two    games    are   scheduled    for  j 
Thursday      night:    KD    vs.      Smith 
Dorm  7   p.m.   and   ADPi   and   Chi 
O    7:45    p.m.    Spectators    are    wel- 
come. 


Of  Chapel  Hil 


W 


^In/dBjomd  SUm  01  '57 


BILLY/mCOUNTlSARAH 


li 


ECKSTII 


BASIE  IVAUGHAN 


AND 


OtCHESTKA  featttring 

JOE  WILLIAMS 


J^, 


\H 


pWSOH'- 


SOUTHERN 


JERI 

RALEIGH  MEMORIAL  AUD. 


BUD  POWELL  TRIO 
CHtT   BAKER 
LtSTER    YOUNG 


PHINEAS 
NEWBORN 
QUARTET 


ZOOT    SIMS 

suDosPOAtL.       TERRY  GIBBS  QUARTET 


Positively  Only  Appearance 
In  Eastern  No.  Carolina 


All   Seats  Reserved  MON 

$2.00,   2.S0,  2.75,  3.00,   3.50  ITlV^l^ 

MAIL  ORDER  AND  TICKET  SALE  PPR 

THIEM'S    RECORD    SHOP  '    ^*** 
HAMLIN   DRUG  CO. 


25 


8:15 


We  want  to  tell 

you  about  a 

special  kind 

of  movie! 


BATLE  HYMN  is  not 

^  *  "i  a  war  picture 

It  is  the  story  of  a  strange 

and  wonderful  deed 

wrought  by  a  strange 

and  wonderful  man. 

BAHLE  HYMN  is  the 

story  of  Col.  Dean  Hess, 

who  traded  his  preacher's 

pulpit  for  the  cockpit 

of  a  fighter  plar\e. 

He  was  one  of  Hell's  angels 

-    in  the  hottest  squadron 

in  Korea-and  he  became 
the  guardian  angel 

of  the  forgotten  children 

of  that  ravaged  land. 

BAHLE  HYMN  is 

the  true  story 

of  one  man's  great  heart, 

and  compassion  and  love. 

It  is  one  of  the  most 

entertaining,  beautiful  and 

inspiring  movies 

'    •  *ver  made. 

Don't  miss  itl 


The  Trqe  and  WondertuI  Story  oA  <|:OL.  DEAN  I^ESS 
_^^  CLERGYMAN  TURNED  FIGHTER   PILOT! 


ROCK  HUDSON 


DNEMA«kOPE-TECrtNlf,niOR 


^MARTHA  HYER 
DAN  DURYEA  DON  DEfORE 

ANNAKASHn  JOCK  MAHONEY  *  cari  bentok  rbo 


A  UNIVERSAL-INTERNATIONAL  PICTURE 


STARTS 
SATURDAY 


^m\ 


it 


U.R«C.   Library 
Serials  Dept. 
Chapel   Hill.    N.    C. 
8-31-49 


WEATHER 

^  P*rtry     cloudy     and     continued 
c«ld.  Expected  high  48. 


Srj)  e  Daily  rn^wc  Mtd 


SELAH! 

They've    noticed!    See    editorial, 
page   2. 


VOL.  LVII  NO.  10S 


Complete  (/F)  Wire  Service 


CHAPEL  HILL,  NORTH  CAROLINA,  FRIDAY,  FEBRUARY  22,  1957 


Offices   in   Graham   Uemorial 


FOUR   PAGES  THIS  ISSUI 


Condemned  Two-Story  Units 
Will  Be  Used  This  Summer 

University 
May  Repair 
Houses 


Football  Team 
In  Cobb  Won't 
Be  Segregated 


By    EDITH   MacKINNON   and 
CLARKE    JONES 

It  appeared  uncertain  Thursday 
whether  the  condemned  two-story 
housing  units  in  Victory  Village 
will  be  torn  down  or  whether  re- 
pairs and  improvements  will  be 
made  on  the  units. 

UNC  Chancellor  Robert  B.  Hou.se 
said  the  facilities  there  were  be- 
ing studied  by  the  University  but 
"no  final  statement"  could  be  made 
at   the  present  time. 

House  said,  the  twelve  two-story 
units  would  be  used  until  next  tall 
instead  of  being  discontinued  after 
the  current  semester  as  reported 
Wednesday.  He  said  the  units 
would  be  .ufe  for  occupancy  due 
to  the  lack  of  necessity  for  heal 
in  the  summer. 

In  a  recent  letter  to  Consolidate^ 
University  President  William  C. 
Friday.  House  recommended  the 
twJ-story  units  be  torn  down  and 
replaced  by  "some  sort  of  perman- 
ent construction."  FYiday  agreed 
with  this  recommendation. 

House   said   Thursday,    however,  j 
no    definite    statement     could    be 
made  at  this  time  on  what  would 
be  done  with  the  two-story    unit.,. 

The  State  Insurance  Dept.  in  Ra- 
leigh, which  handles  the  Universi- 
ty's insurance  policies,  recently 
condemned  all  two-story  apart- 
ments ih  Victory  Village  because ' 
of  their  "hazardous''  nature. 

University  Business  Manager, 
Claude    Teague    received    a    letter! 


Football  players  will  definite- 
ly be  put  in  Cobb  Dormitory  but 
will  not  be  segregated  in  any 
particular  wing.  Chancellor 
House   announced   Thursday. 

He  said  that  in  September 
there  will  be  four  counselors 
in  Cobb  supported  by  the  Ath- 
letic Assn.  but  under  the  super- 
vision of  the  Stud3ni  Welfare 
Division. 

Emphasizing  that  football  play- 
ers would  be  placed  in  Ccbb  on- 
ly as  vacancies  occurred,  the 
Chancellor  said  he  "was  trying 
to  stage  a  trial  project."  If  the 
system  of  counselors  is  success- 
ful and  th?re  are  sufficient,  he 
hopes  the  same  system  will  be 
instituted  in  all  the  dorms. 

The  counselors  are  to  make 
some  advance  in  the  improve- 
m?nt  ot  the  dorm  life  as  a  whole, 
not  just   for  football  players. 

Earlier  this  semester  there 
had  been  spccuia'ion  that  the 
policy  of  having  football  players 
in   Cobb   might   be   reversed. 


Court  Impeachment 

WASHINGTON  —  (AP)  —  Rep. 
Vinson  (D-Ga.)  said  today  he  will 
not  introduce — nor  vote  for — any 
resolution  calling  for  the  impeach- 
ment of  certain  members  of  the 
Supreme  Court. 

His  statement  eame  while  com- 
mencing on  action  today  by  the 
Georgia  Senate.  It  passed  a  reso- 
lution calling  for  the  impeach- 
ment of  Chief  Justice  Warren  and 
Justices  Black.  Douglas.  Reed. 
Frankfurter  and  Clark  for  "high 
crimes  and  misdemeanors."  The 
Georgia  House  approved  a  similar 
resolution  several  days  ago. 


Contracts  For  New  Dormitories, 
Spencer  Addition  Are  Awarded; 
Construction  To  Start  In  March 

Firms  Have  15  Months 
To  Complete  Buildings 


ANNUAL  CONFERENCE: 


Law  Mekt  Starts  Here  Today 


The  American  Law  Student  Assn. 
will  begin  its  two  day  annual  con- 


The     present    vice-president    is 
Henry   W.    Whitesides.    UNC    Law 


ference  of  the  Fourth  Circuit  here    Student  and  resident  of  Gastonia, 


today. 


Ike  Criticized 

LONDON— (AP)— British  Labo 
rites  in  Parliament  have  criticized 
Eisenhower  for  not  consulting  Brit- 
ain before  making  his  policy  state- 
ment calling  for  an  unconditional 
Israeli  withdrawal.  The  foreign 
office  said  the  Israeli  withdrawal 
should  be  combined  with  U.N. 
guarantees  of  Israeli  security  from 
attack  on  the  Gaza  strip  border 
and  free  navigation  in  the  Gull 
of  Aqaba. 


Alcohol,  Frat  Members 
Subjects  Of  IDC  Laws 


I  ably  be  more  lenient  than  the  Ad- 

j  ministration. 

I      In  opposition  Neil  Betider.  Steele 
from   Kenneth  P.   Dixon,   engineer    session    and    consumption    of    a^co-    p^^^.^^.^^    ^^^^  ..^^^^   j^  .,  .^^  ^^^ 

by-laws,  we  have  to  take  action," 


ot  the  State  Insurance  Dept.. 
which  recommended  the  two-story 
units  be  discontinued  "in  the  im- 
mediate future." 

The    two-jiory    apartments   were 


By  PRINOLE   PIPKIN 

One  article  concerning  the  pos- 
s^ion    and    consumption    of    alco- 
holic beverages  and  the  other  bar- 


ring members  of  social  fraternities 
from    being    dorm    officials    were  ] 
changes  made  Wednesday  night  in 
the   by-laws   of   the   ID   Court  and 


About  50-70  law  students  from 
twelve   law  schools   in   North   and 
South    Carolina,    Virginia,    Mary- , 
and.  and  West  Virginia,  will  hear       „  ''     ^_ 
at   1:30  the  welcoming  address  of 
Henry  P.  Brandis,     Dean    of    the 
UNC   Law  School, 
"in  the  afternoon.  Gerald  Barret, 
UNC       Business  .   Administratfon 
School,  will  moderate  a  paneL  of 
Thornton  H.  Brooks.  William  A-b- 
ernathy,    T.    Claries    Allen,    Jelrry 
Stone   of  NLRB,  and   William  W. 
Sturges.    The    group    will    discuss 
"Lawyers  Role  in  Labor  Law." 

Later  in  the  evening  at  the 
Carolina  Inn  Manly  Wade  Well- 
man  will  speak  on  'Silver  Tongue 
Lawyers." 

Saturday  morning  Albert  Coates, 
Director  of  the  Institute  of  Gov- 
ernment, will  give  a  history  of 
the  Institute,  and  the  conference 
will  take  a  guided  tour  of  Institute 
buildings. 

Dr.  Robert  E.  Lee.  former  De«n 
of  the   Wake   Forest   Law  School 


who  did  undergraduate  work  at 
UNC,  was  a  Captain  in  the  Ma- 
rine air  force,  and  is  presently  a 
member  of  Delta  Theta  Phi,  legal 


Ham    Wade,    Davidson     '52,      is 


president  of  the  local  chapter  of 
ALSA  and  is  a  member  of  the 
same  fraternity. 

The  American  Law  Student  Assn. 
is  'a  national  organization  of  law 
students,  sponsored  by  the  Amer- 
ican Bar  Assn.,  which  helps  stu- 
dents become  better  assimilated 
into  the  profession." 


Tour  Cancels  Show  Here 


"Foolin'  Ourselves.-"  a  touring 
production  starring  Gene  Nelson 
scheduled  to  appear  here  March  8- 
9  has  canceled  the'  engagement, 
it  was  announced  this  week. 

The  Carolina  Playmakers,  who 
were  to  sponsor  the  local  perform- 


ances, have  been  notified  that  the  ! 
show  has  discontinued  all  tour  , 
engagements.  { 

Th?  show  was  a  Paul  Gregory  j 
touring  production,  according  to  i 
Marcelline  Krafchick  of  the  Play-  I 
makers  publicity  staff. 


Solons  Set  Up  Group 
To  Study  Lenoir  Ha 


By    NEIL    BASS  i 

(contracts  were  awarded  riuirsdav  for  eoiistviKtion  of 
three  new  men's  dormitories  and  an  additional  wing  for 
Spenter  Women's  I")ormitorv. 

Cionsti  action  on  the  new  bniltlings  ^vill  bei^jn  within 
thirty  davs.  according  to  l'ni\ersity  F.ngineer  M.   |.  Hakan. 

Low  general  l)id  tor  the  three  men's  dorms  was  made 
\)\  l)i(kerson  Inc.  ol  .Monroe.  Dickerson's  bid  was  o\cr  .Si.', 
million. 

Low  general  hid  lor  the  Spencer  Wing  was  made  by  IL 
I".  .Mitdiell  ol  Bin  Iingtr)n.  Kigines  on  Mitdiell's  l)id  were 
not  axailable  vesierdav. 

T(nal  bids  lor  the  new  bnildings  are  within  the  .S2  mill- 
ion loa'iied  the  Lniversity  bv  the  Federal  Honsing  and  Home 
Finance  .Agency  in   H)'\^- 

Constitution  ol  the  three  dorms  and  wrmien's  wing  must 
♦be  completed  within  450  days  af- 
ter construction  is"  begun  ne»t 
!  month.  Hakan  said.  This  provision 
is  incorporated  in  the  contracts, 
he  said. 


Office  Asks 
Changes 
In  Address 


By  NEIL  BASS 


The  student  Legislature  estab 
lished  a  committee  to  investigate 
will  speak  at  a  kincheon  in  Lenoir  >  Lenoir  Hall  working  conditions 
Hall.  The  conference  will  then  i  and  wages  in  a  lively  two-hour 
have  a  clinic  and  workshop  in  the  '  session  last  night. 
afternoon  climaxed  with,,  tbe  ,elSC:^]. 
tion  of  new  officers. 


The    Central    Records    Office    in 
I  Har.es   Hall   has    issued   a   plea   to 


Tire   three    measures   which    ap- 
;he'7e;o"nd    conference ,  f^^^^     f"'"     <'0"»ideration     w«re 


leges   on    both   Friday   and    Satur- 
day nights. 

Chief  argument  came  from  Miss  j  ^^    students    who    have    changed 
Julia  Ann  Crater,  University  Par-  ^  ^j^gj^.  residence  and   not   yet  noli- 
ty.  Miss  Crater  argued  that  fresh- 1  j-^^j  ^^^  Records  Buieau  to  do  so 
men  straight  from  higji  school  did  |  g.  ^^^^^  ^^  possible  . 
not    know    how    to     'budget    their  ,      ..^^  .^  important  for  the  students- 


time"    adequately    to    have    such 


i  own    sake    that    we    have   a    record 


found  to  be  in  direct  violation  of   the  IDC.  respectively, 
the  state  lav;  which  says    "a  dormi- 1 
tnry    of    frame    construction    shall' 
be  only  one  story  in  height." 


One   of   the   changes    which  re- 


Sonny  Hallford,  President  of  the 
IDC,  said  that  he  did  not  believe  j 
the    just    possession    alcholic    bev-; 
erges  warranted  turning  a  person 
in.  but  that   the  real   base  of  the  J 
matter  wa..*  the  way  in  which  one! 


ceived  much  discussion  was  one  in !  "sed  his  liquor. 


Dixon  pointed  out  in  the  letter 


the  ID  Court  by-laws  which  reads 
"possession  or  consumption  of  al 


This    is 

to  be  held  at  UNC.  Conferences 
are  usually  held  at  the  home  school 
of  the  vice-president  (presiding 
officer  of  the  circuit). 


Folk  Song 


hashed  -and  re-hashed  by  lawmak-  j 
ers  who  spoke  their  minds  with-  j 
out   hesitation. 

Legislature  Speaker  Sonny  Evans  ^ 
said  of  the  meeting: 


pri^ileges^     Miss     Jennie     Meador, ;  ^^.   ^^^j^   ^^^.^   address,-   said   Ray 

i  Strong,   Assistant    Director    of   the 


Student   Party,  spoke   for  the  res 


•"We  are  constant- 


olution   urging  that   such   students  1  j^p^Q,.^'^  Office 

mature   enough"   to   handle  ]  j^.  ^^.^..^^  ^^  ^^^^j^  students    in   an 

emergency    case     and     unable     to    sketch  of  the  Spencer  Dorm  wing 
reach  him  simply  because  he  has    and    George    Watts    Carr    of   Dur 


were 
themselves. 
University 


The  state  Legislature  passed  an 
enabling  act  during  the  1955  sess- 
ion which  gave  the  University 
authority    to    borrow   $2    million. 

Upon  this  authorization,  Uni- 
versity Business  Manager  Claude 
Teague  submitted  a  request  to 
the  federal  loan  agency.  The  re- 
quest   was    rapidly    granted. 

The  loan  will  be  paid  back  <  in 
30  years,  Teague  said  last  fall, 
from  surpluses  received  from  a 
S30  per  .  person  dorm  room  rent 
increase.  The  increase  went  into 
effect  the  fall  semester  of  1955. 
PLANS 

Raymond  Weeks  firm  of  Dur- 
ham   prepared     the     architectural 


Parly      Floorleader 


Bennv     Thomas     introduced     and 


'•Tonight    the    student    Legisla-    sponsored  the  resolution. 


the   Board   of  Trustees   regulation 
and  the  IDC  policy.  ' 


to  Teague  the  exit*  both  as  to  lo- 
cation and  construction  are  entire- 
ly inadequate." 

A   major  fire   occurring    in   any 
of   these    two-story    houses    would       Neil  Bass,  who  introduced  these 
cause  inevitable"  loss  of  life,  Di.xon '  change-  recommended  by  the  rules 
said.  committee    of  which   he   is   chair- 

The  letter  also  recommended  the  man,  commented  after  the  meet- 
University  plan  for  the  eventual  re-  j  ing.  "Our  action  wa^.  no  innova- 
moval  of  all  one-.saory   units.  The  j  tion.  We   merely   established   offi 


"Dormitory  officers  shall  not  be 
active  or  pledge  members  of  a  so-  {    _ 
coholic    beverages    is    contrary    to  |  cia'  fraternity,"  was  an  important    Cgm%fm^^      fc 

change  in  the  IDC  by-laws.  l^lflWWff        13 

Al  Alphin,  President  of  Mangum, 
said  that  for  the  IDC  to  function 
properly  the  members  had  to  slay 
with  the  job  the  whole  year.  If  a 

dormitory  official  became  a  pledge  |     a  program  of  traditional  English 
of    a   social   fraternity 
have  to  resign.  i  Sullivan,     and 


Slated  Here 


lure   grew   up." 

The  measure  passed  which 
aroused  a  continuous  stream  of 
orators  to  the  rostrum  for  45  min- 
utes was  a  resolution  urging  that 
curfew  hours  for  freshmen  and 
sophomore  nurses  be  consistent 
with  curfew  hours  for  other  Uni- 
versity  coeds.  j 

Nursing  School  regulations  now 


I  not   bothered   to  tell   Us*  where   he 
"ives." 


The  other  measure  passed  on  i 
the  docket  called  for  appropria- ;  The  Bureau  must  have  up  to 
tion  of  $10  to  the  Legislature  date  records  of  the  students  where- 
Rules  Committe  to  defray  print- ;  abouts  for  use  by  the  Cashier's  Of- 
ing  expenses.  I  fice,    the    YM    and    YWCAs,    the 

Discussion    on    the    Lenoir   Hall    Deans  of  the  various  colleges,  and 


ham  designed  the  men's  dormi- 
tories. 

Original  plans  called  for  con- 
struction of  only  one  men's  dorm 
on  the  hill  behind  Kessing  Pool. 
It  was  to  houise  700  students. 

Later  it  was  decided  three  should 
be    built    with    space    for    600-650 


investigation  bill,  given  serious  Graham  Memorial  in  making  up  students.  This  necessitated 
consideration,  resulted  in  bedlam 
when  Introducer  Whit  Whitfield 
(SP)  read  the  Cafeteria's  Operat- 
he  would  I  ballads,  Shakespeare,  Gilbert  and  j  stipulate  that  freshmen  and  soph- ;  ing  Procedures  stating  the  emplo- 
American     ballads  j  omores    must    report    in   at    11:30    yecs    were    not    to    "share"    their 


Jimmy  Womble,  President  of  |  and  folk  songs  will  be  presented  i  on  Sunday  night  and  are  allowed  $1.90  worth  of  food  per  day.  Legi- 
University  is  not  planning  on  clos  cial  procedure  in  our  by-laws  for  |  Grimes,  said  "I  admit  it  is  hard,  I  when  Earle  Spicer  appears  in  Les ;  one  o'clock  privileges  on  either  slators  also  guffawed  at  a  pro- 
ing  down  the  one-story  units  along   handling   such  cases   which   were!  but  we  have  to  get  at  the  root  of !  Petites  ■Musicalea- Sunday.  i  Saturday  or  Sunday  night.  Other    vision  stating   what  a   'privilege' 


with  the  two-story  units 

In  the  event  the  two-story  units 
are  torn  down  before  next  fall, 
University  Housing  Officer  James 
Wadsworth  said  Thursday  those 
living  in  them  now  will  get  prior'i- 
(See  VICTORY  VILLAGE.  Page  3) 


Orientation 
Interviews  ' 
Are  Today 

Final    interviews    for   the    selec-  j 
tion  of  male     members     of     the 
Campus     Orientation     Committee 
will  be  held  from  2  to  6  p.m.  to- 


handled  unofficially  previously. 

"The  regulation  is  not  ours,  and 
we  don't  like  portions  of  it.  But 
it  is  a  Trustee's  regulation,  and  we 
must  enforce  it." 

During  the  meeting  he  com- 
mented that  the  ID  Court  had  to 
accept  the  responsibility  and  that 
the  clau.:.'3  would  give  student 
courts  the  power  to  try  the  viola- 
tions. Student  court  would  proba- 


the  matter." 

Hallford   later   a-tated, 


i      Sponsored    by   GMAB,   the   pro-    freshmen    and    sophomore    coeds    it   was   to   be   allowed   work   in   a 
"prohibi- '  gram   will    be    held  ,in   the   main    have  12  o'clock  privileges  on  Sun-    cafeteria    "completely    dedicated" 


tion  of  social  fraternity  members  lounge  of  Graham  Memorial  at  8 
from  holding  offices  in  the  dormi- 1  p.m. 

lories  was  not  done  to  discrimin- 1  The  New  York  baritone  and  bal- 
ate  against  fraternities.  Fraternity  j  lad  singer  began  his  musical  ca- 
members  have  done  good  work  in  '  reer  at  an  early  age.  As  a  boy  he 
dormitories.  .  sang  in  church  choirs,  and  at  col- 

"The   fact   Iht   there   are   often  \  lege  found  time  to  study  voice,  pi 
conflicts  between  required  frater- 

(See  IDC  BYLAWS.  Page  3) 


day  night,  and  one  o'clock  privi- 1  to  the  student  body's  service. 


the  Student  Directory. 

"We  are  constantly  plagued  by 
phone  calls  trying  to  locate  stu- 
dents who  have  moved  and  failed 
to  notify  this  office."  said  a  sec- 
rotary  in  the  Records  Office.  "We 
ask  students  who  have  already 
changed  their  address  to  notify  us 
at  once,  and  all  people  doing  so  in 
the  future  to  let  us  know  even 
before  they  move." 


HONOR  COUNCIL  REPORT: 


Probation  Sentence  Is 
Given  In  Forgery  Case 

A  student  convicted  of  forging       "The   student   testified    he    had 


Laradel  Lawrence  Elected  Editor 
Of  1957  UNC  Woman's  Handbook 


day  in  the  Woodhouse  Conference  i  an  infirmary     excuse     has     been    received  notice     from     Arts     and 


Room   in  Graham  Memorial. 

All  interested  male  students 
have  been  urged  to  appear  at  this 
time. 

Selection  of  female  members  of 
the  OriiVitation  Commitlee  will 
be  made  next  week. 

Interested  female  students  can 
fill  out  applications  in  the  Student 
Government  Office.  They  will  be 
notified  of  the  time  and  place  of 
interviews. 

Orientation  program  advisors 
and  counselors  will  be  selected  at 
a  later  date,  according  to  Orienta- 
tion Chairman  Jerry  Oppenheimer. 


GM'S  SLATE 


Th*  activititt  schedula  for 
Grah«fn  MtmorUI  today  is: 

Billiard  Tournament  Final 
Eliminations;  Billiard  Room;  7:30 
p.m. 


placed  on  indefinite  probation  by.  Sciences  to  the  effect  that  he  would 

the  Honor  Council,  Chairman  Jim  fail  the  course  in  question  for  ov- 

Exum  disclosed  yesterday.  ercutting.      The     student     then 

The  student  was  not  suspended  changed  dates  on  two  old  excua-es 

from   school   because   he   reported  for  presentation   to   the  Arts  and 

himjelf,   Exum   said.  Sciences  secretary. 

"This  case  well  illustrates  the  "He  presented  the  excuses  as 
fact  that  leniency  will  be  shown  valid  ones  on  Friday.  After  think- 
in  thise  cases  where  students  re-  ing  about  the  matter  over  the 
port  themselves  for  Honor  Code  weekend,  the  student  testified  he 
violations,"  Exum  said.  felt  guilty  and  ashamed  of  his  act. 

"Had   not   the   student   seen    fit  "On  Monday  following  he  called 

to  report  himself  for  the  violation  the  Arts  and  Sciences  secretary  to 

he  would  have   been  apprehended  tell  her  the  excuses  were  invalid 

anyway   due    to   investigations    by  and  to  dL-count   them.    He   asked 

the   Arti   and   Sciences   secretary,  her  to  turn  him  over  to  Director  of 

Had   he   come   before   the  council  Student  Activities  Sam  Magill. 

and  been  found  guilty  without  hav  "In   the  trial   before   the   Men's 

ing  first  reported  himself,  the  .stu-  Council,  the  defendeht  was  found 

dent    would    probably    have    been  guilty  of  a  violation  of  the  Honor 

suspended     from    school,"     Exum  Code.  For  his  sentence     he     was 

said.  placed     on     indefinite    probation. 

Details  of  the  case  are  as  follows,  which  normally  last   one   full   se- 

1  according  to  Exum.                          .  mester."                                   ^ 


ano,  organ,  as  well  as  sing  in  the 

glee  club,  college  quartet,  and  play 

the    bass    viol    in    the    orchestra.  ,,     j,       „          .u           1.,  >  tt„:.^..ou.. 

I    .        u       .   ^A    ■      J  ^r.Ar.r,    o„^  ior  from  Bradfor,  Pa.,  is  the  newly  .  University. 

Later    he   studied   m   London   and  .     j..        ,        ..          .    nr. 

„       Y     k  appointed  editor  of  next  year  s  W  0-  j      Assisting 

included  on  the  Petite  Musicale   "^a^'^  Handbook. 

Miss  Lawrence  waj  selected  to 
the  Handbook  editorship  by  the 
Women's  Resident  Council  because 


program  will  be  "The  Golden  Van- 
ity,"  "Lord   Randal,"   "O   Willow,' 
Willow,  "    "The    Nightmare   Song," 


Miss   Laradel    Lawrence,    a   jun-  j  activities  available  to  coeds  at  the    Moore,  ph.-)tographer;  Mace  Chapin 

Neill    and    Isabelle    McCloud,    ad- 
Miss    Lawrence    with    visors, 
next  year's  Handbok  will  be:  Mi.rs  1      The  Handbook  will  go  to  press 
Nancy  Milan,  Art   editor:  Truman ,  in  early  .A.pril.  , 


•The  Lane  County  Bachelor,"  and '  of  her  considerable  editing  exper- 
"John  Henry. "  Spicer  presento-  a  ^  ienc^.  She  has  expressed  definite 
Shakespeare    "quiz"   and   parodies   ideas    and    plans    for    next    year's 


on  Gilbert  nad  Sullivan   as  high- 
lights of  his  program. 

The  performance  is  open  to  the 
public,  with  no  admission  charge. 


Mangum  Leads 
In  IDC  Campus 
Dorm  Contest 


publication 

"The  theme  for  the  1957  Hand- 
book will  be  'Columns  since  it 
typifies  Carolina  more  than  any 
other  feature  on  campus,"  she 
said. 

The  Handbook  will  be  highly  ill- 
u.'Lrated  and  will  devote  c(Visider- 
able  space  to  art  and  photography, 
according  to  Miss  Lawrence. 

"In  contrast  with  last  year's 
edition,  the  '57  publication  will  be 
Mangum  Dormitory  is  leading  of  an  informal,  instructional  na- 
with  115  points  in  the  UNC  Dorm  ;  tare,"  she  said.  "We  expect  to  in- 
Contest,  announced  Benny  Thom-  dude  more  information  concern- 
«s.  Chairman  of  the  IDC  Social  ing  activities,  with  special  em- 
Committee.  '  Phasis    on    travel    schedules,    cost 

Stacy  has   100,   Grimes  90.  and  ,'  estimates,  etc." 
Cobb   is   tied     with     Ruffin,  both  ;      The  Women's  Handbook  i^-  a  40 
having  80  points.  Everett  is  fifth    page   booklet  designed  to   ( 1 )   in- 
with  75  points.  i  f^^"™  coeds  of  dormitory  rules  and 

"There  is  enough  time  left  so  regulations;  (2)  introduce  newcom- 
that  any  dorm  can  make  it  hardj  ers  to  ravious  faculty  and  admin- 
for  these  top  five  to  nwintain  their  !  tatratio  nmembers;  (3)  inform 
positions,"  said  Thomas.  The  win-  them  of  what  can  be  found  in 
ner  will  get  a  trophy.  *  Chapel  Hill,  and  (4)  list  the  many 


MISS  LARADEL  LAWRENCE 

,,.new  handbook  editor 


change  in  the  architect's  plans 
which  delayed  bidding  and  con- 
struction. 

The  new  plans  proposed  call  for 
a  three-building  court  of  men's 
dormitories  erected  en  the  hill 
overlooking  Navy  and  Fetzer 
Fields. 

The  dormitories  will  contain 
652  rooms.  These  will  accommo 
date  approximately  50  more  stu- 
dents than  originally  planned  tor. 
according  to  J.  S.  Bennett,  director 
of  operations. 

The  Spencer  Hall  wing  will  in- 
clude an  expansion  of  dining  hall 
and  lounge  and  75  additioHal 
rooms.  It  will  be  added  to  the 
rear  of  the  present  s^lructure. 
SITE 

Site  for  the  mens  dormitories 
was  selected  by  the  Buildings  and 
Grounds  Committee.  It  was  ap- 
proved by  the  Building  Committee 
of  the  Board  of  Trustees  at  a 
Sept..   1955,  meeting. 

The  Building  Committee  which 
approved  the  site  was  composed  of 
Trustees  Reid  Maynard,  Burling- 
ton; C.  Knox  Massey.  Durham; 
Wade  Barber.  Pittsboro;  S.  J. 
Blythe  and  Carl  Venters.  Jackson- 
ville. . 

THIRD  MAN  OUT 

Original  plans  called  for  facili- 
ties adequate  to  house  a  number  of 
student  equal  to  the  present  num- 
ber of  third  men  in  the  Universi- 
ty's two-man  dormitory  rooms. 

Since   that    time     the     student 

(See  DORM  CONTRACTS.  Page  3) 


IN  THE  INFIRMARY 

Those  in  the  Infirmary  yester- 
day included: 

Misses  Dorothy  Pitman,  Mary 
Straughm,  Valarie  Anna  Von- 
Ammon,-  and  James  Tyndall  Jr., 
Robert  Stroud,  Jack  Floyd,  Jen- 
kins Robertson,  Robert  Becknell, 
William  Klein,  Robert  Lewis, 
Patrick   Dooley,   Clay   Mabley. 


PAQM  rwo 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HlBV 


FRIDAY,  FEftRUARY  22,  1«7 


After  A  Decade,  Statute 
Is   Going   To   Be   Enforced 


The  State  of  North  Carolina  has 
recognized  the  fait  that  two-story 
houses  in  \'ictory  Village  are  in 
\iolation  of  a  state  law  that  says 
"a  dormitory  jof  frame  construc- 
tion shall  be  only  one  story  in 
height." 

Tne  two-story  married  students' 
houses  have  been  up  lo  years.  But 
it  took  a  long  4ime  for  someone  to 
notice  the  violation.  Notice  was 
taken  right  after  the  University 
announced  it  would  ask  the  Cien- 
eral  Assembly  for  permission  to 
borrow  money  for  additional  mar- 
ried student^'  housing. 

So  the  University  has  been  ad- 
vised to  tear  down  those  two- 
story  houses  because  "tlie  exits  Jis 
to  location  and  construction  are 
entirely  inadequate"  and  "in  case 
a  major  fire  occurred  in  any  of 
(them)  loss  of  life  would  be  in- 
evitable." 

#  #  * 

Anvone  living  iu  \  ictory  Vill- 
age lo  vears  ago  could  have  said 
that.  Many  people  did.  But  the 
I'niversitv  and  the  state  did  noth- 
ing alxjiit  it. 

Ask  any  married  student,  oi  his 
wife,  who  li\es  in  Victory  \illage. 
Most  of  them  live  in  fear  of  fire, 
because  a  fire  in  \'ictorv  \illage 
mean  a  major  disaster:  so  far.  there 
has  been  no  death. 

Until  tiie  Touii  of  Chapel  Hill 


changed  its  fire  bell  code,  the  sig- 
nal "^8"  meant  a-  fire  in  Victory 
\'illage.  Half  the  town  quit  work 
and  drove  like  mad  to  the  village 
whenever  "38"  sounded,  because 
a  fire  in  \'ictory  Village  is  no  or- 
dinary fire. 

The  state  and  the  University 
ha\e  been  unnecessarily  slow  in 
doing  soniething  about  mjirried 
students'  Jipusing,  but  now  they 
are  finally  doing  something. 

To  insure  that  soniething  will  be 
done,  we  suggest  every  student 
sign  a  housing  petition  today.  The 
petition  is  in  V-Court  and  on  Diany 
bulletin  boards  throughout  the 
campus.  Its'  worth  taking  time  to 
sign,  and  your  signature  might  help 
sa\c  a  (hild's  life  someday  soon. 

Why   UNC 


Is   In 
A  Crisis 


■  rempiiny,  offers  from  other 
colleges  and  universities  to  able 
members  of  our  staff  are  increasin<^ 
steadily.  If  we  arc  to  retain  these 
individuals,  substantial  increases  in 
faculty  salaries  are  imperative 
now."  —  Dean  J,  C.  Sitterson  oi 
the  College  of  Arts  and  Sciences, 
in  The  Univerity  Repcirt. 


CU,  State  Should  Face  Up 


It  has  been  more  than  four 
months  since  the  .National  Colleg- 
iate .Athletic  Assn.  ruled  N.  C".. 
State  College  was  guilty  on  charges 
of  recruiting  a  young  basketball 
star. 

.  ^'cste^dav  the  college  was  still 
fiunbling  afound,  stj^  trving  to 
find  someone  who  would  sav  it 
was  not   guilty. 

Since  last  November,  when  the 
NC.A..A  handed  down  its  decision, 
the  (ollege  has  appealed  its  case 
to  the  -Atlamic  Coast  C^onference. 
The  ACC  upheld  two  of  the 
.\CA.\'s  charges.  Still  the  college 
would  not  be  satisfied. 

It  is  apparent,  from  the  actions 
ol  the  college,  that  it  thinks  it  is 
iimcKent  of  the  charges,  or  at  least 
wants  to  be  considered  innoient. 
Ihat's  the  only.rer.on  we  can  find 
for  such  a  dragging  out  of  the 
%vhole  scandal. 

Dr.  Carev  Bostian.  chancellor  at 


The  Daily  Tar  Heel 

The  official  jtudeni  publication  oi  the 
Publications  Board  oi  the  University  of 
North  Carolina,  where  it  is  published 
daily  except  Monday  and  examinatiot 
and  vacation  periods  and  summer  terms 
EIntered  a.s  second  class  matter  in  th« 
Oost  office  in  Chapel  Mill.  N.  C  ,  undei 
the  Act  oi  March  8.  1870  Subscription 
rates:  noailed,  $4  per  >ear.  $2.50  a  semet 
ter;  delivered,  $6  a  yc.ar.  $3  50  a  seme* 
ter. 


Slate,  this  week  announced  the 
college  would  'not  hold  its  own 
public  hearing  on  the  matter.  He 
is  turning  over  a  report  to  Consoli- 
dated Cniversity  President  Will- 
iam 1  rid;y,  covering  the  whole 
tase.  It  is  expected  Friday  will  talk 
with  the  hoard  of  Trustees  about 
it  at  the  l»oard's  Monday  meeting 
in  Raleigh. 

Of  Presidetit  Fi  iday,  we  ask  one 
-     favor:     Please   -get    the    "Morel^ii^ 
Case"  over  with. 

It  h^is  been  dragging  for  four 
months.  Tiie  people  of  the  state 
are  not  forgetting  about  it,  as  many 
people  suspected  they  would. 
Everyone  is  sort  of  leaning  forward 
in  his  seat,  waiting  for  a  final 
answer,  waiting  for  the  case  to  be 
closed. 

In  order  to  close  the  case,  the 
Clonsolidated  Univerity  aaid  State 
College  must  do  one  of  two  things: 
Fithcr  prove  they  are  right,  befoie 
the  people  of  this  state  w-ho  taxes 
run  tite  Consolidated  University. 
or  admit  they  are  wrong,  also  be- 
lore  the  people,  and  take  their 
{)uni^hment. 

Many  times  a  sentenced  man 
will  gain  his  freedom  by  getting 
successive  stays  of  execution  while 
new  e\idence  is  presented.  If  this 
i,s  possible  in  the  N.  C.  State  case, 
then  line.  If,  however,  the  college 
is  in  the  wrong,  the  sentence  must 
be  carried  out.  .\nd  the  college  and 
President  Friday  have  had  four 
months  to  figure  oiu  whether  the 
((jllege    i.s   wrong. 


Editor 


FRED  POHXEDGF 


Managiog  Editor CHARLIE  SLOAN 


N«ws  Editor 


NANCY   HILL 


Sp«rtt  Editor 


LARRY  CHEEK 


Bnsiness  Manager    .     BILL  BOB  PLEl 
Advertising  Manager  ..    TRED  KAT^^' 

EDn'ORIAL  STAFF  — '^©•dy  Si»ar« 
Frank  Crowther,  David  Mundy.  Cort 
land   Edwards. 


NEWS  STAFF— Clarlie  Jones.  Pnngle 
Pipkin,  Edith  MacKinnon.  Wally  Ku- 
ralt.  Mary  Alys  Voorhees.  Graham 
Snyder.  Neil  Bass,  ]fage  Bernstein, 
Peg  Humphrey.  Phyllw  Maultsby,  Ben 
Taylor,  Walter  Schruntek,  H-Joost  Po- 
lak.  Patsy  Miller. 


BUSINESS  STAFF— Rosa  Moore,  Johiwy 
Wbitaker.   Dick   Leaviti. 

SPORTS   STAFF:   Dave  Wible.  Stewart 
Bird.  Ron  Milliagn. 


Subscription  Manager  Dale  StjUey 

Circulation  Manager  Charlie  Holl 

Assistant  Sports  Editor. Bill  King 


Staff  Photographer 

Librarian    


^NoFman  Kuit(||f 
Sue  Gishner 


Night  Editor 

Night  News  Editor  . 
Proofreader 


Graham  Snyder 
„.  CHarlie  Sloan 
BlU  Weekes 


Television: 
Roy  Rogers 
Vs,  No,  1 

Anthony  WplH 

lU*.'  Ci.cnilemeu  horn  Nevv  York 
;'ie  .sfheduled  to  trample  their  op- 
fxmcnts.  in  the  aren;i.  and  tho^e 
who  plaJJ  to  attend  will  be  ii^is.\ijig 
nothing  on  television  except  l^koy 
l<(jgers  aiid  his  rodeo  on  Channel 
-,.  The  minority  opii>ion  to  svhich 
J  sid>scribe  is  that  the  rodeo  is  the 
iiKjrc  entertaining  of  the  two. 

Fhete's  something  for  th#  art- 
i.sts  again  on  Channel  4  a^t  7:.HO- 
The  show  is  entitled  "Striurture 
and  Ideas,"  and  it  purports  to  he 
.-"  discussion  of  the  work  of  two 
distinctly  different  modernist^, 
Mondrian  and  Picasso. 

If  you're  back  from  the  vittory 
celebrations  by  10.  p.ni.  and.  still 
in  the  mood  for  blood,  the  Car- 
man Basilio-Johnny  Saxton  welter- 
weight charhpionship  fight  is  r)n 
Channel  5. 


Letters,   Letters,   Letters.  A     Request 
For   The   Editor .  To   Keep   H  is    Trap   Shut 


Editor: 


n. 


Lenoir  Hall 
Situation 
^Terrible' 


mm 


A  Daily  Tar  Heel  editorial 
states: 

"Lenoir  Hall  workers  have  had 
a  meager  existence  for  many 
years.  They  work  about  two  and 
one-half  hours  a  day  at  mealtimes, 
and  they  get  $1.90  worth  of  Le- 
noir Hall  food  as  payment." 

The  student  workers  of  Lenoir 
Hall  appreciate  your  interest,  but 
you  are  obviously  unaware  of  the 
extent  of  the  problem.  In  the 
first  place,  your  statement  is  in- 
correct. Lenoir  Hall  workers  do 
not  get  $1.90  worth  of  Lenoir  Hall 
food  as  payment  ■—  if  this  were 
true  workers  would  be  allowed  to 
take  food  out  of  the  building  (it 
would  be  theirs  since  they  have 
paid  for  it  by  their  labor)  or 
thev  would  be  allowed  to  use 
their  allotment  to  buy  a  cup  of 
coffee  for  a  friend,  yet  Lenoir 
Hall  lists  these  as  offenses  for 
which  the  employee  will  be  dis- 
mis.sed. 

Furthermore,  if  the  workers 
were  paid  $190  a  day  in  food, 
and  could  not  take  food  out  of 
the  building,  is  it  not  logical  to 
suppose  that  this  balance  would 
be  transfered  to  the  next  day? 
This  is  not  the  case:  You  either 
eat  it  or  don't  get  it,  and  if  you 
go  over  the  allowance  you  pay 
the  balance. 

It  is  «  poor  ml*  which  works 
only  on*  way,  yst  th«r»  is 
nothing  that  the  workers  can 
do,  bocswso  any  attenrtpt  to  rec- 
tify tho  situation  is  mot  with 
It  fiat  "no"  by  the  manag*n)*nt. 
if  tho  woricors  wore  to  talc*  tho 
mottors  into  thoir  own  hands 
thoy  would  bo  rmmodiately 
"blacklistod"  by  tho  Student 
Aid  Off'cc  and  thoroforo  )n^- 
•iigiblo  for  any  financial  aid. 

These  complaints  are  only  two 
of  the  many.  Some  of  these  were 
included  in  a  petition  circulated 
last  week,  which  was  signed  by 
over  half  of  the  employees,  but 
which  was  denied  by  the  student 
superviser  on  the  ground  that  it 
would'  take  too  much  accounting 
to  return  the  balance  earned. 

A  subsequent  request  asking 
for  cash  payments  was  denied  by 
the  manager.  It  is  quite  obvious 
that  the  management  does  not 
intend  to  do  anything  to  allievi- 
ate  the  horrible  system,  and  the 
committee,  if  it  is  not  just  a  po- 
litical device,  will  undoubtedly 
accomplish  nothing. 

If  there  is  anyone  who  denies 
that  the  conditions  are  terrible, 
I  only  ask  that  he  look  up  from 
his  Daily  Tar  Heel  and  count 
the  number  of  workers  on  the 
floor.  If  conditions  are  so  won- 
derful why  doesn't  Lenoir  Hall 
get  enough  men  to  clean  the 
dirty  table  at  which  you  are 
sitting. 

Nanw  Withheld  By  RaquMf 

L'ii  Abnor 


fX)ESMD;vO'SELP- 
SACK-REE-FICIKJ' 
V/i  ODER,  TAKE  TM  IS 
n.)^  O'  LARD  FO' 
SORR  LAWFUL- 
Vt'i-DOED  HUSbiN? 


I  soriously  doubt  that  y«u  will  PMblish  this 
letter,  claiming  tho  oxcuso  that  it  is  too  long, 
pr  says  nothing,  or  etc. 

I  ask  you  to  stop  dominating  tho  editorial 
page  with  obvious  biased  views  and  unprovfn 
charges.  I  sinf*ro)y  hope  thai  you  will  allow  a 
student  to  express  his  views  in  our  paper,  and 
not  let  us  continue  to  be  subjugated  to  your 
personal  dislikes  forever. 

As  students'  opinions  fr«  to  !)•  aired  in  the 
student  paper  I  hope  you  will  honor  our  re- 
quest. 

D.  M.  Connor 

To  the  little  men  wearing  glasses  standing  on 
a  soap  box,  pounding  on  a  typewriter  in  right- 
cous,frantic  indignation: 

If  the  sole  purpose  of  The  Daily  Tar  Heel 
editorial  page  is  to  provoke  controversy  in  the 
r?alm  of  intellectual  activity,  it  sure  has  missed 
the  boat  since  the  great  religious  expose.  This 
charge  is  referring  to  the  recent  editorial  con- 
demning all  the  so-call  thugs  and  gansters  who 
are  a  product  of  an  unhealth  environment  and 
who  are  running  the  muscle  factory  in  Woollen 
Gym   in  the  name  of  big  time  athletics. 

Look  specifically  at  the  editorials  of  Thursday. 


Feb.  14,  1957.  In  another  school  newspaper  those 
articles  would  be  funny  and  amusing,  especially 
if  they  were  in  a  paper  over  at  Duke  or  Wake 
Forest.  But  it  is  disheartening  for  a  Carolina 
student  to  have  some  fellow  students  write  in  the 
student  paper  of  Carolina  such  junk  as  we  have 
recently  read. 

It  appears  that  we  have  a  hard  core  of  fanati- 
cal midgets  crusading  diligently  and  daily  to 
cut  off  something  partly  ours  to  sopite  something 
which  is  partly  theirs  and  mine  in  public.  The 
disgust  goes  further  than  the  student  body,  for 
I  recently  heard  a  man  of  hardly  any  letters  9X 
all  condemn  sueh  an  obvious  inconsistency  (he 
does  not  even  live  in  Chapel  Hill)  in  our  stu 
dent  newspaper. 

Get  off  your  soap  box,  and  stop  playing  the 
part  of  boy  editor,  martyr  or  machoist,  which 
ever  the  case  may  be.  The  Pulitzer  Prize  or  the 
Nobel  Peace  Prize  has  never  been  awarded  to  a 
college  scandal  sheet  or  to  The  Daily  Worker. 
It's  fine  to  have  dreams  of  glory,  to  be  a  boy 
crusading  editor  who  is  going  to  expose  all  the 
mean  men  on  earth  and  advocate  all  that  which 
stands  for  "Home  Seweet  Home."  but  back  up 
what  you  say  or  defame  with  facts.  Every  editor 
yet  who  has  stood  for  being  the  guardian  of  pub- 
lic and  student  morals  and  prpfesses  to  be  the 


'They  Don't  Like  To  Be  Disturbed' 


"~^  iV 


TO  NOMINATING  SESSIONS? 


UP   Not  Letting  Anyone  In? 


MItor:  '  i  ; 

Tuesday  the  foll(mtng  state- 
ment by  the  chairman  of  the 
University  Party  appeared  on 
the  front  page  of  The  Daily  T|r 
Heel: 

"No  one  will  be  admitted  to  the 
nominating  sessions  (of  the  UP) 
without  presentation  of  his  mem- 
bership card." 

Those  who  bothered  to  consid- 
er the  implications  of  this  state- 
ment, as  I  did.  probablv  saw  ti\e 

• 


I- 


beginning   of  the   rise   again   of 

old  -  fashioned,    smoked  -  filled 

room,  closed  -  door  politics. 

Tho  University  has,  for  some 

reason    known    only    to    itself, 

chosen     to     depart     drastically 

from    a    practice    traditionally 

followed  by  political  parties  at 

Caroliha.  For  at  loast  four  years 

the   University    Party   and    the 

Student  Party  have  held  their 

nominating  sessions  open  to  all 

students  —  members  and  non- 


ntembers  —  who  were  interest- 
ed in  campus  politics. 

At  the  very  time  that  students 
are  being  urged  to  take  a  greater 
and  more  conscientious  interest 
in  campus  t)olitics.  this  contrast 
between  the  actions  of  the  Uni- 
versity Party  and  the  Student 
Party  may  well  be  an  indication 
of  which  party  is  really  interest- 
ed in  campus  politics  for  the 
benefit  of  all  the  students. 

Rupert  Marsh 

• 

By  A!  Capp 


By  Walt  Kelly 


fMtnvi '  t^i^  01;  1980  #er  ^ooK,  nmitt '  i\aATUVYl 

^6>PU   \    VWAT  WAS  N|Vg«    S o'^^lANQ  PUVgB  y 

;wiNgiNfavAoutfTEpir'-  '  '^    '^^  ^ 

sryfcff^ 


campus  watchdog  made  the  Golden  Fleece.  O.K. 
Don't  try  so  hard.  It  is  getting  to  be  obvious. 

Being  that  you  are  the  noble  creatures  that 
all  journalists  obviously  are  and  operate  on  the 
theory  that  the  truth  is  good  no  matter  how  it 
hunts,  I  don't  want  to  ask  too  much  in  requesting 
some  elaboration  on  the  following  charges  or 
"feelings  of  The  Daily  Tar  Heel"  as  you  put  them. 
"Coaches  for  a  long  time  have  attempted  to 
make  policy  that  was  not  in  the  interest  of  aca- 
demics. They  (who?)  have  been  known  to  invite 
prospective  athletes  to  liquor-and-women  parties, 
to  slip  an  occasional  hundred  under  the  table, 
to  miscalculate  on  the  number  of  training  days 
and  similar  practices. 

"We  have  not  discovered  all  of  the  tendencies 
listed  above  in  University  of  North  Carolina  ath- 
letics. But  there  are  some." 

O.K.  Whcro  at  Carolina?  and  what  have  you 
discovered?  Have  you  searched  diligently? 
What  are  you  people  hiding  from  the  public, 
up  in  your  dark  cuBicfes  in  Graham  Memorial? 
You  must  have  somerhing — ^when  are  you  going 
to  publish  the  Big  Story  i  take  it  that  the  rest 
of  the  campus  nuist  be  abnormal  since  we  like 
Mr.  latum  because  he  has  done  nothing  wrong 
yet. 

2.  He  (Tatum)  has  established  a  system  of 
recruiting  that  poses  the  biggest  threat  to  Uni- 
versity of  North  Carolina  academics." 

What  are 'the  other  threats  which  Mr.  Tatum 
so  ominously  overshadows?  Agitating  for  faculty 
pay  raises  more  fervently  would  accomplish  more 
than  trying  to  drive  Mr.  Tatum  from  Chapel  Hill, 
if  you  w^ant  to  maintain  a  high  academic  standard 
here  at  Carolina.  By  the  way,  what  does  your 
broad  term  of  academics  include  and  how  is  it 
threatened? 

I  don't  feel  that  it  is  going  to  be  any  easier 
for  me  to  make  an  A  because  another  football 
player  came  to  Carolina  last  fall,  or  I  will  learn 
.  less. 

"3.     He  (Tatum)  has  turned,  and  is  still  turn- 
ing,   athletics  into   machines.   Stiff   eating  hours 
.   and  places,  'study  halls'  and  now  a  special  dormi- 
tory   section    for    the    football    players    indicate 
tliis." 

Indicate  what?  Machines  •r*  scientific,  and 
~  therefore  unnatural,  and  being  unnatural  is  ab- 
normal. Someone  on  The  Daily  Tar  Heel  must 
have  have  some  English  courses  to  figure  that 
one  out,  because  several  authors  have  written 
on  that  subject  before.  I  saw  three  ball  players, 
including  a  rusty  track  man,  at  a  service  station 
yesterday  getting  a  lube  job,  with  instuctors 
following  them  around  feeding  knowledge  into 
their  iron  heads  like  they  were  an  IBM  n>achine. 
Those  athletic  gears  are  cold. 

■'4.  He  (Tatum)  has  takeA  the  athlete  away 
from  the  University,  and  he  has  turned  the  Uni- 
versity's studnet  body  into  just  another  group  of 
customers  who  pay  to  see  the  team  in  actios." 

Where  has  Mr.  Tatum  taken  the  athlete 
(which  one,  anyway?),  and  how  much  do  you 
pay  to  sec  the  football  or  basketball  team  in  ac- 
tion, and  if  you  do  pay  anything  (you  are  a  stu- 
dent, are  you  not?),  did  Mr.  Tattun  do  all  <rf  this? 
I  didn't  know  I  was  breaking  one  of  Mr.  Tatum's 
rules  when  I  was  talking  to  one  the  other  day, 
or  does  that  apply  to  seniors  who  will  not  play 
any  more  for  Mr.  Tatum? 

"5.  He  has  taken  the  sports  set  up  at  Caro- 
lina out  if  its  old  lovable  rut  and  has  turned  it 
into  a  Gridiron  Club  ..."  I  did  not  know  we  had 
a  winning  season  last  fall  and  that  must  be  the 
rut  to  which  you  were  referring.  It  surely  is  not 
lovable.  Should  we  turn  the  other  cheek  to  Duke 
if  it  is  unethical  to  win? 

"The  institutions  tJiemselves,  however,  are  the 
real  ones  to  blame."  Define  "institutions,"  "ones," 
and  "blame"  what?  Does  it  apply  to  Carolina? 
If  so.  say  so.  This  would  include  cx-officio  mem- 
ber of  the  Board  of  Trustees  Hodges,  Bill  Friday. 
Chancellor  House.  Dean  Sitterson,  Dr.  Lefler 
and  Jack  Homer  who  thinks  that  he  is  an  in- 
stitution. 

I  sat  on  the  honor  council  for  a  year  and  was 
never  aware  that  we  were  partial  to  athletes. 
If  you  kno^'  different,  let  me  know,  and  exactly 
where  you  get  your  information,  as  I  was  under 
the  impression  that  all  proceedings  of  the  honor 
council  were  confidential.  I  assume,  of  course, 
that  our  Men's  Honor  Council  comes  under  the 
broad  sweep  of  campus  academics,  (amateur,  of 
course)  that  has  been  corrupted  by  big  time 
athletics,  sponsored  solely  by  Mr.  Tatum. 

As    I    see    it,   you    are   saying   that   Carolina 
faculty    members,    which    Mr.    Tatum    is,    are 
,  crooks    and    unethical,    »n4    dangerous.    How? 
What  are  the  specifics?  What  is  meant  by  aca- 
demics? How  are  they  threatened  here  at  Caro- 
lina? 
Who   will    be   effected   and   where   and   how? 
From  just  this  minute  talking  to  a  football  player, 
he  said  that  he  is  not  filing  a  W2  form  for  income 
tax  returns  on  all  that  money  that  he  was  sup- 
posed to  have  gotten. 

Get  off  Mr.  Tatums  back    Help  him   do  his 
job   instead   of  fighting  him  all   the    way.   More 
people  than  not  think  that  he  belongs  in  Chapel 
Hill  more  than  you  do.  Watt  until  he  louses  up 
before  you  start  whining.  He  is  no  Al  Capone  or 
iJoe  McCarthy.  It  is  not  against  the  rules  to  want 
to  win  or  to  inspire  optimism  and  a  winning  spirit. 
Martin  Luther  King  (the  rev.)  is  trying  to 
do  the  same   thing.  Until  you  have  something 
specific  to  say,  please  keep  your  trap  shut.  It's 
getting   loaded  with   tfc'A@%/'.:   and   it   looks 
unpleasant,  especially  when  we  have  to  apolo- 
gize in  public  for  you. 
You  tell  a  neighbor  by  tlie  people  who  go  \n 
his  house.  We  are  more  proud  of  Tatum  than  you. 
And  don't  get  that  hurt  persecuted  attitude  when 
people   disagree   profusely  with  you.  Why  dont 
you  join  the  University  or  student  body,  which 
ever  seems  the  least  debasing  to  you,  and  enjoy 
life.   This    is   Carolina,    not   UCLA   and  we   still 
don't  have  to  win. 

David  M.  Conner 
Hugh  Cowan 
Thoo  Pitt  Jr. 
Joe  Walser 


FRIDAY, 

Wei 
WitI 

Informs 
the  sociall 
i  tones    wi 
night  in 
odist  spot 

The   ses 
by  a  met 
of  head  i\ 
Sunday  ii 

The  coi 


5  ROOM 
rooms. 
3  miles] 
and 
Fred  K| 

JA3 

Saturdal 
ages  Cabj 
Dick  Gal 
Served. 

FOR  SALl 
and  Krc 
to  matcl 
Call  Mr 


I 
I 
I 


Ever 
CAPI 

co!  leg! 
BM 
be  the 
can  bi 
little; 
spcci 
porta| 
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Fc.if. 

''' 

Two-] 

pricey 


D 


5 
9 

10. 
12. 

13 
14. 
15. 
16 
17. 

18 
19. 
20 
23 

24. 
26 
28 
31. 

32. 
33. 
34. 

35. 

36. 

3&. 
40 

41. 

42. 
43. 
44. 


FRIDAY,  FEBRUARY  22,  1957 


THt  DAILY  TAR  HIIL 


lO.K. 

[that 
the 

it 
^ting 

or 
Jem. 

to 
aca- 
ivite 
ties, 
ibl«. 
lays 

acies 
ath- 

row 
Mr? 
lUc 
ui? 

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r*st 
lik* 


of 

lUni- 

itunt 
:ulty 
lore 

I  Hill. 

kdard 
your 
is  it 

lasier 
Hball 
learn 

Iturn- 
lours 
>rmi- 
licate 

»nd 
•b- 

iu»t 

that 
Itten 
f*rs, 
ition 
Eteri 

into 
I  in*. 

away 
Uni- 
>up  of 

ktMete 

you 
I  in  ac- 
|a  stu- 
this? 
itums 
|r  day, 
K  play 

Caro- 
led it 
fe  had 
)e  the 
is  aot 
Duke 

|re  the 

rones." 

jlina? 

rnem- 

iday. 

Lefler 

an  in- 

id  was 
thletes. 
[exactly 
under 
honor 
!  course, 
ler  the 
leur,  of 
time 

irelina 
•r« 
H»w? 
•c«- 

Qaro- 


Wesley  Weekend  Begins 
With  Discussion  Sunday 


Informal  discussion  groups  in 
the  social  rooms  of  various  dorm- 
itories will  begin  this  Sunday 
night  in  connection  with  the  Meth- 
odist sponsored  Wesley  Weekend. 

The  sessions  will  be  kicked  off 
by  a  meeting  under  th€  direction 
of  head  football  coach  Jim  Xatum 
Sunday  in  the  basement  of  Cobb. 

The  complete  schedule  of  meet- 


CLASSIFIEDS 


ROOM  BRICK  HOUSE.  3  BED 
rooms,  all  modern  conveniences. 
3  miles  on  Old  86  Hyway.  Stove 
and  Frigedaire  furnished.  Call 
Fred  Katzin  after  6:00,  8-9025. 


ings  is  as  follows:  Monday,  in 
Winston.  Dr.  Earl  Peacock;  in 
Grimes,  Jim  Wadsworth;  Tuesday: 
in  Mangum,  Dr.  A.  K.  King;  in 
Joyner.  Lt.  Com.  Howard  Chil- 
dress; in  Alderman.  Dr.  Earl  Pea- 
cock; in  Mclver,  Rev.  Joe  Tyler; 
in  Spencer,  Jim  Wadsworth;  in 
Smith,  Rev.  Charles  Hubbard;  in 
Carr,  Dr.  Frank  Hanft;  in  t^e 
Nurses  Dorm.  Dr.  Kempton  Jones. 
All  meetings  will  be  held  at  10:00 
p.m. 


JAZZ  AT  TURNAGES 

Saturday  artemooa,  2:00,  Turn- 
ages  Cabin   in   Durham Jazz  by 

Dick    Gables    "All    Stars."    Beer 

Served. 

FOR  SALE:  SIMMON'S  SOFA  BED 
and  Kroehler  sofa  bed  with  chair  ! 
to  match.  All  in  good  condition.  I 
Call  Mrs.  Haithcock  at  9-8482. 


Oklahoma  A&M  Ekes  Out 
Win  Over  Kansas,  56-54 

Dropping  in  two  points  in  the 
last  second  of  the  game.  Ok  la* 
homa  A&M  last  night  eked  out 
a  victory  over  Kansas,  56-54.  In 
the  close  fought  battle.  Wilt 
Chamberlain  racked  up  32  points 
for  the  losing  Kensans. 

This  marks  the  second  loss  of 
the  season  for  nationally  second- 
ranked  Kansas. 


Come  And  Get  'Em! 

Anybody  Who  Buys  An 
LP.  Gets 

2  FREE  LP's 

From 

R.  C.  A.  VICTOR 

in  Honor  Of 

AAARDI  GRAS' 


207  E.  FRANKLIN  STREET 


Track  Meet  Preparations  Here 
Reach  Climax  With  Workout 


PAGE  THREI 


honors.  Sims  is  entered  in  the  high 
pole  vault,  and  is  rated  top  man 
and  low  hurdles,  broad  jump,  and 
in  each  of  these  four  events. 

Milers  Cowles  Liipfert  and  Fick 
Arthur  will  carry  the  Tar  Baby 
colors  in  the  distance  events.  This 
duo  consistently  finished  one-two 


Unbeaten  UNC  Fish 
Meet  State  Saturday 


By  JIM  HARPER 

Preparations  for  the  upcoming 
ACC  indoor  track  meet  to  be  held 
in  Raleigh  on  Saturday,  reached  a 
climax  yesterday  as  the  UNC  track 
team  went  through  its  final  heavy 
workout. 

The  longer  distance  runners 
worked  outside  on  the  track  and 
the  cross  country  courses,  while 
sprinters,  hurdlers,  jumpers  and 
weight  men  worked  inside  the  Tin 
Can. 

Coach  Dale  Hanson  was  well 
pleased  with  the  progress  shown 
by  his  distance  runners,  but  also 
noted  that  his  squad  is  none  too 
strong  in  the  other  events. 

In  the  two  mile  run,  Ranson  ex- 
pects to  enter  both  conference  rec- 
ord holder  Jim  Beatty  and  sopho- 
more Wayne  Bisht^.  Beatty  will 
also  run  in  the  mile,  against  Mary- 
land's Burr  Grim,  a  top  contender. 
Grim  has  run  one  4:10  this  winter, 
and  last  week  finished  right  be- 
hind Beatty  in  the  New  York  Ath- 
letic Club  Games. 

{     The  Tar  Heels  will  perhaps  be 

I  strongest  in   the  880  yard  event, 

j  fielding  a  top-rate  trio:  Dave  Scur- 

[  lock,   Ben   Williams,   and   Howard 

I  Kahn.  Scurlock  ha*  run  this  di«t- 

I  ance   in   1:55,   good   time    on   the 

i  boards. 

I     Another  top  trio  will  be  entered 

i  in  the  hurdles.  Lyn  DeBorde,  Mer 

{  rit  Sugg,   and  Charles   Sowers  all 

j  promise    to    make    good   showings    tical  5-1  conference  charts  and  tRe 

,  and  collect  several  points.  i  co-championship. 

Oscar  Davis,  who  lately  has  This  year,  things  may  be  a  litUe 
I  shown  much  improvement  in  the  j  different  Carolina  took  State  on 
pole  vault,  was  injured  during  the ;  its  own  home  grounds  48  to  38, 
I  inter-class  meet  held  last  week  and  j  January  15th,  for  the  largest  mar- 
:  it  is  doubtful  if  he  will  be  entered.  |  gin  of  victory  by  either  team  over 
,      Ahiong  the  frosh.  Ward  Sims  is'  the  other 


a    good    bet    to    take,  individual    during  the  cross  country  season, 


and  is  heavily  favored  to  repeat  on 
Saturday. 

Coach  Rason  said  yesterday  that 
he  expected  his  squad  to  make  a 
good  showing  in  Raleigh,  but  stat- 
ed, "It  will  take  a  lot  of  hustle  on 
the  part  of  everyone  to  keep  us  in 
competition." 


By  STEWART  BIRO 

A  determined  and  confident  Tar 
Heel  swimming  team,  undefeated 
in  seven  outings,  will  meet  an 
equally  determined,  thrice-beaten, 
revenge  minded  N.  C.  State  Wolf- 
pack  Saturday  afternoon  in  Bow- 
man Gray  Pool  with  this  year's 
conference  championship  at  stake. 

Ralph  Caiiey's  mermen  will  go 
into  the  three  o'clock  meeting  with 
a  carbon  copy  of  last  year's  record 
at  this  time:  undefeated. and  hold- 
ing one  victory  over  brother  Wil- 
lis's charges  from  West  Raleigh. 
Whether  things  will  tt^9^  out  as 
they  did  last  year  is  the  issue  that 
will  be  settled  wbei),' iiiese  two 
southern  swimming  p^f^  tangle,' 
with  no  holds  barreC*:^e  Wolf- 
pack  rose  up  and  e|ip^d  the  Tar 
Heels  last  year,  43  to  41,  and  the 
two  squads  had  to  settle  for  iden- 


m  many  years. 


IDC  BYUWS 


RMO.C  W 

I  with  his  new  ▼ 

!       SONIC 


(Contimied  from  Page  ^)  sonal  contact  with  the  subject 

mty  meetings  and  dormitory  fun- j  The  dorm  executive  now  has  the 
ctions,  which  often  necessitates;  power  of: 'impeaching  a  dorm  of^' 
resignation  from  dormitory  office  ficial  if  the.yote  is  unanimous;  th« 
m  the  middle  of  a  seraecAer,  is  the  \  dohn-officiial  being  trwd  would  not 
reason  for  the  change.  .  J  v6te.  A  dorinUo^y  can  also  impeach 

"These     mi(tgeme»t.er     r^8igija-Kaii;official.if  two-thirtji^f  liie  dorm 
tions   and  subsequent  rerelectionajs^  a  petiUcuivM'       ^  sU 
disrupt  continuity  of  acti<m^tn  bath  i      AJJ  '^'recommet^etf  ohailgW^  Wert 
individual  dormitories  and  the  in- lihco^porated  into  the  by-laws, 
terdormitorj  CouncU  ii^elf .  Boh    Carter.    Chairman    of    the 

"The  action   was  taken  for  the  |  finance    committee,    introduced    a 


!  Ever  since  Jack  bought  his  new  Sonic 
.CAPRI  phonograph  at  the  local 

college  store— he's  become  the  biggest 

B  M  O  C  ever.  You  can  join  him  and 
;  be  the  biggest  ever,  too,  for  you 

can  buy  a  Capri  phonograph  for  as 
.little  as  119.95.  This  month's 
:  special  buy  is  the  Capri  550.  It's  a 

portable  4 -speed  hi-fi  phonograph 
'  with  WEBCOR  automatic  changer 
^Features  are  twin  speakers,,a 

quality  amplifier  and  a  smartly 

"styled  cabinet  in  attractive 

,  Two- Tone  Forest  Green  Specially 

priced  at  your  local  dealer 


But,  that  was  five  weeks  ago 
and  the  Wolfpack  is  not  going  to 
be  caught  napping  by  such  a 
m|isterful  bit  of  stratiegy  that  so 
completely  fooled  them  last 'time. 
Judging  by  their  showing  in  the 
Carolini  Collegiates  two  weeks  ago, 
marked  improvement  has  been 
made,  and  they  may  come  in  with 
a  few  surprises  of  their  own.  That 
ten  point  margin  of  vict(»y  may 
not  be  realized  by  the  Tar  Heels 
this  time,  and  State  could  pull  a 
few  upsets  should  some  of  Ralph 
Casey's  charges  have  an  off  day. 

AU  of  these  facts  the  Carolina 
mentor  and  his  aces  are  aware  of 
and  are  not,  talcing  lightly,  but; 
with  so  many  future  prizes  in  the 
offering,  they  may  be  a  bit  more 
determined  than  Slate. 

AU  the  Wolfpack  can  salvage  by 
beating  the  Tar  Heels  is  co-cham- 
pionship of  the  conference.  Caro- 
lina can  pick  up  quite  a  bit  more 
than  that.  By  beating  State,  they 
can  sew  up  imdisputed  conference 
laurels  and  first  undefeated  season 
since  the  days  of  the  old  Southern 
Conference,  and  become  a  prime 
threat  in  the  National  Collegiates 
a  month  from  now. 

To  play  host  to  the  best  in  the 
nation,  wearing  a  conference  crown 
and  sporting  an  unblemished  slate 
is  something  the  Tar  Heels  would 
dearly  relish  to  place  in  the  path 
<«)[{  their  perennially  powerful  con- 
temporaries from  the  likes  of  Yale, 
ibhio  State,  Michigan.  Stanford 
and  Harvard,  to  mention  a  few. 


Tar  Heels 
Slate  26 
Game  Card 

The  University  of  North  Caro- f 
lina  today  announced  a  2€-game| 
1957  baseball  schedule  which  in-| 
eludes  six  new  opponents. 

Four  of  the  additions  are  Flori- ; 
da.  Georgia  Tech,  Ohio  State  and  j 
Rollins,  all  of  whom  will  be  play^  j 
ed  en  the  Tar  Heels'  annual  spring  j 
Florida  trip.  The  swing,  opening  i 
the  season,  begins  with  the  gam*  t 
with  Florida  at  Gainesville  on  j 
March  20.  The  Tar  Heels  then! 
move  to  Rollins  for  a  round  robin  j 
with  the  other  teams.  ! 

Ithaca  College  and  the  McCrary 
Eagles  will  be  the  other  newcom- 
ers. 

Tlje  1957  UNC  schedule: 

March  20,  Florida  at  Gainesville, 
Fia.;  21,  Georgia  Tech.  22,  Ohio 
State,  and  23,  Rollins  (all  at  Win- 
ter Park.  Fla.);  27,  Delaware;  28, 
Maryland;  29,  Ithaca;  30,  Washing- 
ton and  Lee. 

April  2.  South  Carolina;  3,  N.  C. 
State  at  Raleigh;  5.  Virginia  at 
Charlottesville,  Va.;  6.  Maryland 
at  College  Park,  Md.;  10,  Vu-ginia; 
13,  Duke;  17,  Clemson;  19,  Fur- 
man  at  Greensville,  S.  C;  20,  South 
Carolina  at  Columbia,  S.  C;  22,  [ 
McCiary  at  Asheboro;  25.  Wake! 
Forest;  29.  Clemson  at  (:if^9i§on, 
S.  C.  '.^ii'^'-Jf 

May  1,  Duke  at  Durham;  4.  Mc- 
Crary at  Asheboro;  7,  Wake  For- 
est at  Winston-Salem;  11,  N.  C.  j 
State;  13,  Wake  Forest  at  Winston-  j 
Salem;  15.  N.  C.  §tate  ?!  .Silerj 
City. 


SP  Invites  Students  To  Nominating  Session 

Student  Party  Chairman  Sonny  for  people  outside  the  party  prop- 
Hallf ord  has  invited  all  interested  j  er  to  see  and  hear  from  candidates 
persons  to  attend  the  SP  nominat-  \  who  will  be  running  this  spring." 
ing  sessions  beginning  Feb.  25  and  \ 
continuing  throngh  March  11.         j 

In  extending  the  invitation  Hall- 


Hallford    announced    that    thijs 
was   an   open  invitation 


ford  stated  that  it.  was  felt   that 
"this  will  be  a  good  opportunity 


Business  A^jprs  Hear 
Local  firm  Executive 

Carolina  Business  majors  h^ard 
i;.  M.  Craig,  Territorial  Person- 
nel Director  of  Sears-Roebuck,  dis- 
cuss opportunities  in  retailing  as 
a  caieer  Monday  evening  in  Car- 
roll Hall  at  a  jointly  sponsored 
presentation  of  Delta  Sigma  Pi 
and  Alpha  l^appa  Psi. 

The  two  business  fraternities  co- 
sponsored  a  film  entitled  "Time 
for  Decision,"  which  followed  the 
life  of  a  typical  trainee  in  the 
Sears-Roebuck  program. 

Craig,  who  is  a  UNC  graduate 
(1947),  conducted  the  discussion 
period  following  the  film.  He  em- 
phasized to  the  assemblage  the 
opportunities  open  in  the  field  of 
retailing  with  particular  stjress  on 
possibilities  with  the  Sears-Roe- 
buck Co. 


LEARN  COLLEGE  HEBREW 
AT  CAMP  THIS  SIMMER 

Annual  accelerated  cours*  is 
modern  Hebrew  for  coUeg* 
studentd  and  graduating  hi|^ 
school  seniors,  at  beaatifut  T3 
acre  coed  camp  in  New  York's 
Hudson  Valley ;  complete  sports 
facilities. 

7  week  session,  July-Auf««ft, 
$183;  including  room,  botN[, 
tuition  (some  scholarship  Melp 
available)  write: 

ULPAN,  Student  Zionist  OrganizatMH  ^ 
342  Madison  Avenue,  New  York  17. 


Hr 


SONIC  INDUSTRIES.  INC.     L' Wilbur  S»fe«t,  lynbrook.J'JLY. 


DAILY    CROSSWORD 


ACVOS8 

1  Edible 

cnistaceftn 
5.  Killed 
9.  Peppar 
10.  Thick  ioup 

12.  C«nUr«id 

13.  An  addition 

14.  Mimics 

15.  River  islet 

16.  Greek  letter 

17.  River 
(Chin.) 

18.  Merriment 

19.  Wager 

20.  ReptUes 
23  Affected 

numners 
24.  Prized  wine 
26.  HastMied 
28.  RaiMd 

31.  Type 
measures 

32.  Uttle  gi 

83.  Greek  letvsr 

34.  Jewish 
month 

35.  Narrow 
inlet  (geol. ) 

36.  Parasitic 
insects 

38.  Fear 

40.  Particular 
cost\une 

41.  Nappsd, 
tanned  skin 

42.  Faulty 

43.  Ei>ochs 

44.  Walk 

,      through 
water 
DOWN 
I.Polish 
I     composer 

2.  Ready  to  sat 

3.  Malt 

\     beverages 


4.  Offer 

5.  Country 
(Eur.) 

6.  American 
astor 

7.  Sea  eagle 

8.  Mourner 

9.  Rank 
11.  Egresses 
15.  Haven  for 

Hungarians 
IS.  Bog 
19.  Coffin  and 

stand 

21.  Birds  as 
a  class 

22.  Young  f  oat 

23.  Turkish 
Utlc 


25.  Rontan 
money 

26.  Leads 

27.  Drench 
with 
gore 

29.  Cut 
out 

30.  Legisla- 
tures 

32.  Boxmd- 
ing 
sur- 
faces 

35.  Legislative 
body 
(Ukr.) 

36uTibeUn 
priest 


good  of  continuous  don|utory  gov- 
ernment." 

Members  of  social  frateAiities 
now  holding  dorm  offices  will  con- 
tinue in  their  positions  until  their 
terms  expires,  according  to  Neil 
Bass. 

A  change  which  will  abolish  the 
investigating  committee  of  the  ID 
Court  and  make  these  students 
members  of  the  Court  was  debated. 
The  article  provides  that  the  court 
be  increased  to  nine  in  the  regular 
sessions  and  seven  during  the  sum- 
mer sessions.  The  ID  Court  mem- 
bers will  investigate  cases  on  a 
rotation  basis  or  at  the  discretion 
of  the  chairman  of  the  court. 

There  was  right  much  general 
discussion  of  whether  or  not  the 
member  inves-tigating  a  case  should 
be  allowed  to  vote;  some  members 
felt  that  the  someone  investigat- 
ing case  might  be  biased  by  pcr- 


budget  for  the  IDC.  The  IDC  hopes 
to  get  $1500  from  the  Student  Leg- 
islature, a  $300  increase  over  laift 
year.  The  total  IDC  and  individual 
dormitories*  income  is  estimated  at 
$5800.  The  budget  was  passed  with 
little  discussion. 

^alph  Cummjngs,  Chairman  of 
the  EUections  Board,  talked  about 
the  spring  elections.  The  campus- 
wide  elections  and  the  dormitory 
elections  are  to  be  held  at  the 
same  time. 

March  22  the  IDC  vill  sponsor  a 
concert  in  connection  with  the 
sophomore  dance  -  weekend  an- 
nounced Benny  Thomas,  Chairman 
of  the  social  committee. 

Neil  Bass  swore  Ekl  Brown,  new 
President  of  Winston^  into  office. 


^^fffosh  Golfers  M«et 

;  All  candidates  for  the  freshman 
golf  team  have  been  asked  to  at- 
tend a  meeting  today  at  1:15  at  the 
Pioley  Course  clubhouse. 


Phillips  Russell  To  Speak 
To  PAR  On  February  27 

Phillips  Russell  will  be  the  guest  j 
speaker  at  the  meeting  of  the 
Davie  Poplur  Chapter,  D.A.?i.  on 
Wednesday  afternoon  at  3:30 
o'clock,  February  27.  at  the  home 
e<  Mzs.  &.  M.  Lester  on  Pit|$\)Qr9 
Aoad.  Mis  3ub»«cU  iThomas  Je^fer-. 
son,  Our  Number  One  Teacher". 

Serving  as  hostesses  with  JiTs. 
Lester  will  be  Mrs.  J.  Q.  LeGrand, 
Mrs.  W.  B.  Holmeif  and  Jfes.^.  S 
Voorhis. 


DORM  CONTRACTS 


(Continued   ironii  Page   1) 

JDody  has  grown  by  approximately 
2,000  students. 

According  to  Business  Manager 
Teague's   statement    in    1955.   the 


new  dormitories  will  be  built  in 
colonial  type  architecture  •  yriHi 
outside  porches  and  stair^. 

Plans  for  the  dorms  include 
built-in  dfesks.  bookcases  and  dress- 
ers on  one  side  of  the  room.  The 


new    dormitories    will    not    touch  j  only  movable  furniture  would  be 

the   athletic  fields.  They  will  be 

built  in  such  a  way  that  the  land 

will  be  put  to  good  use,  and  with 

an  eye  to  future  development-  he 

said. 


FACILITIES 

According  to  original  plans,  the 


VICTORY  VILLAGE 


beds  and  chairs. 

Teague.  Dean  of  Student  Affairs 
Fred  Weaver,  Director  of  Opera- 
tion J.  S.  Bennett  and  Universi- 
ty Engineer  Hakan  made  a  study 
of  new  dormitories  at  Wake  For- 
est College's  new  site  in  Winston- 
Salem,  and  of  a  new  dormitorj'  at 
Davidson  College  in  1955.  Their 
finding  were  reported  to  the  des- 
ignated architectural   firms. 

#2 


VICT.ORY  VILLAtSE  DAY  CAtE  CENTER 

, . .  after  fire  last  spring- 


t  soeifli 
boHerfly? 


style  No.  401,  $8.95 


SHOE  DSPT. 


Of  Chapel  Hil! 


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THIS  AFTER  SHAVE  LOTION 
CONDITIONS  YOUR  FACE,  TOO 

Invigorates  and  softens  the  skin;  soothes  razor  bum 
after  any  shave,  electric  or  lather . . .  $1.10,  plus  tax. 


YARDLEY  OF  LONDON,  inc. 


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YARDLEY   PRODUCT^  AVAILABLE 


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SUTTON'S  DRUG  STORE 


PAOI  »>OUI 


THE  DAILY  TAR  H6BL 


FRIDAY,  FEBRUARY  22,  Tf57 


Tar  Heels  Meet  South  Carolina  Tonight  In  Last  Home  Game 


i' 

SPORTS 

Urry  Cheek,  SpcrH  hdlior 

For  The  Wolfpack,  A  Good  Sound  Lktcing 

UNC  basketball  fans  have  been  waiting  a  long,  long  time  to  see 
Carolina  beat  the  pants  off  State,  and  their  loyalty  was  rewarded 
Tueiiday  night  when  Coach  Frank  McGuires  classy  Tar  Heels  handed 
the  Wolfpack  their  wor^n.  licking  in  10  years,  86-57,  in  Woollen  Gym. 

It  was  UNC's  third  straight  win  over  State,  but  the  Tar  Heels 
still  have  a  long  way  to  go  to  pull  even  with  their  West  Raleigh 
rivals  in  the  win-loss  column.  However  the  way  things  are  going 
right  now.  the  account  may  be  balanced  in  time.  >  - 

» 

It    was    a    superb   effort    by    Carolina's    flaming    five    starters 

that  turned  the  game  into  a  ridiculous  rout.  Rosenbluth  led  the 

scoring  with  28  points,  but  the  roles  played   by  Brennan,  Kearns, 

Ouigg  and  Cunningham  were  just  as  vital. 

There  was  little  or  no  tension  in  the  air  at  Woollen  Gym,  at  least 
a^  far  as  the  Carolina  team  was  concerned.  The  Tar  Heels  were  re- 
laxed, and  performed  with  effortless  ease,  in  direct  contrast  to  their 
play  against  Duke  and  Wake  Forest.  State  on  the  other  hand,  with 
four  sophomores  in  the  ^'tarting  lineup,  seemed  to  have  an  acute  ca^e 
oi  the  jitters.  Their  poor  shooting  and  sloppy  ball  handling  testifies 
to  this  fact. 

State:  Better  Than  They  Looked      r^         \ 

State  has  a  better  team  than  they  e>thibited  on  the  Woollen  Gym 
floor  Tuesday  night.  On  a  hot  night  playing  before  loyal  partisan 
fans  in  the  Coliseum,  they  can  be  double-trouble,  even  with  thei;' 
overload  of  sophs.  Frank  McGuire  lent  his  weight  to  this  theory  Tues- 
day night  when  he  predicted  that  State  would  win  its  fira-t  two  games 
in  the  tourney.  Question.  If  State  and  Carolina  wind  up  in  the  same 
bracket,  whfch  they  are  expected  to  do,  whfere  vices  that  leave  the 
Tar  Heels? 

McGuire  has  always  been  known  as  a  firm  believer  in  the  man- 
«  to-man  defense,  but  Tuesday  night  he  came  up  with  an  airtight 
zone  defense  that  effectively  stymied  the  Wolfpack  attack.  When 
pressed  for  an  explanation,  the  Tar  Heel  coach  said  the  strategy 
had  been  adopted  to  cut  down  on  fouls.  In  view  of  the  fact  that 
the  Tar  Heels  are  down  to  five  men  (for  all  practical  purposes), 
this  would  seem  to  be  a  good  move. 

Some  observers  criticized  McGuire  for  leaving  his  starters  in  the 
game  until  UNC  had  a  28  point  lead  with  only  a  little  over  2  minutes 
to  play.  But  the  Tar  Heel  coach,  never  known  for  trying  to  run  up 
a  big  score,  had  a  realty  answer.  "We  hadnt  played  a  game  in  nearly 
a  week,  and  the  starters  needed  the  work."  he  said. 

The  win  sewed  up  the  regular  season  championship  for  Carolina, 
but  thia-  is  an  empty  honor,  for  it  is  the  ACC  tourney  champ  who 
reigns  as  official  kins'.  The  only  advantage  to  be  gained  by  finishing 
first  in  the  standings  is  the  number  one  seeded  position  in  the  tourna- 
ment. Although  this  may  insure  a  win  in  the  quarter-finals,  it  leaves 
the  road  to  the  championship  just*  as  tough  in  the  semi-finals  and 
finals. 

Duke  And  Wake  Forest:  Double  Trouble 

Three  ganie.->'  now  lie  between  the  Tar  Heels  and  an  undefeated 
regular  season.  One  of  them,  the  South  Carolina  scrap  tonight,  should 
be  in  the  bag  if  the  Chapel  Hillians  perform  up  to  par.  But  the  other 
two,  away  from  home  tilts  against  Duke  and  Wake  Forest,  could  be 
trouble. 

Both  .squads  battled  the  Tar  Heels  down  to  the  wire  in  Woollen 
Gym,  and  they  will  be  twice  as  tough  on  their  home  courts.  But 
against  State  Tuesday  night,  Carolina  seemed  to  have  snapped  out 
of  the  slump  that  almost  co^t  them  their  winning  streak.  In  our 
book,  this  makes  the  Tar  Heels  very  slight  favorites  in  next  weeks 
important  finales. 

Tonight  it's  South  Carolina  and  their  one-man  scoring  gang. 
Grady  Wallace.  Although  the  Tar  Heels  are  heavily  favored,  it  should 
be  an  interesting  show  to  see.  Perhaps  the  controversy  over  the  re- 
lative merits  of  I^en  Roa-enbluth  and  Wallace  will  be  settled  once 
and  for  all. 


Wallace, 
Rosenbluth 
Lock  Horns 

By    LARRY    CHEEK 

The  nation's  best  basketball 
team  and  the  country's  number 
one  individual  scorer  crash  head 
on  tonight  in  Woollen  Gym  when 
North  Carolina's  unbeaten  and  top 
ranked  Tar  Heels  take  on  Grady 
Wallace  and  his  South  Carolina 
teammates. 


MEET  IS  TOSSUP 


Grapplers  Tangle 
With  VMl  Tonight 


By  RON  MILLIGAN  I 

The  twice  beaten  but  high  spirit-  i 
od  Carolina  wrestlers  left  yester  \ 
day  afternoon  for  Virginia  Mili-  { 
tary  Institute  where  they  will  bat-  i 
tie  the  Keydets  tonight.  j 

TJne  Tar  Heel  grapplers  face! 
competition  tonight  that  is  con- 1 
sidered  no  stronger  than  them- 
selves. Coach  Sam  Barnes  said  yes- 
terday, "According  to  comparative 
scores,  I  believe  that  this  match 
will  be  a  toss-up.  VMI  has  been 
beaten  by  VPI  and  Maryland  and 
the  same  teams  that  have  beaten 
us.'' 

The  Tar  Heels  so  far  have  wins  | 
over  Wake  Forest,  Citadel,  David- 
son, Virginia  and  one  tie  with  j 
Washington  and  Lee,  They  have  \ 
been  beaten  twice  by  champion ' 
teams  in  the  ACC  and  Southern  i 
conferences,  making  a  record  so ; 
far  of  four  wins,  o'ne  tie  and  two ; 
losses.  ,  j 

After  the  match  tonight  with 
VMI,  the  squad  has  two  more 
matches  scheduled.  These  are  with 
conference  team.v,  Duke  and  N.  C. 
State. 

Two  outstanding  wrestlers,  Ken 
'Hoke   and   Perrin   Henderson   will 
be  in  the  lineup  at  the  157  lb.  and 
137   lb.    divisions    respectively    to- 
night against  VML  Two  w^eks  ago 


The  Tar  Heels  will  be  looking 
for  their  22nd  consecutive  win 
without  a  loss  and  their  12th  in 
conference  play.  Tipoff  time  for 
the  headline  attraction  is  8  p.m. 
with  a  capacity  crowd  expected  to 
be  in  the  stands. 

It  will  be  the'last  home  game  of 
the  season  for  the  classy  Chapei 
Hillians,  and  in  addition,  it  will 
be  the  final  appearance  before  the 
home  folks  for  All-America  for- 
ward Lennie  Rosenbluth.  Since 
his  arrival  on  the  Hill,  Rosey  has 
rewritten  the  record  books.  He 
now  holds  all  UNC  individual  and 
season  scoring  marks  plus  other 
records  for  field  goal  and  free 
throw  accuracy. 

Headlining  tonights  game  will 
be  a  probable  scoring  duel  between 
Wallace  and  Rosenbluth.  Wallace 
tops  both  the  nation  and  the  con- 
ference with  an  average  in  ex- 
cess of  30  points  per  game,  while 
Rosenbluth  has  a  26.5  mark. 

Early  in  the  season,  Carolina  was 
forced  into  overtime  before  turn- 
ing back  the  GamecocKS,  90-86,  in*^ 
Columbia.  Wallace  tallied  35  points  I 
that  night,  and  it  was  only  the  play  j 
of  Tommy  Kearns  that  kept  the 
Tar  Heels  above  board. 

Last  Tuesday  night.  Coach  Frank 
McGuire's  squad  trimmed  Stale, 
86-57,  in  Woollen  Gym.  It  was  their 
first  "breather"  since  the  Western 


Tar  Baby  Cagers  Meet 
ACC  Jayvees  Tonight 


By    BILL    KING 

Coach  Vince  Grimaldi's  Carolina 
Tar  Babies  will  be  shooting  for 
win  number  15  tonight  when  they 
entertain  the  Atlantic  C|iristian 
College  jayvees  at  6  o'clock  in 
Woollen  Gym.  The  game  will  be  a 
preliminary  affair  prior  to  the 
North  Carolina-South  Carolina 
tipoff  at  8:00  p.m. 

The  Tar  Babies  are  currently  the 
hottest  freshman  team  around, 
having  lost  but  one  game  since  the 
end  of  the  first  semester.  That 
one  was  to  the  Wake  Forest  frosh 
Jan.  31,  and  the  tall  freshman 
came  back  with  a  resounding  re- 
venge victory  over  the  Baby  Deacs 
last  week. 

Probably  the  sweetest  win  of  the 
season,  however,  came  agains't  the 
North  Carolina  State  freshmen 
Tuesday  night — a  convincing  86-56 


lUCHAKP,  Leo 
B  asehxrt  G^Kf  r 

JOHNHUSTOlSr 

rnoDvctiON  Of  hcrman  uiivilie  s 


win  for  the  Tar  Babies.  The  Wolf- 
lets  had  previously  handed  the  Tar 
Babies  two  of  their  three  defeats. 
The  big  five  for  the  frosh  tonight 
will  be  leaping  Lee  Shaffer  and 
Mike  Steppe  at  forwards,  lanky 
Dick  Kepley  at  center,  and   York 


pBVf  X)lC- 


"bANNY   LOTZ 
.faces  Gamecocks  tamght 


.^jj^.-T^CHNICOUOR 


NOW  PLAYING 


Carolina 


WILLIAM 
HOLDEM 

AS  A 

Rocket  Pilot,  u.s.a, 

IN 


I   i%MwmmMM 
\  THE. 
yNKNOlMTN 

I  The  story  of  the 

I  incredible  handful 

I  of  picked  men 

\  who  ride 

j  the  Space  "ft  j 

I  beyond 
the  sky! 


For     more     sports     news,     see 
Page  3. 


these  boys  were  the  only  ones  to 
defeat  their  opponents  in  the  Mary 
land  tilt  which  was  watched  by  a 
large  crowd  in  Woollen  Gym.  Af- 
ter that  match  Coach  Barnes  re- 
marked: "I've  never  seen  Ken 
Hoke  wrestle  as  smoothly  a:;  he 
did  this  afternoon.  He  was  deter- 
mined to  win  his  match  and  he  did. 
I  thought  that  Henderson  did  an 
excellent  job  too."  I 

The  lineup  for  the  Carolina  Var- 
sity will  be  123  lb.  Henry  Rhyne, 
130  lb.  Capt.  Bob  Wagner,  137  lb. 
Perrin  Henderson,  147  lb.  Charlie 
Boyete,  157  lb.  Keft  Hoke,  167  lb. 
Bill  McKehee,  177  lb.  Dave  Atkin- 
son, and  heavyweight  Larry  Hayes. 

The  yearling  freshman  grapplers 
accompanied  the  varsity  to  take  on  ' 
VMI's    junior    varsity    before    the 
main  event  tonight.  < 

Last  Friday  the  freshman  team! 
lost  to   the  Duke  frcvhman  there  j 
by   a   score  of  28  to   8  with   Bill  I 
Suttle  getting  a  decision  and  Mike 
Pittman  scoring  a  fall.  i 

The  freshman  team  lineup ; 
against  VMI's  jvs  will  include 
Carolina's  123  lb.  Bill  Suttle,  130 
lb.  Charlie  Whitfield,  137  lb.  Bob 
Bingham,  147  lb.  Jim  Welborn,  157; 
lb.  Ray  Russell,  167  lb.  Jim  Hudson,  I 
177  lb.  Mike  Pittman  and  heavy 
weight  Dick  LeBus. 


Cafoifffa  game  immediately  follow- 
ing the  mid-semester  break.  The 
Tar  Heels  had  appeared  tight  and 
jittery  in  edging  by  Maryland, 
Duke,  Virginia  and  Wake  Forest, 
but  against  State  they  were  never 
better  .hitting  50  per  cent  of  their 
shots. 

Backing  up  Rosenbluth  tonight 
will  be  the  usual  foursome  qf  Pete 
Brennan,  Tommy  Kearns,  Joe 
Quigg  and  Bob  Cunningham.  Brcir 
nan  is  the  club's  second  high 
.•corer  with  a  14.1  average.  Bob 
Young  and  Danny  Lotz  are  the  j 
leading  reserves. 

In  addition  to  Wallace,  the  Game- 
cocks will  field  a  strong  support- 
ing cast  headed  by  dandy  guard ' 
Cookie  Pericola.  Pericola,  a  sopho- 
more from  Union  City,  N.  J.,  has 
become  known  around  the  ACC  for 
his  sensational  ball  handling  and 
dribbling. 

The  Tar  Heels  have  the  ACC  reg- 
ular season  championship  in  their 
hip  pocket,  and  are  assured  of 
playing  the  number  8  team  in  the 
opening  round  of  tl»e  ACC  tourna- 
ment. To  gain  the  conference 
crown  and  the  NCAA  bid,  the  Tar 
Heels  must  win  the  tourney. 

After  tonight's  game,  two  ob- 
stacles along  the  road  to  an  un- 
beaten season  remain  to  be  hurd- 
led. Next  week,  the  Tar  Heel.s  go 
against  Wake  Forest  on  Tuesday 
night  in  Winston-Salem  and  Duke 
on  Friday  night  in  Durham.  The 
Wake  Forest  game  is  a  sell-out,  but 
a  limited  supply  of  tickets  is  left 
for  the  Duke  game. 


Basil io  Meets  \ 
Saxton  Tonight 

CLEVELAND  —  ^if^  —  Carmen 
Basilio,  one  of  the  most  populur 
modern  era  champions,  rules  a 
solid  13  to  5  favorite  to  whip 
Johnny  Sa.xton,  a  hit-and-run  art- 
ist, tonight  in  defense  of  his  world 
welterweight  title  at  the  Cleveland 
Arena. 

The  third  nr^etinR  between  the.-*  ii 
contrasting  147-pounders  is  ex  j 
pected  to  draw  a  crowd  of  9,000  « 
and  a  gross  gate  of  '$100,000"  | '. 
according  to  Larry  Atkins,  co-pro- 1  ■ 
moter  with  the  International  Box- 
ing Club. 

Each  fighter  gets  30  per  cent 
of  the  gross  gate  and  the  $60,000 
radio-TV  fee  for  the  15-rourid 
match  that  will  be  carried  on  net- 
work NBC  radio  and  television. 
Cleveland  and  the  surrounding 
area  for  a  100-mile  radius  will  be 
blacked  out  on   TV. 


ho  ward  Johnson  Restaurant 


BREAKFAST 


LUNCH 


DINNER 


"Landmark  For  Hungry  Tarheels' 


SNACKS 


LLOYD  NOLAN 
VIRGINIA  LEITH 


TODAY  ONLY 


ryffPSTtYi 


live  Modern ! 


Larese    and    John    Crotty    at    the 
guard  positions. 


THE   WILD   WEIRD 

WORLD  AT 
BARGAIN    PRICES 

The  D«vil's  Chemists,  by  Josiah  E. 
Dubois  Jr.  The  story  of  the  I.  G. 
Farben  cmobine,  and  it's  sinister 
interest  in  war.  Published  at  $3.75. 

Our  Sp«ci«l .      $1.29 

Giands,    Sex    and    Personality,    by 
Herman  Rubin.  There  ii-  a  Destiny 
,  that  shapes  our  EIndocrines.  Pub- 
lished at  $2.95. 

Our  Special  $1.29 

Creation  and  discovery,  by  Eliseo 
Vivas.  Professor  Vivas  in  a  serie.-. 
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aesthetics.  Published  at  $5.00. 

Our  Special   .  $2.49 

The  Great  Rehearsal,  by  Carl  Van 
Doren.  Doctor  Van  Doren  is  the 
uncle  of  the  great  TV  prize-win- 
ner. Ours  are  Book-of-the-Month 
Club  editions. 

Our  Special $1.29 

A  Train  of  Powdor,  by  Rebecca 
West.  These  studies  of  crime  in- 
clude a  North  Carolina  lynching. 
A  treat  for  good  writing  and  keen 
perception.  Published  at  $3.?5. 

Our  Special  .  $1.49 

The  Making  of  France,  by  .Marie- 
Madeline  Martin.  The  winner  of 
the  Grand  Prix  d'Histoire  of  the 
French  Academy,  in  a  needed  re 
fresher  on  French  history.  Pub- 
lished at  $4.00. 

Our  Special  $1.49 

New  York's  100  Best  Restaurants, 
by  Harry  Botsford.  A  mine  of 
savoir  faire  for  the  hungry  visitor 
to  New  York.  Cho.^•^n  from  Es- 
quire's columns.  Published  at  S2.50 

Our  Special  ..  _  .  $1.2? 

The  Pursuit  of  Happiness,  by  How- 
ard Mumford  Jones.  A  sprightly 
and  thorough  study  of  our  chang- 
ing ideas  of  the  good  life.  Ours  is 
a  Book.  Club  edition. 
Our  Special  _.. _._    $1.00 

Join    Your   Friends 
In  A  Treasure-Hunt  In 

THE  INTIMATE    ' 
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Pick  the  Pack  that  Suits  You  Best ! 


The  Art  Of  Tailoring 

♦'Every  man  to  his  business, 
is  beyond  all  doubt  as  noble  and 
but  indeed  the  craft  of  a  taller 
as  secret  as  any  in  the  world." 

HAVE   OTHERS   FAILED? 

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the  best  service  possible  Pett 
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tailoring  needs. 

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Specializing  in 
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Hi 


11 


MARDI  GRAS 

Still    Continuing 

LAST  DAY  TODAY 

Open  Til  9  P.M. 

This  Is  Really  A  Give-Awayl 

ALL  KINDS  OF    '   C    "^   A   2  \4,    PRICES 

12"  LP's  At  Lowest  Ever  .  .  . 
$2.90  and  $3.90  .  .  .  Some  LP's  At  $2.50 

Special  ''Mardi  Gras''  Rack 

10  LP's  For  $7:00 


w- 


207  E.  FRANKLIN  STREET 


^.,..   .^ 


Smoke  modem  L^M  and  always  get 

fuil  exciting  flavor 


With  L*M  .  .  .  and  only  L*M  . . . 
can  you  pick  the  pack  that  '  , 

suits  you  best.  And  only  LaIVI         -. 
gives  you  the  flavor  .  .  .  the  full,.  •  - 
exciting  flavor  that  makes  LaM 
AfAEMCAS  I 

FASTEST-GftOWWG  QGARETTE  ^^ 


...PLUS  THE  PURE  WHITE  MIRACLE  TIP 


a  195"  licem  *  Mti»s  To»*cco  Co. 


WEATHER 

Partly     cloudy     and     confinuad 
cold.  Expoctod  high  48. 


9.li.C.  Library 
Serials  Dept. 
Chapel  Hill,  N.  C. 
8-31-49 


SKjeDatto 


Keel 


MACHINE 

What  turnod   it  on?  Soa  «di- 
toriai,  pago  2. 


VOL.  LVII,  NO.  106 


Complete  UPi  Wire  Strviee 


CHAPEL  HILL,  NORTH  CAROLINA,  SATURDAY,  FEBRUARY   23,  1957 


Officet  in  Graham   Memorial 


FOUR   PAGES  THIS  ISSUI 


Today  Is  Tar  Heel's 
64th  Anniversary 

Many  AAajor  Editorial  Issues 
Haven't  Changed  Over  Years 

By  CHARLIE  SLOAN 

The  Tar  Heels  front  page  in  the  next  column  is  a  reproduction  of 
tUc  first  student  newspaper  published  at  the  University  of  North  Ca- 
rolina 64  years  ago. 

During  its  existence  in  Chapel  Hill,  The  Tar  Heel,  and  its  modern 
counterpart.  The  Daily  Tar  Heel,  has  seen  a  great  variety  of  issues 
wrung  dry  of  controver.'y  on  the  editorial  page. 

Some  of  these  controversies  have  disappeared,  such  as  hazing. 
Some  of  them  have  just  changed  location  for  instance  articles  depior- 

inu  conditions  in   the  dining  hall.* ■ '■ ■ - 

then  located  in  Swain  Hall,  have 
followed  the  target  to  Lenoir.  And 
some  conditions  haven't  changed 
at  all.  Thomas  Wolfe  in  hij  days  as 
editot  condemned  three-man  rooms 
as  much  as  any  student  of  today. 
On  the  newspages  there  has  been 
a  change,  too.  A  banner  five-col- 
umn headline,  there  were  only 
five  columns  in  1919,  announced 
•"Thirteen  Hundred  Students  Re- 
gistered." 

A  few  days  later  signs  of  extra 
curricuiar  activities  made  their 
appearance. 

A  three  line  headline  said 
•'Nuricas  and  F  a  t  i  m  a  s  (ciga 
rette  brands)  Mingled  with  Orato- 
ry Open  Dialectic  Smoker." 

On  the  other  j.de  of  the  page, 
in  type  of  identical  size  on  a  story 
of  identical  length,  was  a  headline 
declaring  "Phi  Legislature  Deba- 
tes League  of  Nations;  Sixty-seven 
Men  Initiated." 

Using  jokes  for  fiHtr  was  com- 
mon practice  for  a  long  time,  and 

many  of  the  funny  stories  are  still 

being   passed   around    today     with 

only  slight  pojishin^-  j 

la  1918,  the  year  Wolfe  was  edi- ! 

lor.  Carolina's  ba..-ketban  team  was  I 

good,    but    not    unbeaten.    .A   para- ! 

graptr  filler  iroted,  "  -The  passing  | 

of  the  CarO'lina  basketball  team  is ; 

excellent.'    —    Washington    Post.! 

AVould  that  we  had  passed  Virginia 
and  Georgetown!' 


Tar  Heel  Cagers  Come  From  Behind  In 

nd  Half  To  Whip  South  Carolina, 
75-62;  Wallace  Is  Held  To  11  Points 

Brennan   And   Rosy 


Trustees 
To  Visit 
On  Campus 

'  At  least  12  woman  members  of 
I  the  Board  of  Trustees  will  visjl 
1  UNC  next  w?ek.  it  was  announced 
,  recently  by  the  Dean  of  Women's 
■  Office. 

The  trustees  arc  expected  to 
;  arrive  throughout  th?  afternoon. 
I  on  Monday.  Feb.  25.  Rooms  in 
I  various  women's  dorms  have  been 
j  set  :iside  for  their  convenience 
:  and  overnight  use.  ; 

A  welcoming     dinn?r     will     be' 
held    in    Spencer    Hall    with    stu- 
dents and  several  members  of  tlie, 
administration    in    attcndjaco.  i 

Later  in  the  evening,  .scheduleii  i 
meetings  of  the  Women's  Resi-  ■ 
dence  Council,  Women's  Honor  I 
Council,  the  YWC.A  and  the  Jn- j 
depend3nt  Women's  Council  will  { 
be  held  in  Grsham  Memoriai. 
The  trustees  will  then  meet  with 
the  Panheilcn'ic  Council  at  the  1 
Kappa  Delta  sorority  house.  j 

The  first  evening's  activities ! 
will   be   rounded   out   by    informal 


Advertising   in    that   same    year !  gatherings  in  each  dormitory  dur 


may  have  seemed  up  to  date,  but 


ing  which   time   the    trustees   will 


today  it  seems  a  little  wordy.  The    "^^'^^  ^"^  ^^^^  ^ '"»  groups  of  stu- 


dents 

A  full  Tuesday  morning  schedule 
for  the  trustees  includes  visits  to 
the  Student  Aid  Office,  the  Wo- 
man's Gym.  the  Nurse's  Residence 
and  the  Placement  Office. 

A  tea  given  by  the  University's 
Woman's  Club  will  end  the  formal 
(See  FIRST  TAR  HEEL,^Page  3)    progam    at  6   p.m. 


form  of  the  following  cigarette  ad 
seems  familiar  in  form,  but  the 
wording  would  miss  the  modern 
consumer.       , 

"Men  keep  ^•witching  from 
straight  Turkish  cirgarettes  be- 
cause they  contain  too  much  (sic) 


AFTER  'POP'  INSPECTION: 


Five   Establishments 


Given  B  Rating  Signs 


By   JIM    PURKS 

Five  food  establishments  in  the 
Chapel   Hill   area     are     currently  j 
sporting  a  ""B"  rating  sign.  j 

This   situation   came   about  sev-  '■ 
e;-al    days   ago   when    the    District 
Health    Dcpt.    sprung   one    of   its| 
"pop"  inspections  of  all   the  food 
establishments  in  Chapel  Hill  iir\ 
Carrboro.  j 

I  Four    restaurants.    Larry's    Bar  ^ 
and    Grill.    Goody   Shop.    M    &    n' 
(irill,  and  Michael's  Famous  Food,> 
were  given  the  "B"  rating  by  the 
District   Health   Department.   Only  j 
one  meat   market   in   Chapel  Hill. ' 
Power's    Market,    received    a    "B" 
rating. 

Dr.  O.  David  Garvin,  the  District 
Health  Officer,  says  the  in^ec- 
^tion  given  by  the  District  Health 
Dcpt.  is  a  thorough  one.  An  es- 
tablishment has  to  be  in  peak 
condition  in  order  t-o  receive  an ' 
"A"  rating.  I 

EQUIPMENT 

Garvin  said  the  inspection  is 
"I'  sed  on  equipment,  cleaning, 
food  handling,  and  cleaniness  of 
surroundings. "  i 

Garvin  pointed  out  that  the  in- 
spection ^  a  major  evaluation  of 
all    thes3    factors.    A    total   of    19 
item.s   are    considered    toward   the  i 
final  grade. 

Every  one  of  these  items  is 
carefully  considered  and  one  fault 
can  send  an  establishment  below 
the  A  average. 

For  instance,  the  District  Health 
Dept.  inspects  the  uniforms  in 
the  establishment,  and  if  the  uni- 
forms are  not  up  to  stanil-ard  three 


points  are  chalked  against  the 
establishment.  Failure  to  do  a 
thorough  job  in  washing  the  dishes 
will  cost  13  points.  With  all  these 
items  being  considered,  Garvin  ex- 
plained, a  restaurant  or  meat  mar- 
ket could  easily  receive  a  "B" ; 
rating.  \ 

Garvin  pointed  out  that  almost 
all  of  the  places  in  Chapel  Hill 
have  the  necessary  equipment  for 
.sanitation.  Where  a  place  falls 
down  is  in  the  utilization  of  this 
equipment. 
EXAM  I 

"It's  like  taking  an  exam,"  Gar- 
vin explained,  "you  may  have 
everything  necessary  in  the  text 
book,  but  you  don't  apply  what's 
in  it  yourself  enough  to  make  an  : 
■A'."  . 

"Most    of   the    places    here    that 
get  a    B'  rating  have  the  facilities 
and  the  equipment,  but  they  don't 
maintain    them    as    well    as    they  i 
should."  Garvin  said  .  } 

"Most  of   the   places   in   Chapel 
Hill    are   prepared   to   do   a   good 
job  and   most  of  them   do."   Gar- 
vin explained.  "Good  intentions  are  ! 
always    present,"    Garvin    added.    ' 

Garvin  summarized  the  inspec- ! 
tion  procedure,  terming  it  as  a ; 
"graduated  system  based  on  all  j 
elemerits  of  construction,  equip- j 
ment.  maintenance  and  opera,tion."  i 

Garvin  added  in  an  amused  tone  i 
that  some  people  thought  the  Dis- 
trict Health  Dept.  considered  the 
taste  of  the  food  in  the  restaiur- 
ants. 

"We  don't  take  into  considera- 
tion prices,  portions  served,  and 
the  taste  of  the  food,"  Garvin  said. 


VOL  I. 


I  MVKKSITY  OF  NuKTII  f.\|{OI,1N.\.  KKHKUAllY  'M.  IsWA. 


No.  I. 


,,-  I  'p.      .-  T-4i;:k<^1  Ol.jivl  U  lit  firrtlii  r  ll«- «lifl»uni» 

1    lit?     I    •II      '»  t"V.- I, '„„.„,  ,,f  ,„.,^  ,.^.i,„,„g  ,„   ii,,.   \1b|, 

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CUAkLtJ-   U»-Kf  KMlL*..! 


TUKTAR  IIKKI.  Til  i:  I.U'.ISI.  \TI\  li  loM 

J  .A  wrrklv  |H>|«r  |»uUt>h<-0  tl  i»^  MITTI.I.  VISIT  'I  HE  ^ 

mI/V.  mthf  coll.. ri»..|.ro»i.lriil     ''"•»-'•'«>      *>f     Nftrlh     r«r.iUo». ,  f.MM.KMTN. 

.,.,,,.,t„   VL.IifA.-'tiittivo  •>«»«l<r    lli(>  nu^ficTMoTllir  t'uivrr-        Tin   (..ll..»  iii^  in.  iiiVr-.  »l    iht 

11     k'  H..in     pnniilriit  ."''•''   '*"•*-'•••»"  ^••^■'•"*'"' •'*"*"•*"''    W'^l  »»>>'«•  i"'"|"'^"'K   •'»«^'    VWt.1- 

.1    I.   fill:  It.  ►•-•v   mill  Irmii.  lo  llm  iiil^rwl  of  llio  I  Bi»«T»it)  •»  ]  imii  ouniniiUv  .irnxitl  at  llie  fni- 

M.-.i«  n,j«ili«rly*lli.>  ••••r.>ti«!   Sol- '  laru*!  \»-r'.ii\  4.n  .1  N|KVial  iTjiii    l'ri«ti% 


Lead  2nd  Half  Surge 


MttOkfiing  Editor 


\V.\i  11 1<  Ml  Niiix 


lluviun*  Mnii.if(cr 


.\   II    M.  K.\l«ll. 


iii«l.i\  ill  >«-i»lrnil»T  mill   .liMiiinrjr 
Uili.V  <'all>rul>j<-t'l  III  til*  |iri*i«k-iil 

'  ruirf'filg  >'....f  lUill  r.m;. 
Mi.liitrl   ll.fLi-.  C.ii-imiii. 
I     (*li.«ili-.«  liiii>k«r\ili<-.  Mniiiicci 

('•"•«■>  ..ry    l:.»f   l!,>ll   7V.II" 

I'.Trin  l«ii.«lirf.  iiiiiuii. 
\\    R   Kiumi.  nniiHS'T. 

(■.„lr.#./y  i:.  r I   (  l,.b 

J    I      Iti;.-);"    |>t«'>|j.-ul 


lanurtl  «\ery  TliunuJay. morniAK.  iii>>niiii^,  l-rlirti.irv  \r<)t 
It  .mill  ouiiikin  »  fturaiiinry  uf  all  I  Me>Nrv  llatilc,«!iairinan;Chc«  k 
.«rurmi<<«»  In  lK«  I  nUiwity  «u.l  1  A)^'"^' •  J»"«'».  I'"".  i.<  ilir  «rti- 
»ilU|{t  of  rU|»-l  Uill  "^  •  •""'  M«-'f>    !•"'»  (ilMiniMio 

S|««-«   will    U>  i.M.iRn.'J  for  tin-  I'T''    ';"''":   ^^•*""--'   WalkvT. 

lll.....H.K».  .l.-c...,i..ii  ..f  Ml    ,-.ii.i.;^^*'"''"('''^l"""*''       , 

...       .    .u      J  ... ....  ...1'      .-Vfui  bf<aklu.sliii);.  llK- .rcjnil 

JKMinlli  of  l)i<>  liiiivt-rtity. 

A  l.rn  f  iin-ounl  r.iib  wis-k  of  ike' 
iiriciirr^   in    tlm   aiiiitlcur  allir 


rliapt'l  i-xtrciso  utn-  atlviKlnl, 
tlii-n  \  i>it.,  wrrr  inaili  totlir  tiMtl- 
\t\'    imiiii,  lilir.irii'N  .iiiil    vanciii^ 


* c    K     lii.i.rr   ;...y    ;.i..l  Uc«!»             «"•.«■  ri.i.rr..   in    u...   a.iiMicur  ai \,.,t,„,.    „,,„..  wluri  cla.v<-»  %icU- 

^              M,.,,-. It  ili....ill..f«)..|.tvM.lrnt.   I'i»-   •itM. '»nln"|-'-'»' •"•■"""•'  .ix^.i.J.K.I      TIk  iiimicruiuUbot- 

i\\.  I  it.rii.ii>   2  y.       0,;.      |,.„|^.,  ,,i,.,|,.,|  f„r   ciuli   IJrruiau  'i.ii.iir  <>t\ii  HUil.lif  iitl'^i •»«'•.»»»«<  ,^„n,,  „^f^    in-|.ivt<M    ;ls  wvll  :i« 

.  «■              .     .1   -  ••!    1                                     \ .. .     ;..       ■.■.-.•I...II         lu..).i>ll  i  .1.       ...»    ...    •   .                    I.. 


Ml 


Cllt  Rl  II    |ilKi:t  T^.•R^ 
Baft  ft  Lk-rrl. 

9,r.\   .1   I.  ("v'-t.M    1»  l» 
l'ri-.nliiii(j  i-»i-i\    >iiiiJ.i>    iiiiTii 
log  ami  iiij;!.!      .<ii.vl.iy    N  In 
0  *)  •    III      I'ruy.T    iii.A-tiii|(  vwry 
\Vrdii«<Mla>  inclit 

J^fAfleriif  ISnrrft.  ' 

Bk.\   J   K  K.«AfcTir 

l'r»'acliiii;r  ••♦•iv  Siimliiv.  uktii- 
ing  aad  inj:lil  1  xivj.l  JJif  lirM  Mm 
il.ii  iui'iK'li  ID  >iitli  Stni.tiiv  Srli.H.l 
ai  *  U»."*i  a.  m  rny.r  im.»-tiin{ 
f\»'ry  \\  i-<liir.»il.(y  nij;lit. 
M'il,v.lt.l  ll.urrh. 

J{»v.  N    M    \V.»r-«N 


y».:;i'a  ."•     Tray.i  uniiiii;;   ••%itj 
WhIiwmI.iv  uiirlil 
t'f/i'foi'<il  Churdi. 

Uh.r  Kiii.i>»«if  'IV'W  c»-. 

>Bn«lay  M-r»i.r»  .it  7.  11  ami  ' 
trt-liH'k.  >\«-«I.U  r.«r\H'<-o  ill  4  p. 
Fii«l«\  SiiiiiIh>  .SchlMil  4  |i  Ml 
Uuru4;  I'Viil  ke'''^i<v 'kiily -il   4    p 

m 


FifitUII, 


Thiusi 

1.1.1       ..».,    lil.f  iixt'.  •  JH-llK 

K   rur^.'ii  Willuril.i'rr.  iiUi'l  and  li-iiiiiii.  it 
liM.l.r. 

l'li:irli-  K..l..i-.'ll,  lii.UirtpT 

l"r..l    K..1I  r    llutniiK'-     «S«r««- 

l..r  -    . 

.%A..i. •,....  I  !>•'..'  ' 

I»r    ri...iii;>-  lluiuf.  |.ri-iili  •  I. 

J    .M    lli.-.k.  M«"»    aii«l  tu.i" 

M.rl  III  tl...  V.  M.r   A    lii»ll  111* 
ilur-l  rii.-il.i\  iii|slil  mil.  li  wiii:>- 
l.il.iaiy  I'i'tii  i»ii«-  l...iif  i-.i.  Ii  il.iv. 
>;/',/.  I  yi'i.I.eJl  Stl'uttjif  .<■■•: ';i 

rr..r  J    A    ll<>liii.'>,  |.iT>i.».jit, 
"ri.f  .1    \V    IJim-.  »i>v  pii—iil.-iil,  .  .  . 

I Vr    I     I'.  V.>I...I.I...  -1  c.  l..r>  UI..I  ""«  »""'-'      "' '"        •"  «  «•'•*  "  ' 
l-r.|.«r«r  .'••"•   '■•' 

|-r,mchlBz   i».rv  S.iii.lar.  I n- ,  .y««- >•«  IVivm  hill  >.    ."i.l  >Tii.-  • 

1;  JUiil   Bi<lil       >.iml.i\   S.h.K.1  ;il    ilii.V  liinlil  Ml  «i«-  I  lii'iit'i 

J.iiiriiiil  I— ii.'il   t»ii»-  a  .\--.ii 

U,.l:,ir.tl  >.r-t  ... 

I»r  Kiiii|i  IJ.iill'-.  i.iivi.l.i.i  am! 
«.««rr«  •|.fl»iiliiii;  »<.»-rrlaiy. 

II.  M. 'riu»ii)|i-«  u.  m'.  ri-l;iry  ami 
lii-aMir«-r. 

Mi-i-l>  al  til**  i-all  <-f  till-  i.n-'-i.li'itl 
7*./.|i./A..y    .   S;":-'^     S..  t.  I 

Mi^-I*  i-ti'iy  Kriilii.i  i>i;;lil  in  I'lti. 
Iiall  »r»-  «a-t'  liMililiiit;  "  •  • 

/»..»V./..-  .V-../.V.  .:*..rrt)  i  SAI.r  rvTiikv. 


tpruN  Win   in..| 

llii-ilmll.    ^,„n.  ,,(  ,1,1  >tu.Kms'  t.«i|ll».      Ill 

tli«-  .ifii-ni-Kiii    iiui-tiiij;N   of  liotli 

All  .MM'ifty   uv*r.,   piTrnmaU  ttiiil  ilic  ^.k  ii  (11-    win-    lulil  and  the 

r\rr>    i;ul.j<vt    r>f  inlrioul    IhiiIi  Io  m  iillriiiili  \»1iii  Win-    liul  aluilini 

111..  i-iiiJ.iii.4  aii.l  riiixiii...iftli«- *il-    "«ii     ni.i.U-    li..ii..r.irv    iiicnitH-rs. 

111,!...  will  l...  lr..»l...l  cull' wotli  Jii'><  .iHvt  pMVvtN    tilt   1 4»y>  C.lllc.l 

I  li..  .llI.lnln^  w  ill  hi-  <>!>•  "  <•»  ••'"  1 ''  1'  •*'' '"'  '"'    "!■«'  *■  '"^  f'^'"*  '"" 

rn>M..n  ..n  all  a|.|.r..|.ri:ii.- -uLj- t»  ^  ^  •*"' "^.    '    «'".l"''>  "f    «>'<»"'  '«- 

•  ill.  iui    ,...|.ux..r    t..il..   fi.ll  jii.:M-'"I»'1     "<•-••      filu.ti.u^lv    .and 

.:    - ^ 11...   .Imf  im.l  >J''^'  ^^•"'~  <l  ^'H"««;-»ginKiil  f..r 

•titl.H.k  ff  tliv  iinucr- 


By  LARRY  CHEEK 

South  Carolina's  battling  Game- 
cockj  stunned  top  ranked  and  un- 
beaten North  Carolina  with  a  blis- 
tering first  half  attack  here  last 
night,  but  slacked  off  in  the  second 
to  allow  the  Tar  Heels  to  pick  up 
their  22nd  win  of  the  season,  75- 
62. 

The  Gamecocks  led  at  halftime, 
37-35,  and  stretched  this  advantage 
!  to  41-35  moments  after  the  second 
I  half  started.  Then  the  Tar  Heels 
j  came  off  the  ropes,  and  sparked 
by  the  shooting  of  Lennie  Roo-en- 
I  bluth  and  Pete  Brennan,  went  on 
j  to  take  a  13  point  decision. 

I      It  was  a  bitter  dogfight  until  Ko- 
senbluth  and   Brennan     iced     the 


liix  u^M<l.iul»  win  il««-nii' IV.  I.»  an 
|.ri>l>i  i.iliii.>-  o(  Ml  tiv'l.'t-  -  to  an.. nil 
nii.iKarli.'l.  «  v>i!l  ...-  ufW|.I.O  «itli 


lit.-    clii.  r.    A-hicli     «ti:l  I  r  ..I  (.«>ul 
!.  ii«^'.  if  ili«-irt»«l 
A'K.iiiMr* '«ill  nil.-  that  llii«  i 


I.. 


rh.l 


l.l.  1 1.. 


tl 

'l.y  «l...li    III 

il.-iil-.      I'-.r     ii.i;i  -    n r      uii 

•  n.i-iii.—  M..i.a,:.  r  .if  riK  lU.tl 
|-|...|.-l  llill  N  I".  IT  ilr.'pliim 
.,11.1  ami  li..  mil  .i.ll. 

^u^.•.  lil.li.iii   .III.-    Iiollar   ami 
ti.ill'  j«-i'  MK-imi.  1  III-  -|.ii 


r.MVERSlT  V   l>IRi;«-  TfiRV. 

I'aor.     K.XKi      I*.     II*hni.n..to.v, 
Li-ntit-r. 
Ilrgaiii'li.,  J.   .\.    M.txwi-iL   aud 

'.*■*».    M»H».K»..v 


|'ri<l.i\    n'ijlit  "  SKJ"  ""■ 

l;;    II.   in.   I..II      1.    »      , 


I  NiVKKsn  Y  'maga/im:, 

•IX  Tint.!!  A  VKAK. 

KIilTUIW. 
Pai.  1)1. 

W    r   \Vi«jl.-i..     >V.  V    .M.  Cnrrii. 
J.  K   IliKle.Ji  .     .r.  .M.(l....k, 
A    U.  K.«>o<.-.      r  .1.  WitkOii. 
lIuaiDtiia  ManagiT, 

I'lof  Cullirr  (*»bb. 


SMiiir<l..>  n..iri 

«..»l    l.iiild.iit;. 

rt.r  It.. I,.  ./  Htm    r.l,^ul.U.  (^4«f«•rfl) 

Juui.ir. 

Til.'  wirn-ly    nipi-l'  in   Ki'liniarj 
O<^oln-r.     IUit.|Uvt  Tliiirxday  ni,;l.t 
(if  .■.ifniii.-u..t-nM-iil. 
l-'ruleriiilifi.  (.SmTi-I  ) 

Siguia  .\l|ilia  K|mili>ii,  Kap|>a.Vl- 
|ilia../«-ia  IVi  Al|.lia  ."^.m  Aincga, 
Sif;ma  Nil,  itil  K«p|>:»  .Si,;inu,  rlit 
Ivlia    T>ii*U.    I'hi   tlaiunia   IMu 


Till-  >:t«.»iiv 

I  'tii\tr«itv  li.ixt 
•  •I  u  wi-«.kl\  |i.i|Hr 
>ii»   .MIiUlic   .V-- 


i.r  ll 


.Uiii.tti^ 

•If.  .Mil      lll\-      III-.. I 

Tin-  t'liiwr- 
.iiK.ii   rig.ir.l- 


iii;j  il?i.ir.i«  llu   IIII..IIN   !•>   wliiili 
oiivli  .1  mi-.l  c"iil<l  !<«.  vii|,|,li, .1.  .11 
.1  >t.iU<l  liKftiii;;  i  Uvti.l    .1   lM.;irii 
i.f  i.<litors  (chief   .iM'l    li\i'    -III 
aii'l  .1  l>iisiiirs>  iiirfii.i;4ii. 


the  1 1  till. 

si«\.  fi.-in  a  ■.iv;:>l..'.i\»-  ajiprvjiii- 
. 111. Ml  -taiiil]»>i«l.  .\11  saw  ihc 
iiixl  ..!'  .1  -iiflKiiiit  a|i|irQ]>ruli(M 
I  riilU  (  |iii|-,  tins  tlir  ni(r«(  xuf' 
fill  .V  I  im|«.rt.inl  (if  all  th«  St.itf 
;  T  .,  ,  7'.  .  nn-l  i;.M  lt>  .i  iiiuviT- 
-it\  ..f'lli..-.  jM-t  liTiIlunt  rccuTil 
.ci'l  \  L'-i  iii'.iiu  pi.i-in-fu  ar« 
^',;.  It    I-  w  .iiM  III  ik.   .iii\  Sl.iti  :il 

llu    Hl|-...'l    I':..!!.!  ','•    111-    llll-    JHJVS*..-- 

-•r  Hi  -III  ll  ..II  hi  iitiyjc  l.l  1)4*111  t.i 
j"-.t..iin.  I  -iittiii.iii  a|«|iri>iinj- 
I',. Ill  ll.  (I'll  till'  iitii\tr.iiv  uii  a 
;iii  .III  I  ll  Im«:-  vij'.i.il  l«.  it-  rapid 
;^,,  I  \'.aii-i..ii  :iinl  \;r.rtrth.  Wlifii 
t-'iiK  -4.1  till  i-xtii'.iiitHv  c]^rr>.M.il 
llu  .1  .lii-j.  Ii,;ii'.  ..t  ii.it  %.i Mil;; 
h.fl  >n  •.ti*''^^*"*^  ''I  R.A'i'iviii,; 
^!i  .  .!ii«iili..ii.  ill  itivir  v.tiitli,  «k<- 
{-••iil.l  ii-'t  I'lti  fill  1I1..I  ^t  wa-  .-« 
.Iiitv  till!  i».i- .-fci .  I  l.l  future  ,j<-il- 
i'r.(ti<-ii-.  and  whii^i  hn-  Iki-ii  due 
!..  ill.  -*-  ill  It  li.uV  p.iv-c«l  a\ia\, 
tli.ii  till-  Mipri-iiH-  law  111.1k iii{; 
ln.Mit  mill.  .Si.iti,  .iii^hl  111  iiiakr 
tir.ti.iii  .it  till-  titii\i-rMt«  fiw  tu 
>  \..nli  C.ir.~5liiii.iii-  .!>>  i>  ilun."  at 
jlii  rin\ii-it\  lif  \'ir>;ii«ialii  Vir- 


Willi    Uii-   aiKili'KV    oiih 


.Sigma  I'hi      BoU  Thala   VI  iXHia   fim  i.-MU  «'f  the   fu-t   v..Iiiiik    of 


tl,^. ,  ^iiii.iii- .iiid  till    uiiU    way  tw  do 
tlii-  i- to  .tppruprutc  a  .sitflScicnt 


Kappa  Kpnilon,  lun-t   in   lluiir  rv 
■iioriivo  lullnttvary  Haturday  night 
>'  .1/  f,.  A. 
F.  C.  iiniitiDg,  prfMidrut 


.iiiioiiiit  toki'i-p  tlir  iiiri\cnut\  itp, 
the  Tar  HhKi.  in.ikc- U-  ..pin-.ir-  „„„i  ,c-..,iri.c-iiniiioiitMdc Statu 


IKIVEK.SITY  J.inHAKV 
I'R.  Kl.K.«  Aitrsa.^bKii,   l.tbrarinn, 
I-'.  I,    \\  lu^ix  iSiud.iii  l.ibniriitn 
"  f>|N.|i  f\fiy  d»y  i-x<4*nt  .Sunday,   trcii-ur.-r, 
thitu  11   v>t'>  l.-'IOahd  rr.iin  :t  ti> '>    K.  K   /..ichary,  organlNt 
'UlM'ii  ."'iiid.ni.  from  .1  III  6  p  ni 
•t'aiWfoN  /:'••■]. ,.f  J!',.,m 

0|«n.V'.ry   day       I.in.lii.g   !•«• :  .SriiLmlw  i 
(■■r*  liliblinlird  m  I  moil  aii.l  Klatu    ii',i„i„,jifnl  Snriely. 
■Ill  Hie.  •-        ••■      '•«•■?. 

t'i»'t'r>ili  l'r<f'  .{•••ifiiili-n 

11    .\    »t..i,dil..ili.r.  pn-Kidi-nl, 

l»r    |(    W  l,.i.ik.r.  K..  r.  I  uy 

.liiliiiii  I  Mul.      In     |<      Wlt'iliikir.    ni'ii.ll 

11.   A.    IC Itl.'.il.r.    Wallir   Miir-    TKr //W//1...1...  •  AtttHtl) 

|4if).  |-.*iiiiii\i  r..iiiaiiM.i..  fiikli.lixl  l>v  tk*  ji'ratarniiieM. 


aiicr.  and    llu-  uchnic.-il   coutnw  diall 

This  new  vftUnrc  i»  ucc<.--s.irily  I  make    it-clf  .-iiktaininf;,  »ii«l,  loo, 

TRu  .St.  pliwni,  a^crotary  and  p„n.r^  ,,,,011  liv  the  prcstnl  Uwrd   ««  ^""'«'' "<»»  *'«»»    thi«<li    what    a 

with  no  little  trepulalioii.   luv cr- 1  ^i'-^'"^'  ="«»  '»*-^  '.'  ^=»   »? .^^ 
,      -1     -  ......  -I         .  .     .  .    Cirolma,    that  it   h;»o   failed,  to 

.M..ri.  fiitir  Hinia  a  w.tk   In   \     tluK-s  with  .1   detcniiiiiatii.n.    tu,,  ,,^.  ,,^„  ^  „,^.  ..^j^^^j, 

.'^^!.«d'';';::nd;:i:;kiT.*T:v:^  ;-»;-^  7--  -;;-•  r\  ""'^  i;'::!;^  ^--^  ^"^"^'i  rf'^r^- 

Ik*  (Ioik- tliroiiKli    the    ini!iil>:iiice  hood .v< rrpr\-»*ntcii  tlif  Kt;i«l.itiirv 
and  «s-i>lanre  nf  mir  faciilt\  and  |  on  tin  tMniniittiT.     Tlii'  hinlv  ««f 

! '''/'i'""i.';''';V''' •*'•.'•'•"''''!!■  fvlliiw-siiiiKiiU.    Xl^adiyriwjiu 
IV. if  Karl  r.  liarriiiglon,  aeora       ,  .     —    " 

larv  mid  iria^uri-r.  viti  hiiiu->t  critici 

..M.ii«  ln>t  Kiiiliiy  night  in   each   in  iJ,,.  .i.iv.itirenKiil 
piiiji't'l  will  In  llll 
ci.itid. 


ihr.  stndriit*   WYTT    welt    plc.istxl 
I   with   iiiir  frii  tiilm  if  th*  v  .in- 

'  f.iir  viiiipic  of  nut  U">;'»l.U.>r>.  th- 
*    \iai.      Nfiitli  CaTidiiA  i>  ill  (;.« 
''-ih.tial-.     Till  V  knuw  tlu  iuaaI- .-i 
till    I  iiurrMlv. 


The  Tar  Heel,  Page  One,  Volume  One,  Number  One 

Thii  it  what  th*  February  23,  1863  UNC  student  ntw»pap*r  loolc-       Editor  Fred  Powledge  entered  his  twenty-second  year  this  morning., 
•d   like.  Both  birthdays  were  celebrated   last  night  at  a  Daily  Tar   Heel 

Th*  Daily  Tar  Heel   is  not  celebrating  Its  birthday  «lon«  today.      staff  dinnar  and  party. 


FOR  MARRIED  HOUSING: 


Petition  Circulation  Continues 


By  EDITH  MacKINNON 

Plans  have  been  made  to  contin-  i 
ue  the  circulation  of  the  local  pe-  j 
tition  for  married  students'  hous- 1 
ing  until  Feb.  2!k  I 

According  to  Mrs.  John  Critten-1 
den.     leader     of   the     petitioning 
group,  the  progress   made  in   cir- 1 
culation  has  been  "just  fine."  660 
names  have  already  been  counted 
on  two  of  the  petitions,  with  ap- ! 
proximately     three   dozen     copico- 
still  remaining  in   circulation. 

Members  of  the  petitioning ; 
group  canvassed  the  90  Victory  i 
Village  residents  of  two-story  I 
buildings  concerning  the  request ; 
on  Thursday  night.  Of  those  resi-  i 
dents  contacted,  all  but  two  were 
willing  to  sign  the  petition.  { 

Campus  circulation  of  the  peti- 1 
tion  was  centered  around  a  booth  j 
located  in  Y  court.  It  has  been 
reported  by  Mrs.  Crittenden  that ! 
300  signatures  were  gained  at  the ' 
booth  within  two  hours  on  Thurs- 1 
day.  Copies  of  the  petition  have  al- 1 
so  been  sent  to  the  vice-presidents  | 
of  all  dorms  on  campus. 

Calling  for  the  N.  C.  General  Aa- ' 
sembly  to   approve  legislation  en-  j 
abling  th°   University     to     obtain 
funds  for  self-liquidating  business  | 
for  married  students,  the  petition-  j 
ing  group  hopes     to     have     Rep. 
John  Umstead  present  the  request 
before  the  1987  General  Assembly, ' 


Mrs.   Crittenden  stated   that   plans 
have    been    made    to   contact   Rep. 
"Umstead  over  the  weekend. 
IMPETUS 

The  petition  has  been  given  im- 
petus by  an  announcement  by  UNC 
Chancellor  Robert  House  that  all 
two-story  housing  units  in  Victory 
Village  will  be  discontinued  ne.\t 
fall. 

House's  announcement  followed 
a  recomendation  Feb.  8  by  the 
State  Insurance  Dept.  in  Raleigh 
than  two-story  units  be  discontinu- 
ed "in  the  immediate  future"  be- 
cause of  their  "hazardous"  nature. 

The  facilities  in  Victory  Village 
are  being  studied  by  the  Univer- 
sity, but  Chancellor  House  said 
that  "no  final  statement"  could 
be   made   at   the   present  time.   It 


is  not  yet  certain  whether  the  con 
;  demned  two-story  units  will  be  torn 
j  down  or  whether  repairs  and   im- 
;  provements   will   be   made  on   the 
I  unit.-. 
SAFE 

Chancellor  House  said  the  units 
would  be  safe  for  occupancy  dur- 
ing the  summer  due  to  the  lack  of 
necessity  for  heat. 

In  the  event  the  two-story  units 
are  torn  doyi'n  before  next  fall.  Uni- 
versity \  Housing  Officer  James 
Wadsworth  said  Thursday  those 
living  in  them  now  Viil  get  priority 
over  the  remaining  apartments 
next  year.  Those  who  are  on  wait- 
listj  for  Victory  Village  apartments 
would  be  the  ones  to  suffer,  ac- 
cording to  Wadsworth. 


Invitations  For  Sale 
Last  Times  Next  Week 

Senior  invitations  will  go  on 
sale  for  the  last  time  Tuesday, 
Feb.  26  and  Wednesday.  Feb.  27 
between  the  hours  of  9  a.m.  and 
3  p.m.  in  the  Y-Court  lobby. 
'All  graduating  seniors  and  pro- 
fessional school  graduates  have 
been  urged  to  purchase  their  in- 
vitations on  these  dates.  Spokes- 
man for  the  Grail  has  emphasized 
that  thia  will  definitely  be  the 
final   sale   of   invitations. 


MARDI  GRAS 

NBC  MONITOR  will  broadcast 
taped  segments  of  last  week's 
Germans — Mardi  Gras  festival 
at  7:45  tonight  through  station 
WPTF  (Raleigh),  it  was  announ- 
ced yesterday  by  announcer 
Jimmy  Capps. 

Another  taped  segment  of  last 
week's  festivities  will  be  broad- 
cast tofnorrow  at  an  undeter- 
mined time. 


Club  Makes 
Record  Of 
UNC  Songs 

The  UNC  Mens  Glee  Club  is  cur- 
rently completing  the  cutting  of  its 
first  record  of  Carolina  loyally 
songs. 

A  spokesman  for  4he  club,  in  an 
interview  yesterday,  said  the  "'pro- 
gress on  cutting  the  record  has 
been  very  rapid  and  very  satisfac- 
tory.  .  .we  are  sure  we'll  have   a 

record  every  UNC  student  will  be 

I 
proud  of." 

The  4l5  extended  play  record  will 
contain  arix  songs,  each  depicting 
some  aspect  of  Carolina  life  and 
spirit. 

The  45-member  group  has  been 
preparing  for  the  record  since  the 
latter  part  of  the  fall  semester,  the ' 
spukesmtin  said.  ! 

i 
.  At  Monday's  regular  meeting.  Di- 
rector Dr.  Joel  Carter  said  that 
about  all  that  remains  "is  the  po- 
lishing of  at  least  two  of  the  num- 
bers. The  blend  and  balance  have 
been  good,  and  the  cc -operation 
by  the  members   during  the   long  i 

(See  GLEE  CLUB,  Page  3) 


Gala  Event 
In  Woolen 
Last  Night 

By   BILL   KING 

The  nation's  number  one  basket- 
ball   team,    a    great   big    Cadillac, 
I  and    a    fellow    named    Rosenbluth 
made  Carolina  students  forget  the 
book.s    for    a    while    last    night    as 
they   completely   overflowed   Wool- 
I  len    Gym    for    a    gala    event    that 
[  was  comparable  to  the  Mardi  Gras 
I  here  last  weekend,  and  everybody 
went  away  happy. 

The  tremendous  throng,  which 
started  matriculating  into  Wool- 
len as  early  as  5  o'clock,  watched 
the  powerful  Tar  Heels  rack  up 
their  22nd  straight  victory,  but 
the  win.  believe  it  or  not.  was 
more  or  less  a  sidelight. 

Lennie  Rosenbluth,  probably  the 
greatest  basketball  player  in  Caro- 
lina history,  was  making  his  final 
appearance  in  Woollen  Gym  and 
the  fans  had  come  out  to  accord 
him  the  appreciation  he  so  richly 
deserved.  And  that  wasn't  all;  not 
by  a  long  shot.  The  coach  'of  the 
Tar  Heels.  Frank  McGuire  by 
n.nme.  hadnt'  been  forgotten  lor 
his  great  efforts  with  the  Tai 
Heels,   nor  was  his  coaching  staff.  I 

Following  the  usual  crowd-plea.s- 
ing  entrance  of  the  Tar  Heels  tc  | 
the      tune     of      "Sweet      Georgia  ] 
Brown,"   and  the  pre-game   warm  j 
ups.    Rosenbluth     was     introduced  ' 
to  the  crowd — that  stated   a  deaf- 
ening roar  which  lasted  well  over 
three  minutes.  Then,  student  body  , 


(See  GALA  EVENT,  Page  3) 


Seminar 
Dates  Are 
Postponed 


The  YMCA  Seminar  in  New 
York  on  disarmament  will  be  post- 
poned from  March  7.  8  and  9  to 
March  14.  15  and  16.  Wally  Sat- 
terfield.  "V"  spokesman,  stated 
that  the  originally  planned  dates 
would  conflict  with  disarmament 
cunferences  and  hence  speakers 
on  disarmament  would  not  be  ob- 
tainable to  appear  before  the  dele- 
gation at  that  time. 

Approximately  18  students  have 
signed  up  to  make  the  trip,  which 
will  leave  about  12  vacancies  for 
the  delegation.   Satterfield  said. 

Those  students  who  wish  to  at- 
tend the  seminar  are  asked  to  get 
in  touch  with  Satterfield.  Guy  El- 
lis. Ron  Oldenberg  or  Norm  El- 
lis. The  S3  registration  fee  should 
be  paid  before  this  Thursday. 


game  halfway  through  the  second 
period.  Carolina  held  a  9  point  lead 
at  one  time  in  the  first  half,  but 
lost  it  with  a  little  over  2  minutes 
to  go.  They  regained  the  advantage 
in  the  second  stanza,  and  safely 
salted  away  number  22.. 

An  overflow  crowd  of  6,000  in 
Woollen  Gym  watched  UNC  guard 
Bab  Cunningham  put  the  clamps 
on  Gamecock  star  Grady  Wallace, 
the  nation's  number  one  scorer. 
Wallace,  averaging  30.6  going  into 
last  night's  game,  could  ivore  but 
11  points  on  3  field  goals  and  5 
free  throws  as  he  failed  to  shake 
loose  from  the  bulldogging  of  Cun- 
ningham. 

Lennie  Rosenbluth.  playing  his 
last  game  before  the  home  folks, 
turned  in  a  tremendous  perform- 
ance, anck  decisively  won  his  per- 
sonal scoring  duel  with  Wallace. 
Rosenbluth  hit  23  points,  but  even 
more  important,  he  cleared  the 
board..'  with  16  rebounds. 

Pete  Brennan  hit  8  out  of  12 
shots  from  the  floor  and  10  of  12 
xTom  the  foul  line  to  take  high 
scoring  honors  with  26.  Cunning- 
ham had  11  and  Tommy  Kearns 
12. 

I  The  fifth  man  in  Carolina's  flam- 
I  ing  five,  center  Joe  Quigg,  sat  out 
the  entire  first  half  because  of  a 
virus  infection,  but  came  off  the 
bench  M-ith  five  mi/jutes  gone  in 
the  second  period  when  the  score 
was  knotted  at  43  all.  While  in  the 
lineup  he  scored  4  points  and  pick- 
ed off  6  rebounds. 

South  Carolina,  sparked  by  the 
hot  shooting  of  i-ophomore  guard 
Cookie  Pericola.  canned  14  of  31 
field  goals  in  the  first  half  for  a 
45.2  per  centage.  Carolina  could 
do  no  better  thin  30  per  cent. 

The  tall  Tar  Heels,  even  with 
Quigg  out  of  the  lineup  for  most 
of  the  game,  completely  dominated 
the  backboards.  They  got  54  while 
the  scrappy  Gamecocks  could  get 
but  37. 

Carolina  employed  a  zone  defense 

with  Cunningham  playing  Wallace 
man-for-man.  The  .system  worked 
eflectively  in  containing  Wallace, 
who  scored  his  first  field  goal 
with  8:02  remaining  in  the  1st  halt, 
but  Pericoala  caused  tiie  Tar  Heels 
no  end  of  trouble.  The  classy  t-a- 
phomore  hit  15  points  in  the  first 
half,  but  luckily  cooled  off  after 
intermission. 

South  Carolina  had  a  percentage 
of  37.3  from  the  floor  for  the  entire 
game  while  UNC  hit  366.  a  consi- 
derable decrease  fr<;m  their  50  per 
cent  mark  against  State  Tuesda> 
night. 

The  Tar  Heels  try  their  luck 
against  Wake  Forest  at  Winston- 
Sajem  Tuesday  night,  and  visit 
Duke  gym  for  their  final  game  next 
Friday  night. 


use 

G 

F 

P       TP 

Wallace  f 

3 

5-9 

4     11 

Hoffman  ( 

5 

3-4 

5     13 

Anderson  f 

1 

0-0 

0       2 

Lenlz   c 

2 

5-5 

5       9 

Pericola  g 

8 

3-4 

1     19 

McCoy   g 

3 

2-4 

4       8 

Totals 

22 

18-26 

19     62 

UNC 

G 

F 

P       Tf» 

Rosenbluth   f 

7 

9-12 

0     23 

Brennan  f 

8 

10-12 

4     26 

Lotz   f 

0 

0-0 

3       0 

Quigg  c 

2 

0-4 

3       4 

Young  c 

0 

1-2 

1        1 

Kearnj  g 

5 

0-0 

1      10 

Cunningham  g 

4 

3-4 

5     11 

Rosenmond  g 

0 

0-0 

0       0 

'  Totals 

26 

23-34 

17     75 

South  Caro 

line 

37     25 62 

North   Caro 

lina 

35—40 75 

VMI  Tops  Grapplers 

Virginia       Military       Institute 

handed    North 

Caro 

Una's 

youth- 

ful   wrestlers   their 

third 

defeat 

of  the  season 

n   Lexington,  V»., 

last   night,  21-10. 

PAGe    TWO 


THl  DAILY  TAR  HEBl 


SATURDAY,  FEMUARY  23,  19S7 


Y-COURT:    AND   THE   MACHINE    ROLLS   ON 

.  .  .  the   Univcrs-ity  is  losi)iy  a  buttle 

Where  Are  UNC's  Learners, 
The  Searchers  And  Askers? 

\\  htn  ilic  rauit  issiu-  ol  "  riif  rni\tisit\  Rcpoii"  taiiic  out.  it 
profhucd  ;i  homlxslull.  Koi  tin-  Report  is  tisiiallv  a  coiiscnativc  journal, 
dmilattrl  to  tlif  (oiiservati'vc  alimnii  ;  iicl  irieiuls  ol  thf  rniNcrsity. 
';  1  liis  time.  houe\er.  the  Rejiort  devoted  its  \\hole  issue  to  reasons 
\\liv  |)eo])le  should  <4et  wonii-d  alxuit  the  I'nixersity.  "Phe  obvious.  thout>h 
hot  stated,  idea  is  to  ^et  enough  |)eo|)le  woiried  eiioimh  to  cause  the 
(•eneral  .X.sseinblvtn  be  more  la\ovil)le  to  the  I'luxersity  than  it  has  in 
liie  past. 


r  iu-  RefMMi 'Hi^?  iiiauN  distini- 
■fions  the  \l 'n4*^eF<H+v-4»fis^  ha([  in 
t\  entlM7>ij  froi7iv.^tlie  Ameri(;v;i 
.\s^j,)--,"l  I  nixeisities  to  Mediexal 
aiul  Renaissance  studies,  the  Morc- 
iiead  Planetarium  to  the  Psvi  ho- 
rnet ri(  l.al)orator\.  A  lew  ol  the 
other  reasons  we  should  he  ])roud 
are: 

Fop  historv  •ftepaiiment.  the 
CaiDlina  Plivpiakers,  I'NC  Press. 
l)entistr\  S(hool.  .St  hool  ol  Busi- 
ness Administiation's  "I-.\e(nti\e 
Program,"  top  loniparaiixe  litera- 
ture curriculum. 'the  Institute  ol 
Fisheries  Research,  a  hee  student 
ne^\spaj)Ci  and  Irc-e  studein  <^ii\- 
erinneiH.  the  NcHih  Carolina  .S\nt- 
phony.  ediuational  television.  I'N'C 
F.xtension  I)i\isioii-and  top  dcj^art- 
ments  ol   a  do/eji  sorts. 

But   something  Js   missuig. 


The  Daily  Tar  Heel 

The  official  jtudent  puDlicatioD  of  tbe 
Publications  Board  of  the  University  of 
North  Carohna,  where  it  is  published 
daily  except  Monday  and  examinatio: 
and  vacation  periods  and  summer  terms 
Entered  as  second  class  matter  in  th« 
post  office  in  Chapel  Hill,  N.  C,  undei 
the  Act  oi  March  8.  1870.  Subscription 
rates:  mailed,  $4  per  year,  S2  50  a  semes 
ter;  delivered,  $6  a  year,  S3  50  a  seme> 
ter. 

Nos    illigimati   carborurula    te 


Editor 


FRED  POWLEDGE 


Managing  Editor 


CHARLIE  SLOAN 


News  Editor 


-__  NANCY  HILL 


Sp«rt«  Editor 


LARRY  CHEEK 


Business  Manager 


BILL  BOB  PL-El 


Advertising  Manager         FRED  KATZIN 


EDITOfllAL  STAFF  —  Woody  Sears, 
Frank  Crolher.  David  Mundy. 

NEWS  STAFF— Clarke  Jones.  Pringle 
Pipkin.  Edith  MacKinnon.  Wally  Ku- 
ralt,  Mary  .Alys  Voorhees,  Graham 
Sr^\^er,  Neil  Ba.-s,  Peg  Humphrey, 
Phyllis  Maultsby,  Ben  Taylor,  Waller 
Schruiiteie,  H-Jooirt  Polak,  Patsy  Miller. 

BUSINESS  STAFF— Rosa  Moore,  Johnny 
Whitakcr,    Dick  Leavitt. 

SPORtS  STAFF:  Dave  Wible,  Stewart 
Bird,  Ron  MiUia&n. 


Subscription  Manager Dale  Staley 

Circulation  Manager  *: Charlie  Holt 

Assistant  Sports  Editor  Bill  King 


Staff  Photographer 

Librarian        -, ^- 


Norman  Kantor 
Sue   Gishner 


Night  Editor 


Manley  Springs 


V\c  t.ntnot  sav  e\;Kily  what  it 
is.  Bui.  as  a  prolessor  told  a  stu- 
dent yesterday  in  pri\afe.  it  is  cer- 
t;i:!il\   missing. 

Win  do  g(M)d  j)rolessois  Iea\e? 
Why  do  pjolessois  who  pla(e  many 
things  ;il)o\e  salary  suddenly  de- 
cide to  (]uite  the  rni\ejsity  and 
teac  h  someplace  else? 

\\  liv  is  theic  .1  de(  ided  lone  ol 
neglei  I  among  the  memheis  ol  the 
student   body   toward   learning? 

W'hv  is  there  a  ^ack  oi  morale 
or.  as  the  pvolessoi  put  it  vester- 
da\.  a  dilferent  sort  ol  morale, 
among  the  siudeius  and  the  pro- 
lessois— a  morale  that  is  not  ol  an 
ac  -lemit  nature? 

*  *  *  \      ^  •,■ 
^'ou  t  ;ui  feel  it  as  vou  walk  down 

.MtC'.oikle  Place  in  the  moining. 
^.lu  can  kel  it  in  l.enoir  Hall  and 
in  liie  Pine  Room  and  in  the  Wil- 
son I.ibrar\  and  at  a  dozen  other 
pl:i<  es  in  ('hapel  Hill. 

^■(lu  lo<ik  lor  the  old  (;ha|)el 
Hill— the  Chapel  Hill  Aichibald 
Henderson  ancl'Dr.  Frank  (.raham 
wiote  aboiu.  and  the  Chapel  Hill 
ihai  Kemp  Plummer  Battle  siir- 
\c\ed  lM)m  his  horse,  and  the 
Ch;ipel  Hill  that  is  still  delicately 
preset \c(l  in  l>;utle  \Voods  and  in 
Kcn:m  Woods.  ;  id  vou  wonder 
what  has  hajiprned  t^)  the  I'nivers- 
ilv. 

liu-  piolessor  xesterday  had  one 
answei.  '  Thev  ha\e  turned  this 
place  inio  a  htige  machirJe."  hi* 
sriid.    I'.ut    who    did    it?    What    sort 

ol   machine?  Whv? 

«  *  * 

Here  we  h;i\e  a  machine  f<»r 
tiirninii  out  cUplfMnrs  and  scholars. 
Here  there  is  no  longer  an  aliilos- 
phere  ol  teal  le;trning.  ol  searching. 
(i|  .-iskinii. 

Here  there  is  no  a\:iilable  land 
loi  ihe  building  ol  i\(!rv  towers. 
Hi're  ihere  is  no  time  lor  cf»n- 
temiilation.  no  time  lor  c|nestion- 
in'4.    no    time    lelt    ioi    searching. 

I'o  be  sure,  theie  aie  those  who 
make  time  lor  these  things.  They 
are  usually  the  most  respected 
teac  hers,  the  littlest  -  known  Stu- 
dents. They  show  great  strength  in 
making  the  time,  in  building  the 
i\-orv  towers,  and  we  should  admire 
them  h)r  doing  it.  But  their  inim- 

bers  are  too  few. 

#  *  * 

iiecause  there  are  a  lew  learn- 
ers left,  a  few  searchers,  we  are  not 
lost.  But  we  are  losing.  The  leai"n- 
ers  must  do  sonicihing,  and  they 
must  do  it  cpiickly.  The  marhine 
is  getting   bigger   and   bigger. 


Honor  Councils  blacl  Better  Decide 
What  Their  Responsibilities  Are 


David  Mundy 

The  "honor  system"  and  Iho 
"canlpus  code"  seem  to  have 
come  in  for  a  consid(?rable  amou- 
nt of  discu.ssion.  I  have  no  desire 
to  pursue  the  subject  any  further, 
since  it'  might  become  as  nause- 
ous as  the  discussion^  about 
"God"  a  few  weeks  »go.  But  ev- 
en if  ter  promising  Mr.  Exum,  the 
chairman  of  the  Mens  Honor 
Council,  that  I  was  "through  with, 
the  whole  subject,"  1  feel  obliged 
to  continue  my  part  in  the  dis- 
cussiOh. 

Not  only  are  most  students  un- 
certain about  the  workings  of  the 
"honor  system"  and  th«  "cam- 
pus code."  but  the  members  of 
the  student  coi^-ts  are  themsclve.- 
uncertain,  and  in  conflict  about 
the  extent  of  their  respon.sibili- 
ties. 

I  suggest  that  the  Student 
Council,  the  Men's  Honor  Coun- 
cil, and  the  Women's  Council 
issue  official  statements  of  what 
th«y  consider  their  responsibili- 
ties to  be,  and  which  of  the 
many  rules  they  will  enforce. 
Ti  fail  to  do  so  will  but  hasten 
their  eventual  downfall. 

The  present  situation  is  about 
as  muddled  as  a  bucket  of  Oke- 
fenokee  mud.  Here,  for  example, 
are  some  quotes  from  'The  Hon- 
or System  and  the  Campus  Code,' 
a  publication  issued  last  spring, 
partially  under  the  auspices  of 
Mr.  FJxum: 

"Under  the  honor  system  you 
are  on  your  honor  not  to  cheat, 
steal  or  lie;  and  if  you  see  another 
doing  ^•o.  you  are  on  your  honor 
to  report  him  to  the  appropriate 
student  council. 

"Under  the  campus  code  you 
are  bound  on  your  responsibility 
as  a  gentleman  to  conduct  your- 
self as  such  at  all  times,  and  fur- 
ther to  see  to  it,  insofar  as  pos- .. 
sible,  that  your  fellow  students^, 
do  likewise."  ,  ,  ,       j.  . 

Under  the  heading  of  "The 
Honor  System"  the  booklet  »>ay»-:  - 
"The  honor  system  is  not  some- 
thing which  applies  only  to  work 
performed  for  academic  credit. 
It  pervades  our  whole  lives.  .  ." 

Under  the  heading  "The  Cam- 
pus Code"  it  says  "Hazing,  gaintt^ 
ling,  intoxication  and  boisterous 
conduct  are  examples  of  what 
would  be  considered  violations  of 
the  campus  code  today." 


Under  the  heading  "  "Fringe" 
Violations  of  the  Honor  Sy.='tem  ' 
the  booklet  declares  that  falsi- 
fying the  class  roll  and  signing 
laise  names  to  library  book  cards 
come  under  the  purview  of  the 
honor  system  because:  "This,  too, 
is  lying  and  is  a  violation  of  the 
honor  code.  ' 

Ml.  Exum,  chairman  of  the 
Metis  konor  Couhcll.  is.  in  com- 
plete conflict  with  all  the  state 
nionts.  He  uys  that  "Drinking  in 
it.>-.'ll  is  not  now  nor  never  (D.M, 
or  ever)  has  been  a  violation  of 
any  student  regulation."  His  pub- 
licaticn   says   otherwise. 

Mr.  Exum  says:  ••Neither  does 
the  rule  againiit  passbook  trans- 
ference fall  under  the  purview 
01  the  honor  system.  The  honor 
sy -tern  is  primarily  concerned 
with  upholding  academic  honesty 
in  the  classroom,  gentlemanly 
conduct  and  major  lying  and 
stealing  violations  where  no  other 


university  systesn  of  control  ex- 
ists, i.e.,  where  a. student  is  com- 
pletely on  his  honor,  so  to  speak, 
to  be  honest." 

Again   Mr.    lExum      is   wrong 
in  his   interpretations.   If  falsi- 
fying   class    rolls    and    signing 
false  names  on  library  cards  is 
a  violation,  as  stated,   because 
it  is  lying,  why  aren't  the  other 
"fringe    violations,"     for      the 
same  reason,  violations? 
Even  in  this  argument  of  Mr. 
Ex^jn   there    are   conflicts.    Only 
where  a  student  is  given   a  quiz 
to  take  home  and  complete  at  his 
convenience  is  he    'completely  on 
his  honor,  so  to  speak,  to  be  hon- 
est.""  Does  this  mean  that  the  hon- 
or councils  will  consider  only  vio- 
lations comitted   under  such   cii" 
cumstances? 

If  Mr.  Exum  wi.a-hes  to  make  any 
pretense  of  being  logical  or  rea- 
.sanable,  he  must  admit  that  the 
councils   are  choosig  to  penalize 


lying  in  some  situations,  and  not 
to  penalize  it  in  other  situations. 
He  reaches  the  height  of  absur- 
dity when  he  declares:  "The  coun- 
cils, of  course,  highly  recommend 
that  students  abide  by  the  pass- 
book    regulations,  but  here,     in 
fact,  is  where  our  authority  be- 
gins and  ends."'  Mr.  Exum  knows 
.that  to  violate  those  regulations 
is  to  lie.  Lying,  according  to  the 
official  publications  of  the  coun- 
cils, is  a  violation  of  the  honor 
system.  Why  doesn"t  he  see  that 
these   violations  are   proijecuted*? 
When  student  courts  manage 
to  muddle  themselves  into  such 
absurd     and    ridiculous     situa- 
tions, it  is  no  wonder  that  they 
find  themselves  and  their  "hon- 
or system"   in  such  a  disrepu- 
table state. 
Platitude.?     about   "this     most 
prized   po.ssession,"    Student   res- 
ponsibility,"   and   the    "Carolina 
way  of  life"  aren't  going  to  help. 


'Wonder  Why  We're  Not  Keeping  Pace?'      \ 


,Vv 


'»\. 


Offer  Beer   To  Dorm   Meeting   Faithful? 


Pringle  Pipkin 

You  don"t  mean  to  say  that 
you  actually  attend  dorm  meet- 
ings? Not  many  people  in  the 
men's  dorms  do. 

You  can  ask  a  man  why  he 
didn't  make  it.  There  is  no 
dearth  of  excuses:  "Had  to  study 
for  >a  quiz,"  "wanted  to  see  a 
movie."  "  forgot  about  it,"  or, 
"the  social  room  was  too  crowd- 
ed ( suiH>osedly).'*  The  student, 
in  a  lucid  and  pihilosopiikal  mo- 
ment, may  comment  that  he  just 
doesn't  care   since  the   meetings 


• 

L'il  Abner 


don't    exactly   change  the   future 
of  the  world. 

The  larger  the  dorm  is.  the 
greater  the  indifference  of  the 
students.  Too  often  the  students 
feel  that  someone  else  is  going, 
so  why  bother?  -   .  .. 

The  first  question  is,  "does  it 
make  any  difference  if  I  attend 
the   meetings?" 

Yes.  If  the  student  cares  about 
his  social  fee  he  paid  or  wishes 
to  express  his  opinion  in  another 
way  than  in  just  griping  with 
his  roommate,     he     should...  go. 


There  he  has  a  chance  to  exert 
his  influence. 

In  Conner  Dormitory  the  stu- 
dents vote  by  proxy  on  important 
matters;  this  system  has  been 
much  more  successful  than  meet- 
ings, according  to  dorm  Presi- 
dent Norman  Draper.  In  Cobb 
each  of  the  floors  have  had  in- 
dividual meetings  and  have  had 
better  participation,  according  to 
President  Steve  Lyon. 

Another  innovation  might  be 
the  election  of  a  dormitory  coun- 
cil of  no  more  than  15  members 
(the  usual  number  at  manv  meet-  . 


ings)  to  decide  and  debate  busi- 
ness as  it  «omes  along. 

The  most  obvious  solution  is 
to  continue  the  present  system 
and  to  try  to  stimulate  greater 
interest  in  the  meetings  by  be- 
ing more  imaginative.  The  dorms 
might  express  collective  opinions 
on  campus-wide  questions.  Per- 
haps there  might  be  some  type 
of  entertainment  or  maybe  there 
might  be  a  door  prize  (say  a  six- 
pack  of  beer,  not  to  be  consumed 
during  the  meeting,  of  course). 

The  problem  now  lies  in  the 
hands  of  the  energetic  few  and 
the  many  apathetic. 


':':\'' 


1     o'or^''  r 

^ —       ~~--^ 

'^  AHTHUNJKOFA  ^ 

>      ME—        > 

loecL  Place  fo' 

\    MERELV  \ 

O1.JK  HOOF-VMOON, 

)    B.ECUZ    > 

^      ■  D  DEAR—           •< 

i-    W£  IS      -^ 

pfllagra  falls.'.' 

)    MARRIED. 

^c-«s> 

^"^ — r^ 

v/T  s' 

^0 ' 

ri:>^ 

c^^i>^^^ 

^^ 

^~^^k^tll^^^^M  / 

j^^: 

ty  A!  Capp 


AH  HAD  A  LOVElY    )(-m,'-/  1^ 
MONiEVMOONi  -     )  SjC^  WIF 
ONCE- VJ IF  A 
UOVELV  HUSB'N 
—  NA'VE  OF 
Li'L  AB\iER.''.' 


HATE  O' 
t>£.EJ>      , 


Pogo 


By  Wait  Kelly 


Cowards  And 
Name-Slinging 

Woody  Sears 

Everyone  hates  a  coward,  and  no  one  likes  the 
social  stigma  attached  to  cowardice.  But  we  are 
breeding  a  special  brand  of  it  on  campus  today, 
and  making  it  quite  legal  and  almost  proper  in  the 
process. 

Thi.,'  brand  of -.cowardice  I  mention  is  familiar 
to  every  student  who  reads  The  Daily  Tar  Heel.  I'm 
referring  to  this  business  of  letters  to  the  editor 
signed  "Name  Withheld  By  Request." 

This  is,  I  think,  an  outrageous  situation.  Under 
this  system  a  person  'can  wrrite  almost  anything  he 
wishe-  about  anyone,  with  no  concern  for  his  own 
"good  name."  Of  course,  if  anyone  wishes  to  know 
the  author's  name  he  can  check  with  the  Daily  Tar 
Heel  editor  to  find  out,  but  the  majority  of  the 
students  will  never  know. 

Opinions     are  fine,  but   like  so   many     other 
things,  their  purpose  determines  their  usefulness. 
We  have   a   lot  of  highly  opinionated   people  on 
this   cantpus.   Quite   often   the   opinions   of   these 
"great    minds"    are    not    born    out    by    facts    and 
figures. 
Everyone  should  have  opinions;  that's  one  of  the 
reasons  for  coming  to  college  to  learn  to  think.  .  . 
objectively.  It  is  right  that  every  man  should  have 
opinions-,-  but  when  he  begins  to  expres.v  the  same 
.  (often  to  the  detriment  of  another  man"s  character), 
something  else  enters  the  picture. 

This  something  else  is  responsibility.  To  be  sure, 
we  have  freedom  of  speech,  but  as  in  all  phases  of 
the  freedoms,  we  must  be  prepared  to  assume  the 
responsibility  which  is  attached  to  and  is  even  an 
integral  part  of  the  freedoms  we  enjoy. 

As  I  see  it,  this  is  the  biggest  weakness  on  this 
.      campus,  this  reticence  on  the  part  of  the  students 
to  accept  their  respon.^bilities. 

St«H»  »houW  be  taken  to  correct  this  short- 
coming before  the  student  body  loses  ail  its  free- 
dom, end  before  we  release  many  more  people 
into  the  world  who  have  been  steeped  in  the  quag- 
mire of  irresponsibility. 

*  *  « 

The  topic  at  hand  concerns  only  one  freedom, 
however,  and  that  is  the  freedom  to  speak,  or  more 
correctly  in  this  case,  to  opinionate.  The  old  adage 
"Sticks  and  artones  may  break  my  bones,  but  words 
can  never  hurt  me'"  is  not  without  credance.  How- 
ever, it  is  common  knowledge  that  many  people 
have  been  ruined  by  slander  and  unfounded  rum- 
ors, but  this  neither  is' the  topic  of  this  column. 

The  words  Tm  concerned  with  are  the  words 
which  appear  on  The  Daily  Tar  Heel  edit  page  with 
out  names  to  go  along  with  them.  The  people  who 
write  these  things  are  apparently  not  sure  enough 
of  their  convictions  to  assume  the  responsibility 
for  what  they  write. 

It  i^'  either  a  matter  of  not  being  sure  or  of  being 
too  cowardly  to  stand  out  in  the  open  to  make  their 
comments. 

There  is  one  exception,  however,  and  that  is  for 
cases  such  as  occured  several  weeks  ago  when  a 
stu<i«nt  wrote  in  defense  of  stuclents  who  had  be- 
come involvetl  in  the  unpleasant  situation  over  in 
Greensboro. 

This  student  wrote  with  compas-sion  (which  is 
different  by  many  degrees  from  sympathy)  and 
justifiable  indignation,  but  had  his  name  appeared 
with  his  letter,  he  would  have  been  immediately 
branded  with  the  same  social  stigma  as  the  boys 
whom  he  would  have  spared  further  disgrace.  For 
a  situation  of  this  sort,  the  author's  name  must  be 
withheld,  and  s4iould  be  even  if  he  doesnt  request 
it  due  to  the  sophisticated,  all-knowing"  attitude 
of  so  many  people. 

My  own  opinion  is  that  if  a  man  wants  to  sar 
something,  he  should  stand  ready  to  assume  the 
full  responsibility  for  his  words.  This  business  of 
writing  letter^?  to  the  editor  blasting  everyone  on 
campus  from  the  editor  himself  to  the  chancellor 
should  be  stppped. 

If  a  man  doesn't  like  what  I  write  I'm  happy 
for  him  to  let  me  know,  or 'as  many  people  as  he 
wishes,  but  don't  hand  me  any  of  this  "'Name  With- 
held By  Request"  stuff. 

if  I'm  to  be  lambasted,  let  a  man  do  it,  net 
some  sniveling  coward  who  hides  behind  a  peper 
protective  screen. 

Frankly,  I'd  be  ashamed  to  sign  my  name  to 
mo„'l  of  the  stuff  which  the  editor  receives  for  the 
YOU  Said  It  Column.  A  goodly  percentage  of  it  is 
completely  illogical  and  quite  often  gives  the  ap- 
pearance of  being  written  by  an  illiterate.  I  dont 
blame  the  writers  for  not  signing  their  names. 

But  be  this  as  it  may,  I  still  think  that  with  the 
exception  of  situations  like  the  one  I  mentioned, 
there  shouldn't  be  any  unsigned  letters  in  The 
Daily  Tar  Heel,  or  any  other  publication,  for  that 
matter. 

The  University  and  the  Town  of  Chapel  Hill  are 
known  for  the  liberal  thought  which  is  found  here 
m  abundance.  Some  folks  like  this,  some  don't  but 
I  thmk  that  most  honest,  straight-forward,  sincere 
people  object  to  unsigned  letters,  even  here  in  this 
center  of  liberal  thought. 

If  I'm  wrong,  let  me  know.  ..  but  sign  vour  name 
so  everyone  can  know  who  you  are..  .  if  you've  got 
the  intestinal  fortitude. 

• 

Television  Previews: 
Como  Looks  The  Best 

Anthony  Wolff 

According  to  your  own  preference,  you    might 
tune  in  either  Channel  2  or  Channel  5  at  8  p..m. 
On  2  is  Mr.  GleasOn.  undoubtedly  sticking  to  his 
'  tried-and-tested  formula  of  raucous  bawling. 

The  considerably  more  relaxed  Mr.  Como  on  Chan- 
nel 5  is,  as  usual,  my  choice  for  this  hour.  The 
guest  line-up  thij  week  includes  the  Andrews  Sis- 
ters, Ernie  Kovacs  and  Tony  Bennett.  Sounds  like 
fun. 

Following  Como  on  Channel  5  is  the  Sid  Caesar 
hour,  which  has  remained  the  only  consistently  fun- 
ny show  on  television.  True,  the  skirts  are  some- 
times overlong,  and  perhaps  the  comic  point  is  often 
overworked;  but  at  the  heart  of  every  situation,  of 
every  zany  bit,  is  the  rare  comic  genius'  of  Mr.  Cac 
sar. 

Just  to  watch  him  work,  in  any  of  his  many  for- 
mats, is  an  education  in  the  art  of  comedy. 


SATl 


makl 
Statl 


Turk  I 
heav: 

In 
Walt^ 
becar 
ha.< 
undej 
now 
the 


J3,  1957 


SATURDAY,  FEBRUARY  23.  1957 


likes  the 
It  we  are 
pus   today, 

?r  in  the 

familiar 
[Heel.  I'm 
the   editor 

sn.  Under 
lything  he 
his  own 
to  know 
^  Daily  Tar 
its   of   the 

|y     other 

(fulness. 

>ple  on 

[of   these 

lects    end 

me  of  the 
think.  .  . 
mid  have 
the  same 

Character), 

[o  be  sure, 

phases  of 

ssume  the 

even  an 

Ms  on  this 
students 

lis   short- 
its  free- 
re  p«ople 
■the  qu«9- 


freedom, 
,  or  more 
old  adage 

I  but  words 

knee.  How- 
ly  people 
ided  rum- 

^olinnn. 
I  he  words 
>age  with 
?ople  who 
re  enough 

Iponsibility 

)r  of  being 
lake  their 

that  is  for 
;o  when  a 
io  bad  be- 
ov«r  in 

(which  is 
^thy)  and 
appeared 
imediately 
the  boys 
race.  For 
must  be 
t  request 
attitude 

^nts  to  SMJ 

sume   the 

>usiness  of 

^eryone  on 

chancellor 

I'm  happy 
bople  as  he 
lame  With- 

do  it,  not 
td  e  peper 

liy  name  to 
Ives  for  the 

age  of  it  Is 
|ves  the  ap- 

ite.  I  don't 

names, 
lat  with  the 

mentioned, 
ters  in  The 
on,  for  that 


pel  Hill  are 
found  here 
don't  but 
ard,  sincere 
here  in  this 


;n  your  name 
if  you've  got 


ews: 
Best 


^  you    might 
5  at  8  p..m. 
icking  to  his 
iwling. 

;omo  on  Chan- 
lis  hour.  The 
Andrews  Sis- 
Sounds  like 

he  Sid  Caesar 
isistently  fun- 
rts  are  some- 
point  is  often 
situation,  of 
Uif  of  Mr.  Cac- 

his  many  for- 
remedy. 


m 


THt  OAILT  TAR  M||L 


PAGE  THREE 


h)<eW  Ixhil^ifiorrs  Ar^ 
Oh  Dis^idy  in  Library 

Eight      ne\v     exhibitions     have    traveling  exhibition  of  excellently 
ben  put  on  display  in  the  Wilsofi   designed  German  books,  covering 


Library. , 

They  are  as  follows: 
1  "Brotherhood  Week,"  main 
J  ilo6r:  an  exhibit  in  two  cases  of 
I  books,  articles  and  pamphlets  pre- 
•^  senting  the  purpose  of  this  nation- 
,  ally  observed  week — the  promo- 
i  tion  of  good  will  among  the  Prot- 
!  estant.  Catholic  and  Jewish  faiths. 
i  Much  of  the  material  for  the  ex- 
1  hibition  was  supplied  by  local 
I  ministers. 

!  "Race  Relations,"  foyer:  an  ex- 
i  hibit  of  books  and  articles  pre- 
I  sented  in  cooperation  with  the 
!  University's  YMCA  student  com- 
;  mittee  oh  Race  Relations. 

"Southern     Books     Competition 


'Brigadoon'  Cast  Dancers 


a.  variety  of  fields  and  subjects. 
Tlie  University  of  Kentucky  Li- 
brary is  the  sponsor  of  this  ex- 
hibit which  will  be  shown  through 
Thursday. 

"Notable  Books  1956,''  main 
floor:  a  selection  of  the  42  books 
which  have  made  a  real  contribu- 
tion to  literature  in  the  past  year, 
chosen  by  the  American  Library 
Assn. 

"Spotlight  On  Women,"  main 
floor:  an  e:!chibit  featuring  books 
and  pamphlets  on  business  and 
professional  careers  for  women. 
The  exhibit  is  planned  to  tie  in 
Vjth  the  second  annual  "Spotlijght 
dn  Women,"  a  conference  to  ac- 


1956"  foyer:  a  trav3liDg  exhibition  j*quaint  North  Carolina  business 
of  the  25  winners  in*the  fifth  an- j  and  professional  women  with  oa- 
nual   coatpetitiori   for    books   dis- '  rter  advancement.  The  conf«renc«, 


Dancing  a  highland  fling  in  rehearsal  for  the  forthcoming  Play- 
maker's  production  of  "Brigadoon"  are  Robert  DuMeer,  of  Star,  a 
State  College  student,  and  Miss  Megan  Stewart  of  Raleigh. 


tinguisbed  6y  their  physical  ap- 
pearance, produced  by  Southern 
printers  and  publishers.  This  ex- 
hibit, sponsored  by  the  Southeast- 
ern Library  Assn.,  will  close  Feb. 
28. 

"Contemporary  German  Book 
Design,"  in  eight  cases  on  both 
the  ground  and  main    floors:     a 


First   Tar   Heel 


(Continued   from   Page    1) 

Thev  seem  over-rich  and 


Tinrkish 
heavy." 


In  1929,  under  the  editorship  of 
Walter  Spearman,  The  Tar  Heel 
became  The  Daily  Tar  Heel  and 
ha:j  continued  without  interruption 
under  that  Logotype.  Spearman  is 
now  a  professor  of  journalism  at 
the  University. 


The  Daily  Tar  Heel  has  fluctua- 
ted in  size  between  4  columns,  6 
colums,  8  columns  and  tabloid,  but 
it  ,ha;f  remained  essentially  the 
tame  in  many  ways. 

From  the  days  when  the  editor 

set  the  type  by  hand,  through  two 

world  wars  and  a  police  action  to 

the  present  edition  the  University's 

!  student  newspaper  has  reported  the 

I  events  of  campus,  state  and  world. 


12  7  «^' REASONS 


for  giving  your  xvatch  a  yearly  check-up 


1  here  are  at  least  127  tiny  precision  parts  in  your 
watch,  each  part  contributing  vitally  to  the  accuracy 
and  dependability  of  your  watch  .  .  .  127  important 
reasons  in  all  why  your  wattli  needs  regular  expert 
attention.  ...  .At  least  once  a  year  your  watch  should 
be  cleaned  —  all  127  parts  cleaned  individually  —  it 
should  be  relubricated,  and  the  entire  watch  carefully 
inspected.  .  .  .  You  can  save  yourself  from  costly  watch 
repair  bills  by  bringing  your  watch  in  now  for  a  pre-  . 
cautionary  inspection.  Don't  wait  till  trouble  starts- 
let  our  experts  inspect  your  watch  for  you  today.    / 

In  servicing  your  Buloi'a  wafck  u/  use  only 
GENUINE  BULOVA  I  .ACTORY  PARTS 

^  ttvihorized  BULOVA  distributor! 

WENTWORTH  &  SLOAN 

JEWELERS 
167  E.  Franklin  St. 


Fred  Powledg^,  present  Daily 
Tar  Heel  editor,  and  Charlie  Sloan, 
managing  editor,  are  u«tng  the 
paper's  64th  birthday  as  a  founda- 
tion for  a  campaign  for  new  staf- 
fers. There  are  openings  for  12 
people  on  the  news  staff. 

The  business  office  is  looking 
for  advertising  salesmen,  and  the 
sports  department  also  needs  staf- 
fers. 

Ail  orientation  meeting  for  pros- 
pective reporters  will  be  held  next 
week.  The  meeting  time  and  place 
will  be  announced  in  advance  in 
the  paper. 

Two  meeting  times  will  be  an- 


sponsored  by  the  University  Ex- 
tension Division,  will  be  held  on 
campus  this  Saturday  and  Sun- 
d^y. .         . 

"Art  for  World  Friendship." 
Assembly-Exhibition  Room,  ground 
floor:  an  exhibition  of  art  work 
by  children  from  18  foreign  coun- 
tries, including  21  drawiDgs  l«r 
South  Africian  children,  obtained 
through  an  Exchange  program 
called  "Art  for  World  Friendship." 
Sponsored  by  the  Women's  In- 
ternational League  for  P©aee  »pd 
Freedom.  Qombined  with  this  ex- 
hibit is  some  of  the  «t  work  from 
Chapel  lllll's  inter-racial  veia  and 
crafts  class  for  children,  sixjosowd 
by  the  locfl  branch  of  the  Leafw. 


WESTMINISTER  FELLOWSHIP 

The  Westminister  Fellbirefaip 
will  meet  for  :rtipper  at  6:00  p.m. 
this  Sunday.  Such  questions  as: 
Who  was  John  Calvin?  What  did- 
he  do?  Are  the  Presbyterians  Ca- 
Ivinists?  ^arid  What  is  predestina- 
tion? will  be  discussed. 


Mentha  fortun<d 
Nath6d  Winner 
OfScho 


A  UNC  junior.  Miss  Martha  Car- 
oline Fortune  of  Brewrd,  has  been 
named  the  winner  af  th«  Mary 

nounced  so  that  people  with  con-   '^^  innouiietd  by  the  k.  C.  Oasa- 


flictj  on  one  date  will  be  ablfe  to 
attend  the  meeting  on  the  othei-. 
The  meetings  will  be  nearly  iden- 
tical in  eoBtent,  aec^r(|ing  tc'Pow- 

' '  i'  rr''*"  •    yr  " — 

Gala  Ivenf 


Worn  Teaciitrs  Assn.,  t  ditlslttn  of 
the  NCEA.  ,  ,(      .. 

Miss  Fortune,   the,  daughter  of 
:  Mr.:  and  Mrs.  .M.  W»^  Igprtune    of 
I  ^e^«rdi  Wat^elggte^pi^er  "a  num-l t^naiim 
I  l^r  of  outstandins  iDpintlnts  f^4; 
[  tft«  VWard."  Mm.  offleMs  sald> 

The  scholarship  will  b^  i|X  the 
\  amount,  of  $150  ahd  wa*  awfO^ed 
on  the  l»«sis  of  character,  finikncial 


(Continued  from  pa^  I) 
president    Bob    Young    presented  |  aid,  persoaality,  anid  expresJed  in 

tention  of  entering  ttte  teaching" 
profession,  and  scholastic  achieve- 
ment. 

"I  want  to  be  a  teacher  as  I  sei 
that  the  need  for  teachers  must 
be  met  if  the  youth  of  today  are 
to  be  guided  into  responsible  adult- 
hood," Miss  Fortune  stated. 

The  Mary  Morrow  scholu^!>hip 
was  originated  by  the  South  i*ied- 
mont  District  Division  of  classroom 
Teachers,  Oct.  16,  1953.  This  fcroi^ 
began  the  scholarship's  fioahciid 
support  by  contributing  $l6d  to  a 
fund  in  honor  of  Mary  Morrow,  'W^o 
taugbt  many  years  in  the  Greens- 
boro schools.  • 


Law  Meeting  Arrivals 


^  Ooan  Rich  and  Miss  Bobby  Lovai,  sa#t«d  bobind  tabi«,  ro^istor  visiters  to  th»  Circuit  4  meetinn  of 
,th«  Matlenal  Law  Student's  As»n.  mooting  this  woekond  in  Manning  Hall.  Circuit  4  includes  12  Uw 
achooU  in  North  Carolina,  South  Carolina,  VIroinia,  West  Vlrginio  and  Maryland. 


orking  Wbrneh's  Meet  Opens 


North  Carolina  business  and  pro- 
fessional women  will   arrive  here 
today  for  the  opening  session  Sa- 
ttu'day  of  the  second  annual  "Spot 
light  On  Women"  conference. 

The  conference,  which  Is  open 
to  all  business  and  professional 
women  in  the  state^  intends  to  aid 
women  in  career  advancement  and 
to  elevate  the^  standards  for  wo- 
men in  the  business  and  profes- 
sional worlds. 

Nearly  200  business  and  profes- 
sional, women  are  expected  to  at- 
tend the  conference.  Registratkm 
opens  today  at  1  p.m.  Sessions  wfll 
befin  at  2  p.m.  when  Chancellor 
iBojbert  B.  House  welcomes  the  con- 
fereei. 

^e  conference  is  sponsored  by 

the  N(»'th  Carolina  Federation  of 

Biisiness  and  Professional  Women's 

j  Clubs,  Inc.,  iind  the  University  Ebc- 

Division. 


will     be 
Women." 


"ChiUlenges  To 


Today's  j  human  relations  in  industry, 
management  techniques. 


and 


At  These  Prices 
You  Can  Afford 
To  Ldugh! 

A  B»wl  of  Bishop,  by  Morris  Bish- 
op. Gay  verse  by  The  New  Yorker 
contributor.  Published   at  S3.00. 

Our  Special  —  $1.00 
Perilhian's  Heme  Cempanieh,  by 
that  zany  fellow.  S.  J.  Perelman. 
The  English  language  dances  a 
wild  friHcsome  number!  Published 
at  $3.50 

Our  Special  —  $1.39 
The  Best  of  H.  T.  Webster  —  a 
memorial  volume  of  wonderful 
cartoons  by  the  creator  of  .The 
Timid  Soul. 

Our  Special  —  $1.39 

The  Intimate 
Bookshop 

205  E.  Franklin  St. 
Open  Till  10  P.  M. 


Dr.  Sorkin  is  a  recognized  na- 
tional authority  on  personnel  af- 
fairs, business  and  financial  man- 
agement. She  is  also  a  consultant 
on   employer  -  employee   relations, 


CLASSIFIEDS 


FOR  SALE:  ERCnSHKA  11.  A 
very  fine  1949  Plymouth,  $175. 
CaU  Bob  Mauldin,  89079  after  five 
or  come  to  404  Connor. 


5  RpOM  BRICK  HOUSE.  3  BED 
rooms,  all  modern  conveniences. 
3  miles  on  Old  86  Hyway.  Stove 
and  Frigedaire  furnished.  Call 
Fred  Katzfn  after  6:00,  8-9025. 


JAZZ  AT  TURNAGES 


Actfng  as   moderator,     19u$tries$i      ^turtiat  arttrrnoon.  2:00,  Tttru- ' 
consultant  and  giving  the  Keynote    ikges   Catiffl    In    Durham.— Jazz    by 
speech  will   be   I>r.   Cylvia   Sorkin '  DiCk     Gables     "All     Stars."     Beer 
of  St.   Louis,   Missouri.   Her  topic  j  Sein^ed.  ■ 


Phone  9-3331 


DAILY    CROSSWORD 


ACROSS 

1.  Tree  stump 
5.  Hiffh  cards 
9.  Reflect 
deeply 

10.  Prleft 
(Tibet) 

11.  Immense 

12.  Slopped 
over 

14.  Main 
highway 

16.  Great  Lake 

17.  Part  <rf 
"to  be" 

18.  Weaken 

20.  Nickel 
(aym.) 

21.  Skinful 

24.  Of  the  mind 
27.  Tree 

29.  Church  seat 

30.  Scorched 
33.  Venture- 

some 

36.  Ahead 

37.  Sailor 
(Slang) 

39.  Water  grod 
(Batqrl.) 

40.  Bestow 
43.  Formal 

agreement 
46.  A  range 

48.  Mine 
entrances 

49.  Boy's  school 
(Eng.) 

50.  Weasel 
(Eng.) 

ii.mt 

12.  itealUre 
(Heb.) 
UOWN 

1.  Meager 

2.  Wrwigful 
act  (Law) 


3.  Advocate 

4.  Malt 
leverage 
(Pl) 

5.  Jolson  and 
others 

6.  Sleeveless 
garment 

7.  Arab 
chieftain 

8.  Salt  marsh 
11.  Placed 

13.  Eun^Jtean 
linden  tree 

15.  Sweet 
potato 

19.  Vigor 

22.  Preposition 


23.  Ught 
brown 

25.  Pen 
tip 

26.  Num- 
t>er 

28.  cask 

30.  Fens 

31.  Com- 
bined 

32.  Speck 

34.  Alpha 
betic 
character 

35.  Period  of 
time  (pl.) 

38.  WeU  d<me! 
41.  Ballot 


.ill      acjd'   liiiAii 
y:'j  an 'J   ran'r:^ 


Tcitcrdey'a  AatwM 

42.  Cry  of 
bacchaaaix 

44.  Cheese 

45.  Rank 
(Early  Jr.) 

47.  Conclude 


Rosy  with  an  inscribed  trophy,  a 
token  of  appreciation  for  the  great 
contribution  fli*t  be  had  made  to 
Carolina.  Big  Len,  who  would 
much  rather  play  basketball  than 
stand  out  in  the  middle  of  the 
court  while  thousands  of  fans 
cheer,  nevertheless  got  through  the 
ceremonies   in  good  shape. 

After  a  few  anxious  moments 
early  in  the  second  half,  the  fans 
were  able  to  sit  back  and  relax 
as  tbe  "Tar  Heels  roared  through 
the  Gamecocks. 

Then  came  the  tlinlax  of  what 
was  probably  thi  bi^g^t  athletic 
extravagahza  at  Cai^olina  since  the 
Choo  Choo  Justice  era. 

With  as^ociafe  justice  of  the 
supreme  court  Hi^gins  acting  as 
emcee,  freshman  coacb  Vince  Gri* 
maldi  and  Assistant  coach  Buck 
Freeman  were  awarded  gifts  for 
their  work  with  the  Tat  Heels. 

Then,  Justice  Higgins  called 
McGuire  to  the  front,  and  with  his 
lovely  wife  and  two  daughters  at 
his  side,  the  popular  Tar  Heel 
mentor  accepted  the  key  to  a  blue 
and  white  Cadillac  which  was 
parked  outside  the  gym. 

Beaming  from  ear  to  ear.  th^ 
smiling  irishman  thanked  every- 
one for  the  "tremendous  honor." 
"I've  always  watched  people  re- 
ceive those  big  prizes  on  televis- 
ion," he  joked,  "but  I  never  fig- 
ured it  would  happen  to  a  basket- 
ball coach." 


Q\6i6  Club 

(Corttinutd  fmm   FoQt  I) 
and  tedious  recording  sessions  is 
a  sure  sign  that  they  all  expect 
to  be  rewarded  for  their  feffwts." 

Among  the  songs  to  be  recorded 
are  "Hark  Thfe  Sound,"  "Dixie," 
and  "Old  Chapel  Hill." 

Volume  purchasing  will  Insure 
a  very  low  retail  price,  according 
to  a  glee  club  spokesman. 

Charles  Shoe,  glsfe  club  business 
manager,  said  at  Monday's  meeting 
that  "it  will  mark  the  first  attempt 
by  a  campus  choral  group  to  re- 
cord Caroliha  songs  for  widespread 
distribution,  to  students,  faculty, 
and  alumni." 

Present  plans  indicate  an  appro- 
xihiat^  release  date  of  April  1. 


C6vi»hhg  The  Campus 


UNIVnilTf  ieiM.M!UII>i     ' 

students  who  have  scholarships 
awdrdid  by  thie  University  and  who 
have  not  picked  up  their  tickets,  in- 
difrite  thereby  to  the  Student  Aid 
Office  that  they  do  hpt  wish  re- 
H«wal  of  thi§  s£Hbl|rship  for  the 
yfeat  1957-98,  according  to  the  of- 
fice. 

The  final  date  fOr  picking  these 
tickets  lip  was  Feb.  Q. 
fc69M6N»Lff  A^  tLUB 

The  Cosmopolitan  Club  will  miet 
at  4:00  p.m.,  this  Sunday,  in  the 
Assembly  Room  of  Wilson  Library. 
An  unusual  "Qiiii  !*rogram, "  with 
John  MoUer  as  emcee,  will  be  fea- 
tured and  refreshments  will  be  ser- ! 
ved.  Everyone  has  been  invited  to 
com^  and  IMng  friends. 
THE  AMERICAN  ASSN.  OF 
UNIVERSITY  WOMEN 

The  Chapel  Hill  Sranch  of  the  , 


American  Assn.  of  University  ^0* 
men  will  meet  in  the  Library  As- 
sembly Room  on  Tuesday  evening, 
Feb.  28.  .    . 

Dr.  Katherine  Kennedy  CarnJi- 
chael,  Dean  of  Women,  will  speak. 
Her  subject  will  be  'The  Educa- 
tion  of  Women  in  a  i»57  Milieu.' 

Coffee  will  be  served  at  7:30,  p. 
m.,  and  the  meeting  will  begin  at 
8:00  p.m. 

^xjtit'Tv  Program  ^HE^ulI 

Today's  schedule  for  WUNC-TV, 
the  Universitys'  educational  televi- 
sion station: 

6:21^— Sign  On 

6:30— Yesterday's  Worldjj      •-■ 

7:00— Deadline  U.S.S.R. 

7:80— The  Elements 

8:00 — laaiurance 

8:3(^— Urban   Crisis 

9:00--Sign  0I£ 


YOU'RE  STRANDED  high  on  a  peak  in  the  Andes.  "Wind's 
rising.  Thermometer's  dropping.  And  the  next  llama  for 
Lima  leaves  in  7  dajrs.  You  reach  for  a  Lucky ...  try  every 
pocket .  .  .  but  you're  fresh  out.  Brother,  you're  in  for  a 
Bleak  Week!  No  cigarette  anywhere  can  match  the  taste 
of  a  Lucky.  A  I^ucky  is  all  cigarette  .  .  .  nothing  but  fine, 
mild,  good-tasting  tobacco  that's  TOASTED  to  taste 
even  better.  Try  one  right  now.  You'll  say  it's  the 
beat-tasting  cigarette  you  ever  smoked ! 

DON'T  JUST  STAND  THERE  ..  .    STICKLE!    MAKE   *25 

%t\//^  Sticklers  are  simple  riddles  with  two-word  rhyming 
"^^S^  answers.  Both  words  must  have  the  same  numlier  <  f 
syllables.  (No  drawings,  please! )  We'll  shell  out  $25  for  all  we  use 
— and  for  hundreds  that  never  see  print.  So  send  staclcs  of  'em 
with  your  name,  address,  college  and  class  to  Happy-Joe-Lucky, 
Bol  67A,  Mount  Vernon,  N.  Y. 


WHAT  IS  A  COlUCf 

FACOirr  *ooMf 


A.  JEIOMC  COltoa. 


Mentor  Ctnter 


Luckies  Taste  Better 

*MrS  tdA^TED"  TO  TAStie  HITtER  .  .  .  CLEANER,   FRESHER,  SMOOTHER! 


WHAT  IS  A  SHORT  AlGUMB4T« 


DANIEL  COHSTAHT. 
SkHT*  MONICA  CITT  COLL. 


Bru/Bttf 


WHAT  IS  A 

CONCHTH)  VStHt 

n^P 

^ 

-  * 

A 

i» 

i/i 

.  nafttiimN 

J9 

t. 

SmitgPut 

a 

tfr  eNitA^o 



WHAT  IS  A  TOUCH  GUY'S 
IKAKFASTf 


Yegg'*  Egga 


•ATNt  amvcuiTT 


WHAT  IS  A  SODA  fOUNTAJNI 


r»ot  tiON.  Otiorie  GiMery 

U.  OPtOUTHERN  CAI 


WHAT' IS  FAKE  FEtOCmrt 


VIMIMIA  H»USSa«M. 
MICHICA*!  STATE 


StaiieRagt 


•  A.T.U. 


9m»9VQT  or 


iMt%>^m0*iiBun  j(i^itkit»<9ty^Miw 


AMXKICA'S    l^AOINO    KCAMUFACT VKSm    07    CIOAJtBTTXt 


*»   ai^rftaii  i,ii 


Vf 


PMM  rout 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


SATURDAY,  FEBRUARY  23,  1957 


UNC  Track  Squad  Travels  To  Raleigh  For  ACC  Games; 
Unbeaten  Swimmers  Meet  Wolf  pack  Here  This  Afternoon 


Krepp  Paces  Mermen 
In  Important  ACC  Test 

By  STEWART  BIRD  event  he  enters,  but  there  are  sev- 

The  greatest  all-around  swigimer  '.  e.al  other  events  that  will  produce 
in   Carolina  history.    .\11  -  American    some  hair  raising  finishes, 
team    captain   Charlie   Krepp.    will  i     The    50    yard    freestyle    duel    be- 
don    the   blue   of  Carolina    for   the    tween  Dave  Mclntyre  of  State  and 
j»ist  time  in  dual  meet  competition    Carolina's  Bill  Roth  is  a  iossup.  Mc- 


when  he  leads  his  undefeated  teem 
mates  against  arch  rival  N.  C.  State 
at  three  o'clock  this  afternoon  in 
B-^wman  Gray  Pool. 

With  the  conference  championship 
and  an  undefeated  season  hanging 
in  the  balance,  it  is  anybody's  guess 
as  to  what  events  Coach  Ralph 
Casey  wiU  throw  his  ace  in. 

In  the  Tar  Heels'  smashing  48-38 
win  over  the  Wolfpack  January  15,  i 
the  Carolina  mentor  fooled  everyone 
by  matching  Krepp  in  the  200  but- 
;crfly  against  Dick  Fadgen.  last 
>ears  XC.A..\  champion,  and  Charlie 
,«on  going  away  in  one  of  the  prime 
upsets  of  the  season. 

Krepp  will  t»e  the  favorite  in  any 


Milton's 

Mid-Winter  Carnival 
Ends  Saturday  March  2 

Save    on   year-round 
and  lightweight  apparel 

Clotl)ing  Cupboart 


Intyre  took  Roth  in  their  first  meet- 
ing with  a  time  of  23.5.  Roth  turned 
Ihe  tables  on  him  in  the  Carolina 
Collegiates  two  weeks  ago,  and  tied 
McIntjTe's  pool  record  of  22.5  in  a 
time  trial  last  week. 

Frank  Nauss.  the  big  bull  from 
.State,  has  had  several  anxious  mo- 
ments this  year  against  Walt  Rose 
of  Carolina  in  the  220  freestyle. 
\auss'  tremendous  finishing  kick  in 
fie  last  20  yards  has  nipped  Ro.se  by 
inches  everytime. 

Tony  Schiffman  is  another  who 
has  suffered  the  result  of  Nauss' 
sreat  finishing  sprint,  and  will  be 
after  the  State  ace  in  the  440  free- 
style. \au.ss  nipped  him  by  inches 
n  the  Collegiates,  with  Tony  swim- 
ming the  lliird  fastest  time  ever 
turned  in   by  a  Carolina   swimmer. 

Mclntyre  must  also  rule  the  fav- 
orite in  the  100  yard  freestyle,  but 
cither  Rose  or  Roth  could  make  it 
too  close  for  comfort.  Only  a  few 
tenths  of  a  second  separate  the  three 
sprinters,  and  a  bad  turn  or  start 
could  mean  an  upset. 

Undoubtedly,  whichever  relay  Car- 
olina trios  to  take.  State  will  go 
for  the  other.  Neither  team  can  af- 
ford to  lose  both  of  the  seven  point 
events  and  stand  ^a  chance  of  win» 
ning  the  meet.  Carolina  took  the 
medley  last  time,  and  State  the  free- 
style relay.  Strategy  may  change 
this  time. 

Carolina's  hopes  for  a  comfortable 
victory  lie  in  team  depth.  TIic  two 
squads  split  even  in  first  places, 
five  apiece,  but  it  was  the  seven 
tliree  point  second  places  garnered 
by  the  Tar  Heels  whQe  limiting 
State  to  one  that  settled  Uie  issue 
in   favor  of  Carolina. 


Tracksters  Battle  With 
Duke,  Terps  For  Crown 


UP  THERE  WITH  --=-r 


By  RAY  LINKER 
Th«  Associated  Press 

The  usual  top  three  teams— Mary- 
land. North  Carolina  and  Duke- 
are  expected  to  walk  away  with 
most  of  the  honors  In  tomorrow's 
-Atlantic  Coast  Conference 
track  meet. 

Preliminaries  are  scheduled  to 
get  under  way  at  10  a.m.  in  the 
State  Fair  .\rena  in  Raleigh.  Finals 
will   be  held  at  2  p.m. 

Maryland,  the  defending  cham- 
pion, is  again  strong,  but  North  Car- 
olina and  Duke,  always  top  con- 
tenders have  top  qotch  performers  of 
their  own. 


in  the  high  jump,  and  also  defend- 
ing champ  and  record  holder. 

Maryland,  seldom  beaten  in  the 
mile  relay,  will  be  strong  there 
again,  with  Surgi  and  Dave  Leas 
back  from  last  year's  winning  team 
indoor  along  with  Carl  Party  and  Bill 
Wagner. 


Party  will  t>e  the  man,  to  beat  in 
the  880-yard  run,  and  will  find  tough 
competition  from  UNC's  long-legged 
Scurlock. 

Beatty,  defending  champ  in  the 
mile  and  two-mile  and  record  hold- 
er in  the  two-mile  run,   again  vnU 


About  160  athletes  are  entered  in  1  ^'^Sage  Grim.  Beatty  has  won  both 


Krepp  And  Casey  Talk  Things  Over       -4 


J 


,  '^-.ii--^  r-itxamjemftX^-^. 


% 


UNC's  All-America  swimmer  and  his  coach,  Ralph  (fasey,  hold  an  impromptu  confer%nce  to  discuss 
plans  for  this  afternoon's  important  meet  with  State  in  Bowman-Gray  Pool.  Krepp,  a  serttor  from  Bal- 
timore,  holds  many   ACC    and   national    records. 


Frosh  Cop  Number  15  With 
89-65  Victory  Over 


the  conference  division.  i 

The  nonconference  division,  draw- 
':ng  such  teams  as  Tennessee,  Ala- 
bama.   Florida    State   and    Georgia, 
will  have  about  75  performers.  There 
will  be  115  in  the  freshman  division, 
which  is  limited  to  conference  teams 
I  oaly.    The  scholastic     division     has 
j  been  eliminated  this  year. 
I      Maryland,     which    has    three    (/f 
!  eight  defending  champs  on  its  roster, 
I  has   been   tapped   as  favorite   while 
I  Duke  and  North  Carolina  are  rated 
i  as  strong  contenders.  Last  year  it 
I  was  Maryland,     Duke     and     North 
i  carobna  in  that  order. 
j     North   Carolina   State,  last  year's 
("ourth  place  finiEhcr.  has  lost  sev- 
1  eral  top  performers,     but     appears 
1  capable    of    finishing    in    about    the 
■  same  posiMon  this  year. 

The  spotlight  will 'be  on  several 
outstanding  individual,  performers, 
\  including  Dave  Sime  of  Duke.  Jim 
Beatty  and  Dave  Scurlock  of  UNC, 
and  Bun-  Grim  of  Maryland. 
Sime  won  three  events  last  year; 
i  the  broad  jump,  the  700-yard  low 
j  :iurdle.s,  and  the  60-yard  dash,  the 
latter  in  world-record  tying  time  of 
{6.1  seconds.  He  will  not  enter  the 
•  b.x)ad  jump  this  year.  ' 

Maryland's    top    strengtli    lies    in 

Ed   Cooke,     the     defending  champ 

and  record  bolder  in  the  shot  put, 

,  Lou  Sergi,  6000>yard  run  defending 

I  champ     and    record     holder,     and 

I  George  Hogan,  always  a  top  threat 


events  two  years  in  a  row. 


ERROL 


IDeHAVIIIANDI 

wmVxm 
Boats  Oft 

A  Ittry  ul  mn  Urndfing  foilh 

NOW   PLAYING 


Carolina 


HETROCOLOR 

JOHN  WAYNE 

DANDAILEY 

MAUREEN  CHARA 


THE  WINGS 


OF  EAGLES 


WARD  BOND 

UK  MG K  PlCTUtt 


LATE  SHOW  TONIGHT 

REGULAR  SHOWING 

SUN.-MON.-TUES. 

Carolina 


he  jrd  Johnson  Restaurant 


BREAKFAST 


LUNCH 


DINNER 

SNACKS 
"Landmark  For  Hungry  Tarheels" 


(«<->iii.mi  t 


Coach     Vince      Grmialdi's     Tar, 
Baby     cagers     experienced     both 
famine  and  plenty  last  night,  but ' 
finished    strong   to  clefcut  the   At-  1 
lantic  Christian  College  JV's  89-65. 

The  two  teams  battled  on  even  ■ 
terms    for    the    first    10    minutes. ' 
and  at  the  end  of  this  period,  the 
score  stood  at  I.t-15 

The  Tar  Babies  then  took  com- 


plete charge  of  the  contest,  and 
ran  the  score  to  25-17.  However,  by 
13:00  ACC  had  surged  ahead  and 
led  28-27. 

At  this  point  Coach  Gnmaldi 
put  in  an  entire  new  squad,  and 
the  quality  of  play  improved.  La- 
rese  came  back  in  shortly  there- 
after, and  was  soon  followed  by 
Shaffer  and  Dick  Kepley. 


FREE!  INVISIBLE  SHIRTS! 


It  is  a  little  known  fact  that 
Van  Keuaen,  in  addition  to 
Its  regular  merchandise,  also 
makes  a  grand  line  of  invisible 
shirts.  Alas,  they  have  never 
proved  very  popular.  Pedple 
lose  them  easily.  Laundries  are 
confused  by  them.  And  people 
wearing  these  invisible  shirts 
are  not  just  walked  0F6r,  they're 
sometimes  walked  through. 

So,  we're  stuck  with  thou- 
sands of  them,  and  we've  just 
decided  to  give  them  away.  To 
you!  Just  write  Van  Heusen. 
We  will  gend  you  free  a  com- 
plete wardrobe  of  invisible 
shirts.  Not  jiist  one  or  two! 
Not  us.  We'll  send  you  hun- 


dreds of  them.  In  every  stylo! 
Every  size!  Every  collar  fash- 
ion! All  handsome.  All  invis- 
ible. Probably  the  finest  you've 
never  seen. 

As  for  visible  shirts  —  and 
shorts,  sport  shirts,  sweaters, 
pajamas,  handkerchiefs  and  ties 
-^  well,  you  know  Van  Heusen. 
We  have  most  of  the  new  style.s 
before  anybody  else.  And  we 
handle  traditional  favorites  in 
a  way  that  explains  why  cer- 
tain styles  last  a  long,  long 
time.  Your  local  haberdasher 
carries  a  large  Van  Heusen 
selection.  See  him  soon. 

Phillips-Jones  Corp..  417 
Fifth  Ave.,  New  York  16,  N.Y. 


Delaney,  Dwyer,  And 
Tabori   Duel   Today 


By   ED  CORRIGAN 


NEW  YORK  —  (AP)  —  The 
national  AAU  track  and  field 
champiohships  —  the  biggest  whir- 
ligig of  the  indoor  season  with  254 
entries  —  will  take  over  Madison 
Square  Garden  for  alnio.si  12  hours 
today. 

But  most  of  the  interest  will  be 
on  three  runner.->'  —  Ronnie  Delany 
of  Villanova,  Fred  Dwyer,  former-  j 
ly  of  the  New  York  Athletic  Club, 
and  Laszlo  Tabori  of  Hungary. 


of  Chicago,   or   Jim 
Wheaton  College. 


Hanchett   of 


•]^' 

''¥ 


In  the  last  five  minutes  of  the 
half,  the  frosh  turned  on  the 
steam  and  surged  into  the  lead, 
never  again  to  be  headed.  Instru- 
mental in  this  spurt  were  Larese 
and  Wally  Graham,  whose  floor 
play  acted  as  a  steadying  influence  \ 
for  the  Tar  Babies.  ! 

Carolina    lead    at    halftime,    44-1 
33.  I 

During    the    first    half    of    the 
second    period,    the      taljer     UNC  j 
players  exploited  their  height  ad-  j 
vantage,   and  after  10  minutes  of  I 
play  led  67-51.  At  15:00.  the  point  | 
spread  had  widened  to  20  as  the 
scorestood    at  81-61.     and     never 
dropped  below  that   point.  j 

With  1:30  left  to  be  played,  Gri- 1 
maldi    again    inserted    his -second 


SHEER  MOVIE   GREATNESS! 


Arnic  Sowell  and  Tom  Courtney.'  team,  and  the  reserves  contained 


for    the    time    re- 


the    Christians 
maining. 

Larese  was  the  most  outstand- 
ing performer  of  the  evening, 
distributing  his  23  points  when 
and  where  they  were  needed  most. 

Shaffer  had  a  particularly  good 
night,  leading  both  teams'  scoring 


WE   ARE   THE   EXCLUSIVE 

VAN  HEUSEN 

0 

DEALER  IN  CHAPEL  HILL 


I      They'll   race  in   the   mile  and 
!  will  mark  the  first  meeting  of  all 
j  three  during  the  winter  campaign. 
;  Delany  has  beaten  each  individual- 
j  ly.    Tabori    has    been    training  -at 

the  University  of  North  Carolina. 

He  and  Dwyer  are  determined  to 
;  stop  the  Irish  Olympic  1,500-meler 
j  champion's  two-year  streak  of  11 
i  straight  indoor  successes. 

Said  Dwyer  on  the  eve  of   the 

race: 

"I  still  think  I  will  beat  Ron  one 

of  these  nights.  I've  been  working 

on   my  speed   all   week.  " 

Said  Tabori.  like  Delany,  a  s-ub- 

four-minute-miler: 

"There  never  has  been  a  runner 

who  couldn't  be  defeated.  Delany 

can  be  beaten,  too."' 
But  how  are  they  going  to  do  it? 
j  Both  agr^e  that  someone  must  set 
j  a  torrid  pace  to  kill  off  Delany's 
!  finishing  kick  that  has  mowed 
I  them  all  down.  Neither  however, 
j  is  willing  to  set  himself  up  as  a 
I  sitting  duck. 


have  reached  a  parting  of  the 
ways  and  will  be  in  dilferent 
events.  Sowell.  the  slim  Pitt  ath- 
lete who  hps  been  beating  Court- 
ney to  the  tape  with  monotonous 
regularity,  will  be  the  favorite  in 
the  1,000,  while  the  Boston  GI  goes 
in  the  600  against  Charlie  Jenkins. 

Little  Ira  Murchison  of  Chicago    wi^h   27   points.     Most     of     these 
is   lop   man   in   the   60-yard   dash  \  markers  came  on  rebounds  and  in 
j  and  still  trying  to  get  ii  down  to    fast  breaks. 
^  j  6   seconds    fiat;    Bob   Richards   is  i 

the      favorite   of   the   Pole      Vault  ■  ^^^   *' 
threatening  to  go  over   15-9     and    ^^""" 
big    Parry    O'Brien    is    the    choice 
in  the  sholput     trying   to  shatter 
his  own  world  record  of  61-5 '.j. 

Milt  Campbell,  and  Lee  Calhoun 
of  North  Carolina  College  at  Dur- 
ham, will  duel  in  the  60-yard  hui-- 
dles. 


TH£  TRUE  AND  WONDERFUL  STORY 
OF  COL.  DEAN  HESS,  CLERGYMAN 
TURHED  FIGHTER  PILOT.. 

tola  in  the  heroism  of 
battlers  hell  cherished  in 
tha  hearts  of  those 
who  loved  him... 
and  living  forever 

the  happiness  of 
the  once-forgotten 
children  of  a 
ravaged  land 


i 


Whalcy  f . 
Harvey  t* 
Kasmer  f 
Godfrey  c 
Craft   g 
Greff  g 
Burnett  g 
Phares  g 
Totals 


Phil  Coleman  or  Ted  Wheeler,  both 


Don  Miller  Wins  Campus  ^'^'*°^'^'^ 

D      I     M.  ri'ii'        I     ^  Shaffer  f 

Pocket  Billiards  Crown     i  Air.siie  { 

Don  Miller  won  the  campus  pocket  j  Crutchfield   f 
i)illiards     tourney_    Thursday     night  i  Larese   f 
with  a  score  of  78  points.  He  was  j  McRacken  f 
closely  followed  by  Jim  Dupree  with  !  Renneckcr  f 
74  and  Ray  Stanley  with  69.  i  j^eplcy    c 

Otheis  in  the  finals  were  Al  Cain,  \  poole  c 
66.    J.    D.    Herring,   56,    and   Chuck ;  crotty    g 
Hartman.  49.  •  |  Graham  "g 

The  first  three  Iwys  form  the  of- 1  griffin  g 
licial  UNC  team,  and  their  scores  |  steppe  g 
V  ere  mailed  to  the  National  Tourna-  i  Wilson  g 
nient  director.     Last     year's     teamt-jotals 


ranked   ninth   in   the   natio^i  with 
The  task  could  fall  to  Olympians  Iscore  of  219.   The   team   score  thi.s 


year  wa.s  221. 


F 

0-0 

0-1 

0-1 

6-7 

3-4 

2-3 

45 

0-0 

0-1 

25     15-22 

(89)      G       F 

11       5-7 

0       1-5 

0       0-0 

10       3-5 

0       0-1 

0  0-0 
7       0-2 

1  0-0 
6       1-5 

2  OK) 
0  0-0 
2  1-2 
0       0-1 

39     11-28 
SCORE   BY   PERIODS: 

ACC  JV     33— 32— *-45 
UNC     44—45 19 


P 

5 
4 

0 
4 
4 
2 
1 
0 
1 

21 

P 
2 
2 
1 
3 
0 
0 
1 
1 
3 
1 
0 
4 
0 

18 


TP 

10 
6 
0 

24 

3 

12 

10: 

0 
0 

65 

TP! 

27l 
li 
q! 

23 
0 
0 

14 

131 

4J 
01 
5! 
O' 
89 


A  IjWIVEKAllNTEXIUTIONtt  PICTUK  STARRING 


ROCK  HUDSON 
MARTHA  HYER 

DAN  DURYEA  DON  DeFORE' 
A>fNA  KASHFI  JOCK  MAHONEY 

Carl  BeStOO  Reid   nvectid  l^  OOUGUS  SIRK-  Nnatn  by  CHARUS  GRAYSON  and  VINCENT  B.  EWNS •  Produced  by  ROSS  HUNTER  % 


STARTS  TODAY 

FOR  4  DAYS  OF  GUARANTEED  ENTERTAINMENT! 

ADMISSION:  ADULTS  65c 

CHILDREN  25c 

FEATURES  AT:  1:00-3:00-5:00-7:00-9:00 


&ivm€LTr9' 


mmmmmmmmi 


^mmmmmmmmmmmmmmvi 


tJ.NfC.  Library 
Serials  Des^t. 
Chapel   Hillf    N«    C. 
8-51-49 


WEATHER 

Rain,  with   high  of  62. 


OThc 


akt  Heel 


WUD  ANIMAL 

Butterfly    bits   duck.    Set    peg* 


VOL.  LVII,  NO.  lOf 


Complete  (/P)  Wire  Service 


CHAPEL  HILL,  NORTH  CAROLINA,  SUNDAY,  FEBRUARY   24,  1957 


Offices  in   Graham   Memorial 


FOUR   PAGES  THIS  ISSUI 


Wesley   Weekend' 
Will   Begin   Today 

A  three-day  student  Methodist  dents,  faculty  members  and  towns- 
religious  program,  "Wesley  Week-  j  men,  will  attempt  to  stimulate  the 
end."  opens  here  today  at  the  [  ideas  beyond  tlie  spoken  stage. 
University    Methodist    Church.        j  said  Unruh. 

Tho    prjgram,    led    by    its   main  .... 

speaker  Dr.  Carl  Sanders,  will  co-  ^"  *^  projected  broad  scope  of 
ordinate  three  days  of  sermons.  **'-  P'^^^ram.  Unruh  said,  the  pur- 
meetings  and  student  discussions '  P°^^  ^'"  ^^  ^«"^^^  ^>;°"*^  *5^ 
uith  its  purpose  of  'reemphasiz- j  ^^^P**^"  ^^  Methodists  alone.  He 
ing  the   ideas     of     religion     and 


Friday  May  Recommend  His  Choice 
For  New  UNC  Chancellor  Tomorrow 


Christianity." 

Dr.  Sanders,  district  supt.  of 
Methodist  churches  in  Richmond. 
Va.,   will  open  the  weekend   with 


said  the  discussion  sessions  in 
the  church  and  in  the  dorms  "will 
be  op^n  to  all  townspeople  and 
students." 


Executive  Committee,  Full  Board  Meet 


This   will    be    the    second    year 


the  first  of  four  sermons  at  11 1  that  the  now  annual  program  has 
a.m.  in  the  University  Methodist  |  been  held.  A  student  central  plan- 
Church.  ;  ning    committee,    head3d    by    Ray 


.\t  7:30  p.m.  tonight,  and  at  the 
same  time  trmorrow  and  Tuesday. 
Dr.  Sanders  will  deliver  his  re- 
maining  sermons.    His    talks    will 


Long,    has    been    in    consultation 
since  last  October  in   preparation 
for  the  religious  program. 
Faculty    and    townspeople    who 


center  around   the  context   of  the    will    lead   discussions   in   the   sev- 

pronounced  theme  of  the  program  ,  eral    dorms  include: 

"  —  And  God."  I      Rev.  J.  Paul  Edwards.  Dr.  E.  M. 

Di.scussion  groups  wil)  hold  "cof-  [  Gitlin.  Jim  Tatum,  Rev.  Charles 
fee  confabs"  in  the  church  and  { Hubbard.  USN  Lt.  Commander 
"bull  sessions"  in  dorms,  fratern-  Howard  Childress.  Dr.  Guy  John- 
ity  and  sorority  houses,  according  j  son,  Dr.  0.  D.  Garvin,  Rev.  A.  K. 
ta  Wesley  Foundation  Director  O.  Kin^g,  Dr.  Earl  Peacock  Jr.,  Dr. 
Murray  Unruh.  Frank  Hanft.  D.r  J  Kempton  Jones 

The    groups,   composed    of    stu- '  and  Unruh. 


Morehead 
Applicants 
To  Be  Here 

Fifty-four  top  scholars  among 
high  school  graduating  seniors 
being  considered  for  Morehead 
Scholarships  atUNC  will  attend  fin- 
al screenings  here  March  2,  4. 
and  5,  it  was  annouced  recently  by 
R.  A.  Fetzer,  director  of  the 
scholarships. 

A  seines  of  intei*views  with  a 
salection  committee  headed  by 
John  Motley  Morehead  of  Rye, 
N.  Y.,  donor  of  the  $1,250  a  year 
scholarships,  will  be  held  at  the 
Morehead  Building  here. 

The  iVIorehead  Foundation  trus- 
tees  will    complete    the   selection ; 
program  which  has  been  going  on 
several    months    in   all    parts    of , 
Ballad  singer  Earle  Spicer  will    grams  have  gained  much  popular-   North  Carolina,  and  including  al- 
be   featured    in   Les   Petites   Musi-    ity  with  both  /acuity  and  students  |  so  preparatory  schools  in  the  South.  , 
cales  tonight  in  a  program  of  tra-    and  are  considered  ideal  for  a  gen-  j  Announcement   of   recipients    will 
ditional    English    ballads.    Shakes-    eral  college  audience.  |  be  made  March  6.  I 

peare,  Gilbert  and  Sullivan  selec-  •     ,    w      •  .  i      Of  the  54  finalists,  42  of  them 

tions    and    American    ballads    and        Although  musical,  h.s   mterpre- 
folk  sonos  tations  are  of  interest  t^  English 

Sj,    isored  bv  Graham  Memorial 

and  creative  writing  are  taught.      ,  .  „ .  ,    *u      i. 

*  *  lors.    Forty-six    of    the    boys    are 

V    .     _  .  ^  M.     .  ..u  i  natives    of    North     Carolina;    the 

York.  Spi^r  went  t>n  to  sing  with'    ^^^^  ^^^    ,^^^   Tennessee. 

many  of  the  leading  symphony  or- 1  Kentucky.     South   Carolina,     and 
ehestras     and     oratono     societies  |  vjrainia 

both   in  this  country  and  in  Eng- •      ^^   Morehead   Scholarships   are 
land.    He    ha^    made    aPPearances ,    ^„^j^^^ ^    ^  ^^^    ^^^^    3^. 

before   the   English    nobility,    t  h  e  I  ^^^^^^^.^   ^„^^^   .^   American   col- 
C.  vernor-General   of   Lanada.   and    j  ^„^    universities 


Musicale  To  Sponsor 
Ballad  Singer  Tonight 


Activities  Board,  the  Petite  Musi- 


Although  musical,  his  interpre-  *  j     .     •      ..u         vu      ■-•  u 

*^         are    students    in    the    public    high 

-,     .        .         u  11  J     oi.  •  i  schools    of    North    Carolina,    and 

Depts.  where  ballads,  Shakespeare    ..        4u       .o  i.     . 

__j   ^.         _,,.  ,  .         the  other  12  are  prep  school  sen- 

After  study  in  London  and  New 


Planning  To  Attend  Y  Conference 

Shown  above  .are  twelve  UNC  students  planning  to  aftend  Hie 
YM-YWCA  joint  spring  conference  af  Bricks  Friday-Sunday.  The 
conference,  planned  for  Carolina  students,  will  deal  with  the  topic 
"Conscience  and  Cenformitory."  Seated  are  Bob  Newton  and  Miss 
Kathy  LeGrande.  Standing  (left  to  right)  are  Doug  Cantrell,  Miss 
Phyllis  Kraft,  Tom  Long,  Miss  Jackie  Haithcock,  Miss  Ann  Morgan, 
Miss  Joyce  Bryant,  Paul  Carr,  Miss  "Flo  Davenport.  G.  C.  Pridgen 
and  Miss  Mary  Jean  Cravifford. 


y  Conference 
ToBeHefd 


The  7th  annujil  joint  YW-YMCA 
Student    Conference    will    be    held 


Ul.  S.  Loyalty 
Program  Hit 


started  giving  the  scholarships  six  j  gt  Brick's  Assembly  Grounds  near 

Rocky  Mount  next  .weekend. 


„,.      „  ,        .        ,  — =-"    Morehead 

at  the  White  House  and  for  three 

years  was  feature  soloist  on  one ,  .^^^  ^^^  Scholarship,  characie-. 
of  the  kading  NBC  Programs!  ,^^^^^^^jp  ^^^  ^  well-balanced 
with  Donald  Voorhees  and  his  or- ,  ^^^.^^^^    ^^^     .^^^^^^    .„    ^^^^^. 

cnestra.  ;  pyr^jpula  acti\ities,  including  ath- 

The  New  York  baritone  accom- !  jptics.     are     considered  '  in     the 
panics   himself   at   the   piano    and  i  scr?enin<'  processes, 
makes    brief    informal    comments  |      Trustees  of  the  Morehead  Foun- 

stressing     the     c  vntribution     folk    Nation  in  addition  to  John  Motley  |  Yale  Divinity  School, 
music  has  made  to  art  music  and  i  Morehead,  include  his  tfousin  John 


CLEVELAND  _  ( AP)  — ,  Former 
U.  S.  Sen.  rtarry  P.  Cain  said  yes- 
terday   this    nation's    loyalty    pro- 
gram   "will    lead  only   to    thought 
Theme  of  this  year's  conference  !  control   and     become     a     greater 


will  be  "A  Student  Faces  Con- 
science, C.onformity  and  Com- 
promise." and  the  featured  speaker 
will  be  Dr.  Jchn  0.  Nelson  of  the 


..      .   ,,  ,  1.  11  J  I      Six    discussion    groups    led    by 

the   influence  of  ballads   on  crea- ,  l.  Morehead  of  Charlotte.  Norman  l^udents  will  applv  the  conference 
''"'  ^"^^"«-  !  Cocke   of  Charlotte.-  Robert     M.  j  j^eme    to    1-planning    marriage. 

Tonight's   program  includes  the   Hanes  of  Winston-Salem  and  Hugh  j  y^^^^    ^^^    future    vocation.    2— 
traditional    English    ballads    "The  j  Chatham   of  Elkin. 


Rich  Old  Woman,"  "The  Hertford 

shire  Farmer"  and  "Lord  Randal." 

"Willow,   Willow'     from     Shakes 

peare's    "Othello,"      "The      Night 

mare  Song"  from  Gilbert  and  Sul 

livan's  "lolanthe,"  and  the  Amer 
j  ican   ballads   and   folksongs   "The  j  scrupulously  followed.  Morehead's 
cale  will  be  held     in     the     main  i  Lane  County  Bachelor"  and  "John  j  benefaction    coincides     with     the 
k>unge  of  Graham  Memorial  at  8 1  Henry."  {premises   of     the     "Great  Talent 

p.m. 


;  meeting  the  challenge  of  vocation 
In  Awarding    80    undergraduate  j  ^^  students.  3— relating  Chrlstiani- 
scholarships  at  Chapel  Hill  since 


EARLE   SPICER 

sings  ballads  tonight 


1951,  Mr.  Morehead's  wish  that 
the'  "tall  timber  of  the  future"  be 
selected  and  carefully  groomed 
for  places  of  leadership  has  been 


threat  than  any  from  outside  the 

country." 

Cain,  who  was  appointed  to  the 

President's    Subversive    Activities 

Control  Board  in  1952,  called  the 

loyalty  program  a  weapon  against 

those    who    might    disagree    with 

stated  policies  of  the  government. 

"As  now  constituted,  it  appears 

the  loyalty  program  is  considered 

necessary   because-  of   a   fear   the 

American     people     are     growing 

weak  and  those  who  argue  against 

j  stated  policites  are  un-American," 

he  told  a  city  club  forum  audience. 

,.-,..      r    M-        u»_  •     *v-  i      The  state  of  Washington  Repub- 
responsibility  of  c.t,2en.,h»p  in  the!     ^^^   ^^.^   ^^^^   ^^^^  ^^^^^  ^^^ 

world  community.  I  ^^  ^^^  ^^^.^^  ^^^  ^^^^  operating 

All     intorested     students     have  \  on  fear  rather  than  on  its  strength 


ty  to  real  life,  4 — seeking  and 
maintaining  popularity  in  social 
life,  5 — exploring  and  conquering 
prejudices   and   6 — accepting  the  j 


Spicer     has     been     called     the 
"most   re-engaged    singer   by   col-j 
leges   today"    as    is   evidenced   by ! 
his  1000  engagements  at  over  400 
colleges  and  universltl'^s.  His  pro- 

Football  Squad  Holds 
Duel  Scrimmage  Session 


No  admission  is  charged  for  the    Hunt"  which  now  prevails  in  ma- 1  been  urged  to  fill  out  registration  j  and  thus  has  not  been  acting  wise- 
program,  jor  universities  of  the  nation.        •  forms  in  the  Y-Court  lobby.  ly  as  it  might. 


LEGISLATURE  ROUNDUP 


Lawmakers  Find  Time  For  Fun,  Too 


Thursday  night's  legislative  ses-  Bill  McNaull  (SP)  called  the  cafe- 
football     practice  ^^^^  ^^^  ^^^  ^"^  away  the  most  ac- 1  teria  a  "sweat  shop."  Butch  Tom- 

tive  of  the  present  22nd  Assembly,  linson  asked  that  sources  of  "pro- 
Student  lawmakers  got  some  se-  j  duce"   be   inve^'ilgated  along  with 

!riou-'   business    accomplished   and  i  'wages     and    working     conditions. 


Streamlinad 
was  introduced  at  Carolina  today. 

Coach  Jim  Tatum  conducted  a 
double  header  scrimmage  in  cks- 
ing  the  second  week  of  off-season 
practice  for  the  Tar  He?ls.  Two 
scrimmages  went  on  simultane- 
ously with  assistant  coaches  in 
charge. 


still  found  time  to  have  an  inter- 
mission of  fun. 

Measures  passed  were: 

(1)  A  bill  establishing  a  commit- 
tee to  confer  with  Lenoir  Hall  of- 
Both  of  the  head-knocking  ses-  ficials  on  wages  and  working  con- 
sions  took  place  in  Kenan  Stadium  |  ditions  for  self-help  students, 
with  a  small  gallery  watching.  (2)  a  resolution  urging  that 
Cameram?n  made  movies  for  the  ifreshn^en  and  sophomore  hurse« 
t  aches  and  players  to  study  next  have  the  same  curfew  hours  as 
w«?ek.  !  other  University  coeds. 

I      (3)  A  bill  appropriating  $10  to 

Committee   Applications  j  the   Legislature   Rules   Committee 

Are  Due  By  Wednesday  \''' onJZel"^'!'l  SSn  urg- 

All  women  interested  in  bemg  j^g  j^^^  ^^^^^^^  government  or- 
ganizations refrain  from  overspend- 
ing their  budgets,  was  held  in  com- 
mittee. 


members  of  the  women's  Orienta-  i 
tion   Committee  have  been  asked 
Ur  fill    out   their   applications    in  j 
the  stud?nt   government  office  by 
Wednesday. 

Members     of     the     Orientation 
Committee 
counselors. 


Tomlinson  and  the  SP's  Al  Alphin 
were  Speaker  Sonny  Evans'  ap- 
pointments to  the  investigating 
committee  from  the  legislature. 

Bill  Baum.  ordinarily  the  serious 
and     forceful     Rules     Committee 


(1)  A  resolution  endorsing  Presi- •  ed  the  session  as  the  year'*-  most 
dent   Bob  Youngs  purchase  of  a .  active.  It  lasted  a  full  two  hours, 
trophy   for  Lennie  Rosenbluth  as  j  HUMOR 

an  expression  of  appreciation  from  j  The  session's  humorous  side  be- 
Ihe  student  body.  Special  orders  j  gan  when  Whit  Whitfield,  Student 
were  moved  for  immediate  passage  Party,  read  Lenoir  Hall's  Operat- 
of  this  meaj-ure.  \  ing  Procedures  in  conjunction  with 

At  this  point,  a  three-minute  re- 1  his  bill  calling  for  investigatioh  of 
cess  was  called  lo  allow  Introducer  ,  wages  and  working  conditions   in 
Sonny     Hallford.    SP    floorleader,   the  cafeteria, 
time  to  redress  his  measure.  The  procedures  .:,'tate,  in  part: 

Hallford's  measure  actually  call-      (1)  "We  wish  to  impress  upon  you 


chairman,  got  the  biggest  laugh  of  ..,.,..,..  i  »   w,...„   ;.-    ^ 

the  night  when  he  asked  McNauU  «d  for  appropriation  from  the  un-,  that  your  «'"P»7'"«"\^f  •^,  ^  J 
if  the  investigation  should  be  "ma- j«PPr«P"«^«<'  »^«'«"«^«-  Instead  tro- j  privilege  granted  by  the  Umver- 
ture  and  rational."  McNaull  hesi-   P^y  f"nds  are  to  come  from  Presi-   sity 

tantly  asked  Baum  to  repeat  his'^J^"^  Youngs  discretionary    fund..      (2)   "$1.90  worth   of  food  dai!> 

'  Hallford  quickly  corrected  his  mis-  \  .  .  .  may  not  be  shared  with  others, 
take.  j      (3)  "The  future  of  allowing  stu- 

(2)  The  new  student  government  j  dents  to  fill  these  jobs  instead  of 
Elecetionj  Law  which  will  be  vot- 1  regular  employees  depends  upon 
ed  upon  next  week.  j  your  showing  that  students  are  cap- 

able of  providing  services.  It'a-  a 


Reajon    for    its    being    pigeon 

holed,     according    to     Ways     and 

are     not     orientation    Means  Chairman  Al  Goldsmith,  was 

according     to     Jerry  i  that  a  law  is  currently  in  effect 


question.  "That  answers  my  ques- 
tion," Baum  said. 

Chairman  Baum,  University 
Party,  threw  in  a  serious  note  when 
he  emphasized  that  Lenoir's  start- 
ing salaries  were  comparable  to 
those  of  other  university  cafeterias. 
Such  a  study  must  be  "careful  and 
tactful,"  Baum  said. 

Rules  Committee  Chairman 
Baum  also  reminded  legislator.^' 
that  a  quiz  on  parliamentary  pro- 
cedure was  forthcoming  Feb.  28. 
The  quiz  wil  be  of  a  take-home 
type. 


Oppenheimer.     orientation     chair- ,  which  calls  for  prosecution  by  stu- 
man     for     1957-58.     Oppenheimer  j  dent  government's  Attorney  Gen- 
said     committee     memlS»er8     will  i  eral  of  organizations  which  spend  : 
draw    up    plans   for   the   program  |  more  tnan  their  legislative  appro- 1  NEW  MEASURES 
next  fall.  j  priation.  I     New  measures  introduced  were 


APPOINTMENTS 


wonderful  opportunity  for  a  man 


President  Young's  appointment :  to  secure  a  fine  education  m  a 
of  Jerry  Oppenheimer  as  Orienta-  [  manner  that  will  make  him  proud 
tion  Committee  chairman,  and  Rep-  j  for  the  rest  of  his  life, 
resentatives  Bill  Baum  and  John  (4)  "The  facilities  at  Lenoir  Hall 
Brooks  to  the  Constitutional  Revi- 1  are  completely  dedicated  to  the 
sional  C6mmittee  were  approved,     j  student  body  ..." 

Absent    from    the    session    were  |  HOWLS 
Herb  Greenblatt,   Ben  Peele,  Roy|      Reading     of     these     procedures 
Peele,  Miss  Val  von  Ammon  and  j  brought  howls  from  student  law- 
Mike  Weaver.  j  makers  and  a  stream  of  orators  to 

Speaker  Sonny  Elxans  commend- !  the  rostrunL 


Bevin  Says  lice  In  Trap 


Woman's   College 
Head  May  Be  Named 


A  replacement  tor  letirino   I'NC:  Chancellor  Robert  B. 
House  may  be  chosen  tomorrow. 

Consolidated  rniver.sity  President  William  C.  Friday  is 
e.xpected  to  recommend  his  choice  to  the  Executive  Commit- 
LONDON— (AP)— Aneurin  Bev- j  j^^  ^f  ^j^^  Board  of  Trustees  who  meet  tomorrow  morning  in 
an  said  last  night  President  Eisen-    j^ajeitrh  "* 

Fridays  recommendation,  if  approved  by  the  Fxecutive 

~ ♦  Committee,    will     then     be    voted 

I  upon  at  the  full  board  me3ting  to- 


hower's  stand  on  Israel  had  placed 
the  President  "in  a  trap  of  his 
own  devising  and  he  is  trying  to 
get  us  into  it  with  him." 


Bevan,  foreign  affairs  spokesman 
for  the  British  Labor  Party  and  a 
frequent  critic  of  U.  S.  foreign 
policy,  charged  in  an  article  for 
the  Sunday  newspaper  News  Of 
The  World  that  Eisenhower  has 
adopted  a  double  standard  in  the 
Middle  East. 


Hodges  Talks 
To  Tar  Heels 
In  Washington 

WASHINGTON  —  (AP)  —  North 


Referring  to  Eisenhower's  ap-  night  told  Tar  Heels  in  the  nation's 
parent  approval  of  U.  N.  pi%ssure  ^  capital  how  their  home  state  is 
to  persuade  Israel  to  withdraw  j  striving  for  a  bigger  economic  ful- 
from  Egypt,  Bevan  wrote:  1  ure. 

"It  is  as  much  the  duty  of  the ! 
United  Nations  to  put  a  clamp  on  j      "■  •  •  ^^    "^"^t    do    everything 

'  passible    in    every    phase    of    our 


morrow  at  2:30  p.m.  in  the  Hall 
of  the  House  of  Representatives. 
Chancellor  Robert  B.  House  will 
retire  from  his  position  in  June. 
A  trust 3e  regulation  put  into  ef- 
fect last  year  automatically  re- 
tires University  officials  when 
they  reach  age  65. 

^„„„,.     ,     „        „   .         o  .     o      I      There    is    a   possibility   a   char. 

Carolina's    Gov.    Hodges   Saturday      „,.  „    ,^„   „,  ,       nf ,, 

nicrhf  f.iH  T^.  Tx„^,.  ;!  .K„  „„.:„.,.„  '  ^cllor   for   Woman's     College     in 


Egypt  as  it  is  to  demand  from 
Israel  that  she  should  not  bene- 
fit from  an  act  of  aggression." 


economy    to    press   forward    to    a 


Greensboro  may  also  be  chosen. 
UNC  Graduate  School  Dean  W.  W. 
Pierson  has  been  acting  chancellor 
there  since  Edward  Kidder  Gjah- 
am  resigned  last  Jane. 

A      committee      appointed      by 
President  Friday  to  select  a  UNC 


more  productive,  more  prosperous    Chancellor      recently      made      its 


No  Compromise 


CAIRO — (AP)— Official  spokes- 
men torpedoed  last  night  any 
hopes  in  the  U.N.  that  Egypt  has 
offered  to  compromise  on  Uie  Gaza 
Strip  issue. 

The   hopes  rose  yesterday   when 


future  for  all."  Hodges  said   in  a  ' 
speech    prepared    for    delivery    to 
the  annual  banquet  of  North  Car-  { 
olina    Society   of  Washington. 

The  Governor  pointed  again  to 
the  state's  low  per  capita  income 
— 44th  in  the  nation — and  point- 
ed again  to  the  fact  that  41  per 
cent  of  it.s  population  is  under  21 


U.  N.  Secretary  General  I>ag  i  years  old  which  gives  it  a  lower  ! 
rtammarskjold  reported  Egypt  j  percentage  of  income  producers  | 
would    permit    the    U.N.    forces  to  ;  than  other  states.  » 

take  up  positions  in  the  strip  and  j  This,  he  said,  places  a  ''relative-  ' 
help  end  all  raids  fi-om  either  side.  ,  ]y   greater  burden   on   the   income  ■ 

Commenting  on  this,  Abdel  Kar-  j  producers"    in    meeting    the   costs  j 
er    Hatem.     information     director,  j  of   public   education.  I 

declared  Egypt  had  made  no  new  I      He  said  if  h?  had  to  pick  out  a  | 
agreement   for  additional   or  new  I  few  of  the  problems  facing  u.s  as  ' 
tasks   for   U.    N.  forces  since   the    we   look   ahead,   I  would   mention 
one  concluded  last  November.  as   always  public  education,   a  re-  . 

He  said  the  November  agreement    vamped  tax  structure  and  a  sound 
stipulated  that  the  U.  N.  forces's  j  tax     program  ...  I     would,     of  j 
task   "is   to  stop  the  fighting  and  i  course,    mention    agriculture,    not  i 
follow      the      aggressive      Israeli  |  only  beacuse    of    the    problems    it  ; 


forces  as  they  withdrew  to  points 
behind  the  Demarcation  line 
(Armistice  Line  of  1949)."  ' 


Underground  Mobilizing 

NEW  YORK— (AP)— Bela  Var- 
ga.  former  speaker  of  the  Hungar- 
ian Parliament,  said  yesterday  the 
Hungarian  underground  is  mobiliz- 
ing for  a  revolt  in  March  "more 
deadly  than  the  last." 

Monsignor  Varga,  who  heads  the 
anti-Communist  Hungarian  nat- 
ional Council,  made  his  remarks 
in  a  talk  and  interview  at  a  lunch- 
?on  ofthe  Woman's  Pr?ss  Club  of 
New  York  City. 

He  said  that  "among  Hungar- 
ians, the  password  is  'Muk,'  which 
means  'we  move  again  in  March.' 


is  facing,  but  in  North  Carolina 
we  must  do  w'hat  we  can  to  help 
save  our  changing  tobocco  econo- 
my and  to  be  ready  with  new  eco- 
nomic opportunities  for  those  who 
must  shift  to  other  endeavors." 


Daily  Tar  Heel 
To  Hold  Meets 

Two    orientation    meetings    for 

prospective  Daily  Tar  He?l  staffers 

have  been  planned  for  next  week. 

1  Managing     Editor     Charlie  *  Sloan 

announced  yesterday. 


recommendations  to  Friday  after 
screening  candidates  since  last 
August  when  the  committee  was 
appointed. 

Four   names   were   submitted   to 

Friday  by  the  committee,  headed 

j  by  R.  Mayne  Albright  of  Raleigh. 

1  Names     submitted,     according    to 

j  Albright,  included  members  o/  the 

UNC  faculty  and  others. 

There  has  been  strong  specula 
tion  William  B.  Aycock  of  tbf. 
Law  School  here  will  be  nominated 
by  Frid.iy  for  the  position.  It  is 
known  that  Friday  recently  drove 
to  the  University  of  Virginia  in 
Charlottesville  to  see  Aycock,  on 
leave  of  absence  there  from  UNC 
this  year. 

Shortly  afterwards.  Aycock  turn- 
ed up  in  Chapel  Hill. 

Other  UNC  faculty  members 
known  to  have  been  under  con- 
sideration by  the  selection  com- 
mittee include  Dr.  J.  L.  Godfrey, 
history;  Dr.  Alexander  Heard,  po- 
litical science;  Dr.  Paul  Guthrie, 
business  administration  and  Dr. 
William  H.  Poteat.  philosophy. 

It  is  not  known  who.  will  be 
named  chancellor  of  Woman's  Col- 
lege. The  WC  chancellor  selection 
committee,  chaired  by  Reid  May- 
nard  of  Burlington,  has  been  at 
work   since   last  summer. 


The  meetings  are  scheduled  for 

Tuesday   afternoon   at    1    and  Fri- 

"This  revolt,*'  he  said,  "will  be  |  day  afternoon  at  2.  Both  meetings 

moe  deadly  than  the  last.  It  will    will  be  held  in  Roland  Parker  1. 

mak   the  L'lst  stand  of  thre  Hun- 1      Approximately    the     same     ma- 

garians    for     their     rightfully-de-  j  terial     will     be     covered  in  both 

served  freedom."  j  meetings.      Two      sessions      were 

He    did    not   elaborate   further,    j  scheduled    so    that    students    with 

Monsignor  Varga    was    the    last  |  lab  conflicts  could  attend  the  al- 

speaker   of   the    Hungarian    Parli-  j  ternate   meeting. 

ment  before  the  Communists  took        During   the   meeting   The    Daily 

control  in  Hungary     after     World  '  Tar   Heel's   organization,    deadline 


War  II. 


schedule  and  style  will  be  dis- 
cussed. According  to  Sloan  there 
are  openings  for  new  people  in 
all  departments  of  the  paper. 


Eastland  To  Investigate 

WASHINGTON— (AP)  —  Sen. 
Eastland  (D-Miss)  said  yesterday  a 
"disguieting  flow  of  anonymously 
owned    foreign   capital     into     the 

United    States"    will    be    the    sub-  k«„-„„;„„  «< 

ject   of  a   major  investigation   by  |  the   paper  since  the  beginning  of, 

this  Senate  Internal  Security  Sub- 
committee. 

Eastland  said  the  inquiry  may 
show  a  "back  door  of  financial 
manipulation    by   which      an     im- 


Trustee  Women 
Will  Arrive 
Here  Tomorrow 

The  thirteen  women  members 
of  the  UNC  Board  of  Trustees  will 
get  a  close-up  of  campus  life  to- 
morrow and  Tuesday  when  they 
visit  Chapel  Hill. 

Miss  Katherine  Kennedy  Car- 
michael  recently  announced  the 
trustees  will  arrive  late  tomorrow 
afternoon  following  the  trustees' 
meeting  in  Raleigh.  They  will  stay 
on  the  campus  overnight  and  spend 
Tuesday  ob.serving  various  phases 
of  student  life. 

The  thirteen  are  Mrs.  R.  S. 
Ferguson,  Taylorsville;  Mrs.  Al- 
bert  H.  Lathrop.   Asheville;   Mrs. 


This  meeting  is  primarily  for  j  >tary  Mclver  Stanford.  Chapel 
students  who  have  not  worked  on  j  Hill;  Mrs.  May  L  Tomlinson,  High 
The  Daily  Tar  Heel  before  and  |  Point;  Mrs.  Ed  M.  Anderson.  West 
those  who   have      not   worked    on  i  Jefferson;  Mrs.  Nancy  Hall  (3ope- 

land.  Murfreesboro;  Mrs.  P.  P. 
the  fall  semester.  McCain.    Red    Springs;   Mrs.   J.   B. 

Sloan  said  this  is  not  a  regular  :  Kitrell.  Greenville;  Mrs.  Grace  Tay- 


staff   meeting. 


friendly  foreign  power  could 
quietyl  take  over  our  vital  in- 
dustries." 

"As  a  matter  of  fact,"  he  contin- 
ued in  a  prepared  statement,  "it 
is  not  at  all  unreasonable  to  as- 
sume that  heavy  inroads  of  such 

(See  WORLD  NEWS.  Page  3) 


Local  Restaurant  Given 
'A'  Rating  Instead  Of  'B' 

It  was  incorrectly  reported  Sat- 
urday that  Michael's  Famous  Foods 
restaurant  was  recently  give  a 
"B"  rating  by  the  District  Health 
Dept.  The  restaurant  was  given  an 
"A"    rating  several  days  ago. 


lor  Rodenbough,  Walnut  Cove; 
Mrs.  C.  W.  Tillett,  Charlotte;  Mrs. 
Oscar  Barker.  Durham:  Mrs.  Me- 
bane  H.  Bufgwyn.  Jackson;  and 
Mrs.  ^.  C.  Parker.  Albermarle. 

Sixty-^ve  women  students  have 
been  selected  to  act  as  h3stesse.= 
to  the  visitors,  who  will  be  guests 
of  the  women's  dormitories  dur- 
ing  their   stay. 

Following  dinner  at  Spencer 
(See  TRUSTEES.   Page   3) 


^A6i  rwo 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


SUNDAY,  FEBRUARY  24,  1957 


REVIEW: 

CAMPUS 

STATE 

WORLD 


World: 
The  Cards 
In 


UNC  CHEMIST  GETS 


$7,500,  Banked  For  The  Future 


PIYASENA  GANEWATTE 

...fcants  Americans  in  Cosmopolitan  Club 

Personality:   Sena' 
Is  Gifted  Many  Ways 

Jackie  Haithcock 

About  the  bigso.t  mcmcnt  in  Piyastna  Ganewattp's  life  is  just 
arqpnd  the  comer.  He's  going  to  be  a  father.  The  only  trouble  is 
that  his  baby,  scheduled  to  arrive  any  day  now,  will  be  clear  on 
the  other  side  of  the  world  in  Geylon. 

Piyasena  Gancwatte  is  a  foreign  student  from  the  island  of 
Ceylon.  He  is  studying  for  his  masters  degree  here  in  the  School 
of  Public  Health.  A  graduate  of 


the  University  of  Ceylon,  Piya- 
sena came  to  this  country  last 
August.  He  left  behind  him  hii 
wife  of  several  months,  his  home 
and  his  people. 

Piyasena.  known  as  "Sena", 
divides  most  of  his  time  in  Chap- 
el Hill  between  the  School  of 
Public  Health  and  the  Cosmopoli- 
tan Club,  of  which  he  is  the  presi- 
dent But  various  interests  find 
him  working  in  the  "Y"  on  the 
International  Relations  committee, 
supporting  the  number  one  bas- 
ketball team  in  the  nation  and 
getting  to  know  the  members  of 
the  Chapel  Hill  community. 

Sena  is  a  citizen  of  the  Ceylon 
state  which  gained  its  indepen- 
dence from  Great  Britain  only 
about  seven  years  ago.  His  work 
here  is  a  preparation  for  a  part 
in  the  Public  Health  Service  of 
Ceylon. 

St%»  feels  that  one  of  the 
greatest  needs  of  his  country 
is  for  sanitation  and  preven- 
tion of  disease.  "It  is  hard,"  he 
remarked,  "because  the  people 
in  my  country  are  so  supersti- 
tious about  health  problems 
and  their  remedies." 

It  was  his  interest  in  the  health 
problems  of  his  country  that  led 
Piyasena  to  the  United  States. 
The  World  Health  Organization 
sent  an  advisor  to  his  country  last 
year  to  help  c-upervise  the  health 
program.  Sena  was  selected  to 
take  his  place  and  to  head  the 
ifeaith  Education  subdivision  of 
the  Public  Health  Service.  Such 
a  responsibility  required  further 
training.  The  WHO  fulfilled  such 
a  need  by  granting  Sena  a  one- 
year  scholarship  to  study  in  thii 
country. 

For  a  young  farm-reared  man 
whose  dreams  had  supposedly 
come  true  by  his  being  able  to 
attend  the  one  university  in  his 
native  land,  the  opportunity  to 
itudy  abroad  was  almost  unbe- 
lievable. It  would  give  him  a 
chance  to  further  his  career  in- 


terests and  to  gain  experience  in 
the  field  of  international  rela- 
tions. 

This  latter  interest  has  been 
quite  evident  in  Sena's  work  in 
the  Cosmopolitan  Club.  He  finds 
it  particularly  interesting  because 
around  20  or  30  countries  are  rep- 
resented within  its  membership. 
This  means,  according  to  Piya- 
sena, that  nearly  all  the  major 
religion*  and  customs  of  the 
world  are  represented  in  this  one 
organization. 

His  only  disappointment  in  the 
club  has  been,  however,  that  more 
American  students,  do  not  take 
part.-  A  very  few  of  the  club's  200 
members  are  students  of  this 
country.  "I  think  American  stu- 
dents are  missing  a  great  oppor- 
tunity by  not  belonging  to  the 
club,"  Piyasena  remarked. 

His  interestj  in  international 
relations  have  led  to  Sena's  form- 
ing definite  opinions  about  the 
world  situation/  today.  "I  think 
one  of  the  greatest  things  taking 
place  in  the  world  today,'"  he  said, 
■  is  the  rising  of  the  Africo-Asian 
block  as  a  neutral  force." 

He  does  not  feel  that  Commun- 
ism will  take  over  many  of  these 
Asian  countries  because  'religion 
ha.,  such  a  strong  hold  on  the 
people."  Sena  hopes  the  United 
States  will  be  able  to  understand 
the  problems  of  the  new  Asian 
countries.  Helping  thcnl  will 
thwart  the  influence  of  Commun- 
ism there,  he  feels. 

Sena  likes  the  United  States, 
and  particularly  Chapel  Hill, 
very  much.  He  feels  that  he  has 
made  friendships  here  that  will 
lajt  a  very  long  tinie.  "I  like 
Chapel  Hill  very  much,""  he  said. 
"I  especially  like  the  informali- 
ty. You  don't  feel  lonely  or  cut- 
off. Everyone  says  hi"  to  you  no 
matter  where  you  are." 

•  Chapel  Hill  i  a  verj'  wonder 
ful  plate,'  Piyasena  continued. 
"Something  very  strange  seem.s  to 
link  the  people  together— the  in- 
tellectual atrto.cphere,  I  suppose.  " 


The  official  student  publication  of  the  Publications  Board  of  the 
University  of  North  Carolina,  where  it  is  published  daily  except  Mon- 
day and  examination  and  vacation  periods  and  summer  terms.  EIntered 
as  second  class  matter  in  the  post  office  at  Chapel  Hill.  N.  C,  under 
the  act  of  March  8,  1870.  Subscriptior  rates:  Mailed,  $4  a  year.  $2.50 
per  semester;  delivered,  $6  a  year,  $3.50  a  semester. 


Editor 


FRED  POWLEDGE 


Managing  Editor 


CHARLIE  SLOaN 


Night  News  Editor  __ 


Charlie  Sloan 


Night  Editor 
.  Proof  Reader 


Manfey  Springs 
L  Guy  Ellis 


The  Gaza  strip,  a  small,  and. 
seemingly  unimportant  little  plot 
of  land  bordering  on  the  Medi- 
terranean, betonging  to  Egypt 
and  held  by  Israel,  was  again  the 
focal  ppint  of  the  world's  atten- 
tion last  week.  The  situation  was 
slowly  approaching  the  precar* 
ious  stage — some  thought  it  well 
past. 

In  the  previous  week,  the  UJiit- 
ed  States,  being  in  the  "demeur- 
er  tenace."  played  the  Queen  in- 
stead of   the  Ace,   and   lost  the- 
trick. 

Mopday,  the  President  assert- 
ed that  we  could  not  and  -would 
not  grant  Israel  any  more  con- 
cessions. 

Tuesday,  while  Ike  emplaned 
for  Washington  and  conferences 
with  Dulles  and  a  bi-partisan 
Senate  group.  Israel's  Premier 
Ben-Gurrcn  released  a  statement 
saying  Israel  would  rather  go  to 
war  again  than  lose  use  of  the 
vital  .\qaba  Gulf. 

Wednesday  nisht.  in  a  speech 
t3  the  nation  and  the  world,  the 
Prp»iid?nl  said  the  United  States 
and  the  United  Xrtions  had  no 
other  alternative  but  to  sanc- 
tion the  use  of  force  in  removing 
the  Israelis  from  the  Gaza  strip 
if  they  persisted  in  remaining 
there  and  flagrantly  disobeying 
the  U.  N.  resolutions. 

Ben-Gurion  was  angered,  not 
frightened,  l>y  this  proclema- 
tion,  and  again  refuted  to 
budge. 

Another  week  of  tension  came 
to  an  even  more  hazardous  end- 
ing wih  Israel  flouting  all.  and 
the  U.  S.  still  holding  the  all- 
powerful  Ace,  but  about  to  swal- 
low it. 

Britain  and  Greece  again  ex- 
changed accusations  concerning 
the  other  touchy  situation  in  the 
Mediterranean.  Cyprus.  Both 
countries  gave  their  cases  to 
the  UN. 

4e  «  lit 

On  the  continent,  six  European 
Premiers — those  of  France,  Bel- 
gium, Holland.  West  Germany, 
the  Netherlands  and  Luxem- 
bourg— made  possibly  the  great- 
est step  toward  European  unity 
in  the  past  500  years.  Although 
many  particulars  were  yet  to  be 
ironed  out,  they  tentatively 
agreed  to  merge  into  a  single, 
common,  tariff-free  market  over 
a  i>eri'od  of  the  next  12  years, 
and  laid  the  groundwork  for  the 
formation  of  a  European  Atomic 
Energy  Commission  in  which 
the  six  nations  would  pool  their 
resources. 


Bill  Horner 

The  prospects  of  a  new  car 
sound  mighty  good  to  Dr.  Char- 
les N.  Reilley.  who  has  recently 
received  a  $7,500  grant  from 
Research  Corp.,  a  foundation  for 
the  advancement  of  scientific  in- 
vestigation. "But  I  won't  use  it 
for  that.  There  are  too  many 
ways  to  use  the  money  for 
furthering  the  development  of 
new  ideas  and  concepts  in  ana- 
lytical chemistry,  which  is  my 
field,"  he  says. 

Reilley.  a  graduate  jf  the  Car- 
olina undergraduate  school  who 
received  hLs  Ph.D.  in  chemistry 
from  Princeton,  was  born  in 
Charlotte.  Now  31.  the  short, 
stocky  associate  professor  plans 
to  stay  at  Carolina  to  further  his 
exploratory  research  in  fields,  as 
he  puts  if  "where  anything  can 
haopen." 

His  most  recent  wrork  has  been 


with  a  chemical  called  EDTA, 
and  because  of  hi*  influence,  a 
well-known  chemical  ntanufact- 
uring  company  is  now  produc- 
ing this  vital  substance  which 
heretofore  has  been  little 
knoWn. 

Reilley  became  knpwn  to  other 
scientists  throughout  the  coun- 
try by  some  25  papers  he  pub- 
lished on  various  subjects,  all 
of  them  having  to  do  with  ana- 
Ijtioal  chemistry.  ''The  Research 
Corporation  must  have  found 
out  about  my  work  from  these 
scientists,  because  I  was  sure  sur- 
prised to  hear  about  it,"  says 
R3illey. 

Reilley  will  be  able  to  do  any- 
thing he  wants  with  the  money 
without  having  to  account  for  the 
way  he  spends  it.  He  says  he 
might  use  some  of  it  to  briftg 
oth?r  chemists  here  to  work  with 
him.    or   even    finance    his    own 


trips  to  work  with  others. 

"This  is  one  of  the  best  ways 
to  keep  up  with  the  times,"  says 
Reilley.  "Of  course,  I  could  al- 
ways use  it  to  help  pay  the  grad- 
uate students  who  help  me  dur- 
ing the  summer,  or  I  might 
even  buy  some  new  equipment 
with  it." 

It  was  learned  from  Reilley 
that  upon  graduating  from  un- 
dergraduate school*  at  Carolina, 
he  taught  at  Queens  College  in 
Charlotte  for  a  short  time  be- 
fore deciding  to  further  his  edu- 
cation at.  Princeton.  At  Prince- 
ton Graduate  School.  Reilley 
worked  under  the  famous  author- 
ity on  analytical  chemistry,  Dr. 
N.  H.  Furman,  and  then  when 
he  received  his  Ph.D.,  he  re- 
turned to  Carolina  to  carry  on 
his  research. 

Besides  the  graduate  students 
helping   him   here,    his    partner 


in  research  is  Dr.  Rudolph  W. 
Schmid  of  Switzerland,  an  im- 
portant analyst  in  the  field  of 
metallurgy.  Reilley,  a  born 
Southerner,  doesn't  like  to  think 
of  going  North,  and  expects  to 
stay  here  few  some  time. 

By  staying  here  he  can  carry 
on  "uninhibited"  research,  which 
means  he  can  experiment  on 
anything  he  wants  to.  "All  that 
the  people  who  gave  me  the 
grant  want  me  to  do  is  to  work 
on  new  ideas  and  developments, 
the  outcomes  of  which  won't  be 
sure-fire  bets.  I'm  supposed  to 
take  wild  guesses  and  try  to  fol- 
low these  through  to  obtain  the 
answers,"  say  Reilley. 

Reilley  obviously  likes  this 
kind  of  work,  and  shows  great 
amounts  of  creativeness  in  both 
his  work  and  in  his  teaching,  as 
his  freshmen  and  sophomore 
students  will  allow. 


Election 

Laws  Need 

Revision 


Photogrepher  Hal  Henderson  was  walking  in  from  of  Caldwell 
Hall  the  other  day  when  he  saw  and  recorded  this  scene.  The  sun 
was  getting  ready  to  set  in  the  direction  of  Hill  Hall,  and  Henderson 


The  Campus  At  Sunset  —  Sign  Of  Spring 

noted  that  it  had  moved  a  little  bit  more  toward  the  north.  But  it 
wasn't  spring  last  week;  students  shivered  a  little,  and  they  still 
wore  long  coats.  But  there  was  promise  .  .  . 


The  State: 

Three  Groups 

In  Action 


The   Campus:    Housing 
Started,   Worry   At 


Many  predicted  that  this  was  the 
beginning  of  an  economic  Refor- 
^nation  for  Europe. 

In  the  U.  S.,  the  deck  strike 
ceme  to  an  end  for  45,000  work- 
ers from  M»in«  to  Virginia, 
and  they  made  plefw  to  get 
back  on  ttie  job  by  Saturday 
morning. 

Val  Peterson,  retiring  head  of 
the  Civil  Defense,  startled  Amer- 
icans by  telling  them  that  one 
half  of  our  170  million  popu* 
lation  would  most  likely  be  kill- 
ed in  the  event  of  an  atomic  at- 
tack, even  with  protective  shel- 
ters. 


By  Charley  Sloan 

While  the  state  legislature  con- 
tinued to  introduce  and  discuss 
new  bills  two  other  organizations 
made  some  changes  of  their  own. 

In  York  County  tbe  Klu  Klux 
Klan  started  something  new.  In 
connection  with  a  new  youth 
drive  the  Klan  has  set  its  mini- 
mum age  limit  at  18,  and.  ac- 
cording to  a  story  in  The  Rock 
Hill  Herald,  "They  don't  have 
to  be  18.  Just  tell  them  to  say 
they're  18  when  they  fill  out 
their  applications." 

At  the  other  extreme  of  the 
social  reform  scale  the  NAACP 
finally  complied  with  North  Car- 
olina's foreign  corporation  law. 

But  Secretary  of  State  Thad- 
£ure  said  it  had  not  registered 
as  a  group  seeking  to  influence 
public  opinion  or  legislation  as 
is  required  by  another  state 
law. 


By  Peg  Humphrey 

The  housing  situation  in  Vic- 
tory Village  and  the  lack  of  funds 
for  UNC's  Wilson  Library  were 
the  two  major  issues  over  which 
students  have  shown  consider- 
able concern  during  the  past 
week. 

Petitions  to  get  the  N.  C.  Gen- 
eral Assembly  to  pass  legislation 
enabling  the  University  to  bor- 
row money  to  finance  housing 
units  are  now  in  circulation.  Mrs. 
John  Crittenden  and  Mrs.  Rob- 
ert Griffin,  Victory  Village  wives 
who  are  heading  the  petitioning 
group,  ••irculated  the  petitions 
until  Ftiday.  Then  they  brought 
the  matter  to  the  attention  of  the 
General    Assembly. 

The  State  Insurance  Dept.  in 
Raleigh  recommended  the  12  two- 
story  units  in  Victory  Village  be 
discontinued  "in  the  immediate 
future"  because  of  their  "haz- 
ardous" nature.  According  to  an 
announcement    by    UNC    Chan- 


cellor Robert  B.  House  on  Mon- 
day, these  units  would  be  discon- 
tinued after  the  current  semes- 
ter. Late^  in  the  week  the  chan- 
cellor announced  they  would  con- 
tinue to  be  used  until  next  fall 
and  would  be  safe  for  occupan- 
cy because  heating  would  not  be 
necessary  during  the  summer 
months. 

• 


Petitions 
Library 

Insufficient  facilities  of  the  li 
brary  were  enumerated  by  Dr. 
Andrew  Horn,  retiring  UNC  li- 
brarian, when  he  addressed  the 
Dialectic  Senate  at  Lenoir  Hall 
Monday  nl|ht.  The  library's  prob- 
lems will  be  "doubled  by  the 
90  per  cent  increase  of  eligible 
college  students  by  1970,"  Horn 
said. 

• 


Television  Roundup;  Omnibus 
Running  On  Its  Last  Legs? 

Anthony  Wolff 


It  is  rapidly  becoming  more 
than  a  suspicion  among  televis- 
ion forecasters  that  Omnibus, 
the  Ford-Foundation-backed  cul- 
tural program,  is  in  its  last  sea- 
son. The  Foundation's  Radio-TV 
workshop,  which  produces  the 
show,  is  due  to  come  up  before 
the    organization's    trustees   next 


Pogo 


By  Walt  Kelly 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL  WEEK  IN  REVIEW 

Staff  Writers  -.  Peg  Humphrey,  Frank  Crowther,"  Sill  Horner, 

Anthony  Wolff,  Jackie  Haithcock,  Charlie  Sloan,  Neil  Ba^, 


WgH,,  we  PINT 


HB  0IT  Mg  OH  rne 


rw.  dOTTA  SgPOKT  THIS  •© 

Or-'VWATKIHPO^A 
eOOWAeTHAT'  — - 
^rrv«»A 


]  IN  A  9£?0m  ro/rMC50FN0fiMAuy 


month  for  its  annual  budgetary 
allotment:  there  is  some  serious 
doubt  as  to  whether  the  Work- 
shop is  even  on  the  agenda.  This 
is  an  insulting  error  of  omission, 
if  it  is  true,  for  it  means  that 
Omnibus  will  be  scratched  with- 
out even  tiie  dubious  honor  of  a 
hearing. 

And  yet  I  find  it  hard  to  be- 
lieve that  Omnibus  is  about  to 
lose  the  support  of  the  Ford 
grant.  Perhaps  I  am  just  unwill- 
ing to  accept  what  has  already 
become  an  obvious  fact  in  the 
minds  of  those  far  more  sophist- 
icated than  I. 

I  could  accept  my  disillusion- 
ment as  a  bit  of  enlightenment, 
were  it  not  for  the  fact  that 
there  is  no  apparent  cause  for 
Omnibus  to  be  yanked.  For  one 
thing,  the  show  costs  the  Ford 
Foundation  next  to  nothing  in 
terms  of  today's  astronomical 
television  budgets.  Of  the  one 
and  three-quarter  million  dollars 
the  Foundations  has  allocated  to 
the  Workshop  each  year  since 
1952,  all  but  about  six  hundred 
thousand  has  been  repaid  by  the 
sponsors. 

Nor  has  the  program's  quality 
deteriorated  to  the  point  where 
it  is  no  longer  worthwhile.  In 
fact,  the  Omnibus  production  of 
Oedipus  Rex  only  weeks  ago  was 
perhaps  its  most  sterling  achieve- 
ment. 

If  no  one  can  see  it  their 
duty  to  sponsor  the  program, 
then  the  television  industry,  and 
the  mass  media  in  general,  are 
in  for  a  sad  future.  I  have  a 
feeling — call  it  a  prayer  if  you 
will— that  this  future,  of  which 
the  eventual  fate  of  Omnibus 
might  well  be  a  symbol,  will  not 
be  quite  so  devoid  ^of  promise: 


Neil  Bass 

The  student  Legislature  will 
approve  or  reject  Thursday  night 
an  Elections  Law  which  prohib- 
its run-offs  except  in  specified 
cases. 

Exceptions  specified  in  the  new 
law  are: 

(1)  When  the  vote  for  two 
candidates  vieing  for  the  same 
office  ends  in  an  absolute  tie. 

(2)  When  a  candidate  for 
either  of  the  four  major  campus- 
wide  offices  fails  to  secure  a  ma- 
jority vote. 

The  principle  behind  tliis  one 
major  change  in  the  new  Elec- 
tions Law  is  simple: 

Except  for  the  four  big  cam- 
pus-wide offices,  a  plurality 
vote — not  an  over-half,  majority 
vote — will  be  sufficient  to  ele^t 
student  government    officials. 

And  since  there  are  seldom 
more  than  two  candidates  run- 
ning for  each  of  the  four  big  of- 
fices, and  absolute  tie  votes  for 
other  offices  are  improbable, 
runs-offs  in  the  future  will  be 
as  scarce  as  coaches  not  press- 
ui^d  by  alumni  to  win  fit  all 
costs. 

Folks  who  remember  the  two 
run-offs  last  fall  should  laud 
this  new  proposal. 

Under  the  old  multi-run-off 
plan,  percentages  of  student  vote 
was  inversely  proportional  to 
the  number  of  elections  held. 

In  the  end,  this  meant  that  30 
per  cent  of  the  student  body  or 
less  was  electing  important  stu- 
dent government  officials;  Elec- 
tions Board  members  had  the 
course;  students  got  an  overdos- 
age of  the  ballot  box  privilege 
crammed  down  their  throats. 

It  would  certainly  appear  an 
abbreviating  advantage  —  an  ad- 
vantage which  would  expedite — 
to  eliminate  run-offs.  It  would 
make  for  a  more  efficiently  run 
election.  Consequfently,  legisla- 
tors should,  we  feel,  stainp  ap^ 
proval  on  the  new  law. 

The  plurality  electoral  system' 
is  long  overdue. 
OTHER  CHANGES 

Other  more  minor  changes  in 
the  Elections  Law«are: 

(1)  A  provision  which  strikes 
established  opening  and  closing 
hours  for  polls  and  leaves  times 
to  be  established  at  the  descre* 
tion  of  the  Elections  Board. 

(2)  A  provision  which  will 
mean  that  dormitory  presidents 
will  ballot  boxes  in  their  dorm" 
throughout  the  school  year.  Elec- 
tions Board  members  will  pick 
up  the  ballots  after  polls  are 
closed  and  pack  them  off  in  en- 
velopes. But  the  balot  box  will 
remain  in  the  dorm  all  year. 

(3)  A  procedure  establishing 
a  uniform  system  of  registering 
voters   in   town   districts. 

This  provision  requires  that 
town  district  voters  fill  out  in- 
dex cards  with  their  name  and 
residence,  and  that  these  cards 
be  filed  alphebetically  by  the 
poll  tender. 

This  method  of  systemizing 
town  voters  is  an  invaluable  ad- 
dition to  the  Elections  Law. 
Town  districts  are  sprawling  and 
large.  Thus  much  confusion  nat- 
urally arises  as  to  whether  multi- 
tudinous voters  are  X-ing  in  their 
correct  district. 

Although  a  transient  student 
population  can't  be  indexed  for 
permanent  reference,  this  in- 
dex system  should  greatly  help 
the  Elections  Board  in  their  at- 
tempt to  supervise  an  efficient 
and  fair  election. 

Such  required  index  cards 
w^uld  stipulate  the  class  in  which 
the  .student  was  enrolled.  Tnus 
it  would  be  virtually  assured 
that  only  students  enrolled  in 
the  junior  class  would  vote  for 
junior  officers  and  so  on  down 
the  line. 

Dorm  residents,  in  a  much 
more  compact  unit,  are  easily 
kept  in  their  proper  polling  dis- 
trict. Tlris  shonW-meke  it  much 
easier  to  regulate  town  resi- 
dents' voting. 
GOOD  CHANCE? 

The  provision  which  would 
leave  poll  opening  and  closing 
hours  solely  at  the  Elections 
Board's  discretion  is  a  debat- 
able one. 

As  board  member  Bill  Redding 
said,  students  might  not  vote  at 
eight  o'clock  in  the  morning.  So, 
we  say  move  poll  opening  hours 
up  to  nine  o'clock.  Maybe  even 
set  them  from  nine  in  1h<  morn- 
ing until  five  in  the  afternoon 
instead  of  eight  to  six  as  the 
law    no^'    reads 


SUNDA1 


Fif 
M. 

Dear 
School  o| 
the  namj 
North  ci 
List  an( 
fall  semi 

TwentI 
on   the 
average 
mainingj 
Dean's 
90  or 

Honoi 
Charles 
Frankiii 
Ronald 
Margare 
Kennetl 
Huckabj 
net.  \s\ 
Karri  ng< 
Gordon 


(Cc 

influent 
made." 

The 
held  sol 
ter.   It 
about  Z\ 
Germ  a  r 
dollars, 
in  19451 
ed  in. 
made 
them. 

Hydi 

BERF 
top  se<; 
among 
Americ^ 
to  harr 
peaceful 

Sir  c\ 
Prize  wj 
structivl 
plete   i| 


WHi 
IN  A 


will 

night 

jrohib- 

:ified 


le  new 

two 
same 
Ue. 

^te    for 

|anipus- 

a  ma- 


ns one 
Elec- 

|g  cam- 
lurality 
lajority 
lo  ele^t 
Hals, 
seldom 
es   run- 
big  of- 
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jbable, 
|will    be 
press- 
^t    all 

Ihe  two 
laud 

l-run-off 

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i>nal     to 

add. 

I  that  30 

Dody  or 

jnt   stu- 

Elec- 

ad     the 

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rivilege 

>ats. 

&ar   an 

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lite— 

would 

^tly  run 

legisla- 

^mp  ap- 

systeni 


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strikes 
closing 
PS  times 
descrc 
rd. 

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tir  dorm 
tar.  Elec- 
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SUNDAY,  FEBRUARY  24.  1957 


TMt  DAILY  TAR  HIlL 


PAGE  T 


Fifty-Four   Pharmacy 
Men  On  Honor  Lists 


Dean  E.  A.  Brecht  of  the  UNC 
School  of  Pharmacy  has  announced 
the  names  of  54  students,  aH  from 
North  Carolina,  making  the  Dean's 
List  and  the  Honor  Roll  for  the 
fall  semester,  1956-57. 

Twenty-nine  students  are  listed 
on  the  Honor  RcU.  requiring  an 
average  of  92.5  or  better.  The  re- 
maining 25  are  named  to  the 
Dean's  List,  having  an  average  or 
90  or  better. 

Honor  Roll  members  include 
Charles  Peter  Copses  and  Dennis 
Franklin  Troutman,  Charlotte; 
Ronald  Lowery  Austell  and  Nancy 
Margaret  Faison,  Shel1)y;  Donald 
Kenneth  Chapman,  B>Ton  Taylor 
Huckaby  and  James  Lewis  Inabi- 
net,  Winston-Salem;  Gerald  K. 
Harrington,  John  Michael  Lazarus, 
Gordon  Lee  O'Briant,  Sanford. 


World  News 

{Cwiiinwed.   fram    Paffe    1) 

have     already     been 


influence 
made." 


The  subcommittee  already  has 
held  some  hearings  on  the  mat- 
ter. It  has  heard  allegations  that 
about  350  million  dollars  worth  of 
German   Bonds,   payable  in   U.   S. 


Joseph  Stevens  Ferrell  and  Paul 
Augustus  Stevenson,  Elizabeth 
City;  Robert  Ellis  Bishop,  Kinston; 
James  Center  Bolton,  Rich  Square; 
John  Robert  Bowers,  Bethel;  Ship- 
ley Weaver  Bumgardner,  West 
Jefferson;  Virgilia  Carswell,  Spring 
Lake;  David  Ramsey  Davis  Jr., 
Williamston. 

William  L.  Marsh,  Marshville; 
Bemie  Joe  Nance,  Salisbury; 
James  Miller  Prevo,  Thomasville; 
Renus  Edgar  Rich,  Harmony;  Stev- 
en Burgin  Roberts,  Marshall;  Ed- 
ward L.  Smithwick,  Morehead 
City;  LuRuth  Sutton,  Raleigh; 
Franklin  E.  Wells,  Roseboro;  Ho- 
bart  Whatiey,  Beulaville;  Druie 
Daniel  Winstead.  Elm  City;  and 
Thomas  Marian  Yost,  Weavervill*. 

.Named  to  the  Dean's  List  also 
were  James  E.  Arena.  Durham;  Al- 
pheus  W.  Benthall,  Ahoskie;  Joe 
F.  Browning,  Graham;  Vaughn  D. 
Bryson,  Gastonia;  Robert  D.  But- 
ler. Morganton;  Donald  K.  Carter. 
Dallas;  Edith  A.  Caviness,  Lilling- 
ton;  Carl  V.  Christenisen  and 
Marian  B.  McCurdy.  Raleigh; 
Charles  T.  Dixon,  Winston-Salem; 
Marshall  W.  Dutton  and  James  M. 
Miller,  Hickorj-;  Fred  T.  Fayed  and 
James  T.  Ingram.  Roanoke  Rapids. 

Robert  E.  Fleming.  Rocky  Mount; 
William  R.  Griffin,  Old  Fort;  Lo- 
retta  John.son,  Harrells;  Geraldine 


dollars,  disappeared  from  Berlin 
in  1945  when  the  Russians  march-  \  Keenum,  Hazelwood;  Billy  W.  La- 
ed  in,  and  that  efforts  have  been  j  nier,  Buie's  Creek;  Kenneth  L. 
made    recently    to   cash    some   of '  La  wing,  Conover;  Fred  O.' Phifer, 


them. 


Hydrogen  Conference      j 

BERKELEY,  CALIF.  —  U?i  —  A'. 
top  secret  four  day  conference ' 
among  more  than  400  British  and  | 
American  scientis  on  possible  ways  I 
to  harness  Hydrogen  energy  fM  \ 
peaceful  purposes  ended  yesterday  j 

Sir  George  T.  Thomson,  a  Nobel  j 
Prize  winner,  called  the  session  in- ! 
structive.  He  said  there  was  a  com-  ■ 
plete   interchange   of  information. 


Marshville:  Mary  S.  Cheek.  Yad- 
kin ville;  William  P.  Shrtemaker, 
Thomasville;  Alfred  G.  Smith. 
Elizabethtown;  and  Paul  A.  White- 
hur.st.   Murfreesboro. 


Eleven  Nurses 
Are  Announced 
On  Dean's  List 


WHAT-A-GUY  WAYNE 
IN  A  WONDERFUL  NEW 
•NTERTAINMENT! 


M-G-M  pRMitu 
JOHN 

WAYNE 


DAN 

DAILEY 

MAUREEN 

O'HARA 


NOW  PLAYING 


Carolina) 


Dr.  Eizabeth  L.  Kemble,  dean 
i  of  the  UNC  School  of  Nursing. 
i  has  announced  the  names  of  stu- 1  ^£ 
'  dents  who  were  on  the  dean's  list 
1  for  the  fall  semester  of  the  cur- 
rent school  year.  The  dean's  list 
i  contains  the  names  of  those  stu- 
I  dents  who  made  all  A's  or  B's  and 
I  who  carried  at  least  15  semester 
I  hours  of  work. 

The  honor  students,  shown  by 
i  rlasses,  are  as  follows: 
I  Freshmen:  Claudia  L.  Barnes, 
I  Reidsville;  Margaret  L.  Evans, 
I  Chapel  Hill;  Nancy  F.  Holden, 
'  Phoenixville.  Pa.;  Sandra  D.  Reed, 
Houston,  Texas  and  Anita  C. 
Whitener,  Lenoir. 

Sophomores:  Elizabeth  C.  Nich- 
olson. High  Point  and  Martha  F. 
Ross,  Albermarle. 

Juniors:  In  the  junior  year,  sev- 
eral nursing  courses  are  not  com- 
pleted until  the  end  of  the  sum- 
mer session.  Therefore,  members 
of  the  junior  class  do  not  appear 
on  the  dean's  list. 

Seniors:  Diane  G.  Fogleman. 
Henderson  and  Margaret  J.  Kist- 
ler  of  Chapel  Hill. 

Special  Students:  Lucy  T.  Fort, 
Oxford  and  Betty  B.  West  of'Mt 
Olive. 


cosmopotiT Atr  clut 

The  Cosmopolitan  Club  wiU  meet 
at  4  p.nL  today  in  the  Wilson  Li- 
brary Assembly  Room.  An  unusual 
"Quiz  Program,"  with  John  Moller 
as  emcee,  wil  be  featured  and'  re- 
freshments will  be  served.  Every- 
one has  been  invited  to  come  and 
bring  friends. 
SCHOLARSHIPS 

Students  who  have  scholarships 
awarded  by  the  University  and  who 
have  nbt  picked  up  thefr  tickets 
have  indicated  to  the  Student  Aid 
Office  they  do  not  wish  renewal 
of  their  scholarship  for  the  year 
1957-68,  according  to  the    office. 

Local  €hureh 
Asking  Plans 
For  Expansion 

A  twonstage  building  expansion 
program  for  the  Chapel  Hill  Pres- 
byterian Church  is  being  planned 
■by  the  church  membership  and 
its  building  council. 

As  originally  proposed,  the  pro- 
ject involved  an  estimated  $375,- 
000  for  erection  of  a  student  cen- 
ter wing  on  the  Henderson  Street 
entrance,  expansion  of  the  church 
sanctuary,  educational  plant  and 
offices,  and  buildiag  of  a  chapel 
as  a  front  wing. 

A  closer  estimate  of  costs  since 
finally  revised  plans  were  drawn 
places  the  project  nearer  the  half 
million  dollar  marie. 

Ralph  Marshall,  building  coun- 
cil chairman,  said  it  is  hoped 
construction  on  the  first  stage 
can  be  started  this  year.  If  funds 
^are  available  when  this  is  com- 
pleted, the  second  phase  could  be 
started  immediately,  he  said.' 

The  first  project  includes  a 
two-story  edireatiohal  plant  addi- 
tion, the  two-story  student  center 
and  fellowship  hall  and  some  ad- 
ministrative quarters. 

About  $290,000  is  at  present 
availabre  for  the  construction  out 
the  church's  building  fund 
drive  last  year  and  additional 
money  from  the  synowrde  higher 
educational  campaign  and  from 
General  Assembly  sources. 

Arrangenents  are  now  under 
way  for  securing'  the'  rest  of  the 
money  through  several  possible 
means,  according  to  the  Rev. 
Vance  Barron. 

Rev.  Barron  s^d  the  starting 
date  for  construction  would  de- 
pend on  the  securing  of  addition- 
al gifts  in  the  next  few  months. 


HIS  DUTY  TO  fflS  GOD     ' 

...  to  t*ve  ktunan  Knu«! 

HIS  DUTY  TO  HIS  NATION 
...  to  talte  enemy  llvefl! 


The  fmc  and  tnrilliii^ 

fftorf  ol  CoL  De«n  HcM, 

wko  tnJUi.  kis  |mlpit 

tor  a  ndhtcr  plane 

Irat  wLmc  great  maxcj 

and  lore  niaJe  mam 

a  Iiexo  tcr  tlnr 

war>ofplianM  tdaa 

\  m  Ko>iea->a]ia 

^^  tkeVorU! 


^^ -■^t^fUwiriw/'^— — * 

ROCK  HUDSON 

Battle 
Hymn 


MARTHA  HYER  DAN  DURYEA 

DON  DeFOREANIIAKASHR -JOCK  MAHONEY  ..CMiioinMiBD 

TODAY  THRU 
TUESDAY 


WESTMlNSTEIt 

Blveryone  has  been  invited  to 
come  to  the  Westminster  Fellow^ 
ship  tonight.  The  program  will  be 
on  John  Calvin,  what  he  did  and 
on  predestination.  Supper  will  be 
aervied  at  6  p.m. 


Trustees 

(Continued  from  page  1) 


Hall  tomorrow  night,  the  trus- 
tese  will  observe  typical  meetings 
of  the  Women's  Residence  Coun- 
cil, Women's  Honor  CoUncil,  the 
YWCA  and  the  Independent  Wo- 
man's Council,  all  at  Graham  Me- 
morial. 

The  PanJiellenic  Council  will 
meet  later  in  the  evening  at  the 
Kappa  Delta  sorority  house.  Af- 
ter the  visitors  return'  to  their 
assigned  dormitoriiel.  informal 
study-breaks  will  be  held  so  that 
they  may  get  acquainted  with  the 
individual  students. 

Tuesday  morning  will  be  given 
to  visits  to  the  Student  Aid  Of- 
fice, the  Woman's  Gymnasium  and 
the  Nurses'  Residence.  At  11  p.m. 
a  cSffee  hour  will  be  held  in  Ke- 
nan Hall,  with  Mrs.  Victor  Humph- 
reys in  diai^e.'  Womfen  members 
of  the  faculty  ahd  graduate  stu- 
dents will  attend. 

Othsr  visits  Tuesday  will  be  to 
the  Placement  Office,  Admissions 
Office,  and  the  Office  of  the  Dean 
of  Women,  where  a  short  press 
conference  will  be  held  at  2:15 
p.m. 

Ilie  trustees  will  be  honored  by 
the  University  Woman's  Club  at 
a  tea  at  4  p.m.  Tuesday  in  the  In- 
stitute of  Government  Building. 
Mrs.  Gordon  Blackwell,  club  pres- 
ident, will  be  assisted  by  Mrs.  Al- 
bert Coates,  wife  of  the  Institute 
director. 

A  tour  of  the  Knapp  Building 
will  be  conducted  following  tea 
by  Mrs.  Donald  Hayman,  whose 
husband  is  an  assistant  director 
of  the  Institute.  No  formal  pro- 
gram has  been  scheduled  for 
Tuesday  ni^t,  Miss  Carmlchael 
said. 

The  Chapel  Hill  Garden  Club. 
hMdcd.by  Mrs.  Curl  Pegg,  is  co- 
operating in  the  visit  by  .supplying 
bouquets  and  corsages  for  the 
trustees  while  in  Chapel  Hill. 


The  final  date  for  picking  up  the 
tickets  was  Feb.  8. 

KM<tt 

The  Chapel  Hill  branch  of  the 
American  Assn.  of  University  Wo- 
meii  will  meet  in  the  Library  As- 
sembly Room  Tuesday  night.  Dean 
of  Women  Miss  Katherine  Ken- 
'^e^  Carmichael  will  speak  on 
"The  Education  of  Women  in  a 
1957  Milieu."  Coffee  will  be  serv- 
ed at  7:30  p.m.  The  meeting  will 
begin  at  8  p.m. 

DENTAL  DAMES 

The  Dental  Dames  Society  will 
meet  Tuesday  at  8  p.m.  in  the  Vic- 
tory Village  Nursery.  Nomination 
of  officers  for  1957-58  will  be  held, 
according  to  publicity  chairman  Jo 
Ann  McAllister. 


WUNC-TV 

Today's  schedule  for  WUNC-TV, 

the  University's   educational   tele- 

vision station,  is  as  follows: 

9:45 

Ma'n  to  Man 

10:00 

Sunday  School 

10:30 

Travelogue 

10:45 

Organ  Prelude            ^ 

11:00 

Church  Service 

i2.oa 

This  Is  The  Life 

12:30 

Sign  Off 

6:30 

Big  Picture 

7:00 

American  Album 

7:30 

Shakespeare 

8:15 

UN  Review 

8:30 

Writers  of  Today 

9:00 

Sign  Off 

Monday's  schedule  includes: 

12:49 

Music 

1:00 

Today  on  the  Farm 

1:30 

Science  and  Nature 

2:00 

Sign  Off 

5:15 

Music 

5:30 

Solid  Geometry 

6:00 

Legislative  Review 

6:20 

News 

6:30 

South  America 

7:00 

Science  and  Society 

8:00 

Showcase 

8:30 

Civic  Toiu-nament 

9:00 

Hour  of  Thespis 

10:00 

Final  Edition 

10:05 

Sign  Off 

Law  Profession  Called 
'Jealous  Mistress' 

CHAPEL  HILL— (AP)— Law  stu- 
dents from  five  states,  meeting 
this  weekend  at  UNC.  were  tdm 
Saturday  that  "law  is  a  jealous 
mistress,  which  must  be  constant- 
ly wooed." 

Dr.  Robert  E.  Lee,  professor 
and  former  dean  of  the  Wake  For- 
est law  school,  addressed  a  lunch- 
eon meeting. 

He  told  the  students  from  12 
schools  that  a  genuine  love  for 
the  legal  profession  is  required 
when  one  enters  law  school  for 
one  virtually  "becomes  wedded  to 
the  law." 

J!he  nveeting,  a  two-day  annual 
conference  of  the  fourth  circuit 
of  the  American  Law  Student 
Assn..  ended  Saturday  after  work- 
shop sessions.  Schools  in  Virginia, 
Maryland,  West  Virginia,  North 
Carolina  and  South  Carolina  were 

represented. 


Press  Women 
To  Meet  Here 
AAarch  23-24 

The  North  Carolina  Press  Wo- 
men will  hold  their  spring  meet- 
ing liere  March  23  and  24  with 
convention  headquarters  at  the 
Carolina  Inn. 

Doris  Fleeson,  columnist  for 
United  Features  Syndicate  in 
Washington,  D.  C.  will  be  keynot^ 
speaker  for  the  two-day  institutfe 
on  the  UNC  campus. 

Registration  for  the  institute 
will  begin  Saturday  morning, 
March  23,  followed  by  a  panel  dis- 
cussion of  "Writing  Prize-Winning 
Stories."  Panel  participants  will 
be  Walter  Spearman  of  the  UNC 
Journalism  School,  Marjorie  Huht- 
er  of  The  Winston-Salem  Jotumal, 
Bunny  Harris  of  The  Charlotte 
Observer  and  Elizabeth  Pell,  Wil- 
son Daily  Times. 

The  Saturday  afternoon  session 
will  be  devOted  to  the  makeup  of 
woman's  pages,  with  Mrs.  Dorothy 
Jumey  of  the  Miami,  Fla.,  Herald 
as  guest  discussant.  Her  topic  will 
be  "Giving  Your  Pages  More  Eye 
Appeal." 

Mrs.  Fleeson.  whose  column 
from  Washington  appears  in  lead- 
ing metropolitan  dailies  through- 
out the  nation,  will  speak  at .  a 
banquet  session  Saturday  night, 
March  23.  A  social  hour  at  the 
home  of  Dean  and  Mrs.  NM^al  Neil 
Luxon  will  precede"  the"  banquet 
at  Carolina  Inn. 

Institute  Chairman  Dotty  Cam- 
eron of  "Hie  Raleigh  News'  and 
Observer  said  that  a  business 
session,  with  election  of  officers, 
will  be  held  Sunday  imorning,'March 
24.  Following  will  be  a  luncheon 
at  which  annual  awards  in  news 
writing  by  press  M'omen  will  be 
presented. 

Prior  to  the  formal  opening  of 
the  Institute,  the  Press  Women's 
board  of  directors  will  meet  on 
Friday  night.  March  22.  at  the 
Carolina  Inn. 

Miss  Frances  Walker  of  the 
Trans>i\'ania  Times,  Brevard,  is 
president  of  the  Press  Women  and 
Mrs.  Lucille  Cathey  Bost  of  Win<- 
I  ston-Sale.m  is  chairman  of  the 
writing  contest. 

Association  members  wishing  to! 
j  make   reservations   for   the   event  • 
should    contact  the    Carolina   Inn  I 
I  in   Chapel    Hill    and    send    notice 
of  the  reservation  to  Dotty  Cam- 
eron. News  and  Observer,  Raleigh. 


Six  YMCA  Executive  Posts  Open'::^ 

All  girls  interested  in  an  execu-i  from  2-5  p.m.  and  Wednesday  and  i  ficers  and  there  will  be  an'<wal' 


All  girls  interested  in  an  execu 
tive  position  in  the  YWCA  for 
the 'coming  year  have  been  asked 
to  come  by  the  Y  office  and  make 
an  appointment  for  an  interview 
with  the  YWCA  nominating  com- 
mittee. 

The  elected  positions  are  pres- 
ident, vice  president,  secretary, 
treasurer,  program  chairman  and 
membership  chairman. 


from  2-5  p.m.  and  Wednesday  and  |  ficers  and  there  will  be  an  ojlfil 
Thursday  from  2-4  p.m.  The  com  I  nomination    meeting   on   Mtr^-^5 

mittee  will  nominate  a  slate  of  of- in  Graham  Memorial.  ''      "^ 

. . •  -     i,fa  "lAfci^ 


SERVE  YOURSELF— 


EVERY  S 


5:30^7:30  PiM: 


BUFFET 

At  The 

RANCH   HOUSE 


Interviews  will  be  held  tomor- 
row   from    2:30-5  p.m.^    Tuesday  HOME  OF  CHOICE  HICKORY-SMOKED  CHARCOAL  BROILED  STfeA(0r 


Special  Course 
lor  CoHege  Women] 

Thorough  trchtiical  tr<iniii( 
with  conctirrrnt  program  of 
busin<^!>«  orientation.  Resi- 
di'nccfi  in  New  Yorii  and  Bos- 
ton, ^'rite  College  Deaa  for 
GiBBS  Girls  at  Work. 

katharin«« 


■lolds 


sacretarialj 

MSTON  IS  :  : :  11  mMimnt^  «. 
moviKNCt  I  :...!« lUfM  a 


new  YOiK  IT,  ! :  i 
Moimuu«.iu.  I 


A  Campus-to-Career  Case  History 


'1 
I 


£en  Bbekeloo  (center  foregrotmd)  at  the  scene  of  a  cable  installation  project  in  Detroit:. 

Ten  years  along  in 
his  telephone  career 


After  graduation  in  1947  from 
Kalamazoo  College  with  a  B.A.  in 
Physics  and  Mathematics,  Ken 
Boekeloo  joined  Michigan  Bell  Tele- 
phone Company  as  a  trainee. 

Today,  ten  years  later.  Ken  is  a 
Division  Plant  Superintendent  in 
Detroit.  Eight  district  supervisors 
report  to  him.  and  they  supervise 
some  1700  people.  Ken  is  responsi- 
ble for  the  installation  and  mainte- ' 
nance  of  plant  facilities  valued  at 
$135,000,000  including  more  than 
500.000  telephones. 

A  big  jump  in  ten  years?   Here's 


what  Ken   Boekeloo  says  about  it: 

"The  way  the  telephone  business 
is  grow^ing,  you  can  advance  just  as 
fast,  and  just  as  far,  as  you're  able. 
. .  .  And  all  along  the  way.  from  the 
student  period  through  each  assign- 
ment, the  training  and  experience 
you  get  really  prepare  yoo  for  ad- 
vancement 

"If  you  like  to  make  contributions 
and  take  responsibility,  and  if  ^ow 
value  the  opportunities  a  growing 
business  can  offer,  then  the  tel^ 
phone  company's  the  place  to  Ioni^ 
for  a  career."  * 


Ken  Boekeloo  is  one  of  many  young  men  who 
are  findhif;  rewarding  careers  in  Bell  Telephone 
Companies,  Bell  Telephone  laboratories.  ViVst- 
ern  Electric  and  Sandia  Corporation,  "^'our  place- 
ment officer  can  give  you  more  information 
about  all  Bell  System  Companies. 


BELL    TEt-EPHON* 
SYSTEM 


.*-,J 


WIISISTONf 

gives  you  the  break  on 

Time  out  for  flavor!  — and  what  flavor!  This  filter  cigarette 
tastes  rich  and  full.  And  its  pure,  snowy-white  filter  does  the  job 
so  well  the  flavor  really  comes  through.  Wlffstdli  is  the 
filter  cigarette  you  c/yoy— that's  why  it's  Amenc^Us  favorite! : 


Smoke  WINSTON  ...eijqytfie  snow-< 


».  J.  tn^rtwiA 

TOSAvCO  c^.. 

WINSTON-SA:.eM,  M    dt. 


the  cofk-sinooUi  ^p^ 


PAOI  POUI 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


SUNDAY,  FEBRUARY  24,  lf$7 


Maryland  Sweeps  ACC  Indoor  Track  Title;  UNC  Is  Second 

Beatty   Paces   Heels 
To  Second  Place  Finish 


By  JIM  HARPER 

Maryland   once   again   reigns   as  < 
Atlantic  Coast   Conference  indoor 
track  champion  by  virtue  of  a  61  Vz  ! 
point  victor>^  scored  in  the  ACC  in 
door  ganjes  held  yesterday  in  Ra-  • 
leigh.  Carolina  placed  second  with 
a  point  total  of  32,  Duke  was  next  i 
with  20*2   points,  followed  by  Vir- ; 
ginia.   Clemson.    N.    C.    State,   and 
South  Carolina. 

In    the    freshman    division    the 
Terps  also  were  the  leaders  scor  , 
ing  30*2    points.    UNC   was   again 
second   with   22,   and   Duke    third  | 
with  21.  N.  C.  State,  Virginia,  Wake  j 
Forest.  Clemson.  and  South  Caro- 
lina rounded  out  the  field,  finish- ! 
ing  in  that  order. 

Florida    State    copped    Non-Con- 
ference division  honors  with  a  total  i 
of  50  points,  followed  by  Georgia; 
with  23,  and  Davidson  with  22. 

The   brightest  star  in  the  Caro- 
lina heaven,  and  by  far  the  out  ; 
standing  performer  of  the  day  was 
Carolina's  .'Mi-America,  Jim  Beatty|  i 

Beatty  won  both  the  one  and  two  '< 
mile  events,  in  both  cases  coming  | 
from  behind  to  beat  Maryland's' 
star  runner.  Burr  Grim. 

Beatty  was  not  the  only  Tar 
Heel  who  stared.  Dave  Scurlock. 
figured  in  one  of  the  mQa't  thrilling 
of  the  day's  events  when  he  de- : 
feated  .Maryland's  Carl  Party  in 
the  880  yard  run  by  6,  10  of  a  sec- 
ond. Scurlock  also  anchored  Caro- 
lina's winning  mile  relay  team 
which  won  with  a  time  of  3:29.9. 

Freshman    Ward    Sims    was    an- 
other standout   performer   for  the ; 
Tar  Heels.  He  tied  for  first  place: 
in  both  the  broad  jump  and  pole  i 
vault,  finished  fourth  in  the  high 
hurdles,  and  tied  for  fourth  in  the 
low  hurdles. 

.\nother  freshman.  Lou  Glas- 
cock, did  well  in  the  hurdles,  cap- 
turing second  place  in  the  high 
hurdlerf  with  9.2.  while  placing 
third  in  the  low  hurdles. 

Maryland's  Jim  Starboard  was 
the  meets  only  other  double  win- 
ner. Starboard  took  both  the  low 
and  high  hurdles  wuh  respective 
times  of  7.7  and  8.6. 

All  told.  .Maryland  captured  six 
first  places  in  the  varsity  division 
and  two  blue  ribfcons  in  the  frosh. 
Backing  up  these  were  seven  sec- 
ond places  and  thret*  third  places 
for  the  var.^ity;  five  seconds  and 
three  thirds  for  the  freshmen. 

After  his  second  win,  Beatty  was 
presented  with  the  Weil  Mile  Tro- 
phy, which -annually  goes  to  the 
top  miler  in  the  Atlantic  Coast 
Conference.  This  is  the  third  time 
that  Beatty  has  received  the  award. 
THE  SUAAMARIES 
'    Conference  Division 

Broad  jump  —  1.  Robert  Laber- 
ty,  Duke.  2.  Eddie  Ll(^d,  Mary- 
land. 3.  Edward  Barwley.  North 
Carolina.  4.  Mike  Miller,  N.  C. 
State.  21  feet.  134   inches. 

Shot  put  -  1,  Ed  Sooke,  Mary- 
land. 2,  Larry  Steer,  Duke.  3,  Nick 
Leras,  Maryland.  4.  Harold  Outten, 
Virginia.  50  feet.  1%  inches. 

High  jump  —  1,  tie  between 
George  Hogan,  Maryland,  and  Tom 
Tair.    Maryland.    3.    tie    between 


James  Booher,  Duke  and  Max  Phil- 
lips, N.  C.  State.  6  feet  3  inches. 

Two-mile  relay  —  1.  Maryland 
West.  Hardee,  Wagner,  Steckel.  2, 
Clem:.<on.  3,  N.  C.  State.  4,  Virginia. 
8:20.3. 

Mile.—  1,  Jim  Beatty,  North  Car- 
olina. 2.  Gurr  Grim,  Maryland.  3, 
Everett  Whatley,  North  Carolina. 
4.  H.  D.  Tinsley,  Clemson,  4:16.9. 

60-yard  —  1,  Dave  Sime,  Duke. 

2,  Larry  Salmon,  Maryland.  3,  Jon 
Elder,  Duke.  4,  Steve  Scheck.  Mary- 
land. :6.3. 

70-yard  high  hurdles  — r  1,  Jim 
Starboard.  Maryland.  2,  J.  R.  Steed- 
ly,  Clemson.  3,  Elliott  Thompson, 
Maryland.  4,  tie  between  W.  C. 
Simmons.  Clemson,  and  Duncan, 
Maryland.  :8.6. 

600-yard  run  —  1,  Dave  Leas, 
Maryland.  2,  Jess  Peter,  Maryland. 

3,  Richard  McFaddin  (Jr.,  North 
Carolina.  4,  Jim  Cathcart,  South 
Caroli/ia.  1:18.1. 

2-mile  run  —  1,  Jim  Beatty, 
North  Carolina.  2,  Burr  Grim, 
Maryland.  3,  Wayne  Bishop,  North 
Carolina.  4,  Everett  Whatley.  North 
Carolina.  9:32.02.  i 

One-mile  relay:  —  1,  North  Car  1 
olina  (Williams,  Sylvester,  McFad-j 
din,  Scurlock).  2,  Maryland.  3,  N. ! 
C.  State.  4,  Virginia.  3:29.9.  ; 

880-yard  run;  —  1.  David  Scur- 
lock. North  Carolina.  2,  Carl  Party, 
Maryland.  3.   Ben  William's,  North  ; 
Carolina.   4,  Howard  Kahn,  North 
Carolina.  1:57.1. 

70-yard  low  hurdles:  —  1,  Jim 
Starboard,  Maryland.  2,  Larry  Sal-! 
mon.  Maryland.  3.  Elliott  Thomp- ! 
son.    Mar>'land.    4.    Jack    Linden,  j 
Duke.  :7.7.  { 

Pole  vault:  —  Henry  Davenport, ' 

Virginia.   2,   Jess   Peter,   Duke.    3,  j 

and  George  Murman.  Maryond.   13 

feet.  j 

Freshman   Division  i 

Broad  jump  —  1,    tie    between 
Arthur  Sims,  North  Carolina   and  j 
Rip     Moser.     Virginia.    3.    Stanley 
J*itts,    Maryland.    4,'    Ike    Powell,  \ 
Duke.  21  feet.  14   inches.  | 

Pole  vault  —  1.  tie  between  Ar- : 
thor  Sims,  North  Carolina,  and  i 
Warren  Raines.  N.  C.  State.  3.  Jack  i 
Doning,  Maryland,  4.  tie  between 
Bruce  Rinehart.  Virginia  and  ^ 
James  Sherrat.  .Maryland.  12  feet.j 
4  inches.  i 

Shot  put  —  1,  Dave  Graham,  Vir-  \ 
ginia.  2.  George  Semi>eles,  Virgin- 
ia. 3,  Boyd  Batton,  Duke,  4.  Ronald  j 
Shaffer,     Maryland.     47     feet     1'4{ 
inches. 

Mile  —  1,  Gary  Weisiger,  Duke., 

2.  Cowles  Lipfert,  North  Carolina.  I 

3.  Winfred   Fore.   South   Carolina,  j 

4.  Ted  Zachino.   Maryland.  4:29.3.    } 
60-yard  dash   —   1.   Bill    Taylor,  i 

Duke.   2,  Stanley   Pitts,    Maryland.' 
3.   Rip   Moser.  Virginia.   4,  tie   be- : 
tween  Charles  Sulbacker,  Duke  and  ! 
I  Stan  Giveez,  N.  C.   State.   :6.5. 
70-yard  high  hurdles  —  1.  Rob- 
ert Short,  Maryland.  2,  Louis  Glas- 
cock, North  Carolina.  3.  Arthur  W. 
:  Sims,     North     Carolina.    4.    Stuart 
Dow,  Duke.  .-9.1. 

70-yard  low  hurdles  —  1,  Rob- 
'  ert  Short,  Maryland.  2.  Charles 
I  Grandmaison,  Maryland.  3,  Louis 
J  Glascock,  North  Carolina.  4,  tie  be- 


ROTH  UPSETS  MclNTYRE: 


UNC  Swimmers  Trample  Wolf  pack 
49-36,  To  Win  Conference  Crown 


By  STEWART   BIRD 


The  State  ace  came  back  in  the  100 
J    ^  ,  ,  I  yard  free-style  to  set  a  new  pool 
.  „..'!!'!:^^?^,.!"^  .[!-^l  .v^?:^Und  ACC  time  of  50.0;  breaking  his 

own  loop  mark  of  50.4. 
In  their  march  to  the  champion- 


BILL   ROTH 

.  upaets  Dave  Mclntyre 


Co-Rec  Carnival  Set 
Here  Tomorrow  Night 

riif  tentti  ammal  Cio-Rencation  Camiva'l  is  scheduled 
tor  Woollt'U  (iymnasium  lueday,  March  5th  at  6:45  p.m. 
The  event,  sponsored  by  the  Intramural  Department  and 
the  Women's  .Athletic  .Association,  had  some  2,000  partici- 
pants and  spectators  last  year.  It  is  the  largest  single  event  of 
the  year.  Entries  are  dne  in  the  Intramural  Office  by  Tues- 
day, Feb.  2(i. 


Cajey  went  flying  through  the  air 
from  the  arms  of  his  undefeated 
Tar  Heel  swimmers  into  the  waters 
of  Bowman  Gray  Pool  at  4:10  yes- 
terday afternoon  to  bring  to  an 
"official"  end  Carolina's  smashing 
49  to  36  victory  over  N.  C.  State 
and  the  crowning  of  UNC  as  un- 
disputed 1957  Conference  Cham- 
pions. 

As  predicted,  reserve  strength 
provided  the  victory  margin.  State 
Outnumbered  Carolina  in  first  plac- 
es, six  to  foizr,  but  the  27  points 
garnered  in  seconds  and  thirds  by 
the  power-laden  Tar  Heel  bench 
sealed  the  issue  and  gave  UNC  its 
first  loop  crown  in  four  years. 

Carolina's  Bill  Roth  and  Dave 
Mclntyre  of  the  WoUpack  provided 
the  notable  performances  of  the 
afternoon.  In  a  split  decision,  Roth 
^  upset  Mclntyrie  in  the  50  yard 
freestyle  with  a  docking  of  22.7. 


Carnival      games,      relays      and  1 
team    sports   will    make     up     the  \ 
program.  A  combo  will  be  on  hand 
to  play   while   the   points  are   be- 
ing totaled  to  determine  the  win- 
ners.   Dental    school      and     Smith 
Dorm    combined    their    efforts    to  j 
take  home   the  honors  la.st  year. 


The  most  popular  activitie.s  of 
the  entire  night  will  be  the  carn- 
ival games.  Some  of  the  games 
are:  candle  blowing,  jacks,  top 
spinning,  marbles,  nail  driving, 
rocket  darts,  target  l>oard,  table 
shuffleboard.    bounce    ball,    base- 


ship,  the  Tai-  Heels  rolled  over  East 
Carolina  and  State  twice,  Duke, 
Clemson,  South  Carolina  and  Vir- 
ginia. 

The  mermen  will  attempt  to  add 
more  laurels  to  their  record  next 
^weekend  as  they  play  host  to  the 
Conference  Championships  in  the 
individual  events  Thursday  through 
Saturday.  They  will  close  their  sea- 
son with  a  bid  for  national  recog- 
nition in  the  National  Collegiates 
here;  March  28-30. 

THE  SUMMARY 

400  yand  medley  relay— (1)  Nash, 
Mabaffy,  Krepp,  Zickgraf,  (UNC). 
Time:  5:15.7  (no  N.  C.  State  entry). 

220  yard  freestyle  —  (1)  Nauss 


(3) 


(S),    (2)  Rose   (C), 
(C).  Time:  2:10.5. 

50  yard  freestyle  —  (1)  Roth 
(C),  (2)  Mclntyre  (S),  (3)  Zickgraf 
(C).  Time:  22.7. 

200  yard  butterfly  —  (1)  Fadgen 
<S),  (2)  Mahaffy  (C),  (3)  Turner 
(C).  Time:  2.13.8. 

Diving  —  (1)  Mclnnis  (CO,  (2) 
Meekins  (C),  (3)  Marks  (S).  points: 
248.6. 

100   yard   freestyle    —   (1)    Mc- 

Intype  (S),  (2)  Rose  (C),  (3)  Roth 

(C).  Time:  50.0.  (New  ACC  record. 

old  record  5014  by  Mclntyre,  1956). 

100  yard  backstroke  —  (1)  Krepp 


Schiffman  I  (UNC).  (2)  Nach  (C).  (no  N.  C.  SUte 
'  entry).  Time:  57.2. 


CLASSIFIEDS 

FOR  SALE:  EROTISHKA  11,  A- 
very  fine  194S  Plymouth,  $175. 
Call  Bob  Mauldin,  89039  after  five 
or  conw  to  404  Connor. 


5  ROOM  BRICK  HOUSE.  3  BED 
rooms,  all  modem  conveniences. 
3  miles'  on  Old  86  Hyway.  Stove 
and  Frigedaire  furnished.  Call 
Fred  Katzin  alter  6:00,  8-9025. 


A  team  is  composed  of  11  boys !  ball    throw,     and     ba.sketball   crip 
and   11   girls.   EnU-ies     from     the  |  shooting, 
men's  organizations  and   those   of       Balloon  bursting  and  tennis  ball 


the  women's  organizations  will  be 
paired  by  lot.  Trophies  will  be 
awarded  to  the  individual  winners 
and  plaques  to  the  team  winners. 
Members  may  enter  one  individual 


relay  lead  the  list  of  relays  to  cli- 
max the  evening. 

Badminton,  table  tennis,  shuffle- 
board,  box  hockey,  archery,  skish, 


event  and  also  participate  in  the    tether  ball,  and  volleyball  are  the 

sports  activities  on  the  agenda. 


carnival  games.  All  members  may 
participate  m  the  relays  which 
are  last  on  the  agenda.  1 

tween  Stuart  DoW,  Duke,  and  Ai- 
thiir  Sims,  North  Carolina.  :8.0. 

One-mile   relay:    1,    N.  C    State  | 

(Tessley,     Chalkles      6,  Rockett. 

Reeling).  2,  Maryland.  3.  Virginia. 
4.  Duke.  3:.36.2. 

600-yard  run  —  1.  Charles  Chalk- 
ley,  N.  C.  State.  2.  Bill  Wolfe, 
Maryland.  3,  John  Dunkleburg, 
Clemson.  4,  Bob  Layton,  Virginia. 
1:16.1. 

880-yard  run  —  1.  Cary  Weisig- 
er, Duke.  2,  Warner  Butler.  3,  Ger- 
ald Raferty,  Maryland.  4,  Neal 
Chappell,  North  Carolina.  2:01.4. 


Entries  should  be  turned  in  to 
the  Women's  Athletic  Office  or 
to  the  Intramural  Office,  315 
Woollen. 


Sigma  Nu  And 
Peacock's  Vie 
For  Cage  Title 

By  TOMMY  JOHNSON 

Sigma  Nu  Fraternity,  winners  of 
the  fraternity  blue  division,  will 
clash  with  the  Peacock's  Monday 
night  at  7:00  on  court  No.  3  in 
Woollen  Gym  for  the  All-Campus 
Intramural  Basketball  Champion- 
ship. The  Sig  Nu  team  will  go  into 
the  game  with  a  9-0  record  for  the 
season.  The  Graduate  students,  or 
Peacock's,  named  for  Dr.  Peacock 
of  the  Physical  E^ducation  Depart- 
ment have  an  8-1  record.  The  loss 
was  at  the  hand^  of  Lewis  Dorm 
early  in  the  season. 

The  Sigma  Nu  five  won  the  right 
to  meet  the  Peacock's  by  defeating 
Zeta  Psi  last  Friday  afternoon. 
Zeta  Psi  won  the  Fraternity  White 
Division  Championship. 

Center,  Dave  Odom  is  the  big ; 
gun  for  the  Peacock's  with  his  out- 
standing backboard  play  and  shoot- 
ing ability.  He  tallied  a  total  of  29 
points  against  the  team's  last  two 
opponents,  Med  School  and  Alex> 
ander. 


At  These  Prices 
You  Can  Afford 


To  Laugfi! 


I 


A  Mwi  •#  Biihep,  by  Morris  Bish-  ] 
>p.  Gay  verse  by  The  New  Yorker ' 
contributor.  Published  at  $3.00,      I 

Our  SpMial  —  $1.08  | 
P*rtlin«n't  Hem*  Companien,  by  j 
that  zany  fellow,  S.  J.  Perelman. : 
The  English  language  dances  a 
wild  frilicsome  number!  Published  1 
at  $3.50  j 

bur  Special  —  $1.39  j 
Th»  B«tt  mf  H.  T.  W*bster  —  a| 
memorial    volume    of    wonderful 
cartoons   by   the   creator   of    The 
Timid  Soul. 

.      Our  Sp«ci«l  —  $1.29 

the  Intimate 
Bookshop 

205  E.  Frahklin  St. 
Open  Till  10  P,  M. 


njn 


Our  COMPETENCi 
cams  your  CONFIDENCE 

•  The  "Prescription  Specialists"  emblem, 
wbidi  we  display  with  pride,  indicates  that 
this  professional  pharmacy  maintains  high, 
ethical  standards.  Our  skilled  Registered 
Pharmacists  use  only  quality  ingredients 
and  our  fair  prices  are  based  on  accurateily- 
.determined  casts.  Turn  to  us  confidently 
With  your  Doctor's,  prescriptions.  You  may 
be  sure  we'll  compound  them  promptly  and 
iprecise^v  as  direaed.' 

Sutton's  Drug  Store 

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A        "The  Tar  Heel's 
Prescription  Center" 


Ho^vard  Johnson  Restaurant 


BREAKFAST 


■'> 


LUNCH 


DINNER 


SNACKS 
landmark  For  Hungry  Tarheels" 


lice 

HAIR  GROOM 


V 


« 


NIC 


IN    UNBREAKAiLI 
PLASTIC  i 

Grooms  your  hair  while  it  treots  your 
scolp.   Controls  loose  dandruff.    1.00 

plin  lac 
SHULTON       N*>*  York     •     tor*iit« 


jAILY 

ACROSS 

1.  Leaning 
Tower  of 

5  Conatel-        ' 

lation 

9  Peraon 

under 

maj(  ji-ity 

10.  Pia;  iaya 

12.  Uve 

13.  E^gle'a  n««t 

14.  Humor 

16.  Cheat 
l6.>Sodium 

{ »ym. ) 

17.  A  fit 

20.  Lettuce 

21.  Ozone 

22.  Crazy 
(Slang) 

23.  Music  wand 

25.  Met  a 
pieman 

26.  Baking 
chamber 

27.  Sprite 

28.  Guided 

29.  Plant 
33.  At  home 
G4.  Addition 

Z^.  Narrow  inlet 
36.  Song.i  for 

two 
38.  Surface 

again 

40.  Weird 

41.  Efts  (Dial, 
var. ) 

,  42.  Orange-red 
chalcedony 
43.  Cushions 

DOWN 

i    1.  Fairy 
!   2.  Bafaa 


CROSSWORD 


3.  Distress 
signal 

4.  SkiU 

5.  Conscious 

6.  Smell 
strongly 

7.  Fish 

8.  River 
(Venea.) 

9.  Cries,  as 
a  cat 

11.  Autumn 
15.  Land 

measure 
\%.  Site  of 

David's 

palace 


19.  FooUd 
vase 

20.  Con. 
aoled 

22.  Lively 
aong- 

2S.  BrU. 
Uaiit 
meteor 

24.  Streets 

25.  Dry.  M 
wine 

29.  Blended 

30.  Part  or 
"lo  be" 

31.  Uprisings 

32.  Barks 


34.  Mix 

37.  E}po«h~ 

38.  Twiltod 
fabric 

39.  Oirl'snaaw 


HERE  ARE  THIS  WEEK'S  TIE-BREAKERS  IN 

OLD  GOLD'S 


.5  /^ki«i»* 


PUZZLES 


TIE-BREAKING  PUZZLE  NO.  4 


CLUli  Benjamin  Franklin  participated  in  the 
founding  of  this  school.  Later,  the  first  uni- 
versity medical  school  in  the  country  was 
established  here. 

ClUEt  This  New  England  university  was 
chartered  In  1869.  A  theological  seminary, 
founded  in  1839,  was  its  forerunner,  and 
was  ab.sorbed  as  the  university's  first  de- 
partment. 

ANSWER  1 

ANSWER  2 

^awie___ 

Address 

City 

College 


_Stnte. 


TIE-BREAKING  PUZZLE  NO.  S 


IB 

i«      ^m     «m      ^  1 

kT/AT/AVJ 

■< ,  a 

CLUE:  This  Catholic  university  for  mep, 
conducted  by  Jeswit  Fathers,  is  located  id  i 
town  founded  as  a  mission  in  1777.  Th« 
university  was  opened  in  1851. 
CLUE:  This  women's  college,  founded  in 
1879,  is  affiliated  with  a  famous  univsrsity 
for  men.  It  is  named  to  honor  an  early 
benefactor  of  the  men's  university. 


ANSWER  1. 
ANSWER  2. 

Name 


Address^ 

City 

College^ 


^taie. 


HOLD   UNTIL  YOU   HAVE  COMPLETED  ALL  EIGHT  TIE-BREAKERf 


All  participants  who  completed  the  initial  set 
of  twenty-four  puzzles  correctly  are  required 
to  solve  a  series  of  eight  tie-breakers,  in  order 
to  compete  for  the  prizes  in  the  tie.  Tie-breakers 
four  and  five  are  published  herein  and  the 
remaining  three  puzzles  will  appear  in 
successive  issues. 

Remember— first  prize  is  a  TOUR  FOR  TWO 
AROUND  THE  WORLD— or  $5,000TJash  .  .  . 
and  there  are  85  other  valuable  prizes  now  tied  for, 

TRY  TODAY'S  OLD  GOLDS 

No  ofhar  ci^aratta  con  match  the  taste  of 
tedayU  Old  Golds. 

Regulars— Kings— or  Filters  . . .  they  taste  terrific  ... 
thanks  to  Old  Gold's  nature-ripened  tobaccos  ...  so 
ricbt  ao  light,  so  golden  bright.  Buy  A  Carton  Todayt 


B^'^ii^ 


if^s,|'«4f- 


t«B«C.  "tXBRART 
SSfUUOpS  DSPT. 


New  Stand  Seen 


ing 


THE  WILUIAM  C.  FRIDAYS 

.  .  .  they  meet  the  press- 


By    FRED    POWLEDGE 

Special  To  The  Daily  Tar  Heel 

RALEIGH  —  The  Visiting 
Committee  of  the  Consolidated 
University's  Board  of  Trustees 
appears  to  be  taking  a  stronger 
view  and  stand  on  married  stu- 
dents'  housing. 

In  the  Visiting  Committee's 
report,  released  •  Monday  at  a 
meeting  of  the  full  Board  of 
Trustees,  the  gioup  recom- 
mended "that  the  administra- 
tion push  forward  immediately 
for     legislation     providing     for 


self-liquidating    units    for    mar- 
ried students." 

Many  influential  members  of 
the  State's  General  Assembly 
have  for  a  long  time  maintained 
[hat  married  students'  housing 
at  Chapel  Hill  and  State  Col- 
lege should  be  treated  as  a  sec- 
ondary consideration.  The  Vis- 
iting Committee's  report  ac- 
knowledges: "Argument  has 
been  advanced  that  all  single 
students  should  be  housed  be- 
fore married  students  are  ac- 
comodated." 


WEATHER 

Mild   with   occasional    rain    end- 
ing today.  Expacted  high  62. 


However,  states  the  report, 
This  argument  today  is  not 
£ound  in  our  opinion,  and  we 
must  furnish  sufficient  housing 
for  this  group  which  has  been 
greatly  neglected  and  discrimi- 
nated against." 

The  Visiting  Committee  rec- 
ognized the  theory  that  "family 
units  for  married  students  can 
be  financed  by  self-liquidating 
bonds  without  jeopardizing  the 
rent  scale  in  the  dormitories 
for  single  students." 

There   appears   to   be   opposi- 


tion, however,  on  the  horizon 
for  this  last  statement.  The 
State  Board  of  Higher  Educa- 
tion, in  its  Biennial  Report  re- 
leased recently,  states: 

"The  board  believes  that  the 
present  methods  of  financing 
self^iquidating  loans  through 
agencies  of  the  federal  govern- 
ment or  through  private  finan- 
cial institutions  impose  limita- 
tions on  the  ability  of  the  insti- 
tutions to  finance  such  projects 
without  charging  their  students 

(See  MARRIED,  Page  S) 


^  THE   NEW   CHANCELLOR 

a  statemevl  after  an  appointment 


3r()  e  Daily  m^Sit  Heel 


2nd  Edition 


VOL.  LVII,  NO.  108 


Complete  OP)   Wire  Service 


CHAPEL   HILL,  NORTH   CAROLINA,  TUESDAY,   FEBRUARY   26,   1957 


Offices   in   Graham   Memorial 


FOUR   PAGES  THIS  ISSUI 


William  Ay  cock  Named  New  Chancellor  At  Carolina; 
Gordon  Blackwell  Gets  Woman's  College  Head  Post; 


^ 


Friday  Spells  Out  UNC  Policy  On  Athletic  Program 


Faculty's  Salary 
Hike  Inadequate, 
Feels  President 

By   CLARKE  JONES 

Special   to  The  Daily  Tar  Heel 
RAL^GII  — ConsoJidated   University  President   William   C.   Friday 
to'd  tiuatee  ;i)em  "t'r*  Monday  the  faculty  ^-aJary  increiOei  recoriWwnd*, 

cvl  V»y    Gov.!   HbdlgEeB    and   the   Advisorj     Budget    Commission   were   "in- 
adequate." 

\\v  said  the  University  would  stand  behind  its  original  request   as 
made  to  the  State  Board  of  Higher  F,ducati-.n.  If  the  General  Asstm- 

♦  )ly   turns   down   this   r?quest.   Fri- 

—^         ^^  I  dav    said    he    would    ask    for    the 

Dr.  Sitterson 
Will  Speak 
To  Di  Tonight 


D/.  Carlyle  Sitterson,  Dean  of 
the  College  of  Arts  and  Sciences, 
will  be  guest  o-peakcr  at  the  inaug- 
uration meeting  of  the  Philan- 
thropic Society  Tuesday  night  at  8 
p.m. 

Speaking  on  "'Creative  Spirit  in 


•  me  increases  other  state  workers 
will  receive  during  the  1957-59 
bicnnium. 

"Our  greatest  concern  today  is 
faculty  and  staff  salaries.  The 
value  of  faculty  members  to  the 
University  cannot  be  overempha- 
sized, "  he  said. 

The  Budget  Commission's  reconi- 
mendaticns  for  the  library  were 
also  inadequate. 

[      Retiring  UNC  librarian  Andrew 

I  Horn  last  week  said  he  wa^-  deeply 

disappointed  with   the   recommen- 


University's    Chancellor 

Is  Professor  Of  Law  Here   -^ 

By  CLARKE  JONES  AND  FRED  POWLEDGE 

Special  To  The  Daily  Tar  Heel 

RALF-IGH— William  lirontley  .\y(XHk,  a  s'lovt.  sinilin<>  I'nivcvsity  ot  North  Clarolina 
law  professor,  is  the  new  chancellor  at  CJiapel   Hill. 

The  .|  I -year-old  nntive  of  lauania,  N.  C.  was  tmanimoiisly  apjivoxed  h\  the  fall  Board 
of  TTUstees,  nieetino  Monday  in  Raleigh.  V\:  will  succeed  Robert  B.  House,  who  will  tc- 
tive  at  the  end  of  this  ^Tadeniit  yeiir. 

\\<«wk  Is  now  ^,'^  ■Vi.<ittn]rr  pn>fe.s.sor  nt  the  l^.iivcrsiiy  of  \'i)<;Lfti,i  law  .sijjool.  He  was  pr.cs- 

iden^  of  his  student  body  at  N.  €.♦- — ■ — 

S'ate  College,  then  came  to  the 
Univergity  at  Chapel  Hill  for  law 
.school.  He  was  editor  of  The  Law 
Review. 


Chapel  Hill,  Dr.  Sitterson's  speech  ,  dations  and  added  if  he  had   not 


will  be  followed  by  the  inaugura- 
tion of  President  Jim  Monteith, 
President  Pro-tern  John  Brooks. 
Parliamentarian  Jess  Stribling, 
Sergeant  at  Arms  Don  Jacobs, 
Clerk  Elisabeth  Dent,  Treasurer 
Jim  Tolbert,  and  Critic  J  jnes  Du- 
vall. 

The  meeting  will  be  preceded  by 
an  executive  initiative  meeting  and 
followed  by  the  serving  of  refresh- 
ments. The  public  has  been  invit- 
ed to  attend. 


One  Name  Omitted  In 
Nursing  Dean's  List 

One  name  was  inadverdently 
omitted  from  a  list  of  student  nurses 
making  the  dean's  list  in  the  Daily 
Tar  Heel  Sunday. 

In  addition  to  those  listed  should 
be  Miss  Sandra  Rush  Roberts,  of 
Wallingford.  Pa. 


;  already  rendered  his  prior  resigna- 
tion, he  would  have  done  so  after 
seeing  the  new  budget. 
I      He  called  the  state's  budget  mak- 
'  ing   policy   "very  conservative.  " 
I        Friday  told  of  several  instances 
I    where   faculty    members   within 
the  Consolidated  University  had 
j     received  offers  from  other  Instl- 
I     tutions   at    a    much    higher    rate 
i    than  they  get  here. 

Included  in   his  examples  were: 

I      1.  A  UNC  professor  who  was  of- 

I  fered  $5,000  more  annually  by  an- 

I  other   school,    an   increase    of  €3 

percent. 

2.  A  Woman's  College  faculty 
member  who  was  offered  a  $3,000 
increase,  approximately  43  percent 
more  than  she  was  being  paid  at 
WC. 

3.  A  member  of  the  State  Cc'- 
lege  faculty,  offered  S3,000  more 
for  nine  months'  work  than  he  re- 
ceives at  State  for  12  months. 


Blackwell  And  Aycock 

Shown  above  are  Dr.  Gordon  Blackwell  (left)  and  Dr.  William  B.  Aycock,  nanned  Monday  to  the  chan- 
cellor positions  at  Woman's  College  and  UNC,  respectively.  Blackwell  will  fill  the  post  vacated  last 
spring  by  Edward  Kidder  Graham.  Aycock  will  rep  lace  Chancellor  Robert  B.  House  when  the  latter  re- 
tires in  June. 

Women  Trustees  Visiting  Campus; 
Will  Finish   Their   Tours   Today 


The  thirteen  women  members  of  1  a«--   hostesses   to   the  visitors 
t'le    UNC    Board    of    Trustees    will 
complete    their    extensive    tour    of 
campus  life  Tuesday. 


They  will  be  shown  various  aspects 
of  the  University  by  women  stu- 
dents who  have  been  selected  to  act 


Engineer  To  Speak  Mere 

Edward  J.  Cleary,  executive  di- 
rector and  chief  engineer  of  the 
Ohio  River  Valley  Water  Sanita 
tion  Commission,  will  speak  at  the 
University  School  of  Public  Health 
March  4. 


Tuesday's  tour  will  include  visits 
to  the  Student  Aid  Office,  the  Wo- 
man's Gymnasium,  the  Placement 
Office  in  Gardner  Hall  and  the  Ad- 
missions Office  in  South  Building. 


The  trustees  will  have  luncheon 
in  the  South  Room  of  Lenoir  Hall 
at    12:45.  , 

At  4  p.m.  the  women  trustees  will 
attend   a   University   Women's   Club  [ 
Tea  at  the  Institute  of  Government  j 
Building.  The  tea  will  continue  until 
6  p.m.,  which  marks  the  end  of  the 
formalized  program  for  the  trustees. 


The  trustees  will  then  be  free  to 
work  their  own  schedule  for  Tues- 
day evenirfg. 

As  pert  of  the  entertainment 
i  for  the  women  members  of  the 
j  Board  of  Trustees  a  iunehoen 
will  be  given  in  the  Suuth  Room 
of  Lenoir  Hall  today  at  12:30. 
Ail  women  studffnts,  graduates 
and  undergraduates,  have  been 
invited. 

According  to  the  Dean  of 
Women's  offico,  students  who 
have  •  12:00  class  may  come  in 

(See   VISITING,   page  3) 


Aycock  was  one  of  four  men 
whos?  names  came  out  of  months 
of  consideration  by  a  special  se- 
lectit)n  committee,  composed  of 
faculty,  trustee  and  alumni  rep-  j 
resentatives.  Consolidated  Uni-  j 
versity  President  William  Friday  j 
chose  him  and  gave  his  name  to  ■ 
the  executive  committee  of  the  j 
Board  of  Trustees  Monday  morn-  '■ 
ing.  I 

The    committee    approved    him, 
and  later  in  the  afternoon  he  re- 
^ceived   the   approval   of   the    full 
board. 

President  Friday  described  Ay- 
cock as  a  "man  of  high  courage 
and  energy,"  Trustee  Victor  Bry- 
ant of  Durham,  who  nominated 
Aycock  in  the  board  meeting,  said  | 
he  represents  "courage,  tact  and 
scholastic    attainments."  | 

Friday  told  the  trustees  that ' 
qualities  stressed  by  those  look-  j 
ing  for  a  new  chancellor  were , 
those  of  an  "educator  with  admin- ; 
istrative  ability,"  youth,  public! 
speaking  ability,  and  those  of  a  | 
man  who  is  a  "Southerner  or  with 
Southern  ideas  and  traditions." 


Blackwell  Is  Named 
As  WCs  Chancellor 


Special  to  The  Daily  Tar  Heel 
R.\LEIGH  —  Dr.  '  Gordon  W. 
Dlackwell.  UNC  sociologist,  was 
elected  chancelibr  of  the  Wo- 
man's College  in  Greensboro 
Monday. 

The  Consolidated  University 
Board  of  Trustees  unanimously 
elected  Blackwell  to  the  jwsition, 
which  lias  been  open  since  Cd- 
ward  Kidder  Graham  resigned  last 


spring. 

Blackwell  is  a  Kenan  profes.sor 
of  .sociology  at  Chapel  Hill  and 
director  of  the  University's  lasti- 
tute  for  Research  in  S>ocial  Sci- 
ence. 

President  William  Friday  of  the 
Consolidated  University,  in  recom- 
mending Blackwell  for  the  job, 
said  "he  is  a  man  of  integrity, 
jreat   vision   ^nH   energv.' 


Shepard  New  Business  Man; 
Whyburn  Gets  Graduate  Job 


AAUW  Meets  Tonight 

The  Chapel  Hill  branch  of  the] 

American      Assn.  of     University  j 

Women  will  meet  tonight  in  the| 

assembly  room  of  Wilson  Library. 


Special  to  The 
President  William  Friday  today 
announced  the  appointment  of 
.\le.\ander  H.  Shepard  as  busi- 
ness officer  and  treasurer  of  the 
Consolidated  University  of  North 
Carolina. 

-Vlr.  Shepard  has  been  acting 
business  manager  of  the  Uni- 
versity  at   Chapel   Hill. 

Mr.  Friday  stated,  Mr.  She- 
pards  superior  capabilities  ^nd 
his  intimate  knowledge  of  the 
functions  and  details  of  finances 
t^nd  business  management  of  the 
University  are  the  reasons  why 
he  was  the  natural  choice  in 
making   the   selection.    His   j'ears 


Diily   Tar   Heel 
f^f  devotion  to  duty  in  the  Univer- 
sity,  his   knowledge  of  University 
affairs  and  his  fundamental  abili- 
ly    were   prime    considerations. 

Shepard  is  a  native  of  Wil- 
mington and  a  graduate  of 
Davidson  College.  He  has  been 
with  the  University  of  North 
f'arolina  at  Chapel  Hil^  since 
1932.  and  has  been  assistant  to 
the  business  manager  since  1943 
ixnd  acting  business  manager 
since  Sept.  56.  He  is  married  to 
the  former  Miss  Sallie  Cowell 
who  was  from  Washington.  N.  C. 
and    they    have    a    son     and     a 

daughter.  .   \ 


EMPHASIZES  HIGH  ADMISSION  STANDARDS 


. ^  ^    . 

Trustees  Hear  Fridays  New  Athletic  Recommendations 


RALEIGH— Consolidated  University  President  William  Friday 
oiit'ined  his  recommendatityis  for  future  University  athletic  policy 
in  a  statement  delivered  to  the  meeting  of  the  Board  of  Trustees  in 
Raleigh.  The  report,  emphasized  the  high  admiss-ions  standards 
of  the  University,  the  position  of  the  Athletic  Council,  and  the  Uni- 
versity's policy  of  compliance  with  the  regulations  of  the  ACC 
and  the  NCAA. 

"Much  has  been  written  and  said  during  recent  months  about 
the  intercollegiate  athletic  program  of  State  College  and  the 
University  in  Chapel  Hill. 

"Since  this  is  my  first  opportunity  to  do  so  I  feel  that  there 
should  be  a  restaternent  and  clarification  of  the  policy  and  pro- 
cedures of  the  Univer^'lty  concerning  intercollegiate  Athletics. 

"The  executive  committee  by  a  moiiua  passed  at  its  meeting 


on  January  25th  1954  placed  the  responsibiliiy  for  the  adminis- 
tration of  intercollegiate  athletics  in  the  hands  of  the  chancellor 
at  each  of  our  institutions.  Respecting  thia'  procedure  and  seeking 
as  much  conformity  as  possible  1  conferred  with  Chancellors  Houo"e 
and  Bostian  and  they,  along  with  all  members  of  the  consolidated 
office  and  staff  and  I.  submit  to  you  the  following  statements  with 
our  recommendation  that  it  be  approved  by  you,  that  it  replace 
prior  board  action  which  may  conflict  and  that  it  become  operative 
on  your  approval: 

"D  The  admissions  standards  of  State  College  and  the  University 
in  Chapel  Hill,  as  in  the  paa-l,  will  be  set  by  (he  respective  facul- 
ties. 

'2)  The  academic  standards  of  State  College  and  the  University 
in  ChaiJel  Hill,  as  in  the  past,  will  be  set  by  the  respective  fac- 
ulties (I  should  like  to  say  parenthetically  that  the  present  aca- 


demic .standards  of  our  institutions  are  higher  thatf  those  of  the 
Atlantic  Coast  Conference  and  they  are  being  enforced.) 

"3)  The  Director  of  Athletics  shall  be  responsible,  unto  the 
Chancellor,  for  the  administration  of  the  intercollegiate  athletic 
program  at  each  of  our  institutions  and  be  shall  work  with  and 
through   the    duly   established  Faculty   Committee   on   Athletics. 

"4)  The  Executive  Committee  of  this  Board  of  Trustees  on 
January  25.  1954  stated  that  the  Athletic  Council  at  each  inati- 
tution  shall  be  advisory  to  the  Chancellor  and  shall  not  have 
administrative  or  operating  authority  or  responsibilities,  except 
a„'  may  be  specifically  prescribed  by  the  Chancellor  and  approved 
by  the  President. 

"5)  The  Scholarship  Committee  and  each  institution  is  the 
agency  tbat  awards  athletic  grants  in  aid  ^nd  it  is  the  agency 


that  revokes  grants  in  aid. 

"6)  State  College  and  the  University  in  Chapel  Hill  are  mem- 
bers of  the  Atlantic  Coast  Conference  and  the  National  Collegiate 
Athletic  Association  and  we  will  abide  by  boih  the  letter  and 
spirit  of  the  regulations  established  by  these  organization^". 

"7)  Periodic  reports  on  all  phases  of  the  intercollegiate  ath- 
letic program  will  be  made  to  the  faculties  of  our  institutions 
and  to  the  Board  of  Trustees  by  the  Chancelors  or  their  desig- 
nated representatives. 

"We  believe  that  compliance  with  the  standards  and  regula- 
tion.- will  safeguard  the  moral  and  academic  integrity  of  the  Con 
solidated  University  of  North  Carolina. 

To  make  our  position  clear,  the  members  of  the  Consolidated 
Staff  and  I  will  not  tolerate  any  infraction  of  these  standards  or 
r«gulations. " 


faWt^ 


THE  DAILY  TAR  Mttt 


.:?^<vfio 


TUESGAY,  FIBRUAIIY  My  1W7 


TUESDAY 


M^d#rrf  Affefitkm  Goffer: 
Ssryfrvg  Wharf  ShouM  §6  So 

Student  Icj^islators  got  a  big  laligh  out  of  the  reading  of  Lenoir 
Mall's  Operating  Pnxeclures  last  Thursday  uiglit.  The  passages  were 
strangely  incongruous  with  actual  conditions  in  the  University's  cafeteria-. 
Promises  and  descriptions,  whether  they  be  in  the  form  of  a  list  of 
operating  prcnedures.  a  prospectus,  the  first  lecture  of  the  semester  or 
the  preface  of  a  book,  are  developing  more  and  more  frequentlv  into 
ex,xrsitin  .s  on  what  shoidd  be  in-  j^  .^  natuii^llv  difficult  to  de- 
steatl  ot  what  aviII  be. 


If  enough  people  believe  in  a 
projed  almost  anything  can  be  ac- 
complished. The  verv  fart  that  peo- 
ple liiid  a  list  of  operating  proce- 
duics.  or  auN  of  the  above,  believ- 
able must  mean  that  what  ever  it 
is  being  described  is  possible.  After 
all,  as  Lincoln  .said,  you  can't  fool 
all  of  the  people  all  of  the  time. 

But    now    vcrv    few    people    are 

l)eing  fooled  anv  of  tiie  time.  .\ 
student  entering  the  I'niversity  for 
the  first  time  hears  tradition,  honor 
system,  cjualiiies  (supposed)  of  the 
C Carolina  gentleman  and  the  Caro- 
lina wav  of  life  until  ('hapel  Hill 
looks  like  a  minor  Utopia. 

Then  let  this  same  individual 
get  back  to  the  dorm  and  talk  to 
some  veteran  Carolina  gentlemen. 
There  is  nothing  violently  wrong 
with  the  topics  of  discussion,  aca- 
demic as  they  may  become,  but  the 
tonteni  usually  riuis  in  diametric 
opfxjsition  to  the  minor  Utopia  as 
orginallv  touted. 


cribe  anything  intangible.  People 
tend  to  picture  things  from  only 
their  point  of  view.  So  students 
rarit  compliment  the  quality  of 
the  h)()d  in  Len<Mr  Hall,  and  when 
they  do  the  phrase  "for  the  price  " 
Ls  begrudgingly  appended. 

And  the  management  of  Lenoir 
Hall  declares  in  the  Ojjeratibnal 
Proiedures  that'  work  in  their 
establishment  is  ";  wonderful  op- 
portunitv  for  a  man  to  secure  .\ 
fine  education  in  a  maimer  that 
Avill  make  him  jjroud  for  the  rest 
of  his  life.  ' 

That  he  had  to  scrape  garlwge 
of!  plates  to  get  an  education  ma-v 
be  a  fine  thing  for  a  ma::  to  tell 
his  soti.  but  as  iai  as  being  a 
"WoiKltrfid  op|x>rtinTity"  is  con- 
cerned —  well,  the  wonderment  of 
it  estapes  us. 

The  time  is  (oming  when  uikl- 
ed  lily  j>tibliciiy  will  stop  working. 
People  will  do  well  to  start  makc- 
ing  the  facts  pleasant  enough  to 
sell  their  program. 


Greek  Week  A  Good  Deal 


This  week  Carolina's  fraterni- 
ties are  sending  their  pledges 
through  (ireek  AVeek.  The  week 
replaces  the  innnature  and  often 
d;  ngerous  "Hell  \Veek  "  of  before, 
and  gives  the  fraternity  men  a 
chance  to  pit  their  future  brothers 
against  the  pledge  classes  of  other 
houses. 

Chapel  Hill's  gentlemen  greeks 
will  help  conditions  in  Chapel  Hill 
in  inanv  direct  and  indirect  ways. 
The  most  diiect  of  course  are  tlie 
service  projects  each  gioup's  pledge 
c '  iss  nuist  do.  But  the  more  in- 
c'irert  uavs  the  community  is  bene- 
fited rre  ecpially  \aluable. 

Mist,  lelaiioub  between  i,he  Ira- 
tenin\  men  and  townspeople  will 
f>e  streni>tl!ened.  Greek  Week  is  an 
annual  reminder  that  fraternitv  is 
not  all  party  and  noise:  that  fra- 
ternity men  are,  for  the  most  part 

mature  individuals  and  capable 


doing  good  in  and  for  tlie  com- 
nninitv. 

Secondiv,  relations  between  the 
houses  will  be  strengthened. 
Through  the  exchange  dinners  the 
pledge  classes  will  have  a  chance 
to  exchange  notes  on  their  pledge 
tiaining  and  will  observe  living 
conditions  in  houses  other  riian 
their  own. 

Through  competition  in  intra- 
nuirals  the  houses  have  been  drawn 
together  as  a  group.  On  field  day 
the  pledges  will  be  put  on  their 
own,  to  carry  their  house's  banner 
to*  either  victory  or  defeat,  but  al- 
so to  a  greater  unity  within  them- 
seive.s. 

Fraternities  aren't  really  on  any 

better    behaviour   this    week,    but 

they  aie  in  the  spotlight.  They  will 

prove    that    they   are    more    than 

of  social  animals. 


Time  Has  Come  For  Funds 


Married  I'nixersity  students  are 
no  longer  a  novelty.  An  estimated 
20  per  cent  of  the  student  body 
does  not  sound  like  a  novelty. 

^  et  the  stale  legislature  refuses 
to  accept  the  fact  that  in  this  era 
of  speed  and  pressure  frohi  all  over 
the  world  jieople  are  getting  mar- 
lied  s<H)ner  and  must  bev  housed 
while  they  get  a  college  education. 
This  is  especially  so  for  students 
in  institutions  of  higher  education. 

Their  very  environment  is  on  a 
higher  plane  than  that  of  the  aver- 
age citizen.  The  jX)wers  in  charge 
of  doling  out  mcjuey  should  reali/e 
that  education,  the  University  and 
married  students  ate  related  bv  ties 
other  than  the  almighty  c  hec  k 
book. 

Married  students  are  not  detri- 
mental to  the  standard  of  educa- 
tion. Quite  to  the  contrarv.  they 
are  uplifting  forces.  The  married 
student  has  taken  on  a  great  re- 
sponsibility, he  is  a-  ntatnre  indi- 
vidual. The  University  needs  ma- 
ture individuals.  It  needs  tliem 
badly.    • 

All  that  can  be  done  in  the  way 


The  Daily  Tar  Heel 

The  official  itudent  publication  of  the 
Publications  Boarci  of  the  Uriversity  uf 
North  Carohna,  where  it  is  published 
daily^  except  Monday  and*  examinatioc 
and  vacation  periods  and  summer  terms 
Entered  as  second  class  matter  in  the 
oost  oifice  in  Chapel  Hill.  N.  C.  undei 
the  Act  oi  March  8,  1870.  Subscriptioc 
rates  mailed,  $4  per  year.  .$2.50  a  seme* 
ten  delivered.  $6  a  year,  S3  90  a  aeme» 
ter 


editor 


FRED  POWLEDGE 


Maoaging  Editor CHARLIE  SLOAN 


N«ws  Editor 


NANCY  HILL 


Sports  Editor 


LARRY  CHEEK 


Busineu  Manager  BILL  BOB  PEEL 

Advertising  Manager  ^^„  FRED  KATZIN 
Night  Editor  .  - Manler  Springs 


of  advaiK  e  work  has  been  complet- 
ed bv  the  L  niversity.  The  hardest 
workers  of  ill  for  getting  married 
student  houiin»  have  been  officials 
in  the  I'nivcrsity.  But  the  work 
has  reached  r  jioint  where  it  must 
have  funds  to  continue,  and  other 
tones  have  power  over  the  purse- 
strings. 

This   Season 
Could   Use 
New  Title 

Cha|x'I  Hill's  highly  variable 
^\  eat  her  is  approaching  the  season 
in  between  winter  and  spring. 
Ihere  is  no  name  h)r  this  particu- 
lar part  of  the  year,  it  just  hap- 
pens. .Actually  there  is  not  even 
iAi\  wa\   (A  predicting  it. 

One  d;iy  students  will  be  stroll- 
ing  the  cinnpiis  in  shirtsleeves  and 
praising  the  airivai  of  spring,  and 
ihe  next  morning  be  cruiiching 
a(  loss  frosty  grass  to  early  claisses. 
7  he  campus  seems  to  be  in  the 
middle  of  just  such  a  time  now. 

In  a  lew  wtJks  the  |;reat  out- 
doors >\ill  go  through  what  poets 
anri  writers  ln're  been  singing  of 
foi. centuries.  The  rebirth  o\  na- 
ture, the  return  of  colfn-Mvilliug 
students  lo  South  Building's  steps 
and  everything  else  that  cotnes  tvilh 
the  \ernal  equinox. 

In  a  few  weeks  the  season  will 
be  over.  But  nobody  has  written 
about  the  in  between  time.  Just 
because  Sunday  was  warm  and  sun- 
ny is  no  excuse  to  start  warbling 
cheerful  melodies.  Tomorrow  will 
'^-obably  bring  a'  frost  that  will 
kill  any  brave  buds  that  tried  to 
mike  an  annearance  for  the, warm 
weather  Simday. 

Somrbodv  should^  recoenize  the 
mugwump  season    the    campus   is 

■  -  tVifoMfrh  arid,  o-ivp  it  an  of- 
fjrinl  n-rnir.  one  suitable  for  tnix- 
.  "d  groups. 


Village's  New  Housing: 
Someone  Must  Move  Out 


Garke  Jones 

A  large  number  of  married 
students  in  Victory  Village  will 
more  than  likely  find  them- 
selves in  a  very  unpleasant 
£ituation  next  fall  in  the  event 
the  two-stor>'  units  thsre  are 
torn  down. 

Even  though  they  —  the  fami- 
lies in  the  two-<story  units  -^ 
wil  not  be  faced  with  the  danger 
of  fire  as  they  are  now.  some 
of  them  may  find  themselves, 
out  on  the  street  with  no  place 
to  live. 

Although  HtAising  Officer 
James  Wadsworth  has  said  the 
married  students  who  will  be 
affected  in  that  event  will  have 


priority  over  the  remaining 
one-story  apartments,  it  is 
doubtful  there  will  be  enough 
vacancies  to  go  around. 

The  12  two-story  units  receht- 
ly  ''condemned"  by  the  State 
Insurance  Dept.  have  eight 
joparate  apaitments  —  four  eacfi' 
on  the  first  and  second  floors 
—  in  each  one.  making  a  total 
of  96  families.  Therefore,  (al- 
lowing for  the  probability  some 
of  the  96  may  not  return  next 
fall  regardless),'  approximately 
that  many  vacancies  will  have 
to  occur  among  the  remaining 
one-story  units. 

University  officials  now  study- 
ing the  facilities  in  Victory  Vil- 


lage to  determine  what  will  be 
done  with  the  condemned  units 
may  do  one  of  two  things,  judg- 
ing, from  what  UNC  Chancellor 
Robert  B.  House  has  said  re- 
cently. 

Either  repairs  and  improve- 
ments will  be  made  on  the  old 
units  with  discontinuation  of  the 
second  floor  (the  state  law  says 
frames  of  wooden  construction 
must  not  be  more  than  one 
story  in  height)  or  the  units  may 
be  torn  down  altogether  and  re- 
placed by  more  permanent  hous- 
ing. 

Either   way    won't   help    the 

situation  much,  if  at  all,  at  the 

present  time. 


"Don't  Worry  —  They're  Condemned  Anyway  — 
I'll  Show  You  One  You  Can  Move  Into  By  1960" 


YOU  Said  It: 


How  About  Caddie  For  Others? 


Editor: 

It  seems  that  the  Christmas 
spirit  has  extended  this  year  in- 
to late  February.  An  occasional 
bird  chirps  in  the  treen  ol  a 
morning,  and  the  mercantile  iOr 
terests  downtown  have  removed 
their  symbols  of  good  cheer  from 
JYanklih  St. 

But  not  only  hasn't  the  spirit 
of  the  past  season  died,  it  seems 
to  have  gained  proportions  far 
beyond  those  of  last  Dec.  25.  As 
a  matter  of  fact.  Santa  came  to 
my  room  the   other   night  on   a 


most  charitable  mission:  it  seems 
that  a  poor  Mac-something-or- 
other  was  without  a  Cadillac  car 
in  his  stocking  last  Christmas. 

I  was  so  touched  by  Santa's 
plea  that  we  rectify  this  mis- 
take that  I  began  to  think  of  all 
the  other  poor  follu  who  were 
by  some  cruel  fate  overlooked  in 
this  respect.  I  therefore  submit 
the  following  names  for  consid- 
eration in  this  time  ot  bene- 
ficenop. 

Mr.  Archibald  Henderson  — 
One  Cadillac  for  indirectly  per- 


forming a  greater  service  for 
this  university  and  the  world  of 
letters  than  the  esteemed  Mr. 
Mac-whatcver-it-is  can  ever  hope 
to  do. 

Mr.  Thomas  Wolfe  —  for  the 
same  reason,  one  Cadillac.  To 
be   awarded    posthumously. 

Chancellor  House  —  A  like 
award,  in  recognition  of  his 
many  years  of  service.  With  the 
inscription:  "He  did  his  best — 
more  can  no  man  do." 

I  could  go  on,  but  I  think  I've 
made  my  point. 

Anthony  Wolff 


Repairs  and  improvements 
would  help  but  the  second  floor 
discontinuation  would  leave  the 
area  with  4  less  apartments.  The 
waiting  list  would  grow  even 
longer. 

The  obvious  solution  would  be 
to  build  more  permanent*  hous- 
ing facilities,  but  that  will  be 
an  impossibility  for  at  least 
another  two  years. 

x  *       »       « 

Why? 

Because  the  University  would 
not  be  able  to  start  construction 
of  new  facilities  for  at  least  that 
long,  judging  from  the  example 
of  the  proposed  three  men's 
dormitories  and  an  addition  to 
Spencer   women's   dormitory. 

Contracts  for  the  dormitories 
and  addition  took  over  a  year 
and  a  half  to  be  awarded  due  to 
various  reasons.  The  Victory  Vil 
lage  construction  woi4ld  more 
than  likely  take  about  the  same 
length  of  time. 

There  is  a  good  chance  the 
University  will  be  successful  in 
its  quest  for  an   enabling  act 
from  the  General  Assembly,  ac- 
cording to  University  Business 
Manager  Claude  league. 
Even  though  a  similar  request 
failed     during     the     last     state 
legislature  session.  Teague  soun- 
ed    hopeful.   He    said    University 
officials   had    been   ooing   much 
more    work    on    the    matter  this 
tim?  than  was  done  then. 

Nothing  concrete  is  known  at 
the  present  time  concerning  the 
terms  of  the  act.  Teague  said 
last  week  it  may  be  a  while  be- 
fore the  measure  is  introduced 
because  the  session  is  still  in  its 
early  stages  and  things  needed 
to  settle  down  somewhat  before 
action  will  be  taken. 

But  he  said  it  would  take  only 
about  six  days  in  all  to  get  the 
bill  through,  if  it  will  pass. 
Just   how   much   money   the 
University  twould    be   able    to 
borrow  was    not   known,    said 
Teague.  He  said  since  the  act 
passed  on  the  proposed   men's 
dormjfories   and    Spencer    Hell 
wing  allowed  the  University  to 
borrow  $2  million,  the  figure 
for   the    Victory   Village   hous- 
ing   virould    probably    not    be 
mere  than  this. 
Other  questions  are  raised  in 
connection     with     this,such     as 
why  should  the  University  have 
to  seek  passage  of  an  enabling 
act?  Why  did  the  Advisory  Budg- 
et  Commission   completely    turn 
down    the    University's    original 
appropriation    request    of    over 
$1.5    Bjillion    for    married    stu- 
dents' housing? 

The  answer,  according  to 
Teague,  is  opposition  on  the 
part  of  some  members  of  the 
Budget  Commission  to  students' 
being  married  while  in  school. 

Those  objecting  to  student 
marriages  apparently  think  they 
are  more  or  less  of  a  passing 
fancy  and  do  not  realiz*  they 
are  here  to  stay. 

This  is  «  blind  attitude.  Stu- 
dent marriages  are  more  than 
a  passing  fancy.  The  number 
of  married  students  in  college 
is  increesing  each  yeer  in  col> 
leges  throughout  the  country 
and  the  situation  here  is  no 
exception. 


Pogo 


By  Walt  Kelly 


AArsr.  Betts 
Hiew  Novel 

JeisieRehder 

TALL  HOUSES  IN  WlNT^ii,  By  Doris  B«IH, 
published  by  G.  P.  Pu«n»"»'*- 

r   ^  K^t  The  Gentle  Insurrection,  a  vol- 
In  h3r  first  book.  The  Genj^  ^^^  ^^^ 

ume  of  short  ^^"«' ^J^^^^Una  Prize.  In  fact, 
Putnam-Umversity  of  N^rth  C         ^  ^^^^^^^^  ^ 

almost  «t  once'f  "..^^"^oung  ^^^  ^^  ,^  ^^^e 
one  of  the  mo.4  «!^«^ J^'^^  ^etts  has  gone  be- 
In  Tall  Houses  m  Wnit«-J>ons  ^^ 

yond  the  short-story  form  to  wriie 
pected  of  her. 

in  the  book  the  author  gives  us  the  Godwms 
4  l?olelilU    the  returning  Ryan  Godwin  bring- 
r^  irhlm  on  his  visit  horn.  th.  burden    of 
^  TiJL}NBs  love  affair  with  Js«ftca,  his  s.ster- 
'"..wT^k  hZe  Ryan  finds  Fen,  his  nephew 
ITlTuvng   memento  of  Jessica  and  finds    too, 
.self' he  .^rhaps  has  been  uncon«:iously  seek.ng. 
The  whole  of  the  book,  which  is  compkx  and 
satisfying,  centers  around  the  search  for  th.  self 
which  is  never  quite  exactly  defmed. 

The  author  asks  that  her  main  character,  Ryan, 
be  judged  in  the  end  by  his  growing  compassion  to- 
wards the  boy  Fenwick  who  might  be  his  son  and 
by  his  own  realization  that  although  he  is  danger 
oulsly  ill  of  throat  cancer  and  very  tired,  he  i5  not 
yet  tired  eough.  In  Ryan's  own  words,  "Im  not 
through  yet,  that's  all.  I  haven't  finished  " 

In  Fenwick's  thoughts  at  the  book's  end,  which 
projection  "of  Ryan's,  the  reader  like  the  boy,  comes 
to  ask  for  a  time  to  be  with  new  capacities  for 
change  to  demand  it  from  the  leaves,  the  bare 
trees  the  almost  blue  skies;  to  demand  it  from 
what^er  there  is  beyond  the  sky  that  hovers  over 

Stoneville.  u         .u  i 

Set  in  the  pattern  of  the  journey  home,  the  novel 
begins  with  Ryan's  interim  life  with  his  sister  Asa. 
the  boy  Fen,  and  Lady  Malevena  the  cook,  who  rep- 
resents the  continuity  of  living  in  the  Godwin  house. 
Tl^e  very  real  ghost  in  the  novel,  so  real  that  in  the 
central  section  of  Tall  I.  uses  in  Winter  she  almost 
takes  over  the  book,  is  Jessica  Ryan,  the  wife  of 
Aver,y,  who  has  died  with  her  husband  in  a  car  ac- 
cident 10  years  before,  but  who  is  still  very  much 
alive  in  Ryan's  mind  when  he  get^-  off  the  bus  with 
the  crowd  at  the  station. 

Sensibly  for  Ryan,  home  is  Wellman  College  in 
New  England,  where  he  is  a  teacher  of  English  lit- 
erature and  to  which  he  will  return  when  the  jour 
ney  in  search  of  himself  is  over.  Actually,  home  is 
still  Stoneville  and  in  one  sense  the  book  is  an  in- 
vestigation of  the  effect  the  past  in  a  very  ordinary 
small  Southern  town  can  have  on  a  man  who  is 
forced  by  circum..-tances  to  take  a  long  look  at  hun- 
self  and  the  surroundings  that  made  him. 

Doris  Betts  knows  her  town— the  bus  station, 
the  realty  office,  the  orchard  behind  the  Godwin 
house  and  the  frosted  hunting  country  of  the 
final  scene. 

Thematically.  the  town  comes  to  stand  as  an  ex- 
planation of  what  all  the  people  in  Tall  Houses  in 
Winter  become  because  of  each  other.  Using  a  shift- 
ing point  fo  view  to  dramatize  her  theme,  the  au- 
thor starts  her  story  slowly  moving  forward  with 
the  hesitancy  of  a  child  at  a  new  game,  here  turn- 
ing back  again,  now  j-umping  with  hopscotch  step, 
but  always  managing  to  keep  the  focus-  on  the  Ryan- 
Fenwich  relation  and  on  Ryan's  remembrance  of 
Jessica,  and  on  the  relationship  of  all  of  them  lo 
Stoneville  itself. 

Ryan  does  move  IN  SAD  AND  UNDIGNIFIED 
WAYS— the  caption  for  the  first  part  of  the  movel— 
down  to  the  Jewish  tailor  and  back  home  to  Lad'/ 
Malveena's  kitchen  where  she  and  Mister  Lord  some- 
times seem  to  have  consummated  an  alliance  against 
him,  and  eventually  into  an  interview  with  a  sharp 
operator  named  Peyton  who  wants  to  eartablish  a 
college  in  Stoneville  for  reasons  known  only  to 
himself. 

On  the  question  of  the  college,  Ryan  vacillates 
but  it  is  apparent  thet  his  inebility  to  take  sides 
for  or  against  Peyton  is  no  mere  then  a  small  pert 
of  the  larger  indecision  that  permeates  the  first 
part  of  the  novel. 
In  A  VIRTUOUS  DAY,  the  novels  center.  Jessica 
Maples,  who  became  the  wife  of  Avery  Godwin  in 
1936  and  soon  after  became  the  mistress  of   her 
brother-in-law,   is  projected  through  Ryan's  mem- 
ory with  such  force  that  her  presence  changes  the 
pace  of  the  book.  Virtuous,  serene,  erotic,  but  at 
the  same  time  cold  in  facing  reality.  Jessica  is  more 
woman  than  heroine.  Some  of  the  most  powerful 
writing  in  the  novel,  and  Doris  Betts  is  a  powerful 
wTiter,  lies  in  the  pages-  that  project  the  love  she 
brings  to  Ryan  in  a  way  that  for  many  never  stand 
as  having  any  virtue  at  all. 

These  remembered  todays,  part  of  Was-Time 
move  forward  through  love  making,  renouncement, 
and  more  love  making  to  Jessica's  pregnancy  with 
Fenwick  and  to  her  decision  to  make  him.  in  the 
world's  eye  the  son  of  her  husband  Avery  thus  for- 
ever anchoring  Ryan  as  a  Romeo. 

But  in  Is-'Hme  with  Jessice's  deatfi  10  years 
In  the  past  Fenwfck  begins  to  take  his  mothers 
place  with  Ryen.  Their  relationship  feeds  on  small 
friendly  deeds.  It  holds  deep  intimacy.  It  contains 
within  Itself  all  that  the  love  affair  which  is  now 
part  of  WavTIme  could  nevM-  do  more  than  re- 


fleet. 


And  so  in  the  end  and  by  compassion  with  the 
journey  to  Stoneville  is-  almost  over  the  final  motif 
becomes  apparent  as  one  of  grief  c;.lling  unto  gr»cf 
until  out  of  the  calUng  a  new  bond  appears  between 
Ryan  and  "Fenwick  and  by  extension  between  Ryan 
and  his  relationship  to  Time-To-Be. 

In  the  moment  the  taxi  that  is  taking  Ryan  back 
to  the  bus  station  comes  to  a  halt  before  the  Godwin 


house  and  blows  like  Gabriel,  we  know  like  Ryan 
that  the  world  is  always  in  peril  however  blue  the 
sky  and  bnght  the  sun,  but  we  know  too  with  him 

tnar  in   oil   mn..'..  i: ^^ 


that  m  all  men  s  lives  there  are  one  or.  two  moments 
in  which  all  the  lement.-  are  in  perfect  and  pre- 
carious balance  .  .  .  and  that  in  such  a  blinding 
moment  we  draw  clo^e  to  the  heart  of  the  axi.s  of 
joy,  to  the  place  where  the  universe  is  hinged. 

Jessie  Rehder  is  a  lecturer  in  the  English 
Dept.  here,  and  she  teaches  courese  in  creative 
*»rltlng.  She  recently  published  a  novel,  Remem- 
brance Way. 


; 

fros 

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Plan 

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Camp  will 

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Y. 

, 

Discussi< 

will  follow 

Today's 

1 

roll  Hall. 

in  a  series 

•    this  year's 

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Advance  ir 
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Procter  & 
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Personnel, 
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Placement 


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,    TUESDAY,  FEBRUARY  26,  1957 

\      Frosh  Camp 

"^      Planning 

i      Begins  Tonight 

Planning  for  the  1957  Freeman 
Camp  will  begin  tonight  according 
to  John  Reibel,  Y  secretary. 

Reports  will  be  given  at  that 
time  by  a  subcommittee  en  evalu- 
ation of  last  fall's  camp  for 
frcs-hmen  boys,  sponsored  by  the 
Y. 

Discussion,  led  by  Claude  Shotts, 

will  follow  the  report. 

Today's  meeting  at  6:45  in  Car- 
roll Hall,  room  200,  is  the  first 
in  a  series  of  planning  sessions  for 
i  this  year's  freshman  camp.  Gerry 
llayo,  YMCA  president  will  pre- 
side. 

Mayo   urged   that   all   interested 
members  attend  tonight's  and  fol- 
vX  lowing  Tuesday  meeting. 


THI  DAILY  TAR  HllL 


PAGE  THREE 


o 


J1 


Seniors 

Advance  Information 

On  Career  Opportunities 

At  Procter  &  Gamble 


UP  Meets 
To   Begin 
Selecting 

The  University  Party  will  meet 
in  Roland  Parker  1  and  2  at  7:30 
tonight  to  select  nominees  for  the 
coming  spring  elections,  it  was  an- 
nounced yco^erday  by  Chairman 
Mike  Weinman. 

Secretary  Harriet  Bobbit  and 
Chairman  Weinman  will  accept 
membership  petitions  and  dues, 
and  distribute  membership  cards 
at  6:30  p. ill.  before  the  scheduled 
meeting. 

All  petitions  for  UP  member- 
ship must  be  presented  at  this 
time  so  that  membership  cards 
can  be  issued,  Weinman  said.  New 
members  will  be  permitted  to  vote, 
be  added. 

Actual  nominees  will  not  be 
named  until  Mar.  5  because  of  an 
impending  revision  of  election  by- 
laws, Weinman  said. 

I 

1  The  UP  chairman  added  that  due 
to    the    large    roles    of    inactivity 

i  among  members  between  elections, 
new   nominating   procedures  have 

!  been  initiated. 

I  The  program  tonight  will  also 
i  include  Weinman's  reply  to  "a  let- 
;  ter  on  closed  sessions. 


Advance  information  on  Marketing: 
Management  opportunities  in  ffisj 
Procter  &  Gamble  Advertising  De  ! 
partment  is  now  available.  Write! 
H.H.  Wilson,  Jr.,  Supervisor  of 
Personnel,  Advertising  Depart- 1 
ment,  Procter  A  Gambie,  Cincin>  I 
nati,  Ohio.  Campus  interviews  in 
Placement   Service   March   28. 

i 


CLASSIFIEDS 


5  ROOM  BRICK  HOUSE.  3  BED 
rooms,  all  modern  conveniences. 
3  miles  on  Old  86  Hyway.  Stove 
and  Frigedaire  furnished.  Call 
Fred  Katzin  after  6:00,  8-9025. 


ITALL\N-BUILT  MOTOR  SCOOT- 
er.  Sears  Cruisiare.  Excellent 
condition.  90  miles  per  gallon. 
Call  S.  M.  Bryant,  8-2052. 


IT'S  FOR  REAL! 


by  Chester  Field 


HOW  PRACTICAL  IS  MOONLIGHT? 

Hie  bookwonn  said,  "A  moonlight  night 

Is  apt  to  be  a  worthwhile  si^t. 
But  after  you're  throu|^  with  it 
What  can  you  do  with  it?" 

MORALS  Plenty,  chum!  Open  up 
your  hbido  and  let  in  some 
moonlight.  Take  your  pleasure 
BIG  .  .  .  smoke  Cheutezfield  King. 
With  that  big  size  and  ttiat  big 
taste  .  .  .  it's  the  smoothest  tasting 
smoke  today  'cause  it's  packed 
mote  omootl^y  1^  ACCU'RAY. 

Uk*  your  pleasure  BIGT 

A  Oeteritold  Wnfl  hm»  Iwgytl^ig! 

S60  for  tadt  philoKphieal  mrm  aettpttdfor  public 
cation.  OiaUrfitU,  P.O.  Box  21.  New  Yark  46.  N.  V 

e  Un«n  •  Mrw*  TofeMM  0>. 


DAILY    CROSSWORD 


ACROSS 
1  Miaa 

Pickens 
S.  King  S»ud. 

foriiutanc* 
9.  Wot  ettodtny 
,  10  Desert 


f 

Ml 

i.X 

:'  14. 


(Aaia) 
Subsided 
Floating 
in  water 
OwcUinfs 

i'  16.  Sur*(^et.> 
17.  Compass 
point 
<abbr.) 
I  18.  Hunter's 

!       prey 
:  21.  Ben* 
:  22.  Jos 
I  25.  Make* 
'  brittle 
t  27.  Plced 
;  29.  Cooking 
'        uteiuil 
31.  Greet 
'  34.  Hawaiian 

bird 
;  35.  Sutmierged 
:  37.  River 

(Chin.) 
:  38.  Friar's  title 
'  40.  Specimen 
43.  avll 

wrongs 
46.  WeighU 

(Ind.) 
,47.Two.t«ed 

stotti 
4t  Dash 

49  Indefinite 
amount 

50  Dispatch 

DOWN 
I   1.  Middleman 
!   t  Large 

reading  de^ 


Qui   irA^^   r:r.r:.'i 


3.  Require  26.  Wild 

4.  Finished  sheep 
5  Turkish  title  (India) 

6.  Quarrel  28.  Body 

7.  Arabian  of 
garmenta  water 

8.  Church  29.  Kind 
official  of 

11.  The  Orient  drink 

13.  Dial,  variant  30.  Per- 

of  "horse"  mea-  »"•• 

M.  Diacrimi-  We  Ye«tor«iir'«  AMw«r 

natea  by  liquids         41.  Burrowing 

19.  Before  32.  Manhattan  animal 

20.  Wealthy  33.  Falsehoods      42.  Schema 

23.  Sash  (Jap.)  36.  Singer  44.  Head 

24.  Spreads  Smith  covering 
grass                     (poss.)             45.  Take  legal 
todry  39.  River  Ut.)            procec^ii0i 


'Brigadoon"  Romantic  Leads 


BIynn  Durniny  and  Gana  Strastlsr,  romantic  leads  in  the  for»h-comin«  Playmaker's  |»reductien  of 
"Brigadeon"  rehaarse  a.  scene  on  their  waddfng  day.  "Brigadeon"  will  be  prasantad  March  1,  1,  and  3 
in  Memorial   Hall. 


-A^rried  Student  Housing- 


Covering  The  University  Campus 


DaMOLAY  < 

The  UNC  chapter  of  Order  of  j 
the  DeMolay  will  meet  tonight  atj 
8  in  the  Masonic  Temple  on  West 
Franklin  St. 
WUNC-TV 

WUNC-TV,  the  University's  edu- 
cational television  station: 

12:45— Music. 
1:00— Today  on  the  Farm, 
1:30 — Music  in  the  Air. 
5:15— 'Musk.  "^  ■ 

5:30— Buckskin  Bo^  j^jj 

6:00 — legislative  Review. 
6:20— News. 
6:30 — ^Magic  Lantern. 
6:45— Help  Wanted 
7:00 — Books  and  P  >  pie. 
7:15-^ports. 
7:40 — German  Course. 
8:15— Dr.  Schriver. 


9:0e— Ideas. 
9:30-'Bternal  Spring. 
10:00— Final  Edition. 

DANCE  LESSONS 

Dance  lessons  will  be  held  to- 
night in  the  Rendezvous  Room 
from  6:30-8.  Mrs.  Bounds  of  flie 
Bounds  Studio  of  Dance  is  instruc- 
tor for  the  class. 

FORUM  FILM 

The  YMCA  and  Hillel  Founda- 
tion will  present  a  Film  Forum 
movie,  "Lost  Boundaries,"  Wed- 
nesday at  7:30  in  Carroll  Hall.  The 
film  will  be  followed  by  a  discus- 
sion led  by  Dr:  William  K;)itton, 
of   the   University   Dept.    olj^Soci- 

I  ology. 

j  PSYCHOLOGY  CLUB 

There  will  be  a  meeting  of  the 


Psychology  Club  tonight  at  7:30  in 
room  102  of  New  West.  Two  films 
on  child  psychology  wlii  be  shown. 
Following  the  films  a  discussion 
will  be  led  by  Dr.  June  Chance  of 
the  UNC  Psychology  Dept.  AH 
undergraduate  psychology  majors 
and  other  interested  persons  have 
been  invited. 

YWCA  POSITIONS 

Interviews  will  be  held  from  2-5 
p.m.  today  by  the  YWCA  nominat- 
ing committee  for  girls  interested 
in  executive  positions  in  the  YWCA 
for  the  coming  year. 

Ail  girls  interested  in  one  of  the 
six  positions  have  been  asked  to 


(Continued  from  page  1) 

burdensome  and  unreasonable 
room  rent  or  fees  .  .  .  The  board 
believes  it  to  be  a  sound  policy 
that  students  living  on  the  cam- 
pus should  be  required  to  pay 
the  actual  cost  of  their  hous- 
ing." 

The  University  administration 
recenUy  announced-  it  would 
^eek  permission  of  the  General 
Assembly,  now  meeting  here,  to 
borrow  money  with  which'  to 
erect  permanent  housing  for  mar- 
riied  students. 

Students  at  Chapel  Hill  are 
already  paying  ino^ased  dorm>' 
itory  rents'  in  order  to  pay  off 
a  $2  million  loan  the  Univers- 
ity secured  one  and  one-half 
years  ago.  The  $2  million  Will 
go  toward  addltioftal  men's  and 
women's  hoosihg. 

The  Visiting  Committee's  re- 
port gave  no  indication  that  th^ 
Board  of '  Trustees  would  push 
very  hard  for  expanded  library 
facilities  o^  a  new  student  union' 
building  for  the  University  at 
Chapel  Hill.  Said  the  reportf  \ 

"Other  buildings  are  needed, 
such  as  expanded  library  facili- 
ties, a  student  union  building, 
etc..  but  the  housing  situation 
is  in  the  actite  stage.**-    v\?-- 


The  report  brought  a  hint  of 
good  news  for  graduate  stu- 
dents from  other  states.  It  rec- 
ommended the  difference  be- 
tween in-state  tuition  and  out- 
of-state  tuition  (S350)  be  waiv- 
ed for  students  in  the  Univers- 
ity's graduate  schools.  The  dif- 
ferential is  now  "adversely  af- 
fecting the  enrollments  in  the 
gradUllfe  schools  of  candidates 
for  the  master's  and  doctors 
degrees,  and  ...  a  rich  source 
of  prosBective  teachers,  schol- 
ars and  researchers  is  being  lost 
to  the  University  and  the  state." 

The  report  recomme|?ded  the 
differential  be  made  up  by  ad- 
ditional  state   appropriations. 

A   new  policy  may  be   forth- 
coming on  the  number  of  coeds  ^ 
allowed    at    the    University    in 
Chapel  Tlill. 

The  Visiting  Committee's  re- 
port recommended  "that  the 
policy  of  the  Board  of  Trustees 
be  made  definite  on  the  ques- 
tion of  whether  tiie  proportion 


of  women  students  at  Chapel 
Hill  is  to  be  increased  or  main- 
tained at  the  present  level." 

The  recommendation  came  af- 
ter Dean  of  Women  Katherine 
Carmichael  posed  "the  question 
of  whether  the  enrollment  of 
women  students  is  to  be  ex- 
panded —  thus  requiring  much 
more  living  space  than  will  be 
provided  by  the  addition  to 
Spencer  Hall  —  or  maintained 
at  the  present  figure  —  which 
will  require  an  admissions  pol- 
icy much  more  selective  than 
it  now  is." 

Registration  at  the  University 
for   the    fall   semester   included 
5,756  men  and  1,215  women. 


YW  ExecuttYf 
,  Positions 
Are  Now  Open 

Six  executive  positions  in  the 
YWCA  for  the  coming  year  are 
nbw  open. 

The  elected  positions  are  presi- 
dent, vice  president,  secretary, 
treasurer,  program  chairman  and 
membership  chairman. 

All  girls  interested  in  the  posi- 
tions have  been  asked  to  come  by 
the  Y  office  and  make  an  appoint 
ment  for  an  interview  with  the 
YWCA  nominating  committee. 

Interviews  will  be  held  today 
from  2-5  p.m.  and  Wednesday  and 
Thursday  from  2-4  p.m.  The  com- 
mittee will  nominate  a  slate  of  of- 
come  by  the  Y  office  and  make  an  j  ficers,  and  there  will  be  an  open 
appointment  for  an  interview  with  •  nomination  meeting  on  March  5 
the  nominating  committee.  in  Graham  Memorial. 


Junior  Bargains 


Tha  Valiay  of  Song,  by  Elizabeth 
Goudge.  A  gorgeous  tale,  with  a 
touch  of  magic,  for  the  tcn-to-four- 
teen  young  lady.  Published  at  $3.00. 


Our  Spadat 


$1.25 


SharkI,  by  Patrick  O'Connor.  This 
true  tale  of  high  adventure  in  per- 
suit  of  the  five-ton  basking  shark 
was  originally  written — and  priced 
— ^f or  adults.  Now  you  can  afford 
to  buy  it  for  your  boy — and  will 
he  eat  it  up!  Published  at  $3.50. 


Our  Spacial 


%^J2B 


COIGATEPALMOLIVE 

IV-BtflMll 

"^FORYOU- 


It's  All  in  the  Family,  by  Margaret 
Millar.  The  chucklesome  story  of 
how  eleven^year-old  Priscilla  mak- 
es l^er^'way  in  a  world  cluttered 
with  Mother,  Father,  Aunts  and 
Uncles,  •  and  other  Aged  Persons. 
Will  appeal  mightily  to  ten-to- 
fo\lrtecn-year  giris.  Published  at 
$^.50. 


IDC  Prexy 
Expands 
On  Rul 


COURTHOUSE,  TOO 


Night  Burglars  Ransack  Hillsboro 


IDC  President  Sonny  Hallford 
issued  a  statement  yesterday  ex- 
panding upon  the  reasons  for  the 
Council  by-law  which  states  that 
no  member  of  a  social  fraternity 
can  be  a  member  of  IDC. 

Hallford  pointed  out  that  the  ac- 
tion is  not  intended  to  discrimin- 
ate against  dormitory  residents  who 
are  also  fraternity  members.  "It  is 
a  mfeasure  the  IDC  has  been  need- 
ing for  along  time,"  Hallford  »aid. 

The  Council  president  stated, 
"The  main  reason  why  it  was  in- 
corporated in  the  by-laws  was  to 
give  continuity  in  the  IDC  mem- 
bership. Due  to  the  fact  that  the 
IDC  meets  on  Wednesday  night, 
which  is  also  the  night  many  fra- 
ternities hold  their  chapter  meet 


Smooth-working  break-in  artists  j  of  loot  was  taken.  The  break-in  at  i  Sheriff  Odell  Clayton  said  today 
ransacked  a  good  portion  of  the  the  Courthouse  included  entry  into  that  no  ^ood  clues  had  been  found 
dQwatowtt  business  district  and  the    ^         ^cunty  office,  and  caused  the    «"  the  wholesale  burglaries,  though 

•  •      ~ '  SBl  Agents  Haywod  Starhng  and 

Lyn  Harton  had  lifted  a  number  of 
fingerprints  from  various  places. 


SUTTONS 


PHONE    9-8781 
FREE     DELIVERY 


County    Courthouse    in    Hillsboro 
Friday  night. 

Altogether  14  business  establish- 
ments were  burglarired,  though 
only  a  comparitively  small  amount 


building  to  be  closed  on  Saturday 
morning  while  employees  checked 
through  the  thoroughly  ransacked 


Hamilton  Fan  Club  Here 
Plans  Spring  Projects 


In  keeping  with  the  wishes  of 
OeoKge  Hamilton  IV  that  they  be 
organized  for  charitable  purposes, 
the  nevt  UamiltoD  Fan  Club  here 
vrill  help  ibe  N.  C.  Society  for  Crip- 
pje4  Children  and  Adults  in  its  an- 
nual fond  drive  this  spring,  and  is 
already   collectmg  books    for   chil- 


ings,  we  have  had  confUcU  with  Oren  patients  at  Memorial  Hospital. 

meeting  dates."  The  group  was  organized  locally 

Hallford  pomted  out  that  the  in-l  iast   week   by    ^s   <^a^<|*a  ^^*°; 

dividual  involved  has  to  forego  one 


of  the  meethiga.  "Eventually  it 
reaches  the  point  where  fhe  indi- 
vidual has  to  resign  from  the  IDC 
or,  due  to  the  fact  he  has  misse<i 
meetings  which  are  unexcused 
absences,  he  in  removed  f^om  of- 
fice," he  added. 

According  to  Hallfcnsd,  the  action 
taken  by  the  IDC  was  to  help  both 
the  IDC  and  the  fraternity  man. 
"We  of  the  IDC  hope  others  can  | 
see  our  side  of  the  issue  and  will 
agree  with  ua  that  k  waa  the  bf^ 
soltttipn  t^.the  puroUein/'  Halif ord 
sa^. 

, — J . 

^und  &  Fur/ 
>uts  Slated 
For  March  5 

Tryt>ut9  for  this  year's  musical. 
"Sound  and  Fury"  will  be  held 
Tuesday,  BItu'dt  S,  k  waa  anneunc- 
ed  Monday. 

Tryouts  Tuesday  will  be  held  in 
Memorial  Hall  from  4-6  and  7-9 
p.m. 

Scfipts  (for  Uns'  I***  produc- 
tion. "Thcives  ^oli|t^3'"  are  avail- 
able on  ireserve  at  the  Graham  Me- 
morial miormatios  Des^. 

The  prodtiction  will  be  directed 


nady.  National  Hamilton  Fan  Clubs 
President,  who  was  appointed  re- 
centrly  by  Hamilton  himself. 
President  of  the  55-member  local 
is   Miss  Cookie  Hackney,  daughter 


of  Mr.  and  Mrs.  Hubert  Hackney. 

Hamilton  wired  his  regrets 
frtwn  Washington  at  being  unaWe 
to  attend  the  Chapel  Wl  meeting, 
as  follows:  "Leaving  on  record 
pitomotion  tour  of  Chicago.  Cleve- 
land, and  Canada.  Would  like  very 
much  to  maike  a  trip  to  Chapel 
Hill  in  the  near  future  and  meet 
with  the  entire  fan  club  for  an  af- 
ternoon or  evening  of  fun.'  WDl  be 
in  touch  with  you  to  set  up  a  satis- 
factory date  at  the  earliest  pos- 
sible moment." 


Tryoi 


Visiting 

(Cotitinued  pom  Page  f) 
late,  and  those  who  have  a  2:M 
class  may  leave  early. 

The  thirteen  trustees  are  Mrs.  B. 
S.  Ferguson.  Taylwsviile;  Ifirs.  Al- 
bert H.  Lathrop,  Asheville;  Mrs. 
Mary  Stanford,  Chapel  HiU;  Mrs. 
May  Tomllnson,  High  Point;  Mrs. 
Ed  Anderson.  West  Jeffersoi;  l^W- 
Nancy  H.  Copeland.  Murfreesboro; 
.Mrs.  P.  P.  McCain.  Red  ^jdngs; 
Mrs.  J.  B.  Kitrell.  GreenviHe;  Mrs. 
Grace  Rodenborough,  Walnut  Cove; 
Mrs.  C.  W.  TiUett,  Charlotte;  Mrs. 
Oscar  Barker.  Durham;  Mrs.  M«- 
banc  Burgwyn.  Jackson;  and  Mrs. 
B.  C.  Parker.  Albemarle. 


At  a  number  of  Main  Street 
establishments  which  had  not 
been  entered,  the  doors  had  been 
tried  with  a  crowbar  or  some 
simiUr  tool.  A  wrecking  bar 
stolen  from  Ray's  Electric  Shop 
was  left  on  the  desk  in  County 
Tax  Collector  Car  Davis'  office. 
The  burglars  get  into  the  Court- 
house by  breaking  a  window  on 
the  east  side  of  the  building. 

Following  arc  the  downtowTi 
establishments  entered:  Dr.  Robert 
Murphy's  office,  where  about  $200 
was  taken  from  a  locked  filing 
cabinet,  Hillsboro  Dry  Cleaners, 
Morris  Telephone  Co.,  Hillsboro 
High  School,  Botsford's  Radio  and 
TV.  the  News  of  Orange  County 
and  Citizens  Insurance  Agency  of- 
fice, Ray's  Electric  Co..  Summy 
Shoe  Repair  Shop,  and  Smiths 
Readj'-TorWear. 


T«  The  Yoviig  Man 
Who  Loves  Tho  Sea 


Bifk  Okayed ' 

RALEIGH— The  Board  of  Trus- 
tees unanimoiisly  approved  c«>n- 
tracts  for  three  new  m^ns  dormi- 
tcric.;  and  one  addition  to  bpenccr 
women's  dorm  at  Chapel  Hill. 
Contracts  for  the  three  men's 
by  John  Ludwig,  and  is  scheduled  j  dorms  totaled  $1,462.57.  The  addi- 
fox.ABrfQKmaace  thfi.  l««t.  we«tluuuL!  Una  tOLSoencer  ^«omen'&  dormitory 
in  March.  totaled  $279,711. 


YOUII     TRIP     l»    MUCH    H  O  R  B    F  U  H 
WITH    r«l«NDLY    FOLK«^ 

Go  TRAILWA^S 

••.Specialists  infeidly 
•first -class -travel  !^ 

Tfcrilway»  90M  THRU  »o  mott  d««tinofion*i; 


OpHi^Hy  swfllto  QmRM  IMm  DraftMM  !•  •  YHr- 
xvnA  dlMta  §1  etmftrt  Mi  ntf  »»!■§  f»  tfct  SiH  C^ff . 

the  VnOKLis  SiOTiinioore  Co^w«atwk.  oper*tiB»  the  larfttt  ship- 
yard on  the  Gulf  Coast  offers  tpromiria^hjture  to  lyalifiad  drafts' 
mea  who  join  this  propessivt  onanitatioa  —  kroj  twweoottactfc 
^aasuit  worUng  conditions,  VlMn)  b««dte»  TataBWetraiBint. 

THI    INOALLS    fHlHUIlOmO  CCWrOKATfOlf 

-    PksctfB^ 


From  CMAPEL  HILL  to: 

•  GREENSBORO 

9  Corvonient  departure*  daily 

•  •IRMINGHAM 

Express  service  via  Charlotte 

•  RICHMOND 

Thru-Liner  (no  change)   service  daily 

•  ASHEVILLE 

4  Express  departures  daily 

UNION  BUS  STATION 

3U  W.  FRANKLIN  ST    ?>HONE  4281 

Ask  thippera  to  send  P«i-^«««  «P«^°/°"  ^ 
Trailwaya.  It's  faster.  Busea  Chartered  for  tnpe 

anywhwpe— any  time. 


TRAIL.  VW^AYS 

The  »outi  ot  tK.>  Thfu-Liners! 


l-w«y 

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'plus  tax) 


^•Ct  rout 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HBBL 


TUESDAY,  FEBRUARY  2$.-  1t»7  | 


Top  Ranked  Tar  Heels  Battle  Demon  Deacons  Tonight 


Quigg  Is  Hospitalized; 
Will  Be  Out  Of  Action 


By  LARRY  CHEEK 

North  Carolinas*  number  one 
ranked  Tar  Heels,  still  unbeaten 
going  into  the  last  week  of  the 
season,  will  be  without  the  serv- 
ices of  starting  center  Joe  Quigg 
tonight  when  they  go  against 
Wake  Forest's  battling  Baptists- 
for  the  third  time  this  season  in 
Winston-Salem. 

Quigg,  6-9  jun'or  who  sat  out 
much  of  the  South  Carolina  game 
here  Friday  night,  is  confined  to 
the  infirmary  with  influenza  and 
will  definitely  miss  tonight's 
game.  It  is  hoped  he  will  be 
available  for  the  seasons  finale 
against  Duke  on  Friday. 

Quigg  was  taken  to  the  in- 
firmary immediately  following 
the  South  Carolina  game.  His 
condition  is  reportedly  improved, 
and  doctors  say  he  may  be  re- 
leased either  today  or  tomorrow. 

Coach  Frank  McGuire's  player 
pool  has  already  been  reduced 
to  the  barest  minimum  by  a  siege 
of  classroom  casualties,  and  the 
Tar  Heel  coach  has  been  depend- 
ing on  his  five  starters  for  ex- 
tensive service  in  recent  games. 
With  Quigg  out  of  the  lineup. 
AfcGuire  will  lean  heavily  on  his 
other  four  starters,  Lennie  Rosen- 
blisth,  Pete  Brennan,  Tommy 
Keams  and  Bob  Cunningham. 
Sophomore  Daiiny  Lotz,  a  6-6 
forward,  will  step  into  Quigg  s 
shoes  in  the  starting  lineup. 
Senior  Bob  Young  will  also  help 
fill  the  gap. 


Carolina  will  bring  a  22-0  rec- 
ord in  the  scrap  in  hopes  of  mak- 
ing Wake  Forest  their  23rd  vic- 
tim. Twice  before  this  sea^-an  the 
Deacons  have  fallen  before  the 
classy  Tar  Heels,  once  in  the 
Dixie  Cljjfsic  finals.  63-55,  and 
once  in  Chapel  Hill,  72-69. 

McGuire  said  yesterday,  "I 
have  a  lot  of  respect  for  Wake 
Forest,  but  were  no  longer  wor- 
ried about  pressure.  That's  all 
gone.  We  wanted  to  win  the  reg- 
ular season  title  and  18  games- 
most  of  all."  Until  this  year,  his 
teams  at  UNC  had  never  won 
more  than  18. 

The  Tar  Heels  left  Chapel  Hill 
yesterday  at  2  p.m.  for  Winston- 
Salem.  They  were  schedtiled  to 
go  through  a  workout  on  the 
Memorial  Coliseum  floor,  a  court 
they   have  never  played  on. 

Coach  Murray  Greason's  quin- 
tet was  the  last  to  hang  a  lick- 
ing on  the  Tar  Heels.  They  turn- 
ed the  trick  in  the  semi-finals 
of  la.."t  years  ACC  tournament, 
77-56.  Wake  is  7-5  in  conference 
play  this  season  and  18-6  overall. 

Four  seniors  playing  their  last 
home  game  for  the  Deacons  are 
Jim  Gilley.  Jack  Williams.  Jackie 
Murdock  and  Ernie  Wiggins.  The 
fifth  starter  is  junior  Wendell 
Carr. 

The  battle,  to  be  played  before 
a  sellout  crowd  of  8,200.  will  get 
under  way  at  8  p.m.  following 
a  freshman  preliminary. 


UNC  Stretches  Lead^ 

I 

Over  Kansds  In  Poll 


A  Champion  Bows  Out 

UNC's  greatest  basketball  player  in  tiistory,  Lennie  Rosenbluth, 
is  pictured  above  receiving  a  2  mirtute  ovation  from  the  fans  at- 
tending the  South  Carolina  game   Friday  night,   it  was   Rosey's  last 

home  game.  (Norman  Kantor  Photo) 

— _, 

Blue  Imps  Whip  Frosh, 
79-78,   In   Squeaker 


Carolina's  Tar  Babies,  now  15-4 
at'ler  a  heart  breaking  los.v  to  the 
Duke    Blue    Imps   Saturday    night, 


The  Tar  Babies  held  a  four 
point  lead  with  only  a  minute  to 
go.  but  the  Blue  Imp.->"  came  from 


travel  to  Winston-Salem  tonight  behind  to  knot  the  count  at  78  al! 
for  the  last  in  a  four  game  series  with  20  seconds  remaining.  UNC 
with  the  Wake  Forest  Baby  Dea-  took  the  ball  out  of  bounds  after 
con.s.  the    last    Duke    basket    and    called 

In  t'nrce  previous  meetings  with    time  oat,  but  received  the   tecbni- 
the    Wake    Forest    frosh.    the    Tarjcal  foul  instead. 
Babies  have  won  two  while  losing 
one.  That  lone  loss  came  in  Wins 
ton-Salem    by    a   93-67   count.    Its 
been  just  the  other  way  around  in 


By  BEN  OLA.N 

NEW  YORK  —  (AP)  —  North 
Carolina's  all-winning  Tar  Heels 
maintained  a  comfortable  lead  in 
the  Associated  Press'  weekly  col- 
lege basketball  poll  yesterday, 
with  Southern  Methodi^^'t  and 
UCLA  making  the  most  notable 
advances  among  the  first  10 
teams. 

Lifting  their  season's  record  to 
22-0  with  victories  over  North 
Carolina  State  and  South  Caro- 
lina last  week,  the  Tar  Heels 
collected  61  first  place  votes 
and  757  points  from  the  nation's 
sportswriters  and  sports'casters. 
Only  one  among  the  79  who  vot- 
ed picked  North  Carolina  lower 
than  third. 

Kansas  held  second  place  with 
637  points  on  tlie  usual  10  points 
for  first  place,  nine  for  second 
place,  etc.,  basis.  The  Jayhawks, 
who  were  upset  by  Oklahoma 
A&M  56-54  last  Thursday  night, 
loA  ground.  They  trailed  North 
Carolina  by  only  50  points  a 
week  ago. 

Kent^icky  beat  Vanderbilt  and 
.Bahama  in  last  week's  games 
and  remained  in  third  place. 

Southern  Methodist,  which  cap- 
tiu-ed   its   third   straight   South- 
west   Conference    championship 
by  beating  Texas  A&M  and  Rice, 
jumped   two    notches   to   fourth 
place.  Seattle  dropped  one  posi- 
tion to  fifth.  The  Chieftans  have 
lost  only  two  of  22  games,  to 
San  FYancisco   and  Santa  Clara 
early  in  the  season. 
UCLA  climbed  from  eighth  to 
the  No.  6  .-pot.  The  Bruins-knock- 
ed  off  Oregon   twice   last  week 
to  boost  their  season's  mark  to 
20-2. 

Bradley  slumped  two  places 
to  seventh.  The  Braves  lost  to 
St.  Louis  Saturday  night  to  re- 
linquish their  lead  in  the  Mis- 
souri Valley  Conference. 

Louisville  fell  from  seventh  to 
eighth.  The  Cardinals  are  follow- 
ed by  Vanderbilt  and  Indiana. 
Vandy  made  a  good  showing  in 


lojinf  to  Kentucky  by  two  points, 
then  bounced  back  to  trounce 
Florida.  Indiana,  the  Big  iO  pace- 
setter, knocked  off  Iowa  and  Wis- 
consin. 

Iowa  State  was  the  only  team 
to  drop  out  of  the  first  10.  It 
dropped  from  ninth  to  16th  with 
the  loss  to  Kansas  State  Satur- 
day night  the  likely  reason. 

In  addition  to  North  Carolina, 
Those  teams  getting  first  place 
votes  were  Kansas  and  Seattle, 
six  each,  and  UCLA,  Louisville, 
We.:,t  Virginia,  Oklahoma  A&M,  j. 
Oklahoma  City  and  West  Virginia 
Tech,  one  apiece. 

The  top  10  teams  with  first 
place  votes  and  won-lost  records 
through  Saturday.  Feb.  23  in  pa- 
rentheses, points  on  10-9-8-7  etc. 
basLs: 

1.  North  Carolina  61  22-0  757 

2.  Kansas    6  18-2  637 

3.  Kentucky    . 20-4  508 

4.  Southern    Meth 19-3  424 

5.  Seattle   6    -  20-2  393 

6.  UCLA    1    ._ -  20-2  257 

7.  Bradley    18-4  153 

8.  Louisville    1    18-5  141 

9.  Vandepbih    16-5  134 

10.  Indiiana    __ .     13-6  118 

SECOND  TEN 

11.  West   Virginia   1 

12.  Kansas   State    

13.  Wake   Forest 

14.  St.  Louis 

15.  Idaho   State 

16.  Iowa  State    

17.  Oklahoma  A&M  1 

18.  Oklahoma  City  1 

19.  Memphis  State 

20.  Mississippi  State 


20-4 
14-6 
18-6 
16-7 
23-2 
15-6 
13-8 
16-8 
20-5 
15-8 


97 
79 
71 
64 
59 
57 
53 
51 
48 
43 


A  Trophy  For  Rosenbluth 


Student  body  president  Bob  Young  gives  Lennie  Rosenbluth  a 
hearty  congratulatory  handshake  Friday  night  as  he  presents  Lennie 
with  a  trophy  which  recognizes  Rosenbluth's  four  years  as  a  Carolina 
basketball  player.  Norm  Kantor  Photo. 


Sigma  Nu  Wins  UNC 
Cage  Title  In  Murals 


Chapel  Hill  where  the  Tar  Babies 
have  won  twice  by  large  margins. 

Duke  won  their  first  victory  of 
the  season  over  Carolina  in  Duke 
Gym  Saturday  night,  79-78.  Blue 
Imp  forward  Merrill  Morgan  sank 
a  tree  throw  with  13  seconds  left 
to  give  Duke  their  one-point  mar- 
gin. 

Morgan  was  awarded  the  free 
toss  as  the  result  of  a  technical 
foul  called  on  Carolina.  With  the 
score  tied  78-78,  the  Tar  Babies 
asked  for  a  timeout,  but  because 
they  already  had  five,  they  were 
penalized  with  a  technical  foul. 
Morgan  converted  the  necessary 
one  point,  and  the  game  ended 
79-78. 


Lee     Shaffer    topped     the     Tar 

Baby  scoring  with  24  points.  John  | 

Crotty  had  15.  Mike  Steppe  13.  and  , 

Dick  Kepley  and  Bruno  Larese,  12 

each.  Bill  Gilley  paced  Dkue  with  ' 

20. 


George  L.  Coxhead 

U.N.C.  '42 
Campus  Representative 


NEW  YORK  LIFE 

INSURANCE    COMPANY 


TiM  TriM  Story  off 

COL.DKAN  NKM, 

CUEROYMAN 

TURMKO 

FiONmi 


By   TOMMY   JOHNSON  | 

Sigma  Nu  fraternity  took  advan- 
tage of  a  closely  called  contest  and 
racked  up  23  pwints  from  the  foul 
line  to  take  an  easy  victory  over 
the  Peacock's  for  the  campus 
basketball  championship  last  night 
in  Woollen  Gym,  41-26. 

The  Peacock's  out-shot  the  Sig 
Nu  team  from  the  floor  by  one 
basket,  10-d.  It  was  a  contest  of 
foul  shooting  as  the  Sig  Nu  team 
went  to  the  line  35  times  against 
only  17  for  the  Peacocks,  The  fra- 
ternity team, connected  on  667f  of 
their  free  throwfs  while  the  gradu- 
ate students  only  shot  35% . 

Foy  Shingleton  lead  the  Sigma 
Nu  five  with  14  points,  and  took 


I  scoring  honors  for  the  night.  The 
Peacock's  center,  Dave  Odom  and 

■  Sig   Nu   Ricky   Rucker    connected 

j  for  12  each.  Fred  Young,  another 
scoring  threat  for  the  Peacock's-, 
was  held  to   four  points.  He  was 

:  handicapped  a  good  part  of  the 
game  as  he  had  imn  personals 
marked  against  him. 

I  The  Peacock's  couldn't  get  fired 
'  up  for  the  game  after  winning  the 
Dormitory  Division  championship 
last  Thursday  night.  The  fraternity 
boys  from  Sigma  Nu  had  an  extra 
games  experience  under  their  belts 
as  they  won  the  right  to  meet  the 
Peacocks  by  defeating  the  Zeta 
Psi  white  team  la^-t  Friday. 


NCAA  Hits  At  State 


KANS.\S  CITY— 'i!^— The  exec 
utive  director  of  the  National 
Collegiate  Assn.  said  yesterday  it 
is  "difficult  if  not  impossible  to 
understand"  recent  statements  by 
officials  of  North  Carolina  State 
College  about  the  Jackie  More- 
land  case. 

The  NCAA  placed  N.  C.  State 
on  four  years  probation  for  six 
alleged  violations  of  association 
rules  in  the  recruiting  of  More- 
land  a  Miden.  La.,  high  .school 
basketball  star.  The  Atlantic 
Coast  Conference  subsequently 
fined  the  college  $2,500  and  or- 
dered it  to  cease  recruiting  ath- 
letes for  a  year. 

Dr.    Carey    H.    Bostian,    N.  ^C. 


State  Chancellor,  yesterday  rec 
ommended,  in  a  report  to  the 
president  of  the  Consolidated 
University  of  North  Carolina,  that 
the  Moreland  case  be  closed.  He 
also  recommended  that  no  action 
be  taken  against  any  member  of 
the  school's  athleti9  staff.  He  said 
he  found  no  evidence  that  any  of 
them  committed  the  violations 
charge^. 

Dr.  Bostian  referred  to  actions 
of  the  .  NCAA  and  the  Atlantic 
Coast  Conference  as  "sublimely 
ridiculous"  and  said.  "We  con- 
sider the  Moreland  case  closed 
unless  and  until  the  NCAA  or 
the  ACC  see  fit  to  conduct  a  fair 
and  open  hearing." 


Varsity,  Frosh 
Grapplers  Lose 
To  Strong  VMI 

By  RON  MILLIGAN 

The  Carolina  grapplers  came  out 
lowers  in  two  ways  from  the  VMI 
match  last  P'riday  night;  they  lost 
21  to  10  and  Tar  Heel  157  lb.  Ken 
Hoke  was  injured  and  will  be  out 
for  the  rest  of  the  season. 

"My  boys  fought  their  hearts 
out,  but  VMI  knew  a  little  morel 
than  we  did,"  explained  COach  Sam 
Barnes.  "Bob  Wagner  wrestled  the 
best  match  he  has  ever  wrestled. 
Dave  Atkinson  and  Charlie'Boyette 
lost  close  decisions;  both  were  on 
top  of  their  opponent  when  the  bell 
rang."  | 

Even  though  Kok«,  a  157  pound- 
er,   injured    his    arm    midway    hid 
bout,  he  continued  to  fight.  Hoke 
continuously  held  on  with  his  ail- 
I  ing  arm  and  allowled  his  opponent 
:  to  win  only  by  a  decision  instead 
I  of  by  a  default  or  letting  himself 
be  pinned. 

This  is  the  way  the   indi>^idual 

bouts  ended:  123  lb.  Mackay  (VMI) 

i  pinned  Henry  Rhyne,  130  lb.  Capt. 

,  Bob     Wagner     decisioned     Wood 

j  (VMI),  137  lb.  Hubbard  (VMD  tied 

Perrin    Henderson.    147    lb.    Hunt 

(VMI)  decisioned  Charlie  Boyette, 

157  lb.   Sprinkle  (VMI)  decisioned 

Ken   Hoke,    167   lb.   Bill   McGehee 

pinned  Boiling,  177  lb.  Baker  (VMI) 

decisioned     Dave     Atkinson,     and 

heavyweight  Basham  (VMI)  pinned 

Larry  Hayes. 


WHAT.A.OUY  WAYNB 
IN  A  WONDERFUL  — 
NEW   ENTERTAINMENT!  <^ 

»*M  rmumn  m  MITNCaUl 


K'^'^' 

v-:^ 


JOHN  WAYNE 

DAN  DAILEY 

MAUREEN  O'HARA 

THE  WINGS 


OF  EAGLES 

...WARD  BOND 


Carolina 


NOW  PLAYING 


ROCK  HUDSON 


///.'/. 


CMnuScoPCTGCHMCOlBlL 


«^*^-^  MARTHA  HYER 
DAN  DURyEA-DON  dcfwe 

ANNA  KASlih  JOCK  MAHONCY 

m  cut  KNTON  Kll 


LAST  TIMES  TODAY 


The  Wholesalers  Did  It! 

But 
I've  Still  Got  ESSO  EXTRA 

At  Downtown  Regular  Price 

And 

Regular  3c  Under  That 

Plus 

Bring  This  Ad  and  Get  1  Cent  Off  Per  Gal.  Gas, 
5  Cents  Per  Qt.  Oil 

Credit  Cards  Honored  Again 

At  The  Students'  Friend 

WHIPPLE^S  ESSO  SERVICE 


MILTON'S 

Mid-Winter 

Carnival 

GOING  DOWN 
THE  HOME  STRETCH 
SPECIALS  END 
SATURDAY 


Just  addtd  Urge  group  of  year- 
round  end  lightiweight  hose  «t 
greatty  reduced  prices: 
Cotton  6x3  rib  socks,  formerly 
$1.00,  now  $.50. 
McOeorge  wool  argyle  and  tar- 
tan hoeo,  values  to  $4.50,  fur- 
ther reduced  to  $1.99. 

Last   chance    to   save    on    year- 
round    suits,    sport     jackets, 
trousers,     and     lightweight 
suHs. 

Last  oiNMrtunity  for  reduced 
price*  on  ivy  button-down  and 
ingllsh  tab  shirts. 

Largo  assortment  of  rubber- 
tolcrf  cordovan  shoes  reduced 
from  $20.00  to  $12.99. 


In  our  Lady  Milton  Shop 

still  danling  reduction  on  Brae- 
mar  and  Drumianrig  sweaters 
•t  $1«;00. 

Blliet  cashmere  sweaters  re- 
duced from  $14.95  to  $8.99. 

Plenty  of  ttmpting  reductions  on 
Lady  Hathaway  and  other 
shirts. 

Spring  Irish  linen  sicirts  by 
Evan-picone  reduced  from 
$14.95  to  $9.00. 

Many  other  unusual  buys. 


All  sales  cash- 
alterations  extra 

Clotting  Cupboarb 


A  new  supply  of  150  tickets  to 
the  Carolina-Duke  game  in  Dur- 
hami  will  be  placed  on  sale  at 
the  Woollen  Gym  ticket  office 
this  morning. 


GF  C€>%Jl^Mta . 


0^^^^^ 


The  Art  Of  Tailoring 

"Every  man  to  his  business, 
is  beyond  all  doubt  as  noble  and 
but  indeed  the  craft  of  a  tailor 
as  secret  as  any  in  the  world." 

HAVE  OTHERS  FAILED? 

With  expert  workmanship  and 
the  best  service  possible  Pete 
The  Tailor  has  and  will  continue 
to  give  you  the  ultimate  in 
tailoring  needs. 


PETE  THE  TAILOR 

■    Specializing  in 
"Ivy    Leagueizing" 

133V2   E.  Franklin  Street 


bod's  imported  French  lisle  wash* 
•bit  sport  shitt,  flatterinc  fit,  in  nine 
virile  colors,  always  fresh .  lookinf. ; 
"tni  -shaiM"  ribbed  eoUar  and  cufft. 
lengthened  "stay-in"  shirt  tail. 
Sizes  S-M-l-XL-XXL.  $109 


In    Black,   White,   Red,    Navy, 

Canary,    Carolina    Blue,    Ten 

Brown,  and  Gr*y< 

JULIAN'S 

COLLEGE    SHOP 


Howard  Johnson  Restaurant 


BREAKFAST 


■l^jL.~ii.~.       ..-  «••«■' 


LUNCH 


DINNER 


SNACKS 
landmark  For  Hungry  Tarheels" 


COME    TO 

VARLEY'S   MEN'S   SHOP 

For     Your 

COOPER'S   PRODUCTS 


JOCKEY   UNDERWEAR 

AVAILABLE  AT 

BERMAN'S  DEPT.   STORE 


tmmm 


BOTiVi 


WEATHER 

Cloudy   and   cooler,   with   a   ox- 
poctod  hi«h  of  60. 


3r()  c  Hattu 


3rar  Mtd 


FAITH 

It's  somothing  to  consider,  Chan' 
collor  Aycock.  See  editorial,  page 
2 


VOL.  LVII,  NO.  104 


Complete  (A^   Wire  Service 


CHAPEL  HILL,  NORTH  CAROLINA,  WEDNESDAY,  FEBRUARY  27,  1957 


Offices    in   Graham    Memorial 


FOUR   PAGES  THIS   iSSUI 


Student  Leaders  Congratulate  Tar    Hoels 
W.  6.  Aycock  On  Appointment      Finish   To 
As  Univetsity  Chancellor 


Stag 


Young,  Evans,  Exum,  Hallford 
Extend  Best  Wishes  For  Tenure 

By   EDITH   MacKINNON 

Students  Icaclcis  \esttrdi'y  expressed  their  views  ron- 
ceriiin<r  the  naming  ol  William  Bramlcv  Avcotk  as  the  new 
Chain  el  lor  at  rXC. 

Student  TxhIx  President  lioh  \()uno,  Student.  Body  \  iee- 
President  Sonn\  K\airs.  Men  s  Honor  Council  C^hairnian  jini 
K\uni.  and  Student  Partv  Ciiainnan  Sonny  Halllord  indirated 
tiu'ir  uhole-lie     led  appro\al  in  the  appointment. 

President  ^onny  ollered  congratulations  to  the  new 
Chancellor  .uh\  extended  "best  wishes  fo  Mr.  .Avcoc'li  for  a 
most  eniovaMe  aiul  ixolir  d)le  tenure  of  oHice  as  Chancellor.' 

In  speaking  of  the  selection  Young* ~ 

said.    '•X:iw    is   the    time   we — stu-         _     _  _ 

Offers 
Cited  By 
Officials 

William  B.  Aycock  and  Gordon 
Blackwell  Monday  spoke  of  the 
opportunities  they  will  have  at 
hand  in  guiding  UNC  and  Wo- 
mans  College. 

Aycock  said  he  thought  his  posi- 
tion 'offers  unlimited  opportuni- 
ties fcr  leadership.  It  is  not  a 
position  of  power  and  authority 
and  that's  as  it  should  be,"  he 
said. 

"My  obligation  as  I  see  it  is  to 
do  everything  within  my  power 
to  utilize  the  opportunities  the 
board  o  trustees — and  in  a  large 
sense  the  people  of  the  state- — 
will  give  toe,"  Aycock  said. 


Over 


dents,  faculty,  and  administrators — 
all  should  unite  behind  one  cen- 
tral purpose,  that  of  promoting  the 
best  interests  of  the  entire  Uni- 
versity community. 

•'I  am  aware  that  many  groups 
of  students,  faculty  members,  and 
administrators  were  firmly  com- 
mitted to  other  persons  for  the 
position  of  Chancellor.  However. 
I  feel  that  all  of  th?se  committ- 
ments and  feelings  .should  be  su- 
bordinated to  the  task  of  cooperat- 
ing for  the  best  interests  of  every- 
one. 

N'There  is  much  work  to  be  done 
in   Ihe   few   months,   even    weeks. 
that  lie  ahead.  .Many  problems  will 
confront  .Mr.  Aycock.  problems  of 
students,  of  faculty  members,  and 
of  administrators.  It  will  take  con- 
scientious   and    dedicated    leader- 
ship  tD  confront     and     overcome 
these   diverse   problems.    It   is   my 
sincere  hope  that  Mr.  Aycock  will 
foek.   and  receive  utmost  coopera- 
tion  fr:;m  all   coacerned. 

"From  what"  I  Irave  heardi  about 
Mr.  Aycock,  he  appears  lo  be  the 
type  of  person  we  stand  in  need 
of  at  the  present  time.  May  he  be 
decisive  and  influential  in  his 
leadership  of  our  University,  as 
it  strives  to  continue  the  high  tra- 
ditions of  its  history." 
See  CONGRATULATIONS,  Page  3 


Blackwell   said      he      was      'very  foie       the       nominating       meeting, 

pleased    and    happy    with    the    op-  Those    students    without    member- 

portunity  and  was  looking  forward  ship    cards   but    whose    names    are 

to      living      in      Greensboro      very  on  the  rolls  and  who  have  already 


UP  Session 
March  5  To 
Be  Open 

In  answer  to  \much  discussion 
concerning  the  University  Party 
rule  of  a  closed  meeting  for  nomi- 
nating sessions.  UP  Chairman 
Mike  Weinman  announced  last 
night  that  the  nominating  meeting 

I  wjuld  be  held  in  Gerrard  Hall  and 

{  would    be   open   to    visitors. 

I  "We  feel  very  ^fortunate  in  get- 
ting Gerrard  Hall  and  want  to  in- 
vite all  interested  per.M)n.s  to  at- 
tend the  UP  meeting,"  Weinman 
said. 

j      The  announcement  was  made  at 

'  the  regular  weekly  UP  meeting. 
Weinman  stated  that  the  nomi- 
nating meeting  would  be  held 
March  5  at  7:30.  At  that  time 
guests  and  visitors  will  be  allow- 
ed to  sit  in  the  gallery  and  be  per- 

.  milled  to  speak  during  the  session. 

:  UP  members  with  membership 
cards  will  sit  on  the  first  floor. 

The  UP  chairman  explained  that 
the  party  had  had  "more  people 
than  it  could  handle"  in  the  rooms 

in  Graham  Memorial  and  had  de- 
cided to  move  the  meeting  to  Ger- 
rard   Hall  to  enable    more    people 

to  attend  the  sessions.  The  mem- 
bership  cards   had    been    designed 

to   eliminate    irregularities    in    the 

nominating   procedure.  RALEIGH  —    'Vigorous  .action 'J,  the  higher  board. 

Weinman  announced      that      no   will  be  taken  by     tiie  administrM       The   board  aak«d  for  salary  in 

nty#  -pgHWiilH  ■wUf'^w  ^W'ceptgd  hm^*i»nrml'jA»^matuoiMm*ied-'VnivmrmiihQtMBie.n  tntaHng  10  per  e«nt  in  eon 


Newly-Appointed  University  Officials 

The  four  Consolidated  University  officials  pictured  above  were 
unanimously  elected  Monday  at  a  meeting  of  the  full  board  of 
trustees  in  Raleigh.  They  are,  left  to  right,  William  M.  Whyburn, 
dearTof  graduate  studies;  Alexander  Shepard,  business  officer  and 
treasurer;  Gordon  Blackwell,  chancellor  of  Women's  College,  Greens- 
boro, and  William  B.  Aycock,  chancellor  of  the  University  at  Chapel 
Hill. 


e  Last-Minute 

Get  Win  Number  23 

Scrappy  Deacons,  69-64 

Kearns,  Rosy,  And  Brennan 
Combine  To  Assure  Carolina  Win   ; 

By  LARRY  CHEbK 

Special  To  The  Daily  Tar  Heel 
\\'I.\ST()\-S.\lvEM — Carolinas    wonder tiil  Tar  Hccis  staged  aiioiltci    miracle  fiiiisli 
Jteie  Irst  night  as  they  raine  loaring  from  behind  in  the  last  minute  of  play  to  wiiip  the 
Wake  Forest  Demon  Deacons,  69-64.  in  a  pressure-jjacked    .VC.C    thriller    played    before 
(S.aoo  h()ulin<>   fans  in   Memorial   Coliseum.. 

The  win.  achie\ed  in  the  face  of  almost  insurmoinuabic  odds,  was  I'NCi's  2:?rd  of 
the  season  without  a  loss,  and  kept  them  snii<>lv  in  their  place  as  the  nation's  tunnber 
one  team. 

With  one  miniuc  to^go  in  tlie  free-swingino  domiybrook.  Wake  Forest  led,  (^-O^.  But 
then  with  forty  six  seconds  to  go,  suie-fingered  Lennie  Rosenbluth  was  fouled"  while 
attempting  a  shot.  Lennie.  never  calmer,  pushed  in  both  free  throws  to  gi\c  the  Tar 
Heels  a  one  poiiu   margin.  65-64. 

Wake  put  the  ball   in  play,  but* — r 

UNC  guard  Bob  Cunningham  stole    nan  who  was  fouled.  Brennan  sank 
a  pass  and   flipped  to  Pote  Brcn-    one  to  make  the  score  66-64.  Then 


These  Close  Victories 
Come  With  Perspiration 


FRIDAY  SAYS: 


Pay  Hike,  Book  Funds 
Need  Vigorous  Action 


By  BILL  KING 

Special  To  The  Daily  Tar  Heel 
WINSTON-SALEM,   Feb.   26,   1957 

Different    dressing    room,    same 
scene.    Frank    McGuire    stood    out- 


basketball,  when  you  can  get  en- 1 
tcrtainment  like  that  for  two  j 
bucks."  j 

McGuire  readily  agreed  that  the  j 
loss    of   center   Joe    Quigg   was    a 


side    the    Carolina    dressing   room   tremendous  blow,  but  "the  others 
last  night  wiping  the  perspiration    (R6semond,  Young  and  Lotz)  play- 
from  his  face.  His  Tar  Heels   had .  ed   a  fine  game.  Our  bench  depth 
chalked   up   number  23,  but  what .  is    pitiful."    he    continued.    "W^hy, 
a    lime    they    had    doing    it.    '•You    we   couldn't   scrimmage   last   night   ^^^^ 
know."  McGuire  said,  "I  was  ki.i     because  we   only   had   nine    men.  "I      w 
ing  that  one  goodbye   for  a  while   Ask«d     about     Quigg' s 
there."  '         !  McCuire    --aid   that    he 


a  few  moments  later,  Cunningham 
tossed  a  long  pass  to  Tommy 
Kearns  for  an  easy  snowbird. 
Fouled  on  the  play.  Kearns  added 
the  free  throw,  then  the  final 
.•core  read,  UNC  69,  Wake  Forest 
64. 

Rosenbluth  hit  10  for  15  from 
the  floor  and  10  of  12  from  the 
line  to  accumulate  30  points. 
Brennan  followed  with  16. 

The  Tarheels,  playing  without 
the  services  of  Joe  Quigg.  led  at 
intermission,  33-32.  but  fell  be- 
hind by  eight  points  midway  the 
second  half.  With  Rosenbluth  lead- 
ing the  way,  they  gradually  pulled 
back  into  contention,  and  finally 
iced  the   game    in   the  dying   sec- 


condition, 
was 


Education  I 
Of  Women  \ 
Difficult       I 

The  "involved,  uncertain,  inter- ' 
changeable  and  variable'  roles 
which  the  young  American  woman 
of  1957  must  play  makes  it  diffi- 
cult lo  determine  "the  roles  for 
which  we  educate,"  said  Dean  of 
Women  Mis„-  Katherine  Carmi-j 
chad  Tuesday  night.  | 

.Miss  Carmichael  said  'the 
American  woman  is  wife,  mother, 
hf.iitckcepci ,  decoraler,  cook, 
economist,  psychologist,  chauffeur, 
cnmpanicn.  charmer,  mans  status 
.sjmi)ol,  angel-on-the-pedestal  and 
breadwinner." 

Dean  Carmichael  spoke  Tuesday 
ni;;ht  to  the  Chapel  Hill  branch  of 
the  American  Assn.  of  Univer.-lly 
Women  on  "Educating  the  .Ameri- 
can Woman  in  a  1957  Milieu.  '         i 

She  said  the  American  woman 
"may  perform  ail  of  these  func- 
lions  at  the  same  tiijie  or  she  may 
perform  them  at  various  timci  of 
her  life."  * 

■  Even  so,"  she  may  be  divorcee 
or  widow,  given  the  relatively 
high  divorce  rate  in  the  United 
Slates  and  the  staiistics  thai  show 
that,  jn  a  mean,  the  American 
woman  is  a  widow  at  55."  , 

Miss  Carmichael  jAd  she  en- 
dorsed llie  program  advocated  by 
Ihe  AAUW  that  all  university 
women  lake  approxlmaleiy  half  ui 
their  college  program  in  the  lib- 
eral arts.'  Bui  she  said  "at  the 
same  time,  a  liberal  arts  progiam 

nia\     be    an    unwise    choice    for 

I 
some  wcmen.  1 

"Given   the    many    functions   of 
the   woman    in   our   society,"    she  1 
said,     I  think  that  the  women  dare 
not    become    too    greatly    special- 
ized loo  early.  Hence  I  agree  that 
the  usual  practical  ftcpectation  for  | 
the .  college     woman     should     be  | 
course  work  in  thf  liberal  art,-.  '      ! 
(See  EDUCATION,  page  3)        1 


much." 

But  he  said  "to  leave  Chapel 
Hill  is  a  very  deep  wrench  and 
causes  considerable  emotional  feel- 
-ing.  My  family  and  I  are  very 
strongly    attached,"    he    said. 


ty  of  North  Carolina  in  an  attempt 
to  obtain  higher  salary  increases 
and  more  funds  for  books  than  the 
Advisory    Budget   Commission   ree- 


prcsented    their    petitions    will    be  ommcnded.                                              I 
issued    cards    immediately    preced-  xhis  was  announced  at  a  meet- 
ing the   March   5   meeting.  jng     of     the     University  Board  of 
The  new  election  law  which  will  Trustees   by   President   William   C.  1 
be    presented    before    the    Legisla-  pridav   here   vesterdav.                      I 


truiit  to  the  Governor's  and  Ad- 
visory Budget  Commission's  rec- 
ommendations of  a  eight  per  cent 
hike. 

This  increase  would 


Ttic  Tar  Heels'  69-64  win  over;  pretty  sick  and  'if?  doubtful  that  I  ^vjjij^jjjj. 

the      Wake      Forest      Oeacons      was  <  he    will     play    in    the    Duke    «ani«r/^„t     Carr 


lure  Feb.  28  was  brought  under 
discussion.  This  law.  if  passed. 
Aycock    said    Woman's    College    would  call   for  the  election  of  all 

is  a  "great  institute"  and  "we  must    class    officers    lo   be    held    in    the 

keep  it  that  way."  fall. 


Officials  Speak  Highly 
Of  Chancellor  Choices 


Four  officials  within  the  Con- 
solidated University  Monday  spoke 
very  highly  of  the  two  chancellor 
selections. 

University  Business  Manager 
Claude  Teague  said  "They're  ex- 
cellent people  in  every  way." 

State   College   Chancellor  Carey 
H.  Bostian  said  ''I  am  very  much  [ 
pleased   and    I    look      forward      to 
working  with  them  as  members  of  1 
the    University."  j 

Consolidated      University      Vice 
President     and     Finance     Officer , 
William   D.   Carmichael   said   "Ay-  I 
cock   possesses  the  character  and 
characteristics  that  will  enable  him 
to   live  up   to  the  promise   of   the  ! 
noble  educational  name     that     he  . 
bears.  I 

"I  think  Blackwell  has  qualities  ' 
of  the  mind,  conscience,  heart  and  ■ 
soul  that  will  add  his  name  to  the  ' 
list  of  distinguished   North  Caro- 
linj   educators,"   he   said. 

UNC  Chancellor  Robert  B. 
House,  who  will  step  down  from 
his  present  position  in  June,  said 
he  was  "highly  delighted  at  the 
selections." 

He  said  he  was  in  favor  of  the 
University's  automatic  retirenvent 
age  of  65  and  he  "was  very  glad 
lo  go  into   teaching." 

House  added  a  bit  of  humor  to 

Invitations  On  Sale 

(Graduation  invitations  are  on 
sale  for  the  last  time  today,  ac- 
cording to  a  spokesman  for  the 
Grail,  the  organization  sponsoring 
the  sale. 

Invitations  will  be  on  sale  in  Y 
Court  lobby  betwten  9  a.m.  and 
3  p.m. 


his  statement.  When  asked  by  a 
reporter  if  Aycock,  his  replace- 
mcnt-to-be.    could    play    the    har- 


Other  institutions  are  offering 
our  key  professors  much  greater 
pay,  Friday  stated.  The  recommen- 
dations of  the  Commission  are  "in- 
adequate" to  stem  the  exodus  of 
our  instructors,  Friday  said,  and 
the  University  has  suffered  heavy 
losses  and  the  pace  of  the  exodus 
has  accelerated,  the  president 
said. 

Friday  also  reported  that  Dr.  J. 
Harris  Purks,  State  director  of 
higher  education,  and  the  Board 
of     Higher     Education     will     join 


W^ake    Forest's    chances    for    an 

upset  received  a  severe  jolt  in  the 

*^*^^  I  second    half    when    starters    Jack 

and  Wendell  Carr  fouled 

^    .     .  ,       .,  ....       r    .1  ,  ^  ■  ,        ,.  I  ~--    (^ftrr  went    out   wifh    9:29  left. 

probably  the  .sweetest   of   the   sea-   Friday.  /     -    ,       „r-i,  i.         ^         .        -.. 

.1.  L     .,  ^    .  ...     ^  ""#",^-  while     Williams     bowed     out     with 

son.     although     MeGuirc     wouldn  t        The  smiling  Irishman  called  Bob    3.33 

admit   it.  As  for  being  up  for  the   Cunningham,    'the  unsung  hero  of 

■have     been   Deacs.  "we  like  to  play  Wake  For-    our  ball   club.   Bob  has   been  play- , 

administered  on  a  selective  basis,    est.  but  we  weren't  especially   up    ing  some   great    ball    for    us,"    he 

If      tile      Legislature      approves   for  it.  They're  all  tough  now,  "  Mc-    stated. 

higher  salary    increases   for   other  Guire  stated.  "As    for    the    tension,    that 

State     employes,     the     University       "If  you  think  we  weren't  tense.'     bound    to    grip    a    team    that    has! 

"will    take    the    position    that    we   said    the   Tar   Heel    mentor,    "you  won  23  straight,  McGuire  said  'the 

should    get    the    same  .  .  ."    Friday   should  have  seen  the  expre^-sion  of  worst  part  of  it  is  waiting;  I  wish  j 

said.  the  stands.  That's  really  great  for    that  we  could  play  Duke  tomorrow 

— —  i  afternoon." 


remaining. 
Carolina,     also     guilty     of     bad 
'  passes    in    the    game's    early    mo- 
ments, hit  19  of  38  shots  from  the 
floor    for    50    per    cent    accuracy. 
'^ !  The  Deacons  had  22  for  47. 


Trustees  Visiting  Here 
Had  'Wonderful  Time' 


By   CLARKE    JONES 

The  thirteen  women  members  of 
the  Consolidated  University  Board 
forces  with  the  administration  of  j  of  Trustees  wound  up  their  two- 
the    University    in    efforts    to    get    day  visit   here  Tuesday  afternoon.  \ 


monica.   he   replied    "No,    but   I'll    tht   General   Assembly  to  approve  |     And  they  had  a  wonderful  lime 


leach  him  that." 


the    original    recommendations   of  while  they  were  here. 


Several  of  the  tru-,*tees  express- 
ed pleasure  at  the  "friendly  at- 
mosphere and  hospitality"  of  the 
students  and  faculty  and  admin- 
istration members. 

The  women  trustees  were  here 
See  TRUSTEES  VISITING,  Page  3 


Cavalcade  Of  Talent  Goes  To  WC 

Carolina's  Cavalcade  of  Talent  yesterday  boarded  «  chartered  bos  for  Greensboro  where  they  presented  the  variety  show  before  an 
audience  of  Women's  College  students.  Master  of  cerenumies  for  th»  presentation  was  Frank  Crowther.  The  show  featured  Peewee  Bat- 
ten and  combo,  who  won   first  priie   in  the   show's  first   presentation  here  lest  fall. 


SP  Initiates 
Selections 
At  Session 

By  NEIL  BASS 

At  exactly  7:25  p.m.  Monday, 
the  doors  were  thrown  open  for 
nomination  of  1957-58  student  gov- 
ernment officials. 

The  Student  Party  started  the 
ball  rolling  with  a  brief  half-hour 
•  ;ssion  at  which  candidates  tor 
legislature  seats  from  dorm  mens 
districts  were  named. 

All  candidates  were  acclain*  d 
as  the  SP's  choice  to  run  in  the 
April  2.  election. 

Student    Party   legislative   candi 
i  dates  by   districts  arc: 
I      Dorm    Men's    I,    Phillip    Gerdcs, 
I  Charles  Coley. 

Dorm  Men's  U.  Gray  Greer, 
'  Rudy  Edwards. 

'      Dorm    Men's    III.    Bill   McNaull, 
Don  Jacob.;,   Tally  Eddings. 

Dorm  Men's  IV.  Al  Alphin. 
<  Caleb  White,  Everett  James.  Bob 
!  Browning. 

Dorm  Men's  V,  John  Brooks,  Pal 
Adams. 

Alphin.  Brooks.  McNuall  and 
Jacobs  are  all  incumbent  members 
of  the  legislative   assembly. 

Present  at  this  initial  nominat- 
ing session  was  former  SP  secre- 
tary Mis.'  Pat  .McBane. 

Party   Chairman  Sonny  Hallford 
;  called     Miss     McBane     a     former 
party  "warhorse." 

Miss  McBane  said  she  was  "over- 
joyed" by  actions  of  the  present 
student  government  administration 
under  President  Bob  Young. 

The  party  will  meet  again  next 

Monday  night  to  select  candidates 

for  legislative  seats   in   dorm   v.o- 

men'j,    town    women's,    and    town 

i  men's  districts. 


Walter  Eaton, 
Noted  Critic, 
Passes  At  Inn 

Walter  P.  Eaton,  noted  New 
York  drama  crilic,  died  suddenly 
at  the  Carolina  Inn  Tuesday 
morning  of  a  heart  a 'tack. 

The  79-year-old  former  newspa- 
per reported"  had  been  staying  in 
Chapel  Hill  for  the  past  several 
winters  with  his  wife.  He  always 
resided  in  the  Inn.  . 

Eaton  was  well-known  am^ng 
.\cw  York  theater  people,  having 
been  Clitic  on  the  New  York  Sun. 
lie  also  worked  in  the  drama  de- 
partmehl  of  the  .N'tw  York  Tri 
.ounc. 

While  in  New  York  many  years 
ago,  Eaton  was  affiliated  with  lo- 
cal newspapermen.  Phillips  Rus- 
-.•11  and  Louis  Graves 

Eaton,  bom  in  Maiden,  Mass., 
received  his  .\.B.  from  Harvard  'n 
1900  and  A.M.  from  Yale  in  1946. 
The  deceased  had  been  in  litera- 
liu-e  since  1908  and  lived  in  Shef- 
field. Mass..   most  of  the  time. 

The  noted  crilic  was  a  visiting 
lecturer  here  in  1948-1949  in  the 
Department  of  Dramatic  Art.  In 
his  work  he  wrote  numerous 
books. 


Panty  Raid  Attempt 
Halted  By  Officials 

The  second  panty  raid  at- 
tempt of  the  ye«r  broke  out  last 
night  shortly  before  10  p.m.  in 
the   lower  quad. 

The  demonstration  was 
prompted  by  UNC's  close  bas- 
ketball win  over  Wake  Forest 
and  the  unusually  warm  weath- 
er. 

The  presence  of  local  police 
and  officials  of  student  govern- 
ment end  the  administration 
caused  the  throng  of  an  esti- 
mated 400  students  to  break  up 
at  approimately   10:15  p.m. 


PAGt    TWO 


THE  DAIiY  TAR  HEBt 


WEDNESDAY.  FEBRUARY  17,  1957 


To  New  Chancellor  Aycock: 


'Studenf  Workers  At  Lenoir  Hall' 


Faith  Is  Mighty  Important       Want  Fair  Break  From  Management 


The  rni\eisity  (omnumitv  and  the  student  body  should  he  pioud 
to  have  sut  h  a  \ouiij>.  enep^etie  and  respet  ted  elianeellor  as  William  Ay- 
<.  <M  k. 

While  out  ( hoice  was  someone  else,  we  rai^  see  jn  Ayecx  k  tlie  ex- 
rcllent  qualities  that  made  Jiim  so  acceptable  lo  tlvc  people  who  cliosc 
the  new  (h;wuelIor-he  is  vimng.  wetl-liked.  determined  and  should  be 
a  jii«>d  imerpieter  ol  the  rniverstt\  to  the  j>co|>le  ulio  love  and 
support   it. 

I'nhntnnately.  when  William 
A\((K  k  takes  o\er  the  job  ol  chan- 
cellor next  Inll  he  will  inherit  far 
nu.re  than  the  }>ortrait-lined  ol- 
lice  on  the  livst  lloor  ol  Soutii 
litiilditv-;-  He  will  v^ft  a  hatful  <)f 
worries.  We  supj)ose  he  already  is 
(piite  laniili;  r  with  most  of  those 
worries,  siu  1)  as  the  need  h>r  high- 
er instnn  tors"  pay  and  the  tontin- 
ned  freedom  of  the  mind,  and  he 
is  VpialUied  for  tan,!'lin<4  with  the 
obstatles  that  rise  up  in  front  of 
those  eternal  needs. 

r>ut  there  arc  some  other  prob- 
ieurs  that  need  attention  and  that 
alwavs  do  not  teceive  (omj)lete  con- 
sideration in  South  Bu'^ldin;^.  Thev 
are  lar-jelv  students'  probletus.  and 
the  students  need  the  new  chan- 
cellors trust  and  assistimce  before 
those  problems  can  be  solved.  We 

will  list  a  few  of  them: 

*  *  * 

1.  The  need  for  housing.  Here 
is  somethin!;  that  (an  easilv  be  ov- 
erlooked when  one  is  fighting  in 
the  State  (ieneral  Assemblv  for 
millions  of  dollars  in  appropria- 
tions. But  it  is  a  (ontimiing  prob- 
lem (Gord(Ui  Grav  listed  it  year 
after  year  in  his  Presidents  Re- 
ports) and  one  what  will  not  get 
better  after  awhile. 

S<mieone,  obx-iouslv  th.e  chan- 
cellor, must  convince  the  state's 
money-handlers  ^  that  enrollment 
here  prol>af>lv  ^"ont  taper  off. 
S<mieone  nuist  tell  the  legislators 
tlu:  married  students  are  not  a 
raritv  or  a  pas.siltg  famy.  Someone 
must  engrave  on  the  state's  mind 
iiJie  fait  that  2i.t  percem  of  the 
students  at  the  I'niversiv  hete  are 
married  students,  and  that  many 
students  do  iu)t  come  to  this  Uni- 
versity l>ecause  ihev  i  amiot  find 
aJtquate  luniswi^  for  theuiselves 
and  their  lamilies. 

1  he  new  tliantellor  naist  be 
readv  to  argue  with  private  in- 
terests who  oppose  state  housing 
proieds.  and  he  must  not  bend 
under   the   pressure  that   is   bound 

to  come. 

*  *  * 

2.  New  studein  union.  As  in- 
dicated in  the  report  of  the  \'isit- 
ing  Coimtiittee  of  the  Boaid  of 
Trustees.  })ro|)onents  of  a  new  stu- 
dent union  building  are  not  Hke- 
Iv  to  get  their  wish  anytime  s<Mm. 
.Now  the  (.raham  Memorial  build- 
ing holds  a  verv  small  peicentage 
of  the  studeins  who  pay  student 
union   fees. 

While  some  people  may  c(msid- 
er  a  student  union  building  a  lux- 
nrv.  thev  should  remember  that 
massive  new  buildings  have  been 
erected  at  both  N.  ('..  State  College 


The  Daily  Tar  Heel 

The  official  student  publication  of  tbe 
Pttblicatioas  Board  of  the  University  h{ 
North  Carolina,  where  it  is  published 
daUf  except  Monday  and  examinatiot 
and  vacation  periods  and  summer  terms 
Entered  as  second  class  matter  in  th( 
post  office  in  Chapel  Hill.  N  C  .  undei 
the  Act  of  March  8.  1870  Subscription 
rates:  mailed,  $4  per  year.  $2.50  a  senoe* 
ter;  delivered.  $6  a  year.  $3.50  a  leme* 
ter. 


Editor 


FRED  POWLEDGE 


Managing  Editor 


CHARUE  SLOAN 


News  Editor 


NANCY  HILL 


Sp*rts  Editor 


LARRY  CHEEK 


Buaiaess  Manager 


BILL  BOB  PE.'EL 


Advertising  Manager         FRED  KATZIN 

EDITORIAL     STAFP-  —   Woody     Sears. 
Frank  Crother,  David  Mundy. 


NEWS  STAFF— Clarke  Jones.  Pringle 
Pipkin.  Edith  MacKinnon,  Wally  Ku- 
ralt,  Mary  Alys  Voorhees,  Graham 
Snydei.  Neil  Ba ;s,  Peg  Humphrey. 
Phyllis  Maultsby,  Ben  Taylor,  Walter 
Schruntek.  H-Joost  Polak,  Patsy  Miller. 


BUSINESS  STAFF—Rosa  Moore,  Johnny 
Whitaker,    Dick   Leavitt. 


SPORTS    STAFF:    Dave   Wible,   Stewart 
Bird.  Ron  Milliagn. 


Suhscription  Manager  _ 
Circulation  Manager  — 
Assistant  Sports  Editor 


.  Dale  Stalcj 

CharUe  Holt 

Bill  King 


Staff  Photographer 
Librarian 


Norman  Kantor 
Sue  Gishner 


Night  Editor ^ <ihraham  Snyder 

Night  News  Editor Ben  Taylor 


TH€  NEW  CHANCELLOR 

.  .  .iuitful   of  worru-s 

and  the  \Vomai,i's  College — broth- 
er .'iid  sister  members  of  the  so- 
tailed  "Consolidated"  Tniversity— 
in    retem    vears.    We    deser\e    the 

same  tieatmeni  here. 

*  *  • 

'5.  ()nt-ol-state  tiiiti<m.  A  year 
or  so  ago,  the  legislative  policy- 
makers of  the  Tniversity  decided 
they  needed  more  money  to  run  the 
institution,  so  they  raised  ont-ol- 
state  students'  tuition  bv  S:i30. 

This  has  resulted  in  a  lessening 
of  student  quality  and  can  cause 
a  trend  toward  isolationism  in  the 
student  bod  v.  This  week  the  Visit- 
ing C'oimiiittee  of  the  Board  of 
I  rustees  tecogni/ed  the  mistake 
to  some  extent:  it  recommended 
that  tuition  for  out-of-state  grad- 
uate students  be  restored  to  the 
normal   North  Carolina   rate. 

The  reason:  The  V^isiting  Com- 
mittee felt  "a  rich  source  of  pros- 
pe(tive  teachers,  scholars  and  re- 
searchers is  being  lost  to  the  I'ln- 
versitv  and  the  state." 

By  the  same  token,  a  rich  source 

«)f  student  leaders  and  the  healthy 

influence   of  people      from     other 

parts  of  the  country  is  beiivg  lost  to 

■  ttie  part  of  the  student  .body  wiiifch 

tomes  from  North  Carolina. 
«  •*  * 

.\.  Athletics.  This  would  be  the 
most  difficidt  request  to  answer, 
for  in  pioba'blv  no  other  field  at 
the  Cnixersity  is  there  such  a  [pow- 
erful influence  to  maintain  the 
status  (juo.  But  the  I'liiversity. 
through  the  guitlante  of  the  new 
thantellor.  should  *ft)t  be  tt>ntent 
to  satisfy  the  rules  of  the  various 
athletic  (onleient  es  to  whit  h  it  be- 
longs. 

.Although  in  many  wavs  the  I'ni- 
'.ersiiy  is  even  more  stritt  than  the 
tonleientes.  its  goal  shtiidd  be  set 
even  lii'^htM.  There  should  be  no 
possible  wav  hir  the  I'niversity  to 
get  iinohed  in  the  tvpe  of  standal 
th  .\.  C.  .State  College  is  still 
wallowing  i:i  right  nt>w:  there 
shoultl  be  no  t  hance  t)f  antither 
■\'inte  Olen'  case  or  any  other 
hints  of  wrongdoing  sut  h  as  tlu«e 
whit  h  iia\e  t  tjine  tt)  the  smface  in 

receiH  vears. 

*  *  * 

-,.  1  he  most  im))oitant.  and 
most  tritiial.  problem  now  exist- 
ing'here  for  the  students  is  student 
frettlom.  For  stutlent  freedom  was 
born  because  cettain  .Soinh  Build- 
inti  offii  i;  Is  felt  it  should  be  there. 

.\s  lo4ig  as  there  are  m'en  in  Soiuh 
liuiltling  wjio  believe  in  student 
fieedt)in.  that  freedtnu  shall  exist 
— it  thi.-  students  tlu-mselves  exer- 
t  ise  their  freedom  with  a  great  deal 
of   res|MHisil>ilitv. 

In  the  past  there  have  l>een  cases 
of  the  students*  neglet  ting  tfieir 
resp(»nsil)ility.  but  in  almost  every 
invlaiu  e  the  petjple  in  South  Build- 
in'.*  ha\e  reathed  tUep  d(>wn  into 
theit  souls  i^rid  come  up  with  a  faith 
in  the  students  that  the  resixMwi- 
brlitv  will  return.  It  has  returned, 
prattitally  every  time. 

S«)  we  ask  the  new  t  hantellt>r  to 
have  failli  in  the  student  fvxly,  to 
stitk  bv  the  siudetus"  fieed«>m  the 
way  he  will  stick  by  his,  and  to 
never  forget  that,  while  there  are 
often  cases  of  irresponsibility,  there 
^are  iuv.irialily  those  stucients  who 
learn  reponsibility,  who  will  ex- 
erci.^  it.  who  will  teach  others  the 
passif>nate  need  h)r  a  hvpen  be- 
tween twt)  ideal-words,  freedom 
and  responsibility. 

That  faith  from  South  Building 
to  the  campus  is  what  we  need 
ntost.  We  ct>ult1  ask  nf)thing  more 
imponant   of   Chancellor    Aycock. 


Editor: 

We  were  glad  lo  see  that  The 
Daily  Tar  Heel  editorial  stall 
has  taken  interest  in  tl^  wage 
situation  of  self-help  students 
(Feb.  19).  but  we  would  like  to 
clarify  with  the  editor  matters 
concerning  the  bill  before  the 
legls.lature  that  a  committee  be 
appointed  to  investigate  the  sit- 
uation of  ejfisling  conditions  for 
Lenoir  Hall  workers. 

You  stated  the  tact  that  we 
Are  paid  in  food.  As  you  can  see. 
a  raise  ia  salarj-  would  only 
mean  more  food  daily.  The  work- 
ers do  not  want  this.  They 
want  to  be  paid  cash,  and  would 
be  satisfied  with  the  S  .75  right 
nt>w  if  they  could  get  cash. 

The  adminLstrators  feel  that 
they  have  stuck  their  heads  out 
now  with  the  $  .75  wage.  This  is 
more  than  most  college  campuses 
pay  and  little  could  be  done  to 
ccomplish  a  change  in  this  poli- 
cy. 

But.  something  could  be  done 
about  the  way  students  are  paid 
at  Lenair  Hall.  Lenoir  workers 
can  only  receive  their  pay  in 
food.  Yes.  food  ...  if  they  wish 
to  save  up  money  to  pay  other  ex- 
penses, they  can't,  and  it  is  im- 
possible to  meet  bills  with  credit 
in  food  at  Lenoir  Hall. 

Even    if   this  were   accepted, 
it  couldn't  be  done,  for  LeiMir 
Hail    officials    say    that    if    th« 
wrerkers   don't    use    their    daily 
wage  for  wood  on  the  day  that 
they    earn    it,    that    they    can't 
bay*  it  the  next   day  or  ever. 
Tbey   cannot   carry    food   from 
Lenoir  Hall. 
The    only    way    they    can    feel 
that  they  got  their  money's  worth 
at    the    end  of   the   day.    if   they 
have  filled   their  bodies   in   food 
capacity  and  they  have  food  cred* 
it   left,   is   to  buy   food,  and,   be- 
cause they  can't   eat   it.   leave  it 
on  the  table.  This  is  a  very  child- 
ish   but   natural    thing   to   do.    If 
there  is  another  job  on  campus 
that  pays  like  this,  we  would  like 
to  hear  about  it — no.  we  would- 
n't, for  two 'wrongs  do  not  make 
a  right. 

A  petition  by  student  workers 
for  a  change  in  this  policy  was 
unsuccessful.  The  management 
had  logical  facts  (which  might 
be  questionable)  concerning  the 
unworkable  nature  of  a  change. 
It  was  said  that  Lenoir  would 
have  to  raise  prices  if  the  work- 
ers were  paid  in  cash.  The  rea- 
son would  be  that  they  aren't 
making  any  profit  and  they  bare- 
ly have  enough  money  to  operate 
on. 

Notice  the  new  china  dishes 
they  just  bought,  yes  bought. 
We're  sure  that  no  one  gave 
them  to  Lenoir  Hall.  Doesn't  it 
seem  a  bit  strange  that  an  estab- 
lishment operating  on  a  narrow 
m^MTgin  ups  and  changes  dishes 
just  like  that?  They  claim  state 
officials  made  th«m  do  this  for 
sanitary  reasons. 

Weil,  doosn't  something  rt* 
quire  4iat  young  adults  18 
years  old  and  up  receive  cash 
wages  for  working  part  time? 
If  not.  It  is  time  something  was 
done  about  the  situation  at 
Lenoir  HaU. 

We  hope  the  bill  pas.ses  and 
that  the  committee  can  (wme 
across  new  discoveries  that  tibe 
lent  workers  did  not  find.  All 


level  of  other  student  workers 
ou  campus.  This  is  the  best  that 
any  Lenoir  Hall  worker  could 
hope  for — to  be  paid  in  cash 
and  budget  his  own  moiiey.  IVe 
ar?  sure  that  his  budget  would 
not  look  like  this:  income  daily. 
S1.90:  expenditures  daily,  food. 
SI. 90. 

Thanks  to  Whit  Whitfield  and 
the  Studeni  Party  for  the  bill, 
we  want  is  to  be  paid  in  cash. 
and   then   we    would    be   on   the 


and  to  The  Daily  Tar  Heel  for 
supporting  it.  We  trust  we  have 
your  future  support  as  the  find- 
ings of  a  committee  may  prog- 
ress. 

The  Wickers,  and  we  are  sure, 
the  Lenoir  Hall  management 
would  like  to  hear  the  views  of 
other  students  and  studeni  work- 
ers on  campus.  According  to  the 
management  we  have  only  to 
find  a  way  that  they  can  pay  us 
in    cash.    Thev    would    like    to. 


but  they  say  that  they  really 
can't  afford  to.  Let's  see  if  *e 
can  find  something  to  help  the 
management  to  fulfill  this  de- 
sire. 

I  know  that  they  would  be 
happy,  and  the  workers  are  all 
for  it.  Fellow  students,  write  your 
views  to  the  paper  and  let  us  hear 
from  you.  We  are  sure  that  you 
would  like  to  h^p  the  workers 
at  Lenoir  Hall  get  a  break. 
Student  Workers  at  Lenoir  Hall 


'Why  Should  This  Guy  Have  A  Conscience 
When  I  Ain't  Got  One?' 


•vrr 


THE  CHARLOTTE  NEWS: 


.     Si 


Esthetic  Battle  Is  Raging 


The  most  refreshii^'  thing 
about  the  aesthetic  free-for-all 
raging  in  Chapel  Hill  over  the 
architecture  of  the  new  art 
building  is  that  it  is  indeed  a 
free-for-all — fought  with  enorm- 
ous conviction  and  elaborate 
zeal. 

Too  often,  when  universities 
and  artists  become  solvent  they 
lose  their  old  cussedness  and 
vitality  and  become  merely  cita- 
dels of  civUity.  This  will  never 
do.  It  stifles  expression  and  free 
expression  is  what  makes  great 
art.  whether  it  be  in  architecture 
or  pot-making. 

We  reject  Jacques  Barzun's 
theory — that  art  exists  solely  out 
of  the  impartial  benevolence  of 
the  world's  asscH-ted  Babbitts. 
"Has  it  ever  txHiurred  to  you." 
he    says,    "that    the    very   things 


you're  interested  in — art.  science, 
new  ideas  of  any  kind — would 
never  have  been  widely  distribut- 
ed had  it  not  been  for  the  trades- 
men's interest  in  the  commodity 
and  lack  of  interest  in  what  it's 
about?  Leave  it  to  the  philoso- 
phers and  artists,  and  each  fa- 
natical sect  will  suppress  aU  the 
rest  on  the  grounds  of  princi'ple. 
Your  trader  is  your  only  impart- 
ial man." 

Impartiality  can't  save  bad  art 
nor  can  it  do  much  to  help  good 
art.  A  nice  soul-satisfying  rum- 
pus can  at  least  flush  .some  of  the 
badness  out  into  the  open  wliere 
it  cafi  be  recognized  and  con- 
demned. 

Cooflict  cannot  hurt  archi- 
tecture, eitbes.  Most  of  the 
world's  great  architects  —  SuUi- 


The  Chancellor 
Here's  His  Job 


van,  Wright.  LeCorbusier.  van 
der  Rohc — thrived  on  it. 

The  only  touch  of  Irony  in  the 
Chapel  Hill  rhubarb  is  the  fact 
that  it  is  being  conducted  amid 
probably  the  greatest  collection 
of  architectural  monstrosities  this 
side  of  the  Chicago  World's  Fair 
of  1893. 

No  amount  of  ex  post  facto 
lamentation  can  standardize  a 
campus  which  is  already  an  ami- 
able hodge-podge  of  many  archi- 
tectural modes.  But  there  is  vir- 
tue in  almost  any  attempt  to 
avoid  further  clashings  of  style. 
If  the  new  art  building  must  be 
Georgian  let  it  be  good  Georgian. 
But.  let's  at  least  try  to  have  its 
design  correspond  sdmewhat  to 
the  real  needs  of  the  people  and 
paraphernalia  that  will  occupy 
it.  Anything  less  is  dishonest. 


Pogo 


By  Walt  Kelly 


William  Aycock,  the  new  chancellor  of  the 
University  of  North  Carolina  at  Chapel  Hill,  will 
have  a  big  job.  Here  is  the  University's  defint- 
tion  of  Aycock's   job: 

GENERAL    RELATIONSHIPS 
AND  DUTIES  OF  THE  CHANCELLORS 

The  chancellor  of  each  of  the  several  iristitu- 
tions  shall  be  responsible  to  the  president  for  the 
administration  of  the  several  schools,  divisions  and 
departments  comprising  hij  institution,  and  shall 
make  an  annual  report  (and  such  other  reports  a.s 
shall  be  called  for)  on  the  state  of  the  institution 
under  his  control.  He  shall  be  the  advisor  to  the 
president  for  his  institution  in  matters  of  inter- 
institutional  administration. 

He  shall  present  to  the  president  all  administra- 
tive, fiscal  and  otiier  matters  of  his  institution  to 
be  considered  by  the  board  or  its  executive  com- 
mittee at  any  of  their  meetings  or  by  committees  ol 
the  board.  • 

,  He  shall  recommend  to  the  president  all  appoint- 
ments for  terms  of  more  than  one  year,  promotions 
within,  and  removals  from  the  faculty  and  other 
positions,  administrative  or  otherwise,  in  the  in- 
stitutions, and  all  increments  in  salaries  and  leaves 
of  absence  for  members  of  the  academic,  ad- 
ministrative or  other  staffs. 

He  shall  be  responsible  to  the  president  for 
enforcing  the  decisions,  actions,  policies  and  regu- 
lations of  the  board  and  of  the  faculties  for  the 
operation  of  his  institution. 

He  shall  be  the  official  medium  of  communica- 
tion between  all  deans,  heads  or  chairmen  of  de- 
partments, directors,  and  all  other  administrative 
officers,  faculty  members,  students  and  employees. 
The  chancellor  shall  be  a  member  of  all  facul- 
ties and  other  academic  bodies  of  the  institution 
oAjCr  which  he  presides  and  shall  have  the  right  to 
preside  over  the  deliberations  of  the  legislative 
body  of  the  faculties  of  hii  institution.  All  pro- 
jects, programs,  and  institutional  reports  which 
form  any  part  of  the  activitiy  of  his  institution  are 
subject  to  his  approval. 

When  not  otherwise     specifically     defined     by 
board   action,   and   subject  to  review   by  the  presi- 
dent, he  shall  have  the  right  to  define  the  scope 
of  authority  of  faculties,  councils,  committees  and 
officers  of  his  institution.  Subject  to  review  by  the 
president,  h?  may  take  the  initative  in  all  matters 
Qf  student  discipline  and  in  the  regulation  of  stu- 
dent organizations  and  institutions     whose     actions 
may  affect  the  welfare  or  policy  of  his  institution. 
The  chancellor  with  his  faculty  shall  be  charg- 
ed with  the  responsibility  of  maintaining  the  ed-  ' 
ucational  policies  of  his  institution,  subject  to  the 
endorsement  of  the   president  and  the   final   ap- 
proval of  the  board. 
The  chancellor  shall  assist  the  president  in  his 
relationships   with   and  presentations  to  the   Board 
of  Trustees,   the  General  Assembly,  the  Advisory 
6udget    Commission,   Budget   Bureau    officials    and 
the  public.  ^ 

Non-Bureaucrats    ; 
tjciye  Pone  Good  Job 


Stan  Shaw 


The  other  day  we  said  that  Graham  Memorial 
was  the  official  residence  of  the  Junior  Bureaucrats 
Club.    Since   then   we   have   had   reason   to  change 

•  our  mind.  We  have  recently  been  engaged  in  a  lit- 
tle  busy  work.    (A  term   whiah   we   learned   at  the 

.  NSA  Congress   last   summer.) 

While   partaking   of  this   busy   work   we   have 
found   out  that  the  Official   Student  Constitution 
of  the  University  of  North  Carolina  cotains  exact- 
ly  6,944   words.    If    you    haven't    understood    the 
term  busy  work  this  example  should  clear  up  the 
difficwity. 
Then  we  learned   that   the   Student   Legislature 
has   mandated   the    president   of  the   student   body 
to  make  a  complete  overhaul  of  this  constitution. 
In  the  ovtrhaul  the  constitution  will  be  simplified 
and  cut  down  to  a  document  containing  principles 
and  drawing  up  the  framework  of  student  govern- 
ment. 

This  is  clearly  a  piece  of  non-bureaucratic  work. 
A  real  bureaucrat  would  never  simplify  anything. 
If  a  change  were  to  be  made  he  would  add,  delimit, 
expound  and  generally  confuse  the  document.  'Riis 
would  be  done,  ostensibly,  for  the  same  of  exact- 
ness. 

It  would  spell  out  duties  so  that  everyone  could 
see  exactly  what  was  to  be  done.  In  the  process  it 
would  also  stifle  initiative,  but  this  is  a  low  price 
to  pay — in  the  mind  of  the  bureaucrat. 

We  shall  not  say  that  we  know  that  a  good  job 
will  be  done,  or  that  conditions  will  be  improved, 
by  any  changes  brought  about.  It  is  po.ssible  to 
simplify  too  much,  and  in  a 'sense  lose  part  of  the 
continuity  that  is  necessary  for  any  government, 
but  it  appears  to  be  a  step  in  a  direction  more 
closely  allied  to  what  could  be  called  right. 

In  any  event  it  cannot  be  called  bureaucracy.  And 
so  with  this  in  mind  we  shall  be  happy  to  say  thai 
not  all  student  politicians  are  bureaucrats.  We 
hope  that  the  campus  can  see  more  of^  this  lund 
of  work  in  the  future  months.  ,  c 


YOU  Said  It: 


f 


Arise,  Panty  Raiders! 

The  eager  young  "femme  fatale"  who  has  written 
of  her  desire  for  us  chaotic  UNC  males  to  organire 
must  be  very  anxious  for  the  success  of  the  next 
panty  pillage. 

■WTiat  we  troopers  need,  as  she  has  so  well  ata- 
ted,  is  a  Napoleon  Lower  Quad.  Rise  leader,  the 
campus  awaits  you,  Corsicaif  Colosus. 

Soldiers  of  Carolina,  march,  you  have  nothing  to 
lose  but  your  past  regrets!  Ecrasez  les  femmesl 
t  .  Julian  L.  Sessomc 


f\ 


WEDN 


U. 

o, 


Jw 


The  V«l 

Goudgel 
touch  ol 
teen  yo^ 

Our  St 

Shark! 
true  taj 
sui^  ol 
was  ori 
— for 
to  buy  I 
he   eat  | 

Our 

It's  All 

Millar. 
how  e\\ 
es    her 
with 
Uncle.sl 
Will 
fourlet 
$2.50 

Our 


WEDNESDAY.  FEBRUARY  27,  1957 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


the 

will 

kfint- 


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other 

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regu- 
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of  de- 
strati  ve 
Jloyees. 
facul- 
titution 
Hght  to 
lislative 
111  pro- 
wbich 
lion  are 

led     by 
presi- 
scope 
;es  and 
by  the 
I  matters 
of  stu- 
actions 
Jtitution. 
ch»rg- 
|th«  ed- 
to  th« 
lal    ap- 

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Board 

dvisory 

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lob 


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ireaucrats 

change 

in  a  lit- 

;d  at  the 

|w«  h«v« 
istitution 
exact- 
teod  th« 
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jgislature 
body 

)nstitution. 
simplified 
principles 

fnt  govem- 

ratic  work. 

anything. 
Pd.  delimit, 
lent.  This 

ot  exacf 

^one  could 
process  it 
low  price 

a  good  job 
J  improved, 
possible  to 
Dart  of  the 
overnment, 
ction  more 
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icracy.  And 
to  say  that 
ucrats.  We 
this  kind 


lers! 

\  has  written 
to  organize 
of  the  next 

so  well  sta- 
leader.  the 

e  nothing  to 
femmes! 
>.  S*«seini 


U.S.  Lacks  Sympathy 
On  Suez  Crisis:  Godfrey 

"The  United  States,  has  too  lit- 1  Israel  and  Egypt,  assure  free  and 
tie  understood  the  importance  of  |  reasonable  access  to  the  canal  for 
the  Suez  Canal  and  the  oil  fields  !  all   users,  bar  the   penetration   of 


to  Western  Europe  and  too  little 
sympathized  with  the  fears  of 
Great  Britain  and  France  that  in- 
terests vital  to  thero  would  fall  ourselves 
under  the  control  of  an  irrespons- 
ible dictator  or  become  the  excuse 
for  Russian  p«taetration  in  the 
Near  East."  This  view  was  pre- 
sented by  Dr.  James  L.  Godfrey 
of  the  History  Dept.  in  a  talk  be- 
fore the  Charlotte  Legau©  of  Wo- 
men voters  Tuesday  night.  Civic 
leaders  were  invited  to  the  meet- 


Russian  influence  in  the  region, 
and  preserve  the  oil  fields  for  the 
economic  use  of  our  friends  and 


ing. 


Discussing  the  historic  orgins  of 
the  quarrel  between  Israel  and 
the  Arab  states.  Dr.  Godfrey  de- 
clared that  the  result  "is  the  loos- 
ing t>f  a  dynamic  and  destructive 
force  of  nationalism  and  anti- 
colonialism,  with  which  we  have 
sympathy,  in  a  region  of  great 
sensitivity   and   potential   danger." 


"In  view  of  the  handling  of  the  '  The  crisis,  he  concluded,  presents 
problem."   Dr.   Godfrey  continued.    "Prickly    questions    to    which    our 
"we  must   now  find  a  policy  that    State  Dept.  must  find  answers, 
will  guarantee  the  peace  between  |      ^he  lasting  validity  of  these  an- 

swers.  however,  must  rest  upon 
]  the  intelligence  and  persererence 
of  our  citizens.  In  a  very  real 
sense  our  failure  to  solve  problems 
abroad  rests  upon  our  failure  to 
understand  questions  at  home.  To 
this  part  of  the  difficulty  we  should 
address  ourselves." 


Junior  Bargains 

Th«  Valley  cf  Song,  by  Elizabeth 
Goudge.  A  gorgeous  tale,  with  a 
touch  of  magic,  for  t^je  ten-to-four- 
teen  young  lady.  Published  at  $3.00 


Our  Special 


»"   Education 


Shark!,  by  Patrick  O'Connor.  Thi:; 
true  tale  of  high  adventure  in  per- 
sui{  ol  the  rive-ton  basking  shark 
was  originally  Written — and  priced 
— for  adults.  Now  you  can  afford 
to  buy  it  for  your  boy — and  will 
he  eat   it   up?  Published   at  $3.50. 


(Continued  from  Page  ^) 


PACE  THiei 


Discussion  Will  Follow 
Showing  Of  Forum  Film 

Dr.     William     Catton.     assistant    ments    masterpiece  .  .  .  the    human 
professor  of  Sociology     at     UNCtj  interest      is     so      compelling    and 


will  be  on  hand  in  Carr-oU  Hall  at 


naturaJ  that  one  has  the  unusual 


7    p.m.    today    to    lead    disucssion    feeling   of   eavesdropping." 
following   the   YMCA   forum   com-        Rotarian  described  it  as  a  -tre- 
hmittee's     presentation      of      "lost    mendously  convincing  film  because 
boundaries.'  [  gf  the  performances  and  because 

Dr.   Catton,     before    coming    to  j  it  treats  a  current  problem,  which 
UNC.  was  employed  by  the  Rand 
Corporation,  a  non-profit  research 
organization.  He  was  a  member  of 


the  Washington  Public  Opinion 
Laboratory  at  the  University  of 
Washington,  wbere  he  did  his 
graduate  studies  and  has  taught 
at  Reed  College,  Washington. 


far  from  universal,  does  involve 
the  basic  tenets  of  human  rela- 
tionship and  religious  truth." 

The  film  has  been  ehsewhere 
favorably  reviewed  in  Time, 
Newsweele  and  other  national 
prominent   magazines. 

Told   in    a     documentary     style, 


Miss  Carmichael  said  "at  the 
same  time,  some  women  do  not 
have  time  to  take  the  liberal  arts 
program  and  then  speciali/e  in  so 
son>e  skill;  and  I  recognize  that 
some    women    would    do    best    to 

Our  Special $1JS  train  themselves  in  techcnological 

I  or  the  fine  arts  program." 

it's  All  in  the  Fanfily,  by  Margaret  |     "Hence  the  modern  woman  faces 

Millar.   The  chucklcsome  story  of  i  a  dilemma,"  Miss  Carmichael  sai^. 

how  eleven-year-old  Priscilla  mak-     " • 


es  her  way  in  a  world  cluttered 
with  Mother.  Father,  Aunts  and 
Uncles',  and  other  Aged  Persons. 
Will  appeal  mightily  to  ten-to- 
fourteen-year  girls.  Published  at 
$2.50. 

Our  Special  $1.25 

The  Intimate 
Bookshop      I 

205  E.  Franklin  St. 
Open  Till  10  P.  M. 


CLASSIFIEDS 


A  Scene  From 


Pictured  above  is  a  scene  from  the  Players,  Incorporated,  pro- 
duction of  Henry  IV,  to  be  preeented  here  in  Mevnorial  Hall  March 


'Henry  IV" 

11  at  8  p.m.  Tickets  are  $1.25. 


The  YWCA  film-forum  commit- 1  the  film  Ls  produced  by  Louis  de 
tee  also  expects  to  invite  a  number  i  Rocliement  {March  of  Time, 
of  religious  leaders  from  neighbor-  j  House  on  82nd  Street  and  Boom- 
ing churches  in  the  community  to  j  erang)  and  stars  Mel  Ferrer  and 
assist  and  participate  in  the  dis-  Beatrice  Pearson, 
cussion. 

Lost  Boundaries,  which  has  re- 
ceived wide  praise  from  critics, 
deals  with  the  existing  racial  prob- 
lem in  society  and  is  tnie-to-life 
story  of  Dr.  Albert  Johnston,  a 
prosperous  New  Hampshire  phy- 
sician who  crossed  the  color  line,  j 

The  film  reveals  the  conflict  that 
subsequent      disclosure      of      6r.  i 
Johnston's   racial    origins    creates 
on  his  family  and  the  community. 

Commonweal  magazine  has  said 
of  the  motion  picture.  "We  could 
call  this     (producer)     de     Roche- 


AT  BRK:KS  CONFERENCX  CENTER: 


y  Conference  Is  Set  This  Weekend 


ROOM  BRICK  HOUSE.  3  BED 
rooms,  all  modem  conveniences. 
3  miles  on  Old  86  Hyway.  Stove 
and    Frigedaire    furnished.    Call  \  will  be  held  Friday  through  Sim 


Fred  Katzin  after  6:00.  8-9025. 


ITALIAN-BUILT  MOTOR  SCOOT- 
er,  Sears  Cruisiare.  Excellent 
condition.  90  miles  per  gallon. 
Call  S.  M.  Bryant,  8-2052. 


LOST:  K  AND  E  LOG-LOG  DU- 
plex  Slide  Rule.  Finder  please 
contact  Jim  Buchanan.  38  Old 
East.  Reward  offered 


Some  75  students  here  will  of  Christian  voacation  at  Yale 
participate  in  a  religious  confer- 1  Divinity  School,  will  be  keynote 
ence  at*  Bricks.   N.  C.  during  the  j  speaker. 

coming   weekend;  '      He   will    discuss   "The   Basis   ef 

The    joint    Young    Men's-Youag  i  Our  Christian  Conscience"  at  7:30 

Women's     Christian    Assn.     events  p.m.   Friday,   "The   Forces     in     a 

Campus  Culture  Which  Seems  to 
Require   Conformity   and   Compro- 
mise" at  7  p.m.  Saturday. 
Topic  of  the  two-day  conference 
Dr.  John  O.  Nelson,  director  of    jj  -students  Face  Conscience.  Con- 
religious  field  work  and  professor '  formity  and  Comproihise."  It  will 


"WARNCII  BROS.  rKisENT  — ^ 

TMcCV. Whitney  picture 


at    the    Congregational    Church's 
Conference  Center  in  Bricks. 


explore  many   facets  of  life  from  j  return   late   Sunday  afternoon, 
responsibilities  in  the     home     to !      Registration  for  this  conference 
that  in  a  world  community.  i  is  nearing  a  close,  and  all  people 

Heading    the    conference    com- !  interested  in  attending  have  been 
mittee    which    has    been    planning   asked  to  register  at  the  "Y".  Mar- 
the   event    since     last    November   tha    Richardson    and    Gerry    Mayo 
are  two   UNC  seniors,   Kathy  Le-    ^^jsh    to    urge   students   interested 
Grande    of    Daytona    Beach.    Fla.. '  .^  j^^^^^j^g  ^^^inet  members,  of- 
and   Bobby   L.   Newton   of   Creed- 1  ,.  ...  .        . 

1  ficers,    or    committee-men    to    at- 
moor.  1 

The  group  is  expected  to  leave    tend    this    conference,    they    said 
Chapel  Hill  Friday  at  3  p.m.  and   yesterday. 


Searcherjsl 

VISTaViSIOMww  TttH««M.o« . 

co>«TAaMma 

JEFFREY  HUNTER  VERA  MH. 
WARD  BOND  NATALIE  WOOD 


;h«ck  »Emnr 


k  tmmmm-amtmtmmminmmHa 
*    .mtummtnitti—iiKMVMuaim 


o.«<  -fradvoBo  TUESMT  WIB   7  / 


CONVENIENT  DAILY  SERVICE 


MBKIAf*  C.  COOPCH 

BIRECTU  ItIOUN  ford 

TODAY  ONLY 


CONGRATULATIONS 

(Contimied  from  page  1)         i  siderable  support   and  we  are   all 
Vice-President    Evans,    who    was  {  pleased   with  his  selection." 


TODAY 
ONLY 


Carolinil 


TO 

WINSTON-SALEM 
HICKORY 
WILMINGTON   . 
LOUISVILLE 
CINCINNATI 
COLUMBUS,  0. 

and  Biany  other  potnts 


• 
• 


COLLOQUIUM  lowship  will  meet  today  at  7  p.m. 

There    will    be    a    local    Physics    in    the   choral    rehearsal    room    of 
Colloquium   today  at   4:30  p.m.  in    Hill    Music   Hall.   The   Hlble  study 
250  Phillips  Hall.  William  Mallard  ;  will  be  on  the  15th  chapter  of  St. 
will  speak  on   "Radiation  Damage '  Johny 
in  Solids  j  LANGUAGE    EXAMS 

FELLOWSHIP  I      Today    is   the    last   dax  for   stu- 

The  Inter- Varsity  Christian  Fel- '  dents    wishing    to    take    examina- 

reading    knowledge 


''.f.:.:.'W£m7/7/?n 


Y  Delegates 
Returned 
Here  Monday 


also  chairman  of  the  Student 
Chancellor  Selection  Committee, 
said  of  the  report.  'Over  four 
months  ago.  the  Student  Chan- 
cellor Selection  Committee  de- 
livered its  report  to  President  Fri- 
day's Committee  giving  what  it 
regarded  as  student  sentiment  on 
the  campus.  Though  Mr.  Aycock 
had  had  little  association  with  un- 
dergraduates, he  (iid  receive  con- 


tions     for    reading    knowledge    of 

foreign  languages  to  register  with 

the     Graduate     ofifce     in     South 

Builcfing. 

FORUM  FH.M  ."^ 

The  YMCA  and  Hillel  Founda- 
tion will  present  a  Film  Forum 
movie,    "Lost    Boundaries."    today 

at  7:30  p.m.   in   Carroll  Hall.  The    Mottday   and   Tuesday   visiting  the 
film  will  be  followed  by  a  disciii*-  campus  to  get   a  close-up  look  at 
Five    delegates  returned   to   the   sion  led  by  Dr  W.iliam  Kattoa  of ,  various  aspects^  of  the  University 


Council  Chairman  Exum  stated, 
"I  was  very  pleased  with  the  se- 
lection and  feel  that  Aycock  will 
offer  vigorous  leadership.  It  was 
a   fine   choice." 

.According  to  SP  Chairman  Hall- 
ford,  "Aycock  is  an  excellent 
choice  .and  I'm  looking'  forward 
to  many  years  of  capable  and 
progressive   leadership. 


^*, 


TRUSTEES  VISITING 

(Continued   fr9m   Page   1) 


FOt  RESHVATIONS 
Can  yoiK  Trivvl  A|mI  « 

TEiiViiZ41#l 


•  ••••••••••••• 


DAILY    CROSSWORD 


ACROSS 

1.  Applaud 
5  Plot  of 
ground 
9.  Tile 

10.  Zodiac  sign 
12.  Bees'  homes 
13  Reddish* 
yeilow 

14.  ^  be  it 

15.  .Pigpen 

16.  River  (It.) 

17.  lAasurium 
(sym. ) 

18.  Malt 
beverage 

19.  ruel 

20.  ghow 

23.  pQlynesian 
fod 

24.  Sticks  to 
26.  .^  peer 
28.  ^Muiled 

31.  Aftem 

32.  vViooden  pin 

33.  Greek  letter 

34.  Whether 

35.  God  of 
pleBsure 

36.  Be  glum 
3«.  rr^tc 

40.  Dress  front 

41.  Urke 
fe^ard 

42.  Aromas 

43.  ttifaks 

44.  Haberdash. 
cry  item 

QOWN 

1.  Acme 

2.  Wysh 

3.  Splar  disk 
(Brypt.) 

4.  Fdotlike 
organ       , 


5.  Dish 

6.  Viscous 

7.  Warp-yam 

8.  Crown  saw 
(Surg.) 

9.  Disgrace 
11.  Ascended 
15.  Coat  parts 

18.  Tree 

19.  Pant  for 
breath 

21.  Portion 

22.  Strange 
23  Evening 

sun  god 
( Egypt. ) 
25.  Tattered 
cloth 


26.  Scotch 
landed 
proprie- 
tor 

27.  Tenders 

29.  Send 
abroad 

30.  Legisla- 
tures 

32.  Hawai- 
ian god- 
dess 
of 

volc|inocs 
(pofls.) 

35.  Flock 

36.  Manufae* 
tured 


ijL2J  daui.  ■ 

'i\f2[:i\-i    iiliiW^  ^ 

a^vHi^Li  j'jyyii 

3i.rio   [i'3[;i  IjG 

.•5 'J      iraiiu     ■  r 

li'aTianri:^     ss ' 

□ar^rrri-j 

MU[.:      r-.r.ta.-.K 

^n   lizai.     '-v.! 

iVA    n^r.'    T'.  -  1 

ysTir^::    ..in:-!^-  • 

^J>T](l'^'^     '-'k'i'-'"'-    . 

i-[4:^    ;'Li:;-- 

'•CT 
T«*lcr««r'«  aaM»«r 

37.  Ancient  coin 
(Gr.) 

39.  By  way  of 

40.  Piece  OC 
work 


campus    Monday,    after    attending  ^he  UNC   Sociology  Dept. 

the  Y.MCA  Southern  Council  J^^et  | 

in  Atlanta,  Ga.  The  council  meet- 
ing was  held  as  a  business  session 
of  the  Southern  Area  of  Y  Work. 

Joe  PhiUips.  chairman  of  the 
local  better  race  relations  board 
at  the  "Y".  was  a  member  of  the 
panel  discussing  the  role  of  the 
Sotithern  Christian  Association  in 
improving  human  relations,  on 
campus. 

Local  president,  (kjrry  Mayo, 
was  elected  chairman  of  the  execu- 
tive committee  of  the  Southern 
Area  YKICA.  In  addition  to  Kayo 
and  Phillips,  other  members  of 
the  delegation  attending  were  Cur- 
tiss  Daugbtry,  Bob  Leonard,  and 
Stewart  Colson. 


Sixty-five    women    students     here 
acted   a.b-  hostesses  to  the  visitors. 


Student  Aid  Office,  the  jvomens 
gymnasium,  the  Nurses'  Resi- 
dence, the  Placement  office,  ad- 
missions office  and  the  dean  of 
women's  office. 


Retailers  Meet 
Sketches  Duties 
Of  Officers 


The   group    also   toured    the   In- 
stitute    of    Government     Building 
They  arrived  Manday  afternoon  .  ^^^^^^  ^^^^  ^^^^^  ^^^^^^^   ^^,  ^^^ 

University  Woman's  Club  at  a  tea 


following  the  full  board  meetmg 
in  Raleigh.  The  women  trustees 
spent   Monday  night   in  the  wom 


The  thirteen  members  are  Mrs 


Brandts  Talks 
ToSemindr 
Group  Tonight 


The  North  Carolina  Merchants 
Assn.  held  its  annual  Retailers' 
Activities  Clinic  here  Monday  "to 
outline  duties  of  retailers"  who 
are  currently  holding  responsible 
office  in  their  organizations. 

I*residents  of  merchants  associa- 
tions and  chairmen  of  retail  di- 
visions of  chambers  of  commerce 
were  honored  at  a  breakfast  Mon- 
day. George  Lemons.  1956  presi- 
dent of  the  Greensboro  Merchants 
Association  and  advertising  di- 
rector of  the  Greensboro  News-Rec- 
ord, spoke  at  12:30  p.m. 

Other  main  addresses  were  by 
Dean  Maurice  Lee  of  the  UNC 
Business  Administration  School, 
speaking  on  ••Retailing  and  Edu- 
cation for  Business  in  North  Car- 


en's  dormitories  and  spent  most  of  R.  S.  Ferguson.  Taylorsville;  Mrs. 
Tuesday  observing  different  Albert  H.  Lathrop,  AsheviUe;  Mrs. 
phases  of  student  life.  I  Mar>'     Mclver     Stanford,     Chapel 

I  Hill;  Mrs.  May  L.  Tomlinson,  High 
COMMENTS  I  Point;  Mrs.  Ed  M.  Anderson,  West 

One  trustee  member  said  a  hos- '  Jefferson;  Mrs.  Nancy  Hall  Cope- 
pit  jlity  committee  of  some  sort  I  land.  Murfreesboro: 
was  suppos-ed  to  have  been  set  up  1  Mr^.  P.  P.  McCain,  Red  Springs; 
for  the  visit.  "E>very  person  I've  Mrs  J.  B.  Kitrell,  Greenville;  Mrs. 
met  was  on  this  hospitality  com- j  Grace  Taylor  Rodenbough,  Wal- 
mittee,"  she  said.  { nut    Cove;     Mrs.     C.    W.     Tillett, 

I  Charlotte,      Mrs.      Oscar      Barker, 
Everyone  was   .so  friendly   here  ^  ^^^j^^^     ^^^     ^^^^^^^^    ^     g^^^. 

•I  could  not  tell  wh.ch  girls  were  j  ^^^    j^^^^^^  ^^^  ^^^    g    ^    p^^. 

associated   with   the   program   and  !  ^^j.   Albemarle. 

which    were    not,"    one    of    them  j 

said. 

Another  spoke  of  the  "friendly 
atmosphere."  A  colleague  an- 
swered "Well,  it's  jua<   Carolina." 


FAMILY  COUNCIL... 


;. . .  and  the  FAMILY 
DROP  ''TORE 


•  At  the  ac.vi  "Family  Council,"  whv  not 
suggest  this  establishment  as  your  head- 
quarters for  drugs  and  sundries?  You 
will  like  our  friendly  interested  service; 
appreciate  our  uniformly  fair  prices.  And 
be  sure,  too,  to  turn  to  us  for  the  com- 
pounding of  prescriptions.  They  are  our 
specialty,  you  know. 

Sutton's  Drug  Store 

Phone  9-8781 
"The  Tar  Heel's 
Prescription  Center"      


Dean    Henry    Brandis      of      the 
UNC  Law  School  will  speak  to  the!  olina";  and  Dr.  Kenneth  Goodson 
United  Nations  Seminar  group  to- j  pastor   of     the     First 
night  on  the  subject  of  "Disarm- '  Church  of  Charlotte,     talking     or 
ament."  The  meeting  will  be  in  the    "Service   is  My   Business." 
Library    Assemblv    room    at    7:30       Among  the  speakers  on  organi 

zational  work  were  W.  H.  Collins,   with    the    selections     Monday    of 

of     Montgomery     jVard  1  William   B.  Aycock  as  UNC  chan- 

Raleigh;     and   cellor    and    Gordon    Blackwell    as- 


One  member  of  the  group  was, 
standing  in  front  of  South  Build- 
ing, looking  toward  the  Wilson  Li- 
brary. "The  buildings  on  the  cam- 
pus are  so  much  prettier  when 
Methodist  ^'°"'"^  on  the  campus,"  she  said, 
"Than  when  you're  driving  arountf 
it  (the  campus(  in  a  car." 

The   trustees   were   also  pleased 


p.m. 

Brandis'  talk  is  the  ^cond  in  a    manager 
series    preparing  the     group     for   and  Company 


their   March    14-16     trip     to 


the    Charles   C.    Dudley,    managing   di-   chancellor   at.  Woman's   College. 


Uaited  Nations  in  New  York.  The   rector  of  the  CbarloUe  Merchants  j  VISITS 


seminar  will  also  be  on  the  gen- 
eral topic  of  disarmament. 

Wally  Satterfield.  chairman  of 
the  group,  urges  all  students  plan- 
ning to  make  the  trip  to  be  pres- 
ent at  tonight's  session.  The  sess- 
ion is  also  open  to  interested  stu- 
dents. 


Assn.  I     While  here,  the  trustee  women 

i  observed   typical   meetings   of   the 
-  I  Women's'  Residence    Council,    the 

j  Women's      Honor      Council,      the 
I  YWCA  and  the  Independent  Wom- 
Bridge  'essons  will  be  taught  by  i  en's   Council,    all    at   Gnaham    Me- 
Mrs.  E.  R.  W^ade  today  in  the  Ren-  j  morial. 
dezvous  Room  from  4:30-6  p.m.     1     Tuesday  they  made  visit<i  to  the, 


Bridge  Lessons 


ONLY  2  MORE  DAYS 

To  Vofe  for  Your  favorite 

ior 

MARCH  MISS  FASHION  PLATE 

BALLOTS  AND  BALLOT  BOX  AT 

Your  Coed  Sportswear  Center 


T 


PAGE  FOUR 


THI  DAILY  TAR  HEIU 


WEDNESDAY,  FEBRUARY  27,  1»57 


Frosh  Rally  To  Beat  Wake  Forest 


Intramural  Champions 


Pictured  above  are  the  members  of  Sigma  Nu  Fraternity's  basketball  team.  The  Sigma  Nu's  de- 
feated the  Peacocits  Monday  night. 

Members  of  the  winning  team  include,  front  r  w  from  left  to  right:  Charlie  Bolton,  George  Hol- 
den   and  Tom  McKee.   Second   row:   (.awrece   Kouri,  Floy  Shingleton,  Adin  Rucker  and  John  Gynn. 


Duke  Grapplers  To  Give 
Tar  Heels  Difficult  Match 


By  RON  MILLIGAN 

The  crippled  Tarheel  wrestlers 
Yiill  be  guests  of  the  Blue  Devils 
for  a  tough  conference  match  this 
afternoon  in  the  Duke  Gym  at  3 
Vm. 

The  service..'  of  Ken  Hoke,  one 
of  the  leading  figures  for  the  grap- 
plers. will  pot  be  available  for 
the  rest  of  the  season  since  his 
•irm  injury  in  the  VMI  bout  last 
Friday. 

Another  grappler.  Henry  Rhyne. 
will  probably  not  start  in  the  130 
pound      division      this      afternoon  I 
i! gainst  Duke.  Rhyne  also  suffered 
an  arm  injury  last  Friday. 

"The  Blue  Devils  have   a  tough 


draw    twice   in   the   two  different  ; 
matches  held  with  Duke.  J 

The  wrestling  team  has  only 
two  more  matches-  this  seascm, 
they  are  both  conference  tills  wtih 
Duke  this  afternoon  and  N.  V. 
State  on  March  4.      '  ; 

The    winner   of   the    match    this 
afternoon  could  easily  be  the  run- 
ner-up   for    second    place    in    the ' 
conference.  i 


So  far  the  Carolina  squad  has 
won  four,  tied  one.  and  lost  three 
matches. 

The  probable  starting  lineup  for 
the  Tarheels  will  be  123  lb.  Hc^riry 
Hhyne  or  David  Wall,  130  lb.  Capt. 
Bob  Wagner.  137  lb.  Perrin  Hen- 
derson, 147  lb.  Charlie  Boyette. 
157  lb..  Bill  Adcox,  167  lb.  Bill 
McGchee,  177  lb.  Dave  Atkinson, 
and  heavyweight  Lari-y  Hayes. 


UNC  Mermen  Favored 
In  ACC  Championships 


team."  said  Coach  Sam  Barnes 
yesterday  T  know  they  have  a 
good  team  because  I  refered  a 
match  between  them  and  Mary 
land  last  Saturday.  One  thing  I 
noticed  was  that  they  didnt  u.-e 
their  best  men  against  Maryland. 
They  were  probably  saving  them 
for  us." 

Tarheel   Perrin    Henderson,    137 
pc under,  will  remember  one  indi- 
vidual   on    the    Blue    Devil    team 
called  Esposito  that  he  will 
ably  face  this  afternoon. 

Last  year.  Henderson,  as  a 
wrestler,    fought    Esposito 


Ends  Strong 
In  Off-Season 
Work  Sessions 


The  t  )p  swimmers  in  the  Atlan- 
tic Coast  Conference   invade  Bow-  ■ 
man  Gray  Pool   this  weekend   for  [ 
the   annual    ACC    Swimming    and 
Diving    Championships,    beginning 
tomorrow  night 

Conferenee      champion    North 
'  Carolipa  and  runner-up  N.  C.  State 
will   be  solid  favorites  to  cop   all 
of  the  15  events.  ! 

Two  triple  winners  from  last 
i  year's  event  will  be  back  to  de- 
prob- 1  fenjj  j^g  j,jg  jqq  g^j  200  yard  In- 
dividual  Medley   Championship. 

North  Carolina"^  All-America 
Charlie  Krepp  will  be  defending 
his  100  and  200  yard  backstroke 
and  20  yard  individual  medley 
championship. 

North  Carolina  States  Frank 
Nauss  will  be  trying  for  the  220, 
440  and  1500  meters  free-style 
ck|ampio|ishipf    for     the     fourtih 


frosh 


to 


Off  -  season  football  practice  at    consecutive  year. 


Carolina  finds  Coach  Jim  Tatum 
and  his  staff  doing  a  lot  of  ex- 
perimenting, especially  at  the  ends, 
where  numerous  possibilities  are 
presented.  1 

Best  thing  that  has  happened  to ' 
the  squad  in  this  particular  de- j 
•purtment  is  the  return  of  Dick' 
Goldstein,  a  gifted  6-0.  205-pound  1 
operative,  who  played  freshman' 
football  here  in  1953  and  then 
dropped  out  of  school. 

Goldstein   was  a   fine   freshman 
football     player     but     reportedly 
failed    to    make    his    adjustments. 
Now.  as  a  returnee,  he  says  he  has  1 
";4rown   up"   and   has   greatly  im- j 
pressed  his  coaches.     Some     pre- 1 
diet  that  he  may  make  one  of  the  j 
Tar  Heels'  finest  flankmen.  Gold- 1 
stein  played  football   in  Germany  , 
while   in  the   service. 

Position  shifts  have  sent  vet- 
erans Don  Kemper  and  Jim  Jones 
to  the  exteriors  and  both  have 
looked  fine  at  their  new  end  posts. 
Coach  Tatum  says  that  these  two 
players,  who  were  highly  com- 
petent in  the  interior  of  the  line. 
seem  more  at  home  on  the  flanks 
and  they  are  likely   to  stay  there. 

The  end  positions  came  to  be  of 
(considerable  cocern  as  the  result 
of  the  losses  of  such  lettermen  as 
Larry  Muschamp  and  Bill  Elling- 
ton by  completion  of  eligibility 
and  Charlie  Robinson,  who  has 
dropped  out  of  school  '"for  finan- 
cial reason..'. ' 

Robinson  was  a  first  stringer 
last  season  and  played  some  fine 
football.  He  had  always  been  a 
question  mark,  however,  because 
of  injury  possibilities  and  at  one 
time  was  on  the  doctors'  taboo  list. 

The  Tar  Heels  are  workihg  out 
four  days  weekly  in  the  off-season 
practice.  They  do  not  drill  on 
Tuesdays  and  "Thursdays.  Coaches 
have  been  well  pleased  with  the 
scrimmage  sessions  held  so  far. 


The  Championships  open  Thurs- 
day night  with  the  1500  meters 
finals  on  a  time  basis.  At  least  two 


heats  will   be   run   beginning  at  8 
p.m. 

Friday  afternoon  preliminaries 
in  the  200  yard  freestyle.  100  yard 
breaststroke.  low  diving,  200  yard 
Individual  Medley  and  the  400 
yard  relay  will  be  run  off  begin- 
ning at  1  p.m.  The  finals  in  these 
events  begin  Friday  night  at  8 
p.m. 

Preliminaries  on  Saturday  be- 
gin at  1  o'clock  in  the  100  yard 
butterfly,  high  dive,  100  yard 
dash,  200  yard  medley  relay.  The 
finals  are  slated  for  Saturday  night 
at  80'clock. 

All  eight  conference  schools  are 
entered  in  the  meet  and  over  100 
swimmers  are  expected  to  par- 
ticipate. 

Admission  to  the  preliminaries 
is  free  and  tickets  are  on  sale  at 
Woollen  Gymnasium  for  the  finals 
on  Friday  and  Saturday  night. 

North  Carolina  has  already  won 
the   ACC  team   championship,   de 
cided    by    dual    meets.    The    Tar 
Heels  are  undefeated. 


By  BILL  KING 

Special  To  The  Daily  Tar  Heel 

WINSTON-SALEM  —  Carolina's 
Tar  Babies  staged  a  magnific  nt 
second  half  rally  to  defeat  the 
Wake  Forest  frosh  65-63  in  Me- 
morial coliseum  here  last  night. 

The  heroes  of  the  thrilling  bat 
tie  were  forward  Lee  Shaffer  and 
Wally  Graham,  a  .jcond-string 
guard  who  came  off  the  bench  to 
provide  the  Tar  Babies  with  the 
winning  margin  with  only  50  sec- 
onds remaining  in  the  contest. 

The  Tar  Babies  were  completely 
outplayed  in  the  first  half  as  the 
Baby  Deacs  ran  up  a  43-41  half- 
lime  margin.  But  the  Carolina 
fresh  wa  •  a  determined  team  in 
the  second  period  and  began  cut- 
ting the  Deaclets'  margin. 

With  2.53  remaining.  Grey 
Poole  hit  two  free  throws  to  move 
the  Tar  Babies  to  within  one  point 
of  the  Wake  frosh,  at  61-60.  The 
Deaclets  missed  their  next  shot 
and  Lee  Shaffer  hit  a  hook  shot 
with  1:52  lef^  to  put  the  Tar  Ba- 
bies ahead.  62-61.  The  Baby  Deacs 
got  the  ball  again  and  then  Gra- 
ham took  over  for  the  Tar  Babies. 

The  clock  showed  fifty  seconds 
left  when  Graham  blocked  a  jump 
shot  by  George  Richie,  grabbed 
the  bail  and  dribbled  in  for  a  lay- 
up  to  put  the  Tar  Babies  ahead. 
64-61.  Graham  was  fouled  on  the 
play  but  missed  the  shot  and 
Wake  scored  again  to  make  it  64- 
63.  The  Carolina  frosh  got  the  ball 
and  went  into  possession  with  13 
seconds  remaining.  Griaham  was 
fouled  again  and  made  his  first 
shot  to  put  the  icing  on  the  cake 
for  th*  Tar  Babies  at  65-63. 

The  win  was  number  15  for  the 
Tar  Babies  against  four  losses  and 
their  third  win  over  the  Baby 
Deacs.  . 

Shaffer  was  top  man  for  the  Tar 
Babies  with  26  points.  York  Larese 
followed  with  16.  Richie's  18 
points  was  good  for  high  honors 
for  the  Baby  Deac.v. 

The  Tar  Babies  close  out  the 
1956-57  schedule  when  they  travel 
to  Durham  Friday  to  meet  the 
Duke  Blue  Devils.  • 


CAROLINA  G. 

Larese.  f  „..  8 

Graham,  f — .  1 

Shaffer,    f   _    9 

Poole,  g  0 

Kepley.   c   4 

Crotty.  g      -     — 3 

Steppe,   g     1 


F. 
0-1 
1-2 
8-8 
2-2 
0-1 
25 
0-0 


I 
31 

26 

2 

8 

8 

2 


Totals    26     13-19    65 


W.  FOREST 

Wiggins,  f     . 
Mitchell,   f 
Murray,   f  ... 
Budd,  c  ,.._ 
McGraw, '  c    . 

Forte,  g  

Richie,  g    .._ 

Totals    : ^. 


F. 
2-3 
1-3 
0-1 
6-7 
0^ 
6-6 


T. 

12 

9 

2 
12 

01 

8 


810     18 


19     23-30    63 


Spring  Footbali  Drilk 
Draw  Many  Candidates 

Coach  Jim  Tatum  welcomed  ap- 
proximately 90  candidates  to  the 
opening  of  spring  football  drills 
at  the  University  in  mid-Febru- 
ary. 


Monogram  Club 

The  Monogram  Club  will  meet 
tomorrow  night  at  7:30. 

All  member^-  have  been  asked 
to  be  present. 


MILTON^  MID- 
WINTER CARNIVAL 
Endt  Saturday 

Save  on  th«  most  wantad 
•pparai  in  the  South. 

Clotbing  Cupboarb 


Rosenbluth  Second 
In  ACC  Scoring  Tally 


GREENSBORO  liPU- With  South 
Carloina's  Grady  Wallace  rocking 
along  with  basketball  titles  appar- 
ently all  locked  up  in  scoring  av- 
erage and  individual  rebounding, 
the  Atlantic  Coast  Conference^ 
real  efficiency  battles  are  in  tho 
field  of  shooting  accuracy — par- 
ticularly free  throw  shooting. 

Wallace,  according  to  ACC  serv- 
ice Bureau  figures  through  games 
of  last  Saturday  night,  is  averag- 
ing 'iO.\  points  and  14.7  rebounds 
a  game. 

Len  Rosenbluth   of  North  Caro- 
lina is  well  back  in  scoring  aver- 
age   at    26.3    points    a    game,    and 
North  Carolina  Stale's  John  Rich-  • 
ter  is  considerably  in  the  rear  in  '  Wallace,   S.C. 
rebounding  with  11.8  recoveries  a    R'bluth,  N.C. 
game.  Y'kel,  Clem. 

But   in   the   department   of   free  j  Hardy,   Va. 
throw    i-hooting,    there    are    three  ;  W'liams,  WF 
players  in  the  running   and  sepa-     Richter,  NCS 
rated    by    the    narrowest    of    mar-  '  Newcome,  D 
gins.  .         -  j  Murdock  WF 

Jackie  Murdock  of  Wake  Forest,  I  Pericola,  SC 
ntaional  leader  as  well  last  week,  '  Brennan  NC 
is    No.    1    with    an   accuracy   mark  ;  Allen,   Duke 
of  87.74  per  cent  136  for  155.  But  i  OBiien,   Md. 
second  is  Bob  Seit/  of  North  Caro-  '  Wiggins,  WF 
lina  State  at  87.62  per  cent;  92  for  !  Gilley,   WF 
105;  and  third  is  Ernie  Wiggins  of  |  Davis,  Md. 
W'akc  Forest  at  86.73  per  cent  (85  j  Seitz,    NCS 
for  98).  This  race  is  .so  close*  that  j  Brinkely,   CI. 
a   single   miss   at    a    critical    stage  |  Kearns  N.C 
could  mean  a  title  won  or  lost.  {  Miller,  Va. 

Field  goal  shooting  competition  '  N'incik,  Md. 
is  alsi)  close  with  Richter  on  top  Cooper,  Va. 
with   51.9  per  cent   on    123    field  ;  Cameron,  CI. 


Howard  Johnson  Restaurant 


BREAKFAST 


•ffAtt' 


LUNCH 


DINNER 

u:;-  'y':iti,u^-u:i\^^r;    snacks 

Landmaric  For  Hungry  Tarheels" 


BOB   and  MONK 

TOWN& 
CAMPUS 

SALUTE 
Athlete  Of  The  Week 


JIM  BEATTY 

UNC  distance  runner  Jim 
Beatty  has  been  named  Athlete 
of  the  Week  for  his  double  win 
in  last  week's  ACC  Indoor 
Games  in  Raleigh.  Beatty  nosed 
out  arch  rival  Burl  Grim  of 
Maryland  to  take  the  oiile  and 
two-mile  events. 

We  want  him  to  drop  by 
TOWN  A  CAMPUS  and  pick  out 
a  shirt  to  his  liking — compli- 
ments of  the  house.. 

We  want  the  old  and  young 
alike  of  Chapel  Hill  to  make 
TOWN  A  CAMPUS  their  head- 
quarters for  the  finest  in  men's 
clothinff.  Drop  in  today. 


TOWN& 


CAMPUS 


Windproof,  rainproof,  WASH  AND  WEAR 

ALL-WEATHER  JACKET     ^^ 


by 


LONDON  FOG 


It's  all  the  jacket  you  need!  Lastingly  water-and- 
wind  repellent ...  and  wrinkle  resistant!  With  con- 
vertible English  collar  that  buttons  up  for  rough 
weather.  The  fabric  is  Calibre  Cloth . . .  50<'o  dacron, 
50  ^  cotton  so  blended  it  stands  up  under  the  most 
rugged  wear  !  Soiled  ?  Just  toss  it  into  a  washing 
machine... let  it  drip  dry... it  looks  new  again, 
ready  to  go !  Light  pres.sing  is  optional,  and  actually 
increases  the  water  repellency!  Colors: 
White  and  Natural  .  . $14.95 


L  Dfulian* 


'  goals  in  237  shots.  Perry  Moore  of 
Maryland  is  second  at  even  50  per 
cent,  but  with  only  61  field  goal.s 
at  prci-ent   he  may   not  reach  the 
100  required  for  season  honor  con- 
tention. Seitz  and  Exi  Brinkley  of 
Clcmson  are  next  at  48.4  per  cent 
and  43  per  cecnt,  respectively 
i      Jim  Newcome  of  Duke  and  Fred 
I  Lentz  of  South  Carolina,  both  with 
!  recovery  averages  of  11.3  a  game, 
are  tied  for  third  in  individual  rc- 
:  bounding.  Vince  Yockel  of  Clem- 
I   .•m    is    third    in    scoring    average 
;  with    20..3    points    a    game    to    his 
;  credit. 

The  scoring  leaders: 

G  G  F  Pts  Avg 
24  268  187  723  30.1 
22  188  203  579  26.3 

21  165     96  426  20.3 

22  133     88  354  16.1 

21  130     77  337  16.0 

22  123     93  339  15.4 

21  132  5«  322  15.3 
24  113  136  362  15.1 
24  137     81  355  14.8 

22  100  125  325  14.5 

19  71  125  267  14.1 
22  120  61  301  13.7 
24  117  85  319  13.3 
24  93  128  314  13.1 
22  113  57  283  12.9 
24  108  92  306  12.8 

21  108  502  66  12.7 

22  99  83  281  12.5 
22  104  65  273  12.4 
21  94  67  255  11.9 
21  100  49  249  11.9 

20  89  61  239  11 9 


^n 


JohnSmitk 
tt)caJionfas 


(OR)  MOW  7D  KEEP  VOUR  HEAD  WTTHOUr  HALF  TRY1N(^. 


*»m'i 


PPack  near  the  turn  of  the  century  (17th,  that  is).  Captain  John  Smith 
and  some  of  his  sidekicks  were  exploring  ye  Chickahominy  when  some  of 
his  troops  started  to  sprout  arrows. 

Well,  Smitty  and  his  squad  got  in  a  few  good  licks,  but  the  weeds  were 
full  of  redskins  and  they  were  soon  hauled  in  to  see  the  Top  Dog  Indian 
.  .  .  Powhatan. 

"Sauth,"  thundered  old  fuU-of-feathers,  "I'm  tired  of  you  puncturing  my 
in-laws;  we're  going  to  do  a  disappearing  act  with  your  head!" 

"Wild,  man,"  said  the  good  captain.  "A  little  Rock  'n  Roll,  eh?"  ) 


J 


S 


•■jf 


f      "  t 


This  humor  was  lost  on  the  chief,  and  he  was  all  set  to  shorten  Smith  by 
about  nine  mches  when  in  walked  Princess  Pocahontas  ...  a  nifty  little 
number  who'd  been  out  scalping  tickets  to  Cleveland   baseball  games. 

Pokey  sized  up  the  situation,  and  screamed  (in  perfect  Iroquois)  "Man,  it 
k)oks  like  my  ship  came  in  . .  .  that  beard!  That  outfit!  That  build!  Oh, 
Daddy-O — spare  that  cat!" 

"Pokey,"  said  Dad,  "How  many  times  have  I  told  you  not  to  come  mesmn' 
around  here  during  initiation!  We're  playing  to  a  full  house,  and  now  I 
have  to  refund  all  those  beads."  But  he  was  pretty  sweet  on  the  kid,  and 
laid  aside  the  meat  cleaver. 

Well,  Captain  John  was  so  happy  about  his  reprieve  he  broke  out  a  barrel 
of  Budweiser  .  . .  and  popped  for  the  tribe. 


Wouldn't  you? 


•*^:-f^i 


►7i^g  MORAL:  When  you  want  to  treat  the  tribe  {or,  better  yet,  doaaolo  with  a  squaw),  make  it  Budweiser. .  .the  chief  of  been! 

JlPllCtH^GlSd^       ANHEUSER-BUSCH.  INC.  .  OT.  LOUIS  .  NEWARK  .  LO8  ANGELES 
KING  OF  BEERS 


'r./^ri^r- 


_  •<«**•  W^-t**-"-' ' 


etc  u^ftff 

Aerials  »«pt« 


WEATHER 

Cloudy    *nd    cooler,   with    a    ox- 
pt<tod  high  of  60. 


VOL.  LVIi,  NO.  lOS 


3r()  c  3Ja(tu 


V  I  S  I  J 

Jiofs  •rran9«  on*.  So*  oditeriol. 


Compicte  (/P)   Wire  Sertnc* 


CHAPEL  HILL,  NORTH  CAROLINA,  THURSDAY,  FEBRUARY  28,  1957 


Offices  in  Graham  Memorial 


SIX   PAGES  THIS  ISSUE 


Petition  Circulation 
Has  Been  Stopped 

Number  Of  Signature  Totals 
'At  Least  1500/  Says  Leader 


circulation  of  the  Ircal  petition 
fi»r  m.iiried  students'  housing  has 
hfcn  stopped,  Mrs.  John  Critten- 
den said  Wednesday. 
•  Mis.  C^ltendcn,  l:adcr  of  the 
petjt.on:ni4  group,  said  she  felt 
sMro  "at  Icist  1500  names  were  on 
the  list." 

She  said  the  group  was  prspar 
in?  I J  type  up  the  names  and 
h  imct  wns  of  those  who  signed 
the  petti  a.  It  will  be  circulated 
among  members  of  tlio  General 
Ass^nb'y  very  shortly,  she  said. 

The  petition,  as  it  will  be  pre- 
sented to  the"  stare  Irglslature. 
will  crll  for  the  General  Assem- 
bly to  approve  legislation  enabl- 
in;  the  Un:ve"sity  tc  obtain  funds 
for  s  If  liriuid2t'ng    hou.sing    units. 

It  is  hor?d  by  the  petitioning 
jirjiip  R  \  John  Umstcad  of 
Chanel    Hill    will    present    the    re- 

The  State  Tnsuranc?  Dept.  in 
Rilcigh  rc-cently  recommended  to 
th"  Univcr-lty  all  two  story  hous- 
irg  units  in  Victory  Village  but 
d'scontinucd  immediat?ly  due  to 
the  units'   "hazardous   nature." 

UNC  Chancd'or  Rrbcrt  B. 
House  announced  shortly  after 
till-  ih-^  t  "  plvc  t'O-story  units 
would  be  discontinued  starting 
n-vt    fall 

The    two--torv    units    would    be 


safe  for  occupancy  during  the 
summer.  House  said,  because  of 
the  lack  of  necessity  for  heat. 


nevs 

m 
brief 


Wisconsin  Man  Rejects  Position  Here 

As  Director  Of  Graham  Memorial 

Howard  Henry  s  'No' 
Not  Definite --GM 


Fcrec?  t  The 
Same — Ram! 

Oy  bay!  More  rain?  The  North 
Crf'-alina  weather  fore?ast  for  the 
rest  of  th?  week  is  just  about  as 
n  ual:  rain.  This  time  its  scatter- 
c«l  showc.s  ending  today  about 
noort. 

Friday  will  be  no  better.  In- 
creasing cloudiness  and  little 
chance  in  t'le  temperature  is 
fore-rnsl    for    Friday. 

Today,  th?  high  will  be  between 
.^5  and  65. 


Sitterson: 
Creative 

Spirit  Here-  Debaters  Off 


Summit  Demands 

CAIRO  —  '.^  —  Tlie  kings  and 
presidents  of  the  .\rab  .summit  con- 
ference demanded  last  night  that 
Israeli  fcrct  withdraw  at  once 
li-om  Egypt  and  Gaza. 

Egypt's  President  Nasser,  Ara- 
Ar.  3  King  Saud,  Jordan's  King 
niissein  and  Syria's  Prcsidenl 
ihukri  Kuwatly  als.)  declared 
t^ypt  must  be.  paid  for  damage  in- 
flicted in  the  Israeli  and  bnlish- 
Frcnch  invasions  of  last  Octooer- 
November. 

At  the  close  of  their  two-day 
meeting  horc,  the  lour  chiet.,  of 
ctalc  signed  a  communique  issued 
awnullancoubly  in  their  capitals 
and  lialina'  six  resolutions  they  ap- 
proved. 

1.  .\  declaration  that  defense 
"should  emanate  from  the  .\i'ab 
natiun  (the  combined  Arab  coun- 
iics)  in  ine  hghi  ot  Ks  real  securi- 
ty and  outside  the  sphere  of  ioi- 
eign  pact     " 

z.  .K  pledge  that  the  fou;  gov- 
einmcnls  will  work  for  immediate 
and  unconditional  withdrawal  of 
the  Israelis  behind  the  1949  Arm- 
istice lines. 

3.  A  pledge  that  the  fuel  rights 
cl  Palestinian  Ararbs  and  Hie  Suv- 
wieignty  cf  Arabs  over  their  lands 
and  territorial  waters  will  be  up- 
held. 

4.  Slatemenls  that  Egypt  has  a 
right  to  compensation  from  "ag- 
gressor states'  for  all  damage  and 
»0i  .5  suffered  as  a  result  of  ag- 
gression, nad  "all  attempt  to  de- 
rogate   Egyptian    sovereignty    and 

I  eights  to  the  Suez  Canal"  will  t>e 
I  iCJectcd  since  the  canal  is  an  in- 
'  tegral  part  of  Egypt. 
j  5.  Denunciation  of  "British  ag- 
Igressi.n"  against  Yemen. 
I  6.  A  declaration  of  support  for 
j  Algeria  Arabs  fighting  against 
ii.''rcnch  rule  in  their  struggle 
j  against-  ""the  forces  of  imperial- 
ism." 


Howard  Hchia  oI  tlie  L'liivosity  of  Wisconsin  has  rcr 
jectccl  UXC's  ofler  lor  the  position  of  permanent  diiector 
of  C>ra)iaiii  Meinoiial. 

Or.  \\'illiani  Poteai  received  a  teleipani  from  Heiii^ 
Tuesday  night  rejecting  the  GM  post  and  stating  that  he 
plans  to  remain  in  Madison  in  his  present  position  as  as- 
sistant director  of  AN'isconsin  l^nion  at  the  rni\ersit\  of  Wis- 
consin. 

Dr.   Foteat  said  that   Hcnty  offered  no  explanation   for 

■ ■ -♦his    refusal    in    the    telegram    but 

had  stated  that  a  letter  would  fol- 
low. Henry's  letter  has  not  been 
received  at  the  present  time. 

Henry  was  nominated  for  the 
position  by  the  Graham  Memorial 
Board  of  Directors.  He  was  offer- 
ed that  job  at  a  salarj  of  S8,000  a 
year. 

The  Wisconsin  director  was  in- 
terviewed in  the  spring  of  1956 
and  was  offered  the  GM  position 
beginning  Sept..  1956.  This  offer 
was  rejected  by  Henry  for  reasons 
of  salary  and  other  differences. 

The  hiring  »of  Henry  was  given 
approval  by  the  University  ad- 
ministration  on   Feb.    12.   Dr.   Po- 


I  Camera-Shy  Panty-Raiders  On  The  Run 

When  Daily  Tar  H«el  Photographer  Woody  Sears  came  up  on  a  Tuesday  night  party  was  over  then.  This  picture,  shot  from  the 
i^-proyp  of  30  to  49'stw(lfnts  cailing  for  panties  outside  Carr  Women'|  fire  escape  on  the  west  end  of  Caldwell  Hall,  shows  sonM  of  th# 
'^^1%  rnftory,    someono   saw   the   camera   and   ahouted  .  fji^m  .alarm.   Th^^    camera-shy  raiders  on  the  run. 


Second  Try  !  housing  office  says: 


By  H-JOOST  POLAK 

"The  creative  mind  has  tremen 
dous  opportunity  to  give  service 
in  cur  time,'  said  Dr.  Carlyle  Sit 
terson.  Dean  of  Arts  and  Science-, 
speaking  on  "Creative  Spirit  in 
Chapel  Hill"  before  the  inaugural 
meeting  of  the  Philanthropic  As- 
sembly Tuesday  night. 

"Creative  Spirit  is  part  of  the 
air  we  breathe  in  Chape!  Hill ". 
continued  Dr.  Sitterson,  recalling 
the  past  accomplishmets  of  Thomas 
Wolfe.  Paul  Green  and  Friday  Wil- 
son as  creative  men  inspired  by 
the  atmosphere  of  the  University. 

Warning      the      assembly      that 
•'truth  ij  often  displeasing  to  all 
knowing,  the   unthinking  and   the 
(See  SITTERSON.  page-  5) 


GM'S  SLATE 

Acfivities  in  Graham  Memo- 
rial  today  inclutfa: 

Student  Government,  2-4,  Grail 
Room;  Board  of  Directors,  4-6, 
Grail  Room;  IDC-IWC,  4  6,  Ro- 
land Parker  Lounge  No.  1;  UP 
Caucus,  6-7:30,  Roland  Parker 
Lounge  No.  1;  Debate  Squad, 
4:30-6,  Roland  Parker  Lounge 
No,  2;  A. P.O.,  7-1:30,  Roland 
Parker  Lounge  No.  2;  Rules 
Commitee,  4-5:30,  Roland  Piir- 
ker  Lounge  No.  3;  SP  Caucus, 
6.30-7:15,  Roland  Parker  Lounge 
No.  3;  Orientation  Committee, 
2-4,  Woodheuse  Conference 
Room;  Finance  Committee,  4-6, 
Woodheuse  Conference  Room; 
Dance  Court  Committee,  7-8, 
Woodhousok  Conference  Room; 
Women's  Honor  Council,  7-8:30, 
Council  Room;  Oept.  of  D.  A., 
2-4,  Rendezvous  Room;  Sound 
and  Fury  set  construction  group, 
S  a.m.-TI   p.m.,  A.P.O.  Room, 


To  Tournament 
In  W.  Virginia 

^  The  debate  team  will  leave  to- 
day at  1  p.m.  for  the  University  of 
West  Virginia  and  the  annual 
North-South  Tournament. 

Dr.  R.  P.  DouthU  will  accom- 
pany the  team  to  Morganton 
where  26  colleges  and  universities 
from   10  slates  will  debate. 

The  subject  of  the  tournament 
is;  Resolved,  that  the  United 
States  .viould  discontinue  direct 
economic  aid  to  foreign  countries. 

The  tournament  will  cover  two 
days.  Activity  will  begin  FYiday 
afternoon  at  1  p.m.  and  continue 
through  3  p.m  .Saturday. 

Representing  the  negative  team 
will  be  Harold  Stessel  and  Clay 
Simpson.  The  affirmative  duo  are 
David  Evans  and  Phillip  Guerdis. 

Stessel  is  also  entering  the  aft- 
er-dinner speaking  contest. 


^AfterGame 
Unsuccessful 

The  panty  raid  attempt  that  took 
place  shortly  after  the  UNC-Wake 
Forest  basketball  gtime  Tuesday 
night  was  followed  by  a  second 
smaller  attempt  at  approximately 
midnight. 

The  second  demonstration  was 
staged  by  25-30  male  students. 
Some  if  them  wore  handkerchiefs 
over  their  face  to  keep  from  being 
recognized. 

One  panty  raider  unsuccesi-fully 
banged  on  the  rear  door  of  Carr 
dormitory. 

Two  local  policemen  arrived  on 
the  scene  shortly  afterwards.  .After 
several  minutes  more,  the  group 
Ciispersed. 

The  fir.st  one  started  up  at  about 
9:45  p.m.  and  broke  up  a  half 
hour  later.  Both  were  reported  to 
have  been  prompted  by  the  bas- 
ketball game  and  the  unusually 
warm  weather. 


Three-Men  Rooms  To 
Apply  Again  Next  Fall 


Three-men  rooms  will  predomin- 
ate again  in  several   men's  dormi-  i 
lories    this    fall,    according    to    the 
UNC  Housing  Office.  j 

It  will  be  necessary  to  house 
three  person.-.*  per  room  in  Le>l»'is, 
Aycock.  Graham,  Everett,  Slaey, 
Alexander.  Steele.  Battle-Vance- 
Pettigrew.  Whitehead:  the  first  i 
three  floors  of  Grimes.  Mangum,  ' 
Manly  and  Ruffin;  and  the  south 
and  middle  sections  of  Old  East 
and  West.  j 

Room  rent  for  the  fall  semciter  | 
must  be  paid  by  Sept    1.  The  fall 
reservation   fet-   is    $10..   according 
to  the  Housing  Office.  I 

Students  now  assigned  to  dormi- 
tory rooms  have  the  option  of  re-  . 
.jrving  space  for  the  summer  and  ' 
fall  sessions.  A  room  reserved  for 


the  summer  only  does  not  entitle 
to  that  space  in  the  fall. 

Room  reservation  deposits  must 
be  made  with  the  University  Cash- 
ier in  South  Building  not  later 
than  April  25. 

Summer  housinsi  for  men  will 
include   double  and  single  rooms. 

Double  rooms  will  be  available 
in  Winston  (fir,'t  session  only). 
Old  West.  Graham.  Aycock.  and 
Connor  (tor  graduate  men).  Rent 
and  reservation  in  these  dorms  is 
$20  for  each   summer   session. 

All  rooms  in  Steele.  Lewis. 
Everetle.  and  Stacy  dorms  will  be 
assigned  as  single  rooms  for  the 
summer.  Rent  and  rejorvation  fees 
are  $30. 

Married  couples   will   be  housed 

(6'ee   3-MAN,    page   5) 


Legislature    To 
Elections   Law 


Debate 
Changes 


r 


I  Playmakers  To 
i  Hold  Tryouts 
For  New  Play 

Tryouts  for  parts  in  a  new  play 
will  be  held  by  the  Carolina  Play- 
makers,  at  the  Playmakers  The- 
atre, Monday  at  4  and  7:30  p.m. 
The  play,  "Stranger  in  the  Land', 
by  a  former  UNC  student.  Chris- 
tian Moe.  will  have  its  first  produc- 
tion anywhere  when  the  Playmak- 
ers prejc>nt  it  March  27  Ihrought 
31. 

Directing  the  production  will  be 
Tommy  Rezzuto,  technical  director 
of  the  Carolina  Playmakers  and 
instructor  in  Dramatic  Art.  Ac» 
I  cording  to  Rezzuto,  the  play  calls 
;  for  about  nineteen  actors,  mostly 
m«in.  The- story  is  set  in  .lapan  and 
revolves  about  American  service- 
men and  the  Japanese  people 
shortly  after  the  war. 

Copies  of  the  play  will  be  on 
reserve  this  weekend  in  the  Li- 
brary and  in  the  Dramatic  .\rl  of 
ficc.  101  Saunders  Hall,  for  those 
who  wish  to  be  familiar  with  the 
'  .-:^'ript  before  auditions,  although 
this  is  not  necessary.  Tryouts  are 
open  to  everyone. 


Candiciates 
Grades  To 
Be  Okayed 

.\11  candidates  for  any  elected 
campus  offices  must  have  his  or 
her  grades  approved  by  the  dean 
of  student  affair's  (rffice  by  March 
22,  Elections  Board  Chairman 
Ralph  Cummings  said  Wednesday. 

All  nominations  must  also  be  '.n 
on  or  before  this  date,  he  said. 
The  spring  election  is  April  2. 

Offices  up  for  election  thi.s 
.J ring  include: 

President,  vice  president,  secre- 
tary and  treasurer  of  the  student 
body;  seats  on  the  student  coun- 
cil, men's  council  and  women's 
council;  chairman  of  the  Women's 
Residence  Council: 

Officers  o(  the  Carolina  Ath- 
letic Assn.  and  the  Women's  Ath 
letic  Assn:  head  cheerleader;  the 
editor.&'iii'Cluef  of  The  Daily  Tat 
Heel  and  the  Yacket;-  Yack  and 
the  National  StudenJ  A„-sn.  coor- 
dinator. 

Legislature  seats  are: 

Dorm  Men's  I — two  seats:  Dorm 
Men's  H— tviro  seats;  Dorm  Men's 
IH — two  seats  plus  one  six  months 
seat;  Dorm  Mens  IV — four  seals; 
Dorm  Men'o'  V — two  seats:  Dorm 
Women — three   seats. 

Town  Men  I— -one  seat;  Town 
Men's  n — two  scats;  Town  Mens 
III — three  seats;  Town  Men's  IV — 
one  seat  and  Tdwn  Women — two 
seats.  ': 

At  the  last  EHectioos  Board  | 
meeting,  Chairmab  Cummings  ap- 
pointed Arthur  Sobel.  a  junior , 
from  New  York,  to  sene  as  vice- 1 
chairman  of  the  board  for  the 
spring  term.  | 


Student  members  of  GM  Board 
of  Oirvctors  said  last  night  they 
were  not  certain  Henry's  reply 
was  a  definite  "no. ' 

The  students  said  they  were 
invest'igatinf  further  Henry's  re- 

ply. ' 

teat  sent  him  the  offer  with  the 
endorsement  of  Chancellor  Rob^ 
ert  House.  Director  of  Student 
Activities. 

Sam  Magill  and  William  D.  Pez- 
zy.  chairman  of  the  Division  ot 
Sttident    Affairs. 

Poteat's  offer  stated,   "I  do  not 
believe    there   is    a    more   exciting 
j  place  in  America  for  someone  to 
come    in    and    build    a    new   union 
program  plant." 
A   Graham   .Memorial    Board    of 
;  Director's    meeting    will     be    held 
j  today.  At  this  meeting  plans  will 
I  be   made   for  future   activity  con- 
'  cerning  the  securing  of  a  perman- 
'  ent     director,     according     to     Dr. 
t  Poteat. 


offs. 


Senate  Thinks 
Israel  Should 
Be  Peaceful 

The  Dialectic  Senate  deadlocked 
over    a    bill    calling    for    Israel's 
right  to  peaceful  existence  in  the 
troubled    mid-east,   and   her   right 
to  protect   her  sovereignty   in  the 
I  face    of   continued    aggression    by 
{  her  Arab  neighbors  Tuesday  night. 
I      The     meeting,     at     which     four 
I  Egyptian  sjudents  and  Rabbi  E  M. 
Ro..-enzweig    of   Chapel    Hill   were 
the  society's  guests,  was  highlight- 
ed by  spirited  debate  in  which  al- 
most all  the  members  present  par- 
ticipated. 


The  one  item  on  the  legislative  I  effect 
docket   for    tongiht    is    the    newly 
proposed  Elections  Law. 

But  the  12-page  law  should 
evoke  much  deliberation  and  ora- 
tion. 

Student,  lawmakers  meet  at  7:30 
on  the  fourth  floor  of  New  East 
Building. 

Visitors  are  cordially  invited  to 
attend    the    session,    according    to 
Speaker  Sonny  Evans. 
CHANGES 

Major  changes  in  the  Elections 
Law.  as  proposed  by  the  15-mem- 
ber  Elections  Board,  Ralph  Cum- 
mings, chairman,  are: 

(1)  A  provision  which  would 
eliminate  run-off  elections  except 
in  case  of  absolute  ties  for  all 
elected  student  government  posts 
except  the  four  major  campus- 
wide  offices. 

A  successful  candidate  for 
either  of  the  four  major  campus- 
wide  offices  muJit  secure  a  ma- 
jority vote. 

This,  in  effect,  institutes  the 
plurality  ballot  system  instead 
of  the  majority  (over  half  the  bal- 
lots ca^'t)  system  which  is  now   in 


moving  dormitory  ballot  boxes  be- 
Since  there  are  only  two  candi-  '  fore  and  after  every  election 
dates  who  usually  run  for  each  of  would  be  eliminated 
the  four  major  campus-wide  of- j  If  new  provisions  in  the  Elec- 
fices,  the  pluralitv  (merely  one  tions  Law  are  not  ratified  at  to- 
vote  more  than  opponent)  system  nights  .vssion.  then  they  will  nut 
should     virtually     eliminate     run- Effect    spring    electicns.    Elections 

Law  changes  must   be   ratified  30- 
"other  changes  proposed   by  the  |  days    before   any    general    election 
Elections    Board    which    must    be    to  govern  that  specitic  election, 
proved  by  two-thrids  of  the  legis- <  ^.^MUMBMi^iMmMM     ..mmt^am^mm 


Selections  To 
Be  Made  For 
Honor  Council 


lators  assembled  are: 

(DA  provision  which  provide., 
that  all  class  officers  be  elected 
in  the  fall  general  election. 

(2)  A  provision  which  would 
strike  established  opening  and 
closing  hours  for  polls  and  leave 
determination  of  poll  hours  to  lh<j' 
discretion   of  the  Elections  Board. 

(3)  A  provision- which  would  es- 
tablish an  index  system  for  town 
di.lrict  voters. 

(4)  A  provision  which  would 
leave  dormitory  ballot  boxes  in 
the  possession  of  dormitory  pres- 
idents throughout  the  year. 

Elections  Board  members  would 
empty  the  ballots  into  envelopes 
which  would  be  carried  to  a  tabu- 


IN  THE  INFIRMARY 


Students  in  the  rnfirmary  yes- 
terday  included: 

Missest  Dorothy  Pitman,  Mar- 
garet Smith,  Nancy  Suitt,  Erma 
Dance;  and  Ralph  Johnson,  Rob- 
ert Brannan,  Robert  Lewis,  Wil- 
liam Wilson,  Jackie  Cooper,  Jer- 
ry White,  Robert  Jones,  Richard 
Alexander,  John  Fneen,  John 
Christian,  John  Smith,  Freder- 
ick Hutton,  Knox  Jenkins,  John 
Andrew/s,  Robert  Babb,  Willard 
Bagwell,  Donald  Corbin,  Paul 
Willingham,  James  Magness, 
James  Moss,  Andrew  Johnson 
Donald  Kenropt,  Benjamin  Levy, 


Stephen    Honeycutt,    Paul    Elam, 
lalion   point.   But   the   necessity   of    Vincent  Mulieri,  Kennis  Grogan. 


The  bi-partisan  selections  board 
for  .Mens  Honor  Council  and  Stu- 
dent Council  candidates  will  meet 
Monday.  Tuesday,  and  W'ednesday 
from  2-4  p.m.  in  the  Men's  Coun- 
cil Kooim  on  the  „-,?cond  floor  of 
Craham  Memorial. 

.Ml  .students  interested  in  being 
elected  to  either  the  hon«r  council 
or  (he  student  council  must  be  in- 
terviewed by  this  board,  according 
to  Honor  Council  Chairman  Jim 
Exum. 

In   order    to   save    time    waiting 

for    an    interview,    students    may 

make  appointments  by  calling  Jim 

Exum    at    the    Sigma    Nu    House, 

■  phone  89077.  around  meal  time. 

Openings  on  the  Honor  Council 
include  4  se;iior,  1  junior.  1  soph- 
omore. 1  graduate  student,  and 
pharmacy  student  seat. 

There  are  seats  for  three  svn- 
^  iors  open-  on  Student  Council..  • 


Attorney  Talks 
To  Law  School 
Students  Todoy 

John  A.  Wilkinson,  practicing! 
attorney  in  W^ashington.  N  C.  will  ^ 
address  the  Law  School  student  '■ 
body  tonight  at  8  in  the  Couii ' 
Room  of  Manning  Hall.  | 

"Practicing  Law  in  an  Eastern! 
North  Carolina  County  Seat"  willj 
be  the  subject  of  Wilkinson's  ad- J 
dress,  which  is  open  to  the  public.  I 
The  program  is  sponsored  by  thei 
Law  Student  As.^m.  and  was  ar- 
ranged by  Jerry  A.  Campbell,] 
chairman  of  its  speakers  commit- 
tee. 

\\nikinson   ,a  native  of  Pantego 
in  Beaufort  County,  was  gradual- 

'  ed  from  the  University  at  Chapel 
Hill  in  1932,  and  attended  Law 
School  here  the  foUowing  year.       I 

i      While  at  UNC  he  was  active  in  i 
the  Phi  Assembly,  in  campus  poli- ; 
tics  and  on  the  staffs  of  the  Daily 
Tar  Heel  and  the  Carolina  Maga- 
zine. 

j      Since  passing  th^   Bar   in    19351 

!  he  has  practiced  law  in  Washing- 
ton, except  for  thr«e  year's  dcrv-' 
ice  in  the  U.  S.  Army  from  1942 
thruogh  1945.  He  has  held  office 
in    district    bar    associations,    and 
represented   the   State   Bar  Assn.  i 
on  the  radio  series,  "This  is  the  j 
Law."  I 

A  past  president  of  the  State ! 
Yoimg  Republicans,  Wilkinson ' 
was  his  party';;  nominee  for  Con- : 
gress  from  the  First  Congression- ; 
al  District,  1986-40,  and  Senate 
nominee  in  1948.  j 


Frat  Court 
Feline  Has 
Hard  Time 

By    BILL    KING 

"Odd  Ball",  an  oddly'colored  cat 
with  an  "odd  personality*,  was 
made  the  victim  of  a  cruel  practi- 
cal joke  Sunday  night. 

Mrs.  Merle  Fisher.  Odd  Ball's 
mistress,  said  that  this  was  not  the 
first  titne  that  someone  had  mis.^- 
treated  Odd  Ball.  On  an  earlier 
date,  some  person  or  persons  un- 
known had  bathed  the  cat  in  kero- 
sene. Odd  Ball  had  just  recovered 
from  this  incodent.  when  he  was 
again  subjected  to  another  incident 
that  was  almost  as  bad. 

Mrs.  Fisher  said  that  late  Sun- 
day evening,  she  heard  Odd  Bali';^ 
crie^  of  pain,  and  went  to  see  what 
had  happened  to  him.  Three  stu- 
dents were  grouped  around  the 
cat  and  it  appeared  they  were 
hurting  him.  Mrs.  Fisher  had  pre- 
viously lost  one  cat  in  this  man- 
ner, 90  she  tried  to  get  close 
enough  to  identify  the  students. 
The  culprits  saw  her  coming,  and 
after  throwing  Odd  Ball  into  a  mud 
puddle,  started  to  run.  Sonny,  the 
c','og  -of  the  household  and  Odd 
Ball'j  protector,  joined  t|ie  chase. 

Ivirs.  Fisher  followed  the  stu- 
dents across  Columbia  St.  where 
they  split  up.  Two  of  the  "jokers  " 
went  down  the  alley  beside  the 
Beta  House,  and  the  other  in  the 
direction  of  Big  Fraternity  Court 
Mrs.  Fisher  a..4ted  several  students 
if  they  had  seen  anyone  just  come 
in.  As  is  usually  the  case,  no  one 
had;  so  the  three  students  got 
away  with  out  any  punishment, 
reprimand^  or  censure. 


»A«t  rwQ 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEtV 


THURSDAY,  FEBRUARY  21,  ^H7 


Let's   Entertain  Trustees 
In  An  [hformative  Manner 

The  idea  oJ  hasiu;^  Claxtliiia's  ladv  trustees  visit  the  raiupus  tor  a 
coiipleof  da\s  is  .  \ery  ;;<MKi  »»ne.  It  is  so  good  that  a  similar  visit  slioiild 
be  arraiv^ed  soon  lor  male  menibers  ot  the  Uoard  of  Trustees. 

Almiit  tlie  only  eoniact  most  nuftees  haxe  with  the  ktiident  body 
is  a  siilicd.  lonual  one  that  romes  whei\  the  Visiting  Cioiniiiiitee  visits. 
A  leu  niinntes  ;'re  allotted  lui  the  students,  and  student  leaders  and  the 
\  isitiu'^  C"«nnnMiLce  sulMoniniitue  ha\e  a  I.enoir  Hall  meal  and  shoot 
torihal   bull   for  a   little  while-  and 


then  it  i, over.  The  siudeitts  rtisli 
baciv  home  and  take  «tl  their  ties 
and  heels.  ;'nd  the  trustees  move 
ai\    to   visit   scnnew^eve   else. 

\'er\  little  lan  be  L-ained  this 
ua\  in  the  area  ol  nndersiatiding 
the  probltnis  and  the  iiiuniphs  of 
the  student  lit'tiy.  f*rool  of  tjiis  is  in 
uriiiui;  in  the -\ 'wiling  i'omrnit- 
tees  repiMi  to  ihe.TM»ar(i  of  Vvus- 
tees.  Of  the  stjnler»t  ImkI\  ai  the 
\\oniau  >.  (!<»Jle«»e.  the  rejKMt  said: 

The  <oinniitie<*^iet  a  *»Toup  of 
iS  stuilenis  elerfifd  t»*  Ueatl  the 
lca.'iin;4  or.!4ani/i*f»<)ns  vui  the  <aiup- 
us  .  .  .  Ihi'V  lio|K'il  llie  <  hantellov 
lor  \\<miair>  Collt^ifc'  .uould  be 
youni;  and  loMvav<l-l<K>k.iiVi;  .  .  . 
All  nieinlHtN  ol  the  (oininitiee 
ueie  la\orabl\  inipn'ssetl  uiili  the 
poise,  the  >eriotisues>  ol  purjx»se 
an<l   the  happv  spirit   exhibited  by 

these  "iris." 

*  * .  IP 

Al  N.  i  .  Slate  College  in  Ral- 
eiyh  it  ua>  .i  similar  stor\.  The  re- 
port saNs: 

Siudeni  moiale  an<l  leadership 
i.s  i^ood.  We  uere  impressed  witii 
tlie  sin<eritv  and  mattnitv  of  the 
students  and  the  jud^meni  shown 
in  con.siderinj*  and  diseussiny  the 
problems  .  .  .'  .Students  aie  in- 
tenselv  interested  in  the  prt»blem 
of  sci  iirin_i»  and  keeping;  j^OiKl 
teachers." 

For   the   l'ni\ei>itv     at      (ihapel 

Hi!!: 

■  In  the  reahn  of  student  activi- 
ties, tltere  is  nuu  h  to  be  coimnend- 
ed.  I'nder  the  leadership  o\  Mr. 
Robert  Voung.  president  of  the 
<iiideni  l^Kly.  and  others  tHdipy- 
incj  positions  of  pron\ii>en<{'  in  stu- 
dent affairs,  jnorale  on  the  t  auip- 
ii-s  i>  hi,i»l!:  lespert  lor  the  honor 
I'ode  and  the  eampirs  code  seems 
to  be  widespread,  anil  tlie  students 
appear  to  be  exert  i/iuji  soinid  ma- 
ture judmneiH  in  solvip"  their 
problems. ■'' 

How  the  \isiiin;4  (.»»mmittee 
tame  up  with  these  impressions  in 
onlv  a  \i\\  hoins  s|K'tJt  with  stu- 
dent  leaders  we  do  not  know. 

AltJxMij^h  fiob^  ^'ouu;4  i**  1"^  f'" 
the  bc^  student  Ixwlv  president  in 
recent  vrars.  morale  here  is  not  hi>;h 
(e\<e|)t  after  ('aiolina  wins  a  bas- 
ketball ^amei:  respect  for  the  hoil- 
t>r  and  t  ainpus  codes  ma\  f>e  wide- 
spread, fun  it  ceitainly  isn't  very 
deep,  and  tl»e  students  appear  to 
be   sol\inj»    their   problenw   in   the 

typital  student  ways. 

»  * '  » 

•  The    re|Jort     laile<I     to     mention 

••   s  — — — — _^_ 

The  Daily  Tar  Heel 

The  official  itudeni  publication  of  tht 
Fdblic^tions  Board  of  the  Universitj  of 
North  Carolina,  where  it  is  published 
tfaily  except  Monday  and  examinatior 
•Bd  vacation  periods  and  summer  terms 
Eitered  as  second  class  matter  in  th< 
foct  office  io  Chapel  flUl,  N.  C.  undei 
tk«  Act  mt  March  i,  llfTO.  Subscription 
ntm:  OMUed,  M  ptir  yeirr.  $2  50  a  semen 
ter;  fclitered.  48  a  year.  $3.50  a  seaict 
tcr. 


Editor 

_.niED  POWTLEDGt 

lUnafiag  Editor  _ 

.  _::  CHARLIE  SLOAN 

News  Editor 

:Ji       NAXCY  mi.L 

^ 

Sp«rt8   Kriitor    ._ 

LARRY  CHEEIf 

Bminess  Manager 

-      Bir.L  BOB  PL'fil 

■1^                      . 

.Advertising  .Manager         FRED  KATZIN 

tlMHJKtAL  STAfK  -  A.Micly  Sear«, 
Frank  t  rother,  David  Mundy. 

NEWS  STAFF— Clarke  Jones.  Pringle 
Pipkin.  Editli.  MacKinnon.  Wally  Ku- 
raJt.  Wary  Alyg  Voorhee.s.  Graham 
Snyder,  .Neil  Ba^a,  Peg  Humphrey. 
Phyllis  .MauHsby.  Ben  Taylor.  Walter 
Schruftiek,  H-Joost  Polak,  Patsy  MiJler. 


BUSLVESS  STAFF— Rosa  Moore.  Johaay 
Whitaker.   Dick   Leavitt. 


SPORTS   STAFF:    Dave    Wible.   Stewart 
Bird.  Ron  Milliagn. 


Subscription  Manager Dale  Stole) 

Circulation  Manager Charlie  Holt 

Assistant  Sports  Editor  J8ill  King 


Staff  Photc^apher 
Librarian 


Norman  Kantor 
Sue  Gisbner 


-■iAj^.-- 


Proofreader 

Night  News  Editor  „ 


_  Bill  Weekes 
Wally  KuraJt 


Night  Editor 


Manley  Springs 


what  Saiuuil  MaL»ill.  (li\eet<M  ot 
siudeiM  utiivitio,  tailed  a  "erisU" 
iti  student  leadership:  it  also  nej«- 
'  le(icd  the  homosexual  problem  the 
rni\eisii\  is  larin.u.  the  in(  reus- 
ing pressuie  of  South  Uuildin.*:*  up- 
on student  heedoins.  the  Jaei  that 
men  ate  st:  -ked  three  to  a  room  in 
many  dormitories,  that  workers  in 
I.enoii  Hall  are  j^eniu^  a  raw  deal 
Innii  the  rniversity  instead  ol  de- 
cent paymeiu,  that  there  are  quite 
A  leu  Ireshmen  hete  ^^ho  have  cars 
illeiiillv  in  (:ira|>el  Hill,  that  Ira- 
lernity  ha/inj»  still  ^oes  on  ^nd  lit- 
tle is  bein.'H  done  to  stop  it.  thai 
students  are  beini.;  thrown  into  this 
mathine-like  I'niverity  svstem  and 
turned  loose  to  <»et  out  the  best 
wav   thev  ran. 

W'e  su;4i>est  a  small  Jiroup  ot 
proiuiiient  uiak-  iiustecs.  and  a  lew 
not  so  pvoininein.  « ome  s|K'nd  a 
week  <»n  the  eampus.  Let  theni 
xiiitt  the  |M>li(e  static »n.  lei  them 
talk  to  the  I'niver.sitv  psyrhiatrist, 
let  them  attend  meetinj^s,  let  them 
walk  ahnie  late  at  ni^ht  in  the 
halU  ol  the  nten's  tlonnitories.  and 
let  them  yet  inxoKed  in  fights  with 
j>ressuri/ed    shaxini;    rream. 

Let  them  w.ilk  ihrou*;ii  the  Li- 
braiv— ;  !1  the  lloois — and  let  them 
sit  in  the  beer  joims.  Let  them  at- 
tend patties  and  lit  them  pick  up 
a  tired  lieshman  jxled;j;e.  stumblino 
up  the  road  to  Cilcn  Lennox,  dt  r, 
in  the  moiiiin^. 

I  At  them  jt>et  tip  early  in  the 
morning  witli  the  students  who  de- 
liver this  newspaper,  atid  let  them 
f;et  (offee  late  at  nio^ht  with  the 
student  government  leaders  who 
utuallv  worry  about  what  all  this 
i>  attually  toming  to. 

We  think. .ij   u'iVuld  do  a   k»t^»t 
iUHHl.  l>oth  for  the  trustees  and  for 
tlje  re.«  of  the  rniversity— and  the 
studems. 

Arts  Are 
Necessary  ,; 
For  Coeds 

The  deat)  of  women  was  ri^ht. 
Women  students,  most  of  them  at 
least,   need   a   I"  jeial      arts     bark-  * 
([[Toinid    «r(»m   college. 

Dean  (»f  Wonten  Kaiherine  Car- 
midiael  was  <<»rre(t  when  she  said 
this  week: 

"...  I  think  th:it  the  wonten 
<l  \-  not  berome  t<K»  greatly  spet- 
ivli/ed  i«)o  early.  Hence  I  agree 
ihit  the  usual  prariieal  expectatioti 
hn  the  (ollege  woman  shmild  be 
soinsf    work    in    the   liberal   arts." 

I  oo  manv  coeds  ate  being  grad- 
uated Imm  this  and  other  insti- 
tutions, kuowin-^  pr  ti(allv  u<)fli- 
in'2  but  how  to  beliaxe  at  a  party, 
how  not  to  belia\e.  or  h(»w  to 
4  at(  h  a  hushaud.  Manv  of  them 
haxe  oiiK  ;i  passin;;  connection 
with  th  ■  innnaniiics.  the  liberal 
ails.  t  hev  appe:'r  —  remember, 
wf  re  t;»!kin^  about  -vonie  of  them 
—to  beli<\e  such  stuff  wont  help 
them  latei  on. 

S(  hooliiio  in  tlie  humanities  and 
the  airs  never  luiri  ;np".ies  brain. 
It  would  Ik-  \ery  goo<l  for  the  co- 
eds, whether  or  not  thex  latch  a 
husband.  ^ 

Suggestion 

Tt»  the  gentlemen  who  play 
.  b;tsketball  for  the  llniversity  of 
North   Carolina: 

Pleaje.  gentlemen,  quit  waiting 
tintil  the  last  niimne  to  win  those 
fmlljrames.  We  know  you  know 
you're  going  to  win,  all  along,  and 
just  want  tr»  prodtire  a  thrillin<[; 
game,  but  you're  having  $eriou.<i 
ie})ercussi<>ns  on  the  campus. 

Two  panty  raids  in  the  same 
night,  yet!  And  no  orie  knows  how 
many  sweatv  palms,* shaky  knees 
and  chexved  fingernails. 


How  You  Can  Become  A  Pseudo: 
Be  Sure  To  Hide  Mr.  B  Shirts 


Bryan  Woods 

Jn    .\oh('    Dome    Sthohislic 

If  you  have  at  last  decided  that 
you  toe  wi^h  to  join  the  growing 
rank.s  of  the  campus  pseudos. 
thio  is  for  you.  But  belore  xve 
come  doWTi  to  a  practical  dis- 
cussion ot  what  it  take.s.  let's 
first  examine  the  word. 

There   is   a   controversy    as   to 
how    it    should     be     pronounced. 
Some    hold    lor   "pa-.sway-do"    or 
••p-sway-do"    as    in   "blue    psuede 
shoe.s."     The      majority      though 
seem    to    favor    "•Sue-dough." 
Anyway  it's  short  for  pseudo- 
inttlloctual.    in  other  words,  a 
fatM  ^»r   imitation   inteiloctual. 

Now  a  necessary  part  ot  being 
intelloctual  is  having  intelligence 
In  other  word.s  know  something 
So  a  pseudo  is  a  per.son  who  pre- 
tends   to   know    samething. 

Btit  if  he  did  know  .something, 
he  wouldn't  have  to  pretend,  so 
he  obviously  knows  nothing. 
What's  the  point  ol  all  this?  It 
just  goes  to  show  that  anyone 
can   be  a   pseudo. 

It  intelligence  or  knowledge 
isn't  required,  the  field  ii>  wide 
open.  You  t 'o  can  be  a  pseudo. 
Don't  let  them  tell  you  that  you 
have  to  be  in  .AB. 

Even  Commerce  men  ought  to 
be  able  to  fit  the  above  require- 
ments. 

Now  that  y  HI  have  made  up 
your  mind,  you  will  wonder  ju.st 
how  yiu  go  about  it.  Instead  ol 
merely  listing  some  rules.  I  am 
goinii  to  give  some  examples  of 
the  pseudo  in  action. 

*  * 

Suppose  you  walk  into  a  group 
»nd  the  conversation  is  about  lit- 
erature. Don't  think  that  the 
fact  that  you  stepped  reading 
when  you  finished  the  "Hardy 
Boys''   scries   stops  you. 

Chances  are  the  others  stopped 
with  Raggedy  .\nn.  Wait  for  an 
opening  and  say  something  like. 
"What  did  you  think  of  Jean 
Paul  Sartre's  last  book?"  I  guar- 
antee that  this  will  .stop  all  but 
the  cleverest. 

But  just  in  ea.se  you  run  into 
an  ^Id  pro  who  comes  back  with 
""Very  interesting,  but  do  you 
think  he  really  justifies  his  con- 
chvsions?"  all  you  have  to  do  is  ■ 
shrug  your  shoulders,  say.  "Oh 
well,  you  know  how  tho.se  French 
intellectuals  are."  and  change 
the  subject. 

Another  oxempte.  Suppose 
,  the  tallt  is  about  nf>odern  art. 
Just  say  "New  take  Picasso.  Of 
'  Course  his  technique  is  excell- 
ent, but  do  you  think  he's  real- 
ly get  the  spirit  of  art?"  What 
could  anyone  possibly  say  to  a 
remark   like   that? 

One  thing  to  remember.  If 
the  majority  likes  something, 
you  are  again.st  it.  The  majority 
can  be  referred  to  as  the  "peaii- 
aats."  the  "herd."  or  "the  great 
unwashed."  Vou  can  even  take  a 
chance  on  "other-directed"  which 
ha^  the  added  advantage  that 
they  might  not  understand  what 
"other-directed    people"   are. 

If  they  are  foolish  enough  to 
ask.  just  give  them  a  withering, 
"where  have  you  been  for  the 
last  18  years?"  stare.  They  won't 
press  the  point.  \  writer  or  art- 
ist who  ha.s  made  money  is  guilty 
of  "selling  his  soul  for  the  al- 
mighty  dollar." 

Now  that  you  have  these  few 
hints,  you  ought  to  be  able  to 


taice  it  from  there.  Use  your 
imagination  and  you  can  come 
up  with  dozens  mere  genuine 
pseudo  remarks. 

If  you  want  a  simple  rule,  just 
preface  every  pontifical  pi"t>- 
nouncement  with  '"Aristatle  says 
.  . . ."  (Of  course  if  you  ar?  away 
from  the  Dome  yeu  may  want  to 
change  it  to  "Nietzche  says  . . . ." 
f()r  the  sake  of  tho.se  who  haven't 
been  e.vp^sod  to  the  Ari.stotelian 
tradition.) 

As  far  as  clothes  go,  of  course 
you  will  dress  in  the  "Natural 
Look."  t  Never,  never  use  I»y 
League,  unless  you  want  to  spoil 
evei'ything. )  You  might  also  let 
it  be  known  that  "I've  been 
dre.ssini;  thus  way  for  years,  and 


now  all  of  a  sudden  all  the  peas- 
ants are  hopping  on  the  band- 
wagon." 

(Be  sure  though  that  the 
trunk  containing  your  peggsd 
pants  and  Mr.  B  shirts  from 
freshman  year  is  locked.) 

There  are  other  incidentals 
that  always  help,  such  as  con- 
ti'mpt  for  the  so-called  mass  me- 
dia and  so  forth,  but  .vou  ought 
to  be  able  to  take  it  from  there. 
For  your  convenience  though  I 
have  composed  a  list  of  a  few  of 
the  more  common  p.seudo  ex- 
pressions, complete  with  defini- 
tions. 

NOUVEAU  RICHE  —People 
with  more  money  than  you. 

INFERIORITY   COMPLEX-  A 


psychic  malady  which  causes 
other  people  to  act  differently 
from  your  inhibition^- — morals. 

GOOD  TASTE  —  What  you're 
wearing. 

A  PROVINCIAL  —  Doesn't 
live  near  you. 

A  PHONY  —  A  person  who 
tries  to  be  what  you  are  natural- 
l.v. 

MATURE  PERSON  —  You. 

IMMATURE  PERSON  —  The 
girl  who  jilted  you. 

ALCOHOLIC  —  Someone  who 
drinks  more  than  you. 

SOCIAL  DRINKER  —  A  per- 
son who  di-inks  as  much  as  you. 

BOURGEOISIE— People  in  the 
income  brackets  below  you. 

BOHEMIANS  —  People  who 
like  EHvis. 


^. 


'Who's  Coming  Or  Going?' 


YOU  Said  It: 


•-•  ^ 


Inspiration   To   The  Falterers 


Editor:  . .'.       "  '  '    *-.- 

This  (following)  is  a  compo- 
sition of  Brett  T.  Summey.  a 
recent  graduate  of  Carolina,  who 
wrote  it  as  his  final  adieu  to 
I'NC.  I  think  it  is  very  good, 
and  hope  that  you  will  find  it 
worthy  of  print  in  The  Daily  Tar 
Heel.  Maybe  it  will  serve  as  an 
inspiration  to  some  faltering  .stu- 
dent. If  so.  it  will  have  .served  its 
purpose. 

Name   Withheld   By  Request 


AN  ODE  TO  LIFE 

Why  d;)  we  mortals  live  .  . .? 
Is  it  just  to  suffer  and  meditate 
over  the  toils  of  an  education? 
To  reap  the  rich  harvest  of  a  suc- 
cessful course ...  An  A.  a  B  or 
even   a    proud   and   substantialC? 

I.s  this  what  we  strive  for — is 
it  worth  the  time  and  worry?  To 
hell,  to  hell  I  cry.  but  still  I 
long  for  success — without  it  we 


are  nothing —  like  lowly  moles 
burrowing  ourselves  deeper  into 
the   pit   of  self-destruction. 

Try  as  we  might — classes  and 
books  will  conquer  us  yet — we 
cannot  succe.ssiully  fight  the  im- 
pending need  for  financial  .se- 
curity. 

Give!  Give!  Your  time  to  some- 
thing of  value — or  go  down  to 
defeat  at  the  hands  of  laziness — 
and  never  rise  again. 


• 

By  A!  Capp 


VO  «.■>.     ■-. 
COME  t'.r.-  [K, 
AN'  FACE  Th 
PACKS  OF 
LIPE,  HOMEV- 

NAMELV 

EDWARD  R. 

MUSHROOM.. 

AN'ALL-fiiJLP.'- 

THAT.r- 


A.H.  Shepaf 
He's  Not  Acting 


THURJ 


ALEXANDER   SHEPARD   JR. 

. . .  holds  the  keys 


Alexander  H.  Shepard  is  the  new  business  of- 
ficer and  treasurer  of  the  Consolidated  Univer- 
sity. He,  along  /fHh  three  ether  men,  wer«  •lected 
to  high  University  positions  by  the  -  B*ard  of 
Trustees  Monday,  in  successive  editions  Tho  D*J4y 
Tar  Heel  will  print  backgrounds  of  these  ottitr 
men. 

Alexander  H. 
Shepard'  Jr.  was 
born  in  W^nting- 
ton.  N.  C.  Aug. 
23,  1908.  the  son 
of  A.  H.  Shepard 
Sr.  and  Mary  Au- 
gustus   Shepard^ 

He  attended  the 
pu>blic  schools  ef 
W^il^ington  and 
later  went  to 
Davidson  College 
where  he  grad- 
uated in  1931. 
with  both  the  AB 
degree  and  MA 
degree  in  politi- 
cal science  and 
in   English. 

He     came     to 

Chapel     Hill     in 

1932    to    take    a 

temporary  job  in 

the  University  business  office.   He   remained   in  a 

business   connection    with    the    University. 

He  has  had  titles  of  payroll  officer,  auditor  and 
a.ssistant  to  the  business  manager  of  the  Univers- 
ity in  Chapel  Hill. 

He  was  assistant  to  the  business  manager  at 
Chapel  Hill  from  1943  to  October.  1956.  when  he 
was  appointed  acting  business  officer  and  treasurer 
of  the  Consolidated  University  of  North  Carolina. 

By  action  of  the  trust  3es  on  Feb.  25.  1957.  he 
was  nam  3d  business  officer  and  treasurer  of  the 
Consolidated  University,  the  word  "Acting"  being 
eliminated. 

He  is  married  to  the  former  Sallie  Baxter  Cowell 
of  Washington.  N.  C.  and  the  Shepards  have  two 
children.  Alexander  Shepard  III,  who  is  a  senior  at 
David.son  College,  and  .Mary  Cowell  Shepard.  a 
fre.shman  at  Duke  University. 

The  Sh?pards  are  members  of  the  University 
Methodist  Church. 


Television  Preview: 
Climax  And  Dragnet 

Anthony  Wolff        *  ^      , 

"Climax,"  one  of  the  consi.stently  competent,  if 
rarely  excellent,  television  dramatic  hours  is  on 
Channel  2  at  8:30  p.m.  Tonight's  play  is  about  a 
vindicated  ex-convict  who  returns  to  the  scene  of 
the  crime  of  which  he  has  been  proven  innocent. 
"Dragnet"  is  opposite  on  Channel  5,  if  you  can 
stand  the  monotony. 

For  the  hour-and-a-half  starting  at  9:30  you  are 
invited  to  watch  "Playhouse  90"  on  Channel  2.  This 
show  has  been  one  of  the  major  disappointments  of 
the  year,  and  this  week's  presentation  doesn't  prom- 
ise to  redeem  its  reputation.  It  concerns  the  strug- 
g!  of  the  first  American  woman  doctor  to  gain  rec- 
ognition from  the  medical  profession.  The  nurs- 
ing students  might  be  interested  in  the  subject 
matter,  while  the  males  on  campus  might  enjoy 
Joanne  Dru. 


YOU  Said  it: 

Appreciation  Needed 

Editor: 

After  witnessing  the  touching  tribute  paid  last 
Friday  night  to  one  of  the  University's  "great" 
men.  I  would  like  to  make  a  few  suggestions. 

Men  like  Frank  McGuire.  through  long  years  of 
study  and  preparation,  have  given  to  Chapel  Hill 
a  name  that  it  deserves  among  the  finest  universi- 
ties in  the  country.  There  have  been  other  men, 
however,  who  through  long  unselfish  devotion  to 
the  student  have  made  the  classrooms  of  this  camp- 
us an  intellectual  haven  for  students  from  every 
state  of  the  nation. 

Therefore,  may  I  suggest  to  our  all  too  gener- 
ous alumni  that  a  special  fund  be  set  up  on  behalf 
of  these  professors.  Some  kind  of  tribute,  whether 
it   be   in   the   form   of   a   four   wheeled   trophy   or 
seated  envelope,  or   just  a  standing  ovation  from 
the   student   body,   should   be    presented   after   20 
years  of  servrce. 
I  say  20  years  because  I  fully  realize  their  in- 
abilities   to    accomplish    the    things    that    the    great 
strategist   of   Woollen   Gym   has   done    in   his   year 
stay. 

In  conclusion  I  would  like  to  quote  the  senator 
who.  addressing  Dogpatch's  citizens  in  the  Broad- 
way hit,  "Little  Abner,  '  r^ys  the  United  States 
Government  is  spending  1  million  dollars  on  one 
bomb,  just  to  blow  your  homes  off  the  face  of  the 
earth.    So    show    your    appreciation. 

Name  Withhold  By  Request 


Try  Impounding  Violators'  Cars; 
Helps  Understanding  Road  Rights 

Editor: 

Firws  do  not  seem  to  be  the  answer  to  our 
traffic  violations.  Better  results  might  be  obtained 
by  impounding  the  car.  ' 

If  we  had  to  do  without  it  for  a  while  we  might 
begin  to  understand  about  rights  of  the  road. 

William    R.    Sullivan 
,  Los   Angeles,   C«lif> 


ccrpor 


THURSDAY,  FEBRUARY  28,  1957 


THE  OAtLY  TAR  HEEL 


PAGE  THRfff 


lniv«r- 

ird  of 
Osily 
other 

ler  H. 
Jr.  was 
rflnting- 
Aug. 
the  SOD 
^hepard 
[ary  Au- 
ihepard^ 

fded  the 
tools  of 
)n  and 
^nt  to 
College 
grad- 
1931. 
the  AB 
^nd  MA 
politj- 
lice  and 
th. 

ivne      to 

iHill     in 

take    a 

job  in 

led    in   a 

kitor  and 
(Univers- 

lager  at 
Allien  he 
isurer 

lina. 
1957.   he 
of    tlie 
'   being 

CoweH 

lave  two 

Isenior  at 

?pard.    a 

Ifniversity 


net 


Ipetent.  if 

irs    is    on 

about   a 

scene  of 
Inocent. 

you  can 

you  are 
;1  2.  This 
Itments  of 
sn't  prom- 
the  Strug- 
gain  rec- 
le   nurs* 
subject 
?ht   enjoy 


ded 


paid  last 
;  'great" 
stions. 
g  years  of 
hapel  Hill 
t  universi- 
^her  men. 
evotion  to 
this  camp- 
rom  every 

lee  gcnor- 
on  b«h«lf 
,  whothor 
trophy  or 
tlon  from 
after    20 

te  their  in- 
the  great 
n  his  year 
I 
the  senator 
the  Broad- 
lited  States  . 
ars  on  on«  | 
face  of  the 

By  Roquect 


Cars; 
Rights 

wef  to   our 
be  obtained 

le  we  might 
be  road. 
R.    Sullivan 
•!•«.  Calif. 


In  "Henry  IV"  Production  Here 


William   Callahan,   left   and   Dan    Ruslander   of   the^  Players,    In- 
corporated will  portray  Falstaff  and   Bardolph   in  a  production  here 


March  11  of  "Henry   IV."  The  play  will  take  place  in  Memorial  Hall 
at  8  p.m.  Tickets  are  $1.25. 


Traffic   Committee   Clarifies  Jurisdiction 


QaCampiU! 


with 
MaxShuinan 


(Author  of  ■'Dure foot  Boy  With  Chtck,"  etc.) 


FASTER,  FASTER! 

Pick  up  your  paper  every  morning  and  what  do  you 
read?  '"rRl^l:*  l\  Highkr  P^dihwtion."  That's  what  you 
read.  "Enrollmknt  Spir.xlling  Upward  -  Desfkrate 
Need  for  More  Cl-assrooms.  More  Teachers."  Rut 
cla.ssrooms.  ala.s,  do  not  spring  up  like  mushrooms,  nor 
teachers  like  mavHies.  So  what  mu.st  we  do  while  we 
build  more  clas^jrooms,  train  more  teachers?  We  must 
get  better  u.se  out  of  the  cla.ssrooms  and  teachers  we  now 
have.   Thafs  what  we  must  do. 

This   column,   normally   a   vehicle   of  good-humored 
foolery,  of  joy  that  wrinkled  care  derides,  of  laughter 
holding  both  his  sides,  will  today  forsake  levity  to  ex- 
amine the  crisi.s  in  higher  education.    My  sponsor.s,  the 
makers  of  Philip  Morris  Cigarettes,  as  bonuie  a  bunch 
of  tycoons  as  you  will  see  in  a  month  of  Sundays,  have 
given  cheerful  consent  to  this  departure.    Oh,  splendid 
chaps  they  are,  the  makers  of  Philip  Morris!    Oh,  darlin' 
types  they  are,  fond  r>f  home,  mother,  porridge,  the  Con- 
stitution, and  country  fiddling!    Twinkly  and  engaging 
they  are,  jaunty  and  sociable,  roguish  and  winsome,  a.s 
fu'i  of  joy.  as  packed  with  pleasure,  as  brimming  with 
natural  goodness,  as  loaded  with  felicity  as  the  ciga- 
rettes they  bring  you  in  two  convenient  sizes  —  regular 
in  the  handy  snap-open  pack,  and  new  long-size   in  a 
crushpi-oof  flip-top  box  —  both  available  at  modej-ate  cost 
from  your  favorite  tobacc<mist.    Light  one  now.    Light 
e  it  he  t  end.  No  filter  cigarette  can  make  that  statement. 


''X!*^!^: 


Let  us  then,  with  the  gracious  connivance  of  the 
makers  of  Philip  Morris  -  Oh,  splendid  chaps !  Oh.  gra- 
cious connivers !  -  take  up  the  terribly  vexing  question 
of  how  we  can  turn  out  more  graduates  with  campus 
facilities  as  they  now  exist. 

The  answer  can  be  given  in  one  word :  speedup!  Speed 
up  the  educational  process.  Streamline  courses.  Elimi- 
nate frills.    Sharpen.    Shorten.    Quicken. 

Following  is  a  list  of  courses  with  sugge.sted  methods 
to  sj)eed  up  each  one. 

Physics  -  Eliminate  slow  neutrons. 

Psych  Lab -Tilt  the  mazes  downhill.  The  white 
mice  will  run  much  faster. 

Enc.i.\eerin(;  —  Make  slide  rule.s  half  as  long. 

Music  Change  all  tempo  to  allegio.  (A  collateral 
benefit  to  be  gained  from  this  suggestion  is  that  once 
you  speed  up  waltz  time,  campus  proms  will  all  be  over  by 
10  p.m.  With  students  going  home  .so  early,  romance  will 
languish  and  marriage  counselors  can  be  transferred 
to  the  buildings  and  grounds  department.  Al.so.  housing 
now  u.sed  for  married  students  can  be  returned  to  the 
school  of  animal  husbandry.) 

Algebra  — If  "x"  always  equals  24,  much  time-con- 
saming  computation  can  be  eliminated. 

Lanc.uages  —  Teach  all  language  courses  in  English. 

Dentistry  —  Skip  baby  teeth.  They  fall  out  anyhow. 

Poetry  —  Amalgamate  the  cla.ssics.   Like  this: 

Hail  to  thee,  blithe  npirit 
'  Shoot  if  you  must  this  old  gray  iiead  > 

You  ain't  not  It  in'  hut  a  hound  dog 
Swiling  the  boy  fell  dead. 

You  see  how  simple  it  is?  Perhaps  you  have  some 
speedup  ideas  of  your  own.  If  .so,  I'll  thank  you  to  keep 
them  to  yourselves. 

©Max  Shulmati,  19.')7 

Tlif  maker  $  of  Philip  Morris  have  no  interest  in  any  speedup. 
We  age  our  fine  tobacco  glow  and  euny.  And  thal''ti  the  tvtiy  it 
smok*»  —  *totv  and  eanr  —  u  natural  nmoke. 


A  statement  was  released  yes-  i 
t'orday  by  Lawrence  Matthews  of 
the  Student  Government  Traffic 
Committee  in  an  effort  to  clarify 
the  orgin.  purpose  and  jurisdic- 
tion ol   the  committee. 

Lawrence  stated  that  questions 
had  aris3n  from  cases  tried  be- 
fore the  committee  as  to  its  juris- 
diction. He  said  that  this  report 
is   to   answer  such   questions. 

The  statement  released  is  as  fol- 
lows: 

Ssme  students  appear  to  be  con- 
fused as  to  the  origin,  purpose, 
and  jurisdiction  of  the  Student 
Government  Traffic  Cammittee;  so 
the  Committee  would  like  to  again 
clarify  its  position  in  student  gov- 
ernment. 

On  Feb.  27,   1956,  the  Board  of 

Trustees    approved      the      Visiting 

!  Committee's  report  for  1956.  This 

;  report  contained  an   ultimatum  to ; 

I  the   students    for    a    definite    plan 

,  fof  easapg  the  parking  problem  at 

the    University.    The    plan    was    to 

be   submitted    to  them   by    May    1. 

1956. 

Immediately      following       the 
I    spring    elections.    Student    Body 
j    President  Bob  Young,  appointed 
a   commission  to   investigate   the    ' 
problem  and  produce  a  plan.  The 
I     report    of    the    commission    was    ! 
submitted   a    week    later    to    the 
Student     Legislature,     where     it 
.    was     approved.     The     proposals 
were  then  endorsed  by  the  Chan- 
cellor  and   the   Dean  of   Student 
Affairs,    who,    in    turn,    sent    the 
plan    to   the    Board    of    Trustees 
for  final  approval. 

The   Student  Legislature,  mean- 
while,   had    been    paralleling    this 
activity    by    officially    establishing 
the    Student    Government    Traffic 
'  Committee.      Also,      the      Studsnt 
Legislature     endorsed     the     Com- 
mittee were  enumerated    The  Stu- 
I  dent  Government  Traffic  Commit- 
I  tee  members   were   then   selected, 
and    the    first    official    committee 
meeting  was  held  last  June.  This 


meeting,    and   several   others    last 
summer,  were  largely  devoted  to- 
ward     compiling      the      Trustee's ' 
recommendations     and     the     Stu- 
d:nt    Legislature's   provisions  into  j 
one    document,    which    comprises  | 
the    T1-atfic    Regulations    for    the 
University  at  Chapel  Hill. 

Copies  of  the  Regulations  were 
delivered   to   all    dormitory    rooms 
and    posted    in    dormitories,    fra-  j 
ternities.  sororities,  and  at  several  | 
conspicuous    places   elsewhere.        I 
Since  the  parking  problem  was  . 
not    contained    within    the   campus ' 
limits,  the  committee  was  also  cm- 
powered    to    handle    cases    arising 
from   violation   of  Chapel  Hill  or-  • 
dinances. 

The  $2.50  automobile  registra- 
tion fee  was  approved  by  the 
Board  of  Trustees  for  the  pur- 
pose of  constructing  parking 
facilities  for  students.  The 
Buildings  and  Grevnds  Commit-  t 
tee  now  has  the, problem  of  ob- 
taining a  good  site  for  construc- 
tion of  a   parking   area. 

Among  th^  immediate  concerns 
of  the  Traffic  Committee  is  the 
problem  presented  by  students 
who  receive  too  many  parking 
tickets.  In  past  years,  students 
who  could  afford  it  merely  paid 
their  dollar  fine  each  day  for  hav- 
ing a  parking  space  on  campus. 
This  procedure,  however,  restrict- 
ed those  who  could  not  afford  the 
fine  each  day  from  parking  on 
campus.  The  Traffic  Committee  is 
now  attempting  to  give  all  stu- 
dents an  equal  parking  priviledgc. 
In  keeping  with'  the  equality 
theme,  the  $2.50  registration  fee 
might  be  considered  as  payment 
by  uppcrclassmen  for  a  privilege 
that  underclassmen  do  not  have. 
The  idea  is.  of  course,  that  from 
this  fee.  facilities  will  be  provided 
by  the  privileged  uppcrclassmen 
so  that  soon  the  underclassmen 
may  enjoy  the  same  privilege, 
namely,  that  of  having  a  car  at 
school. 


UNC  Faculty  To  Advise 
NafI  Census  Bureau 


A  committee  composed  chiefly 
of  University  faculty  members 
will  advise  the  U.  S.  Census  Bu- 
reau on  key  questions  in  its  na- 
tional census  Of  1960. 

The  group,  which  received  a  $1,- 
350  grant  from  the  Population 
Assn.  of  America,  will  make  rec- 
ommendations useful  in  the  na- 
tional scope  of  race,  color,  ethdic 
background  and   country  of  birth. 

Dr.  Dan  Price,  professor  of  so- 
ciology at  UNC.  identified  the 
Population  Assn.  of  America  as 
a  professional  group  which  nrakes 
statistical  studies  of  populations. 

He  said  other  faculty  members 
on  the  committee  of  which  he  is 
•j  chairman  are  Dr.  Rupert  B.  Vance. 
Kenan  professor  of  sociology  and 
Dr.  Guy  B.  Johnson,  professor  of 
sociology    and    anthropology. 

All  three  are  of  the  Institute  for 
Research  in  Social  Science  at 
UNC. 

The  committee  will  deal  with 
such  questions  as:  "What  is  the 
best  way  to  identify  oriental. 
American  Indian,  Puerto  Rican, 
Mexican  and  other  similar 
groups?",  and  "How  should  cen- 
sus data  regarding  these  groups 
be  analyzed?" 

Also,  "Should  information  about 
'  mother    tongue    be,  asked   in    the 


census?"  and  "How  should  the 
census  classify  people  of  mixed 
racial  background,  such  as  the 
American-born  child  of  an  Ameri- 
can soldier  and  his  Japanese 
wife?"        ;:   -- '  •  j;  • 


Training  Meets 
On  Leadership 
To  End  Tonight 

The  fii\al  YMCA  leadership 
training  session  is  to  be  held  to- 
night.        , 

The  meeting  will  be  in  the  cab- 
inet room  of  the  "Y".  and  will 
begin  at  7:30. 

Larkin  Kirkman  and  Roy  Taylor 
will  be  the  discussion  leaders  of 
the  session.  The  topics  for  discuss- 
ion will  include  the  purpose,  the 
progress,  and  the  role  of  the  Y  on 
the  Carolina  campus. 

Anyone  who  is  interested  in 
becoming  a  cabinet  member,  of- 
ficer, or  in  holding  any  other 
position  in  the  Y  has  been  invited 
to  attend. 

I      This  is  the  last  time  that  a  train- 
j  ing  session  w  ill  be  held  this  year, 
according  to  Y  officials. 


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THE  DAILY  TAR  Hltt.--"^i— ' 


THURSDAY,    FBMUARY  U.  \$i7 


Honor  Codticll  Reports  Stbdeht  Stjspeiision 


friLLIilM  STOKOE  AND  GENE  CASTLEBERRY 
. . .  bagpipers  for  '^Brigadoon" 


Playmakers  fihd  Bagpipers  In  D.C. 


By  DOLORES  ABKAMS  citad«l.    Charleston.    South   Caro- 

Where  would  you  find  Scottish  I  lina.    military    college.     Although 
bagpipers  around  Chiipel  Hill?       j  the    band    had    recently  returned 
H  !  from  marching  in  the  presidential 

If  .you  were  Pro|essor  John  ^  j^j^gurai  parade,  the  pipers  were 
Parker,  business  manager  of  the !  jj^^^^i^^s  ^^  ^^^i^  fjnd  it  extreme- 1 
Carolina  Playmakers.  you  would  j  j^  difficult  to  be  in  Chapel  Hill ' 
be  faced  with  just  such  a  knotty  |  j^^  rehearsals  and  performances. ' 
problem,  typical  of  the  unusual  j  j^ajor  Crary  said  he  wttuld  like 
way  in  which  his  business  office  I  j^  j.^^,^  himself,  but  was  doubt-  i 
functions  to  get  a  show  on  the  j  £yi  ^^  gaining  General  Mark ' 
^^^St-  I  Clark's  permission     for     such     a 

Tbe  show  concerned  is  "Briga- ;  Ja^mt. 
doon,"    well-known    musical   com-  j      Another  name  was  checked  off , 
«dy  by  Frederick  Loewe  and  Alan  j  the   list!  j 

Jay  Lemer,  to  be   presented   to-       Next  in  line  was  Tom  Moore  of ' 
moiTow  and  Sunday  in  Memorial  j  Cumberland.  Va.,   who  reportedly 
Hall  by  the  Playmakers.  The  set-|  both    sold    and    glared    bagpipes, 
ting^  of    the    show   embraces    the!  Unfortunately,     that     individual 
Scottisb  Highlands — whence  the  call  i  could  not  be  contacted, 
for  bagpipers — ^two  that  would  be  ■      pead  end,  again! 


mast«-  pipers,  or  could  handle  tbe  | 
spri^tly  incidental  music  invoI-| 
ved. 

So,  tbe  search  began,  by  Prof. 


Oti    to    Harold  Collins,  III,    of , 
Southern  Pines.  N.  C  A  student  at 
Duke,    Collins    was    recommended 
as  a  novice  piper,  but  felt,  when  [ 

Parkerran"Jid"hand"i  'securing;  contacted.  th^tWs  playing  wa*  of' 

tbe  unusual  in  the  theater  whim- 

sey-J- 


insufficient  calibre   for  the   musi- 
cal production.  i 
On  down    the,  list,    and    a    new  ^ 
Parker  first    felt     that     pipers :  phone  caHl-  j 
inight  be  located  in  the  Cape  Fear.      This  time  it  was  Gene  Castleber- 
River' Valley,  originally  settled  hf ,  ry,    a   young  man    who    had    won 
Scots  people  and  now  thickly  pop-i  hanors  at  the  bagpipes  contest  at 
ulated    by    descendants.    The    bag- j  Grandfather    Mountain.    Castleber- _ 
pipe   cla&s^    at    Flora    MacDonaldj  ry,  a  law  student  at  George  Wash- 
College  and  the  Fayetteville  High  j  ington      University.      Washington, 
tScbaot  Scots  marching  band,  were]  d.C.^  and-  a  master  piper,  was -de- 
tiiveStigated,    But    they    included  |  lighted  at  the  prospect  of  playing 
only   beginning    pipers,    who    feUi  y^^h  the  pteyiftakers;  and  said  that 
they-c«ttld  riot  read  the  niusie  in- 1  he- could  arrange  tf' short  leave  uf 
Volv^d.                                                I  absence  from  his  studies.              ^  j 
The  conclusion?  Nething  in  the!    ,^f-   Parker  dr^w   a  ^ctorious 
iftimediate  area^  and  Prof.  Parker  ,  ^""cle   ^l^.^J^^  "^'"^  ,i^"^'f 
woufd  have  to  look  eisew*ere 


berry"  on  his  list! 

Nor     did     Castleberry's  talents 
stop   there.   He   disclosed  that   he ; 
had  played  the  incidental  bagpipe 
music  in  a  Washington  production 
of  ''Brigadoon,"  and  has  his  own  \ 
Scots    outfit    and    pipes.    Further- 1 
more,  he  promised  to  provide  his 
own    co-piper,      a      Mr.      William 
Stokoe. 

"At  present,  Castleberry  and  co- 
piper,  Stokoe.  are  busy  recording 
"Brigadoon"  bagpipe  music  for 
the  required  reel,  sword  dance, 
funeral  and  wedding  processions. 
They  will  send  the  recordings  to 
Chapel  Hill  to  be  used  by  the  Play- 
makers in  rehearsals.  The  two 
pipers  will  j<vin  the  company  on 
Feb.  27  for  final  dress  rehearsals 
and  will  play  for  the  three  per- 
formances. 

Prof.  Parker  contends  that 
searches  for  sucii  rareties  as  bag- 
pipes are  a  usual  /unction  of  the 
theatrical  business  manager,  the 
mf-raber  of  the  producing  team 
least  recognized  by  theStre-goers. 
This-  administrator  is.  however, 
constantly  working  behind  the 
scenes,  smoothing  the  way  for  the 
show's  producing  directors.  He 
handles  such  important  matters  as 
budgeting  and  purchasing  thear- 
rical  materials,  arranging  royal- 
ties, promoting  t'hc  .show  to  bring 
a  production  to  the  attention  of 
play-goers  in  the  area,  seeing  to 
■audience  comfort  in  the  theatre, 
and.  of  cours-e — looking  for.  bag- 
pipe! —  finding  the  unusual  in 
evcr>'  show.  . 

Prof.  Parkers'  of fipe  at  Zr^Aber- 
I  netJ»y  Hjfll   also  dispenses   ticfcets 


and  theatre-goers  are  invited  to 
come  in  for  reserved  seats  to 
"Birigadoo^."  which  he  guaran- 
tees will  be  a  delightful  musical 
play. 
All  this,  and  bagpipes  too! 


A  student  charged  with  falsify- 
ing library  cards  has  been  suspend- 
ed from  the  University  indefinite- 
ly, according  to  a  report  released 
yesterday  by  the  Men's  Honor 
Council.  I 

The  report,  released  ye.sterday 
by  Council  Clerk  George  Rags- 
dale,  is. as  follows:  | 
A  student  was  brought  before 
the  Council  charged  with  signing 
false  names  to  library  cards  in 
order  to  check  nut  books  for  a 
longer  period  of  time  than  tfie 
normal  two  week  period.  Using 
this  dishonest  method  he  was  able 
to  obtain  books  and  keep  them  as 
long  as  he  wished.  He  signed  the 
same  false  name  each'  time  he 
commited  this  fraudulent  act  and 
the  library,  missing  books,  noted 
that  many  of  the  books  that  hadn't 
been  returned  to  them  were  check- 
ed out  in  the  name  of  the  same 
person.  They  checked  on  this 
name  in  the  Student  Directory  and 
in  the  Office  of  Central  Records 
and  found  that  no  such  student 
was  registered  with  the  Universi- 
ly.  They  then  informed  their  staff 
that  they  were  not  to  all;)w  books 
to  be  checked  out  to  the* student 
siiining  this  name. 

The     defendant     tried     once 

again  to  check  out  several  books 

and    he    signed   the   same    false 

name    to    the    library    card.    The 

attendant    recognized    the    name 

as  the  one  which  the  library  was 

to   report   and    she   went   to   get 

the  assistant  librarian.  This  wo- 

nnian    accosted    the    student    and 

asked   if   she   might   see    his   ID 

'  card.  He  said  that  he  didn't  have 

;    an     ID     card,    which     was     the 

truth.  He  then  said  that  he  was 

i    checking   out   the   books   for   his 

roommate  but   then   told   the   li- 

I    brarian  that  he  had  lied  to  her. 

He   then    thought   that    the   case 


would  be  turned  in  and  consequent-  ture  are  serious  enough  to  merit  tions  themselves.  Cases  should  be 
ly  did  not  turn  himself  in  to  a  suspension  from  school  indefinite- '  turned  in  to  the  Library  staff,  or 
member  of  the  M^n's  Council,  ly-  Students  who  know  of  such  vio-  j  to  any  member  of  the  Men's  Coun- 
which  he  should  have  done  im-'lati^ns  and  fail  to  turn  them  in  cil.  or  to  Jim  Exum  at  the  Sigma 
mediately.  The  case  was  later  turn- '  are  guilty  of  Honor  Code  viola-  Nu  House, 
in  and  he  readily  admitted  his 
guilt  and  said  he  realized  his  v/rong 
and  dishonest  actions.  He  was 
tried  by  the  Men's  Counc.'l  on  H 
January  16,  1957  and  was  suspend- 
ed  indefinitely  from  school. 

This  was  definitely  an  Honor 
Code  violation.  The  students  must 
be  made  to  realize  that  falsifying 
a  library  K^ard  is  a  serious  lie  and 
that  the  Council  has  and  will  con- 
tinue to  treat  it  as  such.  The  Li- 
brary has  had  a  great  deal  of  sim- 
ilar trouble  in  the  past  and  the 
Hon:)r  Council  has  acted  on  many 
such  eases.  The  Council  feels  that 
clear    ?ut    violations    of    this    na- 


Seniors 

Advance  Information 

On  Career  Opportunities 

At  Procter  &  Gambls 


Advance  information  on  Marketing 
Management  opportunities  in  ^le 
Procter  &  Gamble  Advertising  De 
partment  is  now  available.  Write 
H.H.  Wilson,  Jr.,  Supervisor  of 
Personnel,  Advertising  Depart- 
ment, Procter  &  Gamble,  Cincin- 
nati, Ohio.  Campus  interviews  in 
Placement   Service   March   28. 


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PINE  CONE  BRAND  SWEET,  TE.NDER  GOLDEN 


.  Parker's  second  thought  center- 
ed around  a  recoBeetion  o!  a 
summer  "gathering  of  the  clans" 
at  Grandfather  Mouotain  in  nortU- 
:  western  Carolina,  in  wbich  bag- 
l>ipers.  had  reporte^y  participated, 
immediately.  Donal4  F.  McDonald, 
Charlotte  newspapeiman  and  lead- 
•er  of  the  Scots  clans  in  the  area, 
was  contacted,  with  ^  request  for 
leads  to  secure  cbtfrpetent  bag- 
pipers. A  gracious  jfily  listed  a 
little  less  than  a  dotien  papera  in 
a- 500-mile  radius  (^Chapel  Hill. 

:    Prof.  Parker  begaii  by  putting 
a  cBeck  after  tRe  first  name  on 
the    list   and   by   placing  a   long- 
.  distance  telephone  call. 

It  was  dene  Smith,  a  72-y«arrold 
master  piper  and  native  Scots- 
man^  currently  residing  in  Winston- 
Salem,  Smith  agreed  to  come  to 
Cbapel  liill  to  play  with  the 
.  Playmakers,  but  his  former  bag: 
^ipe  band  was  dlsfiolved,  and  the 
players  bad  diapersed,  he  said,  to 
coUe^<!s  an^  6ie  armed  services. 
He  could  not  provide  a  co-player. 

T%e  search  was  on  again! 

Name  number  two  on  the  list 
.  ftf  prospects  wa*^  Major  Crary,  di- 

iditorToTaik 
to  Faculty  Club 

j:.  A.  Rescb.  editor  ol  the  Chat- 
ham County  News  of  SMier  City 
will  be  guest  speaker  Tuesday  at 
^^meeting  of  the  Faculty  Club, 
liie  Faculty  Club  will  meet  Tues- 
day at  1  p.m.  in  the  Carolina  Inn. 
Ttie  meeting  will  be  a  huicheon. 


Books  People  Are  Tailcmg  About 


Books  listed  here  are  not  necessa- 
rily the  best  of  tih^  February  crop, 
but  they  are  the  ones  people  are 
talking  about,  and-we  think  you'll 
find  them  worth  looking  at. 

-        ■.  ■  <  ^ 

Tbe  Scapegoat,  by  Daphne  du  Ma^- 
rier.  Ladies  loagazine  readers  arjd 
book  club  members  are  swooning 
over  this   one.  Good  of  its  kind. 

$3.95 

The  Fruit  Tramp,  by  Vinnie  Willi- 
ams. If  you  liked  "'Cannery  Row" 
We-  think  you31  find,  thiv  .warm 
little  Q(Vvef  worth  a  look.       $3.50 

Ships  In  the  Sky,  by  John  Tolanjl. 
The  story  of  tMe  great  dirigibles 
—Rich  in  tragedy  and  drama.  May 
well  become  a  collectors  item. 
:     $4.«5 

The    Fell,    by    Albert    CannJa.    A 

i  thoughtful  novel,  and  its  author's 
first  since  "The  Plague".  Don't 
miss'it.  $3.00 


■■•,■.  ■■■■*.    -ml':     - 

Th«  Eye  of  Love,,  by  Margery 
Sharpe.  Satire,  tenderness,  and  .sly 
humor  ornament  .this  fine  English 
novel.  $3.9."5 

Onionhead,  by  Weldon  Hill.  Peo- 
ple are  chuckling  over  this  story 
of  a  i-ailor  who  said,  "Comfort  me 
with  love,  for  I  am  sick  of  apples*" 

$3.96 

Tbe  Blue  Camel  ia,  by  Frances 
Parkinson.  Keyes.  Now- all  the  lad- 
ies can  fini^  the  serial  broken 
off  by  the  demise  of  the  Woman's 
Home  Companion.  $3.9i5 

A    Study    of    History,    Vol.    n,    by 

Arnold  J.  Toynbee.  The  Somervell 
abri(J[^ement  of  Volumes  7  through 
10  of  the  masterwork.  Compact 
find  readable.  $5.00 

Bedlam,  by  'Andre  Soubiran.  A 
real    soul-twister    about    insanity! 

$3.95 


du  Always  Find  The  Best  Books  In 

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205  E.  Franklin  Street    —:—    Chapel  Hill    — :—    Qp^n  Till  10  P.M. 


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Special! -S€tve  8c  At  Coloniall 

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Special! -Tip-Top  Pure  Ground 

COFFEE      i^  69 


GLEN  LENNOX 


THURSDj 

Moll 

U.S 

Wil 

washI 

French 
today  h( 
the   ba.si^ 
Ei-'enho\ 
United 
operatioi] 
policies, 
f     He  mi 
swering 
press  cli 
x-lared    t| 
guaranii 
free     na\ 
Aqaba. 


IS 


».  1947 


staff,  or 
j's  Coun- 
|e  Sigma 


lir. 
ird 

in 
to 

His. 

r>wc 


81 


THURSDAY,  FEBRUARY  28,  19S7 

Mollet  Thinks 
U.  Sw,  France 
Will  Cooperate 

WASHINGTON.  Feb.  27.— (/?>i— 
French  Premier  Guy  Mollet  said 
today  he  is  "quite  confident, "  on 
the  basis  of  talks  with  President 
Ejenhower.  that  France  and  the 
United  States  will  re-establish  co- 
operation in  their  Middle  East 
policies. 

He  made  the  comment  while  an- 
swering questions  after  a  national 
press  club  speech  in  which  he  de- 
clared that  Israel  is  entitled  to 
guarantees  for  its  borders  and  for 
iree  navigation  in  the  gulf  of 
.Aqaba. 


r  EVERY  MOMENT 
IS  A  BIG  MOMENT 
IN 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


PAGE  Five 


cflnpus 

SEEN 


Prof.  Wiley  Will  Begin 
Study  In  Paris,  Europe 


Student    sleeping     on     conch   | 
on    Graham    Memorial    landing.    ; 
The  photographers  flash  failed 
to  ^boke  him. 


Sign  suspended  frmn  a  dorm- 
itory '^vfindow:  '^Coqnina,  A 
Cocktail    Lmmge." 

:5  «  ♦  • 

%  Student  wheeling  a  hahy  car- 
riage across  Loncer  Quad.  Con- 
tents: one  load  of  dirty  laundry. 


Kenan  Prof.  W.  Lee  Wiley  will 
next  week  'be^n  a  seven-month 
study  in  Paris  and  other  parts  of 
Europe  on  "Beginnings  of  the 
French  Theater." 

On  leave  from  UNC  under  a 
grani  from  the  Institute  for  Re- 
search in  Social  Science,  Prof,  and 
Mrs.  Wiley  are  now  aboard  the 
iiner.  "United  States,"  and  will 
make  their  headquarters  in  Paris? 

Dr.  Wiley  will  publish  the  re- 
sults of  his  research  of  the  early 
period  of  the  FVench  theater,  from 
1580  to  1630. 

His  work  will  take  him  to  the 
scenes  of  the  original  French  the- 
ater    movement,    in     Strasbourg, 


CLASSIFIEDS 


ALAM  LADD 

VIRGINIA     EDMOND 

MAYO-O'BRIEN 
Snow  playing 


Carolina 


5  ROOM  BRICK  HOUSE.  3  BED 
rooms,  all  modern  conveniences. 
3  miles  on  Old  86  Hyway.  Stove 
and  Frigedaire  furnished.  Call 
Fred  Katzin  after  6:00.  8-9023. 

JAZZ  AT  TURNAGES 

Saturday  artemoon.  2:00,  Turn- 
ages  Cabin  in  Durham. — Jazz  by 
Dick  Gables  "All  Stars."  Beer 
Served. 


Nancy,  Metz,  and  Rouen.-,-. 

Prior  to  1580,  the  French  Gov- 
ernment and  the  Catholic  Church 
discouraged  growth  of  the  theater. 
Catherine  de  Medici  was 'especial- 
ly effective  in  opposing  dramatics 
which  featiu"ed  tragedy  in  connec- 
tion with  kings.  She  had  a  super- 
stition that  the  death  of  kings  in 
a  play  forecast  the  fall  of  dyna.s- 
ties. 

It  was  not  in  Paris,  but  in  the 
northern  provinces  of  France  that 
the  French  theater  had  its  first 
beginnings. 

Later,   Loui:>'  XIV   and   Cardinal 
Richelieu     favored    the    theater's  i 
growth,    and    Paris   became    them  j 
the  center  of  drama.  j 

Richelieu's  view  was  that  'it's! 
better  to  go  to  the  theater  than ' 
to  engage  in  dueling  and  brawls."  I 
He  felt  that  the  misdirected  ener-  j 
gies  of  members  of  the  nobility  in ' 
brawling  and  dueling  could  be 
channeled  into  the  relatively; 
harmless  and  beneficial  influenceii| 
of  the  drama. 


Covering 


th» 


Campus 


CARNIVAL 

Greek  week  fraternity  festivi- 
ties will  be  continued  with  a  car- 
nival tonight  at  8  p.m.  on  Navy 
Field. 

BRIDGE  LESSONS  TONIGHT 

Bridge  lessons  will  be  offered 
this  evening  at  7:3o  p.m.  in  the 
Victory  Village  Day  Care  Center. 


KITTEN,  YELLOW  TIGER,  mSS- 
ing  since  Friday,  Feb.  15.  Owner 
would  appreciate  any  informn- 
tion  as  to  his  present  where- 
abouts. Brad  Sea.,'holes,  phone 
9-7688. 


-  -XiTVl-xJ-J,., 


MAMMOTH!  MIGHTY! 
MAGNIFICENT! 


IN  Cinemascope  anoWarnerColo 
sT«m«o  ROSSANA  JACK 

tsPARIS 
SIRCEDRICHARDWICKFsTiuiiErNe 

HUU  NictlRIIIS-IOBEII  DSUDUS-IMill  IIUTeilU  ^ 


mumAm  TWISIwHU&H  GKAY  Mteian lOBEKl WISE 


TODAY 


MUSIC    BY 

MAX  rreiNM 


ONLY 


DAILY    CROSSWORD 


ACROSS 
1.  Applaud 
5.  Plot  of 
ground 
».  Tile 
10.  2kKliac  sign 

12.  Bees'  homes 

13.  Reddish- 
yellow 

\4.  So  be  it 
15.  Pigpen 
le.  River  (It.) 
lH  Masurium 

(sym.) 
18.  Malt 

'   beverage 
1*.  Fuel 

ae.  Show 

23.  Polynesian 

fod 
i«.  Sticks  to 
241.  A  peer 
28.  Beguiled 
31.  Aatem 
32^  Wooden  pin 
fe3.  Grtek  letter 
34.  Whether 
36.  God  of 

pleaaure 
M.  Be  glum 
38.  ProUc 

40.  Dress  front 
ruffle 

41.  Urge 
foru'ard 

42.  Aromas     . 

43.  Speaks 

44.  Haberdash. 
•ry  Item 


5.  Dish 

6.  Viscous 

7.  Warp-yam 

8.  Crown  saw 
(Surg.) 

9.  Disgrace 
11.  Ascended 
15.  Coat  parts 

18.  Tree 

19.  Pant  for 
breath 

21.  Portion 

22.  Strange 

23.  Evening 
sun  god 
(Egypt.) 

25  Tattered 
cloth 


26.  Scotch 
landed 

proprie- 
tor 

27.  Tenders 

29.  Send 
abroad 

30.  Legisla- 
tures 

32.  Hawai- 
ian  god- 
dess 
of 

volcanoes 
(poas.) 

35.  Flock 

36.  Manufac- 
tured 


Y»«l«r4*]r'»  AaswM* 

37.  Ancient  coin 
(Gr.) 

39.  By  way  of 

40.  Piece  ot 
work 


Brigadoon 
Casf  Has    ' 
Over  Sixty ; 

A  cast  of  more  than  sixty  will ; 
perform  in  the  Caroling  "Playmak-| 
ers'  production  tomorrow,  Satur-  j 
day  and  Sunday  of  "Brigadoon," ': 
at  Memorial  Hall. 

The  UNO  drama  group,  directed 
by  Foster  Fitz-Simons  and  Wilton 
Mason,  who  teach  in  the  Dept. 
of  Dramatic  Art  and  Music,  re- ; 
spectively,  will  present  the  full-  ■ 
scale  musical  supported  by  an  or-  ^ 
chestra   of   local   niusicians.  ; 

Choreography  lor  the  dances  isi 
being  devised  by  Mrs.  Yvonne ; 
Parker,  who  has  studied  with  i 
Martha  Graham,  Doris  Humphrey  | 
j  and  Jose  Limon,  and  who  was| 
a  dance  instructor-performer  in 
New  England  for  several  years.       I 

Appearing  in  major  roles  are 
j  Mrs.  Adele  Lippert,  Cincinnati.  O.; 
t  David  Small.  Morehead  City; 
James  Heldman,  Durham;  Miss 
Hope  Sparger,  Scarsdale,  N.  Y.; 
John  Sneden,  Tenafly.  N.  J.;  Miss  j 
Blynn  Durning,  Louisville,  Ky.; ! 
and  Gene  Strassler,  Apollo,  Pa.       i 

Others  in  the  cast  are  Harvey  j 
Knox,  Greensboro;  Miss  Louise 
Fletcher,  Birmingham,  Ala.;  Vin- 
son McNeill,  Chapel  Hill;  Peter 
B.  O'Sullivan,  Valhalla.  N.  Y.; 
Mrs.  Yvonne  Parker,  New  York, 
N.  Y.;  Dick  Newdick,  Augusta, 
Me.;  and  Morgan  Jackson,  Char- 
lotte, g^; 


Dr.  Anderson 
Receives  Grant 

Dr.  Carl  E.  Anderson  of  the  Uni- 
versity of  North  Carolina  School 
of  Medicine  has  been  granted  $15,- 
400. 

The  grant  came  from  the  Life 
Insurance  Medical  Research  Fund 
of  New  York 

Dr.  Anderson,  associate  profes- 
sor of  the  Department  of  Biologi- 
cal Chemistry  and  Nutrition,  will 
use  the  money  for  further  support 
of  research  on  the  chemistry  of 
metabolism  of  acetal  phospha- 
tides. 

The  grant  will  cover  a  two-year 
period  beginning  in  July  of  this 
year. 


National  Prexy 
Here  To  Speak 

Pi  Sigma  Alpha  will  present  Dr. 
E.  K.  Schattschneid^,  President  «f 
the  American  Political  Sciendf 
Assn.,  tonight  at  8:30  p.m.  in  the 
Library  Assembly  Room. 

Dr  Schatlschneider,  of  Wes- 
leyan  University,  will  speak  on 
"The  New  Politics."  His  sponsM:, 
Pi  Sigma  Alpha,  is  a  national  po- 
litical .vienee  honorary  fraternity. 

Dr.  Schatlschneider  is  one  of 
the  foremost  authorities  on  t  he 
American  political  party  system. 
His  topic,  "The  New  Politics" 
comes  from  his  recent  studies  in 
the  American  political  party  sys- 
tem. 

He  will  discuss  the  forces  at 
work  in  the  syji.em  and  the 
changes  that  have  already  oc- 
curred to  make  the  American  po- 
litical system  markedly  different. 


DOWN 

Acme 
Wash 
•pMwdiak 

teigrpt.) 

PootUks 
oegan 


Sitterson 

CContmiied  from  Page  i) 

uninspired,"  he  cautioned  against 
excessive  timidity  and  and  con- 
formity, toleration  of  the  mediocre 
and  inadequate  support  for  the 
University  in  its  task  of  "acquiring 
and  extending  knowledge  to  all 
mankind." 

Jim  Monteith,  in  his  inaugura- 
tion address,  lamented  the  passed 
^ory  of  the  Umversit>'s  two  de- 
bating societies  and  called  upon 
them  to  "fittd  their  new  academic 
constellation." 

"The  two  debating  societies?  can- 
not remake  the  world,"  he  said, 
"our  new  place  is  to  teach  the  stu- 
dents in  this  university  self  ex- 
pression. 

Asking  that  the  societies  look  to 
the  future  rather  than  the  past, 
he  stated  that  '"we  must  never 
prostfate  ourselves  on  the  altar  of 
tradition.  Thie  future  i.,-  within  our- 
selves." . 

Installed  at  the  meeting  vvih'c 
President  Monteith,  President 
Pro-tem  John  Brooks,  Treasurer 
Jim  Tolbert,  and  Sergeant  at 
ArmA  Don  Jacobs. 


3-Man 

(Continued   From   Page   1) 

in  Alexander  dormitory  this  sum- 
mer. Rooms  may  be  rented  at  $40 
for  each  summer  session. 

Women's  dorms  will  be  open  as 
usual  for  the  first  session  of  sum- 
mer school,  according  to  the  Dean 
of  Women's  Office.  Undergraduate 
women  will  room  in  undergradu- 
ate dorms,  and  graduate  students 
^vill  room  in  Kenan.  In  case  of  an 
overflow  of  graduate  students, 
men's  dormitories  will  be  utilized. 

No  plans  have  been  made  yet  as 
to  women's  housing  for  second  ses- 
sion summer  school.  * 


MILTON'S  MID- 
WINTER CARNIVAL 
Ends  Saturday 

Sava  en  tha  most  wanted 
apparel  in  the  South. 

Clott)in0  Cupboiirb 


Jl 


SLACKS 

/     Tropical  Wool-Dacron 

Polish  Cottons 

Cambre-Cloth, 

Cotton-Dacron 


SPORT   SHIRTS 

Plaids,  Stri|!>es, 

Knits,  Cotton  Imports 


SPRING  SUITS 

Wool-Dacron, 

Cambricloth,  Cotton* 

Dacron  by  Gordon 

Of  Philadelphia  — 

Cotton-Cords 


OcRMUDA 

SHORTS  -  Polish 

Cotton,  Khaici, 

Cotton-Dacron 

Wool  Dacron  —  All  Colors 


DkESS  SHIRTS 
Stripes,  Solids,  Whites 
Tabs  &  Button-Downs 


BCilMubA  "^ftCJiTS  FOR  MEIST 

Stripes,  Checks,  Plaids, 

Sottds,  Woot-Dacron,  Khaki 

Polish  Cotton,  Poplin, 

Tropical  Wool-Dlkrons  \ 


JACKETS 

Suedes,  Poplin 

And  The  Famous 

N.  C^  Jacket 


yr 


PAGE  SIX 


THB  DAILY  TAH  HfBL 


THURSDAY,  FeiRUARY  2i,  |*S7 


Duke  Tops  Matmen,  20-8 


An  Old,  Old  Adage,  But  Never  Truer 

A  team  that  won't  be  beat,  cant  be  beat. 

It's  em  old  time  worn  phrase,  but  it  never  fitted  more  perfectly 
than  it  does  right  now  when  applied  to  the  North  Carolina  Tar 
Heets.  The  Carolina  quint,  unbeaten  this  season   and   ranged    as 
the  nation's  number  cne  team,  literally  refused  to  be  beaten  Tues- 
day nif ht  in  Winston-Salem  as  they  cani>e   off  the  floof  to  whip 
Wake  Forest.  69-64. 
It  was  l>cyond  a  doubt  the  toughest  game  of  the  season   for  the 
Tar  Heels.  In  fact,  they  were  rated  as  underdcg^'  by  some  observer.s 
going  into  the  game  even  though  they  had  beaten  Wake  Forest  on 
iwo  picvious  occasions. 

But  this  time  the  Tar  Heels  didn't  have  Joe  Qui^g  th*lr  6-9 
center.  The  entire  squad  numbered  9  men,  not  even  epouglr  to 
scrinmiage  with.  Wake  Forest,  with  four  talented  seniors  in  tij« 
starting   lineup,   had   been   practically  unbeatable   on   their   heme 
floor,  and  wanted  to  knock  the  Tar  Heels  off  very  badly- 
The  victory  cele:ration  was  planned.  Dishpans,  cowbells,  Confed- 
erate flags,  cheerleaders  and  insulting  chants  were  all  plentifully  in 
evidence.  There  was  even  a  banner  reading.  '"Goodbye,  Number  One." 
All  was  in  readiness  for  the  bit;  upset.  But  somebody  forgot  to  tell 
Coach  Frank  MtGuire  and  his  Carolina  basketball  team.  Many  UNC 
fans  hai  given  up,  but  the  nine  cagers  and  their  coach   were  of  a 
more  optimistic  turn  of  mind. 

A  Dogficht  From  Start  To  Finish 

The  ii:  •  half  was  a  bitter  dogfight  with  both  teams  feeling  the 
intense  pressure.  Wake  Forest,  even  with  their  four  supposedly  nerve 
!:'?^  seluur^,  ciul  ;n;  hit  furm  ihe  fltr  or  the  loul  line  in  ihr  eaily 
minutes.  And  Carolina  seemed  i^.lent  on  hitting  a  home  run  each  time 
they  got  the  ball.  Eight  bad  passes  in  the  first  ten  minutes  testifies 
to  th; 

The  lead  s^e  sawed  back  and  forth.  Carolina  held  a  five  point 
lead  ai  29- "24,  lost  it  zf  29-39,  then  gained  it  back  to  leaJ  at  half- 
time,  33  32. 
Then  Wake  cam:'  out  for  the  second  half  and  began  to  pour  it  f>n. 
Sorn  they  had  an  8-point  bulge.  47-39.  and  the  end  of  a  22  game  win 
ning  streak  appeared  in  sight.   But  the  Tar  Heels  and  their  ace.  Lennie 
Rosenbluth  reiu^ed  t^  foM,  ar.d  came  surging  back  to  knot  the  game 
at  54  all. 

About  that  time  Wendell  Carr  and  Jack  Williams  fouled  out, 
and   Wake   iost   th^ir   advantage  under   the   boards.   The    ensuing 
few  m:,T>cnts  were  hectic  as  the  Deacons  hung  grimly  on  to  the 
lead. 
But  with  the  score  63-64  in  favor  of  Wake  with  46  seconds  left, 
Rosenbluth  sank  two  free  throws  to  put  the  Tar  Heels  on  lop'by  one. 
Then  Bob  Cunningham,  the  unsung  hero  of  the  UNC  team,  \istole  a  ' 
pass,  and  everyone  knows  what   happened  after   that. 

Wait  nril  Next  Time' 

It  was  the  third  time  this  year  the. Tar  Heels  have  downed  Wake 
Forest,  but  the  Deacs  still  .eem  to  have  that  '"wait  'till  next  time" 
spirit.  From  Bones  MeKinney  and  Murray  Greason  on  down,  the  bat- 
tling Baptists  think  they  can  bi-eak  the  Tar  Heel  spell.  Seems  to  us 
like  "three  strikes  and  you're  out"  would  be  a  belter  way  of  sum- 
ming up  the  situation 

There  have  been  txHrty  champions  gf  the  Carolina    cause  ail 
Y»ar   long,   and   many    reasons   why   they   are    still    unbeaten.    One 
name,  that  of  Lennie  Rosenbluth,  is  known  to  ail  far  and  wide. 
But  the  other.  Bob  Cunningham,  is  sometimes  lost  in  the  soaring 
scoring  columns. 
Cunningham  scored  2  pcints  against  Wake  Forest  Tuesday  night, 
but  he  was  to  a  larg?  extent  the  man   responsible  for  beating  the 
Deacons.   McGuire  called  Cunninghams   important   interception    of  a 
Wake  pass  in  the  dying  seconds  "the  key  play."  And  Bones  McKinncy 
remarked  after  the  game  that  "this  is  the  .-.'cond  time  this  year  Cun- 
ningham has  beaten  us."  He  was  referring  to  the  Dixie  Classic  game 
in  Raleigh  when  Bob  pulled  another  of  his  famous  stulen  ball  plays. 
Pete  Brennan  and  Tommy  Kearns  were  also   invaluable  Tues- 
day   nightr  and    Danny    Lotz,    Bob    Young    and    Kenny    Rosemond 
n9V9r  played  better  in  the  face  of  such  intense  pressure. 
It  wa     a  team  victory,  one  of  the  biggest  and  bravest  team  vic- 
tories in  the  history  of  Carolina  basketball.  The  air  in  .Memorial  Cn<- 
seum  was  thick  with  pressure,  and  nerves  were  on  the  thin  edge  of 
breal^ir.g.  But  nobody  cracked  except  8.200  fans.  And  one  deliriou.s 
spcrtswriter. 

How  Much  Heart? 

How  much  heart  can  one  bunch  of  boys  have?  Just  ask  Ftank  Mc- 
Guirt,  Hell  tell  you. 

Friday  night:  Duke.  Another  impossible  task,  and  without  Joe 
Quigg,  who  may  be  sidelined  still,  the  job  grows  doubly  diffi- 
cult. Bones  MeKinney  issued  a  warning  earlier  this  year  that  he*d 
hate  to  walk  into  Duke  Gym  in  the  last  gam*  of  the  season  un- 
beaten. Well,  the  stage  is  set. 

A  win  over  Duke  will  make  this  the  winningest  team  in  LTS'C 
basketball  history  ,and  will  give  the  Tar  Heels  an  unbeaten  regular 
season.  With  these  goal  •  to  shoot  for.  not  to  mention  such  things  as 
ACT  and  NCAA  championships,  how  can  these  transplanted  Yankees 
be  beaten?  We  don't^believe  they  will.  And  we  know  about  10  other 
guys  who  would  concur.  "" 


By   RON   MiLLIGAN 

The  Duke  wrestlers  proved  to 
be  too  strong  for  the  Tar  Heels 
yesterday  afternoon  as  the  Blue 
Devils  handed  the  locals  a  20 
to  8  licking  in  tlie  Duke  Gym. 

With  a  crippled,  substitute 
team.  Coach  Sam  Barne's  squad 
fought  all  the  way,  but  the  more 
experjcnced  Duke  team  was  just 
too  much  far  th;m  to  handle. 

The  only  Tar  Heels  to  win 
their   matches   were    137    pound 


Perrin  Henderson  and  167 
pound  Bill  McGehee.  Inciden- 
tally. McG:hee's  •  opponent, 
Mcnofee.  was  runner  up  confer- 
ence  champion    last   year. 

Dave  Atkinson.  177  pounder, 
was  determined  not  to  los?  his 
bout  yesterday  and  althrugh  he 
didn't  win  over  hi§  opponent, 
Atkinson  fought  him  to  a  draw. 

Duke's  regular  137  pound 
Espcsito  didn't  get  to  face  Tar 
Heel    Perrin    Henderson    yester- 


day as  wasischeduled.  Both  were 
frosh  grai^lers  last  year,  and 
they  met  on  two  separate  occa- 
s::ns  with  both  bouts  ending 
in  draws.  Esposito  defeated 
Carolina's  Bob  Wagner  in  the 
130    pound    division    yesterday. 

Next  Monday  the  Tar  Heels 
will  fight  their  last  match  when 
they  meet  the  State  Wolfpack 
in    Raleigh. 

The  individual  results  of  the 
UNC-Duke  match  are  as  follows: 


123  lb.  David  Wall  was  pin- 
ned by  Bergensen  (Duke).  |30 
lb.  Capt  Bob  Wagner  was  pin- 
ned by  Esp^jsitb  (D),  137  |b. 
Perrin  Hendi^rson  diecisioned 
Daille  (D).  147  lb.  Bill  Adcox 
was  pinned  by  Girind  (D>,  167 
lb.  Charlie  Boy.ette  was  deci- 
sioned  by  Meffert  (D),  167  ib. 
Bill  McGehee  decisioned  Merie- 
iee  (D),  177  lb.  Dave  Atkin- 
son tied  Kempler  (D).  and 
heavy\^eight  Larr>'  Hayes  was 
pinned  by  Macelhaney  (D). 

WUHC'TV  * 

Today's  schedule  for  WUNC-TV, 
the  University's  educational  tele- 
vision station: 

12:44— Sign  On 
12;i5— Music 

1:00— Today  On  The  Farm 

1:30— Play  Period 

2:0p— Sign  Off 

5:14— Sign  On 

5:15 — Miwic 

5:3(>— Mr.  Murglc's  Musee 

6:00 — Legislative  Review 

6:20--HNews 

6:30— Draw  Me  A  Story 

6:45— Man  On  The  Move    " 

7:00--Mi|seum  of  Art  , 

7:30 — German  Course  , 

8:15— Dr.  Schrivor 

9:00— World  of  Man 

9:30— Lecture  Hall 
10:00— Final  Edition 
10;|05— Sign  (HI     ..  ^        .  ^ 


CCNY  Accepts  Invitation  To 
NCAA  Small  College  Journey 


NEW  YORK  —  (AP)  —  City 
College  of  New  York  accepted  a 
bid  to  participate  in  the  NCAA 
small  college  basketball  tourna- 
ment today  and  will  play  Mt.  St. 
Mary's  College,  champion  of  the 
Mason-Dixon  Conference  at.  Em- 
mitsburg,  Md.,  March  4. 


It  will  be  CONY'S  first  appe^r- 
ace  in  NCAA  competition  since 
its  wonder  team  of  1948,  »:iancr 
of  both  the  NCAA  and  National 
Invitation  Tourney  in  a  space  ojE 
two  weeks.  The  record  was  blem- 
ished later  by  charges  of  Hxing 
involving  several  players. 


Howard  Johnson  Restaura^ 

BREAKFAST 


LUNCH 


DINNER 


SNACKS 


'Landmark  For  Hungry  Tarheels' 


The  h«aHon's  Best    -      iUi^sf^i- 

Picture:!  above  is  the  natirn's  number  one  ranked  basketball  team,  the  Carolina  Tar  Heels.  The 
above  photo  was  taken  at  ceremcni.?s  following  th  Carolina-South  Carolina' game  last  Friday  njght. 
Ths  Tar  Heels,  winners  over  Wake  Forest  Tuesda  -,  meet  Duke  Friday  night  in  their  |ast  regular 
season  game. 


1500  FREESTYLE  TONIGHT: 


UNC,  State  Expected  To 
Dominate  ACC  Swim  Meet 


By   STEWART   BIRD 

The  annual  Atlantic  Coast  Con- 
ference Swimming  Championships  ' 
will  cpen  at  8  p.m.  tonight  with 
undef.ated  North  Carolina  and* 
powc:  fill  N.  C.  State  favored  to 
'  pick  up  most  of  the  headlines.'       ' 

UNC   won   the  conference   team 
championship   by  defeating  Stale. 
49  to  36.  last  Saturday.  The  three 
da\-  m(  et   will  decide  the  individ- 
ual champions  in  sixteen  events.    ; 
Th:  sruclling  1500  meters  free- i 
style   will   be   the   only   attraction  j 
on  tonight's  program.  Favored    to- 


successfully  defend  his  title  will 
be  Frank  Nauss  of  N.  C.  State,  but 
he  may  have  a  strong  challangcr 
in  Tony  Schil'fman  of  Carolina. 
Thes?  two  aces  have  dueled  in 
the  220  and  440  froestylcs  all 
year,  with  Nauss  the  eventual 
winner  ea'jh  time. 

His  win  over  Schiffman  last  Sat- 
urday in  the  440  was  by  far  the 
closest  yet.  with  Nauss  t  ;uching 
Ralph  Casey's  ace  out  by  a  hand* 
lenjjth.  Th's  close  fini.^h  may 
have  given  Schiffman  an  added 
boost,  and  things  could  get 
mighty    hot    tomorrow    niaht.    and 


in  the  440  yard  freestyle  finals 
Saturday   night. 

Each  swimmer  will  be  swim- 
ming against  the  clock  in  the  64 
lap  event,  with  the  winner  being 
decided  on  the  fastest  time.  It 
is  expected  that  enough  men  will 
be  entered  to  necessitate  two 
hcatsi. 

Preliminaries  in  eight  events 
will  begin  at  2:30  Friday  after- 
noon with  the  finals  slated  for  8 
o'clock.  Titles  to  be  decided  to- 
morrow will  be  th?  200  butterfly, 
50  freestyle.  200  backstroke.  220 
frcestylo,  100  brcaststroke.  low 
beard  diving.  200  individual  med- 
lev.  400  vard   freestyle  relay. 


A   SMILING   FRAN 

.  .  .  keys  to  a 


K   McGUIRE 

kingdU/m 


New  Version  of 

« 

a  record  seller 

Arrow's  University  collar  has  been  on 

campus  hit  parade  right  from  the  start, 

now  this  famous  button  down  collar  ( 

center  button  in  back)  is  also  available 

smart  knit  shirt!  Traditional 

Ivy  League  styling 

throughout  in  a  pullover 

model,  offered  in  a 

choice  of  two  placket 

lengths:  7"  (2  buttons) 

12"  (3  buttons).  Available 

in  solid  colors,  checks,  stripes 

and  plaids.  $5.00. 


ARROW 

CASUAL  WEAR 


JOE  QUIGG  I 

sidelined  xii  /iwther  notice 


RECENT 
ADDITIONS 

To  The  Rare  Book  Shelf 

Philosophy  —  One  of  our  distin- 
guished customers  is  thinning  out 
his  collection  of  philosophy.  If 
your  collection  needs  building  up, 
take  a  look  at  our  Recent  Acquisi- 
tions shelf  and  our  97  •  shelf. 

History — \Ve'ce  recently  brought 
in  u  small  collection  of  boots  on 
history.  By  the  time  this  appears, 
some  will  be  gone,  but  it  will  bo 
worth  your  while  to  come  treasure- 
hunting. 

Tecqueville  f—  Also  on  the  Recent 
Acquisitions  shelf,  you'll  find  nice 
copies  of  Democracy  in  America 
and  On  the  State  of  Society  in 
l-Yancc.  At ,  least,  they  are  there 
as  we  write*. 

Novels  —  A  recent  collection  of 
novels  includes  John  Eoten  Cooks, 
Inglis  Fletcher  in  the  limited 
North  Carolina  edition,  and  a  flock 
of  pristine  book  club'^  numbers. 
You'll  find  them  scattered  all  over 
the  Old  Book  Corner,  according  to 
their  value. 

The  Intimate 
Bookshop 

205  E.  Franklin  %\. 

CHAPEL  HILL 

Open  Till  10  P.  M. 


'paiM0se 

to  #vrope 

on  jitudent  ships 

•tMcite  ni  liathiri 
km  f ijf fN 

tk||lfif4  tlawii 
Ii  II  liifucn 

travtl  tiptf  MAtfrti 
fliilif  ftriBii  tfiiitt 

traM'ttlmtit  liiiri 
fi|^(•llltf  itrvlH 
aaj«r  •iriHtii  ^trti 
■Itipia  ftn  fill 


I  ^.   itudtnl  Iravti 


i79|fM4wfly,Mvy«rfc7,«ta.««M 


•  They're  light,  trim, 
comfortable  I  French  Shriner  / 

builds  them  with  painstaking  care,  eren  to 
kand-»euing.  Come  in  and  enjoy  their  eonlort  todUy. 

BLACK   AND   ANTIQUE    BROWN 

GENUINE   CORDOVAN   SLIGHTLY   HIGHER 


f.H?s 


Julian' 


-.^ 


r.^% 


■■ii.. 


Connecticut  General's 
'     Representative 
will  be  on  campus 

March  8       . 

to  interview  Seniors 
for   our 


•      i-:M  ;^-  '-.  , 

Manag 

ement  Training  I 

>  a-      "-'v  "A^*-.-*^.'"""  ' 

1 , ' 
■  > 

in       .-.^■• 

-■'r            •  ■        ,-.> 

'       -i-  -  ■ 

Adminis  tration. 

'      -■                V--  _ 

Actuarial 

i'  .    ' 

-._        -f  Jv-»  • 

\       •    :. 

or           '     , 

7  ./<.>V-J,i     ...  i        .  ». 

Sales  Management 


See  Your    Placement  Director  for  further  information 
about  a  career  with  Connecticut  General.  When  you  do. 
make  a  dkte  to  discuss  your  future  with  our  repreaen- 
tative.      Connecticut  General  Life  Insurance    Company 
Hartford. 

P.S.    Job  offers  arc  made  to  qualified  college  men  re- 
gardless of  their  nnilitary  status. 


..-•# 


WEATHER 

Cloudy  and  continued  cool  with 
•n  oxpoctod   high  of  45. 


1 

STar  Heel 


Di  G 

Honor  council  candidatos  should 
havtf>  to.  See  oditorial,   pago  2. 


V6I..  LVIi.  NO.  106 


Comviete  ^/P)  Win  SftMM 


CHAPEL  HILL,  NORTH  CAROLINA.  FRIDAY,  MARCH  1,  1957 


Offices   in   Graham   Memoftai 


FOUR  PAGES  THIS  ISSUE 


Integration  Issue 
Being  Kept  Silent 

Florida  University  Students 
Making  Study  On  This  Campus 

A  study  ol  racial  iiitegratu)!!  at  Carolina  beinp;  ronducted 
by  a  ornup  ol  eii^ht  people  Ironi  the  I'liiversity  ol  Florida 
!i  IS  been  blanketed  in  silence. 

According  to  the  groups  leader,  Florida  Student  fiody 
I'resident  I  Icicher  llennn;:;.  the  acii\iiies  ol  the  ,u;roup  are 
not  bein;:^  leUau^d  to  the  press  to  insure  (oniplete  coopera- 
tion Ironj  the  people  ihe\   are  interviewing;. 

^'esteI<lav  morninr^  the  "roup  spent  about  an  hour  in 
Chain elloi  House's  ollice  and  had  lunch  with  Dr.  (iuv  John- 
son ol  iIk  Sociolonry  Depi.  :iud  his  wile,  Dr.  (iuion  Johnson. 
Vhev   also   t:dkcd    to    live  other  members  ol   the   Cniversiiy 


.staff.  * 

In  the  Florida  group  are  Flem- 
in  ':,  Tom  Byrd.  president,  Florida 
Ela.'  Key:  Steve  Sessums.  vice 
p:'i»&:dont,  FMorida  Blue  Key;  Jim 
Kaulntaii  a.sst.  to  the  president 
of  t+i:'  .student  body;  Murray  Wili- 
ijiiis.  clerk,  student  honjr  court; 
Lloyd  Russell.  commissioner. 
P'esid.nfs  cabinet;  William  E. 
Rioii,  director.  Florida  Union  and 
^liss  Marna  V.  Brtdy.  dean  of 
women.  ; 

Flemincj  said  during  his  prepara- 
t  ry  visit  to  Chapel  Hill  last  month 
that  the  purpos?  of  the  trip  was 
neither   to   hasten   nor  hinder  in-   guard  at  the  door  of  the  stacks  to 


Israel  Talks  Today 

UNITED  NATIONS.  N.  Y.  ^A^. 
—  Israel  will  inform  the  General 
Assembly  today  that  she  will  with- 
draw troops  completely  from  Egypt 
and  the  Gaza  Strip,  a  high  diplo- 
matic source  reported  last  night. 

I     The  source,  who  has  been  clo.se 
'  to  the  negotiation^,  said  Lvael  may 
include   some   qualifying    assump- 
tions in  making  the  announcement. 
The    informant    did    not    specify 

what  these  would  be. 

He  said  Israel  would  announce 
the  plans  to  pull  out  of  the  Gulf  ol 

,      (See  WOULD  NEWS.  Page  3) 


Librcry  Starts 
Permit  Check 

The  Library  began  Tuesday  the 
spot  checking  of  LD.  cards  and 
stack   permits. 

0.  V.  Cook,  associate  librarian, 
said  that  this  was  only  a  routine 
check  t  .  be  sur?  that  all  the  stack 
permits  are  in  order.  He  went  on 
to  say  that  the  Library  of  Congress 
and    the    Harvard    Library    had    a 


No  Siti^s 


t'gratin    at   Florida. 


check   brieicasrs.   but  the  Library 


The  group  is  talking  to  people  j  here  was  planning  no  such  action 
on  both  sides  of  the  racial  integra- 


tion issue.  Yesterday  afternoon 
they  spoke  with  a  group  of  pro- 
segregation  students. 

One  of  the  students  told  the 
group  that  integration  will  come 
and  nothing  can  be  done  about 
it.  "Hie  student  said  as  long  as  there 
are  only  three  Negroes  in  the  Uni- 
versity there  won't  be  any  trouble. , 
but  if  a  thousand  applied,  overt  I 
activity  on  the  part  of  the  students 
would    take    place.  j 

La.st  nighl  three  Negro  students ' 
m?t  with  the  group.  Sometime  dur- ; 
ing  the  group's  three-day  stay 
they  will  interview  student  lead- 
ers, graduates  who  were  in  the 
University  in  1951  and  '52  when 
the  first  Negro  graduate  students 
were  admitted,  and  Consolidated 
University  President  William  FYi- 
dav. 

Co-sponsoring  the  trip  is  the 
Florida  student  government  and 
the  YMCA. 

All  Fleming  would  say  about 
the  grouo's  progress  yesterday 
was  a  closely  guarded  comment 
that  the  peopl*  they  had  talked 
to  were  cooperative. 

Dr.  Johnson  told  the  group  at 
lunch  yesterday  that  "American 
integration  in  higher  education  is 
working  smoothly." 


"The  library  has  three  main 
functions,  to  acquire  books,  to 
preserve  the  bo.oks  and  to  insure 
the  proper  use  of  them.  This  check- 
ing is  part  of  the  preservation 
function.  We  have  had  some  cases 
in  the  past  where  people  were  in 
the  stacks  who  were  not  .connect- 
ed with  the  University."  Cook 
said. 

"Sonne  of,  tbe3e  l>«opl«  repttttti  ' 
bo  >ks    in  rm    wrong    places    and 
took  some  out  without  registering 
for  the  check."  Cook  stated. 
them  properly.  This  is  the  reason  ' 


KAFAH,  Gaza  Strip— (AP)—  Is- 
raeli forceii  in  the  Gaza  Jtrip  show 
no  signs  01  preparing  for  a  with- 
drawal, and  the  Israeli  military 
governor  of  the  area  said  Thurs- 
day he  has  neither  plans  nor  or- 
■  ders  ti  pull  out.  Reports  of  an 
'  agreement  in  Washington  for  an 
Israeli  withdrawal  from  the  strip 
failed  to  raise  much  optimism 
j?ither  in  Rafah,  Jerusalem  or  Cai- 
ro. 

"The  last  thing  in  my  mind  is 
to  leave,"  said  Col.  Matityahu  Pe- 
led.  the  33-year-old  military  gov- 
ernor. "We  haven't  planned  it  yet." 
he  added.  "It  would  take  some 
time." 

U.  S.  Convinced 

WASHINGTON  —  (AP)  —  The 
paralyzing  crisis  over  Israeli  Troop  i 
withdrawal  appeared  last  night  to ! 
be     broken.     American     official.s 
were  convinced  that  within  a  fe-w  | 
6nys  Israel  will  pull  its  froces  out 
of    the    Gaza    Strip    and    the    Gulf 
of  Aqaba  area. 


GAA  Board  Takes  No  Action 
On  Securing  New  Directors- 
Committee  To  Handle  Search 

Letter  Of  Explanation 
To  Arrive  From  Henry 


FINAL    REHEARSAL    FOR    'BRIGADOON' 

. . .   before   opening   iiight 


Raorganized 


Weatherman 
Says,  Switch 
To  Overcoats 


BUDAPEST.  Hungary— (AP>— 
The  Hungarian  cabinet  and  Com- 
munist Party  have  been  reorgan- 
ized. An  announcement  Thursday 
said  the  changes  were  meant  to 
strengthen  the  nation's  leader- 
ship. 


Sound  And  Fury  Tryouts  To  Be 
On  March  5;  Characters  Needed 

By   MARY    MOORE   MASON         ;  student.s  to  fill   these  rolca.  John    "Ludwig.    director    of     the 

Do  you  remember  how  louch  Perhaps  a  student  would  like  to  j  mu.-lcal,  says,  "this  being  a  mu.si- 
fun  Sound  and  Fury'  was  last  year  play  Igor,  a  deposed  Russian  count  i  cal  comed.v,  everj'one  should  be 
when  Pee-Wee  Batten  and  Jack  and  a  jewel  thief;  Marina,  his  exo  I  able  to  sing  a  little,  but  we  arc 
Sponer  got  lost  in  the  wilds  of  tic  mistress;  or  Bhrudah,  Igor's  not  looking  so  much  for  superb 
.South  .\merica?  Balkan     stooge.     Then     there    are  [  voices  as  for  people  with  enthusi- 

Even   more   fun    is   in   store    for    other   characters   ju^^    as   interest-    asm  who  enjoy  singiny  " 
this  spring  when    Sound  and  Fury'    ing  «f  not  as  cosmopolitan. 

There  are  Jack,  Larry,  and  Betty 
Ann,  three  gay  college  students  not 
so  innocently  involved  in  a  dia- 
mond   robbery,  "^and    Betty    Ann's 


The  Graham  .Memorial  Board  of  Director.s  took  no  ac- 
tion Thursday  conrernin,^  future  plans  to  serine  a  permanent 

fUre(tf)r. 

liitine  a(ti\ity  in  connedion  uith  this  will  be  in  the 
hands  of  the  personnel  committee,  a  permanent  j^oiip  con- 
sisting of  two  faculty  members  and  three  students  on  the 
board. 

Moward  Hcnrv  of  the  I'niversity  of  Wisconsin,  who  was 
hired    rc(entlv   to   become   the   permanent   director   of  CiM, 
I  turned  down  the  offer  Wedne.sda-N.  , 

Dr.  WilLiam  Pr)teat.  faculty  member  on  the  GM   Board 

!  of  l)ne{  tors,  received  a  telegram  Tuesday  nioht  from  Henry 

\\hi(  h  said  he  planned  to  remain   in  his  present  "position  as 

assistant  director  of  the  Wisconsin  rni\ersitv  student  tinion. 

♦ ■ ♦     Howard   offered   no   explanation 

for  his  action  in  the  telegram  but 
said  a  letter  would  follow.  Dr.  Po- 
teat  said  Thursday  he  expected  the 
letter  to  arrive  soon,  possibly  to- 
day. 

The  GM  Board  of  Directors  had 
nominated  Henry  for  the  position. 
He  was  offered  the  job  at  $8,000 
•per  year. 

'    Howard    rejected    an    invitation 

last  spring  to  eome  here  for  rea- 

Tonight   the    Carolina   Playmak-    sons   of   salary     and     other     dif- 

ers  will   present  the  first  of  their    ferences. 


Playmakers 

To  Present 

Brigadoon 


Budget  Is  Now 
Being  Prepared 

The  Student  Government  bud- 
get for  1957-58  is  now  being 
prepared,  according  to  John  Kerr, 
treasurer  of  the  student  govern- 
ment. Any  organization  wishing 
to  come  under  the  budget  should 
contact  him  immediately  at  Gra- 
ham Memorial. 


Spring  has  retreated  and  winter  ■ ' 
is   returning,   or  so  says   the   Ra-  i 
leigh-Durham  Weather  Station.        i  ' 

The  weather  forecast  for  Friday, 
is  not  quite  the  same  as  the  fore-  ' 
casts  of  the  last  few  days.  It's  go-  ' 
ing  to  be  cold  and  cloudy,  but ' 
something  different  has  been  add- ; 
ed.  No  rain.  ! 

A  change  in  air  masses  has  re- 1 
suited  in  lower  temperatures  and  ; 
rising  winds  'forecast  for  Raleigh-  ' 
Durham  and  vicinity.  j 

Average  rainfall  for  February  I 
has  been  exceeded  by  V*  inch,  the ! 
bureau  said. 

So  hang  up  the  raincoats  and  | 
take  the  overcoat  back  out  of  moth  j 
balls,  it's  going  to  be  a  little  chilly  ; 
around  Chapel  Hill  in  the  next  few  j 
days.  j 


tN  THE  INFIRMARY 


Students  in  th»  Infirmary  yes- 
terday included:  Missee  Ddrethy 
f^itntan,  Mar9«r«t  Smith,  Nancy 
Suitt,  Erma  Dane*,  Carol  Flem- 
ing,   Helen    Yatts;    and    Ralph 
Johnson,   Reb«r^  Brannan,   Rob- 
Art  Lewis,'  Ja<kl*  Coe|>er,  Jerry 
White,  Richard  Alexander,  John 
Fneden,    John    Christian,    John   i 
Smith,    Frederick    Hutton,    John    ! 
Andrews,   Robert   Babb,  Willard 
Bagwell,    Donald    Corbin,    Paul   | 
Willingham,      James      Magness,   \ 
James   Moss.    Artderw    Johnson,   | 
Donald  Kento#t,  BAnjamin  Levy, 
Stephen    Honeycutt,   Paul    Elam,  I 
Vincent  MuUeri,  Kennis  Grogan,   | 
Robert  Creighton. 


presents  "Thieves'  Holiday",,  an 
original  student  written  musical 
comedy  which  hao*  as  its  setting 
New  Orleans  during  Mardi  Gras. 

The  script  has  been  written,  the  •"Auntie'"  dedicated  to  putting  the 
music  has  already  been  tape  re-  damper  on  anything  so  vulgar  as 
corded,  and  tht  choreographers  are  a  jewel  thief.  And  of  course, 
hard  at  work.  But  —  "Thieves';  "Thieves'  Holiday"  wouldn't  be 
Holiday'"  still  lacks  something,  complete  without  "The  Incompar- 
What  is  it? 


Tryouts  will  be  on  March  5 
from  4  to  6  p.m.  and  from  7  to 
9  p.m.  in  Memorial  Hall,  accord- 
ing to  Nancy  Stephens,  produc- 
er. Scripts,  she  said,  may  be  ob- 
tained at  the  Information  Desk 
in   Graham    Memorial. 

But   what   if   an   interested   stu- 
dent's talent  or  his  .vpirit   doesn't 


three  performances  of  the  full- 
scale      musical.     "Brigadoon",    .in 

:  Memorial  Hall  at  4:30.  The  pro- 
duction is  tinder  the  direction  of 
Foster    Fitz-Simon.':,    Dramatic    Art 

■  professor,  and  Wilton  fWason.  Mus- 
ic professor,  and  includes  a  cast 
of  more  than  sixty,  representing 
fourteen    states. 

According  to  Playmakers  Busi- 
ness .Manager  John  W.  Parker,  con- 
trary to  rumor  the  show  will  def- 
initely not  be  held  over  Monday 
eveni.ig.  There  are  still  600  .seats  ' 
availaiile  for  each  of  the  three 
performances,    tonight,     tomorrow 


APPROVAL 

The     Universit>     approved     the 

hiring  of  Henry  Feb.   12.  Dr.  Po- 

teat   sent  him   the   offer  with  the 

endorsement    of    Chancellor    Rob- 

:  erf  B.  House.  Director  of  Student 

Affairs    Sitm    Magill    and    William 

:  D.    Perry,    chairman    of   the    divis- 

i  ion  of  student  affairs. 

In  the  offer,  Poteat  said  "I  do 
not  believe  there  is  a  more  ex- 
citing place  in  America  for  some- 
one to  come  in  and  build  a  new 
union  program  plant." 
.STRANGE  CALL 

An    unnamed    spokesman    said 
Thursday  Director  of  Student  Ai- 


available  for  tonight  and  Sunday, 
he  said. 


Reserved  seats  may  be  purchased 
able  Kalantan"',  a  strip  teaser;  her  ;  run  along  the  acting  or  singing  (S2.00)  or  exchanged  for  season 
It  lacks  approximately  15  leads,  manager,  Joey  Puccini;  and  the  :  line?  What  could  be  more  fun  than  ticket  stubs  at  214  Abcrnethy  Hall 
20  singers  and  ^ancers,  and  10  to  sleuthing  of  four  of  the  most '  to  work  on  the  New  Orleans  sets, .  or  Ledbetter-Pickard.  The  box  of- 
15  extras,  non-singing  role.-. ;  bumbling  detectives  To  ever  cross  the  lighting,  or  the  gay  Mardi  Gras  fice  at  Memorial  Hall  opens  at  7 
'Sound    and    Fury'    needs    U.N.C.  i  a  stage  |  costumes.  .  pm. 


and  Sunday.  The  best   tickets  are    fairs  Magill  called   Henry  on  the 

telephone  after  the  telegram  ar- 
rived and,  under  strange  circum- 
stances, failed  to  get  in  touch  with 
him. 

The  spokesman  said  Henry  answ- 
ered the  telephone,  learned  Chapel 
Hill  was  calling  and  had  his  wife 
come  to  the  phone  to  tell  the  caller 
he  was  not  at  home. 


FOUR  ACQUITTED: 


Three  Convicted  By  Honor  Council 


GM'S  SLATE 


Nash  To  Talk 
To  Graduates 
On  March  15 

Dr.  Arnold  Nash  of  the  Dept. 
of  Religion  will  be  the  guest 
speaker  at  the  UNC  Graduate 
Club  meeting  on  Friday.  March 
1.5  at  8  p.m.  The  meeting  will  be 
held  in  Roland  Parker  Lounge. 

The  program  is  open  to  all  grad- 
uate students  of  the  University, 
all  undergraduates  over  21.  grad- 
uates who  no  longer  attend  UNC. 
and   registered   nurses. 

The  UNC  Graduate  Club  released 
the  results  of  recent  board  elec- 
tions yesterday. 

The  officers  and  members  elect- 
i'<l  are  as  follows:  president  Bill 
Deaton,  vice-president  Bob  Grain, 
treasure  Bob  Rennick.  The  office 
of  secretary  has  not  yet  been  filled. 

Members  of  the  board  are  Miss 
Jackie  McCarthy,  Miss  Barbara 
Wadsworth,  Miss  Eleanor  Riggins. 
Miss  Doris  Parker,  Herb  Shellans, 
George  Crevar,  Tom  Donnelly.  Miss 
Barbara  Battle,  and  Miss  Pam 
Jewett. 


Legislature  Endorses 
Pay  Raise  For  Faculty 


I  By    NEIL    BASS 

I  The  Student  Legislature  last 
night  passed  unanimously  a  resolu- 
tion urging  General  Assembly  pass- 
age of  the  University  administra- 
tion's proposed  ten-percent  pay 
hike  in  faculty  salaries. 

Student  lawmaker.^,  who  also 
stamped  approval  on  a  new  Elec- 
tions Law,  met  for  three  solid 
hours. 

EJxcept  for  sessions  devoted  to 
consideration  of  student  govern- 
ment's $100,000-plus  budget,  this 
was  one  of  the  longest  on  record. 

YOUNG'S   ADDRESS 

I  Prior  to  the  l^egislature's  ap- 
proval of  the  salary  increase  fOr 
faculty  memt)ers.  President  Bob 
Young  delivered  an  address  ex- 
plaining what  he  called  a  Unlver- 

'.  sity  "crisis." 

Young  explained  how  eighty- 
'  seven  persons  had  left  the  Univer- 
•  sity,  44  connected  with  the  Division 
of  Academic  Affairs  and  43  with 
the  Division  of  Health  Affairs,  pri- 
marily because  of  "increased  ^la- 


ry"  inducement"  from  other  groups 
and  educational  institutions. 

Young  urged  that  legislators  and 
students  in  general  write  General 
Assemblymen  and  endorse  passage 
of  the  ten-percent  hike  in  faculty 
salaries 

tLECTIONS  LAW  j 

After  more  than  two  hours  de- 
liberation, lawmakers  approved  a 
newly  propoirt'd  Elections  Laws 
which  incorporated  these  changes: 

(1)  fHimination  of  run-offs  ex- 
cept in  the  case  of  absolute  tie 
votes  for  student  government  of- 
ficials except  the  four  major  camp- 
os-wide  officers.  Run-offs  will  be 
held  for  these  four  posts  unless 
candidates  receive  a  majority 
of  ballots  caoi. 

This  virtually  eliminates  run-off 
elections  since  only  two  candidates 
usually  run  for  each  of  the  four 
major  campus  offices,  and  cases 
of  absolute  tie  vote  for  other  of- 
fices are  few. 

(2)  Ele(<tion  of  all  class  officers 
in  the  fill  election  except  senior 
clasi  officers. 


One  student  has  been  convicted 
of  plagiarism  and  two  of  cheat- 
ing, according  to  a  report  released 
yesterday  by  the  Men's  Honor 
Council.  I 

A  sentence  ot  probation  was  j 
handed  down  in  the  plagiarism  j 
case,  and  sentences  of  one-.semes-  j 
ter  suspension  in  the  cheating  i 
cases.  I 

Four  other  students  accused  of  | 
cheating  were  found  not  guilty  by  i 
the  Honor  Council. 

The  report     issued     by     Honor  j 
Council   Chairman  Jim  Exum  yes- 
terday is  as  follows: 

(1)  A  student  pled  guilty  and 
was  convicted  for  plagiarism.  It 
was  found  that  he  plagiarized  on--j 
ly  a  small  part  of  a  book  report 
which  was  concerned  with  giving 
a  biographical  .sketch  of  the  auth- 
or. He  had  looked  up  the  mater- 
ial on  the  author  in  the  library 
and  had  copied  parts  of  his  ref- 
erences verbatim.  The  student 
seemed  to  be  unaware  that  he 
would  be  "fooling"  his  professor 
since,  he  testified,  the  professor 
should  know  that  he.  the  student, 
did  not  know  anything  about  the 
author  and  would  have  to  look  up 
such  information.  Practically  all 
of  what  was  plagiarized  was  Very 
condensed  .statements  concerning 
the  author  of  the  books  place  and 
date  of  birth,  colleges  attended, 
etc. 

BecaiLse  of  the  nature  of  the 
material  plagiarized  and  the  sin- 
cere attitude  of  the  defendent, 
the  Council  decided  to  give  a  sen- 
tence of  probation  rather  than  the 
normal    suspension    sentence    for  | 


ordinary  plagiarism.  The  sort  of 
material  the  defendent  used  would 
have  been  difficult  to  reword, 
and  no  important  ideas,  as  such, 
were  stolen. 

(2)  Two  students  were  brought 
before  the  Council  for  possible 
collab.nration  on  quiz  due  to  cer- 
tain similarities  on  their  papers. 
The  similarities,  however,  were 
insufficient  to  convict  the  students 
and  both  were  found  not  guilty  by 
the  Council  as  they  pled. 

(3)  Two  students  were  accused 
before    the    Council    for    possible  | 
collaboration  on  a  quiz.  Both  pled  j 
not    guilty.    After  extensive   ques-  , 
tioning   by   the   Council,   however, 
one    of    the    defendants    admitted 
that  near  the  end  of  the  quiz  the 
other    student    involved    laid     his 
paper   down   on    his   desk    and   he 
copied  one  of  his  answers.  It  was 
a   pop  quiz  and  the  student  testi- 
fied   h?    only   copied    one    answer 
and  that  the  student  whose  paper 
he   copied   knew     notliing     about 
this. 

The    student    who    copied    was 


found  guilty  and  suspended  for  one 
full  semester.  The  other  student 
was   acquitted. 

(4)  Two  students  were  brought 
befoce  the  Council  for  possible  col- 
laboration on  a  quiz.  Both  students 
pled  not  quilty  of  the  charge. 

Several  character  and  material 
witnes.ses  were  heard  in  behalf  of 
both  defendents. 


Both  students  were  questioned. 
After  considerable  cross-examina- 
tion by  the  Council  one  of  the 
students  confessed  that  he  had  cop- 
ied from  the  paper  of  the  other 
who  knew  nothing  about  it.  The 
student  who  confessed  was  found 
guilty  and  suspended  from  schotol 
for  one  full  semester.  The  other 
student  was  acquitted*. 


Activities  in  Graham  Memori- 
al today  include: 

Student  Government,  2-4,  Grail 
Room:  Student  Government,  4-6, 
Grail  Room;  Daily  Tar  Heol 
Staff,  2-3,  Roland  Parker  Lounge 
No.  1;  .  Constitution  Revision 
Committoo,  2-5,  Roland  Parker 
Lounge  No.  2;  Sophomore  Class 
Officers,  5  pm.,  Woodhouse  Con- 
ference Keom;  Dept.  of  D.A., 
2-4,   Rendezvous   Room. 


Bring  Your  Dishpans  With  You 


YW  Interviews 

Interviews  for  executive  of- 
fices in  the  YWCA  have  been 
extended  to  Monday,  March,  4, 
2-5  p.m.  according  to  YWCA 
President   Martha   Richardson. 

The  offices  include  president, 
vice  president,  secretary,  trea- 
surer, program  chairman,  and 
membership   chairman. 

Interviewees  will  be  notified 
whether  they  have  been  approv- 
ed Wednesday. 


Pep  rallies  will  be  staged  be- 
fore and  after  the  Duke-Carolina 
basketball  game  tonight,  accord- 
ing to  head  cheerleader  Jim  By- 
num. 

Bynum  has  requested  that  all 
students  come  to  the  gym  with 
noisemakers  .  . .  from  bugles  to 
dishpans  ....  to  give  the  Tar  Heels 
a  send  off  when  they  leave  for 
Durham  at  6:15  thus  evening. 

"The  team  is  expected  to  re- 
turn at  10:30,  and  everyone  should 
be  at  the  gym  to  welcome  the  re- 
turning team  after  its  24th  \ic- 
tory."  stated  Bynum. 

Bynum  said.  '"We'll  welcome  the 
team  hack  with  a  gala  celebra- 
tion, after  which  we  will  return 
quietly  to  our  dorms.  " 

This  is  Bynum's  last  game  as 
head  cheerleader. 


JIM  BYNUM 

a  cheerleader's  sican  song 


BLUE-WHITE    DATE    SET 

The  annual  Blue-WTiite  football 
game  which  climaxes  spring  foot- 
ball practice  at  the  University  of 
North  Carolina  has  been  schedul- 
ed for  March  16 


II 


i»Aot  rwo 


THE  DAILY   TAH  Hfft 


FRIDAY,  MARCH  1,  1957 


FRIDAY 


Honor  Council  Candidates 
Should  Be  Screened  Well 

It  is  oettiiig  lo  be  spring  election  time,  and  that  means  members  of 
next  year's  honor  coiuicils  will  be  running  for  office. 

If  tradition  holds,  there  will  not  be  a  very  large  field  for  honor 
council  candidates.  W'p  would  like  to  suggest  that  there  be  a  huge  field. 

There  shoidd  be  a  great  nimiber  of  candidaaes,  and  the  electorate 
should  cjuestion  those  candidates  on  every  possible  tenet  of  honor  and 
justi(e. 


There  l)a\e  been  a  great  many 
cases  of  stupiditv  on  the  honor 
coimcils  this  year.  Those  cases 
should  not  be  lepeated  next-\ear 
Metnl)ers  iuue  dis;  .;reed  with  each 
other  and  with  the  rule  book  on 
what  (onstitutcs  a  campus  crime, 
and  thev  ha\e  been  guilty  of  over- 
looking their  own  operating  rules 
in  bringing  students  to  ti  iai  unfair- 
ly. 

Tfjcre  is  [jracticailv  no  margin 
for  erroi  in  the  judicial  pnKcdure 
hetc  oi  anvwhere  else.  Of  all  the 
funt  lions   of  goxevnnient.    the   ju- 


dicirry  sliould  have  the  least  lee- 
wav.  But  this  >car  the  honor  coun- 
cils ha\e  been  wrong  too  many 
times. 

The  i)lame.  of  course,  always  lies 
in  the  people  who  are  elected.  It 
their  records,  their  standpoints  and 
theii  feelings  are  examined  before 
their  election,  perhaps  less  could 
go  wrong  with  Carolina's  honor 
svstem. 

The  mt)ve  (audid;.:es.  the  more 
rjucstions,  the  Ijetter  system. 


The  Project  Is  Unwise  One 


1  he  DaiK  lar  Heel  iccls  that 
ihc  idea  of  piuting  f(M)tball  play- 
ers, or  am  athletes,  in  speci.".l 
dormitories  is  a  vcrv 'iniwise  one. 

We  hojX'  thai  W'illi.nii  .Xyccnk. 
who  will  be  chaiuelloi  next  veai. 
will  remember  that  present  Chan- 
cellor Robert  House  said  the  plan 
is  only  a  "trial  project."  and  that 
he  will  not  hesitate  to  stop  the 
plan  if  it  results  in  anything  but 
good  for  the  academic  side  of  the 
I'niversity. 

Theie  are  at  least  two  indica- 
tions that  the  plan  has  created  con.- 
fusion  in  South  Building  since 
Chancellor  House  first  announced 
it   a  couple  oi  months  ago. 

F"or  one  thing,  it  was  originallv 
announced  that  the  members  ot 
the  football  team  woidd  live  "next 
to  eaih  other.'*  Thev  woidd  move 
in  "as  Aacancies  occur, "  said  Chan- 
(cUor  House. 

Last  week  the  chancellor  said  the 
players  won't  be  segregated  into 
anv  particular  wing  of  the  dormi- 
tcjrv. 

•  *  * 

Si^oiidly,  the  idea  oL  having 
"cotinselois.  "  supported  by  the 
Athletic  Assn..  living  in  the  dorm- 
itories is  apparently  an  acknowl- 
edgement of  the  fact  that  the  pres- 
ent dormitory  svstem  of  advisors 
and  donnitorv  managers^  is  not 
working.  If  it  were,  there  would  be 
no  need  for  the  .\tWetic  Associa- 
tion's "counseloTs.V 

There  is  at  least  one  more  rezr 
on  why  the  svstem  is  unwise.  It 
means  f(X)tball  players  are  being 
treated  unlike  other  students. 

.South  Building  officials  an.swer 
this  argument  by  saying,  "But  they 
aren't  getting  better  treatment. 
They  are  getting  mere  discipline 
than  the  other  stiid^ns."  And  our 
answer  is  this: 

If  the  I'nivcrsity  of  North  Car- 
olina at  Chapel  Hill  can't  produce 
a  football  team,  fither  a  winning 
one  or  a   losing  one.  and  at  the 

The  Daily  Tar  Heel 

Tbe  official  jtadeni  pibiicatioo  of  tbe 
Publications  Board  of  tbe  University  of 
Nortb  Caxoliaa,  wbere  it  is  published 
daily  except  llonday  and  examinatio; 
and  vacation  periods  and  summer  terms 
Entered  as  second  class  matter  in  tht 
poft  office  in  Chapel  lllll,  N.  C  ,  undt. 
the  Act  oi  March  8,  UBO  Subscriptioc 
rates:  mailed.  $4  per  yeapr,  $2  50  a  spmes 
ter;  delivAred.  $6  a  yean,  $350  a  seme* 
ter. 


Editor 


FRKD  POWLEDGE 


Maruging  Editor 


CHARLIE  SIOAN 


News  Editor 


Sports  Editor 
Business   Maniiger 


NANCY  HILL 

LARRY  CHEEK 

Bn.L  BOB  PLEI 

Advertising  Manager         FRLD  KATZIN 

EDITOKIAL  S'lAI-F  -  AooUy  bearr 
Frank  Crother,  David  Mundy. 

NEWS  STAFF— Clarke  Jones.  Pringle 
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bFsINESS  STAFF— Rosa  Moore,  Johnaj 
Whitaker,   Dick  Leavitt.  • 


SPORTS    STAFF:    Dave    Wible.   Stewart 
Bird,  Ron  Milliagn. 


Dale  Stalej 
CbarUe  Holt 

Assistant  Sports  Edit«^ -Bill  King 


Subscription  Manager 
Circulation  Manager 


Staff  Photographer 

Librarian 


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^ue  Gishncr 


Night  News  Editor  _:.-:  Fred  Powledge 

Proof  Reader — Guy  Ellis 

Night  Editor Graham  Snyder 


.same  time  allow  its  tootball  play- 
ers to  live,  eat,  sleep,  studv,  dale 
and  go  to  the  movies  w-ith  the  rest 
of  the  student  bodv.  theu  the  loot- 
l)all  Irani  i^  uoi  i\-ori\srutalivc  ol 
the  Universitv.  and  the  University 
should  stop  saying  it  is. 

Having  "counselors"  in  the 
dormitories  for  a  special  gToup  ot 
people,  whether  they  be  athletes 
or  members  of  the  Debate  Squad, 
is  verv  uiiAvise.  iu  our  opinion.  It 
is  about  as  unwise  as  segre«[ating 
that  special  gioup  even  more  from 
the  rest  of  the  student  lx)dy. 

Let's  Work  - 
On  Henry 
For  Union 

If  e\er  the  University  needed  a 
professional,  permanent  student 
union  director,  the  time  is  now. 

-And  right  now  it  looks  as  if 
-the  top  ^oice  for  a  director;  How- 
ard Henry  from  tbe  University  of 
Wisconin,  is  planning  to  turn 
down   Carolina's  offer. 

Henry's  name  first  came  up  last 
spring  when  it  was  known  James 
Wallace  would  resign  his  director- 
ship. A  few  members  of  the  Grah- 
am Memorial  Board  of  Directors 
visited  Wisconsin  and  came  back, 
very  happy  about  Henry.  Later, 
Henry  came  down  here  and  look- 
ed over  the  building  and  program. 
He  appeared  pleased.  Carolina 
people  appeared  pleased  with  Hen- 
ry, 

Henry  was  offered  the  job,  and 
he  turned  it  down.  He  listed  his 
objections.  For  the  most  part,  they 
were  corrected.  Anotlter  offer  was 
made.  Hcurv  filed  l^NC  authori- 
ties a  telegram  this  week,  saying 
hi  didnt   think  he  would  come. 

\ti.  (iraham  Memorial  student 
officials  feel  there  is  a  chance 
Henry  may  chang^e  his  mind  and 
(i)MK'   to  Carolina. 

*  *  • 

It  is  right  now  that  the  Uni- 
versitv—students  and. South  Build- 
iug  offiiials— should  talk  and  write 
to  Heury  ami  talk  him  into  com- 
ing dowu  to  manage  the  student 
union.  It  is  in  rel; -ivelv  sad  shape, 
.uu\  onlv  a  (Uceiitlv-paid.  profess- 
ional and  jxrmanent  director  can 
turn  it   into  a  line  student  union. 

Preview 
On  Video: 
Art,  Abbe 

Anthony  Wolff 

For  the  i;,  minutes  starim;  ;;! 
7:;{o  p.m..  Xavier  Cugat  and  wile- 
\(Kalist  .Vbbe  Lane  will  be  on 
Channtl  ;,.  It  might  be  interesting 
to  tinn  off  the  sound  and  watcli 
Abbe. 

If  you  can  forgo  this  experience, 
you  might  be  interested  in  the  do- 
ings on  Channel  4  at  this  hour. 
"How  Real  Is  Real"  is  the  m^an- 
ingle.si  title  of  this  show,  which 
purports  to  l>e  an  inquii7  ^nio 
some  of  the  mysteries  of  so-called 
"modern  art." 

Friday  is  always  a  quiet  night  for 
television,  but  tonight  is  an  ex- 
ception. At  ii:o5  on  Channel  2 
Charlie  Chan  encounters  some  no- 
torious smugglers.  I  assume  that 
Choily  comes  out  on  top. 


Creative  Spirit  In  Chapel  Hill: 
Opportunities  And  Challenges 


Dr.  J.  C.  Sitterson 

Dr.  J.  Carlyle  Sitttrson  is 
d«an  of  th«  Gellag*  of  Arts  and. 
Scioncos  h«r*,  and  a  professor 
in  the  History  Dept.  H*  deliver- 
•d  this  speech  this  weeic  to  the 
PhUanthropic  Literary  Society, 
•ne  of  Carolina's  two  debating 
organizations. 

t  am  very  happy  to  have  an 
opportunity  to  be  with  you,  for 
this  Important  occasion.  It  seems 
to  me  that  you  in  the  Phi  Society 
and  in  the  Di  Senate  are  an  illu- 
stration of  liberal  education  at 
work.  For  you  take  from  the 
classroom,  the  library  and  the 
laboratory  the  knowledge  that 
you  find  ttjere.  and  put  it  to 
work  in  the  discussion  of.  and 
the  solution  of,  the  critical  is.,uts 
of  our  time;  in  so  doing,  you 
show  what  I  believe  to  be  the 
essential  practicality  of  liberal 
education. 

I    heve   chosen    this    evening 
te  tclk  with  you  about  a  mat- 
ter  which    I    beJieve   to   be    of 
greet   significance    in    the    re- 
cent  past,    the    present    and    I 
hope  the  future  of  this  univer- 
sity —  nanteiy,     the     creative 
spirit    in    Chepel    Hill. 
If  there  is  one  thing  mote  than 
another  for  w-hich  this  universi- 
ty has  become  known   it  is  as  the 
hospitable  home  of  the  creative 
spirit — that  quality  of  the  human 
mind  which  leads  man  to  pursue 
his  total  perfection.  In  the  quest 
he  meets  both  evil  and  good;  he 
is  frustrated,  but  he  is  also  en 
Qobled  in  the  process. 

-Over  the  past  two  generations. 
the  creative  spirit  here  in  Chap- 
el Hill  has  been  productive  of 
many  of  the  finest  examples  of 
contributions  of  the  University  to 
the  life  of  the  state  and  to  the 
welfare  of  man.  Obviously,  in 
the  few  minutes  that  we  have  be 
fore  us,  I  can  mention  only  a 
few  of  them,  and  those  fe^'.  all 
too  briefly. 

But  let  u.s  for  a  moment  think 
of  what  happened  in  ^he  work  ol 


Thomas  Wolfe  and  Paul  Green — 
Wolfe,  that  remarkable  figure, 
restless,  inquisitive,  always  seek- 
ing the  meaning  of  man's  life, 
not  only  here  in  the  state,  but 
in  all  time,  whom  some  have  re- 
garded as  one  of  the  greatest 
talents  of  our  time;  and  Paul 
Green  who  was  one  of  the  pio- 
neers in  portraying  and  analyz- 
ing the  life  of  the  people  of  our 
region  in  dramatic  form. 
I    think,    too.    of   that    famous 


scienc-e  and  the  vast  researches 
which  the  members  of  that  staff 
have  produced  over  the  past  sev- 
eral decades  and  which  has  giv- 
en to  social  research  at  the  Uni- 
versity of  North  Carolina  a  posi- 
tion of  iminence  throughout  the 
nation. 

And  I  think,  too.  of  the  vision 
of  Louis  R.  Wilson,  in  the  estab- 
lishment of  the  extension  divis- 
ion and  of  the  University  of 
North  Carolina  Press  as  a  med- 


DEAN  SITTERSON 

, .  .  ive  liave  dreams 

the  Carolina  Playmakers,  in 
their  emphasis  upon  the  folk 
drama  of  the  region  under  the 
inspired  leadership  of  the  late 
Prof.  Frederick  Koch.  Out  ol 
this  group,  this  set  of  forces  and 
other  influences,  came  such  pene- 
trating   and  .creative    writers    as 

• 

L'fl  Abner 


zoologist  "Tuggie'*.  Wilson,  that 
stern  taskmaster,  wl|o  has  been 
called  one  of  the  grtat  teachers 
of  his  time,  and  from'whose  class 
rooms  distinguished  scientists 
have  gone  on  to  pursue  truth  irt 
laboratories  in  various  parts  of 
the  nation;  I  think,  too,  of  J.  G. 
deRoulhac  Hamilton,  who  had  a 
dream  of  establishing  here  at 
Chapel  Hill  a  great  collection  of 
source  material  from  which  the 
real  history  of  the  South  should 
someday  be  written. 

That  dream  came  to  fruition 
with  the  establishment  of  the 
great  Southern  Historical  Col- 
lection, the  largest  single  col- 
lection of  manuscript  sources  in 
the  history  of  the  South  in 
existence,  and  which  brings 
every  year  to  Chapel  Hill  the 
most  imminent  historians  for  re- 
search. 

Again  I  think  of  the  late 
Howard  W.  Odum,  who  came 
to  Chapel  Hill  in  the  early 
1920't  from  his  native  Georgia^ 
with  •  vision  of  seeing  the  so- 
cial Institutions  of  this  region 
subject  to  investigation  end  an- 
alysis so  that  the  real  truth, 
the  unbiased  facts,  could  be 
gathered  as  a  basis  of  enlight- 
ened action  by  a  growing  and 
developing   region. 

Out  of  this  vision  came  the  In- 
stitute for   Research     in     Social 


ART   IN   CHAPEL   HILL 

.  no  lack  oi  creative  mvnds 


iiim  for  the  publication  of  the 
finding.s  of  research  scholars  so 
that  the  j.ruth  could  become  wide- 
ly disseminated  and  that  it  could 
become  the  basis  of  intelligent 
public  action.  Nor  should  we  in 
Chapel  Hill  ever  forget  the  great 
work  of  Edwin  Greenlaw  in  tak- 
ing the  University's  Graduate 
School  to  a  position  of  leader- 
ship in   the   region. 

Again,  there  is  Albert  Coates, 
a  man  who  has  dedicated  much 
of  his  life  to  the  establishment 
of  the  Institute  of  Goverment 
where  local  officials  could  be- 
come trained  in  the  affairs  of 
government  to  the  better  service 
of  their  communities.  There  are 
many  other  examples,  too  numer- 
ous for  us  to  mention  here  this 
evening. 

But  you  might  well  say  that  all 
of  this  is  in  the  past.  What  of 
the  present?  What  are  the  pres- 
ent opportunities  for  the  creative 
spirit  to  work  here  in  Chapel 
Hill. 

What  are  the  challenges  of 
our  time?  I  hope  you  will  allow 
me  to  point  out  several  areas 
in  which  f  think  there  are  real 
opportunities  for  the  creative 
mind  to  work  here  in  our  day. 

We  have  established  over  on 
the  hill  a  great  Health  Affairs 
division.  Of  course  tKe  physicians 
and  the  scientists  there  will  pur- 


sue their  work  in  the  laboratory 
and  will  discover  new  things  to 
the  greater  benefit  of  man.  But 
that  is  what  scientists  will  be 
doing  everywhere. 

It  seems  to  me  that  they  have 
an  opportunity  also  to  develop 
plans  to  put  medical  science  to 
the  broadest  service  6f  man.  Here 
is  truly  an  area  which  offers  one 
of  the  greatest  challenges  of  our 
time,  for  we  have  yet  to  devise 
a  system  whereby  the  best  of 
medical  service  can  be  taken  to 
those  who  are  in  the  greatest  of 
need. 

If  I  may,  too.  I  should  like  to 
suggest  for  your  thought  the 
honor  system.  We  now  need  to 
find  new  ways  in  which  it  can 
grow  in  effectiveness  and  to  bring 
to  our  heterogenous  student  body 
a  consci'>usness  of  its  values. 
This  seems  to  me  to  offer  a  chal- 
lenging opportunity  for  the  cre- 
ative spirit  to  work  in  the  stu- 
dent body. 

For  it  was  the  students,  above 
all.  who  created  the  honor  sys- 
tem. 

I  'Aould  suggest  too.  that  the 
completion  of  the  Ackland  Gal- 
letry  will  present  the  University 
with  the  opportunity  to  make 
art  a  part  of  our  cultural  educa- 
tion in  the  broader  education  of 
our  i'tudents.  Also  there  is  an 
opportunity  to  continue  our  quiet 
progress  in  bringing  the  Negro 
into  the  benefits  of  university 
education. 

Again,  we  should  give  a  new 
emphasis  to  liberal  education  as 
the  great  hope  of  our  time,  in  a 
society  so  preoccupied  with  the 
material  and  the  immediate. 
Finally,  it  seems  to  me  that  one 
of  the  greatest  challenges  of  our 
time,  not  only  here  in  Chapel 
Hill,  but  in  all  American  life,  is 
to  place  an  emphasis  upon  qual- 
ity, upon  the  mind,  and  upon 
vigorous  intellectual  pursuits  in 
an  age  and  in  a  society  when 
man  has  so  little  time,  and  the 
worship  of  size  and  number  has 
become  all  but  universal. 

But  while  we  point  out  these 
and  many  other  challenging  op- 
portunities, we  must  not  be 
unaware  of  the  fact  that  there 
are  serious  obstacles,  always 
ready  to  crush  the  creative 
spirit,  to  throw  obstacles  in  its 
way.  I  cannot  here  point  out 
all  of  these,  but  certainly  I 
would  ntention  the  excessive 
caution  and  timidity,  the  su- 
spicion of  the  new,  the  differ- 
ent and  the  critical. 

To  me  one  of  the  disturbing 
facts  of  our  day  in  the  Univers- 
ity is  our  tolerance  of  the  medi- 
ocre— our  willingness  to  accept 
the  mediocre  rather  than  to  de- 
mand the  excellent. 

Finally^  I  must  remind  you  of 
the  seriously  inadequate  finan- 
cial support  for  the  University. 
Tlie  Univesity  of  Noth  CaoRna 
cannot  hope  to  retain  on  its  fac- 
ulty those  stimulating  and  crea- 
tive individuals  who  are  brought 
together  from  many  places,  and 
who,  because  of  their  differences 
of  views  and  their  stimulating 
ideas,  act  as  catalytic  agents  to 
criticize,  to  stimulate,  to  create 
and  to  take  the  University  al- 
ways onward  in  its  service  to 
the  community 


I    ..—^Uc 


^ogo 


By  Walt  Kelly 


AW  tVIN'  POWU. 


VICE    PRESIDENT   WHYBURN 

.  a  Texan  in  the  graduate  schools 


W.M.  Whyburn: 
Graduate  Chief 


Dr.  Whyburn  was  named  vice  president  of  the 
Consolidated  University  for  graduate  studies  and 
research  by  the  Board  of  Trustees  this  week.  Fol- 
lowing is  a  biographical  sketch  of  the  vice  presi- 
dent. Tomorrow:  The  new  chancellor  at  Woman's 
College. 

William  Marvin  Whyburn.  Kenan  Professor  of 
Mathematics  and  chairmr.n  of  that  department,  was 
elected  acting  provost  of  the  University  of  North 
Carolina  by  the  Executive  Committee  of  the  Board 
of  Trustees  a  year  ago. 

H*>.\vas  born  in  Lewisville.  Denton  County.  Texas, 
on  Nov.  12,  1901.  His  father,  Thomas  Whyburn, 
came  to  the  United  States  from  Tiverton.  Devon- 
shire, England,  at  an  early  age  and  lived  in  Ken- 
tucky several  years  before  settling  in  Texas.  His 
mother.  Eugenia  Elizabeth  (McLeod)  Whyburn, 
was  born  in  Alabama  of  ancestral  stock  which  in- 
cluded  the   Scarbrough  family   of   North   Carolina. 

He  was  the  seventh  of  nine  children. 

*  *  * 

His  childhood  was  spent  on  a  farm  and  his  earl* 
education  was  in  the  rural  schools  of  his  home 
community.  He  entered  the  North  Texas  State  Col- 
lege at  the  age  of  15.  and.  after  one  year  of  college 
work,  taught  two  years  in  the  rural  schools  of 
Denton  County. 

He  transferred  to  the  University  of  Texas  in 
1920  and  majored  in  mathematics  and  chemistry 
for  the  degrees:  Bachelor  of  arts  (1922).  master  of 
arts  (1923).  doctor  of  philosophy  (1927).  Texas 
Technological  College  conferred  an  honorary  de- 
gree of  doctor  of  laws  on  him  in  1948. 

As  an  undergraduate  at  the  University  of  Texas,  ^ 
he  was  elected  to  Phi  Beta  Kappa  and  Sigma  Xi, 
while    his   graduate    honors    included    designation 
as  University   Fellow,  Louis  Lipschitz  Fellow  and 
award  of  a   National   Research  Fellowship. 

During  the  years  1923  to  1927  Dr.  Whyburn 
served  in  the  department's  cf  mathematics  at  South 
Park  College  (now  Lamar  State  College  of  Tech- 
nology at  Beaumont.  Texas.  Texas  Agricultural  and 
Mechanical  College,  and  Texas  Technological  Col- 
lege. The  year  1927-28  he  spent  at  Harvard  under 
the  provisions  of  a  National  Research  Fellowship. 

In  1928  he  joined  the  faculty  of  the  University 
of  California  in  Las  Angeles,  and  in  1937  became 
chairman  of  the  Dept.  of  Mathematics  there.  In 
1944.  he  became  president  of  Texas  Technological 
College  and  served  in  that  position  until  1948 
when  he  resigned  to  become  head  of  the  Mathe- 
matics Dept.  at  UNC. 

During  World  War  II  he  was  chief  of  the  opera- 
lions  analysis  section  for  the  Third  Air  Force. 

At  Carolina.  Dr.  Whyburn  has  been  active  teach- 
ing mathematics.  Seven  doctor's  degrees  have  been 
granted  under  his  direction  since  he  came  here.  He 
has  also  maintained  research  contact  with  the  Air 
Force,  the  Oak  Ridge  National  Laboratories  and 
the  Navy.  He  was  general  chairman  of  the  second 
State  of  the  University  Conference  in  1954.  The 
year  1954-55  was  spent  on  a  research  leave,  pro- 
vided by  the  Office  of  Scientific  Research,  Air  Re- 
search and  Demand. 

He  spent  the  sununer  of  1955  at  universities  in 
Germany,  France,  Italy,  and  England. 
Dr.  Whyburn's  principal  specialties  within  the 
field  of  mathematics  lie  in  the  areas  of  real  varia- 
ble theory  and  differential  equations.  In  addition  to 
many  published  articles  in  these  areas,  he  has  co- 
authored  several  books  on  mathematics,  two  of 
which  are  "Algebra  for  College  Students"  and  "Col- 
lege Mathematics  with  Applications,"  both  with 
Prof.  Paul  H.  Daus  of  the  University  of  California 
in   Los  Angeles. 

* 

Some  Hair  Curler 

Messrs.  Humphrey  and  Hoover  might  note  Oiat 
even  without  a  depression  the  inflationary  spiral 
is  quite  a  hair  curler  for  people  scratching  their 
heads  over  the  family  budget. — The  Chicago  Tribune 


LOST: 
blue 
10    Or 
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FRIDAY,  MARCH  1,  1957 


THI  DAILY  TAR  HIIL 


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ri; 

f 


>f  the 

^s   and 

Fol- 

presi- 
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Usor    of 

\ni.  was 
North 
Board 

Texas, 
[■hyburn. 

Devon- 
in  Ken- 
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(■hyburn. 
^hich  in- 
?arolina. 


!S  ear;" 
IS   home 
kate  Col- 
college 
lools    of 

Texas  in 
hemistry 
taster  of 
).  Texas 
rar>    de- 

f  Texas,  _ 

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ignation 

low  and 

WTiyburn 
at  South 
of  Tech- 
ural  and 
ical  Col- 
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xwship. 
niversity 
7  became 
here.  In 
nological 
ntil  1948 
Mathe- 

thc  opera- 

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here.  He 
the  Air 
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he  second 
1954.    Th€ 

ave,   pro- 
Air  Re- 


-I 


Handicapped  Children 
Conference  Underway 


Covering  The  University  Campus 


Dr.  Irwin  said  another  purpose  of  '< 
the  studies  was  to  learn  mere  about ' 
the  articulation  of  cerebral  palsy 
children  in  order  to  compare  their 
development  with  normal  children. 

"Rie  conference  opened  with   a 
keynote   addi'ess   by   Dr.   Wendell 


The  third  annual  North  Caro- 
lina Conference  on  H»adicapped 
Children  opened  yesterday  at  the 
Memorial  Hospital  of  the  Univers- 
ity of  North  Carolina.  j 

The  two-day  conference  is  de- 1 
voted  to  problems  of  st>eech  and 
hearing  in  children.  The  meet-  Johnson,  protfessof  of  speech  patho- 
ing  sponsored  by  the  Coordinating  logy  and  psychology  at  the  State 
Committee  on  Handicapped  Chii- ,  University  of  Iowa.  Dr  Johnsoft's 
dren  of  the  N.  C.  Health  Council,  j  topic  was  "How  Normal  Can  You 
the  N.  C.  Assn.  of  Speech  Therap- .  Get?" 

ists  and  the  Nemours  Foundation.  |  Friday's  session  will  open  at 
The  UNC  School  of  Medicine  is  9:15  a.m.  with  an  address  by  Dr. 
^ost  to  t]ie  conference.  j  Jon     Eisenson,     director     of  the 

Dr.  Orvis  C.  Irvin,  professor  of  .-Speech  and  Hearing  Clinic  of 
psychology  of  the  State  'Universi-  [  Queens  College  of  New  York, 
ty  of  Iowa,  was  the  principal  speak- 1  Dr.  Charles  B.  Kendall  of  the 
er  at  tonight's  session.  The  title!  N.  C.  State  Board  of  Health  will 
ol  his  speech  was  "The  Develop- 1  speak  at  10  a.m.  on  "The  Speech 
ment  of  Speech  of  Infants  and  j  and  Hearing  Program  of  the  N.  C. 
Cerebral  Palsy  Children."  I  State  Board  of  Health."  This'  will 

Dr.  Irwin  gave  some  of  the  re-j  J«    followed   by    a    demonstration 

suits  of  studies  conducted  by  the  j  ^^  «  ^»«««  f"-"™  ^^'^  N.  C.  Sdiool 

Iowa  Child  Welfare  Research  Sta- 1  ^^'"^  Pf.* 

jjg,  I      Addle   Lee   Meador  of  William- 

I  ston.  president  of  the  N.  C.  Assn. 

of  Speech  Therapists,  will  preside 


dOUND  AND  FJRY 

last  year:  a  terrified  Peewee 


tion    on   problems   of   speech 
velopment 

"The  general  purpose  of  these 
studies  is  to  discover  if,  in  the 
wild  chaotic  meaningless  babbling 
of  infants,  there  is  at  all  any  iden- 
tifiable regularities  or  orderliness 
of  development."  Dr.  Irwin  said. 
"Or  to  say  it  scientifically,  are 
there  any  laws  in  the  early  stages 
of  phonetic  development?" 


at  the  morning  sessions.  Dr.  Edwin 
J.  Chapman  of  Asheville,  presi- 
dent of  the  N.  C.  Ear,  Eye.  Nose 
and  TTiroat  Society,  will  preside 
at  the  afternoon  sessions. 
Three    speakers    will    be   heard 


UNIVERSITY  CLUB 

The    University    Club,    formerly 
the  Carolina  Pep  Club,  will  meet! 
Monday    night    in    Roland   Parker  | 
Lounge  No.  2  at  Graham  Memorial,  j 

The  purpose  of  the  meeting  is 
to    discuss    plans   for   the   Spring ! 
Show  and  to  elect  officers  for  next  | 
year.    All  students    interested   in  { 
becoming  members  are  invited  to 
attend  the  meeting. 

PTA 

There  will  be  a  meeting  of  the 
PTA  Monday  at  8  p.m.  in  Peabody 
Hall.  The  program  will  consist  of 
a  mock  interview  for  teachering 
position  and  the  installation  of 
new  officers  for  next  year. 

STUDENT  WIVES 

The  Student  Wives  will  hold 
their  next  meeting  Tuesday  at  8 
p.in.  in  the  Victopy  Village  nurse- 

during     the      afternoon      session. 
These  will  be  Dr.  William  G.  Har- 
dny,  director.  Speech  and  Hearing 
Center,  The  Johns  Hopkins  Medi- 
cal School     and     Hospital,  Batli- 
I  more;   Dr.   Herbert  K.  Cooper,  di- 
I  rector,    Cleft    Palate   Clinic.    Lan- 
I  caster.  Pa.;  and  Dr.  A.  R.  Shands 
Jr.,  medical  director,  Afred  I.  du 
I  Pont     Institute.     The     Nemours 
Foundation,    Wilmington.    Del. 


ry.  Dr.  Flowers  will  give  a  talk  on 
obstetrics. 

All  wives  of  studenta'  have  been 
invited  to  attend. 
FACULTY  CLUB  LUNCHEON 

The  faculty  club  luncheon  -will 
be  held  Tuesday  at  1  p.m.  at  the 
Carolina  Inn.. 

E.  A.  Resch,  editor  of  The  Chat- 
ham County  News,   of  Siler  City, 
will  speak. 
WUNC-TV 

Following  is  today's  schedule  for 
WTjNC-TV,  the  University's  educa- 
tional television  station,  channel  4. 


12:45 

Music 

1:00 

Today  on  the  Farm 

1:30 

Engineering  Visit 

5:15 

Music 

5:30 

Music  for  Young  People 

6:00 

U.N.   Review 

6- 15 

News 

6:30 

Wings  to  Finland 

7:00 

Science  Fair 

7:30 

The  Humanitie:? 

8:00 

Air  Age 

8:30 

Prelude 

9:00 

Project  Health 

10:00 

Final  Edition 

Books  People  Are  Talking  About 


CLASSIFIEDS 


LOST:  CAT.  BUFF  OR  SAND  COL-  j 
ored.  one  year  old,  expecting  ; 
kittens  in  4  weeks.  Los-t  vicinity  j 
of  Porthole.  Reward  for  recove-  j 
ry,    phone    2031,    Merle    Fisher.  { 

LOST:  ONE  TAN  TRENCHCOAT.  | 
blue  and  red,  plaid  lining.  Size  ' 
10.  One  white  blazer  with  navy  ' 
blue  binding.  If  found,  please  j 
notify  Kitty  Carr.  103  Mclver. 


Chamber  Music  To  Be  Presented 
By   University   String   Quartet 


5  ROOM  BRICK  HOUSE.  3  BED  j 
rooms,  all  modern  conveniences.  ' 
3  miles  on  Old  86  Hyway.  Stove  ! 
and  Frigedaire  furnished.  Call ' 
Fred  Katzin  after  6:00.  8-9025.    j 

. ., 

JAZZ  AT  TURNAGES  ' 

Saturday  afternoon,  2:00,  Turn- 
ages  Cabin  in  Durham.*— Jazz  by 
Dick  Gables  "All  Stars."  Beer 
Served. 


A  program     of     18th     century  i 
chamber  music  will  be  presented  I 
Tuesday.  March  5.  at  8  p.m.  in  Hill 
Music  Hall  by  the  University  String  ■ 
Quartet  and   assisting  artists.  j 

It  will  be  the  10th  in  the  Tues-  ] 
day  Evening  Series  of  concerts  \ 
sponsored  by  the  University  o£ ' 
North  Carolina  Dept.  of  Music  and  i 
will  be  open  to  the  public  without 
charge.  \ 

Members  of  the  Quartet  are  Ed-  j 
gar  Alden.  first  violin;  Mrs.  Dor-  j 
othy     Alder,     viola;     Mrs.     Jean 
Heard,    second    violin;    and    Mary  I 
Gray   Clarke,   violoncello.  i 

They  will*be  joined  in  composi- 
tions for  unusual  combinations  of  : 
instruments  by  Harris  Mitchell,  j 
horn:  Julia  Mueller.  Jean  Vavoul- 1 
is  and  Marjorie  Renner,  violas;  i 
Ern^t  Peschel  and  William  Klenz, 


Dairyland  Royal  B.anana  Split 


39< 


A  banquet  in  one  dish.  Three  dips 
of  Dairyland  Ice  Cream  —  Straw- 
berry, vanilla,  and  chocolate,  each 
covered  with  topping  of  fruit, 
nuts,  and  smothered  with  whip- 
ped cream  and  garnished  with  red 
cherry. 


DAIRYLAND  FARMS 


Glen  Lennox 


violoncellos;    Carol    Sites,    harpsi- 
chord; and  Neal  O'Neal,  bass. 

The  concert  will  mark  the  sec- 
ond appearance  of  the  Quartet  in 
Chapel  Hill  this  season.  It  also 
has  appeared  in  Raleigh,  and  will 
be  heard  in  concert  at  S<Hithern 
Pines  March  7  and  at  Woman's  Col- 
lege in  Grensboro  March  20. 

For  the  opening  number,  the 
String  Quartet  will  play  Beeth- 
oven's Quartet.  Opus  18..  No.  2, 
from  the  first  set  of  quartets  he 
wrote. 

This  will  be  followed  by  the  Mo- 
zart Quintet,  K.  407,  for  the  un- 
usual combination  of  horn,  violin, 
violas  and  violoncello. 

After  intermission.  Handel's 
!  Trio  Sonata.  Opus  2.  No.  9  in  E 
;  Major,  will  be  presented  featuring 
I  two  violins,  violoncello  and  harpsi- 
i  chord,  use  of  the  latter  instrument 
i  being  typical  at  the  time  the  music 
I  was  written.  n 
j  Concluding  the  concert,  Bach's 
I  Brandenburg  Concerto  No.  3,  one 
i  of  the  most  famous  early  18th  cen- 
j  tury  chamber  works,  will  be  given 
j  by  a  string  ensemble — three  vio- 
I  lins.  three  violas,  three  violoncel- 
1  los,  and  bass — supported  by  the 
I  harpsichord. 

Among  the  musicians  appear- 
ing on  the  program  are  three 
members  of  the  Duke  University 
faculty.    Klenz   and   Mrs.   Mueller 


teach  in  the  Duke  Music  Depart- 
ment while  Dr.  Peschel.  a  gifted 

I  amateur  cellist,  is '  a  Member  of 
the  Duke  Medical  School  faculty. 
I  Mitchell,  on  leave  of  absence 
,  from  the  University  of  Georgia, 
I  where  he  is  associate  professor  of 
j  music  and  conductor  of  the  Uni- 
versity Band,  is  a  ^aduate  stu- 
'  dent  at  Carolina  where  he  is  work- 
;  ing  toward  his  Ph.D.  in  music. 
j  Previously,  he  appeared  here  as 
j  guest  conductor  of  the  All-State 
j  High  School  Band  Clinic  and  has 
i  been  the  principal  horn  in  the 
!  North  Carolina  Symphony  Orches- 
!  tra,  the  Atlanta  Symphony  and 
Atlanta  Pope  Orchestra. 

Miss    Sites,    who    will    play    the 
harpsichord,    is    a    UNC    graduate 
;  student  and  instructor  in  the  Dept. 
i  of  Music. 


I  Frank  Graham 
Talks  At  State 

I 

KALEIGH— (AP)— Dr.    Frank 

!  p.    Graham,   former  President   of 

[  the     Consolidated     University     of 

i  North  Carolina  and  now  mediator 

j  for  the  UN.  will  speak  at  North 

Carolina  State  College  Monday 
;  night.  His  topic  will  be  "The 
I  United    Nations   and   the    Atomic 

Age." 


Israel  Withdrawal  Expected 


DAILY    CROSSWORD 


ACROSS 

1.  Bleat 

5  Substance 
in  ale 

9  Scotch  hero 
10.  Wide- 
awake 

12.  Lubricated 

13.  Lucid 

14.  Greek  letter 

15.  Like  ale 

16.  Girls 
nickname 

17.  Intlmation- 
al  language 

18.  Location 

20.  Encount- 
ered 

21.  Grab 
23.  Large 

bundle 
24  Traders 
26.  Level 
2S.  Called  forth 
^1  Audience 
32.  Boil  slov\-ly 
33  Greek  letter 
Zi.  Land 

measure 
35  Female  deer 

36.  Feline 

37.  Kind  of 
wave 

39  Mature 
person 

41.  Slewed  fruit 

42.  Soiled 

43.  Golf 
mounds 

44  Grows  old 
DOWN 

1  Englishman 

2  Louisa 
(dim.) 

3  One-spot 
card 


4.  Boston's 
Williams 

5.  Twin  crystal 

6.  Confederate 

7.  Shelte'^d 
side 

8.  Journey 

9.  South 
Africana 

11.  Banal 
15.  Olympic 
contestant 

18.  r«t  it  stand 
(print.) 

19.  River 
(S.  A.) 

20.  Disguise 


tt.  Jewish 
month 

13.  Fore- 
head 

K.  Eve- 


aa  aana     ho 


ninf 

(poet.) 
26.  Deeds 
27.Lu»> 

29.  Glori- 
fies ^^ 

30.  Short,         Ye«ter4»y'*  Aaiwar 
simple  air 


Parts 
of  shoes 
35  Fresh, 
water  fish 


36.  Heal 

38.  Owing 

39.  Girl's  name 
40  Excavate 


(Continued  from  Page  1) 

Aqaba  and  Gaza  in  accordance  with 
the  General  Assembly  resolutions 
of  Feb.  2. 

The  disclosure  came  after  Israel 
informed  the  assembly  that  it 
would  make  a  statement  this  after- 
noon on  the  plans. 

The  Feb.  2  resolutions  were 
sponsored  by  the  United  States 
and  six  other  nations. 

They  provide  that: 

1.  Israel  withdraw  immediately 
behind  the  1949  armistice  lines. 

2.  Both  Israel  and  EJgypt  observe 
terms  of  the  armistice  and  endorse 
recommendations  of  Secretary 
General  Dag  Hammarskjold  for 
stationing  UN  emergency  forces 
along  the  demarcation  line. 

Israeli  sources  last  night  would 
neither  confirm  nor  deny  the  re- 
port. 

Taking  the  floor  when  the  80- 
nation  assembly  resumed  debate 
on  the  Middle  East  crisis  after  sev- 
eral postponements,  Israeli  Deputy 
Delegate  Mordecai  R  Kidron  made 
thi«  statement  Thursday. 

"In  connection  with  the  debate 
on  thfr  present  item,  the  Israel  del- 
egation will   be  in   a  position  to 
make  a  statement    on  the  Israeli 
plan  for  withdrawal  at  a  meeting 
of  the  general  assembly  tomorrow 
afternoon.  I  would  be  grateful  if 
it  can  be   arranged   for  Israel   to 
make  «  statement  at  that  time." 
Kicfron'ft    adnouncement    was 
reported  by  sources  close  to  the 
delegation    to    niean     Israel     is 
preparing  to  pull  her  troops  beck 
from  the  Gulf  of  Aqeba  and  the 
Gata  Strip,  seized  when   Israeli 
forces     crossed     the      armistice 
.   deniaf-catiea    line    four.  OMMths 
•go. 


It  cut  through  some  of  the  con- 
fusion on  the  Middle  E^st  situation 
and  provoked  a  bitter  attack  on 
Israel  and  France  by  Egyptian 
Foreign  Minister  Mahmoud  Fawzi. 

Fawzi  said  bitterly  that  Israel's 
withdrawl  "must  not  be  the  out- 
come of  a  bargain  made  anywhere 
and  in  exchange  of  a  price  Israel 
may  have  been  promised  by  a  peo- 
ple who  had  no  right  to  make  any 
such,  promise." 

He  said  Egypt  had  been  barely 
consulfed  or  informed  during  the 
long  talks  but  had  agreed  to  post 
ponements  lest  Cairo  be  charged 
with  not  permitting  sufficient 
scope  to  secure  the  withdriwal  of 
Israel. 

Lashing  at  French  Premier  Guy 
Mollet,  who  was  visiting  in  an- 
other room  of  the  UN  headquar- 
ters as  he  spoke,  Fawi  said  Mollet 
had  indulged  in  "mudslhiging"  in 
his  speech  in  Washington  yester- 
day. Fawzi  said  Mollet  levelled  all 
kinds  of  accusation  at  Egypt.  The 
foreign  minister  said  Mollet  can 
hardly  qualify  as  a  model  in  mat- 
ters of  justice  and  added  that  Mol- 
let "(»mes  forth  with  his  hands 
Jtill  dripping  of  Algerian  and 
Elgyptian  blood." 

It  was  said  here  that  the  Israeli 
statement  Friday  would  be  follow- 
ed by  individual  declarations 
from  the  United  States,  France  and 
other  countries  supporting  the 
principle  of  free  shipping  through 
the  Gulf  of  Aqaba. 

The  U.  S.  drlr:?aticn  earlier  dis- 
rltspd  that  Ambassador  Henry 
Cabot  Lod^e  htd  suspended  work 
on  a  compromise  resblutiftrt  p<'nd- 
ing  the  outcome  of  the  Washington 
talks. 


•  What  is  a  hammer  without  a  nail.'  Or 
put  it  the  other  way  'round,  if  you  will. 
Together,  they  work  to  accomplish  • 
constructive  purpose.  Similarly,  we  join 
forces  with  your  physician  to  recover  and 
guard  your  health.  Bring  us  your  Doc- 
tor's prescriptions  for  compounding! 


Sutton  s  Drug  Store 

Phone  9-8781 

"The  Tar  Heel's 

Prescription  Center' 


Books  listed  here  are  not  necessa- 
i  rily  the  best  of  the  February  crop, 
'  but  they  are  the  ones  people  are 
j  talking  about,  and  we  think  you'll 

find  them  worth  looking  at. 

:  The  Scapegoat,  by  Daphne  du  Mau- 
'  rier.  Ladies  magazine  readers  and 
.  book  club  members  are  swooning 
I  over  this  one.  Good  of  its  kind. 
I  $3.95 

!  The  Fruit  Tramp,  by  Vinnie  Willi- 

j  ams.  If  you  liked  "Cannerj'  Row" 

we  think   you'll  find   this  warm 

little  novel  worth  a  look.        $3.50 

Ships  in  the  Sky,  by  John  Toland. 
The  story  of  the  great  dirigibles 
— Rich  in  tragedy  and  drama.  May 
well    become    a    collector's    item. 

$4.95 

The  Fall,  by  Albert  Camus.  A 
thoughtful  novel,  and  its  author's 
first  since  "The  Plague".  Don't 
miss  it.  $3.00 


The  Eye  of  Leve,  by  Margery 
Sharpe.  Satire,  tenderness,  and  sly 
humor  ornament  this  fine  English 
novel.  $3.95 

Onionhead,  by  Weldon  Ifill.  Peo- 
ple are  chuckling  over  this  story 
of  a  i.-ailor  who  said,  "Comfort  me 
with  love,  for  I  am  sick  of  apples." 

$3.95 

The  Blue  Camel ia,  by  Frances 
Parkinson  Keyes.  Now  all  the  lad- 
ies can  finish  the  serial  broken 
off  by  the  demise  of  the  Woman's 
Home  Companion.  $3.95 

A   Study   of   History,   Vol.    if,  by 

Arnold  J.  Toynbee.  The  Somervell 
abridgement  of  Volumes  7  through 
10  of  the  masterwork.  Compact 
and  readable.  $5.00 

Bedlam,  by  Andre  Soubiran.  A 
real    soul-twister    about    insanity! 

$3.95 


't 


You  Always  Find  The  Best  Books  In 

The  Intimate; 
Bookshpp 

205  E.  Franklin  Street    — :—    Chapel  Hill    — :—    Open  Till  10  fJA. 


CIGARETTES 


MESSAGE  to  Botany  majors:  today's  lesson  is  easy.  No 
spore  lore,  plant  cant  or  stidk  talk.  Just  the  fact  that 
Luckies'  fine  tobacco  is  A-1  Puff  Stuff!  This  informati<Mi 
won't  help  you  graduate,  but  it'll  cue  you  to  the  best 
smoking  you  ever  had.  You  see,  fine  tobacco  means 
better  taste.  A  Lucky  is  all  fine  tobacco  .  . .  nothing  but 
mild,  good-tasting  tobacco  that's  TOASTED  to  taste 
even  better.  Why  settle  for  less?  You'll  say  a  Lucky  ia 
the  best-tasting  cigarette  you  ever  smoked ! 

y^  STUDENTS!  MAKE  ^25 

■  ^\^^)yp  Do  you  like  to  ehirk  work?  Here's  some  ca*y  money 
^3s^^^/Q^  —start  Stickling!  We'll  pay  $25  for  every  Stickler 
^  -^^  we  print— and  for  hundreds  more  that  never  get 
used.  Sticklers  are  simple  riddles  with  two- word  rhyming  answers. 
Both  words  must  have  the  same  number  ol'  syllables.  (Don't  do 
drawings.)  Send  your  Sticklers  with  your  name,  address,  college 
and  class  to  Ha^py- Joe-Lucky,  Box  67 A,  Mount  Vernon,  N.  Y. 


Luckies  Taste  Better 

"irS  TOASTED"  ZO  TASTE  BETTER  .  .  .  CLEANER,  FRESHER,  SMOOTHER! 


•A.  T.  Co.       reooucT  or 


lEKICA'S    LBAOINQ    MaNUF aCTUKBK    OF    CIQAfllCTTSS 


mmm 


PAGE  POUR 


THl  DAILY  TAR  HflL 


FRIDAY,  MARCH  1,  1f57 


Tar  Heels  Close  Out  Regular  Season  At  Duke 


Quigg  To  See  Limited 
Action;  Will  Not  Start 


By    LARRY    CHEEK 

With  starting  center  Joe  Quigg 
back  in  the  fold.  North  Caro- 
lina's unbeaten  Tar  Heels  wind 
up  their  most  successful  regu- 
lar season  campaign  in  history 
tonight  when  they  go  against 
Duke'.'  hot  and  cold  Blue  Devils 
in  the  Duke  Gym. 

This  is  the  big  one  for  Coach 
Frank  McGuire  and  his  Tar 
Heels.  Going  into  tonight's  game, 
they  have  swept  23  victories  in  a 
row,  including  two  wins  over 
the.se  same  BTue  Devils.  For  the 
past  seven  weeks,  they  have 
reigned  atop  all  the  major  cage 
polls  as  the  nation's  number 
one  team.  And  tonight's  game 
with  the  dangerous  Blue  Devil.v 
i.s  the  only  obstacle  remaining  in 
the  path  of  an  unbeaten  season. 

Tuesday  night.  Carolina  kept 
their  streak  alive  by  whipping 
Wake  Forest,  69-64.  in  a  heart 
.stopper  in  Winston-Salem.  They 
did  the  job  without  the  services 
of  big  Joe  Quigg.  who  was  side- 
lined with  an  attack  of  the  flu. 

It  was  announced  yesterday 
that  Quigg.  the  team's  number 
two  rcbounder  and  an  11  point 
per  game  scorer,  would  be  avail- 
able for  ■limited"  duty  tonight, 
but  probably  would  not  start. 
Either  Bob  \  Jung  or  Danny  Lotz 
will  open  in  place  of  Quigg. 

The  Tar  HeeL-  wil  face  a  home 
court  jinx  tonight  even  tougher 
than  the  one  they  broke  in  Win- 
;-.on-Salem.  The  Blue  Devils  have 
been  practically  untouchable  on 
their  home  court  this  year,  win- 
ning over  such  rivals  as  State. 
Wake  Forest,  and  Kentucky.  All 
told,    they    have  ,won    8    games 


without  a  loss  in  Duke  Gym. 
Their  overall  record  is  13"-7. 

If  the  Tar  Heels  win  tonight, 
they  will  establish  a  new  school 
record  for  consecutive  victories 
in  one  season.  The  1924  team, 
la.-:  to  go  unbeaten,  ran  up  a 
string  of  23  in  a  row.  The  last 
time  Carolina  beat  Duke  in  Dur- 
ham was  in  1950. 

Carolina  has  mastered  the 
spirited  Blue  Devils  on  two  dif- 
ferent occasions  this  season. 
They  won  out,  87-71,  in  the 
semi-finals  of  the  Dixie  Classic, 
and  prevailed,  75-73,  in  a  Wool- 
len Gym  thriller  on  Feb.  9. 

All-American  Lennie  Rosen- 
bluth  will  go  gwnning  for  mure 
records  in  tonight's  game.  Len- 
nie need..  29  more  field  goals  to 
equal  his  own  school  record  of 
227  for  one  season.  He  also 
needs  five  more  points  to  equal 
his  own  record  of  614  points  for 
one  season. 

The  Tar  Heels  have  assured 
themselves  of  the  number  one 
seeded  position  in  the  .\CC  tour- 
nament which  opens  in  Raleigh 
ne.xt  Thur -Jay.  A  Duke  victory 
tonight  would  give  them  a  tie 
with  Maryland  for  second  place 
in  the  standings.  . 

A  sellout  crowd  of  9,000  will 
be  on  hand  for  the  ACC  scrap 
which  tips  off  at  8:15  p.m.  fol- 
lowing a   freshman   preliminary. 

Rosenbluth.  Bob  Cunningham. 
Pete  Brennan.  Tommy  Kearns 
and  either  Lotz  or  Young  will 
start  for  Carolina;  while  Hayes 
Clement,  Jim  Newcome,  Paul 
Schmidt,  Bobby  Joe  Harris  and 
Bucky  Allan  will  open  for  the 
Blue  Devils. 


Dave  Scurlock  Cracks 
Record  In  880  Run 


UNC  sophomore  speedster  Dave 
Scurlock  yesterday  unofficially  bet- 
tered the  Atlantic  Coast  Conference 
and  old  Southern  Conference  rec- 
ord in  the  880-yard  run  with  a 
time  of  1:52.6. 

Scurlock,  running  over  the  Tin 
Can  board  track,  cut  .1  of  a  second 
off  the  old  mark  of  1:52.7  set  in 
1940  by  UNC's  Bill  Hendrix  in  an 
outdoor  meet. 

Two  other  Tar  Heel  half-milers, 
Ben  Williams  and  Howard  Kahn, 
also  turned  In  excellent  times  in 
yesterday's  workout.  Williams  was 
clocked  in  1:55.3.  Kahn  in  1:57.6. 

Scurlock  recently  won  the  Atlan- 
tic Coast  Conference  Indoor  half- 
mile  championship,  beating  out 
Carl  Party  of  Maryland  and  team- 
mates Williams  and  Kahn. 

Coach  Dale  Ranson  plans  to  en- 
ter Scurlock  in  one  or  two  big 
indoor  mfeets  early  in  March. 


Man  Behind  The  Headlines 

Pictured  above  is  Bob  Cunningham,  stellar  UNC  guard  who  has  been  the  backbone  of  the  Tar  Heel 
squad  alt  year  long.  Cunningham,  although  not  a  prolific  scorer,  is  an  outstanding  defensive  performer 
and  excells  at  ball  handling  and  floor  play. 


Frosh  Cagers  Wind  Up  ' 
Season's  Play  Tonight 

By   BILL    KING  |  the  Tar  Babies  after  the  Wake  For- 

Tonight    the    Carolina   freshman    est  game  Tuesday  night.  In  speak- 
basketball  team  winds  up  the  1956-  '  ing  of  the  thrilling  Tar  Baby  come-  / 
57  season   in  Durham  against  the  i  back  in  the  second  half,  McGuire 
Duke    Blue    Imps,    and    regardless  i  said:  "those  freshmen  looked  great 
of  the  outcome  the  Tar  Babies  have  j  in  the  second   half  tonight,  it's    a  i 
already    insured    them.-.'elves    of    a  \  very   fine   ball  club.'  I 

ver>'  fruitful  campaign.  j      Gazing   over  the   Tar   Heel's  al- 1 

Although  not  quite  as  powerful  |  moA     depleted     bench     Tuesday ; 
as    last    year's    tremendous    fresh-    night,  one  could  see  several  open- 1 
man  squad,   the   Tar   Babies   have  |  ings     which    might    be    filled    by  | 
breezed   through   the   season   with  t  some  of  these  freshmen.  The  top 
16  victories  and  only  four  defeati,  |  varsity    prospect   is   6-7' Lee   Shaf- 


ACTION  INTENSIFIES  TODAY: 


Nauss 
Krepp 

By    STEWART    BIRD 


Takes  ACC  1500 
To  Swim  Tonight 


The  Art  Of  Tailoring 

"Evtry  man  to  his  business, 
is  beyond  «li  doubt  as  noble  and 
but  indOOd  tho  craft  of  a  tailor 
as  loerot  as  any  in  tho  world." 

HAVt  OTHERS   FAILED? 

With  export  workmanship  and 
the  bo»t  sOrvieo  possible  Pett 
Tho  Tailor  has  and  will  continue 
lb  givo  you  tho  ultinioto  in 
tailoring  noocls.         ■-*:'. 


PETE  THE  TAILOR 

Spocialixing  in 
"Ivy   Loofuoixing" 

133V2   e.  Franklin  Street 


RECENT 

APDITIONS 

To  The  Rare  Book  Shelf 

I  Philosophy  —  One  of  our  distin- 
j  guished  customers  is  thinning  out 
his  collection  of  philosophy.  U 
your  collection  needs  building  up, 
take  a  look  at  our  Recent  Acquisi- 
tions shelf  and  our  97*  shelf. 

History— We'ce  recently  brought 
in  a  small  collection  of  books  on 
history.  By  the  time  this  appears, 
some  will  be  gone,  but  it  will  be 
worth  your  while  to  come  treasure- 
hunting. 

Tocqueville  —  Also  on  the  Recent 
Acquisitions  shelf,  you'll  find  nice 
copies  of  Democracy  in  America 
and  On  the  State  of  Society  in 
France.  At  least,  ihtf  are  there 
as  we  write. 

Novels  —  A  recent'  collection  of 
novels  includes  John  Eo-ten  Cooks, 
Inglis  Fletcher  in  the  limited 
North  Carolina  edition,  and  a  flock 
of  pristine  book  club  numbers. 
You'll  find  them  scattered  all  over 
the  Old  Book  Corner,  according  lo 
their  value. 

The  Intimate 
Bookshop 

205  E.  Franklin  St. 

CHAPEL   HILL 

Open  Till  10  P.  M. 


a  record  that  labels  coach  Vince 
Grimaldi's  aggregation  the  best 
freshman  club  in  the  Atlantic 
Coast  Conference. 

The  presence  of  several  very 
talented  cagers  among  the  fresh- 
men makes  Carolina's  basketball 
future  bright.  Varsity  coach  Frank 
McGuire  had  a  word  of  praise  for 


fer,  a  forward  from  Pittsburgh,  Pa. 
who  has  paced  the  Tar  Babies  all 
season.  Center  Dick  Kepley  is  an- 
other Tar  Baby  who  might  fit  in 
with  McGuires  plans  in  the  ne.xt 
few  years.  York  I-afese,  Mike  Step- 
pe, and  John  Crotty  are  alio  very 


Frank  Nau^s  of  N.  C.  State 
sucessfwlly  defended  his  ACC  1500 
meter  freestyle  title  in  Bowman 
Gray  Pool  last  night  in  the  time 
of  nineteen  minutes,  thirty  seconds 
to  take  his  fourth  conference 
metric  naile  title  in  as  many  years. 
His  time  was  far  off  his  record 
standard  of  nineteen  minutes, 
twelve  and  two  tenths  second.-* 
established  in  1956. 

Tony  Schiffman  of  irNC  was  sec- 
ond with  a  time  of  twenty,  minu- 


has  broken  thus  year. 

Frank  Nauss  of  State  will  be 
making  his  bid  for  the  second  leg 
of  an  unprecedented  4th  triple 
crown  in  the  distance  events  when 
he  again  duels  Walt  Rose  of  Car- 
olina in  the  220  yard  freestyle. 
Rose  has  been  closer  to  beating 
the  State  ace  each  time  they  have 


lina  Collegiales  and  in  last  Satur- 
day's meet  with  State.  Fadgen  is 
also  defending  recordholder  in 
this  event. 

Krepp  will  go  after  his  second 
win  in  the  200  yard  individual 
medley  in  which  he  was  ranked 
third  (nationafUy  last  yeart  His 
current      Conference      record      is 


met  this  year,  and  this  could  be    2:13.2.   and   this  may   fall   to  the 
the  day  for  desire  to  upset  a  cham-  j  graduating  senior  as  he  makes  his 


JAZZ' 

At  TURNAGE'S 

PRESENTS 

Dick  Gable 

AMO    THE 

ALL -STARS 
EVERY  SAT.  2:00  P.M. 

BEER   SERVED 


MILTON'S 

Mid-Winter 

Carnival 

GOING  DOWN 
THE  HOME  STRETCH 
SPECIALS  END 
SATURDAY 

Just  added  targo  group  of  yoar- 
round  and  light<weight  hoso  It 
greatly  roducod  prices: 
Cotton  6x3  rib  »ocks,  formerly 
$1.00,  new  $.50. 
McGeorge  wool  ergyle  and  tor- 
tan  hoso,  values  to  $4.$0,  fur- 
ther reduced  to  $1.99. 

Last   chance   to   save   on    year- 
round     seits,     sport     jackets, 
trousers,     and     lightweight 
suits. 

Last  opportunity  for  reduced 
prices  on  ivy  button-down  and 
English  tab  shirts. 

Large  assortment  of  rubber- 
soled  cordovan  shoes  reduced 
from  $20.00  to  $12.99. 

■  II    .1.  ■»  ■■ mm 

In  our  Lady  MiUon  Shop 

Still  dazzling  reduction  on  Brae- 
mar  and  Drumlanrig  sweiiters 
at  $10.00. 

Elliot  cashmere  sweaters  re- 
duced from  $14.95  to  $8.99. 

Plenty  of  tempting  reductions  on 
Lady  Hathaway  and  other 
shirts. 

Spring  Irish  linen  skirts  by 
Evan-picone  reduced  from 
$14.95  to  $9.00. 

Many  other  unusual  buys. 


Ail  sates  cash- 
alterations  extra 

Ciotfjing  Cupboarb 


In  Florida f 
Sweet  Music 

By  THE  ASSOCIATED  PRESS 

One  of  the  sweetest  of  all  spring- 
time sounds — the  crack  of  a  base- 
ball against  a  bat — ^resounds  over 
Florida  today. 

All  12  of  the  major  league  clubs 
training  in  Florida  engaged  in 
full-fledged  workouts.  Five  begin 
today,  six  started  yesterday,  and 
the  12th  was  in  action  Wednesday. 

Several  of  the  clubs  have  been 
holding  limited  workouts  for  play- 
ers who  wanted  to  get  ia  some 
early  training. 

Holding  their  first  fulltime  work- 
outs today  are  the  St.  Louis  Cardi 
nals  at  St.  Petersburg,  the  Phila- 
delphia Phillies?  at  Clearwater, 
Milwaukee  Braves  at  Bradenton, 
Detroit ,  Tigers  at  Lakeland  and 
Kansas  City  Athletics  at  West 
Palm  Beach. 

Yesterday  the  New  York  Yan- 
kees turned  out  in  full  force  at 
St.  Petersburg,  the  Chicago  White 
Sox  and  Cincinnati  Reds  at  Tam- 
pa, Washington  Senators  at  Orlan- 
do, Pittsburgh  Pirates  at  Fort 
Myers,  and  Brooklyn  Dodgers  at 
Vero  Beach. 


pion.  { 

UNC's  dominance  of  the  spring- ; 
boards   should   continue    with   the 
respective      first,      second,      and 
tes,   eight  and   six-tenths   seconds,    third  place  winners  Dave  Mclnnis. 
capable  men  and  will  be  shooting    followed    by    Millard,    of    Clemsun  \  Ned   Meekins,  and  Charlie  Parker 


for  a  varsity  spot  next  season. 


in   third  place.  Fourth  was  Reck- ,  dueling  the  rest  of  the  pack.  Div- 


Top  subs  for  the  Tar  Babies  are    son    of    Maryland;    fifth,    Maness,  {  ing    coach    Dick    Jamerson's    aces 
tall  Grey  Poole  from  Raleigh,  and  |  Carolina;  and  sithx,  Langler,  Duke,  j 
Wally   Graham,   a   guard   who   led  j      _.       ,.     ,    ,  „    ^    .     ,  ,.1 

the  Tar  Babies"   rally  against   the!      ^'"^    ^""^^    ^""   ^^^   "^   competi-l 
Baby  Deacs  Tuesday.  i  ^'""   '"   ^^^*   """^^  ^'"   °P^"   *'^*^ 


last  bid   for   a  clocking   that    will 
stand   for  some   years. 

The  evening's  action  will  close 
with  UNC  favored  to  retain  its 
title  in  the  400  yard  freestyle  re- 
lay. Coach  Casey  is  undecided  as 
to  whether  he  will  use  his  ace 
foursome  of  Rose.  Roth,  Zickgraf, 
are   so   close    in   ability   that    one  i  and  Krepp  in  an  attempt  to  lower 


the   current   ACC   record   held  by 
the  Tar  Heels  and  broken  by  this 


Shaffer,  Larese,  Kepley,  Steppe, 


trials    at   2:30    this    afternoon   and 


and     Crotty     will     start     tonight .  ^'"^'^  ^^  ^^  P'""  '"  *'«^*  *^^"^*- 


against  the  Blue  Imps.  The  Tar 
Babies  have  beaten  the  Duke  frosh 
twice  this  season  and  have  dropped 
one  to  them. 

Tip  off  time  for  this  preliminary 
action  is  6  o'clock..  The  varsities 
of  the  two  schools  will  square  off 
at  8:15  p.m. 


bad    dive    by    either    three    could 
.see  a   new  champion  emerge 

Fadgen  will  defend  his  100  yard  j  quartet  consistently  this  year 
breaststroke    title    when    he    goes ;  ^ 

against  Dick  Goad  and  Chris  Mer- 


ACC  Tickets  Left 


A  limited  number  of  tickets 
still  remain  for  tho  Atlantic 
Coast  Conference  basketball 
tournament  which  opens  in  Ra- 
leigh next  Thursday  it  was  an- 
nounced yesterday.  Both  in4lvi- 
dual  and  season  tickets  ar9  avail- 
able. Tickets  may  be  obtained  •* 
«  the  William  Neil  Reynolds  Col- 
iseum box  office. 


Drawings  May 
Fix  Positions 
In  Tournament 

RALEIGH— (AP)— If  necessary, 
a  drawing  will  be  held  Sunday  to 
determine  final  standings  in  the 
Atlantic  Coast  Conference  basket- 
ball race. 

This  was  announced  yesterday 
by  Roy  Clogston.  athletic  director 
at   North    Carolina    State    College. 

The  drawings  would  be  held  in 
order  to  arrange  pairings  for  next 
week's  conferente   tournament. 

At  present,  it  appears  that  a 
drawing  may  be  needed  to  deter- 
mine the  3rd.  4th,  7th,  and  8th 
positions. 

Duke  and  Wake  Forest  are 
struggling  for  the  3rd  and  4th 
spots,  and  Clemson  and  Virginia 
are  fighting  to  keep  out  of  the  cel- 
lar. 

The  drawing  will  be  held  at  the 
Carolina  Country  Club  at  1  p.m.. 
with  Clogston  and  Chuck  Erick- 
son,  athletic  director  for  the  Uni- 
versity of  North  Carolina,  pre- 
siding. 

Clogston  said  the  team  winning 
the  draw  would  take  the  higher, 


Defending  champions  in  all ,  cg^  of  Carolina,  who  have  been  I 
events  are  back,  and  barring  mir-'  3,.^ing  „„  somewhat  of  a  duel! 
acles.  all  should  be  firmly  estab- 1  them.selves.  Mercer  was  regularly ' 
hshed  m  the  favorite's  role  come '  ahead  of  Goad  until  the  unhearld- 1 
startmg  time.  In  the  events  to  gd  junior  upset  him  in  the  Caro- ' 
be  decided  tonight,  last  year's] 
champions  defending  are  split 
evenly  between  Carolina  and  N.  C. 
State  with  four  each. 


The  200  yard  butterfly  will  open 
the  program  with  defending  ACC 
and  NCAA  titlest  Dick  Fadgen 
of  State.  Carolina's  "Mac"  Mahaf- 
fy  and  darkhorse  Ackerman  of 
Clemson  the  men  to  watch. 

Ace  sprinter  Bill  Roth  of  the 
Tar  Heels  will  attempt  to  dup- 
licate his  victory  of  last  week  ov- 
er Dave  Mclntyre  of-  State  when 
they  lock  horns  in  the  .50  yard 
freestyle.  Mclntyre  is  defending 
champion   and   recordholder. 

All  -  American  Charlie  Krepp 
.should  experience  no  difficulty  in 
defending  his  200  yard  backstroke 
title  and  will  probably  be  shoot- 
ing for  a  conference  standard 
that  will  stand  for  some  time  to 
come.  The  Tar  Heel  holds  the  cur- 
rent   record    at    2:07.9,    which    he 


place  in  the  standings  and  not 
the  place  that  would  give  it  a  pre- 
ferred  spot  in  the  pairings. 


Titan 
Against 
Titan . . 

Hate 
Against 
Hate . . 


FATHER 

AGAINST 

SON! 


kph  COHEN -Vrt  Of  ORS" 


THE 


PATRONIZE  YOUR 
•    ADVERTISiRS    • 


AlUOAY 


«eleoied  thru  Unii.d  Artiil,     ! 

TODAY  ~  SATURDAY 


ALAN  LADD 

VIRGINIA     EDMOND 

MAYO- O'BRIEN, 

NOW  PLAYING 


Carolina 


•*«■■ 


Win  or  Lose . . . 


-.  \ 


%■ 


TAR   HEELS! 

We  Are  Mighty  Proud  Of  You! 


.:  I: 


t  ^ 


There  is  little  we  can  add  to  what  has  been 
said  already  about  this  year's  edition  of  the 
Carolina  Basketball  Team.  ^      .     . .'. 

'       '  ..it 

\ 

Not  only  have  they  created  a  new  spirit  and 
enthusiasm  among  our  citizens,  but  they  have 
focused  nationwide  attention  on  our  campus 
and  our  community. 

To  Frank  McGuire  and  Company,  we  want 
officially  to  extend  our  congratulations.  As  you 
face  the  last  game  of  the  season,  we  are  well 
aware  of  the  tremendous  pressure  of  the  as- 
signment. 

But  we  know  that  each  of  you  will  give  it 
your  best.  Maybe  that  won't  be  enough^  but 
it's  st^l  good  enough  for  us. 


TheB 


apelHill 


MEMBER   FEDERAL   DFPO<;iT    INSURANCE   CORPORATION 

Chapel  Hill  Carrboro  Glen  Lennox 


^mmmmmmmmm'immmtf 


tJ  H  C  LIBRARY 
SERIALS   DEPT. 
CHAPEL  HILL,    N.    C. 
8-31-49 


52. 


WEATHER 

S«nny  and  warmer  with  high  of 


VOL.  LVII,  NO.  106 


^Tar  Heel 


iNrriATivE 

A   good   axam^a    S—   »dit«r{af, 
Mf  •  2.. 


Complete  (Jf)  Wirti  S^rtttt 


Israel  To  Comply 
With  UN  Demands 

UNITED  NATIONS.  N.Y.  -(AP)  i  States  understands  it  to  mean  im- 
~Thc  United  Nations  moved  Fri-   mediate  withdrawal  without  condi 
day  night  to  post  its  police  forces   tions. 
in  the  Gaza  Strip  and  along  the  Gulf 

of  Aqaba  as  Israeli  forces  leave  Secretary  General  Dag  Hamniar- 
under  the  agreement  announced  ^^^°^^  issued  orders  for  Maj.  Gen. 
yestei^ay.  ,  E-i^-M.  Burnj.  Canadian  commatid- 

»ng   the   UN   emergency   force   in 

The  Israeli  decision,  forecast  last    Egjpt,  to  meet  Israeli  army  leaders 

night   by   its,  UN  delegation,   was   tomorrow     to  arrange  for    taking 

put  before  the  UN  General  Assem    over  the  disputed  areas. 

biy     by    Foreign   Minister     Golda       In    the    only   Arab   comment   of 

■.  todays  session,  Egyptian  Foreign 

The   effect   is   to  return   Israeli   '^'"'s^er  Mahmoud  Fawzi  said  he 

soldiers  ,to  the  positions  they  oc-    assumed    the   Assembly   is    unani- 

cupicd  before  last  October's  invas     "^""^  '"  acceptig  full  and  honest 

ion   of    Egypt— be"hind    the      1949   implementation    of   its   resolution* 

annstice  lines.  calling  for  immediate  and  uncondi- 

tional  withdrawal  of  Israel.  He  ob- 
By  withdrawing.  Israel  meets  the   served  that  nothing  said  in  the  As 
demands  of  both  the  UN  and  Presi    sembly  or  elsewhere  could  affect '  s^"^<^ots /^terday  discuss  the  Uni- 
aent  fcisenhowcr— and  escapes  the  the  lawfulness  of  Egypt's  rights  and  !  ^'<^fsity's  Negro  students. 
i*iZ  nr"nn*'^  ^  x^"u"'''    ''"'    *^"''  ^^  ^^"^  ^^^  P^°P'^^  «f  the |      Common  opinion  among  the  UNC 
!n  the  U^  '  ^''^  ""'"'*""    ""'"^   ^'"P-  ^^"'^^°»  '^'''ders  was  that  it  is  very 

.,„    „  ■.  ^  ''"he  Israeli  action  had  been  vir-    difficult  to  estimate  student  opin 

wil    Lh.    h    r'r        I  ^'^""^   *"'"-   '"  '•P*'"  '^'^'••^t  f"*-  »^-«  days    ion   on   such    a   tender   matter   as 

w-ill   fight   back  If  violence   flares   after    many    conferences    here     in 

up  against  Israeli  shippiiig  or  Is  ,  Washington  and  in  Jeru.«lem.  But 

raeJi   terntory-and    appealed     to    no  one  outside  the  Israeli  dele-a- 

the  Ai-ab.  to  work  with  Israel  for    tion  appeared  certain  of  the  final 

development   of   the    Middle   East,    decision   until   Mrs.  Meir  told   the 

^hc  enumerated  steps  that   Israel    assembly: 

understood  would  take  place  with;      "The 


CHAPEL  HILL,  NORTH  CAROLINA,  SATURDAY,  MARCH  2,  1957 


Offices   in  Graham   Memorial 


POUR  PAGES  THIS  ISSUE 


Ttr  Heels  Finish  Regular  Schedule 
Unbeaten  With  86-72  Win  Over 
Duke;  Rosey  Hits  40  To  Lead  Way 

Twenty  Four  Straight 
For  AAcGuire's   Club 


FlQrMa  Visitors 
Hear  Stugdents 
Qn  Integration 

University  of     Florida     visitors 
heard     pro  •  integration     Carolina 


the  withdrawal,  but   did  not  class    now  in  a  position  to 


government    of   Israel    is 


racial  integration.  But.  as  student 
body  President  Bob  Young  told 
the  grcup.  "as  long  as  we  have 
Negroes  in  sm^l  numbers,  and 
the  number  increases  gradually, 
then  we  don't  expect  any  trouble." 
The    group   from    Florida,    con 


these  as  conditions. 


plans    for   full    and    prompt    with- 


announce  its    sisting   of  student     officials     and 


I.,     9"'^/ P^'^Sate  Henry  Cabol  |  drawal  from  the  Sharm  El  Sheikh 
Lodge  hailed  the  Israeli  action  as  ,  area  and  the  Gaza   Strip,  in   com 

mmT'"!  r"'   '"  ^"^''■'   ^^  ^^'    P""'^*^^  ^^  '^h  resolution  one  of  Feb 
Middle   Ea^t.   He  said  the   United,  2.  1957." 

Fourteen  Are  Selected 
For  57-58  Committee 


Fourteen 
selected    bv 


persons     have 
the    Selections 


ientation   Committee. 


their  dean  of  women,  has  beer, 
meeting  here  for  three  days  to 
question  University  of  North  Car 
olina  people  on  campus  integra- 
tion. Their  stated  purpose  is  neith- 
er to  hasten  nor  hinder  integra- 
tion. 

Carolina  students  who  met 
with  the  group  included  President 
Young.  Speaker  Sonny  Evans  of 
the  Student  Legislature.  Chairman  ♦ 
Tom  Lambeth  of  Graham  Memor- 1 
ial  Activities  Board.  Chairman 
Luther  Hodges  Jr.  of  the  Student  I 


a  string  of  24   straight 


By   LARRY    CHEEK  son    with 

Led  by  the  almost  unbelievable  victories. 

shooting    of  All-American    Lennie       The  win  broke  the  all-time  sing- 

Rosenbluth.       North       Carolina's  le  season  consecutive  victory  mark 

courageous   Tar   Heels   fought   off  of  23  set  by  the   1924  Tar  Heels. 


an  all-out  effort  by  Duke's  Blue 
Devils  last  night  in  Duke  Indoor 
Stadium  to  take  an  86-72  win. 
thus  closing  out  their  regular  sea- 


Group  Studies  integration  Progress 

This  is  the  group  from  the  University  of  Florida  which  is  here  to  study  Hie  integration  measures 
taken  by  UNC.  On  the  front  row  left  is  Fletcher  Flemins,  president  of  the  Florida  student  body.  He  was 
here  several  weeks  ago  to  tine  up  the  meeting  which  the  representatives  have  held  this  week.wVh 
various  groups  on  campus. 


/  'Somebody  Will 
Knock  Us  Off;' 
But  Nobody  Did 

By   BILL   KING 

Coach  Frank  McGuire  proved 
himself  a  poor  prognosticator  last 
night  when  his  Carolina  Tar  Heels 
climaxed  an  unbeaten  season  with 
an  86-72  win  over  the  Duke  Blue 
Devils  despite  McGuire's  constant 
warning  throughout  the  season 
that  ••somebody  will  knock  us  off 
before  the  season  is  over." 

Yet    nobody    could    have    been 


been 

,    ^     ^  ^''*'""i      The  following  people  have  been  1  Coupcil  Joe   Fleishman,   law  stu- 

mittec  <,f  the  Student  government    selectjjd    by    the    Selections    Com- (dent  w*o  haa  been   active   before 

"iJtlcc.    as    provided    by    the    Stu- j  in    student   gowmment.    and    Edi- 
dent   Constitution:      Misses     Belle  i  tor   Fred   Powlcdge   of   The   Daily 


for   service    dn'"(hc   1957  1958   Or- 


Faculty  Pay  Raise  Wanted 


It  also  assured  the  UXC  cagers 
of  remaining  atop  the  national 
ratings  for  at  least  one  more  week. 

Rosenbluth  was  the  fair-haired 
boy  who  broke  the  Blue  Deal's 
backs.  The  slender  senior  poured 
in  40  points,  most  of  them  com- 
ing in  the  game's  early  moments 
when  they  were  badly  needed. 

The  game  was  lifted  straight 
from  the  pages  of  Frank  Mcrri- 
well.  Duke  jumped  into  a  9-1 
lead,  fell  15  points  behind  at  37- 
22,  trailed  by  12  at  half.  47-35, 
then  forged  back  into  the  lead 
early  in  the  second  half. 

With  4:10  to  go.  Coach  Harold 
Bradley's  inspired  charges  led. 
70-69.  and  UNC  fans  looked  just 
a  little  down  at  the  mouth.  Then 
Rosenbluth  put  the  Tar  HeeLs 
I  back  on  top  by  one  with  a  field 
I  goal  at  the  3:45  mark,  and  the 
UNC    cagers    never    trailed    after 


Susan  Mayhue 
To  Head  Coed 
Orientation 


Corey,  Lucie  Cro.ssland.  Libby  Mc- 
Cord.    LuRnth    Sutton.    Mary  Jane 
Fisher.  Sue  Mayhue.   Dick   Robin- 
son.   Ed    Levy,    Jim   Alford,   John 
Brooks,  Herman  Godwin,  Al  Gold- 
j  smith,  Larr\-  Taylor.  David   Sloan 
I  and   Benny   Thomas,    student   gov- 
Mayhue,    a    junior   ernment  president  Bob  Young  an- 
fnom    Fort    Lauderdale,    Florida.  ■  nounced    jesterday. 


Miss    Susan 


has  been  selected  the  new  Wo- 
men's Orientation  head  by  the  Wo- 
men's Residence  Council.  | 

Miss    Hayhue,    a    transfer    from ' 
Stephens    College    in    Missouri,    is 
a    SDciology   Personnel    major.        [ 

Her   committee      will     be     an- : 
nounced    late    next   week.    It    will 


President  Young  stated.  ''For 
several  weeks,  the  Selections  Com- 
mittee held  interviews  of  all  those 
persons  who  were  interested  in 
serving  on  the  Campus  Orientation 
Committee.  Approximately  fifty 
persons  were  interviewed,  with  14 
being  s?lected.  The  caliber  of  stu- 
dents who  appeared  for  interviews 
was  very  high." 

•"Most  of  them  seemed  very  in- 
terested in  providing  the  best  j 
possible  program  for  the  incoming  j 
students.  Many  offered  construe-  i 
live  criticisms  of  the  past  pro- j 
grams."  Young  went  on  to  say. 


Tar  Heel. 

Asked  what  student  opinion  was 
on  racial  integration  here,  the 
UNC  students  said  such  a  ques- 
tion was  hard  to  answer.  Presi- 
dent Young  said  "it  is  accepted 
with  sort  of  an  indifferent  atti- 
tude," •with  "no  strong  opposition 
and  no  strong  feeling  for  it. " 

Editor  Powledgc  explained  The 
Daily  Tar  HcePs  editorial  stand 
on  the  subject.  The  newspaper  has 
been  pro-integration  on  the  camp 
us  for  a  number  of  years,  he  said, 
and  no  one  has  attempted  to  sup- 
press it.  "They  have  cussed  us.  like 
all  people,"  he  said,  "but  they 
have  not  suppressed  us  " 


any  happier  to  be  WTong  than  Mc- 
Guire because  as  he  stated  last  -  ^^^  With  Pete  Brennan.  Joe  Quigg 
night  following  his  team's  thrill-  and  Rosenhluth  hitting,  they 
ing  victory,  "an  unbeaten  season —  QMickly  rolled  up  a  14  point  fUMl 
President  Bob  Young  Thursday  i  -If  they  (the  General  Assembly)  in  his  plea  to  the  Legislatiu-e  to-  that's  what  the  boys  wanted.  U '  iri«i*gi3  ovir  the  undermanned 
night   compared    the  Tsnesent    Unit^do  not  approve   factilty   salary  hi- 1  duded:  |  we  lose  to  Clemson  or  Virginia  in  i  »*««   Devils. 

verstty    faculty    salary    scale    to    a    creases  as  proposed  and  requested  f      That  87  pei-sons  h«d  left  the  Uni- !  ihe     touroament.    then     we'll    just        Duke    plmyiag    rouiihhouse    ball 

"cub    tractor"   attempting   to   cu!li-    Ly    the    University    administratt  .a,  j  versity    in   the   past    18   months,   43    watch  the  rest  of  it  irom  the  side-  /  all  the  way,   paid  the  price  in  the 

vate  a  "200  acre  farm."  then  I  fear  we  will  .suffer  for  years     from    the    Division    of    Health    Af-    lines.   We  can  relax   a   little   now."    thtal    few    moments      when      they 

Young   delivered    an   appeal    be-    to  come."  he  emphasized.  '  fair.^•  and   44  from  the  Division  of        Over  in  one  corner  of  the  Caro- ■  W'^i'e   forced   to   combat    the    UTiC 


fore  the  student  Legislature  for 
endorsement  of  the  Universitys 
proposal  for  ten-percent  pay  hikes 
in  faculty  salaries. 

The  Advisory   Budget     Commis- 
sion has  propoi^ed  an  eight-percent 


Young  then  requested  legislature 
member.'  wTile  al  least  four  mem 
bers  of  the  General  Assembly  and 
plea  for  the  proposed  ten-percent 
increase  in  faculty  salaries. 

Youngs  request  for  adoption  of 
hike  to  the  General  Assembly  for    a  resolution  by  the  student  Legis- 


the   1957-59  biennium. 


laturc  endorsing  the  ten-percein  in- 
crease was  heeded. 


Special  order  was  moved  by  law- 


N^h^  Made  In 
Fqnty  Raid 


A  combination  of  three  previous 
I  threats   and   24   basketball   games 
!  finally    produced    a    full-fledged 
•1  am  confident  that  all  of  those    panty-raid  last  night. 

Between  10  p.m.  and  12  mid- 
night a  mob  si«oceeded  in  encom- 
passing most  of  the  ground  be- 
tween girls'  dormitories,  break- 
ing in  oo€  or  two  of  them. 
The  students  generally  managed 


SUSAN  MAYHUE 

new    coed    Orientation 


head 


chosen  will  be  aware  of  their  re 
sponsibilities  and  will  be  dedi- 
cated to  planning  and  carrying 
out  the  best  Orientation  Program 
in  the  history  of  Student  Govern- 
ment. 1  would  like  to  offer  my  sin- 
cere congratulations  to  all  of  those 
selected.  1  would  also  urge  tbos^ 
who  were  not  selected  for  the 
Committee   to  apply  for  work  as 

j  an   Ori^tation   Counselor   or  Ad- 

I  visers,"  said  Young. 


"The  next  few-  weeks  may   pos- 
sibly  be   the   most   critical   period 

of  our  University's  recent  history,  makers    to    allow 

I  say  this  for  one  major  reason --  doubly-endora-ed  - 

that  the  decisions  of  the  North  Ca-  University  Party- 

rolina  General  Assembly  may  well  lators  voted   unanimously   for   the 

determine  the  future  status-  of  our  proposal.                            .  ' 

University      for      generations      to  STATISTICS 

come."  Young  said.  Statistics    presented    by    Young 


,  Academic  Affairs,  due  to  "incrcas  i  Una  dressing  room  sat  Lennie  Ros-    stretch    drive    with    fire    key    men 

ed  salary  inducements."  eiibluth.     the    greatest     basketball    on    the    bench    via    the    excessive 

(2)  That  a  compilation  of  faculty    player    in    Carolina    history.    Rosy  '  personal    foul    route.    Four    were 

salary  scales  from  44  leading  Uni-    dropped  in  40  last  night — "a  pret- '  starters   wiile   the    fifth    was   Jer- 

versities  revealed  that  UNC  ranked    ty   fair   night    for   him."'   said   Mc- ,  ry   Robertson,  a    top  reserve.   The 

I  Guire.  Blue  Devils   were  called  35  times 

'Hey   Lennie."     the     Tar     Heel    for   fouling,   while   Carolina    drew 
i  chieftain  grinned,  "have  you  been    23  penalties. 

!  taking  vitamin   pills?     You     look        Each   team    had   25    field   goals, 
like   you're    improving."  i  b"*    'he   Tar   Heels    sank    36   free 

I      '"Naw  coach."  retorted  big  Len. 


from  23rd  to  27th. 

(3)  That  statistics  compiled  on 
19  of  the  persons  leaving  the  Uni- 
versity in  the  18  months  period 
studied  revealed  a  50.2  percent 
salary   increase. 


Longest  Legislature      | 

'    .  .-.  ^^  A    .r-v, .  j 

Changes  Election  Law   I 


passage    of    the  i      •'*'  That  present  salaries  for  full  |  "I've  been  practicing." 

Student  Party-  [  proft^ssors  here  ranged  from  $1,200  I      Somebody    was    of    the    opinion 
measure.   Legis-  I  ^'^  $3,000  below  annual  salaries  for  |  that    Rosenbluth    had    played    bet- 
full  professors  at  three  other  lead-  j  ter    than    ever    in    the    past    four 
ing  universities.  j  games.  To  this,  McGuire  retorted: 

Young  asked  that  the  legislature  \  "Lennie    has    been     playing     like 
and   individual   students   "join  to- 
gether  in   this   important  endeav- 
or— increase  in  faculty  .salaries. 


that   for   three   years. 


throws  compared  to  only  22  for 
Duke.  UNC  hit  25  of  60  for  41.7 
per  cent,  while  Duke  had  25  of 
74  tor  36.4  per  cent. 

Things  looked  dark  for  the  Tar 
Heels  in  the  game's  early  mo- 
ments as  Dtike  rolled  up  7  straight 
points  before  the     stiff     Carolina 


McGuire  was  asked  if  he  thought-  cagers  could  connect.     But     when 


Student  Cars 
In  Precarious 
Position  Now 


be    composed      of      nine      women 


of 


"Making  the  •  decisions  was  a 
whose  purpose  is  coordinating  the  "^ost  difficult  task.  A  great  deal 
program  for  new  women  students  of  time  and  energy  was  spent  in 
jjjjg  £g^  j  evaluating     the     qualifications 

Miss    Mayhue    is    an    automatic   everyone  who  was  interested, 
member   of    the    Campus    Orienta- '  : 

ti.m    Committee    bj    the    Student 
Constitution. 

Some  of  the  women  serving  on 
the  Campus  Orientation  Commit- 
tee will  also  be  members  of  the 
Woman's  Orientation  Committee. 
"The  purpose  of  this  dual  respons- 
ibility is  to  co-ordinate  the  men 
and  women's  activities,"  said  Miss 
Mayhue. 

In    selecting    Miss    Mayhue    as 


by  policeoaea,  ten  or  twelve  stu- 
dents succeeded  in  breaking  open 
a  door  and  entered  the  halls,  only 
to  be  repelled  by  a  determined 
housemother. 

Stopped  from  further  action 
around  that  sector  cf  the  girls' 
dormitories  by  the  police,  the  mob 
switched  back  and  went  up  to 
Carr  Dorm.  Reports  indicated  that 
a  few  male  students  opened  the 
front  door  but  that  it  was  force- 
fully closed  in  their  faces,  be- 
The  Bi-partisan  selection  board ,  lore  they  made  any  entrance, 
for   Men's    Honor   Council    candi-. ;      With  one  end  of  that  section  of 


By  NEIL  BASS  Trustees  for  their  seljectioH  of  Wil- 

Thursday  nights  legislative  ses-    liam   B.   .\ycock   as  the   new   UNC 
sion   was   probably  the  longest  on   chancellor, 
record,  excluding  sessions  devoted  I  Elections  Law 
to  consideration  of  student  govern  \      Deliberation   on   the  newly  pro- 
tp   produce    a    rowl    of   noise   and  i  '"^"'"s  $100,000-plus  budget.  posed  Election  Law  caused  the  ses- 

confusion,     while     entreated     and        Legi^/Iators     took    the     Elections ;  slon  to  run  three  full  hours. 

resisted  by  policemen     in     squad    Law  apart,    made   additions   to   il        Most    of    the    controversy    came    ^ence  Matthews,  chairman   of  the 
cars  and  on  foot.  j  and  spent  more  than  two  hours  de-  i  due    to    necessarj-    provisions    and  ,  student  Traffic  Committee 

The    large   crowd   estimated    at   liberating  changes  proposed  by  the   changes  which  were  overlooked  by 
400    post-game   students    streamed    15-member  Elections  Board.  j  the    Elections   Board    and   the   Le- 

out  from  the  pep  rally  held  after  I      Representatives   also  listened  to    gislature    Ways    and    Means    Com- 
tho  game-  headed  toward  Mclver  I  President  Bob  Young  make  a  plea    mittee. 

Dorm.  Milling  around,   hedged   in  '  for  increased  salaries  for  Universi-        According    to    Ways   and    Means 

ty  faculty  members.  Chairman  Al  Goldsmith,  University 

Young  called  the  situation    "cri-   Party,  it  was  proposed  these  chan-  i  student  affairs, 
tical"    and    asked    that   legislators  ges  be  made  from  the  legislature        Strong  action 


The  possession  of  cars  by  stu- 
dents presently  rests  in  a  precar- 
ious   position,    according    to    Law- 


Over  300  license  numbers  of 
cars  not  registered  with  the  Unf- 
versity  are  now  being  processed 
in  Raleigh  through  the  Office  of 
Student  Affairs,  reported  Ray  Jef- 
feries.    a.ssi6tant    to    the    dean    of 


thai  the  Blue  Devils  were  as  tough 
as  Wake  Forest  Tuesday  night. 
"Thef  were  definitely  just  as 
tough."  he  stated.  "'They  wanted 
to  knock  us  off  mighty  badly  just 
like  everybody  else,  and  the  fel- 
Utws  who  subbed  for  the  ones  who 
fouled  out  were  just  as  tough. 
That's  the  way  it's  been  all  year 
long." 

The  smiling  Irishman  was  very 
happy  a.s  he  remarked  to  nobody 
in  particular,  "they  fooled  mc.  I 
never  though  they  could  go  all 
the  way." — but  thev  did. 


Lennie   Rosenbluth   began   to  find 

the  range,  it  was  '"Go  for  Broke". 

(S^e   TAR   HEELS,    Page   4) 


Nominations 
To  Be  Tuesda^' 


will     be     taken 


write   their  General   Assemblynten  >  floor  due  to  lack  ol   time  to  con-    agaihst   those  who  fail  to  register 


Honor  Council 
Interviews     ; 
Start  Mondqy 


their  automobiles  as  soon  as  possi- 
ble. 

Approximately  30  cases,  most  of 
which  were  for  parking  violations, 
have  been  tried  by  the  Student 
Traffic 


urging  adoption  of  the  University   sider  the  law  in  committee  nieel- 

propasal   for   a    ten-percent   hike    ings. 

in   faculty  salaries.  Way,,*"  and  Means  met  two  after- 

The  Budget  Commission  has  pre*-    noons    to    consider    the    Elections 
posed   an    eight-percent    increase.    Law. 
Resolution  Changes   made   on   the   floor   in- '  Government 

After  Young's  address,  the  Le-  eluded  addition  of  a  provision  for  recently, 
gislature  approved  unanimously  a  a  specific  balloting  place  for  re-  the  future  traffic  policy  at  the  I  dates  for  dorm  and  town  women's 
rejolution  favoring  the  ten-pcr  sidents  of  Emerson  StadiUm  and  University  depends  largely  upon  legislature,  student  body  officers, 
cent  hike.  !  other    University-owned    residence '  student's  self-discipline  in  abiding    and  possible  a  candidate  for  Daily 

Other   measures    passed    by   the  ■  halls   not   stipulated   in    the    Elec-   by  existing  traffic  regulations  and  j  Tar  Heel  editor,  will  be  held  on 


Due  to  changes  in  the  election 
laws  the  UP  nominatiing  schedule 
has   been   changed. 

The  University  Party  will  meet 
Tuesday  in  Gerrard  Hall  at  7:30 
p.m.  The  purpose  of  this  meeting 
will  be  to  nominate  candidates  for 
town  men  and  dorm  men's  legisla- 
ture and  Carolina  Athletic  Assn. 
Committee !  president. 

I      A   meeting,    to    nominate   candi- 


head  of  Women's  Orientation  the    dates  will  meet  Monday,  Tue»d«7  j  the    campus    covered,    the    crowd    assembly   other   than  the    12-page    tions  Law  due  to  an  oversight.        j  in  cooperating  with  groups  of  stu-  j  Tues'day.  March  12.  at  a  time  and 

came  back   toward  Mclver   where  '  Elections  Law  were:  !      Residents  of  Emerson  will  vote    dents  selected  to  officially  repre-    place    to   be   announced    later, 

the  police  again  cut  them  off.  They  j      (DA  resolution  reminding  stu-   in   Ruffin   Dorm    and    other    resi-    ^ent    the   student    body   in    traffic]      Both  meetings  will  have  separate 
got   across  the  street  toward  the    dent  government  organizations  that  i  dents    of   University    owned    resi-  j  matters.  seats  for  anyone  interested  in  at-  j 

lower  fiuad.   when   the   f)olice    at- '  student  government's  attorney  gen- j  dence  halls  not  enumerated  in  the  _     The  Traffic  Committee  issues  attending   the    meetings.   All    guests, 
tempted  to  apprehend  several   of    eial   will    prosecute  under  provi.s-l  Elections   Law   will    vote    in    Old  ■  committee  summons     to     students    have  been  invited  to  speak  at  any 


WRC    considered    ability   to    work  |  and  Wednesday  of  next  week,  be- 
with  students,  administration,  and  i  iween  2  and  4  p.m. 
faculty;      organizational       ability;       All   men    interested   in  running 
originality;  ability  to  speak  before  i  lor    men's   honor  council   will   h^ 


others:    responsibility;    and    lead- 1  interviewed  at  ^hese  times  in  thg 
ership. 

"Through  close  cooperation  with 
the  Campus  Orientation  Commit- 
tee we  hope  to  present  an  effec- 
tive program  to  all  new  students." 
Misy  Mayhue  stated. 


Former  Student  To  Be      * 
On  Murrow's  Program 

Special  To  The  Dniln  Tar  Heel 
DURHAM— Bob  Evans,  a  1952 
graduate  of  UXC.  will  appear  on 
the  Edward  R.  Murrow  Program. 
"See  It  Now,"  tomorrow,  it  was 
learned  Friday. 

Evans,  who  is  now  studying  law 
at  Oxford  University  in  England, 
will  appear  with  seven  other  Ox- 
ford students  in  a  dramatization 
of  Oxford  University  life. 

In  a  cable  to  Murrow  at  his 
London  hotel  from  hLs  New  York 
staff  the  following  comment  was 
released:  "Stuart.  Griffith,  and 
Evans  (of  North  Carolina)  will 
probably  rank  as  one  of  the  great 
perfromanccs  of  American  tele- 
vision." 

Evans  recently  was  elected  to 
the  second  bigbe.st  office  in  the 
Oxford  Union,  an  Oxford  debat- 
ing   society.    He    also    played    on 

:  the   Oxford   championship   basket- 
ball   team    with    Paul    Likins    last 
year. 
While     at     the     University   of 

I  North  Carolina  Evans  was  Phi 
Beta  Kappa,  chairman  of  the  Caro- 
lina Forum.  Attorney  General  of 
the  student  body  and  president  of 

!  the  Student  Partv. 


Men's    Honor   Council      room     in    the  students,  but  they  all  escaped.  I  ions   of   the   Honor   Code    if   they!  East. 
Graham  Memorial.  Those  men  in-    Howevier  two   frtudents   had    their   overspend    funds   appropriated    by  j  CLASS  OFFICERS 
terested  have  been  asked  to  call  I  ID  c^urds  taken  from  them.  I  the  legislature. 

Jim  Exum  at  the  Sigma  Nu  house,  I      A«  lor  tibe .  sought-after  item—       (2)    A    sesolution    commending    legislature     floor  which  was     de- 

89007.  around  supper  time  to  make '  pontic?— male   acquisition   of    any  Consolidated   University  President    feated   immediately  was  a   provis 

appointments  for  interviews.  was  not  spjen.  William  Frdiay  and  the  Board  of,      (Sec  LEGISLATURE,  Page  3) 


who   incur  as  many  as   five   park-  \  time  during  the  meetings, 
ing  tickets  during  a  semester.  Sen-  ;      "All   University  Party  members 
One  change  proposed  from  the ,  ttences  have  ranged   from  a  Com- !  must  have  their  membership  cards 

mittee  warning  to  revocation  of  in  order  to  vote  on  nominees  for 
the  privilege  of  keeping  a  car  at  candidacy."  according  to  UP  Chair- 
thc    University.  '  man  Mike  Weinman. 


OM'S  SLATE 

ActivltlM  inGraham  Mennorial 
today  include: 

ttwdent  GevernnMnt,  3-5,  Grail 
RMm;  Class  Group,  11   a.m.  Ro- 


land  Hrk4fr   Lounge   No.  3   and 
Woodhows*  Conference  Room. 


.  .y  -.v  ,     ,-:,,  ,  A- 


^AGi  rwo 


THE  0A4LY  TAR  HCBt 


SATURDAY,  MARCH  i,  yH7 


Presidenf  Young's  Speech: 
Fine   Student   Initiative 

Stucltiit  luxlv  Presidt-m  Hol»  \(Mm,i;  has  pixjdiued  an  cxtellem  exam- 
ple ol  snidcju  initiative. . 

He  told  the  Stiidem  l.e-»islatme  rhursday  night  that  "The  next 
feu  weeks  may  jiossibly  l>e  the  most  tritieal  period  ot  our  university's 
recent  historv. 

.  .  the  deeisiouN  ol  the  North  Carolina  General  .\ssembly  durin'^ 
this  period  ot  time  mny  well  determine  the  future  status  ot  our  universi- 
tv  tor  oetieriuions  to  tome.  It  thev 


do  not  approNe  lacidty  salary  in- 
( reases  as  pro|>osed  aiid  requested 
l)v  the  I'niversitv  administration. 
iIkii  I  tear  we  will  "sflfter  h>r  vears 
lo  <<>nie."  ,.^^ 

And  the  .Student  l.e;»islature  im- 
me<liatelv  passed  a  rt^Siolution  baek- 
ini;  up  ^'(1UI1L^  s  spet^h  and  retpiest- 
\\vy  tliat  "lovjl  (iii/eirs  ot  the  .State 
ot  North  Carolina  .\ .  .  tome  to 
the  rid  ot  the  taiuhv  at  ihe  Ini- 
vetsitv  ot  North  Cantiina." 

President  \'oiuv4  hacVed  up  his 
plea  Avith  specific  tatts  altout  the 
,  tremendous  problent  we  now  have 
in  tiirinu  and  keepinin  i;ood  pro- 
lessors  and   instrtutors.         * 

.\t  the  same  lime.  Cons<)lidated 
l'ni\erviiv  President  ^\'illiam  Fri- 
d.iv  has  swun.n  into  aition  on  the 
s.  nie  suhjett.  l^te  has-\  irtiiallv  de- 
manded iliat  r.NC  n-fi*  heis  oel  pav 
i;iises.  If  his  retpiest  tails,  he  has 
said,   those   inshnt  tors   tHust  %e\   a 


pav   raise   identital   to  the  one   all 
state  workers  are  re(|uesrin<'. 

It  Ik  ,  l)een  a  lon,i>  time  sinte 
stndeiu  leaders  resp<inde<l  to  a  trit- 
i<al  situation  with  sut  h  alertness. 
The  ley  islat  lire  and  President 
Vnuag  should  be  con,«rati»lated. 
.\nd  thev  shoidd  not  stop  their 
work.     « 


Pity 


The  visitors  from  the  Tniversi- 
tv  ot  Florida  who  are  studying  in- 
te|i>r:  lion  here  ha\e  had  their  visit 
covered  in  silence,  says  a  new  story. 

It  is  saddeninj;  that  the  t'NC 
people  they  are  visiting,  who  rep- 
lesent  the  oldest  :ind  most  free 
state  uni\ersitv.  sboidd  ha\e  to 
operate  in  silente.  the  oldest  and 
best  lorm  of  (ontnsitui  and  sup- 
pression (»f  the  truth. 


Best   Licensing   Program? 


Ctimmissioner  F.d  St:heidt  of  the 
stale's  motor  vehicles  dep;irtment 
has  been  (pioted  as  saviiio  North 
Carolina  has  the  l>est  automobile 
licensing   program    in    the   nation. 

We  disagree.  It  this  state  has 
the  l)est.  we  would  hate  to  drive 
on  other  states'  roads.  For  North 
Cart)lina  dri\eis  ap|)ear  to  ha\e  an 
easv  lime  getting  their  Hi  eases. 

How  else  could  a  Avtunan  get  a 
license  to  drive  a  car  when  slie  dries 
her  fingernail  pi>lish  l)y  sticking 
her  arm  out  the  window?  How 
else  (onld  people  otnain  licenses 
when  thev  ol)\  iouslv  d<»  not  know 
one  hand  signal   from  the  other? 

Consider  the  people  in  this  state 
wh«j  tlo  noi  kn«)U  what  lo  do  when 
their' afifmffilttflt^  »f>W  U\W  it  Sfkfit' 
or  a  spin.  .\nd  tJio.se  wfio  <om- 
pietely  panic    wlieu  t\\v\r  fooiljrake 

goes  down  to  the  floor. 

♦  *  * 

CoJisider  the  cIm Irtish  tpiestituis 
titat  are  asked  in  dri\ers'  licenses 
examinations,  and  tlie  tftpially  piti- 
liil  road  test  that'  U  given  pros- 
pet  ti\e  dri\e>s. 

How  alxnu  the  people  who  con- 
stantly fail  their  tests,  study  the 
book  a  little  hartUuj.  then  come 
liack  and  get  permission  and  ap- 
pjo>al  trom' the  stlpfe  to  pilot  a 
deadlv  weaixm  oxer  the  hlghwavs 
and  streets  of  this  slate.-' 

No.  we  disagree  '. erv  much  with 
Commissioner  Scheidt.  This  state's 
license  program  mav  l)e  best  com- 
paretl  with  the  other  states,  but  at 
tliat    it   is  a   j)itiful  one.   Cars  are 

The  Daily  Tar  H^el 

The  official  jtudeoi  publication  of  tbe 
Pnbhcatioos  Board  of  tbe  Universitj  u( 
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editor 


. Ff^jfD  POWLEbCr 

Managing  Editor  _.  '^.ARLlE  SLOAN 


News  Editor 


m  NANCY  HILL 


SpOTts   Editor     ^.?*4ARRY  CHEEK 

Business  Manager        '  UlL  BdB  PLEl 

Advertlsins  Mana^^or^FRED  KATZIN 

: — *4ilt  -  -    ■■     — 

EDITORIAL  SIAVY  \^/ '<^>><'>'\j  Sears. 
Frank  Crother.  Davfd  Mundy. 

iVEWS  STAFF— Clarke  Jones.  Pringle 
Pipkin.  Edith  MacKinnon.  Wally  Ku- 
ralt.  Mary  Alys  Voorhees.  Graham 
Snvder.  NeiJ  Ba..s.  Peg  Humphrey. 
Phyllis  Maultsby.  Ben.  Taylor.  Walter 
Sohruntek.  H-Joost  Pftlak,  Patsy  Miller. 


BUSINESS  STAFF— Rc^  Moore.  Johnny 
Whitaker,   Dick  .  L^iSR^.. 


SPORTS    STAFF:   Ddive.  Wible,   Stewart 
Bird.   Ron   Milliagn.'- •'* 


.lubscription  Manager'^*'*  !f?  Dale  Staley 

Charlie  Boll 
Bill  King 


Circulation  Manager  

Assistant  Sports  Editor- 


Staff  Photographer 
Librarian    _ 


Norman  Kantmr 
—  Sue  Gishner 


yetting  bigger  and  more  powerful, 
and  inconijx'ient  people  are  being 
allowed  to  diixe  them. 

Suggestion: 
Let's  Start 
Catching  Em 

It  is  good  that  the  Student  Traf- 
lic  Committee  is  investigating  the 
students  ^\ho  have  not  registered 
their  automobiles  here. 

As  a  news  storN  today  explains, 
the  comiiiittee     is     checking     with 


proofreader  Bill  Weekes 

Night  Editor .  Manley  Springs 

Night  News  Editor  .. —  Graham  Snyder 


state  license  authorities  on  iinreg- 
is/ered  cars,  and  strong  action  ^vill 
l>e  taken  against  those  students  who 
ha\e  failed  to  register. 

The  I'niversitv  currently  has  a 
bad  problem  about  cars.  It  has.  a 
gieat  main  students  who  own  cars. 
and  not  encuigh  parking  space  for 
them.  For  this  leason  cars  have  had 
to  l>e  restric  ted  in  Chapel  Hill. 

It  is  not  a  healthv  situation,  but 
the  University  had  to  do  something 
alxMit  it.  It  did  the  f>est  it  could. 

Now.  the  students  who  violate 
the  rules  of  the  University  should 
be  punished.  Fhev  have  had  ample 
time  to  register  their  automobiles. 
Almost  anv  excuse  would  be  silly 
now. 

I  he\  are  holding  up  progress  as 
well  as  breaking I'niversity  law.  Wt 
liope  the  Student  Frallic  C'onniiit- 
tee  continues  catching  ihein. 

TV  Review: 
Basketball 
&  Pee  Web 

Anthony  Wolff 

I  Ik-  basketball  lans  and  the 
team  will  piob;  bly  enjoy  the  ccm- 
test  between  the  Hostcuf  Celtics 
and  the  koc  Jiesier  Royals  on  (*han- 
nel  f,  at  ai^jo  p.m.  Flie  Bostoti 
team  includes  rebounder  Bill  Rus- 
sell and   ball-h  indler  Bob  (Mousey. 

At  (5  p.m.  oil  Channel  ii.  CNC's 
own  Pee  Wee  Batten  entertains 
inoilur  iiroup  ol  Diirhani  high- 
school  studentson  "Fop Ten  Dance 
Fartv."  Miss  Baacn  is  the  onlv  at- 
traction   here. 

Beginning  at  <»:i5  on  (ha'nel 
J  is  another  in  the  series  entitled 
■Yesterday  s  VVc)rld."  This  weeks 
segment  preseitts  a  day  in  tbe  life 
of  the  average  man  of  fireece  dlir- 
inu  the  (iolden  Age.  For  all  class- 
ical scholars  and  other  interested 
parties. 

Jackie  (ileason  aiul  the  Perry 
C<nnc>  Show  are  on  Channel  2  anci 
'.  respect ivelv  at  8  p.m.  Mickey 
Roonev  subs  tonight  for  the  vaca- 
tioning Mr.  Como.  and  ]o  .Stafford 
is  the  guest  vcKali-st. 

Following  Conto  at  9  is  "Caesar's 
Hour."  t< might  departing  from  its 
usii.tI  foremat  to  present  awards  to 
Rcwk  Hudson  (for  "Giant")  and 
Ingrid  Bergman   (for  "Anastasia"). 


YOU  Said  It;  Big-Time  Athletics, 
Poetry  And  Mi  chael's  Restaurant 


Editor  S^hould  Be  Congratulated  On  Sta  nd 


Lake,  or  jazz  concerts. 

But  the  supporters  of  big-time 
athletics  would  contend  that  ball 
games  are  such  an  integral  part 
of  colleg?  life,  the  center  of  the 
"Carolina  tradition;"  and  if 
there  was  ever  a  "sacred  cow" 
in  this  university,  it  i.s  this  pray 
upon  the  "Carolina  way  of  life." 

If  actual  tradition  is  taken  in- 
to   consideration,     we     can     see 
thiit  this  consist.s  of  high  cultural 
standards     and     high     academic 
standards;  not  ol  "rah!  rah"  foot 
ball  weekends  and  jazz  concerts 
as  many  would  have  us  believ©. 
Its  tin^e  for   us  to  tako  tht 
"sacrod  cow"  out  and  soo  it  for 
what  it  actually  is.. 

First  of  all.  we  should  have 
'big-time  academics."  and  then 
we  can  worry  about  athletics. 
Let's  not  forget  that  our  first 
responsibility  is  an  education: 
but  we  are  more  concerned  with 
keeping  our  basketbiall  team  num- 
ber 1.  while  we  dismiss  the  fact 


editor: 

I  had  hoped  to  refrain  from 
waiting  «  tetter  to  T^e  Daily  Tar 
Heel,  but  I  find  it  impossible.  I 
think  you  are  to  be  congratu- 
lated, not  condemned,  for  your 
editorial  on  ••big-linie  athletics." 
You  are  following  a  trend  not 
dnly  set  by  previous  editors  but 
one  which  all  thinking  people 
who  are  concerned  with  this  uni- 
versity   follow. 

1  do  not  think  Mr.  Tatum.  or 
his  colleagues,  are  responsible; 
It  is  the  whole  system,  ^'e  might 
^s  -well  face  it — either  big-time 
athletics  must  be  ^subordinated 
or  the  University  will  suffer  aca* 
d^mically.  How  can  we  talk  of 
building  a  new  gymnasium  when 
the  cultural  conditions  here  are 
so  lamentable? 

A  look  at  the  mu.sic  and  art 
departments  here  makes  one 
shndder.  to  mention  only  two  in- 
stances. Where  are  the  high 
standards  which  gave  this  uni- 
versity its  great  reputation  as 
tbe  'cultural  center  of  the 
South"?  These  have  been  re- 
placed by  hysterical  mobs  shout- 
ing. "'We  want  a  touchdown." 

JTompare,  for  example,  the  dif- 
ference between  the  attendance 
at  a  Tuesday  Evening  concert  and 
9  Louis  Armstrong  jaiz  concert; 
or  the  difference     between     at- 
tendance at   one   of  the  basket- 
ball games  and  attendance  at  one 
of  the  Chapel  Hill  Concert  series. 
this  indiMtoo  tho  low  lovol 
ff  wtitch  our  cultural  standards 
lMVi»   droppod.    Tho    fa«t    that 
r^  many  oro  concornod  about 
Hmi  sMttotfon  only  mok'os  i*  mero 
soriovs. 

We  must  realize  that  universi- 
ties such  as  this  one  have  a  re- 
sponsibility to  society  to  uphold 
hi^  standards — and  we  cannot 
escape  it  by  substituting  ball 
games    and     parties    at    Hogan's 

Grading  On 
The  Curve? 

■dll«r: 

The  article  "B"  rating  by  Jim 
Parks  is  very  helpful  to  the  stu- 
dents and  the  people  of  the  sur- 
rounding communities.  But  I 
want  to  call  your  attention  to 
one  point  of  the  article  which 
states  that  Michael's  Famous 
Foods   was  given   a   "B"   rating. 

This  morning  I  was  eating 
breakfast  in  Michael'**  I  hap- 
pened to  notice  Jim's  article,  but 
»ooieb«w  something  did  not  co- 
incide. 

ilichaers  rating  card  was  ".\." 
I  looked  closer  to  see  the  date, 
and  it  iras  good  since  Feb.  13. 
1«97. 

I  believe  this  needs  your  im- 
mediate attention. 

6*oonwood  Ednoy 


Suggestion  About  Consolidation 

The  budget  presented  to  the  General  Assembly  includes  funds 
to  recondition  the  old  Institute  of  Government  building  in  Chapel 
Hill  for  the  office  of  the  president  of  the  Consolidated  University 
of  North  Carorina. 

The  thing  to  do  with  that  office  is  to  move  it  away  from  the 
cajnpus  of  the  University  in  Chapel  Hill.  The  president  i.s  presi- 


that  we  are  losing  several  good 
faculty  members  with  a  shrug 
of  our  shoulders. 

Why  do  we  not  take  our  cue 
from  some  of  the  other  ioad- 
in  univorsities,  such  as  Harvard« 
and  take  athletics  off  its  false 
pedestal  and  concern  ourselves 
with  true  values? 

Sooner  or  later,  this  universi- 
ty will  be  brought  to  its  senses, 
and  perhaps  its  knees.  We  can 
do  it  the  easy  way  by  abolishing 
big-time  athletics,  or  the  hard 
way  by  waiting  till  the  bottom 
drops  out  of  everything. 

In  any  case  we  shall  reap 
what  we  sow;  nor  can  Mr.  Tatum 
and  all  his  assistants  present 
prevent  it.  There  may  be  wailing' 
and  gnashing  of  teeth,  but  jus- 
tice shall   prevail. 

Name   Withheld    By    Roquost 


'I  Demand  Sanctions' 


Poetry-To- 
The-Editor:  • 
^ajnt  Job? 

Editor:       ' 

An  unidentified  car  is  running 
around  Chapel  Hill  with  some 
blue  paint  on  its  front  bumper 
that  was  swiped  from  me.  I  need 
the  paint. 

Please  pot  the  following  notice 
in  your  paper  to  help  me  re- 
cover it: 

STOLEN 

Will  the  car  that  removed 

The   light   blue   paint 

From  my  left  rear  fender 
(Last   Wednesday's  "the   date) 


Return  it  to  Hill  Hall 
From  where  you  took  it. 
But  not  by  the  method 
Used  Wednesday  to  hook  it! 

A.  Blue  Car 


•  •Or^  -r«*«  »i^MiMl^-r»r*  f^Mirr  «• 


:    Let's  Put  Building  Elsewhere 

dent  of  the  three  branches  of  the  University,  and  the  presence  of 
the  office  on  the  Chapel  Hill  campus  has  always  led  many  State 
College  and  Woman's  College  people  to  feel  left  out.  to  put  it 
mildly. 

The  place  for  that  office  is  not  on  any  of  the  three  campuses. 
The   1957  legislature  can  turn  the  trick  if  it  wants  to  do  so. — 
The  Raleigh  Times. 


^6go 


By  Walt  Kelly 


WC   CHANCELLOR   GORDON    BLACKWELL 

. . .  sociologist    leaves    for   Greensboro 


G.W.  Blackwell 
A  Sultan-Elect 


UNC  sociologist  Gordon  Blackwell  is,  for 
some  people,  in  a  very  enviable  position.  He  was 
introduced  jokingly  this  week  at  a  Rotary  Club 
meeting  as  the  "sultan-elect  of  the  greatest  edu- 
cations! harem  in  the  United  States" — meaning 
he  was  elected  this  week  as  chancellor  of  the 
Woman's  College  of  the  Consolidated  University, 
where  2,353  beautiful  females  go  to  school.  Fol- 
Icwing  is  Or  Blackwell's  background  story.  To- 
morrow on  the  Review  page:  William  Aycock. 
UNC's  new  chancellor. 

Dr.  Gordon  W.  Blackwell,  director  of  UNC's 
Institute  for  Research  in  Social  Science  and  Kenan 
Professor  of  sociology,  is  a  nationally  known  S/pec- 
ialist  in  community  organization. 

He  came  to  the  University  in  September.  1941. 
from  Furman  University,  where  he  was  head  o*^  the 
Dept.  of  Sociology  and  a  staff  member  of  the  Green- 
ville Counf^'  Council  for  Community  Development. 
During  World  War  II  he  was  on  leave  for  two 
years  with  the  Office  of  Civilian  Defense,  working 
on  community  problems  under  the  stress  of  war. 

Earlier  he  directed  research  with  relief  agen- 
.    cies  in  North  Carolina  and   in  Washington,  D.  C. 
He   has   also   served    as   visiting   professor   at   Co- 
lumbia   University    and    Oxford    University,    Eng- 
land. 
Dr.   Blackwell  is  a  native  of  Timmonsville.  S.C. 
He    is    a    graduate    of    Furman    University    (1932). 
and  holds  the  M.  A.  degree  from  the  University  of 
North   Carolina   (1933)    and   the   M.   A.    (1937)   and 
Ph.D.    (1940)   from  Harvard  University. 

Publications  include  New  Farm  Homes  for  Old 
(with  Vance.  1946);  Future  Citizens  All  (with 
Gould.  1952),  an  evaluation  of  the  Aid  to  Depen- 
dent Children  Program,  undertaken  for  the  Amer- 
ican Public  Welfare  Assn.;  Game  Theory  and  De- 
fense Against  Community  Disaster  (with  Nicholson. 
1954).  a  study  for  the  National  apsearch  Council. 
He  has  contributed  to  numerous  journals  in  the 
fields  of  sociology  and  education. 

In  1942  the  American  Council  on  Education 
selected  him  to  conduct  a  study  of  programs  of 
teacher  education  in  institutions  throughout  the 
country,  published  as  a  volume  entitled  Toward 
Community  Understanding. 

• 
A  Matter  Of  Rights: 

Lenior  Hall  Petitibn 

Following  is  the  complete  text  of  a  petition 
signed  by  approximately  60  Lenoir  Hall  student 
workers,  protesting  the  cafeteria's  methods  of 
payment. 

A  PETITION 

TO:  Mr.  George  W.  Prillaman 

Director  of  student  dining  halls.  ' 
.      FROM:  Student  workers  at  Lenoir  Hall 

RESOLVED:  '  That  the  unused  portion-not  to 
exceed  90  cents  daily— of  the  wages  of  $1.90  in 
food,  earned  by  a  self-help  student  for  each  days 
work  at  Lenoir  Dining  Hall  be  paid  to  the  student 
worker  in  cash  at  time  periods  of  twice  monthly. 

WHERE.AS:  The  student  workers  realize  that 
these  jobs  are  provided  to  help  a  student  work  his 
way  through  college,  and 

WHEREAS:  The  two  and  one-half  hours  work 
at  Lenoir  Hall  daily  is  about  the  limit  of  work  that 
a  student  can  do  daily  and  keep  his  studies  up 
to  par.  and 

WTIEREAS:  Necessities,  such  as  students'  laund- 
ry, could  be  purchased  by  the  accumulation  of 
money  not  used  by  him  for  food  each  day.  and 

WHEREAS:  There  are  occasions  when  a  work- 
er misses  meals  and  has  earned  more  for  his  work 
than  he  has  consumed  in  food  that  day,  and  he 
never  receives  pa>-ment  in  full  for  that  days  work 
because  it  does  not  carry  over  and  is  not  refunded, 
and 

WHEREAS:  Other  jobs  on  campus  pay  wages 
to  student  workers  in  cash, 

THEREFORE:  We,  the  student  workers  at  Le- 
noir Hall,  feel  that  we  have  earned  the  $1.90  each 
day  and  are  entitled  to  receive  in  cast  fhat  portion 
—not  to  exceed  90  cents  daily— which  we  do  not 
uae  for  the  purchase  of  food  at  Lenoir  Hall. 

AND:  For  this  right  we  present  this  peUtion. 


SATUi 


Str 
Wil 
Ch( 


The 
will  pr 
tury    CI] 
8  p.m. 
The 
lie  withj 
tenth  ii 
ies  of 
UNC  ^ 
Edgar 
Doroth> 
Heard. 
Gray  C| 
the  Qui 
Joinir 
unusual  I 
ments 
Julia   M 
Marjori* 
chel  an( 
los;   Cai 
Neal  0  1 

This 
this  yeai 
ed  in  cj 
OpeniJ 
perform  ^ 
et,  Opus 
set  of  qj 
SecortJ 
ual    con 
violas  a^ 
zart's  Qi 
The  h 
be  devoti 
Opus   2,1 
Bach's 
3,   one 
18th  cer 
will  be 
support  el 


5 


D< 


ws; 


SATURDAY,  MARCH  J,  1W7 


THrOAILY  TAR  HEEL 


:LL 


for 

1*  was 

Club 

•du- 

>f  th« 
licrsity, 
M.  Fol- 
T«- 
Lycock, 


UNC's 
Kenan 

ir.  1941. 
of  the 
Green- 
fupment. 
for    two 
working 
war. 
agcn- 
\.  D.  C. 
at   Co- 
ir,   Eng- 
ine.  S.C. 
(1932). 
jrsity  of 
J7)   and 

for  Old 

11     ( with 

Depen- 

Amer- 

land  De- 

Icholson, 

Icduncil. 

in   the 

Education 
ims   of 

ioxit  the 
Toward 


Ifs: 
•n 

I  petition 
ttudont 
tods   of 


1 — not   to 

$1.90    in 

|ach  day's 

.student 

monthly. 

ili-ze    that 

work  his 


wagi^s 


PAGE  THREE 


String  Quartet 
Will  Present 
'Chamber  Music 

The  University  String  Quartet 
will  present  a  program  of  18th  cen- 
tury chamber  music  Tuesday  at 
8  p.m.  in  Hill  Music  Hall. 

The  program  is  open  to  the  pub 
lie  without  charge  and  will  be  the 
tenth  in  the  Tuesday  Evening  Ser- 
ies of  concerts  sponsored  by   the* 
UNC  Music  Dept. 

Edgar  Alden,  first  violin:  Mrs. 
Dorothy  Alden,  viola;  Mrs.  Jean 
Heard,  lecond  violin;  and  Mary 
Oray  Clarke,  violoncello,  compo.se 
the  Quartet. 

Joining  them  in  compositioi^  for 
unusual  combinations  of  instru- 
ments by  Harris  Mitchell,  horn; 
Julia  Mueller.  Jean  Vavoulis  and 
Marjorie  Renner.  violas;  &nst  Pes- 
chel  and  William  Klenz,  violoncel- 
los; Carol  Sites,  harpsichord;  and 
Neal  ONeal,  bass.  i 

This  will  mark  the  second  time  I 
this  year  that  the  Quartet  has  play- 
ed in  Chapel  Hill.  | 

Opening  the  concert  will  be  the  j 
performance  of  Beethoven's  Quart- 1 
et.  Opus  18.  No.  2,  from  the  first 
set  of  quartets  he  wrote.  \ 

Secoridly,  written  for  the  unus- ' 
ual   combination   of   horn,   violin, ! 
nolas  and  voiloncellc,  will  be  Mo- 
zart's Quintet,  K.  407. 

The  last  half  of  the  program  will  ! 
be  devoted  to  Handel's  Trio  Sonata, '  '"^om  what  I've  seen  of  your  ^  camps  next  summer  in.stead  of  32, 
Opus  2,  No.  9  in  E  Major  and  ^J^^^^C  unit  here,  you  have  nothing ;  due  to  reduced  manpower  both  in 
Bach's  Brandenburg  Concerto  No.  *?  worry  about  at  Federal  Inspec-  j  the  Air  University,  and  in  the  num- 
3.  one  of  the  most  famous  early  ^^^^  **"  ^^^'  ^'  continued  Colonel  ber  of  juniors  in  the  country  ex- 
18th  century  chamber  works.  This  i  ^'  ^'  MacDonald,  liaison  officer  I  pected  to  go  to  camp  next  sum- 
will  be  given  by  a  string  ensemble.  '  ^^°^  AJTIOTC  Headquarters,  in  the  j  mer. 
supported  by  the  harpsichord  i  Tuesday   briefing   of   the  Detach- 

-  . "  ment  Staff. 

^■■^^■■^^■^^^^■^■•■^■^"■M"       Colonel  MacDonald,  a  Visitor  in 

CLASSIREDS  Chapel  Hill  for  the  past  two  years, 

«.MMMBa.^MaaB.^^Mi^^.^..    spent    all    day   Tuesday,   Feb.   25, 

LOST:   ONE  TAN  TRENCHCOAT,   **  Detachment  590,  for  the  purpose 

blue  and  red,  plaid  lining.  Size  !  °^   determining    the    readiness    of 

10.  One  white  blazer  with  navy  i  ^^^  Corps  for  Federal  Inspection, 

blue    binding.    If   found,   please 

notify  Kitty  Carr,  103  Mclver. 


OVER  INDUSTRY 


Concern  Shown  By  Hodges 

DURHAM,    — ^AP)— "If   we    are  |  the    Legislature   that    the   present  j  by  the  Legislature  on  the  first  day 


going  to  save  the  economy  oC  this 
state."  Gov.  Hodges  said  here  yes- 
terday, "We  must  do  everything 
possible  to  attract  industry." 

Speaking  bef-ore  the  Durhanr 
Chamber  of  Commerce,  Gov.  Hod- 
ges reiterated  his  plea  on  the  need 
for  making  the  state  more  attrac- 
tive to  industry.  / 

Hodges  also  said  the  state  must 
:  have  a  minimum  wage  law  "to  raise 
i  the  standard  of  living"  in  the  state. 
Hodges  also  discussed  the  ques- 
tion of  teacher  pay  hikes,  now  be- 
fore the  General  Assembly- 
Hodges,    who   fias    proposed    to 


tax  structure  be  revised  to  attract    of  its  session  were  justified.   Be- 
outside  industry,  to  the  state,  said  ,  ^^^^^  jg^  3^^  1957    ^e  said,  the 
that  "too  often  in  our  zeal  to  gel 
other  industrieif,  we  fail  to  appre- , 

ciate   and   support    the    industries  |  raises  of  100  per  cent  while  in  the 

that  we  have."  [  same  period  school  teachers  have 

The  state  must  take  into  consi- 1  received   160  per  cent  and  othei 


Chuck  M«y  U  Elected 
Beta  Theta  Pi  President 

"Rie  new  president  of  Beta  Theta 
Pi  elected  Feb.  27  is  Chock  May 
of  Bennettsville,  S.  C. 


AFROTC  Colonels  Attend  Briefing 


Shown  above  are  three  AFROTC  officials  who  attended   the   UNC   unit's  dotachment  staff     briefing 

on  Tuesday,  Feb.  25.  From   left  to  right  are  Lt.  Coi  onel  F.  W.  Swann,  detachment  executive  officer;  Col. 

George  Smith,  detachment  commander  and  Col.  A.  C.     MacDonald,  liaison  officer  for  ROTC  headquarters. 

Col.  MacDonald  told  those  present  at  the  briefing  Carolina's  AFROTC  unit  had  nothing  to  worry  about 

in  connection  with  the  upcoming  inspection. 


ROTC  Liaison  Officer 
Pleased  With   Unit 


5  ROOM  BRICK  HOUSE.  3  BED 
rooms,  all  modern  conveftiences. 
3  miles  on  Old  86  H)rway.  Stove 
and  Frigedaire  furnished.  Call 
Fred  Katzin  after  6:00.  8-9025. 


JAZZ  AT  TURNAGES 

Saturday  afternoon,  2:00,  Turn- 
ages  Cabin  in  Durham. — Jazz  by 
Dick  Gables  "All  Stars."  Beer 
Served. 


and  to  brief  the  Detachment  Staff 
on  procedures  next  year. 
MacDonald  listed  the  following 
main  points  to  be  effective  in  next 
year's  ROTC  program  over  the  na-  j 
tion: 

1.  Coeds  that  are  interested  in  a 
military   career,    can. 


4.  The  production  quota  of  tak- 
ing in  juniors  will  be  replaced  next 
year  by  an  enrollment  qi^ta. 

5.  Next  year  it  will  be  left  up 
to  the  PAS'S  of  Detachment  Com- 
manders as  to  whether  freshmen 
will  have  to  take  physicals  and 
the  Officer's  Qualification  Test  be- 
fore they  are  allowed  to  take  the 
program  or  after  their  first  two 
years  in  the  program. 

Colonel    MacDonald  ended     the 

briefing  by  pointing  out  there  is 

a  good  unit  here  and  a  high  per- 

as    of   nexti*^®"^*^®  °'  ^^^  ^^°'  "P°"  gradua- 


FOR  SALE:  32  FOOT  TRAILER, 
sleeps  four;  has  bath.  Contact 
Robert  Pickard  at  Taylor's 
Trailer  Court.  Airport  Road. 


year  put  in  for  direct  commission 
through  ROTC  programs. 

2.  Any  school  that  wants  flight 
training  for  next  fall  can  have  it.  \ 
With  regard  to  the  UNC  program, 
this  moans  that  category  1  seniors 
in  the  AFROTC  will  be  able  to  get 
their  private  license  even  before 
going  into  the  Air  Force.      • 

3:  There     will   be   26     summer 


ting,  get  their  wings.  "Keep  up 
the  good  work,"  he  said,  "and  let 
Federal  Inspection  take  care  of  it- 
self." 


Dairyland  Royal  Banana  Split 

A  banquet  in  one  dish.  Three  dips 
JnF^  of  Dairyland  Ice  Cream  —  Straw- 

berry, vanilla,  and  chocolate,  each 
covered  with  topping  of  fruit, 
nuts,  and  smothered  with  whip- 
ped cream  and  garnished  with  red 
cherry. 

DAIRYLAND  FARMS 

Glen  Lennox 


UNC  Graduates  Named 
To  Receive  Training 

Two  former  students  of  the  Uni- 
versity of  North  Carolina  have 
been  named  to  receive  training 
at  the  Navy's  Officer ''Candidate 
School.   Newport.  Rh^e  Island. 

Thomas  Miller  Snyder.  Jr.,  son 
of  Mr.  and  Mrs.  T.  M.  Snyder  of 
Lexington,  and  David  Madison 
Smoot.  Jr..  son  of  Mrs.  D.  M. 
Smoot  and  the  late  D.  M.  Smoot 
of  Wake  Forest,  were  processed 
through  the  Office  of  Naval  Of- 
ficer   Procurement    at    Raleigh. 

Both  candidates  received  Bach-  \ 
elor  of  Science  degrees  from  | 
UNC.  Snyder  was  a  <nember  of  j 
the  Professional  Business  Fratern- 
ity, while  Smoot  belonged  to  Al- ' 
pha  Kappa  Psi  and  the  Young  Re- 1 
publican   Club.  j 


Seniors 


iDAILY    CROSSWORD 


1 
5 

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1«. 
11. 
11 

14. 

IS. 
1« 

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20 
21 

i33. 

25 

;3« 

'.27. 
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'32. 

S5 

S« 

»7 

t» 

«0 
tl 

«2 


ACBOM 

lUmaia 


Bilkworm 
Nora*  god 

UnAdoriMd 
Heiirt 
ArUry 
Trite 
(N.  Z.> 
Barrier 
PbllUtin* 
|l*nt 

Sen.  Gr*«n'a 
•tau  (abbr  ) 
Ua«l«Mly 
Birds M 
a  CUM 
Uons  h4vt 
them 
Cbnccit 
Unitiof 
work 
Tin  foil 
Pakn 
(AaiA) 
Ro«m« 
Flowering 
shrub 

AfHrmativK 
vote 
Adore* 
Contraction 
(coUoq.) 
.  Number 
Firm 
J*wi«h 
month 
.  Remnantt 

DOWN 

A  contest 
FolUlwinf 
Vftntila.* 


4.  Ox  iTtbet) 
i-Gook. 
aaefga 

iuSmeU 

T  Money  iA4 

•.C^roelM 
11.  Droop 
IS.  Herb  of  car. 

rot  family 
15.  Pigpen 

17.  Roman  dat« 

18.  Island  off 
Jutland 

21  Dry 

22  GBap«- 
frowinf 
area 


23  Iron, 
for 
instance 

t4.  Sen. 
Gold- 
water's 
stats 

25  ShaU 
low 
vessel 

27.  Chinese 
pa- 
ffods 

».  Riv»r 
(Gcr.l 

90.  Splits 

21.  Perched 


YMUifSsjr't  Aatwer 

33.  Greedy 

34.  Girl's  name 
37.  Pronoun 
38  Chinese 

dynasty 


Legislature 

(Continued  from  Page   1) 

ion  by  John  Brooks,  Student  Party 
to  eliminate  all  class  officers  ex 
cept  those  for  the  senior  class. 

Brooks  said  election  to  class  of- 
fice created  a  "false  impression  ol 
leadership"  due  to  lack  of  "res- 
ponsibility" of  the  offices. 

Don  Furtado,  (SP)  sophomore 
cla.sa-  president,  said  Brooks'  idea 
was  "preposterous."'  Class  offices 
are  what  "you  make  them, '  Fur- 
tado said.  "They  provide  an  ex- 
cellent opportunity  for  initiative,' 
he  said.  • 

The  other  big  argument  over  the 
law  came  over  election  of  senior 
class  officers. 

Whit  Whitfield  (SP)  urged  elec- 
tion of  senior  offit^ers  be  held  in 
the  fall  to  enable  students  who 
ran  for  other  offices  in  the  spring 
and  were  defeated  to  serve  stu- 
dent government  as  class  officers 
through  fall  election.     .  i 

Butch  Tomlinson,  University 
Party,  argued  against  Whitfield's 
idea  by  saying  spring  election  al- 
lowed senior  officers  a  "training 
period"  to  prepare  them  to  carry 
out  their  duties  at  graduation  time. 

Whitfield's  proposal  was  defeat- 
ed 
NEW  MEASURES 

New  measures  introduced  at  the 
session  were:         _ 

(1)  A  bill  calling  for  appropria- 
tion of  $750  to  the  UNC  band  to 
defray  expenses  of  a  spring  tour; 
introduced  by  Representative  Bert 
Warren  (SP). 

(2)  A '  bill  to  place  the  student 
directory  and  the  Carolina  Hand- 
book under  8tttdenf  government's 
Publications  Moard. 

This  bill's  pas&'age  would  mean 
that  the  VMCA,  current  publisbers 
of  the  two  pubUcations,  wq|U4  still 
have  control  over  them.  But  stu- 
dents would  pay  for  the  two  out  of 
their  block  fee.  Bill  introduced  by 
.John  Brooks  (SP). 

(3)  A  bill  to  establish  a  commit- 
tee to  "investigate  the-  feasibility 
of  organizing  a  campus  humor  ma- 
gazine." Measure  introduced  by 
Tom  Long  (SP). 
APPOINTMENTS 

Presidential  appointments  ap- 
proved   by    the    legislature   were: 

Tom  Ray,  Pace  Barnes  and  Miss 
Marcia  McCord  to  the  student  gov- 
ernmeht  Library  Committee.         , 

Bob  Carter,  Miss  Betty  Huffman 
and  Kelly  Manness  to  th«^  recent- 
ly-established Bad  dieck  Commit- 
tee. 


Advance  Information-    "- 


On  Career  Opportunities 
At  Procter  &  Gamble 


Advance  information  on  Marketing 
Management  opportunities  in  »♦»« 
Procter  &  Gamble  Advertising  Ds 
psrtment  is  now  available.  Writs 
4.H.  Wilson,  Jr.,  Supervisor  o# 
Personnel,  Advertising  Depsrt- 
ment,  Procter  &  Csmbie,  Cincin- 
nati, Ohio.  Campus  interviews  in 
Placement  Service  March  2t. 


JUKE   BOX 

The    Graham    Memorial    Activi- 
ties Board  will  provide  free  juke 
box  music  in  the  Rendezvous  Room 
tonight  from  8-11  p.m. 
PTA  MEETING 

The  Future  Teachers  of  America 
will  meet  Monday  at  8  p.m.  in 
/»eabody  Hall.  The  program  will 
consist  of  a  mock  interview  for 
teachers  positions  and  the  instal- 
lation of  new  officers  for  next 
year. 
WUNC-TV 

Today's  schedule  of  the  Univers- 
ity's non-commercial  TV  station  is 
as  follows: 

6:30    Yesterday's  Worlds 

7:00    Delinquincy 

7:30     The  Elements 

8:00     Safe    Driving 

8:15    Lincoln  Day  Dinner 

9:00     Sign    Off 

JUNIORS  and  SENIORS 
Majoring  in 

Other  Biological  Sciences 

Biology 

Chemistry 

Physical  Education 


deration  the  expansion  of  its  pre- 
sent imiustries,  and  "see  that  we 
do  not -offer  people  from  the  out- 
side things  that  we  cannot  give 
to  those  already  here." 

"We .will  not  have  enough  jobs 
for  the' people  of  .this  state  unless 
we  develop  industry, "  Hodges  told 
the  comanerce   dinner  guests. 

"On  schools,  Hodges  stressed  the 
need  for  more  support  on  the  lo- 
cal level,  and  he  quoted  figures 
which  indicate  that  several  other 
southern  states  give  less  support 
to  the  schools  than  does  North 
Carolina.  North  Carolina  pays  ^.5 
per  cent  of  the  teacher's  salaries, 
Hodges  said. 

"We   h^ve   dropped    from   29th 

to   38th  in  the  last  five  years  in 

our  rank  among  the  states  in  what 

we  pay  teachers.  This  is  as  serious 

,  as  it  possibly  could  be.  .  .and  we 

!  need  a  resurgence  on  all  levels,  es- 

I  pecially  at  the  local,  for  a  real  in- 

'  terest  in  our  schools,"  he  said. 

.  Hodges  said  there  has  been  "too 
I  little  of  information  and  too  much 
j  of  prejudice  and  pressure"  con- 
!  cerning  the  teachers'  salaries. 
!  Hodges  said  pay  raises  given 
members   of  the   Council  of  State 


state    employees    have   gotten    176 
per  cent  increases. 


Joe  Callicott  of  Greensboro  is 
received !  the  new  vice-president;  Fuller 
Shuford.  Asheville,  secretary: 
Graham  Holding.  Charlotte,  re- 
corder and  Randy  Williams,  Asfae 
ville.  rush  chairman. 


Would  you  like  information  on  an 
interesting  selective  pharmaceuti- 
cal sales  career? 

An  Upjohn  Company  representa- 
tive will  be  on  the  campus  March 
4  to  discuss  employment  possibili- 
ies  in  PHARMACEUTICAL  SALES. 
Please  arrange  for  interviews 
'through  your  placement  office. 

THE  UPJOHN  COMPANY 
Washington,  D.  C«. 


Books  on 
Religion .... 

Beyond  Despair,  by  G.  Ray  JCHrdan. 
A  guide  to  radiant  joy  and  aboundr 
ing  peace.  Published  at  $2.30.  Our 

Our  SpMial  ^    $1.00 

Livo  and    Help  Live,   by   Kraines' 
and  Thetf ord.  How '  to  regain  faith 
in  yourself  through  faith  in  oth«-s. 
Published  at  $3.75. 
Our   Special    _  _   $1.4» 

The  Ramayena.  The  great  Hindu 
religious  epic,  retold  in  modern 
fwose  ;  by-  Aubrey  Mennen.  Ours 
is  the  book  club  edition. 

Special  _._    St.OO 

The  Bedside  Bible.   Excerpts  from 
the    Book    of    lx>oks.   in   readable 
type,    for   inspirational   reading.. 
Our  Special      .  .  $1.25 

Whatever   your   reading    needs, 
you'll  find  the  books  to  satisfy 
them    in   the   big,    big    stock    at    I 
Chapel  Hill's  friendly  bookshop.    1 

The  Intimate    ! 
Bookshop 

205  E.  Franklin  St. 
Open  Till  10  P.  M. 


MY  FAIR  OXFORD 


Srene:  The  London  drawing 
ro^m  of  Profestsor  Moriarity 
Kitchener,  philologist  and  elocu- 
tion igt.  An  curtain  ri»es.  Kit- 
chenir  in  singing  and  dancing. 

Kitchener:  Why  can't  the  Eng- 
li.sh  learn  how  to  speak?  Hey? 
Why  can't  a  woman  be  like  a 
man?  What?  Why  can't  any- 
bodii  grow  accustomed  to  my 
face?  So? 

Enter  Catithi/  Donothing,  a 
ihimneij  siceep. 

Donothing:  P'arn  me,  Perfi- 
«er  K.  oi  w'd  loik  tao  lorn  'ow 
do  spike  e'en  batterwise  thun 
oi  spike  naow.. 

Kitcbener:  Ugh?  (Aside)  Yet, 
h"^'s  a  challenge.  (To  Donoth- 
ing) All  right,  loathsome,  in 
six  weeks,  you'll  be  speaking 
well  enough  to  go  to  the  Coro- 
nation Ball! 

Six  wteke  later. 


Donothing:  Sao,  Prayfooser  K, 
can  yez  thank  what  me  spikes 
gentmanly  aynuf  naow?  Do 
we  be  gung  to  Coronation  Ball 
towgedder? 

Kitchener:  Oh,  my  Aunt  Sally, 
the  blighter  hasn't  learned  a 
thing.  I'm  lost.  But  wait.  I'll 
dress  him  in  a  Van  Heu-sen 
Oxford  cloth  shirt.  Then  he'll 
pass  as  a  gentleman  for  sure! 
All  I  have  to  do  Ls  be  sure  he 
keeps  his  big  mouth  shut.  I'm 
saved,  but  good! 

{Curtain) 

Yes,  friends,  there's  nothing 
like  Van  Heusen  Oxford  cloth 
shirts  to  make  a  gentleman  of 
you.  Whether  you  p4fer  but- 
ton-downs, other  collars,  white 
or  colors,  see  Van  Heusen  £rst. 
And  buy.  $5. 

Phillips-Jones  Corp.,  417  Fifth 
Ave.,  New  York  16,  N.Y. 


WE   ARE   THE   EXCLUSIVE 


VAN  HEUSEN 


DEALER  IN  CHAPEL  HILL 


■i  ^>m^'- 


You  smoke  refreshed 


A  new  idea  in  smoking... all-new  Sal 


J*:'. 


em 


Cn  at>  <l  Itu  f!. ./.  fif-w^ld*  Tobat  • ..  C„nii.nny. 


t  menthol  fresh 

•  rich  tobacco  taste 
•  most  modern  filter 


Take  a  pufT— it's  Springtime!  Light  up  a  filter-tip  S.\lem  and  find  a  smoke 
that  refreshes  your  taste  the  way  Springtime  does  you.  It's  a  new  idta  in  smok- 
ing —  menthol-fresh  comfort . . .  rich  tobacco  taste . . .  pure,  white  modem  filter ! 
They're  all  in  Salem  to  refresh  your  taste.  Ask  for  Salem  — you'll  love  'em! 

Salem  refreshes  your  taste 


PAGI  FOUR 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


SATURDAY,  MARCH  2,  1fS7 


Roth    Dethrones    Mclntyre    In  ACC   50    Freestyle 


Krepp,  Fodgen,  Star 
In  Conference  Swim 


A  tall,  powerful,  180  pound  jun- 
ior from  Elkin.  N.  C.  cumlinated 
a  year's  frustration  and  desire  in- 
to a  happy  victory  \usi  night  as  he 
upset  the  dope  sheet  to  share  hon- 
ors with  two  repeating  champions 
in  the  Conference  Swimming 
Championships  at  Bowman  Gray 
Pool. 

Bill  Roth,  a  boy  who  will  wTite 
his  name  in  Carclina  swimming 
history  many  times  in  the  future, 
made  official  his  dominance  over 


took  the  opening  event  of  the 
program;  the  200  yard  butterfly, 
in  the  time  of  2:16.0  with  his  con- 
.stant  challenger.  Mac  Mahaffy  of 
UXC  not  far  behind. 

Charlie  Krepp.  most  successful 
and  versatile  swimmer  in  Tar  Heel 
history,  successfttlly  defended  his 
200  backstroke  and  200  individual 
medley  titles  in  the  times  of  2:16.1 
and  2:12.2.  respectively. 

Carolina's     dominance     of     the 


defending  ACC  champion  and  rec-  i  springboards  was  broken  as  Stap- 
ord  holder  Dave  McIntyTC  of  N.  C. 
State  by  taking  the  50  yard  free- 1 
style    in    the    time    otf    22.8;    two 
tenths  a(  a  second  off  the  current 
standard  i)f  22.6.  | 

In  the  trials  yesterday  after- 
noon. Frank  Xauss.  ace  junior  on 
the  State  squad,  splashed  his  way 
to  a  new  national  collegiate  rec- 
ord of  1:03.6  in  the  100  yard  | 
breaststroke.  for  the  only  record  J 
.setter  of  tlie  program.  He  took 
the  finals  three  seconds  slower  to 
v.in  by  a  comfortjU)le  margin  over 
his  teammate  Dick  Climo.  and 
Carolina  pacers  Jim  Goad  and 
Chris  Mercer.  The  State  speedster 


MILTON'S 

Mid-Winter 

Carnival 

GOING  DOWN 

THE  HOME  STRETCH 
t 
SALE   ENDS 

TODAY 

Just  added  large  group  of  year- 
round  and  ligtitweight  hose  at 
mrmatly  rmdu€€d  »fic««: 
Cotton  6x3  rib  socks,  fermorly  I 
$1.00,  now  $.50. 
AAcGeorge  wool  argylo  and  tar 
tan  hose,  valuos  to  $4.50,  fur- 
ther reduced  t«  $1.99. 


ler  Shields  of  Maryland  took  third 
place  in  the  lowboard  event  over 
last  years  placer  in  that  position. 
Tommy  Parker  of  UNC.  Last  year's 
first  and  place  finishers  repeated 
again  with  Champion  Dave  Mcln- 
nis  again  taking  the  John  Feutch- 
tenerger  Memorial  trophy  with 
teammate  Ned  Meekins  second. 

The  meet  will  swing  into  its 
final  day  of  action  at  2:30  this 
afternoon  and  close  with  finals* 
tonight  in  seven  events  with  de 
fending  champions  in  each  event 
favored  to  repeat.    *  j 

Strong  argument  will  be  given 
the  defending  titleholder  in  sev- 
eral events  with  the  final  result 
being  either  a  new  champion  or 
possibly  a  new  conference  record. 

Tonight's  events     will     be     the  { 
last   competition   in    this   area   un  ; 
til    March    28th    when    the    three 
day  National  Collegiates  will  open 
at  Bowman  Gray  Pool. 

SUMMARY  "^  I 

200   butterfly— (1)   Fadgen     (S). 
(2)  Mahaffy  (C),  (3)  Ackerman  (CL.) : 
i4)    Morgan,    (D).    (5>    Turner    (C),  j 
(6)  Weaver  (D).  time:  2:16.0. 

50  freestyle— (1)  Roth.  (C).  (2) 
Mclntyre  (S).  (3)  Zickgraf  (C),  (4) 
Robertson  (S).  (5)  Young  (D),  (6) 
Maness  (C).  time:  22.8 


ViUanova  And 
Manhattan  Vie 
in  Track  Meet 

By  ED  CORRIGAN 

NEW  YORK  —  tAP)  —  Villa- 
nova,  with  the  likes  of  Ron  Delany 
and    Charlie   Jenkins    hauling    in 


Wachendorfer   Sets 
New  Mark;  Frosh  Lose 


Casey  And  Charges 


Pictured  above  is  UNC  swimming  coach  Ralph  Casey  with  four  of  his  ece  n»ermen.  In  the  water 
from  left  to  right  are  Walt  Rose,  Charley  Krepp,  Bill  Roth  and  Bill  Zickgraf.  All  four  will  swim  tonivht 
in  the  second  round  of  the  ACC  Championships  in    Bowman  Gray  -Pool. 


Tar  Babies  Whip  Blue  Imps 
End  Year  With  104-83  Win 


By  STEWART  BIRD 

Former  prep  school  AU-Ameri- 
can  and  ace  freshman  Tar  Baby 
swimmer  Paul  Wachendorfer  set 
two  new  records  this  week  as  the 
points,  is  favored  to  beat  defend- 1  UNC  frosh  mermen  lost  dual  meets 
ing  chaippion  Manhattan  and  47  to  Greensboro  and  Raleigh  High, 
other  lesser  lights  for  the  IC4A '  Greensboro  handed  the  frosh  a 
track  and  field  title  tonight  in  48-31  licking,  while  Raleigh  turned 
Madison   Square   Garden.  i  in  a  52-25  win. 

Unlike   the   invitation   meets  on  j      in  the  200  yard  butterfly  against 
the  indoor  whirl,  the  team  cham-  j  Greensboro  early  in  the  week,  Wac- 

pionship  carries  more  prestige  than  j 

individual  performances  in  this  j  ^■^■■■■"•■i^iii""^i^™^""i"ii"""" 
one.  And  it  should  develop  into 
a  jockeying  duel  between  Villa- 
nova's  coach,  Jumbo  Jim  Elliott, 
and  George  Eastment  of  Manhat- 
tan. 

Manhattan,  which   has   won   the 
crown   five  of   the  last  six  years, 
scored  34  points  last  year  in  nip- 
ping ViUanova  by  two  points  de- 
spite   the    fact   that   the   "Wildcats 
came    up   with   an    unprecedented 
j  five  individual  winners. 
I      All    five    are    defending   —   De- 
I  lany   in   the   mile,  Jenkins  in   the 
600,  Phil  Reavis  in  the  high  jump, 
Don  Bragg  in  the  pole  vault,  and 
the   mile   relay   team 


hendorfer  flashed  the  distance  in 
2:17.3,  breaking  hi.->- own  univeraity 
freshman  record  and  coming  within 
nine-tenths  of  a  second  of  the  na 
tional  collegiate  freshman  stand- 
ard. 

Thursday  afternoon  against  Ra- 
leigh he  set  his  second  record  o{ 
the  week  by  churning  the  100-yd. 
butterfly  in  59.0,  two  tenths  of  a 
second  better  than  his  existing 
school  record. 


Howard  Johnson  Restaurant 


BPLAKFAST 


LUNCH 


DINNER 
-  *  SNACKS 

landmark  For  Hungry  Tarheels" 


200  backstroke— (1)  Krepp  (C), 
(2)  Lucey  (Md.).  (3)  Pace  (D).  (4) 
Armstrong  (Va.),  (5)  Vcazey  (C), 
(6)  Poulnot.  (S.C.)  time:   2:16.1. 


By  BILL   KING 

!  DURHAM— Carolina  Tar  Babie.s 
put  a  glittering  finia-h  on  their 
1956-57  basketball  season  last  nigh' 

I  by  walloping  the  Duke  Blup  Imps 
104-83  in  Duke  gym. 

I  The  win  gave  Tar  Babies  an  over 
!  all  season  record  of  17  wins  against 
I  4  losses,  and  a  3-1  advantage  over 
i  the  Duke  frosh.  It  marked  the  sec 
!  ond  time  this  season  that  coach 
j  Vincc  Grimaldi's  club  ha.v  hit  the 
I  century  mark.  Guard  John  Crotty 
'  won  the  distinction  of  hitting  the 
1  hundredth  point  with  2:50  left  in 
I  the  contest. 
'      The  Tar  Babies  got  off  to  a  slow 


first  half,  but  the  Tar  Babies  fought 
back  and  with  center  Dick  Kepley 
bagging  three  baskets,  the  fresh- 
men went  ahead  to  stay,  at  the 
14:5  mark.  36-35.  They  led  at  the 
half.   54-42. 

In  the  second  half  it  was  all  Ca- 
rolina as  the  Tar  Babie:>  came 
through  with  one  of  their  most 
effective  efforts  of  the  season  dis- 
playing an  efficient  eye  and  spark- 
ling  team   play.. 

The  Blue  Imps  were  never  able 
to  make  it  even  close  after  inter- 
mission. With  11:45  remaining  in 
the  game  they  closed  the  gap  12 
points.  72-60,  but  two  quick  baskets 
I  by  the  visiting  Tar  Babies  quickly 

start  as  the   Blue   Imps    ran   up  a  •  .squelched  any  hope  of  a  Blue  Imp 

21-12  lead  after  7  minutes  in  the   rallv.. 


Last   chance   to   Mve   on   year- 
round     suits,     sport     jackets, 
trousers,     and     lightweight 
suits. 

Last  opportunity  for  reduced 
prices  on  ivy  button-down  and 
English  tab  shirts. 

Large  assortment  of  rubber- 
soled  cordovan  shoes  reduced 
from  $20.00  to  $12.99. 


In  our  Lady  Milton  Shop 

Still  dazzling  reduction  on  Brae- 
mar  end  Drumionrig  swoetors 
at  $10.00. 

Elliot  cashmere  sweaters  re- 
duced from  $14.95  to  $8.99. 

Plenty  of  ttmpting  reductions  on 
Lady  Hathaway  and  other 
shirts. 

Spring  Irish  linen  skirts  by 
Evan-picone  reduced  from 
$14  95  to  $9.00. 

Mony  other  unusual  buys. 


220  freestyle — (1)  Naua-s  (S),  (2) 
Rose  4C),  (3)  Wbitoey  (P),  (4)  Swle 
CD).  (5)  Hattler  CD).  (6)  Millard  (CI.) 
100  breastroke — (1)   Fadgen   (S), 
I  (2)  Climo  (S).  (3)  Goad  (C).  (4^  Mer- 
cer (C).   (5)  Phillips  (Va.),  (6)  Ro- 
i  berts   (D)   time;    1:06.8. 
'  i  N.  CAROLINA 

Low   board   diving— (1)   Mclnnis|  Rojjg„5,^,^h   f 
(C).   (2)   Meekins   (C).   (3)   Shields 
(M),  (4)  Parker  (C),  (5)  Kines  (D), 
(6)  Myers  (C).  points:  4:10.6. 

200  Ind.  medley— (1)  Krepp  (C), 
(2)  Mclntyre  (S).  (3)  Bell  (.Md.), 
(4)  Mercer  (C),  (5)  Veazey  (C),  (6) 
Goad  (C).  time  2:12.2. 


Tar  Heels  Unbeafen 


(Continued  from  Page  \) 


THE   BOX 
G 


The  Tar  Babies  went    over  the 
century  mark  with  minutes  remain-  [ 
ing  on  a  Yield  goal  by  Charlie  Wolf.  | 
The  final  two  points  were  by  sub 
(iil  Rcnnacker.  | 

Center  Dick  Kepley  and  forward : 
York  Larese  paced  the  Tar  Babies 
scoring  22  each.  Leaping  Lee  Shaf- 1 
fer  and  guard  Mike  Steppe  had- 
20  apiece,  while  the  fifth  starter, ' 
John  Crotty  had  12.  Forward  Mcr  1 
rell  Morgan  topped  the  Blue  Imps . 
with  24.  ... 


TP 

22 

20 

0 

0 

2 

22 

4 

12 

20 


I 
JOKTM  VIVKA 

GOTTEN  UNDFORS 

•ETSV  WARD 

BUiR  BOND 


400  free  relay— (1)  Rose,  Nash, 
Schiffman,  Roth  (C),  (2)  Duke,  (3) 
S.  Carolina.  (4)  Virginia.  (5)  Mary- 
land, (6)  Clemson. 


UNIVERSITY  CLUB 

The   University   Club   will    meet 
Monday    night    in   Roland   Parker 


Brennan  f 
Rosemond  f 
Young  f 
Quigg  c 
Cunningham  g 
Lotz  g 
Kearn.r    g 

TOTALS 
DUKE 

Robertson  f 
Miller   f 
Newcome  f 
Barrett  f 
Schmidt  c 
Clement  c 


F 

12  16-22 
2  12-14 
0-0 


I  Lounge  number  two  at  the  Graham   Vernon   g 


Memorial 


All  sales  cash- 
alterations  extra 

Milton'^ 

cutting  Cupboard 


Watson  g 
Harris    g 
Allen  g 
TOTALS 


0 

3 

4 

1 

0 
3 
25 

G 

4 

1 

0 

1 

3 
2 

5 

0 

9 

0 


0-0 
2-4 
0-0 
3-7 
3-7 


36-54  23 
F       P 

0  1 
0-2 
1-2 
0-1 
11-12 
1-2 
0-1 
0-1 
1-2 
8-9 


25  22-33  35 


T 

40 

16 
0 
6 

10 
2 
3 
9 

86 
T 
8 
2 
1 
2 

17 
5 

10 
0 

19 
8 

72 


Rosenbluth  rolled  in  18  of  his 
team's  first  22  points  to  put  the  ] 
Tar  Heels  up.  22-16.  From  there  j 
they  stretched  the  margin  to  12 
at  halftime.  But  in  the  .second 
half.  Bobby  Joe  Harris  and  Paul 
Schmidt  began  to  hit  and  the  Blue 
Devils  finally  took  the  lead  at  59- 
58  with    10:25  left. 

It    was    a    see-saw    battle  from 

there    until    the    3:45    mark  when 

Rosenbluth     put     Uie     Tar  Heela 

ahead  to  stay.      .    ^        -     .,  .  ^; 

The  Tar  Heels  played  most  of 
the  s(*eond  half  with  only  one 
guard.  Tommy  Kearns.  in  the  line- 
up. The  other  backcourt  starter. 
Bob  Cunningham,  fouled  out  with 
14  minutes  remaining  on  the 
clock. 


THE  BOX 

UNC 

G 

F       1 

P 

Larese.  f 

9 

4-4 

4 

Shaffer,  f 

6 

8-9 

2 

Graham,  f 

0 

0-0 

0 

McRacken,  f 

0 

0-0 

0 

Renneckar,  f 

1 

0-0 

0 

Kepley.  c 

9 

4-5 

4 

Poole,   c 

1 

2-2 

2 

Crottj.  g 

3 

6-8 

3 

Steppe,   g 

5 

10-13 

3 

Wilson,  g 

1 

0-0 

1 

Crutchfield.    g 

0 

0-0 

1 

TOTAL 

35 

34-41 

20 

Duke 

G 

F 

P 

Gilley,   f 

2 

4-7 

3 

Morgan,   f 

8 

8-12 

2 

Irwin,   f' 

0 

1-2 

1 

Rochclle.  f 

0 

0-0 

0 

Youngkin.   c 

4 

1-2 

5 

Wayand.  c 

3 

0-1 

3 

Boyd,  g  «»i 

6 

0-1 

4 

Joyce,  g.  - 

4 

4-5 

5 

Morris,   g 

4 

'    3-4 

1 

Nolan,  g 

0 

0-1 

0 

TOTALS 

31 

21-35 

24 

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* 

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see  page  2. 


VOL.   LVIi,  NO.    107 


Complete  iJF)  Wire  Servtee 


CHAPEL   HILL.   NORTH   CAROLINA,  SUNDAY,  MARCH   3,   1957 


Officet   in   Graham   Memorial 


FOUR   PAGES   THIS   ISSUE 


Withdrawal  Of  Troops 
Is  Delayed  By  Israel 


JERUS.4LEM  —  (AP)  —  Israel 
delayed  Saturday  night  the  with- 
drawal of  its  troops  from  the  Gaza 
Strip  and  the  Gulf  of  Aqaba. 

"It  is  not  certain  tonight  and 
at  this  ver>-  hour  whit  is  going  to 
happen."  said  Finance  Minister 
Levy  Eshkol. 

Prime  Minister  David  Ben-Gur- 
ion's  cabinet  met  for  four  hours 
in  an  unprecedented  Sabbath  day 
emergency  session  under  mount- 
ing pressure  from  Israeli  critics 
of  the  withdrawal  agreement. 

The  cabinet  t^en  adjourned 
without  the  signal  to  begin  the 
"full  and  prompt"  withdrawal 
annDUnced  by  Foreign  Minister 
Golda  Meir  to  the  UN  General 
Assembly  Friday. 

The  Finance  Minister  hurried 
from  the  cabinet  meeting  to  Tel 
Aviv.   He  made  his  statement   un- 


derscoring Israel's  uncertainty  to 
the  opening  session  of  the  women's 
Zionist   conference  there. 

Ben-Gurion  sent  a  message  to 
the  women's  meeting  saying  Israel 
is  living  through  its  most  critical 
hours  while  "the  state  is  engaged 
ii}  a  difficult  struggle— not  only 
with  its  enemies  but  also  with  its 
friends." 

"I  cannot  say  at  the  time  of 
sending  this  message,"  he  contin- 
ued, "whether  we  will  succeed  in 
guaranteeing  freedom  of  sh'ipping 
in  the  Tiran  Straits  and  turning 
,Eilat  into  a  major  international 
*  port  and  whether  we  sh^U  succeed 
irf  keeping  Ejgyptian  invaders  out 
of  the  Gaza  Strip  and  insuring  se- 
curity for  our  settlements  in  the 
Negev." 

The  cabinet  called  for  clarifi- 
cation of  the  US  position". 


Eisenhower  Urges  End  To  Delay     Vl\^*    VVi 


W.\SHINGTON  —  ( AP)  —  Presi- 
dent Eisenhower  told  Israel's  Pre- 
mier in  a  new  letter  last  night  he 
hopes  for  "utmost  speed"  in  Is- 
rael's Sinai  withdra'wal  and  en- 
dorses the  idea  cf  turning  over  a 
n?w  leaf  in  .^rab-lsraeli  affairs. 

The  letJer  dispatched  to  Premier 
David  Bcn-Gurion  was  made  pub- 
lic by  the  White  House  after-  an 
urgent  secret  talk  between  Secre- 
tary of  State  Dulles  and  Israeli 
Ambassador  Abba  Eban.  \  pre- 
vious letter  never  has  been  made 
public. 

Eisenhower,  obviously  seeking 
to  end  Israel's  delay  in  carjrying 
out  announced  plans  to  withdraw, 
wrote: 


'I  was  indeed  deeply  gratified 
at  the  decision  of  your  govern- 
ment to  withdraw  promptly  and 
fully  behind  the  armistice  lines 
...  I  venture  to  express  the  hope 
that  the  carrying  out  of  these 
withdrawal.*  will  go  forward  with 
the   iilmo-st  speed." 

He  then  sought  to  reassure  skep- 
tical Israelis  that  the  United  States 
stood  firmly  behind  its  assurances 
that  Israel  would  not  be  hit  by 
.Arab  b;rder  raiders  or  blockaded. 

The  president  noted  that  Mrs. 
Golda  Meir.  Israeli  foreign  min- 
ister who  announced  the  withdraw- 
al plans  at  the  United  Nations  Fri- 
day, had  voiced  certain  "hopes 
and  expectations"  of  .Middle  East 
peace. 


IraJu  Talks 
To  BSU 
Here  Today 

Charles  Iralu.  a  graduate  stu- 
dent from  Pakistan,  will  kick  off 
the  Baptist  Student  Union's  two 
we6k  "Listen  Campaign"  tonight 
at  7:30. 

Iralu.  wiio  will  be  speaking  at 
the  Chapel  Hill  Baptist  Church, 
has  chosen  "Effectiveness  of  For- 
eign Missions"  as  his  topic. 

"Listen",  an  abbreviation  for 
"love  impels  sacrifice  toward  every 
need",  is  a  student  mission  pro- 
gram. The  proceeds  from  the 
"Listen  Campaign"  are  used  not 
only  for  foreign  missions,  but 
also  to  supply  student  scholar- 
ships, medical  clinics,  and  agri- 
culture implements  to  foreign 
countries. 

Bill  Pruitt  will  direct  a  play. 
"The  Cryer  calls,"  for  presentation 
I  March  10  at  7:30  p.m.  The  chorus 
of  the  play,  which  depicts  the 
needs  of  the  world,  will  be  under 
the  direction  of  Ivey  Heath. 

The  two-week^  program  is  seek- 
ing to  relate  the  needs  of  the 
world  and  to  show  how  "Listen" 
meets  these  needs  according  to 
Doug  Farmer,  the  chairman  of 
'  the  campaign.  Farmer  and  Bill 
Baddley,  chairman  of  the  Enlist- 
ment Campaign,  "urge  all  Bap- 
tist students  to  participate  in  this 
program." 


'GENERALLY  A  SUCCESS' 


Florida  Group  Ends  Study 


By  CHARLIE   SLOAN 

"Mongrelizayon"  and  the  un- 
constitutionality of  segregation 
were  not  mentioned  to  the  dele- 
gation from  the  University  of  | 
Florida  studying  racial  integra- 
tion at  Carolina,  said  Fletcher 
Fleming,    the    group's    leader. 

the  group  talked  to  students, 
faculty  members.  University  offic- 
ials, townspeople  and  alumni  du*-- 
ing  their  three-day  study  of  how 
integration  has  been  carried  out 
at  the  University. 

."To    the    extent    that    Carolina 


ber  of  Negroes. 

Fleming  said  that  before  the 
group's  arrival  he  had  heard  from 
off-campus  sources  the  student 
body   was    largely   pro-integration. 

After  completing  the  study  he 
said.  'Now  I'm  not  sure."  He 
pointed  out  that  there  are  so  many 
shades  of  opinion  that  there  is  not 
a  majority  sentiment  on  anything. 

Those  at  the  segregation  end  of 
the  scale  said  integration  at  the 
college  level  will  lead  to  a  mix- 
ture of  the  races.  Fleming  said. 

He  could     not     remember     any 


is  integrated,"  said  Fleming,  "it  {  strong  opinion  at  the  opposite 
has  been  accomplished  . . .  with- ' 
out  major  problems."  The  Florida 
student  body  president  said  some 
of  the  people  they  have  talked  to 
do  not  consider  UNC  really  inte- 
grated because  of  the  .>;mall  num- 


Officer  Candidate  School 
Gets  Former  UNC  Student 

The  Naval  Officer  Procurement 
Office  in  Raleigh  has  announced _ 
that  a  former  University  of  North 
Carolina  student  will  receive  train- 
ing at  the  Navy's  Officer  Candi- 
date School,  Newport.  Rhode 
Island. 

DL-nald  Lee  Patterson,  son  of 
Mr.  and  Mrs.  I.  R.  Patterson  of 
Rt.  2.  China  Grove,  is  a  graduate 
ol  UN'C.  receiving  a  Bachelor  of 
Science   degree.  , 


end  of  the  issue,  but  he  noted 
that  generally  the  pro-integration 
people  said  segregating  the  races 
is  not   morally  right. 

NoMfc  that  the  group  has  gather- 
ed its  information,  it  will  return 
to  Gainesville  where  it  expects  to 
make    a    report    "embodying  prin- 


ciples which  can  be  used  in  many  ' 
problems  that  might  arise,"  Flem- 
ing said. 

The  principles  may  be  applied 
in  problems  arising  not  only  from 
integration  on  the  college  level, 
but  in  any  way  it  might  appear, 
he  added. 

From  their  study  the  group 
gained  "a  fairly  good  history"  of 
opinion,  and  "a  lot  of  information 
on   student   activities." 

The  last  item  Fleming  called  an 
"important"  by-product  of  the 
trip.  He  said  many  issues  at  Caro- 
lina are  also  big  at  Florida. 
"Generally  the  trip  has  been  very 
successful,"  he  said. 

"I  think  this  information  will  be 
valuable  to  us  in  handling  many 
problems  that  might  arise  in  Flor- 
ida,"  Fleming   added. 

The  group  left  yesterday  after- 
noon. 


Two  Students  Arrested 
At  Sortie  Friday  Night 


Two  UNC  students,  arrested  dur- 
ing Friday  night's-  panty  raid,  will 
go  on  trial  Tuesday  morning  in  the 
Chapel  Hill  Recorders  Court. 

One  of  the  two  arrested  was 
booked  by  police  on  a  disorderly 
conduct  charge.  The  second  one 
was  picked  up  for  wearing  a  hand- 
kerchief around  his  face,  a  viola- 
tion of  a  state  law. 

Arrested  we^e  Richard  F.  Thiele, 
a  21-year  old  senior  from  Atlanta, 
Ga.  and  Walter  D.  Mills,  sophomore 


students  were  turned  over  to  the 
Student  Council  for  allegedly  toss- 
ing firecrackers  out  of  car  windows 
during  the  panty  raid.  The  names 
were  unknown  as  of  late  Satui'day 
afternoon. 

The  identification  card^  of- those 
arrested  and  turned  over  to  the 
Student  Council  were  taken  by 
policemen  there  and  turned  over 
to  Ray  Jefferies,  assistant  to  the 
dean  of  student  affairs. 

Meanwhile,    strong    notice    was 


from  Charlotte.  Mills  was  the  one  served  Saturday  from  the  dean  of 

student  affairs  office  to  the  effect 
the  next  time  a  panty  raid  occurs 
sterner  action  will  be  taken. 

Jefferies  said  from  now  on  pres- 
ence at  a  panty  raid  will  mean 
participation.  Students  "have  no 
right  to  be  there"  and  those  on 
the  I'cene  will  have  to  explain 
their  reason  for  being  there,  he 
said. 


wearing  the  handkerchief. 

Thiele's  'disorderly  conduct' 
charge  was  said  to  have  been  the 
u.-e  of  profane  langilcige  directed 
at  a  local  policeman  at  the  scene. 

The  state  law  Mills  violated 
says  no  mask  can  be  worn  by  per- 
sons at  a  public  demonstration. 

Names   of   at    least    three    other 


Brigadoon  —  A  Singing  Story 
Of  A  Highland  Never-Never  Land 


.lakarta's  Rule  Is  Challenged 


Two  Future  Teachers 
Are  'Representative 


J.\KARTA.    INDONESIA- (AP)"    spokesman    in    Jakarta    as    a    big 
A  rebel  group  proclaimed  the  in-    factcr  in  this  ehaUenge  to  ^kar- 
stallation  cf  a  military  regime  ov-   -ias'  rul«.      -  .         - 
'ef  East  Indonesia  Saturday.  The   btobdtess  Toup    spread    the 

President  S^kartras'  Cammupist  unrest  set  off  by  the  Sumatran  re- 
backed  "guiiied  democracy"  plan  volt  in  the  west  last  December  ov- 
er economic  and  political  issues 
that  still  are  unresolved.  Inform- 
ed sources  said  they  were  related, 
that  the  East  Indonesians  had  but 
waited  for  Sumatra  to  lead  the 
way  and  that  a  "chain  reaction" 
might  be  expected  in  other  islands. 
But  no  shooting  was  disclosed 
and  the  affected  area  was  reported 
calm. 

Ike's  Appeal  Wins    . 

WASHINGTON  —  (AP)  —  Re- 
sponding to  an  urgent  appeal 
from  President  Eisenhower,  the 
Senate  yeserday  defeated,  58-28. 
a  move  to  deny  him  authority  to 
spend  200  million  dollars  for  mil- 
itary-economic aid  in -the  Middle, 
East. 

This  action  cleared  the  ^ay  for 
passage  of  the  Middle  East  resolu- 
tion, probably  early  next  week. 

The  resolution  also  would  de- 
clare a  readiness  to  use  American 
'  military  forces  to  block  any  open 
Communist  aggression  in  the 
Middle  East.  The  house  already  ha^ 
passed  its  version  of  the  resolu- 
tion whicii  contains  somewhat  dif- 
ferent wording  on  the  use  of  US 
'  troops. 


was   regarded  even    by    an    Army 

Studeilt,  Honor 
Selections  Due 
By  Committee 

The'  bi-parl.san  selections  board 
for  Men's  Honor  Council  and  Stu- 
dent Council  candidates  will  meet 
Monday.  Tuesday,  and  Wednesday 
from  2-4  p.m.  in  the  Men's  Coun- 
cil Room  on  tile  second  floor  of 
(rralvam  Memorial. 

All  students  interested  in  being 
elected  to  either  the  hpnor  council 
or  the  student  council  must  be  in- 
terviewed by  this  beard,  accord- 
ing to  Honor  Council  Chairman 
Jim  Exum. 

In  order  to  save  time  waiting 
f  T  an  interview,  students  may 
make  appointments  by  calling  Jim 
Exum  at  the  Sigma  Nu  House, 
phone  8-9077.  around  meal  time. 

Openings  on  the  Honor  Council 
include  4  senior.  1  junior,  1  soph- 
omore. ,  1  graduate  student,  and 
pharmacy  student  seat. 

There  are  seats  for  three  sen- 
iors open   on  Student  Council. 


Two  University  seniors,  Enno 
Reckendorf  and  Mi.ss  Gwen  Hein- 
zen,  have  been  selected  as  ".Mr. 
and  Miss  Representative  Future 
T.^acher"  of  the  Fr_ank  Porter 
Graham  Chapter  oT~the  Future 
Teachers  of  America. 

They  will  represent  UNC  at  the 
annual  convention  of  the  North 
Carolina  Education  Assn.  to  be 
hsld   in   Wilmington   March  21-23. 

Both  are  majors  in  elementary 
education  and  finished  their  per- 
iod of  student  teaching  at  the  end 
of  the  fall  semeser.  fhcy  will  be 
graduated  this  June. 

A  prospective  fourth  grade 
teacher.  Miss  Heinzen  is  from  Nut- 
ley,  N.  J.,  and  attended  Skid- 
more  College  her  first  two  years. 
On  coming  to  the  University  .she 
was  elected  to  be  a  cheerleader, 
orientation  advisor,  an  officer  of 


Delta  Delta  Delta,  and  is  a  mem- 
ber of  the  University  Budget  Com- 
mittee. 

Reckendorf  attended  elementary 
and  secondary  schools  in  the 
Netherlands  and  has  completed 
his  undergraduate  studies  at 
U.NC.  He  now  Yesides  in  Chapel 
Hill  with  his  wife,  the  former  Bet- 
ty M.  Jones,  and  their  two  chil- 
dren.  Ben   and   Karen 


GM'S  SUTE 


The  foilowinf  activities  are 
scheduled  for  Oraham  ^Aemo^ial 
today: 

Quakars,  11-1,  Grail  Rooip; 
Wtstminister  Fellowship,  9:30- 
10:45,  Roland  Parker  1;  Com- 
munity Church,  11-12,  Roland 
Parker  1;  Presbyterian  Church, 
9:30-11,  Roland  Parkar  2;  Pres- 
byterian Church,  9:30*11,  Roland 
Parker  3;  Presbyterikn  Church, 
9:30-11,  Rendeiveus  and  APO 
Reem^. 


By    WAYNE   LAMM 

Like  a  singing  story  book  with 
pictures  that  move,  the  Carolina 
Playmakcrs'  production  of  "Briga- 
doon"  on  opening  night  was  a 
pleasure  and  a  delight.  Under  Fos- 
ter Filz-Simons"  direction,  the 
musical  play  by  Jay  Lerner  and 
Frederick  Loewe  had  no  trouble 
gaining  the  verisimilitude  of  a 
Chapel  Hill  audience.  For  the  en- 
chantment of  that  neVer-never 
land  in  the  heather  extends  into 
rtlost   phases   of   the   production. 

The  story  of  Brigadoon  is,  of 
course,  a  •  beautiful  one.  and  as 
the  dominie  points  out  in  the 
^lay.  'There  must  be  lots  of 
pecple  .  .  .  who'd  like  to  live  in 
Brigadoon." 

For  miraculous  reasons  Ihal 
aren't  important  here.  Brigadoon  ^ 
is  an  enoh anted  village  which 
awakes  to  life  for  only  one  day 
out  of  every  hundred  years  and 
then  vanishes  into  the  mist  for 
another  century.  Because  the  rest 
(  f  the  century  passes  as  the  equi- 
\;ilent  of  a  good  night's  sleep,  this 
causes    no    problem      until      two 


.American  hunters  get  lost  in  the 
Hi.uhlands  of  Scotland  and  wander 
into  the   town  on   its   day   up. 

Needless  to  say.  the  .\merican 
hero  tails  iti  love  with  a  local  lass- 
JL'  (who  is  two  hundred  .vears  his 
.senior  but  doesn't  look  a  day  over 
twenty),  and  there  is  the  problem! 
of  whether  to  leave  her  and  re- 
turn home  to  the  not-so-loveabie 
girl  whom  he  has  engaged  to 
marry  or  to  stay  in  Brigadoon  and 
renounce  the  modern  world.  The 
solution  of  this  delicate  problem 
involves  the  singing  of  many  de- 
lijjhtful  songs. 

While  the  scenery  and  lighting 


are  routine  and  slightly  miss  con- 
veyuig  the  prevalent  magic  of  the 
rest  of  the  production.  Dr.  Wilton 
Ma.son.  musical  director,  and 
Yvonne  Parker,  choreographer, 
have  come  through  with  perform- 
ances to  match  the  uniformly  good 
(See  BRIGADOON,  Page  3) 


Nominations  Continue 
At  UP  Meet  Tuesday 

Senior  Class,  dorm  and  town 
•men  and  Carolina  Athletic  Assn. 
nominations  will  be  n»ade  at  a 
University  Party  meeting  Tues- 
day at  7:30  p.m.  in  Gerrard  Half. 

Due  to  changes  in  elections 
laws,  sophomore  class  officers  will 
not  be  nominated  until  next  fall. 

According  to  chairman  Mike 
Weinman,  no  new  petitions  for 
membership  will  be  received  after 
Tuesday,  and  all  voting  members 
must     shew     membership     cards. 


House  Says  Fraternities 

V 

Helpful  To  Education 


RECKENDORF    AND    HEINZEN 

.  . .  represeiitaUre    teachers 


Di  To  Debate 
Supreme  Court 
Tuesday  Night 

A  bill  calling  for  the  curtail- 
ment of  the  power  and  jurisdiction 
of  the  United  States  Supreme 
Court  will  be  the  subject  of  Tues- 
day night's  Dialectic  Senate  de- 
bate at  8  p.m.  in  the  Senate  Hall 
in    New   West. 

Recognizing  that,  in  the  last  1*0 
.^ears.  the  Su'preme  Court  has  in- 
creased its  power  through  judic- 
ial review  beyond  the  scope  pTan- 
ncd  by  the  framers  of  the  Con- 
stitution and  the  danger  of  the 
body's  misinterpretation  of  good 
laws,  the  bill  calls  for  a  reduction 
in  the  Court's  power. 


Parts  Tryouts 
To  Be  Monday 
For  New  Play 

Tryouts  for  parts  in  a  new  play 
will  be  held  by  The  Carolina  Play- 
makers,  U.NC  drama  group,  at  the 
Playmakcrs"  Theater  on  Monday  at 
4  and  7:30  p.m. 

The  play.  "Stranger  in  the 
Land,"  to  be  presented  March  27- 
31,  was  written  by  a  former 
UNC  student.  Christian  Moe.  The 
Chapel  Hill  performances  will  be 
the  first  production  of  the  play 
anywhere.  .  . 

Directing  the  production  will  be 
Tommy  Rczzuto.  Playmakcrs"  tech- 
nical director  and  U.NC  instructor 
in  dramatic  art.  Rezzuto  said  that 
19  roles,  mostly  for  men.  are  in- 
cluded in  the  play.  The  story  is 
set  in  Japan  and  revolves  about 
.\merican  scrvicement  and  the 
Japanese  people  shortly  after  the 
war. 

Copies  of  the  play  will  be  on 
reserve  this  weekend  in  the  Wil- 
.?on  Library  and  in  the  office  of 
the  Dept.  of  Dramatic  Art.  101 
Saunders  Hall,  lor  those  who  wish 
familiarize  themselves  with  the 
script  before  auditions.  Tryouts 
are  of-on  to  alL 
TITS" 


Chancellor  Robert  B.  House  gave 
|,Greek.  letter  fraternities  a  pal  on 
1  the  back  and  termed  them  "an 
American  invention  and  in  every 
way  helpful  to  education,"  in  an 
address  Friday  night  at  the  Uni- 
versity. 

He  told  fraternity  pledges  a-;- 
.vmbled  for  the  Greek  Week  ban- 
quet in  Lenoir  Hall  that  "all  the 
fraternities,  in  their  tone  and 
ideals,  are  in  harmony  with  the 
major  spirit  of  the  University." 

"But."'  he  continued.  "I  do 
think  as  the  Universitt-  grows  lar- 
ger and  larger,  friaternities  will 
prove  more  beneficial  as  a  guaran- 
tee that  a  student  can  have  a  con- 
genial group  of  close  friends  to 
live  and  work  with  during  his  col- 
lege career. 

"They  give  training  in  o\vner- 
ship  and   management   of  proper- 


ty,"  he  said,  and  added  the  ad- 
vantages of  congenial  Company  aad 
mutual  discipline  to  an  individual's 
own   efforts." 

The  retiring  chancellor  remark- 
ed that  "among  other  s-ervices 
fraternities  do  a  great  service  in 
providing  necessary  housing  at 
their  own  expen.se." 


WUNC-TV  Is  Only  Area 
Non-Commercial  Station 

In  the  February  issue  of  Edu- 
cational Television.  WUNC-TV  was 
listen  as  one  of  the  24  non- 
commercial television  stations  in 
the  United  States. 

Of  the.se  24  stations,  six  are  in 
the  only  one  in  the  Virginia-North 
the  onl  yone  in  the  Virginia-North 
Carolina-South  Carolina  area.  The 
others  are  locatetl  in  Tennessee. 
Alabama.    Florida    and    Louisiana. 


Rain  Postpones 
Greek  Carnival 

Tile  Grefek  Week  carnival, 
scheduled  for  Feb.  28  and  called 
off  because  of  rain,  has  been  post- 
poned to  March  7.  according  to 
Bill  Redding,  IFC  president. 

Ending  tlie  Greek  Week  activi- 
ties, the  carnival  will  be  held  at 
Navy  Field.  Each  pledge  class  will 
have  a  booth  at  thj  carnival  and 
will  present  a  variety  of  games 
and  shows. 

In  speaking  of  the  Greek  Week 
program.  Redding  .slated  that  the 
competition  among  the  pledge 
classes  for  the  most  outstanding 
class  has  been  high.  The  final 
presentation  Jp  \^v  most  outstand- 
ing pledge  clajB  will  be  announced 
at  the  IFC  meeting  held  March  II. 

According  to  Redding,  the  SAE 
pledge  class  won  the  field  day 
award,  and  ZBT  won  the  scholas- 
tic prize. 


Celebration  FollowsTar  Heels  Victory  Number  24 


A   JUBILANT    CROWD 

. . .  trell-behaved  here 


TOILET  PAPER   BRIGADE 

irliiil''<  the  nt'ri  uirgex 


THIS  WAS  THE  TARGET 

. .  .  aUer  Uie  rally 


^AGt  rvfo 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEV 


SUNDAY,  MARCH  3,  If 57 


SUNDAY 


REVIEW: 

CAMPUS 

STATE 


WORLD 


Miss  Pee  Wee  Batten: 
A  Hectic  Charmer 

Several  years  ago  the  nickname  Pee  Wee  was  attached  to  Miss 
ivfary  C.  Batten  in  recognition  ol  that  small  girls  rather  mlschievou.s 
scnce  cf  hiimcr.  The  name  stuck,  and  it  persists  tj  this  day  a-  hall 
a  misnomer— Pte  Wer  has  attained  her  majority,  and  her  physical 
proportions  are  shipshape  indeed. 

*  She  never  did  cutiirow  the  sense  of  humor,  thoujth.  and  it  is  still 
very  much  a  part  of  Pee  Wee  Batten— I'NC  senior.  Kappa  Delta, 
television   personality   and   vocal  .a    to   displaying   her  charm   or   her 

Far  an  hour  she  and  ac- 


ist — comedienne  extraordinary. 

As  a  srniar  majoring  in  radio- 
TV.  she  manages  between  a  "B" 
and  a  "C-"  average.  Taken  at  face 
value,  this  belies  hor  intellig-'nce. 
Pee  Wee's  '.schedule  is  as  hectic 
and  demanding  as  a  24  haur  day 
will  allow,  and   it  is  understand-^ 
abb.   ev?n   commendable,   if   sher 
slights   her   studies    in    favor    of  ,| 
more     exciting     and     rewarding  | 
pursuits.  ?i 

Her     sorority    sisters    at      the  ' 
Kappa  Delta  house  catch  hurried 


MISS    BATTEN 

. . .  iioi    very   pee    wee 

glimpses  of  the  busy  Miss  Batten 
only  twice  on  most  days — at 
breakfast  and  $t  the  curfew 
hour.  ( Pee  Wee  admits  to  having 
been  'only  a  couple  of  seconds 
late"  one  evening,  for  which 
she  was  campused  for  a  week- 
end.) 

Even  so.  she  .serves  her  soror- 
ity as  Social  Chairman,  head  of 
the  Charm  Committee,  ahd  song 
leader,  as  well  as  singing  at 
pledge  dances.  As  might  be  ex- 
pected, she  is  quite  the  pride 
and  joy  trf  her  sorority  sisters, 
who  are  amused  by  her  antics 
and  half-heartedly  annoyed  by 
having  to  take  innumerable 
phone  messages  for  their  much- 
in-demand  but  invariably  abs?nt 
housemate. 

Pee  Wees  tsrevision  show. 
'Top  Ten  Dance  Party"  (Sat..  6 
p.m.,    Channel    11)    is    ill    suited 


talent. 

complice  Ty  Boyd  play  host  to 
a  gri>up  of  Durham  hisfh-school- 
ers  who  dance,  perform,  and 
play  juvenile  games. 

If  the  show  decsn't  do  any- 
thirMi  for  Pee  Wee  other  ihin 
give  her  some  experience  in  the 
medium.  Pee  Wee  certainly 
does   much   for   the   show. 

What  little  of  her  eharni  and 
wit  does  manage  to  ovfrc<mie  the 
es.senti.d  heaviness  of  the  .show 
gives  the  whole  affair  occasional 
flashes  of  lightness  without 
which  it  would  be  stone  cold 
(!:ad. 

The  main  objection  to  the  TV 
show  is  that  Pee  Wee  hasn't  had 
a  chance  to  sing  on  it  a.s  yet  (she 
promises  to  do  so  soon).  Her 
vocal  talent  invariably  accom- 
panied by  comic  antics,  is  shch 
that  it  nearly  eclip.ses  an  off- 
stage personality  even  as  strik- 
ing a;;;  hers. 

Pee  Wee  doesn't  care  who 
IS  in  the  audience — a  crowd  of 
students,  a  men's  club,  or  just 
the  boys  in  Bruno's  Combo:  when 
she  sings,  sh^'  sings  with  a  venge- 
ance. Her  voice  is  loud,  with  a 
strident  quality  which  makes  it 
impossible  to  ignore  and  hard  to 
forget.  Her  diction  ranges  from 
comic  hillbilly  to  raucous  rock 
and  roll,  from  baby-t«lk  to  love 
talk. 

Pee  Wee's' charecteristic  ac- 
tion, whatever  she  may  be  sinf- 
ing,  is  a  cress  b€»wn  •  mili- 
tary mark-time  and  Marilyn 
Monroe's  hip  walk.  H*r  htad  is 
held  high,  mouth  in  a  prevaca- 
tive  smile;  her  hands  mr*  usual- 
ly still,  often  lighHy  holding 
the  mike. 

From  the  neck  down  she  b 
incesjsant  motion,  but  there  is 
nom-  of  the  self-conscious  gyrat- 
ing typical  of  Presley  and  others. 
Pee  Wee's  rhythmic  '1)ounce" 
stems  from  a  love  of  singing,  a 
love  of  the  song,  and  an  almost 
tangible  rapport  which  she  estab- 
lishes with  the  musicians  and  the 
audiences. 

When  Pee  Wee  moves,  every- 
body moves. 

For  a  21  year  old.  Pee  Wee  is 
well  on  her  way  to  becoming  a 
"pro."  Aside  from  her  weekly 
TV  .stint  and  frequent  singing  en- 
gagements, she  has  drawn  the 
interest  of  at  least  one  Xew  York 
night  club  and  one  record  com- 
pany. ( First  Colonial  release  is 
in  the  works)  "Xothing  definite 
as  yet."   Ls  her  only  comment. 

Ali.ss  Battrn  probably  won't 
have  to  wait  very  long. — AN- 
THONY WOLFF. 

* 

Winter  Quarterly 

The  Carolina  Quarterly  made 
its  second  ap-pearauce  of  tht 
year  this  week  siMirtiag  a  line 
drawing  of  Archibald  Macleish. 
whose  article.  "The  Poet  and 
An.?rica."  heads  th?  table  of  con- 
tents. 

The  winter  issue  includes  in 
addition  to  Macleiiih's  discussion 
of  hi-;  development  as  '8  poet, 
the  first  publisliod  short  story  of 
Frances  Bennett,  who  graduates 
this  year  from  the  University 
with  a  major  in  French. 


The  official  student  publicatiofi  of  the  Publications  Board  of  the 
Univensity  of  North  Carolina,  where  it  is  published  daily  except  Mon- 
day and  examination  and  vacation  periods  and  summer  terms.  Elotered 
as  second  class  njatfer  in  the  post  office  at  Chapel  Hill.  N.  C,  under 
the  act  of  March  8.  1870.  Subscriptior  rates:  Mailed.  $4  a  year.  $2.50 
per  semester:  deHvered,  $6  a  year,  $3.50  a  semester. 


Editor  .           — 



FRED  POWLEDGE 

Managing  Editor.     ■._: 

— 

-CHARLIE  SLOaN 

Night  News  Editor  ...        



Clarke  Jones 

Night  Editor      .. '. _.... 

- -    Graham  &iyder 

The  World: 
Action  In 
All  Parts 

Charlie  Sloan 

Israel  brought  to  an  end  a  lot 
of  head-scratching  in  the  world 
FYiday  aitemoon  when  her  dele- 
gate to  th?  U.\  agreed  to  pull- 
ing Israeli  troops  out  of  the  Gaza 
Strip    and  Aqaba   Gulf    area. 

Even  the  application  of  sanc- 
tions agalast  the  scrappy  young 
nation  was  brought  up  in  the 
United  Nations.  But  it  was  a 
suggestion  which  drew  mingled 
reactions  from  the  organization's 
members. 

Israel's  delegate  to  the  U.N. 
pointed  out  that  the  removal  of 
tro'^ps  does  not  mean  Egypt  will 
return  to  -power  in  the  territory. 
Umt?d  Nations  forces  will  move 
into  the  area. 

In  the  United  States  the  Su- 
preme Court  struck  a  blow  for 
the  reading  public  when  it  void- 
ed a  Michigan  law  designed  to 
protect  children  from  books 
that  might  comipt  them. 

The  high  court  ruled  that  the 
I:i.v.  while  protecting  children. 
is  a  curb  on  adults'  liberty.  Those 
who  prefer  their  reading  to  be 
more  rugged  can  now  have  it  in 
Michigan,  and  pre.sumably  in  the 
four  other  states  having  .similar 
laws. 

Spain'.s  Generali.ssimo  Franco 
remained  in  full  and  unchallenged 
control  after  the  first  cabinet 
reshuffling  since  1951  in  his 
country,  but  gave  a  slight  in- 
crea.se  in  power  to  the  monarch- 
i.sLs.  The  Falange  suffered  a  cor- 
resT>onding  drop  in  influence. 

Senate  investigators  uncover- 
ed many  unpleasant  facts  during 
their  inquiry  into  labor  racketeer- 
ing last  week.  Proo-titution  and 
punchboard  projects  were  linked 
with  top  officials  of  the  Team- 
sters Union.  The  'projects "  fail- 
ed, however,  when  an  attempted 
Dolitical  "fix"  fell  through. 


The  United  States  called  home 
its  minister  to  Hungary.  Edward 
Thompson  Wailes.  last  week 
rather  than  have  him  present  his 
credentials  to  the  soviet-domi- 
nated government  •  of  Premier 
Janos  Kadar,  thus  showing  U.  S. 
recognition  oi  the  government. 

President  Eisenhowers  plan 
for  a  Mideast  aid  fund  came  un- 
der sharp  attack  Wednesday  when 
Senator  Richard  B.  Russell  of 
Georgia  called  the  proposal  a 
blank  check. 

Russell  spoke  on  t>ehalf  of  his 
own  substitute  that  would  era- 
power  the  President  to  come  to 
the  aid  of  Middle  Eastern  nations 
threatened  by  Communist  ag- 
gression, but  would  deny  him 
the  authority  to  spend  $200  mill- 
ions in  economic  aid  to  the  area 
between   now   and  July  1. 

Vice  President  Nixon  left 
Thursday  for  a  three-week  good- 
will tour  through  .Africa.  The 
trip,  according  to  The  New  York 
Times,  constitutes  a  dramatic 
gesture  of  Washington's  realiza- 
tion that  twentieth  century  na- 
tionalism is  beginning  to  stir  in 
the  dark  continent. 

Much  of  Nixon's  trip  will  be 
south  of  the  Sahara  in  the  non- 
Moslem.  Negro  central  belt  of 
Africa. 


PRO/M/SK  TO  HCW  STUDENTS: 


New  Chancellor:  William  Aycock 


Clarke  Jones 

William  Brantley  Aycock. 
named  last  week  to  replace  re- 
tiring UNC  Chajicellor  Robert  B. 
House  this  summer  believes  m 
"respect  for  the*  law"  and  for 
that  reason  feels  there  is  no 
choice  between  being  for  or 
against  integration. 

Concerning        integration 
UNC.    Aycock    .said    when    " 
law    savs    vou    do    something 


at 
the 


yau  have  no  choice.  The  Univers- 
ity has  been  required  by  law  to 
admit  N:groes"  to  the  under- 
graduate level  and  it  "has  com- 
plied with  law." 

Asked  how  he  thought  inte- 
•gration  had  worked  out  at  UNC 
sj  far.  he  said.  "We've  had  Neg- 
roes in  th?  Law  School  for  five 
years  now  and  there  has  been 
little,   if  any  problem." 

But    as    to   the    undergraduate 


situation  '"I  simply  have  no  in- 
formation on  how  it  has  worked 
out  but  my  observation  is  that 
it's  wcfrked  out  very  well." 

Aycock  was  contacted  earlier 
this  week  at  the  University  of 
Virginia  in  Charlottesville  where 
he  has  been  a  visiting  professor 
in  the  Law  School  there  for  the 
1956-57  school  year.  When  Chan- 
cellor House  retires,  he  will 
leave  his  position  as  acting,  dean 


CHANCELLORS   HOUSE    (LEFT)   AND   AYCOCK 
. . .  after  Board  of  Trustees   meeting 


•. 


Woody  Sears  Photo 


AND  BASKETBALL  -  WHEWI 


The  Campus  Got  Spring, 
Chancellor,  Politicians 


The  University  at  Chapel  Hill 
got  a  new  chancellor  this  week. 
.\t  approximately  the  same  time, 
the  campus  started  looking  dif- 
ferent. 

The  two  items  probably  had 
nothing  to  do  with  each  other. 
While  William  Aycock.  the  new 
chancellor,  is  young  and  ener- 
getic, the  change  in  the  campus 
came  from  a  premature  arrival 
of  spring  and  the  approach  of 
spring  elections. 

Aycock  was  elected  to  the 
position  to  succeed  retiring 
Chancellor  Robert  House  at  a 
meeting  of  the  Board  of  Trus- 
tees Monday.  The  board  also 
elected  other  officers  of  the  Con- 
solidated University:  UNC  so- 
ciologist Crordon  BlackwcU  as 
chancellor  at  Woman's  College 
in  Greensboro.  .Alexander  H. 
Shepard  as  business  officer  and 
trea.surer.  and  Dr.  W.  M.  Why- 
burn  as  vice  president  for  grad- 
uate studies  and  research  , 

The  preview  of  tpring  poked 
its   nose   into   Chepol   Hill    and 
stayed    for    part   of   the    week. 
Hard,    chilly     rains     drove      it 
k  away  for  at  least  a  little  while, 
but    not    before    Carolina    men 
staged  two  panty     raids,     both 
'misfires,  Tuesday  ni^ht.  No  ar- 
rests were  mede;      no     panties 
were  got. 
Spring  elections     are     coming 


up  fast — April  2.  as  student  poli- 
ticians noticed.  Campus  political 
parties  started  the  alwa.v.s-excit- 
ing  business  of  naming  candi- 
dates, and  more  students  were 
wearing  neckties  and  getting 
their  hands  .<%haken. 

On  the  basketball  front.  Coach 
Frank  McGuires'  Tar  Heels  ran 
their  unbeaten  string  to  24  with 
come  from  behind  wins  over 
Wake  Torest  and  Duke.  The 
Deacons  fell.  69-64.  Tuesday 
night,  while  Friday  night  Duke 
was  the  victim.  86-72.  The  wins 
clo.sed  out  the  regular  season 
campaign  for  the  nationally  top 
ranked  Tar  Heels.  They  go  into 
the  ACC  tournament  next  week- 
end heavily  favored  to  win  the 
tourney  title  and  a  bid  to  the 
NCAA  playoffs. 

There  were  signs  of  increased 
activity  all  over  the  campus.  Fi-a- 
ternities  taught  their  pledges 
about  Greek  Week,  and  engaged 
in  .service  projects.  For  their 
hard  work,  sororities  feted  the 
pledges  with  open  houses  Mon- 
day night. 

Graham  Memorial's  director- 
ship .seemed  back  in  trouble.  The 
student  union's  board  of  direct- 
ors had  approved  of  Howard 
Henry,  a  student  union  man  at 
the  University  of  Wisconsin,  for 
the    Chapel      Hill    -directorship. 


Last  week  Henr>'  telegraphed  a 
negative  reply,  and  members  of 
the  board  of  directors  were  won- 
dering what  to  do  next. 

The  Student  Legislature  en- 
dorsed a  far-reaching  plan  to  re- 
vamp UNC  student  elections 
laws.  Outstanding-  among  the 
laws'  changes  are  elimination  of 
runoff  elections  except  in  case 
of  an  exact  tie,  and  election  of 
all  class  officers  in  the  fall  ex- 
cept senior  class  officers. 

Student  body  President  Bob 
Young  spoke  to  the  legislature 
Thursday  night,  asking  for  back- 
ing for  the  University's  plan 
to  raise  teachers'  salaries.  The 
legislature  endorsed  Young's 
plan  shortly  afterward. 

Student  leaders  from  the  Uni- 
versity of  Florida  paid  Carolina 
a  visit.  They  were  studying  racial 
integration  here  and  getting  back- 
ground which  may  help  them  in 
a  similar  situation  back  in 
Gainesville.  While  their  proceed- 
ings were  announced  as  secret, 
it  was  known  that  they  visited 
numerous  people  here — those  in 
favor  of  integration,  those  op- 
posed to  it.  and  those  directly  af- 
fected by  it,  the  Negroes  them- 
selves and  the  student  and- ad- 
ministrative leaders  who  have 
worked  with  racial  integration 
here. 


SO,WHUFFO' r"     OEST     '~^ 

IS  VO'    ,w-^STUDyiN'  '70RE    ) 

WEAKNESSES.    ^ 

MIGHT  BE  SOME 

OTHE.R  VMV  O' 

Tf^APPIM'  -iO'ff 


STILL 

FOLLVtN'  ME 

AF^OUND, 

WHOFFO? 


„      HERE  TOMORROW  . . 
FACE  WHAT  FOSPICK  FACES.rT 


Pogo 


By  Walt  Kelly 


^MOOf  H— /  CM  TAKe 
AHINT-"lFtH^VPOt^- 
WANT  THf  POf¥0tt  OP 

MY  MAIN  ^N  TMt$  NOW , 

•TACT  THINICIM'  ON 


7  net  om^ 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL  WEt£K  IN  REVISW 

Staii  Writers .. .  Joey  Payne,  Charlie  Sioaa 


WMAT  THie    WOKLP  NBBP* 
l«  A  WW0I,E  figi¥mMT  Of 

PBOBUBM*  "'AMygoffy 

CAAf  MO&Xe  AlfOUN^ 

WITH  TMEM  0£^  l¥Omf- 

oar  9gT'Ums. 


\NUAJ'e  rue  ©ubz  <&ot 

WHAT  TH6  SrtS^fAm'T 
&Or'i  WATER?  WgrfiOrr^ 

\-r"'rmouMi.f'?  we 

&Or\T"-AND  WgT^B 


^HSU//  MY  DUCKS! 

I  THINK  I  60T  A  /^^A/ 
WIS  COULD  6TAPTOUeOWN 
CAHAL  ASAPST—IVE  COUUP 
&B-X  AUU  THAT  9U*INSS6. 

fy!¥yAMs>AmfOA^P 

WHO  GOT  THB  hhO^B. , 
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of  the  Law  School  here. 

He  also  believes  strongly  in 
student  freedom  and  leadership 
but  cautions  that  these  go  hand 
in  hand  with  responsibility.  He 
said  ^e  believed  "a  university 
ought  to  permit  students  to  de- 
velop leadership.  It  goes,  natural- 
ly, that  the  students  must  show 
responsihility"    along    with    this. 

"Anything  I  can  do  to  strength- 
en leadership  through  student 
government,"  he  said,  "I  will  en- 
joy doing."  By  student  govern- 
ment. Aycock  said  he  was  talk- 
ing of  student  activities  in  gen- 
eral. 

Aycock  is  a  North  Carolina 
native  and  spent  the  first  six 
years  of  his  life  in  Lucama,  his 
birthplace.  He  was  bom  there 
Oct.  26,  1915,  the  son  of  William 
P.  Aycock  and  Myrtle  Moore  Ay- 
cock. 

While  growing'  up  in  Selma  he 
decided  to  study  law,  an  ambition 
that  goes  back  as  far  as  he  can 
remember.   He   wanted   to  study 

Playmakers 

Put  On  Fine 

Brigadoon 

Anthony  Wolff 

Playing  truant  from  the  TV 
set  Ftiday  evening,  I  spent  a  very 
enjoyable  time  with  the  Play- 
makers  and  "Brigadoon."  1  left 
Memorial  Hall  with  several  im- 
pressions, and  so  I  shall  break 
my  contract  and  risk  the  wrath 
of  my  editor  to  report  them 
here. 

Unhappily,  I  have  a  basic  ar- 
tistic quibble  with  the  authors. 
The  last  two  scenes  have  no 
place  in  the  show. 

The  present  production  was  ex- 
celtent  in  some  respects  and 
rather  disappointing  in  others. 

First  in  line  for  plaudits  must 
c(mie  Mrs.  Adele  Lippert,  who 
played  Fiona  with  delicate  charm 
Her  skill  was  mainly  responsible 
for  holding  the  show  together 
particularly  in  the  interludes  be- 
tween songs  where  the  dialogue 
was  badly  paced  and  the  acting 
was  none-too-good.  Mrs.  Lippert 
proved  that  she  is  a  pro. 

Her  singing  was  even  more 
outstanding.  There  was  not  an 
ungraceful  gesture  or  a  strained 
note. 

James  Heldman  deserves  cred- 
it for  some  fine  comedy  work  as 
Jeff.  Tommy's  cynical  partner. 
He  also  did  a  great  deal  to  keep 
the  dialogue  from  dragging. 

One  of  the  major  disappoint- 
ments was  I>ave  Small's  job  as 
Tommy.  The  flatness  of  his  act- 
ing could  have  been  compen- 
sated for  by  his  singing  perform- 
ance, but  that  was  flat  too. 
There  was  always  the  pr<miise 
of  a  beautiful  voice,  but  it  was 
seldom  realized. 

Hope  Sparger  was  also  dis- 
appointing as  the  female  comedy 
lead.  She  overplayed  bits  that 
would  have  been  funner  played 
.s;traight;  a  girl  with  a  propensi- 
ty for  exchanging  her  virtue  for 
a  promise  of  marriage  who  gets 
short-changed  every  time  is  com- 
ic enough  without  underscoring. 
Her  rape-and-seduction  scene 
with  Heldman  was  saved  only 
by  his  mugging. 

Gene  Strassler's  Charlie  was 
memorably  sung,  if  rather  weak- 
ly acted.  Mr.  Strassler's  voice  is 
breathtaking,  and  his  treatment 
*tl  the  love  song  "Come  To  Me, 
Bend  To  Me"  was  particularly 
touching. 

As  for  the  dances,  which  are 
a  major  feature  of  the  sIkav. 
they  were  inconsistent  at  best. 
The  minor  ones  which  punctuat- 
ed the  crowd  scenes  were  the 
most  successful. 

Jeannie's  dreamlike  dance  in 
the  first  act  was  more  posturing 
than  anything  else.  Yvonne  Park- 
er's gyration  to  the  dirge  in  Act 
n  was  excellently  conceived  and 
well  danced  by  the  choreograi^- 
er,  but  it  existed  more  as  a  re- 
cital than  as  an  integral  part  of 
the  show.  \ 

The  most  effective  dance  was 
the  chase  scene  which  closely 
preceded  Miss  Parker's  solo. 

If  Brigadoon  was  not  a  com- 
plete artistic  success,  it  was  great 
fun.  All  in  all  it  was  well  worth 
the  price  of  admission. 

Ed  Sullivan  has  come  up  with 
an  unusually  good  program  for 
tonight  at  8  on  Channel  2.  The 
occasion  is  the  first  anniversary 


law  at  UNC  but  felt  it  would  be 
best  to  study  at  different  schools 
and  matriculated  at  State  College 
in  1932.  He  was  active  as  a  .'itu- 
dent  there  being  student  body 
president  his  senior  year. 

He  was  a  member  of  Blue  Key. 
Golden  Chain,  Kappa  Phi  Kappa 
and  Phi  Kappa  Tau  social  fra- 
ternity while  at  State. 
,  He  received  his  BS  degree  in 
education  from  State  in  1936  and 
entered  Carolina  the  following 
•fall.  He  received  his  Master's  de 
gree  in  history  and  political 
science  from  UNC  in  1937. 
.  After  a  hitch  in  the  Army. 
Aycock  entered  the  UNC  Law 
Schot^  He  applied  himself  so 
well  that  he  became  editor-hi- 
chief  of  The  Law  Review,  the  top 
position  in  the  school. 

He  was  graduated  from  the 
Law  School  in  February,  194a. 
with  the  JD  dggree.  A  week  later 
he  was  back  as  an  assistant  pro- 
fessor. 

He  happened  to  get  into  the 
teaching  field  more  or  less  by 
accident.  During  his  second  year 
in  the  UNC  Law  School,  one  of 
his  professor's  lost  his  voice  and 
asked  Aycock  to  te^ach  the  class 
from  his  notes.  He  did  this  for 
six  weeks  and  liked  the  work. 

He  is  co-author  of  a  book  en- 
titled "Military  Law  Under  the 
Unifonn  Code  of  Military  Jus- 
tice." Aycock  and  a  former  teach- 
ing cdtteague.  Col.  Seymour  W 
Wurfel,  wrote  the  book,  aimed 
at  both  military  and  civilian 
practitioners  of  law. 

Aycock  likes  to  write  in  the 
field  of  law  and  has  had  numer- 
ous articles  in  law  reviews.  He 
feels  it  is  necessary  for  a  man 
to  do  research  and  writing  in 
order  to  be  a  good  teacher. 

He  spent  one  summer  in  India 
and  Pakistan  as  a  personal  as- 
sistant to  former  UNC  Presi- 
dent Frank  Graham.  United  Na- 
tions representative  to  the  coun- 
tries. Another  summer  he  served 
as  a  visiting  professor  at  the 
■University  of  Texas. 

He  is  a  member  of  the  Com- 
munity Church  in  Chapel  Hill 
and  also  the  N.  C.  State  Bar,  the 
North  Carolina  Bar  Assn.  and 
the  American  Bar  Assn.  He  has 
been  a  member  of  the  Chapel 
Hill  Zoning  Board  of  Adjust- 
ment. 

Aycock  was  married  on  Oc- 
tober 25,  1941,  to  Miss  Grace 
Mewborn  of  Snow  Hill,  an  alum- 
na of  Woman's  College  and  Duke 
University.  In  addition  to  Nan- 
cy, 10,  they  have  a  14-year  old 
son.  William  Aycock  II. 

of  the  Lerner-Loewe  smash  hit 
"My  Fair  Lady,"  ^nd  the  show 
will  feature  songs  from  their  past 
shows — "Brigadoon,"  and  "Paint 
Your  Wagon,"  as  well  as  their 
current  K^adway  success. 

Steve  Allen  runs  a  poor  sec- 
ond on  Channel  5,  with  tonights 
•guests  including  Ginger  Rogers. 
Edward  G.  Robinson,  the  An- 
drews Sisters  and  comic  Phil 
Harris.  On  most  nights  this 
would  be  sufficient  to  keep  me 
away  from  Sullivan,  but  not  to- 
night 

Herald  Tribune  drama  critic 
Walter  Kerr  takes  over  on  "Om- 
nibus" at  9  p.m.  on  Channel  11 
His  thesis  is  that  the  style  of 
the  drama  is  determined  by  the 
structure  of  the  theatre  in  which 
it  is  perftwmed.  The  evidence  in- 
cludes a  B.C.-.style  "Oedipu5 
Rex."  "Hamlet"  and  Othello' 
in  Elizabethan  surroundings^  and 
Romeo  and  Juliet,  then  and 
now.  The  proof  sounds  more  in- 
teresting than  the  thesis. 


On  Television  .   .  . 

On  the  theatrical  £rr>nt,  the 
Carolina  Playmakers  opened  up 
their  production  of  "Brigadoon. 
complete  with  two  real  bagpip- 
ers, Friday  night  in  Memorial 
Hall.  And  Sound  and  Fury,  a 
student  dramatic  group  which 
got  its  start  a  coiiple  of  years 
ago,  announced  tryouts  will  he 
March  5. 

Victory  Village  residents  who 
were  circulating  a  petition  for 
new  housing  said  names  on  the 
petitron  were  approaching  1.500. 
The  petition  came  after  the  Uni- 
versity administration  said  it 
would  push  for  more  married  stu- 
dents' housing  and  after  the 
State  Insurance  Commission  said 
the  two-story  frame  barracks 
buildings  in  Victory  Village,  now 
housing  students  and  their  fam- 
ilies, were  hazards. 

As  of  Saturday  the  necessary 
legislation  in  the  General  Assem- 
bly, which  would  ask  for  per- 
mission to  borrow  money  to  build 
tlie  housing,  was  not  introduced. 


HI 


01 


1W7 


SUNDAY,  MARCH  3,  1957 


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Its  this 
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THl  DAILY  TAt  HlfL 


FAGC  THitn 


EDGAR  ALDEN   AND   CAROL   SITES 

. .  .in  Tuesday  concert 

HERE  IS  THIS  WEEK'S  TIE-BREAKER  IN 

OLD  GOLD'S 


String  Quartet 
Wiii  Present 
Chamber  Music 

The   University   String     Quartet ; 
will  present  a  program  of  18th  cen-  j 
tury    chamber    music    Tuesday   at 
8  p.m.  in  Hill  Music  Hall. 

The  program  is  open  to  the  pub 
lie  without  charge  and  will  be  the 
tenth  in  the  Tuesday  Evening  Ser- 
ies of  concerts  sponsored  by  the 
UNC  Music  Dopt. 

This  will  mark  the  second  time 
this  year  that  the  Quartet  has  play- 
ed in  Chapel  Hill.        * 

Opening  the  concert  will  be  the 
performance  of  Beethoven's  Quart- 
et, Opus  18,  No.  2,  from  the  first 
set  of  quartets  he  wrote. 

The  last  half  of  the  program  will 
be  devoted  to  Handel's  Trio  Sonata, 
Opus  2,  No.  9  in  E  Major  ^nd 
Bach's  Brandenburg  Concerto  No. 
3,  one  of  the  most  famous  early 
18th  century  chamber  works.  This 
will  be  given  by  a  string  ensemble, 
supported  by  the  harpsichord. 


40  Meets      Gcirdner  Heads  Inauguration 

Scheduled 


PUZZLES 


TIE-BREAKING 
PUZZLE 
NO.  6 


CluC:  This  coeducational  state  university  is  located  in 
the  South  and  was  chartered  in  1820,  opened  in  1831. 
In  1865  most  of  the  university  buildings  were  burned 
by  a  body  of  Federal  cavalry. 

ClUE:  Opened  in  1889,  this  is  the  undergraduate  college 
for  women  of  a  large  eastern  university.  It  is  named  for 
an  eminent  educator  who  advocated  its  establishmpnt. 

auE:  This  Ohio  college  was  established  in  1881  as 
Educational  Branch  of  Y\^CA.  Ii  acquired  its  present 
name  in  1929. 


ANSWER  1.. 
ANSWER  2.. 
ANSWER  3.. 


HARRIS  MITCHELL  AND  MARY  GRAY  CLARKE 

.  ..in  chamber  orchestra 


Appointments  have  reached  the 

40  mark  for  interviews  to  be  held 

I  here  March  6-9  of  high  school  and 

j  elementary   teachers   interested   in 

overseas     teaching     positions     for 

1957-58. 

Dr.  Wilmer  Jenkins  of  the 
School  of  Education,  who  is  handl- 
ing the  arrangements  for  The  in- 
terviews, ^■aid  "considerably  more" 
teachers  are  expected  to  register 
between  now  and  March  6. 

Representatives  of  the  Army 
Overseas  Affairs  Division  will  con- 
duct the  four-day  interviews  for 
positions  in  Army-operated  schools 
of  Japan,  Okinawa,  Germany. 
France  and  Northern  Italy. 

Interviews  will  be  held  in  Pea- 
body  Hall  between  1:30  and  9:30 
p.m.  on  March  6-8,  and  between 
8:30  a.m.  and  6:30  p.m.  on  March 


The  inaugural  committee  for 
inducting  Willjam  C.  Friday  into 
office  as  president  of  the  Con- 
solidated University  of  North 
Carolina  is  being  headed  by  0. 
Max  Gardner  Jr.  of  Shelby,  it 
was  announced  here  Saturday  af- 
ter a  preliminary  planning  meet- 
ing. 

W.  D.  Carmichael  Jr.  vice  pres- 
ident  and  finance   officer  of  the 


I  Consolidated  University,  will  be 
j  Wee  chairman  of  the  planning 
j  committee.  Other  committee  mem- 
{  hers  will  include  faculty  and 
'  at  the  Memorial  Coliseum  in  Ral- 
!  eigh.  begiiming  at  10:30  a.m.  Wed- 
I  The  Coliseum  is  the  only  place 
I  on  either  of  the  three  camrpuses 
i  large  enough  to  accommodate  the 
crowd  expected  for  the  event. 


SERVE  YOURSELF— 


EVERY  SUNDAY 

5:30-7:30  P.A^ 


BUFFET 

At  The 

RANCH   HOUSE 

HOME  OF  CHOICE  HICKORY^MOKED  CHARCOAL  BROILED  STEAKS 


'BRIGADCX>N'  PERFORMANCE 


ANNOUNCEMENT  BY 

Illinois  College  of 
OPTOMETRY 

Appltcatioiu  for  admission  to 
classes  beginning  September  9, 
1957    are   now   being    received. 

Three  year  course 

of  professional  study 

Leading  to  the  Degree  of 

Doctor  of  Optometry 

Requirements  for  Entrance: 
Two  jrears  (60  semester  hours  or 
equivalent  quarter  hrs.)  in  spe- 
cified liberal  arts  and  sciences, 

WRITE  FOR  BULLETIN 
TO:  REGISTRAR 

ILLINOIS   COLLEGE 
of  OPTOMETRY 

3241    So.    Michigan   Ave. 
Tedutotogy  Center,  Chicago  16,  IlL 


Name — 
Address- 
City — - 
College— 


-State- 


HOLD  UNTIL  YOU  HAVE  COMPLETED  ALL  EIGHT  TIE-BREAKERS 

All  contestants  who  successfully  completed  the 
first  24  puzzles  in  Old  Gold's  Tangle  Schools 
contest  are  required  to  solve  eight  tie-breakers  in 
order  to  comp)ete  for  the  first  prize  of  a  World 
Tour  For  Two,  and  the  85  other  prizes  now  tied 
for.  Note  that  the  above  puzzle  contains  the 
names  of  three  schools,  for  which  three 
separate  clues  £ure  given. 

Puzzled  About  Cigarette 
Claims?  Try  today's  Old  Gold 
.  .  .  Regulars,  King  Size  or 
Filters  and  enjoy  terrific  taste 
.  ,  .  thanks  to  Old  Gold's 
exclusive  blend  of  nature- 
ripened  tobaccos  ...  so  rich, 
so  light,  so  golden  bright. 

NO  OTHER  CIGARETTE* 
CAN  MATCH  THE 


TASTE  OF  TODAY'S 

OLD  GOLDS 


Join  the  Aristocrats 
of  the  Book  World 


Now's  th*  time  to  sample  the! 
delights  of  "the  noblest  hobby  of  i 
them  ell".  No  matter  whet  yourj 
special  interest,  your  bookshelf ; 
will  be  perked  up  no  end  by  the ' 
I  addition  of  a  rare  book  in  your 
field.  . 

There's  something  about  the  feel 
of  en  old  book  in  your  hand,  and 
the  knowledge  that  it  is  a  land- 
mark in  the  field  of  your  special 
knowledge,  that  will  give  you  an 
unforgetable  thrill.  There's  an  in- 
ner Mtisfaction  in  knowing  your 
shelves  held  books  that  aren't 
available  every   day  to  everybody! 

From  sports  to  science  there's  a 
body  of  books  that  art  hard  to 
find  and  a  joy  to  own.  Get  started 
tomorrow..  Treat  yourself  to  a 
browse  in  our  Old  Book  Corner. 


THE  INTIMATE 
BOOKSHOP 

205  East  Franklin  Street 


(Continued  from  Page  1)  ' 
job  of  acting  and  singing.  Irene 
Smart  Rains'  costumes  are  cer- 
tainly arresting  enough,  but.  in 
the  crowd  scenes,  the  actresses  in 
dresses  of  pastel  shades  are  not 
nearly  as  coftspicuous  as  the  act- 
ors who  wear  attractive  kilts  and 
represent   an  array  of  clans. 

Added  to  that  professional 
touch  which  Dr.  Mason  has  lent 
to  the  show  in  the  orchestration 
was  the  impressive  snarling  wail 
of  real  bagpipes  which  accom- 
panied Yvonne  Parker's  funeral 
dance. 

Dancing  has  adequate  vitality 
and  seems  to  be  what  might  be 
Scotch  folk  dancing.  Especially 
entertaining  were  the  sword  dance 
brilliantly  executed  by  Bob  Du 
Meer,  Morgan  Jackson,  and  John 
Steed  and  Yvonne  Parker  and 
Blynn  Durning's  dramatic  .solo 
dances. 

The  real  pleasure  of  "Briga- 
doon"  lies  in  the  talent  and 
"kno'Ar-how"  of  most  of  the  prin- 
cipal performers.  Picking  a  fav- 
orite among  them  is  a  matter  of 
taking  your  seat  and  then  your 
choice.  Friday  night's  audience 
most  appreciated  the  popular 
song.  "It's  Almost  Like  Being  in 
Love",  sung  rapturously  by  David 
Small  and  Adele  Lippert.  who 
play  the  leading  roles  in  the  ten- 
der love  story.  These  part.s  were 
well  ca.st.  for  not  only  arc  Small 
and  Mrs.  Lippert  actors;  they  can 
sing,  and  the  songs  combined  witli 
the  story  convey  the  sweetness 
"like  the  smell  of  heather  in  the 
rain." 

Gene  Strassler  was  well-chosen 
for  the  tenor  songs,  "Come  to  Me, 
Bend  to  Me"  (his  best),  and  "I'll 
Go  Home  with  Bonnie  Jean".  His 
wa.s  one  of  the  three  love  stories 
in  the  play,  though  one  of  the 
pairings  is  ill-fated,  for  James 
Heldman  lose^  his  pants  rather 
than  his  heart  in  the  highlands 
when  he  is  pursued  by  Hope 
Sparger,  the  corresponding  fe- 1 
male     comic     lead. 

The  most  impressive  support- 
ing role  in  the  play  is  done  by 
John  Sneden,  who  is  Mr.  Ludy, 
the  dominie.  He.  like  all  the  rest 
of  the  cast,  speaks  with  a  burr, 
and.  luckilly  the  nearest  he  gets 


to  a  Scots  accent  of  two  hundred 
years  ago  is  a  sort     of     Carolina 


Playmaker   Irish    which 
ant  to  hear. 


is    pleas- 


"^   What  a  man  uses  on  his  face 


is  important 


CHOOSE   QUALITY 
I     SHAVE   WITH 


Rich,  creamy  quolity  for 
shaving  comfort  ond  sk\n 
health.  New  formula  Old 
Spice  Shaving  Creori^s  in 
giant  tubes: 

Brushless  .60    Lather  .65 
Old  Spice  aerosol 
Smooth  Shave  1  00 

•  H  U  LT  O  N 

NCV»    TOIK     •    TOIONIO 


GRAD   BOARD  MEETS 

The  Graduate  Executive  Board 
will  meet  Monday  night  from  6  to 
7  p.m.  in  the  center  room  on  the 
second  floor  of  Lenoir  Hall.  Any 
graduate  student  have  been  invit- 
ed to  attend  and  help  plan  gradu- 
ate activities. 
FACULTY  CLUB  LUNCHEON 

The  Faculty  Club  will  meet  at 
the  Carolina  Inn  on  Tuesday  at  1 
p.m  Professor  George  L.  Simpson, 
Jr..  director  of  the  Re^-earch  Tri- 
angle Committee,  Inc.,  will  be  the 
speaker.  E3ections  of  members  to 
the  Board  of  Governers  will  take 
place  at  the  meeting. 


Sound  And  Fury 
Tryouts  Set 
For  Tuesday 

Tryouts  far  this  year's  Sound 
and  Fury  production  will  be  held 
on  Tuesday  from  4-6  p.m.  and  7-9 

i  p.m.  at  Memorial  Hall. 

i  This  year's  |how.  "Thieve.:,'  Holi- 
(iuy,"  will  T)e  direcljed  by  John 
Ludwig.  It  i-s  scheduled  for  per- 
formance the  last  weekend  of 
March. 

Anyone  interested  in  trying  out 
may  obtain  a  script  on  reserve  at 
the  information  desk  in  Graham 
Memorial 


|ac 
a 


k' 


RM.O.C  W 

ii  with  his  new  ▼ 

I       SONIC 


:  Ever  since  Jack  bought  his  new  Sonk 
.CAPRI  phonograph  at  the  local 
college  store  — he's  become  the  biggest 
B  M  O  C  ever.  You  can  join  iiim  and 
be  the  biggest  ever,  too.  for  you 
can  buy  a  Capri  phonograph  tor  as 
.  litde  as  $19  95.  This  montiis 
special  buy  is  the  Capri  550  It's  a 
portable  4-speed  hi-fi  phonograph 
with  WEBCOR  automatic  changer 
! Features  are  t^in  speakers,  a 
.quality  amplifier  and  a  smartly 
styled  cabinet  in  attractive 
,  Two-Tone  Forest  Green.  Specially 
priced  at  your  local  dealer. 


SONIC    INDUSTRIES,  INC.     19  Wilbur  Street,  lynbrook,  N.Y, 


The  FAMILY  HOME 


...  and  the  FAMILY 
DRUG  STORE 


•  Your  Family  Home  is  one  of  your  most 
important  investments.  Naturally,  you 
check  carefully  on  each  detail.  But  every 
day  you  make  other  important  invest- 
ments—purchases that  affect  the  health 
and  welfare. of  your  household.  Thus, 
you  should  select  your  Family  Drug  Store 
with  care.  We  invite  your  consideration 
and  will  appreciate  yoor  patronage. 


Sutton's  Drug  Store 

Phone  9-8781 
^0f*f^s<^^^,y    "The  Tar  Heel's 
Prescription  Center* 


How  does  it  feel  to  win  a  billion  dollar  bet? 


WELL  you  just  did.  Detroit  was  so  sure  you'd  like 
their  new  cars  they  invested  $1  billion  in  1957 
model  chauge-overs.  Detroit's  winning  its  bet,  getting 
its  aioney  back.  But  the  real  winner  in  two  ways— is  you. 

First  of  all,  when  you  get  a  new  car,  you'll  be  getting 
the  finest  car  money  ever  bought.  A  car  as  exciting  to 
look  at  as  to  drive.  With  new,  lower  styling,  exciting 
new  colors.  Powered  with  surging  horsepower  for  the 
super  highway  age. 

Second,  you'll  cash  in  on  a  booming  economy.  When 
Detroit  produces  cars  everybody  wants,  they  keep  more 
people  working.  Help  more  people  boy  them.  There's 
more  money  to  support  more  businesses.  More  job 
opportunities  for  you. 

Backing  up  the  dramatic  newness  of  the  1957  cars 
is  the  sturdy  dependability  the  world  associates  with 
American  cars.  We  know  about  this  dependability  be- 
cause we  work  hand-in-hand  with  car  manufacturers 


to  put  it  there.  Every  make  of  American  car  uses  Tinaken* 
tapered  roller  bearings  to  reduce  friction— help  handle 
the  heavier  loads  of  today's  high  speed  driving. 

The  vital  role  Timken  bearings  play  in  making  cars 
and  machinery  for  all  industry  better  than  ever  helps 
keep  us  steaming  ahead.  And  because  it  makes  sense 
to  join  a  winning  team,  you  may  be  interested  in  the 
fiimre  the  Timken  Company  can  offer  college  grad- 
uates. For  details,  write  for  our  booklet  "Career  Oppor- 
tunities at  the  Timken  Company".  The  Timken  Roller 
Bearing  Company,  Canton  6,  Ohio. 


TIMKEN 

TRAOC-MAHK  IU«.  U>  S.  PAT.  OFT. 

TAPmO  ROLLER  BEARINCS 


Timken''  bearings  keep  America  on  the  GQ ...  and    ' 
y(Ui  keep  going  up  when  you  go  with  the  Timken  Compony 


-.-..^■yj;. 


SUNDAY,  MARCH  3,  1957 


PAGI  FOUR  '  .  THI  DAILY  TAR  HEBL _^__ __^____— — 

Charlie  Krepp  Wins  Eigiith  ACC  Swimming  Championship 

.. . - — ♦  ^* ^ 


Grapplers  Wind  Up  Season      Four  Seniors  Repeat  OeoconsUpsef 
I    D    I   '   LM      J       AU^.^^r^r^  I  As  Defending  Champs|fiy'^-C-5to'e 

m  KQieian  ivionauy  MTiernoon  \     b,stewartb.rd    i^  >ard  tre«s«ie  i„  a  .me  ot  iniQsjFmaie 


By  RON  MILLIGAN 

The  Carolina  wrestling  team  will 
visit  the  State  Wolfpack  grapplers 
for  their  last  dual  tilt  of  the  sea- 
son at  State  tomorrow  at  4  p.m., 
hoping  to  leturn  home  with  a  win 
that  will  put  them  in  a  three-way 
Tic  for  second  place  in  the  con- 
ference. 

Three  teams.  Duke.  Virginia  and 
Carolina  are  all  competing  for  sec- 
ond  place  in   the   Conference.   All 


Books  on 
Religion . . .  • 

Beyond  Despair,  by  G.  Ray  Jordan. 
A  guide  to  radiant  joy  and  abound- 
ing peace.  Published  at  $2.50.  Oor 
Our  Special  $1.00 

Live   and    Help   Live,    by    Kraine:> 
and  Thetford.  How  to  regain  faith 
in  yourself  through. faith  in  others. 
Published  at  S3.75. 
Our   Special       —-  $1.49 

The   Ramayana.  The  great    Hindu 
religious    epic,    retold    in    modern 
prose    by    Aubrej-    ilennen.    Oiir,> 
is  the  book  club  edition. 
Special  $1.00 

The  Bedside  Bible.   Excerpts  from 
the    Book    of    books,   in  readable 
type,   for   inspirational   reading.. 
Our  Special  $1.25 

Whatever  your  reading  needs, 
you'll  find  the  books  to  satisfy 
them  in  the  big,  big  stock  at 
Chapel   Hill's  friendly  bookshop. 

The  Intimate 
Bookshop 

205  E.  Franklin  St. 
Open  Titi  10  P.  M. 


three  teams  have  been  beaten  by 
the  first  place  winner,  the  Terps 
of  Maryland. 

Concerning  the  outcome  of  the 
match  tomorrow,  Coach  Sam  Barn- 
es said:  "We've  got  to  get  this  one 
because  if  we  tie  for  second  place 
in  the  conference,  our  team  this 
year  will  be  the  firat  winning  team 
that  Carolina  has  had  in  ten 
years." 

Capt.  Bob  Wagner,  a  senior,  will 
be  fighting  in  his  last  dual  match 
for  the  Tar  Heels.  Last  Friday 
afternoon  durmg  practice.  Bob  was 
asked  to  comment  on  the  coming 
State  tilt.  Catching  his  breath, 
Wagner  commented:  •'I'm  sori? 
that   we've  dropped   four    matches 


JUNIORS  and  SENIORS 
Majoring  in 

Other  Biological  Sciences 

Biology 

Chemistry 

Physical  Education 

Would  you  like  information  on  an 
interesting  selective  pharmaceuti- 
cal sales  career?    >•."';.. 


.\n  Upjohn  Company  representa- 
live  will  be  on  the  campus  March 
4  to  discuss  enaployment  possibili- 
ies  in  PHARMACEUTICAL  SALES. 
{  Please     arrange     for     interviews 

!  through  your  placement  office. 

I 

I  THE  UPJOHN  COMPANY 
Washington,  D.  C. 


straight  in  a  row  after  starting  off 
so  well  at  the  first  of  the  season. 
I  think  it's  about  time  we  got  back 
into  our  winning  .N-treak!" 

Another  senior  and  outstanding 
grappler.  Charlie  Boyette  made 
this  statement  concerning  the  i 
State  match.  He  said:  "I've  thought  ; 
all  season  only  about  winning,  but 
I  believe  in  thinking  about  the 
teams  we  meet  one  at  a  time  as 
they  come.— We  meet  State  Mon- 
day afternoon  at  4:00." 

Although  the  starting  lineup  has 
not  definitely  been  picked.  Coach 
Barnes  gave  the  following  list  of 
possibilities:  123  lb.  Henry  Rhyne 
or  David  Wall,  130  lb.  Bob  Wag- 
ner. 137  lb.  Perrin  Henderson  or 
Bill  Adcock,  147  lb.  Charlie  Boy- 
ette. 157  lb.  Bill  McGehee,  167  lb. 
Dave  Atkinson,  177  lb.  Jim  Hutch- 
ins  and  heavyweight  Larry  Haye.v. 

The  freshman  wrestling  team 
will  also  meet  the  young  wolflets 
at  3  p.m.  tomorrow. 


Four  of  the  greatest  swimmei  ;  50.2,  two-tenths  of  a  second  off  the 

record  of  50.0,  established  by  the 
Wolfpack  speedster  last  Saturday. 
His  constant  challenger  and  likely 


in  North  Carolina  and  N.  C.  State 
history  bowed  out  of  conference 
competion  as  successful  defending 


champions    and    recordholders    to  sucessor  to  the  head  of  the  century 


bring  the  annual  ACC  Swimming 
and  Diving  Championships  to  a 
close  laX  night  in  Bowman  Gray 
Pool. 

Frank  Nauss,  200  pound  speed- 
ster from  the  Wolfpack,  won  his 


rank'.  Walk  Rose  of  Carolina,  was 
second  with  a  time  of  51.8.  | 

4  pint-size,  145  pound  bundle  i 
bf  nftuscles  f i"om  Sumter.  S.  C,  i 
.Daye  Mclnnls.  thrilled  the  crowd 
of  300  persons  with  an  amazing  per- 


RALEIGH—(AP)— North  Caro- 
lina State's  sizzling  sophomores  up- 
set Wake  Forest  75  to  71  before 
10,500  fans  here  last  night  to  ring 
down  the  curtain  on  the  1957  bas- 
ketball season. 


By  ippointment  purveyors 


of  SMP  to  the  late  King  G«or|e  VI.  Yardley  &  Co.,  ltd,  Uado« 


LEARN  COLLEGE  HEBREW 
AT  CAMP  THIS  SUMMER 

Annual  accelerated  course  in 
modern  Hebrew  for  college 
students  and  graduating  high 
school  seniors,  at  beautiful  76 
acre  coed  camp  in  New  York's 
Hudson  Valley ;  complete  sports 
facilities. 

7  week  session,  July -August, 
$185:  including  room,  board, 
tuition  (some  scholarship  help 
avuilablel  write: 

ULPAN,  Student  Zionist  Organization 
342  Madison  Avenue,  New  York  17 


A  Campus-to-Career  Case  History 


Al  Morris  (right)  diacuases  a  new  amplifier  system  with  Howard  D.  Thomas,  one  of  his  foremen. 


"After  training . . .  it's  up  to  you" 


That's  what  Alfred  E.  Morris  says 
about  the  Bell  System.  "And  that's  the 
way  I  like  it."'  he  adds.  "Right  now 
I'm  in  a  job  I  didnl  think  Td  have  for 
ten  or  fifteen  'years.'' 

The  job  AI  "thought  was  more  than 
a  decade  away  is  Plant  Superintendent 
for  the  Hutchinson  district  Ln  Kansas 
with  Southwestern  Bell.  ''You  can  .«uni 
up  my  Hork  by  saying  I'm  responsible 
for  the  installation  and  maintenance  of 
all  telephone  equipment  in  a  large  part 
of  central  Kansas,'"  Al  says.  "In  times 
of  emerget»>  —a  tornado,  for  instance  — 
I  have  complete  charge  of  maintaining 
and   restoring  service.'" 

Here's  how  .M  describe;'  the  step?  that 
led  up  to  his  present  job:  "I  started  out 


in  Beir?  management  training  program 
in  1951.  This  gave  me  an  excellent 
opportunity  to  leani  about  all  jobs  in 
the  company  — not  just  the  job  I'd  be 
doing.  The  program  was  well  orga'n- 
ized,  and  I  got  a  lot  out  of  it. 

"My  first  assignment  was  to  coordi- 
nate a  dial  conversion  in  La  Crosse, 
Kansas,  a  quarter-inilliun-doUar  opera- 
tion. My  next  assignments  were  in 
Abilene  and  Lawrence.  Both  carried  in- 
creased responsibility. 

"I  knew  I  was  moving  along  pretty 
fast  — but  I  was  really  surprised  when 
nty  present  job  came  up.  It  bears  out 
what  my  wife  and  I  thought  when  1 
joined  Bell— there  would  be  great 
chances  for  advancement." 


Al  Morri"  ^aduatPil  in  1951  front  the  L'niver!<ity  of  Karii^as 
with  H  B.S.  in  Industrial  Management.  Me  if>  topical  of  niany 
vOHiig  men  who  ar*-  iindiiig  inlcreniin^  niroer  opporlunitinH 
hi  Bell  Telcphon*-  <!onn»:«nie-.  Bell  Telfplione  Kahoralorie.o, 
^'ei.|ern  Elertrii-  and  Saiiilia  (lur|Miralioii.  \our  |>la«r<-iiient 
ofiiver  faai<  more  infornialiun  aixtut  lli*:.>o  i-umiianie.x. 


TKLBPHONI 
8Y8TBM 


third  title  of  the  current  meet  is  formance  of  diving  as  he  took  the 
he  took  the  Bill  Thompson  Me-  three  meter  crown  with  a  total  of 
morial  trophy  for  the  440  freestyle  468.25,  for  his  second  title  of  the 
in  the  time  of  4:42.7.  five-tenths  of  i  f»eet.  Previously  he  had  success- 
a  second  off  his  record  set  last  fully  defended  his  one  meter  title, 
year  in  these  same  championships,  to  emerge  as  conference  champion 
Naus.-  began  his  reign  as  king  of  In  both  events  for  the  past  two 
conference  distance,  events  in  1952  '  y^^j-s. 

'.  .  There  were  t«'o  records-  estab- 
1  Ushed  in  the  evening's  seven 
I  events.  Bill  Zickgraf,  175  pound 
i  junior  from  Franklin.  N.  C,  swam 
!  100  yards  butterfly  in  57.5,  almost  '• 
j  two  seconds  faster  than  his  pre- 
I  villus  best  to  set  an  atutomatic 
standard  the  first  time  this  event 
.  has  been  held. 

Dick  Fadgen,  defending  >^NCAA 
champion  took  his  s-ccond  200  yard 
I  breaststroke  title  in  as  many  years 
as  he  flashed  the  distance  in  2:22.8. 
In  the  afternoon  trials  he  shaved 
two-tenths  of  a  second  off  his  ex- 
isting  record,  with  a  time  of  2:21.7. 
I   ^  SUMMARY 

100  butterfly— ( 1 )  Zickgraf  (C). 

(2)    Mahaffy    (C),    (3)    Ackerman 

-  (CI.).    (4)    Turner    (C).    (5)    Bell 

(Md.).  (6)  Doll  (Va.).  (New  ACC 

record.  Time  :57.5). 

100  frcestlye  —  (1)  Mclntryre 
(S).  (2)  Rose  (C).  (3)  Whitney 
(D).  (4)  Young  (D).  (5)  Robert- 
son (S).  (6)  Ascherfeld  (Md.). 
Time:  50.2. 

200  breaststroke  —  ( 1 )  Fadgen 
(S).  (21  Morgan  (D).  (3)  tie: 
Goad  and  Mercer.  (C),  (5)  Climo 
(S).  (6)  Phillips.  (Va.).  Time: 
2:22.8. 

100  backstroke— ( 1 )  Krepp.  (C), 
(2)    Lucey    (Md.).    (3)    Nash    (C). 

(4)  Pace  (D).  (5)  Poulnot  (S.C.). 
(6i    Veazyy   (C).    Time:  57.0. 

440  freestyle -^  ( 1 )  Nauss  (S), 
(2)  Schiffman  (C).  (3)  Hattler 
(D).  (4)  ^angler  (D),  (5)  Mill- 
ard (C).  (6)  .\twater  (C).  Time: 
4:42.7. 

High  diving— (1)  iMcInnis  (C). 
(2)  Meekins  (C).  (3)  Shields 
(Md.).  (4)  Parker  (C).  (5)  Hodge 
(Va.).   Points:   468.25. 

400  medley  relay— ( 1 )  Nash.  Ma- 
haffy. Zickraf.  Roth.  (C).  (2) 
Maryland.  (3)  Duke.  (4)  Virginia. 

(5)  tie;  South  Carolina  and  Clem- 
son:  Time:  4:05.0. 


Managers  Meet 

There  will  be  an  intramural 
managers  meeting  tomorrow 
night  at  7:30  p.m.  in  room  301-A, 
Woollen  Gym.  Entries  for  soft- 
ball  and  tennis  will  be  due  at 
this  time. 


CHARLIE  KREPP 

. . .  Hrtjw  eighth 
when  he  became  eiigible  under 
the  then  exisiting  freshman  rule. 
Since  that  time  he  has  taken  the 
220.  440.  and  1500  meter  freestyles 
far  four  sucessive  years,  giving 
him  a  total  of  twelve  individual 
championships.  He  left  as  a  true 
champion,  going  all  out  the  full 
17  lap  distance  in  a  vain  effort  to 
once  again  lower  his  record.. 

Sure  fire  bet  for  All-Amerjcan 
honors  this  year  and  team  captain 
Charlie  Krepp  a-wam  his  last  back- 
stroke race  for  the  Tar  Heel  cause 
as  he  took  his  eighth  title  in  three 
years  with  a  time  of  57.0  for  the 
100  yard  backstroke.  His  time  miss- 
ed his  current  conference  stand- 
ard of  56.6  by  five  tenths  of  a  sec- 
ond. Krepp  has  firmly  established 
himself  as  a  prime  contender  for 
a  national  title  when  the  National 
Collegiate  Championships  open 
here  March-  28.  His  conference  re- 
cord which  he'  set  earlier  this  year 
also  tied  the  existing  national  col- 
legiate mark. 

Dave  JWcIntjTe  of  State  took  the 


Howard  Johnson  Restaurant 


BREAKFAST 


lUNCH  "^^ 

DINNER 


:    V    '         SNACKS 
"Landmark  For  Hungry  Tarheels" 


DAILY    CROSSWORD 


ACROSS 

1   Blister 
(med  ) 

6  Merganser* 
1 1  A  willow 
12.  Weird 

13  Female 
sandpiper 

14  Lively  song 

15  Like 

16.  Half  ail  em 
1"  Speeders' 

penalties 
18.  Draws  up 
20.  Exclama- 

lion 
22  Attack 

violently 
26.  Revival 
29.  Tops 
.30.  Consume 
.11  Teeter 
.14.  Demand 
37.  Land 

measure 
38  Whether 

40.  Yearn 

41.  Desire, 
as  food 

43  Mingled 
with 

4S.  Mohamme- 
dan Bible 

4<.  Minister's 
house 

4r.  Aquatic 
birds 
DOUN 

>  1.  Adriatic 

'     cold 
wind 

2.  Employs 

3.  FalsehocHl 

4  Pry 

5  Fi*M  of 
action 


6  Selenium 
(sym  ) 

7.  Girls  name 

8.  Ireland 

9.  Trick 
10.  Places 
17.  Band  acroM 

escutcheon 
<  Her. ) 

18  A  temple 
•  archaic) 

19  Billiard 
stroke 

20  Curved  line      36 
21.  Pronoun  38 

23  Afresh 

24  River  (S  A  i   39 


35 


Permit 

Alio. 

elites 

Article 

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Missile 

weapon 

Bivalve 

mol. 

lusk 

Long, 

narrow 

hill 

Soon 

Russian 

tyrant 

Bogs 


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42  Conslella. 

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44  Earth  ji# 

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THIS  AFTER  SHAVE  LOTION 
CONDITIONS  YOUR  FACE,  TOO 

^    Invigorates  and  softens  the  skin ;  soothes  razor  bum,  ^ 
after  any  shave,  electric  or  lather ...  $1.10,  plus  tax. 


KATHARINE     HEPBURN 

Nominated  For  Academy  Award 
Best  Actress 

NOW     PLAYING 


ea^oiina 


YARDLEY  OF  LONDON,  inc. 


". "  \'.  f 


Yardlry  pToducJs  for  America  are  created  in  England  and  finished  m  the  U.S.A.  frw  tti»  origmsl 
English  formulae,  combining  imported  and  domestic  mgredianfs.  620   Fifth  Ave..   N.Y  C. 


YARDLEY    PRODUCTS  AVAILABLE 


at 


SUTTON'S  DRUG  STORE 


Inch  by  bloody  inch    . . 

a  battle-batteretf  platoon 
drags  itself  back  to  its 
own  lines  .  .  .  surrounded  by 
a   lurking,  treacherous  enemy 
that  snuffs  out  stragglers 
without  a   sound — 
An  enemy  that 
patiently  waits   for     ^ 
one  careless  move, 
one  wrong  command,   and 
then  strikes! 
But   up  ahead, 
leading  them, 
are   a 

cast-iron  lieutenant  and 
a  killer-cold  sergeant  .  .  . 
two  mudsioggers 
who  hated  each 
other's  gots —  .^  "^ 

two   hell-hounds      i. 
who  fought 
'like  two  thousand!       •'    •  '-* 


SECURITV  FiCTllRtS  INC    crcsani)  -^ 

ROBERT  RYAN 


'4M  Ih* 

LIIUTENANT 

who'd  lead 
hi«m«n 
anywhere  — ^ 


mSXi 


I   -: 


^4tr 


m 


^'  ^W*   JUIUTARY  HACMlHi  tH^t 


ALDO  RAV 

w  ^  ^  ~rrito»* 


»u«»** 


••The 
'lllROIANT 

who'd  fellow 

him  in*e 

hell—  jurt  te 

get  even! 


STARTS  TODAY 


\MSS1LU 


-"S'f* 


Serials     Dept. 


Ben-Gurf0n  "Orders   Withdrawal:  Action  Sets  Off  Clash 


JERUSALEM   —<*>— Prime   Min- 
ister David  Ben-Gurion  ended  de  j 
bate  Monday  and   ordered    Israeli  ! 
troops    to    get    out    of    Gaza    and 
Aqaba  ccastal  strip  j.  | 

The    grizzled     prime    minister's 
MCtion,    before     he    had    informed  ] 
Parliament,  set  off  a  clash  between  j 
police  and  demonstrators  — mostly 
students  —  who  angrily  shouted.  | 
"stop   the   withdrawal."  \ 

ONC  INJURED  I 

.  A  crowd  of  hundreds  mafched  ; 
toward  the  Knesset  (Parliament)  i 
building  in  Jerusalem  shouting  for 
Ben-Gurion'.'  government  to  re- 
sign. Ckie  of  the  marchers  was  in-  i 
jured  and  about  10  arrested  in  a  ! 
police  charge.  I 


WEATHER 

Scattered  showers.  Turning  cool- 
er in  the  afternoon. 


Police  used  clubs  to  subdue  the 
crowd  and  threw  up  a  cordon  that 
stopped  the  march  on  Parliament. 
About  100  of  the  marchers  at- 
tempted to  stage  a  sit-down  in  the 
middle  of  the  street. 

CONFERENCE 

Under  Ben-Gurion's  orders,  Maj. 
Gen.  Moshe  Dayan,  Israeli  Army 
Chief  of  Staff,  flew  to  Lydda  Air- 
port in  central  Israel  and  held  a 
70-minute  conference  with  Maj. 
Gen.  E.  L.  M.  Biu-ns,  commander 
of  the  UN  Emergency  Force 
(UNEF). 

Burns  announced  agreement  on 
plans  for  the  Israelis  to  pull  out  of 
the  territories  and  •  lor  UN  forces 


to  move  in,  bwt  gave  no  detailsT 

iThe   evacuation   may   start    this 
week. 

OVERLAND 

The  withdrawal  from  Gaza  will 
I  be  by  overland  motor  route.  Two 
Israeli  frigates  and  other  craft  are 
at  hand  at  Sharm  El  Sheikh  to  re- 
move Lvrael's  troops  from  the 
Egyptian  shore  overlooking  the 
south  of  the  Gulf  of  Aqaba. 

A  Swedish  unit  of  UN  troops  is 
at  RATA  area  and  may  move  into 
Gaza.  Danish  and  Finnish  troops 
are  about  37  miles  west  of  Sharm 
El  Sheikh. 
MEETING 

A    government    spokesman    an- 


nounced Ben-Gurion  had  ord«"ed 
Dayan  to  invite  Burns  to  an  im- 
mediate meeting  "to  discuss  n^a- 
sures  necess-ary  to  carry  out  the 
withdrawal  of  forces  in  accordance 
with  the  statement  by  the  Foreign 
Minister,  Mrs.  Golda  Meir." 

This  was  the  sequence  which  Jed 
up  to  the  announcement: 

On  Friday,  after  prolonged  ftx- 
changes  with  the  United  Stales, 
Mrs.  Meir  declared  in  the  UN  Gbn 
eral  Assembly  that  Israel  would 
withdraw.  ; 

BACK  OUT  ; 

Then  the  Lraeli  cabinet  met  Sat- 
urday and  Sunday  to  reconsider 
the    decision.     Some    government 


leaders  wanted  to  back  out  be- 
cause of  a  statement  by  US  Dele- 
gate Henry  Cabot  Lodge  to  the 
UN  that  the  future  of  the  Gaza 
Strip  would  be  worked  out  within 
the  framework  of  the  1949  Egypt- 
ian-Israel armistice. 

•  It  seemed  to  the  Israeli's  that 
thus  was  in  contradiction  to  one  of 
their  'assumptions"  that  UN  forces 
would  remain  in  Gaza  until  there 
is  a  peace  settlement  or  a  final 
determination  of  the  status  of  the 
area. 

NO  DECISION 

The  cabinet  reached  no  decision 
Sunday  and  was  to  meet  again  yes- 
terday.   But    before    it    met    Ben- 


Gurion  issued  his  orders. 

A  government  official  gave  this 
report  of  the  development:  al- 
though the  announcement  was 
made  before  the  cabinet  met,  Ben- 
Gurion  had  held  conferences  with 
various  party  leaders  last  night  and 
today  in  order  to  get  their  views. 

The  prime  minister  will  make  a 
complete  statement  to  the  Knesset 
and  the  nation  today  and  explain 
why  he  decided  to  give  the  order. 

DEBATE 

Hij  statement  probably  will  be 
followed  by  a  debate,  and  a  vote 
on  a  motion  of  non-confidence  in 
the  government  that  has  been  of- 
fered   by    the    Nationalist    Herut 


I  (Freedom)  and  Conservative  Gen- 

I  eral  Zionist  parties. 

I     Ben-GurioD  is  acting  in  the  be- 

j  lief  that  moral  support  expressed 
by  many  UN  delegations  will  re- 
sult m  freedom  foe  Israel's  ship- 
ping in  the  Gulf  of  Aqaba  and  the 
safeguarding  of  her  borders  front 
commando  raids. 

The  spokesman  S'aid  Israel  re- 
ceived no  assurance  during  the ! 
weekend  exchanges  in  Washington  i 
that  Lodge's  statement  on  the  fu-  j 
ture  of  Gaza  had  been  revised,  j 
These  talks  were  between  Israeli  j 
Ambassador  Abba  Eban  and  US  | 
Secretary  of  State  Dulles.  ! 

FINAL  STATEMENT  I 

A  letter  from  President  Eisen- 


hower, handed  to  Ben-Gurion  by 
the  US  Ambassador  Eklward  «• 
Lawi»n  Sunday  was  the  final 
American  statement  on  the  matter. 

During  the  cabinet  debate  here, 
the  four  ministers  of  two  left-wing 
socialist  parties,  Mapam  and  Ach- 
dut  Avoda,  voted  against  with- 
drawing the  troops  and  threaten- 
ed to  resign  if  a  withdrawal  was 
ordered. 

Their  resignations  would  weak- 
en, but  not  autcjmatically  cause 
the  fall  of  the  Ben-Gurion  govern- 
ment, since  the  other  three  parties 
of  the  coalition'  could  still  muster 
a  majority*  in  the  120-member 
Knesset. 


arhc 


STar  Mtd 


u 


GM 

K    is   starting    to   crumble.     Soo 
e^iterial,  pa^e  2. 


VOL.  LVII,  NO.   10= 

nev5 

m 
brief 

Nixon  Tiiks 

ACCRA.  GOLD  COAST  —  i/?i — 
Vice-President  Nixon  said  Primfe 
Minister  Kwame  Nkrumah  pledged 
yesterday  his  newly  independent 
country  will  'never  be  neutral"  in 
the  E^>t-West  struggle. 

Nixun  rep.;rted  the  .American- 
wiuvited  Gold  Coast  leader,  47, 
told  him  this  in  a  private  meeting 
—  tne  lirst  .\Kiuinah  ha  agrecti 
to  with  a  representative  of  any  of 
the  70  foreign  nations  vvh3  have 
flocked  to  this  Wesi  .Airican  coun- 
try fur  celebrations  marking  its  in- 
dependence. The  nation  will  be 
kii  un  as  Ghana. 

NixJn.  bouncing  back  from  a 
three-day  flu  attack,  quoted  Nkru- 
mah as  telling  him:  "we  can  never 
be  neutral." 


Complete  (JP)  Wire  Service 


CHAPEL  HILL,  NORTH   CAROLINA,  TUESDAY,  MARCH  5,  1957 


Officti  in  Graham  Mamori^ 


FOUR   PA&ES  THIS  ISSUE 


McCarthy  Clashes 

WASHINGTON  —  .f—  Sen.  Mc- 
Carthy (R-WLs)  clashed  with  Dem- 
ocratic leaders  on  the  Senate  floor 
today  after  declaring  "It's  a  dis- 1 
giace"  ihal  only  five  Senators  were  1 
present  for  the  Middle  East  de- 1 
bate.  1 

Both  majoAty  leader  Lyndon 
Johnson  (D-Tex)  and  Sen.  Neubi.T 
ger  (D-Ore.).  acting  leader  at  tho 
time  McCarthy  made  hie  protest, ' 
asserted  the  Wisconsin  Senator 
had  been  missing  during  most  of 
the  two  weeks  the  Middle  East 
resolution  has  been  under  discus- 
sion, j 

Johnson  insisted  oh  a  quorum 
ciU  to  bring  all  available  Senators 
to  the  floor.  They  should  be  on 
hand  "to  .-.^e  that  the  Senator  from 
VViscon.'in  is  here,"  the  Texan  said, 
adding  acidly:  ^      j 

"That's    a    record    in    itself."        | 

The  exchange  took  place  as-  the 
Senate  moved  steadily  closer  ic 
ward  a  final  vote  on  the  Midd'e 
Fast  resolution.  Sen.  Wiley  (R-Wis) 
urged  passage  "within  the  next  24 
hours." 

(See  WORLD  NEWS.  Page  3) 

Board  Cancels  Meetings 
For  Councils  Interviews 

The  Bnpartisan  Selection  Board 
for  the  Men's  Honor  Council  and 
the  Student  Council  has  cancelled 
all  its  regularly  scheduled  meet- 
ings, according  to  Honor  Council 
Chairman  Jim  Exum, 

EJxum  said  the  board  will  inter- 
view candidates  only  b>  appoint- 
ment. Those  interested  in  running 
for  the  two  councils  have  been  ask- 
ed to  call  Exum  at  89077  to  sched- 
ule an  appointment. 

There  are  three  seats  open  on 
the  Student  Council  to  be  filled 
only  by  rising  ^.-aniors. 

There  are  four  rising  senior 
seats,  one  rising  junior  seat  and 
one  rising  sophomore  seat  to  be 
filled  on  the  Men's  Honor  Council 


Attention: 
Change  Again 
To  Raincoats 


University  Will  Seek 
Pay  Hike  For  Teachers 


An  attempt  by  the  Consolidated  I'mversity  to  obtain  hij^b- 
er  .salary  increases  and  more  funds  for  books  than  the  .\d- 
visory  Budget  Commission  originally  recommended  will   be 
Raincoats  to  overcoats  and  back    '"^^e  W^ednesday,  March  20  instead  of  tomorrow  as  previous- 
again — this  seems  to  be  the  only  ■  '>  reported. 

forecast  that  the  U.  S.  Weather  Consolidated  I'niversity  Ptesideni  William  C:.  Friday,  whe 
Bureau  at  the  Raleigh-Durham  w  ill  present  the  l^niversity's  requests  before  the  joint  .\p- 
Airport  is  making  these  days.         propriations  Committee  of  the  General  .\s.semhly,  announc- 

The  weather  outlook  for  today   ed  the  change  .Monday. 
is  the  usual:  rain  and  low  temp-   


eratures.  The  low  for  today  Is  ex- 
pected to  be  in  the  low  50'S  with 
occasional   rain    this    afternoon. 

The  general  weather  trend  for 
i  this  area  is  cloudy  'and  cooler 
Tuesday  through  Friday  with 
more  rain  expected  Friday,  fore- 
casters said. 

So.  don't  pack  up  those  over- 
coats and  raincoats  yet.  There's 
more  to  spring  in  Chapel  Hill 
than  sunshine  and  balmy  days. 


Police  Free 
3  Students 
Of  Charges 


RECORDS  IN  The  book-^ex 

.   Hvlen   Williams  looks  them  over 


(Woody  Sears  Photo) 


BY  HONOR  COUNCIL 


'-•'^ 


Six  Students  Suspended 

The  decisions  on  the  four  cases '  Santyana.   Following   his   trial,   he    the    students    pleaded   guilty    and 
before     the    Honor    Council    this   was  suspended  from  .school  indef-   stated    the   other   didn't   know   he 


week  have  resulted  in  the  indefi- 
nite i-jsper.sion  of  six  students. 
The  first  case  was  for  plagiarism 
on  an  English  2  final.  Part  of  the 
final  was  to  "be  an  essay  written 
in  class  for  which  the  student  was 


initely. 

The  s-econd  case  was  for  collab- 
aration  on  the  written  and  oral 
parts  of  a  ten-part  Spanish  3x  fin- 
al.  The   Council   found   the   three 


was   copying    his   paper.    The    .stu- 
dent  who   pleaded   guilty   was   in- 
definitely    suspended,     while     the 
other  wa.v  exonerated. 
Case  four  was  also  for  plagiar- 


Music  Gets 
Around 

By   WALTER   SCHRUNTEK 

Music  lovers,  record  collectors, 
rock  and  roll  addicts  and  calypso 
enthusiasts  have  been  a^-ked  to 
take  note.  The  Book  Exchange  in 


New  Officers 
Are  Installed 
fey  Fraternity 

Howard  Broughton  of  Hertford 
was  installed  as  Justice  of  Phi  Al- 
pha Delta,  the  law  fraternity  that 
sponsors  the  mock  trial  at  Caro- 
lina each  year,  at  a  formal  pledg- 
ing ceremony  Friday.  Mar.  1. 

Also  elected  were:  William 
Ransdell  of  Varina,  Vice  Justice; 
Lemuel  Blades  HI  of  Elizabeth 
City,     Clerk;    James    Conoly    of 


■♦     He  said  officials  of  the  commit- 
j  tee  requested  the  University  wait 
I  until    that    date.    Friday    agreed 
'  with  the  request. 
j      Friday  had  stated  to  the  recent 
j  meeting  of  the  board  of  trustees 
"vigorous    action"    will    be    taken 
j  by  the  University  in  the  attempt. 
Friday  told  the  trustees  the  rec- 
ommendations    of     the     Advisory 
Budget   Commission   were   "inade- 
quate"   to    stem    the    exodus    of 
many   University   professors.    Oth- 
er   institutions    are    offering    our 
key   professors   much   higher   sal- 
aries than  they  are  getting  here, 
he  said. 

In    the    event    the    General    As- 


Police   dropped   charges   yester- 1 
day    against    three    UNC    students 
who  participated  in  Friday  nighfs 
panty  raid.  ! 

The  students  were  turned  over  j 
to  the  Student  Council  for  alleg-  j 
edly  tossing  firecrackers  out  of  j 
car  windows  during  the  raid.  '  settibly  laoes  OfU   approve   the  sal 

Two  others  are  expected  lo  go 


on  trial  this  morning.  One  ol  the 
two  was  booked  by  police  on  a 
disorderly  conduct  charge.  The 
second  was  picked  up  for  wearing 
a  handkerchief  around  his  face, 
a  violation  of  state  law. 

In  a  statement  yesterday.  Ray 
Jefferies,  assistant  to  the  dean 
of  student  affairs,  warned  that 
publicity  from  these  raids  is 
harmful  to  the  University. 

He  said:  "We're  the  only  school 


ary  increases  requested.  Friday 
said  he  would  ask  for  the  same 
raises  approved  for  other  state 
employees. 

Friday   announced    to    the   trus- 
tees   the    State    Board    of    Higher 
Education    will    join    forces    with 
the  administration  of  the  Univers- 
j  ity  in  efforts  to  get  the  Generil 
'  Assembly  to  approve  the  original 
I  recommendations     of     the     State 
Board. 


participants  guilty  as  charged,  and   ism.  A  student  was  reported  by  his 


,  „.  .,  J  ,  ^,  in    the    country    participating    in 

the  basement  of  Steele  dorm  now  j  Philadelphia,    Pa.,   Treasurer;   and ;  ^y^.jj    J.^^^^     We've    got    to    grow 

up." 


to  prepare   before  the  exam.  The  1  ^"^P^"^^^  them  from  school  indef- 

initely. 


defendant  memorized  six  para- 
graphs of  a  selection  by  George 
Santyana  and  rewrote  them  on  the 
final     without     giving    credit 


GN\'S  SLAT^ 


meeting  last  night  partially  filled 
its  slate  of  legislative  candidates. 

Misses  Caroline  Brown  and  Jo 
McClintock  were  named  party  can- 
didates to  fill  legislature  seats 
from   Dorm   Women's   District. 

Misses  Brown  and  McClintock 
were  named  by  acclamation  to  vie 
for  two  of  three  vacant  seats  in 
the  district.  One  seat  will  bo  fill- 
ed at  next  Monday  night's  meet- 
ing. 

Selected  to  carry  the  party  ban- 
ner in  Town  Mens  III  legislature 
district  were  Perry  White,  Bob 
Landrt'th  and  David  Evans. 


history  professor  when  the  defend-  j 

ant's  book  report  seemed  to  be  far  I 

In  case  three,  two  students  were '  more  elevated  and  elaborate  than  I 

charged    virith    collaboration    on    a 'the  usual  work  done   by  the  stuj 

to  Geography  38  final  exam.  One  of  j  dent.  The  student  maintained   hisj 

innocence     until,    after     extensive  i 
questioning,    he    began    contradict- 
ing hii  earlier  s'tatements.  He  then  ' 
changed     his    plea    and    admitted  | 
that  he  had   copied  the  whole  re- 
port, word  for  word,  from  a  book  | 
review  in  a  magazine.  After  much  ' 
deliberation,    the    council    decided! 
to     suspend     the     student     from 
school   for  an  indefinite  period. 


Student  Party  Meets 
To  Select  Candidates 

The    Student    Party   in   a    brief '  Hallford  said: 


"I  urge  everyone  to  attend,  whe- 
ther members  or  not,  to  see  our 
prospective    candidates." 

Hallford  said  he  anticipated  the 
largest  crowd  of  the  year  and  re- 
minded that  the  session  would  be 
open  to  the  entire  student  body. 


UP  Nominating 
Session  Tonight 
Open  To  Public 


The  first  nominating  session  of 
The  three  candidates  were  also    the  University  Party  will  be  held 


Activities  scheduled  for  Gra- 
ham Memorial   today   include: 

Grail  Room  —  Conference  on 
Education  Administration,  10:30 
a.m.-12:1S  p.m.  (also  Roland 
Parker  Lounges  1,  2,  3  and  the 
Woodhouse  Conference  Room); 
Roland  Parker  Lounge  1  —  In- 
terdermitory  Council,  3-4:30 
p.m..  University  Party,  7-11  p.m. 
(also  Roland  Parker  2);  Wood- 
house  Conference  Room  —  Bud- 
get Committee,  4-4  p-m..  Men's 
Honor  Council,  7-11  p.m.;  Ren- 
dezvous Room  —  Dance  Class, 
&  30  8  p.m.;  APO'  Room  —  APO, 
7-9  p.111. 


elected    by    acclamation. 

Candidates  for  Town  Men's  I, 
II  and  IV.  Town  Women's  District 
and  the  one  remaining  seat  in 
Dorm  Women's  District  will  be 
elected  at  nxet  week's  meeting. 

Nominees  for  the  presidency, 
vice-presidency  and  offices  of 
treasurer  and  secretary  of  the  stu- 
dent body  will  also  be  selected  by. 
the  SP  next  wee^. 

Other  candidates  to  be  named 
at  the  meeting  are  for  senior  class 
offices  and  editorships  of  the  cam- 
pus  publications. 

Concerning    the   session,   which. 


tonight  in  Gerrard  Hall  at  7:30. 

The  positions  up  for  nomination 
are  Senior  class  officers,  and  op- 
enings for  Dorm  and  Town  men 
legislature. 

University  Party  members  must 
have  their  membership  cards  to 
vote.  Anyone  who  has  not  gotten 
his  card  but  whose  name  is  on  the 
secretary's  official  roll  will  be  giv- 
en a  card  prior  to  the  meeting, 
stated  Mike  Weinman,  UP  chair- 
man. 

Those     needing    a    membership 


Eban,  Cain 
May Speak 
For  For  urn 


sells  records. 

Operating  on  a  trial  basis,  the 
record  stand  is  currently  display- 
ing a  small  variety  of  recordings 
ranging  from  Harry  Belafonte  to 
Elvis  Presley.  Albums  and  indi- 
vidual record.^-  run  in  the  45  and 
334   rpm  price  range. 

Sales  have  been  .moderate  since 
the  initiation  of  the  record  stand 
two  weeks  ago,  a  Book  ,Ex  em- 
ployee said,  probably  because  its 
existence  is  little  known  among 
students. 

The  future  existence  of  the  re- 


David  Evans  of  Chapel  Hill,  Mar 
shall. 

The  Phi  Alpha  Delta  pledge 
class  includes:  Irwin  Aldridge, 
Durham;  John  Allred,  Dunn;  John 
Campbell,      Buiflington^,      G  ij  1  e  s 


After  the  Friday  raid.  Jefferies 
said  that  in  the  future,  presence 
at  a  panty  raid  will  mean  partici- 
pation.   He    added    that    students 


Ceiling  Falls 
In  Murphy  Hall 

D.   M.   Homer.    Supt.   of   Main- 
tenance, said  j'esterday  thai  a  leak 
.     ^        .       .  .1  had    caused    a    .small    section    of 

dark.      EU«be.htow„.      J  a  .  e  ,  1  j^^^  ^  ^XfJ'.TLX  ^  '"''"  '°  ""  '""'  '-'  «"'°«  '" 


I  Clark,  New  York;  A.  E.  Cleveland 
III.  i  Murfreesboro;  George  Coggin, 
Star;  Luke  Corbett.  Pinehurst; 
Carl  Goldfarb,  Charlotte;  Hugh 
Hester,  Reldsville;  Dalton  Loftin, 
Trenton;  Phillip  Logan,  Chapel 
Hill;  Jimmy  Love.  Sanford;  Nick 
Miller,    Charlotte:    Carl    Masted. 


cord  service  will  depend  upon  its  j  Swansboro;  Earmine  Poteat,  Yan- 
pccess  during  the  coming  month, '  ceyville;  David  Read,  Gastonia; 
he  added.  1  Henry   Rosser,   Hamlet;   Benjamin 


explain    their    reason    for    being 
there. 

The  dean's  office  indicates  that 
sterner  action  will  be  taken  in 
future   occurrences. 

Cardboard  To  Feature 
Awards,  InstaHaticn 


Sadler,   Chapel   Hill;   John   Shjjck- 
elford.  Rocky  Mount;  R.  C.  Soles, 


And  what  kind  of  music  is  the 
Carolina  a-ludent  listening  to   and 
buying  during  these  days  of  Pres- 
ley, calypso  and  Rock  Around  the '  Ja"ds;  Richard  Tuggle.  Kannapol- 
Clock?  I  is:    Rohert    Webb.    Wilson;    John 

Current  sales  indicate  that  calyp  j  Smart,    Mooresboro;    and    James 
so  ranks  high  in  music  apprecia-,  Smith.   Chapel   Hill. 


tion.  Credit  for  the  success  of  this 
trend    is    laid    to    the     popularity 
Harry    Belafonte    is    enjoying    of 
Harry   P.   Cain,   former  senator ! '^^t"  | 

from  the  state  of  Washington,  and;      Hows   Elvis  doing  at   Carolina?! 
Abba   Eban,  Israeli  ambassador  to  i  One  local  music  dealer  put  it  this ; 
the    United    Nations,    are    possible !  way:  "We  don't  carry  Prco-ley  for 
speakers   on    the   Carolina   Forum  |  f^ar    of    driving     our    customers ! 
schedule  for  the  spring  .semester.  I  away."    Another,    not    nearly    so 
Accordhig   to   Brandon   Kincaid,  j  Positive,     indicated     that     Presley 
chairman   of   the   Forum,  the   two  j  Popularity  is  dying  down  in  favor  i 
men  have  been  contacted  and  are    of  Belafonte  and  calypso.  j 

expected  to  send  replies  in  the'  A  survey  yesterday  also  indi- 
near  future.  Kincaid  .stated  that  I  cated  that  the  cover  publicity  ol 
Eban's  reply  will  most  likely  de- !  Julie  London  has  pull»d  her  into 
pend  on  the  outcome  of  the  Is- 1  ^^e  sales  lead  over  June  Christie 
raeli-Egyptian  conflict  centered  at ,  here  in  Chapel  Hill, 
present  in  the  Gaza  strip  and  j  Rock  and  Roll?  "We  don't  carry 
the  Aqaba  area.  !  '^'      said    one    dealer.      "Carolina 

No  definite  dates  have  been  set    students   are   buying   it,"   a-aid  an- 
for  the  speaking  engagements.  other. 

Kincaid  also  said  that  the  Caro-       Jazz,  as  expounded  by  Ella  Fitz- 


The  annual  awards   banquet   of 
the    Carolina   Cardboard    will    be 
held  tonight  at  6:30  p.m.  in  the 
Tabor  City;  Paul  Sylvester,  Rich- !  upper  dining  room  of  Lenoir  Hall,  i  ca*^" 

The    program    will   feature    the  j 
presentation   of  awards    to   mem' 
bers  of  the  cardboard  and  the  in- 
stallation of  new  officers. 

The  officers  to  be  installed  are; 
President,  Peter  Evans;  sec'y-vice 
pres.,  Carolyn  Hofler;  head  of  arl 
dept.,  Rachel  Speight;  office  dept. 
head,  Fred  Propst;  and  head  ush- 
er, Doug  DeBank. 


room  111  of  Murphy  Hall. 

The  ceiling  supposedly  fell 
sometime  during  the  past  week- 
end. "It  was  something  that  just 
happened,  with  no  reason  that 
could  be  definitely  the  cause,  but 
the  l«ak  in  the  roof  is  the  appar- 
ent cause."   Homer  said. 

"The  debris  has  alreadv  been 
cleaned  up  and  the  ceiling  Ls 
ready  to  be  repaired."  continued 
Horner.  "We  will  have  the  dam- 
aged section  fixed  as  soon  as  we 


Office  Seekers 
Must  Have  25 
Persons  Sign 


The  EUections  Board  announced 
yesterday  that  all  petition  candi- 
dates who  wish  to  run  for  an  of- 
fice in  the  coming  Spring  elections 
must  have  a  petition  signed  by  25 
people. 

Petitions  must  be  submitted  to 
the  Student  Government  office 
before  March  22. 

All   candidates    wishing   to   run 
without   party  support  have  been 
urged    to    comply    with    this    an 
Armstrong,  |  nouncement. 

Candidates    receiving   selections 


card    should    bg   at   Gerrard    Hall 

well   before   time   for  the  session  '  Una  Forum  plans  to  contact  Sena-  gerald      and      Louis 

if    tradition    is    followed,    will    be   as  the  meeting  will  begin  prompt-  !  tor  Stuart   Symington  of  Missouri  seems  to  be  enjoying  steady  popu 

the    moijt    highly    participative    of    ly.  No  new  petitions  for  member  |  and  Speaker  of  the  House  of  R^P-  'arity  on  the  Hill.                              j  hoard   endorsement   will    be    noti 

the  year — along  with  the  Univers-    ship  will   be  accepted   until   after  i  rcsentatives   Sam   Rayburn   in   re-  In  the   Broadway  musical  field,    fied  by  March   19,  which  will  al 

ity   Party's  meeting  on  the  ^ame    nominations    are    complete,    said    gards  to  speaking  before  the  For  "My  Fair  Lady"  is  holding  down    low  three   days   for  the   procure 

night   —   Party    Chairman   Sonny    Weinman.                                          i  um,  *op  honors.                                        j  ment  of  a  petition. 


Gordon  Gray  Approved 
By.  B^nkinp  Committee 

Former  Consolidated  University 
President  Gordon  Gray  was  ap- 
proved Monday  by  the  Senate 
Banking  Committee  as  director  of 
the  office  of  defense  mobiliza- 
tion. 

Gray,  a  Democrat,  has  filled  a 
number  of  positions  under  both 
the  Truman  and  Eisenhower  ad- 
ministratidns.  mo.st  recently  that 
of  Assistant  Secretary  of  Defense 
for  international  security  matters. 

He  was  Consolidated  University 
president  from  1949  to  1955. 

Frank  Graham  To  Talk 
In  Durham  'Y'  Tomorrow 

Frank  Graham  will  speak  on 
"The  United  Nations  in  the 
.\tomlc  Age"  tonight  at  8  in  the 
Ourham  VWC.\  Auditorium  under 
sponsorship  of  the  Durham  branches 
Ludwig,  hopes  to  cast  15  leading- 1  of  the  AAITW,  American  Assn.  of 
roles  and  more  than  30  singers.  |  t'le  U«itW  Nations,  and  the  \'WCA. 
"I  am  not  looking  so  much  fori  The  p«l>lic  ha^  been  invited  to 
superb  voices  as  for  people  with !  Attend  the  lectitre,  which  will  be 
enthusiasm    who    enjoy    singing,"  i  p.-^eeedM  by  a  dinner  meeting  iac 


Sound  &  Fury  Starts 
j    Tryouts  For  New  Play 

I     Tryouts   for   Sound   and   Fury's 
i  spring    show,    "Thieves    Holiday" 
;  will  be  held  today  from  4  to  6  p.m. 
and  7  to  9  p.m.  in  Memorial  Hall. 
The    original    musical    ctwnedy, 
scheduled  for  performance  March 
30  and  31,  is  s'ct  in  New  Orleans 
during  Mardi  Gras  season  and  con- 
cerns the  adventures  of  a  set  of 
international  jewel  thieves. 
The  director  of  the  show,  John 


^  stated  Ludwig. 


the  speaker. 


Need  For  **' 

The  Correct  Ti^  N|  Nfe^ 

Wljeu  die  University  administration  ..annoUHced  k  wouJd  prcM  tor 
legislation  allowing  it  to  build  »elf-ltijuidat^ng  hoiving  for  married 
student*,  many  cleiuents  of  the  campus  were. elated;  . 

Furcmost  among  ihc  elated  were  the  married  studstnts.  Some  of  them 
St  ted  a  petition  backing  the  request  for  legislation;  by  last  w^k  Uie 
petition  had  1.300  names,  affixed  to  it.  Also,  a  great  niiny  nyn-matTied 
but    svuipathetic    students    joined 

ill  Jlie  plea  for  a  state  appropria*^      students   spend   weekends    on    tlie 
lion— just  permission  for  the  Unir     caiilpus,  mid  yet  the  students'  liv- 
\ersity  to  borrow  the  money  and.     ing  room  is  not  large  enough  to 
to    pav  off   the  debt   through   in-      take  care  of  the],n. 
creased  rcuts. 

*  *  *  \  new  student  union  bUihllng 

^^1ly  can't  the  LTu'versity  do  the  is  no  lo\iger  on  the  luxury  list.  It 
sanic  thing  with  a  i,student.  union .  is  something  dial  the  students 
buildingf  ^      ..  i>eed,,just,  as'theConiolidated  of- 

firc  nei^ds  a  building  of  its  own, 

For  niuuy  years  informed  stu-  just  as  the  ^nsiitjiite  of.  tioveru- 
dcnts,  faculty  members  and  ad-  menV-kieedcd  a  new  btjildiriji,  just 
niinistrators  lj;'ve  seen  the  need'  as  X,<^  .St;>.'Je  College  nee^Jfed  its 
lOr  a  lar^^er  building  to  house  tiic  C6}iset4iu.  just  as  thei;^  was  a  need 
student  union.  Graham  Meuiorial,  for  a  new  highway  building  in 
tlicv  ari>ued.  uas  and  is  just  Mot  Raleigh,  just  as  a  dozen  other 
bi.<.  enough  to  take  care  of  tlic  needs  were  recognized  and  taken 
number  of  students  who  could  |x>-     caicTuf! 

tcntiallv   use,  it — if  there  Kere  en-  ,       .*.       '     *        ,      ♦    . 

ougli  spare. 


TMl  DAILY  TAR  Hlft 


TUESDAY,  MARCH  5,  1f$/     ^ 


Tbev  have  been  arguing  for  a 
\cry   { 'U^   tMue.    fhev  sla-ited-ar" 
yfuin:;   shortly  idtcr   Graliain    ^ie- 
morial  was  built.  23  veavs  ago  this 
academic  year.  Bietmii^nv  after  bi-' 
cnniiini.      their     argimients     iiavC: 
It.mi  i'juoied.  or  at  best  relented' 
o  the  bottom  of  the  :iyguuienk-fist. 

And  Mieanwhile  ma<isivc  ticw 
student  union  buildings  liave  beefi 
created  at  N.  C.  Sutc  College  in 
Ra't'L'h  and  at  the  ^Vonr.^n's  C-ol- 
!cgc  in  Greensboro.  .-Viid  Graham 
Memorial  siruggltd  afong.    - 

It  is  tiint-  now  for  the  Icifisl^T. 
tors  in  R:ilei,ij;li  r4id  the  achninis- 
triior>  ill  South  IJuildinsj  "to  ad- 
mil  iliat  Graham  Memorial  can- 
noi  '  o  utJ  takin.j  care  of  a  tiny 
uftvtniis^t  of  the  studeiju  body. 
We  cui  excuse  tlntie  legislattoi^ 
and  .  Imin'stiitois  for-  puttins;*  ii 
viMcl  nr  nnion  request  on  the  boi* 
t.  ni  of  the  approp  ialions  liht.  ht- 
«  uibc  hi  pist  biemnuTHS  money 
In"  no'  been  verv  plentiful.  And 
uth^r  iliin-jcs.  such  as  tlie  married 
vuden:s'    housing.,  had    to    come 

fi.M-  ■■■,   ■■    '     ■: 

liui  now  is  the  time,  if  titere  be 
,inv  time,  for  sometlting  to  be  done 
ab.mt  a  studeiu  un»on.  buildinjj. 

The  'l'niver>iiv  is  apptoacimtH 
its  enrollHJent  peak.  :  :id  there  arc 
very  few  sitrns  of  its  taperiiuj  off. 
Flic  ri)i\cr<itv  is  now  .011  tkc  ^er 
mesier  schedule,  which  insists  liiat 


Tlie  ^'ui\  crsity  administration 
should  take  it  upon  itself  to  push 
for  ;■  new  stndenj  union  building. 
If  an  appvopriatiyt>  or  a  loan  wci^e 
got  riglit  now.  it  would  be  scveval 
rears  before  the  biiildiitg.  would 
be",  ready  for  occupancv.  .\nd  in 
several  •  vcars  Graliam  Memorial 
will  be. an  even  naore  pitiful  ei- 
.' :uple.;  of  :ai  5|]Liident  union.. 

Suini  tneiilis  should  b<^:Sbv^ht; 
aujil  got.  for  a  ne\\  btJildiitg."  A 
state  approp  iat ion  is  probably 
too' much  10  ask.  but  since  Ayhen 
hrs.the  tJniveftily  asli^d  for  one? 
If. we  aSsuine  th.tt  th^  Xniveisity 
wdrtts  a  riew  building,  then  where 
is  ,the  support,  the.  pressure  and 
the.()V".^'^tien  for  44  -^  th'^:  snnc 
su^ptirt.  pfe<isuve  and  orraui/ation 
tliat  are  goin^j  into  the  present 
cvusade     tor     Iiii;^cr '  iiisiructors' 


■■'■■  .  ^  -ii 

Gracious 
wvinp: 
N^  14 


The  Daily  Tar  Heef 


\oril'  'f'i>r-iirnk     whrv     it    rv    •^ijfilish'^'t 
,pii  ki»(-4ii»i.  (tiTi'Mi.  ij|.(  *iiH«>ft<-,i  ti>r'n» 

9>i«t  "Hfll-f-    III    «"hiip«'l     llllj     N     C.    rt|»  If 
ib»     \»i    -II    \tiiiW   H     IS"»»     ""iiiii-rnpl)..! 

>r.r     '♦.•t.v«<r.<|    xn  4  w'-Ai     Ki  ^t^   %  *»m»* 
tor 


*'  ^ 


>>"••   Editor       .. 


-  -    NANCY^HIUi 


■Jparft  FHiriir 


R<itiii<>«)i   UanAitpr 


A  tvrrtistn'j  Manager 


LARKY  CVEtt 


•*rliose  nbi-avraii*  hr  tlie  Resenc 
Rcjdtii'^  Ruoin  of  the  Wi'sou  Li- 
brary did  not  have  Gr  'jidlts  l.iv- 
iu^  iu  ^liapr'l  UiVJ  ot»  tlidr  ininds 
yesterday  niorliiiig.  ^ 

Wlii'e  a.  roomful  of  students 
si i^rfiid  fieri  elv  (bee aLV»c'  tlie  ti me 
hi*  coiue.  fur  the  Hr«  quizzes  of 
tlu-  spiing  semester^  the  girls  be- 
hind the  desk  altcmpted  to  pull 
the  c-UTve  4tJ"*^'n  *-. '  Utle-     . 

^Onc  of,  Uhui  sia  ted  tvjpiug  on 
ilic  .claciicit  ^pcwritcr  ever  made. 

iIr^  othi^t  ciic  started  tvping  on 
the'   JHJcUtvJ     cLaclyiejt     typewriter. 

iogeilitr.'thev  brought  down  the 
c^l^W  to.afountl  a  D  *^•erage.. 

Please,  ladii^s'  In  the  interests 
of  Gr:ici6'.>s  Living, we  must  have 
tomparable  quiet    in   the   Library 


lew: 


inm 


Kim*. KIM       STAK>  »Vm«.4> 

f rank  Crother,  David  Uun^. 


^«» 


NEWS  STAFF— Clarke  Jones,  Ptlasifi 
Pipkin.  Edith  AlaeKinnoB,  W^lly  Kii- 
ralt.  ilary  aIv^  Voorhees,  Grahani 
Snyder.  Neil  Ba -s.  Peg  Humphrc.v 
Phyllis  Siaullsby.  Beo  Taylor,  Walter 
SchrunteL  H-Joosl  Polak.  Patsy  Miller. 


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er 


Anthony  Wolff 

-  Tfeeve  is  notliiir.;  on  television 
lo>ny;ht  to  compare  with  "The 
Raiiniiakpr."  ,the  f ^epbura-Lan- 
casf^r  movie  it  tltp  ^Jarolimv.  It's 
well  worih  the  O5  cents  any  Avay 
year  look  ai;it.  'Ihe  acthig  is  cx- 
teptioUal.  aiid  the  movie  is  both 
artistic  and  aimtsing. 

riie  tfieme  has  £  certain  sinii- 
larity  to  thv:  of  "Brigadoon,"  and 
tlie  recetnly  departed  musical 
looks  pretty  thin  by  comparison. 

•  Just  for  the  record,  "Panic,"  a 
new  dramatic  shoAV,  debuts  to- 
nig^ht  at  8:30  on  Channel  5.' 

.\t  tlic  sauie  time  pi^  Channel 
ii  IS  "The  Life  AiW  L^end  of 
Wyatt  Earp.''  Sbinetliirig;  he  ate, 
no  doubt. 


« 


•mv'-j 


^Critical  Period  In  UNC  History: 
Wr^sident  Bob  Young  Makes  A  Plea 


Bob  Young 

Fresidm,  Student  Bpdy 
S*v4*^.  kMly  FrMidMt  lob 
Yaimg^^^llvMiMl  fkU  spMch 
l«lf  4rMk  I*  nMMilMrs  of  th« 
l|NC4tiMfaM  t«tlsi«Hir«.  Fe(- 
i^if«^  hb  spcfch,  th*  l«tisla- 
tbf^i'fMisiiijA  %rMolutien  calling 
•n  ^jN^  1<^i«U»or««  ffri«nds  of 
th«,  W«l^*Mity  AOtrf  th«  Un}v*r- 
•ti^s  «ttt|«fit»  to  btftck  pay  rait^ 
<».  fWl  .ficofly  nWmb^ri  here. 
T1i«  fiMWch  l»IMw«. 


4t  "present  the.  University  of 
Notth  .^CalrQlioa  is  recognized  as 
on«  6i.  ^e  most  distinquished 
uiiiv^rsiti^  in  the  United  States. 
— 4i5tingidshed  {or  its  faculty, 
for  its  »^kj)larly  achievements, 
for  i^  Fte^search  and  for  its  con; 
tribuitipt)ri»' and  service  to  the  na- 
tiwi.  '    .  ; 

;Otir„  University  hagf  beconi4|( 
distinguished  through  many 
years  of  conscientious  labors 
cKiefly  'by  members  of  our 
faculty. who  have  been  dedicated 
IqF  thQ  caiiSQ.  of  learning. 

The  next  few  weeks  may  pos- 
sibly be  the  most  critical  period 
of  6ur  I^niversity's  recent  his- 
torj.;  I  ^y  this  for  one  major 
i^a^qa  —  that  the  decisions  of 
tl|e  North  Carolina  General  As- 
sejttAly  during  this  period  of 
time  may^^ell  determine  the  fu- 
ture statis  of' our  University 
for  generations  to  come.  •!£  they 
do  not  approve  .faculty  salary  in- 
creiises  as  proposed  and  request- 
ed by  the;  University  administra- 
ti6n,  thsn  i  fear-  we  will  suffer 
for  yea?s  to  come. 
.  Ltf^in*  pr«Mnl  fe  you  sem« 
dt  Mn)  ImH  pifrtain^nf^  t*  this 
proMipt  critical  s^yaHoil: 
■1.  From  June.  1965,  tliroufih 
January  1967,  87  persons  have 
seen  fit  to  leave  the  University 
of  North  Carolina  at  Chapel  Hill 
F6rty-fou^'of  these  persons  were 
eohneeted  -Uith  academic  affairs; 
43  were  connected  with  the  Di 
vision  cf  Health  Affairs.  Grant- 
ed, many  factors  probably  eji- 
tkt^d  int&  each  of  these  indi\ld- 
ual  decisions:  however,  the  basic 
reason  was  thav  the  increased 
.calory  inducement  was  too  great 
iw  fbont  not  to  accept. 

2.  Statistics  have  been  compU- 
ed  on  19  of  ihese  persons  whose 
saliirles  are  known  at  other  in- 
stitutions. There  19  persons  will 
refcdve  a  total  of  50.2  percent 
more  salarj-  than  they  were  re- 
ceiving hi  Chapel  Hill.  Figured 
precisely'.  ll*cy  were  receiving 
$81,24l  and  they  will  receive 
$lll,800.  Thus  one  may  be  easi- 
ly convinced  that  with  competi- 
tion on  thi«  le\'el>  it  will  be  dif- 
ficult to  retain  our  mcst  im- 
portant personnel. 

3.  L*t'  mc  «ff or  mort  sp«cific 
•xam^**  «ft  hew  our  taiariM 
c»mp«r«  wilK  other  wnivorti- 
tios» 

a.  In  September.  1956,  $15,000 
was  offered  to  one  professor  who 
here  was  making  a  salary  of 
S7500.  Of  course,  b?  accepted 
this  offer. 

b.  Recently  another  professor 
resigned;  to  accept  an  appoint- 
ment at  another  state  university 
where  his  salary  will  be  55  per- 
cent greater  than  it  was  here. 

c.  During  this  sam'e  period  of 
time  three  persons  with  the  rank 
of  instructor  were  hired  by  other 
ainiverisities   as   assisytant   profes- 

ril  Abner 


sors  —  (not  associate  profes- 
sors!). This  entailed  at  least  a 
50  percent  increase  in  each  of 
their  respective  salaries. 

d.  Also  during  this  same  18 
months  period*  18  members  of 
the  staff  of  the  University 
"Library  have  seen  fit  to  resign. 
I  ean  assure  you  that  lack  of 
funds  and  inadequate  salaries 
was  of  their  utmost  considera 
tion. 

4.  Forty-four  leading  univer 
sities'  salary  scales  were  com 
piled  recently.  According  to  pre 
sent  salary  scales  our  four  rank 


proposal  of  eight  percent  total 
increase  were  approved,  we 
would  fall  to  either  the  31st  or 
32nd  ranking  among  the  44  uni 
versities.  Therefore,  our  ple« 
must  not  be  for  an  increase 
alone  —  but  for  at  least  an  in- 
crease of  10  percent.  This  would 
b3  in  addition  to  a  fund  of  $100,- 
000  to  be  used  for  merit  pur- 
poses in  retaining  our  most 
promising   faculty  members. 

With  all  of  these  facts  in  mind, 
my  opinion  is  that  we  must  de- 
cide   upon    one   of   two   philoso- 


dents  at  the  University  to  the 
citizens  of  the  state  of  North 
Carolina  and  to  the  friends  and 
supporters  of  the  University  of 
North  Carolina. 

We  must  all  i>ring  our  indi- 
vidual and  unified  pressures  tb 
bear  upon  the  members  of  the 
North  Carolina  General  Assem- 
bly, who  will  ultimately  this 
most  important  issue  in  the  fu- 
ture of  educetion  in  North  Car- 
olina. Many  of  them  are  sym- 
pathetic toward  it. 
I  am  asking  you  as  an  individ- 
ual     member     of   the     Student 


'There  You  Are  ~  Snug  As  A  Bug  In  A  Rug' 


e><es-r  -^  u^ijMtrtsimiJ 


ings  were  rated  as  follows  among 
the   44: 

Professors'      salaries      ranked 
23rd. 

Associate    professors'    rai>ked 
24th. 

Assistant     professors'     ranked 
26th.  , 

Instructors'    "^  salaries      ranked 
27lh. 

In  the  recent  past.,  our  Uni- 
versity salary  scales  probably 
were  among  the  top  ten  in 
each  of  the»e  categories.  We 
have  fallen  iutt  in  the  pest  few 
years.  If  the  prepoted  request, 
namely  an  across  the  beard  to- 
tal of  10  percent,  were  passed 
by  the  North  Carolina  General 
Assembly,  we  would  at  least  re- 
tain our  present  ranking. 
If    the    Budget    Commission's 


phies  for  the  futuce  of  this  Uni- 
versity: 

1.  Do  we  want  the  best  Uni- 
versity for  a  certain  amount  of 
money?  Or 

Do  we  want  the  University, 
with  a  certain  amount  of  status, 
and  be  prepared  to  pay  for  it? 

In  other  words,  Do  we  want 
to  spend  $2,500,000  per  biennium 
for  salaries  and  let  them  do  the 
best  possible  job.  or  do  we  want 
the  University  to  maintain  its 
present  prestige  and  respect  and 
be  prepared  to  pay  for  that,  re- 
gardless of  the  costs?  .  .  .  With 
the  challenges  and  pressures  of 
the  present  day  we  must  be  pre- 
pared to  pay  the  price,  literally, 
for  a  great  University. 

At  this  time  I  would  like  to 
extend  this  appeal  from  the  stu- 


Legislature  of  the  University  of 
North  Carolina  at  Chapel  Hill, 
to  write  to  at  least  four  mem- 
bers of  the  North  Carolina  Gene- 
ral Assembly  and  express  to 
them  the  feelings  ol  the  stu- 
dents here. 

Most  important,  however.  I  be 
lieve  that  all  loyal  alumni, 
friends  and  supporters  of  the 
University  must  express  theii 
feelings.  Those  voting  citizens 
could,  and  should,  have  much 
more  influence  than  we,  as  stu- 
dents, have. 

I  urge  you,  therefore,  to  adopt 
a  resolution  which  would  point 
out  the  critical  aspects  of  this 
situation  and  would  appeal  to 
the  citirens  of  the  State  of  North 
Carolina  to  join  with  us  in  this 
most  important  endeavor. 


• 

ByAlCapp  ; 


BV  JOHN  DILLINGER.?'-VOU 
LOOK  SPLENDID  TONIGHT; 
MISS  PIMPLETON.*:''— I 
WANT  THE.  WHOLE  WO(UJ> 


(-WH£P£ /S  HE  TAf</'VC  ^ffi  ?   I. 
:VH£/?£  7»£  WHOLE  >VOf?lO 
CAN  SEEAfEP  TO  THEOPEW? 
TO  A  /MMTEP-TO  a  i-AV/S*-^ 


LS^ 


Pogo 


By  Walt  Kelly 


i 


kHDAUONCOtMSSftiUKWAlMg 

Vw    Piece  OP  UAiA!^  y. 


\  JU6T  HAP  A  mMOMtfOL 
PfitAM"-  IN  (T  I  OUKPCASO 

A  ^»U  «OWP  ATT—  WANNA 
MSAR  UOSV  IT  eOB»  "7 


TRUSTEES  REPORT  ON 

Enrollment  And 
Pay  For  Faculty 

Trustee  Visiting  Committee 

The  University's  Visiting  Committee  of  the 
Board  of  Trustees  lest  week  made  its  annual  re- 
port on  conditions  within  the  University.  Here  is 
the  first  installment  of  the  portion  devoted  to 
Chapel  Hill.  Tomorrow:  The  students. 

THE  UNIVERSITY  AT  CHAPEL  HILL 

Upon  his  retirement  in  June,  1957,  as  chancellor 
of  the  University  at  Chapel  Hill,  Robert  B.  House 
will  have  completed  31  years  of  service  in  an  ad- 
ministrative capacity.  In  tribute  to  his  devoted  ser- 
vice, this  committee  calls  attention  to  the  wisdom 
and  sagacity  of  his  leadership  during  a  time  when 
this  institution  has  more  than  trebled  both  its  sto- 
dent  body  and  its  physical  plant,  has  achieved  a 
place  of  highest  distinction  and  prestige  among  the 
imiversities  of  the  nation  and  has  maintained  its 
high  educational  tradition. 

Retiring  also  after  this  academic  year  is  Claude 
E.  Teague,  business  manager  for  the  last  decade. 
He  leaves  to  his  successor  a  well-organized  office 
which  has  handled  efficiently  the  complex  affairs 
of  rapid  growth  and  expansion. 

ADMINISTRATION  AND  FACULTY 
Registration  for  the  fall  semester,  1966,  was 
6,971,  an  increase  of  about  400  over  the  previous 
fall  registration.  Of  thes-e,  5,756  were  men,  1,215 
w^e  women.  1,054  were  registered  in  the  Division 
of  HeaUh  Affairs,  and  5,917  in  the  other  schools. 

5,505  students  were  from  North  Caroiina;  1.377 
were  from  other  states,  and  89  were  from  United 
States  pos.sessions  and  foreign  countries. 

The  great  increase  in  the  number  of  students 
has  far  out-distanced  the  increese  in  the  number 
of  the  faculty.  C.  P.  Spruill,  deen  of  the  faculty, 
ai>tly   described    the  situation   and   at   the   same 
time  succinctly  pointed  up  the  inherent  danger 
to  the  University  when  he  said,  ".  .     the  faculty 
in  most  departments  has  been  stretched  past  the 
performance  appropriate  to  a  distinguished  uni- 
veirsity." 
The  Board  of  Higher  Education  ha?  reconunend- 
ed  an  increase  in  faculty  personnel  of  the  equival- 
ent of  34  full-time  resident  teachers,  and  this  num- 
ber has  been  described  as  the  absolute  minimum. 
Unless  adequate  teaching  personnel  is  made  avail- 
able or  a  change  made  in  teaching  methods,  there 
must  of  necessity  be  inferior  instruction. 

Our  state  is  faced  with  the  prospect  in  the  im- 
mediate future  of  sharply  restricting  admissions  so 
as  to  hold  the  student  body  within  the  limits  of  the 
physical  plant  and  the  available  faculty,  or  of  find- 
ing the  funds  with  which  to  provide  additional  hous- 
ing and  a  larger  faculty. 

Of  equal  importance  with  increasing  the  size  of 
the  faculty  is  the  question  of  raising  the  salary 
scale.  In '  a  recet  survey  conducted  by  the  Faculty 
Committee  on  Salaries,  it  was  learned  that  twq- 
thirds  of  the  44  institutions  reporting  are  currently 
increasing  salaries. 

At  Chapel  Hill,  51.8  per  cent  of  the  faculty  are 
full  professors,  while  at  comparable  institutions  the 
average  or  median  figure  is  28.8  percent,  indicating 
that,  in  order  to  attract  able  teachers  salarywise,  it 
has  been  necessary  to  bring  in  instructional  per- 
sonnel at  the  full  professor  or  associate  professor 
level  rather  than  at  the  instructor  or  assistant  pro- 
fessor level  as  is  done  at  most  other  institution?  of 
comparable  reputation. 

It  is  most  gratifying  to  point  out  that  recently 
the   National    Science   Foundation   made  a   grant 
of  $267,600  for  support  of  a  program  for  improve- 
ment of  mathematics  and  science  teaching,  and 
later  made  two  additional  grants,  one  of  $75,000 
for  support  of  a  Summer  Institute  for  High  School 
Teachers  of   Scynce   and   AAathematics,   and   an- 
other for  $50,100  for  support  of  a  Summer  Insti- 
tute for  College  Teachers  of  Chemistry. 
In  the  field  of  undergraduate  instruction,  two 
points  merit  comment.  First,  the  greatly  increased 
enrollment  of  students,  without  a  proportionate  in- 
crease in  teaching  personnel,  has  resulted  in  class- 
es in  many  instances  with  over  100  students,  and 
in   several   instances   with   nearly   200.    Second,   a 
goodly  number  of  senior  professors  holding  Kenan 
and  other  important  appointments  recently,  Ih  ad- 
dition to  their  classes  of  graduate  students,  had 
more  than  1,500  undergraduates  in  their  classes. 
The  Admissions  Policy  Committee  of  the  faculty 
has  been  diligent  in  seeking  to  evaluate  and  pre- 
scribe the  procedure   for  the  tests  to  be  given  to 
all  entering  freshmen  in  the  fall  of  1957.  Dr.  J. 
Carlyle  Sitterson,  chairman,  on  behalf  of  his  com- 
mittee, has  submitted  a  series-  of  recommendations 
for  implementing  the  giving  of  these  tests,  and  the 
administration  has  engaged  a  research  statistician 
to  determine  which  tests  are  most  effective. 

A\Tiile  placement  and  other  tests  are  not  new 
at  the  University,  the  use  of  apt,}tude  examinations 
will  be  utilized  for  the  firsl  time  as  a  basis  for 
selection  of  students. 

«  *  « 

It  is  felt  that  at  this  time  particular  attention 
should  be  called  tg  the  situation  existing  in  the 
Law  School.  Since  the  war  the  student  body  ha." 
doubled  while  the  permanent  full-time  faculty  has 
increased  only  from  eight  to  10.  In  keeping  with 
the  trend  in  the  best  l^w  schools,  an  attempt  is  be- 
ing made  to  provide  intensive  individual  training 
for  students  in  legal  research  and  writing,  and  the 
curriculum  has  been  expanded  to  iwovide  courses 
in  specialized  fields  such  as  taxation,  labor  law  etc. 
Within  five  years,  six  of  the  present  faculty  will 
have  reached  the  retirement  age  of  65  (including 
two  who  have  already  reached  that  age). 

Accordingly,  it  seems  imperathre  that  two  young 
assistant  profeMore  be  engaged  at  once,  not  only 
to  relieve  a  presently  overleaded  faculty,  but  also 
to  prepare  in  advance  for  a  situation  that  could 
become  immediately  acute. 

Furthermore,  the  Law  Library  is  well  behind  the 
libraries  at  Duke,  Virginia,  Louisiana  State  and 
Texas.  Appropriations  for  the  library  have  increased 
very  little  over  the  past  eight  years,  while  during 

The  committee  recommends  that  the  needs  of 
the  Law  School  be  placed  high  on  the  priority  liA. 
the  same  period  the  average  cost  of  law  books  has 
in<5reased  44  per  cent. 


TUESDAY. 


(ContiT 

Knowlaj 

WASHIN< 
Kn.iwland  o| 
Republican 
he  has  not 
the  possibi 
GOP    presi^ 
1960. 

Knowlanc 
corded  rad| 
porters  Roi 
ly   to    say 
that  campa] 

Asked 
scientiousbj 
to  seek  th| 
tion,"  Kno^ 

"I  dont 
can  say  ii 
tijns  may 
ruled  it  in 

Indonei 

J.AJCARTI 
— Effort.-J 


FOR    SALi 
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Robert 
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5   ROOM 
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and    Frj 
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TUESDAY,  MARCH  5,  l9St 


THI  DAILY  TAt  HfIL 


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World    Albws 


(Continued  from  Page  1) 

Knowland  Doubtful 

WASHINGTON  —  (Ai*)  —  Sen. 
Knowland  of  California,  the  Senate 
Republican  Leader,  said  yesterday 
he  has  not  "closed  any  doors:''  on 
the  possibility  of  his  seeking  the 
GOP  presidential  nomination  in 
1960. 

Knowland  told  reporters  in  a  re- 
corded radio  interview  (MBS)  Re- 
porters Roundup)  it  is  just  too  ear- 
ly to  say  what  he  might  do  in 
that  campaign. 

Asked  whether  he  can  "con- 
scientiously say  you  are  not  going 
to  seek  the  Presidential  nomina- 
tion," Knowland  made  this  reply: 

"I  don't  think  any  per..\)n  .  .  . 
can  say  in  1957  what  the  condi- 
tions may  be  in  1960.  I  neither 
ruled  it  in  nor  ruled  it  out." 


day  to  solve  the  East  Indonesian 
revolt  by  negotiation.  I 

Franz  Umbas,  Deputy  Economics 
Minister,  said  he  had  discussed  the  j 
revolt  with  Prertiier  Ali  Sastroam- 1 
idjojo.  Umbas  is  a  relative  and 
personal  advisor  of  Lt.  Col.  Her-  j 
manSamual,  the  rebel  leader,  and' 
is  a  native  of  Ceiebes.  largest  is'  i 
land  involved  in  the  rev(dt.  ,  j 

mtormea  sources  saia  Sumual  I 
would  work  through  Umbas  to  pre  ' 
sent  his  case. 


Indonesians  Negotiate     ! 

J.\KARTA,  INDONESIA  —  (AP) ; 
—Efforts  were   under  way  yester- 1 


Decision  In  Israel  i 

UNITED  NATIONS ,  N.  Y.— ^j 
— ^While  Israeli  students  rioted  in 
Jerusalem  in  protest.  Israel  yes- 
terday  completed  technical  ar- 
rangement for  the  transfer  of 
Sharm  El  Sheikh  and  the  Gaza 
strip  to  the  U.N.  Emergency 
Force.  | 

Mrs.  Golda  Meir,  Israrfs  for- 
eign minister,  'annotmced  the 
agreement  on  arrangements  to 
the    80-nation    General    Assembly.  I 


She  spoke  in  an  atmosphere  of  re« 
lief  among  the  delegates  over  the 
ebbing  crisis  in  the  Middle  East. : 
The  foreign  minister's  declara-  i 
tion,  marking  another  step  in  end- ; 
ing  the  invasion  of  Egypt  by  Is- ' 
rael.  was  gireeted*  witb  MtJsfae*j 
tion  by  Britain  afid  other  coun-  j 
tries. 

Mrs.   Meir  reminded   the   dele- ; 
gates   of   hre   announcement   last  [ 
Friday  that  Israel  was  ready  to 
withdraw  from  the  Sharm  El  She- 
ikh  area  •{   the   Guli   of  Aqaba 
and  Gaza  Strip. 

"I  can  now  state,"  she  contin- 
ued, "that  on  instfuctions  from 
the  Crovermneftt,  the  chief  of  staff 
of  the  Israel  defense  Torees,  Oen. 
Moshe  Dayan,  met  today  with  the 
commands  of  the  United  Nation? 
Emergency  Force,  Maj.  Gen.  E 
L.  M.  Burns,' to  discuis  measures 
necessary  to  cerry  out  the  with- 
drawal froJIx  both  areas  in  accord- 
ance with  the  statenrent  made  by 
me  on-  Pridaj^  last. 


"I  am  now  happy  to  state  that 
they  have  come  to  full  agreement ' 
on   the    technical    details   for   the  j 
withdrawal   and   takeover."  | 

Commander  Allan  Noble,  Brit- ; 
ish  Minister  of  State  and  chief ; 
delegate,  told  the  assembly  that! 
Britain  was  satisfied  with  the  Is- 
raeli decision.  Britain  completed 
\iithdrawal  from  Egypt  last  fall  \ 
and "  has  been  urging  this  course  i 
upon  Israel. 

Noble  lined  Britain  up  beside! 
the  United  States,  Italy  and  the : 
Netherlands  in  the  view  that  the  ! 
Straits  of  Tiran,  the  vital  entrance  \ 
to  the  Gulf  of  Aqaba,  must  be  re- 
garded as  an  international  water- 1 
way. 


Carolina  Quarterly 
To  Be  Mailed  Today 

AU  copies  of  the  •  "Carolina 
Quarterly"  will  be  mailed  out  to- 
day according  to  Marcelline  Kraf- 
sdiick,  editor  of  the  Quarterly. 


CLASSIFIEDS 


FOR  SALE:  32  FOOT  TRAILER, 
sleeps  four;  has  bath.  Contact 
Robert  Pickard  at  Taylors 
Trailer  Court.  Airport  Road. 


Uranium,  Gold,  Petrified  Forests 
Plague  Geologists  At  University 


5  ROOM  BRICK  HOUSE.  3  BED 
rooms,  all  modem  conveniences. 
3  miles  on  Old  86  Hy\*ay.  Stove 
and  Frigedaire  iurnished.  Call 
Fred  Katzin  after  6:00,  8-9025. 

FOR    RENT:    TWO    HOUSES    A- 

vailable,  one  immediately  and 
one  in  June.  Two  l>ed  rooms. 
Also  5  room  house  available  in 
two  weeks.  Call  9458.  After  5:30 
and  on  weekend,  call  2926. 


SANT>BURG'S  "LINCOLN,  THE 
War  Years"  —  We  have  just 
bought  in  a  pristine  set,  which 
some  lucky  buyer  can  have  at 
a  saving  of  more  than  $10.  The 
Intimate  Bookshop,  205 
Franklin  Street. 


By  BOB  MYERS  { 

"L"  this  gold-"  j 

"How  old  is  the  petrified  cedar 
forest  10  feet  below  the  ground  in 
Dare  County?"  I 

I      "Can  you  find  out  if  any  uran-' 
!  ium  is  on  my  farm?" 
j      "Where  and  how  can  I  find  ru- 
I  bies  in  western  North  Carolina?" 
"I  am  a  graduate  student  in  Aus- 
tria. Send  me  everything  you  have 
about  North  Carolina?" 

Those  are  some  of  the  recent 
questions  contained  iu  letters  U> 
professors  in  the  Dept.  of  Geology 
and  Geography.  Hundreds  of 
questions  come  in  every  year.  It's 
a  big  chore  to  an„-A'er  them  all. 
Dr.  Samuel  T.  Elmory.  chairmar 


E. !  of    the    Geology    and    Geography 
'  Dept..  tried  to  answer  the  approx- 


DREAM  GIRL 


*'My  ideal  gal  has  got  to  be 
From  four  foot  six  to  six  foot  three! 
And  I  insist,  my  ideal  queen 

Be  plump  or  slim  or  in-between. 
Redhead,  brunette,  or  blonde"  .  .  . 
"1  won't  complain  if  she's  a  she." 

MORAL:  Dreaming's  fine— but  you 
want  to  smoke  for  real.  So  get  behind 
a  Chesterfield.  That'a  flavor,  noan! 
That's  aroma!  Speak  up  and  say 
Chesterfield— -aiui  take  youjr  pleasure 
BIG.  Packed  more  smoothly  by 
ACCU'RAY,  it's  the  smoothest 
tasting  smoke  today! 

Smoke  for  rool  . . .  smoko  CkostorfloMI 

foO  for  entry  phUotophual  tmrm  aceepted  for  pubtiea- 
Hon.  Ck**tfrfUU,  PX>  Bo*  21,  New  York  46,  N.Y. 

01'im<tt  *  Mvw*  TotacM  C*. 


said  he. 


DAILY    CROSSWORD 


ACROSS 

1   City   (G«  ) 
6  Boundary 
1 1 .  Worihip 

12  Fragrance 

13  Refrigera- 
tor 

l.'S.  Persian  com 
l«.  Foot  lever 
18.  Type 
meMurea 

19  Honest  -i 

21.  Porticos 
2^.  String 

25.  Weep 

26.  Public 
notice 

28  Book  of  Old 
Testament 

$0.  Roly-poly 

32.  Half  an  em 

31.  Wing 

35.  Woody 
perennial 

38  Ablaze 

38.  Cld  times 
I  archaic ) 

3»  Fairy 
queen 

41  Untrue 

43.  Hebrew 
prophet 

Af>.  Crass  spears 

48.  Means  of 
communica- 
tion 

50.  Goddess  of 
peace 

51.  Ledge 
52  Titl«  of 

respect  ( pi.  > 

DOWN 

1  Scottish 
nickname 

2.  Fuss 

3.  Barrel - 
makers 


4  A  voided 

'   escutcheon 

5  Requires 
S.  Music  note 
7   Ve.x 

i.  Customs 

9  Priest 

(Moh.) 

10  Browns 

14.  Rodents 

IT.  Plunder 

19.  Dull  ^ain 

20.  Request    . 
(obs. ) 

12.  Border  on 
24  Unabia  to 

hear 
29.  Adam's  son 
27.  Colored. 

as  cloth 


29  Letter 
( Arab  i 

31   Animal 
raiser 

34.  An 
African 
native 

36  Dwell, 
ing 

37  Island 
<  N  Y. 
C  ) 

3»  Dis- 

figures 
40  Nurse 

(Orient) 
42  Hindu 

garment 
44   Yellow 
''    ocher 


3nc!ti2  uu  nc 


Y««Urilsr'«  Astw«r 

46  Compass 
point 

•  abbr.  i 

47  Compass 
point 

I  abbr. ) 
49  From 


imately  five  questions  a  week  that 
come  in.  Those  he  cannot  answer 
readily,  he  bucks  to  the  state  geo- 
logist ui  Raleigh.  Others  that 
would  cost  quite  a  lot  of  money  to 
ansvl'er  in  detail,  Dr.  Etaiory  has 
to  turn  down. 

For  instance,  a  farmer  may  send 
in  a  rock,  wrapped  up  in  a  pack 
age,  with  a  note  attached:  "What 
is  this,  and  is  it  worth  anything?" 
PLAIN   STONE 

Chances  ate  it's  a  plain  old  rock, 
Out  it  requires  carclful  analysis 
sometimes  to  determine  the  com- 
.X)sition  of  minerals  and  rocks. 

Inquires  come  from  four  major  | 
dnds  of  people:  (1)  school  child-  j 
-•en,  (2)  retired  people  who  have 
)ecome    "rockhounds",     (3)    land 
owners   with  visions   of   uranium  | 
jeposits,     (4)     investment-minded  '■ 
commercial   concerns.   These   foxu-; 
categories  of  curious  persons  test 
he  departmental  geologic  I.  Q.'s  at . 
Chapel  HUl.  | 

It  is  not  unusual  that  so  many  j 
questions  come  into  Chapel  HiU,  | 
oecause  North  Carolina  is  a  state ' 
containing  practically  every  kindj 
)f  mineral  that  can  be  found  any- 1 
Adhere." 

Not  many  of  these  minerals  are 
found  in  alMUidance,  but  there  is 
a  little  bit  of  ever>'thing.  The  late 
Dt.  Collier  Cobb,  one  of  the  na- 
cion's  greatest  geologists  and  long- 
time head  of  the  Geology  Depart- 
ment at  UNC,  used  to  say  that 
North  Carolina  "is  the  nation's 
showcase"  for  minerals,  becanse 
those  found  here  are  so  many  and 
varied. 
BURtED  CEDAK  FOREST 

A  West  Virginia  paper  company 
official  desired  to  know  the  age 
3f  a  unique  forest  of  down  cedar 
uncovered  while  digging  a  ditch 
in  Dare  County.  A  sample  of  the 
wood,  surprisingly  well-preserved 
was  sent  to  Yale  scientists  who 
said  it  would  be  necessary  to  send 
a  geologist   to  the   scene   to   de- 


termine the  geological  setting,  a 
$100  project.  Dr.  Emory  explain- 
ed. Atomic  Radiation  in  the  trees 
will  have  to  be  ascertained. 

Dr.  Emory's  theory  on  the  forest 
suggests  a  htirricane  more  destiuc- 
tive  than  the  Hazel  variety  felled 
the  trees  thousands  of  years  ago. 

"All  that  glitters  is  not  gold," 
was  Dr  Elmory's  borrowed  poetical 
advice  to  people  who  brought  in 
nuggets  of  worthless  pyrite,  which 
looks  like  the  real  thing. 

There  are  property  owners  with 
the  mercenary  conviction  that 
uranium  deposits  infest  their  co5^' 
pastures.  They  know  it's  there  be- 
cause a  Geiger  counter  has  i-e- 
sponded  to  tec\s.  What  they  some- 
times don't  know  is  that  a  Geiger 
counter  will  detect  the  radiation 
in  the  human  body.  It's  a  $100 
project  for  an  expert  to  prove 
there's  probably  no  uranium  in  the 
cow  pa.sturc. 
RUBIES 

Newspaper  articles  announcing 
the  presence  of  rubies  in  Western 
North  Carolina  mountains  touched 
off  queries  like  the  one  from  a 
man  who  had  retired  to  "rock- 
bounding"  after  43  yeSR'tif  pub- 
lic work.  -.. 

How  much  Lithium  is  there  in 
North  Carolina,  where  is  it  and 
will  you  anal^-ze  samples  is  an- 
other tj-pical  request  generally  ac- 
companied by  a  small  boulder. 
People  know  lithium  is  being 
mined  near  Bessemer  City,  that  it 
is  a  light,  heat-resisting,  sought- 
after  metal,  that  it  is  useful  in 
making  the  H  bomb,  and  that  jet 
planes  in  which  it's  used*cost  a 
million  dollars  apiece.  That  caus- 
es a  stir. 

Dr.  Emory  was  surprised  at  a 
graduate  student  in  Austria  who 
was  preparing  a  lecture  and  want- 
ed "everything  you  have  on  the 
I  state."  "Apparently  he  was  not  a 
graduate  student  in  geology  or 
geography,"  Dr.  Emory  said. 


Greek  Week  Workers 

Two  social  fraternity  pledges  at  UNC  are  shown  above  cleaning  an  area  of  the  UNC  campus  during 
"Greek  Week"  work  day  exercises  this  past  week.  Nearly  400  pledges  spent  some  l/XN)  man-hours  of 
labor  around  the  university  community  in  the  mass  cleanup  program  which  has  replaced  varied  acttvi* 
ties  that  formerly  characterized  "Hell  Week."  Above  are  Oavid  Loughlin  of  Henderson,  left,  and  Buck 
Johnston  of  Statesviile,  right,  both  Zeta  Psi  pledges. 


Reddtng  Is  Elected  As 

N«w  President  Of  IFC 

Bill  ReddiilSgH^nior  from  A*hc- 
boro,  was  elected  Monday  rtfght 
by  the  InterfraterJiity  Council  to 
succeed  Ed  Hudgias  as  President 
of  tht>  IFC'    -  V-  >*     ■" 

Also  elected  were  Sophomores 
Tommy  Rand,  to  succeed  Dave 
i  Ward  »&  Vice  President.  Don  Mil- 
len  as  Secretar>-.  and  Tucker 
Yates  as  the  Council's  new  Sec- 
retary. 


Seniors 

Advance  Information 

On  Career  Opportunities 

At  Procter  &  Gamble 


Advance  information  on  Marketing 
Management  opportunities  in  the 
Procter  &  Gamble  Advertising  De- 
partment is  now  available.  Write 
H.H.  Wilson,  Jr.,  Supervisor  of 
Personnel,  Advertising  Depart- 
ment, Procter  &  GambSe,  Cincin- 
nati, Ohio.  Campus  interview*  in 
Placement  Service  March  28. 


A/ew  Dramatic  Series 
To  Be  Offered  By  GM 


A  new  dramatic  series.  Petite 
Dramatique,  is  in  the  offing  for 
the  spring  semester. 

Sponsored  by  Graham  Memorial 
Activities  Board,  the  series  will 
be  produced  by  Seamon  Gottlieb, 
who  hopes  that  the  productions 
will  bring  the  "best  in  dfama"  to 


I  the  campus. 

The  series  will  be  featured  on 
I  Sunday  nights  in  the  main  lounge 
I  of  Graham  Memorial  at  8  p.m.  Per- 
j  formances  have  been  scheduled 
for  nights  on  which  there  are  no 
;  Petites   Musicales. 


To  The  Young  Man 
Who  Loves  The  Sea 


Rock  And  Roll 
To  Be  Debated 
By  Phi  Society 

Rock  and  roll  fans,  your  music 
has  been  condemned. 

A  resolution  favoring  the  con- 
demnation of  rock  and  roll  has 
been  submitted  for  action  tonight 
by  the  Philanthropic  Literary  So- 
ciety. 

'The 'Tesolution  is  as  follows: 
Whereas:  Today.  American  youth 
is  being  distracted  from  clean 
and  wholesome  recreation  by  ex- 
temporaneous arrangements  of 
notes  and  sounds;  and 

Whereas:  Such  sounds  and  dis- 
cords are  causing  the  American 
people  to  become  a  nation  of  psy- 
choneurotics and  p.sychopaths. 

Be  it  resolved  that:  Rock  and 
roll  be  condemned  as  an  uncivil- 
ized expression  of  man's  desires, 
passions  and  talents. 

All  students  of  the  public 
school  system  of  North  Carolina 
be  encouraged  to  spend  their  mon 
ey  and  time  on  more  worthy  en- 
tertainment, recreation  and  diver- 
sions. 


Selma  To  Honor  Aycock 

At  Banquet  March  15 

The  citizens  of  Scima,  North  Car- ! 

olina,  will  honor   William  B.   Ay- 1 
I  cockf  newly   appointed  UNC  chan- 
,  cellor  with  a  banquet  in  his  honor  i 
'  March  15.  | 

I     Helping  ^to    honor    the    former! 
I  resident  of  Selma  will  be  Governor  ' 
j  Hodges,   Dr.    Frank    Graham,    past 
;  president   of   UNC,   current   Prcsi- 1 
jdent  William  C.  Friday.  Dr.  Dud- 1 

ley    D.    Carroll    and    other   educa- 
i  tional    leaders.  i 

T      Fred    Powledge.    editor    of    The ; 

Daily  Tar  Heel,  has  been  asked  to  , 

represent   this   paper   at   the    ban-  i 

quet. 


Opportunity  awaits  Qualified  Marint  DrafttMea  ia  «  ytw* 
round  climate  of  comfort  and  Hisy  living  en  ^t  GuK  Coast. 

The  Inoalls  SHn»BUiLDiNG  Owporation,  operating  the  largest  ship- 
yard on  the  Gulf  Coast,  offers  a  promising  future  to  qualified  drafts-  ^ 
men  who  ^oin  this  progressive  organization  —  long  term  contract^ 
pleawnt  working  conditions,  libera}  benefits,  valuable  training 

Addrtss  inquiries  to  Chief  Engineer,  Room'  100 

THE    INGALLS    SHIPBUfLDINO    CORPORATION 

Pascagoula,  Mississippi 


Held  Over 


PHARMACY  SENATE 

The  Pharmacy  Senate  will  meet 
lonight  at  7  in  room  113  Howell 
(fall. 
PHILOLOGICAL  CLUB 

The  Philological  Cltib  will  meet 
at  7:30  is  the  Faculty  Loivige  Of 
Morehead  Planetarium.  Professor 
U»uis  O.  Kattsoff  of  the  Dept.  of 
philosophy  will  present  a  paper 
antitled  "Thinking  of  Acting,"  I 
comparison  of  continental  and 
Anglo-American  philosophy.  All 
iiaculty  members  and  graduate  stu- 
dents have  been  invited  to  attend 

WORLD  RELIGION 

The  WbrWs*^  Religion  supper 
neeting  study  group  will  meet  to- 
lay  6-7:30  in  the  upstairs  dining 
.'oom  of  Lenoir  Hall.  Last  week's 
!iscu3jion  on  Hinduism  and  other 
jKlian  religions  will  be  continued 
Aith  I>rofessor  W.  I.  Stace  leading 
he  discussion.  Other  speakers  will 
present  various  aspects  of  the  In* 
iian  religion.  The  public  has  been 
nvited  to  attend. 

COSMOPOLITAN  CLU^ 

The  Cosmopolitan  Cliib  will  meet 
at  Graham  Memorial  at  8  p.ih'. 
iVednesday  for  pictures  to  be  tak- 
n  for  the  Yak. 

WAA  TABLE  TENNIS 

All  third  round  matches  in  the 
WAA  table  tenniir  tournamctA 
must  be  played  by  Friday  at  % 
p.m.  According  to  WAA  officials^ 
both  parties  will  forfeit  if  the 
matches  ire  not  playled  Ijy  Friday. 
MSN'S  GLEE  CLUB 

The  UNC  Men's  Glee  Club  will 


1  hold  a  called  extra  rehearsal  Wed- 
jnesday  afternoon  at  5  p.m.  in  Hill 
j  Hall.  A  sextet  practice   has   been 
I  called  for  4:30  p.m. 
!  WUNC-TV 

I     Todays  schedule  for  WUNC-TV. 
I  the   University's   educational   tele- 
'  vision  station: 
12:44    Sign  On 
12:45    Music 

1:00    Today  on  the  Farm 

1:30    Music  in  the  Air 

2:00    Sign  Off 

5:14    Sign  On 

5:15'   Music 

5:30    Buckskin  Bob 

6:00    Legislative  Review 

6:20    News 
^6:30    Magic  Lantern 

6:45     Measure  of  a  Man 

7:00    Of  Books  and  People     . 

7:15    Sports 

7:30    German  Courae 

8:15    Dr.  Schriver 

9:00    Ideas 

9:30    Wings  to  Haiti 
10:00    Final  Ekiitlon 
10:05    Sign  Off 


Y  Planning  Committee 
For  Frosh  Camp  To  Meet 

There  will  be  a  meeting  of  the 
planning  committee  for  Frerfiman 
Camp  tonight  at  6:45  in  the  Y 
lounge. 


A^GASTEK-HEPBUl. 


NOW  PLAYING 


Carolina 


ROBERT      ALDO 
RYAN«       RAY. 

The  LIEUTENANT         The  SERGEANT 


T^'t  PSRl  OF  TME  VillT/VRY 
MACHINE  THAT   BIEEDS! 


LAST  TIMES  TODAY 


STUDENT  WIVES 

The  Student  Wives  will  hold 
their  next  meeting  tonight  at  8 
in  the  Victory  Village  Nursery. 
Dr.  Flowers  will  give  a  talk  on  ob- 
stetrics! All  wives  of  students  have 
been  invited  to  attend. 

FACULTY  CLUB  LUNCHEON 

"riie  Faculty  Club  Luncheon  will 
he  held  today  at  the  Carolina  Inn 
at  1  pm.  Mr.  EL  A.  R^h.  editor  of 
the  Chatham  Cobntjf  News,  will 
spFak.      - ' " 


COME  AND  GET  IT! 
I've  Still  Got  ESSO  EXTRA 

at 

Downtown  Prices  For 
Regular  Gas 

and 

My  Regular  3<  Under  That 

Plus 

Bring  This  Ad  and  Get  1  Cent  Off  Per  Gai.  Gas, 

5  Cents  Per  Qt.  Oil 

Credit  Cards  Honored  Again 

At  The  Students'  Friend 

WHIPPLE'S  ESSO  SERVICE 


YOUR     TRIP     IS    MUCH     MORC     FUN 
WITH     PRIKNDLY    FOLKS 

QoTRAILWAYS 

•••opecidlists  in  Triendly 
•first -class -travel  I 

Trailways  90M  THRU  to  most  desHnatientl 

From  CHAPEL  HILL  to: 

•  ATLANTA       

Express  service  via  Charlotte 

•  RALEIOH  ,  _, : , $     J5 

9  Convenient  trips  daily 

•  MEMPHIS   :_       $15.90 


1-way 
$  9.85 


3  Thru-Lirter  (no  change)  trips  daily 

•   N£W  YORK  

Thru-Liner  (no  change)  service  daily 


UNION  BUS  STATION 

311  W.  FRANKLIN  ST.  _:_ 


_  .  $12.25 
(ptus  tax) 


PHONE  4281 


Ask  shippers  to  sjend  package  express  to  you  by 
Trailways.  It's  faster,  fiuaes. Chartered  for  trips 
anywhere — any  time. 


T  R  A  I  LV\f  A Y  S 


Ttie   route   ot  the   Thru- 


PAGE  FOUH 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


TUESDAY,  MARCH  5,  TfSf 


L/A/C,  Maryland,  Duke  And  State  Are  Favored  In  Tourney 


Undefeated  Tar  Heels   1  Rosie,  Kearns 


IN  WOOLLEN  GYM: 


Rate  Nod  Over  Tigers 


,     By    KEN    ALYTA 

RALEIGH  —  i»  —  Based  on  re 
suits  of  their  regular  season  meet- 
ings North  Carolina.  Maryland, 
Duke  and  North  Carolina  Stale 
should  have  the  edge  over  their 
opponents  here  Thursday  in  the 
opening  round  of  the  Atlantic 
Coast  Conference  tournament. 

Duke,  the  third  place  finisher 
with  an  8-e  conference  record, 
opens  the  tournament  against 
South  Carolina,  a  team  it  has  al- 
ready beaten  twice,  by  scores  of 
104 -7«  and  94-81.  In  the  latter 
game  Grady  Wallace.  South  Caro- 
lina* forward  who  leads  the  na- 
tion with  a  31-point  scoring  aver- 
age, hit  for  43. 

The  second  afternoon  game 
Thursday  sends  Maryland,  confer 
ence  runner-up  with  a  9-5  record, 
against  Virginia,  already  a  three 
time  loser  to  the  Terps.  The  first 
two  n.eetings  of  the  clubs  were 
close  affairs.  Maryland  winning  its 
season  opener  67-63  and  following 
with  a  43-39  victory  over  the  Cav- 
aliers in  the  All-Anierican  tourney 
at  Owenslxjro,  Ky.  Their  third 
meeting,  an  ACC  affair  a  mouth  _ 
ago  way  an  85-64  romp  for  Mary- 
land. 

North  Carolina.  No.  1  in  the  na- 
tion and  unbeaten  in  24  starts, 
holds  two  decisions  over  Clemson. 


I  its  7:30  opponent  Thursday  night. 
!  The   Tar   Heels   tamed   the   Tigers 
94-75  and   86-54. 

<      North  Carolina  State  and  Wake 

'  Forest    will    be    meeting    for   the 

fourth  time   when  they   tangle   at 

9   p.m.   I'hursday.   Slate   gained   a 

fourth  place  conference  tie  with  a 

75-71    victory    over    Wake    Forest 

Saturday  night.  The  teams  splH  a 

,  pair  of   December   contests.   State 

;  won  at  Wake  Forest  73-63  and  lost 

to  the  Deacons^  in  the  Dixie  Clas 

.  sic  semifinals  here  73-66. 

If  North  Carolina  sails  into  the 

semifinals  JYiday   night   its   oppo- 

i  nent  will  be  either  Wake  Forest  or 

j  North    Carolina     State.     The     top- 

1  seeded    Tar    HPels     have     beater 

i  Wake  Forest  three  times,  but  each 

I  game  has  been  a  battle.  Their  first 

I  meeting  was  in  the  Dii^ie  Classic 

'  finals.  North  Carolina  winning  63- 

55     Two    February    conled<s    went 

to  North  Carolina  72-69  and  69-84 

North    Carolina    State    was    easier 

for   the    Tar   Heels,    bowing   83-57 

and  86-57. 

A  fourth   Maryland  victory   ovei 

Virginia    would    match    the   Terps 

with   either  Duke   or   South   Caro 

lina.  Maryland  won  at  home  from 

'  each,    but    lost   on    the   road.   The 

1  Terps  downed  Duke  62-51  and  los't 

I  to  the  Blue  Devils  72-«0  while  beat- 

'  ing  South  Carolina  66-59  and  losing 

to  the  Gamecocks  68-60. 


Are  Named  To   Tenth  ApOUal  Co-RgC  SpOtts 

Aii-AccTean,  Cg^nival  To  Begin  Tonight 


Trackmen  Meet  Today 


RALEIGH  —  ifi—  Two  players 
i  each  from  North  Carolina  and 
i  Wake  Forest  and  one  from  South 
Carolina  were  named  on  the  All 
Atlactic  Coast  Conference  basket- 
ball teaiA  chosen  by  the  AtlaiUu 
Coa«t  Sports  Writers  Assn. 

The   team    id   headed    by   North 

i  Carolina's  Lennie   Rosenbluth  and 

I  South   Carolina's    Grady    Wallace, 

whi»    were    unanimous    first    team 

!  choices. 

Jackie  Murdock  and  Jack  W'U- 
'.  liams  of  Wake  Forest  and  North 
j  Carolina's  Tommy  Kearns  round 
'  out  the  team. 

Murdock  missed  unanimous  se 
lection  by  thre£  votes.  ,      / 

Fifty-five  press,  radio,  TV  and 
college  publicity  men  participated 
in  the  balloting.  Votes  were  count- 
ed on  the  ba^i^  of  five  points  for 
first  team  and  three  for  second 
team   choice. 

Rosenbluth  and  Wallace  collect 
'  ed  the  maximum  of  275  points. 
Murdock  received  269  and  Kearns 
222.  Williams  collected  166  to  nose 
out  B  b  O'Brien  of  Maryland,  who 
had  160. 

The  second  team  seleetios  were: 
Bob  O'Brien,  Maryland;  John 
Richter,  N.  C.  State  (152);  Jim 
Newcome,  Duke  (142);  Pete  Bren- 
nan,  North  Carolina  (123);  Ernie 
Wiggins,  Wake  Forest  (93). 


NCAA  Playoff  Picture 
Beginning  To  Clear  Up 


By  MUCH  FULLERTON  JR. 
Th«  Associated  Press 

The  post-season  basketball  situ- 
ation was  clarified  considerably 
yesterday  when  Pittsburgh  v.as 
selected  as  an  "at  large"  entry  in 
the  NCAA  major  college  champ*- 
ionships. 

Pitt,   seldom   regarded   ai    a    na- 
tional power  in  college  ba»ketb^l. 
will  oppose  the  Ohio  Valley  Con- 
ference     entry.       Morehead       Ky. 
State,    in    a    firjf^^round    game    at 
Colambas,   Ohio,  5larch    12-   Notre 
Dame,  aiso  an  at  large  team,  wiii 
plsiy    Miami.     Ohio    of    the    Mid- 
American Conference  in  the  other 
half     of     a     first     round     double- 
header. 

Pitt  was  the  18th  team  selected 
for  the  23-entry  tournament,  but 
only  one  of  the  remaining  seven 
spots  is  seriously  in  doubt.  Defend- 
ing NCAA  champion  San  Francis- 
co. Kansas  and  St.  Iu)uis  can't  get 
-worse  than  ties  for  their  confer- 
ence championships  while  North 
Carolina  and  We;*t  Virginia  are 
odds-on  favorites  to  win  tht4r  con- 
ference tournaments. 

Ajj  soon  as  some  of  these  titles 
are  decided,  a  couple  of  runner s- 
up  likely  will  receive  bids  to  the 
National  Invitation  Tournament. 
Most  likely  candidates  are  Bradley, 
which  still  has  a  chance  to  tie  St. 
Louis  in  the  Missouri  Valley,  and 
Utah,  second  to  Brigham  Young  in 
the  Skyline  Conference.  Nine  of 
the  12  teams  for  the  NIT  have 
been  cho.:«n  and  the  committee 
has  begun  a  discussion  of  seed-i 
ings. 

In  addition  to  the  double-headei 
at  Columbus,  these  first  round 
pairings  have  been  made:  March 
11  at  Pocatello,  Idaho  —  Idaho 
State,  Rocky   Mountain    vs.   Texas, 


Western  Border  March  12  at  Okla- 
homa City  —  Oklahoma  City  L' 
at  large  vs.  Loyola,  New  Orlean.s 
at  large.  March  12  at  New  York 
— Syracuse  at  large  vs.  Connecti- 
cut. Yankee,  Cani^rius  at  large  vs. 
Southern  Conference,  Ivy  League 
vs.   Atlantic   Coast   Conference. 

It  will  be  Yale  or  Dartmouth  ai 
the  Ivy  League  entry  with  Yale 
favored.  The  Ivy  champion  no 
longer  qualifies  automatically,  but 
an  at  large  spot  is  being  reserved 
since  both  contenders  are  willing 
to  enter  the  tourney.  The  sajBC 
teams  are  listed  as  NIT  possibili- 
ties. « 


Newcombe  Complains  Of  j 
Sore  Elbow  In  Practice     I 

VERO  BEACH.  Fla.   —tJ^—  Don  | 
Newcombe  quit  the  mound  after  a 
10-minute    batting    practice    .stint 
yesterday,   complaining   of   a    sore 
right  elbow. 

"I  hurt  it^  throwing  to  .second 
base  practicing  pickoff  plays  b» - 
lore  the  batting  practice."  said  the 
big   Bro<iklyn    right-hander., 

Newcombe    first    complained    of 
the    sore    elbow    while    with    th-?' 
Dodgers  in  Japan  an0  said  at  that 
time  it  hurl  him  during  the  World 
Series.   However,   he  first    had   el- ; 
I  bow   trouble   way   back   in    1949       I 


By   TOMMY    JOHNSON 

The  tenth  annual  Co-Rec 
Sports  Carnival  will  get  under- 
way tonight  at  6:45  in  Woollen 
Gymnasium.  The  event,  sponsor- 
ed by  the  Intramural  Department 
and  the  Women's  Atnletic  Asso- 
ciation, will  be  filmed  by  the 
University  PhyjrtCal  Education 
Department  to  be  shown  to  the 
Southern  Association  of  Health, 
4»hysical  Education  and  Recrea- 
tion meeting  in  Asheville,  April 
1-5. 

Fourteen  teams  totaling  some 
500  students  have  entered  the 
affair.  The  carnival  is  the  largest 
single  Co-Rec  event  of  the  entire 
year.  Some  1500  persons  were 
either  participants  or  spectators 
last  year.  Spectators  are  wel- 
comed to  witness  the  carnival. 
Any  couples  may  enter  the  car- 
nival games  to  compete  for  the 
handsome  trophies 

Bruno's  combo,  the  popular 
players  at  the  basketball  game&. 
will  be  on  hand  to  furnish  mu 
sic  for  the  group.  There  will  be 
dancing  while  the  point  totalft 
are  added  to  determine  the  win- 
ners. 

Dental  School  and  Smith 
Dormitory  were  the  winners  last 
year. 


Three  of  the  girls'  teams  will 
be  Duke  Univer.:«ty  co-eds.  It  is 
expected  that  they  will  bring 
along  some  spectators.  The  WAA 
and  Womens  Physical  Educa- 
tion Department  from  the  neigh- 
Ixjring  school  have  also  been  in- 
vited to  witness  the  affair. 

The  Intramural  Department 
from  East  Carolina  College  has 
been  invited  to  attend  the  carni- 
val. They  are  attempting  to 
sponsor  a  similar  affair  on  their 
campus. 

Carnival     games-,    relays     and 
team   sports   will    make    up   the 
program.  Trophies  will  be  award- 
ed   to    the    individual    winners, 
and  plaques  to  the  team  winners 
Members  may  enter  one  indivi 
dual  event  and  also  participate 
in  the  carnival  game*.  All  mem 
bers  may  participate  in  the  re 
lays  which  are  last  on  the  agen 
da. 

The  most  popular  activities  of 
the  entire  night  will  be  the 
carnival  games.  Some  of  the 
games  are:  candle  blowing,  jacks, 
top  spinning,  marbles,  nail  driv- 
ing, rocket  dart.,  target  board 
table  shufflelward.  bminceball, 
baseball  throw,  and  basketball 
crip  shooting. 


Balloon  bursting  and  tennia- 
ball  relay  lead  the  list  of  relays 
to  climax   the  evening. 

Badminton,  table  tennis,  shuf- 
fleboard,  box  hockey,  archery, 
shish,  tether  ball,  and  volleyball 
are  the  sports  activities  on  the 
agenda. 

Supervisor  Fred  Young  gave 
these  words  of  instruction  to  the 
participants:  All  teams  are  due 
on  the  main  floor,  behind  the 
standards  bearing  their  names, 
at  6:45.  All  events  *rill  start  at 
7:00  except  the  relays  which  will 
be  held  at  the  end  of  the  pro- 
gram. Participants  not  present 
when  their  names  are  called,  will 
be  scratched.  Young  urged  all 
teams  to  have  their  members 
present  on  time. 

THE   PAIRINGS 

Alpha  Gam  II— Phi  Kap  Si«; 
Pi  Phi  —  ZBT;  Smith  —  Pi  Kap- 
pa Alpha;  Alph«  Gam  I  —  Law 
School;  Tri  Delt  —  Delta  Sigma 
Pi;  Alderman-Mclver  —  Stacy; 
Carr  —  Mangum;  Dental  School 
—  Dwke-2;  Kappa  Sig — Duke-1; 
Zeta  Psi  —  Duke-3;  Kappa  Oelt 
—sig  Hu;  SAE  —  Alpha  Delta 
Pi  II;  Alpha  Delta  I  —  SAE;  Phi 
Gamma  Delta  —  Chi  Omega. 


Both  the  varsity  and  freshman  ] 
track  teams  will  meet  today  in  I 
room  304,  Woollen  Gym  to  discuss 
plans  for  the 'start  of  full  scale 
track  practice  tomorrow.  Anyone 
interested  in  trying  out  is  invited 
to  attend  the  meeting. 

The  Tar  Heel  cindermen,  second 
to    Maryland    in   the   ACC   Indoor 

;  Games,   will    face    a   schedule    of 
6  duraJ  meets  plus  two  relay  meets 

j  and   the   ACC    outdoor   champion- 
ships thiif  spring. 

Each  of  the  other  7  Atlantic 
Coast  Conference  schools,  with  the 
exception  of  Clemson,  will  be  met 


Allen  To  Teach  In  Europe 


Associate  Professor  Marvin  Al- 1 
len  of  the  UNC  Department  of 
Physical  Education  was  announc- 
ed today  as  one  of  a  team  of  alh 
letic  specialists  to  give  a  special 
one-month  course  in  Germany  be- 
ginning March  10.  under  auspice^ 
of  the  U.  S.  Army. 

Prof  Allen  i«  one  of  a  team  of 
eight  persons  who  will  conduct 
clinics,  especially  in  soccer,  among 
American  troops  in  Germany. 


N.C.  State 
Trips  UNC 
Grapplers 

Carolina's  once  mighty  wrest- 
ling team  closed  out  their  regu- 
lar season  on  a  sour  note  in  Ra- 
leigh yesterday  as  they  dropped 
a  narrow  18-17  decision  to  ths 
N.  C.  State  Wolfpack.  The  frosh 
grapplers  also   lost.  23-10. 

The  loss  was  UNC's  fifth  of  the 
season,  and  ran  their  overall  rec- 
ord to  4  wins.  1  tie  and  5  losses. 
The  Tar  Heels  finished  fourth  in 
the  conference  standings  behind 
Maryland.   Duke   and   Virginia. 

Only  three  Tar  Heels  emerged 
victorious  yesterday,  and  one  of 
those  won  by  forfeit.  The  Boyette 
brothers.  Charlie  and  Bob,  each 
pinned  their  opponents,  while 
heavyweight  Larry  Hayes  took  his 
match  by  forfeit. 


^*=*^       onif  2  end  flaps  from 
^      — y  carton  of 


f'  PiOMK  u|)ii((]  of  the       ^-- 

■l/IMIIM   sI'IdAI,' 
''I  >      Used  l»v  W Villi  1 


f^asy  lo  assemble 
OIT  CERTIFICATi  HERE 


GLEEM 

'rfOOIHPASIt 


^AlttcnX^ 


uRUC  STORE 


^  Allen  is  soccer  coach  at  Chapel 
Hill  and  is  in  charge  of  the  Uni 
versity's  program  of  required  phy 
sieal  education  for  freshmen  and 
sophomores  He  is  secretary-treas- 
urer of  the  Intercollegiate  S'xicer 
Associaion. 
He  Ls  a  native  of  Wilmington. 


Have    You  Forgotten 
Something? 

Pete  the  Tailor  has  leads  ef 
cieH«in«  M»«*  hee  bewi  W-ewyte* 
in  for  Pete's  first  cIms  repairs 
and  has  been  left. 

Are    You    Guilty? 

Pete  surely  would  hete  to  have 
to  sell  these  clothes.  How>  about 
coming  by  and  picking  up  yours 
now 

•  ;^ '    At 

PETE   THE   TAILOR 

SPECIALIZING    IN 
"IVY    LEAGUEIZINC" 

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Complete  Your  Education  with  Travel 


.^^eeing  nrw  and  exciting  placec,  meelioff 
inirre»ting,  prominent  people,  is  a  part  ot 
your  everyday  life  a»  a  TWA   Hostew. 
You'll   enjoy  the  wonderful   world  of  flyiac  if 
you  can  qualify  for  thi»  exciting,  rewarding 

career.  Fly  the  Finest  ...  Fly  with  TWA. 
Clirrk  the  qualifications  below.  We  invite 
you  to  apply  now  for  Hostess  Traieieg 
Clas«e6  starting  in  June  and  July. 


QUAL/ffCATfONS; 

Mlwon  20-J7,  5'2"  ta  3'|", 
weigh  b«lw«wi  too  ond  13j  lb*., 

2  y««n  co<l«9«.  or  a^vivalcM 
in    busin*ti   •xparixx*,   claor 

complexion,  good  vitioM  wM»- 
o</<  sla»«t,  unmorriod. 


Miss  llnore  Jehnsoe 

Tront  World  Airlines 
K<jn»a»  City,  Missouri 

I'd    lev*   being    «   IWA 
•pplication. 


Just  Out! 

Rebels  and 
Redcoafs 


By  Chapel  Hill's  Own 

George  F.  Scheer 


and 


Hugh  F.  Rankin 
$7.50 


The  lnt*(mate  Bookshop 

205  E.  Franklin  St.    -:-    Open  Till  10  P.M 


Other    Books 

By  Chapel  Hill 

Writers 

Tall  Houses  in  Winter,  by  Doris 
Belts,  winner  of  the  Putnam-UNC 
prize.  '   .        ,   ^  .  $4.50 

Rebel  Boast,  by  Manly  Wade  Well- 
man.   Carolina    in  the  Civil   War. 

$3.95 

Remembrance  Way,  by  Jessie 
Rehder.  A  very  fine  novel  by  a 
very   popular   Elnglish   teacher. 

$3.50 

The  Magic  Pin,  by  Ina  B.  Forbus. 
Whimsical  story  for  7-to-lO  year 
readers.  $2.50 

The     Southern     Part    ef     Haavtn, 

Chapel  Hill's  all-time  best  seller, 
by  the  late  William  Meade  Prince. 
Illustrated.  $1.98 

George  Bernard  Shaw:  Man  of  the 
Century,  by  Archibald  Henderson. 

$12.00 

Jefferson,  Champion  of  the  Free 
Mind,  by  Phillips  Russell.        $6.00 

Captain  Littte  Ax,  by  James  Street. 
Wonderful  Civil  War  yarn.      $3.95 

Gone  is  My  Goose,  by  Dorothy 
Koch.  Simple  story  for  the*  4-to-7 
group.  $2.25 


SPRING  WARDROBE 
PLANTING  TIME 

Our  spring  stocks 
were  never  more  com- 
plete for  this  time  of 
year. 

Large  assortment  of 
55%  dacran/45%  v/oci 
tropical  suits,  many 
with  rich  foulard  lin- 
ings, in  solids;  Va" 
black  stripes,  new 
shades  in  miniature 
glen  plaids  —  $56.95. 

New  shell  cordovan 
shoos  maoe  in  Engl  and 
of  supple  French  cordo- 
van, one  solid  piece  of 
leather  in  finest  made 
plain  toe  .  .  .  compare 
with  any  $35.00  pain 
or  domestic  cordovan 
shoes  —  $20.0. 

Full  assortment  in 
cashmererized  cotton 
argyles  and  6x3  ribs  in 
both  garter  and  anklet 
lengths  —  from  $1.25. 

Polo  shirts  in  button- 
down  and  regular  polo 
collars  —  from  $3.95. 

Anything  from  soup 
to  nuts  in  ivy  bermudas 

—  from  $3.98. 
Large    assortment    of 

short  sleeve  button- 
down  ivy  shirts  —  from 
$4.00. 

The  best  looking  im- 
ported Madras  striped 
ties  —  $2.00.  Matching 
cordovan   trimned   belf 

-  $3.00. 

Imported  cotton  Shet- 
land sport  coats,  all 
foulard  lined  —  $39.95. 
Matching  bermudas  for 
same  —  $10.95. 
In  Our 
Lady  Milton  Shop 

We're  still  continuing 
our  $10.00  off  on  our 
Braemar  and  Drumlan- 
rig  sweaters. 

New  spring  ivy  ber- 
mudas from  $3.95. 

New  Carolina  blue 
polished  cotton  skirts  at 
$8.95. 

New  ady  Hathaway 
shirts  from  $4.95. 

Clutijing  Cupboarli 


during  the  year.  The  season  offi 
cially  gets  started  on  March  3fl 
when  a  hand  picked  squad  of  15 
men  travels  to  Gainesville.  Fla..  for 
the  Florida  Relays.  Stime  of  thi 
team  members  will  also  compete 
in  the  Penn  Relays,  April  26  and 
27. 


NEW  FACES 

Jim  Tatum's  North  Caroli.ia 
coaching  staff  has  two  new  fac^s 
this  year.  Ernie  WilIiam.son  and 
Bud  Carson,  both  former  Tar  Heel 
football  players,  have  joined  the 
football  staff.  '. 


Howard  Johnson  Restaurant 


BREAKFAST 


LUNCH 


"^*  DINNER 

SNACKS 

landmark  For  Hungry  Tarheels'' 


TAKE    THt    <9iUlLtibWURK 
OUT.  OF    THE    WEATHER 

with  the  v" 

WASH  and  WEAR  ''DUCHESS''5i/ 

LONDON  FOG 

. . .  the  one  coat  you  need 

The  weatherman  may  be  wrong,  but  you're 
light  ...  in  the  feminine  twin  to  the  famous 
LONDON  FOG  for  men.  Good  as  gold,  rain  or 
shine  . . .  lastingly  wrinkle-resistant,  water-and- 
wind  repellent.  50'c  Dacron,  50%  fine  combed 
cotton.  Completely  waishable,  drip-dries  ready 
to  wear  .  .  .  with  little  or  no  pressing  at  all! 
Colors :' 
Colors:  White  and  Natural 

RAINCOAT  MATCHING  HAT' 

$29.95  $4,95 

—  Men's  To  Match  — 


Julian' 


t^to 


♦  •• 


*«■» 


SERIALS  BEPT. 
CHAPEL  HILL.  N.  C. 


Eisenhower's  Mideast  Doctrine  Passes  In  Congress 


WASHINOTON^(AP)—  The 
Senate  adopted  overwhelming- 
ly today  a  resolution  serving 
notice  on  Russia  the  United 
States  will  fight,  if  necessary, 
to  halt  Communist  aggression 
in  the   Middle   East. 

The   vote   was   72-19. 

Passage  of  President  Eisen- 
hower's Middle  East  resolution 
came  at  the  close  of  more  than 
two  weeks  of  debate  on  the  pro- 
posal which: 

Pledges  the  United  States  to 
use    its    military    forces    if    the 


■^president  deems  it  necessary  to 
help  any  Middle  East  nation 
which  asks  U.  S.  help  in  resist- 
ing overt  armed  aggression  by 
the   Reds. 

Gives  the  President  authority 
to  spend  up  to  $200  million, 
free  of  most  present  restric- 
tions, in  supplying  arms  aid  and 
economic  assistance  to  Middle 
East  nations  between  now  and 
July   1. 

Eisenhower  asked  urgently 
for  the  authority  in  a  special 
message   two  months  ago  Tues- 


day. The  House  gave  its  approv- 
al.   355-61,    on   Jan.    30. 

The  Senate  has  been  debat- 
ing the  subject  with  delibera- 
tion. 

While  both  the  Senate  and 
House  have  now  acted,  the  reso- 
lution will  have  to  be  adjusted 
in  a  Senate-House  conference 
committee,  since  the  two  ver- 
sions   differ    in    some    detail. 

Jn  one  change  voted  Tuesday 
the  Senate  approved  48-43  an 
amendment  by  Sen.  Mansfield 
(D-Mont)    pledging    support    of 


United  Nations  police  forces  in 
the   Egypt-Israel    area. 

On  the  final  roll  call  30  Dem- 
ocrats and  42  Republicans.  Mc- 
Carthy (Wis),  Jenner  (Ind)  and 
Malone  (Nev),  voted  against  it. 

Just  before  the  vote.  Senate 
Democratic  Leader  Johnson,  of 
Texas,  called  the  final  resolu- 
tion "A  clear  and  unequivocal 
warning"  to  Soviet  Russia  that 
•■'Communist  aggressoM  musit 
reckon  with  the  United  Sta^s 
if  they  move  into  the  Middle 
East." 


He  defended  the  time  taken 
by  the  Senate  in  considering 
the  resolution  and  said  that 
body  acted  "carefully,  prudent- 
ly and  in  plenty  of  time." 

In  his  original  request  for  the 
resolution.  Eisenhower  jrsked 
advance  authority  for  him  to 
use  armed  forces,  if  necessary, 
in   the  Middle  East. 

The  House  went  along  with 
that  but  in  the  Senate  consider- 
able opposition  arose.  Some 
Senators  argued  that  the  Presi- 
dent as  commander  in  chief  al- 


ready has  authority  over  use 
of  the  armed  forces. 

The  Senate  Armed  Services 
and  Foreign  Relations  tommit- 
tees,  which  conducted  hearings 
Jointly,  changed  the  language 
to  read  that  the  United  States 
"is  prepared  to  use  armed  forc- 
es" to  resist  aggression.  This 
change  was  accepted  by  Eisen- 
hower and  Secretary  of  State 
Dulles. 

In  Tuesday's  debate  on  the 
Mansfield   amendment    pledging 


support  of  the  UN  police  forces 
in  Egypt-Israel  area.  Sen.  Know- 
land  of  California,  the  Republi- 
can Leader,  fought  vigorously, 
but  in  vain,  for  its  defeat. 

Knowland  said  it  would  be 
interpreted  by  other  UN  powers 
to  mean  Congress  approves  the 
idea  of  the  United  flCates  pick- 
ing up  "the  entire  Check  for 
the  '  cost  of  maintaining  the 
UN  force  in   the   trouble   area. 

The  amendment,  as  revised 
with  the  help  of  Sen.  Case   (R- 


SR).  provided  that  "the  Presi- 
dent should  continue  to  furnish 
facilities  and  military  assist- 
ance, within  the  provisions  of 
applicable  law  and  established 
policies,  to  the  United  Nations 
emergency  force  in  the  Middle 
East,  with  a  view  to  maintain- 
ing the  truce  in   that   region." 

The  legislation  is  designed 
to  give  President  Eisenhower  a 
stronger  hand  in  dealing  with 
threats  of  Communist  expan- 
sion  in   the  strategic   Mideast. 


WEATHER 

Scattered  showers.  Turning  cool- 


er in  the  afternoon. 


3r()  c  Dally 


atar  Mtd 


FLORIDA 

There's  more  then  sun  there.  Sm 
Editorial,  page  2. 


VOL.  LVII     NO.  109 


Complete  OP)  Wirt  Servtct 


CHAPEL  ><ILL,   NORTH   CAROLIN^f.  WEDNESDAY,   MARCH   6,   1957 


Ofiices  in  Graham  MtfUarW 


FOUR  PAGES  THIS  ISSUE 


nevs 

in 
lM*ief 

Egypt  Ends  Mobilization 

CAIRO  (AP) — President  Nasser, 
acting  in  his  capacity  as  Egypt's 
Military  Governor,  yesterday,  de- 
creed an  end  to  general  mobiliza- 
tion. .The  mobilization  was  order- . 
ed  after  Israel  attacked  Egypt  last 
Oct..  29. 

New  Nation  Founded 

ACCRA,  Ghana  (AP)— The  first 
Negro  nation  of  the  British  Com- 1 
nK^nwealth  was  born  yesterday, 
out  of  the  old  and  prosperous  gold 
coast  colony  in  tropical  West 
Africa. 

The  transition  of  power  from 
British  colonial  hands  to  the  na- 
tion named  GJiana  camp  at  mid- 
niyht  ceremonies  against  a  back- 
ground of  cheering  and  talking 
drums. 

The  newest  nation  was  launched 
as  the  day  began  just  past  mid- 
night.. 

That  historic  act  freed  nearly 
live  luilii^n  .\frican.s^  from  foreign 
paramountcy,  and  it  may  have 
wide  reverberations  across  the 
African  continent. 

Hungarians  Going  Back 

BfcXGR.V>E.  Yugo.-lavia  (.\P)— ' 
More  than  450.  Hungarian  refu- 
gees will  return  to  Hungary  today. 

The  refugees  have  told  a  special 
commission  of  the  U.N.  they 
asked  for  repatriation. 

Their  return  will  bring  the  num- 
ber of  repatriates  from  Yugoslavia 
to  almost  1.400.  Most  said  they 
wanted  to  go  back  because  pros- ! 
jects  of  emi^ating  to  the  \Ve!.t ' 
were  small.  Less  than  300  have' 
left  for  Western  countries.  About ' 
16,500  are  still  in  Yugoslavia. 

Menon  Meets  Nasser 

CAIRO  (AP)— Indian  Diplomat 
V.  .K.  Krishna  Menon  talked  with 
President  Nasser  for  four  hours 
yesterday,  and  said  afterward 
Israel  must  withdraw  from  the  EI  i 
Auja  demilitarised  zone  as  well  as 
Gaza  and  Aqaba.  . 

El  Auja  is  a  triangular  area  on 
the  Egypt-Israeli  frontier  25  miles 
south  of  the  Gaza  strip  that  wa.*i 
demilitarized  under  the  armistice 
agreement  ending  the  194S-49J 
PaJestin6  war.  Its  future  was  never 
settled,  but  Israel  has  built  settle- 
ments iside  it. 

German  Reunification 

WASHINGTON  (AP)— The  Unit- 
ed States  and  West  Germany  last 
night  urged  jRussia  to  help  toward  i 
reunification  of  Germany. 

A  joint  coiilmunique  issued  by 
Secretary  of  State  Dulle.-.-  and  For- 
eign Minister  Heinrich  Von  Bren- 
tano  said  it  is  hoped  Russia  will 
will  realize  such  a  step  would  be 
"in  its  own  interest." 

The  communique  was  issued  aft- 
er two  days  of  discussions  between 
the  visiting  'German  leader  and 
United  States  official.^/. 


Cardboard  Israeli  Students 
Presents    |  Will  Appear  Here 

20  Awards    Part  Of  AnmialTotir  Made  By 

Awards  and  the   installation   o^       ■  I   Ca      J  m,      /'\  •  x* 

new  officers  headlined  the  annu-       ISrOGl  OlUCiSntS  wrOOHftZQl  lOtl 

al  banquet  of  the  Carolina  Card-  ^ 

board  last  night  in  Lenoir  Hall,    i  Four  Israel  studetiLs  will  visit  the  l^NC  rdnipu.s  March 

Over  20  awards  were  presented    i2  as'a  part  of  the  third  annual  tour  organized  bv  the  Israel 

to  cardboard  members  in  recogni-;  Students  Organization. 

Sponsored  by  the  L'S  .Nationai  Students  .\ssn.,  the  jfioiip 


tion   of  their  services   to   the   or- 

ganization   during  the   past   year     -^  ^^.       ^^^^^    j^^  ^^  ^^^  I'niversitv  by  Student  Government, 
Based    on    a    point    system    which  "  "  >       ; 

varies    according    to   the    type    of 
work  members  engage  in,  awards    ... 

were  allotted  to  members  of  the'  include  a  musician,  a  dancer,  a  singer,  and  a  speaker.  In  ad- 
various  art  and  activity  staffs. 


Graham  .Memorial  and  the  YMCA. 

The   members  of  the   Israel   Student   Oraanization   tour 


dition    to   these    talents,    each    of4- 


Members  granted  awards  for 
the  first  time  received  certifi- 
cates of  membership.  Winners  of 
second  awards  were  presented 
with  monogram  jackets  and  those 
who  received  their  third  card- 
board award  received  monogram 
sweaters.     Four-time    award    win- 


the  students  is  prepared  to  speak 
on  Israel's  culture  and  .history.  In 
their  tour  they  seek  an  opportuni- 
ty for  both  cultural  and  individu- 
al contact  with  a  variety  of  Ameri- 
can  campuses. 

Taking  part  in  the  UNC  program 
will  he  Miss  Hava  Kohav,  Rafael 


ners  were  presented  with   special   Even.  Hanoch  Greenfeld  and  Elie- 
key  and  chain  jewelry.  ;  ^er  Plotnik.  ^ 

After  presentation  of  the  yearly  \  Before  coming  to  thi.s  country 
scrapbook,  the  program  was  in  1964.  Miss  Kohav  was  a  well- 
closed  with  the  installation  of  known  dancer,  in  Israel  and  a  grad- 
n^xt  year's  offieers.  M«h»  tRcludc:^  uate- of~th« 'Music  Teachers  Col- 
presldent,  Peter  Evan.s;  .secretary-  '  Wgf  iJi  TeT  AVIV.  Updn  gra«ua- 
vice-president,  Carolyn  Hofler;  tion.  she  joined  the  Israel  De- 
head  of  are  dept.,  Rachel  Speight;  fcnse  Army,  especially  in  com- 
office  dept.  head,  Fred  Propst;  munities  in  the  south  of  Israel, 
and  head  usher,  Doug  DeBank.      ,  Miss    Kohftv   is   now   studying    at 


Cirolina  Cardboard  Banquet 


New  officers  were  installed  at  the  annual  »wr4t  banquet  of  tl>e 
Carolina    Cardboard.    Pictured    above,    next    year's    president    Peter 


Evans   is  shown    presenting    an    award.   The   awards   were   given    ac- 
cording to  the  number  of  years  of  service. 


REPORT  FROM  SARAH  LAWRENCE: 


Colleges  Need  Character 


The  following  article  was 
written  by  Misses  Jackie  Aid* 
ridge  and  Dot  Pressly  who  have 
been  observing  Sarah  Lawrence 
College  at  Bronxville,  N.  Y.  for 
the  past  week.  The  two  coeds, 
participating  in  that  college's 
annual  exchange  program,  view 
the  educational  and  social  as- 
pects of  Sarah  La-wrence  and 
also  make  some  comparisons  be- 
tween it  and  UNC. 


is  to  dijouss  what  the  universities  i  is  their  governing  board,  made  up 

and     college     expect     from     their   of  the  presidents  of  all  the  dormi- 

(students')  college  education,  what   tories. 

they  think  of  the  education  (their    UNLOCKED 

students)  are  receiving  and   what       No    dorms    inside    the    campus 

ideas  they  have  about  themselves,  |  gate    are    locked    al    night.    Each 

their  society  and  their  own  place  |  student  who  lives  outside  the  gate 

in  it.  I  has    her    own    key.    There    are 

It  has  been  interesting   to    note  [  adult.-    on     campus     after    closing 
that  other  universities  fuss  about  i  hours  except  the  night  watchman. 


their  parking  problems,  apathy  on 
campus,  married  student  housing 
and  s'ludenl  government  problems. 
Sarah  Lawrence  College  is  very 
liberal  in  its  restrictions  but  most 
students  seem  to  accept  all  this 
Special  To  The  Daily  Tar  Heel     with  adult  responsibility.  They  are 


By  JACKIE  ALORIDGE  and 
DOT  PRESSLY 


BRONXVILLE,  N.  Y.— Dr.  Rob- 
ert Hutchins.  former  president  of 
the  University  of  Chicago,  today 
(Saturday,  March  2)  advocated 
his  theory  of  better  higher  educa- 
tion. 

•'Abolition  of  the  mechanics  of 
a  i»jhool  inspire  changes  having  a 
phenomenal  influence  on  the  char- 
acter of  a  college,"  Dr.  Hutchins 
said.    Under    these    mechanics    he 


allowed  to  entertain  men  in  their 
rooms  from  1-8  pm.  on  weekends. 
NOT  WRITTiN 

There  is  no  written  Honor  Sys- 
tem. Yet  here  in  this  atmosphere 
it  seems  right..  They  accept  all 
thi.7  with  adult  responsibility  and 
very  few  students  take  advantage 
of  their  privileges. 

Their  class  attire  of  all  slack.s 
and    bermudas  with   heavy   sweat- 


President  Harold  Taylor  ex- 
plains their  education  setup  by 
saying,  "It  is  often  forgotten  that 
learning  is  a  private  affair  taking 
place  within  the  individual  con- 
sciousness.    Formal     education     is 


Dorm  Residents 
Must  Pay  Fines 
Or  Be  Removed 


Dormitory  residents  who  fail  to 
pay  fines  levied  by  the  Inter- 
Dormitory  Court  are  subject  to 
removal.  Sonny  Hallford,  presi- 
dent of  the  IDC.  announced  yes- 
terday, 
no  I  After  a  .student  has  been  sen- 
tenced by  the  ID  Court  to  pay  a 
fine  he  will  have  approximately 
one  week  in  which  to  remit  per- 
sonally the  fine  to  the  president 
of  the  IDC.  The  student  himself 
must  see  the  president  of  the  IRC. 
Hallford  said  this  action  was 
taken  in  order  to  facilitate  book- 


Lenten  Mission  Will 
Feature  Bishop  Henry 

The  Right  lleverend  M.  George  year  later. 
Henry,  Bishop  of  the  Diocese  of  He  has  served  various  parishes 
Western  North  Carolina,  will  in  North  Carolina  and  in  1948 
speak  during  the  Lenten  Preach-  was  consecrated  Bishop  of  the  Di- 
ing  Mission  sponsored  by  the  ocese  of  Western  North  Carolina. 
Episcopal  Student  Congregation  Bishop  Henry  married  the  for- 
March  10.  11,  and  12.  :  mer  Miss  Catherine  Sprinkle  and 

The    services    will    be    held    at '  they  have  four  children  living  in 
the  Chapel  of  the  Cross.  .  Asheville. 

Bishop   Henry  will    preach    four        All  students,  faculty, 


not    f.-jmething    done    to    him.    It  j  keeping  and  to  enable  him  to  give 
merely    surrounds    him    with    the  I  the  student  a  receipt, 
first  possibility  of  learning.  I      He  said  that  so  far  one  student 

"The   teacher's   fir^-t   duty    is   to    has  been  sentenced   to  pay  a  fine 
show   his   students   how    they   can  ;  and  has  been  notified  by  mail  of 
(see  LAWRENCE  page  3)       '  the  proper  action  to  take. 


sermons,  the  Sunday  morning  ser- 
vice and  Sunday.  Monday  and 
Tuesday  evenings  at  7:30.  Topic 
of  these  four  services  will  be  "The 
Church  and  the  Campus." 

Born  in  Chapel  Hill.  Bishop 
Henry  was  the  son  of  Dr.  K.  K.  G. 
Henry,  professor  of  Latin  and  later 
assistant  registrar  here  at  the  Uni- 
versity. • 

After  graduating  from  UNC  in 
1931,  Bishop  Henry  entered  Vir- 
ginia Theological  Seminary  and 
was  ordained  to  the  diaconate  in 
1935.    He    obtained    priesthood    a 


and  towns- 
peopl  have  been  invited  to  attend 
this  mission  in  the  hope  that  a 
greater  insight  may  be  gained  in- 
to the  Christian  witness  to  the 
University,  .accordig  to  a  spokes- 
man. 


the  Juilliard .  School "  of  Music. 
AOVISOA 

Polish-born     Rafael     Even     has 

worked    with    the   Israel    state    as 

adviser    on    public     opinion     and 

publicity    and    on    l)ehalf    of    the 

Israel  Treasury.  He  served  in  the 

Jewish     Brigade     of     the     British 

j  army    and    was    a    translator    at 

I  Army   Headquarters   in   Egypt.   In 

j  1953   Even  came    to  this   country 

I  aqd    is    now   studying    toward   his 

,  Ph.D.  in  social  psychology. 

Now  in  the  0.  S.  to  continue  his 
musical  education,   piani.si  Hanoch 
'  Greenfeld    is    a    gradvate    ot    the 
Israel    Academy    of    Music.    Since 
coming    to    this    country    he    ha.s 
appeared  in  a  number  of  concerts 
in    leading   cities,    as    well    as    on 
radio  and  TV.  Greenfeld  recently 
won   the    Lado   .Artist   Award   and 
played     at     the     Waldorf    Astoria 
and  Brooklyn  Museum. 

Upon  ending  his  service  in  the 
Israel  Defense  Army.  Eliezer 
Plotnik  was  accepted  by  the  best 
known  Israel  theatrical  company, 
rfabimah.  Three  years  ago,  Plot- 
nik came  to  the  U.  S.  to  specialize 
in  theati^cal  movement  and  mod- 
ern dance.  After  completing  his 
course  at  the  Neighborhood  Play- 
house, he  won  a  scholarship  at 
the  Mannes  School  of  Music  and 
Drama,  where  he  is  now  studying. 
Included  in  the  Israel  students' 
visft  are  plans  for  a  luncheon, 
class  room  appearances  and  a 
public  performance.  The  luncheon 
will  be  held  March  12  in  Lenoir 
Hall  for  members  of  the  Y.  Cos- 
mopolitan Club  and  othet  inter- 
ested   persons. 


UP  Names  Ragsdale 
Senior  Prexy  Choice 


RUMOR  SAYS: 


'■F 


included      examinations,      depart- l^^s   seems   appropriate.    (It    is   tool 
mentalization,    the    credit    system '  <-'old   to  seem  otherwise  with  four 


and  collegiate  sports. 
CONFERENCE 

Dr.  Hutchins  was  the  main 
speaker  for  the  Intercollegiate 
Conference    on    the    Character    of 


inches  of  snow  on  the  ground.) 

Their  social  hours  are  1:30  a.m. 
for  week  night*,  2  a.m  on  week- 
ends and  3  a.m.  for  prom  nights. 
There    is    no    liquor    allowed    on 


Alligator  To  Be  Student's  Roomier- 
Result  Of  Recent  Florida  Journey 

By   BILL    KING  i      The  U.  S.  Post  Office,  scene  of    to  arrive?  What  are  yod  going  to 

A   rumor     was     heard     around  i  his    first    attempt    to    verify    the  ]  ^q  ^j^h     him?     These     questions 


Students  Back 

Misses  Jackie  Aldridge  and  Dot 
Pressly  arrived  back  on  campus ; 
last  night  after  spending  a  week ' 
as  exchange  students  af  Sarah  Lw- 
rence  College  in  Bronxville.  N.Y. 

Students  from  Sarah  Lawrence 
will  vi:^it  the  University  in  April. 

( An  article  by  Misses  Aldridge  \ 
and  Pressly  on  their  New  York 
stay  is  on  page  one  of  today's 
Daily  Tar  Heel:  j 


Dormitory  Nominations 
Must  Be  In  By  March  22 


the    Present   Generation   at   Sarah   '."'"P"'  T"^}  }'^  'P'"'"'  ^''"'''■ 
Lawrence  College.  ''°"  ^^  ^^'  ^^"^^"^  ^«"""1'  *'"ch 

Sarah  Lawrence  college,  a  pri- 
vate liberal  arts  school,  instructs 
400  women  students..  It  is  consid- 
ering expanding  into  a  co-educa- 
tional school.  The  Exchange  stu- 
dents from  Bennett  College,  Rad- 
cliffe  College  and  UNC  have  been 
helping  di.scuss  the  problems  of 
this  expansion  program. 
*  Representatives  from  40  eastern 


campus  recently  that  a  student  i  rumor,  had  regulations  prevent- 
was  to  receive  a  strange  visitor  j  ing  them  from  telling  him  if 
frcm  Florida.  |  someone  had  received  a  small  alli- 

This  student,  who  shall  remain  i  gator  recently,  so  he  was  left 
nameless,  had  purcha-sed  a  small '  right  where  he  had  started — no- 
alligator,    to    be   delivered   to    the    where. 

After  grilling  the  informants, 
he  came  up  with  something  def- 
inite to  work  from — a  name  and 
an  address.  Armed  with  pencil 
and  pad.  he  started  the  long  trek 


U.   S.   Post  Office  at   Chapel   Hill, 
The    nominations    of    dormitory    while  on  a  recent   trip  to  Florida, 
presidents     and  "    yice  -  presidents  j  or  so  the  rumor  said, 
must  be  made  by  March  22.  |      Now.   being  a   naturally  curious 

Sonny  Hallford.  IDC,  President,  i  soul,  and  having  never  seen  an 
said  that  the  grades  of  the  nomi-  alligator  outside  of  a  zoo,  a  Daily  j  in  search  of  the  owner  of  the  alii- 
nees  had  to  b^  Checked  in  order  l  Tar  Heel  reporter  decided  that  i  gator  in  question.  The  search  led 
colleges  and  universities  arrived  atj  to  see  that  all  the  candidates  are  the  only  way  to  soothe  his  piqued  ,  through  Spiros.  the  Tempo  Room. 
Sarah  Lawrence  College  Friday  to  j  eligible.  The  dorm  officers  will  |  curiosity  and  ease  his  tortured  and  the  "Rat",  but  the  reporter 
attend  the  weekend  Intercolleigiate  I  be  elected  in  the  spring  balloting,  i  mind  would  be  to  locate  these  var-  j  *as  rewarded  by  meeting  the  own- 
Conference.  April  2.  with  the  rest  of  the  campus  j  mits.    both    student   and    alligator,  i  er  of  the  creature   from   Florida,  j  couldn't 


seemed  to  put  the  student  ill  at 
I  ease. 

The  reporter  thought  it  may 
have  been  because  the  University 
Housing  Office  is  known  to  frown 
on  little  items  of  this  nature  be- 
ing kept  in  the  dormitory  rooms, 
but  further  questioning  ruled  out 
this  possibility. 

The  only  other  explanation  was 
that  the  whole  story  was  only  a 
rumor.  When  questioned  the  stu- 
dent confessed  the  story  had  be- 
gun as  a  joke,  but  some  people 
took  it  seriously.  The  student 
bring    himself   to   admit 


The  purpose  of  the  coaference   officials. 


and  get  the  real  lowdown. 


Why  did  you  do  it^  When  is  it  1  that  it  was  all  a  joke. 


i  the    UP    banner    in    Town    Men's 

|m. 

I  Other  legislative  candidates  will 
!  be  named  at  next  Monday  night'.> 
!  party  meeting. 

I      Also  to  be  chosen  at  the  meel- 
I  ing  are  party  candidates  for  Car- 
j  olina    Athletic    Association    presi- 
;  dency.    student    body   offices   and 
editorships   of    the   campus    publi- 
cations. 
CONTESTED 
j      The    most    hotly    contested    of- 
\  fices  of  the  night  were  presidency 
I  and    social    chairmanship    of    the 
I  senicH*   class. 

Up«n  his  selection  as  candi- 
date for  senior  class  presidency 
over  Ellerbe.  Ragsdale  said  sim- 
ply. "Thank  you  very  much,  and 
I  pledge  to  devote  my  best  en- 
ergies to-  the  election  and  the 
job." 

Before  her  selection  as  candi- 
date for  social  chairmanship  of 
Men's  II.  Randv  Williams  and  i  the  class  over  Miss  Campbell. 
Jeff  Hare  by  acclamation:  Town  j  Miss  Dillon  outlined  her  prospec- 
Men's  III,  Bob  Perry.  Tom  Kenan  |  five  duties  and  promised  to  carry 
and  Pete  Kelley.  them     out    faithfully     were     she 

Perry,  Kenan  and  Kelley  were  j  elected, 
named  over  Terr>'  Baililn  to  carry  j  (ae4   UP  poffe  3)  , 


By   NEIL    BASS 

The  University  Party  last  night 
named  George  Ragsdale  its  can- 
didate for  presidency  of  the  sen- 
ior class  at  a  meeting  attended  by 
more  than  150  students. 

The  meeting  was  a  kick-off  ses- 
sion  for   UP   nominations. 

Ragsdale  was  chosen  over  Harry 
Ellerbe. 

Other  candidates  picked  by  the 
UP  to  fill  senior  offices  are: 

Harry  Braxton  over  Kelley 
Maness  for  vice  president;  Miss 
Bobbi  Madison  for  secretary  by 
acclamation;  Charles  Ashford  for 
treasurer  by  acclamation;  Miss 
Pat  Dillon  over  Miss  Carol  Camp- 
bell for  social  chairman. 

Student  Legislator  contenderu 
named  by  the  party  are: 

Dorm    Men's    I,    Ed     Levy    and 
Herb  Ross;  Dorm  Men's  III,  ^ob- 
by    Huffman;    Town    Men's   I.    Al  j 
Goldsmith    by    acclamation;    Town  i 


»A«t  TWO 


THt  DAILY  TAR  Hffk 


Florida  Reaches  The  Front 
In  Southern  Slough  States 

It  now  appears  that  Florida,  and  not  the  Southern  Slough  States 
such  as  Mississippi  and  Louisiana,  hz.i  taken  the  lead  in  being  backward 
and  unreasonable  in  the  fate  of  the  Supreme  Court's  desegregation  de- 
rision. 

In  the  past  week,  a  white  man  and  two  Negro  students  have  been 
given  jail  terms  and  fines  for  sitting  together  on  a'  bus.  Segregatioiialist 
and  rabl)le-roiiscr  John  Rasper,  late  of  Clinton,  Tenn..  has  arrived  in 
the  Partvland  State,  complete  with      gospel,      their     white      supremacy 


,  \  honor  guard  of  ^5  Ku  Klux 
Rlan  "riflemen"  to  protect  him 
from  those  bad  old  integrational- 
ists. 

Rasper's  t(un  called  for  speeches 
dealin.u;  harshly  with  Jews,  integra- 
tiotiali.sts  and  Negroes. 

And  a  Quaker  minister  got  a 
'{o-day  susjjended  se»t.euce  in  .Mi- 
ami   tor  preaching  brotherlKX)d  at 

;    >cgvegatioiiaIisi  lally. 

*  *        '       * 

i  he  ha(kuard  and  unreasonable 
thing  about  all  this  pre- violence  is 
the  fait  th;u  none  of  it  does  any 
;4<)()d.  No  matter  how  many  peo- 
|)ie.  Nf;»r()  and  white,  sit  togethei 
on  a  Floritla'  bus.  the  Supreme 
(idurt's  decisions  are  beino;  ignor- 
itl.  ul  tlic  State  of  Florida  is  just 
getting  sillier  and  sillier  bv  ignor- 
ing them. 

No  m  itUM  how  manv  )oim  Ras- 
|)evN  aiii\».-  in  FUuida.  or  anywhere 
tke.    lo    preach    this    anti-scmiiic 


drivel,  they  will  serve  only  to  stir 
up  emotions,  and  emotions  will 
not  win  out  in  the  battle  for  equal- 
ity in  the  I'nited  States. 

\N'e  had  judged  Florida  as  a 
proj>Tessive  state,  something  like 
North  C'aiolina  (ould  be  if  she 
tried.  But  now  it  appears  that  we 
were  judging;  only  the  coastal  Flor- 
ida, where  Negroes  and  Jews  and 
.New  Yorkers  go  to  spend  holidays. 

File  inland  people,  and  quite  a 
lew  natives  on  the  coast,  seem  to  be 
IS  backward  and  militant  about 
equality  as  their  (ieorgia  Cracker 
lousins  and  their  South  ('arolina 
Sandlapper  sisters. 

Where  is  the  Iea4crship  ol  the 
Sj;ife  of  Florida  to  treat  the  equal- 
it\  problem  decently?  Who  in  the 
state  uoveinnient  is  tryin:4  to  in- 
ject a  little  reason  into  the  state's 
wav  ol  iliinkini.  to  lessen  the  im- 
pack  ol  eiUDiion?  No  one.  it  ap- 
l^eavs.     , 


Philosophy  On  Pahty  Raids 


I  heie  seems  to  be  ;•  new  philos- 
ophy    forming    here    about     p;  :ity 
raids. 

>'e;ns  ai^o  bystanders  could  dis- 
miss su( h  affairs  ,as  'college  hu- 
mor:" the  statement,  "bovs  will  be 
biivs. "  lould  rationalize  such  riots. 
lUii  now  the  panty  raid,  or  a  reas- 
on Me  lacsimilie  thereof.  has 
tu.nvd  iiuo  mightv  dangerous 
business. 

Now  police  lKi<*e  a  tendencv  to 
iC'^aKl  such  raids  as  acts  of  vio- 
lenio.  Ihev  l  eep  their  e\es  on  the 
tear  -jfas  supplv.  and  there  are  nt> 
I  >n>er  satisfied  to  let  "boys  be 
lj«»\s."  They  arrest  raiders,  and  later 
the  I'irlers  are  de;ih  with  by  the 
pr(  j)er  honor  count  ils. 

One  obvious  reason  for  the  new 
pUiUisttphy  is  that  the  partieipaxas 
in  o:unv  raids  no  longer  appear  to 
Ije  bi'inv;-  \mj\s.  TJiev  act  like  friis- 
t  ifefl  and  pmit  ked  hellions,  which 
thev  are.  Alx)in  three  raids  ago 
some  of  the  piii  tici?);"iHs  stalled 
weirin'>  iKuull-ert  hief  masks  over 
tliei)    la(  es.    Ibis   is  a  violation   ol 

North    Carolina    knv. 

c  +  * 

'I  he  reason  for  pantv  raids  ap- 
pears to  be  the  same  r. a  usual: 
Frustration,  part  I  v  sexual,  partly 
because  of  the  pressme  of  sett'n  >, 
a  C.  average  :md  a  diploma  and 
having  to  studv  in  order  tf>  at!  'in 
these  y;(jals.  liut.  as  we  said  alx>ve. 
tl)c  metliods  used  to  relieve  the 
ftiisirution  ha\e  become  \iolein. 
nnd  arc  i"»  lon"^er  e"^("M.s:ibU-  on  the 
"boys  will  be  l)oy>"  liTtMUifls. 

The  Daily  Tar  Heel 

The  (jffinal  ;tiirlfni  p«ii>ti(atir>n  of  tbt 
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\.,rl»i      »";)|mI    nn        *V»<Tf      ll       Is      publisheri 

1ail\  "Xtrpi  M<>n<ia\  an<1  '•xaminalio; 
•  I'H  v;ii;iticf.  iit'iiiid.->  dn<l  summor  terms 
KiiiiTfri  a»  •.»tun(J  class  matter  «n  the 
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Crtitur      

FRED  POW'LEDGr 

Manaffing  Rditor 

-    CHARLIE  SLOAN 

NVw«   Editor 

NANCY  HILL 

•ipnrtu   Editor     

LARRY  CHEEK 

Business   Manager 

Bnx  BOB  PLTCl 

Advertising  Manag«?r         FRED  KATZIN 

«i.L>tiUKlAL  M.-vi-l-  -  vvowuy  a»;4r», 
Joey   Payne. 

NEWS  STAFF— Clarke  ~Jon€s~Pringle 
Pipkin.  Edith  MacKinnon.  Wally  Ku- 
ralt.  Mary  Alys  Voorhees,  Graham 
Snyder.  Nei]  Bass,  Bob  High.  Ben 
Taylor,  Walter  Schnintek,  H-Joost  Po- 
lak.    Patsy  Miller,   Bill  King. 


BUSINESS  STAFF— Rosa  Moore.  Johnnj 
Whitaker,   Dick  Leavitt. 

SPORTS   STAFF:    Dave   Wiblc.   Stewart 
Bird,   Ron  Milligan. 


Subscription  Manager Dale  Stale; 

Circulation  Manager Charlie  Holt 

Assistant  Sports  Editor.. Bill  King 

Staff  Photographer  Woody  Sears 

Librarians.  Sue  Gichner,  Marilyn  Strum 


Proof  Reader  ...-. .  Graham  Sayder 

Night  Editor  — . Manley   Springs' 

Night  News  Editor  Charlie  Slojp 


When  masks  are  used,  and  uheti 
.vater  i>  poured  on  policemen  from 
uppei-storv  windows,  a  p:"nty  raid 
ceases  to  be  fun.  Then  tl>e  police 
have  a  perfect  ri-^ht  to  reach  for 
the  tear  j^as  and  the  nightstick. 

We  think  the  current  ihethod  of 
dispelling  raiders— the  cops  grab- 
bing identification  cards  right  and 
left — is  the  best  method  fojnd  so 
far.  .\n  l.D.  card  is  pretty  c-on- 
clusive  evidence,  either  in  Rc- 
cordei  "s  C'.ourt  dcjwntown  or  in  the 
siudeiu  councils. 

Is  Book  Ex 
Setting  A 
New  Record? 

We're  eager  to  see  how  muih 
profit  the  I  NCi  fiook  FxclK.ngc  is 
makitig  ofl  it  newest  addition — a 
phonog)aj)h  record  shelf. 

Since  tiietc  is  moderate  tompcti- 
lion  among  the  two  major  record 
ckalers  in  town,  we  suspect  tiic 
i>i;ok  f  \  \\(»n  t  jack  up  its  prices  as 
it  dcus  on  textbool  s.  And  since 
reccjids  wear  out  fastei  than  books, 
we  doubt  if  the  Evchatige  is  going 
to  make  a  lot  of  money  bv  trving 
ti     '.e-ins  and   le-sales. 

And.  too.  thev  can  t  tell  a  stu- 
dent a  leicjrd  is  "not  available" 
and  sell  hm  a  m<»ie  expensive 
edition. 

Suiely  the  Fxc  hange.  after  all 
these  years  of  ex}>ert  deflation  «jl 
■•tudLiiis'  piH  keibooks.  can't  be  eii- 
'uaged  in  an  ;.!trustic  \enture. 
C-ume.  iitntlcmen.  tell  us.  where's 
the  trcmcn'dous  prolit  going  to 
come   iiom? 

TV  Preview: 
Chevalier 
And  Russia 

Anthony  Wolff 

Mainice  Chevalier,  the  ageless 
and  irrepressible  Frenchman,  con- 
'!ut  Is  a  guided  tour  lA  his  beloved 
Palis  toni'.:ht  at  S  c»n  (  haiinel  5. 
Chevalier  is  to  many  an  in»titiUion. 
and  his  c ommeirt.'""  v  on  the  many- 
faceted  Citv  of  l.i'iht  sltould  be 
annising  and   tcjuchiiej;. 

Fhe  show  should  be  especially 
inreiesting  to  all  French  students, 
and  all  thoe  who  have  seen  Paris 
first-hand. 

At  9  p.m..  Channel  4  presents 
another  in  its  weekh  series  on 
"Russia,  Past  and  Piesent."  To- 
night's topic  is  "Ideology  and 
Consequences  of  the  Russian  Rev- 
olmion.  "  The  importance  of  this 
series  is  obvious. 

\t  the  same  hour  on  Channel 
5  is  the  Kraft  Television  Theatre's 
production  of  "The  Duel"  a  dra- 
matic treatment  of  the  rivalry  be- 
tween Alexander  F!.?jn<ilton  and 
Aaron  Burr  and  the  residting  duel. 


The  University  Situation: 
'Crowded'  Is  The  Password 


Vk itins  Conunitte« 

H«r*  is  th*  second  and  final 
ln<»»Hmft»  in  th*  r*e«nt  rvport 
of  th*  Board  of  Trust***  Viti*- 
infl  Committ**.  This  portion  of 
th*  report  d*aU  with  th*  Uni- 
▼•rsity  at  Chap*!  Hili. 
In  the  realm  of  stucicnt  activi- 
ties, there  is  much   to  be  com- 
meqded.  Under  the  leadership  of 
Robert   Young,   president  of   the 
student  body,  and  others  occupy- 
ing  positions    of   prominence    in 
student    affairs,    morale   on    the 
campus  is  high;  respect  for  the 
honor  code  and  the  campus  code 
seems  to  be  widespread:  and  the 
jludents  appear  to  be  exercising 
sound  mature  judgment  in  solv 
ing  their  problems. 

The  Board  of  Trustees  in  May. 
1956.  approved  specific  student 
recommendations  concerning  stu- 
dent aulL>mobilcs  at  Chapel  Hill. 
Pursuant  to  these  recommenda- 
I  tions.  a  Student  Traffic  Com- 
mittee, during  the  1956-57  ses- 
sion, has  banned  the  use  of  caro 
by  freshmen:  rccjuircs  registra- 
'tioii  of  all  student  owned  cars: 
requires  the  payment  of  a  regis- 
tration fee  of  S2.50,  and  has  set 
up  and  is  enforcing  regulations 
regarding  the  ownership  anci  uso 
of  automobiles  on  the  campus. 

Nothing  haj  jvi  been  done  lo 
provide  parking  lots:  however, 
the  fund.}  derived  from  the  reg- 
istration fee.  after  paying  polic- 
ing expenses  to  enforce  the  regu- 
lations, are  earmarked  for  estab- 
li.<Uiing  parking  facilities,  and  the 
•  Chairman  of  Student  Affair.s 
slated  that  action  will  be  initiated 
in  this  matter  without  delay. 

Dr.  William  D.  Perry,  chair- 
man. Division  of  Stuck-nl  iVifairs, 
pri  •  nted  lo  the  committee  a 
ccmprehen.*sive  report  cvoering 
all  pha  -js  of  \hc  work  of  his  of- 
fice. Women  now  omstitule  17.4 
percent  of  the  student  bqdy. 

Dr.  -Katheriac  Carmichael. 
Dean  of  Women,  poses  the  ques- 
tion of  whether  the  enrollment 
of  women  sludcats  i.s  tj  be  ex- 
panded —  thus  requiring  much 
more  living  space  than  will  be 
Picvided  by  the  addition  to  Spen- 
cct  Hall  —  or  maintained  at  the 
present  figure  —  which  will  re- 
quire an  admissions  policy  much 
more  .  elective  than  it  now  is. 
1  his  quoalion  is  one  for  decision 
by  the  Board  of  Trustees. 

In      practically     every     report 
made  to  the  committee,  emphasis 
was  placed  on  the  need  for  addi- 
tional  buildings  a'   Chapel   Hill. 
In    15   of   the   19   dormitories 
for  n>*n,  students  are  crowded 
three   to   a    room    intended   for 
only  two.  Memt>ers  of  the  com- 
mitt** made  a  parsonal  inspec- 
tion    of     sevoral     dormitories, 
and     can     readily     understand 
tha.       the      conditions      under 
which   •    large   numlMr  of   the 
,      stAidents  live  are  not  conduciv* 
to  the  attainm«,ni  of  high  scha- 
lastic  standing. 
In    practiially    all    the    room.> 
visited  there  were  only  two  small 
closets    for    the    three    occupant.s 
cf  the   rem.  and   there  was  not 
•  ifficient  .space  for  three  dre.s;j- 
crs.  three  tables  and  three  beds. 
Particular   emphasis    was    pljiced 
upon  the  critical  need_  for  hou.s- 
ing  for  married  students. 

The  pre-fabricaled  houses  in 
Victory  Village  were  built  to  la.«>t 

• 

L'il  Abner 


seven  yd'ars,  and  they  are  already 
nearly  10  years  old.  356  families 
■live  in   private  rooms  or  apart- 
ments in  and  near  Chapel  Hill. 

The  Victory  Village  units  will 
.•jon  have  to  be  replaced.  Plans 
have  been  submitted  by  J.  E. 
Wadsworth,  director  of  housing, 
for  the  construction  of  200  addi- 
tional units,  with  a  plea  for  sup- 
port by  the  Board  of  Trustees. 

It  is  the  opinion  of  the  com- 
mittee that  a  concerted  drive 
must  be  put  on  for  the  construc- 
tion of  additional  housing  for 
men,  women  and  married  stu- 
dents, or  that  admissions  must 
be  kept  within  the  bounds  of  the 

• 

'Good  Worli 


sions  of  the  University  of  $608.32. 
However,  the  justification  for 
the  cost  of  medical  education  con- 
not  be  measured  in  dollars  and 
cents,  but  mu^,t  be  measured  in 
the  rapid  increase  in  the  expanse 
of  life  in  recent  years,  in  the  al- 
leviation of  pain  and  suffering 
by  the  discovery  and  practical 
application  of  new  cures  for  an- 
cient diseases  and  some  of  those 
once  considered  incurable,  and 
in  the  skill  and  knowledge  im- 
parted to  those  upon  whom  we 
rely  from  birth  to  death. 

Alr*ady  that*  is  a  shortage 
of  laboratory  space  for  research 
in   a    rapidly  growing  s*9m*nt 


post-graduate  dental  training, 
hospital  services,  etc.,  the  people 
of  our  state  are  becoming  more 
aware  of  the  material  as  well  as 
the  intangible  benefits  of  the 
medical   center   at    Chapel   Hill. 

CONCLUSION 

The  sub-committee  for  Chapel 
Hill  visited  research  laboratories, 
a  graduate  seminar,  and  dormi- 
tories to  obtain  first-hand  infor- 
mation about  some  of  the  pro- 
blems of  the  University  and  to 
observe  the  actual  operation  and 
functioning  of  several  depart- 
ments. The  experience  is  worth 
the  lime  of  the  Trustees. 


By  The  Way,  Did  You  Find  Anyone  On 
The  Roof  Garden?' 


0nn  T/m  wK^-tHi-<«cre^  fvtr. 


available  space. 

Other  buildings  are  needed, 
such  as  expanded  library  facili- 
ties, a  student  union  building, 
etc..  but  the  housing  situation  is 
in  the  acute  stage. 
HEALTH  AFFAIRS 

Budget-wise,  the  Health  Affairs 
constitutes  one-half  of  the  Uni- 
\crsity;  student-wise,  it  constitut- 
es on«-fifth,  to  which  must  be 
added  the  important  service  ao- 
pecj.  The  per  capita  cost  per  stu- 
dent for  regular  session  enroll- 
ment based  upon  the  appropria- 
tion for  the  regular  session  for 
1966-57  is  $1,243.61,  compaaed 
with  a  figure  in  the  other  divi- 


of  th*  Univ*rslty.  in  this  con- 
noction    it    is   woli    by   way   of 
.    illustration  to  point  to>the  stu- 
d*nt  pr*ssure  for  and  the  pub- 
lic need  of  pharmaceutical  ed- 
ucation in  North  Carolina. 
In  this  state  the  population-to- 
studenl  ratio  is  double  that  of  the 
country  hs  a  whole;  from  1945  to 
1955 — only  50  percent  of  the  new 
pharmacists  were  trained  at  the 
University;   and   our  state  ranks 
45th  in  the  nation  x>f  pharmacists 
to  pharmacy. 

However,  our  Division  of 
Health  Affairs  is  growing.  In  the 
fields  of  public  health,  communi- 
ty  laboratory    teaching,   nursing, 


RECOMMENDATIONS 

1.  That  two  assistant  professors 
be  obtained  for  the  Law  School 
as  soon  as  possible. 

2.  That  the  policy  of  the  Board 
of  Trustees  be  made  definite  on 
the  ques-tion  of  whether  the  pro- 
portion of  women  students  at 
Chapel  Hill  is  to  be  increased  or 
maintained  at  the  present  level. 

3.  That  more  housing  facilities 
be  provided  at  once  for  all  stu- 
dents. 

4.  That  the  facilities  of  the 
School  of  Pharmacy  be  expanded 
to  meet  the  pressing  need  for 
more  pharmacists  in  North  Caro- 
lina. 


WEDNESDAY,  MARCK  6,  TW 


ByASOiy^ 


f^l^^^hA^^B 


voo  Loot-N  rowi  '-^j  r-'v  yyoNDER 


MISS  PlMi^l-tiTOM 
-r-;OT  TO  C. HARE 
VOJ  VVl.TH  ^ 
yjORLOf' 


WH/QH 
EXP£NS/Ve 
fs//G»r  CLUB 
^/^'S  TAK/MG 

METOff^) 


SOV/EV«/ll_L   I ,  /^  ^1^     -^ 
SPEND  OUR  '•'■'  J  HAVE  A 

EVEMIMG      SI  PEANUT.7'- 
HERE,  WHERE 
KVCRVONE. 
CAN  SEE  VOU. 


^¥l 


MGl'ir-AND  I'H  THROUGH.':' 
I  DRESSED  UP  TO  SHAME 
VOU  tMTO  TAKIMG  ME  OUT- 
FORONCE.r/    r 

7-r 


E>UX  VOU'RE  JOST  V //'/.)<  \ 

TOO  CHEAP.':''  r^/  /y"^/. : 


Pogo 


By  Walt  Kelly 


Panty  Raiders 
&  Filthy  Talk 


Woody  Sears 

The  psychology  of  a  mob  is  a  strange  and  lerri* 
fying  thing;  it  is  hard  to  figure  out.  One  minute 
you  have  a  raging  mass  of  people  with  a  seemingly 
similar  purpose,  and  the  next  minute  the  mob  i.s 
scattered  and  spread  out  in  every  direction,  evidenc- 
ing no  unity  of  purpose  at  all,  unless  it's  to  get 
out  of  the  way. 

Our  unfortunate  panty-raids  here  are  good 
examples  of  this  peculiar  set  of  circumstances.  And 
maybe  it's  a  good  thing. 

in  my  opinion,  other  than  the  fict  that  its 
against  th*  law,  i  hav*  no  objaction  to  th*s*  mass 
*xpr*ssions  of  studont  *ntiiuslasm;  viz.,  panty- 
raids.  This  is  a  rathar  lii>*ral  viewpoint,  and  at 
is  often  th*  cis*  with  liberal  thin!c*rs,  some 
rathar  obvious  objoctions  ar*  ovor  lootced. 

So  let's  consider  a  few  of  the  facts ...  or  the 
objections. 

In  the  first  place,  there  is  always  that  element 
which  never  seems  to  be  able  to  make  the  dis- 
tinction between  fun  and  vandalism.  Tliis  is  a  dis- 
tinction worth  a  lot  of  consideration.  These  folks 
are  the  ones  who  always  manage  to  throw  a  damper 
on  everything.  TTiese  are  the  guys  who  aren't  con- 
tent to  just  holler  for  panties;  they've  got  to  heave 
a  brick  through  a  window  or  smash  the  panels  in 
a  door.  This  hardly  falls  under  the  classification  of 
good  clejn  fun. 

We  mustn't  forget  that  when  you  have  large 
numbers  of  people  marching  around  in  a  haphazard 
manner,  it's  going  to  play  havoc  with  the  land- 
scape. Shrubs  and  flower  beds  get  trampled,  and 
small  trees  arc  bent,  briused,  and  have  their 
branches  snapped. 

Then,  of  course,  there  Is  Qie  ever-present  possi- 
bility that  someone  will  get  hurt  in  the  ruckus. 
Inasmuch  as  the  University  would  be,  at  least  in 
part,  responsible  for  any  injuries  incurred,  it  is 
easy  to  see  that  this  might  be  an  objectionable  factor 
to  some  parties.' 

Maybe  it  wotild  only  be  a  sprained  ankle,  but 
it  might  be  a  br<&en  leg  or  arm,  or  maybe  even 
a  fractured  skull.  Those  things  can  happen,  you 
know. 

There  are  any  number  of  reasons  for  condemn- 
ing panty-raids  on  any  number  of  different  grounds. 
And  the  vast  majority  of  them  are  very  valid  argu- 
ments. 


Mjt  biggest  objection,  however,  does  not  concera 
physical  damage,  eitfcer  to  property  or  persons.  I 
object  to  the  mental  deterioration  which  results 
from  these  mass  demonstrations.  There  is  a  time 
and  a  place  for  everything,  but  obscenities  and  pro- 
fanity have  little  or  no  place  anywhere. 

When  The  Daily  Tar  Heel  photographer  arrived 
at  Carr  Women's  Dormitory  Tuesday  night,  the 
30  or  40  boys  there  bolted  when  they  saw  the 
camera.  The  photographer  went  up  the  fire  escape 
at  the  west  end  of  Caldwell  Hall  to  shoot  some 
pictures.  • 

He  was  met  with  a  blast  of  profane  and  obscene 
language,  shouted  at  the  tops  of  their,  voices  by  a 
group  of  "Carolina  Gentlemen"  .  .  all  within  30 
yards  of  the  girls'  dorm. 

But  it  was  obvious  that  thosii  war*  all  real 
fin*  g*ntl*nten.  They  must  hav*  Icnown  that 
•  something  th*y  wer*  doing  wasn't  axactly  Itosher 
...  or  thoy  yrouldn't  hav*  run  from  th*  camera. 
Brav*  m*n,  th*s«,  who  shout  thoir  saliclous  de- 
mands outside  a  women's  dormitory,  protected  by 
th*  doalc  of  midnight  dark. 


Down  in  the  Lower  Quad,  the  traditional  breed- 
ing place  of  panty-raids,  things  were  even  worse 
but  better,  since  the  quad  isn't  in  such  close  proxim- 
ity to  the  women's  dorms.  As  one  of  the  Chapel 
Hill   policement   observed,   "They're   worse   than  a 
bunch  of  high  school  kids.  I  bet  their  folks  would 
be  real  proud  to  see  what  their  money  is  buying." 
It  wouldn't  surpris*  m«  a  bit  if  this  sort  of 
thing  doesn't  sour  som*  or  alt  of  th*  local  offi- 
c*r's  attitudes  toward  th*  studants.   It  wouldn't 
surpris*  m*  to  so*  tfiom  start  putting  drunk  stu- 
dents in  th*  pok*y  instead  of  t»ning  tham  to  gat 
off  the  streets  or  put  thoir  botttos  away. 

It  wouldn't  surprise  me  a  bit  to  find  that  they've 
begun  to  treat  'Jnischievious"  students  like  any 
other  law-breaker. 

And  I  wouldn't  blame  them  a  bit.  We've  got  it 
mighty  soft  here.  Do  you  think  the  Durham  cops 
take  care  of  the  Duke  students  the  way  our  Chapel 
Hill    officers   look    after   UNO    students?    Do    .vou 
think  the  Winston-Salem  police  are  going  to  nurse- 
maid the  Wake  Forest  kids  the  way  some  of  our 
officers  have  treated  students  here?  Not  hardly! 
So  you  see,  <w*'v*  ^t  it  pr*tty  «asy  around 
h*r*.  And  If  w*  don't  walch  our  %t*p,  if »  going 
♦0  tighten  up. 

♦  •  • 

No  one  was  arrested  Tuesday  night  that  I've 
heard  about,  but  it  needn't  have  been  that  way . . . 
for  one  loud-mouth  juvenile  in  particular.  He's  the 
one  who  wore  his  handkerchief  as  a  mask  and  be- 
came the  self-styled  leader  of  the  midnight  mob 
at  Carr.  He  was  particularly  offensive  and  abusive 
in  his  loud  speech. 

Ray  Jefferies  got  four  offers  from  bysUnders  to 
have  the  brat  caught,  but  Ray  turned  and  walked 
away.  I  rather  imagine  that  Ray  didn't  want  to 
see  anyone  get  shipped,  even  someone  so  object- 
ionable and  obviously  out  of  place  here  at  the  Urn- 
versity. 

This,  too,  may  change. 
Th*  stwdMiH  aro  about  to  ios*  ail  their  friands 
•  .  .  b*caus*  of  th*  f^  ... 

So  as  I  said  to  begin  with.  I  haven't  got  any 
objection  to  having  mass  demonstrations  of  stu- 
dent enthusiasm.  But  there  are  many,  many  people 
around  here  who  do  object  Many  of  them,  I  think, 
are  the  people  who  are  in  a  position  to  do  very 
unpleasant  thin^  to  fhe  ones  they  catch.  But  this 
is  lust  a  minor  detail,  I  suppose^ 

I'll  see  yoi  at  the  next  one! 


WEDNESDAi 


(Contim 
arrive  at  the 
pies  and  thel 
the  test  of  tl 
man  action,''! 

This      phi| 
through   by 
consisting    o| 
sions    with 
conferences 
quizzes  and 
to  replace  tej 
inations. 
DONS 

Instead  of 
has  a  Don 
sonal  problei 
to  use  all  hi 
tunities.   Herj 
pick  out  herj 

"Registratij 
ing  on  a  for 
men   are   toll 
talking     aboij 
hopes,    atliti 
about  the   st 
her  experier 
visor's   judgr 
should  do." 
manner   of 
LawTcnce    C^ 
l>ook. 

Student.<; 
each  year.  Tl 
tensive     rese 
once    a    wee 
meet    their 
weekly  aj^. 
FIELD  TRIPJ 

Field   trip^ 
dude  taking 
tural  aspects] 
City. 

It    is   inte^ 
election     tir 
heels,  that  tj 
ing  at  all  ft 
Lawrence  CoJ 
considered  a  | 
tions  icomr 
dent,  asking 
In  this  mam 


FOR  SALE 
sleeps  foi 
Robert 

Trailer  Col 

5   ROOM   BJ 
rooms,  ail 
3  miles  onl 
and    Frigel 
Fred  Katzf 

FOR    RETVT:! 
vailable, 
one    in    Ji 
.  Also  5  re 
two  weeks  J 
and  on  w« 

LOST:    ONEI 
Reward  is 
Gene  Spalj 
phone  9-7^ 

FOR   SALE: 
house  on 
9-1436. 


FEELI 

Choose  fj 
and  fabr^ 
heuri 


DA 


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WEDNESDAY,  MARCH  6,  ^H7 


THI  DAILY  TAR  HIEL 


PAGE  THREt 


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at  this 


SARAH  LAWRENCE 


U 


(Continued  from  Page  \) 
arrive  at  their  own  honest  princi- 
ples and  then  to  teach  them  that 
the  test  of  the  principal  is  in  hu- 
man action,''  he  said. 

This  philosophy  is  carried 
through  by  a  system  of  classes 
consisting  of  roundtable  discus- 
sions with  from  10-15  students, 
conferences  wMeh  rmwiwbli!  oral 
quizzes  and  contracts  which  seem 
to  replace  term  papers  and  exam- 
inations. 
DONS 

Instead  of  advisors,  each  student 
has  a  Don  who  discusses  her  per- 
ianal problems  and  who  helps  her 
to  use  all  her  educati(mal  oppor-jwe  are 
tunities.  Her  Don  also  helps  her 
pick  out  her  courses. 

"Registration  does  not  mean  list- 
ing on  a  form  the  courses  fresh- 
men are  told  to  take.  It  means 
talking  about  expectations  and 
hopes,  attitudes  an-d  difficulties, 
about  the  student's  idea  of  what 
her  experience  might  be,  the  ad- 
vi:»or*s  judgment  atwut  what  she 
should  do,"  describes  the  unusual 


ing,  the  final  slate  is  drawn  up        IvOVOririQ      TmG      CSmpUS 

Full  reports  are  written  on  all |  -^  "^ 

who     accept     for     the     two     top     POSi-  j  aMMHMMMMMMMBMMMlMMMMMMBMai^BIMIiMI^HMiBHMMHiiHM^aMa* 

tions..    In  an  all-student  meeting, ,  COSMOPOLITAN  ~CLUB  ]  Ifendezvous  •   RoOte     of     Graham 

this   slate    is    presented.    At   this  I     The     Cosmopolitan     Club     will  j  Memorial. 


CHRISTIAN  FELLOWSHIP 

A  Bible  study  will  be  held  to- 
night at  7  p.m.  in  the  Choral  Re- 
hearsal room  in  Hill  Hall.  The 
inter-Vardily  Christian  Fellowship 
invites  everyone  to  attend.  Green 
Hallowell  will  lead  the  discussion 


time,  any  further  nominations  may   meet    in  Graham   Memorial    at   8 

be  made  and  the  full  reports  are   p,jn.  for  pictures  to  be  taken  for 

?ead.  The  handbook  states  'There  |  the  Yackety  Yack. 

will  be  no  discussion  of  candidates  i  WAA  TABLE  TENNIS  / 

at  the  meeting."  I      All  third  round  matches,  in  the 

The  stress  is  on  liberalness  and  WAA  table  tennis  tournaihent 
individuality  here..  But  when  one  j  must  be  played  by  Friday  at  3 
student    heard    of    UNO's    Honor  1  p.m.  According  to  WAA  officials, 

Cotmcil  being  able  to  recommeni  j  both    parties    will    forfeit    if   the  i  o"  ^^^  subject,  'The  Fruit  of  the 
suspension  of  their  peers  she  ex-  matches  are  not  played  by  Friday.  |  Spirit." 
claimed,    "Why.    that's    more    pro-   MEN'S  GLS6  CLUB  I  PHARMACY  WIVES 

gressive    and    rcvolutioaary    thahj      The  UNC  Men's  Glee  Club  willj     The  Pharmacy  Wives  will  meet 

j  hold  a  called  extra  rehearsal  to-  j  Wednesday  at  8  p.m.  at  the  Insti- 
EXTRACURRiCULAI^S  j  day  at  5  p.m.  in  Hill  Music  Hall. !  ^^te  Of  Phrarmacy.  Mrs.  Mary  Alice 

Some   of   Sarah   Lawrence   Col-   A  sextet  practice  has  been  called  ■  smith  will   speak    on  "Hair  Styl- 
lege'9  most  active   extracurricular  j  for  4:30  p.m. 


organizations     are     the     campu'S 
newspaper,     the     Public     Affaire 
Forum'  'which  includes  many  conl-| 
mittees,  one   of   them   being   the  { 
NAACP  and  their  student  council. 
Sometime  during  the  year,  eachi 
dorm  is  extended  a  special  invi-i 
tation  to  attend  a  Student  Council  i 


BRID6C  LESSONS 

GM's  free  bridge  lessons  will  be 
offered  today  from  4-6  p.m.  in  the 


UP 


formally   and   discusses    in    detail; 
any  problem  confronting  tl)e  col  i 


manner  of  registration   at  Sarah  j  meeting.   The   Council    meets   in 
Lawrence    College    in    the    hand- 
book. 

Students  take  three  courses 
each  year.  This  allows  time  for  ex- 
tensive research.  Classes  meet 
once  a  week.  Students  usually 
meet  their  teachers  and  Dons 
weekly  also. 
FIELD  TRIPS 

Field   trips   for   the   classes   inj 
elude  taking  advantage  ot  the  cul- 
tural aspects  of  nearby  New  York 
City. 

It  is  interesting  to  not^,  with 
election  time  close  on  UNC's 
heels,  that  there  is  no  campaign- 
ing at  all  for  an  office  at  Sarah 
Lawrence  College..  Eiwh  student  is 
considered  a  candidate.  A  nomina- 
tions ^mmittee  visits  each  stu- 
dent, asking  if  they  choose  to  run. 
In  this  manner,  with  no  politick- 


(Contimied  From  Page   1) 

The  session  was  held  in  Gerrard 
Hall     and     lasted    approximately 


CLASSIFIEDS 

FOR  SALE:  32  FOOT  TRAILER, 
sleeps  four;  has  bath.  Contact 
Robert  Pickard  at  Taylor's 
Trailer  Court,  Airport  Road. 


5  ROOM  BRICK  HOUSE.  3  BED 
rooms,  all  modem  conveniences. 
3  miles  on  Old  86  Hyway.  Stove 
and  Prigedaire  furnished.  Can 
Fred  Katzin  after  6:00.  8-9025. 


lege.  In  the  proposed  college  ex-  j  two  hours. 

pansion,  the  Student  Council  is !  In  djouming.  party  Chairman 
playing  a  vital  part  in  reevaluat- 1  Mike  Weinman  urged  all  mem- 
ing  the  existing  rules  governing  j  bcrs  to  seek  out  prospective  can- 
the  campus.  •  j  didates     and     congratulated     the 

One  interesting  goal  of  the  stu-i  i50-plus  crowd  for  its  "interest." 
dent  body  is  hoping  to  bring  to!  jjext  Monday  night's  meeting 
the  campus  a  young  married  cou- 1  will  also  be  held  in  Gerrard  Hall. 

pie  who  can  serve  as  counselors;  . .  — 

to  the  girls  and  who  will  be  pres-; 
ent  at  night  on  the  campus.  This; 
governing  body  is  aiding  the  ad-; 
ministration  in  redefining  the  du-! 
ties  of  the  dean  and  is  encourag-  ^ 
ing  the  adminisiration  to  increase} 
the  personnel  in  this  office.  j 

The     Sarah     Lawrence     CoUeget 

community  is  self-governing  under!     FrankUn  P.  Inman  of  the  Chi  i 

the  grant  of  powers  made  to  it  by!  p^i   social  fraternity  was  elected; 

the  trustees  The  Student  CouncUj  p^sident  of  the   University  Club 

is  the  representaUve  group  of  the   m  elections  held  Monday  night  in  [ 

self-governing  student   body.  ,  Graham  Memorial.  ! 

I      Dave  Jones,  representing  Alex- 
ii\f*  \M.i'tt  e  ^  '  ander  dormitory,  was  elected  vice 

IDC  Will  Sponsor  Concei;ti  president     Buddy    Strickland    of 


mg, 

WUNC-TV 

Today's  schedule  for  WUNC-TV. 
the   University's  educational   tele- 
vision station: 
12:45    Music 

1:00    Today  on  the  Farm 

1:30    A  Career  for  Yt>u 

2:00    Sign  Off 

5:15    Music 

5:30     Solid  Geometry 

6:00    Legislative  Review 

6:20    News 

6:30    Sky  is  for  Everjone 

7:00    Industrial  Artisan 

7:30    College  Concert 

8:00    Science   Fair 

9:00    Russia:  Past  and  Present 
10:00    Final    Edition 
10:05     Sign  Off 


1 

Inman  Elected  \ 
Presicient  Of 
University  Club i 


GM'S  SUTE 


Activities  scheduled  for  Gra- 
ham Memorial  today  include: 

Grail  Room — Elections  Beard, 
4-5  p.m.,  Panhellenic  Council, 
5-6  p.m..  Women's  Residence 
Cevncil,  S-10:30  p.m.;  Roland 
Parker  Lounge  1 — Student  Gov- 
ornmont  Retreat  Committee,  5-6 
p.m..  Petite  Drematique,  7-10:30 
p.m.jtalso  Roland  Parker  Lounge 
2);  Roland  Parker  Lounge  3 — 
Student  Audit  Boerd,  4  p.m.,  Je- 
hovah's    Witnesses,     8-9     p.m. 


During  Soph  Weekend  SUcy  dormitory  was  elected  treas- 1    woodhouse  Conference   Roo*n-^ 


FOR    BENT:    TWO    HOUSES    A 

vailable,    one    immediately    and  1  ^^^^^    will    need    one    ticket    per 
one   in  June.   Two   bed  rooms.  1  P«rson.  The  program  is  tentative- 
.  Also  5  room  house  available  in  |  '^  ^^^  to  begin  at  8  .m 
two  weeks.  Call  9458.  After  5:30 !  "°^^^   ^^  P"^- 


A  concert,  featuring  Don  Shirley  j  urer. 
and  his  combo,  will  be  sponsored '      The    position    of    secretary    was , 
on  March  22  by  the  IDC.  Sonny  I  not  filled  Monday  night.  Annette ! 

PGven  of  Pi  Beta  Phi  sorority  will  I 

cmitinu«  to  be  -secretary  until  an  j 

election  next  week.  | 

The  outgoing   officers   are:   Joe  I 

Cla|^,     iMresident;     Jim     Bynum, 

vice  president;  Al  Moise."  treasurer. 

adn  Annette  Niveh.  secretary:        j 

The  University  Club   is   an  or-j 

and  last  j  ganization    consisting     of     repre-  • 

I  sentatives  from  sororities,  fratern-  j 


Hallford.  IDC  President,  an- 
nounced yesterday. 

The  concert  will  be  in  connec- 
tion with  the  sophomore  weekend. 

A  dollar  ticket  will  admit  a 
sophomore  and  his  date;  other  stu- 


— ^Ways  and  Means  Committee, 
4  -5:30  p.m.,  Interdormitory 
Council,  7-9:30  p.m.;  Council 
Roont— Grail,  8  9-11  p.m.;  Ren- 
dexveus— UNC  Jan  Club,  8-11 
p.m.  end  Bridge  Class,  4:30-6 
p.m. 


and  on  weekend,  call  2926.  \ 

LOST:    ONE   BLUE   SUIT  COAT.  I  '^ 
Reward  is  offered.  "Desperate."  !     ^he      Inter-Dormitory      Council 
Gene  Spake,    216    Ransom    St.,  j  '^"^  ^^^^  tonight  at  7  p.m.  in  Phi 
phone  9-7321  Assembly    Hall.    President    Sonny 

j  Hallford  encourages  all  to  be  pres- 

FOR  SALE:  SIX  ROOM  BRICK  ent  as  there  are  only  3  more 
house  on  Pritchard.  Ave.  Phone  ■  meetings  before  the  new  admin- 
9-1436.  istration  takes  over 


Istvan  Laszio  Going 
To  Vienna,  Says  KSA 

i  itics.  and  dormitories.  It  also  has ;      Istvan  La^o.  the  Hungarian  ref- 

i  representatives    from    the    Card-  "g*^'  student  who  spoke  Ijere  last 

^  November    29,    recently    left    for 


FEELING    UKE   SPRING? 

Choose  from  •  wide  range  of  colors 
and  fabrics  to  suit  all  your  summer 
hours. 

CAROLINA 
FABRIC    SHOP 


Uff 


boardr  the   band,   and   the  cheer- 
leaders. 

The  University  Club  cooperates 
with  the  Athletic  Assn.  in  sponsor- 
ing pep  rallies,  paraded,  and  other 


activities      designed      to      create 
school  pep  and  spirit 


Carolina  Quarterly 
St^fllyiMits  today 

There  will  be  a  meetiBg  of  the 
jntire  staff  of  the  Carolina  Quart 
?rly  today  at  4:45  p.m.     in 
■Quarterly  office. 

Miss  Marcelline  Krafchick.  edi- 
tor, has  urged  all  staff  rtiembers 
'0  be  present. 

IN  THE  INFIRMAIiY 


DAILY    CROSSWORD 


ACROSS 
1.  At  a 

diftance 
5.  Branch 
#.  Had  on 

10.  Tibetan 
prieet 

11.  Withered 
(v«r.» 

12.SUR 

14.  Measure 
( Malay,  t 

15.  Reaident 
doctor 

K.  N^vtee 
18.  Look 
If.  ItaiKray 
(abtar.) 

20.  9wmb 

21.  String 

22.  Gomriwle 

23.  rorbM 
S4.  ibieiMBa- 

tion 
M.  Stripe  (Mil.) 
27.TwofoM 

2f.  PrOBOua 
ao.  Hunting 

dogs 
82.  AmeriesMR 

IndiMM 
84.  Measure  of 

lenffta 

35.  Calm 

36.  Dexteroue 

37.  Shield 
<v»r.» 

88.  Son  Of 
Adam 

39.  Spreads 
grass  to  dry 

40.  Red  plsnet 

DOWN 

1  Wearied 

2  Discussion 
meeting 


3.  Part  of 
"to  be" 

4.  Music  note 

5.  Cuts 
«.  Story 

7.  American 
essayist 

8.  Normal 
behavior 

11.  Mast 

12.  Brittle 
eeokie 

IS.  Drove  off 

IS.  Heathen 

fmisce. 
17.  Nurse 

(Orient) 


21   Wagon 

22.  Cost  of 
carry- 
ing 

23.  Noc- 
turnal 
aninuils 

24.  Deck. 
(naut.> 

25.  A  Vent      =-.. 

2«.  A  gun 

sight  TMt*ra«r's  Amaww 

27.  Carpenters' 


a:j  fji^'j   d':'-'K 

"'I'^f-j   'j^3'-2\'y> ■" 
::irj'jiijj   uuL-JT'i 


toon 
28.  small 

i«land 
30.  Kind  of 

cheese 


•  ."il.  Livf  coal 
33.  Tart 
36.  Arabian 
garment 
38.  Exist 


Shidofits  in  Hie  Infirmary  yes- 
terday induced: 

Misses  Derothy  E.  Pitman. 
Jennie  \m  |«tlOtt,  Helen  Lm- 
cille  YalM*  Estelle  McClul**, 
Joann  W.  Ashl#y,  Katharine  M. 
Wobster,  Harrietts'  C.  Lvwis, 
Nancy  Laigh  Suttie,  and  Mrs. 
Louise  Cummings  Saiite;  and 
Maiceme  H.  McLaan,  Fred  A. 
RiverbaHi,  Georg4  S.  Best,  Ken- 
neth k.  Gro^,  Henry  D.  Brown- 
ing, Roborf  E.  Sholte  Jr..  Pote 
Steward,  Ai1l*n  S.  ^nicolstein,^ 
Charles  W.  i^fnos.  Den  H.  Mil- 
ler, 0»orge  P.  Carter,  James  C 
M«ifieat,  Hichim  B.  Alexander, 
Jerry  M.  Parher,  Micliaal  Al 
Rosen,  Myreii  Crook  and  Louis 
S.  Crye. 


Vienna,  according  to  the  National 
•Student  Assn.  He  will  join  his 
Hungarian  colleagues  there 

Laszio  visited  UNC  as  part  of  a 
tour  of  colleges  and  universities 
sponsored  by  he  NSA.  He  describ- 
ed many  of  the  horrors  of  the  Rus- 
^an  oppression  of  his  country  and 
told  of  his  experiences  during  the 
recent  Hungarian  revolt. 

The    Canadian    government    re- 
cently indicated  Laszio  can  oe  ad-| 
the !  mitted  to  Canada  under  their  im-  j 
migration  quota. 

The  purpose  of  tliis  meeting  is; 
to  elect  a  chairman  of  Freshman  j 
Camp.  All  membeis  of  the  plan-^ 
ning  committee  will  be  courtselorsi 
at  Freshman  Camp  this  summer. ; 

This  meeting  is  very  important 
and  anyone  at  all  interested 
should  not  miss  it,  according  to 
Y  President  Gerry  Mayo. 


Applications  Now  Taken 
For  Handbook  Positions 

Applications  for  positions  oo 
the  staff,  for  editor,  and  Business 
manager  of  the  Carolina  Fresh- 
man Handbook  are  now  being 
taken  at  the  "Y." 

"The  Carolina  Handbook,"  a  Y 
publication  that  is  mailed  to 'all 
entering  freshmen,  is  rapidly  ap- 
proaching it's  publication  date. 
Any  student  is  eligible,  and  any* 
one  interested  in  working  on  the 
staff  has  been  asked  to  see  3ohn 
ReiWe  at  the  Y.         :^'  h^'    ;     - 


Dr.  Cooper  Ends  Conference 

A    speech    by    Dr.    Herbert    K.  I  tion  which  have  an  interest  in  the 
Cooper,  director  of  the  Cleft  Palate  I  physical  restoration,  habilitation  or 


Clinic  of  Lancaster.  Pa.,  ended  the  ]  rehabilitation  of  /he  person  with 

„     J.    cleft  lip  and   palate,     stated  Dr. 
third  annual  Conference  on  Handi- 1  ^^^p^j. 

Dr.    Cooper    went    on    to    say,  i 


capped  Children  here  Friday. 


Presenting  This  Month's 

Miss  Fashionplate 


SELECTED 

BY 

POPULAR 

VOTE 


MISS  UBBY  NICHOLSON 

*  A  Sophomore  Student  Nurse  From  High  Point 

Ready  for  a  stroll  in  the  park  or  a  promenade  on  the  Avenue,  prettily  fitting  and  proper  for 
social  functions.  Miss  Nicholson  is  shown  modeling  a  "Daryl  Original  Sheath  Dress,  champaigne 
leaf  embroidery  over  linen  featuring  a  double  or  2  sets  of  collars  with  tie  and  pearl  buttons.  The 
gk>ves  are  by  Fownes,  the  bag  by  B-Dainty,  th*  flowsefed  cackt^iJ  Kat  by  Kutz,  and  the  patent 
shoes  by  Mademoiselle. 

Miss  Nicholson  will  be  awarded  a  prize  gift  from  J.  B.  ROBBINS.  as  also  will  the  other  two 
contestants. 

The  New  Contest  Starts  Today 

The  New  Contestants  Are: 


*B  :: 


MtSS  JANE  STAINBACK 

A  Sophomore  Nursing   Student 
From  Jacksonville.  Florida 


MISS  MARGERY   LINDEMAN' 

A    Senior   From    Virginia    Beach,    Va. 

and   a   member  of   Alpha   Delta   Pi 

Sorority,   Majoring  ijn   French 


MISS  GLORIA  HOLCOMB 

A  Junior  English  Major 
From  Mooresxille 


Castyour  ballot  «f  ROBBINS  —  Nothing  to  buy.  Come  in  and  vote  for  your  favorite.  Your 
vota  may  be  th#  deciding  one.  ^^ 


Several  hundred  people  were  at-  j  "Eiach,  in  his  own*  field  and  with  j 
tracted  ttom  Tttrheelia  and  neigh-  j  his  o\^-n  techniques,  at  some  time  j 
boring  states  to  the  two-day  con-  has  something  to  contribute  if  thcj 
ference  held  at  Memorial  Hospital. !  end  result  of  treatment  is  to  be 
Thfe  School  df  Medicine  was  host '  successful.  We  are  living  in  an  age 
to  the  conference.  '  where  iTJecialty  training  and  prac- 

Dr.  Cooper  spoke  on  "An  Ap-  tice  is  very  acute.  It  is  only  natur- 
proach  to  Diagnosis  and  Treatment  al,  then,  that  one  is  likely  to  place 
Planning  for  the  -Cleft  Palate  Pa-  i  more  emphasis  on  his  own  special- 
tient."  j  ty.  This  is  one  of  the  dilemmas 

"There  are  many  specialties  of  caused  by  specially  practice  to- 
medicine,  dentistry  and  in  educa-lday." 


of  CKapel  Hill 


■  P.S.:  Please  note  that  the  last  month  of  the  school  year,  all  previous  Fashionplates  will  vie 
for  the  title  of 


FASHION  QUEEN 


The  Queen  selected  by  your  vote  wijl  be  awarded  an 


Entire  Ensemble 

From  The  Fashion  Center 


■WPSlBIISBlWWP^^i^*^^*^^^ 


PAGE  POUR 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


WEDNESDAY,  MARCH  A,  IW 


UNC  On  Top  By  Wide  Margin 


Tar  Heels  Dominate  AP  Poll 


The  Tar  Heels:  They  Did  The  Impossible 

Back  on  Dec.  1.  Carolina  basketball  coach  Frank  McGuire  sounded 
a  warning  that  his  team  would  probably  lo^-e  four  or  five  games  dur- 
ing the  upcoming  season.  On  March  1.  ju.st  three  short  months  later, 
the  final  returns  were  in.  Twenty  four  won.  none  lost. 

Coach   Frank  McGuire  and  his  Tar   Heels  had  somehow    dene 
the  impossible.  They  had  swept  through  a  rugged  conference  and 
intersectional  schedule  without  a  loss,  despite  a  swarm  of  miner 
personnel  setbacks  that  would  have  felled  many  a  lesser  team. 
The  season  was  full  of  thrills,  scares,  and  downright   breath  tak- 
mg   escapes   that   left    partisan   Tar   Heeh  rooters*  walking   in   circles 
And  worst  of  all.  the  season  isn't  over  yet. 

That  nebulous  thing  called  a  "regular"  season  has  been  offi- 
i'   cially  concluded,  and  the  Tar  Heels  are  undisputed  kings  of  both 
I     the  Atlantic  Coast  Conference  and  the  nation.    But  despite  their 
;     14-0   conference    mark    and    their    24-0    record    overall,    they    are 
only    now    opening    their    real    season,    they    are   only    now    begin- 
ning to  play  the  games  that  mean  something. 
Tomorrow  night,  that   14-0  record  goes  out  the  window  when  the 
ACC   tourney   opens   in  Raleigh..   For   to    reign  as   official   kings,   the 
proud  Tar  Heels  must  win  the  tournament  championship. 

Then  if  they  r/in  the  tourney,  they  advance  to  a  playoff  game 
against  the  Ivy  League  chan\p  in  New  York  City  to  see  who  gets 
into  the  .NCAA   regional  tournament  in  Philadelphia. 
In  Philadelphia,  they  must  win  two  more  games  to  qualify  for  the 
finals  in  Kansas  City.  And  in  Kansas  City,  they  finally  get  a  chance 
to  prove  their  right  to  the  golden  crown  signifying  the  National  Col- 
legiate Basketball  championship. 

Now  add  them  up,  and  you  get  a  grand  total  of  8  games.  One  slip, 
and  you're  out  for  good. 

Let's  Throw  Out  The  Tournament 

"^  The  last  five  games  are  perhaps  justified,  although  we  don  t  be 
lieve  in  loading  the  NC.\A  tourney  field  with  several  mediocre  teams. 
But  the  first  thre^iare  totally  unnecessary,  for  the  Tar  Heels  have 
undisputably  proved,  their  right  to  the  ACC  championship  by  going 
through  the  regular  season  unbeaten. 

The  conference  tournament  is  being  held  for  one  reason  only: 
money.  Br  putting  on  the  gala  three  day  show,  the  ACC  takes  in 
a  pretty  nifty  sum,  and  ifs  hard  to  blame  them  for  wanting  to 
continue  the  tournament.    But  if  Carolina  gets  knocked  out  of  an 
NCAA   tournament   berth,    the   present  system   of   determining   a 
champion  will  be  subjected  to  hei:vy  fire. 
Of  course  if  the  Tar  Heels  win,  and  we  think  they  will,  there's  no 
problem.   At   least   there   isn't   one  as  far   as   getting  into  the   NC.\.\ 
playoffs  is  concerned.   But   tney   must   play   their  first  game   on   next 
Tue..-day  night  after  going  through  a  rigorous  three  days  of  intense 
competition  on  the  preceding  weekend. 

The  letdown  will  be  tremendous,  ai  other  ACC  teams,  notably 
State,  have  found  out  in  the  past.  State  had  a  fine  team  last  year, 
but   lost    in   the   NCAA   first   round   to   Canisius    They    were    dead 
on  their  feet  after  the  strenuous  ACC  tournament. 
The  same  thing  could   happepn   to  Carolina   this  year,  or  to  any- 
one else  who  might  happen  to  win  the  conference  title.    The  ACC  is 
literally   committing   NC.\A  suicide   by   holding  the   tournament.   Per- 
haps   vjmeday    the   powers    that   be   will    wake   up   and   do  .something; 
about  a  deplorable  situation. 

Tar  Heels  Should  Win  Crown 

As   for   this  years   tourney    which   begins   tomorrow,   it   should   be 
a  good   one.   Carolina.   Clemson,   State   and  Wake    Forest    are   in   one  ' 
bracket,   while  Duke,   South   Carolina,   .Maryland   and   Virginia   are   in  : 
the  other. 

The  Tar   Hoel.s  were  favored  by  the  luck  of  the  draw.  Clemson,' 
their  first  round  opponent,  is  at  the  present  time  the  weakest  cluh 
in  the  cunference.  and  should  provide  little  competition. 

Friday  night  the  job  gets  tougher  with  either  State  or  Wake  For- 
est furnishing  the  opposition.  These  two  play  the  final  game  tomor- 
row night,  and  the  winner  may  still  be  in  a  mild  state  of  shock  when 
they  go  against  the  mighty  Tar  Heels. 

If  the  Tar  Heels  survive  their  semifinal  test,  thev  will  probably 
meet  either  Duke  or  Mar>land  in  the  championship  game.  And  either 
of  these  teams  can  be  trouble. 

Our  guess  is  Clemson  in  the  quarter-finals.  Wake  Forest  in  the 
semis,  and  Duke  in  the  finals.  And  Saturday  night.  Captain  Lennie 
Rosenbluth  and  his  UNC  teammates  will  reign  as  ACC  kinijs. 

John  Antonelli 
Figures  To  Be 
20  Tilt  Winner 

By  JERRY  LiSKA 

PHOENIX,  Ariz.  —  (AP)  —  Al- 
though uncoiling  his  talented  left 
arm  for  a  second-division  club, 
John  Antonelli  this  year  figures  to 
be  a  20-game  winner  for  the  third 
time  In  four  New  York  Giant  sea- 
sons. . 

Giant  mangaer  Bill  Rigney  to- 
day said  his  ace  hurler  may  even 
be  headed  for  a  25  or  better  vic- 
tory year,  although  Rigney  ma" 
have  his  problems  trying  to  im- 
prove the  Giants'  sixth  place  fin- 
ish in  1956. 

Antonelli,       erstwhile       $65,000 

bonus   signee    of    the    old    Boston 

Braves   in    1948,   last   year   had    a 

20-13  record,  after  finishing  14-16 

in    1955   and   21-7    in    the    Giants' 

pennant-winning  year  of   1954. 
Rigney      .vaid      Antonelli,      who 

turns  27  April   19.  still  is  heading 

for  a  pitching  peak. 

"Just    stop    and    realize,''    said 

Rigney,    "that    until    late    August 

last    season    the    Giants    made    as 

many  as  four  runs  in  a  game  only 

twice  for  Johnny.  . 

'There    is     no    reason    Johnny 

can't   hit   25   (»r  30   victories-  in   a 

season." 


By  THE  ASSOCIATED  PRESS 

The  North  Carolina  Tar  Heels 
will  have  three  major  objectives 
in  the  Atlan-tic  Coast  Conference 
championship  basketball  tourna- 
ment which  gets  under  way 
Thursday  in  Raleigh,  N.  C. 

They  are  not  necessarily  in 
order  of  importance: 

1.  To  gain*  an  NCAA  berth  by 
winning  the  tournament. 

2.  To  continue  an  unbeaten 
season  in  which  they've  won  24 
games. 

3.  To  remain  on  top  in  the 
Associated  Press'  weekly  poll  of 
sport*writers    and   sportscasters. 

The  Tar  Heels  got  a  huge  vote 
of  confidence  from  the  nalion'.s 
experts  in  the  seasons  next-to- 
last  poll  based  on  games 
through  last  Saturday 

Collecting  55  first  place  votes 
and  711  points,  they  held  a  com- 
fortable margin  over  tire  run- 
nerup  Kansas  Jayhawka-,  who 
got  only  eight  firsts  and  605 
points  on  the  usual  basis  of  10 
points  for  first  place,  9  for  sec- 
ond, etc.  The  Tar  Heels  meet 
Clemson  in  a  first  round  game 
of  the  ACC  title  competition 
Thui-sday  night.. 

The   next    three   positions   re- 


main unchanged  with  Kentucky 
in  third  place  with  476  points. 
Southern  Methodist  fourth  with 
399  and  Seattle  fifth  with  331. 
Seattle,  22-2  for  the  year,  drew 
five  votes  for  first  place  from 
the  76  who  participated. 

The  most  notable  advances 
made  by  Michigan  State  and 
Oklahoma  City  with  the  Spar- 
tans, uni'anked  last  week,  mov- 
ing into  the  No.  8  position,  and 
OCU  jumping  eight  notches  to 
10th.  These  two  replaced  Brad- 
ley, which  fell  to  13th.  and  In- 
diana, loser  last  week  to  Michi- 
gan and  Michigan  State.  The 
Hoosiers  are  unranked  this 
week. 

Louisville  m  o  v  e  d  up  two 
places  to  sixth  on  the  strength 
of  victories  over  DePaul  and  To- 
ledo. UCLA  which  lost  twice  fell 
one  place  to  seventh.  Vanderbilt 
remained  in  the  No.  9  .vpot. 

West  Virginia  heads  the  sec- 
ond ten,  followed  by  St.  Louis, 
Bradley.  California.  Idaho  State 
and  Oklahoma  A&M.  California, 
which  leads  the  Pacific  Coast 
Conference  was  unranked  last 
week. 

The  sea.son's  final  pojl  will  be 
released  next  week. 

The  top   10  teams   with  first 


place  votes  and  won-lost  records 
through  Saturday,  March  2  in 
parentheses  (points-  on  a  10.  9. 
8.  7,  6,  5,  4,  3.  2,  1  basis): 

1.  UNC  (55)  (24-0)  711 

2.  Kansas  (8)  (29-2)  605 

3.  Kentucky  (1)  (22-4)  476 

4.  SMU  (1)  (21-3)  399 

5.  Seattle  (5)  (22-2)  331 

6.  Louisville  (1)  (20-5)  194 

7.  UCLA    (21-4)   188 

8.  Michigan  State  (14-7)  ..     122 

9.  Vamlerbilt  (17-5)  115 

It).  Oklahoma  City  (2)  (17-8)   101 


SECOND  TEN 

11.  West  Virginia  (22-4)       ..  86 

12.  St..  Louis  (1)  (18-7) 83 

13.  6radley   (19-5)    80 

l4._C«lifornia    (18-4)    72 

15.' Idaho  State  (24-2)  64 

16.  Okla.   A&M  (16-8)  63 

17.  low?  State  (16-6)  ..., 54 

18.  Miss.   State  (17-8       47 

19.  Memphis  State  (21-5)  ...  39 

20.  Wake  Forest '(18-8)  37 

St.  Peter's  (NJ)  received  two 
first  place  votes. 


Howard  Johnson  Restaurant 


BREAKFAST 


LUNCH 


DINNER 

SNACKS 
"Landmark  For  Hungry  Tarheels' 


Lemon  Looks  For  Rough  Year 


BUT  TAR  HEELS  GO  UNBEATEN 


M 


Gamecocks  And  Terps 
Win  Statistics  Titles 


j       GREENSBORO     —(AP)— South 
I  Carolina   and    Maryland    apparent- 
'  ly    have    sewed    up    the    offensive 
and   defensive   team   titles   in   At- 
!  lantic    Coast    Conference    basket- 
ball for  19^7.  but  unbeaten  North 
l^ar^lina    neverthless    has    sound 
statistical    proof    of    why    it    was 
able   to  complete  i^s  regular  .^^ea- 
1  son   without   a  defeat. 

'  South  Carolina  has  an  offensive 
I  average  ot  8:i.7  points  after  scor- 
ing li3  against  Clemson  Saturday 
!  night,  with  the  Tar  Heels  second 
:  at  80.3.  Maryland's  average  point 
<  yield  is  60.3  points,  compared  ta 
j  the  63.0  of  Wake  Forest  and  th« 
I  65.5   of   North   Carolina. 

But  the  Tar  Heels  according  to 
latest   regular-season   comQilations 


ner.  Tournament  games  count  in 
final  tabulations  since  they  are 
part  of  the  season. 

N.  C.  State  is  No.  1  from  the 
floor  with  an  accuracy  mark  of 
43.8  per  cent.  But  close  behind 
ire  Wake  Forest  43.5,  North  Caro- 
lina 43.3  and  Maryland  42.9.  Other 
FG  percentages  arc  Virginia  41.8, 
South  Carolina  41.4  Clemson  40.3 
and  Duke  38.6. 

Wake  Forest  at  74  per  cent  ac- 
curacy tops  the  free  throw  shoot- 
ing division,  with  Clemson  the 
only  clcse  challenger  at  73.4  per 
cent.  Trailing  ar?  Maryland  71.3. 
North  Carolina  70.8.  South  Caro- 
lina 70.1,  Duke  68.4.  Virginia 
67.8   and   N.   C.    State  66.9. 

N.   C.    State    and    Clemson   have 


TUCSON.  Ariz  _(AP)—  Bob 
Lemon  of  the  Cleveland  Indians 
believes  this  season  will  be  the 
toughest  in  years  for  any  Ameri- 
can League  pitcher  to  win  20 
games. 

"The  race  is  going  to  be  closer," 
the  big  right  hander  predicted  to- 
day.. 'Detroit  and  Boston  are  bet- 
ter. So  are  other  clubs.  You  aren't 
going  to  see  two   or  three   teams 


BOOKS   OF    SPECIAL 
INTEREST    FOR   LENT     j 

Bibles   —   Revised   Standard    from  | 
$3.25  up.  King  James  version  $1.50 ' 
up,  The  Interpreter's  Bible.  $8.75 
per  volume  ' 

Books   for   Bible   Scholars,  Concot 
dances,    including    the    new    Con-  j 
cordance  for  the  Revised  Standara  \ 
Version,    Bible   Dictionaries.    Bible  i 
Atlase.-.   Bible   commentary. 

Paper-Backed       Religious       Books 

place  the  works  of  great  religious 
thinkers,  from  St.  Francis  and  St. 
Thomas  .A.quinas  to  ReinhoJd  Nie- 
buhr  within  your  reach. 

Inspirational  Books,  book  of  daily 
meditations,  the  works  of  C.  a. 
Lewis  and  J.  B.  Phillips,  contem- 
porary evangelists 

i  THE  INTIMATE 

I  BOOKSHOP 

205  East  Franklin  Street 


get   far   ahead   of   the   rest.   This 
year  it  will  be  dog  eat  dog." 

The  fact  he  can  become  the 
third  pitcher  in  American  League 
history  to  be  a  20-game  winner 
eight  times  doesn't  seem  to  make 
any  difference  to  Lemon.  Only 
Walter  Johnson  and  Bob  Grove  i 
have   done   it.  I 


20th  Century-Fox 


CINE^^S^OPE^ 


NOW  PLAYING 


earolin^ 


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from  *^® 


•  No  matter  what  the  item 
may  be— drugs,  sundries,  nu- 
tritional aids,  sickroom  sup- 
plies, baby  needs— you  will 
find  it  at  this  fine  pharmacy. 
Make  this  your  family  drug 


store— headquarters  for  de- 
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>ure  to  bring  us  your  Doc- 
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know,  careful  com:v>unding 
by  experts  is  our  spefrialty! 


Sutton's  Drug  Store 

Phone  9-8781 
"The  Tar  Heel's 
Prescription  Center" 


by  the  ACC  Service  Bureau,  boast !  averaged  the  most   personal  fouls. 


an  average  scoring  margin  of  14.8 
points  a  game  over  the  opposition, 
while  the  Gamecocks  have  man 
aged  to  outscore  the  opposition 
only  4.5  points  a  game  and  Mary- 
land 4.1. 

South  Carolina  also  leads  team 
rebound  avorage  with  51  a  game, 
but  North  Carolina  boasts  an  aver- 
age margin  of  11.1  rebounds  a 
game  over  opposition,  easily  be.st 
in  the  league. 

In  field  goal  shooting,  the  race 
is  so  close  betwen  four  teams  il 
will  take  Qte  championship  tour- 
nament to  decide  the  season  wln- 


19.4  a  game,  while  Maryland  is 
lops  in  personal  *foul  avoidance 
with   only    16.4    personals   a   game 


TECNNICOLOII 


THE    NEW   YORK   LIFE   AGENT 

ON  YOUR  CAMPUS 
IS  A  GOOD  MAN  TO  KNO\^ 

George  L  Coxhead 


UNC,   '42 
A<  Mutual    Company 


Campus  Representative 
Founded  1845 


IMEVIf  YORK  LIFE 


Initiation  Ceremonies 

The  Monogram  Club  will  hold 
formal  initiation  ceremonies  to- 
morrow night  for  32  n#w  mem- 
bers. Chancellor  Robert  B. 
House  will  speak  at  8  p.m. 
President  John  Bilich  has  urged 
all  club  members  to  be  on  hand 
•t  7:30  p.m. 


T. 


.    . .  GARY  P'"*" ^''^'f  RUTH 

L'^.GOOPER  ROMAN 


¥ 


rS-,  STEVE 

COCHRAN 


Ip 


R.\YMOND  MASSey  •»•" 

BARBARA  PAYTON     STUART  HEISLER 


TODAY 
ONLY 


fMettr^ 


Open  Wednesday  All  Day 
—  Until  July 

""        'Special  For  Wednesday  Only  — 
''>>guiar  Value  $1.98  3x6  Rugs  For  Only  $1.00 
Sheets  -  72x108  For  Only  $1.79 
MIlow  Cases  —  39*  Value.  Three  For  $1.00 
ROTC   BOYS, 
We  Have  A  New  Supply  Of:     --' 
Khaki  Socks  -  Three  For  $1 .00 
Khaki  Pants 

Brown  And  Black  Shoes  '  ^ 
SHIRT  SALE 
Best  Known  Advertised  Brand.  Samples  (on? 
of  a  kind)  only.  Value  to  $6.00,  colors  and  white 
samples  now  $3.39  each.  S^m^  known  brand 
underwe3r  shorts  ~  Value  to  $3.00  \NKy^^\^ 
Madras  fancy  or  plain  $1.29. 

Same  known  brand,  white  and  fancy  handke^ 
chiefs  —  cotton  and  pure  silk,  up  to  $1.50,  now 
39<  or  three  for  $1.00. 

We  have  a  strong  sale  on  shoes.  Some  Crosby 
Square,  some  not.  Also,  Loafers  from  $5.95  up. 
Lonq  Sleeve  Sport  Shirts:    .  ' 
$3,98  Now  $2.98  '        , 

$4.98  Now  $3.98  -^ 

New  Ivy  League  Dress  Pants 

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Serials     Dept. 
Chapel   Hill,    N.    C, 


WEATHER 

Cloudy  and  cold  with  occasional 
rain  »n4  an  expected  high  of  50. 
Low  last  night  was  40. 


aTarliccl 


SNARL 

That's    the    way    South    Building 
it.  See  editorial,  page  2. 


VOL.  LVII  NO    110 


Complete  (/P)  Wire  Service 


CHAPEL   HILL,   NORTH   CAROLINA,  THURSDAY,  MARCH   7,   1957 


Offices   in   Graham   Memorial 


FOUR  PAGES  THIS  ISSUE 


news 

m 
lirief 


Irish  Voting 

PUBLIN  (AP)— Earaon  de  Va- 
lera  moved  into  an  impressive 
lead  yesterday  in  his  bid  to  regain 
the  prime  ministership  of  the  li'ish 
Republic. 

Oddly,  the  74-year-old  Ameri- 
can-born patriot  ran  into  poten- 
tial difficulties  from  fanatical 
youths  who  have  revived  the  Irish 
Republican  Army  (IRA)  he  once 
led.  I 

The  Revolutionists  who  support 
the  revived  outlaw  IRA  captured 
rtwo  vital  seats  from  "Dev's"  Fi- 
'  anna  Fail  (Men  of  Destiny)  party. 
He  now  favors  union  of  all  Ireland 
by  negotiation  rather  than  force. 
Britain  run^-  northern  Ireland. 


Israeli  Troops  Leave  Gaza  Strip; 
Ships  Clearing  Aqaba  Gulf  Area; 
Operation  Due  Over  By  Thursday 

Di  Senate  Asks  Violence  In  Gaza  Strip 


Council  Is  Discussing 
White,  Negro  Awards 


Reduction  In 
Court  Powers 


As  Withdrawal  Begins 


DR.  SAMUEL  T.  EMORY 

.died  )icre  yesterday  morning 


Dr.  5.  T.  Emory, 
Noted  Geologist 
Dies  In  Hospital 


Dr.   Samuel   T.   Emory,    head    of 
the   Pfe>»*.   of  -Geology     and     Geo- 


posts    and    was    chairman    of    the 
Chapel    Hill    School    Board.    1947- 


Ghana  independence 

ACCRA.  Ghana  (AP)— Vice  I»res- 
ident  Nixon  wound  up  his  four- 
day  visit  to  the  new  nation  of 
I  Ghana  last  night  with  warm  praise 
for  Britain's  "enlightened" 
in  giving  it  independence.  \ 

"Here  in  Ghana,"   he  said,   "wo  | 
have   as   good    an    example    of    a  j 
colonial  pjlicy  at   its  best   as   the! 
world  can  see.  When  we  see  colo- : 
nialism  operating  in   this   fashion, 
it  is  a  force  which  most  objective 
people  in  the  world  will  say  i^-  a 
force   for  good   rather  than   evil."  j 

Nixon  also  told  a  farewell  news  | 
conference  Ghana's  leaders  show- : 
ed  wisdom,  moderation  and  states-  \ 
mahship  in  establishing  "a  new  i 
and  vital  government  which  can 
.>e  a  shrine  dedicated  to  liberty." 

Morehead 

Scholarships 

Presented 


next  two  weeks. 

Provisions  of  the  proposal  have 


Student  Guilty 
OfTanty  Raid 
Charges  Here 


graphy.     died     Wednesday      al      9    51. 


a.m.   fcllowing    10   days   oi   serious 
illness  and   a   major  operation. 

The  60-year-old  educator  suc- 
cumbed in  N.  C.  Memorial  Hos- 
pital. 

Dr.  Emory  joined  the  faculty  in 
1933  and  assumed  the  position  of 
acting  chairman  of  the  Dept.  of 
Geology  and  Geography  in  1949. 
Two  years  later  he  became  the 
chairman  of  th«  dept. 

From  Chase  City,  Va..  where 
he  was  born.  Dr.  Emory  entered 
college  at  Randolph-Macon  and  re- 
ceived his  .\.B.  in  1917  and  M.A. 
in  1918.  He  completed  his  masters 
in  education  at  Columbia  in  1921 
and  received  his  Ph.D.  in  geogra- 
phy from  the  University  of  Chica- 
go in  1939. 

Dr.  Emory  was  active  in  the 
Assn.  of  American  Geographers, 
serving  on  the  membership  com- 
mittee from  1945-1947  and  chair 
man  of  the  honors  committee. 
1956. 

Other  professional  affiliations 
were  the  National  Council  of 
Georgraphy  Teachers.  American 
Geographic  Society,  Society  -of 
Sigma  Xi.  Elisha  Mitchell  Scientif 
ic  Society.  North  Carolina  Acad- 
emy of  Science  and  the  Carolina 
Ge-^logical  Society. 

While  here.  Dr.  Emory  held 
numerous  committee  and  advisory 

LEGISLATURE  ADVANCE: 


During   the    1954-55    school    yeai 
Dr.  Emory  taught  on  the  faculty  , 
of   the   Swedish   and   Finnish   Uni- 
versities in  Helsinki.  Finland,  un-  j 
der  the  auspices  oi  the  Fulbright  j 
Program.  I 

His     writings     included     mono- 
graphs   and    articles    for    profess- 1 
ional   journals,   such   as  "Eccnom-  ] 
ic   Georgraphy."    "The    State"   and  i 
"North    Carolina    Education." 

Commenting  on  Dr.  "Emory's 
death.  Chancellor  Robert.  B. 
House  said:  'We  have  always  been 
grateful  for  Sam  Emory,  both  as 
a  teacher  and  a  friend.  He  was  an 
outstanding  man  and  a  fine  edu- 
cator, whose  death  comes  as  a  great 
loss  to   the   University." 

Funeral  services  will  be  held 
Friday,  March  8.  at  the  Chapel  of 
the  Cross.  Chapel  Hill,  at  3  p.m. 
I  Interment  will  be  in  the  old  Chap- 
el Hill  cemetery.  The  family  has 
requested  that  flowers  be  omitted. 
Surviving  Dr.  Emory  are  one 
daughter.  Mrs.  W.  H.  Rogers  of 
Miami.  Fla.,  one  son.  Samuel  T. 
Emory  Jr.,  a  gradutite  student  at 
the  University  of  Maryland;  and 
three  sisters:  Mrs.  T.  B.  Harris  and 
Mrs.  B.  M.  Garner  of  Emporia, 
Va.;  and  Mrs.  Eva  Mosley  of  White 
Plains.  Va.  Mrs.  Emory,  the  form,- 
er  Mary  Dortch  of  Goldsboro,  died 
'in  1952. 


By  CLARKE  JONES  [  not  been   finally  determined.  The 

A    proposal    to    award    scholar-   mea,>jre  is  still  in  its  early  stages 
ship.'    to    white    and    Negro    high   of    development,     the     spokesman 
school  graduates  within  the  Chap-   said, 
el  Hill-Carrboro  area  who  wish  to    SEPARATE  STUDY 
attend  the  University  is  currently       Tp^   student   groups   within   the 
being    discussed    by    the    Campus   Council  are  currently  studying  the 

Christian  Council.  j  proposal    separately    and    are    ex-  ,       ,  j.     ..         ,  .  . 

A    spokesman    for    the    Council   pected  to  report  to  the  full  group. '  "^^  ^82^^"^'"^^""  «^  P"^^'"  '"^S*^^" 
policy  I  said  a  final  vote  on  the  proposal   possibly    by    Monday,    March     18, 
may    be    forthcoming    within    the  1  according  to  the  spokesman. 

The  proposal  was  drawn  up  re- 
cently and  presented  to  the  CCC 
Afonday  night.  It  was  referred  to 
the  various  groups  for  study. 

Bill  Kane,  chairman  of  the  CCC, 
could  not  be  reached  for  comment 
a  •  of  late  Wednesday  afternoon. 

The  Campus  Christian  Council  is 
composed  of  all  Protestant  Chris- 
tian   church    groups    represented 
on  the  campus.' 
SIMILAR 
A  similar  proposal  was  brought 
Richard   F.   Thiele,   UNC   senior   up  recently  before  the  Chapel  Hill 
from     Atlanta,     Ga.,     was     found  !  Ministerial  Assn.  The  measure'  re- 
guilty  Tuesday  morning  in  Chapel  ;  ferred    to    the    assn.    would    have 
Hill    Recorder's   Court   on    charges  [  provided    for    the"  scholars-hips    to 
of  disorderly  conduct  during   Fri-  |  be     financed     by     the     Interracial 
day  night's  panty  raid.  j  Fellowship  in  connection  with   lo- 

Thiele  pleaded  guilty  of  the  us^  !  cal  white  and  Negro  churches, 
of    prof{\ne    lavguage    directed  '  «4i      Nothing  ^as    done^  about    this 
a  Chapel  Mill  policeman  during  tht-  j  proposal   by   tTie   Ministerial   Assn., 
Thirty-two     Morehead      Scholar- ' ''""^^>'   "ight    panty    raid   and   was    however.    It    is    thought    the    CCC 
ship,    each    wotth    $5,000    over    a ' '"^'^''^^'^  wflh   the  costs  of  court.      .measure  is  related  to  this  one. 
four    year    period,    were    awarded ' 
last    night     to     members     of    the 
freshman  class  of  1957-58.  This  se- 
lection  was   made  from   600   pros- 
pects   selected    from    North    Caro- 
lina high  schools  and  prep  schools. 
It    t->ok   several    months    to   come 
up  with  the  thirty-two  final   win- 
ners. 

The  winners  are:  Chas.  E.  Torr. 
Conover;  Angus  Maclea"  Duff, 
Greenville;  Flody  T.  Bryan.  Ahos- 
kie;  Chas  M.  Whedbec.  Hertford; 
N.  W.  Bell.  Elizabeth  City;  David 
Lee  Grigg.  Albermarle:  Rob't  L. 
Smith,  Albemarle;  R.  T.  Corbett, 
Charlotte;  L.  B.  Au.«;tin  HI,  Chat- 
tanooga. Tenn.;  L.  H.  Gump.  John- 
son City.  Tenn.;  H.  A.  Ragsdale, 
I  Jr..  Richlands;  R.  H.  Walldorf, 
Chattanooga.  Tenn.;  J.  H.  Warner. 
I  Lookout  Mt.,  Tenn.;  F.  H.  Craig- 
hill  III.  Henderson;  C.  H.  Tiffany. 
Warrenton,  Va.;  C.  W.  Weaver. 
Jr..  Greensboro;  D.  A.  Brooks. 
Burlington;  Ronald  A.  Koonts. 
High  Point;  W.  L-  Wilkinson. 
High  Point;  L.  0.  Rush.  Asheboro; 
D.  W.  Hearn,  Laurinburg;  R.  V. 
Fulk,    Jr..    Wilmington;    Chas.    P. 


JKRl'SALEM— (AP)— I.sraeli    troop-s   and   adiiiiiiistraiors 

A  bill  calling  for  a  reduction  of.  headed  home  From  the  (ia/a  Strip  last  night  in  a  wiilidrawal 

the  powers  of  the  U.  S.  Supreme    operation  due  to  be  completed  bv  7  p.m.  Tliufsdav. 


Court  was  passed  by  a  vote  of  7-4  \ 
Tuesday  night  in  the  Dialectic 
Senate's  third  regular  meeting  of 
the  semester. 

The    original     purpose     of     the 
Court  and  its  long  history  of  grad- 


I  fully   belonging  to  the   lepslative 
branch  of  the  Federal  Government 
1  was    outlined    by    Senator    Roths- 
'  child,  who  further  stated  that  "the 
j  Supreme    Court   .   .   .  t:an   confuse 
Congress,  interpret  Congress,  mis- 
interpret  Congress,   and   is   trying 
I  to  legislate  for  Congress.' 

Senior  Senator  Barrow,  speak- 
ing in  defense  of  the  Court,  point 
ed  out  that  its  justices  have  a 
unique  and  difficult  job  and  are 
performing  it  admirably.  He  was 
upheld  in  hi»-  views  by  Sergeant 
at  Arms  Avery  •  and  Senatoi 
Holmes,  who  nfiaintained  that  the 
court  "stands  as  the  guardian  of 
our  fundamental  liberties'  and 
that  it  is  a  necessary  and  logical 
part  of  our  Federal  Government. 

IDC  Meets  Torught 

The  IDC  will  meet  tonight  at  7 
p.m.  on  the  top  floor  of  New  East. 
Sonny  Hallford,  4DC  President, 
urges   ail   members   to   be   present. 


IN  WOOLLEN  GYM 


Dentists  Win  Co-Rec  Carnival 


Four  Measures  Slated 
For  Legislature  Today 

By  NEIL  BASS  j  ducket   during  tonight's  session. 

I      Two  are  appropriations  bills  to- 
Four  measures  are  slated  to  ap-   .„ij„a  cosa 

pear  on  the  Student  Legislatures 

^  —    .  . ■ rphe  other  two  measures  are:- 


Graham,  Jr.,  Wilmington;  D.  S. 
Harris.  Rocky  Mount;  R.  P.  Fox- 
W01LI3.  Raleigh;  W.  A.  Wilson.  Jr., 
Raleigh;  D.  E.  Cooper.  Gary;  R.  J. 
Hollers.  Durham;  W.  E.  Stepp. 
Marion;  G.  H.  Walker,  Hayesville; 
J.    H.    Miller,    Asheville;     G.     M. 

Eargle,  Thomasville. 

— 1 ( 


By  WALT   SCHRUNTEK 

Monkey  business,  hi-jinks  and  a 
barrel-full  of  laughs  were  the  or- 
der of  business  at  the  Co-Rcc 
Sports  Carnival  in  Woollen  Gym. 
Tuesday  night. 

The  program,  which  saw  over 
500  delighted  contcs-tants  and  spec- 
I  tators  on  nand,  was  ^e  tenth  such 
j  event  sponsored  by  the  Inlramu- 
I  ral  Department  and  the  Women's 
I  Athletic  Association. 
I  Carnival  games,  relays  and 
.  team  sports  provided  the  fun  and 
I  good  -humored  sportsmanship 
j  which  prevailed  over  the  carnival 
I  atmosphere  for  contestants  and 
I  spectator.^  as  well. 
I  The  carnival  games  were  a  con- 
1  slant  source  of  early  amusement 
i  in  the  program  with  such  events 
!  as  candle  blowing,  top  spinning, 
i  marbles,  nail  driving,  rocket  darts, 
bounccball,  and  basketball  crip 
shooting. 

The  games  were  open  to  all  par- 
ticipants   and    teamed    boys    with 
coeds    in    an    overall    competition 
against  the  rest  of  the  field 
While  the  carnival  play  held  the 


limelight  on  the  gym  floor,  other 
aotivities  such  as  badminton,  vol- 
ley ball,  table  tennis,  archery, 
skish,  tether  ball,  shuffleboard  and 
box  hockey  were  con.stant  sources 
of  competition  and  good-natured 
rivalry  in  various  sections  of  the 
main  gym,,,  w.omen's  gym.  Tin 
Can  and  indoor  pool. 

At  8:30  the  real  fun  began.  Re- 
lay teams  were  formed  under  their 
organizational  banners  and  coed 
team  competition  highlighted  the 
evening  of  friendly  competition 
and  sometimes  uproarious  rivalry. 
Anyone  who  has  never  attempt- 
ed to  balance  a  tennis  ball  between 
his  and  hi^'  partner's  head  in  a 
headlong  race  from  a  start  to  fin- 
ish line  against  time  and  other 
equally  handicapped  competition, 
doesn't  know  what  he's  miissing  — 
or  missed  by  not  being  there  as  a 
spectator. 

At  the  completion  of  the  relays, 
the  contestants  grouped  around 
the  judges  stand  for  the  official 
presentation  of  trophies  to  individ- 
ual and  team  winneiv  of  the  vari- 
ous events. 
The  overall  Carnival  winner  was 


the  Dental  School  (a  winner  last 
year)  and  Duke  II  (one  of  the  three 
girl's  teams  provided  by  the  neigh- 
boring school)  with  a  total  of  19 
points.  Second  wa.>;  Alpha  Gam  I 
and  Law  School  with  14' 2  points 
while  third-place  went  to  Smith 
Dorm  and  Pi  Kappa  Alpha  with  14 
points. 

In  the  relays,  Zeta  Psi  and  Duke 
III  captured  top  honors. 

Winners  of  the  individual  event* 
are  as  follows:  1.  Tether  ball.  Chi 
Omega  and  Carolyn  Suffcrt;  2. 
Table  Tennis.  Alpha  Gam  IL  Phi 
Kappa  Sigma,  Jennie  Meadow  and 
Tank  Goin.^-;  3.  Skish,  Dental 
School  and  G.  C.  Taylor:  4.  Box 
hockey,  Sigma  Nu  anc'l  Bill  Morgan; 
5.  Carnival  games  Joan  Willsey 
and  Walt  Wilson;  6.  Archery.  Al- 
pha Gam  I,  Law  School,  Ann  Burt 
and  Scotty  Hester;  7.  Shuftle- 
board.  Alpha  Delta  Pi  II.  St.  An- 
thoney  Hall.  Susan  Edmundson  and 
Bill  Ru^el;  and  8.  Badminton. 
Duke  II,  Dental  School,  Wye  Toh 
Luke  and  Polly   Beddoe. 

A  four-place  tie  resulted  in  vol- 
ley-ball competition.  '   ■ 


Others  based  on  the  .\(|aba  (iuif  coast  loaded  tlieii  etpiip- 
mem  aboardship  at  Sharn!   Kl  Sheikh  lor  a  similai    pulloui. 

liie  exofhis  (ame  as  Prime  Minister  l)a\id  Ikn-diirion 
receixed  overuhelmino  endorsement  ol'  his  poli(  \  lioni  parlia- 
ment. There  was  xioience  in  Gaza. 

I'.X.  Kmeriiency  Force  troops  moved  into  tlie  (iaza 
Sirif).  home  to  about  2;^o.ooo  .\iab  refugees  of  tlie  Palestine 
war  ol  i<)|H  laij^ely  siij)j)orted  by  the  I'.N.  Works  and  Rebel 
.\oeiuy. 

The  Israeli  Army  announced  "the  achninistration  of 
the  Sharm  Kl  Sheikh  area  wij}  be  tran.slerred  to  the  l^NEF 
by  the  Israeli  Defense  Forces  <m  Friday,  March  8.  "  implvinof 
Israel  would  retain  possession  of  that  base  on  tiie  C.uli  about 
pS  houLs. 

liut  r.\.  sources  in  Cairo  said  the  Israeli  withdrawal 
from  Sharm  F.l  Sheikh  is  progressing  ra[)idly.  Train  .stations 
in  Cairo  were  c  rowded  with  Palestine  .\rabs  seekin<4  to  return 
to  Cia/a'. 

The. historic  changeover  in  Ca/a  was  started  under  cover 
of  darkness,  Aviih  tlie  .\iab  |)opulation  forced  to  remain  in- 
doors under  a  rif^id  c  uriew  after  a  flurry  of  disorders  whic  h 
left  an  .\rab  cixilian  aiul  an  Israeli  .soldier  dead  and  two 
Israelis  wounded. 

The  l\N.  troops  moved  up  from  Sinai  FJeseri  positicms 
throus>h  the  frontier  town  of  Rafa  to  t;ike  up  vacated  <r\.vd\A 
pests. 

The  Israeli  withdrawals  yiefd  the  final  bits  of  the  vast 
I  territory   Tsrat")   wrested   from    F.u;ypt.,last. ialW  -    '/ 
■  They  pnllccl  (»mi   I)v  order  of  lien-Cnrion.  hmiself  under 

the  pressure  of  a   half  do/en   I'nired   .Nations  resoultions  to 
write  off  these,  fruits  of  invasion. 

Israel's  parliament— torn  by  dis.sension  for  days  o\er  the 
withdrawal  ordei— larj^elv  closed  ranks  behind  Ben-(;uri(»!i 
and  his  conception  that  peace  now  becomes  the  moial  ve- 
sponsibilitv  of  the  Tnited  Sta'tes  and  oihcr  ii.uions  which 
swaved   him   in   the  decision. 

I>y  margins  of  more  than  '^-to-i.  the  le:..>islatc^rs  swe|)t 
aside  motions  of  ncmconlidenc  e  presented  l)y  three  opposition 
parties. 


THIS    la   A   OA»v\t? 

.  .  .  co-rec  nifiht  type 


GM'S  SLATE 


Activities  in  Oraham  Memori- 
al today   include: 

Fraternity  and  sorority  social 
chairmen,  4:30-6,  Roland  Parker 
Lounges  Nos.  2  and  3;  Debate 
Squad,  4:30-6,  Grail  Room;  Fi- 
nance Committee,  4-6,  Wood- 
house  Conference  Room;  SP 
Caucus,  6.30-7:15,  Roland  Par- 
ker Lounge  No.  3;  UP  Caucus, 
6-7:30,  Roland  Parker  Lounge 
No.  1;  Panhellenic  and  IFC,  7- 
f:3C,  WoodhoMse  Conference 
Room  and  Grail  Room;  YWCA, 
7'9,  Main  Lounge;  Petite  Dra- 
matrque,  7-10:30,  Roland  Parker 
Lounge  No.  2. 


(1)  A  bill  establishing  a  com- 
mittee to  investigate  the  "feasi- 
bility" of  organizing  a  campus  hu 
mor  magazine. 

(2)  A  bill  placing  the  .-ludent  di- 
rectory and  Carolina  Handbook 
under  student  government's  Pub- 
lications Board. 

One  of  the  appropriations  bills 
calls  for  payment  of  $750  from 
student  government's  general  sur- 
plus fund  to  the  UNC  band  to  de- 
fray transportation  expenses  for  a 
spring  tour'. 

Larlier  this  assembly,  the  legis- 
lature appropriated  $1,000  to  the 
Mens  Glee  Club  to  defray  trano- 

(See  MEASURES,  Page  3.^ 


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LAST  MINUTE  INSTRUCTIONS 

. . .  but  1  don't  understand 


_U''s— L. 


-^iL^ 


A  Relay  race 
.  in  the  homestretch 


>,      ■*  '  ,* 


tim£  for  a  brsak 

. . .  rest  after  rec 


..      A^M 


PAGi    TWO 


THI  DAILY  TAR  >fieL 


THURSDAY,  MARCH  7,  19S^ 


Faith  Can  Move  Mountains, 
But  Not  Old  South  Building 

There  are  many  situations  around  this  campus  that  need  correcting, 
but  there  is  one  in  South  Building  that  needs  absolute,  immediate  at- 
tention. 

It  is  the  simple  fact  that  a  great  many  students  have  had  tlieir  sched- 
ules fouled  up,  their  graduation  rate  changed,  mostly  because  of  inef- 
ficient secretaries  and  administrators  in  South  Building. 

For  tluxse  who  doubt  the  range  of  this  problem,  ue  recommend 
that  they  stop  and  question  the  next 


lo  |)epple  they  see.  Chances  are, 
seven  of  them  will  be  ^nursing  a 
long-term  grudge  against  South 
Building.  And  it  will  be  a  well- 
founded  grudge.    ' 


Here  is  one  example,  for-  thovse 
who  don't  want  to  take  the  time 
to  question   lo  students: 

.\  freshman  came  here  well 
grounded  in  F.nglish.  He  was  so 
well  grounded  that  he  took  a  test 
;ind  passed  both  English  i  and  2. 
He  wa»>  happy  ])«ause  of  iiis  ac- 
(oniplishments,  ai  least  until  his 
junior  year. 

In  his  juiiioi  year  his  Cieneral 
Ck)llege  advisors  told  him  he  would 
liot  be  leaving  the  General  Col- 
lege. He  did  not  have  the  required 
C  average.   •  ^ 

"But.  ■  protested  the  student.  "I 
skipped  two  semesters  of  Englisl'i 
«u<l  got  As  for  both  courses.  The 
(ieneral  College  told  me  so,  and 
so  did  my  F.nglish  instructors." 

The  Cieneral  College  reviewed 
the  tudents  case,  and  decided  he 
^vould  not  be  awarded  the  quality 
poiius  promised  him  two  years  be- 
lore.  The  student  was  plunged  in- 
to an  academic  chaos. 


Another  student  transferred  here 
from   N.  C.  State  College  in  Ral- 
eigh, a  member    of    the    so-called 
C'.onsolidatctT'   I'niversity. 

1  le  had  jjlanncd  to  take  two  years 
his  advisors  at  State  tliis:  they  as- 
siy;ncd  courses  to  hiq),  that  would 
easily  transfer  to  Carolina's  sched- 
ule. 

He  came  to  Carolina.  His  ad- 
visors here  chuckled  and  threw  out 
half  the  courses  he  had  taken  at 
State.  Thev  didn't  count  for  credit 
here. 

*  «  * 

In  many  cases  it  is  ignorance  oX 
secretaries  are  studeiu's  wives,  and 
willul  neglect,  that  causes  the 
tvoulile.  .\lany  of  .South  Buildings 
secretaries  arc  ttuleiu's  wives,  and 
are  working  to  get  tjieir  husbands- 
through  school  or  until  the  first 
babv  arrives. 

Also    to   blame     is    the     present 


The  Dally  Tar  Heel 


The  official  itudeni  publicatron  of  Ibe 
Publications  Board  o!  the  University  ol 
Nofth  Carolina,  where  it  is  published 
ia\\j  except  Monday  and  examinatiot 
■Pd  vacation  periods  and  .summer  terms 
Entered  a.«  second  class  matter  in  tht 
XHisi  office  in  f'haprl  Hill,  N  C,  und«i 
ihe  Act  01  March  8.  1870.  SubscriptioB 
ratc.i:  mailod.  $4  per  year.  $2.50  a  semea 
ter;  delivered.  S6  a  year.  13.30  a.  acmea 
ter 


Editor 


FRED  POWLEDGI 


Managing  Editor 


CHARLIE  SLOAN 


News  Editor 


NANCY  HILL 


Sports  Editor 


LARRY  CHEER 


Business  Manager 


6ILL  BOB  PL'EL 


♦red 


KATZCV 


Advertising  Manager    .> 

EDITORIAL     STAl'^    —    Woody     Sean, 
Joey  Payne,  Stan  Shan 


NEWS  STAFF^-Clarke  Jones,  Pringle 
Pipkin,  Edith  MacKinnon,  Wally  Ku- 
ralt,  Mary  Alys  Voorhe«s,  Graham 
Snyder.  Neil  Bass,  Bob  High,  Ben 
Taylor,  Walter  SchniBtek,  H-Joost  Po- 
lak.   Patsy  Miller,   Bill  King. 

BUSINESS  STAFF— Row  Moore,  Johnny 

Whitaker,  Dick  Leavitt. 

SPORTS  STAFF:  Dave^Wible,  Stewart 
Bird,  Ron  Milligan. 


SabscriptioQ  Manager  _ 

Circulation  Manager  

Assistant  Sports  Editor 


.  Dale  Staley 

CbarUe  Holt 

.Bill  King 


Staff  Photographer t  Woody  Sears, 

Norman  Kantor 
Librarians    Sue  Gichner,  Marilyn  Strum 


Night  Editoi'^ 

Might  News  Edit<H-  _ 
Proof  Reader  


Graham  Snyder 
•    Wally  Kuralt 
Ben  Taylor 


schedule  for  assigning  advisors  and 
deans,  .\dvisors  arc  also  instructors; 
during  certain  times  of  the  year- 
such  as  preregistiation— they  can- 
not .see  all  the  students  who  want 
to  see  thein,  and  long  lines  appear. 
When  they  do  see  their  students, 
it  is  otily  for  a  few  minutes. 

Deans  also  teach  courses.  They 
are  not  necessarily  administrators, 
bill  facMlty  members  who  admin- 
istrate for  a  certain  portion  of  the 
dav.    riiis.   too.   is  bad. 

South  Building  deans  aiid  a,d- 
visors  also  appear  to  have  no  real 
authority.  What  one  says,  anoihei 
may  cancel.  Manv  students  go 
through  registration  lints  on  the 
advice  of  one  advisor,  only  to  find 
th.-^.'t  what  they  are  doing  is  con- 
sidered wrong  by  a  dean  or  anothei 
ad%isor. 


.\nd  it  is  practically  iinpossibie 
to  get  a  dean  or  advisor  to  plit 
something  down  in  pen  and  ink 
and  expect  tiie  I'niversity  to  keep 
its  signed  and  printed  word.  If  the 
dean  or  the  college  or  the  school 
changes  its  mind,  then  the  prev- 
ious commital  means  absolutely 
nothing. 

The  result  of  all  this  mess  is  a 
deep  bog  of  quicksand  lor  the  stu- 
dent who  allows  his  average  to 
descend  anywhere  near  the  Al- 
mighty C  .Vveiage.  He  goes 
through  fc>ur  years  of  confusion, 
frustration  and  bewilderment,' 
not  really  knowing  whether  he  will 
gtaduate  or  not. 

The  people  of  South  liuilding. 
who  decide  whether  or  JK»t  the 
.student  <fradiiates,  or  get.s  credit 
for  this  and  that,  are  confused  and 
frustiated  themselves.  Tliey  seem 
to  have  no  clear  |x)licy,  no  idea  of 
what  is  right..  They  teiKJ  instead 
to  refer  students  to  the  next  in 
line.  .And  the  line  is  usually  vei7 
long. 

Set  letaries  administrate  i:i  South 
Building.  They,  above  all  others, 
aic  primarilv  responsible  for  the 
confusion  that  is  stapled  to  a  stu- 
deiu's ie(ord.  .\nd.  really,  that 
(ant  Ix*  blamed  too  heavilv:  they 
a>e  gei»eral]y  not  supposed  to  be 
st,-< retries  ai  all.  but  hotisewives 
who  kimw  how  to  tvpe  and.  some- 
times, to  take  shorthand. 

*  *  * 

No  mattei  what  the  ciicum- 
siaiues  are,  Semth  Building  has  no 
excuse  lor  its  ptK>r  handling  of 
students'  records.  For— and  South 
Building  knows  this— right  now  a 
stttdent's  retold  is  a  most  valuable 
thing.  To  i>iost  people,  it  is  even 
move  valuable  that)  aji  education. 
It  should  not  be  fouled  up. 

Yet  South  Building  continually 
fouls  up  records,  issues  conflicting 
advice  and  decisions,  and  when  it 
ii  caught  in  the  act.  it  shuts  its 
mouth  and  pretends  to  be  above 
all  criticism,  ft  takes  on  a  strange 
dignity.  .\nd  it  goes  on  fouling  up 
records. 

11  you  doubt  this,  tiy  to  get 
someone  in  South  Building  to  say, 
in  writing,  that  you  are  actually  a 
junior,  or  a  senior,  01  whatever 
you  aie,  with  thus-and-so-many 
({iiality  points. 

*  •  * 

As  one  exasf>erated  mothei  of  a 
rniversity  .student  told  hci  son 
the  other  day: 

"If  you  graduate  in  June,  I'll  be 
happy.  But  I  won't  let  myself  be- 
lieve you're  actually  go^ng  to 
graduate  until  I  see  you  in  Kenan 
Stadium  with  the  diploma  in  your 
hand.  I  don't  have  much  faith  in 
the  administration  any  more." 

Faith  in  the  administration  of 
a  big  and  old  university  like  Car- 
olina is  an  important,  an  essential, 
thing.  South  Building  deans  and 
administrators  must  not  forget  this. 
They  really  should  do  something 
to  '•egain  that  faith,  f>efore  it  is  all 
lost. 


New  Quarterly  Disappointing: 
Too  Little  Student  Writing 

Quaiteii 


Jackie  Cooper 

I  was  not  on  the  campus  when 
the  Winter  Carolina  Quarterly 
came  from  the  press.  However, 
two  hoiu*s  after  I  came  back,  I 
faithfully  handed  Paul  Smith  52 
cents  for  a  copy. 

Faithfully,  I  say;  I  did  nit 
even  bother  to  open  it,  be- 
cause I  had  no  doubt  that  the 
winter  issue  would  be  even 
better  than  the  fall  issue,  which 
I  read  and  enjoyed  from  Thom- 
as Wolfe  to  book  reviews. 

Nevertheless,  I  was  disep- 
^intMl  with  the  Pall  Quarterly 
because  ef  the  leek  of  locel 
talent.  However,  because  of  the 
quality  of  the  articles,  I  was 
content  to  overlook  this  fail- 
vre  of  the  Quarterly  staff. 

In  the  new  Quarterly,  1  first 
of  all  read  Frances  Bennett's 
•'The  Wagon  Wheel"  because  1 
had  heard  of  her.  I  knew  that 
^e  was  a  student  here  last  se- 
mester. Miss  Bennett  charming- 
ly and  vividly  tells  us  a  story  of 
a  sinful  aunt  in  Mississippi.  She 
provolces  our  imagination  with 
her  many  descriptive  phrases  that 
clearly  show  us  that  she  sees 
the  world  about  her  through  very 
sensitive  eyes. 

Many  of  us  have  probably  bad 
the  same  thdughts  about  many  oi 
the  same  observations.  It  Is  al- 
ways pleasant  to  discover  that 
someone  else  had  the  same 
thought  as  wc,  and  has  recorded 
it  for  us. 

*  *  * 

But  then  1  began  to  look  for 
another  story  or  poem  by  anoth 
cr  writer  who  is  this  year  en- 
rolled in  the  University.  I  did  not 
find  it.  Furthermore.  I  didn't 
like  what  I  did  find. 

What  I  did  find  caused  me  to 
qu?stion  just  what  need  the 
Quarterly  is  supposed  to  meet  on 
the  campus.  What  is  it  the  stu- 
dents, represented  by  the  Publi 
cations  Board,  are  asking  in  re- 
tarn  for  their  financial  support, 
taken  from  student  fees? 

The  discontinuation  of  Tar- 
nation, which  was~  not  even  sup- 
ported by  the  .student  budget,  it, 
,  an  example  of  what  happens 
when  a  publication  doesn't  de- 
fine and  take  seritnisly  Its  re- 
sponsibility to  its  readers  and 
supporters. 


SIDEBAR: 


I 


Af^^fj^ld  'hUrJ^^h 


Why  should  students  con- 
tribute money  to  pay  for  print- 
ing articles  by  some  professor 
in  seme  western  university? 
This  ecoem^ishes  little  mere 
than  building  up  the  ego  of 
the  professor. 

Too.  William  Lanier  Hunt  un- 
doubtedly is  capable  of  writing 
interesting  botanical  books,  but 
this  is  no  reason  why  we  should 
have  to  pay  for  the  reduplica- 
tion of  six  pages  of  his  "forth- 
coming book"  in  our  literary 
magazine.  After  having  read  lit- 
tle eight-year-old  Harry  Peter- 
son's unfinished  story  about  brave 
Pet.r  King,  I  feel  guilty  for  not 
having  submitted  some  of  the 
stories  that  my  little  eight-year 
old   sister  sends  me. 

What's  more,  s.ic  car.  spell 
bridel  and  sadel  correctly.  Just 
think  how  proud  she  w(mld  havs 
b:'en  and  Th-^  Sylva  Herald 
would  probably  have  printed  her 
picture  in  it  and  M  .ther  would 
have  probably  had  a  tea  party 
for  her.  So  nice,  but  I  really 
don't  think  that  her  short  stor- 
ies, even  though  they  arc  hotter 
than  the  incompleted  one  of  lit- 
tle Harry's,  are  enough  to  hail 
her  as  a  child  prodigy,  even 
though  she  is  a  genius. 

However.  I  can  see  great  lit- 
erary accomplishments  for  little 
Harry.  I  have  no  doubts  than  il 
he  learns  to  spell  that  he  will 
make  an  A  on  freshman  theme 
writing  when  he  comes  to  the 
University. 

Now  if  Minou  Drouet  hau  sent 
us  a  poem  equal  to  her  "The 
Skies  of  Paris."  I  think  that  we 
might  have  leaned  over  back- 
wards and  printed  it. 

But  the  point  is  that  the  pur- 
pose of  the  Carolina  Quarterly 
is  not  to  do  this.  The  purpose  of 
the  Quarterly,     unlikp     that     of 


"New  Campus  Writing,"  and  sim- 
ilar publications,  is  to  recognize 
and  encourage  creative  ability  on 
the  campus  of  the  University  of 
North  Carolina,  or  at  mast  among 
students  ^nd  former  students.  The 
annual  fiction  awards  are,  I  rec- 
ognize, an  effort  to  do  this. 

Surely  out  of  over  6.000  stu- 
dents there  are  enough  to  pro- 
vide sufficient  material  of  high 
quality  to  merit  publishing  the 
Quarterly. 

The  Quarterly   Is  a   sleeping 
giant,  with  the  potential  abili- 
ty  to   cause    a    renaissance   of 
creative   work      in     the     seven 
classicel  arts  on  the  campus. 
I  am  certain  that  we  have  stu- 
dents of  writing,  sculpture,  mus- 
ic,   drama    or   painting   who   are 
capably  of  supplying  the  quarter- 
ly  enough    materials   so   that   it 
would  be  unnesessary  to  go  out- 
side Elisha  Mitchell's  walls. 


Reproductions  of  paintings  or 
photoraphs  of  sculpture  by  such 
gifted  students  as  Linda  Vestal 
or  James  Brewer  would  add  much 
to  the  attractiveness  of  the 
Quarterly.  Too,  a  new  melody  by 
a  music  student  or  a  play  by  a 
dramatic  arts  major  might  be 
considered. 

Surely  we  have  persons  on  the 
campus  who  have  more  to  say 
about  modern  art  than  did  Mr. 
Tagliabue.  His  article  is  little 
more  than  a  collection  of  quota- 
tions of  what  the  artists  have  to 
say  about  themselves. 

I  hope  that  the  staff  of  the 
Quarterly  will  accept  the  re- 
sponsibility for  encouraging  and 
recognizing  work  in  the  seven 
arts,  and  I  hope  that  the  stu- 
dents will  respond  by  supplying 
the  Quarterly  with  their  work 
and  maybe'  even  joining  the  staff. 


Full  News  Blackout  Not  Becoming 


Charlie  Sloan 

The  delegation  from  the  Uni- 
versity of  Florida  that  spent 
three  days  last  week  studying  in- 
tegration at  Chapel  Hill  did  a 
thorough  job  of  protecting  the 
people  it  contacted — it  invoked 
a  cemplete  news  blackout. 

Menfbers  of  the  group  even 
hesitated  revealing  the  number 
of   people   they   had   talked    to 
one    morning    for    fear    of    be- 
traying someone's  confidence. 
There  was  no  attempt  to  keep 
this    schedule    a    dark    secret — a 
quick  check    on    meeting    room 
reservations     and     in     officials' 
dates  books  gave  away  where  the 
committee  would  be  spending  its 
time.    But   cooperation      in     the 


form  of  a  typed  list  of  times  and 
places  was  not  to  be  had. 

The  group  had  a  worthy  pur- 
pose—integration is  on  the  way, 
to  becoming  a  reality  in  Florida, 
with  a  case  in  the  State  Supreme 
Court  due  to  appear  on  the  docv 
ket  within  a  few  weeks. 

Sentiment  toward  integration 
in  Florida  is  apparently  not  fav- 
orable. The  University's  Board 
of  Control,  comparable  to  Car- 
olina's Baard  of  Trustees,  handed 
down  a  dictum  forbidding  stu- 
dents to  take  any  part  in  the 
controversy  pro  or  con. 

The  visitors  came  to  see  how 
the  University  met  its  racial  in- 
tegration problems.  They  found 
that  no  violence  accompanied  in- 


tegration. They  found  no  majori- 
ty of  student  opinion  on  either 
side  of  the  .issue. 

Fleming  said  they  did  find 
many  "principles"  that  may  be 
applied  to  Florida,  both  on  and 
off  campus.  He  could  not  specif- 
ically name  one  of  these  princi- 
ples, explaining  that  this  woulc" 
nat  be  worked  out  until  the 
group  had  had  several  meetings 
on  the  trip. 

But  back  to  the  group's  activi- 
ties In  Chapel  Hill. 

The  Y.  the  organization  which 
has     underwritten     this     trip, 
promised  that  al]  individuals  in- 
volved would  rerqain  unknown. 
Fleming's  study  group  has  left 
the  campus  now,  admittedly  tired, 


but  grateful  for  cooperation  un- 
usual in  these  times  of  conform- 
ity  and    half-cocked   accusations. 

Perhaps  all  the  secrecy  sur- 
rounding their  visit  has  been 
good  for  their  cause.  Possibly 
when  their  report  comes  out 
tliree  or  four  weeks  from  now 
some  of  the  opinions  they  heard 
while   here  will  come  out. 

Among  the  people  the  group 
talked  to  were  those  who  had 
something  to  do  with  some  phase 
of  the  integration  process,  some 
of  them  are  already  known,  but 
if  there  are  others  it  was  not 
revealed. 

The  student  body  here  would' 
like  to  know  just  how  integra- 
tion is  doing  in  their  southern, 
once    liberal   University. 


PKjMHPSi 


• 

By  A!  Capp 


REPOKf    rC-<     I 
VVOIK  TOMOPPi;.'^  - 


I'LL  TAKE.  THE  vJOB.rf- 

(-W/T1H  MW /NCf<£ASED 

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M/SS  P/KfPlMTlON  A        Tl  O'CLOCK     f 

s^nv/r/zvc  GOOD  T/M^jy^} 


'~MNiKV>ff 


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By  Walt  Kelly 


You  CAN  -mx  kicA^  -nuT  youVi 

CAM  tmtPtm  MILLION  DOtLA?^  >  1 
WMAT  TMC  $ON6  WIIJU  MAK6 


wow  woui^  >t>u  utce  "»  I 
ftWSrtTlNl 


March  Moments: 
Powerful  Month 

Frank  Crowther 

Although  it  seems  redundant  to  keep  harping, 
"Do  you  know  what  happened  so  many  years  ago 
today"  or  "Guess  what  happened  at  7:16  p.m.  on  this 
same  day  27  years  ^go,"  I  want  to  resort  to  the 
game.  Sometime  these  past  happenings  are  worth 
remembering  and  recalling  on  their  anniversaries, 
otherwise  we  wouldn't  have  national  holidays, 
memorials,  etc.  -,_^- 

Three  days  pass  in  the  veiy  bhlk  of  March 
which,  even  in  my  myopic  opinion,  are  wMth  re- 
noting. 

On  the  6th  of  March,  which  was  also  Shrove 
Tuesday,  in  1946  at  Westminister  College  in  Ful- 
ton, Mo.,  a  man  named 
Winston  Churchill  coined 
a  phrase  which  would  be 
adopted  and  dwelled  upon  \ 
by  the  Western  geaera-i 
tion  for  some  time  to 
come:  "An  iron  curtain  | 
has  descended  across  the 
Continent." 

At  the  time,  those  col- 
lege     students      hardly 
knew  how  true  and  per;  | 
ceptive  that  metaphor  was 
to  become — if  it  had  not| 
already  become  one  of  the ! 
most  relative  to  our  peo-« 
pie.  Now*  that  iron  cu 
tain    has   not  only   been^       ^HITLER 
accepted  as  a  part  of  our 

world,  but,  seemingly,  it  has  taken  on  substance. 
Today,  we  are  no  longer  amazed  at  its  size  and  ap- 
parent impenitratibiiity,  but  are  aware  of  its  wid- 
ening Clacks  and  corrosion.  These ■  cracks,  we  hope, 
are  representative  of  the  fact  that  the  wall  may 
eventually  decompose  and  crumble. 

The  very  next  day,  which  was  also  Ash  Wed- 
nesday, in  1836,  a  band  of  Mexicans  under  the  com- 
mand of  Santa  Anna  wiped  out  187  Texans  at  a 
place  called  the  Alamo;  from  this  battle,  we  adopted 
the  phrase,  "Remember  the  Alamo." 

One  of  those  men,  however,  was  of  particular 
importance — especially  to  our  youth,  which  no  long- 
er remembers  the  cries  of  "remember  the  Alamo," 
but  has  lately  idolized  the  man  through  songs,  tele- 
vision, motion  pictures  and  a  magnification  of  folk- 
lore. March  6,  1836  was  the  day  that  the  "king  of 
the  wild  frontier."  Davy  Crockett,  bit  the  pro- 
verbial dust. 

*  •  * 

Exactly  100  years  and  one  day  later,  another 
military  operation  shocked  the  world,  and  became 
the  beginning  of  the  largest,  bloodiest,  and  most 
ruthless  World  War  known  to  man. 

Alddlph  Hitler,  the  fanatic  who  "redoubled  his 
efforts  when  he  had  forgotten  his  aim,"  ordered 
his  shock  troops  to  march  into  the  Rhineland,  and 
^  thus  broke  the  Treaty  of 
.Versailles  and  the  I«ocar- 
no  Pact  As  The  New 
jYdrk  Times  editorialized 
[that  day,  ".  .  .  the  cards 
\  are  running  out  It  is  one 
[step  nearer  the  last." 
Twenty-one  years  later, 
we  are  still  feeling  the 
!  reverberations  of  that  act 
The  history  bo<*s  rc- 
[  veal  many  ponderable 
facts  about  March:  the 
,  Monitor  and  the  Merrimac 
staged  the  battle  of  the 
I  first  iron  warships  on  the 
9th;  the  first  paper  mon- 
ey printed  by  the  govern- 
ment was  issued  on  the 
lOlh;  St.  Patrick's  day  falk  on  the  17th;  the  vernal 
equinox  comes  into  its  own  on  the  20th  at  4:17  p.m. 
EST;  the  vaudeville  performers  hoofed  for  the  first 
time  on  the  stage  of  the  famous  Palace  Theatre 
in  New  York  on  March  25,  1913;  Walt  Whitman, 
"The  Good  Gray  Poet,"  was  put  below  the  leaves  0? 
grass  which  he  so  loved  on  the  26,  in  1892;  Ponco 
de  Leon,  on  the  27,  stumbled  into  Florida  while 
looking  for  the,  "fountain  of  youth;"  and  the  show 
which  was  to  have  Broadway's  longest  run  opened 
on  the  "great  white  way"  on  the  31st,  the  same 
day  that  Franz  Joseph  Hay  den  was  bom  in  1732. 
"Oklahoma"  they  called  it 

And  our  month  will  prove  to  be  of  little  signifi- 
cance either.  The  Israelis  will  leave  the  Gaza  Strip 
and  end  or  help  lead  to  the  end  of  several  torrid 
months  in  the  middle  east;  President  Eisenhower 
will  have  met  with  Premier  Guy  MoUet  of  France 
and  Prime  Minister  Harold  Macmillan  of  England 
— from  these  meetings  much  or  little  may  develop; 
and,  possibly,  the  General  Assembly  of  North  Car- 
olina may  put  its  personal  interest  and  petty 
squabblings  aside  and  see  fit  to  give  our  teachers 
the  pay  which  they  deserve. 

So  our  month  will  be  recorded  as  the  rest  have 
in  the  history  books  and  will  add  to  their  already 
overburdening  number  of  facts — facts  which  the 
famous  historian,  Arnold  Toynbee,  called,  "Just  one 
damned  thing  after  another." 

• 

Television  Preview: 
Dr.  Norland  On  Greece 

Anthony  Wolff 

John  Kerr  ("Tea  and  Sympathy")  and  Margaret 
O'Brien  star  in  tonight's  "Climax"  at  8:30  on  Chan- 
nel 2.  The  story  concerns  a  young  boy  who  is  asham- 
ed of  his  father  and  runs  away  to  seek  his  fortune. 
He  finds  it,  which  sounds  improbable  but  com- 
forting. 

At  9  p.m.  on  Channel  4,  Dr..  J.  P.  Harland  of 
the  Classics  Dept.  discusses  "Contributions  of  Anc- 
ient Greece."  The  classicists  and  students  of  ancient 
history  should  find  this  valuable  and  entertaining. 
Playhouse  90,  on  Channel  2  at  9:30  p.m.. 
should  serve  to  stir  Confederate  sympathies.  "In 
viUtion  to  a  Gunfighter"  presents  a  pore  Freedom 
Fighter  (circa  1865)  who  has  been  done  out  of  his 
holdings  during  his  absence. 


CHURCHILL 


TMUW 


179  stu^ 
pean's 
average 
taken  ia 
according! 
terday.  AJ 
hovirs    is 
tion. 

Named 
the  foU< 
Wiflston- 
tine,  Wi 
Durh»m; 
Md.;  Nei 
ville; 
Texas; 
HUl;  Wil 

CharlesI 
Pines;  Hi 
Mary   L- 
Ksr.;    G< 
Robert  Tj 
Gayie 
Bobert  L. 
E.  Claibo^ 
Collins, 
ley,  Oran^ 
rie,  Fayet 
Buddy 
Florine 
George 
trkia  Am 
W.    Dim 
S.    Dock* 
fred  G. 
C  Drewi 
Er\-ic,  Ci 
Durham; 
Charlotte] 
lington; 

Robert 
N.Y.;  Mj 
Va.;  Leel 
Robe  rt 
Ronald 
ma  E.  Gi 


lur; 
decl 

the! 
An 

pirll 
«>"rJ| 
ni 


tha( 
SigJ 


sqi 


Pl 


•S; 
Ih 


rping,' 

ago 

^n  thig 

jo  the 

jworUi 

ies. 

idays, 

larch 
|th  re> 


ince. 
ap- 

wid- 

may 
Wed- 

COOIf 

at  a 
Idopted 

rUcidar 
lode- 

lamo," 
tele- 
folk- 

King  of 
pro- 


lother 

>ecame 

most 

led  hu 
|>rdered 
id,  and 
iaty  of 
Locar> 
New 


signifi* 
Strip 
torrid 
snhotDer 
France 
England 
develop; 
orth  Car- 
pettj 
teacfcers 

•St  have 

already 

ikh   the 

•Just  one 


Margaret 
on  Chan- 
is  asham- 

s  fortune. 

but    com- 


THUHSOAY,  MARCH,  7,  1W 


THt  DAILY  4 At  MRL 


PAOE  THRIi 


179  Students  NQmecl;    To  Fall  Deans  Ust 


179  students  wem  named  to  the 
Dean's  list  for  attaining  a  "B" 
average  or  higher  lor  all  work 
taken  in  the  fall  semester  of  1956, 
according  to  a  report  released  yes- 
terday. A  minimum  of  15  semester 
hours  is  required  'for  qaolifica- 
tion. 

Nanved  to  tbe  Dean's  list  w^e 
th€  following:  Edward  S.  Avery, 
Winston-Salem;  Esther  M.  Ballen- 
tine.  Winston;  Billy  E.  Barnes. 
Durham;  Jayne  Beatty,  Bethesda, 
Md.;  Neil  C.  Bender,  Pollodcs- 
ville;  Lloyd  E,  Berry.  Houston, 
Texas;  William  R,  Bibb,  Chapel 
Hill:  William  S.  Bost,  Greenville; 

Charles  H.  Bowman,  Southern 
Pines;  Hugh  M.  Boyer.  Charlotte; 
Mary  L.  Brinckerhoff,  Louisville, 
Ky.;  George  W,  Biyce,,  Hamlet; 
Robert  T.  Bumis,  liockf<M:d;  Mrs. 
Gayle  Campbell,  Fayetteville; 
Robert  L.  Churchill,  Durham;  Jack 
E.  Claiborne,  Charlotte;  Francis  E. 
Collins.  Lumberton;  Mary  C.  Cor- 
!ey.  Orangeburg.  B.C.;  Fred  H.  Cur 
ric.  Fayetteville; 

Buddy  A.  Daggerhart.  Raleigh; 
Florine  A.  Davenport,  Columbia; 
George  T.  Davis,  Chapel  Hill;  Pa- 
tricia Ann  Dillon.  Statesville;  James 
W.  Dinwiddle,  Lexington;  James 
S.  Dockery,  IHutherfordton;  Win- 
fred  G.  Dodson,  Chapel  Hill;  John 
C.  Drewry.  Chapel  Hill;  James  F. 
Er\in,  Camp  Hill,  Pa;.  Eli  Evans, 
Durham;  Maiigaret  W.  Falkenberg, 
Charlotte;  Frank  W.  Farref ,  Lil- 
lington; 

Robert  Fassberg,  Spring  Valley, 
N.Y.;  Mary  J|ne  Fisher,  Bristol, 
Va.;  Lee  ^  Vflbcer,  Greenville; 
Robert  L.  Fowler,  Chapel  Hill; 
Ronald  G.  Garmon,  Charlotte;  Al- 
ma E.  Graham,  Raleigh;  Byron  W. 


Grandjean,  ThomasviUe;  Mafy  L. 
Gravely,  Ringgold,  Vk;>  James  B. 
Graves,  Raleigh;  William  D.  Gray, 
Roanoke;  Paul  A.  Guiles.  Char- 
lotte; Mary  C.  Green,  Chapel  Hffl; 

Irvine  Reid  S.  Haig.  Rome,  tt^I^; 
Everette  I^  Hale,  Greens^ro;  I^es- 
lie  M.  H9le,  FayettevlBe;  Donald 
J.  Han,  Chapel  Hill;  Sarat  HalX. 
Oxford;  John  W.  Harden,  Chapel 
Hill;  Roberta  A.  Hastings,  Orange, 
Va.;  Jean  Parham  Hicks,  Hender- 
son; Robert  B.  Hicks,  New  Lon- 
don; James  C.  Hill.  ><^iapf  1  Hill; 
Clark  M.  Hinkley,  Chanel  Hill; 
Maiiui  K  Hobeck,  Virgioia  Beadi, 
Va.; 

Joseph  A.  Hodge,  New  Bern; 
Luther  H.  Hodges,  Rideigh;  Wil- 
liam H.  Haldford,  Chapel  Hill; 
Graham  D.  Holding,  Charlotte; 
Sally  M.  Homer,  Chapel  W; 
Shelley  W.  Howard,  Chapel  Ifill; 
Sarah  K.  Huds<m,  Atlanta,  Ga.; 
Joseph  H.  Hurd,  Chapel  Ifill;  Le 
land  S.  Jamieson,  Ddand,  Fla.; 
Mary  E.  Jefferson,  Danville,  Va.; 
Ann  Jennings,  Greenville,  S.  C; 
Bruce  C.  Johnson,  Conway;  Don- 
ald G.  Johnson,  Walnut  Cove;  Hill 
C.  Johnston,  Noroton,  Conn.;  Ray- 
mond A.  Jolly,  Clu4>el  Hill;  Anne 
H.  Jonea,  Norfolk,  Va.;  Roger  C. 
Jones,  High  Point;  John  H.  Kerr. 
Warrenton;  Ronni  Jane  Levin 
Korschun,  Chapel  Hill;  Herbert 
W.  Kouri,  Shelby;  Sharon  A. 
Krebs,  Chapel  Ifill; 

Donna  C.  Kurtz,  Charlotte;  Ber- 
nice  N.  Lane,  Chapel  Hill;  Robec- 
ca  Josephine  Swain  Leggett,  Wash- 
ington; Patrick  J.  Leonard,  Ra- 
leigh; Harriette  C.  Lewis,  Suther- 
lin,  Va.;  Benjamin  B.  Liipfert  Jr., 
Winaton-Salein;  Niancy  Link,  Ra- 
leigh; Retoot  A>  Linn;  Genet  H. 


I  Little,  Wadesboro;  Betsjr  Car<^ 
Lloyd,  Raleifh;  Lawtence  L.  Lohr, 
Raleigh;  Mrs.  Charlotte  Miles  Mac- 
Donald,  AjmapoUs,  Md.; 

fiUnlMth  tl.  lleGnrw,  Chvles- 
ton,  S.  C;  Holland  McSwain  Jr., 
Franklin;  Isabel  M.  Madry,  Kin- 
ston;  Archibald  K.  Maness,  Greens 
bot»;  HcfMM  A.  Mtf^tisy  St 
Paul^;  Robert  W.  Markham,  Apex; 
Don  H.  Bliller,  Cedar  Rapids, 
Iowa;  Roy  W.  Miller,  Salisbury; 
William  S.  Miller,  Benson;  Mary 
Ruth  Mitchell,  Greensboro;  James 
&  MontetiJh,  ^Iva;  Robert  M.  Mor- 
ris, Atlantic;  Leb  A.  Mulvaney, 
Asheville;  David  R.  Norsworthy, 
Florien,  La.;  Charles  R.  O'Briant, 
Chapel  Hill; 

Marcia  EL  Opperman;  Charles 
W.  Oyer,  Wokott,  N.  Y.;  Elizabeth 
S.  Parker,  Chapel  Hill;  Frederick 
Parker,  Chapel  Hill;  John  C.  Par 
ker.  Chapel  Hill;  Malcolm  O.  Par- 
tin.  Enfield;  William  S.  Pate, 
Pikeville;  Jane  L.  Patten,  Char- 
lotte; Sally  H.  Patterson,  Char- 
lotte; Htrvcy  Peck,  Durham;  Lin- 
wood  T.  Peeves,  Cha|iel  Hill;  Jas 
1^  L,  Phfifips.  Khuton;  Carl  S. 
Phipps.  Wendell;  Carl  G.  Plekard. 
Asheville;  Thomas  C.  Pitt,  Rocky 
Mount;  William  W.  Porterfield, 
Richmond.  Va.;  Malory  A.  Pitt- 
man,  Wilson; 


Qii6inipis 


MsSfatWQQ 

(Author  of  "Bart/oot  Boy  Wtth  Chttk."  9te.f 


NOW  YOU  CAN  BE  YOUNGER  ;: 
THAN  SHE  IS!         i 

It's  a  scientific  fact  that  girls  reach  emotional  ma- 
turity earlier  than  boys.  For  this  reason  freshman  girls 
decline  to  make  romantic  alliances  with  freshman  boys. 

Thus,  the  freshman  boys  are  left  dateless,  and  many's 
the  night  the  entire  freshman  dorm  sobs  itself  to  sleep. 
An  equally  damp  situation  exists  among  upper-dass 
girls.  With  upperclassmen  being  snapped  up  by  freshman 
girls,  the  poor  upper-class  girls  are  reduced  to  dreary, 
manless  evenings  of  Scrabble  and  home  permanents. 

There  is  a  solution  for  this  morbid  situation  —  a  very 
simple  solution.  Why  don't  the  two  great  have-not  groups 
find  solace  with  one  another? 

True,  there  is  something  of  an  age  differentia),  but 
that  need  not  matter.  Take  the  case  of  Albert  Payson 
Sigafoos  and  Eustacia  Vye. 

Albert  Payson,  a  fr^hman  in  sand  and  gravel  at 
Vanderbilt  University,  was  walking  across  campus  one 
day,  weeping  softly  in  his  loneliness.  Blinded  by  teafS, 
he  stumbKd  upon  the  supine  form  of  Eustacia  Vye,  a 
senior  in  wicker  and  raffia,  who  was  collapsed  in  a 
wretched  heap  on  the  turf. 


V^  0»iUUdiMrclM  j/k^^eM-ac^f*  ^ 


"Why  don't  you  watch  where  you're  goiqg,  you 
squirt?"  said  Eustacia  peevishly. 

"I'm  sorry,  lady,"  said  Albert  Payson  and  startml  tp 
move  on.  But  suddenly  he  stopped,  struck  by  an  inspira- 
tion. "Lady,"  he  said,  "you're  miserable  because  you  ca«*t 
get  a  date.  So  am  I.  So  why  don't  we  date  each  other?" 

"Surely  you  jest!"  cried  Eustacia,  looking  with  scorn 
upon  his  youthful  head  and  body.. 

"Oh,  I  know  I'm  younger  than  yon  are,"  said  Albert 
Payson,  "but  that  doesn't  mean  we  can't  find  many  splen- 
did things  to  do  together." 

"Like  what?"  asked  Eustacia. 

"Well,"  said  Albert  Payson,  "we  could  get  a  third  and 
play  some  one-o-cat." 

"Bah !"  said  Eustacia,  grinding  her  teeth. 

"All  right  then,"  said  Albert  Payson,  "we  could  go 
down  to  the  pond  and  skip  some  stones  and  maybe  catch 
a  few  frogs." 

"Ugh!"  said  Eustacia,  shuddering  her  entire  length. 

"How  about  some  run-sheep-run?"  he  suggested. 

"You  are  callow,  green,  and  immature,"  said  Eustacia, 
"and  1  will  thank  you  to  absent  yourself  at  once !" 

Sighing,  Albert  Payson  lit  a  cigarette  and  started 
away. 

"Stay !"  cried  Eustacia. 

"Was  that,"  she  asked,  "a  Philip  Morris  you  just  lit?" 

"What  else?"  said  Albert  Payson. 

"Then  you  are  not  immature!"  she  cried,  clasping 
him  to  her  clavicle.  "For  to  smoke  Philip  Morris  is  the 
very  essence  of  wisdom,  incontrovertible  proof  that  yot2 
know  rich,  natural  pleasure  from  pale,  poor  substitutes! 
Albert  Payson,  I  am  yours!" 

And  today  they  are  married  and  run  one  <^  tbe  1 
widter  and  raffia  eatabliabnieats  in  Blue  Earth,  J    - 

aw  mmJ^aSBh-ymmV  mhx  m0mtml  MtfMi  M*nU,  Imi| 
ami  r^ipifar,  mtmh  *r  «*«  'pof"**"  •/  '*^  eetmrnn. 


APO  Rushing 
WiilBegin 
Next  Tuesday 

Rush  will  begin  Tuesday  fot 
Alpha  Phi  Omega  scouting  frater- 
nity. 

Students  who  have  participated 
in  scouting  have  been  invited  to 
come  to  the  APO  Room  in  the 
basement  ol  Graham  Memorial  at 
TJiQ  pjn,  Tuesday. 

Alpha  Phi  Omega  is  a  service 
{raternity  that  does  projects  which 
are  helpful  to  the  University  and 
its  students. 


Measures 

(Continued  from  page  1) 
portation   expenses   for   a   spring 
tour. 

Hie  second  appropriations  bill 
class  for  allocation  of  $100  from 
student  government's  unappropri- 
ated balance  to  the  Carolina  Quar- 
terly  literary  magazine. 

According  to  the  bill,  such  funds 
weuld  be  used  to  pay  for  prizes 
in  the  Quarterly's  annual  fiction 
contest 

The  bill  which  would  place  the 
student  directory  and  Carolina 
Handbook  under  the  jurisdiction 
ol  student  government's  Publica-I 
tions  Board  would  require  a  con- 
stitutional amendment. 

The  student  body  would  pay  for 
the  two  puUkations  instead  of  the 
YMCA,  ctirrent  publishers.  Ac- 
cording to  the  bill,  the  "Y"  Publi- 
cations Board  chairman  would  also 
be  added  to  the  membership  of 
student  government's  Publications 
BoaS'd.  This  would  require  consti- 
tutional amendment. 

S^aW  Sonny  Evans  reminded 
lecifilators  that  they  were  sup^ 
po^ed.  to  haye  written  five  General 
A«semhlynen  eoaceming  pro- 
jpoted  faculty  salary  hike  by  to- 
xOCht's  meciting. 

The,  legislature  convenes  on  the 
fourth  fkior  of  New  East  Building 
at.  7:4^  Cuests  are  welcome,  saiq 
Speaker  Evans. 


James  Young  Pre^on,  Blat- 
thews;  Mebane  M.  Pritchett,  Le- 
noir; Leonard  Z.  Reaves,  Fayette- 
ville; Martha  A.  Richardson,  Mid- 
lothian, Va.;  Hoyle  L.*  Robinson, 
Oandor;  Martin  Rosenzweig,  Laur- 
elton,  N.  Y.;  John  W.  Ruff,  Chap- 
el Hill;  Margaret  M.  Sander^, 
Charlotte;  Neltie  L.  Sanders 
Charleston,  S.  C; 

Joanne  Saunders,  Norfolk,  Va.; 
Adelaide  M.  Schnell,  Pinebluff ; 
Frank  L.  Schrimeer,  Charlotte; 
Alvin  J.  Secrest,  Shelby;  Leslie  A. 
Scott,  New  Yorfc,  N.  Y.;  Floumey 
S.  Semmes,  Memphis,  Tenn.;  lioyd 
R.  Shaw,  Statesville;  Richard  W. 
Shermer,  Winston-Salem;  James  E. 
Shockley,  HopeweU,  Va.;  W.  Eliz- 
abeth Simmons,  Bessemer  City; 
Fahieigh  D.  Small,  Morehead  City; 

Howard  M.  Smith,  Swansboro; 
Robert  G.  Smith,  Stoneville;  Billy 
M.  Smyre,  Newton;  John  A.  Sne- 
don  Jr.  Tenafly,  N.  D.;  Mary  R. 
Spivey,  Windsor;  John  W.  Stal- 
lings,  WUson;  John  H.  Standi, 
Durham;  Eleanor  B.  Stephens, 
Asheville;  William  E.  Stewart, 
Marshville;  Charles  A.  Strong, 
Chapel  Hill;  Katherine  H.  Strong, 
Savannah,  Ga..;  Royal  B.  Talley, 
Fuquay  brings; 

Joshua  T  a  y  1  o  e,  Washington, 
Herman  W.  Taylor,  Raleigh; 
Charles  V.  Tompkins,  Alexandria, 
Va.;  Stephen  J.  Trachtenberg, 
Jacksonville;  Henry  C.  Turner, 
Greensboro;  John  G.  Underwood, 
Charleston;  Valerie  A.  Von  Am- 
mon.  Fort  Pierce,  Fla.;  Joseph  G. 
Walser,  High  Point;  Leo  C.  Ward- 
rup,  Middlesboro,  Ky.;  Bert  B. 
Warren,  Farmville;  Harold  L.  Wa- 
ters, Jacksonville; 

Zebulon  Weaver  HI,  Asheville; 
Kathryn  K.  Webb,  Raleigh;  Robert 
M.  Weinstein,  Greensboro;  Joan 
Victoria  Wender,  Highland  Park, 
ni.;  William  Henry  White  Jr.,  San- 
ford;  Harry  E.  Whitelock;  Balti- 
more, Md.;  James  A  Williams, 
Chapel  Hill;  Harold  E.  WUliamson, 
Sims;  Stanley  M.  Williamson, 
Charlotte;  Paul  E.  Willingham. 
Ridgely,  Tenn.;  Gordon  R.  Woody. 
Durham;  Charles  W.  Worsley, 
Greenville;  Douglas  M.  Young. 
Salisbury;  Robert  K.  Yowell,  Ra- 
leigh; John  H.  Zollicoffer.  Hendcr 
son;  Lawrence  Zollicoffer,  Little- 
ton. 


CLASSIFIEDS 


For   SALE:   32   FOOT  TRAILER, 
sleeps    four;    has    bath.   Contact  \ 
Robert     Pickard      at     Taylor's 
Trailer  Court,  Airport  Road. 


5  ROOM  BRICK  HOUSE.  3  BED 
rooms,  all  modem  conveniences. 
3  miles  on  Old  86  Hyway.  Stove 
and  Frigedaire  furnished.  Call 
Fred  Katzhi  after  6:00.  8-9025. 


FOR    RENT:    TWO    HOUSES    A- 

vailable,  one  immediately  and 
one  in  June.  Two  bed  rooms. 
Also  5  room  house  available  in 
two  weeks.  Call  M58.  After  StSO 
and  on  weekend,  call  2926. 


FOR  SALE:  SIX  ROOM  BRICK 
house  on  Pritchard.  Ave.  Ply>ne 
9-1436. 


JAZZ  AT  TURNAGES 

Saturday  anemoon,  2:00,  Turn- 
ages  Cabin  in  Durham.--Jazz  b1 
Dick  Gables  "All  Stars."  Beer 
Served. 


LOST:  BROWN,  PLASTIC  WAL- 
let,  Woollen  Gym.  Important 
that  papers  be  returned.  Reward. 
Robert  L.  Fowler.  Phone  2761. 


OAILY    CROSSWORD 


MS* 


ACBOSS 

i  «fyptlan 

god 
^p«nian 

futer 
a.  Commerce 

iCliaate 

'  e^rana   boy* 
a^rtrtirougli 

a  food  mill 
U.  Harden 

■lS.m  (Cur.) 

Tcotloq) 
1>.  Letter 

aigned 

laUbr.r 
^..Skaling 

area 
l.Portekkd 

ICixttire 
zs.Oirett 
a«.part 

27.  Sugar  lump 
S8.Bird  (H.I.> 
at.  Floor 

protector 
32.  Pish  hawk 

55.  Wl|4  si^p 

find.) 

56.  An  affray 

37.  Pale 
39.8eaff 
4«.  tmites 
metal 

41.  Timber  trees 
(tnd>, 

42.  ifegative 


4.  Boy's  22-  In  a 
nick-  dollish 
name  manner 

5.  Enemy  23.  House- 
scouts  hold 

€.  Suspend  imple> 

7.  ChUls  and  meilts 
fever  24.  Frees 

8.  Proaaime  25.  The 
t.  Snare  heart 

11.  Become*  (anat.) 

aware  ef  27.  Place      v-ur*mw'*  A«.w«r 

IS.  Cheat  29.  Swerves  34.  Stagger 

t7.  Languislk  30.  Lean-tos  37.  Beard 

ff.lConclude  31.  Man's  Munt         of  rye 
21.  Breakfast  (Oer.) 

fobd  33.  An  excuse 


Extra    Special  — Ann    Page    Condensed 

TOMATO  SOUP 


3''-?29' 


2— 20-OZ.  CANS— 31c 


F.-A.  Prepared  Macaroni  15V4-OZ.  can  19c 
F.-A;  Prepared  Spaghetti  15y4-oz.  can  15c 

BAM  Baked  Beans  18-oz.  jar _ .    25c 

Hawaiian  punch  Drink  46-oz.  can  33c 

Sunshine  Hydrox  Cookies  1  lb.  pkg.     49c 

Nabisco  Chees*  Riti  S-oz.  pkg.  31c 

Strietmann  Pecan  Sandies  Mb.  pkg.     40c 

Burry  Oatmeal  Cookies  9-oz.  pkg 23c 

Quick  Frozen  Sandwich  Style 

Excelsior  Beef  Steaks  8-oz.  pkg.    ......  43c 


P.  of  C.  Sweet  Mixed  Pickles  qt.  jar  37c 
V-8  Vsfletable  Juice  46-oz.  can  ...     35c 

C.  Of  Wheat  10-oz.  pkg.  2U  28-oz.  pkg.  35c 


FINE  A&P  COFFEES 


Golden  Maid  Margarine  1-lb.  pkg. 
Suitant  Short  Grain.  Rice  3-lb.  bag. 
Sultana  Peanut  Butter  24-oz.  jar  ...- 
Ions  Brand  Tomatoes  2  16-oz.  cans  . 
Sultane  Medium  Prunes  1-Ib.  pkg.  . 
A&P  Seedless  Raisins  15-oz  pkg.  . 
AAP  Orange  Juice  46-oz. 


can 


21c 
39c 
59c 
23c 
25c 
19c 
29c 


Mild  And  Mellow 

8  O'clock   'it. 

Rich  AjmI  Full  Bodied 

Red  Circle  '^<- 


vie  Sag  $2«56 


Bag   91 C 

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Bokar  .  '^'  96c 


38.  Body  Of 
water 


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Special  Low  Price!  Packer's  Labd  Whole 

m  29c    SPICED  PEACHES  2 

Special  Low  Price  -  Jane  Parker         »  Golden  Whole  Kernel 

GLAZED  DONUTS  "'."27c    NIBLETS  CORN  -  2 

Extra  Special— No  Limit— Stock  Up— lona  Cut  Style 


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C...:£a.V    D»AM«       LUNCHEON  12-Or.    39^ 

jwirT  s  rrem       meat-   can   ^^^^ 

Swift's  Hamburger  "™"  ..  %Tn  45c 

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Swift's  Beef  Steaks   ''W"  "c2  49c 
Cracker  Jacks 3  "'J'.SSgr'ZOc 


Fresh  Crisp  Lettuce  2  He,<is  23c 
Florida  Grapefruit  8  b"  39c 
Fresh  Tender  Rhubarb  ^b  25c 


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5  41f  29c 


Carrots 


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STOtE  ADDRESS 

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CORN 


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FRYER  BREASTS.  ..  5Lb. Box  $2.89 


PAGE  POUR 


THE  DAtLY  TAR  HEEL 


THURSDAY,  MARCH  7.   1«7 


Tar  Heels  Meet  Tigers  In  ACC  Tourney  Tonight 


•      •      * 


V       •       • 


UNC  Is  Chosen  For  j-en  Rosenbiuth 


Is  Chosen  On 


Kentucky  Tourney  ap  Aii-America 


LEXINGTON.  Ky.  (AP)— Un- 
defeated North  Carolina,  the  na- 
tion's No.  1  collegiate  basketball 
power,  was  chosen  yesterday  for 
the  University  of  Kentucky's  In- 
vitational Tournament  next  Dec. 
20-21. 

Athletic  director  Bernie 
Shively  said  the  field  would  be 
filled  shortly  with  two  other 
outstanding  teania*  joining  North 
Carolina    and    defending   champ 

Stripped  of  A/f  FICTION, 
IfGfMD, 

lies; 


Kentucky  in  the  fifth  annual  af- 
fair. 

North  Carolina,  coached  by 
Frank  McGuire.  raced  through  a 
24-0  season  to  become  Dixie's 
first  unbeaten  club  since  Ken- 
tucky posted  a  25-0  record  in 
1954. 

North  Carolina  enters  the  At- 
lantic Coast  Conference  tourna- 
ment tomorrow. 

The  Kentucky  Tournament, 
started  with  the  idea  of  luring 
big  time  teams  to  the  campus, 
usually  draws  its  four  teams 
from  the  country's  top  10.  Addi- 
tionally, it  has  become  one  of 
the  richea-t  with  payoffs  of  $8,- 
200  to  $10,000  for  two  nights  of 
play. 


North  Carolina  team  captain 
Lonni*  Rosenbluth  has  bean 
namod  to  tho  1957  Acaociatad 
Press  All-Am«rica  first  string. 

In  addition  to  Rosanbluth, 
othors  seiacttd  wore  Wilt  Cham- 
berlain of  Kansas,  Chet  Forte  of 
Columbia,  Rod  Hundley  of  West 
Virginia  and  Gary  Thompson  of 
Iowa  State. 

Rosenbluth  was  also  named  to 
the  United  Press  All-America 
squad. 


Unbeaten  Cagers  Start 
Quest  For  NCAA  Titk 

North  Clarolinas  undefeated  Tar  Heels,  cinrently 
reioning  as  unoilicial  national  and  conference  cage  kings, 
start  a  drive  to  lock  uj)  the  ACC  and  \C\\  titles  in  a 
h)rnial  fashion  tonight  when  they  open  |M>st  .season 
tournament  play  against  the  Clenison   Figcrs  in  Raleigh. 

The  occasion  of  course  is  the  .\ilantic  Coast  C-on- 
fereiue  basketball  tournament,  held  annually  to  deter- 
mine  the  conference   champion 


PATRONIZE  YOUR 
•    AOVERTISERS    e 


Lost  Rings  Available 

At  Gym  Ticket  Office      | 

Two    ring,s    were    found    in    the : 

ladies     lounge    of     Woollen     Gym ' 

about  a  week  ago.  i 

The  person  who  lost  thec«  rings  i 

is  asked  to  call  the  ticket  office  of 

I  the  gym.  i 


20tli  Cmtory-fm  preMflti 

The  TRUE 

Story  OF 

Jesse 

James 


MBE*T      lEFFRH      HOPE 

WAGNERJjINTERlANGE 

CINBmaScoPS 
NOW  PLAYING 


Carolina 


Unbeaten   Mermen 
Look  To  National  Meet 

North  Carolina's  unbeaten  Dave  Mclnnis,  the  Tar  Heels 
swimming  team,  still  celebrating  top  diver,  compiled  the  highest  to- 
ils Atlantic  Coast  Conference ;  tal  of  his  career  in  the  ACC  Meet. 
Championship  and  nine  individual ;  .Mclnnis  scored  468.25  points  in 
title.--,  today  began  looking  for-  the  high  diving  event  and  also 
ward    to    the    NCAA    Swimming   won  the  low  diving  champions-hip. 

Championships  here  on  March  28-       ^^^        ,^,^  „.„ 

--  Other   UNC   winners   were    Bill 

Zickgraf  in  the   100-yard  butterf^^y 
Charlie    Krepp.    the    Tar    Heels    .^^^  g^jj  ^^^^  •„  ^^^  ^^.^^^  ^^^ 

All-America,  copped  three  vie- 1^^^  ^^^^.jj^  Carolina  team  also  won 
tories  in  the  conference  meet,  win-  ^he  400-yard  freestyle  and  medley 
ning  the  200-yard  individual  med-  relays.  ^  ' 

ley     and     the     100     and    200-yaid 


The  Tar  Heels,  winners  of  the 
regular  season  crown  with  a  14-0 
record,  -vce  last  place  Clemson 
at  7:30  tonight  in  the  first  game 
of  an  evening  doubleheadcr 
.session. 

Duke  and  South  Carolina,  the 
third  and  sixth  place  teams,  get 
together  at  2  p.m.  in  the  open- 
ing game  of  the  quarterfinal 
round.  That  contest  will  be  im- 
mediately followed  by  the 
Maryland-Virginia  game  at  4. 
Then  comes  Carolina-Clemson  at 
7:30  and  State- Wake  Forest  at 
9:30. 

The  winner  of  the  UXC- 
Clemson  game  will  face  the 
State-Wake  Forest  winner  in 
the  .semifinals. 

The  unbeaten  Tar  Heels,  un- 
disputed leaders  in  all  the  major 
polls  with  a  24-0  record,  must 
win  the  ACC  tourney  to  quali- 
fy for  the  NCA.\  playoffs  which 
begin  in  New  York  next  Tues- 
day night.  H  Carolina  survives 
the  local  dogfight,  they  will  meet 
the  Ivy  League  champion,  either 
Yale  or  Dartmouth,  in  Madison 
Square  Garden.  ^ 


ened    considerably    in    the    past 
month,   and  could   be  trouble. 

Leading  the  way  for  the  Tig- 
ers will  be  forwards  Vince  Yoc- 
kel  and  Ed  Brinkley.  two  potent 
.scorers  all  year  long.  G€ne  Seay 
at  center  and  Tom  Cameron  and 
Dick  Yeary  or  Doug  Hoffman  at 
guards  will  round  out  the  start- 
ing lineup. 

For  Crolina  it  will  be  the  same 
fearsome  five  that  has  carried 
them  to  a  24-0  regular  season 
record.  Joe  Quigg  is  at  center. 
Pete  Brennan  and  Lennie  Rosen- 
bluth at  forwards,  and  Tommy 
Kearns  and  Bob  Cunningham  at 
guards. 

Rosenbluth  officially  became 
an  Ail-American  yesterday  when 
he  was  named  to  both  the  UP 
and  AP  first  teams. 

Ticket  sales  for  the  tourna- 
ment have  been  moving  at  a 
slower  rate  thn  u^al  this  year, 
and  some  2.000  ducats  still  re- 
main for  each  of  today's  two 
sessions.  About  500  remain  for 
the  Friday  and  Saturday  night 
sessions. 


backstroke.  This  season,  Krepp 
tied  the  NCAA  100-yard  back- 
stroke record  and  will  be  one  of 
the  top  contenders  for  national 
honors. 


ISUSPBKSS: 
GROWS 
AS  THE 
NARROWS. 
L     — *   DAVID  FARRAR- DAVID  KNIGHTj 
■  <..».,  JULIA  ARNAU. 

^  >•    EASTUtN    CO.Su 


tV£R5Zru 


The  nation's  top  intercollegiate  i 
swimmers  will  participate  in  the 
34th  annual  NCAA  Champion- 
ships. Nineteen  events  are  sched- 
uled for  the  three-day  meet. 

I 

Swimmers  from  Yale,  Michigan,  j 

Michigan  State,  Iowa,  North  Caro- , 
lina  and  n^any  more  schools  from : 
coast  to  coast  will  be  competing  | 
for  lop  honors.  j 

This  will  be  the  third  NCAAl 
Championships  held  at  the  Uni-  \ 
versity  of  North  Carolina  in  as  | 
many  years.  Two  years  ago  the 
tennis  tourney  was  held  here  and ; 
last  year  UNC  was  the  site  Of  the  i 
gyninastic's  championships.  The  i 
la.st    -NCAA    Swimming    Champion- , 

ships  to  be  held  here  was  in  1949.  i 

j 
A  limited  number  of  tickets  are  i 
now  on  sale  at  the  UNC  ticket  of- 
fice  in   Woollen  Gymna^^ium. 


If  victorious  there,  they  will 
advance  to  the  regional  play- 
offs in  Philadelphia  next  week- 
end. 

Logically  enough,  the  Tar 
Heels  have  been  established  as 
heavy  favorites  to  walk  off  with 
the  tourney  title  just  as  they 
did  regular  season  honors.  Coach 
Frank  McGuire's  club  holds  at 
least  two  wins  over  every  other 
team  in  the  tournament,  and 
they  have  whipped  Wake  Forest 
and  Duke  three  times  each.  The 
UNC  cagers  had  little  trouble 
with  Clemson  during  the  year, 
polishing  them  off  94-75  in  the 
first  game,  and  86-54  in  the 
.second. 

Clemson  finished  in  a  dead- 
lock with  Virginia  for  seventh 
place,  but  fell  into  eighth  place 
and  a  battle  with  mighty  Caro- 
lina by  the  luck  of  the  draw 

Experts  regard  this  as  a  break 
for  the  Tar  Heels.  Clemson  has 
been  a  soft  touch  this  season, 
while  Virginia  has  been  strength- 


Imported  Black  and  Brown 

Scotch  Grain 

Mahogany  and  Black  Cordovan 


Julian' 


tMaSt 


Everybody  in  lh«  family  con  lein  in  »h«  fiiii 
and  •xcir«m«nt  of  tha  big  guaiiing  cantttt! 

All  y*u  hav*  lo  da  it  noma  lh«  winntrt  of  lh« 
1 957  Academy  Awards  le  win  a  prixa! 

Send  in  as  mony  antrias  as  yew  like! 

l^  A  CONTEST  ENDS  MARCH  26,  1957 

FREE   ENTRY   BLANKS  AT  THE 
CAROLINA  AND   VARSITY  THEATRES 


Seniors 

Advance  Information 

On  Career  Opportunities 

At  Procter  &  Gamble 


Arfvane^  information  en  AAarkoting 
AA«n«gNHnont  opportunities  in  thej 
Procttfr  a  Cembte  Advertising  De  j 
pertmMvt  is  now  available.  Write 
H.H.  Wilson,  Jr.,  Supervisor  o{{ 
f^^etamtuA,  Advertising  Depart- ! 
me^t,  frocter  A  Cambie,  Cincin-| 
n«ti,  Offio.  Campus  interviews  in  I 
Placement   Service  March  28. 


WITH 

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your  hair  can  feei 
softer,  shine 
brighter,  comb  and 
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Only  w*  and  *I4)0  plus  tax. 


SUTTON'S 

PHONE    9-8781 
FREE     DELIVERY 


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Paper-Backed      Relifious      Bm4cs*. 

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'  1 


SPRING  WARDROBE 
PLANTING  TIME 

Our     spring    stocks 

Large  assortment  of 
55%  dacron/45%  wool 
tropical  suits,  many 
with  rich  foulard  lin- 
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shades  in  miniature 
glen  plaids  —  $56.95. 

New  shell  cordovan 
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of  supple  French  cordo- 
van, one  solid  piece  of 
leather  in  finest  made 
plain  toe  .  .  .  compare 
with  any  $35.00  plain 
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shoes-$20.00. 

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argyles  and  6x3  ribs  in 
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lengths  —  from  $1.25. 

Polo  shirts  in  button- 
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collars  —  from  $3,95. 

Anything  from  soup 
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Large  assortment  of 
short  sleeve  button- 
down  ivy  shirts  —  from 
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The  best  looking  im- 
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ties  ~  $2.00.  Matching 
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land sport  coats,  all 
foulard  lined  —  $39.95. 
Matching  bermudas  for 
same  —  $10.95. 
In  Our 
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We're  still  continuing 
our  $10.00  off  on  our 
Braemar  and  Drumlan- 
rig  sweaters. 

New  spring  ivy  ber- 
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New  Carolina  blue 
polished  cotton  skirts  at 
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New  Lady  Hathaway 
shirts  from  $4.95. 


Follow  The  Campus  Qrowds 

■■sH  ...,     to 


k  J  /« '  •   ■>«■ 


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IVY   LEAGUE   SLACKS 

'    "'    ■  '  ^  ■.  ■    .    -  V    ■  \.\^.   .\  » 

•   Wool  And  Dacron  Blends  :    ;.  ^ 

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^  Cotton  And  Dacron  Blends 


;  Take  a  gander  at  these  "out  of  this  world''  dress  slacks  .  .  .  Ex- 
\  pertly  tailored,  full  cut  ...  a  perfect  fit  every  time.  All  the  latest 
'^.'  colors  in  the  popular  "ivy"  style.  Come  by  today  and  see  these 

barg.ains  ...  an  everyday  deal  at   BELK'S,   the  store  for  your 

•very  need  in  Chapel  Hill. 


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95-J14.95 


IVY   LEAGUE 
COTTON   SLACKS 

Ivy  Stripes    -:-    Satteens  \ 

•   Khaki  Twill 

•   Cotton  Cord 


Black  Twifl 


$3  98-$5.98 

For  your  leisure,  you  find  these  "ivy"  washable  slacks  are  the 
very  thing  that  you  need,  and  at  a  price  that  you  can  well  af- 
ford .  .  .  None  better  in  ail  of  Chapel  Hill. 


^)(1k-Leggett-lIorl<)ii(;(>. 


ir.W.C.  tlt)t»4fy 
Serials  Dept, 
Chapel   Hill,    N.    C. 
8-31-49 


WEATHE.R 

*•!»;   ending   this   morning.    Ex- 
P«<t*d  high  45.  Low  last  night  was 


30. 


3rat  Heel 


REVOLT 

But  who  witi   ta«d   it?  Sm  odl- 


torial,  i^go  2. 


VOL.  LVII  NO.  ni 


Complete  (Jf)  Wire  Service 


CHAPEL  HILL,  NORTH  CAROLINA,  FRIDAY.  MARCH  8,   1957 


Officea  in   Graham   Memointl 


FOUR  PAGES  THIS  ISSUE 


Pranksters 
DabCagers  l| 
Luck  Piece 


By   BEN   TAYLOR 

Pranksters  left  their  calling  card 
in  red  la.-,  night  when  they  moved 
and  smeared  the  old  model  Biiick 
belonging  to  cage  star  Pete  Bren- 
nan. 

The  car  was  pushed  from  its 
parked  position  on  Country  Ciub 
Road  and  backed  over  the  curb 
directly  in  front  of  the  Forest 
Theatre. 

The  only  apparent  damage  was 
red  paint  smearing  the  fenders, 
hood,  windows  and  trunk. 

The  automobile  had  been  parked 
in  front  of  the  Monogram  Club  foi 
over  ten  months  representing  a 
good  luck  charm  for  the  Tar  Heel 
ba.^etball  team. 

One  unconfirmed  report  stated 
that  considerable  noise  was  heard 
last  night  around  midnight  behind 
Stacy  dorm,  and  it  ij  expected  that 
the  pranksters  did  their  painting^ 
around  that  time. 

Owner    Pete   Btennan   said   that  | 
"it    was    unmarked    and    peaceful  * 
looking  when  I  passed  by  last  night 
at  11  p.m."  I 

Brennan  remarked  that  he 
thought  the  vandals  had  wasted 
their  time,  adding  "I  think  it  will 
just  bring  us  even  more  luck." 


Rosey 
As 


Sets 
Tar 


IN  HOUR  SESSION 


Tourney  Record 
Heels  Rout  Clemson, 
81-61;  Enter  ACC  Semi-Finals 

*Rosenblufh  Connects  For  45; 
Cagers  Meet  Deacons  Tonight 


Legislature  Approves 
$750  For  UNC  Band 


By   LARRY    CHEEK 

Special  To  The*Daily  Tar  Heel 


Was  it  ReaHy  Lucky? 

Pete  Brennan's  lucky  car  which  was  movad  from  in  front  of  the  Monogram  Club  Wednesday  night 
for  the  first  time  in  over  a  year  was  found  in  Jhis  condition  yesterday  morning.  It  was  not  moved 
before  because  ^he  old  Buick  was  supposed  to  bring  luck  to  Carolina's  undefeated  basketlAll  team. 
The  removal  of  the  auto  was  thought  to  be  done  by   visitors  who  left  their  trademark   with   red  paint. 


IDC  Endorsement  Of  Campus  Stores 
Committee  Follows  Discussion 


Phi'Passes  Bill 
To  Censure 
Rock  And  Roll 


The  big  discussion  at  Wednes- 
day night's  Interdormitory  Coun- 
cil meeting  centered  around  Book 
Exchange   profits. 

The  council  met  at  seven  o'clock 
in  Phi  Hall. 

Council  members  discussed  at 
a  Feb.  20,  meeting  the  possibility 

of  establishing  a  committee  to  in  '  *^°""'^''  ^»^"^«  *^'*^- 
vestigate   what   were  called   "high 


specific  cases.  ernment    retreat   slated    for   April 

Question    raised    by    Old    West    13-14.  ^Action   was  withheld   pend- 
President  Teddy  Jones  concerning    ing  submission  of  more  facts  about 
the  court  change  was  whether  or    the  retreat, 
not    court    members    who '  investi- 
gated the  case  should  be  allowed  to 
vote  on  the  case. 

Other    items    discussed    on    the , 


By  NEIL  BASS 

Student    lawmakers    last    night' 
approved  appropriation  of  $750  to 
the    University     band     to     defray 
"transportation"    expenses    for    a 
spring  tour. 

I  Other  measures  passed  by  legis- 
lagtors  were: 
'  (1)  A  bill  establishing  a  five- 
.  man  committee  to  investigate  the 
:  "feasibility"  of  organizing  a  camp 
us  humor  magazine. 
L  (2)  A  resolution  favoring  re 
I  tirement  of  Lennie  Rosenbluth's 
!  number  '"10"  jersey. 

(3)  A  resolution  commending 
I  Coaches  Frank  McGuire  and  Buck 
Freeman  "for  their  talents  in 
I  building  a  championship  team 
I  (and)  their  ability  to  mold  s 
I  squad  of  sportsmanlike  athletes— 
I  worthy  to  be  called  Carolina  gen- 
:  tlemen." 

j      A   bill   calling   for  allocation   of 
I  $100  to  the  Carolina  Quarterly  lit- 
The  council     will     meet     again  j  erary  magazine  *vas  held  in  corn- 
Wednesday     nighty    March     20. !  mittee  until  "fruther  information" 
President   Sonny   Hallford  said.      |  is    acquired    concerning    it,    Ways 


and    Means    Chairman    Al    Golds- 
mith said. 

A  bill  which  would  place  the 
Student  Directory  and  Carolina 
Handbook  publications  under  the 
jurisdiction  of  .student  govern- 
ment's Publications  Board  was  re- 
ferred back  to  committee 


tionally  top  ranked  Tar  Heels  into 
tonight's  ^mifinals  against  the 
Wake  Forest  Demon  I>eacons. 

The  Tar  Heels  leaped  off  to  a 
learly  lead  and  held  a  10-2  advant- 
age at  the  17:24  mark  Playing  re- 


RALEIGH  —  All-American  Len- 
nie Rosenbluth  staged  a  one-man 
assualt  on  the  record  books  here 
last  night  as  top-seeded  North  Car- 
olia  waltzed  into  the  Atlantic 
Coajt  Conference  semi-finals  with 
a  81-61  win  over  the  outclassed 
Clemson  tigers. 

Rosenbluth,   recently    named    to 
both  the  UP  and  AP  AU-American 
Principle    objection    to    the    bill    squads,  tied  his  own  personal  re-    ball,    they    held   the    margin    with 
in  its  present  form  was  voiced  by    '^^^^  ^nd  broke  the  tourney  mark    ^^^1^  difficulty,  and  led    47-30    at 
Representative       Frank       Farrell.    ^ith  total  of  45  points,  27  of  them   ^^^^  j^^jj 

Student  Party.        ,  ,  j^.  the  first  half.  Buzz  Wilkinson  of       j^  jj,e  second  half.  Carolina  con- 

Farrell.  Publications  Board  j  Virginia  held  the  old  record  of  44.  centrated  mainly  on  getting  the 
chairman,  said  he  felt  students  The  win,  achieved  with  almost .  ball  to  RosenMuth  and  although 
.should  buy  the  directory  Individ- 1  effortless  precision,  moved  the  na- ,  ^^^^  uj^^,  ^^^  ^^j^  ^^^  ^j-g^jiy 
ually, 


Frank  Mctfuire,  coach  of  tho 
undefeated  Tar  Heels  of  North 
Carolina,  was  tonight  named 
Coach  of  the  Year  by  the  Onited 
Press. 

iaxed,    almostnonchalant    ba.sket- 


I  profits"     made     by     the     campus 

A  bill  condemning  the  disenance  ;  stores,   of  which     the     Book     Ex- 

ot    the    currently    popular    music '  change  is  a  part. 

known    as    "rock    and    roll"    was  I      u  was  decided  at  this  meeting. 

passed,   with  some  discord,  by  the    however,      that     the     IDC      would 

merely  endorse  the  work  already 
being  done  by  student  governnieni 

members     on     the     Campus  Stores, 
Committee. 

Wednesday  night  John  Brooks, 
a  member  of  the  committee,  dis 
cussed  operating  procedures  ot 
th?  campus  stores  before  the  Coun 
cil. 
^    Brooks     explained     to     council 


Philanthropic  Assembly  in  a  meet 

ing  Tuesday   night. 

In  a  vain  attempt  to  defend  the  ! 

nwisic,    representatives    Gray    and  1 

Toll)ert    hailed    the    movement    a.s  I 
a  "new  art  form"  and  condemned 
the    bill    itself    as    a    measure    de- 
signed to  condemn  not  only  rock 
and   roll,   but   self   expression    per 


( 1 )  Possibility  of  buying  pencil 
sharpeners  for  individual  dormi- 
tcries.  Action  was  withheld  pend- 
ing reports  from  dorms  concerning 
the  number  of  sharpeners  needed. 

(2)  Possibility  of  appropriating 
$100  to  the  proposed  student  gov- 

Cofhpetition 
Begins  April  10 
For  Medal 


Lennie  Didn  t  Know 
About  The   Record 


By  BUZZ  MERRIT 

Special  To  The  Daily  Tar  Heel 


RALEIGH 


guy    who    had    been    marooned    on 


"They  have  to  play  us.  It  does 
n't  matter." 


He    look* -like.- ».>.»^3e«»*»<»«   Coach   Press    Maravich 


came    in    to   congratulate    the    Tar 


a  desert  island  for  three  weeks.  [  Heels  and  posed  for  pictures  with 
and  the  way  the  kids  and  fans ,  Ro.sy.  He  pulled  out  a  rabbits  foot, 
ganged  around  him  in  the  passage  |  "Maybe  I  can  get  some  magic  from 
leading    to   the    d^e.^•sing    room,    it  ,  him, "  he  laughed. 


Speaking  affirmatively  Repre- 
.sentative  John  Brooks  pointed  out 
rock   and    roll's   destructive    influ- 


secure  young   people. 


looked   Hke  a  happy   homecoming. 
Emeciated     Lennie     Rosenbluth 
had   just   set   a   new   ACC   tourna- 


"I  hope  you  boys  go  all  the  way. 
Congratulations  on  a  good  game." 
Coach  Frank  McGuire  of  the  un- 


The    annual    Willie    P.   Mangum 
Medal,      the     University's      oldest 

members  who  questioned  him  vig- '  award,  will  be  open  to  competition  ment  .scoring  record  of  45  points  |  defeated  Tar  Heels   (it's   25   now) 

orously  that  student  government's  }  at  8  p.m..  April   10.  in  the  Dialec-  in  leading  the  Tar  Heels  to  a  81-  j  felt   the  Tar  Heels  played   a  good 

.                .                  .   I  Campus     Stores     Committee     was  j  tic  Senate  Hall.  61   first  round  victory  over  Clem  j  basketball  game.  Obviously  elated 

ence  on  American  youth,  calling  it  ,  working  on  a  long  range  program        The    Mangum   Medal   is  an   ora  '  son.  |  over  Rosy's  great  night,   McGuire 

IS       and  a    a  se  naven  tor  in  '  ^-bich    would    continue    into    next ,  torical  award  given  under  the  aire  It  was   a  bad  case  of  malnulri-  j  heaped  the  usual  prai^ye   on  lithe 

year.    Results    of    their    investiga- 1  pices  of  the  Dialectic  Senate  and  tion  that  slumped  on  the  bench  and  j  Lennie. 


Quarterly  Sets 
Deadline  For 
Contest  Entries 


the    questions    of    the 


The  Carolina  Quarterly  has  an- 
nounced its  seventh  annual  Fie- 1 
tion  Awards,  offering  two  prizes  of ; 
fifty  dollars  and  twenty-five  dol-  j 
lars  for  the  two  best  short  stories ; 
submitted. 

All  persons  others  than  mem- 
bers of  the  Quarterly  staff  are 
eligible  for  entry.  Judges  for  the  > 
contest  will  be  the  editors  and  | 
fiction  board  of  the  magazine.  | 
Deadline  for  the  contest  is  mid-  \ 
night.   Monday,   Aprii    1,    1957.        j 

Stories  should  be  mailed  un- 
signed, with  name'and  address  of 
the  author  attached  separately, 
and  accompanied  by  a  stamped, 
self-addressed  envelope.  Preferred 
length  is  between  1.500  and  5,000 
words.  Judges  reserve  the  right 
to  withhold  the  awards  in  the 
event  there  are  no  stories  of  suf- 


tion   will    perhaps   be   released   at  ;  the   Philanthropic   Literary    Socie-  ar.swcred 

that  time.  Brooks  said.                        I  ty.  writers. 

Council        members        discussed '      AH    graduating   seniors,    includ-  "Did   you   know   you    were   near 

farther    a    provision    incorporated  |  ing  senior*  graduating  at  the  end  the  record?" 

in   to   the   ID   Court    By-Laws   last  [  of  summer  school,   are  eligible  to  "No.    I   know   whether   they   are 
week    which   would    eliminate   the  j  compete.                                               :  going  in  or  not  and  whether  I'kx 

Oration  subjects  are  to  be  chos- 
en by  the  participants.  Ech  ora- 
tion should  be  about  ten  minute.*! 

long.  ■        -■     <;. 


"We  have  a  lot  of  respect  for 
Clemson,  he  said.  "I  know  Press 
(Maravich)  and  respect  his  abili- 
ty." 

Asked  who  he'd  like  to  play  to- 


and  that  student  govern- 
ment should  not  pay  for  its  pub- 
lication   in   a    package   deal. 

The  YMCA  currently  publishes 
the  two  publications.  Tho  bill, 
handed  back  to  Ways  and  eMans 
Committee,  would  call  for  publica- 
tion payment  out  of  student  gov- 
ernment's block  fee. 

Appointments  of  student  bod\ 
President  Bob  Young  to  the  Stu- 
dent Entertainment  Committee  and 
Orientation  Committee  were  ap 
proved  by  legislators.  Names  will 
be  published  tomorrow. 

Appointments  of  Speaker  Sonny 
EX'ans  to  the  Lenoir  Hall  Investi- 


Abuses  Are 
Cause  For 
Check 

Undergraduate  abuses  of  library 
privileges  were  largely  responsi- 
ble for  the  new  policy  of  check- 
ing stack  permits,  library  officials 
stated  yesterday. 

University  Librarian  Andrew  H. 


from  his  torrid  first  half  pace,  he 
managed  to  pour  in  18  points, 
enough  to  break  the  record. 

With  so  much  emphasis  placed 
on  getting  the  ball  into  their  star, 
the  Tar  Heels  allowed  the  pesky 
Tigers-  to  creep  within  10  points, 
57-47,  at  the  10:33  mark.  Then  UNC 
i-enter  Joe  Quigg  dumped  in  a  pair 
of  field  goals,  and  it  was  a  breeze 
from  there  on  out. 

Rosenbluth  made  19  of  31  from 
the  floor  and  7  for  12  from  the 
line  in  amassing  his  total.  The  old 
(See  TAR  HEELS,  page  4) 

TH€  BOX 


gation  Committee   were    approved    Horn  indicated  that  progress  is  be-  j  UNC 


i  court      investigating      committee. 
'  and  have  an  enlarged  court  mem- 
bership— from  seven   men  to  nine 
I  — actually  do  the  investigating  for 


night,  the  smiling  Irishman  quip 
having  a  good  night,  but  I  can't  tell  '  ped,  "Id  rather  not  play  anybody, 
how  many."  I'd  rather  sit  up  there  in  the  stands. 

"Would   you   rather    play   State '  and    watch.   Seriously,   1   have   no   dent,  vice-president,  secretary,  and 
or  Wake  Forest?"  preference."  treasurer.  « 


by  lawmakers.  These  are  Jim  John- 
son, Ekldie  Brown  and  Bert  War- 
ren. 

SP  Continues 
Nomination 
Meets  Monday 

Student  Party  will  meet  to  con- 
tinue nominations  Monday  at  7:30 
p.m.  in  Roland  Parker  Lounges  Ij 
and  2. 

Nominations  for  Student  Legis- 
lative positions  from  "Town  Men 
and  Women's  districts,  as  well  as 
dorm  wotpen,  will  be  made  at  this 
time. 

Endorsement  of  editors  of  camp- : 
us   publications,   Carolina   Athletic  I 
Assn.,  head  cheerleader,  and  Na- 1 
tional  Student  Assn.  coordinator  is 
also    scheduled    for    this    meeting.  ■ 

Last  on  the  nominating  agenda 
will  be  Senior  Class  oficers,  and 
the  student  body  offices  of  presi- 


ing   made   in   curbing   the   abuses  1  Quigg  f 
"We're  making  progress  with  these   Brennan  f 
birds  (students)."  he  said.  Lotz  f 

However,  he  pointed  out  that  j  Young  f 
the  library  is  greatly  handicapped  i  Searcy  f 
by  insufficient  funds.  jRoseitWnth  c 

The    head     of     the     Circulation  I  Keams  g 
Dept..  .Miss  .Mary  Lou  Lucy,  traced   Cunningham  g 
most    of   the   trouble   to   the  large  :  Rosemond  g 
number   of   undergraduates    using  I  Holland  g 
the   library     stacks.     "T^e     fewei  i      Totals 
i  people   there  are   running  arounci !  CLEAASON 

I  in  the  stacks,  the  less  trouble  we    Vockel  f 
have    keeping    things    in    place,"   Hoffman  f 
she  said.  (Undergraduates  are  not  |  Seay  c 
j  given    permission      to      visit      the  j  .Moncrief  c 
j  stacks. )  j  BrinkJey  g 

I      Miss    Lucy    .stated    the   problem '  Cameron  g 
!  this  way:   the  greater  the  numbei  I  Yeary  g 


LENiOR  HALL: 


J.-**" 


of  students,  the  greater  the  de 
mand  for  books.  The  greater  the 
demand  for  books  the  greater  the 
"misplacement"  of  books.  The  li- 
brary lacks  sufficient  funds  for 
additional  copies,  she  added. 

"Open  stacks  for  all  student.*; 
would  be  the  ideal  solution  to  the 
problem,"  she  stated.  However, 
the  library  lacks  the  necessary 
money  for  that  too.  she  said. 

She  said  that  stack  permits^ 
should    have    been    checked    Ion" 


Totals 
UNC 
CLEMSON 


G 

3 
3 
1 
0 
0 

1» 
2 
1 
1 
1 
31 

C 

5 

2 

3 

0 

7 

5 

0 
22 


F 
4-4 
6-6 
0-2 
0-1 
OK) 
7-12 
1-3 
1-2 
0-1 
0-1 
19-32 
F 
6-8 
1-2 
3-4 
0-1 
2-4 
4-4 
1-2 
17-25 
47 
30 


P 
2 

3 

1 

2 

0 
-  1 

0 

4 

0 

1 
14 

F 
3 
3 
5 
3 
2 
2 
1 

19 
34  —  SI 
31  —  61 


T 
10 

12 

2 
0 
0 

4& 
S 

3 

2 

2 
81 

T 
16 

S 

9 

0 
16 
14 

1 
61 


Selection  Starts 
Next  Week  For 
Co«d's  Council 


Student   Workers   Fail   To   Get   Cash   Payment 


By   BOB   HIGH 


one-half    hours   with    the    worker:';   which    would    be   required.   Prilla-  come  to'  him  in  the  first  place,  the   on  to  say. 
j  receiving    permission    to    visit    the ,  man  said  this  would  cost  more  and  i  volume  of  business  would  not  have       He   said    the    rule.v   and    regula 

Pine  Room  twice  a  day  and   have    by  paying  student:*  in  meals,  Len-   dropped.  tions  of  Lenior  Hall  were  made  to    of  the  strays  never  return, 

two  free  cups  of  coffee.  ior  is  saving  money.  "j  do   not  condone  the  practice   abide  by  and  that  he  and  the  din-  \      She  said  that  the  checking  had 

Approximately  three  weeks  ago,  Prillaman  said,  "We  have  tried  of  writing  editoriaL,-  but  if  you  ^"8  hall  administration  was  not  begun  as  an  experiment  and  thai 
a  petition  was  solicited  by  the  paying  the  students  before  and  it  have  a  grievance  I  would  go  to  the :  trying  to  push  the  student  work-  the  faculty  and  graduate  students 
workers   of  Lenior  with   the  fina.'  didn't  work."  He  then  summed  up  \  superintendent  or  to  the  manager  j  ers  around.  '  "" 

count  of  signatures  being  close  to   the  situation  by  adding,  "I  am  not    and  not  resort  to  petty  editorials,";      In  trying  to  prove  his  point  on 
60.  It  was  understood  by  the  work-    inductive  to  changes  in  the  policy   stated  Prillaman.  I  how  much  it  cost  Lenior  to   hire 

ers  that  this  document  was  to  be   of  student  aid.  "  '  student    workers,    Prillaman    gave 

presented  to  Prillaman.  The  students  then  tried   to  bar-       "Some      misunderstanding      has^j^^  following  figures.  To  feed  125 

=t..H^„t'     The  director  stated  that  he  nev-    gain   with    the   director   for   other   <^on»e   up   and    I  wish   you   would  ^tu^ents,  R  costs  $237.50  per  day. 
'*"'^^"Vr  saw  a  petition.  He  went  on  to   benefits  but  were  denied.  Permia- ;  come  to  me  with  your  troubles. 
ThP     mPPtina    of    thP     ,t„Hpnf 'say  that  if  such  a  .situation  aro.scsion  to  go  ^o  the  Pine  Room  and   continued  the  director.  t 

workLrSior^krwaJcanel'-  ^^  whether  he  had  to  pay   the   spend  the  money  not  used  .,  .ally       Prma-^^^  ,,y  u  «6.  to   have  the 

u.' ^  ,„ ...     ..  .._   .* ;*.-i  student   workers    on   a   ca.sh    basis   eating  was  refused.  The  rca,.'on  was    worxers 


"I  think  the  Student  Legia-lature 
erred  in  resolving  to  investigate 
the  conditions  here  as  you  did 
when  you  wrote  editorials.  I  think 
this  misunderstanding  was  moti- 
vated for  political  expediancy,  and 
the  situation  should  have  had  a 
preliminary  hearing  before  any  ac- 
tion was  taken,"  George  W.  Prilla- 
man, director  of  Lenior  Hall,  told 
a  mass  meeting  of  the 
workers  Wednesday  night. 


The  Bi-partisan  Selections  Board. 
made  up  of  three  Women'?  Honor 
ago  and  that  the  practice  of  close- j  council  Members  and  a  represent- 
ative of  each  party  for  the  purpose 
of  screening  candidates  for  Wo- 
men's Honor  Council  sets,  will  hold 
interviews  en  Thursday  from  4:00 
5:00  and  from  6:30-7:30;  also  on 
March  13.  from  1:30-3:00.  Three 
seats  are  open  to  juniors. 

Girls  interested  in  running  must 
sign  up  on  the  list  posted  on  the 
door  of  the  Council  Room  on  the 
setond  floor  of  Graham  Memorial, 
according  to  Pat  McQueen,  chair- 


ly  checking  out-going  books  should 
be  extended  to  the  Reserve  Read- 
ing Room.  She  attributed  most  pi 
the  missing  books  to  carelessness. 
However,   sht   sWmitted   that   most 


were   pleased  with   the  idea, 

The    librar>'    officials   expressed 
their  intention  of  using  the  pres- 

ent  method  of  checking  stack  per-  j  ^^^  ^j  Women's  Honor  Council 
mits    until   June.    The    amount    of 


at,  Lenior  the  "cream  ol 


to  reward  and  encourge  literary 
excellence.  Although  the  comjjeti- 
tion  is  completely  open,  UNC 
writers  are  particularly  encouraged 
to  enter. 

Prize-winning  stories  will  be 
published  in  the  spring  issue  of 
the  Quarterly. 


ficieni  ment.  by  Prillaman,  t'o  discuss  the  issue!         ~""  .  ""   "   ""■'"■    ""■"■'  -  r      i   *      .    -«    the  cron"  of  the  student  bodv  here 

The    purpose    of   the   contest    is  J  receiving  cash  payment  for  the !  "'"  '*'^'"'*-''  ^^^"^   ^^'"'^   ^^^'''  J°^«'   ^^'^  ''""^'  ^^  ^^^  '"^^"'^^  ^"^  ^""     T^5_?k_- 

;  student  workers  instead  of  having'?.^  ^°"'^    ^''"^    ^^^    workers    and 
'  to  consume  their  compensation  in  I  ^"^^  ''^«"'^'"  ^'^'P' 
food  I      The    key'  to   the    whole   policy 

argument  is  in  the  Rules,  Regula- 


Uniform    cleaning    bill    per    day 
amounts  to  $31.50.  The  total  cost 

stu- 
dent workers  in  Lenior. 


library  funds  will  determine  wheth- 
er the  system  is  continued,  they 
said. 


and 
Concerning 


GM'S  SLATE 


ActivitiM  In  Graham  Memori- 
■I  today  includ*: 

Bud9«t  Committ»«,  4-6,  Roland 
Ptrkor  Loung*  No.  1;  Petit* 
Dr*m«ti<|u*,  7-10:30,  Roland 
Piirkor  Loun9*»  N«.  1  ind  2; 
C«nstitutien  Rovi»lon  Committoo, 
2-S.  Weedheuso  Conforonco 
R«em;  Trl-t«ta,  10-11,  W©od- 
houso  CMif«r*ne«  R«»in. 


Prillaman    opened    the    sessipn ,   . 
with    a    written    statement    which !  J°"^' 
said,   "Recently   several   deceptive   . 
editorials    have    appeared    in    the  I '"  .^^"""■.  "^"• 
Daily  Tar  Heel,    and   in   order  to 
clarify  the  prejont  policy  of  Len 
ior    Hall's    management    and    per- 
haps to  stop  further  decimation  of 
Lenoir  as  a  fine  student  dining  hall 
and  a  place  where  University  fac 
ulty,   staff   and   students   enjoy   a 
fellowship   that    no    other   campus 


General 
Student 


Information 
Employment 


It  reads  as  follows:  "You  will 
allocate  you  daily  compensation  of 
one  dollar  and  ninety  cents  for  3 
meals." 

Prillaman  said  that  this  state- 
ment was  drawn  up  for  the  fall 
semester  and  could   possibly  been 


cash  payment.  It  would  not  pay  for 
itself. 

The  suggestion  that  meal  book.s 
be  used  was  met  by  Prillaman  with 
an  abrupt  no.  The  system  asked  for 
was  to  have  the  books  printed  on 
the  basis  of  $1.90  a  day  for  the 
.vmester  or  a  week  and  if  a  stu- 
dent didn't  use  all  of  the  alloca- 
tion it  could  be  used  another  time.- 
Prillaman's  objection  this  time  wa.s 
that  it  cost  too  much  for  the 
printing  of  the  meal  books. 

"We  do  not  want  you  to  go  to 
the  Pine  Room  and  eat  hotdogs 
or   a   snack   when   you    can   get    a 


Fire  Smothered  i 
InY  WasteCcmj 

A  small  blaze  in  a  waste  basket  \ 
caused  a  brief  period  of  excite-  j 
ment  in  the  Y  lounge  "Riursday '. 
morning.  j 

The  fire  broke  out  about  9:45 1 
belliouir  toward  the  system  at  Len-  aman  said,  "The  policies  have  not  :  in  an  office  on  the  second  fl»or  of  1 
ior  Hall  but  they  will  not  be  dis-  changed,  your  interpretations  |  the  Y.  A  secretary  in  an  adjoin- 1 
misssd.  j  changed.  You  have  the  right  to  ex     ing  office  noticed  the  smoke  and ! 

"It  appalls   me  that  you   didn't   press  your    feelings    to    the    right    called   on   the   students   in   the   \ 
come  to  me   in  the   first    place,"  I  place.   You  (the  student  workers)  j  lounge  for  aid  in  putting  out  the ', 
stated    Prillaman.    Prillaman   went   are  to  be  paid,  we  have  not,  do  not    blaze, 
on   to   say   that   the    action    taken    and  will  not  set  a  value  on  your 
by  the   Student   Legislature    a,Tid    work." 


at  Carolina.  i      Prillaman  went   on   to  say   that 

Referring  back  to  the  Tar  Heel, ;  his  18  regular  workers  received 
Prillaman  said  that  he  was  never  $75.06  per  day  in  wages,  $34.20  in 
approched  by  a  student  represen-  meals.  Uniform  cleaning  costs 
tative  and  found  out  all  that  he  amounts  to  $4.68  per  day.  The  dif- 
knows  from  the  Tar  Heel.  He  en-  ference  between  the  two  types  of 
um^rated  further  that  he  knew  workers  was  $155.06  per  day. 
who  the  students  are  who  are  re-       In  summing  up  the  session,  Prill- 


The  list  will  be  removed  on 
Tuesday,  March  12,  at  5:30.  Ap- 
pointments for  interviews  will  be 
closed  at  that  time. 


IN  THE  INFIRAAARY 

^Umttl  in  the  Infirmary  y*s- 


interpreted     by    the     workers     as 
,  facility  offers;  an  open  discussion  i '"^^"^"g   ^««*»   payment   of   money    g;^"   -"-J^";"^-;-  jj^;;  .f^^^^  The    only    humorus    thing    that 

iis    perhaps    the    best    solution    of   "°^  ^P^"^  ^^  ""^  ^^^  "^  «^""g-         the  director  ''  ^     newspaper    were    mostly,    he   happened    all    night   was    when    a 

!  what  may  otherwL>«  cause  ill  feel- 1      "^^^    '"^'"    objection    to    payroll  thought,  done  for  political  reasons,   student  got  up  to  leave  early,  ex 

Jngs." 


The    only    major    damage    done 
was  the  mess  caused  by  the  fire  j 
extinguisher,   and   a   ruined    waste  • 
basket. 

The  secretary     said     that     the 


hiring  of  student  workers  was  the       In  referring  to  the  editorials  ap- ,      "They   are   trying   to   cram    the  plaining  that  he  was   15    minutes ,  blaze  was  probably  the   result   ol 
neccessity  of  additional  personnel    pearing  in  the  Tar  Heel,  the  direc- 1  Civil  Rights  bill  down  the  South-   late   for   an   appointment    and    all  j  a    cigaret     that     was     carc'essly 
The  session  lasted  for  two  and  ^  to  take  care  of  administrative  work   tor  said  that  if  the  students  had  em's  throats,"   the  director  went  he  wanted  was  the  food,  dropped  in  the  waste  basket. 


terday   in«ludod: 

Mrs.  Leif  Saute;  MisMS  Doro- 
thy F'itman,  Holon  Yat»«,  Harri- 
ett* Ltwik,  Nancy  SuttI*,  Jo  Ann 
Soworr,  Sarah  Whit*,  Lillian 
$p«nc*r;  and  G*org*  B*st,  Ron- 
ald K»lly,  Willicnv  Roddinc,  Mar- 
vin HarlMt,  B*n  Mast,  B*njamin 
L*vy,  lv*y  P**t*,  Edvi^ard  Hugh- 
*s.  Chariot  B«rn*.';,  J*rry  Farbcr, 
Chark's  B«rg*r,  Fr*d  Robinson, 
Donald  Howard,  William  Bab- 
bl*y,  RaiMfl*  R*nn,  Paul  Pinto, 
0*01-9*'  Carter,  David  Bryont, 
0*w*y  Johnson.  Gordon  Lind- 
say, C*cil  Barrior,  Noil  Reborts,' 
Jwn*s  Borreughs,  Timothy  Jonos, 
Richard  Eis*nb*rg,  G*org*  Pr*n- 
thiss.  Rhedos  Ltgan,  Rebort  Mau- 
rice «)mI  Iruc*  eilit. 


i  A 


^A6t    TWO 


f 

,'lnteHectual   Revolution: 
N6w  Is  The  Time  To  Start 

Once  upon  a  time,  at  an  institution  of  higher  learning,  a  professor 
despaired  of  the  fish-like  gaze  that  greeted  him  for  an  hour  each  day. 

He  was  a  professor  of  American  literature,  so  he  said,  maitter-of- 
factly,  "Ernest  Hemingway  was  the  father  of  Gertrude  Stein. " 

A  hand  shot  up  on  the  fourth  row.  The  professor's  heart  raced.  His 
eyes  widened.  "Yes, "  he  said  with  anticipation,  "you  had  a  question?" 

"Veah,"   the  student  replied.  "Arc  you  going  to  hold  us  responsi- 
ble for  that  on  th^exam?"  , 

lie.  Maybe  their     forces     are     too 


tMl  UAJLY  TAR  HtlL 


FRIDAY,  MARCH  I,  IfS^ 


Friday, 


Suggestion  For  The  Mugwump  Time--     An  Overworked 
Name  It  Vadlblain,  Sa/s  Reader        Garden  Tractor 


»  *  .    • 

\Vhy  are  we.  as  students  and  the 
proverbial  leaders  of  tomorrow, 
content  to  sit  on  our  comfortable 
rear  end  in  class  all  morning  and 
stir  not  a  cell  of  our  brains?  Whv 
do  we  search  for  the  memorized 
fact,  for  the  already-digested  atid 
neatly-outlined  opinion,  instead  of 
the  truth? 

One  professor  has  an  answer. 
•'W'liy  should  you  students  Iwther 
to  be  different?"  he  asks.  It  is  much 
more  (omtortrible  to  be  like  every- 
body else,  to  stay  Out  of  trouble,  to 
keep  the  status  qtio." 


The  sLitus  quo  is  one  ol  ihe 
most  terrible  threats  to  modem 
p<jlitics.    to   modern    living. 


Once  we  start  believing  coni- 
plclelv  what  Norman  Vincent 
Peale  savs,  or  Time  Magazine,  or 
a  professor,  or  the  State's  General 
.\sscmblv.  or  this  newspaper,  then 
we  have  truly  gained  the  title  of 
tlic  "lost"  generation. 

WIk'vc  are  the  leaders,  the  think- 
er, the  i\ory-towcr  people,  of  this 
L'ni  verity? 

Tor  the  most  part,  they  are 
members  of  the  laculty.  They  are 
not  evident  in  the  student  body. 
Those  members  of  the  student- body 
uho  are  leaders,  thinkers  and  in- 
habitants of  the  ivory  tower  are 
(]uiet.  Maybe  they  are  scared  to 
speak,  to  lead,  to  question  in  pub- 


HHiaft:  maybe  they  ar^  Raiting  for 
an    iiuellectual    revplution. 

Such  a  revoliiftion  etilinot  come 
unl^  thiyse  thinkers  come  out  in- 
to the  open. 

•i,;:!'.        •  * 

lake  l^e  Campus  Christian 
Council,  for  cXatople.  It  is  a  Prot- 
estant student  grolip,  made  up  of 
leaders.  It  obviously  is  searching 
for  the  truth.  Vet  a  report  of  the 
Campus  Christian  Coimcil  lead- 
ing with  student  initiative  was 
Mimeographed  and  sent  to  mem- 
bets  with  the  notation  that  mem- 
bers should  not  reveal  its  contents 
either  in  writing  or  in  spoken  words 
to  other  members  of  the  campus 
connn  unity. 

Or  take  tiK'  Votnig  Nfens 
Christian  Assn..  .vjongrtime  spokes- 
man lor  the  Ireedom  of  the  mind, 
the  freedom  to  dissent,  the  free- 
dom to  criticize. 

The  VMCA  is  in  such  a  hobble 
rigin  now  that  its  leaders  are  quite 
intwilling  to  be  quoted,   publicly, 

on  anv  touchy  issue. 

*       '      #  • 

So  it  appears  that  the  religious 
thinkers  on  this  campus  are  not  go- 
ing to  lead  an   ititcllectual   revolt. 

\Vho  is?  Who  is  tired,  of  staying 
in  the  background,  tired  of  watch- 
ing their  fellow  men  and  women 
stupidlv  place  shackles  on  their 
f>wn  brains?  Who? 


Editor: 

Last  week  sometime  you  is- 
sued an  appeal,  a  plea  concern- 
ing the  nature  of  the  seasons. 
You  wrote  of  a  "mugwump  sea- 
son" that  the  campus  and  the 
world  in  general  is  experiencing 
right  now.  And  you  asked  that 
this  nusiance  be  named. 

I  respond  in  kind  to  your  chal- 
lenge, your  entreaty.  It  was  an 
articulate  plea,  yours,  and  a 
worthy  one:  for  true  enough  this 
time  of  year  is  a  mugwump,  a 
dervish  of  changes,  an  unpredict- 


able variant  of  weather  and  the 
elsments. 

Consistency  in  everything  is 
a  ne<*essity  of  temperance  in 
moo(}  and  morale.  This  time  of 
year  preys  upon  the  temper  and 
it  thus  receives  the  plaudits  of 
the  damned. 

And  so  it  must  be  named.  But 
what?  Fall,  winter,  spring  and 
summer  are  concise,  inclusive 
terms.  The  names  are  original 
and  they  serve  their  purpose 
well. 

I  will   have  to  apolegiz*  for 


my  limited  command  of  Eng- 
lish and  therefore  revert  to  a 
weaker  method,  to  a  splicing 
ot  names.  And  so  not  mug- 
vfump,  but  Vacilblain.       * 

This  season,  as  I  said  befdre, 
flutters  back  and  forth  between 
temperate  and  cold  weather.  Rap- 
idly changing  temperatures  pro- 
duce sore  throats,  cold  sores, 
chaped  lips.  Condense  the  two 
definitions  and  you  have  left  a 
combination  of  vacillation  and 
chilblain. 

Perhaps  this  term  causes  only 
disagreable  ughs.  It  may  do  so, 


but  the  term  itself  should  not  be 
lost.  It  has  a  medieval  trill.  Use 
of  the  term  could  be  made;  for 
example,  by  pouring  together  a 
mixture  of  vaseline  and  vapbrub 
and  calling  it  "Vacilblain,  the 
new  wonder  cold  eradicator." 

Its  soothing  roll  and  the  pub- 
lic's love  of  patented  names 
will  make  it  sell. 

In  any  event  an  attprapt  has 
been  made.  TIfere  are  undoubt- 
edly better  names  fer  this  sea- 
son; I  leave  it  to>the  savants  to 
sow  the  fertile  ground. 

Graham  Snyder 


uui    WHA"»r  ABUOT   THAT   OTHER   TI^E? 

redder  Spiidcr  lias  a*;   ansiver 


AtHLETES  IN  COBB  DORM: 


TV:  Miss  Bloom  iSs  Juliet 


Anthony  Wolff 

Kiiday  evening  is  almost  always 
lacking  in  worthwhile  television 
fare,  and  tonight  is  no  exception. 
II  vou  ha\e  an  undeniable  yen  to 
turn  the  thing  on,  your  guess  is  as 
good  as  my  choice. 

As  there's  nothing  in  the  way  of 
previews  and  since  blank  space 
ruins  the  make-up  and  angers  my 
editor.  1  shall  devote  the  remainder 
of  this  space  to  my  impressions  ot 
Monday  nights  Produce!  s  Show- 
case production  of  Romeo  a-ud 
Juliet,  n^iie  to  spatial  limitatians. 
this  column  was  unable  to  carrv 
advance  notice,  but  perhaps  some 
saw    it   anv  way.) 

The  main  weakness  ol  the   pre- 


The  Daily  Tar  Heel 


The  official  itudeni  puhljcatiim  of  ibe 
Publications  Board  of  the  University  of 
North  Carolina,  where  it  is  published 
daily  except  Monday  and  examinatiot 
•  nd  vacation  periods  and  summer  terms 
Entered  a.s  srcDnd  class  matter  in  the 
0'>.<!t  office  in  f'haprl  Hill,  N  C,  undei 
the  .^ct  oi  March  8,  1870.  SubscriptioB 
rates  mailed.  .$4  per  year.  $2.50  a  semes 
ter  delivered.  $6  a  year,  $3.50  a  seme* 


4 

teT 


Editor 


FRED  POWLEDGt 


Managing  Editor CHARLIE  SLOAN 


News  Editor 


NANCY  HILL 


Sports  Editor 


LARRY  CHBEK 


Business  Manager BILL  BOB  PEEL 

Advertising  Manager        FRED  KATZLN 


EDITUKIAL     iTAFF    —    Woodjr     SeaM, 
Joey  Payne,  Stan  Shaw. 


NEWS  STAFF— Clarke  Jones.  Pringle 
Pipkin.  Edith  MacKinnon,  Wally  ^u- 
ralt,  Mary  Aly» .  Voorhces.  Graham 
Snyder.  Neil  Bass,  Bob  High.  Ben 
Taylor.  Walter  Sehruntek.  H-Joost  Po- 
lak.   Patsy  Miller,   Bill  King,      t 


BUSINESS  STAFF— Rosa  Moore.  Johnny 
Whitaker.  Dick  Leavitt. 


SPORTS   STAFF:   Dave  Wible,  Stewart 
Bird,  Ron  Milligan. 


Subscription  Manager  _ 

Circulation  Manager  

Assistant  Sports  Editor 


.  Dale  Stale; 

Charlie  Holt 

-Bill  King 


'^taff  Photographers    Woody  Sears, 

Norman  Kant  or 
Librarians    Sue  Gichner,  Marilyn  Strum 

Proofreader  , Bill  Weekes 

Night  Editor  Grahani  Snyder 

Night  News  Editor*^^ Bob  High 


UltMiitil 


sentation  wa«j  Claire  Bloom's  act- 
ing. This  is  not  to  say  that  Miss 
liloom  is  not  a  very  fine  Shakes- 
pearian actjress:  in  the  past  she  has 
olteUt-J^een  excellent.  But  she  is 
nnsuitedto  television,  and  to  the 
role  of  Juliet. 

*  ■  .  *  .  .,  *  ' 
Specifk-atty,  !?he  bVer-emotes. 
This  is  more  effective  on  a  full 
stage  than  on  the  TV  screen,  but 
e\en  there  her  sobbing  and  giasp- 
iug  and  beating  of  breast  often 
obscure  the  beauty  of  Shakes- 
peares  woicls.  In  Shakespeare,  the 
emotion  and  grandeur  are  so 
iniuli  in  the  lines  themselves  that 
the  actors  maiti  lesponsibility  is  to 
make  smc  that  not  a  word  or  an 
in  Meet  ion  gets  lost. 

.\lso.  .Miss  Bloom  tiiher  over- 
looked or  (hose  to  tnsregard  the 
essential  contrast  in  the  personality 
ol  the  heroine.  Juliet  is  abom  14 
veais  old.  and  thus  in  a  sense  she- 
i^  unsophisticated,  innnature;  but 
as  she  is  involved  in  a  pure  and 
passionate  love,  she  is  at  times  a 
woman. 

It  is  this  sharp  dramatic  con- 
trast aroimd  which  Shakespeare 
built  -many  of  his*  scenes,  particu- 
larlv  Juliet  s  solilocjuies.  Miss 
Blooms  weakness  in  portraying 
this  dualitv  weakened  the  whole 
production. 

.Nfy  onlv  other  criticism  is  that 
much  of  the  dialogue  was  often 
difficult  or  impossible  to  make 
out,  Shakespcaie's  language  was 
probably  easily  intelligible  to  the 
people  of  his  day,  and  modern 
Fivjflishmen  may  not  have  too  much 
difficulty  with  it.  But  Americans, 
no  matter  how  dearlv  they  love 
or  how  intelligently  they  appreci- 
ate his  plays,  must  havj^^  swne 
troiihle  in  this  respect.  '"' 
<*■',■.'.«■■' 

^his.  is  particulaily  true  when 
the  lines  are  spoken  as  rapidly  as 
tiiev  were  by  the  Old  Vic  company. 
.\gain,  the  beauty  of  Shakespeare 
is  mainly  in  his  lines;  though  the 
emotions  may  be  intense,  they  are 
still  contained  in  the  words  tliem- 
•selves.  On  this  side  of  the  .\tlan- 
tic,  the  wcjrds  should  flow  more 
slowly. 

Otherwise,  I  have  almost  un- 
qualified praise  for  the  show.  It 
was  imagini lively  staged  and  well 
acted.  The  necessary  condensation 
for  tele\fsion  was  executed  with 
little  loss  of  continuity  or  beauty. 


Beneficial  To  The  Student  Body 


Pringle  Pipkin 

Some  students  do  not  like  the 
proposed  plan  of  having  all  the 
football  players  in  Cobb  Dormi- 
tory. Many  more  do  not  under 
stand  it  or  the  reasons  behind  it. 

In  answer  to  questions  con- 
.  cefrriing  his  reasons  for  wanting 
the  football  players  in  Cobb 
'  il)tlhh.  Coach  Tatum  replied,  "we 
ha\'e  never  asked  for  Cobb.  We 
asked  for  someplace  where  the 
football  players  could  be  super- 
vised in  their  h.^using  until  they 
^'ere  acclimated  in  campus  life." 
.^Atany  of  the  plajers  are  already 
in  Cobb,  he  said. 

He  continued,  "we  fee!  men 
on  grant-in-aid  out  for  football 
have  an  obligation  to  football  the 
same  as  the  students  working  in 
Lenoir  Hall  have  to  their  job. 
Because  a  football  player  has  to 
practice  every  afternoon,  he  can 
not  regulate  his  time  of  study  to 


the  other  mehin  the  dorm." 

Pointing  out  an  isolated  case 
where  two  other  men  and  a 
football  player  live  in  a  three- 
man  room  and  one  has  to  gel  up 
at  5  a.m.  and  the  other  c\o?s  not 
go  to  bed  until  1:30  a.m..  he  said 
\  that  the  football  player  would 
not  get  proper  sleep. 

He  commented  that  it  is  not 
easy   for  a   boy   to   get  out   of 
General  Cellega,  and  that  it  is 
lecessary  for  him  to  start  mak- 
ing  a  good  qualitypoint  grade 
his  freshman  year. 
The    grant-in-aiu    contract    for 
football  players  stipulates  that  a 
student    make    "normal    progress 
toward  graduation." 

When  asked  if  the  football  play- 
ers would  be  more  supervised, 
the  U.\C  coach  answered.  "That's 
it.  We  have  to  have  a  tutoring 
program  as  at  every  institution 
that  I  know  of,  this  will  be  more 


Panty  Raids  Aren't,  Really; 
Start  Them  On  Navy  Field 


Editor: 

The  purpose  of  this  note  is  to 
correct  a  grievous  error — more 
specifically,  a  misnomer.  The 
subject  is  panty  raids.  The  argu- 
ment is  thai  there  are  no  such 
Ihiiigs. 

In  my  estimation  there  can  be 
no  panty  raid  unless  panties  arc 
involved.  And  those  of  you  who 
have  been  here  long  enough  to 
ste  such  a  "raid'  knew  very  well' 
that  these  dainty  articles  are 
never  involved. 

The  crux  of  the  matter  is  that 
many  students  are  capable  of 
starting  a  "raid'  but  there  are 
none  who  are  willing  to  see  it 
go  off  successfully. 

• 

I'il  Abner 


The  students,  faculty  and  ad- 
ministration are  forever  "ifbm- 
menting  on  Writing  about  *and 
persecuting  something  that  does 
not  exist.        » 

I  have  several  suggostiojis,  to 
make.  First  of  all.  if  panty  raids 
are  desired  then  have  them:  but 
se?  that  panties  are  included. 
Secondly,  if  they  are  nojt  to  be 
included,  then  stop  calKng  them 
"panty   raids." 

Most  important  of  aUT^Hll'  all 
that  comes  of  such  a  "raid"  is 
noise  and  confusion,  then  why 
not  start,  on  Navy  Field,  and  let 
the  rost  of  Us  study  of  sspSlroul 
as  the  case  may  be? 

Name  withheld  by  rl<rv«st 


organized  in  an  approved  man- 
ner by  having  them  together. 
"We  think  right  now  tljat  the 
program  ought  to  be  for  any  boy 
not  out  of  General  College  or  who 
hasn'i  proved  that  he  is  )[oing  to 
have  any  trouble  doing  it.  As 
so'n  as  a  man  shows  us  his  abil- 
ity in  conduct  and  in  meeting 
academic  grades,  we  would  urge 
him  to  room  in  a  place  of  his 
own  choice.'' 

One  upperclassman  football 
player,  having  some  academic  dif- 
ficulties, said  that  he  thought  it 
was  a  good  idea  to  have  all  the 
freshmen  together  "because  when 
I  came  I  stayed  out  to  anytime  at 
night." 

Coach  Tatum  said  that  many 
of  the  people  fell  by  the  way- 
side who  would  not  have  done 
so  if  they  had  been  properly 
proctored. 

He  concluded  that  the  program 
of  having  the  players  all  together 
in  a  dormitory  was  an  attempt 
to  help  the  athlete  meet  the  high 
academic  jstandards: 

Because  football  players  rep- 
resent a  large  and  non-transfer- 
able amount  of  time  and  of  train- 
ing, he  said  that  he  wanted  to 
help  them  academically  so  that 
they  would  not  fail  out  the  soph- 
omore or  junior  year. 

I  personally  feel  that  this  pro- 
gram    would    be     beneficial     to 
everyone — to     the     students     in  , 
Cobb  because  the  football  play-  " 
ers   would     be     supervised     and 
necessarily   quieter,   to   the   foot- 
ball   team    because    they    would  / 
the  given  a  chance   for  more  ef-' 
ficient    study,    and    to    the    aca- 
demic standards  because  the  foot- 
ball   players    would    be    able    to 
meet  them  more  easily  and  the 
pressure  to  lower  them  would  be 
minimized. 


* 

He 

Hates 

Students 

Stan  Shaw 

Yes,  we  hate  students.  We  hate 
these  lazy  slobs  who  aren't  will- 
ing to  engage  in  any  activities. 
If  they  did  something  they  are 
afraid  that  they  might  have  to 
think,  and  thinking  might  upset 
that  delicate  conception  of  the 
world  that  they  find  so  comfort- 
able. 

We  find  that  the  most  that 
many  students  engage  in  is  an 
occasional  trip  to  one  of  the 
emporiums  of  apathy,  locally 
known  as  the  Tempo  and  the 
Goody.  ..^t  these  places  a  student 
will  exercise  his  meager  intel- 
lectual machinary  in  what  is 
Jtnowii  as  a  "bull  session." 

The  name  fits  adequately. 
There  we  find  our  typical  stu- 
dent discussing  such  questions  of 
lasting  interest  as  "Is  our  basket- 
ball  team   really   number   one?" 

They  memorize  a  certain 
amount  of  material.  This  enables 
them  to  pass  their  courses  and 
slay  in  schools  Occasionally  one 
of  them  will  make  Phi  Beta  Kap 
pa. 

They  have  goals,  ambitions  and 
desires,  just  like  people  who 
think.  These  aren't  very  well 
thought  out  goals,  desires  oram- 
bitions<  how  could  they  be  if 
the  person  never  thought),  but 
they  pass  for  what  they  actual- 
ly are  supposed  to  be. 
■  It  -^seems  sad  that  this  is  the 
case,  and  that  things  are  in  as 
miserable  condition  as  they  are. 
^t  then  if  we  don't  worry  about 
iHera  and  take  a  positive  attitude 
tfiey/teally  don't  exist  after  all. 

It  would  appear  possible  that 
there  are  those  here  who  may 
disagree  with  us.  We  hope  that 
they  can  prove  their  case. 

• 

By  A!  Capp 


♦.'IK 


XBHIRS, 


'/pitv 


]  PLEASE.  DONT  HANt  UP    ^ 
\    AGAIN,  MISS  PlMPUETOM.':'' 

IT  IS  DIFFICULT  FINDING 
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By  Walt  Kelly 


wnt*  I  L,mn  ^f  U91HI  07     ^-y  « 

NATIONS  OP -rwe  ^V--^^ 
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fM  IDEA  id  TO  OPBH  A  CANAL 
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pg(?uoo--    >— -// 


A  «M,y  (QUESTION-  3ur 
WHERi  VW3UUP  IT  GO--? 
WMEPe  WOJUP  IT  WINP  VPJ> 


Neit  Bass 

President  Bob  Young  was  hitting  close  to  home 
last  week  when  he  told  the  Student  Legislature  that 
the  University,  faculty  pay  scale  was  comparable 
to  '%  Farmall  cub  tractor"  cultivatiag  a  "200  acre 
farm." 

Young  was  also  right  in  his  labeling  this  a  "criti- 
cal" period  in  the  University's  history.  The  Gen- 
eral Assembly  has  a  giant-sized  load  of  responsibili- 
ty on  its  shoulders. 

Will  state  representatives  see  fit  to  endorse  the* 
University's  request   for   a   10  percent   in   faculty.-, 
salaries?  Or  will  the  next  18  months  be  witness  to 
a  mass  migration  of  intellectual  talent  as  the  last 
18  months  has  been? 

President  Young,  in  an  excellent  display  of 
leadership,  presented  a  plea  to  student  lawmakers 
to  sio  on  record  as  favoring  the  10-percent  pay 
hike.  He  also  pled  with  lawmakers  to  write  five 
menobers  of  the  General  Assembly  apiece  and 
express  thejr  feelings  en  the.  matter. 
Here  are  those  startling  facts  which  should 
shake  us  all  out  of  our  somnambulistic  states: 

1.  During  the  last  18  months,  ,87  members  of  the 
University's  Division  of  Academic  Affairs  and  Di- 
vision of  Health  Affairs  have  cleared  out  of  these 
hallowed  halls  due  to  whtt  Young  called  "increased 
inducement." 

2-  Statistics  compiled  on  19  of  these  persons 
whose  salaries  at  other  institutions  were  known  re- 
vealed  an    average   50.2  percent   increase   in   pay. 

3.  University  salaries  for  full  professors  range, 
from  $1,400  to  $3,000  below  salaries  at  three  other 
leading  universities  included  in  the  study.  Salaries 

,for  associate  professors  are,  on  the  average,  $1,500 
lower  than  those  of  comparable  faculty  numbers 
at  the  three  other  institutions  studied;  salaries  for 
assistant  professors  are  about  $1,200  less;  salaries 
for  instructors  are  around  $1,200  less. 

4.  A  compilation  of  faculty  salaries  at  44.  leadr 
ing  universities  ranked  UNC  23rd  in  professors' 
salary  bracket,  24th  in  associate  professors'  bracket. 
26th  for  assistant  professors  and  27th  for  instruc- 
tors. 

After  presenting  these  amaxing  facts.  Young 
posed  the  following  two  questions: 

1.  Do  we  want  the  best  university  for  9  certain 
amount  of  money? 

2.  Or  do  we  want  the  university  with  a  certain 
amount  of  status,  for  which  we  are  prepared  to 
pay? 

The  proposed  10  percent  pay  hike  will  only  allow 
the  University  to  retain  its  iwesent  relative  status 
among  other  universities.  It  will  not  kick  it  up- 
stairs in  the  status  poll  of  great  universities. 

Thus,  Mr.  Legislator,  the  future  of  our  state's 
youth  lies  in  your  budgetary  hand.  Careful  where 
you  cut.  If  we  can't  advance,  at  least  let's  stajt. 
status  quo. 

The  poor,  old  small-sized  Farmall  cub  has  about 
outlived  its  usefulness.  Birt  at  least  let's  keep  il 
moving. 

Let's  not  slip  down  tie  salary  scale  to  a  garden 
cultivator. 


DOCUMENT  IT: 


.   Plagiarism  At  UNC: 
HowNotToDolt 

,     ;  Jim  Exum 

Chairman,  Men's  Council 

According  to  reports  from  English  1  and  2  in- 
structors, there  still  seems  to  be  confusion  on  the 
part  of  the  students  as  to  what  plagiarism,  a  ser- 
ious offense  of  the  honor  code,  is.  This  is  to  clari- 
fy the  honor  councils'  position  on  plagiarism. 

To  plagiarize,  according  to  Webster's  New  Col- 
legiate Dictionary,  is  "To  steal  or  purloin  and  pass 
off  as  one's  own  (ideas,  writing,  etc.,  of  another)."  . 
This  is  the  same  definition  used  by  the  student 
courts   when   questions   of  plagiarism    arise. 

The  important  idea  here  is  expressed  by  the 
works  "To  .  .  .   pass  off  as  one's  own."  When  a 
student,  therefore,  submits   a   paper  which   con- 
tains the  thought  or  method  of  expression  ef  an- 
other person  as  if  it  w«re  the  student's  own  work, 
he  is  guilty  of  plagiarism. 
When   the    e.xact   wording  of   another   is   used, 
quotes  must  enclose  it;  and  its  source  must  be  in- 
dicated either  in  a  footnote  or  in  the  body  of  the 
paper.    A   bibliography   at   the   end   of   the    paper 
showing  all  sources  is  not  enough  when  material  is  - 
quoted  verbatum. 

When  the  ideas  of  another  are  used  in  the 
same  way  as  the  original  author  presented  them, 
although  not  with  identical  wording,  the  sentences 
or  paragraphs  in  which  the  ideas  occur  should  be 
footnoted. 

It   is   difficult,   of   course,    to    write    something 
that  someone  else  hasn't  wTilten  about  before.  It 
is  almost  impossible  to  be  perfectly  original.  Still 
students  should  be  cautious  when  using  ideas  which 
they  know  have  been  expressed  by  someone  else. 
One   should    be   certain   that   he    has    studied 
and  inwardly  digested  the   ideas  enough  so  that 
they  become  actually  part  of  his  own  thinking. 
Then  it  will  be  possible  to  present  them  in  such     • 
a  fresh  and  original  way  that   plagiarism  would 
be  out  of  the  question. 
The  spirit  of  the  regulation  is  a  simple  matter 
of  personal  honesty.  Whenever  there  exists  in  the 
back  of  one's  mind  the  idea  of  fooling  the  instruc- 
tor or  the  reader  into  thinking  that  he,  the  author, 
is   smarter  or  more   original   than  he   actually  is, 
there  is  great  danger  that  plagiarism  will  occur. 

Write  your  papers,  then,  in  the  sure  knowledge 
that  what  you  say  and  how  you  say  it  arc  your 
own  ideas.  Whenever  the  ideas  or  wording  of  others 
is  used,  be  double  sure  it  is  quoted  and  document- 
ed. 

Three  students  hi  the  last  month  have  been 
suspended  from  school  for  plagiarism.  So  be  care- 
ful. If  you  have  any  questions  or  doubts  st  all,  dis- 
cuss the  matter  with  your  instructor  before  you 
hand  in  a  paper,  or  get  in  touch  with  an  honor 
council  member. 


At 
were  ht 
offices: 
squad  ror 
Sponsor 


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The 

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candidate 
ed  the  e^i 
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The  24 
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examinati 
Harold 
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Barbour 

Marcus 
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colnton; 
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Carl 
Sara  F. 
Lowder. 
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E.   MuelJ 
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Lionel! 
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THE  DAILY  TAR  MtflL 


PAGE  THl^tft 


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The  Air  ^orce  New  Look 

At  th«  last  m— ting  of  th*  AFROTC  SfMnscM*  Squadron  vlactions 
were  held  and  th*  foUtnttng  young  women)  war*  olttod  to  tho  top 
offices:  (left  to  right)  Carol  Dennis,  operatkms  officer;  Pat  Dillon, 
squadron  commander;  and  Marian  Dickens,  adjutant  recorder.  The 
Sponsor  Squadron  helps  coordinate  the  social  affairs  of  the  Corps. 


24  Candidates  Pass 
UNC  Pharmacy  School 


The  North  Carolina  Board  of| 
Pharmacy  recently  '  announced  24 
candidates  have  successfully  pass 
ed  the  examination  for  registered 
pharmacists,  and  three  others  were 
registered  by  reciprocity. 

The  24  licensed  were: '  Thomas 
M.  Keating  of  Asheville,  who 
aiade  the  highest  grade  on  the 
Examination  and  led  the  board; 
Harold  Lee  Ball.  Mars  Hill;  Ron- 
ald E.  Barber,  Clinton;  Joseph  P. 
Barbour    Jr.,    Burlington; 

Marcus  Camercm.  Sanford;  Rob- 
ert A.  Coleman,  Burlington; 
Lewis  B.  Doyle  Jr.,  Roanoke  Rap- 
ids: Henry  N.  Grah«n,  Albe- 
narle;  Sara  Alice  Jackson,  Lum- 
1>erton;  Zeb  T.  Keever  Jr.,  Lin- 
eolnton;  Van  Hill  King  HI,  Wil- 
liiington. 

Carl  M.  Kirby  Jr..  Wilson; 
Sara  F.  Lore,  Sanford;  James  F. 
Lewder.  AlSermarle;  William  R 
McDonald  lU,  Hickory;  Reinhold 
£.  Mueller,  High  Point;  Stephen 
C.  Morris.   Four   Oaks; 

Lionel  P.  Perkins,  South  Bos- 
ton, Va.;  John  W.  Polk,  Marsh- 
yille;  Stuart  W.  Rollins.  Winston- 
Salem;  Arthur  P.  Schlagel  Jr.. 
Durham;  Charles  R.  StTne,  Char- 
lotte; Julian  E.  Upchurcb  Jr., 
Spring  Hope;  and  Joseph  H.  Wil- 
son.   Kural    Hall. 

Jack  Hickman  irom  South  Car- 
olina; Mrs.  Anna  Sue  Hubbard, 
presently  of  Gi^ns'boro;^  and 
Robert  R.  Rankin,  a  Tenn6ssean 
now  living  in  Sylva,  were  the 
candidates  registered  by  reciproc- 
ity. 
The  members  of  the  board  giv- 


ing the  examination  were:  Roger 
A.  McDuffie,  Greensboro;  Robert 
Neal  Watson,  Sanford;  Frank  W. 
Dayvault,  Lenoir;  Moss  W.  Salley 
Jr.,  Asheville;  and  H.  C.  McAl- 
lister,  Chapel   Hill. 


South  Bell 
Ringing  For 
Professors? 

For  whom  does  the  South  Build- 
ing bell  toll — ^the  students  or  the 
professors? 

At  intermittent  times  for  the 
past  two  or  three  days,  the  hol- 
low-sounding bell  has  failed  to 
gong  at  the  end  of  the  class  per- 
iods, much  to  the  chagrin  of  the 
students  and  to  the  oblivious  joy 
of  the  lecturer. 

Without  the  customary  bell  to 
end  the  class  period,  the  stodentq 
have  had  to  rely  on  a  concerted 
grunt  to  interrupt  the  professor 
and  remind  him  that  confinement 
time  is  long  past  due. 

South  Btiilding  reports  that 
maintenance  officials  have  not 
noticed  any  malfunctioning  of  the 
bell.  However,  the  Buildings  Dept 
stated  that  they  would  check  otf 
the  reports  and  possibly  have  the 
bell  examined. 

Whatever  the  trouble  is,  it  is  a 
golden  opportunity  for  the  dis- 
course-loving professor. 


Special  Freshmen  Eat- 
With  President  Friday 

The  24  special  freshman  and 
the  professors  administring  the 
program  were  the  guests  of  Con- 
solidated University  President 
Bill  Friday  Wednesday  for  dinner 
at  the  Pine  Room  of  the  Carolina 
Inn. 

President  Friday  was  unavoid- 
ably detained  and  did  not  attend 
the  gathering.  After  the  meal  the 
students  and  professors  discussed 
a  liberal  arts  education  and  re- 
lated subjects. 

The  professors  included  in  the 
program  are  Kenan  Professor 
Everett  W.  Hall,  philosophy;  Ken- 
an Professor  Richmond  P.  Bond, 
English;  Professor  E.  C.  Markham, 
chemistry;  Professor  E.  A.  Cam- 
eron, math;  and  Asst.  Professor 
G«org«  V.  Taylor,  history. 


Lutherans  To  Celebrate 

The  Congregation  of  Holy  Trin- 
ity Lutheran  Church  will  hold  a 
celebration  of  the  Holy  Commun- 
ion Sunday,  the  first  Sunday  in 
Lent.  Dr.  E.  C.  Cooper,  former 
pastor  of  the  congregation,  will 
give  the  Communion  meditation 
and  serve,  as  one  of  the  celebrants 
at  the  service. 

Dr.  Cooper  has  served  as  guest 
professor  in  the  Dept.  of  New 
Testament  at  Pacific  Lutheran 
Seminary,  Berkely.  Cal..  during 
the  fall  and  winter  quarters  of 
ti\^  1956-57  academic  jrear. 


FROM  NC  FOUNDATION: 


Med  School  Gets  $1,000  Grant  Hfere 


Dr.  J.  H.  Schwab  of  the  School 
of  Medicine  has  received  a  $1,000 
grant  ffonj  the  United  Medical  Re 
search  Foundation  of  North  Caro- 
lina. 

The  funds  will  be  used  to  con- 


NC  State  Gets  Grant 
From  Atomic  Commission 

WASHINGTON  — (AP)—  North 
Carolina  College  has  been  award- 
ed $80,000  under  a  new  Atomic 
Energy  Commission  program  de- 
signed to  encourage  wider  study 
in  science. 

The  West  Raleigh  institution 
was  one  of  15  American  colleges 
and  universities  awarded  grants 
totaling   almost  $1,200,000. 

The  AEC  said  there  will  be  more 
grants  later. 

The  latest  grants  will  be  used 
to  help  pay  for  laboratory  equip- 
ment for  expanded  courses  in  nu- 
clear sciei\ce  and  engineering. 

The  funds  granted  N.  C.  State 
College  will  be  for  construction  oi 
a  nuclear  reactor  for  educational 
use.  The  same  use  will  be  made 
of  funds  granted  the  University  ol 
Florida. 


tinue  a  research  project  already 
underway.  Dr.  Schwab,  assistant 
professor  of  bacteriology  and 
medicine. 

Extracts  of  streptococcal  cells 
are  being  studied  to  detect  toxic 
products  of  the  organism.  These 
toxins  may  elucidate  the  prob- 
lem of  How  streptococci  produce 


Eight  Students  Omitted 
From  Dean's  Honor  List 

The  names  of  8  students  were 
omitted  from  the  dean's  list  that 
appeared  in  the  Thursday  edition 
of  The  Daily  Tar  Heel. 

Those  QflflMs  omitted  from  the 
list  were:  Cyrus  RODert  Harring- 
ton, Thomasville;  Andrew  Milnor. 
Wilmington;  Samuel  F.  Wells, 
Reidsville;  D.  Emerson  Scarbor- 
ough. Yanceyville;  Nancy  McFad- 
den,  Atlanta.  Ga.;  Nancy  Frances 
Lattimore.  Lawndale;  Martha  Per- 
due Peoples.  Chapel  Hill;  and 
Cora  Louise  Nelson.  Littleton. 

There  was  one  name  on  the  list 
that  shouldn't  have  been  included. 
That  w^s  Robert  Fassberg,  Spring 
Valley,  N.  Y. 


and  acute  infection  such  as  scarlet 
I  fever,  and  tissue  damage  in  dis- 
I  ea^s  such  as  rheumatic  fever  and 
glomerulonephritis.  Thus  far  in 
this  investigation  toxins  have 
been  found  which  will  deitBoy  red 
blood  cells,  kill  mice  upon  in- 
travenous injection,  and  produce 
extrensive  damage  in  the  skin  of 
rabbits. 

The  project  actually  got  under- 
way last  summer  with  funds  from 
other  sources.  It  is  a  long  range 
stydy  and  could  possibly  require 
several  years  of  research. 

Dr.  Schwab*  was  educated  at 
the  University  of  Minnesota,  hav- 
ing received  his  Ph.  D.  de^€ 
there  in  1953.  He  joined  the  UNC 
faculty  that  srme  year. 


Covering  The  University  Campus 


YW  NOMINATIONS 

A  open  nominating  meeting  of 
the  YWCA  will  be  held  Monday 
at  6  p.m.  The  meeting  was  origin 
ally  scheduled  for  yesterday,  was 
postponed  until  Monday. 
DISCUSSION   HERE 

The  Student  Faculty  Forum  and 
GMAB  will  sponsor  a  discussion 
of  "Evolution  of  the  Role  of  the 
Supreme  Court  in  American  Gov 
ernment,"  at  7  p.m.,  Sunday  in  the 
Grail  Room  of  GM. 

Earl    Wallace    of    the    Political 
Science    Department    and    Robert 
Wettach  of  the  Law  School   will 
lead  the  discussion. 
SPAGHETTI  SUPPER 

The  annual  Tri  Delta  Spaghetti 
Supper  will  be  held  on  Friday  even- 
ing, March  15,  from  6-8  p.m.  The 
supper  will  be  at  the  Tri  Delta 
House. 

Tickets  may  be  obtained  in  "Y" 
Court,  at  the  Tri  Delta  House  <» 
from  any  member  of  the  sorority. 
<E:ach  year  the  Spaghetti.  Supper 
is  given  by  the  Tri  Delts  in  order 
to  raise  money  tar  scholarships, 
which  are  to  be  awarded  in  the 
spring. 

All  women  students  of  L'NC  are 
eligible  to  apply  for  the  scholar- 
ships.  Competition  will  begin  aa 
Monday,  March  18. 
SCIENTIFIC   SOCIETY 

The  Eli^rha  Mitchell  Scientific 
Society,  will  meet  Tuesday  at  7:30 
p.m.  in  206  Phillips  Hall.. 

Dr.  C.  N.  Reilley  of  the  Chem- 
istry Department  will  speak  or 
"Metal  Analysis  with  Complexon 
es,"  and  'Dr.  Walter  Wheeler  of 
the  Geology  Department  will  dis- 
cuss "Fossil  Brains." 
LENTEN  COMMUNION  SERVICE 

The  Congregation  of  Holy  Trini- 
ty Lutheran  Church  will  have  a 
celebration  of  the  Holy  Commun- 
ion on  Sunday.  Dr.  E.  C.  Cooper, 
former  pastor  of  the  congregation, 
will  give  the  Communion  medita- 
tion and  serve  as  one  of  the  cele- 
brants at  the  service. 
WJLA.  TABLE  TENNIS 

Sue  Gichner,  manager,  urges  all 


girb  still  in  the  tournament  to  play 
their  matches.  The  present  round  j 
must  be  played  off  by  Friday  at 
5  p.m. 


WUNC-TV 

Today's  schedule  for  WUNC-TV, 

the  University's   educational  tele- 

vision 

station  is  as  follows: 

12:45 

Music 

1:00 

Today  on  the  Farm 

1:30 

Engineering  Visit 

5:15 

Music 

5:30 

Music  for  Young  People 

6:00 

U.N.  Review 

6:15 

News 

6:30 

At  the  Moment 

7:00 

Science  Fair 

7:80 

The  Humanities 

8:00 

Know  Your  Schools 

8:30 

Prelude 

9:00    Cavalcade  of  Talent 
10:00    Final  Edition 


James 

OnbmaScoPC 

ctMom  M  oc  i.v>«t 


ROBERT        JEFFREY        HOPE 

WAGNER- HUNTER  LANGE 


NOW  P^YINQ 


Carolina 


EDWARD  G. 

ROBINSON 

shocks  the  screen 
awake  ill 


TODAY  ONLY! 


MISS  ALICIA  DEVEREAUX    ,      MiSS     SARONG     1956 


j.i^g^^      Miss  Devereaux  will  be  at  our  store 
for  /zonsuitation,  discussion,  and  dem- 
•  onstration  of  Sarong  girdles: 

BIIPAY,  MARCH  8  (today) 
SAtURDAY,  /VUVRCH  9 

We  invite  you  to  visit  us  to  meet  AAiss 
Devereaux,  and  learn  why  "Sarong  is 
*     the  Girdle  for  you." 

IB.ROBBINS 

Of  Chapel  Hill 


39  Nam^d  to  Bkl$iness' Dean's  List 


A  total  of  39  students  have 
made  tiie  Dean's  list  of  the  School 
of  Bu9ine.«s  Admini^ation,  ac- 
cording to  an  announcement 
froni  Dean  Maurice  L?e. 

The  Dean's  list,  composed  of 
students  who  made  all  A's  and 
B's  on  theii"  fall  semester  courses, 
incln«!ies  only  one  out-of-state  stu- 
dent. The  list  includes: 

James  W.  Adams,  Chapel  Hill; 
Joseph  B.  Alala  Jr.,  Gteenshoro; 


Three  Local 
People  Win 
Opera  Award 

ITiree  people  from  Chapel  Hill 
have  been  announced  winners  of 
the  "Lets  Listen  to  Opera"  con- 
test conducted  Feb.  13.  The  win- 
ners were:  Dr.  Lawrence  F.  Lon- 
don, Joseph  L.  Morrison,  and 
Miss  Marthat  H.  Adams. 

The  contest  consisted  of  listen- 
ing to  the  broadcast  of  Verdi's 
"Rigoletto"  and  then  writing  a  re- 
view of  200  woi-ds  or  less  giving 
the  contestant's  impressions  of  the 
performance. 

Winners  were  awarded  record- 
ings of  Puccini's  "La  Tosca"  do- 
nated by  a  national  record  com- 
pany. According  to  Norman  Cor- 
don, former  Metropolitan  Open 
star  and  eommeittator  for  WUNC'» 
"Let's  Listen  to  Opera"  the  re- 
cording is  "just  about  the  best  per- 
formance of  "La  Tosca"  available." 


Grad  Students  To  Hear 
Dr.  Lawrence  Of  Harvard 

Dr.  Roy  H.  Lawrence  .  will  be 
on  campus  March  11,  to  speak  t» 
all  jilniors  and  seniors  interested 
in  doing  graduate  work  in  the 
school  of  Business  Administration 
at  Harvard. 

Arrangements  may  be  made  to 
see  Dr.  Lawrence,  who  is  the  as- 
sistant dean  of  graduate  work  in 
the  school  of  Busine^ls  Administra- 
tion at  Harvard,  through  the  Dean 
of  Student  Affairs  Office  in  206 
South  Building,  according  to  R^ 
JeffHes.  assistant  dean  of  Student 
Affairs. 


Walton  O.  Banks,  Garner;  Alch 
tird  Von  Biberstein,  Burgaw; 
Thomas  S.  Brickhouse,  Wilmittg 
toh;  Gordon  R.  Brown,  Durham 
John  McD.  Carter,  Madison;  Jos 
eph  Mack  Clark,  Chapd  Hill. 
Clayton  W.  Davidson,  Mooresville; 

Donald  E.  Daniels,  Wilson;  John 
T.  Doggett,  Greensboro;  Roger  F. 
EUer,  Purlear;  Jimmy  W.  Garrell. 
Tabor  City;  William  L.  Godwin 
Smlthfield;  William  J.  Hall  Jr. 
Kanaapolis;  Dan  Rommie  Johnson. 
Winston>SaIem;  Ralph  Dewey 
Johnson,  Winston-Salem;  Barney 
Gene  Joyner,  Raleigh;  Bobby  C. 
Kirk,  Martinsville,  Va.;  Robert  W. 
Lee,  Salisbury; 

Teddie  Herbert  Lowe,  Winston- 
Salem;  William  D.  Matthews,  Rock- 
well; Floyd  C.  McLean,  Laurin- 
burg;  Jo«ah  S.  Murray,  Chpel 
Hill;  S.  Mical  Pate,  Goldsboro; 
Robert  B.  Patterson  Jr.,  Wilson. 
Arthur  Ray  Price,  Marion;  Will- 
iam E.  Self,  Shelby;  Richard  D. 
Sessoms,  Rockingham;  George  W. 


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reasons  wl 

sarongjr: 

girdle  is  perfect  for 
junior  figures  of  all  ages 

Sorong^Jr.  is  completely  different  from  all  other  girdles.  There 
is  nb  Other  giroHe  that  caters  so  comfortably  to  young  figures. 
Here's  why: 

;^  Sorong's  exclusive  Sta-Put  elastic  collar  eliminates  the  waist- 
lirte  roll  forbidden  by  tfie  new  fashions. 

Strong's  exclusive  potented,  hidden  construcfion  actually  lifts 

eind.flottens  your  tommy  youthfully. 

II 

P6v^r  net  sides  and  back  provide  maximum  lift  and  control. 

.^::^  Gentle  power  rtet  si*»ooth$  thighs,  eliminates  unwanted  bulges. 

Serong's  exclusive  criss-cross  feature  frees  yoor  legs  to  move 
with  complete  comfort— standing,  walking,  sitting. 

Sorong  yr.  is  scie»>JificaHy  desigrted  and  anatomically  correct  for 
evtery  Xirtior  figure.  Come  in  and  let  us  show  you  how  comfortable 
you  COM  be  — and  still  look  your  slender  best. 


pAee  POUR 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


FRIDAY,  MARCH  k,  1f$7 


For  Lennie,  A  Well  Deserved  Honor 

Lennie  Rosenbluth  is  finalb'  getting  the  recognition  he  so  riihly 
deserves.  Rosenbluth.  who  i.*  generally  conceded  to  be  the  best  basket- 
ball  player  in  Carolina  history,  has  been  an  almost  unanimous  choice 
on  just  about  every  All-American  team  that  has  been  released  so 
far.  • 

Although  he  was  snubbed  by  the  pro  coaches  and  scouts  who'  pick 
the  NEA  team,  both  United  I»ress  and  As.dOciated  Press  gave  him  rous- 
ing votes  of  confidence  in  naming  him  to  a  first  team  spot. 

Last  year  Rosenbluth  made  the  Helms  Foundation  team.  but. 
because  this  is  a  ten  man  squad,  it  does  not  carry  tho  oif^**l 
weight  of  a  UP  or  AP  team.  Now  it  can  truthfully  be  Mid  that 
Rosie    is    a    genuine    All-American.    Of    Course   Carolina    studonts 
knew  it  all  along. 

Four  other  guys  had  a  lot  to  d«  with  putting  Rosenbluth  on  the 
dream  team.  Joe  Quigg.  Pete  Brennan,  Tommy  Kearns  and  Bob  Cim- 
ningham  all  did  their  part  in  sparking  the  Tar  Heels  to  an-  unbeaten 
season,  and  that  24-0  record  just  about  assured  Lennie  of  a  spot  on 
the  m>lhical  squad. 

A  Bucket  Of  Paint,  And  A  Beat  Up  Buiclc 

Some  industrious  State  studcnto*  seem  to  have  an  affinity  for  red 
paint  and  old  beat  up  Buicks.  In  the  pre-dawn  hours  yesterday  morn- 
ing, the  aforesaid  students  struck  a  death  blow  aimed  at  the  Carolina 
basketball  team.  Armed  with  a  bucket  of  paint,  they  descended  on 
this  sleepy  village,  home  of  the  nation's  number  one  basketball  team. , 
and  liberally  splashed  Pete  Brennan's  good  luck  Buick  with  red  paint, 
:4)elling  out  the  letters  "NCS*". 

Until    yesterday,    Pete's   Buick    had    remained    unmoiottod    in 

its  parking  place  in  front  of  the  Monogram  Clu^  since  last  May.      I 

The  battered  auto  had  become  a  good   luck  symbol  for  th4  »n- 

beaten   UNC  basketball  team.  As  long  as  Pete's  Buick'  sat  in  its 

accustomed  place,  the  Carolina  cagcrs  couldn't  lose. 
But  then  in  the  dead  of  night,  the  anonymous  vandals  eame,  an^ 
left  their  crimson  calling  card.  The  Wolfpack  have  found  it  impossi 
ble  to  beat  Carolina  on  the  basketball  floor,  so  now  they  seem  to 
be  resorting  to  "red"  magic  to  do  the  job.  We  think  it'll  take  more 
than  a  bucket  of  Cow  College  paint  to  put  the  whanuny  on  the  coun- 
try's best  team. 

Mermen  Have  Chance  For  National  Title       * 

The  NCAA  swimming  championships  to  be  held  here  are  stiil 
some  three  weeks  off.  but  interest  in  the  gala  three  day  show  is 
picking  up.  Schools  from  all  parts  of  the  country  will  be  represented 

with  powerful  Yale  ruling  a^*  a  heav^  favorite.  Six    colleges,    Maryland,    Duke, 

The  Elis  are  unbeaten  In  dual  meet  competition  since  1945,      i  Virginia,  UNC,  NC  State  and  Wake 

and  annually  wage  an  ail  our  war  with  Ohio  State  for  the  NCAA      j  Forest  will  be  represented  in  the 

title.  This  year  Ohio  State  is  ineligible  to  compete,  and  Michigan       competiti(m.  The  preliminaries  of 

and  host  North  Carolina  have  taken  over  the  dangerous  challenger      i  the  tournament  will  get  underway 

>■*'•*•  I  today.  The  finals  will  be  held  Sal- 

The  Tar  Heels,  always  strong  in  the  aquatic  sport,  have  one  oi '  urday. 

their  best  te*ms  in  history,  and  stand  a  good  chance  of  scgring  heavily  '      Coath  Sain  Barnes  said    yester- 

in  the  national  meet   With  a  host  of  good  swimmers  and  the  advantage   day-   "We   have  a  good   chance   ol 

of  swimming  in  their  own  home  pool,  the  Tar  Heels  could  be  rough. 

Put  the  job  of  whipping  Yale  is  trul^'  a  formidable  onq. 

For  The  Students,  An  Award 

Frank  .McGuire  has  worked  industriously  at  two  different  jobs 
this  year,  and  we  think  he's  succeeded  in  both.  The  first  was  to  pro- 
duce a  winning  basketball  team,  and  a  look  at  the  record  will  show 
that  he  has  achieved  his  goal. 

The  ^'econd  was  to  produce  a  courteous, student  body  and  a  sports- 
manlike attitude  among  Carolina  fans.  And  we  believe  he  has  suc- 
ceeded equally  well  in  that  respect.  Compared  to  other  Big  Four  stJi- 
"     "  practially    angels,    although    thL«    is 


Four  Recei^  WAA  Awards 


Four  coeds  received  Women's 
Athletic  Assn.  awards  this  week. 
Those  who  won  awards  include: 

Monograms — ^Misses  Diana  Ash- 
ley, Joan  Willsey  and  Nancy  Latti- 
more;  Stars — Misses  Ashley  qnd 
Trudy  Lefler. 

All  participants  in  WAA  activi- 
ties receive  points.  Point  values  loi 


awards  are  200  points  for  -a  mono- 
graiB  and  100  additional  points  for 
stai'ts. 

Miss  Lefler  was  awarded  her 
third  star. 

Awards  will  be  given  again  at 
the  end  of  the  spring  semester, 
according  to  Awards  Chairman 
ftancis  Reynolds. 


record  of  44  was  set  in  1954  by 
Wilkinson. 


Senior  Wrestlers  Wagner  And  Boyette 

Shown  above  are  two  UNC  varsity  wrestlers  wlio  will  make  their 
final  appearancOs  Friday  fnd  Saturday  in  the  annual  Atlantic  Coast 
Conference  wro«tiing  tournament.  They  mr*  (left)  Capt.  Bob  Wagner 
and  Charlie  •oytttc.  The  two  seniors  left  yesterday  with  the  rest 
of  the  tofm  for  Charlqi^esviile,  Va.  The  tournament  gets  underlay 
today  and  will  end  tonnorrow. 

Wrestlers  Hoping 
To  Place  Second 


Deacons  Hdlel; 
Top  State  ^571 

RALEIGH— ( AP )— Wake  f'orfest'5 1 

:  possession-minded    Deacons-  nevei 

j  trailed  last  night  as  they  trimmed  ; 

■  defending   champion   North   Caro  i 

lina  State  66-57  in  a  first  rbilnd  | 

Atlantic  Coast  Conference  basket-  i 

-ball  tournament  game.  l 

The  victory  sends  Wake  Forest 

against   North   Carolina  toiitorrow  ' 

in  the  semifinals     for     a     fourth  I 

time  this  season.  ' 


y^r'^r- 


CLL  CONCENTRATE 

Iliiiip««2f»r79« 


Fi(EE   DELIVERY 
PHONE  9-87t1 


By  BOi  MILLIGAN 

The  UNC  wrestling  team  left  by 
station  wagon  ye^erday  aftemocn 
for  the  third  annual  Atlantic  Coast 
Conference  wrestling  tournament 
being  held  in  Charlottesville,  Va 
with  determined  hopes  of  return- 
ing Sunday  as  second  place  win- 
ners. 

The  tournament,  only  three 
years  old,  is  one  of  the  highlights 
that  follows  the  collegiate  wrest- 
ling season. 


dent    body.<:     UNC   stuflent^ 

stretching  matters  a  little. 

They  have  been  exceptionally  well  behaved  and  have  treated 
visiting  teams  with  all  the  courtesy  that  could  be  expected.  Boo- 
Ig  has  been  almost  non-existent.  Cat  calling  has  been  kept  at  « 
minimum,  and  opposing  players  have  always  received  a  fair  shake. 
The  same  thing  cannot  be  said  for  Wake  Forest,  State  and  Duke. 
We  think    the   University  of  North  Carolina  should   receive  the 

ACC  sports  writers   Sportsmanship  Award.  The  students  deserve  it 

the  team  deserves  it.  Coach  Frank  McGuire  deserves  it.  What  other 

school  has  a  better  ca.se? 


Terps  Edge  Virginia  | 

RALEIGH— (AP)_Bill  Murphy,  j 
a  sophomore  reserve  dropped  in  I 
four  pressure  fouls  in  the  last  49  i 
seconds  Thursday  to  enable  sec- 
ond-seeded  Maryland  to  slip  by 
Virginia  71-68  in  the  opening! 
round  of  the  Atlantic  Coast  Con-  ; 
ference    Basketball    Tournament,    i 

Nick  Davis'  21  points.  16  by' 
Nacincik  and  14  by  Jim  Halleck 
supplied  the  big  punch  for  Mary- 
land. Busch.  who  hauled  in  17  re- 
bounds, had  18  points  and  Billy 
Miller,  a  hustling  little  guard,  16 
for  Virginia. 


winning  four  individual  champion 

ships  and  the  whole  team  should 

finish  second." 

Among    the     12    wrestlers    that 

€oac)k  Bsraes  took  on  the  trip,  10 
j  of  them  will  {participate  in  the 
j  tournament.  They  are  Capt.  Bob 
I  Wagner,  David  Wall,  Henry  Rhyne, 
j  Perrin  Henderson,  Charlie  Boyette, 
I  Rob  Boyette,   Bill   McGehee.   Dave 

Atkinson,    Jack    Gray    and    Larry 

Hayes. 

Ken    Hoke,    injured    two   weekjs 

ago.  and  Bill  Adcock  will  accomp- 
I  any  the  team. 

Last  Monday  the  ringside  bell  at 

NC  State  sounded  a  final  clang 
!  that  wa^  a  little  off-key  for  the 
I  heavily  favored  Tar  Heels  because 

the  final  score  turned  out  to  be 
I  18  to  17  in  favor  of  the  Wolfpack 
I  Looking  at  the  overall  picture, 
!  though,  the  wrestling  team^ecord 
.  is  a  much  improved  one  over  the 


tion  and  he  is  now  on  the  verge  of 
molding '  together  a  championship 
team  for  Carolina.  Barnes  stated 
recently:  "Mfe  have  had  our  seven 
lean  years,  "now  we  are  going  to 
have  3f yen  fat  ones."  ^ 

From  this  year's  team,  only  two 
senior  starters,  130  lb.  Bob  Wag- 
ner and  147  lb.  Charlie  Boyette, 
will  have  to  be  replaced  next  year. 
The  rest  of  the  starting  team  con- 
sists of  five  sophomores-  and  one 
junior. 

Coach  Barnes  has  several  fine 
prospects  coming  up  from  the 
freshman  team.  In  the  147  pound 
spot  in  particulai",  Jim  Welbom,  a 
state  high  school  champion  for  two 
ye4u-s  will  probably  see  much  ac- 
tion as  a  sophomore  next  year,,.. 


DtxieUND  mMRo 

SATURDAY  AfTEltNOON 

Natumno 
LES  SUTOI^fUS 

THE    PATIO 


Tar  Heels  Win 

(Continued  from  page  1)  Clemson  employed   a    zone   de- 

fense, ccdiasping  on  Rosenbhilk  in 
a  effort  to  halt  the  UNC  offense, 
but  it  went  to  no  avail.  Carolina 
The  Tar  Heels  as  a  team  hit  31  ^i  meet  Wake  Torest  at  7:30  to- 
for  71  from  the  floor  for  43.7  per-  night.  That  game  will  l>e  followed 
cent.  Their  hapless  rivals  could  do  by  a  clash  between  South  Carolina 
no  better  than  22  of  74  for  29.7  i  and  Maryland  for  the  other  Satur 
percent.  ■  day  night  finals  berth. 


Howard  Johnson  Restauranf 

BREAKFAST 

LUNCH 

DINNER 
-  SNACKS 

"'Landmark  Fbr  Honcjry  Tarheels" 


PATRONIZE   YOUR 
•    ADVERTISERS    • 


Gamecocks  Upset  EHike 

RALEIGH  —  (AP)  National  ^*^  ^'"^  of  previous  teams  for  the 


major  college  scoring  leader 
Grady  Wallace  delivered  a  basket 
and  three  foul  shots  in  the  last 
26  seconds  Thursday  to  give  South 
Carolina  an  84-Bl  upset  victory 
■over  Duke  in  the  opening  gbnte  ol 
the  Atlantic  Coast  Conference 
Basketball   Tournament. 

Wallace  led  the  scoring  for 
South  Carolina  with  41,  one  point 
shy  of  the  tournament  record. 
Jim  Newcome's  20  points  was  high 
for  Duke. 


past  10  years.  The  record  for  tbi.s 
year  shows  four  wins,  one  tie  and 
five  losses. 

Coach  Sam  Barnes  has  worked 
very  hard  hi^  seven  years  here 
trying  io  build  a.  winning  combina- 


Have    You  Forgotten 
Something?       , 

Pot*  the  Tailor  hat  loads  of 
clothing  that  has  boon  brought 
in  for  Poto'c  first  class  repairs 
and  has  boon  loft. 

Are    You    Guilty? 

Pat*  surely  woJId  hat*  to  have 
to  soil  thoso  clothes.  How  about 
coming  by  and  picking  up  yowrs 
now 

AT 

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SPECIALIZING    IN 
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THE  MOST  MUNDANE  PARTY 
INTO  A  REAL  FRANTIC  BLAST! 


%    r 


Upstairs 

Varsity 

:irheattft'  Biiig. 


For  Further  Information 
Write  Or  See 

RON  LEVIN 


•;.:* ; 


:.,-r--^ 


'***"*« wi»if»«<r»»>« i» v"%.  rT"^*»  •■•T#»  -  i«-»»««.^-»-.»«. 


•'»•  '.M'tV*^ 


»^T^W»r'«r»»i  M»  ,j^  rJ»t*»«Hf»»l*»«nil<l1i»'«%»< 


Ideas  grow^  and  grow  at,,^  ,,,,^, 


t 


•DAILY    CROSSWORD 


IVY 


TROUSER  SPECIALS 


Dark  brown  55%  dacron/ 
45%  wool  formorly  $16.95,  of- 
fortd  at  $10.99. 

All  wool  8V2  ounce  tropical 
worsted,  formerly  $14.95,  offer- 
ed at  $10.99. 

All  wool  oxford  brown  8V2 
ounce  worsted  tropical,  former- 
ly   $15.95,  new  $9.99.  « 

New  lew  price  on  55%  da- 
cron/45%  wool  tropical  ivy 
trousers,  with  side  buckle  straps 
in  place  of  bfck  strep,  in  char- 
coal, medium  gray,  medium 
bre%vn,  black/ brown,  or  char- 
cool  olivo  —  at  only  $13.95. 


Clotting  Cupboarli 


■haeiHea 


CLASSIFIEDS 


ft. 


FOR  SALE:  32  FOOT  TRAILER.! 
sleeps   four;    has    bath;   Contact 
Robert.     Pickard     at     Taylor's 
Trailer  Court,  Airpwi  Road. 


5  ROOM  BRICK  HOUSE,  3  BEB 

rooms,  all  moderq  convenienceah 

3  miles  on  Old  86  Hyway.  Stove 

.a.id    Prigedaire   furnished.    Call 

Fred  Katzin  after  6:00.  8-9026. 


FOR  RENT:  TWO  HOUSES  A-! 
vailable,  one  immediately  and! 
one  in  June.  Two  bed  rooms.  { 
Also  5  room  house  available  in  I 
two  weeks.  Call  9458.  Aiter  5:30  j 
and  on  weekend,  call  3026.  j 

7azz  at  turnagbs         I 

Saturday  anernoon,  2:00,  TUro- 
ages  Cabin   in   Durham. — Jaa  hf 

Dick    Gables    "All    Stan."    B««r  i 
Served.  ' 


FOR  SALE:  1949  STUDEBAKEH 
Commander — 4  doors,  good  con- 
dition. O.D.  and  heater.  $275. 
Call  Lee  Cotten,  93001  after  6 
p.m.  at  Durham  7868S. . 

LOST;  ONE  BROWN  SHOULd¥r 
pocketbook.  Please  {ihoiio  Oar- 
ham  76945  alter  six.  


ACBOSS 

1.  lir.mensc 
;  5.  Store 

f.  A'Mient 
meatsur* 
(Arab.) 
,!•.  Fruits 

12.  Forced 
onward 

13.  B«f  Inninc: 
1*:  RWf^in 

'  15.  Hattard 
l«i  MiMurf 
(Chin.) 
.17.  M^ti's 

HicHnMnf 
It.  So4fcivro 

...    (ajUwf.)-' 

•.aJt'-Ffewer  ■ 

it^mk  m 

'2*1|W'a      • 
aumaoh ' 

.a«;Mikl#''«i>ar.' 

:3%Ptaythiilf 
3i|:H«Mr4to 

3r.  Ifttlberry 

H  Atof  ry 

40  Waroinc 

41  Cttri^  fruit 
4B.  Genmi  o( 

evcrfrtoi 
4«:  SmaU 

cl«pri(Mlon 
411  9upportliif 

strap 

'  1. 0<N)4lioaa 


3.  Weaver's 
reed 

4  Spread  fraaa 

to  dry 
5.  BobbiH 

4.  |*emale  fowl 
7.  Malt  kiln 

9.  Dreseca,  aa 

feathers 
9  Weakly 

sentimental 
1 1.  Wander 
If.  Animal's 
.   foot 
IT.  Torrid 
30-  African 
w4nn 


23 


Shallow 

vessel 
23.  Possess 
25.  Month 
M.  Ruin 

27.  Cover, 
ed.  as 
a  road 

28.  Yo^tb 

29.  To 
await 

30.  God. 
deaa  of 
the  hunt 

32.  River  (Can.) 

35.  Entitle 

36.  Snglish 
school 


Y«*t*»asy'i  Ae«w«f 

37.  Weary 

38.  Seed 
covering 

40.  E^piian 
•  earth  f  gd 
(varj 


■  y 


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,.'  ^  -^1     ..If.,     ,.  .    _     .";'  p, 

v^^^•^'/V   ♦.  c./s  •%»!■*•■    :.^  '•    '  ,•    •    •    •    •    •'••    t-e    •    •    . 

irrtf  •ivisidNs  iMcLMojii 

■okoirte  Compony 
•      5^Wond'Cort»di'€ii;U«I.Compony       ' 
.    Mv    -.  4  .  ,  w^    ,   K'ciro'MetallorafciliCwiMWny 

Lih4(Jk' Air  Product*  Ceewaii^' 
1  ,C,r?  •-  •"•  !  '  >^llon<rt  Carbon  Company 

StteOnei'DMiion 
Unfan 'C«?bJWA'NWeif  dliipany 


Last  year,  approximately  one  third  of  Union  Carhi^f'i 
total  sales  were  of  products  not  avaUahlr  15  years  ago. 
For  the  past  25  years,  the  Corporation  has  averaged  on4 
new  product  a  month.  Soiv  it  is  introducing  than  at  the 
rate  of  two  a  month. 

Ideas  boi3X.in  Union  Cadjide  laboratories  grow 
. . .  from  exploratory  and  iundamental  research  t* 
applied  research  and  prodinn.and  process  develop. 
.  raent . . .  through  pilot  plants  lo  production  to  sales. 
In  all  these  fields  the  -Divisions  of  Union  Carbide 
need  engineeirs,  chemists,  physicists,  and  businesa 
and  Hberal  arts  majors.  For  more  information  write 
Co-oa-dinator  of  College  Recruiting,  *        • 

Union  Carbide 

AND    CARBON    CORPORATION 
30  East  42nd  St.  CIS  New  York  17,  N.  Y. 


i:iisi,\*jet»:tumse.- 


-^^^ 


«*u 


•uf.  w  «*  i  J' 


■*!**         :_- ,.  ^5 


I 


f^^^mmmmm^mimmmmt 


P«W«VBW«OTB««0««OT««l 


WEATHER 

C\—r  4nd  cold  with  tn  txptfi 
hifh  of  4S.  Last  ni«hf«  low  w«i 
n*^  30. 


ait99l  Sill,  21.   C. 


STh  c  3)ai 


3*(cct 


^      LENOIR 

Wtfrktfrs  must  try  for  sympathy 
stfm^wticr*  •Is*.  Sm  p«9«  2. 


VOL.  LVII     NO.  112 


Complete  (4*)  Wtrt  5crvic« 


CHAPEL  HILL,  NORTH  CAROLINA,  SATURDAY,  MARCH  9,  1957 


Offices  in  Graham  Memortet 


rOOR  PAGES  THIS  ISSUE 


Young  Says  Effort 
Being  Made  For 
Loan  For  Parking 

•  Student  body  President  Bob  ^'ouni;  said  Friday  "We  are 
now  invcstio:.,in;4  all  jjossible  means  of  j^ettin^  a  (self-liqui- 
dating) loan  to  put  ihrou,i»h"  proposed  parking  lots  for  stu- 
dent automobiles. 

He  s:  id  the  stiulent  go\ernment  traffic  committee,  head- 
ed by  Lawrence  Mattheus,  had  been  working  \vith  the  flni- 
veisity  traffic  connnittce  in  connection  with  the  project.        j 

Ycjung  said  that  construction  of  these  lots  coidd  be 
be^^un  with  the  SG.ooo  net  income  from  student  automobile 
registration  fees.  He  stated  in  :■  recent  letter  to  University 
President  I'riday  a  suggestion  for  increasing  charges  of  park- 
ing violation  to  S2.  with  the  l'ni\ersitv  receiving  S»  of  this. 
N'oimg   also  suggested  charging  every  staff  and   facidty  I 

member  in  addition  to  every  stu-* ' 

dent  who  registers  an  automobile  _ 

Board  Sets 
Extra  Meet 
Thursday 

The  Bipartisan  Selections  Board 
or  tho  Men's  Honor  Council  and 
the  Student  Ccuneii  will  hold  a 
special  session  next  Thursday  af- 
t;rnocn  for  rising  seniors  who 
wish  to  apply  for  the  Honor  Coun- 
cil. 


Rosenbluth  Clinches  Win  Over  Deacs 
In  Final  Seconds.  61-59:  Win  Is 


26th 


the  $2.30  fee  at  the  University. 
This  particular  change,  he  said, 
would  probably  double  the  income. 
LETTER 

Youngs  letter  to  President  Fri- 
day is  quoted  in  part  below: 

^ince  the  approval  last  spring 
of  the  Student  CfOvemment  traf- 
fic recammendaiion.  we  have 
nkade  some  positive  adjustments 
on  campus.  At  present,  there  hav: 
been  no  additional  parking  spaces 
provided.  In  my  opinion,  however, 
the  number  of  automobiles  on 
campus  is  about  the  same  that  it 
was  last  year.  Therefore.  I  do  not 
feel  that  the  problem  Is  any  more 
complicated  than  last  year. 
FOUR  POINTS 

Since  last  spring.  Student  Gov- 
ernment has  been  concerned  with 
the  following  matters  with  regard 
to  the  traffic  situation. 

1.  A  Student  Government  Traf- 
fic Committee  was  established  with 
the  responsibility  of  tr>'ing  viola- 
tors of  the  new  traffic  recommen- 
dations. 

9.     A    campus    TVaffic    Commit- 
tee was  established  to  study  camp- 
us   parking    needs    aad    to 
sussested    improvements. 

3.  New  fraternity  parking  "The  board  was  quite  pleased  1  -The  participation  in  the  club 
areas  have  been  constructed  f.t  with  nearly  all  the  senior  appli- '  this  vear  has  been  more  than  in 
the  DKE  House  and  at  the  Beta  |  cants,  but  it  thinks  that  if  possi-  the  past.  This  initiation  will  be 
House.  }  ble  the  students  should   be  given .  another  step  in  raising  our  club  to 

4.  According  to  the  University  mnre  of  a  choice  in  the  campus  the  level  of  the  other  honorary 
Engineer,   prospects  are  good  for   elections,"  E.xum  said. 


Tar  Heels,  Gamecocks 
Meet  In  Finals  Tonight 


By    LARRY    CHEEK 

Special  To  The  Daily  Tar  Heel 

RALEIGH — All-America    Lennie 

Rcsenbluth  sank  a  hook  shot  with 

46  seconds  left  here  last  night  and 

added   a   clinching   free   throw   to 


the  year  over  Wake  Forest.  With 
only  55  second  left  in  the  pressure 
packed  scrap,  the  Deacons  led  by 
one  point,  59-58.  With  their  hopes 
of  qualifying  for  the  NCAA  play- 
offs faintly  glimmering,  the  UNC 


give  North  Carolina's  hard  press-    cagers  called  on  their  high  scor- 

to    pull 


ed  Tar  Heels  a  nerve  shattering 
61-59  win  over  the  Wake  Forest 
Demon  Deacons. 

The  come  from  behind  win 
moved  the  top  seeded  Tar  Heels 
into  the  Atlantic  Coast  Confer- 
ence Tournament  finals  against 
South    Carolina   tonight. 

Carolina  did  it  the  hard  way  in 
racking   up    their    fourth    win    of 


Exum.  Clarifies 
Honor  Report 
On  Plagiarism 


Chancellor  House  and  John  Bilich 


The  Board  has  finished  its  reg, 
ularly  scheduled  interviews  with 
prospective   candidates. 

According  to  Jim  Exum.  Honor 
Council  chairman,  there  were  am- 
ple applicants  tor  the  one  junior 
and  one  sophomore  seat  open  on 
the  Council. 

For  the  four  senior  seats  open, 
however,  only  four  candidates'  '^^^'^  Monogram  Club,  the  Uni- 
were  interviewed.  Four  candidates  versity's  honorary  Athletic  Socie- 
were  also  interviewed  for  the ,  ^>-  initiated  32  Carolina  men 
offer!  three  senidr  seats  open  on  the i  Thursday  night  who  won  their  let- 
Student   Council.  I  *«"'  •"  fa"  sports.         ,^^^  ^^.. 


Chancellor  Robert  House,  who  presented  awards  Thursday  nigh? 
at   •   Monogram    Club    awards    dinner    is    pictured    above    with    John 


Bilich  as  BDich  presented  him  with  a  plaque  from  the  club. 

Photo  bv  Norman  Kanlor 


Monogram  Club  Initiates  30  Men  Cast  Named 
Winning    Letters    In    Fall    Sports 


ing   captain   in   an   effort 
the  game  out. 

Rosenbluth,  calm  as  ice  water 
with  the  end  of  UNC's  -25  game 
game  unbeaten  streak  apparently 
in  sight,  took  a  pass,  drove  in  to- 
ward the  foul  line  and  connected 
on  a  sweeping  hook  shot  to  put 
the  Tar  Hels  up  by  one.  60-59. 
Fouled  on  the  play,  he  dropped  in 
the  charity  toss  to  give  the  Tar 
Heels   their  final   margin. 

Carolina  led  all  the  way  until 
Jim  Gilley  sank  an  important  pair 
of  free  throws  to  put  the  Deacon? 
ahead.  After  Wake  had  tallied  the 
opening  basket  Rosenbluth  hit  two 
in  a  row  to  make  the  score  4-2. 

Carolina  steadily  increased  their 
tnargin  until  they  held  an  11-point 
lead,  30-19  at  the  4:19  mark.  Wake 


Honor     Council    chairman    Jim 
Exum   yesterday   issued    a   clarifi- 
cation of  an  Honor  Council  report 
on  the  conviction  of  a  student  f  or  i  forest  staged   a  spirited   rally   at 
plagiarism.  ^is  point  and  pulled  to  within  4 

Exum  said   tht   some   misunder-   points.   33-29,    at  intermission. 


additional  parking  areas  within  the  ' 
next  f3w  months,  if  funds  can  be 
made  available.  One  lot  would  be 
constructed   in   the     area     south- 
west of  the  Bell  Tower. 
MINIMUM 

It  would  cost  a  minimum  of  $70.- 
000.  Another  prospective  lot  would 
be  constructed  near  the  proposed 
site  of  the  new  men's  dormitories. 

I  feel  very  strongly  that  if  work  j 
were  begun  on  these  lots  in   the 


near  future,  it  would  alleviate  the  j  asked  to  call  Jim  Exum  at  the  Sig- 
pressures  for  parking  space.  I  ma  Nu  House.  8-9007. 


clubs  on  campus."  said  John  Bil- 
-We  of  the  Bipartisan  Board  I  jph.  Monogram  Club  president. 
therefore  make  this  announcement  I  jn  a  short,  extemporaneous  talk 
in  The  Daily  Tar  Heel  in  hopes ;  at  ^he  initiation.  Chancellor  R.  B. 
that  more  rising  seniors  will  ap-  j  House  discussed  the  ideal  of  a 
ply  for  seats  on  the  Honor  Coun-  ^ound  mind  and  a  sound  bodv. 
cil  and  on  the  Student  Council."         .-a;,    athletic    mind,   an   athletic 

body,   and   a   spirit   of   sportsman- 
ship  are   the   three   essential    ele- ; 
ments  of  a  sound  education  for  a 
I  person    and    for    a    civilization    in 
!  any  generation.  Any  student  who ! 
i  combines  these  three  has  reached  j 


The  students  who  were  inter- 
viewed by  the  board  last  week  will 
be  notified  by  mail  of  the  board's 
decision. 

Rising  seniors  who  wish  to  ap- 
ply   for   an    interview    have   been 


the    highest    achi^>vement    in    Uni- ,  Don  Redding.  Leo  Rusiavage.  Fred 
versity   life."   House  said.  t  Swearinger  Jr..  and  Clyde  Turling- 

Men    initialed    into    the    Mono-   ton. 

gram    Club    and    their    respective 

sporting   fields   are   listed    bslow. 

Crot-s  country:  Pcrrin  flcncTcf- 
-son.  Howard  Kahn.  John  Reaves. 
Dave  .Scurlock,  and   Ben  Williams. 

Soccer:  Coleman  Barks.  Robert 
Borden.  Robert  Bruggcworth.  Wil- 
son Cooper  Jr..  Richard  Grousman. 
Pete  Killinger.  Janie.s  Purks,  Tom 
Rand.  David  Corkey.  Theodore 
Y') II h anna,  and  Theodore  Smith 
.Jr. 

Football:  Phil  Blazer.  Emil  De- 
Cantis.  William  Ellington.  Doug 
Farmer,  Daley  Coff.  Curtis  Hatha- 
way. Bill  Hardison  Jr.,  John  Hay- 
wood. Don  Kemper.  Ronald  Mar- 
quette.  Stewart   Pell.  Paul  Pulley, 


For  Playmaker 
Production  Here 


16  Convicted 
In  Trial  Of 
State  Rioters 


Wake  closed  to  within  2  points 
at  the  beginning  of  the  second  hali- 
but the  Tar  Heels  managed  to 
build  their  margin  back  up  to  51-44 
with  7:45  left.  But  the  Deacons 
slowly  began  to  narow  the  margin 
with  Jack  Williams  doing  the  dam- 
age. 
"Stranger  in  the   Land,"  a  new   ievci   than  me  usual   report.  I-'ur- ,      With  1:57  to  go.  CaroUna  led  by 

play     by     former     UNC     student    ther  questioning  revealed  that  the  .th^^e^  5*-55.   but   a   field   goaj^  b> 

Christian    Moe.    will    be   the   next  \  student  had  copied  the  whole  re- 
production  of   the    regular   .season  j  Port.  word  for  word,  from  a  book 

for      The      Carolina      Playmakers.    review   in   a   magazine. 

Tommy  Rezzuto.  Playmakcrs  lech-        The    clarification   of   the  report 

nical    director     and      director     of;  ^^om     the    Honor    Council     is     as 

Moc's  play,  has  announced  his  se- ;  follows: 

lection    of   the   ca.st.    The   produc- '      From     the     comments     around 

tion    will   appear   at   tho   Playmak-    campus    there   seems    to .  be   some 


standing  had  resulted  from  the 
report  published  in  Tuesday's  edi- 
tion of  The  Daily  Tar  Heel. 

The  report  stated  that  a  his- 
tory professor  turned  in  a  student 
to  the  council  when  the  defend- 
ant's book  report  seemed  to  be 
more  elaboate  and  of  a  higher 
level   than   the   usual   report.  Fur- 


LEGISLATURE  ROUNDUP: 


I    Editor  Will  Question 

Sen.  Talmadge  On  TV 

!      Editor    Fred    Powledge    of    The 

f      f-Cr^wlfl     ^^dDCrillli^llr     ^%Zim>       I  nationally  -  televised    program     to- 

''  tomorrow. 

IXwCOf  O    t     or   Dills   nGOfO  '^^^^  ^^^^^  conference  televised 

}  from   Washington   at  *4   p.m.   Sun- 
By  NEIL  BASS  sessions   remaining     this     month,    day.  He  and  other  representatives 
According  to  current  trends,  the   '^^^  assembly   will   also  meet  for  ^  of  American  colleges  and  univers- 
22nd  assembly  Student  Legislature   one  or  two  lame  duck  sessions  to  i  ities    will    question    S^en.    Herman 


will  be  the  bill  passingest  ever. 

Qrammatically  restated.  the 
present  22nd  legislative  assembly 
will  apparently  take  action  on 
more  measures  than  any  other  as- 
sembly on  record. 

Legislators  have  already  cross- 
ed the  30-measure  marker  RW-22- 
32  and  RW-22-33,  two  resolutions, 
were  passed  after  special  orders 
were  moved  at  Thursday  night's 
se.ssion. 


deliberate  the  1957-58  student  gov- 
ernment   budget.    These    sessions 
will  be  held  in  April. 
APPROPRIATIONS 

According  to  figures  released  at 
Thursday    night's   legislative    sess-  j 
ion,    student   government   current- ' 
ly  has  approximately  $1,000  in  its  j 
unappropriated    coffers.  i 

In  the  General  Surplus  Fund 


Talmadge  (D-Ga.). 


Dave  Si  me 
Wins  Award 

RALEIGH—  (  AP )  —Dave  Sime. 
Duke  University's  crack  sprinter, 
Friday  night  received  the  Anthony 
J.  McKeylin  Award  as  the  out- 
standing athlete  for  the  1955-56 
.school  year  in  the  Atlantic  Coast 
Conference. 

It  was  voted  1o  him  by  the  M 
lantic  Coast  Sport  Writer.s  Assn 
for  hi^  brilliant  track  exploits  last 
year  before  a  ic-^  injury  cut  down  ■ 
his  bid  for  a  berth  on  the  U.  S. 
Olympic  team. 


RALEIGH  —  (AP)  —  Some  16 
North  Carolina  Slate  College  stu- 
dents, part  of  a  group  of  27  ar- 
rested during  riots  on  the  college 
campus  Thursday  night,  were  con- 
victed in  city  court  yesterday  on 
charges  of  rioting  and  disorderly 
conduct. 

Judge  Albert  Doub  sentenced 
the  16  to  30  days  on  the  roads 
and  suspended  the  sentences  on 
payment  of  $25  fines  each  and. 
cost  of  court. 

Police  officers  said  the  riots 
broke  out  near  Reynolds  Coliseum 
after  11  p.m.  and  continued  with 
lulls  until   long  after  midnight. 

They  said  several  hundred  stu  j 
dents  participated  in  the  demon-  [ 
strations.  They  said  some  were 
throwing  rocks  and  others  slashed 
auto  tires.  Outnumbered  officers 
used  tear  gas  to  quell  the  stu- 
dents,   they.  said. 

Officers    said    the    students    ap 
(See  16  SENTENCED,  Page  3)      i 


ors  Theatre.  March  27  through  31. 

Set  in  Japan  the  play  revolves 
about  American  servicemen  and 
Japanese  girls  after  the  last  war. 
Featured  in  the  cast  are:  Ken 
Lowry.  Troy.  0..  as  Gil;  John 
Whitly.  New  Bern,  as  Dan;  Har- 
vey Knox.  Greensboro,  as  Sween- 
ey; .Miss  Nancetta  Hudson.  Golds- 
born,  as  Ayame;  Miss  Mary  Johns- 
ton. Eupora,  Miss.,  as  Akadama; 
Dick  Newdick.  Augusta.  Me.,  as 
Yamada.  and  Hal  Williamson. 
Sims,  as  Takashi. 

Taylor  Williams.  Dunn,  appears 
as  the  British  Sailor;  Lloyd  Skin- 
ner. Burlington,  as  the  Rickshaw 
Boy;  Tasso  Spanos.  Braddock.  Pa., 
as  the  Ragged  Man;  Miss  Betty  Jin- 
nette.  Goldsboro.  as  the  Girl:  Mel- 
vin  Hipps.  Tryon.  as  the  Japane.se 
Policeman;  Pat  Mulvihill.  Evans  \ 
ten.  111.,  as  Chief  Shore  Patrolman;. 
Chuck  Federspeil.  Ithaca.  Mich., 
as  Shore  Patrolman;  and  Miss  Bar 
bara  Battle.  Miami.  Fla..  as  the  , 
Old  Woman.  | 


Olin  Broadway  cut  it  to  one.  Then 
Bcb  Cunninghm  was  called  for 
charging,  and  Gilley  sank  what 
could  have  been  the  game  winning 
free  throws. 

But  it  was  not  to  be  as  Lennie 
Rosenbluth  hit  what  was  perhaps 
the  most  Important  shot  of  his  life. 

After  Rosey  scored.  Wake  guard 
Ernie  Wiggins  missed  a  game  tying 
shot,  ftnd  Joe  Quigg  "got  the  re- 
bound. Carolina  froze  the  ball  the 
rest  of  the  way,  and  it  was  all  over. 

Although  Carolina  won  the  ball 
game.  Wake  Forest  walked  off 
(See  CAROLINA,   Page   4} 


misunderstanding  concerning  a 
recent  Honor  Council  report  which 
dealt  with  the  placing  on  pro- 
bation of  a  student  convicted  of 
plagiarizing  some  biographical 
data  on  an  author. 

The  Council  report  is  mislead- 
ing. The  truth  is  that  the  student 
who  was  convicted  copied  verbat- 
im  an   entire   biographical   sketch 

from  the  flap  of  the  book  in  ques-  In  Parlors  Friday  Eve 

tion-  Smith  Dorm   will   have   a   semi- 

Cerlainly  the  Courtcil  does  not  formal  dance  in  their  parlor  Friday 

consider  it  a  violation  to  use  the  night    announced    dorm    President 

factual   data     in     a     biographical  Carla  Ccrley. 

sketch  of  an  author.  It  is  a  viola-  At  the  dance,  to  be  attended  by 

tion,  however,  to  copy  this  sketch  Smith  girls  aod  their  dates.   Bru- 

verbatim.                                        ^  j  no's'CMntoo  will  provide  the  music. 


Smith  Dorm  Plans  Dance 


PRILLAMAN  SAYS:    ^  .  . 


.N-  Q 


Workers  And  Prillaman 
Disagree   On   Article 


By  BILL  KINO 


Cast  Announced  For  'Sound  And  Fury 


By  MARY  MOORE  MASON 

Casting  and  final  plans  have  bton 
i  completed  for  "Sound  and  Fury's" 

a  'safety  deVice"  whereby"  any'Tin- i  ^^^  'P""^  '""''•'^''  '"'^^^i^^^"  "-''■ 
ancial   losses  may  be  cushioned-    i^^^-'Jhe  three   main   leads   are 

Miss   Carol    Ann    Suther,    Richard 


Movement     of     special     orders  Approximately   $14,000   remains,      i  «..„,,„,  ..p^^„,.^..  t^:,.^  „.  .urpe 

The  auditing  office  recommends  I  stoker,  and    Pepper    Tice  a.  three 

care-free    college    students     on     a 


simply  means  that  a  measure  may 
be  introduced  and  passed  the 
same  session.  Ordinarily,  a  meas- 
ure is  introduced  one  .session  and 
voted  upon  at  the  following  meet- 
ing. 

Other  a.s.semblies,  such  as  the 
21st  which  lasted  from  last  spring's 
election  to  the  fall  election,  have 
acted  upon  an  average  of  25  bills 
and  resolutions. 

The  current  assembly  has  three 


GM'S  SUTE 


Artivltics  fch^^ui**!  for  Grab- 
•m  Memorial  today  includ*: 

Roland  Parkor  3  and  Wood- 
houM  Conforonco  Room  —  Claoc 
Group,  11  a.m. 

Roland  Parkor  leungot  •  Now- 
comor't  Cldb,  1-12  p.m. 


that   at    least  $10,000   be   kept   in 
student  government's  coffers  as  a 
buffer  against  loss. 
APPOINTMENTS 

Appointments  approved  by  stu- 
dent legislators  at  Thursday 
night's  se.s.sion  were  as  follows: 

Student  Entertainment  Commit- 

'tee:   Larry  Harris,   chairman.   Bob 

Borden.     Joel     Flei.shman.     Eddie 

Bass,     Joe   Clapp,     Pace    Barnes, 

Mi.ss  Marsha  McCord. 

Orientation  Committee:  Dick 
Robinson,  Ed  Levy,  Jim  Alford, 
John  Brook.s.  Herman  Godwin,  Al 
Goldsmith,  Jerry  Taylor,  Benny 
Thomas,   David   Sloan,   Miss  Belle 


spree  in  New  Orleans  at  Mardi  Gras 
time. 

The  three  mysterious  diamond 
thieves  will  be  portrayed  by  llon- 
ny  White  as  County  Igor  Techom 
neov;  Miss  Nancy  Stephens  as  Ma- 
rina, his  exotic  mistress:  and  Jim 
Thompson  as  Bhrudah,  Igor's  Bal 
kan  stooge. 

Ken  Callender  is  cast  by  Joey 
Puccini,  proprietor  of  the  atmos- 
pheric "Green  Door"  night  club. 
His  three  entertainers  are  Miss 
Pee-Wee  Batten  as  Gertrude,  the 
blues  singer;  Miss  Jane  Brock  as 
"The  Incomparable    Kalantan,"    a 


„  »*-      I      -     /-I  «  „i A    iLito» '  strip-tease  dancer;  and  Mis^-  Mary 

Corey,  Miss  Lucie  Crossland,  Miss.    ,   *^     ,,  „  .    ^         - 

Moore  Mason  as  Rosemarie  Devecr, 


Elizabeth    McCord,    Miss    LuRuth 
Sutton,  .Miss  Mary  Jane  Fisher. 
Lenoir  Hall   Investigation  Com- 
(See  LEGISLATURE.  Page  3) 


another  entertainer. 
The    four    bumbling    detectives 

(See  "SOUND,  FURY",  Page  2) 


The  student  workers  of  Lenoir 
Hall  and  George  W.  Prillaman  not 
only  disagree  on  the  way  the  stu- 
dents should  be  paid,  but  also 
on  their  opinions  of  the  article  that 
appeared  in  The  Daily  Tar  Heel 
Friday  morning. 


were  statements  in  the  article  that 
were  taken  from  context,  and  they 
did  not  have  the  same  meaning 
as  they  did  when  in  the  complete 
speech. 

He  went  on  to  say  he  thought 
The    Daily    Tar    Heel    wrote    the 
article    from    the    students    view- 
point, ''and  this  is  as  it  should  be 
since  The  Daily  Tar  Heel  is  a  stu- 
dent newspaper."  Prillaman  cited 
the   section  of   the   article    about 
business   volume  dropping   in   Le- 
noir. He  said,  "The  volume  of  bus 
One    of    the    students '  tness   has    not    dropped.    We    are 
article    was    an    almost    feeding  more    people   this   March 
than  we,  Lenoir,  did  la.st  March." 
Prillfiman  based  his  view  of  the 
article   on   the   fact  nothing   good 


MISS  JANE  BROCK  AND  JACK  BEMIS 

check   "Sound  and  Fury"  relicarbal  schedule 


In  the  opinion  of  the  14  student 
workers  who  were  approached 
about  th<?  article,  the  writeup  given 
the  meeting  was  a  fair  report  ot 
the  matters  taken  up  during  the 
assembly 
said    the 

word  for  word  account.  Another 
said  the  reporter  tried  to  be  ob- 
jective but  slipped. 

Most  of  the  students  agreed  the 
meeting  didn't  accomplish  much. 
There  was  one  student  worker  who 
disagreed.  The  worker's  statement 
was:  "Through  Lenoir  Hall  I  was 
able  to  get  an  education  that  1 
would  not  have  gotten  otherwise. 
I.  as  one  student  employee,  would 
like  to  .say  that  I  appreciate  the 
opportunity  given  me  by  Mr.  Prill- 
aman or  whoever  is  responsible  for 
appointing  students  for  use  as  stu- 
dent  workers." 

Prillaman   said   the    article   was 


Soo  h»day's  editorial  page  for 
Hi0  tOKt  Ot  Prillantan's  Wednes- 
day night  statement  to  Lenoir 
Hail  workers 

was  said*  about  Lenoir.  He  said. 
"Nothing  has  ever  been  said  about 
the  wonderful  environment  (at 
Lenoir)  as  compared  to  six  years 
ago.  I  have  never  had  any  differ- 
ences with  the  students  in  the  six 
years  I  have  been  here.  The  stu- 


dent  special    is   one   of  the   new 
"biased"  and  "slanted  writing  "  was  i  items  that  have  originated  since  I 
used  in  the  article.  He  said  there  began    work    here.". 


PAGE    TWO 


TMt  DAILY  TAR  Htit 


Saturday,  march  %  }9si 


SATURDA 


25TH  Bl 


Situation  At   Lenoir   Hall        the  sueping  giant: 


Editorials  Are 


Must  Be  Solved  Elsewhere    Quarterly  Lacks  Local  Manuscripts        Decebtive  f^effv        ^ 

tA%tc^\\\n»  Krafchick         *'  to  the  work.  If  it  is  published        tion,  just  as  with  all  other  org-     to  cveryon*  but  th«  staff)  w*  ft^WWW|iyf  I  v  W*/      ■     V«i  ■  ^ 


Now  it  appears  that  student  workers  at  Lenoir  Hall  aren't  going  to 
get  what  they  want  and  deserve. 

Director  George  Prillaman  of  the  dining  hall  told  his  workers  this 
week  they  could  have  two  free  cups  of  coffee  in  the  Pine  Room,  under 
the  cafeteria.  If  he  meant  this  as  a  compromise  to  the  workers,  it  is  a 
highly  humorous  as  well  as  an  utterly  incredible  compromise.  And, 
right  now.  it  appears  tlie  free  coffee  was  offered  as  a  compromise. 

\Vhat   the  workers     want,     and 
what  they  deserve,  is  the  right  to      extensive  investigation  of  the  case 
get  paid  for  their  work.  Now  they      from     a     relatively     unprejudiced 


get  Si. 90 ''Worth  of  Lenoir  Hall 
food  per  day  of  work.  The  food 
nuist  be  consumed  duriitg  the  day 
bv  the  workers;  otherwise,  it  must 
remain  uneaten  and  the  worker 
doesn't  get  his  Si. 90  worth.        -,■ 

Prillaman's  get-together  with 
the  workers,  this  week, was  a  good 
thiui;.  even  though  it  came  a  lit- 
tle late.  But  in  certain  of  his  state- 
ments the  director  showed  he  would 
resist   any   movement    to    pay    the 

workers  what  they  deserve. 

*  *  * 

Me  said  he  was  not  conducive  to 
( lianges  in   the  fM>licy  of  student 
aid.  " 

He  said  if  he  were  faced  witfi 
the  choice  ot  }>aying  cash  to  the 
workers  or  dismissing  them  from 
their  jobs,   he  would  fire  them. 

He  ruled  out  the  use  of  mea-l 
lM»oks.  which  would  allow  students 
to  spend  part  of  their  pay  one  day, 
none  the  ne.\i,  and.  mavbe  a  great 
deal   tlie  next  day.  *'  * 

He  iiuimated  that  opposition  io 
the   present   system  of  payment   \s 

poliiicallv   motivated. 

*  *  * 

So,  Prillaman  cannot  be  dealt 
with  anv  longer.  Someone  else 
iiuisi  consider  the  case. 

We  suggest  that  the  student 
^vorkers  take  their  case  to  the  Stu- 
dent Legislature  and  then  to  South 
Ituildinq,. 

The   legislatme  can  perform  an 


point  of  view  (even  in  an  election 
moi]th.  Director  Prillaman). 

South  Buildings  office  of  stu; 
dent  affaiis  can  hear  all  sides  of 
the  question  and  come  up  with 
some  soi-t  of  answer,  maybe  one 
tliat  will  be  acceptable  to  both 
sides. 

If  both  these  resources  fail,  we 
suggest  the  studein  workers  of  Le- 
noir Hall  decide  to  find  work  else- 
where, and  to  allow  Director 
Prillaman  to  try  "regular  labor" 
lor  a  while. 

Tear  Gas 
Is  Fine 
For  Riots 

N\  C.  State  College  students 
have  rioted  again,  the  papers  say, 
and  Raleigh  police  have  found  an 
excellent  way  to  deal  with  them. 

Thev  use  tear  gas  and  state 
prison  trucks.  The  gas  is  used  to 
slow  the  gentlemen  down,  the 
trucks,  to  haul  them  away  to  jail. 

Mayhap  the  same  techniques 
woidd  be  of  use  here.  They  fit  in 
nicely  with  some  I'NC  students* 
conception's  of  a  rally— handker- 
chief masks  and  foul  language.  We 
pass  along   the   idea.   Chief  Sloan. 


March:  Month  Full  Of  Hope 


All  aiUertisement  in  a  niaga- 
zine  lor  cold  pills,  or  raincoats,  or 
someihinu  like  that,  says  "March 
is  a  miserable  month." 

We  disagree.  March  is  an  indis- 
peU'^ihle  month. 

Wficn  else  is  there  the  depress- 
ion of  giay  moining  after  gray 
morning,  of  ctinstantiv  soaked  shoes 
and  iiair. matched  with  the  infinite, 
M>iil-touchin<;  glorv  of  promise? 

Children  wIkj  flv  kites  in  the 
cold,  windv  inoinh  of  March  are 
the  same  children  who  take  off 
t.'ieii  shoes  Ions  before  the  propter 
time.  a,t»ainst  the  wishes  and  de- 
mands ol  their  parents,  and  exper- 
icJice  an  e\(]uisite.  sensuous  feel- 
ing, and  tlieir  parents  envy  tlieni 
for  it. 

It  i>  in  Matdi  that  tlie  therry 
trees  alojv^  M(Corkle  Place  be<j^in 
to  blossom.  ;  lul  they  <:over  the 
walkwavs   with    petals,      making     a 

The  Daily  Tar  Heel 

The  ufficiai  itudeni  purilicattnn  of  tbe 
Piihlications  doard  of  the  University  of 
Nurih  Carolina,  where  it  is  piihlished 
daily  except  .Monday  and  examinatioT 
•  pd  vacation  periods  and  summer  terms 
Entered  a.«  second  cla^.s  matter  io  tbt 
Of'st  office  in  rh;jpei  Tlill.  N.  C,  undei 
the  Aet  oi  March  3.  1870.  Subscription 
rates:  mailod.  $4  per  year.  $2  50  a  semp« 
ter:  delivered.  $fi  a  year.  $3.50  a  aeme* 
ter 


Editor 

FRED  POWLEDGE 

Ifanaging  Editor 

-  CHARLIE  SLOAN 

News  Editor 

NANCY  mLL 

Sports    RHitnr 

_  LARRY  CHEEK 

Business  Manager    ^. 

BILL  BOB  PL*EL 

Advertising  Manager 

FRED  KATZIN 

EDITORIAL     STAFF    —    Woody     Sear^, 
Joey  Payne,  Stan  Shaw. 


NEWS  STAFF— Clarke  Jones,  Pringle 
Pipkin,  Edith  MacKinnon,  Wally  Ku- 
rait.  Mary  Alys  Voorhees,  Graham 
Snyder,  Neil  Bass,  Bob  High.  Ben 
Taylor.  Walter  Schruntek.  H-Joost  Po- 
lak,   Patsy   Miller.   Bill  King. 

BUSINESS  STAFF— Bosa  Moore,  Johnnj 
Whitaker,  Dick  Leavitt. 

SPORTS  STAFF:  Dave  Wible.  Stewart 
Bird.  Ron  Milligan. 


SubscriptioB  Manager 
Circulation  Manager 


Assistant  Sports  Editor.— 


.  Dale  Staley 
Charlie  Holt 
-Bill  King 


Staff  Photographers  Woody  Sears, 

Norman  Kantor 
Librarians    Sue  Gichner.  Marilyn  Strum 


Proofreader 


Night  Editor 

Night  News  Editor  . 


. Bill  Weekes 

Manley  Springs 
Clarke  Jones 


(oed  on  the  way  to  class  just  as 
lovely  as  any  queen  on  the  way  to 
her  coronation. 

In  March  the  deep  passions  and 
deep  leelings  of  the  soul  arise,  be- 
c.  .i.se  people — even  students — know 
the  oldest  and  yet  the  freshest 
triuh  of-the  world:  Spring  is  com- 
iti<j;,  slowly,  up  from  the  Kvet glades 
and  the  cottoti  belt.  It  is  rising  from 
the  depths  of  the  cold  soil,  turning 
that  soil  a  semi-iic  h  red  and  a  prec- 
ious black. 

For  ex'erv  moment  ol  cold,  terri- 
bly-wet lain.  Match  brings  10 
moments  of  warnuh.  of  sunlight, 
of  li(5j)e.  lor  everv  wet  foot  and 
sirilfle.  it  i)rings  a  new  leaf,  a  fresh 
hlossom.  a  new  feeling  of  fa-ith. 

.\o.  Manli  is  not  miserable.  It 
mav  appear  so.  to  the  man  who  is 
1 1  vino  to  .sell  cold  pill  or  rain  coats, 
but^  (o  the  human  being  whose  life 
is  tied  to  the  seasons  and  whose 
heart  beats  liom  the  soil.  March 
is  a  passionate,  fiesh  tnonth  ol 
l)ope. 

TV  Preview: 
Como  And 
Education 

Anthony  Wolff 

Pen\  Como  leturns  to  his 
Usual  spot  on  Channel  5  at  8  o'- 
clock tonight  with  a  fairly  im- 
pressive array  of  talent.  Most  not- 
able of  the  guests  is  Kthel  Mer- 
man, current  star  of  Btoadway's 
"Happy  Hunting."  The  Mills 
Brotheis  and  Comedian  Jack  Car- 
.son   round  out  the  bill. 

Opposite  on  Channel  2,  as 
usual,  is  Jackie  (ileason.  who  is 
finding  it  im|X)ssible  to  match 
Como's  lating.  This  is  not  veiy 
sinprising. 

If  you  get  dissatisfied  with 
either  of  these  shows,  or  bptli,  you 
<an  get  educated  (horroys!)  on 
Channel  4  at  8  p.m.  The  debut  of 
the  America  Looks  Abroad  series 
presents  a  discussion  of  "Africa: 
Colonialism."  emphasizing  tonight 
the  land,  its  history  and  its  people. 

At  9  tonight,  Sid  C*aesar  is  on 
Channel  5  with  the  usual  and  very 
talented  Carl  Reiner,  Howard  Mor.*; 
ris,  et  al. 

Innnediately  following,  on  tlu 
same  channel.  Lonesome  George 
Gobel  entertains  Jack  Carson 
(twice  in  one  night  for  Jiim)  and 
singer  Erin  O'Brien. 


Marcetline  Krafchick 

Mias  Krafchick,  editor  of  the 
Carolina  Qtfertorly,  below  rth 
plies  to  e  columrr  by  Jackie 
Cooper  thef  appeared  in  last 
Thursday's  Daily  Tar  Heel. 

Mr.  Cooper,  on  Thursday's  edi- 
torial page,  Has  stated  very  apt- 
ly what  the  situation  of  The  Car- 
olina Quarterly  is  in  regard  to 
student  writing.  The  magazine  is 
indeed  a  sleeping  giant  compar- 
ed to  what  it  might  be. 

Out  of  152  fiction  mauscripta 
received  in  oyxf  office  this  year, 
only  9  Carolina  students  have 
been  represented.  In  poetry  the 
proportion  of  local  contributors 
is  even  smaller. 

If  we  are  to  maintain  a  high 
standard  of  quality  we  must  se- 
lect the  best  we  can  from  what 
we  have.  It  has  been  our  policy 
to  allow  a  margin  of  priority  for 
Carolina  contributors.  But  where 
are  they? 

You  would  not,  of  course,  want 
us  to  publish  every  Carolina 
work  merely  because  it  is  from 
our  own  campus;  this  is  no  cred- 

• 

Sim  Time 

fAarks  New 

Season 

The  New  York  Times 

Some  have  speculated  that  mi- 
grant birds  and  spring  flowers 
time  their  vernal  activity  by  the 
moving  angle  of  the  sunlight. 
This  is  easy  to  believe  in  March, 
when  even  humans  are  virtually 
forced  to  leave  their  calendar- 
watching  long  enough  to  look  at 
the  sun. 

It   streams   almost   directly   in 
the  ea^t  windows     now     in     the 
morning,    and    at    evening    it    is 
full  in  the  windows  to  the  west. 
It  scarcely  seems  to  be  the  same 
sun    that   inscribed   a   small    arc 
in  th?  southern  sky  in  .January. 
Duration    of   daylight    is    in- 
volved, of  course;  sunrise  and 
sunset  »r0   now  almost  eleven 
end   a    helf   hours   apart.    But 
that   is   considerably    loss   than 
the  -whole  story.  The  sun  strikes 
the  earth  at  a  now  ansio,  and 
that  makes  all   the  difference. 
There  is  now  more  warmth  in 
an  hour  of  sunlight  than  before. 
It   penetrates  the  soil  instead  of 
glancing    off:    and,    whether    we 
are    conscious    of    it    or    not,    it 
p?netrates    a    little    deeper    into 
human  beings,  too.  One  of  these 
days,   and   not   too   many  weeks 
hence,    it   will    penetrate    deeply 
enough    to    generate    a    case    of 
spring  fever. 

But  it's  the  look   as  well   as 
the  feel  of  sunlight  now.  And 
that  may  be  one  of  the  factors 
in  bird  migration.  The  light   is 
different,    morning    and    even- 
ing.  The    shadows   fall    a    new 
way.  The  whole  aspect  of  the 
■world  is  changed,  and  not  even 
a  new  snowdrift  or  a  new  coat- 
ing of   (ce  on  the  brooks   and 
rivers  can  much  alter  that. 
The  sun  itself  has  moved  into 
March  and  toward  April,  and  the 
sun   will   not   go  back   to   its  old 
slant  until   another  summer  has 
passed.  One  doesnt  have  to  look 
at  a  calendar  to  know  that.  One 
merely  has  to  live  with  the  sea- 
sons for  a  few  years,  as  the  birds 
do.    The    birds    know    it    in    the 
marrow  of  their  bones. 

• 

L'il  Abner 


it  to  the  work.  If  it  is  published 
after  succeeding  in  competition, 
you  can  be  sure  that  your  story 
has  been  selected  on  its  worth. 
The     Quarterly      has     been 
caught  in  e  trap  of  prestige. 
That  is,  its  reputation  has  risen 
90  high  emong  literary  maga- 
zines that  meny  writers  around 
tihe  country,  knowing  we  can- 
not afford  payntent,  still  wish 
to  appear  in  our  pages.  Writ- 
er's Digest   last  year  rated  us 
among  the  top    literary  publi- 
cations,   along    with    Harper's, 
Chicago   Review  and   Saturday 
Review. 

Quality  is  our  foremost  aim  in 
representing  Carolina  to  the  na- 


tion, just  as  with  all  other  org- 
anizations and  teams.  Although 
it  is  perhaps  of  interest  and  con- 
cern to  fewer  people,  our  UNC 
magazine  ranks  almost  as  high  in 
its  realm  as  our  basketball  team 
does  in  its  realm. 

The  heavy  correspondence  car- 
ried on  from  The  Quarterly  of- 
fice is  on  a  48-state  and  inter- 
national scale — though  no  inten- 
•tion  or  fault  of  the  current  staff, 
but  as  a  result  of  the  status  the 
magazine    has   attained. 

We'd  like  to  publish  an  all- 
Carolina  magazine.  In  order  to 
discourage  outside  entrees  in 
the  current  fiction  contest 
(which    has   always   been   open 


to  everyone  but  the  staff)  we 
have   not  announced   the  con* 
test  off  campus,  except  in  the 
megazine  itself.  Well,  Carolina 
writers,  we're  rooting  for  you. 
A  note  especially  to  Mr.  Coop- 
er: we  appreciate  your  leads  on 
talented   people    around   campus* 
and  plan  to  use  your  suggestions. 
In  fairness  to  Mr.  Hunt,  his  ar- 
ticle was,  as  the  title  page  state?, 
"adapted,"   and   not   "reduplicat- 
ed.''   Your    kind    of    interest    in 
"the  potential  ability  to  cause  a 
renaissance  of  creative  work  in 
the   seven   classical   arts   on   the 
campus"    is    what    our    staff    is 
looking  for.  Why  don't  you  join 
us? 


Bob  High 


'Tried  To  Eat  His  $1.90  Food  Allowance 
All  In  One  Meal' 


'W'  .^ '  l-» 


TO  LENOIR  HALL'S  WORKEIS: 


Resolving   AAisunderstandings 


George  W.  Prillaman,  director 
Of  Lenoir  Hall,  made  the  fol- 
lowing speech  to  the  cafeteria's 
student  workers  last  Wednes- 
day evening. 

F?no\v  students  and  employees, 
I  have  requested  that  you  meet 
with  mc  tonight  so  that  we  may 
resolve  any  misunderstanding 
that  might  exist  in  regard  to  stu- 
dent  employment    at    Lenoir. 

ftccently  s::vcral  deceptive  edi- 
torials have  appeared  in  The 
Daily  Tar  Heel,  and  in  order  to 
clarify  the  present  policy  of  Le- 
noir Hall's  management  and  per- 
haps to  stop  further  decimation 
of  Lenoir  as  a  fine  student  din- 
ing hall  and  a  place  where  Uni- 


veraity  faculty,  staff  ad  students 
enjoy  a  fellowship  that  no  other 
campus  facility  offers,  an  open 
discussion  is  perhaps  the  best 
solution  to  what  may  otherwise 
cause  ill  feelings.  ■ 

I  wish  to  state  very  emphat- 
ically that  I  do  not  condone  the 
practice  of  writing  editorials 
and  withholding  names.  If  you 
have  a  question  in  mind  in  re- 
gard to  any  phase  of  a  business 
by  which  you  are  employed, 
seek  the  answer  to  that  ques- 
tion from  your  supervisors.  If 
satisfaction  is  not  found  there, 
the  manager's  office  is  always 
open  for  consultations. 

Don't  resort  to  petty  editorials 


which  tend  to  cause  an  air  of 
antagonism  in  your  working  en- 
vironment. (For)  example,  sup- 
pose I  was  not  satisfied  or  con- 
tented with  my  salary,  and  I 
wrote  several  editorials  decimat- 
ing my  superiors.  What  do  you 
think   the  results   would   be? 

Fellas,  in  the  Book  of  Genesis 
it  relates  how  Eve  took  the  ad- 
vice of  the  serpent  and  ate  fruit 
from  the  Forbidden  and  the  re- 
sult was  condemnation  of  Adam 
and  Eve. 

The  moral  is,  of  course,  dou't 
be  guided  by  the  desires  of  antag- 
onists to  upset  what  you  come 
to  Chapel  Hill  for,  and  that  is 
a  college  education. 


By  A!  Capp 


{WELL, IF  THE  FORCE  HASN'T 
GIVEN  VOU  A  RAISE,  HOW 
I  AF.E.  VOU  GOING  lO  GET 
t*  TMH  EKr.'^A  MONEV  TD 
TAKE  ME  OUT? 


OH,  FEARLESS,  DEAR- 
WECAN  DINEOtr", 
NOW  THAT  ^iOU 
USING  VOUR 
HEAD.'/' 


MV  HEAD  15  RiCHrrZ-C-/ 
TNAT /'M  TXD  BE  A 

^PffAcr/SE  PAr/£Nr' 


1 


^f^fm 


By  Walt  Kelly 


0UT  \9  we  «fAeT0PA 
CAMAI.  f««  to  9*P\MB. 


"jKfUemi^]  you  vw»Tf  a^u 
WHeK^  you    cfotMACA/a^ 


TWAT»  A  MIUIOH  fWfTAtiU, 
MIUUON  >^CXIU>  -IbXXMti^  _ 

IP  veu  w»oT»  nt^  v«z©». 
Moe0  i^^iif 


'  NO\v  THBH,  eupp>oeB  >tou 
>f/fsoreJtO  MXB  -iS?—  , 
A  fiif^&fSPf  7km  OP  IT/  \ 

AU.  ATA  MIUUON  PgfZ  eACHf     - 


uM-'Weu.:^ 

UH-HOW" 


\^^0  OifTOf  . 

-rH»  CANAU  I 

9ueiN6«ft. 


Nl«e/ 


BfiftswiTH     — 


George  W.  Prillaman  opened  hi?  called  meeting 
with  the  student  workers  of  Lenoir  Hall  with  the 
speech  which  is  printed  in  its  entirety  on  this  page. 
Prillaman  said  the  editorials  in  The  Daily  Tar  Heel 
were  deceptive  and  petty.  There  has  never  been  a 
editorial  which  was  petty  and  very  few  which  were 
deceptive.  This  one  is  no  exception. 

If  Prillaman  thinks  the  letter*  5n  The  Daily 
Tar  Heel  were  Hie  opinlfne  of  H»i»  paper,  he  is 
wrong.  There  was  but  one  article  written  by  per- 
sons associated  with  this  paper  in  reference  to 
the  Lenmr  Hall  situetioM.  The  strongest  language 
used  WM  that  the  workers  in  Lenoir  have  had  a 
meager  existence  for  meny  ye«r&.  This  Is  not  de- 
ceptive or  petty. 

The  other  writings  which  appeared  in  The  Daily 
Tar  Heel  were  written  by  students  of  the  University 
and  they  are  not  in  affiliation  with  this  paper. 
Maybe  they  used  strong  language  and  made  state- 
ments which  were  not  true,  -but  they  were  WTitten 
with  the  understanding  that  the  petition,  which  was 
drawn  up  by  the  student  workers  at  Lenoir,  had 
reached  Prillaman. 

PrUlaman  stated  that  he  never  received  this 
petition  and  would  not  have  known  what  was  going 
on  had  it  not  been  for  the  articles  in  The  Daily  Tar 
Heel.  The  petition  in  question  is  the  same  one  prmt- 
ed  by  this  paper  on  March  2.  It  says:  "RESOLVED: 
That  the  unused  portion  —  not  to  exceed  90  cents 
dail3»  —  of  the  wages  of  $1.90  in  food,  earned  by 
a  self-help  student  for  each  day's  work  at  Lenoir 
Dining  Hall  be  paid  to  the  student  worker  in,  cash 
at.  time  periods  of  twice  monthly." 

The  person  responsible  for  th»  failure  of  the 
petition  to  reach  Prillanwn  has  oene  a  greet  In- 
justice to  the  workers  at  Leiiior  Hall.  The  work- 
ers were  under  the  assumptioo  that  their  superior 
had  the  staten(»ent  which  concerned  them  directly.. 
They  were  very  suprised  to  f'Snd  out  that  Prille- 
man  knew  nothing  of  their  >>ants  or  demends. 
Prillaman  stated,  "I  see  in  TJie  Daily  Tar  Heel 
that  I  am  driving  the  students  and  making  slaves 
out  of  them.  I  see  no  slaves." 

I  see  no  slaves  either,  but  I  see  boys  with  no 
choice  but  to  accept  the  rules  laid  down  by  the 
Lenoir  management.  Prillaman  says  he  wants  the 
workers  to  have  a  well-balanced  diet,  and  thus 
the  proposal  that  the  studenU  have  the  right  to 
use  their  meager  allowance  in  ,the  Pine  Room  was 
denied. 

Since  the  workers  have  been  refused  cash  pay- 
ment of  the  balance  of  the  allotted  $1.90  per  day 
in  food,  they  will  now  attempt  to  have  the  balance 
carried  over  to  another  period  so  they  can  make 
use  of  their  full  earnings.  What  is  the  sense  in  a 
person  stuffing  himself  with  food  to  Aeet  the  quota 
which  has  been  set?  The  answer  is  simple,  none. 

Prillaman  said,  "I  think  some  of  you  have  gone 
underground  by  WTiting  editorials  to  The  Daily  Tar 
Heel  in  trying  to  force  something  on  us  that  we 
can't  afford." 

1  realize  that  Prillaman  knew  nothing  of  the 
petition  but  the  lett^-s  were  written  with  the  as- 
sumption that  he  knew.  If  wTiting  of  a  situation  on 
the  editorial  page  of  a  newspaper  L*  being  sly,  then 
what  is  publicity? 

Furthermore,  the  director  said  that  the  Student 
Legislature  and  The  Daily  Tar  Heel  were  trying  to 
cram  this  down  Lenoir's  throat.  An  example  was 
how  the  Northern  senators  are  trying  to  cram  the 
Civil  Rights  bill  down  the  Southerns  throats.. 

"I  was  never  approached  by  a  student  repre- 
sentative about  the  petition  but  found  out  what 
I  know  from  The  Daily  Tar  Heel,"  stated  Prilla- 
man. Now  I  say,  where  vrould  the  controversy  be 
now.  If  he  hed  not  discovered  the  situation  in  this 
newspaper  and  celled  the  meeting  of  the  workers. 
In  continuing  his  blast  at  The  Daily  Tar  Heel, 
Prillaman  stated,  "I  have  never  known  but  one  or 
two  Daily  Tar  Heel  editors  that  have  complimented 
Lenoir  Hall." 

This  editorial  is  not  meant  to  be  a  defense  of 
this  paper  but  a  summation  of  the  issue  at  stake. 

Prillaman  pointed  out  many  things  that  he  was 
doing  for  the  benefit  of  the  workers.  He  stated  that 
the  South  Room  i^  kept  open  for  lunch  and  dinner 
to  give  work  t(i  the  students.  Also  the  statement 
was  made  that  he  could  save  money  by  hiring  regu 
lar  workers  which  would  cut  down  on  the  expenses 
of  feeding  the  student  workers. 

One  student  asked  Prillaman,  "Then  this  is  a 
lost  cause,  and  we  understand  that  you  will  not 
change  the  policy  no  matter  what  w'e  say."  Prilla- 
man nodded  and  retorted,  ''Yes,  you  can  say  that." 
in  making  this  point,  the  director  stated  that 
Lenoir  could  save  approximately  $155  a  day  by  no* 
having  student  workers.  He  continued,  "Rules  and 
regulations  were  made  to  abide  by  and  we  are  not 
trjing  to  push  you  around.  I  am  not  condu  ive  to 
any  changes  in  the  student  aid  policy." 

During  the  question  and  answer  period,  which 
went  on  for  almost  two  dreary  hours,  a  student 
said  the  profit  made  by  Lenoir  Hall  last  year  6l 
something  near  $550  would  buy  110  cases  of  beer 
and  the  arguments  about  coffee  in  the  Pine  Room 
and  being  able  to  receive  only  20  cents  worth  of 
ice  cream  at  a  time  were  petty.  He  went  on  to 
say  that  he  thought  that  a  small  minority  of  the 
workers  were  responsible  for  the  whole  situation. 
On  beinf  esked  vrhore  the  money  for  the  pur- 
chase of  the  new  chinawere  wee  coming  from  if 
the  coet  was  to  be  neer  $2300  and  the  profit 
ntiade  last  year  was  $550,  Prillaman  said  that  that 
was  the  profit  for  last  year. 

Some  questions  which  should  be  answered  arc: 
Ho-»v  much  would  it  add  up  to  per  day  to  hire  an 
accountant  to  take  care  of  the  system  of  cash  pay- 
ments? Would  not  the  accountant  need  to  be  hired 
with  regular  workers  and  would  not  the  boys  be 
willing  to  take  a  fut  in  pay  in  order  to  receive 
wages? 

An  accountant  would  take  up  only  an  hour  a 
day  to  figure  the  payroll  and  during  the  rest  of 
the  day  cotild  be  working  elsewhere. 

Another  observation  made  of  the  issue  was;  If 
he  (Prillaman)  were  not  making  money  by  giving 
meals  inyte^  of  cash,  he  would  not  continue  te  do 
so.  This  I  agree  with  wholeheartly. 

Here's  hoping  that  I'm  not  cut  up  in  slices  jnd 
sold  as  a  Student  Special! 


.ff* 


11 


Wil 

By 

Graham 
Monday  its] 
day    celebi 
ing  with  "\ 
1.   "Sound 
ed  by  GM. 

The  pui 
sor   activit 
students  a£ 
ested  and 
to  be  at  hi 
&£id  Linda] 

'il-e  celt 
Anniverss 
open  to  al| 
flicks  are 

GM  is  dl 
dent    unioi 
and  ran  thj 
Then  the 
maintainei 
However. 
activities 
dollars  pn 

Graham 
a  result  o] 
1920  by  tl 
erection  o\ 
Kidder  Gi 


Th( 


Lots  of 
high  rega^ 
tors    are 
collecting 
It  just  pU 
For  the  p^ 
of  popul 
book  that 
ured    thrc 
'For  less 
temporary! 
can,  if  yoj 
inal  record 
discovery 

Check  t| 
alogue- 
our  compf 
prised  to 
buy  more 
'—fun.  fo^ 
book  wor 


205 


A^ 


12  Al 


15 

17 

d< 
1«  Cvj 
JO  pJ 

22  Bl 

ni 
2.'5  rI 


26 

2T 
29 

31 


35 
36 
37 

38 
40 
42 
43 
45 

47 
48 

49 

50 


hfsf 


SATURDAY,  MARCH  9,  1957 


TMl  DAILY  TAR  NNk 


PASI  THRii 


Ming 
the 

leel 

a 
rere 

is 


>aily 

rsily 

iper. 

»tp- 

Ktten 

was 

had 

this 

fcoing 

Tar 

rint- 

TED: 

rents 

hy 

?noir 

ca«>b 

th« 

in- 

>rk- 

iy. 

ilia- 
Heel 
Slaves 

I  no 
the 
the 

thus 
It  to 

was 

pay- 
day 
ince 

lake 
in  a 

||uota 

le. 

I  gone 
Tar 

it  we 

the 
as- 
}n  on 
then 

^udent 
ring  to 
le  was 
the 

what 
»rilta- 
y  b« 
this 
rkars. 
Heel, 
or 
leuted 

:nse  of 
^ake. 
I  be  was 
[ed  that 
dinner 
Jtement 
regu 
cpenses 


25TH  BIRTHDAY: 


GAA  Celebration  Ends 
With  'Sound  And  Fury' 


By  PATSY  MILLER 

Graham  Memorial  will 
Monday  its  three-week  25th  Birth- 
day celebration  period  conclud- 
ing with  "Sound  and  Fury"  April 
1.  "Sound  and  Fury"  is  sponsM>- 
ed  by  GM. 

The  purpose  of  GM  is  to  spon- 
sor activities  in  which  as  many 
students  as  possible  will  be  inter- 
ested and  will  participate..  "We  try 
lO  be  at  home  away  from  home." 
said  Linda  Maao,  GM  director. 

The  celebration'  includes  a  25tb 
Anniversary  Open  House  March  25. 
open  to  all  students.  Several  free 
flicks  are  also  on  the  agenda, 

GM  is  different  from  other  stu- 
dent unions  since  students  built 
and  ran  the  building  until  the  war. 
Then  the  University  took  over  iti 
maintainence  because  of  finances. 
However,  students  still  pay  for 
activities  through  a  fee  of  three 
dollars  per  semester. 

Graham  Memorial  was  built  as 
a  result  of  a  movement  begun  in 
1920  by  the  alumni  body  for  the 
erection  of  a  memorial  to  Edward 
Kidder  Graham,  University  presi- 


The  Thriftiest 
Hobby 

Lots  of  people,  when  they  see  the 
high  regard  in  which  bo<A  collec- 
tors are  held,  get  the  idea  that 
collecting. is  a  millionaire's  hobby. 
It  just  plain  isn't  true. 
For  the  price  of  an  ephemeral  bit 
of  popular  music  you  can  buy  a 
book  that  has  been  read  and  trea$ 
MTed  through  a  hundred  years. 
For  less  than  the  cost  of  a  con- 
temporarj*  adventure  book  you 
can,  if  you're  lucky,  buy  the  orig- 
inal records  of  an  important  bit  of 
discovery. 

Check  through  oiur  old  book  cat- 
alogue— or  the  catalogue  of  one  of 
<mr  competitors — and  you'll  be  sur- 
IBised  to  find  that  you  can  always 
"buy  more  reading— and  collecting 
•-i-fun,  for  less  money,  in  the  old 
liook  world. 

THE  INTIMATE 

BOOKSHOP 

205  East  Franklin  Street 


dent  fiDm  1914  to  1918.  Gl'aham 
was  a  very  popular  president. 

An  anonymous  donation  of  $80,- 
000  from  a  New  York  alumnus 
made  completion  of  the  building 
possible.  Tiie  building  ftmd  be- 
gan with  contributions  from  3,- 
900  students,  alumni,  and  facul- 
ty. The  building  committee  had  to 
combat  the  financial  depressions  of 
the  post-ward  period,  and  had  run 
out  of  funds  until  the  anonymous 
donation  wias  made.  The  donator's 
name  is  still  a  mystery. 

Presentation  of  the  building  was 
made  by  Dr.  Louis  Rou  id  Wilson, 
executive  secretary  of  the  build- 
ing committee,  on  January  29, 
1932.  Mayne  Albright,  then  presi- 
dent of  the  UNC  student  body, 
accepted  the  building  for  the  stu- 
dents. 

GM's  scrapbooks  are  full  of  in- 
teresting notes  on  past  GM  activi- 
ties. 

Ifears  ago  coeds  to<*  over  &e 
pool  room,  which  occupied  the 
whole  basement.  The  basement 
then  was  converted  into  a  bowling 
alley,  and  finally  divided  into  sev- 
eral activities  rooms,  including  the 
present  pool  ropm. 

In  1939  Bob  Magill  announced 
the  first  croquet  party  at  UNC. 
A  prize  was  given  to  the  person 
who  succeeded  in  making  a  round 


LEARN  COUEGE  HEBREW; 
AT  CAMP  THIS  SUMMER 

Annual  accelerated  course  in 
modern  Hebrew  for  college 
students  and  gradaatinf  hitk 
school  seniors,  at  beautiful  76 
acre  coed  camp  in  New  York's 
Hudson  Valley ;  complete  sports ' 
facilities. 

7  week  session,  July-Attgnat, 
$185;  including  roqin,  boutL 
tuition  (sooM  scholarship  help 
available)  write: 

ULPAN,  Student  Iionist  OrsanizitkNi  \ 
342  Madison  Avenue,  New  York  17 


DAIRYLAND  FARMS 
FOUNTAIN  SPECIAL 


HOT  FUDGE 
SHORTCAKE 

24< 


On  fresh  baked  sponge  cake,  a  generous 
scoop  of  our  rich  vanilla  ice  cream  covered 
with  hot  fudge. 

DAIRYLAND  FARMS 

Glen  Lennox 


World 
Dinner  Is 
At  6  Today 

The  Cosmopolitan  Club's  second 
annual  International  Dinner  will 
be  held  today  at  6:30  in  Chapel 
Hill  Baptist  Church  basement 

All  tickets  have  been  sold,  out 
for  a  week  to  club  members  and 
their  guests,  «nd  a  capacity  group 
of  150  gourmets  is  expected^  ac- 
cording to  a  spokesman.  Inf<MrmaI 
entertainment  will  follow  the 
meat 

This  highlight  of  the  Club's 
spring  semester  programming 
was  organized  and  executed  for 
the  first  time  last  spring. 

Members  of  the  Club  from  var- 
ious countries  gave  their  services 
to  make  tiie  event  successful. 
Owners  of  kitchens  cooperated  in 
preparing  dishes  or  in  making 
their  facilities  available  to  cooks. 

A  capacity  group  of  200.  com- 
posed of  the  club's  membership 
and  friends,  was  present  F^ods 
from  all  over  the  world  were 
served. 

A  program  of  singing  by  mem- 
bers of  the  Club  followed  the 
meal. 


By  SUE  ATHISON 

The  Pi  Kappa  Alpha  Fraternity 
pledge  weekend  began  last  night 
with  a  formal  dance  held  in  the 
Carolina  Inn.  Music  for  the  cele- 
bration was  provided  bj^  the  Duke 
Ambassadors. 

Officers  of  the  pledge  class  and 


DAILY    CROSSWORD 


ACROSS 

1.  Plaything 
5.  Mast 
9.  Hautboy 


10 


Famous 

comediaa 

Stop     ""'  ^ 

( naut. ) 

Abundant 

Measure 

(Chin.) 

Pronoun 

<Bib.) 

17.  Stifny 
decorous 

18.  Cucko« 
ZO.  Roman 

money 

22.  Biblicnl 
name 

23.  Repentant 
regret 

25  GMdeat  Of 
death 

M.  Fen 
27.  Exist 
29.  Exclude 
31.  The  Philip* 
pinee.  for 
inatane* 

35.  Odd    ($B.) 

36.  Hint 

37.  River 
(Enr) 

3S-flea4l 
40.  For 

42.  Uve 

43.  Narratea 
45.  Greek 

epic  poem 

47.  Fodder  vat 

48.  BuiMinf 
addiUona 

49  GMden 

amphtbiilK 
90  Auctiow  y 


DOWN 

1.  Oxlike 

2.  Ambina 
gainieiit 

5.  Grayed 
4.  DuH 
{.Wild 

fiBfd.) 

6.  Splendor 
T.  Arrest 

a.  BxperieaM 

again 
11.  Wing:hke 
13.  Man's  name 
16.  AfrimMtive 

reply 
19.  An  en- 
tanglement 


21 


Fur. 
be«r> 

aniinis 


are 

hunted 

keri 

«pl.» 
tCBil^d 

m.I.) 
tS.  Radium 

(sym.) 

29.  Set-to 

30.  Check 

32.  Dine 

33.  Degrade 

34.  Plant  ovule 
39.  Girl's  name 


^31      n'jii      lit: 


of  the  wickets  with  the  least  num- 
ber of  strokes.  Cold  lemonade  was 
served  to  all  participants. 

Students  plan  all  GM's  aetivities. 
There  are  nine  activities  commit- 
tees  including  a  dance  CMnaiittee, 
movies  committee  and  Teeeption 
committee. 

The  Graham  Manorial  Board  of 
Directors,  composed  of  eight  fac- 
ulty memibers,  ten  students  includ- 
ing the  student  body  president  and 
the  GM  director,  formulates  the 
policies  for  the  building  and  acts 
as  an  approval  board. 

Tom  Lambeth  is  president  of 
GMAB  and  Linda  Mann  is  director 
of  GM. 

At  the  present  time  GM  is  cramp- 
ed for  space  and  hopes  for  a  new 
building  in  the  future. 

GMAB  Slates 
Henry  iV 
For  Monday 

Gary  Greer,  antertainment 
chairman  of  OMAB,  announced  to- 
day that  Players  Incorporated  of 
Washington,  D.  C.  will  present 
William  Shakespeare's  Henry  IV, 
(Part  I)  at  Memorial  Auditorium 
Monday  at  8  p.m.  The  company 
will  be   sponsored  by  GMAB. 

The  repertory  company  from 
Catholic  University  will  be  head 
ed  by  Broadway  actor  William 
Callagan,  wiio  recently  played  30 
Weeks  in  the  Broadway  preduc 
tlon  of  ''Anastasia."  In  this  per 
formance  he  will  be  seen  as  the 
funniest  of  Shakespeare's  comics, 
the  mountainous  Falstaff. 

This  classic  is  two  plays  in  one; 
a  comedy  and  a  heroic  tale  of 
adventure.  The  comedy  is  provid- 
ed principally  by  Falstaff,  the 
fat  and  funny  knight  who  has  be- 
come a  legend  and  a  symbol.  The 
excitement  is  derived  from  the 
refbellion  of  the  hot-headed  Hot- 
spur and  his  showdown  in  battle 
with  young  Prince  Hal. 

Tickets  are  available  for  $125 
at  the  infonnation  desk  of  GMAB, 
Dandger's  and  Ledbetter-Pickard. 
For  further  information  call  5-611. 


T«e«er4«]r'«  Aa«v«r 

41.  Wide. 

mouthed 

jar 
44.  Turf    ; 
46.  Sick      - 


CUSSIREDS 


JAZZ  At  turnaois 

Saturday  atlemoon,  2:00,  Turn- 
ages  Cabin  in  I>Qrham.--Jas  hs 
Dick  Gables  "All  Stars."  Beer 
ikarved. 


FOR  SALE:  S2  FOOT  TKAILER, 
sleeps  four;  has  bath.  Contact 
Robert  Pickard  at  Taylor's 
lyailer  Court,  Airport  Road. 


5  ROOM  BRICK  HOUSE.  3  BED 
rooms,  all  modem  eonveniences. 
3  miles  <M  <M  86  Hyway.  Stove 
and  FHgedalre  furnished.  Call 
Fred  Katzta  alter  6:00.  9-9025. 


TWO  BEDROOM  HOUSE  FURN- 
ished  or  unfumiriied,  near  camp- 
us. Call  9458  during  day  or  2926 
after  5:80  p.m.  and  weekend. 


FIVE  BOOM  BRICK  HOUSE  IN 
cen*er  of  town — has  hobby  work- 
shojp.  Call  9458  during  day  or 
2926  after  5:30  and  during 
weekend. 


HAPPENINGS  ON  THE  HILU 


Rika  Pledge  Doings  Start  Today 


their  dates  who  atlaBded  the 
dance  were:  Mason  Wilkina,  presi- 
dent, and  Miss  Carolyn  Whit- 
worth;  Dick  RObinson,  vice  presi- 
dent, and  Miss  Ambum  Hti^ins; 
Mark  Wilson,  secretary-treasurer, 
and  Miss  Betty  Ann  Wilkins;  and 
Doe  Farell,  socjal  chairman.  Md 
Miss  Sarah  Van  Wjdte.      :>     ^     ' 


IDC  And  Sophomores  Sponsor 
Informal  Spring  Swing  Here 


The  Spring  Swing,  consisting  of 
a  concert  and  an  informal  dance, 
will  be  presented  by  the  Don  Shir- 
wMtend  event  will  be  jointly 
sponsored  by  the  Inter-Dormitory 
Council  and  the  Sophomore  Class. 

On  Friday.  March  22,  a  concert 
wil  be  presented  by  the  Don  Shir- 
ley Duo.  Interpretive  jazz  and 
old  favorites  will  be  featured  on 
the  program  which  will  begin  at 
8  p.m.  in  Memorial  Hall. 

The  informal  dance  Saturday 
night  will  begin  at  8  p.m.  in 
Woollen  Gym.  The  dance  vrill 
feature  the  music  of  the  Duke 
Ambassadors,  a  well  known  North 
Carolina  Orchestra. 

Don  Furtado,  president  of  the 
sophomore   class  stated  that  the 


dance  were  open  to  all  Carolina 
students.  He  added  that  there 
would  be  no  charge  for  the  Satnr^ 
day  dance. 

A  fee  of  %1  per  person  will  be 
charged  for  the  c<moert  8oph»> 
mores  with  their  dates  will  be 
admitted  on  one  ticket  (1  per 
couple). 

Concert  tickets  will  be  on  sale 
at  Graham  Memorial  and  the 
"Y."  Members  of  the  IDC  will  al- 
'so  be  selling  tickets. 

At  the  intermission  of  the  danee 
two  concert  ticket  stubs  will  be 
drawn.  Holders  of  the  winning 
tickets  will  win  $10  gifts  eertifi'' 
eates  to  be  spent  in  the  Chapel 
Hill  stores. 


Toiay  at  2:30  p.m.  in  the  Tin 
Can  there  will  be  a  basketball 
game  between  the  pled^s  and 
the  broihers. 

ZBT  ■tRTHDAY 

Last  'Thursday  Alpha  Pi  of 
Zeta  Beta  Tau  began  the  celebra- 
tlos  of  its  30th  anniversary  with 
a  Coal  Miners  Party  at  the  house 
and  loltowed  this  with  a  Pajama 
Party  Friday  at  Hoenig's  Cabin. 

Qn  Saturday  the  festivities-  be- 
gan with  an  informal  party  at 
Tumages  in  Durham  for  the 
pledges  and  their  parents.  Later  in 
the  day  a  cocktail  party  and  a 
formal  hanQuet  were  held  at  the 
Carolina  Inn. 

A  formal  dance  followed  the 
baofuet  at  the  Inn.  Diuring  the 
dance  Miss  Kit  Mayer  of  New  Or- 
leans, La.,  was  crowned  the  new 
Swaelibeart  of  Alpha  Pi  by  Miss 
Sally  Silberstein  of  Baltimore, 
Maryland,  the  chapter's  past 
Sweetheart 

The  Anniversary  celebration 
was  the  occasion  for  the  introduc 
tion  of  the  new  officers:  Jerry 
Oppeaheimer,  president;  Gene  Fel- 
ton,  i^ce  president;  John  Kridel, 
seetetary;     and    Abe    Abramson, 


Sixteen  Sentenced 


(Continued  from  Page  1) 

parently  were  irked  because  fans 
attending  last  night's  games  in  the 
Atlantic  Coast  Conference  Basket- 
ball Tournament  had  parked  their 
cars  so  as  to  block  entrances  to 
student  parking  lots. 

At  their  trials,  the  students  de- 
nied that  a  mob  had  existed  and 
one  contended  that  the  students 
were  victimized  by  officers  who 
were  ''excited  and  anxious  to  lay 
their  hands  on  anyone  available." 

One  student,  Joel  Page  of  Ral- 
eigh, told  the  judge  he  had  left 
his  dormitory  to  get  a  younger 
brother  and  two  companions  to 
their  rooms  before  they  got  in 
trouble.  He  said  he  had  cursed 
but  it  was  not  directed  at  the  of* 
fleers. 

Another  student,  J.  D.  Punch  of 
Hickory,  Rt.  1,  said  he  get  caught' 
while  en  route  to  the  Jnfirmary 
for  treatment  of  a  boil  on  h& 
neck.  He  said  his  roommate— seek- 
ing treatment  for  an  infected  foot 
— ^was  with  him  when  they  met 
other  students  being  chased  by 
officers.   Punch  was  arrested,  he 


Legislature 

(Continued  From  Page  1) 

mittee:  Al  Alphin,  chairman,  Jim 
Johnson,  Bert  Warren,  Eddie 
Brown. 

Elections  Board:  Wayne  Ander- 
son to  replace  Bill  Redding,  elect- 
ed to  head  the  Interfraternity 
Council. 

All  appointments  were  approv- 
ed. 

Absentees  from  the  session 
were: 

Bo/b  Carter,  Wilson  Cooper,  Don 
Furtado,  Joe  Hagedorn,  Charles 
Howerton,  Jerry  Oppenheimer, 
Ben  Peele.  Bill  Redding.  Benny 
Thomas.  Bill  Bobbins  who  sub- 
mitted a  formal  letter  of  resigna- 
tion expressing  his  pleasure  at 
having  served  and  his  reasons 
for  resigning. 


said,  but  the  roommate — ^Who  said 
he  ran— was  not. 

Larry  Carter  of  Winston-Salem 
said  he  heard  "screams  and  sirens" 
and  thdught  it  was  a  prifon  rioC. 
He  said  he  was  arrested  as  be 
went  to  see  what  was  ha]>penlag. 
Meanwhile,  State  Colkge  o£|lda)a 
said  the  names  of  the  27  stDdettta 
would  be  turned  over  to  the  atv> 
dent  government  judicial  board. 


'Sound,  Fur/ 

(Continnted  from  Paoe  1) 

wUl  be  played  by  E^win  Kcams, 
Qeoiret  Stepfenou,  Jean  Pierre 
Boiaaavit,  and  Alan  Pultz. 

The  heroine's  old-maid  aunt. 
Miss  Melissa  Dardeneaux,  will  ba 
portrayed  by  Miss  liouise  Whitley. 
Mis*  I>(«me  Hasting;  will  be  the 
fyow&r  Woman. 

John  Ludwig,  director  of  the  mu* 
siMi,  has  also  announced  the  stdtf 
oT  the  pr^^uction. 

Miss  Nancy  Stepbens  is  proj^ue* 
er;  Miss  Nance^a  Hudson  is  tech- 
nical director:  Cecil  Hartsoe  is  mu- 
sical director;  BradftMrd  Hall  is 
stage  manager;  Miss  Virginia  Grata 
is  choral  director;  Herman  Schultz 
is  business  manager;  Miss  Blynn 
Durnig  is  chcrteographer;  and  cos- 
tiunes  are  being  executed  by  Miss 
Fou-Fou  Senimca. 

Members  of  the  chorus  include 
the  following:  Tom  Brennen, 
Wayne  Lamm,  Herman  Schultz,  J. 
T.  Stevens,  Miss  Rosemary  Lem- 
mcmd.  Miss  Doris  Woody,  Miss 
McCord,  Taylor  Albert,  Hal  Hen- 
derson, John  Steed,  and  Miss  Caro- 
line Hume. 

Dancairs  for  the  production  are 
Miss  Virginia  O'SuIlivan,  Jerry 
Young,  Bliss  Camie  Goodwyn,  Thom 
Stutt.  Darwin  Solomon,  Bobby  Du- 
Meer,  Miss  Carol  Dennis,  Nelson 
Lavergne,  and  Mias  Joan  Vansise. 

The  musical,  which  wilj  appear 
in  Memorial  Hall  at  8:30  on  March 
30  and  31,  still  needs  people  for 
the  technical  crews,  costumes, 
lighting,  and  sets. 


Covering  The  Campus 


LOST:  ONE  ROLEX  OYSTER 
Speedking  wrisiwatch,  Tuesday 
night  in  Physics  lAb  (I  think). 
Please  eontaet  Jooit  pplak,  208 
Lewis. 


COU.O0UIUM 

There  will  be  a  joint  Duke-UNC 
Physics  Colloquium  Wednesday  at 
8  p.m.  in  206  FhiUips  HalL  Dr. 
Warren  Henry  of  the  Naval  Re- 
search Labwatory  will  speak  on 
"Magnetic  Interactions  in  Solids." 
SCIENTIFIC  SOCIETY 

The  Elisha  Mitchell  Scientific 
Society  will  meet  Tuesday  at  7:30 
p.m.  in  206  Phillips  Hall. 

Dr.  C.  N.  ReiUey  of  the  Chemis- 
try Dept.  will  speak  on-  "Metal 
Analysis  with  Complexones,"  and 
Dr.  Walter  Wheeler  of  the  Geology 
Department  will  discuss  "Fossil 
Brains." 
DISCUSSION  HERE 

The  Student  Faculty  Forum  and 
GMAB  will  sponsor  a  discussion  of 
"Bvolutloa  of  the  Role  of  the  Su- 
preme Court  in  American  Govern- 
ment," at  7  p.m.  Sunday  in  the 
Grail  Room  of  GM.  ^ 

E:arl  Wallace  of  the  Political 
Science  Department  and  Robert 
Wettach  of  the  Law  School  wiB 
lead  the  discussion.  « 

TEA 

The  Botany  Dept  Tea  will  be 


T^cTMonSay^rTirpIm 
Davie  Hall. 
CELEBRATION  BMINS 

"Henry  IV"^  will  be  present 
Monday  at  a  p.m.  in  Graham  !!•> 
morial  by  tie  PUye»  Jac.  *uil^ 
ing  the  beginning  «f  Brihantf  ltt» 
morial's  twenty-fifth  lurthday  eel- 
#brati<Ni. 
C0MMA6ER  TO  SPEAK 

Dr.  Henry  Steele  Commager  of 
Columbia  University  will  sjpeak  at 
the  Graduate  History  Chib  meet 
ing  Tuesday  at  8  p.m.  Tlie  public 
haft  been  invited. 
LUNCHEON 

The  Institute  for  Research  in 
Social  Science  staff  luncheon  will 
be  held  Wednteday  at  12:50  in  407 
Alumni  Building.  Dr.  Guy  B.  ^hn- 
son  will  speak  on  "The  Course  ol 
Racial  Confliets." 
WUNC-TV 

Today's  schedule  for  WU!rc-TC 
the  Univ^Sity's  educational  tel 
evilion  station  is  as  follows: 

6:30    Yesterday's  Worlds 

7:00    Delinquency 

7:30    The  Elements 

8:00    Insurance 

8:30 -Aaaaiiea  Loaka  Abroad. 


Orleans,  and  John  Kridel  to  Miss 
Vicki  Stick  oi  Secaucas,  N.  -J. 


ROBtRi        JtrrRLY        HOPE 

WAGNER  HUNTtRlANGE 


treasurer. 

It  was  dsa  the  occasion  for  two 
pinnings:  Bob  Goldberg  of  Greens- 
boro to  Miss  Kit  Mayer  of  New 


OlflTlsCAPC! 

jotms 

/   .■:. 

'^r- 

mu 

TRMSKS 

Ay 

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...i   1. \i;];i:i  rs 

«)i 

\v  1  \ir(  )i  t    s  1  Klj  ,1 

ii-6-ir$  m. 
CMlwuicoK  am  iiicntocoLOft  rowANCc  <J 

LAIC  SHOW  TONIGHT 

REOULAR  SHOWING 

SUN.-MON.TUE. 

Carolina 


NOW  PLAYING 


T?\Cry 

CinemaScGP^ 


WajinehColorStefeophcihc  SOUHO. 

"CmT^  W-DO    mon*      nancy      j»»«es 
kaymond    tab     dorothy    ann€ 

^mxn  rukT  av       otmcta  V         umuur  '\.  mMtc  Mr 

-  NOW  SHOWING  - 


e-aioiiwammmm 


WHAT 

FASCINATION 
DREW  WOMEN 
TO  HIS  ARMS 
...DESPITE 
THEMSELVES? 


CSNemaScoPE 


■;       STARMNG 


lONYCUitTiS'MAlAIIYEII       ®. 
WSBICm-KAlYNOIlANT 


LATE  SHOW  TONIGHT 
SUNDAY-MONDAY 


f 


.*■    f.'V!*'.. 


A  Campus -to -Career  Case  History 


*'The  future  looks  unlimited 


**I  wanted  a  career  that  offered 
^riety,  opportunity  and  a  chance  to 
work  with  people,*'  says  Lew^is  William 
Post,  C.E.,  Michigan  State,  1950. 
**That's  why  I  went  to  work  for  the 
tel^hone  ccmipany. 

**My  initial  training— two  full  years 
of  it— probed  every  phase  of  company 
operations  and  acquainted  me  wit)i  all 
of  the  jobs  in  the  Plant  Department, 
where  I  was  starting. 

**T6day,  as  Plant  Engineer,  I'm  re- 
sponsible for  preventive  maintenance 
of  all  field  equipment,  installation  of 
new  facilities  for  wire  and  cable,  apd 
I  work  with  architects  and  builders 
on  telephone  needs  in  new  buildings. 


".Selling's  part  of  my  job,  too.  I 
sell  ideas— like  the  wisdom  of  plan- 
ning for  telephone  service  when  you're 
building.  Recently  I  advised  an  archi- 
tect and  an  owner  on  telephone  wiring 
and  outlets  in  a  new  $160,000  medi- 
cal center.  I  enjoy  getting  in  on  the 
ground  floor  of  such  projects  and 
making  contributions  both  as  a  cjvil 
and  a  telephone  engineer. 

"In  my  area  of  Chicago  there  are 
tiO.OOO  telephones,  home  and  busi- 
ness. More  are  being  added  every 
day.  There's  expansion  everywhere 
in  the  telephone  business— all  across 
the  country.  To  me,  the  future  looks 
unlimited." 


Lew  Poat^s  career  is  nith  Illinois  Beli  Telephone 
Company.  Many  interesting  career  opportuni' 
ties  exist  in  other  Bell  Telephone  Companies* 
Bell  Telephone  Laboratories.  Western  Eleetric 
and  Sandia  Corporation.  Your  placement  officer 
can    give    you    more    information    about    them. 


PAGi  POUR 


THE  OArLY  TAR  HEEL 


SATURDAY,  MARCH  9,  ItS? 


Rosey  Or  Wallace?  Take  Your  Choice 

The  controversy  over  the  relative  merits  of  Lennie  Rosenbluth 
and  Grady  Wallace  is  continuing  at  an  accelerated  pace  at  the  ACC 
tournament  being  held  in  Raleigh. 

Although  no  conclusion  has  yet  beon  reached,  the  centostinf 
parties  seem  to  have  divided  into  Kvo  camps:  those  north  of  the 
border,  (Rosenbluth)  and  those  south  of  the  border,  (Wallace). 
Bones  McKinney  of  Wake  Forest,  EX'erett  Cass  of  State  and  Hal 
Bradley  of  Duke  all  go  along  with  Rosenbluth,  the  UNC  All-American. 
But  all  do  so  with  qualifications.  Case  for  instance  thinks  Rosey  is 
a  better  shot  from  the  inside,  while  Bradley  takes  Lennie  for  his  su- 
perior offensive  abilities.  Thia*  despite  Wallace's  standing  as  the  na- 
tion's leading  scorer.. 

From  the  sunny  state  of  South  Carolina  come  dissentinQ  cries. 
Wallace's  teammates  are  of  course  convinced  that  no  one  it  better 
than  their  Mare  Creek,  Ky.,  meal  ticket.  And  the  Clemson  players 
are  in  alntost  complete  agreement. 

It  took  Clemson  guard  Dick  Yeary  to  settle  matters  once  and 
for  all.  "I  don't  know  which  one'^?  best,"  said  Yeary.  "but  they  both 
should  be  made  illegal."  And.  we  know  six  coaches  in  the  Atlantic 
Coa.«t  Conference  who  would  undoubtedly  agree. 

From  The  Gridiron   .   .   .  Spring  Sports 

One  week  from  today,  the  annual  Monogram  Club  sponsored  Blue- 
White  football  game  will  be  held  in  Kenan  Stadium.  At  that  tinie 
the  second  edition  of  Carolina  football  Jim  Tatum  style  will  go  on 
display. 

Last  fall  the  Tar  Heels  had  a  miserably  season:  no  wins  and 
ten  losses.  Of  course  two  victories  and  one  He  w«re  thrown  out 
because  of  an  ineligible  player. 

Next  year's  team  is  almost  certain  to  be  better.  Graduation  losses 
were  light,  and  a  good  deal  of  help  should  be  gained  from  the  '56 
frosh.  But  it   still  looks  like  a  long  drought. 

Although  you  may  not  believe  it  from  looking  outside,  spring 
is  just  around  the  corner.  Baseball,  tennis,  gdlf,  track  and  lacrosse 
will  soon  move  into  replace  the  winter  sports  in  the  spotliffht. 
This  year's  baseball  squad  should  be  a  good  one,  although  several 
key  men  have  been  lost  via  the  graduation  and  scholastic  deficiency 
routes.  The  golfers,  last  year's  conference  champo-,  face  a  strong  sche- 
dule liberally   sprinkled   with  intersectional  foes,  but   have  the  per- 
.sonnel  to  do  the  job. 

But  this  looks  like  the  end  of  an  era  in  Carolina  tennis.  Since 
the  days  of  Bitsy  Grant,  UNC  has  been  known  as  a  mecca  of  college 
tennis.  Annually  the  Tar  Heels  have  fielded  one  of  the  nation's  top 
collegiate  teams. 

Every  year   since   the  conception  of  the   Atlantic  Coast  Con- 
ference, Carolina  has  annexed   the  team  title.  They   have   yet  to 
lose  a  duel  nrtatch  in  the  ACC. 
But   this  year's   UNC    team  will   bear  little   resemblance   to   the 
powerhouses    of  old.    Graduation  took   away  Tommy  Bradford.    Don 
Thompson,  Pete  Green  and  Bruce  Gustafson,  all  members  of  the  top 
six.   And   scholastic    deficiencies    further   riddled    the   .squad,    leaving 
Steve  Bank  as  the  only  returning  letterman  from  last  year's  conference 
championship  team. 

It  looks  like  a  long  spring  for  Carolina  t6nnis  fans. 


McGuire  Still  Nervous  '^//erl^P^'^^^'^^^^ 
Wih   Over   Deacons     sportswriters 


%Y  BUZZ  MERRiT  McGuire    was    as    shaken    as    it 

Special  To  The  Daily  Tccr  Heel   ■  possible  for  the  dapper  Irishman. 

It  was  the  second  time  in  two ;  "You  know,  I,  couldn't  even  write 

nights  that  Lennie  Rosenbluth  had  |  my  name  on  the  way  down  here.  A 


been  the  object  of  a  backslapping, 
gladbanding  attack. 

The  first  time  he  had  been  hot- 
handed  enough  for  an  ACC  tourn 
ament  scoring  record. 

This  time  he  exchanged  the  heat 
!  for  ice  water. 

Minutes  after  he  had  ho<^ed  in 
a  bucket  and   added   a   free   toss  |  play   them 
to  win  UNC's  way  into  the  tourney  |  whew!" 
finals,  he  sat  in  a  happy  dressing 
room  and   explained: 

•'Nab,  you  don't  think  about  it. 
They're  one  ahead  with  55  seconds 
left,  then  you  get  ahead  by  one. 
You  can't  think  about  the  free 
throw." 

Coach  Frank  McGuire  had  called 
time  out  between  Lennie's  bucket 


kid  asked  for  an  autograph  and 
I  couldn't  even  wTite  my  name." 
"We  played  about  the  same  aa 
in  the  other  games 'with  them.  To 
beat  a  club  like  theirs,  with  Mur- 
dock,  Gilley,  Wiggins  and  the  res^, 


Across  the  way  Deacon  Bones 
.McKinney  turned  the  text  to  box 
ing  and  preached  a  sermon  on  the 
evils  inherant  in  meeting  the 
champ. 

"Remember^*  the  Louis-Walcott 
fights.  You've  got  to  knock  out  the 
Champion  in  order  to  win  a  de- 
cision. You  can't  win  a  decision 
from   a    Champion."     the     disap- 


RALEIGH—(AP)— Frank  Spen- 
cer, vetrfan  Winston-Salem  Journ- 
al and  Sentinel  Sports  writer,  Fri- 
day was  elected  president  of  the 
Atlantic  Coast  Spores  Writers  Assn. 


He    succeeds    Add 
radio  station    WBIG, 


Penfield    of 
Greensboro. 


Softball  Clinic  Meetings 
To  Start  Tuesday  At  4 

There  will  be  an  intramural  soft- 
ball  clinic  each  day  in  Ro«m  301-A 
in  Woollen  Gym  at  4  p.m.  Tues- 
day.   Wednesday    and    Thursday. 

Anyone  interested  in  officiating 
must  attend  the  meetings,  accord- 
ing to  the  intramural  office..  Play  ! 
will  begin  Monday,  March  18. 


SOPHOMORE 

YOUR  JUNIOR  YEAR 
IN  NEW  YORK? 


s 


to  go  some.  I  don't  even  like  to 
one.    but    four   times, 


four  <iine9  in  a"  season  you  have;  pointed  Bones  almost  whispered. 

"I'll  be  glad  to  answer  your 
questions  but  I  don't  have  any- 
thing to  say,"  the  usually  vocal 
Bones  said. 

"I  will  say  that  I'll  be  pulling 
for  Carolina  all  the  way.  Frank  is 
a  fine  coach  and  deserves  anything 
he  might  get.  including  all  the 
coach  of  the  year  awards." 


"We  played  poorly  after  we 
built  up  that  early  lead  and  let 
them  catch  up.  But  when  you  can 
lead  them  11  points,  then  go  be- 
hind with  53  seconds  left  and  still 
win,  you're  a  good  ball  club." 

Somebody  asked  about  defense, 
i  man-to-man  which  wa.s  airtight 
in   the  opening  minutes.   McGuire 


and  the  free  toss.  Whafd  they  talk  i  caljed    to    Bob    Cunningham. 

about? 
i      '*doach  just  said  to  make  it  and 
i  we'd   be  two  ahead   and   all  they 
I  could  do  in  the  regulation  game  is 

tie   it  up."  he  simplified. 


'Tell  'em  what  I  said  about 
defense  before   the   season,   Bob." 

Pupil  Bob  said  "You  said  if  oui 
defense  improved  we  wouldn't  lose 
a  ball  game."  j^;.^     i>...: 


Ace  Runners 
To  Compete 
In  New  York 


BY  MtlWAUKEE  SPORTSWRITER 

Pampered  Child'  Label 
Hung  On  Laszlo  Tabori 

MHiWAUKEIEl — (AP) — ^The    meet    quarters,   including  Dan  Ferris  oi 
director  of  tonight's  Journal  Gam^s  '  the  AAU. 


Friday    blasted    distance    runner 
Laszlo  Tabori  as  "a  pampered  lit- 
tle child"  who  had   'better  change 
I  some  of  his  ways  of  thinking." 

The  criticism  was  levelled  at  the 
Hungarian     refugee     b  y    .Oliver 
I  Kuechle,  sports  editw  of  the  Mll- 
i  waakee  Journal  and  director  of  the 
'  meet,   after  receiving  word  frcan 
Chapel  Hill  that  Tabori  had  pull- 
ed out  of  the  two-mile  event  hej;e 
because  of  a  strained  "hamstring" 
muscle. 

SECOND   RHUBARB 

This  episode  marks  the  second 


'BETTER  CHANGE' 

"Tabori  proposes  to  live  and 
work  in  this  country,"  Kuechle 
said.  "So  does  his  coach,  Mihaley 
Igloi.  Both  had  better  change  some 
of  their  ways  of  thinking.  Stub- 
*bom  little  whims  or  flashes  of 
temperament  had  better  be  dio.*- 
carded — and  a  'contract,'  which  a 
signed  entry  blank  is,  had  bettor 
be  honored." 


Jm  Bcatty  and  Dave  Scurlock. 
two  of  the  greatest  distance  run- 
ners in  Carolina  track  history,  will 
compete  tonight  in  the  Knight'.* 
of  Columbus  Games  in  New  York 
City. 

Beatty.    UNC    record    holder   in  i 
both  the  mile  and   two-mile,   will  I 
run   in  the   two-mile,   while   Scur- 
lock, who  recently  set  an  unoffic- 
ial ACC  mark  in  the  880,  will  gc 
in  the  1.000  yd.  run. 

Beatty's  chief  competition  will 
be  provided  by  Alex  Breckenridge 
of  Villanova.  Scurlock.  a  sopho- 
more, will  match  strides  with  the 
great  Arnie  Sowell  in  his' event. 


Bill  Hensely,  sports  publicist  at 
North  Carolina  State  College,  was 
named  executive  secretary,  re- 
placing Bob-Brooks  of  The  Raleigh 
News  and  Observer  who  has  left 
the  sports  writing  field. 

Other  officers  chosen  at  the  an- 
nual luncheon  meeting  of  the  94- 
member  organization; 

Vice-Presidents  —  Dick  Herbert. 
Raleigh  News  and  Observer:  Bob 
Fulton,  radio  station  WCOS,  Co- 
lumbia. S.C:  Shelley  Rolfe.  Rich- 
mond Times-Dispatch,  and  Joe 
Blair,  University  of  Maryland 
sports  publicist. 

Executive  committee  members, 
in  addition  to  Penfield— Dick 
Pierce.  Charlotte  Observer:  Bill 
Rone.  Columbia  State,  and  Chris 
Cramer.  Charlottesville,  Va..  Daily 
Progress.  j 

Plans  for  presentation  of  various 

achievement  awards  were  discus.s- 

ed.   The   basketball    player   of  the 

year  award,   received   last   year  by 

North     Carolina     State's     Ronnie 

Shavlik,  hencefarth  will  be  known 

I  as    the    Flwcie    Stewart    Award.    It 

j  was  named  in  memory  of  the  form- 

i  cr   basketball   coach   at   Maryland. 

;  Furman    and    Appalachian    College 

I  who  died  last  year. 

The  sportsmanship  award  which 

will   go   to   the   school   whose  fans 

'  and  athletic  teams  are  graded  by 

opposing  players  as  to  deportment 

and  sportsmanship     will     be     an- 


nounced   after    the    close    of    the 
spring  sports  season. 

A  service  to  sports  award  win- 
ner,, the  first  such,  given  to  a  per- 
son prominent  in  athletics  but  not 
a  participant  in  the  conference 
area,  will  be  announced  later  this 
month,  Dick  Herbert,  chairman  of 
the  selection  committee  announced. 


I  Se«  your  d»an  or  writ* 
J  for  brochura  to: 


DeanF.H.McCloskey 
Junior  Year  Program 
Wasbincton  Sq«arc 

Collece 

New  Varfc  Universitr 

New  York  3,  N.Y. 


► 


Howard  Johnson  Restaurant 

BREAKFAST 

LUNCH 

'  '  DINNER 

SNACKS 
"Landmark  For  Hungry  Tarheels" 


South  Carolina  Upends 
Maryland  Terps,  74-64 

RALEIGH— (AP)— Upstart  South 
;  time  the  orietime  shoemaker,  who !  Carolina  smothered  second-seeded  [ 
did  not  return  to  his  Communist-  j  Maryland    74-64    Friday    night    to 


Two    Committeemen 
Favoring  Tourney  Play 


i  dominated     homeland     after     the 

Melbourne  Olympics,  has  been  in- 

I  volved  in  a  rhubarb.  "The  first  was 

when    he    supposedly   complained 

about     hia'    training     quarters     in 

1  Florida. 

I     "Laszlo  Tabori's  inability  to  rue 

I  In    the  Journal    games    is   regret- 

j  table  but  understandable,"  Keuch- 

!e  wrote  in  a  signed  column.  'UiJ 

refusal  to  make  even  a  token  ap- 


j  gain  the  finals  of  the  Atlantic 
Coast  Conference  basketball  tourn- 
ament along  with  unbeaten  North 
j  Carolina.  Their  meeting  tonight 
I  will  decide  the  conference  title 
and  Yale's  opi>onent  in  the  first 
round  of  the  Eastern  NCAA  reg- 
ional tournament  in  the  New 
York  Tuesday  night. 


RALEIGH— <AP)— Two  members 
of  the  five-man  basketball  com-  j 
mittee  of  the  Atlantic  Coast  Con- 
ference went  on  record  Friday  in 
favor  of  retaining  the  champion- 
ship tournament  system.  | 

Duke  Athletic  Director  Eddie ' 
Cameron,  head  of  the  basketball 
committee,  told  Atlantic  Coast 
Sports  Writers  .\ssn.  members  at 
their  annual  luncheon  nveeting 
that  the  proven  successful  tourna- 
ment should  be  retained. 

He  advocated  continuing  on  this ! 
"sound  basis"  which  has  been  the  'i 
chief  source  of  conference  reven-  ] 
ue.   Roy  Clogston,  North  Carolina 
State    athletic   director,   expressed 
the  same  sentiments.  j 

M  a  n  y  conference  basketball  i 
coaches  hold  that  the  regular  s-ea- 1 
son  winner  should  be  recognized  I 
as  champion  without  being  forced ; 
into  three  days  of  tournament : 
pressure  to  win  the  title  and  a: 
spot  in  NCAA  regional  playoffs 
TAR  HEELS 

They  cite  the  case  of  top-seed 
ed  North  Carolina,  only  unbeaten  1 
major  team  in  the  country.  The 
Tar  Heels  swept  24  games,  includ- 
ing 14  in  the  conference,  going 
into  the  tournament.  They  made 
it  25  last  night  by  whipping  Clem- 
son. Friday  night  they  faced  Wake 
■Forest,  a  team  they  already  had 
beaten  three  times. 

Cameron  pointed  out  the  best 
team  Uc-ually  wins  the  tournament, 
anyway.  He  said  that  in  the  last 
10  years  the  top-seeded  club  won 
seven  times,  the  No.  2  team  twice 
and   the  fourth-ranked  club  once. 

Supporters  of  the  present  cham- 
pionship tournament  setup  say  that 
if  the  championship  phase  of  the 
event  is  removed  it  takes  with  it 


much  of  the  excitement  and  inter- 
est in  the  toiu-nament.  i 

Cameron   declared   that    basket- 
ball   interest   in    the    southeastern ; 
Conference   has   slumped   general- j 
ly  with  the  dropping  of  its  tourn- , 
ament.  I 

Clogston  said,  with  sellouts  of  I 
more  than  12,000  assured  for  the  j 
games  last  night,  and  tonight  the 
ACC  tournament  receipts  record 
established  last  year  already  had 
been  bettered.  Thursday's  four 
games  drew  22,000. 


pearance  here,  however,  is  not  un- 
derstandable. Like  a  pampered  lit- 
tle child,  he  has  stamped  his  fooi 
in  Chapel  Hill  where  he  is  train- 
ing and  yelled  "Nem,  Nem,  Nem,' 
which  I  have  found  pneans  'No' 
three  times  in  Hungarian." 

Kuechle  said  Tabori  completely 
ignored  a  responsibility  to  the 
meet  after  accepting  a  Journal 
contribution  of  ^500  "through  the 
National  AAU  a^r  a  contribution  .  .  . 
for  his  living  and  training  e.xpen- 
tKs,  despite  appeals  from  various 


' :  <>*•  Jig: ;  rtsi'i^-'.  <f i.r.v 

f»:'. 

•'•1 

EAUN  youn  MASTER'S  DEGREE 

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■toi-M  doveUiled  with  cte«rw>«  work.  T*Ui  •«  for 
store  work  HS9.  Co-ed.  Schol«rshi»4.  S«]«cUt«  iiA  BUM- 
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SCHOOL  OF  RETAILING 

UNfVEllSITy  OF  IMTTS8UII6H 


11,  fa. 


Seniors 

Advance  Information 

On  Career  Opportunities 

At  Procter  &  Gamble 

Advance  inform«Hen  on  Marketing 
Management  opportunities  in  the 
Procter  &  Gamble  Advertising  De 
partment  it  now  available.  Write 
H.H.  Wilscn,  Jr.,  Supervisor  of 
Personnel,  Advertising  Depart- 
ment, Procter  &  Cambie,  Cincin- 
nati, Ohio.  Campus  interviews  in 
Placement  Service  M^rch  21. 


DIXIELAND  COMBO 

SATURDAY  AFTERNOON     .J 
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FEATURING 

LBS  SUTORIUS 

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SPECIAL  SUMMER  SESSIONS: 

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Emphasis  On: 

Spanish,  Latin  American  Studies,  Foreign  Trade, 

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Grants  B.A.  and  M.A.  degrees 
Fall  Quarter— Early  October  to  Late  December 
Winter  Quarter—Early  January  to  Mid-March 
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Carol 


ina 


(Continited  from  Page  }) 
with   shooting   percentage    honors. 
The  Deacons  hit  21  of  40  shots  for 
52.5  per  cent  as  compared  to  Car- 
olina's 38.8.  j 

Joe  Quigg  Pete  Brennan  and  Bob 
Cunningham  did  a  terrific  job  on 
the  baeicboards     as     UNC     pulled  , 
down  45  rebounds  compared  to  only  I 
21  for  Wake  Forest.  | 

Rosenbluth  hit  23  points  to  take 
scoring    honors    for    USC.    while  I 
Willisius  bad  24  for  th«  D«acon8  | 


THE  NEW... 

CHAT  N'  NIBBLE 

drive  in  restaurant 

N  n  W     O  P  F  N  On  The  Greensboro 

i^WTV     wrbi^  i^.^^y  3  ^.^    p^^j^  Campus 


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Three  Day  Special  Tue. 

'        ^  Wed. 

HAMBURGER  &  MILK  SHAKE* 

Armour  Meats  And  Long  Meadow  Dairy  Products 


^i&l^riM:^ 


ASTRONOMERS!  Long  svmsets  make 
you  impatient?  Do  you  hate  standing 
around,  twirling  yovur  telescope,  wait- 
ing for  dark?  Cheer  up  .  .  .  now  you 
can  fill  that  gap !  Take  out  your  Luckies 
—and  you're  in  for  a  Twilight  High- 
light! Luckies. are  out  of  this  world 
when  it  comes  to  taste.  That's  be^ 
cause  a  Lucky  is  all  cigarette  .  .  . 
nothing  but  fine,  mild,  naturally  good- 
tasting  tobacco  that's  TOASTED  to 
taste  even  better.  Light  up  a  Lucky 
yourself.  You'U  say  it's  the  best-tast* 
ing  cigarette  you  ever  smoked! 


STUCK  FOR  DOUONt 

c^START  STKKUNGI 
MAKE  ^25 

We'll  pay  $25  for  every  Stickler  we 
print— and  for  hundreds  more  tliat 
never  get  iised!  So  start  Stickling— 
they're  so  easy  you  can  think  of  dozens 
in  seconds!  Sticklers  are  simple  riddles 
wit  ii  t  wo-word  rhyming  answers.  Both 
words  must  liave  the  same  number  of 
syllables.  (Don't  do  drawings.)  Send 
'em  all  with  your  name,  address, 
college  and  class  to  Happy -.loe-Lucky. 
Box  67A,  Mount  Vernon,  N.  Y. 


WHAT  IS  AN  ANGRY  BUTCHER? 


JAMES  POWELL. 
ALAMHA 


Cleaver  Heaver 


WHAT  IS  A  NOISY   POUTICAl  MEETING » 


JAMES  BUTLER. 
BOSTON  COLL. 


Raucous  Caucus 


WHAT  IS  A  HOPPED.UF  CONOCUI 


MARTHA  ■ACHNE*. 
■  ADCLirFE 


Venice  Menace 


WHAT  IS  A   WOIF  IN  SHEEP'S  C10THING» 


NOCkT  jtNHiHes. 
U    or  N.  CAROLINA 


Sham  Lamb 


WHAT  IS   FAKE  ClASSICAl  MUSIC? 


ANNE  PELL. 
OKLAHOMA 


Mock  Bach 


WHAT  IS   A   HUG  IN  HOUANO? 


CAROL   POST. 
COLL.  OF  THE  SEQUOIAS 


Dutch  Clutch 


WHAT  IS  A  lAO-NEWS  THCOIAMI            1 

• 

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N^^ 

'  r  w  'v\ 

BdK^^ 

-V^ 

L-ji^ 

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i^zJ^ 

».  L   SARNER. 

Dirt  Win 

IOWA 

Luckies  Taste  Better 

••IT'S  TOASTED"  TO  TASTE  BETTER  .  .  .  CLEANER,  FRESHER,  SMOOTHER  I 

©A.  T  Co.  FmoBUCT  or    t^Pl^ €.<^r*«<k«»«  o/crt^«a>--^^«y»<wy    America's  lkading   manufactukkk  or  ciqaiisttb* 


■^^^^»^^^^^p« 


'^^"f^^^^mfm 


0  N  C  Library 
Serials  Bept. 
Chspel   Hll"  .    N.    C. 


WEATHER 

f>«ir  Mid  medM-at*iy  cold.   High 
4i  ••  55. 


2rhc  Ilaity  War  Heel 


ALL     OVER 

Thaf's  where  the  review  pag* 
take*  you.  Flip  to  2. 


"ter 


LVii     MO.  113 


Complete  UP)  Wirt  Strviet 


CHAPEL  HILL,  NORTH  CAROLINA,  SUNDAY,  MARCH  10,  1957 


Offices  in  Graham  Memorial 


FOUR  PACES  THIS  ISSUE 


Tar  Heels  Stomp  South  Carolina  To  Win  ACC  Championship 


Colson  Heads  Slate 
OfYMCAFor1957 

Siewait  Colson  heads  the  V.VIC  A  slate  of  candidates  an- 
nmiticed  yesterday  by  V  officials. 

.Nominated  by  the  V  for  \ ire-president  is  Joe  Phillips. 
Other  nominees  are  as  follows: 

Secretary,  Kelly  Walla,  e;  treasurer,  Dick  F'rank;  mem- 
bership chairman,  Larkin  Kirkman;  proojram  chairman, 
kandy  Shelton   and   Buddy  Strickland. 

The  V.XfC.V  uill  hold  its  annual  nominating  and  elec- 
liens  meeting  this  Thursd:iy  at  7  p.m.  in  Cierrard  Hall. 

,\11  students  who  have  participated  in  the  VMCA  pro- 
gram, financially  or  actively  have4 

been  encouraged  to  attend  and 
vote  in  the  elections  meeting 
Thursday,   Y   officials  stated. 

Stewart  Colson,  the  presidential 
nominee,  is  a  rising  senior  from 
Greensboro  and  a  math  major.  His 
activities  have  included  Freshman 
Fellowship;  freshman  camp;  chair- 
man of  YMCA  Worship-Vespers 
Committee;  delegate  to  the  South- 
ern   Area    Council    meting   in   At- 


nev5 

in 
lirief 


PLOTNIK 

music  and  dranm 


HANOCH  GREENFIELD 

.  . .  pianist 


RAFAEL    EVEN 

.  stiidying  psychology 


laftta,  Ga.;  discussion  le9der  at 
the  annual  Y5IC.\-YWC.\  confer 
enec  at  Bricks.  N.  C;  member  of 
t^ie  international  cooperative  house 
at  UNC. 

The  vice  presidential  nominee. 
Joe  Phillips,  a  junior  from  New 
Bern,  is  a  political  science  major. 
He  has  served  as  chairman  of  the 
Kace  Relations  Council  of  the 
YMCA;  delegate  to  the  Southern 
Area  CounciJ  meeting  in  .Atlanta, 
Ga.;  chairman  of  the  group''  plan- 
aJns  the  intercollegiate  Human  Re- 
hltiOQS  Institute  to  be  held  in 
April. 

llecrettrial  candidate  Kelly  Wal-  j 
lace  is  a  junior  iron  Aurora  and 
a  pre-roed   student.   He   has   been 
chairman  oi  Ihe  hospital  work  un- 1 
der  the  Community  Service  Com- ' 
mittee  ft>r  the  YlBcA.  and  he  has 
been  active  on  the  planning  com- 
mittee    for     the     YWCA-YMCA 
Spring  Conference. 

Dick  Frank,  nominee  foF  treasur- 
er, is  a  juniof  from  Greensboro 
and  a  B.A.  major.  Prank  has  been 
chairman  of  the  intercollegiate  re- 
lations for  the  YMCA  this  year. 
He  has  also  worked  in  Public  Re- 


Students  Hear  Nasser 

CAIRO,  EGYPT  —  (.\P)  —  Presi- 
dent Nasser  told  Palestinian  stu- 
dents from  Gaza  yesterday  that 
Arab  nationalism  had  liberated  the 
Gaza  Strip  and  "will  help  us  win 
back  all   of  Palestine." 

Nasser  spoke  to  a  thousand  stu 
dents  who  assembled  at  the  presi- 
dential palace  to  hail  the  president 
as  the  liberator  of  Gaza  and  to  de- 
mand that  Egyptians  return  to  the  1 
strip  as  administrators.  i 


Four  Israeli  Students 
Appear  Here  Tuesday 

By   H-JOOST  POLAK  ■  Israel   War   of   Liberation.   He  has 

The  Israel  Student  Organization,  ^  been    pursuing   his   studies   in    the 
an    international   organization    de- 1  United  States  since   1953. 
signed  to  provide  cultural  and  in- 
tellectual   contact    betwen    Israeli ' 
college   students   and    their   U.    S.  j 
counterparts,     is     sponsoring     the  I 


Aycock  Here 
Over  Weekend 
For  Orientation 

The  Univeroity's  new  chancel- 
lor, William  B.  Aycock,  is  here 
this  weekend  getting  "oriented" 
with  members  of  the  administra- 
tion, (acuity  and  student  body. 

He  arrived   here  Saturday  from 


appearance  •here  of  four  Israeli 
students  Tuesday  at  8  p.m.  in  the 
G.  M.  Lounge. 

The   four,   whose    schedule   also 
includes     classroom      appearances 
and    a    luncheon    in    Lenoir    Hall, ; 
comprise    a    heterogeneous    group  i 
to    acquaint    University    students 
facets  of  Israeli 


Nuclear  Test  In  Russia       | 

W.4SHINGTON  — (AP)  —  Russia  i 
set  off  ant>ther  nuclear  test  explo-  j 
sion  Friday  the  Atomic  En«rgy  j 
Commission  announced  yesterday.  1  with   the  diverse 

This    was    the    sixth    such    an-  j  culture.  j 

noaneement  since  la^  Atitftwl]  Rafaisl  Even,  Polish  born  social  > 
whMi  the  AE!C  reported  the  start  |  psycholo^t.  now  studying  for  hisi 
of  a  Russian  test  series.  {  Ph.t).,   h^ads  the  group.   Assistant 

director    of    the    State      of      I.sracI 
Bonds    Organization,    Even    served  j 
in    the    British    Army   during    the' 
last    World    War    and    joined    the 
Israel    Defense    Army    during    the 


Two  musicians,  Hanoch  Creen- 
feld  one  of  Israel's  outstanding 
pianists  and  Miss  Hava  Kohav  a 
dancer  currently  studying  at  the 
Julliard  School  of  Music  in  New 
York  City,  are  also  in  the  group. 
Greenfeld.  a  graduate  of  the  Is- 
rael AciWcmy  of  Music,  has  played 
in  New  York.  Des  Moines,  and 
Minneapolis  and  received  the  Lado 
Artist  Award  for  his  pianistic 
prowess.  Miss  Kohav*  a  graduate  of 
the  Music  Teachers  College  in 
Tel   Aviv,   has   performed  for   the 

Israel    Broadcasting    Service     and   ,«„^        j     •    •  »     »•  .       . 

.   .      ...  .  ^-*.lnany   admimstretion,    faculty   and 

appeared   in   this  country   in   sucir^_...j._.    ,..^.  ...    :. 

places   as    Carnegie    Hall    and    the 


By    BUZZ   MERRITT 

R.\LEIGH  —  It  was  reminiscent 
of  another  Saturday  night  four 
months  earlier,  but  this  one  had 
more  of  a  future. 

Both  of  the  nets  came  down  in 

.     ,,  .  i  N.C.   State's  red    and   green   trim 

he  Umversity  of  Virginia  in  Char-    coliseum   and  the   crowds   surged 

lottesvUle   where    he    has    been    a  I  ^nto  the  court  the  same  way  and 

visitmg  professor  of  law  since  last  I  ^^e    handshakes    were    the    same. 

^  .  but  New  York  was  on  everybody's 

Aycock.  who  will  succeed  retir- 1  ^^^^ 

ing    UNC     Chancellor    Robert     B.  |      winning  the  Dixie  Classic  crown 
House  in  Jus;?,  said  he  wants  "to  |  j^^  j^e  first  time  had  made  it  elev- 


Len  Rosenbluth  Scores  38 
To   Spark   95-75    Vktory 

By  LARRY  CHEEK 

Special  To  The  Daily  Tar  Heel 

R.\I,F.IGH— Nf)rth  Carolina's  tall,  terrific  Tar  Heels  made  a  .shambles  of  the  .Atlantic 
Coa.st  Conference  Tournament  finals  here  last  night  as  they  roared  to  a  O-'i-;:,  victory  over 
the  snowed  u«ider  South  Carolina  Gamecocks. 

12,100  delighted  fans  sat  in  Reynolds  Coliseum  and  watched  Coach  Frank  McGuire's 
classy  club  dispose  of  their  27th  consecutive  victim  bv  the  most  one-sided  margin  in  the 
history  of  the  tournament  finals. 

The  win  gave  Carolina  their  first  ACC  title  since  the  formation  of  the  conferente.  But 
just  as  prized  was  the  automatic  bid  to  an  NC.\.\  playoff  spot.  The  Tar  Heels  will  meet 
the  Ivy  League  ihampions,  ^'ale,  Tuesday  night  in  New  York  City  in  the  middle  game 
of  a  tripleheader. 

Last   night's   triiunph,  achieved  with  almost   ridiculous  ease,   was  strictly  an   anti-climax 

after  the  Tar  Heels'  two-point 
verdict  over  Big  Four  rival  Wake 
Forest  in  the  semi-final  round. 
UNC  breezed  by  Clemson  in  the 
opening  round,  while  South  Car- 
olina, the  Cinderella  team  of  the 
tournament,  conquered  Duke  and 
Maryland  to  move  into  the  finals 


Happy  Tar  Heel  Cagers 
Look  To  New  York  City 


time    made    it   27    in   a   row.   And  .   _^   ..  •  u.     ^       i-   • 

--  ,  „„..   •  J  •    _-.,-»     against  the  mightv  Caorlinians 

Yale  waa  28th  m  everyoody  s  mind        „  ^        ,.      7       .      „        ui 


spend    as    much   time    asf  possible 
getting  oriented"  here.  • 

"Under  the  supervision  and  di- 
rection of  Chancellor  House."  he 
said,     '1    intend    to    talk    -with    as 


student    leaders   as    possible. 


en  in  a  row  for  this  North  Caro- 
lina team  of  firsts. 

Winning  the  Atlantic  Coast  Con- 
ference  tournament  for   the   first 


Gaza  Arabs  Celebrating 

EL  BALLAH,  EGYPT  —  (AP)  — 
U.N.  Emergency  forces  head- 
quarters reported  yesterday  the 
curfew  in  Gaza  has  been  kept  in 
force  to  prevent  Arab  celebrations 
of  the  Israel  withdrawal  from  get 
ting  out  of  hand. 

A  spokesman   fdr  the  UN  Com- 


mander, Maj.  Gen.  E.  L.  M.  Burns, ' 
lations  and  publicUy,  and  hasbeen  !  g^^j^j^^jj  ^^le  UN  troops  are  "hav-i 

ing   a   little   trouble"   keeping   the 


connected  with  Freshman  Camp, 
the  Concert  Band,  and  the  UNC 
Orchestra. 

Larkio  Kirkman.  membership 
chairman  candidate,  is  a  sopho- 
more from  High  l»oint  majoring 
in  history.  During  this  past  school 
year,  he  has  set^ed  as  member- 
ship chairman  fo  the  YMCA;  par- 
t'^ipaitd  in  the  Student  Party  and 
the  student  legislatttre;  and  was 
a  co-leader  of  the  YMCA  Leader- 
ship Training  Program 


demonstrators  in  order  but  he  s-aid 
no  casualties  had  been  reported. 

"The  UN  troops  have  not  fired 
on  the  crowds  and  nobody  ha.*; 
fired  on  the  UN  forces,"  he  said, 
"although  the  populace  is  doing  a 
lot  of  shooting  in  the  air  to  cele 
brate. " 

He  called  the  demonstrations 
"well  organized"  but  did  not  ela- 
borate. 

The  city  of.  Gaza  has  been  in  a 


The  program  chairman  nominees,  j  ^^^^^^^  ^j^^g  ^^^^  j^^^^y  ^^^  .^^ 
Randy  Shelton  and  Buddy  Strick  ,  ^ua^t  ^^^  population  is  celebra- 
laad.   are   both  sophomores.   Shel-l^i^g     ^^^     ^^^^^     surrender     of 

'  the  Gaza  Strip  to  the  UN  soldiers 

^.  .^,  :  and  demanding  that  the  territory 
for  two  years.  His  other  actmtie. ,  ^  ^^^^„^^  ^^  ^^^^  immediately. 
• — 1..J-   university   


ton,  a     veteran     from     Winston- 
Sal?m,   was  on  the   football  team 


include  university  mixed  chorus; 
YMCA-YWCA  Spring  Conference, 
and  social  chairman  in  Old  East. 
Strickland,  from  Kannapolis,  has 
been  active  in  the  Y-Nite  pro 
grams,  serving  as  stage  manager 
for  the  Y  Talent  Show.  He  has 
worked  with  "Sound  and  Fury,'" 
is  treasurer  of  the  University  Club 
and  is  University  Club  representa- 
tive  from   Stacy   dormitory. 


Eddie  Bass  Is 
Band  Head 

Eddie  Ba&s,  a  junior  from  Farm- 
viUe,  is  the  newly-elected  presi- 
dent of  the  UNC  band,  according 
to  Herbert  Fred,  director. 

Other  officers  are  Bill  Kellam, 
vice  president,  a  freshman  from 
Gi'eensboro;  and  Jerry  Sullivan, 
secretary-treasurer,  a  freshman 
from  Wilmington. 

Possible   revisions  of  the   pres 
ent   band   constitution     was 
topic  discussed  at  the  first  coun- 
cil  meeting   of   the    new   officers 
several  days  ago. 


>Egypf  To  Take  Suez  Tolls 

CAIRO  —  (AP)  —  Egypt's  infor- 
mation director  declared  today  all 
Suez  Canal  tolls  must  be  paid 
henceforth  to  Egyptian  Authori- 
ties. He  rejected  a  U.S.  backed  pro- 
posal for  collection  by  a  neutral 
agency  which  would  split  the 
revenue  with  Egypt  50-50. 

'The  Egyptian  government  will 
not  accept  any  such  proposal  be- 
cause it  violates  Egypt's  rights  ac- 
cording to  the  convention  on  the 
Suez  Canal,"  Director  Abdel  Kad- 
er  Hatem  said  in  an  interview. 


lenbir  Hall  Committee 
to  Hold  Op«n  Hearing 

The  Committee  on  Lenoir  Hall 
will   hold   an  open  hearing   at   4  _ 
tomorrow    afternoon     in    Roland  i 
Parker  3.  All  interested   students  • 


Red  Paper  Praises  U.  S. 

BELGRADE  — (AP)—  Borba  the 
official  Yugoslav  Communist  news- 
paper   accused    the    Soviet    press 
last  night  of  waging  an  anti-Yugo- 
;  Slav  campaign  and  warmly  praised 
I  Yugoslav — ^U.S.  cooperation. 
I      An  editorial  in  Borba  broadcast 
'"  j  by  Belgrade  Radio  said  newspapers 
in  Russia  and  some  Eastern  Ehiro- 
pean    countries    are    preisistently 
making  unprincipled  attacks  on  Yu- 
goslavia, its  internal  Soccialist  or- 
ganization    and     its    independent 
foreign  policy. 

It  said  the  Soviet  .press  "more 
directly  and  sharply  attacks  Yugo- 
slav-America cooperation  which  is 
however  one  of  the  very  cocrete 
and  important  attainments  in  af- 


Spring  Put  Off 
For  A  While 
In  Chapel  Hill 

Chapel  Hillians  may  don  heavy 
winter  clothes  again — spring  has 
decided  to  postporie  its  visit  for 
awhile.  « 

Today's'  forecast  is  fair  and  mod- 
erately cold  with  highest  tempera- 
tures in  the  low  50's.  according 
to  U.  S.  Weather  Bureau  spolfes- 
man  Cole  at  the  Raleigh-Durham 
Airport. 

The  low  last  night  was  about  28  i 
degrees. 

Monday's  forecase  is  increasing 
cloudiness  and  cold  with  an  ex-  , 
pected  low  Monday  night  of  about 
27  degrees. 

The  present  cold  weather  is  a 
result  of  a  northwesterly  windflow 
which  is  bringing  in  cold  air  from 
Canada.  The  cold  follows  a  low 
pressure  system  which  has  cen- , 
tered  in  North  Carolina  for  the  I 
past  few  days.  ! 


Waldorf   Astoria. 

The     group's     fourth      member. 

actor   Eliezer   Plotnik,.is  a    native 

born  Israeli.  A  member  of  Israel's 

well  -  known     theatrical    company. 

Habimah.   Plotnik   is   currently   on 

i  a    scholarship      at      the      .Mannes 

I  School  of  Music  and  Drama.  Plot- 

I  nik   has  participated   in  a  number 

i  of   performances   in    this   country, 

j  including    a    tour    of    Mid-Western 

1  college   rampuse.s. 


Grease  Catches  Fire 
In  Pi  Kapoa  Phi  House 

A  grease  fire  broke  out  in  the 
Pi  Kappa  Phi  Social  Fraternity 
kitchen  about  6:15  last  night.  A 
member  of  the  fraternity  report- 
ed that  the  fire  "just  smoked 
the  place  up  a  bit." 

The  Chapel  Hill  Fire  Dept.  ex- 
tinguished the  blaze  with  a  fire 
extinguisher. 


Thad  Eure  Delivers  Address 
At  Di  Inauguration  Tuesday 


Thad  Eure,  North  Carolina  Sec-, 
retary  of  State  will  deliver  the  j 
principle  addre.s.s  at  a  meeting  of 
the  Dialectic  Senate  Tuesday  night 
to  inaugurate  the  Di's  new  of-  ■ 
ficers  for  this  semester. 

sEure,    who    attended    the    Uni- 
versity  from    1917   thru   1019   is   a 
member    of    the     North     Carolina  I 
Bar    Assn.    and    President    of    the  j 
Elon   College   Foundation.   He   has 
been    Secretary     of     State     since  j 
1936  and  in  the  State  Legislature 
since   1929.  when  he   first  entered 
the   General   Assembly  as   a   dele  I 
gate  from   Herfjrd  County. 

Eure  will  be  introduced  by  Wil- 


liam D.  Carmichael.  University 
vice  president  and  finance  offi- 
cer. His  speech  will  be  followed 
by  an  inaugural  address  by  incom 
ing  Di  President  John  Patrick 
Adams.  The  meeting  will  be  pre- 
ceded by  an  informal  supper  at 
the  Carolina  Inn  and  followed  by 
a  reception  at  which  refreshments 
will  be  served. 

Besides  Adams  the  officers  to 
be  installed  at  the  meeting  are: 
Nancy  Rothschild,  president  pro- 
tem;  Malcolm  Partin.  clerk;  Gene 
Boudi-eau,  critic;  and  Ervin  Avery. 
sgt.  at  arms.  " 


tdcdl  Wfiitie  Rdt 
I  Is  Now  Cause 
Of  Disturbance 

I  -^X  •■■•.     .By  BILL   RING 
j      Animal's    are    causing    an    awful } 
i  lot  of  trouble  around  campus  the.-e 
j  days.  j 

!      A  cat,  an  alligator,  and  now  Her- 
I  man,  a  white  rat,  are  raising  quite  | 
j  a  disturbance.  | 

Herman's    nocturnal    habits    are  ' 
I  the   main  source   of  consternation 
j  to  his  owner  and  the  owner's  room- 
ie in  the  SPE  House.  It  seems  that  ! 
j  Herman  likes  to  sneak  out  of  his 
;  cage  at  night  and  "hide-out"  from  ! 
I  his  owner.  TJiij  doesn't  seem  like  , 
'  much  of  a  complaint,  but  what  .a 
thought — to  sleep  in  the  same  room 
with  a  white  rat  on  the  prowl. 

One    day    Herman    managed    to 
elude  his  owner  for  the  entire  day. 
He    was    finally    cornered    in    the  ' 
space    between    the    bed    and    the  I 
wall,  where  he  was  perched  on  the  1 
I  top  of  the  baseboard. 
j      Herman's  wandering  is  the  only 
:  major   objection   to    him.    It    takes 
time  to  find  and  catch  him  in  the 
mornings.  Otherwise  Herman  is  an  ] 
ideal  tenant;    he  makes   no  noise. ! 
lis  continually  bathing  himself,  and  j 
i  he  doesn't  object  to  being  petted. ' 


AT  UNIVERSITY  OF  FLORIDA: 


Florida    Court  Blocks  Negro  Entrance 


have    been    asked 
pfsent  the!  vi*ws. 


to    attend 


and 

'  1 


firming  active  peaceful  toex^tenee 
in  the  world^*' 


TALLAHASSEE.  Fla.— <i?v— T  h  e 
Florida  Supreme  Court  Friday 
threw  up  a  states  rights  barrier 
to  block  immerlate  entrance  of  a 
Negro  to  the  all-white  University 
of  Florida  Law   School. 

The  state  tribunal  took  the  ac- 
tion despite  a,  year-old  ruling 
from  the  U.  S.  Supreme  Court 
that  he  be   admitted    promptly. 

Relying  on  ,  the  "compelling 
duty"  of  the  state  to  maintain  the 
public  peace  and  prevent  violence, 
the  Florida  Court  in  a  5-2  decision 
denied  the  petition  of  Virgil  D. 
Hawkins  for  an  immediate  order 
requiring  his  admission. 

Hawkins,  a  49-year-old  instructor 
at  Bethune-Cookman  College,  has 
been  trying  for  eight  years  to  gain 
admittance  to  the  University. 
Hawkins'  attorney,  Horace  E.  Hill 
of  Daytona  Beach,  declined  to 
comment  until  he  had  examined 
the  opinion.  Hawkins  also  declined 
comment. 

Xhurgood    Marshall,    special 


counsel  for  th?  National  Assn.  for 
the  Advancement  of  Colored 
People,  said  in  New  York  "If  Vir 
gil  Hawkins  requests  our  assistance 
we  shall  continue  our  efforts  to  se- 
cure his  prompt  admission  to  the 
University  of  Florida  Law  School." 

The  majority  opinion,  written  by 
Justice  B.  K.  Roberts,  recognized 
the  duty  of  the  state  court  to  com- 
pel Hawkins'  admission  "if  it  is 
feasible  to  do  so  at  this  time." 

But  the  majority  said  it  was 
convinced  that  violence  would 
break  out  in  university  commun- 
ities and  a  critical  disruption  of 
the  university  system  would  oc- 
cur if  Negroes  were  permitted  to 
enter  white  schools  at  this  time. 

In  a  dissenting  opinion,  Justice 
E.  Harris  Drew  said  he  had  taken 
an  oath  to  uphold  the  Federal 
Constitution  and  that  the  U.  S 
Supreme  Court  had  been  long 
established  as  the  "final  interpre 
ter." 

"Such      an     interpretation     has 


been  made  in  this  case."  Drew 
j  said.  "I  cannot  conclude  that  any 
I  discretion  remains  in  this  court 
I  to  lawfully  postpone  the  issuance 

i  of  the  peremptory  writ." 
i 

The  other  disjsenter.  Justice  El- 

j  wyn  Thomas,  said  he  thought  the 

ruling  of  the  U.  S.  Supreme  Court 

j  that   "there    is   no  reason   for  de- 

j  lay"  had  ended  the  litigation. 

The   matter   is   now   one  purely 
of   administration,"   he   said, 
i      Roberts,  however,  took  the  posi- 
j  lion  that  fche  U.  S.  Supreme  Court 
t  has   not   knocked   out    a    1955    d'e- 
i  cision    of    the    state    court    which 
I  called  for  a  study  of  when  Hawk- 
ins could  be  admitted  to  the  white 
:  university  without  causing  "public 
mischief." 

He  held  further  that  the  federal 

court    would   have    had   no   lawful 

authority  to  dictate  when  the  high- 

j  est   tribunal    of   a   sovereign   state 

;  must  issue  a  final  order  in  a  state 

i  case.    - 

Roberts   said    the    1955   decision 


of  the  state  court  to  delay  Hawk- 
ins' admission  until  it  was  determ- 
ined whether  his  enrollment  would  i 
create   trouble  was  based   on   two 
grounds — one   state   and   one   fed  I 
eral.  j 

The  state  ground  was  the  poss-  • 
ible  threat  to  the  public  peace; 
the  federal  ground  the  U.  S.  Su- 1 
preme  Court's  previous  ruling  that  j 
local  courts  would  have  di.scretion  1 
to  consider  local  conditic^ns  when  | 
fixing  times  for  integration  of ; 
local  schools.  | 

The    majority    ruling    said    that  I 
while   certain   recent   decisions    of 
the  federal  court  indicate  a  "pro- 1 
gressive   disappearance     of     state 
sovereignty.     We     cannot    assume  j 
that  the  Supreme  Court  intended  ^ 
to  deprive  the  highest  court  of  an  ; 
ind^endent  sovereign  state  of  one 
of   its  traditional  powers,   that  is,  | 
the  right  to  exercise  a  sound  ju- 
dicial discretion  as  to  the  date  of  j 
the  issuance  of  its  process  in  or- 1 
der   to   prevent   a   serious   public  i 
mischief."  I 


It's  Yale  that  UNC  meets  in  the 
Garden  Tuesday  night  in  the  first 
round  of  the  NCAA  eliminations 
The  next  step  is  Phildelphia  for 
the  Eastern  Regionals,  then  the 
national  finals  at  Kansas  City,  Mo. 
.\nd  a  lot  of  folks  here  are  betting  j 
that  the  Tar  Heels  will  make  it.  i 

Frank  McGuire,  following  the 
philosophy  that  has  worked  ail 
year,  was  looking  only  to  New 
York.  I 

"I    don't     know    anything    about ' 
Philly    now,"    he    answejed    to    a 
question.   "We're  concerned  about 
Yale  right  now.  Yes,  we've  scouted 
them  and  know  their  ball  club." 
I      "Winning  this  one  by  a  big  mar- 
■f  gin    tonight     lifts  ♦  us.    BfeFore    the 
I  game    I    told    'em    t.'^it    any    ball  j 
jclub    that    can    beat    Wake    Fgrest 
four  times  in  one  season  can  beat 
anybody." 

Is  he  afraid  of  a  Tar  Heel  let 
down  after  the  pressure  of  the 
regular  season  win  streak  and 
tourney  play?  "It  could  happen 
you  know.  After  winning  here  all  ; 
else  us  secondary.  This  is  the  big  I 
thing."  I 

The    man    of   the    hour,    tourna-  ; 
ment   and    season,    was    of   course 
Rosenbluth,  whose  106   points,  in- 

(See   HAPPY  HEELS,   Page   4)    ^ 

Dean  Calls 
Probation 
Automaf  ic 

Students  in  the  General  College 
who   use   up   their  quota  of  unex-  < 
cuses  absences  will  be  put  on  pro- 
bation  "automaticall   and   immedi- 
ately without  the  formality  of  noti   ; 
fication  by  the  dean's  office."        ' 

This  announcement  was  made 
Wednesday  by  General  College 
Dean   Cecil  Johnson. 

Students  who  take  more  than  ' 
their  number  of  absences  with-  I 
out  excuse  "will  be  dropped  with 
an  F  by  the  dean's  office."  There 
will,  of  course,  be  ample  oppor-  ' 
tunity  for  the  correction  of  er-  | 
rors,"  he  said. 

Dean  Johnson  stressed  the  word  1 
automatically  in  his  first  state-  : 
ment.  | 

He  explained   "this     is     hot     a 
tightening   of    the   regulations;    it , 
is    an    effort    to    simplify    proced- 
ure." I 
MATURE          '  <        -':.''    \  .:  ■ 

Dean  Johnson  based  his  state- 
ment on  the  "assumption  that  a 
student  who  is  mature  enough  to 
attend  the  University  is  capable 
of    presenting    to    his    instructors  | 


(See  CUTS,  Page  3) 


Sabre    thin    Lennie    Rosenbluth. 
j  never*  more  an  All-.\merican,  won 
I  his     personal     scoring    duel     with 
I  Gamecock  ace  Grdy  Wallace.  The 
i  UNC  captain  poured  in   19  points 
I  in  each  half  for  a  total,  of  38.   10 
'  better  than  Wallace's  28.  The  38 
j  points  ran  Rosey's  three  day  total 
to    .106,     a     new    tourney     record 
Wallace  posted  an  even   100.   Vic 
Molodet  of   State   set   the  old   rec- 
ord of  79  in  1956. 

McGuire  lifted  Rosenbluth  from 
the    lineup    with    36    seconds    ra- 
maining,    and    the    packed    house 
gave    Roaey     a    standing    ovation. 
While    photographers    crowded    a- 
round.    Gtsverhor    Luther    Hodges 
^  le/t    his    seat    in    the    stands    and 
came    to    the    Tar  Heel    benich    to 
'  shake    the   great    UNC   All-Ameri- 
j  can's    hand.    One    of    the    greatest 
!  players  in  conference  history  had 
played  his  final  game  in  Reynolds 
1  Coliseum. 

I      The   game   was   strictly   no   con- 
test   from   beginning   to   end.   The 
Tar   Heels  Kit   four  quick   baskets 
j  to  jump   off  to   an   8-0    leald.   but 
I  couldn't  stretch  their  margin  and 
led   23-19  at   the  8:36  mark 

Then    the    roof   fell    in    on    the 

shell    shocked    Gamecocks.   In   the 

next  seven    minutes,    South    Caro- 

i  lina  failed  to  score  a  single  point 

I      (See  TAR  HEELS.  Page  4) 

Men's  Dorms 
Plen  Party  Witr. 
Itidependents 

Alexandei .  Grimes,  Battle-Vance- 
PettigreifV',  and  Old  Elast  will   havo 

>a  party  in  conjunction  with  the  In- 
dependent Women  Friday  at  8  p-m 
in  the  ba.vmet  of  Cobb  Dormitory 
The  name  of  the  party,  "Blarn 

I  ey's  Ball,"'  and  the  theme  will  be 

'  in  line  with  Saint  Patricks  Day 
The  entertainment  will  be  supplied 
by  the  Hillside  Joymakers  from 
Durham. 

I  "Dating  will  not  be  prohibited, 
but  strongly  discouraged  so  that 
more  women  and  men  will  attend.' 
Benny  Thomas,  IDC  social  chair 
man,  said,  "and  we  would  like  for 
more  groups  of  both  men  and  wo 
men  students  to  attend  and  get 
acquainted  at  the  party  "       • 

The  men  students- will  meat  the 
Independent  women  -at  their  ^rm> 
and  escoti  them  to.  the  ina^nhent 
of  Cobb.  All  students  who  live  in 
the  4  dcirms  listed  and  the  inde 
pendent  women  have  been  strong- 
ly urged  not  to  miss  the  party  by 
Thomas.  "Blarney's  Ball  is  really 
going  to  be  a  blast,"  according  to 
Thomas. 

^-  • 


Student  Party  Holds 
Nominations  Monday 

student  Party  chairman  Sonny 
Hallford  has  invited  all  students  to 
attend  the  party's  nominating  ses 
sion  Monday  at  7:30  p.m.  in  Ro- 
land  Parker    1-2. 

Slated  for  nomination  are  leg- 
islature seats,  senior  class  officers 
and  student  govtrnment  officers 
The  party  will  also  endorse  candi- 
dates for  editorship  of  campus 
publications.  . , 


IN  THE  INFIRMARY 

Theie'in  th*  infirmary  yester- 
4vr  included: 

Mifts*s  Billie  Ann  Routh.  Lil- 
lian Alice  Spencecr,  Elain* 
Louise  Meldahl,  and  George  Best, 
RiMiald  Kelly,  William  Redding. 
0<m«ld  Itothrock,  Benjamin  Levy, 
Craig  Crawford,  Fred  Robinson, 
DMiald  Howard,  Robert  Ghodos, 
•f^c*  Itlis,  Robert  Hinn«nt,  Paul 
#lhto,  H.  Caleb  White,  Dewey 
Johnson,  David  Bryant,  George 
Carter,  IImnIoI  Rouse,  Allen  Holt. 


PAGt    TWO 


TMt  OAtLT  TAK  ^fVCL 


SUNDAY,  MARCH  10,  1957 


REVIEW: 

CAMPUS 

STATE 

WORLD 


IN  THE  WORLD: 


Advice,  Judgement 
Are  Exum's  Big  Jobs 

Dispensing  advice  to  Genieral  College  students  on  plagiarism  and 
how  tj  avoid  it,  interviewing  candidates  for  Mens  Honor  Council, 
presiding  over  session..*  of  the  council — its  all  part  of  the  job  for 
Jim  Exum.  chairman  of  the  Men's  Honor  Council. 

He  heads  up  this  impoctanl  function  of  student  government  and 
juggles  a  sccre  of  other  interests  as  well. 


A  seaior  from  Snow  HUi.  North 
inventor  and  manufacturer  of 
Happy  Jack  dog  remedies.  His 
father  makes  Happy  Jack  from 
his  own  formula  and  mixes  it  in 
the  same  Maytag  washer  that 
he  used  ten  years  ago  when  an 
interest  in  dogs  prompted  the 
enterprise. 

From  this  ccmes  Exums  nick- 
name. 'Happy  Jack."  He  claims 
that  the  mange  medicine  is  just 
as  beneficial  to  the  human  scalp 
as  it  is  to  dog  hide. 

Exum's  interest  in  campus 
affairs  is  characterized  by  his 
participation  in  the  University 
Party.  Until  his  Honor  Council 
job  renwved  him  from  the  pol- 
itical scene,  he  was  an  active 
UP  worker. 

He  was  floor  leader  for  his 
party  in  Legislature  during  his 
sophcmore  and  junior  years,  and 
he  received  the  UP  nomination 
for  student  body  president  in 
last    year's    spring    elections. 

Early  in  the  semester,  Exum 
was  placed  in  the  position  of 
defending  the  Honor  Council  and 
its  policies  after  a  suggestion 
by  a  Tar  Heel  columnist  that  the 
Hoijpr  System  b?  abolished. 

Of  the  Honor  Council's  im- 
portant judiciary  function,  that 
of  uphoidiag  the  Honor  System, 
Exum  says.  'I  think  that  the 
Honor  System  is  the  most  won- 
derful possession  the  students 
have  here.  It  is  synonomous  with 
the  Carolina  way  of  life.  Probably 
none  of  us  will  realize  Jiow  much 
it  has  meant  to  us  until  we 
leave  Chpael   Hill." 

Of  his  own  p6sition.  which 
along  with  the  other  members 
of  the  Council,  bears  the  weight 
of  reprimand,  probation  and  su- 
spension for  violators  of  the 
Honor  System,  he  says.  ''My  ex- 
perience on  the  Council  has  been 
interesting   but   hard. 

I  feel  a  great  hurt  every  time 
the  Council  has  to  take  severe 
action  against  any  student,  but 
I  feel  that  such  action  is  nsces.s- 
ary  if  the  system  is  to  be  en- 
forced." 

Exum  is  a  Morehead  Scholar. 
He  is  justly  proud  of  his  presi- 
dency cl  the  Carolina  chapter  of 
Phi  Beta  Kappa.  In  addition,  he 
holds  membership  in  several 
honorarics,  the  Order  of  the  Old 
Well,  the  Order  of  the  Grail,  and 
the  Order  of  the  Golden  Fleece 

He  is  chairman  ofthe  Interim 
Committee  for  the  Carolina  Sym- 
posium, the  organization  which  is 


Carolina,  Exum  is  the  son  of  the 


JIM    EXUM 

. .  .  advice  and  Happy  Jack  ' 

responsible  for  bringing  a  prom- 
inent group  of  speakers  to  Caro- 
lina biennially. 

Exum  is  a  Sigma  Nu,  and 
he  holds  the  office  of  vice- 
president  in   his  fraternity. 

Exum  is  an  ardent  sports  en 
thusiast  and  a  basketball  fiend. 
He  likes  to  go  down  to  the  gym 
and  watch  the  bjys  work  out.  He 
does  weight  lifting,  but  a  budding 
career  en  the  wrestling  team  was 
cut  short  for  him  by  an  untimely 
acdident. 

While  showing  some  element- 
ary holds  to  a  new  grappler,  the 
hefty  man  sat  down  on  and  con 
sequently    broke   Jim's    back. 

In  the  summertime,  Exum  is  a 
counselor  at  Camp  Sea  Gull  on 
the  Carolina  coast,  and  he  claim.- 
that  its  the  "most  outstanding 
sea  faring  camp  for  l)oys  in  the 
South.'  He  loves  to  sail,  and 
is  a  memb-er  of  the  sailing  staff 
of  th?  camp,  with  racing  as  his 
specialty. 

Exum  teaches  a  Sunday  School 
class  of  sixth  grade  boys  weekly 
at   the  Episcopal   Church. 

Exum  doesn't  like  the  prospect 
of  leaving  Chapel  Hill  for  good 
this  spring,  and  he's  thinking 
s:riouily  of  eomini;  back  some 
day  to  live. 

An  English  major,  he  is  con- 
sidering entering  law  school  in 
the  fall,  either  here  or  at  Har- 
vard. 

But  there's  another  opening 
waiting  for  him.  He'd  also  like  to 
"go  home  an  help  daddy  make 
Happy  .Jack." 


•  • 

Appropriation  To  Library: 
If  May  Be  A  Little  Higher 


There  is  an  indication  the 
University's  library  appropria- 
tion— which  has  been  the  cause 
of  quite  a  bit  of  disturbance 
here — may  not  be  so  low  after 
all. 

Gov.  Luther  Hodges,  speaking 
last  week,  said  Advisory  Budget 
Commission  recommendations  for 
library  books  and  journals  here 


may    have    ben    cut    a    little    bit 
too  thin. 

To  some  University  observers- 
there  is  no  doubt  that  approp- 
riations have  been  cut  too  thin. 
Head  Librarian  Andrew  Horn, 
who  will  resign  at  the  end  of 
this  academic  year,  has  been 
quoted  as  saving  if  he  had  not 
already  gecidpd  to  leave  he 
would  now.  iifter  learning  of  the 
budget  cut. 


€:t)e  Battj*  Ear  Jleel 

Th«  official  student  publication  of  the  Publications  Board  of  the 
University  of  North  Carolina,  where  it  is  published  daily  except  Moo- 
day  and  examination  and  vacation  periods  and  summer  terms.  Ekitered 
as  second  class  matter  in  the  post  office  at  Chapel  Hill.  N.  C,  under 
the  act  of  March  8,  1870.  Subscriptior  rates:  Mailed.  $4  a  year.  $2.50 
per  semester;  delivered,  $6  a  year,  $3.50  a  semester. 
Editor ^- FRED  POWLEDGE 

Managing  Editor  CHARLIE  SLOaN 

.  Charlie  Sloan 


Night  News  Editor 


Highway 
Reshuffle 

Is      LlkGiy  Edith  AAacKmnon 


Relief  in  The  Middle  East 


Night  Editor 


Graham  Snyder 


TMS  OAHY  .TARHEEL  WEEK  IN, REVIEW 


Staff  Writers 


uL. 


Joey  Payne,  Charlie  Sloan 


A  bill  to  reorganize  the  state's 
highway  system  sped  through  the 
Senate  and  appeared  headed  for 
General  Assembly  approval'  last 
week. 

If  the  bill  passes  both  houses, 
it  will  be  a  triumph  for  Gov. 
Luther  Hodges,  Capitol  Square 
observers  were  saying.  It  will 
prove  what  many  state  leadiers 
have  thought  for  a  long  time,  they 
say:  That  Luther  Hodges  sym- 
bolizes the  strong-governor  idea 
in  state  politics. 

The  bill  was  drafted  by  the 
Governors  Highway  Safety  Com 
mission.  Its  main  provisions  are 
these: 

R?duction  of  the  State  Highwa.\ 
Commission  from  its  present 
strength,  of  15  members  to  seven 

A  policy-making     body,     com 
posed   of  the  seven  commission 
ers.  which  will  form  policies  fc 
the  state's  entire  road  system — 
not  just  a  division  at  a  time. 

Appointment  of  a  Director  of 
Highways,  a  career  official. 

A  part  of  the  bill,  termed  the 
•no-politics"  section,  would  have 
banned  highway  employees,  from 
soliciting    political!    coi^tributions 


BacktmckH^' 
On  School  Pay 

Gov.  Luther  Bodges  last  week 
backtracked  on  an  issue  which 
he  helped  create  —  increase  in 
teachers'  pay. 

The  governor,  who  had  rec- 
ommended strongly  a  9.1  per- 
cent budget  increase  for  North 
Carolina  schbolteachcrs.  told  his 
weekly    press  conference: 

"I  feel  that  during  this  sess- 
ion of  the  General  Aseenobly 
we  will  have  to  reaiixe  the 
short-term  necessity  of  raising 
teacher. ,  and ,  ft*#*  r  eppleyees"  , 
pay  beVom} 'tM"^fcU>-i^Wb^l) 
mended  by  the  Advisory  Bud- 
get Commission   and   myself." 

The  State  Board  of  Education. 
viewing  the  proposed  9.1  percent 
increase,  had  requested  19.31 
instead.  State  and  highway  em- 
ployee associations  had  request- 
ed a  15  percent  raise;  the,t)Ud- 
get  commission  and  th?  gover- 
nor recommended  eight  percentl: 

The  governor  explained  his 
change  of  mind  this  way: 

".  .  .  my  tendency  is  to  try 
to  think  in  terms  of  long-range 
progress  because  my  experience 
has  been  that  emphasis  on  a 
short-range  need  can  sometimes 
prejudice  a  long-range  improve- 
ment. However,  it  is  well-known 
that  in  dealing  with  government- 
al problems  involving  millions  of 
people  and  their  ideas  and  feel- 
ings.' we  must  softictimes  place 
emphasis  on  a  short-term  neces»5-. 
ity  and  adjust  any  long-range 
plans  to  the  short-term  empha- 
sis." 

while  on  duty,  along  with  other 
provisions.  The  section'  has  l>een 
deleted   by   legislators.  ^.  ^' 

*  :i  *  -    •  ■  * 

Also  in  the  General  Assembly, 
leg'slators: 

Got  a  bill  providing  for  su- 
spensi:n  of  a  driver's  license  if 
he  is  convicted  of  two  speeding 
or  reckless  driving  charges  with 
in  a  year. 

Got  a  bill  to  lower  the  mini- 
mum voting  age  in  Nofth  Caro- 
lina from  21  to  18  years. 

Considered  a  bill  allowing  the 
use  of  unmarked  patrol  cars  for 
the  State  Highway  Patrol.  The 
bill  passed  in  the  Senate  after 
considerable  debate,  and  was  sent 
to  the  House. 

Elsewhere  in  the  state,  Ral- 
eigh to  be  specific,  16  N.  C.  Sfafie 
College  students  got  susperid€rd  = 
sentences  and  fines  following  art 
cH'  -morning  riot  at  the  college. 

They  were  part  of  27  students 
arrested  on  charges  of  rioting  and 
d'sorderly  conduct.  The  riot  came 
near  men's  dormitories  ani  Rey- 
nolds Coliseum,  wher?  the  At- 
lantic Coast  Conference  basket- 
ball tournament  was  in  prog- 
ress. 

The  students  apparently  re- 
volted because  spectators'  auto- 
mobiles blocked  parking  at  ths 
dormitories,  police  theorized. 

Tear  gas  and  prison  bu-ses  were 
used  to  quiet  the  studentsVwho 
threw  rocks  at  police  cars  and 
sla.shed  tires. 

Judge  Doub  heard  the  students 
Friday,  then  handed  down  his 
sentences:  30  days  on  the  roads 
suspended  on  payment  of  $25 
fines  and  costs  of  court. 


Israel  created  an  atmosphere 
of  relief  over  the  ebbing  of  the 
crisis  in  the  Middle  East  when 
Prime  Minister  David  Ben-Giir- 
ion  ordered  Israeli  troops  to  get 
out  of  Gaza  and  Aqaba  coastal 
areas  last  Monday. 

The  Israeli  olrder  called  forth 
a  chain   of   mixed   reactions.   In 


Jerusalem,  Israeli  students  and 
police  clashed  when  the  students 
set  up  a  demonstration  against 
the  new  agreement.  With  shouts 
of  "Stop  the  withdrawal,"  the 
rioters  expressed  the  feelings  of 
many  in  Israel  who  oppo.se  this 
latest  'step  toward,  the  ending  of 
the    Israeli-Egyptian    conflict. 

The  battling  Israeli  Prime  Min- 
ister faced   a  storni   of  ridicule. 


sarcasm  and  protest  in  his  own 
Parliament  Tuesday  night  when 
he  defended  his  position  on  the 
Gaza  situation.  But  Ben-Gurion 
was  expected  to  win  out  over 
the  opposing  threat  of  no-con- 
fidence when  he  stated  that  Is- 
rael's October  invasion  had 
achieved  its  goal  of  delivering 
the  country  from  danger  rather 
than  conquest. 


It  Was  Spring  —  Just  A  Little 


::■:■        ■     }  '-.i,,' 

]  Despite  Hfe  reM^^cold  weather  and  sore  throats,  things  were  beginning  to  shape  up  on  the  vernal 

*iftiiWx  wiiht:''XhsrT^li*d    OoHs    Adklhs    inspecting  flcwering  shrubbery  in  the  Arboretum.  Staff  pho- 

togra^er  W^edy  Smn^  caught   the    picture  betvtree  i  rains.  .^ 


vJdN  THE  CI^MIHII: 


i  rain*-: 


It  Was  Busy  At  UNC 
Politics  Dominated 


Last  week  was  a  very  busy  one 
for  folks  in  Chapel  Hill.  'Chrono- 
logically, it  went  this  way: 

On  .Monday,  student  politics 
g;;t  underway  even  more  when 
the  Student  Party  elected  more 
candidates  for  Student  Logisla- 
tuFc  jobs.  The  next  day.  the 
UaivcEsity  Party  picked  legisla* 
Uir&  ,  candidaM^s  .  and  George 
Ragifclalc  ,a.s  iUi-  choice  .for  senior 
cliis*.  ,pro!»idejjt.  The  jj^rties  will 
coutinuc  this,  week  vnU-  the  high 
prcssurQ  .  n::;ijlinal,lou^;  Top  stii- 
dpj\t.ba(l^;,  ofiices  and  the  editor- 
ship,., of  .The  .baily  far  Heel. 
,  tharges  were  drpppeu  against 
three  students  following  a  com- 
bination panty  raid-rally  the  Fri- 
day b:fore.  One  student  was 
found  guilty  and  charged  with 
costs  of  court  for  disorderly  con- 
duct. 
>A  report  had  it  that  the  Camp 

• 
L'if  Abner 


us  Christian  Council  is  consider 
ing      offering      scholarships      to 
worthy  white  and  Negro  students 
in      the      Chapel      Hill-Carrboro 
area. 

Dr.  S.  T.  Emory,  60,  chairman 
of  the  UNC  Dept.  of  Geology  and 
Geography  since  1951.  died  Wed 
ncsday  aft;r  a   serious  illness. 

Morehead  scholarships  were 
awarded  to  32  North  Carolina 
high  school  seniors. 

The  Student  Legislature,  in  its 
Thursday  night  session,  approved 
measures: 

•Appropriating  S750  to  the 
UNC  Band  for  transportation 
charges  during  the  band's  spring 
tour. 

Approving  ^  look-see  Into  the 
feasibility  of  a  new  campus  hum 
or  magazine  -to  replace  Tarna 
tion.  wKiPnMied  a  year  ago  of 
a  serious  pocketbook  condition. 


W  -if  >K  ^  Tri^,  Of  Wins 

A  basketball  fever  running 
rampant  over  the  campus  cen- 
tering around  UNC  and  the  num- 
ber one  Tar  Heels,  finally  cul- 
minated in  the  hectic  three  day 
ACC  tournament. 

It  was  a  clean  sweep  for  the 
Tar  Heels;  81-61  over  Clemson, 
61-59  over  Wake  Forest  and  then 
the  buggyride  victory  and  the 
crown  over  South  Carolina,  95- 
75. 

A  disturbance  on  the  Lenoir 
Mall  front  shaped  up  after  sev 
eral  student  workers  at  the  Uni- 
versity-run cafeteria  protested 
that  they  weren't  being  paid  cor- 
rectly. 

Director  George  Prillaman  of 
the  cafeteria  called  his  workers 
together  Wednesday  night  and 
told  them  such  a  request  was  out 
of  bounds.  He  also  spoke  against 
student  workers  who  wrote  let- 
ters on  the  subject  to  The  Daily 
Tar  Heel  and  against  The  Daily 
Tar  Heel  itself  for  printing  the 
letters  and  editorials  on  the  sub- 
ject. 


In  Egypt  the  press  moved  for- 
ward to  declare  that  Egypt  had 
gained  a  point  in  the  Mideast 
fracas  by  the  failure  of  the  Is- 
raelis to  withdraw  promptly  from 
the  contested  areas.  Press  spokes- 
men maintained  that  Israel  would 
lose  many  friends  by  appearing; 
to  hesitate  on  a  solemn  pledge. 

The  United  States  was  drawn 
into  the  picture  when  an  Egyp- 
tian paper  accused  her  of  en- 
couraging the  Israeli  stubborn- 
ness in  the  withdrawal. 

Following  the  declaration  made 
by  the  Israeli  Foreign  Minister 
before  the  UN  General  Assembly. 
Al  Ahram  came  out  with  the 
statement  that  "there  is  some 
sort  of  agreement  between  Amer- 
ica and  Israel  regarding  the  fut- 
ture  of  the  Gaza  Strip  and  free- 
dom of  navigation  in  the  Aqaba 
Gulf." 

But  the  Israeli  announcement 
was  not  made  without  reserva 
tions.  it  seems.  Israel  is  still  pre 
pared  to  fight.  Speaking  before 
the  United  Nations,  Israeli  For- 
eign Minister  Mrs.  Golda  Meii 
warned  that  Israel  will  go  to  wax 
against  the  Arabs  again  in  the 
future  if  Israeli  security  war- 
rants such  a  move. 

*  *  * 

Now  that  the  Israelis  are  tech- 
nically out  of  the  Gada  area,  con- 
trol has  been  turned  over  to  the 
UN  Emergency  Force  troops, 
which  began  moving  into  the 
strip  Thursday. 

Hopes  for  the  speedup  of  Suez 
traffic  came  about  as  one  of  the 
first  noticeable  results  of  the  Is- 
raeli announcement.  The  Egyp- 
tians, who  have-  been  slow  in 
clearing  the  important  channel 
following  its  blocking  during  the 
height  of  the  conflict,  were  urged 
to  get  moving  on  the  clearing  pro- 
dess.  Secretary'  of  State  Dulles 
warned-  Egypt  to  stop  "dragging 
its  feet,"  and  begin  the  opening 

'  immediately. 

Still  dealing  with  the  Mideast 
problem.     President    Eisenhowei 

*  #on  strong  approval  for  his 
fight-jf-we-must  resolution  in 
both  the  Senate  and  House  this 
week.  The  doctrine,  subject  tfl 
much  debate,  is  designed  to  halt 

;  Communist  aggression  in  the  Mid 

-east  area  by  military  force  il 
deemed  necessary  by  the  Presi- 
dent. 

Authorization  was  also  given 
to  the  President  to  use  at  his 
discretion  $200  million  in  eco- 
nomic aid  to  the  area  between 
now  and  July'l. 

WHITTAKER  V         *  '     V* 

If  the  nomination  made  by 
President  Eisenhower  is  confirm- 
ed by  the  Senate,  Charles  Evans 
Whittaker  will  be  the  first  Mis- 
sourian  to  serve  as  jurist  by  ap- 
pointment on  the  Supreme 
Court.  Whittaker,  a  Republican, 
was  nominated  by  President  Eis- 
enhower for  the  Supreme  Court 
position  to  fill  the  vacancy  left 
by  the  retirement  of  Associate 
Justice  Stanley  F.  Reed,  a  Dem- 
ocrat. 

Eisenhower's  nomination  puts 
two  of  his  Supreme  Court  ap- 
pointments before  the  Senate 
Judiciary  Committee.  New  Jer- 
sey Democrat  William  J.  Bren- 
nan  is  now  before  the  hearings 
of  the  committee.  Granted  Sen- 
ate approval,  the  Supreme  Coi^rt 
will  then  be  made  up  of  five 
Democrats  and  four  Republicans. 

• 

By  a:  C>pp 


Ikes  Cough  : 
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ITAiN'T«OMUCHf»W 
VOU-«aWP,  IT»TWg 

>— -< 


James  Reston 

The  New  York  Times 

WASHINGTON— President  Eis- 
enhower fiadS  himself  in  an  un- 
usual position  today.  Instead  of 
being  criticized  for  leaving 
Washington  too  much,  he  is  being 
urged  by  his  associates  and  even 
by  his  critics  to  go  away  into 
the  sunshine  for  his  health. 

The  Presideet  has  been  try- 
ing unsuccessfully  to  shake  a 
cough  for  Mx  weeks.  Despite 
constant  medication,  he  has  been 
barking  and  straining  his  system 
during  most  of  thistime,  and  his 
hearing  has  been  impaired  by 
an  inflammation  of  the  left  ear.' 

This  was  all  so  apparent  at 
the  President's  news  conference 
today  that  the  reporters  almost 
forgot  all  the  great  issues  in  the 
world  and  questioned  him  main- 
ly about  his  health,  the  kind  of 
water  he  drinks  (bottled,  tapi, 
fluoridated,  or  otherwise)  and 
on   a  variety  of   thirialities. 

He  had  boned  up  on  a  hpst  of 
questions  about  Suez,  Anglo- 
French  relations,  the  future  of 
Germany,  disarmament,  etc.,  but 
his  health  was  on  everybody's 
mind.  And  he  either  wasn't  ask- 
ed the  big  questions,  or  forgot 
about  them  himself  when  he  was 
asked  for  his  estimate  of  the  sit- 
uation in  the  Miadle  East 

When  he  was  asked  about  go- 
ing away  for  a  rest,  he  left  no 
doubt  that  he  would  like  to  do 
so,  but  explained  in  a  throaty 
voice  that  with  Vice  President 
Nixon  in  Africa  and  Secretary 
of  State  Dulles  in  Asia,  he  could 
not  do  it. 

Behind  this  poignant  personal 
situation  there  is  a  serious  prob- 
lem 'of  Government  The  Admin- 
istration has  not  been  organized 
properly  to  deal  effectively  with 
the  moimting  problems  of  gov- 
erning under  a  President  who 
must  guard  his  health  and  spend 
a  considerable  time  away  from 
the  capital. 

General  Eisenhower  himself 
has  defined  this  problem  more 
accurately  than  anybody  else. 
He  was  perfectly  candid  wtih  the 
people "  before  he  was  nominated 
and  re-eiected. 

"It  would  be  *dle  to  pretend 
that  my  health  can  be  wholly 
restored  to  the  excellent  state  in 
which  the  doctors  believed  it  to 
be  in  mid-September  (1955),"  he 
announced  publicly  in  January 
of  1956.  "My  future  life  must  be 
carefully  regulated  to  avoid  ex 
cessive  fatigue  *  *  *." 

When  he  announced  his  can- 
didacy for  a  second  term,  he 
told  the  nation: 

"Readiness  to  obey  the  doctors 
out  of  respect  to  my  present  du- 
ties and  responsibilities  is  man- 
datory in  my  case.  I  am  now 
doing  so  and  I  intend  to  con- 
tinue doing  so  for  the  remainder 
of  my  life,  no  matter  in  what 
capacity  I  may  be  living  or  may 
be  serving." 

Since  then  he  has  made  a  re- 
markable recovery,  but  these 
limitations  naturally  and  prop 
eriy  remain.  Meanwhile,  the  pe- 
riod since  the  Norember  election 
has  been  one  of  constant  crisis 
in  the  field  of  foreign  affairs. 

Far  from  disengaging  the  na- 
tion from  some  of  its  commit- 
ments overseas,  as  some  offi- 
cials hoped  the  Administration 
could  do.  the  United  States  has 
taken  almost  sole  responsibili- 
ity  for  pacifying  the  Middle 
East,  and  is  now  getting  more 
deeply  involved  in  the  problems 
of  Africa. 

This  trend  toward  total  in- 
volvement in  the  affairs  of  the 
whole  world  may  be  inescapable, 
but  the  cumulative  effect  of  all 
this  on  the  President  and  on 
Secretary  of  State  Dulles,  wiio 
has  had  to  carry  the  main  bur- 
den in  the  Middle  East,  is  be- 
coming increasingly  obvious. 

Mr.  Dtilles  was  asked  a  ques* 
tion  at  his  news  conference  on 
Wednesday  about  the  Southeast 
Asia  Treaty  Organization  meet- 
ing Australia.  His  reply  indi- 
cates the  problem  created  by 
an  overwhelming  work-load  that 
^r.  Dulles  does  not  seem  to  be 
able  to  share  with  others. 

T  am  not  aware  of  that,"  he 
said.  "I  have  not  as  yet  had  a 
chance  to  study  the  agenda  for 
the  SEATO  conference.  I  am 
leaving  for  that  tomorrow,  as 
perhaps  you  know,  and  my  docu- 
mentation is  going  to  be  on  the 
plane.  I  am  not  yet  quite  fully 
versed  as  to  what  may  come  up 
there." 


SUKOAYj 


HAPPEI 

P/e. 


BY 
KA  PLED^ 

The  Cai 
of  the 
pledge  ds 
Langely's 
ic  for  tl 
was  prec^ 
party  in 

Pledge 
attending 
Lowe,  prej 
Evan  Pall 
Boo    Bake 
tary-treasij 
Fred  Bar 
Kay  Covii 

The  w< 
fume  par 
end    this 


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4S. 


SUNDAY,  MARCH  10,  1957 


THE  DAILY  TAK  MIIL 


PAOI  THRIf 


HAPPENINGS  ON  JHE  HILL: 


i  of 

laving 

|being 

evea 

into 
Ih. 

try 

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been 
lystem 
id  his 
fd  by 
ft  ear.' 

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main 

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tost  of 
[Anglo- 
re   of 
but 
rbody's 
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le  was 
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>at  go- 
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to  do 
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Resident 
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prob- 
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[ganiied 
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Pledges,  Basketball,   Inifiatlons 
Are  Reason  For  Weeker^cts  Parties 


BY  SUl  ATCHISON 
KA  PLEDGE  WlfKENft 

The  Carolina  Imi  yjna  tbe  scene 
of  the  Kappa  Alfriha's  form^ 
pledge  dattce  last  night  KB 
Langely's  group  ^ovided  the  mus- 
ic for  the  ocffagjoa.  Ike  dance 
was  preceded  by  a  champagne 
party  in  the  afternoon. 

pledge  officers  and  tiio^r  datea 
attending  the  dadce.  were:  Ftank 
Lowe,  poresident  and  Lib  Carnegie; 
Evan  Palmer,  vice  president,  and 
Boo  Baker;  John  McGee,  secre- 
tary-treasurer, and  Sara  Bay;  and 
Fred  Bardin.  social  chairman,  and 
Kay  Covington. 

The  weekend  began  with  a'cos- 
tume  party  Friday  night  and  will 
end    this    afternoon    with   an    in- 


For 

Beautiful 

Hair 

USE  f  IJZABETH  ARDEN 


lIAIft  PREPARATIONS 


BLUE  GRASS  VELVA 
SHAMPOO—  «itra  rich  lather 
cleanses  and  stimolatee 
your  scalp — more  economical 
because  so  little  goes  so  far. 
Fragrant  with  Blue  Crass.  1.S0 

FLUFFY  SHAMPOO— 

contains  fresh  eg^  eoiiq>lete 
with  natural  vitamins 
needed  for  lustrous,  healthy 
hair.  Especially  beneficial  for 
dry,  dyed  or  bleached 
hair.  3  oz.  1.35;  6  oz.  2.00 

'  BLUE  GRASS  HAIR  SPRAY 

— gossamer  fine,  tumstitky.., 
really  holds  a  setting  with  firm, 
yet  invisible,  strength.     1.75 

Priea*pla»lu 


formal  party  at  the  house. 
LAMBDA  CHI'S  PARTY 

Last  Saturday  night  the  Lamb- 
da Chi's  and  their  dates  partied 
at  the  Saddle  Club  in  Durham. 

New  Officers  for  the  coming 
year  have  been  announced  this 
week:  president,  Jim  Johnson, 
lliomasville;  vice  president,  Lar- 
ry Matthews,  Winston-Salem;  sec- 
retary, "Bob  Landreth,  Greensboro;  I 
treasurer,  Gary  Sherrill,  Tbomas- 
ville;  rush  chairman,  Larry  Grah- 
am. Sanford;  social  chairman,  Pete 
Ye^anis.  Warwick,  Va.;  pledge 
trainer.  Bob  Ferrell,  Graham;  and 
ritualist/  Jack  Fair.  Louisville, 
Ky. 
BASKETBALL  PARTY 

The  Chi  Phi's  celebrated  Caro- 
lina's  victory  last  night  with   an 
informal   party   at  the  house  fol- 
lowing the  game. 
OiSSERT 

Kappa    Delta    sorority   was   the 
scene  of  a  dessert  party  Thursday 
eveninjg.     The     SPE's    were     the 
guests. 
SERENADES 

Three  serenades  were  heard  by 
the  girls  at  the  Alpha  Delta  Pi 
house  during  the  past  week.  Bar- 
bara Stockton,  who  is  pinned  to 
Jimmy  Knowles,  was  serenaded  by 
the  Alpha  Gamnfa  Rho's  from 
State;  and  the  Sigma  Nu's  from 
Slate  serenaded  Ann  Shaw,  who 
is  pinned  to  John  Montgomery. 
Mary  Burgwyn  was  serenaded  by 
the  KA's  to  whose  i»«sident,  Raq 
Newsome.  she  is  pinned. 
AGO  IMITATION 

Last  ni^  the  Alpha  Gamma 
Delta  actives  gave  a  {Mjama  party 
for  their  pledges  who  will  be  init- 
iated this  afternoon.  This  morning 
the  actives  attended  church  ser- 
vices with  the  pledges  ?nd  then 
entertained  at  a  buffet  luncheon 
for  the  pledges.  The  initiation 
ceremonies  will  be  followed  by 
tiie  sorority's  annual  Feast  of 
Roses  at  which  time  awards  will 
be  made  to  the  outstanding  pledge 


and  the  pledge  with  the  highest 
sch^atie  average. 

FACULTY  TCA 

This  afternoon  from  4  to  6  p.m. 
t|ie  Tri  Dell's  will  entertain  the 
UNC  faculty  at  a  tea  that  will  be 
^ven  at  the  house. 

fNGAGEMENTS 

Helen  McDougald  of  Raeford,  a 
graduate  in  Dental  Hygiene  last 
-year,  to  Dan  Craver,  Chi  Phi. 

PINNINGS 

The  Tri  Delts  led  tiie  campus 
this  week  in  the  field  of  pinnings 
with  three.  The  lucky  girls  were: 
Diana  Ashely  to  Keith  Palmer. 
Kappa  Sigma;  Dottie  Wood  to  E.  C. 
Smith.  DKS;  and  Rachel  Ray  to 
George  Raines.  I^E. 

The  A  D  Pi's  and  the  AiGD's 
were  runners-up  witb  one  pinning 
each.  They  were:  Sue  Edmundson, 
A  D  Pi.  to  Ffank  ^utler,  Kappa 
Sigma;  and  Beverly  Culhreth.  AGD 
to  Carlton  Q.  Bedsole.  Kappa  Psi 
Nu  from  Elon  College,  now  at  the 
•U.  of  Florida. 


prammlng 
fiffor  CxamsIP 


tutti 


oh-'L'O  sroRt 


Ficht  "Book  Fatipo''  Safoiy 

Your  doctor  v/ill  tell  yon — • 
N<^Dos  Awakener  is  safe  aa  an 
airerage  cup  of  hot,  black  c<^-  j 
fee.  Take  a  NoDoz  Awaieeaer  i 
trfaen  you  cram  for  that  exam  ; 
...or  when  niid>afternooQ 
brings  on  those  **3  o*clbck  col>« 
webs."  You'll  find  NoDoagiaea 
you  a  lif tHvithout  a  letdown . . . 
belpa  you  snap  back  to  nocBMd 
ana  fight  fatigue  safely! 


Dormt)  M  roblMt— 


MMJUIAC 

Cosmetic  Dept. 


NOQOZ 

AWAKE  NERS 


JAPI   ASCOFPei 


DAILY    CROSSWORD 


ACROBS 

1.  BrilllanUy 
colored  fish 

B.Jog 

».  Extra 
10.  Send,  aa 
money 

12.  Oil  of 
roae  petala 

13.  Roman 
official 
(var.) 

.14.  Falaehooda 
15.  Ptafua 
K.  V«rs;» 
(abbr.) 

17.  Goddeaa  of 
dawn 

18.  Muaie  noU 
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the  mm 
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lima 
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river 

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perennials 
•.  Anarehiata 
7.  Leave  out 
•.Door- 
keepers 
•.  Sertesof 

shots 
11.  River 

(Ruas.) 
15.  Seed 

vessel 
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SO.  Route 


21.  City 
(Fr.) 

22.  ForUd 

23.  Afflm. 
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vots 

25.  Perish 

26.  Pole 
27;  Bank 

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30.Carrtsa 

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(Ind.) 


144. 


Pr^r«fs  Maci^  To  Fincl 
Causef  Of  Laukemia 

Dr.  Josejrii  W.  Beard  of  the 
Duke  University  SehoKd  of  Medi- 
cine reported  ih  Houston,  Texas 
Friday  that  new  progress  toward 
the  direct  investigttioa  of  possible 
causes  of  human  letdtemia  has 
been  made. 

Dr.  Beard  described  the  isola- 
tion and  identificatk>n  of  two 
cancer  viruses  that  cause  leukem- 
ia in  chickens. 


GMAB  Brings 
'Henry  IV' 
Here  A^nday 


Graham  Memorial  Activities 
Board  will  sponsor  Shakespeare's 
"Henry  IV"  here  tomorrow  night 
at  8  in  Memorial  IMt 

The  performance  will  be  by  the 
Players,  Inc.,  of  Washington,  T>.C. 

Tickets  for  the  performance  are 
$1.25  and  are  on  sale  at  C^-aham 
Memorial  information  desk.  Led- 
better-Pickard,  and  Danzigers. 

The  repertory  company  from 
Catholic  University  will  be  head- 
ed by  Broadway  actor  William 
Callagan,  who  recently  played  36 
weeks  in  the  Broadway  produc- 
tion of  "Anastasia."  In  this  per- 
fomrance  he  will  be  seen  as  the 
funniest  of  Shakespeare's  comics, 
the  mountainous  Falstai^ 

This  classic  is  two  plays  in  one; 
a  comedy  and  a  heroic  tale  of  ad- 
venture. The  comedy  is  provided 
principally  by  Falstaff.  the  fat 
and  funny  knight  who  has  become 
a  legend  and  a  symbol.  The  ex- 
citement is  derived  from  the  re- 
bellion of  the  hot-headed  Hotspur 
and  his  showdown  in  battle  with 
young  Prince  Hal. 

Gary  Greer  is  Graham  Memor- 
ial Activities  Board  entertainment 
chairman. 

Graham  Memorial,  .laensoring 
tomorrow  nighf  s  produc^n,  cele- 
brates it's  25th  bix^y  this 
spring.  ' 


local  Writar  To  Appear 

At  W.C.'s  Art  ^sttval 

Max  Steele.  Chapel  ^ill  writer, 
has  been  added  to  ^e  writing 
panel  of  the  14th  ahnual  Arts 
Festival  beginning  next  Wednes- 
day at  Woman's  College. 

Steele's  first  novel  was  "Debby" 
and  i^won  for  him  the  1950  Har- 
per's $10,000  award  and  The  May- 
flower Cup. 


Ki 


mmmm 


Covering  The  Campus 


BRIDGS  LESSONS 

Bridge  lessons  will  be  given 
Wednesday  afternoon  firom  4-6 
p.m.  in  the  Bendezvous  Room  and 
Thuntday  evening  at  7:30  p.m.. 
at  the  Victory  Village  Day  Care 
Center. 
TEA 

The  Botany  Dept  Tea   will   be 
held  Monday  at  4:45  p.m.  in  102 
Davie  HalL 
LUNCHEON 

Tbe  Institute  for  Research  in  So- 
cial Science  staff  luncheon  will 
be  held  Wednesday  at  12:50  in  407 
Alumni  Building.  Dr.  Guy  B.  John- 
son win  speak  on  "Hie  Course 
of  Bacial  Conflicts." 
DISCUSSION  HERE 

The  Student  Faculty  Forum  and 
GM^  will  ^oosor  a  discussion 
of  "Svalution  el  the  B^ole  of  the 
Supreme  Court  in  American  Gov- 
ernment," at  7  p.m.  today  in  the 
Grail  Room  of  GM. 
eOLlO0UNM» 

Tbepe  will  be  a  joiat  Duke-UNC 
Physics  Colloquium  Wednesday 
at  8  p.m.  iir  209  Philips  Hall.  Dr. 
Warren  Henry  of  the  Naval  Re- 
search Laboratory  will  speak  on 
"Magnetic  Interactions  in  Solids." 
SCIENZII4C  SOCIETY 

Tbe  BUaha  Mitchell  Sicientific 
Society  wj^  meet  TSesday  aft  7i30 


p^m.  m  a06  Phillips  HafL 

Dr.  C.  N.  Reilley  of  the  Chem- 
istry Dept.  will  speak  :«ea  "Metal 
Analysis  with  Complexonea,"  and 
Dr.  Walter  Wheeler  of  the  Geology 
Dept.  will  discuss  "Fossil  Brains." 
CELEBRATION  BEGINS 

"Henry  IV"  will  be  presented 
Monday  at  8  p.m.  in  Gaham  Mem- 
orial by  the  Players  Inc.  marking 
the  beginning  of  Graham  Mem- 
orial's 25th  birthday  celebration. 
COMMAGER  TO  SPEAK 

Dr.  Henry  Steele  Commager  of 
Columbia  University  will  speak  at 
the  Graduate  History  Club  meet- 
ing Tuesdy  at  8  p.m.  The  public 
has  been  invited. 
WUNC-TV 

Today's  schedule  for  WUNC-TV 
the  University's  educational   tele- 
vision station  is  as  follows: 
9:45  ■  Man  To  Man 
10:0Q    Sunday  School 
10:30   Christian  Layman's  Wilr 

ness 
11:00    Church  Service 
12:00    This  Is  The  Life 
3:00    Winter  la  Sun  Valley 
3:30    Moravian   Anniversary 
6:30    Big  Picture 
7:00    American  Album 
7:30    Shakespeare  on  TV 
8:15     U.N.  Review 
8:30    Writers  of  Today 


CUTS 

fConttmted  from  page  1% 

excuses  for  absences  and  of  keep- 
ing account  of  his  unexcused  ab- 
sences. 

fie  announced  General  College 
students  who  maintained  an  aver- 
age of  "Honor  Roll  caliber"  for 
the  previous  semester  have  "op- 
tional ;^endance  up  to  the  limit 
of  25  per  cent  of  the  total  class 
meetings." 

Dean  Johnson  emphasized  this 
did  not  mean  the  cut  rules  were 
being  tightened  up  but  it  was  a 
measure  to  reduce  the  paperwork 
in  the  General  College  offices. 
SWAMPED 

He  said  "We  are  swamped  witb 
paperwork  of  this  nature  near  the 
eiid  ol  every  s^nester,'  at  a  time 
when  we  have  many  other  things 
that  need  to  be  done." 

His  announcement  was  taken 
mostly  froni  the  abseace  cegula 
tions  for  General  College  stuifettt) 
as  recently  adopted  hy  the  Faitml' 
ty  Cwncil. 


The  Thriftiest 
Hobby 

Lots  of  people,  ^en  they  see  tibe 
high  regard  in  wbich  book  coltecj^ 
Uiin  are  held,  get  the  idea  tiiat 
collecting  is  a  millionaire's  bobbf. 
It  just  |)fatb  isn't  trbe. 
Fortbe  priee  e^ ian  ephemerti  bit 
of  jppular  music  you  can  bujr  a 
bQoi  that  has  been  r«Kl  and  treafi> 
ured  througb  a  hund^ed  yeajns. 
Far  less  tJum  tbe  eost  of  a  cvii- 
teJn^rary  adventure  book  jm 
can,  if  you'te  hicky,  bay  ^Ute  «ri| 
in<^recon3s  bt  an  important  btt  of 
discovery. 

CKeck  through  our  old  book  cat- 
alp^e — or  the  catalogue  of  one  of 
oor  competitors — and  you'll  be  sm*- 
prised  to  find  that  you  can  always 
bay  more  reading— and  colie<^g 
--lun,  for  less  money,  in  the  old 
book  world. 


TI^E  INTIMAf  i 

#H6KSHqp 


M 


Harland  To  Prepare  ^ibJe  Data 

Dr.  J.  Penrose  Harland,  arch- 1  don  Press  of  New  York, 
aeologist  here  has  been  invited ! 
to  prepare  histoncal  and  up-to- 
date  archaeological  data  on  the 
"wicked"  cities  of  Sodom  and  Go- 
morrah, to  be  published  in  "The 
Interpreter's  BiUe"  by  the  Abing- 


Pr(rfessor  Harland,  who  has 
done  extensive  archaeological  stu- ! 
dies  in  the  Middle  Eas^  particular-, 
ly  the  Dead  Sea  area  where  the 
Bibliaal  "cities  of  the  plain"  were 
said  to  have  been  located,  is  con- 


j  sidered  an  authority  on  the  ap- 
proximate location  of  Sodom,  Go- 
morrah,  Zoar,     Bela     and     other 

I  towns  of  Biblical  antiquity. 


SERVE  YOURSELF— 


EVERY  SUNDAY  I 

I 


5:30-7:30  P.M. 


BUFFET 

At  The        . 

RANCH   HOUSE 

HOME  OF  CHOICE  HICKORY^MOKED  CHARCOAL  BROILED  STEAKS 


"The  quick] 
^brown  fox" 

Smart  college  woiDcn  know  that 
Gifabs  tborou«)i  secretarial  train- 
in)^  \n  the  Quickest  route  to  baai- 

ness  success. 

SptcUl  Courte  tor  Collage  WomeB.  Wntt 

Coflefc  C««n  for  GIBBS  GIRLS  AT  WORK. 

katharzne*  "i     n 

S3.DDS 
secretarial 

■OSTON  1«  .  .  .  t\  Itorlboroufh  $L 
PIIOVIDU»CE  S  .  .  .  .  15J  A<n«ll  St 
IRW  TOW  17  ....  23»nfk  Av«. 
MORTCLAIR.  NJ.    .  .  S3  f^rauOi  St 


©^Ofi^e 


HAIR   GROOM 
TONIC 


IN     UNBREAKABIE 
PLASTIC  I 


Grooms  your  hair  white  it  treats  your 
scalp.  Controii  loose  dondruff.   1.00 

plu!.  lax 
^        (HUITON       M*>w  V*.ri(     •     Toronto 


•What's  It  U|c«  to  work  for  a  big,  ex- 
panding company  lika  IBM?  What 
would  I  be  aaked  to  do?  Would  I  get 
ahead  fast?"  Theae  were  some  of  the 
questions  that  filled  Bob  Evwett's 
mind  ai  he  faced  up  to  the  big  prob- 
1am,  "ikow  can  I  put  my  M.BA. 
draining  to  the  beat  poaiS)Ie  uae?" 

Bob  came  directly  to  IBM  from 
Cornell  in  July,  1955,  with  aa  M.B.A. 
in  fiiuiaoe.  He  waa  immediately  as- 
signed, with  twenty-nine  other 
M.B.A.'s,  to  a*^  Business  Adminis- 
tration training  program,  tins  six 
months  program  comprised  general 
orientation  in  the  entire  IBM  organi- 
sation, a  six  weeks'  field  trip  to  the 


^WJto's  ii  l%k^  to  be  im 

BUSINESS  ^aMiNtSTRATION 
AT  IBM-?" 

Two  yeort  ago,  Robert  Everelf  osked  himself  this  question.  Today,  at 
Adminishative  Assistant  to  the  Divisional  Controller,  Bob  reviews  his 
experience  at  IBM  and  gives  some  pointers  that  may  be  helpful  to  you  In 
taking  the  first,  miMtt  important  step  in  your  bu,iiness  carear* 


Why  Bob  picked  IBM 

Bob  made  a  careful  study  of  existing 
opportunities  before  selecting  IBM 
for  his  career.  He  had  a  dozen  campus 
interviews;  took  nine  company  tours. 
IBM's  M.B.A.  program  interested 
him— because,  as  he  says,  "It  gave 
me  a  chance  to  ^e^^ew  the  entire 
company  before  starting  an  actual 
line  assignment."  He  was  intrigued 
by  the  increasing  use  of  data  procesa- 
mg  equipment  in  finance  and  he  knew 
that  IBM  was  a  leader  in  this  field. 
Salary-wiae,  he  found  IBM  better 
than  many,  but  it  was  company 
growth  potential  that  motivated  his 
choice.  "Opportunity  certainly  exists 


Navy  Recniiting,  Procurement 
Teqi^  To  B^  Here  This  M^eek 


The  Ifa^  Recruitlng^  and  Othcer 
Procurement  Headqtiart«rs  in  Bal- 
^h  annouQced  today  ^at  an  In- 
formrtioB  Teen'  of  Naval  Officem 
wis  be  here  1fe^i»feday^  TSmra* 
day  an4  friijbf. 


ii'OR  SMliE:  32  FpgT  TRAIL&B. 
sleepi  four;  has  bath.  Caalaet 
Bobert  Pickard  at  "Ai^jf^t 
TraUar  Court,  Airport  Road. 


S  BOOM  imCK  HOUS*.  S  BED 
totUm  aH  mtt'tmmftifmiences. 
3  ttilas  <4»o  Old  as  Hyway.  Stove 
and  |*rigedaire  forhished.  Call 
rtetf  Katzhi  after  6:80,  M025. 


TWO  BEDROOM  BOUSE  FURN- 
Ished  or  wrfmnialwd,  Re«r  camp- 
us. Call  9458  during  day  or  2926 
after  SiW  pito.  mi  weekend. 


FIVE  ROOM  BRICK  HOUSE  IN 
center  of  town — has  hobby  work- 
shop. Call.  •ffS^  posing  day  ar 
2926  sdt^t  iJ»  ao4  dvripg 
weekend. 

LOST:  ONE  ROLEX  OYSraR 
SfieedJiJnf  wristwatch.  Tuesday 
niC^titt  Physics  |ab  (|  think). 
Pietae  contact  Joaet^Polak.  20d 

Lewis. 


University  officials  have  mada 
arrangements  for  the  team  to  be 
located  in  the  NROfTC  Armory 
during  their  visit. 

The  team  will  consist  of  repre< 
sentatives  of  the  various  Navy  Of* 
lieer  Programs  including  Aviati|>a 
Officer  Candidate,  DCS.  and  Wave 
Officer  pTogsams  for  colR^  sen- 
iors. "'     '  '  / 

'  A  representative  from  the  Nav- 
al Air  Station,  Atknt^  Ga.  yfill 
pieitai  information  ^nceraing. 
the  Niaval  Aviation  Cadet  program 
for  2  year  college  men. 

Accompanying  the  team  will  be 
"Miss  Cougar,"  a  transonic  Navy 
jet  fighter  plane  which  will  be  on 
display  in  the  area  of  the  Armory 
Parking  Lot. 

The  only  difference  between 
this  jet  and  its  operational  coun- 
terpart is  tba  &ct  that  in  ''Mias 
Cougar,"  the  tuibo-jet  engine  can 
be  viewed  through  a  portion  cut 
away  from  the  tail  assembly.  The 
engine'  can  be  operated  at  slow 
4lpe«di  s6  that  all  of  the  inner- 
romponcnt  parts  may  be  observed 
under  actual  operating  conditions. 
The  aircraft,  weighing  19,p9Q 
pounds,  is  tt<Mlaalta^  catajnAet) 
froni  an  aircraft  earner  and. has 
7,250  horsepower  at  sea  level; 


nitorinfl  o«l  Hm  "h*«"  profMlt 

Promoted  the  tome  year 

By  December  of  the  same  year,  Bob 
was  promoted  to  his  present  job- 
Administrative  Assistant  to  the  Con- 
troller of  the  Data  Processing  Divi- 
sion. "The  first  •function  of  an 
Administrative  Assistant,"  says  Bob, 
"is  to  filter  out  the  'hot'  projects 
from  those  that  can  be  handled  later. 
You  follow  through  on  projects  as- 
signed by  the  controller  and  keep 


Syractise  branch  ofllce  and  aeveral 
montha  at  the  Poughkeqwe  manu- 
fictufing  faeilitiaa.  There  be  gained  a 
funetimtal  knondedg*  of  IBM  ma- 
ehitiear  partieulariy  the  780  aeriee  of 
giant  aleetroBic  computeca. 

His  training  completed  by  January, 
19^6,  Bob  waa  assigned  to  the  Methods 
riepartment  as  a  Method*  Analyst  at 
IBiC  World  Headquartera  in  New 
Ybrk  City.  Here,  with  the  cooperation 
of  operating  department  personnel,  he 
worked  on  the  development  of  systems 
and  procedures  for  the  various  Divi- 
sion areas.  In  addition  to  aoilnal 
methods  techniques  uaed  in  develop- 
ing systems  and  procedures,  he  studied 
these  projects  in  terms  of  possible 
machine  application  for  either  IBM 
high-s|}eed  giant  computers  or  con- 
ventional accounting  equipment.  One 
project  was  the  study  of  the  Machine 
Ordering  procedure  with  the  objective 
of  simplifying  and  mechanizing  it  and 
at  the  same  time  improving  the  sour^ 
information  to  provide  for  a  more 
complete  analysis  of  sales  and  pro- 
duction t}ack]og. 


him  posted  on  their  progresst"  Bob 'a 
new  position  affords  a  pleasant  diver- 
sification of  work:  charting^ divisional 
responsibilitiesofthecontroller'sfunc- 
tion  . . .  plans  for  decentralization  . . . 
costs  of  regionalization  . . .  summariz- 
ing key  financial  and  statistical  infor- 
mation for  presentation  to  top  man- 
agement. 

Bob  points  out  that  there  are  many 
areas  in  Business  Administratioa  at 
IBM  for  men  vnth  an  M.B.A.  or  a 
B.S.  in  accounting:  corporate,  gen- 
eral, and  factor^'  accounting;  internal 
audit;  methods;  payroll  and  taxes. 
Administrative  and  management 
positions  constantly  open  up  at  World 
Headquarters.  IBM's  188  branch 
office.**,  many  plants  and  laboratories. 


"OM^ortwHity  eortoinly  axIsH  at  IBM" 

at  IBM,"  he  says.  "Growth  factors 
akne  will  accoimt  for  many  new  exec- 
utive poeitions.  A  second  factor  is  the 
trend  toward  decentralization,  which 
also  creates  new  joba.  These  factors, 
plus  IBM's  'promote-from-within* 
policy,  add  up  to  real  opportunity." 


IBM  hopes  that  this  message  will  help  to 
give  yon  some  idea  of  wiiat  it's  like  to  be 
in  Buamess  Administration  at  IBM. 
There  are  equal  opportunities  fur  E.E.'s, 
M.E.'a,  physicists,  mathematidans  and 
Liberal  Arts  major*  in  IBM's  many  divi- 
sicms— Re>«eareh,  Product  Developm«>nt, 
Manirfacturing  EQgineering,  Sales  and 
Sales  Aasistanoe.  Why  not  drop  in  and 
discun  IBM  with  your  Placement  Direc- 
ICM-?  He  can  supply  our  latest  brochure 
and  tell  you  when  IBM  will  next  inter- 
view on  your  campus.  Meanwhile,  our 
Manager  of  College  Relations,  Mr.  P.  H. 
Bradley,  will  behappy  loan  tiweryournuee- 
tjons.  Write  him  at  IBM,  Room  10001 
5S0  Madison  Ave.,  New  York  22,  N.  Y. 


IBM 


INTEINATIONAL 
BtJStNESS  MACHINES 
CCBPORATION 


,  isffara  PAoetaaiNa 


CiJUCTAiC  TVPKWniTKm 


TiMf^  tapipaiENT 


MiLiTARw  Htooucra 


^=3r-: 


MGI  PdUK 


THt  DAILY  TAR  HflL 


SUNDAY,  MARCH  lO,  1t» 


tar   Heels  Win  Title 


Tigers  Play  Intrasquad  Game 


(Oobtinued  from  page  1) 
whUe  thi  red  hot  Tar  Heels  were 
pouring  in  u  total  of  23.  This  hot 
streak  carried  the  Chapel  Hillians 
into  a  tremendous  46-19  lead,  and 
no  one  in,  the  magnificent  coli- 
seum had  aqy  doubts  Who  the  best 
team  in  the  .conference  and  the 
country   was. 

The  Tar  Heels  led  at  halftime. 
$0-23,  and  ^i«t(^hed  th^t  27  poiqt 
spread  to  32,  87-55. 'at  the  3:58 
mark.  Coach  Frank  McGuire  made 
his  first  substitution  with  4:26 
left  in  the  game  Kwen  he  sent 
Danny    Lotz    in    tdf*>  enlace    Joe 


Quigg.    Then    at 

M.^^,    «^ark.. 

Nfrth  ^C«r»KiM) 

a      F    )f     ,Ti 

Rosenbluth.   f 

lis     8-11'  2     38 

Brennan,   f 

16     2-4     4     J2 

Holland,    f 

0     0-00       0 

Youngi  f 

0    0-11       0 

Quigb,   c 

7r  >  5     1     18 

Lotz.  c 

0    0-01      0 

Keams,  p 

6    4-5     3     16 

Cunningham,  g 

0     i-  2     3       1 

Rosemond,   g 

0    0-01      0 

Searcy,  g 

0    0-00      0 

Totals 

28  19-28  ^6     95 

Soivtli  C«Hlin» 

G      F      f      T 

Wallace,  f 

11     6-11     4    28 

Hoffman,,  f 

5     1-1     4     11 

Goodroe.  ts 

0    0-03      P 

Lenttf,   c 

8     I-  2  .2    is 

Pericola,  g 

4    3-53     11 

McCoy,  g 

5    2,  3    2    12 

TotaW 

31  ld-2»  J8    75 

Hwth  C#r»Un# 

M    4S-95 

SmHi  C#r«tin« 

11    Mt-75 

«r«uikl 

From  The  Southland,  The  Crack  Of  A  Bat 

The  crack  of  baseball  bats,  sweet  music  to  the  ears  of  millions  of 
Americans,  is  now  resounding  through  the  length  and  breadth  of  the 
nation's  southland  as  play  in  the  Grapefruit  league  gets  under,  way. 

From  now  until  the  regular  season  opens,  all  16  snaior  leagoe 
teams  will  be  hard  at  work  paring  their  rosters,  testing  tlM»ir 
highly   touted   rookies  and   leg   weary   veterans. 

At  this  early  stage  of  the  sea.-an.  it  seems  safe  to  go  out  on  a  limb 
and  predict  another  championship  to  the  New  York  Yankees.  After 
all.  who  wants  to  bet  against  a  champ? 

But  it  looks  like  the  Yankees  will  get  some  compotitien  this 
season  from  an  unaccustomed  source  in  tho  Amorican  LMgu*. 
The  Detroit  Tigers  have  been  building  for  the  past  5  or  4  yMri, 
and  ii  looks  like  their  extensive  youth  pregraot  has  ?in«lly  |Mld 
off. 

ThecW  t\*'0  teams  should  dominate  the  American  League,  although 
perennial  runnerup  Cleveland.  Chicago  and  Boston  will  all  be  In  coh- 
tention.  As  for  Baltimore.  Washington  and  Kansas  City,  it  isn't  hard 
to  guess. 

In  the  National  League,  things  shape  up  as  a  very  interestin# 
four-way  battle  for  the  pennant.  Brooklyn  is  the  defending  c1««t«i>, 
but  Milwaukee,  St.  Louis  and  Cincinnatti  all  will  be  very  mudi 
in  contention.  ' 

It  lookiT  like  a  merry  race,  and  we  wouldn't  be  surprised  if  the 
upstart  Cardinals  won  their  first  pennant  since  1946. 

In  The  ACC,  A  New  Found  Balance 

A  startling  trend  in  the  ACC  is  reflected  in  the  fact  that  South 
Carolina,  made  it  to  the  finals  of  the  annual  conference  tourney  which 
concluded  in  Raleigh  last  night.  The  Gamecocks  until  this  year  have 
been  a  weak  sister,  never  to  be  spoken  of  in  the  same  t«*ath  with 
members  of  the  Big  Four  and  Maryland. 

But  somehow  or  other  South  Carolina  sneaked  into  the  finals  this 
year,  beating  Duke  and  Maryland  to  get  there.  No  more  are  they  s-oft 
touch  teams  in  the  ACC.  From  Clemson  and  Virginia  on  up,  they  all 
can  be  tough.  And  next  .vear  they'll  be  tougher. 

UNC  sophomore  half  miler  Dave  Scurlock  is  well  on  'his  way  to 
becoming  one  of  the  nation's  best  i-unners.  Dave  proved  he  could  do 
it  early  last  week  when  he  shattered  the  880  conference  record  in  an 
imofficial  time  trial.  The  later  on  in  the  weet,  he  turned  in  a  thrill- 
ing victory  over  illustrious  teammate  Jim  Beatty  in  a  three-quarter 
mile   time   trial. 

His  coach.  Dale  Ranson.  thinks  Dave  has  what  it  takes  to  run 
with  the  best.  And  he  thinks  that  s'ome  day  Dave  will  be  able  to  beat 
the  best. 

.Mihaly  Igloi  and  Laszlo  Tabori.  the  two  Hungarian  refugees  now 
residing  in  Chapel  Hill,  have  done  much  to  help  the  Carolina  runners. 
The  two  Hungarians,  both  experts  in  the  field  of  running,  have  passed 
along  invaluable  tips  that  the  Tar  Heels  are  sure  to  find  useful  during 
the  outdoor  season  which  lies  ahead. 

Jim  Tatum  Meets  The  Students 

Football  Coach  Jiin  Tatum  has  embarked  upon  a  perianal  popu- 
larity campaign  in  an  effort  to  win  the  friendship  of  the  CXPdShW 
students.  The  oft  criticized  Tatum  has  t>een  making  the  rounds  of  the 
UNC  social  fraternities  for  bull  sessions  with  the  students. 

We  can't  think  of  a    better  way  for  Tatum  to  get  to  know  the     ^^    the   Al*' All 
Carolina  student^s.  Contrary  to  popular  belief,  the  Tar  Heel  coach  *>«  '  j^ooj.    Hia  'fails    assert   vig'oVouily 
care  about  the  students.  He  care.v  very  much.  And  if  the  students  don't    ^J^*  U^  u  m  anmt>  i^anM>tti  lUtfer 
want  him  at  Carolina,  he  will  waste  little  time  in  packing  his  bags  and 
heading  for  more  fertile  land. 

An  effort  is  being  m^de  to  have  fencing  recognized  as  an  offieUl 
intercollegiate  sport  here  at  Carolina.  UNC  has  been  represented  by 
a  fencing  club  for  the  past  few  years,  but  there  has  been  no  connec- 
tion with  the  Carolina  athletic  department. 


I  McGuire  cleaned  his  bench. 

Pete  Brennan  took  runnerup 
scoring  honors  for  the  Tar  Heels 
with  22  points.  Joe  Quigg  had  18 
and  Tommy  Kearns  had  16. 

Brennan,  Quigg  and  Rosenbluth 
swept  the  boards  clean  to  give 
Carolina  a  61-45  edge  in  that  de- 
partment. Brennan  picked  off  19, 
Quigg  15  and  Rosenbluth  13. 

The  Tar  Heels  showed  a  mark-  \ 
ed  improvement  in  scoring  effici- 1 
ency  over  the  Wake  Forest  game. ' 
As  a  team  they  Jut  38  of  79  for 
48.1  per  cent.  Squth  Carolina  had  i 
36  percent.  \    y*'V.-.'^- 

Rosenbluth  pumffed  in'llS  of  23  1 
shots  from  the  floor  and  8  of  Hi 
from  the  foul;  line  for  his  «38 
points.  SoMth  ^Carolina  shotgun 
Wallace  made  only  11  of  28 
amassing   his  28    point    total. 


The  "fJtt*  Jleels  displayed   some  | 
of  their  IWflMt  offensive  and  defen- 
sive   basketSall'of    the   season   in 
sweeping     the     conference     title. 
They    used    a    zone    defense    that  , 
the  Gamecocks  could   do  little  to  i 
crack, "  and    time   and    again    took  j 
advantage  of  USC  lapses  to  tally 
on  easy  shots. 


Quarterback    Virgil    Dillon    <fid 
halfback  Larry  Rudin   also  aiipw- 

CLEMSON,    S.C. -(/- Twenty    ny    Quesenbury.    Goff    completed  j^d   well,   with  Dillon  tossing  sfv-. 

members  of  the  first  and  second  t  several  passes  for  long  gains.  I  eral  touchdown  passes  ^^ 

teams  got  the  day  off  but  Clem- : 
son  Coach  Frank  Howard  sent  the 
rest    of    his    Tiger    football    team 
through     a     routing     intra-squad . 
game    Saturday. 

Leading  one  team  were  quarter- 
back Mac  Goff  and  halfback  Son- 


HERE  IS  THIS  WEEK'S  TIE-BREAKER  IN 

OLD  GOLD'S 


Howard  Johnson  Restaurant 


BREAKFAST 

LUNCH 

DINNEir    * 

SNACKS 
"Landmark  For  Hungry  Tarheels'" 


WHAT 

FASCINATION 
DREW  WOMEN 
TO  HIS  ARMS 
...DESPITE 
THEMSELVES? 


Dominate 


NEW  \0K»  ^%AJS>)  —  Tne  big 
cfTDp  of  sophomores  whoTmade  good 
in  colleg^^  basl^^tha^^  ^^^^  season 
may  well  dominftf  ^e  sport  dur- 
ing the  196^  and  I86t'cait)paigns. 
.  Topping, the  list,  of  coursie,  is 
big  Wilt  The  Stilt  Chamberlain, 
who  led  Kansas  to  the  Big  S<iven 
championship.  The  jeven-lfoot  Ne 
gfo  from  Pl^a(Jelph^a  is  one  ol 
the  few  sophs' !ever  to'  mikt  th« 
Associated  Presa  AU  America "  iii 
his  first  varsity  s^asion.^ 
.^e^t.jMiejne  lia^04  8ipi  The  IlJ^b- 
bll  Bayl(^;  the''lad  from  Washing- 
top,  D.  Cr  wKo  wfenf  VffiK  'and 
starred  ^t  SwitUe. '  He  ww  thosei 
AQierica    second 


Happy  Tar   Heels 


(Continned    from   page    1)         I  Forest    game 

eluding  38  in  the  finale,  set  a  new  j  looked,  like 

tournament     scoring     record     and  j 

boosted  his  season  total  to  755  and  ' 

a  27.9  average. 

"We  were  ready  and  kn«w  what 

we  wanted,  and  really  came  outa 

there   like   tigers,"    Rosie   figured. 

"The  whole  season  was  wrapped  up 

in  this  game." 

The  question  that  was  foremost 

in  a  lot  of  mindy  after  the  game 
was  what  sort  of  adrenalin  did  Mc- 
Guire give  Rosenbluth  to  cause 
his  late  season  scoring  and  re- 
bounding spurt?  Rosie,  hitting 
about  25  a  game  all  season,  explod- 
ed for  30  and  23  in  two  games 
against  Wake  Forest,  45  againo*t 
Clemson  40  against  Duke  and  38 
tonight,  an  average  of  35.2  for  the 
five  pressure  games. 

"I  really  don't  know,"-  the  Irish- 
man said,   "but  before  the  Wake 


(regular   season)    he 

new   man   and   has 

played    like    one.    His    spurt    has 

been  the  thing  tor  us.  He"s  by  far 

the  best  I've  ever  coached." 

South  Carolina's  Franfc  Johnson, 
a  soundly  beaten  coach,  had  little 
to  say.  He  complimented  the  Tar 
Heels  on  their  play  and  of  courst 
wished  them  best  of  luck  in  the 
NCAA. 

He  summed  up  the  troubles  of 
college  basketball  coaches  on  26 
other  nights  this  season.  "We  tried 
to  stop  Rosenbluth  and  get  some 
rebounds.  We  wanted  them  to  shoot 
outside  and  they  did  and  were 
tremendous..  You  stop  Rosenbluth 
and  you  can't  stop  them,  and  we 
couldn't  stop  Rosenbluth." 


that  he.  iJ,!^  iwme  rfeapects  Wtfer 
than  ChaipWriftfn  anrf'^evdh  *fg 
Bill  Ruaell,  wh«  >d  Sari  >rafl- 
eisco  to  the  NCAA  title  in  1955 
and  19M. 

Also,  you  can't  overlook  John- 
ny Green,  who  3parke,d  Michigan 
State  in  it«  cjimb  from  last  place 
to  co-championship  of  the  Big 
"ten  and  a  h«rth,  in  the  NCAA 
tourney.      •    '.  ,  \ 

Then  Hi^re  tin  "Doug  Smart  of 
Washington;  Baifiey  Uow^'U  of  Mis- 
sissippi Stat«i.  Johnny  <JOx  of  Ken- 
tucky. Bw>n  S^hscall  of  Nel)raska, 
Arleit  CUjt^  0{r  tt)«  Oli|ah|M|a  Ag- 
gie's, tbnlr  WtridJIi  of  Wfoim^  and 
Itonny  Stevenson  oi  T^mm  Chri»- 
tiata.  •.        .  ' 

Theft  ig  ,«lsa  Tom  Hawkins  of 
;Votre   .  D^m^     Bill     Mi^h^    '^^  I 
Maryland,  Herb  Bu*ch  of  Virgihia  \ 
and   G«orge   Harrington   of   Datl-j 
mouth.      .      ,.  ^        ,       ,     , 

Next  y«ar  or  th»  year  aftir  Don  ; 
Heanun  of '  PlU  and  Dick  Wright  | 
of  Furman  may  well  mate})  this 
year's  achievement  ,  c\^  5-9"  Chct  j 
Forte  of  CQlumbia  and  5-l0  ^^^  ! 
Thompson  o|  Iowa  State  in  mak- 1 
ing  the  All  America.  Hennon  is 
5-9  and  Wright  9-U. 


PUZZLES 


i^^h'olin;! 


fori 

AAONDAY 


CINEMASCOPE 


TIE-BREAKING 
PUZZLE 
NO.  7 


CLUE:  This  western  coeducational  state  university  was 
opened  in  1 892 .  It  pioneered  in  cooperative  student  living. 

CLUE:  This  coeducational  university  was  founded  at 
Muskogee,  Indian  Territory  in  1894.  In  1920  it  was 
renamed  for  a  city  known  as  the  "oil  capital  of  the  world." 

CLUC:  Founded  in  1794  and  chartered  by  the  legislature 
of  the  territory  South  of  the  Ohio  River,  this  university 
acquired  its  present  name  in  1879.  Its  original  name  was 
Blount  College. 


ANSWER  1. 
ANSWER  2. 
ANSWER  3. 


Name^ — 
Address- 
City 

College- 


State. 


HOLD  UNTIL  YOU  HAVE  COMPLETED  AU  EHSHT  TIE-BKAKEIS 

Contestants  who  correctly  solved  the  first  24 
puzzles  in  Old  Gold's  Tangle  Schools  contest  are 
now  solving  the  tie-breakers  in  order  to  compete 
for  the  first  prize  of  a  World  Tour  for  Two  and 
the  other  85  prizes  now  tied  for.  Note  that  the 
above  puzzle  contains  the  names  of  three  schools 
for  wliich  three  separate  clues  are  given- 


Whet  her  you  smoke  Regulars, 
Kings  or  Filters,  Old  Gold's 
exclusive  blend  of  nature- 
ripened  tobaccos  givea  you  a 
taste  that's  t-errific.  Try     , 
today's  Old  Golds  and. 
you'll  agree! 

NO  OTHER  CIGARETTE 
CAN  MATCH  THE 
TASTE  OF  TODAY'S 


OLD  GOLDS 


H^-^>y 


^A.*--— •-■•^«..  »...■.- 


?4» />' A'- "f 't 


•f 


t«i.,j  ♦?  » 


CYRANO 

AND 

i  SYME^IBV 


r         > 


vr-  v; 


^  '& 


/■»-•;'*;■ 
''-•'^■'■a 


Once  there  was  a  sword  with  a  poet  attached  named  Cyrano  (the  man,  not  the 
sword).  Cyrano  was  equaUy  famous  for  being  handy  with  thetutlery  and  having 
a  real  honker  of  a  nose.  This  proboscis  was  a  real  UabiUty  ...  not  only  to  Cyrano, 
but  to  the  bumpkms  who  had  the  misfori^une  to  make  fun  of  it.  They  always 
Wound  up  with  an  extremely  low  body  temperature. 

In  the  midst  of  all  this  swaslibuckhng,  Cyrano  feU  for  a  chick  named  Roxanne, 

ii^oM  father  ran  one  of  the  fancier  bistros  in  town.  The  cUnker  in  the  deck 

^^fea  that  Roxanne  hankered  after  another  cat . . .  who  made  the  unbeUevable 

(and  ytberto  fatal)  error  of  teUing  Cyrano  "You,  sir,  have  a  rather  large  noee!" 


UNC  Runners 
Finish  Second 
In  NY  AAeet 

Two  experienced  veterans.  Tom 
Courtney  and  Horace  Ashenfelter, 
handed  Carolina  distance  runners 
Jim  Beatty  and  Dave  Scurlock 
double  defeats  in  New  York  last 
night. 

'  Courtney,  the  Olympic  800  meter 
champion,  whipped  the  youthful 
Scurlock  by  11  yards  in  the 
Knights  of  Colutnbus  1.000  yard 
run,  while  Ashenfelter  turned  on 
the  steam  in  the  stretch  to  whip 
Beatty  by  about  50  yards  in  the  2- 
mile  run. 

Courtey  jumped  into  the  lead  at 
the  start  and  was  never  headed 
His  time  of  2:06.8  equaled  the 
meet  record.. 

Ashenfelter  and  Beatty  went  in^o 
the  last  half  mile  with  the  old 
pro.  holding  a  5  yard  lead.'  Then 
Ashenfelter  uncorked  a  furiou.- 
finishing  kick  that  left  Beatty  tar 
iMck  in  second  place. 


jack'$ 


with  his  new 


Ever  since  Jack  bought  hit  nje*  Souk 
CAPRI  phonograph  at  the  local 
college  store—  he's  become  ttie  biuNt 
B  M  O  C  ever.  You  can  join  hiniMiii 
be  the  biggest  ever,  too,  fof  you 
can  buy  a  Capri  plionograph  for  M 
little  as  119.93.  This  month's 
special  buy  is  the  Capri  i^O.  It's  t 
portable  i-speed  hi-fi  phonograph 
with  WEBCOR  automatic  chthger 
Features  arc  twin  speakers,  a' 
quality  amplifier  and  a  sniartiy 
styled  cabinet  in  attractiW 
Two-Tone  Forest  Green.  Specially 
priced  at  your  local  dealer... 


SONIC  INOUSTRieS,  INC.    1 1  WIftifr  ptf^,  lynk>*^.  N.  V. 


:.v:y^,- 


r    ' 


.:  /(••  not 


Wdii  Cyrano  couldn't  skewer  this  chucklehead— Roxaime's  old  man  would  cut 
off  his  Budweiser  credit  card.  So— heeding  that  old  chestnut  "If  ^u  can't  fight 
'em  . . .  join  'em,"  Cyrano  did  a  ghost-writing  job  on  some  love  poems— real 
mushy  stuff-  enabling  Roxamie's  beau  to  win  her.  Afterward,  mothballing  his 
•  king-size  steak  knife,  Cyrano  turned  his  poetic  talents  to  the  best  use  he  could 
think  of:  vmting  lyrics  for  "Where  There's  Life . . .  Tliere's  Bud." 

ntceaaary  to  "noaeorouruT' for  Ae  best  in  beer  I-,.  U's  waiting  for  you  at  yoi^ 


•:^,ii: 


h 


Budweiser. 


ANHEtJSER-BUSCH,  INC.*  ST.  LOUTS  •  NEW  ARK  .  LOS  ANGELES 


KWG  OF  BEERS 


■■s-^M 


WEATHER 

&■ 

Cloudy,  with  possibility   of  sho- 
w*rs;  oxpoctod  high,  70. 


9r()  c  3)aay 


aTat  Xecl 


WEEK 

This  wook  may  moko  tho  diffor- 
inco.  $«e  oditoriai,  p«9o  2. 


VOL.  LVII     NO.  114 


ComfiltU  {/f^  Vftrt  Servtet 


CHAPEL  HILL,  NORTH  CAROLINA,  TUESDAY,  MARCH  12,  1957 


Offices   in   Graham   Mewurrial 


t^OUR  PAGES  THIS  ISSUE 


Campus  Political  Parties  Choose  Top  Men  For  Spring; 
SP  Names  Evans,  UP  Electa  Baum  For  President's  Job; 
Bass,  Crowther  And  Sloan  In  Running  For  Editorship 


DTH  Candidates 
Run  Independent 


Three    students 
aiMK>unced     their 
e<i;tor  of  The  Daily  Tar  Heel, 
three  will  run  independently. 


Monday    night 

candidacy     for 

All 


.(the 


B?th  political  parties — the  Stu- 
dent Party  and  the  University 
Party — decided  not  to  endorse  any 
candidate  for  for  the  editorship. 

Banning  for  the  position  will  be 
Charlie  Sloan,  Frank  Crowther 
and  Neil  Basg.  Running  indepen- 
dently was  apparently  their  own 
decision  in  addition  to  the  par- 
ties' announcement. 

Each  went  bstore  both  parties 
Monday  night  ta  announce  their 
platforms  and  to  setsk  "individual 
support." 

SLOAN 

Sidsn,  a  sophomore  from  Ar- 
lini^ton,  Va.,  has  been  managing 
editor  since  last  fall.  Crowfter. 
nHo  a  sophomore,  has  written 
columns  for  the  paper  since  last 
spring.  He  is  from  Chevvy  Chase, 
Md.  Bass,  a  junior  from  Nashville, 
has  eo^^red  student  politics  for 
the  paper  for  three  years.' 

In  his  platforKk-  Sl0»n  said.  if. 
elected,  he  would  try  to  eUmin- 
ate  "otf"  the  record"  and  "no  com- 
ment" situations,  "The  Daily  Tar 
Heel   has   a   conscience,"   he   said. 

Other  points  were: 

1.  Better  coverage. 

2.  Less    dropping    of    the  '  flag 
(the  paper's  nameplate)  than  there 
has    been    this   year   even 
world  news  is  necessary. 

3.  "The  purpose  of  The  Daily 
Tar  Heel  is  to  inform  rather  than 
to  incite." 

4.  "I  am  for  bigtime  atHletics." 
Concerning      closed      meetings- 
Sloan  .said  he  did  n»t  want  them 
but    "We   can   be   fair   to   the  or- 
ganization." 

Mentioning  specifically  the  In- 
terfratemity  Council,   he   said   he 


are  better  judges  than  they 
IFC)  of  what  is  news  and  what  is 
not  in  relation  to  what  happens 
in  IFC  meetings. 

CROWTHER 

Crowther  said  "1  can  offer  the 
most  service  to  the  school  as  edi- 
tor. I  consider  this  a  personal 
challenge  and  I  never  turn  my 
back  en  a  personal  challenge."    , 

He  announced  an  eight-point 
platform  which,  if  elected  he  will 
bring  about: 

1.  Better  understanding  in  edi- 
torials. 

2.  Elimination    of 
national-international 

3.  Better    internal 
on  the  paper. 

4.  An    attempt    to 


the     paper'.s 

wire. 

organization 


better    rela- 
the    faculty    and    stu- 


ath- 


tions    with 
dents. 

5.  Better  interpretation  of 
letics. 

6.  Better    feature    coverage. 

7.  A 'welJ-rounded  editorial  page 
with  more  columns. 

8  A  poll  of  the  students  to  find 
out  what  comic  strips  they  want. 
BASS 

Bass  said  he  is  running  on  three 
things  —  experience,  interest  and 
capability. 

His  platform  contains  three 
principles: 

1.  Professional  athletics  —  "1 
am  for  a  winning  team  and  I  shall 

though   continue    to     be     for    a    winning 
'  team." 

2.  Closed  IFC  meetings  —  He 
said  he  was  against  any  closed 
meetings  on  principal. 

3.  "Afghanistanism" — Bass  said 
here  there  was  overemphasis  of 
world  news.  He  said  he  thought 
there  is  a  place  for  world  news — 
a   columq. 

He  said  unless  there  was  a 
catastrophe,  he  would  never  make 


SP  Selects  |  Humanity  Institute 
Candidafes  Established  Here 

For  Spring 


RALEICH — An   Institute  of  Hu-   ed  undergraduate  instruction,  and 


By   EDITH    McKINNON 

The  Student  Party  nominated 
Paul  Carr  as  its  candidate  for 
president  of  the  Senior  Class  la^t 
night  in  a  meeting  at  Graham  Me- 
morial. 


Carr  was  nominated  by  acclama- 
tion at  the  nominating  session  in 
Roland   Parker   Lounge    1    and   2. 


manities  was  established  Monday 
by  the  executive  committee  of  the 
Board  of  Trustees  of  the  Univer- 
sity. ■    j 

The  institute  gives  an  extra  di- 
mension to  foundations  and  insti- 
tutes in  sciences,  business,  medi- 
cine, and  other  professions  in  the 

University.  *;  i  j 


Frank  Black  was  nominated  by 
icclamation     for    the    position    of 

ice-president.      Jennie      Margaret 
Meador  won  over  Ann  Morgan  as 

he   candidate    for   the    secretary 
post,  while  John  Walters  was  ^.c- 
lected  for  the  treasurer's  spot  by 
icclamation. 


Chancellor  Robert  B.  House,  h 
announcing  the  organization  of 
the  institute,  stated,  "I  rejoice  in 
the  formation  of  a  new  founda- 
tion type  of  institute  which  will 
undergird  the  work  of  arts  and 
•  ^ !  sciences." 

The     Humanities      Institute 


to  provide  the  means  by  which 
their  assistance  can  be  used  most 
advantageously." 

The  Institute  is  directly  respon- 
sible to  the  Chancellor.  All  mem- 
bers of  the  several  departm^ts 
in  the  Division  of  Humanities  are 
members  of  the  Institute.  , 

The  governing  board  is  compos- 
ed of  seven   members:   a   director,' 


Israelis  Are  Candidates  Meet 
To  Appear  I /„  April  2  Polls 

Here  Today 


Four  Israeli  students  will  be  on 
campus  today  and  tomorrow,  spon- 
sored by  the  Graham  Memorial  Ac- 
tivities Bo.ird,  Hillel  Foundation, 
the  Y.M.C.A.  and  stuucnt  govern- 
ment. 


Bill  Baurp,  University  Party, 
and  Sonny  Evans,  Student  Party, 
last  night  were  nominated  to  run 
for  the  presidency  of  the  student 
body   in   spring  elections. 


— ^President  William  Friday  and 
newly-elected  Chancellor  William 
Aycock. 

E>ans  hailed  the  present  admin- 
istration of  Bob  Yeung,  who  was 


.vet  to.be  chosen:  the  Dean  of  the 
College  of  Arts  and  Sciences;  and 
five  others  to  be  elected  by  the 
membership. 

Outside  persons   who  are   inter- 
ested in  the  Instiiute  will  be  mem- j 
i  hers     of     an     advisory      council, 
is  I  among    these     'influential    friends 


sponsored  by  the  Division  of  Hu- 
manities and  its  purpose  is  "to 
show  persons  interested  in  the 
liberal  arts  how  they  can  support 
effectively  the  central  teaching  ol 
the  University  as  strengthened  By  i 
graduate  research  and  by  improv- 


Ann  Morgan  was  nominated  to 
>eek  the  office  of  social  chairman 
ver  Debbie  Sink. 

Legislature  seats  were  also  up 
for  grabs  and  the  year  seat  for 
he  rem-esentative  of  I>orm  Women  j 
.vent  to  Lib  Sty^ughn  b;^  acclama  | 

j      Th*re  will  be  a  caravan  to  Phil- 
There  were  no  nominations  for'adclphia    this    weekend,    however, 
he  seats  due  Town  Men  I  and  U,  1  no  excuses  for  classes  will  be  giv- 
cherefore    Chairman    Sonny     Hall- ( en  to  those  who  wish  to  attend  the 
ford   stated   that  the   two   nomina     games. 


of  the   liberal  arts." 

No  funds  are  available  to  the 
present  time;  however,  it  is  ex- 
pected that  financial  support  will 
be  forthcoming  similar  to  the 
support  given  other  foundations 
(See  HUMANITIES,  Page  3) 


The  students,  Ralael  Even. '] 
Hanoch  Greenfeld,  Hava  Kohav. 
and  Eliezcr  Plotnik,  will  appear  in 
general  cultural  programs  at  8  p.m. 
in  the  lounge  of  Graham  Memorial 
each  night  they  are  here.  The  pro- 
gram will  consist  of  music,  dance, 
and  drama. 

In  addition  to  a  show  scheduled 
for  this  morning  over  WCHL,  the 
activities  of  the  group  are  to  in- 
clude   class     appearances     and     a  ,  hope  for  the  future"  He  promised 
luncheon    sponsored    by    the    Cos-   to  prepare  a  prospectus  of  a  new 
mopolit^n  Club,  the  Y.M.C.A.,  and   student  Union  building  and  present 

Commission      next     summer.      He 
promised  "close  cooperation"  with 


The  two  candidates,  along  with  i  elected  to  the  presidency  of  the 
others  nominated  for  student  gov- ;  student  body  last  year  on  the  Stu- 
ernment  positions  last  night,  will !  dent  Party  ticket, 
tangle  April  2  in  the  most  signifi-  The  University  Party  nominat- 
cant  election  of  Carolina's  aca-  ed,  in  addition  to  Baum,  Benny 
demic  year.  |  I'homas,    vice    president,     by    ac- 

Other  Student  Party  candidates {  claraation,  and  Jerry* Jones,  treas- 
are   Don   Furtado,   vice    president, '  urer,   over  Jim  Alford. 


500  Game  Ducats  For  Philly 


thought  we  (The  Daily  Tar  Heel)    world  news  the  lead  story. 


.ions  would  be  chosen  by  the   ad 
/isory  board. 

Kay  Smith  and  Nola  Hatten  won 
the  seat  nominations  for  the  vacan- 
cies of  the  Town  Women  by  accla- 
mation. The  seat  for  Town  Men  fV 
went  to  Robert  Spencer  with  no 
opposition. 

The  position  of  National  Student 
Assoc,    coordinator    went   to   Whit  ]  provided 
Whitfield  even  though  he  did  not  j    ~ 
ask  for  endorsement  but  asked  for 
unofficial  support  of  the  party. 

On  a  vote  of  acclamation,  Frank 
Black  won  the  nomination  of  head 
cheerleader. 


C.  P.  Spruill,  dean  of  the  facul 
ty,  announced  yesterday  that  ex- 
cu.vjs  for  student  body  members 
will  not  be  given  but  that  he  be- 
lieves there  arc  a  great  many  stu- 
dents who  can  make  the  trip  'to 
Philadelphia  without  endangering 
their  standing  in  their  classes. 

For  the  games  in  Philadelphia, 
Carolina    wins    tonight. 


there  are  some  5(X)  tickets  avail- 
able. These  tickets  may  be  reserv- 
ed by  going  to  the  Woollen  Gym 
ticket  office  and  giving  your  name. 
Reservations  must  be  made  by 
4:30  Wednesday  afternoon. 

The  tickets  are  for  either  the 
Friday  or  Saturday  night  game->. 
Reservations  can  also  be  be  made 
for  both  games.  The  ticket  office 
will  not  accept  reservations  made 
by  phone. 

The   caravan  will  be  made  Fri- 
day only  if  enough  students  sign 
(See  ISRAELIS,  Page  3) 


the    Y.W.C.A 

Today  at  6  p.m.  at  the  Pines 
restuarant.  a  banquet  for  the  vis- 
iting students,  and  community 
and  student  government  leaders 
is   planned. 

Heading     the     grnup     is     Rafael 
Even,    who    was    born     in     Poland 
in     1925    and    came     to     Israel     in 
1P33,    At    present    he    is    .studying 
toward    his    Ph.D.    in    Social    P.sy- 
chology    at    the    New    School    for 
Social    Research.   He   is  an  adviser 
on  public  opinion  and  publicity  fori 
the  .state  of  Israel   Bonds,   as  well 
as    the    assistant    director    of    the 
economic  research  of  the  State  of 
Israel      Bonds      Organization.      In 
1953    Even    came    to    this   country 
for  further  study. 
Hanoch    Greenfeld,    pianist    for 
(See  ISRAELIES.   Page   3)        \ 


Baum  is  a  junior  from  Elizabeth 
City.  He  said  he  would  release 
his  platform  today. 

The  University  Party  released 
a  four-point  platform  at  its  meet- 
ing last  night.  Included  in  the 
Student  Party  it  is  "the  i  platform  was  a  promise  to  form 
a  recommendatory  "Student  Sen- 
ate" to  advise  the  student  body 
president  on  all  matters. 


by  acclamation;  Betty  Huffman, 
secretary,  elected  over  Jane  Brock 
and  Eklith  MacKinnon,  and  Bob 
Carter,  treasurer,  over  John 
Brooks. 

Evans,    a   junior   from    Durham, 
told  the 


the  new  University  administration 


IN  CARROLL  HALL: 


Commager  Speaks  Tonight 


Gov.  Hodges  Heads  Speaker  List 
For  Business  Fair  Here  March,  22 


Prof.    Henry    Steele 
will   deliver  a   lecture.    "National- 
ism  in  America,"  tonight   in  Car- 
roll Hall  at  8. 


By  SO*  HIGH 

The  fifth  "Business  Fair '.  spon- 
sored as  a  service-to-school  project 
by  Alpha  Tau  Chapter  of  Alpha 
Kappa  Psi,  will  feature  Gov.  Luther 
H.-  Hodges  as  the  main  speaker 
M^h  22  in  Carroll  Hall. 

The  topic  of  the  conference,  on 
thi  contributions  of  the  State 
agencies  toward  the  industrializa- 
tion of  North  Carolina  will  be 
"What  North  Carolina  Can  Do  For 
You,  Mr.  Industry." 

Bob  Ratledge,  president  of  the 
local  fraternity,  stated,  "Through 
this  Fair  we  hope  to  present  the 
ways  in  which  North  Carolina  is 
striving  to  encourage  both  the  in- 
tenial  and  external  industrial 
growth  of  the  state.  We  believe 
that  we  have  set  up  a  worth  while 
program  and  one  which  should 
make  businessmen  aware  of  the 
potentialities  of  our  state." 
SEMINARS 

Ihree  seminars  on  this  main 
topic  will  be  held.  The  first  study 
group  will  conrene  at  1  p.m.  Fri- 
day on  "Development  of  Small  In- 
dustries in  North  Carolina."  G.  F. 
Ali>right,  head  of  4he  Small  In- 
dustries Section,  Dept.  of  Conser- 
vation and  Development,  Raleigh, 
will  head  the  speaker  list  for  this 
c-.min-ar. 

Albright  is  to  speak  on  how  small 
industries  have  prospered  in  this 
state  and  the  outlook  for  the  fu- 
ture. Ben  Smith  of  the  Black  Pan- 
ther Co.,  Sanford,  and  Jack  Wors- 


eering,  Greensboro,  will  reply  on 
how  the  small  industries  in  North 
Carolina  helps  them. 

The  second  of  these  seminars 
will  start  at  2:30  and  run  to  3:30, 
immediately  following  an  inter- 
mission for  the  showing  of  exhi- 
bits Walter  W.  Harper,  develop- 
ment engineer,  Dept.  of  Conserva- 
tion and  Development  in  Raleigh, 
will  be  featiu-ed  on  the  topic  "At- 
traction of  New  Industry  into 
North  Carolina." 

On  the  program  with  Harper  will 
be  Cart  El  Blass,  production  man- 
ager, Southern  Assembly  Planter! 
Talon,  Inc.,  Dallas,  Texas  and  Tru- 
man H.  Safford,  southern  represen- 
tative, Charles  T.  Main  Inc.,  Archi 
tects  St  Engineers  of  Charlotte. 

Harper  will  deliberate  on  bring 
ing  new  industry  to  this  state  and 
Blass  and  Safford  will  speak  abou^ 
the  industry  that  has  already  found 
itj  way  into  this  fa^it-rising  area  of 
industry. 
PROPOSALS  • 

Following  a  second  intermission 
and  another  viewing  of  the  exhi- 
bits, James  S.  Currie  will  head  a 
discussion  on  the  "Proposed  State 
Tax  Revisions  and  its  Effect  on 
the  Industrial  Development  in 
North  Carolina."  Currie  is  the  di- 
rector of  the  Dept.  of  Tax  Re- 
search of  Raleigh. 

"This  probably  will  be  the  best 
seminar,"  stated  Ratledge. 

The  evening  program  will  open 
with  a  welcome  by  Ratledge.  Cap- 


/ 

the    Governor's    Small    Industries 

Plan,  High  Point,  will  then  present 

some    remarks    on    the 

make    the    introduction     of    Gov. 

Hodges. 

Hodges  will  speak  on  "Industry 
in  North  Carolina." 

This  is  just  a  wide  range  of 
choices  as  the  Governor  has  not 
yet  selected  a  specific  6>ubjeci. 

A  reception  for  speakers,  guests 
and  faculty  will  be  held  in  the 
Faculty  Seminar  room,  301  £;arroll 
Hall,  immediately  ■  following  the 
evening  program. 

Anyone  who  is  interested  in  this 
Fair  is  cordially  invited  to  attend 
as  this  event  is  open  to  the  public, 
stated  Ratledge. 


ham,  of  Southern  Plastics  £ngin-uj  M.   Waynich,  past   director  of 


GOV.  HODGES 

.  at  Business  Fair 


Sponsored  by  the  Graduate  His- 
tory Club.  Graham  Memorial,  and 
Phi  Alpha  Theta  history  fratern- 
ity, the  public  address  is  the  third 
Fair  and  i  *"  ^  series  of  speeches  by  eminent 
American    historians. 

In  his  lecture  Prof.  Commager 
will  discuss  the  American  experi- 
ence with  nationalism,  the  avoid- 
ance of  chauvihism,  the  dangers 
of  nationalism  today,  and  indicate 
some  ways  in  which  the.se  dangers 
may  be  avoided. 

Author  of  two  recent  best-sel- 
lers. "The  American  Mind"  and 
"The  Blue  and  the  Gray,"  Prof. 
Commager  was  for  many  years  a 
member  of  |he  Dept.  of  History 
at  Columbia  University.  During 
World  War  II  he  served  as  con- 
sultant to  the  Office  of  War  In- 
formation, and  has  conducted  sev- 
eral overseas  studies  for  the  State 
Dept. 

In  addition  to  articles  and  re- 
views which  appear  in  the  "New 
York  Times,"  "The  Reporter," 
and  "The  Nation."  Prof.  Commag- 
er has  written  many  books  on  so- 
cial, and  intellectual  history,  and 
is  particularly  known,  for  his 
books  on   American  history. 

In  1954-5.5  the  historian  was 
Harmsworth  Professor  of  Ameri- 
can History  at  Cambridge  Uni- 
versity and  has  been  elected  to 
membership  in  the  National  In- 
stitute of  Arts  and  Letters.  He  is 
a  fellow  of  the  American  Acad- 
emy of  Arts  and   Sciences. 

As  a  speaker.  Prof.  Commager 
is  an  advocate  of  Jeffersonian  lib- 
eralism   and    a   staunch    defender 


Commager!  of  civil  liberties.  ] 

A.sked  to  name  some  of  his  per- 
sonal interests.  Prof.  Commager 
answered,  "Lots  of  books,  two  pi- 1 
anos,  two  record  players  and 
phonograph  collection.  Children's 
literature,  Danish  history  and  lit- : 
erature  as  a  kind  of  sideline.  Al- ' 


.So  England.  My  attachment  for 
that  place  is  graat.  especially  for 
Cambridge." 

Members  of  the  History  Dept. 
have  stated  that  the  public  lec- 
ture will  be  over  before  the  radio 
broadcast  of  the  Carolina-Yale 
^ame  begins. 


Egypt  To  Tak*  Over 
Gaza  Strip  From  UN 

CAIRO — (A^) — Egypt  announ- 
ced Monday  it  is  taking  ovar  ad- 
ministration of  th«  turbulent 
Gaza  Strip. 

The  announcement  surprised 
UN  officials  in  Gaza  as  they  were 
smoothing  out  working  arrange- 
ments between  local  Arab  offi- 
cials and  the  UN  Emergency 
Force   (UNEF). 

Dr.  Ralph  Bunche,  UN  under- 
secretary general,  said  on  his  re- 
turn to  Cairo  from  Gaza,  howev- 
er, that  the  UN  "never  has 
questioned  Egypt's  legal  rights 
regarding  •Gaza." 

In  two  swift  moves  Egypt: 

1.  Announced    appointmet    of    i 
Gen.  Hassan  Abdcl  Latif  as  gov-    { 
ernor    of    Gaza.    The    26x8-miie 
strip    was    given    up    only    last 
week  by  Israel's  army. 

2.  Fired  off  a  protest  to  UN  j 
Secretary  General  Dag  Hammar- 
skjold  against  the  UNEF  for  fir- 
ing shots  over  the  head  of  a  mob 
in  Gaza  Sunday.  The  mob  was 
demanding  return  of  Egyptian 
administration. 


Adm.  Byrd  Dies 

.  BOSTON  — (AP)—  Retired  Rear 
Adm.  Richard  E.  Byrd,  USN,  the 
first  man  to  fly  over  both  the  NoHh 
and  South  t^oTes,  died  Monday  He 
was  8d.  The  pioneering-  air  ex- 
plorer, who  had  been  named  over- 
all head  of  the  Navy's  huge  Oper- 
ation Deepfreeze  in  Anarctica,  had 
been  ailing  with  a  heart  condition 
several  months. 


Telegram 

Studenit  will  have  a  chance  to 
send  their  best  wishes  to  the 
Car»(ina  basketball    team  today. 

According  to  plans  formed  late 
last  niyht,  a  lengthy  telegram 
will  be  sent  to  the  team  in  Phil- 
adelphia foday. 

Students  can  sign  the  telegram 
at  variaus  places  on  the  campus 
and  downtown. 


Deadline 

Th«  Daily  Tar  Heel  today 
starts  a  tystam  of  deadlines  for 
political  statements. 

Studant  campaigners  in  the 
spring  aiaction  will  have  until 
^  p.m.  aich  afternoon  to  submit 
political  statements  for  the  next 
day's  newspaper.  Those  state- 
mutt  bt  tyMwriHen  and  signed. 


IDC,  Sophs  To  Sponsor 
Spring  Concert,  Dance 

The  IDC  and  the  Sophonwre :  group  that  is  well  known  for  the 
Class  will  i^-ponsor  a  concert  and '  excellence  of  their  dance  music 
dance  to  be  held  on  the  weekend  j  At  this  dance,  they  will  have  an 
of  March  22-23.  1 18  piece  orchestra  and  vocalist. 

The  "Spring*  Swing"  will  con-j  "The  concert  will  be  open  to 
sist  of  a  concert,  to  be  given  at!  anyone  who  would  like  to  attend. 
8  p.m.  in  Memorial  Hall  March  22,  j  but  the  dance  will  be  limited  to 
and  a  campus-wide  dance,  to  be  j  members  of  the  Carolina  student 
held  in  Woollen  Gym  from  8  to  11  j  body  and  their  dates,"  Furtado 
p.m.   on   March   23.  said   "The   price   of  admission   for 

Don  Furtado.  president  of  the  i  the  concert  will  be  $1.00  per  per- 
SDphomore  class,  said,  "This  will!  son  except  for  members  of  the 
be  a  chance  for  a  big  fling  to  re- }  sophomore  class.  The  admission 
lieve  the  pressure  built  up  during  j  price  for  Sophomores  will  be  $1.00 


DR. 


COMMAGER 

.  speaks^  tonight 


mid-term  exams,  so  get  your  dates 
and    tickets   early." 

The  music  for  the  concert  will 
be  supplied  by  the  Don  Shirley 
Trio,  which  is  currently  on  a  tour 
of  the  major  cities,  is  one  of  the 
leading  combos  in  the  field  of 
modern  interpretive  jazz.  They 
have  performed  in  several  of  the 
leading  night  clubs  in  Chicago, 
Washington  and  New  York.  The 
combo  Ls  also  under  contract  to 
one  of  the  major  recording  com- 
panies. 

The  music  for  the  dance  will 
I  be    bv   the    "Duke    Ambassadors." 


per  eouple.  There  will  be  no  ad- 
mission charged  for  the  dance." 
stated  Furtado. 

Tickets  for  the  concert  will  be 
available  at  the  "Y"  and  in  the 
information  desk  of  Graham  Me- 
morial. Two  ticket  «tubs  from 
the  concert  wiii  be  drawn  at  the 
dance,  with  the  two  winners  each 
to  receivj?  a  $10  gift  certificate 
which  can  be  used  at  the  stores 
downtown  who  are  members  of 
the   Chapel   Hill    Merchants  Assn. 

"The  winners  must  have  the 
other  half  of  the  ticket  stub  in 
or<fer  to  receive  the  certificates, " 


The    "Ambassadors"    are    a    local .  said  Furtado. 


PAGfi  rwo 


THt  DAILY  TA»  HltL 


TUESDAY,  MARCH  U  ^Kf 


A  Great  Professor  Is  About  To  Leave  The  University 


It's  Spirit,   Not  Salary, 
That  Hastens  His  Leaving 

A  great  professor  is  about  to  lea\e  the  University.  .\iid  he  is  not 
leaving  because  of  money. 

He  is  considering  leaving  for  a  multitude  of  other  reasons.  Of  tliem, 
money  is  just  one. 

At  the  otiicr  college  which  has  asked  him  to  teach,  he  is  being  offiered 
several  financial  improvements.  But,  really,  it  isn't  money  which  will 
take  him  from  the  Universitv  if  he 


decides  to  go.  It  is,  more  than  that, 
a  feeling  of  the  lack  of  morale  here 
among    faculty    members,   students 

and  administrators. 

*      *      # 

People  talk  about  academic  free- 
dom here,  and  they  exercise  it.  to 
some  extent,  but  they  stop  ait  that 
extent.  It  is  fashionable  to  talk 
about  and  exercise  academic  free- 
dom here,  but  it  is  not  fashionable 
to  go  too  far. 

Largely  for  this  reason,  the  fac- 
ultv  here  has  lost  its  morale.  It 
teaches.  :  nd  it  teaches  well,  and  it 
also  exercises  as  nnich  academic 
freedom  as  it  can.  liiu  at  the  same 
time  it  ktjeps  an  eve  open  lor  ol- 
leis  from  ficer  colleges  and  uni- 
\cisiiics.        ., 


But  about  this  man.  He  is  the 
last  man  you  woidd  suspect  of 
lea\ino  the  Tniversity  of  Nc^rih 
Carolina.  Uis  roots  are  here,  his 
love  is  here,  his  students  are  here. 

His  students  love  him  and  re- 
spect him  as  they  love  and  respect 
no  other  facidty  member.  He  has 
to  turn  away,  sadly,  himdreds  of 
students  each  semester  from  his 
cla^scs. 

.And  right  now  he  is  considering 
ka\ing  the  I'niversity  for  wother 
one.  one  where  the  spirit  and  aca- 
demic freedom  amd  challenge  and 
adniinistrati\c  respect  are' much 
more  in  abundance. 


If  til  is  man  Iea\es  the  I'niver- 
sifv  of  .\ortli  Caiolma.  it  will  hurt 
North  Carolina.  It  will  mean  one 
m  )re  free  mind  has  Ixfen  lost  in 
this  state,  in  this  state  which  does 
not  hare  a  surplus  of  free  minds 
and  which  n^eds  free  minds  even 
more   than  it   needs   tobacco. 


\\''hat  can  make  him  stay? 

It  is  not  monev.  Kven  tiiough 
the  new  offer  is  large  financialK. 
it  is  not  monev  that  will  take  this 
maii  away.  It  is  the  spirit  ol  this 
pi;  .e. 


The  Daily  Tar  Heel 

The  official  itudeni  pubhtdtinn  of  tbe 
PiiW Rations  Board  ot  the  University  of 
N'orth  Carolina,  whert*  it  is  published 
irfily  except  Monday  and  examinatio? 
•  nH  varafiop  ptriocis  and  summer  terms 
Entered  as  spi()n(5  class  matter  in  th« 
0"St  ni^ce  in  Thapel  Hill,  N.  C,  undei 
the  Act  ni  March  8.  1870.  Subscriptioc 
rates:  mailed,  $4  per  year,  $2  50  a  semes 
ter:  delivered.  $6  a  year,  $3  50  a  seme* 
ter 


Editor 

FRED  POWLEDGE 

Managing  Editor 

CHARLIE  SLOAN 

N>ws  Editor   _. 

NANCY  HILL 

Snorts    Editor 

LARKY  rWFKK 

Business  Manager  _^ 

-   BILL  BOB  PLEL 

Advertising  Manager 

.  FRED  KATZIN 

toiioKiAi-    biAf'h    —   Woody     Sean, 
Joey  Payne,  Stan  Shaw. 


NEWS  STAFF— Clarke  Jones.  Pringle 
Pipkin,  Edith  MacKinnon,  Wally  Ku- 
ralt,  Mary  Alys  Voorhees,  Graham 
Snyder,  Neil  Bass,  Bob  High,  Ben' 
Taylor,  Walter  Schruntek,  H-Joost  Po- 
lak,   Patsy  Miller,   Bill  King. 

BUSDfESS  STAFF— Rosa  Moore,  Johnny 
Whitaker,  Die*  Leavitt. 

SPORTS  ^TAFF:   Dave  Wible,  Stewart 
Bird.  RcMi  Milligan. 


Subscription  Manager  Dale  Staley 

Circulation  Manager  _^ Charlie  Holt 

Assistant  Sf>orts  Editor Bill  King 

Staff  Photographers   - Woody  Sears, 

Norman  Kantor 
Librarians .  Sue  Gichner.  Marilyn  Strum 


.V  new  fatuity  spirit  will  make 
him  stay.  A  spirit  not  unlike  that 
of  the  Frank  Ciraham  era  will 
make  him  stay.  Continued  support 
from  the  thinking  pc^rtion  of  the 
stucleiu    body  will  make  him   stay. 

Cooperation  and  support  from 
the  administration  will  make  him 
stav.  This  is  needed  very  much- 
For  administrators  are  altogether 
too  wont  to  run  this  place  as  a 
financial  organism,  constiiicted  of 
art  ituiseums  and  educational  tele- 
\ision  stations  and  seats  in  Kenan 
Stadium,  rather  tlian  as  the  educa- 
ticmal  institution  it  shoidd  be. 

rniihfnl  iMiderviaiulitiM,  ol  the 
laciilty'.s  proljlenis.  ;v:icl  an  attempt 
to  help  solve  thetn.  is  needed  on 
the  pait  of  Presicfent  Friday.  Chan- 
lellor  House  and  all  the  other  ad- 
ministiators   in   .South    Huilding. 

F.ir  more  time  should  be  spent 
fighting  for  appro|)riations  in 
Raleigh.  For,  as  one  profes.sor  said 
yesteula) : 

"We  don't  need  buildings  heie. 
We  don't  even  need  library  books. 
.\  university  could  exit  with  just 
a   professor,   and  a   stiKient." 


Night  Editor : 

Night  News  Editor 


Manley   Springs 
Bob  High 


We  doubt,  howcNer,  that  such  a 
feeling  will  come  from  South 
Building,  which  is  piesently  carry- 
ing on  a  large-scale  political  en- 
deavor. Where,  then,  will  the  feel* 
ing  come  from? 

The  feeling,  right  now  at  least, 
must  come  Irom  the  laculty  itsell. 

Tlie  faculty  must  convince  it- 
self that  maybe  sometime  the  Uiii- 
\eisity  of  .North  Carcjlina  will  re- 
gain its  old  spirit.  I  hjt  maybe 
academic  Ireedom  will  come  back 
again,  in  whole,  to  Chapel   Hill. 

Peiha[js  this  would  mean  that 
the  laculty  would  Iiuac  to  lie  to  it- 
sell.  \\  c  hope  not. 

*  *      * 

Somehow,  that  feeling  must 
come  back  to  the  I'nixersity.  .Vnd 
if  men  like  the'great  man  contitnie 
to  lea\e  heie,  chances  ol  such  a  le- 
tiirn   get  slimmer  and  slimmer. 

For  that  reason  the  great  man 
must  stav.  He  niusi  stay  and  light 
lor   that    Ireedom.' 

If  he  leaves,  and  if  others  like 
him  leave,  this  place  will  cease  its 
search  hn  truth.  It  will  concen- 
trate on  licking  tlie  boots  of  politi- 
cians, on  educational  television* 
that  is  not  leally  educational,  on 
research  into  the  habits  of  fish,  on 
being  a»  ]}lare  where  sundials  and 
pseudo-museums  are  erected. 

Chapel  Hill  will  loigci  aboiM  its 
cliuy  to  cause  people  to  think  in- 
dependently, to  cause  them  to  dis- 
agree intellectualLy,  to  read,  to 
ask.  t(j  cjuc'stion,  to  teach.  .-Ml  that 
will    be  gojie.    because   (he   people 

who  keep  that  alive  will   be  gone. 

*  *      * 

We  must  not  let  it  happen.  The 
laculty,  Carolina's  wcmcierful  fac- 
idtv.  nuist  keep  the  duty  alive. 

We  are  now  in  the  most  exten- 
sive crisis  of  this  I'niversity's  his- 
''toi7,  ;  lid  it  is  not  a  salaiy  crisis. 
It  is  a  riisis  of  minds,  of  actions, 
of  authority,  of  offers  fiom  other 
colleges  and   universities. 

And  this  gieat  man,  who  today 
is  wavering  between  staying  and 
leaving,  sits  at  the  peak  of  the 
crisis.  He  is  more  a  syml)ol  of  the 
crisis  than  he  ever  uspected.. 

I 

ffe  must  not  go.  The  faculty 
can  keep  him.  And  in  the  process, 
it  can  keep  a  nnich  dearer,  much 
more  important  thing,  than  this 
single  very  great  man. 

The  faculty  can  keep  freedom 
here.  This  week  may  make  tF.e  dif- 
ference. 


• 
CAROLEIDOSCOPE: 


John  Donne  s  Solemn  Reminder 


Frsnk  Crowther 

As  I  came  from  class  last  Fri- 
day, just  before  three  o'clock, 
the  South  Building  heU  began  its 
ominous  toll  in  rememberance  of 
Dr.  Einory,  who  had  passed  away 
suddenly  the  previous  Tuesday, 
and  who  was  being  buried  that 
afternoon. 

I  stopped  at  the  door  of  Old 
West  before  entering  and  watch- 
ed the  few  scattered  students  am- 
bling through  V-Court  in  the  driz- 
zling rain  and  crosjlng  in  front 
of  the  Old  Well— some  of  them 
stopping  to  looks  up  at  the 
solemn,  green-capped   tower. 

The  feeling  |hat  the  bells  were 
ringing  more  for  as  than  for  Dr. 
Emery  was  ver>'  apparent  and 
the  soft,  still  tones  were  momen- 
tarily very  significant. 

Mut  of  us  are  too  busy  and 
propossessod  to  cdlkcorn  oor- 
selvos  with  the  omniprosonco 
cf  doath;  wo  seom  to  b«  awart 
tWat  it  is  arownd  and  that  poo- 
plo  dio,  but  its  inevitability 
and  catholic  relevance  are 
often  brushed  aside  unattenta- 
ttvely. 

Conversely,  we  must  admit  that 
others  are  constantly  cognizant 
of  its  omnipotence  and  unavoid- 
able reality;  but,  death  is  hardly 
a  conversational  topic  or  the  sub- 
ject of  continued  contemplation. 

Why,  I  don't  know,  for  it  is 
the  impassable  boundary  of  our 
human  existence,  the  guillotine 
which  will  eventually  sever  all 
of  us  from  what  we  know  as  life. 

We  may  somcitimes  find  our- 
selves thinking  that,  admitedly. 
our  lives  wiU  come  to  an  end.  We 
may  regard  our  bodies  and  tliink, 
"I  know  that  this  body  will  lose 
its  spark  of  life  and  be  buried, 
but  .  .  .  what's  going  to  happen 
to  ME?  What  then?  Juot  what 
can  wo  know  about  death  and  its 
supremacy?"  We  seemed  to  be 
faced  with  a  reality  which  can  be 


circumvented  only  in  the  minds 
of  fools.  ,  ^ 

As  I  stood  on  the  steps,  a  stu- 
dent walked  by,  hesitated,  and 
then  asked  i^wlogetically  '■What,s 
the  bell  ringing  for?" 

"Probably   more   for  us   than 
for  Dr.  Emory."  I  replied,  rathi.r 


vaguely.  I  didn't  really  think 
about  what  I  had  said  until  set- 
tled in  my  room  a  few  minutes 
later 

John  Donne  wrote  of  this  feel- 
ing in  "A  Valediction  Forbidding 
Mourning"  around  which  "papa" 
Hemingway  based  his'  book,  "For 
AVhom  The  Bell  Tolls": 


Any  man's  deatii  diminishes 
me,  because  I  am  involved  in 
Mankind;  And  therefore  never 
send  to  know  for  whom  the 
bell  tolls;  it  tolls  Ifor  thee. 

The  bell  was  tolling  for  the 
loss  of  a  man  from  our  university 
communrty,  but  it  was  tolling 
even  more  for  us. 


Report  From  Behind  The  Golden  Curtain 


•  • 

THE  CHRISTIAN  SCIENCE  MONITOR: 


Youth  And  The  Thought-Twisters 


Thought  control.  The  ,mass 
mir.i.  P.sychological  warfare. 
Brainwashing. 

These  words  all  express  the 
deep  concern  of  our  day  with  the 
idea  that  a  regime  in  absolute 
cwntrol  of  mass  media  and  edu- 
cational facililie.-  can  mold  men  s 
minds  to  specification.  A  wel- 
come answer  to  that  concern  has 
l)een  erherging  in  many  quiet 
footnotes  to  the  clangor  of  world 
events. 


Nearly  everj'  day  there  Icak.s 
from  the  Soviest  Union  some  word 
of  student  skepticism  about  the 
infallibilitj-  of  ccvmmunism.  From 
Poland  comes  news  that  youthful 
intellectuals  have  demanded  the 
return  of  Polish  territory  seized 
by  the  U.S.S.R.  In  Hungary  youth.s 
trained  by  the  Communisti*  have 
been  in  the  vanguard  of  revel t 
against  totalitarianism. 

Authoritarians  of  the.  political 
far  rigfjt  are  finding  their  efforts 
at     indoctrinating     the     younger 


generation  equally  futile.  In 
Spain,  students  have  taken  part 
in  many  outbursts  against  Falang- 
ii;t  authority.  Barcelona  Univer- 
sity students  are  currently  lead- 
ing a  transportation  boycott  in 
protest  against  government  price 
decrees. 

And  in  some  nations  of  the 
Middle  E&A,  Asia,  Africa,  and 
South  America  where  despotic 
authority  is  wielded  youths  who 
have  in  most  cases  known  no 
other  form  of  government  have 
stepped  forward  to  deny  the  po 


litical     indoctrination    drammed 
into  them. 

All  these  cases  refute  the  argu- 
ment that  modern  thought  con- 
trol methods  have  seme  how  got- 
ten dominion  over  man. 

The  need  for  alertness  against 
their  devious  subtleties  and  blue*- 
geoning  certainties  retrain?.  Birt 
as  such  resistance  to  thought  con- 
trol continues  to  enierge,  the  leai 
that  truth  can  ever  be  blanketed 
by  any  form  of  big  lie  recedes 
even  further  into  absurdity 


OTHER  NEWSPAPERS  SAY: 


Ignored:  Housing 
Marrifd  Students 

The  Dunn  Dispatch 


Of  all  the  changes  in  higlicr  education  in  the 
last  20  years,  no  problem  has  received  less  attention 
in  North  Carolina  than  housing  for  married  students. 

Until  the  end  of  World  War  EL,  married  students 
consisted  mainly  of  graduate  students..  Even  this 
group  was  small:  Fellowi*ips  usually  were  all  a 
student  had  for  money.  The  graduate  who  dared  the 
responsibility  of  marriage  usually  allowed  his  wife 
to  work  while  he  earned  his  advanced  degree. 

This   exci^tion   becanie    mero   common   whwn 
Worfd  War  «t  yfnm  fiMckod  to  colttgts. 

Today,  maxrised  students  are  important  segments 
among  student  l^odies  in  Nortl)  Carc^ina  colleges. 
Governmental  as^'stance  is  waning,  scholarships, 
parental  aid  and  the  willingness  of  yovmg  men  and 
women  to  work  together  is  giving  youngstws  the 
means  for  education  and  marriage. 

At  State  College,  for  instance,  one-fourth  of 
the  student  body  is  married  students.  And  half  of 
these  are  making  the  grade  with  no  GI  Bill  assis- 
t^ce 

Elducational  leaders  expert  the  trend  to  con- 
tinue, and  grow  stronger.  This  is  particularly  truJ 
among  graduate  students  who  realize  a  need  for  ad- 
vanced studies  to  qualify  them  for  the  expanding 
technical  world. 

The  administration  {ft  the  Consolidated  Univer 
sity  of  North  Carolina  already  have  expressed  their 
concern  for  the  married  student  facilities  «1  both 
State  Colleife  and  Carolina.  They  have  warned  that 
the  wooden,  fire-trap  barracks  left  over  from  army 
camps  and  militaxy  canstnjction  areas  of  WcMrld  War 
n  are  falling  apsi^ 

At  Carolina,  the  «<h?Hi«i»tr«tioii»  ^^^*^  t 
warnins  by  the  State  Insuranct  Qvparfment  and 
announced  that  its  two-stoiif  barrack  •ptrtmanti 
wouid  be  closed  at  th«  m^  ol  thf  current  semai- 


State  College  has  similar,  but  less  formal  plans 
for  its  barracks. 

What  then?  W'here  will  married  students  live? 

Consolidated  University  officials  have  found  the 
•  answer  in  permanent  housing  projects.  T1»ey  pr** 
po«5  that  the  projects  be*  built  with  self-Iiqtiidating 
loans  from  federal  agencies. 

Wake  Forest  already  ha3  taken  advantage  of 
the  Federal  money.  Other  colleges  that  have  utilized 
the  money  successfully  are:  Purdue  University,  Uni- 
versity of  Kentucky,  Indiana  University,  Michigan 
State  and  the  University  of  Michigan. 

Twe  years  ago,  the  Genaral  Assembly  turned 
down  a  State  College  request  for  authority  to 
borrow  the  funds. 

Now,  State  College  wfll  be  joined  by  Carolina 
in  asking  the  General  Assembly  to  give  them  per- 
mission to  borrow  funds  to  build  married  student 
housing.  The  loans  would  be  paid  off  from  minimum 
rents  charged  students. 

Legislators  may  turn  down  the  request  again. 
If  they  do,  they  had  better  pass  a  law  barring  Dan 
Cupid  from  actiwty  among  college  youth. 

YOU  Said  it: 


Bad  Taste  From 
The  Cavalier  Daily 

Editor: 

May  I  quote  from  the  CavaMer  Daily  (University 
of  Virginia)  of  February  28:  "The  promotion  of 
WiUiam  B.  Aycock,  visiting  prctfesaw  of  law  here, 
to  the  post  of  OhanceUor  of  the  University  of  North 
Carolina  has  just  been  axaomec^-^  are  pleased 
about  the  appointment  b»it  are  incHaed  to  wonder 
whether  a  transfer  from  here  to  Chapel  Hill  can 
be  considered  a  pfonaotion." 

The  question  is,  do  we  let  this  piece  of  bad  edi- 
torial taste  go  unnoUced  because  ve  are  too  ma- 
ture to  trifle  witi  such  an  editor,  or  do  we  become 
righteously  indignant  and  answer  the  ragamuffin 
with  even  sharper  words? 

—      .    . ._..._  Whit  WUtfMd 


I 


f 

TUBSO«r, 

EffEcnvj 

fl/vei 
Two 


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faculty  and 
announced 
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proved  by  ti 
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Company. 

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assistant  pr 
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TUESDAY,  MARCH  \%  inT 


THI  DAILY  TAR  HCffL 


PAGE  THKM 


EFFECTIVE  SEPT.  1; 


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Five  Nqm^d  To  Faculty, 
Two  Resign,  Says  House 


Five  appointinei|t^.  lo  ttie  TJNC 
faculty  ind  two  resignations  were 
announced  yesterday  by  Chancel- 
lor Robert  House. 

To  become  etfectfve  Sept.  1. 
1957.  the  appointments  were  ap- 
proved by  the  Executive  Commit- 
tee of  the  Board  of  Trustees  in  a 
meeting  m  Raleigh  yesterday 
morning. 

Henry  C.  Thomas,  te  be  a  pro- 
fessor in  the  Dept.  of  Chemistry 
here  is  a  native  of  Cheraw,  South 
Carolina,  and  was  grduated  from 
UNC  in  1932.  He  attended  Yale, 
and  has  worked  for  the  DuPont 
Company. 

Lyle  V.  Jones  was  appointed  as 
assistant  professor  of  Psychology 
and  as  director  of  the  psychomet- 
ric lab.  He  is  a  native  of  the  State 
of  Washington  and  was  graduated 
from  the  University  of  that  state. 

To  be  an  assistant  professor  in 
the  English  Dept.  is  Osborne  B. 
Hardison,  Jr.,  a  native  of  Califor- 
nia. Hardison  received  *his  Ph.D. 
in  1956  from  the  University  of 
WisconsiB  and  his  M.A.  from  UNC 
in  1950. 

John  S.  PiKc,  to  be  an  assistant 
professor  in  the  School  of  Den- 
tistr>',  was  bom  in  Georgia.  He 
was  graduated  from  Emory  and 
from  the  University  of  Nebraska. 

Clifford  M.  Foust,  Jr.  is  a  na- 
tive of  New  York.  A  graduate  of 
Syracuse  University  and  of  the 
University  of  Chicago,  he  will  be 
an  assistant  professor  in  the  His- 
tory Dept. 

■  Resignations  from  the  faculty 
of  North  Carolina  were  by  G. 
Gorden  Ellis,  an  assistant  profes- 
sor in  the  School  oi  Education 
who  accepted   a  position  at  Iowa 


State  CoHege;  and  by  Rubin  Hill, 
a  professor  in  the  Dept.  of  So- 
ciology who  accepted  a  position 
with  the  University  of  Minnesota. 

Belle  Corey  Is 

YWPrexy 

Nomination 

TiK  nominating  committee  of 
the  YWCA  met  yesterday  after- 
noon and  presented  the  following 
persons  as  candidates  for  office: 

Belle  Corey,  president;  Ann 
Morgan,  vie  e-  president;  Mollie 
Adams  and  Barbara  Fowler,  sec- 
retary; Lloyd  Danghtery  and  Ann 
Holt,  treasurer;  Phyllis  Kraft  and 
Eve  McClatchey,  program  chair- 
man; and  Mary  Louise  Bizzell 
and  Lucinda  Holderness,  mem- 
bership chairman. 

During  the  open  nominations 
meeting  Monday.  Mary  Moore  Ma- 
son was  nominated  to  run  for  sec- 
retary and  Cindy  Seagraves  was 
nominated  to  seek  the  office  oi 
program  chairman. 

The  elections  will  be  held  Wed- 
nesday, March  13,  in  the  dormi- 
tory and  sorority  house  meetings, 
stated  Martha  Richardson,  presi- 
dent of  the  YWCA. 

Editor  Speaks  Here 

"British  and  American  News- 
papers" is  the  topic  of  a  talk  by 
Harry  M.  Evans,  chief  editorial 
writer  of  the  Manchester  Daily 
News.  Manchester,  England,  to  be 
given  at  an  address  of  a  Journ- 
alism Assembly  at  12  noon  Wed- 
nesday. March  13, 


IT'S  FOR  REAL! 


nRiBue* 


A  thousand  cunes  on  that  slim, 

Incendiary  she 
Who — calculating  shrewdly  my 

Comfaa8tibi]^-> 
Enflamed  me  wxfch  ha  eyes  and  let 

me  bum  so  menily  ' 
That  when  Uie  fire  was  out  she'd  made 

A  porfBct  adi  of  me. 

MOIALi  When  thsre't  fir»— then's 
amoke.  So  pull  awaadf  iogtirtwr, 
chum,  $ad  pat  a  Audm  to  the  end  of 
your  Cliuililiiaiil  tmg.  Ah-h-h-h— 
that  foAWltif.  TUa  coinlQrt  in 
that  r^pl,  KOral  lautf^  Bajoytiie 
smoothBpk 
Savor  4Im 
today— 
by  "' 


by  Chester  Field 


DAILY    CROSSWORD 


Acmoss 

1.  Capital 

(Bur.) 
S.  Chase  balls 

(coUoq.» 
t.  Satan 
10.  Works  hard 
12.  Musical 

drama 
IS.  Fictional 

lover 

14.  AbMtaU 

15.  Spoiled 

M.  Mtisie  Mie 

17.  Water  foi 
(Babyl.) 

18.  Purchase 
1«.  Moist 

a*. 1«IM* 

(N.Y.O 
2S.  Not  difficult 
34.  Slow 
SI.  Appear 
lt,D|miniali 
SI. Open  (poet.) 
32.  God  of 

pHiaeure 

S8.  PrsaeMfi 

34.  Measure 
(Chin.) 

S9.Prfcklr 
envdqps 
of  fruit 

36.  Slsevsless 
g^i  iitent' 

35.  Fruit  of 
th«  oak 

40.  Firm 

41.  «acH  ^ird 

■•^» 

41.  Wire  «^ 

a  baronet 
44.  Foundation 


t.  Say  afala 


2.  Across 

S.  Botnr 
4.  Ouido's 

hlfhsst  asis 
1^  Wander 
•.Mtek's  eomrt 
7.  Point 
t.  European 

kilas 
t.  Birds  of 

ll.Crt^.as 
•  chinuMjr 

isipiead 
n.  Small 

bundles 
•Sl.Oppaaitc  «t 

•wsather 


22.  Head 

cover- 

inr 
M.  Bitter 

vetch 

25.  Roman 
money 

26.  Kind 

sr 

beat 

27.  or 

heroic 
poetry 

19.  Imperial 
rule 

SO.  Poverty- 
stricken 

•2.  Kaster  pet 

S5.  Raised 


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DHSn 

-i  Ji'^'ill^ 

W3::inn 

yuur^a 

i^^iam^ 

maiifj   ' 

saaQjiti 

^ix       a: 

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r.3nrj 

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36.  SUte  of 
Insensibility 

37.  Malt 
beverages 

39.  Eggs 

40.  Berth  god 
(var.) 


Committee  Asks  Carry-Over  lo«»' station 


ty  BILL  KING 

The  committee  appointed  by  the 
Student  Legislature  to  investigate 
the  conditions  surrounding  the  Le- 
noir Hall  situation  met  yesterday 
in  an  attempt  to  ascertain  the  op- 
inions of  the  student  workers  in- 
volved and  to  decide  the  goal  to- 
ward which  the  committee  would 
worlc. 

A  good  part  of  the  meeting  con- 
cerned itself  with  George  W.  Pril- 


laman  and  some  of  his  statements 
at  a  meeting  of  the  student  work- ! 
ers  last  week.  j 

The  feeling,  according  to  a  stu- 
dent, seemed  to  be  that  Prillanuui, 
manager  of  Lenoir,  has  evaded  the 
major  issues  and  concerned  him- 
self with  the  relatively  unimport- 
ant details. 

As  an  illustration,  it  was  point- 
ed out  that  at  the  meeting  of  last 
Wednesday    five    students    were 


MISS  HAVA  KOHAV 

.  .  .  Israeli  student 


counted  by  Prill  aman  who  were 
unable  to  eat  lunch  at  Lenoir, 
while  several  other  people  count- 
ed as  many  as  10  to  15. 

Prillaman,  at  the  session  in  Le- 
noir, expressed  his  bewilderment 
that  the  workers  didn't  come  to 
him  with  their  problems.  A  state- 
ment was  made  at  the  meeting  yes- 
terday that  the  student  wwkers 
had  been  discouraged  from  going 
any  higher  than  their  immediate 
superior  in  the  past 

Al  Alphin,  chairman  of  the  com- 
mittee, said  that  the  goal  of  the 
committee  would  be  to  gain  an  ac- 
cumulative payment  system.  The 
student  under  this  system  would 
be  able  to  carry  over  the  balance 
of  his  food  allowance  that  he  does 
not  use.  This  carry-over  would  ac- 
cumulate over  a  period  of  u  month 
with  the  student  to  receive,  in 
cash,  the  balance  at  the  end  of 
the  month. 

The  amount  to  be  carried  over 
would  not  exceed  $.90  a  day. 

Alphin  said  the  committee  would 
make  this  recommendation  to  the 
legislature  in  its  report. 

The  students  at  the  meeting  ag- 
reed this  would  satis^  most  of  the 
workers  at  Lenoir. 

Opinions  wcfre  also  expressed 
that  the  workers  at  Lenoir  were 
afraid  of  losing  their  jobs  as  a  re- 
sult of  Prillaman's  statements 
which  could  be  taken  as  threats  or 
insinuations.  It  was  brought  out 
that  Prillaman  could  not  "black- 
list" the  student  workers  and  that 
only  the  student  aid  office  had  thfe 
authority  to  "blacklist"  a  student 
worker. 

The  investigating  committee  ag- 
reed the  Lenoir  Hall  situation  was 
a  bad  one  and  that  something 
should  be  done  about  it. 


Carrying  NBC 
Program  List 

WUNC^TV,  the  University's 
educational  television  station,  I 
Monday  ni^t  carried  the  first  of ! 
a  five-day  series  of  programs  tele- ; 
cast  nationalljr  by  NBC  and  tfae| 
Educational  Television  and  Radio  \ 
Center.  I 

The  programs,  to  be  carried  live  j 
by  all  the  educational  television  , 
stations  in  the  country,  will  be  i 
seen  each  week  night  at  6:30  for 
a  13-week  period  this  spring.         | 

It  marks  the  first  time  the  na-  j 
tion's  educational  television  sta-i 
tion  will  carry  live  netwM-k  pro-  j 
gramming  from  the  NBC  studios.  { 
The  series  is  a  non-commercial  | 
deal  with  all  commercial  stations 
excluded. 

The  programs  will  be  in  the 
areas  of  literature,  geography, 
mathematics,  government  and  mu- ; 
sic.  Well-known  authorities  in 
each  area  will  be  featured.  j 

A  similar  13-^'eek  program  is ' 
planned  for  this  fall.  j 

NBC   is    presenting    the    mathe-  j 


HUMANITIES  i 

(Conttnued  from  Page  1)  \ 
associated  with  the  University. 

Undertakings  which  are  expect- 
ed to  be  followed  by  the  Institute 
are:  | 

CI)  Scholarships  in  humanities; ; 
(2)  Improvement  of  teaching 
methods;  (3)  Visiting  Professor- 1 
ships;  (4)  Individual  and  periodi- ' 
cal  publications;  (5)  Funds  for  { 
research  expense,  travel,  micro-  j 
film  and  clerical  assistance;  (6) 
Special  Library  acquisitions;  (7)  I 
Support  of  departmental  interest 
in  high  school  teaching.  j 


matics.  government  and  music 
'series.  The  ETRC  is  underwriting 
the  literature  and  government 
programs  and  supplying  lines  to 
connect  the  network  cables  with 
educational  television  .stations. 

The  literature  program,  carried 
for  Ihe  first  time  Monday  night, 
will  dramatize  certain  aspects  of 
American  life  and  culture  as 
seen  by  contemporary  writers. 
The  pi"ogram  will  feature  Dr.  Al- 
bert D.  Van  Nostrand.  author  and 
associate  professor  of  English  at 
Brown  University. 

Host  for  the  geography  series 
will  be  .Albert  E.  Burke,  executive 
director  of  the  American  Insti- 
tute of  Resource  Economics.  The 
programs  will  deal  with  the  eco- 
nomic realities  of  geography  and 
their  influence  on  world  action. 

James  Newman,  editor  of  "The 
World  of  Mathematics,"  will  serve 
as  chief  consultant  on  this  series 
designed  to  make  mathematics  in- 
teresting and  understandable  to 
the  general  public. 

Host  for  the  government  series 
will  be  E.  E.  Schattichneider, 
chairman  of  the  department  ot 
government  at  Wesleyan  Univer- 
sity and  president  of  the  Ameri- 
can PoHtical  Science  Assn. 

Dr.  Schattschneider  will  explcwe 
the  evolution,  functions  and  op- 
eration of  the  institutions  of 
.'\merican  government  with  the 
cbjective  of  helping  the  citiz^ 
understand  how  his  government 
really  works. 

The  music  series  will  deal  with 


"Highlights  of  Opera  History." 
Paul  Henry  Lang.  Columbia  Uni- 
versity musicology  professor  and 
New  York  music  critic,  will  host 
this  series,  to  relate  the  history 
of  culture  from  1600  to  1950. 

Producers  for  the  five  programs 
are  well-known  in  the  field  of 
broadcasting.  David  Lowe,  pro- 
ducer and  director — both  in  tele- 
vision and  the  theater,  is  overall 
producer  of  the  project  and  will 
produce  the  mathematics  program. 

William  Parish,  an  NBC  super- 
visor of  public  service  programs, 
will  produce  the  comtemporary 
American  literature*  programs. 

Brice  Howard,  NBC  senior  unit 
manager  has  been  assigned  to  pro- 
duce the  government  series. 

Charles  Polachek,  who  has  been 
associate  producer  of  the  NBC 
Opera  Co.,  will  produce  the  music 
series  and  Dorothy  Culbertson, 
former  supervisor  of  religious  ra- 
dio programming  and  education 
features  for  NBC.  will  produce 
the  geography  programs. 


Religious  Books  By 

C.  S.  LEWIS 
The  Intimate  Bookshop 

205  East  Franklin  Street 


Council  Convicts  Student  For  Theft 


A  student  was  convicted  by  the 
Men's  Honor  Council  on  charges 
of  theft  and  sentenced  to  indef- 
inite suspension,  according  to  a 
report  released  by  the  Council 
yesterday. 

The  student  was  found  guilty 
of  selling  a  book  belonging  to  an- 
other student  at  a  local  bookstore. 

The  report  releated  by  the  Hon- 
or .Council  is  as  follows: 

A  local  bookstore  recently  re- 
ported that  several  stolen  books 
had  been  sold  to  them,  and  that 
one  of  ttie  owners  had  claimed  his 
and  asked  that  the  Men's  Honor 
Council  be  notified  of  the  theft. 

The    student    stated    that    his 


Phi  To  Debate  AAeasure 

A  bill  resolving  that  war  be  rec- 
ognized as  an  end  in  itself  will 
be  debated  tonight  by  the  Assem- 
bly of  the  Philanthropic  Literary 
Society. 

The  bill,  which  points  out  the 
role  of  war  as  a  stimulus  to  na- ' 

tional  effort  and  unity,  calls  war  I     The  Intimate  Bookshop 
not  a  destructive  force  but  an  ef- 1 

fective    and    necessary    means    of '  205  East  Franklin  Street 

supplanting     antiquated     national 
and    international    institutions. 


YOU  CAN  BELIEVE 

By  U.   N.   C.'s  Frank    Hanft 
Lenten   Reading   at  $1.69 


from  Lenoir  Hall  on  Feb.  8.  Next 
day  as  he  started  to  buy  another 
one  he  mentioned  the  theft  to 
the  saleslady.  Remembering  that 
she  had  the  day  before  bought 
one  produced  the  book  in  which 
hia  name  fcad  been  entered. 

She  stated  that  she  lia4  requir- 
ed of  the  student  selling'-IMs  and 


another  book  his-H)  cac(J_and  his  tor  hint  He  testified  that  this  was 


signature  in  each  one,  which  is 
a  general  procedure  of  the  store. 
It  was  evident  then  that  the  sig- 
nature ranst  have  corresponded 
with  that  of  the  ID  card  and  that 
the  possessor  of  this  ID  card  at 
the  time  was  guilty  of  the  offense. 
The  student  whose  name  corres- 


moned  before  the  Men's  Honor 
Council  and  presented  with  the 
charge  of  theft.  To  this  charge 
he  pled  "not  guilty."  When  ques- 
tioned as  to  his  possession  of  his 
ID  card  during  the  month  of  Jan- 
uary and  February  he  stated  that 
he  had  loaned  it  to  his  roommate 
once  to  acquire   a  postal  package 


WORLD  RELIGIOM  GROUP 


The  World  Religion  Study  Group 
will  meet  in  Lenoir  Hall  at  6  p.m. 
tonight  for  dinner  and  a  continu' 
ation  of  its  study  of  Asian  reli- 
gions. Ifr.  W.  L  Stace  will  lead  the 
grbup  in  a  discussion  of  Buddhism. 
All  interested  persons  have  been 
invited  to  attend. 

WOMEN'S   BI-PARTISAN    BOARD 

The  Bi-Partisan  Selections  Board 
will  hold  interviews  Thursday  from 
4-5  p.m.  and  from  6:30-7:30  p.m. 
for  the  purpose  of  screening  can- 
didates for  Women's  Honor  Coun- 
cil seats.  The  board  will  also  meet 
the  following  day,  Friday,  from 
1:30-3:00  p.m. 

Three  seats  are  open  to  juniors. 
Girls  interested  in  nmning  for 
these  seats  have  been  asked  to 
•sign  a  list  posted  on  the  door  of 
the  Council  Room  on  the  second 
floor  of  Graham  Memorial.  The 
list  will  be  renvoved  today  at  5:30 
p.m.  Appointments  for  interviews 
will  be  closed  thereafter. 
UNC  GRAD.  CLUB 

Dr.  Arnold  Nash  of  the  UNC  Re- 
ligion Dept.  will  present  a  short 


"Personnel"  text  had  been  stolen  ponded  to  the  signature  was  sum-  ,  the    facts,    his    plea    changed    to 

"guilty." 

The  council  members  felt  that 
his  offense  constitutes  one  of  the 
most  serious  violations  of  the  hon- 
or code  and  consequently  issued 
a  sentence  of  indefiniie  suspen- 
sion. 

Ducats 

(Cmitinued  froni  page  1 ) 
for  the  trip,  stated  Student  Body 
President  Bob  Young.  If  the 
amount  of  students  signed  for  the 
Friday  night  game  does  not  justify 
a  .special  train,  then  the  train  trip 
can  be  made  for  the  Saturday 
game  stated  Young. 

The  train  trip  will  be  made  eith- 
er from  Durham  or  Raleigh  and 
could  leave  Friday  morning  for 
Philadelphia  and  be  able  to  return 
Sunday  night,  said  Benny  Thom- 
a.f,  social  chairman  of  the  IDC. 

The  cost  for  the  round-trip,  tra 
vcl  only,  will  be  appi-oximately 
$20,  stated  Thomas. 

Pete  Evans,  president  of  the 
Cardboard,  said  that  any  students 
who  would  like  to  paint  posters  j 
for  the  caravan  will  be  welcome  to 
the  Cardboard  office  over  Emer- 
son Stadium.  Poster  material  will 
not  be  furnished,  but  paint  and 
brushes  will  be  offered,  said  Ev- 
I  ans.  •* 


flaring^  the  last  of  January  and 
that  his  roommate  had  kept  it  for 
several  weeks,  but  could  not  re- 
member the  exact  date  of  its  re- 
ttu-n.  Further  interrogation  by  the 
council  established  this  date  which 
indicated  that  only  he  could  have 
possessed  it  on  Feb.  8.  Faced  with 


CLASSIFIEDS 


5  ROOM  BRICK  HOUSE,  3  BED 
rooms,  all  modern  conveniences. 
3  miles  on  Old  86  Hyway.  Stove 
and  Frigedaire  furnished.  Call 
Fred  Katzin  after  6:00,  8-9025. 


TWO  BEDROOM  HOUSE  FURN- 
ished  or  unfumi^ed,  near  camp- 
us. Call  9458  during  day  or  2926 
after  5:30  p.m.  and  weekend. 


FIVE  ROOM  BRICK  HOUSE  IN 
center  of  town — has  hobby  work- 
shop. Call  9tSS  during  day  or 
2926  after  5:30  and  during 
weekend. 


LOST:  ONE  ROLEX  OYSTER 
Speedklng  wristwatch,  Tuesday 
ni^t  in  Physics  Lab  (I  think). 
Please  .contact  ;Joast  Polak,.  208 
Lewis. 


talk  before  the  UNC  GradL  Club 
Friday  at  8  p.m.  in  the  Roland  Par- 
ker Lounge  of  Graham  Memorial. 
Dancing  and  refre^-hments  will 
follow  the  preliminary  business 
of  the  meeting,  which  is  open  to  all 
grad  students,  UNC  employees, 
members  of  the  Administration, 
registered  nurses  and  undergrads 
over  21. 

UNC-DUKE  40INT  PHILOSOPHY 
COLLOQUIUM 

The  UNC-Duke  Joint  Philosophy 
Colloquium  will  meet  tomorrow  at 
8  p.m.  in  room  200  of  Carroll  Hall. 
Prof.  William  H.  Poteat  will  pre- 
sent a  paper  entitled  "The  Incar- 
nate Word  and  the  Language  of 
Culture." 

SENIOR   LIFE-SAVING 

Everyone  interested  in  senior 
life-saving  clashes  has  been  urged 
to  attend  a  meeting  in  room  304, 
Woollen  Gym  tomorrow  at  4  p.m., 
it  was  announced  yesterday  by 
I  Dick  Jamerson  of  the  Athletic 
Dept. 

UNIVERSITY  CLUB 

The  University  Club  will  meet 
at  7  p.m.  tonight  in  the  Library 
Room  located  on  the  second  floor 
of  the  YMCA  building.  All  mem 
bers  have  been  urged  to  attend. 
ELISHA  MITCHELL  SCIENTIFIC 

SOCIETY 

The    Elisha    Mitchell    Scientific 
!  Society  will  meet  in  the  Main  Aud- 
[itorium  of  Phillips  Hall  at  7:30  to 
1  night  to  present  plans  concerning 
\  the  commemoration  of  the  centen- 
nial  of  the   death   of  Elisha   Mit- 
chell.   Full    attendance    has    been 
urged  by  W.  L.  Engels,  Pres. 
GOVERNMENT  LEADERSHIP 
TRAINING  COMMITTEE 

The  Student  Government  Lead- 
ership Training  Committee  will 
meet  at  5  p.m.  tomorrow  in  Roland 
Parker  Lounge  No.  1.  The  purpose 
of  the  meeting  will  be  to  discuss 
further  plans  for  a  Retreat  to  be 
held  in  the  spring.  All  interested 
persons  and  members  have  been 
urged  to  attend. 


PLACEMENT  SERVICE 

The     Placement     Service     will 
sponsor  a  career  program  in  Ger- 
rard  Hall  at  7:30  p.m.  tonight. 
BLARNEY'S  BALL 

The  Independent  Women  and 
four  men's  dorms  —  Alexander, 
Grimes,  B.V.P.  and  Old  East— will 
sponsor  a  dance  and  party  in  the 
basement  of  Cobb  Dormitory  Fri- 
day from  8  to  12  p.m.  The  Hill- 
side Joymakers  from  Durham  will 
entertain.  I 

The  theme  will  be  in  Ime  with . 
St.  Patrick's  Day  and  wiM  he  call- 
ed Blarney'9  Ball.  Dating  wiU  not 
be    prohibited,    but    strongly    dis 
couraged  so  that  more  men   and  ! 
women  will  attend. 
WESLEY  CHOIR  { 

The  Wesley  Choir  will  hold  a  j 
rehearsal  tomorrow  at  6:45  p:m.  in  ^ 
the  Sanctuary  of  the  University  j 
Methodist  Church.  i 

BRIDGE  LESSONS  j 

Bridge  lessons  will  be  given  to- 1 
morrow  from  4-6  p.m.  in  the  Ren 
dezvons  Room  of  Graham  M««or-  j 
ial,  and  on  Thursday  at  7:30  p.m.  i 
in  the  Victory  Village  Day  Carei 
Center.  1 

JOINT  UNC-DUKE  PHYSICS  | 

COLLOQUIUM  i 

The  joint  Duke-UNC  Physics  C  )1- 
loquium  will  meet  tomorrow  at  8 
p.m.  in  Room  206  of  Phillips  Hall. 
Dr.  Warren  Henry  of  the  Naval 
Research  Laboratory  will  present  a 
talk  on  "Magnetic  Interactions  in 
Solids."  \     I 

YMCA  ELECTIONS 

YMCA  elections  will  be  held  in 
Gerrard  HaU  from  7  to  8:30  p.m. 
Thursday. 
PSYCHOLOGY  CLUB 

There  will  be  a  meeting  of  the 
Psychology  Club  tonight  at  7:30 
in  room  210  New  West.  A  movie, 
"This  Is  Robert,"  will  be  shown. 
Following  the  movie  there  will  be 
a   discussion   led   by   members    of 


CRAZY,    MAN,   CRAZY! 

—  WHILE  THEY  LAST  

BUY 

$69.00  WORTH  OF  RECORDS 

AND  GET  A 

3-SPEED    PHONOGRAPH 


FREE 


the  Psychology  Dept.  All  under- 
graduate psychology  majors  and 
other  students  interested  in  psy- 
chology have  been  invited  to  at- 
tend the  meeting. 


ISRAELIS 

(Continued  from  page  1) 
the  touring  Israeli  students,  has 
been  reported  to  be  one  of  the 
most  brilliant  graduates  of  the  Is- 
rael Academy  of  Music.  After  he 
finished  his  studies  in  Israel,  he 
came  to  the  United  States  to  con- 
tinue his  work.  Recently,  he  won 
the  Lado  Artist  Award  and  play- 
ed at  the  Waldorf  Astoria  and  in 
Brooklyn  Museum. 

Miss    Hava    Kohav.    an    Israeli 
dancer,  is  a  graduate  of  the  Mu- 
sic Teachers  College  in  Tel  Avilv. 
After    her    graduation    there    she 
joined   the   Israel    Defense   Army 
where   she    taug"ht   Hebrew    songs 
and  original  Israel  dances  to  im- 
migrant   soldiei^.     She    has    pre- 
pared several  folk  festivals,  especi- 
ally in  communities  in  the  south 
of    Israel.    Miss    Kohav    came    to 
thi?  country  three  years  ago  and 
j  is   now   studying   at  the  Juilliard 
School    of    Music.    She    has    per- 
formed with  a  special  professional 
'  dance  troup  in  Carnegie  Hall. 
i      After  serWng  in  the  Israel  army. 
I  dramatist  Eliezer  Plotnik  was  ad- 
;  mitted  to  the  Habimah.  a  famous 
Israel   theatrical   company.   Three 
years    ago    Plotnik    came    to    this 
country  to  further  his  musical  and 
his  theatrical  studies.  He  now  has 
a     scholarship     at     the     Mannes 
School   of  Music   and   Drama.    He 
has   participated   in   a    number   of 
performances     in     th*     country, 
specifically,  in  a  tour  of  campus- 
es in  the  Middle  West. 


Sociologv 


Spin  a  platter . . .  have  some  chatter . . . 
wad^ip  that  real  great  taste  of  Coke- 
Sure,  you  can  have  a  party  witliout 
Coca-Cola— but  who  wants  to! 


6(£'^ 


BoHled  under  owthority  of  The  Coca-Colo  Company  by 


DURHAM  CbCAXOLA  BOTTLING  CO. 


'^^nf^. 


^AtiE  FOUR 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


TUESDAY,  MARCH  12,  IW; 


In  New  York's  Maciison  Square  Garden 

Unbeaten  Tar  Heels  Meet  Yale  In  NCAA  Playofls  Tonight 


ACC  And  Ivy  League 
Champs  Play  At  9:45 


BOB   CUNNINGHAM 


LEN    ROSENBLUTH 


JOE    QUIGG 


f^ETE   BRENNAN 


TOMMY  KEARNS 


UNC  CAGERS  SUCCEED  SAN  FRANCISCO 


Tar  Heels  Finish  First  In  AP  Poll 


By    BEN    OLAN 

The  Associated   Press 

The  North  Carolina  Tar  Heels, 
unbeaten  in  27  games,  today  broke 
the  two-year  hold  of  thl  San  Fran- , 
Cisco    Dons    by    finishing    in    first 
place  by  an  overwhelming  margin 


Senicrs 

Advance  infoi'mation 

On  Career  Opportunities 

At  Procter  &  Gamble 


Advance  information  on  Marketing 
Management  opportunities  in  the 
Procter  &  Gamble  Advertising  De 
partment  is  now  available.  Writs 
H.H.  Wilson,  Jr.,  Supervisor  of 
Personnel,  Advertising  Depart- 
ment, Procter  &  Cambie,  Cincin- 
nati, Ohio.  Campus  interviews  in 
Placement   Service   March   28. 


in^the  final  Associated  Press  col- 
lege basketball  poll  of  the  1956-57 
campaign. 

The  Tar  Heels.,  winners  of  the 
.Atlantic  Coast  Conference  tourna- 
ment last  week,  were  given  the 
No.  1  distinction  by  55  of  the  76 
sports  writers  and  broadcasters 
who  participated  in  the  final  vote. 

On  the  usual  basis  of  10  points 


STOP 

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Bring  This  Ad  and  Get  1  Cent  Off  Per  Gal.  Gas, 

5  Cents  Per  Qt.  Oil 

Credit  Cards  Honored  Again 

At  The  Students'  Friend 

WHIPPLE'S  ESSO  SERVICE 


To  The  Young  Man 
Who  Loves  The  Sea 


Oj^pMivnity  ■waits  Qvalifitd  Morint  Draftsai«ii  in  •  yMr-' 
rtnad  cfim«t«  •!  CMifort  and  toty  living  en  tli«  Gulf  Coast. 

The  Incalu Shipbuilding  Corporation,  operating  the  largest  ship- 
yard on  the  Gulf  Coast,  offers  a  promising  future  to  qualified  draft*- 
men  who  join  this  progiessive  organization  —  long  term  contract^ 
pleasant  working  conditions,  liberal  heneiits,  valuable  traininf. 

Addrnt  Inqidrits  to  Chief  Engineer,  Room'lOO 

TNI  INGALLS  SHiPiuiLDiNa  corporation 

Paacngoula,  Miaaiiaippi 


I  for  first  place,  9  for  second  place,  j 
8  for  third  etc..  North  Carolina 
j  received  725  points.  Kansas  was 
second  with  602  points  followed  by 
}  Kentucky  with  47»,  Southern 
I  Methcdist  437  and  Seattle  302. 
i  San  Francisco  was  the  top  club 
i  in  1955  and  1956.  Since  the  poll's 
i  inception  in  1949,  Kentucky 
\  wound  up  in  first  place  four  times 
I  and  Bradley  and  Indiana  once 
!  each. 

North  Carolina  was  in  13th 
place  in  the  final  balloting  last 
season.  This  year,  the  Tar  Heels 
'  were  sixth  in  the  first  poll  on 
Dec.  10.  moved  up  to  third  the 
following  week  and  remained  in 
the  runner-up  spot  behind  Kansas 


from    Dec.    25    to   jlin.    21.    When  ] 
the  Jayhawks  lest  their  first  game  j 
to     Iowa     State.     North     Carolina 
moved  into  the  No.  1  position  and . 
held  it  for  the  last  eight  weeks,     j 
In  the  final  voting.  West  Virgin- 
ia  and   St.   Lsuis   moved   into  the  ] 
top    10.    replacing  Michigan   State 
and  UCLA.  ' 

The  top  10  teams  with  f irst  j 
place  votes  and  won-lost  records 
through  Saturday,  March  9  in 
in  parentheses  points  on  a  10-9-8 
etc.  basis: 

1.  North  Carolina  55   (27-0)       725 

!  2.  Kansas  9  (21-2)  602 

j  3.  Kentucky    2    (22-4)  479 

'  4.  Sou.  Methodist   1   (21-3)         437 

5.  Seattle   (22-2)  302 


6.  Louisville    1    (21-5) 

7.  West  Virginia  1  (25-4) 

8.  Vanderbilt    (17-5) 

9.  Oklahoma  City  1  (17-8) 

10.  St.  Louis  1   (19-7) 

SECOND   10 

11.  Michigan  State   (14-8) 

12.  Memphis  State  4  (21-5) 

13.  California    (20-4) 

14.  UCLA    (2*2-4) 

15.  Mississippi    State    (17-8) 

16.  Idaho  State  (24-2) 

17.  Notre  Dame    (18-7) 

18.  Wake  Forest  (19-9) 

19.  Bradley    (19-7) 

20.  tie  Canisius  (20-5) 
Oklahoma  A&M   (17-9) 

St.  Peter's  NJ  received  one 
place  vote. 


236 
184 

164 
126 
117 

98 
97 
92 
85 
67 
62 
45 
44 
35 
27 
27 
first 


In  The  Dressing  Room 
A  Meaningful  Silence 


By   Larry   Cheek  | 

North  Carolina's  Tar  Heels,  who  j 
meet  Yale  tonight  in  the  first 
round  of  the  NCAA  playoffs,  won  J 
the  Atlantic  Coast  Conference  j 
championship  last  Friday  night  j 
when  they  edged  Wake  Forest,  61  | 
59  in  the  semii-fnals.        ^  j 

Wake  Forest  a  tiiree  time  loser  j 
to  the  Tar  Heels,  wanted  this  one  j 
very  badly,  and  when  Jim  (lilloy  | 
gave  them  a  one  point  lead  with  ; 
55  seconds  to  go,  it  looked  like  | 
they  had  it.  But  they  forgot  about  i 
Lennie  Rosenbluth,  the  greatest  I 
basketball  player  in  Carolina  his- 1 
tory.  j 

With  46  seconds  showing  on  the  [ 
clock,  Lennie  drove  for  the  basket  ' 
and  dropped  a  game  winning  houk 
shot.  Referee  Jim  MilL*  called  Dea- 
con Wendell  Carr  for  blocking  Uo- 
senbluth,  and  the  Tar  Heel  cap- 
tain converted  the  free  toss. 

There  were  many  in  Reynolds 
Coliseum  who  thought  Rosenbluth 
should  have  been  called  for  charg- 
ing. But  referee  Mills  stuck  by  his 
guns,  and  all  of  the  other  officials 
working  the  tournament  backed 
liim  up. 

The  scene  in  the  Wake  Forest 
dressing  room  following  the  game 
was  one  of  tragedy;  stark  mute 
tragedy.  The  reporters  gathered  a- 
round  for  the  usual  post  game 
comments,  but  they  were  greeted 
with  stricken  silence. 

The  usually  voluble   Bones   Mc- 
Kinney  had  nothing  to  say.  Murray  ' 
Greason  had  nothing  to  say.  Wake 
Forest's    four-co-captains    had    no- 
thing to  say. 

The  silence  was  graphically  ex- 
pressive. One  look  at  the  tear 
streaked  face.^  told  the  whole  story. 
T?ie  Wake  Forest  players  had  tri?d 
with  all  their  hearts  and  souls  to 


beat  Carolina,  and  they  had  ci'me 
within  a  whisker  of  doing  just 
that.  But  that  didn't  change  the 
final  score. 

After  nearly  10  minutes.  Bones 
came  to  life.  I've  nothing  to  say, 
boys,  but  I'll  answer  your  ques- 
tions." 

The  subdued  reporters  quietly 
began  to  quiz  the  Wake  asa-istant 
coach.  The  usual  questions,  the 
whispered  answers.  Then  Bones, 
as  if  talking  to  himself,  summed 
up  the  game  with  one  terse  com- 
ment. "You  can't  decision  the 
champion.  You  have  to  knock  him 
out." 

For  Wake  Forest,  the  sea.-wn  was 
over.  For  Bones  and  his  four  sen- 
iors, there  was  no  fifth  chance  at 
Coach  Frank  McGuire's  unbeaten 
Tar  Heels. 


McGuire  To  Tutor  East     ' 
In  Kansas  City  March  251 

KANSAS  CITY— (AP)— Coach  I 
Frank  McGuire.  whose  North  \ 
Carolina  Tar  Heels  finished  the  I 
regular  season  as  the  nation's  No.  I 
1  college  basketball  team,  will] 
tutor  the  East  All-Star  squad  in 
sixth  annual  Ararat  Shrine  East- 
West  game  here  March  25. 


tAcGuire  Says 
Deacs  Should 
Play  In  NIT         \ 

NEW  YORK— (AP)— Frank  Mc-: 
Guire,  coach  of  the  undefeated  ' 
University  of  North  Carolina  bas- ' 
ketball  team,  put  in  a  pitch  today  { 
for  a  change  in  the  rules  that 
would  permit  a  second  Atlantic 
Coast  Conference  team  to  play  in 
a  postseason  tournament.  | 

Speaking  at  the  luncheon  of  the; 
Metropolitan  Basketball  Writers 
Assn..  prior  to  the  start  of  the 
NCAA  tournament.  McGuire  said 
it  was  "a  shame"  that  Wake  For- 
est couldn't  represent  the  ACC  in 
the  National  Invitation  tourna- 
ment  which  starts  here  Saturday. 

'The  intensity  of  the  competi- 
tion in  our  conference  is  terrific," , 
McGuire  said.  "We  defeated  Wake 
Forest  fotir  time.s — each  time  on 
the  bounce  of  the  ball.  I 


By  LARRY  CHEEK 

North  Carolina's  Atlantic  Coast 
Conference  champion  Tar  Heels, 
working  on  a  win  streak  they  hope 
will  carry  them  to  the  national 
collegiate  crown,  swing  into 
NCAA  playoff  action  tonight  when 
they  ga  against  Yale's  Ivy  League 
titleholders  in  New  York's  Madi- 
son Square  Garden. 

The  two  teams  will  play  the 
last  game  in  a  triple-header  that 
finds  Syracuse  meeting  Connecti- 
cut in  the  opener  and  West  "Vir- 
ginia tangling  with  Canisius  in 
the  second  attraction. 

The  triple  header  is  set  to  start 
at  6  p.m.,  and  t^e  Carolina-Yale 
game  should  get  under  way  at 
about  9:45  p.m.,  although  it  may 
be  closer  to  10. 

If  the  Tar  .Heels  win  tonight, 
they  will  move  on  to  Philadelphia 
for  the  Eastern  regionals  Friday 
and  Saturday.  At  Philadelphia, 
they  will  meet  the  winner  of  the  | 
West  Virginia-Canisius  game.  If 
successful  at  Philadelphia,  they 
go  into  the  national  finals  at 
Kansas  City,  Mo.,  R^rch  22  and 
23. 

The  Tar  Heels  left  Raleigh-Dur- 
ham Airport  Sunday  for  the  big 
city,  and  were  scheduled  to  run 
through  a  brief  workout  yester- 
day at  the  69th  Regiment  Armory 
in  New  York. 

Coach  Frank  McGuire's  unbeat- 
en waiTiors,  hands  down  winners 
^n  all  the  major  polls  after  post- 
ing a  27-0  regular  season  record, 
are  top  heavy  favorites  to  sweep 
by  the  Yale  quint  and  move  into 
the  regional  finals. 

The  Bulldogs,  a  comparative 
weak  sister  among  major  college 
basketball  teams,  posted  an  11-2 
record  in  winning  the  Ivy  League 
championship.  Among  their  losses 
was  a  one  sided  beating  handed 
them  by  Dartmouth,  a  team  Cajro- 
lina  had  little  or  no  trouble  con- 1 
quering,  89-61.  earlier  in  the  sea 
son. 


the  game  with  a  decided  height 
advantage  that  should  give  them 
almost  complete  control  of  the 
backboards. 

The    Bulldog's    tallest    men    are 
Lanny    Baird    and    Sterling    Har- 
well, each  6-5.  and  Lee,  6-4.  In  op- 
position    to     these     comparative  ! 
midgets.      Coach      McGuire      will  I 
throw   his  towering  front   line   of  j 
Joe  Quigg,  6-9,  Pete  Brennan,  6-7,  i 
and  Lennie  Rcsenbluth,  6-5. 


QUIGG  IS  NAMED 
Joe  Quigg  has  been  nani*4  t* 
the  NYU  All-Opponent  tearti  by 
the  Violet  players. 


Religious  Books  By 


J.  B.  PHILLIPS 


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BREAKFAST 

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•    ADVERTISERS    • 


Despite  his  team's  majestic 
record  and  lofty  ranking,  Mc- 
Guire refused  to  go  out  on  a  limb 
with  a  prediction.  "I  don't  know 
how  we'll  do  against  Yale,"  he 
said.  "I  figure  they  could  be 
tough." 

Yale  will  be  led  by  their  high 
scoring  junior  phenomenon  John- 
ny Lee,  a  Brooklyn  youth  who 
once  was  ticketed  for  the  UNC 
campus  at  Chapel  Hill.  Lee  estab- 
lished a  new  Ivy  League  scoring 
record  last  year,  and  has  been 
4^abbed  by  many  as  Yale's  great- 
est in  history. 

The  Tar  Heels,  one  of  'the  na- 
tion's  tallest  teams,  will  go  irflo 


JENNIFER  JONES 
JOHN  GIELGUD 

tOLTwarae  Virginia  McKekna 

.THE  BARRETTS 


OF 


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■JLi|iiJimiM.ii|iKBriiji|:|yj|g| 

NOW  PLAYING 


Carolina 


''GAY  AND  SAUCY  GALLIC  rRANKNESS 
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-DEFINITELY  NOT  FOR  JUNIOR 


G 


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National  Carbon  Company,  America's  foremost  manu- 
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Positions  are  available  at  National  Carbon  Company's 
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Bright  clear  colors  (lively  as  an  Irish  Jig)  proclaim  the 
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« 

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HUMANITIES 

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$••    |Mff«    2. 


VOL.  LVII  NO.   112 


Complete  i/P)  Wtre  SerrHce 


CHAPEL  HiLL.  NORTH  CAROLINA,  WEDNESDAY,  MARCH   13,   1957 


Offices    in   Graham    Memorial 


POUR   PAGES  THIS   ISSUE 


As  Platforms  For  Tar  Heel  Editorship, 

Sloan  Promises  Unbiased  Coverage; 

Crowt her  Sees  Large  Morale  Shortage 

Editorials  to  Be 
Sound,  Pledges 
Nominee  Sloan 


Mosf  ImportantT 
Issue  Shunned 
Says  Crowther 

The  lack  ol  morale  among  teach- 
ers and  students  at  UNC  has  as- 
sumed the  proportions  of  acrisis, 
according  to  Frank  Crowther,  in- 
dependent candidate  for  editor  of 
the  Dai)y  Tar  Heel. 

This  issue  has  been  overlooked 
by  both  his  opponents,  he  said  in 
a  statement  to  the  Daily  Tar  Heel 
yesterday. 

He  said  it  is  a  problem  that 
"all  of  us  .  .  .  must  rise  to  meet." 
He  added  that  he  thought  he  could 
contribute  more  in  this  direction 
as  edit:xr  of  the  publication. 

•'One  of  the  most  important  is- 
sues in  this  coming  election  Iws 
been  neglected  or  overlooked  by 
my  two  opponents,"  Crowther  told 
the  Tar  Heel.  "We  should  natur- 
ally be  concerned  with  the  paper 
itself,  and  put  farth  our  respec- 
tive platforms  relating  to  the 
change.-  and  improvements  which 
we  plan  for  the  Tar  Heel.  But 
there  is  another  problem  on  the 
campus  at  this  time  which  also 
demands  immediate  attention. 
More  than  a  prob'em,  it  is  a  crisis. 

"Chapel  Hill  has  taken  on  the 
aspect  of  Mortuary  Hill.  The  Ujl- 
(see  SLOAN  SAYS  page  3) 


CLARKE   JONES 

neio  managing  editor 


Sfoan  Resigns  Position; 
Jones  Named  Successor 

Clarke  Jones,  junior  from  Char-   great  deal  of  sleep  in  doing  it. 
lotte,   yesterday   was   named    man-       "He  will  make  a  fine  managing 
aging    editor    of    The    Daily    Tar  editor." 


IWA,  Dorn\$ 
Sponsor  Ball 
Friday  NigKt 

"Blarney  s  Ball,"  a  party  spon- 
sored by  the  independent  women 
and  four  men's  dorm..-,  will  be 
held  in  Cobb  basement  F'riday 
ni>;ht,  from  8  p.m.  until  12  mid- 
night, according  to  Benny  Thomas, 
IDC  social  chaii-man 


As  managing  editor,  Jones  will 
supervise  and  be  responsible  for 
the  mechanical  production  of  the 
newspaper.  His  office,  along  with 
other  'Daily  Tar  Heel  editorial  of- 
fices, is  on  the  second  floor  of 
Graham  Memorial. 


Heel. 

Jones  will  take  the  place  of 
Charlie  Sloan,  managing  editor  fur 
this  academic  year.  Sloan  resigned 
yesterday  to  conduct  his  campaign 
(or  editor. -Iiip  of  the  student  news- 
paper in  spring  elections. 

Editor  Pised  Powledge.  ir48>  nairH  * ^— 

ed     Jones     to   the   second    highest  .     ^.         Y"  J 

Daily  Tar  Heel  post,  said:  S*.aft  Meeting  Today 

■•Clarke  has  worked  lor,  with  There  will  be  a  Daily  Tar  Huel 
and  on  The  Daily  Tar  Heel  ever  staff  meeting  today  at  3  p.m.  in 
since  he  transferred  here  from  the  newsroom  office.  All  staffers 
Furman  two  years  ago.  He  has  have  been  urged  to  attend, 
been  the  most  faithful  worker  the  At  the  meeting,  the  p;)iicy  of 
newspaper  ha.s   had  Ihis  year.   He  the  paper  in  regards  to  the  spring 


Premises  to   present   sound   edi- 
torials   and    to    provide    unbiased 

newj  coverage  were  included  in  a 

statement    to  The   Daily   Tar   Heel 
I  yesterday   by   Charlie  Sloan,   ind< 
■  pendent    candidate    for    editor    ol 

this  publication. 

Pointing  out   that    the   issues   ui 

the  coming  elections   are  "far  to< 

important    to    be    condensed    int  > 

one  statement,"  Sloan  confined  hi- 

attention  to  athletics  and  IFC  co\ 
'  erage. 

"It  is  difficult  to  put  samethnv 

you  have  lived  with   .or  your  en 

tire  college  career  into  words,"  h> 

said.  "So  I  will  have  a  hard  tinn.- 
'■  trying    to    express    my    plans    lor 

The  Daily  Tar  Heel  if  I  am  elected 
j  editor.  I  am  sure  of  one  thing;  I 
:  will  do  my  be  k.  I  know  I  can  do 
i  a  good  job.  I  can  and  will  present 
]  sound  editorials  based  on  facts. 
1  give  other  people's  views  space  in 
j  the  paper  and  develop  a  reputa- 
I  tion  that  The  Daily  Tar  Heel  is  a 
I  responsible  publication. 
j      "My    first   contact   with   the  Tar 

Heel    was    in    my    freshman    year 

when  I  wrote,  and   had   published 

in  the  paper,  an  article  on  my  e.c- 

periences    as    a    camper    at    fresh- 
man camp   Since  then  I  have  been 

a    feature    writer,    a    general    as- 
I  .ignment    rcjwrter,    a    reporter    on    age  in  the  state  from  21  to  18. 
,  a     regular    run,    associate     editor,        According    to    Central    Kecord.s, 

managing  editor,  night  editor,  and   58  students  who  enrolled  here  this 

proofreader,      have      pinch  hit      as   fall    were    17    years   old,   816   were 

news,  editor,  .sports  editor  aad.«d«|j'18,   8S7   were   19.    and    1068   were 


UP  Candidate  Plans  Senate 
To  Advise  Him  Of  Objectivies 

BauKn  Lists  First  Official  Act  Of  Tenure 
And  Says  It  Would  Advise  The  President 

I  hii  riiiviisiiy  P;utv  (aiulicfate  tor  stiulem  bf>dy  President  yesterday  aniKuinced  his 
pliui  lor  [onnins  a  Student  Senate,  representative  or  the  .students,  whirh  would  advise  him 
ol   the    "objectives  ol  student  oovernment  duiing^  the  coming  year." 

151!!  liauni,  in  listinji  the  calling;  ot  the  Senate  as  the  first  official  ad  ol  liis  tenure, 
said  tliat  the  l)odys  laommendatory  powersuould  enable  it  to  advise  the  President.  Baum 

' » ~ ■ ♦emphasized  that  he  "would  pledge 

every   power    invested    in    me   as 
Student     Body    President    to    see 
that   its   recommendations   are  ac- 
complished   during    my    adminis- 
tration." 
I     Baum's  proposed  Senate  would  be 
;  composed  of  represent*atives  elect- 
I  ed   on  a    non-partisan   basis    from 
I  evsry    dormitory,    fraternity,    and 
I  sorority   on   campus.   It    would   be 
I  called   to   meet   only  once   a  year, 
j  except  by  recall  from  Baum.  dur- 
I  ing    which   time    it    would   present 
I  its    "objectives   and    recommenda- 
tions   for    student    government." 
From    the    meeting   of   the   Stu- 
dent   Senate,    Baum    said,    would 
come  an  elected  ten  students  from 
its   membership,   who  would   com- 
pose the  President's  Cabinet.  This 
capacitory    body    would,    he    said, 
meet  with  him  and  other  officials 
of  Student  Government  to  present 
in   an  advisory  capacity,  the  Sen- 
.ate's  recommendations. 

Offering  "responsible  and  vital 
leadership",  Baum  listed  the  pro- 
blems of  student  governmen{ 
which  his  administration  would 
take  action  on: 

(1)  Problems  of  housing  for 
married  students. 

(see  UP  PLATFORM  page  3) 


Public  Affairs 
Symposium 
Set  Thursday 

The  formation  of  a  committee  to 
sponsor    the    1958    Carolina    Sym- 1 
posium   on  Public  Affairs  will   be  j 
discussed   Thursday    at   4   pm.   in  ^ 
the  Library  Assembly  Room.  I 


Housing  Bill 
Being  Drawn 
By  University 


Bill  To  Reduce 
Voting  Age 
Before  Solons 


Members  of  the  Symposium  In- 
terim   Committee,   headed   by  Jim  j 
Exum,  will  speak  on   the  function 
of  the  Symp.'isium  Committee  and 


A  bill  providing  for  an  enabling 
act  to  obtain  funds  for  married 
•ludenls'  housing  both  here  and  at 
N.  C.  State  College  is  currently 
being  prepared,  a  Consolidated 
University  official  said  Tuesday. 

William  D.  Carmichael,  vice 
president  and  finance  officer,  said 
the  bill  is  being  drawn  up  in  the 
office  of  the  attorney  general  now. 


answer    questions    from     students  |  He  said  he  hoped  it  would  go  be- 

interested  in  working  on  the  1953 

Symposium. 


with 


Approximately  2419  students  en- 
rolled here  will  be  affected  by  a 
proposed  bill  now  before  the  State 
Legi.^lature.  The  bill  Ls  one  which, 
if    passed,    will    lower    the 


Last  spring  such  speakers  a.v 
Ralph  Lapp,  James  Reston,  and 
Frank  Graham  were  brought  to 
the  campus  to  discuss  major  local, 
national,  and  international  pro- 
blems. During  the  week  various 
tJngressmen  and  authorities  from 
voting  special  fields  appeared  in  class- 
rooms and  before  student  organ- 
izations. 


has  done  practically  every  job  the   election  will  be  discu.ssed,  accord 


The   Hillside  J(^makers    combo   newspaper  offers,  and  ha.,-  missed    ing    to    Managing    Editor 


from  Durham  will  entertain. 

The  men's  dorms  having  the 
party  with  the  independents  in- 
clude Alexander,  Grimes,  B.V.P. 
and  Old  East.  Residents  of  the 
four  men's  dwrns  "will  -^ome  by 
the  respective  women's  dorms  at 
appproximately  7:45  p.m.  to  es- 
cort the  independent.)'  to  Cobb 
basement. 

St.  Patrick's  Day,  from  which 
the  name  "Blarney's  Bail"  is  de 
rived,  will  be  the  theme  of  the 
dance  decorations. 


a   great    number   of   meals   and   a  Jones. 


tor,  and   have  eveft   taken   picture.^. 

"This,  then,  is  my  background      i 
I  "have   been   available- around  the  j 
block  for  every  phase  of  the  news- 
paper's activity. 

"I  have,  ^of  course,  made  many ! 
plans  f.)r  the  paper  if  I  am  elect-  j 
ed    editor.    My    feelings    on    every  j 
Clarke!  matter    will    be    reflected    in    the: 
'  (see   CROWTHER   SAYS   page   3) 


20. 

About  15  per  cent  of  these  are 
in  the  undergraduate  schools  and 
are  out-of-state  students. 


Student  members  of  th«  Sym- 
I  posiuinjCommittee  arranged  meet- 
ing limes,  cprresponded  wifh  the 
guest  speakers,  planned  topics  of 
discussion,  edited  a  handbook,  and 
personally  escorted  the  various 
speakers  around  campus. 


fore   the    General    Assembly 
"within  the  next  10  days." 

The  measure,  if  approved  by  the 
General  Assembly,  will  give  the 
University  authority  to  borrow 
funds  on  a  self-liquidating  basiv. 

Funds  for  a  new  student  union 
building  were  not  included  in  the 
bill,  he  said. 

The  University's  request  for  $1,- 
740,000  was  completely  turned 
down  last  month  by  the  Advisory 
Budget  Commission.  0\'er  $1   mil- 

1  lion  was  requested  for  a  new  stu- 

j  dent  union  buildinfr. 


CALLED  MEETING 


i'*All  students  interested  in  serv- 
'  ir.5  on  the  1958  Symposium  Corn- 
There  will   be  a  called  meeting   mittee  have  been  invited  to  attend 

of  the  UNC  Men's  Glee  Club  for   the  Thursday-  meeting  or  to  con- 

5  p.m.  this  .afternoon  in  Hill  Hall,   tact   Jim   E^um. 


UNC  To  Work     l^^"©- White 
On  Year-Rouncf!Queen   To 
BosisBy,959?    g.   M-^^d 


ALSO  OTHERS  NOMINATED: 


wm 


Belle  Corey  Nominated  For  YWCAs  President 


Miss  Belle  Corey  heads  the 
YWCA  slate  of  candidates  an- 
nounced yesterday  by  the  Y  of- 
ficials after  the  official  slate  was 
announced  and  nominations  were 
made  from  the  floor  at  a  meeting 
"It   is  hoped  that   more  groupai|  op?n  to  all  Y  members.     ' 


Y-Teens,  and  the  president  of  the 
Presbyterian  ^  o  u  n  g  peoples 
league. 

Miss  Barbara  Fowler,  also  a 
candidate  for  sDferetary.  is  a  jun- 
ior, and  an  elementary  educaction 


major  from  Mount  Airy  who  went 
to  Salom  College  last  year.  While 
at  Salem  she  worked  with  the  Y. 
and  since  coming  to  UNC  she  has 
worked  on  the  Campus  Chest  com- 
mittee   and    the    Homes    Dav    Nur- 


sery committee. 

The  third  candidate  for  secre- 
tary. Miss  Cynthia  Segraves  is  a 
junior  English  major  from  Jack- 
sonville. Fla.,  and  tranferred  here 
from    Mary    Washington    College. 


Shi?  has.  worked  on  the  Y  Hospital 
committee  henie  and.  while  at 
Mary  Washington,  she  was  social 
chairman  of  the  Y  and  on  the  cab- 
inet. 

(.see   YW   SLATE   page   3) 


of  both  boys  and  girls  will  attend 
since  dating  per  se  has  been 
strongly  discouraged  but  not  pro- 
hibited," Thomas  Mid. 

Both  men  and  women  may 
bring  dates  if  they  like,  but  peo- 
ple without  datea  have  been  en 
couraged  to  attend  the  dance. 

It  is  to  be  an  informal  affair 
with  women  not  wearing  heel^  and 
stockings,  and  men  not  wearing 
coats  and  ties.  However,  if  stu- 
dents want  to  "dress  up,"  they 
ma>'  do  so,  aceordihg  to  Thomas. 

"Blarney's  Ball"  has  been  ap- 
proved by  the  Dean  of  Women 
and  the  University  Dance  pom- 
mittee. 

I  hope  that  every  one  of  the 
independent  women  and  the  resi- 
dents of  the  above  four  mentioned 
dorms  will  come  on  over  to  Cobb 
basement  Friday  night  and  let's 
make  'Blarney'if  Ball"  a  real 
Mast,  stated   Thomas. 


GM'I  $UTE 


Activities  sclMflwlMl  for  Gra- 
h«nk  Memorial  t«day  include: 

Elections  ••ard,  4-5,  Grail 
Room;  Panho4i«|li«,  ■  S-6,  Grail 
Room;  Grail,  I'll,  Grail  Room; 
Student  Governnitfit  Leadership 
Training  CemmlttM,  5-6.  Ro- 
la«Mi  Parker  1;  Women's  Resi- 
dence Covncil,  Ml*  Roland  Par- 
ker 1;  S.E.C..  3-5.  Roland  Par- 
ker 2:  Jehovah's  Witnesses,  8-9, 
Roland  Parker  it  Ways  and 
Moans,  4-5: 30>  WMdhouse  C^- 
fference  Room;  IOC  Court,  7-9:30, 
Woodheuso  C«nf«r«nce  Room; 
Bridfo  class,  4t30-4,  Rendeivous 
Room;  Petit*  Dramatique,  7- 
1t:30,  APO  Rofm. 


Nominated  by  the  Y  for  vice- 
president  was  Miss  Ann  Morgan. 
Other  nominees  are  as  follows: 

Secretary,  Misses  Molly  Adains. 
Barbara  Fowler  .and  Cynthia  Se- 
graves; treasurer,  Misses  Ann  Holt 
and  Lloyd  Dougherty;  program 
chairman.  Miss  Eve  McClatchey. 
Phyllis  Krafft  and  Mary  Moore 
.Mason;  and  membership  chair- 
man. Misses  Mary  Louise  Bizzell 
and  Lucinda  Holderness. 

Miss  Ccrey,  the  presidential 
nominee.'  is  a  rising  senior  from 
Atlanta  v/ho  attended  Stephens 
College  last  year  and  is  majoring 
in  sociology.  Her  activities  here 
include  work  on  the  Hospital  com- 
mittee. Homes  Day  Nursery  com- 
mittee. Campus  Chest  committee. 
Prayer  and  Worship  study  group, 
and  she  attended  the  YW-YM  con- 
ference. 

The  vice-presidential  nominee. 
Miss  Ann  Morgan,  a  junior  from 
Charleston.  West  Va..  is  a  sociolo- 
gy major  and  a  transfer  from 
Miama  University.  Oxford.  Ohio. 
She  has  worked  on  the  Evaluation 
committee,  the  Conference  com- 
mittee, been  a  discussion  group 
leader,  and  attended  the  Y  con- 
ference since  coming  to  UNC.  She 
is  also  Outreach  Commission  chair- 
man and  on  the  council  for  the 
Westminster    fellowship    here. 

Secr'^tarial  candidate  Miss  Mol- 
ly Adams  is  a  rising  senior,  Eng- 
lish major  from  Wilmington,  and 
a  transfer  from  Agnes  Scott  Col- 
lege. Here  at  Carolina  she  is  on 
the  Christian  Action  commission 
in  the  Westminster  fellowship; 
and,  while  in  high  school,  she  was 
program  chairman  and  secretary 
of  the  Tri-Hi-Y,  a  member  of  the 


RALEIGH    — (AP)—    D.    Hiden 
Ram.sey  of  Asheville,  chairman  of 
the    Board    of    Higher    Education, 
Tuesday    suggested    a    year-round, 
operation  of  the   12  state-support- 1 
ed  colleg?s.  "including  the  Univer- 
sity in  Chapel   Hill.  | 
He    told    members   of    the   joint} 
appropriations  committee  he  hop- 
'  ed    a    program    could    be    worked  i 
out   in   the   next   two  years  to  be 
presented  to  the  1959  General  As- 
sembly. 

,  In  outlining  the  legislators  the 
!  needs  of  the  stat?  schools,  Ram- 
1  sey  proposL'd  operation  of  the  in- 
I  stitutions  on  a  2-m-nth  basis. 
!  At  present,  he  noted,  the  colleges 
:  and  university  operate  nine  of  the 
!  12  months  at  full  force. 

"North  Carolina  is  too  poor  a 
state  and  our  college  needs  too 
great  to  indulge  in  that  kind  of 
lu.xury.  '  Ramsey  added.  "The 
state  has  a  large  investment  which 
is  partially  idle  for  three  months,'' 
he  added. 


The  selection  of  a  beauty  queen 
and  court  will   highlight  the  half- 
time    ceremonies    of    the    Annual 
Blue-W^hite    football    game    to    be 
played  here  Saturday  afternoon. 
1     The  queen,  to  be  selected  on  the 
i  basis    of    a    penny'  vote,    will    be 
i  crowned  at  half-time  of  the  game. 
I      Candidates  for  queen  were  chos- 
en from  all  dorms  and  sororities. 
!     Jars     labeled     with     candidates 
i  names  are  available  in  Y  court  for 
penny  votCo. 

Pat  Oliver,  a  Tri-Dclt.  won  the 
contest  last  year  at  the  annual 
game.  The  vJting  will  end  Satur- 
day at  noon,  with  the  queen  to 
be  presented  at  the  half-time  of 
'  the  football  gam%  Saturday  after- 
noGi:.  The  queen  and  her  court  will 
be  escorted  by  members  of  the 
Monogram  club  during  the,  cere- 
monies. 

Another  high-light  of'  the  week- 

I  end  will  be  the  selection  of  a  Car- 

1  olina  Coach  and  runner-up  coach 

I  of  the  year.  The  two  coaches  select- 

jed  will  be  presented  with  trophies 

I  at  the  ball  game. 

I      After  the  game,  the  queen  will 

be  the  guest  of  honor  at  a  private 

party  given  by  the  Monogram  Club 

in  her  honor. 

,,.      ^  .  _       ,  ^J     This  weekend  will  also  be  high 

^'''!..^_^L^'^'!'\'''^""?,'".^^'^' school  weekend,  with  high  school 

students -in  Chapel  Hill  to  tour  the 
campus  and  inspect  the  University. 
The  proceeds  from  the  game  will 
go  to  a  scholarship  fund  sponsored 
by  the  Monogram  Club.    ' 


Miss  Pressfy 
Nominated  For 
Secretary  Post 


YWCA  Slate  Of  Officer  Candidates 


Seated  above  are  candidates  for  YWCA  offices  for  the  coming 
year.  Left  to  right  they  are:  Lloyd  Dougherty,  Barbara  Fowler,  Mol- 
lio  Adams,  Mary  Moore  Mason;  second  row.  Belle  Ccrey,  Ann  Mor- 


gan, Mary  Louise  Bizzell,  Lucinda  Holderness;  third  row,  Ann  Holt, 
Cindy  Seagraves,  Phyllis  Kraft  and  Eve  McClatchery. 


by  acclamation  to  be  the  Univer- 
sity Party's  candidate  for  the  of- 
fice of  secretary  at  a  meeting  of 
the  UP  Monday  night  in  Gerrard 
Hall. 

Nominees  for  dorm  women  and 
town  women's  legislature  seats 
were  also  named.  Three  one  year 
dorm  women  seats  were  filled  by 
Julia  Ann  Crater,  Lucy  Grassland, 
and    Nancy    Llwewllyn. 

The  two  one  year  seats  open  in 
town  w'ornen's  district  will  be 
headed  by  candidates  Tog  Sanders 
and  Ann  Holt. 

Ed  House  and  Charlie  Wilson 
were  nominated  by  acclamation 
to  run  for  the  two  one  year  seats 
in  the  Dorm  Men's  district. 

An  acclamatory  nomination  for 
Carolina  Athletic  A.ssn.  President 
was  given  to  Wayne  Bishop. 

Weinman  endorsed  the  com- 
plete slate  of  candidates  saying 
that  ••the  UP  has  chosen  as  good 
a  group  of  candidates  as  could 
possibly  be   nominated." 


IN  THE  INFIRMARY 

Those  students  in  the  Infirm- 
ary yesterday  included: 

Misses  Hannah  Kirby,  Anna 
Goddie,  Betty  Dale  Pressly,  Ann 
P  I  a  1  i  o  r,  Patricia  Whittman, 
Mary  Vance,  Florence  Robert- 
son and  C!wood  P  r  i  d  g  e  n. 
Charles  Rayner,  Lloyd  Walter, 
Roy  Cashion,  George  Carter, 
Victoi  Padorick,  Giles  Gaca, 
Bonfomin  Levy,  Larry  Good, 
I>«wty  Johnson,  Fred  Robinson, 
BrMco  litis,  Paul  Pinh).  Horace 
White,  Melvin  Bordeaux,  Edgar 
Maeklo^  ftobort  Newton,  Thom- 
as Yost,  Toy  Gregory,  Donald 
Dowdy,  William  Keiter,  and 
William  Tyson. 


PAGE    TWO 


TMI  OMLV  TAt  HtffL 


WEDNESDAY,  MARCH   13,  1957 


Long  Needed,  Welcome 
Institute  Of  Humanities: 

The  part  oi  the  University  known  as  the  Humanities  is  olten  over- 
looked and  rarely  understot)d.  but  just  as  essential  to  education. 

The  I'XC  Division  ot  the  Humanities  includes  several  departments 
of  the  University:  Art,  the  classics,  dramatic  art,  English,  j^eneral  and 
comparative  literature,  (iermanic  languages,  history,  jcmrnalism.  music, 
philosophy,  radio,  religion  and  romance  languages. 

What  with  the  present  trend  of  getting  the  most  you  can  out  of  col- 
lege   (i.e..  a  chploma  and  "securi- 

schol^rs  in  recent  years  have      faculty   expenses.   Scholarships   are 


GOETTINGEN  LETTER: 


/ 


tv"). 

noticed  Increasing  neglect  of  the 
hiunanities.  which,  after  all,  are 
more  closely  assfniated  with  the 
old-timey    idea   of  education   than 

anything  else  here. 

'  *  *  * 

So  it  was  a  golden  day  Monday 
when  the  executive  committee  of 
ilu-  rni\ersitv"s  Boar(i  /)f  Trus- 
iccs  csiablishetl  an  Institute  of 
i  lumanities.  It  was  made  even  more 
golden  when  the  g  -als  of  the  in- 
snt'itc   were  outlin  •  l: 

To  establish  schoIarshij.)s  in  hu- 
manities, improve  teaching  meth- 
(Klb.  a\\;n(l  \isiting  professorships, 
issue  pidiLicaiion.  provide  funds 
for  research,  travel  and  other  costs, 
proxide  l.ibrarv  atquisitions  and 
suppojt  (l/'partmetn;l  interest  in 
lu'4li  s(  hool   teathing. 

Perhaps  the  two  most  im|)ortant 
of  these  items  are  the  etsablish- 
ment  of  scholarships  in  humanities 
.iiul    finids   for   research  and   other 


awarded  to  bright  students:  many 
bright  students  stay  to  do  giaduate 
work:  some  students  stay  to  teach 
here  and  in  classrooms  thiough  tlu* 
state.  Research  and  travel  funds 
enable  top-rate  professors  to  stay 
at  C.arolina  in  the  fate  of  more  at- 
tractive offers  from  other  instiiti- 
tions. 

They  keep  a  faculty  happier. 
And  they  tell  an  enterprising  fac- 
ultv  member  that  someone  is  in- 
terested in  wliat  he  is  doing,  no 
matter  how  speciali/ed  it  may  be. 

Hurray  for  the  Institute  of*Hu- 
manitie...  We  hope  its  estal)lish- 
ment  will  serve  to  keep  fatuity 
membets  here  who  are  otherwise 
tempted  to  leave.  W'e  are  certain 
suth  an  institiue  will  be  good  for 
thes  tudents.  the  lacultv.  the  ad- 
minisiiation  and  tiie  state's  gen- 
eral idea  of  the  University  of  .North 
Uarolina.   Uhapel    Hill    biandi. 


Forum  Should  Dig  In  Here 


f-roiu  all  outw...d  appearances 
I  he  Uarolina  Korum  is  carrying  on 
A  slack  yeai. 

The  Forum,  which  is  supjx>sed 
to  bring  to  the  campus  sf>eakers  of 
Avorld.  national  and  state  import- 
ance, has  brougiit  one  speaker 
here  so  l;r  this  academit  year — Dr. 
Hollingion  K.  Tong.  Chinese  am- 
bassador, who  waji>,iiere  in  Septem- 
ber. 

1  he  organization  has  had  many 
troubles  this  year,  and  some  of 
tiiem  ha\e  been  bevond  its  con- 
trol. lUit  such  an  unfruitful  sea- 
scji    is   worthy   of   some  criticism. 

The  Forum  prtisently  is  having 
m)nl)lc  getting  speakers  to  fill  out 
tJif  year,  and  tlie  year  is  rapidly 
closing-. 

S<».  we  /ia\e  a  feu-  sngijesJions. 
*  *  *  . 

it]  the  al>seiue  of  more  inter- 
i?ationallv  -  known  sf)eakers,  we 
suggest  the  Fonnn  invite  people 
of  state  sii>nificance  to  talk  here. 
Members  ol  the  Universitv  staff 
would  make  excellent  speakers, 
too. 

Thomas  Pearsall.  who<e  name  is 
simied  to  the  Pearsall  Plan.  North 
(aiolina's  method  of  est  aping  the 
Sutireme  Courts  desegregation  tle- 
tision.  would  make  an  extellent 
speaker.  So  woidtl  Iivini  Carlvle, 
a  Winston-Salem  man  who  spo^-e 
here  last  summer  in  op|M)sition  to 
the  Pearsall   Plan. 


The  Daily  Tar  Heel 

The  official  jtudeni  publiti<tii>n  of  the 
P»ihliratiiins  8o»rd  of  the  University  of 
North  Tarolin^t  where  it  is  publishert 
daily  except  Ntonlay  and  examinatior 
•  rd  vacation  pfrioHs  and  summer  terwis 
F'ntpred  a«  second  clas<  matter  in  th« 
nt>«t  otficp  in  rhapcl  Hill.  N.  C.  undei 
the  Xci  oi  March  8.  1870  Subscription 
rates  matl'^d.  $4  per  year.  S2  .50  a  seme« 
ter  dfi'vorf'd  S6  a  year.  $3  30  a  »en»e» 
ter 


Editor 


_     FRED  POWLEDGE 


Managing  Editor     CLARKE  JONES 


Vews  Editor 


NANCY  HILL 


Sports  Editor LARRY  CHEEK 


Bii5:>npss   Manager    ^.    MX  BOB  PL'S! 
Advertising  Manager         FRED  KATZLN 


EDITORIAL     S'lAKP     -    WwQy     i>«ar<, 
Joey  Payne,  Stan  Sfiaw. 


NEWS  STAFF— Clarke  Jones.  Pringle 
Pipkin.  Edith  MacKinnon,  Wally  Ku- 
ralt,  Mary  Alys  Voorhees,  Graham 
Snyder,  Neil  Bass,  Bob  High,  Ben 
Taylor,  Walter  Scbruntek,  H-Joost  Po- 
lak,   Patsy  Miller,   Bill  King. 

BUSINESS  STAFF— Rosa  Moore.  Johnny 
Whitaker,   Dick  Leavitt. 

SPORTS  STAFF:  Dave  Wible,  Stewart 
Bird.   Ron  Milligan. 


Subscription  Manager  L  Dale  Staley 

Circulation  Manager Charlie  Holt 

Assistant  Sports  Editor. Bill  King 

Staff  Photographers  -     Woody  Sears, 

Noi*man  Kantor 
Librarians...  Sue  Gichner,  Marilyn  Strum 

Night  Editor   Ashmead  P.  Pipkin 

Night  News  Editor  .._ Clarke  Jones' 

Prr^freader Ben  Taylor 


William  U.  Clarmithael.  wht)  is 
one  ol  llie  tt)j)  handlMl  ol  men  who 
run  the  I'niversity.  is  larely  a  puh- 
lit  speakeg.  Muth  coulti  be  learn- 
ed From  a  speeth  hv  him. 

HotV'  ahoiu  a  metnhet  ol  *the 
C:hapel  Hill-Carrboio  Merchants" 
Assn..  or  .\Iavor  (>.  K.  (lortiwell  ol 
the  Town  ol  Chapel  Hill?  (Corti- 
well  also  is  an  oil  it  i;  I  ot  the  Na- 
tKMial  Collegiate  Athletic.  Assn., 
and  toultl  enlighten  students  antl 
townspeople  gieatlv  on  that  sub- 
ject.) 

John  Washington  (lark,  a  trus- 
tee antl  outs|)t)ken  opponent  ol 
mixing  ol  the  races,  would  make  a 
big  hit,  here.  So  would  A|  Rcsth. 
CliatlK-.'in  Cunuty  nc\\.Np:i}jerni.m 
and  a  de\t>ted  alumnus  ol  the  I'lii- 

\eisity. 

*  *  *  , 

.Alter  a  tprarter  ol  a  teiilury  ol 
sejvite  to  the  rniversity.  C^han- 
tellor  Robert  House  tertainly 
wou'd  ha\e  some  lellections  on 
education,  the  state  and  the  world. 

How  inanv  stutlcius  lure  know 
what  the  .N:  tional  Stutlent  Assn. 
is?  They  could  learn  il  NS A  pies- 
ident  FJataltl  C.  liakken  were  in- 
sited   to  speak   heie. 

The  Held  is  virtually  limitless, 
rht  Carolina  Forum  has  a  tra- 
tlition  for  bringitig  U)  the  tampiis 
allegetllv  'big"  men  in  worltl  antl 
national  lile.  I'sually.  il  the  "big" 
men  are  politic  i.ans,  their  speeches 
aie  rehashes  ol  speeches  they  orig- 
inallv  gave  vears  ago.  and  contain 
\tiy  little  iidormation.  The  other 
people— people  Irom  the  state,  fiom 
ihe  stutlent  community  antl  from 
the  Cniversity  itsell — would  teach 
stutlents  a  grerr  deal. 

Gracious 
Living: 
No.  15 

Holtl    your    breath. 

It  lt)oks  as  il  (.racious  Living 
in  Chapel    Hill   h.^s  slatted. 

The  temperature  was  somewhere 
arotnid  7(»  yesteitlay.  Maybe  it'll 
Slav  that  way. 

What  could  be  g^acioi^ser  in 
C'hapel  Hill  than  spring  aniviiig 
with  the  Ides  ol   Match? 

Sure-Fire^ 
Indication 
Of  Spring  • 

-Anti  speaking  ol  sjiring,  maybe 
the  freshmen  would  like  to  know 
how  to  tell  if  it  has  arrived. 

Check  the  fiont,  tenter  door  at 
the  U.S.  Pt)st  Office.  If  it's  locked 
and  you  have  to  use  the  side  doors, 
it's  still  wjnter. 

But  if  it's  open,  you  tan  be  sure 
spring  is  here. 

.As  of  yesterday,  the  tlt)or  was 
still  locked. 


Thumbing  Across  Europe: 
Sore  Feet  And  Tangerines 


John  Raper 


Carolina  students  John  Rapor 
and  Dan  Southarland  ara  cur- 
rontly  on  cxchans*  with  th« 
Univorsity  of  Goettingan  in 
Germany.  Here,  in  the  first  of 
a  two-part  conMnunique,  Rapor 
tolls  of  a  vacation  trip.  Euro- 
poan-style. 

GOETTINGEN— Have  you  ever 
been  in  a  car  when  the  driver 
suddenly  had  an  epileptic  fit,  or 
ridden  with  a  gasoline  smuggler, 
or  seen  a  Communist  social,  or 
walked  across  the  Pyrenees  a.t 
night,  or  lived  for  23  days  on 
bread,  cheese  and  tangerines  or 
slept  in  youth  hostels  worse  than 
flop  houses? 

Neither  had  I.  until  I  decided 
to  thumb  down  to  Spain  for  the 
holidays.  Karl  Anderson,  an  ex- 
change student  from  Ohio  State, 
ancj^  I  left  Goettingen  on  a  23-day 
dauy  jaunt.  We  thumbed  2,800 
kilometers  (1,680  miles)  and 
rode  tJie  train  for  another  3.000 
kilometers   (1,800   miles). 

You  might  be  interested  in 
some  of  the  things  that  can  hap- 
pen to  an  innocent  young  South- 
erner on  the  high  road  of  adven- 
ture. 

Most  of  th*  time  we  livad  on 
broad  and  marmoladc,  tea  and 
tangerines  for  breakfast;  bread, 
cheese     and     tangerines     (We 
consumed   over  200  tangerines 
apiece)  for  lurKh;     and     ended 
the   day   with   a    tasty   meal    of 
soup,  egg  and  salad. 
To  make  thumbing  easier,   we 
carried    a    sign    reading.    "USA 
Student  Madrid  Please."  in  both 
German  and  French.  We  had  also 
two  little  overnight   bags   as  we 
had    earlier    sent    our    bag    with 
oiir  clothes  in  it  to  a  .small  town 
on  the  French-Spanish  border. 

The  first  day  we  thumbed  580 
kilometers  to  the  Swiss  border 
at  Basel.  There,  with  the  ad- 
vice and  financial  help  of  a  new- 
found friend,  we  spent  the  night 
in  a  nice  hotel.  I  remember  go- 
ing to  bed  and  dreaming  Candi- 
dish  dreams  ab^ut  how  every- 
thing was  for  'the  best  in  the 
best  of  all  po.ssible  worlds. 
Thumbing  sure  was  the  way  to 
travel! 

Next  morning  we  took  the 
trolley  through  Basel  to  the 
French  border  on  the  other  side 
of  town.  We  flagged  the  cars 
a9  they  stopped  for  customs, 
which  seemed  a  terrific  place 
from  which  to  thumb. 

Six  hours  later,  dampened  by 
a  light  drizxie  and  by  subfreoz- 
ing   weather,   our      minds     had 
slowly  changed. 
Late  in  the  afternoon   wc  fin- 
ally got  a  ride  with  a  fellow  go- 
ing   20    kilometers    to    a    cross- 
roads. When  we  got  to  his  turn- 
ing-off  place,  he  felt  so  sorry  for 
us   because   of   the   rain,   desola- 
tion  and    lack    of  autos    on    the 
highway  that  he  took  us  30  more 
kilometers    to   Belfort. 

We  bedded  down  there  in  one 
(jf  the  famous  p'rench  youth  hos- 
tels. We  had  four  blankets  which 
looked  as  if  every  youth  hostler 
in  Europe  had  slept  on  them,  no 

• 

L'il  Abner 


sheets,  no  heat,  and  ice  water 
to  call  the  comforts  of  home  in 
20  degree  temperature.  Visions 
of  health  books  kept  dancing 
through  my  head. 

The  third  day  we  made  it  to 
Besancon  and  40  kilometers  far- 
ther, where  we  lost  courage,  ra- 
tionalized and  decided  to  take  t|ie 
train  to  Lyon.  W^e  knew  there 
would  surely  be  plenty  of  traf- 
fic from  Lyon. 

In  Lyon  we  were  fartunate 
enough  to  stay  in  a  YMCA-run 
youth  hostel,  highly  recomend- 
ed  to  us.  We  had  two  dirty 
blankets  and  a  dirtier  mattress 
in  a  building  open  to  any  passer- 
by who  might  wish  to  enter.  I 
forgot  about  my  hygenic  anti- 
bacterial    upbringing    and    slept 


She  stuck  something  iff  his 
mouth,  got  his  hands  off  the 
wheel,  turned  off  the  ignition, 
guided  the  car.  held  him,  while 
Karl  and  I  unparalyzed  our- 
selves enough  to  help.  I  -have 
had  the  shakes  ever  since. 

That  night  while  looking  for 
a  hotel  in  Nemes,  we  passed 
the  local  hall  of  social  and  eco- 
nomic equality  where  the  Com- 
munists were  holding  a  Satur- 
day night  social.  The  people 
present  reminded  me  of  the 
people  one  sees  hanging  around 
the  county  courthouse  through- 
out the  South. 

Sunday  we  took  out  on  what 
we  hoped  was  the  last  leg  of 
our  thumbing.  In  France  at  the 
time  there  was  gas  rationing  and 


The  train  stopped  10  niinutes 
in  Cerbere  before  going  On  to 
Port  Bon,  .the  Spanist  customs 
town  seven  kilometers  on  the 
other  side  of  the  mountain.  Karl 
was  to  go  on  to  Port  Bon  and 
wait  for  me  there,  while  I  jump- 
ed off  and  got  our  bag. 

.-  Now  my  French  is  not  so  good, 
and  I  found  ttw  that  freight 
travel  might  not  be  so  fast  as 
they  had  boasted  back  in  Geot- 
lingen. 

There  was  nothing  for  me  to 
do  but  ascend  the  Pyrennes  Moun- 
tains and  walk  the  seven  kilo- 
meters to  Port  Bon.  You  can 
imagine  how  romantic  it  was — 
the  stars,  the  Mediterranean  Sea 
on  the  left,  the  Pyrennes  stretch- 
ing to  the  right,  the  lights  of  the 


'Okay!  Okay!  I  Give  In!' 


•* 


between  the  two  blankets  and 
two  mattresses. 

Leaving  Lyon,  we  travelled  by 
the  beautiful  Rhone  River 
through  Vicnne,  Valence.  Avig- 
vn\\  down  to  Nemes  in  another 
day.  Thii  day  presented  only  one 
or  two  small  incidents.  We  rode 
with  a  fellow  who  had  and  epilep- 
tic fit  while  driving  50  mph. 

It  would  not  have  been  too 
exciting,  if  we  had  not  been 
meeting  so  many  heavy  trucks 
on  the  left  and  there  was  not 
a  row  of  trees  lining  the  right 
side.  He  was  fortunate  in  having 
such   an    admirable    girl    friend. 


suppt)sedly  not  much  Sunday 
traffic.  However,  we  were  lucky 
and  caught  a  ride  most  of  the 
way  from  Nemes  to  Perpignan 
with    a   gasoline   smuggler. 

When  the  cops  stopped  him, 
h?  used  us  and  our  sign  as  a 
cover  Kind  passed  on  without  be- 
ing caught.-  He  told  us  then  he 
was  running  about  100  gallons  or 
so  of  gas. 

Wc  followed  the  Riviera  Route 
tlirough  Montpellier  to  Perpig- 
nan. We  took  a  train  there  to 
Cerbere,  the  French  customs 
village,  whe  we  were  to  pick  up 
our  bag  (our  clothes). 


two  villages  at  the  mountain's 
base  on  each  side,  and  the  can't 
see-the-hand-in-fron>-of'-your-face 
blackness  of  no  moon. 

I  kept  thinking  of  these  lit- 
tle  stories   I    had   heard   about 
the    way    the   poor     Spaniards 
would    kill    a     man     for     two 
pesetas. 
After  two  hours  walking,  I  ar- 
rived in  Port  Bon  to  find  no  Karl. 
I    thought    maybe    he    had    gone 
back    to    Cerbere.    As   I    had    to 
speak    with    the   station    master 
the  next  morning  at  8.  I  decided 
it  would  be  best  to  turn  around 
and  walk  back  to  Cerebere. 


C'.0£.S  MV  M.HAPT,  FOSDICK, 
I  DlD^;TPI^»p^  THu  MILLION- 
DOLLAR,  D^^MOMD -STUDDED 
ftrlAMl^ORt  KMOX  V^R)ST 

WATCH. »:'■- 


IF  VOU  DIDN'T  PINCH  117 

Ezio  the:  pincher,  it's 

ODD  VOU  SHOULD  KNO/J 
THAT'S  WHAT  I'M  ABOUT 
L  TO  SEARCH  NOU  l=OR 


Grumbling  From 
UNC  Professors 


The  News  and  Observer 

"The  politicians  have  taken  over  and  the  out- 
standing professors  are  taking  off." 

"That  statement  made  last  week  by  an  able  fac- 
ulty member  at  Chapel  Hill  may  be  tt>o  sharp.  But 
it  indicates  the  fact  that  North  Carolina  today  in 
education,  in  which  is  so  long  took  so  much  pride, 
is  facing  not  only  problems  of  money  \n^  of  a  mood 
in  the  life  of  the  people  of  this  state. 

More  serious,  indeed,  than  salaries  may  be  the 
growing  feeling  among  the  ablest  educators  that 
North  Carolina  has  lost  its  eagerness  to  excel, 
even  in  the  South.  If  that  is  true  in  education,  it 
may  explain  better  than  taxes  questions  the  lag  in 
other  fields  of  the  state's  life. 

Of  courso,  a  professor  may  b«  iust  bellyaching 
when   he  complains.   But   a   bellyache   may   be  • 
fairly  important  symptom  of  «  sorious  disease. 
Anyhow,   one   from   Chapel   Hill,   even   without 
identification  as  to  its  source,  may  be  worth  the 
attention  of  North  Carolinians  who  love  their  state 
and  are  concerned  about  its  directions.  Here  it  is: 
"It  seems  that  most  editors  and  practically  all 
the   politicians  have  been  happy  about  recent  de- 
velopments   in    the    Consolidated    Unitversity.    The 
reaction  of  the  faculties — the  people  who  make  a 
university,  has  not  been  so  happy. 

"I  have  never  known  the  morale  of  this  faculty 
here  to  be  so  low,  despite  the  fact  that  people  who 
know  Bill  Aycock  have  a  high  opinion  of  him.  I 
have  a  very  high  opinion  of  him,  but  I  think  it  is 
rather  strange  that  at  no  place  in  the  hierarchy  of 
the  University  is  there  a  man  of  the  type  of  Harry 
Chase  or  Frank  Graham. 

"We  wind  up  with  two  succcessive  presidents  of 
the  University,  neither  of  whom  had  ever  taught 
a  day.  Friday  is  not  the  stuffed-shirt  type  and 
may  work  out  all  right. 

"You  may  recall  what  Lincoln  asked  Douglas 
in  the  famous  debates  of  1858.  Can  water  rise  above 
its  source?  Can  the  University  rise  above  its  lead- 
ership— that  is  its  administration,  and,  above  all 
above  its  politically  appointed  and  politically  mind- 
ed Board  of  Trustees? 

"One  of  our  most  distinguished  professors  made 
the  statement  last  week  that  *The  politicians  have 
taken  over  and  the  outstanding  professors  are  tak- 
ing off.'  We  are  losing  many  good  men  here,  and 
it  is  not  altogether  a  question  of  salaries. 

"We  are  losing  a  young  man  at  the  same  salary 
he  is  getting  here.  But  some  people  seem  only  to 
think  in  terms  of  money — of  politics." 

All  this,  of  couse,  may  be  dismissed  as  academic 
grumbling.  But  it  could  represent  not  only  a  sad 
situation  in  the  University,  but  also  deep  trouble 
in  the  life  of  the  state. 


YOU  Said  i»: 

^Open  Discussion' 
Was  Narrow-Minded 

Editor: 

In  a  mass  "open  discussion"  held  in  Lenoir  Hall 
last  Wednesday,  Lenoir  Hall  Director  George  W. 
Prillaman  personified  the  classic  idea  of  narrow- 
mindedness,  illogical  thinking  and  complete  dis- 
regard of  the  rights  of  a  minority  unable  to  defend 
itself. 

The  only  benefit  which  the  students  derived 
from  Prillaman's  two  and  one-half  hour  tirade  were 
two  free  cups  of  coffee,  a  chance  to  visit  the  Pine 
Room  daily,  and  an  excessive  ration  of  "hot  air." 

Priilsman  crushed  under  his  omnipotent  heel, 
one  by  one.  the  student  workers'  dreams  of  ade- 
quate working  conditions  and  a  fair  wage  scale, 
paid  in  usable  tender,  not  the  *'whoJesome"  food 
of  Lenoir  Hall.  He  aptly  showed  his  narrow-minded- 
ness by  stating.  "I  am  not  inductive  to  changes  in 
the  p^licj'  of  student  aid." 

Contrast  this  to  his  statement  that  "...  I  wish 
you  would  come  to  nte  with  yoor  treublas."  After 
such  a  contradiction  as  this,  a  janitor's  vicryvpoint 
would  be  more  sought  after. 
Perhaps   the   highlight   of   this   funeral '  of   stu- 
dent rights  came  when  Prillaman  said  that  the  at- 
tempt  at  reforms   ". . .  was  motivated  for  political 
,  expediency."  WTien  50  legislator*,  representing  two 
opposing    political    parties    already    deep    in    pre- 
election strife,  merge  and  approve  a  bill  with  the 
fervor  which  was  displayed  over  this  one,  "political 
expediency"   is   absurd.     Evidently     Prillaman     is 
searching  for  skirts  to  hide  behind. 

Prillaman  muddled  on  to  s^  that,  "They,"  (pre- 
sumably they  meaning  those  ol'  mean  Student  Legis- 
lators) "are  trying  to  cram  fee  Civil  Rights  bill 
down  the  Southerners'  throats."  The  relation  of 
this  statement  to  the  present  Lenoir  Hall  problem 
is  roughly  as  pertinent  as  the  price  of  diaper  pins 
in  Outer  Mongolia.  The  only  analogy  we  can  muster 
in  the  statement  concerns  slavery,  which  we  heard 
was  prohibited  nearly  a  century  ago. 

Evidently  we  heard  wrong:  the  situation  exists 
in  one  form  in  Lenoir  Hall.  now.  for  the  workers 
are  controlled,  suppressed,  and  exploited  in  a  way 
reminiscent  of  01'  Plantation  days.  Simon  L.,»where 
is  your  whip? 

We  notice  that  one  worker  left  the  gathering 
early.  We  heartily  sympathixe  with  this  student; 
the  situation  makes  us  fkk,  toe! 
It  is  our  belief  that  the  student  employees  of 
Lenoir  Hall  are  being  exploited,  and  due  to  press- 
ing need  of  financial  assistance.  ev«i  the  meager 
offerings  of  Lenoir  Hall,  these  students  are  unable 
to  take  a  strong  stand  for  their  rights. 

We  sincerely  regret  that  the  administration  of 
Lenoir  Hall  is  not  more  willing  to  recognize  the 
plight  of  their  employees,  and  to  take  a  more  open- 
minded  position  concerning  the  pajrment  of  wages 
and  the  improvement  of  working  conditions. 

Frank  Parrofl  Jr. 
0«n  Fvrtado 


WCDNtSDi 


No 
To 
Say; 


There  wilj 
van  trip  to 
end  because 
have  indica^ 
according 
body  presi( 

Young   .sa| 
planning    t( 
Therefore, 
on  riding 
a  ride,   ple^ 
dent  goveri 
Memorial." 

A  list  o| 
Philadelphia 
he  said, 
may  contact 
ing  and  ai 
tion,  Young  I 

•"Kiere  a| 
ets  availably 

No  excus 
will  be  gra 
P.  Spruili. 
Spruill  sai( 
dents  coulc 
out  endang^ 
their  classel 


Jessie 
At  Bull' 

Jessie    R^ 
English    fa 
Remembrai 
Friday  at  3| 
a    Book." 
Bull's    Hei 
Bull's  Heac 
ment   of 


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WEDNtSDAY,  MARCH  13,  19S7 


TH6  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


rAGE  THUfli 


»ut- 

[ac- 

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in 

ide, 

lood 

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lat 

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in 


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sad 
luble 


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re  w. 

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srived 
were 
Pine 
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heel. 
>f  ade- 
scale. 
"  food 
iiinded- 
ages  in 


No  Caravan 
To  Phllly 

Says  Young 

There  will  not  \ifi  a  train  cara- 
van trip  to  Philadelphia  tkis  weA 
end  because  not  enough  students 
have  indicated  an  interest  in  it, 
according  to  Bob  Young,  student 
body  pre^dent. 

Young  said  "Most  everyone  is 
planning  to  go  by  automobile. 
Therefore,  if  anyone  was  planning 
on  riding  the  train  and  now  needs 
a  ride,  please  check  by  the  stu- 
dent government  office  in  Graham 
Memorial." 

A  list  of  all  those  going  to 
Philadelphia  will  be  in  the  office, 
he  said.  Anyone  needing  a  ride 
may  contact  someone  who  is  go- 
ing and  arrange  for  transporta- 
tion. Young  said. 

"There  are  still  plenty  of  tick- 
ets available."  he  said. 

No  excuses  for  classes  missed 
will  be  granted,  according  to  C. 
p.  Spruill,  dean  of  the  faculty. 
Spruill  s.aid,  however,  many  stu- 
dents could  make  the  .trip  with- 
out endangering  their  standing  in 
their  classes. 


Jessie  Rehder  To  Talk 
At  Bull's  Head  Tea 

Jessie  Rehder,  member  ot  the 
English  faculty  and  author  of 
Kemembrance  Way,  will  spe^ 
Friday  at  3:45  p.m.  on  "Publidiing 
a  Book."  She  will  speak  at  a 
Bull's  Head  Tea,  held  in  the 
Bull's  Head^Bookshop  in  the  base- 
ment of  the   Wilson  Library. 


YWJ5LATE 


(Continued  from  Page  1) 

Miss  Ann  Holt,  junior  candidate 
for  treasurer,  is  from  Sanford.  a 
transfer  from  Peace  College,  and 
elementary  education  major.  She 
has  been  on  the  Hospital  commit* 
tee  and.  while  at  Peace,  she  was 
Morning  Watch  chairman  and  rep- 
resentative for  the  junior  class  on 
the  Peace  Student  Christian  Assn. 
cabinet  In  high  school  she  was 
president  of  her  Presbyterian 
youth  fellowship  and  on  the 
Orange  Presbyterian  Council  for 
four  years. 

Miss  Lloyd  Doughtery  of  Cin- 
cinnati, Ohio,  is  also  a  candidate 
for  treasurer.  She  is  a  rising  sen- 
ior here  and  a  religion  major  who 
transferred  from  Stephens  Col- 
lege. She  has  worked  on  the  Camp- 
up  Chest  committee.  Evaluation 
committee  and  the  co-chairman  of 
the  Y  discussion  group  on  Science 
and  Religion. 

Miss  Eve  McClatohey,  junior 
candidate  for  program  chairman 
from  Atlanta,  Ga.,  is  a  religion 
major.  At  Stephens,  where  she. 
went  her  first  two  years,  she  was 
on  the  religious  cabinet  ad  chair- 
man of  the  Worship  committee. 
Here  she  has  been  on  the  worship 
study  group  at  the  Y  and  on  the 
study  group  in  the  Westminster 
fellowship. 

Miss  Phyllis  Krafft,  also  running 
for  program  chairman,  is  a  junior 
religion  major,  a '  transfer  from 
McMurray  College  in  Jacksonville, 
111.,  and  from  River  Forest,  111. 
She  has  been  a  discussion  group 
leader,  co-chairman  of  worship  at 
Camp  Bricks,  on  the  Hospital 
committee,  on  the  Speakers  For- 
um comittee,  and  a  delegate  to 
the  Y  seminar  in  New  York. 

Miss  Mary  Moore  Mason,  third 
candidate  for  the  program  chair- 
manship, is  a  junior  from  Roan- 
oke, Va.,  a  transfere  from  Queens 
College  in  Charlotte,  and  a  journ- 


SEE  THE 

CAROLINA-YALE 
NCAA 

BASKETBALL  GAME 

WITH 

Ray  Reeve 

EXCLUSIVELY 

ON 

CHANNEL  5 
WRAL-TV 


WEDNESDAY,  MARCH  5, 
7:30  P.M. 


alism  major.  Since  coming  to 
UNC,  she  has  been  news  editor  of 
the  Y  paper,  in  one  of  the  study 
groups,  and  on  the  Fellowship 
committee  for  the  Westminster 
fellowship.  At  Queens,  she  was  on 
the  publicity  committee  of  the 
Queens  Christian  Assn.  and,  in 
high  school,  she  served  as  pro- 
gram and  publicity  chairmen  oi 
the  Y-Teens. 

Miss  Mary  Louise  Bizzell,  can- 
didate for  thevmembership  cii  air- 
man, is  a  junior  education  major 
from  Goldsboro  who  transferred 
from  St.  Marys.  "Riere  she  was 
on  the  Altar  Guild  and  worked 
on  Y  community  projects.  In  high 
school,  she  was  secreatry  of  the 
Methodist  youth  fellowship  and 
here  she  is  on  the  Y  Hospital  com- 
mittee and  does  work  with  the 
Girl  Scouts. 

Miss  Lucinda  Holdemess.  also  a 
candidate  for  membership  chair- 
man, is  a  junior  history  major 
from  Greensboro  who  transferred 
from  Randolph-Macon  College. 
At  Randolph-Macon,  she  worked 
on  Y  community  work  and  here 
she  has  been  on  the  Mentbership 
Council  for  the  Y  and  on  the  Wor- 
ship commission  for  the  West- 
minster fellowship. 


Powledge  Has  Article 
in  NSA  Bulletin  Now 

Fred  Powledge,  editor  of  The 
D^ily  Tar  Heel,  is  the-  author  of 
an  article,  "Self-Censorship  and  a 
Do-Nothing  Press,"  in  the  current 
issue  of  Student  Government 
Bulletin.  The  Bulletin  is  published 
by  the  U.S.  National  Student 
Assn.,  and  the  current  issue  deals 
with  academic  freedom. 


Student  Fined 
In  Chopel  Hill 
Court  Session 

Walter  D.  Mills,  one  of  the  stu- 
dents arrested  March  1  during  the 
panty  raid,  pleaded  guilty  in 
Chapel  Hill  Recorder's  Court  of 
violating  a  state  law  which  pro- 
hibits the  wearing  of  masks  dur- 
ing a  public  demonstration. 

Mills,  a  sophomore  from  Char- 
lotte, was  arrested  last  Friday  by 
a  Chapel  Hill  policeman  during 
the  panty  raid  because  he  was 
wearing  a  handkerchief  over  his 
face,  thus  concealing  his  identi- 
ty. 

Other  students  were  wearing 
handkerchiefs  also,  but  police  of- 
ficers were  not  able  to  apprehend 
them.  Mills  was  fined  $25.00 
and  costs. 


BSU  Will  Begin  Forum 

Series  At  Sunday  Supper 

The  Baptist  Student  Union  has 
begun  a  series  on  "What  Can  A 
Man  Believe?"  at  its  weekly  Sun- 
day night  supper-forum  pro- 
gram. 

The  series  is  concerned  with 
five  areas  of  Christian  belifcis. 

Last  Sunday  night  Dr.  Maynard 
Adams,  associate  professor  of 
philosophy  at  UNC.  began  the 
series  by  speaking  on  "What  Can 
Man  Believe  About  God?"  This 
Sunday  (March  17)  Dr.  Stewart  S. 
Newman  associate  professor  of 
religious  philosophy  at  Southeast- 
ern Seminar>'  of  Wake  Forest  will 
speak  on  "What  Can  Man  Believe 
About  the  Bible?" 


(Continued  from  Page  1) 

(2)  Present  inadequacy  of  Stu- 
dent Union  buildng. 

(3)  Necessity  for  lessening,  as 
soon  as  is  feasible,  restriction  on 
student  possession  of  cars. 

Baum  and  UP  chairman  Mike 
Weinman  at  the  same  time,  an- 
nounced the  party's  platform  for 
the  April  2  election.  Headed  by 
the  Student  Senate  plank,  the 
adopted  platform  plans: 

(1)  To  build  Student  Govern- 
ment to  a  position  of  greater  re- 
spect, dignity,  importance  and 
honor. 

(2)  To  govern  maturely  and 
rationally  in  the  best  interest  of 
all  the  students. 

(3)  To  capably  meet  all  campus 
problems  as  they  arise  and  now 
exist.- 

Baum's  full  statement  follows: 
I  wish  to  congratulate  Sonny 
Evans — and  to  here  again  express 
my  sincere  appreciation  to  my 
own  party,  the  University  Party, 
for  giving  me  the  opportunity  to 
represent  them  in  the  election  of 
the  Presidency  of  the  Student 
Body. 

The  task  facing  the  officials  of 
oqr  Student  Government  has  al- 
ways been  great;  but,  during  the 


UP  PLATFORM 

coming  year  more  than  at  any 
time  in  the  immediate  past.  Stu- 
dent Government  will  be  called 
upon  to  offer  responsible  and 
vital  leadership.  The  problems  of 
housing  for  married  students,  the 
present  inadequate  Student  Union 
building,  and  the  necessity  for 
lessening,  as  soon  as  ii>  feasible, 
restriction  on  student  possession 
of  cars,  are  all  questions  which 
demand  action.  A  respected  and 
responsible  Student  Government 
will  be  able  to  give  powerful 
voice  to  student  opinion  in  the 
solutions  to  these  questions,  and. 
if  elected,  I  will,  to  the  best  of 
my  ability,  conduct  an  administra- 
tion capable  of  giving  this  type  of 
leadership. 

Any  Student  Government,  how 
ever,  is  effective  only  to  the  ex- 
tent that  its  one  aim  is  to  serve 
the  students  and  to  accurately  re- 
flect their  beliefs.  Consequently, 
my  first  official  act  as  your  presi- 
dent, if  you  ch^  to  elect  me, 
will  be  to  call  into  session  a  Stu- 
dent Senate,  composed  of  repre- 
sentatives elected  on  a  non-par- 
tisan basis  from  every  dormitory, 
fraternity,  and  sorority  on  camp- 
us, which  shall  meet  for  the  sole 
purpose    of    outlining    what    the 


Covering 


tha 


student  body  feeis  shoulfl  be  the 
objectives  of  Student  Government 
dm'ing  the  coming  year.  The  pow- 
ers of  the  Student  Senate  will  be 
completely  recommendatory:  but 
I  shall  pledge  every  power  invest- 
ed in  me  as  President  of  the  Stu- 
dent Body,  to  see  that  they  are 
accomplished  during  my  admin- 
istration. 

The  Student  Senate  wUl  be  call- 
ed only  once  a  year,  unless  as 
situation  arises  which  it  is  felt  de- 
mands the  advice  of _^  the  entire 
Student  Body.  Otherwise.  I  shall 
ask  the  Senate  before  it  adjourns 
to  elect  ten  students  from  its  mem- 
bership who  will  compose  the 
President's  Cabinet,  and  who  will 
meet  with  me  and  the  other  of- 
ficials of  Student  Government  to 
advise  and  to  seek  w^ays  to  put 
into  action  the  recommendations 
of  the  Senate. 

This  is  the  best  means  which 
the  University  Party  could  bring 
to  mind  to  effectively  put  into 
action  the  principle  that  respon- 
sible Student  Government  needs 
and  demands  the  opinions  and  ad- 
vice of  every  possible  student.  I 
am  looking  forw-ard  to  discussing 
this  with  as  many  of  you  as  possi- 
ble during  the  coming  campaign. 


Campus 


COMMUNITY  SEimCE 

The  YMCA  Co:^bnity  Service 
Commission  will  m'eet  in  YMC.\ 
office  No.  2  at  4  p.m.  today. 


SLOAN  SAYS 


:  CHRISTIAN  FELLOWSHIP 

i  The  Inter-Varsity  Christian  Fei- 
I  lowship  meets  tonight  in  the 
.  Choral  Rehearsal  Room  ( 108)  of 
Hill  Hall.  This  is  an  inter-denom- 
j  inational  organization  and  every- 
j  one  is  invited  to  attend.  A  study 
j  on  the  Book  of  Philippians  will 
I  begin  tonight. 

!0UKE-UNC   PHYSICS 
COLLOQUIUM 

!  There  will  be  a  joint  Duke-UNC 
Physica   Colloquium    tonight    at    3 

ip.m.  in  room  206  of  Phillips  Hall. 

I  Dr.  Warren  Henr>':  of  the  Naval 
Research    Laboratory,    will    speak 

I  on  "Magnetic  Interaction?  in  Sol- 
ids." 


Religious  Books  By 

C.  S.  LEWIS 
The  intimate  Bookshop 


CROWTHER  SAYS 


(Continued  From  Page  1) 

editorial  columns.  And  the  people 
whose  feelings  differ  from  mine 
will  have  full  access-  to  the  rest  of 
the  editorial  page  to  state  their 
views.  My  feelings  will  not  at  any 
time  be  carried  into  news  copy, 
and  will  not  appear  on  the  news 
pages  at  all  unless  a  situation  war- 
rants   a    front    page    editorial,    a 


training  has  emphasized  the  se- 
lection of  which  item  is  more  im- 
portant than  another  when  it  ap- 
pears in  print. 

I  don't  think  the  majority  of  the 
IPC  is  able  to  see  the  fine  line 
between  news  and  gossip  simply 
because  they  have  not  had  to 
spend  as  much  time  as  I  have  on 
the  matter.  It  is,  after  all,  a  skill 


"If  the  IFC  wants  clo«d  meet 
ings  they  have  a  right  to  keep  out  I  ^J^" 
reporters,   but  I  think  I  can  con- 
vince    individual     members,     and 
finally  the  body  as  a  whole,  that 
the  meetings  should  be  open. 


DAILY    CROSSWORD 


ACROSS 

1.  Strike 
5.  Styliah 

( colloq. ) 
jl.  Bondsman 
10.  Type  of 
pneumonia 

12.  Port.  cI»r«C 
•tc. 

13.  Genus  of 
beetles 

14.  Sums  up 

15.  CwMl 
gmm 

16.  RomaA 
numeral 

17.  God  or 
pleasure 

It.  Roman 

money 
It.  Presideiltlal 

nicknamt 
to.  Narrow 

roadway 
ta.  River 

(Enf.) 
St.  Bcariac  % 

S6.  Wife  of 
Bknlfht 
t7.  Man's  nam« 
2S.  Slnfle  unit 

29.  Exist 

30.  Astern 
33.  Father 
S4.  Twice 

tmus. ) 
35.  Mix 
3«.  Set  solidly 
St.  Strnifkun 

(var.) 
St.fM^ 

UffhUy 
40.  Crasy 

(slaiiK) 
41  Asterisk 


42.  Bearded 
DOWN 

1.  Slip 

3.  Great 
election 
victory 

t.  Birds  as 
a  class 

4.  PooUikc 
part 

».  Kaolins 
t.  An  asylum 

<P.  I.) 
t.  Reindesr 

(N.  A.) 
t.  Mop 
11.  Blnek  Mrds 


15.  aose- 
fitting 
Jackets 

18.  Cuckoo 

19.  Hobby 

21.  Some 

22.  Town 
(In- 
diana) 

23.  Inclines 

24.  Summer 
haU 

25.  Bef  or« 
29.  Helper 
II.  Abbundlnf 

in  fish 
t2.  Three, 
at  cards 


34.  Greek 
letter 

36.  Not  fast 

37.  Elxcept 

38.  A  wing 


Post  Is  Open 

Executive  Secretary-  for  Student 
Government,  Mrs.  Hilda  Grass- 
man,  resigned  her  position  yes- 
terday because  of  ill  health.  She 
had  held  this  office  since'  the  fall 
of  1955. 

Student  Body  President  Bob 
Young  indicated  that  the  Student 
Government  would  like  to  fill  this 
position   immediately 


piece  of  writing  that  will  be   la-  j  almost  anyone  can  learn, 
beled  as  such. 

"The  issues  involved  in  the 
coming  election  are  far  too  impor- 
tant to  be  condensed  into  one 
statement,  so  I  will  take  two  thft 
are  important  to  me  and  explain 
my  position  on  them. 

"Athletics  at  Carolina  are  big 
and  getting  bigger,  and  I  like^big- 
time  athletics.  I  like  them  because 
I  want  a  winning  team  and  (Caro- 
lina has  to  compete  with  schools 
where  big-time  athletics  exist  I  do 
not  want  to  see  any  improper 
methods  used  in  the  securing  of 
players.  I  don't  want  our  football 
players  to  be  paid  professionals. 

"Right  now  I  have  no  wa^  of 
knowing  whether  or  not  this  is  the 
case.  I  have  heard  rumors  on  both 
sides  but  have  heard  nothing  from 
the  most  reU;!ible  sources, .  the 
players  and  the  coaches. 

"If  h  were  ever  brought  to  my 
attention,  or  if  I  ever  f«U  that 
there  were  any  underhanded 
methods  in  any  sport  I  would  con- 
sid&r  it  my  duty  to  investigate  the 
situation  thoroughly  and  talk  to  as 
many  people  as  possible  about  the 
problem. 

'Then  if  I  found  anything 
wrong,  I  would  be  duty-bound  to 
report  it  in  The  Daily  Tar  Heel  in 
the  editorial  columns.  On  the 
other  hand  if  I  could  uncover 
nothing,  it  would  be  equally  as 
much  my  duty  to  praise  tho^  de- 
serving of  it  for  maintaining  high 
standards  in  athletics. 

"Another  issue,  also  of  interest 
to  a  minority  of  the  student  body, 
is  I  feel,  of  equal  importance.  This 
is  whether  or  not  meetings  of  the 
|FC  should  be  ^vered  by  a  re- 
porter for  The  Daily  Tar  Heel. 

"I  ittel  that  if  I  were  not  able 
to  detect  what  constitutes  news  I 
would  not  he  fit  for  my  chosen 
professioB.  All  my  experience  and 


(Continued  from  page  I) 
dition  which  has  been  so  preva- 
lent since  1793  is  dying  an  agon- 
izing death.  The  excitement,  the 
enthusiasm  and  the  esprit  de 
corps  which  was  once  the  heart 
throb  of  Carolina  seems  to  be  dis- 
sipating each  day.  Undoubtedly, 
you  are  all  aware  of  the  situation 
of  which  I  speak. 

"Recently  there  has  been  a  type 
of  mist  which  has  engulfed  Ihei 
campus — this  being  related  to  the  • 
seeping  disappearance  of  morale , 
and  the  monetary  needs  of  our 
teachers,  the  life  blood  of  every 
university.  Besides  being  disgrun- 
tled with  underpayment,  our  pro- 
fessors seem  to  have  'dropped  a 
•stitch'  somewhere.  This  unravel- 
ing is  apparent  among  the  stu- 
dents, also.  The  finely  knit  spirit 
which  for  so  long  was  exemplary 
has  reached  a  low  ebb,  and  the 
tide,  as  yet,  shows  no  sign  of  re- 
turning to  its  previous*  high  stand- 


the    administration,    our    trustees,) 
our  alumni,  the  General  Assembly, ' 
and,    also,    from     the    people    of 
North  Carolina.  The' blame  cannot 
be  focused  upon  one  faction;  there  ! 
is  not  one  group  to  be  singled  out, 
it  is  not  only  the  loss  of  morale  ; 
and   lack  of  funds;   neither  is    It 
the    lack    of    student    initiative—  I 
each   individual    must   realize   his ; 
or    her    responsibility    and    apply 
himself  or  herself  to  the  task  at 
hand — more  clearly,  to  his  or  her 
duty  which   the   university   should 
and  does  command.  ' 

"We  must  fir^-t  realize  that  this 
is  no  restrictive  dilemma.  Every 
member  of  the  university  commu- 


nity is  involved — and  not  just  be- 
cause    the  ■  spring    elections     are 
here.  This  is  something  which  has  j 
evolved  over  a  i>eriod  of  years. 

"I  am  not  running  for  this  of- 
fice, however,  solely  because  I 
feel  it  my  duty  or  because  I  con- 
sider it  a  moral  obligation  I  rec- 
ognize the  situation  for  what  it  is, 
and  see  that  there  is  a  large  and 
tedious  job  to  be  done.  I  think 
that  I  can  off'^r  the  most  service 
and  contribute  mof^  in  the  ca- 
pacity of  editor  of  the  Daily  Tar 
Heel..  It  is  not  only  a  challenge 
for  me;  it  is  a  challenge  for  all 
of  us  which  we  must  rise  to  meet.' 


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New  shipment  of  men's  knil 
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CONVENIENT  DAtLY  SERVICE 


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must  come  from  a  combined  ef- 
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themselves,  but  from  the  students. 


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sizes,  high  top'  and  low  quarter. 
For  men  as  low  as  $2.98  in  red, 
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after  !hSO  p.m.  and  weekend. 


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Anew  idea  in  smoking.. .all-new  SdleiTI 


Cre<itfd  try  R  J  Reynolds  Tobacco  Comparv- 


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2K6  alter  5:30  and  during 
weelKind. 

LOST:  ONE  ROtEX  OYSTOR 
Speedking  wristwatch.  Tuesday 
night  in  Physics  Lab  (I  think). 
Please  contact  Joost  Polak.  208. 
Lewis. 


•  menthol  fresh 

•  rich  tobacco  taste 
•  most  modern  filter 


Think  of  a  Sprii)g  breeze  blov.ing  over  fresh,  green  gra><  and  youll  have  a 
gooH  idea  how  rcfresliinp  all-new  Salem  Cigarettes  ta>te.  The  freshest  taste 
in  cigarettes  f^ow?  through  ^.M-'^m'^-  })iire  while  filler.  Rich  tobacco  taste  with 
new  surprise  softness ...  menthol-fresh  comfort.  Try  Salem  —  you'll  love  eni, 

Salem  refreshes  your  taste 


PA6I  POUR 


TMl  DAILY  TAR  MiH 


WEDNESDAY,  MARCH  13,  1^S7 


UNC  Beats  Yale,  90-74;  Will  M^et  Canlsius  Friday  Night 


A  Great  Tournament  For  The  Tar  Heels 

Last  weekend's  Atlantic  Coast  Conference  basketball  tournament 
was  the  biggest  and  best  in  history':  especially  if  you  happen  to  be 
a  Carolina  fan. 

The  unbeaten  Tar  Heels  breexed  through  the  quarterfinal 
round  without  working  vp  a  sweat,  nearly  got  bumped  off  by 
Wake  Forest  in  the  semis,  but  mopped  up  the  floor  with  South 
Carolina  in  the  championship  game. 

It  was  a  great  tournament  for  the  Tar  Heels.  They  set  the  sports 
wjrld  agog  with  the  blazing  brand  of  basketball  they  displayed,  and 
won  many  new  found  friends  to  their  cause. 

So  many  good  things  were  said  about  the  magnificent  Tar 
Heels  that  it  would  be  impossible  to  remember  them  all.  Ever 
since  last  Friday  morning.  Coach  Frank  McGuire's  dendies  hav* 
monopolized  the  sports  pages  of  ail  our  state  papers.  And  rightly 
so. 

South  Carolina  mentor  Frank  Johnson  called  Carolina  '"the  best 
team  to  ever  come  from  this  area."  After  the  licking  he  absorbed  in 
Saturday  nights  finals,  this  statement  is  not   too  surprising. 

It  was  a  tremendous  team  performance  that  carried  the  Tar 
Heels  to  27  straight  victories  and  their  first  ACC  title  in  histery. 
Lennie  Rosenbluth  was  their  hero,  but  his  supporting  cast  of  Joe 
Quigg,  Pete  Brennan,  Tenmiy  Kearns  and  Bob  Cunningham  de- 
served Oscars  for  the  roles  they  played. 

These  five  boys  dominated  the  ACC  All-Toiu-nament  team.  Rosen- 
bluth and  Brennan  were  named  to  the  first  unit,  while  Kearns,  Quigg 
and  Cunningham  all  drew  second  string  berths. 


For  Wake  Forest,  An  NIT  Berth 

Frank  McGuire  told  a  group  of  Metrofwlitan  WTiters  in  New  York 
Monday  afternoon  that  at  least  two  teams  should  be  allowed  to  repre- 
sent the  ACC  in  pest  .-wason  tournament  competition. 

The  Tar  Heel  Coach  poined  to  Wake  Forest  as  an  example, 
saying  that  the  Deacons  should  be  permitted  to  play  in  the  Na- 
tional Invitational  Tournament  as  a  reward  for  their  fine  season's 
record. 

As  the  conference  rule  stands  now.  only  the  league  champ  as  de- 
cided by  the  ACC  loiu-ney  can  compete  in  post  season  affairs.  And 
then  the  champ  mu.<  play  in  the  NCAA  tourney. 

Wake  Forest  has  a  strong,  experienced  team  that  deserves  a  chance 
io  go  after  the  NIT  crown.  The  Deacons  had  a  very  successful  year, 

and  if  four  losse.;  to  the  number  one  Tar  Heels  had  been  wiped  ou*. 
they  would  have  a  truly  outstanding  record. 

Against  outside  competition  such  as  Seton  Hall,  Temple  And 
others,  they  were  unbeatable.  It  was  only  against  conference  foes 
that  they  experienced  diffii;ulty. 

We  believe  Wake  Forest  could  have  gone  places  in  the  NIT  with 

its  comparatively  weak  field.  In  fact  we  think  they  could   have  won     ^ 

the  tournament.  It  would  have  been  another  argument  in  favor  of  the  j      ^^^^    Carolina    now    plays 
brand  of  basketball  played  in  the  Atlantic  Coast  Conference.  ^j^jy,,     j^     jj,g     Eastern     reg 


Tar  Heels  i 
Pull  Away  \ 
In  2nd  Half 

NKW  ^ORK  —  (AP)  —  North  ' 
Carolina's    Tar    Heels,    down    for 
nearly  three  quarters  of  the  game, 
showed  the  S'tuff  that  made  them  j 
the  nation's  No.  1  team  this  year 
by  whipping  Yale,  90-74  in  a  first 
round  game  of  the  NCAA  tourna- 
ment  Tuesday   night.    It   was   the 
28th  consecutive  victory  for  North 
Carolina,  the  only  unbeaten  major  i 
college  team  this  season.  j 

Yale's    red-headed    Johnny    Lee; 
rivalled  North  Carolina's  all-Anieri- ! 
ca  Lennie  Rosenbluth  as  the  out- , 
standing  player  to  appear  in  Tues- 
day night's  three  games  at  Madi- 
son Square  Garden.  .It  wa^  Lee's  , 
sharp  .shooting   that    was   the   big  j 
factor    in    keeping    Yale    in    front 
through  most  of  the  first  half  and  j 
getting  the  Eilis  back  in  contention  j 
after  North  Carolina  had  begun  to ' 
move  in  the  second  half.  | 

Syracuse  rallied  to  beat  Conn.  | 
82-76,  and  then  Caniaius  outplayed  ! 
lethargic  West  Virginia,  the  South- ! 
ern  Conference  champion,  64-56.  i 
Rosenbluth  had  the  edge  over  j 
jLee  in  their  duel  although  he  was  ' 
benched  for  awhile  after  commit-  , 
ting  his  fourth  personal  foul.  The  j 
tall  Tar  Heel  scored  11  field  goals  j 
and  seven  fouls  for  29  points.  In  ; 
addition  he  did  a  superb  rebound- 
iig  job  under  both  bo^ds.  Lee 
made  25  points  before  fouling  out  ; 
in  the  last  minute. 

North  Carolina's  "subway  South- 
erners,'  whose  entire  starting 
lineup  hail.>«  from  the  New  York 
area,  never  lost  their  poise  when 
they  were  threatened  by  an  upset. 
They  had  to  work  hard  to  tie  the 
score  at  40-40  just  at  the  end  of 
the  first  half. 

After  Carolina  did  go  ahead  at 
the  start  of  the  second  half,  the 
scrappy  EHis  rallied  to  regain  the 
lead  three  times.  Bob  Cunningham 
finally  sent  Carolina  ahead  for 
keeps  in  the  ninth  minute  of  the 
second  half.  Yale's  aggressive  de- 
fense proved  costly  in  the  long 
run  a.-;  four  of  the  five  starters 
fouled  out  in  t^e  closing  minutes. 

A  three-point  play  by  Lee  half- 
way through  the  final  half  marked 
Yale's  final  threat.  Carolina,  bear- 
ing down  harder,  spurted  into  a 
10  point  lead,  then  increased  its 
margin  further  after  Rosenbluth 
returned  to  the  game. 

Ca- 


Mihaly  Igloi  Answers  Blast 
By  Milwaukee  News  Man 

»,.,_  ,    ,  .  .  ,     ,  „  the  fact  that  Tabori  is  undergoing  i     "Had  we  interrupted  the  treat- 

Mihaly  Igloi,  coach  of  Hungarian  1,^.,^   j.egt^e^t  j^ere  that  should    ment  for  the  three-day  trip  jusl  to 
Olympic    distance    gunner    Laszlo   ^^^^  ^^^  .^.^^^  .^  ^.^^  ^^^  ^^.^  ^^  \  ^^^^^  ^^^  ^^^^  ^^^  ^g^^  3  ^^ 


A  Smile  For  The  Cameraman 

Coach  Sam  Barnes  and  five  of  his  top  wrestlers  flash  big  grins 
for  the  photographer  when  caught  in  the  UNC  dressing  room.  The 
five  are,  left  to  right:  Henry  Rhyne,  Larry  Hayes,  Ken  Hoke,  Char- 
ley  Boyette  and   Bob  Wagner. 

MARYLAND  WINS  TITLE 

Grapplers  Take  Fourth 
In  ACC  Championships 


By  RON  MILLIGAN 

The  Carolina  grapplers  brought 
home  disappointment  Sunday,  hav- 
ing placed  only  fourth  in  the  ACC 
wrestling  tournament  at  Char- 
lottesville. Va.  which  was  held 
over  the  weekend. 

Coach  Sam  Barnes  was  hoping 
to  place  iccond  in  the  tournament, 
but  to  his  disappointment,  fourth 


McGuire  Made 
Coach  Of  Year 
In  Conterence 


Notes  And  Quotes  On  Sports 

The  Carolina-Yale  game  played  last  night  in  New  York  City  will 
be  shown  on  televsion  tonight  at  7:30  over  station  WTIAL  in  Raleigh. 
WTVD  and  WTIAL-TV  are  negotiating  for  live  coverage  of  the  UNC 
games  in  Philadelphia  this  weekend.  (Since  this  column  was  written 
before  last   night's  game,  we   hope  they're  still  negotiating.) 

The  Tar  Heel  siring  of  27  regular  sea^^on  victories  which  they 
possessed  going  into  the  NCAA  tourney  was  a  new  record.  Kentucky 
and  San  FYancisco  held  the  old  regular  season  mark  at  25.  If  Caroliaa 
sweeps  the  national  title,  they  will  set  a  new  one  season  record  for 
consecutive  victories  at  32.  • 

Grady  Wallace  after  Saturday  night's   ACC  title  game:  "Th«» 
«     Rosenbluth  is  something,  isn't  he?  He  is  really  the  greatest." 

Info  reaching  our  ears  tells  us  that  Carolina  will  not  win  the  con- 
ference sportsmanship  award  as  voted  by  the  players. 

Yale  will  be  almost  impossible  to  beet  In  the  NCAA  swim 
championships  to  be  held  here  later  on  this  month.  The  p«W*rful 
Elis  swamped  one  of  the  nation's  better  teams.  Harvard,  U-7Q  h» 
•  meet  last  week.  Harvard's  coach  called  Yale  before  the  meet 
"the  greatest  team  ever." 


R.\LEICrH  (iT)— Frank  McGuire, 
coach  of  the  University  of  North 
Carolina  basketball  team,  is  the 
unanimous  choice  of  the  Atlantic 
Coast  Sports  Writers  Assn..  as  At- 
lantic Coast  Conference  Coach  of 
the  Year. 

He  received  all  47  votes  cast  by 
association  members  covering  the 
ACC  toiu-nament   finals-  here   last 


;gional  ^ 

tournament  at  Philadelphia  Friday.    Saturday  night., 
while    Syracuse    meets    Lafatette,       The  Tar  Heels  swept  27  games 


which  drew  a  first  round  bye. 


WAA  Intramural  Activity  To 
Hit  Peak  In  Weeks  To  Come 


YALE 
Lee  f 
Downs  f 
Baird  f 
Bodman  f 
Robinson  c 
Bab  c 
Sargent  g 
Thompson  g 
Molumphy  g 

Totals 
UNC 

Rosenbluth 
Brennan  f 
Young  f 
Quigg  c 
Cunningham  g 
Kearns  g 
•  Totals 
Yale 
i  North  Carolina 


G 


f 


8 

5 

0 

1 

7 

0 

2 

3 

1 
27 
G 
11 

6 

0 

5 

4 

5 
31 


F 
99 
3-6 
00 
0^ 
6-9 
0-0 
2.2 
0-0 
0-1 


20-27  28 
F      P 


7-12 
8-12 
0-0 
3^ 
4-4 
6-9 


28-41  18 
40  34  - 
40    50  - 


T 
25 
13 

0 

2 
20 

0 

0 

6 

2 
74 

T 
29 
20 

0 
13  I 
12  i 
16  1 
90  I 
74  i 
90 


to  gain  recognition  as  the  nation's 
No.  1  college  team  and  a  place  in 
the  NCAA  Eastern  regional  tour- 
nament against  Yale  at  New  York 
tonight. 

McGuii-e,  a  42-year-old  native  of 
New  York,  is  completing  his  fifth 
season  at  North  Carolina. 

He  also  was  named  coach  of  the 
Year  by  the  Metropolitan  Basket- 
ball Writers  Assn.,  in  New  York 
yesterday. 


place  was  the  best  his  boys  could 
do.  Barnes  commented:  "We  did 
not  look  smart  at  all  in  our  bout 
strategy;  we  did  the  right  thing 
at  the  wrong  time."' 

Perrin  Henderson,  137  lb.  divi- 
sion, was  the  star  wrestler  for  the 
Tar  Heels.  Henderson  placed  sec- 
ond in  the  tournament.  He  lost  a 
close  decision  to  the  "most  out- 
standing wrestler"  of  the  tourna- 
ment, Rodney  Norris  of  Maryland. 

I  One  of  the  highlights  of  the 
I  tournament  was  the  defeat  of 
I  .Maryland's  heavyweight  champion, 
I  .Mike  Sandusky.  The  champion  was 
j  defeated   by   Virginia's   Al  Jordan. 

The  Terps  of  Maryland  again 
showed  their  strength  as  they 
placed  first  in  the  event  and  had 
seven  individual  champions.  Vir- 
ginia came  next  and  put  Hwo 
wrcjllers  on  the  champions  plat- 
form, while  Duke  had  one  champ 
in  the  191  pound  division. 

The   individual   Tar   Heel   wrest- 
lers placed  in  the  tournament  as 
follows:   115  lb.  Dave  Wall   placed 
3rd,    130  lb.   Capt.    Bob    Wagner- 
3rd,    137    lb.    Perrin    Henderson— 
2nd,   147   lb.  Charlie   Boyette— 4th. 
157  lb.  Bill  McGehec— 4th,   167  lb. 
Dave    Atkinson— 3rd,    177   lb.    Rob, 
Boyette — 4th,  191   lb.  Larry  Hayes  , 
— 4lh  and  heavyweight  Stan  Left-  i 
wich — 3rd. 

The    NCAA    Wrestling    Tourna- 
ment  will   be   held   in   Pittsburgh,  { 
Pa.  on  March  29-30. 

Coach  Barnes  will  take  six  mat- 
men   to  this  national  tournament. 


"GAY  AND  SAUCY  GALLIC  FRANKNESS 
ABOUT  LIGHTHEARTED  SEX... 

the  brozen  defiance  of  movie  morals 
will  stir  protests  but  they  will  hove 
to  be  loud  ones  to  drawn  out  the 
loughterl". 


y.  World-Ttltgram 


Intramural  activities  in  the 
Woinen'if  Athletic  Association 
reach  a  peak  for  this  time  of  year 
within  the  next  few  weeks.  Bad- 
minton, tennis,  basketball,  shuf 
fleboard  and  table  tennis  activity 
is  picking  up:  and  champions  in 
the  various  sports  will  be  crowned 

soon. 

In  the  tenni^  tournament,  which  | 
began  early  last  term,.  Betty  Me- 
loy  and  Ann  Gillett  Burt  meet  in 
the    semi-finals.    Nancy    Shufford  1 
will  play  the  winner  of  that  match  \ 
in  the  finals.  j 

The    tennis    club    will    resume ' 
meeting  on  Thursday,   March  21. 
All  those  interested  are  invited  to  j 
attend. 

In  the  shuffleboard  tournament, 
Bev  Beckert  will  meet  Sara  Wal- 
ters in  a  semi-final  match  to  de- 
termine who  will  meet  Eleanor 
German  for  the  title. 

The  table  tennis  tournament 
has  reached  the  quarter-finals. 
The  deadline  for  this  round  is 
Friday  afternoon. 

The  badminton  tournament  be- 
gins    this     afternoon.     Sixty-four 


girls  have  entered  the  single  elim- 
ination tournament. 

The  WAA  basketball  club  will 
open  it:^  season  with  a  game 
against  Duke  this  Friday  in  Dur- 
ham. An  important  practice  ses- 
sion will  be  held  this  afternoon  at 
4  p.m. 


Reilfieue  Beokt  By 


J.  B.  PHILLIPS 


The  Intimate  Bookshop 


20s  tnt  Franklin  StrMt 


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Armour  Meats  And  Long  Meadow 
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"DEFINITELY  NOT  FOR  JUNIOR 
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— N.  T.  Journal  Amtrican 


RIC;<AltO  DAWN  MARTME         VIHORIO 

TODD  -  AODAMS  *  CAROL '  DeSICA 

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town  classes 


C/iap«/  HUl.  Narth  Cmrolinm 


Tabori,  said  here  Monday  that  had 
he  permitted  Tabori  to  attend  the 
Milwaukee  Journal  Games  Satur- 
day as  requested  despite  a  leg  in- 
jury, Tabori  could  easily  have 
been  in  the  position  of  being  un- 
able to  finish  out  the  indoor  sea- 
son. 

Igloi'o'  remarks  came  in  answer 
to  a  blast  by  Milwaukee  writer- 
track  promoter  Oliver  Kuechle 
that  Tabori  was  a  "pampered 
child"  and  "had  better  change 
some  of  his  ways  of  thinking." 

While  explaining  his  refu.sal  to 
let  Tabori  run  or  attend  the  Mil- 
waukee games,  Igloi  also  released 
the  text  of  a  telegram  which  he 
and  Ranson  sent  to  Kuechle  la.sl 
Thursday  informing  the  Milwau- 
kee Sports  Editor  of  Tabori's  in- 
jury and  the  need  to  stay  in 
Chapel  Mill  for  treatment. 

"What  Kuechle  is  overlooking  is ! 


run    at    Chicago    and     Cleveland  j  it  would  have  made  it  almost  :m- 
meets    the    next    two    weekends,"  j  possible  to  run  in  any  more  meet£ 


I  Igloi  commented. 


this  season,"  the  coach  stated. 


Howard  Johnson  Restaurant 

BREAKFAST 

LUNCH 

DINNER 

SNACKS 
"Landmark  For  Hungry  Tarheels" 


Dir«ct«d  by  RAOUL  WALSH 
NOW   PLAYING 


Carolina 


THE  HORIZOHS  ARE  UNLIMITED 


sU.  3*i.»i.':«rj«j-.»»' 


at  UNION  CARBIDE 


E.  R.  Brown 

of  our  New  Yark 

Offices  will  b« 

•    '  t 

on  campus,  Wednesday, 

9" 

March  27,  to  discuss 

career  opportunities 

'  * 

in  New  York  City  in 

;<r  •* 

these  fields: 

v 

Accountinf  " 

Advertising 

Credit. 

Foreign  Operations 

'.    :h 

Manrgentent  Services 

• 

Patent 

Purchasing 

Tax 

Traffic 

/              • 

Technical  WHting 

For  further  information 
see  your  Piacoment  Office. 
Then  make  an  appointment. 


Union  Carbide  offers  to  college  graduates  oppor- 
tunities in  some  of  the  mcst  rapidly  expanding 
fields  in  industry^Carbon  Products,  Chemicals, 
Alloys  aad  Metals,  Industrial  Gases,  Plastics, 
Nuclear  Blnergy,  and  Silicones.  In  all  these  fields 
Union  Carbide  needs  engineers,  scientists,  and 
Lusinesfi  and  liberal  arts  graduates,  y' 


Union  Carbide 

AM)    CARBON    CORPORATION 
30  ta^t  42nd  St.  GBI  Ne%¥  York  17,  \.  Y. 


tJ.H.C.  tlt>i*ftry 
Serials  Dept. 
Chapel  Hill.  N.   C. 


WEATHER 

C»ntM«r«bl«      cleudiiMM      and 
w«rm.  iviMctMl  high  72. 


S'()cDattyi|3rarKecl 


YEAR 

If s   a   good    IdM.    Sm   Mlitoriai. 
pa«<  2. 


VOL.  LVII  NO.   113 


AftHvieie   OP)    Wtre  itttvtc* 


CHAPEL  hill,  north  CAROLINA,  THURSDAY,  march  14,  19S7 


Offices    in    Graham    Memorial 


POUR   PAGES  THIS  ISSUE 


Bass  Reviews  Edit  Policy; 
Sloan  Notes  Morale  Crisis 


obligated  To 
Seek  Solution 
SaysSloon 

Ch8Tl5e  Sloan  said  yesterday  that 
lie  wDuW.  as  Daily  Tar  Heel  editor, 
"consider  it  an  obligation  to  do 
everything  possible  to  start  things 
moving  toward  a  solution  of  the 
probJem  ...  of  morale  at  Caro- 
lina." 

Responding  to  a  statement  made 
Tuesday  by  Daily  Tar  Heel  editor 
candidate  Franlv  Crowtlier  on  the 
lark  of  morale  among  students  and 
faruUy,  Sloan  said  that  he  agreed 
with  Crowther  that  "it  is  a  crisis." 

However.  Sloan  said,  an  edi- 
torial opinion  on  a  matter  of  such 
iraiwtance  \vould  serve  only  tv 
rehash  the  issue  unless  an  attemp* 
t'>  suggest  a  correction  was  made 

Sfcnn  observed  that  as  Daily  Tar 
Heel  managing  editor.  '"I  have 
been  in  a  position  to  ob-serve  the 
cii?'s  Frank  describes.  He  said  that 
"I  may  never  find  a  solution  to 
the  problem  myself,  but  I  hope  that 
through  editorials  I  could  stii 
liioughts  in  the  minds  of  others 

Sloan  asserted  that  he  "would 
not  conduct  anv  sort  of  crusade 
'Crusade'  is  not  a  well-liked  word 
when  used  a^  a  synonym  for  edi- 
l.rial  fervor." 

•"The  knowledge."  Sloan  said, 
"that  I  could,  in  the  poisition  of 
Daity  Tar  Heel  editor,  contribute 
to  the  solution  of  this  crisis  fills  me 
r^ith  a  mu:-h  deeper  feeling  than 
;oy  —  it  is  the  feeling  one  get.s 
in  aAt(c1i>ntlon  of  a  great  accom- 
lAiahHient. ' 


NEIL  BASS 

.   sec}:s   editorship 


CHARLIE  SLOAN 

candidate  for  editor 


Bass  Charges 
World  News  & 
Editor  Policy 

An  overabundance  of  national 
and  international  news  and  an 
ivory-towered  editorial  policy  are 
^monsf  the  situations  promised  to 
be  remedied  by  Nell  Bass,  inde- 
pendent candidate  for  editor  of 
the  Daily  Tar  Heel. 

"Bring  the  paper  back  to  the 
student,"  he  said.  "If  there  were 
nnv  on?  slogan  which  would  cap- 
ture my  sentiments,  this  would 
certainly  be  it. 

"My  three  qualifications  which 
will  enable  me.  with  the  help  of 
Ood,  to  give  you  the  best  student 
newspaper  you  have  ever  bad  are- 
interest,  experience  and  sincerity. 

"My  first  week  at  Carolina  T 
be-ran  work  on  The  Daily  Tar 
Heel.  I  have  worked  continuously 
for  two-and-a-half  years  since  that 
time.  I  believe  this  experience 
will  enable  me  to  give  you  the 
type  of  newspaper  a  great  uni 
versity  such   as  ours  deserves. 

"Concerning  my  interest,  if  1 
did  not  want  this  job  with  all  my 
heart.  I  would  not  se?k  it.  It 
would  be  a  betrayal  to  you  as 
students  were  I  to  take  this  job 
without  a  willingness  to  serve  and 
a  devotion  which  would  prod  me 
to  work  twenty  four  hours  a  day 
for  vou. 

"Concerning  'professional'  ath- 
letics, I  do  not  believe  profes- 
.<:=onalism  as  such  exists  here  at 
Carolina.  I  believe  in  a  winning 
team  and  always  will. 


Selma  Holds     ' 
Aycock  Day 
This  Friday        | 

Selma  will  celebrate  William  B.  [ 
Aycock  Day  on  Friday,  in  honor  j 
ot  her  favorite  son,  recently  se-| 
lected  chancellor  of  the  University  I 
in  Chapel  Hill.  \ 

Aycock's  mother,  Mrs.  Myrtle  B. ! 
Aycock,  will  hold  open  house  at ! 
her  home,  on  401  N.  Ma.iscy  St.  for 
sue  s  and  Selma  citizens.  An  in-j 
formal  dinner  will  be  given  from  I 
7  to  9  p.m.  at  the  ielma  School  i 
Lunchroom   in  Aycock's   honor.        i 

The  mayor  cf  Selma  and  the 
Board  of  Commissioners  are  spon- 
soring the  event,  and  the  towns- 
people are  pitching  in  on  arrange- 
ments. 


Evans  Pledges  Presentation 
Of  SP  Principles,  Purposes 


Orientation 
Committee 
Announced 

:,  Women's    Orientation    Commit- 
tee  members '  have   been  selected, 
SKisan    Mayhue,   chairman    of   Wo- 
Among  guests  invited  to  the  pro-  j  njen's    Orientation,   announced   to- 
grain    are    Gov.    and    Mrs.    Lulher    ,j|ay 
Hodges,  Dr.  and  Mrs.  Frank  P.  Gra- 1  v 

ham.  President  and  Mrs.  William  ■  Libby  Straughn  of  Fayettevillc 
C.  Friday,  officials  of  Johnston :  will  serve  the  committee  as  sec- 
County,  and  members  of  the  press '  j-jftary  and  Pat  Dillon  of  States- 
and  radio.  •.,,         .,,  .   .        •— . 

T-.        .  ,      .      .,  ,  Ville    will   .serve   as   adviser    train- 

The    Aycock    family    moved    to 

Selma   when    Aycock   w.is   7   years    ^^   chairman. 

(Id.     He    graduated     from     Selma '  i  The  other  women  selected  are: 

High  School  in  1932.  tl...      »,  ^      .    ^       »     »,  o    ^ 

I  t.bba  McCord,  Spartenburg,  S.  C; 

^MBMMMiMBaMaaMBMi^a^MBMa^M    Lucy    Crossland.    St.     Petersburg. 

Florida:  LuRuth  Sutton,  Raleigh; 
Belle  Corey,  Atlanta.  Georgia; 
Marcia  McCord,  Charlotte:  Pat 
Anderson.  Crete.  Illinois;  Martha 
Fortune.  Brevard. 


Robert  Frost 
Stops  Here  On 
Annuoi  Tour 


JTT 


f6ur  Students  Are  Suspended  Here 


As  part  of  a  yearly  tour  to  this 
•>-f"».  P'lh'-rf  T;'-o«t  dean  of  Ameri- 
can poets,  will  be  in  Chapel  Hill 
lor  several  days  beginning  Mon- 
day. 

In  an  extemporaneous  lecture 
reading  Monday  at  8  p.m.  in  Hill 
Hall.  Frost  will  read  from  his 
poems  and  will  comment  on  life 
antt  'dir:  conlemparary    affairs 


The  committe  members  will 
each  be  in  charge  of  coordinat- 
ing the  women's  activities  for  one 
day  of  Orientation  Week. 

Misses  McCord,  Crosaland,  Sut- 
ton, and  Corey  will  also  serve  on 


Theater  Exec 
To  Taik  Here 
On  Plan  Men. 


Tom  Lambeth  Named  To  Post 
Ot  Evan's  Campaign  Manager 

Sonny     Evans.     SP     presidential    men!  further  towards  the  realization 
nominee,    pledged    himself    yester-    <  i    its  full  potential." 
day    to    a    full    presentation   of   tlie       Evans    also    anntninced    the    at>- 
principles,  purposes  and  records  ol  i  pointment  of  Tom  Lambeth,  .senior 
Ills  party.  >  fiom    Winston-Salem,    as   hLs   cam- 

In    a    prepared   statement    Evans    paign  manager, 
said  'the  next  few  weeks  will  give       In      accepting     the      nomination 
tlie    campus    a  'detailed    di.scussion    Lambeth  voiced  respject  for  Evans 
of  most  of  the  problems  which  will    and  cited  the  nominee  for  his  out- 
face the   Student  Government   next    .standing  record  in  the  University's 
jear.  The  principles,  purposes  and  ,  Student  Government:   "In  the  three 
records  must   be  again  restated  in  '  .vears  I  have  known  ( Evans i,  I  have 
no   uncertain   terms    .       .   I   would    come   to   respect   him   for  his   out- 
l:ke    to    challenge    each    student    to    standing    ability    and    the    integrity 
compare    and    consider    the    presi-    w  ith  which  he  approaches  each  sit- 
c'ential   candidates   on    the   basis  ol    u;ition  he  meets." 
our  records  and  our  programs,  and        In    delineating    Evans"    qualifica- 
op    this    basis   to   vote    for   the   per-    '  ons  for  office  he  further  mention- 
.son    who    they    feel    can    most    ef-    ed  the  candidates  positions  as  vice 
fectively   lead   the  Student   Govern-    president  o[  the  student   body  and 

— — - —     chairman  of  the  student  comjjiittee 

II  <»n  selection  of  a  chancellor,  further 

|^0Q0|^  ^fOflYI  stating       that      'through      all     hLs 

(Evans  •  work  in  all  three  branches 

f^l  ll^/Vn    P<^l^^^^«  **  student  goveimment  he  has  gain- 

^UDQn    I    QiaC6/  ,d   a   background  of  understanding 

^  ,         I/*  1 1       J  ^"'^  experience  with  the  affairs  of 

I  Wenty   Ixlllea  ^^     studem     and     the    University 

which   will   enable  him   to  perform 

HAVANA,     Cuba — (AP) — Arm-  capably    the   job   of   pi-esident.' 

ed   rebels   stormed   into  the   presi- 

dential  palace  today  in  a  bloody 
r?volutionary  attempt  to  seize  or 
kill    President    Fulgencio    Batista. 


YMCA  Holds  Elections, 
Nominations  Tonight 


Twenty  men  were  reported  kill- 


V'vti.  idents  have  t>een  sus- 
pen4ea  from  school  indefinitely 
lium  Carolina  by  the  Men's  Honor 
CbUticil.  according  to  a  report  re- 
Icuaed  this  week. 

iJiree  students  were  found  guil- 
ty ol  cheating  and  one  of  pla'giar- 
i^m,  acjuruing  to  the  report. 

Oiie  student  was  acquitted  by 
the  council  of  charges  vf  plagiar- 

Ihe     report     issued     by     Clerk 
G«oi'ge  Kagsdale  s  as  follows: 
CASE   ONE 

A  student  was  brought  before 
the  council  charged  with  cheating 
on  a  Social  Science  11  final  exan.. 
Hk  plead  guilty  to  the  charge  and 
.iduiiitej  that  he  had  copied  mu- 
UMial  from  h.  •  text  book  into  sev- 
eral blue  books,  taken  these  blue 
hooks  into  the  final,  and  then 
copied  passages  from  these  into 
another  blue  book  which  he  hand- 
ed in  to  the  professor.  '      ' 

lU  admitted  his  guilt  readily 
and  was  found  guilty  and  suspend- 
ed indefinitely  from  Carolina,  but 


the  council  made  the  recommen-  , 
dation  that  he  be  allowed  to  re- 
enter school  at  the  beginning  of 
the  Summer  Session  this  year  be- 
cause cf  his  •  raightforwardness 
and  complete  co-operation  with 
:he  council. 
CASE  TWO 

Two  students  were  charged  with 
copying  from  each  other's  paper 
durii.^;;  a  Psychcology  40  final  ex- 
am. These  two  boys  were  seen  by 
several  other  people  who  turned 
ihfm  in  to  a  member  of  the  Coun- 
cil. The  boys  plead  guilty. 

One  cf  them  stated  that  he— 
■'just  wasn't  thinking"  and  copied 
five  or  six  answers. 

The  other  staled  that  he  had 
always  been  aware  of  the  Honor 
Sy  '.cm  and  had  always  respected 
it,  but  that  he  needed  a  C  in  the 
course  and  didn't  think  he  could 
get  it  without  help,  so  he  copied 
from  the  other  defendant's  paper. 
Both  were  found  guilty  and  were 
suspended  indefinitely  from  Caro- 
lina. 


It  Is  w«ll  t«  mention  h«r« 
that  th*  ••vtral  ptrsoni  who 
turned  thvs*  boyt  in  did  the 
right  thing  and  »rt  to  be  com- 
mended for  their  action. 

CASE  THREE  - 

Two  boys  were  questioned  con- 
cerning themes  which  they  hand- 
ed in  which  were  practically 
identical.  One  boy  stated  that  he 
knew  nothing  about  how  they 
could  have  gotten  that  way,  while 
the  other  said  that  he  had  read 
the  other  boy's  theme  and  wrote 
on  the  same  subject.  The  boy.-, 
were  room  mates. 

The  second  boy  said  that  the 
other  didn't  know  anything  about 
it,  and  that  he  himself  hadn't 
copied  the  theme,  but  had  read  it 
and  then  wrote  his  own.  He  said 
that  he  didn't  plagiarize,  but  it 
became  increasingly  clear  to  the 
council  that  he  didn't  know  exacl- 
ly  vyhat  plagarism  entailed. 

The  themes  were  word  for  word 

(see  HONOR  COUNCIL  page  3) 


Willara    Swire,   executive    dircc 
the    Campus    Orientation    Commit-    lor  .f  the  American  National  The- !  ^^  -^  j,^^^,^  j„^.^^  ^^^  p^j^^^ 
tee.  As  part  of  a  new  system.this  •  ator  and  Academy,  will  be  a  guest  i      ^^e  56-year-old  president,  a  vet-   p""  "-■■'  ' 
year  the   purpose   of   the   Campus    of    the    Carolina    Playmakers    and    ^,^3^  ^j  violence,  survived  and  di-    ^^'"^^'  ^'^•'° 
Orientation    Committee    is    to    co-   will  address  a  class  here  Monday.    ^,^^^^  ^  successful  tank-led  coun- 
orjjirwte  the  men  and,  women's  ac- ,      ^^^^^^^^  .^^^  ^.^  ^^^^.^  .^^  ^^^  '  ter-attack  on  rebel  supporters  out- 
,  ^  '  York  to  travel  around  the  country  |  side  the  iialace. 

Frl»et  phins  to  rislf  nevrral  Eng4<i''M¥wiTMi'-s  •  Orient atlon'  Commit- .-tor  a  few'months,  Swire  is  visiting 
lish  classes.  He  will  talk  with  stu-    tee  nv.Mnbers  were  selected  on  the .  certain     key    cities    lo    determine-  rebcKs   and   5   palace   guards   wer^ 

basis     of     high     recommendations.  ,  whether     they     want     to     join     in    reported    killed    within   earshot   of 

theater    Batista. 

Flights  into  and  out  of  Havana 


Elections  for  YMCA  officers  will 
be  held  tonight  at  7  p.m.  in  Ger- 
rard  Hail,   according   to   President 


dents    Tuesday    at    noon    in    Bing- 
ham  103. 

Scheduled    to    arrive    in    Chapel 


Hill  Sunday  evening,  the  poet  will    work    with    people 


reliability    and    initiative,    interest    A.N.T.A.'s       forty-circuit 
in     campus    activities,     ability    to   plan.  The  plan  calls  f.ir  an  organ- 
and    past    ex-    Ized    network    of    forty    repertory 


stay   with   C. 
wood. 


P.    Lyons   in   Grcen- 


perience   and   activities, 
to  Miss  Mayhue. 


according   theaters 
country. 


distributed     around     the 


"Anyone  who  has  contributed  or 
has  been  active  in  the  program  is 
encouraged  to  come,"  he  said. 

The  floor  wil!  be  open  for  nom- 
Fifteen  out  of  about  40  invading ;  inatjons..  The  election  will   foUow. 

Mayo  said. 

The  slate  of  candidate.^  to  be 
presented  by  the  nominating  com- 
mittee includes; 

Prcident — Stewart  Colson;  vice 
president  ~  John  Phillips;   secre- 


vvere   cancelled  late   today   because 
of    the    armed    rebellion,    leaving 


'  152  passengers  stranded  in  Miami. ;  ^^y  _  Kej,y  ^vallace;  treasurer- 


Penny  Votes  Select  Blue-White  Queen 


students'  penny  votes  will  de- 
termine this  year's  beauty  queen 
and  court  for  the  annual  Blue- 
White  football  game  to  be  pla>ed 
in  Kenan  Stadium  Saturday  after- 
noon. 

Pictures  of  the  girls,  chosen 
from  all  the  dorms  and  sororities 
on  campus,  are  available  in  the 
lobby  of  Y-Court.  In  line  with  the 


traditional  voting  procedure  for 
the  Blue-White  queen,  the  candi- 
date receiving  the  largest  number 
of  penny  votes  will  be  selected 
queen  of  the  festivities. 

Jars  are  available  in  Y-Court 
wherein  votes  for  favorite  choices 
can  be  cast.  Voting  will  end  Satur- 
day at  noon,  when  the  votes  will 
be    tallied   and   the   queen    will  -be 


announced   at  the   halftime   at    the 
game  lalrr  in  the  ai'ternoon. 

The  queen  and  her  court  will  be 
escorted  by  members  of  the  Mono- 
gram Club  during  the  ceremonies. 

After  the  game,  she  will  be  the 
gue-st  *cf  honor  at  a  private  party  ^ 
sponsored   by  the  Monogram   Club 
in   her  honor. 


Also  highlighting  the  program 
will  be  selection  of  a  Carolina 
coach  and  runner-up  coach  of  the 
year.  The  two  coaches  selected 
will  be  pivs?nted  with  trophies  at 
the  end  of  the  game. 

Proceeds  from  the  game  will  go 
to  a  scholarship  fund  sponsored 
by   the   Monogram  Cfub. 


Dick  Frank  and  membership  chair- 
man —  Larkin  Kirkman. 

Two  candidates  will  be  present- 
ed by  the  committee  for  program 
chairman.  They  are  Randy  Shellon 
and  Buddy  Strickland. 


First  Seminar.  Small  Industry 


By  BOB  MiOH 

The  "Business  Ffllr"  will  pre- 
sent a  varied  caat  Of  speakers 
headed  by  the  chief  executive  of 
thi$  «tate.  Gov.  Luther  H.  Hodges. 
.  The  fair  is  10  be  sponsored  by 
the  School  of  Business  Admin- 
i  'iration  through  thfe  Alpha  Kappa 
Psi,  professional  business  frater- 
nity. 

Heading  the  first  of  three  semi- 
nars will  be  GeraW  F.  Albright, 
director  of  the  Small  Industries 
Sectior..  Dept.  of  Conservation  and 
Development  in  Raleigh.  Albright 
will  speak  on  the  "Development  of 
Small  Industries  in  North  Caro- 
Irna." 

Speaking  during  the  same  ses- 
sion with  .\lbright  will  be  Ben 
Smith  of  the  Black  Panther  Co., 
^nford,  and  Jack  Worsham  of 
Southern  Pb  ,ics  Engineering, 
Greensboro. 
ALBRIGHT 

Albright  will  deliberate  on  how 
*mall  industries  have  helped  place 
this  state  on  a  higher  economic 
^rl  f  "''■  ^""^^  Carolina  can 
factories  into  the  state 

t  .^h''  l"^  ^""*'*'"  *"1  reply 
i  w^;^^n  '  '''*^'"'^"»«  ^d  teU 


I        Albright    is   qualified    for  Mt 
'    position    as    heed    of    the    Small 
Industries  Section  having  gradu- 
ated   from     ihtfiana    University 
i    with    a    degree    in    business    law 
and   corporate   organization.    He 
j    has  served  the  municipal  utility 
I    of     his    home-town     as    auditor, 
I    business     manager     and     comp- 
I    treller. 

I  He  later  became  associated  vflTh 
'  an  IndianapoHs  accounting  firm 
where  for  several  years  he  special- 
ized in  corporate  reorganization, 
system  installations  and  business 
coun  -ling.  After  entering  his  own 
business  and  organizing  Central 
I  Broadcasting  Corp..  which  pur- 
chased and  operated  a  Richmond, 
Ind.,  radio  station,  Albright  sold 
out  and  moved  to  Raleigh  where 
he  became  general  manager  of 
WNAO.  Following  the  subsequent 
sale  of  the  station,  under  his  di- 
Irection,  he  took  a  temporary  as- 
signment as  Industrial  Develop- 
ment Engineer  for  the  Dept.  of 
Conservation  and  Development  in 
tlie  capital. 

i      While  handling  the  location   of 

I  the  two  General  Electric  plants  in 

Hickory    and    Hendersonville,    he 

wa  •  imyressed  by  the  need  for  the 

,  development 'of    small    industries 

within  the  state,  using  local  capi- 

Itai,  know-how,  and  resources. 


Albright   organized,   in   Septem- 
ber,   1954,    the    Small    Industries 
Section  and  has  served  as  its  di- 
rector from  that  time.  Under  his 
guidance,  74  new  small  industries 
have    been    established    in    North 
Carolina  and  an  equal  number  of 
projects  are  in  process. 
BOOK 
j      During  the  time  he  worked  with 
this  state's  small  industry  develop- 
ment, Albright  wrote  and  publish- 
ed a  book  guiding  community  de- 
'  velopment  of  industry.  This  book 
^  is  not  only  used  by  towns  in  this 
state,  but  also  by  communities  in 
several  other  states. 
I      In   order  to   obtain    outstanding 
speakers  and  displays  for  the  two 
exhibit  showings,   a    student  com- 
mittee   from   the    School    of   Busi- 
ness  Administration   went    to   Ra- 
^  leigh,    Greensboro,    Durham    and 
'  other  cities  in  the  state  where  they 
.  interviewed     the     Governor,     Al- 
1  t)right,  Waynick  and  other  indus- 
trial executives. 

The    concept    of    the    Business 

Fair  this  year  is  'one  which   has 

1  been  commended  by  educators  and 

I  North  Carolina  bu'^nessmen  alike 

for  its  educational  value,  as  well 

]  as  fw  the  experience  Which  those 

,  who   partidpite   in   the   planning 

and  execution  of  such    a  produc 

I   tipn  gain. 


Candidates  For  Blue-White  Queen 

The  above  girls  have  been  chosen  to  vie  for  the  title  of  beauty  Shelley,  Spencer;  Elane  Meldah,  Alderman.  Back  row  left  to  right: 
queen  of  the  annual  Blue-White  football  game  to  be  played  here  p^^  y^^^  Batten,  KD;  Ann  Newsome,  AGO;  Isabel  Madrey,  Mclver; 
Saturday  afternoon.  The  candidates  ofr  queen  were  chosen  from  all 
dorms  and  sororities.  Front  row  left  to  right:  Lucinda  Holderness, 
TrI  Delt;  Mary  Louise  Bizzell,  Chi  O;  Lucie  Crossland,  PI  Phi;  Ann       Willowdean  Land,  Nurses. 


Joan  Willsey,  Carr;  Shirley  Dees,  AD  Pi;  Ann  AAorgan,  Smith;  and 


Cambridge 
Prof  Speaks 
Here  Tonight 

Dr.  Nichola  •  .Man.sergh,  British 
C.:mmonwealth  expert,  will  speak 
here  tonight  on  "South  Africa 
19CG-1956:  The  Price  of  Magnani- 
mity." 

D,.  Blansergh  will  speak  at  8:3U 
in  the  Library  Assembly  Room.  He 
is  being  sponsored  by  Pi  Sigma 
-Alpha,  an  honorary  political 
science  organization. 

Dr.  Mansergh,  of  Cambridge 
University,  is  currently  a  visiting 
professor  of  the  British  Common- 
v.ealth  Studies  at  Duke  University. 

Di.  Mansergh  hs  been  active 
not  only  in  academic  work  but  also 
in  British  government.  From  1941- 
46  he  was  associated  with  the  Em- 
pire Division  of  the  Ministry  of 
Information  which  he  directed  the 
last  two  years. 

In  1946-47  h?  was  assistant  sec- 
retary of  the  Dominicans  Office. 
He  began  teaching  at  Cambridge 
in  1947  except  for  1951  when  he 
went  to  Australia  as  a  visiting 
professor. 

Since  1933  he  has  been  Smuts 
Professor  of  the  History  of  the 
British  Commonwealth  at  Cam- 
bridge. 

Dr.  Mansergh  is  one  of  the  lead 
ing  exponents  of  the  idea  that 
th?  British  Commonwealth  system 
is  out  of  date.  He  expounds  this 
idea  in  his  major  early  publica- 
tion, 'The  Commonwealth  and  the 
Nations,  released  in   1948. 

One  of  his  best  books  and  the 
most  readable  is  "The  Coming  of 
the  First  World  War",  published 
in  1949.  His  most  recent  stt>dies 
resulted  in  a  publication  entitled 
"Multi  -  Racial  Commonwealth", 
published  at  the  end   of  1955. 

His  major  academic  fields,  the 
fields  of  most  of  the  rest  of  his 
works,  are  British  Commonwealth 
affairs  and   modern   history. 


i^^^'^^'^^'w^^"^^ 


p*  •  mm  »»»•  »" 


^A6E  TWC 


tHi  DAILY  TAt  HCfL 


THURSirAY,  MARCH  >4,  1957 


Schbdl  On  12-Month  Basis?    integration  SCOREBOARD: 
It   Is  A   Practical  Answer 


1  !ie  proposal  this  week  to  put  state-supported  colleo[es  on  a  ,12- 
nioinh  basis  canie  as  no  sliock  to  quite-  a  Few  members  ot  the  l.'viiversity 
community. 

They  remembered  what  (iordon  Gray,  former  president  of  tlie  Con- 
solidated University,  Si-id  in  his  re|K>rt  to  the  Board  of  Trustees  in  the 
academic  year  i9j4"r»r)- 

"We  are  confronted  with  the  prospect  of  greatly  imreased  enroll- 
ments.  We  nu.st  move,  therefore.  ^^^.^.^.^^  ^,^^  I'niNersitv  c^ets  will 
to  a  mavnnum  ellectiveness  m  the      ^.^^^^^^  ,omenme  in  the  future,  aiuf 


use  of  our  present  pla-nt.  Among 
other  nieasunes.  we  will  liave  to 
consider  seriotislv  two  departures 
from  present  -  practice. 

"One  is  the  question  of  schedul- 
ing more  cla.sses  in  the  afternoon, 
so  as  to  use  classroom  space  to  bet- 
ter adxania'^c:  the  other  is  the  (pies- 
tion  of  giving   iciiular   instruction* 

on    a    i2-n>onth   basis." 

*  *  * 

So  \vhen  ftlirirman  1).  flidcn 
Ramsey  of  tlie  Stare  Board  ol 
I'i"hcr  IfliKvioii  said  a  studv  ol 
the  12-month  plan  is  nnderwav 
in  the  hoard,  he  was  refleciin.n 
thought  that  has  been  floating 
around  hn  several  vears. 

While,  there  will  be  moans  from 
"ionie  of  the  students  at  the  thought 
of  such  a  svsrem.  we  belie\e  it 
woulfl  work,  and  work  well._ 

As  Ramsev  said  this  Wv^ek,  '  l  he 
state  has  a  lar'j[e  inxestment  which 
is  partially  idle,/pr  three  months." 
and  the  edur<.;ional  institutions  of 
the  >tate  are  o|:i!eratini>  at  onlv  one- 
thiifl  canai  itv  duiinu  summer  now. 

Since  it  i.s  apparent  that  anv  ad- 
ditional   buildiuiis    and    classr(M)m 


that  the  futine  will  ^be  quite  a 
ways  off,  it  is  time  that  thinkers  in 
the  istate  began  thinking  ;)ibout 
enlarging  the  system  within  the 
same  physical  boundaries.  Bcilh  af- 
ternoon classes  and  a-  la-month 
study  system  are  excellent  wavs  to 
do  this. 


They 

T09, 

Age 


Riot^ 
At 
Of  18 


Maybe  it  would  be  better  ik  the 
proposal  to  dro|j  the  stales  Not- 
ing A'^v  to    iS   were  defeated. 

When  ive  think  thai  the  Caro- 
lina (ientlemin  who  participated 
in  those  recent  panty  raids  woidd 
be  Noting  on  county  connnissi<Mi- 
crs.  town  aldermen,  state"  legisla- 
tors, I'nited  States  senators  and 
representaiixes.  go\ernors  and  the 
Tresident  of  the  Ignited  States,  we 
shudder. 


America   Slipped  A   Little 


America  slipped  a  little  in  the 
past  few  davs. 

Two  in(  idents  proved,  to  our 
wav  of  thinkin*  at  least,  that  the 
coiniirv  has  fallen  a  little  bit  from 
those  nice  fundament.-.ls  that  were 
empl<»yed  in  the  Declaration  t)f 
IndependeiKe.  the  C^cmstitution 
and   the 'R"volutionarv  ^Var. 

bi  New  R<Khelle,  N.  V..  the 
Nmeviian  l.eQ;i<)n  post  elected 
Sen.  Joseph  McCarthv  (R-Wisc") 
aN  recipient  of  J^s  '" Americanism"' 
award.  To  McCarthv.  who  fought 
lor  <e>eral  years  -jtfx,  pojike'  people 
tJ)ink  iu  cT  very  un-American  man- 
ner aiid  called  them  Communists 
('T\hi!e  he  hid  on  the  Senate  floor)* 
when  thev  didn't,  went  an  award 
h>r  beini»  an  American  and  belie\- 
inu  basic  allv   .\meii(an   ideals. 

We  pit\  the  wives  of  the  New 
Rodielle    l,e»ionaiies.    Thev    must 

be  awfullv   tormetited   people. 

*  »  # 

An  inc  idem  of  consideiably 
mort^  si'inific  .'lue  happened  at 
Queens  College.  Flushing.  .\.  ^ .. 
last  Siuiday.  Prcnost  Thomas  V. 
Ciarvev  of  the  instituti<m  rided 
rditor  John  (iates  of  I'he  Daily 
Woi  ker  "mav  not  speak  on  the 
Oufccns  Collei;e  Vampus." 

Dr.    (rar\ev's    reason: 

"It  would  be  unrealistic  and  in- 


The  Daily  Tar  Heel 

Thr  iiffKial  ,ui(li-ni  ptifilKdli'>n  ol  ibt 
Piihlu:jii..n.>  Boiinl  ol  'he  Univer.sil>  o| 
North  C;<riilink  W^&^  i\  is  pul^iishert 
iaily  exttpl  Mnft»*iiV  aiWt^  .'xaminalio; 
•  pil  varalK'n  piTiotls  ami  oumiiier  terms 
Kni**!*^  a*  ««'ri)nil  rtass  matter  in  tht 
o.>««  'MUcc  m  rhap«-l  Hill  N  C.  undei 
■h»-  \ii  .11  March  r  I87(j  SuhscnpliJ'^r 
rates  nfaiUd.  S4  per  year.  $2.50  a  semes 
ter,  (1riiver«'fl  $6  a  year.  $3  50  a  seme* 
fer 


EdMor            

FRED  POWLEDGE 

Managing  Editor 

CLARKE  JONES 

\>ws  Editor    . 

NANCY  BILL 

>pftrt<i    pditor 

_  LARRY  CHEEK 

Bii.'^ineHi  hfanager   >_ 

BILL  BOB  PL-EL 

Advertising  .\!anager 

FRED  KATZIN 

tDUOKlAL     SlAfr>     -    Woouy      seaur%, 
Joey  Payne,  Stan  ShaW. 

NEWS  STAFF— Clarks  Jones.  Pringle 
Pipkin.  Edith  MacKinnon,  Wally  Ku- 
ralt,  Mary  Alys  Voorhees,  Graham 
Snyder.  Neil  Bass.  Bob  High,  Ben 
Taylor.  Walter  Schruntek,  H-Joost  Po- 
\ak,   Pitsy  Miner.   Bill  King. 

iuSINESS  STAFF— Rom  Uoore,  Johnny 
Whitaker.  Dick  Leavitt. 

SPORTS  STAFF:  Dave  Wible,  Stewart 
Bird.  Ron  Milligan. 


_  Dale  Stale; 
Charlie  Holt 

Assistant  Sports  Editor _  Bill  King 


Suboeription  ManagM' 
Circulation  Manager 


Woody,  Scjaxt, 


Staff  Photographers 

Norman  Kantor 
Librarians.   Sue  Gichaer,  .Marilyn  Strum 


Proofreader     -    Walt  Schruntek 

Night  Editor  -. Manley  Springs 

Night  News  Editfr  .j^^^  .-..■  Bob  High 


tonsistent  with  the  intent  of  the 
bvlaws  and  pertinent  resolutions 
of  the  Board  of  Hi<;her  [-.ducation 
for  us  to  briny  to  this  <ann>us  fi 
person  uho  w  is  t:on\i(  ted  of  (on- 
spirin-^  to  reach  the  o\erthro\\  In 
hine  aiul  xioKiite  of  the  \erv  s^n- 
ernmeni  which  we  arc  obligued 
to  uphold  .  .  .* 

(iates.   it  Stems,  has  ser\ed   lime 
in  federal  prison  for  attempiiuii;  t(»  . 
o\erthro\\    the  go\ermneni  by  \  io- 
Icnte. 

What  l>ctttn,V'*"e''"son  c'>idd  exist 
lor  J)tiu|L^i>^tjiiJi  a  man  to  a 
(■'  np.is? 

There  would  be  no  (  haiue  that 
a  student  would  stu])idlv  a((ej)t 
(iates'  p.onouncemeiH  as  la<t. 
t-'ates  is  an  acknowledged  Com- 
nuinist. 

.\>id  tl'e  student  body  of  Queens 
C^ollcne  would  have  a  chan*  e  to 
see  and  hear  a  real.  li\e  Com- 
munist in  action.  The  students 
loidfl  ask  hint  questions.  e\en 
armie  w  ih  him.  but  no.  sav  Dr. 
(iarvev  and  tlie  lioaid  ot  Higher 
Fducation. 

D' .  Cirvey  also  said,  at  the  time 
of   tl>e   (iates   decision,    that: 

'Oueens  ColU-of  has  lony  held 
and  will  continue  to  hold  the  po- 
siiiiKi  that  subject  t<i  the  rcstvit- 
irons  of  the  law  and  f)f  decency, 
its  itudcnis  in  ihc  j)ursuit  of  a 
greater  'inderstandiiii^  of  the 
v.ovld'>  p'.ohlems  may  heai  and 
Ie..n  aboiu  all  rei():.;tu/ed  opin- 
i.  :}s  and  positions  no  matter  how 
miuh  in  tlie  minority  and  how  un- 
popular thev  mav  be." 

Such  hijWK  lisv  .in  modern  edu- 
r  jiion   is  si(  kenin;:;  and  disgusting;. 

TV  Preview: 
Government 
On  WUNC 

Anihony  Wolff 

\\T'NC-T\'  inaugurates  a 
Thursday  series  entitled  "Ameri- 
can Covernmetit'  tonigltt  at  0:^;o 
on  Cli  •  niel  4.  The  <|uc>tion  for 
this  evening;  is  "What  is  (ioxern- 
ment?"    .\   good   (juestion. 

jack  IJetmv  takes  o\ei  in  Chan- 
nel 2  for  an  hour  at  iS:-{o  p.m.  His 
guests  imlude  (iale  Stoiuh  Lau- 
rence VVelk  and  Heddy  Lamarr.  It 
hjoks  from  here  to  be  Jack's  show 
all  the  way. 

"Dragnet"  is  opposite  (m  Chan-, 
nd  .'),  as  usual. 

The  Playhouse  ijo  producticm. 
on  Channel  2  at  ():j^o  p.m.  stais 
CNC  graduate  Jack  Palance  in 
an  adaptation  ofT".  Scott  Fitzcer- 
alds  Irst  novel,  "The  Last  Fy- 
ct>on.  "  The  setting  is  the  frustrat- 
ing world  of  HollywtKul:  featured 
in  the  cast  are  Keenan  Wynn,  Vi- 
veca  Lindofrs.  Peter  Lorrc  aud 
Lee  Demi(k. 


Five  States  LegiSilate 
To  Maintarn  Segtegothn 


Southern  School  News 

Southern  School  News,  pub- 
lication of  tho  Southern  Educa- 
tion Roporting  Sorvice,  is  an 
objective  report  of  the  segre* 
getion-integretion  situation  in 
tho  United  States.  This  article 
is  from  tbe  News'  March  edi- 
tion. 

Legislative  action  in  five  statea 
to  maintain  school  segregation 
and  court  desegregation  orders 
in  two  states  (affecting  six 
school  districts)  claimed  atten- 
tion as  southern  and  border  states 
schools  moved  well  into  tho  last 
half  of  the  1950-57  academic 
year. 

Ccurt  -  crdc-cd  ae^esrcijalion 
was  directed  for  NorfMk  and 
Newport  N?ws  in  Virginia  and 
for  Hopkins.  Scott.  Webster  and 
L'^nion  counties  in  KiJntucky. 
Court  action  was  anticipated  to 
force  integration  in  tow  areas  of 
Oklahoma  schooling.. 

Arkansfs'  legislature  enacted 
four  bills,  one  setting  up  a  state 
sovereignty  commission.  The 
Georgia  General  As.semhly  adc>pt 
ed  six  measures,  including  a  res- 
olution of  impeachment  against 
six  U.  S.  Supreme  Court  Justices. 
Texas  and  Tennessee  legislators 
psssed  resolutions  reasserting 
states'  rights,  and  in  South  Car- 
olina an  anti-barratry  law  was 
added  to  legislation  aimed  at  the 
National  Assn.  for^he  Advance- 
ment of  Colored  People. 

Thirteen  southern  and  border 
state  legislatures  are  meeting 
this  year.  Legislation  adopted 
thus  far  brought  to  120  the  num- 
ber of  measures  dealing  with 
se!?regation-dcsrgrcgation  enact- 
ed since  the  19.54  Supreme  Court 
decisicTi  against  school  segrega- 
tion. 

In  fiirthsr  court  actions.  John 
Kasp:r.  figure  in  Ahe  Clinton. 
Tenn.  school  disturbances  last 
fall,  was  ordered  re-arrested  by 
a  federal  judge. 

In  Georgia  the  seven-year-old 
Horace  Ward  ca.se  reached  an- 
other milestone  when  a  federal 
court  h:ld  that  the  Negro,  who 
,  ha^  sought  ti  enter  the  Univers- 
ity of  Georgia  law  school,  was 
not  the  ob.iect  of  racial  discrimi- 
nation. And  a  North  Carolina 
school  entry  suit  was  on  its  way 
to  the  Supreme  Court. 

^*^o-se2^p?afion  group  activity 
was  reported  to  be  increasing  in 
1  vi.uu  anil  Aiaryland.  In  St. 
Louis  a  .50-50  racially  mixed  high 
school  reported  increasingly  suc- 
cessful operation  in  its  second 
year  of  integration. 

A  sl3to-by-.statc  summary  of 
m3j:r  developments    follows: 

ALABAMA 

A  University  of  Alabama 
spokesman  told  Southern  School 
News  after  reports  of  an  exodus 
of  "'shocked  and  shamed"  pro- 
fessors as  an  aftermath  of  the 
1956  Autherine  Lucy  incident 
that  there  had  been  a  "nornoal" 
turnover  although  six  departing 
faculty  members  had  given  this 
explanati:n  as  a  major  reason 
for   leaving. 


L'i)  Abner 


ARKANSAS 

Four  pro-segregation  bills,  have 
been  enacted  by  the  gsner^l  as- 
sembly and  approved  by  Govr  Or- 
V3l  Faubus.  One  sets  up  a^*i|tate 
sos-creignty  commission  wiij^  in- 
vestigating powers.  *  V 
DELAWARE 

As  public  school  desegrtjijation 
slowed  down  in  Delaware,  negot- 
iations were  pursued  for  a  mer- 
g?r  of  white  and  Negro  parent- 
teachers  ajs  ciations. 
DISTRICT  OF  COLUMBIA     , 

T  o  studies,  oup  by  a  school 
i:yst?m  official,  called  integra- 
tion in  the  District  a  "miracle  of 
social  adjustment.'  Two  southern 
congressman  charged  that  a  jun- 
ior h'gh  .sch  >ol  was  forcing  mix- 
ed dancing. 


tices.  A  bill  to  baa  interracial 
athletics  meanwhile  was  shelved. 
KENTUCKY 

Three  westsrn  counties  apd  a^ 
fourth  one  in  central  Kentucky 
were  ordered  by  a  court  ttk  de- 
segegate  th:ir  schools  this,  falll 
Louisville  Supt.  Omar  Carmic- 
haol  blamed  the  National  Assn. 
f  r  the  Advancement  of  Colored 
Peoph  for  much  of  "the  chaos 
in  the  South"  and  the  organiza- 
tioii  replied  this  was  due  rather 
to  "open  defiance  of  some  south 
crn  spokesmen'  to  court  decis- 
i  ns. 
LOUISIANA 

On-  hundred  Negroes  out  of 
s)me  200  previously  enrolled  re- 
entered integrated  state  CQlleges 
under  injunctions  restraining  ap 


'Okay  —  Now  Scram' 


wbich  he  hopes  to  achieve  before 
leaving  the  governor's  chair. 
MISSOURI 

A  St.  Louis  high  school  report- 
ed after  its  second  full  year  of 
desegregation  that  it  was  operat- 
ing more  smoothly  with  a  50  per- 
cent N?gro  enrollment  than  it  did 
with  a  33  percent  Negro  minority 
the  first  year. 
NORTH  CAROLINA 

As  the  teacher  pay  issue  domi- 
nated the  1957  legislative  session, 
the  U.  S.  Supreme  Court  was  ask- 
ed to  review  a  lower  court  decis- 
ion denying  Negroes  entry  to  an 
all-white  schooL 
OKLAHOMA 

New  federal  court  action  was 
expected  in  an  effort  to  force  in- 
tegration of  a  state  training  in- 


FLORIDA 

Pro-segregation  group  activity 
stepped  up  with  the  entry  of  per- 
sons from  other  states  who  are 
critifal  cf  Gov.  LaRoy  Collins' 
s'atod  position  that  mixed  .school.*; 
nre  inevitable. 
GEORGIA 

A  case  in  which  a  Negro  had 
made  a  seven-year  effort  to  get 
into  the  University  of  Georgia 
bw  school  was  dismissed  in  part 
■  on  grounds  that  no  racial  dis- 
crimination was  involved.  The 
legislature  passed  five  pro-segre- 
gation bills  together  with  a  res- 
olution asking  impeachment  of 
six    U.    S.    Supreme    Court    jus- 


'  HERE  HE  iS.STOt^ENTS.rf- 
TKE  Pa«CTISE  PATIENT  FOR 
VCO  BEGINNERS  IN  BRAIN 
j  SURGERV  ."■ 


1  MOPE  THIS  WONT    *^ 
INCONVENlEhiCE  VOU, 
PROFESSOR,  &UT  W^ 
FRIEND  IS  UNDER 
ARREST  — 


plication  of  new  slate  laws  which 
would  have  excluded  them. 
MARYLAND 

Pro-segregation  groups  were 
more  active  at  the  current  legis- 
lative session  than  at  any  time 
since  the  1954  Supreme  Court 
decision  though  no  legislation 
they  advocated  was  introduced. 
MISSISSIPPI 

Saying  the  state  must  preserve 
the  "domestic  peace  and  tran- 
quility which  is  surprising  our 
friends  as  well  as  our  worst 
enemies."  Gov.  J.  P.  Coleman, 
who  is  expected  to  run  against 
Sen.  James  O.  Eastland  in  1960, 
outlined    a    foui -point    program 


AS  VOU  CAN  SEE,  THE 
PATIENT  IS  NOW  OUT 
LIKE  A  LIGHT     HE 

DON'T  FEEL. 

NDTHIN'  — 


B».<— OCT  »C 


stitution  and  a  public  school  dis- 
trict. 
SOUTH  CAROLINA 

The  general  assembly  added  an 
anti-barratry  (soliciting  law  suits) 
statute  to  a  body  of  legislation 
aimed  at  the  NAACP  and  consid- 
ered other  pro-segregation  laws. 
TENNESSEE 

An  arrest  order  was  issued  by 
federal  court  for  John  Kasper, 
segregationist  leader  and  figure 
in  the  Clinton  incidents.  Mean- 
while, the  Tennessee  Senate  pass- 
ed by  voice  vote  the  House-pass- 
ed "Tennessee  Manifesto"  while 
rejecting  a  resolution  of  interpo- 
sition. 


• 

By  A!  Capp 


Pogo 


By  Walt  Kelly 


"s: 


AN'  p]6ur  ii<f  tuf  iNMCK  <^  ^  MmiR  wrw  S 


^ 


AtHWAT 
HAVI^J'  A 

/MVWIMIfllM'. 


-..  .rA6qi05«KrTO 

,   WASfiONKAmfiDWlNA^ 
COUP4  miDOH  00\.\>kf» 


% 


Spain:  Friendly 
But  Isolated 


John  Raper 

In  y8st»rd«y'«  P*p*r,  wo  left  Goettin^cn  ex- 
changns  ^hMiont  John  Raper  a»  he  decided  to  walk 
back  «avan  kilemefars  across  the  Pyrennas  Moun- 
tainc  in  saarch  of  a  fellow  hitch-hiker  and  a 
suitcase. 

On  the  second  crossing  through  the  customs 
station  in.  one  night,  the  suspicious  Spanish  held  me 
for  a  time  for  questioniag  (thought  1  was  smug- 
gling). As  I  could  not  speak  Spanish  and  they 
could  not  speak  English,  we  quickly  reached  an 
impasse,  and  they  let  me  go. 

I  finally  got  back  to  Carbere  to  find  its  only 
hotel  had  barred   its  doors  for  the  night,  i  was 
forced  to  tpond  the  night  on  a  bench  beside  the 
Mediterranean  Sited.    Unfortunately  those   warm, 
sunny  steriaa  about  the  Riviera  in  sumn.er  do  not 
hoitj  true  for  winter  nights. 
Bright  and  eax-iy  the  next  morning,  I  arose  from 
my   bencfa-bed   with   optimistic  hopes  and  went  to 
see   the  station   master.  He  did  not  find  the  bag, 
but  saitf  it  should  arrive  en  the  noon  train.  I  re- 
turned onoe  more  to  Port  Bon  and  got  Karl.  We 
waited,  but  no  bag  came  at  noon. 

Th3  baggj^e  p  'ople  told  us  that  ihcy  had  called 
and  located  our   t>ag.  They  promised  it  would  ar- 
rive on  the  8  o'clock  evening  train.  We  decided  to 
spend  Christmas  Eve  on'  the  Riviera  and  wait  for 
the  bag  (did  not  have  too  much  choice,  because  in 
the  clothes  which  we  were  wearing  we  had  already 
been  mistaken  for  wandering  Hungarian  refugees). 
Wo  got  a  room  and  sat  around  waiting.  Eight 
came,  but  "Twas  the  night  before  Christmas,  end 
all  through  France,  not  a  bag  was  stirring,  not 
even  ours." 
However,  the  station  master  did  promise  that  it 
would    undoubtedly    arrive    on    the    early    morning 
train  Christmas.  We  could  then  catch  a  train  on 
to  Barcelona  and  Madrid. 

We  caught  the  train  without  the  Bag' the  next 
morning  in  a  flurry  of  invectives  against  trains  and 
people  connected  with  them.  This  little  bag  story 
Is  to  emphasize  the  degeneracy  of  modern,  day 
France  and  its  lack  of  ability  to  do  fln^  Jaxng  but 
botch  up  both  external  and  internal  affairs. 

We  took  a  seven-hour  pause  in  Barcelona  to  eat 
Christmas  dinner.  It  was  there  that  we  first  realized 
that  the  people  were  not  kidding  when  they  said 
Spain  was  a  dictatorship.  Everyone  from  bathroom 
attendants  to  army  generals  had  a  special  uniform. 
Memories  of  12  years  ago  returned  with  the  Span- 
ish soldiers  marching  around  in  their  Nazi  styled 
helmets. 

Upon  finally  arriving  in  Madrid  we  calculated 
and  found,  along  with  worry,  lack  of  clothes,  and 
eight  days  consumed,  it  had  cost  us  $5  apiece  more 
to  hitchhike  than  to  catch  the  train. 

People  say  Franco  is  the  dictator  in  Spain,  but 
perhaps  that  is  not  quite  accurate.  Perhaps,  the 
Spanish  Catholic  Church  is  the  real  tyrant  there. 
The  Catholic  Church  has  done  to  the  Protestants 
what  France  did  to  the  Communists — placed  them 
in  the  Fifth  Column.  No  where  in  the  Western 
W^orld  has.  a  church  so  mucii  power  and  influeuce 
in  the  government  and  over  the  people. 

There  was  a  Protestant  Seminary,  sponsored 
by  the  World  Council  of  Churches,  in  Madrid  until 
last  year,  when  the  Catholic  Church  through  Fran- 
co's government  (Franco  to  get  power  iiad  to  prom- 
ise three  groups  certain  things:  The  church:  the 
roj'alists.  and  the  Fascist  governments  of  Germany 
and  Italy)  had  it  closed. 

Students  are  outlawed  frtwn  openly  studying  for 
the  Protestant  ministery. 

Today  the  Seminary  aerves  as  1  Protestant 
school  for  children. 

I  met  a  young  Protestant  minister  there  who 
was  marrying  the  Catholic  daughter  of  an  official 
in  a  large  Madrid  bank..  When  the  announcement 
was  made,  the  bank  reduced  his  job  and  salary  to 
that  that  he  had  received  upon  beginning  work  35 
years  earlier.  He  \^as  told  both  would  be  restored 
if  ho  prevented  his  daughter's  marriage. 

Spain  has  two  classes  of  people,  the  rich  and 
the  poor.  The  government  officials  have  much  of 
the  wealth,  but  the  Catholic  Church  has  even  more. 
Economicallv  the  Catholic  Church's  control  of 
wealth  in  Spain  would  be  equal  to  a  combination 
of  General  Motors,  U.  S.  Steal  and  General  Elec- 
trics in  America.  The  poor  just  remain  poor  and 
ignorant. 

The  Catholic  Church  sees  that  movies,  especially 

American    movies,    are    censored.    The    half-naked 

*shot  of  Marilyn  Monroe  is  not  cut.  It  is  the  part 

of  the  movie  taken  in  a  New  England  Protestant 

Church  that  catches  the  shears. 

While  in  Matlrid,  i  lived  in  the  above-mention- 
ed Protestant  Seminary  and  talked  with  its  Iniquit- 
ous inhabitants.  If  you  can  take  their  side  of  the 
picture,  the  Spanish   Inciuisitlen   is  not  over. 

Before  leaving  Madrid  I  must  mention  its  fam- 
ous subway,  the  Metro.  Riding  on  the  Metro  is  like 
living  in  a  Mickey  Spillanc  novel.  Twice  I  felt  the 
sneaky  hand  of  a  Metro  pick-pocket.  In  the  comers 
are  enacted  cover  illustrations  to  sordid  pocket- 
books. 

*  •  • 

Karl  and  I  went  to  Lisbon,  Portugal,  and  cele- 
brated there  New  Year's  Eve  with  a  group  of  Pres- 
byterian missionaries  departing  for  Africa.  We  went 
south  to  Seville  next,  where  we  rode  through  the 
city  in  horse  drawn  carriages  and  watched  younel 
Jose  Grecos  and  castonet-snapping  sen<M'itas  danc- 
ing in  tVir  fiery  Andalusion  style.  After  a  look 
around  Cordova.  w*»  celebrated  the  Old  New  Year's 
Eve  (Jan.  5th)  in  the  seaport  town  of  Malaga.  We 
danced  until  4  a.m.  with  the  rest  of  the  crowds  of 
peT*!?. 

It  took  uf  from  noon  Sunday  until  last  Tues- 
day—55  hours— to  reach  Cerbere  from  Malaga.  This 
vas  iust  tvpical  of  Spain.  It  is  almost  as  isolated  by 
Franco.  th'>  Catholic  Church,  and  the  Pyrennes  from 
*h«.  ^-*»  of  th»  "-orld  as  t^e  countries  behind  the 
Iron "  Curtain.  Tliere  are  few  countries  so  rich  in 
art.  folk  music  and  lore,  and  landscape;  yet  so 
poor  in  fertile .  earth,  progress,  democracy  and  in- 
dividual identity  of  its  mass^ 


Pli 


f 


Mar 
sion. 
Film 
Carrol 

Ma 
ed.- 
Hail 

Marl 
rrimsl 
Carrot 

in  tliel 
Hail 

Face>J 

Hall. 

Rendel 

Marl 
p.m.. 

Marl 
the 
Ediif^ 
Brid^ 
VUlag^ 

Mai 
board 
Carroll 

>Iari 
Open 
loungf 

Mar^ 
Hull, 
lesson^ 
Room. 

Mar<| 
p.m  , 


i?sy 


walk 
Id   • 


istoms 

?ld  me 

smug- 

they 

an 


from 
xt  to 

le  bag, 
I  re- 

rl.   We 


next 

and 

story 

day 

ig  but 

to  eat 
lalized 
said 
throom 
form. 
Span- 
styled 

:ulated 
and 
more 

in,  but 
^s.  the 
there, 
sstants 
them 
Western 
tlueuce 

isored 
until 
Fran- 
prom- 
^h:   the 
frmany 

ing  for 


Ich  and 

^uch   of 

more. 

[itrol   of 

^nation 
kl  Elec- 

3r  and 

Ipecially 

Jf-naked 

le  part 

}testant 


fam- 

Ls  like 

I  felt  the 

comers 

pocket- 


Ind  cele- 
|of  Pres- 

Je  went 

^ugh  the 

younel 

BS  danc- 

a   look 

Year's 

iga.  We 

irowds  of 

\s\   Tues- 

kga.  This 

>]ated  by 

?s  from 

lind  the 

rich  in 

yet   so 

and  in- 


THUltSOAY,  MARCH  M.  1fS7 


THI  DAILY  TAR  HML 


Special  Round 
Of  Activities 
Planned  By  GM 

In  honor  of  its  25th  Birthday 
celebration.  March  11-April  1, 
Qraham  Memorial  has  planned  a 
special  schedule  of  activities.  The 
schedule  is  as  follows: 

March  14:  Jazz  Club  Jam  Ses 
sion,  8  p.m.,  main  lounge.  Spring 
Film  Serie.',  'Open  City.'  8  p.m.. 
Carroll  Hall. 

^areh  15:  Free  Flick,  "Unchain- 
ed," 7:30  and  la  p.m.,  Carroll 
Kail. 

March  16:  Free  Flick,  'The 
Crimson  Pirate,"  7:30  and  10  p.m., 
Carroll  HaU. 

March  18:  Jazz  records  playcii 
in  the  main  lounge,  7-9  p.m. 

March  19:  Free  Flick,  "New 
Face.^,"  7:30  Sand  10  p.m.,  Carroll 
Hall.  Dance  lessons.  6:30-8  p.m., 
Rendezvou.s  Room. 

March  20:  Bridge  lessons,  4:30-6 
p.m..  Rendezvous  Room. 

March  21:  Graham  Memorial  and  : 
the    English    Dept.    present    Dame 
Edith    Sitwell.    8    p.m..    Hill    Hall. 
Bridge   lesson.s,  7:80  p.m..  Victory 
Village  Day  Care  Center. 

March  23:  Free  Flick,  "Blac*- 
board  Jungle,"  7:30  and  10  p.m.. 
Carroll  Hall.  Combo.  9-12  p.m. 

March  25:  25th  Anniversary 
Open  House.  8-10  p.m.,  main 
lounge. 

March  26:   SEC  present 
Hull,  8  p.m.,  .Memorial  Hall.  Dance 
lessons.    6:3U-8    p.m.,    Rendez\'Ous 
Room. 


SO   LONC   AGO 

..the  ave  of  mechanization  had  not  arrived  in  1924 


Classes  Were  Called  Off 
For  Christening  In  7936 


By  SUE  ATCHISON 

"Eleven  o'clock  classes  will  not 

meet  this  morning."  At  least  that's 

what  you  might  have  read  had  you 

been  reading  the  January  29,  1932 

Henry   ^^^^i^^  <,£  ^^e  Tar  Heel. 


Eleven      o'clock     classes     were 
called  off  that  morning  because  at 
March  27:  Bridge  lessons.  4:30-6  ^0:30  a.m.  the  school  band  struck 
p.m..  Rendezvous  Room.  .  up  a  familiar  tun«   and   the  cere- 


QaCanfQS 


with 
MsQcSfnilinan 


( Author  pf  "B^Tthot  Boy  Vit\  Chtek,"  tU.) 


ADVICE  ON  ADVISORS 


Recently  I  made  an  exten-sive  tour  of  .-Vmerican  cam- 
puses, interviewing  students  and  .selling  mechanical  dogs, 
and  one  of  the  most  frequent  complaint.s  I  heard  from 
undergraduates  wa.s,  "My  faculty  advisor  doesn't  really 
carie  about  me." 

Everywhere  I  went  I  heard  thi«  same  cry,  (Indeed, 
at  one  university  I  found  ldi,000  Atudent.«  jammed  in  the 
field  boune  chanting  it  a  cappella.  <  But  1  am  bound  to 
»ay,  dear  friends,  that  you  are  wrong.  Your  faculty 
kdvisor  doex  care  about  you.  The  trouble  is,  he  doesn't 
knnir  you.  And  no  wonder!  How  do  you  expect  him  to 
know  you  when  you  see  him  once  or  so  a  semester? 

Get  to  be  friends  with  your  faculty  advisor— like,  for 
example,  Alpine  R.  Sigafoos,  a  .sophomore  in  timothy  and 
ailage  at  Texas  A.  &  M. 

Alpine  R.  Sigafoos  appeared  one  night  in  the  living 
quarters  of  his  faculty  advisor  (whose  name,  by  a  curious 
coincidence,  was  al.so  AJpine  R. '  Sigafoos  i. 

"Good  evening,  sir,"  .said  Student  Sigaf«H).s.  "I  am 
come  so  that  you  may  get  to  know  me  better  and  thus 
help  me  solve  the  vexing  problems  that  trouble  me." 


monie^;  dedicating  Graham  Me- 
morial to  Edward  Kidder  Graham, 
president  of  tlie  University  from 
1914-18,  begarf  Dr.  Louis  Round 
Wilson,  the  executive  secretary  of 
the  building  committee,  presented 
the  building  to  Mayne  Albright, 
president  of  the  student  union, 
while     plea.sed     alumni     proudly 


whether  the  students  would  vote 
in  favor  of  the  i^-sue.  The  election 
results  were:  806  for  the  proposal 
and  74  against  it.  Graham  Me- 
morial was  in  business  to  stay. 

Facts  from  the  dedication  pro- 
gram seem  to  uphold  the  faith  the 
organizers  had  in  their  plan.  Dur^ 
ing   the   first   three  months   over 


viewed  the  memorial  to  a  man  whoi  19,000     persons     used     the     game 


lett  the  university  so  much  spirit. 
Work  began  in  1922  on  GM 
which  was  built  to  provide  "a 
Chapel  Hill  home,  to  non-frater- 
nity men."  The  original  plans  for 
the   building  called    for   a    center  I 


room    and    everything    from    ex- 
hibits, meetings  dance?  and   teas, 
to  a  faculty  pool  tournament  were 
held  in  the  building.        #.    . 
VISITORS  .^i— v-  t' 

That  first  year  in  nitration  GM 


section  with  a  wing  on  either  end.    had  as  visitors  such  personalities 


Due  to  a  lack  of  fynds  only  the 
center  section  of  the  building  was 
ever  built.  . 
VOTE  QUESTION 


as;  Norman  Thomas,  Socialist  par- 
ty leader;  Dr.  Warren  K.  JHoore- 
head,  noted  archaeologist;  the  Ra- 
leigh Male  Chorus;  South  African 


In  1921  GM  faced  one  of  its  fir^A.  Quartet  and  Helen   MeGraw,  eon- 
critical     issues — getting     the    stu-    cert  pianist. 


dents  to  vote  for  a  three  dollar  a 
year  maintenance  fee.  C.  T.  Wool- 
len, then  business  manager  of  the 
University,  after  careful  study 
had  decided  three  dollars  per  stu- 


Through  the  years  slight 
changes  have  been  made  in  GM, 
but  today  it  has*  the  same  spirit 
as  the  day  it  was  dedicated.  To- 
day more  than  ever  it  fulfills  one  ' 

01 


dent  per  year  was  what  would  be    of  its  original    purposes-^hat    _. 
needed  to  run  the  Student  unld&f  providing  a  meeting  plabe  for  ntn 
The     question,     however,     was    dents.  Xaculty  and  alumni. 


MEANING  OF  GMAB: 


GAAAB  Is  Organization  i 
For  Providing  Interest 


'  Vk'  Jv  ijm  tbeepfcl06es?^ 


"And  what  are  tho.^e  three  packages  you  are  carry- 
ing?" a.sked  Advisor  Sigaf«KJs. 

"This."  .said  Student  Sigafoos,  holding  up  the  first  of 
the  three  puckage.s,  "is  a  carton  of  Philip  Morris  Ciga- 
rette.s,  which  come  in  long  ."^ize  or  regular,  and  without 
which  I  never  stir.  It  is,  sir,  a  .smoke  beyond  compare— 
fujl  of  fre.Hh,  natural,  iinfiltered  flavor  that  delights  the 
ta.ste,  salves  the  soul,  and  turns  the  whole  world  into 
one  long  vista  of  peace  and  greenery.  Try  one,  sir." 

"Thank  you,"  said  Advisor  Sigafoos,  lighting  a  Philip 
Morri."*  Cigarette.  He  puffed  appreciatively  for  an  hour 
or  two  and  then  .said,  "And^vhat  is  tn  the  other  packages 
you  are  carrying?" 

,  "1  am  rather  a  complex  fellow,"  .said  Student 
^gafoo.s,  "and  I  don't  expect  that  you  will  get  to  know 
me  in  a  hurry.  So,"  he  said,  holding  up  his  second  pack- 
age, "I  have  brought  my  bed-roll." 

"I  see,"  .said  Advisor  Sigafoos,  not  entirely  pleased. 
"And  what  is  this  third  package?" 

"Well  sir,  I  know  that  occasionally  yon  will  be  busy 
with  other  matters  and  will  therefore  be  unable  to  .spend 
time  with  me.  So  I  have  brought  along  my  gin  rummy 
pi^rtner,  Walter  M.  Handzlik." 

In  the  next  two  yeans  Advi.sor  Sigafoos,  living  cheek- 
by-jowl  with  Student  Sigafoos,  got  to  know  all  of  the 
lad's  personality  traits,  his  hopes,  his  fears,  his  drives, 
his  quirks,  his  aspirations,  ^t  the  end  of  that  time, 
armed  with  true  understanding.  Advisor  Sigafoos  con- 
dhided  that  Student  Sigafoos's  basic  trouble  was  that  he 
was  not  really  college  material. 

So  Advisor  Sigafoos  got  Student  Sigafoos  a  job  with 
the  North  Star  Hockey  Puck  Corporation  where  today  he 
is  head  of  the  puck-packing  department  and  a  happy  man. 

Advisor  Sigafoos  is  happy  too.  He  has  time  again  to 
pursue  his  .studies  of  Trichobatrachun  rohmshiH,  the  hairy 
frog.  At  night  he  plays  gin  rummy  with  Walter  M. 
Kandzlik. 

®Max  Shulman,  1957 
Omr  mdvicf  tn  ttudentt—and  tn  faculty  too  and  tn  anybody  el»e 
trko't  looking  for  a  ttvfelhearl  of  a  »moke  —  U  to  try  nn0 
mmUtrut  Hhilip  Morri*,  made  by  the  $pon»or$  of  thh  column. 


By   WALTER   SCHRUNTEK         I 

'Presented  by  GMAB"  is  almo.st , 
a    catchword    on    the    campus    of 
UNC.    But    what    exactly    does    it 
mean?   What  is  GMAB?   And  how  1 
does    it    affect    the    Carolina   stu- 
dent? 

Defined,  GMAB  is  the  Graham  j 
Memorial  Activities  Board.  It  is  j 
that  organization  whosv  task  it  is  j 
lo  provide  a  student  recreational ; 
and  activity  program  at  UNC.  It  j 
is  a  student  organization;  a  com- 
posite of  dance,  movie,  recreation,  \ 
reception  and  outting  committees 
which  determine  the  programs  and  ' 
activiti3s  available  to  the  students  ! 
and  student  body  of  UNC.  ! 

In  carrying  forth  with  its  pro- 
gram to  promote  student  interest 
and  provide  recreation  and  enter- 
tainment, GMAB  extends  its  func- 
tions to  areas  as  varied  and  di- 
verse as  the  interests  of  a  univer- 
sity of  7,500  students. 
EFFECTS 

The  effects  of  GM  activities  on 
the  student  is  manifested  daily 
through  its  promotion  of  such 
campus  "traditions"  as  the  Film 
Series,  Free  Flicks,  Free  Bridge 
Lessons,  dance^f,  etc. 

Its  effect  on  the  student  body 
is  best  illustrated  by  its  sponsor- 
ship of  dances  and  combos  in  the 
Rendezvous  Room  of  GM;  and 
more  spectacularly  in  such  presen- 
tations as  the  recent  Mardi  Gras 
and  the  upcoming  "Sound  and 
Fury"  production,  which  is  organ- 
ized and  paid  for  through  GMAB 
facilities. 

GMAB,  designed  to  benefit  the 
student  body  as  well  as  the  indi- 
vidual, is  financed  by  a  portion  of 
student  fees — ^roughly  $3  per  stu- 
dent per  semester.  It  is  fully  a 
student  organization. 
OTHER  HELP 

Besides  carrying  out  its  various 
program^',  GMAB  also  extends  ad- 
ministrative and  financial  assist- 
ance to  other  organizations  and 
groups  which  invite  speakers  to 
the  campus  thi  ^mJllBut  the  year. 

By  promoting  iti  purpose  to  f ur- 
thef  student  interest  in  activities 
and  campus  organizations,  the  ac- 
tivities board  helps  the  student  by 
adding  to  the  jseaning  of  extra- 


curricular experience/in  provid- 
ing an  opportunity  for  group  con- 
tact  and  the  subsequent  exchange 

of  idea.-;. 

UNIQUE  POSITION 

As  a  function  of  the  Student 
Union,  GMAB  today  finds  itself  in  \ 
a  unique  and  perhaps  enviable  po- 
sition among  other  similar  organ- 
izations throughout  the  country. 
According  to  Tom  Lambeth,  pres- 
ident of  GMAB,  the  Carolina  or- 
ganization is  "'perhaps  the  strong- 
est union  regionally,  and  one  of 
the  strongest  in  the  nation.  It 
practices  a  very  high  degree  of 
student  control  over  itar  programs 
as  contrasted  to  others." 

He  accentuated  his  remarks  by 
pointing  out  that  the  only  profes- 
sional assistance  available  to  the 
student  union  here  is  its  director 
(a  post  unfilled  at  present)  where- 
as other  schools  usually  have  two 
or  more  professional  advisers  to 
its  programs. 

Looking  forward  to  the  day 
when  a  new  union  building  will 
be  constructed  to  house  t!»e  ex- 
panding functions  of  GMAB  and 

(See  GRAHAM.  Page  4) 


Birthday  Feie 
Honoring  GM 
To  Be  Monday 

GM  will  hold  its  25th  Anniver- 
sary Party  Monday  night  from 
8-10  p.m.  in  the  Main  Lounge  of 
Graham  Memorial,  according  to 
Mis.?  Linda  Mann,  GM  director. 

AH  administration,  faculty,  and 
students  have  been  invited  to  the 
open  house. 

Birthday  cake  and  punch  will  be 
served,  and  piano  music  will  be 
played  throughout  the  party  by 
Cecil  Hartsoe. 

Mrs.  William  Friday  and  Mrs. 
Gordon  Blackwell  will  serve  from 
8-9  and  9-10  p.m.  respectively. 

"I  hope  that  everyone  will  come, 
even  if  it  is  just  for  a  minute,* 
Miss  Mann  said. 

Students  and  faculty  will  have 
the  opportunity  to  meet  and  talk 
together  at  the  party.  _ 


FA6B  THR» 


FLORIDA  FRESH,  JUICY 

Grapefruit  1 35>: 


TENDER  FRESH  REGALO 


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MIX 


Pkg. 


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TENDER  FRESH 

Hothouse       ^5c 

rhubarb'' 


CRISP  TENDER  FRESH 

LEnUCE  -  2   29 


Golden  Crisp  Tender 


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FRESH  CARROTS  2  i^  1 7c  CORN  4  i::  29e 


*  STOCK   UP  DURING  A&P'S   BIG  CANHCD  FOOD  EVENT* 

No  Limit  —  Stock  Up  —  lona  Brand  Priced  Low  —  Delto  Club  Green  &  White 

GREEN  PEAS  2  '^  25e  LIMA  BEANS  2  -^  29c 

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PEACHES-     2h  55 


Kraft  Mayonnaise     far   43c  ?ar   75c 


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pt. 

Jar 


39c 


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Swift's  Meats  For  Babies  . . . 


Cerber  Baby  Food 


'£  25c 


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2  Jars  ttc 


-  -  -  2  'tS^.  23e 

Can       COC 

-17-Oz.     23c 


lONA  CUT  GREEN  BEANS 
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DEL-MCNTE  ASPARAGUS    ^"^   '  ""^ 
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17-Oz. 


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Red  Heart  Dog  Food 2  liSs  lie 


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LOW  PRICED  NON-FOOD  ITEMS 


Imported  Rockinghani  Non-Drip 
Eh'ery  Ready  Flashlight 

BATTERIES        2  for      J   1: 


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SWIFT'S  ASSORTED  JAR  CHEESE  3  5.o^  s.,.  50c 

SPAM  LUNCHEON  MEAT .20.  can  39c 

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69 


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15c     CHOCOUTE  OHIP  COOKIES  pii^;[|.  p'»  28c 


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PEANUT  BUHER 


4*AGE    -  -    fc    Cans 

r^E  'i°J  27c  ",?^  37c     COLDER  LOAF  CAKE 


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Each    25c 


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POTATO  CHIPS 12-Oz.Box59c 


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rTTTT^rrr 


THUR! 


PAGE  FOUl 


nw  OAILT  TAII  Hf  It 


THURSDAY,  MARCH   14,  1957 


CommittGG  Hnnina  i  'Dramatiques'  Is  New  Feature 

^^*^"  ■'■■'■  '  i  ^W      i    f  V/^f  f  ii^      I     Graham  Memorial  has  added  an-   and    Patricians    Wife  —  Amaf 

For  New  Building 


Realizing  the  fast  growing  need 
for  a  new  student  union,  adequate 
in  size  ami  central  in  location, 
student  leaders  and  administrative 
officials  are  locking  to  the  future 
in  the  hopes  of  a  new  building. 

Continuing  in  a  four  year  long 
drive  to  acquire  funds  for  the 
building,  the.  Graham  Memorial 
Student  Union  committee  io-  put- 
ting forth  an  all-out  effort  to  pre- 
sent plans  that  will  secure  the 
necessary  backing. 

Financing  the  proposed  new 
union  poses  the  biggest  problem  to 
the  committee.  Hog^es  now  rest  on 
the  committee's  prospectus  to  be 


Honor 


FOR  SO  MANY  PEOPLE 

.  .  and  these  are  but  a  few 


Varied  Role  Played 
By  Graham  Memorial 


By  EDITH  AAacKINNON 

The  role  of  a  student  union  in 
the  life  of  the  university  comraun- ; 
ity  is  a  multi-purposed  and  vital  \ 
one.  In  addition  to  serving  as  the 
heart  of  grampus  life  and  as  the 
center  of  student  extracurricular 
activity,  th?  student  union  plays 
an  important  part  in  the  education- 
al pprcgram  of  the  college. 

Housed  in  its  many-roomed  in- 
terior are  meeting  places  for  cam- 
pus organizations,  offices  and  rec- 
reation facilities  for  hours  of  re- 
laxation and  informal  association. 

But  the  union  is  not  just  a 
building;  in  its  duties  to  the  stu- 
dent body  it  is  also  an  organiza- 
tion and  a  program.  It  creates  a 
liub  arouad  which  the  wheel  of 
university  life  rotates'  and  func- 
tions. Without  it  the  v,rhcel  would 
cease  to  function  in  rolling  the 
university  toward  further  prog- 
ress. 

Serving  then  as  a  college  com- 
munity life  center,  the  student 
union  must  at  the  s^me,  time  ful- 
fil! a  role  in  fnt  educational  pro- 
gram of  academic  life.  The  peo- 
ple who  participate  in  the  opera- 
tion of  the  union  are  engaged  in 
a  training  program,  whether  they 
are  consciously  aware  of  this  pro- 
gram or  not. 


The  foundation  of  this  program 
rests  on  the  rock  of  preparation 
for  future  positions  as  citizens, 
leaders,  and  members  of  a  world 
society. 

In  a  statement  of  purpose, 
adopted  by  the  general  member- 
ship of  the  Assn.  of  College  Unions 
at  the  national  conference,  April, 
1956.  the  student  union  was  des- 
cribed as  following:  '>In  all  its 
processes  it  encouTages  self-direct- 
ed activity,  giving  maximum  op- 
portunity for  self-realization  and 
for  growth  in  individual  soc'^1 
competency    and    group    effective- 


ness. Its  goal  is  the  development , 
of  persons  as  well   as  intellects." 

This  then  is  your  student  union,  j 
Graham  Memorial,  which  this  week 
celebrates  its  25th  birthday.  It  is 
a  union  of  which  the  Carolina  stu- 
dent body  may  be  justly  proud,  a 
union  which  is  consistent  in  its 
effort  to  serve  the  university  com- 
munity, and  a  union  which  strives 
to  the  limit  of  its  ability  to  ful- 
fill its  role  as  a  unifying,  force 
in  the  life  of  the  University  of 
North  Carolina. 

Happy   birthday,   Graham   Mem 
orial! 


Graham 


(Coyitimied  Jrom  page  3) 
other  student  organizations.  Lam- 
.:;€  Ih  concluded  more  adequate  fa- 
cilities will  mean  expansion  of  the 
board's  w'eekend  entertainment 
program,  an  e^nding  cf  GM's  pres- 
ent dectntriaized  program;  which 
utilize  different  buildings  on  the 
campus,  and  a  larger  program 
with  increased  facilities  for  people 
interested  in  GMAB. 

In  past  years,  when  GMAB  was 

kjiown    under    the    title    "Student 

I  Union    Activities    Board,"    its    ac- 


tivities were  increasingly  ham 
pered  and  curtailed  by  the  restric- 
tions imposed  on  it  by  the  present 
25-ycar-old  building,  Lambeth 
pointed   out., 

'      GM.\B,  in  one  f  rm  or  another. 

*  has  been  in  operation  since  Gra- 
ham Memorial  was  erected  here  25 
yearj  ago.    Today  is   Graham  Me 

'.  morial's  birthday.  So  too  Is  it 
GMAB's  anniversary — 25  years  of 
service  and  accommodation  to  the 

'  student  body. 


P,::,. 

y 

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GRAHAM  MEMORIAL  TODAY 

congenialUy,  rest  and  retortion  far  UNC  students 


l»ATIIOIHZE  YOUR 
•   ADVIRTISEBS   • 


(Continued  from  page  i) 
until  the  last  paragraph. 

The  council  found  the  second 
boy  guilty  of  plagiarism  and  sus- 
pended him  indefinitely  from 
school,  and  the  other  boy  was  ac- 
quitted. 

It  secm^  that  the  students  are 
not  aware  of  the  ramifications  of 
the  word  "plagarize."'  Clearly,  it 
means  to  copy  another's  work  and 
hand  it  in  as  one's  own,  but  it  also 
entails  the  use  of  ideas  that  be- 
long to  somebody  else  as  one's 
own,  with  no  credit  given  to  the 
author  of  the  ideas.  The  council 
reminds  the  students  again,  tl^t 
whenever  a  student  u^  another's 
ideas,  he  should  either  give  the 
utfaor  credit  or  rework  the  ideas 
until  they  have  become  a  part  of 
his  own  thinking  and  exhibit 
themselves  as  such. 


presented  before  administrative 
officials  and  University  Vice  Pres- 
ident and  Finance  Officer  William 
D.  Carmichaerj*  endorsement  of 
the  student  union  program. 
SUPPORT 

Carmichael  has  promised  to  lend 
his  support  in  getting  a  high  pri- 
jrity  for  the  issue  on  the  list  of 
Consolidated  University  requests 
of  the  1959  session  of  the  N.  C. 
.-Vdviscry  Budget  Committee. 

Included  in  the  prospectus  will 
be  pictures  of  other  s-tudent 
unions,  both  external  and  internal 

matures,  statements  of  past  lead- 
ers and  administration  leaders, 
statistics  on  needs  for  a  new  un- 
-jn,  and  possibly  a  suggested  ar- 
.hitectural  plan. 
DEADLINE 

A  deadline  of  April,  1958  has 
been   set   for   the    pre.-jntation    oi 

he  student  union  committee's  tc' 
port  to  the  local  administration, 
.'roviding  this  report  is  approvcvi 

i«i.aUy,  it  will  then  appear  before 
the  N*  C.  Advisory  Budget  Com- 
mittee in  July,  1959. 


Graham  Memorial  has  added  an 
other  feature  to  iti-  Sunday  eVe 
i  ning  entertainment  program.  The 
I  new  feature  is  the  Petite-  Drama- 
;  tiqucs  series  which  wUl  be  given 
'  at  >8  -p.m.  in  the  Main  Lounge  of 
GM. 

"Caligula,"  a  play  about  the  in- 
sane  Roman   emperor   who   ruled 
:  the  world,  will  be  presented  April 
j  7  as  the  first  production  in  the 
I  series.  It  will  be  directed  by  Be- 
;  tina    Jinette,    managed    by    Hope 
'  Sparger,  and  produced  by  Seamon 
G:;ttlieb.  The   cast  will  be  as  fol- 
lows:     Caligula— Lloyd      Skinner, 
I  Caesonia — Page  Williams,  Scipio  - 
I  Sam    Baker,    Cherea — Taylor    Wil- 
;  liams.    Helicon — Ken   Lowry,    Cas- 
i  sius — Bole  Ketler,  Mereia — George 
Hill,   Muciu..'— James   Sebrest,   Lu- 
cius— Jack     Jackson,     Intendant — 
.  Ted    Parker,    Mucius'    YfUe — ^Hope 
Sparger,    Poet — Darwin     Solomon, 


and  Patricians  Wife  —  Amanda 
Meggs. 

May  5  "Sweeny  Agonistes"  by 
T.  S.  Eliot  will  be  presented.  It  ifi 
to  be  directed  by  Nancy  Stevens,  f 

At  a  date  to  be  announced  latef', 
"An  Evening  of  Tennessee  Wil- 
liams" will  be  presented  under 
the  direction  of  Page  Williams 
and  Tavlor  Williams. 


YOU  CAN  BELIEVE 

By  U.  N.  C.'s  Frank   Hanft 
Lenten    Reading   at  $1.69 

The  tntimate  Bookshop 

205  East  Franklin  Street 


George  L.  Coxhead 

U.N.C.  142 
Campus  Representative 


NEW  YORK  LIFE 

INSURANCE   COMPANY 


SEWING    CLASIES 


Regular  Classes 
Tuesday  2:00   PM.  —  Thursday  7:30  P.M. 

These  regular  classe.-  are  ncw^  scheduled  for  group  sewing  in- 
struction by  Mrs.  Ethel  Daniels,  instructor.  Individual  instruction 
and  other  classes  will  be  scheduled  if  requested.  Lessons  come 
free  with  the  purcha^-a  of  a  fine  new  machine.  Come  in,  or  call 
to  schedule  clasjis.  The  charge  is  moderate.  Bring  along  gar- 
ments that  need  belts,  buttonholes,  or  decorative  stitching.  The 
work  is  done  at  reasonaWe  prices.  Sew  for  originality,  satisfac- 
tion, and  saving. 
We  Make  Draperies  And  Do  Dressmaking    And   Alterations 


New   Machines 

Prices  start  at      $50.00 


Used  Machines 

Prices  start  at      $15.00 


KEITH   SEWING  MACHINE  SALES   &  SERVICE 

403  W.  Franklin  St.  Chapel  Hiii  Phone  9-7041 


..»..»..».#..»..>.^w»..»i  a,^. 


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-LIL    PIG"  SMALL   TEMJER   fHESH  FORK 

PICNICS       •  29 

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bACiuionic  •  49 

•l.IL"  PIG"  SMAl.l.  TENDER  FHESII  POHK 

SraitE  KiBS   •  43 

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BEING  GIVEN  AWAY  BY  COLONIAL  STORES  IN  CHAPEL  HILL 
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f 


The 
headquj 

C 


A    Coh 
>r    and 
Hall  audi] 
"an       imj 
rests  upoj 
guiding 
in   encouil 
5onalism. 

Speak '.n| 
the  Grad! 
ham  .Mer 
Theta  hisj 
r>-  Stet'le 
the  last 
has  been] 
movemenl 


5   ROOM 
rooms, 
3  miles  I 
and    Frl 
Fred  k| 

TWO  BeJ 
ished  or 
us.  Call  I 
after  5:| 

fi\t:  R( 

center 
shop. 
2926 
weekend 

LOST: 
Speedkij 
night  ii 
Please 
Lewis 

LOST:  KI 
eral  kel 
Fratcrnj 
Hall  Sal 
9  and 
8-9032. 


DA 


prop 
12   N>% 
Engl 
.stati 

13.  Coni 

14.  A 
15  PaH 
16.  Grefl 
17  WilJI 
18.  Ea.stI 

EMr«l 

20.  Ir.dc 

21.  Not  I 
(pre 

22.G0IC 
23  Ma» 
28.  Mu 
29.Can| 

30.  Met 
(Chi 

31.  Shei 
depi 

36.  Ah( 

37.  M! 
nicJi 

38.  C«nj 

39.  Soul 

41  BakI 
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42  AccI 

43.  R.' 

44.  Red 
iazit 

45.  RepI 


\i 


THURSDAY,  MARCH  14,  7957 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


PAGE  Five 


kanda 

by 
It  is 

ins. 

later. 
Wil- 

knder 

liams 


■ 


Students:  Route  To  Philadelphia 


Here  is  the  suggested  route  for 
all  students  who  are  going  to 
Philadelphia  by  car.  This  route 
will  have  less  traffic  and  those  g«- 
ing  to  Philly  to  see  Carolina's  No. 
1  basketball  team  will  make  good 
time. 

From  Chapel  Hill,  take  US  15  to 
Henderson.  In  Henderson,  travel 
US  1  to  Wa^^iiington,  D.  C.  and  go 
through  the  nation's  capital  to  the 
Washington-Baltimore   Freeway. 

After  reaching  the  Washington- 
Baltimroe  Freeway,  take  US  40  to 


Baltimore.  Upon  reaching  this 
Maryland  city,  take  a  right  turn 
and  get  on  the  New  Jersey  Turn- 
pike. I 

Avoid  all  Philadelphia  signs.  ! 

Stay    on    the    turnpike    outside 
Camden,  N.  J.,  and  then  look  for ; 
Exit  3.  Take  this  exit  and  hit  the  i 
Philadelphia^amden   Bridge.  This 
goes  into  downtown  Philadelphia. ; 

For  those  who  wish  to  stay  in  a  ■ 
hotel  in  Philadelphia,  the  follow- , 
ing  hotels  have  given  these  rates. 

Adelphia     Hotel,     Chestnut     at 


13th,  twin  bedrooms.  $4.75;  three 
tc  a  room,  $4;  four  to  a  room, 
S3. 50.  The -J  prices  apply  only  if 
25  or  more  persons  stay  in  this 
establishment. 

If  students  stay  in  the  Adelphia 
with  a  group  less  than  25,  the 
prices  are:  twin  room,  $11;  three 
room,  $13.50;  'and  four  to  a  room, 

The  Ben  Franklin,  Chestnut  and 
9th,  have  rates  for  a  twin  room  at 
;fl5,  three  to  a  room  for  $18  ^n'^i 
321  is  the  rate  for  four  to  a  suite. 


The  basketball  squad  will  probably 
.stay  here. 

Ratej    for   the    Essex,    131h    and 

Filbert,  are  twin,  $10;  three.  S13; 

and  four,  $16.  The  St.  James.  13th 

and  Walnut,  charges  S9  for  a  twin 

room,  $10.75  for  a  triple  room  and 

$13.25  for  a  foursome. 

j      Student     Body     President     Bob 

!  Young  statetl  that  all  persons  who 

''  wanted  to  go  to  Philadelphia  and 

did  not  have  a  ride,  to  check  by 

his  office  today. 


Miss  Cougar  Jet  On  Display  Here 


The  jet  plane  pictured  above  is  on  display  here  today  at  NROTC 
headquarters.  The  jet  came  with  the  Naval  Recruitment  and  Officer 


Procurement  Team  which  arrived  on  campus  yesterday.  The  team 
and  jet  will  remain  on  campus  today  and  tomorroy. 


Commager  Says  US.  Should  Lead 


A    Columbia    University    profes- 
sor  and   historian   told  a  Carroll 
Hall  audience  Tuesday  night  that 
'an       implacable       responsibility 
ests  upon   the  United  States  for 
guiding  nationalist  countries  .  .  . 
encouraging    a    benevolent   na- 
ionalism." 

Speaking  under  the  auspices  of 
the  Graduate  History  Club,  Gra- 
ham Memorial  and  Phi  Alpha 
Theta  history-  fraternity.  Dr.  Hen- 
ry Steele  Commager  said  that  "for 
the  last  15  or  20  years,  the  U.  S. 
has  been  "in  the  midst  of  ...  a 
movement       which       runs       into 


CLASSIFIEDS 


chauvinistic  nationalism,  which  is 
self-assertive,  which  appeals  to 
the  basic  instincts  of  superiority, 
vanity,  and  aggression." 

Dr.  Commager.  in  comparing 
European  and  American  national- 
ism said  that  the  U.  S.  has  held 
"a  consolidated  nationalism,  as 
against  a  .  .  .  fragmentation  of 
nationalism  and  its  ravages  in 
Europe." 

Going  on  to  list  the  reasons  for 
this  consolidation  Dr.  Commager 
cited   the: 

(1)  Inherence  of  fortunate  cir- 
cumstances in  colonial  settlement, 
in  ibe  17.  ik,.  and  aa  unequaled  j 
leadership   blessed   as   a   result  of 


the    Enlightenment    and   the    Age 
of  Reason. 

(2)  Absence  of  worship,  awe 
...  or  religion  for  the  state. 

(3)  Beginning  of  the  U.  S. 
without  a  state  church. 

(4)  Absence  of  a  powerful  mili- 
tary establishment  in  the  begin- 
ning of  U.  S.  government. 

(5)  Lack  of  state  control  of  the 
public  institutions  of  press  or  edu- 
cation, and  thus  escape  from  the 
danger   of   nationalist   control. 

An  atmosphere  of  nations  in 
the  18th  and  19th  centuries  no 
longer  exists.  Dr.  Commager  said. 
"wbmm  tlMre  wa«  »  jcoun(iipoUtan. 
international  culture,  when  all  na- 


tions were  open  and  did  not  resist 
any  alien  culture." 

Dr.  Commager  emphasized  that 
the  trend  toward  "chauvinistic 
nationalism  ...  a  viAovement 
which  exacerbates  the  flame  of 
vanity  and  power  .  .  .  has  been 
counterbalanced  in  the  U.  S.  by 
other  factors  which  do  not  lead 
to  grievous  mistakes." 

A  reassertion  of  the  "incum- 
bency of  the  U.  S.  to  give  example 
of  a  benevolent  nationalism  was 
called  for  by  Dr.  Commager.  He 
added:  "This  we  cannot  do  if  we 
.subject  to  intimidation  and  indig- 
nity." 


1)  ^^^^^,,i|j|gmiBig|0|||j|BKHaai 


5  ROOM  BRICK  HOUSE,  3  BED 
rooms,  all  modem  conveniences. 
3  miles  on  Old  86  Hyway.  Stove 
and  Frigedaire  furnished.  Call 
Fred  Katzin  after  6:00,  8-9025. 


TWO  BEDROOM  HOUSE  FURN- 
ished  or  unfurnished,  near  camp- 
us. Call  9458  during  day  or  2926 
after  5:30  p.m.  and  weekend. 


FIVE  ROOM  BRICK  HOUSE  IN 
center  of  town — has  hobby  work- 
shop. Call  9458  during  day  or 
2926  after  5:30  and  during 
weekend. 


LOST:  ONE  ROLEX  OYSTER 
Speedking  wristwatch,  Tuesday 
night  in  Physics  Lab  (I  think). 
Please  contact  Joost  Polak.  208 
Lewis. 

LOOT:  KEY  .RING  WITlT  SEV- 
eral  keys.  Lost  between  <  Little 
Fraternity  Court  and  Saunders 
Hall  Saturday  morning  between 
9  and  10.  Call  J.  W.  .Johnson, 
8-9032. 


German  Fraf  Holds  Spring  Meet 


The  Beta  Rho  Chapter  of  Delta 
Phi  Alpha,  honorary  German  fra- 
ternity will  hold  its  annual 
spring  meeting,  tonight  at  8:30 
in  105  Gardner  Hall. 

The  program  will  consist  of  a 
panel  discussion  on  "the  attitude 
of  the  German  Student  toward 
German  Rearmament." 

Three  German  students  current- 


Religious  Books  By 

J.  B.  PHILUPS 
The  Intimate  Bookshop 

205  East  Franklin  Street 


ly  attending  U.N.C.,  Wilfried  Bra- 
je,  Rainer  Menking,  and  Gunter 
Tschopel,  will  form  the  panel. 
After  the  panelists  have  express- 
ed their  views,  the  meeting  will 
be  open  to  questions  and  further 
discussion. 

The  public  has  been  invited  to 
attend.  * 

The  following  new  members 
will  be  initiated  at  the  meeting: 
Clay  Franklin  Churcl^.  Jr.,  Kins- 
ton;  Craig  E.  Crawford.  Fayette- 
ville,  N.Y.;  Thomas  Benjamin 
Douglas.  Charlotte;  George  Milton 
Haddad,  Kinston;  Stephen  Hardy, 


Silver  Springs.  Md.;  Charles  M. 
Hicks,  Wilmington;  Burton  Allan 
Horwitz.  Raleigh;  Mrs.  Sharon 
Louise  Krebs,  Chapel  Hill;  Ed- 
ward Reid  Hunter,  Charlotte;  Den- 
ton Lotz,  Northport.  N.Y.;  Don  H. 
Miller,  Cedar  Rapids.  Iowa:  John 
B.  Norris,  Oxford;  and  Harry  H. 
Summerlin.  Laurinburg.  The  three 
panelists  will  be  made  honorary 
members  of  the  chapter. 

Dr.  Herbert  W.  Reichert  is  the 
chapter  adviser.  Officers  are  Miss 
Joanna  Scroggs.  prtsident,  and 
Miss  Ellen  Brauer,  secretary,  both 
of  Chapel  Hill. 


DAILY    CROSSWORD 


ACROSS 

1.  Young:  bird 
6.  Calking 
material 

11.  Hebrew 
prophet 

12.  New 
England 
.state 

13.  Confederate 

14.  A  sauce 

15.  Pare 

16.  Greek  letter 

17.  With  (Scot.) 

18.  Eastern 
European 

20.  Indefinite 
article 

21.  Not 
(prefix) 

22.  Gold  (Sp.) 

23.  Makes  up 

28.  Mineral  rock 

29.  Can 

30.  Measure 
(Chin.) 

31.  Sheriff's 
deputies 

36.  Ahead 

37.  Man's 
nickname 

38.  Center 

39.  Sounds 

41.  Baking: 
chamber 

42.  Acclaim 

43.  Regrions 

44.  Rf  clines 
lazily 

45.  Reptile 

DOWN 

1.  Scabbard 
trinuniuf 

2.  Cavities 
3  Little 

island 


f  4.  Indian 
Ocean  is- 
land (poss.) 

5.  Unknown 
go6  (Hmdu) 

6.  City  (Neb.) 

7.  Brother 
of  Moses 

8.  An  outfit 

9.  Not 
conscious 

10.  Sheep 
14.  Triads 
19.  Negative 

word 
22.  Old 

Testaiaent 

(abbr.) 


23.  Army 
officer 

24.  River 
(S.  A.) 

25.  Com- 
pass 
point 
(abbr.) 

26.  Se- 
same 

27.  Fab- 
ulous 
horse- 
like 
animal 

31.  Funda- 
mental 

32.  Incites 


cjoaQ  aisna 
BHaDH  HaaacLi 
nanaH  •  anaaET 
□[^sia  maa  OS 
araa  ana  araa. 
aaai^  aaaca 

ayua  aana  ^ 
ana  aaa  aaa; 
QQ  Qua  aanii 


TMt«rd*y't  Aaawcr 

33.  Small  pit 

34.  Caprice 

35.  Meaning 
40.  Sick 

43.  Like 


People  Needed 
For  Council  In 
Summer  School 

student  Body  president  Bob 
Young  released  today  a  bill  that 
was  passed  recently  by  the  Student 
Legislature  concerning  a  commit- 
tee for  the  Summer  Activities 
council. 

Young  stated  that  all  oerson  in- 
terested in  working  on  this  com- 
mittee are  ajked  to  report  to  his 
office  as  soon  as  possible.  Young 
also  sent  a  word  of  caution  to  the 
prospective  committee  members  in 
that  he  wants  them  to  be  sure  that 
th^  are  going  to  be  attending 
summer  session. 

"I  would  like  to  appoint  this 
committee  early  next  week,"  stat- 
ed Young.      , 

The  bill  states:  WHEREAS: 
There  'u  no  present  statute  cover- 
ing the  operations  of  the  Summer 
Activities  Council,  and 

WHERllAS:  There  needs  to  be 
some  legally,  authorized  procedure 
for  the  formation  of  the  Council 
and  fulfilling  of  its  functions. 

WHEREAS:  There  is  ah-eady 
precedent  for  Presidential  appoint- 
ment of  Summer  School  officials; 

iffOW  THEREFORE,  BE  IT  EN- 
ACTED BY  THE  STUDENT  LEG- 
ISLATURE OF  THE  UNIVERSITY 
OF  NORTH  CAROLINA   THAT 

ARTICLE  L  Presdent  of  the  Stu- 
dent Body  appoint  chairman  of 
Summer  Activities  Council,  and  an 
Executive  Cohncil  of  five  members. 

ARTICLE  IL  Executive  Councif 
may  choose  any  other  necessary 
officers. 

ARTICLE  in.  Executive  Council 
shaH  be  responsible  for  planning 
and  co-wdinating  of  campus  ac- 
tivities during  summer  sessions. 


Tri' Delta  To  Sponsor 
Spaghetti  Supper  Friday 

The  annual  Tri  Delta  Spaghetti 
Supper  will  be  held  on  Friday 
evening  from  6-8  p.m. 

The  supper  is  given  each  year 
j  by  the  sorority  in  order  to  raise 
money  for  scholarships  which  are 
awarded  in  the  spring. 

Tickets  may  be  purchased  in  "Y  ' 
Court,  at  the  Tri  Delta  House,  or 
from  any  sorority  member. 


Tom  Walters  Is  SP 
Candidate  For  Office 

Through  error  of  Tuesday's 
Daily  Tar  Heel  it  was  announced 
that  John  Walters  was  the  SP 
senior  class  candidate  for  treasur- 
er. Tom  Walters  is  the  correct 
name  of  the  candidate. 


Informal   Photography 

(By  appointment  at  your  nome] 

Wedding  Photos 

A  Specialty 

PRESS  PHOTO  SERVICE 

XOLAND  GIOUZ 

Ofc<— News  Building, 

Main  St«  Carrb«r« 


Belk-Leggett-Horton  Go's.  Exclusive  \n  Chapel  Hill 


ROSE  MURPHY  Sinsi« 


uiilliiHii 


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IIItraplQiic  high  fideiity 

33'/3  RPM 

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RECORD 

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Every  record  fully  guaranteed.  Factory  sealed.  Absolutely 
perfect.  Satisfaction  guaranteed  or  your  money  .will  be 
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Sarah  Vaughn 

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Oklahoma 

Rodgers  And  Hammerstein, 

Porgy  and  Bess 

Jerome  Kern 

Show   Boat 

Irving  Berlin 

South  Pacific 

Rudolph  FrimI 

Student  Prince 

"Soft  Lights  and  Sweet  Music 

"Desert  Song 

Encores  Of  Hollywood 

Eddie   Cantor's  Childrens' 

Popular  Favorites 

Stories 

American  Waltzes 

Country  and  Western    Hits 

Pipe  Organ  Pops 

Boegie  Beat 

Georgia  Gibbs 

Rock  And  Roll 

Standard  78  RPM 

Microgroove  Records 

16  To^  Tunes 


Played  and  sung   just  as  you 
hear  them  on  radio  and  TV. 

4.00  Value 


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Just  imagine  16  full  length 
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PAGE  SIX 


TMi  DAILY  TAt   HiiL 


THURSDAY,  f^J^^  14,  tfS> 


Satutxiay  In  Kenan 


For  UNC  Fans,  Another  Scare 

Carolinas  unbeaten  cagers,  now  shooting  for  the  national  colle- 
giate title  after  v/inning  the  conference  crown,  threw  another  scare 
into  their  loyal  -^jpporters  Tuesday  night  in  New  York  City. 

Th«  Tar  Ht«l$,  vctims  cf  a  $ev»r»  case  of  MadiMfi  Sqwftrt 
Gardtnitis,  had  to  come  from  behind  m  the  second  half  to  down 
the  plucky  Yale  Bulldogs,  90-74,  in  an  NCAA  Courney  first  r*«ind 

9  "VIC 
With  abrut  10  minutes  left  in  the  game,  the  Carolinians  trailed, 
62-60,  and  Lennie  Rosenbluth  had  just  taken  a  seat  on  the  bench  after 
committing  his  fourth  personal  foul. 

Things  looked   bleak  at  this  point,  and   many  Tar  Heel    fans 
had  given  the  cause  up  for  lost  and  were  preparing  to  weitMtM 
the  UNC  team  back  to  Chapel  Hill. 
But  with  Rosenbluth  out  of  the  lineup,  his  four  sidekicks  in  the 
flaming  five  began  to  take  a  few  shots  themselves,  and  make  them. 
Bob  Cunningham  sank  three  baskets  in  a  row.  Tommy  Kearns  hit  a 
layup,  Pete  Brennan  dumped  a  jump  shot,  and  Joe  Quigg  dropped  a 
couple  of  baskets. 

This  salted  the  decision,  and  when  Rosenbluth  re-entered  the      { 
lineup,  there  was  little  left  for  him  to  do. 

Playing  before  the  home  folks,  the  New  York  bred  Carolina  play- 
ers seemed  to  have  trouble  getting  started  in  the  first  half.  The  score 
at  intermission  was  40-40,  but  it  took  some  last  minute  baskets  by 
the  Tar  Heels  to  eyen  up  the  scoreboard. 

The  Tar  Heels  were  nervous,  and  their  play  reflected  thlfe  fact. 
They  perked  up  in  the  second  half,  at  least  enough  to  win  the 
game  and  advance  to  the  regieoal  finals  at  Philadelphia  tomorrow 
night. 
Birt  their  play  left  much  to  be  desired.  Coach  Frank  AfcGuire  sai^ 
after  the  game  ♦hat  it  wauld  take  a  much  better  brand  of  basketball 
to  beat  Canisius,  and    Captain  Rosenjluth  assented.   JSk-Guire  called 
the  UNC  first  half  performance  their  worst  of  the  season.  And  very 
few  people  in  the  packed  stands  at   Madison  Square  Garden  would 
disagree  with  him.  I 

In  Philly,  A  Severe  Test  i 

The  Tar  Heels  have  a  bad  game  out  of  their  .-/stem,  and  should 
be  recovered  from  the  inevitable  post  ACC  tournament  letdown.  Four 
games  remain  between  thcra  and  the  NCAA  title  with  Canisius  first 
on  the  list  at  7:30  tomorrow  night. 

The  Golden  Griffins  from  Buffaloe,  N.  Y..*  are  tough,  and  have  the 
guns  to  spring  an  upset  if  Carolina  isn't  up  to  par.  They  turned  the 
tables  K:n  Slate  last  season,  and  would  like  very  much  to  add  IfSC 
to  their  list  of  Big  Four  victims. 

Canisiu  ■  is  a  W»kc  Forest  type  club:  smart  and  skilled.  Their  two 
most  potent  weapons  are  Hank  Nowak  and  Joe  Leone,  but  the  other 
membei's  of  the  starting  five  are  almost   as  dangerous. 

Against  West  Virginia  the  Griffins  employed  an  alternating  press- 
ing and  zone  defense  that  seemed  to  worry  the  Mountaineers  no  end. 
Carolina  often  has  trouble  against  a  pros.-,  so  this  could  be  just  what 
the  Gnifins  will  use. 

U  Carolina  can  survive  the  Canisius  test,  they  will  in  all  proba- 
bility meet  Syracuse  in  the  regional  final  game.  And  in  this  observer's 
opnion,  it  will  be  Kentucky  then  S.MU  in  the  Kansas  City  final  round 
for  the  national  title.  Where's  Kansas?  Felled  by  a  flying  Mustang 
in  Dalla.-. 

From  The  Shadows,  Spring  Sporfs 

AM  of  the  three  major  spirts  here  are  going  full  swing  simultane- 
ously. The  cagers  are  of  course  continuing  their  quest  for  the  nationa' 
crown,  the  baseball  squad  is  working  out  daily  on  Emerson  Field 
preparing  for  their  season's  opener  next  Thursday,  and  Oach  Jim 
Tatum's  giidders  will  hold  their  annual  Blue-White  game  in  Kenan 
Stadium  Saturday.  Seems  like  the  .masons  are  overlapping  just  a  bit. 

Almost  lost  in  the  shadow  cast  by  King  Basketball  are  th* 
spring  sports.  The  baseballers  open  their  season  next  Wednesday 
against  the  University  of  Florida,  and  the  tennis  team  debuts  a 
day  later  against  George  Washington.  Track  gets  started  on  March 
30  and  golf  on  March  25. 

The  linksters  will  face  an  attractive  schedule  featuring  home 
matches  against  RoUins,  Cornell,  Michigan  State,  Wake  Forest  Michi- 
gan, Davidson.  Western  Illinois  State,  N.  C.  State  and  Duke.  ' 

And  a  closing  net«  from  over  Raleigh  way:  State's  Lou  Pucllle 
the  darling  ef  the  f»n«,  has  been  charged  with  scalping  tickols 
at  last  week's  ACC  basketball  tournement.  A  little  money  on  tho 
side,  Lou? 


Blue-White  Game  Slated 


By  BILL  KII4G 

Carolina  students  ana  fans 
A\'ill  g«t  their  first  look  at  the 
1957  edition  of  the  Tar  Heel 
football  team  Saturday  after- 
noun  in  the  annual  Monogram 
Club  sponsored  Blue  -  White 
Game  at  2  o'clock  in  Kenan 
Stadium. 

The       intra-squad     affair     will 
climsx  spring   practice   for  the 
Tar    Heels    who    first    donned 
thejr  uniforms  Feb.  11. 

Coach  Jim  Tatum  will  be 
shooting  for  bigger  and  better 
things  this  season  —  his  Tar 
Heels  ended  the  '56  season  with 
a  0-16  record.  Actually,  the  Tar 
Heels  won  2  and  tied  1  during 
tb*    season,    but   an    ineligible 


player  whiped  the  victory  ledg- 
er clean. 

Only  one  face  will  be  missing 
from  the  Tar  Heels'  '56  coach- 
ing staff.  Assistant  coach  Eddie 
Teague  resigned  during  the' 
winter  to  take  a  job  at  The 
Citadel.  Teague  has  been  re- 
placed by  Leon  (Bud)  Carson, 
a  1932  graduate  of  Carolina 
who  played  his  collegiate  foot- 
ball under  Tatum's  predecessor, 
Carl  Snavely.  Carson  was  a  de- 
fensive halfback  of  the  fruit- 
ful Choo  Choo  Justice  days 
when  the  two-platoon  .syetem 
was   in   effect. 

The  Tar  Heels  lost  9  men  via 
gpaduation  from  last  season's 
squad  and   three   for  scholastic 


reasons.  But  the  presence  of 
s&me  of  last  years'  starters  plus 
some"~  good  new  prospects  has 
brought  optimism  to  the  coach- 
ing staff.  The  Tar  Heels  had  a 
very  fine  freshman  team  last  sea- 
son and  a  good  many  of  the  ex- 
Tar  Babi3s  are  on  hand  to  bolster 
the   Carolina  roster. 

Saturday's  contest  will  not  be 
without  .  the  usual  festivities 
either.  ^At  halftime  the  Blue- 
White  queen  will  be  named 
from  a  list'^of  Carolina  lovelies. 
The  Monogram  Clubs'  Coach  and 
Assistant  Coach  of  the  Year  on 
thfe  Carolina  campus  will  also 
be  honored. 

Th?    tenative    startins   lineup 


for  Saturday  is: 

Blue:  Ends-Buddy  Payne  and 
John  Jones;  Tackles-Leo  Rus- 
savage  and  Phil  Blazer;  Guards- 
Don  Stallings  and  Stu  Pell; 
Center-Fred  Swearingen;  Half- 
backs-Emil  DsCantis  and  Dan 
Droze;  Fullback-Cornell  John- 
son, and  Quarterback.  Dave 
Reed. 

White:  Ends-Mac  Turlington 
and  Dick  Goldstein;  Tackles- 
Mike  McDade  and  Don  Redding; 
Guards-Don  Wooldridge  and 
Jack  Lineburger;  Center-Bill 
Nead;  HalfbacXs-jim  Schuler 
and  Daly  Goff;  Fullback-Bob 
Shupin,  and  Quarterback,  Curt 
Hathaway. 


Washington  Wfiips  Defroiif^ 
5-2,  In  Exhibition  Game 

ORLANDO,    Fla.— (AP)— Wash-    day  to  preserve  a  3-2  exhibition 


ington  pitcher  Bud  Byerly  struck 
out  pinchhitter  Bob  Kennedy  with 
two  out  and  runners  on  first  and 
third  in  the   ninth   inning  yester- 


game  decision  over  Detroit. 

Garland  Shifflett,  rookie  right- 
hander, held  the  Tigers  hitless  in 
his  three-inning  appearance  and 
emerged  the  winner. 


Howard  Johnson  Restauranrf 

BREAKFAST 

LUNCH 

DINNER 

SNACKS 
"Landmark  For  Hungry  Tarheels'' 


Baseball  Team  Prepares  Fori  ""'s' ®'«" 

^  r         ^^  \At     J         I  To Di Senate 

Seasons    Opener    Wed.     jgyThadEure 


By  BILL  KING 

AMhough  all  interest  on  the 
Carolina  campus  is  now  centered 
on  the  magnificent  C^olina  bas- 
ketball team,  number  3  of  the 
"major  sports"  cycle  —  baseball 
Is  about  rtady  to  roar  into  high 
g?ar. 

The  Tar  Heel  baseballers  have 
been  going  through  spring  prac- 
tice for  three  weeks  and  Coach 
Walter  Rabb  has  stepped  up  the 
r^^f  in  preparations  for  the  Tar 
Heels'  annual  journey  to  Florida. 
The  Rabbmen  depart  Monday  for 
a  five  day  stay  in  the  land  of  sun- 
.shlne.  During  their  tenure  in 
Florida,  the  Tar  Heels  will  meet 


,  been  coming  along  slowly."  That       "This    is   just   an    experiment," 

'  statement  was  a  little  unusual  for    commented    Rabb.    "I    don't   know 

this  time  of  season  when  the  hit- '  whether  or  not  it  will  work  yet." 

ters  should  be  hitting  the  ball  all    Babb  was  a  bit  concerned  about 

over   the    lot    while    the    pitchers   the  physical  condition  of  alternate 

get  their  arms  in  shape.  ;  second    baseman    Carson    Oldham. 

•'I    believed,"    continued    Rabb.    "Carson,"  he  said,  hs  been  bother- 

J  "that    our    pitching    and    defense   cd  with  a  pain  ip  his  arm." 

I  will   be    much    better   this    season       Commenting     on     the     pitching 

than    it    was    last    year.    The    big   staff,    Rabb    stated    that    it    was 

question  right  now  is,  can  we  gel    shaping  up  very  nicely.  He  singl- 


the  runs?" 

Rabb  also  feels  that  the  team 
will  be  "exceptionally  fast"  for  a 
college  ball  club.  "We  should  have 
a  running  team."  he  stated. 

The  Tar  Heel  chieftain  watched 
veteran   Roger  Honeycutt   blast   a 


the    University    of    Florida,    Ohio   double  to  left  field  an  dremarked: 


State  twice,  and  Rollins  twice. 
The  first  home  game  is  March 
28th  against  the  University  of 
Delaware. 

Coach  Rabb.  who  has  finally 
been  bl?s;>ed  with  some  warm 
weather,  stood  beside  the  batting 


"There's  one  of  the  boys  involved 
in  our  experiment."  He  was  re- 
ferring to  his  rejuvenation  of  the 
Tar  Heel  field  which  included 
switcbing  Chuck  Hartman,  last 
year's  second  baseman  to  third, 
and    moving    his    regular     third 


cd  out  veteran  Jim  Raugh,  the 
workhorse  of  last  season,  and 
righthander  Joe  Morgan,  as  a 
couple  of  boys  who  are  "looking 
very  good." 

The  Tar  HeeLs"  finished  a  re- 
spectable third  in  the  ACC  last 
season,  but  Rabb  isn't  making  any 
predictions  about  this  year.  "Re- 
member," he  smiled,  "we've 
to  get  those  hits." 


"A  challenge  to  make  good  the 
opportunity  to  inspire  and  teach 
the  outstanding  youth  of  this  Uni- 
versity, to  create  an  organization 
whose  caliber  is  unequalled 
throughout  the  nation",  was  is- 
vtued  Tuesday  night  to  the  Dialec- 
tic Senate  by  Thad  Eure.  North 
Carolina  Secretary  of  State. 

Speaking  before  the  Di's  162nd 
inaugural  session,  Eure  stated  that 
the  two  debating  societies  form 
potentially  the  most  valuable  part 
of  a  Carolina  education  and  call- 
ed upon  the  Di  to  realire  its  po- 
tential and  "establish  a  new  tra- 
dition to  rival  the  old." 


YOU  CANT  TOP  KEMP! 

-' While  They  Last - 


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cage  yesterday  watching  his  team  baseman.  Bomber  Hill  to  the  out- 

in  an  intra-squad  game.  field.  Rabb  has  also  moved  short- 

•'You  know."  he  remarked,  "the  stop  Don  LewU  to  second  and  bas 

pitchers  are  a   little  ah^ad  of  th.";  put   Honeycutt.   a   utility   man   last 

batters    so    far.    Our    hitting    has  season,  in  at  short. 


Ydle  Is  Big  Favorite 
In  NCAA  Swim  Meet 


Grady  Wallace  Looks 
For  Improved  SC  Team 


COLUMBIA,  S.  C.  —  South  Car- 
olina's ail-American  Grady  Wal- 
lace, who  led  the  Gamecock  bas- 
ketball t?am  to  its  best  season  in 
more  than  a  decade,  is  telling 
newsmen  that  "You  haven't  seen 
anything  yet.  Next  year's  team  is 
going  to  be  really  tough.  I'd  give 
anything  to  be  playing  on  it." 

Grady  claims  that  the  1957-58 
Gamecocks  will  have  the  height  to 
cope  with  North  Carolina,  ".  .  . 
and  they'll  have  a  man  who  can 
^ore  better  than  Rosenbluth  or 
me." 

"That  man"  is  Dickie  Prater, 
who  like  Wallace  came  to  South 
Carolina  as  a  transfer  student. 

"Dickie's  the  best  shot  I've  ever 
seen  in  college  basketball."  waxed 
Grady,  who  is  sometimes  referred 
to  in  the  same  kind  of  superla- 
tive. "There's  no  doubt  in  my 
mind  that  he'll  be  an  all- Ameri- 
can." 

Prater,  a  6-2  guard,  was,  a  high- 
ly sought-after  prospect  several 
years  ago.  He  entered  Kentucky 
where  he  continued  to  wow  his 
audiences. '  He  went  into  the  army 
after  the  first  season  and  spent 
four  years  gaining  more  basket- 
baill  experience  along  with  his 
army  chores. 


"He  can  throw  them  up  from 
anywhere  on  the  forecourt  in  any 
style  ...  and  he'll  hit  'em,  too." 
says  Grady.  "Pressure  is  a  word 
he  doesn't  knowj' 

To  go  along  with  Prater  there 

will  be  a  formidable  team,  as  Wid- 

lace  sees  it.  Three  of  thig  yeat*s 

I  starters,     Cookie     Perkola.    Dick 

Hoffman  and  6-8  Fred  Lent!  will 

;  return.     Then    there's     6-7    .Bob 

Frantz    a    transfere    with    three 

;  years'     varsity     eligibility.     Mike 

,  Callahan,  6-6,  -who  led  the  fhwh- 

I  men  scorers  this  season,  Walt  and 

i  Bury    Hudson,    6-5    twin    whizzes 

j  from  Columbia,   and  Fred  LuifS, 

i  another    Kentuckian,    are   (doming 

j  up  from  the  freshman  team  along 

i  with  6-10  Larry  Dial. 


Mighty  Yale  University,  one  ot 
the  top  swimming  powers  in  the 
nation,  will  rule  ta  favorites  to 
win  the  34th  annual  NC.\A  Swim- 
ming Championships  at  the  Uni- 
versity of  North  Carolina  on 
March    28-30. 

The  Ivy  League  Champions  will 
be  defending  the  400-yard  free- 
style and  medley  relays  champion- 
ships. The  Bulldogs  have  broken 
the  world  freestyle  relay  record 
twice  this  ytar.  and  they  did  it 
with  two  different  teams. 

Around  50  t«ams  and  over  30d 
of  the  nation's  top  swimming  stars 
are  expected  to  compets  for  na- 
tional hnors.  Among  the  group 
will  be  tljree  defending  cham- 
pions. 

Indiana's  gill  Woolsey  will  at- 
tempt to  win  three  titles  this  year. 
He  is  defending  champion  in  the 
220  and  400-yard  freestyles  and 
is  favort^  t9  win  the  1900  meters, 
the  first  event  on  the  schadule. 
Robin  Mopre  of  Stanford  and 
Yale's  Rex  Aubrey  are  favored  to 
win  the  50  and  100-yard  freestyl- 
es. The  two  da^br  men  tied  for  na- 
tional honors  last  year  in  the  50- 
yard  event. 


Pirates  Take 
Fifth  Straight 
Grapefruit  Win 

SAR.\SOTA.  Fla.  —  (AP)  — 
Pittsburgh);  rampaging  Pirates 
made  it  five  consecutive  grape- 
fruit league  victories  today  by 
whipping  the  Baston  Red  Sox  3-1 
in   10  innings. 

The  loss  was  the  fourth  in  five 
.starts  for  Boston,  which  has 
scored  ju.st  four  runs  in  50  innings 
of  e.\hibition  games.  ■    ■ 

The  Pirates  put  acrosR  the  Win- 
ning runs  after  two  were  out  in 
the   extra    inning. 

Bonus    Baby    Harold    Pritchard, 
signed  off  the  University  of  South- 
ern   California    campus   for   a    re- 
1500-meters   will   open   the   finals    ported  $30,000.  singled  sharply  to 


tennis  Practice 

Coach  Ham  Strayhorn  has  re- 
quested anyone  interested  in 
trying  oUt  for  the  versity  or 
freshman  tennis  teams  to  report 
•'ny  day  at  2  p.m.  to  the  tennis 
courts. 


STEVBKS-  SHCTHBRC 
PRESENTS 


North  Carolina's  Charlie  Krepp 
has  been  tabbed  a  favorite  in  the 
100  and  200-yarU  backstrokes.  The 
Tar  Heer  senior  has  already  tied 
the  NCAA  record  for  the  100  this 
year. 

Sixteen  events  are  included  in 
thi.s     year's     championships.     The 


on  Thursday  night  with  eight  and 
seven  finals  scheduled  for  Friday 
and  Saturday  nights,  respectively. 

'  North  Carolina  Coach  Ralph 
Casey,  who  is  directing  the  meet, 
announced  that  a  limited  number 
of  tickets  are  now  on  sale  at  the 
Woollen     Gymnasium    Ticket     Of- 

I  fice. 


Religious  Books  By 


left  and  raced  to  third  on  Bob 
Skinner's  off-field  double  to  left. 
Both  scored  on  Bill  Virdon'*  first 
pitch  slam  into  rightfield. 


SiMPlYHEAT! 

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Monogram  Club 
Meeting  Is  Tonight 

Monogram  CiuU  ^#Mldent 
John  Bilich  has  announced  that 
there  will  be  an  imporfehf-  liNN^* 
ing  of  the  club  at  8  o'clock  to- 
night. . 

Final  plans  for  the  Bluo-W^lta 
game  will  be  discustf^ed  eWtf 
Bilich  says  that  all  niemliers 
mutt  attend. 


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IDEAS 

And  who  help«»d  start  'om?  S«« 
editorial,  page  2. 


VOL.  LVII  NO.  T14 


Complete  UPi  Wire  Seme* 


Freer  Edit  Policy 
Is  Need,  Crowther 

D1 H  Editor  Candidate  Gives 
Eight-Step  Platform  Plank 


CHAPEL   HILL,   NORTH   CAROLINA,  FRIDAY,  MARCH   15,   1957 


Offices   in   Graham   Memorial 


FOUR  PAGES  THIS  ISSUE 


Boltor  public  relations,  more 
campus  news  and  a  freer  editor- 
ial policy  were  announced  as  plat- 
form planks  ye  erday  by  Frank 
I'rowthcr.  indepen  lent  candidate 
for  editor  of  The  Daily  Tar  Heel. 

The  24-ye-jr-oId  Marine  Corps 
vp{»?ran  pointed  out  that  he  has 
had  experience  with  the  National 
Brcadcastin::  C '..  The  Daily  Tar 
H'el  and  that  ho  has  been  close- 
ly associated  with  that  paper  for 
pbout  a  year. 

He  proposed  improvements  in 
The  DaJlv  Tar  Heel  aloni-  the  fol- 


lowing lines:  j 

1.  A    de-emphasis    of    national  | 
politics  and  news.  \ 

2.  Le.=s  dependence  on  the 
World  Wire.  j 

3.  Better  internal  organization 
of  the  paper. 

4.  Better   public    relations. 

.5.     A  better  understanding  and 

interpretation  of  athletics. 

6.     .\     better     feature     depart- 
ment. 
I      7.     A    more    well-rounded    edi-i 
torial   page. 

8.  A  student  poll  to  decide  on 
the   paper's  comic  strips. 

"I  shall  make  no  wild  promises 
til  at  I  would  not  be  able  to  ful- 
fill." he  said.  "But."  he  added,  "if 
clectcQ  I  shall  attempt  to  admin- 
istrate the  office  of  editor  in  a 
manner  that  will  do  justice  to  the 
student  body  and  to  the  great 
tradition    of    our    university."  j 


Legislature   Appropriates 
Funds  On  Three  Committees 

Leadership  Committee  Given 


5ig  EpS  Plan  l  Expenses  For  Coming  Retreat 


JOHN  WHITTY  AND  NANCETTA  HUD^N 

...  ill    Stranger    in    the    Land 


IDSOt 


FRANK   CROWTHER 

.   .  a  personal  challenge 


oHice  Seekers  Colson  Elected  YMCA  Head; 

Belle  Corey  To  Lead  YWCA 

Corey  Is  Next    ^-^^       '~~~  ^*  Phillips  To  Be 
YW  President    I  HP   *t^  iHi         Vice-President 


Petitions  Due 
By  March  22 


Selection  Board 
Questioning 
DTH  Aspirants 

The -Bipartisan  Selections  Board 
for  candidates  for  The  Daily  Tar 
Heel  editorship  is  currently  in- 
terviewing prospective  editors,  its 
chairman   said   yesterday. 

Chairman  Fred  Powledge  said 
that  two  of  the  three  candidates 
who  have  entered  the  race  have 
bren  interviewed — Neil  Bass  and 
Ft'ank  Crowther. 

"Any  other  student  who  wants 
♦o  run  for  editor  of  The  Daily 
Tar  Heel  in  spring  elections  April 
2  should  check  with  me  or  any 
other  member  of  the  board  with- 
in the  next  few  days."  said  Pow- 
ledge. "to  arrange  for  an  inter- 
view." 

Powledge  is  present  editor  of 
The  Daily  Tar  Heel.  Others  on 
the  committee  are  Frank  Ferrell, 
chairman  of  the  Publications 
Board;  Mike  Weinman,  chairman 
of  the  University  Party;  Sonny 
Hallford.  chairman  of  the  Student 
Party  and  Tom  Lambeth,  former 
Publications  Board  and  Student 
Party  and  chairman  of  Graham 
Memoril  Activities  Board. 

Powledge  said  the  board  will 
make  its  recommendations  for 
candidates  "probably  at  the  first 
of  next  week  " 


All  students  wishing  to  run  for 
office  in  the  coming  election   are 
required    to   submit   a   petition   to 
I  the   chairman     of     the     Elections 
j  Board  by  March  22.     it     was     an- 
1  nounced  yesterday. 
j      Petitions  must  be  signed  by  25 
i  persons    and    the    candidate.    This 
I  announcement   applied   to  all   can- 
•  didates   who   wish  to   run   without 
!  party  affiliation  or  endorsement  by 
I  ihe  Selections  Board. 
!  Caodidate^  grades  must  l^  certi- 
fied By  (^%elin*s  Office  by  Mar. 
22.   An  overall  "C"  average  is  re- 
quired  from  each  candidate. 

Petitions  should  be  left  with  the 
Secretary  in  the  Student  Govern- 
ment  Office   in  Graham   Memorial. 


Carolina  Forum 
Will  Sponsor 
Patrick  Mai  in 

The  Carolina  Forum  will  spon- 
sor Patrick  Murphy  Malin.  Execu- 
tive Director  of  the  American  Civ- 
il Liberties  Union.  March  27.  in 
Carroll  Hall,  according  to  Bran- 
don Kincaid.  chairman  of  the 
Forum. 

Malin's  topic  will  be  "Liberty — 
Unfinished  Business."  which  is  al- 
.<o  the  "title  of  a  book  he  wrote. 

Malin  has  spent  a  month  travel- 
lin?  through  the  South  studying 
civil  liberties.  He  is  a  former  eco- 
nomics  professor    at    Swarthmore. 

"*       gmTslate 

"Sound  artd  Fury,"  4-6,  Roland 
Parker  Loung*  No.  1;  Gradoato 
Club,  8-9:30,  Roland  Parkor 
Loun«M  Nos.  1,  2,  3;  Publica- 
tions Board,  4-6,  Weedhouse  Con- 
ftrance  Room;  »I-Partl»an  Salac- 
tlons  Beard,  1:30-4,  Council 
Room;  Potito  Dr»matique,  7- 
10:30,  Council  Room;  Elections 
Board,  2  p.m.,  A.P.O.  Room; 
"Scond    and    Fury, '   7-12,   A.P.O. 

Room. 


Seven  Profs 
/Granted  Leaves, 

Seven  UNC  faculty  members 
have  been  granted  leaves  of  ab- 
sence, according  to  President  Will- 
iam Friday's  office. 

The    leaves    were    approved    by 
!  the    Executive    Committee    of   the 
Board    of   Trustees  upon   the    rec- 
ommendation   of   Chancellor   Rob- 1 
,  ert   House. 

I  Dudley  J.  Cowden.  professor  in 
the  school  of  Business  Admin- 
istration, was  granted  a  Kenan 
Leave  for  the  spring  semester 
1957-58  for  research,  study,  and 
lecture  at  the  University  of  Lon- 
don. 

Kobert  W.  Linker,  professor  in 
the  Dept.  of  Romance  Languaages. 
will  be  on  Kenan  leave  for  the 
fall  semester  1957-58  in  order  to  ' 
continue  research  and  writing  in 
the  field  of  Old  French  and  Ital- 
ian. 

In  order  to  pursue  research  at 
the  Plant  Industry  Station  at 
Beltsville,  Md.,  Charles  E.  Jen- ' 
ner.  associate  professor  in  the  i 
Dept.  of  Zoology,  will  be  on  a 
Kenan  leave  for  the  spring  semes- 
ter. 1957-58.  I 

John  J.  Honigmann.  associate 
'  professor.  Dept.  of  Sociology, 
was  granted  a  leave  of  absence  for  i 
the  academic  years  1957-58.  sub-  [ 
jeel  to  the  award  of  a  Fulbright 
Research  Grant,  to  continue  an- 
I  thropological   studies  in  Pakistan. 

In    order    to    accept    the    invita- 
I  tion  of  the  Institute  for  Advanced 
I  Study  at  Princeton  for  study  and  i 
research.    F.    Burton    Jones,    pro-  i 
fessor  in  the  Dept.  of  Mathemat- 
j  ics.  will  be  on  leave  for  the  aca- 
demic year  1957-58. 

Robert  L.  Bunting,  assistant  pro- 
fessor. School  of  Business  Ad- 
ministration, was  granted  a  leave 
for  the  spring  semester  1956-57 
to  accept  a  grant  from  the  Will- 
iam Volker  Fund,  in  order  to  con- 
tinue research  and  writing. 

Leave  of  absence  is  also  in  or- 
der for  David  G.  Basile,  assistant ! 
professor.  Dept.  of  Geology  and 
Geography,  for  the  academic 
year  1957-58.  in  order  to  pursue  i 
research  and  write  in  this  coun- 
try and   possibly  in  South   Ameri- , 


YWCA  election  results  were  an- 
nounced  by   Lee   Ann   Curtis   yes- 1 
tcrday. 

Belle  Corey,  a  rising  senior  from 
Atlanta.    Ga..    was    elected    presi- 
dent   for    the    coming    year.    .\nn 
liMTgan.  a  junior  from  Charleston.  > 
W.  Va..  is  the  new  viee  president. ' 

There  wfll  be  a  runoff  l>etween  ' 
Molly    Adams   of   Wilmington    and 
Cynthia    Segraves   of  Jacksonville,  i 
Fla..    for    the   secretarial    position.  ] 
Both  women  are  junior."?.  • 

Ann  Holt,  a  junior  from  San- 
ford,  was  elected  treasurer.  Lu- 
cinda  Holderness.  a  junior  from 
Greensboro,  was  elected  member- 
ship  chairman. 

A  ^runoff  will   also  be  held  for 
program  chairman.  The  candidates  | 
arc  Phyllis  Kraffl.  a  junior  from: 
River  Forest,  111:,  and  Eve  McClat 
chey.  a  junior  from  Atlanta,  Ga.    j 

Runoffs    will    be    held    Wednes- ! 
day  night  at  the  regular  women's 
dorm  meetings.  I 


Refuses  Testimony 

WASHINGTON    —</P>— Poker-faced 
William    Langley.    distrit- 1   attorney 
of    Portland,    Ore.,    took    the    Fifth 
.Amendment  before  the  Senate  rac- ' 
kets  committee   yesterday  and   re- ; 
fused  to  testify  about  gambling  and  ' 
prostitution    in   his   bailwick.  j 

He  listened  to  tape  recordings  of , 
what  purported  to  be  conversations  | 
between  him  and  a  pair  of  gamb-  j 
ler.s  but  refused  to  say  whether  he 
recognized  his  own  voice. 

He   also  declined — on   grounds   of  j 
possible  self-incrimination  —  to  ex-  j 
plain    a   $500   check   drawn    in    his 
Lame    by    the   Western    Conference 
of   Teamsters   in   1934.  | 

The  tape  recordings,  made  secret- 
ly by  a  third  gambler,  quoted  Lang- 
ley  as  saying-  it  .was  "all  right"  to 
run  card  ^ame^,  handbooics.  pinball 
machines  and  puncbbuards.  i 


Senate  Accuses  Hoffa 

WASHINGTON  -AJP^-  The  Gov- 
ernment moved  swiftly  yesterday— 
with  a  grand  jury  investigation  — 
in  the  case  of  Jimmy  Hoffa.  Team- ' 
8ters'  Union  blgshot  accused  of  a 
plot  to  plant  a  spy  in  the  midst  of 
the  Senate's  racket  prol)ers.  1 

The  cocky,  dapper  Hoffa.  vowing  ; 
innocence,  said  he  would  fight  "un- 
til  I  am  cleared."  j 

But  his  senatorial  accuser::)  seem- 
ed satisfied  they  had  the  goods  on 
him  and  could  send  him  to  prison  ' 
on    charges    of    an   $18,000   bribery  I 
scheme. 

(See    WORLD   NEWS,   Page   3)    j 


HOKE    SIMPSON 

.  .  .   Glee   Club  Star  I 

UNC  Glee  Club 
Will  Feature       ; 
Hoke  Simpson 

By  BEN  TAYLOR 

Tall,    tanned   and    talented    Henry  i 
"Hoke"  Simpson   will  take  his  Bel- 
afonte   sway    and    song   style  on    a ; 
rambling   tour  of   North   aud   South ' 
Carolina   next   week   when   he   tours 
uith  the  UNC  Men'.s  Glee  Club. 

The  soft  spoken  Georgian  will  be 
the  glee  club's  featured  vocalist 
when  it  leaves  Wednesday  morning 
i\i  9  a.m.  on  its  annual  spring  tour. 

The  cheerful  freshman  will  per 
Ivirm  three  songs  at  the  Glee  Club's 
numerous  concerts.  In  each  perfor- 
mance he  will  be  arrayed  in  an 
outfit  he  refers  to  as  a  "dock- 
norker's   wardrobe." 

By  this  he  means  he'll  be  sport- 
ing white  duck  pants  and  a  red 
shut  opened  lazily  at  the  neck. 

h  quartet  of  glee  club  members 
will  provide  backgr;ound  music  on 
.same  of  the  numbers  They  will  be 
attired  in  white  shirts  with  the  op- 
en neck  synonymous  of  the  Jamai- 
can natives,  and  dark  tux  pants. 

The  amiable  calj-pso  singer  will 
pei'form  "Mariaiuie."  and  "Jamaica 
ta  Farewell."  The  third  number  in' 
jiis  relaxing  repertoire  is  as  yet  un- 
determined, but  either  "Hold  'Em 
Joe,"  "Matilda."  or  "Pretty  Girl" 
V,  ill  roun(jl  out  his  performance. 

Hoke's  soothing  style  is  as  fresh 
as  his,  big  southern  grin.  He's  been ; 
a  calypso  singer  for  only  "about  a 
year."  I 

Simpson   staled   that   he   felt   that 
"the  five  day  tour  will  give  me  a 
chance  to  meet  and  perform  before 
just  atwut  every  kind  of  audience.  I 
The  opportunity  to  perform  on  tele-  \ 
vision  along  with  the  Glee  Club  will  [ 
£lso   be   provided."  ! 

Any  student  who  was  present  at 
the    Carolina    Cavalcade    of    Talent 
show  held  lu  Memorial  Hall  earliej 
(See  GLEE  CLUB,  Page  3) 


Stewart  Colson  was  unanimous- 
ly elected  YMCA  President  for 
1957  last  night  at  a  meeting  in  Ger- 
rard   Hall. 

Ail  of  the  other  officer  candi- 
dates were  als;>  unanimously  elect- 
.d. 

Elected  viee-prcsTdent  oi*  the 
organization  was  Joe  Phillips;  Sec- 
retary. Kelly  Wallace:  Treasurer. 
Rick  Frank;  Member^^hip  Chair- 
man, Larkin  Kirkman;  Program 
Chairman.    Randy    Sholton. 

Extensive  experience  in  YMCA 
work  marked  the  record  of  all  the 
officers  elected. 

Colson.  a  rising  senior  from 
Greensboro,  will  be  installed, 
along  with  the  other  elected  of- 
ficers, sometime  in  April,  said 
out   going    president    Gerry   Mayo. 

Colson's  activities  in  the  YMCA 
have  included  work  in  Freshman 
Camp,  discussion  leader  of  the 
annual  YM-YWCA  Bricks  confer- 
ence, and  delegate  to  the  Southern 
Area  Council  meeting  in  Atlanta, 
Ga. 

Vice-president-elect  Phillips  has 
served  as  chairman  of  the  Race 
Relations  Council  of  the  YMCA. 
among  other  committees  of  Y  or- 
•^anization. 


Move  To 
New  Court 

The  Carolina  Sig  Eps  will  move  | 
tj  the  new  fraternity  court.  i 

I 
Sunday,  at  the  annual  founders' 

day  of  Sigma  Phi  Epsilon.  the  alum- 
ni gave  the  word  to  go  ahead  by 
voting  to  back  the  undergrads, 
"All  the  way."  j 

The  alumni  appointed  an  action 
committc  to  make  all  the  final  ar- 
rangements. Dr.  Charles  Hender- 
son, of  the  UNC  classics  depart- 
ment.  was  named  to  head  the  com- 
mittee. Harold  Weaver  was  elected 
treasurer  of  the  committee.  Jack 
Owens  of  Durham  and  Charles 
Linvillc  of  Winston-Salem  com- 
pose the  remainder  of  the  alumni  , 
committee.  I 

An  undergraduate  committee  was 
also  formed  to  assis\  the  alumni.  | 
Charlie  Dniels  was  named  chair- 
man of  the  undergraduate  commit- 
tee. Bill  Aiken,  William  E.  Self.! 
and  Curtiss  Daughtry  are  the  other 
tnembers  of  the  undergrad  commit- 
tee. 

This  action  was  taken  at  a  Found- 
ers' Day  celebration  at  the  SPE 
House  Sunday. 

The  presiding  officer  at  the 
function  was  John  Dawn. 

(see   Sig   Eps   pa&e   3) 


By  H-JOOST  POLAK 

The  passage  of  bills  appropriating 
fimds  to  the  Student  Government 
Leadership  Training  Committee,  the 
Elections  Board,  and  the  Constitu- 
tional Revision  Conimittee  and  a  re- 
solution concerning  student  employ- 
ees of  Lenoir  Hall  and  revision  of 
the  Student  Body  Constitution  form- 
ed the  main  business  of  the  Student 
Legislature's    meeting    last    night. 

The  leadership  program  was  ap- 
propriated 250  dollars  by  the  Legis- 
lators to  defray  expenses  for  its  up- 
c'oming  retreat  which  has  lieen  ten- 


Raid  Rules 
Order  Of  Day 

Luther  Hodges.  Jr..  has  issued 
a  stern  edict  and  fair  warning 
from   the  Student  Council. 

"Active  attendance."  he  said, 
"or  participation  of  any  sort  in  a 
panty  raid  is  very  defitiitely  a  vio- 
lation of  gentlemanly  conduct.' 
and  thus  a  violation  of  the  Campus 
Code.  A  participant  of  the  March 
1  caper  has  been  placed  on  proba- 
tion for  such  a  violation. 

"Wo  urge  the  students  to  take 
notice  of  tiie  consequences  that 
can  be  incurred  from  such  un- 
gentlemanly  conduct."  said  Hod- 
ges. "Panty  raids  have  always  been 
degrading  to  the  University  and 
to  the  individuals  involved,"  he 
.»aid. 


UN  Seminar  Students 
Hear  Dr.  Frank  Graham 


tatively  scheduled  for  the  first  week- 
end after  spring  recess.  Both  the 
Elections  Board  and  the  Constitu- 
tional Revision  Committee  were 
granted  small  sums  to  cover  oper- 
nling  expenses. 

The  legislatiu-e  expressed  unani- 
iiK>as  appro\al  of  the  resolution  in- 
t.oduced  by  M  Alphin  which  propos- 
ed two  alternative  plans  of  better- 
.ng  Lenoir  Hall  student  employee 
compensation.  Both  systems  calk-d 
tor  the  establishment  of  meal  tick- 
et book  systems  to  enable  the  work- 
ers to  spend  their  food  allotment 
as  they  please. 

Letters  of  resignation  were  ten- 
ifiered  by  Representatives  Baum  and 
Howerton,  Baum  resigning  to  pur- 
.':ue  the  office  oi  Student  Body  Pres- 
ident, and  Howerton  to  pursue  his 
studies. 

Bills  presented  upon  which  no  ac- 
tion was  taken  included:  a  resolu- 
tion to  subsidize  the  UNC  Graduate 
Club  and  a  bUl  to.  allow  student 
parking  in  the  Morehead  Planetar- 
ium lot  on  election  day.  A^  bill 
calling  for  a  375  dollar  subsidation 
for  the  Carolina  Quartely  was  tab- 
led  indefinitely. 

Charles  Huntington,  newly  elect- 
ed representative  of  Town  Men's  I, 
was  sworn  in  by  legislature  speak- 
er Sonny  Evans,  who  recommended 
that  Representative  Wilson  Cooper 
bo  relieved  of  his  duties  until  he 
could  aiTange  a  class  schedule  fa- 
vorable  to   their  performance. 

Past  President  of  the  National  Stu- 
dents  Association  and  1949  UNC 
graduate  .\1  Lowenstein.  who  is  cur- 
rently visiting  the  campus,  was  rec- 
ognized by  Speaker  Evans  and  ac- 
corded a  standing  ovation  by  the 
.Assemblage.   . ._ 


Grad  Club  Will 
Hear  Dr.  Nash, 
Religion  Prof. 

Dr.  .Arnold  .Nash.  UNC  religion 
professor,  will  deliver  an  address 
entitled  "University:  Ivory  Tower. 
Filling  Station  or  Prophet"  tonight 
at  8  p.m.  in  Roland  Parker  Lounge 
of  Graham  Memorial. 

Dr.  Nash's  address  will  be  feat- 
ured at  the  UNC  Graduates  Club's 
first  meeting  of  the  semester,  and 
will  be  followed  by  tJie  serving 
of  refreshments  and  an  informal 
dance. 


Tiio  meeting  is  open  to  all  grad 
students.  U.NC  employees,  regist- 
ered nurses  and  undergraduates 
over  21  years  of  age.  An  invita- 
tion to  '  attend  the  session  has 
been  extended  to  members  of  the 

Cosmopolitan   Club.    . 

* 

The  Graduate  Club  also  an- 
nounced yesterday  the  establish- 
ment of  a  scries  of  informal  Sun- 
day afternoon  coffee  hours,  to  be- 
gin this  Sunday.  March  17th  in  the 
new  second  floor  lounge  of  -  the 
YMCA.  All  graduate  students  and 
University  administrative  person- 
nel have  been  invited  by  the  club 
to  participate. 


By    PIG    HUMPHREY 

Special  to  the  Daily  Tar  Heel 
NEW  YORK— Tne  art  of  medi 
ating  an  international  settlement 
between  Indonesia  and  The  Neth- 
erlands was  graphically  explained 
last  night  by  Dr.  Frank  Graham 
to  the  group  of  students  which 
made  up  the  UN  Seminar  trip. 

Dr.  Graham  described  to  the 
UNC  and  WC  students  the  diffi- 
culties which  he  encountered  as 
a  member  of  the  UN  commission 
which  settled  the  revolt  of  the  In 
donesians  against  the  Dutch,  and 
gave  sovereignty  to  the  Indonesian 
Republic. 

With  the  Indonesians,  led  by 
President  Sukarno,  clamoring  fo'* 
independence  in  1945  from  the 
Dutch.  Dr.  Graham  >\as  appointed, 
along  with  an  Australian  and  Bel- 
gian representative  to  mediate  the 
dispute  for  a  peaceful  settlement. 

Dr.  Graham  went  on  to  relate  the 
deadlocks  which  the  UN  commiss- 
ion bogged  down  on  The  Dutch 
wanted  the  problem  settled  in  In- 
donesia. The  Indonesians  out  of 
their  country. 

Out  of  this  impasse  came  the 
solution,  through  diplomatic  chan- 
nels, to  negotiate  the  dispute  on 
an  American  warship,  the  Ren- 
ville,  a  naval   vessel. 

On  Board  the  Renville  in  1947. 
acute  arguments  and  more  dead- 
locks   arose    over    the    principles 


Kings  Share 
Most  Precious 


of  the  struggle  of  Indonesia 
against  the  Netherlands.  By  pa- 
tient maneuvering  and  diplomacy, 
however.  Dr.  Grahams  commiss- 
ion worked  out  a  ceasefire  line 
between  the  two  countries. 

The  final  result  of  the  commiss- 
ion's work  emerged  in  early  1948 
as  the  Renville  Agreement.  Dr. 
Graham  then  had  finished  his  work 
and  so  turned  the  matter  over 
to  the  UN  Security  Council  to  vote 
upon. 

The  UN  Seminar  continues  on 
in  its  tour  of  conferences  and 
pleminaries  centering  the  UN 
building.  The  group  will  return 
here  Sunday  night. 


Theater  Director  To  Speak 
To  Carolina  Playmakers 

Willard  Swire,  executive  director 
of  the  .American  National  Theatei 
and  .Academy,  will  be-  a  guest  of 
The  Carolina  Playmakers  and  will 
address  the  9  a.m.  Dramatic  .Art 
class  in  the  Playmakers  Theater. 

Released  from  his  work  in  ew 
York  to  travel  around  the  coun- 
try for  a  few  months.  Swire  is 
visiting  certain  key  citie.s  to  de- 
termine whether  they  want  to  join 
in  .A.N.T.A.'s  forty-circuit  theatre 
plan.  The  plan  calls  for  an  organ 
ized  network  of  forty  repertory 
theatres  distribated  around  the 
country. 


More  Than  60 
Earthquakes 
Recorded  Here 

At  least  60  different  earth- 
quakes were  recorded  in  the  past 
four  days  by  the  UNC  seismo- 
graph. Dr.  Gerald  R.  MacCanhy. 
geophysicist  in  charge,  said  Wed- 
nesday. 

Dr  MacCarthy  said  the  number 
"far  exceeds"  recordings  for  any 
similar  period  since  the  seismo- 
graph was  established  here  in 
1953. 

Then  tremors  ranged  from 
"  "world-shaking"  to  barely  percep- 
tible." he  said.  The  period  covered 
the  time  from  9:33  a.m.  of  Mar. 
9.  when  the  first  big  Aleutian 
earthquake  of  the  current  series 
began,  until  8:45  a.m.  yesterday. 

In  the  past  24  hours.  13  earth 
quakes,  all  "moderate  to  weak." 
were  rcc:rded.  Dr.  MacCarthy 
said.  Most  were  located  in  the 
Aleutian      region,  he  said. 

The  series  of  tremors  constitute 
what  is  called  a  "swarm  of  earth- 
quakes."' t)r.  MacCarthy  said.  Tliey 
have  been  decreasing  in  intensity, 
following  a  regular  pattern,  he 
said,  and  can  be  expected  to  con- 
tinue for  several  months  or  possi' 
blv  years. 


Possession 


It  has  been  said  a  man's  most 
precious  possession  •  is  his  name. 
And  two  Daily  Tar  Heel  staff  mem- 
bers have  been  concerned  with 
this  recently. 

Why? 

Both  are  named  Bill  King;  con 
sequently.  there  has  been  some 
confusion   over  which   is   which. 

One  Bill  King  is  assistant  sports 
editor  and  confines  his  articles  to 
the  sports  page  (except  for  possi 
ble  front  page  color  stories  on 
.sports  events).  He  also  writes  oc- 
casionally  for   the   editorial    page. 

The  other  Bill  King  is  a  report- 
er on  the  news  staff.  His  writings 
appear  solely  on  the  news  pages.  " 


UILL    KMo    tLtM,    NfcWd)    ArtU    MILL    MNG    (SPOkTS) 

• .  •  utaffers  >M>t   to  be  confused 


■  t 


PAoi  rwo 


TMI  DAILY  TAft  HiiL 


FRIDAY,  MAR^M  M,  1^5/ 


UNCs   Graham   Memorial: 
Beautiful  Source  Of  Ideas 

C.ialiani  Mein»)rial.  the  \eiieiable  old  woman  who  is  smroimded  hv 
a  Conlederate.  the  toun.  a  siiiidial  and  7.000  students,  is  eelelnatin"  her 
hiithdav.  She's  2',  years  old. 

For  2-,  \eris  the  niajoritv  oi  student  expression  has  eon»e.  one  way 
or  another.  Ironi  (irahani  Memorial.  The  old  woman  has  seen  hundreds 
of  rceeptions.  thonsand.s  ol  meetings,  a  million  argmnents. 

Student  o;ovei-f\ment  is  condutfed  from  Graham  Memorial.  Mu.sic 
Hows    Irom    her   louds|X'akers.   eoi- 


iee  rinis  from  her  maehine.  From 
her  top  rioor  a  newspajjer  iss'ues, 
and  a  pioiessional  auditor  kee|>s 
ir.uk  of  student  government  ex- 
penditures. Honor  toumils  meet 
and  roll   out    juslirc. 

On  her  nuv/anines  a  literarv 
ma'^a/ine  is  pr<Klu<ed.  along  with 
posters,  designs  and  ideas  alMut 
jiaxinji  a  hvtter  student  union.  In 
lu*r  howfls  dante  nnisic  tomes 
lorth.  and  hilliard  tiies-hit  pseudo- 
i\orv.  ;ind  ping  p>ng  halls  liounee, 
.ind  harlu-rs  (lip  hair,  a  vearlMM>k. 
is  prtxU ued  hv  students  whodril^t 
there,   somrhow. 

In  her  niain  loiujge  vou  (an  Find 
siudfuts  oi  all  nations,  (onversa- 
lions  ol  all  Jvpes,  |)ort rails  ol  men 
ot  all  divisions  t>I  thought,  .\moug 
her  Italian  ashtrays  are  magazines 
Mui  newspajK'rs  that  he(ome  dog- 
eared a  (lav  after  ihev  arc  phu  ed 
on  the  ra(  ks.  From  (on(ealed 
>peakers  (omes  musi(  ol  all  kinds, 
and  every  so  often  liie  rug  is  rolled 
hark  for  a  visiting  Israeli  dancer 
or  aceordian-piaver.  (^r  a  Petite 
Mu>i(ale.  or  piuK  h  and  (<M>kies 
\\iih  l>r.  Fr.^nk  (iraham  or  F.leanor 


Roosevelt  or   tho  president   f)l    the 
Clonsolidated   rnivcrsiiy. 

Yet  these  things  ate  not  ,what 
makes  (iraham  .Memorial  the 
heautiful  old  woman  siie  is. 

Rather,  it  is  the  tliought  that  has 
issued  from  Ir'i  ( hamhers.  from  her 
hiunges.  fiom  her  halls  and  stair- 
wavs. 

For  2.')  vears  students  have 
thought  in  (iraham  Memorial. 
Some  of  their  thoughts  ha\e  come 
(»ut  on  paper,  some  of  them  have 
l)^en  tossed  aioinid.  dehated.  kill- 
ed in  her  meeting  r<K)ms.  some  ot 
them  ha\e  gr<»wn  and  de\eloped 
aJid  he(ome  f)oIi(ies  of  the  student 
IxKiv.    even    polities    of    the    I'ni- 

\ersity. 

*         •      *  * 

For  I  his.  ue  o\\e  (iraham  .Mem- 
orial a  lot.  She  Ik-s  heen  \erv  go(»d 
t(»  us  students,  for  she  has  done 
part  of  the  I'nivetsitys  most  basic 
jol) — made  us  think. 

Long  live  the  old  woman.  .\s 
old  as  she  is.  she  still  fairlv  bubbles 
with  vomhful  thought. 


Crusades,  Towers  Needed 


Two  ol  the  candidates  for  the 
editorship  of  this  newspaper  have, 
in  tlie  (omse  of  their  campaigns 
><»  far,  touched  on  two  items  which 
need  (omment.  One  of  them  is  the 
ide;  ot  a  newspajx-r  "(rusade." 
whi(  h  one  (andidaii-  sa\s  is  a  Ivad 
word  now.  The  other  is  the  idea 
of  an  "ivon^  towet."  from  which 
these  ediioiials.  are  supj>osedlv 
written. 

Now.  we  (l(»n"t  (are  whith  (andi- 
(laie  made  those  statements.  "Fhe 
statements  are  the  things  with 
whi(  h  we  disa-gree. 

A  (rusade.  as  the  (andidate  said, 
is  a  had  woid  nowadavs.  It  int- 
plies  all  sorts  of  si  IK  and  e\en  evil 
things.    liut.    we    woidd    ask,    isnt 

there   a    need    tor   a   (rusade? 

#  *  * 

Who  in  the  nati<tn  will  (  rusrule 
for  things  like  Ireedom  ol  spee(  h. 
freedom  from  hi|)o(risy.  fieedom 
to  wot  ship  as  «rtle  j)leases?  .Sinely 
the  I'nited  States  govenmient  does 
not  do  that  sort  of  (rusading.  Not 
do  the  organized  religions.  whi(h 
seem  to  he  hea<fing  us  in  the  otiu'i 


The  Dally  Tar  Heel 


The  official  jtudeni  publKjtion  of  the 
Publications  Board  of  the  University  •>( 
North  Carolina,  where  it  is  publishert 
<iMiif  except  Monday  and  examinatior 
•pd  vacation  periods  and  summer  terms 
Entered  »s  second  class  matter  in  th« 
o-><«t  office  in  Thapel  Hill.  N.  C.  undei 
che  Act  oi  March  8,  1870.  SubscriptioB 
rales:  mailed,  S4  per  year.  $2  50  a  seme« 
ter;  delivered.  SS  a  year.  S3.50  a  semef 
ler 


Editor 


FRED  POWLEDGl 


.Managing  Editor 


CL.\RKE  JONES 


Sevrs  Editor 


NANCY  HILL 


Sports  Editor 


LARRY  CHEEK 


Business  Manager 


BHX  BOB  PL'S! 


Aidvertising  Manager         FRED  KATZIN 


fSDlTURlAL     STAFfr    -    Wood*     Seut%. 
Joev  Payne,  Stan  Shaw. 


NEWS  STAFF— Clarke  Jones.  J»ringle 
Pipkin,  Edith  MacKinnon.  Wally  Ku- 
ralt.  Mary  Alys  Voorhees,  Graham 
Snyder.  Neil  Bass,  Bob  High,  Ben 
Taylor,  Walter  Schruntek,  H-Joost  Po- 
lak.    Patsy   Miller,   Bill   King. 


BUSINESS  STAFF— Rosa  M<n>re,  Jebnnj 
Wbitaker,  Dick  Leavitt. 

SPORTS   STAFF:   Dave   Wible,  Stewart 
Bird.   Ron  Milligan. 


subscription  Manager 
Circulation  Manager  . 


.  Dale  Staley 
Cbarlie  Roll 


Asalktant  Sports  Editor Bill  King 

Staff  Photographers  Woody  Sears, 

Norman  Kantor 
Librarians    Sue  ^ichner,  Marilyn  Strum 

Night  Editor    ---^ Manley   Springs 

Night  News  Editcit  __  Graham  Snyder 


diredions.    F.\ei>  ediKational  insti- 
tmions  are  slipping. 

Only  the  newspaiKTs.  and  other 
forms  ot  writing  and  opinion  and 
eonnnent.  seem  left  to  ( 1  iisade  lor 
tlw)se  heedoms.  .\nd  e\cn  their 
ranks  are  getting  thinner.  Klmer 
Davis,  one  of  the  most  (rusading 
of  writers,  thinkers  and  speakers, 
is  now  an  iiualid.  .\  top  radio 
(ommentator  has  had  one  of  his 
s(ripis  jerked  off  the  air  hy  his 
«<»mp;;nv. 

Hut  still.  news|>apers  (oiititnte  to 
(iiisade.  .Sometimes  their  ( rusades 
are  ill-timed,  and  mayhe  they  are 
o\erplaved.  hut  usualh  thev  serve 
good  pin  poses  —  purposes  Ifke 
trinh.  honor,  integrity  and  all  thhse 
other  ahstra(t  and  ohsoIes(ent 
terms.  , 

On  the  campus,  ihe  newspajKM" 
must  (rusade.  for  who  else  will!' 
I  he  religions  oigani/atioirs.  again, 
reluse  to  mo\e  om  of  the  center 
ol  the  load.  The  student  govern- 
ment is  largeK  made  uj)  ol  timid 
and  uninfornted  souls.  Ihe  (en- 
:ial  adniiiiistralion  is  stared,  total- 
l\  s(ared.  to  give  om  miu  h  more 
inlonnation  that  the  time  of  dav. 
K\en  the  faeultv  has  lost  a  g(KKl 
deal  of  its  morale,  and  it  doe.sn't 
sav  mudi. 


The  same  thing  goes  for  an 
*i\(»ry   toAver'  editorial    fxjlity. 

Who.  we  ask.  on  the  (ampus  li\es 
in  :ni  ivoiy  tower  nowada\s?  Piae- 
ti(ally  no  one.  K\eryone  lives  in 
a  sld)^\.ly  tuhe.  or  in  a  (afeteria 
line.  01  Inn  rying  down  a  sidewalk. 
\'ety  few  jx-ople  attempt  to  ana- 
Iv/e  their  own  thoughts  anymore 
—that's  whv  they  turn  to  lime 
Mi'ga/ine.  whi(  h  analyzes  thoughts, 
grinds  them  up  and  tinns  out  pie- 
forme«l  opinions  foi  people  wiio 
are  too  husv  01  t<»o  (<)wardlv  to 
think  for  themselves.  Thats  why 
thev  sit  in  ( lass  like  rows  of  dead 
fish.  theiV  eyes  (Kcasionaliy  hlink- 
ing  if  thev  ate  not  r<mipletelv  dos- 
ed. 

Who  on  the  tampirs  is  willing 
and  has  the  materials  to  mayhe 
^erk  thfWe  people  out  of  the  stream 
of  ((  idormity,  out  of  the  Ujiig 
waiting  line  for  serurity?  The  con- 
diKror  of  the  editorial  (olinnn  is 
the  one. 


\o.  there's  no  harm  whatscR'ver 
in  (iiisading  from  an  ivory  tower. 
Those  two  "ohjertions"  are  also 
esseinial  duties  of  the  editor  of  this 
newspaper,  jn.st  a.s  they  are  the 
duties  of  all  elected  and  chosen 
people  on  the  campus  who  ate 
designated  sttident  leaders."  The 
candidates  should  not  loiffet  this. 


Students,  Too,  Are  Cause 
Of  This  Educational  Apathy 


EdHor: 

I  am  writing  with  rererence  to 
the  editorial  in  Tuesday's  Daily 
Tar  Heel  concerning  the  immin- 
ent departure  of  one  of  our  great 
teachers. 

.Agreed  that  a  lack  of  educa- 
tional morale  exists  here  at  Chap- 
el Hill,  it  seems  hardly  the  place 

• 
'Toxicr 

~irnera.i«« 

Born  Into 
Television 

Anthony  Wotff 

On  first  glance  it  seems  that 
the  Fates  have  reserved  little 
space  in  the  history  books  for  the 
current,  college  generation:  A 
few  of  us  participated  in  the  Ko- 
rean "police  action."  but  that  will 
probably  rate  only  a  couple  of 
pages  in  the  histories  of  this  cen-» 
tury:  we  are  all  a  little  too  late 
to  have  invented  the  automobile 
or  the  airplane,  or  to  have  run 
over  Europe  chasing  Hitler's 
armies;  we  are  proba'oly  a  little 
too  early  to  fly  to  the  moon. 

But  in  the  eyes  of  the  socia! 
scienti.r.'t,  this  generation  is  im- 
portant in  maiiy  re.^pects.  The 
one  which  particularly  concern.s 
this  column  is  that  we  are  the 
last  batch  boin  B.  T.  —  Before 
Television. 

Most     of    us    were     probably 
fairly    well    into    childhood    be- 
fore television  achieved  its  re- 
cent   popvtiarity.     Some     of    us 
were    already    teen-agers.    And 
no  small   number  of  us  remain 
today     only     slightly    involved 
with   the   infant   ntcdium. 
But  consider  the  present  young 
steis — those  who  were  born  alter 
sters — those  who  were  bom  after. 
sa>.  1945.  They  have  never  known 
a  world  without    television.  TM.> 
may  seem  a  shallow,  even  ab.sur'l. 
point   to   make,   but    its   ramifica- 
tions are  vitally  important  to  the 
culture  of  our  country. 

In    a  recent  study,  sound   evi- 
dence  indicated   that    youngsters 
between  the  ages  of  ^ix  to  13  in 
a    middle-class    neighborhood    in 
New    York    City    averaged    about 
four  hours  of  television  viewing 
every  day.  One  lad  of  about  nine 
years   swore    to   eight    hours    per 
day.  including  one  before  school 
and  one  during  his  lunch  period 
These    children     also     spend 
five  hours  a  day  in  school  (plus 
that    lunch    period).    When    do 
they     play,      or     discover    the 
beauty  of  literature?  What  time 
is  left  for  music  lessons  or  club 
meetings? 
How  olten  do  th(\v  hear  an  in- 
telligent    conversation'      Indeed, 
are    they    ever    prompted    to   tesi 
ther   minds,   and   to  discover  the 
dynamics  of  society   through   ex 
perience? 

These  are  rhetorical  questions, 
and  the  implication.s  are  obviou.* 
and  worthy  of  serious  considera 
tion. 

*         •»        -.f 

So  it  is  none  too  early  —  in 
fact  it  is  nearly  too  late  —  to 
begin  a  concerted  effort  to  make 
television  a  positive  influence  in 
American  life. 

• 

L'H  Abner 


of  a  student  publication  to  lay 
the  blame  on  the  faculty.  We  as 
students  have  first  to  look  to  our- 
selves as  the  cause  of  this  educa- 
tional apathy. 

In  the  course  of  my  education 
here  I  have  frequently  found  my- 
self comforted  by  an  attitude 
which  I  believe  is  all  too  preva- 
lent among  the  student  body.  This 
attitude  consists  of  the  reflection, 
"I  don't  have  to  dig  this  out.  The 
prOfeso"or  will  explain  it  in  class 
tomorrow." 

We  passively  glance  over  our 
auignments,  close  the  books, 
and  wait  until  "tomorrow" 
when  the  all-provident  profess- 
or will  make  it  clear  to  us. 
Now  it  seems  to  me  there  are 


two  ways  to  approach  the  busi- 
ness of  education.  One  is  "edu- 
cation as  learning,"  the  other, 
"Education  aj  thinking."  The 
second  approach  seems  to  include 
the  first,  sinco,  obviously,  ones 
must  learn  in  order  to  have  soine- 
thing  to  think  about. 

If  college  training  has  any  long- 
lasting  value,  I  believe  it  is  pre- 
cisely in  this  latter  sense:  Edu- 
cation as  thinking. 

How  can  a  professor  be  expect- 
ed to  feel  "free"  when  his  a-tu- 
dents  approach  him  solely  as  a 
source  of  learning?  How  wonder- 
ful it  w.Hild  be  from  the  profess- 
ors.standpoint  if  he  could  assume 
that  the  students  in  his  class  had 
learned    their    assignments.    The 


classroom  would  then  become  a 
place  for  thinking. 

Learning  is  the  kind  of  thing 
you  do  by  yourself,  in  the  cool 
of  the  evening,  alone  with  a  book. 
Thinking  is  stimulated  by  dis- 
cussion, controversy  —  in  short, 
classroom  talk. 

If  we  want  our  professors  to 
stay  with  us,  we  need  to  keep 
them  interested;.  All  too  often 
the  cry  has  been  that  the  pro- 
fes.vir  does  not  interest  us. 

If  we  as  students  can  cultivate 
the  professor's  interest  in  us  and 
our  thinking,  then  we  will  have 
gone  a  long  way  towards  creating 
the  kind  of  atmosphere  which  at- 
tracts and  holds  teaching  talent. 
John  C.  Parker 


•  •  • 

'Weil,  We  Certainly  Botched  this  Job.  What'll  We 
Stamp  It  —  'Secret'  Or  'Top  Secret'?' 


YGU  Said  It: 


Form   A    Union   At   Lenoir   Hall 


Editor: 

In  the  last  week  we've  all 
heard  a  lot  about  workin.n  condi- 
tions in  Lenoir  Hall.  I  think  that 
most  of  the  workers  will  agree 
with  me  when  I  say  the  work  at 
Lenoir  isn't  too  hard,  and  it  is 
well  known  that  the  majority  of 
the  workers  couldn'-t  stay  'n 
school  long  without  the  work. 

As  I  heard  a  student  captain 
say:  "If  you  can  afford  not  'o 
.work,  why  don't  you  quit.'  Other- 
wise, be  thankful:"  This  philoso- 
phy Ls  the  general  attitude  taken 
by  the  management  of  Lenoir 
Hall.  They  know  that   they   have 


the  employees  over  a  barrel,  so 
to  speak. 

They  know  most  of  the  em- 
ployees   can't    afford    to    quit, 
and    they're    taking    advantage 
of  their   knowledge. 
When  I  say  "they  "  in  reference 
to   the   management,   that    is   ex- 
actly   what    I    mean.    "To    many 
chiefs  and  not  enough  bravesi"  is 
the    expression   1   heard   used   to 
describe  the  abundance  of  bosses 
at  Lenoir  Hall.  "Truer  words  have 
never  been  spoken." 

Today  I  heard  a  fellow  em- 
ployee express  his  belief  in  the 
need  of  a  union  —  Yes!  a  union 
for   workers-  at   Lenoir.   He   also 


said,  "If  we  walked  off  just  as 
the  place  filled  up;  we  might  ac- 
complish  something." 

Perhaps  this  is  radical;  how- 
ever, we  have  signed  petitions, 
and  we  have  talked  to  our  em- 
ployers. We  have  expressed  our 
views  to  the  student  body.  What 
have  we  received'.'  Nothing  but 
sympathies   and   philosophies! 

But  the»>e  are  only  words,  and 
words  without  action  are  no 
good.  So  I  say,  "Let's  put  away 
these  philosophies!  Let's  put  away 
these  sympathies!  It's  time  for 
action  —  now! 

Name  withheld  by  request 


ViS 


awi»f 


'IDUL 


Vv/MFM  SA'/^iN  OFF   FHL'.  TOP  j 
OF  A  SKULU,  KKMEMBER     " 
OMF  TMINO,  BOVS  —  BE 
NEAT.r''- 


F£i.LAS, 

LooKrr 


Poqo 


By  Walt  Kelly 


3\rr  sou  wouujnY 
euooT  A  sfrrffTB/epfF 


fear  ue'e  sirm 
^ — ^- Close) 


Initiative  On 
Council  Needed 


Luther  Hodges  Jr. 

Chairninn,  Student  Coinuil 

The  rtew,  revised  student  council  has  just  com 
pleted  its  first  year  of  upholding  the  campus  code. 
To  say  the '  very  least  the  council  has  not  been 
plagued  with  cases  dealing  with  violators  of  our 
standards  of  gentlemanly  conduct,  but  it  has  dealt 
quite  earnestly  with  its  suspensions,  probations, 
reprimands  and  warnings. 

I  shall  not  here  begin  to  defead  our  honor  sys- 
tem, for  I  believe  the  system— to  all  conscientiou.s 
students — can  stand  on  its  own  merits. 

I  only   wish  to  emphasixe  a  principle,  specifi- 
catly  that  ail  joilflnftents  rendered  by  the  student 
council,    indeed   by   all    courts    under   our   honor 
system,  are  corrective  nwasores — as  any  student 
familiar  with  the  workings  of  tt»e  Carolina  honor 
system  will  vouch. 
I  write  in  sincere  appreciation  to  the  members  of 
the  student  council  for  their  service  over  the  past 
year,  but  also  with  a  serious  concern  over  the  lack 
of  responsibility  that   individual  students  have   for 
upholding  the  standard  of  gentlemanly  conduct  on 
this  campus. 

Not  to  detract  from  honor,  but  your  life  as  a  true 
Carolina  gentleman  is  equally  as  important.  And  as 
you  are  concerned  over  the  honor  of  your  fellow 
students,  so  should  you  be  over  his  conduct. 

.  It  is  a  tragedy  that  our  cases  come  from  the 
police  blotter  and  not  from  the  interest  of  student-; 
who  are  desirous  that  their  academic  community 
have  the  same  high  standards  of  gentlemanly  con- 
duct as  their  homes. 

In  less  than  one  month  a  new  student  council 
will  be  formed.  I  only  wish  to  plead  that  stu- 
dents take  the  necessary  initiative  and  interest  to 
express  themselves  in  rhe  coming  election  and 
throughout  the  next  year  on  the  campus  code. 

There  is  an  opportunity  for  three  rising  sen 
iors  to  serve  with  the  student  council.  There  is 
the  responsibility  for  the  rest  of  the  atudent  body 
to  chogse  and  support  them. 


THROUGH  MAZE  OF  SMOKE;        rv 

Student's  Evening 
At  Wilson  Library 

Bill  King 

The  time  is  7:45  p.m.  on  any  given  week  night. 
Our  character,  whom  we  shall  refer  to  as  Joe.  is 
hustling  down  to  the  Library  to  begin  studying  for 
an  English  32  quiz  which  heis  to  face  on  the  mor- 
row. He  has  just  got  back  from  his  fraternity  house 
where  he  has  spent  the  last  two  hours  engaged  in 
a  game  of  bridge. 

He  is  determined  that  his  path  will  lead  straight 
to  the  quietude  of  the  business  library  because  to- 
night he's  got  a  lot  of  studying  to  do 

But  just  for  the  heck  of  it  he  takes  a  quick 
look-see  through  the  maze  of  smoke  into  the  Re- 
serve Reading  Room.  By  golly,  there's  Joan  sitting 
by  herself  at  the  second  table.  Oh  well  it  won't 
take  but  a  minute  to  go  back  and  say  hello.  After 
all.  he  hasn't  seen  her  since  sociology  class  this 
morning. 

At  8:10  our  boy's  conscience  begins  t«  hurt 
because  he  is  depriving  both  Joan  and  himself 
of  the  right  to  study,  so  he  bids  her  farewell  un- 
till  ^  o'clock  "break  time. '  He  starts  for  the  Bus- 
iness  Library. 

Funny  tning.  but  the  book  just  doesn't  inter- 
est  Joe  any   more.   After  five  pages   he    gets  up 
and  wanders  back  to  the  steps.  The  foursome  is 
still  there  and  Jean  and  George  have  joined  the 
group. 
Joe  sits  down  again  and  goes  through  a  cigaret. 
At   10:10  he  gets  up  and  tells  the  group  that  this 
Ls  all  very  nice  but  he*  just  gotta  utilize  these  final 
20  minutes. 

It  doesn't  take  much,  however,  to  convince  him 
that  he  cap't  get  anything  done  in  20  minutes,  but 
still  he  figures  he  oughta  give  it  a  try  for  the  sake 
of  clearing   his  conscience. 

But  mind  over  matter  is  not  one  of  Joe's  virtues. 
He  goes  for  aother  cigaret  and  finds  that  he's  out. 
What  the  heck,  he'll  finish  it  when  he  get  back  to 
the   room;   anybody  got   a   cigaret? 

Our  conscientious  student  finelly  gets  confor- 
tabiy  seated  in  the  current  affairs  room. 
But  what's  this  glaring  him  in  the  face?  The 
new  issue  of  Sports  Illuslra^ed  and  he  hasn't  even 
seen  it.  Now  what  red-blooded  American  boy  could 
dig  into  something  as  deep  as  Conrad's  Heart  of 
Darkness  before  just  "glancing"  through  SI'  It 
won't  take  but  a  minute,  he  figures. 

For  some  reason,  though,  it  takes  Joe  a  lit- 
tle more  than  a  minute,  30  mmutes  to  l>e  exact; 
now's  he's  really  gotta  dig  in!  And  he  does,  for  a 
full  30  minutes.  He's  gone  through  28  pages  and 
by  golly,  if  that  doesn't  call  for  a  drink  of  water 
what  does? 

He  decides  to  sneak  out,  grab  a  quick  sip,  and 
then  back  to  Conrad.  He  waves  at  a  couple  of 
friends  as  he  strolls  toward  the  door  but  prides  him- 
self in  not  stopping  to  chat — a  real  compliment  to 
his  will  power. 

Joe  peers  around  the  door  to  the  steps  to  make 
sure  there's  nobody  around  because  he's  just  not 
going  to  get  mixed  up   in  another  bull  session; 
too  much  studying  to  be  dene. 
Darn  the  luck!  the  water  fountain  doesn't  work 
and   he's   gotta   go  down   stairs   for  a   drink.   Well- 
anjTvay,   there's   nobody   on   the   steps.   He  hustles 
down,  gets  his  water  and  starts  back  up.  Sitting  at 
the  top  of  the  steps  now  are  Patsy  and  Mary  Jane, 
and  Howard  and  Bill  are  just  getting  ready  to  join 
them.  Oh  well,  might  as  well  take  a  quick  smoke 
just  to  be  sociable.  It's  only  §-.40.  still  got  50  min 
ufes.  "--  -  **^e^9- 

This  .session  last  15  minutes  and  it's  now  five 
'til  10.  Back  to  the  bookjs  now  and  no  more  wan 
dering 


HAPI 


New 
ed    by 
campusi 
presidej 
be     as.l 
presidej 
ing  sQCi 
ing  sec^ 
surer; 
treasury 
house 

Bart 
A  G  D' 
cers 
vice  pr< 
vnce  pr^ 
.<surer: 
secreta 
spondir 
house 
social 
rush  cl 

Punkj 
presidei 
officers! 
preside^ 
Penny 
Welch, 
anna  M\ 

Bettyl 
presidef 
Holderr 
dent. 


The 
201 


D 


9  Si 


17 
18 

19 

20 
23 
24 
26 


31 
32 
33 
34 
35 
36 
38 

40 

4: 

42 

43 
44 


i*sr 


Mst  com- 
lus  code, 
^ot  been 
of  our 
\as  dealt 
>bations, 

^iior  sys- 
Mentious 

J  spec  if  i- 
|s»u<l«nt 

honor 
Istudont 

honor 


the 


bers  of 
past 
he  lack 
ave  for 
duct  on 

a  true 
And  as 
^r  fellow 

?t. 

rom  the 

I  students 

inninity 

ily  con- 

coancil 
)t    stu- 
terest  to 
and 

ing   s«B- 

|T1»ere   is 

?irt  body 


(ek  night. 
Joe.  is 
ying  for 
the  mor- 
ty  house 
gaged  in 

straight 
?ause  to- 

a  quick 
the   Re- 
in sitting 
it   won't 
llo.  After 
:lass   this 

to  hurt 

himsolf 

Ml  un- 

|th«  Bus- 

»'t  ii*»or- 

fots  up 

Irsento  is 

lined  tho 

I  a  cigaret. 
that  this 
Ihese  final 

^ince  him 

lutes,  but 

the  sake 

»'s  virtues, 
he's  out. 
•t  back  to 

eenfor- 

|face?  The 
asn't  even 
boy  could 
Heart   of 

|gh    SI?    It 

I  Joe    a    lit- 
be  exact; 

Iocs,  for  a 
pages  and 
;  of  water, 

k  sip.  and 

couple    of 

prides  him- 

pliment  to 

«  to  mako 

't  iutf  iiot 

II  M»sion; 

oesn't  work 
Ihnk.  Well. 
He  hustles 
.  Sitting  at 
Mary  Jane, 
lady  to  join 
uick  smoke 
got  50  min- 


FftlOAY, 


MAHCM  t$,  1«7 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


PAGE  THREff 


HAPPENINGS  ON  THE  HILL 


Hb-^ 


New    Sorority    Officers    Woiri^ 


By   SUE    ATCHISON 


New  officers  have  been  announc- 
ed by  four  of  the  sororities  on 
campus.  Sue  Whitley  will  serve  as 
president  of  the  A  D  U's.  She  will 
he  as.-.isted  by  Ann  Shaw,  vie? 
president;  Dot  I*ressly,  corespond- 
ing  secretary;  Hope  Brown,  record- 
ing secretary;  Ellen  Johnson,  trea- 1  Lambda  Chi  Alpha  begins  here 
surer;  Molly  Adams,  assistant 
treasurer 


serve  as  secretary;  Flo  Fearring- .  tration  chairman,  with  Miss  Aileue 
ton  as  treasurer;  Pat  Dillon  as  Hinkle;  George  North,  secretary, 
rush  chairman:  Eve  McClatchey  ai> ,  with  Miss  Marianne  Nelson;  Gary 


chapjin;    and    Eleanor   Williamson 
as  social  chairman. 

The  KD's  and  Pi  Phi's  will  an- 
nounce new  officers  next  week. 
The    1957   Colonial   Conclave   of 

o- 


Sherril,  treasurer,  with  Miss  f^nma 
Kanoy;  Bob  Ferrell,  dance  chair-> 
man,  with  Miss  Carolyn  Seyffert; 
Pete  Yeapanis,  limdieoa  chairman, 
with  Miss  Sarah  Stanford;  Dave 
Berryhill,  banquet  chairman,  with 
Miss    Barbara    Davis;    Jack    Fair, 


and   Mary  Ann  Hofler,  i 'Sus'Jl'    '^rouT  and"  wm'  eld    "''T^  ''^"^*"=  ^^"^  ^^  ^''' 
hm,.P  manaper  i  °^'"^'^^^''^'^  f^"^^    ^nd    will    end    gy   cress;   Robert  Lamdreth,   dis- 

house  manager.  i  ^""J^^^^'^f  «  ^«^«*«J1   luncheon  |  c„3,io„  chairman,  with  Miss  Mar- 

Barbara    Fowler    will    lead    the ;  ^^  *"^  Carolina  Inn.  |  gjg   costner;    and   Lawrence   Mat- 

.\  G  Ds.  Other  newly  elected  oifi- 1      Tomorrow    night    Miss    Lequita  \  thews,   date   chairman,   with   Miss 
cers    are:    Frances    Revnolds.    1st  I  ^^"-  spon.-anng  the  Lamba  Chi's  j  carmen  Green. 

from   High   Point   Coilege   will   be 


vice  president;  Eimly  Somers.  2nd 
vice  president;  Ruth  Neisler.  trea- 
siurer;  Sherry  Puckett,  recording 
secretary:  Deborah  Sink,  core- 
sponding  secretary:  Nola  Hatten. 
house  manager:  Peari  Ann  Revelle, 
social  chairman  and  Cathy  Webb, 
rush  chairman. 

Punkitt  Coe  is  the  newly  elected 
president  of  the  Chi  O's.  The  other 
officers  include:  Peggy  Funk,  vice 
president;  Kay  Hannan,  secretary; 
Penny  Norman,  treasurer;  Jane 
Welch,  social  chairman;  and  Mari- 
anna  Miller,  rush  chairman. 

Betty  Belle,  has  been  elected 
president  of  the  Tri  Delts.  Lucinda 
Holderness  will  serve  as  vice  presi- 
dent, while  Julia  Ann  Carter  will 


crowned  Rose  Queen  at  the  White 
Rose  Ball.  Her  honor  attendant  will 
be  Miss  Barbara  Davis  from  Wo- 
man's College  sponsored  by  the 
U^JC  chapter. 

Star  Dust "  will  be  the  theme 
of  the  dance  and  The  Embers  with 
Miss  Pee  Wee  Patten  providing 
the  music  £or  the  dance.  The  dance 
figure  will  be  made  up  of  the  of- 
ficers of  the  Colonial  Conclave 
and  their  dates.  They  are;  Bob 
Harrington,  chairman,  with  Miss 
Melba  Remig;  Jim  Johnson,  regis>- 


Preceeding  the  dance  a  banquet 
will  be  held  in  the  Carolina  Inn. 
Rev.  Lee  F.  TutUe  of  the  national 
fraternity  will  address  the  group 
as  will  Mr.  Sam  Magill  and  Mr. 
George  Spaysk. 


Religious  Books   By 


C.  S.  LEWIS 


The  Intimate  Bookshop 


205  East  Franklin  Street 


World  News 

(Continued   from   page   1) 

Egypt  Takes  Control 

CAIRO  — tJP»—  Egypt  reestablish- 
ed civil  control  last  night  in  the 
Ciaza  Strip  under  the  new  governor 
assigned  by  the  Nasser  regime. 

There  was  no  indication  <rf  Egyp- 
tian troops  moving  on  the  strip  now 
policed  by  the  U.N.  Emergency 
Force 

The  return  of  Egyptian  civil  ad- 


Dr.  Newrhan 
To  Speak  To 
BSU  Sunday 

What  can  man  believe  about  the 
Bible? 

This  question  will  be  answered 
this  Sunday  at  6  p.m.  by  Dr.  Stew- 
art S.  Newman,  whp  will  address 
the  Baptist  Student  Union  on  this 
topic  in  the  Chapel  Hill  Baptist 
Church.  Dr.  Newman  is  associate 
professor  of  religious  philosophy 
at  Southeast  Seminary  of  Wake 
Forest. 

This  address  is  one  of  a  aeries  of 
talk^  given  each  Sunday  night  un- 


CADET  CALLENDER  AND  COL.  SMITH 

, .  .  conQraUilationti  on  aii'ard 

Kenneth  H.  Cal lender 
Wins  Speaking  Contest 


Cadet  1st  Sergeant  Kenneth  H. 
Callender.  winner  of  the  annual 
Republican  Aviation  Corporation 
speaking  contest,  received  the 
first-place  prize  of  a  silver  brace- 


ministration    over    the    Gaza    Strip  ■  der   the    au^ices   of   the    group's 
was  regarded  here  as  a  tremendous    Supper-Forum. 


victory  for  Egypt's  President  Carn- 
al Abdel  Nasser  and  a  setback  for 
I.srael. 


jack's 
a 


io^jLl] 


BMO.C  ^ 


i  with  his  new 

i^     SONIC- 


I 
I 
I 
I 
I 

Ever  sioce  Jack  bought  his  new 
Sonic  CAPRI  phonograph  at  the 
local  college  store  —  he's  become 
the  biggest  B  M  O  C  ever.  You 
can  join  him  and  be  the  biggest  ever, 
too,  for  you  can  buy  a  CAPRI 
phonograph  for  as  little  as  $19.95. 

This  month's  special  is  the  CAPRI 

550  —  a  twin  ^teaker  high 

fidelity  portable  with  4-speed 

Webcor  automatic  changer, 

hi-fi  amplifier  in  attractive 

two-cone  Forest  Green.       •nly  ^59'* 

at  your  local  dealer. 
SONIC  INDUSTRIES,  INC.  19  Wilbur  Street,  Lynbrook,  N.  Y. 


Other  suhjects  to  4>e  discussed 

at  the  meetings  will  include  "What 
Can  Man  Believe  About  the 
Church?"  by  Dr.  James  A.  Tull 
and  "What  Can  Man  Believe 
About  the  Cross?"  by  Dr.  Ben 
Lyons.  The  series  will  be  conclud- 
ed on  April  7  with  an  address  by 
Dr.  Samuel  T.  Habel  entitled 
"What  Can  Man  Believe  About 
the  Life  To  Come?" 

Supper*Porum  Conunittee  ^hair- 
j  man  Nola  Hatten  has  invited  all 
interested  students  to  join  in  this 
Sunday  night  program. 


See   Our  Complete   Line   Of 
SONIC   PHONOGRAPHS 

BELK  -  LEGGEn  -  HORTON 


's  now  five 
more  wan- 


DAILY 

ACROSS 

1.  Dressed 
5.  Music 

character 
9.  Specie* 

of  pepper 
10.  Storm* 

12.  Marked 

13.  Dropsy 

14.  Questions 

15.  Month 

16.  Bibhcal 
city 

17.  Pronoun 

18.  Squeeze 
19  Three 

( prefix ) 
20.  Splinter 

23.  Disarrange 

24.  Wars 
26.  Well. 

pleased 
28.  New* 

Enf  lander 
31.  Donkey 
S2.  Young  fish 
83.  Yes  (Ger.) 
34.  Overhead 
35  Little  girl 
36.  Performs 
38.  Warning 

signal 
40  Unit  of 

weight 

41.  Attempted 

42.  Denomina. 
tions 

43.  Audiences 

44.  The  sweet - 
sop  ( P.  I. ) 

DOWN 
l.Tool 
'2.  Part  of 

a  chain 
3  Malt 

beveracca 


CROSSWORD 


4.  Performed 
ft.  Choicest 

pArt 
6  Wife  of 

a  knight 

7.  Evening 
(poet.) 

8.  Thightwnea 

9.  Quahogs 
11.  Hindu 

garments 
15.  Tortures 
18  Type  of 

plane 
19.  Long  tooih 


22.  Carting 
vehicle 

23  Cheas 
piece* 

25  Place 

26  Goe. 
the's 
hero 

27.  Long 
to 

29.  Puts 
out 

30.  Relieves 
32.  Discovers 
35.  Prophet 


21  Wading  bird    36  Musical 
I  Nile  I  composition 


n^"!iiwcDnr.rTi  r3[a 

•3r-iu  "siriiaj 
rt''':i3Hirinnr»inna 
Sir .      i^n.-:; 

3i;     rjilri     :H.-rJHH| 


Yf*t«r4*jr't  Aiiawar 
37.  At  one  time 
39.  Narrow  inlat 

40. 

JcAnaon, 
explorer 


Dean  Will  Be 
Participant 
In  Convention 

Dr.  Katherine  Kennedy  Car- 
raichael.  Dean  of  Women,  will  be 
a  participant  in  the  annual  con- 
vention of  the  National  Associa- 
tion of  Women  Deans  and  Coun- 
selers. 

The  convention  will  be  held  in 
San  Francisco  March  28  through 
April  1. 

The  main  speakers  for  the  con- 
vention will  be  H.  Donald  Win- 
bigler.  Dean  of  Students  at  Stan- 
ford University  and  Dr.  John  L. 
Bergstresser,  Dean  of  Students  at 
Chico  State  College  in  Chico,  Cal- 
ifornia. 

Dr.  Carmichael  will  lead  a  dis- 
cussion on  "Programs  for  the  Gift- 
ed College  Students,"  at  a  Friday, 
March  29.  luncheon.  The  follow- 
ing Sunday,  Carmichael  will  be 
one  of  several  hqstesses  who  will 
hold  discussion  groups  for  the 
pu]*pose  of  acquainting  new  mem- 
bers with  the  people  who  have 
served  the. organization  for  a  num- 
ber of  years. 


'Blarne/s  Ball 
To  Be  Real  Blast' 

The^  independent  women  and 
four  men's  dorms,  Alexander, 
Grimes,  Battle  -  Vance  -  Pettigrew 
and  Old  East  will  have  a  party  in 
Cobb's  basement  tonight  from  8  to 
12  and  will  feature  The  Hillside 
Joymakers  from  Durham,  who 
will  provide  the  entertainment. 

In  observance  of  St.  Patrick's 
Day,  the  fling  will  be  named 
"Blarneys   Ball." 

"All  independent  women  and 
residents  of  the  four  dorms  men- 
tioned are  strongly  urged  to  at- 
tend." stated  Benny  Thomas,  soc- 
ial chairman  of  the  Interdormitory 
Council. 

The  basement  of  Cobb  will  be 
adorned  with  the  appropriate  dec- 
orations in  keeping  with  the  Irish 
holiday.  Paul  Carr  is  co-ordinator 
for  the  party.  ^  ^ 

Chairmen  for  the  decorations 
of  the  ball  are  Linda  Schoof,  Alex 
Morrison,  Don  Howard,  Bet.sy  Mc- 
Kinnon,  Jean  Sillay  and  Neil 
Bass.  Clyde  Engle  is  chairman  of 
the  refreshment   committee. 

The  basement  will  be  equipped 
with  a  radio  for  those  who  wish 
to  listen  to  the  Carolina-Canisius 
ballgame  from  Philadelphia, 
stated  Thomas. 

Working  on  the  refreshment 
committee  with  Engle  are  Bob 
Jacobu.s.  Randy  Shelton,  Joan 
Moore.  Gail  White  and  Eddie  Bass. 

'Let's  all  turn  out  and  make 
1  "Blarney's  Ball  a  real  blast,"  said 
I  Thomas. 


let    and    an  accompanying   certifi- 
cate March  4. 


Legal  Frat 

Completes 

Pledging 


Covering  The  Campus 

FACULTY  CLUB  LUNCHBON         ;  have   a    St.    Patrick's    Day    dance. 
Chancellor  Robert  B.  House  will     'Blarney's    Ball,"    in  Cobb   base- 
ment Friday  night  from  8-12  mid- 


speak  at  the  Faculty  Club  luncheon 
Tuesday  at  1  p.m.  at  the  Carolina 
Inn,  according  to  Arthur  Roe. 
president,  and  Sydenham  B.  Alex- 
ander,    secretary.     Luncheon     is 


Delta  Theta  Phi,  the  largest  leg- 
al     fraternity      nationally      com- 
pleted    its     pledging     ceremonies  j  $1.30. 
this    past   Saturday    night   with    a    LADIES  NIGHT  BANQUET 
party  in  honor  of  its  new  pledges  j     a  Ladies  Night  banquet  is  being 
held  at  the  Saddle  Club  in  Dur-  j  sponsored  by  the  Laymen's  Fellow- 


ham. 

The  Saturday  night  affair  was 
highlighted  by  the  attendance  of 
more  than  100  brothers,  pledges, 
and  their  wivps  or  guests. 

The  party  was  preceded  by  a 
formal  pledg-ng  ceremony  on  Fri- 
day held  in  Gerrard  Hall. 

Those  welcomed  by  the  profess- 
ional, legal  fraternity  were:  Rich- 
ard Badgett,  Connie  Bolden,  Joe 
Bourne,  Troy  Brown,  Joe  Chamb- 
liss,  Ed  Hanson,  Henry  Higgins. 
John  Ingle,  Bill  Kirkman,  Jimmy 
Kiser,  Hugh  Milton,  Paul  McM'ir- 
ray,  Harold  Mahler,  Fred  Meek- 
ins,  John  Murphy,  Ted  Reynolds, 
Parks  Roberts.  Marshall  White, 
and  Ralph  Wilson.  v  , 

Initiation  will  be  held  tke  lat- 
ter-part of  this  spring  semester. 


All  contestants  were  required 
to  speak  on  some  facet  of  air 
power,  but  were  allowed  to  pre- 
.sent  their  speeches  in  any  way 
thoy  wished.  Cadet  Callender's 
topic  was:  "What  Air  Power  Real- 
ly Means." 

The  contest,  held  at  Detach- 
ment 590  of  the  Carolina  AFROTC, 
during  an  Arnold  Air  Society 
meeting,  is  sponsored  by  the  Re- 
public Aviation  Corporation.  Its 
purpose  is  to  provide  Air  Science 
juniors  with  a  broader  knowledge 
of  Air  Power  concepts,  and  to  en- 
courage these  cadets  to  obtain  ex- 
perience in  research,  preparation 
and  delivery  of  speeches. 

The  judges  at  the  contest  were: 
Col.  George  Smith,  Lt.  Col.  Frank- 
lin Swann  and  Maj.  Thomas  Gil- 
christ. 

Major  George  Lynn,  speech 
teacher  and  assistant  professor  of 
Air  Science,  said  that  the  other 
participants,  cadets  Ralph  P.j  WASHINGTON  —  Former  Con- 
Hunt,  Jerry  J.  Smith  and  Thomas  solidated  University  President 
G.  Farrel.  will  receive  merits  for  Gordon  Gray  was  sworn  in  at  the 
the  keen  competition  they  offered  White  House  Thursday  as  the  new 
and  for  the  interest  they  showed  director  of  the  Office  of  Defense 
in  the  contest.  Mobilization. 


Sig  Eps 

CContmwed  from  pcLde  1) 

Roy  Armstrong,  director  of  ad- 
missions, began  the  day-long  fes- 
tivities with  a  talk  on  "The  Func- 
tion of  Fraternities  at  the  Univers- 
ity of  North  Carolina." 

Bill  Aiken  followed  Armstrong 
with  a  report  on  the  progress  made 
by  the  undergrads  on  the  new 
fraternity  court  Bedford  Black 
acting  Grand-Secretary  of  Sigma 
Phi  Epsilon,  also  spoke  to  the  as- 
sembly. 

The  Alumni  voted  to  take  im- 
mediate action.  Sigma  Phi  Epsilon 
will  move. 


ship   of  the  United   Congregation- 
al Christian  Church,  Sunday,  6:30 
p.m.,  in   the  parish  house  at  211 
West  Cameron  Ave. 
STATISTICS  COLLOQUIUM 

Dr.  David  B.  Duncan  will  speak 
on  "A  Simple  Minimum  Average 
Decision  Problem  in  Comparing 
Several  Means"  at  the  Statistics 
Colloquium,  Monday  at  4  p  m.  in 
room  206  of  Phillips  Hall. 
"BLARNEY'S  BALL" 

The  Independent  Women  and 
four  men's  dorms,  Alexander, 
Grimes,  B.'VP.  and  Old  East  will 


PATRONIZE  YOUR 
•    ADVERTISERS   • 


night. 

The    Hillside    Joymakers 

from  Durham  will  entertain. 

WUNC-TV 

Today's' schedule  for  WUNC-TV, 

th*  University's   educational   tele- 

vision s 

Nation,  is  as  follows; 

12:45 

Music 

1:00 

Today  on  the  Farm 

1:30 

Engineering  Visits 

5:15 

Music               • 

5:30 

Art  and  Artists 

6:00 

Magic  Lantern 

6:15 

News  and  Safety 

6:30 

Opera  History 

7:00 

Science  Fair 

7:30 

The  Humanities 

8:00 

Air  Age 

8:30 

Prelude 

9:00 

Project  Health 

Religious  Books  By 


J.  B.  PHILLIPS 


The  Intimate  Bookshop 


205  East  Franklin  Street 


Informal   Photography 

(By  appointment  at  your  home) 

Wedding  Photm 

A  Specialty 

PRESS  PHOTO  SERVICE 

ItOLAND  GIOUZ 

Ofe— N«ws  BuiKifiie, 

Main  St^  Carr1»«r» 


Gordon  Gray  Sworn  In 
As  New  Defense  Director 


DIXIELAND  COMBO 

FROM  4  TO  6 

AFTER  BLUE-WHITE  GAME 

FEATURING 

LES  SUTORIUS 

THE    PATIO       \ 


llodern ! 


Pick  the  Pdck  that  Suits  You  Best  i 


CLASSIHEDS 


5  ROOM  BRICK  HOUSE,  3  BED 
rooms,  i}I  modern  conveniences. 

3  miles  on  Old  86  Hyway,  Stove      ,         .       „.       ^  „         ^  -i.^^i 
and   Prigedaire   furnished.    Call    University    Eon  College,  Gui  ford 


GC  Has  Invited 
Men  To  Attend 
Concert,  Dance 

Sam  Donahue,  formerly  the 
leader  of  the  Billy  May  Orchestra 
and  now  director  of  his  own  16- 
piece  orchestra,  will  appear  at 
Greensboro  College  Friday,  March 
22.  for  an  afternoon  concert  and 
an  evening  dance. 

The  4:30  p.m.  concert  in  Odell 
Auditorium.  Greensboro  College, 
will  be  open  to  the  public  with 
tickets  selling  before  the  concert 
and  at  the  door  for  $1.  There  will 
be  no  reserved  seats. 

Men  from  Carolina,  Davidson 
College.  High  Point  College,  Duke 


Fred  Katzin  after  6:00.  8-9025. 


TWO  BEDROOM  HOUSE  FURN 
ished  or  unfurnished,  near  camp- 
us. Call  9458  during  day  or  2926 
after  5:30  p.m.  and  weekend. 


FIVE  ROOM  BRICK  HOUSE  IN 
center  of  town— has  hobby  work- 
shop. Call  9458  during  day  or 
2926  after  5:30  and  during 
weekend. 

LOST?  OME  ROLEX  OYSTER 
Speedking  wristwatch,  Tuesday 
night  in  Physics  Lab  (I  think). 
Please  contact  Joost  Polak,  208 
Lewis. 


College  and  Wake  Forest  College 
have  been  invited  to  the  informal 
dance  from  8:30  to  11:30  in  the 
main  building  of  the  college. 

Bids  for  the  dance  are  $2.75. 
Both  tickets  to  the  concert  and 
bids  to  tjie  dance  are  being  sold 
on  the  UNC  campus  and  on  the 
Greensboro  College  campus  in  the 
office  of  the  dean  of  students. 


LOST:  KEY  RING  WITH  SEV- 
eral  key:*.  Lost  between  little 
Fraternity  Court  and  Saunders 
Hall  Saturday  morning  between 
9  and  10.  Call  J.  W.  Johnson, 
8-9032. 

FOR  SALE:  1939  PLYMOUTH 
Coupe — 100  dollars.  Can  be 
seen  at  204  Jackson  Circle, 
phone  80511. 


Glee  Club 

(Continued  from  page  1> 

in  the  school  year  will  remember 
tl»e  loosely-jointed  vocalist  as  the 
performer  who  placed  second  in  the 
run  for  the  prizes.  He  also  accom- 
panied the  same  group  of  perform- 
ers when  they  motored  over  to 
Gjwensboro  to  present  their  show 
before  the  women  of  WCUNC. 

Hoke  and  his  guitar  will  travel 
by  bus  along  with  the  45  talented 
tonsils  of  the  Glee  Club,  leaving 
March  20  and  returning  to  Chapel 
Hill  March  24. 


Newest,  modern  box.  Crush-proof. 
Closes  tight!  Flavor  stays  In  . . .  everything  else  stays  out. 


Ever-popular  handy  L&M  packs! 
America's  fastest-growing  King  .'. .  largest  selling  Regular  filter. 


Smoke  modem  L^M  and  always  get 

full  exciting  flavor 

...  PLUS  THE  PURE  WHITE  MIRACLE  TIP 

Yes.  you  are  fr««  to  choose  .  .  .  only  when  you  smoke 
.^^  modern  L«M.  And  only  LaM  givss  you  ths  flavor  .  .  • 

ths  full,  oxcltlna  flavor  that  maksa  LaM  .  . . 


01957,  Umrt  »  IItus  Tobacco  Co. 


^AMrmcA's  FASTWsr  GiHfWiMa  emAmem 


PACE  FOUR 


THl  DAILY  TAR  HSEt 


FRIDAY,  MARCH   IS,  W57 


Tar  Heels  To  Meet  Canisius 
In  Philadelphia  Tonight 


By  LARRY  CHE^K 

North  Carolina's  Tar  Heels,  one 
down  and  four  to  go  in  NCAA  play- 
(ii'f  competition,  face  another  stem 
assignment  in  Philadelphia.  Pa.,  to- 
il ij'ht  when  they  tackle  Canisius  Col- 
lege of  Buffalo,  N.  Y.,  in  an  East- 
t'ln   Regional  first   round  game. 

The  two  clubs  will  clash  at  7:30 
tonight  in  the  first  game  of  a  dou- 
oleheader  in  the  Palestra.  Each  ad- 
\  anced  to  the  regional  playoffs  with 
tirst  round  wins  in  New  York  Tues- 
day night. 

Canisius.  known  to  Big  Four 
loams  as  a  spoiler  club,  dumped 
S,->uthern  Conference  champion  West 
Virginia.  64-56.  while  the  Tar  Heels  ' 
lowned  Ivy  League  titlehokler  Yale, 
PO-74.  in  a  game  that  was  much 
c'oser  that  the  final  score  indicates. 

.\t  least  three  television  stations 


in  the  state  will  televise  the  game 
live  from  Philadelphia.  As  of  now, 
the  stations  are  WFMY-TV  in 
Greensboro,  WTVD  in  Durham  and 
WBTV  in  Charlotte.  These  stations 
will  also  carry  the  UNC  game  to- 
" morrow,  whether  it  is  the  consola- 
tion or  championship  scrap. 

The  winner  of  the  UNC-Canisius 
contest  will  meet  the  winner  of  <o- 
u-ght's  second  game  between  Sy- 
racuse and  Lafayette  for  the  East- 
ern regional  crown.  The  regional 
champ  will  join  teams  from  the 
west,  midwest  and  southwest  in  th€ 
national  finals  at  Kansas  City  nexl 
'.veekend. 

Canisius,  upset  conquerors  ol 
mighty  N.  C.  State  in  last  year's 
NCAA  tourney,  will  bring  an  impos- 
ing 21-5  record  into  the  game. 
Coached  by  youthful  Joe  Curran,  the 


Golden  GriffiniS  are  regarded  by 
many  as  the  best  clnb  in  the  east. 

The  Griffins  are  basically  a  ball 
hawking,  aggressive  club  that  plac- 
es great  emphasis  on  capitalizing 
on  the  other  team's  mistakes.  UNC 
Coach  Frank  McGuire  called  Canis- 
ius "a  better  club  than  Yale."  say- 
ing they  reminded  him  of  the  Wake 
Forest  team  that  gave  Carolina  so 
much   trouble  thl.s   season. 

The  Canisius  attack  is  built  a- 
round  6-3  Hank  Nowak  and  6-3  Joe 
Leone.  These  two  scored  19  and  18 
points  respectively  against  Wes| 
Virginia  Tuesday  night. 

Backing  up  these  two  In  the  Grif- 
fin starting  five  wlU  be  Jim  Sprin- 
ger. John  Coogan  and  Dave  Mar- 
key. 

Carolina  will  bring  a  tremendous 
height    advantage    into    the    game. 


Tiieir  towering  front  line  of  Joe 
Quigg,  6-9,  Pete  Brennan.  6-7,  and 
Lennie  Rosenbluth.  6-5,  stands  far 
stove  the  Canisius  threesome  ol 
Leone.  6-5,  Nowak,  6-3  and  Spiin- 
srer,  6-1. 

On.  the  backline.  of  cour.se.  the 
Tar  Heels  will  have  Bob  Cunning- 
hjim.  hero  of  the  Yale  game,  and 
Tommy  Kearns. 

Canisius  coach  Joe  Curran  said 
earlier  in  the  week  that  his  club 
has  a  chance,  against  the  number 
{»ne  ranked  Tar  Heels,  but  not  a 
good  one.  He  called  the  Tar  Heels 
"the  best  team  I've  seen  all  year," 
and  termed  Lennie  RosenbJulh,  "the 
f'nest  shooter  I've  seen." 

Curran  went  on  to  say.  "there  i.s 
not  a  weak  spot  on  the  ball  club. 
They're  big,  skillful  and  have  great 
poise  under  pressure." 


laiip 

€ax 

ill 

m 

>'■••'% 

^               tjl/ 

P 

O 

RT 

'S 

^              tirry  Cheek,  Sports  Editor 

Swim  Squad  Throws 
Banquet  At  Brady's 


(Today's  column  is  wriHen  by  Daily  Tar  Heel  Assistant  Sports 
Editor  Bill  King.  — Ed's  note). 

From  Coach  Jim  Tatum,  Blue-White  Notes 

As  spririg  football  practice  reaches  a  climax  with  the  annual  Blue- 
White  Game  tomoiTow  afternoon  in  Kenan  Stadium,  a  check  with  the  ] 
Tar  Heels'  gridiron  chieftain  Jim  Tatum.  found  the  husky  coach  a  | 
little  disturbed  with  the  results  of  the  off-season  practices.  | 

A  niMnber  of  things  have  occured  during  the  20-day  practict  | 
p«riod  to  make  Sunny  Jim  voice  a  pessimistic  opinion,  and  on  I 
the  other  hand,  reflect  a  little  optimisnv 

"Im  very  displeased  with  the  way  things  have  gone,"  said  Tatum.' 
In  the  first  place,  the  field  ha.-.-  been  muddy  for  a  good  bit  of  the 
time  during  spring  practice  and  the  boys  just  cant  dig  in  like  they 
should..  Another  thing  that  ha»-  hurt  us  is  the  fact  that  we've  had  some 
key  injuries." 

Tatum  appoerbd  a  bit  irrttatod  when  he  stated  thet,  "we've 
had  about  at  many  injuries  in-  tho  dorms  as  we  have  on  the  pl«ir* 
ing.   field." 

The  injury  list  includes  halfback  Wade  Smith,  quarterback  Nelson 
Lowe,  end  Paul  Pulley,  guard  Bennie  Smith,  and  freshman  Bob  Bran- 
nan. 

Tatum  wai-  particularly  distressed  at  the  lost  of  Wade  Smith 
and  Nelson  Lowe.  "Smith,"  said  Tatum,  has  been  looking  very  good 
and  we  had  counted  on  him  to  fill  the  very  important  right  half  back 
srlot.  I  regret  that  he  has  had  to  miss  a  lot  of  practice  and  won't  be 
available  for  the  game  tomorrow.  "  Smith  has  a  broken  rib. 

The  Tar  Heel  coach  continued  that,  "Lowe  will  have  t«  miM 
the  game  because  of  •  cut  on  his  foot  which  he  received  wtten 
he  stepped  on  a  drink  bottle.  I  hate  for  him  to  miss  the  experience 
th«t  h*  could  got  in  the  Blu*-White  gimo." 


By   STEWART   BIRD 

The  combined  varsity  and  frcsh- 
iiicn  swimming  teams  celebrated 
i  the  end  of  their  dual  meet  seasons 
:  with  a  steak  banquet  Wedne^iday 
I  night  at  Brady's. 

j     Following  supper,  the  election  of 
I  new   team  captains  was  held  with 
'  Charlie  Krepp.  this  year's  captain, 
presiding. 

Paul  Wachendorfer  was  selected 
by    his    teammates    as    permanent 
freshman  team  captain  of  the  1956- 
'■  57   season. 

Two  ace  sprinters,  rising  ^niors 


Reed  And  Hathaway  To  Quarterback 

With  Dave  Reed  running  .the  blue  team  at  quarterback  it  Jooks 
like  Curt  Hathaway  will  be  the  signal-caller  for  the  whites.  Tattim 
had  hoped  to  try  Hathaway  at  fullback  and  let  Lowe  handle  the  quar- 
terbacking  chores.  "If  we  had  Lowe,"  he  said  "that  would  give  Curt 
a  try  at  fullback:  a  very  weak  spot  at  present." 

Tatum  considers  fullback  and  right  halfback  his  weakest  »p«ts 
at  present  "They're  just  not  shaping  up  as  quickly  a«  I  bad 
hopad,"  Tatum  remarked,  "but  I  will  say  this,  the  boya  who  w^ 
working  out  at  those  positions  are  really  fighting  hard  and  there's 
a  lot  of  competetion  ttiere." 

In  fact,  according  to  Tatum  competetion  and  hustle  have  been 
the  life-blood  of  the  ball  club.  "The  boys  arc-  fighting  so  hard  to 
win  a  starting  position, '  he  said,  "that  it's  making  them  ail  better 
ball  players." 

One  thing  that  worried  the  veteran  coach  a  great  deal  was  the 
length  of  the  practice  session.  "It's  hard  to  take  a  comparatively 
green  ball  club  like  ours  and  shape  it  up  in  a  20  day  period,"  Tatum 
remarked. 

"One  of  the  main  assets  of  thief  years  club."  he  further  stated, 
"is  depth."  A  good  many  freshmen  are  shaping  up  pretty  good  and 
once  we  get  our  team  in  order,  we  shouldn't  have  to  switch  the 
players  around  like  we  did  in  '56." 

The  Tar  Heels  were  hit  hard  throughout  the  '56  season  by  in- 
juries, and  Tatum  has  seen  the  time  when  he  didn't  have  a  starter 
for  a  certain  position  on  the  day  before  the  game. 

So.  for  better  or  for  worse,  the  Tar  Heels  will  take  the  field 
Saturday  afternoon  in  Kenan  Stadium  at  2  o'clock,  and  the  Carolina 
.'(tudents  who  didn't  make  the  trip  to  Philadelphia,  if  there  are  any 
left  who  didn't,  should  go  out  and  watch  this  preview  showing  of 
the  1957  Carolina  Tar  Heels.  It  should  be  a  very  interesting  afternoon; 
and  don't  forget  the  crowning  of  the  Blue-White  queen  and  the  Moinv 
gram  Club's  announcement  of  their  choice  for  Coach  and  A.ssistant 
Coach  of  The  Year  at  halftime. 


Krepp,  Fadgeni 
And  Nauss  Go  \ 
For  New  Marksi 

Three   of   the    top   swimmers    in 
this  area  will  attempt  to  set  new; 
American    ano    world    records    in ; 
special  time  trials  at  4:30  this  af- 
ternoon  in  Bownan  Gray  Pool. 

Charlie  Krepp.  ace  Tarheel  j 
backstroker.  will  go  after  stand-! 
ards  in  the  200  yards.  200  meters.  | 
and  220  yard  backstroke.  ' 

N.  C.  State's  Dick  Fadgen  will 
swim  a  time  trial  in  the  200  meter 
and  220  yard  breaststroke. 

The  500  meter  freestyle  Ameri- 
can record  will  be   the   objective 
of   Frank   Nauss   of   N.   C.    State, ' 
and  his  teammate  Dave  Mclntyre 
will  try  for  a  «ew  standard  in  the ! 
110  yards  freestyle.  j 

Officials  for  the  events  will  be 
Coaches  Willis  and  Ralph   Casey,  i 
Dick   Jamerson,   George   Coxhead,  | 
Pete     Wienants,     Paul     Grodsky,  i 
Susan  Fink  and  Stewart  Bird. 

A  diving  exhibition  will  be  feat 
tured  during  the  program. 


Bill  Roth  of  Elkin,  N.  C.  and  Walt 
Ko.sc  of  South  Miami.  Florida  were 
elected  co-captains  of  next  year's 
varsity  mermen. 

.Mr.  George  Coxhead.  himself  3 
recipient  of  the  award  as  a  back 
stroker  in  the  early  1940's,  pre- 
sented the  Dirk  Jamerson  Senior 
.A.ward  to  .■Vll-American  backstrok- 
er and  graduating  team  captain 
Charlie   Krepp. 

The  Dick  Jamerson  Freshman 
.■\ward  went  to  Paul  Wachendor- 
fer. ace  frosh  breaststroker.  and 
waj  presented  to  him  by  last  year's 
honoree.  Tony  Schiffman. 

Ralph  Casey,  team  mentor,  was 
also  remembered  with  a  very 
"touching'  and  "thoughtful  "  gift 
by  his  varsity  charges.  During  the 
course  of  a  season.  Casey  walk.s 
many  miles  up  and  down  the  25 
yard  course  of  Bowman  Gray  Pool, 
yelling,  urging,  pleading  with  his 
swimmers  during  the  time  trials. 
Many  pairs  of  Carolina  Athletic 
As^'ociation  gym  shoes  are  worn 
out  in  the  process. 

His  "slaves",  taking  into  consid- 
eration the  cost  of  gym  shoes,  to 
say  nothing  of  the  wear  and  tear 
on  their  coach's  health  in  his  "ad- 
vancing" years  presented  him  with 
a  beautiful  pair  of  plastic  ten-cent 
store,  small  child's,  ball-bearing 
roller  skater 

The  banquet  was  closed  with 
short  talks  by  Diving  Coach  Dick 
Jamerson,  also  presented  with  a 
gift  by  his  divers,  and  Coach 
Casey.  Graduating  seniors  Krepp. 
Charlie  Parker  and  Dave  Mclnnis 
made  parting  comments  to  their 
teammates. 


San  Francisco  Begins 
Quest  For  NCAA  Title 


By  HUGH  FULLERTON  JR. 

The  Associated  Press  | 

The  San  Francisco  Dons,  winners 
of  the  NC.\A  basketball  champion- ; 
ship  for  the  past  two  years,  open  ; 
defense   of   their   title   tonight   with  j 
no    more    than    a    50-50   chance   of 
making  the  semifinals.  j 

The    Dons,    whose    two-year    win- 
ning streak  creaked  to  an  end  last  I 
December,   oppose   IdaYm  State   to- 
night at  Corvallis,  Ore.,  in  their  first  ' 
tournament  game. 

This  is  one  high  spot  of  the  four 

regional  playoffs   tliat   will   cut   the 

"SCAA   field   to   four  teams  for  the 

I  semifinals  and  finals  at  Kansas  City 

I  next  week.  Others  are  scheduled  to- 

i  night  and  tomorrow  at  Philadelphia, 

Lexington,  Ky.,  and  Dallas. 

i  If  San  Francisco,  survives  these 
eliminations,  the  chances  are  the 
Dons  wUl  wind  up  as  the  outsider 

,  In  a  group  that  could  include  un- 
defeated North  Carolina,  Kansas 
and     Kentucky— the     nation's     top 

I  three  college  teams  in  the  season's 

I  final  Associated  Press  poll. 

1 

Minus  the  stars  that  accounted  for 

their   great  past   record,   Bill   Rus- 

.  sell  and  K.  C.  Jones.  San  Francisco 

i(  St   six  early  season  games.    Then 

the  Dons  settled  down  and  won  11 

of  their  last    12  and   took  the  Cali- 

I  lornia  Basketball  Assn.  title  to  qual- 

j  i!y  for  the  NC.A.A  tournament. 

j      Elsewhere,    it's    top-rated    North 


Carolina  against  Canisius.  a  team 
that  could  make  trouble,  and  Syra- 
cuse against  Lafayette  at  t>hiladel- 
phia.  Second-ranked  Kansas  and 
WUt  the  Stilt  Chamberlain  m<?et 
fourth-ranked  Southern  Methodist 
while  Oklahoma  City,  No.  9  in  the 
Associated  Press  poll,  plays  St. 
Louis.  No.  10  at  Dallas.  Kentucky 
plays  Pittsburgh  and  Michigan  State 
meets  Notre  Dame  at  Lexington. 

North  Carolina  had  some  bad  mo- 
ments against  a  scrappy  Yale  team 
in  its  tournament  opener,  but  won 
90-74  for  its  28th  straight  victory. 
Canisius.  another  hustling  team 
built  around  one  superb  pla.ver. 
Hank  Nowak,  tumbled  West  Virgin- 
ia mainly  by  getting  possession  of 
the  ball  and  keeping  it  for  sure 
shots. 


CAROLINA 

AMAZING 
STORY 
Of  THE 
GiRL  WHO 

uveo 

THREE 

'  SEPARATE 

LIVES  I 


d^ 


Eleanor] 

BARKER! 

CO-tTAniNS 

Richard  BOONE 

Joan  BLONDELL 
Hugo  HAAS 


JEKYLL 

Hrpv 


20t»i  C«fllu(»-Foi 
prei'nts 


t\^  and  High  Water 

*       '     .'..:      RICHARD  WIDMAPK  •  BfLl  A  DARVI  •  DftVID  V,fAY>Jf 


ttOb    YOUNG 

to}^  Tar'  Heel  sub 


New  20  Second  Rule 
Brings  Only  Confusion 


NOW 
PLAYING 


^^i^rar 


m^uon^iKjm 


ST.  PETERSBURG.  Fla.— (AP) 
— ^Baseball's  new  20-second  rule 
was  introduced  here  yesterday — 
and  ail  was  contusion. 

The  umpire  lost  the  count, 
pitcher  Herman  Wehmeier  of  the 
St.  Luuis  Cardinals  lost  his  tem- 
per, and  the  qardinals  lost  the 
game. 

The  rule  was  put  into  effect  this 
year  in  an  effort  to  speed  up 
,^amc.>;.  It  provides  specifically 
that  a  pitcher  must  not  use  up 
more  than  20  seconds  from  the 
time  he  receives  the  ball  from 
the  catcher  until  the  moment  he 
delivers  the  ball  back  to  the  catch- 
er. 

Wehmeier  was  pitching  to  Gus 
Zernial  of  the  Kansas  City  Ath- 
letics.   The    count   was    two    balls 


and  a  strike.  Wehmeier  was  about 
to  make  the  next  pitch.  Zernial 
.stepped  out  of  the  batter's  box  to 
wipe  his  forehead. 

And  Umpie  Hal  Dixon,  behind 
the  plate,  call  "ball."'  enforcing 
the    rule. 

Wehmeier's  red  face  turned 
even  redder.  Boiling  because  he 
felt  he  had  been  penalized  for 
politeness  in  refraining  from  de- 
livering the  pitch,  he  rared  back 
and  fired  a  fast  one  as  hard  as  he 
could  throw.  Zernial  connected 
with  a  mighty  swing.  The  ball  sail- 
ed into  Tampa  Bay  for  a  home 
run. 

That  third-inning  homer,  ac- 
counting for  Kansas  City's  third 
run.  made  all  the  difference.  The 
Athletics  won  the  game  5-4. 


Howard  Johnson  Restaurant 

BREAKFAST  - 

;.  LUNCH  -     *     V -^  . 

DINNER 

SNACKS 
"Landmark  For  Hungry  Tarheels" 


Irish  Begin  Spring  Drills 

SOUTH  BEND.  Ind.—  (AP)  —  j  the  task  of  trying  to  puj  together 
Coach     Terry     Brennan     expects  la  winning  unit  after  a  disappoint- 
about  80  candidates  for  positions  |  ing  1956  season, 
on  Notre  Dame's  football  team  to|      He  plans  five  workouts  a  week 
report    for    spring    practice    Mon- !  for  four  weeks, 
day.  i     It  v.'ill  be  Brennan's  f^juxth  sea- 

Brennan   indicated   be   considers   son   as   head  coach,   and   the   89th 
•very  position  open  »£  he  begins   season  tor  Notre  Dame. 


Rosie  Is  Named 
Player  Of  Year 

All-Ameri<jan  Lennie  Rosen 
bluth.  captain  of  North  Carolina's  | 
unbeaten  Tar  Heels,  has  been ! 
named  "Player  of  the  Year"  by : 
the  Atlantic  Coast  Conference  i 
Sports  Writers  Assn. 

Rosenhluth  polled  43  of  a  possi- 
ble 47  votes  in  sweeping  the  hon- 
or. Grady  Wallace  of  South  Car- 1 
olina    was    given    Uie    other    four 
VDtes. 

The  lanky  Tar  Heel  thus  joins 
his  coach,  Frank  McGuire  as  the 
two  individuals  judged  tops  in 
the  conference  by  the  writers.  Mc- 
Guire was  named  "Coach  of  the 
Year." 


Pete  Brennan  In  Good 
Health;  No  Broken  Hand 

A  rumor  saying  that  Carolina 
forward  Pete  Brennan  had  suf- 
fortd  a  broken  hand  was  dis- 
poned lest  night.  When  reached 
by  phone  in  Philadelphia,  Bren- 
nan seid  he  had  suffered  a 
slightly  pulled  tendon,  but  it 
was  nothing  serious  at  all. 


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SPRING 


It  ic  horo.-  Soo  p«90  2. 


VOL.  LVII,  NO.  lis 


Coviplete  (/P)  Wirt  Strvict 


CHAPEL  HILL.  NORTH  CAROLINA,  SATURDAY,  MARCH   16.  1957 


Officet   in   Graham   Memorial 


POUR  PACES  THIS   IS:UE 


Mighty  Tar  Heels  Roll  To  87-75  Victory  Over  Canisius 


Sloan  Takes  Crusades    i 
In  Editorials  To  Task    ! 

Iflitori;il  (iiisaclts  cmuv  iindtr  distussion  yesterday  in  a 
statement  made  by  Charlie  Sloan,  independent  candidate  foi 
editor  of  The  Dailv  Tar  lleel.  j 

Statins  In*^  j)osition  on  the  suhjed  ol  crusading,  Sloan] 
Ccv'led  to  task  a  recent  editorial  (oik  ernino  the  matter.  \ 

".\n  editorial  in  yesterday's  Daily  Tar  Heel  would  have 
a  candidate  for  editor  .saying  he  is  opposed  to  crusades  be- 
(au.se  'crusade'  is  now  a  bad  word.  Xo  statement  could  be 
farther  from  the  truth.  I  know,  bcc-use  I  am  that  (andidate." 
Sloan  said.  j 

"Editorial  crusades  by  Daily  Tar* — — | 

Heel  chiefs  in  the  past  have  usual- 


Charter  Plane    !  after  henry-s  refusalI 

Is  Available  Fori  Cj/W  Looking  For  Union 
Trip  To  Kansas  i  Director,  Poteat  Says 


A    plane    will    be    available    for 
charter  for  students  interested   in 


us   high   priority 
according  to  Dr. 


ly  been  quixotic  blunders  that 
have  set  the  student  body  against 
the  i&iue  and  cost  the  newspaper 
the  respect  of  South  Building  and 
the  faculty. 

'•Rather  than  become  involved  in 
a  discussion  of  semantics.  I  have 
chosen  to  disassociate  myself  from 
the  word  "crusade'  to  avoid  con- 
juring up  unpleasant  pictures  in 
the  minds  of  students. 


Six  University 
Staffers  Irj 
Local  Politics 


i  each  student  will  be  $102.00.  said 
Exum. 

All  students  who  are  interested 

in   making   the   trip   should   bring 

a  check    for  $102   to   the   Council 

Six   members  of   the   University    Room   cf  Graham    Memorial   Mon- 

staff  are  featured  on   the   Chapel   day  afternoon. 

Hill    political    scene. 


"Therefore    I    am    against    'cru-       AH  are  seeking   election  or  re-| 
sades'    but    not    against    editorial  election  to  town  offices  in  the  May 
campaigns  in  defense  of  freedom  7  elections. 


and  all  the  other  ideals  on  which 
our  country  was  founded.  An  edi- 
tor would  rapidly  outlive  his  Use- 
fulness if  he  let  any  violation  of 
thej»e  ideals  slip  by  without  com- 
ment. He  would  probably  also  out- 
live his  newspaper. 


Dr.  J.  Kempton  Jones,  clinical 
instructor  in  medicine,  Ls  running 
tor  re-election  to  the  Chapel  Hill 
School  Board:  Alderman  Paul  W. 
Wager,  prof,  of  political  science, 
an<l  Hubert  S.  Robinson.  University 
custoslian,  are  also  trying  for  re- 
"My  previously  released  state-  election;  R.  E.  Jamerson,  prof,  of 
ment  on  athletics  is  an  example  of  physical  education,  is  a  hold-over  ^ 
my  stand  on  editorial  campaigns,  member  of  the  School  Board. 
I  am  in  favor  of  big-time  athletics, 
itod  I  want  Carolina  to  have  a  win- 
ning team  in  every  sport.  But  I 
docL't  ihink  athletics  have  to  be 
'professionalized'  to  be  big  time. 
'•If.  as  editor.  1  become  a*are 
of  any  deviation  from  the  straight 
and  narrow  in  the  administration 
Of  athletics  at  Carolina,  it  would 
be  my  duty  to  investigate  the  sit- 
uation thoroughly  and  report  my 
findings  in  the  editorial  columns. 

•'I  h  )pe  this  makes  clear  my 
position  on  'crusading'  and  the 
actual  accomplishment  of  one  of 
an  editor's  chief  duties.  A  news- 
paper's reputation  for  responsibili- 
ty is  not  enhanced  when  its  edi- 
tor  goes    charging    off    at    wind- 


By  PATSY  MILLER  [  he    would    "give 

The   University  is  starting  from  1  on  his  interests, 
scratch  to  find  a  student  director  Poteat 
going    to    Kansas    next    weekend,  for  GM,  Dr.  William  Poteat  stated       Dr.    Poteat   stated   that    a   letter 
according  to  Jim  Exum.  j  yesterday.  had  been  written  to  Porter  Butts, 

!?„.■»,  ..-.A  „  ot^-j       .u  .       04  I     ^^  ^^^  learned  that  Howard  Hen-  executive  secretary  of  the     Assn. 

iiXum  sain  vesterdav  that  a  24-1         r  .1.     tt  •        •,       -  

;  ry  of  the  University  of  Wi.sconsin  of  College  Unions,  asking  him  to 

passenger    DC3    will    be    available   has  definitely  rejected  UNCs  offer  send  about  a  dozen  sets  of  person- 

if  there   are   enough   students    in- !  for  the  position  of  permanent  dir-  nell    filco    of    possible    candidates 

terested    in    making   the   trip.   The  ,  ector  of  Graham  Memorial  at  the  far  the  GM  position, 
cost  of  the  plane,  round  trip,  will  j  P^e -nt  time,  according  to  Dr.  Po- ,      "We   are   assuming   that   Henry 

be  slightly  over  $2,400.00  Cost  for  I  ^^t!"  .  l'^'  ^^^'^^"'^  "'^^^ '  '^'^  ^'   ^^^ 

Henry  gave  an  explanation  in  re- ;  teat. 

ference    to   his   refusal    in   a   tele-  ^      Henry  was  nominated  for  the  GM 

phone  conversation.  He  stated  thai  director's  position  by  the  Graham 

the   difficulties  he  was  having  at :  Memorial  Board  of  Directors.  The 

Wisconsin,  particularly  those  with  '.  salary  offered  was  $8,000  a  year. 

his  employees   had     been   worked       The  Wisconsin  director  was  in- 

out  to  his  satisfaction  and  that  he   terviewed   in   the   spring   of    1956 

planned  to  remain  in  his  position  ;  and   was  offered   the  GM  position 

there  for  the  present.  j  beginning  Sept.  1956  His  ^-.^lection 

Henry  said  that  he  hop>ed  event-  :  had  been  approved  by  the  Univer- 

ually  to  have  his  own  college  union,   sity  administration  on  Feb.  12. 

He    was   attracted   to   the   position       Chancellor  Robert  House,  Direc- 

hee,   and   if   he   leaves   Wisconsin  ^^^  of  Student  Activities,  endorsed 

-^ — .  Henrys  offer. 

Poteat's  offer  stated,  "I  do  not 


Carolina  To  Play  Syracuse 
In    Regional   Finals    Tonight; 
Rosy   Sets   Record   With   39 


If  a  situation  exists  where  the 
student  is  sure  that  he  is  going  but 
cannot  have  the  money  by  Mon- 
day then  the  student  should  call  ( 
Jim  Exum  at  the  Sigma  Nu  House 
to  make  the  necessary  arrange- 
ments. 


The  deadline  for  reservations 
will  be  6  p.m.  Monday.  If  24  peo- 
ple have  not  signed  up  to  go  by 
that  time,  the  trip  will  be  cancell- 
ed. If  Carolina  loses  tonight,  the 
flight  will  also  be  called  off.  Exum 
said. 


Blue-White  Game  fe 
2  P.M.  Today  In  Kenan 


By  BOB  HIGH 

The  twelfth  annaul  Blue  -  White 


and  a  lively  tussle  on  the  gridiron. 
The  Monogram  Club  has  publish-  i 
ed  a  special  program  for  the  oc-  | 
casion,  complete  with  rosters  of 
mills  every  lime  an  issue  is  waved  ^^^  participating  players,  features: 
in  front  of  him."  j  ^^^    jj^^    coaching   staff,    announce- 

ment  of  Coach  of  the  Year,  profiles 

;  on  Jim  Tatum's  boys,  pictures  of  ; 
the  girls  vieing  for  the  honor  of ' 
Blue-White  Queen,  photos  of  Caro-  ] 
lina  sports  round-up  by  Jake  Wade.  ; 
The  story  on  the  Tar  Heel  bas- 
ketballers  is  in  headlines  of  North  , 
Carolina    newspapers    proclaiming 

^  .  the  greatness  of  Coach  Frank  Mc- 

tor.ight,   the   news   agency   Tanjug  ^   •     ,     ,  u   ,         ,         t     i   j  j   • 
^     .  B      .  i  o .  Guire  s  fabulou.i  five.  Included  m 


chosen  for  this  honor  for  the  second 

straight  year,  has  had  his  Southern 

dream  come  true.  His  top-ranked 
Game  will  be  played  today  in  Ken-  hardwood  quint  ha^  had  a  unparal- 
an  Stadium  at  2  p.  m.  \\e\Qd   vear   in   the    rough   Atlantic 

The  game,  sponsored  by  the  UNC  |  ^^^^^  Conference.  His  -Northern 
Monogram  Club,  will  feature  theig^^^^..  ^^^  ^^^^  through  the  sea- 
crowning   of   a   queen   at   half  time  \^^^  ^^^^  ^^  unblimished  record  and  1  YMCAand  the  YWCA 


No  Action 
Yet  Taken 
On  Grant 

No  action  has  yet  been  taken 
by  the  Campus  Christian  Council 
on  the  proposal  to  award*  scholar- 
ships to  white  and  Negro  hi^h^ 
school  graduates  within  the  Chap- 
el Hill-Carrboro  area  who  wish 
to  attend  the  University. 

When  the  proposal  came  up  two 
weeks  ago,  a  committee  was  es- 
tablished from  the  CCC  to  look 
into  the   mattter. 

The  '  committee  sent  the  pro- 
posal to  each  Protestant  church 
group  on   the     campus     and     the 


I  believe  there  is  a  more  exciting 
place  in  America  for  someone  to 
come   in   and    build    a   new   union 

!  program  plant."   ' 


Midwest  Has 

Blizzards, 
Spring  Here 


By   LARRY   CHEEK 

Special  To  The  Daily  Tar  Heel 

PHn,.AI)I-.I.PH  I.\.  Pa. — .North  Carolina's  unbeaten  Tar  Heel.s,  paced  by  a  record 
!)ieakiii;>  ^\i)  point  pcrlorniance  by  Lenpie  Rosenbliith,  advaitced  to  the  finals  of  the  Ea.st- 
eni  Rej^ionai  liasketball  Tournament  here  last  night  with  an  87-75  decision  over  the  ag- 
.^ressixe  (ianisiiis  (.olden  Cirilfins. 

The  bnitsing  win  moved  the  Tar  Heels  into  the  cliainpionsliip  game  of  the  Eastern 
Regional.s  against  .Syracuse,  winner  of  tonight  s  .second  game.  The  rXC-Syraciise  Game  will 
get  underway  at  <):.")<>  tonight  in  Philadelpliia's  Palestra. 

The  vi<  torv  was  nuni})er  29  without  a  loss  for  the  powerful  Tar  Heels.  liy  winning. 
liiev  tied  the  2()  game  streak  set  by  San  Franci.sco  last  year  in  th«4r  march  to  the  national 
( rown. 

Canisius  hittlcd  tlie  Carolinians  nip  and  tiuk  for  most  of  the  first  half  before  UNC 
ace  Rosenbliith  broke  the  game  wide  open  with  an  ii-point  scoring  splurge  that  put  the 
far  lleels  up,  .S9-23  at  half  time.  Ro.sey  had    2^  points  in  the  torrid  first  half. 

— _ ^ ^     jn   the  second     half,     Canisius 

broke  out  with  an  off  again  on 
again  press  that  did  little  to  rattle 
the  confident  Tar  Heels.  The  two 
teams  swapped  baskets  for  the  en- 
tire second  stanza  as  Carolina 
took  advantage  of  the  Griffin's 
pressing  tactics  to  maintain  their 
bulge  on  layups  and  free  throws. 

Stubby  guard  Tommy  Kearns. 
called  by  UNC  Coach  Frank  Mc- 
Guire  "the  country's  best  driver", 
hit  13  points  in  the  second  half. 
II  on  driving  layups  and  charity 
tosses. 

Rosenblulh  added  16  points  to 
his  first  half  total  to  collect  30. 
a  new  high  for  a  visiting  player 
in  the  Palestra. 

The  tall  Tar  Heels,  with  Rosen- 


Fifth  Student  Seminar 
To  Be  Held  In  Summer 


The  International  Student  Rela- 
tions Seminar  will  be  held  this 
summer  for  the  fifth  time.  The 
seminar  will  be  from  June  30  lo 
August  29  and  for  the  first  seven 
week.?  will  meet  in  Cambridge, 
Mass.,  where  the  office  of  USNSA 
International  Commission  is  locat- 
ed. 

The  purpose  of  the  seminar  is 
designed  to  meet  three  major  needs 
of  the  American  student  communi 


Yugoslav  President  Dies; 
One  Of  Tito's  Top  Aides 

LONDON-— (AP>—Moshe  Pijadc, 
president  of  the  Yugoslav  Nation- 
al Assembly  and  a  top  lieutenant 
of   President    Tito,    died    in    Paris 


reported. 

The  report  said  Pi  jade  suffered 
a  heart  attack  while  en  route  honie 
from  London.  He  had  been  in  Bri- 
tain as  head  of  visiting  Yugo.-lav 
parliamentary   delegation 

TO  READ  OWN  POETRY: 


now  in  the  NCAA  playoffs  for  the 
regional  title  of  the  East. 

Sam  Barnes,  the  little  man  with 
the  rough  boys,  has  been  selected 
for  the  spot  of  rimner-up  in  the 
Coach  of  the  Year  poll  for  his  fine 
record  in  wrestling  circles  this 
year.  His  4-5-1  record  thi.^'  season 
is  the  finest  record  his'  Tar  Heel 
wrestling  squad  has  had  in  many 
years. 

Buddy  Payne  and  Giles  Gaca 
were  co-chairmen  of  the  program 
committee  this  year. 


Each  group  was  to  discuss  the 
matter  and  lo  report  lo  the  Com- 
mittee the  results  of  their  dis- 
cussions. 

At  the  Monday  meeting  of  the 
Campus  Christian  Council,  these 
reports  had  not  been  received  so 
no  action  could  be  taken. 

The  next  meeting  of  the  coun- 
cil is  lo  be  March  25. 

The  final  action  is  hoped  to  be 
taken  on  the  proposal  at  that 
lime,  according  to  a  council 
spokesman. 


While  a  large  part  of  the  coun- 
iry  is  experiencing  blizzards  and 
violent  mid-March  storms.  Chapel 
Hill  is  in  the  midst  of  a  first 
.spring. 

A  large  low  pressure  system  is 
causing  snow  and  winds  in  the 
northern  Midwest. 

However,  the  low  is  ^p  far  north 
and  the  movement  of  air  so  slow 
that  it  is  gradually  being  warm- 
ed and  will  have  little  effect  on 
this  part  of  the  country,  reported 


Jhe  U.   S.  Weather  Bureau  at  the  !  to  their  campuses  and  develop  in 


Raleigh-Durham   Airport. 

Today's  forecast  is  fair  and  gen- 
erally mild.  The  high  will  be  near 
60  degrees. 

The  low  last  night  was  40  de- 
grees, with  a  high  yesterday  of 
72  degrees.  The  humidity  was 
about  60  per  cent. 

Sunday  will  be  fair  and  cooler 
Precipation  is  expected  Monday 
night  or  Tuesday. 


registration  fees  and  a  allowance  of  1 
$8   for  each  weekend   during   the 
seminar  and  all  costs  for  two  or  j 
more  weekend  excursions.  ' 

Participants  are  chosen  in  a  na- 
tional competition  on  the  basis  of 
ability    and    potential    for    leader- ; 
ship    in    international    student    af- 
fairs; have  provert  intellectual  ab-  ■ 
ility,   character   qualificaliono-,   ex- 1 
perience    in    extra-curricular    acti-  > 
vities,  knowledge   of  internatio.nal 
ty.  To  develop  leaders  qualified  to  aMairs.  adaptability  in  meeting  new  \  Viuth  and  Brennan  doing  the  lion's 
direct    the    international    program   situations,  and    a   sincere   interest ,  gjjare  of  the  work,  dominated  the 
of  USNSA  on   the  campuo  and  in  in  the  problems  of  students  in  other  j  bcitboards.    pulling    down    45    a* 

countries.  !  compared    to    34    for    the    shorter 

Knowledge  of  a  foreign  language  I  Griffins.  • 
is  desirable  as  is  specialized  know  j      It  was  a  vicious  battle  of  body 
ledge  of  certain  geographic  areas. 
Application     forms    are     distri- 
buted    to  political  science     dcpt. 
chairman,  deans  and  student  body 
presidents.  Student  Body  President  :  N. 
Bob  Young  slated  that  any  person  i  Rosenblulh  f 
interested    in   attending   this   sern-    Brennan  f 
inar  can  get  application  forms  in  ^  Lotz  f 
his  office.  I  Quigg  c 

Harold  Stassen,  special  assistant  ]  Young  c 
to    Presdenl    Eisenhower,   said   of ,  Cunningham  g 
the    USNSA,    "You    are    providing    Kearns  g 


the  region,  to  represent  American 
students  at  the  annual  student  con- 
ference and  to  partcipatc  in  travel- 
ing  fraternal   delegations; 

To  impart  to  a  representative 
group  of  students  a  thorough  know- 
ledge and  understanding  of  inter 
national  student  problems  and  ol 
contemporary  social,  political,  and 
cultural  forces  affecting  student.s 
in  many  other  nations; 

To  equip  participants  to  return 


(See  CAROLINA    WINS,  Page  4) 


THE  BOX 


CAROLINA 


ternational  programs  which  will 
enable  students  at  their  schools  to 
participate  more  meaningfully  in 
the  international  program  of  US- 
NSA. 

There  are  15  to  18  students  se- 
lected to  attend  the  seminar  and 
each  student  receives  a  complete 
.cholarship.  The  grant  covers  trans- 
pjrtation  to  and  from  place  of 
residence,    room    and    board    plus 


j  this  spread  on  Lennie  Rosenblulh 
and  Co.,  are  pictures  of  the  start- 1 
ing  team,  along  with  photographs  ■ 
of  the  three  lop  reserves.  | 

Coaches  of  the  Year  are  Frank 
McGuire  and  Sam  Barnes.  McGuire, 


Noted  Poet,  Sitwell 
Speaks  Here  March  21 


By    BILL    KING 

Dame  Edith  Sitwell.  reading 
some  of  her  own  poetry,  will 
appear  in  Hill  Hall  March  21. 
She  is  being  sponsored  by  the 
English    Club    and    GMAB. 

The  title  of  Dame  of  the  Bri- 
tish Empire  was  conferred  on 
Dame  Edith  by  Queen  Elizabeth 
in  1953.  This  was  the  first  time 
that  a  woman  writer  had  been  so 
honored. 

This  was  not  the  first  time  that 
a  h':jh  honor  had  ben  bestowed 
on  the  70  year  old  Dame,  how- 
ever. Dame  Edith  was  given  an 
honorary  Doctor  of  Letters  from 
Oxford  and  Leeds,  and  an  honor- 
ary membership  in  the  American 
Institute   of   Arts  and   Letters. 

Wilham  Butler  Yea|s  once 
wrote  of  the  poetry  of  Dame 
Edith  that  she  had  brought  back 
into  literature  ''a  quality  absent 
for  a  generation  and  rare  in  the 
literature  of  all  ages — passion  en- 


nobled   by    intensity    and    by    wis- 
dom." 

.Satherine  Ann  Porter  called 
Dame  Edith's  "Collected  Poems," 
published  in  1954,  "the  true 
flowering  branch  springing  from 
the  old.  unkillable  roots  of  Eng- 
lish poetry,  with  the  range,  var- 
iety, depth,  fearlessne.ss,  the  pas- 
sion   and   elegance   of   great    art." 

Dame  Edith  is  known  not  only 
for  her  poetry,  but  also  for  her 
activities  in  helping  a  countless 
number  of  young  poets,  both  in 
England  and  America.  Of  partic- 
ular importance  was  the  part 
she  played  in  bringing  the  works 
of  the  late  Dylan  Thomas  from 
obscurity    lo    public   attention. 

Dame  Edith  lives  quie<ly  in 
England  for  part  of  the  ye^r. 
and  during  the  v/inler,  stays  in 
the  family  villa  near  Florence, 
Italy.  She  has  described  her  re- 
creations during  these  periods  as 
"Listening  to  music"  and  "sil- 
ence." 


an  opportunity  otherwise  unobtain- 
able for  students  to  learn  of  the 
complexities  surrounding  problem^ 
of  international  life  today,  and  to 
pursue  various  possible  solutions 
to  those  problems.  1  am  particular- 
ly impressed  by  the  International 
Student    Relations    Seminar.'" 

Comments  by  seminar  partici- 
pants are.  ".  .  .this  was.  overall,  the 
best,  most  interesting  group  of 
people  I  have  ever  had  contact 
with." 

".  ..  .this  was  the  most  intellect- 
ually stimulating  and  probably  im- 
portant turning  point  of  my  life." 

LEGISLATIVE  ROUND-UP: 


I  Searcy  g 
'  Totals 
\  CANISIUS 
I  Springer  f 

Nowak  f 

Brit2  f 

Ruska  f 
,  Leone  c 

Rojek  c 
'  Markey  g 

Coogan  g 
:  MackinnoQ  g 
I  Shea  g 
!  T.  tals 

North  Carolina 

Caalsitlfi 


F 

9-11 

4-4 

0-0 

0-2 

0-0 

11-15 

3-5 

0-0 

30  27-37 

G       F 


T 

39 

6 

0 

8 

0 

15 

19 

0 

87 

T 

4 

24 

11 

0 

13 

1 

12 

10 

0 

0 

25  25-33  21     75 

3»— 48 87 

25—50 75 


0-0 

8-12 

7-7 

0-0 

7-9 

1-2 

2-2 

0-1 

0-0 

0-0 


P 

2 
5 
0 
4 
2 
4 
2 
0 
19 
P 
1 
4 
4 
0 
5 
2 
3 
2 
0 
0 


Legislature  Gives  $290 
Away  In  Thursday  Meet 


Sound  And  Fury  Comedy  Team 


Sound  and  Fury's  new  comedy  team  of  Pee  Wee  Batten  and  Ken 
Caiiender,  MsUf«d  by  Nick   Kearns,  left,  and  George  Stefenou  re- 


hearse a  scene  from  "Thieves  Holiday*"  to  be  presented  March  30  and 
31  at  Memorial  Hall.  Photo  by  Norman  Kantor 


I  By    H.    JOOST    POLAK 

I 

In   a    rather   expensive   meeting 

Thursday  night  the  LTNC  Student 
Legislature    managed    to   dispense 
with  a  total  of  290  dollars. 
\     Olher  activity  included     unsuc- 
cessful attempts  to  disburse  more 
money  to  various  causes  of  vary- 
ing worth,   the   passage   of  a   bill 
approving  the  revision  of  the  Con- 
:  stitution,  and  the  announcement  of 
i  the  legiolatures  loss  of  two  legisla- 
tors. 

Thirty  of  the  legislator's  dollars 
were  appropriated  to  the  Elections 
Boart^,  to  defray  operating  expens- 
es for  the  coming  election;  ten  to 
the   Constitutional    Revision    Com- 

'  mittee  to  defray  its  expenses;  and 
250  to  the  Student  Government 
Leadership   Training   Program,   to 

I  enable  it  to  conduct  a  retreat  on 
the  first  weekend  following  the 
spring  reccess. 

REQUESTS 

I      Bills   on   which   the   representa- 
tives jefrained   from    giving   any- 
[  thing   away  included  requests  for 


subeidation  from  devotees  of  the 
UNC  Debate  Council,  the  UNC 
Graduate  Club,  and  The  Carolina 
Quarterly.  No  action  was  taken  on 
a  bill  proposing  that  the  More- 
head  Planetarium  parking  lot  be 
opened  for  student  parking  on  the 
fcrthcoming  elections  day. 

The  Lenior  Hall  situation  wa<* 
again  discussed  and  di^-missed  tem- 
porarily by  the  unanimous  passage 
of  a  bill  propor.ed  by  the  dining 
hall's  personal  investigating  com- 
mittee. The  bill  offers  two  alterna- 
tive plans  for  ticket  book  systems 
either  of  which  would,  if  enacted, 
allcw  Lenoir's  125  student  workers 
to  /pend  their  allotment  at  their 
own  discretion  in  either  the  up- 
stairs dining  room  or  the  Pine 
room. 
RISIONATIONS 

Letters  of  resignation  were  ten- 
dered by  Bill  Baum  and  Chuck 
Howerton.  Baum  announced  his 
resignatioh  from  the  Legislature's 
Rules  Committee  to  pursue  politi- 
cal office,  and  Howerton  his  re- 
signation from  the  Legislature  to 
pursue  hj«  studies. 


^Aot  rwo 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HCCL 


SATURDAY,  MARCH  16,  Y957 


Spring  Comes  To  The  Hill: 
A  Time  To  Yawn  &  Stretch 

'Wsterday  it  was  much  better  to  do  nothing. 

It  was  easier,  and  the  natural  thing,  at  that,  to  walk  slowly  to  ^ome 
grassy  spot  on  the  campus  and  drop  to  the  earth.  The  earth  was  warm, 
though  a  little  bit  wet.  and  all  above  there  were  spring-type  birds  sing- 
ing and  blossoms  were  bursting  out  ol  trees  and  bushes  and  flowers. 

In  the  Arboretum  trees  were  beginning  to  fill  out.  and  it  was -diffi- 
cult to  see  all  the  way  through  from  Raleigh  St.  lo  the  phr-rmacy  build- 
ing. Once  in  a  while  a  coed,  dress- 
ed  in   very    springy    costume    and 
with  the  very  essence  of  spring  in 
licr  walk,     would     come     through 
and    ynii    could    almost    hear    her 

hummiiig. 

#  *  *  . 

Dusty  windows  were  opened 
and  dusted  off.  and  front  doors 
stood  open  to  let  the  warm  air  in. 
The  aged  woman  who  sells  dalfo- 
tlils  in  front  of  the  Bank  of  Chap- 
el -Hill  had  an  extra  large  sele< - 
tion  vestcrdav  morning,  and  she 
also  had  a  secret  look  t)n  her  face, 
as  if  she  knew  about  spring  all 
along.  She  was  selling  her  daffo- 
dils rapidly. 

Ihe  middle-front  door  of  the 
r.  S.  Post  Office  was  im locked  af- 
tei  fi\e  nionths,  adding  govern- 
mental appioval  to  something  that 
really  didn't  need  it. 

C.hapel  Hill,  a  town  iha-t  was 
made  lor  operation  during  the 
spring  months,  had  started  li\ing 
yesterday.  All  of  a  sudden,  things 
of  ureat  importante — things  like 
studies,  and  meetings,  and  exnen 
the  basketball  game  last  night — 
suddenly  became  secondary  to  the 
one  great  trutli  that  flooded 
through   the  classr<Kmrs.  down   the 


halls,  up  and  down  the  streets  and 
through  McCorkle  a  n  d  Soiuh 
Places.  Spring  came,  with  a  yawn 
and  a  stretch,  and  life  started  again. 

Congrats 
To  Forum 
On  Malin 

Congratulati<}ns  to  the  Carolina 
Forum  for  sectying  Patiick  Malin 
of  rhe  .\meri<an  Ci\il  Liberties 
I'nion  as  its  March  27  speaker. 

NO  mattei  whetl»er  siudenis 
agree  or  disagree  with  Malins 
stands  on  and  interpretaUons  ol 
(ivil  liberties,  thevll  ha\e  to  ad- 
mit that  civil  liberties  are  as  great 
a  part  of  oui  time  as  taxation  and 
death. 

Korum  Chairman  Brandon  Rin- 
caid  should  be  congratulated  for 
in\iting  .Malin,  and  ihe  student 
UkIv  should  overflow  Carroll  Hall 
aaditoriinn    to  hear    Malin   speak. 


Wallace  And  Student  Union 


Ciraduates  of  the  I'niversity  se\ 
enil  vears  back  usually  do  about 
three  things  when  they  return  to 
Chapel  Hill.  Thev  breeze  by  the 
extracurricular  organizations  they 
once  belonged  to:  they  drop  in 
their  favorite  lestaurant  or  coffee 
Ju)usc.  and  thev  are  ama'/ed  to  find 
Jimmv  Wallace  still  here,  l(X)king 
younjJier  every  year. 

jimmv  Wallace,  you  see,  is  sort 
of  a  perpetual  student.  He  has 
been  here  a  long  time,  and  he 
doesn't  apoear  able  to  leave. 

He  has  run  through  several  de- 
grees, just  as  he  ran  through  sev- 
eial  student  govennnent  offices 
when  he  was  .1  student  here.  Kven 
now.  many  of  his  friends  are  stu- 
dents, and  mar<y  of  them  come  to 
4iim  for  talk  and  ad\ice. 
*  *  * 

But  the  point  of  all  this  is  that 
James  Wallace  has  put  quite  a  bit 
of  his  time,  his  energy  and  his  blood 
into  Crj^hani  .Memorial  Student 
I  nion. 

^Vallace  is  responsible  primari- 
Iv  for  newer,  more  and  bcttei 
furniture  in  the  buildiny^'s  lounges: 
for  ail  efficient  darknxjm.  for 
sparkling  snack  fac  ilities.  for  a  full- 

The  Daily  Tar  Heel 

The  official  i.iuueni  publicdtion  of  tbe 
Puhlications  Board  of  the  University  uf 
North  Carolina,  where  it  i»  publishecj 
daily  except  .Monday  and  examinatioc 
■  nd  vacation  periods  and  summer  terms 
Knfered  as  second  class  matter  in  th< 
Dosi  oifice  in  Chapel  Hill.  .N  C.  unde. 
ihf  Art  oi  March  F  1870  .SubscriptioE 
rates  mailed.  S4  p^r  year.  $2  .50  a  seme* 
ter  deiivprpd  $6  a  year.  $3  50  a  lemef 
ter 


Editor    FRED  POWXEDGE 

.Managing  Editor  CLARKE  JONES 

News   Editor NANCY  HILL 

Sporla  Editor LARRY  CHEEK 

Business  Manager    _      BILL  BOB  Ph'EL 

Advertising  Manager         FRED  KATZIN 

EDITORIAL  STAFI-  -  Woody  Sekry 
JoeyJ>a>ne,  Stan  Shaw. 

NEWS  STAFF— Graham  Snyder,  Edith 
MacKinnon,  Walter  Schruntek,  Pringle 
Pipkin,  Bob  High,  Jim  Purks,  Ben  Tay- 
lor, H.  Joost  Polak,  Patsy  Miller,  Wal- 
ly  Kuralt,  Bill  King,  Curtis  Crotty. 

BUSINESS  STAFF— John  Minter,  Marian 
Hobeck,  Jane  Patten,  Johnny  Whitaker. 

SPORTS  STAFF:  Dave  Wible.  Stewart 
Bird.  Ron  Milligan. 

Subscription  Manager  .  Dale  Staiey 

Circulation  Manager  Charlie  HoJl 

Assistant  Sports  Editor Bill  King 

Staff  Photographers Woody  Sears, 

Norman  Kantor 
Librarians  -Sue  Gichner.  Marilyn  Strum 

Night  Editor Maniey  Springs 

Night  News  Editor Bob  High 

Proof   Reade^;.  _.._._^_._.^_  Quy  Ellis 


•  time   billiard  looni.   lor  a   happier 
student  union. 

He  has  beeti  involved  in  border 
actions  Avith  South  Buildini;.  and 
eveiy  time  the  interests  of  the  free 
student  body  were  foremost  in 
Wallace's  mind.  Koi  rea.sotvs  of  his 
fretjuent  tiffs  with  the  I'niveisity 
authorities,  manv  of  the  authori- 
ties decided  to  take  a  dim  view  of 
Wallace.  Hut  Wallace,  in  eveiy 
case,  (amt-  out  of  the  conflict  the 
?)etter  man. 

Here  is  a  man  wiio  took  the  stu- 
dent union  in  his  hands  and  u\^<lc 
somethiui;  of  it,  soniethinu  that  is 
g^<KKl  for  the  studeiu  bodv.  gcxKl 
for   the    Unixcrsity. 

jinnnv  Wallace  has  left  the 
Ciraham  .Memorial  .Student  rnioii 
business  now.  to  search  foi  knowl- 
edqe  antl  another  (leu;ree.  liin  the 
stiKleiii>.  (»I>ser\in<4  (Graham  Mem- 
fjiial's  2-,th  birihdav.  should  re- 
member the  iTi.-in  who  did  so  uuich 
for  their  union  biiildinsi  and  the 
i:-eople  who  inhabit  and  lre(juent 
it. 

TV  Preview: 
Art,   Free 
Movie   Here 

Anthony  Wolff 

"Sestet day's  Worlds. "  on  Chan- 
nel .}  at  (»:'{o  p.m..  (ontinues  its' 
discussion  of  Ktruscan  art.  The 
students  of  ani  iciu  hislorx.  Ciieek 
and  art  should  <.>ct  somethin<^  (^ut 
of  this. 

Jackie  (ilcasoji  is  on  a  three- 
week  \  ation.  probablv  hidinjj;  his 
endjairassment  at  beinii>  bodily 
ejected  liom  the  Stork  Club  the 
other  nij>ht.  The  netw(jik  must 
ha\e  {onira(ted  h)r  this  hout  by 
the  pontui  and  is  determined  to 
get  its  money's  worth.  h»r  it  has 
signed  Rate  Smith  to  head  the 
replacements.  The  test  of  the  cast 
im  hides  Jonathan  Wiiuer  and  Pat 
Roouev  Sr.  Soimd.s  a  bit  too  Iciid 
to  take. 

Perry  Como  is  ojip(>>;:e  as  us- 
ual on  ('hannel  -,.  toninht  head- 
lining Kvdie  Gortne.  Ksiher  Will- 
iams anrl  Dana  .\ndrews.  F.ydie  is 
a  piodiict  of  the  early  Steve  Allen 
.Allen  days,  and  she's  quite  terrific. 

.At  9  p.m.  on  Channel  2  you  are 
invited  to  watch  the  hour-long 
presentation  of  tli  e  "'Emmy" 
Awards— television's  version  of  the 
Ocar.  It's  usually  a  great  show,  but 
I  refu.se  to  believe  that' the  awards 
are  indicative  of  anything  much. 

At  y.^o  and  10  tonight  "The 
Crimson  Pirate"  (Burt  Lancastei. 
Fva-  Bartok  is  free,  for  all  at  Cat  roll 
Hall.  This  may  well  be  the  best 
bet  for  the  evening;  the  comedv  is 
stret:ched  pretty  thin  in  spots,  but 
there  is  plenty  of  action. 


State's  Ability  To  Pay  The  Bill 
Is  Measured  By  Creative  Resources 


R.  Mayne  Albright,  Ral*igh 
attorney,  is  president  of  the 
General  Alumni  Assn.  He  de- 
livered the  following  talk  be- 
fore the  Current  Topics  Club 
of  Rocky  Mount  this  week. 

In  thi^f  legislative  year  1957, 
what  of  our  pride  in  North  Caro- 
lina and  in  the  creative  spirit 
which  has  spurred  her  past  prog- 
ress? 

Ours  is  a  peculiar  pride.  North 
Carolinians,  a..-  Bill  Polk  described 
us.  are  "mighty  proud  of  not  be 
ing  proud." 

Nevertheless,  Feb.  6,  1957.  was 
a  proud  day  in  North  Carolina. 
That  morning  in  the  halls  ol 
North  Carolina's  old  state  capitol. 
one  of  the  olde..t  and  most 
beautiful  of  state  capitol  build 
ings.  a  new  General  Assembly 
was  called  to  order. 

That  afternoon,  in  the  halls  of 
North  Carolina's  new  art  museum 
— the  first  and  only  slate-sup- 
ported art  museum  in  America — 
the  pro-inaugural  reception  be- 
gan, with  music  by  the  North  Car- 
olina Symphony  Orchestra,  an- 
other North  Carolina  first. 

Legislators   and   their  wives, 
coming    from    all    parts    of    the 
state,   entered    by    canopy   and 
carpet    (the   very      kirui      with 
which      "Our   Bob"   lampooned 
Cam  Morrison  out  of  the  U.  S. 
Senate).    They   strolled,   to   the 
music  of  the   masters,  through 
marbled  halls  of  Greek  and  Ro- 
man  sculpture,     17th     Century 
tapestries,  and  masterpieces  of 
French,    English    »n4    Colonial 
American  paintings. 
Here  North  Carolina  has  honor- 
ed and  enshrined     the     creative 
past  to  lend  in^-piration  for  a  cre- 
ative future. 

Here  was  a  new  and  different 
way  to  begin  an  inauguration  and 
a  new  session  of  the  General^ As- 
sembly. You  did  not  need  to  be 
an  expert  in  the  arts  to  feei  its 
significance. 

It  symo;lized  what  Gov.  Hod- 
ges expressed  the  next  day  in  his 
inaugural  message:  "Great  decis- 
ion are  in  the  offing;  great 
choices  must  be  made,  great  prob- 
lems are  demanding  solutions.  At 
such  a  time,  wc,  who  under  the 
disposition  of  providence,  hold 
for  a  little  while  the  destiny  of 
North  Carolina  in  our  hands, 
must  take  strength  from  the  past; 
for  the  greatness  of  history  is 
made  manifest  in  the  action..-  of 
the  living." 

*  *  *  ^ 

Was  all  this  to  prove  prophetic 
of  a  new  upsurge  of  that  creative 
spirit  in  North  Carolina  which 
has  so  often  manifested  itaelf  in 
critical  times  of  the  past'.' 

There  were  many  reesons  to 
believe    that    it    should.    There 
was  the  need— for  North  Caro- 
lirwis    march    of    progress    has 
been  slowing  down:  In  industry. 
In  agriculture.  In  pr  capita  In- 
come;  especially   in   education. 
The     1955     General   Assembly, 
fearing  a  deficit,  could  aim  no 
higher  then  to  try  to  maintain 
levels    already    reached,    levels 
far  belcw  the  national  average. 
There    was    the-  opportunity— 
for   this    1957    General    Assembly 
was  meeting  not   with  a  deficit, 
but  with  a  $60  million  dollar  sur 
plus;  with  a  great  drive  for  new 


industry,  and  with  new  commi^'S- 
ion  reports  on  lax  revision  and 
governmental  reorganization. 

In  addition  to  North  Carolina 
matters,  this  General  Assembly 
was  meeting  at  a  time  when  it  is 
generally  agreed  that  the  next 
great  epoch  of  American  develop 
ment  must  be  in  the  South,  with 
North  Carolina  and  the  South- 
east described  as  fiotentially  the 
richest  area  in  the  world. 

Is  North  Carolina,  as  in  the 
past,  to  be  the  leading  state  in 
this  regional  development? 

This  was,  and  is,  the  challenge 
facing  the  1957  General  Assem- 
bly. 

1^  if  if 

But  the  '57  General  Assembly 
began  in  controversy: 

The  limited  appropriation  for 
education  and  state  services  pro- 


North  Carolina  that  North  Caro- 
lina does  not  desert   its  schools. 
Now  that   members  of  the  Gen- 
eral Assembly  have  reflected  that 
spirit    in    the    Uzzell  Resolution, 
and    the    governor    his  changed 
his  position  and  agreed,  the  duty 
and  'he  opportunity  of  this  Gen- 
eral Assembly  is  made  clear: 
Our    choice    is    not    betsween 
proper     tax    adjustments    and 
proper    teacher    salaries.    Our 
choice   is    between   meeting   or 
failing  to  meet  a  real  crisis  in 
public  education,  both  in  pub- 
lic schools  and  the   University. 
That    choice    should    be    clear. 
Popular  education  has  been  our 
chief    boast;    we    cannot    allow 
it  to  continue  to  decline.   The 
state   University   has   been   our 
pride;   we   cannot   surrender   it 
to  mediocrity. 


public  education;  to  renew  our 
determination  not  only  to  sup- 
port but  to  increase  and  strength- 
en and  improve  our  public 
schools. 

We  need  to  plan  now  for  the 
predicted  "tidal  wave"  that  the 
next  decade  will  bring  into  our 
schools  and  colleges.  We  need 
to  meke  it  clear  that  we  recog- 
nize this  "tidal  wave"  of  school 
children  and  college  students 
not  as  a  burden  but  as  a  bless- 
ing; not  only  as  our  greatest 
expenditure,  but  as  our  greatest 
resource. 

We  need  a  new  acknowledge- 
ment that  our  ability  to  pay  the 
bill  is  not  so  much  limited  by  our 
present  financial  resources  as  it 
is  measured  by  the  creative  re- 
sources of  our  minds  and  hearts, 


'I  Think  I  Begin  To  Get  The  Idea' 


^  -^"^S^  >    /J 


'wffM-  ei=?  ^«-  <=>*=  K 


posed  by  the  governor  and  his 
Adivi-  ;ry  Budget  Commission 
were  inacleqaatc  to  meet  recog- 
nized heeds.  Because  appropria- 
tions for  education  and  state  ser- 
vices were  inad^uate.  there  was 
widespread  resentment  against 
the  hurried  raises  for  the  Coun- 
cil of  State,  the  proposed  re- 
duction^, in  corporate  taxes,  the 
proposed  planp  for  the  governor. 

It  is  fortunate  tl>at  this  con- 
troversy  came   early     It   helped 
crystalize    a    growing    recogni- 
tion by  the  people  of  the  state 
of    the   crisis    in    education;    in 
both    public    schools    and    the 
state  University. 
"Sometimes   it   seems   that    the 
people  themselves   are    the  lead- 
ers." as  Gov.  Hodges  wisely  recog- 
nized   in    hi.;   inauguraf    address, 
'and  that  the  governor  and  legis- 
lators are  important  only  as  they 
understand     and     interpret     the 
spirit  of  a  great  people." 
It  is  the  spirit  of  the  people  of  ^ 


Of  course  we  can  and  should 
afford  a   plane  for  the  governor. 

Of  course  we  can  and  should 
afford  $12,000  salaries  for  the 
Council  of  State. 

Of  course  we  can  and  should 
remove  any  tax  inequities  that 
impede  our  industrial  develop- 
ment. 

We  can  afford  these  things'  just 
as  we  can  afford  to  support  our 
new  art  museum  and  .our  state 
symphony.  But  wc  cannot  afford 
them  unless  we  are  determined 
that  we  can  also  afford  adequate 
appropriations  for  public  schools, 
for   state   employees,   and. for   a 

first-rate  state  University. 

*  *  * 

And  in  these  times  "adequate" 
support  means  more  than  a 
grudging  gift  of  the  necessarj'  dol- 
lars to  make  up  a  19.32  per  cent 
increase  to  meet  what  the  State 
Board  of  Education  believes  the 
essential  minimia.  It  means  that 
,wc  need  to  renew  our   faith   in 


and  by  the  firmness  of  our  deter- 
mination to  provide  education 
worthy  of  om-  state  and  its  future. 

In  a  changing  South  and  na- 
tion. North  Carolina  needs  both 
industry  and  education  for  contin- 
ued and  increased  leadership.  We 
can  take  strength  from  our  edu- 
cational  progrca's   in   the   past. 

Between  our  neighbors  to  the 
North  and  South,  we  have  been 
called  "a  valley  of  humiliation 
between  t.vo  peaks  of  conceit," 
but  let  us  not  forget  the  rest  of 
the  quotation.  The  "Valley  of  Hu- 
miliation," as  Manly  Wade  Well- 
man  points  out.  is  found  in  The 
Pilgrim's  Progress — and  after  de- 
scribing the  Valley,  Bunyan  says: 

"*  *  *  yet  I  must  tell  you 
that  in  former  times, ' 
men  have  met  with  angels 

here, 
have  found  pearls  here, 
and  have  in  this*  place,  heard 

ihe  words  of  life." 


Pogo 


By  Walt  Kelly 


NO^-AH,  THg  talk: 
iWA^AKJUTAflimWy 

\  W/TWJIM  ? 


OH,  I  DON'rB\.SBvB 

Hi'6  fBSfiOC\OUS- 

ear  SOU  &(^  A  Bums- 
fiyAeerofTserH, 

AHP  CHA»CB^ASeHB'3 
flONNAtf5g  W"-Hg 
AUOrOPeAOCB/riN' 

ro  gvgN  uponT 


ACKLAND  BUILDING; 

Subversives 
Hiding  Here  ^ 

Stan  Shaw 

We  recently  have  learned  that  the  "mad  bomber" 
of  New  York  City  fame  was  not  actually  arrested. 
The  person  who  was  taken  under  custody  was  a 
fake.  The  real  "notd  bomber"  is  here  in  Chapel 
Hill;  he  was  brought  here  by  some  of  the  old  an- 
archistic crowd  of  the  days  of  yore  and  has  been 
imported  to  these  regions  to  do  a  specific  job. 

His  target  is  the  Ackland  -Art  Museum,  now  ris- 
ing in  its  Georgian  splendor  across  the  street  from 
the  Beta  House. 

We  had  thought  that  the  opponents  of  this  ad- 
dition to  the  architectural  consistency  of  our  campus 
had  given  up  their  fight  too  easily,  and  we  were  all 
too  right. 

They  have  found  thet  there  is  no  setisftction 
to  be  found  by  appealing  to  the  proper  authorities. 
Petitions  and  meetings  have  also  proved  to  be 
of  little  or  no  value,  and  the  fact  is  that  irate  state- 
ments and  threats  can  accomplish  nothing.  In  face  of 
these  odds  they  have  come  to  the  conclusion  that 
the  only  way  to  settle  the  dispute  is  to  take  the 
law  into  their  own  hands  and  do  as  Garj'  Cooper  did 
in  "The  Fountainhead."  This  action  is  to  cleanse 
the  face  of  the  campus  (and  the  earth)  of  the  "arch- 
itectural abortion"  that  they  feel  has  been  perpet- 
rated on  them. 

Some  nMy  take  this  ell  too  lightly,  for  they 
do  not  realize  how  far  tliis  group  is  willing  to  go 
to  accomplish  its  purpose.  We  can  see  evidence  of 
their  work  in  the  past  when  they  did  deeds  even 
more  horrible  than  the  one  that  they  now  con- 
template. 

We  recall  with  great  vividness  and  clarity  the 
days  in  which  they  .attempted  to"  turn  the  whole 
student  body  into  one  huge  Communist  cell  by 
spreading  subversive  literature  across  the  campus. 
This  was  done  with  such  impunity  and  subtlety  that 
we  shudder  at  the  thought  of  such  a  reoccurence. 

'And  then  there  was  the  time  that  they  actually 
attacked  the  University's  greatest  benefactor  by 
means  of  their  control  over  this  newspaper  (we  are 
grateful  that  those  days  are  gone). 

We  have  heard  from  our  confidential  sources 
thet  they  are  merely  waiting  for  the  right  occasion 
to  present  itself— then  ttiey  expect  to  strike.  They 
want  to  do  it  with  drame  and  verve. 

They  want  the  whole  world,  the  University  engi- 
neer and  the  Board  of  Trustees  to  know  that  tbcy 
mean  business.  We  personally  shed  a  tear  at  the 
thought  of  Mr.  Ackland  not  having  a  place  to  be 
buried  and  lament  the  fact  that  the  campus  will  be 
poorer  by  one  lovely  Georgian  building,  but  we 
know  no  way  of  stopping  them  from  this  act  of  sui)- 
version. 

We  would  make  an  appeal  that  all  members  of 
the  faculty,  administration  and  the  student  body 
(particularly  those  in  the  near  neighborhood)  be 
constantly  on  the  lookout  for  strange  persons  Hear- 
ing the  building.  Only  through  the  united  efforts  ot 
us  all  can  it  be  saved. 


All  Of  Us  Belong 
To  One  University 

Editor: 

'It's  a  downright  shame  that  more  people  have- 
n't taken  advantage  of  this  event." 

This  phrase  is  being  used  more  and  more,  and 
probably  with  good  reason  because  thoo-e  who  are 
saying  it  have  realized  themselves  the  real  pleasure, 
downright  fun,  satisfaction,  or  perhaps  gratifica- 
tion from  taking  part  in  a  few  of  the  organizations 
on  this  campus. 

Some  of  the  basketball  games  this  season  were 
attended  by  less  than  50  per  cent  of  all  the  Caro- 
lina students  (even  when  tickets  were  not  rationed). 
Off  goes  a  small  group  to  New  York  for  a  really 
once  in  a  lifetime  chance  to  find  out  more  about 
the  UN  and  to  talk  with  those  working  for  it. 

There  are  any  number  of  discus.sion  groups  on 
a  variety  of  subjects;  we  read  announcements  in 
The  Daily  Tar  Heel  stating  that  play  "tryouts  are 
open  to  all,"  the  Cosmopolitan  Club  sayo-  that  "every 
one  is  welcome. '  and  it  seems  that  the  political  par- 
tics  want  interested  members. 

But  interested  or  not,  when  we  are  reading 
"you,"  we  don't  feel  "me!"  Just  too  often,  students 
and  falcult\,  and  administration  wind  up  saying.  "I 
wouldn't  know  anybody,"  or  "don't  you  have  to  be 
a  member?"  or  "Can  anybody?"  or  "But  I'm  not  ac- 
tive'." 

I'm  not  gung  ho  on  activities  at  all,  and  have 
come*  up  with  these  same  aiiswero\  and  probably 
don't  even  know  the  existence  of  many  ofthe  truly 
worthwhile  organizatiions  on  our  campus. 

But  perhaps  isn't  one  of  the  reasons  thet  we 
miss  so  much,  because  there  is  so  little  a  sense 
of  belonging  or  being  a  pert  of  one  school? 

There  are  always  going  to  be  some  who  simply 
don't  like  to  watch  football  games,  or  go  to  a  plaj-, 
or  listen  to  any  authority.  And  many  will  always 
continue  to  be  miserable  at  a  concert,  or  inevitably 
fall  asleep  inside  the  Planitarium. 

But,  still  there  are  so  many  more  of  us  who  kick 
ourselves  inside  and  will  kick  even  harder  20  years 
from  now  over  the  opportunities  we've  missed.  Isn't 
it  possible  also  that  thi*— sliding  along  on  the  part  of 
the  interested,  is  not  entirely  due  to  lack  of  initia- 
tive, "apathy,"  shallow  appreciations  and  cool  un 
concern?  Perhaps  it  is  due  to  a  not  belonging  feel 
ing  to  any  group,  and  not  enough  of  "So  what,  you 
can  do  that  later.  Come  on  with  us!" 

Of  course,  the  kind  of  group  one  belongs  to  de- 
lerminej  Isxgely  what  he'll  go  out  and  do,  but  isn  t 
it  possible  to  realize  that  all  these  posters  and 
nt)tices  printed  by  Carolina  organizations  also  mean 
"Come  on,  after  all  we  all  do  belong  to  one  UNC?" 

Fliyllts  KeeHt 


Twe^ 

dents 
tions 
this  w^ 

The 
New 
is  led 
ciate 
YWCAl 

Et 
were 
group 
round 
hopes 
India. 
Viet 
tries. 

A  tc 
buildini 
seminal 


Ti 

pi 


D 


10. 

14 
I5J 

id 
jtJ 

191 


i   i 


)6,  19S/ 


SATURDAY/ MARCH  16,  W57 


THE  DA^LY  TAR  HEEL 


FAGE  THREI 


>mber" 
^sted. 
was  A 
Chapel 
old  an- 
us beea 
iob. 

[now  ris- 
^t  from 

this  ad- 
campus 

I  were  all 

faction 
»riti«s. 

ed  to  be 
»te  state- 
face  of 
^inn  that 
hake  the 
[>per  did 
cleanse 
He  "arch- 
perpet- 

fhcy 
to  go 
ce  of 
•von 
low  con- 
parity  the 
le  whole 
cell     by 
campus, 
lety  that 
jnce. 
actually 
»ctor     by 
(we  are 

toursos 
■occasion 
lo.  Thoy 

["sity  engi- 

|that  they 

at  the 

tee  to  be 

IS  will  be 

but  we 

:i  of  sub- 

•mtxTs  of 
lent  body 
rhood)  be 
sons  nesr- 
ef forts  of 


'9 
ify 


fople  have- 
more,  and 
who  are 
\l  pleasure, 
gratiflca- 
Iganizations 


:ason  were 
the  Caro- 
t  rationed). 
Dr  a  really 
aiore  about 
for  it. 

groups  on 
cements  in 
tryouts  are 
thai  •evcrj- 
olitical  par- 
re  reading 
?n,  students 
p  saying,  "1 

have  to  be 
I'm  not   ac- 

[I.  and  have 
nd  probably 
ofihe  truly 

IS. 

ns  that  wo 
Itl*  a  sonso 
hoo!? 

uho  simply 
go  to  a  play, 

will  always 
or  inevitably 

us  who  kick 
rder  20  years 

missed.  Isn't 
on  the  part  of 
lack  of  initia- 
and  cool  un 
elonging  feel 
'So  what,  you 

lelongs  to  de- 
{  do,  but  isn't 
t  posters  and 
Dns  also  mean 
lo  one  UNC?" 
FliylfH  «<«fft 


28  University  Students  Attending 
Four-Day  United  Nations  Seminar 


Twenty-eight  University  stu- 
dents are  attending  a  United  Na- 
tions seminar  in  New  York  City 
this  week,  March  14-17. 

The  group,  which  traveled  to 
New  York  in  private  automobiles. 
Ls  led  by  Miss  Anne  Queen,  asso- 
ciate director  of  the  campus 
YWCA. 

Eleven  deiegvtions  to  the  UN 
were  requested  to  furnish  the 
group  with  representatives  for 
round  table  discussions.  The  group 
hopes  to  hear  representatives  from 
India,  Russia,  Israel,  Japan.  Iraq, 
Viet  Nam  and  five  other  coun- 
tries. 

A  tour  of  the  United  Nations 
building  was  the  first  event  of  the 
seminar    trip.    Marilyn    Habel.    a 


UNC  graduate  and  Chapel  Hill  na- 
tive, probably  will  be  assigned 
by  the  UN  Guide  Service  to  con- 
duct the  tour  and  the  initial  orien- 
tation, Miss  Queen  said. 

Dr.  Frank  Graham,  UN  media- 
tor, ex-senator  from  North  Caro- 
lina and  former  president  of  the 
Consolidated  University  of  North 
Carolina,  will  address  the  UNC 
students  and  give  a  general  or- 
ientation on  the  functions  of  the 
United  Nations. 

Another  speaker  scheduled  to 
address  the  group  is  Elmore  Jack- 
son, a  former  professor  of  inter- 
national relations  at  Haverford 
College.  Jackson,  author  of  the 
book,  "Meeting  of  Minds."  is  now 
on  the  staff  of  the  Friends  Ser- 


DIXIELAND  COMBO 

FROM  4  TO  6 
AFTER  BLUE-WHITE  GAME 
FEATURING 

LES  SUTORIUS 

THE    PATIO 


v/^  cartt  SEE  sllof*  Sjrope. 


\Gu  have  IbUVE  rt ! 


That's  why  American  Express  Student  Tours  are  expertly 
planned  to  include  a  full  measure  of  individual  leisure — 
ample  free  time  to  discover  ymir  Europe — as  well  as  the 
most  comprehensive  sight-seeing  program  available  any- 
where! Visit  England,  Scotland,  Denmark,  Norway, 
Sweden,  Holland,  Belgium,  Germany,  Austria,  Switzer- 
land, Italy  and  France— accompanied  by  distinguished 
tour  leaders — enjoy  superb  American  Express  service 
throughout. 

11  Special  Tours  ...  53  to  63  days  ...  via  famous  ships: 
He  de  France,  United  States,  Liberty,  Saturnia, 

Guilio  Cesarp,  Flandre.  $1,448  up 
Also  Regular  Tours  ...  42  days  .  .  .  $1,301  up 

You  can  always  TRAVEL  NOW— PAY  LATER 
when  you  go  American  Express. 

For  complete  information,  see  your  Campus  Representative, 

local  Travel  Agent  or  American  Express  Travel  Service, 

member:  Institute  of  International  Education  and  Council 

on  Student  Travel  ...  or  simply  mail  the  handy  coupon. 


American  Express  Travel  Service 

65  Broadway,  New  Yofk  6,  N.  Y.  e!o  Travel  Sales  Dimeion 

Yes!  Please  do  send  me  complete  information  C-50 

about  1957  Student  Tours  to  Europe! 


Name. . . 
Addreae. 
City.... 


Zone State 

'WTECT  VOWt  T»«V€l  FtWOS  WITH  AMIttCAN  fXPMSS  TMVflEPS  CHEQUtS  -  SPtHDABU  tVt»YWH€W 


DAILY    CROSSWORD 


1. 


ACROSS 

Capital 

( Switz. ) 
5.  Seasoninf 
9  A 

nativ* 

of 

Germany 
10.  Affirms 

12.  Inscribe 

13.  Intolerant 
person  « 

14.  Branch  of 

15.  Pole 

16.  Native 
(Burma) 

It.  Pronoun 

18.  Humor 

19.  Chief  deity 
(Babyl.) 

20.  Typewriter 
roller 

23.  Volume 

24.  Sounds, 
•s  coins 

29.  Bridf  e 
2i.  Chur^ 
celebration 

31.  Breez* 

32.  Lever 

33.  Greelc  Mttcr 

34.  Biblical  otty 
39.  Aupatus 

(dtm.) 

.36.  Frontiers- 
man's shoes 

M.  Valleys 
<po«t.) 

ao  Affray 

XI.  Arttetta 

42.  Donkeys 

43.  Not 
difficult 

44  Building 

material 


DOWN 

1  Ke^ 

2.  Egress 

3.  Decasrs 

4.  Direction 
(abbr.) 

5.  Wooden 
slioe 

6.  Greedy 

7.  Support 

«.  Garden  tool 

9.  Bog 
11.  Stem 
19.  Quoits 
on  pegs 

18.  Skin  tumor 

19.  Piece  of 
sculpture 


lira      "jcri  iivz-a 
'iuuii   nuiiaLjii 

ILli    HUH    riJHHFJ 


21.  Partly 
open 

22.  Metat 

23.  God 
of 

pleas, 
ure 
(Eg. 

ypt.) 

25.  Bet 

26. 

Arabia        YMterdsy't  Amtwg 

27.  High-seaa        36.  Money 


robber 
1*9.  Excel 
30.  Ufts 
32.  Kitty 
35.  Jewels 


(Mex.) 
37.  Too 
39.  Mesdowr 
40  Bird's 

stomach 


vice  Committee  and  Society  of 
Friends.  His  topic  will  be  "The 
Changing  Role  of  the  United  Na- 
tions." 

North  Carolina  students  attend- 
ing the  seminar  are  Wally  Sater- 
field  and  Gene  Spake,  Charlotte; 
Prank  Wamsley,  Asheville;  Miss 
Peggy  Patterson,  Sanford;  George 
Rowland.  Mocksville;  Bill  Lowe, 
Gastonia;  Bill  Weekes,  Murphy; 
Jim  Merritt,  Mount  Airy;  Don  Her- 
ring, Clinton;  Ed  Heyman,  Hen- 
dersonville;  Miss  June  Potter, 
Wallace;  Pete  Julian,  Winston- 
Salem;  Miss  Donna  Snyder,  Fay- 
etteville;  and  Bob  Black,  Forest 
City. 

Out-of-state  students  making  the 
trip  are  Miss  Mary  Margaret  Will- 
iams, Orlando,  Fla.;  Ted  Youhan- 
na,  Baghdd,  Iraq;  Cortland  Ed- 
wards, Sag  Harbor,  N.  Y.;  Misses 
Doris  Adkins  and  Peg  Humphrey, 
Richmond,  Va.-;  Carl  Griffin,  Rome. 
Ga.;  Miss  Betty  Richards.  Mont- 
clair,  N.  J.;  Joe  and  Norah  Hurd. 
Boston,  Mass.;  Frank  Crowther, 
Chevy  Chase,  Md.;  Miss  Belle 
Corey,  Atlanta,  Ga.,  Miss  Bette 
Bondurant.  Memphis,  Tenn.;  Arn- 
old Sagner,  Baltimore,  Md.;  and 
Miss  Jo  Ann  Astor,  Newport  News. 
Va. 


Heolth  Meeting 
Scheduled  Here 
On  March  17-20 

The  12th  annual  Health  Educa- 
tion Conference  will  be  held  here 
and  at  N.  C.  College  March  17-20. 

Sunday,  Monday  and  Wednes- 
day sessions  will  be  held  at  UNC. 
Tuesday's  meeting  will  be  held  at 
the  Health  Building  at  N.  C.  Col- 
lege. Sunday  night's  meeting  will 
be  held  in  the  Health  Education 
Workshop  of  the  UNC  School  of 
Public  Health.  All  other  UNC 
meetings  will  be  in  the  Library 
Assenrbly  Room. 


Theta  Chi  "Mason-Dixon  Jubilee"  Sponsors 

Sponsors  for  the  Theta  Chi  "Miison-Dixon  Jubilee"  pictured  above  are:  top  row,  left  to  right.  Miss 
Mary  Jean  Owen,  sponsoring  Don  Melson;  Miss  Ann  Orten,  sponsoring  Gaorgo  Moore;  bottom  row, 
left  to  right.  Miss  Ann  Cone  spons-oring  Bill  Barn  hart;  Miss  Nat  Moroaw  sponsoring  Bill  Snail,  and 
Miss  Nancy  Nutter  sponsoring  Craig  Choate. 

HAPPENINGS  ON  THE  HILL: 


SP  Meets  Monday 

The     Student  Party    will  meet  i  Sonny  Halliord.  The  party  will  fill 

iMonday  at  7:30  to  decide  on  the  »  ^a^^nt  legislature  seat  for  Twm 
'  Men's  n.  The  party  will  meet  m 

party's  platform  for   the   current  |  jj^j^^j^j     parker  Lounges  2-3     rf 
cam|»aign,  according  to   chairman  Graham  Memorial. 


..TAKE  YOUR  DATE  FOR  SUNDAY  DINNER  TO 

DANZIGER'S  OLD  WORLD  RESTAURANT 

For  an  fntamaHonal  Fair  of  Quality  Food 


FRENCH  ONION  SOUP 

tlUNGARIAN   GOULASH ., 

GERiMAN  SAUERBRATEN  W.  DUMPLING 

CZECH  MEAT  ROULADE  W.  SOUR  CREAM  .^ 

STUFFED  ROAST  CHICKEN 

WIENER   SCHNITZEL 


_„S   3$ 

_„S.9* 


. $1.25 

Sarvad  with  salad,  2  vagetablas,  bread,  butter,  coffaa  or  icad  taa 

Homemade  French  and  Viennese  Pastries 

Hours  from  11:30  A.  M.  to  7:30  P.  M. 


Pledge  Dance,  Jubilee  On  Calendar 


By  SUE   ATCHISON 

THE  ATO'S  BEGAN  A  VERY 
GAY  PLEDGE  WEEKEND  last 
night  with  their  pledge  dance  at 
Hope  Valley  Country  Club.  The 
Star  Dreamers  were  on  hand  to 
provide  the  music. 

Officers  of  the  pledge  class  and 
their  dates  seen  whirling  around 
the  floor  were:  Johnny  Burgwyn, 
president,  of  Jackson  with  Miss 
Ann  Smith  of  Apex,  Frank  Wal- 
lace, vice-preifident,  oi  ,  Boston, 
Mass.  with  Miss  Nell  Justice  of 
Lynchburg,  Va.;  Kokfi  Simpson, 
secretary-treasurer,  of  Larchmont, 
N.  Y.  with  Miss  Sissy  Butudr  of 
Durham. 

Tonight  the  pledges  are  having 
a  shipwreck  party   at  Smith  lake. 


•nr  started  the  big  SAE  weekend! 
last  night.  Tonight  ■  there  will  be 
a  jformal  cocktail  and  dinner  party 
at  the  Cupboard  and  tomorrow  the 
weekend  will  come  to  a  close  with 
an  informal  party  at  the  house. 

THE  THETA  CHI'S  MASON- 
DEKON  JUBILEE  got  under  way 
yesterday  with  an  "open  house." 
Today  at  noon  the  brothers  will 
have  a  banquet  at  the  Carolina  Inn 
while  their  dates  will  be  guests  at 
a  t;a  to  be  given  at  the  house.  This 
evening  there  will  be  a  formal  ban- 
quet and  dance  at  the  Washington 
Duilce    Hotel    in    Durham. 

iT.  PAT'S  DAY  isn't  until  tomor- 
rov^  but  that  didn't  put  a  damper 


on   the   "Blarney 
night     in   Cobb's 


Ball "   held   last 
basement.      The 


A  JAMAICAN  FAREWELL  PAR-  Hillside  Joymakers   from  Durham 


•provided  the  music  and  the  inde- 
pendent women  on  campus  along 
with  men  from  Alexander,  Grimes, 
B.VJ».,  and  Old  East  dormitories 
took  advantage  of  the  opportunity 
to  celebrate. 


Little  Symphony 
To  Play  Two 

1*0  North  Carolina  Little  Sym- 
phony Orchestra  wiU  next  week 
interrupt  its  1957  tour  of  towns 
where  local  chapters  of  the  Sym- 
phony Society  are  sponsoring  con- 
certs for  two  special  concerts  of 
statewide  interest. 

First  will  be  a  telecast  on  Sun- 
day, March  24,  from  2  to  3  p.m. 
over  the  Wasiiington  station. 
WITN,  Channel  7.  Second  will  be 
the  biennial  "thank  you"  concert 
for  the  General  Assembly,  which 
will  be  given  at  9  p.m.  Monday, 
March  25,  in  the  House  chambers 
in  Raleigh. 


Newly-Elected  FTA  Officers 

Officers  chosen  for  the  Fr#nk  P.  Graham  chapler  of  the  Future  Teachers  of  Amarica  pictured 
above  ara,  left  to  right,  Carson  Oldham,  treasurer;  Sue  Atchinscn,  program  chairman;  Bill  Henshaw, 
president;  Joyce  Alli90od,*sacratary;  and  Varnon  Culpappar,  vice-presid«-nt. 


CLASSIFIEDS 


LOST:  ONE  ROLEX  OYSTER 
Speedking  wristwatch.  Tuesday 
night  in  Physics  Lab  (I  think). 
Please  contact  doost  Polak.  208 
Lewis  / 

JAZZ  AT  TURNAGES 

Saturday  anernoox^  2:00,  Turn- 
iges  Cabin  in  Durham.— Jazz  by 
Dick  Gables  "AU  Stars."  Beer 
Served. 


Covering  The  Campus 


FOR     SALE:      1939     PLYMOUTH 
Coupe — 100     dollars.     Can     be 
seen    at    204    Jackson    Circle, 
phone  30511. 
« 

5  ROOM  BRICK  HOUSE.  3  BED 
rooms,  all  modem  conveniences. 
3  miles  on  Old  86  Hjrway.  Stove 
and  Frigedaire  furnished.  Call 
Fred  Katzin  after  6:00.  8-9025. 


TWO  BEDROOM  HOUSE  FURN- 
ished  or  unf  umiahed,  near  camp- 
us. Call  9458  during  day  or  2926 
after  5:30  p.m.  and  weekend. 


FIVE  ROOM  BRICK  HOUSE  IN 
center  of  town — has  hobby  work- 

'^  shop.  Call  9458  during  day  oi 
2926  after  5:30  and  during 
weekend. 


NOTICE:    BLACK    WILL    BE    AT 

SAE    House   from    Friday    thru 

Sunday.    Anyone    interested    in 

tugboat     omployment     call     8- 

9053. 


FACULTY  CLUB  LUNCHEON 

Chancellor  Robert  B.  House  wili 
speak  at  the  Faculty  Club  Lunch- 
eon at  1  p.m.  at  the  Carolina  Inn, 
according  to  Arthur  Roe,  president, 
and  Sydenham  B.  Alexander,  sec- 
retary. The  cost  of  the  Luncheon 
is  to  be  .$1.30. 
LADIES  NIGHT  BANQUET 

A  Ladies  Night  banquet  is  being 
sponsored  by  the  Laymen's  Fel- 
lowship of  the  United  Congrega- 
tional Chri„-tian  Church,  Sunday, 
6:30  p.m,  in  the  parish  house  at 
211  West  Cameix)n  Ave. 
STATISTICS  COLLOQUIM 

Dr.  David  B.  Duncan  will  speaK 
on  "A  Simple  Minimum  Average 
Decision  Problem  in  Comparing 
Several  Means"  at  the  Statistics 
Colloquim,  Monday  at  4  p.m.  in 
room  206  of  Phillips  Hall. 
PHYSICS  COLLOQUIM 

"Impurity  States  in  Silicon"  will 
be  the  topic  for*  Dr.  Walter  Kohn 
at  the  Joint  Duke-UNC  Physics  Col- 
loquim Tuesday  at  8:00  p.m.  in 
the  Duke  Physics  Dcpt. 
GRAO  CLUB  COFFEE  HOUR 

The  UNC  Graduate  Club  will 
spon.  jr  a  coffee  hour  this  Sunday 
at  4  p.m.  in  the  lounge  of  the  Y. 
WUNC-TV      ' 

Today's  schedule  for  WUNC-TV, 
the  University's '  educational  tele- 
vision station;  is  as  follows: 


6:29— Sign  On 
6:30— Yesterday's  World 
7 :00 — Delinquency 
7:30 — The  Elements 
8:00 — Jackson  Day  Dinner 
9:00— Sign   Off 


Seniors 

Advance  Information 

On  Career  Opportunities 

At  Procter  &  Gamble 


Advance  information  on  Marketing 
Management  opportunities  in  tha 
Procter  &  Gamble  Advertising  De 
partment  is  now  available.  Write 
H.H.  Wilson,  Jr.,  Supervisor  of 
Personnel,  Advertising  Daparh 
ment,  Procter  &  Gamble,  Cincin* 
nati,  Ohio.  Campus  interviews  in 
Placamant  Service  March  28. 


Informal  Photography 

(By  appointment  at  your  home) 

Wedding  Photo$ 

A  Specialty 

PRESS  PHOTO  SERVICE 

ItOLAND  GIDUZ 

Ofc. — News  Building, 

Main  St.,  Carrbora 


r  ( 

GO,  VAN,  GOGH! 


Once  upon  a  time,  when  the 
world  was  really  evil,  and  a 
thief  lurked  behind  every  bush, 
cautious  men  had  their  shir*^s 
painted  on!  The  reason  for  this 
is  explained  by  a  perceptive 
saying  of  those  da\'s: 

"Forsooth,  nothing  deters 
those  rap.^alUons  abovt  town. 

They'll  steal  anything  that 
isn't  butioyicd  down." 

Kougb  days  —  particularly 
for  the  shirt  business,  what 
with  painters  picking  up  all 
the  profits.  Until,  suddenly, 
an  idea  of  genius  appeared. 
The  button-down  shirt!  This 
shirt  was  actually  buttoned  on 
to  the  chest  of  the  wearer,  making 
it  absolutely  steal-proof! 

Today,  in  these  honest  times, 
we  still  feel  its  influence.  It  is 


the  true  ancestor  of  that  glori- 
ous style — the  shirt  with  the 
button  down  coUar!  Isn't  his- 
tory interesting? 

Van  Heusen — because  they 
know  so  much  about  the  but- 
ton-down —  has  done  more 
with  it  than  anybody  else. 
Take  our  new  line  called  the 
Van  Ivy,  for  instance.  Here 
are  button-downs  in  tortan 
checks  and  stsrapes.  Van  Ivya 
look  marvnelous  with  suits  and 
sport  coats,  and  worn  open  at 
the  neck  give  you  a  roguish 
look.  They  also  have  a  button 
on  the  bark  of  the  collar,  for 
authenticity's  sake.  See  them. 
$4.00   in   short  sleeve,   $5.00 
long  sleeves. 

Phillips-Jones  Corp.,  417 
Fifth  Ave.,  New  York  16,  N.  Y. 


WE   ARE  THE   EXCLUSIVE 


VAN  HEUSEN 


DEALER  IN  CHAPEL  HILL 


(Pj/<^/uce 


HAIR  GROOM 
TONIC 


IN    UNBREAKABLE 
PLASTIC! 

Grooms  your  hair  whife  it  treoK  your 
Koip.  Controls  loose-  dsndruff.   1.00 


Met  FOUR 


THl  DAILY  TAR  Hlfv 


SATURDAY,  MARCH  16,  1957 


Blue-White  Contest 
This  Afternoon  Ends 
Spring  Grid  Drills  hiere 


Queen  To  Be  Crowned  At  Half; 
Coaches  Of  Year  To  Be  Named 


By    BILL    KING 

.Mthough   lootball    A-qason    is    a 


Net  Coach 
Has  Big  Job 


Halftime  entertainment    will  be 

I  provided  by  the  crowning  of  the 

,         ,.  ,,    ^.        „,   .       .     ..    ,,  i  Blue-White   Queen,    who   will      be 

long  time  off,  there  11  be  football '    .  r    _  .  .     i       /^ 

..        .     .     ^  ^   J.  .  .    I  chosen  from  a  group  of  twelve  Ca- 

in the  air  m  Kenan  Stadium  this'      ,.  .  j    .u      »* 

^,      „      ,.       ,      .    ,,    rolma   coeds,    and   the    Monogram 
afternoon  as  the  Carolina  football  ^-i  k-      i,„         »  ^      r     -    .      ♦ 

,.  ■       ,      ^  ..  Clubs  choice  of  Carolina  s  top  two 

teams  climaxes  spring  football  prac-  ■„     .  „  ^,  _,, 

..  ...  coaches  of  the  year.  The  winners  ,,  u-        /       u       i 

tice   in  the  Monogram  Club's  an- i*..  ^     ,    »,I   •  .    son  after  coaching   (as  he  alway.s 

,  n,      ,,.i--  ...     this  year  are  Frank  McGuire  and    ...,  ^  i    io  i 

nual  Blue-White  game  at  2  o clock.  ^        „       ,  did)    a    very    iucccssful    181    sea- 

_,  u  \  ,      .     ..       ..  son.  Hi?  duties  have  been  turned 

The  probable  starting  lineups: 


Spring  has  come  to  Carolina 
and  with  it  comes  the  task  ef  shap- 
ing a  tenniii  team.  John  Kenfield 
who  has  coached  tennis  at  Caro- 
lina for  30  years  retired  last  sea- 


game 

Under  the  watchful  eye  of  Coach 

Jim  Tatum.  the  Tar  Heel  squad  will 

be   divided   into   equal    teams   and ,  pj," 
.  I  *  "J  ne 

the  Tar  Heel    mentor  and  student 

body  will  get  a  preview  of  things 

to  come  in  what,  according  to  Ta- 

tum.  promises  to  be  a  good  battle 

with  lots  of  competetion.  Last  year  \  rJ™- 

the  game  ended  34-33  in  favor  of 

the  Whites. 

Tatum  stated  earlier  In  the  week  DeCantis 
that  he  was  a  bit  displeased  with   ppo^e 
the  way.>-  things   have  been  going  j  Johnson 

during  spring   practice.  He  listed  

bad   weather  and  injuries   as  the  | 
chief   handicaps   and   added   that, 
"its  rather   hard  to   get  a  squad 
shaped  up  in  20  days." 

The  Tar   Heels  started  practice 


BLUE 


Russavage 
Stalling^' 
Swearingen 
Pell 


Jones 
Reed 


Pos 

LE 
LT 
LG 
C 
RG 
RT 
RE 
QB 
LHB 
RHB 
FB 


WHITE! 

Turlington ' 
McDade  | 
Wooldridge  | 
Neadj 
Lineberger! 
Redding 
Goldstein 
Hathaway 
Schuler 
Goff 
Shupin 


Caroline  Wins 

(Continued   jrttm    page    1) 


over  to  Ham  Strayhorn. 

Coach  Strayhorn  said  yester- 
day, -'We  have  our  job  cut  out  for 
us.  There  is  only  one  letterman 
returning  from  last  year's  squad. 
Four  of  the  eight  man  squad  grad- 
uated and  the  other  three  are  in- 
eligible because  of  scholastic  dif- 
ficulties. It  will  take  a  lot  of 
work  from  everyone  to  shape  up 
..  good  squad."' 

Letterman  Steven  Banke  will  be 
leading  the  way  this  season  for  the 
Tar  Heels  along  with  a  promising 
sophomore,  Jeff  Black.  Other  top 
performers  who  are  expected  to 
be  a  big  help  are  Frank  Livings- 
ton, Bobby  Jacobus.  Ray  New- 
some.  J.  B.  Walker.  Caine  Smith, 
Tom  Mclver.  and  Fritz  Van  Wink 


Baseballers  Open  Wednesday 


Twenty-six  Carolina  baseball 
players  will  leave  with  Coach  Wal- 
ler Rabb  and  his  staff  Monday  af- 
ternoon for  a  week's  swing  through 
Florida. 

The  club  will  travel  by  station 
wagon  and  will  pJay  four  games 
in  the  Sunshine  State,  opening 
with  the  University  of  Florida  at 
Gainesville,  then  moving  to  Win- 
ter Park,  Fla..  for  a  Thursday 
game  and  a  double-header  Friday. 

With  Rabb  will  be  assistant  Bill 
Wilhelm  and  freshman  coaches 
Wayne  White  and  Nelvin  Cooper. 


The    traveling 
10   pitchers   wl.j 


ttquad 
will    be 


includes 
battling 


(or  3tarting  turns  for  the  rest  of 
I  ho  .^<»ason.  Thr  trip  is  an  annual 
training  and  playing  jaunt  for 
UNC  teams. 


Howard  Johnson  Restaurant 

BPEAKFAST 

LUNCH 

DINNER 

SNACKS 
"Landmark  For  Hungry  Tarheels'' 


Curtis  Hathaway 


Sophomore  Curtis  Hathaway  (above)  will  quarterback  the  White 
team  in  the  annual  Blue-White  game  in  Kenan  Stadium  thit  after- 
noon. 

I 


■\ 


FiSHER 


Feb    11,   and    have    been    working  |  contact  from  start  to  finish.  Two 

out  regularly  on  Navy  Field.  Ta- !  Tar  Heels,     Joe     Quigg     and  Bob 

tum  had  a  few  words  of  praise  for !  Young,   lert   the   game   in   its   late  '  le 

the  work  of  the  freshman  line  dur- ,  stages  with  hip  injuries  sustained  '      The    freshman   season    does   not 

ing  the  off-season  drills  and  made  i  in  hard  falls.  Both  were  in  good    look  quite  as  dark.  Marshal  Hap- 

;he  remark  that  several  of  the  froo'h    shape    after    the    game,    and    will  ^  P^^.    state   junior   boys   champion. 


will  be  pushing  for  a  starting  birth. !  be  available  for  full  duty  against 

In  the  backiield,  a  sore  spot  with  I  Syracuse  tonight, 
the     Tatum  charges   last     season,  I      The     Griffins    surprised    every- 

about    the   only    certainty    is   that  |  body  by  employing  a  man  to  man  \  pects  along  with  Walker  Lockett. 
the  one-two  quarterback  combina- 1  defense  instead  of  the  anticipated  '  Jack   Macy   and   David   Myers   are 


and  Ben  Keys.  S.  C.  state  junior 
boys  champion  and  rated  second 
in  the  South,  are  top  frosh   pros- 


tion  of  last  season,  Dace  Reed  and 


zone.    Coach    McGuire    said    after    expected  to  make  up  the  strongest 


Curt   HathaA^ay    will    be    the    top    the  game  that  his  club's  play  was    freshman  squad  in  four  years 

men  at  the  signal-caUing  slot  again]  a  decided  improvement  ovtr  their  — | 

in    57.  Tatum  lists  right  halfback    showing   in   the  Yale  game  Tues-  [  «.    ii         a*  ! 

and  fullback  as  hi:y  weakest  posi-|(jay   night     in     Madison     Square!        Program  Sellers  Meet      ' 
tions,  and  both  appear  to  be  wide    Garden.  "We  were  better  than  we  j      Monogram        Club        Chairman 
^^^^-  were  against  Yale.  We  were  ner-  <  Charles    Boyette    announced    yes- 

"The  fans  may  not  see  a  profes-  yous  in  The  Garden  because  it  was  1  terday  that  all  Monogram  members 
Bional  display  tMs .  afternoon."  j^e  home  of  many  of  our  fellows,  !  who  are  going  to  sell  programs  for 
latum  remarked.. -but  they'll  see  ^u^  ^^  ],ad  ^q  j^^^^^^  tooiftht."  i  Uie  Blue-White  game  this  after- 
a  good  competetive  battle.  The  buys  Rosenbluth  agreed  with  his'  noon  must  meet  in  the  Monogram 
have  been  working  hard  in  prac-.  ^oach.  "Canisius  gave  us  a  much  Club  room  todav  at  12:30.  Accord- 
tice  and  I'm  real  happy  about  their  ;  rougher  game  than  Yale  did, '  ing  to  Boyette,  the  dress  for  the 
atutude.    I   thuik    everybody    will    ^^.g^  though  it  seemed  we  had  the    progra.m-sellers  will     be     ties     or 


be   playing  their    best    this    after- 
noon." he  concluded. 

Tickets  for  the  intra-squad  con- 
test are  going  for  fifty-cents  for 
students  and  one  dollar  for  other.-*. 
Proceeds  will  go  to  the  Monogram 
Club. 


game  all   the  way". 


sweaters. 


Beatty  Will 
Run  Tonight 
In  Chicago 


3  Swim  Marks  Fall 
In  Special  Trials 


Mantle  Blasts; 
But  Yanks  Lose 

ST.  PETERSBURG.  Fla.,  March 
15  — (AP) — Mickey  Mantle  unload- 
ed a  425-foot  homer  in  a  losing 
cause  today  as  the  New  York  Yan- 
kees lost  to  the  St.  Louis  Cards,  7-4. 
■Mantle's  blast  soared  over  the 
scoreboard  in  left  center.  He  was 
batting  lefthanded  against  rookie 
righthander  Tom  Cheney. 

The  triple  crown  winner's  first 
spring  home  run  came  in  with  a 
runner  aboard  and  put  the  Bomb- 
ers ahead  4-1  in  the  fifth  inning. 
•But  Tom  Byrne,  veteran  southpaw, 
was  hammered  for  five  runs  as-  10 
Cards  went  to  bat  in  the  sixth. 

Toothpick  Sam  Jones  started  for 
St  Louis.  He. gave  up  five  hits  in 
the  first  two  innings,  the  Yankees 
scoring  twice  in  the  second  frame. 
Johnny  Kucks  pitched  the  first  five 
innings  for  the  Yankees  and  was 
touched  for  eight  hit.v,  three  of 
them  by  rookie  shortstop  Ekldie 
Kasko. 


Bermuda 
Heaven 


Just  received  large  shipment 
of  men's  bermuda  length  ivy 
shorts — all  sizes — in  blue  or  tan 
baby  cords;  polished  cotton  in 
suntan,  olive,  or  black;  —  only 
$3.98. 

Over  1500  pairs  of  bermudas 
in  stock — see  the  Blue-White 
game  in  comfort  and  style 

MILTON'S  CLOTHING 
CUPBOARD 


he  sings  6 
wonderful  songs!/ 


\ 


1 

\ 
DEBBIE 

REYNOLDS 

wait  'til  you  see 
them  dance! 


BXJNOXuE  or  kJOY 


Co-Starring 


i\DOLPHE  MENJOU 

■  TOMMY  NOONAN  ■ 

«Wi  NITA  WLBOT  •  UNA  MERKEL  •  MELVILLE  COOPER 

BILL  GOODWIN  •  HOWARD  McNEAR 

^io4ii«*d  by  EDMUND  GRAINGER  ■  Screen  Play  by  NORMAN  KRASNA.      ^ 

ROtrOT  CARSON  end  ARTHUR  SHtEKMAN 

lary  ky  FELIX  JACKSON  ■  Dirtcttd  by  NORMAN  TAUROG 

Musi««l  Numbers  and  Dances  SUged  by  NICK  CASTLE 


Worr>'  About  Tomorrow.  Tomorrow" 

"I  Never  Felt  This  Way  Before" 

'"Lullaby  In  Blue"  ^ 

"All  About  Love" 

"Some  Day  ^oon" 

"Bundle  Of  Joy" 


Carolina's 
Jim    Beattv. 


Throe  new  swimming  records  The  final  record  breaker  of  the 
were  .set  in  special  time  trials  yes-  specially  sanctioned  trials  wa»  Dick 
terday  afternoon  in  Bowman  Gray .  p^^g^^  ^^  ^^^^^  ^j,^  ^^^^^^^^  j,is 
pool,  and  a  number  of  others  nar- '  ^.^^.  ^^  ^  ^^^  American  record  of 
rowly  missed  by  the  charges  o^  i;  14.2  by  McGuire  of  the  3rd -Arm  v 
WiUis  Casey  of  State  and  Ralph  .  •„  J954  Charlie  Kreppj.  All- 
great  AIl-Amencan  i  Casey  of  Carolina.  I  American  backstroker,  missed  in 
and    the    now-native'      Dave  Mclntyre  of  the  Wolfpack, ;  ^i^     ^id   for  new  American     and 


CAROLINA 

AMAZING 
STORY 
OF  THE 
GIKL  WHO 
LIVED 
THREE 
'  SEPARATE 
LIVES  I 


a/k 


^Chapel   Hillian   Laszlo  Tabori  will  j  current  holder  of  the  conference 
be  shooting  for  national  honors  to-  \  100  yard  freestyle  record,  swam  the 
night  in  the  Chicago  Daily  News  '  110  yard  freestyle  in  56.5,  break- 
Relays.  -  j^    jjy   Q^g   second    the   previous 
Beatty.  the  best  runner  in  Car- '  standard  of  57.5  by  Keith  Carter 
olina  history  will  be  out  to  avenge .  of  Purdue  in  1953. 
•a  recent  defeat  to  34-year-old  Hor-j     Paul  Wachendorfer,  star  of  thi:* 
^ace    Ashenfelter    in    the    two-mile   year's  Carolina  frosh.  flashed  200 
.event.   Neither  Beatty  nor  Ashen- j  yards   butterfly  in  2:15.2,  shatter- 
;felter  will  be  favored  in  the  event   ing  by  almost  seven  fuir seconds 
.but    both    should   be    strong    com- 'his  pool  record  of  2.22.1.  set  earl- 
petitors.    The    favorite    role    goes    ier  this  year.  In  addition,  he  un- 
to   Southern    California    ace    Max  ;  officially  bettered  the  existing  na- 
'^^^^-  j  tional  Collegiate   Freshman    time 
Tabori,  the   Hungarian   refugee,  |  by     2:16.4,  held   by     Brawner   of 
will  be  out  to  make  sport*writers '  Princeton, 
'eat  their  words."  Tabori  was  se- 
verly  criticized  because  he  did  not 
compete  in  the  Milwauke*  Journal , 
Games  last  Saturday,   despite  the  j 
fact  that  he  was  suffering   a   leg 
injury.  The  Hungarian   will  prob- 
ably  find   his  chief   nemesis   Ron 
Delaney    waiting    to    make    things 
unpleasant    for   him    in    the   one- 
mile  event. 


World  records  in  the  200  meter, 
300  yard,  and  220  yard  backstroke 
trial.  Other  narrow  mi&ses  were 
recorded  by  Fadgen  In  the  220  and 
200  meter  breaststroke.  Bill  Roth 
in  an  attempt  on  his  pool  50  yard 
freestyle  record,  and  Frank  Naus-s 
of  State  in  the  500  yard  freestyle. 


You 

had 
it  so 
good 
and 
funny! 


Softball  Clinic  To  Be  Held 

The  intramural  department  has 
announced  that  a  softball  clinic 
will  b«  held  Monday  and  Tuesday 
afffernoon  at  4  o'clock.  Anyone  in- 
terested in  Softball  officiating  is 
urged  to  cpme  to  room  301  Wool- 
len. Play  begins  March  25th. 


HOW  ABOUT  IT  MAN? 
DIG  THIS 

Jazz  at  Turnages 

with 

DICK  GABLE'S  ALL-STARS 
2  V.^.  Saturday  Beer  Served 


COLOR  by  01  LUXf 

INbmaScopE 

OANM-CINfiElimS-OAVIONIVEN 


LATE  SHOW  TONIGHT 

REGULAR  S»?OWING 

SUN.  -  MON.  -  TUE. 


Cardina 


mm 

CO. ST  AMINO 

RjchardJBOONE 

Joan  BLONDELL 
Hugo  HAAS 


The  Plussage 
of  Old  Books 

A  part  of  the  charm  of  collecting 
old  books  is  the  extra  bits  they 
accumulate  through  the  years — 
marginal  notes,  presentation  in- 
scriptions, sparks  of  persistent  hu- 
nMnity  in  faded  ink. 
We've  had  books  on  our  shelves 
whose  whole  history  of  ownership 
could  be  traced  in  a  series  of  fad- 
ed inscriptions  going  back  to  the 
1820's. 

A  book  of  poetry  we  bought  in  not 
long  age  was  inscribed  to  "Grace, 
from  one  who  will  love  her  for- 
ever". As  we  held  the  book  in  our 
hand,  it  seemed  to  us  that  for  a 
moment  the  charming  Grace  did 
triumph  over  the  universal  dust. 
Just  at  the  moment,  we  have  on 
our  shelves  the  very  copy  of  Help- 
er's "The  Impending  Crisis"  which 
his  nephew  "took  from  my  fathers 
sh«lf"  to  give  to  #  friend. 
Come  in  for  a  lazy  half  hour  in 
our  old  book  section  when  you 
have  time.  We  think  you,  too,  will 
find  delight  in  the  small  extra 
treasures  of  the  old  book  world! 

The  Intimate 
Bookshop 


WHAT  IS  A  NAIL-STREWN  CROSSROADS? 


DAN  lopii.  Puncture 

«YAN   PRCfARATONY  COLL.  Juncturg 


TRY  THIS:  put  a  pack  of  Luckies  on  a  pedestal— under  glass. 
Observe  closely  for  several  days.  What,  happens?  Not  a 
thing.  You've  just  learned  the  hard  way  that  an  unsmoked 
Lucky  is  simply  Waste  Taste!  Light  it,  and  it's  simply 
wonderful.  You  see,  a  Lucky  is  made  better  to  taste  better. 
It's  packed  end  to  end  with  fine  tobacco  .  .  . 
mild,  good-tasting  tobacco  that's  TOASTED 
to  taste  even  better.  Don't  just  wait  around- 
light  up  a  Lucky.  You'll  say  it's  the  best- 
tasting  cigarette  you  ever  smoked! 


CANDKA  ■cRNSTEiN.         PUuh  Thnuh 

■OS. LA, 


WHAT  IS  AN  AMBULANCE  ATTENDANT  t 


IRINE  ALLEN, 
•RADLEY 


Stretcher  Fetcher 


DONT  JUST  STAND  THERE  .  . 


STICKLE! 


&- 


205  E.  Franklin  St. 

CHAPEL   HILL 

Open  Till  10  P.  ^. 


WHAT  IS  AN  ABSENT-MINDED  MOTORIST  I 


OAVIO  BARTON. 
U    OF  ILLIHOIS 


Bumper  Thumper 


MAKES25  "^ 

Sticklers  are  simple  riddle.s  with 
two-word  rhyming  answers.  Roth 
words  must  have  the  .same  number 
of  syllables.  (No  drawings,  please!) 
We'll  shell  out  $25  for  all  we  us(j— 
and  for  hundreds  that  never  see 
print.  So  send  stacks  of  "em  with 
your  name,  address,  college  and 
class  to  Happy-Joe-Lucky,  Box 
67A,  Mount  Vernon,  N.  Y. 


WHAT  IS  A  PfNT-SlZEO  GHOST! 


ROSE  OE  woLr.        Bantam  Phantom 


WHAT  IS  A  RADIO  THAT  RUNS  AU  NICMT* 


EMORY  OUNTON. 
CEOR6IA  TECH. 


Tirele,,  Wireteu 


CIGARETTES 


Luckies 
Taste  Better 


-■.— -1 


WHAT 

MAKES  SHEEP 

RUNI 

^rCW 

& 

« 

r 

i 

& 

%^ 

JAMES  TAHAHCT. 

^        SkearFear     1 

lOHA 

> 

"irS  TOASTED"   TO  TASTE   BETTER  .  .  .  CLEANER,    FRESHER,  SMOOTHER! 


AMKKICA'S    LZAOINQ    MAN  Ur  ACTUKKR    OP    CIQAItBTTSt 


V  M  C  LIBRARY 
SERIALS   DEPT. 
CHAPEL  HILL,    N.    C. 
8-31-49 


WEATHER 

P«ir  Sunday,  hig>i  t*mpM-«furM 
g*n«rally  in  the  60s. 


3r()  c  Daily 


^Tar  Heel 


POLITICS 

^      Wh*wl    What    a    w—k\    Sm    9li« 


r*vit>w  en 


2. 


VOL.  LVII,  NO.   116 


Complete  UPi  Wire  Strviee 


CHAPEL   HILL,  NORTH  CAROLINA,  SUNDAY,  MARCH   17,    1957 


Ofiicet   in  Graham   Memorial 


FOUR  PAGES  THIS  IS5UE 


Kearns,  Rosy  Pace  Tar  Heels  To  Eastern  Championship 


Robert  Frost  Will 
Give  Lecture  Here 


By  CURTIS  CROTTY  i 

Robert  Frost,  the  author  ot 
such  poems  as  "Mending  Wall." 
•  The  Road  Not  Taken."  and  "Stop- 
ping by  Woods  on  a  Snowy  Even- 
ing" will  be  in  Chapel  Hill  to- 
morrow. He  is  to  give  a  lecture 
reading  in  Hill  Hall  at  8:30  p.m. 

A  sentence  from  a  review  of  a 
portrait  of  Robert  Frost  by  Sid- 
ney Cox  may  serve  as  an  intro- 
duction for  Frosts  lecture-read- 
ing. 

"The  portrait's  content  is  quo- 
tations, paraphrases,  anecdotes, 
and  praise:  its  form  is  a  guided 
tour,  a  trudging  from  beauty  to 
bc?iuiy.*'  , 

Frost  says,  "Lyrics  ought  to  be 
dramatic.  A  poem  ought  to  be 
something  going  on."  Drama  is 
visible  not  only  in  the  poems,  but 
also  in  the  life  of  Robert  Frost. 

Frost,  a  tru  y  American  poet, 
was  born  in  California  in  1874. 
Upon  the  death  of  his  father. 
Fro5t  moved  to  New  England,  the 
original  home  of  his  Scotch-E^ig- 
lish  ancestors. 

Mrs.    Frost    then    taught    school 
and  read  to  her  son.  By  the  tim? 
he    was    14.    Robert    relished    the 
beaaty    and    the    meaning    in    the 
works  of  Poe  and     of     Emerson. ' 
When    be    was    19   his    first    "pro- 
fessional" poem  was  published   in 
a  magaaUie  of  national  circulation. 
Thrye    years    after    his    gradua- 
tion trogn  high  scliooL  Vr*at-4Kuia-- 
rierf  (he  girl  who  had  been  his  co- 
valedictorian.  Elinor  Miriam  White. 
The   nest  15  years  were  uncer- 
tain years  for  Robert  Frost.  He  at- 
tended   Harvard    and     Dartmouth 
for  a  tinfMi;  he  reported  for  a  town 
newspaper:    he    farmed     and     he 
tnught.  But  all     of     his     thoughts 
were   about   writing  poetr>-. 

With  a  little  money  he  saved, 
he  moved  his  family  from  New 
Hampshire  to  rural  Buckingham- 
shire. England. 

When  his  first  volume.  .\  Boy's 
Will,  appeared.  Frost  v-as  38.  He 
had  had  to  wait  more  than  20  years 
from  the  time  his  first  poem  was 
published  until  publication  of  his 
first  book. 

English    reviewers    were    capti- 


Panel  To  Speak 
On  Middle  East 

A  panel  discussion  on  the  pres- 
ent .Middle  East  crisis  will  be  spon- 
sored by  Phi  Alpha  Thcta.  nation- 
al honorary  history  fraternity,  in 
the  Library  Assembly  Room.  Tues- 
day at  8  p.m. 

Dr.  Shepard  Jones  of  the  Polit- 
ical Science  Dept.,  Dr.  James  L. 
nodfrey  of  the  History  Dept..  and 
tw  •  Egvptian  students  arc  on  the 
panel.  The  public  has  been  in- 
vited   to   attend. 


vated  with  Frost's  simplicity  and 
observations.  And  they  were  even 
more  captivated  by  .North  of  Bos- 
ton.  Fr;st's  second   publication. 

One  reviewer  said.  "Mr.  Frost 
has  turned. the  living  speech  of 
men  and  women  into  poetry."  An- 
oth?r  praised  Frost's  poems  fo"" 
th?ir  "downright  knowledge,  theirift 
vivid  observatfons.  and  their  rich 
enjoyment  of  all  kinds  of  practi- 
cal life." 

When  Frost  returned  to  Ameri- 
ca in  1915.  he  was  hailed  as  the 
leader  of  "the  new  era  in  Ameri- 
can poetry. '  Recent  works  of  Frost 
have  been  two  plays,  or  masques. 
with   Biblical   settings. 

The    American    poet    is   a    four- 
time  wfnlli^  i»f  «be  PiUUzer  FtiMm*, 
/or  th»  best-  book  of -poehry  of  the 

year:  in  1924.  for  New  Hampshire; 
in  1931,  t9T  Collected  Poems,  in 
1937.  for  A  Further  Raoge:  and  in 
1943.  for  A  Witness  Tree.  He  has 
been  awarded  honorary  degrees  by 
Columbia.  Dartmouth.  Yale.  Har- 
vard, and  other  schools,  and  is  one 
of  the  few  authors  to  receive  the 
Gold  Medal  from  the  National  In- 
stitute of  Arts  and  Letters.  i 


Mich.  State  Next  As 
UNC  Wins,  67-58 

By  RALPH  BERNSTEIN 

PHIL.\l)KI.PHI.\-(.\P)-.\  magiVinccm  floor  game  by 
little  Toniuiy  Reams,  "quarterback"  of  mighty  North  Caro- 
lina's ba.skeiball  offense.  led  tlie  unbeaten  Tar  Heels  to  a 
()7-r,8  victory  over  Syracuse  tonight  and  an  all-time  one 
.season  collegiate  record  of  -^o  straight  victories. 

.\s  Kastevn  regional  champions  of  the  annua!  \t].\.\ 
tournament,  the  .\tlanti(  (loach  (.onfevcnce  team  now  travels 

♦to  Kansas  City  for   the   semi-final 

^  -  I       ^^    •    •     •  round  March  22. 

Nash  Criticizes  { 
Home,  Foreign ! 
School  Systems! 

"The  University:  Ivory  Tower. 
Filling  Station  or  Prophet."  was 
the  title  of  Dr.  Arnold  Nash's  talk 
before  the  Graduate  Club  here  Tar  Heels  meet  Michigan  State's 
Friday  in  which  he  critically  ana-  Spartans,  winners  of  the  Midwest 
lyzed  and  contrasted  the  Euro-  Regionals  by  beating  Kentucky. 
p^an     and     American     University  80-68,  and  also  Big  Ten  champions. 


After  Canisius  defeated  Lafay- 
ette 82-76  in  the  consolation  game 
of  this  NCAA  touney  doublebead- 
er.  North  Carolina's  tall  tossers 
crushed  S.\Tacuse  to  eclipse  the 
record  of  29  straight  victories  es- 
tablished last  year  by  San  Fran- 
cisco's   national    champions. 

Coach    Frank   McGuire's  rugged 


New  YMCA  Officers 


Th«  new  officers  for  the  YMCA  i>re:  (seated,  left  to  right)  Kelly 
Wallace,  Secretary;  Stewart  Coison,  President;  Joe  Phillips,  Vice- 
President.  Second  row  standing  (left  to  right)  are:  Larkin  Kirkman, 

^  :.:;j-    : -----^ 1 — — -    

BlGGgS^Ml^NORARY  EVENT: 


Membership    Chairman; 
Rick    Frank,  Treasurer. 


Randy    Shelton,     Program    Chairman;     and 


.systems.  ' 

In  his  address.  Dr.  Nash,  of  the 
University  Department  of  Relig- 
ion, developed  three  possible  con- 
cepts of  thv^^  University  and  its 
purposes.  Dr.  Nash  directed  his  re- 
marks to  defining  the  purposes  and 
functions  of  the  modern  universi- 
ty. 

Headlining  the  '"Ivory  Tower" 
theory  which  he  characterized  as 
the  dominant  one  found  in  British 
and  continental  universities.  Dr. 
Nash  described  it  as  one  which 
(See  NASH,  Page  3) 


Tapping  For  Golden  Fleece  And 
Valkyrie  Sing  Set  For  April  8 


Bass  Defines  Sf'andl 
On    Ivory  Towerism' 


On  March  24.  1950.  the  U.  S. 
Senate  adopted  a  resolution  hon- 
oring Robert  Frost  on  his  75th 
birthday.  A  citation  honoring  him 
said  that  his  poems  have  helped 
to  guide  American  thought  with 
humor  and  wisdom.,  setting  forth 
to  our  minds  a  reliable  represen- 
tation of  ourselves  and  of  all  men." 


Concert  Band  Presents 
Spring  Concert  Tuesday 


The  Carolina  Concert  Band  will 
present  its  annual  spring  concert 
here  Tuesday  under  the  baton  of 
Director  Herbert   Fred. 

The  concert.  11th  in  this  year's 
Tuesday  Evening  Series,  will  be 
held  in  Hill  Music  Hall  at  8  p.m. 

One  English,  one  Bohemian,  one 
Russian,  one  Italian,  one  French 
and  six  American  composers  are 
represented  on  the  program  which 
will  range  from  Howard  Hanson's 
"N^jrdic"  Symphony  to  Vincent 
Persichetti's   ''Pageant. " 

The  soloist  for  the  concert  will 
be  Eddie  Bass,  president  of  the 
University  Band  and  a  junior  mus- 
ic major,  who  will  play  "Ode  for 
Trumpet"  by  Alfred  Reed.  Bass  is 
a  student  of  Calvin  Hubert,  as- 
.sistant  director  of  bands. 

"Danse  Persane"  by  Guiraud, 
which    will    be    pjayed    from    the 


rectors   National   Assn. 
I      One     of     Fred's     compositions. 
"Spaixico"   will   be ''performed    at 
the  concert.  i 

His  latest  publication  for  band 
is  a  novelty  arrangement  of  'Pop! 
Goes  the  Weasel."  which  was  re- 
leased last  month  by  a  New  York 
publishing   firm. 

Among  other  numbers  on  the 
concert  program  will  be  Anthony 
Donates'  "The  Hidden  Fortress." : 
"Burlesque"  by  Shostakovich,  a.id . 
Polka  and  Fugue  from  Weinberg- j 
er's  "Schwanda,   the   Bagpiper."      | 


The  biggest  honory  event  of  the 
Carolina  year  will  be  held  .April 
8  when  the  Order  of  the  Golden 
Fleece  holds  its  annual  tapping, 
followed  by  the  Valkyrie  Sing. 

The  Fleece  is  Cairolinas  highest 
honorary  organization  for  men. 
The  Valkyries,  highest  coed  hon- 
orary, annually  sponsors  a  sing 
in  connection  with  the  Fleece  tap- 
ping. 

The  event  this  year  will  be  held 
in  Memorial  Hall  at  7:30  p.m. 
Doors  will  be  locked  at  that  time, 
the  hall  will  be  darkened  and 
Wagnerian  music  and  spotlights 
will  accompany  two  hooded  mon- 
sters as  they  search  for  tapets 
in  the  audience. 

The  Fleece  yearly  taps  an  un- 
specified number  of  men  from  all 
phases  of  Carolina   life. 

The  Valkyrie  Sing  is  a  singing 
competition  among  various  groups 
on  the  campus  —  dormitory,  fra- 
ternity, sorority  and  special 
groups. 

Miss  Joy  Earp,  chairnian  of  the 


sing,  said  yesterday  "The  sing  is 
designed  to  serve  as  a  unifying 
force  among  and  between  student 
groups,  as  well  as  a  source  of 
much   enjoyment." 

First  prize  in  the  competition 
will  go  to  the  group  judged  be.sl 
in  singing  ability  and  or  origi- 
nality in  composition,  staging  and 
costuming.  The  first  category 
counts  for  90  percent  of  the  final 
judging.   Miss  Earp  said. 

Five  cups  will  be  awarded  to 
winning  groups  in  fraternity,  so- 
rority, men's  and  women's  dorm- 
itories and  special  divisions.  En- 
try fees  will  be  $6.  and  groups 
may  spend  only  $10  on  costumes. 

The  Valkyries'  schedule  calls 
for  one  rehearsal  and  one  dress 
rehearsal  before  .\pril  8.  .\  mini- 
mum of  eight  persons  may  p<>r- 
form  in  an  act. 

.Mi.ss  Earp  called  the  tapping  and 
sing  'two  annual  events  of  great 
campus    significance." 

She  invited  groups  interested  in 
participating  in  the  sing  to  contact 


her  at  309  Can- 
next    Tuesday. 


Dormitorv  before 


Lambda  Chi's 
Hold  Conclave 
Meeting  Here 

Deiegate.s  from  10  chapters  of 
Lambda  Chi  Alpha  fraternity  are 
meeting  here  this  weekend  for 
The  Colonial  Conclave.  The  con- 
clave is  one  of  15  throughout  the 
world. 

"The  .Man  and  Manpower"  has 
been  the  theme  of  the  conclave 
pan?l   discussions. 

The  topics  associated  with  the 
theme  were:  "Man  as  a  Rushee:" 
"Man  as  a  Pledge;"  "Man  as  an 
.\ctive:"  "Man  as  an  .\lumnus." 
according  to  Bob  Harrington,  pres- 
ident of  the  general  chairman  of 
the  conclave. 

The  Friday  schedule  included  a 

(See  LAMBDA  CHIS.  Page  3) 


Neil  Bass,  independent  candi- 
date for  editor  of  The  Daily  Tar 
Heel,  spoke  out  yesterday  on 
"ivory  towerism"  (DTH  editorial. 
.Mar.  15)  and  expanded  on  his 
earlier   platform  statements,  j 

Bass  said: 

"In  reference  to  an  editorial  in 
Friday's  "baily  Tar  Heel  on  "ivory '. 
towerism,"    I    feel    compelled    to 


make   myself  clear. 

"I  realize  the  necessity  to  steer 
away  from  so-called  madding 
crowd  at  times  to  analyze  trends 
objectively;  but  what  I  shall  al- 
ways unalterably  oppose  is  a 
"stand-offish"  editorial  policy 
which  tends  to  become  overb' 
critical  because  it  actually  becomes 

(See  BASS  DEFINES,  Page  3) 


in  one  of  next  Friday's  semifinal 
games   at   Kansas   City. 

While  All-American  Lennie  Ros 
enbluth  turned  in  his  usual  sharp- 
shooting  performance  with  23 
points,  it  was  Kearns.  a  5-11  jun- 
ior from  Bergenfield.  N.  J.,  who 
lead  the  'rebels"  to  a  37-28  first 
half  edge,  and  whoso  driving  play 
completely  befuddled  a  speedy 
Syracuse  quintet. 

Kearas  scored  22  points,  includ- 
ing  14  for  19  from  the  foul  line, 
but   it   was  his  keen   play-making. 
'  iancy  dribbling  and  precision  p»ss- 
■  ing.  which  sparked  the  Tar  Heels 
'  throughout. 

North  Carolina  built  a  nrne 
;  point  half-time  edge  as  a  result 
'  of  marked  superiority  on  the  foal 
line.  The  Tar  Heels  dropped  in  17 
of  21  foul  tosses  in  the  first  20 
minutes,  while  Syraci.so.  which 
outscored  the  winner  12-10  from 
the  field,  managed  only  four  for  15 
from   the   15-foot  line. 

Actually,  Syracuse  collected  sev- 
sorbed  its  seventh  defeat     in     24 

(See  BASKETBALL,  Page  4) 


THE   BOX 


1 


Selma  Honors  Ay  cock; 
Hodges,  Friday  Speak 

By  Clarke  JONES  \  has  been  and  will  be  teaching  us  to 

.      be   better    North   Carolinians. "    he 
Special  To  The  Daily  Tar  Heel   j      -^ 


Arab  Killing 
Blamed  On  UN 


GAZA— (AP)— A  gunshot  killed 
an  Arab  today  and  the  U.N.  Emer- 
orijjinal  French  band  arrangement,  gency  Force  (UNEF)  said  one  of 
with  parts  to  complete  the  Ameri- 


can   instrumentation    having    been ' 
added  by  Fred,  will  be  performed  : 
for    the    first    time    in    this    area 
Tuesday  evening.  ] 

.Nationally  known  as  a  conduct-  j 
or.  composer  and  arranger,  Fred 
is  in  his  first  year  as  Director  of , 
Bands.  Prior  to  coming  to  Caro-l- 
lina,  he  taught  at  Ball  State  Teach-  • 
ers  College  in  Indiana,  at  Evans-  j 
ton.  111.  Township  High  School, 
and  at  the  University  of  Missoori. } 
He  «-as  director  and  commanding  j 
officer  of  the  e62nd  AAF  Band' 
during  World  War  II.  I 

Last  December  at  the   national ' 
convention    in   Chicago,     he     was 
elected  chairman  of  the  Southern  i 
Division   of   the   College   Band   Di- 1 


its  Scandinavian  soldiers  had  fir 
ed  in  his  direction.  Fresh  tension 
threatened  between  Gazans  and 
the  little  international  army. 

The  bullet  fatally  wounded  Is- 
mail Yacoub  Bakka  in  a  street 
about  300  yards  from  UNEF  Head- 
quarters. He  was  shot  in  the  neck. 

'"If  an  investigation  shows  shots 
fired  by  the  guard  caused  the 
death  of  Ismail  Yacoub  Bakka.'' 
the  UNEF  announced,  "approp- 
riate legal  action  will  be  taken." 

Egyptian  military  police  serving 
under  the  new  governor,  Maj. 
Gen.  Mohamed  Hassan  Abdel  Lat- 
if.  said  witnesses  told  them  the 
shot  came  from  the  top  of  the 
headquarters,  where  armed  guards 
are   posted. 


SELMA— William  B.  Aycock. 
UNCs  new  chancellor.  Friday 
night  received  special  tribute  here 
from  many  of  his  longtime  friends. 
.And  he  was  highly  pleased  to  be 
back  home  again. 

Approximately  300  persons  at- 
tended an  informal  banquet  and 
program  given  him  by  citizens  of 
Selma  in  the  school  lunchroom. 

The  central  theme  of  the  pro- 
gram was  "Aycock  —  A  Life  of 
Service"  in  which  several  local 
residents  and*  invited  guests  brief- 
ly related,  step  by  step,  several 
aspects  of  his  life. 

Included  on  the  program  were 
Gov.  Luther  Hodges  j.nd  Consoli- 
dated University  President  Will- 
iam C.  Friday.  It  was  Selmas 
.show,  however. 

Talmage  B.  Corbett  of  Selma 
ii'cailcd  .\ycocks  early  days  when 
the  two  of  them  played  on  the 
same  ba.seball  team.  Mrs.  Ralph 
Bunn  of  Zebulon,  who  was  grad- 
uated with  .Aycock  in  the  class  of 
1932.  told  of  a  home  economics 
course  he  took  while  in  high 
school. 

Dr.  E.  N.  Booker.  Selma.  told 
how  .\ycock  helped  the  town  get 
a  gymnasium.  E.  G.  Hobbs.  wbo 
presented  .\ycock  with  a  Silver 
Star  war  medal,  said  '"No  man  ever 
had  a  more  brilliant  military  ca- 
reer. " 

Terrv  Sanford.   Favetteville,  re- 


Gov.  Hodges,  speaking  of  .Ay- 
cock's  "dedication  to  edu\ition." 
said  "We  can  expect  much  from 
Bill  Aycock  because  he  has  so 
much  to  give." 

An  open  house  at  the  home  of 
-Aycock's  mother.  Mrs.  Myrtle  B. 
Aycock,    followed    the   banquet. 


UNC 

Roseabluth 
Brennan  f 
Lotz  c 
Quigg  c 
Kearns  g 
Cunningham 

Totals 
SYRACUSE 
Breland  f 
Snyder  f 
Cincebox  f 
Clark  c 
Cohen  g 
.'Vlbanese  g 
Loudis  g" 
Youmans  g 
Schmelzer  g 

Total* 

North  Carolina 

Syracuse 


F 
7-11 
7-9 
1-2 
4-4 
14-19 
0-0 


17  33-45 


F 

0-2 
0-2 
2-6 
1-2 
7-11 
0-0 
0-0 
0-0 
0-0 


24   10-23 
37 
28 


P 

2 

4 

0 

4 

3 

3 

16 

P 

5 

4 

5 

5 

3 

0 

3 

0 
«> 

27 
30  - 


T 

23 

13 

1 

6 

22 

2 

67 

1 

0 

10 

2 

11 

25 

2 

6 

0 

2 

58 

67 


29  —  58 


Robert  B.  House: 


Chancellor's  Eye  View 


A  "Chancellor's  Eye  View"  of 
the  University  of  .North  Carolina 
was  issued  by  Chancellor  Robert 
B.  House  Tuesday  in  a  special  re- 
port to  the  President  and  trustees 
of   the   Consolidated   University. 

The  report  noted  certain  "falla- 
cies" of  viewpoint  often  heard 
about  the  University.  House  an- 
swered with  his  own  opinions. 

To  those  who  declare  that  the 
University  "is  known  and  respect- 
ed outside  the  state."  but  is  not 
as  highly  regarded  inside  the 
state.  Hou.se  said  "1  doubt  that  it 
is  so.  In  my  trips  throughout  the 
state,  in  my  conversations  with 
people  .in  the  editorials  that  I  read 
in  the  newspapers  and  in  the  avid 
interest  I  find  displayed  by  North 
Carolinians  everywhere,  I  am  con- 
vinced   that      the      University     at 


Joan  Willsey  Is  Blue-White  Queen 


Joan  Willsty,  representative  of  Carr  dormitory,  was  crowned  Queen  of  the  12th  Annual  BluO' 
White  football  game  here  yesterday  befote  a  large  crowd.  John  Bilich,  president  of  the  Monpgram 
Club,  is  shown  giving  Miss  Willsey  the  trophy.  The  Queen  was  chosen  from  candidates  of  all  the  wo- 
m9n's   dornu  and   sororities   on   campus.  (Photo  by  Norman  Kantor) 


Chapel  Hill  Ls  close  to  the  hearts 
lated  some  of  Aycock's  experiences !  and  minds  of  our  people." 
during  his  days  in  the  UNC  Law  I      "We  welcome  scrutiny  and  crit- 
School.  Icism. "  said  the  Chancellor,  "and 

President  Friday,  who  recently ,  will  be  better  able  to  serve  the 
appointed  .Aycock  as  chancellor,  state,  to  teach  and  to  perform  re- 
praised   his   teaching   ability.    "He .  search   if   we   continue    to  'be    re- 


ceptive to  examination  and  crit- 
icism." 

Having  listed  honors  and  na- 
tional and  world  distinctions  that 
have  eome  to  members  of  the  isc- 
uky  at  Chapel  HilJ.  he  cited  the 
rank  that  certain  departments  of 
the  university  have  attained  in  the 
academic  world.  "Extra  services.  " 
such  as  the  Institute  of  Govern- 
ment, the  Health  Center.  UNC 
Extension  Division,  and  Institute 
for  Research  in  Social  Science 
are  all  features  of  the  University. 

rtou.se  said  that  the  Uni\ersity 
i.s  neither  "safe  nor  slipping."  He 
said  that  there  was  a  need  for 
faculty  salaries  te  be  raised  and 
for  support  of  the  Iibrar>  and  re- 
search to  ihaintain  high  ranking  of 
the  University. 

House  hailed  the  appointment 
of  Profegsor  William  'B.  .Aycock 
as  Chancellor  at  Chapel  Hill  be- 
ginning July  I.  "By  training,  ex- 
perience and  aptitude  William  B. 
Aycock  is  a  scholar  and  admini- 
strator who  will  bring  energy  and 
vision  to  the  fask. " 


PAoi  rwo 


THI  t>AltY  TAft  HiiL 


SUNDAY,  MAften  17,  1*57 


SUNDAY, 


REVIEW: 

CAMPUS 

STATE 

WORLD 


Two  Candiddtes 
Aren't  Different 

Too  often  in  pdiitical  campaigns,  as  the  heat  of  the  contest 
l)fars  more  and  more  pressure  on  the  opposing  camps  and  their  sup- 
porters, focus  is  brought  to  bear  on  thfe  graver  aspects  of  the  con- 
test, the  di.-jimilar  attitudes  ^of  the  candidates. 

This  focus,  however,  is  often  not  representative  of  the  true 
.situation  and  conditions,  as  investigation  in  to  the  backgrounds  and 
experiences   of  the  candidates  almost   invariably   reveals. 

Current   presidential    candidates    Sonny    Evans    (Student    Party) 
and  Bill  Baum  (University  Party) 
.vrve    as    excellent    examples    of 
the  truth  of  this  approach. 

Hew  m«ny  people  know,  for 
instance,  that  both  were  con- 
spirators  in   an   "infamous'*  at- 

tentpt  to  initiate  a  third   party 

coup  d'etat  at  the   Boys'   State 

Convention  here  in  1953? 
Ask  either  of  them  and  smiles 
will  come  to  their  faces  as  they 
reflect  -iipon  those  experiences. 
They'll  tell  you  that  their  third 
party — regaled  under  the  flowing 
banners  of  the  Confederate 
Party —  came  within  23  votes  of 
usurping  power  from  the  existing 

Federalist.,'  and  Nationalists,  and   • 

that  they  only  lost  because  these 

two  parties  banded  together  in  a 

last-minute  effort  to  beat  them. 
Theyil  smile  in  remembrance, 

chuckle   from   time   to   time   and 

leave  you  with   the   feeling   that 

this  was  one  of  ih^  greatest  ex- 
periences of  their  lives. 

But  the  parallel  is  not  merely 

one  of  a.ssociation  .  and     contact 

between  Evans  and   Baum.  Their 

similarities     .-.retch'     into     their 

backgrounds    prior   to    and   after 

entering  UNC.  Their  differences 

are  wllei-ted   in   the   differences 

of    lhe:r    personalities    and    out- 
look?. Iheir  aspirations  and  their 

pei>oiia!    interests. 
WJlJam  O.  Baum  was  born  and 

ratsed   in  Eiiza^^i^  City.   He  at- 
tended     Central      High      School 

then,  where  his  activities  spread 

from    editorJiip    of    the   school 

paper  and  presidency  of  his  class 

for  three  years  to  the  presidency 

of  the  student  body. 

He  attended  the  Boys'  State 
Convention  here  in  1953  and 
his  participation  ranged  from 
speaker  of  the  House  of  Rep- 
resentatives to  candidacy  for 
governor  of  the  Confederate 
Party. 
Eli  N.  Evans  is  a  Durham  pio- 

duct.    An    attendant    of    Durham 

High    School,   he   too   was    active 

in  schjol  and   political   functions 

which   brought  him  to  the  preji- 

dency   of  the   student   body   and 

an  award  as  the  outstanding  sen- 
ior  in  his  last  year. 

In  1953  he  came  to  Chapel  Hill 

for  the   Boys'   Stale   Convention. 

He    was    Boys"     State    oratorical 

champion   and   ran  for  Lt.   Gjv- 

ernor  under  the  third  party  "con- 

federatiop"  platform.    . 

Sonny  Evans  entered  UNC  with 
the  freshman  class  of  1954.  "Al 
though  Im  from  Durham,"  he'll 
tell  you,  'I  knew  Chapel  Hill  had 
the  better  school.  Besides,  niy 
father  graduated  from  UNC  in 
1928." 

In  his  freshman  year,  Svan=? 
was  elected  to  the  presidency  of 
the  freshman  class.  And,  in  the 
spring  of  '55,  he  was  appointed  to 
the  Men's  Honor  Council  as  well 
as  representative  to  the  Student 
Council  Court  of  Appeals. 

As  a  sophomore  in  the  spring 
of  '96,  Evans  ran  for  the  vice- 
pre.ldency  of  the  student  body, 
fte  was  subsequently  elected  and 
became  the  first  sophomore  ever 
to  fill  the  position.  In  addition  to 
his  vice-presidential  post,  he  has 
at  various  times  since  then  been 


The  Stage  Is  Set,  And  Politics  Start 


BAUM  &   EVANS 

. . .  neck   &   lu-ck 

a  member  of  the  Consolidc.ted 
University  student  council  and 
the  student  Chancellor  Selection 
Committee. 

In  the  spring  of  '56  he  was 
initiated  in  the  Order  of  the 
Grail,  and  expects  this  spring 
to  be  initiated  into  Phi  Beta 
Kapa. 

Bill  Baum  also  entered  the  Uni- 
versity in  the  spring  of  1954.  llo 
came  here  under  the  self-help 
scholarship  program  and  at  pre- 
sent works  ill  the  Library  Docu- 
ments Dept.  * 

•  When  I  first  came'  to  Chapel 
Hill,  I  was  scared,"  he  will  lell 
you.  "I  wa.,'  scared  to  the  point 
of  shakes,  but  on  my  way  from 
the  bus  station  to  the  campus 
that  first  day,  a  cab-driver  told 
me  something  I'll  always  remem- 
ber. He  ^'aid  Chapel  Hill  is  a  good 
town  and  once  you  stay  here  and 
get  to  know  it,  you  never  want  to 
leave.  I  know  that  now.  And  U^'C 
is  the  greatest  school  in  the 
South." 

As  a  freshman,  after  he  got 
over  those  initial  "freshman 
jitters,  "  Baum  became  a  mem- 
ber of  the  Student  Legislature, 
was  appointed  sargeant-at-arms 
of  the  University  Party,  served 
en  the  orientation  committee 
and  led  the  Rules  Committee 
of   legislature  as  its  chairman. 

In  1355,  as  a  sophomore,  Baums 
participation  in  student  politics 
was  relegated  to  active  interest 
only.  He  instead  devoted  hia-  time 
to  the  N.  C.  Conference  of  the 
Methodist  Youth  Fellowship  and 
served  as  president  of  that  or- 
ganization. 

Since  the  fall  of  '56,  he  has 
served  as  a  local  minister  of  the 
University  Methodist  Church.  He 
has  coupled  these  activities  with 
the  campus  scene  as  a  member 
of  the  legiJaturc  and  the  Con- 
stitution Revision  Committee. 

*  o  * 

Both  Evans  and  Baum,  through 
slightly  different  perspective, 
seem  to  have  their  sights  set  on 
a  common  goal  —  attendance  at 
Harvard  upon  graduation  from 
UNC.  Baum,  a  history  major  at 
present,  is  hoping  to  enter  the 
Methodist  Ministerial  School  at 
either  Harvard  or  Duke.  And 
Evans,  a  recently  converted  Eng- 
ish  major,  has  his  eyes  set  on  the 
law  school  at  Harvard. 


Walter  Schruntek 

The  stage  wac-  set  and  campus 
political  activity  sprung  to  prom- 
inent life  last  week  as  the  two 
student  parties  named  their  can- 
didates and  presented  their  plat- 
forms for  forthcoming  spring 
elections. 

Nanied  to  lead  the  Student  Par- 
ty slate  in  a  bid  for  the  presiden- 
cy of  the  student  body  was  Sonny 
Evans,  a  rising  senior  (rom  Dur 
ham.  Oppocfing  him  on  the  Uni- 
versity Party  slate  was  Bill  Baum. 
rising  senior  from  Elizabeth  City.. 
A  battle  for  the  editorship  of 
The  I>aily  Tar  Heel  was  set  in 
motion  when  three  independent 
candidates  announced  their  in- 
tentions to  run.  They  were  Neil 
bass,  Frank  Crowther  and  Char- 
lie Sloan. 

The     first   week    of    activity 
produced   the    initial    flurry   of 
individual  candidate  stands  and 
issues.     Individual     and     party 
platforms  were  presented  which 
will    provide   the   material    and 
roughage     for     the     impending 
campus-wide     campaign.      The 
wheels  of  motion  have  been  set 
and  will   continue   running   un- 
til the  final  returns  are  in  l^te 
in  the  morning  of  April  3. 
.A.S   spokesman    for   his   party's 
aims      and     pursuits,     caririidatc 
Raum  presented  a  platform  which 
featured  th>  formation  of  a  Stu- 
dent  Senate  composed   of  repre- 
sentatives    ejected     from     every 
dormitory,  fraternity  and  sorori- 
ty on  campus  to  act  as  an  advis- 
ory body  to  the  president. 

He  also  included  in  his  plat- 
form provisions  that  with  his 
leadership,  the  office  of  president 
WMuld  take  action  on: 

1.  Housing  for  married  stu- 
dents. 

2.  A  needed  lessening  of  re- 
strictions on  student  union  build- 
ing. 

3.  A  needed  les^-oning  of  re- 
strictions on  student  automohik's. 

UP  Chairman  Mike  Weinman 
expressed  the  support  of  his  par- 
ty in: 

1.  Building  student  government 
to  a  positii.n  of  greater  respect 
and  dignity. 

2.  A  mature  government  in  the 
best   stucie^t   interests. 

'3.'  A  capable  approach  to  all 
existing  campuo-  problem*. 

SP  ca'ndidate  Evans,  in  prc- 
platform  statements,  pledged  his 
full  support  to  and  representation 


POLITICIANS    START  THEIR  YEARLY   WORK 

...17  days   until  electioyis 


of  the  "principles,  purposes  and 
records  of  the  Student  Party." 

In  his  preliminary  statements, 
he  also  advocated  submission  of 
a  prospectus  for  a  new  student 
union  building  to  be  prepared  for 
next  summer.  He  promised  close 
cooperatioiv  with  the  new  Uni- 
versity administration  of  Presi- 
dent Friday  and  newly-elected 
Chancellor  William  Aycock. 

Evans  and'  SP  Chairman  Sonny 
Hallford  promised  elaboration  on 
their  platform  when  the  party 
formally  presents  it  Monday.. 

On  The  Daily  Tar  Heel  edi- 
torship scene,  a  bi-part:san  se- 
lections board  was  established 
for  the  purpiose  of  screening  all 
candidates  for  the  position. 

Standing  on  their  individual 
platforms,  which  differed  in  de- 
grees of  emphasis,  the  three  thus 
far  acknowledged  candidates  were 
of  one  mind  in  one  matter.  All 
three  advocated  more  complete 
and  better  covei'age  during  their 
tenure  <is  editor. 

BaoS,  a  junior  from  Nashville, 
underlined  his  policies  for  editor- 
ship on  the  basis  of  his  experi- 
ence, interest  and  capability.  His 
platform  emphasized: 

1.  A  belief  in  and  advocation 
of  professional  athletics. 

2.  An  opposition  to  closed  In- 
terfraternity  Council  meetings,  t 

3.  Opposition  to  "Afghanis-tan- 
ism,''  which  he  defined  as  over- 
emphasis of  world  news. 

Crowther,  a  sophomore  from 
•Chewy  Chase,  Md,  also  running 
on  an  experience  ticket  (both  with 
The  Daily  Tar  Heel  and  the  Na- 


tional Broadcasting  Co.)  announc- 
ed an  eight-point  program  which 
highlighted: 

1.  deemphasis  of  national  poli- 
tics and  news. 

2.  Better  public  relations. 

3.  Beltei'  features  and  internal 
organiaztion  of  the  paper. 

4.  A  iiudent  poll  to  decide  on 
the  paper's  comic  strips. 

Sloan,  a  sophomore  from  Ar- 
lington, Va.,  and  an  ex-managing 
editor  of  The  Daily  Tar  Heel,  of 
fered  in  his  experience  platform; 

1.  Better  coverage. 

2.  Less  dropping  of  the  flag 
(the  paper's  namcplate). 

3.  an  intent  to  inform  rather 
than  incite  through  The  Daily 
Tar  Heel. 

4.  Belief  in  big-time  athletics. 
Filling    the    rest   of   the    SP 

candidate  ticket  were  Don  Fur- 
tado  for  vice  president,  Betty 
Huffman  for  secretary  and  Bob 
Carter  for  treasurer. 

No.  1  positions  in  the  UP 
scheme  were  filled  by  Benny 
Thomaa',  vice-presidential  candi- 
date and  Jerry  Jones,  Candidate 
for  treasurer  of  the  student  body. 

Running  for  presidency  of  the 
senior  class  with  UP  endorsement 
■was  George  Ragsdale.  His  oppon- 
ent with  SP  support.  Paul  Carr. 
Vice  presidential  contenders  will 
be  Harry  Baxton  (UP)  and  Frank 
Black  (SP). 

Other  senior  office  selections 
for  the  UP  were  Miss  Bobbi 
Madison  for  secretary,  Charles 
Ashford  for  treasurer  and  Miss 
Pat  Dillon  for  social  chairman. 


• 

ON  THE  CAMPUS: 


Commager  Speaks;  Y's  Elect  Officers 


In  between  basketball  game.-, 
which  almost  .stopped  UNC  hearts 
and  political  statements  which 
marked  the  opening  of  another 
spring  campaign,  here's  what  the 
campus  did   last   week: 

Th?      Interdormitnry      Council 
and    the    sophomore      class      an- 
nounced   the    "Spring    Swing",    a  • 
(♦rirtcert'-danct'  •wPck^ctld  -^chediilerf' 


World 


InThe  state:         ^Aideast 

Voting  Age,     Continues 

Tea/  School 


Israeli  Students  Paid  UNC  Campus  A  Visit 


■'  The  University  was  host  last  week  to  four  visiting  Israeli  stu- 
dents, organized  by  the  Israeli  Students'  Organization  and  spon- 
sored by  the  U.  S.  National  Student  Assn.  They  provided  a  song, 
dance  and  speaking  program  in  Graham  Memorial's  main  lounge. 


Left  to  right,  they  are:  Pianist  Henoch  Greenfeld,  speaker  Rafael 
Even,  accordianist  and  singer  Eliezer  Plotnik,  and  dancer  Hava 
Kohav.  (Photos  by  Norman    Kentor) 


In  the  state,  a  bill  to  reduce 
the  voting  age  from  21  to  18  was 
released  from  the  (General  As- 
sembly committee  last  week,  and 
is  scheduled  to  go  before  the 
full   Senate  sometime  this  week. 

The  annual  Jefferson-Jackson 
Day  Dinner  was  held  last  ni,!:;ht 
by  Tar  Heel  Democrats  in  Ral- 
eigh. Sen.  Lyndon  Johnson  (D- 
Tc'xas)  and  Democratic  majority 
leader  in  the  Senate,  was  the 
main  speaker. 

The  State  Board  of  Higher 
Education  made  a  suggestion  last 
week  to  put  the  12  state-support- 
ed colleges  on  a  12-month  instruc- 
tion basis.  D.  Hiden  Ramsey, 
chairman  of  the  board,  said  a 
bill  to  this  effect  would  be  pre- 
sented to  the  1959  Legislature. 

• 

I'M  Abner 


The.se  things  happened  in  the 
world  last  week: 

The  Eisenhower  administration 
pr.piirefl  itself  for  an  extensive 
investig.Ttion  of  the  Middle  East 
sijuati:n. 

.\rab  demon.sti;ators  stormed 
UN  Emergency  Force  headquart- 
ers in  Caza  demanding  the  re- 
turn of  the  Gr'za  Strip  to  Egypt. 

Admiral  Richard  E.  Byrd. 
ySN.  the  first  man  to  fly  over 
both  pnlrs.  died  e.ir!y  last  week. 

Tlie  Portland  labor  probe  con- 
t;nued  with  more  important  peo- 
ple bsiiig  supoenacd  to  appear 
before  the  congressional  investi- 
gating committee. 

President  Eisenhower  received 
a  check-up  at  Walter  Reed  Hos- 
pital for  a  cough  he  has  had  for 
several  days. 


fcr  March  22-23.  to  feature  the 
Don  ^Shrirlity  Trio  and  the  Duke 
Ambassadors. 

The  ^iQii's  Honor  Council  took 
stern  action  against  four  stu- 
dents, three  charged  with  cheat- 
ing and  ipne  with  plagiarism. 

.  In  a  Wednesday  night  speech 
in  CsfcTCJll  Hall.  Columbia  pro- 
f?.ssor  of  .history  Dr.  Henry 
Steele  Commager.  .one  of  Ameri- 
ca's leadmg  historians,  stressed 
the  leading  role  that  must  be 
played  b\  this  country  in  guid- 
ing the  world  toward  "benevol- 
ent .nationalism."  Sponsored  by 
the  Graduate  History  Club,  Gra- 
hant  Memorial,  and  Phi  Alpha 
Thcta  history  fraternity.  Com- 
mager said  that  this  country  has 
for  the  past  10  or  15  years  been 
a  .scene  of  "chauvanistic  nation- 


alism" which  promotes  "the  bas- 
ic instincts  of  superiority,  vani- 
ty,  and   aggression.' 

In  the  midst  of  suddenly  acti- 

Cagers  Victors 

North  Carolina's  Tar  Heels 
won  over  Canisius  Friday 
night,  87-75,  and  downed  Syra- 
cuse, 67-58,  Saturday  night  to 
win  the  Eastern  NCAA  cham- 
pionship and  earn  a  berth  in 
the  national  NCAA  semi- 
finals in  Kansas  City  next 
Week. 

The  Carolina  win  stretched 
its  record  to  30  wins,  no  losses, 
setting  a  new  record  of  wins 
by  a  college  team  in  one  regu- 
lar season.  The  old  record  was 
held  by  last  year's  San  Fran- 
cisco team. 


'tPUl* 


J  C'MOM,  FOSDiCK.r-SNAP 
OUT  OF  iT.r-VOO'F^E  ALL 
STITCHED  TOGETHER 
AGAIN/:'' 


The  official  student  publication  of  the  Publications  Board  of  the 
University  of  North  Carolina,  where  it  is  published  daily  except  Mon- 
day and  examination  and  vacation  periods  and  summer  terms.  Entered 
as  second  class  matter  in  the  post  office  at  Chapel  Hill,  N.  C,  under 
the  act  of  March  8,  1870.  Subscription  rates:  Mailed,  $4  a  year.  $2.50 
per  semester;  delivered,  $6  a  year,  $3.50  a  semester. 
Editor  ..._ FRED  POWLEDGE 

Managing  Editor   CLARKE  JONES 


j  AND  NOW  WE  WILL  RESUME 
OUR  JOUP-NEV  TO  THE. 
STAT-tON  HOUSE,  EZIQ  THE 
PINCHER, WHERE  I  WILL 
SEARCH  VOU  FOR  THE 
WATCH  VOU  PINCHED. 


Night  News   Editoft>.. 


Wally  Kuralt 


Night  Editor 


Walt  Schruntek 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL  WEEK  IN  REVIEW 

Staff  Writers Bill  King,  Walter  Schruntek,  Anthony  Wolff. 


vated  campus  politics,  the  YWCA 
quietly  elected  its  officers  for 
the  coming  year.  Belle  Corey,  a 
ri.sing  senior  from  Atlanta,  Ga.. 
was  chosen  as  president,  and 
Ann  Morgan  of  Charleston.  W. 
Va.,  as  vice-president.  Ann  Holt, 
junior  from  Sanford.  and  Lu- 
cinda  Holderness  of  Greens'boro, 
also  a  junior,  were  elected  treas- 
urer and  membership  chairman, 
respectively. 

The  office  of  secretary  is  as 
yet  undecided,  and  a  runoff  elec- 
tion between  Molly  Adams  of 
Wilmington  and  Cynthia  Se- 
graves  of  Jacksonville,  Fla.  will 
be  held  Wednesday  evening.  Al- 
so to  be  decided  in  the  runoff 
will  be  the  tie  between  Phyllis 
Krafft,  River  Forest,  III.,  and 
Eve  McClatchey,  Atlanta,  Ga., 
for  the  po^  of  program  chair- 
man. 

The  Y  masculine  counterpart, 
the  YMCA,  also  named  its  next 
year's  staff.  Stewart  Colson  was 


unanimously  elected  president. 
Vice  president  is  Joe  Phillips; 
secretary.  Kelly  Wallace:  treas- 
urer, Rick  Frank;  Larkin  Kirk- 
man,  membership  chairman,  and 
Randy  Shelton.  program  chair- 
man. 

A  bill  providing  for  an  enabl- 
ing act  to  obtain  funds  for  mar- 
ried students'  housing  both  here 
and  at  N.  C.  State  College  was 
started. 

William  D.  Carmichael.  UNC 
vice  president  and  finance  of- 
ficer, said  the  bill  was  being 
drawn  up  in  the  office  of  the  at 
torney  general  during  the  week. 
The  measure  is  scheduled  to  go 
before  the  General  Assembly 
within  the  next  week. 

The  I2th  annual  Blue-White 
game  was  played  Saturday  with 
the  queen  of  the  game  and  her 
court  being  crowned  at  'half 
time.  The  Carolina  coach  of  the 
year  an  drunner-up  were  also 
selected. 


Prize-Winning  Play 
On  Channel  5  Today 


Anthony  Wolff 

Catherine  Cornell,  the  First 
Lady  of  the  American  theatre, 
stars  tonight  in  R.  E.  Sherwood's 
"There  Shall  Be  No  Night"  at 
7:30  on  Channel  5. 

This  is  a  play  which  has  been 
rejuvenated  every  time  the  world 
situation  has  made  its  th^me  pert- 
inent;   tonight    it    concerns    Hun- 
gary's fight  for  freedom,  while 
in  1940  the  setting  was  Finland. 
Charles  Boyer  is  co-starred.  Con- 
sidering   Miss    Cornell's    stature 
and   the   fact   that   the   play  is   a 
Pulitzer   winner,   this  should   be 
a    rewarding    production. 

At  the  same  time  on  Channel 
4.  Dr.  Baxter  begins^  a  series  of 
discussions  of  "Henry  V."  This 
week  he  treats  the  play's  pur- 
pose and  its  audience. 
At  8  p.m.  on  Channel  2,  Ed 


Sullivan    has    lined    up    Robert 
Mitchum,      Beat      Lillie,      Edith 

Adams,  Harold  Lang  and  others. 
Tt  sounds  like  a  pretty  good  show 
for  Ed,  but  the  Kathcrine  Cor- 
nell play  is  more  deserving  of 
attention. 
In  case  you  don't  watch  either. 

with  a  yen  for  something  faici- 
and  you  turn  the  set  on  at  8:30 
wih  a  yen  for  something  fasci- 
nating and  educational.  Channel 
4's  "Writers  of  Today"  series 
presents  the  great  American  poet 
Langston  Hughes. 
On  Monday  evening  at  8:30  in  Hill 
Hall  Robert  Frost  will  make  his 
yearly  Chapel  Hill  appearance. 
Frost  is  aging,  to  be  sure,  but 
his  talks  are  always  fascinating 
He  is  liable  to  talk  on  anything, 
and  what  he  says  is  always  right 
to  the  point.  ^ 


Noi 

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SUNDAY,  MARCH  17,  1957 


THt  DAILY  TAR  HEtL 


FAGC  THRee 


Norval  Luxon 
Is  Humanities 
Lecturer  Here 

Dean  Nor\al  Neil  Luxon  of  the 
Journalism  School  will  deliver 
the  spring  term  Humanities  Facul- 
ty Lecture  here  Tuesday.  March 
26. 

The  lecture,  scheduled  for  8 
p.m.  in  Room  106  Carroll  Hall,  will 
be  on  the  topic,  "The  Responsi- 
bilities of  a  Journalist." 

Dean  Luxon  joined  the  Univers- 
ity faculty  in  1953  after  25  years  i 
as  a  member  of  the  staff  of  the  ; 
School  of  Journalism.  Ohio  State ! 
I  niversity,  Columbus.  Ohio.  Dur- 1 
ing  these  years  he  had  also  served  \ 
as  co-ordinator  of  the  armed 
services  program  at  Ohio  State 
and  as  director  of  that  universi- 
ty's "Twilight  School."  He  was  for 
seven  years  assistant  to  the  presi- 
dent. 

Holding  a  doctorate  in  history 
Irom  the  University  of  California 
in  Los  Angeles.  Dean  Luxon  is 
author  of  a  book-length  history  of 
\iles"  Weekly  Register  and  co- 
author  of   three   other  books. 

Crammlhg 
for  Exams? 


Fiikt  *'Botk  Fatigae"  Safely 

Your  doctor  will  tell  yon — a 
NoDoz  Awakener  is  safe  as  an 
average  cup  of  hot,  black  cof* 
fee.  Take  a  NoDoz  Awakener 
when  you  cram  for  that  exam 
...or  when  mid-afternoon 
brings  on  those  *'3  o'clock  cob- 
webs.** You'll  find  NoDoz  gives 
von  a  lift  without  a  letdown . . . 
helps  you  snap  back  to  normal 
and  fight  fatigue  safely ! 


Carolina  Supporters 
throw  Rash  Of  Parties 


By   SUE   ATCHISON 


Dr.  OscGir  Rice 
delivers 
Reilly  Lecture 


THE      EVACUATION     WHICH 
took  place  on  campus  this  week-  j 
end  caused   a  rash  of  parties   to, 
break  otit  among  the  Carolina  Sup- ! 
porters     in     Philadelphia.     Those  j 
supporters  of  the  team  who  were  j 
miabie  to  nudce  the  trip  spent  the ! 
I  greater  part  of  last  night  gathered 
I  around    television    sets    enjoying 
!  informal  parties. 

A  DtXIELAND  PARTY  was  giv- 
en last  night  by  the  Chi  Psi's  at 
their   lodge.    The    Kappa    Kappa 
;  Gamma's  from  Duke  were  guests 
j  at  the  festivities. 
}      THE    FIJI   ISLANDS    were    the 
!  theme  of  a  party  given  last  night 
I  by  the   Phi   Gam's.   Today  an   in- 
fomal   party   will   be  held  at   the 
house. 

TWO  DESSERT  PARTIES  were 
'  given  by  the  KD's  during  the  past 
I  week.  On  Tuesday  night  they'  en- 


I  tertained  the  Chi  Psi's  and  on ;  a  University  chemistry  pro- 
j  Thursday  night  the  St.  A'«  were ,  fessor.  Dr.  Oscar  K.  Rice,  is  cur- 
,  their  guests.  j  rently  in  S6uth  Bend.  Ind.,  deliv- 

i      NEW  OFFICERS  were  recently  |  ering  the  Reilly  Lectures  in  Chem- 
installed  by  the  SPE's.  Thtey  are:    istry   at  the  University   of  Notre 


Curtiss  Daughtry,  president;  Har- 
ry Holding,  vice  president;  Jeff 
Corbin.  secretary;  Hugh  Upton, 
comptroller;  and  Bill  Bobbins,  his- 
torian. 

Last  Sunday  at  a  formal  cere- 
mony they  initiated  seven  pledges. 
The  pledges  initiated  were:  Clif- 
ton    Paterick,    Thomas    Phillisp, 


Dame. 

During  his  two-week  visit,  Dr. 
Rice  will  delix'er  four  formal  lec- 
tures on  "The  Theory  of  Liquid 
Helium"  and  also  engage  in  con- 
sultation and  exchange  of  ideas 
with  Notre  Dame  faculty  and  stu- 
dents. 

The  Reilly  lectures  were  estab- 


James  Hillman  Jr..  William  Burn-  i  lished  in  1945  by  a  gift  of  approx- 

side.   Fred  Fonville,   Robert   Bur-  i  imately  one  million   dollars  from 

roughs,  and  James  Turner  Jr.         peter  C.    Reilly.    Indianapolis   in- 

THE  COEDS  IN  Spencer  Dorhii-   dustrialist  and  member  of  the  No- 


tory   are    going   to   have    a    party 


tre  Dame  Associate  Board  of  Lay 


Wednesday  night     in     connection  j  Trustees. 

with  their  election  of  new  donni- 1      in   addition    to    the    two -wee* 

tory  officers  for  the  coming  year.  |  lectureship,     the     ftind     provides 

THUR^SDAY       NIGHT       Ernie  1  graduate  non-teaching  fellowships 


Kemm.  DU.  pinned  Patsy  Carter, 
AGD. 


Receives  Fulbright  Grant 

Robert  A.  Hall  Jr.,  French  instructor  here  and  netive  of  Spar- 
tenburg,  S.  C.  has  received  a  Fulbright  grant  at  the  University  of 
Paris  in  1957-58 


Nash 


(Continued  from  page   1) 


Dr.  T.F.  Williams  Is  Fifth 
Carolina  Markle  Scholpr 


ISMMati- 


35< 


lorg*  •coaomy  ti2» 
(for  Gr*«k  Row  and 
OMmi)  MlobMt  — 


mppz 

A Wa K  E  N  E  RS 


SAFE    AS.  COFFEE 


ANNOUNCEMENT  BY 

Illinois  College  of 
OPTOMETRY 

Applications  for  admission  to 
classes  beginning  September  9, 
1957    arc    now    being    received. 

Three  year  course 

of  professional  study 

Leading  to  the  Degree  of 

Doctor  of  Optometry 

Requirements  for  Entrance: 
Two  years  (60  semester  hours  or 
equivalent  quarter  hrs.)  in  tpe- 
ciAed  liberal  arts  and  sciences. 

/WRITE  FOR  BULLETIN 
TO:   REGISTRAR 

ILLINOIS    COLLEGE 
of  OPTOMETRY 

3241    So.    Michigan   Ave. 
Technology  Center,  Chicago  16,  III. 


i  approaches  the  search  of  truth  as 
~~.  sufficient  unto  itself. 

'^Under  this   system."   be   said, 
"the   university   becomes  a    place 
I  where  the  truth  is  eagerly  sought 
after  by     some     scholars     whose 
I  lives  are  often  unrelated   to  the 
When  Dr.  T.  Franklin  l^illiams  I  world    anound    them    and    whose 
was  named  a  Markle  Scholar  this 'truth    when   discoverd,    often    re- 
week,  it  mar^d  the  fifth  time  the :  mains  within  the  confines  of  'the 
UNC  School  of  Medicine  has  had   ivory  tower'." 


a  faculty  member  to  receive  thci 

award.  •       •  I 

'     '  I 

The  award  carries  a  cash  grant  j 

of  $30,000,  payable  at  the  rate  of| 
$6,000  a  year  for  a  five  year  per-  j 
iod.  It  is  considered'  one  of  the  | 
highest  honors  in  the  field  of  aca- 1 
demic  jnedicine.  The  money  is 
used  for  teaching  and  research. 
Dr.  Williams  is  expectesd  to  work 
in  the  field  of  internal, Affd  pre- 
ventive medicine.  T' 

■t  , 

The  awards  were  establi^ed  in 
194B    by   the   John    and    Mary    R. 


WATCH 
FOR 


SS.S.S. 


"Wh^ro  this  theory  of  univer- 
sity provails,  obviously  great 
contributions  to  scholarship  are 
RMdo,"  Dr.  Nash  said.  "Take  for 
oxampio  tho  Unhrersity  of  Zu- 
rich,  which  is  smaller  than  UNC's 
School  of  Business,  ho  explain- 
ed. "It  has  produced  two  Nobol 
Prix*  winners  whilo  UNC  has 
produced  none." 

Oppo.sed  to  this  attitude  is  that 
which  prevails  in  American  uni- 
versities^ Nash  said.  This  he  label- 
ed the  "filling  station"  theory  of 
education  which  dominates  our 
universities  and  state  •  supported 
institvtions. 

"They  are  designed  to  give  the 
custonier  Exactly  what  he  wants 
and  can  pay  for,"  Nash  said. 

"Tho  American  university,"  he 
said,  "•clos  out  information  and 
facts  by  tho  buckoHuli,  but  with 
little  attention  to  developing 
critical  ottHudos  and  the  phil- 
osophic typo  of  mind  which  were 
not  too  long  ago  tho  primary 
aims  of  libOral  education." 


I  Here,  the  university  is  too  much 
I  a  part  of  the  society,  he  said.  It 
j  is  an  "uncritical  and  somewhat 
I  satisfied  part  of  an  uncritical  and 
I  satisfied  society." 

Explaining  that  the  American 
university  too  perfectly  reflects 
the  culture  eround  it.  Or.  Nash 
reasoned  that  ttto  level  of  schol- 
arship here  is  lower  than  in 
European  universities — that  our 
university  graduates  are  educat- 
ed often  in  the  ntost  superficial 
mann^  possible. 
Dr.   Nash  began   his  discussion 


for  chemistry  and  chemical  engi? 
neering  graduates  of  Notre  Dam« 
and  other  universities,  and  fin- 
ances an  annual  one-semester  ser- 
ies of  lectures  by  an  outstanding 
chemist  or  chemical  engineer. 

Dr.  Rice,  a  UNC  faculty  mem- 1 
ber  since  1936,  has  completed  some 
nine  years'  work  on  liquid  helium. 
Some  of  his  recent  research  has 
been  aided  by  an  Office  of  Naval 
Research  grant. 


DR.  O.  K.  RICE 

. .  .at  Notre  Dame 


lambda  Chis 


(Contimt£d  from  Page  1) 

buffet    supper,    model    initiation, 

I  was   performed  by  chapter  mem- 

j  bers  from  High  Point. 

t     The   highlight   of  the   Saturday 

,,.,..  ^  ,  ,^         .1  program  was  a  formal  banquet  at 

of  the  third  concept  of  the  urn- 1  ^j^^   ^.^^^^^^   j„„  g^nroom.   Rev. 
versity~as   prophet-by   recalling  j^^  p_  ^j^^^^^^   ^^^^^^^  secretary 


that  Gordon  Gray  once  said  that 
the  University  of  North  Carolina 
should  be  the  conscience  .of  the 
.state. 

"The  University  serves  its  func- 
tion,"   Nash    pointed    out,    "when 


of  the  fraternity,  gave  the  key- 
note address.  Rev.  Mr.  Tuttle  is 
from  Duke  University. 

Other  features  of  yeatterday's 
agenda  were  a  morning  convoca- 
tion,     panel     discussion,     buffet 


SERVE  YOURSELF— 


EVERY  SUNDAY 


5:30-7:30  ^Ml 


BUFFET 

At  The 

RANCH   HOUSE 

HOME  OF  CHOICE  HICKORY-SAAOKED  CHARCOAL  BROILED  STEAKS 


it    can.    like      Hebrew      prophets, ,  luncheon,  business  meeting,  form 
criticize    contemporary    life    in    a   ^^  ^^^^    reception  and  an  open 

house.  The  Iramquet  and  dance  took 
place    at   the   Cai'olina    Inn    Ball-t 
room. 
The  conclave  concluded  Sunday 


creative,  constructive   manner." 

In   his   concluding   remarlcs,   he: 
said  that     "the     true     university ' 
serves    the    needs   of   the    people, 
ijut  can  never  forget  that  it  must 
proclaim    truths    higher    than    the 
community  holds  as  ultimate  and 
loyalties    higher    than    the    loyal- 
ties of  clan  or  business  or  state." 
"if  American   universities  «re 
to    fulfill    their    prophetic    pur- 
pose,,"   he    emphasiied,    "they 
must,  like  prophets,  be  bold  in 
criticising  society,  and  thoy  must 
seek  for  insight  into  the  truth, 
regardless  of  lesser  loyalties." 


with  a  farewell  luncheon  and  a 
planetarium  show.  A  tour  of  chap- 
el Hill  was  optional. 


New  Course  In 

Personal  Typing 

March  25-May  17 

Limited  Enrollment, 
Register  Now 


town   classes 

CHmpml  MUl.  Mmrth  Carmllnm 


Bass  Defines 


DR.  T.  F.  WILLIAMS 

. . .  new  Markle  scholar 


(Continued   from   "page   1) 
more   imiiersonal   than   the   '"mad- 
ding crowd." 

"In  other  words,  I  feel  that  ed- 
itors in  the  past  have  tended  some- 
I  whet  to  lose  contact  with  the 
Markle  Foundation.  Since  they !  campus  as  a  whole  and  have  criti- 
were  established  a  total  of  206  j  cized  incidents  without  taking  hu- 
doctors  in  74  medical  schools  have  man  beings  like  themselves  into 
been  named  Scholars  in  Medical  consideration. 
Science,    generally    called   Markle  |      "T*e  human  element  and  asso- 


DAILY 

ACROSS 

1.  Shaip 

6.  Discourage 

11.  B«nefactor 

12.  Harden 

13.  Arabian 
country 

14.  Street 
19.  Place 
16  Letter 

(Heb.) 

17.  Public 
notice 

18.  Toward 

19.  Elephant's 
tusk 

21.  Destroytng^ 
23  Secure 
( colloq. ) 

20.  Inside  part 
27.  Mons.    Zola 

29.  StraJifre 

30.  Bird 

32.  Kicks  a  ball 

33.  Exist 

34.  Thus 

36.  Nonsense 
37  River  (Pol  ) 
39  Enclose 
41  Helps 

43  Greek 
philosopher 

44  Wadinc  bird 
49  Wheel 

accessories 
(Brit.) 
46  Wary 

DOWN 

1  Puss 

2  Put 

tof  ether 

3.  Two-toed 
sloth 

4.  Insurance 
arrangs- 
m«n( 


CROSSWORD 


5.  Erbium 
(sym. ) 

6.  Different 

7.  Foe 

8.  Large 
wine 
cask 

9  Mother 

goddess 

( Babyl. ) 
10.  Bamboolike 

grass 
14.  Egyptian 

god 
18.  Music 

Kroup 
20  Brilliant 

musicians 


22  India 
(poet.) 

23.  Swine 

24.  Poison- 
ous 
ever- 
green 
shrub 

25.  Court 
session 

28.  Rub 

31.  Poker 
st«ke 

32.  Chatter 

34.  Clan    (Ir.) 

35.  Sole 
38.  River 

(Pr.) 


aa^  iii3a     an 

[53  ana  ansa 


8«tsr4»]r'a  Ammwr 

40.  Elevator 

cage 
42.  Pigpen 
44.  Elevated 
train 
( colloq. ) 


Scholars. 

Dr.  Williams  is  a  native  of  Bel- 
mont, N.  C.  He  graduated  from 
UNC  in  1Q42,  received  his  M.  A. 
degree  from  Columbia  University 
in  1943  and  got  his  M.D.  degree 
from  the  Harvard  Medical  School 
in    1950. 


Honey  Elected 

I 

Barbara  Honey  a  member  ol 
Kappa  Delta  sorority  has  been 
elected  secretary  of  the  Universi- 
ty Club. 


ciations  and  contacts  with  students 
should  never  be  neglected.  An 
"ivory  towered"  editor  would  com- 
pletely overlook  the  fact  that  stu- 
dents who  pay  for  the  paper  are 
entitled  to  have  their  views  ex- 
pressed. 

'•With  all  my  strength.  I  will  al- 
ways fight  such  an  overly  critical, 
♦stand-offish*  attitude.  It's  your 
newspaper. 

"It  is  impossible.  I  believe,  to 
completely  reflect  'student  opin- 
ion' There  is  no  such  crystallized 
animal.  Thoughts  on  this  campus 
are  diverse,  and  ^hey  should  be. 
But- 1  feel  your  editor  should  keep 
himself  well-acquainted  with  how 
the  campus  feels  on  controversial 
issues. 

'Then,  through  association  with 

/^KT1P    i>rtf  irv     nvarvM  i  students,    if   I   were   your   editor 
ONE     ROLEX     OYSTER   ^^^  ^^^^^  ^^  ^^^^^  ^^  ^  ^^^^^^ 

was  opposed  to  majority  senti- 
ment, I  would  dearly  label  my  ed- 
itorial to  that  effect,  and  keep  the 
editorial  page  completely  open  to 
all  letters  and  general  disagree- 
ment with  my  stand. 

"I  do  not  feel,  however,  that  an 
editor,  should   prostitute   his   con- 


CLASStmOS 


LOST: 
Speedking   wristwatch,   Tuesday 
night  in  Physics  Lab  (I  think). 
Please  contact  loost  Polak,  208 
Lewis. 


TWO  BEDROOM  HOUSE  FURN 
ished  or  unfurnished,  near  camp- 
us. Call  94S8  during  day  or  2926 
after  5:^  p.m.  and  Weekend. 

5  ROOM  BRICK  HOU^e.  3  BED  i  victlons.  One  purpose  of  an  edi 


rooms,  ail  modern  cobvidniences. 
3  miles  on  bid  86  Hyway.  Stove 
and  Frigedaire  {iirniahe^.  Call 
Fr^  Katsin  after  41:00,  ,#-9025. 


FIVE  ROOM  BRICK  HOUSE  IN 
center  of  town— has  hdbt^  w«frk- 
shop.  Call  9458  during  .day  or 
2926  after  5:30  and  during 
weekend. 


FOR  SALE:  1939  PlLYMOUtH 
Coupe— 100  dollars.  ,^*i||i|n  be 
seen  at  204  Jackson  Circle, 
phone  80511. 


torial  page  is  to  stimulate  thought. 
Complacent  and  continuous  agree- 
ment would  lead  to  stagnate 
minds. 

"Regarding  my  stand  on  several 
issues.  I  shall  attempt  to  make 
myself  clear: 

(1)  International  ^nd  national 
r  news:.  With  the  present  staff,  our 
student  newspaper  isn't  even  com- 
prehensively covering  our  camp- 
us. Thus,  with  an  enlarged  and 
well  oriented  staff,   were   I  your 


paper  filled  with  student  news  and 
views. 

(2)  Interfraternity       Council 
Mtetings:    As  I  told  the  two  polit- 
ical parties,     the     paper's     pages  j. 
would  never  be  closed  to  IFC  news , 
because  meetings  of  that  body  are 
closed.   I   haVe   already   talked   to 
President  Bill  Redding  concerning 
appointment  of  a  council  publicity  j 
chairman,  a  council  member  who  | 
would  transmit  items  to  the  paper 
when  it  wanted  them  printed,  and 
only  when  it  desired  publicity. 

(3)  Professional  athletics:  I  am 
for  a  winning  team. 

(4)  Faculty  problem:  I  recog- 
nize the  impending  crisis  which 
may  result  unless  faculty  salaries 
are  hiked.  There  is  a  gradual  mi- 

, ,  gration. 

(5)  Student  initiative:  I  do  not 
feel  that  a  crisis  is  in  store  due 
to  student  apathy.  The  Honor  and 
Student  Councils  and  student  gov- 
ernment officers  in  general  have 
made  great  .strides  this  year.  But 
we  cannot  be  complacent.  Our 
Honor  System,  the  backbone  of 
student  government,  must  be  im- 
pressed more  upon  students'' 
minds  .There  is  always  room  for 
improvement. 

(6)  Campus  coverage:  I  would, 
as  your  editor,  organize  a  more 
comprehensive  "beat  system" 
which  would  send  reporters  to  all 
segments  of  the  campus.  Such  re- 
porters would  be  acquired  and  or- 
iented througih  a  program  ol  per- 
sonal contact  either  from  myself 
or  from  my  immediate  staff.  The 
campus,  especially  its  profession- 
al schools,  has  never  been  ade- 
quately covered.  No  campus  Areas 
would  be  covered,  of  course,  ex- 
cept by  consent  of  those  concern- 
ed. 

"In  conclusion,  may  I  say  that 
as  your  editor,  operating  a-  paper 
you  pay  for,  I  would,  were  your 
•confidence  graciously  bestowtd  in 
me,  give  my  every  waking  minute 
toward  providing  the  best  atu- 
dent  newspaper  we've  eVer  had  at 


A  Campus-to-Career  Case  History 


editor,  I  would  give  you  a  news-  Carolina. 


Leader  of  an  exploration 


Owen  Williams  leads  a  team  of  re- 
9earch  and  development  specialists  at 
Bell  Telephone  Laboratories.  His  is  one 
of  many  teams  set  up  at  the  Labs  to  ex- 
plore the  frontiers  of  electronics  aad-itom- 
municatiqns.  In  the  picture  above.  Owen 
(right)  discusses  modulation  problems 
in  electron  tebes  with  Robert  Leopt>ld, 
M>S.,  Electrical  Engineering,  University 
of  Michigan,  1949. 

Owen  himself  is  thirty-owe,  and  a 
B.E.E.  from  Rensselaer  PoIyte<dinic  In- 
stitute, cla<«8  of  '49.  He  joined  the  Labs 
upon  graduation,  and  was  assigned  to 
communications  development  training  — 
the  equivalent  of  a  two-year  postgraduate 
course  in  communications.  Mixed  with 
hh  classes  were  various  assignments  in 


the  Chem  Lab,  the  switching  and  wave 
filter  departments,  and  work  on  transmis- 
sion systems  and  coaxial  cables. 

In  19.S4  Owen  was  promoted  to  super- 
visor. He  worlts  with  two  electrical  en- 
gineers, both  systems  analysts,  and  four 
technical  assistants.  Their  current  job  is 
exploratory  development  of  submarine 
cable  systems,  looking  towards  great  new 
transoceanic  communications  links. 

Owen  is  one  of  many  engineers  and 
scientists  in  the  Bell  System  whose  prin- 
cipal responsibilities  include  those  of 
leadership.  The  work  of  improving  tele- 
phone service  in  the  Bell  System  is 
guided,  and  decisions  are  made,  by  men 
who  understand  the  {n'oblents  involved 
at  Hrst  hand. 


I 
i 
I 
t 
I 
I 
I 
i 
I 
I 

1 
I 
I 
t 
t 
I 

i 
1 
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1 
t 
t 
1 
1 
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-  » 

) 

1 

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^^r 


Many  young  men  like  Owen  Williams  are  finding 
interesting  and  rewarding  carfM^rs  in  the  Bell 
System  —  at  Bell  Telephone  laboratories,  in  Bell 
Telephone  Companies,  Western  Electric  and 
Sandia  Corporation.  Your  placement  officer  can 
give  you  more  information  about  career  oppor- 
tunities in  all  Bell  System  companies. 


I   I 


PA6I  FOUR 


THt  DAILY  TAR  Hf  A 


SUNDAY,  MARCH  17,  1«T 


Whites  Defeat  Blues,  38-12,  To  End  Spring  Grid  Drills 


Powerful  Backfield  Combo 
Proves  Too  Much  For  Blues 
In  Intra-Squad  Finale 


Three  Receive  Awards 
At  Half  time  Festivities 


By    BILL    KING 


I  passed  to  halfback  George  Kirk  at^ 


_.     ^      ,.       , ..    „  .  J  ;  the  five.  Leffler  carriei}  over  frfcn" 

The  Carolina  football  team  end-  ;^j^_  ^  ,^_  ^_.^  ,._^  «_n..   c„„ Z,^ : 

cd  its  off  season  drills  yesterday!! 

as  the  Whites  cMnpletely  over-pow- 


ered the  Blues.  38-12.  in  the  twelf- 
th annual  Blue- White  intra-c^uad 
contest  in  Kenan  Stadium. 


<t  action.  The  Whites*  number  one 
backfield  of  Reed,  fullback  Bob 
Shupin.  and  halfbacks  Jim  Schuler 


By    BILL    KING 

Despite  the  one-sided  outcome 
of  the  Blue;White  game  yesterday 
afternoon,  f  oach  J  i  m  Tatum 
thought  that  it  was  a  better  game 
than  the  one  last  season  which 
ended  in  a  35-35  deadlock. 


"This  game  was  twice  as  good 
as  the  one  •  last  year.''  remarked 
TatUm    following    the    intra-squad 


Basketball 

back  to  try  the  conversion,  but  the  i 

ball  sailed  over  his  head  and  hej  (Contimied  from  Page  1) 

was  hit  far  behind  the  line.  ;  games,    improved    its   aim   at    the 

The   Blue   team   made   it^    final '  charity    line    in    the    second    half. 

The    Whites    led  bv  last   y^^-J^^^^hdo^^-n  with  10:52  remaining  in  i  the    nine-point   Carolina   lead   was   ^Jn^e'st.  "I'think  the  big  improvr- 
ine    wmies.  lea   oy  last   years  tj,e  game.  The  march  began  at  the    too    much    for    the    smaller    New 
number     one     quarterback      Dax-e ;  31^^.5  jg  yard  line  and  con.-umed|  york   collegians  to  overcome. 
Heed,  displayed  a  powerful  attack  1  15  pi^js    Freshman  Jack  Cumm-,      Actuallv..  Syracuse  collected  sev- 
•hat  completely   overwhelmed  theji^gs.  Larr>'  Fredrick,  and  Jim  Var- 1  en  more  field  goals  than  the  win 
Blues  after^the  first  fe>»-_minutes  I  „u^   Jed   ^e   way   with  the  only   ners.  but  the  story  was  told  in  the 

really  good  offensive  display  of  columns  marked  fouls  and  foul 
the  afternoon  by  the  Blues.  Yarn-  i  tries.  Carolina  made  33  of  45  and 
um  culminated    the   drive  with   a   Syracuse  but  10  for  23. 

North     Carolina's    biggest     mar- 

The  Blues  kicked  off  and  twelve   .^m  wa^  14  pointj  midway  through 

continuously      bulldozed      through   piay^    ,ater    Leffler    had    crashed  ;  the  final  half,  and  the  closest  Syr- 

and  around  the  Blue  hne.         ^       across   for    the   final  tally  of  the    acuse  could  come  was  eight  points. 

An    unusually    small    crowd    of    game.    With   Goff   doing    most   of   vinnic    Cohen.    6-1    Negro    senior 

about  4.000  watched  the  Blues  get    the  running  and  Reed  hitting  some    from  Brooklyn.  N.  Y.,  led  the  l^s 


and  Daly  Croff  worked  like  a  back-    ^^.^  yard    jaunt    around   left   end. 
field    in   midseason   form    as   they 


the  first  break  of  the  game  early  timely  passes,  the  \MiUea'  moved 
in  the  first  period  when  Dan  Droze,  to  the  1-inch  line  where  Leffler 
who  cjlablished  himself  as  a  real  made  it  38-12. 
comer,  with  two  pass  interceptions  From  there  out  neither  team 
and  some  fanc>-  running,  intercept-  moved  the  ball  consistently  and  the 
ed  Reeds  pass  on  his  own  25-yard  game  ended  without  further  threat 
hne    and    went    S^yards    to    the ,  by  either  club. 

White's  16  to  set  up  the  first  score,  i  

JYom  the  16.  halfback  Emil  De- 
Cantis  took  a  pitchout  from  Curt 
Hathaway  and  flipped  into  the  end 
zone  to  Jim  Jones  for  the  first 
touchdown  of  the  afternoon.  , 

The  TD  came  after  Cornell  John- 
ion's   touchdown   had   been  called ! 
back   on   a   penalty.   Veteran   Phil  [ 
Blazer  mis.-.«d  the  extra  point  try;      Spring    sports    will    get    under 
and  the  Blues  had  their  only  lead  !  full  steam  this  week  for  Carolina 


ers   with   25   points   on   nine   field 
goals  and  seven  fouls. 

This  was  Carolina's  third  tour- 
namen'i  victory.  They  advanced  to 
the  Elastern  final  over  Yale  and 
Canisius.  Syracuse  previously  had 
defeated  West  Virginia  and  La- 
fayette in  preliminary  round  game. 


ment  can  be  attributed  to  the  tre- 
mendous competition  we've  had 
throughout    spring    practice.' 

Tatum  was  not  too  pleased  with 
the  Blue  team's  defense  which 
the  stronger  Whites  cracked  for 
five  touchdowns,  but  he  thought 
the  White  defen.sc  looked  pretty 
good. 

The  Tar  Heel  mentor,  who 
watched  the  game  from  the  stands 
until  the  third  quarter  when  he 
went  down  on  the  field  to  watch 
the  plays  from  a  clase  point,  point- 
ed out  the  fine  play  of  the  White's 
number  one  backfied.  Dave  Reed, 
who  quartcrbacked  the  Whiles,  had 
three  very  capable  backs  by  his 
side  in  fullback  Bob  Shupin  and 
halfbacks  Dailcy  Goff  and  Jim  Shu- 


Spring  Sports 
Will  Commence 
On  Wednesday 


n  the  game.  6-0. 

The  contest  was  marred  by  pen- 
alities and  several  very  nice  plays 
were  called  back  on  account  of  in- 
fractions. 

The  White  team  wasn't   long  in 

making  a  comeback  as  it  took  the 

ensuing    kickoff    and    marched    ail 

the  way  for  the  tying  touchdown. 

Goff,  Shupin.  and  Skhuier  carried 

the   mail   on   this  series   o€  plays, 

with  Goff  circling  end  for  four 
yards  and  paydirt  with  8:36  re- 
maining in  the  first  quarter. 

The  game  was  prolonged  by  the  ;  ;;;^;';;  to"  Chapel  Hill 
fact   that  Coach  Jim  Tatum.   who 


with  the  varsity  baseball  team 
leading  the  way.  Twenty-six  Tar 
Heel  baseballers  left  this  morn- 
ing for  their  annual  Florida  trip 
on  which  they  will  play  four 
games.  Their  debut  will  be  next 
Wednesday  when  they  meet  the 
University  of  Florida  at  Gaines- 
ville. Thursday  they  move  to  Win- . 
ter  Park  where  they  plajr  Ohio 
State.  Friday  they  play  two  games. ' 
Ohio  State  again  and  Rollins.  Sat- 
urday they  meet  Rollins  for  the . 
second  time.  The  Tar  Heels  then 
Their  first 
game  at  home  will  be  w^ith  the 
University  of  Delaware  on  March 
27th. 

The   tennis    team    will    play   Its 
season  opener  here  next  Thursday ' 
with   George   Washington. 

The  golf  team  will  not  have  Its  i 

first  match  until  March  26  when  I 

they  will  face  the  Rollins  swatters  j 

on   Finley  Course.  \ 

The    Tar    Heels    tracksters    will  I 

I  follow  in  the  baseball  squads  foot- 1 

I  steps   when    they   head    south    to  i 

i  Florida    to    open    the    season.    On ; 

j  March  30  they  will  make  the  trip  1 

j  to   participate   in  the  Florida  Re- ' 

'  lays.  '  _    i 


watched  the  game  from  the  standi-, 
decided  to  make  each  quarter  18 
minutes  long  instead  of  the  usual 
15  minutes. 

The  Blues  threatend  to  go  ahead 
again  after  the  ball  exchanged 
hands  when  Jack  Cummings,  play- 1 
ing  behind  starting  quarterback  1 
Curt  Hathaway,  unlcssed  a  29  yard  j 
pass  to  end  Charlie  Cotton  in  the ; 
end  zone  for  a  tally,  but  a  penali-  j 
ty  nulified  the  score.  | 

After  that,  the  game  turned  into 
a  battle  of  the  defenses  until  the 
first  period  ended.  It  was  the  only 
real  defensive  show  of  the  day. 
The  only  other  wirious  threat  in 
the  quarter  came  when  the  Blue's 
second  string  quarterback,  Ron 
^larquette  pulled  off  a  32  yard  pass 
play  to  end  Don  Kemper.  The  play 
was  called  back  by  a  penalty. 

With  the  start  of  the  second 
quarter,  the  Whites  took  complete 
control,  scoring  two  touchdowns 
before  the  first  half  ended. 

The  first  tally  came  after  pass 
interference  had  been  called 
against  DeCantis,  who  tripped  end 
Al  Goldstein  at  the  two  yard  line 
as  Golda'tein  was  going  up  for  a 
pass  from  Reed.  From  the  2-yard 
marker.  Bob  Shupin  slashed  over 
to  make  it  12-6.  Shupin  added  the 
point  after  and  the  Whites  led  13- )  Halfback  George  Dutrow  cll- 
e.  j  maxed  a  70-yard  drive  in  the  first 

Shupin  put  his  squad  back  on  of-  i  quarter  as  he  went  over  from  th^ 
fense  on  the  first  play  after  the  I  ^^^  ^^  P"^  ^^  B'"*  ^*^am  head  6^. 
kickoff    by   intercepting  a   Hatha-  i  Fullback  Art  Ebert  added  the  ex- 


Duke  Winds  Upl 
Spring  Drills       | 

DURHAM.  N.C..  Marxrh  16  (AP)  | 
i  — Quarterback  Bob  Brodhead  engi- 
1  neered  the  Duke  "Blue"  team  to 
I  a  well-played  21-7  victory  over 
j  the  "White"  outfit  in  Duke  Stad- ' 
I  ium  today  as  the  Blue  Devils 
I  wound  up  s-pring  drills.  , 

!      Brodhead  scored  on  a  five-yard 
I  keep  play   and    had   a    significant  * 
I  part    in    setting    up    the    "Blue's 
first  score  with   superb  faking. 


way  pass  at  the  Blue's  32.  From 
there,  Reed  and  company  marched 
to  a  third  straight  tally  with  Reed 
plunging  over  from  the  one  yard 
line  after  Goff  and  Schuler  had 
set  up  the  score  with  some  beauti- 
ful work  through  the  Blue  line. 
The  half  ended  with  the  Whites 
leading,  19-6. 
The  second  half  wa*  repetitious 


tra  point.  I 

In  the  third  quarts  Brodhead 
heaved  a  pass  to  Dutrow  on  the 
45  who  carried  the  ball  all  the 
way  to  the  While  5-yard  line. 
Brodhead  took  it  across  tackle  on 
the  next  play. 

The  White  team  struck  back  a 

few  minutes  later  to  make  it  14- 

I  7.  George  Harris  crossed  the  goal 


of  the  first.  The  Whitee  took  the  |  from  the  one-yard  line.  Jim  Har- 
kickoff  and  once  again  the  White's  1  ris  kicked  the  point. 


powerful  backfield  combo  took 
over.  With  Reed  mixing  his  run-' 
ning  plays  with  a  few  passes,  the 
"Whites  tallied  again  after  13  plays; 
Schuler  carrying  oyer  from  the  one 
inch  line  after  a  five  yard  penalty 
had  moved  the  ball  to  that  point. 
Phil  Blazer  WocXed  Reed's  extra 
point  try  and  the  Whites  led,  25-6. 
Sub  fullback,  Dave  Leffler,  did 
the  honors  for  the  final  two  touch- 
downs for  the  Whiles.  Leffler  got 
a  big  assist  from  Al  Goldstein  who 
blocked  a  Hathawa»'  kick  at  the 
Blue's  30.  and  Bu<Wj  Sas.ser,  who 


Fleet  halfback  Bobby  Honey- 
cult  got  the  third  Blue  score  in 
the  fourth  period  with  a  46-yard 
gallop  up  the  middle. 


Spartans  Topple  Wildcats 

LEXINGTON,  KY.,  —  (/P)  — 
Michigan  Stat*,  virtually  out  •! 
the  picture  at  halftim*,  rtcov- 
•r%d  with  a  wall  balanced  attack 
and  vital  rabeundinf  in,  the 
clutch  to  upend  favored  Ken- 
tucky, »fh68,  tonight  in  tho  finaU 
of  the  NCAA  tAidw%t  Rc«ion»l 
basketball   rournament, 


v¥hen19S8  rolls 
jiround  you'll 

ij:5^|flllbe 
^^    laughing 
X      at  fhls  one! 


SiiH 


Oh.Wi)Men! 


ttMTJr^ 


VELVA 

MOISTURE 

FILM 

a  new 
experfenoe  in 

beauty 

front  the  Salon  ; 

of 


r%^y^^|;i?SHM 


^^. .on.  .,K..<JONNAliY  JOHNSON 

_^    COLpM  ky  DC  LUXE 

CINbmaScoPE 
NOW  PLAYING 


Carolina 


Just  arrived !  This  gentle,  last- 
ing, transparent  film  that 
softens,  smooths  and  protects 
the  skin,  giving  it  a  young  and 
dewy  look.  To  be  worn  under 
any  of  the  Elizabeth  Arden 
foundations.  A  blessing  to  the 
most  sensitive  skin,  it  is  a  de- 
lightful body  lotion  too. 

3  oz.  5.00 
7'/4  oz.  10.00 
17'/,  oz.  18.50 

pfi:"S  phji  fcx 

Ask  Im  s*«  £/iicbe(h  Arden 

hyisiblt  Vtil  foe*  Powder — 

(he  fif.-j»  in  tht  world.  2.7$,  3.00 


SUTTONS 


Cosmetic  Dept. 


TAKE  YOUR  DATE  FOR  SUNDAY  DINNER  TO 

DANZIGER'S  OLD  WORLD  RESTAURANT 

For  «n  International   Fair  of  Quality  Food 

FRENCH  ONiON  SOUP  $   35 

HUNGARIAN  GOULASH    .    S    1.10 

GERMAN  SAUf  R8RATEN  W.  DUMPLING $1.45 

CZECH  MEAT  ROULADE  W.  SOUR  CREAM S  .90 

STUFFED  ROAST  CHICKEN '. .      $1.10 

WIBNER   SCHNITZEL $1.25 

Served  with  Mlad,  2  vegetablet,  breed,  butter,  coffee  or  iced  tea 

Homemade  French  and  Viennese  Pastries 

Hours  from  11:30  A.  M.  to.  7:30  P.  M. 


She-wo|i  over  eleven  other  Caro- !  award.  Barnes  brought  a  cheer  from    trophy  saying.  "It's  a  pleasure  to 


ler. 

"I  though  those  boys  looked 
very  good."  Tatum  said.  They  did 
a  pretty  good  job  on  defense  too," 
he  added.  "I  especially  liked  the 
running   of  Goff." 

Tatum  said  that  the  20  day  prac- 
tice period  had  been  pretty  good 
but,  "I  dont  think  it  was  long 
enough."  Under  the  conference 
rules.  ACC  teams  are  allowed  on- 
ly 20  days  for  off-season  practice. 

Halftimc  festivities  yesterday 
included  the  crowning  of  Miss 
Joan  Willsey  as  Blue-White  queen. 


The  ?\us%a^e 
of  Old  Books 

A  part  of  the  charm  of  collectiof 
old  books  is  the  extre  biU  tl*«|r 
accumulate  through  the  yefrt— 
marginal  notes,  prosentetien  in* 
scriptions,  sparks  of  persistent  h»- 
manity  in  faded  ink. 
We've  had  books  on  our  $heivef 
whose  whole  history  of  oytfnershi|l 
could  be  traced  in  a  series  of  fe^ 
ed  inscriptions  going  back  to  thf 
1820's.  j 

A  book  of  poetry  we  bought  in  not  | 
long  age  was  inscriked  to  "GrfCf,  j 
from   one   who  will    i'ove   her   fer- 1 
ever".  As  we  held  the  bo^k  in  our  j 
hand,  it  seemed  to  us  that  for  f  j 
moment   the   charming    Grace   di4{ 
triumph  over  the  universal  dust.      | 
Just  at  the  moment,  we  have  en  I 
our  shelves  the  very  copy  of  Help- 
er's "The  Impending  Crisis"  which 
his  nephew  "took  from  my  fethors 
shelf"  to  give  to  a  friend. 
Come   in   for   a   laxy   half   hour   in 
our   old    book    section    w^en    Y9** 
have  time.  We  think  you,  t^o,  will 
find   delight    in    the    small    extre 
troasures  of  tho  old  book  worldl 

The  Intimate 
Bookshop 

205  E.  Franklin  St. 

CHAPEL   HILL 

Open  Till  10  P.  M. 


Una  lovelies  in  a  contest  conduct- 1 
ed  by  the  Monogram  Club,  which  I 
sponsored  the  game. 

Also  a4  halftime  was  a  perform- 
ance by  the  crack  Naval  ROTC  | 
Drill  Team  and  the  naming  of| 
Caroli,na's  top  two  cottches  of  i 
the  year  as  selected  by  the  Mono-  [ 
gram  Club.  Coach  Frank  McGuire,  i 
voted  the  top  coach  of  the  year,  i 
was  not  on  hand  to  accept  his 
trophy  for  obvious  reasons.  Sam 
Barnes,  an  English  professor  who 
Coaches  the  wTestling  te^m  as  a 
hobt)y,  received  the  second  place 


the  crowd  when  he   accepted  his    be  second   to   Frank   McGuire. 


Howard  Johnson  Restaurant 

BREAKFAST 

LUNCH 

DINNER 

SNACKS 
"Landmark  For  Hungry  Tarheels" 


MKO  KAOIO 
PICTURES 

pr«a«nt» 


he  sings  6 
wonderful  songs 


EDDIE 
FiSHER 


DEBBIE 
REYNOLDS 


wait  'til  you  see 
them  dance! 


BUNoiJE  OF  JTcnr 


Cedarrinc 


ADOLPHE  MENJOU 

TOMMY  NOONAN 

wm  Nif  A 1HB0T  •  UNA  MERKEL  •  MELVILLE  COOPER 
^.  BIU  •OOOWIN  ■  HOWMRO  McNEAR 

Pmtimt  *f  tetMJNO  WAINGER  •  SerMn  Pl>y  by  NORMAN  KRASNA. 

RpHRT  CaRSOM  and  ARTHUR  SHEEKMAN 

«N»y  to  fO-n  MCfCSOW  •  t)ir»tt»6  by  NORMAN  TAUROG 

.   IMiMi  Mumir*  *«<)  0*nc*>  SUfi  by  NICK  CASTLE 

Lynet  ky  MACH  OOROON  .  Mu«  by  X)SEf  MYROW 


'Worr>'  About  Tomorrow,  Tomorrow" 
I  Never  Felt  This  Way  Before" 
•"Lullaby  In  Blue" 
"All  About  Love" 
"Some  Day  Soon" 
"Bundle  Of  Joy"        -» 


^=T^^ 


HERE  IS  THE  FINAL 

TIE  BREAKER  IN  OLD  GOLD'S 


ifiiH^)**^^*'^- 

f.t     .»  .     '.L 

is      iV       -t.  .r:,,i'-. 

>  :     1 

LATE  SHOW  TONIGHT 

I  i!i^jgMjirii  1 

■ii  ■ 

SUNDAY-MONDAY 

1 

t 

^i 


TIE4IIIEAKING 
PUZZLE 
NO.  p 


PUZZLES 

FOLLOW  THESE  MAILING  INSTRUCTIONS  CAREFULLY! 


QUI:  Thi.s  Nebra.ska  coeducational  college  of  liberal  arts 
is  affiliated  with  the  Presbyterian  Church.  It  was 
chartered  and  opened  in  1882. 

ClUE:  Conducted  by  the  Je-suit  Fathers,  this  midwestern 
coeducational  university  was  opened  in  1877.  It  bears 
the  name  of  the  city  in  which  it  is  located. 

CLUE:  This  coeducational  university  was  chartered  in 
1845  under  the  Republic  of  Texas.  It  is  a  Baptist  school. 


ANSWER  1. 
ANSWER  2.. 
ANSWER  a.. 


DOE,  JOHN 
LAKE  DRIVE 
SOUTH  BEND. 
IND. 


Print  or  type  your  name  and  retvm 
address  on  bock  of  tfie  envelope, 
lost  name  first,  like  this: 

To  help  checkers,  use  butinetf 
size  envelope  approximately 
4"  X  9  Vi".  Type  or  print  the 
-address  ai  shown.  ^q 

Use  6e  postage.  \ 


TANGLE  SCHOOLS 

P.O.  5JOX  26A 

MOUNT  VERNON  10,  N.  Y. 


Name — 
AdJrcss- 

City 

College— 


.State- 


sometimes  referred 


NOTE  THAT  THE  ABOVE  fUZ^  CONTAtNS  TMF  NAipES  OF  THREE 
SCHOOLS  FOR  WHICH  THREE  SEPWAH  CUKS  IRE  GIVEN. 

Players  may  now  mail  their  completed  sets  of  8  Tie- 
Breakers.  Before  mailing  your  puz?!es,  keep  an 
accurate  record  of  your  answers.  The  8  Tie- Breakers 
must  be  answered,  neatly  trimmed,  and  enclosed  in 
an  envelope,  flat  ai?d  not  rolled  and  addressed  to: 
Tangle  Schools,  P.  0.  Box  26A,  Mount  Vernon  10. 
N.  Y.,  and  bearing  a  postmark  not  later  than  April  5, 
1957.  Do  not  decorate  or  embellish  the  puzzles  in  any 
w£iy.  Do  not  include  anything  in  the  envelope  but 
the  puzzles. 

If,  after  solutions  have  been  submitted  to  this  set  of 
Tie-Breakers,  a  tie  or  ties  stiJl  remain,  those  tied  will 
be  required  to  solve  ijwfiother  tie-breaking  puzzle,  in 
accordance  with  the  official  Tangle  Schools  rules. 
Tliese  tie-breaking  puzzles,  if  neceseary,  will  be 
mailed  to  each  conteptaot. 


Use  business-size  envelope  4'  x  9i  .j 
to  as  a  No.  10  envelope. 

Each  of  the  puzzles  must  be  neatly  trimmed,  separately, 
and  placed  in  numerical  order. 

No  decorations  please!  Address  envelope  as  shown. 
Your  name  and  address  must  be  on  the  back  of  the 
envelope  across  the  end  and  in  the  position  shown  in  the 
illustration.  Please  print  or  type  in  capital  letters- 
last  NAME  FIRST.  If  mailed  according  to  instructions,  6^ 
postage  should  be  enough. 

In  the  event  of  further  ties,  contestants  will  be  mailed  an 
additional  tie-breaking  puzzle  form. 


REMEMBER-ENTRIES  MUST 
BE  POSTMARKED  NO  LATER 
THAN  FRIDAY,  APRILS,  1957. 

FIRST  PRIZE-A  TOUR  OF 
THE  WORLD  FOR  TWO- 
OR  $5,000  CASH!  EIGHTY- 
FIVE  OTHER 
VALUABLE  PRIZES! 


WEATHER 

Scattvrttd  showers,  •xp«ct*d  high 
in  th«  60's. 


VOL.  LVII,  NO.  117 


tJ.W.C.  Library 
Serials  Dept, 
Chapel  Hl^ 


^()c  3)aUy  S^Tar  Med 


BUCKET 

It  has  several  holes  In  the  bot- 
tom. See  editorial,  page  2. 


Complete  iff)  Wirt  STvte§ 


CHAPEL  HILL,  NORTH  CAROLINA,  TUESDAY,  MARCH   19,  1957 


Officet   in   Graham  Memoridl 


FOUR  PACES  THIS  iSZUB 


Senate  To  Answer  \i80DucafsSP  AnhouncGS  Party  Platform 


Student  Problems      Remain  For 


UP  presidential  candidate  Bill 
'Baum  said  in  a  statement  released 
yesterday  that  the  Student  Senate 
he  proposes  will  provide  answers 
for  the  students  on  problems  now 
facing  the  campus. 

Baums'  statement  was  to  clarify 
the  relationship  between  the  pro- 
posed Student  Senate  and  the  Stu- 
dent Legislature,  he  said. 

The  proposed  Senate  will  make 
decisions  on  student  problems  and 
the  decisions  will  be  taken  before 
the  Legislature  for  action  by  the 
student  body  pre.-ldcnt. 

Baum  stated.  ■When  jurisdiction 
shall  lie  outside  the  Legislature. 
I  am  sure  the  legislators  will  join 
with  me  in  using  every  means  at 
cur  disposal  to  seek  their  enact- 
ment." 

Baum's  statement  continued, 
"From  my  c.\pcrience  in  student 
legislature.  I  believe  such  a  clear 
•alcmcnt  as  the  Student  Senates 
of  the  definite  objectives  which  the 
student  body  feels  should  be  ac- 
complished would  be  a  great  aid 
to  the  Legislatures  work  and  a 
niaiKiate  for  action— regardless  of 
the  party  which  should  be  in  con- 
trol tf  the  body  at  that  time." 

The  Senate  would  meet  once  a 
jear  to  set  policy.  Baum  said,  but 
would  be  called  up  more  often  if 
necessan,-. 

The  president's  cabinet  would  be 
electe<l  from  senate  membership. 
"This  i,-  a  departure  from  the  cus- 
tom of  the  presidents  appointing 
his  own  cabinet,"  Baum  stated. 

One  function  of  the  Senate 
would  be  to  let  the  administration 
k;  w  student  opinions  on  import- 
ant matters,  he  said. 

Baum  stated  that  to  base  a  gov- 
rrnraent  on  records  'is  an  extreme- 
ly dangerou.s  business""  and  con- 
cluded. -The  University  Party  ad- 1 
vocatc.    that  yau.  as  a  student   at ' 

idftor  Selection  Bo— J 
. iAeeis  last  Tfmo  Today     ^ 

.  The  Bipartisan  Selections  Board 
fo,-  cditcTial  candidates  for  The 
Daily  Tar  Heel  wiU  hold  its  last 
interviews  today. 

Chaii-man  Fred  Pow!cdge  said 
the  group  will  meet  in  Roland 
Parker  Lounse  1,  Graham  iMe- 
morial.  to  intervew  candidates 
seeking  the  board's  approval.  The 
time  will  be  4:45  p.m. 

He  said  the  board's  decision.,  or. 
candidates  will  be  i.ss-ued  later  in 
the  week. 


Carolina,   base   your   student   gov- 
ernment on  a  foundation  of  which 
,  you  can  be  sure — your  own  judge- 
i  ment.   We  offer  the  Student  Sen- 
'  ate  that  you  might  give  voice  to 
that  judgement." 


Sloan  Hits 
Policy  Of 
Opponent 

Daily  Tar  Heel  Editor  candidate 
Charlie  Sloan  Sunday  criticized  one 
of  hLs  opponents.  Neil  Bass,  for 
the  lallcr's  recent  statement  con- 
cerning news  coverage  of  campus 
areas. 

Bass  said  Sunday  he  would  not 
cover  any  campus  area.-  witiiout 
the    consent   of    those   concerned. 

Sl.;an  said  "He  seems  to  forget 
a  newspaper  is  not  a  publicity 
sheet  or  a  news  bulletin  that  prints 
only  the  most  glowing  handouts." 

He  said  "Often  the  news  printed 
I  ill  a  paper  is  unpleasant  for  the 
parties  concerned  because  it  .-•hows 
a  part  of  society  or  human  error 
that  people  like  to  ignore.  In  a 
word."  Sloan  .said,  "a  newspaper 
must  stick  to  reality.  " 
MISTAKEN 

Sioan  said  Bass  was  "sadly  mis- 
taken if  he  thinks  this  reality  will 
be  given  to  him  on  the  asking.  Re- 
porters often  have  to  ferret  out 
news  and  get  their  facts  indirectly. 

But  reporter^-,  nevertheless,  must 
get  ihe  facts,  Sloan  said. 

fn  stating  his  ideas  about  what 
a  newspaper  should  be,  Sloan  said 
he  would,  if  elected,  give  the  stu- 
dents a  "scrappy,  frank  newspaper 
based  on  facts  as  they  are,  not  as 
people  would  like  them  to  be." 
NOT   SENSATIONAL 

He  said  in  no  way  wouTtl*"tfiis 
cau.se  The  Daliy  Tar  Heel  to  be 
■jnsational. 

".\ny  controversy  that  arises  in 
The  Daily  Tar  Heel,"  Sloan  said, 
••will  be  stirred  up  on  its  own 
merits,  net  because  (the  paper; 
presented  it  as  any  kind  of  intel- 
lectual bail." 


Phi  To  Debute  Monaco 
Establishment  In  NC 

A  measure  designed  to  trans- 
form the  sovereign  state  of  North 
Carolina  into  a  lesser  Monaco, 
with  gambling  dens  rivalling  those 
at  Monte  Carlo  in  Lexington, 
WajTiesville  and  Clinton,  will  ap- 
pear for  consideration  by  the  Phi- 
Assembly  in  its  Tuesday  night 
meeting. 

Ths  bill  proposes  that  these  yel- 
low brick  and  glass  casinos  would 
be  places  of  wholesome  recreation, 
a  new  source  of  revenue  for  the 
st^te  and  would  draw  thousands 
of  free-speding  tourists. 


UNEF  Leaves 
Study  Group 

C.\IRO  _(AP)—  Cairo  radio 
said  the  Egyptian  Governor  of 
Gaza  announced  tonight  all  U.N. 
emergency  force  troops  will  leave 
towns  in  the  Gaza  Strip  within 
48  hours. 

The  radio  quoted  a  statement 
from  Maj.  Gen.  Mohammed  Has- 
san Abdel  Latif.  the  governor, 
saying  the  UNEF  command  agreed 
its  troops  would  evacuate  the 
headquarters  building  it  occupied 
in  Gaza  and  all  the  towns  in  the 
strip. 

The  announcement  indicated  the 
present  movement  of  the  UNEF 
to  the  1949  Armistice  Line  on  the 
Israeli  frontier  would  be  com- 
pleted Wednesday. 


KC  Games 

Arrangements  have  been   made 
for  the  students  who  wish  fb  go 
j  to  Kansas  City  for  the  NCAA  Bas- 
I  ketball   finals  this  weekend. 
'      Student     Body     President     Bob 
Young    announced    today    that    a 
Carolina    Trailways    bus   or   buses 
I  have  been  chartered  for  all  those 
:  going  to  Kansas  City,  who  do  not 
have    any   other   means   of   trans- 
portation  or   for   those   who   wish 
to  go  in  a  group. 

Everyone  must  sign  up  and 
pay  the  entire  oest  ef  ttte  round- 
trip  by  Tuesday  at  4:30  p.m.  That 
is  today! 

The  cost  of  the  trip  is  as  fol- 
lows: tickets  for  the  ball  games. 
S8;  and  transportation  costs  will 
amount  to  $51  round-trip. 

•'I  have  checked  every  possible" 
means  of  arranging  for  this  trip, 
and  this  is  the  best  possible  me- 
thod." stated  Young. 

The  bus  or  buses' will  leave  from 
the  campus,  in  the  Morehead 
Planetarium  parking  lot.  Thurs- 
day at  12:00  noon.  It  will  return 
to  Chapel  Hill,  leaving  Kansas  City 

The  allotnwnt  of  250  tickets, 
at  $4  a  piece,  has  dropped  to  180 
v/ith  the  purchase  of  some  70 
'  ducats  yesterday.  The  remaining 
tickets  are  available  at  the  Wool- 
len Gym  ticket  office.  The  price 
is  $4  per  game. 

at  midnight  Saturday  and  arriv  > 
ing  in  Chapel  Hill  by  7  a.m.  Mon- 
I  day  morning.  "Students  will  miss 
only  two  full  days  of  classes.  Fri- 
day and  Saturday."  stated  the  stu- 
dent   body    president. 

"The  costs  are  At  the  least  pos- 
sible figure.  It  Is  imperative  that  i 
we  have  as  many  students  as  pos-  ' 
slble  at  the  games. -Arrangements  ^ 
for  class  excuses  can   probably  be 
I  made    with    the    iildlvldual    deans. 
Several    of    the    cheerleaders    are 
I  making  the  trip,  and  it  sholud  be 
I  a  most  enjoyable  trip  for  all  those 
,  who  can   go,"  stated   Young. 
t      Chancellor    R.    B.    House    eom- 
j  mcnted.    "'I    would    like    to    com- 
I  mend   the   studftlts  who   attended 
■■  the    games    in    Philadelphia    and 
New  York   last  week.  Their  con- 
!  duct   was   exemplary   of  our   fine 
Carolina    traditions.    The    actions 
i  of  the  fans  wefc  comparable  with 
the  high  sportsmanship  displayed 
by   the   players.   All  Carolina  stu- 
dents  and   players  were   in   a   ra- 
ther tense  situation,  and  all  con- 
ducted themselves  as  true  champ- 
i  ions."  , 

House  went  on  to  say.  "I  strong- 

!  ly    urge    all    students  who   are   in . 

'  proper  academic  standing  and  who 

have  the  desire,  to  make  the  trip 

to  Kansas  City  and  help  to  push 

our  Tar  Heel  basketball  team  ov- 

I  er  the  top."     „  \ 

I      "Since  200  students  at  the  most.  I 

!  could  make  the  trip.  I  would  sug- 

I  gest    that    all  students   who   wish ' 

I  to  make  the  trip  check  with  their ' 

I  respective    deans    and    make    the 

'  necessary   arrangements. 


romises  Effort  On  Problems 

Hal  I  ford  Expresses  Hope  For  The 
'Achievement  Of  New  Successes' 

By   GRAHAM   SNYDER 

Pledging  pursuit  and  accomplishment  on  many  exislino;  student  problems  of  parking 
lot.s.  .student  i^oNevnmcnt,  date  tickets  and  Leniir  Hall  workin,"  conditions,  the  Student  Par- 
t\   last  night  annc»unicd  its  party  platform  for  the  coming  year. 

.\pj)i<)ved  unaniinou>lv  by  the  party  members,  the  lo  plank  SP  platform  as  read  by  parry 
(.hairman  Sonnv  HalHord  xpres.ses  hope  lot  the  "achievement  of  new  sucee.sses  over  SP  ac- 
tnmplishmenrs  of  last  year." 

in  regard  to  student  government  the  party  pledged    separation   of   the    investigation    and 

l^rosccution   jxiwers   from    the   indgmeni   po\\':Ms  in  the  jisdieiary  Biandi.  Three  planks  of 

the  phith)rm  addressed  \\ork  on  the  parking  prol)1em.  in  regard  to  ""more  equal  treatment 

■ — ■ — — — — - — — -#of  student  parking  violators,  sup- 


Investigation  Branch 
For  Council  Asked  For 

Sr  presidential  candidate  Sonny  i  "This  would  then  allow  the 
t^ans  presented  his  plans  yester-  ■  Council  to  fulfill  its  function  of 
day  for  the  establishment  of  an  j  hearing  the  case  and  making  a  de- 
HoncT   Council    investigation    and  |  cision    based    on    the    evii^ce.    It 


SONNY  HALLFORD  AND  DON  FURTADO 

.   .   .   plan   for  sophomore    weekend  .  .-^ 

Don  Shirley  Plays  Here 
Friday  For  Soph  Swing 


prosecution     branch     to     function 
through  the  office  of  the  Attorney 
General. 
Citing  his  belief  in  the  conlinu- 


would  end  dual  responsibility  .  .  . 
and  ...  it  would  insure  the  fair- 
est possible  treatment  of  all  Caro- 
lina  students    brought    before    the 


nece.><sity  of  a  strong  campus ;  councils. 


judiciary,  Evans  i-aid: 


"I  am  sure  that   any  such   pro- 


The  Don  Shirley  Trio  will  play 
in  conjunction  with  the  sophomore 
"Spring  Swing"  Friday  for  8-10.30 
p.m. 

Following  the  concert  on  Friday 
a  campus-wide  dance  will  be  held 
in  Woollen  Gym  from  8  to  11  p.m. 
on  March  23.  The  Duke  Ambas.sa 
dors  will  play  for  the  dance. 

The  dance  and  the  concert  wj^l 
be  »pon  jred   by  Ute  IDC  and  ilM  ! 
Sophomore  Class.  I 

The  concert  will  be  held  in  Me 
morial  Hall  and  the  price  of 
tickets  will  be  $1  per  person  ex- 
cept in  the  ca.se  of  sophomores 
whereby  the  price  will  be  SI  per  i 
couple.  Tickets  are  on  sale  at  Gra- 
ham Memorial,  the  Y.  Kemp's  sand 
from  IDC  representatives.  \ 

The    concert    program    will    in- ! 
elude  "1  Can't  Get  Started,"    'Lets 
Fall   in  Love,"   "Autumn   Leaves," 
"Walking    My   Baby    Back   Home,"  ; 
"Sometimes  I'm  Happy,  "  and  "Ton  ! 
derly."" 

Shirley  will   be  accompanied  by 
David  Moore  and  Keenneth  Frick- 
er.  Both  Moore  and  PYicker  have 
played   with    major  .symphony    or  j 
chestras. 


During  the  intermijsion  2  gift 
certificates  will  be  gicvn  away  as 
door  prizes. 

Entertainment  at  intermission 
will  be  provided  by  Misses  Barbara 
Prago  and  Mary  "Peewce"  Batten. 


.  .  .  .'dudent  jumping  from  a 
second  floor  uiindotv  of  Manley 
Porm  on  a  bet. 


Petite  Musical 
To  Feature 
Golde  Students 

A  program  qf  operatic  arias  and 
ensembles  will  be  on  schedule  for 
Les  Pctitps  Musicalos  appearance 
March  24  in  the  main  lounge  of 
Graham  Memorial  at  3  p.m. 

Featuring  the  students  of  Dr. 
Walter  Golde,  the  program  will 
be  presented  with  a  commentary 
by  Norman  Cordon. 

Les  Petites  Musicales  program 
will  be  given  with  sopranos  Mar- 
tha Fou.se,  Donna  Patton,  Jan 
Saxon  and  Jean  Vernon,  with 
Anne  Moore  as  mezzo  soprano. 
Tenors  will  be  Gene  Strassler  and 
Robert  Andrews.  Singing  baritone 
will  be  Edgar  von  Lehm. 

Sunday  night's  program  will  in- 
clude "Mignon"  by  .\mbroi.se. 
•"L'Arlcsiena"  by  Ciles,  Erich 
Korngolds  "Die  Tote  Stadt."' 
"Thais"  by  Massenet.  Tschaikow- 
.skys  •■Piciiie  Dame"  and  "Romeo 
and  Juliet. Fhe  Secrets  of  Su- 
zanne" by  W(»lf-Ferrari.  Boito's 
"Mefistofele.'  "Der  Rosonkavalier"' 
by  Richard  Strauss,  and  Richard 
Wagner's   "Die   Meistersinger." 


Charter  Plane 
Available  For 
rip  To  KxinsQS 


-'The  unique  system  of  student  I  posal  as  this  must  face  the  valua- 
government  which  has  added  i  ble  scrutiny  of  responsible  student 
strength  to  the  Universitys  cam-  j  leadership  .  .  .  that  when  this 
pus  since  its  beginning  more  than  |  leadership  consider^-  the  plan  .  .  . 
half  a  century  ago  has  found  its  |  we  can  develop  a  better  program 
strongest  foundation  in  the  tradi- j  of  administering  justice  at  Caro- 
tion  of  student  discipline  adminis- 1  lina. 
tered  by  students'  themselves.         } 

For  this  reason.  I.  as  a  candidate 
for  President  of  the  Student  Body, 
am  especially  aware  of  the  neces 
sity  for  maintaining  the  strongest 
possible  campus  judiciary  if  stu 
dt^ts  are  .  to.  efXccUv«ly  pregei-y* 
the  freedoms  which  tJiey  have  gaifl 
cd  by  the  evolution  of  student  gov- 
erninent  at  Carolina.  }      ^    plane    will    be    available    for 

•As  a  former  member  of  the  i  ^^^'f '^^^^  ^"i"  students  interested  i.*; 
Honor  Council,  I  have  been  con- '  8"hig  to  Kansas  City  this  week- 
cerned  for  .'ome  lime  with  the  fact  i  *^"<^'-  according  to  Jim  Exum. 
that  our  present  judicial  system'  ^"^"'^  ^^^^  ^^^^  the  DC-3  of 
makes  the  Honor  Council  judge,  ^''^'^"^•'"^  Airlines  is  still  able  to 
.jury,   investigator  and    prn.secutor. ;  ^  gctten  for  24  students  who  wish 

"While  we  have  been  fortunate^"   travel   faster   than   car,   bus   oi 
in  recent  years  especially  capable .  ^''^•"• 

members  on  the  councils,  the  ado-  ^^^  ^^^^  ^^  ^'i^"  plane.  round-trip 
ed  burden  of  investigative  work  j  ^^  ^^"*3'='' ^"i^X- "''"  *><^  slightly  over 
and  the  dual  role  of  the  council  >2,400.00  aiJd  this  will  mean  each 
meniber  Mho  l>olh  prosecutes  a  student  will  have  to  pay  $102. 
case  and  siLs  in  on  its  decisions  j  'This  is  SoO  cheaper  than  if  you 
have  caused  giave  concern  among  *'"'*^<^  *"  go  »"  a  regular  flight,"' 
people   on   campus   who   fear   that  1  s^^^^^*^  Exum. 

such  a  system  does  not  lead  to  "Thert  has  not  been  any  re- 
the  most  effective  administration !  sponse  to  the  first  notice  put  in 
of  justice.  'the  paper  and  rapid  action  is  nccd- 

"To  meet  this  problem.  I  suggest  ,^^  '^  <he  P'ane  is  to  be  chartered." 
the  establishment— under  the  Ai-  ''"tated  Exum. 
torney  General — of  an  investigative 
ad  prosecuting  staff.  These  people, 
chosen  under  a  merit  sy./iem  'if 
appointment,  would  i)c  at  the  dis- 
posal of  the  chairman  of  the  coun- 
cil  concerned. 

"The  chairman  would  give  the 
case  to  the  investigator,  who 
would   do  the  preriminary  invesli- 


port  of  Student  Government  sug- 
I  gestions  for  obtaining  funds  for 
planned  parking  lets,  and  a  belief 
that  faculty  and  administrative  per- 
sonnel should  pay  parking  fees  for 
the  planned  parking  Jots." 

Pledges  to  work  for  TV  coverage 
of  all  sellout  home  basketball 
games  and  extension  of  date-ticket 
lowering  for  home  football  games 
were  expressed  in  two  planks. 

Later  working  hours  in  the 
Monogram  tlub  and  Scuttlebut  for 
fraternity  and  dormitory  residents, 
and  a  stand  on  working  condi- 
tions at  Lenoir  Hall  in  regard  to 
effecting  payment  in  caa-h  on  un- 
used meal  tickets  were  pledged  by 
the  party. 

The  final  plank  was  addressed 
to  the  "importance  of  realizing 
establishment  of  a  new  student 
union  here  and  the  continued  ef- 
forts toward  the  successful  com- 
pletion of  a  building  program. "" 


Any  persons  interested  In  mak- 
ing this  trip  to  Kansas  City  for 
the  NCAA  Basketball  Finals  Fri- 
day  and   Saturday   are   asked    to 
contact  Jim   Exum  at  the  Sigma 
Nu     House     this     afternoon     be- 
tween 1  and  3  p.m. 
The  trip  will  be  cancelled  if  the 
number  of  students  desiring  to  ;,o 
gating  and  present  the  case  before  i  is  not  24,  reported  the  honor  couu- 
the  court.  cil  chairman. 


G/ee  C/uJb 
Leaves  LJn 
Spring  Tour 

By    BEN    TAYLOR 

The  40-voiced  L.VC  .Mens  Glee 
Club  will  embark  by  bus  on  their 
annual  spring  tour  tomoiTow 
morning  at  9  a.m..  with  plans  to 
present  nine  concerts  throughout 
eastern  North  and  South  Carolina. 
I  The  tour  will  last  four  days, 
with  the  group  returning  to  Chapel 
Hill  Saturday,  .Maich  23.  around 
j  midnight. 

I      Directed   by   Dr.   Joel   CiJrter   oi 

'  the  ITNC  music  faculty,  the  group 

will    pre.'^nt    concerts    which    will 

include  secular,  leiigious.  folk  and 

I  UNC  loyalty  music.  A  contata.  .-icv- 

]  eral  selections  by  special  quartets 

and    a    performance    by   the   guest 

::rlist   on   the   tour.   Henry    "Hoke 

Simpscn.  will   be  features  of  each 

concert. 

I      The  group   will   open    their  con- 
certs  with    "The   Carolina   Loyalt> 
Snng,"   followed    by   four   religious 
selections:     '.May    God    Smile    On 
'  Yuu"  by  Bach:  "To  Thee  We  Sing.  " 
,  a    selection   fr.^m    the   Ru.ssian   lit 
(See  GLEE  CLUB,  page  3) 


Seima  Celebrates  'Aycock  Day'  For  New  Chancellor 


THE  TOWN'S  PEOPLE  ARE  PROUD 

.  .  says  Mayor  Jae  A.  Creech  (Woody  Sears  Photas) 


FAMILIAR  FACES  AJ  THE  RECEPTION 

.  .  co-t'd  Ann  Moryan  and  MorelieMl  Scholar  Boh  Carter  of  Seliiui 


TO  THE  HOME-FOLKS 

an  educator  aijeaka  of  the  past,  and  t/w;  future 


THE  CHANCELLOR  CHATS 

icith  mother,  Selmu  ^acspaper  editor,  and  Goceiiwr 


PAOI  TWO 


THI  DAILY  TAR  HEBL 


TUESDAY,  MARCH  If  1W7 


TU6SI 


Tacts  By  The   Bucketfull:' 
Wie  Ne^d  A  New  Institutior 

liravo  to  ttu'  InivtMsity's  Dr.  Arnold  Nash  lor  his  talk  last  Aveck.  to 
till-  (iiadiiaie  Club.  Dr.  Nash  said,  amono  other  thiii,i;s: 

"The  Aineritan  t^iii\ersity  «loles  out  information  and  facts  bv 
jIk-  l)ii(ketlull.  I>ut  with  little  attention  to  developing  (ritieal  attitudes 
and  ilu-  philosophic  type  of  mind  whith  were  not  too  lou«;  ago  the  pri- 
marv  aims  of  liberal  education." 


READER  COVELL  THINKS: 


!  M 


That's  froni  the  institution's 
siiie  .>f  the  lent  e.  An  examination 
ot  tiie  sttidents  side,  says  Queen's 
Colleyes  Stan  lev  Runit/  in  The 
N.itittn   maga/iner  sliows: 

Most  students  do  not  tome  to 
lollege  in  pmsuii  of  tiie  true,  the 
iKMUtilnl.  or  the  go<^L  thev  come 
betause  a  dei^ree  inti^ttes  earning 
power  ami  enhanefjii^^iKial  pres- 
tige. 

■  It  must  be  idfiiiiy^iLat'the  risk 
(if  sounding  suj>erciniously  un- 
Ameritan  or  of  seeming  to  vearn 
iiostalgi<  ally  for  the  gwod  old  days 
(which  ((»uldn"t  ha\e  been  so 
g(M)d.  alter  all,  in  \  iew  ol  the  his- 
toric tonsecpieiues).  that  the  in- 
liux  of  a  new  student  fjopidation. 
ill  pait  barely  litrrate.-in  the  main 
holding  no  (oncepts  (*  value  dis- 
tilr4lli^Iu^bll'  trom  I  hereof  oiu  so- 
(iiMN  at  laige.  h.ts  resnfled  in  a  ser- 
ious «leieriorati(»n   ol    the   intelle«- 

iiial  rlimate." 

*  *  * 

Most  people  who  are  in  anv  \\a.\ 
iiitoliigeiuly  (onnetted  with  mod- 
ern hi:.ther  ediuation  will  agree 
with  both  ilxise  statements,  even 
ihough  it  mav  hujt  considerablv 
to  agree. 

I'he  I'nivetsitv  of  North  Caro- 
lina. h)i  example,  is  now  a  ma- 
ihine  devoted  to  tinning  out  peo- 
ple who  have  diplomas  in  their 
h  nds.  For  this  we  have  to  blame 
ilie  stttdcnts.  the  fatuity,  the  ad- 
itiinistration    aiul    the    legislature. 

But  viewing  with  alarm  will  not 
d(»  anv  g(M>d.  Someotie  must  find 
.III  aiiNwer  to  our  dileimna.  or  we 
will  be  paid  bat  k  lot  the  meditn- 
ritv  \\i-  turn  out  into  the  state  and 
the  nation. 

We  believe  r  new  institiuion  of 
liiuhei  learning  shoidd  be  foimd- 
cd  h»  the  people  ot  the  State  of 
Noith  Carolina.  Separate  even 
tiDiii  the  I'niversiiv  here,  it  would 


teadi  qtiiet  thought,  triuli,  iindet- 
sianding.  totuemplation.  human- 
ity. 

Su(  h  std)jeit*  cannot  be  taught 
on  the  limited  (lass  sc.ile  here. 
Professors  (apa)>le  of  teaching 
them  are  leaving,  and  the  students 
capable  of  learning  ihem  are  all 
but  lost  in  the  midst  of  students 
wli<»  (ome  here  to  participate  in 
panty  raids  and  t<»  make  more 
monev    upon   gta<luation. 

A  new  institution  should  be 
tounded.  and  it  shoidd  be  sup- 
ported by  the  State  of  North  Caio- 
lina. 

Siu  h  an  institution  would  im- 
mediately laise  the  wrath  of  tax- 
payers, who  would  try  that  their 
money  shouldn't  go  toward  the  de- 
velopmem  ol  eggheads.  But  if  en- 
ough respet  letl  antl  iiuelligent 
1  at  Heels  were  to  line  up  behiiui 
such  a  mt>\ement.  .iiid  ii  an  iii- 
telligeiH  public  inlormation  cam- 
j)aign  were  taiiied  out.  maybe  the 
laxpaie^s  woultl  understand  the 
reasons  why  something  nuist  be 
done     t»n     the     higher     educatit»n 

fiont. 

«  *  * 

The  vear-old  State  lioard  of 
ffigher  Kdiuation  toulil  betome  a 
lei'A'ler  in  the  movement  if  its  lead- 
ers and  t onstituents  believed  in  it. 
riie  latiilties  of  the  state's  tol- 
leges  and  universities,  we  bleieve. 
would  be  neai  Iv  unanimous  in 
tlieii  endorsement  ol  the  new  in- 
stitution. 

Fatts  bv  the  butkellnll  does  n*>t 
lonstitine  an  education,  but  wf 
are  getting  more  and  more  likt 
the  institution  Dr.  Nash  desciib- 
ed.  Quick  and  hatd-working  lead- 
eiship  could  put  an  end  to  the  de- 
pression, imd  North  Carolina 
(ould  betome  a  leader  in  still  an- 
other field. 


First,    Demonstrate.  Trust 


In  ordet'  to  rca<  h  the  voters  and 
maintain  their  trust,  the  Dento- 
( ratit  xPativ  in  North  Carolina 
must  tonvinte  them  that  we  have 
a  sintete  iinerest  in  go(»d  govern- 
mein."  Fhats  what  (.ov.  HtKlges 
!o!tl  prtintineiH  Democrats  in 
Raleigh   ovei    the  weekeutl. 

The  good  governor  loultln't  be 
more  torrett.  lint  we  fear  Demo- 
crats m:!y  have  trouble  tonviiu- 
ing  people  of  their  sintere  imer- 
est"  when  thev  themselves  show 
vety  little  of  said  interest  in  good 
oovermnent. 


I  o  be  sine,  theie  are  maiiv  fine 
men  among  the  DemtKraiit  poli- 
titians  of  this  state.  Mutli  ol  tlieir 
wotk  goes  unrecogni/ed.  lint  on 
the  other  haiul,  there  is  also  an 
abundante  of  petiv  |)olitiis.  ol 
guttei  lampaign  attivities.  ol 
t  rookedness    :i.id    log-rolling. 

People  ianiM,)j.  be  tonviiued  who 
hive  seen  .Negroes,  and  Intliaiis 
denied  their  right  lo  vote  tomlott- 
ablv.  I  he  |X'ople  ol  Metklenbuig 
liaidlv  have  any  (onlideiue  when 
thev  are  denied  —  bv  the  lat  k  ol 
g(M)d  govenimeiu  in  the  (ieneial 
Assemblv   —    theii    lijihts   to   legis- 


The  Daily  Tar  Heel 

The  official  iluueni  puMn.ati<>n  of  tbf 
Pii'ilication-  Board  ol  the  University  of 
North  Carolina.  wh<-re  it  is  pui)lishert 
daily  except  Mnmlav  and  examinatjgr 
»pd  vacation  periods  and  summer  terms 
Entered  as  second  class  matter  in  tht 
post  office  in  Chapel  Hill.  N  C,  undei 
the  Act  oi  March  8,  1870  Subscription 
rates  mailed,  $4  per  year.  S2  50  a  seme« 
ter:  delivered.  $6  a  year.  $3.50  a  leme* 
ter 

Editor FRED  P0"!*XEDG1 

.■Vl^aging  Editor  CLARKE  JONES 

;;J7^  Editor NANCY  HILL 

S^^^ditor LARRY  CHEEK 

iiilineiis   Manager   _.    BILL  BOB  PE'EL 

Advertising  Manager         FRED  KATZIN 

iulrORlAL  iTfAKK  -  Woody  Sears. 
Jtjey  Pa.vne,  Stan  Shaw. 

.NEWS  ST.\FF — Graham  Snyder,  Edith 
MacKinnon,  Walter  Schruntek.  Pringle 
Pipkin,  Bob  High,  Jim  Purks,  Ben  Tay- 
lor. H.  Joost  Polak,  Patsy  Miller,  Wal- 
ly  Kuralt,  Bill  King,  Curtis  Crotty. 

BUa^ilSS  STAFF-^ohn  Minter,  Mai^an 
Hobeck,  Jane  Patten,  Johnny  Whitaker. 

SPORTS  STAFF:  Dave  Wible,  Stewart 
Bird.   Ron  Milligan. 

Subscription  Manager  Dale  Staley 

CirculatioB  Manager Charlie  Holt 

Assistant  Sports  Editor Bill  King 

Staff  Photographers   Woody  Sears, 

Norman  Kantor 
Libi;arian&    Sue  Gichner,  Marilyn  Strum 

Night  Editor  —  Manley   Springs    . 

Night  News  Editor Walt  Schruntek 

Proof  Reader Bai,  WEEKS 


lative    rej)resent.uioii. 

Kdutational  le.ideis  (an  haidlv 
be  (ottviiKed  when  they  see  a  li- 
biarv  appiopriation  slashed  as  was 
the  University's.  Law  eidonement 
ollicers  have  little  (onlidenre  when 
they  are  denied  the  right  to  en- 
lorce  the  law  Irom  umiiai  ked  pa- 
trol ea.s.  Koitnnately.  this  last  be- 
trayal ol  (onlidente  will  be  (hang- 
ed by  the  I.egislatuie. 

II  the  Hemoirats  ol  North  Car- 
olina want  good  government,  and 
it  they  wain  the  (onlideiue  ol  the 
people  who  vote  and  pay  taxes, 
we  suggest  they  look  into  these 
matters  with  a  little  more  than  the 
usual   politic  iatts'   dispatth. 


The   Band 
Plays  On: 


Hear   It 


T(Klay's  aj>p«'aran<e  of  the  Car- 
olina C-on«  ert  B;nid  will  be  wotth 
attending. 

The  band  is  anothet  of  the  tiii- 
Iv  representative  organizations  on 
the  rampus.  Directed  bv  Herbert 
Fred,  another  true  repre.sentative 
of  Ca-iolina,  it'll  play  in  Hill  Hall 
at  «. 

For  purposes  of  soul,  education, 
inteiest  and  pride  in  the  home 
town  bovs,  we  should  be  there. 


Students  Must  Discipline  Selves 
To  Shake  Off  Educational  Apathy 


Editor: 

Yes.  a  great  deal  of  the  cause 
of  educational  apathy  here  ai 
UNC  does  lie.  as  Mr.  Parker 
pointed  out  in  his  letter  with 
the  attitude  of  the  student  to- 
wards his  professors.  As  stu- 
dents, we  are  at  the  nebulous 
age  between  adolescence  and 
adulthood  which  is  characterized 
by  .such  attitudes  as  "have  fun 
while  you  can."  and  "I  don't 
need  to  take  on  my  full  measure 
of   responsibility   yet." 

Besides  that,   many   students 
here  find,   although  they  know 
it  will  pay  off  eventually,  that 
their  courses  of  study  seem  ra- 
ther   incidental    to    their    "Big 
Job"  when  it  comes,  often  not 
even    knowing    whar    they    will 
be  doing   after  graduation  and 
military  service. 
Their     objectives,     then,      are 
sometimes  not  clearly  defined  in 
their  minds.   .\nd   so  distractions 
and  apathy  take  hold,  since  there 
is    a    fertile    bed    of   distractions 
awaiting    the    .student's    exploita- 
tion.   There    are    .some   who    can 
keep   their   duty    before   them    at 
all    times,  subjugating   all    other 
pastimes  to  their  one  main  pur- 
pose: Getting  every  po.ssible  ben- 
efit  from  their  courses.   But   the 
average    student    will    be  behind 
in  his  work,  feeling  "I  can  catch 
up  later  (before  the  exam)." 

Often  the  distractions  —  such 
as  a  job.  .student  government, 
athletics  and  various  organiza- 
tion work  —  can  be  regarded 
by  the  student  as  well  worth  the 
sacrifice  of  study  time.  Thus  he 
justifies  procra.stination.  But 
then  there  are  few  students  who 
are  proud  of  taking  off  to  flicks, 
coffee  breaks,  or  such  diversion.^ 
when  they  >iust  know  that  they 
will  probably  have  a  pop  ^quiz 
in  English  50  tomorrow,  and 
goof  off  instead  of  studying. 
But   they  just  can't   .stick  with 

it.    for   some    strange   reason. 

•  »  * 

It  Is  commonly  agreed  that  a 
person  'gets  out  of  something 
i.s  never  truer  than  in  regard  to 
what  he  puts  into  it."  And  that 
is  never  truer  than  in  regard  to 
school  work.  Again,  we  all  admit 
"that  "one  works  hardest  at  that 
in  which  he  is  very  interested. 
So  maybe  the  student  who  is 
deeply  interested  in  his  work 
will  put  into  it  that  which  is 
required,   with   more   to   boot. 

.A.nd  thus  educational  apath.v 
will  decline.  But  for  many  stu- 
dents who  just  aren't  .studious, 
this  cannot  be  accomplished  to 
any  great  degree.  Especially  when 
most  of  his  cour.ses  consist  of 
nothing  more  than  notetaking 
(pu.*<hing  a  pencil  furiously  all 
the  class  period),  textbook  read 
ing  (which  is  often  quite  admit- 
tedly boring),  an  occasional  hour 
test,  and  loads  of  outside  read- 
ing. 

For  the  student,  at  the  height 
of  physical  activeness.  reading, 
notetaking  and  memorizing  is 
not  his  cup  of  tea.  And  with  a 
chapter  to  read  for  every  class 
mi-ting,  outside  reading  run- 
ning into  there  or  our  thousand 
pages  a  .semcler.  and  plenty  ol 
rules  and  facts  to  memorize 
(only  to  be  done  for  a  grade, 
and  not  to  retain),  the  active 
young  men  or  women  can 
hardly  help  developing  a  rather 
apathetic   attitude. 


L'il  Abner 


Agreed.  «this  type  of  load  va- 
ries for  each  student:  and  the 
major  one  picks  is  usually  in  a 
field  of  interest  to  him.  And  also 
there  are  plenty  of  unapathetic 
students  who  do  what  is  expect- 
ed of  them  and  find  time  to  take 
part  in  other  activities  without 
stealing  time  and  emphasis  from 
scholastics. 

But  for  many,  the  "mill"'  of 
a  curriculum  such  as  that  here- 
in described  is  less  interestinig 
than  parents,  teachers  and  stu- 

• 


dents,  themselves  would  have  it. 

The  answer  to  educational 
^spalhy  lies  in  the  self  discipline 
•of  each  of  us  here  at  Chap(?l 
Hill.  It  Ls  hard  to  say  "no'"  to  a 
buddy  who  wants  to  "flick  it"  or 
chug  a  couple  down  in  the  Tem- 
po Room.  We  just  have  to  set 
our  chins  and  dig  resolutely 
into  the  50  pages  which  will 
drag  out  before  us.  But  we  will 
have  much  more  interest  in  what 
we  are  doing  when  we  "assume 


a  virtue"  and  'do  it  now."  Later 
we  will  get  our  reward,  when  we 
find  that  we  have  developed  a 
liking  for  a  certain  subject. 
since  we  have  dug  into  it  a  little 
more  than  we  were  asked  to. 

And  with  a  -  measure  of  faith 
that  we  are  really  getting  some- 
thing worthwhile  from  our  edu- 
cation process  for  our  future 
lives  (as  v.c  are  told  by  our  lead- 
ers), we  r-b.-i  all  boost  education- 
al morale  a  good  deal. 

Charles  V.  Covell  Jr. 


'You  Aren't  The  Only  One  Coming  Home' 


• 

CHAPEL  HILL: 


A   Rare   Place   In    The  Spring 


S»^n  Shaw 

Chapel   Hill   is  a  rare  place  in 
the    spring.    It    is    then    that    the 
suffering  we  endure  for  the  rest 
of  the  year  is   made  worthwhile. 
In  the  winter  we  stand    long 
periods    of     wet     seeping     cold 
broken    only    by    enough    good 
weather     to      insure     everyone 
equal  participation  in  the  camp- 
us cold. 
Fall    is   an    interrupted    season 
of     warm     beauty     and     chilling 
monsoons    which     sweep     across 
the    campus,    insuring    each    and 
every   path   left   in   these  days  ot 
brick-laid     progre.s.s    a    complete 
and    penetrating   ?!ogginess. 

In  the  summer  we  endure  day 
after  day  of  deenervating  heat 
which  serves  as  a  testimony  to 
the  innate  cruelty  of  nature,  but 
when    spring    arrives    in    Chapel 

•  / 


Hill   the  story  is  a   far  different 
thing. 

«  *  * 

The  first  sign  of  spring  is  a 
mist  of  green  that  hangs  over 
the  campus  when  you  start  to 
•Tn  early  class  in  the  warm  sun- 
.shine.  The  relaxed,  lazy  droning 
of  a  professor. 

Full  tennis  courts  day  after 
day.  carele.ss  afternoons  at  Ho- 
gan's  and  bees  in  Y-Court — all 
of  these  are  spring  in  Chapel 
Hill.  It's  the  time  of  year  when 
seniors  suddenly  realize  that 
they  are  going  to  graduate  in 
two  or  three  months. 

It's  a  time  for  reflection  and 
a    time    for    looking    ahead    and 
somehow    you    don't    really    feel 
yourself  in  the  preseet.  There  i.-<- 
too    much    in    the   past    to    think 


of  and  too  much  in  the  future 
to  plan  on  and  the  present  slips 
pa.st  unnoticed,  fast  in  a  slow- 
paced   dream  world. 

The  campus  is  surrounded  by 
the  delicacy  of  Piedmont  spring- 
time. The  peach  and  cherry 
trees  hang  their  limbs  over  the 
mo55S-tinted  walks  around  Mc- 
Corkle  Place  and  the  first  glare 
of  the  sun  is  soon  reduced  to 
the  sort  of  shadowed  light  of 
leaf-filtered    green. 

And  the  shrubs  and  the  flow- 
ers of  the  .■\rboretum  pour  out 
their  songs  of  fragrance  on 
couples  slowly  walking  home  in 
the  late  evening.  Warm  days  are 
relaxed  by  cool  soft  spring 
nights  that  roll  in  later  and  lat- 
er each  day  as  the  sun  rises  high- 
er in  the  sky. 


By  A!  Capp 


PATHETIC,  iSfxj'T  IT -THE     *" 
REACTION  OF  THE  CHEAP 
CRIMINAL,  EVEN  WHEN 
CAUGHT  WITH  A  STOLEN   r 
ARTICLE.'!''  I -^f 


bUT  IN  THIS  CASE     p"    GO    ' 
THE  STOLEN  ARTICLE   I  AHEAD - 
ITSELP  ACCUSES    {  SOICH 
SOOff- 1  CAN  HEAR      ME.'/- 
IT  TICKING//, 

T/CK.' 


Pogo 


By  Walt  Kelly 


jiflvtf  nevW  9een  a 


I 


MAVaf  THAT'S  ^y     AIN'T 

igBN\vATCHiN\  0\W9r. 

NOTHIM'.      K  > 

NO" 


be  ^Tzdeti  to  see  Whe^e 
hcaoe?*to5«ehcrW      lS^f\(/) 


NlO>OUtf  N^tlN' 


Foul   Language 
From   Students 


Bill  King 


How  many  parents  would  even  claim  a  son, 
a  supposed  Carolina  Gentleman,  who  would  use 
such  foul  language  that  I  would  say  is  unfit  to 
say  in  a  soundproof  room  with  no  one  else  around? 
On  occasions  I  have  heard  students  who  could 
not  utter  a  complete  statement  without  a  profane 
word  in  it.  Is  this  what  the  people  of  North  Caro- 
lina have  to  look  forward  to  in  their  future  "lead- 
ers?" 

If  it  is,  fhen  the  future  of  North  Carolina  will 
certainly  be   a  bleak  one.   How   many   leaders  of 
today  will  respect  a  man  whose   every  sentence 
contains  a  variety  of  not  merely  profane  words, 
but  vulgarities  that  are   nts^r   said  by  the  truly 
great  men?  Some  profanity  is  used,  that  I'll  admit, 
but  there  is  not  a  great  mass  of  vulgarisms 
Where   does  this  foul   language  come  from"   Is 
it    the   students   who   are   making  the  best   grades 
or    in    the    most    extra    curriculars?    No.    It    comes 
from  the  students  that  are  here  for  a  "ball."  the 
ones  foi*  which   Carolina   forms  a  big  playground 
and    the    ones    who   dsappear    after   their   first    or 
second  semester  here.  These  students  are  causing 
a  disparaging  eye  to  be  cast  on  the  rest  of  us. 

These  students,  if  they  must  use  vulgarity.-  can't 
see  fit  to  reserve  it  for  their  rooms,  but  instead 
must  shout  it  from  the  sidewalks  so  everyone  will 
see  what  great  "big"  men  they  have  become.  Xhis 
undoubtedly  leaves  the  visitors  to  the  University 
with  a  very  good  impression  of  our  school,  our 
state  and  our  "future  leaders  of  tomorrow." 

This  is  especially  true  since  these  offenders 
don't  seem  to  mind  who,  man,  woman  or  child, 
happens  to    hear  them. 

Now  I'm  not  critieixing  the  people  who  use  a 
few  "d»mn«"  and  "holU,"  but  the  people  who  use 
Ian9uage  that  isn't  even  minted  in  the  most  vul- 
gar of   the    Illegal    books.   These   "big   men"   arc 
hurting     the  reputation  of  Carolina  m  much  at 
the  malicious  gossips  and  drunkards. 
■Who    is    to    blame    for    this    going    unchecked'' 
You  are,  every  student  at  Carolina  who  does  not 
express    his    distaste    when    one    of    these    'loud- 
mouths"  goes  into   a   "cussing"  period;  every  stu- 
dent who  does  not  have  the  guts  to  ask  one  of 
these  "blow-hards"  to  quieten  down;  every  student 
who   is  himself   guilty   of  this   act.   These  are  the 
guilty  ones. 

Does  one  of  these  descriptions  fit  you?  If  it 
does,  don't  you  think  it's  time  to  re-examine  four 
values,  take  stock  and  see  just  exactly  what  you 
can  do  about  the  situation  personally? 

• 

YOU  Said  It: 


Lenoir  Hall  Workers 
Are  Now  Satisfied 

Editor: 

The  uprising  of  the  workei's  at  Lenoir  Hall  for 
cash  wages  and  other  l>enefits  in  pay  has  come  to 
an  end.  The  Student  Legislature  Investigation  Com- 
mittee is  still  studying  the  situation  in  an  effort 
to  gain  better  pay  conditions  at  Lenoir,  but  it  no 
longer  has  the  overall  suppwrt  of  Lenoir  Hall  work- 
ers. 

I  havo  taken  a  survey  since  last  Wednesday's 
meeting  with  the  manager.  I  found  out  that  only 
11  students  out  of  125  are  not  satisfied  to  accept 
the  policy  of  Lenoir  Hall  as  It  now  stands. 

I  have  been  a  leader  in  the  whole  uprising,  but 
when  the  majority  goes  the  other  way  I  believe  it  is 
time  to  stop. 

Because  Mr.  Prillaman  has  said  he  will  not  fire 
any  student  for  saying  what  he  believei/,  this  satis 
faction  seems  to  have  come  about  because  the  work- 
ers see  the  managers  side  of  the  question  and  be 
lieve  in  his  desire  to  help  them. 

Caleb  White 


A   Big    Period 
At   Duke   School 

The  Duke  Chronicle 

Wednesday    afternoon    the    Board    of    Trustees 
met.  Wednesday  afternoon  President  Edens  gave  a 
quote   to   the   Chronicle.   This  quote    is   as   follows: 
"The   student   petition  was  discussed   today.   There 
has  been    no   change    in    policy."    Period.    A    great 
big  final  period. 

The  Divinity  School  students  circulated  their  pe 
tition  because  there  is  no  written  policy  govern- 
ing admissions  into  that  school.  They  wrote  their 
petition  because  qualified  students  were  being  turn- 
ed away  from  a  divinity  .school.  "There  has  been 
no  change  in  policy." 

Because  we  are  •  segregated  school,  valuable 
grants  for  graduate  study  have  be*n  given  to  oth- 
er schools.  Our  own  school  it  missing  Hnancial 
and  academic  aid  imperative  to  the  growth  of  an 
•ducationai  institution.  "There  has  bMn  no  change 
in  policy." 

The  Divinity  .School  students  are  the  men  who 
will  live  with  Negro  students;  they  will  sit  next 
to  them  in  classes;  they  will  share  the  Men's  Grad 
uate  Center  dining  halls  with  them.  They  con 
sidered  these  things  and  they  wrote  their  petition. 
"The  student   petition  was  discussed." 

President  Edens  did  not  say  "The  student  pe- 
tition was  given  consideration."  Rather  than  con- 
sideration there  was  discussion,  and,  "There  has 
been  no  change  in  policy." 

It  is  obvious  that  the  Board  of  Trustees  does 
not  care  to  apply  either  Eniditio  or  Religio  to 
this  situation.  They  prefer  to  discuss,  rather  than 
to  consider  it. 

Of  all  the  places  for  an  inevitable  step  to  be 
taken,  the  Divinity  School  is  the  logical  one,  y#t, 
"There  has  boon  no  change  in  policy." 

Prejudices,  it  is  well  known  are  most  difficult 
to  eradicate  from  the  heart  whose  soul  has  never 
been  loosened  or  fertilized  by  education;  they  grow 
there  firm  as  weeds  among  stones."' 


AT  BUS 


"Attractij 
North  Car<j 
ject  of  tht 
held  durin? 
voted  to  tl 

Walter  VI 
engineer  o^ 
tion  and 
to  head  tht 
new  jnriu.s^ 
expound  int 
had  aireadj 
flourL'hingl 
per  capita 

I'he    Faii 
Alpha  Kap^ 
ternity  of 
Adrninistral 
observance 
business   w| 
1952  had 
This  was  fc 
Barton  of 
speaker  on 
year. 

Tar    He| 
Graduates. 
Fair  in    19^ 
president 
Chambers 
list  of  .vpyeaj 
concerned 
Rudders,  tl 
can    TransT 
attended 
Southern  ti 
try. 


D 


iti 

When 
you're] 

you're] 
coll<*g€ 


-c»fc»-  A 


DA 

AC! 
1   Frad 
5.  Agrel 

10.  FragI 

11.  Asid/ 

12.  Tv] 
archil 

13.  A  phj 

14.  Bear 

15.  The 
oak 

17.  ExoU 
tion 

18.  At  &| 
distl 

19.  Like! 

20.  Voici 
ij>hoj 

23.  Creal 

tity 
25.  Rescl 

planJ 
27  Mac4 

(Bn 
28.  Fenii 

relat 

29  Rapi| 
<abt 

30  A 

31  'M.^i 
i  syiT 

S2  Sup{ 
33  RomJ 
mon^ 
3«.  Indi 

<mH 

38.  Heat 

imi 
40.  Skvl 

Ml.  Hnni 

loop] 

42.  Mel( 

48.  A  f  a| 

DOJ 

1.  Bird! 

2.  Mii.1t 
litfctrl 


m? 


son. 

use 

to 

>uld 

fane 

|aro- 

?ad- 


Is 

ides 

^mes 

the 

^und 

or 

Ising 

tan't 
tead 

I  will 
^his 

rsity 
our 


ted' 
not 

>ud- 

stu- 
of 

lent 
the 

it 
rour 
you 


for 
|e  to 

:0m- 

ffort 

no 

Irork- 


but 

it  is 

fire 

satis- 

ifork- 

be 

fhit* 


itees 

* 

ive  a 

llows: 

iThere 

great 

Ir  pe 
Ivern- 

their 
I  turn- 
been 


who 

next 

Grad- 

oon- 

Ftition. 

^nt   pe- 

con- 
re    has 


TUESDAY,  MARCH  19,  1957 


AT  BUSINESS  FAIR: 


TMI  DAILY  TAR  HllL 


rA*ft  TMRCV 


Harper  To  Speak  On  New  Industry 


By  BOB  HIGH  1      Harper  will  be  answered  in  his 

Attraction  of  New  Industry  into! seminar  by  Carl  E.  Blass  and  Tru- 


North  Carolina"  will  be  the  sub 
ject  of  the  second  seminar  being 
held  during  the  day,  March  22,  de- 
voted to  the  fifth  Business  Fair. 
Walter  W.  Harper,  development 
engineer  of  the  Dept.  of  Conserva- 
tion and  Development,  Raleigh,  is 
to  head  the  discussion  on  bringing 
now 


i  man  H.  Safford,  who  will  speak  on 
1  how  the  small  indu^ftry  in  North 
:  Carolina    has    helped    the    'little 

man." 

1  Harper  is  a  native  of  Edgecombe 
I  County  and    received    his    formal 

education  at  Leggett  and  Tarboro 
i  High    Schools.    Upon    his    gradua- 


mdustry  into  the  state  and :  tion  from  high  school  he  attended 
expounding  on  the  industry  that  Davidson  and  North  Carolina  State 
ha,<  already  been  formed  and  is  Colleges,  where  he  was  a  civil  en- 
tlourishing  to  better  the  income  gineering  graduate.  During  the 
per  capita  in  this  state.  second  World  War,  Harper  served 

The   Fair,    being   sponsored    by ;  as    a   public   relations    officer   in 
Alpha  Kappa  Psi.  professional  fra- ;  Italy. 

ternity  of  the  School  of  Business  His  business  experience  includes 
Administration,  is  the  fifth  such  highway  construction  and  various 
observance  in  connection  with  the  jobs  with  the  State  Highway  and 
business  world.  The  first  Fair  in  ;  Public  Works  Commission.  Harper 


1952  had  as  its  theme  "Finance." 
This  was  followed  by  having  Bruce 
Barton  of  New  York  as  the  main 
speaker  on  "Advertising"  the  next 
year. 

Tar  Heel  Jobs  for  Tar  Heel 
Graduates."  topic  for  the  third 
Pair  in  1954.  had  R.  D.  Harwick, 
president  of  the  State  Assn.  of 
Chambers  of  Commerce  headed  the 
list  of  s-peakers.  The  fourth  session 
concerned  "Wings,  Wheels  and 
Rudders,  the  Story  of  the  Ajneri- 
can  Transport  System."  This  was 
attended  by  many  executives  of 
Southern  transportation  and  indus- 
tr>'. 


has  been  affiliated  with  the  Ra- 
leigh Times  in  the  editorial  dept. 
and  was  also  assistant  to  the  di- 
rector of  Engineering  Research  at 
North  Carolina  State. 

While  at  N.  C.  State,  Harper  was 
also  the  assistant  director  of  Foun- 
dations. He  has  served  as  execu- 
tive vice-president  of  the  Fayette- 
ville  Development  Corporation. 

Blass  is  production  manager  for 
the  Southern  Assembles  Plant, 
Talen,  Inc.,  Dallas,  Texas.  Safford 
is  the  s-outhem  representative  for 
Charles  T.  Main  Inc.,  architects 
and  engineers,  Charlotte,  N.  C. 

The  purpose  of  the  Fair  is  to 


better  familiarize  both  the  public 
and  factors  of  industry  with  the 
Governors  SmaU  Industry  prograni 
in  North  Carolina  and  to  bring  out 
the  tremendous  possibilities  for  the 
profitable  establishment  or  exten- 
sion of  industries*  in  North  Caro- 
lina. 

The  concept  of  the  fair  this  year 
is  one  which  has  been  commended 
by  educators  and  North  Carolina 
businessmen  alike  for  its  educa- 
tional value,  as  Well  as  for  the  ex- 
perience which  those  who  partici- 
pate in  the  planning  and  execution 
of  such  a  fair  gain. 


It's  a  puzzlement: 


When  you're  old  enough  to  go  to  college, 
you're  old  enough  to  go  out  with  girls.  When 
you're  old  enough  to  go  out  with  girls,  who  needs 
college?  Oh  well,  there's  always  Coke. 


(cia(\7a 


Yonled  under  authority  of  Tha  Coed-Cola  Company  by 

DURHAM  COCA-COLA  BOTTUNd  CO. 


"C*!*"  h  a  r*gitt»rMl  trade-mark. 


•  19M,  THE  COCA-COU  COMPANY 


DAILY    CROSSWORD 


ACROSS 

1.  Fragment 
5.  Agreements 

10.  Fragrance 

11.  Aside 

12.  Type  of 
architecture 

13.  A  phoebe 

14.  Beard  of  rye 

15.  The  holm 
oak 

17.  E^clama' 
tion  (slang') 

18.  At  a 
distance 

10.  Like 

20.  Voiceless 

(jBhon. ) 
23.  Creat  quan> 

tity  (var. » 
25.  Rescue 

planes 

27.  Macaws 
(Braz.) 

28.  Female 
relatives 

29.  Rapid  fire 
(abbr.) 

30.  A  measure 

31.  Masauriuin 
(sym.) 

32.  Support 

33.  Romanian 
money 

38.  Indian 

<  Mex. ) 
38.  Heathen 

images 

40.  Sky-blue 

*4i.  Hangman's 

loop 

42.  Melodies 

43.  A  factor 

DOWN 

1.  Bird 

2.  Musical 
ixutruxnent 


3.  Wurttem- 
berg 
measure 

4.  An  ocean 

5.  Journal 

6.  Top 

7.  Cry  of 
a  crow 

8.  Cherish 
O.Boil 

slowly 
10.  Ctirl's  BiMne 
16.  Brief  and 

pithy 

18.  Cuckoo* 

19.  Man's 
nickname 

20.  Exclaxuju 

tiOB 


21.  Type 

of 

floor- 
ing 

22.  Norse 
fiame 

23.  Let 
it 

stand 
(Print.) 

24.  Large 
worm 

28.  Cutting 
notches 

30.  Steps 

31.  The  river 
Meuse 
(Neth.) 

M.  Mass  of  ice 


SQSD 

SQDQ 

aa^g] 

K3!I1(3 

aumma 

QQiaaii 

HIDC?        SIKQ    yS 

iui[i[:]S[is[i]  □na 

as    HHEl    LTiOHF- 

aaoDDSf:? 

Kmmn   ana  iife 

Tir^V     '■^' 

-.Ti.iiTi'^i'r 

HT'    J-;Sr 

c      rjr«ji*; 

'^jilXtn 

irjor^e 

i"ja>]  ^ 

'Jt:?.ir=^ 

dill'Lii'^ 

iiif^ij.-i 

33.  Pish-eattng 
bird 

34.  Otherwise 

35.  Employ 
37.  Large  wine 

cask 
39.  Female  d««r 


State  Dismisses 
Charges  On 
Students  Riot 

RALEIGH— (AP)— North  Caro- 
lina State  College  authorities  have 
closed  the  case  of  26  students  ar- 
rested by  Raleigh  police  as  the 
result  of  a  campus  disturbance. 

The  student  judicial  board  at 
the  college  announced  yesterday 
it  has  dismissed  the  charges  of 
"ungentlemanly  conduct"  against 
the  26.  It  said  the  charges  were 
dropped  because  of  "lack  of  evi- 
dence." 

Banks  C.  Tally  Jr.,  cp-ordlna- 
tor  of  student  activities,  said  the 
board's  report  has  been  accepted 
and  approved.  This  will  be  the  fin- 
al action  taken  in  the  case,  he 
added. 

After  a  hearing  in  city  court, 
17  of  the  students  were  given  sus- 
pended sentences  and  $25  fines. 
The  nine  others  were  acquftted. 
The  group  was  arrested  following 
a  riotous  demonstration  near  Rey- 
nolds Coliseum  the  night  of  March 
7.  Parking  problems  resulting 
from  the  Atlantic  Coast  Confer- 
ence Basketball  Tournament  tlieo 
in  play  was  cited  as  a  cuse. 


McKcMlSpeaks 
Here  Tomorrow 
fnGdrcfnerHdH 

C  .A.  MtiKeel,  manager  of  the 
Personnel  Administration  Dept., 
Manufacturing  Division  of  Vick 
Cliemical  C(»np«ny,  will  be  the 
giiest  speaker  at  a  Career  Meeting 
sponsored  by  the  FSaeement  Serv- 
ice. Alpha  Kappa  Psf,  and  Delta 
B%ma  Pi  tomorrow  at  7:36  p.m.  in 
195  Gardner  BaB. 

f)M  program  is  designed  to  give 
information  helpful  to  anyone  to 
be  interviewed  fior  employment 
it  was  ^ated  yesterday.  McKeel 
wiU  iM-esent  »  sample  interview 
with  the  questiMis  an  employer 
will  ask  and  the  lutderlying  facts 
he  is  tr>ing  to  obtain  from  them. 
Techoiquea  of  se«bng  emplt^ment 
and  interviewing  will  be  discussed. 
Anyone  interested  has  been  invited 
to  attend. 

McKeel  is  a  native  of  Greene 
County,  and  received  his  educatioo 
in  the  public  schools  and  Duke 
University.  Prior  to  his  association 
with  Vick  Chemical  Company,  Mc- 
Keel was  a  special  agent  with  the 
North  Carolina  Rating  and  Inspec- 
tion Burewi  and  in  general  insur- 
ance, mortgage  loan  and  property 
management . 


Dr.  \y.  W.  Qori  Receives 
Appmkhierrf  With  U.  N. 


Dr.  W.  W.  Cort.  a  research  pro- 
fessor of  the  UNC  SdKMd  of  Med- 
icine, has  accepted  an  honorary 
appointment  on  the  World  Healtli 
Organization  which  is  a  division 
within  the  United  Nations. 

Dr.  Cort  will  be  serving  his  sec- 
ond five-year  term  as  a  member 
of  the  Expert  Advisory  Panel  on 
Parasitic  Diseases.  A  letter  of  ap- 
pointment came  from  Dr.  M.  G. 
Candau,  director  of  the  World 
Health  Organization  whose  head- 
quarters is  in  Geneva,  Switzer- 
land. 

In  part,  the  letter  read,  "As  you 
are  aware,  membership  of  a  pan- 
el is  an  honorary  apppointment. 
Its  members  are  asked  to  give  the 
organization  the  benefit  of  their 
knowledge  and  to  inform  it  of  im- 
portant developments  in  their  own 
subjects,  particularly  in  the  coun- 
tries in  which  they  are  wwklng. 


There  will  be  a  meeting  of  the 
Law  Wives  Assn.  tomorrow  night 
at  8  p.m.  in  the  Victory  Village 
Day  Nursery.  A  group  of  law  stu- 
dents will  present  a  skit  for  the 
program. 


W;W.  CORT 

•  .  .  '.  ivith  U.N, 

Panel  members  undertake  to  con- 
tribute by  correspondence  and 
without  renumeration  technical 
information  or  reports  on  devel- 
opments within  their  own  field,  ei- 
ther periodically  or  on  request 
from  the  Director-General. 


Steele  States 
Young  Writers 
Too  Serious 

GREENSBORO  — ( AP)—  A  de- 
fect in  young  writers  is  their  too 
serious  approach  to  authorship. 
Max  Steele,  Oiapel  Hill  novelist 
and  teacher,  said  over  the  week- 
end at  the  writing  panel  of  the 
Woman's   College   Arts   Festival 

"They  appear  preoccupied  with 
death,"  Steele  said.  "Most  of  them 
write  with  unrelieved  seriousness 
and  don't  seem  to  know  how  to 
inject  humor  or  even  irony.'* 


.  Notices  Sent  To  Mm 
In  Phi  Eta  Sigma 

Dean  Elrnest  IVbckie,  director  0t 
student  avrards,  aaoo*.uiced  JKs- 
terday  tStat  notices  have  been  sent 
to  all  freshman  wh»  have  qualified 
for  Phi  Eta  &gma.  All  except  niae 
^  tho.se  that  were  sent  notieis 
have  reported  in  the  Dean's  office 
in  312  South  Kdg. 

Any  fre^umin  wha  thinks  that 
he  is  eligible  and  lias  not  received 
a  notice  has  been  asked  to  notify 
the  Dean's  office. 

In  order  to  ^pialify  a  student 
must  have  <me  half  A's  and  th» 
rest  B's  in  eitha*  his  first  semester 
or  his  first  two  semesters. 


Carolin:} 


TODAY 


Oh.Men! 

Oh.women: 

C010»',DF    '   VXL 

CinfmaScoPE 


jwss».\vVi\v>;.\mv 


///V»5» 


VmMRNS 


TODAY  ONLY 


EgrR5ZT^ 


ATTn/^T' 


GLEE  CLUB 

(Continued  from  page   \) 

urgy  by  Peter  Tkach;  Soi>ert  Louis 
Stevenson's  '^Requim"  and  "The 
Last  Words  of  David"  by  Thomp- 
son. 

A    triple    quartet    directed    by 
James  Chamblee,  dubbed  the  "Clef  I 
Dwellers"   will  offer   a  few   selec- 
I  tions  of  barbershop  quartet  music  1 
at  this  point.  j  v» 

I      "The    Testament    of    Freedom,"  \ 
composed  of  four  highly  patriotic 
passages     from     the     writings     of 
Thomas  Jefferj«>n,  will  follow  the 
'  special  quartet  music. 
j      After   intermission,   a   group   of 
I  folk    songs    and   Negro   spirituals, 
including  "Shenandoah"  and  "O!* 
I  Joe  Clark"  will  be  sung. 
!      Calypso  singer   Hoke    Simpson, 
[  backed    by   a   quartet  called   The 
i  Four  Flatterers,  will  appear  next 
[  as  the  club's  special  guest  artist. 
Simpson  is  a  freshman  at  Carolina. 
A    group    of     Carolina    loyalty 
songs  will  terminate  the  program. 
Along  with   the   alma   mater,   the 
club  will  sing  "Interger  Vitae"  and 
a  new  arrangement  of  "Dixie"  by 
student    conductor    James    Cham- 
blee. 

The  825-mile  tour  will  include 
stops  at  Rocky  Mount,  Edenton, 
Swansboro  and  Laurinburg,  North 
Carolina  and  Georgetown  and 
Charleston,  South  Carolina.  One  of 
the  performances  at  Charleston 
will  be  a  television  appearance 
over  WCSC-TV. 

The  piano  accompanist  for  the 
Glee  Club  is  Hunter  Tillman. 


CLASSIFIEDS 


TABITHANN  —  I'VE  ENJOYED 
past  seven  months.  How  about 
August  31?  DRAWLER. 


LOST:  GOLD  WEDDING  BAND 
(man's)  Monday.  Letters  A.  L. 
P.-B.  R.  P.  on  inside  with  date 
12-23-55.  Finder  please  notify 
Ben  Payne,  Rt.  1.  Box  146.  Dur- 
ham, N.  C,  or  leave  messaie 
with  Janet  Domugh,  Chemis- 
try Office,  phone  3471. 


FOR  SALE:  1949  FORD  WITH 
motor  in  good  condition— $200. 
Contact  Tommy  Johnson  at  201 
Joyner  Dorm. 


TWO  BEDROOM  HOUSE  FURN- 
ished  or  unfurnished,  near  camp^ 
us.  Call  9458  during  day  ot  2926 
after  5:30  p.m.  and  weekend. 


3  ROOM  BRICK  HOUSE.  S  BED 
rooms,  all  modem  convcniencea. 
3  miles  on  Old  86  Hyway.  Stove 
and  Frigedaire  furnished.  Call 
Fred  Katzia  after  6:00.  8-902S. 


FIVE  ROOM  BRICK  HOUSE  IN 
center  of  town — has  hob))y  work- 
shop. Call  9458  during  day  or 
2926  after  5:30  and  during 
weekend. 


NORTH     CAROLINA     SENIORS 


H: 


PROCTER  &  GAMBLE 


:*:?- 


REPRESENTATIVE    HERE     MARCH    28 


I.. 


-    ■?- 


;  t 


Unusual  QppmiTuivnTiE&imR 

Growth  IjSSbs    ^mmmm^ 

in  the  fields  of  Advertising  and  Marketing 


t*'  I 


1  ~        i' 


IVoulei  ftXjImMe hn openlngi  for  yovmg  conegcwKm 
wmd  nbihtj  in  its  Advertising  I>^}artn3ent.  While  the 
are  al  -midim  tbtt  framework  o(  Advertising  aad  Sate  IVoaM- 
ticNi,  the  natta^  of  the  work  is  Marketing  Management  radwr 
tkaa  "handkng  advertking"  as  most  people  understand  k.  Far 
this  reason,  speciaiized  tfaining  (x*  experience  m  Advertieinc  or 
Marketing  is  bo<.  required.  Good  general  bustneas  potenttai,  a 
lugk  degree  o£  naCire  intelltgence,  and  the  ability  to  w^k 
maootbiy  with  maof  tf  pes  o/^  people  wilt  be  considered  foremoet. 
ki  the  last  tea  years  akme,  Procter  &  GamUe  sales  hapm 
incpeased  from  $336  sMliioa  to  over  $1  bittion.  This  rapid  eaqsa»- 
wm.  plus  our  po&cies  o(  always  filiii^  higher  level  poaitioai 
l>f  promotioR  ftom  within  and  advancii^  peopie  miiH^tttMy 
and  iMpidkf  as  soon  as  they  are  ready  to  nnow  «p  the  ladder, 
caaaAes  a  trvkj  oMtofcandiwg  opportwnty. 

A  hnef  deacriptioa  iioAo««  of  the  varioas  careers  now  < 
ttR  Fpocter  &  Gamble  Ad^pertising  DepartmeaL 

BRAIfD  MANAOBMENT— The  marketing  profalen»«f 
flf  onr  brands  asc  handled  by  a  separate  staff  of  Marlntiiic 
Nta»gement  men.  Men  employed  for  this  work  are  trained  ta> 
naoaee  and  be  refponeible  ior  tf>e  effectiveness  of  the  o^craM 
Advertising  and  Promotion  effort  on  an  important, 
advertised  brand.  These  positions  involve  working  with 
Company  departments,  inchiding  the  Research  and  Develop- 
■sent  D^partnaent  on  product  development,  the  Sales  Depart- 
ment  on  the  development  oC  promoti<KY(s  and  with  tJw  Ad'Mrtia* 
lag  Acency  on  aM  phaees  of  planning  for  the  bravi- .      .    v  .- 

60Pr  SCJPfiRVISiON-Copy  Supervisors  iRans«t4i#mt» 

ing  oopr  operations  on  our  brands  principally  by  (1)  Fepresentinc 
liK  Campe»y  in  a  dose  working  relationship  with  owrags^cios 
an  aA  phases  of  the  development  of  advertising  oopr  ^iiA  <M 
iting  agency  copy  proposals  in  the  light  of  prodnot  £act8» 
rketii^  objectives,  and  backgrotmd  kuowluip.  of  ^fedi^a 
techni<ioe&  These  men  do  not  write  copy;  tins  is  a 
fcmction  of  our  advertising  agencies.  Ho««vtr,  within  mm 
Achrertisii^  DepartoMpt,  they  are  responsible  far  the  over-att 
stftxtiwiiM.  *  of  advertising  copy  operations  in  sadin»  telsmnon, 
■niBMinesand  other  media. 

MMtCHANDiSINO— Merchandising  men  develop  store 
pnookotions  mvolving  groups  of  C<xnpany  brands,  select  and 
devekip  premium  aitidea,  manage  the  country-wide  samphDC 
MKl.oOttpooii^  operations,  assist  the  Saks  Department  in  oon- 
dnctii^  trade  conventions,  and  operate  contests*  mail-ini!&  and 
other  forsis  of  promotions. 

MEDIA— Media  men  guide  the  Compaoy  in  tkle  ill  i  mm/mi 
of  advcrttsing  appropriations.  Working  with  the  advertiiinc 
nfenciea,  they  dsvelop  media  plans  on  each  brand  using  radin^ 

etc 


THE  PROCTOR  &  GAAABLE  REPRESENTATIVE  WILL  BE  AT  NOR!  H  CAROUNA  MARCH  28Hi 


MR.  H.  H.  WILSON,  JR. 
Swparrtoor  of  Penooa«l  for  the  P  ft  G 
Advertising  DepartOMaC,  wiM^  at  Xk» 
Placement  Service, 
Thurs<iii7.  March  28th 

j0  j^gpoimimmuUami.  _j 


i.<S 


k^ 


PAGE  FOUR 


THt  DAILY  TAR  HEtl 


TUESDAY,  MARCH  19,  1957 


Beatty  Drops  Out  Of 
I  Two-Mile  At  Chicago 


..UNC  distance  ace  Jim  Beatty 
was  forced  to  drop  out  of  the  run- ' 
ning  with  only  two  laps  to  go  last 
Saturday  night  in  the  two  mile' 
run  at  Chicago.  No  reason  was  | 
given  for  Realty's  failure  to  fin-| 
ish  the  race.  i 

Fellow  Chapel  Hillian  Laszlo ; 
Tabori  wound  up  fourth  in  the  j 
two  mile  behind  Ron  Delaney, ! 
Burr  Grim  and  Ted  Wheller.  Al- 1 
•hough  Tabori  reportedly  finish-  i 
ed  a  "distant  last,"  UNC  track 
coach  Dale  Ranson  said  yesterday ' 
that  the  Hungarian  Olympic  ace  i 
was  only  about  four  feet  out  of 
second  place. 

Beatty,   Tabori  and   Dave   Scur- : 
lock   will    run    in    Cleveland    this ' 
weekend.    Beatty    will    switch    to 
the    two-mile,    Tabori   will   go    in 
the  mile  and  Scurlock  wUl  com- 
pete in  the  1,000  yard  run. 


WHAT'LL  YOU  READ? 

You  Pays  Your  Menoy  and 
You  T*k*s  Your  Choice 

NOVELS  -  -  - 

If  you're  the  sort  thai  likes  to  read 
tjjmorrow's  novels  today,  we've  got 
em  running  out  of  our  ears — al 
Ft  price.  But  we  doubt  verv'  much 
if  any  contemporary  historical  no- 
vel is  better  than  "Gone  With  The 
Wind,"  or  "Ivanhoc."  for  that  mat- 
ter. And  if  you  don't  insist  on  new- 
ness, yjuU  get  a  whale  of  a  lot 
more  reading  for  your  money.  For 
example: 

Papor-backs  (used)  3  for  25c 

Hard-backs  (worn)  46c  3  for  $1.00 
Hard-backs  (Fin*)  72c  to  97c 

Brand  New  Novels 

(Pub.    in    1956   or   earlier)   $1.00 
Reprints  of   Good   Novels 

$1.25  and  up 


The  entire  UNC  track  squad  is 
going  through  intensive  workouts 
in  an  effort  to  gel  ready  for  the 
Florida  Relays  on  the  30th  of  this 
month. 

Coach  Ranson  yesterday  urged 
anyone  interested  to  come  out  for 
the  squad,  saying  that  this  is  the 
crucial  time  in  building  a  good 
team. 

Tabori's  trainer.  Mihaly  Igloi,  is 
working  with  the  Tar  Heel  run- 
ners. Coach  Ranson  turned  the 
coaching  reins  over  to  Iglbi  yes 
terday,  and  the  Hungarian  men- 
tor, considered  by  many  to  b?  the 
world's  best  track  coach,  put  the 
Carolina  boys  through  their  paces. 


McGuire  Gets  Award 

NEW  YORK— (AiPl—Th*  Met- 
ropolitan  Basketball  Writers' 
Assn.  presented  their  annual 
awards  to  Frank  McGuire,  Cpech 
of  North  Carolina's  unbeaten  Tar 
Heels,  Columbia's  All-Americ.a 
Chet  Forte,  Temple's  Guy  Rodg- 
ers  and  Bob  Cousy  and  Tom 
Heinsohn  of  the  Boston  Celtics. 

To  McGuire  went  the  Coach 
of  the  Year  a-ward. 


PATRONIZE  YOUR 
•    ADVERTISERS    • 


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For  The  Tar  Heels,  A  Trip  To  Kansas  City 

What  it  was  was  football. 

For  the  type  of  basketball  we  saw  in  Philadelphia  last  week- 
end, no  more  suitable  description  can  be  found. 

Carolina's  unbeaten  Tar  Heels  survived  two  rough  and 
tun>ble  tusalee  in  the  city  of  brotherly  love  to  qualify  for  the 
NCAA  final  round  at  Kansas  City,  Mo.,  next  weekend,  but 
doing  it  was  no  easy  job. 

The  teams  Carolina  was  called  on  lo  play,  Canisius  and  Syra- 
cuse, were  far  inferior  to  the  Tar  Heels  in  the  matter  of  skill 
and  basketball  ability.  But  for  pure  speed.  aggre.^iveness  and 
physical  strength,  these  two  teams  were  almost  unbeatable. 

Both  Canisius  and  Syracuse  gave  Carolina  a  beating;  a 
good  thorough  working  over.  Joe  Quigg,  Bob  Young  and  Len- 
nie  Rosenbluth  all  took  their  share  of  hard  knocks,  and  all  the 
other  boys  felt  the  effecH  of  flying  knees  and  elbows. 

But  this  was  far  from  enough  to  stop  the  nations  number 
one  team.  The  Tar  Heels  took  all  the  punishment  the  opposition 
could  dish  out.  and  cashed  in  their  chips  at  the  foul  line. 

Deapite  the  "alley  cat"  basketball  they  were  forced  to 
combat,  the  Carolinians  were  never  in  serious  trouble  against 
the  best  teanK  in  the  east.  Superior  skill,  height  and  finesse 
all  paid  off  in  a  trip  to  Kansas  City  for  Coach  Frank  McGuire 
•nd  his  club. 

Back  alley  basketball  won*t  win  when  you  play  the  best.  Syra- 
cuse and  Canisius  found  this  out  the  hard  way. 

Rosenbluth  And  Kearns:  A  Dynamic  Duo 

The  Tar  Heels,  unimpressi«e  in  two  showings  in  New  York 
Cit^  thi.'  season,  forced  the  Philadelphia  writers  to  break  out  new- 
superlatives  with  their  performances  in  the  Palestra.  Tuo  men, 
Rosenbluth  and  Tommy  Kearns.  grabbed  most  of  the  headlines. 

Surprisingly  enough,  there  were  some  who  left  the  Palestra 
convinced  that  Kearns  was  nrore  valuable  to  the  Tar  Heels 
than  AII'Anferica  Rosenbluth.  The  chunky  guard  scored  19  and 
22  points  in  two  nights  while  Rosie  poured  in  39  and  23. 

But  again,--t  a  pressing  man-to-man  defense.  Tommy  is  in  his 
glor>.  There  is  no  belter  dribbler  or  driver  in  the  countrj-.  and 
Kearns  proved  this  to  the  satisfaction  of  all  the  Philadelphia  writ- 
ers in  his  two  game  stand. 

One  scribe  called  Tommy  "next  year's  All-American  choice 
at   guard  with   Guy   Rodgers   of   Temple".   And   most  of   the   rest 
were  equally   enthusiastic.   Voting   for   the   All-Tournanoent   team 
reflected   this  feeling,  for   Kearns  was   left  off  the  first   team  en 
only  one  ballot,   Rosenbluth  was  a  unanimous  choice. 

Rosenbluth  received  his  usual  share  of  plaudits,  especially 
after  his  record  breaking  point  total  Friday  uight.  But  the  real 
hero  of  the  tournament  was  Kearns.  AJong  with  reliable  Bob  Cunn- 
ijxgh&m,  the  muscular  5-11  guard  did  a  marvelous  job  of  ball  hand- 
ling against  the  Canisius  and  Syracuse  pressing  defena-cs. 

The  eastern  powers  couldn't  stop  Kearns  or  Ros*nbluth. 
And  they  couldn't  stop  the  Carolina  basketball  team. 

This  weekend,  Captain  Ro^-enbluth  and  his  Tar  Heel  team- 
mates will  taste  some  of  that  Kansas  City  beefsteak  they've  talk- 
ed .0  much  about:  They  will  also  got  a  taste  of  the  Michigan  Slate 
Spartans,  upset  winners  over  Kentucky  in  the  midwest  regional 
playoffs. 

This  may  prove  to  be  quite  a  mouthful,  for  the  Spartans  have 
been  one  of  the  hottest  1eam.s  in  basketball  in  the  past  few  weeks. 

The  other  semi-final  game  will  pair  mighty  Kansas  and 
San  Francisco,  the  winner  to  meet  Carolina  (we  hope)  in  the 
finals.  And  if  things  go  like  they  should,  the   long  awaited 
showdown  between  Carolina  and  Kansas  will  take  place. 
We're  putting  oiu*  money  on  the  Tar  Heels,  for  how  can  you 
go  against  a  team  that  has  a  30-0  record.  They  must  be  good. 

In  The  Palestra,  A  Back  Alley  Brawl 

Chief  topic  of  coover.sation  among  sideliners  al  Philadelphia 
wa.  the  roughness  of  the  play.  To  those  of  us  accustomed  to 
southern  basketball,  w'hat  was  going  on  on  the  floor  was  nothing 
s'horl  of  criminal. 

Most  of  you  witnessed  the  two  Carolina  gan>es  on  TV,  but 
you  didn't  see  the  Syracuse-Lafayette  game.  Of  all  the  Palestra 
brawls,  this  was  the  bloodiest.  From  start  to  finish,  the  two 
teams  raced  up  and  down  the  court  with  recklesa  abandon. 
Spills  were  a  dime  a  dozen.  One  poor  Lafayette  player  was 
stretched  out  on  the  floor  three  times  during  the  game,  unable 
to  get  to  his  feet  without  assistance.  At  least  two  or  three  more 
players  went  through  similar  experiences. 

The  officiating  was  terrible.  That's  the  only  word  for  it. 
It's  a  wonder  somebody  didn't  get  killed.  Helmets  and  pads 
might  have  helped. 

After  losing  to  Carolina  in  the  championship  game.  Syracuse 
coach  Marc  Guley  had  a  complaint  to  make.  It  seems  the  officials 
called  too  many  fouls  on  his  team.  Because  of  "tight"  officiating, 
the  Orangemen  were  severely  hampered  in  their  attempts  to  a*- 
sasinate  the  Carolinians.  Too  bad.  Coach. 


COME  AND  GET  IT! 
I've  Still  Got  ESSO  EXTRA 


at 


Downtown  Prices  For 
Regular  Gas 


and 

AAy  Regular  3<  Under  That 

Plus 

Bring  This  Ad  and  Get  1  Cent  Off  Per  Gal.  Gai, 
5  Cents  Per  Qt.  Oil 
-^  ^'Credit  Cards  Honored  Again 
At  The  Students'  Friend 

WHIPPLE'S  ESSO  SERVICE 


In  The  City  Of  Brotherly 
Love.  Invasion  From  Dixie 


By  LARRY  CHEEK 

Last  weekend,  the  proverbially 
"friendly"  city  of  Philadelphia, 
numbering  some  4  million  inhabi- 
tants, was  invaded  by  a  meagre 
group  of  400  highly  vocal  rebels 
from  the  sunny  state  of  North 
Carolina.  And  we  doubt  if  the 
"friendly"  city  has  recovered  from 
the   shock   yet. 

The  rebels  were  Carolina  stu- 
dents, and  tJiey  were  in  town  to 
see  their  unbeaten  basketball 
team  go  after  consecutive  num- 
ber 29  and  30  in  the  Eastern 
Regional  NCAA  playoffs.  All  the 
students  knew  their  team  would 
win.  And  the  all-conquering  Tar 
Heels  did  just  that. 

No  one  in  the  vast  metropolis 
that  is  Philadelphia  had  any 
doubts  as  to  the  identity  of  these 
slightly  insane  newcomers.  Color- 
ful blue  and  white  buttons  pin- 
ned to  every  lapel  blatantly  ad- 
vertised Carolina's  number  one 
ranking.  UNC  banners  waved  in 
the  breeze.  Cars  ranging  from 
sleek  convertibles  lo  broken  down 
jalopys  were  plastered  with  white 
paint,  paper,  and  blue  and  white 
colors. 

The  ^students  poured  into  town 
all  day  Friday.  When  game  time 
arrived,  rain  was  falling  in  iiheets, 
but  the  dismal  weather  failed  to 
dampen  Tar  Heel  spirits. 

An  hour  before  tipoff  lime,  the 
Pale.stra.  home  of  the  University 
of  Pennsylvania  team,  was  begin- 
ning to  fill  up  with  Carolina  stu- 
dents. 

The  banners,  pennants,  flags 
and  stickers  were  out  in  full  force. 
Jim  Bynum  and  an  enthusiastic 
group  of  clieerleaders  were  on 
hand.  Trumpets  blared  high  in 
the  stands.  And  there  was  even 
a  booming  drum,  brought  along 
to  combat  the  famous  Canisius 
drum.  Palestra  officials  cracked 
down  however,  and  both  drums 
were  outlawed. 

From  the  opening  tap  to  the 
final  gun.  the  UNC  cheering  sec- 
tion was  a  t»eehive  of  sound  and 


motion.  For  their  team  wat  mop- 
ping up  the  court  with  Canisius. ! 

The    second    night,    the    tempo 
picked  up.  In  addition  to  the  cho- 1 
rus  of  Carolina  voices,  there  was 
a  new  sound.  Lafayette  students,  i 
who  had  watched  their  team  fall  | 
to  Syracuse  the  night  before,  hop-  i 
ped  on  the  UNC  bandwagon.  Fri- 
day  night    the   Tar   Heel  rooters  j 
had  lent  their  support  to  the  Leo- ! 
pards.  no  now  both  schools  join- 1 
ed  forces  against  Syracuse.  , 

As  the  championship  game  near- 
ed   completion   with   Carolina   en- 
joying a  comfortable  lead,  a  fam- 
iliar face  was  spotted  in  the  crowd,  i 
and   cheers   began   to   break   out. 
University    Chancellor    Robert    B.  '•■ 
House    then   stood   up   to   take    a , 
bow.    and    the    congregated    «tu-  < 
dents  roar^   their  approval. 

By  request  of  Palestra  officials. ! 
the     trumpets    were    silent.    But 
from    the    Syracuse    end    of    the 
court    a   loud    blast   each    time    a  j 
Carolina    player    stepped    to    the' 
foul  line.  No  retaliation.  | 

Converts  to  the  Carolina  cause 
were  a  dime  a  dozen.  Won  over 
by  tins  enthusiastic  group  of  Tar 
Heels,  many  Philly  natives  beg- 
ged for  stickers  buttons  pennants 
or  anything  else  they  could  get 
their  hands  on. 

And  then  there  was  the  side- 
line cop  who  won  the  heart  of 
the  crowd.  Swayed  by  the  happy ! 
students  around  him.  this  cop  be- 
came an  ardent  Tar  Heel  fan.  He 
cheered  the  team  on.  praised  the 
play  of  Rosenbluth  and  Kearns. 
and  did  his  best  lo  gel  the  auto- 
graphs of  each  Carolina  player,  j 
For  this  he  received  a  well  de- 
served ride  on  the  .shoulders  of 
UNC  students  at  game's  end. 

After  the  game  came  the  celebra-  ! 
lion.  Restaurants,  night  clubs  and 
fraternity    houses   throughout  the 
length    of   Philly   resounded   with 
the    boistrous    strains    of    "I'm    A ' 
Tar  Heel  Bom."  Far  into  the  night 
the   festivities  went  on.  With  the 
dawn  they  faded,  and  in  the  bright  ! 
light    of    a    new    day,    the    weary 
students  began  a  long  but  happy : 


NCAA  Finals  Tickets 

Tickets  to  tha  NCAA  fin«l 
round  in  Kansas  City,  Mo.,  this 
weekend  are  new  en  sale  at  the 
Woollen  Gym  box  offke.  Ap- 
proximately t80  tickets  are  stiii 
available. 

Tickets  to  each  of  the  Friday 
trek  back  to  Chapel  Hill,  home  and  Saturday  night  sessions  are 
of  the  nation's  best  basketball  j  each  priced  at  S4.00.  Sales  will 
team.  close  at  4:30  this  after  noon. 


WATCH   FOR 


o«  o«    o«  o» 


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BREAKFAST 

LUNCH 
^  /  DINNER 

■ -V-'il  :■  -^u^ ■ ;    -  :  .  SNACKS 
'landmark  For  Hungry  Tarheels" 


SUPER  ATTRACTlOlsiS     pr-e-v-enx 

^^1     M^m^^^m.  ^^'^'^s  for  57 


oflOO 


NORTH  CAROUNA  STATE  FAIR>K 


ONE  NITE  ONLY 


Rosie  Named  To  Look  Sauad         t446«Awto.^«r«c  raleigh 

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■  MB  m^         AMBA«SADO»    THrATffr     «tlll  nil 


CHICAGO,  March  18  — (AP)— 
Look  magazine  today  announced 
its  1956-37  All-America  basketball 
team.  Ten  players  were  named. 
There  was  no  differentiation  whe- 
ther they  were  on  first  or  second 
teams. 

Those  named  were  Hgin  Bay- 
lor,   Seattle:    Wilt    Chamberlain, 


Kansas:  Chet  Forte,  Columbia; 
Frank  Howard.  Ohio  State;  Rod 
Hundley.  West  Virginia;  J  i_m 
Krebs.  Southern  Methodist:  Guy 
Rodgers,  Temple;  Len  Rosenbluth. 
North  Carolina:  Gary  Thompson. 
Iowa  Stale,  and  Charlie  Tyra, 
Louisville. 


nnix%    ADMISSION    ■  ■ 
\n  &  lu  W  Sutt  S3  00  cftf  7' ' 


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MM  a^       AMBASSAOO*   TMCATITE    BUILG 

ODOOr         ^^        MAMLINS    DVUG    COWPANT 


THE    NEW   YORK  LIFE  AGENT 

ON  YOUR  CAMPUS 
IS  A  GOOD  MAN  TO  KNOW 

George  L.  Coxhead 


UNC,   '42 
A    Mutual    Cempcny 


Campus  Rtprttentative 


NEW  YORK  UF 


IT'S  FOR  REAL! 


by  Chester  Field 


VICE  VERSA*^ 


Out  after  a  deer? 

Of  course  you  know 
You  must  get  a  license 

Before  you  go! 


MORALt  Big  game  hunters,  attention— 
tal;e  your  pleasure  BIG!  Smoke  a 
regal  Chesterfield  King  and  get  mart 
of  what  you're  smoking  for.  Majestic 
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smoothest  tasting  smoke  today 
because  it's  packed  more  smoothly 
by  ACCIJ'RAY! 
Like  your  pleamre  BjOT 
Chesterfield  King  has  lyerytWwpi 

*i30  atm  to  Jtrry  A.  By$,  Cot  C«IUg$,  for  kit 
Ch—tir  Fitld  poem. 

$50  for  tvtry  philotophieal  uertt  oceepltdforpuUieK- 
lion.  CktMttrfitU,  P.O.  Box  31,  New  Ytrk  4$,  N.  Y. 

e  Utt*tt  A  Urtn  Toktac*  C* 


Obt  After  a  dear. 

Then  it's  reversed. 
Never  mind  the  licejirc 

Catch  the  dear  first! 


.'dK8 


jieefials     Dept. 
Cli&pel  Hill.   N.   C. 


WEATHER 

Fair  ami  mild,  with  an  axpcctad 
hi«|i  in  Hw  4/0'u 


PLANKS 

As   usual,   »h»y'ra    m»d9    out    •! 
gr—n  pin*.  S««  Miitorial,  pa««  2. 


^ 


LVII  NO.   118 


Complett  UPt  Wirt  SCfMM 


CHAFEL  hill,  north  CAROLINA,  )¥EDNESOAY,  MARCH  20,   1957 


Officei  in  Graham   Memorial 


FOUR  PAGES  THIS  IS5UE 


Israel  Threatens  War; 
Russia  May  Use  Atom 

JERUSALEM.  — ^P —  The  cpeii  threat  of  a  new  war  emerged  to- 
day from  Israel's  dismay  at  Gaza  Strip  and  Aqaba  Gulb  developments 
since  she  turned  over  those  battle-won  territories  ta  the  United  Na- 
tions. 

Prime  Minister  Da\-id  Ben-Gurion  said  Israel's  army  will  march 
against  Egypt  again  if  President  Nasser  "tries  to  block  our  historic 
and  legal  passage  into  the  Gulf  of  Aqaba 


Candidates 
Tqlk  To  IDC 
Thursday  Night 

The    IDC    will    meet    tomorrow 
night  at  7  p.m.  in  the  Phi  Assembly 


"It  would  be  a  black  day  on  the  moral  conscience  of  the  world  if  i  ^^^  political  parties  wiU  speak  be- 
we  had  to  move  our  army  to  defend  our  rights."  said  the  70-year-old  !  ^^^^  ^"^  body. 
L-^racli  leader.  "We   will  do  it  only  as  a  last  resort.   But  if  forced,  i     Representing  the  Student  Party 
wc  will  do  it  and  do  it  effectively.'  j  will  be  Sonny  Evans,  presidential 

Bcn-Gurion  implied  he  hoped  for  backing  from  Pi-esident  Eisen-  '  J^ominee 
howcr  —  "an  honorable  man.  a  friend  and  a  general  of  armies"  — 
on  the  basis  of  a  letter  Eisenhower  dispatched  to  him  during  Israel's 
early  March  crisis  over  the  final  pullout  orders.  Israelis  have  generally 
regarded  that  letter  a    a  pledge. 

II  there  is  nc  forthright  action  by  the  United  Nations.  Bcn-Gurion 
said,  the  Eisenhower  Doctrine  "could  certainly  be  used  to  halt  such 
p  little  man  as  Nasser." 


Hall,  according  ^o  Sonny  Hallford.   student    Party    Chairman     Sonay 

Hallford  yesterday. 
He  pointed  out  that  32  bills  and 
president  and  vice  president  from   resolutions   have   been   introduced 


Hallford  A^s  For  Vote 
Of  Confidence  For  SP 

A  vote  of  confidence  for  the  in  the  current  session  of  the  Stu- ' 
outstanding  legislative  work  of  the  dent  Legislature.  Out  of  these. 
Student  Party  was  called   for  by  |  the  SP  sponsored  22.  Seven  of  the 


'Hard  Working 
Problems,  Says 


Will  Solve 
Crowther 


president  of  IDC. 
Student     Body 


candidates     for 


and  Don  Fxirtado,  vice 
presidential  nominee. 

Bill  Baum,  presidential  nominee, 
and  Benny  Thomas,  vice  president- 
ial nominee,  wil^  represent  the 
University  Party. 

Daily  Tar  Heel  editorship  candi 


Quarterly  Announces 
Fiction  Contest  Date 

! 
The  Carolina  Quarterly.  UNO  !H- 
erary  magizine.  has  announced  its 
deadline  of  April  1  for  its  current 
fiction  contest.  Students  have  been 
invited  to  ^.-abmit  fiction,  not  limit- 
ed in  style  or  form,  1500  to  4500 


like  to  encourage  all  IDC  members 
ti  be  in  attendance  at  this  meet- 
ing, the  last  one  before  elections. 


Sponsored  by  a  national  magazine,   a  chartered  bus. 


WASHINGTOX.  —  .fi—  Israels  Ambassador  Abba  Eban  called  at 
the  State  Department  today,  evidently  to  press  Israel's  demands  for  a 
tougher  United  State  policy  toward  Egypt.  "It's  a  natural  assumption 
thaj  we  didn't  talk  only  about  principles."  he  said  afterwards. 

Eban  described  it  as  a  fv  llow-up  to  yesterday's  meeting  of  Israeli 
FcMreign  Minister  Golda  Moir  with  Secretary  of  State  Dulles  and  her 
conference  at  the  United  Nations  with  Secretary  General  Dag  Ham- 
marskjold. 

Eban  declared  that  whether  Israel  fights  Egj-pt,  as  Israeli  officials 
.«;ay  it  will  do  in  solf  defcn  •>.  depends  "not  only  on  what  wc  discuss 
here  hut  en  the  jiitiiation  on  the  scene."  Eban  said  he  had  not  yet 
heard  about  the  si.\-point  proposal  on  future  operation  of  the  Suez 
Csaal.  It  was  received  by  .\merican  official.*  and  their  initial  reaction 
was  that  it  falls  short  of  being  satisfactory. 

Atom  Bomb  Would  Be  Dropped  On  U.  S. 

LONDON.  —  Pi—  Soviet  Defen  j  Minister  Georgi  Zhukov  says  the 
r.S.S.R.  would  use  atom  and  hydrogen  bombs  as  its  "main  striking 
force"  in  the  event  of  war  with  the  United  States.  ' 

Moscow  Radio  quoted  him  today  as  telling  a  Soviet  army  confer- 
ence that  if  such  a  conflict  broke  out  the  United  States  would  not 
"be  able,  as  formerly,  to  sit  it  out  over  the  ocean  and  avoid  destructive 
«»od  deadly  Wcws." 

The  broadcast  said  the  conference  took  place  lajt  FYiday  in  Mos- 
cow. 

ZbukJv  declared  that  any  future  war  "will  involve  not  only  the 
theater  of  operations,  but  will  stretch  out  deep  into  the  rear  of  the 
belligerents. 

UNC  To  Ask  For  Sahry  H^e 

RALEJGH  — (AP> —  The  Con-  al  iunds  for  the  libraries  of  the  ■  tinctiveness,  atu)  good  fasUion  t.tu- 
soltMted  University  of  North  three  units  of  the  Consolidated  ,  so  as  evidenced  Irom  photographs 
CaroUm    was    expected    to   fo!low    University — North    Carolina    State    which  will  be  submitted. 

Carolina's  representative  will  be 
chosen  from  among  the  candidates 
submitted  by  campus  group.*  by  a 
board  of  student  judges.  Those 
groups  entering  representativco- 
may  submit  three  pictures  of  her 
(in  a  semi-formal  or  formal  gown, 
town  outfit,  and  campus  outfit)  as 
late  as  6  p.m.  Thursday  to  Peg 
Humi^ey  at  ttie  Kappa  Delta 
House. 

Judges  of  the  search  will  meet 
at  8  p.m.  Thursday  in  the  Wood- 
housc  Room  of  Gfaham  Memorial. 


dates  Neil    Bass,  Frank  Crowther  words  in  length,  to  the  contest, 
and  Charlie   Sloan   will    be   guest       Entries  should  be  unsigned,  ac- 
speakcrs.  ■.  companied    by   the    name    and    ad- 

Hallford    stated    that    he    would   f^rcs*  and  a  return  envelope.  Prizes 


are  S50.00  and  $25.00  for  the  two 
winners.  Winning  stories  will  be 
published  in  the  spring  issue  of 
the  Quarterly,  according  to  Editor 
Marcie  Kraftchick. 


remaining   ten   were   co-sponsored  j 
by  the  SP  and  UP,  he  said. 

"The  SP  legislators  had  only  one 
bill  fail  to  pass,  one  bill  held  in 
:  committee      and      one      resolution 
;  tabled, ■'  he  added. 

••This  US  indeed  a  record  to  be 
'  proud  of.  We  of  the  SP  feel  that 
our    SP    legislators    have    proven 
themselves   by   taking   the   necess- 
ary initiative  in  introducing  legis- 
lation  that    has    benefited    a    vast 
majority  of  the  campus. 
"We  hoper  that  the  campus  will 
I  allow  them  to  continue  taking  ac- 
tion   for    the    benefit    of    all    the 
campus. 

"I  feel  that  if  the  students  weigh 
the  SP's  record  in  their  minds  they 
M'ill  vote  for  a  continuance  of  this 
,  party  in  office. 

"I  encourage  each  of  you  to  vote 
i  SP." 


Symposium 

Scheduled  For 

« 

Thursday  At  4 


^  Tar  Heel  Editorship  Should 
Advance  Academic  Position 


Mud-slinging,    growling    and '  paper,  and  through  it,  the  univw- 
grumbling  will  not  solve  the  many  1  sity. 

complex  problems  facing  the  s-tu- '      "I  do  not  imply  that  our  univer- 
dents  and  faculty  of  UNC,  accord-  sity    is    falling    apart.     How^^r, 


posium  ar 
held    tomorrow 


The  second  meeting  of  students 
interest4d    in    the    Carolina    Sym- 

m  Public  Affairs  will  be! Daily  '^^^  "*^'^'- 
at  4  p.m.  in  the 
Wilson  Library  Assembly  Room. 
Students  who  wish  to  aid  in  plan- 
ning thi's  event  have  been  invited 
to   the   meeting. 


Best-Dressed 
College  Girls 
Sought  Here 

I         By  PEG  HUMPHREY 

'      If  anyone  wants  to  go  to  Kansas  tnll    days    of   classes.    Friday 
\  nation    wide  search   is   being   city  to  see  the   NCAA  Basketball  |  Saturday."  stated  Young. 
coj:aucted   to  find  the   "Ten  Best  Championships,  there  is  still  time)     Chancellor  Robert  B.  House  has 
Dressed  College  Girls  in  .\merica."  jto  make  arrangements  to  travel  on  1  commented  en  the  caravan  to  Kan- 


Price  Cut  On  Caravan 
Trip  To  Kansas  City 


and 


ing  to  Frank  Crowther,  independ-    most  of  us  must  agree  that  we  have 
ent   candidate    for    editor    of    The   an  assem'blage  of  problems  which 

seemingly  have  been  thrust  upon 
In  a  statement  issued  to  The  us  all  at  once.  It  may  be  the  con- 
Daily  Tar  Heel  yesterday.  Crow-  solidation  or  the  lack  of  funds  or 
ther  expressed  the  view  that  these  the  stringent  regimentation  or  the 
difficulties  will  be  surmounted .  combined  lack  of  academic  spirit, 
chiefly  by  hard  work.  :  All  these  and  many  more   may  be 

He    pointed    out   that    the   prob-   relevant. 
Al  the  first  meetig  of  the  group   icms  will  not  solve  themselves  and       "These    problems,    though,    are 
Thursday  20  students  and  several    that    the    possibility    of    "George's   not    to    be    resolved     by    hurling 
faculty  members  met  in  an  intro-   doing  it"  is  a  remote  one.  charges    at    one    another    or    by    a 

ductory  session  and  heard  Stan  He  jaid  that  he  believes  we  will  constant  growling  and  grumbling. 
Shaw  speak  on  the  impact  which  have  to  solve  the  difficulties  un-They  will  be  amended  by  sincerity 
the  1956  Symposium  Week  had :  der  our  own  steam, 
upon  the  campus,  state  and  na-.  Observing  that  UNC  is  regarded 
tion.  _  I  by  some  as  something  of  "a  great 

I  cultural  center.  ■  he  said  that  The 

''  Daily    Tar    Heel    should    strive    to 

'  ad\"anGe   this   acadehiic   position. 

He   remarked   that   the  students 

must  elect  an  editor  of  The  Daily 

Tar  Heel  who  is  sincere  and  hon- 

j  est  in  hi„'  desire  to   improve  the 


the  ten  winners  will  be  photo- 
graphed for  the  August  issue  and 
will  receive  a  "Best  Dressed' 
award. 

Carolina  has  been  asked  to  par- 
ticipate in  this  search,  and  all 
dormitorie^-.  sororities,  and  frater- 
nities have  an  opportimity  to  sub- 
mit their  candidates. 

The  national  winners  will  be  sc- 


jsas   with  the  following  .statement, 
1  "I  strongly  urge  all  students  who 


Also  heard  was  Dr.  Fred  Cleave- 
land.  faculty  advisor  for  last 
year's  undertaking,  told  about  the 
operational  aspects  of  the  1956 
Symposium.  He  cmhasised  the 
months  of  plannig  and  prepara- 
tion required  for  such  a  program, 
the  espirit  de  cisrps  which  existed 
among  the  committee  ot  students 
and  faculty  members,  and  especi- 
ally the  better  .student-faculty  re- 
lationships which  this  sort  of  joint 


Stu«i«nt  Btfdy  President  Bob 
Yewns  anneunced  f^}ff  «ll  per-  ;  are  in  proper  academic  standing;  activity  promotes 
sons  wishing  to  fo  iff.  ■  group  on 
a  iMfs  can  still  |mv  for  tfte 
round-trip  by  going  to  tho  In- 
fermotion  Oosk  mf  tho  main 
floor  of  Graham  Memorial  bo- 
foro  noon  (12)  today. 
Costs  for  the  trip  have  been  cut 


I  and  who  have  the  desire,  to  make 
the  trip  to   Kansas   City   and   help 

Uo  pu  'h  our  Tar  Heel  basketball 
team  over  the  top." 


The  S.vmposium  was  instituted 
to  be  held  biennially.  An  Interim 
Committee,  headed  by  Jim  Exum. 
was    established     to    "bridge     the 


I  lected   on    the   basis    of  peatnets,   Thia  is  a  drop  of  some  $8   from 
^orixinai  and  imaginative  a^cessoriz-J  the  fimt  figure  stated. 

3-"l 


"Since  200  students  at  the  most,  ■  gaP"  between  the  1956  Symposi- 
could  make  the  tqp,  I  would  .sug- '  urn  and  the  one  now  being  plan- 
gest    that    all    .students    who    wish'  ned  in  order  to  carry  out  the  pro- 


,to   $43.12  for  a   rouj»d-trip  ticket,  j  to  make  the  trip  check  with  their !  gram  next  year.  The  Interim  Com- 


ing, appropriatoness  "^  xtl^eas,  dls- 


respective    deans    and     make    the 
^  I  necessary     arraiutemeiOs,"     stA^d 
This  Uiis  or  buses  will  leave  from*   the  chancellur. 


the    lead    of    the    State    Board    of    at  Raleigh,  the  University  at  Cha- 


Education  and  ask  the  Joint  Ap- 
propriations committee  today  for 
increased  appropriations  for  fac- 
ulty salaries.  • 

President  William  C.  Friday  of 
the    Consolidated    University    also 


pel   Hill   and  Woman's  College   at 
Greensboro. 

Friday  said  the  institutions 
were  losing  faculty  members  to 
out-of-state  schools  because   of  in- 


thc     campus,     in     the     Morcliead 
Planetarium  parking  lot.  Thursday  j 
at    12:00  noon.    It   will   return    to 
Chapel   Hill,   leaving   Kansas    City , 
at  midnight  Saturday  and  arriving  | 
in  Chapel  Hill  by  7  a.n*  Monday 
morning. 
"Sttidents    will    misj    only  c  two 


in  connection  with  th«  story 
yostorday  in  tho  Daily  Tar  Heel 
•bout  "tho  probability  of  charter- 
ing a  piano  to  Kansas,  Jim 
Exum  said  today  that  th«  trip 
was  called  off,  due  to  lack  of 
student  response. 


mittee  will  aid  the  group  in  start 
ing    and    will    elect    a    new    chair- 
-man.  but  has  planned  to  witiinraw 
from    an.v    official    position   so   that 


ot  effort,  an  unbiased  interpreta- 
tion and  understanding  of  com- 
bined difficulties,  strong  evidence 
of  character,  exhibition  of  sctind 
leadership,  and,  especially,  hard 
work. 

"The  Tar  Heel  is  an  integral 
part  of^  Carolina,  and  should  neces- 
sarily concern  itself  with  this 
situation.  It  muA  reflect  the  life 
of  the  university  and  take  what 
lead  it  can  in  advancing  this  insti- 
tution which,  for  m.any  years, 
has  been  regarded  as  a  great  cul- 
tural center  in  the  state  and  the 
nation. 

"The  problem  will  not  solve  it- 
self  by   oui-   noting   that    it   exists 
and    that    "somebody"     should    do 
I      Two  hour  parking  is  once  again    something  about  it.  II  is  our  prob- 
in  effect  on  S.  Columbia  St.  lem.   therefore,   we    must   respond 

(  The  60  da.vs  the  Chapel  Hill  and  meet  it  ourselves-. 
Board  of  Aldermen  gave  students  The  man  whcse  ability  you  re- 
to  park  on  S.  Columbia  lapsed  Fri-  spect  and  trust,  who  is  sincere 
day.  but  the  parking  ordinance  was  ;  and  honest  i«  his  effort  and  con- 
not  put  back  into  effect  until  Mon- '  ecern  for  the  university  as  a 
day  morning  "to  give  students  a '  whole,  and  wtio  possesses  the  nee 
break,  "  sitid  »  Uttra  «fficiaJ. 


Two-Hour  Ban 
Now  In  Effect 
On  Columbia  St. 


The     ordinance    came    last    Sep- 


the  new  commitee  might   proceed   Member  as  a  rcult  of  crowded  park- 


un  its  own. 


was  expected  to  request  addition-   ability  to  meet  higher  salaries. 


Malin  Will  Speak  Here 
On  liberty'  March  26 


UP  Selects  Dorm  Nominees; 
Party  Headquarters  Named 


Forms  Ready 
For  Women's 
Counselors 


ing  conditions  downtown,  and  was 
pushed  by  the  Merchants  Assn.  It 
was  lifted  for  60  days,  at 'the  re- 
quest of  Student  Government  oi- 
iiciais.  to  give  the  students  time  to 
find  a  solution  to  the  parking  sit- 
uation and  to  get  their  cars  off  the 
streets. 

"We  expected  to  have  student^' 
at  the  March  11  Aldermen  meet- 
ing, asking  for  an  extension  of  the 
lift,  but  none  showed  up."  said  a 
town  official. 


essary  capaliiUSIbes.  icp  the  maa 
Whom  you  will  place  in  the  posi- 
tion of  editor  of  the  Daily  Tar 
Keei.  It  is  your  decision,  not 
mine." 


University  Club 
Plans  Affair 
For  Early  April 


"Liberty — Unfinished  Business" 
will  be  Patrick  Murphy  Malin's 
t  >pic  when  he  speaks  before  the' 
Carolina  Forum  March  26.  The 
Forum  will  meet  at  8  p.m.  in  Car- 
roll Hall. 

A  reception  will  be  held  in  the 
Main  Lounge  of  Graham  Memorial 


gree  in  economics  in  1924.  He  al- 
so did  graduate  work,  chiefly  in 
economics,  at  Coiumbia  Universi- 
ty. He  hold  the  honorary  degree 
of  LL.D.  from  Swarthmore  Col- 
lege where  he  formerly  taught 
economics.  j 

Malin  has  served  as  private  see- 


immediately  following  the  speeech.    retao'   to   Sherwood   Eddy,   of  In- 


^alin.  Executive  Director  of  the  ■ 
American  Civil  Liberties  Union,  I 
has  spent  a  month  traveling 
through  the  South  studying  civil 
liberties. 

In  the  spring     of     1954     Malin 


ternational   YMCA:    as   a   member 
of    the    econ\)mic's    departmet    at 
Swarthmore    College;    as    Vice-Di-j 
rector    of    the    Intergovernmental; 
Committee  on  Refugees,  with  head- 
quarters in  London.  Since  1950  he 


Concert  Ttmft  Changed 

The  Don  SHtrl«y  t^io  Concert 
will  bo  hold  from  4-^:30  p.m. 
Friday  instead  o^  i  p.m.  Friday 
night,  SMHiy  Mtllford  announced 
yesterday. 

The  time  has  boon  changed  so 
the  the  concert  will  net  conflict 
with  the  UMC-Mlthifan  game 
which  is  boin|  t*l#visod. 

Hallford  stafod  that  ho  would 
like  to  "onc«vrAi*  everyone  to 
start  thf  evonlnl  of f  by  attend- 
ing tho  pen  fhirioy'  Trio  Con- 
cert." 


The  UP  continued  rounding  out 
its  full  slate  of  caj)4idates  last 
night  by  selecting  nominees  for 
Dorm  Men's  IV  and  V  j 

In  acclamatory  votes  Bob  Ed- 
wards, Pick  Arthur,  and  Ashe 
Exum  were  nominated,  filling  four 
one  year  candidate  seats  in  Dorm 
Men's  IV.  Eddie  Bass  and  Bryan 
Latham  were  nominated  by  ac- 
clamation for  Dorm  Men's  V.  | 

A  vacancy  in  the  legislature  was 
also  filled  when  Charles  Hunting- 
ton was  named  to  fill  an  unex- 
pired  seat  in  Dorm  Men's  I.         ' 

UP  Chairman  Mike  Weinman 
announced    to    the    members   that 


quarters  would  be  located  in  the 
Yackety  Yack  office  in  the  base- 
ment of  GM.  He  also  asked  for 
volunteer  ballot  counters  and 
party  helpers  in  directing  candi- 
dates  campaigns. 

The  party  gathering  was  exhort- 
ed by  student  body  President 
candidate  Bill  Baum  to  "settle  all 
our   differences."' 

"I'm  proud  of  the  way  the  cam- 
paign is  being  run."  he  said.  "And 
I'm  proud  of  the  way  you're  work- 
ing. But  none  of  us  will  win  by 
ourselves.'' 

Baum  said:  "A  UP  that  is  united 
behind  its  candidates  can  win  this 


the  central  party  campaign  head-    election."' 


Application  forms  for  positions 
as  Women's  Orientation  counsel- 
ors can  be  obtained  today  from  gO  days  are  up."" 
dormitory  and  sorority  house  pres-  j  Parking  on  S.  Columbia  St.  is 
idents.  according  to  Pat  Dillon. !  now  limited  to  two  hours  a  day. 
chairman   of   the   Women's   Orien- 1  excepting  Sundays  and  holidays. 

tation     Counselor     Training     pro-' _. 

gram. 

Completed  foiTns  are  to  be  re- 
turned to  house  presidents  by 
Wednesday,  March  27.  Miss  Dillon 
said. 

Applications  will  be  studied  by 
an  Orientation  Selection  Board 
and  counselors  will  be  selected  to 
serve  in  the  Fall  1957  orientation 
program. 

AVomcn  planning  to  attend  sum- 
mer sessions  have  been  urged  to 
assist  with  the  summer  school  ori- 


Would  you   make   a  convincing. 

cruel  villain?  If  so.  or  if  you  are 

a   good     tap     dancer     or     skilled 

"They  asked  for  60  days,  and  the    Charleston  hopper,  the  University 


spent  two  months  In  England  and    has  been  with  the  American  Civil 


Scotland,  lecturing  on  American 
civil  liberties  to  business,  labor, 
educational  and  professional 
groups.  He  lectured  chiefly  under 
the  auspices  of  Ruskin  College 
(0;fford),     the     English-Speaking 


Liberties    Union,   with    headquart- 
ers in  New  York  City. 

His  work  has  involved  ^idea- 
spread  travel  in  Britain,  eontin-| 
ental  Europe  (including  Russia),! 
the  Near  East.  Canada  and  Latin 


Emphasis  On  Parking  Situation 
Mark$  Student  Party   Platform 


Union,  and  the  Royal  Institute  of  j  America. 

International     Affairs     (Chatham  — 

Hovse ) 

Malin  was  born  in  Joplin 


■iy  GIKAHAM  SNYDER 


stu- 


of   the   c^mpviif  parking   situation 
marked   the    Student    Party    plat 


^^    Tri-Delt  Scholarship 

in    1903.   where   he   attend   public    Competition   Now  OfMH 

schools.    He   obtained    his  college       The  1957  Tri  Delta  Scholarship :  form  released  Tuesday  night, 
education    at    the    University    of    Competition    began    Monday.   The  j     In  the  platforln  ^ound  which  its 
Pennsylvania  receiving  a  B.  S.  de- ,  deadline    for   application   is   April  \  slate  of  party  candidates  will  cani- 

— \  8.  paign    in    the   April    2    elections, 

The  sorority's  scholarship  pro-  three  planks  deal  with  student 
gram  is  an  international  service, '  parking  viol^tora,  femoval  of  park- 
irrespective  of  sorority  affilia-  j  ing  restrictions,  aiid  a  proposal 
tion.  that  university  officials  and  per 


earliest  possible  time  and  on  stu-'  building   program    of    a    new 
1  d'cnt ,  grA'crnment  suggestion    ob-    dent  union  here. 
Ati.emphaslB  on  the  ^Ueviation  j  ^^j^j.^g  ^^^^j^  j^^.  planned  parking:      At  the   meeting  Tom   Lambeth. 

lots.  ,  campaign     manager     for     student 

(4)  Belief  that,  since  faculty  and    body    President    candidate    Sonny 

administrative  personnel*will  gain    Evans,    urged    "full    support"    of 


Lfst  Day  For  Freshman 
Handbook  Applications 

Today  is  the  last  day  for  appli- 
cations    for    freshman     handbook 


Military  Boil 
Is  Saturday 
In  Armory 

The  annual  Militar>'  Ball  will  be 
held  this  Saturday  night  in  the 
Naval  .Vrmory  from  9-12. 

The  Military  Ball,  sponsored  by 
the  Scabbard  and  Blade,  honor- 
entation  progam.  They  have  been  ary  military  society,  is  the  big  so- 
asked  to  indicate  their  desire  as  f-ial  function  of  the  Naval  and  Air 
summer  school  colimselors  on  Force  ROTC  units,  and  is  held 
their   applications    for   the    fall,     j  each  spring. 

In   a  statement   yesterday.   Miss:      Oon  Jefferson's  band.     The  Em- 
Dillon  said:  |  hers, "  will  play  for  the  dance. 

"We  hope  to  have  a  better  train- 1  There  will  be  a  receiving  line 
ed  and  more  enthusiastic  staff  of ,  comprised  of  the  Navy  and  Air 
counselors  than  ever  before.  There  Force  cadre  officers  and  the  cadet 
will  be  a  larger  and  more  exten-  commanders.  Those  in  the  receiv- 
sive  counselor  training  program,  j  ing  line  will  be  Col.  and  Mrs. 
"The  functioning  and  success  Smith.  Major  and  Mrs.  Jack  Gabuj, 
of     the    entire    orientation     week   and  Cadet  Col.  Memor>'  Elmore  for 


Club  has  plans  for  you. 

Frank  Inman.  president  of  the 
University  Club,  said  yesterday 
that  the  club  i.s  currently  planning 
a  campus-wide  affair  called  "Spec- 
tacular   1890"     for  early    April. 

This  event  will  consist  first  of 
a  melodramatic  play  similar  to  a 
play  called  "The  Drunkard"'  which 
hns  been  a  successful  1890  play  for 
many  years. 

The  exact  date  for  tryouts  has 
not  bsen  set  as  yet.  but  will  prob- 
ably begin  during  tho  first  week 
ol  April. 

Besides  the  play  there  will  be 
various  variety  shows  and  skits 
with  primarily  an  1890  theme  or 
background. 

"We  expect  to  see  a  lot  of  stu- 
dents participating  in  this  event." 
Inman  said.  "The  directing  and 
casting  will  be  good  and  we  hope 
a  light-hearted,  gay  time  will  be 
had  by  everyone."' 

"The  University  Club  is  hoping 
it  will  be  able  to  obtain  use  of 
the  Forest  Theatre  fo^  the  event. 
A  definite  date  will  be  announced 
later."  Inman  said. 


equally    from    new    parking    lots,  i  the  party.,-  candidate  in  the  com- i  rests,    in   final   analy.sis.   upon  the  j  the  Air  Force.  Col.   Smith  is   the 


All  women  students  of  UNC  are   sonnel  pay  parking  fees  to  finance  |  the   Monogram  Club  and  Scuttle- 


they  also  should  pay  the  parking   ing  election. 

fees  for  their  automobiles.  I     Lambeth  told  the  party.  '"I  dont 

(5)  Elffort  to  get  TV  coverage  j  know  when  we  have  had  a  better 
of  all  sellout  home  basketball  i  candidate  than  Sonny  E>ans.  He 
games.  !  has  been  learning  .so  much  in  the 

(6)  Effort  to  get  Uter  hours  in   past  three  years  that  there  is  no 


positions,     according     to 
President  Gerry  Mayo. 

Mayo  said  there  were  openings 
on  the  handbook  in  several  areas 


"YMCA    eligible  to  apply  for  the  scholar- 
;  ships,  and  application  blanks  may  j 
be  obtained  from  the  Dean  ol  Wo-  j 
men's    office,    according    te    a    so- ; 


including  sports,  extracurriculars,   orority  spj'kesman. 


student   government,   and   photog- 
rairfiy 

He  encouraged   all  students   in 


Judges  of  the  application$  will 
bs  Miss  Isabelle  MacLeod;  Dean 
E.  L.  Mackie;  Mrs.  Robert  M.  Mill- 


but  for  the  convenience  of  dormi- 
tory and  fraternity  residents. 

(7)  Stand  by  a  proposal  that  stu- 
dent worker^'  should  receive  pay- 
ment in  cash  on  unused  meal 
tickets. 


I  doubt   that 

j  president"" 

I      Lambeth   cited    Elvans'   work   as 

I  student  chairman  of  the  Chancel- 

I  lor's   Selection   Commitee    in   say- 

I  ing,  "Sonny  accepted  and  bore  a 

'  lot  of  responsibility  in  moving  bc- 


capability    and    responsible    gu id- 1  Prof es^jr  of  .\ir  Science  and  Major 
ance  of  the  orientation  counselors.  |  Gabus  is  Commandant  of  Cadets. 

"These  qualities  are  individual'  Representing  the  Naval  ROTC 
matters,  however;  the  counselor ,  will  be  Capt.  and  Mrs.  Patterson, 
must  begin  by  being  adequately  Commander  and  Mrs.  Graves,  and 
informed  on  all  facets  of  Carolina  I  Cadet  Batallion  Commander  Jim 
a  fine  j  life.  It  is  my  plan  to  assure  that  Bynum.  Capt.  Patterson  is  the  pro- 
I  the  counselor  training  program  fessor  of  Naval  Science,  and  Corn- 
will  supply  this  wide  range  of  in- }  mander  Graves  is  commandant  of 
formation. 


UNC-  Michigan  On  TV 


he   will    make 
payment  for  parking  lots.. 

The  full  platform  pledges: 
(1)  Separation, (tf  the  investiga 
tion  and  prosecution  powers  from 
the  judgment  powers  in  the  Judi- 
ciary Qranch. 

(3)  £5t«bUshment  fo  an  arm  of  1      ((8)  Support  for  the  extension  of ;  tween  the  faculty  and  the  students 
Student   Goverimieilt   to    aid  Stu-    date-ticket  lowering   to   all   home  las  chairman  of  the  committee." 
terested  to  apply  at  the  YMCA  fpr  ;  er,    alumnae    advisor;    Betty   Bd^  •  dent  Affairs  ofiice  In  the  proces- 1  football  games.  j     A  legislature  seat  in  Town  Men'ir   the  Carolina-Michigan  State  game 

the    positions.    "We're    trying    to   president;   and   Betty  Dale  Press- 1  sing  of  campus  parking  violations  j     (9)  Support  for  the  re-establish-   HI    vacated    by    Chuck    Howerton  '  Friday  at  8:30  p.m..  EST. 

make  the  deadline  April  15,  Mayo  ly.  service  projects  chairman.         j  to  insure  more  c^ual  treatment  of  i  ment  of  a  campus   humor   magajwas    filled    by    the    party.    David       The  game  for  Satiu-day  will  also.  There   will    be   a  TV   set 
said,   "and  the  staff  needs  to  be       Delta  Delta  Delta  awarded  three  ,  student  violator*.                                 zine.                                                    '  Evans  was  named  by  party  accla-   be  televised.  The  time  is  10  p.m 
organized  within  the  next  two  or   scholarships     last     year     totaling!  '  (8)  Suppoil  (hx  SP   proposal  to       (10)    Continued    efforts    toward  mation  to  fill  the  seat  for  the  re-     if  UNC  wns  and  8  p.m.  if  UNC 
three  days.'  '."8350.  - j  rcqioye     p^trking     restrictions     at '  the    successful    completion    ol    a  maining  term,  until  April  2.  '   lo.cs.  


Cummings  Says 
Nominations 
To  Be  In  Friday 

Nominations  for  positions  to  be 
filled  in  the  coming  election  must 
be  turned  in  to  either  the  Student 
(JOveromcnt  office  or  Ray  Jeffer- 
ie'j  by   Friday,   it   was    announced 


cadets. 

The     Arnold     Air    Society     wil) 
sponsor   a   tea   for   the   Air   ROTC  i  yesterday. 

men   and   their  dates  at  the    Phi;     Ralph    C  u  nf  m  i  n  g  s.    Eleclion^ 

Kappa    Sigma    hou„e    before    the  |  Board    chairman,    .said    that    while 

WTVD   in  Durham  will  televise   dance.  \  nominations   may   be  turned  in  to 

Also    on    the    program    for    the  j  either  office,  it  was  preferred  that 
night  is  the  UNC  basketball  game,   they  be  turned  in  to  Dean  of  Stu- 

at    the  i  dents  Ray  Jefferies. 
armory  for  those  who  might  care  j     Cummings    said    that    petitions 
to  see  a  little  of  the  ball  yame  dur- .  submitted  must  have  25  signatures 
ing  the  dance.  in  addition  to  the  nominees. 


FA91  TWO 


THi  DAILY  TAR  HBiL 


W€ON6SOAY,  MARC*4  M.  ItSf 


The  Political  Campaigns: 
Few  Surprises,  As  Usual 

rheianipiis  political  p;nties  havt*  announced  tiieir  spring  platfonns, 
and  as  usual  thev  say  verv  liitlf. 

The  Student  Pait\"s  platforni  sets  sliohtly  specilic.  but  still  doesnt 
tackle  the  basic  pr«)})lenjs  ol  the  rni\ersitv.  The  rni\eisity  Party's  three- 
plank  plaiiorm  is  so  general  that  it  could  have  been  shared  by  Hitler  or 
(ieorge  Washinjs^ton. 

To  re\  lew.  here  are  the  main  points  ol  lire  two  platlornis: 

The    I'lrixersity    Partv   Hants   to      niaiurelv  and  lationalK  in  the  >x*st 
build    studeiu    go\ernment    "to    a 
p>sition  oJ  greater  res|)eet7  dioiiity. 
importance  and  honor." 


iouallv    in    tlie   Ik'si   jntere.st   ol    all 
the    students." 


I  he  Student  Patty.*  on  the  oth- 
ei  hand,  has  tntiied  out  a  lo-poini 
j>latfovm    which    includes: 

Sepaiatioii  of  in\esti>;atiou  ard 
j)i<>sec  iition  jjoweis  Irom  judj^ment 
|,>owers  in  the  judici.u\  branch  ol 
student  government:  ecpial  tieat- 
ment  ol  stuclent  })aikin'4  \iolators: 
■■siipj)t)rt  ol  student  government 
suggestions  hn  obtaining  funds  lot 
planned  patking  lots:"  l)eliel  that 
l:tultv  aird  admi!iisti;ui\e  people 
shoulci  pav  lees  lot  the  pj(>|>osed 
parking  lots. 

Television  coveiag;^'  lor  all  home 
sellout  basketball  games:  lowering 
d:tte  prices  h>r  home  lootlKill 
•4ames;  later  working  hoiHs  in  the 
Mt>nogiam  ("lub  .ind  Sciittlebiut: 
desire  h>r  cash  pavment  on  unused 
meal  tickets  h)i  I.enoii  H;.ll  woik- 
eis.  and  realization  of  the  "import- 
ance ol  realizing  establishment  ol 
a  new  student  union  here  and  the 
continued  ellorts  toward  the  sue - 
cc'sslid  completion  ot  a  building 
progiam." 


I  he  I'niversitN  Partv.  while  ad- 
\<K:iting  some  verv  Avorthwhile  and 
l(.l;\  ideals,  does  nbt'explain  what 
it  means  and  what  it  intends  to 
do  al»out  them.  ll*is  cpiite  easy  to 
n;i\  von  Willi  lo  buiki  smdent  go\ - 
eijiiiieiir  "re*  ^i.^?silioii:s>Ljitesi£^ 
rcsf>e<  t.  dignity,  iiiiportaiire  and 
lionor."  but  it  is  another  matter 
to  pro\e  tliat  you  are  doing  it.  ^'ou 
must  oiler  specifics. 


One  of  the  reaso»>»  student  gov - 
eiin/ient  is  piesently  sidfering  Irom 
lack  ol  lespcct.  dlgnitv.  importance 
and  honoi  is  that  the  studeiu  tax- 
pavers  doiTt  know  or  caie  what 
goes  oi\  in  their  student  goxeiii- 
ment.  Ihey  can  liai^dly  be  excited 
bv  such  a  general  cailipaign  j)lank 
from  one  <»f  the  stiuient  parties. 

Again.  the  I'niversity  Partv 
should  prove  it  is  able  to  "govern 


The  Daily  Tar  Heel 

The  official  itudtni  putilicatioD  of  the 
Puhlications  Board  of  the  University  t>( 
North  Carolina  wh'.Te  it  if  publisherf 
daily  except  Monrlay  aiui  cxaminatior 
and  vacation  period.*  and  summer  terms 
Entered  as  sccon.i  class  matter  in  thi 
D'lxl  office  in  rhapel  Hill  .N  C,  undei 
lh«-  \n  Ol  March  8,  1870  Subscription 
ritei  mailed,  $4  per  year,  $2.50  a  semen 
ter:  delivered.  $6  a  year.  $3  30  a  •erae» 
ler 


editor 


FRED  POWXEDGl 


.Managin"  Editor 


CLAKKE  JONES 


News  Editor 


NANCY  HILL 


Sport?  Editor 


Bufiaen   Manager 


._.   LARRY  CHEEK 
BILL  BOB  PLEL 


Adverlifing  ?1anagcr         FRED  KATZIN 

innORlAL  STAFF  —  Woodj  Sear*. 
Joey  Payne.  Stan  Shsw. 

NEWS  STAFF— Graham  Snyder.  Edith 
MacKinnon.  Walter  Schruntek.  Pringle 
Pipkin,  Bob  High,  Jim  Purks.  Ben  Tay- 
lor. H.  Joost  Polak,  Patsy  Miller,  Wal- 
ly  Kuralt,  Bill  King,  Curtis  Crotty. 

BUSiwESS  STAFF— John  Minter,  Matian 
Hobeck,  Jane  Patten,  Johnny  Whitaker. 

SPORTS  STAFF:  Dave  Wible.  S^wart 
Bird.  Ron  Milligan.  '- 


-  Dale  Staley 
Charlie  Holl 
Assistant  Sports  Editor Bill  King 


Subscription  Manager 
Circulation  Manager  . 


Staff  Photographers  Woody  Sears, 

Norman  Kantor 
Librarians    Sue  Gichner.  Marilyn  Strum 

Night  Editor              Ashmead  P.  Pipkin 
Night  News  Editor  Bob  High 


interest  ol  all  the  students."  What, 
aftei  all.  is  the  best  interest  of  all 
the   students?   .\   patity   laid? 

II  the  I'lUNe^sitv  Partv  is  going 
to  "capably  meet  all  campus  prob- 
lems as  thev  ai  ise  and  now  exist," 
peihaps  it  should  define  those 
problems  right  away — at  least  the 
otu's  that  n(i\\  exist— and  it  should 
^tell  the  Noters  exattlv  what  it  in- 
tends to  do  about  them. 


Of  the  Student  Partv.  we  ask. 
Why  should  the  judic  iarv  be  split 
up  in  its  functions?  Surely  there 
is  a  g(M)d  leason.  or  the  partv 
.wouldn't  ha\e  decided  it  worth 
placing  in  tite  platfoiin.  The  \ot- 
ers  should  be  told  how.  why.  uhen. 
where. 

Likewise  the  .Studeiu  l*arty 
should  explain  what  it  means  by 
ecpial  treatment  of  student  prark- 
ing  \iolators,  supj>ort  of  sugges- 
tions for  getting  parking  lots  and 
its  belief  that  non-students  should 
ctiiuribute  t(»ward  those  lots.  Tele- 
\  isioii  co\erage  for  ballgames  is 
hardiv  a  decent  plank  for  a  jxiliti- 
cai  |)arty's  plaih>rm.  but  we  have 
seen  worse.  It  was  about  a  vear  ago. 
ue  beliexe.  that  one  of  the  partic-s 
was  ad\( Hating  bicNc  le  lac  ks  in 
lioiit  ol  each  clormilorv.  benches 
in  front  of  eac  h  c  1:  ss  building  and 
pencil  sharpeners  in  each  room.  In 
exery  jjolitical  campagin  iheie  is 
a  certain  amount  of  pure  bull  th.it 
can  and  should  bi-  laughed  at.  fmt 
not    taken    seriousK. 

We  like  the  idea  about  keeping 
the  Monogram  Club  and  .Scuttle- 
butt open  longer,  but  wonder  win 
the  Student  Party  hasn't  pushed 
a  itxisi.uuic-  bill  liiis  yc-.u  asking 
the  a<niniTisfT;7tiV)n  To'chj  just~that^ 
1  he  l.cnoii  Hall  idea  is  good:  we 
hope  bipaitisan  ;>.  tion  in  the  legis- 
latine  will  affect  a  better  p;iy  sit- 
it;4lion  for  the  cafeteria's  mistivated 
workers. 

riie  studeiu  iiniou  pi. ink  is  bv 
far  the  most  sign i lie  ant  one  to 
arise  so  far  in  this  campaign.  Ol 
all  the  m.iteriat  things  we  need 
for  the  l'ni\ersitv  of  .\orth  r.:iro- 
iina.  the  liist.  after  adecpiate  hous- 
ing, is  ;i  new  stiuient  union  build- 
ing.      ^ 

\\'e  hope-  the  Student  Party 
now.  and  the  I'niNersity  F*arty  af- 
ter the  election,  jump  on  the  stu- 
dent union  b:  ndwagon  and  make 
it  one  ol  the  accomplishments  of 
the    academic-    year    i((r,7-.">H.     ^ 


lint  neither  parly  says  anything 
about  lacial  integral  ion  (e\en  the 
students  at  Duke  ha\e  beat  lis  on 
that),  and  neither  one  savs  anv- 
thing  about  the  crisis  of  crises— 
the  trickle  of  piofessois  that  is 
starting  to  go  elsewhere,  that  is 
slowly  but  surely  turning  into  an 
avalanche. 

-Neither  p.nty  has  ctune  up  with 
an  idea  on  how  to  get  more  monev 
lor  ijie  Wilson  I.ibrarv  (as  stu- 
dents, we  .vie  primarily  cone  erned 
with  the  library),  and  neither  one 
has  come  up  with  any  decent  pro- 
piosals  on  how  to  make  the  honor 
system   bettei. 

The  spring  campaign,  clicking 
along  right  now.  is  jneiiv  ojcli'nary. 


Gracious 
Living: 
Number  16 

What  Chapel  Hill  needs,  what 
with  the  spring  season  pretty  well 
here,  is  an  outdcMH*  restaurant. 

Round  tables  with  umbrellas 
and  sunlight— iced  tea  in  the  spring 
air— what  could  be  graeiouser  lor 
this  time  of  the  vear? 


North  Carolina:  Way  At  Bottom 
Among  The  Rest  Of  The  States 


'    D.ave  Bratten 

R*ad*r  Bratten,  who  feels 
the  following  information  will 
be  interesting  to  most  students 
here,  got  most  of  his  statistics 
from  "Sleeping  Tar  Heels,"  a 
booklet  published  by  the  Duke 
University  Political  Science 
Dept. 

The  person  who  boasts  about 
the  "great  state  '  of  North  Caro- 
lina being  a  leader  among  the 
states  and  "fii'irt"  in  the  South 
should  stop  his  boasting  long 
enough  to  e.xamine  the  situation 
mere  closely  and  ask  himsell  and 
his  fellow  North  Carolinians  one 
simple  question. 

Is  a  state  a  leader  when  its 
ratings  among  the  48  stale.v  place 
it  at  the  bottom  or  near  the  bot- 
tom  in  so  many  vital  indices  of 


economic,  industrial,  education, 
political  and  govifrnmental  well- 
being? 

What  are  some  of  the  vital 
indices  in  which  North  Carolina 
ranks  so  low  among  the  48? 

In  1954.  North  Carolna  went  to 
the  bottom  of  all  the  states  in 
earnings  for  its  manufacturing 
employees.  Not  only  was  North 
Carolina  48th  here  but  the  rate 
of  iticrease  in  average  weekly 
earnings  during  the  last  five  years 
has  been  lower  in  North  Carolina 
than  in  any  other  state. 

During  the  year  1954  North 
Carolina  was  43rd  among  the 
state.,-  in  per  capita  income. 

In  bank  deposits  which  many 
people  consider  an  important  in- 
dicator of  economic  well-being. 
North  Carolina  ranks  44th.  During 
the     year     1954   North   Carolina 


ranksd  next  to  the  bottom  among 
states  in  the  percentage  of  its 
college-age  population  which  act- 
ually attended  college. 

The  average  Tar  Heel  has 
less  than  eight  years  of  school- 
ing, making  North  Carolina 
44th  among  the  states  in  this 
area. 

In  the  area  of  public  school 
services  to  its  citizens,  North 
Carolina  is  46th  among  the  states 
in  the  large  number  of  pupils 
per  teacher  in  the  classroom, 
45th  in  the  percentage  of  its 
school  age  children  actually  in 
school. 

During  the  first  year  of  the 
Korean  War,  34.6  percent  of 
North  Carolina's  young  men  who 
were  given  the  armed  forces 
qualification  tests  failed  them. 
The  average  of  rejectees  for  the 


'Now,  in  This  Case,  We  Recognize  The  Government 
But  We  Don't  See  The  Machino  Gun' 


'J8E' 
8 


FROM  CHARLOTTESVILLE: 


Praises  For  Chancellor  Ay  cock 


Virginia  Law  Quarterly 

The  Law  School  has  indeed 
been  forlunato  to  have  Prof. 
William  B.  .^ycock  as  a  visiting 
professor  for  this  .session.  Stu- 
dents in  his  cla&ses  have  been 
much  impressed  by  the  clarity 
and  dynamic  quality  of  his  de- 
livery. His  enthusiasm  for,  his 
sub.ject  is  infectious  and  breathes 
life  even  into  the  dullest  legal 
theories. 

The  breadth  and  depth  of  his 
knowledge  are  as  impressive  as 
his  ability  to  present  it.  His  dis- 
courses   on    the    law    are    punct- 

• 

LMI  Abner 


uated  by  a  ready  wit  which  foe-' 
uses  interest  on  his  problem. 

Prof,  .\ycock  came  to  the  Law 
Scho  ;I  with  a  broad  t)ackground 
in  the  field  of  legal  educatio». 
For  three  years  he  taught  senior 
hi','h  school  in  North  Carolina. 
Just  prior  to  the  war  Jie  served 
with  the  Federal  Security  Agen- 
cy. He  joined  the  United  State.s 
Army  when  war  broke  out  and 
rose  to  the  rank  of  Lt.  Colonel. 

After  the  war  Mr.  Aycock  re- 
ceived his  J.  D.  degree  from  the 
University  of  .North  Carolina  Law 
School  and  thereafter  joined  its 
faculty.  In  addition  he  has  sen'ed 


as  a  special  assistant  to  a  United 
.Nations  Mission  and  has  co- 
authored  a  book  on  military  law. 

Prof.  Aycock  was  appointed 
chancellor  of  the  University  of 
North  Carolina  at  Chapel  Hill 
last  month.  The  position  of  chan- 
cellor is  equivalent  to  that  of 
president  of  most  universities.  A 
man  of  broad  ba'ckground,  knowl- 
edge and  experience  has  been 
chasen  lor  that  high  office. 

We  extend  our  contratula'ions 
to  Chancellor  A.veock  for  his  new 
appointment,  and  we  are  happy 
that  he  will  complete  the  semes- 
ter here  at  the  Law  School. 


nation  as  a  whole  was   16.4  per 
cent. 

Latest  available  statistics  show 
that  although  one-fourth  of  North 
Carolina's  gainfully  employed  cit- 
izens are  engaged  in  farming,  the 
farm  income  is  less  than  one- 
half  of  what  it  is  for  the  aver- 
age  farmer  across  the   nation. 

We  rank  47th  among  the 
states  in  average  weekly  unem- 
ployment payments  to  the  un- 
employed. 

North    Carolina   ranks    last   in 
lie    welfare    expenditures, 
the  mount     of     state     and  local 
funds  spent  for  services  to  crip- 
pled children. 

In  the  area  of  crime.  North 
Carolina  is  highest  of  all  the  48 
states  in  aggravated  assault 
^rime — its  crime  rate  in  this 
classification  being  431  percent 
greater  than  the  average  for  the 
nation  as  a  whole.  Also,  North 
Carolina  crimes  of  murder  and 
non-negligent  manslaughter  are 
229  percent  higher  than  for  the 
nation  as  a  whole. 

Ho«w  can  one  truthfully  say 
that  North  Carolina  is  a  leader 
among  the  48  states? 
The  state's  motto.  "Esse  Quam 
Videri,"  which  means,  "to  be. 
rather  than  to  seem,"  was  adopt- 
ed in  1893.  and  apparently  Tar 
Heels  do  not  yet  understand  it. 
Too  many  of  the  state's  so-called 
leaders  have  "talked"  the  state 
into  a  position-  of  leadership 
which  does  not  really  exist.  In 
this  false  assumption  of  leader- 
ship. North  Carolina  is  seeming 
to  be  what  she  is  not,  and  we 
are  now  officially  beginning  "to 
point  with  pride  to  shame." 

The  major  problem  is  not  that 
North  Carolina  lacks  the  knowl- 
edge or  "know-how"  but  that 
the  state  lack*  sufficiently  cou- 
rageous leader.ship  to  bring  the 
people  out  of  their  indifference 
into  the  ta.sk  of  making  North 
Carolina  a  leader  among  the 
states.  Certainly  North  Carolina's 
size,  geography,  climate,  topog- 
raphy, and  rich,  natural  and  hu- 
man resources  make  her  position 
as  a  laggard  among  the  48  states 
a  somewhat  disgraceful  one — re- 
flecting directly  upon  every  Tar 
Heel  citizen.  , 

Too  many  Tar  Heels  in  po- 
sitions of  leadership  have 
adopted  the  policy  that  if  one 
doesn't  recognize  the  current 
problems  of  North  Caroline, 
then  they  don't  exist  or  th*y 
will  go  away. 

However,  the  problems  will 
not  go  away  until  a  stable,  ef- 
ficient governmental  structure  is 
set  up.  This  will  have  to  be  done 
if  North  Carolina  is  to  fully  de- 
velop its  natural  resources,  its 
industry  and  commerce,  and  the 
potential  abilities  of  its  people. 
A  competent  and  business  state 
governmental  structure  which 
concerns  itself  with  the  best  in- 
terests of  the  people  and  gives 
the  maximum  in  return  for  the 
tax  dollrs  spent  is  the  state's 
number  one  need. 

The  greatest  possible  efficien- 
cy tmd  leadership  in  government 
is  a  "must"  in  North  Carolina.  A 
state  as  rich  as  North  Carolina 
should  not  continue  to  be  a  lag- 
gard among  the  48  states. 


Campaign  Planks: 
Some  Are  Silly  f 

Woody  Sears 

Now  is  the  time  for  all  good  men  (and  women) 
to  come  to  the  aid  of  their  respective  parties.  It's 
spring,  and  the  elections  are  coming  up  in  a  couple 
of  weeks.  It  should  be  an  interesting  session  to 
watch. 

Looks  «s  though  there  will  be  some  hot  races. 
How  much  hot  ir  will  there  be?  As  much  as  usual? 
We'll  have  to  wait  and  see. 

But  from  P«st  exporience.  Hie  prognosis  is 
poor.  It  would  bo  nice  to  have  some  real  issues 
com*  wp,  things  which  ten  bo  eccemiiiished.  So 
«ft«n  tho  campaign  issues  are  of  the  type  that 
breed  hot  oir  .  .  .  just  plain  bull.  There  are  some 
things  which  students  cannot  possibly  accomplish. 

Per  instance,  it's  nice  for  a  candidate  to  be  in 
favor  of  higher  salaries  for  professors.  This  is 
fine,  but  what  can  any  candidate  hope  to  accomp- 
lish? That  is  something  that  the  State  Legislature 
must  handle,  and  from  the  news  releases,  we 
know  that  the  University  is  solidly  behind  this 
measure.  So  what  is  any  student  candidate  going 
to  do  about  it? 

Another  good  platform  point  is  this  business  of 
student  "morale."  What's  going  to  be  done?  Noth- 
ing concrete  has  come  out  in  any  of  the  platforms 
so  far,  for  it  is  too  early  in  the  campaign  to  blow 
all  the  ammunition.  But  will  anything  concrete  ever 
come  out?  Will  there  ever  be  a  workable,  feasible 
plan  presented? 

And  even  more  intportaiH,  if  such  •  plan 
should  present  itsolf,  will  it  ever  be  carried  out? 

Sometimes  we  get  suckered  into  voting  for  a 
candidate  because  he  says  a  lot  of  fancy  things; 
and  makes  a  lote  of  high  -faluting  promises.  Some- 
times we  look  back  over  the  year  at  piection  time 
and  have  occasion  to  wonder  just  what  the  student 
officers  of  the  year  have  done.  Sometimes  we  can't 
think  of  a  thing. 


A  moment  of  recollection  brings  to  mind  some 
chatter  about  the  honor  system  in  last  year's  cam- 
paign. Seems  as  though  some  sort  of  commission 
was  going  to  be  set  up  to  work  with  the  honor  coun- 
cils in  an  endeavor  to  strengthen  their  position  on 
the  campus.  There  was  talk  that  the  honor  system 
was  not  respected  by  the  students  as  it  should  have 
been. 

He<w  about  it?  Anybody  know  of  such  a  com- 
mission? No,  I  <ion't  think  so.  t  know  ef  one,  of 
a  sort,  but  it  was  not  conceived  by  any  ef  lacr 
Veer's  c«ndidato»,  iwr  of  this  yeer's  eUher.  W%  a 
sly  sort  of  thing,  for  the  present,  but  there  is 
hope  that  it  will  eviH^tually  be  possible  to  bring 
it  out  intte  the  open  end  giv*  the  students  •  say-so. 

Of  course,  this  was  just  one  issue,  but  I  don't 
know  of  anything  that's  been  done  to  give  the  hon- 
or^system  a  boost  this  year!  Seems  like  it  has  taken 
a  turn  for  the  worst  instead.  But  at  the  time,  it 
sounded  nice. 

Let's  look  some  more. 

Last  spring  one  of  the  parties  had  an  interest- 
ing item  on  its'  platform,  the  members  of  this  party 
were  campaigning  on  the  idea  of  getting  the  swim- 
ming pool  open  before  exams.  Ain't  that  wonder- 
ful? Of  course,  his  was  just  one  issue  in  a  plank 
containing  more  than  10  issues,  but  really 


And  another 


rebates  at  the  Book  Ex.  Har! 


And  another  .  .  .  parking  lots? 

And  yet  another  ...  f^ee  student  directories? 

And  many  more. 

Hh  i»  n*t  to  sey  thet  A  lot  of  good  is  accom- 
plished by  ill  this,  but  whet  of  tho  "none-such' 
pUtfortfi  statomontt;  i.*.,  st*tomont«  proposing 
things  which  cen't  be  fulfilled. 

Naturally,  it's  hard  to  look  at  a  person  and  hear 
him  tell  you  about  all  the  wonderful  things  he's 
going  to  do  and  be  able  to  decide  if  he'll  really  be 
able  to  carry  them  out.  This  is  a  \'ery  important 
thing,  though,  for  if  we  can't  know  that  the  people 
involved  are  going  to  act  pftsitiwly,  or  at  all.  on 
the  issues  in  their  platforms,  it  invalidates  our 
campus  election  jwocedure. 

To  be  bruUlly  frank,  we  have  nothing  but  popu-- 
larity  ^contests. 

Let's  have  a  good,  clean  race  this  time,  without 
all  the  senseless  and  meaningless  accusations  and 
retractions,  name-calling  and  mud-slinging.  Let's 
have  Bractical  issues,  and  let  elect  people  who  are 
going  to  give  us  what  they  promise. 

And  we've  all  got  pretty  good  ideas  about  what 
can  be  done  and  what  can't. 


A  Reason? 


Si 


drc* 

neces 

MAl 

oceai 
inoto< 

CAI 

CoJ 
and 
the  a 

GO^ 

and 

EMI 

fuara 
May 

shippl 

SEN] 
COL] 


Perhaps  school  officials  want  to  regulate  park- 
ing so  thiir  shabby  cars  won't  be  outshone  by 
pupils'  resplendent  ones.  —The  Raleigh  Newe  and 
Observer. 


I    t 


,  Its? 


:s; 


^omen) 
fs.  Its 

|coupl« 
ion   to 


races. 
I  usual? 


lis   is 
{issues 
So 

»h«» 
Mm* 
>lisK. 

be  Tn 

lis    is 

ccomp- 

»latui*e 

we 

this 

going 


»ss  of 
Noth- 

tfwms 

blow 

|e  ever 

^asible 


plan 

Mft? 

for  a 
I  things 
jSorae- 

time 
tudent 

can't 


»3nf)e 

earn- 

ission 

eoun- 

lon  tMi 

System 

have 


don't 
|e  hon- 

taken 
Ime,   it 


iterest- 
party 
swia- 
»tder- 
plank 


i.  Har! 


tones.' 


|nd  hear 

he's 

'ally  be 

iportant 

people 

all.  on 

ktes    our 


fut  popu-. 


without 

lens  and 

}g.    Let's 

who  are 


kout  what 


WEDNESDAY,  MARCH  20,  19S7 


THI  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


PAGE  THREE 


SCENE  FROM  ORESTEIA 

.  .  .  to  play  here  Thursday 


THE  COLLEGE  SUKVEY  OFFERS 

SlfMMER  EMPLOYMENT 

nr 
THREE  COMPLETE  GUIDES 

Each  including  extensive  listings  of  openings  and  ad- 
dressee, information  on  their  pay  and  responsibilities,  and 
necessan-  application  forms. 

MARITIME  EMPLOYMENT 

Deck  hands,  wipers,  stewards,  messmen,  and  others  on 
ocean  liners,  dredgers,  freighters,  tankers,  and  sail  or 
motor  yachts 

CAMP  AND  RESORT  EMH-OYMENT 

Counselors,  waiters,  waitresses,  life  giiards,  bartcnderi 
and  50  other  position*  k  conq>s  tad  resort*  throughout 
the  country 

GOVERNMENT  EMPLOYMENT 

Fire  control  aid*,  guides,  technical  assistants,  kborin 
and  others  m  national  parks,  federal  and  gam*  refuge* 

EMPLOYMENT  IS  GUARANTEED 

Our  lis^'r^s  are  sufficiently  extensive  to  warrant  o«r 
guarantee  of  employment  to  all  able  applicant*  prior  |o 
May  lst„  195^.  Early  application  is  advised,  espedally  » 
shipping    and    govemment    employment. 

SEND  ONE  DOLLAR  FOR  EACH  QUIDS  tO  THE 

OOLLSOB  8URYET,  BOX  625,  CHARLOTTEBVILLB, 

VIRGINIA 


Fair  To  Be  Over  iy  8:30 

Th*  Schcool  fo  iusinos*  Ad- 
ministraHen  has  announcM  that 
Gov.  Luther  Ho<l9«s  will  s|Mak 
Friday  night  st  8  o'clock  in  con- 
nection with  tho  filth  Business 
Fair. 

The  night  program  will  be 
finished  at  t:30  p.m.,  or  shortly 
thoreafter,  in  order  to  enebje 
persons  attendinf  tho  program 
to  listen  to  the  basketball  game 
between  the  Tar  Heole  of  the 
University  and  Michigan  State 
in  the  NCAA  Tournament  in 
Kansas  City. 


M  ax  Gardner 
Award  To  Be 
Presented  Here 

•The  winner  of  the  annual  Oliver 
Max  Gardner  Award  will  be 
named  here  Friday. 

The  winner  of  the  award  is 
never  disclosed  until  the  annual 
banquet  is  held.  The  banquet  will 
be  held  at  Lenoir  Hall  on  the  UNC 
campus  Friday  at  6:30  p.m. 

By  the  terms  of  the  will  be  of 
the  late  jGovemor  Gardner,  the 
award  is  given  each  year  to  a 
member  of  the  faculty  of  the  Con- 
solidated University  of  North  Car- 
olina. This  includes  the  University 
at  Chapel  Hill.  N.  C.  Stat6  College 
in  Raleigh  and  the  Woman's  Col- 
lege in  Greensboro. 


Dr.  Kerr  L  White  Gets 
Grant  For  Research  Here 


WHAT'U  YOU  READ? 

You  Pays  Your  Moiwy  and 
You  Take*  Your  Choice 

NOVELS--- 

If  you're  the  sort  that  likes  to  read 
tomorrow's  novels  today,  we've  got 
'em  running  out  of   our  ears — at 
s  price.  But,  we  doubt  very  much 
if  any  contemporary  historical  no- 
vel is  better  than  "Gone  With  The  j 
Wind,"  or  "Ivanhoe,"  for  that  mat- 
tM".  And  if  you  don't  insist  on  new-  j 
ness,  you'll  get  a  whale  of  a  lot  j 
more  reading  for  your  money.  For 
example: 

Paper  fcack*  (weed)  9  for  25c ' 

Hard-bocks  (worn)  4tt  I  for  |l^ 
Hard-backs  (Fine)  72c  to  97c 

Brand  N«w  Nevals 

(Pub.   in    195*  or   earlier)   $1.00 
Reprints  of  Good  Novels 

$1.25  and  up 


THE  INTIMATE 

BOOKSHOP 

205  East  Frfthkiin  Street 

Open  Till  10  P.  M. 


Dr.  Kerr  L.  White  of  the  Uni- 
versity School  of  Medicine  has 
been  granted  $41,975  by  the  Na- 
tional Heart  Institute  of  the  U,  S. 
Public  Health  Service  for  a  three 
year  research  project. 

Working  with  Dr.  White,  assist- 
ant professor  of  medicine  and  pre- 
ventive medicine,  will  be  Dr.  Dan 
A.  Martin,  research  fellow  in 
medicine  of  the  American  Heart 
Assn.  and  Dr.  Charles  Vernon, 
instructor  in  psychiatry,  both  of 
the   UNC   School  of  Medicine. 

The  title  of  the  study  is  "A 
Study  of  Life  Situations,  Emo- 
tions, and  Central  Venous  Pres- 
s^re."  Central  venous  pressure  re- 
fers to  the  pressure  of  blood  in 
the  arteries  which  is  related  to 
the  blood  pressure  determinations 
usually  referred  to. 

During  the  current  year  $11,845 
will  be  expended  on  the  study. 
A  total  of  $15,410  will  be  spent 
next  year  and  $14,720  will  be  used 
during  the  third  year  of  the  pro- 
ject. This,  new  U.  S.  Public  Health 
Service  Orant  will  be  used  to  con- 
tinue studies  which  have  been  in 
progress  for  about  a  year. 

The  purpose  of  the  study  is  to 
examine  some  of  the  events  and 
mechanism  which  may  be  related 
to  the  development  of  heart  fail- 
ure in  patients  with  organic  heart 
disease  at  particular  times  in  their 
lives.  Many  different  factors  may 
frequently  be  important  in  pro- 
ducing heart  failure  in  patients 
with     diseased     hearts.      Among 


DR.  KERR  L.  WHITE 

.  .  .  gets  heart  grant 

these  are  strenuous  exercise,  in- 
fection, injury  and  the  failure  to 
take    prescribed   drugs. 

Dr.  White  said  yesterday, 
"There  fs  considerable  evidence 
to  suggest  that  certain  stresses 
and  strains  of  life  and  the  resul* 
tant  feelings  and  emotions  of 
patients  may  place  heavy  de- 
mands for  work  on  the  heart  and 
may  alter  the  tone  of  the  veins 
in  the  body  and  contribute  sub- 
stantially to  the  patients'  heart 
failure.'' 


THE  HORIZOHS  ARE  UMUMITED 

af  UNION  CARBIDE 


12  Students 
Attend  Meet 
At  Wilmington 

Twelve  students  at  the  Univer- 
sity will  go  'to  Wilmington  this 
week  for  the  NCEA  state  conven- 
tion as  representatives  of  the 
Frank  P.  Graham  chapter  of  the 
Future  Teachers  of  America. 

Miss  Barbara  Bennett  of  Chapel 
Hill,  FTA  state  president,  will! 
preside  at  the  operiing  session, 
Thursday  night.  She  will  sfip; 
down  front  her  duties  when  now^j 
officers  are  chose  at  the  Friday, 
afternoon   session. 

Other  delegates  are  Joyce  Alli-j 
good.  Rt.  1,  Washington:  Sue 
Atchison,  Washington.  D.  C;  Vann 
J.  Bass,  Rt.  2,  Middlesex;  Vernon 
Culpepper,  Rocky  Mount;  Gwen 
Heinzen.  Nutley.  N.  J.;  Bill  Hen- 
shaw,  Buie's  Creek;  Ruth  Neisler, 
Rt.  3,  CMicord;  Enno  T.  Recken- 
dorf.  Chapel  Hill;  Louella  Robin- 
son. Rt.  10,  Charlotte;  Libby 
Straughn,  Fayettiv^ille;  and  Bar- 
bara   Wadsworth.    Hcndersonville. 

Faculty  members  attending  the 
NCEA  meeting  include  Dr.  Don 
Tarbet.  Guy  B.  Phillips.  Dr.  Wil- 
mer  Jenkins  and  Mrs.  Stacy  Ebert. 


H.  K.  Beecher 
Scheduled  To 
Talk  At  4  P.M. 


PlayiTidkers 
Production 
Mar.  27-3*1 

The  Carolina  Playmakers  will 
present  as  their  next  major  pro- 
duction a  new  play  written  by  a 
former  UNC  graduate  student. 
Christian  Moe. 

The  play,  "Stranger  in  the 
Land,'  is  scheduled  for  the  Play- 
makers  Theatre,  Wednesday 
through  Sunday,  March  27-31,  at 
8:30  p.m.  Tommy  Rezzuto  of  Ashe- 
ville,  Playmakers'  technical  direc- 
tor and  UNC  dramatic  art  instruc- 
tor, will  direct  the  production. 

Set  in  Japan  duf-ing  the  U.  S.  oc- 
cupation after  World  War  H,  the 
play  deals  with  the  changes  the 
Japanese  people  must  undergo, 
and  their  relationships  with  Ameri- 
can servicemen. 

Featured  in  the  cast  are  John 
Whitty,  New  Bern,  as  Dan;  Ken 
Lowry,  Troy,  Ohio,  as  Gil;  Miss 
Nancetta  Hudson,  Goldsboro,  as 
Ayame;  Richard  Newdick,  August, 
Me.,  as  Yamada;  Harvey  Knox, 
Greensboro,  as  Sweeney:  Taylor 
Williams,  Dunn,  as  a  British  sailor; 
Miss  Mary  Johnston,  Eupora,  Miss., 
as  Akadama;  Lloyd  ^nner,  Burl- 
ington, as  the  rickshaw  boy;  Harold 
Williamson,  Sims,  as  Takashi;  Tas- 
so  Spanos,  Braddock,  Pa.  afl<  Rag- 
ged Man;  Alvin  Whittinghall,  Cha- 
pel HilJ,  as  Jiro;  Pat  Mulvihill, 
Evanston,  ni.  as  Chief  Shore  Pa- 
trolman; Charles  Federspiel,  Itha- 
ca, Mich.,  as  Second  Shore  Patrol- 
man; Melvin  Hipps,  Tryon,  as  Jap- 
anese Policeman;  Miss  Betty  Jin- 
nette,  Ck>ld5boro,  as  a  Girl;  and 
Miss  Barbara  Battle,  Miami,  Fla., 
as  an  Old  Woman. 


Covering  The  Campus 


LECTURE  POSTPONED 

A  lecture  by  Robert  Chisholm  of 
Brown  University  here  tonight  at 
8  p.m.  has  been  postponed,  be- 
cause of  Dr.  Chisholm's  illness. 
The  lecture  has  been  postponed 
indefinitely. 

CHRISTIAN  FELLOWSHIP 

The  Inter-Varsity  Christian  Fel- 
lowship meets  at  7  p.m.  tonight 
in  the  Choral  Rehearsal  Roohi 
(108)  in  Hill  Hall.  Rev.  David 
Yates  will  speak  on  the  resurrec- 
tion of  the  Lord  Jesus  Christ. 

Everyone  has  been  urged  to 
come  and  hear  this  vital  message. 

CAREER  MEETING 

CV  A.  McKeel,  manager  of  the 
Personnel  Administration  Dept., 
Manufacturing  Division  of  Vick 
Chemical  Co.,  will  be  the  guest 
speaker  at  a  Career  Meeting  at 
7:30  p.m.  toniffht  in  lC5  Gardner 
Hall.  He  is  sponsored  by  the  Place- 
ment Ser\-ice,  Alpha  Kappap  Psi, 
and  Delta  Sigma  Pi. 


Team  Telegram 
To  Go  Friday 

Students  will  have  until  Fiiday 
to  put  their  name  on  a  team  tele- 
gram to  be  sent  to  the  basketball 
team  while  it  is  in  Kansas  for  the 
NCAA  playoffs. 

For  ten  cents  a  student  will  be 
able  to  put  his  name  on  the  tele 
gram.  The  University  Club  is  su- 
pervising the  telegram  and  has 
set  up  facilities  in  Y  Court  a&d 
in  the  various  fraternities  and 
sororities. 


WUNC-TV 

Today's  schedule  for  WUNC-TV, 
the  University's  educational  tele- 
visioa  station,  is  as  follows: 
12:43    Music 

1:00    Today  on  the  Farm 

1:30    A  Career  for  You 

5:15    Music 

5:30    Solid  Geometry 

6:(X)    Legislative  Review 

6:20    News  and  Safdy 

6:30    Mathematics 

7:00    Industrial  A]*tisan 

7:30    Travelogue 

7:45     Meredith  History 

8:00    N.  C.  Council  of  Churches 

8:30    Tele-Parade   of   Stars 

9:00    Russia:  Past  and  Present 
10:00    Final  Edition 


E.  R.  Brown 

of   our   N»w   York 

OHices  will  be 

on  campus,  Wednesday, 

/iilarch  27,  to  discuss 

eireer  miyiflitifflS 

in  New  Yoric  City  Iti 

these  ftoiiis: 


Accountinji 

Xav4rtisin«. 

Credit 

Foreign  Operations 

iMefi«tofi{*nt  Services 


The  annual  Whitehead  Lecture 
of  the  University  School  of  Medi- 
cine will  be  given  today  at  4  p.m. 
today  in  the  Clinic  Auditorium  of 
the  N.  C.  Memorial  Hospital. 

The  guest  speaker  this  year  will 
be  Drv\Henry  K.  Beecher.  profes- 
sor ot  research  anaesthesia,  of 
the  Harvard  University  School  of 
Medicine.  The  subject  of  his  lec- 
ture will.be  "New  Work  on  Pate 
a|d  Pain  ReUef." 

iiphe  Whitehead  Lectures  are 
.tponsored  by  the  Whitehead  Medi- 
cal Society  of  the  UNC  School 
of  Medicine.  The  society  was 
founded  in  1908  and  named  in 
honor  of  Dr.  Richard  H.  White- 
head, the  first  dean  of  the  school. 

The  society  officers  are  Benson 
Wilcox,  president,  Charlotte; 
David  Crosland,  vice  president. 
Concord;  Alfred  Hamor,  secretary, 
Morganton;  and  Edward  Carwile 
LeRoy,  treasurer,  Elizabeth  City. 


ft/f/ff^"^'^^^ 


BRIDGE  LESSONS 

Bridge  lessons  will  be  offered 
this  afternoon  from  4-6  p.m.  in  the 
Rendezvous  Room  and  tomorrow 
evening  at  7:30  in  the  Victory  Vil- 
lage Day  Care  Center. 


lY^THf^lveKEYS*  DlicMOONftOVVS 
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WEDNESDAY,  MARCH  20,  lH7 


Tar  Heel  Baseballers  Open  Season  Against  Florida  Today 


In  Kansas  City,  A  Pair  Of  Underdogs 

Two  nationally  rated  powerhoiL-es  and  a  pair  ox  upstart  aUorans 
make  up  the  field  for  the  NCAA  final  round  to  be  held  in  Kansas 
City,  Mo.,  this  weekend. 

Everybody    expectMi   th*   tv«r©   big    boys.    North    Carolina    anrf 
Kansas,  to   breeze    into  the  showdown    Kansas   City   tournoy,  but 
the  arrival  on  the  scene  of  Michigan   State   and   San   Francisc* 
caused  a  few  eyebrows  to  be  lifted. 
Both  of  these  teams  are  in  a  sense  Cinderella  squads.  San  Fuiin- 
ci.:'co.  winners  of  the  national  crown  for  two  years  in  a  row,  lost  six 
early  season   games   before   hitting   their   stride,    and   Michigan    State 
dropped  their  first  three  starts  of  the  campaign. 

But   each   of  these  squads   have  come   on   with   a    late*  seasen 
rush   to  bowl   over   all   competiton.   The   Spartans,   Carolines  first 
round  opponent,   won    12  of  their   last   13  games  to  clinch   a   Ha 
for  the  Big  10  title  and  a  bid  to  the  NCAA  playoffs. 
Nobody    gave   them    much    of   a    change    again..-t    Ketttucky    in    the 
midwestcrn    regi.nals.    but    the    Spartans    surprised    the    experts 
springing  a  80-€8  up.set.  And  on  Kentuckys  home  floor  at  that. 

San  Francisco  toppled  Idaho  State  and  California  on  their  way 
to  Kansas  City.  Their  edge  over  California  was  a  narrow  one,  SO-44. 
Both  Michigan  State  and   San   I-Yancisco  are  dangerous,   but  Caro- •  ^**^^  on  a  strong  mound  staff  and 
lina  and  Kansas  must  be  rated  solid  favorites  to  sweep  into  the  chajB-  '^  ^■^^«''"*«  infield  and  outfield, 
pionship  game.  T!  en  will  come  the  long  awaited  duel  between  Leonic 
ftosenbluth  and  Wilt  Chamberlain. 


by 


Fpur  Tih-s 
Slated  On 
Dixie  Hop 

By  BILL  KINO 

k's  baseball  time  once  again 
aod  Ibis  afternoon  the  Carolina 
Tar  Heeis  make  theii  1957  debut 
ia  suoiiy  Florida  against,  the  Uni- 
versity of  Florida  in  Gainesville. 

Today's  encounter  marks  the 
first  in  a  four  game  sericj  for  the 
Tar  Heels  in  their  annual  jaunt  to 
Land  of  Suns'hine.  Carolina  playti 
a  two  game  scries  with  Rollins  and 
Ohio  State  before  returning  to 
Cbapel  Oil!  for  the  home  opener 
against  the  University  of  Dela- 
ware, March  27th. 

The  Tar  Heels  left  Chapel  Hill 
Momiay  afternoon  with  something 
the>'  haveh't  had  in  a  long  time — 
a  good  supply  pf  pitchers.  Coach 
Walter  Rabb's  club  finished  third 
m  the  Atlantic  Ccast  Conference 
last  jaaaon  and  could  possibly 
have  done  much  better  had  it  not 
been  fw  an  extremely  weak 
moui-d  staff.  This  season  Rabb. 
who  is  now  officially  head  coach 
jf   the   Tar   Heels    is,    basing   his 


That  Sold  Out  Sign 

Tickets  to  the  games  in  Kansas  City  are  scarce  as  -  snowhalls  in 
August.  There  are  mmc  left  in  Kansas  City,  and  the  UNC  allotment 
of  250  has  been  snatched  up.  So  if  you  dont  have  a  ticket,  you'd 
•lOtter  .tay  home.  It's  a  long  ride  just  to  watch  the  scenery. 

Woollen  Gym  was  a  flurry  of  activity  yesterday.  Athletic  Di- 
rector Chuck  Erickson  was  up  to  his  neck  in  last  minute  arrene** 
noents,  while  Cftach  Frank  McGuire  was  beseiged  by  a  fl«cfc  of 
telephony  calls,  newsmen  and  just  plain  well  wishers.  McOwtr« 
stayed  on  the  phone  for  a  half  hour  talking  to  representatives  ef 
Michigan  State,  Kansas  and  San  Francisco  in  a  four  way  conver- 
sation. 


The  bascbalh^rs  were  hit  hard 
y»sterd^y.  hovrever,  when  it  was 
learned  that  veteran  Jim  Love, 
lLabb\s  choice  for  the  number  one 
:atching  duty,  had  been  declared 
aeiiffiole.  hove,  a  law  .school  stu- 
dent, was  reported  a  little  befow 
the  B  average  required  of  law  stu- 
dents to  pip-tlpipatc  in  intercolle- 
giate athletics.  He  was  notified  in 
Florida  by  Athletic  Director, 
Chuck  Erickson  and  Mill  fly  home 
immediately. 

The  loss  of  Love  is  a  big  blow 
to  the  Tar  Heels  who  were  slight- ; 


The  Tar  Heel  party  \?as  unable  to  charter  a  plane,  so  one  group  j  '^  weaker  in  the  catching  depart 

ment  than  at  other  positioi^s. 
Love's  probable  replacement  will 
be  Winston-Salem  sophomore.  Jim 
Leggettc. 

The  Tar  Heela'  stay  in  Florida 
will  give  Rabb  and  his-  assistant 
Bill  Wilhclm  a  good  opportunity 
to  make  some  experimental 
changes  in  the  infield  and  out- 
field. I>uring  spring  practice. 
«alA  Bi«jrif  a^vvral  ehangte  in  the 
outfieM  and  infli^  and  will  prob 


of  ,20  will  leave  from  the  Raleigh-Durham  airport  this  afternoon 
aboard  a  regular  airliner.  They  will  work  out  on  the  Kansas  City  Mu- 
nicipal .Auditorium  court  tomorrow  afternofm  in  preparation  for  their 
Friday  night  game  against  Michigan  State  at  7:30  (CST).  or  8:30  our 
time. 

Contrary  to  popular  belief,  Kansas  City  is  not  the  home  o# 
the  University  of  Kansas.  The  U  of  K  is  located  at  Lawrence, 
Kan.,  only  a  few  miles  from  Kansas  City.  The  Jayhawkers  play 
their  home  games  at  Lawrence,  but  schedule  several  games  each 
season  on  the  'Municipal  Auditorium  court. 

Kansas  supporters  are  sure  to  be  hanging  from  the  rafters  to  get 
a  look  at  their  team  gunning  for  the  national  title.  Folks  out  that 
way  have  always  believed  Kansas  wa.r  the  number  one  team,  and 
they're  just  itching  for  a  chance  to  end  Carolina's  long  unbeaten 
string. 

A  Little  Bit  Of  Chatter 

Next  year's  Tar  Heel  cage  squad  will  have  the  services  of  at  least 
four  highly  promising  newcomers.  They  are  Harvey  Salz.  Ray  Stanley, 
York  Larese  and  Lee  Shaffer.  Salz.  a  top  prospect  before  the  season 
started,  was  foried  to  drop  out  of  i-chool  because  of  academic  diffi- 
culties, but  will  Le  back  ne.xt  fall. 

Stanley  sat  out  a  year's  ineligibility  this  season,  but  kept  his 
shooting  eye  sharp  by  playing  with  the  semipro  McCrary  Eagles. 
He  also  played  with  a  pickup  group  of  UNC  students  in  an  ama- 
teur tournament  in  the  western  part  of  the  state,  and  tallied  50 
points  in  one  game.  Shaffer  and  Larese,  rising  sophs,  were  called 
future  "Tom  Golas  and  Paul  Arizins"  by  Coach  McGuire  In  Phila> 
delphia. 

Chapel  Hill  stands  in  danger  of  losing  two  of  its  finest  citizens, 
Hungarians  Laszlo  Tabori  and  his  coach,  Mihaly  Igloi.  The  two  have 
been  living  and  training  here  since  early  thiii  year,  but  the  word  is 
out  that  they  may  leave  soon. 

And  le.^  extend  a  warm  welcome  to  UNC's  new  tennis  ceach,  ' 
Vladimir  Cernik,  The  ex-Czechoslovakian  Davis  Cup  star,  now,  re- 
siding  in   Palm   Beach,  will   arrive   here  April   1    to  take  «wer  Mi« 
Carolina  natters  for  a  two  month  period.  If  things  can  be  t««rk«d 
out  Cernik  may  become  the  permanent  caoch. 


UNC  Fencers 
Take  Part  In 
NCAA  Meet 

Captain  Don  Corbin  of  the  UNC 
fencing  team  announced  late  yes- 
terday afternoon  that  several 
members  of  the  team  will  be  go- 
ing to  the  National  Collegiate 
Championship  Fencing  Matches 
held  in  Detroit,  Mich.  The  mem- 
bers going  will  be  Captain  Cor- 
bin, Guy  Ellis,  Bob  Clay,  Frank 
Parker  and  Jim  Proctor.  They  will 
be  accompanied  by  coach  Pebley 
Barrow. 

There  will  be  one  man  fencing 
in  each  of  the  three  weapons 
while  the  other  two  will  act  as 
substitutes.  It  is  an  individual 
tournament  run  on  an  elimination 
basis.  The  school  will  be  ranked 
according  to  how  high  their  in- 
dividual  men   go. 

The  UNC  group  will  gather  at 
Woollen  Gym  for  their  6:30  de- 
parture. The  competition  begins 
at  9  a.m.  Friday  morning  and  will 
end   late   Saturday   afternoon. 

The  teams  next  engagement  will 
be  March  30  when  the  Tar  Heel 
blademen  play  host  to  VMI  and 
Vanderbuilt. 


Phillies  Whip  Tigers j  6-5 

LAKELAND,  Fla.  —  (AP)  —  I  man  he  faced.  The  Phils  added 
Joe  Lonnett.  a  reserve  catcher,  i  another  run  in  the  same  frame  oR 
greeted  rookie  John  Tsitouris  with  i  three  consecutive  singles. 


a  home  run  as  the  first  man  up  in 
the  11th  inning  yesterday  and  the 


The   Tigers    had    prolonged    the 
struggle  with  a  run  in  the  ninth 


Philadelphia     Phils     handed     the  ^ff  winning  picther  Granny  Ham 
Detroit   Tigers   their   eighth    exhi    ^ 
bition  defeat  against  two  victories 
6-5. 


Tsitouris   was   the   fourth  Tiger 


ncr  after  two  were  out.  A  walk, 
a  throwing  error  by  Hamner  acd 
a  single  by  Ray  Boone   produced 


pitcher  and  Lonnett  was  the  first  the  tally. 


Howard  Johnson  Restaurant 

BREAKFAST 

I 

LUNCH 

DINNER 

SNACKS 
'^Landmark  For  Hungry  Tarheels" 


JIM  LOVE      , 

declared  ineligible 


Catcher  Jim  Love  Is 
Ineligible  For  Baseball 


Coed's  Card 
Cage  Contest 

The  Carolia  coed  basketball 
team  will  meet  Duke  here  today 
at  4:30  p.m.  in  the  Women's  Gym. 

Last  week,  the  Tar  Heel  girls 
lost  to  their  Blue  Devil  rivals.  42- 
39.  Beth  Buic  (bok  high  scoring 
honors  for  the  locals  in  that  one. 
and  will  lead  U.\C  in  today's 
game. 

In  the  mural  table  \^nnis  tour- 
nameot  semi-finals,  Joan  Willsey 
meets  the  winner  of '  the  match 
between  Jo  Ann  Bridges  and  Sue 
Gichner,  and  Pace  Barnes  meets . 
the  winner  of  the  match  between 
Jane  Westbrook  and  Peggy  Swear- , 
ingcn.  I 

Betty  Meloy  won  the  tennis 
tournament  by  defeating  Nancy 
Shuford,  6-1,  6-4.  i 


The     Carolina     baseball     team,  ^  Love's  average  was  a  little  bit  low- 
ably  start  the  te^spa  with  a  prac-l^*'''^''    meets    the    University    m   er  than  the  required  .standard, 
tically    rejuvenated    lineup    from'^°""^^  *"  '*^  season  opener  this       Athletic   Director   Chuck    Erick- 
last  season.  j  afternoon,  received  a  big  blow  yes- 1  son    informed    Love   by   telephone 

The  Tv  Heels  h«ve  a  five  game  i  ^^^^^  ^  *'^"  '*  ^'^^  learned  •  thit  yesterday,  and  told  him  to  return 
home  stand  upon  their  return '  ^^  '^^^  Heel's  number  one  catch- '  to  Chapel  Hill  by  plane  immedi- 
from     Florida.     After    Delaware  i  '''^  '^'"^  ^"^^  ^^  ^^'^^  declared  in- :  ately. 

^laryland,    Ithaca    College,    Wash- !  '^^^S'^'*^-  !     ^^^    ^'^^    '"    his    final    season 

ington  and  Lee.  and  South  Caro-  '^°^*^'  ^  '^^^  student,  is  just  shy! with  the  Tar  Heels.  He  was  the 
lina  invade  E2merson  Stadium  be-  [  °^  ^^^  ^  average  which  a  law  stu- !  regular  catcher  in  1955  and  sh*i-ed 
fore  the  Rabbmen  take  to  the  road  '•  ***^"^  """^^  ^^^^  '"  order  to  par- '-.  the    catching    chores    with    Jerry 


/^i? 


DIANA 


DORS 

England's  "Marilyn  Monroe" 

'  IS  yovR 

HOffiyNOON 

fffaSSAR/J 


again. 

AAUW  H«re  Sponsors 
'Orest«i«'  Thursday 

The  Chapel  Hill  branch  of 
AAUW  will  sponsor  the  Greek 
film  "Orerteia"  of  Aeschylus. 
Thursday  at  8  p.m.  in  Carroll  Hall. 

ITie  film  adaptation  will  be  pro- 
duced ia  the  origial  language  and 
in  color.  Admission  is  90  cents. 
Tickets  may  be  obtained  at  the 
door  or  from  AAUW  members. 

Proceeds  will  go  to  the  AAUW 
Fellowship  Fund. 

CLASSIFIEDS 


ticrpate     in     intercollegiate  •  ath- 
letics. 

The  Tar  Heel  veteran  made  the 
trip  to  Florida  with  the  baseball 
team  Monday  under  the  as^Aimp- 
tion  that  he  was  academically  all 
right.  Later,   ,it  was   learned   that 


Br>'son,  no  longer  in  school,  laol 
season.  He  was  expected  to  be  the 
number  one  back  stop  for  the 
baseballers  this  season. 

The  gap  left  by  Love  will  prob- 
ably be  filled  by  sophomore  Jim 
Leggettc,  a  catcher-first  baseman.  '\ 


Contemplating 
Mating? 


THE  NEW  INGRID  BERGMAN  PICTURE 

^j^  i ,    Radiant,  full  of  tire. 


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ir 


restless... a  woman 
in  love,  played  by 
the  most  female     - 
^.,  of  all  women !„ 


LOST:  QOLD  WEDDING  BAND 
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P.-B.  a.  P.  on  inside  with  date 
I2-23-M.  Finder  please  notify 
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with  Janet  Dorraugh.  Chemis- 
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ALIKE 

D*  w*   in   think   that   way?  $•• 
•ditorial,  pafa  2. 


VOL.    LVII    NO.    119 


Complete  UP)  Wirt  Seroiet 


CHAPEL   MILL,   NORTH   CAROLINA,   THURSDAY,   MARCH   21,   1957 


Offices  in  Graham   Memenai 


FOUR  PAGES  THIS   l£*UE 


Baum  Says  Student  Senate 
Would  Solve  Student  Issues 


Baum  Protests 
Treatment 
In  Editorials 

lieplying  to  a  recent  Daily  Tal- 
lied editorial  review  of  the  two 
campus  political  parties  (Mar.  20), 
Bill  Baum,  UP  candidate  for  presi- 
pcncy  of  the  student  body,  spoke 
out  yesterday  on  what  he  called 
a  "misleading  and  unfair"  treat- 
ment of  the  student  body  and  the 
Uaiversity  Party. 

Baum  slated  his  belief  that  the 
problems  of  student  participation 
in  studcrft  government  can  he  solv- 
ed through  the  Student  Senate, 
which  he  has  proposed  to  establie,h 
il  elected  president  of  the  student 
biMly. 

DEFENSE 

In  defense  of  the  student  body 
ari^  the  University  Party,  Baum 
said: 

'In  an  editorial  review  of  the 
election  platforms  of  the  two  camp- 
us parties.  Editor.  Powledge  failed 
to  take  into  consideration  what  i> 
the  backbone  and  principle  objec- 
tive of  the  UP  campaign. 

"This  was  tnrough  an  oversight 
which  I  am  sure  was  unintentional, 
but  which  i.  still  regrettable;  and 
the  resulting  editorial  was  both 
misleading  and  unfair  to  the  sUi- 
dent  body  and  the  University 
Party. 

"I  would  like  to  quote  a  portion 
of  Editor  Powledgc's  editorial. 
'One  of  the  reasons  student  gov- 
ernment is  presently  suffering 
from  lack  of  respect,  dignity,  im- 
portance and  honor  is  that  the  stu- 
dent tax-payers  don't  know  or  care  , 
what  goes  on  in  their  student  gov- 
ernment.' 

ASRCEMSMT 

'The  University  Party  l^  in  £xili 
agreement  with  l^ir.  Powledge  on 
this  point,  aad  we  placg  the  full 
Lad  of.  blame  not  on  tbc  studcnt.s 
.themselves,  but  on  the  officials  of 
student  government  and  upon  our- 
selves as  a  political  party. 

'This  lack  of  interest  is  indeed 
real  because  the  interest  of  the 
student  body  in  student  govern- 
ment has  nut  in  the  pa.',  been  sin- 
cerely sought.  , 

"It  is  an  easier  task  for  the  men 
running  for  office  to  propose  a 
'platform*  of  great-sounding  objec- 
tives which  may  be  good,  but 
which,  as  Tar  Heel  columnist 
Woody  Scars  pointed  out.  are  very 
seldom  accomplished  or  are  for- 
gotten altogether. 

'The  difficult   task   for   student 

.  .government   is   to   tvork    to    learn 

what     the     students     themselves 

think  should  be  accomplished.  The 

I'P    recognizes    the    problem    and 

the  difficulty  Qt  the  solution,,  and 

,has  proposed   the   Student  Senate 

.as   lis   principle    objective    during 

this  campaign. 

OBJECTIVES 

"This  representative  group  of 
students  would  outline  the  objec- 
tives of  Student  Government  dur- 
ing the  coming  year,  and,  at  the 
same  time,  will  give  every  student 
on  campu.',  through  their  repre 
scntattves.  a  vital  part  in  student 
government. 

"Thi::  is  the  part  of  the  Univer- 

(See  BAUM,  page  3) 


Friday  Requests  $1.5  Million 
For  Additional  Appropriations; 
Cites  Faculty,  Library  Needs 


Candidafes  Make 
Platforms  Clear 


Phi  Defeats      |  President  Is  Concerned 

Over  Academic  Crisis 


JOHN    KERR   AND   WOODY   THOMASSON 

.    .    .    courdimitc    Baum    cmnpaign 

Baum  Announces  Kerr 
Thomasson  For  Drive 


John  Kerr  and   \Voi>drow  Thom- 
asson  were  appointed  Tuesday   as 
I  campaign     coordinators     for     Bill 
Baum,  UP  candidate  for  president 
!  of  the  student  body. 

In  accepting  the  appointment, 
Kerr  and  Thomasson  said,  'We 
are  backing  Bill  Baum  becau.se  we 
know  he  is  capable  and  qualified. 
We  know  that  with  Bill  Baum  as 
prcw'ident.  we  will  have  a  repre- 
sentative student  government 
which  will  be  run  by  and  for  the 
students.  '• 

"Baum  will  welcome  advice  and  ^ 
suggestions  from  al>  students  and 
faculty  members;  but  he  wtU  not 
be  dictated  to  by  faculty  or  gradu 


ate  students  who  have  Ions  passed 
from  the  student  government 
scene.  We  feel  that  Baum's  idea 
cf  having  a  Student  Senate  to  out- 
line the  issue.)  imp(/rtant  to  the 
entire  student  body  is  a  sound 
one. 

"The    students    need    a    strong ' 
and  capable  leader  to  guide  them 
in  the  coming  year  Baum.'s  admin- 
istrative   experience    last    year    as 
president  of  large  youth  organiza- 
tions comprising  over  10,000  mem-  , 
hers  qualifies  him  to  be  president ' 
of    our     stiidgnl  -body,     and    our 
candidate's  work  in  severul  phases 
of  our  student  government  further 
qualifies  him." 


Young  Hopes  Students 
Day  Will  Be  A  Success 


In  reference  to  the  first  "Stu- 
dents' Day  of  Values,  '  Bob  Young, 
student  body  president,  ha..'  stated 
that  he  hopes  it  will  be  a  great 
success  as  plans  are  now  in  prog- 
ress for  an  observance  of  Stu- 
dents' Day  next  fall.  , 

"Students'    Day    has    taken    the 
time  of  many  persons  to  plan  thij 
particular     day.     The     merchants 
have  been  most  cooperative  in  this-, 
experimental    endeavor.    The    suc- 
cess  of   this   particular  days   pro- ' 
gi'am   will    determine   whether   or  | 
not  they  are  to  be  held  in  the  f u- ' 
ture  years,"  said  the  student  body 
president..- 

"Next  fall  there  will  be  a  'Stu- 
dents' Day."  when  there  will  be  a 
blanket,  across-the-board  discount ' 
given  to  all  students  by  all  mem- 
bers of  the  Merchants  Associa- 
tion, stated  Young. 

Young  said  that  to  him,  this  waa 
the  ideal  "bargain  day,'  for  stu- 
I  dents  who  shop  with  the  local  mer- 
chants. He  expounded  further 
that  the'  student  body  was  very 
fortunate  in  receiving  the  benefitj 
that  have  been  assured,  since  this 
is  to  be  the  first  time  that  a  pro- 


gram of  this  type  has  ever  been 
attempted. 

"The  Merchants  Association  has 
been  most  enthusiastic  in  its  en- 
dorsement of  the  idea,  and  they 
feel  that  it  has  tremendous  poten- 
tial value  to  l>oth  the  i,-ludents  and 
to  themselves, '  the  president  re- 
ported. 

The  student  body  head  went  on 
to  express  thanks  to  the  pefsons 
who  have  been  most  responsible 
for  recognition  for  his  industru)Ua 
effort  in  forming  the  achievement 
ol  the  set-up. 

'■I>on  Fftrtado  has  been  chair- 
man of  the  Student  Committee 
and  he  and  his  group,  Wayne  Ven- 
ters, Bob  Jone^'  and  Betty  Carolyn 
Huffman,  have  done  an  outstand- 
ing job  in  the  amount  of  time  that 
they  have  had  to  work,"  Young 
went  on  to  say. 

In  concluding,  Young  hoped 
that  all  students  would  take  ad- 
vantage of  the  values  that  would 
be  offered.  He  also  said  that  he 
wished  to  express  his  sincere 
thanks  to  the  merchants  partici- 
pating and  he  hoped  that  the  pro- 
gram would  prbve  to  be  of  value 
to  many  individual  students 


Bass  Refutes 
Charges  Made  \ 

Editorial  candidate  Neil  Bass 
named  three  assistants  to  his  cam- 
paign staff  yesterday  and  elabor- 
ated on  what  he  termed  a  misin- 
terpretation of  one  of  his  plat- 
form' planks  by  one  of  his  op-  \ 
ponents  recently. 

In  naming  Al  Goldsmith.  Tom 
Long.  Bob  Hornik  and  Miss  Jen- 
ni?  Margaret  Meadnr  to  hi.s  staff. 
Bass  expressed  his  belief  that  their 
efforts  will  enable  him  to  present 
his  platform  eifectively  to  all  ■ 
areas   of  the   campus.  I 

In  his  statement.  Bass  said:  ! 

"AI  and  Bob  will  work  with  me  j 
from  the  fraternity  i-ide  towai'd 
scheduling  of  speaking  dates.  Tom  | 
has  consented  to  help  with  my ! 
schedule  among  men's  dormitor-' 
ies.  Jennie  Margaret  will  help  me 
arrange  talks  among  the  women's 
dorms  and  sororities.  j 

"Regarding  a  statement  in  Tues- 1 
days  Daily  Tar  Heel  by  my  op- ; 
ponent  Charlie  Sloan,  I  feel  Char-  i 
lie  misinterpreted  one  of  my  plat-  j 
form   planks. 

"I  would  most  assuredly  never  i 
sit  back  contentedly  and  wait  for^ 
optimistic  pre&s  releases  by  camp- 
us organizations.  I  would  seek  out 
campus  news  as  comprehensively 
as  possible  with  a  well  oriented 
and  enlarged  staff. 

".My  point,  which  Charlie  mm-  \ 
understood  completely,  was  that 
through  your  gracious  support,  1 
would  never  attempt  to  barge  in-  \ 
to  closed  meetings  like  a  secret 
police   force.  •  j 

"Concerning  the  campaign.  1 
feel  it  is  a  candidates  job  to  com- 1 
plctely  present  his  ideas  to  the  | 
campus.  If  he  runs  out  of  ideas ! 
and  convictions,  he  should  cer- 
tainly not  turn  to  splitting  hairs 
and  arguing  with  his  opponents. 

"A  fair  and  clean  campaign  is 
on?  in  which  candidates  merely 
present  themselves  objectively 
and  leave  decisions  to  the  elect- 
orate. 

"I  shall  not  criticize  my  oppon- 
ents, but  shall.  God  willing,  only 
present  my  views  and  qualifica- 
tion to  the  campus  and  leave  the 
final  decision  in  your  hands  as  stu- 
dent  subscribers." 


Paper  Not  To 
Reflect  Opinion 

In  a  statement  yesterday  to  The 
Daily  Tar  Heol.  Charlie  Sloan, 
candidate  for  DTK  editor,  said  he 
thought  the  paper  'could  not  re- 
flect" student  opinion. 

"I  hfeve  been  asked  what  I  feel 
is  the  purpose  of  the  paper;  to 
reflect  student  opinion  or  to  stim- 
ulate thought."  said  Sloan. 

"In  the  first  place,  there  is  no 
such  thing  as  '..•tudenl  opinion,"  so 
obviously  the  paper  could  not  re- 
flect it.  There  are  as  many  varied 
and  different  student  opinions' 
on  this  campus  as  there  are  faces. 
This  is  right;  this  is  good,"  said 
Sloan. 

"It  should  reflect  the  interest  of 
as  many  segment.-  of  the  student 
body  a.^  possible."  It  should  ailow 
many  different  ideas— reflections 
of  student  opinion — ta  be  ex- 
pressed on  the  editorial  page. 

"But  it  should  also  stimulate; 
both  thri)ugh  the  ideas  of  contribu- 
tors lo  the  editorial  page  and 
through  the  editorial  columns. 

'"I  don't  particularly  enjoy  talk- 
■iatg  ■  abuut  myself,  but  ioastnuch 
a,?  ttfp  votprs  have  a  right  to_  know 
something  about  the  candidates," 
said  Sloan,  ""I  will." 

'"Last  night  at  the  Intcrdormitory 
Council  meeting  I  presented  two 
positive  plans  by  which  the  paper 
can  be  improved.  The  only  .  real 
materials  fof  a  platform  are  the 
ideals  which  I  have  listed  on  my 
campaign  posters  and  a  few  plans 
for  administrative  improvement," 
Sloan  said. 

'"Let  me  stress  that  a  newspaper 
job  i.'  not  in  the  area  of  politics. 
There  are  few  long-range  pro- 
grams that  can  be  promised.  I  am 
in  favor  of  an  editor  who  will 
prod  the  proper  authorities  on 
problems  such  as  morale,  housing 
for  married  students  and  parking 
lots. 

"The  Tar  Heels  value  lies  in 
the  fact  that  is  a  daily  paper," 
said  Sloan.  A  good  editor  must  be 
able  to  take  a  tremendous  number 
of  new  events  and  discoveries  in 
.'tride  every  day  and  select  the 
most  important  for  comment  and 
suggestion. 


Legal  Gaming 
For  Carolina 

The  Phi  defeated  Tuesday  nighl  : 
a  measure  which,  if  enacted,  j 
would  have  placed  three  plush  | 
casinos      in      strategic      locations  | 

:  through  out  the  .late. 

After  controversy  over  the  plac-  i 
ing   of    the    proposed    casinos,    de- 

I  bate  was  opened  by  Rep.  John  . 
Brooks  who  drew  a  parallel  be  ; 
tween  the  revenue  accrued  by  the 

j  state  of  Nevada  and  the  possibili  '' 
ties  state  suppported  gambling  ca  ! 

'  sinos  would  open  to  North  Caro-  | 
lina.  I 

Brooks'  stirring  defense  of  the  i 
evening's  bill  was  immediately  i 
countered  by  Rep.  Tolbert  who  ! 
maintained  that  s-uch  establish-  j 
ments   would    be    accompanied    by 

^  liquor    which    would    lead    to    an  ] 

!  armed    march   by    the    WCTU    and ! 

i  great    confusion;    that    nude    and  I 

i  lecherous  women  would  hang ! 
around    these    casinos    and    lead 

;  astray  the  youth  of  North  Caro  ! 
lina.  and  that  the  mental  health  of  ; 

i  the   state  would    be   seriously    im- ' 
paired   by   the   insidious  character 
of   these   casinos.   He   called   upon 
the  body  to  place  its  faith  in  'Lu- 

;  iher  the  Lionbearted"  to  bring  the 

■  state  adequate  revenues. 

I  F!upth«r  attacks  on-  t-he  bill 
termed     it     ""Oecptng    Sociali.^Tn," 

.  and  destructive  of  the  self  reliant 

I  character  of  the  people  of  North 
Carolina.  | 

Casinos  were  defended  as  whole- 
some recreation,  and  of  such  iin- 
mense  revenue  po.ssibilities  as  to 
make  possible  the  paying  of  nega- 

,  tive  taxes   by  North  Carolina  Citi- 

'  zens. 


Campus  Candidates  Present  Views 
Before  Inter-Dormitory  Council 


PRINOLI  PIPKIN 

Campus  presidential,  vice-presi- 
dential and  editorial  candidates 
spoke  before  the  IDC  last  night. 

Running  on  the  UP  ticket  for 
pre.-.dent.  Bill  Baum  said  that  his 
proposed  Student  Senate  would  be 
a  "'cross  section  of  students  at 
Carolina."  "'The  results  of  its 
works  will  be  my  platform,"  he 
said.  He  stated  that  he  would  ex- 
ert himself,  "to  fulfill  thttse 
things  you  tell  me  that  you  want 
duae;  and  I  am  going  to  give  you 
the  voice  to  tell  "me." 

Sonny  E^vans,  SP  presidential 
candidate,  said  that  he  hoped  to 
gel   a   percentage    of   the  vending 


machine  profi'ts  to  be  .-.-ct  up  in  a 
continuancy  fund  to  be  used  to 
repair  the  dorms'  television  sets 
or  at  least  get  the  student  legis- 
lature to  help  the  dorms  with  the 
maintenance  of  the  TV  sets. 

He  also  commented  on  dorm 
telephones,  benches  outside  the 
dorms  and  plans  for  a  new  stu- 
dent union  building.  He  mentioned 
other  problem..-  covered  by  his 
platform. 

Benny  Thomas,  UP  vice-presi- 
dential nominee,  urged  the  dormi- 
tory presidents  to  get  their  boys 
out  to  vote. 

Don  Furtado,  SP  candidate  for 
!  vice  president,  said,  "my  only  plat- 
form   i.s    th«    student    party    plat- 


form." 

Neil  Bass,  independent  candi- 
date for  the  editor  of  the  Daily 
Tar  Heel,  said  that  he  would  cut 
national  and  international  news 
and  that  dorm  life  has  not  been 
sufficiently  covered.  Bass  said,  "J 
believe  the  editors  in  the  past 
have  tended  to  become  ivory-tow- 
erized  and  overly  ofitical." 

Charlie  Sloan,  independent  'Can- 
didate for  editor  of  the  DTH,  pro- 
posed having  a  dorm  "stringer" 
system  and  relating  the  interna- 
tional news  more  completely  to 
the  campus.  The  ''stringers  "  would 
be  f-'-tudents  in  the  various  dorms 
who  report  the  interesting  events 
of  each  dorm. 


No  Action  Is 
Token  On  Ban 

No  action  has  been  taken  by  the 
fraternities  affected  by  the  recent- 
ly reinforced  S.  Columbia  St.  two 
hour  parking  ban. 

AftLT  a  lift  of  the  ban  for  a 
period  of  60  days,  the  ban  was  put 
into  effect  Monday  morning. 

The  parking  ordinance  came  last 

September   as   a    result    of  crowd- 

I  ed    parking    conditions    downtown, 

and  was  pushed  by  the  Merchants 

Assn. 


[     RALEIGH   /P)— The  Consolidated  i 
University  of  North  Carolina  Wed-  i 
nesday  asked  the  Joint  Appropria- 
tions   Committee    for    more    than  | 
one  and  a  half  million  dollars  ir 

Dame  Sitwell 
Reads  Here 
Tonight  At  8      I 

Distinguished  English  poet  Dame 
Edith    Sitwell    will    give    a    public  I 
reading  of  some  of  her  own  poetry 
tonight  at  8  p.m.  in  Hill  Hall. 

Dame  Sitwell,  the  first  woman 
writer  to  be  named  Dame  of  the 
British  Empire,  is  being  sponsor- 
ed by  the  English  Club  and  by 
GMAB.  I 

The  70  year  old  Dame  is  the 
recipient  of  the  highest  honors  in 
literary  circles  of  England  and 
America.  She  has  been  given  an 
honorary  Doctor  of  Letters  from 
Oxford  and  Leeds,  and  an  hon- 
orary  membership  in  the  Ameri- 
can Institute  of  Arts  and  Letters. 

In    addition    to    writing    poetry. 
Dame    Sitwell    has    contributed    to 
I'ne    advancement   of   many    young 
I  British    and    American    poets,    in- 
^cUiding  the  tate  Dytt^n  Thom»».    - 
Kathrrinc      Ann       Porter      has 
I  called   "Collected   Poems."  written 
by   the    poet    in      1954.    "the    true 
flowering    branch    springing    from 
the   old,    unkilitble   roots   of  Eng- 
lish   poetry,    with    the    range,    va- 
riety, depth,  fearlessness,  the  pas- 
sion and  elegance  of  great  art."      | 
.  Miss  Sitwells  poetry  provides  a 
"quality    ab.sent    for    a    generation 
and    rare    in    the   literature   of  all 
ages — pas.sions  ennobk-d  by  intens- 
ity and  by  wisdom."  William  But- 
ler Yeats  once  wrote.  ' 

Dame  Edith  is  now  a  resident 
of  England  and  of  Italy  for  part 
of  the  year  and  stays  in  Florence 
during  the  winter.  ' 


At  Don  Shirley  Intermission 

Misses  Barbara  Prago,  left  and  Pee^wee  Batten  will  provid*  inter- 
mission enfertainment  at  the  Don  Shirley  concert  Friday  afternoon 
from  4-4:30.  The  concert  will  k*  spotHored  by  the  IDC  in  conjunc- 
tion with  the  Spring  Swing  sophomore  weekend. 


Henry  Hull 
Visits  Here 
Next  Tues.  I 

-Mark  Twain  will  visit  the  UNC 
campus  in  the  person  of  stage  and 
screen  star  Henry  Hull  on  March 
2«. 

V 

Sponsored  by  the  Student  En- 
tertainment Committee.  Hull  will 
give  a  reading  of  the  well-known 
author  in  .Memorial  Hall  at  8  p.m. 

In  ".^n  Evening  of  Mark  Twain" 
Mr.  Hull  reads  excerpts  from  the 
classic  works  of  ""Tom  Sawyer," 
"Huckleberry  Finn,'  "The  Inno- 
cents .Abroad.'  "A  Cbnnecticut 
Yankee. "  and  "Tlie  Life  of  Joan 
of  Arc."  The  veteran  actor  will 
appear  clad  in  the  same  attire 
j  that  Twain  used  to  wear  when  the 
author  himself  lectured  to  the 
American  public  at  the  turn  of  the 

i  centurv.  , 

I 

Henry  Hull  has  been  a  figure 
of  the  .\merican  theatrical  world 
for  more  than  40  years.  He  has ' 
appeared  in  more  than  200  plays  | 
on  Broadway  and  on  the  road  and 
has  performed  in  almost  as  mauy 
motion    pictures    in    Hollywood.       | 


GM  Has  Special  TV 
For  Basketball  Games 

Graham  Memorial  will  have  a 
special  television  set  for  those 
fans  who  want  to  watch  the  Caro- 
lina basketball  games  taking 
place  in  Kansas  City  this  weekend. 

The  .set  ha.s  been  rented  par- 
ticularly for  this  occasion  and 
will  be  located  in  the  Rendezvous 
Room  Friday-Sunday. 


additional  appropriations  for  in- 
creased faculty  salaries  and  more 
library  booits. 

William  C.  Friday.  Consolidated 
University  president,  made  r'^- 
quests  of  $804,065  for  1957-58  and 
$822,689  for  1958-59  above  the  rec- 
onitmendations  of  the  Ad\'isory 
Budget  Commission. 

Friday  ;,';ated  the  request  was 
centered  on  faculty  salaries  and 
books  in  order  to  stem  the  tide  of 
qualified  professors  leaving  the 
three  institutions.  North  Carolina 
State,  Woman's  College  in  Greens- 
boro and  the  University  at  Chapel 
Hill. 

"A  large  number  of  professors 
recently  have  accepted  po.:.-itions 
in  industry,  government  jobs  and 
in  other  educational  institutions  at 
increased  salaries."  Friday  said. 

He  added,  ""something  must  be 
done  if  we  are  to  meet  this  crisis 
and  maintain  our  excellent  posi- 
tion in  the  academic  world."  He 
urged  that  salary  increases  be 
flexible  and  not  across  the  board 
JO  the  University  might  reward 
the   more  outstanding  professors 

Friday  did  not  request  an  in- 
crease for  the  State  CoUege  li- 
brary but  asks  $20,000  a  year  for 
"Woman's  College  and  $40,000  s 
\  year  at  .Chapel  HUl  for  books. 

FfiSiiy  simted  that  "adequate  li- 
braries are  second  only  to  salaries 
'  in  maintaining  facu'ty  ntembers." 
He  said  13  .i-outhern  rnstitulions 
had  spent  more  than  the  Consoli- 
dated t'niversitx  last  year  for  li- 
brary books.  Seven  of  them  made 
expenditures  above  the  'Univer- 
sity's biennium  request. 

Additional  funds  for  faculty  sal- 
aries requested  included:  Chapel 
Hill,  $199,315  for  each  year  of  the 
biennium;  N.  C.  State.  $136,576  for 
each  year;  and  Woman's  College, 
S80.003  for  each  year. 

University  Controller  W.  D.  Car- 
michficl  asked  the  legislators  not 
to  cut  permanent  improvement 
recommendation.,  because  "wc 
have  received  so  little  and  it  is 
s,)  urgent." 

Other  divisions  of  the  Consoli- 
dated University  requesting  addi- 
tional appr,>priations  for  increasc-a 
in  salaries  were:  Division  of 
Health  Affairs.  S37.78S  annually: 
Psychiatric  Center,  Chapel  Hill. 
S42.S64  for  '957-58  and  $69.a"J2  for 
1958-59  and  the  North  Carolina 
Memorial  Hospital.  $37,104  annu- 
ally. 


Business  Fair  Features 
Currie  In  Seminar  Talk 


By    BOB   HIGH 

James  S.  Currie.  director  of  the 
Dept.  of  Tax  Rcaearch.  Raleigh, 
will  speak  on  the  "i^oposed  Tax 
Revi-ions  and  Its  Effect  on  the  In- 
dustrial Development  of  North 
Carolina"  during  the  thir^  after- 
noon seminar  at  the  fifth  Business 
Fair  here  Friday. 

Currie  w'ill  be  feattir^  in  M?hat 
Dob  Ratledge.  president  of  the 
sponsoring  Alpha  Kappa  Psi  busi- 
ness fraternity,  says  will  probably 
be  the  best  of  the  three  .sessions. 

The  seminar  will  be  devoted  to 
discussion  on  how  tax  cuts  or  re  • 
vision.-  will  help  bring  and  allracl 
new  industries  into  this  state  to 
help  solve  the  economic  problems 
of  North  Carolina. 

Currie  is  the  executive  secretary 
of  the  Tax  Study  Commission  and 
a  member  of  the  State  Board  of 
.\ssessment  and  the  Tax  Review 
Board. 
EXPERIENCE 

Before  taking  office  as  the  di- 
rector of  Tax  Research  on  Jan.  3, 
1950.  Currie  had  experience  as  ao 
attorney,  teach«-,  securities  analyst 


I  and  underwriting  aide. 

'  The  director  received  his  edu- 
cation at  Davidson  College  and 
Univci-sity  of  North  Carolina, 
where  ho  was  granted  B.  S.,  ,M.  S. 
and  L  L.   B.  degrees. 

Currie  ia  associated  jjith  |lotary 
International,  tbc  ]^atio{iai  Tax 
Assoc.  and  the  Presbyterian 
Church.  ^  x^%, 

^Kf  osE         ^  *r  cy.  H 

President  Bob  flafleilge'H'as  stat 
ed  that,  "through  thin  fair  we  hope 
to    present     the    ways    in    which 
North  Carolina   is   ..-triving  to  en 
totiragc  both  the  internal  and  ex- 
ternal    industrial    growth    of    the 
I  st^ite.  We  believe  that  we  have  set 
:  up  a  worthwhile  program  and  one 
which    shbuld    make    businessmen 
'  aware  of  the  potentialities  of  our 
state." 

The  Fair  will  be  held  in  Carroll 
Hall  and  the  main  address,  by  Gov. 
,  Hodges,  will  be  given  at  8  pm  This 
j  part  of  the  program  is  expected  to 
j  be  over  in  tim^  to  allow  all  per- 
I  sons  attending  the  Fair  to  listen 
I  or  see  the  UNC-Michigan  Stale  ba. 
j  kecball  game  in  the  \C.\A  Tour 
I  ney. 


PAoi  rwo 


THi  DAILY  TAR  HiEl 


-THURSDAY.  MARCH  11.   1«$7 


Conforming  Class  Of  '57: 
Will  The  World  Be  Cruel? 

Wlun  the  senior  <  lass  of  Kj-y;  man  lies  proiidlv  throuj^li  Kenan 
Stadium  for  the  last  time  next  jinie.  one  tad  will  be  <citain:  It  will 
lomj^ose  the  first  edition  of  a  strange,  new  generation,  called  "silent" 
l>\  some.  ■■<:!;vful"  hv  others. 

.\o  matter  what  adjet  ii\e  may  he  applied  to  the  (inreiit  j^eneration. 
we  feel  it  is  cert  lin  that  its  j-reatest  iharaeieristic  is  its  confovmitv. 

When  (ontormity  is  mentioned,  people  immediately  stait  thinking 
iImmii    helts-iij-biKtk      afrdj  'tiuVe- 


GOCTTINGEN  LETTER: 


K\  en  the  most  conformist  amotiij, 
us  confoiinists  will  someday  reath 
an  lvipas:>e>  when  what  others  tell 
tis  to  thhik  wiJl  not  help.  We  will 
ha\e  one  vesomte  left— oiu"  own 
minds,     our    own     leelin''s.    What 


huttoned   iai  lleLs.  \Vith.tln>  wti  do 

not  hillv  agree.  .Cliithes  arts  aii  (;x- 

i  client    iiulitat«<*|ij^,^iii«^|.%l,  wui- 

tliton;  and  it  is  ^asy  to  4tieiitifv  the' 

I\\    Leagued  stiideiu   whose  \(Hah- 

ularv  is  limited  to  "  Don't  sweat  it  " 

and  cipially  stupid  terms  with   the      will   we  do  then? 

opiuionless.   t  lose-mouthed. .  set  iir-  *  *  * 

it\ -seeking      iHaijoriiy     <»f      todavs  We  gt>  to  (ollege  to  answer  that 

imdergraduatcsl  *  tpiestlon. 

This  student,  and  the  (tlhers  like  Wh;.i    we  do  underMhe   impasse 

I)in».  are  res|M)nsihle  for  the  tamp-  K»ndiiions  depends  on  our  capahil- 
us  apathy.  Ihcv  are  res|>onsibie  ities  t<). think  for  ourselves.  Surelv 
lor  (pii;   files     \m     the     fraternitv       sitting  dead  in  a  dassroom,  taking 


I  louses,  and  tltey  are  the  reason 
Lenorr  Hall  workers  drc»pped  their 
fight  for  1:  tier  pav.  \\w\  are  the 
reason  students  taut  get  up  en- 
thusiasm about  anvthing.  includ- 
ing the  fo<>ib;dl  team,  studying", 
the  ni'kathon  or  four  \isiiing  Is- 
raeli studints. 

r>eiau>e  tliev  are  in  the  majori- 
ty here,  the  l'.ui\trsity  is  sloAved 
dowi!.  I'ntil  thev  have  gone  theii 
uav,  M'ekin<i  c\en  more  seturits 
tiom  the  (old,  i  riiel  world,  we  Can- 
ute  leallv   progres$f->i       *» 

'•-     •?;     ■.•;,S 
lint.  ( loth es  or  iiO  (h Mines,  pra-L- 

litaliv  fvervone  here  is  a  <«*nform- 

ist    in   the   bad  sense  (►f  the   wovtl. 

V\cn  those  who  profess  to  be  non- 

I  onlormists  are  usuallv  foinul  con- 

toiming   together   in   their  liieiarv 

i.rstcs  ;thry  sit  together  on  the  floor 

uid    read    T.    S.    Kliot.    and    thev 

liwtk  etjuallv  sloppv.   F\en  in  them 

there    i>   (onformitv.   and    it    is    no 

gOOfl. 

What  this  l'ni\ersit\  needs  is  a 
majority  of  students  who  are  non- 
(ontoniists  in  the  mind  —  wlio 
think  n«)t  \\h:t  they  ate  told  to 
think,  or  what  rhev  leel  !i<' expert-  ' 
ieut  t(j  thinlj^  but  what  they  leel 
inside  tluiii^lv(^i|'^fter  considera- 
tion and  i'<)i\V^m[»fation.  '' 


notes  because  it  is  expedietn.  going 
i()  the  movie.s  eveiy  afternoon  and 
s<arcelv  enlarging  oin  \o(abirlar- 
ies  beyond  the  "Doui  sweat  ii" 
stage— surelv  these  things  do  not 
help  us  to  think  lor  ourseKes.  We 
Mui.>t  learn.  We  must  lea'iii,  or  the 
worlfl  will  truK   be  cold  and  truel. 


oracious 
Living: 
Number  17 

riie  Town  oi  Cha-pel  Hill,  whith 
has  the  iiitelligeiue  (town  gpvern- 
ment-^vise)  of  a  nietroj>olitan  area, 
also  has  the  energv  of  a  \er\  small 
\illage.  We  refer  to  holes  thai  are 
left  in  streets  long  alter  the  pa\ers 
and  le\elers  are  gone. 

riie  t<iwn  i'lways  has  been  sloppv 
in  this  respet  t.  It  does  street  work 
proinptlv.  but  leaves  ditches  and 
holes  to  be  filled  in  niili  the  rub- 
ber Irom  jMMir  motorists'  tires. 

(ira(i(»us  fixing  in  Chapel  Hill 
ito^ld  stand  a.  little  dirt  in  those 
lu»1es.   What    sav.    Mr.   Rose? 


Food  Fight  Shouldn't  Die 


A  sj)okesn)an  for  I.enoir  Hall 
workers  has  said  the  majority  of 
the  students  th'ei^e  a^e  now  .satis- 
fied" vxitlfcytheir  jiav  conditions. 

II  the  <voi  kers  are  satisJied,  we 
c.  :i  hardly  see  win.  .\11  their  tninor 
re\(>lution  has  accomjilished  has 
lieen  an  offer  fr(»fii  i!je  manage- 
ment to  thiow  in  an  extra  two 
(lips  ol  Pine  Room  coffee  per  dav. 
The  "old  deal — Snjo  worth  (»l  food 
per  day  |(»r  two  and  one-hall 
Iwims'  Work,  with  no  holdovers 
and  no  one  to  help  eat  the  hM>d — 
Mill    h<»lds.    It   still    l«M)ks   silly  and 


The  Dally  Tar  Heel 


rhr  official  iludeni  piJt>lii4tii»D  of  tht 
Piihli(-ati«n>i  Board  of  ibe  Univemty  ol 
Knrih  Carolina.  wh«Te  it  is.  puhlistie<j 
daily  rxcfpt  Mdfiday  and  pxaminatior 
•P'l  vacation  ptTiwds  and  summer  terms 
Entered  as  srronrt  class  matter  in  tlit 
o<>.«»  officf  in  rhapel  Hill,  N.  C,  undei 
Ihr  Art  .11  March  8,  1870  Subscription 
rates  mailed.  $4  per  year.  $2.50  a  seme^ 
ter:  de»iv«»red.  S6  a  i^ear.  $3  50  a  leme* 
ter 


Editor 

—      - 

FRED  POWLEDGE 

Manag 

ng  Editor 

CLARKE  JONES 

N^ws 

Editor   

_  __    NANCY  HILL 

Sp'>rt!i 

Editor 

LABRY  CHEEK 

Bii.tine.<.<(  Manager 

BILL  BOB  PLEI 

Advert 

ising  Manager 

FRED  K.\TZL\ 

KUrrOKIAL     S'\/Kth     -  ^^^HldJ     aear». 
Joey  Payne.  Stan  Sliaw. 


NEAVS  STAFF— Graham  Snyder.  Edith 
MacKinnwn.  Walter  Schruntek.  Pringle 
Pipkin.  Bob  High,  Jim  Purks.  Ben  Tay- 
lor. H.  Joost  Polak,  Patsy  Miller,  Wal- 
ly  Kuralt.  Bill  King,  Curtis  Crotty. 


BUSINESS  STAFF^John  Minter.  Marian 
Hot>eck.  Jane  Patten,  Johnny  Whitaker. 

SPORTS   STAFF:   Dave  Wible.  Stewart 
Bird.   Ron   Milligan. 


Subscription  Manager Dale  Staley 

Circulation  Manager Charlie  Holt 

A.ssistant  Sports  Editor.  Bill  King 

t«k  ,)      .. 

Staff  Photographers  •: ..  Woody  Sears, 

Norman  Kantor       ,f 
Librarians     Sue  Gichner,  Marilyn  Strum 


Night  Editor Walt  Schruntek 

Prrofreader  Bill  Weeks 


ine(piita!)le.  as  it  did  se\eial  weeks 
<igo  when  the  workeis"  levolution 
.started. 

»  *  *  ' 

Perhaps  the  \forkeJs  are  just  hc- 
ing  (piiet  heiause  thev  feel  it 
uould  he  hetter  to  he  (pi let.  .\t  anv 
late.  the  .Stude»it  Legislature  (om- 
mittee  iiivesiig;iting  the  situation 
at  I.enoir  should  he  ahle  to  do 
soiMcthiug  -lo  South  liuilding. 
Avhith  prohahlv  wont  do  anything, 
in  keeping  with  its  ttaditional  jkjI- 
icv. 

r»v  ihe  w;.y,  we  notice  in  ad\er- 
tisemenis  ^tli;it  one  can  eal  three 
s(|uare  meals  at  I.enoir  Hall  h)r  .Si 
a  day.  Whv.  then,  should  the  work- 
ers he  sttUled  with  Si.(jo  worth  of 
food"-  Overeating  cuts  down  of  ef- 
licieiuv.  hoth  at  woik  and  in  (lass. 
Or  mayhe  the  one-hiu  k  liguie  was 
just   lot   purposes  ol  ad\erti.sement. 

TV  Preview: 
Government, 
Miss  Booth 

Anthony  Wolff 

\\  i'f.'yt  tonight.  Channel  j  (on- 
liiuies  its  weekly  series  on  \ineri- 
can  (ioNCiumein."  lOnights  seg- 
ment deals  with  the  .Supieme  Court 
and  featuies  justice  Harold  II. 
Uurton.  This  should  ht-  ol  interest 
to  political  s<ieinists,  segre  ition- 
ists.  ;  ;»ti-segregationists.  soir.hern- 
ers.    Xortherirs.  .Ameri(ans.   etc. 

■Climax",  on  Channel  2  at  H-.^n 
j).m..  preseins  a  drama  ahout  tlie 
goings-on  in  ;i  recording  company: 
I  suspect  that  this  is  all  an  excuse 
hir  fill  Corey  to  sing  ;  little  dittv 
touchinglv  titled     Let  It   lie  Me." 

Shirley  liooth  rettuiis  to  the  'lA' 
screen  tonight  in  "The  Hoste.s.s 
With  Ihe  .\Iostes  "  on  Channel  2 
at  ():;;().  The  allusion  is  ohvionsly 
to  Pearl  .Mesta,  Washington  .so(  ial 
whi/  and,  in  her  spare  time.  l\  S. 
.Minister  to  I.uxemhurg.  The  play 

mav   verv   well  be  pood,   and   if  it 
isn't.  Miss  Booth  avsH  be. 


In    Germany:    Student   Freedom 


Carotina  stud«nts  John  Raper 
and  Dan  Southerland  ara  cur- 
rantly  on  exchange  with  the 
University  of  Goettinfen  in 
Germany.  Here,  Southerland 
tells  of  the  scholastic  life  of 
German  students. 

GOEmTNGEN  —  How  would 
you  like  to  forget  about  that  eigiit 
o'clock  social  science  glass  and 
sleep  through  till  ten? 
You.  the  English  major,  would 
.  you  like  to  stop  sweating  that 
mid-term  exanv  in  your  Shakes- 
peare course  and  just  take  one 
bi;?  test  at  the  end  ot  lour  yei>rs 
to  get  your  degree? 

Yow,  the  chem  A-tudent,  conju- 
gating irregular  French  verbs 
which  don't  seem  to  be  import- 
ant for  your  future  job  in  the 
lab,  but  arc  part  of  the  General 
("ollege  requirements,  would  you 
like  to  tluow  the  French  book  in 
the  waste  basket  and  spend  ail 
of  your  time  working  on  prob- 
lems and  experiments? 

If    your    answer    is    yes,    you 
folks  should  study  at  a  German 
University     .where     you      have 
"Studienfreiheit,  "    freedom    of 
study. 
A\   the  German  I'niversity  you 
have  unlimited  cuts  and  no  rcfiii 
lar    tests,    only    an    exam    at    the 
ei.  t  of  several  years  and  perhap> 
a    test    in    the    middle    ot    your 
study.     There     are     no    required 
coiu-ses  .^Mch  as  we   have   in  the 
Generar  College  and  you  have  no 
set  study  plan.  You  hear  the  lec- 
tures yon  want  and  study  wiiat 
you   want   according   to   your   in- 
terest. 

Under  this  system,  the  talented 
student  can  go  as  fast  and  as  fjr 
as  he  wants.  For  instance,  in  Phy- 
^.•ics.  he  can  do  30  experiments 
in  one  semester  or  cme  experi- 
ment in  two  semesters  and  the 
pro!  does  not  care  when  he  g(.ts 
the  work  in. 

Under  this  no-oontrol  .system, 
the  student  can  develop  self-re- 
liance  and   resourcefulness. 

However,  the  German  student 
♦yi»e  —  and  only  in  relation  to 
study  can  one  characterize  him 
—  is  much  better  suited  to  this 
freedom,   because   unlike  many 
of    us    in   the    States,    his   main 
concern  is  study. 
You    .see    this    interest    in    the 
clas  •  oom.  .\t  one  popular  leclui*e 
on    the     history    of    the    German 
novel,  I  have  to  be  there  20  min- 
utes before  the  lecture  begins  in 
order  to  find  a  good  seat.  At  the 
beginning  of  the  semester  in  this 
lecture,  students  sat  on  the  floor. 
in  the  aisles,  on  the  window  sills. 
and   on   the   stage   with   the   lec- 
turing professor  in  order  to  hear 
him. 

At  a  regular  public  lecture  on 
the  history  of  World  War  II,  tho 
fir  •  10  rows  are  reserved  usual- 
ly two  h  iurs  ahead  of  time 

Outside  of  the  lecture  hall  yon 
see  very  Tittle  burning  of  the  mid- 
night oil.  Why  should  there  be* 
cramming?  There  are  no  test.s, 
no  pressure.  The  German  .student 
studies  consistently  and  gots  as 
deep  as  he  wants  into  his  sub 
ject. 

You  find  very  few  goof-offs. 
To  be  a  student  in  Germany  is 
much  more  of  a  privilege  than 
in  the  United  States.  It  is  much 
more  difficult  for  a  German  to 
get  through  the  "Gymnasium" 
(10-19  years  old)  and  to  pass 
his    "maturity"    or    final    exam 


L'ii  Abner 


than  it  is  for  us  to  get  a  high 
school  diploma. 

The  BMOC  lo-  not  to  be  found 
at  the  German  university.  Firstly, 
because  nobody  would  know  him 
if  he  existed.  Most  students 
couldn't  tell  you  who  the  presi- 
dent of  the  student  body  fs.  And 
secondly,  students  don't  have 
time  to  be  BMOC's.  They  want  to 
work  and  get  finLshed  as  soon  as 
p6sjible. 

The  main  concern  of  the  Ger- 
man university  is  the  issuance  of 
knowledge.  The  American  univer- 


'  These  individualists  miss  some- 
thing which  we  have  on  the  U.  S. 
campus,  that  is  living  together. 
No  matter  how  much  you  dia-like 
your  roommates  coming  in  drunk 
while  you  are  in  the  sack  at  night, 
you  must  admit  you've  learned 
something  more  about  human  na- 
ture having  lived  v^'ith  him.. 

There  are  very  few  possibilities 
for  German  students  to  live  to- 
gether. In  Gottingen.  onlly  270 
out  of  5.500  students  live  in  stu- 
dent homes.  .Most  live  in  private 


dent  refer  to  "my  university"  as 
we  do.  There  is  no  such  thing  as 
a  "Gottingen  man"  in  the  same 
^•ense  as  a  "Carolina"  or  Harvard 
man." 

Studanis  change  universities 
on  the  average  of  one  or  two 
times  before  taking  their  final 
exams  Since  the  universities  are 
generally  of  much  more  equal 
rank  than  in  the  States,  a  student 
might  choose  to  study  in  Frei- 
biu-g  in  the  winter  semester  be- 


•  •        •  • 

'Wiien  Do  We  Come  Out  Witli  A  New  Model?' 


^•^^mu 


sity  is  interested  in  the  educaticm 
of  the  whole  person.  We  see  c\- 
tra-curriculars  and  social  life  as 
es.se  nt  ial. 

Our   ideal    •product"   is  a   per- 
son   of    high    character,    can    get 
along  well   with   others,   is   well 
pounded,     and     ha.,-     knowlccige 
which  can  be  applied.  If  the  Ger- 
man university  has  such  an  ideal, 
it  is  an  "educated"  person,  a  per- 
son   who    can    "think."   This    pic- 
ture doesn't  include  the  "person- 
al"  traits  of  the  student.      ' 
Our  colleges  tend  to  produce 
a    Joe    College    type.    We    have 
conformity  as  a   result  of  mass 
education.   On   the  other   hand, 
most  German   students   are    in- 
dividualists. 


rooms  and  therefore  find  it  more 
difficult  to  make  contact  with 
other  students. 

Private  student  fraternities  and 
political  clubi-  bring  students  to- 
gether, but  the  University  itself 
makes  no  provision  for  social  life. 
A  student  would  identify  him- 
self sooner  as  a  member  of  a 
fraternity  or  the  Christian  Demo- 
cratic Party  than  he  would  as  a 
member  of  the  Gottingen  student 
body. 

There  is  absolutely  no  unity 
in  the  student  body.  Students 
are  far  apart  as  their  Universi- 
ty buildings  and  their  rooms 
which  art  scattered  all  over 
the  town. 
You  never  hear  a  German  stu- 


cause  the  skiing  is  good  there  or 
in  Munic  because  he  likes  the 
theatre  and  opera  and  the  life  of 
the  big  city.  He  considers  thea« 
things  as  well  as  the  men  in  bis 
faculty  whom  he  would  like  to 
hear. 

The  German  student  has  the 
chance  to  work  completely  iso- 
lated. He  can  study  without  get- 
ting to  know  another  student  or 
professor.  There  is  always  the 
danger  that  he  will  become  nor- 
row  minded  and  specialized  as 
well  as  individualistic. 

The  responsibility  for  what  he 
learns  is  his  alone.  He  is  faced 
with  an  imi>ersonal  university 
which  says,  "here  is  the  know- 
ledge, it  is  up  to  you  to  get  it." 


By  A!  Capp 


h  UT  Mu  HASfTr  GOT 

ITOM  HIM. '.'-ANV 
rOOL  CAKJ  SEE     r- 

Si.-...-,  ^ 


T«OHEARlTTICKlN&? 
f  CAN.'!''- j- 


1  WILL  GLADLV  FU£SlGN 
FROM  THE  FORCE - 
AND  OIVC  UP  MV 
PENSION.''/ 


rHAT  T/CK//^G      S 
/SN'T  UUSr  SOM£ 
r^/AAS  Cf<AZy  /V      I 

MVHEAO/f')     ri^ 
^., J  If 


Pogo 


By  Walt  Kelly 


Uo  Competition 
For  Prillaman 

Editor: 

I  know  a  humble  man  who  is  the  master  of  a 
one  cow  •  two  pig  farm  of  a  few  acres  of  land  and 
50  chickens.  Each  day  he  milks  his  cow  and  co! 
leet.s  the  hens'  eggs. 

Now  he  does  net  feel  that  he  has  done  his  chores 
for  the  day  as  soon  as  he  has  provided  himself  with 
the  bounty  of  his  stock.  No.  while  he  is  not  con- 
nected with  a  great  institute  of  learrung,  he  is 
still  aware  that  the  productivity  of  hi«  farm  will 
cease  to  be  if  he  does  not  provide  proper  water 
and  food  for  his  animals. 

I  guess  it  is  because  he  is  humble  that  this  man 
realizes  he  must  provide  so  that  he  may  I).?  pro- 
vided for.  He  must  give  the  cow  fodder  so  that  she 
will  be  able  to  produce  wholesome  milk.  The  chick- 
ens cannot  lay  well  without  proper  feed.  And  the 
pigs  will  never  grow  fat  unless  they  are  well 
slopped. 

M>  farmer  is  kind  and  providing  for  his  animaL<; 
because  he  knows  that  he  has  to  be  if  they  are  ever 
to  be  of  any  profit  to  him.  In  the  same  manner 
busin€ssm<en  are  solicitous  of  their  clientele,  and 
this  is  so  for  the  same  reason. 

Th'is  h»l4b  true  in  the  world.  Would  that  it 
did  on  the  UNC  campus! 
I  wonder  just  how  many  people  would  willing- 
ly eat  in  Lenoir  Hall  if  it  were  not  at  the  Uni- 
versity? I  wonder  how  many  people  feel  that  Le- 
nor's  food  is  either  nourishing  or  fit  to  he  put  into 
the  human  stomach? 

I  am  sure  that  my  friend  the  farmer  uses  more 
loving  care  in  fixing  his  pigs'  slops  than  anyone 
In    Lenoir    ever   uses    In    throwing   together  their 
ambrosial  delights  for  the  scholars  of  tonterrew. 
There   surely  are  few   places  in  the  free  world 
that  can  t>oast  so  captive  a  market  as  can  a  uni- 
versity cafeteria  such  as  ours.  There  are  few  people 
who  like  such  food  as  that  dished  tip  by  Lenoir, 
but  there  are  many  who  have  no  choice  about  eat- 
ing it.  ■  , 
My  farmer  would  be  out  of  business  if  he  did 
not  care  properly  for  his  pigs.  I  wonder  how  long 
Mr.  Prillaman  would  be  in  business  if  he  had  any 
competition?  I  wonder  if  Mr.  Prillaman  himself  ever 
eats  at  Lenoir? 

If  he  does,  then  surely  he  eould«not  in  good 
faith  have  said  what  he  did  the  oth«r  day  to  the 
students  working  at  Lenoir. 

As  I  remember  from  The  Daily  Tar  Heel  article, 
he  said  he  would  not  allow  them  to  use  their  fond 
credit  in  the  Pine  Room  because  he  wtinted  them 
to  get  three  square  meals  a  day.  I  truly  wonder  how 
he  expects  them  to  do  that  anywhere  in  Lenoir. 
Of  course  the  calorie  content  of  the  food  may 
be  as  high  as  any  of  that  at  Maxime's,  but  at  Le- 
noir calories  are  thrown  together  into  such  un- 
wholesome tastes  and  sad  appearances.  If  Mr.  Prill 
Aman  thinks  that  this  is  not  so,  if  he  thinks  that 
Lenoir's  food  is  in  the  least  appetizing,  then  he  is 
guilty  of  something  or  other  which  is  surely  gros» 
(bad  judgement,  perhaps).  On  the  other  hand,  per- 
haps he  is  simply  being, human. 

Why  should  he  care  whether  the  food  is  «ny 
good?  He  has  no  competition  to  take  his  business. 
The  powers  that  be  (i.e..  South  Building  and  the 
trustees)  seem  content  with   Lenior't  handi*wrk. 
(These  men,  however,  ail  seem  to  ^»t  at  either 
the    Monogram    Club,    the  "Carolina    Inn,    or    »t 
homo.) 
In  other  words.  Mr.  Prillaman  is  like  a  student 
who  on  the  first  day  of  class  kn^-ws  that  he  will  be 
automatically    pa.ssed.    So   why   should    he   work   in 
the  course?  Now  don't  throw  in  the  argument  aboui 
knowledge  for  knowledge's  sake:  that's  long  been 
out   of   vogue  here.  Lenoir   is   within   the   trend  of 
the  times — why  be  any  better  than  you  have  to  be. 
But  then  surely  there  is  some  Providence  that 
will  make  things  better  if  they  have  to  be  better. 
Perhaps    that    Providence    is    in    an    irate    student 
body,  a  student  body  that  is  willing  to  give  visible 
proof  that  it  is  not  satisfied  with  the  sullen  look- 
ing me.ss  that  Lenoir  put,  iorward  as  its  handiwork 
under   the    misnomer   of   food. 

Students  of  the  University  unite!  You  have  noth- 
ing to  lose  but  that  vile  stuff  at  Lenoir  which 
you'd  be  better  off  without 

Daniel  S.  Silvia  Jr. 

• 

Sound  And  Fury 
Looks  Promising 

>        Charles  McCorlcle 

Remembering  the  colorful,  tuneful,  spectacu 
lars  that*  were  Sound  and  Fury  last  year,  we  stopped 
by  Memorial  Hall  the  other  night  to  see  how  it's 
done.  MV^  had  received  inside  information  that  the 
company,  under  the  intrepid  direction  of  senior 
Jqhn  Ludwig.  was  hard  at  work,  with  performance 
slated   for  March  30  and  31. 

The  hall  was  a  seething  mass  of  frantic  thespians 
rushing  around  aimlessly  and  shouting  contradic- 
tory orders  every  few  seconds.  The  chorus,  a  lusty 
group  of  some  30  members  featuring  two  girl  bar- 
itones, was  on  the  stage  stumbling  through  the  ov- 
erture. 

Mies  Blynn  Duming,  who  deserves  orchids  for 
her  bravery  in  returning  to  chereegraph  the  shew 
for  the  third  consecutive  year,  was  in  their  midst, 
repoeting  a  few  simple  steps  which  nevertheless 
seemed  beyond  the  grasp  of  the  singors. 
With  a  despairing  sigh  we  dropped  into  a  seat. 
But   as   we   watched,   order   suddenly  grew  out   of 
the  chaos  and  we  were  confronted  with  a  snappy, 
professional    song    and    dance    which    could   easily 
have  graced  a  Broadway  stage. 

We  leaned  over  into  the  pit  and  aiscovered  Cecil 
Hartsoe,  familiar  veteran  of  Sound  and  Fury  since 
way  back  when,  pounding  away  on  the  piano,  pro- 
ducing wonderful  melodies  out  of  nowhere. 

Enough  complications  follow  to  conveniently 
fill  two  laviish  acts  of  songs  and  dancing  and  to 
utilize  the  talents  of  a  generous  number  of  talented 
performers,  but  eventually  the  diamond  reaches  it's 
final  resting  place — we  wouldn't  he  so  crass  as  to 
reveal  exactly  where  this  is,  but  you  can  take 
our  word  that  it's  pretty  nauseating— just  in  time 
for  the  finale. 


Best- 

Judces  of  tl 
lege    Girls    ii 
will  meet  at 
Woodfaouse 
morial.  All  pi^ 
should  reach 
Kappa    Delta 
time. 


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Judges  of  the  "Best  Dresse^d  Cpl- 
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•••-  will  meet  at  8  p.m.  tonight  in  the  ' 

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"""  >hoiild  reach  Peg  Humphrey  at  the 

"-Jk  Kappa    Delta    House    before    this 

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[1  you're  the  sort  that  likes  to  resd 
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THI  DAILY  TAR  HIIL 


PA6i  THREf 


In  "Stranger  In  The  Land" 

John  WhiHy,   left.  Miss  Mary   Ruth  Johnson    and  Harvey  Knox  are  pictured  above  in  a  scene  from 
'Stranger  m  the  Land/'  to  be  presented  In  the  Playmakers'  Theater  March  27-31   at  8:30  p.m. 


QaCaofus 


Witfi 

(Author  of  "Bortfoot  Boy  With  Cheek,"  etc.} 


THE  PULSE-POUNDING  SAGA  OF 
DE  WITT.  CLINTON,   AMERICAN 

Let  us  today  turn  our  eager  young  minds  to  the  in- 
spiring storj'  of  De  Witt  Clinton,  one  of  the  greatest 
figure.s  in  American  history  and  -  unaccountably  -  one 
of  the  most  neglected. 


nor  W. 

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PHlllPMa0?/5 


ll£  tG^uek pkoveiicMmWTWlm Mjn^ 


De  Witt  Clinton  f sometimes  called  Aaron  Burr)  first 
made  himself  known  to  fame  in  1756  when  Governor 
William  Penn  commissioned  him  to  survey  the  forests  of 
the  Western  Reserve.  (One  is  inclined  to  wonder  what  in 
the  world  Governor  Penn  could  have  been  thinking  of, 
for  De  Witt  Clinton  wa-s  eighteen  months  old  at  the  time. ) 
However,  the  little  chap  did  remarkably  well.  He  surveyed 
as  far  west  as  Spokane,  teaching  phonetic  English  to 
more  than  twelve  million  Indians  along  the  way,  and  then, 
tired  but  happy,  he  became  Johnny  Appleseed. 

Later,  he  became  a  keelboat  and  sailed  home  to  enter 
politics.  He  tried  to  join  the  Greenback  Party,  but  his 
back  wasn't  srreen  enough,  so  he  joined  the  )^higs. 

He  was  trffefed  the  Whig  «6raination  Ipr  the  presi- 
dency, but  declihlfd  with  the  "celebraterfl  statement :  "If 
nominated  I  will  not  run;  if  elected  I  will  not  .serve." 

But  the  Whigs  only  nudged  each  other  and  said,  "That 
old  fox.  he's  just  p&ying  hard  to  get."  So  they  nominated 
him  anyhow,  and  sure  enough  he  did  not  run,  but  he  was 
elected  anyhow,  and  sure  enough  he  did  not  serve.  In 
fact,  he  was  elected  to  a  second  term,  which  he  also  did 
not  serve.  However,  only  a  few  top  Whigs  knew  there 
was  nobody  in  the  White  House.  The  rest  of  the  country 
thought  that  the  President  was  confined  to  his  room  with 
a  wrenched  knee.  For  a  while  people  sent  "Get  Well" 
cards,  but  soon  everyone  forgot  and  turned  their  atten- 
tion to  important  matters  like  opening  the  west,  inventing 
the  buffalo,  and  the  Black  Tom  Explosion. 

After  two  terms  as  President,  De  Witt  Clinton 
entered  Yale  and  took  up  smoking.  He  tried  several 
brands  of  cigarettes  until  he  found  the  one  brand  that 
pleased  him  in  every  particular— Philip  Morris,  of  corria! 

(You  knew  I  was  going  to  say  that,  didn't  you  ?  Well, 
of  course  you  did,  especially  if  you  are  a  Philip  Morris 
smoker,  for  if  ?cfti  are,  you  know  what  a  sweetheart  of  a 
iimoke  Philip  Morris  i«  —  how  full  of  rich,  natural  flavor, 
how  natural  and  mellow,  how  long  size  and  regular.  And 
if  you  are  not  a  Philip  Morris  smoker,  you've  got  a  treat 
coming.   Light  otie  soon.   Light  either  end.)       • 

Upon  graduation  from  Yale,  De  Witt  Clinton  became 
commissioner  of  baseball  and  smoked  and  loved  Philip 
Morris  Cigarettes  for  the  rest  of  his  long  and  distin- 
guished life,  and  when  at  last  he  was  called  to  his  reward, 
his  friend  Old  Hickory  (Daniel  Webster)  stood  up  in  the 
Senate  and  said,  "How  sad  that  De  Witt  Clinton  must 
now  be  forever  separated  from  his  beloved  Philip  Morris !" 

"Nay!"  cried  Pitt,  the  Elder  (Henry  Clay),  bounding 
to  his  feet.  "We  need  not  .separate  De  Witt  Clinton  and 
Philip  Morris.  I  know  how  to  keep  them  together  always !" 

And,  sure  enough,  if  you  will  look  at  the  blue  federal 
tax  stamp  on  your  pack  of  Philip  Morris,  guess  whose 
picture  you'll  see.   De  Witt  Clinton's !   That's  whose ! 

OMax  Shuhnan,  1967 

Thr  maker*  of  Fhitip  Morris,  uiho  bring  you  ihit  column  each 
treeh.  don't  »ubaerihe  to  Old  Max't  hf»torical  'data,  but  we 
Bum  admire  hie  ta»^  in  cigarette:  You  will  too.  Try  a  new 
natural  Philip  Morria  today! 


No  Mistresses 
For  US  Males, 
Says  Di  Senate 

The  American  tradition  of  one 
wife  per  husband  was  upheld 
Tue^ay  night.  Despite  agitation, 
mostly  male,  for  a  change  to  the 
European  wife-mistress  system, 
the  Dialectic  Senate  held  stead- 
fastly to  western  morality  and  de- 
feated a  bill  calling  for  the  estab- 
lishment of  the  "double  standard  ' 
by  a  count  of  6  to  1. 

,The  body's  main  ^eoncrete  objec- 
tion seemed  to  be  the  expense  of 
mistresses.  Negative  speakers 
stressed  the  proposal's  violation  of 
the  'good  old  American  system' 
and  the  horror  of  promiscuity. 

The  bills  supporters  praised  the 
European  dualism  as  a  great  po- 
tential relief  for  the  frustration 
now  Rampant  in  America  and  as 
a  part  of  the  great  American  ti'a- 
dition  of  evolutionary  progress. 

In  spite  of  claimed  backing  by 
Sigmund  Freud  and  Brighani 
Young  the  bills  supporters  were 
ultimately  unable  to  convince 
their  opponents  of  the  merits  of 
mistresses  and  went  down  to  de- 
feat in  final  balloting. 


BAUM 

(Continued  from  page  1) 

sity  Party's  platform  which  Mr. 
Powledge  neglected  to  mention, 
and  which,  the  University  Party 
feels  would  have  given  him  the  an- 
swers to  several  of  the  very  im- 
portant questions  he  asked. 

"Mr.  Powledge  wants  issues 
which  are  concrete,  realistic  and 
important  to  every  student  The 
UP  feels  there  is  do  better  place 
to  find  such  issues  than  ito  a  body 
representative  of  every  student  on 
this  campu£,  meeting  to  discuss 
the  needs  of  fellow  students.^  ' 

"These  repr«sentatiTNK*««Kli 
know  the  problems  whicK  tatfe 
them  and  their  friends.  The  pro- 
gram of  action  which  they  outline 
for  student  government  will  not 
be  promises  for  getting  votes,  but 
the  vital  issues  v^'hich  student  gov- 
ernment, as  a  servant  of  the  stu- 
dents, should  accomplish. 

"Mr.  Powledge  also  a^s,  "What, 
after  all.  are  the  best  interests  of 
all  the  students?' 

That  is  a  difficult  question  to 
answer,  but  the  University  Party 
believes  that  the  people  most  like- 
ly to  have  the  answer  will  be  the 
students  themselves.  The  UP  has 
faith  (in)  Carolina's  s-tudent  body. 
.  .  .  The  Student  Senate  will  pro- 
vide the  answer  to  Mr.  Powledge's 
questions." 


Indonesian  Students 
Visit  Here  On  Campus 


By  CORT  EDWARDS 

Three  journalists  from  the  Re- 
public of  Indonesia  have  been 
visiting  the  campus  for  a  few 
days  to  observe  classes,  compare 
schools  of  Journalism,  and  to  ob- 
serve textile  mills  in  the  vicinity 
of  Chapel  Hill. 

The  first  member  is  Habibulla 
Azhary,  Palembang,  South  Sum- 
atra, Indonesia.  He  is  the  editor  of 
the  "Fikiran  Rakjat"  in  Palem- 
bang. He  is  also  a  correspondent 
to  the  Berita  Idonesia  newspaper, 
which  is  a  morning  daily. 

He  has  been  visiting  small  news- 
papers, and  plans  to  visit  rubber 
processing  plants,  and  citrus  fruit 
groves. 

The  second  member  of  the  group 
is  Wirviek  Hidayat,  who  is  the 
chief  of  the  East  Java  Bureau  of 
Antara.  The  Bureau  is  a  news 
agency  which  supplies  news  to  the 
27  newspapers  of  Indonesia. 

Hidayat  is  primarily  interested 
in  the  different  news  services  of 
the  United  States,  but  is  studying 
the  different  schools  of  Journalism 
around  the  country. 

His  hobby  is  painting  and  pho- 
tography. He  was  impressed  at  the 
art  in  the  Planetarium  and  plans 
to  visit  the  art  museum  in  Raleigh 
today,  he  said.    ' 

Lazarus  Edward  Manuhua  is  the 
third  member  of  the  group.  He  is 
representing  the  Pedomam  Rakjat, 
a  daily  newspaper  in  Macassar, 
South  Sulawese,  Indonesia  (  the 
Celebes  Islands). 
In  addition    to    -visiting  .  small 


newspapers  in  this  country,  he  al- 
so wants  to  visit  cotton  mills  and 
canning  plants. 

All  three  of  the  journalists  are 
participants  in  the  Foreign  Lead- 
er Exchange  Program  sponsored 
by  the  International  feducational 
Exchange  Service  of  the  United 
States  Dept.  of  State.  * 

They  a«rived  at  Raleigh-Dur- 
ham airport  Tuesday  morning  and 
were  officially  greeted  by  Dr. 
Shepherd  Jones  of  the  Political 
Science  Dept.  Prof.  Caldwell  from 
the  Journalism  Dept.  escorted 
them  around. 

After  visiting  the  Scftool  of 
Journalism  and  other  segments  of 
the  University,  they  were  receiv- 
ed by  Dr.  Guy  Johnson.' Dr.  John- 
son talked  with  them  on  the  prob- 
lem of  segregation  and  how  the 
University  was  striving  towards 
gradual    integration. 

Yesterday  morning  all  three  men 
sat  in  on  I>r.  Jones'  class  on  the 
United  Nations. 

At  noon  yesterday  they  talked 
to  the  Journalism  146  class  and 
discussed  journalism  education 
with  Dean  Luxon. 

Yesterday  they  went  over  to 
the  textile  inijtitute  of  State  Col- 
lege and  planned  to  visit  the  art 
gallery  in  Raleigh. 

Thig  morning  they  will  meet 
with  Dan  H.  Brandis  of  the  UNC 
Law  School  and  then  got  for  a 
tour  of  textile  plants,  a  cigarette' 
plant  and  Duke  University. 

This  afternoon  'at  5  p.m.  they 
will  depart  from  the  Raleigh- 
Durham  airport. 


SPECIAL!  Jane  Parker 

Angel  Wapd 
Cake  ifm9 


EACH 


\\  t 


OiKlll.    /^-^\       lU  \  s    ON    WONDLRll  I.    I()v)ns...     \.v!>    !s 

YODR^WeBOSBD  10  SAVINGS 


Jane  Parker 


*"'  23c 


Pkg. 


Potato  Chips  .-.. 

Crescent  City  Coffee     ch'Ti^ry    "  '^^  65c 

Walker  Austex  Chili  &  Beans........  '''t.T  25c 

Green  &  White  Limas    ^fife^ ?  L^^    23c 

Wisconsin  Mild  American  Cheese ">.    43c 

Swift's  Brookfield  Assorted  Cheese  ..  3  ja'i"    50c 


SUNNYBROOK  LARGE 


GRADE 


SPECIAL  LOW  PRICE!  NATURAL  SLICES  OF 


A&P  Swiss  Cheese 


6-Oz. 
Pkg. 


25c 


Prices  This  Ad   Eff.   Thr«  Sat.,  Marck  23rd  

,^ ■''""'" 


^w*^*^^^^^^* 


's  Stor  Smoked  Short  Skonk  12  to  16  Lb.  Arg.  Skinned 


Whole 


HAMS 


FO«    DEPENDABLl   QUALIT-'    AT   THl 
lOWtST    POSSIBLE    PRKtS'.  .  .  Bt  t 

"Soper-Right 
Meats 


"Super-Right"  Fresh  Loin  End     "^*^  ^*t^-^  ..^-^ — .^^.  ^^ 

-^       -       _  Sliced  Bologno ^     45c 

Pork  Roasts  -  ^  39c  s;;;hS;„'M.or! 

•      "SUPER-RIGHT"  HEAVY  WESTERN  GRAIN  FED  BEEF      # 

ROASTS  ^~55e  STEW 


.1 1  ( 


Allsweet  Margarine 


iLb. 
Pkg. 


30c  I   Oaily  Pish-Beef-Liver 


iNiblet's  Mexicom 2  "SS   35c 


€kw»m  Style 


Green  Giant  Corn  . 2    S2    33c  — 


Wesson  Oil Sk    37c 


Qt. 

Bot. 


63c 


Shortening 

Snowtlrift  - ^   34c  ^^  93c 

Aluminum  Foil 

Reynold's  Wrap  -    ^    29c  ^a  73c 

Argo  Gloss  StariH 2  •■'«•  15c 

BAB-o  Cleans,  r  2   ^.L    25c  S'n  17c 


Ivory  White  Soap 4    Bars    25c 

9c 


lYory  White  Scop ..-  "S 


Medium 

ar 


Ivory  White  Soap t.f    15c 

Ivory  Flakes. paS  32c 

Ivory  Snow Tf&  32c 

Camay  Toilet  Soap 2    bJ?s    17c 

Camay  Toilet  Soap 2    liS    25c 

Lava  Soap ^^'  lie 


dog  food  6  c'^,  45< 

2d  Male  Team  Borox  ¥S:  29c  i^  3?c 
"Boraxo  PdW'detedHdnd  Sod|5>^  I9d 


•^  -•*>  t 


8-Oz. 


19 


BURRY  VANILLA 

WAFERS 

Big  BecMi  Sale! 

Aab  Page  PreiNirad  PORK  t  BEARS 
Bodon  Style  •  Red  KMaey 

CUli  i  Beais    ^,  •  Vegelarian  Style 
SULTARA  BLACKEYE  PEAS 

Re  Umil! 
Steck  Up! 

YOUR 
CHOICE 


I 


'2XK"  ORLY 


DU  ^l»r 


UncU  Ben's  Converted  Rice     '^  17c   ?^  33c 


»?J?^-  23c 


Nettle-s  Chocolote  Morsels       ^ 

Sunshine  Hydrox  Cookies 't^t'  25c 

Nabisco  Cheese  Ritz  Crackers lifg^   31c 

A&P'Foncy  Sliced  Pineapple ''^''  29< 


A&P    Foncy  Pineopple  Juice 


27t 


Swonson  Pot  Pies  c^iz^f^^. 2  VST..  49c 

Downy  Flake  Woffles  '«««  ._ 2  2l^    29c 

Swonson  TV  Dinners      '~^ '«?«"  65c 

Belfry  Crocker  Coke  Mixes       '*^*^  ""pt^    33c 


^^"|iii«  «  ^^v^^i^^ 


CARROTS  2 


CELERY 


2Va  SiM  Stalk 


12 


Porto  Rican 
Sweet  Potatoes  ib.  9< 


STOKE   ADDRESS 

210  WEST 
FRANKLIN  ST. 


AP    S"Per  J4a'l<ets 


^^«.^»....  .—^i^^.^.-..^..^.^^^^^^^^^.  ^■•tn_n_n_.n_n_n_ii_nj'i.r 


PAOI  FOUK 


THI  DAILY  TAR  HEIL 


THURSDAY,  MARCH  21,  ^9Sf. 


UNC  Baseballers  Topple  Flonda,  12-7,  1^^^^^^^^^^  Debut 


Spring  Sports  Get 
Underway  At  UNC 


A  J  though  most  people  around 
Chapel  Hill  aiie  concerned  nuinly 
about  Carolina's  welfare  in  the 
NCAA  basketball  finals  this  week- 
end, warm  weather  has  turfie4 
some  attention  to  spring  sports, 
which  get  under  way  this  week. 

Coach  Walter  Rabb'»'  baseball 
team  left  by  car  for  Florida  Mon- 
day for  a  week's  training  and 
competition  trip.  While  in  the 
Land  of  Sunshine,  the  Tar  Heels 
will  play  five  games  in  four  days. 

Other  spring  sports — golf,  ten- 
tennis  and  track— get  started  to- 
day with  Carolina's  netters  meet- 
ing George  Washington  here. 
Track  opens  with  the"  Florida  Re 
lays  at  Gainesville.  Fla.,  March  30. 
and  golf  with  Rollins  here  March 
25. 

Briefly,  the  outlook  for  spring 
sportj  are  none  too  bright  in  pre- 
season looksees. 

Coach  C.  P.  Ericksons  golfers 
lost  ACC  champ  and  record  hold- 
er   Buzzy    Bttsingcr    phis    regulars 

top  men  Jim  Sykes  and  Joe  Cor- i  lottcsville,    Va.;    26-27 
rcll.   Returning  are  Aubrey  Roth- 1  lays     at     Philadelphia; 


last  year,  five  were  lost  by  gradu- 
ation, one  '  transferred  and  two 
dropped  out  of  school  becau^  of 
scholastic  difficulties. 

The  Tar  He?ls .  spring  8iM>rt£ 
teams  won  18,  lost  We  and  tied 
one  in  1956. 

The  schedules: 

GOLF 

March:  25. 4  Rollins  here^  27— 
Cornell,  2S  Michigan  State.  .April 
6— Wake  Forest;  9— South  Caro- 
lina and  Clemson  at  Clemson,  S. 
C;  11 — Michigan;  15 — Davidson, 
16— Western  Illinois  State;  2^ 
Virginia  at  Charlott£5\'ille,  Va.; 
26 — Maryland  at  College  Park, 
Md.;  29— N.  C.  State;  May  2-4— 
Southern  Intcrcollegiates  at 
Athens.  Ga.;  7— Duke;  10-11— ACC 
championships. 

TRACK 

March  30— Florida  Relays  at 
Gainesville,  Fla.;  April  6— Wake 
Forest;  9— N.  C.  State;  13— South 
Carolina;  17^— Maryland  at  College 
Park.  Md.:  27— Virginia  at  Char- 
Penn  Re- 
May   4— ; 


i  RaugK  Hiir 
Show  Way; 
In  Opener  I 

■GAE«SVILLE,  Fla.  t*— Right 
fielder  Ivalec  Hill  slapped  a  three- 
run  h'amcr  in  the  ninth  inning 
here  yesterday  to  break  a  tie  and 
give  the  University  of  North  Cai- 
olina  a  12-7  baseball  victory  over 
Florida. 

Carolina  starting  pitcher  Jimmy 
Raugb  gave  up  only  three  hits  and  ' 
one  ruo  during  his  six  innings  on ' 
the  mound.  The  iar  Heels  led  7-1 
when  he  retired. 


rock.  Gene   Lookabill  and  Walter 
Summerville. 

The  track  spotlight  should  go  to 
pint-sized  Jim   Beatty,   but  sopho- 
mores Dave   Scurlock   and  Wayne 
Bishop    .-hould    have    their 
Thirteen     letter  men     return 


Duke: 


10-11 — ACC  championships 

TENNIS 

March  ,21— <Jeorge   Washington; 

26 — Kalamazoo;    2"? — ^A^'illian^s;    28 

— Williams;    29 — ^Maryland;    April 

days.  1 1 — Har.ard:  2 — 'Harvard:  8 — Wak« 

but  I  Fprest     at     Winston-Salem;      12 — 


weaknesses  exist  again  in  the  field 
events. 

Losses  from  last  years  fine  ten- 
nis team  were  heaviest  of  aU. 
Steve  Bank  is  the  only  regular  re- 


Clemson:  13 — South  Carolina;  1ft— 
Illinois:  25 — Duke;  27 — Davidson; 
23— at  Williamaf;  30 — at  Harvard; 
May  3 — at  Princeton;  4 — at  Vir 
ginia;  7— N.  C.  State  here:  9-11— 


turning  of  those  who^  played  much  ACC  championships. 


Ivy  League,  Big  Ten 
Headline  NCAA  Meet 


The  I\T  League  and  the  Big  Ten 
Conferences  will  send  somfe  of  the ; 
best  swimming  teams  of  all  time 
to  compete  here  on  March  28-30  in 
the  34th  National  Collegiate  Swim- 
ming Chan>ptonships. 

Over  500  of '  the  nation's  top 
swimmers,  represenCinf  57  col* 
le^es  an^l  universities  are  expect- 
ed to  participate  in  the  three-day 


dictions  are  right.  The  Tar  Heel 
mentor  figures  All-America  Char- 
lie Krepp  is  a  solid  favorite  in  the 
100  and  200  yard  backstrokes  abd 
his  relay  teama-  are  good  enough 
to  place  high  in  the  final  stand- 
ings. 

The  Bowman  Gray  pool  i«  bems 
revamped  for  the  nationals,  the 
first  time  the  event  has  been  held 
here   since   1949.   Portable  stands 


event  which  gets  under  way  next 
Thtirsday  night  with  the  1500  me-  j  are  being  erected  over  the  prac- 
ler  fre6-^yle,  tlje  first  of  16  events  i  tice  end  of  the  pool  and  a  la-ge 
on  the  card.  I  crowd  is  expected  for  the  cb»iS- 

,.,.,..  i  pionships. 

^^eumvennty  rules  as  the  fa- i     ^1,^,^,  ^,^  now  Wsal^  it  the 

n^'     /k^  •«J"»<i  Jas  beautiful,  ^v'^Uen  Gymnasium  ticket  office. 

depth  and  balance  and  are  best  in  i 

the  relays.  Two  different  Yale 
foursomes  have  broken  the  world 
400-yard  freestyle  relay  records 
this  year.  The  h-y  League  champs 
are  also  defending  title  holders  in 
the  freestyle  and  medley  relays. 

Several  Olympic  stars  will  per- 
form in  the  Bowman  Gray  Pool. 
Among  them  i^  Indiana's  Bill 
Woolsey.  He  will  be  defending  his 
220  and  440  yard  freestyle  titles 
and  is  favored  in  the  1500  meters 
freestyle. 

Carolina  will  be  represented  in 
th6  top  10  when  the  sc<»:es  are 
added  if  Coach  Ralph  Casey's  pre- 


House  Passes  Measure 
Commending  Tar  Heels 

RALEIGH  liP)— Th*  Hoot*  yt- 
t*rd«y  cemimiMM  th*  Carolina 
baskatiMil  taam  for  ifs  winnins 
ways  and  wishad  it  "cMitinuad 
succass"  in  its  prasanf  quast  far 
a  national  crown  in  tha  Nation- 
al Collagiate  Athlatic  Assn.  tour- 
nay. 

Tha  Houso  pastad  and  sant  to 
the  Sanata  a  joint  rosolufion 
sponsorad  by  Rap*.  John  T. 
Honlay  and  Wilson  F.  Yarbor- 
ough  Sr.  of  Cumbarlaad. 


DAILY    CROSSWORD 


ACB06S 

1.  Ruin 
5.  Mcrranaar 
».  Trtta 
10.  Harmonised 

12.  Extrame 

13.  A  roundup 

14.  Thraah 

15.  God  of 
flocka 

16.  Girl'a 
nicknama 

17.  Tha  Buddha 
IS.  Shore  racaai 

19.  Seaama 

20.  Rock  piaeaa 

23.  Wan  (poat.) 

24.  CatUa  thlaf 
2«.  Strike 

2t.  Church 

celabratioa 
Sl.Ooddaaa  of 

death  (Nor.) 
S2.  Haul 
SS.  Greek  lattar 
34.Latvf«a 

rivar 
3S.DlaU«t 
M.KatUaa 
Si.  Thick  ahada 
4S.W«t«rad 

■ilk 
41.ThoBf 
42.  Girt'a 

(POH.) 

4S.  Gamaat 


4.0uido'a 
Mfheat 
note 
9.  Waadar 
«.  A  aaUAita 
T.Ceneluda 
t.Baotla 
f.  PoUahea 
11.  SmaU 
napUa 
iS.rraadi 


21.  Spoken 

22.  Pecan 

23.  Foot. 
Hka 
part 

28.  Loiter 
M.Chaaea 
(alanr) 
27.RlclMa 
2t.Tbc 


ILOodof 
^taaura 

It.  Sman 
9i» 


(mov> 

lea) 
10.  Standa 

up 
S2.  UfhU 
SS.  rrotk 


TMtat4«y'a  kmtmm 

3«.Rod 

37.  River  (Fr  ) 
39.  MaUHic 
rock 


44.  Golf  msuada 

OOWK 

1.  VoUaf  flip 

Itpadas  «f 

pUir 

(aiekak) 
iNoCoaa 
(dlalj 


Florida    hitters-    got    to    relief 

huriers    Joe    Morgan    and    Doug  i 

Stimson  for  two  nins  in  the  sixth 
i  inning,  then,  aided  by  a  Carolina ; 
I  error,   staged   a  four-run   rally   in  i 

the  ei^th  to  tie  the  game  at  7- 

all. 

North  Carolina  had  two  outs  on ' 
the  Florida  batters  in  the  crucial ; 
eighth  when  third  baseman  Chuck  i 
Hartman  threw  wide  to  start  the 
Florida  rally. 

Hill  put  the  game  on  ice  with  [ 
his  homer  to  t^eep  center  field  in 

the  ninth.  Carolina  then  added  t'lt'o 

more  scores  for  insurance. 

Don  Saine,  who  came  on  in  the    AT  3  P.M. 
last    of    the    eighth,    set    Florida '  BBiaMM^^i™™ 
down   1-2-3  in  the  ninth  and  got 
credit     for     the     victory.     Lo-ang 
pitcher  was  Bubba  Williams,  the 
second  of  Florida's  three  huriers. 

A— ^Flied  out  for  Duda  in  4th. 

R— 'Hudson   2,   )L<egette    2.   Hill, 
Uoneycutt   2,   Hartman,    Shook  2, 
Hughes.     Raugh,     Clark,     Pitman,  i 
Maxcy  3,  Williams  2.  E— Legette, ; 
Hartman  2,  Clark,  Marlowe,  Smith. 
RBI— Hill  3,  Honeycutt.  Hughes  2, 
Raugh,  Pitman  2,  Mariow  2,  Geis- 
^ger.  Maxcy  2.  2B— Hill,  Raugh. 
3B— Pitman.    HR— Maxcy    2,    Hill, 
Honeycutt.  SB-^ark.  King.  SF— 
Marlowe.  DP— Hartman,  Lewis  and 
Legette:   Shook,  Lewis   and  Hart- 
man.    Left— J«forth.    -Carolina     10,  j 
Florida  13.  BB-^Raugh  4,  Morgan ; 
4,  Stimson  2,  Smith  3,  Williams  2,| 
Toortey  2.  SO-^Raugh  8,  Smith  2,  j 
Williams  2,  Toomey  1.  HO— Raugh 
3  in  6  innings;  Morgan'  0  in  2-3; ! 
Stimson  3  in  1;  Sune  0  in  1   13;  I 
StMth  S3  IB  4,  wiliitns  2  in  3;  j 
Toomey    4    in    2.    Rr— ER^-^Raugh  I 

3^1,  Morgan  0-0,  ,  Stimson  4-1,  i —Don  Larsen  was  pounded  for 
Saine  0^,  Smith  M,  Williams  2-0,1  six  hits  and  five  runs  in  his  first 
Toomey  5-3.  HBP— Hudson  (by  j  appearance  since  his  perfect 
Toomey),    Geisrfingcr    (by    Raugh).  [  World    Series   game    yesterday    as 


Dale  Ranson  Receives 
1C-4A  Track  Award 


Carolina  track  coach  Dale  Ran-*- 
son    was   among   coaches    honored 
by   the   IC-4A  at  the  association's 
annual  indoor   meet   last  week. 

Ranson,  who  has  been  coaching  : 
here  since  1925.  was  honored  with  | 
a  certificate  recognizing  his  more  | 
than  25  years  as  a  track  coach  and  j 
booster.  The  certificate  reads;         | 

"For  devotion  to  the'  develop-  '• 
ment  of  track  and  field  competi  '■ 
tion;  for  faithfulness  to  its  ideals,  } 
and  for  outstanding  adherence  to  ' 
the  principles  of  good  sportsman-  i 
ship  in  aid,  advice  and  assistance  ' 
to  the  youth  of  our  nation  for 
moi-e  than  a  quarer  of  a  cent'^ry,  ; 
this  citation  is  in  token  of  respect 
and  esteem  of  his  fellow  coaches  ^ 
is  conferred  upon  Dale  Ranson  of  i 
the  University  of  North  Carolina." 


rTHE  NEW 

INGRID  BERGMAN 

WCTUREIH 


Intramural  Wi«fi«r$ 

Pictured  above  is  the  Alpha  Gamipa  Delta  women's  intramural  basketball  toem.  Alpha  Gamma  Delta 
recantly  «von  the  WAA  mural  basketball  champion  hip  for  tha  second  atraight  year. 


Badminton 

Second-round  matches  in  the 
badminton  tourney  must  be  played 
by  Monday  at  6  p.m.,  according  to 
a  WAA  spokesman. 


Netters  Meet  Colonials  In 
Season  Opener  Here  Today 


WARNER  BROS   p»e«fkt 

INGRID  BERGMAN 

MEL  FERRER 

JEAN  MARAIS 

.JEAN  RENOIR'S 

pARisOOBS 
STRANGE  THINGS 

1 TECHNICOLOR  • 

NOW  PLAYING 


Carolina 


X^ 


By  j:m  crownover 

Carolina's  ambitious  but  un- 
tested varsity  tennis  squad 
opens  its  1957  season  here  this 
afternoon  at  3  p.m.  againiH  the 
George  Washington  Colonials. 

Coach     Ham     Strayhorn     ex 
pressed  concern  yesterday  over 
prospects  for  the  coming  cam- 
paign.   "Our    personnel    losses 

Redlegs  Whip 
Yanks,  20^ 

ST.    PETERSBURG,    Fla— (AP) 


AM>— Smith, 
U-Williams. 


Williams. 
T— 2:40. 


W— Saine. 


The  box; 
North  Carolina        Ab. 

Lewis,  2b 5 

Hudson,  cf  3 

Lefette,  lb :.  5 

HiU,  rf  ._ :_.-.  5 

Honeycutt,  «  4 

Hartman.  3b  4 

aiook,  If  .. 3 

Hughes,  c  3 

Raugh,  p    3 

Morgan,   p   : ^  0 

Stimson,  p  1 

Saine,  p  1 


H. 
1 

0 
2 
2 
1 
0 
0 
2 
1 
0 
0 
0 


a 

1 

2 
8 
0 
0 
1 
6 
8 
0 
0 
0 
1 


Totals     _.=._. 87      9    27     11 


Florida 

Clark,   lb   

Pitman,  3b 

Marlowe,  2b  

King,  If  „.. 

Geis'ger,  cf '.. 

Rawlings,  c  


Dtida,  rf  , 1 


aRridges ;..:    \ 

Alligood,  rf 8 

Maxcy,  88._^ 1^,  4 

Smith,  p - 2 

Williams,  p ,..  J 

Toomey,  p   . i 

■  TotaL^          ..  .:.  34      6    27     11 
Score  by  innings: 
North  Carolina      221  002  005—12 
florWa    . ,_.. 010  000  240—  7 


O. 

7 
4 
3 
5 
0 
5 
1 
0 
1 
1 
0 
0 
0 


I  Cincinnati  dubbed  thre  New  York 
i  Yankees  20-6  in  an  exhibition  fea- 
I  tured   by  home   runs  by  the  Red- 
legs'   George   Crowe.    Smoky  Bur- 
gess and  Jerry  Lynch. 

Larsen  worked  three  innings 
'  and  yielded  Crowe's  circuit  blow. 
j  two  triples,  two  doubles  and  a 
j  single.    The    Redlegs   collected   43 

total  bases  in  all. 
I  Al  Cicotte  and  Jack  Urban. 
I  rookie  righthanders,  followed  Lar- 
I  sen  and  they,  too,' were  unable  to 
j  hold  the  Redlegs.  Cicotte  permit- 
I  ted  10  runs  and  12  hits  and  Ur- 
i  ban  seven  hits  and  five  runs. 
j  Tony  Kubek  and  Bob  Martyn 
!  homered  for  the  world  champions. 
:  who  were  held  to  only  one  hit  in 
;  the  final  five  innings  by  winning 
!  pitcher  Art  Fowler.  New  York  got 
I  all  its  runs  off  starting  pitcher 
'  Brooks  Lawrence. 


from  Jast  year  were  severe,  but 
we  still  should  have  a  fairly 
good  team  With  a  beUer  than 
50-50  season."  :  J  'f  ^.,-  ;!„ 

"Oiu-  toughest  matches  this" 
year  will  probably  come  from 
Han'ard,  Virginia  and  Princeton 
with  Duke,  as  usual,  pretty  near- 
ly on  a  par  with  us."     ,/' '.  :\. 

When  questioned  about  the 
GW  match  this  afternoon.  Coach 
Strayhorn  said,  "I  haven't  heard 
anything  about  George  Washing- 
ton's team  this  year.  We  haven't 
played  them  in  many  years,  so 
I.  dan 't  know  how  strong  they'll 
be.  I'm  sure  we'll  give  them  a 
good  match,  though."  , 

The  Tar  Heel  ranks  have  been 
thinned  considerably  by  gradu- 
ation and  academic  eligibility 
lossej.  Lost  by  graduation  from 
last  year's  Atlantic  Coast  Con- 
ference champion  squad  were 
Tom  Bradford,  Don  Thompson, 
Pete  Green  and  Bruce  Gustaf- 
son.  Going  out  by  the  academic 
route  were  lettermen  Ed  Hudg- 
ins.  John  Foster  and  Bob  Borl 


ner  was  the  team  captain.  Also 
missing  will  be  soph  Ray  Mob- 
ley. 

According  to  Strayhorn,  the 
team  is  looking  better  every  day 
despite  the  drastic  rever^'als. 
Steve  Bank,  the  only  returning 
letterman  and  number  one  man 
will  lead  the  Tar  Heels  into  ac- 
tion. He  will  be  backed  up  by 
tall  leflhanded  sophomore  Geoff 
Black,  the  top  performer  on  last 
year's  freshman  squad,  and 
Frank  Livingston. 

Fighting  it  out  for  the  fourth 
position  are  Fritz  Van  Winkle 
and  Ray  Newsomc,  ,followed  by 
Canie  ^mith,  Bob  Jacobus,  and 
either  Pete  Steward  or  J.  B. 
Walker  in  the  eighth  spot. 

These  team  positions  are  not 
static,  and  anyone  who  shows  up 
well  in  future  intra-squad  chal- 
lenge rounds  will  gain  a  higher 
spot  on  the  team. 

Coach  Strayhorn  emphasized 
that  he  is  expecting  a  good  team 
and  urged  the  students  to  come 
out  this  afternoon  to  watch  the 
locals  in  action  against  GW. 


Golf  Club 

The  Woman's  Athletic  Assn.  golf 

an    organizational 

5  p.m. 


club    will    hold 
meeting  today  at 


Phona 

9-2«81 

Locatad   ovar 

Sutton's 

Drug  Store 


New  Course  In 

Personal  Typing 

.     March  25-May  17 

Limited  Enrollment, 
Register  Now     -  , 


town   classes 


Chap*/  HUl.  North  Cmrolina 


CUSSIFIEDS 


5  ROOM  BRICK  HOUSE,  3  BED 
rooaas.  «U  mod«rs  eooveoiences. 
3  miles  on  Old  86  Hyway.  Stove 
and  Frigedaire  furnished.  Call 
Fttd  KatiiB  alter  9:00,  8-9023. 


nVE  ROOM  BRICK  HOUSE  IN 
center  of  town-o-h^  hobby  work- 
shop. Call  9458  during  day  or 
2928  after  5:S0  »nd  during 
weekend. 


FQR  SALS:  1940  FORO  WITH 
motor  in  good  C9ndition--$200. 
Contact  Tommy  Johnson  at  201 
Joyaer  Dorm. 


NEED  MONEY 

for  the 

KANSAS  CITY  TRIP? 

Sell  Us 
Your  Pocket  Books 


^■j^ppi^ 


JAZZ  AT  TUilNAOIS 

Saturday  afternoon,  2:00,  Turn- 
ages  Cabin  in  Durham — Jazz  by 
Dick  Crables  "All;  Stars."  Beer 
Served. 


Intimate  Bookshop 

Open  Till  10  P.M. 


20th  Century-Fox  presents 


The  Girl  In  , 
The  Red  Velvet 
Swing  i 

OnemaScopE 


Ray  Milland-Joan  Collins-Farley  Granger 

Produccfl  by  CHARLtS  BRACkLl  I   •  In  Uic  wonder  of  STi  Kt-OfHONK.  50LM> 


TODAY 
ONLY 


/        / 


Howard  Johnson  Restaurant 


•-U«'*«<r«trt«w»; 


BREAKFAST 

LUNCH 

DINNER 

SNACKS 
"Landmark  For  Hungry  Tarheels" 


4 


JulmtC, 


'    ,JU|    I 


Moj 


r4^..*. 


good  tailoring 
that  '^ 

won't  cohrie  out 
in  the  wash! 


Here,  at  lost,  is  the  almost 

weightless,  washable  summer 

suit  that  keeps  its  slim 

well-bred  tailoring 

through  muggiest  days 

and  countless  washings. 

Whether  you  wash 

and  hang -dry,  or 

touch  lightly  with  a 

warm  iron  this  classic 

will  retain  the 

handsome  look 

and  fit  of  a 

year-round  suit. 

Exclusive  ^^-^""^ 

fabric 

blend  of     "~""-'-;r'"iir-iMw>iii| 

shape-retaining, 

soil  and  wrinkle  resistant 

Oacron*  and  breeze-cool  cotton. 

Choose  {torn  cords,  plaids, 
stripes,  pin  checks  and  solids. 


i-ilptlHPP 


$39.50 
THE 


^VASH  and  WEAR 
SUIT 


mam 


.  ^^■'•^    •■l'^     »"V'«",   »" 


WEATHER 

Ch«nc«  of  rain  with  «n  expected 
high  of  M. 


tJ.K.e.  Library 
Seflals^Dept. 


i^c 


aTarlHtecl 


^   BATTLE 

frienniei       bic«p»-be»ting       lent 
necessary.  See  editorial,  page  2. 


VOL.  i.VII  NO.  120 


Cotriptote  (4R)  ^if  Strvie^ 


CHAPEL  HILL.  NORTH  CAROLINA,  PRIDAY.  MARCH  22,  1957 


Offrtet  in  Grnt^m  Meinomi 


SIX  PAGES  THIS  ISSUE 


Business  Fair  Opens  Today;  \  ^f}f^, 
Gov.  Hodges  Heads  Sp#ik^r^  Jtwcf 


By  ftOB  HIGH 


The  highest-ranking  University  of  i 
North    Carolina    basketball    fart    in 
iiiis  atate  will  be  the  featured  speak- 
er today  at  the  fifth  Business  Fair 
bsing  held  here  in  Carroll  Hall. 

Governor  Luther  H.  Hodges  will 
c.ddress  an  expected  400  persons  on 
'industry   in   North   Carolina." 


ment  of  Small  Industries  In  North   present   the  waafS   in  whkh  North 
!  Carolina,"  while  Harp«:  is  a  speak  I  Carolina    is    striving'  to   encourage 
on   the    "Attra-ction  of  New  Indus 
tiv    intD    North    Carolina." 


The  theme  of  the  exposition  w'll 
be.  "What  North  Carolina  Can  Do 
*■••     V  .      ,Mr.    Industry"  j 

!..v.'  Fair,  sponsored  by  .\lpha 
Kaipa  Psi  professional  business  fra- 
ternity and  the  School  of  Business 
.Administration,  will  have  three  sem- 
inars to<lay  starting  at   1  p.m. 

Exhibits  wUl  be  shewn  at  12:30 
end  during  the  intermission  of  each 
seminar.  The  exhibits  are  sponsor- 
ed by  the  vartous  industries  in 
.\orth  Carolina. 


Heading  the  third  seminar  this 
'  afternoon  will  be  James  S.  Currie. ' 
'  director  oi  the  Dept.  of  Tax  Re- 1 
j  i-earch  in  Raleigh.  Currie  will  dis- 
I  cuss  "Proposed  State  Tax  Revisions 
and  Its  Effect  on  the  Industrial  Oe- 
vplopment  of  North  Can^na." 

Indiistr>''s  viewpoint  of  the  Fair 
viill  be  presented  by  Ben  Snath 
ct  the  Black  Panther  Co.,  Sanford; 
Jack  Worsheun,  Southern  Plastics 
Engineering,  Greensboro;  Carl  E. 
blass.  Talon,  Inc.,  Dallas,  Texas; 
oud 
T.    Main     Architects,     Charlotte 


Two  Chiefs  Confer 

TUCKER'S  TOWN.  ^Bermuda— 
both  the  internal  and  external  Indus-  (AP) — President  Eisenhower  and 
trial  growth  of  the  state.  We  be- .  Prime  Minister  Macmillan  Were 
lieve  that  we  have  set  up  a  worth-  reported  tonight  to  have  reac^ied 
while  program  and  one  which  j.  a  "gratifying  measure  of  agree- 
^hould  make  businessmen  aware  ment" 'on  future  moves  solving 
of  the  potentialities  of  our  state."  j  crucial  'Middle  East  problems,  in- 
said  Ratledge.  j  eluding  the  Suez  Canal  issue.  . 

The  main  purpose  of  the  fair  is  Later  it  was  learned  that  the  Ho 
to  better  famUiarize  both  the  pub-  government  chiefs  had: 
lie  and  factors  of  industry  with  the  i.  Discussed  with  considcriile 
Governor's  small  industries  pro-  \  accord  steps  which  may  have '  to 
gram  the  profitable  establishment  5,  ^^kcn  when  the  present  W- 
or  extension  of  industries  in  North   gotiations  of  U.N.   Secretary  G^n- 


Crowther  Resigns  From  Race 
For  Editorship;  Will  Devote 
Time  To  Carolina  Symposium 

1  Feels  Better  Prepared' 


Carolina   .a    spokesman   stated.         I 
In    order    to    obtain    outstanding' 


oral      Dag      Hammarskjold      w^th 
Esjypt's  President  Nasser  over  piy- 


Truman    H   "safford  '  Charles    '''^^''*"    ^"^    displays,    a    student    J^^J^^^  ^f  g^^^  tolls  either  succeed 
rruman    H.    baftord,    cnaries   ^.<,n^n^it^ee  ^^J^^  ^^  Raleigh,  Greens-   ^j.  fgj. 


Capus    M.    Waynick,    past    direc- 
ti.r  of  the  Governor's  SnuQl  Indus- 


bor<i,  Durham  and  other  cities  in 
the  state  where  they  interviewed 
ihe  Governor,  Waynick  and  other  in- 


2.  Referred  to  a  committee  of 
experts  for  detailed  study  a  Brit- 
ish proposal  for  prom»tion  con- 
struction   of    an    Iraq-Iran-Turkey 

^       .  .  J       .     .J ^  pipeline  by  making  an  American- 

Speakers  appearing  today  besides    ofter  opening  remarks.  Waynick  wdl        "The  concept  of  the  fair  this  year    gritish  treaty  with  those  countries 

guaranteeing    permanent    freedom 


:ries   Plan,   High   Point,   will  make   (iihstrial    executives,    reported    Rat- 
the    introduction    of    the    Governor    ied^e. 


Gov.  Hv^ges  inciude  G.  F.  Al- 
bright and  Walter  W.  Harper,  both 
o."  the  Dept.  of  Conservation  and 
Development  in  Raleigh.  Albright 
wiU  head  the  seminar  on  "Develop- 


t<-llow    Bob    Ratledge.    president   of  is  one  which  has  been  commended 

the  .\'pha  Kappa  Psi,  who  will  ex-  by    educators    and    North    Carolina 

tend    the    official    welcome    to    the  L:usinessmen    alike    for    its    educa- , 

participating   persons   and   visitors,  tion    01    such    a    exposition    gain," 
••Through   this    fair    we    hope    to  (See  FAJR^   Page  4). 


DUE  TO  SATURDAY  CLASSES: 

Evans  Cites  Problems 
In  Recreation  At  UNC 


of  oil  flow. 

3.  Blocked  out  in  principle  pos- 
sible moves  to  establish  interna- 
tional nature  of  the  Strait  of  Tiran 
to  as.sure  free  passage  of  all  ships 
into  th?  Gulf  of  Aqaba.  Resort 
may  be  made  to  the  world  court 
or  other  international   agency. 

4.  Considered  a  formula  for 
solving  the  immediate  problem  of 
the  Gaza   Strip   by  getting   UNEF 


Sloan  Proposes 
'Positive  Plans' 

j\f  t§J\,    nnf^f^ftna  i  ^^^'^ops  stationed  at  key   points  on  j    to  op«n  sophomore  "Spring  Swing"  weekend  festivities.  The  concert 


an- 


Spring  Swing  Star 

Don  Shirley,   pictured   above,  and  his  trio  will   play   here  today 


Saturday  classes  have  given  rise;  propriation  of  the  1959  North  Oaro-  Charlie  Sloan,  candidate  for  ed- 
to  serious  recreational  problems  |  i^na  General  Assembly.  The  admin-  itor  of  The  Daily  Tar  Heel,  an- 
at  L'XC.  according  to  Sonnv  Evans, 


Student    Party   candidate   for   presi- 
dent   of    the    student    body. 

He  pointed  out  the  present  student 
mAob  buildiag,  GnUwn  Memorial 
nas.  bui}t  in  the  litXKt  and  is  not 
ade^ualp  to  meet  the  needs  of  a 
greatly  enlarged   student   l>ody 


istration's  approval  is  based  on  the  nounced  Wednesday  night  what  he 


board's  pledge  to  present  a  detail 
?d  outline  of  the  building— its  faci 
lilies  and  programming. 

It    will    be   the  job   of   students 


termed    "two   positive   plans"    for 
the  improvement  of  the  paper. 

u    ■ 

Speaking   at    the   IDC    meeting. 


both  sides  of  the  Israeli-Gaza 
border  and  fixing  U.N.  responsi- 
bility for  security  inside  the  strip 
with  Egypt  retaining  civilian  ad- 
ministration. 


Israelis,  Arabs  Clash 

and    the   president  'of   the   stod^nt  ^   Propesed   having   a   "stringer"       TEL    AVIV-(AP)-Israel    ^aid 

body,  who  is  chairman  of  the  Board  s>=***^     for     t)etter     coverage   of  today  its  troops  clashed  with  Arab 

of  Directors,  to  push  the  develop-    ^^^'^}9^  «ews,  and  4  fystem  of  forces  on  the  frontiers  of  both  Sy 

.nent  and  pwentation  of  t4iis  pro^  *»»«ti#ff  wttrld  news  to  the  camp-  ria  and  Jordan. 


today   will   be   held   in   Memorial   Ha]l   from  4-6:30   p.m.   Tickets  are 
SI  and  may  be  purchased  at  Graham  Memorial,  the  "Y"  and  Kemp's. 

AT  SPRING  SWING  FESTIVITIES 


Shirley  Trio  Will  Play 
In  Memorial  Hall  Today 


Ife  yreskient  «#  the  «t»d«nt  body'  posal    before    the    meetings    of    the   "^   through   facuUy  members  who 


.\dvisory    Budget 
year,"  be  said. 
INTERESTEO- 


Ccnunission    next 


know  something  of  what  the  news 
topic  is  about. 


bbould    oush    the    drive    for    a    new 
stadeni   uakin  building,  he  <iaid. 

In  addition,  added.  GM  should  in-,  iMt.KE.sTt;^  .  ..i       ^xpiainiiig    his    "stringer'     svs 

crease    funds    used    for    the    benefit         -.As   a    member  of   the    Board   of   tem.   Sloan  said  he   would   have   a 
of    Victory     VlUage    residents.     Id    Directors  I  have  been  interested  in  correspondent    for    th#    paper    in 
the    pust    these    activities    have    in- ;  tne  drive  for  a  new  student  union,  ggch     dorm.     The     correspondent  '■ 
» laded      children's    programs     and    I   am  aware  of  the   importance  of  ^ould  probably  be  the  dorm  news- ! 
■oridge  lessons  for  residents  of  the   this  largest  single  item  in  our  sta-  pj,per  editor  or  a  person  appoint-  \ 

dent    government    budget    and    as  p^  bv  the  dorm  presidenf  because  ' 
president  I  would  seek  to  see  that   ^f  j,is  interest  in  writing.  | 

wo  finally  achieve  the  completion  of       ^^6    •'stringer"    would    forward 
a  union  building  and  union  program   j^  ^^e  paper  all  news  of  interest  i 
which   WiU   compare  favorably  with  ^^^.j,    ^^    ^^j^j    ^^,^^5    ^^^j    i^t^a- ' 


Village. 

This  urogram  should  become  a 
I>art  of  GM's  yearly  activities,  he 
«aid.  . 

PROBLEM 

Since  1953  when  tlie  trustees  in- 
stituted Satiu-day  classes  at  Ca- 
rolina, the  campus  has  been  faced  that  GM  extend  itself  further  into 
V  ith  a  serious  problem  of  providing  f^nother  field  of  its  work — coopera- 
a  recreational  program  adequate  tion  with  Victory  Village  officials.' 
for  a  growing  studetit  body.  Thej  "The  hundreds  of  people  who  live 
best  center  for  such  development  is  'n  Victory  Village  pay  student  fee* 
Graham  Memorial  which  is  sitU  but  do  not  find  time  to  take  part 
iKiused  in  the  wing  of  the  building  in  many  of  the  GMAB-sponsored 
originally   begun   in   1932.  activities,"   he  said.  | 

"It   has   become  clear  that   until       "This  year  GMAB  has  spent  some 

n    new    student    union    building    is  of  its  funds  in  arranging  activities 

constructed,  Carolina  union  program  tor  Victory  Village  children  and  in 

uill   be  so  cramped  that  its  effec-  dents  of  the  villege.  | 

liveness  will  contthue  to  he  serious-      "I  believe  that  fun^  made  aval- 

ly    limited,"    he    said.  ,  ."sponsoring   bridge  lessons   for  resi-i 

"In    the    past    few    months    the  lable   for   stich   projects   should    be" 

Board  of  Directors  of  GM  succeed-  increased  and  that  Victory  Village 

tcl   in  obtaining  administration   ap-  programs  should  become  a  definite 

proval  of  a  drive  to  obtain  a  new  part   of   the   GMAB   yearly   activi- 

union  building  through  a  direct  ap-  ties,"  he  said. 


that  of  State  and  WC,"  Evans  said,  ^^^^j,  g^d  would  write  occasional 
"i   am   also    interested    in   seeing  /.olumns 

He  would  a|so  report  on  other 
items  of  interest  on  dorm  incidents 
and  dorm  life'  in  general.  "Some- 
times topics  of  bull-sessions  make 
good  editorial  page  copy,"  said 
Sloan. 

Sloan  said  the  dorm  correspon- 
dent would  not  keep  regular 
hours,  but  would  know  how  to 
take  a  stor>%  and  vtrould  know  that 
it  was  his  job  to  take  all  news  to 
The  Daily  Tar  Heel. 

But     this     "stringer"     system, 

(S^e  SLOAN,  Page  4) 


Air  army  headquarters 
man  said  the  latest  incident  in  a 
series  of  Israeli  border  clashes 
this  week  was  a  one-hour  gun 
battle  between  Israel  and  Jordan 
forces  on  the  northern  frontier. 
He  said  an  Israeli  patrol  inter- 
cepted "a  unit  of  Jordan  legion- 
naires while  entering  Israeli  ter- 
ritory northeast  of  Megiddo." 

The  spokesman  said  that  as  the 
Israeli  patrol  approached  the 
scene,  automatic  weapons  and 
rifle  fire  opened  up  from  Jordan 
'  positions  across  the  frontier. 
I  Under  this  cover,  the  Jordan- 
I  ian  legionnaires  escaped  back  into 
I  Jortian,  the  spokesman  declared,  j 
j  He  said  the  exchange  lasted  an 
I  hour  but  there  were  no  Israeli 
'  casualties.  Megiddo  is  about  25 
miles  southeast  of  Haifa.  j 

PARIS— (AP)— A    Paris    Leftist 
paper  reported  today  France  will  I 
provide    air    cover    for    Israel    if 
hostilities  break     out     again     be- 
tween Israel  and  Egypt. 

The  report  was  neither  denied 
nor  confirmed  by  French  officials 
in  Paris. 


j      Do»  Siiirley's  jart  trio  -will  nsh' 
'  CT    in  the  Sophomorc-IDC's   Spring 
Swing      Festivities      in      Memorial 
Hall    from    4-6:30    p.m.    today.  j 

I  ' 

I      Jazz   pianist   Shirley   will    be  ac- 

j  companicd    by    Daivd    Moore    and 


Max   Gardner   Award  will   be 
nounced  here  tonight. 

The  award,  created  by  the  will 
of  the  late  Governor  Gardner,  goes 
each  year,  "to  that  member  of 
the  faculty  of  the  Consolidated 
University  of  North  Carolina, 
who,  during  the  current  scholastic 
year,  has  made  the  greatest  con- 
tribution to  the  welfare  of  the  hu- 

1 
man  race." 

The  award  carries  a  cash  grant 
from  the  annual  income  of  a  $25, 
000  trust  fund. 

The    winner   of    the    award    will 
be  named  at  a  banquet  to  be  held 
at   Lenoir  Hall   at  6:30  p.m.  •Rep- 
resentatives of  all  three  branches 
j  of  the  Consolidated  University  will 
was  changed  so  as  not  to  conflict '  ^  J^^nt-,.Th«  Consolidated  Uni 
with 
game 


For  Committee  Service 

Frank   C'.routhei*  Thursday  re.sio^ned   Irom    tlit-   race   Un 
editorship  oi  The  Daily  Tar  Heel. 

Crowther  •dropped  oitt   of  the  rare   in  oider  10  de\(»te 
more  time  to  the  Carolina  .Symposinm,,  he  said. 

Listed  as  his  reasons  ior  leaving  the  campaign  were  lark 
ol  experience  in  'the  mechanics  of  jotirnrlism"  as  opposed  to 
"kno\vled.£fe  of  symposium  procedures," 
_ — ! ^     Crowther  said   the   decision   was 

made  with  "certainty  determina- 
tion and  purposefulncss  . . .  after 
making  another  appraisal  of  my 
past  experience  and  weighing  my 
capabilities  with  my  basic  in- 
terests . . ." 

"I   feel   that   the   Symposium   is 
more    attuned    to    my    capiacity." 
Tht  winner  of  the  annual  Oliver  |  j^g  stated. 

Crowther  expressed  thanks  to 
the  people  aiding  in  his  campaign. 
He  said,  'I  hope  they  will  not 
feel  -I  have  let  them  down;  I  trust 
that  I  will  render  a  service  of  an- 
other kind  in  which  I  may  per- 
form   more    competently    and    for 


Max  Gardner 
Award  Will  Be 
Given  Tonight 


competently 
which  •  I    consider    myself   better 
prepared." 

Of  the  editorship.  Crowther 
said.  "I  certainly  do  not  minimize 
the   importance   and   singular   sig- 


Friday      night's      basketball 


"I  would  like  to  encourage  all 
to  attend  what  I  feel  will  be  a 
most  enjoyable  concert. '  Hallford 


Kenneth 
drums. 


Fricker     on      bass      and    said. 


Following  the  concert,  the  Duke 
Ambassadors  will  provide  music 
for  a  campus-wid?  dance  to  be 
held  from  8-11  p.m.  in  Woollen 
Gymnasium. 

Concert  tickets  are  available  for 
$1  stag  or  drag  at  Graham  Memor- 
ial, the  "Y"  and  Kemp's.  Sopho- 
mores will  be  admitted. 

Miss  Barbara  Prago  and  Pee 
Wee  Batten  will  entertain  during 
the  concert  intermission.  Two  gift 
certficates  will  likewise  be  award- 
ed  to  ticket   holders  at  this  time. 

Included  in  the  selections  to  be 
featured  by  the  trio  are  "I  Can't 
Get  Started".  "Autumn  Leaves", 
"Sometimes  I'm  Happy",  and 
"Tenderly". 

IDC  President  Sonny  Hallford 
pointed  out  that  the  concert  time 


vcrsit^^  of  North  Carolina  is  com- 
posed of  the   University  at   Chap- 
!  el    Hill,    the    Woman's    College    at 
Greensboro    and    .V.   C.   State    Col- 
lege   in    italeigh. 
The    presentation  of   the   award 
j  which  is  in  the  form  of  a  citation, 
will   be   made  by   former  Lieuten 
!«ant   Governor  H.   P.   Taylor.   UNC 
President   William   C.   F'riday   will 
T     n         TU  AA  r\  preside   at   the   dinner.   The   prin- 

TO  Run  Three  More  Days  i  cipal   speech    of   the   evening   will 

be   given    by   Governor   Luther  H. 
Hodges.  Taylor  is  chairman  of  the 


English  Proficiency  Test 


English  proficiency  tests  will  be 
given  at  7  p.m.  Tuesday,  Wednes- 
day  and   Thursdav   in    106   Hanes   Gardner  Award  Committee  of  the  | 
pjgj]  "  UNC   Board   of  Trustees.  | 

The  irrvccaticr.  Ti-ill  be  delivered 
All  students  in  the  General  Col-   by  the  Rev.  Samuel  H.  Magill,  di-  ' 

rector  of  student  activities.  Music ' 
for  the  program  will  be  furnished 
by    the    University    Chorus   under 
the   direction   of   Dr.   Wilton    Mas-  ' 
on   of  the   UNC   Music   Dept.  j 


lege  who  have  completed  Eng- 
lish 2  are  required  to  take  the 
examination  before  they  are  to  be 
admitted   into  the   upper  colleges. 


Any  student  who  has  been  noti- 
fied  that  he   must   take   the  tests  [ 
and  who  has  not  done  so  has  been 
asked    to    attend    on    one    of    thej 
nights.   Failure   to   do  so  will   re-  j 
suit  in  a  $2  fine,  according  to  an  : 
announcement    from    the    General 
College.  ! 


TO  BMNG  STUDENTS,  MERCHANTS  TOGETHER: 


Legislature  Approves 
Revised  Constitution 

By   H-JOOIT  POLAK  t  April  2nd. 

Favorable  action  on   the  newly  Other  action  by  the  body  includ- 

revised  constitution,  appropriations  ed  the  introduction  for  future  con- 

ol  money,  and  a  bit  of  urging  di-  sideration  of  a  bill  recommending 

rected   at   the   University    Iraffic  that  the  Graham  Memorial  authori- 

c*mmittee   co^mposed   the   legisla-  ties  purchase  and  install  a  color 

live  action  of  tile  Student  Legisla-  televisi..n    set    and    a .  bill    wiiich 

ture's  meeting  last  night.  would      e.'lablish      a      permanent 

Both  a  resolution  to  accept  the  foreign  exchange  student  commit- 

cut  down  constitution  and  a  bloc  tee. 

of  21  junior-sized  bills  pertaining  Resignations    from   the   Legisla 

to  the  revised  Standard  were  pass-  ture  were  tendered  by  Repretcnr 

ed  without  disseht.  tative     Sylvia     Phillips     and     the 

Organizations  acquiring  subsidiza-  body's  clerk.  Miss  Kathy  LeGrande. 

ti  ;n  from  the  body  were  the  De-  Two    new    appointments    were 

bate   Squad,   which   received  $145  made    that  of   Ben  van   Woltz  as 

to  finance   its  impending   trip  to  new  chairman  of  the  Rules  Com- 

VV'ins  ton-Sal  em    to    participate    in  mittee  by  acclamation  of  the  Leg- 

Ihe  ACC  debate  toitrnament;  the  islature,  and  David  Evans  as  a  new 

Carolina  Quarterly,  which  got  $375,  representa-fivt^. 

and  the  UNC  Ofatluate  Club.  The   reading   of   a   letter   from 

In   a:r«3/tttlon  ^)assed    unani-  new    Chancellor    William    Aycock 

mously  the  Univefsity  Traffic  Com  thanking  the  body  for  their  recent 

mittee   was    Urged    to    amend    its  expression   of  confidence   in  him  \  the  future,"  Young  said, 

rule.s  to  allow  residents  of  Town  and  voicing  his  trust  in  the  Legi>-       "Next,  fall,"  Young  said,  "there 

lien's  in  to  park  in  the  Morehead  lature  completed  the  business  of  { will  be  a  'Students'  Day'  and    a 

Planetarium  lot  on   election   day,  the  meeting.                                       blanket,  across-the-board   discount 


First   Students    Day   Observed   Here 


Today  will  be  the  first  'Stu- 
dents' Day  of  Values"  in  Chapel 
Hftl. 

Students'  Day"  has  been  set 
up  to  bring  the  students  and  mer 
chants  of  Chapel  Hill  and  Carr 
boro  together,"  said  Ken  Clark, 
one  of  the  backers  of  the  event. 

Chapel  Hill  and  Carrboro  mer 
chantj  who  display  banners  in  their 
window^-  will  be  participating  in 
the    "bargain  day. " 

"Plans  are  now  in  the  works 
for  another  observance,  of  'Stu- 
dents' Day"  next  fall,,  said  Bob 
Young,  president  of  the  student 
body  "I  hope  this  one  will  be  a 
great  success." 
COOTfftATIVI 

•'  'Students'  Day*  has  taken  the 
time  of  many  persons  to  plan  this 
particular  day,"  said  Young.  "The 
merchants  have  been  most  coop- 
erative in  thirf  experimental  en- 
deavor. 

'The  success  of  this  particular 
day's  program  will  determine 
whether  or  not  they  are  held   in 


to  all  students  by  all  members  of    the  student  body  was  very  fortun- 

the  Merchants'  Assn."  1  ate  in  receiving  the  benefits  that 

Young  said  that  to  him,  this  \vas    have  been  assured,  since  this  is  to 


BOB  YOUNG 

•  hopes  for  success 


i  thanks  to  the  merchants  partici- 
the  ideal  "bargain  day,"  for  stu-  be  the  first  time  that  a  program  pating  and  he  hoped  that  the  pro- 
dents  who  shop  with  the  local  mar-  of  this  type  has  ever  been  attempt-  gram  would  prove  to  be  of  value 
chants.  He  expounded  further  that  ed.  [to  many  individual  students. 


IDC  Discusses 
'Mail  Service, 
I  Dorm  Standings 

j  Discussion  of  slow  mail  service 
j  and  dormitory  standing  in  intra- 
1  murals  were  part  of  IDC  business 
during  a  meeting  W^ednesday 
I  night. 

Paul  Carr,  chairman  of  the 
j  special  committf-  investigating 
!  mail  service,  said  he  had  talked 
'  to  the  postmaster  about  the  late 
]  delivery  of  mail  in  district  five 
i  ( Battle  -  Vance  -  Pettigrew  dormi- 
';  tory)  especially. 

He  said  the  postmaster  was  un- 
:  able  to  distribute  mail  everywhere 
I  early  in  the  day  because  there 
I  was  not  enough  help.  To  solve 
'  the  problem,  the  postmaster  had 
I  asked  for  a  substation  on  the 
I  campus,  but  had  been  refused  by 
the  administration. 
INTRAMURALS 
Jimmy  Womble.  chairman  of  the 
i  IDC  intramurals  committee,  an- 
I  nounced  that  Everett  lead  with 
i  386  points;  Battle-Vance-Pettigrew 
was  second  with  340.8:  Joyner 
third  with  338.8.  He  said  he  was 
trying  to  get  plaques  or  certifi- 
cates to  be  rewards  for  winning 
teams  and  to  be  kept  in  the  dorm 
vantage  of  the  valuco-  that  would  social  rooms, 
be  offered.  He  also  said  that  he'  Sonny  Hallford,  UK"  president, 
wished     to     express     his     sincere    said   the   names   of  all   candidates 

for  dorm  presidents  and  vice-pres- 
idents must  'be  submitted  to  him 

its 


The  Merchants  As^n.  has  been 
most  enthusiastic  in  its  endorse- 
ment of  the  idea,  and  they  feel 
that  it  has  tremendous  potential 
value  to  both  the  students  and  to 
Ihcm.selves,"  the  president  report- 
ed. 

The  student  body  head  went  on 
to  express  thanks  to  the  persona 
who  have  been  most  responsible  for 
recognit..>n  for  his  industrious  ef- 
fort in  forming  ihe  achievement 
of  the  set-up. 

"Don  Furtado  has  been  chair- 
man of  the  Student  Committee 
and  he  and  his  group,  Wayne  Ven- 
ters, Bob  Jones  and  Betty  Carolyn 
Huffman,  have  done  an  outstand- 
ing job  in  the  amount  of  time  that 
they  have  had  io  work,"  Young 
went  on  to  say. 

SINCERE  THANKS 

In  conclucfing.  Young  hoped 
that   all   students  would    take    ad- 


FRANK   CROWTHER 

. . .  withdraws   from    race 

nificance  of  The  Daily  Tar  Heel 
and  still  stand  behind  everything 
I  have  proposed  in  my  platform, 
maintaining  that  the  payer  should 
rol'lect  a  more  coherent  picture 
oi    the    University's    life." 

Crowth?r  said  of  his  plans  for 
the  Symposium,  "I  have  been  com- 
paring last  year's  publications  and 
genera!  information  concerning 
the  Syniposium  while  trying  to 
formulate  and  correlate  some  of 
my  own  ideas  which  I  think  relev- 
ant and>J>ossibiy  worthy  of  consid- 
erdtion  for  l^e   1958  presentation. 

"In  renewing  these  facts.  I 
realize  that.  Id  perform  the  cali- 
ber of  job  whic'J  will  necessari- 
ly command  most  of  my  extra- 
curricular time  would  have  to  be 
spent  in  associatibn  with  the  Sym- 
posium committee  and  therein 
functioning  in  any  assigned  ca- 
pacity." 


Games  To  Be  On  TV 

North  Carolina's  bid  for  tha 
NCAA  bask«>^Hall  championship 
will  b«  carriad  on  at  least  two 
TV  stations  in  this  state.  Greens- 
bore  Mndi  Charlotte  have  an- 
neuncod  plans  to  carry  the  gam- 
es f'ridsy  and  Saturday. 


by  today.  The  IDC  will  have 
election  Wednesday,  April  3. 


IN  THE  INFIRMARY 

StMltonts  in  the  Infirmary  yes- 
terday Included: 

Misses  Anita  Edwards,  Frances 
Plyler  and  Br^ce  Morton.  Rob- 
ert Paine,  Francis  James,  San- 
ford Thomson,  Benton  Beard, 
Roy  Cashion,  David  Collins,  Raid 
Brawiof,  Tate  Robertson,  Nor- 
man Draper,  Bobby  Deavcr, 
Claud*  Harris,  Richard  Eaton, 
William  Ceurie,  Stephen  Biaiek, 
Charlos  Northcutt,  Harvey  Jones, 
Thoihas  Saboski,  Charles  Davis, 
Joe  Brown  and  John  Amy. 


^i  »1 


^Kot  rm> 


Battle  ^^^ts  In  Ralefghr 
There  s  Really  No  Reason 

President  Friday's  appearance  in  Raleigh  betore  the  Legislatures 
appropi  iations  committee  marJced  the  major  point  of  a  long,  planned 
battle  on  the  part  of  the  University. 

The  br.ttle.  ^funairilv,  was  to  provide  higher  salaries  for  faculty 
members  and  tnoie  Mhney  for  library  books  and  journals. 

It  has  beer,  a  most  important  tattle,  and  it  has  not  V^en  without 

its  victims.  The  University's  resigninf^  head  librarian,   for  one,  ■bhike 

the   goody-goody   c-rimpus   silence 

by  telling,    in    exptesive    words, 

what  the  prqpQsgj^^IiibrM^  cut 


FRIDAY,  MARCH  21,  195^ 


FRIDA^ 


FORMER  CO-EDITORi|SiA^YS;. 

Southerhers  Never 


means  to  him.,.      , 

We  congratulate  Pre.sident  Fri- 
day for  the  intelligem^i^nner  in 
which  he  has  carried  oUl'  the  Uni- 
versity's appeal.  He  has  seen  to  it 
that  friends  of  the  University  are 
well  prepared,  intellectually,  to 
argue  for  more  money.  a«d  he  has 
done  a  lengthy  zftid  firing  personal 
job  of  politicking  for  more  than 
Si. 5  million  iff  £x|va<  appropria- 
tions. •  •  '  *•' 
*              *  * 

But  should  a  Consolidated  Uni- 
versity president  be  called  upon  to 
fight  in  a^  lev)fi»lati«;e  ].>ody  for 
moncv  with  "whitJi  it>  vjliu  his  luii- 
versitvr  We  dont  think  so.  WlU- 
i;nn  Friday  has  no  more  business 
in  :  meeting  of  the  Joint  Approp- 
riations C'onnnittec  of  the  North 
Carolina  Cieneral  Assembly  than 
he  dots  in  a  panty  raid. 

The  reason  Pre^idem  Friday-  has 
to  spend  so  muclitiinle  ui  Raleigh 
is  (juite  clear.  It  ls^ie^bbiM>xious 
line-item  budget  tlie  University 
has  to  cope  with. 

The  line-item  budget  specifies 
exact Iv  how  nuich  money  the  Uni- 
\ersitv  receives  to  use.  and  it  speci- 
fies how  to  use  it. 

The  (ieneral  .\sseml)ly  should 
aljolisii  the  line-item  tvpe  budget; 
Instead,  it  should  make  a  blanket 
appropriation  to  the  University 
and  leave  it  up  to  President  Fridav 
and  his  business  officers  to  de- 
termine what  goes  where. 

Then  the  otnrs  of  fighting  f«)r 
a  budget  of  certain  proportirms 
would  lie  on  the  State  Board  of 
Higher  Fducr'tion,  which  submits 
budgets  anyway  to   the   .\dvisorv 


Budget  C^)mm^ic«a. 

And  President  Friday  would  be 
ifr.ee  , to  ..sp^id  ^ii^.time  where  he 
should  spejijkiiitHirt^p^tfit^.  *" 
the  cliassiooms  a^!^  li|^i3|lty  pffices, 
ill  the  Libraty  attd  Gtkbam  Me- 
nioriJil.      ,    ^^-  ,  :   ;  ^  ^1. 

Meanwhile,  untiT  tlie  General 
Assembly  sees  the  light  and  abol- 
ishes the  old  budget,  we  wish  the 
University  a  h.iid  fight  and  a-sweet 
victory  in  Raleigh. 

fslada  On 

Columbia: 

Expected 

Says  a  news  st{»rv:  'N'o  action 
has  been  taken  by  the  liaternitics 
a0et:^ed^v  tlje  r(ftyiuly, reinforced 
S.  C:(Jhi^li#i,  S«|,^  t^vcS-h<i)inj^  park- 
ing   }^an\--'    .  *:i      v.f      .' 

*?<'othing  c(^i]d  be  truei*.  No  ac- 
tion has  been  taken  by  the  or- 
ganizations invol^e(l.  just  U'S  no 
action  was  going  to  be  taken.  The 
oulv  ■action"  involved  cr-ine  when 
pledges  were  sent  Ironi  the  fra- 
ternitv  houses  to  spin  wheels  on 
their  superiors'  cars,  and  thus  beat 
the  parking  ban. 

The  rf)wn  ol  Chapel  II ill  act- 
ed quite  justifiahlv  when  it  le- 
instMed  the  ban.  It  ga\e  the  fra- 
ternities a  chance  to  come  up  with 
answers:  the  fraternities  were  sel- 
fish and  la/y,  and  they  did  not 
answer. 

It  is  a  good  lesson  in  being  a 
part   of  the  ccnmnunity. 


Pogo  SHd(s  Airent  Stable 


t\'hife  Presidemial  candidate 
BiH  Baum's  "Student  Senate" 
piOinise  appears  to  be  a  good  one, 
it  also  appears  to  be  the  only  one 
he  is  going  to  make  in  spring 
elections. 

A  man  cannot  be  elected  to  an 
office  here  on  the  strength  of  one 
campaign  plank.  He  inust  deliver 
manv  of  his  opinions  to  the  camp- 
us, and  he  must  at  least  promise  to 
lcx)k  into  seveial  areas  that  need 
repair. 

Jf  Baum,  running  for  the  presi- 
dencv  of  the  student  body  on 
the    University  ^^irtv;   ticket,    ha> 


The  Daily  Tar  Heel 


Tke  official  itudeoi  publitdtion  of  tbe 
Putiiuatiuns  Bujird  ol  the  University,  of 
North  <!<ir<ilin<a  Miu-rt-  it  l^  ()uhli8he't 
daily  except  M'>ndiiy  and  examinatioi 
•pd  vaiation  pericid.s  and  summer  terms 
Entprcd  a.s  <criind  class  matter  in  the 
0"Jit  office  in  Chapel  Hill.  N  C,  undei 
the  Act  oi  Marih  8.  1870  Sub.scriptioc 
ratp.%  mailod.  S4  per  yoar.  $2  50  a  semen 
!er.  delivered.  $6  a  fear.  $3  50  a  lemet 
ler 


lfiafle*nihpr  (WinKes-  nV^i«5   not 
made   theiii    public  "*** 


Editor 


FRED  POWTJEDGI 


Xlana^ins  Ekiilor 


News  Editor .. 


CLARKE  JONES 


-H? 


NANCY  HILL 


Sport.*  Editor    

Btisine.s.s   Manager 


LARRY  CHEEK 
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tDfl  uaiAL     a  I  AH-    -    VV  o«tuy     aear*. 
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NEWS  STAFF— Grahaih  Shyder,  Edilh 
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Proof  Reader      Jimmy  Creighton 


Ills  idea  of  a  "Student  Seiuvte' 
is  a  gocxl  one — on  t  h  e  surfac  e. 
P»iit  the  students  know  very  little 
about  the  idea  beside>  its  names 

"The  senate  will  be  completely 
a  [)olic  y-making  body."  says 
Uaiim.  "Its  work  will  provide  the 
aiiiwer>s.  as  far  as  the  :-.lminist ra- 
tions" St  iiids  are  ccjiicerned.  U)  the 
problems  now  lacing  the  campus. 
Where  there  is  a  need  for  action, 
the  student  senate  will  examine 
the  need,  using  all  the  evidence 
and  kiiow!ed'>c-  at  hand.  ;  ■  id  its 
decisions  shall  be  the  goals  to- 
ward which  the.  administration 
will  work  during  its  tenuic  in 
<  t'jice." 

Baum  has  said  his  senate  would 
meet  twice  a  year,  and  it  wcjuld  be 
c-omp<')sed  cjf  represenratives  from 
dormitcii  ies,  .sonorities'  a^id  fra- 
ternities. 

.Ml  this  would  he  line  if  the 
Unixersity  didii  t  alieadv  lia\e  a 
student  senate— the  Student  Legis- 
latine.  Its  members  are  chosen 
not  oniv  from  fraternities,  .sorori- 
ties and  dovmiiories,  but  from 
town  re.HdeiUs  and  married  stu- 
fleiits  as  well.  Its  job  is  to  meet 
once  a  week  to  form  jxilicy. 

There  is  no  need  for  a  student 

senate. 

*  *  * 

,Ir  is  the  execiitHxe's  duly  to 
act  :  ;.  spikesinan*  aim  leader  for 
the  sfttdent  l)od\  and  to  cany  cmt 
legislaiiou  passed,  by.  tljie, Student 
Legislature.  He  ,  rjsi  supfjcscd  to 
form  his  own  policv.  eillui"  bx 
liiinstll  .Iff  Afjth  tJjf  assistance  ol 
a  cabi^iet,^  Iir%liis  instincc.  sticli 
a  .senate  wotild  ofe|i;o<>d»  biir  Ijtaum 
should  not  pi*omlslr''^'ts  decisloirs 
shall  be  the  goals  toward  w'hich 
the  administration  will  work..." 

To  do  that  would  be  tcj  promise 
either  the  ineffectual  or  the  im- 
jwjssible.  .\ny  decisions  that  would 
come  out  of  such  a  mixture  of 
people  would  either  be  obvious 
or  so  unrealistic  as  to  make  them 
impossible  to  act  on. 

And,  candidate  iiaum.  the  .stu- 
dents need  some  more  planks.  A 
one- pi  an  R  platform  is  a  pogo 
stick. 


Former  Daily  Tar  He«l  Co- 
Editor  Ed  Yoder,  now  a  Rhodes 
Scholar  at  Jasus  Ceiiege  in  Ox- 
ford, balo-w  explains  how  a 
southerner  can  reconcile  him- 
s^  to  the  differences  that  set 
fh*'  South  per. 

OXFORD.  England  -r  AbsCiWe 
makes  small  loves  less  and  great 
loves  greaten-'-'lhe  French.  U;q|i-, 
\z\  La  Roichefo|K?auld  once  wrote. 

My  mpving  from  the,  ^^ytfi  .toy 
foreign   s6ii-  iitii   convinced   m^,\ 
'not  bnly^  tliat>  lia  Rochefoiipaulcl 
knewVhereof.he  spoke,  but.  that   . 
the  South  falls  under  the  second- 
heading:   The   great  loves  wliicfii 
absence    makes  ;tUe    great^. 

We  southernters'  find  ourselves 
in  the  minority  among  Ameri- 
cans at  Oxford.  But  we  find  that 
our  p^eantry  has  been  borne 
before  us,  and  that  one  thing 
cannot  be  denied  the  South:  The 
mythologies  surrounding  it.  all 
the  thick  catalogs  of  splendor 
and  hokum,  have  carried  far. 

It  brings  a  special  glint  to  the 
Englishman's  eye  when  you  tell 
him  you  are  from  Dixie.  You 
suspect  that  behind  that  glint 
may  be  the  vision  of  a  cotton 
field  hoed  by  darkies  in  chains, 
a  Simon  Legree  "  cracking  his 
whip  and  calling  up  his  blood- 
hounds, pernaps  a  .  Faulkner's 
Snopes.'or  a  Tennessee  ■  Williams'  ; 
Big  Dadfly— or  eVen  a  l^^gahead  .i 
being  rolled  dowji  Erskinc  i:&\A-  ^ 
wells  Tobacco  Road.  But  in  ex- 
ceptional cases,  the  glint  may 
have  behind  it  a  curiosity  stem- 
ming from  disbelief  that  any  re- 
gion can  sustain  "both  Uncle  R^- 
mus  and  lak  Ridge"— to  borrow 
a  phrase  from  me  late  W.  T. 
Poik.  All  the  same  the  glint  is 
tliere. 

This   intense   interest,   found 
in  foreign  parts,  has  made  me 
do  more  serious  thinking  about 
the  South  than   I've  ever  done 
in  one  short  period  before,  and 
I  can't  deny  that  those  thoeghts 
have  been  colored  by  a  certain 
hue    of    nostalgia.     In    detach- 
ment,  the    insignificant   things 
seem    to    fade   away,   the    real 
,Mf.     landmerHs  to   l»^m  larger. 
f^y-'     Being  out  of  the  South  has  dif- 
rni;  lereiit -civets    Of)    uiflerent    peo- 
~     pie.  ♦hough.  A«i»w  weeks  ago,  I 
received  a  letter  from   a   friend 
who   has   left   the    South — if   for 
different  reasons,  and  il  to  gD  a 
shorter  distance. 

"If  there's  any  real  social  prob- 
lem for  the  educated  white  fr:m 
the  South."  my  friend  wrote, 
"that  is  it — how  to  go  home 
agJl'n." 

The  migration  totals  from  the 
South,  par^cularly  among  young- 
er college  graduates,  prove  the 
,  wisdom  of  th.sc.  words.  It  is  a 
problem — going  home;  but  for 
me  it  is  not  a  problem  without 
an    answer. 

T  )0  many  contempararies.  I 
think,  look  on  the  South  as  re- 
tarded, as  lagging  behind  her 
a?grc'«iv3  neighbors  to  tlve 
North  and  West,  without  realiz- 
ing that  there  is  an  opposite  side 
to  the  coin.  Certainly,  her  health 
is  bad.  she  spends  a  paltry 
amount  of  money  per  capita  on 
education,  she  commits  more 
crimes  of  violence  per  'Square 
,  mile  than  any  othqr- region,  and 
it  can't  be  denied  that  simething 


ED  YOOER 

...  still. a  Con.fedej-flfc 

must  be  doWe  about  her  check- 
ered backwardness.  But  it  is  mis: 
taken  to  look  on  her  slowness 
to  act  as  a  vice  and  nothing 
else,  for  in  the  South  I  think 
you  find  an  illustration  of  the 
old  truth  that  most  vices  are  but 
virtues  pushed  to  an  oxtreme. 

The  problem,  then,  is  not  so 
much:  How  can  the  southeVner 
go  home  again?  But:  'How  can 
the   southerner    reconcile    him- 
setfj  to    the    differences    which 
S]|t'Vhe  South  apart  and   learn 
ip   eppreciste  what    is   good    in 
th^se  differences? 
Southerners    may    move  away. 
But    t'le    odd    thin:;    abciU  4hose 
who  leave  is  that     in     s'»     many 
c.is:s  they  look  on  their  decamp- 
ment    as     a    mc»re     geographical 
ciiange.    No    matter     whore      he 
goes,  the  southerner  never  stops 
thinking  of   himself  a  •  a   south- 
erner. He  may  even  try  to  keep 
his    drawl,    though    that    is    only 
a    superficial    mark    of    being    a 
southerner — if    still    one    of    un- 
told significance. 

The  departed  southerner  does 
maintain  his  identity.  But  along 
with  it  he  feels  a  certain  guilt. 
I  call  it  "guilt"'  because  he  some- 
how feels  that  he  must  apologize 
for  having  left.  The  migratory 
gui:t  complex  ise-.pecially  strange 
in  a  cuntry  where  people  move 
around  as  much  as  they  do  m  the' 
U.  S.  But  there  .>*eem|  to- remain 
an  invisible  magnet  of  tradition, 
fond  memory,  .kinship,  which 
went  be  denied.  The  natural 
question  is.  of  course,  why 
southerner?  move  anyway  if 
movin:j  makes  them  uncomfort- 
able. 

And  it  does  make  them  unccm- 
fortable.  Robert  Pcnn  Warren, 
the  southern  novelist  who  has 
l2ft  to  teach  at  Yale,  gives  an  un- 
mistakable sample  of  the  gpilt 
complex  in  his  recent  book,  "Seg- 
regation." Pctfn  Warren  has 
toured  the  South,  interviewing 
old  and  new  friends,  seeiqft,  old 
environs,  and  trying  (and  suc- 
ceeding) t3  put  the  race  problem 
on  a  human  basis.  As  h<;  leaves: 
'Out  of  Mc?nfphis  I  lean  back 
in  my  seat  on  the  plariq.  and 
watch  Ih?  darkness  slide  'by.  I 
know  what  thc^  southerner  feels 
go  n?  out  of  the  Sout,h.  the  re- 
lief, the  expanding  visas ...  .1 
feci  the  surge  of  rsfief.  "But  I 
know  what  the  relief  really  is. 
It  I's  the  relief  from  respbnsi- 
bility."  r 


L'il  Abner 


Penn  Warren  is  at  least  artic- 
ulate about  his  leaving.  But  you 
sense  in  his  words  the  relief  of  a 
man  wh^  is  not  really  relieved. 
He  clearly  feels  that  he  leaves 
his  native  region  in  an  hour  of 
peril  and  need:  Thus,  tlie  guilt 
complex. 

IhaVe  tallied  a  lot.abqu^;  dif*; 
fererices,  vices  and  vju^es*,- ifetlt 
one  of  course  wants  ;  ;to  «kHi6w 
where  they  .come  frOm»'and  why. 
The  first  tern ptation  is  to  attri|>-. 
ute  the  South's  distinctness  16 
the  Civil  War.  b  say:  "Well,  we, 
'  are  ih?  only  people  who  have- 
seceded  and  foitght  tfie  rest  of 
the  countn'."        •  •  ^u'  ' 

But  the  Civil  War  only  cem- 
ented a  feeling  of  sectional 
identity  which  can  be  traced, 
not  only  in  the  years  just  be- 
fore the  war,  but  as  far  back 
as  the  beginnings  of  the  Union. 

Southerners  are  notorious  talk- 
ers about  tradition.  But  tradition 
can  mean  all  things  to  all  men. 
Many  southerners,  myself  in- 
cluded, differ  radically  about 
that  tradition  from,  sa/.  Sen. 
-Eastland  of  Mississippi.  Sen. 
Eastland,  to  judge  by  appear- 
ance, believes  the  southern  tra- 
dition has  its  stronghold  in  a 
pow:^rfiil  and  nsisy  larynx  and 
the  intolerance  'of  the  Negro.  If 
so.  I  think  Eastland  and  others 
like  him  miss  the  irony  and  great- 
ncFS  of  southern  tradition. 

That  irony  is  that,  in  its  great- 
est farm,  southern  tradition  is  to 
b  found  more  in  the  way  people 
act  than  in  what  they  say.  Take 
ou"  bothersome  race  problem,  a 
rieki  littered  with  follies  for 
which  the  Sou'h  must  now  answ- 
er. For  all  the  things  its  errant 
statesmen  say  about  the  race 
problem,  for  all  the  vainglories 
of  the  Citizens  Councils,  and  not 
least  for  all  her  Pharasaic  out- 
side critics  say,  the  South  does 
have  much  to  be  proud  of  in  its 
person-t. -person  race  relations. 
The  way  of  a  bi-racial  society  has 
never  in  history  been  easy,  and 
the  South  has  made  as  good  a  job 
of  her  own  personal  feelings  be- 
tween white  and  Negro  as  any 
region  cursed  with  racial  tens- 
ion ever  has. 

To  say  this  is  not  to  apolo- 
gize for  legal  discrimination, 
poll  taxes,  bombings  of  Negro 
churches,  and  similar  acts  of 
bart>arism.  But  it  is  to  say  |hat 
while  our  red-gallused  Talma- 
ges  have  screamed  "Nigger" 
from  the  county  courthouse 
steps,  while  our  oym  bigoted 
declarations  have  made  it  hard 
for  us  to  live  civilly  together, 
we  have  done  so  —  if  in  an 
inevitably  feudal  way.  Despite 
our  advertisement  that  we  con- 
<  sider  the  Negro  an  inferior  hu- 
man being,  we  have  belied  that 
advertisement  in  personal  deal- 
ings and  have  been  willing  to 
judge  him  as  an  individual  and 
friend.  It  is  a  paradox;  but  it  is 
part  of  this  ironic  southern  tra- 
dition of  saying  publicly  what 
we  don't  really  feel. 

Southern  demagogues  have 
perverted  the  South's  instruc- 
tive concern  for  the  states' 
rights,  and  bamboozled  their 
constituents  in  doing  it.  But 
the  southerner  shouldn't  forget 


that  this  concern  had  important 
beginnings.  Thomas  Jefferson 
^  and  James  Madison  started  in 
-the  18th  Century  what  can  be 
seen  today  in  the  political 
thinking  of  men  like  Sens. 
^G«oi«e  and  Byrd,  both  of  them 
sow^emers  in  the  tradiMon. 

Jefferson  believed  in  strict 
^;;tt»nstriktton  o^  the  Constitu- 
i^len.^  !He  can«idered  tl^al;  >* 
.would  lead  to  the  protection  of 
:  minority  thinkli^  in  the  feder- 
al syafem.  Rightly  «r  wrongly, 
for  good  or  for  evil  foi"  the 
■:■  South,  tome  remnant  of  Jef fer- 
;  Ibn'i  thought  ondergrids  to- 
day's distrwat  of  the  Supreme 
Court  in  the  South.  Jefferion 
and  his  fellow  southern  Repub- 
licans despised  the  judiciary. 
For  under  Chief  Justice  Mar- 
shall it  became  the  armory  of 
the  Federalist  Party:  Tlie  big 
government,  weakened  states' 
rights  party,  the  "loose  con- 
struction" party,  whose  politi- 
cal philosophy  was  hammered 
out  in  the  anvil  of  northern  in- 
dustrial and  merchantile  inter- 
ests. The  Federalists  forgot 
that  the  Soyth  was  an  agrarian 
society  which  depended  on  the 
land,  and  insisted  on  the  tariffs 
which  contributed  as  much  as 
the  South's  "peculiar  institu- 
tion" of  slavery  to  the  out- 
break of  civil  war. 

The  South  has  borne  many 
slings  and  arrows,  much  "wav- 
'  ing  of  the  bloody  shirt"  for  its 
secession.  But  it  is  interesting  to 
note  that  the  first  talk  of  seccion 
did  not  begin  in  the  South.  It 
began  in  Massachusetts  among 
the  Federalists.  The  Supreme 
Court  decision  on  segregation 
has  brought  renewed  rattling  of 
the  nullification  sabre  but  that 
sabre-rattling  figures  in  the  old 
pattern  of  virtue  turned  to  vice, 
since  the  doctrine  pf  nullifica- 
tion was  first  used  by  Jefferson 
and  Madison  to  fight  the  Ali^ 
and  Sedition  Acts,  a  sort  of  18ni 
Century,  early-American  McCar- 
thyism.  which  threatened  civil 
liberties.  The  Virginia  and  Ken- 
tucky Resolutions  embodying  the 
doctrine  of  nullification  were  the 
result,  the  first  real  declaration 
that  the  new  republic  could  not 
survive  without  the  precious 
right  of  dissent.  All  of  this  gen- 
erated in  southern  minds. 

The  South's  concern  for  civil 
liberties  has  not  died.  McCar- 
thy-ism gained  no  real  sway  in 
the  South,  partly  l>ecause  of 
the  tradtion  handed  down  from 
men  like  Jefferson  and  Madi- 
son, partly  because  southerners 
•n  by  nature  trustful  of  their 
neighbors  and  unwilling  to 
think  evil  of  them  without  pro- 
per evidence.  It  is  noteworthy 
that  Sen.  McCarthy's  Waterloo 
in  the  Senate  was  prepared 
With  the  persistent  aid  of  south- 
erners, notably  Sens.  Ervin  of 
North  Carolina,  Stennis  of  Mis- 
sissippi, Sparkman  of  Alamaba, 
and  Fulbright  .of  Arkansas. 

I  can't  resist  adding  that  Sen. 
George  has  spoken  sensible  and 
v.tal  words  in  the  crises  of  re- 
cent American  foreign  policy 
which  have  been  heard  and  ad- 
mired abroad. 

(Contintied  In  Tomorrow's  Issue) 


By  A!  Capp 


»=!TSf».aiMEgW 


.<?THER  NEWSPAPERS  SAY; 

Conformity 
In  Fraternities 

I  Cornell  Daily  Sun 

» 

Ideally,  fraternity  life  provides  a  member'  with 
a  handy  opportunity  for  soclSiI  and  intellectnal  ex- 
perimentation. Brought  into  the  fraternity  environ- 
ment, tbe  memher  may  treat  it  as  a  mierocosmic 
reppeseatation  of  'i4ie  great  world,"  bat  one  where 
mobility  is  greatly  accelerated  and  testing  out  at- 
titudes  is  the  order  of  the  day. 

Thns,  fraternities  are  said  to  encourage  the  de- 
velopment of  the  individuaL  The  compact  society 
of  the  fraternity  membership  is  perfectly  suited 
for  ej^eriraentation  with  roles  and  attitudes. 
Through  the  simple  process  of  day  to  day  living,  in 
a  situation  of  quasi-democa'atic  rules  and  intensi 
fied  personal  relationships,  a  member  should  be 
able  to  attain  a  level  of  maturity  often  impossible 
outside  the  fraternity  system. 

But  although  the  fraternity  system  ideally  fos- 
ters individual  development  and  growth,  in  prac- 
tice it  encourages   a  group  conformity. 


When  a  student  jOins  a  fraternity  it  is  agreed 
that  he  will  give  up  a  part  of  his  individuality  to 
the  fraternity.  He  must  consent  to  live  under  cer- 
tain rules,  perform  certain  duties  and  assume  par- 
ticular responsibilities.  But  all  this  is  expected,  and. 
indeed,  necessary,  if  a  society  is  to  function  ef- 
fectively. 

What  is  not  necressarj-  is  the  conformity  of  at- 
titudes, ideas  and  ideals  which  fraternities  impose 
on  their  members.  And  what  is  most  dangerous  is 
the  conformity  of  anti-intellcctualism.  however, 
subtle,  which  is  maintained  at  this  University  large- 
ly because  of  the  existence  of  the  fraternity  sjstem. 


Fraternities  may  encourage  acadeinic  achieve- 
ment; somt  go  so  far  as  to  establish  study  tables, 
advisor  systems  and  enforce  study  times  for  the 
benefit  of  the  poor  student.  But  in  all  cases  such 
rules  are  essentially  designed  (1)  to  raise  the  house 
average;  and  (2)  to  keep  members  in  school  and 
th'is  maintain  the  revenue  level.  And  few  houses 
have  programs  aimed  at  creating  an  intellectual  at- 
mosphere for  the  bright  student.  In  fact,  there 
exists  a  lamentable  dichotomy  between  the  in- 
tellectual pursuits  of  the  classroom  and  the  social 
aspects  d  the  fraternity  house. 

House  bull  sessions.-  although  often  fascinating 
for  the  participants,  center  around  such  topics  as 
women,  rushing,  adventure  and  personality  analysis. 
Seldom,  we  believe,  can  discussions  on  philosophy, 
art  or  politics  be  found  on  anything  more  than  a 
superficial  plane.  And  while  such  discussions 
would  not,  per  se.  classify  a  fraternity  as  "intellect- 
ual," their  absence  is  perhaps  indicative  of  a  gen- 
eral lack  of  interest  in  intellectual  problems  which 
obtains  throughout  fraternity  liff. 

Substantially,  then,  a  memher  of  a  fraternity  is 
more  or  less  forced  to  forego  the  intellectual  as 
pects  of  his  college  career.  W^hile  this  is  not  al- 
way  discernible,  many  upperclassmen.  especially 
seniors,  look  back  upon  their  college  years  with 
considerable  regret  when  they  consider  the  neg 
lected  opportunities  for  intellectual  growth. 

Tlie  loss  of  individual  identity  is  also  evident  in 
many  other  ways.  Perhaps  the  freshman  rushec  has 
already  noticed  the  similarity  in  dress,  conversa- 
tion topics,  attitudes  toward  campus  affairs  and  re- 
actions to  controversial  questions  which  may  be 
said  roughly  to  typify  the  "fraternity  mind."  This 
kind  of  conform.ity  is  perhaps  minor  in  seriousness. 
but  it  is  at  least  worth  noting,  especially  if  consid- 
ered along  with  the  picture  of  the  freshman  just 
entering  the  fraternitj- — often  with  a  set  of  atti 
tudes  basically,  if  not  superfically.  dissimilar  to 
those  which  he  w411  shortly  acquire. 


As  a  f rfttermty  mirrors  the  -society  in  which  it 
exists,  so  it  is  bound  to  take  on  that  larger  society' 
characteristics.  But  this  does  not  mean  that  fra- 
hernities  mast  include  the  destructive  as  well  as  the 
constructive  elements  in  the  society.  As  essentially 
a  part  of  an  educational  institution,  it  would  seem 
thtft  a  fraternity  has  a  responsibility  to  promote 
not  conformity  but  individuality,  not  anti-intellect- 
ualism  but  intellectual 'develoiMnent.  This  the  fra- 
ternities have  been  both  unable  and  unwilling  to 
accomplish.  ' 

And  this,  it  would  seem,  constitutes  the  mo-t 
damning  charge  which  can  be  made  against  fra- 
ternities. Earlier  in  the  week  we  mentioned  the 
"good  points"  of  fraternity  life — the  points  on  whic  h 
fraternities  rush  the  freshmen,  and  because  of 
which  freshmen  pledge  fraternities.  It  remains, 
however,  for  the  rushee  to  measure  the  benefits  he 
will  receive  from  fraternity  life — and  they  are 
many — against   the  disadvantages. 

Many  freshmen,  probably  a  great  majority,  have 
no  concern  for  the  limitation  on  individual  ex- 
pression which  fraternities  induce.  A  small  number 
will  be  troubled  by  the  indifference  to  intellectual 
development.  But  for  those  happy — or  unhappy- 
few,  the '  time  is  ripe  for  careful  consideration  of 
the  problem:  How  much  of  yourself  is  worth  sac- 
rificing to  fraternity  conformity?  We  have  no  set 
answer;  and  perhaps,  the  question  itself  is  more 
iniportant  than  the  possible  answers.  But  there  will 
be   no  improvement  if  it  is  not   asked. 


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FRIOAY.  MARCH  22,  1957 

i .A-^ 


THE  DAILY  TAR  Nllt 


pAcb  THREI 


HAT^NINOS  ON  TH|  HIU: 


Chi  Psi  Pledge  Weekend  Heads  Social  Events 


They  Went  On^Giee  Club  Tour 


J  The  group   pictured  above  are  special   vocalists  with   the  Glee      Gray   and   Jerry    Furgason;    second    row,    Ralph    Harrinflfon,   Louis 

Club  which  left  on  its  spring  tour  Thursday  morning.  Left  to  right,       Hardee,  Don  Murphy  and   Earnest  Freeiand. 
front   row,   they   are   Ed   Sapp,    Bob   Barrow,  Maurice   Rhodes,  Don 


■~'i 


Medication  in  a  Shampoo 
...that  mrksl 

The  first  eflferfively  medi- 
cated liquid  shampoo  thai 
requires  no  prescription. 

THYLOX* 

medicated  shampoo 

•  •••••»•  •• 

contain-)  two  time?  more  active 

.ingredient*    for    protection 

a»ain.-it    Dandruff,    Itchy  scalp, 

i     Dermatitis.  Oily   scalp.   It  is  an 

V    ea^y   to   use.   pure,  safe   niedi- 

■■ .  rated  shampoo  with  a  pleasing 

•  -  .fragrance.  The  large  6'4  ounce 

,    bottle  costs  only  ...  ^  sr% 

I    HO    tA* 


Pharmaceutical  Division 
SHLLTON,  INC. 


CHA^U.  MIU..I*-** 


Free  Delivery 


Phone  9-8781 


rj 


DAILY 

,  ACROSS 

1.  Ctiafe 
5.  Slide 

9.  Timber  wolf 
10.  Corn  bread 
U.  Barnum's 
elephant 
12.  Unit  of 
weight 
14.  Genus  of 

Hzard 
Xp.  Witty 
saying: 

16.  Argent 
(abbr.) 

17.  Mental 
strain 

iO.  Cuckoo 

21.  Man's 
nickname 

22.  Perform 

23.  Sagacious 

24.  Blandish 
2«.  Close 
28.  Recline 

29  Exclamation 

31.  Pale 

32.  Annoyed 
34.  Exist 

■39.  The  deity 
36:  Sum  up 
37.  Utter 

suddenly 
39.  Suspends 
4 1   Cry  of 

bacchanals 

42.  Toward  the 
sheltered 
side 

43.  Marbles 

44.  Botch 

.     DOWN 

1.  Grooved 

2.  Caesar,  for 
instance 


CROSSWORD 


3.  Subside 

4.  Also 

5.  Table 
utensil 

6.  Bumpkin 

7.  Wayside 
hotel 

8.  Nuts 
11.  Burlap 

material 
13.  American 

Indian 
15.  Dappled 

18.  Seasoning 

19.  River 

.    (S.  A.) 

20.  Ventilate 


23.  Ob- 
noxious 
plant 

24.  Merri- 
ment 

25.  Bind 

26.  Mop 

27.  Shakes* 
pe«r- 
ian 
tragedy 

29.  Thicket 
fencea 

30.  Chance* 

32.  Memos 

33.  Narrow 
roadways 


EI331B    Bail 

HflSuaH  aaaa 

amaiaaaH 

uatf   aaa     an 


YM««r<ey'a  Aaa«ar 

35.  Flourish 

38.  A  grape 

39.  A  meat 

40.  Malt 
beverage 


Doctor  Here  Receives 
Research  Fellowship 


By  SUB  ATCHISOM 

THE  CAMPUS  SOCIAL  SWING 
for  the  wMkend  begins  tonight 
with  the  Chi  Psi's  opening  their 
pAedM  weekend  with  a  formal 
dance  at  the  Warfunrton  Duke 
Hotel  in  Diirham. 

■Rie  Quarter. Notes  will  provide 
the  music  for  the  ^^j  events  which 
will  ]»e  held  fro«i  |^12. 

Officers  of  the  pledge  class  and 
theif-  dates  attend4n|  the  dance 
will  be:  president.  Art  Scbweweli 
of  Stimmit,  N.  J.  wife  Miss  Martha 
Taylor  also  of  Summit;  vice  presi- 
dent, Jerry  Aijams*  of  Pleasant- 
vUle,  N.  Y.  with  Visa  Sue  Dean 
of  Pleasantville,,  N.V.;  secretary- 
treasurer,  Larry  Craver  of  Win- 
ston-Salem witli  Miss  Jill  Foltz 
of  the  same  town. 

The  lodge  will  be  the  sctue  of 
their  party  tomorrow  night  and 
the  Star  Dreamers  will  be  on  hand 
to  add  music  to  the  atmosphere. 

Sunday  afternoon  they  will  con- 
clude the,  big  weekend  with  a 
party  at  Hogan'8. 


DESSERT  PARTIES  seem  to  be 
gaining  more  popularity  as  the 
weeks  fly  by.  Thursday  night  the 
Kappa  Delta's  had  the  A  K  Psi's 
over  for  dessert  and  the  Alpha 
Cams  entertained  the  Tri  Delt's 
and  Pi  Phi's  at  a  dessert  party. 


THE  K  A'i  ^ave  ff  dinner  iwflrty  j  JIM  VANCE,  D  U,  is  pinned  U)^ 
at  their  hotue  ITiiirsday  ^venin^j  Barbara  Gates  of  Goucher  Col-, 
and  the  A  D  Pi's  were  the  caesbi. '  lege,  Baltimore,  Md. 


HAPPY 

PUERTO 

RICAN 

EMANCIPATION 

DAY! 

The  Intimate 
Bookshop 

205  E.  Franklin  St. 
Open  Till  10  P.  M. 


DqifytcNidf  !k)fa\  Banana  Split 


39^ 


j^flBBwatyjUiiiiMM* 


A  b^nquat  in  one  dish.  Three  dips 
of  Dairy  land  Ice  Cream  —  Straw- 
berry, vanilia,  and  chocolate,  each 
covered  with  topping  of  fruit, 
nuts,  and  smothered  with  whip- 
ped cream  and  garnished  with  red 
J  cherry. 


6]rl^«r^^rill^ifrf  And  Geifl  Specials 

OAIRYLAND  FARMS 


-••"if "  1 1 11  I  If 


Lennox 


Dr.  carl  W.  Gottschalk,  assistant 
professor  of  medicine  here,  has 
been  awarded  a  fellowship  for 
established    investigators. 

The  award  was  made  by  the 
American  Heart  Assn.,  the  parent 
organization  of  the  North  Caro- 
lina Heart  Assn. 

The    fellowship    becomes    effec- 

Absentee  Ballot  Requests 
To  Be  In  Four  Days  Ahead 

students  desiring  absentee  bal- 
lots for  the  coming  election  must 
present  a  written  reqtiest  four 
days  in  advance  of  the  election,  it 
was  announced  yesterday. 

Arthur  Sobel.  Elections  Board 
vice-chairman,  said  yesterday  that 
written  requests  must  be  handed 
in  to  the  elections  board  four  days 
in  advance  of  the  April  2  elec- 
tions. 


Tear  Gynf  Dancing 
Tryouts  To  Be  Tuesday 

Dancing  tryouts  for  the  Carolina 
Playmakers'  spring  production  of 
••Peer  Gynt."  scheduled  for  pre- 
sentation in  early  May.  wil  be 
held  Tuesday  at  Hillel  House-^from 
4   to  6  p.m. 

Kai  Jurgensen,  associate  profess- 
'  or  of  dramatic  art.  said  tryouts  for 
the. rest    of    the*  production    will 
take   piaco   early  in  April. 

The  Playmaker.s'  spring   produc- 
tion will  be  presented  at  the  out- 
door   Forest    Theatre    May    10.    11 
i  ahd  12,  directed  by  Jurgensen. 
j      Jurgensen    .said    the    important 
I  role  which  good  dancing  will  play 
j  in  the  production  of  Henrik  Ibsen's 
play    necessitated   the   early  danc- 
ing  casting. 

Twelve  dancers,  male  and  fe- 
male, are  needed  for  the  parts  of 
the  goblins,  and  one  woman,  danc- 
er-singer-actress, is  needed  for 
the  part  of  Anitra  (The  Green- 
clad).  The  dances,  choreographed 
by  Mrs.  Yvonne  Parker,  who  chore- 
graphed  the  Playmakers'  "Briga- 
doon"  will  call  for  versatility  and 
will  utilize  considerable  panto- 
mime. 


tive  July  1  and  runs  for  a  period 
of  five  years  .The  grant  of  money 
allows  the  recipient  to  spend  75 
per  cent  of  his  time  in  research 
work. 

Dr.  Gottschalk  will  continue' 
with  a  project  that  is  already! 
underway.  This  study  deals  withj 
the  kidney  as  it  effects,  the  heart. 
The  name  of  the  project  is  "A  I 
Mammalin  Micropuncture  Study  \ 
of  Some  of  the  Physical  Factors : 
in   Kidney  Function." 

Dr.    Gottschalk     attended     Roa-j 
noke   College   at    Salem,   Va.    and. 
received  his  M.D.  degree  from  the] 
University  of  Virginia.  His  intern- 
ship was  served  in  the  Massachu- 
setts  General   Hospital  in   Boston, 
ending  in   1946.  t 

The  next  two  years  were  spetit 
in  the  Army  Medical  Corps.  Much 
of  this  time  was  at  the  Field  Re- 
search Laboratory  at  Fort  KnoX. ' 
Here  de  did  work  in  the  field  of 
physiological  response  to  cold  eX' 
posure.  He  spent  eight  months  in ; 
Northern  Canada  on  this  project,! 

In  1951   Dr.  Gottschalk  was  ap- 
pointed consultant  to  the  Surgeon 
General's    Office    on    problems   ofj 
cold    injury.    He    .still    holds    this. 

position.  I 

I 
He  joined  the  faculty  of  the  UNC  j 

School    of   Medicine    in    1953. 


DR    CARL  GOTTSCHALK 

. . .  reCeires  grant 


Memorial  Award  Set  Up 
Honoring  Geologist  Here 


A  new  memorial   award   honor- 
ing the  late  Dr.  William  F.  Prouty 
i  has   been   established   here   to   be 
I  given  to  a  member  of  the  football 
j  squad    who   is  also   a   member  of 
senior  class. 

I      Dr.  0.  K.  Cornwell,  chairman  of 

the  Physical  Education  Dept..  said 

!  that     Dr.     Prouty's     three     sons. 

j  Frederick   M.   of  Montclair,   N.  J.. 

Chilton  E.  of  Pittsburgh,  Pa.,  and 

I  William   W.    of  Chapel   Hill,    are 

j  establishing  the  William  F.  Prouty 

Memorial  Award. 

Dr.  Prouty.  who  joined  the  UNC 
faculty  in  1919,  headed  the  Geolo- 
gy Department  from  1933  until  his 
death  in  June.  1949.  Before  com- 
ing to  Chapel  Hill  he  headed  the 
Geology  Dept.  at  the  Universily 
of  Alabama. 

All  three  of  Dr.  Prouty's  sons 
are  alumni  of  UNC,  {Frederick  at- 


tending 1928-31,  Chilton  receiving 
his  B.  S.  in  Geology  in  1936,  and 
William  receiving  his  A.B.  in 
Journalism  in   1938. 

A  large  trophy  with  the  winners* 
names  engraved  on  it  will  remain 
in  Woollen  Gymnasium,  Dr.  Corn- 
well  said.  Individual  winners  will 
be  given  medallions. 

Selection  for  the  honor  will  he 
based  on  such  factors  as  scholar* 

I  ship,  athletic  ability,  character,,  ex- 
tracurricular participation,  and 
general  all-around  campus  citizen- 

j  ship. 

The  individual  recipient  will  ba 

]  selected  by  a  five-man  committee, 
including  the  dean  of  students,  tiie 

I  football   coach,   the  athletic  direc- 

i  tor,  the  dean  of  admissions,  and 

j  the   chairman     of     the     Dept   ol 

I  Physical  Education. 


>    t-H,/  -r.  .■ 


-  1  .rf«-'r.;»x   ( 


aB9B 


FOR    JJNC     STUDENTS     ONLY 


'•vL 


r::.,. 


SALE 


*>\j>  Ji«. 


:'  i:!:^ 


l?SiS$-^  Special  Event  Fpr  UNtSttjcients   f'-W-^y 


^x 


To  benefit  from  this  sale,  ail  you  have  to  do  is  select  lahy 
..,,,-.       merchandise  in  our  store  (everything  is  plainly .  priced), 
'.;V^.'  ->      show  your  ID  card,  and  you  may  dedutt  a  Whopping  big 


15  <% 


*V-M  -I-' 


-  -  ■*>  J;r^ 


r 


l^~"^'  ^  No  qualifications  .  .  .  Select  anything  youWinf  or  niied.  Every- 

'  r>^\'  >  \  thing  bears  the  same  guarantee  of  satisfaction  asyis  customary 

I"  G  V^  i  ^^  ^"  times..  You  enjoy  the  same  everyday  privileges,  that  in- 

-   V^i'/l  elude  I 


iM 


»    > 


i% 


CHARGE    ACCOUNTS  -  LAYIWAYS  -  R^PUNDS 


-■>■'.•  V 


■•*•-■■? 


EXCHANGES  :  CREDITS'  ■ 


.,>.*.ii«^^v^^  to  remind  you,  at  J.  B.  ROBBINSyou  v/ill  fee  able  to  chcjbse  froili 

r^^AL,^^^  nationally  advertised  and  famous  name  brand  mferchjihdise,  in-     ^ 
V;-     :.  cludihg 


.;?»■**  J 


o  ■.-. 


*  SPOfttSWEAR 

*  EVENING  DJ^ESStS 

*  SHOES 
i^  LINGERIE 
it  LUGGAGE 


..  W^, 


'*f6Si'.S*t'  ',;<*»•  "^ 


it  SWiM  suits      '^' 
..  J^    ,.*  COSTUME  JEWELRY 
it  COATS,     SUITS,    DRESSY        , 
it  HATS         •  BAGS 
it  COSMETICS 


*W.-.  .^j^-' 


it  HOSE 

it  GLOVES 

it  GIFT  ITEMS 


WHETHER     A     SIMPLE     ACCESSORY     OR     A 
COMPLETE     ENSAMBLE,     VISIT^'AND     PATRONIZE 


THIS     SALE     FOR^  UN      C 


of  Chapel  Hill 

STUDENtS     ONLY 


m^ 


IT' 


^^ 


TN»  DAILY  TAR  HtlL 


FRIDAY,  MARCH  22,  1957 


New  IWA  Officers 

Miss  Betsy  McKunpn  vms  eltct-i  CoimwU  for  the   coihing  year, 
ed  ir«dimiar  ta  Mtve  Is  9nirf4    Cleeted  laceyfibside&t  wts  Miss 
dent  of  tiire  iMe^ihteiit  WoWah'»  l*incy  Jeriilgjttr: 


dyut 


miOEMTS' 


SPRING  SWING  SALE 


Covering 


OFF    ON    ALL 
"CAROLINA" 


•  GLASSWARE 

•  STATIONERY 

•  STUFFA  AlflMALS 


•  FELT  GOODS 

•  DECALS 

•  STICKERS 


Stiktenli  Must  PrMMit  ID  C«nls 

LEDBEHER-PICKARD 


illlDOl  LtttOM 


Busrndss  foir 


FOISTER'S 
CAMERA  SHOP 

li  Offering  Bargains 

Throughout   The    Store 

In  Co-Operating  With 

SPRING  SWING  SALE 


Bridge  lessons  will  be  given 
today  from  4  to  6  pjn.  in  the  Ben- 
dezvous  Boom  and  Hhursday  even- 
ing at  7:30  pjn.  in  the  Victory 
Village  Day  Care  Center. 
COMBO  CANCELED 

Mist  Unda  Mam,  director  of 
Graham  Mecborial,  has  announced 
the  combo  originally  scheduled 
for  the  Rendezvous  Room  Satur- 
day has  been  caneelled.  Hie  can- 
cellation has  been  Bade  because 
of  the  sophomore  class  dance 
which  is  arlso  planned  for  that  I 
night. 
WUNC-TV  I 

Today's  schedule  for  WUNC-TV,  j 
the  University's   educational  tele- 
visiMi   station,   chanael  4.    is   as; 
folloiws: 
12:45    Mu£ic 

1:00    Today  on  the  Farm 

2:00    Sign  Off 

1:30    Play  Period 

2:00    Sign  Off 

5:  IS    i^sic 

5:30    Mr.  Murgle'«  Musee 

5:45    Draw  Me  a  StcM7 

fi-M    Legi3latfy«   llevienr 

6:20    News  and  Safety 

6:90   American   Government 

7:U0    Museum  of  Art 

7:^    German  Cdurse 

8:15    Dr.  Schrivef 

9:00    World  of  Man 

9:S0    Lecture  HiU 
l(k0i»    Final    Edition 
10:05    Sign  O^ 


(CWtetnutd  fr&m  poffie  1) 
stated  the  fraternity  president. 

Albri^  is  fcr  s^afe  eA  fto%  smaU 
mdustries  have  pn>spered  in  this 
state  and  the  outlooJc  for  the  fu- 
ture. Smith  and  'Witt'sham  will  re- 
ply  on  hew  the  small  tadustries  in 
Jfottii  CaMlina  helps  thesn. 

Iftupear,  Iwading  the  seminar  en- 
titled "Attraction  ei  Nev/  Indos- 
tiy  into  North  Carolina,"  will  de- 
liberate^ Off  hilhtglftg  iWw  platffs  to 
this  state  and  Blass  and  Safford 
will  speak  about  the  industry  that 
hs»  airetudy  found  its  way  into  this 
fast-rising  area  of  industrial  growth. 


" 


Currie  wiQ  bead  a  discusslotf  oo 
the  "Imposed  State- Ttx  R«vi8iaM 
and  Ks  Effect  on  ^  IfidBsMil 
Deviel^ineiit  on    Noitt  -  GaittBUi 

"Tb^  probably  wm  be  fl»  feest 
seminar."  sthted  the  eh«q^te#  ya^si- 
dent. 

A  receptioB  ^r  speakers,  guests 
and  faculty  will  be  fa^d  M  the  Fa- 
culty Seminar  roomi  ^I-  Carroll 
Hall,  immediately  followiag  tiie  ev-. 
ening  program. 

Anyone  who  is  interested  in  this 
Fair  is  cordially  invited  to  aitt«id' 
as  this  event  is  open  to  tht*  puSlfe, 
Ratledge  said. 


Followthip  Sfionsors 
Film  Showing  Sunday 

The  United  Student  Fellowship 
is  sponacttin^  a  apeeiJd  presenta- 
tion of  the  motioa  liieture,  "Mar- 
tin ^nfltety"  tt  T  pi»i  Sufllay  at 
the  l/nited  Congregational  Chris- 
tian Church.  211  West  Cameron 
Ave. 

The  jnfbQc  h*i  teen  invited  to 
(he  s&oiifini. 


I 


SPRING  SWING  SALE 

For  Any  Potr  of  WOnjiens 
HIGH  HEELlSHOES- 

ONE  FAR  HOSE,  FREE. 

(Either  Plain   Of  Mtfsh) 

-    ' '\- 
ONE  VWOLrsHI||lENT  0| 

$199^©  Aji^  S^ 

SELUNG  toR  $199 

THRdbGH  SATURDAY 


VAMtS  to  $5.99 


ALEXANDERS  SHOE   STORE 


DIXIELAh^  90mp 

FROM  2  TO  5  "" 

SATURDAY  AFTERNOON 
FEATURING 

LES  SUTORIUS 

THE    PAflO 


Sloan 


(Contljmed  from  page  1) 

Sloan  said  a  regular  staffer  would 
be  released  to  cover  other  parts 
of  the  campus. 

The  second  of  Sloan's  points  was 
to  relate  world  imws  to  the  campus 
by  getting  comments  on  the  news 
from  various  members  of  the  facul- 
ty who  may  be  able  to  tell  the 
stor>'s  significance,  or  from  fac- 
ulty members  who  have  visited 
the  areas  of  the  world  in  which 
thft  news  is   taking   place. 

This  story   would   appear   as   a 


"sidebar"  or  related  story  with  be  done  without  any  major  ad- 
the  regular  associated  press  ac- 1  dittons  to  the  number  of  staff 
count.  Sloan  emphasized  this  can '  members. 


CAROLINA  COFFEE  SHOP'S 

Sp#d«1   Student  Meal 

Chcice  Westf  rn  Fitet  Tip  Steak 

three  Vegetables,  Hot  Rolls,  Butter, 
Coffee  Or  Tea 

SPECIAL  $77        ""^-r^' 

ID  Cards  Must  Be  Presented 


UNC  STUDENTS' 

SPRING  SWtNO  $AA£ 

"It  Pay*  T^Way^ 


CAROLINA 
SPORT  SHOP 


r— 


ita*M*MlltorilM*JMaiMliiM*tii 


DAIRY  BAR 


f    '"     .«  -^"^      i  T 


CONFEHI  SUNDAE 30^ 

PEACH   SPLIT       L     43< 

We  Serve  Meadowgold  Ice  Cream 


TSUTTON'S 

SPRING   SWING   SALE 

^Qne  Day  Only,  Friday,  March  22nd 


SWING  TO   SUTTONSI   SUEl 

$1.50  MllkMaid  Lipsticks  with  75< 

Liquid  Rouge  Free 

45^  Listerine  Tooth  Paste 

2for59<  


49^  Chloradent  Tooth  Paste 
2  for  73i 


50f!  Kolynos  Tooth  Paste  Super 

White  Anti-enzyme  Activated 

2  for  69< 


$1.00  Jergens  Shampoo 

Coconut  Oil  Type 
Now  Half  Price  Only  SOj 


S9t  Waste  Baskets 
Now  Only  39< 


9Bi  Etiqoet  Cream  Deodorant 
Half  Price  Sale  Just  49< 

98^  EtfCfuet  Stick  Deodorant 
Half  Price  Sale  Just  49< 

$1.00  Harriet  Hubbard  Ayer 

Cream  Deodorant 
Half  Price  Sale  Now  Only  SOj 


Eversharpe  Sfifck  Infector  Razor  FREE 
With  Each  Purchase  Of  2  Packages 
Of  New  Hydro-Maqic  Blades  $1 .96 

60<  Purodent  Mouth  Wash 
Pfnt  Size 
2  For  69< 


DIG  THESE  BARGAINS,    JACK! 
YELLO  BOLE  PIPES 
Values  to  $5.00 

Special  Now  At  $1.50 
Take  Your  Pick. 


SUN    GLASSES 
Polaroid,  Fostex,  Solarex  &  Others 
98<  Up 


50^  Barbasol  Brushless 

Shaving  Cream 

2  Tubes  For  69< 


$1.00  Gem  Razor  And 

69<  Rise  Aerosol  Shaving  Cream 

Both  For  Only  $1.00 


49f  Purepac  Asprin  lOO^s  5  Grains 
2  For  54< 


One  Assortment 

WATERMAN'S  PENS  &  PENCILS 

Values  To  $12.50 

One  Half  Price 

(Limited  To  Supply  On  Hand) 

Isf  Come  1st  Choice 


$1.25  Plastic 

Monogrammed  Tie  Racks 

Close-Out  Price  69< 


$1.19  Dyanshine  Shoe  Shine  Kit 
Now  98< 


THE   STUDENTS'   DREAM! 


(One  pay  Only) 

SPRING  SWING 


SfUE 


For  UNC  Students  Only 

10%  Discount 

upon  Presentation  Of  \t>  Cards 

it  Diamonds  ^  Watchei 

iic  Fountain  Pens  if  Key  Chalna 

it  Clocks  it  Wattefs 

it  Radios  it  Jewelry 

it  Electric  it  Cuff  Unks 
Razors  And  Tie  i«rt 

it  Uather  &  f^lon  Watc|i  Mnds 

ALL  At 


Wentworth  &  Sloan 

Jewelers 


i     ' 


LIMITED     TIME     O  N  LV 

Springtime  special 

D£S£RT  FLOWER 

HAND  aod  BODY  LOTION 
aid  TOILET  WATER 


SAVE2S« 


mo  4f*  TOOTH  PASTE  TUIES  IE6.  ff 


100 

NOW  X^'**  *** 

SHULTON  offers  you  these  ewe 
Desert  Flower  luxuries — PeaKpiok  Hand  tad 
Bocff  Lotiofi  to  make  "wiater-weary'^  skin  soft 
Slid  loscrous  —  Plus,  die  exquisitely  fiagrant 
Desen  Flower  Toilet  Water  to  make  you  spskle 
with  elegance  this  spring.  Don't  wait  — Buy 
yOttfS  today! 


B    R  E  C   K 

BRECK  CREME  RINSE 
Breck  Creme  Rinse,  a  new 
preparation  is  used  after  the 
shampoo  to  add  softness, 
lustre  and  manageability  to 
your  hair.  A  free  4  oz.  bottle 
of  Breck  Creme.  Rinse  is 
now  available  with  each 
purchase  of  a  $1.75  bottle  of 
Breck  Shampoo  .  .  .  both  for 
$1.75    plus    4fi    federal    tax. 

CombimstUm  SI.'S  plus  4t  f(4.  tax. 


FREE  DEilVERY 


Phone  9-8781 


TRIDAl 


Ol 
H 


WIN- 
CHiio  StJ 


13 


M 


ENTi 


:>UR 

EntiJ 


Whi 


BelH 
Dan 


Enl 
La! 


^^^^^^^^^m^^^^mm^ 


w^mmmmmmmmmmmm 


:H  22,  1W7 

major    ad- 
"T    of    staff 


Friday,  march  22,  1957 


teak 


ILY 


E 


Iacki 

.1.50 
I  Pick. 

Hhers 


^ream 


Grains 


ICILS 


and) 


:ks 


ine  Kit 


» 


KSff 


K 


.y 
RINSE 

,  a   new 

after  the 
[softness, 

ibility  to 
|oz.  bottle 

Rinse    is 
|ith    each 

bottle  of 

.  tx»th  for 
icral    tax. 

I*f  ''i.  lai. 


-THE  OAIUY  TAt  HML 


pAdt  ytvi 


Ohio   State    Beats   Car<>lina   On 
Hill   Allows   But   Three   Safeties; 

WINTER     PARK,     Fla.,—(AP>— .  hitting    and    some    breaks    to   edge    in  a  Rollins  College  Baseball  Week  run    in    the    third.    In.  the    fourth, 
Ohio  State  took  advantage  of  timely  I  Noith   Carolina   6-2   here   yesterday  !  game.  |  Vem   Barkstall    walked,    stole   sec- 

Don  Hill  of  North  Carolina  gavej  ond   and  then   scored  on   Rod  Da 


Hits 
6-2 

The  Box 


le  98781 


Howard  Johnson  Restaurant 

BREAKFAST 

LUNCH 

DINNER 

SNACKS 
*aandmark  for  Hungry  Tarheels" 


STUDENTS' 
Spring  Swing 

SALE 

Friday,  March  22 


On  Everything 
tn  Our  Store 

B  E  R  M  A  N  '  S 

Department  Store 


MILTON'S  TOURNAMENT  OF  GIVE-A-WAYS 
One  Full  Day  Of  Out  Of  This  World  Buys 

ENTIRE  STOCK  YEAR  ROUND  SUITS,  SPORT  JACKETS,  AND 
IVY  TROUSERS  —   A  WHOPPING  SSVa   OFF         ^ 

• 
ONE   GROUP   ALL   WOOL   TROPICAL   WORSTED    IVY 
CUT  TROUSERS,  CUT  50%  » 

OUR   $5.95   DAN    RIVER    BABY    CORD    TROUSERS,     " 
1   Pair  S4.00,  2  Pairs,  $7.50  i 

OUR  Baby  Cords  and  3  shades  of  khakis,  reduced  from  $4.95  to 
$3.50.  I 

OUR  $20.00  loather  soled  cordovan  shoes  reduced  to  $15.00  ^Ex- 
cept our  English  shoes).  \ 

3UR  $20.00  rubber  soled  cordovan  shoes  reduced  to   $11.00' 

Entire  stock  long  sleeve  dress  shirts  (except  white  oxford  t|bs), 
$1.00  off.  Long  sleeve  batiste  shirts,  regularly  $4.50  —  )^3.25 
each,  3  for  $9.00.  '  i 

White  cotton  mesh  short  sleeve  button-down  shirts,  regulirly 
$4.00  —  Now  $2.00  each.  » 

Beits,  values  to  $3.00,  going  at  unbelievable  $.69. 

Dan  River  polished  cotton  trousers  in  suntan  and  olive,  regular' 
ly  $7  95  —  Now  $5.50. 

Entire  Stock  Bermuda  Length  Hose  At  50%  Off. 
Entire   Stock  $2.50  Ties  At  $1.99 


We  Haven't  Forgotten  The  Co-eds 

If  You'll  Read  Below 

Entire  Stock  Evan-Picone  Skirts, 

Including  Irish  Linen  Spring  Skir^, 

Reduced  50% 

Entire  Stock  firaemar  and  DrumUnrig 

ScoHish    Cashmeres  $1 0.00  Off 

Group  Sleeveless  Blouses  Cut  from  $6.50 

To  _  $3.25 

Last  Call 'To  Get  Our  Italian  Luisa<Spagnoli 
Sweaters,  Formerly  to  $21.50,  going 
•For  Absurd  $5<00.Each 


ALL  SALES  CASH  AND  FINAL 
ALTERATIONS  EXTRA 

Clothing  Cupiuiarli 


up    only    three    hits    in    his    losing    vis 
cause,  but  six  walks  and  untimely 
«]Tors  proved  costlgr. 

The  Tar  Heels  pulled  ahead  2-0 
in  the  second  after  Chuck  Hart- 
man  and  Joe  Shook  both  drew 
walks  and  Eddie  Hu^ies  was  safe 
on  a  fielder's  choice.  Hill  followed 
with  a  grotind  birilto  eeeond  scor- 
ing both  runs.' 

Ohio  State   scored  one  unearned 


double,    the    only    extra    base   NORTH   CAROLINA 


hit  of  the  game. 

The  Buckeyes  scored  what 
proved  to  be  the  winning  rua  in 
the  fifth  after  Ron  Shay  was  safe 
^n-  an  error  and  Warren  Mizutani 
•  sacrificed  him  to  second.  An  over- 
throw at  third  by  North  Carolina 
first  baseman  Shook  allowed  Shay 
to  score. 


PETE  THE  TAILOR 

WISHES  THE 

Tar  Heel  Basketball  Team 

.     THE  BEST  OF  LUCK  IN 
TONIGHT'S  GAME 
"Specialiiing  In  "Ivy  Leagueizing" 


Lewis    2b 
Hudson  cf 
LeGette  lb 
I.  Hill  rf 
Hon'cutt  ss 
Hartman  3b 
Shook  If 
Hughes  c 
D.  Hill    p 
Totals 
OHIO  STATE 

Shay  ss 
Mzutaoi  If 
Ripp  cf 
Howard  rf 
BarkstaU  3b 
Stea^aU   lb 
Davis  2b 
Cardina  c 
aOsco 
Xtiodop '  p 
Tbtals 


ab 
2 


9       0 


2  0 

3  0 

24      5 


ab 


h 
0 
0 
0 
0 


21      3 


3 
0 
0 
18 

O 

3 


0 
0 
8 
0 
7 
0 
0 
21 


SrOC/C  CAR  RACINE 


GRAND  N/IT^NAL  CJRCIHT 


•III  PRANCff 
fNOCN  STAUr 


SHNDAyT  MARCH  24 

Jg«M  ntMS  IHW  p.  M.  RACt  STMrS  ai»o  p.  M. 


■R>^,f 


OrandstcNid  and 

Admission  $3.00  •   r«xM  in<\^*a 


:->.    broCK    CftRS 
TOP    DRIVERS 


100  Miles 


CHILDREN  UNKR  12  FREE  WITN  ESCORTS  *^"  *'*P* 


ORANGE  SPllOyNA'i 

HILLSBORO.  N.  C. 


a— Walked   for  Cardina   in  6th. 
North  Carolina  020  080  0-^2 

Ohio   State  001  113  x— € 

R.  Hartman,  Shook,  Shay,  Bark- 
stall  2,  Steagall,  Cisco.  E— LeGette, 
Honeycutt,  D.  Hill.  BBI— Lswis. 
D.  Hill,  Davis,  Lindop.  2l>— Davis. 
SB— L  €  w  i  s,  LeGette,  Hattman. 
Barkstall  2,  Davis.  DP— Lewis,  Hug- 
hes, Mizutani,  Davis.  Left— North 
Carolina  10,  Ohio  State  6.  BB— 
D.  HUl  6,  Lindop  6.  SO— D.  KBl  1, 
Lindop  6.  R— ER— Hill  6^2,  Lindop 
2-2.  HBP— Steagall  by  HiU.  PB- 
Hughes  2.  W— Lindop.  L— D.  Hill. 
T— 2:15. 


Kansas;  Carolina  Favored  To  Meet 


I  final    games    of    the    National    CoL 
Tlie  legiate    NCAA     basketball      touma- 


By  SKIPPER  PATRICK 

KANSAS  CITY,  — (iU^— 
nation's  top  ranked  c^ge  powers,;  ment  tomorrow  night 
North  Carolina's  Tar  Heels  and;  Coach  Frank  McGuire's  North 
the  Kansas  Jayhawks^  have  beenj  Carolina  team,  featuring  All-Amer- 
installed  as  the  favorites  in  sivmi-j  ica  Lennie-  Rosenbluth  in  a  perfect 


season  record  of  30  victories  aad 
voted  the  nation's  No.  1  team,  is 
favored  by  five  points  or  incra 
over  Michigan  State  16-8  in  the 
first  gamfe  lit  8:30  EST. 


CUSSIFIEDS 


HIRI  COME  THE 
GUHSUNGERSI 


'"  their  3ifj^ 

beaded 
onto^ 


FTVE   BOOM   BRICK   HOUSE   CJ 
-  '^   center  of  town — has  hobby  work- 
shop! Call   9458  during   day   of 
2926     after    5:30    and    durinjl 
\    weekend.  .    , 


James  Arnfs's  ^  ^^  ^^^  ^  TYV-aiNsiioKE' 

IewJkS- WmRE  HAm WREY.lr.  •«-« -•p-  h-n*. 


5  ROOM  BRICK  HOUSE.  3  BED 
rooms,  all  modern  conveniences. 
3  miles  on  Old  86  Hyway.  Stove 
and  Prigedaire  furnished.  Call 
Fred  Katzin  after  6:00.  8-9025. 


JAZZ  AT  TURNAOES 

Saturday  afternoon,  2:00,  Turn- 
ages  Cabin  in  Durham — Jazz  1^ 
4)ick  Gables  "All  Stars."  Beer 
Served. 


LAW  BOOKS.  VOLUMES  1 
t!hrough  155  except  (22  volume^ 
S.E.  reporter  41  through  50 
Sup.  Ct.  Reporter  100  volume*" 
CYC.CJ  and   Digest  $160.00. 


i^ 


SPRING 


STUDENTS' 


SWING 


SALE 


DISCOUNT 

THROUGHOUT 

THE 

STORE 


^ 
^*>* 


i .  • 


Upon  Presentation  Of  Your  UNC  ID  CARD^ 

EVERYTHING  FOR  THE  BEST  DRESSED 
AT 


P 


/■j^^: 


TODAY  And 
SATURIDAY 


.•.«.-.  Sometimes  ■ 
any  man 


can  be 

a  giant.. 


GEORGE 

W  STEVEm'nicjy 


m<H)UCTION 


1-  ' '  .  s . 


\  AS 

I    -       t  cvi  f 


mictc 


McsMwo  a>  WARNCR  Bros  n  WARMCRCOLM 


^T;^^..-^ELIZABETH  TAYLOR' 
RDCK  HUDSON  •  JAMES  DpAN 


OPENS    TODAY 


Carolina 


Ij^ours  of  shows 

1:15  —  4:48  —  8:21 

PricM  TMt  Amotion 

Adults  85«         Children  25< 


Clievrolet  Wina  Coveted 
IMUuiafacturers*  Trophy  at 
Daytona  Beach'  as  **be8t 
pe^orming  U.  S.  aatomoWle''l 

Want  facts  about  performaace? 

Tlien  look  at  the  oflScial  figures  from 
NASCiOk's*  internationally  famous 
Diiytona  Beach  competition  for  stock 
cars.  Here's  what  you'll  find:  Chev- 
idet,  in  two  weeks  of  blistering  com- 
petitkm,  proved  itself  as  America's 
Number  One  pei  formance  car.  Nothing 
in  the  k>w-iMrice  field  could  touch  it. 


No  other  car,  regardless  of  price, 
scored  such  a  sweep.  And  Chevy 
walked  away  with  the  famous  Manu- 
facturers'Trophy,  ixgjKbs  down! 

The  1957  Chevrolet  is,  by  all  odds, 
the  most  astonishing  performer  ever 
prodtKed  m  the  low-price  fidd.  Best 
of  all,  this  sufieriority'^utti't  limjted  to 
just  a  few  extra-cost  hign-performance 
models.  Every  type  of  Chevy— from 
the  six-cylinder  models  right  up  to  the 
283-horsepower  "Super  Turbo-Fire" 
V8's,  from  the  single-carburefor  V8's 
with  Powerglide  to  the  stick-shift 
"270's"  —is  a  championship  car. 

*Sattonal  AiaacMioHjer  Slock  Car  Auto  Kacing. 


COME  IN  NOW— 

GET  A  WINNLNG  DEAL 

ON  THE  CHA^IPION! 


rusA 


Only  frandiised  Chevrolet  dealers 


display  this  famous  trademark 


See  Your' Author izied  Chevrolet  Denier 


^AGE  SIX 


THE  DAILY   TAR  HEEV 


FRIDAY,  MARCH  22.  1W7 


Tar  Heek  To  Meet  Spartans  m  Kansas  City  Tonight 


By  BOB  HIGH 

Favored  North  Carolina's  unbeai- 
en  Tar  Heels  have  only  two  more 
games  to  play  to  annex  the  NCAA 
crown  currently  worn  by  the  San 
Francisco  Dons.  The  "Flaming 
Five"  of  Coach  Frank  McGuire 
Mill  take  the  court  tonight  against 
tre  Michigan  State  Spartans  in  the 
somi-fjnals  of  the  tournament  being 
held  in  Kansas  City. 

The  game,  starting  at  8:30  (EST) 
TV  ill  pit  the  eastern  regional  cham- 
inns  against  the  winners  of  the 
midwest  regional  tourney,  the  Spar- 
tans of  Coach  Froddy  Anderson. 

The   Tar   Heels   advanced   to   the 


,  <^t  mi-finals  of  the  annual  basketball  i 
;  tournament  by  having  an  unprece-  _ 

dented  unbeaten  season  in  the  tough  ' 
!  Atlantic  Coast  Conference,  gaining : 
i  the  ACC  tournament  titte,  and  con- ! 
I  tinning  their  winning  ways   in  the ' 

plajx)ff  tilt^  with  Yale,  Canisius  and ; 

^Syracuse  in  their  quest  for  t*ie  right 
I  to  represent  the  east  in  the  nation's ! 
I  championships.  | 

j  The  SparUuis,  rated  the.  No.  l' 
darkhorse  of  the  classic,  came  on 
u  ith  a  rush,  winning  14  of  their ; 
last  15  games- -to  ^uaUfy  f^r  the , 
Ka«.4as  trip.  In  the  finals  of  the  i 
midwest  playoffs  at-  Lexiiiet<ni,  Ky.. 
she  Anderson  coached  club  sitrprlsed 


tt>e  WiWcats  of  Kentucky  on  their 
home  court  by  coming  from  12 
points  behind  at  the  half  and  com- 
Ing  out  on  ton  going  away.  j 

Michigan  State  is  a  big  club,  hav- 
ing a  starting  lineup  of  boys  not 
IftFs  than  6-1.  The  star  of  the  Big 
Ten  chemAs  is  a  sophomore,  Carl 
Green,  who  stands  6-5  and  plays  the 
center  pasltion.  Green  is  (he  teams 
chief  rebounder  and  most  colorful 
player;  In  the  two  tourney  games 
at  Lexington,  the  Spartan  star  hit 
ior  94  jjoints   to  lead  the  scoring. 

The  starting  five  of  the  midwest 
club  will  have  Green,  6-5,  at  center; 
George  Ferguson,  6-5,  Jack  Quiggle. 


6-3    forwards;    and    Larry    Hedden,    ijluth,    Pete    Brennan,    Joe    Quigg,    bounds    and    is    hitthig    the   basket . 
6-5,   Wilson,  6-0,  at   the  guards.  i  xommy    Keams   apd   Bob   Cunning-    ^t   a   10.8  clip.   Brehnan,  6-6.  is  the 

Michigan  State,  says  its  coach. '  j^^,^  R^sev,  w*o  needs  only  four  ''««ding  rebounder  with  304  and  is  ^ 
never  uses  a  zone  defense.  "We  j^ore  points  to  crack  the  2,000,  averaging  14-9  a  game.  Kearns,  who, 
have  never  used  the  zone,  but  I  ^^^^^  ,*„  ^^^eer  scoring,  is  averag- ' 
understand  North  Carolina  has  used    .^g    2«.2    for    the    season    and   has  j 

stored  30  more   points  in   12   con- 1 

tests  this  year.  The  Tar  Heel  star  | 

The  Spartan  mentor  went  on   to    stands    6-5    and    has    been    named  I 

say  that  hi  selub  does  not  have  a    ^^   ^^^^^   All-Amerlcan   squad    this  | 

ytar.  :   OaroUna's    varsity    tennv;     team 


was  being  called  the  'Spitfire"  of  ;  ningham,  the  man  who  held  Grady 
the  Tar  Heel  club  while  in  Philly.  Wallace  to  11  markers,  is  the  de^ 
had  a  gi*eat  tourney  and  jumped  j  lensive  genius  of  the  squad  and  is 
his  per  game  average  to  13-1.  Cun-  '  hitting   at   7.0   per   contest. 


it  in  all  their  playoff  games  so  far," 
said    Anderson. 


UNC  Whips  GW  In  Tennis 


By  JIM  CROWNOVER 


big  scorer,  but  most  of  hi-i  boys 
average  betwe**"  13  and  16  points 
a   game. 


The     remaining   four 


marvelous    <^i*ened    its    1957    season    yesterday 

„       ,    , .  ^   .  .     .       'on    the   local    courts    with    a   hard- 

men  of  Frank  AlcGuire  are  juniors  :  ^    k  ^    j     •  •  *  /=  o 

,     I  !  earned    but    decisive    victory,    6-3, 

The  Tar  Heels,  sporUng  a  record    ""**  ^^'^"  ^  ^^^^  ^^^  ^®"  ***  ^^^  \  over  George  Washington  University. 

30    straight    win    streak,    will    have    on    the    tradition    set    this    season,  i  jr  Displaying  good   team   work   and 

'he  usual  starters  in   Lennie  Rosen-    Q:>igg.  6-9,  ha.s  pulled  down  255  re-    excellent  play  in  the   clutch,   Caro- 


lina romped  over  GW  in  four  of 
six  singles  matches  and  two  out 
cf   the   three   doubles   encounters. 

The  only  dark  spot  in  the  Tar 
Heel  camp  was  the  ankle  sprain 
that  No.  1  man  Steve  Bank  suf- 
fered. Bank,  leading  2-0  in  games 
in   his   deciding    set.    stumbled   and 


oprained  his  ankle.  Jim  Tarr  of 
GW  took  advantage  of  the  accident 
£nd  pulled  the  set  out  of  the  fii£; 
and  won  the  match.  i*i 

V 

Jim    Tarr   and   his    brother   Jac^ 

Tarr  defeated  Geoffrey  Black  and 

Frank  Livingstone.  6-0,   11-9.  in  the 

first  doubles  match. 


0-^  f  ■♦^  *^^   >-;-  is  ■*?  '-  j>i  -■■  ^^'*V|^* 


d  "^'  ;'K  f  ®  :^  'D'JkYSr«  ■ » 


H   21"  THROUGH   30 


||NNIVERSAR¥  with   STOR^WIDII  savings  for  EVERYON6I 


v««^*    --jjir  x^    t,  -t 


tf->.-     ^    ^»<t«!Ss4v     ^<J*S^rf-^.s  ~^ '.W'^oiS'«i:^Jb$^t$ti$^lt>j:- 


MISSES'  CHINO  9^  OO 
S«WT  I  BLOUSE    O  »^ 

«•«.  $r.Wl  Ivy  LeoQw  styl. 
•ng!  Trim,  slim  skirt!  Gray,  beige, 
block,  pink.  10-16.  It'so  buyl ' 


R«g.  $1 .  Ours  olon«l  Muh  or 
plain.  Stock  up  -  you'll  lovt 
morftt  Spring  shadtsi  Stock-u^ 


24"  POITTABIE 
0UT900R  GRILL 

*•«,  $14,951  Eosy-cleon  grid 
ra\f$.  lowers  at  o  touch!  Folds 
Hot  toitore!  Eoiy.rolling  w>'»»i-' 


FRIDAY  IS 


STUDENT 

SPRING  SWING  DAY 


Shop  And  Compare 

V 

Thousands  of  Dollars  Worth 
Of  Merchandise  Specially  '^ 

Purchased  For  This  Event 


MEN'S  LUXURY. 
COTTON  SHIRTS 


1 


69 


Volucs  to  $3.98!  Prints,  sol- 
ids, stripes,  plaids!  Sizes  S,  M, 
I.  XL.  Hurry!  They'll  go  fost! 


STRETCH  2  JL  At 
SOCKS        pn.%0W^ 

Reg.  59c  pr.  Solids,  bright 
fancy  patterns!  New  Spring 
colors!  Quick-drying!  One  size. 

GENERAL    ELECTRIC 

Portable  Radio 

5  Tubes 


Unbreakable  Case 


MEN'S  IVY  LOOK 
WASHABLE  SUCKS 


4' 


19.95 


5hQpl  Comparol  Polished 
combed  cotton!  Bock  buckle! 
Ten,  black,  OD.  28-42  waists. 


GOLF  CLUB  SET 


Plaid    Or    Solid    Color 
5  Autogrephod   Irons 
2  Autofraphed  Woods 
2  Covers  For  Woods 


Bag 


3  Golf  Bails 
1   Package  Tees 
Special    Purchase 
Budget   Terms 


LIMITED  QUAMTITY  —   BIG  SHIPA^NT   DUE  — 
WILL  TAKl  OADERS  AT  THIS  PRICE  IN  CASE  OF  SELL  OUT 


COMPLETE 

SET  


$ 


39 


95 


MENS 

SUMMER  SLACKS 

Reg.  $S.95  Rog.   $8.95 

$4.69  $7.69 


MEM'S 

SPORT  SHmtS 

REGULAk 

'    valCtrs 

To  $3.91 

$1.69 


M 


STATE  PRIDE 

DACRON  PILLOW 

REGULAR 
-  S4.95 

VALUE 

$3.69 


NON-SKID 

BATH  MAT  SET 

REGULAR 

S2.48 

VALUE 

$1.69 


LApjeS  SKIRT  A  BLOUSE 

2PC.  GNSEM&iE 

REGULAR 
$8.95     ?^ 
VALUE 


$6.88 


LADIES  DRIP  DRY 

LADIES 

LADIES  CRISP 

WALTZ   GOWN 

COTON  BRA 

COTTON  SLIP 

REGULAR 

REGULAR           ,      . 

REGULAR 

S2.98 

$1.00 

$2.98 

VALUE 

VALUE 

"  *■ 

$2.69 

2  for  $1.69 

$1.69 

MEN'S 

CADDY 

SPRING  SUITS 

GOLF  CAftTS 

REGULAR 

REGULAR 

VALUES  TO 

$12.95 

$39.9S 

VALUE 

$25.00 

$8.88 

9  X  12 

COTTON  RUGS 

REGULAR 
$29.95 
VALUE 

$15.88 


NYLONDACRON    EDGE 

LADIES    SMART 

LADIES    DRIP    DRY 

LADIES  40  DENIER 

LADIES   COTTON 

BATy    TOWELS 

RAIN  COAT  &  HAT 

BABY  DOLL  PAJAMA 

NYLON  BRIEFS 

HALF  SLIPS 

REGULAR 

REGULAR 

REGULAR 

REGULAR 

REGULAR 

$1.00 

$12.95 

$2.98 

$1.00 

$1.98 

VALUE 

VALUE 

VALUE 

VALUE       y 

VALUE 

69< 

.  $9.88 

'    $2.69 

69< 

$1.69 

UNFINISHED 

STUDENT  DESK 

REGULAR 

$17.9$ 

VALUE 

$8.88 


MEN'S  IVY  LEA6UE 


WALKING  SHORTS 


>a':a?5 


$2.98 -$3.98 


MEN'S    ^ 

SPORT  SHIRt 

REGULAR 

»^   :,   H9$ 
VALUE 

$3.69 


3x5  COTTON 

LADIES  PRINTED 

LADIES  NYLON   LINED 

LADIES   DRIP   DRY 

SONIC   HI   Fl   PORTABLE 

IT 

LOOP  RUG 

REGULAR 

$3.98 

VALUE 

,    COTTON  SKIRT 

REGULAR 
.       .    .                $5.95    ^             ,.  . 
VALUE   V 

NYLON  DUSTER 

REGULAR 
r-                         VALUE 

COTTON   DUSTER 

REGULAR 

$398 

VALUE 

RECORD  PLAYER 

2-Speaker             Automatic 

Leather  Cas« 

4-Speed 

' 

$2.69 

$4.69 

I           $4.69 

$2.69 

Regular      &/.Q  QC 
$99.95  Value       ^pOT.T  J 

YATCH  CHAIRS 

STURDY 
OAK 

$2.98 


ALUMINUM 

CHAISE  LOUNGE 

REGULAR 
$15.00 

$12.69 


DRAPERY  MATERIAL 

VALUES 
TO  $5.95 

$1.00  yd. 


LADIES 

CASUAL  SHOES 

COMPARE 
AT  $3.98 

$2.98 


SOHIC  3  SPEED  PORTABLE 

RECORD  PLAYER        * 

$24.95 
VALUE 


$19.95 


ONE   GROUP 

RECORDS 

TOP  VALUE 
10  INCH  L.P. 


3   for   $1.St 


59f! 


ONE   GROUP 

RECORDS 

Reg.  $2.00  Value 
12  Inch  L.P. 


99^ 


ONE   GROUP 

RECORDS 

Reg.  $4.00  Value 
12  Inch  L.P. 

$1.99 


Chapel  Hill      I 
Shopping  Center  | 


BELK-LEGGEH- NORTON  CO. 


Chapel  Hill 
Shopping  Center 


4     X 


SERIALS  DEPT. 
BOX  870 


WEATHER 

WarnMr  and  I»m  cloudy  with  an 
»xp*cted  high  of  62. 


VOL.  LVil     NO.  121 


CHAPEL 


14. C 


e  30attu 


^ar  Xecl 


GUEST 

Comments  from  a  Yala  man.  S«» 
(Mitorlal,  pafa  2. 


CompMe  i/Pi  Wire  Strvtet 


CHAPEL  HILL,  NORTH  CAROLINA.  SATURDAY,  MARCH  23.  1957 


Offieu  in  Graham  Memorial 


SIX  PAGES  THIS  ISSUE 


GOVERNOR  LUTHER  HODGES 

.]or   iudiist>~y,   opportunities 

Photo  by  Bill  King 


Industry  'Growth' 
Asked  By  Hodges 


By  GRAHAM  SNYDER 

,  Gov.  Luther  Hodges  bid  college 
^aduales  last  night  to  "consider 
carefully  staying  and  working  out 
Vt-ur  bwn  destiny  in  North  Caro- 
htta,  be  uuse  the  .  ppjrtunity  is 
here  aird  the  potenUal  lor  growth 
aad  development   i.>    trependous." 

Hodges,  speaking  in  honor  of  the 
Fifth  Annual  BusincSo-  fair,  told 
a  Carroll  Hail  audience  that  in- 
du.-triai  develtpnient  offers  'trem- 
enJous  opportunities  f;jr  economic 
grewth  and  prosperity"  for  a  state 
with  i-he  nioderate  means  of  North 
Carolina."  I  « 

.■•\Ve  know  that  North  Carolina 
has  just  scratched  the  surface  of 
h«r  real  petMUiaL."  he  said.  He  dc-' 
scribed  thi^  itj:te  es  at  '"a  crucial 
»lage  where? young  pe-plc  can  make 
their  most  profcunvl  contribution 
b\  investing  ii:  North  Carolina'.. 
•i,.i.w.h  .sitvk  and  continuing  the 
gpi-a*.  work  Which  ha.<  gone  before 
us  " 

iloctgcs.  flaking  of  the  vari -us 
pn^gram  and  moves  by  the  slate  to 
entou.  jg\.-  tht  dovtlopmenl  cf  local 
ail  '  Ui-ol -'aito  industries,  said  that 
hi.,  •.a.-ic  aim  since  coming  into 
ihc  Covernoi;'s  offite  has  been  \.j 


raise  the  per  capita  income  of  our 
people." 

lo'ra;  •_  the  "standard  of  living 
of  our  people,  ■  he  said,  '"we  must 
raise  the  low  income  groups  if  we 
are  going  I.)  get  any  result*.  This 
means    providing    more    jobs     and 
more  payrolls  to  provide  cash  in- 
'  come  needed  by  individual  workers 
and  their  families." 
,      In    conjunction    with    the    states 
,  planning  boards  toward  encourag- 
I  iUg  industry.  Hodges  cited  the  wo^rk 
i  dene  by  the  Governors  Small  In- 
Idi.  •   ies  Plan  and  the  Business  De- 
velopment Corp. 

i  With  emphasis  on  a  "do  it  your- 
self approach '  Hodges  said  that 
the  Small  Indi^stries  Program  dir- 
ected by  Capxis  Waynick  launched 
75  industries  since  the  fall  of  1954. 

Th2  lack  of  "venture  capital", 
Hodges  said,  "was  a  mujor  handi- 
ap  and  hurdle  f  r  most  new  small 
ndustries."  Through  long-term 
leans  provided  by  stock  programs 
md  lending  agencies.  Hodges  said 
that  the  i3usiness  Uevelopmeni 
Corp.  'has  investment  dollars  at 
work  in  new  small  industries  and 

(See  HODGES,  Page  3) 


Students  Mass  In  Town 
After   Carolina's   Win 


Toilet  paper  tlew  and  traftic 
fighlj  Went  qnhieded  la.st  night 
tn  Fianklin  ^.  as  a  mass  of  stu- 
u-nl!.  siopped  'tratfic  spasmodically 
with  theeis  df  'Carolina:"  , 
i 

llie  ci-wd  of  an  estimated  2000 
j-'utherPvl  approxitriatfely  15  minutes 
a.'ter  Caro.ina's  win  cwt  .Mich- 
nsai  St; ate. 

The  impromptu  parade  began  as 
the  game  ended  with  cars  converg 
ing  on  P'rar.Idin  St.  with  horns 
blurring. 

Appro.ximately  300  student.,  led 
by    John   Carri   George    Ragsdalc, 


^milh  Bradfield  and  Jeff  Hare 
load.d  a  m;:rch  d;wn  Franklin  St. 
to  Chancellor  Robert  House's  home 
and  set  up  a  cheer  "No  Saturday 
Classes. 

The  Chancellor's  reply  was  "If  1 
di.^pt  think  it  would  do  you  harm. 
Id  do  it." 

ChanccUor  House  thanked  the 
students  lor  the  gesture  and  ex- 
pressed pride  at  the  basketball 
U'ijn's    achievement. 

Meanwhile  the  crowd  j.velled  at 
the  pest *^ff ice.  One  student  climb 
ed  the  stop  light,  under  the  watch 
lul  eye  of  sympathetic  town  copii. 


Paul  Can  Expresses  Thanks 
)  o  Student  Party  For  Trust 


"i  am  very  proud  of  the  trust 
shown  in  me  by,  the  Student  Party 
aud  pled33  myself  to  work  to  the 
utin  •  t  of  my  libility  to  adequate- 
ly fill  this  position,"  said  Paul 
Carr  recently.  Student  Parly  nomi- 
nee f  r  S3nior  )Class  President. 

"i  fully  realifc  the  reSponsibili- 
l  Pi  and  duties  carried  by  this  of- 
fice."  .said   Carf. 

•  "As  the  offidial  representative 
cf  my  class  I  hbp?  to  find  many 
opportunities  to  excercise  my  init- 
ia^=ve  and  get  tliings  done  for  the 
-schoul."  ; 

Car",  a  pre-niinisterial  student 
from  Hillsbaro,  l^as  held  many  of- 
£ic:s  in  his  three  years  at  Caro- 
lina. He  is  presently  a  member 
of  the  Men's  Honor  Council,  the 
Y^IC.A  and  the  Freshman  Camp 
Orientation  PrcgMm. 

He  is  active  in  the  Weshy. 
Foundation  and  The  Campus 
Christian    Council.    He    is    a    past 


membor  of  the  Phi  Society  and  the 
IDC  Court. 


Compulsory  Meeting 
For  All  Candidates 

A  compulsory  meeting  of  all 
candidates  running  for  office  in 
the  spring  elections  will  be  held 
Monday  night,  according  to  Ar- 
thur Sobel,  vice  chairman  of  the 
Elections  Board. 

Any  candidate  not  in  atten- 
dance may  be  disqualified  from 
the  election,  he  said.  Excuses 
may  be  obtained  by  contacting 
Ralph  Cummings,  chairman  of 
the  Elections  Board,  within  48 
hours  after  the  meeting. 

Excuses  -will  be  issued  only  for 
special   circumstances,   he    Mid. 

The  public  has  been  invited  t« 
attend  the  meetings  as  the  candi- 
dates for  student  body  offices 
and  editor  of  The  Daily  Tar  Heel 
will  make  short  speeches,  Sobel 
stated. 


Tar  Heels  Save  Unbeaten  Record,74-70; 
Rosenbluth  Ices  Game  In  3rd  Overtime; 
Team  Bills  For  National  Title  Tonight 

^Uan  Race  Brennan  Is  Hero 

bloan.  bass  ,      ^      .  ^        . . 

In  2nd  Overtime 


AT  BANQUET  FRIDAY  NIGHT: 


Wells  Given  Gardner  Award 


Dr.  Warner  Lee  Wells  of  the  U\C 
Schtol  of  Medicine  was  Friday 
night  named  the  winner  of  the  1957 
O.  Ma.\  Gardner  Award.  I 


Luther  H.  Hodges.  The  banquet  was 
I'.eld  at  Lenoir  hall.  j 

The  award,  created  by  Uie  Gard- 
ner will,   is   given  each   year,   "To 


The  award,  a  citation,  also  car-  that  member  of  the  faculty  of  the 
lies  a  cash  grant  of  the  annual  in-' Consolidated  University  of  North 
lome  of  $25,000  placed  in  trust  by  Carolina,  who.  during  the  current 
the  late  Governor  Gardner.  scholastic  year,  has  made  the  great- 

The  principal  speaker  at  the  an-  tst  contribution  to  the  welfare  o# 
r.aal   award   banquet   was  Governor   the  human  race." 

The     Consolidated     Universitv     is 


rilan   document    of  the   new   atomic 

i  se. 

CROSSROADS 

G<nernor  H>xlges  said  of  Dr. 
Wells,  "In  1949,  at  the  age  of  36. 
Dr.  Wells  stood  at  a  crossroads  in 
Lis  career.  Like  so  many  of  the  de- 
oression  generation,  he  had  worked 


Endorsed 
For  Editor 


DR.   WARNEK   WEL|.S 

.. for  uelfare  contribuiions 


composed  of  the  University  at  Chap- 
el  Hill.   N.  C.   State  College  at   Ra- 
leigh   and   the   Woman's   College   at 
(ireensboro. 
DIARY 

Dr.  Wells,  a  member  of  the  UNC 
School  of  Medicine  faculty  since 
1952,  is  the  translator  and  editor  of 
'Hiroshima  Diary."  This  was  a 
•lapanese  doctor's  account  of  the 
iitomic  bombing  of  Hiroshima. 

The  t>ook  was  published  on  the 
10th  anniversary  of  the  bombing, 
Aug.  6,  1955.  It  immediately  be- 
come  a    best   seller. 

.Aside  from  being  published  In 
Engli.sh,  the  book  has  been  or  is 
In  the  process  of  being  translated 
mto  10  other  languages,  aside  from 
the  original  Japanese  language. 

Governor  Hodges  said  tonight, 
"Probably  no  other  book  iias  ever 
*!une  out  from  North  Carolina  into 
«ti   maiij    dltferehl  tongues."  Ifi* 


Charlie    Sloan    and    Neil    Bass 
have    been    approved    by    the    Bi- 
partisan  Selections   Board  as  can- 
his    way   through    college    and   then  didates     for     editorship     of     The 

Daily  Tar  Heel,  it  was  announced 
Friday  by  board  Chairman  Fred 
Powlcdge. 

A  third  candidate,  Frank  Crow- 
ther,  has  dropped  out  of  the  race. 

The  board  met  three  times  to 
consider  the  candidates  who  ap- 
peared before  it. 

Board  members  were  informed 
before  they  met  for  the  last  time 
that  Crowther  had  resigned  his 
candidacy,  according  to  Powledge. 

The  board  consisted  of  Pow- 
lcdge, Tom  Lambeth  of  the  Gra- 
ham Memorial  Activities  Board, 
Sonny  Hallford  of  the  Student 
Party,  and  Mike 
University  Party 


Ihrough     medical    school.     To    give 
li:mself  the  t>est  background  for  his 
c  hosen     specialty    of     surgery,     he 
i.ad    si)ent    six    years    in    fesidence 
training  I     work.     Then    there    had 
i  been   three  years   in   the  army.         i 
I       "Finally   in   1947.   he  had   reached 
a    position    that    many    young    sur- 
geons  would   envy,   a   private  prac- 
tice   in    a    prosperous    city    and    a 
lecture.>hip   in   a    neighboring   medi- 
cal school   .   .   .   Then  in   1949  came 
!  a    challenging  offer   to  go  to   Hiro- 
i^hima,    Japan    as    a    surgical    con- 
sultant   to    the    .Atomic    Bomb    Cas- 
ualty Commission,  to  study  the  long- 
i  :ange  medical  effects  of  the  atomic 
bombing."  I 

.'Xf'.er    receiving    the    award.    Dr. 
'.Veils    said,    "I    could     not    be     so 
presumptuou.s    as    to    stand    t>efore 
j  \ou    were    this    not    an   open    letter 
I  ijf   tribute  to  my   friends  in  Japan, 
j  the   people   of    this    University   and 
I  what     they    stand     for,      the      t>asic 
']112i(  iQoralUy  of  our  press,   and  "the  be> 


By  LARRY  CHEEK 

Special  To  The  Daily  Tar  Heel 

K.\.\S.\S  CIT^'.-Mo.— XortJi  Carolina '.s  nia'^nifuent  Tar 
Heels  wouldn't  be  beaten  here  last  night,  .\lthough  it  took 
three  overtimes  to  do  the  trick,  they  advanced  in  to  the  \C.-V.\ 
championship  game  against  Kattsas  tonight  bv  whipping 
.Mithigan  State.  71-70. 

It  was  the  unbeaten  Tar  Heels  closest  call  ol  a  long, 
long  season  in  which  the  y  ha\e  swept  to  j}i  straight  wins  with- 
out a. loss.  The  plucky  Spartans,  tor  much  ot  the  game,  had 
Coach  Fiank  .Vlc(iuire's  Kastern  Regional'  (hantpitms  on  the 
r<)j)es  time  after  time  but  there  was  nob<xiy  to  deliver  a 
knockout  punch. 

.\  capacity  dowd  ol    io,.')Oo    (tickets  were  selling  at  $50 

♦a   piece   before     game    time)    sat 

enthralled  as  the  underdog  Big  Ten 


Baum  Says  UP 

Has  No  Plank; 

Denies  Editorial 


Bill     Baum    denied     Friday  bis 
platform    consisted   of  only     one 
Weinman  of  the '  plank  as  a  Daily  Tar  Heel  editorial 
stated   Friday. 


"With  its  work  completed,  Pow-  "I  believe  that  the  student  body 
ledge  announced  the  board  is  abol- 1  has  had  enough  'platforms'  which 
ished  for  the  present  academic  are  composed  of  promises  and  ^H^te- 
vear. 


representatives  battled  the  Tar 
Heels  off  their  feet  until  the  clutch 
moments  came. 

It  was  in  that  fatal  third  over- 
time that  .All-American  Lennie  Hos- 
enbluth  put  his  team  out  in  front 
by  two  points,  70-68.  on  a  pair 
of  long  one-handed  jump  shots. 
Tommy  Kearns  followed  Rosey's 
important  points  with  two  of  his 
own  via  the  foul  line  at  the  1:46 
mark  to  put  the  Tar  Heels  up  by 
four.  72-88. 


literary     world     the     book     is     gen- 
erally known  as  the  first   great   hu- 


lief   held   by  so  many  people  in  the 
(Sje    WELLS.  Page  3 J 


DAME  SITWELL'S  READING: 


Pres$  Women 
To  Meet  Here 


jments  which  never  seem  to  cornel  ^^^"^  Rosenbluth  entered  the 
true.  Consequentb',  I  deny  the  «<^^  'Sain.  The  long  armed  UNC 
I  Statement  that  the  University  Par- 1  captain  stole  a  Spartan  pass  at 
Itys  platform  is  composed  of  only  I 'n'^"*^^'"'*-  '«**  *<>  Bob  Young  un- 
I  one   plank.    It   has   no   planks.  |  der   the   basket,   and   Carolina  had 

I     "The  UP  has  an  idea;  and  idea    a  six-point  spread,  74-68.  with  1:33 


;  ^  «.-♦»!■ 


Four  Earthquakes  Hit 

SAN  FRA.NCISCO— (AD-Four 
earthquakes — two  of  them  rumb- 
ling shocks  that  swayed  down- 
'own  San  Francisco  buildings  for 
10  second.s — caused  some  injuries 
md  sent  frightened  people  into  the 
streets  across  a  130-mile  area  of 
n'>rthern    California    Friday. 

Twisted  ankles  and  bruises  from 
ulling  objects  were  dealt  by  the 
iiajor  jolts  shortly  before  noon, 
.''he  first  quake  an  hour  earlier 
md  the  fourth  an  h:iur  later  were 
'?ss  severe. 

No  loss  of  life  was  reported. 

But  buildings  cracked.  Dishes 
•jroke.  Merchandise  was  spilled  in 
stores. 

Ther^  were  read  slides.  People 
had  to  grab  poles  to  keep  from 
falling.  There  was  at  least  one 
report  of  a  broken  gas  main. 


Illuminating  Experience    Over  Weekend 
Shocking  To  Audience 


By  ANTHONY  WOLFF 

Hill  Hall's  auditorium  was  filled 
to  overflowing  for  the  second  time 
in  a  week  on  Thursday  evening, 
when  Dame  Edith  Sitwell  gave  an 
hour-long  reading  of  some  of  her 
poetry. 

Dame  Edith  provided  quite  a 
shock  for  the  mi.xed  student-adult 
audience;  a  good  many  lef  at  inter- 
mission,   not    know.ng   quite    what 


to  make  of  one  of  the  greatest  liv-'  .stations  along  with   Dame   Edith's 


I  ii  g  literary  figures  of  the  Western 
iw  rid..  Throughout 'the     reading. 


.vhich  in  turn  necessitated  the  mov- 
ing of  th?  desk,  during  which  op- 
eration the  water  pitcher  was  lelt 
sitting  in  the  middle  of  the  stage 
floor.  Chancellor  H.)use  was  called 
upon  during  the  reading  to  retrieve 
it,  which  he  did. 

1  he  program  was  further  inter- 
tuptcd  by  the  frequent  adjustment.-; 
ol  the  public  address  system,  which 
managed  to  pick  up  several   radio 


(AP)  —  Writing  prize  -  winning 
stories  will  be  a  major  topic  at  the 
annual  spring  meeting  in  Chapel 
Hill    this    weekend    of   the    North '  J«"*diction  to  benefit  the  student 


which,  if  the  student  body  alJow.s 
it  to  be  put  into  action,  will  be  one 
step  toward  turning  ^-iudent  gov- 
ernment back  to  realistic  service 
to  the  students,"  Baum  stated. 

"Student  government  here  at 
Carolina  Uas  instituted  originally 
to  enact  measures  within  its  own 


Carciina   Press  Women's  Assn. 


I  body  and  to  represent  the  students 
to  other  areas  with  advice  and  co- 
Th?  institute  will  officially  open!  operation.  The  Student  Legislature, 
this   m:^rning  with   registration   at  in  the  begnining,  may  have  been  re- i 


9:30  a.m.  at  the  Carolina  Inn.  The 
Board    of    directors   of   the    Press  1 
Women's  Assn.  held  a  preliminary 
gathering    last    night,    also   at    the  | 
Inn.  I 


voice 


there  was  a  great  deal  of  indecision  I  her   output,   from    her   early    sur- 
as to  when   to   clap   and   when   to,  reali.-.   eFfort.s,  with  their  whimsi- 


Marathon  Meeting 

C AIRO— ( AP )— D  a  g  Hammar- 
skj')ld  of  the  UN  and  Egyptian 
President  Nasser  have  scheduled 
a  marathon  meeting  for  today  in 
an  effort  to  find  face-saving  so- 
ut'ons  to  Middk»  East  deadlocks. 

They  arranged  for  talks  to  be- 
'4in  in  mid-morning  today  at  Nas- 
■jer's  resthouse  in  a  park  on  the 
Nile  eight  miles  north  of  Cairo. 
These  will  continue  through  lunch  | 
and  on   into  the  afternoon. 

This  second  meeting  between 
the  two  since  the  Secretary  Gen- 
jral  arrived  here  early  Thursday 
followed  almosi  continuous  sess- 
ions today  between  Hammarskjold 
and  Egyptian  Foreign  Minister 
.Vlahmoud  Fawzi.  Altogether  the 
two  talked  together  more  than  12 
hours  yesterday   and   today. 


laugh.    , 

The  fantastic  apparel  worn  by 
the  poetes_-  helped  to  throw  the 
audience  off  balance.  Over  a  green 
silk  brocade  dress  she  wore  sev 
eral  ornate  'oreastplates,  and  her 
fingers  wore  decorated  with  var- 
ious rings  of  extraordinary  size. 

The  reading  was  delayed  slightly 
by    the    necessity   of    moving 
microphone  closer  to  Dame  Edith,  I  minating  experience. 


Ho'v  to  write  prize-winning 
features,  news  stories  and  inter- 
views will  be  discussed  at  the  first 

The  selections  ran  the  range  of '  P^"^'  ^''^^^o"  t°^ay  at   11   a.m    in 

Carroll  Hall.  Walter  Spearman  of 
the  UNC  Journalism  School  will 
act  as  moderator  -^jr  the  panel, 
composed  of  Marjorie  Hunter  of 
The  Winston-Salem  Journal,  Bun- 
ny Harris  of  The  Charlotte  Obser- 
ver, and  Elizabeth  Peel  of  Tlie 
Wilson  Daily  Times. 

The    emphasis   on    good    writing 


cal  music  and  meter,  to  the  deeply 
religious  poems  which  came  out  oi 
the   war. 

Although  Dame  Edith's  accent, 
her  age,  ar.d  her  persistent  cough 
combined   with   the   iridcquacy  of 


pre.vntatve,   but  such  is  not   j>ow 
the   case,"    he   said. 

"The  Student  Legislature  is  the 
law-making  body  of  our  student 
government — the  program  whitn 
would  be  outlined  by  the  Student 
Senate  would  aid  it  inimeasurabiy 
in  its  work.  They  are  clearly  not 
in  conflict  with  one  another;  in- 
deed, they  will  work  hand  in 
hand."  he  s?id. 
POWLEDGE  OPPOSES 

'Editor  P..wledge  stated  that  the 
executive's  duty  is  'to  act  as  a 
spokesman  and  leader  for  the  stu- 
dent body:'  but  when  a  mean.^  is 
proposed  to  give  the  executive  a 
clearer  conception  of  what  to 
for  and  in  what  direction  to  lead 


left.  Michigan  State  cut  that  mar- 
gin to  74-70  with  42  .seconds  to 
go.  but  their  golden  opportunity 
had  passed.  .,j. 

The  game  was  airtight  all  the 
way  with  first  one  team  and  then 
th?  other  holding  the  edge.  It  »^as 
tied  five  times  in  the  first  half. 
and  at  intermission,  the  score- 
board read  Carolina  29.  Michigan 
State  29. 

It  was  the  same  story  in  the 
sec:nd  half  until  Michigan  State 
opened  up  a  five  point  lead,  54- 
40.  with  5:42  fcmainin?.  That 
didn't  last  long  however,  as  Bob 
Cunningham  and  Rosenbluth  hit 
s'x  quick  markers  to  put  the  Tar 
Heels  ahead. 

It  was  nip  and  tuck  to  the  wire, 
and  with  a  little  under  two  minute.s 
to  g3  and  th?  score  tied,  Carolina 
(Sep  CAROLINA.  Page  6) 


THE  BOX 


!  the     amplifying  system   to     make. 

I  much    of   her   reading    impvissible \  ^''^    ^^    climaxed    Sunday   at    the  j  Mr.  Powledge  opposes, 
to  understand,  hearing  the  poems    closing    session    of    the    meeting,  j       There   is  a  conflict   in   reason-  Green 


MICH.    &TATE 

Quiggle  f 
•peak  Ferguson  f 
Anderson  f 
Hedden  f 


the  I  read  by  their  creator  was  an  illu- 1  ^^^^^^  annual  awards  for  the  best   ing  here  which  I  cannot  follow.  To 


Studeht  Party  Meet  Time 
Moved  To  7  On  Monday 

The  Student  Party  will  meet 
Monday  night  at  7  instead  of  at 
7:00  as  usual,  Chairman  Sonny 
,'lallford  announced  Friday. 

The  time  of  the  meeting  has 
been  moved  up  so  as  not  to  con- 
flict yith  a  required  meeting  of 
,ill  candidates  for  office  scheduled 
Cor  7:30  in  Gerrard  Hall,  he  said. 

Hallford  urged  all  members  to  be 
oresent.  as  he  said  actioh  is  sched- 
uled on  several  matters. 


stories    of    the    year    by    members 
will  be  presented  at  a  luncheon. 

Keynote    speaker    for    the    two- 
day  institute  will   be  Doris  Flee- 
son  of  Washington,  D.  C,   politi- 
I  cal  columnist  for  United  Features 
Svndicate.    Mrs.    Fleeson    will    ad- 


Bencie  c 
Scott  f 
Wilson  g 
Totals 


seek  to  work  for  what  the  student 
body  feels  is  important  does  not, 
to  me,  indicate  a  personal  weakness 
on  the  part  of  a  president,  or  on 
the  part  of  a  student  government,  N.  CAROLINA 
he  said.  j  Rosenbluth  f 

"Finally,     Mr.  Powledge     states   Brennan  f 
dre.ss  a  dinner  meeting  tonight  at  j  that   any  decision.-  that  would  come   Searcy  f 
7    o'clock    in    the   Inn    ballroom.        out   of  such   a   mixture   of  people  ^ro''  f 


G 

6 
4 
2 
4 
4 
1 
2 
0 


F 
8-10 
2-3 
3-6 
6-7 
3-6 
OK) 
0-2 
2-2 


4 
2 
23  24  36  18     70 


T 
20 
10 

7 
14 
11 


A  second  guest  speaker  today 
will  be  Mrs.  Dorothy  Jurney,  wo- 
men's editor  of  th^  Miami,  Fla., 
Herald,  who  will  lead  a  2  p.m. 
session  in  Carroll  Hall.  Her  topic 
will  be  "Giving  Your  Pages  More 
Eye  Appeal." 

Dean  Nerval  Neil  Luxon  and 
Mrs.  Luxon  will  entertain  the  in- 
stitute participants  at  a  social 
hour  at  5  p.m.  today  at  their  home 
h;re. 

The  press  women  will  elect  of- 


(as     the   Student   Senate)     would  Young  c 
either  be   obvious  or  so  unrealis-  Quigg  c 
tic  as  to  make  them  impossible  to  Ctmningham  g 
act  on,*  Baum  said.  i Kearns  g 

FAITH  Totals 

"I   wish   to  remind  Editor  Pow-   Mich.  St<ate 
ledge  that  the  'mixture'  of  people  North  Carolina 
to  which  he  refers  is  the  student  i  ^i^a^g— ^ 
body  of  the   University  of  North 
Carolina.  I,  for  one,  am  proud  to 
be  a  member  of  that  body,  and  I 
have  faith  that  these  people  can 
judge,  maturely  and  rationallv.  as 


G 

12 

6 

0 

0 

1 

0 

8 

1 


F 

1-9 

2-4 

0-0 

0-0 

0-1 

2-3 

3-4 

4-5 

28  18-26  22 
29  29  6  2  4 


T 

31 

14 

0 

0 

2 

2 

19 

6 

74 

-70 


29  29  6  2  8—74 


OAME  EDitM  SITWELL 

.  shocks  audience 


ficers  Sunday  morning  at  11  at  the  |  well  a;  realistically,  what  are  their 
Inn.  The  awards  luncheon  will  fol- 1  important  needs, 
low  at  12:30  p.m.  Handling  ar- i  "Foirthermore,  I  assert  that  they 
rangements  for  the  institute  are  ,  will,  if  given  the  chance,  work  with 
Dotty  Cameron,  Raleigh,  institute  the  president  to  see'  those  needs 
chairman;  Frances  Walker,  Bre-  fulfilled.  I  intend,  if  elected,  to 
vard,  president  and  Mrs.  Lucille  give  them  this  chance,  and  I  don't 
Cathey  Host.  Winston-Salenu  eon- '  believe  I  will  'be  disai^>ointed," 
test  chairman.  '   Baum  said. 


IN  THE  INFIRMARY 

StiMlMtts  in  th*  Infirmary  yes- 
t*rd«y  inciudtd: 

MiM  H«p*  Sparger  and  Ried 
Haynes,  Yatvt  Palmar,  Nornun 
Draptr,  Stephen  Bank,  Bobby 
Deaver,  Harrie  Schoen,  Milton 
McSwaIn,  Stephen  Biaiek,  Har- 
vey J*nM,  Stanford  Thompson, 
Benton  Beard,  Davie  Harring, 
Charl*e  Saunders,  Tate  Rober^ 
son,  Milton  Berber,  Francis 
Jam^,  en^r  Ray  Kyxak. 


Si'P.H^-   i;^**' 


^Al>t   TWO 


.►s 


*^^*    1 


THE  DAILY  TAR  Httl 


.'  f  SATURDAY,  MARCH  2S,  If 57 


rc 


TheVieWFrohi  N^'Haven:    I2iii2il!i; 


rr'^—iCTT 


Well,  The  Weather's  Nice 

t 

Gordon  Chamberlain  Ls  a  freshman  at  Yale.  He  also  is  working 
on  The  )  ale  Daily  \eins,  a  contemporary  of  this  newspaper,  a 
i.alifornian.  he  is  currently  on  spring  leave  from  Yale,  and  decided 
to  spend  part  of  his  holiday  in  Chapel  Hill.  Heve  Chamberlain  pre- 
sents a  guest  editorial  on  the  Carolina  way  of  life. 

As  an  KaMeriier  by  .4>irth,  Westerner  !>y  upbringing  .and  Easterner 
ajrain  by  (X)lle^e.  1  thou^bt  1  liacl  the  best  of  l)oilr  worlds,  like  a  man  witli 
a  profile  view  of  Marilyn  Monroe.  I  have  iece«tly  distoyered,  however, 
that  I  had  omitted  The  South.-  *.'^  "'' 

The  Sotith.  wbere,  according  to  reliableTe|)ofts,  Ketituefey  Colonels 
burn  da|ii\^ii;:^s  at ;ihe;5^e  every  fiill  nioo'n:  The  South  of  the  ini- 
iiicnioriaT'rode^^V^'.iiiciefi  reg;iTne.  tcith  its  strict  staind  on  not  more  than 
three  niijit  jideps  before  break- 
fast, on  huntin*.  shmrtin',  fisliiit'. 
;  id  more  especially  keepin'  up  ap- 
pearances, and  on  eveTythin"  else 
imder  the  ever-lovin'  honey- 
(olorcd  n)(M»n. 

Mt>re  recently.  The  South  of  the 
Bible  Belt— though  who  am  I  to 
critici/e.  tememberinj4  the  weird 
rubs  of  Los  .Vngele.s?  Still,  L.\  is 
an  inferior  spot — '>,o  suburbs  in 
se;  rch  ol  a  city—and  not  to  be  men- 
tioned. Daunt  ri«»hi  I'm  prej»«liced. 
*  *  * 

Rettirninu  to  the  subject  («vhat?K 

I  come  to  Clhapel  Hill,  and  what  do 

I  find?  Well,  for  one  thing,  weath- 
er that  is  ;  n  innncnsc  intprovemein 

over    New     Havens.      though      of 

cotnse      inferior     to     ('.aliforni:«"s. 

Not  that  it  isn't  all  but  impossible 

not    to    have    better    w^eather    than 

New    I  la\en. 

Right  now.  unfortunately.  1  atn 

looking  out   the   window      of     the 

lather    dhwiy     Far    Heel    office   on 

,>rev  skies  and  :    gentle  drizzle,  but 

I   hope,    tills   is  'atypical,   and   stop 

spoiling  mv  illusions. 

This    brings    me    U)   the   subject 

of  vour  liKal  sterling  organ  of  stu- 
dent opinion.  Tlii.s  I  rather  enjoy. 

Irue.  Irom  what  I  ha\e  seen  of  it. 

it  is  usually  in  fa\oi  only  of  moth- 
er love  and  lifeguards  on  beaches. 

not    to   mention    the   ellipticity  pt 

the   earth  s   orbit. 

Also  someone  recently  crnie  out 

loui-stpiare  rock-ribbed   fairiuind- 

ed  aiul  square-headed  agin"  c\issin'. 

xumeiliin'4  that  would  ne\er  get  by 

at  ^' ale— the  perpetrat(w  would  be 

laui^lied  ou"t  ofW^tence.  Could  f>e 

lb  It    artiile    was   saiirieMl,     but      1 

doubt  it. 

Perhaps,  too,   the  vague  aura  of 

inefficiency  in  this  office  can  be 
traced  to  distractions  inherent  in 
ha\ing  a  coed  news  editor — I  have 
nothing  agr'inst  girls  at  the  proper 
time  and  place,  but  from  a  not-so- 
casual  gkmce  at  the  living  dolls  on 
the  stafi  I  don't  see  how  anyone 
ever  gets     anv     constructixe   \\ork 


YALEMAN    CHAMBERLAIN 

. . .  ke'it  prejudiced 

heading.  I  liaxe  come  up  against 
an  extraordinary  delusion  on  the 
part  of  some  misguided  people 
around  here,  doubtless  more  to  be 
pitied  than  censured,  tiiat  TNC  is 
going  to  win  the  NCAA  swimming 
next  week— when,  as  anv«)ne  knows. 
\i\\e  has  tlie  nation's  best  college 
swimming  team. 

Now  fades  the  glimmering  flash- 
bulb on  the  sight,  and  r'l  the  air 
.issoited  curses  holds.  I'he  photog 
has  just  been  at  li's  fell  task  of  tak- 
ing mv  usual  unllaticring  picture. 
Somethui;!— |>erhai»  i  h  e  editor 
hovering  Milture-like  o\er  me  try- 
ing tv  rip  the  paper  oiu  o4  the 
tv)K"writer:  perhaps  a  sudden  mi- 
gration of  rfiinflfitfi  iMii  iiiY  itiik>^rir-«[ 

tioii— tells  nie  this  lias_  jjoaiej  on*  far 
enoimh. 

1  f*nd  r\e  omitted  to  mention  a 
lot  of  tilings,  inc  hiding  voiu— ahem 
— h)<)tball  team,  but  anvway.  all 
kifldiu'-'  a-^ide.  T  'iipT:o*.e  North 
Carolina    is   all    right,    rc'allv. 


While  Ave're  on  the  subject  ol 
-Strange  F  i  ibal  Customs,  the  grape- 
\ine  tells  me  liquor  is  veiboten  on 
campus,  though  this  rule  is  un- 
doubtedly more  hoiujred  in  the 
brc.  h  than  in  the  observance,  to 
butcher   a    cpiote. 

At  N'ale.  bv  contrast,  it  is  unol- 
ficially  forbidden  not  to  ha\e  a 
l)ottle  ill  vour  rcKim.'  Preferablv 
whiskey.   Cnder  the  same  general 

The  Daily  Tar  Heel 

The  official  iiudi'iii  pcinlK^tion  nf  the 
Pnhlications  Board  otMhe  liniversity  of 
N<irlh  Caroltna  wh»TP  it  i>  published 
daily  exccpi  Monday  and  examination 
and  vacation  piTioris  and  .summer  terms 
Entered  as  .<ietond  class  matter  in  the 
0<><t  rtffire  in  Thapel  flill.  N  C.  undei 
the  Act  ni  Mar.h  Jl.  1«70.  Suhscriptioc 
rate*  maii-'d.  $4  per  year,  $2  50  a  seme* 
ter  dehvomd  $6  a  year.  $3  50  a  Heme* 
ter 


Editor 


FTIED  POHXEDGK 


Managinj!  Editor 


CL.\IIKE  JONES 


Sews  Editor 


NANCY  HILL 


Sporta  Editor 


LARRY  CHEEF 


Business  tlanager     '      BILL  BOB  PLEL 

Advertising  ManJ^ec^-.    FEED  KATZIN 

EdItORIAL  STAFF  ^  W||ody  Sear*. 
Joey  Payne^  Stan  Shaw. 

fiEWS  STAFF— Graham  Snyder,  Edith 
MacKinnon,  Walter  Sehruntek,  Pringfe 
Pipkin,  Bob  High,  Jim  Pwks,  BeO  Tay- 
lor, H.  Joost  P»lak»  Patsy  Miller,  WajV 
ly  Kuralt,  Bill  King,  f^rtis  Crotty. 

BUSINESS  STAFF— John  Minter,  Marian 
Hobeck,  Jane  Patten,  Johnfty  Whitaker. 

SPORTS  STAFF:  Dave  Wible,  Stewart 
Bird,   Bon  Milligan. 


Subscription  Manager 
Circhlation  Manager 


Assistant  Sports  Editor 


.  Dale  Staicy 

Charlie  Holt 

Bill  King 


SiiSi  Photographers 
^  Norman  Kanto;., 


Woody  Sears, 


'Librarians Sue  Gichner.  MarHyn  Stnun 

Night  Editor  Manley   Springs 

Frfjfreader Bill  Weeks 


Coed  Hours 
Should  Be 
Abolished 

Sonny  F.\ans.  a  candidate  for 
student  -<>(»veri  linen  t  presidency, 
wants  better  recrer'.ional  lacilities 
lor  C'lrolina   students. 

We  do.  too.  Thereloie.  we  .^u,i>- 
L;esi  that  tiie  I 'diversity  abolish 
( oed  hours. 

Wcmien  20  and  21  years  of  age 
kiiou-  what  is  rij^ht  and  vhat  is 
wrouf;,  most  of  thetn.  Those  that 
don't  (t>iild  find  out  ({uickly  it 
coed   hours   were   abolishtd. 

If  coeds  are  .^ojiij^  to  ruin  their 
health  and  tlu.ii  i eput;  tions.  they 
will  ruin  ilieiii.  ^vluihei  tlu'%  lia\e 
to  j;et  ill  at  1  i  p.m.,  midnight  or 
1    a.m. 

Some  ol  ihe  .Noiliieru  colle'^es 
apply  such  a  system,  and  ha\v  fine 
residts.   It's  Avorth  a  trv  here. 

TV  Preview: 
Musicians, 
Perry  Como  * 

Anthony  WplH 

For  thgse  who  aren't  planning  to 
attend  either  of  the  dances  on 
campus,  and  who  are  inclined  to 
foregcj  the  f)asketball  game,  tiieic's 
.'••a  entertaining  hour  011  (Ihannel 
2  at  8  p.m.  .As  a  replacement  hir 
Jackie  Cileason,  C.BS  has  gathered 
an  impressive  aroup  of  mu.sical 
personalities:  liubl)y  Hackett.  Sar- 
ah -Vaughan.  Ckiunt  Basic,  joe 
Willir'TTis,    and    others. 

Against  this  array.  Perry  Como 
on  Chainiel  r,  presents  hiin.self,  as- 
sisted f>y  the  talented  .Andy'' Will- 
ianrs  and  a  lo-year-old  refugee 
\rom   the  cpiiz  shows. 


for  Woody  Sears,  Regrets 


Editor: ' 

On  behalf  of  the  Honor  Com- 
mission, I«  would  like  to  express 
our  deepest  regrets  that  Mr. 
Woody  Sears  did  not  know  of  our 
existence.  The  20  member  Hon- 
'  or  Commission  arrived  one  day 
#rior  to  the  beginning  of  Orien- 
tation Week  last  fall  and  discuss- 
ed our  Honor  System  with  all 
incoming  transfers  and  fresh- 
men. 

The  r^sult  of  the  Honor  Com- 
missions  work  is  one  of  the 
things  that  the  Student  Govern- 
ment officer^  are  most  proud  of 
for  this  year's  administration.  It 
was  a  plank  out  of  the  platform 
of  this  year's  student  body  pres- 
ident. 

President  of  the  student  body 
and  the  commission  met  several 
times  last  spring,  set  up  the  pro- 
gram, and  planned  the  time 
schedule.  The  commission  mem- 
bers followed  through  with  well- 
prepared  talks  of  20  minutes  each 
to  approximately  97  grou[>s. 

The  purpose  was  to  discuss  ail 
facets  of  our  Honor  System,  to 
instill  adult  responsibility  for 
our  System,  and  to  answer  any 
questions  concerning  th?  Honor 
System  and,  for  the  girls,  the 
Social    Rules   and    Regulations. 

The  talks  started  Friday.  Sep- 
tember 14  and  ended  Sunday. 
Septrmbcr  J 6.  All  people  includ- 
ed in  last  Fall's  Orientation  Pro- 
gram  were  required  to  attend 
these  discussion  groups.  All 
these  pcsople  can  bear  t?sximony 
to  the  fact  that  an  Honor  Com- 
mi.ssion  did  exist. 

Seemingly  Mr.  Sears  did  not 
knjw  of  the  Honor  Commission 
for  'le  said  in  Wednesday's  Daily 
Tar  Heel,  "How  about  it?  Any- 
one know  of  such  a  commission'.' 
No.  I  don't  think  so.  I  know  of 
one.  of  a  sort,  but  it  was  not 
conceived  by  any  of  last  year's 
candidates. . ." 

He  also  said.  "A  moment  of 
recollection  brings  to  mind  some 
chatt:r  about  the  honor  system  in 
l;^st  years  campaign.  Seems  as 
though  some  .sort  of  commission 
was  going  to  be  set  up  to  work 
with  the  hmor  councils  in  an 
endeavor     to     strengthen     their 

was  talk  that  the  honor  system 
was  'not  respected  by  the  stu- 
dents as  it  should  have  been." 

He  gDcs  on  to  say  ". . .  Of 
course^  this  was  just  one  issue, 
but  I  don't  know  of  anything 
that's  been  d:ne  to  give  the  hon- 
or syst'm  a  '  boost  this  year. 
Seems  like  it  has  taken  a  turn 
for  the  worst  insle:id.  But  at  the 
time,  it  sounded  nice." 

It  is  one  thing  to  know  the 
fa  Is,  and  it  is  another  to  writ^ 
en  assumptions.  Before  people 
start  discussing  any  platforms,  it 
would  be  wise  t  1  check  on  one's 
source  of  materials.  The  files  in 
the  Student  Government  Office 
ars  always  open  If  you  can't  find 
what  yourc  looking  for,  the  Sec- 
retary of  ^Student  Government 
will  help  you.  All  facts  about  the 
Honor  Commission  are  filed  in 
the  Student  Government  Office. 
So  are  all  the  facts  about  he 
other  issues  you  were  question- 
ing about  in  your  letter. 

Members  of  the  Women's  Hon- 
or Council  .stated  'that  the  Com- 
mission  has   definitely  cut   down 


L'il  Abner 


on  their  number  of  cases.  We 
have  many  more  cases  concern- 
ing students  who  have  not  dis- 
cus.sed  the  Honor  Code,  the 
Campus  Code,  and  Social  viola- 
tion with  a  Commission  repre- 
sentative than  we  have  had  with 
those  who  ciid  have  a  commiss- 
ion   member's    presentation. 

Pat  McQueen.  Women's  Hon- 
or Council's  Chairman  added. 
"Second  semester  orientation  did 
not  include  the  ftonor  Commiss- 
ion. Already  we  have  had  two 
cas3S.  involving  second  semester 
transfers,  who  have  violated  the 
social  rules  and  been  tried  by 
Honor  Council  who  did  not  have 
the  benefit  of  the.se  talks. 


All  people  who  tried  out  for 
Women's  Orientation  Chairman 
for  next  year  stressed  that  they 
c-nsidered  the  Honor  Commiss; 
ion's  work  an  asset  to  incoming 
transfers  and  freshmen  and  that 
they  hoped  to  incorporate  it  in 
next  year's  program. 

Jim  Exum,  questioned  about 
the  commission's  work,  replied, 
during  Orientation?  The  Honor 
C:inm:ssion  did  one' of  the  best 
jobs  of  orientating  the  frsshmen 
to  the  Honor  System  that  I've  ever 
seen  done.  I  have  net  made  a 
formal  study  of  the  number  of 
ca.s:s,  but  I  would  say  that  we 
have  not  had  as  many  freshmen 
cases  this  year  as  we  have  had 
in  the  past.'' 


.The  Honor  Commission's  Work 
is  not  yet  done.  Under  the  di- 
r2ct.ori  of  Jim  Exum.  it  is  plan- 
ning an  Honor  Emphasis  Week, 
which  will  be  held  in  April. 

All  this,  in  a  small  degree,  in- 
dicates the  results  of  .the  Honor 
cJ»rainiss;on,  which  includes  Char- 
les Tojnpkins,  Tucker  Yates,  Ed 
Li  main.  .Charlie  Datiiel.  Frank 
Schvimscher,  Fritz  Vah  Winkle, 
3tll  Waite.  Sonny  Ev^ns,  Jerry 
bppenheimer,  Jim  t*reston,  Bob 
Harrington.  Pat  McQueen,  Anne 
Byerly,  Harriet  Lewis,  .Sara 
Humphrey,  Ginger  Floyd,  Jackie 
Aldridge,  Esther  Ballentine,  and 
Mary  Lou  Wells. 

Jacki*  Aldridge 


'I  Haven't  Laid  ^  "^^Jnd  On  Her' 


W  m     lia    ^t     -m^m, 


*  1*  • 

Yx^ers  Column  Cohcluaed 


Ed  Yoder 

In  The  Charlotte  News 

These  facts  stand  out:  Beneath 
some,  of  tic  things  many,  even 
southerners  thcmselyrs.  curse  in 
the  South,  tod.iy  lie  histrric  in- 
stincts worthv  of  pride.  The 
South  by  nature  is  slow,  leisure- 
ly, conservative — like  all  socities 
wrd  for  so  long  to  the  soil;  but 
she  is  also  generous  and  friend- 
ly , bccau.se  of  the  leisure  that 
wedding  has  insured  her.  The 
South  is  not  particularly  in- 
terested in  money  -  making,  or 
she  would  be  wi.se  enough  to  .see 
that  her  race-problem  is  incom- 
patible with  the  coming  of  in- 
dustry which  alone  can  make  her 
rich  —  in  the  meaning  of  that 
w  rd  which  has  come  to  apply  in. 
even  dominate,  other  parts  «f 
the  country.  For  all  her  stub- 
bornness, the  South  still  inter- 
ests herself  in  guarding  the  rights 
of   minorities;    and   .she   still   dis- 


trusts social  engineering  based 
on  abstractions.  On  one  side, 
she  is  called,  with  a  certain  dis- 
dain, the  Bible  Belt;  on  the 
i^lu.r.  she  has  resisted  the  secu- 
larism which  cuts  her  neighbors 
Iro-e  fr.im  established  family  ob- 
ligatons  and  the  respect  of  per- 
son«. 

It  cannot  be  denied  that  the 
South  has  often  abused  these 
proud  traditions.  But  she  re- 
tains them;  and  they  are  worth 
letaining  yet.  'Without  wrap- 
ping herself  in  the  Grey  Con- 
federate cloak,  without  waving 
the  Stars  and  Bars,  the  South 
needs  a  greater  consciousness 
of  the  proper  use  of  the  tradi- 
tion she  knows  only  instinctive* 
ly:  That,  and  not  a  massivf 
changeover  to  the  "ways  of  the 
world,"  is  her  problem. 

Some  Uavc  said  there  are 
really  two  Souths.  Or.  if  you  like, 
a  r?al  South  with  a  mask  on. 
There  i$  the  South  which  riots 
in    Clinton,    Tonn.,    which    sends 


men  like  Eastland  back  to  Con- 
gress, the  South  so  well  captured 
in  Benefs.  " The  sick  mag- 
nolias of  the  false  romance  and 
al]  the  chivalry  that  went  to  seed 
before  its  ripening."  But  this  is 
really  only  the  mask.  Behind  it 
stands  the  South  which  for  all 
its  tribulations  cannot  take  it- 
self too  seriously.  The  South 
which  will  not  break  its  neck 
industrializing  to  make  money, 
nor  be  pursuaded  that  govern- 
ment "out  of  sight  and  at  a  dis- 
tance" is  a  pure  good.  The  South 
which  cannot  convince  herself 
that  pretense  to  cosmopolitanism 
holds  a  special  virtue,  but  which 
owns,  if  only  by  instinct,  tlie 
htyitage  of  Jeffersop. 

I  am. sorry  the  mask  is  often 
mistaken  as  the  face  behind  the 
ma.sk.  But  by  trying,  the  South 
may  remove  the  mask.  I  want  to 
be   there   when    that    happens. 

That  is  why  I  am.  and  will  re- 
main, a  Confederate. 


By  A!  Capp 


iviv 


'ij^^^snd 


VOU  AND  VOUR 
CPAZV  n-jCATIOJ 
TMAT  TME  WATCH 
v-VAS  CONCEALED 
ON -OR  IN -THIS 
INNOCENT  LITTLE 
CmZENt^'" 


BUT,  CHIEF - 

IT  is.'^-irs, 

TICKING  j?^ 

I  CAN 


^   VOO'RE    ' — J  IF  I  WAS  A 
CRACKERS,  J  MEAN, SHIFTS 
FOSDICK.^''  I  LITTLE  RAX  I'D 
^— ir^  SUE  TH'CITV 
l^rv  N  .1    f^OR  FALSE 


^ 


Pogo 


By  Wait  Kelly 


OTHER  NEWSPAPERS  SAY: 

Student  Gov  t: 
Mixed  Situation 

Roger  Kemp  4f 

"^n  The  Syracuse  Daily  Orange 

Parliamentarians  at  Syracuse  are  imable  to  con- 
cur on  the  philosophy  of  a  unified  student  govern- 
ment, while,  requests  for  greater  authority,  defini- 
tions of  purpose,  and  responsibility  of  student  rep- 
resentation constitute  the  current  leading  topics  of 
discussion  at  several  of  the  nation's  universites. 

Interested  students  at  Columbia  University  are 
complaining  of  a  lack  of  tepesentation  in  goven- 
mont  of  Morningside  Heights  College.  An  editorial 
in  the  Daily  Spectator  points  out  that  members  of 
the  governing  body  concern  themselves  primarily 
with  the  continuance  of  their  positions.  Fantastic 
promises  and  wild  slogans  receive  a  greater  amount 
cf  the  legislators'  attention  than  do  more  prei-sing 
matters.  If  the  result  of  this  not  altogether  uncom- 
mon travesty  on  democracy  was  an  efficient  group 
of  student  representatives,  cause  for  questioning 
would  be  small.  Howevsr.  says  the  Spectator,  the 
organizatian  spends  its  time  building  committee 
pyramids  and  designii^  frames  for  the  pictures  of 
the  university's  dignitaries. 

Obsessed  with  Ih?  means  of  student  government, 
rather  than  the  ends,  it  is  often  solely  concerned 
with  "the  role   of   student  government" 

The  Spectator  urges  that  these  "victims  of  an  un- 
' productive   system'   be  replaced  hy   an  interested 
•group   of   leeislat3rs  which  represent   the    studen 
body.  Delegates  from  athletic,  fraternity,  social,  and 
class  organizations  were  suggested  aj  members. 

This  body  would  be  truly  representative  of  the 

students,  sensitive  to  its  many  frimids  and  wishes 

and  anxious  to  act  in  its  behalf.  This  would  be  a 

,         council  of  tested  leaders;  not  o  thfose  striving  for 

leadership.  ^ 

Responsibility,  or  the  lack  of  it,'  on  the  part 
of  the  students  led  to  the  formation  of  the  Student 
Life  C  -mmittee  at  the  University  of  Maryland. 

This  group  is  selected  by  the  President  of  the  U. 
of  M.  and  is  currently  composed  of  15  faculty  mem- 
berj  and  four  students.  It  has  complete  authority 
over  all  student  organizations,  including  the  Student 
Government  Assn. 

,,The  policy  of  the  committee  is  to  delegate  to 
student  groups  the  maximum  authority  thej'  are 
desirous  and  capable  of  assuming,  provided  they  can 
give  "satisfactory  evidence  of  a  willingness  to  exer- 
cise, properly  and  promptly,  the  responsibilities  and 
obiligation^- which  accompany  this_  authority. "     '    ( 

Poor  attendance  at  S.GA.  meetings,  togefhejr 
with  the  failure  of  Maryland's  Interfra^nity  Coun- 
cil to  eafosce  university  regulations  as  applied  to 
fraternities,  has  caused  the  Student  Ule  ComraiUee 
to  assume  all  responsibility  ^d  authority  regarding 
the  regulation  of  students.  g#  i^    vf       "''^^  ^ 

The  opposite  situation  exists  at  th^  University 
of  Oregon,  where  the  Interfraternity  Council  v«ted 
to  place  two  of  the  prominent  fraternities  on  the 
campus  on  social  probation.  The  proposal  was 
made  to  the  Office  of  the  Dean  of  Men  and  fr«s 
immediately  followed.  •".:■■       »  i       "» 

Important  aspects  in  this  case  were  that  1)  tht 
Dean  cf  Men  placed  enough  confidence  in  his  stu- 
dents to  trust  the  IFC  group  to  recommend  punish- 
ment, aware  that  their  recommendation  would  be 
difficult  to  overrule  and  2)  the  students  assumed 
the  respon..'ibility  with  maturity. 

The  action  caused  the  Oregon  Dpily  Emeral  to 
suggest  that  Oregon  students  be  permitted  to  run 
more  of  their  own  affairs.  Reminds  )is  of  a  certain 
Pine  Brook  session.  i  .••-... 

J 
Effectiveness  of  a  student  governing  organiza- 
tion or  the  popularity  of  the  mem^rship  causes 
the  legislator  to  divide  his  loyaltyC  This  view  is 
that  of  the  Minnesota  Daily,  student  newspaper  ^ 
the  University  of  Minnesota.  .;  ' 

The  Daily  mentions  that  the  student,  abiding  by 
the  concept  that  he  is  an  integral  part  of  the  Univer- 
sity community,  may  lose  his  vigilance  for  student 
rights.  If  improperly  used,  thL*  concept  may  cau.>e 
well-being  of  the  university  and  secondarily  with 
students  to  concern  themselves  primarily  with  the 
the  status  of  fellow  students. 

Loyalty  to  the  University  burdens  the  student 
with  additional  responsibilities — mostly  negative.  He 
mu.v  respect  the  University's  lav|s  which  govern 
nearly  every  action  he  takes.  The  <Hie  positive  res 
ponsibility  he  acquires  is  this:  by  his  heightened 
knowledge  of  higher  education  from  attend  the  Uni 
versty,  his  responsibility  toward  higher  education 
must  also  'oe  increased.  This  posithe  responsibility, 
^•ays  the  Daily,  is  what  give* -student  government 
so  much  trouble.  "  j 

Student  governors  acquire  intimats  knowledge 
of  the  University.  They  begin  confusing  their  res- 
ponsibility to  the'  University  with  that  >e  the  sto^  * 
dents.  And  these  representatives  often  eehfuse  res-  ' 
ponsibility  to  the  University  witfj  agreement,  ^th 
University  officials! 

Unfortunately,  a  i^udent  government  which  doe^ 
not  occasionally  disagree  publicly  with  the  adminis- 
tration will  not  develop  much  popular  support.  But 
such  disagreement  often  leads  to  *an  ineffective  stu- 
dent government  program. 

Thus  student  government's  problem  is  one  of 
either  keeping  either  the  administration  happy  and 
being  effective  or  occasionally  publicly  disagreeing 
with  the  administration  and  being  ineffective  but 
popular  with  the  students.  Minnej>ta's  government 
recently  affirmed  a  proposal  to  follow  the  former 
method. 

It's  an  either/or  proposition  and  it's  unfortunate 
that  such  a  situation  must  exist.  But,  across-  the 
t'.'untry.  it  is  student  government's  major  and  per- 
ennial dilemma. 


rURDA' 


<hat 

ti(^     witH 
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versity 
r    itsell 
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leftts    to 
aition  of 
Cfalg    It 
TV 
book    haj 
and  Dr| 
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Dr.    WollJ 
liftey    a.K 
pane.sc 
and    ;;-( 
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■Us  and 
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iiily  to 
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ing  in  l^ 
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Jnivei-sLt) 
in     variol 


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RDAY,  MARCH   23,   1957 


TM*  DAILY  TAR  NEIL 


f  AGE  THREE 


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ilimtjed  from    page   \)         I 

hat    man's    difference    can 
ed    without    violence.    TMs , 
ail  enduring  tribute  tu 
tanity  of  Mr.   Gardner.   Wej 

be    proud    to  stand    behind 

?rsity    that    can    pause    to 

itself    in    relation    to    the 

iiankind.  Herein  is  a  course 

iT    the    heart    of    practical 
lity. 


DR.  WELLS 


1944.  when  he  entered  the  army. 
F<^owing  mflitary  srvtee,  he  did 
private  practice  in  Raleigli  and 
Durham  until  Ite  went  to  Japan 
in  1950.  He  remained  in  Japan  for 
two  years. 

Dr.   Wells  is  married  to  the  for- 
mer Rebeca  Atzrodt  of  Clarksburg. 


Scabbard  And  Blade 
Sponsors  Ball  Tonight 


The  annual  Military  Ball  will  be 
ir-eld  tonight  in  the  Naval  Armory 
from  9-12. 

Each   spring   the   Scabbard   and 


W.Va.  They  are  the  parents  of  five!  Blade,    honorary    military    society. 


;lls  went  to  Japan,  met  the 
!  phvsician.  Dr.  N.  Hachi- 
had  k^t  the  diary  on  the 
bombing,  and  made  ar- 
its  to  bring  the  book  to 
ition  of  the  entire  world  by 

;  it. 
V 

ooiv  lias  been  a  financial 
and  Dr.  Hachiya  requested 
royalties  be  paid  to  Dr. 
)r.  \V<>lls  would  not  accept'  Mrs 
ley  and  finally  persuaded 
ancse  doctor  to-  take  the 
md  u-=e  if  for  charity.  The 
s  now  being  used  to  edu- 
lanese  war  orphans, 
'ells  was  born  in  Dui'ham 
the  son  of  the  Rev.  Warner 
is  and  Narvie  Hobby  Wells. 
iS'  duties  as  a  minister  took 
ily   to   Eton  College.    Reids- 

{rtsjiiouth  and  Norfolk.  Va. 
ly  to  Raleigh  in  1928.  where 
arner  attended  high  school, 
kg  in   1931. 

eived  his  M.D.  degree  from 

tiversLty   in   1938,   remained 

various    capacities    until 


children. 

UNC  President  William  C.  Fri- 
day presided  at  tonight's  meeting. 
The  award  was  made  by  Former 
Lieutenant  Governor  H.  P.  Taylor 
<'f  Wadeslf^ro,  chairman  of  the 
Gardner  Award  Committee  of  the 
UNC  Board  of  Trustees.  The  invoca- 
tion was  given  by  the  Rev.  Samuel 
H.  Magill,  dtrectw  of  UNC  Student 
.\ctivitles. 


sponsors    the   Military    Ball.    It    is 

the  big  social  function  of  the  Naval  | 

land  Air  Force  ROTC  of  the  year.  I 

Don  Jefferson's  band,  "The  Em* 


GL^ESTS 

Special  geusts  for  the  dinner  were 
O.  Max  Gardner  o5f  Shelby; 
Mr.  and  Mrs.  O.  Max  Gardner! 
Jr..  Shelby;  Mr.  and  Mrs.  Ralph! 
Gardner.  Washington.  D.  C.  and 
Mr.  and  Mrs.  Fred  Morrison  of 
\\ashington.    D.    C. 

The  UNC  Board  of  Trustees  Com- 
mittee on  the  O.  Max  Gardner 
.■".ward  is  composed  of  Taylor;  Mrs. 
".  S.  Ferguson.  Taylorsviile;  Mrs. 
P.  P.  .McCain,  Red  Springs;  B.  S. 
Royster  Jr..  Oxford  and  C.  Knox 
Mas-sey  of  Durham. 


Music  for  the  program  was  fur- 
nished by  the  University  Choius 
I'nder  .the  direction  of  Dr.  Wilton 
Mason  of  the  UNC  Music  Dept. 


,        GOLP  CHAMPION, SAYS; 

VICEROY  HAS 
te  SMOPTHEST 

TASTE  OF  All  r 


OOTH  !  From  the  finest  tobacco  grown.  Viceroy  selects  only 

th  FlaNor  Leaf. . .  Deep-Cured  golden  brown  S^ox  extra  smoothness! 


Brawa  a  WiUii 


Robert  Getty 
To  Speak 
Next  Week 

Prof.    Robert  Getty,  head  of  the 

i  Dept.    of    Classics,    in     University 

I  College  at  the  University  of  Toroa- 

tc.   will  speak  on   "Virgil  in  Eng- 

ILsh  Poetry,"  Monday  at  7:30  P.M., 

in  Carroll  Hall. 

This  lecture,  which  is  sponswed 
by  the  UNC  Dept.  of  Classics,  is 
open  to  the  public. 

Prof.  Getty's  career  spans  Ire- 
land, S<*otland,  England,  Canadla, 
and  the  United  States.  He  was  bom 
jn  Londonderry,  and  received  his! 
.\.B.  degree  from  Queens  CoUege. 
Belfast.  He  later  received  the  M.A. 
degree  from  St.  John's  College, 
Cambridge  University. 

.\fter  positions  at  the  University 
of  Aberdeen,  am',  the  University  ot 
Liverpool,  he  returned  to  St.  John's 
i!S  Fellow  and  Lecturer  in  Clas> 
.<^ics.  From  1940  throtigh  1945  he 
worked  in  the  United  Kingdom 
Foreign  Office,  and  came  to  the 
University  of  Toronto  as  Pivfessot 
of  Latin  in  •1947.  He  was  Visiting 
Professor  of  Latin  at  the  University 
of   Chicago  in    1949. 

He  is  the  author  of  two  books, 
one  an  edition  of  the  Roman  epic 
poet  Lucan,  and  many  other  arti- 
cles in  British,  Canadian,  and 
.\merican   scholarly  periodicals. 


bers,"  yviSL  play  for  the  dance. 

There  will  be  a  reoeimil  line 
comprised  of  the  Navy  and  Air 
Force  cadet  officers  and  the  cadel 
commanders.  Representing  tiie  Na- 
val ROTC  wm  be  Cai^.  «Dd  Mrs. 
Patterson,  Commander  and  Mrs. 
Graves,  and  Cadet  Batallion  Com- 
mander Jim  Bynimi.  Th<se  rt^ire- 
seating  the  Air  Force  ROTC  will 
be  Col.  and  Mrs.  Smith,  Major  and 
Mrs.  Jack  Gabus,  and  Cadet  Col. 
Emory  EUixwe. 

Hie  Arnold  Air  Society  will  spon< 
sor  a  tea  for  tiie  Air  ilOTC  men  and 
their  dates  at  the  Phi  Kappa  Si- 
gma house  before  the  dance. 

"Hiere  will  be  a  t^evision  set  at 
the  armory  for  those  who  want  to 
&ee  a  litUe  of  the  UNC  ba^cetball 
game  during  the  dance,  according 
to  an  announcement. 


Mark  Twain'$ 
bnpersonator 
Here  Tuesday 

Henry  Hull,  sta^  and  screen 
star  and  impersonator  of  Marie 
Twain  will  appear  here  Tuesday 
ci^t. 

Hull  will  give  a  readhig  on  Mark 
Twain  in  Memorial  Hall  Tuesday 
at  8  p.m. 

His  appearance  here  will  be  spon- 
sored by  the  Student  Entertain- 
ment Committee. 

Hull's  program  will  including 
readings  from  such  works  as  "Tom 
Sawyer,"  "Hucklenberry  F  i  n  n." 
"The  Innocents  Abroad,"    "A  Con- 


Opera  Program 
Is  Planned 
For  Musicale 

A  program  of  infrequently-heard 
operatic  arias  and  ensembles  will 
be  presented  in  the  Les  Petites 
Musicalcs  series  tomorrow  ni^t 
ft  8  o'clock  in  Graham  Memorial. 

Walter    Golde    will    be    zmwlcal 


Davidson  Is 
Top  Accountant 

Clayton  W.  Davidson  of  Moores- 
ville  has  been  selected  as  the  Uni- 
versity's  "Outstanding  Student  in 
Accounting"  for  this  year. 

Davidson  was  honored  at  the  an- 
nual spring  awards  dinner  sponsM*- 
ed  by  the  North  Carolina  Assn.  «f 
Certified  Public  Accountants. 

This  dinner,  which  honored  the 
successful  candidates  ol  the  Novem- 
ber 1956  CPA  examination  and  the 
outstanding  students  in  accounting 
at  UNC,  Wake  Forest  College,  and 
Duke  University,  was  held  last 
night  in  the  Carolina  Inn  Ballroom 
in  Chapel  Hill. 

On  this  occask>n,  Walter  A.  Watt's 
of  Raleigh,  president  of  the  CPA 
Assn.,  presented  medals  to  the 
three  honored  students. 

James  M.  Slay,  vice-president  <rf 
the  Federal  Reserve  Bank  of  Rich- 
xnotKl,  delivered  the  principal  ad- 
dre»s,  "Executive  Self -Develop- 
onciht."  Slay  was  assistant  dean 
•and  director  of  the  Bureau  of  Test- 
ing and  Guidance  at  Duke  Univer- 
sity from  1943  to  1952. 


Fridays  Plan  To  Move      ,      .    »  v   i,    - 

'      ,  i  necticut    Yankee. 

In  Mansion  Early  in  June!  of  Joan  ot  Arc- 

Consolidated  University  Prejident 
William  Friday,  and  his  family  plan 
to  move  into  the  jM-esident's  man- 
sion on  Franklin  St.  around  the  first 
of  June. 

An  interior  decorator  from  Greens- 
boro was  hired  to  redecorate  the 
Interior  of  the  traditional  residence. 

The  painting  and  replastering  has 
been  done  in  traditional  style.  The 
back  ^  porch  of  the  house  has  been 
glassed  in  providing  a  modern  touch 
to  the  colonial  architecture,  accord- 
ing to  Mrs.  Friday. 


HENRY   HULL 

an  evening  of  Tioain 


Dr.  Waldo  Beach  Heads 
Forum  Here  Next  Month 


and    "The    Life 


The  veteran  actor  will  appear  in 
'An  Evening  of  Mark  Twain"  clad 
ill  the  same  attire  that  Twain  used 
to  wear  when  the  author  himself 
lectured  to  the  American  public 
around  the  turn  of  the  century. 

Henry  Hull  has  been  a  figure  ol 
the  American  tlieatrical  world  ft>r 
more  than  40  years.  He  has 
appeared  in  more  than  200  plays 
on  Broadway  and  on  the  road  and 
has  perfonned  in  almost  as  many 
motion  pictures  in  Hollywood. 


By  JACKii  HAITHCOCK< 

Dr.  Waldo  Beach,  noted  speaker, 
professor,  and  writer  in  various 
areas  of  student  life,  will  lead  the 
thinking    of  a   three-day     forum 

^L'PonsOTed  here  April  14,  15  and  16 
by  the  Campus  Christian  Ceimcil. 
The  OCC  Spring  Forum  will  cen 
ter  aroimd  tlie  theme  ."The  Chris- 
tian Faith— Protest  and  Affirma- 
tion." Its  main  emphasis  wiU  be 
upon  three  nightly  addresses  to  be 
given  "by  Dr.  Beach  in  Memoria! 
Hall  at  8  p.m.  These  will  fall  im- 
der  the  sub-themes  of  "Who  Are 
These  Christians?"  "What  Do  They 

iMore  Than  Others?"  and  "What's 
the  Use  of  the  Church?'', 

Informal  di^ussion  groups  will 
be  held  in  the  various  fraternities 
and  sororities  on  campus  preceding 
the  main  addresses.  Local  minis- 
ters, student  pastors,  and  profes- 
sors will  le»d  these  discusoions 
that  will  deal  with  varied  topics 

'  chosen  by  the  individual  groups. 
Following  the  main  addresses  by 

I  Beach   each  night,   t4>pic-centered 

j  discussion   groups  will   relate   his 


main  thoughts  to  various  areas  bf 
i'tudent  life.  Outstanding  facultjr 
and'  staff  personnel  will  guide  these 
groups,  which  will  meet  in  Graham 
Manorial,  Gerrard  Hall  and  other 
centrally  located  ^ots  on  campus. 
Dr.  Beach,  professor  of  Christian 
EJthics  at  Duke  Divinity  School,  is 
widely  known  throughout  th« 
Southeast  as  a  conference,  forum 
!and  convention  speaker.  He  is  a 
graduate  of  Yale,  gettlAg  both  his 
Phd.  and  B.  D.  there.  Most  widely 
read  among  his  writing^'  is  a  work 
done  in  coUafboration  with  H.  Ric- 
hard Niebuhr,  "Christian  Ethi&." 


Aieef  The 
Civil  War 


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Cr^mnfilno 
for  Kx«nn«7 


HOME  OF  CHOICE  CHARCOAL  BROILED  HICKORY  SMOKED  STEAK 
—  FLAMING  SHISHKEBAB  —  BUFFET  EVERY  SUNDAY 


Hodges 

(Continued  from  page  }) 
processing  plants  from  one  end  of 
North  Carolina  to  another."  , 

Hodges  described  the  present 
.?tate  tax  structutre  as  yet  another 
"smous  handicap  in  successfully 
locating  industrial  prospects."  He 


WHY     NOT     STUDY     IN     MEXICO? 

MEXICO  CITY  COLLEGE 

The  American  College  South  Of  The  Border 

(Approved  For  Veterans) 

Summer  Sessions  Workshops 

BACHELOR'S  and  Master's  Program 

June  1 1-July  16  July  18-August  23 

Write  To:   Dean  of  Admissions,  Box  P 
Mexico  City  College     » 
Km.  16,  Carretera  Mexican-Toluca 
Mexico  10,  D.F. 


Fifht  "B80k  Fitigiie"  Siftly 

Your  doctor  will  tell  you — a 
NoDoz  Awakener  is  safe  as  «n 
average  cup  of  hot,  black  cof- 
fee. Take  a  NoDoz  Awakener 
when  you  cram  for  that  exam 
...or  when  mid-afternoon 
brings  on  those  **3  o'clock  cob- 
webs."  YouUl  find  NoDoz  gives 
vou  a  lift  without  a  letdown . . . 
helps  you  snap  back  to  normal 
and  fight  fatigue  safely! 


fSt«bl*»t 


lorg*  ftonemt   >lz« 

"  r  Crf«l(  t»w  ond 

•rail)  60  l«bl«lt — 


-35«l- 


NOQOZ 

AWAKENERS 


XAft.A>..C<>FFEI 


I  Lots  '  of   people)  here-abouts    who 
enjoy   that   aristocrat  of   hobbies, 
I  old    book    collecting,    concentrate 
I  on  the  Civil  War. 
j  It  is  a  good  field  to  collect,  be- 
1  cause   it   is   so  full   of   plots   and 
j  counterplots,   of  sulphurous  diar- 
I  acters,    of   heroism   and    tragedy, 
I  and  each  book  gives  its  own  pri- 
I  vate    distortion    to    whatever   the 
j  original  facts  may  have  been. 
!  The  field  is  broad  enough  to  in- 
clude many  low-priced  books  for 
the  novice  collector.  On  our  shelf 
!  at  the  moment,  for  example,  is  a 
i  life  of  Lee  at  $1.95,  a  book  on  the 
Secret  Service  at  $2.95,  and  e^en 
a  battered  life  of  Jefferson  Davis 
at  less  than  a  dollar. 
In  the  Look-and-Long  division,  on 
the  other  hand,  theres'  a  bound  set 
of  Harper's  Weekly,  with  drawings 
and  day-by-day  reports  of  battles 
that  is  priced  at  $18.95. 
Let  your  rare  books  reflect  your 
owTi  interests.  One  of  these  days, 
treat  yourself  to  a  lazy  half-hour 
meeting  the  past  in  our  Old  Book 
Corner. 

THE  INTIMATE 

BOOKSHOP 

205  East  Franklin  Stre«t 

Open  Till  10  P.  M. 


director  and  Nonnac  Cordon  wiB  ^qi^  ^^in  group  of  the  development 
be  commenUtar  for  the  program,  of  ^^  ^^  package  plan,  which  in- 
which  will  feature  as  participants,  eludes  changes  in  the  corporate 
sopranos  >Iartha  Fouse.  Donna  income  tax  designed  to  attract  in- 
Patton,  Jan  Saxon  and  Jean  Ver- 1  ^justry,  now  before  the  General 
r.on;  mezzo  soprano  Anne  Moore;  [  Assembly's  Joint  Finance  Commit- 
tenors   Gene  Strassler  and  Romert  tpg 

Andrews;  baritone  Edgar  Vohj  "I  am  encouraged  with  the  sup- 
Lehm;  and  Nwman  Cordon,  bass,  port  the  program  has  received  so 
Sunday  night's  program  will  in-  i^  and  I  am  hopeful  that  it  will  be 
elude  -Mignon"  by  Ambpoige. '  ^^^cted  into  law  in  due  time,"  he 
•L'.^rlesiena"  by  CUea  Erk-h  Korn-  jji^j, 

gold's    "Die   Tote  Stadt,"    "Thais"!     1  he  GovemorV  "Research  Trian- 
by    Massenet,    Tschaikow>skys    •'Pi;  gie  Program"  came  in  for  comment 
Mue  Dame"   and    "Romeo  and  Ju-  by  Hodges  as  having' become  an  "in- 
Jiet,"  "The  Serrets  of  Suzanne"  by  dustry  in  itself.  .  .designed  to  teil 
Wold-Ferrari,  Boito's  "Meflstofele,",  the  world  the  wonderful  facilities! 
Der    Rosenkavalier"    by     Rilhard  and  opportunities'  offered,  in  the  j 
Strau.ss.     and     Richard     Wagner's  general   geographic   area   boundtid  j 
Die  Meistersinger."  j  by   UNC.   N.    C.    State,   and  Duke 

University.  | 

Hodges,  telling  of  the  support 
given  to  the  research  program  by 
industrial  leaders,  said  that  he  be- 
lieved "that  we  have  merely  turn- 
Chattanooga,  Tenn.,  was  elected  i«<i  ^^e  k«y  which  will  open  the 
Tuesday  by  the  freshman  camp '  door  to  a  great  future  in  research 
committee  of  the  YMCA  to  serve !  ""d  development  in  North  Caro- 
as    director    of    Freshman    camp ;  lin«  and  this  region." 

With  the  delivery  bf  Gov.  Hod- 
ges' Fifth  Annual  Business;  Fair, 
sponsored  by  the  Alpha  Tau  Chap- 


ESSO    RESEARCH   works  wonders   witti   oil 


Smoothing  the  way  for  your  call 


Dave  Davis  To  Direct 
Freshman  Camp  In  Fall 

Dave  Davis,  rising  junior  from 


!  next  Fall. 

I      Davis  will  direct  all  planning  for 


the  tliree-day  session  to  precede 
orientation  week  of  the  1967-58 
school  term.  The  camp  will  be 
held  at  Camp  New  Hope,  eight 
miles  from  Chapel  Hill. 

A  meeting  will  be  held  Tuesday 
at  -fl-.io  p.m.  in  Carroll  Hall  for  all 


ter  of  Alpha  Kappa  Pis  business 
fraternity,  was  ended.  In  its  day- 
long series  of  three  seminars, 
speakers  from  industrial  back- 
grounds addressed  various  groups 
on    the    Business    Fair's    general 


upper-classmen  desiring  to  be  coun-  j  theme.  'What  North  Carolina  Can 
cilors.  '      '  I>o  For  You,  Mr.  Industry." 


COME  AND  GET  IT! 
IVe  Still  Got  ESSO  EXTRA 


at 


Downtown  Prices  For 
Regular  Gas 


and 

My  Regular  3f!  Under  That 

Plus 

Bring  This  Ad  ind  Get  ICent  Off  Per  Gal.  Gas, 

5  Cents  Per  Qt.  Oil 

Credit  Cards  Honored  Again 

At  The  Students.'  Friend 

WHIPPLE'S  ESSO  SERVICE 


Important  calls  like  this  go  through  quickly  and  surely,  tJianks  to  an  elaborate  central  switching  mechanism. 

A  special  lubricant  developed  by  Esse  Research  keeps  it  working.  Delicately  brushed  on,  it  helps  the  mechanism 

make  split-second  connections.  Because  it  stays  on  for  many  months,  there's  less  chance 

ofabreakdown  to  interrupt  your  call.  Again  ESSO  RESEARCH  works  wonders  with  oil.        ^fm-gtj^ 


nMNur 


Dr.  Carmichaei 
Plans  To  Atftwl 
Conventron 

Dr.  Katherine  Kennedy  Carmich- 
aei. dean  of  women  ta  UNC  will 
]esvt  for  9an  Francisco,  Calif,  dti?- 
ing^  tti^  coming^  week  to  participate 
Id  tAe  aaiMia]  conveBtien  of  the  Na- 
tmaal  Amb.  of  Women  Deans  and 
Counselors. 

The  assoclatioa  wiU  meet  March 
<l  tbnnfih  April  1  at  the  Fairmont 
and  MarlE  Hopkins  hotels.  Miss  Car- 
michaei will  lead  a  luncheon  dis- 
cussion Friday,  March  29,  <hi  the 
topic,  "Programs  for  the  Gifted 
College  Studeat." 

On  Monday,  April  1,  she  will  take 
part  m  a  discussion  at  a  group 
meeting,  along  with  Dr.  Margiuret 
Habein  of  the  University  of  Roch- 
ester and  Miss  Dorothy  Lipp  of 
the  University  of  North  Dakota. 
Main  speakers  at  this  session  will 
be  H.  Donald  Winbigler.  dean  of 
sfndents  at  Stjorford  University; 
and  Dr.  John  L.  Bergstresser,  dean 
of  students  at  Chico  State  C<^ege. 
ChicOj^  Calif. 

Dr.  Camiichael  wHl  also  direct 
on  Sunday  ni^t,  March  31,  a  dis- 
caasion  group  intended  to  acquaint 
new  and  old  Association  members. 


SATURDAY,  MARCH  23,  1957 


*i"^ 


fr-''^  %4-.*  'V  i   ^-ir 


Coyermg  The  Universify  Campus 


UMt 


SATURDA1 


PMESS  WQMEM 

Registration  for  North  Carolina 
Press  Woihen's  Assn.  Spring  Injii- 
tuAe  will  be  ia  the  Library  at  9:30 
a.m. 
FREE  FLICK 

Tonight's  free  flick  will  be 
Blackboard  Jungle,  starring  Elea- 
nor Parker  and  Gienn  Ford.  ShoM[- 
ings  will  be  at  7:30  and  10  p.m.  in 
Carroll  Hall. 
GM  DANCE 

It  has  been  announced  by  Miss 
Linda  Mann.  Graham  Memorial  dir- 
ector that  the  combo  originally 
scheduled  to  appear  in  the  Ren- 
dezvous Room  this  evening  has 
been  cancelled  due  to  conflict  with 
the   Sophomore   Class   Dance. 


USF  FILM  I  ENGLISH  TESTS 

The   United  Student  Fellowship :     English  proficiency  tests  will  be 


I  ij  sponsoring  a  special  showing  ■ 
Jf  the  motion  picture  "Martin  Lu-  \ 

jther"  at  "7  p.m.  Sunday  at  the  Uni-  j 

I  ted  Congregational  Church  on  West 
Cameron  Ave.  j 

PEER  GYNT 

Dancing   tryouts   for  the   Caro- 
Una  Playraakers'  spring  production 

i  of  "Peer  Gynt"  will  be  held  Tues- 

i  day,  from  4-6  p.m.  in  Hillel  House 
on  West  Cameron  Ave. 

;  ABSENTEE  BALLOTS 

Students  desiring  absentee  bal- 

■  lots  for  the  L.ming  election  have 
been  warned  to  acquire  their  bal- 
lots at  least  four  days  in  advance 

'  of  the  electio.i  day. 


Governor  Will  Attend 
Finals  .In  Kansas  City 


given  at  7  p.m.  this  coming  Tue> 
day,  Wednesday,  and  Thursday  ev- 
enings in  106  Hanes  Hall. 
GRAD  CLUB 

The  UNC  Graduate  Club  will  give 
a  coffee  in  the  second  floor  lounge 
rf  the  YMCA  this  Sunday  at  4  p.m. 
BASKETBALL 

There  will  be  television  coverage 
of  the  Carolina  basketball  g«me 
this  evening  over  both  Charlotte 
and  Greensboro  Television  ouftets. 
WUNC-TV  r 

Todays  schedule  for  WirSCJV, 
the  L'niver.sity's  educational  TV 
station  is  aj  follows: 

5:00— D-Dg  Show 

6:00— Helping  the  Taxpayer 

6:30 — Yesterday's  Worlds 

7:00 — Delinquency 

7:30— The  Elements 

8:00— Art  and  Artists 

8:30 — America  Looks  .\broad 

9:00— Sign  Off 


Ptay  For  "Spring  Swing"  Tonight 

The  Duk*  AnrbasMdars,  pletured  above,  will  play  here  tonight     dance  to  be  held  in  Woollen  Gym  from  S^ll  p.m.  Featured  vocfiiet 
for  an  all-camiHis  dance  sponsored  by  the   lnt«^rmitory  Counfiil     ^.„,  ^^^  Ambessedors  is  Miss  Jean  Bleckstone  (insot). 
•nd  fke  eeiilieiiwii  dee*.  Tfie  16-inen  orchestra  will  play   for  the 


RALEIGH— (AP)— Gov.  Luther 
Hodges  will  fly  to  Kansas  City  to-  j 
day  to  attend  the  finals  of  the' 
NCAA  basketball  tourney — hoping' 
that  the  UNC  quint,  his  alma  mat- j 
ef.  will  be  in  the  finals  and  will 


Person  Hall  Exhibition 
Features  Oldr  New  Prints 

The  current  e:dubition  at  Person  | 
Hall  Art  Gallery.  "Prints  by  Oldi 
and  iMfodem  Mast«^"  was  assembl>, 
ed  for  the  gallery  through  the  co- 
operation of  three  print  dealers. 


Church  To  Raise  $90,000 


The  congregation  of  the  Com- 
mui^y  CbuTfCh  of  Chapei  HiH  has 
voted  unaBimously  to  taise  a  fund 
of  $904)M  to  erect  and  equip  a 
church    building    on    the    Church's 


Most  of  the  prints  are  available !  14-acre  tract  along  the  Purefoy  Rd 
for    sale    and    the    exhib.Uon    af 


fords  oppoFtimity  for  the  aicquisi- 
tk}g  of  examples  by  Picasso,  Lau- 
tree..  Cezanne.  Rraque.  Kokoschka, 
Ensor,  Munch,  Rembrandt,  thuren. 
Canaletto.  The  exhibition  will  con- 
tinue through  April   15. 


l^e  buildias  itself  would  c«st 
about  |7S,0M.  with  an  additiois^ 
$15,000  being  allowed  for  equipment. 
A  fund  campaign  to  raise  $60,000 
is  to  be  conducted  during  the  month 
of  )Iay  under  leadership    of     Dr. 


»Mr«w 


^oOo|, 


jack's 
a 

RMO.CW 

I  with  his  new  ▼ 

Ever  since  Jack  bought  his  new 
Sonic  CAPRI  phonograph  at  the 
local  college  store  —  he's  become 
the  biggest  B  M  O  C  ever.  You 
can  join  him  and  be  the  biggest  ever, 
too,  for  fott  can  bay  a  CAPRI 
phcmograirii  for  as  little  as  $19.95. 

This  mcAth's  special  is  the  CAPRI 

550  —  a  twin  speaker  high 

fidelity  portable  with  4-speed 

Webcor  automatic  changer, 

hi-fi  amplifier  in  attractive 

two-cooc  Forest  Green.      vnly  ^59^ 

at  yew  local  dealer.. 
SOhflC   INDUSTKIES,  1^.   19  Wabgr  Street,  lynbrook.  N.Y. 


Sidney  S.  Chipman  and  Mrs.   Emll 
Chanlett. 

See  CoBstroctfoD  Ntet  Year 
The  Rev.  Charles  M.  Jones,  Min 
ister  of  the  C&urch.  said  he  ht^ted 
that  construction  could  be  started 
en  the  project  next  year.  Since  it 
was  organized  in  1953  the  Church 
has  met  for  worship  services  in 
Hill  HaH  on  the  University  campus. 
Started  with  67  members,  the 
Church  now  has  a  membership  of 
248.  The  Rev.  Mr.  Jones,  former 
minister  of  the  Chapel"  Hill  Pres- 
byterian Church,  was  called  as  the 
first  minister  of  the  Cofomunity 
Church. 

At  a  cengreg aUoaal  d  i  ■  ■  e  r 
meeting  dnilttg  whkA  boildlng 
plans  were  dbcoseed,  Paul  Gn- 
thrie,  Chairman  of  the  Church's 
Property  Development  Commit- 
tee, said  that  the  building  archi- 
tects, George  Matsumoto  and  C»> 
cil  Elliott  «(  Balelgb.  weoid  be 
here  on  April  8  to  lOUtlhM  their 
tentative  plans. 

He  said  that  buildings  in  addi- 
tion to  the  Church  sanctuary  which 
were  ultimately  contemplated 
cwMtfttiwi  eo  tile  Chorefa  property 
inciiided  a  felkmship  hall,  class- 
umm,  and  craft  baOdings.  Prof. 
Guthrie  showed  tentative  sketches 
illuitratiag  how  these  mighi  be 
placed  in  relation  to  .the  main  build- 
ing. 
A  wcrk  party  was  pianned  at  the 


will  lea\-e  Raleigh-Durham  Air- 
port at  9  a.m.  and  is  expected  to 
arrive  in  Kansas  City  between  2 
and  3  p.m.  EST. 

The  party  will  depart  from  Kan- 
sas City  at  8  a.m..  EST.  Sunday  to 


building  site  on  April  IS  for  HhB 
purpose  of  building  a  picnic  shel- 
ter, which  is  scheduled  as  a  part 
of  the  over-all  development  of  the 
property. 

Greeting  Set  For  Cagers 

Win  or  lose,  the  UNC  basketoall 
team  will  probably  have  a  large 
reception  when  they  arrive  back 
from  Kansas  City  tomorrow. 

Plans  have  been  made  for  stu- 
dents to  great  the  team  at  the  Ral- 
eigh -  Durham  Airport  tomorrow 
at  1:20  pjn.  A  motorcade  back  to 
Chapel  Hill  wUl  follow. 

students  who  plan  to  be  at  the 
airport  have  been  asked  to  be  there  j 
at   1:20,   the  time   of  the   plane's 
arrival. 

AJl  students  not  planning  to  be 
there  but  who  wish  to  join  in  the 
reception,  have  been  asked  to  be 
at  the  Fetter  Field  house  at  2  p.m. 

Chancellor  Robert  B.  House,  stu-  j 
dent    body   President    Bob    Young 
'jnd   others  have   announced   they  j 
will   be   on   hand   to   welcome   the 
for  ^  team  back  home, 

COSMOPOLITAN  CLUB 

l^e  Cosmopolitan  Chtb  will  m«et 
tomorrow  at  4  p.m.  in  the  .\ssrm- 
Wy  Room  of"  the  Wiisen  Library. 
D..  Manwe  of  the  Medical  School 
Bacteriology  Dept.  will  present  a 
program  on  Denmarlc 


Cosmopolitan  Group 
Meets  Sunday  At  4  j 

He  Coiiimopoditan  Club  will  meet 

tomorrow  in  tho  Library  Assembly 

Ro»m  at  4  p.m.  ! 

I 
The    meeting    will    consist    of    a 

discussion  of  Denmark  led  by  Dr.  I 

G'.    P.    Minar.    Refre^unents    wUI 

precede   the   program.  j 


bring  home  the  state's  first  nation- ;  return 
al  basketball  crown. 

If  the  top-raTiked  Tar  Heels  won 
over  Michigan  States'  Spartans  last 
night,  they  will  play  in  the  finals. 
If  they  lose,  they  will  play  in  the 
consolation    bracket    tonight. 

The  Governor  and  a  party  of 
nine  persons  will  fly  to  Kansas 
City  aboard  a  DCS  owned  by 
Burlington    Industries.   The    plane 


to  Raleigh-Durham. 
The  Governor's  party  will  in- 
clude: Lt.  Gov.  Luther  Barnhardt 
and  his  son.  John  Barnhardt;  Rep. 
Carl  Venters  of  Onslow;  Harold 
Makepeace  of  Sanford;  Clarence 
Stone  of  Stoneville;  Ben  Trotter 
of  Leaksville;  Warren  Williams  of 
Sanford;  John  Harden  of  Greens- 
boro; and  Ed  Rankin  of  Raleigh, 
the  Governor's  private  secretary. 


UNC  Administration 
Registers  4  425  Cars 

Permits  for  4.425  student,  staff,]  It  was  estimated  that  Hiere  are 
«nd  faculty  automobiles  have  been!  an  additional  ;)00  student  autos  in 
issed   by  the  University,   according'  town  which  are  not  officially  regis- 


See  Our  Complete   Line  Of 
SONIC  PHONOGRAPHS 

SELK  -  LEGGETT .  HORTON 


to  an  analysis  prei>ared  by  the  Uni- 
versity administration. 

Tonight's  Free  Flidc 

To  Be  Shown  Only  Once 


DAILY   CROSSWORD 


ACBOM 

l.lfeeNif  ttfm 

•wOften 
(paet.) 

•.< 
1«. 
II.  n^e  Again 

ts. 

IS. 


tT.eivr»MMe 

m.  vemcm 

niteviM 

sdRnd^ 


S.  Public 
•howtnf 

4.  BMCianHu 
tlon 

7.  HigH  tem- 
perature 

8.  Tripod 
21.  AAcer 

13.  Lower  part 

ef  wan 
1«.  Stajncr 
It.  CMBtxaetiea 
St.  Pttdiar 
SS.  Siiamliia- 

37.  Oavata 


2S.  Un. 

cooked 
a*.  Early 

In. 

hab. 

ttant 

(O.B.) 
M.Ott 
31.  Pat 
3«.Bfocii« 
3t.»amite 

groave 
S7.  Wild 

<K« 

lAuat.) 
41.  iUfretted 


•i/:n:jii;ii   'jt 


tered  for  permits,  k  breakdown  of 
tl)e  figures  shows  that  the  majority 
of  cars  are  owned  by  undergradu- 
ate students,  whose  total  is  1,862. 

Here   is   the  distribution   of  auto 

permits      by     student     residences: 

LK>rmitories,  1.030;   fi-atemities,  365; 

Tonight's  free  flick  will  be  shown  Glen  Lennox,   185;   Victory  Village, 

v-.nly   once,    Graham    Meawrial    Di>  246;    Town,  660;   outskirts,  87;   and 

rector  Miss  Linda  Mann  stated  yes-   commuters,    327.    Permits   were   is- 

terday.  j  sued    to    47    jrfij'S.ically-handicapped 

She  said  the  time  will  depend  on   students  in  the  over-all  total, 
the   time   the   Tar  Heel   basketball;     There  are   107  freshmen   who   as 
squad  plays  tonight.  *  i  veterans   or    physically-handicapped 

If  the  team  wins  in  the  first  round  students  have  been  issued  auto  per- 
against  Michigan,  the  fUm,  "Black-  mits.  Sophomores  account  for  6»0; 
board  Jungle,"  will  play  at  7:30.  student  in  the  School  of  .\rts  and 
If  the  Tar  Heels  lose,  the  showing   Sciences,  533;  Graduate  School,  4(to; 


will  be  at  10  p.m. 


and  law  School,  172. 


Ttrtitoy**  ieiwr 

44.  Aged 
4CBneloaure 
(■sot) 


tS.ObaCiat  of 


SftCMtfliet 

n.9mam  tad 

4».Wm 

4t.HMMni 

4S.  ahgjawM 

48.HBrdeiia 

4T.lfotMng 
M^S^iHiped 
mokUnga 
49.  UtUe  child 
iO.  Sw^IUaga 

oo#ir 
1. 

%\ 

.  1.  PIc  Cat 


Kerr  Scott  Proposes  MeasMre 
For  Teachers'  Tax  Deduction 


WASHINGTON-OB  —  Sen.  W 
Kerr  Scott  (D-NC)  haa  come  to  the 
aid  oi  school  teach«rs  with  legis* 
lotion  tJiat  would  aDow  them  to 
make  certain  deductkMs  from  their 
federal  incwne  taxes. 

Scott  Uitrodttced  a  bill  Thursday 
that  would  permit  the  teachers  to 
deduct  the  cost  of  sunmier  school 
and  iMademic  w<Mrk  toward  gradu- 
ate degrees. 

Scott  said  the  proposai  would 
"correct  a  very  definite  discrimi- 
nation against  teachers  which  has 
existed  a  long  thne." 

He  asserted  big  business  is  allow- 
ed   \iO 


ficates  up  to  date  and  improving 
their  standing  in  the  profession  is 
Jiist  as  important"  to  the  teachers 
"as  oe#  machinery  is  to  an  b- 
duatry" 


English  Proficiency  Tests 

Eagliarb  profleiency  wsts  will  be 
given  at  7  pjm.  Tuesday,  Wednes-! 
day  and  Thursday  hi  106  Haqes' 
Hall. 


All  students  hi  the  General  Col- 
lege   who    havie    compieted    EAg- 
Hah    2    are    required    to    take    the 
examination  befoi:e  they  are  to  be 
dedoet  the  cost  of   "wining  admitted  Into  the  upper  colleges. 


and   dining  customers,  but  for  aU :     Any  student  viho  has  been  aoti- 

practkcal  i^lirposes,  under  the  nar-  fied   that   he   must    take    the    tests 

row  mliDg  o(  the  iateraal  reveaud  and  who  has  not  done  so  has  bren 

.  service,   most  teachers   get  no  tax  '■.  asked    to    attend    on    one    of    the 

'  iierlirctiofl  tsr  vrtiar  they  spend  fbf  ,-nfghts.    Fatiore   to  do  scr  Tivill.  tc- 

sununer  school  and  courses  leading  \  suit  in  a  $2  fine,  according  to  an 

toward   graduate   degrees."  j  announcement    from     Uie     General 

Scott   said    "keeping    their    certi-  College.  * 


The  quick] 
[iDrown  fox'1 

Smmrt  eoltrre  women  know  that 
(}tbb«  ttiorouirh  MH-retariat  train- 
iiif^  i.«  tU«  ()ui«kei<  route  VatniA 
ne«*i  fruccfM. 
Special  CoiirM  for  Cotltft  Woflitn.  Writ! 

Co<ite«  &»■■  iw  ii9%&  eims  at  wo«k. 


■OSTON  II     ...  71  Mtrlboreuth  SL 
WOVIOWCt  «    .  .   .  .   m  Ant»it  SI 

law  VftltK  i; 7Mf»<*»»«. 

MOMrCUM.  N.i.    .  .  S3  PIpnoUli  IL 


TAKE  YOUR  DATE  FOR  SUNDAY  DINNER  TO 

DANZIGEirS  OLD  WORLD  RESTAUKANT 

For  an  International   Fair  of  Quality  Food 


FRENCH  ONION  SOUP . 

HUNGARIAN  GOULASH  l..__ 

OeJIMAN  SAUERBRATEN  W.  DUMPLING  - 
ClECH  MEAT  ROULADE  W.  SOUR  CREAM 

STUFFED  ROAST  CHICKEN 

WIENER  SCHNITZEL  


$   35 

^ $    1.111 

-! ^^$1.45 

^   $.90 

$1.10 

„  $1.25 

Served  witli  seiad,  2  vegetabJos,  bread,  butter,  coffW  or  iced  tea 


Hofnemade  French  and  Viennese  Pastries 

Hours  from  11:30  A.  M.  to  7:30  P.  M. 


GIVE  YOU  PERMANENT 
ASSURANCE   OF  VALUE 

Artcarved's  Permanent  Valu« 
Plan*  permits  you  to  apply  the 
full  current  retail  prire  of  your 
Art  caned  diamond  toward  a 
larger  one.  Rt  any  time,  at  aay 
Artcaned  jeweler" <;  throvglraut* 
the  U.S..\.,  as  stated  in  th^ 
guarantee.  ■Tr*dni--«»k     ^ 

Beloved  by  Brides  * 

for  Over  100  Years  " 


rtcarved 


Give  You  Permanent 
Assurance  Of  Value 


WENTWORTH  •  SLOAN 


ii^» 


// 


A  big  ccmipany  works  for  me . . . 


// 


.^ost  ot  H 
pie     are 
J^^rners  of 
2     chances  arc 
a    Marcl 
they  heard 
lina  go  afti 
ball    chan>{ 
As  they 
whip  Miehij 
ably    Ihu^hl 
yeai's   ago 
clubbed  tne| 
bed    AAdh-di 

pleted  an 

After  th< 
lanla  hit 
some   500 
one-fourth 
organized 
ham     in 
nightshirtsj 
leader  Vic 
Hill,  hard\ 
sang  and 
miles    to 
every    all- 
still    open 
there,    abt 
rounded    tl 
cage  heroel 
"Sprat"    CJ 
bleary-f>ye(j 
the  stars. 

Most  ofl 
back  to  L"! 
IKirhain 
panies  wh| 
had  'take 
tired  groi 
cents  perl 
S:me   git 


^'I  began  working  on  a  training  program  for  General 
Elettric  in  the  summer  of  '52.  Right  now^I'm  'Em- 
ployee and  Plant  Community  Relations  Meager'  of 
my  company's  new  plant  in  Burlington,  Iowa.  One -of 
the  advantages  I  found  In  world  ng  for  a  big  company 
such  a^i  General  Electric  is  that,  because  of  its  size, 
it  is  able  to  give  nie,  and  other  college-graduate  em- 
ployees like  me,  a  widft  variety  of  training  and  experi- 
ence in  any  one  of  159  plants^all  over  the  country. 
Through  an  extensive  on-th6-job  training  program, 
it  is  providing  me  with  the  opportunity  to  become 
one  of  the  top  men  in  my  field,  and  I  know  that  as 
long  as  I  apply  myself  to  each  job,  Til  keep  moving  up. 
The  way  I  look  at  it,  General  Electric  is  helping  me 
help  myself.  That's  why  I  say  I'm  working  for  a  big 
company,  but  a  big  company  works  for  me,  too." 


ThiB  wide  framework  of  opportunity  is  a  unique 
characteristic  of  a  company  of  General  Electric's 


JOHN  D.  EVANS,   University  of  Pennsylvania,  1952 

size.  27-year-old  John  Evans  is  just  one  example  of 
the  thousands  of  college  graduates  at  General  Electric, 
each  being  given  the  opportunity  for  self-development 
so  that  he  may  grow  and  realize  his  full  potential. 

As  our  nation's  economy  continues  to  expand  in  the 
years  ahead,  thousands  of  young  people  of  leadership 
caliber  will  be  needed  to  fill  new  positions  of  responsi- 
bility in  American  industry.  General  Electric  feels 
that  by  assisting  young  people  like  John  Evans  in  a 
p-lan!^/^  program  of  personal  gro\vth.  we  have  found 
one  way  of  meeting  this  need. 

A  Moneger  of  Employte  and  Plant  Community  Relations  at 
General  Electric  holds  a  respo;«sibl«  position:  he  handles  em- 
ployee benefits,  health  and  safety,  training,  wage  and  salary 
administration,  and  community  relations. 

/h>gr€ss  /s  Our  Most  imporMnf  P^ucf 

GENERAL^ELECTRIC 


Gol 
A. 


1            ®^ 

1                 Monday 

'I. 

Carolina  s 

"i 

be  strong 

season    ag 

lege  team 

Finicy  i 

announce< 

local  iK>ys 

and  he  e 

formance 

Kenn\, 

absence  o 

golf   coac 

who    is    i 

know     \\ 

lowing  si: 

No.    1, 

Gene  Loc 

ams;   No. 

' 

Walt  Sub 

Mitchell. 

\^ 

Roundi 

roster    ai 

who   in    : 

hope  to  J 

«iX. 

11  be 
ev- 


give 
p  m. 


'T\. 
-T\' 


Ihc* 


Int 


»AN 


SATURDAY,  MARCH   23,  1951^ 


•   THC  DAILY^AR  HHL 


UNC  Splits  With  Ohio  State  And  Rollins; 


>:'f  tjU  ; '  ?c^.. 


#AGE  ^rvi 


r^- 


Is  Staf 


First  Game  Is  Slugfest; 
Second  Goes  10  Racks 


Jim  Raugh 

*  Jim  Raugh,  the  bis  Tar  Hc«l  righthander,  pitched  the  first  six 
.innings  Thursday  against  Florida's  Gators  and  surrendered  but 
Jhree  hits  and  one  run  in  his  pitching  stint.  Don  Saine  got  gredit 
■^or  the  win  a«  UNC   rallied  for  five  runs  in  the  top  of  the  nnith 

to  break  a  7-7  tie. 


Tar  Heel  Cage  Fans 
Might  Think  Of  24 
Unbeaten  Season 

.}&ost  of  the  several  hundred  peo-    buck,  but  Huggins  remembers  rid- 
pJe     are     scattered     around     the    ing   all    the   cold  way    back   on   a 

;P9fners  of  the     world     now.     but    fender, 
chances  are  their  minds  went  back  ■ 

-te  a    March    night   in    1924   while  ' 
they  heard  or  watched  North  Caro-  ' 
lina  go  after  the  national  basket- 
ball championship  this  weekend.    '  ^^j^ 

As  they  watched  the  Tar  Heels 
whip  Michigan  State,  they  prob- 
ably   thught    about    the    night    33    i  can  even  see  the' blue  and  "white 


WINTER  PARK,  ria— (AP)— 
Wallie  Shook  drove  .across  All  t2iree 
runs  as  North  Carolina  tallied  and 
scored  a  10-inning  2-2  l>aseball 
victory  over  JiolUju  today. 

The  win  gave  North  Carolina  an 
even  split  in  the  Baseball  Week 
doubleheader.  Ohio  State  blasted 
the  Tar  Heels  10-6  in  the  open- 
er. 

Rollins'  freshman  Stover  Mcll- 
wain  shut  out  North  Carolina  on 
thres  hits  for  seven  innings  be- 
fore Shook  doubled  across  two 
runs.  Rollins  bunched  thrct  9^ 
its  four  hits  off  Charlie  Cross  for 
a  2-0  lead  in  the  second,  book's 


Phillies  Beat 
Cardinals,  4-3 

ST.  PETERSBURG,  Fla.— Barry 
Anderson,  a  rtxAie  outfielder, 
drove  in  all  of  the  PhUadelphia 
runs  to  give  the  Phils  a  4kS  ver- 
dict today  over  the  St.  Lotus  Card- 
inals. 

Anderson  hammered  a  three- 
run  home  run  in  the  first  inning 
and  drove  in  the  deciding  mn  with 
a  sacrifice  fly  in  the  ei^th  in- 
ning. 

Don  Cadwell,  who  pitched  shut- 
out ball  lor  the  Phils  after  com- 
ing in  in  the  sixth,  was  the  win- 
ner. Cart  SimmonSr  the  Phils 
starter,  yielded  five  liits  and  the 
three  runs. 


infield  hit  with  the  sacks  full  in 
the  10th  gave  Nwth  Carolina  the 
winning  run. 

Ohio  State's  reliefer  Bill  Soter 
climaxed  a  5-run  sixth  inning  with 
a  double  and  initiated  the  winning 
four-run  rally  with  a  single  in  the 
eighth.  Warren  Mizutani's  pinch 
hit  three-nin  double  climaxed  the 
eighth.  ' 

FIRST  GAME 

Ohio  State  001  005  040—10  14  4 
UNC  010  301  010—  6    9  1 

Rutecki,    Soter    3,    and  Conte; 
Saine.  Aycock  6,     Floyd     7     and 
Maultsby. 
SECOND    GAME 

Rollins  020  000  000  0—2  5  1 

UNC  000  000  020  1—3  J  1 

Mcllwain  and  Coffie;  Cross, 
Morgan  8,  Aycock  8,  Maultsby  9 
and   Legette. 


Yale  Favorife  In 
Championships 


Dixie  Classic 

Only  one  of  the  four  outside 
positions  for  the  1957  Dixie  Classic 
remains  to  be  filled.  St.  Louis, 
Northwestern  and  Duquesne  have 
already  accepted  their  bids.  The 
fourth  team  which  will  compete 
against  the  Big  Four  clubs  prob- 
ably will  be  either  Yale  or  Louis- 
ville.. Tournament  officials  have 
expressed  a  keen  interest  in  both. 


By  STEWART  BIRO 

The  cream  of  the  nation's  swim- 
mers, 500  strong,  representing  56 
colleges  from  Maine  to  California 
will  begin  heading  for  Chapel  Hill 
this  weekend  with  sights  set  on 
the  annual  National  Collegiate 
Swimming  Championships  opening 
«t  Bowman  Gray  Pool  Thursday 
night,  March  28th  and  continuing 
tlo-ough  Saturday,  March  30th. 

This  is  the  second  time  in  the 
history  of  the  annual  event  that 
UNC  has  been  host,  the  last  time 
being  in  18i*9,  when  the  presently 
Ineligible  Ohio  State  Buckeyes 
walked  off  with  the  coveted  title. 
Odds-on  favorites  to  take  their 
sixth  NCAA  title  in  the  past  twen- 
ty yeari-  are  the  Eli  of  Yale  Uni- 
versity under  the  tutlage  of  the 
dean  of  American  swimmiffg  coac- 
hes, Robert  J.  H.  "Bob"  Kiptuth, 
now  in  his  forty-third  year  at  the 
Ivy  League  College. 

Kiptuth  is  generally  credited 
with  placing  swimming  in  the  high- 
ly regarded  position  it  is  to  day, 
and  putting  the  United  States  in 
the  forefront  in  world  aquatic  cir- 
cles. 

Olosedy  following  Yale  in  the 
pre-meet  dope  sheet  finds  Michi- 
gan, Michigan  State,  Indiana  and 
•Harvard  favored  for  the  second, 
third,  and  foiu-th  place  finishes  and 


One  of  the  clubs  set  for  the  1958 
event  is  Michigan  State,  last  night's  j  the  host  Tar  Heels  rated  the  fifth, 
opponent  for  North  Carolina  in  •  spot.  These  six  teams  are  so  close 
the   NCAA  tournament.  '  :n  caliber  that  a  few  points  won 


Bradley  Plays  Memphis  St.  Today 
In  Finals  Of  National  Invitation 


or  lost  could  change  the  order  of 
finish. 

As  has  been  the  rule  rather  thar 
the  exception  in  past  NCAA  meets, 
several  collegiate,  American,  and 
world  marks  are  endangered.  A 
host  of  standards  have  been  brok 
en  over  the  country  this  past  sea 
son  and  the  national  championship 
should  be  -no  exception, 

For  the  host  Tar  Heels,  All-Am- 
tfican  Charlie  Krepp  appears  to 
'oe  the  chief  threat  of  Coach  Ralph 
Casey  in  a  bid  fw  a  NCAA  event 
championship.  Charlie  has  turned 
in  the  best  times  in  the  country 
this  season  in  both  the  100  and 
200  yard  backstroke  events.  He 
finished  third  in  the  200  and  sixth 
in  the  hundred  in  last  year's  cham- 
pionships. •       '  ^ 

Additional  point  gathers  should 
be  Bill  Roth  in  the  50  freei;tyle; 
Roth,  Rose,  Zickgraf  and  Krepp  in 
the  400  freestyle  relay;  Mclnnis, 
Meekins  and  Parker  in  the  high 
and  low  diving;  Krepp,  Zickgraf, 
Miahaffy  and  Roth  in  the  400  med- 
ley relay;  and  possibly  Mahaffy, 
Zickgraf,  Rose  and  Schiffman,  in 
the  other  events. 

The  only  event  to  be  contested 
Thursday  night  will  be  the  gruel- 
ling I'SOO  meters  freestyle  starting 
at  8  p.m. 


,Uy* 


Charlie  Krepp 


i5*^ 


DIXIELAND  COMBO 

FROM  2  TO  5 
SATURDAY   AFTERNOON 
FEATURING 

LES  SUTORIUS 

THE    PATIO 


By  HUGH  FULLERTON  JR.         this  year  under  his  former  assist 

■an,  Chuck  Osborn. 


Recalling  the  march,  cheerlead- 
er Huggins  says  "I  can  remem- 
ber certain  phases  of  the  march 
to  Durham  as  though  it  happened 
last  month.  Faces  come  to ; 
mind  but  I  cannot  associate  na^cs 
with    them    after   these    33   years. 


years  ago  when  the  UNC  team, 
uubbed  the  White  Phantoms,  drub- 
bed Alabama  for  the  South  Con- 
ference championship  and  com- 
pleted an  undefeated  season. 
After  the  happy  news  from  At- 


bathrobe  worn  by  a  boy  without 
bre-ches.  I  can  see  the  flapping 
b^iro^m  slippers  the  battered  tin 
tub  that  somebody  carried  along 
as  a  drum." 

Mr.  Hu-^^ins  is  trying  to  get  a 


lanta  hit  Chapel  Hill,  a  group  of    Ust  of-  all  the  fans  who  made  the 


some  500  students,  then  about 
one-fourth  of  the  student,  body, 
organized  a  march  on  nearby  Dur- 
ham in  their  exuberance  and 
nightshirts.  Led  by  head  cheer- 
leader Vic  Huggins.  now  a  Chapel 
Hill,  hardware  dealer.*  the  throng 
sang  and  cheered  all  the  nine 
miles  to  Durham  and  took  over 
every  all-night  eatery  that  was  Huggins  said.  "There  is  the'  grow- 
still    open      when      they      arrived    ing  feeling  through  the  years  that 


march.  He  asks  all  who  were  along 
to  writ?  him  at  his  store  in  Chap- 
el Hiil  and  send  any  names  tb|^ 
remember. 

Of  those  who  made  the  march, 
Huggins  remembers  about  20,  who 
are  now  scattered  all  over,  from 
New  York  to  the  Canal  Zone. 

Summing     up     the     adventure. 


there  about  4  ajn.  They  sur- 
rounded the  homes  of  Tar  Heel 
cage  heroes  -Cart"  Carmichael  and 
•Sprat"   Ccbb   and   applauded   the 


h*re  in  the  microcosm  of  one  night 
was  summed  up  mankind.  It  was 
folly  perhaps  (for  what  was  to  be 
gained  by  such     a     march)     but 


bleary-eyed  but   happy   parents  of    above  all,  it  was  devotion  to  some- 


the  stars. 

•Most  of  the  marchers  made  it 
back  to  Chapel  Hill  in  taxis  from 
Durham    and     Chapel    Hijll    com- 


thiHg  intangible,  something  big- 
ger and  finer  than  it  ever  was  or 
can  be.  On  that  night  we  were 
marching  not  for  a  basketball  vic- 


panies  whose  enterprising  owners    tory   in   Atlanta,   as   proud   as  we 

were  of  that,  but  rather  we  were 
marching  as  a  sort  of  testimonial 
to  our  pride  in  Carolina  and  her 
sons — past,   present   and  future." 


had  'taken  advantage"  of  the 
tired  group  to  the  tune  of  fifty 
cents  per  ride  back  to  classes. 
S.me  g3t  inside  fdr  their  half  a 


Golf   Season   Opens 
Against  Rollins  Mon. 

By  JIM  C1K)WN0VER  They  are:  Tuffy  Henderson  John 

Monday   afternoon   at   2:00   p.m.    McKee,    Bob   Ruffin,   John  Johns- 
Cafjlinas  golf  team,  expected  to  ton,  Don  McMillan,  James  Collins, 
be  strong  this  year,  opens  its  1957  Aubrey  Rothrock,and  Larry  Bell, 
sea.  jn   against  crack  Rollins  Col- !     C  )ntrary  to  a  previous  announce- 
leik'e  team  on  the  local  links.  i  ment  Buzzy  Basinger,  Joe  Correll 

Finley  Golf  Club  Pro  Ed  Kenny  ;  and  Jim  Sykes  are  definitely  not 
announced  this  weekend  that  the   in   school.    Kenny,   however,   was 
local  boys  were  looking  very  good,   quick   to  point  out  that  with  the  \ 
and  he  expected  a  top-flight  per-  \  great     improvement  ^  of  all     team 
formance  Monday.  '  mem*:ers,  "the  squad  is  shaping  up 

Kenny,  handling  the  team  in  the    belter  than  lait  years',  which  is    had   a   successful   spring   practice 
absence  of  C.  P.  "Chuck"  Ericson,   saying  a  lot  since  they  only  lost  |  session,  but  I'll  know  more  about 
golf  coach   and    athletic   director,  one  match  all  season,  and  won  the  ^  that  Saturday." , 
who   is   in   Kansas   City   for   you    Atlantic   Coast   Conference  ^Dham-  j 
know     what,  announced     the  fol- 1  picn   lip.  "  '  j 

lowing  six-man  team:  !     O^^     of  ^^^  expecially     bright 

No.  1,  Tommy  Lapgiey;  No.  2, !  spots  in  the  Tar  Heel  camp  is  the 
Gene  Lookabill;  No.  3,  Buck  Ad-  return  of  Tommy  Langley  frojn  the 
ams;  No.  4,  Sam  Patrick;  No.  5,  armed  service.  Langley  won  the  old 
Walt  Summerville;  and  No.  6,  Cal  Southerr.  Conference  Championship 


NEW  YORK-^AP)— The  coach 
who  was  largely  responsible  for 
building  the  current  Bradley  Uni- 
versity basketball  team,  will  try 
to  find  its  weakness  tomorrow  and 
add  another  surprise  to  the  up- 
set-riddled 20th  National  Invita- 
tion Basketball  Tournament. 

Bradley,  the  tournament's  sec- 
ond seeded  team  and  the  only  fav- 
orite that  has  survived  so  far, 
meets  newcomer  Memphis  State  in 
the  nationally  televised  CBS  final 
game  in  Madison  Square  Garden 
at  2  p.m.  EST  immediately  af- 
terward, St.  Bona  venture  and 
Temple  will  play  off  for  third 
place. 

The  man  who  has  guided  Mem- 
phis State  into  its  first  major 
tournament  final  is  Bob  Van  At- 
ta,  who  coached  Bradley  for  two 
seasons  and  who  recruited  the 
players  who  reached    their    peak 

Red  And  White 
Football  Game 
Played  Today 

RALEIGH  —  North  Carolina 
State's  Red  and  White  football 
game  today  looms  as  a  duel  be- 
tween Dick  Christy  and  Frank 
Cackovic. 

Christy,  State's  fancy  dan  run- 
ning star,  is  expected  to  be  the 
Red  team's  number  Qne  offensive 
weapon. 

Cackovic.  a  rising  junior,  will 
quarterback  the  Whites.  Working 
with  him  today  will  be  John  Col- 
lar and  Bob  Pepe. 

The  Red-White  game  will  end 
20  days  of  spring  footpall  practice 
for  the  Wolfpack.  KiOioft  in  Rid- 
dick  Stadium  is  at  2  o'clock.  The 
Monogram  Club  is  ^nsoring  the 
contest. 

Coach  Earle  JSdwards  is  anxious- 
ly awaiting  the  intrasquad  game. 
"We  have  div^ed  the  squad  even- 
ly," he  said,  "and  the^  outcome 
will  answer  a  lot  oi  questions  ior 
the  coaching  staff.  I  think  we  have 


both  the  NIT  and  NCAA  tourna- 
ments, was  shattered  by  the  1951 
^,      ^  ,,      I  scandals.  Bradley  has  appeared  in 

If  Bradley  has  a  weakness.  Van  .  j^^^  ^^j,^^  invitation  tournaments. 


Atta  should  ,}cnow  |t  hut  off  their 
showing  in  two  toiu'naraent  games 
so  far  its  hard  .to  see  where  the 
Braves  might  be  vulnerable.  And 
its  just  about  as  hard  to  believe 
that  they  lost  four  ot '  their  last  | 
five  Missouri  Valley  Conference  l 
'  games  and  tied  for  second  place.    | 

It's  a  game  that  pits  Memphis  | 
State's  speed  and  accurate  shoot-  { 
ing  against  the  all-around  ability  I 
of  a  Bradley  team  that  hit  about  i 
60  per  cent  of  its  shots  against  j 
Temple,  can  run  and  has  a  strong 
inside  game  and  greater  height 
and  bench  strength  than  thej 
Memphis  Tigers.  \ 

The   Braves  have   shattered   an 
assortment     of     NIT     records  in 
beating  Xavier  of  Ohio  116-81  and 
Temple  94-66.     The     first     game, 
brought  a  NIT  and  Garden  record  j 

I  high  score  plus  a  new  mark  of 
42  free  throws.  Bradley  needs  on-  j 
ly  57  points  tomorrow  to  break  the 
three  -  game  tournament  record 
set  by  Louisville  in  winning  last 
year.    Louisville    couldn't    defend , 

;  this  year  because  it  is  on  NCAA 

:  probation. ' 

I      Memphis  State,  meanwhile,  has 
had     three     close     ones,   beating ' 
Utah  T7-75,  Manhattan  85-73  and 
St.    Boiaventure    80-78    in    over- 
time. After  the  first  five  men,  the  I 

I  Tigers  ?iave  little  strength.  I 

I     This  tournament  marks  Bradley's 
first  Garden  appearances  since  the  ' 
1950    team,    second    to    CCNY    in 


Memphis  State  is  new  to  the 
NIT  but  has  played  in  the  NCAA 
championship  the  past  two  years, 
losing  in  the  first  round  each 
time. 


FABULOUS    SUMMER   TOURS 
FOR  COLLEGE 
MEN  &  t^OMEN 

(18-30  years  ef  age) 

AT  AMAZING 
BUDGET  RATES 


adventure  ....  study  ....  fun 

EUROPE      ....     $780-1140 

70  exciting  days 

including   special  VOLKSWAGEN'  tours 
and  informal  "HOBO"  tours  by  bus 

AFRICA $1100 

THE  ORIENT $1800 

SOUTH  AMERICA  ....      $  «50 

S|Mcis1  Interest  Tours 

English  Lit   •   Sculpture  &  Paintirtg  • 

Music  Festivals  •  Economics  &  Politics 

All  tours  include  passage,  meals,  guided 

trips,  lectures,  entertainment. 

For  free  itinerary  and  sailing  dates,  fltl  oat 
coupon  and  mall  to  — 

U.  S.  NATIONAL  STUDENT  ASSOC. 
EDUCATIONAL  TRAVEL,  INC.*  , 

701  SEVENTH  AVENUE,  NEW  YORK  36,  N.  Y. 

*A    non.profit   corporation    serving    U.S.    stu- 
dants  from  coast-to-coast.       ' 


»        = 


tfi 


2  II 


111 


u     o 


\L/> 


•i***?'^'. 


CLASSIHEDS 


5  ROOM  BRICK  HOUSE.  3  BED 
rooms,  all  modern  conveniences. 
3  miles  on  Old  86  Hyway.  Stove 
and  Frigedaire  furnished.  Call 
Fred  Katzln  after  6:00.  8-9025. 


FIVE  ROOM  BRICK  HOUSE  IN 
center  of  town — has  hobby  work- 
shop. Call  M58  during  day  or 
2926  after  5:30  and  during 
we^end. 


WNATIS  A  POOl  MKO'S HOMEt 


a.  tnatNi  aaAVELLE 

aiNMCSOT* 


Parrot  Garret 


BASIC  TRAINING  for  R.O.T.C.  men. 
When  the  talk  turns  to  tactics,  remem- 
ber this:  troops  who  don't  get  a  Lucky 
break  soon  become  a  Solemn  Column! 
Why?  Any  private  can  tell  you:  Luckies 
outrank  *em  all  -when  it  comes  to  taste. 
You  see,  a  Lucky  is  all  cigarette  .  .  . 
nothing  but  fine,  mild,  good -tasting 
tobacco  that's  TOASTED  to  taste  even 
better.  On  the  double,  now!  Light  up  a 
Lucky.  You'll  say  it's  the  best-tasting 
cigarette  you  ever  smoked! 

STUDENTS!  MAKE  $25 

Ir>)j<p  Do  you  like  to  shirk  work?  Here's  some  easy  money 
l/ia  —start  Stickling!  We'll  pay  $25  for  every  Stickler 
■^1^^  we  priht — and  for  hundreds  more  that  never  get 
used.  Sticklers  are  simple  riddles  with  two-word  rhyming  answers. 
Both  words  must  have  the  same  number  of  syllables.  (Don't  do 
drawings.)  Send  your  Sticklers  with  your  name,  address,  college 
and  class  to  Happy-Joe-Lucky,  Box  67A,  Mount  Vernon,  N.  Y. 


WHAT  S  A  MAtMTB)  WIGWAM* 


aoa  ac  kirnct 

KANSAS 


Oeepy  Tepee 


Mitchell 
Rounding  out  the  fourteen-man 


in  1952  in  individual  competitioa. 
l<an|^ey    tied  Gene  Loo&abill    of 


roster  are  the  foUowing  golfers  Charlotte  in  pfe-season^Uafifyteg 
who  in  future  challrage  rounds  j  reuMb  with  a  two^nder  p»r  2{f6 
hope  to  gain  a  position  in  the  top!  total] 7^  holes  on  the  Fillleyl«»yoiit 
iix,  iwhei'«  the  par-is  72.        ' 


I 


HalflMiek  Oick  Hunter,  fullback 
Don  Haler  and  end  Bob  Kennel 
are  playing  on  the  baseball  team 
and  will  hot  taXe  part  in  the 
spring  game.  Quarterback  TX>m 
Katich  and  halfback  Bill  Adams 
will  miss  the  j(ame  becAuse  of  in- 
juries. 


The  1W%ite  team  will  be  coached 
■by  €acejr  ^cesebaker.  Bill  Sraaltz 
will  coach  Uie  Red  aquad. 


JAZZ  AT  TURNAOeS 

Saturday  aftwnioon,  2:00,  Turn- 
ages  Cabin  in  Durham — Jazz  by 
Dick  Gables  "All  Stars."  Beer 
Served. 

FOR  aSNT:  GRAD  STUDENT  OR 
faculty  member.  Hanjdsome  West- 
«'ood  hotte  itdfhin  |ivalking  dis- 
tance of  h^s^i^l  ^nd  campus. 
Spacious  and  shaded  yard  com- 
I^Me  with  scuppeapong  arbor, 
screen  porch,  garage,  full  base- 
ment, and  attic  storage.  Four 
bedrooms.  2 ',2  -baths,  separate 
dining  room,  completely  furn- 
ished, available  April  1,  '57 
through  Feb.  1,  ^58.  For  informa- 
tion call  J'Ohn  Foushec  Agency, 
8431. 


WHAT  IS  A  SIOVB4LY  HOWEtt 


«MI«  flllOSS. 

«.oroM««a 


WHAT  IS  A  MAN  WHO  PAWNS 
THE  OLD  FAMILY  CHAMt 


MTCI  MLm. 
eilAHOIIA  A  •  ■ 


Rocker  Hoeker 


WHAT  1$  A  MAN  WHO  ClASSVIES 
,    SNAKES* 


JED  JACOtSON. 
JOHNS  HOPKINS 


WHAT  IS  A  CHINESE  BOAT  WITHOUT 
A  BOTTOM! 


ecHE  mrtns.  Sunk  Junk 

LOm  MACN  STATIC  'COtL. 


Luckies  Taste  Better 

"irS  TOASTED"  TO  TASTi  BETTER  ;  .  .  CLEANER,  FRESHER,  SMOOTHER! 


PKODUCT  or 


kUKRICA'K    LKADING    MAM O FACT 0«»R    Or    CIGASKTTSS 


^•-♦•'♦•"V 


BWiTWIWKil^XfJritryrJ'^W- 


^c^^^j7jvv^<rvv»^v-v%7;7*  ♦'•^ . 


•"7 


PACE  SIX 


TMt  DAILY  TAR  Htfi 


SATURDAY,  MARCH  23,  1*S/ 


Wilt  Stands  As  Obstacle  to  National  Championslirji 


By  BOB  HIGH 

ToniglLt  is  the  night.  Only  one 
more  to  go.  But  the  big  question 
mark  is  centered  around  the  most 
controversial  player  to  come  into 
baslcett>all  in  many  a  year. 

Wilt  the  Stilt  Chamberlain  and 
his  mates  from  the  University  of 
Kansa.-  are  the  opponents  of  the 
unbeaten  Tar  Heels  of  North  Caro- 
Ina  tonight  in  the  champicm^ip 
game  of  the  NCAA  basketball  tou-, 
rnament  in  Kansas  City. 

The  top-ranked  five  of  Coach 
Frank  McGuire  play  the  feature 
game  of  the  two-day  KC  tourney 
tonight  at  10:30  p.m.  "Hie  game 
is  to  be  telecast. 

The  largest  obstacle  the  star- 
studded  five  from  the  'South  will 
have  to  overcome  is  the  awe-inspir 
ing  star  of  Chamberlain  whep  he 
first  trots  out  onto  the  court.  The 
70  center  of  the  Jayhawks  com- 
pletely tore  the  heart  out  of  SMU 
when  he  let  their  fine  All-Ameri- 
can  Jim  Krebs  .hoot  from  the  out- 
side. Krebs  couldn't  hit  and  he 
had  to  go  inside.  He  fouled  out. 

Kansas  is  built  around  the  214 
pound  giant  but  they  are  not  un- 
beatable. Their  season's  record  of 
24-2  signifies  they  are  not  unable 
to  bo  bottled  up  In  the  all  import-  ] 
ant  phase  of  rebounding,  the  Kan-  j 
sas  five  hold  a  edge.  Chamberlain 
is   the    leading   rebounder   in   the  | 
country  percentagewise.  On  defense  ■ 
is  where  Chamberlain  can  "kill    i 
an  opponent  with  hij  jumping,  tim- ' 
in&.  speed,   enormous   height  and ' 
arm  spread.  ! 

North  Carolina  leads  the  Stilt 
inspired  club  by  4  percentage 
points  in  the  shooting  race  from 
the  floor.  From  the  gratis  line,  the 
Tar  Heels  are  hlting  7  percentage 
points  better.  The  Tar  Heels,  in 
Carolina's  greatest  basketball  sea- 
son, carried  into  the  NCAA  tourna- ; 
ment  the  best  shooting  accuracy 
from  the  floor  and  15-foot  line  of 
any  of  the  four  clubs.  ! 

The  other  memberj-  of  Kansas's 
starting  five  are  Ron  Loneski,  6-4*2  . 


Probable  Lineup 


Probably  starting  lineups  for  to* 
nights  title  game.  | 

Pos. — Kansas  Pos. — Carolina  I 
F— Elstum  F— Rosenbluth  i 
P— Lonaski  F — Brannan 
C — Chamiain  '. — Quigg 
G — King  G — Cunningham    j 

G — Parker      6-~Kearn$ 
Time:  10:30  p.m.  EST. 


Howard  Johnson  Restaurant 

BREAKFAST 

LUNCH 

DINNER 

SNAOCS 
"Landmark  For  Hunarv  Tarheels" 


One  More! 


forward,  and  Gene  Elstun,  6-3*2,  at 
the  other  forward.  The  guards  are 
Maurice  King.  6-2 '2,  and  John  Par- 
ker, 6-0.  They  are  fine  shots  and 
should  Wilt  have  an  off  night,  these 
other  four  boys  could  still  pull  U 
out  0^  the  fire. 

The  boys  from  Carolina,  in  a 
march  through  31  opponents  com 
parable  to  Sherman's  march  thru 
Georgia,  have  never  encountered 
such  an  obstacle  as  Chamberlain. 
When  a  rival  team  first  sees  the 
terrific  size  of  Wilt  and  then  sees 
him  dunk  one  early  in  the  game 
and  then  watches  in  dismay  and 
helplessness  as  their  shots  are 
blocked,  the  physocological  advan- 
tage is  insurmountable. 

Lennie  Rosenbluth  can  hit  from 
the  outside  and  there  is  no  threat 
from  Wilt  if  he  is  farther  than  8 


feet  from  the  basket.  Chamberlain 
i  also  has  a  hig  weakness  in  delend- 
,  ing  against  the  hook  shot.  But  once 
j  again.  Carolina  will  be  lucky  if 
jthey  get  more  than  one  shot. 

j     Pete  Brenpan  and  Joe  Quigg  can 

I  help  by  shooting  from  the  cor- 
ners where  they  are  slightly  ter- 
rific. Bob  Cunningham  is  very  ac- 

;  curate  from  the  outside,  while  the 
"sparkplug"  of  the  fabulous  Caro- 

\  lina  five  is  the  squat,  fiery  Tom- 
my Kearnf.  Kearns  will  be  the  big 
thorn  in  the  side  of  Kansas  with 
hi.'  dribbling,  driving  and  cat-like 

;  quickness. 

j     Coach  Frank  McGuire  of  the  un- 
1  defeated  Tar  Heels  said,    'I  think 
I  the  only  way  to  stop  him  is  nol  to 
let  him  get  his  hands  on  the  ball." 
This  was  referring  to  the   "dom- 
inant   factor"      in      the     tourney. 


'  Chamberlain. 

I  "If  we  have  t^i  play  against  him, 

I I  wouldn't  be  surprised  if  we 
wouldn't  freeze  the  ball,"  stated 
the   Irish   mentor,    in   speaking    of 

I  Wilt  the  Stilt. 

:  McGuire  is  expected  to  play  the 
usual  zone  defense  again  -t  the  Big 
!  Seven  representatives.  It  is  any- 
;  body's  guess  what  sort  of  defensive 
pattern  that  the  successful  head 
of  the  Carolina  squad  ij  planning 
for  the  7-0  giant. 

There  is  a  telegram  which  Coach 

McGuire  has  saved  fi'om  the  games 

:  in    Philadelphia    that    he    is    sure 

j  to  read  to  the  top-ranked  Tar  Heels 

;  tonight  before  the  take  the  floor. 

It   reads,    "Best    of   luck    and    our 

wishes  go  with  j-ou.  You  proved  it 

to  us,  now  prove  it  fo  the  nation." 

It  is  signed   by   the  Wake  Forest 

'  basketball  team. 


Tigers  Lose  To 
Redlegs  By  2-1  | 

i 

T.JLMPA.  Fla— (AP)— Ted  Klus- < 
zewski's  single  after  Smc^y  Bur-  i 
gess  had  tripled  in  the  seventh  | 
inning,  gave  the  Cincinnati  Red- j 
leg.s  a  2-1  victory  over  the  Detroit  | 
Tigers  in  an  exhibition .  game  to-  j 
day.  I 

Johnny  Klippstein  went  the  | 
route  for  the  Redlegs,  allowing 
only  srven  hits.  A  two-base  error 
by  outfielder  Petp  Whiscnant  on 
Frank  Boilings  fly.  and  Harvey 
Kuenn's  single  In  the  ninth,  beat 
the  slender  hurler  out  of  a  shut- 
out. 

Cincinnati  socred  its  oth:r  run 
in  the  first  inning  on  a  double  b 
Frankic    R  binsan    and    a    single 
by  Whisenant. 


Coaches  Try  To  Stop 
Wilt  With  New  Rules 


Yanks  Shutout 
Athletics,  30 

WEST  P,\LM  BE.^CH.  Fla.— I 
(AP)— Turn  Sturdivant  and  Jim 
Depalo  combined  to  pitch  a  4*l>it- 
ter  and  shut  out  Kansas  City  today 
as  the  New  York  Yankees  won  3-0. 

The  Yanks  scored  twice  in  the 
!j?cond  inning  off  starter  Virgil 
Trucks  on  singles  by  Jerry  Lumpe 
and  Joe  Collins,  Sturdlvartt's  sac- 
rifice fly  and  a  double  by  Gil  Mc- 
Dougald.  Thny  added  another  of 
Gen  Host,  in  the  eighth.  Elston 
Howard,  who  had  doubled,  came 
in  on  Tonny  Kubek's  sacrifice  fly. ' 

Sturdivant,  the  winner,  pitched  j 
the  first  six  innings  and  gave  up 
no  more  than  one  hit  in  any  frame. 


,  KANSAS  CITY— (AP)— College 
basketball  coaches  took  steps  to- 
day toward  cutting  down  the  ef- 
fectiveness of  skyscraper  players 
!ike  Kansas'.  Wilt  Chamberlain  by 

ecommonding    tightening    of    the 

dunking  rule.!' 

By  a  vote  of  81-10  the  coaches 
;ent  to  the  Rules  Committee  a 
iuggcstion  that  any  plaj-er,  off3n- 
ive  ss  vvrll  as  deiensive,  be  pro- 
iibitsd     tr^m    touching    the    ball 

■lile  it  is  on  the  rim  of  the  bas- 

»i  cr  tlio  cylinder,  the  ima^insry 

33  jUst  ab.)ve  the  rim. 

Currently  d?f:nsive  players  are 
orbiciden  to  touch  the  ball  in  this 
situation.  If  the  new  rulp  goes  in- 
vO    eifect,     the     attacking     player 

(Uilil  similarly  be  restricted. 

T.a:'  ru!3  is  effective  only  on 
.v'bcunds.  A  player  still  may  be 
..ble  to  make  a  jump  and  al.so  a 


rap  in  shot  so  long  as  the  ball  is 
not  on  the  rim  or  in  the  cyclinder. 
He  can't  reach  up  while  sthe  ball 
is  bouncing  around  the  rim  and 
stuff  in  Into  the  basket. 

Plaj-ers  fUie  the  seven  -  loot 
Chamberlain  and  Bill  Russell,  with 
San  Francisco  last  year,  have 
.scored  heavily  by  dunking  a  way- 
ward   basketball. 

Th?  coaches  argued  nearly  an 
lour  over  whether  unifonivs  should 
.be  '"odd  or  even,"  have  a  difl'er- 
2tn  coLr  ar  und  the  fringi'  or 
should  contain  nuniber.<;  above  6. 
NO  action  was  taken. 

Th?  coaches  rejected  a  recom- 
iiendalion  for  a  30  second  rule 
now  in  use  by  the  international 
federation  and  the  Olympic  games, 
whith  would  require  a  team  to 
^h  ot  \sithin  30  seconds  after  gain- 
ing possession  ol  the  ball.  The 
/uio  against  wa^  80-41. 


Tabori  Wins 

Laszlo    Tabori,    Hungarian    who 
has  been   training  at   the  Universj- 
j  ity    of    North    Carolina,    won    the  i 
i  two-mile    run    in    8:.54.6.    Charley  j 
j  Jones    of    Iowa    was    second    and ; 
-Alex    Breckenridge    of    VillanoVa  I 
,  was    third    in    the    event    held  -at 
j  Cleveland.    Ohio. 

j      Ron  Delany  stepped  out  in  front 
i  of    a    four-man    fild    in    the    final 
I  quarter  and  won  the  mile  easily. 
His   tinoe    was   a    slow   4:10.4. 


Carolina  Wins 


Aycock  CHomers 
For  Brave  Win 

BRADENTON.  Fla.— (AP)— The 
-booming    bat    of    the  ilfilwau^ee 
.Raves'  Joe  Adcock  accounted  for 
.the  tying  and  winning  runs  in  a 
16-inning  4-3  victory  over  the  Pitts- 
burg Pirates  yesterday. '       1 

Adcpck  tied  the.  score  «it^  a 
376-foot  home  run  in  the  eighth. 
llien  in  the  10th>  with  di^  win- 
nJBg  run  on  third  an.d  Clarence 
Churn,  Pirates'  rookie  pitcher 
planning  to  give  him  an  intention- 
al walk,  he  reached  scrpss  the 
plate  and  po^ed  a  single  into 
right. 


Kf  nsat  Win$ 

KANSAS  CITY  ^  (AP)  —  Wilt 
Chamberlain  stuffed*  in  32  points 
to  give  Kansas  an  e«sy  80-56  vic- 
tory over  San  Fraficisco  Univers- 
ity^lasi  night. .  wia^^ing  the  Jay- 
htNv^M  ai.  spoi  ill  tli^^iiatian«(l  <tol- 
Jegiate  ,NClU>^ba^etball  iiakU.i 

11,  «  >  «A      ' 


(Continued  from  page  }) 
^.cTw.^^u   lu  t. (til  lui'  Uii>:  last  snot. 
xk/i>:..i>    iveanib    niaa    u,    but    lue 
wu>i    uiiuiiwcu    away   aau   lUe   ovei'- 
...uiti  iii^rtttaon  was  on. 

iL.A\:i\  icuiu  tiuew  it  way  golden 
ciiuiitrcs  10  Win  in  tne  lirst  two 
overtimes,  and  it  was  only  a  last 
second  shot  by  Pete  Brennan  in 
the  second  overtime  that  kept  the 
Tar  Heels  from  absorbing  their 
lirst  defeat  of  the  season. 

All  the  hair-raising  near  misses 
and  near  defeats  went  by  the 
ojards  in  the  third  overtime  as 
RosenbIutb[^  and  tjiis  teammates 
shook  Idose' .  for '  the  game  win< 
ning  poinis, 

The  Tar  Heels  won  it  with  two 
of  their  starters  on  the  benek. 
Both  'Joe  Quigg  and  "Bob  Cunning- 
ham fouled;  out  the  rugged  scrap, 
and  Brettnah  joined  them  on  the 
sidelines  with  Si  seconds  to  go  in 
the  la«t;^p!i^rtime. 

Rosetrbliilh,  stymied  by  juidp- 
ing-jaok    Michigan    State    center 


Joaa  Green,  hau  truubie  getti.ig 
uii  tiia  Aiiuis,  uuL  siiU  managed  6[ 
points.  Cunmngham  allied   19. 

ine  Tar  Heeis  could  manage  to 
hit  on  only  31.$  per  cent  of  their 
stiots,  but  Michigan  Stale  was 
worse  ar  28.8.  The  Spartans  out 
rebounded  Carolina  65-34. 

Coach  McGuire  called  the  clo.se 
shave,  "One  of  ihe  toughest  games 
We've  played  this  year."  The  Tar 
Heel  coach  complimented  Brennan 
for  his  play  and  called  Rosenbluth 
"fabulops  as  usual." 


Illioi  ni.il      ('li«ii(t<>l  :ipfi> 

B\   app<>intmenl   ill   your  home) 

Wedding    Phoi^jr 

A   Svetuilty 

PRESS  PHOTO  SERVICI 

POLAND   GiDU2 

Ufc. — N«w«   BuiidirtQ 

M^-n   $1..   Carreer* 


PATRONtZI  YOUR 
•    ADVERTISIRS    • 


Davidson  Blanks  6W 

DAVIDSON,  N.C (AP)--^eorge 

Washington  whitewashed  Davidson 
9-0  hera  today  in  a  Southern  Con- 
ference tennis  match. 

It  was  the  first  victory  of  the 
season  for  the  defending  confer- 
ence champions,  who  opened  their 
invasion  .of  North  Carolina'  yes- 
terday by  lOsiHg  ft/  the  Lniveru- 
tj*  of  North  Carolirti. 


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VOL.  L VI I  NO.  122 


tl.K.C.  'LIBRARY 
SERIALS   DEPT. 
BOX  870 


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REVIEW 

For  nowt  of  e»mp««.-  »fato  and 
world,  so*  p»g«  2  weakly  ravlaw. 


Complete  (/P)  Wire  Service 


CHAPEL  HILL,  NORTH  CAROLINA,  SUNDAY,  MARCH  24,  1957 


Officeg  in  Graham  Memorial 


FOUR   FACES  THIS   IS':U« 


Win  In  Three  Overtim  es,  54-53 


TAR  HEELS  ARE  NATIONAL  CHAMPIONS 


Pressure  Mounted 
Ther)  Broke  Loose 

KANSAS   CITY — (AP) — A   wild   swapped  \*ords  and  were  restrained 


uprising  invilviiig  coaches  and 
players  broke  out  in  the  tension- 
ricked  ;:ame  last  night  between 
use  and  Kansas.  The  fracas  start- 
ed when  Wilt-The-Stilt  'Chamber- 
lain. Kansas'  7-foot  All  -  America 
star.*  and  Carolina's  Pete  Brennan 
came   in  contact     on     the     floor, 

Legs  Crushed 


bv    other    plays    from    coming    to 
blows. 

Play  was  interrupted  almost  a 
minute  while  tournament  officials, 
assisted  by  policemen,  restored 
ord^r.  No  blows  were  exchanged, 
merely  wnrds. 

Kjinsas  Coach  Dick  Harp  rush- 
ed cut  en  the  floor.  This  brought 
Frank  McGuir?.  North  Carolina 
coach,    rushing      to      the      Kansas 


A    Durham    man    had    his    legs 
crushed   last  night   in   an   .utomo-    bench    where    he   apparently   chal- 


bi>»  Accident  in  front  of  Chi  Ome- 
ga House  during  a  mass  demonstra- 
tion which  saw  thousands  of  stu- 
donts  and  several  Kundi  ed  auto- 
mobiles participating. 

Senny  Deaton,  a  student  from^ 
Duke,  was  admitted  into  Memorial 
Hospital  shortly  after  1:00  a.m.  for 
what  was  reported  as  multiple 
tiactures  of  both  legs. 

Deatcn,  was  riding  the  front 
fondet  of  a  '4?  Ford  which  crash- 
ed into  the  rm»r  of  a  '56  Ford 
throwing  him  from  the  car  and 
pinnir^  him  between. 

Also  admittod  for  treatment  as 
a  result  of  the  wreck  was  a  Mrs. 
Crotskey  of  Durham. 

Deaton  gave  his  adress  as  110 
Hyde  Park  Ave,  Durham. 


lenged  Harp's  right  to  go  onto 
tlie  floof. 

While  the  capacity  crowd  of 
10500  yelled,  a  crowd  gathered 
'rouiid  til?  Kansas  bench.  Reaves 
Peters,  tournament  director,  and 
Dutch  Lcnborg..  Kansas  athletic 
director,  who  is  chairman  of  the 
NCAA  basketball  committee,  rush- 
ed in  to  calm  the  situation. 

Uniformed  police  al^io  doved  in- 
l)  th-  highly  -  agitated  crowd 
around  the  two  teams  and  broke 
up    the    gathering. 

The  Tar  Heels  set  some  sort  of 
a  tcurnament  record  in  using  a 
total  of  six  overtime  session.,-  to 
win  the  championship.  The  na- 
ton's    No.     1    team    needed    three 

(See    PRESSURE,   Page  4) 


Quigg  Sinks  Free 
Shots  For  Victory 

By  LARRY  CHEEK 

Special  To  The  Daily  Tar  Hczl 
K.\NS.\S  CI  IT— North  Carolina  s  Tar   Heels   proved 
they  are  the  nation's  No.  i  ba.sketbaU  team  here  last  night. 

Thev  did  it  by  beating  Kansas  and  \\"\\i  The  Still  Cham- 
berlain, ''p.').'}.  in  a  triplc-oveninie  battle  that  left  10,500 
lans  gasping  after  the  hertii   coiu  hision. 

|()c  Quigg.  <>-t)  center,  uho  did  a  niiratulous  delensive 
job  on  C:hanil)crlain.  uas  directlv  rc.>p<)nsible  for  Carolin-s 
bringing   ho"ie    tlie   National    Cpl-;^  ^.^  ^^^^  ^^^^^   ^^^  ^^^   fj^st 
legiate     basketball     championship ;  ^.^^  ^.  ^^^  ^^.33  ^^^^    33.3- 
from   this   midwestern  city.  ^^^^    ^^^^   ^^^    ^.^^    .^   ^^.^^   ^^^. 

It  was  Quigg's  two  free  throws '  saw,  with  Kansas  maintaining  a 
with  six  seconds  to  go  in  the  very  slight  advantage.  Then  with 
final  overtime  that  brought  Caro  1:45  to  go.  Rosenbluth  fouled  out 
Una  the  championship.  And  it  was  and  Kansas. took  the  lead  at  44-41. 
Quiggs  interception  of  a  Kansas  But  Tommy  Kearns  and  Quigg  put 
pass,    intended    for    Chamberlain,    the  Tar   Heels   back 


that  insured  the  dream  vict«r>'. 

The  battle  of  titans  was  a  fitt- 
ing climax  to  the  long  NCAA 
grind.  UNC  was  rated  No.  1  in 
all  the  major  jjolls  with  Kansas 
close  behind  in  second  place  at 
the  regular  season's  end.  And 
when  all  the  shouting  of  the 
NC.\A  title  game  was  over,  it  was 
still   Carolina   No.   1. 

Carolina  won  without  their  AU- 
American  ace,  Lennie  Rosenbluth. 
Rosenbluth    fouled    out    with    1:45 


into  conten- 
tion and  the  regular  game  ended 
in  a  deadlock.  46-46. 

In  the  first  overtime  period, 
each  team  scored  two  points  as 
Bob  Young  and  Chamberlain 
matdicd  baskets.  Each  team  went 
scoreless  in  the  second  overtime 
but  both  missed  numerous  oppor- 
tunities to  win. 

The  stops  w^ere  pulled  out  in 
(See   QUIGG,   Page   4) 


THE   BOX 


OF  Re^iNT  DISTURBANCE 


■•^nm. 


i 


Dr.  Demerath 
Here  On  Visit 


J     "'if .  .  lip 

N.  C.  State  Legislafure 
Attacks  News  Reports 

RALEIGH  —  \»  —  The     North       The    student   legislature,    in   its 
Carolina  State  College  student  leg-   resolution,  said  "false  reports"  ol 
islaturc  Friday  voiced  strong  crili-    the  riot,   "have   greatly  magnified  , 
cism  of   news    reports  covering   a   the  adverse  effect  on  the  student 
March  7  riotous  disturbance  on  the    hotly  as  a  whole,  although  the  ma-  j 
colle-^c  campuj-  i  J"'"''-^'  ^f  students  had  nothing  to  ] 

In  "a  resolution  to  be  sent  to  all  ,  do  with  the  rioting."  ! 

the    .state's    "major    newspapers," ' 
the    student    legislature     asserted 
that     reports    of    t^e    riot    were 
•'greatly    distorted    in    order    to 
create  sensational  news  stories." 

The  resolution  asked  the  new.-- 
papers  to  "correct  said  stories  pub- 
lished in  their  newspapers." 

College  officials  said  an  investi- 
gation backed  up  the  stand  by  the 
students,  and  showed  no  evdence 
ef  auto  tires  slashed,  automobles 
overturned,  or  other  serious  dam- 
age to  cars. 

The  riots,  which  resulted  in  city 
court  fines  for  17  of  26  students 
arrested  by  Raleigh  police,  broke 
out  near  Reynolds  Coliseum  the 
first  night  of  the  Atlantic  Coast 
Conference  basketball  tournament, 
rarkinji  difficulties,  including  the 
blocking  of  student  parking  lot., 
were  cited  as  a  factoj*. 

The  student  Judicial  board  at 
the  college  dismissed  charges  .  of 
"ungentlemanly  conduct"  against 
the  26.  It  said  there  was  no  evi- 
dence to  support  the  charges. 


1957  National  Basketball  Champions 

The  happy  group  picturad  above   is  the  UNC   basketball   team      Ken  Rosemond,  Bob  Cunningham  and  Tommy  Kearns.  Standing,  left 

l^^^^^^T"^"  "'^^*  **•*"*•**  ***•  ""'^'"'^y  •*   •<•'*••»  •'•V»««*'k«.       to  right,  are  Coach  Frank  ^^cGuire.  team  manager  Joel   Fleishman. 

M|«-53/in  tlirea  overtimes.  Joe  Ouigg  sank  two  foul  shot»  in  tho  fadina  ^^^  ^  .„         ...   ....^  «         »  j... 

second,  to  bring  thi  T.r^Heel,  from  behind  to  take  the  win.  Kneel- •^**^**'^  '-•^•*  «*^»»'"»»»'  •*-  «*"«»•'  P*^  »«"•*•"  •"«*  Assist- 
ing, left  to  right,  are  Roy  Searcy,  Gehrmann   Holland/oanny   Loti.      *"*  *^'***''  *""'*  ''•••••"•"•  Not  pictured  is  John  Laey,  trainer. 


TO  WORK  IN  PHYSICAL  THERAPY 


kiebel  Resigns  Y  Position 


By  NANCY  HILL  degree  in  1937  from  North  Central 

John    Ricbel,    associate    director    College.  III.,  and   his   Bachelor   of 
.'I  the  YMCA.  haj  resigned  his  po-    Divinity  from  Yale  in  1951. 


sition,  it  was  announced  here  Sal 
urday. 

Riebel,  who  hSs  been  here  for 
six  years,  has  resigned  in  order 
to  work  in  phvslcal  thereapy  at 
Duke  Hospital  in  Durham.  His 
resignation  will  become  effective 
at  the  end  of  this  month.  , 


A    former    UNC    Sociology    pro- 
fessor, Dr.  Nicholas  T.  Demerath, 
returned   to   Chapel   Hill   over  t}ie  |  HOUSE 
weekend   for  a  short   visit.  i      Chancellor  Robert  B    House  ex 

Dr.    Demerath,    along    with    his }  pressed  regret  over  the  announce 


Reibcl  joined  the  University  of 
Njrth  Carolina  in  July.  1951. 

He  is  married  to  the  former  Peg- 
gy Ann  Royall  of  Elkin,  and  hat, 
one  child,  Joyce  Elizabeth,  19 
months.  He  i„  a  member  of  the 
Community  Church. 

In   addition    to   his   duties   with 


man  Camp,  Campus  Chest;  the 
Film  P'orum;  .  publishing  of  the 
Carolina  Handbook,  student  direc- 
tory and  "Y  Courier":  the  social 
committoc  and  public  relations  for 
the  Y. 


Gcide  Students 
Gives  Program 
Tonight  At  8 


Students  of  Walter  Golde.  form- 
er voice  teacher  at  New  York's 
Steinway  Hall,  will  present  a  pro- 
gram of  operatic  arias  by  invita- 
tion of  "Les  Petites  Musicales"  to- 


to  go  in  the  regulation  game,  and  North  Carolina 

was    not    available    for    the    three  Rosenbluth  i 

overtimes.     But     his     teammates  Lou  f 

proved   up  to   the  challenge.  Bfennan  f 

Chamberlain      got      23      points    Yoimg  c 

while  Rosenbluth  had  20  when  he  Quigg  c 

lUAfte  hM  icytt  '  Cu^S*"?^""'  ^ 

It    was    \he    second    consecutive  Kearns  g 
triple  overtime  game  in   as  many        Totals 

nights    for    the    Tar    Heels.    Fridy  Kansas 

night      they      whipped      Michigan  Elstun  f 

State.  74-70.  in  a  semi-final  test.  Loneski   f 

Carolina  initiated  stalling  tactics  L.  Johnson  f 

3t  the  opening  tipoff,  and  jumped  Chamberlain  c 

to  a  19-7  lead.  Kansas  then  scored  King  g 

10  straight  points,  before  the  Tar  Parker  g 

Heels  could   rally  to  run  up  a  29-  Billings   g 
22  halftime  spread.  T4ttals  ^ 

The  Tar  Heels  stayed  on  top  un-  North  Carolina 

til     Kansas    guard    Maurice    King  Kansas 


T 

20 

0 

U 

2 

10 

0 

11 

21     12-22     21       54 

G        F        P       T 

4       3-6       2       11 

0       2-3       2         2 

0       2-2       1         2 

6     11-16     3       23 

3       5-6       4       11 

2       0-0       0         4 

0       0-0       2         0 

15    23-33  15      54 

29  17  2  0  6—54 

22  24  2  0  5—53 


F 
44 

0-0 

3-7 

0-0 

2-3 

0-1 

3-7 

12-22 

F 

3-6 

2-3 

2-2 

11-16 

5-6 

0-0 

0-0 


P 
5 
0 
3 
1 
4 
4 
4 
21 
P 
2 
2 
1 
3 
4 
0 
2 


In  addition  Riebel  has  .served  a;s  j  dav. 


a   co-chairman   for   campus   obser- 1 
vance    of    United    Nations    Week, 
worked     with     the     Cosmopolitan 


The  performance  will   be  given 

at  8  p.m.  in  Graham  Memorial  and  ! 

is    open    to    the    public,    free    of ! 


TO  STUDENTS 


the  Y,  Riebel  served  as  general  mittee  of  the  Area  YMCA  Board-, 
chairman  of  former  Chapel  Hill  and  aided  in  bringing  foreign  stu- 
Mayor  Ed   Lanier's  committee  for    denl  speakers  to  the  campuo-. 


Club,  served  on  the  Student  Com-    charge. 

Golde  came  to  Chapel  Hill  from 


wife    and    two    younger    children,  j  ment.  But  he  alSo  offered  his  con-   c;  mmunity   observance    of    United    COORDINATOR 

gratulalions. 


Evans  Vows  To  Bring 
Administration  Closer 


stopped  here  to  see  some  friends. 
He    is    on    his   way   to    New   York 

on  a  business  trip.                             !  but  we  congi-atulate  him  on  going  O.  K.  Cornwell  here  in  1955. 

He   stayed   at   the  home   of  Dr.  i  into  something  he  wants  to  do.  We  DUTIES 

Paul  Guthrie  of  the  Business  Ad- 1  wish  his  well'  in  his  new  job.  Ricbels    duties    as    Y    director 

ministration     School     while     here.       The  a.ssociate  director  was  grad  have  included  coordinating  religi- 

He   resigned   from    the    Univers-  \  uatcd     from     a    Duke     University  ous    activities     including    Campus 
ity   last  summer  and   is  currently  '  School    of    Medicine    physical    the-  Christian  Council  and  church  chap- 
teaching   at   Washington   Universi-    rapy  cour.sc,  receiving   his  degree  iains. 
ty  in  St.  Louis,  where  he  is  head    in  1944.             .;-         .,  He  also  i.-  responsible,  as   asso- 


Nations  Week  in   1952.  He  served        He  served  recently  as  a  coordin 
Huu.  J  said  "We  hate  to  lose  him    in  the  same  capacity  under  Mayor    ator  for  a  delegation  from  the  Uni- 

vecsity  of  Florida  investigating  in- 
tegration at  the  University. 

Riebel  is  now  serving  as  secre- 
tary-treasurer of  the  National  Stu- 
dent Secretaries  Assn.  Since  the 
resignativMi  of  Kirsten  Milbreth.  he 
has  taken  her  piece  as  secretary- 
treasurer  of  the  state  organization 


New    York's  St?inway  Hall   where 
he  was  noted  for  his  work  in  pre- 
paring  singers   for  the   Metropoli- 
tan Opera  Company.  He  agreed  to  ,  ,    ,       ,    .     .  .     .      c  . 
.      ^w       1    ,.n               *■         president  of  the  student  body,  Sat- 
come    t(»    Chapel    Hill    some    four , '^  ..     ., 


Sonny   Evans. 


of   the    Sociology    Dept 


He  received  his  Bachelor  of  Arts  i  ciatc  director  of  the  Y,  for  Fresh-    of  campus  religious  workers. 


All  Candidates 
Must  Attend 
Meet  Tomorrow 

A  compulsory  meeting  of  all  can- 
didates running  for  office  in  the 
spring  elections  will  be  held  Mon- 
day at  7:30  p.m.  In  Gerrard  Hall, 
according  to  Arthur  Sobel.  vice 
cl|arrm3n  of  the  Elections  Board. 

Any  candidate  not  in  attendance 
may  be  disqualified  from  the  elec- 
tion, he  said.  Excuses  may  be  ob- 
tained by  contacting  Ralph  Cum- 
mings,  cbalrmJin  of  the  Eelections 
Bjard,  within  46  hours  after  the 
noecting. 

Excuses  will  be  issued  only  for 
special  circumsUnces,  Sobel  said 

The  public  has  been  invited  to 
attend  the  meeting*  as  the  candi- 
dates for  studeiit  body  offices  and 
editor  of  the  Daily  Tar  Heel  will 
make  short  speeches,  Skibel  added. 


years  ago  at  the  urging  of  his 
close  friend.  Norman  Cordon,  who 
felt  the  need  for  a  man  of  his 
caliber    in    North    Carolina. 

The  program  will  include  se- 
lections from:  '"Mignon"  by  Am- 
broie;  Tschaikowsky's  "Romeo 
and  Juliet."  and  "Pique  Dame';'; 
"Der  Rosenkavalier"  by  Richard 
Strauss;  •"Die  Meislersinger"  by 
Richard  Wagner;  and  "The  Sec- 
rots  of  Suzanne"  by  Woif-Fer- 
rari. 

Donna  Patton.  Martha  Fouse.  j 
Jan  Saxon  and  Jean  Vernon  will  , 
sing  soprano  solos  as  will  Anne  ^ 
Moore,  a  mezzo  soprano.  Tenors 
will  be  Gene  Slrassler  and  Robert  , 
Andrews  .Also  appearing  will  be  ; 
Edgar  vom  Lchn.  a  baritone.         I 

Ncrman  Cordon  will  act  as  mas- 
ter   of    ceremonies   and    sing    two 
bass    solos    from    "Faust."    In    ad-  I 
dition.    he    will    sing    the    role    of 
Hans    Sachs   in    the   quintet   from  j 
"Die    Meislersinger." 

Miss   Saxon   appeared    last   sum- 
mer in  the  "Lost  Colony"  outdoor  , 
drama.  A  native  of  Charlotte,  she  j 
recently  won  the  N.  C.  State  Fed-  j 
eration    fo    Music    Clubs    contest,  j 


SP  candidiUe   for  1  measures    to   encourage    those    al- 
ready in  .student  government  fnJ 
urday  announced  some  further  lea  |  those  who  wish  to  work  for  it  to 
I  tures  of  his  platform.  I  participate  more  closely  in  the  go\- 

I      He   promised    to     'take    the   stu-  j  ernmental   body. 
'  dent   government   clojjr   to   every  1      In  his  statement.  Evans  strcorscd 
'  student,"    noting    that   almost   700    the    idea   there    are   areas   of  pro- 
I  students  are   already  participating    giessive    student    government    ac- 
in  the  various  branches  and  agcn-    tion  whch  can  best  be  achieved  in 

co-operation  with   the  faculty  and 

the  administration.  These  are  pro- 

j  grams    in    which    the    students   do 

i  not    have   the   authority    to    make 

under   ig^.g   ^^t  where  they  can,  through 


cies   under   the    Student    Constitu- 
tion. 


EXPEDIENCY 

Eh'ans   pointed    out 


that 


the  merit  system  inaugurated  last 
spring  by  the  SP  administration, 
many  offices  have  been  filled  by 
hard-working  members  which  had 
formerly  been  held  by  what  he 
termed  "officials  chosen  on  the 
basi.'  of  political  expediency." 


"sane    add     well-preseated    argu- 
ments," persuade  the  higher  pow- 
er.- to  their  view. 
EXAMPLES 

.Vs  examples  of  such  co-operation 
in  the  past  year.  E%ans  cited  the 
new  cut   system,  the  student  par- 


Evans  said  he  plans  to  extend  ticipation  in  selecting  the  ncA* 
thi.s  merit  system,  and  also  to  take  :  chancellor,  the  inauguaration  of 
'  I  date  tickets  for  son^c  of  the  foo*- 

Ragsdale  To  Be  Chairman  '-^^  s*""*^  ^°<^  ^^^  temporarj  re 

1  moval    of    parking   restrictions    in 

Of  Council  For  Next  Year  ^hapei  Hiu 

I      E^'ans  cxpre^ed  the  belief  that 


The  Men's  Council.  UNC  stu- 
dent judiciary  group,  will  be  head- 
ed during  thc^  coming  year  by 
George  R.  Ragsdale  Jr..  a  rising 
senior  from  Raleigh. 

Ragsdale   was   chosen  this   week 
Botji  she  and  Miss  Fouse  are  well  ,  to  succeed  James  Exum   of  Snow    more  if  not  all  of  the  home  foot- 
known    for   their    appearances    in '  Hill    as    council    chairman.    Other   ball  schedule. 

campus     musical     programs     and  !  new   officers  are  Gary   E.   Cooper       Second    is   the   e.<«tablishment   of 

Playmaker    productions.  |  of    Salisbury,    clerk,    and    Tucker    a   reserve  fund   fcr  the  repair  of 

All    of    the    male    singers    have  ;  Yates  of  Asheboro,  assistant  clerk. }  dormitory     television     sets.     This 

had  extensive  experience  in  local  1      During  the   1956-57  school  year  i  would  be  accomplished,  according 


similar  co-operative  advances  could 
be  made  in  the  future,  particular 
ly  in  two  arca^ 
DATE  TICKET 

The  first  of  these  is  the  extension 
of     special     date    ticket    prices    to 


After  The  Game  Celebration  On  Franklin  St. 


Piv«  made  victory  in  Kansas  City  and  whit*  th«y  sat  exhausted 
twc  thousand  studonts  colebrated  thoir  victory.  The  student  pictured 
at  left  climbed  atop  the  post  office  corner  seplight  to  lead  the 
cheering   crowd   which,   right,   turned   on   the   photographer. 


Franklin  St.  was  blocked  for  20  minutes.  Students  would  not 
let  fhe  ears  backing  up  for  two  blocks  each  way  pass  They  sat  on 
the  ears  and  threw  toilet  paper  rolls  on  top  of  them. 

Photo  by   Norman   Kantor 


concert    work. 

I  Miss  Patton.  a  junior  at  UNC. 
appeared  earlier  this  year  in  "The 
.Magic    Flute."    while    Miss    Moore 

I  is  making  her  fir.st  appearance  ss 

I  a   joloist   in   Chapel    Hill. 


Ragsdale  has  served  as  clerk  of  j.to  EX-ans,  by  allocating  a  perccnt- 
the  council.  As  part  of  the  UNC  j  age  of  the  profits  from  the  dormi- 
student  council  system,  the  Men's  tor>'  vending  machines  for  this  use. 
Council  serves  as  a  court  for  try- 1  He  said  a  report  on  the  feasibili- 
ing  violators  of  the  Honor  System  |  ty  of  such  an  arrangement  will  be 
and   the  Campus   Code.  I  completed  thij;  month. 


pAoe  rwo 


THf  DAILY  TAft  HfCl 


SUNDAY,  MARCH  U,  \H7 


REVIEW: 

CAMPUS 
STATE 

WORLD 


Personality  Of  Week 
Dr.  Warner  Lee  Wells 

Rctbert  Bartholomew 

When  Dr.  Wartier  Lee  Well-  was  named  winner  of  the  0.  Max 
(iiirdner  Award  here  FYiday  night,  the  opinion  of  the  people  here  iif 
the  University  community  was,  "It  could  not  have  happened  to  a 
finer  person." 

Di.  Wells,  an  assistant  professor  of  surgery  at  the  UNC  School 
ot  Medicine,  is  held  jn  high  esteem  by  his  associates,  his  students 
and  all  other  people  who  know  th?  genial  teacher. 

Dr.  WelL-.  is  a  familiar  figure  in  the  corridors  of  the  School  of 
Medicine  and  the  N.  C.  Memorial  Hospital.  He  is  usually  seen,  wear- 
ing a  white  eoat.  huiTving  along 
to  a  class  or  meeting,  but  never 
in  such  a  hurry  that  he  does  not 
have  time  to  stop  f.>r  a  friendly 
word  with  a  student  or  colleague. 

His  office  walls  are  covereu 
wilh  pictures  of  friends  and  col- 
leagues   from    all    parts    of   the 

world.  A  visitor  to  his  office  will    ^■^ESP^S^I^SI^liilf^l^^AA.JI 
usually  find  him  workmg  at  one 
oi  hi.'  two  desks.  One  desk  holds 

his  paper  work,  a  microscope  i^    ^^^^^  ._^    r*-^ 
one  the  other. 

The   modest    doctor    is   a    pipe 
smoker,  a  corncob  being  his  fav- 
orite. He  talks  as   easily   on  the    ^^^^^^^^kj^^^;, 'a^v 
qualities  of  a  good  pipe  as  he  does 
on  the  history  of  medicine.  He  is   ^ 

a   scholar   of    note  in    the   latter  *^ 

^•^  ...for    HirosJw.ui    Dmry 

■    Dr.  Wells  was  the  ninth  winner  DR.  WARREN  LEE  WELLS 

of  the  (lardner  .\ward.,  which  wa.v  Dr.    Wells"     citatum    read,     in 

first  gi\en  in  1949.  partj    •"When     Hiroshima    Diary" 

The  award  is   given  each  year  y^as  published   and   acclaimed   by 

"To  that   member  of  the  faculty  leaders  in  all  walks  of  life  in  the 

of  the  Consjlidated  University  of  United  Statej,  when  it  sold  lari;c 

Nurth  Carolina,  who.  during  the  quantities  in  this  country  and  in 

current  scholastic  year,  has  made  Great    Britain,    and    when    it    ap- 

tl\e   greatest   contribution   to  the  peared   in  translation   in    11    (in- 

wellare  of  the  humati  race."  eluding   an  English   edition)  for- 

The   award  was   established   by  ei^n  languages.  Dr.  Wells  showed 

the     will     of    lift    late    Governor  his  unselfishness  by   reusing   all 

Gardner.   It  is  in  the  f«rm   of  a  royalties     and     by     helping    Dr. 

citation  and  carries  a  cash  grant  Hachiya  devote  them  to  the  estab- 

of  the  annual  income  from  a  S25.-  lishment  of  a  foundation  for  the 

000  trust  fund.  education    of   Hiroshima   war   or- 

Dr.   Wells   won    the  award   for  phans." 

disc<»vering.  translating  and  edit-  Last  year's  winner  of  the  award 

ing    "Hiroshima   Diary."'   This-   is  was    Mereb    Ethna    .Mossman    oi" 

the  story  of  the  atomic  bombing  Woman's  College.  The  first  win- 

of  Hiroshima,  as  kept  in  the  diary  ner  of  the  award  was  Louise  Bre- 

of  Dr.  Nichihiko  Hachiya  of   Hi  vard   .Alexander  of  the  Woman's 

roshinia.  College.  The  other  winners  havo 

Dr.  Wells  was  in  Japan,  1950-  been  Robert  Ervin  Coker.  UNC. 
52.  when  he  heard  of  the  diary.  1950:  Donald  Benton  Anderson. 
After  seeing  it.  he  felt  that  it  State  College.  1951;  .\Ibert  Coat- 
should  be  read  by  al^  people.  Ho  es,  U\C.  ,1952:  Howard  Washing- 
began  working  on  the  diary  and  ton  Odum,  UNC,  1953;  Franklin 
it  was  published  .\ug.  6,  1955.  the  Hoi  brook  McNult,  \Voman's  Col- 
10th  anniversary  of  the  historic  lege.  1954  and  Zeno  Payne  Met- 
bombing.  call.  State  College,  1955. 

•  * 

Spring  Is  For  Birds 
And  Weather  Bureau 

Spring  officially  came  to  Chap-  matter    of    fact,    has    seen    only 

el  Hill  this  week.  But  you'd  bet-  four  of  our  feathered  friends  to 

ter  tell  it  t:)  the  birds.  And  you  date.    (Other    reports    from    the 

might    mention    the    fact    to    our  field    are    unavailable      at      this 

friends  at  the  Weather  Bureau  at  time.) 

the    Ral'..M,^-Durham    Airport.  And   those   people  who  are  re- 
Allhough  the  plant  life  in  the  sponsible    for      our      daily      and 
area  has  been  quick  to  recognize  long-range    forecasts    are    telling 
th?    calendar   claim    on   the   new  us   that   the    future   doesn't   look 
season,  our  winged  friends  seem  too    sunny."     Increasing     cloudi- 
loath   to  give  their  approval.  ne'ss    with    chance    of    rain    and 
Brother  sparrow,   friend   robin  temperatures  in  the  high  50's  or 
and    the    rest    of   his    high-flying  low  60s"  is  th?ir  way  of  saying 
relatives  are   in  apparent   agree-  -'you     can't     believe     everything 
ment      with      those      pessimistic  you  read  in  the  calendar." 
peolpe    who    chart    and    predict  Anyway,  spring    did     officially 
that      unpredictable     commodity  corae   to  Chapel   Hill  this  week, 
called   weather.  But  if     you     aren't     particularly 
So    much    in    agreement,    as    a  friendly     with     the     birds    or    a 
matter   of   fact,    that  thleir    pres-  clairvoyant  of  the  plant  world  ot 
ence    in    Chapel    Hill,  is   obvious  Mother   Nature,   you   might   still 
by     their    relatives    absences    of  have  your  doubts, 
numbers  for  this  time  of  year.  it  has  been  a  little  chilly  late- 
One    student    of   nature,    as   a  iv,  hasn't  it? 

S1)E  Bail?  Car  l^eel 

The  official  student  publication  of  the  Publications  Board  of  t*ie 
University  of  North  Carolina,  where  it  is  published  daily  except  Mon- 
day and  examination  and  vacation  periods  and  summer  terms.  Entered 
as  second  class  matter  in  the  post  office  at  Chapel  Hill.  N.  C,  under 
the  cct  of  Mjjrch  8,  1870.  Subscription  rates:  Mailed,  $4  a  year.  $2.50 
per  semester;  delivered,  $6  a  year,  $3.50  a  semester. 
Editor  _.„, — .„ FRED  POWLEDGE 

Managing  Editor  ---^-.- CLARKE  JONES 

Night  News   Editor     _..: Wally  Kuralt 

Night  Editor  J :.._,  walt  Schruntek 

THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL  WEEK  IN  REVIEW 

Staff  Writers --  Bill  King,  Walter  Schruntek,  Anthony  Wolff. 


Earthquake, 
Mid-East  In 
World  News 

Walt  Schruntek 

A  ma.ior  earthquake  shook  one 
part  of  the  world  last  week  while 
tremors  from  what  might  have 
been  the  greatest  upheaval  in 
the  history  of  mankind  were  de- 
creasing in  intensity  and  freq- 
uency in  another  area. 

San  Francisco,  victim  of  the 
famous  disaster  which  virtually 
desjroyed  it  in  1906.  was  hit  by 
strong  earth  tremors  shortly  be- 
fore Doon  Friday  which  had 
skyscrapers  swaying  like  trees 
in  a  gale,  sending  thousands  of 
terror-stricken  people  into  the 
streets. 

Reported  as  the  strcmgest  earth- 
quake to  hit  the  area  since  the 
1906  disaster,  the  series  of  trem- 
ors which  followed  continued 
throughout  the  afternoon  causing 
no  major  damage  over  a  200- 
mile  stretch  of  northern  and  cen- 
tral  California. 

Famed  Golden  Gate  Bridge 
was  set  '•galloping.'  the  metro- 
politan area  was  showered  with 
broken  window  glass  and  high- 
ways were  cut  by  landslides  and 
buckled  from  beneath.  Buildings 
cracked,  gas  mains  were  severed 
and  more  than  a  dozen  persons 
were  reported  injured  by  falling 
debris. 

The  world  of  Mother  Nature 
had  turned  topsy-turvey  while  in 
other  areas  the  world  was  re- 
verberating still  from  man  s 
chaotic  treatment  of  his  fellow- 
man. 

Two  weeks  ago  the  Israeli 
army  pulled  out  of  Gaza.  The 
withdrawal  was  followed  close  by 
.A^rab  drmon.i'.rations  against 
the  U.N.  Emergency  forces  for 
the  r:?turn  of  the  strip  to  Egypt. 

Tension  gripped  the  world  and 
the  big  qu?stion  marked  hovered 
over  Egypt's  intentions  on  the 
strip  and  in  the  Gulf  of  Aqaba. 

Last  week,  the  question  mark 
was  partially  erased  and  tension 
eased  somewhat  as  several  of  the 
technical  and  'ticklish  '  aspects 
of  the  altercation  seemed  cl.iser 
to  solution. 

Egypt  conceded  to  allow  Israeli 
s'lipping  in  the  Gulf  of  .\qaba 
and  stipulated  that  it  would  not 
send  troops  into  the  Gaza  strip. 

In  the  first  interview  he  has 
grantc-d  since  the  Israeli  evac- 
uation of  Gaza.  Israeli  Premier 
David  Ben-Gurion  stated  his  be- 
lief that  peace  will  'eventually 
CL'me"  to  the  Middle  East.  He 
reiterated,  however,  that  Israel 
will  defend  its  rights  to  pa.ssage 
through  the  Gulf  of  .Aqaba  to 
the  Red  Sea. 

On  another  face  of  the  Middle 
East  problem.  President  Ei.sen- 
h.nver  and  Prime  Minister  Mac- 
millan  met  in  Tucker's  Town. 
Bermuda,  for  discussions  deal- 
ing with  the  controversial  dues 
on  toll  payments  through  the 
Suez  Canal,  the  U.N.  role  in  the 
Egyptian-Israeli  dispute  and  the 
general  Soviet  threat  in  the  Mid- 
dle East. 

In  a  news  release  Friday,  it 
was  learned  that  Eisenhower  as- 
'  sured  the  British  statesman  of 
the  U.S.'s  willingness  to  join  the 
Baghdad  Pact's  military  commit- 
tee in  a  move  to  check  the  spread 
of  communism  in  the  Middle 
East. 

• 

L'tl  Abner 


ON  THE  CAMPUS: 


Basketball,  Famous  Poets,  Politics 
Appropriations,  Jazz  Fill  Week  Here 


Walt  Schruntek 

The  focus  of  attention  swung 
dizzily  abaut  last  week  as  campus 
politics,  the  Carolina  basketball 
team,  a  couple  of  visiting  poets, 
the  Joint  Appropi[iations  Com- 
mittee in  Raleigh,  and  the  perils 
of    Fearless    Fosdick    caught    the 

• 


limelight    for   brief   moments    of 
prominence. 

Even  the  weather  got  into  the 
act  as  spring  was  officially  ush- 
ered in  on  the  calendar  with  a 
few  sparkling  days  of  sunshine, 
a  day  or  two  of  unseasonable 
cold   and,   of  course,    the   inevit- 

• 


ible  rain  of  Chapel  Hill. 

Student  politics  picked  up  the 
tempo  as  election  day"  (April  2) 
begin*^  to  draAV  increasingly  near. 
Exceptions  an  d  disagreement 
mingled  together  in  the  political 
air  and  'misunderstandings" 
and     "misiijterpretations"     were 

• 


cast 
don 


about    with    growing   aban- 


Sound  And  Fury  Grinds  Toward  Opening  Date 

Sound  and  Fury,  student  dramatic  organizatio  was  applying  the  makeup  last  week  ir  preparation 
f 01  opening  night  next  Saturday.  Left  to  right  arc  jnd  the  piano,  members  of  the  cast  include  Miss 
Pee  Wee   Batten,   Ken  Callender,  Hal   Henderson  an     pia.-iist  Cecil  Harstoe.        (Photo  by  Fred  Powledge) 

Pay  Increase  For  Teachers,  School 
For  Year  Heads  State  Newsfront 


Patsy  Miller 

The  North  Carolina  Board  of 
Education  recommended  a  teach- 
er pay  increase  of.  19.3  per  cent 
brfore  the  Joint  .Appropriations 
Committee  of  the  Legislature 
Tuesday. 

Th3  appropriation  is  $27.1 
millions  beyond  the  1957-59  bud- 
get   recommendation. 

The  Board  of  Education's  re- 
quest would  provide  a  salary 
.•fcaie  of  .S2  9(X)  to  S4.500  for  Tar 
Heel  teachers. 

Son.  J.  Spencer  Bell  of  Meck- 
lenburg warned  a  Senate  Judic- 
iary Committee  early  in  the 
week  that  failure  to  reapportion 
the  Legislature  might  lead  to  Re- 
publican dominance  within  «  10 
ye;irs. 

The  Committee  held  a  hearing 
on    a    reapportionment    bill    pro- 


posed by  a  study  commission.  Ac- 
lion  will  cnme  later. 

The  proposal  calls  for  an  in- 
crease in  house  membership  from 
120  to  130  members.  Senate 
seats  would  remain  at  50  with 
.senatorial  districts  redrawn  on 
the  bnsis  of  population.  There 
would  be  restrictions  on  senator- 
ifll   redistribution. 

Rep.  John  Kerr  of  Warren 
County  introduced  a  bill  to  the 
Legislature  Wednesday  that 
could  lead  to  year-round  school 
operatipn  on  a  staggered  basis 
in  North  Carolina. 

The  measure  would  permit  stu- 
dents to  a^nd  school  from  Sep- 
tember tQ  |June.  December  to 
September.  "March  to  December 
or  June  to  March.  Teaches  and 
pri/ip/^s  could  be  employed 
on  a  12-month  basis. 


The  Senate  killed  a  bill  to  per- 
mit lowering  of  the  voting  age  to 
18  Wednesday. 

On  Thursday  the  Senate  ap- 
proved a  bill  to  create  a  new 
Dept.  of  Administration  suggest- 
ed by  Gov.  Hodges. 

The  bill  combines  the  Budget 
Bureau  and  the  Division  of  Pur- 
chase and  Contract  under  one 
agency  with  powers  to  create 
olher  divisions. 

.\n  organized  effort  is  under 
way  to  retain  Flora  Macdonald 
College  as  it  is,  Virginia  Frank, 
president  of  the  Flora  Macdon- 
ald .\lumnae  Assn.  revealed  Tues- 
day. 

The  move  results  from  a  de- 
cision by  the  Presbyterian  Synod 
of  North  Carolina  to  establish  a 
four-year  Consolidated  Presby- 
terian  College   at   Laurinburg. 


• 

By  A\  Capp 


A  FINE  MASOR    k 
YOUARE,GCHNG    ' 
r/iJ^^Viiwi^^rr   rV  AROUND  STEAUNG 
_^'>^  THE  MAVORf/jT  v/ATCHES.I" 


'/pi£r 


L£r  eOrFOSOlCKr 
VDU  MANIAC /r 


<v 


!T'&  SOMCWHCRE  OKI 

VOU,  you  FAT  RASCAL!! 

I  CAN  MF.AR  ]rrf-ir's 


IT'S  FOSOICK.f-THAf 
V^TCH  CASE  HAS 
SKIAPF>ED  HIS 
&RAIN.7 


EGAl-'.'.'-  I  Vv  AS     " 
WRONG  A<3.f*JNJy 
IT  WASN'T  OM 
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HEAR  ITTICI|CIK<i.? 
TICKING.':''  ^_- 
TICKiHQ.'.''^l 


r-  t.,,  u  I  U-  cm .11 .1,!.-.  ,.i^.»f 


Poqo 


By  Wait  Kelly 


If  V(OU«  VC0<IN 

FOB  SAir,  i'$e 


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HCW10 


One  candidate  even  called  it 
a   day  campaign-wise. 

Sprinkled  posters  and  banners 
began  to  appear  in  various  nooks 
and  crannies  of  the  campus  prop- 
er,  giving  evidence  to  the  fact 
that  the  tempo  will  pick  up  even 
more  as  elections  draw  closer 
still. 

In  announcing  their  platform, 
apound  which  SP  candidates  will 
campaign,  the  Student  Party 
pledged  its  support  to: 

1.  Separation  of  investigation 
and  prosecution  powers  of  the 
Honor  Council  uJdiciary  Branch. 

2.  E.stablishment  of  an  arm 
of  student  government  to  assist 
in  processing  campus  parking 
violations: 

3.  Removal  of  parking  restric- 
tions at  the  earliest  possible 
time. 

4.  Faculty  and  administrative 
support  to  and  payment  of  park- 
ing fees. 

5.  Efforts  to  secure  TV  cov- 
erage of  all  sell-out  home  basket- 
ball games. 

6.  Efforts  to  establish  later 
hours  in  the  Monogram  Club  and 
Scuttlebut. 

7.  Cash  payment  to  -student 
workers  on  unused  meal  tickets. 

8.  Extension  of  date-ticket  re- 
bates. 

9.  Re-establishment  of  the 
campus   humor   magazine. 

10.  Efforts  toward  completion 
of  a  building  program  for  a  new 
student   union  building. 

UP  candidate  Bill  Baum  re- 
iterated his  platform  for  the 
establishment  of,  a  Student  Sen- 
ate, to  be  selected  from  all  areas 
of  the  campus,  and  spoke  out 
against  what  he  considered  a 
"misleading  and  unfair"  Tar 
Heel   editorial   last  week. 

His  opponent,  Sonny  Evans, 
as  the  front-running  advocate  of 
the  SP  platform,  elaborated  on 
the  individual  planks  presented 
earlier  in  the  week  and  outlined 
his  support  for  an  extension  of 
GM  activities  (i.e.  Victory  Village 
programs  and  a  new  student 
union    planning    program). 

The  Daily  Tar  Heel  editorial 
race  produced  the  withfUraw^l  of 
one  candidate — Frank  Crowther 
— and  an  exchange  of  approaches 
to  and  definitions  of  their  res- 
pective stands  by  the  remaining 
two. 

An  exchange  of  statements  un- 
derlined by  "misinterpretation" 
and  "mistaken"  served  to  color 
the  editorial  campaign  to  some 
degree.  Candidate  Sloan's  criti- 
cal retort  to  an  earlier  statement 
concerning  closed  meetings  by 
his  opponent,  Neil  Bass,  produc- 
ed the  first  real  "sparks"  of  the 
campaign  to  date. 

No  one  need  be  enlightened 
to  the  fact  that  the  nation's  num- 
ber one  undefeated  basketball 
team  made  its  way  to  Kansas 
City  last  week  where  it  readied 
itself  for  the  final  stages  of  the 
NCAA  championship. 

Robert  Frost,  the  snow-white- 
haired  man  of  American  poetry 
and  New  England  vintage,  made 
his  15th  annual  visit  to  Chapel 
Hill  on  Monday  and  gave  read- 
ings before  a  capacity  crowd  in 
Hill  Hall  which  delighted  and, 
as  usual,  captivated  his  audi- 
ence. 

The  week  of  literary  apprec- 
iation was  complemented  Thurs- 
day by  the  appearance  of  Dame 
i«:dith  Sitwell.  poet  of  interna- 
tional reno^vn  and'  recipient  of 
the  highest  honors  presented  by 
literary  circles  in  America  and 
England. 

President  William  Friday  held 
the  campus  spotlight  and  a  sig- 
nificant limelight  in  Raleigh 
when  he  presented  a  Consoli- 
dated University  request  for  $1.5 
million  dollars  for  increased  fac- 
ulty salaries  and  more  library 
books. 

President  Friday  cited  the  in- 
creasing numbers  of  professors 
and  instructors  who  have  left 
the  University  for  better  paying 
positions  and  the  need  to  meet 
this  crisis  if  "we  are  to  maintain 
our  excellent  position  in  the 
Jicademic  world." 

And  Fearless  Fosdick,  under- 
paid detective  hero  non-parallel, 
seems  once  again  to  have  toppled 
from  the  brink  toward  disaster. 
Foiled  by  the  cunning  of  Ezio 
the  Pincher.  Fosdick  is  faced 
now  with  the  loss  of  his  badge 
and  the  cancellation  of  his  pen- 
sion. 

Pum-da-dutn-dum. 


Problem: 

President's 

Disability 

^  Hie  Ntew  York  Times 


More  than  a  year  ago  President 
Eisenhower  asked  the  Depart- 
ment of  Justice  and  Congress  to 
study  measures  to  resolve  the 
ambiguity  in  the  Constitution  on 
these  points: 

When  the  President  is  in  a 
"state  of  inability"  to  perform 
his  duties,  who  shall  determine 
and  announce  the  fact?  When 
this  condition  has  ended,  who 
shall  determine  and  announce 
that?  Since  the  Constitution  auth- 
orizes the  Vice  President  in  the 
interim  to  exercise  the  powers 
and  duties  of  the  Presdiency, 
how  shaU  it  be  assured  that 
the.se  will  revert  to  the  Presi- 
dent at  the  end  Ox  his  "sVate 
of    inability"? 

0 

The  Attorney  General's  pro- 
posal, as  thus  far  revealed,  is 
for  a  constitutional  amendment. 
In  this  the  President  will  be  em- 
powered to  make  his  own  decis- 
ion that  he  is  in  a  condition  of 
"inability"  —  which  could  arise 
from  conditions  ranging  from 
ill  health  to  capture  by  an  en- 
emy— and  to  depute  his  powers 
and  duties  to  the  Vice  President 
for  a  period  the  end  of  which 
the  President  is  also  empowered 
to  determine.  At  its  termination, 
the  amendment  will  prescribe, 
the  powers  and  duties  of  the 
office  will  revert  to  the  Presi- 
dent. 

This  wholly  neglects  the  su- 
premely important  point  raised 
by  President  Eisenhower  that 
deals  with  a  President  who, 
though  unable  to  perfor.>n  bis 
duties,  is  either  not  conscious  al 
that  or  mentally  or  physically 
unable  to  certify  it.  And  thete 
'  \&  rtie  other  conceivable  consid- 
eration of  a  President  who.  no 
longer  competent  and  conscious 
of  this,  declines  to  step  aside. 

The  Celler  -  Keating  proposal 
would  amend  the  Constitution  to 
provide  that  the  Vice  President 
could  summon  a  joint  session  of 
Congress  to  proclaim,  on  his  own 
determination,  the  "inability''  of 
the  President,  and  take  over  the 
Government  with  or  without  the 
approval  of  Congress.  This  naive 
idea  assigns  to  the  chief  party 
in  interesi,  who  might  be  the 
President's  worst  enemy  or  an 
outright  villain,  the  power  to 
supplant  the  President.  And  it 
leaves  only  the  long  and  difficult 
process  of  impeachment  to  get 
rid  of  the  usurper. 

One  obvious  reason  for  the  fail- 
ure of  both  plans  to  repair  this 
serious  defect  in  the  Constitution 
is  that  apparently  they  are  ap- 
proaching the  remedy  by  only 
one  route — that  of  amending  the 
Constitution.  But  there  is  also 
a  statutory  method  of  filling  the 
gap   in   the   Charter. 

By  one  statute  that  has  been 
proposed  Congress,  acting  under 
the  authority  of  the  constitution- 
al clause  that  provides  for  the 
delegation  of  a  disabled  Presi- 
dent's office  and  powers  to  the 
Vice  President,  would  set  up  an 
Inability  Council.  This  council 
would  be  empowered  to  deter- 
mine when  tiie  state  of  Presi- 
dential inabiliy  existed  and 
when  it  terminated,  thus  also 
limiting  the  acting  tenure  of  the 
Vice  President  or,  in  the  absence 
of  a  Vice  President,  the  tempor- 
ary incumbent  of  the  White 
House  already  prescribed  by  law. 
In  a  recent  article  in  the  Sat- 
urday E^'ening  Post  Beverly 
Smith  reviewed  the  whole  issue 
and  the  several  kinds  of  inabil- 
ity councils  that  have  been  sug- 
gested to  resolve  it. 

This  statute  once  enacted  the 
constitutional  amendment  sub- 
mitted by  Congress  to  the  states 
need  only  confirm  the  power  of 
Congress  to  enact  the  statute. 
The  legislative  actions  could  be 
taken  simultaneously.  This  pro- 
cedure would  squarely  meet*  the 
serous  problems  which  both  the 
Attorney  General  and  Congreas 
thus  far  have  evaded. 


Chaj 

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SUNDAY,  MARCH  24,  1957 
Chapel  Hill  Man  Lost 

Capi  James  F.  Pullen.  a  native 
of  Chapel  Hill  and  husband  of  the 
t.rmer  Ida  Hughes  of  Hillsbrfro, 
was  a  passenger  aboard  the  C97 
franspcal  missing  off  the 'coast  of 
Japan.  Captain  Pullen  was  return- 
ing to  Japan  after  being  on  leave 
in  the  U.  S.  One  of  his  brothers, 
William  R.  PuHen,  lives  in  Chapel 
Hill. 


THI  DAILY  TAX  HEll 


PAet  TMRti 


HAPPENINGS  ON  THE  HILL: 


Dances  Fill  Basketball  Weekend 


By  SUE  ATCHISON  and  their,  dates  was  held  at  the 

FROM    ALL    AREAS    OF    THE .  Phi  Kappa  Sigma  house. 


PATRONIZK  YOUR 
•    ADVERTISERS    • 


CAMPUS  came  the  strains  of 
dance  bands  last  night.  The  an- 
nual Military  Ball  was  held  last 
night  in  the  Naval  armory  for  the 
Air  Force  and  Naval  ROTC  units 
on  campus.  Between  snatches  of 
the  basketball  game  the  future  of- 
ficers and  their  dates  danced  to 
the  music  of  Don  Jefferson  and 
the  Embers.  Earlier  in  the  even- 
ing a  tea  for  the  Air  Force  men 


MANY  COUPLES  ON  CAMPUS 
took  advantage  of  the  chance  to 
swing  and  sway  at  the  Spring 
Swing  held  last  night  in  Woc^len 
Gym.  The  Duke  Ambassadors  fea< 
turing  Miss  Jean  Blackstone  as  vo- 
calist were  on  hand  to  piwide  the 
music.  The  dance  sponsorad  by  the 
IDC  and  the  SophoniOTe  class,  was 
from  all  reports  a  success  despi.te 
minor  interruptions  caused  by  ex- 


STATISTICS  COLLOQUIUM  led  by  Dr.  G.  P.   Minar.  Refwsk- 

Professor  J.  Wolfowitz  of  Corn-    ments  will  precede  the  progCMk 

ell  University  will  address  the  Sta- 


tistics Colloquium  Wednesday  on 
"The  minimum  distance  method." 
This  is  a  new  method  of  combin- 
ing observations  to  estimate  un- 
known quantities  or  to  test  hypo- 
theses. The  meeting  will  be  ai  4 
p.m.  in  206  Carroll  Hall. 


STUDENT  PARTY 

The  Student  Party  will  meet  to- 
morrow night  at  7  a.m.,  aMOrding 
to  Chairman  Sonny  Haltetri.  Hall- 
ford  urged  all  membexs  t0  h%  pre- 
sent. 


EUZLABETH  ArDEXS 
FAMOUS 

m\isible 

\'eil 

race  ravder 


GRADUATE  FELLOWSHIP 

Ancitl  Clyde  Mewborn,  a  teach- 
ing fellow  in  the  UNC  Mathemat- 
ics Dept.,  has  been  awarded  a  gra- 
duate fellowship  in  mathematics 
f  by  the  National  Science  Founda- 
j  lion.  Mewborn  is  the  fourlh  gradu- 
jate  student  in  the  MathMnatic* 
jDepi.  to  receive  this  award. 
i  COSMOPOLITAN  CLUB 

The  Cosmopolitan  Club  will  meet 
today    in    the    Library    Assembly  j 
I  Room  at  4  p.m.  The  mcctics  M'H!  ! 
I  consist  of  a  discussion  of  Denmark 

« — 


Klizabrth  .\rdenV  iocredibly 
line  face  powder  is  created  io 
Paris.  Invisible  \  eil  gtxs  on  so 
softly,  yet  never  flies  or  mists, 
screens  out  tiny  flaws  and 
imperfections  \»ith  a  delicate 
him  of  loveliness.  And  it  has  the 
most  beautiful  clinging  scent 
—  a  sheer  delight  to  women 
everywhere  for  it  actually 
males  you  more  beautiful  than 
ordinary  face  powder! 

Ardena  Invisible  Neil  Face 
Powder  comes  in  an  exquisite 
French  flo'ver-topped  box  for 
your  dressing  table,  5.00;  in  a 
nevf  smaller  size,  perfect  for 
travel  and  a  young  beauty's 
first  powder,  2.75.  In  a  Napo- 
leon Compact,  2.00«  5.00 

AU  in  12  perfectly  graduated 
thade$,  pnempbutam 


IIMX.II-C. 

Cosmetic  Dept. 


Meet  The 
Civil  War 


Lots  of  people  hereabouts  who 
enjoy  that  aristocrat  of  hobbies. 
old  book  collecting,  concentrate 
on  the  Civil  War. 
It  is  a  goad  field  to  collect,  be- 
cause it  is  so  full  of  plots  and 
counterplots,  of  sulphurous  char- 
acters, of  heroism  and  tragedy, 
and  each  book  gives  its  own  pri- 
vate distortion  to  whatever  the 
original  facts  may  have  been.  j 
The  field  is  broad  enough  to  in- 
clude many  low-priced  books  tor 
the  novice  collector.  On  our  shelf 
at  the  moment,  for  example,  is  a 
life  of  Lee  at  $1.95,  a  book  on  the 
Secret  Service  at  $2.95.  and  even 
a  battered  life  of  Jefferson  Davis 
at  less  than  a  dollar. 
In  the  Look-and-Long  division,  on 
the  other  hand,  theres'  a  bound  set 
of  Harper's  Weekly,  with  drawings 
and  day-by-day  reports  of  battles 
that  Is  priced  at  $18.95. 
Let  your  rare  books  reflect  y«W 
own  interests.  One  of  these  duft, 
treat  yourself  to  a  lazy  half-hour 
meeting  the  past  in  our  Old  Book 
Corner. 


THE  INTIMATE 

BOOKSHOP 

205  East  Franklin  Street 

Open  Till  10  P.  M. 


One  Dollar  Bill 

♦  "» 

Collector's  Item 
For  Mail  Clerk 

RALEIGH  —  (*—  A  4fiQMT  bUl 
that  a  Raleigh  post  offic*  derk  re- 
ceived recently  in  a  stamp  sale 
may  turn  out  to  be  worth  many 
times  a  dollar. 

You  see,  this  dollatf  bill  is  dif- 
ferent, and  the  difference  may 
make  it  very  valuable  as  a  collec- 
tor's item. 

Leroy  Daniels  happened  t<^  notice 
the  bill  becanae  a  Mter  following 
the  serial  number  had  been  inked 
over — apparenily  while  it  was  be- 
ing made. 

"I  examined  it  to  see  if  it  was 
counterftut,**  said  Daniels.  "Then 
I  noticed  it  lUid  two  different  serial 
numbaVt* 

OrdHUfy  bills  have  serial  num 
tiers  printed  on  them  in  two  places, 
but  the  numbers  are  supposed  to 
be  the  same. 

Daniels  took  the  bill  to  a  bank- 
er who  expressed  the  opinion  it 
was  undoubtedly  genuine  but  that 
it  was  "the  only  biU  he  ever  heard 
oi  in  circulation"  with  different 
aacial  numbers. 

Hie  banker  also  told  Daniels  his ' 
hill  might  be  valuable  as  a  collec 
tiff's  item. 


citing  moments  in  the  basketball 
game. 

FRIDAY  THE  PI  LAM'S  started 
their  annual  pledge  weekend  with 
a  cocktail  party  and  formal  dinner 
at  the  Fleetwood  Motel  in  Raleigh. 
During  the  dinner  Fred  Hirsch  was 
presented  an  award  as-  best  pledge 
and  Stanley  Bershaw  was  present- 
ed an  award  as  the  best  brother. 

"A  suppressed  desire"  was  the 
theme  of  their  cabin' party,  which 
was  held  last  night.  Their  pledge 
weelcend  ends  today  with  a  brunch 
party  at  their  house. 

MISg  EDITH  MACKINNON  will 
lead  the  Kappa  Delta's  as  president 
in  the  coming  year.  She  will  be 
assisted  by  the  following  officers: 
vice  president.  Miss  Jane  Patten; 
secretary.  Miss  June  Potter;  trea- 
surer. Miss  Betty  Rene  Webster; 
assistant  treasurer.  Miss  Nancy 
Graham;  rush  chairman,  Miss  Nan 
Schaeffer;  assistant  rush  chairman. 
Miss  Barbara  Moore;  house  man- 
ager, Miss  Alice  Eller;  social  chair- 
man. Miss  Barbara  Honey  and  as- 
sistant social  chairman,  Miss  Nancy 
Lyon. 

ROBERT  A.  PEHSTDERGRAPH, 
Alpha  Kappa  Psi,  has  pinned  Miss 
Betsy  Jon  Thomerson,  a  student  at 
Meredith  College. 


Four  Freed  From  Ticket  Scatping  Charges 


KANSAS  CITY— (AP)— A  Mich- 
igan State  basketball  player  and 
three  other  persons  accused  of 
scalping  tickets  to  the  NCAA 
basketball  tournament  under  way 
here,  were  freed  Saturday  by 
Municipal  Judge  Eugene  R. 
Brouse. 

Each  was  required  to  pay  $10 
court  costs.  A  fifth  man  who  fail- 
ed to  appear  to  answer  the  charge 
forfeited  a  $25  ca*  bond. 

City  investigators  said  the  ac- 
cused were  caught  yesterday  sell- 
ing tickets  at  premium  prices.  The 
tourney  has  been  sold  out  for 
weeks. 

The   four   brought   before   the 


USF  FILM 

The  United  Student  Fellowship 
is  sponsoring  a  special  showing  of 
the  motion  picture  "Martin  Luth- 
er" at  7  p.m.  tomorrow  at  the 
United  Congregational  Church  on 
W.  Cameron  Ave. 


GETTY 

Professor  Robert  Getty,  head  of 
the  Dept.  of  Classics  in  University 
College  at  the  University  of  To- 
ronto, will  £;peak  on  "Virgil  in  Eng- 
lish Poetry"  tomorrow  at  7:30  p.m. 
in  Carroll  Hall  The  meeting  is 
open  to  the  public. 


judge  included  Harry  Lux,  21,  a 
substitute  Michigan  State  guard 
who  did  not  see  action  in  last 
nights'  game  which  his  team  lost 
to  North  Carolina  74-70. 

Lux^  was  accused  of  selling  two 
$4  tickets  for  $25.  He  explained 
that  each  player  on  the  team  had 
been  given  two  tickets. 

"You  are  here  as  a  guest  of  the 
city,"  the  judge  said,  "and  I  am 
inclined  to  be .  lenient.  You  are 
not  a  professional'  ticket  scalper 
and  in  view  of  the  fact  that  you 
are  a  senior  soon  to  be  graduated 


— and  probably  as  you  soon  will 
go  into  the  Army — I  don't  want 
anytiiing  on   yoyr  reconi." 


DANCE  TRYOUTS 

Dancing  tryouts  for  the  CarolMia 
Plajanakers'  spring  Broductipn 
"Peer  Gynt"  will  be  held  Tuesday 
from  4-6  p.m.  in  the  ffillel  House 
on  W.  Cameron  Ave. 


SERVE  YOURSELF— 


EVERY  SUNDAY 


5:30-7:30  P.M. 


BUFFET 

At  The  • 

RANCH   HOUSE 

HOME  OF  CHOICE  KICKORYSMOKED  CHARCOAl.  BROILED  STEAKS 


A  Campus-to-Career  Case  History 


TAKE  YOUR  DATE  FOR  SUNDAY  DINNER  TO 

DANZIGER'S  OLD  WORLD  RESTAURANT 

For  an  InternaHonai   Fair  of  Quality  F<v>d 

FRENCH  ONION  SOUP 

HUNGARIAN  GOULASH    .  .. 

GERMAN  SAUERBRATEN  W.  DUMPLING JL. 

CZECH  MEAT  ROULADE  W.  SOUR  CREAM 

STUFFED  ROAST  CHICKEN . 

WIENER  SCHNITZEL  


$   35 

-_    $    1.10 

._ $1.45 

%  .90 

SI. 10 

SI  .25 

Served  with  salad,  2  vegetable*,  bread,  butter,  coffee  or  iced  tea 

Homemade  French  and  Viennese  Pastries 

Hour*  from  11:30  A.  M.vte  7:30  P.  M 


I  — 


DAILY    CROSSWORD 


ACE08S 

1  Before 

( naut. ) 
6  Move 

throufh 

water 

10.  More  loyal 

11.  Cattle  (dial.) 

12.  iJtya  up 

13.  Finishea 

14.  Hostel 

15.  Shield 
]«.  Cowardly 

20.  Oe<HYe 
William. 
Ruaaell 

21.  Man's 
nickname 

22.  Beard  of  rye 

23.  Thoac  m 
office 

24  Temple 
sanctuary 
areas 

27.  Turf 

29.  Man's  name 

30.  Wall  (Scot.) 

32  United 
Nations 
(abbr.) 

33  Word  taken 
out 

30.  Stairway 

poet 
38.  Not 

(prefix) 
39  Terrtble 
40.  Preaclnf 

machiae 
43  Cheese 

44.  BUonL  for 
Instance 

45.  Knocks 

46.  American 
admiral 

DOWN 
1  Made 

amende 
S.OeUi  (ft.) 


3.  Pronoun 

4.  River 
(U.S.) 

5.  Bitter  vetch 

6.  Form  of 
trapshoot- 
ing 

,  7.  Wound 
( coUoq. ) 

8.  Native 
(Asia) 

9.  Hodi:e- 
podges 

12.  Elmploy 
15.  Indefinite 
article  ° 

17.  Part  of 
a  cheer 

18.  Female 
sheep 


19.  Smith- 
ys 
block 

23.  Exist 

24.  Cad- 
mium 
(sym.) 

29.  Before 
(poet.) 

26.  Tit 
for 

27.  Separate 

28.  American 
Indian 

30.  Wild  and 

31.  English 
princess 

33.  Supposes 


ii:3fflaHL-:aa;)[:3a 


Ch*  Onwga's  To  Present 

Service  Award  Tomorrow 

I 

The  Chi  Omega  sorority  at  UNC 
win  hold  its  annual  E^usinian  Ban- 
quet at  6  p.m.  tomorrow  at  the 
Carolhu  Inn,  with  some  75  per- 
sons expected  to  attend. 

Presentation  of  the  ei^Ui  Dis- 
tinguished Service  Award  for  Wo- 
men will  highlight  the  evening  pro- 
gram. Chancellor  Robert  B.  House 
will  announce  the  recipient  and 
make  the  presentation. 

Miss  Katherine  K.  Coe,  a  junior 
from  Washington,  D.  C.  who  was 
elected  QM  Omega  president  last 
week,  will  preside  at  the  banquet. 
Two  honors  for  students  will  also 
he  announced  tomorrow  night:  the 
scholarship  award  and  the  award 
to  the  outstanding  active. 

The  1956  Distinguished  Service 
Award  wetit  to  Miss  Lucy  Morgan 
of  Penland.  Previous  recipients 
were  Dr.  Guion  Johnson,  Chapel 
mn,  18S6;  Miss  Ruth  Current,  Ra- 
leigh, 1954;  Dr.  Kate  Burr  John- 
son, Raleigh,  1963;  Miss  Gertrude 
Weil,  Goldsboro,  1952;  Mrs.  Hopje 
Summerell  Chamberlain,  Chapel 
Hill,  1961;  and  Mrs,  Kate  Pendle- 
ton Arringtoft,  Warrenton,,  1950. 


Swinging  Anniversary 

SALE 

365  Days 


A  YEAR 
FOR  THE 


UNC  STUDENTS 


!#► 


207  E.  Franklin  St. 


After  securing  field  duta^  Mac  McLemn  lays  out  plans  for  new  a»d  addition*^  telephone  services. 

Figuring  on  tlie  future 


.^  Thurston  B.  McLeran,  called  Mac 
by  his  friends,  is  an  engineer  with 
Southern  Bell  Telephone  and  Tele- 
graph Company  at  Decatur,  Georgia. 

Much  of  his  work  is  concerned 
with  the  future— planning  for  tele- 
phone service  to  meet  predicted  de- 
mands a  year,  or  five  years  ahead. 

"My  biggest  job  to  date,"  Mac 
says,  "has  been  engineering  a(hH- 
tional  communications  facilities  for 
an  airbase  and  adjoining  aircraft 
factory  in  our  district.  This  means 
making  fi^ld  studies  of  the  cus- 
tomer's requirements  and  planning 
how  new  telephone  facilities  can  best 
jneet  them.   Then  I  translate  this  in- 


formation into  working  plans  for  our 
construction  and  install;) ^lion  peopl''- 
It's  a  big  job,  and  give <  me  a  lot  ii' 
responsibility.  U's  chaiknging  wow, 
loo,  for  an  eyigiAeer.**' 

Figisrinjp?,  ofi  Ac-  «kWii  liA^jre  •_*«»- 
cerns  Mac  alsc.  He  graduated  {ion\ 
Geor:,ia  Tech  in  1952.  with  a  B.S.  in 
EledvHcal  Engineering.  He  went  with 
the  telephone  company  beTr"-,?*-  of 
the  advancement  opportunifl'A  it  of- 
fered. Today,  Mac  is  rnarrir;/  and 
has  c-ne  child.  He  looks  forward  to 
an  ir*«resting  vfrr.-r  in  a  growing 
busin*^;*  where  '..'•'i^  •■•duais  can  e  I- 
vance  as  far  as  thf.i  abilities  wdl 
take  t^::fm. 


There  are  many  rewarding  career  opportu  »*iUu. 
in  all  Bell  Telephone  rompanief*.  and  at  Bell  Tele- 
phone Laboratories,  We>»tern  Electric  and  Sr-'ii- 
Corporation.  Your  placement  officer  can  giv«'  y-.'r 
more  information  about  Bell  System  Conipunieh. 


SV8TIM 


Va 


34.  Article    > 
(Sp.) 

35.  Fircplao* 
37.  Envelop 
40.  Insane 
41  Devoured 
42.  At  once 


KinNSTON 


scores  top  marks  for  flavor! 


cu$si^ia>s 


^pi 


ROOM  BSICjK  HOU^  8  BED 
rooms,  an  laodsm  coiaveniences. 
3  miiet  oa  Ca^  8&  Byway.  Stove 
and  FrtjiadaJjK  furi^uiiwd.  Call 
Pred  Katzk  «fter  6:00.  8-9025. 


with 
WINSTON 


FOR  RENT:  GHAD  STUDENT  OR 
faculty  naember.  Handsome  West- 
wood  home  within  walking  dis- 
tance of  ho^tal  and  campus. 
Spacious  and  shaded  yard  com-  j 
plete  with  scuppernong  arbor, 
screen  porch,  garage,  full  base- 
ment, and  attic  storage.  Four 
bedcooms.  ZVi  baths,  separate 
dining  room,  ctmiplctely  furn- 
ished, available  April  1.  '57 
throwgh  F»b.  1,  "SS.  For  informa- 
tion call  John  Foushee  Agency, 

•4di. 


FOR  INEXFENSIVB  LIVING:  27 
ft.  Nashua  trailer — has  bath, 
tub,  shower,  porch,  oil  heater, 
add«d  room.  Connected  to  util- 
ities and  septic  tank.  1  mile  out 
on  airport  road.  $2300.  Call 
8472. 


■  What's  all  the  shouting  about?  Flavor! 
Full,  rich  flavor  —  in  a  filter  smoke!  Yes, 
and  Winston's  exclusive  filter  —  a  filter  that 


Switch  to  WINSTON  America's  bestselling;  best-tfiSlaDg  ^Utar  curette! 


•      J.    ^ETNOLOa 

To«»ceo  CO., 

WlNeTCN.CALCH,    N. 


i 


FA«I  FOUt 


THt  OAtLY  TAR  HEEL 


SUNDI^Y,  MARCH  24,  1f57 


*<n«9(WI  If  M»  !•  Itw  Mt  KN«  Omti*  VI.  Y«Nl4> «  0»,  LM,  tMldW 


A  CLOSER 
ELECTRIC  SHAVE 

Condftlen*  bMrd;  h«|p«  teu<«n  skin.  ceunt*raet  pmnpir^pwM 
tntkm  It  may  to  8«t  •  cl«an,  cIom  ahav*,  fi,  piu«  t«)u 


McGuire,  Rosenbluth,   Wallace    Head    East   Squad 


YAROLl£Y  OF  LpNDON,  inc. 

Vvdtoy  »i«dbett  tor  AkMm  m  ctmM  in  EngUnd  md  flnWwd  in  Hi*  U.8.A.  f(»m  ttw  trlgiml  En«Uafe 
•wmiiM.  eemMning  imyertirt  *n4  dwnMttc  IngfadHnto.  Virtl«y  of  lanion.  Inc..  «0  Fifth  Avwmm,  N.Y.C. 


KANSAS  CITY— (AP)— A  spark- 
ling array  of  pointmakere  will 
take  the  floor  here  Monday  night 
in  the  sixth  annual  East-West  col- 
legiate all-star  basketball  game. 
For  once,   the  East  is  favored. 

Only  one  victory  in  the  benefit 
series,  staged  by  Shrine  hospitals 
for  crippled  children  has  been 
scored  by  the  East.  That  was  in 
1955. 

But  this  time.  Coach  Frank  ^c- 
Guire  of  North  Carolina  believes 
he  has  the  ans^ver  in  an  Eastern 
squad  of  10  players  featuring 
Grady  Wallace  of  South  Carolina 
and  Joe  Gibbon  of  Mississippi,  who 
averaged  31  and  30.5  points  per 
game,  respectively.  - 

Wallace  was  No.  1  and  Gibbon 
No.  2  in  the  individual  scoring  na- 
tionally among  major  college 
players.  With  them  will  start  such 
stalwarts  as  All-America  Lennic 
Rosenbluth  of  North  Carolina  and 
Charley   Tyra   of   Louisville.  | 

The  West,  with  a  squad  of  11 
coached  by  Bill  Strannigan  of 
'owa  State,  will  be  counting  heav- 
ily on  three  Big  Seven  stars.  Gary 
Thompson  of  Iowa  State.  Gene 
Elstun  of  Kansas  and  Rex  Ekwall 
of  Nebraska. 


Carolina  Whips  Rollins 
To  End  Florida  Swing 


Another  pair  of  strong  competi- 
tors for  the  West  are  Jim  Krebs 
of  Southern  Methodist  and  Deii- 
ver's  Dick   Brott. 

But  the  East  wins  the  nod  on 
the  basis  of  scoring  prowess.  Be- 
sides Wallace  with  806  points  and 
Gibbon  with  631.  four  others  on  J  ORLANDO,  H.A.  —  i^  —  North 
the  squad  broke  the  500  mark  dur-  j  Carolina's  Tar  Heels  ended  their 
mg  the  regular  season;  among  piori^ja  spring  baseball  swing  to- 
thcm  Rosenbluth  with  649.  Tyraljay  ^i£h  a  3-1  victory  over  Rolling, 
with  555.  Jim  Ashmore  of  Missis- ,  engineered  by  effective  pitching 
sippi  with  708,  and  vince  Cohen,  |j..  jjjj,  R^iugh. 
of  Syracuse  with  548. 

Rounding  out  the  West  squad]  The  Tar  Heels  ended  the  swing 
are  Curtis  Jenson  of  Utah.  Mel' with  a  3-2  won-lost  record  against 
Wright  of  Oklahoma  A&M.  George  j  Rollins,  Ohio  and  Horida. 
Mchaffey  of  Texas  A&M,  Larry  j  Raugh  gave  up  five  hits,  fanned 
Friend  of  CalKornia,  Calvin^  seven  and  didn't  issue  a  walk  as 
Grosscup  of  Tulane  and  Jed  Dom-ibe  went  the  distance  for  the  Tar 
mcj-er.  Minnesota.  Heelj,  who  were  held  to  four  hits 

The  East's  standouts  also  include  I  by  two  Rollins  pitchers. 
Dave    Smalley   of   Navy,    Harvard:     ,^       _        ■,,    „  i,         .    . 
Schmidt  of  Illinois.  Gerrv  Calvert       ^^^  ^«""'^^'  «''';"'*  starter,  is- 

j  sued  successive  walks   to  Jim    Lc- 


of  Kentucky  and  Gene  Millard.' 
Ohio  State.  j 

Tallest  men  on  the  21-player 
roster  are  Tyra.  Krebs  and  Brott,  i 
all  6-feet-8;  the  shortest  man  is ' 
Millard,  5-feet-9. 

.  Tipoff  is  10  p.m.  EST.  following  i 
a  preliminary  warmup  game  be-  \ 
twesn  two  industrial  teams. 


UISK;  Opens  Golf  Season  Here 
With  Rollins  Team  Tomorrow 


YARDLEY   PRODUCTS  AVAILABLE 


at 


SUTTON'S  DRUG  STORE 


Carolina's  golf  team  will  tee- 
off  against  a  crack  Rollins  squad 
on  the  local  links  tomorrow  at  2 
p.m.  as  the  Tar  Heels  open  their 
1957  .season. 

Finley  Golf  Club  Pro  Ed  Ken- 
ny, handling  the  team  in  the  ab- 
sence of  r  P.  ''Chuck'"  Erickson, 
stated  this  weekend  that  the  Car- 
olina linksters  were  looking  very 
good,  and  he  expected  a  topflight 
performance    tomorrow. 

The  golf  pro  also  announced 
the  following  six-man  team:  No. 
1.  Tommy  Langley;  No.  2.  Gene 
Lookabill;  No.  3.  Buck  Adams;  No. 
4.  Sam  Patrick;  No.  5.  Walt  Sum- 
mcrville;  and  No.  6,  Cal  Mitchell. 

Rounding  out  the  14-man  roster 
are  the   following  golfers  who  in 


gette,  Ivalee  Hill  and  Roger  Hon- 
Tom  Maultsbyls  single  to  add  an 
eycutt  lo  start  the  fourth  inning. 
Dick  Hudson  singled  Lcgette  and 
Hill  home  to  give  the  Tar  Heels 
Iheir  first  two  runs. 

Hudson    singled    in    the    ninth. 
stole   .-JC'OJid   and   came   home   on 


insurance  run  in  the  ninth. 

Rollins  got  its  lone  run  in  the 
7th  on  Jim  Johnston's  single  and 
Al  Fantuzzi's  double. 

UNC  000     200     001  —  3-4-3 

Rollins      000     000     100  —  1-5-1 
Raugh    and    Maultsby;    Dunnill, 
Powell  (4)  and  Overstreet. 


Howard  Johnson  Restaurant 

BREAKFAST 

LUNCH 

DINNER 

SNACKS 
"Landmark  For  Hungry  Tarheels" 


future   challenge   rounds   hope  tp  ^ 
gain    a    position    in    the    top    six: ' 
Tuffy     Henderson.    John    McKee. 
Bob    Ruffin.   John    Johnston,    Doni 
McMillan,    Jame.s   Collins,    .\ubrey 
Rothrock  and  Larry  Bell.  I 

Even   though     the     squad     lost 
some  lettermen  of  last  year.  Ken- 
ny was  quick   to   point  out   that  \ 
with    the    great    improvement    of ! 
all   team  members,  "the  squad  is  , 
shaping     up     better     than     last 
years',  which  is  saying  a  lot  since 
they  only  lost  one  match  all  sea- 
(  son  and  won  the  ACC  champion- 
ship. 


IN  HONOR  OF  THE  25th  ANNIV  ERSARY  OF  GRAHAM  MEMORIAL 

KEMP'S 

IS  THROWING  HIS   25th  ANNIVERSARY 


SALE 


MONDAY  THRU  SATURDAY 


MARCH  25-30 


HUNDREDS 
OF 

LP/S 

COLUMBIA,  VICTOR 
CAPITAL 

$2.50  Each 


All  $5.98  And  $6.75 

Show  Tunes 
$4.00  Each 


MY  FAIR  LADY  THE  PAJAMA  CAME 

Li'L  ABNSR  KISS  ME,  KATE 

KISMET  MISS  L*IBERTY 

SOUTH  PACIFIC  HOUSE  OP  FLOWERS 

THE  MOST  HAPPY  FELLA 
AND  MANY   MORE 


HAIR   GROOM 

I    to  NIC 


^*^.^-».- 


J  ^-^, 


UNBREAKABll 
PLASTICI 

Grooms  y^fur  hair  whilo  it  treato  your 
\        scoipw  Controls  loos*  dondruff.   1.00 


Quigg     ' 

(Continiied  from  Page  1) 

the  last  overtime  period.  Kearns 
picked  up  four  points  on  a  layup 
and  two  free  throw^s.  but  Chamber- 
lain hit  a  three-pointer  to  make 
the  score  52-51-  King  added  a 
free  toss  for  the  Jayhawks,  and 
the  count  was  knotted  at  52  all. 
Gene  Elstun  then  converted  a 
free  throw  after  being  fouled  by 
Kearns,  and  Kansas  led,  53-52  with 
32  seconds  left. 

The  Tar  Heels  refused  to  be 
rattled.  They  brought  the  ball 
down  the  floor,  fed  to  Quigg.  and 
the  lanky  center  drove  for  the 
basket.  King  blocked  on  the  drive, 
and  with  six  seconds  left,  Joe 
clamly  dropped  in  the  game-win- 
ning points. 

i  Kansas  put  the  ball  in  play,  but 
iwhcn  Quigg  deflected  a  pass 
I  meant  for  Chamberlain,  it  was  aU 
I  over. 

j  It  was  a  great  win  for  a  great 
'  Carolina  team.  The  Tar  Heels 
'  scrapped  throughout  with  murder 
I  ous  aggrco-siveness.  They  out-fought 
j  the  Jayhawks  and  dominated  the 
i  backboards,  42-28.  Chamberlain 
i  got  14,  but  Brennan  was  close  be- 
hind with  11. 

Kansas  Coach  Dick  Harp  called 
j  Carolina,  "the  No.  1  team  in  the 
I  nation,"  after  the  game  .He  point- 
!  ed  to  the  superb  Tar  Heel  defense 
I  and  rebounding  as  deciding  fac- 
Itors.  "Nobody  has  played  us  that 
tough  on  the  boards.  That  was  the 
major  point  in  the  gartie." 

Coach  Frank  McGuire  had  noth- 
ing but  praise  for  bis  victwious 
Tar  Heels  after  the  nerve-.vrain- 
ing  battle.  "I'm  real  proud  of  all 
out  boys,  and  of  course  this  is  the 
greatest  team  I've  ever  coached.  It 
seems  uncanny  that  we  could  have 
gone  through  this  whole  season  un 
defeated  playing  so  many  fine 
teams."  The  Tar  Heels  finished 
with  a  32-0  record. 


Pressure 

fCotttmucd  from  pdtge  i; 

extra  periods  to  beat  Michigan 
State  74-70  in  the  semifinals  last 
night. 

North  Carolina  lost  its  great 
All-America  soft  shot  artist  Lennie 
Rosenbluth  with  1:45  of  the  regu 
lation  game  left  when  the  Tar 
Heels  trailed  43-44. 

Quigg  was  a  clutch  man  in  the 
drive  to  dissipate  the  Jayhawb 
5-point  margin  at  that  stage".  He 
and  Kearns  teamed  to  send  the 
game  into  the  first  overtime.  < 

Chamberlain,  who  went  «lk  tlic 
way,  was  the  leading  scorer  with 
23  poinb.  Robenbiuth  bad  20, 


GEORGE 
;,      STEVENS' 

]  PKODUCriON 

«„,»,.  Wahner  Bros.  -WAHNEPtCocon 


ELIZABETH 

TAYLOR 


ROCK 

HUDSON 


CAlScMA VaKCT  •  .i«  "...  «  CHILL  WILLS 
llEUCCDESMcCAWBRIOGESAL  MINEO 


JAMES 

DEAN 


Judy  , 

HOLLMT-COl^ 


thB  nice  youn§ 
ledy  who  was  so 
full  of  life.  .  that 
everyone  started 
talking  - 


HOURS   OF    SHOWS: 
1:]5__4:48— 8:21 
PRICES   THIS    ATTRACTION: 
ADULTS  85c  —  CHILDREN  25c 

NOW  PLAYING 


Carolina 


tufroifucfng 


SALVATORE  BACCALONI 


TODAY  -  MON.  -  TUES. 


lyA'PS'/TIJ 


Marlboro 


•=^ 


NCW 
PlIP-TOP  BOX 

Firm  to  keep 

eigarattaa  from 

rruchinf. 

No  tobacco  in 

your  pock»i. 

Up  to  <l»t«. 


Mart,?"' 


Here's  old-fashioned  flavor  in  the  nev^  way  to  smoke. 

The  man-size  taste  of  honest  tobacco  comes  full  through.  The  smooth-^rawin; 

filter  feels  right  in  your  mouth.  Works  fine  but  doesn't  get  in  the  way. 

The  Flip-Top  Box  keeps  every  cigarette  firm  and  fresh  until  you  amokt  it. 

_.     .      fMAM  IN  liCHMONO;  VtKWNIA,  MOM  A  NtW  MARUetO  tKl^i) 


•« 


WEATHER 

Cloudy  and  cool  with  occasional 
rain  and  an  axpect^d  high  of  SO. 


fl  H  C  Llbrftfy 

S«»rials  Bept. 


aTar  nice  I 


IFINE 

The  best  avaiiabio  adfOrtivr  $•• 
editdrial,  {>a««  2. 


VOL.  LVII  NO.  123 


Complete  (^  Wire  Seroiee 


CHAPEL  HILL,  NORTH  CAROLINA,  TUESDAY,  MARCH  24^  1957 


Offices  in  Graham  Memoritl 


FOUR  PAGES  THIS  \tZUM 


Accident,  Arrests 
Over  Weekend 


By   CLARKE    JONES 

The  tcwn  of  Chapel  Hill  had 
quite  a  time-  this  weekend  after 
Carolina's  witi  over  Kansas  lor  the 
NCAA  title. 

Featured  in  the  Suturday  night 
ma.  s  demonstration,  in  which  slu- 
denls  and  townspeople  alike  took 
part,  were  an  automobile  accident. 
three  arrests,  a  h«;^£  bonfire,  and 
dancing  in  the  streets. 

Minutes  after  the  game  ended, 
students  and  townspeople  burst  in- 
to the  street  and  the  celebration 
was  on. 

Thousands  gathered  up  and  down 
Ffanklin  St..  stopping  traffic  and 
letting  everyone  know  for  blocks 
around  who  the  n:ition's  numhei 
one  team  was, 
ACCIDENT 

.Shortly  l)efore  1  a.m..  an  auto- 
mobile  accident  occurred  in  front 


SIcan  Outlines 
His  Experience 
On  Newspaper 

Editorial  candidate  Charlie  Sloan 
yesterday  outlined  his  approach  to 
the  office  f)f  editor  of  The  Daily 
Tar  Heel  and  summarized  the  ex- 
tent of  his  experience  in  almost 
all  pha  js  of  newspaper  work,  as 
'well   as   various   campus   activities. 

Sloan  pointed  out  that  "e.Kperi- 
ence  is  a  necessity  for  any  Daily 
Tar  Heel  editor." 

He  said;    "A   good   editor  needs 
mechanical  and  newspaper  experi- 
ence,   hut  ■  he    should    know    even 
m.)re   than   this.' 
OPPORTUNITY 

■"Besides  filling  in  for  all  the 
top  positions  en  The  Daily  Tar 
Heel,    making    up    all    four    pages 

and  so  on.  I  have  had  opportunity    Charles  Byrd  for  propaTty" damage 
as   a   regular  a.jignment   reporter    ^^  ^  stoplight 
tff   meet   peopl*   fch  '4itt   pha.<5es    of 
campus   activity. 

"In  addition,  1  have  taken  part 
in  organixations  otber  than  The 
Daily  Tar  Heel.  1  have  served  on 
the  YMCA  cabinfet  this  year,  work- 
ed with  the  Mardi  Oras  decorations 
committee  and  written  articles  for 
my  fraternity's  quarterly  magazine. 

"On  The  Daily  Tar  Heel,  I  have 
been  night  editor,  proofreader,  as- 
sociate    editor,     managing     editor 


of  the  Chi  Omega  s-orority  house  j 
on  W.  Franklin  St.  Local  police  ar- 
rested two  students  in  connection ) 
with  the  wTCck.  | 

! 
A    Durham    prizefighter,    Benny  j 

Deaton,  suffered  injuries  to  both 
legs  after  having  been  pinned  be- 
tween two  cars,  then  being  thrown 
to  the  ground. 

Chapel  Hill  officer  Coy  Durham  : 
indicted  Donald  J.  Giard,  sopho-  j 
more  from  Henderson  and  Hey- , 
ward  K.  Myers,  sophomore  from  ] 
New  Haven,  Conn.  I 

Giard  was  charged  with  person-  ' 
al   injury   and  damage  to   proper-  j 
ty.  Myers  was  booked  on  driving 
while  drunk,  personal   injury  and  ' 
damage  to  property.  I 

FRACTURES  I 

Deaton  reportedly    had  multiple  ; 

r  actures  of  both  legs.  He  had  been  j 

sitting   on    the    front    fender   of   a 

1940  Ford  driven  either  by  Giard 

or  Myeij.  \ 

Local  police  were  unable  to  de- 
termine who  the  driver  of  the  car 
was  because  of  conflicting  state- 
ments from  the  two  students. 

Bond  in  each  case  was  set  at 
$400.  posted  on  the  signatures  of 
the  pair  and  that  of  Ray  Jefferies, 
assistant  to  the  dean  of  student 
affairs. 

Both  student; —along  with  a  stu- 
dent from  the  University  of  Dela- 
ware— are  scheduled  to  appear  in 
in  Recorder's  Court  today.  Judge 
J.  L.  Stewart  will  preside  at  the 
trial. 

STOPLIGHT 


Joseph  P.  Valinsky  from  Fair- 
lawn.  N.  Y..  was  booked  by  offi- 
cers    Howard     Pendergraph     and 


Valinsky  was  released  shortly  af- ' 
ter  the  two  officers  apprehended  , 
him.  He  is  visiting  from  the  Uni-  | 
versity  of  Delaware  and  ;.-taying  at  ^ 
the  Sigma  Nu  fraternity  house.  j 
Deatcn,  after  spending  a  "fair ' 
night"  at  Memorial  Hospital  here. ; 
was  transferred  Sunday  to  Watts  i 
Hospital  in  Durham. 

A  huge   bonfire  was   lit   around  j 
which   hundreds  massed  until   ap- ! 
and    general    assignment    reporter   proximately    2    a.m.    Several    stu- ; 
and  feature  writer.  In  addition.  1    dents  perched  in   trees  above  the 
have*  filled  in  on  occa.sion  for  the    flames 


editor,  news  editor,  and  sports  ed- 
itor. 

"I  think  I  have  been  with  The 
Daily  Tar  Heel  long  enough  to 
know  how  it „•  administration  should 
be  handled.  And  I  know  the  Uni- 


Fifteen  thousand  persons  gather- 
ed at  the  Raleigh-Durham  Airport 
Sunday  afternoon  to  greet  the 
team.  A  s-cheduled  welcoming 
speech  by  Chancellor  Robert  B. 
House    did   not  come   off   because 


HENRY   I^LL 

.  .  .  'repeats'  history  tonight 

Hull  To  Portray 
Mark  Twain  \ 
Tonight  At  8 

By    BILL    CHESHIRE  | 

Years  ago  Mark  Awain,  ^chtd- 1 
uled  to  give  a  publg  lecture,  w.is  I 
reported  dead.  His  aadionct  was^ 
about  to  go  home  when  Ma.k  j 
Twain,  very  much  aUve.  appeared 
on  the  stage  and  aMnounced  tiiat 
the  reports  of  his  dlath  had  l'jct  [ 
"greatly  exaggeratecf"  I 

Histor>'  will  appear  to  repeat  it-  j 
self   tonight   when  '  veteran    actor 
Henry  Hull,  clad  as  the  venerable  j 
Twain,  will  appear  oii  ^ta^e  here  i 

Hull  will  present  "Ai  Evenin,' 
with  Mark  Twain"  Uini^lr  at  8  o'- 
clock in  Memorial  Hdli  Included 
in  the  program  will  be  excerpts 
from  "Tom  Sawyer, "  "Huckleber 
ry  Finn,"  "The  Innocents  Abrojri,  ' 
"A  Connecticut  Yankee"  and  eth- 
er famous  works. 

Admission  will  be  free  for  sti 
dent.-,  ar.J   i;i.(X)  for    others, 

Hull,  the  son  of  a  southern  news- 
paper editor,  claims  he  was  wean- 
ed on  printer's  ink  instcaa  of  milk. 
However,  he  changed  to  g  ease 
paint  more  thjyi  40  years  ago. 
'  Sin<fe  that  time  he  Jia$.  been  ac- 
tive in  nearly  every  branch  of  the 
theater  except  the  circus.  He  won 
the  Brdadway  critics'  awa:d  ti>r  his 
performance  of  Jeettr  Lo.ucr  in 
the  original  production  of  "To- 
bacco Road.  "  In  addition  he  hat-, 
starred  in  many  other  Broadway 
plays,  a  number  oi  motion  oi( 
tures.and  in  both  raclio  and  TV. 
"To  me,"  he  said,  "Twain  i^  the 
spirit  of  America.  If  I  can  do  any- 
thing to  contribute  my  mite  to  his 
might  I  am  satisfied.' 


Evans,  Baum  Answer  Questions 
Abouf  Racial  Issue  At  Carolina; 
Studeht  Senate  Proposal  Discussed 

Candidates  On  Stand 
At  Fellowship  Meet 


nev5 

m 
brief 


Court  Rejects  Attempts 

WASHINGTON —(AP)— The  Sfu-l 
preme  Court  Monday  rejected  Vir- 
ginia'.<  attempts  to  delay  desegre- 
gation of  its  public  schools.  The 
tribunal  did  so  by  refusing  to  re- 
view lower  court  orders  directing 
the  admission  of  Negro  pupils  to  | 
public  schools  in  Charlottesville 
and  Arlington  County. 


Boss  Reviews 
Editorship 
^onsibility 


Respi 


versity  well  enough  to  understand    of  ^^e  large  crowd, 
what  the  paper  should   contain. 
MORE  CARE 

The  Daily  Tar  Heel  can  be  a  bel- 
ter paper.  It  can  be  more  accurate 
and  it  can  offer  fuller  coverage. 
Accuracy  can  be  improved  simply 
by  taking  more  care  with  each 
s^ojry. 

"This  takes  time,  but  with  the  [  -ism  following  the  victory. 
pi*csent  staff  it  can  be  done.  Some  i  "I  was  proud  of  the  way  the 
of  the  experienced  members  can  Carolina  students  demonstrated 
show  them  the  little  tricks  in  '.  their  team  support  and  felt  it  was 
checking  accuracy  and  I  will  set  ^  a  real  credit  to  the  University," 
up  a  plan  to  have  this  done."  Magill  said. 


ORDERLY 

Sam  Magill,  director  of  student 
afairs.  was  pleased  with  the  demon- 
stration Saturday  night.  He  said 
"On  the  whole  I  thought  the  crowd 
was  well-behaved  and  orderly  in 
spite   of   the   tremendous   enthusi- 


Annual  Di-Phi 
Meet  Is  Tonight 

The  annual  Di-Phi  debate  will 
be  held  in  the  Di  Senate  chamber 
in  New  West  tonight  at  8  p.m. 

The  debate  will  question  wheth- 
er s  representative  should  abide 
by  the  will  of  his  electorate. 

The  Dialectic  Senate's  team  sup- 
porting the  affirmative  con- 
sista-  of  Pat  Adams,  Stan  Shaw, 
Gerry  Boudreau  and  Gene  White- 
head. The  Philanthropic  Assembly 
team  of  Jess  Stribling.  Jim  Tol- 
bert,  John  Brooks  and  an  unnamed 
fourth  debater  will  debate  the  neg- 
ative. 

Jim  Monteith,  president  of  the 
Phi,  y/iU  preside  over  the  meeting. 


Neil  Bass,  independent  candi- 
date for  editor  of  the  Tar  Hed 
reviewed  his  feelings  yesterday 
toward  the  responsibility  of  edi- 
torship and  took  is.sue  with  his 
opponents  previous  statement 
that  the  paper's  present  staff  is 
adequate  in  number. 
ATTITUDE 

Speaking  of  his  attitude  toward 
the  Tar  Heel  editorship,  Ba^s 
said: 

"No  student.  I  feel,  should  seek 
a  job  which  entails  so  much  re- 
sponsibility   unless    he    is    willing 


Presidential  candidates  Bill  Baum  and  Soiniv  Kvans  Sund;iy 
nij^lit  answered  questions  on  the  racial  inte^rrtion  is.sue  at 
Carolina  and  the  forniei's  Student  Senate  projKisal. 

liauni  (rnixer.sity  Pai  t\ )  nid  F.\ans  (Student  Partv)  sp<»kc 
lielore  a  <>atherin,c>  ol  the  Westminster  Kellowsliip  in  a 
(juest ion-answer  program. 

.\lter  a  brief  definition  of. their  respectixe  pp)jri;nns.  the 
♦ ♦two  presidential  aspirants  submitt- 
ed   to    a    group    crrt.ss-examination 


SONNY    EVANS 

ov.s'icer.s-  integratioji  questimis 


AT  ELUSINIAN  BANQUET: 


House,   Miss   Parrot 
Honored  By  Chi  Omega 


Tentative  Plans 
For  Parking 
Cited  By  Baum 

Plans  toward  solution  of  several 
phases  of  the  parking  problem  on 
campus  and  in  Chapel  Hill  were 
cited  by  presidential  candidate 
Bill  Baum  as  one  of  the  major 
issuea  which  the  University  Party 
will  present  to  the  student  body 
in  the  remaining  days  before 
election. 


on  specifics  in  their  programs  and 
on  vital  issues  affecting  the  stu- 
oent  body. 

Both    Baum     and     Evans     were 
probed  on  the  integration  issue  at 
Carolina    in   a   question    from   the 
floor:    "Will    student    government 
attempt   to  see   that   all   students 
,  will    be    treated    equally    with    re- 
spect    to     available     facilities     at 
UNC?" 
!      Ir.   his.  reply.    Baum   said:.  "If  a 
I  stUdent    is  registered   at   UNC.   he 
j  deserves    to    be    treated     equally. 
But.  as  far  as  taking  student  gov- 
I  ernment    into    areas    where    con- 
flict   would    be    in    evidence,    we 
should    look    to    see    which    is    the 
wisest  Snd  most  fair  course."' 

Evans  answered  by  reviewing 
the  "segregated  integration"  situ- 
ation which  exists  at  UNC  for  the 


.serve. 

"Such  is  my  feeling  toward  the 
paper.  And  with  nearly  three 
years  experience  on  the  paper,  I 
sincerely  believe  I  have  the  re- 
quisite which  will  enable  me  to 
produce  a  newspaper  of  which  you 
will  be  proud. 
FIRST  ACT 

"My  first  art,  should  I  be  elect- 
ed your  editor  will  be  to  solicit 
and  orient  a  larger  staff — a  staff 
which  will  cover  the  campus 
comprehensively  aiid   more  fairly. 

"I  take  issue  with  a  statement 
made  by  my  opponent  before  the 
Interdormitory  Council  that  the 
paper's  present  staff  is  adequate 
in  number. 

"Dormitory,  fraternity  and  sor- 
ority news  happens  , every  day  tions  for  women  students  are  now 
which  never  appears  in  the  paper's  being  received  for  the  fall  semes- 
columns.  Students  who  pay  for  ter  and  two  summer  terms,  it  was 
the  paper  deserve  adequate  cover-    announced  Monday  by  the  Dean  of 


Baum  said  the  UP  will  present  j 
the  facts  regarding  these  issues i 
and     the     "objectives     which     the 

University  Party  will  work  toward  1  benefit  of  the  audience  and  stated 
Dr    .R)bert    B.    House,    retiring  |  ed  Service  Award  for  Women  was   during  the  coming  year  if  its  can-    that  the  Supreme  Court  has  made 

jidates   are   elected."  I  a  ruling  by  which  the  administra- 

I  tion  has  agreed  to  abide. 
He  said  tentative  plans  current-        ^^  ^^^^.   ..^he  moment  an  mdi- 
ly  exist  for  the  construction  of  a'    jdual  is  admitted,  he  becomes  a 
parking  lot   to  be  located  belweeal  student    with*  all    the    rights    of    a 
the    Bell    Tower.    Wilson    Hall   and    student 


chancellor    of    UNC    and    the    late  j  gven    posthumously    to    Miss   Parr 
Miss    Harriet   Susan   Parrott    were    ott.    "educator,    pioneer,    prophet, 
to   give   his   every   waking    minute    honored  here  Monday  night  at  the  |  author  .  .   .  who.  through  her  un- 
toward   giving    you    the    type    of  I  annual    Elusinian   Banquet   of   the '  .selfish  devotion  to  the  children  of 
Newspaper  which  you  want  and  tf^^  chi   Omega    sorority. 

Chancellor    Houst-    received    the 
North        Carolina        Distinguished 


North  Carolina,  has  applied  her; 
capabilities  to  furthering  every, 
pha.se    of   education    activity." 

Her  niece.  Mi.ss  Anne  T.  Parrott, 
a    freshman    at    Duke    University, 


Ho.spital   drive. 


Service    Award,    being    given    for,      „rr  .ue...  m....,  ^....r  i.  .-..»..,        .p^^  ^^^^  ^j.  ^^^  project,  he  said, 

the    first    time,    tor    his    contnbu-    a    freshman    at    Duke    University,    ^^.^^„^    ^^    approximatelv    $70,000. 

tions     as     "administrator,     friend.  I  accepted    the   award   presented    by,  p,^^^  .;^^,^^^  ^^^^  ^^^  ,-^  ^^  ^^.^^ 

historian.      philosopher,      scholar,  i  chancellor   House. 

poet."  Mi.ss  Katherine  K.  Coe  of  Wash- 

POSTHUMOUS  I  ington.    D.C..    president    of    UNC's^^V^ 

The   eighth   annual   Distinguish- ;  Epsilon     Beta     chapter     of     Chi 
_ — j  Omega,   presented    the   citation   to 


in   terraces  and   be   land.scaped   to 
conceal  it  from  Ralrigh  Road,  he 


Women^s  Room 
Reservations 
Due  By  April  5 

Application^'    for  room   rcserva- 


age."' 

SUPPORT  *  •    **■ 

Bass  also  commented  on  the 
demonstrations  Friday  and  Satur- 
day as  being  "a  testimonial  to 
the  fact  that  students  want  and 
deserve     a     winning     team."     He 


Women's   office. 

Reservations  are  being  receive'! 
in  the  Dean  of  Women's  office. 

Reservations  must  be  made  be- 
tween now  and  April  5,  the  an- 
nouncement staled.  If  reservations 
are    not    made    by    that    time,    thejbcr  of  the   State  Board   of  Exam- 


Chancellor   House. 

STUDENT  AWARDS  | 

Two  student  awards  to  chap- 
ter members  were  also  announced 
at  the  banquet.  Carolyn  H.  Seyf- 
fert.  a  senior  from  New  Castle.  > 
Pa.,  won  the  annual  scholarship 
award,  and  Sara  C.  Walters,  a 
Greensboro  senior,  was  named 
"outstanding  active." 
FIRST 

The  1957  recipient.  Miss  Parrott 
was  cited  as  the  first  supervisor ; 
of  elementary  schools  in  the  state, 
the  first  woman  in  the  state  to  i 
become  a  member  of  the  first 
State  Textbook  Commission,  one 
of  the  first  three  women  in  the 
state  selected  to  serve  as  a  mem- 


pledged  his  .support  to  big  time  office  will  asviime  that  the  stvttient 
athletics  and  concluded  by  can-  is  either  riot  returning  lor  the  fail 
gratulating  "a  great  team  and  a  or  summer  semesters  or  is  moving 
great    coach."  .  into  a  sorority  house. 


Baum  indicated  according  to  a 
university  estimate,  approximate- 
ly 200  spaces  will  be  completed 
by  the  fall  of  1957  if  the  plan  is 
approved  the  first  200  spaces  will 
be  financed  with  fund.s  presently 
available  from  student  automobile 
registration  fees  and  the  Univer- 
sitj-  maintenance  fund,  he  said. 

He  promis?d  he  would  work 
with  the  administration  to  see 
that  the  plan  is  approved  and 
said: 

'i  will  also  work  toward  re- 
moving the  present  restrictions 
on  student  possession  of  automo- 
biles as  well  as  the  two-hour 
limitations  on  Columbia  St.  park- 
ing." —  .' 

He  al.so  presented  a  plan 
whereby  present  parking  space 
would    be   better   facilitated    so   as 


iners    and     Institute    Ccyidu^tors, 

and    a    state    founder    and    past 

president  df  Delta  Kappa  Gamma    to    accomodate    more    of    the    cars 

Society.  now  on  campus.  < 


pe   should    enjoy   all    the 
principle    rights." 

"In  a  question  bf  such  com- 
plexity and  debate."  he  went  on 
to  say.  "a  poll  of  this  campus 
would  probably  indicate  6500  in- 
dividual slants.  And  in  repfy  to 
I  this  question.  I  would  always 
'  make  it  clear  that  I  was  speaking 
for  myself  only,  not  as  a  presi- 
dent of  the  student  body." 
NO  CHOICE 

The  audience  persisted  in 
.sounding  out  the  candidates  on 
the  segregation  question  and  posed 
the  existing  fact  that  a  Negro  stu 
dent  at  UNC  has  no  choice  of  resi- 
dence as  do  other  students:  and 
argued  that  if  L?noir  Hall  and  the 
Pine  Room  were  closed,  there  is 
no  place  for  a  Negro  student  to 
eat  except  Carrboro. 
j  The  group  pISced  these  situa- 
tions before  Baum  and  Evans  and 
asked   for  their  comments. 

Baum  replied  that  agitation  for 
the  immediate  correction  of  the 
first  condition  "would  hurt  inte- 
gration because  the  student  body 
is  not  yet  ready  to  cope  with  it.  ' 
•He  answered  in  like  manner  to 
the  second  situation  and  pointed 
-out   that  a  period  of  waiting  and 

(See  CANDIDATES.  Page  3) 


AFTER  THE  GAME  -  CELEBRATION,  ACCIDENT,  RECEPTION: 


HEADING   UP   FRANKLIN   ST. 

...  or  the  Chancellor's  house 


i     •   '^^ 


PETE   BRENNAN 

,  .  .  a/tcr  victory,  autographs 


BENNY   DEATON 
lifted  into  ambulance 


IHE  TOILET  PAPER  ^LEW 

.  .  ,  over  a  fiappy  crowd 


umii 


rAoi  nvo 


THl  DAILY  TAR  Hitl 


TUESDAY,  MARCH  U,  1957 


Champions  And  Gentlemen: 
An  Excellent  Combination 

It  is  coinlortino  to  know  the  Tar  Heel  basketball  team  is  champion 
ot  the  whole  collegiate  United  States.  And  it  is  likewise  comtorting  to 
know  that  Carolina's  players  won  their  championship  while  remaining 
gentlemen. 

To  Coach  Frank  McGuire  goes  a  great  deal  of  tljf  credit  tor  seeing  to 
it  that  the  University  of  North  Carolina  is  represented  in  basketball  by 
(lean-cut,     neat     gentlemen.     His 


fine  policeing  of  his  players  be- 
fore and  during  the  basketball  sea- 
son has  insured  that  only  gentle- 
nien  will  play.  Andwhen  he  found 
luigcntlemanly  conduct  among  his 
players,  he  cast  the  offender  out, 
e\en  though  the  loss  hurt  the  bas- 
ketball team.  He  did  what  many 
a  coach  would  hesitate  to  do.  The 
wonder  is  that  Frank  McGuire  did 
it  and  maintained  a  winning  bas- 
ketball team  at  the  same  time. 

To  the  players  themselves  goes 
most  di  the  credit  for  being  true 
sportsmen  imder  imimaginable 
pressure.  Here,  again,  is  something 
:hat  did  not  ha^e  to  be  done.  But 

it  was  done,  and  it  was  done  well. 

«  *  * 

C.ov.  Luther  Hodges,  speaking 
ijere  Friday  night,  said  sometliing 
that  applied  very  directly  to  the 
basketball  team  and  what  it  has 
done  these  past  months. 

■Sonietiines  a  i;()od  dribbler." 
said  the  go\ernor,  "especially  if 
he's  a  sfxntsnian.  can  do  a  great 
job  of  convincing  the  p'eople  of 
the  need  h>r  a  g(K>d  library." 

File  basketball  team  and  its  liv- 
able toach  ha\e  done  a-  grand  job 
ol  public  relations  lor  the  Uni- 
\ersitv.  which  in  manv  people's 
c\es  was  the  state-operated  coini- 
irv  (Jul)  and  drinking  society. 
Now.  pel  haps,  a  lew  people  have 
<han5»ed   iheir  minds.   Slavbe  their 


interest  in  basketball  will  grow  in- 
to ail  interest  in  the  whole  Uni- 
versity, library  and  all. 

The  team  and  its  coaali  have 
helped  develop  a  healthy  situation, 
ancl  they  have  remained  gentle- 
men and  sportsmen-.  The  campus 
is  very  proud  of  tlicm. 


Students 
Were  Fine, 
As  Well 


)    * 


Winning  the  game  early  Sunday 
morning  was  almost  too  much. 
But  when  the  students  put  on  a 
semi-orderly  demonstration  after- 
ward, with  no  reported  malicious 
damage  we  began  to  think  anew 
era  had  arrived. 

It  is  a  credit  to  the  students  who 
mobbed  Franklin  St.  after  the 
game  that  they  kept  the  uprising 
in  good  taste,  without  damage  to 
property  and  wiiliout  the  use  of 
tear  gas  and  nightsticks.  Everyone 
will  iidmit  that  burning  toilet 
papei  does  little  harm,  and  even 
an  illegal  Roman  candle  is  per- 
missible after  yoiu"  team  wins  the 
national  title. 

To  the  students  who  participat- 
ed, and  the  policemen  who  kept 
their   eyes  open,   congratulaiions. 


Women's  Council  Not  Here? 


I  he  Women's  Council,  which 
is  MJi)|X)sed  to  dispense  justice  to 
coeds  here,  doesn't  exist.  At  least. 
tliMs  tlie  impression  one  would 
'.iet  from  readii\g-  the  councils 
nonexistent    rejxirts. 

/ 7ir  i<>un<il,  bf  student  go\-rm-- 
iiient  traditicm,  is  supposed  to  form 
perodical  repcjrts  op  its  activities — 
cases,  trials  and  sentences,  with 
identifying  statements  about  de- 
fendants deleted.  The  reports  are 
siip))osed  to  f)e  submitted   to  this 


The  Daily  Tar  Heel 


The  official  itudeni  publication  of  ibe 
Publications  Board  of  the  UniversUj  ul 
North  Carolina,  where  it  is  published 
daily  except  Monday  and  examinatiot 
and  vacation  periods  and  summer  terms 
Entered  as  second  class  matter  in  th( 
post  office  in  Chapel  Hill.  N.  C,  undei 
the  Act  oi  .March  8.  1870.  Subscription 
rates:  mailed.  $4  per  year,  $2  50  a  semes 
ter.  delivered.  $6  a  year.  $3.50  a  semef 
ler. 


editor 


FRED  POWLEDGE 


Managing  Editor 


CLARKE  JONES 


News  Editor 


-^^  NANCY  HILL 


Sports  Editor 


LARRY  CHEEK 


Buainess  Manager 


BILL  BOB  Ph'EL 


Advertising  Manager         FRED  ILATZIN 


EDITORIAL     STAFF  —  Woody     Sear*. 
Joey  Payne,  Stan  Shaw. 


NEWS  STAFF— Graham  Snyder,  Edith 
.MacKinnon,  Walter-Schruntek,  Pringle 
Pipkin,  Bob  High,  jim  Purks,  Ben  Tay- 
lor. H.  Joost  Polak,  Patsy  Miller,  Wal- 
ly  Kuralt,  Bill  King,  Curtis  Crotty. 


BUSINESS  STAFF— John  Minter,  Marian 
'  Hobeck,  Jane  Patten,  Johnny  Whitaker. 


SPORTS   STAFF:    Dave    Wible.  Stewart 
Bird,  Ron  Milligan. 


newspaper  so  the  student  l)ody. 
which  is  the  biisis  for  honor  at  Car- 
(»lina,  can  know  to  what  extent  and 
how  effective  the  coinuils  work 
is. 

Au.iepor.ts..]jia,vi;.bt'CW.  written  or 
released  since  the  present  council 
was  formed  last  sprinf^.  \\'c  admit 
this  consists  of  a  "period."  but  not 
the  kind  of  periodic  report  we  ex- 
f)ected   and    the  students  deserve. 


'I  he  Women's  Council  may  be 
doiii"  the  best  job  of  its  history, 
but  unless  it  keeps  in  contact  with 
the  student  fjody  it  is  doing  a  bad 
job.  The  council,  elected  from 
and  by  the  coed  student  bcxl.  must 
let  its  constituents  know  what  is 
happening..  So  far.  the  students 
know  only  that  the  council  was 
elected  last  spring. 

The  students  ha\e  no  idea  how 
many  coeds  ha\e  left  school  for 
cheating  or  for  staying  out  all 
night.  They  do  not  kiunv  how  the 
council  has  been  'dealing  with 
plagiarism  and  the  other  campus 
crimes. 

We  have  a  pretty  good  idea  that 
tlie  council  actually  exists.  We 
would  be  certain,  if  the  (oumil 
would  carry  out  its  responsibility 
of  keepjng  in  touch  witli  the  stu- 
dents. 


Progress 
Is  Made 
At  UNC 


Subscription  Bfanager 
CircolatioD  Manager  . 


-  Dale  Stai«7 
Charlie  Holt 
Assisunt  Sports  Editor __Bill  King 


Staff  Photographers Woody  Sears, 

Norman  Kantor 
Librarians^Sue  Gichner,  Marilyn  Strum 


Night  Editor 


Manley  Springs 


It  is  said  that  Chancellor  Robert 
House  granted  coeds  permission  to 
stay  out  until  2  a.m.  Sunday  after 
the  l)asketl)all  games  in  Kansas 
City  and  the  resulting  rally  here. 

If  we'ie  not  mistakeii,  that  is 
one  of  the  very- few  times  in  recem 
years  when  the  students  have 
asked  for  somethiiig  and  have  got 
it  from  South  Building  without 
wading  through  miles  of  discour- 
aging red  tape  and  appealing  tlfeir 
case  several  times. 

The^ chancellor  and  South  Build- 
ing should  be  congratulated.  This 
ii  truly  piogiess. 


Academic  Freedom  In  Hungary: 
A  Revolutionary's  Description 


Istvan  Laszio 

istvan  Laszio,  a  Hungarian 
university  student,  was  one  of 
the  leaders  of  laA  year's  Hun- 
garian revolution  against  Rus- 
sian domination.  Laszio  visited 
the  UNC  canHHJs  shortly  after 
he  escaped  to  the  United  Stetes. 
Here,  in  an  academic  freedom 
edition  of  Student  Government 
Bulletin,  nMgazine  of  the  U.S. 
National  Student  Assn.,  Laszio 
comments  on  freedom  in  his 
native  land. 

In  order  to  talk  about  the  lack 
of  academic  freedom  in  Hungary. 
I  first  have  to  clarify  what  we 
mean  by  academic  life  in  Eur- 
ope— and  therefore  in  Hungary 
— before  the  Communist  rule.  It 
differs  somewhat  from  its  coun- 
terpart at  American  universities. 
Generally  speaking,  the  num- 
ber of  enrollments,  and  there- 
fore the  number  of  students,  is 
not  limited  in  Europe.  The  stu- 
dents, however,  have  to  cover 
the  expenses  of  university  edu- 
cation themselves  .  .  . 

In  order  to  obtain  a  diploma, 
students  are  expected  to  take 
prescribed  courses  and  success- 
fully  pass   final    examinations. 

The  scheduled  time  for  these 
examinations  is  rather  freely 
arranged.  It  follows  from  the 
above  description  that  any  si.-- 
dent  is  not  only  free  to  choose 
what  he  wants  to  study,  but  to ' 
some  extent  is  also  free  to  de- 
cide when  he  wants  to  take  his 
examinations. 

Thes?  examinations  are  given 
once  every  semester,  and  thus 
the  student  is  actually  a  'listen- 
er" (which  is  the  Hungarian 
equivalent  of  the  English  term 
"student")  who  attends  classes 
and  then  gives  periodic  accounts 
of  what  he  learned.  This  makes 
the  student's  work  easier  be- 
cause it  gives  him  an  opportun-, 
ity  to  read,  be  active  in  sporti;. 
or  pursue  any  other  specific  in- 
terest  after   lecture    hours. 

This,  in  a  nutshell,  is  what  I 
wanted  to  point  out  about  the 
system  of  studies  at  European 
universities.  Let  us  see  now  what 
happened  in  Communist  Hun- 
gary: 

I  shall  start  at  the  beginning. 
After  completing  the  high  school 
education — provided  that  one  is 
accepted  to  high  schools  at  all 
— the  student  takes  a  compre- 
hensive final  examination,  call- 
ed the  matura.  Five  to  eight 
years  of  university  study  fol- 
lows this,  after  which  the  stu- 
dent receives  a  diploma  and 
maybe  a  year  later,  upon  writ- 
ing a  dissertation,  a  doctor's  de- 
gree. 

But  the  high  school  matura 
does  not  in  any  way  insure  ac- 
ceptance by  a  university,  since 
enrollment  at  them  is  limited 
and  not  more  than  a  set  num- 
ber of  students  can  be  admitted 
from  one  year  to  the  next. 

The  selection  of  graduating 
high  school  students  however,  is 
not  on  the  basis  of  scholastic 
achievements.  The  students'  pol- 
itical conduct  was  the  decisive 
factor.  The  student  who  accept- 
ed or  actively  participated  in  the 
party  system   was  sure   to   enter 

• 

L'il  Abner 


a  university. 

But  in  view  of  the  fact  that 
there  were  only  very  few  of  this 
kind,  the  second  place  selections 
were  made  according  to  the  so- 
cial status  of  the  students,  or  ra- 
ther the  class  to  which  he  and 
his  family  belonged.  First  choice 
fell  to  students  who  came  from 
the  workers'  class,  next  to  those 
from  the  farming  class,  and  only 
lastly  to  those  whose  parents  be- 


dents    or    that    they    came    from 
workers'   or   farmer's   families. 

Neither  of  these  factors  pre- 
cludes that  they  are  Commun- 
ists. In  this  way,  a  student  body 
formed  which  was  in  complete 
accordance     with     the     picture 
that  the  West  has  of  Hungary's 
revolutionary  youth. 
We   certainly  would   regard   it 
as   wrong   to   admit  students   to 
universities  on  the  basis  of  their 


the  university,  mind  you,  but  the 

government). 

To  this  I  have  to  add,  that 
most  students  cannot  attend  the 
university  of  their  choice. 

Let  us  assume,  then,  that  he 
wants  to  study  law,  consequent- 
ly he  will  be  placed  in  an  agri- 
cultural university,  or  reversely, 
and  so  on.  Beyond  the  prescrib- 
ed courses  the  student  ia-  expect- 
ed   to  attend   lectures   on   Marx- 


'Grandma,  What  Big  Teeth  You  Have' 


longed  to  the  so-called  intellec- 
tuals or  rather  who  were  them- 
selves  educated    people. 

I  nave  to  state  here,  however, 
that  education  at  the  universi- 
ties was  generally  free  of  charge 
and  about  80  percent  of  the  stu- 
dents were  able  to  secure  sti- 
pends or  scholarships  on  which 
they  could  live. 

I  wish  to  add  a  few  observa- 
tions to  the  above  mentioned 
facts.  One  might  easily  get  the 
impression  from  reading  them 
that  only  Communist  students 
were  able  to  matriculate  at  a 
university.  How  is  it  possible, 
then,  one  can  ask,  that  the  rev. 
olution  was  started  by  the  stu- 
dent body  of  Hungary?  The  ans- 
wer to  this  question  lies  in  the 
fact  that  actually  not  more  than 
5  percent  of  the  students  were 
Communists.  That  the  rest  of 
them  have  been  acscepted  to  the 
universities  can  be  attributed  to 
the  fact  that  they  were  good  stu- 


social  background.  On  the  oth- 
er hand,  we  would  not  want  to 
reverse  it  so  that  the  workers' 
class  is  at  a  disadvantage.  No! 
E\erybody  should  be  able  to  at- 
tend universities  according  to 
his  abilities  and  his  knowledge. 

Also,  it  should  be  stated  here 
that  we  would  not  expect  to 
have  scholarships  for  every  stu- 
dent, but  rather  that  the  stu- 
dents' parents  should  be  in  such 
a  financial  position  that  they  can 
assume  the  burden  of  at  least 
helping  their  son  or  daug'hter 
through  their  university  educa- 
tion, or  else  the  students  them- 
selves should  have  adequate  op- 
portunities for  earnng  exti-a 
money  and  thus  working  theirf 
way   through  college. 

To  continue  with  my  account, 
the  student  has  been  admitted 
to  a  university  and  has  started 
to  attend  cla.sses.  However,  he 
has  to  take  those  courses  which 
the   government   prescribes    (not 


-»-rr  e:  ^=^  R- 1- «-3  cr /«:_ 

*»'9'il  T»i«  wi*,fH<»l«T-<»<J  Post-  « 


ism   and   the  Russian  language. 

Even  the  regular  university 
courses  were  taught  from  one 
point  of  view.  Western  books 
were  inaccessible,  or  almost  com- 
pletely so.  No  foreign  journals 
were  admitted  into  the  country. 
The  names  of  western  scientists, 
their  work  and  their  ideas  were 
either  completely  omitted  from 
textbooks,  or  hardly  discussed 
at  all  .  .  . 

This  much,  then,  about  aca- 
demic freedom,  as  far  as  teach- 
ing and  studying  is  concerned. 
That  the  academic  level  at  these 
universities  did  not  fall  below 
that  of  other  universities  can 
only  be  attributed  to  the  efforts 
of  their  professors  who  attempt- 
ed at  last  to  add  to  the  course 
material  above  and  beyond  the 
required  standards  set  forth  by 
the  government  and  to  aid  the 
students  as  much  as  possible  de- 
spite the  completely  bad  and 
wrong  system. 


THET  LION  WERE  JEST 
'EOUT  T'SiNiK  ITS  FANGS 
INTO  HIS  JUICV  LI'L  HIDE.'.' 


• 

By  A!  Capp 


MAV  THET' BE  TH'     ^ . 

LEAST  O'  HIS  TROUBLf^S  ) 
K/VW  H£  NEVER  HAF TA  / 
FACE  WHAT  FOSDICK      ) 


Pogo 


By  Walt  Kelly 


^'gH,'"PS09V  NOT  AS  V    A  CS.HK  ^QQM  MgQ^  iK     ^ 

ioop  Ae  !p  IT  wA$  PONg  /  esoffs/A  $thai©ht  po*ifN 


Big  Brother  There 
With    Spotlight 

U  you  "al-Pen  '»  "^^  ^^^,„  uke  your 

HUl  late  one  ^P™*;;;^"-/,  wography.  because 
idcntiticauon  and  your  prcpanu 

Big  Brother  is  «"'''"f .  ^,,   „eU-tao«-n   Chapel 
last  Friday   mght   a Jarty  ^^   ^^  ^^,  ^ 

rSp'S.Soirt?nSs;ar5..nd...r, 

%i^^  »hi«  writer  over  to  me  »••• 

rogation.  i-oiinw'' "  he  demanded. 

'What's  your  name,  fellow,     ne  ut 

'Where  do  you  live?" 
"Are  you  a   student?"  to  which  the  r.pi> 

""^Tl.,  what  do  you  do  for  a  living?' 
"Just  what  kind  of  writer  are  you. 
r,e„t,en,an  u,  ^^esti^n  t  -  to  «p.a.  ..a. 

:';^a:eT.SurL°paTse;era,  years  while  writin, 

and  leading  a  band. 

"Yeah,  what  kind  of  a  band. 

ThiTr^ude.   demanding  interrogation    lasted   for 
.everal  minutes,  during  which   the  -t-J^^  ^^ 
relate  most  of  hi.  life  story  ^Jll'\Z"'lZ-. 
to  justify  his  being  on  the  street    ai  i-ou 
and  in  Chapel  HUl-  .  .     ^ 

The  driver  of  the  police  car,  who  ^^^^^  to  be 
a  rather  mild-mannered  man  finally  said,  Oh,  you 
mean  that  you're  just  out  for  a  walk? 

I  was  told  by  the  writer  that  this  has  hfpP^"^^ 
to  him  five  or  six  times  in  the  past  ^no^ths  and 
on  several  occasions  before  the  police  even  drove 
up  to  him  and  shined  their  spotlight  in  his  face  whUc 
making  the  i?ame  demands  of  him. 

A  friend  of  this  writer  was  sitting  on  the  porch 
of  his  boarding  home  one  evening  a  few  weeks  ago 
when  the  same  police  car  and  policemen  pulled 
up  to  the  curb,  shined  their  light  in  his  face,  and 
began  the  same  type  of  interrogation.  On  the  porch 
ol  his  own  boarding  home!  • 

I  realize  that  the  Chapel    Hill  Police  Depart- 
ment has  a  duty  to  perform  to  th.  community, 
but  since  when  does  it  have  the  right  to  resort 
to  these  tactics?  Yoo   can   read   George  Orwell's 
1984  and  see  the  same  proccedures  being  described 
in  a  state  run  by  hate,  love  of  war  and  fear. 
Don't  we  have  the  right  to  Uke  a  spring  walk' 
Do  we  have  to  constantly  be  in  fear  of  having  tnat 
awesome  light  thrown  in   our  faces  and  having  to 
produce  innumerable  justifications   for    even   being 

on  the  street' 

True,  they  have  the  right  to  ask.  but  do  tncy 
have  the  right  to  be  nasty,  crude,  surly  and  overly 
demanding?Are  we  all  suspected  of  being  criminals 
until  proven  innocent? 

1,  for  one.  think  that  Chapel  Hill  is  a  wonderful 
place  in  which  to  live.  The  intellectual  freedom  of 
the  University  correlates  with  the  relaxed,  fnendlj 
atmosphere  of  the  community.  But  the^-e  strong- 
armed,  "big  brother"  tactics  of  a  few  members  of 
the  Police  Department  certainly  are  unwarranted. 


The  Divine  Comedy 
At  Lenoir  Cafeteria 


The  Everettonian 

The  following  are  exceipts  from  the  "Operating 
Procedures  of  Lenoir  HaU"  used  in  defense  of  the 
bill  passed  by  the  Student  Legislature  creaUng  a 
committee  to  work  with  Lenoir  officials  concern- 
ing wages  and  working  condition^-: 

"We  welcome  you  to  Lenoir  Hall  .  .  They  (stu- 
dent supervisors)  will  supervise  your  work  and  make 
periodical  reports  to  the  student  manager  concern 
ing  the  efficiency  of  each  student  employee  .  .  . 
Anything  short  of  full  cooperation  will  be  grounds 
for  immediate  dismissal  .  .  .  We  wish  to  impress 
upon  you  the  fact  that  your  employment  here  is  a 
privelege  granted  by  the  University.  You  arc  fill 
ing  positions  that  ordinarily  would  be  filled  by  full 
time  employees  ... 

Your    inmtediate   exam   schedule    is    subordin- 
ated to  our  work   schedule  here  at  Lenoir   .   .  . 
These  meals   are  furnished  to  the  student  only. 
You   ere   not   allowed    to   sh«re   your   food   with 
ofhers.  Violations  will  not  be  tolerated  .  .  • 
You  must  rememl>er  that  you  are  obligated  to 
work  seven  days  per  week  and  free  weekends  arc 
in  the  undivided  discretion  of  the  s-upervisor 
Nothing  short  of  complete  obedience  will  be  tolerat 
ed. 

The  facilities  at  Lenoir  Hall  are  comple'.ely  de- 
dicated to  the  student  body  and  the  faculty  here  at 
the  University  .  .  .  Banquets  are  as  important  in  our 
operations  as  regular  daily  meals  ...  is  the  yearl> 
commencement  banquet  at  the  end  of  each  school 
year.  Approximately  40  students  are  required  to 
remain  three  q^r  four  days  after  the  termination  of 
the  school  year  to  work  this  banquet.  This  is  a 
definite  condition  to  which  you  muol  agree  begorc 
considering  work  at  Lenoir  Hall  .  .  . 

You    »n   net    allowed  to   smoke    during    your 
working  period   .   .  .    Alio,  you  »re  expected   to 
work  consistently  during  your  actual  working  ten- 
ure .  .  .  Bear  in  mind  that  your  employment  here 
is  a  benefit  offered  by  the  University. 
Do  not  abu.:,e  thij  privilege  .  .  .  Its  a  wonderful 
opportunity  for  a  man  to  secure  a  fine  education  in 
a  method   that  will  make  him  proud  for  the  rest 
of  his  life. 

Again  the  management  wishes  to  welcome  you 
to  Lenoir  Hall  and  hopes  that  you  will  enjoy  your 
work  and  fellowship  here.  Our  goal  is  to  have  the 
finest  cafeteria  of  any  Univera-ity  in  the  nation.  We 
feel  that  we  are  well  on  our  way.  (Ed's,  note: 
Where?) 

This  is  by  no  means  all  of  the  operating  pro-  ' 
cedures,  so  if  you  would  like  to  know  the  full  story, 
get  a  copy  to  peruse  when  you  need  a  laugh.  -To 
me,  this  sounds  more  like  the  procedure  of  a  Com- 
munist cafeteria  somewhere  in  USSR,  not  in  Chapel 
HilL 


TUESOA' 


Co 


DEMOLAY] 

In  I  \{ 
of  rVMolal 
8  pm  in 
Vf.  FT»nkU 
lar  businr* 
an  annntin^ 
JOINT  MEJ 

Th.. 
of  the  Stat 
the  S'ate 
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baiiding 
will    cfinc 
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miDDHI! 

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«7 


TUESDAY,  MARCtI  26,  1957 


THI  DAILY  TAR  Htfl 


PACE  THREI 


our 


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rh« 


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liiing 


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derful 

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■.endly 

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ated. 


make 
jrero 

rounds 
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the  rest 


Covering  The  Campus 


DEMOLAY 

The  UNC  chapter  of  the  Order 
of  DeMolay  will  meet  tonight  at 
8  p.m.  in  the  Masonic  temple  on 
W.  FYanklin  St.  It  will  be  a  regu- 
lar business  meeting,  according  to 
an  announcement. 
JOINT  MEETING 

There  will  be  a  joint  meeting 
ol  the  State  Employees  Assn.  and 
the  State  Highway  Assn.  Wednes- 
day at  9:30  p.m.  in  the  chemistry 
building,  room  268.  Discussion 
will  concern  the  critical  salary 
.situation.  All  employees  and  non- 
mombers  ha\'e  been  urged  to  at- 
tend. Clifton  Beckwith.  executive 
.Npcretary  from  Raleigh,  will  speak. 
BUDDHISM 

World  Religions  discussion  will 


co.At.i..Uv:    Ltuxay    ai    U    p.m.    lil    LJCMUt 

Hall.  The  topic  will  be  Buddhism. 
RUSH  MEETING 

Alpha  Phi  Omega,  the  campUs 
service  fraternity,  will  have  a 
supper  rush  meeting  tonight.  The 
rushees  and  the  brothers  have 
been  asked  to  meet  in  front  of 
Graham  Memorial  as  5:30  p.m. 


BY 

«DUR 
HE 


A  FUCIWITINfi 
MVOnURE  INTO 
THE  WRNOWN! 

CftANT  WIUJA.MS 
KANDY  SniAKT 
^  •••  ••  -  •■■  U»*>OH  .  UTMOM  Mur 

«  !«(»«  MEMUnOMl  nCTUK 

STARTS    FRIDAY 


Senators  Win  Over  KC 

ORLANDO.  Fla.—(AP)— Wash- 
ington scored  seven  runs  off  Ned 
Garver  in  the  eighth  inning  to- 
day, with.  Neil  Chrisley  contribut' 
ing  a  three-run  pinch  triple,  to 
defeat  Kansas  City  8-3. 

Herb  Flews  supplied  a  two-run 
homer  in  Washington's  big  inning, 
while  Pete  Runnels  and  Roy  Sie- 
vers  doubled  and  Ed  Yost  inserted 
his  fourth  single.  Lou  Berbetet 
added  a  double  and  two  singles  to 
the  Senators'  13  hit  attack  against 
Arnold   Portocarrero   and   Garver. 


»  •  t  *  • 


THIS  IS 

THE 

CLOSEST 

YOxnAjf 

EVEBfij 
TO      III 
ANY< 
LOVE    g 
LIFE..j| 

wiihaajllj 
being  [\M 
one     ^ 
of  the  lovent 

I   » 

Ju/dy         Iticluund 

^HOuunfiY•colnE 


SILVHnEUCUlM 

■Ml  ESTHER  Mmcnm .  joe  diSmtis  ■  suvn  umatim 
Scim  Pill  kr  Mm  FMOt '  Ufi  m  nt  iiMti  ^  mm  mm 

PiUKtd  iy  FUEO  WHIIM  -  OncM  bf  MCMMO  ODK 

NOW  PLAYING 


Pi  Lambda  Phi  Sponsors 

PicturMi  abovQ  are  sponsors  for  tho  Pi  Lambda  Phi  plodgo  wtokond,  which  ondcd  horo  Sunday. 
Tho  sponsors  ar*  top  row,  loft  to  right.  Miss  Davids  Tononi»aum,  Savannah,  6a.,  i!^onserin«  pledp*  pros- 
idont  Frod  Hirsch;  Miss  Judy  Nichols,  Birmingham,  Ata.,  sponsoring  vica-prosidont  Jarry  Farbor; 
Miss  Bonnio  Shubkin,  Charlotta,  sponsoring  socratary  Larry  Schwartz  and,  bottom  row.  Miss  Susan 
Roinor,  Savannah,  Ga.,  sponsoring  sargaant-at-arms  Alan  Davis;  and  Miss  Natalio  Goldborg,  Graor,  S.  C, 
sponsoring  tfoasuror  Arthur  Kurtz. 


With  the 
{  tfiast  of  gun-fire! 

I       M-O-M's  STOirv  OF  A  GANGLAND  HIDE-OUTI 


I  LESLIE  NIELSEN  dlEEN  MILLER- --RJr 


«»  »C  ■  FlCIUft 


NOW  PLAYING 


Carolina 


DAILY    CROSSWORD 


Women's  Forms 
For  Counselors 
Are  Due  Today  \ 

Application  forms  for  women  or-  j 
ientation    counselors    are    due    to-  { 
day.  These  applications  should  be 
turned   in   to   the    dormitory   and 
sorority   house  presidents,  accord- ! 
ing  to  an  announcement.  ' 

Following  this,  recommendations' 
will  be  made  by  dormitory  hostcs- 
6-es.   house   mothers  and   graduate  • 
counselors.  j 

Orientation    counsei.is    will    be 
chosen   by   the   Select'o.n   Commit- 
tee,   a    student-faculty    groap,    on 
the    basis  of  the   applicatioiu   and ; 
recommendations. 

Approximately  70  women  will 
be  selected  to  the  positions.  Theii 
names  will  be  announced  before 
spring  vacation,  said  the  announ- 
cement. 

After  selection  these  women 
will  undergo  a  u-aining  period  be- 
ginning the  last  of  April.  This 
training  will  be  continued  shortly 
before  next  fall's  Orientation 
Week.' 

The  important  contribution  made 
by  these  women  was  pointed  out 
by  Miss  Martha  Docker  of  the 
Dean  of  Women's  Office. 

"The  Orientation  counselors  are 
vital  to  this  campus,"  she  Soid. 
With  their  enthusiasms,  these 
counselors  introduce  the  incomu.g 
student  to  Carolina,  thus  heiping 
to  make  their  ad>ustmeiitH  easier. 

"I  urge  aU  coeds  to  apply  for 
this  responsible  and  important  pj 
sition,"  Miss  Docker  said. 

Interested  women  may  have  their 
questions  answered  at  the  Orien- 
tation Office  in  Graham  Memorial, 
the  announcement  said. 


Press  Women  Told 
Eisenhower  Pampered 


The    nation's    press    often    was 
fair  to  Truman  and  Roosevelt,  but 
that  was  better  Chan  pampering  a 
president  as  the  newspapers  have 
done  for  Eisenhower.  Doris  Flee- ; 
son     told     the     North     Carolina ! 
Women's     Press     Assn.     meeting 
here     over     the     weekend.     Mrs.  i 
Fleeson  spoke  at  a  dinner  session. ' 
She  is  Washington  Columnist  for 
United   Features   Syndicate.  | 

I 

Current  tendency  of  the  press  I 
is  to  look  at  situations  "through  i 
Eisenhower's    rose-colored    glasses ' 


and  to  overlook-  his  failure  to  give 
creative  leadership,"  she  stated, 
"a  fact  which  has  given  people  a 
totally  wrong  idea  of  the  situation 
today. 

"The  administration  in  Wash- 
ington is  dedicated  to  the  status 
quo.  which  I  feel  is  quite  wrong 
and  quite  dangerous.  It  is  natural 
that  people  are  tired  of  war.  and 
of  cold  war,  but  the  world  is  in 
convulsion  now  as  never  before," 
the  columnist  stated 


ACROSS 

1.  Useless 
5.  Breaches 
f.  Handle 

(Rom. 

Antiq. ) 

10.  Wild  ox 

11.  Ukely 

12.  Science  of 
li^ht  to 
vision 

14.,Succ«aaef 
17.*Bxclama* 

tion 
18.  Disciplined 
19  Indian 

wtight 

20.  Diafiffure 

21.  Unable  to 
speak 

22.  Creek 
(La.) 

25.  Conjecture 

26.  Armadillo 

27.  Play  on 
words 

28.  Cut  off 
29  Ranches 

(Sp.) 
S3  Mulberry 
S4.  Happiness 
35  Voiced 

( Phonet. ) 
37  Egg  or 

•  louse 

38.  Factor 

39.  Puddinf 
starch  (E.I.) 

41.  Affirmative 

votes 
42  FOrebodinf 

DOWN 

1.  Steom 

2.  Cavities 

3  Exist 

4  Badlum 
<aym.> 


5.  Oozed  open- 
mouthed 

6.  Emmets 

7.  Hawaiian 
food 

8.  Scented- 
filled  ba«s 

11.  Astern 
(naut.) 

12.  Extraordi- 
nary person 
(slang) 

13.  Painful 
spots 

15.  Island 

(Malay 

Arch. ) 
18.  Two-toed 

sloth 


19.  Prose- 
cute 
judici- 
ally 

21.  Chew 

22  Pink 
ruby 
spinel 

23.  Written 
defense 

24  Bark 

25.  Fire- 
arms 

27.  Gasp 

29  Teutonic 
characters 

30.  Door  joint 

31.  A  tear 
jerker 


aaGQHa  i 

AS   una      ii'iu 

an  Mr^ninia(i>:ii 


VMtcrdsjr'i  Asvwar 

32.  Place 
34.  CapiUl  of 

Yemen 
:>6.  Bom 

39.  Thus 

40.  Part  of 
"to  be" 


Men's  Selection 
For  Orientation 
Begins  April  9 

Selection  of  men's  orientation 
counselors  will  begin  on  April  9 
at  7:30  p!m.  in  IM  Carrol  Hall. 

At  this  time  a  test  covering  ail 
I  material  in  last  year's  orientation 
manual  will  be  given  to  all  appli- 
cants. At  a  later  date  interviews 
will  be  given. 

Final  selections  will  be  based 
on  the  results  of  the  tests  and  in- 
terviews will  be  given. 

Final  selections  will  be  based  on 
the  results  of  the  tests  and  inter- 
views. 

Men's  Orientation  Chairman 
Jerry  Oppenhcimer  urges  al]  in- 
tjercsted  men  to  become  familiar 
with  the  manual  and  to  fill  out 
application  blanks. 

A  limited  number  of  these 
blanks  are  available  at  the  infor- 
mation desk  of  Graham  Memorial, 
the  YMCA,  the  library  reserve 
reading  room,  the  Monogram 
Club  and  Lenoir  Hall.  Because  of 
the  limited  supply  any  of  last 
year's  counselors  who  have  their 
old  m^uals  have  been  reqtwsted 
to  turn  them  in  at  any  of  ihes» 
places  or  to  Oppenheimer. 

^1  '  cannot     overemphasize    the 


Marian  Dickens  To  Represent 
University  In  Azalea  Festival 

Miss  Marian  Dickens,  a  junior  Miss  Dickens  and  other  repre- 
coed  from  Thomasville,  has  been !  sentatives  of  colleges  of  this  area 
chosen  to  represent  UNC  at  the ;  j^  ^^e  queen's  court  will  be  given 
Azalea  Festival  in  Wilmington 
this  weekend. 

Miss  Dickens   was   cho.scn    from 


all  the.  queens  that  have  been  se- 
lected on  campus  by  various 
organizations  this  year.  She  was 
the  Dakathon  Queen  chosen  by 
the   Delta   Upsilon   fraternity. 

The  selection  committee  was 
composed  of  representatives  of 
women's  campus  organizations. 

Miss  Dickens  will  serve  in  the 
coHrt  of  actress  Kathryn  Greyson, 
this  year's  queen  of  the  Azalea 
Festival. 

It  will  be  a  four  day  weekend 
for  Miss  Dickens  in  Wilmington. 
She  wffl  go  to  Wilmington  Thurs- 
day and  return  here  Sunday. 

The  highlights  of  the  weekend 
will  be  a  parade  Saturday  morn- 
ing and  the  cornation  ball  Satur- 
daynight. 


I  evening  dresses  to  be  worn  in  the 
parade  and  at  the  ball  Saturday 
night. 


Candidates 

(Conttnved  from  page  1) 
"getting   used   to"   will   be   neces- 
sary. 

Evans  answered  that  the  inte- 
gration problem  is  an  administra- 
tive problem.  *"l1ie  purpose  of  stu- 
dent government.'  he  said,  "is  to 
see  that  each  student  is  treated 
equally  as  far  as  facffities  go." 

"If  Lenoir,  Hall  were  not  open- 
ed to  all  students  I  would  take  a 
stand.  Student  government  can 
only  deal  with  problems  On  the 
UNC  campus  where  we  have 
jurisdiction,"  he  pointed  out. 
SENATE 

Another  area  of  discussion  cen- 
tered around  Baum's  proposal  for 
a  Student  Senate  which  he  out- 
lined in  his  opening  talk  Asked 
why  students  who  work  in  student 
government  could  not  be  more  ac- 
tive in  sounding  out  campus  prob- 
lems, Baum  cited  the  growing  re- 
sponsibilities which  demand  the 
time  of  student  legislators. 

He  said  that  with  the  increas- 
ing amount  of  committee  work 
and  draw  on  their  time,  these 
people  are  not  able  to  adequately 
canvas  campus  opinion  on  various 
issues. 

One  comment  from  the  floor  in- 
dicated an  individual's  '  feeling 
that  "I'm  voting  for  the  Senate 
not  the  man."  Baum  replied,  "I 
hope  you'll  feel  you're  voting  for 
a  man  who  wishes  a  student  par- 
ticipation in  vital  campus  mat- 
ters," 

In  response  to  a  question  of 
his  attitucie  toward  the  Student 
Senate.  Sonny  Evans  reviewed  his 
belief  in  the  adequacy  of  the 
present  system  whereby  the  presi- 
dent appoints  a  cabinet  to  inform 
and  advise  him. 

He  pointed  out  at  present  there 
is  an  overlapping  in  various  areas 
of  student  government  where  the 
same  peoijde  are  active  members 
of  several   organizations. 

He   further   noted    members   of 
the  Student  Senate  would  have  to 
be   "capable,   informed    and   have 
a   knowledge   of   student   govern- 
ment.' These ,  requirements  mi^t 
result  in  a  similar  overlapping  of 
responsibility     and     participation, 
he  reasoned. 
At  the  outlet   of  the   program. 
'  Baum  indicated  he  made  a  choice  j 
I  at  the  beginning  of  the  campaign! 
i  as  to  whether  or  not   he   should 

take  a  stand  on  vitals  and  present  | 
{  a  platform,  plank  by  plank.  1 

He  said  he  decided  against  it  i 
and  instead  attempted  to  find  a 
way  to  let  the  students  know  he 
wanted  their  interest,  cooperation  ' 
and  participation.  This  way.  he 
said,  was  through  the  Student 
Senate. 

Evans  pointed  out  the  problems  | 
of     student     government     are     so 
\  complex    that    a    candidate    must 
j  take  a  stand.  He  answered  charges 
i  of  student  distrust  of  campus  poli- 
I  tics   by  citing  the   new-found  re- 
spect for  the  student  government 
of   Bob   Young   he   has  seen   evi- 
denced tills  year. 


Fourteen  Nominated  For  Contest 


Carolina  has  joined  in  the  na- 
tion-wide search  for  the  "Ten  Best 
Dressed  College  Gir'iS  in  Ameri- 
ca" being  sponsored  by  a  national 
fashion  magazine.  . 

All  dormitories,  sororities,  frat- 
ernities, and  various  campu.s  org- 
anizations have  been  given  an  oo- 
portunity  to  nominate  candidates 
and  a  judging  committee  ha>-  been 
set  up  to  determine  UNC's  final- 
ists. 


Those  coeds   nominated   inciude 
Mis^s  Kathy  Webb,  Alpha  Gamma 
Delta;  Ruth  Watkins.  Chi  Omega, 
Sally  Price,  Kappa  Delta;  Jane  Lit- 
tle, Pi  Beta  Phi:  Sue  Mayhue,  Tri 
Delta;  Jane  Brock,  Chi  Phi;  Doris 
Adkins,  SPE;  Bebe  Holbrook,  Nur- 
sing;   Elaine    .Weldahl,    Alderman; 
I  Sarah     Van    Weyk.     Carr;     Carol 
Jones,  Smith;  Fiizabeth  Thompson, 
■  Mclver;   Ix>uise  Robertson,    Spenc- 
'  er;  and  Barbara  Prago,  Interdorm- 
itory  Council. 


importance  of  tSie  individual 
counselor,"  Oppenheimer  said. 

"In  the  final  analysis  he  will 
determine  the  success  or  failure, 
not  only  of  the  Orientation  Week, 
but  also  Of  the  new  students'  col- 
lege careers." 

Interested  students  may  contact 
Oppenheimer  at  the  Orientation 
Office  in  GM  or  at  the  ZBT  house 
for  further  information. 


CLASSIFIEDS 


FIVE  ROOM  BRICK  HQUSE  IN 
center  of  town — has  hobby  work- 
shop. Call  9458  during  day  of 
2926  after  5:30.  and  during 
weekend. 


FOR  INEXPENSIVE  LIVING:  27 
ft.  Nashua  trailer— has  bath, 
tub.  shower,  porch,  oil  heater, 
added  room.  Connected  to  util- 
ities and  septic  tank.  1  mile  out 
on  airport  road.  $2300.  Call 
8472 


Ludgr^l! 

Next  time  one  of  her  dates  brine  up  the  Sehleewif- 
Holstein  question,  she'll  really  be  ready  for  him. 
Ready  for  that  test  tomorrow,  too  ...  if  that  bottle  of 
Coke  keeps  her  as  alert  toni^t  as  it  does  other  people. 


WILL  CAROLINA  HAVE  A 
GLAMOUR  GIRL? 

Tonight  the  judges  will  select  UNC's  "BEST  DRESSED' 
coed.  Pictures  of  her  will  be  submitted  to  GLAMOUR  Maga- 
zine. If  Carolina's  representative  is  chosen  as  one  of  the 
"10  BEST  DRESSED  COLLEGE  GIRLS  IN  AMERICA",  she 
will  be  photographed  for  the  August  College  issue,  and 
receive  GLAMOUR  s    "BEST  DRESSED  AWARD". 


DAWN'S  SURLY  LIGHT'*' 

Early  to  bed  and  early  to  rise 

Makes  a  man  healthy,  wealthy  and  wise. 

The  truth  of  such  nonsense  by  me  is  contested; 
I'd  rather  be  weakly,  insolvent . . .  and  rested.- 

MORALt  In  any  U{^t,  things  start  Imridog  up 

when  you  iig^t  up  the  BIG,  BIG  pleaMire         '^ 

of  Cheeterfidd  King!  Majestic  kngth 

—plus  the  tanoothest  natural 

tobacco  filter  and  the  maoo&m^ 

tflstii^  tODxAbe  today  ^bacmasa 

it's  packed  nKnre  smoothly 

by  ACCU .  RAY.  Try  'em!  '^ 

ChoatorfloM  Klna  g^t  yO«i  inor» 
off  wkMrt  yow'ro  smoking  fort 

'fM  gamrn  •»  DmtitI  J.  Stdlmmn.  Haty  Crom 

for  hit  Ctftter  Field  poem. 

tSO  for  m*ry  phSoaophiecU  vtrm  aeeepttd  for  puM> 

cation.  Chetterfitld.  P.  O.  Box  21,  New  York  46,  N.  Y 


LCAVL\G  FTUDAY  1  P.M.  FOR 
Ann  Arbor,  Mich.  Return  in  time 
for  Tuesday  morning  classej. 
Need  tWo  more  riders.  Fred 
Powledge,  93361  or  88602  — 
Leave  message  ^if  I'm  not  there. 


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WITH     FRIENDLY     FOLKS 

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T  R  A  I  LW  A  Y  S 

The    route    ot   the    i  nnj-Liners' 


PAGe  FOUR 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


TUESDAY,  MARCH  26,  1^57 


Golfers  He  Rollins  Linksters  With  Great  Comeback 

^Patrick  Fires  71 
For  Low  UNC  Total 


UNC-USC  Game  To  Replace 
Big  Thursday'  Grid  Classic 


COLUMBIA  —  (AP)—  Negotia- fixture, 
tions  are  underway  to  replace  the 
61-year-old  South  Carolina-Clem- 
son  State  Fair  football  game  with 
"the  battle  of  the  Carolinas,"  pit- 
ting use  and  North  CaroUna  in 
an  annual  gridiron  feature  that 
could  become  a  major  Suuthwide 


WHAT'LL  YOU  READ? 

You   Pays  Your  Monoy  «nd 
You  Takos  Your  Choico 

Biography  — 

If  your  taste  run.,  to  biography, 
and  your  budget  is  fat,  there  are 
some  swell  new  books  to  tempt 
you  this  year. 


The  University  of  South  Carolina 
announced  today  that  the  annual 
"Big  Thurixiay,"  football  classic 
will  be  dropped  in  1960.  Cl«rason 
has  insisted  on  alternating  the 
site  of  the  game  and  changing  the 
date. 

use  Athletic  Director  Rex  En- 
right  said  a  date  definitely  has 
been  set  with  North  Carolina  for 
State  Fair  weekend.  Enright  said, 
the  Big  Thursday  date  is  a  legal 
state  holiday  here  and  a  bank  hol- 
iday in  many  counties  of  the  state. 
The  present  South  CaroJina-Clcm- 
son  agreement  extends  through 
1959.  But  a  bill  introduced  by  Sen. 
John  Calhoun  Long  of  Union  in 
the  General  Assembly  would  re- 
quire    the     two     ^ate-supported 

I  schools  to  play  in  Columbia  on  Big  I  8-22-4  record  with  North  Carolina 
Thursday  permanently. 

\     Clrmson    has   been  getting  half 


nary  enthusiasm  has  been  generat- 
ed for-  the  battle  of  the  Carolinas. 
The  schools  have  enjoyed  a  suc- 
cessful and  spirited  rivalry  since 
1903.  The  battle  of  the  Carolinas 
ij  the  natural  choice  to  carry  on 
the  State  Fair  tradition. 

"We  are  indeed  fortunate  that 
North  Carolina  officials  have 
shown  interest  toward  perpetuat- 
ing Big  Thursday  or  Big  Friday.' 

At  Chapel  ffill,  N.  C,  Athletic 
Director  C.  P.  Chuck  Erickson  of 
North  Carolina  said  grid  dates  with 
use  had  "not  been  fully  settled 
beyond  1958." 

He  added  that  "there  is  a  possi  j 
bility    that    we    will    change    our 
dates  after  that  year  .  .  ."  but  he 
declined   to  elaborate. 

South  Carolina  has  a  series-long 


the  gate  bonanza  each  year.  I»re- 
For  example,  there  are  Much  Ado !  sumably.  North  Carolina  would  be 
About  NU,  by  Fred  Allen  ($5.00); 
Klizabcth  Spriggc's  new  biography 
ol  Gertrude  Stein  (S5.00);  A  Mirror 
for  Marcissus,  the  new  autobiogra- 
phy by  Negley  FarsoR.  ($3.95). 
They  are  darn  fine  books,  if  you 
can  afford  them. 

But  if  you  can't  afford  them, 
there's  no  sense  in  s'tarving  your 
mind.  The  Old  BooliP  Comer  at  the 
Intimate  is  just  full  of  good  bio- 
graphies at   tiny   little   prices. 

As  we  write  this  advertisment.  we 
note  a  handsome  copy  of  The  Ro- 
mance of  Leonardo  da  Vinci, 
Farson's  original  The  Way  of 
a  Transgressor,  both  on  the  97c 
shelf.  There's  a  good  copy  of  For- 
ster':^  Son>e  French  and  Spanish 
Men  of  Genius,  and  another  of 
Irwins  biography  of  Herbert  Hoov- 1 
er  on  the  72c  shelf.  | 

Treat  yourself  to  a  half-hour  i 
browse  in  our  Old  Book  Corner,  i 
Who  knows — you  may  save  enough  ! 

to  treat  yourself   to   a   hamburger  i 

afterwards! 


offered  something  similarly  attrac- 
tive if  it  agreed  to  play  the  ^ame 
at  Columbia  each  year. 

Enright    said    "more   than    ordi- 

Brooks  Win 

VERO  BEACH,  Fla.  —  ( AP)  — 
Johnny  Podres,  who  shut  out  the 
New  York  Yankees  to  wrap  up 
Brooklyns  first  world  champion- 
ship in  1955,  today  held  the 
Yankees  hitless  in  a  six-inning 
stint  as  the  Dodgers  won  an  11 
inning   e.xhibition   game,    1-0. 

The  winning  run  was  scored  by 
Don  Demeter.  He  opened  the  fi- 
nal frame  with  a  double  off  AH 
Cicotte  and  came  all  the  way  home 
when  Gil  McDougald  threw  wild 
to  third  after  fielding  Roy  Campa- 
nella's  grounder. 

Podres,  faced  only  18  batters. 
.•\ndy  Carey  walked  in  the  third 
and    Darrell   Johnson    hit    into   a 


and  a  2p-13-3  record  in  the  Clem 
son    series. 

Jim  Tatum,  coach  of  the  UNC 
footballers,  .vaid  that  all  he  know 
of  the  proposed  series  was  that  he 
had  been  informed  of  the  negotia- 
tions, but  nothing  had  been  nwde 
definite  yet. 

Athletic  Director  Chuck  Erick- 
son was  not  available  for  comment 
other  than  his  previous  statements. 

Best  College 
Swimmers  Here 

By   STEWART   BIRO 

Tar  Heel  sports  fans,  nerve  jfhat- 
tered  and  red-eyed  from  TV  bas- 
ketball, can  leave  their  sets  to  a 
well  deserved  rest  this  weekend 
and  witness  fir»t  hand  their  sec- 
ond consecutive  NCAA  champion- 
ship in  as  many  weekends  as  500 
of  the  best  collegiate  swimmers  in 
the  nation  invade  Bowman  Gray 
Pool  for  the  34th  innual  national 
collegiate  championships. 

Action  will   commence   at   7   o"- 


Tom  Langley  —  Gene  Lookabill 

Tom  Langley  and  Gene  Lcokabill  arm  the  first  two  men  this  year 
on  the  Carolina  golf  squad.  Langley,  a  service  returnee,  will  help 
bolster  the  team  after  losing  three  lettermen  from  last  year.  Looka- 
bill competed  in  the  North  Carolina  Amateur  Meet  this  past  week- 
end and  finished  only  five  strokes  behind  the  winner,  Lawrence 
Cook    of    Wilmington. 

Photo  by   Bill  King 


Midnight   Madness 


By   WARREN    MILLER 


I      A  student  mounted  the  stop  light 

'  pole  in  front  of  the  post  office  and 
•Its  worse  than  V-J  Day,     a  cop  ^^^^.^^  ^  ^^^^^  ^^  ^p^jjj^g 

muttered  to  his  cohort  with  a  broad    ^^^     c-a-RO-L-I-N-a.     The     cheer 
smirk  on  his  face.  ,  .^^^^^  ^^^    ^^  j^^  ^^^^p  y^^-^^  ^rew 


double  play.  Billy  Martin  was  safe 

on  Pee  Wee  Reese's  error  in  the !  clock     Thursday     night     with     24 

[ourth.    but    was    out    at    second '  swimmers  racing  against  the  clock 


The  Intimate 
Bookshop 

205  E.  Tranklin  St. 

CHAPEL  HILL 


when  lettfielder  Junior  Gilliam  re- 
covered and  threw  to  Don  Zim- 
W6r. 

Don  DrysdaJe  followed  Podres 
and  retired  eight  straight  batters 
until  Tommy  Byrne,  accounted 
for  the  Yankees'  first  hit  with  two 

!  out  in  the  ninth. 

i      Don    Larsen.    the    perfect   game 

j  pitcher    the    last    time    he    faced 
Brooklyn,   limited  the  Dodgers    to 

I  four  hits  in  the  first  five  innings. 

I  Byrne   gave   up   two   in   the  next 
five. 


Milton's  Victory  Give- A- Way 

One  full  day  of  out-of-this-¥KM'ld  buys 

Entire  stock  cotton  suits  —  cords,  pin-checks-polished  cottons. 
Values  to  $32.50,  today  only  —  today  only  —  %70.H. 

Dan  River  Baby  Cord   ivy  cut  trousers,  regularly  I5.9S,  today 
only  —  1   pr.  $4.00,  2  prs.  $7.50. 

Other  cotton  baby  cords;  khakis  in  black,  tan  and  olive;  re«wl«rly 
$4.95  —  today  only  —  $3.50. 

Shell   Cordovan  shoes,  fully  leather   lined  —  with  black  rubbor 
soles,  regularly  $20.00,  today  only  —  $11.00 

Large   group  of  our   $3.95   polo  shirts,   including   our   intported 

Twekas    and   some  of   our   button-downs,   regularly   $3.95, 
today  only  —  $2.99. 

o 

Short  sleeve  cotton  mosh  button-down  shirts  —  regularly  $4.W — 
Today  only  —  $2.00. 

Entire  stock  berntuda  length   hoso  cut  50%. 
Belts,  values  to  $3.00  —   at  a   give-a-way   of   $.69. 
Dan  River  polished  cotton  trousors  in  sunian  and  olive,  r«ful«rly 
$7.95  —  today  only  —  $5.50  —  2  pairs  $10.00. 

Other  polished  cotton  troysers,  regularly  $5.95— today  only-— $4.00 


LADY  MILTON  SHOP  VICTORY  GIVE-A-WAY   FOLLOW 

Ail  Scottish  cashmeres  —  $10.00  off 

All   Evan-Picone  skirts  —  50%  off 

All   Spagnoli   Italian   Sweaters,  values  to  $21.50  —  today 
only  —  $5.00. 

Many  Lady  Hathaway  shirts  reduced 
All  sales  ca«h  and  final  —  alterations  •xtn  —  open  till  6:30  p.m. 

inilton'£( : 
Clothing  Cutilioarli 


for  the  gruelling  1500  meter  free 
style  championship  of  the   nation. 

Friday  morning  trials  in  the  60 
yard  freestyle  and  one  meter  div- 
ing preliminaries  and  semi-finals 
will  be  contested.  That  afternoon, 
^ginning  at  1:30  p.m.  trials  in  the 
200-yard  butterfly.  200  backstroke, 
220  freestyle,  100  brcast:,troke, 
200-yard  individual  medley,  400 
freestyle  relay,  and  semi-finals  in 
the  50-yard  freestyle  will  be  held. 
Finals  in  all  these  events  will  be- 
gin  at   eight   that  night. 

Preliminaries  and  semi-finals  in 
the  three  meter  diving  are  on  the 
agenda  for  Saturday  morning,  be- 
ginning at  ten  o'clock.  Trials  in 
the  final  six  events.  100  butterfly, 
100  freestyle,  200  breaststroke,  100 
backstroke,  440  freestyle,  and  400  ]  been    seen   .setting    up    equipment 


And  he  was  right.  The  time  was 
1:10  a.m.,  some  50  minutes  after 
the  out-of-breath  radio  and  televi- 
sion announcers  hoarsely  cried 
that  after  three  overtime  periods, 
the  ba^etball  game  was  over.  Sec- 
onds later,  what  formerly  was  a 
sleepy  little  college  town  was 
tvimed  into  a  scene  Mardi-Gras 
Hungarian  Revolution,  or  Hallo- 
ween style  frepzied  excitement. 

University  of  North  Carolina  .stu- 
dents swarmed  like  a  locust  plague 
from  their  dormitories  and  frater- 
nity or  sorority  houses  into  West 
Franklin  Street,  the  main  drag 
here.  There  were  over  2,000.  Like 
an  anvil  chorus,  car  horns  from 
every  direction  ^■ounded  in  sudden 
unison. 

It  came  as  no  surprise.  Camera 
men    and    radio    technicians    had 


gave  out  with  a  loud  "L,"  rooters 
a  block  away  wore  just  getting  to 
the  "R."  Nobody  seemed  to  mind. 
They  knew  what  the  word  meant 

to  thoni  anyway. 

Not  content  to  just  yell,  some 
students  formed  a  con'ga  line.  The 
beat  of  the  cheer  was  too  slow. 
They  shifted  into  a   bunny  hop. 


By   JIM   CROWNOVER 

Carolina's  and  Rollins'  great 
golf  teams  fought  to  a  bitter,  mud 
and  r«in-soaked  tie  yesterday  af- 
ternoon on  the  Finley  layout,  13V4- 
13  V2. 

Despite  the  terrible  weather 
conditions,  both  teams  showed 
some  good  scores  and  the  golf 
on  the  whole  was  of  a  fine  quality. 

The  headline  match  pitting 
Carolina's  and"  Rollins'  No.  1  and 
l|  2  men  resulted  in  a  7%-l^  victory 
for  the  Rollins  squad.  Sophomore 
Bob  Ross  of  the  visiting  team, 
fashioning  a  35-39-74  medal  score, 
won  over  ex-serviceman  Tommy 
Langley    by    the    point    score    of 

Langley  also  carded  a  two-over- 
par  74. 

In  the  second  match  of  the  first 
foursome,  Dick  Dlveksi.  Maine 
State  Amateur  champion  for  the 
last  five  years,  shot  a  75  in  de- 
feating Gene  Lookabill  2¥i-Vi. 
Lookabill  was  a  quarter-finalist 
in  last  summer's  NCAA  champ- 
ionships. 

Diveksi  is  only  a  freshman  at 
the  Florida  school. 

The  Florida  sophomore  is  noted 
for  having  placed  8th  in  the 
World  Amatuer  Championships  at 
the  Tarn  O'Shanter  Country  Club 
in  Chicago  this   past  summer. 

In  spite  of  the  rain  and  higher 
individual  scores.  Carolina's  top 
twosome,  Langley  and  Lookabill. 
still  carded  a  low-ball  scor^  of  69, 
with  Rollins  scoring  a  68. 

In  second  foursome.  Carolina 
and  Rollins  split  4ii-4'l2.  Rollins' 
No.  3  man.  Jim  Curti,  carding  a 
two-under-par  70  |or  medalist 
honors,  defeated  Buck  Adams, 
3-0.  Sam  Patrick,  the  Tar  Heel's 
fourth  man,  racked  in  runnerup 
honors  with  a  71  and  easily  whip- 
ped   Ed    Dinger    of    Rollins.    3-0. 

The  final  foursome  found  Caro- 
lina amassing  their  largest  quota 
of  points  of  the  afternoon.  This 
victory  by  the  last  duo  of  the 
Tar  Heels  enabled  UNC  to  tie  the 
match  with  the  superb  Rollins 
squad. 

They  won  the  .team  scoring  2^- 
Mj.  and  the  individual  contests.  3-0 
and  2-1.  Walt  Summerville  defeat- 
ed Joe  Miller.  3-0,  and  Cal  Mit- 
chell, down  three  holes  going  into 
the  15th,  came  on  strong  to  de- 
feat   the    Floridians"    Bob    Craig, 


Bob  Ross  (Rollins)  defeated 
Tom  Langjley,  2"*  to  M;;  Dick  Di- 
veksi (Rollins)  defeated  Gene 
Lookabill.  2h^  to  %.  Team  score 
Rollins  2^^,  UNC  '^. 

Jim  Curti  (Rollins)  defeated 
Buck  Adams,  3  to  0;  Sam  Patrick 
(UNO  defeated  Ed  Dinga,  3  to 
0.  Team  score,  UNC  1%,  Rollins 
IV2. 

Walt  Summerville  (UNC)  de- 
feated Joe  Miller,  3  to  0;  Cal 
Mitc-hell  (UNC)  defeated  Bob 
Craig,  2  to  1.  Team  score,  UNC 
2*2,  Rollins  ^. 


The  Art  Of  Tjiloring 

"Every  man  to  his  businsss, 
is  beyond  all  doubt  as  noble  and 
but  indeed  the  craft  of  a  tailor 
as  secret  as  any  in  the  world." 

HAVE   OTHERS   FAILED? 

With  expert  workmanship  and 
the  best  ftervice  possible  Pcti 
The  Tailor  has  and  will  continue 
to  give  you  the  ultimate  jn 
tailoring  needs. 

And  while  you  are  tt 
Pete's,  won't  you  check  and 
««•  f^  you  have  left  .ny 
clothes  and  overlooked  pick- 
ing them  up? 

PETE  THE  TAILOR 

Specializing  in 
"Ivy   Leagueizing' 

133V2  E.  FrMklin  Strett 


To  the  left  a  car  was  being  rocK 
ed,  its  driver  smiling  understand 
ably.  To  the  right,  two  town  police-  I  2-1. 

men  helped  a  rooter  who  was  fee'-  As  the  scores  clearly  show,  it 
ing  a  bit  under  the  weather  to  the  '  wasn't  the  best  weather  for  golf 
curb  for  a  rest.  Overhead,  rolls  of  |  yesterday,  but  as  Pro  Ed  Kenney 
toilet  paper  streaked  through  the     put  it,   "the  boys  did  pretty  well 


medley  relay,  will  begin  at  one- 
thirty  that  afternoon  with  finals 
at  eight  that  night. 

Tickets  for  the  1500  meter  fin- 
als Thursday  are  $1.00  and  the 
same  for  all  afternoon  preliminar- 
ies,   with    Friday    and    Saturday 


on  roofs  during  Saturday  after- 
noon, in  anticipation,  and  were 
now  having  a  field  day.  Auxiliary 
policemen  were  forming  a  recep- 
tion line  for  the  on-coming  cele- 
brators.  Traffic  from  nearby  Dur 
ham  and  other  coinmunities  filKd 


nights  being  $200.  Tickets  are  now  the  roads  coming  into  Chapel  Hih 
on  sale  at  Woollen  Gymnasium  tic-  as  followers  of  the  Tar  Heels  and 
ket  office  for  all  those  events  at  |  curious  people  came  to  join  tlv 
the  composite  price  of  $5.50.  jubilation. 


Governor  Lauds  Champion  UNC 


RALEIGH  —  (AP)  —  Beaming 
with  satisfaction,  €rov.  Hodges  to- 
day reported  a  "good  weekend" 
on  his  flight  to- Kansas  City  to 
watjh  UNC  win  the  NCAA  na- 
tional basketball  crown. 


The  victory  for  the  Tar  Heels, 
giving  the  state  its  first  national 
cage  champions,  was  "one  of  the 
greatest  things  that  ever  happen- 
ed for  North  Carolina,"  the  Gov- 
ernor said. 


SU»»«R  *.TT»«AC-riOKlO 


^^heBioecrr  shosv  ot  sT/Kwsiorr>l 


TxaveKEYS*  JheMOONGLOWS 
Edd{eCoolev;;iDjniple»  ^  ANN  COLE, *ii»i 
Charles  BROWN  <»llie5CH0OL6OYS 


air  like  a  meteor  shower. 

A  a'Cgmcnt  of  the  crowd  started 
determinately  to  walk  to  Durham, 
some  10  miles  away.  They  got  as 
far  as  the  next  block.  On  the 
lawn  of  the  University  Methodist 
Church,  several  older  folks  gaped 
in  wonder.  Possibly  they  were  con- 
sidering a  moment  of  prayer  for 
the  town. 

Sidewalk  trash  cans  were  emp- 
tied in  a  heap  in  preparation  tor 
a  bon-fire  in  the  middle  of  the 
street.  The  cops  were  still  .smiling. 
The  crowd  was  not  destructi\"e. 
They  had  earn(^d  this  night. 

Flash  bulbs  popped.  Another 
cheer  broke  out  from  the  other 
end  of  the  block.  The  older  lolks 
strolled  down  from  the  chur.h 
lawn  and  joined  in  the  yell.  One 
lady  about  50  realized  what  she 
was  doing  and  put  her  hand  over 
her  mouth,  then  let  it  drop  witl: 
a  shrug.  What  difference  did  it 
make? 

It  was  a  celebration  to  lop  all 
celebrations.  North  Carolina  had 
just  won  the  National  Coll*»gia(e 
basketball  championship! 


against  the  only  team  that  beat 
them  last  year,  and  I'm  sure  that 
they'll  give  a  better  account  of 
themselves  Wednesday  against 
Cornell  and  Friday  against  Michi- 
gan State.'' 


Tennis  Is 
At  3  Today 

The  Carolina  tennis  team  takes 
on  Kalamazoo  College  of  Michigan 
today  on  the  local  courts  at  3  p.m. 

Coach  Ham  Strayhorn  has  said 
that  if  the  team  shows  up  well 
againa4  the  Kalamazoo  squad  that 
it  will  be  a  good  indication  that 
the  Tar  Heel  netters  are  going  to 
be  pretty  tough  this  season. 

The  Carolina  team  lost  lour  men 
by  graduation  and  three  by  the 
scholastic  route.  They  have  only 
one  letterman  on  the  local  squad 
and  he,  Steve  Bank,  twisted  his 
ankle  in  the  team's  opening  match 
with  George  Washington. 


RUnTlfl  CJUHUU  Sl«1b  rARf^ONE  NITE  ONLY 

iiiiiLAsmAiyiQ 

B««.aieW       I,—      HAWUIIS  MUC   COMPANY  ""^  ^TSTkS^ 

Pmm^  i>»  enn  ikmt—mu  m  t-*.^  cmtm  In  &  Rttvtf  S««u  S3  M  tfilT  f'* 


I  LOW  mmmi 

TMIEM't   ■tCORO   SH«r 

AMBAfSABO*   TMEATMC   CUII-OIMC 

HAMLtNS   »tUC   COMPANY 


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Bring  This  Ad  and  Get  1  Cent  Off  Per  Gal.  Gas, 

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Credit  Cards  Honored  Again 

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Howard  Johnson  Restaurant 

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VOL.  LVII  NO.  124 


Complete  (/P)  Wire  Serviet 


CHAPEL  HILL,  NORTH  CAROLINA,  WEDNESDAY,  MARCH  27,  1957 


Offices  in  Graham   Memorial 


FOUR  PAGES  THIS  IS5UE 


Parking  Lot 
Plan  Given 
By  Evans 


student  Party  presidential  can- 
didate Sonny  Evans  proposed  yes- 
terday that  necessary  funds  for 
the  construction  of  needed  park- 
ing facilities  at  UNC  be  borrowed 
from  funds  which  are  available  to 
the  University  and  which  could  be 
repaid  from  annual  car  registra- 
tion fees. 

Evans     reviewed     the 


Newsman  Convicted 

WASHINGTON,  March  26.  i^v-JA 

Federal  court  jury  deliberated  o>- 

ly   30   minutes   today    before   cojj- 

victing    Seymour    Peck,    39,    NeV 

York  newspaperman,  of  contentpt 

of  Congress  for  refusing  to  identi- 

,          r     J        u    u  1  •  1     .      fy  one-time  fellow  Communists.  * 

from  funds  which  are  availaole  to  i  ■   ,^         ,  ,.•....  jj 

•^_  ,,_: ;^..    _j  ...i.:^i.  _„..,j  u„l     The  only  question  District  Judge 

Luther  W.  Youngdahl  left  for  tlfc 
!  jury  to  decide  was  whether  Peck 
'deliberately  and  intentionally  fail- 
parking   g^  jp  answer  questions  before  tl^e 


situation  and  said  a  threat  existed   5^,03^^   internal   Securitv   Subcotfl- 
last   spring  whereby  the  Board  of  ^j^^^  j^„   g    jggg 
Trustees    was    contemplating     the ,     ^hc  judge  ruled  as  a  matter  •( 

law    that    the    subcommittee    ha(i 


Ten  Duties  Of  Journalists 
Explained  By  Dean  Luxon; 
Gives  Humanities  Lecture 

Cites  Responsibilities 
Of   Paper   Readers 


BILL   BAUM 

Honor  Systevi  important 


BAUM  SAYS: 


Honor  System  Depends 
Upon  Complete  Support 


abolishment  of  all  rights  to  main- 
tain cars  on  campus. 

This  threat  was  alleviated 
through  "the  quick  action  of  a 
committee  appointed  by  President 
Bob  Young  and  headed  by  Nor- 
wood Bpan."  he  said.  "The  solu- 
tion arrived  at  was  not  one  that 
made  everybody  happy  but  it  was 
the  only  one  which  would  prevent 


"jurisdiction  and  authority"  to 
investigate  Communist  infiltratio^ 
into  mass  communications.  Anci 
he  held  the  questions  Peck  refused 
to  answer  were  pertinent  to  such 
an  inquiry. 


blanket    prohibition    of    cars,"  »he 
I  added. 

j  Evan.s  indicated  student  govern- 
j  ment  ^ administration  has  come  to 
i  realize  the  nece.'>sily  of  a  ionij- 
"The  Honor  System,  both  as  a  sicn  and  indecision  existing,  I  feel  range  solution  to  remove  existing 
tradition  and  as  a  way  ol  life,  is  :  there  is  a  real  need  for  a  com-  restrictions.  He  stated  his  inten- 
one  of  the  most  important  ele- j  plete  reconsideration  of  not  only  *»«"  ^^  propose  the  following  pro- 
ments  of  University  life."  Bill  !  the  workings  of  the  Honor  Coun-  S'^m  as  president: 
Baum,  candidate  for  president  of  { cil,  but  of  th*  application  of  lhL» ' 
the    student    body,    stated    yester-  1  Hcnor   System    itself,  "    the   candi- 


Military  Reshuffle 

WASHXNGTON.  March  26.  'JP^-^ 
President  Eisenhower  today  order- 
ed the  bigge.-i  reshuffle  of  top 
military  leaders  since  the  year  he 
took  office.  Named  to  head  the 
Joint  Chiefs  of  Staff  was  .\ir  Force 
Gen.  Nathan  F.  Twining. 
Twining,  a   member  of  the  Joint 


day. 


date  stated. 


Baum  went  on  to  say  that  the '  Baum  said  if  he  wais  elected 
vital  existence  of  the  Honor  Sjs-  president  of  the  student  body,  "I 
tern  depend.-  upon  the  complete  shall  form  an  Honor  System  Study 
support  of  every  Carolina  man  Commi. ^.ion,  composed  of  the  .tii>o,i 
and  wom^n.  i  capable    and    informed    men    and 

wonrcn  on  campus,  representing  a 

The     student     body     president   ^.^^ss  section  of  opinion  " 
naminee.  m  furthe.-  elaboration  on  j      He-^ent  on  to  say  that  the  com- 
tbe     Honor     System,     announced 
plans     are     currently     being    dis- 
cussed   lor    removing    the    investi- 


Chiefs     since     1953.    will    succeed 

(1)  The  borrowing  of  funds  for   A^"^'  A'"^^"''  ^^'-  ^^'^^"'"^  ^'  ""^^'^ 

man  on  Aug.  15.  Radford  will  step 

down  after  serving  two  two-year 
terms — the  longest  tenure  which 
the  law  allows.      ' 

Eisenhower  also  nominated,  sub- 
ject to  senate  confirmation,  a  new 
Air  Force  Chief  of  Staff,  a  New 
Deputy   Secretary  tf  Defense  and 


Patrick  Malin 
Forum  Speaker 
Tonight  At  8 

"Liberty — Unfinished  Business" 
will  be  Patrick  Murphy  Malin's 
topic  when  he  speaks  before  the 
Carolina  Forum  tonight.  The  For- 
um will  meet  at  8  p.m.  in  Carroll 
Hail. 

A  reception  will  be  held  in  the 
Main  Lounge  of  Graham  Memor- 
ial immediately  following  the 
•speech. 

Malin.  Executive  Director  of  the 
.\mcrican  Civil  Libertie-s  Union, 
has  spent  a  month  traveling 
through  the  South  studying  civil 
liberties. 

In  the  spring'  of  1954  Malin 
spent  two  months  in  England  and  ' 
Scotland,  lecturing  on  American 
civil  liberties  to  business,  labor, 
educational  and  professional 
groups.  He  lectured  chiefly  under 


Dean  of  the  School   of  Journal- 
ism here  since  1953,  Dr.  Luxon  is 
president   this    year   of   the   Assn.  j 
for  Education  in  Journalism. 

Luxon   assured   the  audience   at 


PATRICK  MALIN 

.    .    .    toram    speaker    tonight 

lege    where    he     formerly    taught  4*^ 

economics.   ^  ^'  ;•* 

Malin  has  .served  as  private  sec-   [ 


mission    would    meet 


the  construction  of  adequate  park- 
I  ing  space  on  campus.  TJie  sum 
necessary  has  been  e.;limated  at 
.S70.000.  I  suggest  this  amount  t)e 
borrowed  immediately  from  with- 
in the  escheats  fund  la  special 
;  fund  made  available  to  the  Uni- 
versity from  State  soui'ces)  or  the 
student  loan  fund. 

"(2)   The   turning  over   of  funds 
now   being  accumulated  from   the 


the    auspices     of    Ruskin    College  •  retary    to    Shcnvood    Eddy,   of   In 

(Oxford),      the      English-Speaking    terational    YMCA;    as    a    membei 

Union,  and  the  Royal  Institute  of  |  of    the    economics    department    at 

International      Aftairs      (Chatham    Swarlhmore    College;    as    Vice-Di- 

Housc).  j  rector    of    the    Intergovernmental 

Malin  was  born   in  Joplin,  Mo.,    C"mmittee  on  Refugees,  with  head- 

!  in    1903.   where   he   attended   pub-    quarters  in  London.  Since  1950  he 

!  lie   schools.    He    obtained    his   col-    has  been  with  the  American  Civil 


outside  the  -mwKbership  of  the 
trouncil  itself.  Opinion  among  the  ^ecd 
council  mcmw?rs  themselves  as 
well  as  among  members  of  the 
.\,udent  body  is  divided  as  to  the 
validity  of  this  plan,  said  Baum. 

"In  the  present  state  of  confu- 


Town  Voting 
Changes  Mode 


sessions,  ;  p^ment    of   car   registration    fees 

open  to  every  student,  to  consider    totard    repayment    of    this    loan. 

,  .^    „  ^  chansicg    the    procedure    of    the,  The   loan   could   be   repaid  within 

gation  duues  of  the  Hrnor  Council    „onor   C-uncil    and    to   determine    te/ or' eleven  year,  ..depending  on 

it     there     actually     exists    such    a    up    charge    or    non-charge    of    in 

i  teti-est  payment..-." 
In  giving  a  plan  on  what  ho  .'  Indicating  his  belief  that  this 
would  do  if  elected,  Baum  staled  jfian  is  superior  to  the  suggested 
he  would  personally  offer  a  plau  "pay-as-you-go"  program  which 
to  the  corami.-."ion.  to  be  set  up,  would  delay  the  construction  of 
whereby  the  membership  of  tho  lots  with  700  spaces  (the  minimum 
Honor  Council  would  be  increastd  need),  Evans  pointed  out  under 
from  its  present  14  persons  to  20. ;  his  proposed  plan,  construction 
Baum  has  suggested  the  six  acl- ,  could  begin  immediately. 

ditional    members    of    the    council — 

be  used  as  (investigators  of  the 
cases  brought  before  the  council 
and  not  be  allowed  to  vote  on"  the 
judgment    to    handed    down    con- 


a  new  Secretary  of  the  Air  Force.  I  l"g«  education  at  the  University  of  i  Liberties    Union,    with    headquart- 

Pennsylvania  receiving  a  B.S.  de- 1  ers  in  New  York  City. 
gree  in  economics  in  1924.  He  al- !  His  work  has  involved  wide- 
so  did  graduate  work,  chiefly  in '  spread  travel  in  Britain,  contin- 
cconomics.  at  Columbia  Universi-  ental  Europe  (including  Russia), 
I  ty.  He  holds  the  honorary  degree  the  Near  East,  Canada  and  Latin 
J  of   i*L,D.   irom   Swarthmoer   Col- 1  America. 


Student  Party 
Ajppoints  Two 
F6r  Positions 


Bass  Neglected  Duties 
As  Staffer,  Says  Sloan 


The  voting  procedure  for  town 
students  and  the  polling  place  f or ,  cerning  the  party  on  trial. 


one  district  have  been  changed. 
Haiph  Cummingj,  Elections'  Board 
chairman,  announced  Monday 
night  at  a  meeting  of  all  candi- 
dates running  in  the  spring  elec- 
tion. 

The  town  stiklents  are  to  fill  in 
their  name,  residence  and  class  on 
index  cards  provided  by  the  Elec- 
tions Board.  The  voter  must  pre- 
sent the  card  and  his  ID  card  to 
be  stamped  before  he  can  vote, 
Cummings  said. 

The  index  card  ml]  be  filed  al- 
phabetically by  the  poll  tender,  he 
said. 

In  town  men's  district  one,  tho 
ballot  box  will  i>e  kept  at  the  Car- 
olina Int?.  Cummings  al  j  said  the 
polls  wciild  open  at  8:45  a.m.  and 
cLsc  at  6  p.m. 

After  Chairman  Cummings  had 
read  the  election  laws  to  the  can- 
didates, those  running  for  secre- 
tary, treasurer,  vice-president,  and 
president  cf  the  student  body  and 
the  editor  of  The  Daily  Tar  Heel 
spoke  briefly  to  the  other  candi- 
dates. 


GM'S  SLATE 

Activities  sch«dul*d  for  Gra- 
ham Memorial  today  are  »%  fol- 
lows: 

Elections  B««rd.  4-5  p.m., 
Grail  Room;  P««hillenic,  4:45- 
5:30,  Roland  Pa?ker  1;  Elections 
Board,  7:30-9,  ll»t<nd  Parker  1; 
L.eadership  Traininf  Committee, 
56.  Roland  Parker  2;  Petite 
Dramatique,  7:30  10,  Roland  Par- 
ker 2;  Jehovah's  Witnesses,  8-9 
Roland  Parker  I;  Ways  and 
Means  Committee,  4-5:30,  Wood- 
house  Conference  Room;  Inter- 
Dormitory  Council  Court,  7-9:30, 
Weodhouse  Conference  Room; 
Inter-Dormitory  Council  Court, 
7-9: 30„  Woodhouse  Conference 
Room;  bridye  class.  4:30-6,  ;ien- 
d^zvous  Room. 


■'This  would  also  have  the  aJ- 
vantage,  aj  I  see  it,  of  not  involv 
ing  the  judicial  functions  of  the 
council  in  the  duties  of  the  attor 
ney-general,  who  is  an  executively 
appointed  Official,"  Baum  said.  • 


Absent  Candidates  Need 
Excuse  From  Cummings 

Candidates  not  present  at  the 
meeting  called  by  the  Eelection 
Board   Monday   night   must   obtain 


The  Student  Party  Monday  night 
filled  4a  vacancy  in  the  student 
legislature  and  cho.se  a  new  ser- 
geant at  arms. 

Miss  Libby  Straughn  was  ac- 
claimed to  fill  a  vacant  dorm  wo*  -i  do  not  relish  releasing  the  The  candidate  wont  on  to  saj 
men's  legislature  seat;  Leon  Holt.  ^  following  statement,  but  I  want?  a  few  paragraphs  above  this  he 
also  acclaimed,  is  the  seargeant  the  following  facts  known  because !  (Neil  Bass)  mentioned  the  fact  ho 
at   arms.  j  they  may  be  iihportant  to  the  well-  has  had  cxxperience  on  the  papei 

Sfudent     Party    members    Whit  [  being  of  The  Daily  Tar  Heel,"  said  ;  amounting   nearly   to   three   years 
Whitfield    asked     other    members  ]  Charlie    Sloan,    candidate    for    the 
to  help  on  campaign  work  for  the'' editorship  of  the  campus   nowspa- 


party's    candidates. 

Party  Chairman  Sonny  Hallford 
reminded  the  party  that  only  one 


an   excuse    from   Chairman    Ralph  1  week  remains  before  election  day. 


Cummings.  203  Hanley.  by  6  p.m. 
today  or  else  be  disqualified, 
Arthur  Sobel,  VIce-Chairman,  an- 
nounced Tuesday. 


He  urged  all  to  "get  out  and  work 
for  our  candidates." 

The    next    meeting    of    the    SP 
will  be  Monday  night. 


per. 


"I  can  remember  few  staff  mcsit  i 
ings  when   a  member  of  the   edi- 
torial staff  has  not   reminded  tht 
"My  opponent  says,  and  he  must   entire    working    staff    that    they 


Ten  responsibilities  of  today's  the  Humanitiec-  lecture  that  "young 
journalist  were  explained  here  men  and  young  women  would  be 
Tuesday  night  by  Dean  Norval  better  prepared  for  careers  io 
Neil  Luxon  who  delivered  the  an- '  journalism  if  they  would  earn  a 
nual  Spring  Humanities 'Faculty  bachelor's  degree  in  the  humani- 
Lectufe.  I  ties  or  the  social  sciences  before 

!  enrolling   in   professional   joumal- 
■  ism  courses." 

However,  he  added.  "I  regret  to 
report  (that)  the  economic  facts 
of  life  do  not  justify  five  or  six 
years  of  university  study  before 
taking  a  newspaper  job." 

Be.'ides  "10  responsibilities"  of 
the  journalist,  Dean  Luxon  also 
,  listed  three  responsibilities  of  the 
'  educator  in  professional  field  of 
journalism  and  he  cited  responsi- 
bilities of  newspaper  readers.  He 
also  suggested  an  'honor  roll"  of 
10  American  newspapers. 

The  10  responsibilities  of  t6e 
journalist  include: 

1.  To  select  the  news  for  the 
reader. 

2.  To  be  accurate. 

3.  To  go  beyond  accuracy  and 
seek  truth. 

4.  To  interpret  the  news. 

5.  To  combat  tendencies  to  shut 
off  or  censor  the  news. 

6.  To  respect  the  individual's 
right  of  privacy. 

7.  To  defend  non-conformijts. 

8.  To  resi&t  pressure  groups. 
8.   To   accept   crHicism    in   good 

grace  and  to  reply  to  it  in  good 
spirit. 

10.  To  be  keenly  aware  of  and 
keep  pace  with  opinion  in  the  local 
community. 

The  three  programs  that  must 
be  provided  in  a  'proper  profes- 
jsional  academic  program"  of  jour- 
nalism, he  said,  are  fir.,-t,  a  basic 
liberal  education:  second,  an  un- 
derst^inding  of  the  responsibilities 
of  a  free  pres.s  in  a  democratic 
society;  and  third,  a  fundamental 
knowledge  of  journalistic  techni- 
ques. 
Asking  readers  of  newspapers  to 


DEAN   LU;CON 

lists    journalists'    duties 


CAMPUS 
SEEH 


student  goveru-iiicnt  secretary 
seen  frantically  searching  every 
room  in  Graham  Memorial  for 
her  typewriter  ivhich  uHis  en- 
closed  in   the   new  desk  in    her 

office. 

*         *         * 

Free  lance  physicist  draunng 
sketches  of  persotis  in  The 
Daily  Tar  Heel  office. 


(see  I.UXON.  page  3) 


have  reliable  sources,  that  The 
Daily  Tar  Heel  has  mia-sed  dormi- 
tory, fraternity  and  sorority  new.>^ 
that  happens  every  day,"  '  Sloa:i 
said. 


AT  MOREHEAD  PLANETARIUM 


should  keep  their  eyes  open  and 
report  any  ylory  that  come  to 
their  attention  whether  it  is  as- 
signed to  them  or  not."  the  nom- 
inee for  the  editorship  of  tho  pa- 
per continued. 

"If  Neil  has  heard  of  any  ncw.s 
in  the  dormitories,  fraternities 
and  sororities  it  has  been  his  duty 
to  report  it.  Maybe  he  can  explain 
in  a  later  statement  the  reason  for  1  "Easter,  The  Awakening,"  which  lighting  and  appropriate  Scriptur- 
this  apparent  neglect  of  his  duties'  h?s  been  viewed  by  more  than  '<^^  readings, 
as  a  staffer,"  ..-lated  Sloan.  -  150.000  persons  in  the  past  seven 

The   candidate   for   editor   went   years,  opened     at     the     Morehcad 

on  to  say  that  the  average  staffer    Planetarium    hei-e   Tuesday   night. 

cannot    be    expected    to    report    in    The  first  performance  was  at  8:30 

writing  every  story  that  chinos  to   o'clock. 

his    attention    every    dav,    but    ho 

Opening  of  the  tribute  to  East- 


Annual  Easter  Story 
Opens  Here  Last  Night 


.should   report   it   to   the  managing 
editor   or   the   news   editor   so   it 
;  can    be    assigned    to    another    rc- 
!  porter. 

I  "if  all  this  news  has  been  miss- 
ed, Neil  is  right  about  a  laryor 
I  staff  being  needed,  but  my  pl.in 
j  for  a  ctringer  system  will  cover 
I  the  dorm  news  thoroughly,  and 
:  eventually  a  similar  set-up  can  be 
I  (see  BASS,   jxiye  3) 


er   was   moved   forward   two   days,  jj^^jjn^es  Saturdays  at    11   a.m. 


ahrad  of  previously  announced 
schedule  because  of  the  large  num- 
ber of  reservations. 

Planetarium  Manager  A.  F.  Jen- 
zano  said  that  as  of  Sunday  more 
than  5.000  persons  already  had 
made  reservations  to  see  the  story 
cf  Easter  and  the  Resurrection 
told    in    beautiful    musie.   colorful 


Th?  Planetarium  has  eypanded 
its  schedule  of  pcrfonnances  be- 
cause of  the  Easter  .<tory.  In  ad- 
dition to  the  nightly  8:30  o'clock 
demonstration.  there  will  be 
s?h:ol  children's  matinees  daily 
at  II  a.nu  and  2  p.m.  and  public 

3 
3 


Miss  Nancetta  Hudson  ;of  Goidsboro,  who  plays  a  leading  role 
in  the  Pl^ymakers'  production  cf  "Stranger  in  the  Land"  gets  advice 
from  Miss  Masako  Uzawa  of  Tokyo  on  the  wearing  of  the  kimono. 
Miss  Hudson  will  wear  the  kimono  in  her  portrayal  of  a  Jjpanese 


Preparations  For  'Stranger  In  The  Land' 

girl  in  the  play,  scheduled  in  the  Playnukers'  Theater  today  through 
Sunday.  Tickets  are  available  at  the  Playmakers'  business  office  in 
Abernathy   Hall   and   at   Ledbetter^ickard. 


Polish  Pianist  To  Bring  Three       | 
Outstanding  Traditions  Here 

Piano     traditions      of     Chopin,  1      Malcuzynski.  winner  of  a  Grand ; 
Liszt     and     Padcrewski     will     be  '  Prix    at    the    International    Chopin ' 
brought   to   Chapel   Hill    tomorrow    Competition,  is  a  graduate  of  the 
through    the    playing      of     pianist  •  Warsaw  Conservatory.   He  studied 
iWitold    Malcuzynski.  {  law   and   philosophy  at   two   other 

Sponsroed    by    the    Chapel    Hill !  Polish  universities     prior     to    his 
Consort  Series,   the   program   will ;  musical  career.  i 

be    held    in    .Mcmjrial    Hall    at    8i      He  made  his  debut   in  Paris  in 
p.m.  '  .January  in  1940.  playing  with  the 

Tickets -are     on     sale     now     at    Orchestre  Pasdeloun.  He  then  went 
Graham    Memorial.    Kemp's,    Dan-    on  to  perform  in  recital  and  with  : 
ziger's      and       Ledbetter-PickJrd.    orchestras  in  most  of  the  capitals  ; 
They    may    also    be    purchased    at    and   large  cities  of  Europe, 
the  door.  j      In    1942.    Malcuzynski    came    ^0  ] 

Prices  for  each  seat  are  S3  for   America  to  give  his  Carnegie  Hall  | 
orchestra:  S2  for  Lst  balcony:  and    debut.  He  has  performed  through- 
Si  for  2nd  balcony.  There  will  be    out  Western  Europe.  South  .\mer- 
no  reserved  seals.  ica,  Australia,  and  North  America., 


and    4    p".m..    and   Sunday    at   2. 
and  4  p.m. 

The  program  details  the  reason 
that  the  date  of  Easter  differs  each 
year  and  how  Easter  was  estab- 
lished as  a  cstival  of  the  early 
church  with  its  date  being  determ- 
ined  astronomically. 

The  spiritual  portion  is  actually 
the  storj-  of  the  Resurrection,  the 
.same  5tory  that  has  been  related 
and  recorded  for  almo.«t  2.000 
years. 

"The    entire    program    again    is 
jf  a  highly  spiritual  nature."  Jen- 
(see  EASTER  SHOW,  pageS) 


IN  THE  INFIRAAARY 

Miss  Sarah  Parker,  Miss  Nan- 
cy Rush,  Paul  Leder,  Alan  Da- 
vis, Sanford  Ttiompson,  Darius 
Herring,  Benton  Beard,  Tate 
Robertson,  Roy  Cashion,  David 
Collins,  Alfred  Dean,  Nathlee 
Strickland,  Norman  Draper,  Mil- 
ton A^Swrain,  ThonMs  Sabros- 
ki,  Ray  Kryzak,  William  Aber- 
nathy, Elliot  Solomon,  Hvbert 
Sharp*,  Robert  Parker,  Dabney 
Coddington,  Woodson  Fearing, 
William  Parham,  Jeff  Strrbling 
and  Curtis  Fields. 


#A6I  TWO 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HtEl 


WEDNEOAY,  MARCH  27,  1957 


Spring  Campaign  Evasions: 
For  Flag,  Country,  Mother 

■  F.vans.  liaum  Answer  Questions  About  Racial  Issue  At  Caroliivi," 
ilu'  heuilline  on  ycsteidav's  Page  One  said.  It  should  lia\e  said  "E\ans, 
liaiMU  F\ade  (^uestiiiiVs  .  . 

Ixasiou  has  heeti  tlie  kesnoie  speet  It  oi  this  t  ainpaij»n.  X'ote-tonsi  i- 
(>u>  Bauin  and  Kvai^  hB\e  been  fonsistentlv  solt-soaping  tiieir  stands  on 
anythinu  so  they  will  9f>pe.'-'I  to  evenone.  So  far  thev  both  are  definitely 
in  lavor  of  Itjiitiniate  niotherluKMi  and  the  Ha'>. 

Let's   examine     what     thev     said 
Sundav  ni«ht  .iboiii   the  ra<  iai  sit-      I 


nation: 

Asked  wljethcr  stifctfnt  "overn- 
uuin  under  their  direction  would 
'attempt  to  see  that  all  students 
will  be  tn-ated  equally  with  re- 
\pe(  I  to  a\ailable  facilities  at 
INC..  ■  the  landidates  teplied  this 
way: 

Uaum:  ■Jl  a  student  is  rej^ister- 
ed  at  TNC,  he  deserve  to  be  treated 
e<|uallv.  But,  as  far  as  takini>  stu- 
dent government  into  areas  where 
(onfliit  would  be  in  evidence,  we 
should  look  to  see  w1ii(h  is  the 
wisest  and  m«>st  fail  course. "' 

K\ins:  "I  he  moment  an  indi- 
\i<hial  is  admitted  he  becomes  a 
Ntudent  Avith  all  the  rights  of  a  stu- 
dent.   He   should     enjov      all     the 

j)iimij>le  ri;4hts." 

*  #  * 

II  tiie  (  andidates  statements  were 
luiiNlated  from  the  lanj^uaf^e  of 
))oliti(al  expediencv  into  Lower 
(hiad  Knulish.  we  suppose  this  is 
aituallv   what    thev    were  saving: 

Bainn:  Now,  look  here.  Ix^ys:  we 
dont  want  to  do  anything  that 
would  ani;<v»(»ni/e  anvone  —  the 
trustees  or  Mr.  Morehead  or  anv- 
one  like  that,  vou  know.  Lets  stav 
out  of  iontrovers\  by  all  means, 
.ind  if  we  s<iniehow  «>et  imolved  in 
(oiitroNersy.  let's  sit  back  and  wait 
.1   while   l>efore   we  do  anythin*;. 

K\r:is:  Sure,  nenilemeii.  Lm  h>r 
freedom  and  the  (Constitution.  .\ny 
other   (juestions? 

*  *  .  * 

In  both  their  statemeiHs.  Vvans 
uid  r»aum  were  hidin<;  s(|uarelv 
behind  something  tliat  is  already 
Lnixersity  |)olic\:  I  hat  auv  stu- 
dent who  is  projK'iiy  registered 
lieie  is  entitled  to  all  the  privileges 
ol  all  the  other  students  (with 
the  rviejTtion  of  soj^v^  special  stu- 
deiitN.  siK  h  as  those  in  spec  i.il 
«  lasses,  handicapped  students  or 
niernfwrr'-rTf-  aihfrtic^  U'.im^).  l\\'Vii 
(Chalice!  lor  Rol>eit  Mouse,  who 
/las  F)een  an  ofl-tlie-fecord  foe  of 
i.iciaJ  integration  hfri"  lor  a  very 
long  time,  agree^s  th.it  registered 
Ntudents.  black' or  white,  have  the 
same  prixi leges. 

liofh  ( andidato  ma'de  classic 
I  iillo«»ns  ot  ihemsehes  in  answer- 
ing fuithei  cjiiesiioiis  on  integra- 
tion-segregation. 

Kvans  >aid  the  integration  |)iob- 
lem  is  an  adininisiraii\e  prol)leni. 
implving  thai  students  ha\e  noih- 
in'4  to  do  with  it.  In  tinth.  i '^  stu- 
dent leaders  .»  couple  of  years  ago 
h;i:l  a  great  deal  to  do  with  the 
three  Negro  undergraduates  pres- 
ently  here. 

lianins  bnftooneiv  came  when 
he  said  immediate  solution  of  the 
integraied  housing  problem  ■would 

The  Daily  Tar  Heel 

The  official  itudeni  pubiicdtion  oi  tbe 
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daily  except  Monday  ^nd  examinatioE 
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Entered  as  second  class  matter  in  th< 
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FR^ 


Editor 


POWXEDGl 


.Mana;>in!;  Editor 


CLAjyCE  JONE.S 


N«ws  Editor 


NANCY  HILL 


Sports  Editor 


LARRY  CHEElt 


Bniiness  Manager 


BILL  BOB  PLTX 


Advertising  Manager         FRED  KATZIN 

CDITORLAL    STAFF  ^  Woody    Sear*, 
Joey  Payne,  Stan  Shaw. 


NE:WS  STAFF— Graham  -Snyder,  Edith 
MacKinnon.  Walter  Schruntek,  Pringle 
Pipkin,  Bob  High.  Jim  Purks.  Ben  Tay- 
lor, H.  Joost  Polak,  Patsy  Miller,  Wal- 
ly  Kuralt,  Bill  King,  Curtis  Crotty. 


BUSINESS  STAFF— John  Minter,  Marian 
Hobeck,  Jane  Patten,  Johnny  Whitaker. 

I.  r  -  ■    ■ 

SPORTS   STAFF:   Dave   Wible,  Stewart 
Bird.   Ron   Milligan.     * 


Subscription  Manager 


Dale  Staiey 
Charlie  Holt 


Circulation  Manager  — 

Assi£tant  Sports  Editor  U Bill  King 

Staff  Photographers ,«...  Woody  Sears, 

Norman  Kantor 
Librarians    Sue  Gichner,  Marilyn  Strum 


Night.  Editor  - 


Walt  Schruntek 


lint  integration  because  the  stu- 
dent bcnly  is  not  yet  ready  to  cope 
with  it."  In  other  words,  liaum 
would  rather  wait  a  lew  years  aiKl 
let  sonreone  else  handle  the  job— 
or  mavbe.  as  politicians  are  wont 
to  sav  n(*wadays.  the  situation 
would  "work  itself  out,"  a  rational- 
ization that  is  unecpialcd  in  mod- 
ern times. 

Candidate  Baum  should  remem- 
ber that  more  than  a  year  ago,  when 
the  three  .Xegio  undergraduates 
wei^e  admitted  by  a  federal  court, 
manv  white  students  recjuested  per-' 
mission  to  li\e  with  them  in  Steele 
Dormitory.  Permission  was  refused 
bv  the  chancellor's  office  cm  the 
grounds  the  students  were  tcx) 
vofing  to  know  what  thev  were  do- 
ing, and  would  regret  such  an  act 
later  iti   life. 

Not  yet  leadyr  Hardb.  candi- 
date Bauin.  Many  students  have 
been  readv  a  \eiv  long  time.  It  is 
.South  building  that  is  holding  up 
efle(ti\e  integration  here.  .\nd  a 
Ii\ewiie  student  govennncnt  could 
remcfh    that  situation.^ 

Citations 
For  A  Few 
Tar  Heels 

\Ve  notice  that  letiring  Chan- 
cellor Robert  House  ha'S  been  gi\- 
en  an  a^vard  fcjr  his  contributions 
as  an  ■administrator,  friend,  his- 
torian, j)hilosopher,  scholar,  poet." 

While  the  award  was  lai  from 
a  Carolina  lilne  Cadilhu.  it  was 
a  line  icjea.  In  this  line,  we  would 
suggest  awards  tor  various  other 
people  liere,  with  the  following 
iiisc  riptioiis;' 

To  several  memlH'is  of  the  Chap- 
el  Hill   Police  Dept..  for  patience. 

'I'o  Librarian  .\ndrew  Horn,  for 
guts. 

To  certain  of  the  l.eiioir  Hall 
workers,  h)r  backing  down  under 
file,  still  believing  they  are  right 
in  doing  what  the\  backed  down 
from. 

10  philosophv  Piof.  William 
Poeteat.  hn  striking  sjiarks  in 
minds. 

I'o  student  body  President  bob 
\'oung.  h)!    wiNclom. 

To  those  paiity  raiders  who  wear 
masks,  a  black  s|)ot.  for  life. 

Gracious 
Living: 
Number  18 

11  (iracious  Lixing  in  Chaju-l 
Hill  is  to  go  one  step  further,  wt 
must  have  sometl^ing  done  im- 
niediateU    about    the    weather. 

Heie  it  was  s|jring.  and  the  Post 
Olfice  had  even  unlocked  its  cen- 
ter door,  and  we  get  involved  in 
all  this  cold,  wet  mess.  The  Spring 
Cold  has  U'en  supplemented  by 
another  one.  F.ven  our  geinleman 
sports  editor,  late  of  Kansas  City, 
Mo.,  gets  himself  siKavbonnd  in 
Huntington,   W.   \'a. 

Spring  must  arrive  soon  h)r 
good,  or  (piacious  Living  will  be 
but   a   fading  image. 

TV  Review: 
Russia  On 
Channel  4 

\t  ()  tonight  Channel  4  con- 
linues  it^  series  ■Russia,  Pa-»t  and_ 
Present."  So  far  this  show  has  been 
one  of  the  most  inhirmative  on 
television,  and  anvone  w  ho  misses 
it.  unless  he  already  has  hfs  de- 
gree in  the  subject,  'is  doing  him- 
self a  f)ad  turn. 

The  "Oscar"  award  ceremony 
takes  over  for  an  hour  and  a  half 
on  Channel  5,  with  Jerry  Lewis 
serving   as   master   of   ceremonies. 


Awful  Wave  Is  Passing: 
American  Freedom  Lives 


THE  LIVESPIKE: 


Bruce  Catton 

Noted  historian  Bruce  Catton 
aMivered  this  speech  at  a  Fund 
for  th«  Republic  dinner  recent- 
ly. These  excerpts  ere  from  a 
Christian  Science  Monitor  re- 
port. 

A  real  national  tradition  is 
something  that  we  live  by  rath- 
er than  something  that  we  talk 
about.  We  seldom  try  to  define 
it;  we  feel  that  we  don't  have  to. 
because  if  it  is  a  real,  living, 
moving  force — and  it  is,  if  it  is  a 
genuine  national  tradition  —  we 
simply  respond  to  it. 

The  greatest  of  all  American 
traditions  is  the  simple  tradition 
of  freedom.  From  our  earliest 
days  as  a  people,  this  tradition 
has  provided  us  with  a  faith  to 
live  by. 

if  any  one  word  tells  what 
America  really  is,  it  is  that  one 
word — freedom 

This  nationfl  tradition  of  ours 
is  as  strong  and  as  healthy  as  it 
ever  was.  Today,  as  always  in 
the  past,  its  best  and  strongest 
defense  lies  in  the  reactions 
which  individual  Americans  make 
when  they  find  tht  tradition  un- 
der attack. 

The  tradition  may  be  a  nation- 
al thing,  but  it  resides  finally  in 
the  hearts  of  individual  men  and 
women.  They  strengthen  freedom 
simply  by  living  it.  < 

We  find  them,  quite  literally, 
everywhere.  A  state  legislator  in 
Florida  discovers  that  his  stand 
for  .vchool  integration  makes  him 
a  min(»rity  of  one  in  his  Legis- 
lature; no  matter,  he  goes  on  as 
he  had  started,  and  attainment 
of     the      brotherhood     of      man 

comes  one  step  nearer. 

.  *  *  * 

A  Catholic  priest  in  Indiana 
finds  immigrant  farm  laborers 
suffering  medieval  exploitation 
and  injustice:  he  refuses  to  walk 
on  the  otht*r  side  of  the  road 
but  stops  to  demand  that  the  ex- 
ploitation and  injustice  be  rem- 
edied— and,  after  months  of  un- 
remitting effort,  linally  sees  his 
demand  made  i5cK)d:  and  50  or 
60  human  beings  move  out  of 
peonage  into  'the  sunlight  of 
American  life. 

A  handful  of  Protestant  min- 
isters risk  their  careers  to  stand 
against  bigotry  and  intolerance 
in  their,  own  Tennessee  town — 
and.  after  a  long  struggle,  see 
the  area  in  which  bigotry  and  in- 
tolerance can  operate  percepti- 
bly narrowed. 

A  young  Oklahoma  school- 
teacher loses  his  job  in  order  lo 
make  his  lone  protest  against 
racial  di.scrimination — and  telling 
why  he  had  done  so,  gives  a  no- 
ble and  eloquent  explanation  of 
the  spirit  that  moves  Americans 
who  love  freedom: 

"In  a  thing  like  this  you  do- 
n't stop  to  think.  You  just  do 
what  you  feel  you  have  to  do." 

You  don't  stop  to  think:  you 
just  do  what  you  feel  you  have 
to  do.  From  the  earliest  days, 
the  presence  of  that  spirit  in 
the  breast  of  American  men  and 
women  has  been  our  most  pro- 
found national  a.sset.  It  is  where 
this  tradition  really  lives. 

• 

L'll  Abner 


r*v 


';»«»< 


'/MO* 


J   TO  SAVE  US  ftOTH 
ruRTHER  EMBARKASSMENT, 
VOUNG  LADV,  WHV 
DOMT  VOO  GIVE  UP 

THE.  wercH  7 


Not  all  of  the  petty,  malignant 
forces  of  reaction — the  men  who 
think  the  people  need  a  guard- 
ian and  a  keeper  to  guide  their 
way  into  a  blighting  conformity; 
the  men  who  dread  freedom  un- 
less it  be  limited  to  folk  who 
think  and  talk  as  they  them- 
selves would  do;  the  men  who 
believe  that  there  should  be 
classes  and  grades  in  .\merican 
citizenship,  and  dread  anything 
that  tends  to  remove  the  barriers 
that  set  man  apart  from  man — 


instinct  in  the  American  mind 
and  heart  which  the  tradition  i.- 
based  on  is  finally,  irrepressible. 

We  are  today  emerging  from 
the  latest  of  these  spasms  of  ter- 
ror. We  have  seen  some  highly 
discouragiiig  things  in  recent 
.years. 

We  have  seen  an  atmosphere 

in   which   the  mere  fact  that  a 

man  was  accused  of  something 

was  taken  as  proof  of  his  guilt. 

which  it  was  widely  taken  as  a 


'We  Want  To  Send  A  Big  Man  There.  Let's  See 


It  is  passing  because  the 
courts  of  America  have  stood 
firmly  in  defense  of  individual 
liberties.  It  is  passing  because 
manv  groups  and  individuals  have 
stood  up  for  the  rights  of  their 
fellow  Americans. 

The  American  people  are  grad- 
ually getting  the  materials  for  a 
more  factual  understanding  of 
communism  in  the  United  States 
and  the  world.  The  events  in 
Hungary  have  clearly  demon- 
strated   the    essential    falsity    of 


not  all  of  these  together,  operat- 
ing in  a  time  of  confusion  and 
danger,  can  summon  a  force 
strong  enough  to  beat  down  the 
iiimple.  instinctive  reaction  that 
rises  in  the  breast  of  the  ordinary 
American  when  he  .sees  Ameri- 
can  freedoms   being  cut  down. 

American  freedom  today  is  un- 
der attack — very  often,  by  people 
who  insist  that  they  are  trying, 
to  defend  it. 

In  a  -s'hortrange  view  condi- 
tions are  extremely  ominous; 
yet  I  think  if  we  look  at  our  pres- 
ent .situation  long-range  we  can 
see  that  we  have  little  reason  to 
be  afraid.  We  get  waves  of  ro- 
acti m  in  this  country,  periodical- 
ly, in  times  of  extreme  national 
stress,  and  the  great  national 
tradition  comes  under  attack — 
se?ms,  indeed  to  be  in  a  fair 
way  to  be  overwhelmed  entirely. 

But  the  waves  always  pass — 
with  however  much  incidental  in- 
justice and  oppression  for  certain 
individual    vi^'tims — becau.sc    the 

We  have   witnessed   an  era   in 


crime  for  a  1  accused  person  to 
invoke  the  Bill  of  Rights  itself  in 
his  own  defense — as  if  the  pro- 
visions of  the  Bill  of  Rights  were 
not  meant  to  operate  in  precis- 
ly  a  time  like  the  present. 

We  have  seen  times  in  which 
no  one  in  authority  seemed  will- 
ing to  place  the  slightest  amount 
of  trui-t  in  the  innate  loyalty, 
good  faith  and  intelligence  of  the 
-'American  people;  times  which 
led  former  Sen.  Harry  Cain  to 
burst  out  with  the  cry:  "A  whole 
clique  of  spies  could  hardly  do 
as  much  damage  to  us  as  could 
our  failure  as  a  government  to 
have  confidence  in  the  people."' 
We  have  seen  all  of  this,  and 
we  can  ^till  see  too  much  of  it 
if  we  look  around  carefully.  Yet 
the  crest  of  the  wave  is  passing. 

It  is  passing  because  the 
American  people  are  respond- 
ing once  more  to  that  deepest 
and  most  profound  of  all  of 
their  instincts — the  instinct  to 
defend  the  tradition  of  freedom 
when  it  comes  under  attack. 


Communist   claimss   to   a   concern 
for  civil  liberties.— and  have  con- 
tributed to  the  decline     of     the 
Communi-sts   here    and    in    other 
free  countries. 

I  feel  confident  that  the 
American  tradition  will  flourish 
in  the  future  as  it  has  in  the 
past. 

Freedom     rests     on     courage; 
and  courage,  in  its  turn,  rests  on 
faith — on  faith  in  ourselves  and 
the    thing    which    ve    believe    in 
faith  in  our  fellows,  on  faith  that 
and  which  we  live  by  is  immor- 
tal   and   everlasting.   Out   of  this 
faith  come  those  noble  statements 
which   show   why   this   .American 
tradition  is  in  the  end  invulner- 
abl?;  .statements  like  that  one  of 
the  Oklahoma  schoolmaster: 
"In    a    thing     like    this    you 
don't   stop    to   think.    You    just 
do  what   you   feel   you    have   to 
do." 

On  hat  spirit,  and  in  that  spir- 
it, we  can  go  ahead  to  broaden 
the   great   American   tradition. 


• 

By  A*.  Capp 


YOUNG  PATS  ff -THAT'S 

WHAT  THEV  ARE.".''- SHE 
MUST'VE  PASSED  THE 
WATCH  TO  ONE  OF  THEM?? 
^   i  HEAR  IT  TICKING.1'- 
[TICKING.y  TICKING."' 


Poqo 


By  Walt  Keily 


Dedication  And 
A    Comparison 


Fred  Powledge 

If  y«i  want  to  see  a  bunch  of  dedicated  people, 
drop  by  Memorial  Hall  any  night  this  week  and 
watch  the  c&A  and  staff  of  Sound  Tnd  Fury  hard 
at  work. 

They  are  all  studeirts  whose  main  interest  right 
now  is  in  putting  on  "Thieves'  Holiday"  this  week- 
end —  to  present  an  enjoyable  musical-comedy. 
They  receive  no  pay  for  their  work,  and  indeed 
their  work  costs  them  much  in  late  hours,  cut  class- 
es, eyestrain  and  complete  loss  of  a  social  life  dur- 
ing rehearsals. 

Their  main  interest  will  pay  off,  I  believe,  in 
"•  ^*»PPY  audience.  The  student-written, — directed 
«nd — 8cf*d   play   is  funny  without   beins   trashy, 
^nd  the  actors  and  technicians  are  welhchosen. 

Especially  watch  out  for  Jimmy  Thompson  of 
Boston,  who  plays  Bhrudah,  a  "Balkan  beast."  He 
is  the  most  convincing  ogre  I  have  ever  seen. 


The  upcoming  spring  election  has  one  distinc- 
tion so  far  —  it  is  upcoming.  Candidates  from  all 
sides  have  refrained  from  doing  or  saying  anything, 
they  appear  to  be  playing  it  extremely  safe,  afraid 
to  antagonize  any  segment  of  voters. 

The  presidciitial  and  editorial  candidatei^  are  all 
trying  to  get  the  fraternity,  sorority,  dormitory  and 
town  vote,  all  at  once.  This,  'by  definition,  requires 
sitting  on  seyeral  sides  of  the  fence  at  onee,  which, 
by  definition,  means  practically  no  platforms  that 
are  helpful  to  the  voting  student. 

The  candidates  so  far  have  spent  about  as  much 
space  attacking  Daily  Tar  Heel  editorials  as-  they 
have  devoted  to  presenting  understandable  positions 
on  campus  issues.  We  can  only  theorize  that  the 
winners  will  conduct  their  offices  next  year  in  the 
same  manner. 


«  • 


Gov.  Luther  Hodges,  speaking  at  last  week's  an- 
nual O.  Max  Gardner  dinner  and  award  night,  stated 
nicely  some  of  the  rei^wnsibilities  of  the  University 
to  the  development  of  the  State  of  North  Carolina. 
He  said: 

"The  University  must  communicate  its  vitality, 
vision,  purpose  and  progress  to  the  state,"  and 
it  must  do  an  adequAtc  public  relations  job  to  tell 
the  taxpayers  what  it  is  doing.  As  for  specific 
duties  facing  the  University,  the  governor  listed: 

1.  "Set  the  administrative  gouse  in  order."  Here 
he  congratulated  Consolidated  University  President 
William  C.  Friday  on  the  job  he  has  done  since  hii 
election  last  year.  Friday,  said  the  governor,  hai 
been  "quietly  effective,  calmly  courageous  and 
completely  det'icated."  ' 

2.  The  University  mu*t  be  able  to  make  "courage- 
ous and  prompt  decisions."  One  example  ol  this 
would  be  the  recent  (and  continuing)  basketball 
scandal  at  N.  C.  State  College  and  minor  athletics 
incidents  here.  "This  doesn't  mean  loss  freedom  of 
speech,  biit  more,"  said  the  governor.  'And  with 
this  goes  commensurate  responsibility."" 

3.  "We  must  dare  to  experiment,  dare  to  be 
ahead." 

4.  "We  miu-t  give  leadership  on  all  fronts." 
Hodges  mentioned  prjmarily  public  education.  He 
indicated  some  minds  in  this  state  are  not  open  at 
all  to  the  future  'and  generally  not  in  tune  with 
modern  times." 

Although  the  governor's  comments  were  gen- 
eral (he  wes  rushing  from  the  Gardner  dinner 
to  the  Business  Fair,  then  to  th.  televison  set 
for  the  Kansas  City  game),  they  showed  clearly 
executive  notice  »f  four  of  the  Umversity ,  top 
duties.  To  those  four,  howovw,  |  would  add  one 
more: 

5^  The  University  must  dare  to  be  free,  for  it 
I  f  uLV'^  '^^  strongholds  of  freedom  in  thi. 
Zn^  ^^'^\'^''  ""true,  the  unfree  circulate  so 
easily  throughout  North  Carolina  -  often  by  a.t 
in  .  ftLt*^fi''"''~  '^'  University  is  the  one  publi. 
ZZT  ^  ^""^^"bat  them  and  tell  the  people 
^e^uth.  The  truth,  folks  have  observed,  sh"l    et 


In  the  aftermath  of  the  basketball  team's  victory 
last  weekend,  I  cannot  help  but  chuckle  when  I 
remember  that  the  team  is  number  one  in  spite 
of  the  facts  that: 

•  1.  Its  members  go  through  the  lines  at  Lenoir 
Hall  like  everybody  else;  they  have  no  special  eat- 
ing rooms,  no  specially-prepared  menues. 

2.'  It„  members  can  manage  to  be  the  nations 
champions  while  stUl  living  with  the  other  students; 
apparently  they  have  no  need  for  a  special  section 
of  a  dormitory,  with  monitors  right  next  door. 

3.  Alumni  can  enjoy  seeing  the  Tar  Heels  win 
without  having  to  get  half  tight  and  in  a  coed-pinch- 
i^g  mood. 

4.  It  does  not  take  thousands  upon  thousands  of 
dollars  in  preparaUon,  plus  charter  planes  and  aU 
the  conveniences  of  Monaco  to  win  a  basketball 
game.  It  ju^-t  takes  skill,  guts,  sportsmanship  and 
spirit. 


WEONi 

Wof 
Must 

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If  resell 
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returninj 
is  movij 

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brought  I 
office, 
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WBONBSDAY.  MARCH  27,   1f57 


THI  DAILY  TAR  HIH. 


PAG6  THREI 


of 
"  He 


d  is  tine- 

from  all 

lything, 

afraid 


arc  aU 

lory  and 

requires 

which, 

that 


much 

[as  they 

)sitions 

that  the 

in  the 


^k's  an- 

IX.  stated 

liversity 

?arolina. 


I  vitality. 
Mid 
to  t*ll 
eific 

Vtsfd: 

Here 
resident 
since  his 
lor.  has 
>u.s    and 


[Courage- 
of  thi5 
isketball 
I  athletics 
^edom  of 
ind  with 


re    tu    be 


fronts."' 
Mion.    He 

open  at 
ine  with 


dinner 
Hsen    s*t 

clearly 
Bty  »  to^ 
|ad«l  en* 


.  for  it 

in   this 

ilate   so 

by  act 

^ne  publJL' 

le  p  ople 

shall  set 


s  victory 

when   I 

m   spite 


at  Lenoir 
fcial  eal- 


?   nation's 
atudents, 
ial  acction 
door. 

Heels  win 
?oed-pinch- 


lou^ands  of 

les  and  all 

basketball 

inship  and 


.    .      I 


Women  Room  Reservation 
Must  Be  In  By  April  5 


SAYS  FR€E  lANCE  PHYSICI^: 


W 


Applications   for   room   reserva- 
tions for  women  students  are  now 
being    received    for    the    fall    se- 
mester   and    two   summer    terms.!         ^^   EDITH  MACKINNON 
according  to  the  dean  of  women's '      "They're     violating     too     many 
office.  I  scientific  principles." 

Reservations  are  being  receiv-'  ^^^^  **  ^^^  reason  given  by  Wil- 
vd  in, the  dean  of  women's  office  ^'^"^  ^^^  Ballenger,  a  free  lance 
in  104-C  South  Building.  i^''**    self-educated     physicist    and 

Reservations  must  be  made  by ,  ^'i^^.f  *^°  ^^}^  ^^^  ^^^  campus  a 
April    5.    the  «nnouiy:ement   said 


Government's  SafeUite  Wont  Work 


visit    yesterday,    for    the    coming 
failure  of  the  U-.  S.  government'a 

satel- 


II    reservations     have     not     been, 

made  by  that  time,  the  office  wiu'P'^"'  ^'''"  launching  a  space 

as.sume  the   student   is  either   not ' 

returning  for  the  fall  seme^-ters  or 

IS  mo\ing  into  a  sorority  house. 

The  procedure     for     making     a 
room  reservation  as  announced  by 


Called  the  Cape  Cod  Philoso- 
pher." Ballenger  dropped  by 
Chapel  Hill  this  week  on  hia-  way 
from  Florida  to  sketch  caricatures 


the  dean  of  women's  office   is  as  i  ^^  f'"aternity  men  and   to  explain 
follows-  !    **  views  on  why  the  government 

(1)  The   student  Should    pay   ^ '^P^^^P^-^J^ct  will  fail.  He  laid  iiis 

SIO   room   deposit   for   each   term  if  ^".'^'"l^".^^  ^^'^^  ^°"^  ^"^"Sh 

at    the    cashier'.^    office    in    south !''' ''^.f.'^^  ^/'  *^^°''>'  °^  ">^-"^^'^ 

Building    basement.    She    will    ^e- •  f '^"''\^""'^  ^^^"^  ""^  "^^^^'^'^  P^" 

.   ^  ilarization. 

ceive   a    receipt. 

( 2 )  The     receipt 


the  satellite  project  will  fail  he- 
cause  its  scientists  assnime  there 
is  iMthing  out  ia  space  ts  Week 
travel  of  a  space  ship.  "I  know 
there  is."  says  Ballenger.  al- 
though he  does  not  know  what 
that  substance  may  be. 

The  lanky  Professor  saya  his 
theory  can  be  explained  by  the  old 
adage     that     "opposites     attract." 


Tfyoul^  Fbr  3 
'One  Act  Plays 
Will  Be  Friday  I 

Tryouts    for    three   new    one-act ' 
plays    will    be    held   at   the   Play- j 
makers'  Theater  Friday  afternoon  ' 
at  4  p.m..  for  the   178th  series  of 
student-writtan     plays     presented 
by  The  Carolina  Playmakers.       '    1 
The  three  plays  are:  'Lost  God- 
dess" by  Christopher  Reynolds  of 
New    York.     N.     Y..    directed'  by 
"Girls     attract     boys,     and     vicej  Miss      Marcelline      Krafchick      of 
versa,"    states    Ballenger    in    con- !  Philadelphia,  Pa.:  "The  Spaceman 
tending  that  the  universe  is  made  I  Cometh"    by    Miss    Page   Williams 
up  of  bodies  with  negative  poles    of   Rt.    Thomas.    Ky..    directed    by 


EASld^R  SHOH/V 


should     be 
brought   to   the   dean   of  women's 


for  reservation  may  be  filled  out 
(8)   The    card   should    be    mark- 
ed  "paid." 

FELLOWSHIP 


HARD  KNOCKS 

Ballenger  says   his   formal   edu- 

„        '     .  1      *    -^         J   I  cation  was  cut  short  in  the  third 

office,     where     applicatioif    cards  „^„j„      .        .  ,         . 

, ,.__    „       ^     ,..,    ,       .  .grade  when  he  ran  away  from  his 

jfOa-ter  parents  and  went  out  on  his 
own.  Since  that  time  the  "Profes- 

jsor"  declares  that  he  has  gradu- 
ated from  the  University  of  Hard 

„..     .  ,  Knocks,   where,   as   he   says,   "the 

The   inter-varsity   Christian   Fel-  „,3,,,     ,,,     ^^„,^,     J^' 

lowship  will  meet  today  at  7  p.m. 


WILLIAM  LEE  BALLENGER 

,    .    .    Neicton'a  di'scription   false 


at  the  center  and  positive  poles  at 
the  outer  surface  or  crusts.  In  this 
way  the  universe  is  held  together 
and  allowed  to  gradually  expand 
by  the  polarization  of  the  gravita- 
tional fields. 
AFRICA 

Speaking     of     the     government 
space  project,  Ballenger  says,  "Oh, 


Peter  B.  O'Sullivan  of  Valhalla, 
N.  Y.;  and  "the  Thief  and  the 
Hunchback"  by  Leon  Rooke  of 
Roanoke  Rapids,  directed  by 
Charles  Barrett  of  Hickory.  All 
six  students  are  doing  graduate 
work  in  UNCs  Department  of 
Dramatic  Art. 
Representing      a      variety      of 


your 


At  the  risk  of  disappointing 
quite  a  number  of  goveinmcnl 
physicists,  engineers  and  assorteri 
technicians,  Ballenger  explains  his 
theory  by  saying,  "Don't  biame 
the  engineers.  The  error  goes  back 
to  Sir  Isaac  Nawton  who  falsely 
described    gravity     as     a     natural 

that 
gravity  is  a  magnetic  force." 


♦  K     ou       1   n  u          ,                     ^^^^   ^'^^    greater  force   and   the .  phenomenon.    The    truth    is 
m   the  Choral  Rehearsal  room  in   fhJnoc  v.«..  i..o..„  ^tj-i 
ina  Tin  tt  ii    v      i-«.-       •.,  ,      .     I  i"'ngs  you  Icam  stick. 
108  Hill  Hall.  Jim  Ellis  will  lead  a| 

Bible  a'tudy  on  the  book  of  Philip- 

pians.  Everjone  has  been  invited 

to  attend  the  meeting.  The  fellow- 

.<ihip  Ls  interdenominational. 


According  to  Ballenger,  the 
whole  approach  by  the  govern- 
ment is  wrong.  The  government 
scientists  are  going  by  the  as- 
sumption that  the  universe  is  held 
together  by  centrifugal  force  and 
gravity,  without  taking  into  con- 
sideration his  new  theory  of  mag- 
netic equilibrium. 

The    artist-physicist    feels    that 


they'll  get  the  satellite    up  there  1  drama  types,  the  three  short  plays 
all  right,   majiM   200   miles   high,  I  are  a  fantsy-romance.  a  farce,  and  ! 


and  into  an  orbit,  but  it's  going  to 
fall  right  back  down  again.  I  fig- 
ure it  will  land  in  Africa  or  some 
place." 

It's  an  interesting  theory,  al- 
though there  will  probably  be  a 
few  startled  government  scien- 
tists at  the  Cocoa,  Fla.  aratellite 
testing  station. 


CLASSIFIEDS 


McGUIRE  PREDICTS: 


FIVE   ROOM    BRICR   HOUSE    IN 
center  of  town — has  hobby  work-  _ 

shop.   Call   9458  during  day   or    „      , 
2926     after     5:30     and     during ' 
weekend. 


Tar  HeelsTo  Be  Better 
Ball  Club  Next  Season 


FOR  INEXPENSIVE  LIVING:  27 
ft.  Nashua  trailer — has  bath, 
tub,  shower,  porch,  oil  heater, 
added  room.  Connected  to  util- 
ities and  septic  tank.  1  mile  out 
on  airport  road."  S2300.  Call 
8472 


NEW   YARK   — (AP)    —   North 
ina's    NCAA    cbampion    bas- 
I  ketball   team   will  be  25  per  cent 
better     next     year     according     to 
Coacli    Frank   McGuire. 


LEAVING  FRIDAY  1  P.M.  FOR 
Ann  Arbor,  Mich.  Retium  in  time 
for  Tuesday  morning  classes. 
Need  two  more  riders.  Fred 
Powledge.  93361  or  88602  — 
Leave  message  if  I'm  not  there. 


But  the  New  York  Irishman  add- 
ed hurriedly  that  it  may  not  do  as 
well  as  this  season  in  the  won  and 
lost  records.  North  Carolina  came 
through  the  NCAA  tournament  as 
the  nations  only  undefeated  major 
college  team  with  32  straight  vie 
tories. 


^  "We  made  a  lot  of  mistakes 
during  the  overtime."  he  said, 
"but  you  could  see  them  out  there 


Orientation  Counselor 
Applications  Available 

Application  blanks  are  now 
available  to  all  men  students  in- 
terested in  serving  as  orientation 
couns!Kors  during  the  fall  pro- 
gram, according  to  an  announce- 
ment. 

The  applications  may  be  ob- 
tained at  the  Graham  Memorial 
information  desk,    the    YMCA   of- 


a  serious  play.  The  program  will 
be  presented  Monday  and  Tues- 
day, April  8  and  9  at  the  Play- 
makers'  Theater,  7:30  p.m.,  with 
no  admission  charged..  Drama  pro- 
fessor Foster  Fitz-Simons  is  fac- 
ulty adviser  for  the  three  produc- 
tions. 


(Continued  from  Page  \) 

zano  said,  "and  it  is  very  approp- 
riate to  the  present  seasoa  of  the 
year  and  the  event  that  it  recalls." 

He  said  also  that  it  is  recom- 
mended for  children  of  all  school 
grades. 

To  make  passible  that  all  who 
desire  to  see  the  Planetarium 
spectacle  may  do  so.  special  per- 
formances will  be  scheduled  at  the 
request  of  100  or  more  persons. 
While  reservations  are  actually 
necessary  only  for  the  daily  school 
matinees,  individual  mail  order 
tickets  or  reservations  by  phone 
or  mail  are  available. 

Although  "Easter,  the  Awak- 
ening" will  be  presented  at  the 
Planetarium  through  April  29, 
Jenzgno  jurged  persons  intending 
to  attend  to  do  so  early  in  the 
season  when  the  Planetarium 
chamber   will  be  less  crowded. 

"Experience  has  Shown."  Jen- 
zano  said,  "tfiat  as  the  actual  date 
of  Easter  approaches,  the  attend- 
ance at  each  performance  increases. 


Sometimes  individuals  without  res- 
ervations have  been  inconven- 
ienced, and  alradf  mere  tha«  S.- 
000  reservations  have  been  made 
v\'ith  more  coming  in  daily.  "Wiat 
is  the  reason  we  advise  seeing 
the  Easter  Story  early  in  the  »ea- 
son.*' 


WHAT'U  YOU  READ? 


You  Pays  Your  Money  and 
You  Takes  Your  Choice 


Biography  — 

If  your  taste  runi,-  to  biography, 
and  your  budget  is  fat.  there  are 
some  swell  new  books  to  tempt 
you  this  year. 


BASS 


remembering  what  they  had  been  fjce.  the  Monogram  Club  and  the 
told  and  trying  to  play  it  ^that  Reserve  fading  Room  in  the 
way."  I  Wilson   Library. 

Another  reason  why  McGuire 
expects  a  25  per  cent  improved 
club  next  season  is  York  Larese,  a 
freshman  from  New  York,  who 
has  "the  greatest  shot  I've  ever 
seen." 


LUXON 


McGuire,    reported    at 


(Continued  from  Page  1) 
meet  their  own  responsibilities'  in 
a   free   society   which   has   a    fsee 
various  '  press,  Dean  Luxon  declared  read- 


jobs." 


McGuire.  here  to  coach  the  East 

team  in  the  annual  Fresh  Air  Fund 

East-West  All-Star  game  Saturday, 

told  a  luncheon  gathering  of  sports 

APARTMENT  ON  QUIET  STREET;  writers  that   the  big  factor  in  his  {since  the  game.  I'm  «oiiic  kack  to 

rooms. 


to    be    considering   leaving    North  ]  ers  should   "criticize   the  journal- 
Carolina,  denied  that  he  had  been  •  igt  where  criticism  is  deserved  and 


approached    about    other 
"I    haven't     talked     to    anyone 


praise  hint  when  praise  is  due." 

He   added,  "All  journalists  like 
praise.  Af  few  welcome  oriticiirtn. 


-w..,.   ...  .....  MULc  luc  suiuc.  1  III  Bwu«  »av»  iwr  wo*ld  SDcak  OT  wTite  to  the 

—three,  rooms,    stov»..   and    re-!  team's' overtime  final  victory  over  |  caroliha  April  Ist.  I  have  a  lot  of  |  ^^.^     editor    or   publisher    in- 
frigerator    furnished.    Brisk    15 (Kansas  Saturday  was  the  way  the  1  speaking   engagements   lined    uP-"ljj»eaH  Qt' 

"    '  "     ••'-•''•  i\^Q    squad     retained)  '         ■■>-•- 


mmute  walk  from  South  Build-  \  juniors     on 
ing.   S65.   Call   8-8528.  their   poise. 


McGuire    said    he    thought    «.»  .y^^^  ^^  believe  what  you  read  in 


his 
Kansas  Coach 
been     over-em- 


mumbling  in  our  beards. 


e 

e 

e 

e 

•' 

e 

e<r 


CONVENIENT  DAILY  SERVICE 


TO 

WINSTON-SALEM 

HICKORY 

WILMINGTON 

LOUISVILLE 

CINCINNATI 

COLUMBUS,  0. 

and  many  other  points 


•.\:./f/eomonr\ 


"rhubarb"  with 
Dick  Harp  had 
phasized. 

'There  was  a  tussle  out  on  the 


the   newspapers,"    we   would   meet 
these  responsibilities." 

Speaking  of  criticism,  the  ninth 
of   Luxon's  "list   of  responsiblities, 


Baum  Typifies 
Spirit  Here, 
Says  Weinman 

I      University       Party      Chairman 
Mike    Weinman     Tuesday    called 
upon    the    students    to    elect    Bill:  Sloan  stated.  "I  think  most  of  the 
Baum    (LT*)    to  the   student  body   people    on     the    ..•taff    have    had 


(■Continued  from  page  1) 
established  in  the  fraternities  and 
sororities,"  Sloan  stated. 

"The  present  staff  of  The  Daily 
Tar  Heel  is  a  good  one,  one  of  the 
best  I  have  seen,"  the  nominee 
said. 

In  referring  to  the  present  staff 


floor,  near  the  Kansas  bench.  They  \  the  dean  said  too  many  newspa- 
went  out  to  break  it  up.  I  didn't  P^r.'  resent  criticism.  "In  all  can- 
even  know  Harp  was  out  on  the  dor,"  he  said,  "I  must  admit  that 
until    i    went    over    there."  f^^l^^  ^o  meet  this  responsibility 


presidency  because  he  "typifies 
the   Carolina  spirit." 

Baum,  he  said,  "is  forceful,  ag- 
gressive and  not  alraid  to  take  a 
stand  on  the  controversial"*  .  .  . 
"and  he  will  stand  up  for  what 
the  students   want." 

Weinman  said  he  considered 
Baum  to  be  "the  finest  orator  on 
the  campus'  and  be  "will  repre- 
sent us  dynamically  before  the  ad- 
OiinLstration  and  trustees  when 
presenting  the  students'  cause  be- 
fore them," 

"The  spirit  at  Carolina  reached 
its  highest  point  in  years  as  it 
fnapped  out  of  the  doldrums  Sat- 
urday   night."  he   said. 

"Let's  not  lei  this  spirit  die. 
Let's  carry  it  over  into  stvdent 
government  by  electing  a  presi- 
dent who  is  a  fighter  and  one 
who  will  lead  this  new  era  of 
Carolina  spirit  and  fight.'  Wein- 
man said. 


enough  experience  with  the  basic 
elements  of  newspaper  work  and 
with  a  little  further  training  will 
be  able  to  turn  out  a  constantly 
improving  newspaper." 


George  L.  Coxhead 

U.N.C.  '42 
Campus  Reprssentativo 


NEW  YORK  LIFE 

INSURANCE    COMPANY 


For  A  1st 
Class 

Basketball 

\ 

Team  See 

UNC 

For  A  1st 
Class 

Diamond 

See 


yrtcarved 


DIAMOND     RINGS 


at 


Wentworth  -  Sloan 


For  example,  there  are  Much 
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I  Treat  yourself  to  a  half -hour 
;  browse  in  our  Old  Book  Ooraer. 
I  Who  knows — you  may  save  enough 
I  to  treat  yourself  to  a  hamborger 
i  afterwards! 
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floor    until    i 
McGuire  said. 


Lost  And  Found  Articles 

(accepting  criticism  in  good  grace  I  ^^  ^e  Auctioned  Bv  Y 

and  replying  in  good  spirit)  is  one  i  ' 


**When  he  was  coming  off  some- ;  of  the  chunks  in  the  aimor  of  to-  j  The  Y  has  decided  to  clean  out 
buuj.  o^ii.iij  ino  niusi  have  said  days  newspapers  and  newspaper- ;  the  lost  and  found  department  by 
something   because   I   hadn't   said  men."  '  "auctloning-off"    the   articles   that 

a  word.  He  said,  'Why  don't  youi      In  setting  forth  an  honor  roll  of    have  accumulated  there  since  the 
keep  you  mouth  shut?'  and  at  first  newspapers,,  Dean  Luxon   insisted  j  last  "house  cleaning." 
I   thought   he    was   talking    to   his '  that  it  does  not  necCi-sarily  mean  I      The  auction  is  scheduled  to  run 


player.  Then  I  just  said,  'Dick,  I 
haven't  said  a  word.' 


KM  KS€tVATIOHS 
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DAILY    CROSSWORD 


ACROdS 

1. A  dessert 
5.  Stone  ax 
».  Skip 
10.  City   (N"eb.) 

12.  Greek  letter 

13.  UniU  of 
distance 

14.  Cov^s 

15.  Protective 
garments 

16.  Esker 

17.  God  of  love 

18.  Impulses 
21.  Seed  vessel 

24.  Knife  part 

25.  Man's  name 

27.  Contraction 
(poet.) 

28.  Peruses 
afaln 

30.  Moslem  title 
(pi.) 

31.  River 
(Chin.) 

32.  Affirm 
35.  Rodents 

37.  Young  hof 

38.  Fasten 
firmly 

39.  River   (Fr.) 

40.  Appliers 

41.  Bewail 
audibly 

42.  Muddle 

1.  Underwalst 

2.  Mimicked 

3.  Casks 

4.  Epoch 

5.  Writers  of 
music 

t.  Aratian 
chieftatna 


7.  Powdered 
leaves  of 
baobab  tree 

8.  At  that  time 

9.  Capital 

( Ceylon ) 
11.  Beast  of 

burden 
15.  Exist 
17.  Deciduous 

tree 

19.  Sailor 
(Brit.) 

20.  Fish 

21.  Perennial 
herb  (H.I.) 


22.  Elderly 
people 
(colloq. ) 

23  Stops 

26  Pro- 
noun 

29.  Con- 
«ume 

3t     'alian 
volcano 
(var.) 

32.  Man's 
name 

33.  Leveler 

34.  Tolerably 

35.  Stand  up 


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these  are  the  best  newspapers.  His  ,  from  10  a.m.  -  12  noon  today,  Wal- 


honor  roll  follows: 

(Thristian   Science    Monitor,   The 

"And  nobody  punched  me  in  the   ^^^   ^^^^  ^.^^^    Baltimore   Sun, 

stomach.    It    was    just    a    subway ,  ^ya^^ia^on   Post    and  Times-Her- 

P"s*^-  '  aid..   The   Cleveland   Press,    Louis- 

I  ville      Courier-Journal       and      the 

I  Louisville  Times,  Chicago  Daily 
[  News  The  Milwaukee  Journal,  St. 
i  Louis  Poa-t-Dispatch.  ' 


Three  Athletes 
From  N.C.  State 
Are  Acquitted 


ly  Satterfield  will  act  as  the  auc- 
tioneer at  the  auction. 

Nora  Hurd.  of  the  Y  staff,  said 
there  was  *just  about  every  con- 
ceivable item "  in  the  lost  and 
found  department.  "Long-Johns, 
fountain  pens,  car  keys,  cigaret 
lighters,  check  books,  note  books 
and   umbrellas  are   only  a  few  of 


RALEIGH— (AP)— Three    North 
Carolina     State     College     athletes 


"Each  of  the  newspapers  I  have    the  items  that  will  be  up  for  sale,"  i 
listed    has   achieved   its   place    be-  ■  according  to  Hurd.  ) 

cause  of  a  great  editor  or  a  great  j  ! ( 

publisher,    or    both,"     said     Dean  j 
Luxon  as  he  quoted  the  remark  of 
Frank    I^uther    Mott:    "The    whole 
history  of  American  journalism  is 


were   acquitted   Monday   of   "seer-  i  a  history  of  the  leadership  of  great 
etly    peeping"    into    windows    at  i  ed»t«M"s 
Peacsk  Junior  College   for  women 


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38.  Alcoholic 
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Deadline  For  Tri  Delta 
Competition  Is  April  5 

Deadline  for  the  1957  Tri  Delta 
Scholarship  Competition  which  be- 
[Jgan  Monday,  March  18,  is  Friday, 
April   &.   according     to     an     an- 
!  nouncment  from  Miss  Betty  Dale 
Pressly.  service  projects  chairman. 
The    sorority's   scholarship    pro- 
gram, is  an   inlernatiarjil  service, 

they  had  driven  on  the  campus  in  |  a.s  long  as  human  beings  gather.  [  ^^'"^'P^^'^'^     °^     ''^''°"*^     ^""'*'' 
a  car  shortly  aft«j_l  a.m.  March  j  write,  and  edit  news,  absolute  ac-|^'°" 
17.    Fines    were    ^2$    and    court   curacy   must    undoubtedly   remain 
costs    for  each    student. 

Original   charges  of  trespassing, 
and     peeping 


when  three  college  mates  came  to 
their  rescue  in  city  court. 

All  six  students  were  fined  for 
trespassing     after     they    admitted 


"Newspapermen  s-trive  for  ac- 
curacy. Most  journalists  take  this 
responsibility  seriously.  But,  in 
spite  of  careful  reporting  and  cau-  ] 
tious  checking,  inaccuracies  ap- 
pear.   Many   are    inexcusable.    But 


All  women  students  of  UNC  are 

an  unattainable  goal."  I  ^li^i^le  to  apply  for  th«  scholar- 

"The  ...arch  for  truth  leads  the ! ''^iP-s,  and  f  P  ^«^»°"  »'»«?^^^^"^"J 

journalist  beyond  the  reporting  of  I  be    obtained    from    «»«    ^^^^    °; 

of  bare  facts."  ^      ^      .  Somen's    office,    according    to    a 

'     "As  a  journalist  and  eductor.  I   ''^°'"°"^y  spokesman. 

concerned   with    the 


am    concerned   with    the    rapidity 
with  which  this   practice   (secrecy 


Tom  were  made 
against  Darrell  C.  Ijess.  21, 
New  Castle,  Pa.;  Peter  Anthony 
Bazonas,  19,  Staten  Island,  N.Y.; 
and  Thomas  Katich.  21.  of  Pitts- 
burgh. Pa.  j '"  government)  has  been  adopted 
Katich  is  a  top  quarterback  on  j  "'^  the  state,  county  and  city  level" 
the  football  team  and  Dess  is  a  ]  "^  .^«"  ««  >«  the  federal  gov- 
tackle.  Bazonas  is  a  member  of|ernraent 
the  baseball  squad. 


Judges  of  the  applications  will 
be  Miss  Isabelle  MacLeod;  Dean 
E.  L.  Mackie;  Mrs.  Robert  M.  Mill- 
er, alumnae  advisor;  Betty  Bell, 
president;  and  Betty  Dale- Press- 
ly. service  projects  chairman. 


"Freedom   of   thought,   freedom 


of 


The  second  group  testified  they  r*    speech,    ami    freedom    of    the,     NATO  May  Get  MlSSlloS 

were  the  ones  who  had  been  near !?''«'«  are  not  separate  freedoms.}  PARIS  u!V-A  French  Govern 
the  windows  and  not  the  trio !  They  are  woven  into  the  fabric  of  ment  spokesman  said  today  the 
charged  Judge  Albert  Doub  is-  this  nation  and  once  that  fabric  is  North  Atlantic  Treaty  Organisa- 
sued  additional  warranU  for  tres-  j  **"t,  the  whole  garment  of  protec-  j  tion  (NATO)  will  take  up  shortly 
patting  against  Carey  Warren,  20. 1  t»on  of  our  basic  rights  will  be  i  the  question  of  U.  S.  guided  mis- 
Partsmouth.    Va ;    Al    Henry.    20.  j  torn  to  .hreds."  i  siles  for  NATO  members. 

Long  Island,  N.  Y,;  and   Edward  I     "^  journalist  may  be  aware  of;     President   Eisenhower   promised 
Herdubay,  19,  Windber,  Pa.  i  <*Pi"»<>"    »"    his    community    and,  j  British     Prime     Minister     Ha;t)ld 

All  six  testified  that  they  were  ;  *^ter  due  consideration,  decide  to'MacMillan  at  the  Bermuda  Talks 
"high"  on  beer  and  had  decided  ^  '^  **'*  "tmost  to  change  that  apin-  j  las-t  week  that  missiles  will  be 
to  "wake  up  the  whole  coUege."     \^^'^''  [given  to  Great  Britain. 


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T«B  DAILY  TAt  HllL 


WEDNEDAY,  MARCH  27,  195t 


Baseballers  Play  Host  To  Delaware  Here  Today  At  3:30 


Tar  Heels  Open  Homej  UNC  Golfers 
Slate  With  3-2  Mark!  i^^f'^?'*;*" 

Today  At  Two 


By  BILL  KING 

After  a  refreshing  week  of 
Florida  sunshine,  the  Carolina 
baseball  team  is  all  set  to  open 
its  1957  home  schedule  this  after- 
noon as  Coach  Walter  Rabb's  club 
plays  host  to  the  University  of 
Delaware  at  3:30  p.m.  in  Emerson 
Stadium. 

As  a  result  of  th«  Florida  trip, 
the  Tar  Heels  now  boast  a  3-2 
record.  During  their  tenure  in  the 


eral  adjustments.  I'll  probably  be 
switching  the  lineup  around  a 
good  bit." 

The  Tar  Heel  coach  was  pleased 
with  the  over  all  performance  of 
his  pitching  staff.  "Pitching  as  a 
whole  was  good,"  commented 
Rabb.  "Joe  Morgan  was  a  little 
wild  but  I  think  he'll  come  around 
all  right." 

Asked  if  he  knew  anything 
about  Delaware.  Rabb  answered: 
"I  think  they  have  a  good  club, 
sunny  south   they   defeated   Flori- 1  xhev  beat  us  here  last  season  but 


da.  and   spi'it   doublebeaders   with 
Ohio   State   and    Rollins. 

Rabb  sent  his  squad  through 
workouts  yesterday  in  Emerson 
Stadium.  He  seemed  to  be  well 
pleased  with  the  Tar  Heels  ef- 
forts in  Florida.  "The  trip  was 
long  and  tiring."  he  remarked,  j 
•but  it   was  pretty   profitable." 

The  loss  of  number  one  catch- 
er Jim  Love  last  week  was  a  big 
blow  to  the  Tar  Heels  and  because 
of  that   Rabb  savs  that  he'll  have  ' 


Duke    beat    them    the    other   day 
6-3." 

Rabb's  pitching  choice  this 
afternoon  will  be  sophomore  left- 
hander Charlie  Cross.  Cross  was 
not  in  school  last  last  season  but 
had  a  fine  record  as  a  freshman 
in   1955. 

Rounding  out  the  starting  line- 
up for  Carolina  will  be  Dave  Leg- 
gotXo  catching.  Carson  Oldham  at 
lirst.  Don  Lewis  at  second.  Roger 
Honeycutt  at  short,  and  Church 
to  juggle  his  lineup  quite  fre-  j  Hartman  at  third.  In  the  outfield, 
quently.  "Lack  of  a  number  one  Rabb  will  send  Joe  Shook  to  left, 
catcher."  stated  Rabb."  is  going  Dick  Hudson  to  center,  and  Bomb- 
to  causp  us  to  have  to  make  sev-    er  Hill  to  right. 


North  Carolina's  defending  ACC 
champion  golfers  face  another 
stiff  intersectional  challenge  to- 
day when  they  meet  the  Big  Red 
from  Cornell  University  at  2  p.m. 
on  Finley  Course. 

The  Tar  Heels,  rated  as  the 
team  to  beat  in  the  conference, 
opened  their  1957  campaign  Mon- 
day with  a  13-13  tie  with  power- 
ful Rollins  College.  Rollins  was 
the  only  team  to  beat  Carolina 
last  season. 

Tommy  Langley.  a  newly  re- 
turned Navy  veteran  .held  down 
the  top  slot  against  Rollins  with 
junior  Gene  Lookahill  at  number 
two.  But  the  match  medalist  was 
fourth  man  Sam  Patrick  with  a 
71. 

Roufiding  out  the  UNC  starting 
sextet  today  will  be  Buck  Adams 
at  number  thriee,  Walt  Summer- 
ville  at  five  and  Gal  Mitchell  at 
six. 


Netters  Lose  To  Kdlamazoo; 
Meet  Williams  Here  Today 


Kalamazoo    College    all    but    de-    set  in  sweeping  the  doubles  mat- 
molished  the  Carolina  tennis  team   ches. 
yesterday  on  the  varsity  courts  as  i 

they  roared  to  a  9-C  whitewash  de-  Kalamazoo  number  one  man  Us 
cision  over  the  undermanned  Tar  Dodson.  a  highly  regarded  young- 
Heels.  I  ster  who  carried  Aussie  Davis  Cup- 
The  touring  netters  from  the  per  Lew  Hoad  to  extra  sets  this 
state  of  Michigan  breezed  through    ^„^^^^      ^^ipped     through     his 

match  with  UNC's  Steve  Bank.  6-3. 
6-0.  Bank  said  after  the  match 
that  he  was  still  somewhat  both- 
ered by  the  ankle  sprain  he  suf- 
fered against  George  Washington 
last    week. 


the  singles  matches  with  straight 
set    victories,  •and    only    lost    one 

CH  Tennis  Club 
Defeats  Frosh 


Geoff  Black 
two    man.    put    up    a    stiff    fight 
against   Mike   Beal.  Black   extend- 
ed his  rival  to  10-8  in  losing  the 
over    the    weekend    with    Marshall    f-.^j  ^^^    ^^^  ^.^pp^  ^^e  second. 


The  Chapel  Hill  Tennis  Club  de- 
feated  the  Carolina   freshmen   8-1 


liams  College,  and  Friday  Mary- 
land. 

The  summaries; 

Singles:  Dodson,  (K),  defeated 
Bank,  6-3,  66-3;  Beal(K),  defeat- 
ed Black,  10^,  6-1;  Schram,  (K), 
defeated  Livingstone.  8-6,  6-2; 
Vapinga,  (K),  d^teated  Newsome. 
7-5,  6-1;  Brice,  (K),  defeated  Van 
Winkle.  6-1,  6-1;  Yuell.  (K),  de- 
feate(l  Smith,  6-3,  6-0. 

Doubfes:  Dodson  and  Beal,  (K), 
defeated  Bank  and  Newsome.  6-3. 
3-6.  6-3;  Schram  and  Vapinga, 
(K).  defeated  Blatk  and  Living- 
Carolina's  number  i  stone.  6-2,  6-1;  Brice  and  Yuell, 
(K).  defeated  Walker  and  Stewart. 
6-4.    6-1. 


Howard  Johnson  Restaurant 

BREAKFAST 

LUNCH 

DINNER  « 

SNACKS 
"Landmark  For  Hungry  Tarheels" 


King  Of  The  Khyber  Rifles 

Tyron  Powers  —  Terry  Moore  —  Michael  Rennie 

TODAY 
ONLY 


^/tecetre' 


NCAA  Swimming  Meet 
Begins  Here  Thursday 


By  STEWART  BIRD 

License  tags  from  many  states, 
foreign  to  the  usual  Chapel  Hill 
scene,  are  becoming  more  numci- 
ous  every  day  as  the  advance 
guard  of  fifty-seven  Collegiate 
swimming  teams  arrive  for  the 
34th  annual  nation  collegiate 
championships  to  be  staged  at 
Bowman   Gray   Pool   beginning   at 


All  the  riotous  fun  of 
the  stage  comedy  hit! 


MARLON 


M  G-M  presents 

mClMMASCOK 

and  Metrocoloi 


TOE  TB^iHOUSe 

OFfNE 

EDDIE  ALBERT 

.-.  Paul  ford  •  JUN  N£G»M! 

ijiKO  ifimm  ■  MiTsuKO  skwumuri 
OPENS   TODAY 


Carolina 


I  seven     o'clock    Thursday    evening 
i  and      lasting     through      Saturday 

night. 
j 
j      Three  teams,  Iowa  State,  Texas. 

I  and  SMU  have  arrived  and  were 
j  hard    at   work   getting   the   travel 
'  kinks    out    yesterday   afternoon   at 
!  the    pool.    The    remaining    squads 
'  were  due  to  arrive  last  night  and 
i  throughout  the  day  today,  with  » \ 
I  final    total    of    approximate^"    550  j 
swimmers  making  camp  in  Chapel  i 
!  Hill  and  the  surrounding  area  for  j 
j  the  ni'Xt  few  days.  ) 

I      Due    to    the    fierceness    of    the  '• 
competition,  a  NCAA  champion  is 
1  usually    a    graduating   senior,   but ' 
'this  year  two  men  will  return   toj 
defend  their  titles.   Their  chancej 
of  successfully  doing  so  are  quite 
dark,    however.    First   returnee   toj 
show  his  wu-es  will  be  Rex  Aub- 
rey   of  Yale,  who   last  year  tied ' 
with'  Robin  Moore  of  Stanford  in 
the  50  yard  freestyle.  Moore  will 
be  unable  to  compete  due  to  knee 
injuries      suffered      in      football. 
Three   swimmers    have    turned    in ' 
times  this  year  tying  the  Eli  star's  j 
time  in  the  1956  NCAA'->\  A  mere 
slip  in  this  short  dash  could  see  a 
new  champion.  One  of  three  dou- 
ble event  winners  of  last  year.  Bill 
Woolsey  of  Indiana,  is  back  to  de- 
fend his  220  and  440  yard  free- 
style titles.  His  title  in  the  220  1? 
in    definite    jeopardy,    jrith    Dick 
Hanley,      sensational      sophomore 
from  Michigan  and  George  Morr^ 
of  Iowa,  having  beaten  him  in  dual 
meets  this  year,  but  only  by  a  few 
tenths  of  a  second. 

Action  will  open  at  seven 
o'clock  Thursday  night  with  twen- 
ty-four swimmers  vieing  for  the 
1500  meter  freestyle  crown.  Meet 
favorite  Yale  has  three  men  head- 
ing the  list  of  the  meteric  mile 
aspirants. 


Beafty  And  Scurlock 
Get  2nds  At  Cleveland 

UNC  track  stars  Jim  Beatty 
and  Oave  Scurlock  came  home 
with  a  pair  of  second  places 
from  the  Cleveland  indoor  meet 
last  Friday  night. 

•••tty  finished  10  yards  be- 
hind Ron  Delaney  in  the  mile 
run,  while  Scurlock  trailed 
Arnie  Sowell  by  only  three 
yards  in  the  1,000  yard  run  De- 
ianey's  winning  time  was  4:10.4, 
while  Sowell's  was  1:12.2.  it  was 
the  final  meet  of  the  indoor  sea- 
son* 


PATRONIZE  YOUR 
•    ADVERTISiRS    • 


el«s«l«  ali'lpa* 


by  Gant  Of  New  Haven 


In*  Mm 
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ciMiractfritlic  it 
N«w  Eaeloktf'i 

A  fliirf  wWk  Hw 

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fabrir  tf  tfUmh»4 


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mit4  caMar  katlaa  aa 

•allar  back.  Availalila 

i*  BMnaa-^rva 

Catlar  wMi  lytt 

^^9  mfJKp^  ■••^•» 


;julian' 


Happcr   winning    the    kine    matcl 
for  the  frosh. 

Th?  summary: 

Singles.  Norman  Sarrard  (CH) 
defeated    Ben    Keys.    6-4.   6-4. 

Marshall  Happer  (F)  defeated 
Henry    Clark.    3-6.    6-1.    6-3. 

John      Tapley      (CH) 
Walker  Lockett.   1-6,  6-3.  6-2. 

Dudley  Cowden  (CH)  defeated 
Dave  Myers.  6-1.  6-0.    * 

Ted  Sharpless  (CH)  defeated 
Bob  Mallins.  6-0.  6-1. 

Herb  Reichert  (CH)  defeated 
Jack  Macy.  8-6.  6-4. 

Doubles:  Sarrard  and  Sharpless 
(CH)  defeated  Keys  and  Hopper, 
6-2.    1-6,   6-4. 

Clark  and  Tapley  defeated 
Lockett    and   Mallins,   7-5.   62. 

Cowden  and  Jordon  (CH)  de- 
feated Salinger  and  Myers.  6-2. 
6-1. 


6-1.  Number  three  and  four  men 
Frank  Livingston  and  Ray  New- 
seme  each  pushed  their  opponents 
into  extra  games  before  bowing. 

Carolina  opened  their  season  last 
Thursday  by  beating  George  Wash- 
defeated  ;  ington.   6-3.   They  will   see  action 
today  and  tomorrow  against  Wil- 


Senators  Whip  A's 

ORL.\NIK),  Fit.  —  (AP)  — 
Harmon  Killebrew,»  smashed  a 
grand  slarn  home  run  for  Wash- 
ington yesterday  as  the  Senators 
overcame  the  Kansas  City  Ath- 
letics 8-7  dcipite  four  homers  by 
tihe  losers. 


SOUND 
AND  FURY 

To  Run  Three  Nights 

Sata- March  30 
Sun. -March  31       r 
Moria  -  April  1   .    ' 


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•       UNC  UNC     -       ,    UNC 

CONGRATULATIONS  TO  THE  NATION  S 
NO.  1  BASKETBALL  TEAM  AND  COACHES 


Our  hearts  go  out  to  the  gallant  young  men  and  coaches  who 
have  brought  fame  and  prestige  to  our  community  and  state. 
We  know  of  no  better  way  to  express  our  appreciation  than  to 

present  a 


STORE    WIDE    SALE 

ON  EVERYTHING  IN  THE  STORE  FOR 
THE  ENTIRE  COMMUNITY 

WEDNESDAY,  MARCH  27  THRU  SATURDAY,  MARCH  30 


m 


Off  Throughout  The  Store  On  Every 
#%  Dollar  You  Spend  Or  More 

Open  All  Day  Every  Wednesday 


BERMAN'S  DEPT.  STORE 


ll9  E.  Franklin  St. 


Established  Since  1914 
Chapel    Hill,  N,  C. 


Phone  6021 


WEATHER 

CiMdiM'  Md  mild  «rith  m  sk- 
#Ml«d  high  of  45. 


U  !l  C  LtB!^ART 
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Mtd 


TEXT 

Th«    propm%9d    r«vis«d    constitu* 
ti«n  •Tarti  en  p«««  2  today. 


VOL.  LVII  NO.  125 


Complete  UPi  Wirt  5«rvic« 


CHAPEL  HILL.  NORTH  CAROLINA,  THURSDAY,  MARCH  28,  1957 


Offices   in   Graham   Memortei 


SIX  PAGES  THIS  ISSUE 


Bass  For  Salary 
Sloan  For  Frank 


Increase; 
Editorials 


Neil  Bass,  siUd  yesterday  lie 
•"would  do  ever>ihing  within  my 
power  to  combat  ...  the  'intellec- 
tual migration'  from  the  Univer- 
sity, were  I  elected  .editor  of  your 
student  newspaper/' 

Bass,,  candidate  for  Daily  Tar 
Heel  editor,  citing  a  speech  made 
by  student  body  President  Bob 
Young  on  the  migration  of  profes- 
sors from  UNC  due  to  •  mcreased 


CHARLIE  SLOAN 

...  for  editorial  freedom 

.salary  inducement,"  said  he  felt 
"strongly  that  faculty  members 
shtfuld  and  must  be  adequately 
paid.' 

At  the  same  time  Ba.ss'  oppo- 
nent Charlie  Slcan  expressing  his 
ediUifiai  policy  view,  said  he 
wcyld  "comment  in  the  two  edl- 
ioriftl  columtis  on  issue  ■  as  I  see 
them  not  as  I  think  a  majority  of 
the  student  body,  sees  them.'"  , 


Saying  that  The  Daily  Tar  Heel  , 
'editorship  "is  a  service  position. '  j 
j  Slcan  qualified  the  duty  of  the  | 
!  editor  a^  one  in  which  "'the  edi- 
'  tor  should  not  say  only  what  the  j 
I  :,tudei;ts  enjoy  hearing.  He  can  do  j 
'  a  far  greater  service  at  times  by  j 
'  writing  about  issues  students  find  j 
I  unpleasant  in  print."  j 

,  Bass  said  also  it  was  the  candi- 
rlate's  duty  to  "present  his  stand  ! 
hn  important  issues  to  the  cam- 
pus. If  a  candidate  runs  out  ofi 
icnvictions  and  stands,  he  a-hould  j 
not  turn  to  splitting  hairs  and  hag-  j 
yjling  with  his  opponents.'' 

"This   I   will    never    do.    I   shall 
strive  to  present  my  views  to  you  | 
as  students  and  leave  the  ultimate 
decision  in  your  hands,"  he  said,  j 
"Like      my      opponent      Charlie 
31oan.    I    compliment    the    paper'i 
pre  -.nt  stalf.  They  are  a  conscien-  j 
lious  gi'oup.  i 

But  they  are  not  large  enough  ' 
in  number  to  comprehensively  ] 
j^ver  the  campus  as  it  should  b3 
■:c\  ercd.  No  one  person,  myself 
•ncludid,  can  do  justice  toward  re- 
porting dormitory,  fraternity  and 
sorority  news  even  halfway  thor- 
tughly,"  he  said. 

j       i    hope   the    fulfillment    of    my 

I  duties,  as  columnist  and  political 
(.eporter,  throughout  the  last  thrc.> 
.»t'ais  has  met  with  ti'ie  approval  of 
you  as  student,-." 

"Vote  for  the  candidate  of  your 
choice  April  2.  Shouhl  I  meet  with  j 
your  approval  and  should  y.ui  elect ' 
me  your  student  editor.  I  shall 
ahvay.s  strive,  within  limitations 
of  my  Gud-given  ability,  to  give 
you  the  type  paper  you  deserve 
and  will  be  proud  of,"  Bass  said. 

the  medicine  just  to  antagonize  a 


group  of  students,"  he  said.  "He 
should  say  things  that  have  to  be 
aaid-  even     though     the    students 

Elaborating  on  the  duties  of  the 
editor,  Sloan  said  the  "two  edi- 
torial columns  on  page  two  are  set 
fkside  for  the  editor.  If  he  sees 
that  the  fiudents  need  some  bit- 
ler  medicine  he  should  give  them 
a  dose,  but  he  should  not  create 
don't  want  to  read  it — even  at  the 
risk  of  making  enemies." 

"I  am  a  blunt  person  I  think 
the  medicine  I  mentioned  in  the 
atwve  paragraph  goes  down  easier 
and  faster  if  it  i„'  not  sugar-coat- 
ed " 

"On  Ihe  rest  of  ^he  editorial 
page  any  student  who  wants  to 
express  himself  on  a  subject  may 
;!o  so.  The  only  limits  on  this  will 
be  taste,  space  and  timeliness," 
ZNaid  Sloan. 


nevs 

m 
brief 


Beck  Denounced 


(AP) 


WASHINGTO  N— 
Teamster  titan  Dave  Beck,  a  Fifth- 
Amendment  witness,  wound  up 
an  initial  appearance  before  sell- 
ate  rackets  probers  Wednesday 
under  scorching  denunciation  for 
"arrogant  contempt." 

Before  senators  talking  ff 
"theft"  of  union  funds,  the  pre$|l-| 
dent  of  the  powerful  Internation- 
al Teamsters  Union  had  repeabi 
edly  .sought  refuge  behind  th<i , 
Fifth  Amendment  on  all  sorts  of 
questions. 


Organized  Anti-Negro' 
Problem  To  Be  Ended  In 
Fifty  Years,  Says  Malin 

Urges  'Equality  Of  Low' 
In  Progress  Of  Outcome 


Cooper,  Yates 
Courcit  Clerks 

The  new  clerk  and  alternate 
..lerk  of  Men's  Honor  Council  were 
announeed  yesterday  by  out-going 
chairman  Jim  Exum. 

Gai->-  Cooper,  a  J-ising  .^^eni'jr. 
will  serve  as  clerk  and  TuckCi- 
Yate  •.  a  rising  junior,  will  serve 
as  alternate  clerk. 

George  Ragsdale  s  selection  as 
•^hairman  of  the  group  was  an- 
nounced earlier. 

Cocpor,  from  Salisbury,  has, been 
a  member  of  the  past  council. 

Yates,  from  Asheboro,  has  been 
fn  the  council  since  the  fall  elec- 
tions. 


Bulganin  Hits  Talks 

MOSCOW  — (AP)—  Soviet  Pre- 
mier Bulganin  asserted  Wednes-« 
dav  night  President  Eisenhower 
and  Prime  Minister  Macmillan 
plotted  further  "subversive  and 
provocative"  actions  against  Com* 
munist  countries  in  their  Bermu- 
da talks. 

He  said  the  Bermuda  Confer- 
ence was  aimed  at  renewing  the 
•old   war  against   Communism. 


Polling  Places  j 
For  £i^tk>n  \ 
Are  AjflHdtlnced 

Tlie  loeati  n  of  all  polling 
pljcts  tor  the  April  2  ebction  was 
announced  yesterday  by  the  Elec- 
tions Board. 

Polling  places  and  ballot  boxes 
as  named  in  district  by  Arthur 
Sobel.  Elections  Board  vice- 
chairman,  are  as  follows: 

Residents  of  Kenan  Dorm  wilf 
vote  in  MclVer. 

Residents  cf  Connor  will  vote 
in  Winston. 

Residents  of  Emerson  Stadium 
will  vote  in  Ruffin. 

Residents  of  Memorial  Hall  and 
all  other  university  owner  build- 
ings will  vote  in  Old  East. 

Men's  Dormitory  Districts  are 
as  follows: 

•Dorm  Men's  I:   Cobb. 
,    -Dorm   Men's  U:   Stacy.  Everett. 
Graham,  Lewis,,  .^cock. 

D.rm  Men's  III:  Connor,  Alex- 
ander and  Winston. 

Dm-m  Men's  IV:  Joyner.  Man- 
gum,  Manley,  Gritnes,  Ruffin.  and 
Em^«on   Stadium; 

Dpnji  Men's  V:  Old  East,  Old 
W  e  s  t,  Battle  -  Vance  •  Pettigrew. 
Steele.  Whitehead.  Memorial  Hall. 

Town  Men's  distflcts  are  as  fol- 
lows: 

Town  Men's  I:  Carolina  Inn, 
Town  Men's  II:  Scuttlebutt,  Town 
Mien's  III:  Graham  Memorial, 
Town  Men's   IV:   Victory   Village. 

Town  wcmen  will  vote  in  Ger- 
rard  Hail,  said  Sobel.  They  will 
"be  composed  of  all  women  not  liv- 
ing in  University  owned  buildings 
and  those  living  in  scrority  houses. 
The  women's  dormitory  district 
wiir  be  compose*  cf  all  those  liv- 
ing in  University  ownad  buildings. 


New  ChanceUor  Likeci 
By  Va.  Law  Students 


What  kind  of  teacher  is  Chan- 
cellcr-elect    William    B.    Aycock?    : 

It  appears  that  the  law  students 
at  the  University  of  Virginia  have 
a  high  appreciation  for  Profes- 
sor .'\ycock,  who  is  en  leave  from 
\jyiC  this  year  and  is  a  visiting 
profes.sor  of  law  in  Charlottes- 
ville. 

The  Virginia  law  classes  have 
discovered  in  Aycock  the  same 
fire  and  enthu.siasm  and  scholar- 
ship that  has  characterized  his 
classroom  leadership  in  Chapel 
Hill.  j 

Here  is  what  the  editors  of  the 
Virginia  Law  Quarterly  say  about 
him:  j 

"The    Law    School    has    indeed 


Faced  Excommunjcatiofi 

PRAGUE  —  (AP).  —  Olympic 
"hampinn  Har  Id  Connolly  faced 
ip  to  excommunication  by  the 
Toman  Catholic  Church  and  mar- 
••ied  his  Protestant  sweetheart. 
Olga  Fiktova.  in  three  ceremon- 
ies that  blocked  traffic  in  ancient 
Prague  Wednesday.  j 

The  east-west  romance  which, 
budded  in  the  1956  Olympii*' 
ganws  at  Melbourne  led  them, 
through  civil.  Catholic  and  Pro*| 
testant  marriage  ceremonies  be-: 
fore  sympathetic  throngs  in  this, 
capital  of  Communist  Czecho«k>-j 
vakia. 


By  GRAHAM  SNYDER 

.An  end  to  "(trganized  .tnti-.Xejjfro  relations  by  tlie  end 
ol  the  lioth  century'  was  predicted  here  last  night  bv  Patrick 
Murphy  Malin. 

HinginjT   his   hoj^e   on    the   "great  progress    made   .since 
(Stii  toward  getting  rid  ol  intensectional  and  racial  troubles," 

#Malin  said  that  the  "national  pro- 

jf^  •   jr^      f  -        ft  I.  *       '  blem"   of  racial   relation..-  can    be 

LJl  l/Gl  GOf  S  ihl       j  ended  'if  we  go  on  by  the  variety 

of  reason  and  by  the  speed  which 

!n  Annual  Meet r^'jf     ,    ,,    „„„ 

Mahn,  speaking  in  Carroll  Hall 
under  Carolina  Forum  sponsorship, 


Tuesday  Night 


Spring  Finally  Arrived 


Spring,  which  officially  began  last  Wednesday,  finally  put  in  a 
f»ed  appearance  here  yesterday.  The  coed  shown  above,  pictured 
last  week  during  the  unspringlike  weather,  was  probably  able  to 
•niey  the  pretty  blossoms  a  little  bit  more  now.  She  is  Miss  Sarah 
J.  Crivrferd,  an  Alpha  Gamma  Delta  from  Raleigh«. 


TO  STUDENT  BODY: 


Advisor  System  Serious 
t^rohlemr  States  Bawn 


The  agreements, 
National  -Assembly,  were  made 
between  *im  and  Secretary  of. 
State  Dulles  in  Washington  last 
month. 


Students  Unable  To  Vote 
May  Get  Absentee  Ballots 

students  unable  to  vote  in  the 
April  2  campus  elections  may  .^c- 
ciu-e  absentee  ballots  by  contact- 
ing the  student  government  office 
before  6  pm.  Friday. 

They  <may  contact  Ralph  Cum- 
mings  or  Arthur  Sobel. 


been  fcrtunate  to  have  Prof.  Wil- 
liam B.  Aycock  as  a  visiting  pro- 
t'?>-sv)r  for  this  session.  Students 
in  his  cla.sses  have  been  much 
impressed  by  the  clarity  and  dy- 
namic quality  of  his  delivery.  His 
enthusiasm  for  his  subject  is  in- 
fectious anff  breathes  life  even 
into  th?  dullest  legal  theories. 

"The  breadth  and  depth  of  his 
knowledge  are  as  impressive  as 
his  ability  to  present  it.  His  dis- 
courses on  the  law  are  punctu- 
ated by  a  ready  wit  which  focuses 
interest    on   his   problem.  | 

"Prof.     Aycock     was     appointed  j 
chancellor    of    the    University    ofi 
North  Carolina  at  Chapel  Hill  last  I 
month.    The    position    of   chancel-  j  jj^p^  captured 
lor  is  equivalent  to  that  of  presi-, 
dent   cf  most   universities.   A  man 
of   broad    background,    knowledge 
and    experience   has    been   chosen 
for  that  high  office. 
■  "We  extend  our  congratulations 
to  Chancellor  Aycock  for  his  new 
appointment,    and    we    are    happy 
thai  he  will  complete   the  semes- 
ter here  at  the  Uw  School."  '      (see  WORLD  NEWS,  page  5.) 


US  Has  Reneqed 

-  PARTS    — (AP)—  -rrm^gn 

Ister    Christian   PtnWrtf  Mrtd   Ww! 

ncsdav   the  United   States  had  re-j  j      .     ■ 

*    ,.         .        ,tu '       University     Party      presidential 
neged  on  agreements  it  made  with;  '"  T     n-n   o  ^  «r  ^„„ 

^  ^44.^.^.»oi    n*    Tci>a«ii   candidate  Bill   Baum  said  Wednes- 

France    on    witndrawal    of    Israeli    .         ^         ,  ..  .        .  , 

c  »  4U«    r-„„    ct-i^    -_H   day,  "One  of  the  most  serious  prob- 

forces    from    the    Gaza    Strip    and  ^  ^^^.    ^^^   ^^^.^^  ^^^  ^^^^^^^^  ^^^^_ 

""  ^      "  rineau  told  the ,  *-  ^^e  need  for  certain  changes  in 

the    adviser    and    pre-registration 


4: 


systems  now  being  used  by  the 
University." 

Baum  said  he  arrived  at  this  con- 
clusion after  talking  with  several 
hundred  students  during  the  cam- 
paign period. 

He  said  "This  is  particularly  true 
in  the  college  of  Arts  and  Sciences, 


Troops  Close  IH 

j      TEHRAN,    Iran    — (AP)—    Im- 
i  perial   troops  with  camel  cavalry 

and  police  Wednesday  night  were !  where  there  have  been  some  ca.vos 

I  reported   closing    in   on   a    desert   of   students   being   closed   out   of 

i  bandit  gang  that  killed  two  Ameri- 1  required  prerequisite  courses  and 

can    aid    officials    and    kidnaped  not  having  t)een  advised  correctly 

the  wife  of  one.  j  concerning   coiu-ses    necessary    for 

Officials   speculatetl    that    some  j  tjjejr  particiUar  degree.  ' 
of    the    gang    may    already    have   UNAVOIDABLE 

"This  has  been  unavoidable  in 
most  cases,  for  the  administration 
has  done  a  commendable  job  con- 
•idering  the  complexity  of  the  reg 
istration  procedui-e. 


"I  would  suggest  that  each  year, 
prior  to  preregistration,  depart- 
mental advisers,  college  advisers, 
heads  of  the  departments  and  the 
dean  of  Artj  and  Sciences  meet  to 
coordinate  policy  regarding  re- 
quirements and  registration  pro- 
cedure,'"  Baum  said 

Baum  recommended  that  the  ad- 
ministration consider  allowing  de- 
partment heads  to  prepare  yearly 


5-aid  that  progress  toward  solving 
Kegro  relations  will  continue,  as 
long  as  "the  American  idea  of  talk- 
ing the  problem  out.  which  has 
taken  hold"  continues. 

Malin,  as  Elxecutive  Director  of 
the  American  Civil  Liberties  Un-f 
the   will    of    his  *'^"'  said  he  wa.-  divided  in  opinion ' 
,  over    the    civil    rights    legislation 
now  l>efore  Congress. 

He  said  that  although  the  "fed- 
eral government  is  partly  ham- 
(^itrung"  by  failure  of  Southern 
judges  and  juries  to  deliver  in- 
dictments where  evidence  is  pre- 
sented, the  use  of  the  injunction  to 
carry  the  case  to  Federal  judges 
departs  from  freedom  of  "equaUty 
before  the  law. 

Malin  said  that  he  believed  that 
;  **tiie  eventual  outcome"  of  Negro 
1  delations  was  decided  in  1900  when 
'the  South,  degded  to  rise  «trt-»t 
thews  (Phi)  countered  by  saying ;  «»'*^<?"'tural  imp«>veri^ment,  to  be- 
that  the  represenJative  should  be  cme  industriaJIy  prosperous."  To 
guided  by  his  own  conscience.  He    *^^   ^^^'   Malin   said,    "It   was,   and 

stlil  is  necessary  to  have  a  skifled 


By  PRiNGLE   PIPKIN 

Arguing    affirmatively,    the    dia-j 
lectic  Senate  defeated  the  Philan- ' 
thropic  Assembly  Tuesday  night  in 
the  annual   Di-Phi   debate   on   the 
question,     "that    a  .  representative 
should   abide    by 

electcrate."  '  '       i 

In    his   six    minute    opening    ad- 
dress Senator   Stan  Shaw  (Di)  in  ! 
troduced       the       resolution       and 
argued  that  a  man  in  government 
is  the  duly  elected   representative ! 
ol  the  people.  ' 

He  .-aid  the  best  way  to  in.sure 
the  people  obey  the  laws  is  to  have 
them  make  them.  "The  represen 
tative  should  have  an  idea  of  how 
the  electorate  feels."  he  conclud- 
ed. 

CONSCIENCC 
^rpresemative     Lawrence     Mat- 


questioned  the  ab'ility  of  the  rep- 
resentatives to  determine  ihe  will 
of  the  electorate  and  the  ability  ol 
the  electorate  to  advise  the  repre- 
sentatives. 

Senator  Pat  Adams  ^aid  "if  you 
believe  in  democracy  you  must 
agree  with  the  affirmative."  He 
said   there   was   an   educated   elec- 


(see  MALIN.   page   5. 


a  list  of  courses  required  for  each  j  torate  capable  of  makinglresponsi- 
riegrce   in  their  departments.  The ,  ble  decisions.  * 


Three  Killed 

I  KAMPALA,  Uganda  — .(AP)— 
j  Three  Sudan  officials  and  two 
I  other  persons  were  killed  on  the 

Uganda  Sudan  border  Tuesday  in 
i  an  ambush  cf  a  Sudanese  district 

commissioner's   party,   the   British 


lists  would  then  be  sent  to  each 
of  the  college  and  departmental  ad- 
visers. ! 

i 
He   also  recommended   that   the  { 

student  government  worK  with  the  ] 
administration    and   the   Office   of 
Central  Records  to   make  it   po^-si- 
ble   for  students    needing   specific 
prerequisites     in     pre-dental     and 
pre-medicine  progi-ams  to  be  given  : 
special   preference    in   class   ticket ; 
distribution. 

"I  will  offer  this  plan,  if  elected, 
"However,,"  he  said  "if  elected  ]  to  the  Faculty  Committee  on  Reg 
president  of  the  student  body,  1 ,  istration  and,  as  has  been  true  in 
would  like  to  work  with  the  ad-  ]  the  past,  I  believe  student  govern- 
ministration  to  help  clear  up,  as  ment  will  receive  their  co-opera- 
much  as  possible,  this  particular  ticn  in  seeing  these  revi.,-ions 
problem."  I  through,"   Baum  concluded. 


Three  To  Run 
For  Council 
President 

Tom  Waiters,  Paul  Carr  and  Al 
Alphin   have   been   nominated  for 


IN  SOUND  AND  FURY  STARTING  SATURDAY 


Counselor  Applications 
Must  Be  In  By  April  9 

Oiientation  Cbairrttan  Jerry  Op- 
penheimer  said  Wednesday  in  or- 
d.T  to  become  a  counselor  in  the 
1^7  Orien  ation  program,  inter- 
<  ed  students  intt»t  sabmit  an  »p- 
pUcation  form  U^  the  YMCA  of 
(.-raham  Memorial  by  April  9. 

On  that  date  tt  7:30  p.m..  he 
eaid,  all  applicants  will  be  given 
a  lest  on  the  maiterial  contained  in 
the  1956  Orientatiw  Manual. 
These  manuals  have  been  placed 
in  the  Wilson  Library.  Graham  Me- 
morial and  the  YMCA.. 


Arguing  negatively,  Repr<*senta- 
tive  Jim  Tolbert  claimed  it  is  "a 
gross  folly  to  assume  that  the  elec- 1  P'-^s'd^"^  oi  Inter-Dormitory  Coun- 
cil, according  to  Sonny  Hallford. 
chairman  of  the  IDC  nominating 
committee. 

Bob  Carter,  .<5ophomore,  and  Bill 
McGe2.  junior,  are  the  vice  pres- 
idential   candidates. 

Secretarial  nominees  are  Neil 
BenQ,?r.  s  phomore.  and  Jimmy 
Womble,   junior. 

Candidates  for  treasurer  are 
Mike  Hayes,  sophomore,  and  Don 
Eudy,  junior. 

Frahk  Brown,  sophomore,  and 
Craig  Gibbons,  sr  phomore,  are 
candidates  for  chairman  of  ID 
Court. 

Clerk  of  ID  Court  candidates 
are  Pat  Leonard,  Junior,  and 
Joel    D'immette,   freshman. 

The  nominating  committee  was 
composed  of  Hallford,  Steve  Lyon, 
Julius  Baniet,  Neil  Bass,  Teddy 
Jones,  and  Den  Matkins. 

"I  Would  like  to  point  out  that 
the  floor  will  still  be  open  for  oth- 
er  nominations."   Hallford   stated. 

The  election  date  is  Apirl  3,  7 
p.m.,  in  the  Phi  Assembly  Hall. 
IDC  awards  and  IDC  Council 
awards  will  also  be  presented  at 
that  time. 


torate  is  always  right.  He  felt  the 
representative  should  lead,  inform 
and  correct  the  electorate.  "After 
election  day  the  representative 
.hould  do  what  he  believes  right," 
he  ended. 

Senator  Eugene  Whitehead  said 
the  government  was  originally 
founded  as  a  republic,  but  now 
the  people  had  more  education 
they  could  better  govern  them 
selves.  "A  representative  is  moral- 
ly bound  to  reflect  the  will  of  the 
•Jlectorate,"  he  claimed. 

Representative     Don     Jacobs 
(s^c    DI    WINS,    page    5.) 


m  THE  INFIRMARY 

Shid*nt«li^h«lnfimiJryyM^ 


WEEKEND  COLLEGE   STUDENT 

.  ,  .  flrod  Pepper  Tice 


BALKAN  PIAST 

sifpkagiwre  Jimmy  Thompson 


Photos  By  Fred  Powledge 


THE  HOOD 

junior  Ken  Cailender 


Verday  included: ' 

MIm  Sarah  Parker  and  Benton 
Beard,  Alan  Davis,  Howard 
WelM,  Sanford  Thompson,  Ba- 
rius  Herring,  Roy  Cashion,  Jack 
Lawlna,  John  Solomon,  Gerald 
Soddrath,  Jets*  Burnem,  Alfred 
Dcen,  Norman  Draper,  Tate 
Robertson,  Thomas  Saboski,  El- 
liott Solomon,  Hubert  Shcrpe, 
CurtU  Fields,  William  Smith, 
William  Laftin,  Joseph  Hewett, 
William  Thompson,  William 
Ruth,  Rokart  Schoize,  John  Har- 
ris, Otis  Banks,  Fred  Phillips 
and  Jamas  Whit*. 


Mot  TWO 


THt  DAILY  TAR  Hlfl 


THURSDAY,  MARCH  21,  1957 


A  List  Of  Qualifications        HERE,  in  co/wpiete  text: 
For  Campus  Office-Seekers 


For  spring  candidates  who  do  not  already  have  one,  we  pubUsh  this 
abridofed  list  of  qualifications  for  office-seekers: 

1.  He  must  know  how  to  construct  a  parking  lot. 

2.  He  must  have  .at  his  finger-tips,  lists  of  SQwrces  within  the  Ui»i- 
versity  where  money  supposedly  could  be  got.  It  is  preferable  tha^  thos^ 
places  be  somewhat  obscure,  so  no  one  can  contracblct  the  candidate. 

•?.     He  must  have  a  working  Imiowledge  of  traffic  patterns,  as  well 
as  a  majority  behind  him  on  the 
Town    Board  of  Aldermen. 

}.  He  nmst  have  access  to  all 
future  physical  plans  of  the  Uni- 
versity, as  well  as  thckse  di  the 
town,  and  he  must  exercise  the 
veto  power  over  all  policy-making 
gioups,^  of  both  organizations,  as 
well  as  dittatori^j^  power  over 
same.  ,   ^■ 

5.  He  must  know  intimately 
the  problems  of  dormitory  men, 
fraternity  men,  dormitory  women, 
sorority  women,  in-town  men,  in- 
town  women,  transfer  students, 
athletes  and  foreign  students.  He 
must  know  just  how  much  trash  a 
\'ic~lory  Village  wife  has  to  carry 
out  each  day  and  liow  many  steps 
It  takes  her  to  carry  it. 

6.  He  must  control  a  simple 
majority  of  the  North  Carolina 
Cieneral   .\ssembly. 

7.  He  must  have  a  friend  in 
the  federal  government's  finance 
corporation,  and  he  must  be  an 
expert  on  studer*  union  build- 
ings. J" 

8.  Above  all,  m  must  be  able 
to  talk  a  great  deal  and  say  very 
little.  He  must  have  three  hands, 
one    for   shaking   one   for    patting 

Uncle  Sam  On  A  Slow  Pony 


and  one  for  painting  posters  while 
not  stabbing. 

9.  Some  list^  include  a  plat- 
form as  the'  last  requirement,  but 
that  would  be  asking  a  little  too 
much,  we  fear. 

Illegal? 
Should  Be 
Enforced 

The  State  of  North  Carolina  has 
a  law  on  its  books  which  prohibits 
illegal  combination  in  restraint  of 
trade. 

How,  then,  can  dry-  cleaners  and 
barbers  get  away  with  what  they 
have  been  doing  a  long  time?  They 
have  3!  meeting  one  night,  and  the 
next  day  prices  rise  uniformly 
throughout  their  area. 

Gasoline  merchants,  too,  have 
been  known  to  raise  their  prices 
in  unison.  Shouldn't  the  State 
Bureau  of  Investigation,  the 
county  sheriffs'  departments  or 
the  local  police  be  doing  some- 
thing about  it? 


It  is  time  the  government  did 
sonieihiiig  right  about  the  mails. 
Nt)t  since  the  postmaster  gen- 
erals job  started  becoming  a  po- 
litical plumb  lias  Washington 
done  aiiv  noticeable  Avork  toward 
impro\ing  mail  service.  In  the 
mcantiine.  there  are  plenty  of 
giijxs  —  higher  paid  (i.e.,  Re- 
publitau-appdinted)  workers  got 
pay  raises,  but  the  pc^tal  workers 
in  lower  economic  brackets  got 
verv  little  muyi.  The  govern- 
ment helm  sulttidi/e  raittbads  that 
cany  theoBBSr^at  tfif  treat  the 
airlines    unfairly. 

And  the  common  old  letter  gets 
delivered  slower  and  slower  in  re- 
lation to  the  quickening  pace  of 
modem   life.  ^^ 

*  *liit  L         * 

^\'hy  can't  the  goijrennment  start 
a  plan — it  has  l«k:ted[  it  around 
some  time  —  oHUlIivering  all  let- 
ters the  fastest  way? 

This  woidd  probialj>ly  take  a 
slight  stamp  raise^  But  correspon- 
dents could  affot#  to  pay  one  or 
two  more  pennies  in  order  to  have 
their  letters  deli#red  the  quick- 
est way  possible.  ^  ' 

The  'quickest  my"'- would  mean 
airmail  if  an  atnbsiil  route  flies 
between  the  two  pouus  concern- 
ed. For  points  not  connected  by 
air.   trains  or  highway  post  offices 

The  DailytTar  Heel 

The  of'.ciai  iiudtiDi  pubUv^tion  of  tbe 
Publications  Bnjrd  <»t  tbe  University  of 
Karth  Carohna.  vr|||||e  it  ii  publisbed 
daily  except  iAonig^jin^  ex»muutiot 
and  vacation  periods  and  iijhpsmer  teriu 
Entered  as  second  clas»  oMtter  io  tbt 
ooat  office  in  Cbapel  Hill,  N.  C,  undei 
che  Act  oi  Marcb  9.  1870.  Subscription 
rates:  mailed,  $4  per  year,  $2.50  a  seaDea 
ter.  delivered.  $6  a  year.  $3.50  a  acme* 
ter 


editor 

FRED  POWJ..EDGI 

Managing  Editor     ^.- 

CLARKE  JONES 

News  Editor 

NANCY  HILL 

Sports  Editor 

-  LARJ^  CHEEI 

Btisioess  Manager  _ 

^   BILL  BOB  PEEL 

Advertising  Manager 

FRED  KATZIN 

EDITORIAL  STAJPF  —  Woody  Sean. 
Joey  Pai-ije.  Stan  Sbaw. 

NEWslTAFlF'-^r*lttiB?  Sa^er,  Bditb 
MacKiiinon,  Walter  Scbruntek,  Pringle 
Piplun,  Bob  Higb,  Jim  Purks,  Ban  Tay- 
lor, H.  Joost  Polak.  Patay  Miller,  Wal- 
ly  Kuralt,  Bill  King,  Curtis  Crotty. 


BUSINESS  STAFF 
Hobeck,  Jane 


.^ 


obn  Minter,  Marian 
John^  Whitaker. 


SPORTS  STAFF:  ^f*;,WiUt.  Stewart 
Bird,  Ron  KilUf  ^  '^ 


SuiMcriyUoo  II 
Clniilatioa  UiitM 
Anutam  Sportf 

III  ii 

Staff  Photpgr«p 
Norqun  Ka^tor 


DiU«  SUi«| 

Oiariie  Bolt 

King 


Woody  Sean, 


LibrariaJi8-_Sue  Gichner.  Marilyn  S^um 


Night  Editor 


Bill  Weeks 


or  mail  buses  could  expedite  the 
letters. 

While  a  lot  of  people  would 
gripe  about  paying  the  extra  one 
or  two  cents,  their  gripes  would 
soon  fade,  just  the  way  they  don't 
gripe  anymore  about  dropping  a 
dime  instead  of  a  nickle  into  the 
jukebox  or  paying  six  cents  for 
for  soft  drinks. 

The  mails,  long-neglected  cor- 
pus(  les  of  the  .\nierican  body, 
need  some  streamlining.  Airplanes 
are  the  b^tliiethods  of  doing  just 
that.  1T^     •**  •*         ^"^ 

Definition 
Is  Needed 
From  Solons 

Since  the  two  candidates  for  the 
student  lx)dy  presidency  have  by 
now  got  so  far  into  the  battle  that 
they  can't  drop  it,  we  would  bring 
up  a  question  of  prime  impor- 
tame. 

What,  candidates  Bauni  and 
F.vans.  is  the  office  of  student  body 
president? 

Wh.L  does  the  president  do?  For 
what  is  he  resj3onsible?  To  whom 
is  he  resfKjnsible?  Is  his  position 
like  that  of  the  President  of  the 
United  States,  or  of  the  governor 
of   North   Carolina,   or   what? 

Should  the  president  break  up 
panty  raids?  Should  he  take  it 
upon  himself,  when  he  isn't  in- 
\  ited,  to  appear  before  the  Board 
of  Trustees  to  state  the  students' 
side  of  an   issue? 

TV  Preview: 
Rayburn 
And  Charley 

Anthony  Wolff 

Channel  4  continues  wiili  its 
liye  educational  series  tonight  at 
6:30  with  a  discussion  of  the 
House  of  Representatives.  The 
guest  is  Speaker  of  the  House  Sam 
Rayburn. 

Its  adult  western  time  again  on 
Channel  2  at  8:30  when  ''Climax" 
stars  Micliael  Rennie  and  Caesar 
Romero  as  two  banlf^  robbers  who 
tai^e  refuge  in  a  convent. 

At  9:30  on  Clunnel  s  Art  Car- 
ney stars  in  "Charley's  Aimt,"  tlic 
musical  version  of  which,  entitled 
"Where's  Charley?"  w^  a  hit  with 
Ray  Bolger  in  the  title  role.'  Tq> 
night's  produetion  ^tures  Orson 
Bean,  Gene  Raymond,  and  Jackie 
Coogan.  This  should  be  funny. 


Students  will  vet*  next  lutJvf  en  •  rtyU«4  Stu<t«|it  ^fl*. 
«titi4ipn.  Here,  and  en  following  pages,  is  cemplet*  text  ef  Ih*:.  ^ 
^reposed  cenetitution.  The  present  constitvtien,   for  purposes  •f'^^ 
cemparison,   may  be  obtained   at  student  tevemment  offices  in  > 
ir^Mpn  MenM»rial.  A  «epy  i*  en  The  Mly  Tar  Heel's  bulletiiiu 

PREAMBLE 

With  strong  purpose  to  resolve  the  doubts  we  have  inheriteti 
frqjQ  15Q  years  of  forrale&s  growth,  witli  resolute  determination  te. 
preserve,  the  l^st  in  our  tradition  of  resjionsible  student  self-goverp^ 
ment,  we  assert  our  goals  to  preserve  order,  make  personal  fceedoia 
secure,  establish  justice,  and  win  a  lasting  opportunity  for  responsiblfs 
individual  and  collective  action;  and  to  these  ends  we  ordain  and 
^tablish  this  constitution  for  the  student  body  of  the  University  of 
JiOTth  Carolina  at  Chapel  Hill, 

ARTICLE  I  . 

LEGISLATIVE 

Section  1.     SUPREME  LEGISLATIVE  POWER  Supreme  legisla- 

Section  1.  SUPREME  LEGISLATIVE  POWER.  Supereme  legisla- 
ture. 

S^QtiOD  2.  COMPOSITION.  The  Student  Legislature  shall  be 
Cimposed  of  50  members,  half  of  whom  shall  be  elected  annually  at 
spring  elections  and  the  other  half  of  whom  shall  be  elected  an- 
nually at  fall  elections.  These  members  shall  be  apportioned  among 
tlMs  men  students  living  in  University  dormitories,  the  women  stu- 
d^jOts  living  in  University  dormitories,  the  men  students  living  else- 
wHere  than  in  University  dormitories,  and  the  women  students  living 
elsewhere  than  in  University  dormitories.  The  number  of  members 
in  the  Legislature  from  each  of  these  groups  shall  bear  the  same 
relation  to  the  total  membership  of  the  Legislature  as  the  totaJ 
number  of  persons  in  each  group  shall  bfear  to  the  total  membership 
of  the  student  body.  The  Student  Legislature  shall  have  power  to 
make  further  division  of  these  groups  into  districts.  Every  member 
of  the  Student  Legislatiure  shall  at  the  time  of  his  election  be  a 
student  in  the  University  in  good  standing  and  a  resident  of  the  dis- 
trict which  he  represents. 

Section  3  SPEAKER.  The  vice-president  of  the  student  body 
shall  be  spea'ker  of  the  Student  Legislature.  •  -fj^j 

Section  4.     POWERS.  The  Student  Legislature  shall  have  power-; 

a.  to  determine  the  Student  Actfvities  fee; 

b.  to  appropriate  funds; 

(1)  to  student  publications,  provided  that  the  total  funds  fof 
publications  shall  be  allotted  to  the  Publications  Board  for  distri- 
bution in  accordance  with  the  total  funds  allocated  to  the  respective 
student  publications  as  established  by  the  Student  Legislature; 

(2)  to  all  agencies  of  student  government; 

(3)  to  such  extracurricular  activities  as  it  shall  deem  .cgm- 
patible  with  the  general  welfare  of  the  student  body;  > . 

provided  that  all  funds  appropriated  for  use  but  not  expended  during 
a  given  fiscal  year  shall  revert  to  the  General  Surplus; 

c.  to  approve  or  reject  all  appointments  made  by  the  pccsideiit 
of  the  student  body  by  a  majority  vote,  providing  that  the  Legisja- 
ure  may  by  law  specify  .such  minor  offices  as  it  shall  deem  proper 
to  which  appointment  shall  not  require  approval;  1- 

d.  to  over-ride  a  presidential  veto  by  a  two-  thirds  majority.iU' 
those  present;  '  •  .;, 

e.  to  organize  and  conduct  its  business  in  accordance  wjth.Rpp- 
ert's  Rules  of  Order:  '  .^.;   .v, 

f.  to  make  all  laws  governing  the  conduct  of  all  jtlections  for 
members  of  the  Student  Council,  the  Men's  Council,  the  Women's 
CounCfffliiM*  Student  Legislature,  all  officers  of  the  student  body, 
the  editors-in-chief  of  all  student  publications  receiving  funds  from 
the  Publications  Board,  the  head  cheerleader,  the  officers  of  the 
Women's  Athletic  Assn..  and  such  class  officers  as  tbe  Sindemt 
Legislature  shall  establish;  "• 

g.  to  determine  offensss  against  the  student  body,  categorizing 
each  offense,  and  fixing  maximum  and  minimum  penalties  and  pun- 
ishments for  each  category,  and  when  it  deems  it  proper,  fixing  spe- 
cific punishments  for  particular  kinds  of  offenses; 

h.  to  impeach  and  remove  from  office  any  elected  student  of- 
ficial; 

i.  to  require  reports  from  the  standing  committees  and  ft'om 
all  organizations  receiving  appropriations  from  the  legislature; 

j.  to  review  rules  made  by  the  Dance  Committee; 

k.  to  make  laws  authorizing  appointments  by  the  president  to 
fill  any  elective  positions  made  vacant  during  the  term  of  office; 

1.  to  make  all  laws  necessary  and  proper  to  promote  the  gen- 
eral welfare  of  the  student  body; 

m.  to  alter  the  student  activities  fee  for  a  given  school  year, 
but  not  later  than  first  of  the  school  year  immediately  preceding. 

Section  5.  WOMEN'S  RESIDENCE  COUNCIL.  There  shall  be 
a  Women's  Residence  Council  whose  duty  shall  be  to  paas  dormitory 
and  social  rules  and  consider  problems  affecting  women  students 
only. 

Section  6.  MEN'S  INTERDORMITORY  COUNCIL.  There  shall 
be  a  Men's  Interdormitory  Council  whose  duty  shall  be  to  handle 
matters  concerning  the  conduct  and  activities  of  dormitory  men. 

Section?.  INTERFRAXERNITY  COUNCIL.  There  shall  be  an 
Interfraternity  Council  whose  duty  shall  be  to  handle  matters  w))ich 
concern  social  fraternities  alone.  '    . 


V 


Section  8.  PANHELLENIC  COUNCIL.  There  shall  be  an  Pan- 
hellenic  Council  whose  duty  sha^l  b^,  to  handle  matters  which  con- 
cern social  sororities  alone.        •    . 

Section  9.  INDEPENDENT  WOMEN'S \ASSN.  There  shall  be 
an  Independent  Women's  Assn.  wh^ji^  duty  shall  be  to  handle  mat- 
ters which  concern  independent  .WPi^^ .,       >^ 

-  Section    10.   The   by   laws  of   all   organizations   receiving   funds 
from   the  Student  Legislature  shall  be  subject  to  review  and  ap- 
proval by  the  Student  Legislature  yearly. 
ARTICLE  II 
JUDICIARY  -  .... 

Sectibn  1.  JUDICL\RY  BODIES  ESTABLISHED.  The  judicial 
power  shall  be  vested  in  a  Student  Council,  a  Men's  Council,  a  Wo- 
men's Council,  a  Law  Sc^hool  Court,  tt  Medical  School  Court,  a  Men's 
Interdormitory  Court,  and  Interfraternity  Court,  the  Womens'  House 
CouncUs,  the  Dance  Committee,  a  Dental  School  Court  and  a  Student- 
Faculty  Council.  ^^ 

Section2.  STUDENT  RESPONSIBILITY  AND  RESPONSIBILITY 
OF  JUDICIAL  OFFICERS.  It  shaU  he  the  responsibility  of  every  stu- 
dent to  uphold  the  honor  system  and  campus  code,  but  ultimately  the 
chairmen  of  every  student  court  shall  assume  this  responsibility.  It 
shall  be  the  responsibility  of  these  chairmen  to  initiate  action  in  all 
cases  or  circumstances  where  there  appears  to  be  a  possible  violation 
of  the  codes. 

Section  3.    JURISDICTION. 

a.  Student  Council.  The  Student  Council  shall  have  oripnal 
jurisdiction  in  all  cases  involving  the  constitutionality  of  any  le^sla- 
tive  or  executive  action,  and  appeals  concerning  the  election  laws. 
This  court  shall  hear  all  cases  in  which  a  violation  of  the  campus 
code  by  men  has  been  committed. 

b.  Womens  Council.  The  Women's  Council  shall  have  original 
jurisdiction  in  all  cases  of  violation  by  women  of  the  honor  code,  the 
campus  code,  and  all  rules  except  those. eases  properly  under  the 
jurisdiction  of  the  Student  Council,  House  Councils  and  Dance  Com- 
mittee. It  shall  hear  appeals  from  House  Council  decisions. 

c.  Men's  Council.  The  Men's  Council  shall  have  original  juris- 
diction in  all  cases  of  violation  by  men  of  the  honor  code,  and  all 
rules  except  those  cases  properly  under  the.  jurisdiction  of  the  Stu- 
dent Council.  Men's  Interdormitory  Court,  and  Dance  Committee. 

d.  Men's  Interdormitory  Court.  The,  Men's  Inerdormitory  Court 
shall  have  original  jurisdiction  in  all  cases  involving  infraction  of 
djrmitory  rules  of  conduct  ds  outlined  in  the  bylaws  of  the  Men's 
Interdormitory  Court  and  in  all  cases  invohing  damagie  to  dormitory 
property. 

e.  Women's  House  Councils.  Each  \^omen's  House  Council 
shall  have  original  jurisdiction  in  all  cases  involving  infractions  of 
the  house  rules  by  residents  of  the  house.      , 

f.  Interfraternity  Court.  The  Interfraternity  Court  shall  have, 
the  power  to  tr>'  all  cases  of  fraternity  violations  of  Interfraternity 
Council  rules. 

g.  Dance  Committee.  The  Dance  Committee  shal  have  original 
jurisdiction  in  all  cases  of  violations  of  the  rules  governing  conduct 
at  d.THccs.  It  shall  refer  all  cases  beyond  its  jurisdiction  to  the  ap- 
propriate student  judicial  body. 

h.  The  Law  School  Court,  the  Medical  School  Court,  and  the 
Dental  School  Court  shall  have  original  jurisdiction  in  all  cases  of 
violation  of  the  honor  code  by  a  student  in  their  respective  schools. 
They  shall  determine  their  own  bylaws  which  shall  be  subject  to  the 
approval  of  the  Student  Legislature.  , 

i.  Limitation.  No  court  except  .the  Men's  Council.  Women's 
Council.  Student  Council.  Lav.-  School  Court,  Dental  School  Court, 
and  Medical  School  Court  shall  have  original  jurisdiction  in  any 
cases  involving  honor  code  or  campus  code  AffeBseu 

Section  4.  COMPOSITION  OF  THE  JUDICIARY  BODIES.  Each 
judicial  body  herein  established  Shall  have  the  power  to  determine 
its  own  composition  subject  to  the  approval  of  the  Student  Legisla- 
ture, with  the  exception  of  the  Men's  Council,  the  Women's  Council, 
and  the  Student  Council,  whose  composition  shall  be  established  by 
the  Student  Legislature. 

Section   5.    GENERAL   PROCEDURE. 

a.  Right  of  Review.  A  Student-Faculty  Judicial  Council  shall 
be  established  to  hear  appeals  from  all  courts  of  original  jurisdiction 
in  student  government.  This  council  shall  hear  those  appeals  which 
are  referred  to  it  by  the  chancellor. 

•  b.  Offenses  and  Punishments.  Except  where  the  Student 
Legislature  shall  have  fixed  the  offense  and  limitations  to  punish- 
ment, the  Men's  Council.  Women's  Council,  Law  School  Court.  Dental 
School  Court,  and  Medical  School  Court  shall  have  discretionary 
authority,  providing  that  they  shall  take  full  cognizance  of. the  tra- 
ditional offenses  and  punishments  herctofrore  enforced  xt  this  Uni- 
versity. 

c.  Rights  of  the  Accused.  The  accused  person  in  any  judical 
hearing  shall  have  the  following  rights: 

(1)  The  presumption  of  innocense  until  guilt  is  proven. 

(2)  The  right  to  due  notice  and  a  fair  hearing. 

(3)  The  right  to  face  the  accuser. 

(4)  The  privilege  of  assistance  by  a  member  of  the  judicial 
body,  if  requested.  No  person  presenting  testimony  for  or  against 
the  accused  person  shall  sit  in  judgment  of  the  accused.  The  coun- 
cil shall  inform  each  accused  person  of  his  rihgts  guaranteed  under 

(See  REWRITTEN  CONSTITUTION,  Page  3) 


111  Abner 


.• 


God  AtJJf^le: 
Unmentiondble? 


THURSO^ 


• 

By  A!  Capp 


^•ai»«»,aflBBBHIlg 


HALTi'- SHE'S  SLIPPED  THE  WAJCH     '-^ 
TO  ONE  OF  VOU.'/'  DOM'T  PKKf  IT.f    j 


ONC  OF"  VOO  HAS  IT 
mDPEN.T-l  CAN  HEAP. 
IT  TICKING  jy^TICKING/f 
,  -TICKING*^: 


AHAff-  so  VOOVt  GOT  IT, 

GENERAL.r'^HlDOEH  SOMEWHERE 
UNDER  THOSE.  MEDALS^  NO  DOUBT.'? 


■fa  V  V. 


Poqo 


By  Walt  Kelly 


The  Yale  Daily  News . 

Evangelist  Billy  f  raham  recently  went  to  Yale, 
to  deliver  sermons.  H»r«s  the  editorial  in  Tha 
Yalfi  Daily  News  that  prececded  his  arrival. 

For  the  iirst  time  in  more  than  five  jears  a 
nearly  unmentionable  subject  has  been  broached 
on  the  Yale  caTnpus  and  has  received  some  cur- 
rency. Since  the  publifation  of  God  and  Man  at 
Yale  in  1&51,  the  question  of  religious  conyiction 
and  commitment  simply  has  not  been  raised  in  any 
persuasive  or  topical  way. 

Tbe  whole  quesUon  has  been  looked  on  as  im- 
mensely irrelevant  or  at  least  monumentaUy  boring. 
Thera  are  many  sound  and  legttlmata  reasons 
for  the  prevalent  student  lack  of  interest  in  things 
religious. 
The   pressure  of  modern  life  and   the  require 
ments  of  a  great  University  leave   little  time   for 
soul-saving;   most   students  are  just  too   busy  for 
that  sort  of  thing.  Moreover,  there  exists  at  Yale  a 
longstanding  tradition   of  adolescent  sophistication 
about  the  church  and  its  activities:   everybody  in 
Dwight  Hall  is  a  "weenie." 

lBtt»«d  of  a  traditional  Christian  commitment, 
the  average  Yale  undergraduate  sulMcribes  to  a 
^f«ith  in  earnest  and  energetic  imiuiry  into  all  the 
aroas  of  thought  and  experience  to  which  he  is 
•xposod,  to  •  kind  of  "reiigiyi  of  reason, "  no  less 
honest  or  unquestioned  than  the  orthodox  religious 
attitude. 
'       •  *  *  * 

Thus  the  momentary  arrival  of  BUI  Graham, 
soul-saver  and  Christian  ajvalogist  par  excellence, 
provides  a  dramatic  point  of  departure  for  the  ap- 
plication of  the  Yale  curiosity  to  the  "problem  oi 
faith."  The  most  interesting  thing  about  Mr.  Grah- 
am's visit  is  the  attitude  it  has  generated  before  his 
arrival;  those  whom  one  would  expect  to'  be  vio- 
lently contemptuous  are  willing  to  wait  and  hear 
what  he  has  say. 

Perhaps  Mr.  Graham  does  not  fulfill  the  highest 
standards  of  scholarship  or  even  integrity.  (The 
arrival  of  an  assistant  cleric  to  "prepare"'  for  Gra- 
ham's mission  cannot  fail  to  suggest  to  the  most 
casual  observer  a  strong  analogy  •with  the  relation- 
ship between  John  the  Baptist  and.  |he 'K)ne:  for 
whom  he  prepared).  -  ' 

Still  Graham  demands  v  attentioh^'' his  "good 
works  for  the  Lord"  seem  toVave  beeh  tremendous. 
He  is  the  mii-sioner  of  his  generation,  and  he  de- 
serves to  be  h'jard  here.  ■  ' 

Yale  provides  an  eminently  interesting  sound- 
ing board  for  the  ideas  and  impact  of  a  dynamic 
revivalist;  in  tradition,  closer  to  orthodox  religion 
than  any  other  non-sectarian  American  university, 
this  community  participates  as  fully  in  the  general 
lack  of  religious  concern  as  one  could  imagiqe. 

We  are  convinced  that  the  mission  will  raise 
important  and  exciting  questions.  We  await  Mr. 
Graham's  arrival  with  impatience,  and  we  offer  him 
our  respectfuly  and  enthusiastic  welcome. 


PON  SHIRLEY: 


:v  nf-j*: 


A  Great  Man  Visited , 
And  A  Hundred  Heard 

Wally  Kuralt        ..'t- 

A  great  man  wa-*  in  Chapel  Hill  last  wecl. 
He  was  in  Memorial  Hall  for  about  two  hours 
Friday  afternoon,  and  in  those  two  hours  proride 
some  of  the  most  beautiful  music  ever  heard  on 
the  Carolina  campus.  It  wasa^t  Just  beautiful;  it 
was  meaningful. 

This  man  was  Don  Shirley,  well-known  pianist 
and  musician.  He  was  accom]^nied  by  a  Juliard  bass 
player  named  Kenneth  Fricker. 

These  two  gentlemen  gave  an  amazing  display 
of  musical  genius,  and  catised  the  audience  to  gasp 
and  smile  and  pat  feet  and,  in  general,  appreciate 
their  interpretations. 

And  the  100  people  who  took  time  out  to  listen 
were  firn>ly  convinced  they   should  have  had  to 
pay  more  than  the  dollar  they  did. 
Shirley  and  Fricker  must  have  felt,  in  a  word, 
silly. 

'  This  contemporary  pianist  and  his  able  accomp- 
anist will  play  to  packed  crowds  in  the  Embers  in 
New  York  City,  and  these  crowds'  will  be  giving 
left  arms  to  see  and  hear  this  man. 

This  man  was  on  leave  from, a  large  university 
(incidentally,  he  holds  two  doctor's  degrees)  and 
was  heading  a  group  to  study  the  effects  of  music 
upon  people,  i.e.  does  music  stimulate  crimes  such 
as  the  recent  "cruelty  crimes"  in  New  York,  does 
it  stimulate  alcoholism  or  dc^e  addiction? 
His  answer  —  definitely  not. 

«  *  * 

He  said  jazz,  perhaps  America's  only  gift  to  the 
world,  was  appreciated  much  more  by  European^- 
than  by  those  to  whom  it  belongs.  And  jazz,  Shirley 
said,  was  fcteing  berated  largely  because  it  was 
handy  ^d  not  very  understood  hy  those  who  accus- 
ed it  of  being  the  cause  for  everything  from  ju 
venile  delinquency  to  narcotics  addiction.  This,  he 
said,  was  "ridiculous." 

He  asked  the  State  Dept.  to  help  bring  a  bit  oi 
closenesj  between  nations  by  sending  a  jazr  band 
to  Europe  and  Asia. 

"Naturally,  thoy  woro  hesitant,"  said   Shirley 
t9  the  .-iieinlMrs  of  St.  Anthony  Hall   after    the 
concert.  "Can   you   imagine  sending   a   group   on 
•  ??o4-will  tpur  when  that  group  played  music 
which  a  lot  of  busy-bodies  said  caused  kids  to  90 
^rs^   and   kill    poepio?   N«turally,    they   were 
hfsitwit." 
I^e  man  who  sat  at  the  piano,  last  Fridav.  sur- 
veying the  keyboard  like  a  king  at  a  feast,  did  all 
this.  He  would  romp  out  a  solid  beat,  then  break 
into  Wank  verse.  Fricker  would  wield  his  bow  and 
make  hij  300-year-old  bass  swoon  like  a  'cello. 

This  man  —  holder  of  two  degrees,  master  of  a 
musician,  pacifist  of  naUons,  and  one  of  the  friend- 
Uest  gentlemen  one  may  hope  to  meet  ~  plajed 
to  100  people  in  Memorial  Hall. 

"It  was  a  very  receptive  audience,"  he  said.  The 
audience  cheered  after  each  selection,  as   soon  as 
Shirley  would  break  the  spell  caused  by  his  unusual, 
wonderful  tonal  expressions. 
An,-!  100  people  heard  them. 


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I, ' 


Rewritfen  Constitution  Ready 

iCrwnfinikaH   fru%w»    «•>.«»   «\  I      nattAccarv  anil  ntvwMir  tA  iiir  him   in  tiim  nAi^y»n«nn>. 


(Continued  from  page  2) 

this  section  at  the  time  he  is  noUfied  of  the  charges  against  him. 

d.  LimHaUon  of  Membership  on  Councils.  Np  studetit  shall  be 
a^member  of  more  than  one  judicial  body  except  that  he  be  a  mem- 
ber of  the  Student  Council  elected  from  a  lower  judicial  body. 

e.  Election  of  Officers.  The  Student  Council,  the  Men's  Coun- 
cil, the  Women's  Council,  and  the  Dance  Committee  shall  elect  their 
own  officers  from  their  respective  memberships.  , 

ARTICLC  III  • 

EXECUTIVE 

Section  1.  EXECUTIVE  POWER  VESTED  IN  PRESIDENT.  The 
e.xecutive  power  shall  be  vested  in  a  presMeat  of  the  student  body, 
who  shall  have  the  assistance  of  a  vice-president,  a  secretary,  and  a 
treasurer  of  the  student  body.  The  four  officer^of  the  student  body 
shall  be  elected  by  and  from  the  student  body  at  large. 

Section  2.  POWERS  OF  THE  PRESIDENT.  The  president  of 
the  student  body  shall  have  power: 

a.  to  appoint  the  chairman  and  members  of  all  standing  com- 
mittees and  b:>ards  not  ptherwise  provided  for  in  this  constitution, 
sutaiitting  initial  appointments  to  the  Student  Legislature  within 
five  weeks  of  his  inauguration; 

b.  to  appoint  an  attorney-general  and  such  assistants  as  he 
shall  deem  necessary  subject  to  the  approval  of  the  Student  Legisla- 
ture: 

c.  to  make  recommendations  from  time  to  time  to  the  Student 
Legislature: 

d.  t:>  administer  and  enforce  laws  enacted  by  the  Student 
Legislature; 

e.  to  veto  acts  of  the  Student  Legislature,  provided  he  shall 
e.xercise  such  power  of  veto  within  ten  school  days  after  the  bill  is 
placed  in  the  executive  offices: 

f.  to  call  and  preside  at  meetings  of  the  student  body; 

g.  to  serve  as  an  ex-officio  member  of  all  standing  committees 
and  boards: 

h.  to  address  the  Student  Legislature  from  time  to  time,  pro- 
vided that  he  shall  notify  the  speaker  of  his  intention  in  advance; 

i.  to  issue  orders  to  the  standing  committees  and  to  require  re* 
ports  from  them; 

j.  to  represent  the  student  body  of  the  University  of  North  Car- 
olina in  dealings  with  the  students  of  other  schools,  in  dealings  with 
the  faculty,  and  in  dealings  with  the  Board  of  Trustees; 

k.   to  establish  such  bodies  subsidiary  to  him  as  he  shall  deem 


QftC^nipis 


^ 


iAmOfr  •/  "B*r9f9^  ft  WtACh^fk,-  ^If^ , 


HOW  MUCH  IS  THAT  DOGFISH 
IN  THE  WINDOW? 


Dear  Mom  and  Dad  (writes  Zelda  May  Nirdlinger,  soph). 
You  have  been  askin^r  me  to  account  for  all  ihk  monej 
I  spend.   There  follows  a  day  by  day  summaiy  of  recent 
expenditures.   Don't  forget,  you  asked  for  it. 

MONDAY; 
$2.78  —  teteirram  to  the  Secretary  of  the  Army,  offerinc 

to  go  instead  of  Elvla. 
^0.26  — pack  of  Philip  Motria,  mV  favorite.. and  yours, 

if  you  know  a  good  thing  when  you  taste  one ! 
ft0.50  —  sorority  fine  for  oversleeping  and  missing  my 
first  hour  class  twelv*  days  in  a  row. 

4^i 


$9  95  -  I  bought  a  rooster  named  Ralph  to  wake  me  in 
the  morning.  (Cant  sleep  with  an  alarm  clock 
ticking  all  night.) 

TUESDAY: 

10.50  -  sorority  fine  for  not  cleaning  my  plate  at  dinner. 

(I  just  couldn't!   Dinner  was  Ralph. • 
$0  50  -  .sorority  fine  for  dating  undesirable  boy.    ( Rod- 

erigo  is  noi  undesirable!    Some  people  say  he  is 

"fast"  and  a  "devil"  but  I  say  be  is  juat  insecure. 

Why  else  would  he  go  steady  with  eifflit  girls?) 
$0.26 -pack  of  Philip  Morris.   What  joy!   What  zest! 

WEDNESDAY:  >     -  „ 

$557.38  -  a  motorcycle  for  Roderiito.   (-He  is  jflViiMif  up  »U 

his  other  girls  for  me,  but  th<^y  are  so  widely 

scattered  that  he  needs  a  fast  conveyance  to  go 

around  and  tell  them  all  goodbye.) 
i0.26-pack  of  Philip  Morris.    (Hjive  f ^  tri^d  tb^ 

yet?   If  not,  you've  got  a  big  treat  comint.  Light 

one  soon.  Light  either  end.) 

THURSDAY: 

$0.50  -  sorority  fine  for  staying  too  tong  in  the  shower. 
T         (Gee  whiz,  a  girl  gets  mighty  dirty  polishing  a 
rtj'-  "  "     motorcycle!) 

*'^ "  |0.52  -  two  packs  of  Philip  Morris  -  one  for  Roderigo. 
( Z)f!fflr  Roderigo!) 

FRIDAY: 

$0.26 -pack  of  Philip  Morris -a  hwi?y  ?"toli;e  for  a 
happy  day.  Yesterday  HudetigAo  "brake  *lth  the 
last  of  his  girls,  and  today  he  is  oiline,  at!  mine! 
$8 57 -new  dogfish  for  zoology.  (I  ^as  dissecting  a 
dogfish  in  zoology  when  I  happened  td  loolt'Oig^tne 
window  and  see  Roderigo  rtding  by  with  »*ry 
Ann  Bea.sley  on  his  buddy  seat.  1  got  so  upset  I 
threw  the  dogfish  at  them.) 

SATURDAY: 

$2.69  -  a  carton  of  Philip  Morris,  one  pack  for  Ipe^  the 
rest  for  Roderigo.  ( I  was  foolish  to  be  angry  ftbOut 
Mary  Ann.    Roderigo  expli^ined  tjMit  ^^^tivS^t 
,     .  L  _._.._ a.  fs -,*».  EhiHhih  fi 

h 

psych,  Lola  Tweet  with  pbya  ed,  etc.  Th*  least  he 
can  do  is  give  them  all  Philip  Morrises.) 

Well,  mom  and  dad,  you  can  see  how  eXiieiisiTe  college  is. 

Send  money Love  and  kisses,  Zelda  M«y 

#lhx  sHuteui,  10&7 

Tkm  price  way  vmry  from  plaee  to  iimeif  ip$  ^Wt^  Mj^rU 
eBntimu€M  to  be  m  naturat  tuwke  thmt  JfmmnU  u^  tmr$e,Mlif*t*r 
tmmt.  It  U  mode  in  regular  mmd  lotfg  ftt^  »y  the  apiddotf  of 
this  column,  rnnd  u  i§nitmble  at  eitkmt  «M. 


netessary  and  proper  to  air  him  in  the  perfonnance  of  his  duty. 

Section  8.  VICE  PRESIDENT.  The  vice  president  of  the  stu- 
dent body  shall  perfoan  the  duties  of  the  president  in  the  event  of 
his  absence  or  incapacity.  He  shall  succeed  to  the  presidency  should 
that  office  become  vacant,  in  which  event  the  vice-presidency  shall 
remain  vacant  pending  an  election.  The  Student  Legislature  shall  by 
law  i«t)vide  for  the  filling  of  the  office  of  president  should  a  presi- 
dent who  has  succeeded  to  that  office  from  the  vice-presidency  also 
vacate  the  office.  The  vice-president  of  the  student  body  shall  be 
speaker  of  the  student  legislature.  He  shall  forward  all  legislative  acts 
to  the  president  within  three  class  days  of  their  passage. 

Section  4.  POWERS  OF  THE  SECRETARY.  The  secretary  of 
the  student  body  shall  maintain  all  records  «nd  files  of  the  student 
body  and  shall  arrange  for  permanent  preservation  of  its  archives. 

Section  5.  POWERS  OF  THE  TREASURER.  The  treasurer  of 
the  student  body  shall  disburse  all  monies  appropriated  by  the  Stu*^ 
dent  Legislature,  and  he  shall  be  chairman  of  the  Budget  Committee. 

Section  6.  POWERS  OF  THE  ATTORNEY  GENERAL.  The 
attorney  general  of  the  student  body  shall  assist  and  represent  the 
president  in  the  performance  of  his  duties  as  the  president  shall  di- 
rect. He  shall  also  investigate,' gather  evidence,  and  prosecute  any 
offenders  of  the  Student  Constitution  of  the  University  of  North  Caro- 
lina. (Offenders  may  take  the  form  of  individuals,  groups,  or  or- 
ganizations under  the  auspices  of  the  Student  Constitution  and  Stu- 
dent Government  statutes.) 

Section  7.  NSA  COORDINATOR.  There  shall  be  a  NSA  coordi- 
nator whose  duty  shall  be  to  administer  the  affairs  of  the  National 
Student  Assn.  and  to  publicize  the  policies  and  activities  of  this  or- 
ganization. 

Section  8.  STUDENT  AUDIT  BOARD.  There  shall  be  a  Student 
Audit  Board  whose  duty  shall  be  to  supervise  the  Student  Activities 
Fund  Office.  It  shall  have  the  power  to  inspect  the  books  of  any  or- 
ganization coming  under  its  jurisdiction,  i.e.,. organizations  receiv- 
ing funds  from  the  Student  Legislature.  The  composition  of  this  group 
shall  be  established  by  t&e  Student  Legislature,  and  any  changes  in 
its  composition  or  powers  must  be  approved  by  the  Student  Legis- 
lature. 

Section  9.  BUDGET  COM>nTTEE.  There  shall  be  a  Budget 
Committee  whose  duty  shall  be  to  recommend  a  budget  to  the  Stu- 
dent Legislature  annually.  

Section  10.  STUDENT  ENTERTAINMENT  COMMITTEE.  There 
shall  be  a  Student  Entertainment  Committee  whose  duty  shall  be 
to  provide  the  student  body  with  a  suitable  entertainment  series. 

Section  11.  CAMPUS  ORIENTATION  COMMITTEE.  There  shall 
be  a  Campus  Orientation  Committee  whose  duty  shall  be  to  devise 
and  conduct  an  adequate  program  or  orientation  for  all  entering 
students. 

Section  12  ELECTIONS  BOARD.  There  shall  be  an  Elections 
Board"  whose  duty  shall  be  to  administer  all  laws  governing  elec- 
tions passed  by  the  Student  Legislature.  No  more  than  55  percent  of 
the  members  of  the  Elections  Board  shall  be  from  any  one  political 
party.  

Section  13.  TiMES  OF  ELECTION  AND  OFFICES  TO  BE 
FILLED.  No  election  shall  be  held  within  one  week  after  a  scheduled 
University  recess  and  no  election  shall  be  held  during  a  University 
examination  period. 

Section  14.  TIME  OF  INAUGURATION  AND  OATH  OF  OF- 
FICE All  persons  elected  to  office  shall  be  duly  inaugurated  on  a 
date  which  shall  be  established  by  the  Student  Legislature,  said 
date  to  be  within  18  days  after  elecUon,  Each  officer  ahsH  take  an 
oath  to  uphold,  protect,  and  preserve  thia  conatittttiAn  and  the  gov- 
ernment created  thereby. 

ARTICLK  IV 

NII$CILtANIOUS  OROANIZATIOMS 

Section  1.  DANCE  COMMITTEE.  There  shall  be  a  Dance  Com- 
mittee whose  duty  shall  be  to  make  rules  concerning  conduct  at 
dances,  to  enforce  these  rules,  and  to  try  aU  cases  of  violation  of 
these  rules. 

Section  2  UNIVERSITY  CLUB.  There  shall  be  a  University 
Club  whose  duty  shall  be  to  encourage  interest  and  sportsmanship  m 
all  University  events  and  contests.  _,^,.«^„c.  ,.^ 

Section  3.  GRAHAM  MEMORLU.  BOARD  OF  DIRECTORS.  T^e 
Student  Legislature  shall  fix  the  student  membership  on  the  Stu- 
dent Union  Board  of  Directors,  and  the  chancellor  of  the  ymjersity 
shall  appoint  the  faculty  members  of  the  board.  This  board  shall  be 
the  governing  body  of  the  student  union.  ^    ^   . 

Section  4  HE.\D  CHEERLEADER.  Tljere  shall  be  a  head  cheer- 
leader who  shall  be  elected  annually  by  and  frpm  the  student  >ody 
at  large 

Section  5.    DEBATE  COUNCIL.  There  shall  be  a  Debate  Coun-  . 
cil  which  shall  be  responsible  for  all  formal  debating  connected  with 

^^  SonT'  CONSOLroATED  UNIVERSITY  STUDfiNT  COUNCIL 
DELEGATION.  There  shall  be  a  delegation  from  the  University  ot 
North  Carolina  at  Chapel  Hill  to  the  ConsoUdated  University  Stu- 
dent Council.  It  shall  be  the  duty  of  this  delegation  to  disucss  prob- 
lems common  to  the  branches  of  the  University  and  plan  social  events 

for  the  three  branches, 

."■,.*  I  ^.  t  -        .    .         .  ^  •    •        .    ^,  ■  -  •    .^ 

ARTICLE  V  .    * 

PUBLICATIONS  BOARD  ■ 

SECTION  1  COMPOSmON.  The  composition  of  the  Puoii- 
cations  Board  shall  be  esUbUshed  by  the  Student  Legislature 

Section  2  POWERS.  Financial  supervision  of  all  student  puo- 
lications  financed  by  the  authority  of  the  Student  Legislature  shall 
be  vested  in  the  Publications  Board  subject  to  ?"y  ^J"^'^^;"?  ,.^^° 
tained  in  the  bylaws  of  the  Publications  Board  which  the  Legislature 

'^'''"sSl  FREEDOM  OF  THE  EDITORS.  Neither  the  Publica- 
tions Board  nor  the  Student  Legislature  shall  exercise  control  over 
the  editors-in-chief  of  the  various  publications  in  theperformance  of 
their  duties,  including  the  appointmente  of  their  sUff.  except  where 
matters  of  finance  be  involved.  ^^...^  i«^»,4«# 

section  4.  EDITORS-IN-CHIEF  ELECTED.  The  *^^<«^-^;f*»«J 
of  the  student  newspaper  shall  be  elected  by  the  student  body  -t 
lar^e. 

ARTICLl  VII 
SUMMBR  SCHOOL  GOVKANMENT  _^  ^ 

There  shall  be  a  Summer  School  Student  Government  Jhosi 
composition,  powers,  and  functions  shall  be  esUblishfd  by  the 
Student  Legislature. 

JfJoVHT^'ilSFOKSIBILITY;  POWERS  OF  RECALL,  iMltlXtlVI. 
REFBRBM0UM:  CONSTITUTIONAL  GUARANTEES 

Section  1.  STUDENT  RESPONSIBILTFY  UNDER  HONOR  AND 
CAMPUS  CODES.  It  shall  be  the  duty  and  responsibiU^  ?  I!2 
student  at  the  University  of  North  Carolina  to  obey  the  *°no'  5^ 
prohibiting  lying,  cheating,  or  steaUng.  and  tVe^po^jnyl^ng  chew- 
ing. 0  stealing  of  which  he  has  knowledge;  add  it  shall  be  the  further 
duty  of  every  student  to  abide  by  the  campus  code,  name  y  to  (sm 
duct  hemlf  or  himseM  as  a  lady  or  gentieman  at  all  times  and 
S.r«  it  may  be  appropriate,  to  see  that  his  fellow  students  do 

Section  2  RECALL.  Any  constituency  shall  have  power  to  re- 
call any  officer  elected  by  that  constituency  under  this  constitut»<MK 
If  the  constituency  is  campus-wide,  the  petition  to  recall  ^all  be 
haiuled  to  the  president  of  the  student  body  and  shall  not  be  vri  d  . 
Tnless  it  contains  the  signatiires  or  at  least  15  P*«*.^  °  ,f  *  *^^^ 
fied  voters  If  the  constituency  \i  less  than  campus-wide,  the  petition 
^  re^TshallTot  be  valid  unless  it  conUins  tiie  signatures  M  at 
i^ast  M  percent  of  the  qualified  voters  in  the  constituency  concern- 
Id   tS  ?JeTdent  shall.  U  he  determines  the  petition  to  be  in  good 

(see   CONSTITUTION,   poff*  50 


ANN 
PAGE 


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PAGE  FOUR 


TNI  OAfLT  TAR  H«lt 


THURSDAY,  MARCH  28,  1957     _ 


Excation  And  A  Reconstructed  Indian  Temple 

TWo  workmen  ^r*  sh«wn  abov*  excavating  a  small  plot  of  ground  on  a  centurios-oid  Indian  village 
in  Montgomery  County.  They  appear  to  be  unmindful  of  the  reconstructed  sacred  temple  In  the  bf^ck- 
grovfxL  The  temple  is  part  of  a  project  carried  on  during  the  past  twenty  years  by  the  University's 
research  laboratories  of  anthropology. 

FOR  ANTHROPOLOGICAL  RESEARCH 

Old  Indian  Village  Useful 


By  CURTIS  CROTTY  |  juncUon  of  Town   Creek  and   Lit-| 

For   the   past   twenty  vears    the  '  ^'^  ^''^'^-  '^^^  ult'i^ate  goal  of  the  j 
University's   research    laboratories '  P''*'^^^  "^  ^^  '"^'^"''^  ^^^  complete! 
of   anthropologv.   under     the     di-  •  '^^^°'"o°'?l  '^^"ter  to  its  16th  can-  j 
rection  of  Assistant  Professor  Jof- '  ^"^  condition  so  that  the  people: 
fre  L.  Coe.  have  been  engaged  in  '  '^    ^°'*^    '^^''^''"^    ""^^ 
a  cooperative  program  of  archae- 1  acquainted     with     thL5 
logical  research  and  restoration-  in    "^^^^^^^  «^  ^^^  ^^^^^'^  ^'"^''^■ 
Montgomery  County  j      ^^^    original    plot   of   land    was 


become 
unknown 


The   fbcus   of  this  project  is   a    '^^"^^^^    ^°    *^^    '^^^^    ^^    ^-    ^• 


16th  century  Indian  village  at  the 

Biology  Meet 
To  Start  Here 
Next  Monday 


Frutchey  in  1937,  with  the  Uni- 
versity assuming  responsibility 
for  its  proper  excavation  and  re- 
search. Work  on  the  site  began  in 
April  of  that  year. 

When    excavation    began,    there 
were   no   maps,   letters,   drawings,  j 
or  books   describing  Town   Creek  \ 
or    the    people    who    lived    there.  I 
Archaeologists   working     on     this , 
What        biological       knowledge  i  project  have  had     to     make     the  j 
should    form    part   of    the    exper- '  maps  and  to  write  the  documents 
ience  of  all  or  most  college  stu- ;  from  the  shreds  of  evidence   left 
dents.   Fegardless  (rf  their  course    '"  ^^^  ground.  It  has  been  the  re- 1 
of   study?  i  sponsibility   of   Laboratory   of   An- 

What  additional  knowledge  and  \  thropologv-  to  translate  the  raw 
experience,  in  both  biological'  archaeological  data  i»to'  corapre- 
aod  related,  iteklau  is  ei^BtiaJ,  /  bQ03ibi«  iorm.  .jm^^^ssm-^ 
useful  or  cfiMMlMe  for  «»- Wolo- ,  j^y^ENT  TRAINING 
gists,  irrespective  of  later  special- 


ization? 

What  is  the  role  of  the  under- 
graduate college  in  providing 
specialized  training,  and  what  ad- 
ditional elements  are  basic  in 
each  of  tbe  major  areas  of  special- 
ization in  biology? 


Besides  supervising  the  re- 
sear<^  and  restoration,  the  Uni- 
verslty  has  been  able  to  use  this 
program  for  training  its  students 
in  «nthropoIogy.  Most  of  the  sup- 
ervisors at  Town  Creek  have  been 
University  graduate  students 
Sinte  1951  Ernest  Lewis,  William  i 


Some    of    the    nation's    leading, 
biologists  will  convene  here  early  W*'''^'  J**^"  ^^^^^'^'  ^"^  Stanley  j 
next  week  to  discuss  these  three!  South  have  worked  there. 
quesUons.  They  will  (Jevelop  a  set  1     ^""^^  ^^^  ^^^"  ^*  '^°*"  ^^^^^  \ 
of    principles     for     guidance     in!*"^   '^'^  "^""^     «°^     ^^^     ^®^° 
planning  courses  and  curricula  for'  '^^ely    responsible    for    the    res-; 
future  biologists  i  ^oration  of  part  of  the  ceremonial  | 

Dr.  Victor  A.  Greulach,  prof  ess- ;  ««^^*'''-  "«  ^''P^^^^  to  complete  his! 
or  of  botany  at  UNC,  said  the 
meeting  here  will  cdticlude  delib* 
erations  begun  last  December  in 
Washington.  D.  C.  It  will  last 
from  Monday  through  Thursday. 
Many  American  biologists,  he 
said,  have  emphasized  a  need  for 
an  intensive,  critical  re-examina- 
tion of  courses  and  curricula  de- 
sireable  for  undergraduate  stu- 
dents in  biological  sciences. 

"It  is  widely  felt  that  instruc- 
tion programs,  conditioned  as 
they  are  by  history  and  tradition, 
have  often  failed  to  evolve  at  a 
rate  commensurate  with  the  pres- 
ent and  future  demands  of,  and 
responsibilities  upon,  the  life 
sciences,"  he  remarked. 

The    "broad"    purpose    of    the 

meeting  here   is  to  develop  a  set 

ci  principles  for  instriKtion  of  the 

*  life  science,  keeking  in  mind  the 

many    facets    affecting    tbe    train- 

-ing  of  students. 


M.A.   degree   here  next  term. 

Town  Creek  is  also  used  by  Prof.  I 
Coe's  classes  to  illustrate  practical  j 
field     methods     in      archaeology.  ■ 
Students    making    trips    to    Town 
Creek   are   allowed   to   participate  I 
in  all  phases  of  the  work  that  is, 
being  done.  In  this  way  they  are ! 
able  to  learn  from  first  hand  ex- 
perience   many   of   the    important 
aspects  of  anthropology  that  would 
be  difficult  to  learn  from  lectures,  i 

Until  a  permanent  museum  can  | 
be   built,   most   of   the  specimens 
and  archaeological  documents  are 
being  kept  here  in  Chapel  Hill. 

STOCKADE 

The  ceremonial  center,  which 
composes  only  three  acres  of  the 
33-acre  village  tract,  is  complete- 
ly encircled  by  a  stockade  of 
wooden  poles.  Entrance  to  the 
sacred  area  is  through  a  tower. 
Inside  of  the  stockade  is  the  re- 
constructed Indian  temple,  with 
its  thatched  roof  of  straw  and  its 

It  is  the  only  authenticalljr  re- 
constructed, actual  size  Creek  In- 
dian temple  on  a  mound  in  this 
country.  The  mound  was  used  as 
a  foundation  bxe  the  temple  in 
which  religious  and  political  cere- 
monies took  place.  Steps  on  one 
side  of  the  earthen  mound  lead 
to  the  temple. 

Organizations,  other  than  the 
University,  which  have  assisted  in 
research  are  the  stae  museum,  the 
Division  of  State  Parks,  and  the 
North  Carolina  Archaeological 
Society. 


Raleigh  Student 
Wins  Jackson 
Scliolarship 

Lafayette  Ferguson  Norton  of 
Raleigh  has  been  announced  the 
1967  winner  of  tjie  Herbert  Worth 
Jackson    scholarship    at    UNC. 

The  scholarship,  valued  at  $2,- 
000,  is  awarded  yearly  in  memory 
of  the  late  H.  W.  Jackson.  UNC 
Class  of  1886.  It  was  established 
by  Jackson's  widow  and  sons  "to 
promote  the  ideals  of  manhood 
and  good  citizenship  exemplified 
in  the  life  of  Herbert  Worth  Jack- 
son." 

This   year's   winner    is    the   son 
of  Dr.  and  Mrs.  J.  W.  Roy  Norton, 
2129  Cowper  Drive,  Raleigh,  Nor-^ 
ton   is    a   senior   at   NeecViam    B.  j 
Broughton    High    School    and    has  i 
held  numerous  class  offices  while! 
an    outstanding    member    of    the  ] 
varsity      football      and      baseball! 
teams.  1 

"Ferg",  as  be  is  called  by  his 
friends,  was  chosen  from  a  group  j 
of  12  finalists.  The  selection  j 
committee  was  composed  of:  Mr. ! 
Herbert  W.  Jackson.  Jr.,  of  Rich- 1 
mond.  Va.;  Mr.  Samuel  H.  Ma- 
gill,  director  of  student  activities 
at  UNC;  and  Dr.  C.  0.  Cathey, 
chairman  of  the  University  Schol- 
arship Committee. 

Norton  has  been  an  officer  and 
member  of  the  high  school  'Stu- 
dent council  for  four  years,  a 
member  of  the  National  .Honor 
Society,  vice  president  of  the  sen- 
ior class  and  was  voted  "Most  Vers- 
atile" by  the  senior  class.  He  ap- 
peared last  fall  on  the  East  squad 
in  the  Shrine  Bowl. 

A  Jackson  scholar  must  be  a 
native  North  Carolinian  and  is 
chosen  for  his  ''high  scholastic 
rank,  character,  leadership  in  high 
school,  achievements,  health  and 
promise     of    future    distinction. " 


Student  Party  Not  Content:  Hall  ford  I 


LAFAYETTE  F.  NORTON 

.  .  .  receives  award 


BRAUER 

Dr.  Alfred  T.  Brauer  of  tbe 
UNC  Dept.  of  Mathematics  is  in 
Washington,  D.  C.  his  week  at 
the  invitation  of  the  National  Bu- 
reau of  Standards,  to  give  a  lec- 
ture of  his  newest  research. 
sponsored  by  the  U.  S.  Air  Force. 


^tiidenl  'Party  Ch^arman  «on- 
ny  Hallford  said  Wednesday  tbe 
Student  Party  was  "not  content" 
with  the  excellent  record  achiev- 
ed this  year  under  President  Bob 
Yoiuig's  administration. 

Hallford  said  tbe  SP  "faces  tbe 
campus  with  a  pledge  that  it  can 
accomplish  in  tbe  months  ahead 
even  more  victories  for  student 
government  through  continued 
cooperation  and  industriousness 
on  the  part  of  its  members." 

Hallford  said,  "We're  running 
on  a  record  of  unmatched  achieve- 
ment   in   the    administration    and 


direction  of  student  goveroment; 
a  record  set  by  Bob  Young  and 
his  associates,  and  by  SP  leaders 
in  student  legislature.  It  is  a  re- 
cord that  has  brought  real  tangi- 
ble and  important  benefits  to 
every  segment  of  the  campus." 

He  said  that  Student  Party  can- 
didates will  hi  wsiting  rooms  and 
meetings  on  campus  from  now 
until  e^fction.  He  pointed  out  SP 
candidates  "have  displayed  will- 
ingness to  serve  and  the  ability 
to  fill  the  positions  which  they 
seek." 

"The  Student  Party  Jws  proven 


that  hard  wurk  and  good  work 
can  be  good  in  politics  and  will 
continue  to  prove  this.  The  party 
feels  that  one  can  win  by  showing 
what's  right  with  you  and  not 
what's  wrong  with  the  other  fel- 
low.' 


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^fnd     Fur> 
Holiday 

Howcvci 
AdvLsorj- 
dates,     and 
come  b>  thel 
quarters  Sur 
final  campaj 


JOIN  THE  THRIFT  PARADE  Iq  your  friendly  Colonial  Store  .  .  .  where  your  total 
food  bill  is  less,  and  where  every  purchase  is  barked  by  ColoniaFs  famous  money- 
back  guarantee  of  complete  satisfaction.  You  are  the  sole  judge,  and  you  must  be 
satisfied  with  what  you  buy  at  Colonial  Stores,  or  your  money  will  be  promptly  and 
clieerfnlly  refunded!    Shop  with  confidence  at  Colonial  .  .  .  and  savel  - 


Advertising  Clinic  Here 
On  Saturday,  April  6 

Advertising  personnel  from 
daily  and  non-daily  newspapers  in 
North  and  South  Carolina  have 
been  invited  to  attend  a  one-day 
"grass  roots  advertising  clinic"  on 
the  UyC  campus  Saturday,  April 
6. 

The  Newspaper  Advertising 
Executives  Assn.  of  tbe  Carolinas 
and  the  UNC  School  of  Journalism 
will  sponsor  the  conference,  which 
will  include  top  speakers  from 
New  York  and  the  two  Carolinas. 

A.  L.  Brandon  of  the  Rocky 
Mounty  Evening  Telegram,  con- 
ference chairman,  said  that  journ- 
alism and  advertising  students 
from  UNC  and  the  University  of 
South  Carolina  will  also  attend. 

"TJie  advertising  outlook  for 
1857  iappears  to  be  good,"  Bran- 
don said,  "but  it  wUl  be  a  year 
of  'hard  sell"  for  newspapers  in- 
teiM  competition  among  all  med- 
Hf  for-adveftiserrtlollaffs.-    ■" 


SCQTT  nssTO 
INSTANT  c<"™ 

TOMATO  -nncE 


Regular  13c 
Vidw  . . .  Yon 
Save  3c  m  Roll 


CS  BRA^D 


Regular  $1.25    j^j^ 
Value  •  Save  6f 


REDGATE      ^^  q^ 
Regular  29c      ^^^ 
Value  -  Save  4c 


f*f>i 


NO 


Lnters  Smoked,  W'hole  or  Half 


PICNICS   BEANS 


Sp^^igBl!  Fresh    Tender    Green   Snap 


LBS. 


Chi  Omega  Award  For  House 

Chancellor  Robert  B.  House  was  presented  the  first  honorary 
Distinguished  Service  Award  by  Chi  Omoga  sorority's  Epsllon  Bota 
chaaftr  Monday  night.  The  chapter  held  Its  annuel  Elusinlan  Ban- 
quet at  which  the  eighth  Distinguished  Sarvice  Award  for  Woman 
was  given  postumously  to  Miss  "Hattie"  Parrott,  who  was  the  first 
supervisor  of  elementary  schools  in  the  stete  and  a  leader  in  edu- 
•  cation  for  many  years.  Her  niece,  Duke  University  freshman  Anne 
T.  Parrott,  accepted  the  a>w»rd.  Chancellor  House  is  shown  with  Miss 
Kstherin  K.  Coe  of  Washington,  D.  C,  chapter  president,  who  pre- 
sented his  citation  for  his  contributions  as  "adn>inistrator  _  friend, 
lifsfonah,'|»hnosoiBher, 'scholar  and  "poet."" 


Your   bent   meal 

buy!  S*x   to  eight 

pountis  nrcrngm 

ipcighl   .   .   ,   LB. 


POTATOES 


N€W  CROP  FLORIDA  WHITC- 
GREAT   SERVED  WITK  GREEN  BEANS' 


ISaiur-Temler  Veal  Values! 

VEAL  SllOliLDER  )  VEAL   RIB 

BOAST       CHOPS 


LL 


LB. 


Qi;A!.rrY-CON"TROlXED  FRESH 

GBOUND  BBDP 

lOOOS  fAXCT  DRT-CWIED  SLICED 

VA.  BACON 


LI. 


TIP-TOP  PURE   \  ACt'l  M-PACKED 

COFFEE  IB  CAN    75c 

su.vb»  l.\0^:l  PHt:c;isio.\-Gnou;\D 

COFFEE  '  B  BAG    87c 

OUR   PRa>E   FRESH  SLICED   WIENER 

ROLLS  ^'^^  6 15c  PKG.  12  25c 

CRLEX  CLVXT  TENDER 

SWEET  PEAS  3  NO  303  50c 

REP  HUID   VUINNA 

SAUSAGE      10  NO  /.  99c 

NUTREAT  COLORED  QVARTEHS 

MARGARINE       •    21c 

PICK-OF-THE-NEST  GRADE  'A"  FRESH 

LARGE  EGGS    ^°^    45c 


WESSON 

on 


Regular  67c 
Value  .   .   .    You    QUART 
Save  Sc  BOTTLE 

At   Colanial! 


Gorton  s  Frozen  Fish  Values! 

T«Mi«!«  m  QjiM*        I       In   Mushroom  Sauce  (         >»  Leni«o   Batter 
Nave*                   %  SBoce 

T\»h   Sfriks      j        Sole  Fillet  ;  Flounder  FiUel 

»il       59^  I  10  OZ       59c  10  OE       59£ 


Chef's  Pride  Fresh  Potato  Salad     '*^^  ^"^  31  e 
Chef's  Pride  Pimento-Cheese  >°'  ""'  43c 


u.,,    CheFs  Prid9  Fruit  Jell 

)t'i 


»Mr  a»    35c 


DA 

KU 

1 

Girl 

nick 

5 

Styl 

9 

Hue 

10 

A  G 

f    air 

12 

Cp\* 

13 

Girl 

14 

Arj 

dnn 

15 

FfMJ 

17 

C*-r 

(!«>1 

18 

Pail 

19. 

GoU 

20 

SU-i 

2S 

Sor 

t'V« 

25 

B»] 

26 

Mo 

27 

I^ 

um 

in  Qu 

79 

Ex 

30 

Ml 

nki 

.■Jl 

SI< 

32 

Ch 

3.''. 

Sp 

36 

M< 

rai 

38 

I> 

«« 

M< 

» 

41 

n 

42 

P.C 

ri( 

<1 

til 

Reg.   63p 
Lb.   Value! 


W.  Franklin  St  at  Graham 


Glen  Lennox  Shopping  Center 


'  ■  •  •  "  m^^a^^mf^^mmm^mm 


THURSDAY,  MARCH  28,  1957 


rk 


t. 


iter 


THE  DAILY  TAB  HEEL 


PAOt    PtVf 


Serving  Punch 

Th«  three  persons  shown  above  at  the  Graham  Memorial  Open 
House  Monday  night  appear  to  be  enjoying  themselves  while  talking 
in  front  of  the  punch  bowl.  From  left  to  right  are  Mrs.  Gordon 
Blackwell,  wife  of  the  recently-elected  Woman's  College  chancellor, 
Mrs.  Douglas  Fambrough,  who  works  in  the  GM  information  office 
and  former  Director  Jimmy  Wallace. 


Watching  The  Festivities 

The  open  house  celebrating  Graham  Memorial's  25th  birthday, 
features  something  of  interest  to  the  persons  pictured  above.  From 
left  to  right  are  Director  of  Student  Activities  Sam  Magill,  Mrs. 
William  C.  Friday,  wife  of  the  consolidated  university  president  and 
Mrs.  Magill. 

Photos  By  Wooay  Sears 


Coeds  Invite^ 
To  Sign  List 

The  YWCA  has  invited  all  girls 
interested  in  holding  a  cabinet 
position  that  did  not  fill  out  an 
application  for  the  Leadership 
Training  Program  to  sign  the  list 
in  the  Y  office  by  Monday  night. ! 

According  to  the  announcement, 
chairmen  are  needed  for  the  fol- 
lowing committees:  Campus  Chris- 
tian Council,  Campus  Chest,  con- 
ferences, intercollegiate  relations.  I 
nur.se.s  assn..  office  force,  publi- 
cations board,  social  committee, 
speakers'    forums. 

Vespers  worship,  world  under- 
standing, "Y"  night,  community 
work,  hospital  work.  Holmes  Day 
Nursery,  Dix  Hill  Sanitarium, 
Gravely  Sanitorium,  and  Girl 
Scoute. 

These  positions,  said  the  an- 
nouncement, offer  a  challenge  to 
those  viiio  are  interested  in  serv- 
ing the  campus  and  the  commun- 
ity. All  those  interested  have  been 
urged  to  apply. 


In;ISi|P'iCo^«""g  The  Campus 


Advisory  Board 
Meet  Delayed 

The     meeting     of     the    Student 

[Party  Advisory  Board,  planned  for 

Sunday  night,  has  been  postponed. 

ccording    to    SP    Vice-Chairman 

rhit  Whitfield. 

Whitfield  said  the  meeting  had 
een  called  off  because  of  the  con- 
ting  presentation  of  the  Sound 
Fury     production     "Thieves 


WORLD  NEWS 


(Cor.tinued   From   Page   1) 

Colonial    Government     announced 
Wednssday. 

The  attack  was  attributed  to  a 
gang  of  Sudan  army  mutineers 
still  holding  out  on  the  Uganda- 
Sudan  border  after  a  rebellion 
two  years  ago. 


rever.    Whitfield    urged     all 
ory    Board    members,    candi- 
and     party    members     "tc 
l^by  the  party  campaign  head- 
Sunday  night  to  help  with 
impaign  plans." 


iVIVxo* 


sbe 


d\Ato' 


,u\Al 


onW  "^ 


V\o\«S£ 


BMBm 
Sterung 

Hayden 


c^ 


i»A 


s©J! 


o^» 


M  ttni 
UHITB)  «TISTS 


Macmillan  Home 

LONDON  — (AP)—  Prime  Min- 
ister Macmillan  flew  home  Wed- 
nesday from   Bermuda  talks  with 

Condition  Of 
Injured  Man 
Is  Good 

Benny  Deaton,  a  prizefighter 
from  Durham  who  was  injured 
in  an  automrbile  accident  here 
Saturday  night,  is  reported  to  be 
in  "good"  condition.  He  is  now 
in    Watts    Hospital    in    Durham. 

^      Deato^  reportedly  suffered  mul- 

i  tiple    fracuires   of   both   legs   after  j 

being    pinned    between    two    cars 

and    thrown    to    the    ground.    The 

i  cars    were    driven    by   Donald    Gi- 

ard.    sophomore    from    Henderson, 

I  and    Heyward    Myers,    sophomore 

'  from  New  Haven,  Conn. 

Local  police  were  unable  to 
j  identify  the  driver  of  the  car  on 
]  which    Deaton   was   sitting. 


President  Eisenhower^  and  said 
Britain  will  save  "immense  sums" 
by  using  American-made  guided 
missiles  for  defense. 

He  got  a  warm  welcome  from 
government  officials  who  have 
been  plagued  during  his  absence 
by  a  spreading  rash  of  strikes  in 
vital  industries. 

He  immediately'  held  cabnet- 
level  meetings  to  get  highlights 
on  the  labor  situation,  and  also 
on  developments  in  the  Cyprus 
constitutional  dispute. 


Queen  May  Visit 

OTTAWA  —  (AP)  —  Queen 
Elizabeth  H  will  be  asked  to  come 
to  Canada  first  if  she  visits  the 
United  States  this  year.  Prime 
Minister  Louis  St.  Laurent  said 
Wednesdiay. 

St.  Laurent  told  newsmen  on 
his  return  from  his  Bermuda 
meeting  with  Prime  Minister 
Macmillan  that  no  decisions  were 
reached  there  concerning  the 
Queen's  visit. 


Dl  WINS 

(Contmiied  from  Page  1) 

"argued  If  a  representaitve  were 
bound  to  the  will  of  the  people 
he  would  lose  his  initiative.  Say- 
ing that  legislators  are  better  in- 
lormed  than  the  average  person, 
he  concluded  the  representatives 
elected  because  the  people  they 
will  best  serve  their  interest  In 
the  long  run. 

'  "A  government  is  only  success- 
ful when  it  follows  the  direction 

!  of  the  pepople,"  said  Senator 
Dave  Rcid.   He  claimed   the   only 

I  way  to  have  a  true  democracy  Is 

I  to  have  the  legislators  speak  for 

j  the  will  of  the  people. 

I  Representative  John  Brooks 
argued  a  representative  is  not  on- 
ly elected  to  reflect  the  will  of  the 
people  but  also  to  use  his  own 
judgment.  He  said  coagress  had 
saved  the  people  from  fheir  own 
mistakes.     "A     representative 

'should  follow  the  dictates  o$  his 
own  heart,"  he  concluded. 

Matthews  gave  the  first  three 
minute  rebuttal;  he  claimed  that 
the  people  have  a  right  to  be 
wrong,  but  they  should  not  sacri- 

ifice  their  rights.  -s 


NOW  PLAYING 


tf  Even  funnier  than  Ihe 
M     Pulitzet  Pnie  play' 

/Marlon  BRANDO 
I  Gienn  FGRD 
I  Machiko  KYO 

iTbeTeahoase 

■  OF  THE 

■  CINiMASCCPf  i 

■  MfTROCOlOR 

I '^'^  Eddie  ALBERT 


Carolina 


NOW  PLAYING 


DAILY    CROSSWORD 


ACB06S 

1.  Girl's 

nickname 
5.  Stylish 
9.  Hue 
10.  A  Great 

Lake 

12.  Celerity 

13.  Girl's  name 

14.  Any  fruit 
drink 

15.  Fountain 

17.  Cerium 
(sym.) 

18.  Painful 

19.  Gold  ( her. ) 

20.  Sea  (Eur.) 
23.  Song  for 

two 

25.  Bay  window 

26.  Moldy 

27.  Large 
umbrella 

2S.  Quicker 

29.  Exist 

30.  Mark  on 
skin 

31.  Sloth 

32.  Christmas 
song 

33.  Sprite 
36.  More 

rational 
38.  Dwelling 
40.  Mend*,  as 

a  bone 

41  Parts 

42  Rod  for 
meat 

43.  Periods  of 
time 

DOWN 

1.  Pointed 
driving  rod 


2.  Otherwise 

3.  Decay 

4.  Clover 

5.  Backbone 

6.  Injure 

7.  Anger 

8.  Solid 

9.  Mandarin 
tea 

11.  Bom 
16.  Grampus 

18.  Stair 

19.  Eject 

20.  Marsh 

21.  Horses 
(kind) 

22.  Fruit 


aaaa  aaoc  « 


23.  House- 
hold 
nuis- 
ance 

24.  Norse 
god 

26.  Duck 
28.  Charge 

for 

services 

30.  Wick- 
edest Y««t«rd»y'»  A»iwer 

31.  Question  35.  God  of 

32.  Grass  used  pleasure 
in  thatching  (Egypt.) 

33.  Hallowed         37.  Small  dnnk 

34.  Poems  39.  Snake 


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CONSTITUTION- 

(Continued  from  page  3) 

order  within  the  limitations  of  this  constitution,  direct  the  Elections 
Board  t»  conduct  an  election  for  the  office  in  question,  in  which  elec- 
tion the  officer  in  question  shall  have  the  right  to  be  a  candidate 
The  incumbent  shall  continue  in  office  until  the  election  returns 
shall  be  officially  announced. 

Section  3.  LMTIATIVE.  The  student  body  shall  have  power  to 
initiate  any  act  within  the  power  of'the  Student  Legislature,  pro- 
vided that  10  percent  of  the  qualified  voters  in  the  group  concerned 
shall  sign  a  petition  calling  for  an  election  within  the  groj^p  on  a 
bill  which  they  shall  submit  in  writing  with  the  petiton  to  .Uje  presi- 
dent of  the  student  body.  The  president  shall,  if  he  determmes  the 
petition  to  be  in  good  order  within  the  limiations  of  this  consti- 
tution, direct  the  Elections  Board  to  conduct  an  election  on  the  bill 
in  not  less  than  six.  nor  more  than  15,  days  after  he  shairhave  re- 
ceived the  petition  and  bill.  Public  notice  of  such  election  shall  be 
given  not  less  than  four  days  before  it  shall  take  place.  A  majority  of 
the  votes  cast  at  the  election  shall  be  sufficient  to  pass  the  bill. 

Section  4.  REFERENDUM.  The  student  body  s:hall  have  power 
to  call  for  a  ballot  on  any  act  of  the  Student  Legislature,  provided 
a  petition  calling  for  the  ballot  and  specifying  in  writing  the  action 
the  referendum  is  to  take  shall  be  signed  by  10  percent  of  the  group 
concerned  and  transmitted  in  writing  to  the  president  of  the  stu- 
dent -body.  The  president  shall,  if  he  determines  the  petition  to  be 
in  gdod  order  within  the  limitations  of  this  constitution,  direct  the 
Elections  Board  to  conduct  an  election  on  the  act  in  not  less  than 
six  nor  more  than  15  days  after  he  shall  have  received  the  petition. 
Public  noice  of  such  election  shall  be  given  not  less  than  four  days 
before  it  shall  take  place.  A  majority#of  the  votes  cast  jit  |he  elec- 
tions shall  be  sufficient  to  pass  the  bill. 

Section  5.  COERCION  OF  VOTERS  PROHIBITED.  No  group 
or  organization  on  the  campus  of  the  University  shall  coerce  or  in 
any  manner  unduly  influence  any  student's  vote.  The  Student  Legis- 
lature shall  have  the  power  to  make  laws  to  enforce  this  provision. 

Section  6.  GUARANTEE  OF  CONS-HTUTIONAL  RIGHTS.  The 
Student  Legislature  shall  not  make  any  law  abridging  or  denying  the 
freedom  of  the  student  press  or  any  other  freedom  guaranteed  by  the 
Constitution  of  the  United  States  to  citizens  of  the  United  States, 
or  by  the  Constitution  of  the  State  of  North  Carolina  to  citizens  oi 
North  Carolina. 
ARTICLE  VIII 
AMENDMENT  PROCEDURE 

Amendments  to  this  constitution  shall  become  valid  when  pass- 
ed by  a  simple  majority  of  those  voting  in  campus  elections  conduct- 
ed by  the  Elections  Board  at  the  direction  of  the  Student  Legislature: 
or,  they  shall  become  valid  when,  upon  petition  in  writing  signed  b" 
10  percent  of  th?  duly  enrolled  students  in  the  University  cf  North 
Carolina,  the  president  of  the  student  body  shall  direct  the  Elections 
Board  to  conduct  an  election  in  which  a  favorable  vote  of  two-third5 
of  those  voting  shall  be  necessary  to  ratify  the  amendment.  Public 
nctfice  of  sucAi  election  shall  be  given  by  the  Elections  Board  not 
less  than  six  days  before  the  vote  shall  be  taken. 
ARTICLE  IX 
SUPREME  STUDENT  LAW 

Section  1.  CONSTITUTION  AND  LAWS  SUPREME.  This  con- 
stitution and  aB  laws  enacted  pursuant  thereto  shall  be  the  supreme 
student  law. 

SectiWl  2.  MESENT  L.\WS  AND  RULES  TO  CONTINUE  IN 
EFFECT.  All  laws  enacted  bv  the  Student'  Legislature  and  all  rules 
passed  by  the  various  const itutionaJlv  established  agencies  of  stu- 
deirt.  e:>vernment  shall  continue  in  full  force  and  cffeft  until  changed 
by  the  agiencies  concerned  pursuant  to  this  constitution. 
ARTICLE  X 
RATIFICATION  AND  APPROVAL? 

This  constitution  shall  be  ratifTcd  by  a  simple  majority  of  the 
Student  LegreUKure  sitting' as  a  institutional  convention  and  ap- 
proved by  a  simple  majority  of  tKbse  voting  at  the  qeneral  c.ampu.« 
elections  of  1957.  -         >f^■ 


AAALIN 

(Continited  from  Poffe  1) 

community  of  all  citizens." 

The  determination  of  how  much  f 
"stress  and  strain  and  how  much  | 
trouble  the  South  will  have  in  ^-olv- 
lag  the  problem"  was  said  by  Mai-  j 
in  to  depend  on  what  "will  come  I 
from  white  protestant  churches."  j 
.More  so  than  denominational  head-  j 
quarters,  Malin  said,  "The  key  t6 
this  determiniation  .will  come  from 
local   ministers   and   deacons." 

Malin  said  that  the  United  States 
will  "never  finally  dispose  of  any 
of  these  problems  because  of  the  ' 
three  channels  of  civil  libertieiV '. 
which  will  be  encoimtered  and  en- 
compassed in.  i 

Elarlier  in  his  speech  Malin  out- 
lined these  three  channels  of  civil 
liberties  as  the  freedoms  o|  §peech, 
press,  religion,  etc.,  due  process 
of  law,  and  equality  before  the 
law. 

In  describing  the  progress 
niade  toward  the  cleaning  up>  of 
restraints  on  these  "three  chan- 
nels of  freedom",  Malin  listed 
the  problems  still  remaining,  the 
en  which  his  speech  was  based. 
"Liberty   —    Unfinished   Business" 


CLASSIFIEDS 


FIVE  ROOM  BRICK  HOUSE  IN 
center  of  town — has  hobby  work- 
shop. Call  9458  during  day  or 
2926  after  5:30  a^d  during 
weekend. 


FOR  INEXPENSIVE  LIVING:  27 
ft.  Nashua  trailer — has  bath, 
tub,  shower,  porch,  oil  heater, 
added  room.  Connected  to  util- 
ities and  septic  tank.  1  mile  out 
on  airport  road.  $2300.  Call 
8472. 


LEAVING  FRIDAY  1  P.M.  FOR 
Ann  Arbor,  Mich.  Retiu*n  in  time 
for  Tuesday  morning  classes. 
Need  two  more  riders.  Fred 
Powledge,  93361  or  88602  — 
Leave  message  if  I'm  not  there. 


APARTMENT  ON  QUIET  STREET 
— three  rooms,  stove,  and  re- 
frigerator furnished.  Brisk  15 
mmute  walk  from  South  Build- 
ing. $65.   Call  8-8528. 


APARTMENT  FOR  RENT  — $45 
per  month.  In  Carrboro.  Bed- 
room, livingroom,  kitchenette 
and  bath.  Newly  decorated  and 
very  nice  upstairs  apt.  with 
outside  private  entrance.  Stove 
and  refrigerator  furnished.  Call 
9-8286. 

LOST:  $45  SOMEWI^M;  IN  THE 

I     vicinity  of  Woollen  Gym  or  Cobb 

I     Dorm.  Finder  please  contact  Leo 

Russavage  at  218  Cobb  Dorm  or 

I  call  8-9093,  and  receive  re\vard. 

I : 

I  WILL    PAY    CASH    FOR     GOOD 

I  running  Chevrolet,  Ford  or  other 

I  small  car.  Must  be  mechanically 

!  good    and    low    priced.    Phone 
!     3081. 


Nfiw^mbQrs 

Phi  AlpbfL.  l^icta,  national  hon-^^ 
ofary  histqry' fraterhity,  initiated 
14  new  .raembeH  when  it  met 
Tuesday  'in  tii^'  libtar^  Assembly 
Room.     V'^-,  ■'•  ;"''\--i^^  \       ■*■     "'. 

Five  ihitlafes  '  were  gi'aduate  • 
students,  and  nine  Were  under- 
graduates.   "'-'■'■    ■      '  ;;  i;.  r-/- 

Graduate  'stu^ent^  initiated  in- 
cluded Janies  R.  :A^^nderson,  L'eroy 
Joseph  Dare,'  George  Horner  Gib- 
son, W.  Noah  Lindsay  and  William 
Ernest  rtaekie/all  of  Chapel  HilL 

The  undefgr^fKiuates  were  Miss 
Sheila  Boone  Cronan  of  Wethers- 
field,  Con.,  Robert  Fassberg  of 
Spring  Valiey,  N.  Y.,  WUUam ' 
Holmes  'Johnson  of  Reidsville, ; 
William  Arthiir  Nebel  of  Char- 1 
lotte,  John  R. -.Newton  of  Chapel  I 
Hill,  WifliJim  Thomas  Ray  of  Char-  j 
lotte,  Miss  I«^eltie  XK>iuse  Sanders 
of  Charl^ton,  S.  C,  Lloyd  R.  Shaw 
Jr.  of  Statesyide  and-  Blui^ier .  E. 
Taylor  of  Kinstca^.'   .  •  j 

Hii  Alpha  Theta,  represented  in  [ 
150  imiv«*sities  ' and  colleges  in' 
the  United  States,  recognizes  out-  i 
standing  si^hplasttc  achievement  in 
the  field  of  hioitory, 

Reqtiii^irients  for  admission  as 
und^gr^uates  are  a  B-plus  aver- 
age in  -history  cbufBes  and  a  B 
average  in  other  oollege-  work. 
Graduate  students  must  have  suc- 
cessfully eompleteci  one  semester 
in  graduate  wcark- yfith  a  B.  aver- 
age.        ■._'  ''■•'•.  ■  .;■■■■'■'  •■'// 

Offie^s^  fhe^lpeal  chaptiei-  dre 
Samuel  f;  Wells  Jr.,  president; 
William  0,  Bkura,  vice  president; 
and  Miss  Joanne  Saunders,  secre 
tary-treasairer.  '      . 


PHYSICS  CLUB 

The  Physics  Club  will  meet  to- 
day at  8  p.m.  in  P/iillips  Hall  room 
252.  Dr.  Ekigene  Merzbacber  will 
speak  on  a  topic  of  current  inter- 
est, accordir;g  to  ap  announcement 

FICTION   BOARD  J 

The  Carolina    Quarterly  l-lction 

Board  will  meet  today  at  4:45  p.m. 
I  in  the  Quarterly  office,  according 
!to  editor  Mi..-j  Marcelline  Kraf- 
!  chick. 


HEALTH    PROGRAM 


iwill  stage  the  hext  television  pro- 
!gram  on  the  current  "Project 
Kiealth"  series.  .TMs  hour-long  pro- 


gram will  be  at  9  a.m.  Friday. 
WUNC-TV 

12:45  Music 

1:00  Today  on  the  Farm 

1:30  Play  Period 

5:15  Music 

5:30  Mr.   Murgie's  Musce 

5:45  Draw  Me  a   Story 

6:00  Legi^-lative  Review 

6:20  News  and  Safety 

6:30  American   Government 

7:00  Museum  of  Art 

7:30  German   Course 

8:15  Dr.  Schiver 

9:00  World  of  Man 

9:30  Lecture -Hall 

10:00  Final  E^on 


SOUND 
AND  FURY 

To  Run  Three  Nights 

Sat.  -  March  30 
Sun. -March  31 
Mon.- April  1 


$0 p  a  n  d  AA  o  n  k  present... 

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combination  of  50%  Dacron  and  50%  Cotton.  Introduced  last 
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■  ^•V'»  'J-7  Tv  -JX-^J 


f  AOt  SIX 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


THURSDAY.  MARCH  W.   IfS* 


Baseballers  Beaten  11-7  By  Delaware;  Play  Terps  Today 


Williams  Posts  5-3 
Win  Over  Tar  Heels 

By  JIM  CROWNOVER  .  tingling  sets.  Uvingstone  wott  th« 

_.     „,.„.         „„„  „  ,  '  first  set  6-2,  lost  the  s«coad.  7-^, 

The  Williams  College  netters  of  !      ...        .  ,*  .  _  -  ^  . '  m. 

°       _.  and  then  blew  a  4-3  letd  in  toe 

Williamstown.   Mass.,   eked   out   a   ^^^.^  j^  j^^  ^^^  ^^j  ^^^  ^^^j, 

close   5-3   win  over  ;the   Carolina '  e^.. 

tennis  team  here  yesterday  after- 


noon. 


The  match,  fought  down  to  the 
wire,  was  called  because  of  dark- ' 
ness  with  one  doubles  match  irtill  i  Maryland  tomorrow   and  Harvard 


1^  two  teams  will  g«^at  it 
again  this  afternoon  at  3  p.m. 
After  today's  match  witte  WUiiwns^ 
the    local    netters    plav    host    to 


in  progress.  Tlie  match  that  was 
called  pitted  the  number  one  dou- 
bles teams  of  each  school,  Steve 
Bank  and  Ray  Newsome  of  Caro- 
lina and  Karl  Hirshman  and  I>ave 
Leonard  of  Williams.  The  score 
when  darkness  intervened,  was 
7-5.  4-6.  6-6. 

UNC's  number  two  doubles  team 
of  Geoff  Black  and  Frank  Living- 
ston captured  their  match,  6-4, 
8-6.  while  the  third  tandem  of 
t'anie  Smith  and  Fritz  Van  Win- 
kle fell    7-5,  8-6. 

Carolina'-'  only  victors  in  the 
singles  battles  were  number  one 
man  Steve  Bank  and  NewsJme. 
Bank  conquered  tjirl  Hirshman,  ! 
6-4.  5-7.  6-0,  while  Newsome 
stopped  Joe  Turner.  6-2,  6-2.  , 


Monday  and  Tuesday. 

Coach  Ham  Strayhota  said  fol" 
lowing  the  match,  "Tbe  bfi^rs  life 
looking  better  all  along.  I'm  sure 
that  as  soon  as  we  gaih  some  ex- 
perience we'll  be  foiling  A\>me 
people?' 

The  summary: 


Wild  Affair 
Stopped  In 
8fh  Inning 

•y   IlkU   KING 

The  Delaware  Blue  Hens  sent 
the  Onolina  baseballers  down  to 
their  tJiird  defeat,  11-7  in  Emerson 
SUdiism  yesterday  in  a  wild  and 
woolly  fracas  that  bad  to  be  called 
at  the  end  of  eight  innings  be- 
cause of  darkness. 

The  contest  showed  few  traces 
pf  souiid  baseball  as  both  clubs 
were  fuilty  of  some  costly  errors 
and  ifttffective  pitching.  Very  few 
of  the  estimated  900  fans  who 
turned  out  to  watch  tbe  Tar  Heels 
in  thjl^ir  h^roe  opener  stayed 
around  until  the  finish. 

Coach    Walter    Rabb   sent    five 


National  Swim  Meet  Begins 
Here  Tonight;  Yale  Favored 


By  STEWART  BIRD 


more,  Tim  Jecko,  who  two  we^s  i  Iowa,  and  Stanford,  in  that  order. 


ago  became  the  first  triple  crown 
A  coUegiate  swimming  team  is  ^.i^ner  in  the  Eastern  CoUegiates 
generally  regarded  as  to  its  power  i  since .  the  days  of  the  late  John 
as  an  all  around  aggregation  by ,  Marshall  Of  Yale  in  1951.  Jecko  is 
how  it  places  in  the  final  point  |  favored  in  the  100  and  200  butter- 
score  of  the  .Rational  collegiate  j  ^^  ^nd  the  individual  medley, 
swimming  championship^'.  ■     Krepp  in   the   two   backstrokes, 

and  two  fine  relay  teams,  along 
with    possible     pbint*    in    other 


8-6,  6-2. 

i     Doubles:    Bank    and    Newsome, 

(C),    ted    Hirshman   and   Leonard, 

7-5,  4-6,  6-6  (match  called  because 

ot    darkness);    Black    and    Living- 

In  the  match  of  the  day  ,  Dave   stone,     (C),    defeated    Eells    and 

Leonard  of  Williams  was  foi-ced  to    Schulman,    6-4,    8-6;    Turner    and 

Bcrap  from  behind  to  defeat  UNC's  Fleishman,    (W),    defeated    Smith 

Frank 'Livingi^tone  in  three  spine   and  Van  Winkle,  7-5,  8-6. 


Singles:  Bank,  (C),  defeated  |  htoiers  to  the  n>ound  in  an  at- 
Hirshman,  6-4,  5-7,  6^;  Schulman,  j  t^mpt  to  come  up  with  some  effec- 
(W)  defeated  Black,  9-7,  6^;'Uve  Irurliug  but  'th«  Tar  Heel 
Leonard,  (W),  defeated  LiviHf-  moundainen  couldnt  find  the 
itcTi^  2-6,  7-5,  6-4;  NeWsoxne,  (C),  |  range  as  they  walkad  nine  Dela- 
defeated  Turner,  ■6-2,  6^2;  Bells,'  ware  m«n.  Tbe  Tar  Heels  were  al- 
(W),  defeated  Van  Winkle,  6-1, ;  so  guilty  of  three  coytly  errors. 
ii-0;  Searls,  (W),  defeated  Jacobus,  I     The  visitors  jumped  off  to  a  3-0   dominated    the    scene;    Michigan, 


With  that  thought  uppermost  in 
their  minds  and  a  keen  desire  to 
bring  recognition  to  themselves 
and  their  particular  "Halls  of  ivy," 
live  hundred  and  fifty  of  the  best 
mermen  in  the  country,  represent- 
ing fifty-seven  colleges  from  coast 
to  coast,  swing  into  action  tonight 
at  Bowman  Gray  Memorial  Pool  in 
the  thirty  fourth  renewal  of  the 
NCAA   swimming  championships. 

This  annual  clajsic  had  its  be- 
ginning in  1924,  but  it  was  not  un- 
til 1937  that  point  totals  were  kept 
and  a  national  champion  named. 
Since  that  time,  three  teams  have 


events,  give  the  host  Tar  Heels 
'he  chance  on  nailing  down  the 
fifth  spot.  Krepp  is  favored  in 
both  of  his  events,  the  freestyle 
iclay  quartet  is  ranked  third,  and 
the  medley  relay  aggregation 
fourth. 


The  first  event  gets  underway 
at  seven,  o'clock  tonight  with  the 
national  1500  meter  freestyle 
crown  at  stake.  Twenty-four  swim- 
mevj  are  entered  in  the  meteric 
mile,  with  Yale  favored  in  vhe 
first  three  positions.  Richard  Elli- 
son, six^  place  finisher  last  year, 
has  turned  in  the  season's  best 
time  ahead  of  Anderson  and 
Jecko.  Robinson  of  Yale,  who  fin- 
ished ahead  of  Ellison  last  year  in 
fjfth  position,  'u  rated  seventh  in 
the  premeet  dope  sheet. 

Full  action  begins  at  10  o'clock 
Friday  morning  and' at  1:30  Friday 


Rosenbluth  To  Wed 


MOUIfT  AIRY.  N 
Lennie  Rosenbluth,  the  Univers- 
ity of  North  Carolina's  All-Amer- 
ica basketball  player,  will  wed 
Helen  Powell  Oliver  of  Mount 
Airy  June  1.  She  is  a  graduate 
of  UNC. 

The  bride-elect  is  the  daughter 
of   Dr.    and    Mrs.    Otis    Oliver    of 


C.—(AP)—1  Mount  Airy.  * 

Rosenbluth,  captain  of  the  UN^ 
team  which  last  Saturday  won  the 
NCAA  title,  is  the  son  of  Mi; 
and  Mrs.  Jack  Rosenbluth  of 
Greeneville,  Tenn.  He  is  a  native 
of  New  York  City  and  attended 
Staunton  Military  Academy  at 
Staunton,   Va. 


Howard  Johnson  Restaurant 

BREAKFAST 

LUNCH 

DINNER  • 

SNACKS 
"Landmark  For  Hunqry  Tarheels"        ^ 


afternoon    with    trials    in    seven 
Roimding   out   the   top   ten   are '  events  followed  by  finals  at  eight 
Harvard,  Northwestern,  Oklahoma,   that  evening. 


UNC  Golfers  Cop  One 
Sided  Win  Over  Cornell 


Carolina's     well     balanced     golf 
team  rolled  tj  its  first  win  oi  the 
season  yesterday  on  Finley  course 
as  they  whitewashed  visiting  Cor- 
nell. 27-0.  ! 
Led     by     co-raedalisto.-     Tommy 
Langley  and  Buck  Adams,  the  Tar 
Heels  swept  every  match  with  lit- 
tle   or    no    trouble.    Adams    and 
Langley   each   posted   a   71,  while 
Sam    Patrick.    Walt    Summerville 
and  Cal  Mitchell   each   had  a  73. 
Gene  Looka'jil!  was  high  man  with 
74. 

Low  man  for  Cornell  was  Harry 
Halac.  Halac.  a  3-0  loser  to  Lang- 


rlt'ad  after  '^^ur  innings.  Charlie 
Cross  started  for  t)volina  but 
gave  way  to  veteran  Don  Saine 
in  the  second  who  pitched  3 
trames.  Both  allowed  two  runs. 

Ihe  Tbr  (if  elj  cfme  back  with  a 
run  in  the  fifth  ^n<)  another  in 
the  sixth  alter  Delaware  scored 
one  in  tlie  sixth. 

'ihe  vifHors  scored  four  times 
in  tbe  seven ^i  off  two  Carolina 
pitchers.  Delaware  Wleeted  three 
of  the  runs  as  the  result  of  sijigles 
and  the  fourth  on  a  wild  pitch. 

The  Tar  Heels  «ri»llied  for  three 

runs  in  the  bottom  of  the  seventh 

without  collecting  a-  Wt.  Two  cost- 

a  76  over  the  soggy  Finley  layout '  ly  errors  and  five  walker-  allowed 

Coach    Chuck    Erickson's    IJHC  (he  T^  Heels  to  pull  to  within  3 

squad  opened  the  1957  campaign ,  runs  of  Delaware  at  8-5. 


Mondaj     against    Rollins    College, 
and  came  out  with  a  13-13  tie.  The , 
vctal     linkster^'     iace     LMichigan  ' 
Slate  here  tomorrow.  ; 

'Ihe  summary:  ' 

Langley,  (C).  defeated  Halac, 
3-0;  Lookabill,  (C)  defeated  Klein, 
3-0:  best  ball.  Carolina.  3-0. 

Adams,  (C),  defeated  T-allman, 
3-0:  Patrick,  (C)  defeated  Tavlin, 
3-0;  best  hall,  CaroilB*;  3^. 

Summerville.  (C),  defeated  Mau-, 
SO;  Mitchell,  (C)    defied  Foster, 


Ihe  Blue  Hens  put  the  frosting 
on  the  oake  in  the  eighth  with 
three  more  big  runs  oil  Carolina 
error  and  a  home  run  by  short 
stop  Fred  Walters. 

Maryland    invades    Chapel    Hill 
this   afternoon   in   the   Tar 
j  first   .\CC  outing. 

I  TH£  BOX 

)  DiLAWARE 

mm-^  :£-, 


Ohio  State,  and  Yale.  In  all, 
Michigan  has  taken  six,  Yale  lour 
and  Ohio  State  ten  championships 
in  the  past  twenty  years. 

Though     not     picked     to     place 
higher  than  fifth  in  the  meet,  the 
hOit  Carolina  Tar  Heels  have  one 
contender   for   national    honors    <n 
Charlie  Krepp,  the  pren<eet  favor- 
ite in  the  100  and  200  yard  back- 
stroke  events..   However,  Carolina 
hopes  received  a  drastic  blow  la..'t 
week    when    during    practice    the 
ACC  champion  suffered  a   pulled 
muscle  in  his  upper  ngnt  arm  that 
has    caused     a    strain     there     and 
down   the  right  side  of  his  back. 
He  worked  out   yesterday  with   a ' 
bandage  on  the  injured  limb,  but  j 
it  is  not  known  at  this  time  wheth- ! 
er   the  Tar  Heel   captain   will   be ' 
able  to  go  come  Friday  when  trials 
in  the  backstroke  are  conducted.   I 


ley  in  the  number  one  match,  fired  3-0.   Best  ball,  Carolina,,  3-0. 


HAVE   YOU   SEEN    YOUR  PICTURE 
AT 

KEMP'S? 

Look  in  Kemp's  window  these  evenirtgs 
from  dark  tii  1 1 :00.  if  you  see  your  pichir#, 
tell  Kemp  about  it,  and  he  will  give  you  a 

FREE  ALBUM! 

Another  Give-Away  At 
pHpF^  207  E.  Franklin  St. 


■lAMtoMMiMk 


SuF'eR  ATTRACTIONJS 


pr-^.'-.yr-iT- 


for57 


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Wan.-,  ,3b  ^ 

Wfttsoh    lb - 

Smith,  2b .. 

Walters,  M-p 

Holden    If  .._,. 

Walsh,  rf 

Ihwpe,  c    .„_ 

McKelvey,  p 

KreiU,  p 

Sorairko,  p  

Catuzci,  s»    '^._- 

'PotMla    ._ 

UMC 

Hartman,  3b  .. . 
b^Strauss,  Sb  ..„ 

Hudson    cf  , 

Legette,  c  „._ 

I.  mil.  rf 

Hunnitutt,  ss  . 

fitaook,  If 

tWdham.  lb    .,- 

Lewis,  2b  

cross,  p 

Saihe    p 

a-Pon^' 

c-MeMolIen   ... 

D.  MiU,  p 

Hardihc  p  _^ 

d-Han#vU  

Aycock,  p 


In    his    preview,   entitled.    •The: 

Battle,"   UNC   Coach   Ralph   Casey 

Heels  calls  premeet  favorite  Yale  "what 

may  be  the  fine.-l  collegiate  team 

'  uf  all  time,"  and  he  may  well  be 

X   rifcbt.  Top  event  for  the  Eli  is  tbe 

1    4S0  yard  ffeestfyMe  relay,  which  has 

bettered  Yale's  own  world  record 

by  no  less  than  three  and  one-half 

seconds. 


29      7     24 


Greying  Bob  Kiputh,  coach  of 
the  Blue  and  Gold,  has  a  host  of 
^  phenominally  fast  sprinters  to 
^  pick  from,  plus  four  men  in  the 
medley  relay  who  should  again 
bring  that  individual  crown  back 
lo  New  Haven.  O^her  stars  are 
Rex  Aubrey,  who  Ls  defending  co- 
0  champion  in  the  50  free.>tyle,  Ray 
7  Ellison,  favored  in  the  1500  meters 
*    tonight,   and   a  sensational   sopho-i 


OF  a€3XTttmJEi..».Ak, 


yw**' 


fSotf't  Impttrt**  French  H*e  w*****- 

sport  thin  . .  .  flattering  fit  .  .  .  in  nlnt  virilt  colors. 
always  frtsh  looking  .  . .  "tru  shape"  ribbed  colUr 
and  cuffs,  lengthened  "stay-in"  shirt  tail. 

Sizes    S-M-L-XL-XXL '  $7.95 

RED    HEATHER  GREY,  NAVY,  BLACK,  CAROLINA  BLUE, 
OLIVE,   TAN    HEATHER,   WHITE,   AND   CANARY. 


Julian' 


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$55.00 
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SPRING  IS  HERE 
STEVENS-SHEPHERD 

Our  stock  of  lightweight 

clothing  is  overflowing  with 

phenomeril  values. 

SUITS:  CHECK  THESE 

Haspel  wrinkle-shed  Cotton  Cord  Suits 

Dacron/Coifon  Wash  'n  Wear  Suits 

New— Dacron/Wool/Ravon  Suits 

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All  Wool  Tropical  Stripings 

Imported  wool  and  dacron  blended  Suits  $70.00 

Sou'hwjck's  fine  ail  wool  Tropicals  $75.00 

SPORT  JACKETS: 

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Sport  Jacket 
Cotton  SheHand  Sport  Jackets      . 
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Pure  Irish  Linen  Coats 
10  Oz.  Hand-Woven  Imported  Shetlands  $55.00 

TROUSERS: 

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SHOP  NOW  FOR  BEST  SELECTIONS 


I  STE VEhf§  -  SHBPHBRD 


Z 
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0 

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You  sinoke  refreshed 


A  new  idea  in  smoking... all-new  SaleiVI 


Crrated  by  Ti.  J  liei/nolds  Toltarco  ConipBTtv. 


MORTH  CAROUNA  STATE  FAIR^ONE  NITE  0MLY 

APR. 

ONE  SHOWt.fS 


TMIEM't  •ICe«0  SHOP 

SAOOa   TMCAT*C   BUILttNC 

"twit  pmv6  cowFiXY 


NLT 

3 


ToUls   30      9    J4 

a— Walked  for  Saine  in  5th. 

.  b— •#ftlked  for  Hartman  in  5th. 
c— ^fUli  for  PtfM  in  5th. 

;  d— Flied  out  for  Harding  in  7th. 

DiLA^NTARK   --Oil  101  43-11 
k.  CAROLINA  -  000  Oil  i2-  7 

R— Walla,  Smith  2,  Walters  3, 
Holden    2,    W»ls^    2    Thorpe    1, 
Liegettey  I.  IflJl  2,  Hunnlcutt,  ^look 
2,  McMuUen.  B— Oldham,  Hartman 
2.     Breyur,     Witaon.     Hunnicutt 
KBl^Homen  Legette.  Breyer,  D. 
HiU,  Walah  2,  Kreitz,  Walters  2, 
Oldham  2.  ^B-^Ctil*-  3B— legette 
Smith,  iloWen,  OJdhwn.  KR— Wal- 
ters. Si-^WattOn.  Holden,  Breyer, 
Walsh.    ^--McKelrey    Z,    Watson. 
Bf— BMyer,  PP— Hartman,  Lewia 
.and  Oldhain:  Thorp*  and  Watson, 
Left— 'Delaware  6   Nortl)  Carolina 
12.  BIb—OA  CroM  5,  McKelvey  6, 
Hill  S,  Kr?iti  3,  Sov»ii)ro  8,  Ay- 
cock  1.  SO— ftr  Croas  2,  McKelvey 
1.  Siaini  1   Harditog  2,  Ayeock  2. 
Waiterti  J.  HO--CroM   I  in   1/3; 
l^Kefvey  7  in  5  2/3;  S»in^  2  in 
2  Z/9;  Kr«it«  0  in  1  1/3;  Hl|l  0  in 
i;  HftMiiig  1  in  1;,  Walters  %  in  1; 
AScotk  I  in  1;  Sovaiko  0  In  1. 
WP  —  Crpsa.  PB  —  Legette  L— 
CYoss.  W— MeKelvey  T-3  08.  U— 
Hicka  and  NtvlUe.    . 


•  menthol  fresh 

•  rich  tobacco  taste 
•  most  modern  filter 


j^_..;-j.-^.-v. 


Think  of  a  Spring  breeze  blowing  over  fresh,  green  grass  and  you'll  have  a 
good  idea  how  refreshing  all-new  Salem  Cigarettes  taste.  The  ifreshest  taste 
in  cigarettes  flows  through  Salem's  pure  white  filter.  Rich  tobacco  taste  with 
new  surprise  softness ...  menthol-fresh  comfort.  Try  Salem  — you'll  love  'enu 

Salem  refreshes  your  taste 


-4# 


tJ.fJ.C.  'tIBRARt 
SERIALS   DEPT. 
BOX  870 
CHAPEL   HILL.    N.C 


'i> 


WEATHER 

Cl9«Hli*r   •nd   mild   with   an   tx- 
^•cHd  high  of  «S. 


LISTLESS 

Another  ^st  possibi*  adjMtiv*. 


VOL.  LVII,     NO.  153 


CofiipltU  if)  Wirt  Strme* 


CHAPEL  HILL,  NORTH  CAROLINA,  FRIDAY,  fAASCH  29,  1957 


Offieet  in  Gnham  Mtmotitl 


SIX  PAGES  THIS  ISSUE 


Dr.  Cromartie  Gets 
$94,000  Grant 

The  National  Institute  of  Allerg> 
sr.d  Infectioiis  Diseases  of  the  U.  S. 
r\ibUc  Health  Service  has  granted 
$94,010  to  Dr.  William  J.  Cromartie 
of  the  IfSC  School  of  Medicine. 

The  money  will  be  used  for  a  five 
\rar  study  of  bacterial  infections 
«"f  the  kidney. 

Sper-ific  objectives  of  the  proposed 
btudics  are  the  development  of  pre- 
r.se  methods  of  diagnosiKg  chronic 
infectious  of  the  kidney,  determin- 
ing the  relative  importance  of  such 
infections  as  a  cause  of  kidney 
lailure  and  lujh  biood  pressure. 
c>nd  determination  of  the  best  meth- 
ods of  treating  chronic  infections  of 
the   kidney. 

Infections  of  the  kidney  arc  very 
ionimon.  being  probably  second 
cmIv  to  those  of  the  nose  and  throat 
.n  freqiienoy  of  occurence.  There 
is  reason  to  believe  that  they  are  i^nd.  X.  C.  He  attended  Prcsby- 
0  cause  of  certain  t.vpcs  of  hyper-  terian  Junior  College,  the  Univer- 
tiuslon.  De-«pitc  the  fact  that  they  sity  of  .North  Carolina  and  the  Uni- 
versity of  .-Mabama.  His  M.  D.  de- 
gice  was  awarded  by  Emory  Uni- 
versity in   1937. 

Before  coming  to  the  UNC  School 
oi  Medicine  in  1951.  he  had  taught 
u  V'andcrbilt  University.  South- 
western    Medical    College    and    the 


OR    CROMARTIE 

to  study   hhlney   infections 


f  icur  5o  comnraonly.  completely 
5atisfactor>-  methods  of  a  diagnosis 
t'lid  treatment  have  not  been  de- 
\  iscd. 

The  .unds  granted  will  be  utilized 
in  an  effort  to  develop  more  effec- 
t-.\e  methods  of  diagnosing  and 
treating    these    common    infections. 

Dr.  Cromartie  is  a  native  of  Gar- 


Mollet  Wins  Vote 

PARIS  — (AP)—  Premier  Guy 
Mollet  won  a  221-188  vote  of  con- 
fidence early  today  in  the  Nation- 
al Assembly. 

The  33- vote  majority  was  higher 
than  the  government  had  expect- 
ed. ! 

Mollet  pleaded  before  the  vote 
t'.iat  deputies  cast  ballots  and  not 
abstain  on  the  policies  of  his  14- 
TnoTith  government,  which  has 
set  a  record  for  longevity  in  post- 
^^^r  France. 

The  record  was  made  while 
Mollet  was  in  Washington  last 
month  conferring  with  President 
Eisenhower  and  Secretary  Dulles. 
The  confidence  vote.  33rd  in  the 
government's  term  of  office,  was 
Ihc  first  since  his  return  from 
AVashington. 

•  It  followed  a  two-we?k  debate  on 
the  government's  general  policies, 
including  its  dealings  in  rebelli- 
ous Algeria. 


Evans  Endorsed  By  Young 
For  Office  Of  President 


Baum,  Evans 
Bass,  Sloan 
Head  Election 


Pee  Wee  The  Seductress 


Carolina's  own  Pee  Wee  (Mary)  Batten,  who  has  been  a  hit  on 
stage  and  vide:^  of  late,  piays  the  seductress  in  "Thieves'  Holiday,' 
Sound  and  Fury  presentation  this  weekend.  The  shews  run  Saturday, 
Sunday  and  Monday  in  Memorial  Hall.         (Photo  by  Fred  Powledge) 


BY  STRINGER  SYSTEM: 


Suez  Crisis 

PORT  SAID.  Egypt  —   (AP)   -- 


University  of  Minnesota.  He  served  I  The    Suez    Canal    will    be    opened 


ill  the  armv  during  World  War  II. 


Color  TV,  New  Clerk 
Highlight  Legislature 


!  tomorrow  to  ships  up  to  11.000 
t'  ns.  a  spokesman  for  the  Egypt 

;  ian  Canal  Authority  announced  to 
night. 


Sloan  Restates  System 
For  Better  Dorm  News 


■♦     Student      Body     President       Bob    dent   legislature   for   the   University 
Young    Thursday    endorsed     Sonny    party,   the  president  said. 
Evans   in    the   coming   election    for   DIVERSE 

student   body  president.  'Thus.    Evans    has    gained    a    di- 

Young  pointed  out  that  Evans  verse  and  wide  perspective  of  stu- 
hcs  been  vice^resident  of  the  slu-  dent  government  vvhile  serving  in 
dent  body  for  the  past  year  and  the  judicial,  legislative  and  ex- 
lias  become  most  familiar  with  the  ecutive  branches."  said  Young. 
problems  presently  confronting  all  Young  went  on  to  say  that  Evans 
areas  of  the  campus.  i  knows    how    much    work    has    been 

'He  has  seen  how  the  office  of  <!one  on  the  various  problems, 
t.he  president  could  and  should  be  fraternity  court,  book  exchange 
run,  and  he  has  observed  the  short-   vriccs.    student    union    plans,    mar- 

iied  students  housing,  parking  and 
president.  traffic,    student-^dministration-facul- 

KNOWS  BOTH  i  iy  relations   and  the  honor  system. 

In  confmuJng  his  reasons  for  sup-'      In  making  his  point  on  the  above 
Bass  and  Sloan  are  editorial  can-    porting    Evans    for    the    president's    t^tatements.    Young    said.     "He    will 
(lidalcs    for   The    Daily    Tar    Heel,  j  position  Young  said  he  has  observed    he  prepared  to  step  in  immediately 

and  known  both  of  the  persons  run-  ^fler  the  election,  without  wasting 
ring  for  the  office.  "In  their  fresh-  >°\eral  weeks  becoming  oriented 
man'  year,  both  were  very  active  t(.  the  position,  problems  and  the 
in  the  Student  party.  Baum  (Uni  jxneiKial  accomplishments." 
versity  Party  nominee  BiU  Baum>  PERSONAL  OPINION 
was  in  the  student  legislature  and  Young  made  it  t^ear  that  he  was 
l>ans  was  eiected  president  of  the  expressing  his  pcr.sonal  opinion  on- 
l:x-shman  class.  j  '.v,    but    that    he    felt    Evans    would 

•The    following    year.    Baum    re-    fcr»d    is    more    qualified    to    handle 
moved    himself    from    the    campus    i'ne  work  of  the  office, 
politics   and   Evans   won   a   seat  on 
the  Mens  Honor  Council.  This  aca- 
demic year.  Evans  served  as  vice- 
president     of     the      student     body 

(.speaker  of  the  student  legislature)    r.y    Evans    is    elected." 
while    Baum    iias    served    the    stu-i  Young. 


Bill  Baum,  bonny  Evans,  Neil 
Bas.s.  and  Charlie  Sloan  will  head 
the  campus  slate  in  the  spring  ♦'lec- 
tions next  Tuesday. 

Baum.     University     Party,     and   "-^^^Ss  of  this   year."    stated    the 
Evans.    Student  Party,   arc   candi 
diites  for  student  body  jwesident. 


Other  student  body  office  nom- 
inees are  Benny  Thomas  (UP)  and 
Don  Furla<lo  (SP)  for  vice  prcii- 
dcnl:  Dot  Pressly  (UP)  and  Betty 
Huffman  (SP)  for  secretary;  Bob 
Carter  (SP)  and  Jerry  Joncj  (UP) 
' lor  treasurer. 


YACKETY-YACK 


Charlie     Sloan,     candidate     fcrj  gotten  consistently   more   publicity 
editorship  of  The  Daily  Tar  Heel,    in  the  past  because  their  very  ex- 
He  said  this  meant  that  vessels    has  restated  his  outline  for  a  plan  |  istencc    depends    on    their    being 

for   better   news   coverage    of   stu-lwell    known,'"    he    explained. 


of    28V^    feet    draught    and    maxi- 
mum  width   of  65   feet   would   be    dents'    living   quarters 
allowed    to    enter    either    end    of 
the  canal  after  5  a.m..  local  time. 


WASHINGTON  —  (AP)— The 
Uiiited  States  counseled  Ameri- 
can «hips  today  to  steer  clear  of 
the  Suez  Canal. 


up 


.     .  ,  dorms.  j 

-.  -wi  ..««--    fc>r    U.I      "^'^  •**^*"'   «'^*"   ^?  ^^^  State    would  start  with  the  mens  dorms  j      ^^^^^  reporter  cant  possibly  cov-l  ,       ^ 

a   walking   advertiaemem    for    W   |,ep*rtinent  to  a  shipowners  com-    and  add  the  other  livirtg  quarters,  remainina  area    the  jnen's  aPPJ^oved  by  the  Selections  Board..!      Dr. 

.....^     «*..:«*ri-«ilored     <«»»««  I  ^jitge    h^i  m6- a^iiiiraiice  of  at-    graduallj'.  lie  jaid.  '       fZL^Z:^!^,.    J^,,  HONOR  COUNCIL  [denied 


Color  T.V.   for  G.M..   contention    the  legislative  action  for  the  eve- 
over  a  cravat,  and  the  selection  of   nijig 

a  new  clerk  for  the  body  to  re- j  Strong  backing  was  given  the 
place  retiring  Kathy  LeGrande  television  bill  by  Rep.  Clem 
highlighted  the  student  legisla- !  Shanfcle.  who  appeared  before  the 
tures  1 1th  meeting  of  tjie  semes-    body  most  oddly  attired,  garbed  as 

ter. 
TiM  aeetias:, JBAC  4i|WBc^  wtth  «B-i^«au9id».    .Jii*  -  4rjH-i-coiared 

ovation  to   the   clerk    for   success- ',  was  the  basL-  for  f drther  action  bjr  1 
till  reading  of  the  mlmites.  i  the  body  as  Sonny  Hallford  pV»ice<l 

mils  urglng^  the  Board  of  DLrec- 1  before  it  a  bill  calling  for  the  rc- 

lor      of    the    Graham   Memorial    to    moval  of  Shankles  red  tie.  which 

install     colfcr     television     in     the    liallford  maintained  clashed  abom 

G.M.'s  main  lounge,  establishing  of    inably    with    Shanklc's   plaid   shin 

a   permanent   eleven   member   for-    and  blue  hat.  Shanklc.  by  pointing 

eign  e.^hange  student  committee, '  out  that  the  tic  was  a  prized  pos 

and  appropriating  $100  to  the  session  of  Student  Body  President 
.  Carolina    Coffee    Shop    comprised  j  Young,  and  that  Hallfords  motion  j    ^p  v""Jl"T^g*el  Tonight  "claimed    coverage 

'was    a    manifestation    of    creeping    '  ..t,__.. 


Sloan    pointed    out    that    by    co- 

"This   coverage."    he   said,    "can  I  incidence   most  of   the  undcrgrad- 

be  given  by  establishing  the  'string- !  uatc  women's  dorms  already  have 

er  system'   I    proposed   to   the   In-  j  representatives   on    the   paper.   He 

terdormitorV    Council    la.st    week."'  I  complimented    these    girls    on    the 

I  job   thev    have   done    in   reporting 
He    would    not    attempt    to    8er     ^^.^  ^^^-.^^^^.^^^^  j^^pp^^.^„  j^  ^j^^^^ 

the    plan      right      away,      but' 


Gene  Whitehead  is  the  unoppos- 
ed candidate  for  Yackcty  Yack  edi- 
tor. 

George  Ragsdale  (UP),  Paul  Carr 
(SP),  and  Harry  Ellerbe  are  senior 
class   presidential  nominees. 

Other  senior  class  office  candi- 
dates are  Harry  Braxton  (UP)  and 
Frankie  Black  (SP)  for  vice  presi- 
dent: Bobbi  Madison  (UP)  and 
Jennie  Margaret  Meador  (SP)  for 
secretary;  Charles  Ao,'hford  vUP) 
and  Thomas  Walters  (SP)  for 
treasurer;  Pat  Dillon  (UP)  and 
Etlith  Ann  Morgan  (SP)  for  social  i 
chairman. 

Four  senior  seats  are  open  for 


."1  feel  that  It  will  be  for  the  best 
interests  of  the  entire  student  body 
and  the  best  interests  for  the  fu- 
ture of  student  government,  if  Son- 
concluded 


Artisfs  Views  \  Form  Deadline 
Are 'Nonsense'  For  Orientation 
Says  Professor     is  April  9 


By  WALT  SCHRUNTEK 

In    a    word.    Dr.    Eugene    Merz- 


temptcd       pressure       on       Eg>'pt'Sj 
President  'Gamal   Abdel   Nasser. 

It  came  as  the  United  States  and 
other  western  users  of  the  canal 
girded  for  long  range  negotiations 
with  Nasser  on  its  future  opera- 
tion. 

JERUSALEM.   Israeli   Sector 


Students  who  are  interested  in 
"cecoming  a  counselor  in  the  1957 
Orientation  program  must  submit 
an  apj>lication  form  to  the  YMC.V 
or  Graham  Menwrial  by  AjwU  «. 

Orientation    ChairmaB    Jerry    Op- 

penhoimer  made  the  anmnincement 

dorms.    Sloan    said.  ^  Mwmwf*  cuww^ii.  ,  ».,...,ru    .»v    v«r,^..>    points    ■'■""     ..arlier    this    week. 

•I   have  no  intention  of  putting'      He   added    tha.    the   only   way   a'      J"n"".v    Rand.    Ma.son    Wilkin^    duced  by  Ballenger  in  a  Daily  T^r  ^      ^„    ^^„p,i,.«„j,    ,,^0    ^e    given    a 

the   men's   dorms   above  the   other    dorm    can    be    adequately    covered    ^"^  Lawrence  Kour..  all  approved  ^  Heel    article    Wednesday  ^  a.s      mis     ^^^^^^    ^^    ,^^    material    contained    in 


Mens    HonJr   Council.    The   candi-  j  bacher.  of  the  UNC  Physics  Dept.. 
dates    are    Bob   McCartney,    Glenn '  summed   up  free-lance,  self-styled 
Pickard,    Charles    Ashford,    Kelly  I  physicist  William  Ballenger's  views  | 
Maness,  and  Robert  Exum.  AU  are '  yesterday  as  "nonsense."  \ 

Merzbacker      categorically 
the    various    points    intro- 


areas  just  because   thev   represent    is  by  a   resident.      Under  my   plan    by  the  Selections  Board,  are  nom 

this  can   be   done-without   adding   '"<^<^^  f"^"  o"*^  JU'i'^""  seat  on  Men  s    misconceptions 


the  most  votes."  emphasized  Sloan. 

He  said   he   has   planned   the   pro-    to   the   number  of  full   time  staff 

gram   this  wav  because  the  mens    ers."'   he  added 


Honor  Council. 

One  sophomore  seat  is  open  for 


informed"    and    added    that    such 
are       far      from 


(he    1956    manual    at    7:30    p.m.    on 


that    date 


CarroU      HaU.      The 


unique.  ,  ,„a„yaj5    have    been    placed    in    the 

"We   receive   things   like   this  m    ^^^^^^    Library.    Graham    Memorial 


dorms    have 
weakest    spot 


alwavs      been      the        Commenlins      on     the     curren 


^   Mens    Honor   Council.    Candidates   the  mails  every  da>'."  he  said.  The  ^       .  .^  YXfCA    he  said 


Dailv 


Parker  To  Talk 
To  Press  Club 
Monday  Night 

James  H.  Parser,  news  editor  ol 
tiie  Siler  City  Chatham  News  will 
tiiSL-uss  opportunities  in  the  weekly 
t»ewspaper  fie\d  at  the  meeting  Mon- 
day of  the  Press  Club. 

The  Press  Club  will  meet  at  7:30 
p.m.  at  the  home  of  Dean  Luxon 
of  the  Sciiool  of  Journalism  on  Mt. 
Bolus  Road. 

Parker  is  a  1949  graduate  of  the 
S<hool   of  Journalism.    .\11   students 
interested  in  journalism  are  invited,  j 
Charles    Johnson,    president   of   the  \ 
dab   said.    Election   of  officers    for  ' 
1937-1938  will   be  held.  Members  ol 
ti!e  Matrix  Society,  women's  journ 
?l}sm  organizati<m,  will  also  be  pre 
sent. 


coiJormity,  managed  to  hold  on  to 
his  neckpiece  by  a  decisive  vote. 
Legislator.'  nominated  for  the  of- 
fice of  legislature  clerk  were  Kit- 
t>  Corr,  Paul  Leroy  Whitfield,  Lib- 
by  Strong,  Julie  Ann  Crater,  and 
Jennie  Margaret  Meador.  Miss 
Strong  was  disqualified  when  it 
was  pointed  out  to  Bill  Reading, 
acting  president  of  campaigning 
Sonny.  Evans,  that  she  was  not  a 
mem'oer  of  the  legislature.  Miss 
Meador,  SP  nominee  for  senior 
class  secretar>',  was 
winner  of  the  office. 


Egyptian  Militarj-  Police  have 
moved  into  the  Gaza  Strip.  It  said 
this  was  "in  strictest  contra.st  to 
assurances  given  before  the  Is- 
raeli   withdrawal."' 

A  government  official  said  the 
claim  was  based  on  reliable  in- 
formation reaching  Israel. 


Medical  School 
Receives  Grant 


Famous  Men  Die 


Record  Number 
Of  Reservations 
Made  For  Show 


DUBLIN.  Ireland  —  (AP)  —  Jack 
the'eventuai  »""er  Yeats,  the  Irish  painter. 
di'Ml  today  in  a  Dublin  nursing 
hj'me. 

Bom  in  Sligo  almost  90  years 
ago,  Yeats  was  regarded  as  the 
greatest  Irish  painter  of  this  gen- 
eration. 

He  was  a  brother  of  the  late  Wil- 
liam Butler  Yeat:?,  poet  and  wTiter. 


Tar    Heel   campus  issues  Sloan  said: 

j  "1  am  in  favor  of  many  im- 
"Fratcrnities  and  sororites  have  |  provements  around  the  Universi- 
ty." He  cited  such  examples  as 
housing  for  married  students,  so- 
lution of  the  parking  problem, 
lower  prices  in  Chapel  Hill  and 
better  working  conditions  in  Le- 
noir Hall. 

"Everybody  is  in  favor  of  the 
DURH.\M— i.Tv— .A  $2,700,000  grant  same  things."  he  observed.  Sloan 
has  been  made  to  the  Duke  Uni-'  said  if  he  is  elected  editor  he  will 
versity  School  of  .Medicine  by  the  d:)  everything  in  his  power  to  car- 
Ford  Foundation.  Duke  President  ry  them  out.  j  STUDENT  COUNCIL 
hollis  Edens  announced  Thursday  j  "I  have  proposed  a  plan  1  want  Three  L-jals  are  open  for  Slu- 
Part  of  a  $90  million  program  to  to  see  carried  out.  But  I  want  to  dent  Council.  Candidates  are  Gerry 
.■•trengthen  instruction  in  private  be  elofted  editor  not  just  to  car-  Hartzog  (Selections  Board).  John 
medical  .schools  throughout  the  ry  out  this  plan,  but  to  work  con- '  Kerr  (Selections  Board),  and  Mike 
Lnited    States,    the    Duke    grant    of   stiintly  toward  the  improvement  of   Tanner. 

$2.7    million    ir.pludes    an    initial    in- The   Daily  Tar  H-cl   and  the   Uni-,      Whit  Whitfield  Is  the  unopposed 
stallment  of  $500,000.  versity."  [       (See  CANDIDATES,  Page  3) 


are  Walker  Lockete  (Selections 
Board).  Jack  Spain  (Selecti«>ns 
Board),  and  Pringle  Pipkin. 

Women"s  Honor  Council  candi 
dates  are  Misses  Cynthia  Sea- 
graves,  Punkin  Coe.  Nancy  Davis, 
Hannah  Kirby.  Pat  Dillon.  Andrea 
SlalvcN.  and  Deborah  Sink.  Ail 
have  been  approved  by  the  Selec- 
tions Board. 

Julia  Ann  Crater  is  the  unop- 
posed candidate  for  chairman  of 
Women's  Residence  Council. 


Women's  Files 
Are  Missing 


.  J  u  r      J  .     ROSLYN..—(AP)— Author   Chris 

A   rcccrd    number    of    advance  I       J^     „    ,        «,    ^    j   ,  ^  ..    oi 

4-  1       J       ,.  ».         tooher  Morley,   87,  died  today   at 

reservations     already    have    been   ;T"         "  ,.  ,         •,, 

^^A^  .      .»     J  ..i:'    4       *u     A      u    his  home  here  after  a  long  illness. 

made  to  attend    'Easter,  the  Awak- 

ening"    at    the    Morehead    Plane-  ».         .    .         , 

.....  .   verse,  short  stories,  plays,  essays,  i 

tarium  here     between     now     and ,    _   ,'       _.    _umj___.\.  i.,„i.„    f„»  i 

April  29.   Manager  A.   F.  Jenzano 

announced    TTiursday.  | 

As  of  Tuesday  when  the  eighth! 

.Women's     orien».atiou     files     for   annual    presentation    of   the    story 

1956  have  been  removed  from  their    of    Easier    and    the     Resurrection  j 

cabinet  ii>  the  Women's   Residence   opened   at  the  Planetarium,^ more 

Council  Room,  it  was  announced  by    than    8.0(X)    reservations    were    on 

the  council   Thursday.  j  file.  Every  niail   brings  others. 

The    files    were    open   during   the       Jcnzano  would  not  hazard  a  pre- 

period  from  Feb.  11-22  for  girls  in-    diction    that    this    year's    attend- 

terested    in    trying   out    for   orienta-    ance    would    exceed    that   of    1956, 

t.oo    chairman.    The     council     an-    but    the    figures    indicate    at    the 

touncement  yesterday  said  the  1956   present  that  it  might. 

files,   consisting  of  7  to   10  manila        The    announcement    of    advance 

filders.     were    probably    borrowed    reservations   is    being   made.   Jen- 

during  that  time  and  not  returned,   zano  said,  to  encourage  those  who 
Planning  for  1957  orientation  can-    wish   to  see  the  spectacle  to  plan 

Uiit   begin   untH  these  files   are  lo-   to  do  so  early    in    the     program,  i     OSLO,    Norway (AP)  —  Soviet ' 

calcd.  the  council  said,  urging  any-    either   with     or     without   reserva-l  Russia's  new  war' of  nerves  against' 

one  knowing  aboiK  the  fUes  to  con-    tions.  |  Scandinavia   is   backed   by   strong' 

tact  the  Dean  of  Woqaens  Office  oi ,      •They    are    not    absolutely    nee-   forces    close    to    Norway's    Arctic  i 

Peggy     Funk    at    the    Chi    Omega    essary  for  the  night  and  weekend    border,  NiTV^-egian  sources  said  to-! 

public      performances,"     Jenzano  day.  | 

said,  "although  persons  with  res- ;  The  informants,  who  are  aiKhori-  j 
ervations  are  given  preferred  seats  tative  but  wilj  n6t  permit  use  of  \ 
in  the  spacioiLs  chamber.  Reserva-  their  namej,  said  Russia's  far] 
tions  are  necessary,  however,  for  north  array  buildup  is  strongly 
the  daily  school  matinees.  Adutt«  backed  by  heavy  industrial  devel- 
may  attend  them  if  they  wish,  but  opment.  railroads  reaching  almost  i 
they  are  not  admitted  until  all  the  to  the  frontier,  modem  air  forces ' 
children  have  been  seated."  |  and  naval   forxes.  , 


Morley  was  a  fertile ,  writer  of 
rse,  short  stories,  plays,  essays, 
I  novels    and    children's  ^ooWs    for 
more  than  30  years. 

He  had  been  ill  about  five  years 
and  suffered  a  i-eries  of  minor 
strokes.  He  died  with  members  of 
his  family  by  his  side. 

His  first  formal  literar>-  effort  to 
be  published  was  a  book  of  verse, 
"The  Eiighth  Sin,"  in  1912.  From 
then  on  he  produced  one  or  more 
works  almosrt  every  single  year  into 
the  1950's. 

j      One   of  the   best  known   of  his 
I  lucent  works  was  his   1939  novel, 
,  "kitty  Foyle." 
I  ~ 

'  Russia  Threatens 


bouse. 


■(MPMIMM 


GM'S  $UTE 

'  Graham  MAmarftl  BoArd,  447 
6r*il  room;  P«flf«  DranMtiqu*, 
7:30-10,  Ro<and  barker  2;  B«st 
Pr«u*d  airl.  5-4,  Woodhovsc 
Conferenc*  Room, 


physicist  reviewed  several  in- 
stances in  connection  with  the 
Physics  Colloquium  on  •'Gravita- 
tion" held  here  recently  and  in- 
dicated that  almost  all  were  com- 
pletely groundless. 

.According  to  Ballenger's  state- 
ments, the  proposed  satellite  pro- 
gram which  the  government  is 
\v."'-king  on  now  won't  work  be- 
cause it  subscribes  to  an  "error" 
in  Isaac  Newton's  description  of 
gravity  as  a  natural  force. 

Dr.  Merzbachcr  smiled  at  thi.s 
concept  and  indicated  his  disap- 
proval with  a  negative  nod  of  his 
head.  He  followed  his  previoiL« 
example  .several  times  as  he  re- 
read Ballengcrs  views  in  the  art- 
icle. 

"If  this  story  accurately  repre- 
sents his  (Ballenger's)  views,  then 
I  must  disagree."  the  physicist 
I  said.  Ballenger  has  indicated  to 
The  Daily  Tar  Hepl  that  his  ideas 
were  aptly  expressed  in  the  Wed- 
nesday article. 

"There  is  one   point  to  which  I 

I  would     subscribe,    however,"    Dr. 

Merzbachcr  added   smiling.   "Girls 

do  attract  iMjys  and     vice     versa. 

There's  no  discounting  that." 


Director  of  Student  .\cti\ities  Saui 

MagiM     said     Thursda\-     he     hoped 

every     segment    of      the      stuoent 

community  will  rc>pond"  to  the  an 

i.ouncement. 

■It  will  be  an  unforgettable  ex- 
ptrience  for  those  who  participate," 
he   said. 

Magill  said  "For  many  genera- 
tions the  University  has  looked  to 
devoted  and  unselfish  leadership  for 
a.Nsistance  in  the  initation  of  new 
.>tjdents  Into  University  life.  This 
\ear,"'  he  said,  "the  Universitv 
i  gain  looks  to  students  for  this 
leadership. 

Personal  interviews  \v*il  begin 
AprH  23.  The  test  score  and  the 
result  of  tht  interviews  will  be  the 
most  important  factors  considered 
i'.i  the  final  selection,  said  Op- 
penheimer. 


CU  Day  Plans 

Woman's  College  in  Greensboro 
iias  formulated  plans  for  an  open 
IiouAc  and  dance  on  Consolidated 
tnlversily  Day,  ,\pril  6.  according 
to  Jim  Kimzcy.  chairman  of  the 
C'onstolidated  Universitj'  Student 
Coohcil. 

Men    from,    Carolina     and     State 
have     been     inxited     to    attend    an 
'  ciJcn    house    in    dorms    at    Woman'j^ 
I  College    from    7:30-8:30    p.m.    .^priJ 
•  6.    A    dance    will    follow    ihc    open 
\  l:ouse   at   8:30   in   EllioU   Kali.    The 
No   political   statemenits   will   be    dance    will    be    informal    and    lasl 
published    in   The   Daily  Tar   Heel     until   midnight. 


No  Statements 
After  Sunday 


YWCA  Officers  For  1957 

Th«  YWCA  completed  its  elvcKons  last  week  for  the  coming  ye«r.  Pictured  above  en  front  row  are 
(left  to  right)  Misses  iyiolly  Adams,  secretary;  Belle  Corey,  president  and  Ann  Morgan,  vice  president. 
On  the  back  row  are  (left  to  right)  Misses  Phyllis  Krafft,  program  chairman;  Ann  Holt,  tr^surer  and 
Lucinda   Holderness,  membership  chairman. 


Klmzey  urged  all  interested  men 
to  make  plans  to  attend  the  open 
house  and  dance  at  W.C. 


IN  THE  INFIRMARY 


after  the  Sunday  morning  edition. 
Managing  Editor  Clarke  Jones  said 
Thursday. 

Jones  said  it  would  not  be  fair 
for  one  candidate  to  have  a  state- 
ment printed   after  this  date.   His 

opponent  would  not  have  a  chance 

to  reply  a.s  the  election  is  Tues-   Student*  in  the  Infirmary-  yester 
day.  The  paper  does  not  put  out  a    day  included: 

Monday   issue.  |      Miss     Sarah     Parker,     and     Joel 

He    also    urged    all    campus    or     Bickers.     Benton     Beard.     Howard 

ganizations  who  have  news  articles   ^Veis3.    Stanford    Thompson.    Ro> 

to  have   them   in   by  at   least  4:30   Cashion.  Jack  Lawing.  Roy  Haney. 

j  DariiB  Herring.  John  Solomon, 
•  Ger^d  Suddreth,  Jesse  Burnam. 
I  Alfred  Dean,  Tate  .Roberta  >n.  Nor 
I  man  Draper.  Gordan  Phelin. 
I  Thomas  Saboski.  Curtis  Field.s.  Wil 
liam  Stm4h.  William  Loftin.  Joseph 
Hewett.   OUs    Banks.   John   Harri.-. 


p.m. 


McGwire  At  Clinic 

COLUMBIA  —  (A1»)  —  H*ad 
Co«ch  Frank  McGvir*,  of  the 
University  of  North  Carolina  will 
be  the  baskatfeall  lecturer  h*re 
Aug.  5-7  at  th«  annual  South  i  f'red  Phillips.  James  White  Shei- 
Carolina  Hi^  School  Coaches  *•-'>  Blake.  Charles  Coky  ;ind  Rob 
Assn.  clinic.  I  ert  Undacy. 


pAmn  TWO 


THi  DAILY  TAH  Hi(|L 


PftiDAY,  MARCH  21  HS; 


UNC's  Listless  Students 
Don't  Even  Try  To  Learn 

last  Sunday,  around  ;^  a.m..  rlie  person  who  mentioned  the  word 
apathy"  >vould  ha-Ne  been  stoned  in  the  struts.  The  streeis  ^^ere  full  ot 
people    Nome  of  them   stoned)   (elebratin^  the  Tar   Reels'   basketball 
\iciorv. 

But.  as  a  <(»Iuiiaii*t  points  out  elsewhere  on  this  pagt.  apathy  was 
o\eruhelmini»  in  other  areas  of  the  campus  last  week.  *;   ^'^     *" 

The  I'tiiversity  was  honoced  by  the  presence  of  Rol^rt  Fr( 
Idiih    Sitwell     and     I)on     Shirlev. 


rest.  f>a"me 


Tlu-  attendamc  at  Frost's  first  talk 
loiked  im|)ressi\e  because  Hill  Hall 
is  rather  small,  and  the  ranks  of  stu- 
dents were  swelled  considerably  by 
I  lie  t(»\\nsfolk  and  lacidtv  members 
i\h«>  attended. 

It  f\t'rv  .st'ai  in  the  a-uditoriinn 
had  Ih-cu  filled  bv  a  student,  still 
only  oni  in  lo  would  haye  been 
repiesenid.  The  actual  figure  was 
prohabK  abi»ut  hall  of  that — onr 
«>iu  ol  r\cry  «o.  This  must  mean 
that  it|  (un  of  20  student  on  this 
tainpus  ritht'r  dtm't  know  Avho 
Rolxit  Frost  is,  don't  <are  or  feel 
tii.it  iJH-y  hayc  heard  him  before 
and  t.m't  spend  the  time  to  hear 
liiiu  a^ain.  Both  of  the  liist  two 
e\( uses  are  pitifiU.^>ind  the  last  is 

inNupp<jrtable. 

♦  *  #    " 

In  the  ( ase  of  Dame  Fdith.  there 
ix  a  M»mewhat  stri^nuer  tase  tor 
»i.tvinii  .wav,  bitt  fryen  it  isiiot 
much  of  a  case  at  all. 

Most    Americani?*tto    iiot    know 


Those  who  do  not  know  who 
l>a'me  Fdith  is,  or  who  didn't  un- 
til last  week,  might  have  summcHi- 
ed  up  enough  real  j»pirit  to  find 
out:  they  mio^ht  even  have  become 
eoofheaded  enough  to  browse  the 
bookshops  and  thumb  through 
st>me  of  her  jH>etry.  .\nd  then  they 
mijrht  have  had  the  enerj»y  to  show 
up  at  Hill  Hall  after  dinner  and 
try  to  learn  what  it  was  all  about. 
This  is  st)metimes  called  learning. 

The  I)ou  Shirley  slight  was  ab- 
solutely unforgivable.  Once  again, 
there  uere  undoubtedy  i)iany  who 
did  not  know  who  Shirley  is;  once 
again,  they  could  have  found  out 
easily.  Foi  those  who  still  don't 
know.  Or.  Shirley  is  a  30-year- 
old  pianist  of  whom  Igor  Stravin- 
sky was  moved  to  sav  "His  \  irtuosi- 

ty  is  worthy  of  gods.  " 

♦  '       •   *  »   ■ 

So  the  I'niversity  lyst  week  pro- 
vided in  just  those  three  events 
sjnall    but    wonderful   parts   of  an 


enoiig^h  of   the   literature     of     the      education  in  literature,  philosophy 


l.mctuaire  ihev  profess  to  speak  to 
recogni/.e  the  name  Sitwell.  Most 
of  tlie  rest  do  not  speak,  read  or 
t<»r.'.|»rehend  the  language  well 
cn4>ugh  to  feel  the  beauty  of  her 
ix>civy.  much  jess  to  underst:uid  it. 


and  music.  Not  many  had  enough 
energy  tt>  even  give  education  a 
tiy,  or  even  to  seek  a  little  enter- 
rainnient  somewhat  more  substant- 
ial than  getting  drunk  over  a  win- 
ning ball  team. 


Stranger'  Was  Estranged 


It  the  opening  night  of  the  new 
pl.i\  ■  Siiangev  In  The  Faiul"  at 
the  Plav makers'  I'heatre  Wednes- 
iLi\  was  sometliing  less  than  a  sut - 
< .  x's.  the  author  is  not  entirely  lo 
b'.nue.  Where  (Ihrjstiaa  .Moe's 
pla\  \\:v>  latking,  the  actors  em- 
pli  ivi/etl  the  fault:  where  it  was 
strong,  its  >irengih  Avas  lost. 

Mi>e  treated  the  iiuvently  •.•vcr- 
workcd  irreioncilabiJity  of  the  cuJ- 
riires  ol  Fast  and  West:  That  he 
did  not  fre:it  it  a^>i  well  as  it  has 
been  treated  in  tlj^  past  (South 
Pacifit.  Sayonara.  Tetjhouse.  etc.) 
is  (juite  tnnlerstau^able.  Bin  the 
only  excuse  for  rcit^;ttmg  a  theuie 
which  has  l>een  doae  before— with 
the  same  setting  aiill  virtually  the 
same  <  Ik  rat  tcrs  aii(^  situations— is 
to  adtl  some  new  dimension.  Theie 
was  none. 

Ill  f:ut.  ihe  <inl\  (leparture  fvoiu 
the  now-stereot\pe(t  plot  is  in. the 
chaiaiier  of  the  fapanese  girl  who 
finds  herself  in  (ohfluit  with  the 
old  tulture  in  which  she  wan 
raised:  this  is  an  interesting  ad- 
tlitiou.  but  it  weakens  the  lo\c 
tragedy.  The  tragcd^  is  (on\iiicing 

The  Daily  Tar  Heel 

The  official  itudent  fuMjication  oi  t)>c 
pulititatioDs  Board  ol  the  University  ul 
North  Carolina,  where  it  it  publisbed 
daily  except  Mtinrlav  and  examinatioa 
and  varation  periods  aad  summer  termi 
Entered  as  second  class  matter  ia  thi 
D<>8t  office  in  Chapel  ktll,  N.  C.  uodea 
the  Act  o(  March  8.  1070.  Subacrlptiok 
rates  mailed.  $4  per  ye^r.  $2.50  a  tMsea 
ter;  delivered.  SO  a  ye«r.  $8.50  >  UW^M 
t*r 


only  if  the  love  Ls  made  imposfiible 
by   the  diversity  of  cultures. 

In  ".^trciiiger  In  The  Land,' 
however,  the  japaUe.se  girl  is 
faced  with  a  detision.  and  eithei 
choice  is  etpially  aixeptable.  Fhai 
she  chooses  the  more  tragic  ol  the 
alternatives  is  dratnatic  but  fool- 
ish. 


otlier    fuults.    In 
afways     helps  to 


Editor 


FRED  P6WLEDGf 


Managing  Editor 


CLARKE  JONES 


Newt  Editor 


NANCY  HILL 


Sport*  Editor 


LARRY  CHC£S 


Butinets   Manager 


BILL  BOB  FVEh 


Advertising  Manager        FRED  KATZIN 

BDITORIAL  STAFF  —  Woody  Sewf. 
Joey  Payne,  Stan  Shaw. 

NOV'S  STAFF— Graham  Snyder.  Edith 
MacKinnon,  Walter  ^hruntek,  Pringl« 
Pipkin,  Bob  High,  Jim  Purks,  Ben  Tay- 
lor, H.  Joost  Potak.  PaUy  Miller,  Wal- 
ly  Kuralt.  Bill  King,  Curtis  Grotty. 

BUSINESS  STAFF-^ohB  Minter,  Marian 
Hobeck,  Jane  Patten,  Johnny  Whitaker. 

SPORTS  STAFF:  Dave  Wible,  Stewart 
Bird.  Ron  Milli^an. 


Subscription  Maaager 
CiicHlation  Manager  . 


.^Dale  Staicy 
CkarUe  Bolf 
Assistant  Sports  Editor..l_^.3ill  Kiag 

Staff  Photographers ^  -  Woodjr  S^ara, 

Norman  Kantor 
Librarians.  Sue  Gichner,  Marilyn  Starum 


Night  Editor 


M^7  5pria|i 


J  "he    play    had 
;    lo>e  story,      it 

have  some  poetry  in  the  dialogue; 
love  is  in  life  unspoken,  and  if  it  is 
10  be  spoken  in  a  drama,  discuss- 
ed and  disse(  ted.  it  must  be  done 
poet  it  ally.  . 

The  closest  that  this  play  -omes 
Is  in  the  Japanese  sayings  which 
uere  generously  sprinkled  througli- 
out  the  dialogue.  .\ll  that  wxs  lack- 
ing w:  s  the  'Conlucious  say  . .  ^' 
to  make  it  even  less  auihemii . 

I  "here  were  tharatiers  such  as 
the  liritish  Sailor  and  the  Old 
Woman  who  could  just  as  well 
have  been  omitted  along  xyith  the 
VXhoie  and  much  ol  ilie  Ragged 
.Man;  there  were  others  such  as 
Sweeny,  Ciil,  and  (ieneral  Yainada. 
who  were  inadequately  conceived. 

j.K»orlv   written  and  badly  ;ict.ed. 

»  *  * 

Ihe  s<;enery  was  unobtrusixe. 
hut  Mcnery  is  not  supposed  to  be 
that.  Theie  was  none  of  the  sim- 
ple beauty  so  characteristic  of  the 
Japanese  arts  and  which  could 
have  been  effective  in  contrast 
with  rite  toughness  ot  the  l^  S. 
Navy. 

Naiuetta  Hudson,  as  the  Japa- 
nese girl  uho  is  torn  between  the 
(»ld  and  the  new,  was  the  only 
member  of  the  cast  who  drew 
everything  out  ol  the  script  that 
Moe  put  in  it  and  then  some.  She 
t  ame  the*  closest  to  approximating 
the  graceful  oriental  short.step.  and 
.she  kept  the  accent  down  to  a 
rea.sonable  (legree. 

l.h>yd  Skinner  was  very  aniii.s- 
ing  in  j>roviding  the  \\elcome 
(omedy  relief,  and  his  is  the  sole 
minor  role  well-done  enough  to 
merit  (orament.  This  in  itself  is 
a  serious  fault  in  the  play. 

Tjte  (mly  otjier  acting  job  worthy 
of  note  was  Mary  Johnston's  por- 
trayal of  the  girl  uho  has  couipro- 
uii^d  herself  in  order  to  eat.  The 
part  was  not  a-a  well  written  as  it 
might  have  been,  thoitgh.  ai)d  Mi«s 
Johnston  was  foired  to  fltl  about 
the  stage  miking  symbolic  remarks 
which  were  too  pirofound  to  ring 
true:  Evidently  th^  author  wa.s 
afraid  not  to  pound  fh^  "theme " 
out  early  in  the  play,  lest  t^e  au- 
dience miss  it.  Not  a  chance,  Mr. 
Moe. 


YOU  Said  It:  Lenoir  Controversy 
Still  Bubbling;  Say  Dispatches 


Erfiter: 

Students  and  faculty  alike 
surely  by  now  are  completely 
confused  by  the  merry-go-round 
fervor  over  working  conditions 
at  Lenoir  Cafeteria  a  la  Prilla- 
man.  As  a  student  employee  I 
hope  I  can  present  in  a  concise 
way  the  crux  of  the  matter. 

The  contract  which  the  stu- 
deitt  employee  signs  v/itt  Lenoir 
states  that  he  will  be  compen- 
sated for  his  work  by  providing 
him  three  square  meals  per  day 
with  a  maximum  allotment  of 
$1.90.  Should  he  eat  le«s  than 
;$1.90  ma.ximum.  the  remainder 
is  non-cumulative. 

Furthermore,  he  is  forbidden  to 
use  any  part  of  his  allowance 
in  the  Pine  Room.  A  few  weeks 
aga  several  student  employees, 
much  to  the  satisfaction  of  fellow 
workers,  initiated  a  petition  de< 
manding  that  the  management 
of  Lenoir  allow  workers  to  use 
the  remainder  of  their  food  al- 
lotment in  the  Pine  Room,  thus 
effecting  a  change  in  L.enoir 
policy.  The  petition  got  no- 
where! 

Mr.  PrilJaman.  forced  by  pres.s- 
ing  unfavorable  publicity  in  The 
Daily  Tar  Heel,  called  a  meeting 
of  employees  in  which  he  flatly 
refused  the  student  demands. 
However,  Prillaman  invited  us 
to  carry  our  demands  to  his  su- 
periors, if  necessary  the  trus- 
tees of  the  University 

put  *s  s*lf-h*lp  students  wt* 
Cfrttiniy  hav*  no  time  to  carry 
on  such  •  crusade.  Sympathetic 
ff#ling  to  our  cause  by  The 
OftUy  Tar  Hoel  and  the  campus 
political  parties  helped  take  up 
the  slack.  We  felt  that  it  was 
now  a  m«tter  of  time  until  our 
demands  wore  met. 

Much  to  my  regret,  an  unforo- 
saen  thing  happened  last  week. 
Caleb  White,  a  ".self-appointed" 
student  leader  among  us.  wrote 
The  Daily  Tar  Heel  to  the  effect 
that  we  were  now  satisfied  and 
content  with  conditions  at  Le- 
noil".  White  took  such  naive  ac- 
tion because  we  refused  to  sign 
an  apology  he  drew  up  to  Mr. 
Prillaman  for  misunderstandings 
concerning   the   petition. 

Accompanying  this  paper  was 
k  new  petition  calling  for  a  vote 
of  confidence  by  student  employ- 
ees to  carry  the  fight  to  higher 
levels.  The  workers  were  so  riled 
that  many  refused  to  sign  either 
paper.  White  took  this  to  mean 
that  we  were  no  longer  interest- 


CONTRARY  TO  SEARS'  OPINION: 


ed  and  took  it  upon  himself  to 
let  the  University  population 
know  our  "new"  position. 

This  obviously  was  a  moans 
to  vindicate  himsolf  w^th  Lenoir 
Hall    management.   This   diplo- 
matic orrof  by  White  could  be 
the  death  fcnoll   for     our     de- 
mands which  are  practical  and 
are  woll-moaning. 
It     is    the    general  concensus 
among  us  that  pressure  continue 
to    be    brought    to    bear    on    the 
management   of  Lenoir  Hall  for 
fairer    treatment    of    its    student 
workers.  This  plea  is  directed  to 
The    Daily    Tar     Heel.     Student 
Legislaure.    University    and    Stu- 
dent   Parties,    faculty,    students, 
and   interested  persons.  Without 
your  invaluable     help     we     are 
doomed  to  failure. 

Tom  Reoves 

€ditor: 
Shut  Up 

Editor: 

Since  when  has  it  been  the 
policy  of  The  Daily  Tar  Heel  to 
editorialize  in  direct  contradic- 
tion of  the  facts? 

I  am  referring  to  the  recent 
editorials  regarding  the  Lenoir 
Hall  situation  in  which  the  stu- 
dent workers  have  been  chastised 
by  the  editor  far  giving  up  their 
liijht  to  get  better  working  con- 
ditions, yet  all  the  while  the  ed- 
itor has  had  a  letter  refuting  Mr. 
Caleb  White's  statement  that  the 
workers  wanted  the  whole  mess 


»g?^^^?T^T^^''W  m^^" 


stopped. 

Even  if  the  editor  did  not  have 
such  a  letter  it  would  have  been 
simple  to  interview  Lenoir  Hall 
workers  to  get  their  opinions, 
yet  the  editor  did  neither."  The 
Daily  Tar  Heel  is  correct  n  say- 
ing that  the  workers  are  scared; 
after  all,  they  must  eat  next  Sep- 
tember as  well  as  now;  but  he 
and  Caleb  White  are  wrong  in 
saying  that  we  are  satisfied — 
we  will  not  be  satisfied  until  the 
management  recognizes  that  we 
are  workers  who  give  our  labor 
in  return  for  food,  or  money, 
which  is  ours  to  do  as  we  please 
with,  regardless  of  whether  we 
eat  it.  give  it  away,  or  throw  it 
away. 

I  know,  and  the  editor  also 
knows,  thot  Coleb  White  was 
forced  to  -write  that  letter  in 
order  to  continue  his  job  in 
pea<o.  (He  no  longer  works  in 
Lonoir  Holl,  and  will  gladly  ad- 
mit the. reason  he  wrote  the  let- 
ter.) I  regret  to  say  that  his  let- 
tor  did  not  secure  peace,  and 
he  was  finally  forced  to  quit 
wrok. 

Before  the  editor  criticizes  us 
it  would  be  well  for  him  to  get 
the  facts.  It  would  also  be  nice 
of  him  to  inform  the  public  of 
the  true  conditions.  We  have 
done  a.s  much  as  we  can.  except 
strike,  and  it  would  be  greatly 
appreciated  if  The  Daily  Tar 
Heel  would  print  letters  that 
.show  the  true  picture  of  the 
worker's  desires,  not  hold  them 
.so  that     it     can     editorialize  on 

• 

Panty  Raider 


apathy. 

If  you  should  decide  to  inter- 
view student  workers,  and  this 
you  s-eem  reluctant  to  do,  it 
would  be  greatly  to  your  credit 
to  iterview  the  student  workers, 
not  .  the  student  supervisor's 
wife,  whom  you  quoted  (anony- 
mously) as  saying:  / 

"I,  as  one  student  employee, 
would  like  to  say  that  I  appreci- 
ate the  oppoctunity  given  me  by 
Mr.  Prillaman.  or  who  ever  is 
responsible  for  appointing  stu- 
dents for  use  as  student  work- 
ers" 

If  you  can  quote  only  a  forced 
retraction  or  the  student  super- 
visor's wife  as  your  authority  for 
the  statement  that  Lenoir  Hall 
student  workers  are  now  satis- 
fied it  is  just'  about  time  that 
you  shut  up. 

William  E.,  Brigman 

Shortly  after  the  Lonoir  Hail 
controversy  started.  The  Daily 
Tar  Heel  interviewed  soverai  of 
the  cafeteria's  workers,  asking 
their  opinion  on  the  matter. 
They  commonted,  but  shortly 
afterward  (after  a  talk  with  Lo- 
noir Hail  officials,  we  undor- 
standi  they  retracted  what  they 
soid.  Told  The  Daily  Tar  Hoel 
would  publish  his  statomont 
anyway,  one  worker  asked  for 
anonymity  for  himself  and  his 
follows.  Yhe  Daily  Tar  Hoel 
regrets  that  such  an  outspoken 
young  m^n  as  Brigman  -was  not 
on  hand  when  the  interviews 
wore  held. — Editor. 


«s«iWft«j^ 


'% 


r^l 


There  Has  Been  Work  On  The  Honor  Systenti 


Editor: 

1  am  writing  this  in  tne  hopes 
that  you  will  print  it  in  The 
Daily  Tar  Heel  so  that  it  may 
serve  to  correct  a  terrible  error 
made  by  .Mr.  Sears  in  his  article 
on  (the  March  20 )  editorial 
page. 

In  this  article  Mr.  Sears  .states 
'*.  .  .  some  chatter  about  the 
honor  system  in  last  year's  cam- 
paign. Seems  as  though  some 
aort  of  commission  was  going  to 
he  set  up  to  work  with  the  honor 
councils  in  an  endeavor  to 
strengthen  their  position  on  the 


campus.  There  was  talk  that  the 
honor  system  wa.s  not  respected 
b>'  the  students  as  it  should  have 
been. 

"How  about  it?  Anybody  know 
of  such  a  commission.?  No.  I 
don't   think   so/' 

Yes.  I  do.  I'm  one  ot  many 
students  who  knows  of  such  a 
commission.  1  was  one  of  approx- 
imately 20  students  who  had  the 
honor  of  being  a  part  of  this 
commission.  This  was,  I  believe, 
a  hard  working  and  sincerely  in- 
terested group  of  students  anx* 
ious  to  present  the  honor  system 


to  the  new  students  in  a  manner 
which  would  do  the  utmost  to 
make  them  realize  and  appreciate 
theii'  responsibility  as  Carolina 
students. 

This  commission,  contran-  t# 
Mr.  Sears'  belief*!,  was  conceived 
by  one  of  last  year's  candidates. 
Bob  Young,  student  body  presi- 
dent. Also  one  of  this  year's  can- 
didates. Sonny  Evans  (then  vice 
president  of  the  student  body) 
played  an  active  part  in  the  form- 
ulation and  workings  of  the  hon- 
or system  commission. 

As  for  the  value  of  the  com- 


missions  work.  I  have  no  def- 
inite campuswide  facts.  I  can  on- 
ly say  that  all  Honor  Council 
cases  in  my  dormitory  this  year 
have  concerned  only  seniors. 
This  seems  to  be  a  sign  that 
the  commission  made  a  definite 
impression  on  the  students  to 
which  it  spoke.  Since  last  year, 
was  the  first  time  such  a  group 
has  functioned  on  this  campus, 
this  is  only  in  the  experimental 
stage.  However.  I.  for  one,  re- 
gard it  as  a  successful  experi- 
ment and  one  that  should  be  con- 
ceived for  a  second  year. 

~    Esther  M.  Ballonfinc 


PP9<» 


By  Walt  Kelly 


School  Spirit: 
Slighted  Giants 


Anthony  WoUf 

The  Carolina  student  body  took  advantage  of 
three  opportunities  last  week  to  paJR  up  an  en- 
tertaining and  invaluable  educational  experience. 
In  so  doing,  it  slighted  somewhat  two  giants  in  the 
world  of  poetry,  and  soundly  insulted  one  of  the 
nation's  finest  musicians. 

One  of  the  obvious  conclusions  is  that  last  wook 
was  unofficially  "Basketball  Wook"  at  UNC,  and 
school  spirits  r»n  so  high  that  there  was  no  school 
spirit  at  all. 
This    phrase    "school    spirit,"    as    used    on    this 
campus,    has   little   meaning    at   all:    or,    more   cor- 
rectly,   its   real    meaning   has    been    discarded    and 
a    rather    inadequate    substitution    made.    In    view 
of  the  aforementioned  occurances  of  the  past  week, 
it  is  worthwhile   to  take  a  sober   look  at   "school 
spirit"  in  terms  of  ourselves  and  the  University  of 

North  Carolina. 

«  *  * 

In  its  best  sense,  "school  spirit"  is  a  term  which 
denotes  participation  in  all  of  the  diverse  activities 
of  this  institution:  to  equate  it  with  the  6asy  act 
of  supporting  a  winning  basketball  team  is  to 
Tiake   a  comfortable   and  serious  oversight. 

It  is  deplorable  in  this  day  of  big-time  "amateur" 
athletics  that  school  spirit  should  be  so  distorted 
that  it  has  ceased  to  be  a  dynamic  force  in  this 
university. 

"School  spirit"  really  moans  the  constructive 
manifestation  of  love  for  the  Univorsity.  It  is  not 
limited  to  athletics,  or  to  any  one  part  of  life  here; 
it  includes,  rather,  the  octive  support  of  the  Uni- 
versity in  all  its  ondoovors. 

The  University's  major  goal  is  the  education  of 
its 'students,  and  in  th^  naihe  of  school  spirit  the 
students  should  make  every  effort  to  take  advan- 
tage of  the  educational  opptalunities  provided  for 
them.  The  University  also  aims  to  further  the  so- 
cialization of  its  students,  and  so  the  students,  if 
they  would  consider  themselves  as  a  part  of  the 
University,  must  enter  into  its  society  and  fill  their 
roles  as  members  of  a  group. 

Among  other  things  this  means  that  football 
players,  unless  they  wish  to  be  considered  as  some- 
thing apart  from  the  University,  would  be  failing 
to  fulfill  this  part  of  their  obligation  if  they  add 
segregated  living  quarters  to  the  privileges  they  al- 
ready enjoy. 

*  4r  * 

All  this  has  a  bearing  on  the  obvious  fact  that 
this  university  is  going  to  pot  with  alarming  speed 
despite  the  efforts  of  many  to  stay  its  decline.  Part 
of  the  fault  lies  with  the  "administration " — from 
the  legislature  on  down  to  the  faculty. 

But  the  major  share  of  blame  rests  w^ith  the  stu- 
dents, for  in  a  sense  the  student  body  is  what 
makes   a   university  good   or   bad. 

To  be  sure,  there  is  a  need  for  a  distinguished 
faculty,  and  adequate  fapiiilies,  and  this  university 
is  heading  for  the  day  when  it  will  have  neither. 

But  it  would  be  rather  futile  of  this  university 
to  build  new  buildings  and  make'  an  effort  to  keep 
its  faculty  if  the  students  for  whom  these  things 
tre  provided  will  not  take  advantage  of  them. 

• 

Sound  &  Furyites 
Noisy  &  Furious 

Charles  McCofrkle      , 

Sound  and  Fury  is  entering  the  last  lap,  with 
performances  of  "Thievci,'  Holiday"  slated  for  Sat 
urday  and  Sunday.  March  30  and  31,  and  it  is  be- 
coming increasingly  easy  to  identify  cast  and  crew 
as  they  stagger  wearily  across  the  campus  with 
pale,  drawn  faces  and  dark  shadows  under  their 
eyes. 

A  typical  reheju:^al  day  begins  at  dawn  and  lasts 
far  into  the  night,  with  homework  done  at  odd 
moment.^-  and  sleep  postponed  until  it's  all  over. 
Cast  and  crew  alike  have  been  swept  up  with  the 
excitement  of  show  business  and  are  to  a  man  ready 
to  give  their  life's  blood  for  Sound  and  Fury. 

One  of  the  hardest  working  is  Blynn  Durning. 
choreographer  and  lead  dancer  for  the  show.  Blynn. 
now  in  her  third  year  with  Sound  and  Fury,  grad- 
uated from  Carolina  last  spring  and  has  returned 
to  the  Hill  after  a  wonderful  six  months  in  Europe 
to  get  her  teaching  certificate. 

A  slender,  graceful  brunette,  this  Kentucky 
girl  has  previously  danced  her  way  thn^ugh  two 
seasons  of  summer  stock  at  the  Louisville  Irequoi.N 
Amphitheatre  and  innumerable  musicals  both  at 
Indiana  University  and  here  at  Carolina. 
*  «  « 

A  young  man  who  has  devoted .  heart  and  scuA 
lo  Sound  and  Fury  ever  since  its  rennaisance  in  the 
spring  of  1955  is  Cecil  Hartsoe,  musical  director 
and  pianist  for  "Thieves'  Holiday."  Cecil,  a  sell- 
sty>d  "hobo-composer"  from  Newton,  Is  responsi- 
ble for  the  majority  of  the  tunes  that  have  made 
Sound  and  Fury  famous,  writing  for  such  stars  as  • 
George  "A  Ro.se  and  a  Baby  Ruth"  Hamilton.  Bo 
Bernardin,  Jane  Edwards  and  Pee  Wee  Batten. 

General  whipping  boy  and  Jack-of-aIl-tradc-«  back- 
stage is  Nancy  Stephens,  whose  official  title  is 
producer  of  the  1957  show.  Nancy,  who  made  her 
stage  debut  at  the  age  of  15  as  .Mr.  Hyde  in  "I  Re- 
memt>er  Mama."  has  appeared  in  two  previous 
Sound  and  Fury  shows  and  in  addition  has  spent 
a  summer  of  stock  at  the  Barter  TTieater  in  Vir- 
ginia, where  she  did  everything  from  painting 
flats  to  baby-sitting  with  the  child  star  in  "The 
Bad  Seed."  In  addition  to  her  producer's  job  Nancy 
will  appear  on  stage  as  Marina,  the  exotic  jewel 
thief. 

.  But  it  is  John  Ludwig,  Sound  and  Fury's  hard 
working  director,  who  deserves  the  majority  of  the 
credit  for  this  year's  show.  John,  a  senior  from 
New  Orleans,  has  done  everjhing  from  writing 
much  of  the  script  to  painting  the  flats  to  de 
signing  the  lights  to  blocking  and  directing  the  60 
odd  cast  members  of  ''Thieves'  Holiday." 

Extremely  capable,  and  possessed  of  infinita 
patience,  John  has  so  far  endured  100  inevitable 
complications  of  producing  an  aroateinr  show,  in- 
cluding falling  sand  bags,  time  out  for  the  basket- 
ball games  and  laryngitis  in  tbe  leads. 


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In  Person  Hall  Art  Exhibit 

Picasso^s  "Doux  Femmes  Nuas"  (Two  Nuda  Weman)  is  on*  of  a 
larga  numbar  of  prints  in  the  exhibition  by  "Old  and  Modom  Mas- 
tars"  at  Parson  Hall  Art  Gailary  hara.  This  Picasso  print  it  on*  of 
two  which   it  is    hoped   will   ba   supplied   to  th«   Art  Papaitmani 
through  popular  subscription.  Tha  exhibit  remains  on  diaplay  throwf  h 
April    IS. 


Naval  ROTC  To  March 
For  Azalea  Festivities 

The  UNC  Naval  ROTC  Color 
Guard.  Drum  and  Bugle  Corps, 
and  Drill  Team  will  march  in  the 
Azalea  Festival  Parade  in  Wil- 
mington Saturday.- 

TTie  group,  consisting  of  ap- 
proximately   60    midshipmen,    ac- 


Prints  In  Person  Hall 
Attract  Wide  Attention 


A  varied  and  distinguished  ex- 
hibition of  prints  on  display  here 
at  Person  Hall  Gallery  is  attract* 


companied  by  LT  (JG)  J.  G.  Abert.   ing  Widespread  attention  and  will 
USN,   and   M/Sgt.    W.    H.    Lanier,  j  remain  through  April  15. 
USMC.    will   leave     from      ChapeJ  '      The    current    exhibition,    to    be 
Hilt  at   1  p.in.   Friday  and   travel '  seen  daily  from  9  a.m.   to  5  p.m. 


show  Wednesday  at  5  p.m.  Prof. 
Allcott  will  center  his  talk  on 
ideas  in  prints  during  the  last 
100  years. 


ORIEMTATIOli 

The  Qrientati<Hi  Committee  needs 
girls  to  help  with  typing  every  af- 
ternoon for  the  next  few  weeks, 
and  would  appreciate  any  help, 
according  to  an  announcement. 
Any  girL-  who  are  interested  have 
been  asked  to  contact  Mary  Jane 
Fisher  in  319  Mclver,  phone  89134. 

FACULTY  CLUB  LUNCHSON 

Dr.  Am^w  H.  Horn,  retiring 
University  Librarian,  will  speak  on 
"Interlibrary  Cooperation  AnMUi^ 
Research  Libraries"  at  the  Faculty 
Club  luncheon  on  Tuesday  at.  1 
p.m.  at  the  Carolina  Inn. 

PHARMACY  WIViS 

Mrs.  H.  R.  Totten  will  give  a 
demonstration  talk  on  flower  ar- 
rang^nents  on  Wednesday  night 
when  the^  Pharmacy  Wives  iheet  at 
the  Institute  of  Miarmacy.  Mem- 
bers have  been  authorized  to  in- 
vite guests  to  this  special  meet- 
ing. 

PHARMACY  RESiRVATtONa 

Reservations  are  being  taken  for 
the  one-day  postgraduate  seminar 
to  be  held  at  the  School  of  Miar- 
macy  on  Wednesday. 
MEDICAL  EXHIBIT 

An  exhibit  of  old  medieal  instru- 
ments is  not  being  shown  at  Me- 
moriai  Hospital.  The  exhibit  is  in 
the  Royall  O.  E.  Dfivis  Memorial 
Display  Case  near  the  main  en- 
trance of  the  hospital. 
DBMTAL  WORKSHOP 

The  School  of  Dmtistry  and  the 
UNC  Extension  Division  are  spon- 
soring a  One-day  wM-kichop  at  the 
.<>eheol  of  Dentistry  today. 
NEW  BOOK 

"SUtistieal  Methods  in  Quality 
Control,"  a  te.xt  find  reference 
book  in  industrial  quality  control, 
written  by  Dudley  J.  Cowden,  Prof. 
of  Statistics  in  the  Sehoot  of  Busi- 
ness Administration,  has  just  been 
published. 
RADIOLOGY  MEETINC    ^ 

Dr.  Ernest  H.  Wood,  professsor 
or  radiology  in  the  School  of  Medi- 
cine will  attend  a  meeting  of  the 
American  Board  of  Radiology  iJi 
Tampa.  Pla.  next  week. 


ACADEMY 

Physicians  from  'five  southern 
states  are  expected  to  attend  a 
regional  conference  of  the  Ameri- 
can Academy  of  Pediatrics  being 
held  here  today. 

HANDBOOK 

A  staff  meeting  of  The  Carolina 
Handbook,  UNC's  orientation  guide 
for  new  students,  wiU  be  held  to- 
day at  4  p.m.  in  the  YMCA.  Staff 
positions,  including  Business  Man- 
ager and  Section  Editors,  are  still 
open  to  students  interested  in 
working  on  the  Handbook.  Anyone 
wL4iing  to  be  a  member  of  the 
staff  has  been  urged  to  attend  the 
meeting. 
WUNC-TV 

Today's  schedule  for  WUNC-TV, 
the  University's  television  station 
is  as  follows: 
12:45 — Music 

1:00 — Today  on  the  farm 

1:30 — Eiiginecring  Visits 

2:00— Sign  Off 

5:15 — Music 

5:30 — Art  And  Artists 

6:00 — Magic  Lantern 

6:30— News  And  Safety 

6:15 — Opera  History 

7:00— Science  Fair 

7:30— The  Humanities 

8:00— Air  Age 

«:30-J*relude 

9:00— Project  Health 

10:00— Final    Edition 


Conspicuous  ih  the  exhibit  are 
three    brilliant     Picasso,  .  poaters. 


via  Navy  Bus.  They  will  spend  Fri- 
day and  Saturday  nights  at  Camp 
Lejeune. 


CLASSIFIEDS 


LOST:  $45  SOME'A'HERE  IN  THE 
vicinity  of  Woollen  Gym  or  Cobb 
Dorm  Finder  please  contact  Leo 
Russavage  at  218  Cobb  Dorm  or 
call  8-9093.  and  receive  reward. 

WTlL  pay  CASH  FOR  GOOD 
running  Chevrolet,  Ford  or  other 
small  car.  Must  be  mechanically 
good  and  low  priced.  Phone 
3081. 


and    on    Sundays    from    2:30    p.m. ,  ...»__.. 

to  5  p.m..  is  titled  "Prints  by  Old^*"?'^*^;  ^"'^  °"f  Bonnard  poster, 
and   Modern   Masters."  |  .  J^f  dozens  ^of  pnn  s  are  furn- 

I  ished   to  the  University  by  court- 
Professor    John    Allcott,    chair- j  esy   of   three     established     print 
man  ot  the  UNC  Art  Dept..  will  j  dealers,  William  Schab  and  Peter 
a   gallery  talk   on   the   print  j  Dietsch    of    New   York   City,    and 

Ferdinand  Roten  of  Baltimore. 
One  purpose  of  the  exhibition  is 


CANDIDATES 


(Continued  From  Page   1) 


one  lithograph  poher  by  Touttntee    candidate  W'coorTlnator   of   the 


National  Students"   Assn.^ 

Head  cheerleader  nomiaees  are 
Harold  Williamson  and  Prankie 
Black  (SP>. 

Wayne  Bivhop  is  the  candidate 
for  president  of  the  Carolina  Ath- 
letic Assn. 
Candidates   for   (^fice   in   WA.^ 


FIVE   ROOM   BRICK   HOUSE   IN 
center  of  town — has  hobby  work-  ! 
shop.  Call  9458  during  day  or  I 
2926     after    5:30     and     during 
weekend.  i 

.\P.\RTMENT  ON  QUIET  STREET : 
— three    rooms,    stove,    and    re- 1 
frigerator    furnished. '  Brisk    15 
minute  walk  from  South  Build- : 
ing.   $65.   Call   8-8328. 


Old 
Timey 
Southern 
Novels 

35<  and  on  up 

The  Intimate 
Bookshop 

205  E.  Franklin  St. 
Open  Till  10  P.  M. 


i  to  bring  ficst-rate  quality  prints  ^^  Frances  Reynolds,  president; 
i  to  North  Carolina  for  the  exami-  p^j  Ander^-on,  vice  president; 
i  nation,  enjoyment    "and     possible  Emily  Sonmiers  and  Marilyn  Strum. 


purchase  by  art  collectors.  Prints 
j  win  be  available  in  Chapel  Hill 
j  which  are  not  normally  accessible 
I  except  by  special  visit  to  the  art 

dealers  in  the  North. 
The  Art  Dept.  hopes  to  add  to 


secretary;    Ka    Smith,    trelsurer; 
Helen  Walker,  awards  chairman. 
LEGISLATURE 

Candidates  for  two  seats  in 
Dorm  Men  I  are  Phillip  Gerdes 
(SP),  Charles  Ccley  (SP),  Ed  Uvy 


ita  permanent  collection,  through  j  (UP)^  Herb  Ross  (UP). 


DAILY    CROSSWORD 


ACBOM 

1.  Streetcar 

(Enf.) 
9.  BluJOen 
9.  Circle  6t 

light 

10.  Encountar 

11.  Teat 

12.  Greena  and 
dreaalng 

14.  Vandal 
iS.Cloaa  to 
n.InMct 
K.  Ukt 
19.  Steal 

21.  Girra  nam* 

22.  Pronoun 
29.  SanU'a 

reindeer 
27.  MAla  sheep 
29.  Definite 

article 
SO.  Prlfhtenad 
93.  Jewiah 

month 
99.  Kuacular 

twitch 
27.0ttia 

39.  Giri'a 
nickname 

40.  Jewish 
month 

42.  Fellow 
(alanf) 

43.  A  f  ooid  time 

44.  Tridia 

49.  Taxea 
48.  WiUanr 

stick 
49.8tikwomi 

50.  OacUc 
91.  Kind  U 

palm 

DOWN 

1.  Songbird 
2.ahow«r 


S.  Wing 

4.  Tooth 

5.  Type 
meaaurea 

9.  Quantity 
of  paper 

7.  Enjoyed 

8.  Sculptured 
lilienesa 

11.  Melt 
13.  Antlered 
animal 

19.  Old  weight 
(wool) 

20.  AtUc 
inhabitant 

33.  Fore- 
tasting 
the  future 


24.  In. 
Jure 

29.  Wild 
aheep 
4lnd.) 

28.  Cage 
for 
hawks 

30.  Menu 
item 

21.  Hair. 

cloth 
32.  Dip 
34.  Wing 

parts 

(orinth.) 
39.  Movea 

swiftly 
39.  famed 


public  subscription,  two  of  the 
famous  prints  in  tha  eahilMt.  Picas- 
so's "Deux  Femmes  Nues"-  and 
Oarer's   '*The   Visitation." 

Prints  in  tte  m»l  display  range 
in  value  from  1S,SQ0  to  915. 

Among  the  featured  prints  M^e 
Rembrandts  "Self-Portrait",  Cez- 
anne's "Bathers."  Durer's  "Night 
Death  and  Devil."  an<l  others  by 
Henry  Matiss.  Oscar  Koscbka  and 
Andre  Mantegna. 


Candidates  for  two  seats  in  Dorm 
Men  H  are  Gary  Greer  (SP),  Rudy 
Edward^  (SP),  Ed  Hou»e  (UP), 
Charles  Wilson  (UP). 

Two  seat6'  and  one  six  month 
seat  are  open  in  Donh  Men  IH. 
Candidates  are  Don  Jacobs,  six 
months.  (SP).  Harold  0  Tuel  (SP), 
Tally  Eddings  (SP),  Bobby  Huff- 
man (UP). 

Candidates  for  four  seats  in 
Dorra  Men  fV  are  Ai  Alphin  (SP), 


41.  Part  of 
a  camera 

43.  Dart 

49.  Diocaaan 
canter 

47.  Openings 
<anat.> 


The  display  has   a  large  repre- 1  Bob  Browning  (SP),  Everett  James 
sentation  for  German  expression-  i  (SP),  Caleb  White  (SP),  Ashe  Exum 
I  Lsts  and  French  impressionists  and  I,  (UP),  Bob  Edwards  (UP),  Fick  Ar- 
the   post-impressionists.  thur  (UP). 

Candidates    for    two    seats    in 
Dorm   Men    V    are    J<rf)n    Brook.:< 
(SP).  Pat  Adams  (SI^).  Eddie  Bass 
(.\}f),  Bryan  Latham  (UP)). 
DORM  WOMKN 

Nancy  Jernigan  (SP).  Libby 
Straughn  (SP),  Caroline  Brown 
fiLKffiUlT.  Indianfr-Thpea  Kacul-  (gp)^  ^^^^y  Uewellyn  (UP),  Julia 
ty  memtersvof  ElWiart  University }  ^.nn  Crater  (UP),  and  Lucy  Cross- 
were  defended  Thursday  hy  a  «n»P  land  (UP)  «e  nominees  for  three 
of  University  students  on  the  charge  I  D^^rra  Women's  seats. 

staging    drinking    partieB    Itor      ctae  seat  and  one  six  n^h  seat 


Students  Back 
EUdiart  Faculty 


of 


Itor 
"tteaeftt  fiteir 


are  open  in  Town  Men  1.  Candi- 
dates are  Charles  Hunting^,  six 
Hni>nth£,   (UP)  And   Al    Goldsmith 


coeds  who  wanted  to 
scholastic  efltorts." 

Seven  teea<«ged  ooeds  have  sign 
ed  statemeota  saying  tiiey  went  m  (Up) 

drinking  partleft  with  the  teach«rs.|  Candidates  for  two  seat5  in 
iwjlice  reported.  The  girls  said,  in  Town  Men  «  are  Jiefif  Hwe  (UP) 
their  statements,  one  of  the  teach'  ^nd  Jack  Lawing  (UP), 
ers  would  comfort  them  with  Candidates  for  three  seats  in 
fatherly  kisaea"  when  they  »>t  ly^j^i  m^ji  jjj  ^^^  ppj,y  ^^np 
rick  from  driakittg.  •  I  (sp),  Bob    Landreth   (SP).   David 

Tlie  Uistnictors  were  freed  on  $300  Ey^ns  (SP).  Pete  Kelly  (UP),  Tom 
boad.  They  face  maximum  penal-  Kenan  UP),  Bob  Pifry  (UP).  Alvin 
ties  <4  $500  fines  and  six  months  ioj  d.  Brown  (SP)  and  Richard  D.  Ses- 
jail  if  convicted.  They  are  charged  jsoms  (UP)  are  nominees  for  one 
with  fumishhig  Hquor  to  minors,      [seat  open  in  Town  Men  IV. 

The   teachers,  Hu|0i   A.   Woorfey.;     Candidates       for      two      Town 
40,  Frank  Schultz..  28,  and  Robwt  Women's  seats  are  Ka  Smith  (SP), 
Zimmerman,    32.    are    accused    oi^  Edith  MacKinnon  (SP).  Ann  Holt 
throwing   a   party  where   over   100,  (Up),  Tog  Sanders  (UP). 
cans   of    beer    were   emptied    and 

some   of   the   girls   got   sick   front 
tc>o    much    liquor,    tried    to  .soothe 
them    witti    "fatherly   kisses,"    tha 
statemeata  read. 


ti>e    statements   of    the    coeds    also 
charged  the  instructors  with  supply- 
ing mixed  drinks. 
Woosley, ..  on    "occasions"    when 


Board  Is  Proutl 
Of  Candidates 
For  Councils 


Third  Meeting  OfSymppsivm 
ConimitfeeTo  BeWedine^dcfy 


The    thivd    general    meeting    of  j  ed   there  is  a   n^ed  to  begin  lay- 

the  Carolina  Symposium  Conunit-  j  ing    plans    immediately    for    next 

,  tee  for  1958  will  be  held  in  the   year's  Synappsium,  because  o|  the 

or   Council,    stated   Thursday    "thej  Assen,|,iy  j.^^^  ^^  Wilson  library ,  amount  of  work  necessarily  ciwJ- 


Bi-Part'5an     Selections     Board     i?|aj  4  p.m.  Wednesday.     ' 
proud   to   announce   the  candidates'      j^terim     Committee     Chairman 
approved     for     the     Men's     Honor]  j.^  g^^  ^^j^j^jj  ^^^^^^^^  j^. 
Council  and  .Student  Council." 


manded  by  any  such  endeavor. 


After     carefully     considering 
candidates,     the    following 


18 


ulty  and  students  have  been  urged 

not  to  miss  this  meeting.   During 

''*®^^°®i  Wednesday's  gathering,  the  group 


Absentee  Ballot  Deadiihe 
Is  Today,  Says  Cummings 

^    X.       ._      r,.  Y,      •       .      "  —  -       -  I      Anj-one   requesting  an  sbsCTifte 

were    selected    by    the    Bi-Partisan;  ^jjj   ^^   subdivided    into   8  or    10   ballot  must  submit  a  written  re- 
Selections  Board:  ^{smaller  groups  which  will  in  turn '  quest   to  the  student  government 

For  the  Men's  Honor  Council  with   ^.^^^^^   ^j^^    ^^^^^       ^^^^^      ^^^    ^^^.^^  ^^^^^  g  p^    ^^^^    ^^^. 

possible    speakers    for    the    forth- j  ing  ,  to  Elections  Board  Chairman 
!  coming   Symposium.                          Ralph  Cummings. 

j      Exum  said  the  Interim  Commit-       The  balioTS     will     be  available 

tee   was   highly   pleased   with   the :  from  11  a.m.  to  5  p.m.  today*  and 

progress  to  date,  and  has  been  im- 1  from  11  a.m. — 12  noon  tomorrpw. 

'.  pressed  with   tht:  genuine  enthus-  j  The  person  requesting  a     ballot 

!  iasm  shown  by  the  new  members  j  must  appear  in  person,  said  Cum- 
i  of  the  program.  He  also  explain- 1  mings. 


four  senior  seats  open,  Robert  Mc 
Cartney,  Glenn  Pickard,  Robert 
Exum,  Kelly  Maness  and  Charlie 
.Ashford.  j 

The  pensons  approved  for  the  onei 
junior   seat   were   Lawrence   Kouri, 
Mason   Wilkins   and   Tommy   Rand. 
The  sophomore  seat  vacancy  went 
to   nominees   Walker   Lockett,   Jack 


Spain.     David     Evans     and     Sandy 
Amesley. 

Selections  for  the  Student  Council  | 
were  made  for  the"  three  open  seats  | 
of  seniors;  Jerry  Hartzog,  John  Carrj 
and  David  Watson  were  approved! 
by  the  board  to  run  for  the  upper- 
class  poisitions. 

In  interviewing  the  candidates, 
Exum  stated,  "we  looked  for  moral 
ivtability,  strong  character,  ability 
to  express  himself,  past  experience,  1 
respect  whi<;h  he  receives  w  the 
campus,  time  he  will  have  to  putj 
Into  the  job  and  the  reasons  he| 
wanted  to  serve  on  the  coimcils." 


With  students  everywhere.  "Meet 
Me  Under  the  Clock"  is  a  tradition ! 

It  mean*  "that  special  wadcead"  at 
New  York's  most  convenient  location  .  .  . 
good  times  in  the  famous  Palm  Court. 
Preferred  for  its  apacial  services  for    , 

students.  Write  the  College  Department 
.  for  reservations.  No  cab  fare 

neceliary — direct  private  ^«vat6r 
from  Graad  Central  Station. 


^::^B  I  L  T  M  O  li  E 

Otktr  RIAiTY  HOnU  —  Tke  Barelav  •£  Parle  l.an* 
Harry  M.  Anholt,  President 


Everybody 
Loves 
The 
\  SUITMATE 


America's 
Best  Fashion 
Sht)e  Value 
in 


1^h&  Country  Shoes 


It's  going  everyplace  on  the  gayest 

young  and  younger  feet.  A  fa^iga 
sensatkM,  cute  as  a  button  ami  #iReiy  cwnfortilsle. 
In  a  variety  of  cotors,  QQ.QO  the  pair. 


1 


of  Chapel  Hiji 


.^■■■ 


He's  creating  America's  fourth  coastline 


THE  grades  this  gentleman  is  making  have  to  be 
good  because  America's  largest  construction  proj- 
ect,  the  St.  Lawrence  Seaway,  depends  on  them.  When 
it  is  finished  in  1959,  America  will  hate  a  fourth  coast- 
line 8,000  mflea  long.  Ships  will  sail  2,300  miles  into 
the  nation's  industrial  heart.  Milwaukee,  Chicago, 
Detroit,  Qevelaod  and  Bu£falo  will  be  seaports. 

To  get  the  job  done,  3,000  bulldoiers,  power  shovels, 
draglines,  dredges  and  trucks  must  rip  180  million 
tons  of  earth  and  rock  from  the  valley  floor.  This  takes 
machines  with  guts.  And  that's  why  most  of  the$e  huge 
machines  use  Timken*  tapered  roller  bearings.  Hfflkea 
bearings  roll  the  terri&c  leads,  keep  wheels  and  shafts 
moving  day  in,  day  out,  in  steady,  friction-free  rhythm. 

Keeping  these  machines  rolling  smoothly  is  just  one 
w«y  the  Timken  Company  keeps  America  on  the  go. 
We're  working  hand-in-haod  with  all  industry  to  make 
machines  go  fasten  with  more  predsioh,  fewer  ^ekk- 


do^s,  minimtnn  inaintenance.  We're  helping  to  iHa- 
prove  the  machines  that  are  improving  America. 

This  desire  for  continued  progress  made  us  a  leader 
—the  world's  largest  maatt£acturer  of  tapwe4  f«rfl«r 
bearings  and  removable  rock  bits.  And  a  leadihi^  pro- 
ducer of  fine  alloy  steel. 

Would  you  like  to  get  in  on  die  ground  floor  with  a 
company  that's  on  the  go.'  If  you're  interested,  we'll 
tell  you  more  in  our  booklet,  "Career  Opportunities  at 
the  Tiakea  Company".  Drop  us  a  card  soQn.  The 
Tiaaken  Roller  Bearing  Company,  Canton  6,  Olao,. 


'HMKEN 

TAKRED  miiM  BiAftlNGS 


Timktn'  beorings  k»ep  Amerka  on  tho  GO . : .  Qnd  ^  k«ep  going  u£  whon  you  go  with  tho  fimkon  ttmpiny 


r-«  ••ti««««aivai 


iJJi..ip..M>WP 


PAGE  FOUR 


THI  DAILY  TAR  HCEL 


FRIDAY,  MARCH  2f,  1*57^ 


Eight  Events  Scheduled  In  NCAA  Swim  Meet  Here  Today 


•A- 


•r 


Carolina  Whips  Maryland  1-0  On  Honeycutt's  Hit  In  Ninth 


Jim  Raugh  [ 
In  3-Hit 
Whitewash 

By  BILL  KINO 

Shortstop  Roger  Honeycutt  un- 
loaded a  game  winning  single  in  i 
the  bottom  of  the  ninth  inning  to 
sc»v  up  a  brilliant  three-hit  pitch- 
ing performance  by  righthander 
Jim  Raiigh  to  give  the  Carolina 
Tar  Heels  a  thrilling  1-0  ACC  win 
over  Maryland  in  Emerson  Stadium 
>esterday. 

Honeycutt's  drive  to  rightfieltl 
br  ught  catcher  Dave  Legettc  home 
trom' second  ba-.*e  with  the  games 
only  tally  after  Legelte  had  \v6 
off  the  inning  with  a  single  and 
uent  to  second  on  a  sacrifice  by 
Bomber  Hill. 

Raugh.  the  pitching  ace  of  the 
lar  Heels  last  season,  displayed 
mid-season  form  as  he  went  the 
distance  to  rack  up  his  second  win 
of  the  season  against  no  defeats. 
The  hard-throwing  ^cnior  fanned 
right  and  walked  but  two  as  he 
bested  Maryland  righthander.  Fred 
Gebhardt  in  an  exciting  pitching 
»iucl.  The  winning  hit  came  off  Bob 
Rlorehead,  who  came  on  to  pitch 
in  the  eighth  after  Gebhardt  had 
been  lifted  for  a  pinch  hitter  in 
the  seventh  inning. 

The  Tar  Heels  were  able  to  mus-  i 
ter  but  five  hits  off  the  two  Mary-  I 
land  hurlers  and  only  three  off ' 
Gebhardt.  But  the  two  big  ones  I 
came  as  the  dramatic  contest  ' 
threatened  to  go  Into  evtra  innings.  | 

The  game  was  quite  a  .-ontrast 
with  the  Tar  Heels  erratic  11-7 
los  to  Delaware  Wednesday. 

Both  teams  played  as  if  the  con- 
ference championship  wa^*  riding 
on  the  outcome,  and  the  approxi- ' 
niale  1.00  fans  who  braved  the  chil- 
ly weather  in  the  latter  part  of' 
the  afternoon  roared  their  approval 
every  inning.  ' 

Raugh  had  the  game  under  con-  The  nucleus  of  the  Carolina 
trol  from  the  very  first  pitch,  never  wrestling  team  wiU  represent  UNC 
allowing  over  one  hit  in  an  inning. .  in  the  NCAA  wrestling  tournament 
Only  twice  during  the  contest  was  as  the  preliminaries  start  today  in 
Marjiand  able  tj  advance  runners '  Pittsburgh.  Pa. 
as  far  as  third  base,  and  both  \  coach  Sam  Barnes  and  five  of 
.mes  the  Tar  Heel  righty  throttled  his  top  wrestlers.  115  lb.  David 
tne  tnreat.  j  ^^^     ^3^  ^^    ^^^^    ^^  Wagner. 

Carounas  biggest  threat  came  in  1 137  lb.  Perrin  Henderson,  157  lb. 
he  sixth  mning  when  leadoff  bat-  charlie  Boyette  and  167  lb.  Dave 
ter  Don  Lewis  drew  a  walk  and  Atkinson,  left  for  Pittsburgh  last 
TkI  !i  V  "^^^  ^°  ^^  »'h€niwedne.^ay  to  arrive  in  time  for 
Gebhardt  threw  wild  trying  to  pick  i  workouts  before  the  event  gets 
him  off  first.  Joe  Shook  popped :  under  way  todav. 
out,  then  Dave  Legetle  hit  to  the  I  Henderson.  137  pound  Atlantic 
Lewis  moved  too  far  offjcoast  Conference  runner-up,  has  a 
was   caught   m   a   run-  good  opportunity  to  win  a  national 


i  UNCs  Charley  Krepp 
Favored  In  200-Bdck 


gram.  100  yard  breastslrokc,  find£ 
Paul  Reinke.  Big  Ten  champfon^ 
from  Michigan  State,  listed  in  the- 
number  o;ie   slot. 


By  STEWART  BIRD  I 

By  eight  o'clock   tonight,   forty- ' 
eight   men   will    have  survived    a 
tension-packed    day    of    trials   and 
semi-finals  of  the  stiffest  compe-  ^ 
tition    imaginable    and    of    these, 
eight  will  emerge  as  champions  of  j 
the    nation     in     their    respective 
events  as  the  first  full  day  of  com- 1 
petition  in  the  thirty-fourth  annual ; 
National       Collegiate       Swimming ' 
Championships  comes  to  a  close. 

Of  the  eight  champions-hips  to  be  I 
decided  today,  one  has  a  return- 1 
ing  co-champion  and  another  an ' 
outright  champion.  Whether  these  i 
two  will  successfully  retain  their , 
titles  is  somewhat  dou^btful  j 

Rex   Auburey   of  Yale,   has   per-  j 
haps  the  hardest  job  of  either  of ! 
these  two  as  he  faces  a   field   of 
fifty-seven  in  his  quest  for  the  fifty  ! 
yard  freestyle  title.  Last  year,  the 
Yale    speedster    tied    with    Robin 
Moore    of  Stanford    in    the   finals. ' 
though    being   timed    one-tenth    oi 


Ail-American  Charlie   Krepp,   sec- 
ond place  finisher  last  year,  leads  j 
the  200  yard  backstroke  field  with  | 
a  clocking  of  2:06.3.,  four  seconds  ; 
faster  than  his  nearest  challenger,  j 
Dave  Pemberton  of  Northwestern. 
Krepp  has  been   bothered  consid-  j 
erahly   with    a    pulled   muscle    in  i 
his  right  arm   that   has   extended  ; 
down  into  his  back   for  the   past  I 
week.  In  an  interview  with  this  re-  j 
porter  yesterday,  Krepp  stated  that ! 
"it    feels    somewhat    better,    but    I  j 
won't  know  ju-t   how  good  shape 
it  is  in  until  tomorrow.   "Regard- 
less, I  will  do  my  best.'   So,  tomor- 
row will  tell  the  tale  as  to  whe- 
ther Carolina  can  boast  of  a  NCAA 
swimming  champion. 

Probably  the  chief  thriller  9! 
the  evening  will  be  between  Bill 
Woolsey  of  Indiana,  defending 
champion,  and  sensational  Dick 
Hanley  of  Michigan  in  the  220 
yard  freestyle. 


Erickson  Receives  NCAA  Plaque 


Another  NCAA  Championship  event  continues  at  UNC  this  week 
end   with   the   holding   of  the   National    Collegiate   $winnn>ing    meet. 
Al   Barr  (right),  chairn>an  of  the   NCAA   rules  commiHee,  is   shown 
above  presenting  UNC  Athletic  Director  Chuck  Erickson  a  plaque  in 


recognition  of  the  university's  "effective  and  efficient  admniistration" 
of  past  national  championships  vrhich  include  gymnastics,  tennis, 
and  swimming.  Looking  on  is  UNC  Swimming  Coachc  Ralph  Cat«y, 
the  meet  manager. 


Friti  Meyers  of  Michigan  nip-   (      A  new  event  in  the  NCA.\  pro 

pmd  pre-meet   favorite   Ray   Elli-    j — 

ton  of  Yale  in  the  last  ten  yards 
to  take  the  NCAA  1500  meter 
title  in  the  time  of  19:04.8 
which  tied  the  existing  pool  rec- 
ord set  in  these  same  champion- 
ships in  1949.  Ellison  was  timed 
in  19:05.5.  Third  was  Robinson, 
Yale;  fourth,  Johnson,  Texas 
fifth,  Belshe;  Denver;  and  sixth, 
FriM;  Michigan.  Point  standings 
•r*:  Yale,  9;  Michigan,  8;  Texas, 
3;  and  P«nv«r,  2. 


The  Art  Of  Tailoring 

"Every  man  to  his  business, 
is  beyond  all  doubt  as  noble  and 
but  indeed  the  craft  of  a  tailor 
as  secret  as  any  in  the  world." 

HAVE  OTHERS   FAILED? 

With  txpert  workmanship  and 
the  best  service  possible  Pete 
The  Tailor  has  and  will  continue' 
to  give  you  the  ultimate  in 
tailoring  needs. 

And  while  you  are  at 
Pete's,  won't  you  check  and 
see  if  you  have  left  any 
clothes  and  overicoked  pick- 
ing them  up? 

PETE  THE  TAILOR 

* 

specializing  in 
"Ivy    Leagueizing'' 

133V2   E.   Franklin  Street 


Wrestlers  In 
NCAA  Prelim 
Tests  Today 

By   RON  MILLIGAN 


Netters  Win  5-4  Over 
Williams:  Second  Win 


By  JIM  CROWNOVER 

I 

I 

Carolina's     fast-improving     tenms 

team   avenged   Wednesday's  loss  to 

Williams  College  by  defeating  them 

yesterday   on    the   local   courts.   5-4 


With  Steve  Bang  reaching  top 
form,  the  Tar  Heels  took  half  of 
the  singles  matches  and  two  out  of 
three  of  the  doubles  contest.  Bank 
tamed  back  Tom  Schulman  in  fine  y^g  SUMMARY- 
St. vie    6-2,    6-3. 


and  three-quarter  hours  to  be  com- 
pleted. 

This  afternoon  the  Tar  Heels  take 
on  a  tough  Maryland  squad  on  the 
Carolina  *  courts.  MarylaiKl  is  ex- 
pected by  many  observers  to  take 
the  .^CC  crown,  and  Bank  will  have 
the  task  of  pla.\ing  one  of  the  best 
aumber  one  men  in  the  conference, 
Dave  F'reistat. 


Carolina  Golf 
Team  Host  To 
Mich.  St.  Today 


I  a  second  slower  in  a  time  of  22.2 
'  seconds. 


Howard  Johnson  Restaurant 


BREAKFAST 

LUNCH 

DINNTER 

SNACKS 
"Landmark   For  Hungry  Tarheels'' 


The  spring  board  divers,  masters  ,' 

j  of  the  acrobatics,  take  over  in  the  I 

j  second  event  of  the  evening,  with  I 

I  none  of  last  years  six  finalists  on  ( 

I  hand.    Ohio  State,    ineligible   this  I 

j  year,  tocrk  the  first  four  position^'  j 

t  in   the  finals.   Dave   Mclnnis,   Tar 

Heel    ACC   champion,    along    with  [ 

.    .  ,,.  ..         ^,  ,  ^     Ned    Meekins   will    represent    the 

iH>on  agamst  .Michigan  State  on  the  ^ ,.  ,•  Tj     r  ^u-  . 

„.  .       „  .  .  Carolina  cause  in  a  field  of  thirty- 


UNC's    undefeated    but    once-tied 
golfers  return  to  action  this  after- 


three. 

"The  NCAA  and  meet  record  of 
2:12.9.  i>et  by  Davies  of  Micchigan 
in    1952.  seems  destined  to  fall  in 


infield 
third   and 

Honeycutt's  ninth  inning  single 
coupled  with  a  double  in  the  sec- 
ond made  him  the  leading  hitter 
for  the  Tar  Heels.  Third  baseman 
Andy  McDonald  had  two  singles  to 
If  ad  the  Terp's  at  the  plate. 

dOHTl. 

MARYLAND 


25  13 
o     • 


Hintze.  If 4 

Doane.  cf 4 

Dave,  2b  [ 2 

iBolen.  ss „^...  4 

McDonald,  3b 4 

Fichctte.  lb     1 

a-Just.  lb       2 

Beauchamp,  c  2 

Johnson,  rf  2 

Rosenbush,  rf    1 

Gebhardt.  p  ._  _ 2 

t-Beres  ._  1 

Morehead.  p      . Q 

TOTALS  .        29 

NORTH  CAROLINA        ab 

Lewij.  2b 3 

6hw>k,  If  1 3 

Legette,  c 4 

HUl,  rf    1  3 

Honeycutt,  ss  . 4 

OltHiam.  lb 2 

Hudson,  cf  3 

Sirauss.  3b .__  1 

b-Pons  1 

Harwell.  3b ^.  1 

JlMigh,  p  3 

TOTALS  27     5  27  11 

«-Ran  for  Fichette  in  5th. 
b-Flied  out  for  Sfcrau*s  in  5th. 
e-Struck  out  fw  Gebhardt  in  8th 
MARYLAND  000  000  OOO-O 

N.  CAROLINA  000  000  001—1 

E:-Gebhardt  2,  Oldham,  Har\t'eU. 
R— Legette.  RBI— Honeycutt.  SB- 
Dare.  S— Fichette.  Beauchamp, 
Hill.  DP— Honeyeutt,  Lewis  and 
Oldham:  Gebhardt,  Fichette  and 
McDonald.  Left^Maryland  6,  North 
Carolina  5.  BB— Off  Gebhardt  3. 
Raugh  2.  so—By  Ciebhardt  1, 
Raugh  8.  HO  —  Gebhardt  3  in  7: 
M<JTehe*d  2  in.  I'a.  L— Mwehead 
T— 1:5».  l^— Tally  and  Mills, 


title.  Henderson  has  been  an  out- 
standing performer  all  season  and 
is  only  a  sophomore. 

UNC  is  the  only  school  in  the 
deep  South  that  represents  colle- 
giate viTcstling  from  the  Carolina^ 
'  on  down. 

Since  Coach  Barnes  -has  been 
here,  he  has  represented  Carolina 
three  times,  this  year  will  be  the 
fourth.  Barnes  has  never  won  a 
match  in  the  nationals.  With  op- 


1  i  timistic  hopes  he  said  recently 

2  j  have  a  great  desire  to  at  least  win 
1 1  one  match  in  the  nationals." 

Last  year  Coach  Barnes  and  two 
of  his  determined  grappler»'  115 
ib.  Dave  Wall  and  123  lb.  Bob 
Thornton,  went  all  the  way  out  to 
Oklahoma  A&M  where  the  nation- 
als were  held  this  year. 

Wall  and  Thornton  were  com- 
pletely outclassed  though,  both 
were  pinned  in  the  first  round  of 
the  preliminaries. 


Singles:   Bank  (C^  defeated  Schul- 
In   the  match  of  the   day.   Caro-   man,    6-2,    6-3;    Hirshman    (W)    de- 
linas     Fritz    Van    Winkle    whipped;  feated    Black,    6-4,    6-2;     Livingston 

<C>   defeated    Turner.   6-3,   5-7.    6-3: 


?.iel  Searls  in  a  gruelling  maratHon 
6-2,   14-16,  &4.  The  match  took  two 


Averages  Drop 
In  Conference 


GREENSBORO  —  '^t  —  .Atlantic 
Coast  Conference  basketball  scoring 
averages  were  down  an  average  of 
4.0  points  a  game,  according  to' 
fipures  for  tht?  19J>7  season.  Only  | 
offensive  champion  South  Carolina  i 
increased    its    average   over    1956. 

At  the  same  time,  every  ACC, 
team  but  two  invproved,  or  reduced,  \ 
i'.?  defensive  average,  giving  ACCj 
opponents  an  average  of  3.0  points; 
a  game  less  than  in  1956. 

Only  North  Carolina  State  and' 
Duke  opponents  averaged  more] 
points  tills  year  than  they  did  last,  i 

ACC   and   NCA.\  champion   J?orthl 
Carolina  fell  only  0.6  of  a  point  a 
game   offensively,    yet   heW    its   op ' 
ponents  to  ao  average  of  5.4  points: 
8  game  less  than  a  year  ago.  ' 


Leonard  (Wi  defeated  Newsome. 
16-3,  6-4;  Van  Winkle  (Ci  defeated 
Searls.  6-2.  14-16,  6-4;  Eells  (W)  de- 
,  icated  Jacobus.  6-2,  6-3. 
j  Doubles:  Bank  and  Newsome  <C>j 
;  defeated  Hirishman  and  Leonard, 
I  6-3.  3-6,  7-5;  Black  and  Livingstone 
;  <C)  defeated  Fleishman  and  Turner 
I  C-4,  6-2;  Schulman  and  Eells  (W>  de- 
feated    Walker     and    Steward,    6-2 


Finley  Course  layout  at  2  p.m. 
The  Tar  Heels,  who  trounced  Cor- 

I'Cirs   Big   Red  Wedneiiday.   will  be 

i'(Vored   to   continue   their    winning 

ways.    ,i|         X..  -     ,.y^.,;    i  ^y,p   200  yard   butterfly   with   Tim 

There  will  be  one  change  in  the'jecko    of   YaJe   at    2:08.6    and    Cy 

Carolina     lineup     with     Charlotte's  j  Hopkins  of  Michigan  with  a  2:12.2 
'  Taffy  Henderson  replacing  Cal  Mit- 1  clocking   favored    to    battle   it  .out 

chell   in  the  sixth   position.   The  re-   f^r    the    title.    Mac    Mahaffy    and 

niaimlcr     of     the     starting     lineup,  j  Tony   Schiffman  of  UNC   will   at- 
t  Tom      Langley.      Gene      LookablU.   tempt  to  make  the  final  round  of 

Buck  Adams.  Sam  Patrick  and  Walt  six. 

Summerville.  will  remain  the  same  j      EJvent  number  five  will  bring  the 
I  as  in  previous  matches.  '  most    hopes    to    Carolina    fans    as 


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VOL.  LVii,     NO.   154 


Complete  OP)  Wir§  Strvict 


CHAPEL   HILL.  NO^TH  CAROLINA,  SATURDAY.  MARCH  30,  1957 


Offiee$  m  Graham  Memtridl 


FOUR  PAGES  THIS  iSrUE 


news 


Iranian  Kidnap 

TEHRAN.  Iran  —  (AP)  —  The 
Shah's  Imperial  Government  today 
otiered  to  let  the  bandit  kid- 
napers of  Mrs.  Anita  Carrol  go 
anpunished  if  they  will  return 
her  unharmed. 

This   was   coupled    with    a    U.S. 
Embasisy   offelr  of  ransom   in   any 
'  amount  of  money  for  her  safe  re- 
turn. 

Both  desperate  inducements  are 
being  broadcast  hour  after  hour 
on   the   Iranian   State   Radio. 

The  pretty  35-year-old  Ameri- 
can woman  was  captured  last  Sun- 
day by  south(»astern  desert  thugs 
after  they  killi?^  her  husband  and 
another  Ameriqan  Aid  Official  and  ! 
two  Iranians  traveling  with  them. 

An  authoritalive  source  said 
the  Shah"s  govetnmtftit.  while  will- 
ing to  ransom  Mrs.  Carroll,  is 
fearful  of  the  effect  this  might 
have  on  other  outlaw  tribes  in 
Southern  Iran.  Other  Americans 
are  working  in  the  U.  S.  Aid  Pro- 
gram there. 

All  security  establishments  in 
the  area  have  been  ordered  to 
provide  military  armed  escorts  for 
American   vehicles. 

The  broadcasts  from  Zahidan. 
where  Kolplri  has  established 
headquarters  in  the  search  for 
Mrs.  Carroll,  said  the  ransom 
would  be  paid  in  any  currency  the 
bandits  propose  and  deposited  at 
any  place  they  suggest  for  her  re- 
lease. 

Government  experts  believe  that 
because  the  bandits  want  foreign 
currency  to  buy  arms  and  other 
goods  unavailable  in  Iran  they 
may  soon  make  a  ransom  proposal. 


Evans,  Baum  Restate  Stands 
In  Final  Campaign  Statements 


Presidential  candidates  Bill 
Baum.  University  Party,  and  Son- 
ny Evans.  Student  Party,  issued 
Friday  their  final  statements  con- 
cerning the  campus  elections 
Tuesday. 

Baum  stated:  "If  elected,  each 
of  us  (UP  slate)  will  use  his  every 
energy  to  do  a  job  of  which  you 
will  be  proud,  and  a  job  which 
will  merit  your  renewed  respect 
for  student  government." 

Evans  said:  "If  elected.  I  will 
strive  to  represent  all  the  student 
body  as  it  deserves  to  be  rep- 
resented." 


student  government."  Baum  said. 
"This  will  demand  work,  but 
every  person  running  with  Uni- 
versity Party  endorsement  is  ready 
and  willing  to  give  that  work." 
Baum  stated. 

EVANS 

Evans  summed  his  campaign, 
"If  elected  president  of  the  stu- 
dent body.  I  have  promised  to  do 
these  things  through  student  gov- 
ernment: 

"I.  To  separate  the  investiga- 
tion powers  from  the  judicial 
powers  of  the  Honor  Councils  by 


'  setting    up    an    investigating    body 

BAUM  j  for  all  cases.  These  individuals  will 

Baum  said.     "I     j\'ould     like  to    bo  appointed  by  the  merit  system 

briefly  outline  again  for  your  con-  !  of  appointments   in   an  effort   for 

sideration    the    University    Party's ,  fairer  trial   procedure  and   a   less- 


NilL  BASS 


Campus  News  Is  First, 
Says  Editor  Candidate 


Restaurant  Entertainer 

.Pj»y(ng.tfct  p^rt,  9f,  K»l»n*»n,  a  New  Orloans  ro«t«wr*nt  ontor* 
tain«r,  in"  t(»«  Sound  and  Fury  prodoctioh  "Thiovo*'  HoHday,"  i» 
iane  Brock,  from  Atlanta,  Ga.  Sho  will  do  tho  Dane*  of  tho  Thro* 
Voils.  The  sh-w  start*  tenight  at  8  in  Memorial  Hall.  It  will  continue 
through   Monday.  Photo  by  Fred  Powledge 

ON  SPRING  TOUR 

Members  Of  Glee  Club 
Are  Noisy  And  Hustling 


Su#i  Crisis 

WASHINGTON  —  (AP>  —  The 
United    States    and    its    European 

1  Allies  today  lined  up  support  of 
their  private  shipping  firms  for  a 
snail's   pace   return  to   use   of  the 

!  Suez   Canal. 


By    BEN    TAYLOR 


Th?  UNC  Mens  Glee  Club  end- 
ed its  annual  spring  tour  on  a 
c  ntrasting  note  of  sobriety  when 
it  rounded  out  its  last  day  of  tour- 
ing by  sight-seeing  at  Fort  Sumter. 
S.C. 

The  group  spent  four  full  days 
traveling  over  most  of  eastenn 
North  and  Soutli  Carolina,  with 
full  concerts  at  least  twice  a  day 
keeping  the  33-member  group 
hustling.  They  spent  the  final 
day  as  the  noisiest  group  of  tour- 
ists Charleston.  S.  C.  has  heard 
from  in  years. 

In  jubilant  contrast   to   the  fall 
toiir.  th?  bus  left  Chapel  Hill  on  j 
time.  The  four  hour  delay  of  last 
fall    was   eonspicuously   absent.        j 
ENTHUSIASM 

The  first  stop  was  made  at 
Rocky  Mount  High  School.  There 
the  club  enjoyed  a  delicious  meal 
and  rewarded  the  packed  audi- 
torium with  a  concert  which,  with 
its  number  of  comical  selections,  \ 
was   received  with  enthusiasm.        | 

From  there  they  went  on  to 
Edenlon.  where  a  full  concert, 
complete  with  tuxedoes  and  glar- 
ing lights,  was  given  at  the  Eden- 
ton   Grammar  School.  I 

The  contata.  "Testament  of 
Freedom."  by  Thompson,  was  the 
featured  nurabjr  for  the  night.  A 
near  capacity  audience  of  around 
300  was  on  hand  to  hear  the  Glee 
Club  perform. 

After  a  night's  stay  in  Edenton, 
tile  club  moved  on  to  Camp  Le- 
jcun?  High  School  for  dinner  and 
an  afternoon  concert.  Several 
hundred  students  and  teachers 
heard  Ihc  club  perform. 
CALYPSO 

Georgetown.  S.  C  was  the  next 
.«tap  for  the  touring  men.  There 
they  were  assigned  residential 
homes  for  the  night.  A  full  con- 
cert was  presented  in  Winyah 
High  School,  with  the  calypso 
numbers  by     gue.st     artist     Hoke 


lighting  the  evening.  A  birthday 
cake  in  honor  of  director  Dr.  Joel 
Carter  adorned  the  piano  during 
the  concert.  A  sellout  crowd  heard 
the  program.  Afterwards  a  sup- 
per was  given  for  those  members 
who  "escaped"  making  acquaint- 
ances with  the  local  female  popu- 
lation. 

Friday  morning,  the  group  trav- 
eled to  Charleston  where  they  pre- 
sented   several      numbers     before 

'  the  television  cameras  of  WCSC- 
TV.  At  1:30  p.m.  the  club  gave  a 
program     for    the    c'hicora    High 

j  School.  Approximately  700  people 
crowded    the    high    school    gym: 

i  na*ium    for    the   presentation. 

i      A  few  hours     later,     the     club 


Hallford 

Announces 

Candidates 


Interdormitory  Council  Presi- 
dent Sonny  Hallford  Friday  an- 
nounced the  candidates  for  IDC 
president  and  vice  president  to  be 
elected  Tuesday  in  conjunction 
with  the  campus  election. 

Included  are: 

Cobb— Billy  Bailey.  Bill  McGee. 
Rush  Bradshaw  and  Jerry  Shaver, 
president;    Ray  Stanley,   Bill   Ser- . 
mons.    Erwin    Fuller    and    Avery 
Thomas,   vice  president.  | 

Winston — ^Fratvk  Berr>',  presi- 
den:t:  Billy  Burke.  Juan  Canas 
and  Dom  Gable,   vice   president.   I 

Everett  —  Warren  Miller  and 
Rudy  Edwards,  president;  John 
Oliver  and  Jimmy  Highsmith.  vice 


Campus  news  should  come  first. 

•  according  to  Noil  Bass,  candidate 
for  editor  of  The  Daily  Tar  Heel. 

I  However.  Bass  stated.  "There 
is  a  definite  place  for  a  national 
and  international  News  in  Re- 
view'  column." 

"As  I  spoke  to  coeds  in  Mclver 
and  Alderman  dormitories  Thurs- 
day night,  an  interested  young 
lady  in  Alderman  pointed  out  to 
me  that  she  felt  national  and  in- 
tcrnationl    news    was    an    integral 

part  of  The  Daily  Tar  Heel 
said.  I*' 

-CONSIDERATION 

"I  gave  these  sentiments  ser- 
ious consideration,  as  I  shall  al- 
ways   give    student    opinion     and 

!  suggestions  serious  consideration. 
For    it    is    your    newspaper;    and 

;  should  I  be  elected  your  editor. 
I    shall   not   only   gladly    listen    to 

j  ycur  suggestions  toward  making 
The  Daily  Tar  Heel  a  better  pap- 
er; but  I  shall  seek  out  your  sug- 
gestions."   he    said. 

Although  Bass  feels  the  campus 
should  be  more  comprehensively 
covered,  he  stated  he  has  never 
advocated  the  complete  revamp- 
ing  of   the   wire   services. 

But  he  would  not  have  the  pap- 
er's pages  "become  top-heavy 
with  stories  from  the  wire  ser- 
vices.  For   this  could   become,   as 


my  former  opponent  Frank  Crow- 
ther,  who  withdrew  to  devote  his 
valuable  services  to  the  Carolina 
Symposium,  said!  a  'crutch"  upon 
which  staffers  might  lean  in  lieu 
of  seeking  out  worthwhile  campus 
news. 
PRESTIGE 

"Another  point  for  considera- 
tion is  that  the  wire  services  give 
prestig?  to  the  paper.  Few  col- 
lege  papers  have  wire  services. 

"Thus   our   paper,   which   enjoys 
BagHk  a   leading;   position   among   campus 
I  papers     throughout     the     country. 
,  *s    considered     a     leader    partially 
because  it  offers  national  and   in- 
ternational  news  to  the  students." 
Bass  added. 

"I  have  seen  many  mistakes 
made  by  the  paper  in  my  three 
years'  experience,  editorially  and 
otherwise.  But  I  am  proud  of  the 
respect  which  is  shown  our  paper 
by  ot*L'r  colleges  and  univcr^ties. 

"Thus  I  would  not  relish  doing 
anything  to  lessen  its  prestige. 
It  would  not  be  doing  justice  to 
our  great  University  and  to  you 
as  student  subscribers,"  Bass  said. 

"Again  I  pledge  you  my  every 
waking  minute,  should  I  be  elect- 
ed your  editor  next  Tuesday,  to- 
ward giving  you  the  type  paper  of 
which  you  will  be  proud,  God 
willing. "    he   concluded. 


suggestions  for  a   better  Carolina 
student    government: 

"1.  If  elected,  my  first  official 
act  shall  be  to  call  into  session 
a  Student  Senate,  composed  of 
representatives  elected  from  anfi 
by  every  dormitory,  sorority  and 
fraternity  in  order  to  give  each 
student  a  chance  to  voice  his  opin- 
ions in  determining  the  objectives 
toward  which  student  government 
will  work  during  the  coming  year. 

"2.  The  UP  will  work  in  every 
possible  way  with  the  administra- 
tion to  s?e  that  the  proposed  park- 
ing lot  plan  is  approved,  and  that 
construction  begins  immediately, 
having  approximately  200  spaces 
ready  by  the  fall  of  1957;  and  we  { 
will  work  toward  removing  all 
restrictions  on  student  possession 
of  cars. 

"We  will  work  for  non-restricted 
parking  in  the  Columbia  St.  area 
and  see  every  chance  of  accomp- 
lishing this  goal;  and  the  UP  will 
work  with  the  University  Main- 
tenance Dept.  to  outline  into  in- 
dividual spaces  the  parking  area 
in  the  Lower  Quad  ccgioii.  so  as 
to  accommodate  more  cars  in  the 
parking    areas    that    now    exist. 

"3.  The  UP  offers  a  plan  for 
an  increase  in  Honor  Council 
membership,  to  make  it  possible 
for  a  violator  of  the  Honor  Code 
to  not  be  tried  by  his  investigat-  i 
ors.  and  we  promise  to  form  an 
Honor  Council  Study  Commission^ 
to  .study  the  present  standing  of, 
the  Honor  System  within  the  stu- 
dent body. 

"4.  Finally,  the  University  Par- ' 
ty  will  work  with  the  University! 
administration    to    co-ordinate    the  I 


ening  of  the  burden  on  the  coun- 
cils. 

"2.  The  preparation  of  a  pros- 
pectus for  a  new  student  union 
building.  I  definitely  consider  this 
one  of  the  most  far-reaching  con- 
tributions that  student  government 
can  make  next  year.  This  pros- 
pectus   will    be    presented    to   the 


Voting  Places 
For  Town  Men 
Announced 


■  Arthur  Sobel,  vice  chairman  of 
the  Elections   Board,   recently  an- 
nounced   voting    places    for    town 
'  men's   districts.  , 

Town  district  polling  places  for  ' 
Tuesday's  election   wi?".   l>e   as   fol- 
lows: ( 

Town  Men's  I  shall  be  composed 
of  all  men  students  living  in  the 
southern  section  o£  Chapel  Hill 
south"  oT  Cameron  .^vc.  and  <f&sl 
of  S.  Columbia  St.  imaginary  ex- 
tension. 

This  district  shall  include  those 
students  living  in  the  outlying 
sectians  and  cities  which  lie  in 
this  directon.  These  men  shall 
vote  in  the  Carolina  Inn.  Sobel's 
announcement  said.  I 

Town  Mens  II  shall  be  com- 
posed  of  all  men  students  living 
in  the  rectangle  bounded  by  W.  ■ 
Cameron  Ave..  S.  Columbia  St..  W.  | 
Franklin  St.  and  Carrboro  City 
limits.  These  men  will  vole  in  the 
Scuttlebutt. 

Town    Mens    III    shall    be    corn- 


Budget  Commission   next  summer 
in    an   effort    to   bring   the    union 
program  here  into  focus  with  both 
State    College    and    Women's   Col- 
lege. 
j      "3.    To  work  towards  the  com- 
I  pletion  of  off-campus  parking  lots 
i  planned    by    the    engineering    de- 
partment.   I    have    suggested    that 
we  finance  these  lots  by  the  im- 
mediate borrowing  of  funds  from 
j  available  sources  and  that  w^e  pay 
i  this    back    over    the    course    of    a 
number  of  years     by     using     the 
I  money    from    the   student    fee   on 
ears. 

:      "4.     The  establLshment  of  a  con- 
tingency fund  for  dormitory  tele- 
vision   set    repair    from    a    small 
■  percci.itage    of    vending    machine 
I  profit.    I   explained   to   the    Inter- 
'  dormitory  Council  a  few  days  ago 
;  that    for    the    first    time,    we   will 
I  have  a  relatively  clear  picture  of 
j  the    use    of    campus    stores    funds 
,  when    the    report   of    the   Campus 
I  Stores  Committee   is   complete.   If 
I  this    does    not    prove    feasible,    I 
j  pledge  to  them  that  I  would  sup- 
port a  legislative  appropriation  to 
match  any  funds  that  they  would 
raise  for  this  purpose. 

"The  present  SP  administration 
has  made  great  strides  forward 
in  lifting  student  government  to 
a  position  of  such  influence  as  it 
now   has."  Evans  said. 

"The&e  are  just  a  few  of  these 
things:  the  new  fraternity  court, 
ejxtension  of  lower  date  ticket 
prices  to  all  home  football  games, 
continued  pressure  lot  married 
housing,  continued  efforts  for 
(See   Fipal   Statements,    Page   3) 


IN  TH€  INFIRAAARY 


>rd«y  inct 


present  preregistration  and  advis 

er  setup  so  as  to  lessen  confusion  j  posed  of  all  other  students  except- 

and   misadviee.   and   to   arrange   a    in 

plan     wherebv    students    needing 

Graham    Memorial,    the 


Carter  Feels 
Experience 
Qualifies  Him 


NROTC 

The    UNC    Naval     ROTC    Color 

Guard.  Drum  and  Bugle  Corps  and 

Drill   Team  will      march     in     the 

Azalea    Festival    Parade    in    Wilm- 

I  ington  today.     ' 


those  provided  for  elsewhere 
in  these  districts.  These  men  shall 
specific  courses  as  prerequWtes:  vote 
in  their  plans  of  .studv  will  be  glv- '  announcement  said, 
en  precedence  in  the  pulling  of*  Town  Mens  IV  shall  be  com- 
class  tickets  for  those  courses.  !  posed  of  men  students  living  m 
"We  will  do  our  best  to  have.  Victory  Village  or  the  area  btiund- 
also.  a  student  government  that  ed  by  Jackson  Circle.  Mason  Farm 
is  realisticallv  geared  to  the  needs  Rd..  Raniels  Rd.  and  Polk  St. 
which  are  of  importance  to  you  These  men  shall  vote  in  Victory 
and  to  give  everv  student  the  op- ',  Villa«^e       .Sobels      announcement 


portunity  to  actively  participate  in    .said. 


im  Mt*  Imfirmarv  Y**- 

tertfa/  •nclud«<l: 

/Mf*«    L*v*s  Mcclssac,   Mica   C*- 
ref     O^ldHian,     Alvin      Oo^dmmn, 
Ml*t  $«rAh  Parker,  Jo«l  Biclrtfrs, 
Benton     Beard,     Howard     Weiss, 
Sfantwd    Thompson,    Roy    Cash- 
iort.    Jack    Lawirtg,    Oarius    H«r- 
ring,  Jehn  Soloman,  Gerald  Sud- 
dreth,      Jesse      Burnam,      Alfred 
Dean,   Norman    Draper,   Thomas 
S«be«kl,    Curtis    Fields,    William 
Smith,    William    Loftin,    Josoph 
HowlH,     Fred      Phillips,     James 
WNite»    Shelley     Blake,    Charles 
Colty  and   Robert  Lindsay. 


ECCLtl 

The  Gladstone  -  Disraeli  period 
in  British  history  will  be  discuss- 
ed here  at  two  separate  meetings 
Monday  and  Tu:sday  by  Professor 
Eccles.  on  leave  from  Purdue  Uni- 
versilys   history   department. 

Sponsored  by  the  UNC  Dept.  of 
History.  Prof.  EJccles  will  lecture 
to  students  at  12  noon  Monday  in 
Saunders  Hall. 


amused    itself   by   singing   in    the   president. 
streets  while  they  waited  for  their!      Old  East— Kelly  Wallace  Jr.  and 
Publicity    Chairman    to    telegraph '  Thomas   Moore;   Gilbert  Huffman, 
a   telegram   bearing  34  signatures  ■  Thomas     Brandon     and     Thomas 
along  with  a  note  of  good  luck  to   Huss.  vice  president 


the  UNC  basketball  team  then  in 
Kansas  City. 

For  dinner  that  night,  most  of  j 
the  club  gathered  at  a  famous 
restaurant  in  downtown  Charles- 
ton. Upon  completion  of  the 
meal,  they  appropriately  render- 
ed several  choruses  of  "Hark  The 
Sound.'"  They  were  suddenly  and 


Ruffin— Bob  Lowder  and  Ed 
Rowland,  president:  Gus  Revis. 
vice    president. 

Alexander — David  Parrish,  Rand 
Bailey.  John  Hammett,  Lawrence 
Wilson  and  Lee  Ausley.  The  cand- 
idate with  the  second  highest  total 
of  votes  will  be  vice  president, 
aaid  HaJlford. 

Joyner — Jerry      Baynes.      presi- 


foundly  complimented  by  a  bushy  o  k  -.   «f 

ha-red  19th  centurv  Carolina '  d««t;  James  White.  Robert  W 
alumnus  who  profusely  smiled^ Berber  and  Jim  Casey,  vice  presi 
and  shook  hands  with  the  energy 


of  a  teenager. 

Saturday   morning,   the  schedule 
called  for  a  boat  ride  to  Ft.  Sum- 
ter. The  warm     spring     sun     sil- , 
houetted   the   club  as  it  sang  the 
greater  part  of  its  concert  in  en-  j 
tertaining   the    passengers   of   the, 
boat  as  it  sped  toward  the  island,  i 
Strains    of   "Dixie"    were    proudly , 
lifted'  from  the  Civil  War  relic  as  , 
the  Tar  Heels  serenaded  the  tour-  | 
ists  for  the  last  time.  \ 

After    dinner,    the    tired    group  j 
headed    for  Chapel    Hill,   arriving 
just   in   time   to    lend  their  weak  ! 
voices  to  the  cheering  for  the  Car- 


dent. 

Crraham — John  Mason  and  Don 
Owens,  president;  Duke  Haynie. 
Parks  Helms  and  Bob  Bingham, 
vice  president. 

Battle-Vartce-Pettigrew  —  Bob 
Kulins  and  Bob  Pierce,  president; 
Ed  Proescher,  Bill  Porter  and  Mal- 
colm Gay,  vice  president. 

Hallford  urged  all  dormitory 
residents  to  vote. 


GM'S  SLATE 


Simpson   'and    his    quartet    high-olina-Kansas  ball   game. 


ActivitiM  Mhadulad  for  Gra- 
ham JM«morial  today  includo:  Pe- 
tite Dramatk|u«,  7:30-10  p.m., 
Roland    Parlitr    Lounge   2. 


Bob  Carter,  candidate  for  treas- 
urer of  the  student  body  on  the 
Student  Party  ticket,  Friday  said 
several  jobs  he  has  held  on  camp- 
us "have  given  me  the  experience 
I  feel  a  student  body  treasurer 
,  should  have."  i 

As  a  candidate  for  this  office, 
he  said  "I  would  like  to  impress 
upon  the  students  the  importance 
of  experience  and  interest  as  a 
prerequisite  for  the  job." 

Cart:?r  said  his  present  position 
as  treasurer  of  the  Men's  Inter- 
dormit2r>-  Council  kept  him  in 
close  contact  with  the  Student  Ac- 
tivities  Fund. 

Candidates  for  treasurer  should 
"have  worked  in  finances."  he 
said,  in  order -to  obtain  an  "inti- 
mate knowledge  of  the  job  and 
the  wcrk  involved."  He  said  he 
felt  he  had  these  qualifications. 

Carter  said  his  position  in  the 
student  legislature,  where  he  is 
on  the  finance  committee,  has 
given  him  knowledge  "as  to  where 
the  unappropriated  surplus  of 
student  funds  goes. 

He  also  said  he  was  on  the  bud- 
get committee  "which  is  now  in 
the  process  of  arranging  next 
year's  budget. 

"All  these  jobs  have  given  me 
the  experience  I  feel  a  student 
body  treasurer  should  have.  I 
would  appreciate  your  support  in 
next  Tuesday's  election."  he  said. 


Paul  Carr 


George  Ragsdale 


Shown  above  are  Paul  Carr  (left)  and  George  Ragsdale,  candidates  for  the  president  of  the  senior 
class.  Carr  is  running  on  the  Student  Party  ticket  while  the  University  Party  is  backing  R^sdale.  Not 
pictured  is  Harry   Ellerbe,  independent  candidate  for  the  po«ition.  ^ 


Class  Officers  . 
Have  Definite 
Job-Ragsdale 

The  University  Parly  candidate 
for  senior  cla.ss  president  Friday 
said  the  class  officers  have  "a  con- 
crete and  definite  function  to  per- 
form for  the  betterment  and  en- 
joyment of  the  members  of  their 
class." 

George  Raasdalc.  urging  the 
rising  senior  class  "to  unite  be- 
hind the  UP  candidates",  said  he 
beliextd  the  UP  "has  been  fortu- 
nate in  assembling  whaJ  I  believe 
are  the  most  outstanding  mem- 
bers of  an  outstanding  class." 

Rag.^da]e  said  he  considered  the 
selection  of  the  UP  senior  class 
candidates  'not  .so  much  an  honor 
a»  we  do  an  opportunity  to  func- 
tion effectively  in  behalf  of  next 
year's  Senior  class." 

Believing  his  party  has  assem- 
bled the  candidates  who  are  pos- 
sessed of  the  qualities  of  leader- 
ship, Ragsdale  said.  "All  of  us 
arc  pledged  and  determined  to 
provide  the  seniors  of  next  year 
with  whatever  opportunities  and 
entertainment    we    can." 

Ragsdale  said  if  elected,  he 
will  "plan  to  woik  closely,  with 
Jim  Ilaugh.  pre^sent  senior  class 
president,  in  his  preparation  for 
Senior  Week  and  other  activities 
concerning  the  senior  class.  I  be- 
(See   RAGSDALE,  Page  3) 


■■r 


PA«f(   TWO 


THE  DAILY  TAR  M€EL 


SATUllbAY,  AAAftCH  30,  )9if 


Proposed  New  Constitution 
Is  Efficient  And  Workable 

AIt»n'4  uirli.tlie  piesidcntial  and  other  student  government/ offices 
lip  for  election  next  Tuesday,  tlie  student  body  will  ^e  presented  a  pro- 
posed revision  of  its  ioiKtitHtion. 

\VJe  feel  ^he  revij^i^Mi  is  worth  elertiY>n.  If  it  serves  no  other  purpjose. 
it  uill  be  shorter  than  rhe  old  oive.'^ajnd  far  easier  to  read. 

Here's  Avhat  the  roMsed  constitution  does: 

In   the   main,   it   tuts  out   specific  constitutional    references   to -the 

composition  of  sturflent  eoverninent  ,  i^     •*   ^. 

'  ^    ■  constirution   werclv  makes  it  ens- 


-GOEWNOiN  LETTERS,  WITH  PICTURES- 


or^ani/ations.  I'nder  the.  pfeseni 
constitution  vou  often  run  across 
staicmenis   like   tJjis: 

Rrn(;F  I  COMMITTKF.  The 
Rudv»et  (Commit lie  shall  he  cohi- 
posed  ol  a  ( haivman  and  lo  nteni- 
Ihms.  The  chairn'iau  shall  be  the 
treasurer  t»l  the  student  +MKly.  r-nd 
eiijht  members  shall  l>e  appointed 
b\  the  president  of  the  student 
bodv  and  tonfirmed  bv  the  Stu- 
dent   Leiiislaiure  .  .  . "  And  so  on. 

The   revised  editiou  savs: 

"B  VDi ;  F  r     COM  .\t  I!  TFF . 

There  shall  be  a  lUid,s>ei  (l(Hninii- 

tee  whose  duty  ihall  l>e  fo  reioui- 

mend    a    budget     to     the     Student 

•  Leoislatuve    annually." 

Tilt'  rest  of  the  res|»usibiliiies 
for  the  com|xxsiiion  of  the  Bnd^et 
C'oinuiittee  are  left  up  to  the  com- 
mittee ii«»elf  and  the  student  bodv 
president,  with  the  approval  of  the 
Student  Lej^isla'ture. 

It  is  the  s:inie  with  most  orlier 
ori>ani/aiions  ot  studein  i.x)veiii- 
mcnt.  including  the  honor  coun- 
cils. 

The  revised  edition  also  whittles 
down  the  lengthy  article  on  siun- 
nicr  school  siudein  fjfovennnent. 
Formerly  taking  np  a  whole  col- 
umn of  details  tui  the  svsieiu  of 
.ttunmer  .novernmein.  the  propjsed 
(onstitmion  savs  iit  lull: 

"There  shall  Ik*  a  smnmer  scluK)l 
>iudent  government  whose  com- 
position.* p+m'ers  and  functitms 
shall  Ik-  established  bv  the  Stu- 
dent   Legislatme.' 

'*  *  •* 

We  should  be,  «m  are.  always  on 
the    lookoin    for    signs    of    restric- 
tion of  personal   lihierty.  eitlter  in 
the  nation,  state  or  <in  the  campus. 
The    constitmion    is    the    primavv 
source  «»l  personal  liberty  in  all  i»t 
these  places:  it  serves  as  effectivefv 
(o  luuit  the  yiumtiis  ot  <4oveitnneni 
as    it  -^teives    lo  limit    the    freedom 
of  the  people.  Therefore,  it  wouKl 
be  natinal  to  assume  that  a  short- 
ened   stutient    <-omtiiuti<m    would 
mean  less  freedom. 

However,  in  this  case,  the  as- 
suntption    df>esn"i    hold    true.    The 


ier  for  student  organizations  to 
<  hange  thejr  membership.  \n  act 
of  the  .Student  Legislature  is  all 
rhat  is  »eede«l  lor  the  cbeerleading 
squad  to  increase  its  number  or  for 
the  Uudgct  Onnniittee  to  cut  down 
on  its  membership. 

There  is  no  lu-ed  to  worr>  about 
the  new  const itution's  limitations 
on  stitdent  freedom.  They  remain 
the  s;me. 

The  revision  promises  a  more 
efHcient  constitutiovi.  It  should  be 
\t>ted   into  effect  next   Tuesday. 


Palmetto 

State's 

Snobbish 


Goettingen  —  A  Picture  Postcard  View 


♦l«re  are  three  views  of  Goettingen,  where  Carolina  exthange 
•twdents  attend  the  University  of  Goettingen  under  a  student  gov- 
ernment plan.  Taken  from  German  picture  postcards,  they  show 
(left)  the  "Rathou*,"  Goettlngens  center,  with  the  "Rathskeller"  un- 
derneath and  on  the  plaza;  (center)  the  Bismarck  cottage  outside  the 

•  • 

IT  MAY  COME  TO  PASS: 


city  limits.  When  the  Prince  had  drunk  too  much,  says  correspond- 
ent John  Raper,  "he  used  to  jump  out  the  window  into  the  canal  and 
go  swimming."  On  the  right  is  one  of  the  toiwn's  streets,  showing 
the  typical  half>wood,  half-stucco  German  houses  and  a  church  in 
the  background. 

•  • 


It's  iiHercstijig  to  iK>rr  that  a 
Soiuh  Carolina  girl's  attempts  to 
einer  tlie  states  imiversity  have 
been    thwarted. 

The  young  lady,  a  majorette  by 
<h<K»sing.  wanted  to  be  tJte  I'tii- 
\ersity  ol  South  Carolina's  major- 
ette. But  a  law  said  she  couldn't: 
majcMettes  aren't  wanted  m  I'SC. 
Legislation  which  would  let  her  in 
^uiyway  failed  on  the  stale's  geu- 
geial  assembly  this  week. 

Sotith  Carolinians,  we  have 
noticed,  have  turned  out  <piite  a 
few  f>eautiful  young  ladies  in  re- 
4  em  vears.  They  can  claim  a  Miss 
.\merita,  and  the  beautv  of  their 
secretaries  anxl  eollege  girls  is 
commonly  a<c-epted  by  conneisseurs 
as  iWing  the  l>est. 

But  Soutl^  Carolina  hxs  grown 
fat  and  la/y  on  the  subject  of 
f>eaury,  it  would  appear  from  re- 
j»ovts  ol  the  majorette's  cuse.  <^)ii*e 
proud  «>f  its  girls,  the  state  now 
w;^nts  to  snub  ancf  suppress  them. 

Thank  gcMKlness  North  (Carolina, 
the  \allev  ol  hinnility.  is  more 
c(»gin'/ant  of  local  beautv  nt>d  tal- 
ent liian  her  neighboring  mountain 
ol  conceit. 


Exchange  Of  US./ Red  Students? 


Frank  Crowther 

Although  he  wa-s  only  falling 
into  the  line  which  has  turned 
into  a  formidable  chain  gang. 
President  Eisenhower  seemed  to 
be  the  only  one  able  to  express 
his  views  on  disarmament  in  a 
single  sentence:  "The  world  must 
finally  disarm  or  suffer  catas- 
trophic  consequences." 

Agreed,  we  would  like  to  dis- 
arm, but  who  is  going  to  play 
-ball  first?  Other  nations  don't 
trust  us,  «nd  we  don't  trust 
them.  The  vicious  circle  is  grow- 
ing in  diameter,  and  its  expanse 
will  soon  reach  extensions 
Which  will  prove  beyond  its  tra- 
versable crosspiece. 

When  in  New  York  with  the 
UN  Seminar  on  Disarmament  a 
few  weeks  ago.  I  had  the  chance 
lo  sit  in  on  a  discussion  with 
the  Russian  delegate  to  th£ 
UN,  who  spoke  on  the  problem 
of  world  arms  reduction.  TTie 
following  are  some  disjuncted 
quotes  from  Juii  M.  Vorontsov. 
Third  Secretary  of  the  Perman- 
ent Mission  of  the  USSR  to  the 
UN: 

"We  need  and  want  disarma- 
ment   because    we    need    men    in 


our  industries  and  in*  agricul- 
ture on  a  vast  scale.  We'^also 
need  the  money  which  we*'are 
spending  on  munitions  to  invest 
into  industry  and  agriculture. 
We  are  ready  and  willing  lo  dis- 
arm, but  only  will  agree  to  uni- 
versal disarmament  under  com- 
plete agreement  by  the  world 
powers.  I  can  for.see  a  complete 
disarmament  with  only  a  small 
militia  force  maintaining  the  law 
in  the  respective  countries.  But. 
we're  told  that  this  isn't  possi- 
ble." 

"We  agree  to  start  witlv  lim- 
ited disarmament,  and  -wOW*  to- 
ward ultimate  .and  coniplete 
withdrawal  of  arms.  The  ques- 
tion is.  how  do  we  start— -what 
ar.'  some  practical  it^pal  *  to 
strengthen  our  i^espective  posit- 
ions?" 

•One  point  is  ver\-  StVoft^' on 
our  side;  we-  mu64  hs^ve  a  com- 
plete elimination  of  all  nuclear 
weapons.  We  are  developing 
some  solutions  in  this  field,  and 
are  willing  to  meet  the  United 
States  half  way  by  .-rtopping  all 
testing. 

■'.Many  people  say  that  there 
cannot  be  disarmament  without 
control,    and    others     claim     that 


W.      I  -^  ^^     '  111  r^  I  oecause    we    need    men    m       control,    and    others     claim 

l1-h<AJt  Canvas^  It  Is  Dead  Television  Preview:  Fatman 

And  Ringmaster  Wyatt  Earp 


.•\n  earlv-morning  fadict  an- 
noimcer  this  week  drifted  off  into 
nostalgia  as  he  read  a  wiie  rejK)n 
of  the  ciiciis  train's  .starting  oH 
again. 

Kingling  Brothers  and  Uantum 
•<:    iiailev    Combined    .*>bows.    aifter 


The  Daily  Tar  Heel 

The  official  itutfeni  publication  of  tke 
Publications  Board  of  the  University  Of 
North  Carolina,  where  it  is  published 
daily  except  Monday  and  examinatiot 
and  vacation  periods  and  summer  terns 
Entered  as  second  class  matter  in  thi 
p<ist  office  io  Chapel  Hill,  N.  C,  undei 
tbe  Act  of  March  8,  1870.  .Subscription 
rates:  mailed,  $4  per  year,  $2.50  a  semca 
ter:  delivered.  $0  a  year,  S3.50  t  ieai«» 
ter 

Editor FBED  POWLEDGl 

Managing  Editor  CLAUKE  JONES 


•Ne«'s  Editor 


NANCY  RILL 


Sports  Editor 


I^RRY  CimSKi 


Business  Uanager 


BILL  BOB  FfXL 


Advertising  Manager         FRED  KAT21N 


CDITOIUAL    STAFF  —  Woody    S«ar«, 
Joey  Payne,  Stan  Shaw. 


NEWS  STAFF— Graham  Snyder,  Edith 
MacKinnon.  Walter  Schruntek,  Pringle 
Pipkin.  Bob  High,  Jim  Purks,  Ben  Tay- 
lor, H.  Joost  Polak,  Patsy  Miller,  Wal- 
ly  Kiiralt.  Bill  King,  Curtis  Crotty.     . 


BUSINESS  STAFF— John  Minter,  Marian 
Hobeck,  Jane  Paffen,  Johnny  Whitaker. 

SPORTS   STAFF:   Dave  WibJe.  Stearart 
Bird.   Ron  Mitli«an. 


Subscrrption  M«n^|er  _ 
Circulation  Manager  

Assistant  Sports  Editor. 


.  Dale  St$iigy 
Charlie  BoH 
.^JBill  «ia« 


Staff  Photographers  Woody  Sears, 

Norman  Kantor 
Librarians    Sue  Gicjhner,  Marilyn  Strum 


Might  Editor 


Ma&ley  Springs 


l<»ldiny:  last  suunner  uith  a  great 
der.l  of  shame  in  the  midst  of  rain, 
mud  and  stiiking  emplovees,  is 
start ifi'4   u|>  ag;aiu. 

But  nostalgia  is  the  only  avail- 
able feeling  lelt  lor  the  Big  Top. 
For  the  circus  will  ncu  live  again 
undei  a  huge  tent:  its  sawdust 
[loots  are  g<»ne.  atid  ♦jhi  are  a  lot 
of  the  fjeople  who  made  it  tlie  cir- 
cus. In  their  places  will  Ix-  tele- 
\ision-type  f>erformers  and  tele- 
\ision-type  shows.  To  rfiink  of  the 
new  Kingling  Br(>thers  is  to  cause 
a  pain   in  a  (ire  its- lover's  beart. 


It  is  no  use  any  more,  talking 
r.fjoia  tlie  circus  in  the  old  terms. 
.Now.  that  is  like  taking  a  dying 
man  om  of  bed  anfl  \vafking  him 
arcnnid  anyway,  botli  of  you  know- 
ing he  will  be  dead  before  fie^ean 
walk  far  again. 

We.  wlv>  were  lucky  enotif^h  to 
watch  the  Big  Top  vhen  it  was 
soinethitig  beivmifid.  are  truly  for- 
tiUKite  people.  Om  ycuniger  broth- 
ers and  sisters,  whase  only  contact 
with  a  circus  has  been  an  lionr- 
Icmg  thing  cm  -television  /SatiiP" 
days,  will  go  thunigh  theii  lives 
without  a  ripreat  bit  of  Americana. 

.And  those^  of  iw  who  are  left 
with  the,sawdust  and  canvas  mem- 
ories can  understand  what  a  weary 
young  man  said  last  summer. 

The  yoimg  man  was  sitting  in 
the  d<M>j  of  an  elephant  car,  al- 
most dragging  his  heels  an  the 
coiHitryside  as  the  Ringbng  Broth- 
ers traijj  rolled  from  the  North  to 
Sarasota  on  its  last  tiip.  On  the 
sides  of  the  cars  were  the  words, 
now  meaningless.  'The  Cireatest 
Show  on   Earth." 

"It's  no  u*e."  said  the  yoinig  man. 
""It's  no  use.  She's  dead,  and 
there's  nothing  M*e  can  ever  do 
about  her.* 


Neither  Jackie  Gleason  or  Perry  Como  look  particularly  «ood 
from  here.  Gleason's  8  p.m.  spot  on  Channel  2  i.s  again  occupied  by 
a  fill-in  while  the  Fat  .Man  is  on  vacation.  Wyatt  Earp  himself  ap- 
pears tonight,  acting  as  ring  master  for  a  bunch  of  circus  acts.  ThLs 
should  disillusion  his  followers  considerably. 

Ccmo.  at  the  same  time  on  Channel  5,  presents  singer  Julius  La 
Rosa,  among  others. 

Sid  Caesar  is  in  his  u.sual  .situations  on  Channel  5  at  9  tonight: 
opposite  him  on  Channel  4  is  a  live  telecast  of  the  State  College 
freshman-sophomore  dance,  with  Ralph  Marterie's  band  supplying 
the  music.  If  as  many  people  show  up  for  this  affair  as  did  here 
last  week  for  the  Sprin«  Swing,  it  sh;)uld  bi'  something  to  .see. 

To  depart  from  television,  the  Intimate  Bookshop  has  a  book 
which  will  be  of  interest  to  any  who  enjoyed  Robert  Frost  s  visits 
to  Chapel  Hill  eithrr  thi.s  year  or  in  years  past.  Fro.st  was  kind 
enough  to  stop  in  at  the  shop  and  autograph  several  copies  of  his 
Complete  Poems.  One  of  these  would  make  a  valuable  addition,  to 
any  library.  .    -  . 

I'il  Abner 


there  cannot  be  control  without 
first  having  disarmament.  They 
claim  that  the  two  are  insepera- 
ble.  but  we  say  that  this  is  not 
the  case.  We  want  ultimate  and 
complete  reduction.  As  far  as  I 
am  concerned,  disarmament  is 
disarmament." 

'The  open  sky  proposal  Ls  not 
practical.  Troop  movements  could 
be  observed,  but  that's  about  all. 
Also,  some  control  of  nuclear 
production  would  be  observable, 
but  this  would  be  negligible. 
What  we  really  need  is  more 
mutual  confidence.  We  must 
have  confidence  if  NATO  and 
the  Warsaw  pacts  are  to  be 
abolished." 

•'We  are  not  enthusiastic  about 
an  international  government.  How- 
are  you  going  to  get  any  country 
to  drop  its  sovereignty?  The  only 
t.hing  which  can  be  done  is  have 
the  Security  Council  create  some 
kind  o  fa  force  to  protect  the 
peace." 

*i  admit  that  we  were  the 
firs  to  eiiforce  the  25-mile  re- 
stric.ion  around  Moscow  before 
your  government  placed  the  same 
type  of  restriction  on  us  here  in 
the   United   States." 

"The  question  is  whether  we 
can  achieve  disarmament  through 
the  UN  or  if  it  would  be  better 
and  .sooner  achieved  through  the 
heads  of  government.  Personal- 
ly. I  think  that  the  heads  of  gov- 
ernment would  be  more  fruitful, 
but  this  does  not  mean  that  the 
UN  is  hopeless.  1  think  that  the 
Geneva  conference  was  very 
worthwhile,  but  the  results  were 
nullified  by  tension  in  Hungary 
and  the  Mideast.  If  we  release 
the  present  tensions,  we  will 
again  have  a  better  understand- 
ing." 

'Russia  has  had  a  proposal  for 
complete  disarmament  since 
1922,  hoping  to  create  militias 
and  .small  police  forces." 

"Listen.  We  are  living  togeth- 
er in  this  world,  in  this  one  lit- 
tle world,  the  same  plar>et,  and 


doing  so  without  fighting  now. 
So.  why  should  we  fight?  'We  are 
co-existing  and  must  keep  do- 
ing so.  This  is  one  tSiought  which 
is  in  complete  agreement  on 
both    sides." 

"The    machinery'    for    disarma- 
ment is  perfect     right     now.     I 
don't  see  the  need  for  any  dras- 
tic changes,  just  a  little  concess- 
ion by  each  party.  We  are  bead- 
ing in  the   right  direction." 
"When  the  U.  S.  and  Russia 
becente  neutral  to  each  ether, 
it  will  be  perfect." 

"Our  belief  is  that  Commun- 
ism will  take  over  the  world 
eventually  of  its  own  accord,  and 
the  people  will  realize  and 
espouse  a  Communist  form  of 
government.  We  don't  advocate 
revolt,  but  will  continue  to 
preach   Communism. '' 

"Russia  proposed  an  exchange 
of  students,  artists,  specialists, 
etc.,  but  nothing  came  of  It.  We 
would  welcome  an  exchange  of 
intellectual  students." 

To  attempt  to  synthesize  and 
dispute  these  points  would  take 
thousands  of  additional  words. 
You  can  do  this  for  yourself. 

The  only  further  comment  I 
will  make,  is  that  I  talked  with 
Vorontsov  after  the  meeting' con- 
cerning an  exchange  of  students 
from  the  University  of  North 
Carolina  and  the  University  of 
Moscow,  and  we  have  started 
motions  through  the  channels  of 
both  governments. 

We  hope  that  the  Russian  gov- 
ernment will  finance  the  U.  S. 
students,  and  the  U.  S.  govern- 
ment will  finance  the  expenses 
of  the  Russian  students.  Voront- 
sov is  paving  the  way  for  me 
to  vi.sit  and  discuss  this  with  the 
Russian  ambassador  in  Washing- 
ton next  month.  Each  grout)  will 
spend  their  three  summer  vaca- 
tion months  in  the  respective 
countries — that  is.  if  all  the  par- 
ticulars can  be  worked  out.  The 
prospects  are  not  optimistic,  but 
the   effort   is   being  made. 


iiUAW 

.      Hi 


• 
By  A!  Capp 


rass^ 


'ma: 


THAT'S  OOOrf 
VMSSOftC  I 
HEARD  IT 
TICKING  IM 


J, 


WE'D  CALLTH' 
COPS,  ^CRAZV 
JOIK- EXCEPT 
WE'RE  ALL 
V7ANTEP.':''- 


M  FAMISHED.<:r-  I 

NEED  MONEV  TO  ' 

FOOD  TO  GO  OM 

WITH  KAW 

CRUSADE.':'' 


WE  NEED    '- 
riRSr-CLASS 
U^AINS  POR 
OOR&OVS 

TO  PRACTISE   _ 
OM/'.''-VOlJ'RE 
FIREft  RDSDICK.'.' 


J  HOW  CANJ  I   L 
KEEP  UP 
MV  STRENGTH^ 
jt  I  MUST 

GO  ON.T 


Pogo 


By  Walt  Kelly 


^  suppmf 

MlETHflACK  OH. 


NOTHiy  POIN'-' 

MfiAt  6t^a  I  mp 

ON  THgA\  CHOPPBJr 

'"teerH A/N'T 
foff  BUTteifkies 


si^: 


A  Description 
Of  Goettingen 

John  Raper 

GOETTINGEN — The  city  Goettingen.  famous 
through  its  sausage  and  university,  belongs  to  the 
king  of  Hannover,  and  contains  999  fireplaces,  di- 
verse churches,  a  maternity  hospital,  an  observa- 
tory ...  a  library,  and  a  "Rat.:^^teller."  where  the 
beer  is  very  good,  the  part  flowing  stream  is  call- 
ed the  'Leine,'  and  serves  in  summer  for  bathing; 
the  water  is  very  cold  and  in  several  places  so  wide 
that  I  must  take  a  long  start  to  spring  over.  The 
city  itself  is  beautiful  and  pleases  one  best,  when 
one  sees  it  with  his  back."  Thus  Henrich  Heine  in 
his  essays  on  his  trip  through  the  Harz  Mountains  1 
described  Goettingen  during  the  first  half  of  the  / 
19th  century. 

Not  too  badly  destroyed  during  the  war.  Goet- 
tingen today  appears  as  much  like  that  picture  of 
a  German  town  one  has  after  reading  the  Grimm's 
Brothers  as  anj?  of  the  towns  that  I  have  seen.  The 
center  of  the  town  is  still  the  "Rathous"  (city 
hall),  and  under  it  the  "Ratskeller"  is  still  serving 
good  beer  just  as  in  the  days  when  Heine  was  a  stu- 
dent here.  With  the  "Rathous"'  as  a  center  and  a 
radius  of  six  city  blocks  runs  what  is  left  of  the 
old  city  wall. 

It  now  serves  as  a  large,  circular,  Sunday  after- 
noon stroll  route  for  Goettmgers.  From  the  "Ra- 
thous" one  can  see  the  austere  steeples  of  the 
four  Goettingen  churches,  built  back  during  tha 
Middle  Ages.  The  town's  houses  have  the  half 
stucco,  half  dark  wood  exterior  so  typical  of  tht 
old  German  towns. 

One  of  the  really  tremendous  spectacles  that 
takes  place  in  Goettingen  is  the  Tuesday  and  Satur- 
day morning  market.  The  farmers  bring  in  every- 
thing from  whole  cows  to  flowers  .and  .sell  them 
from  little  carts.  On  these  two  mornings  four  or 
five  streets  are  filled  with  carts  sellers  and  buyers. 
The  iSeopIe  go  to  market!  It  Ls  the  American  curb 
market  of  200  years  ago. 

If  one  were  taken  on  a  tour  of  th?  traditional 
or  historical  points  of  interest,  he  wduld  certain- 
ly see  where  Goettingen  University's  most  famous 
alumnus.  Prince  von  Bismarck,  lived.  The  Bismarck 
cottage  is  just  outside  the  city  wall  beside  the 
canal  running  through  the  city.  As  a  Goettingen 
student,  Bismarck  was  known  far  and  wide  as  a 
riotous    drinker   and    dweller. 

Bismarck  lived  at  first  inside  the  ^ity  wall,  but 
was  forced  to  move  outside  the  city  limits  by  a  de- 
cree from  the  city  fathers  for  a  rather  ungentle- 
manly  and  unseemly  deed  one  night  before  his 
landlord's   house   after   having   drunk   too   much. 

Among  the  many  stories  of  Bismarck's  Goet- 
tingen escapades,  the  best  is  how  he  got  kicked  out 
of  the  University.  Bismarck  was  a  great  dueller. 
One  day  during  a  duel  he  received  a  cut  clean 
through  his  cheek  and  refused -to  have  it  sewed  up 
(the  corps  men.  fraternity  men,  are  proud  of  their 
scars  even  today,  to  the  point  of  putting  an  ir- 
ritstin,"  '.40stanco  on  their  wounds  to  keep  them 
reo  lOiiger). 

yeveral  days  later  he  got  mad  at  a  professor 
-,nd  stuck  his  tongue  out  at  him  through  this  cot 
in  his  cheek.  The  University  could  take  his  excess 
drinking  and  fighting,  but  not  such  an  insult  to  a 
professor,  and  told  him  to  leave.  I  am  told  that 
later  b\  another  university  a  girl  straightened  him 
out,  and  he  became  a  serious  student. 

One  of  the  finest  institutions  in  Goettingen  i.< 
the  coffee  house.  Here  one  can  have  a  cup  of  cof- 
fee or  tea  with  a  piece  of  pastry  and  read  the  daily 
newspapers,  which  the  house  furnishes  for  its  cus- 
tormers.  in  the  morning  and  afternoon. 

As  it  was  in  Heine's  day.  the  "Rat.skener"  is 
the  meeting  place  of  the  students  at  night.  The 
different  corps  come  in  with  their  little  hats  and 
color  bands,  dnnk  beer  from  mugs,  and  sing  the 
traditional  student  songs. 

Another  famous  student  meeting  place  is  the 
late  show  every  night  at  the  Krone  movie  house  (a 
third  class,  rat  hole  type  theater.)  The  main  at- 
tractions are  bad  movies,  mostly  American  west- 
erns. The  management  tries  to  get  the  worst  movies 
he  can  to  keep  up  his  busine.«ss.  During  the  show 
the   students   go  wild. 

The  movie  dialogue  is  forgoHen.  Everyone  tries 
to  catch  the  remarks  flying  cil   over  the  theater. 
No   one  watches   tfie  movie,   or   if   so,   only   long 
enough  to  get  fuel  for  hH  next  cutting  remark 
Dan  Southcrland  and  I  have  found  Croettingen. 
Its   University,    and    its    people    wonderfu':    and    in- 
teresting. As  a  universKy  producing  many  of  Ger- 
many's greatest  leaders,  it  has  given  us  an  insight 
into   the   direction   that   Germany    is    taking. 

We  both  would  like  to  urge  you  to  apply  for  the 
Goettingen  Exchange  Scholarship,  which  has  af 
forded  us  an  immeasurable  education  and  exper- 
ieaee. 


SATURC 


making 
veterans 
•  -The! 
we  can] 
operatit 
Evans 

"And  I 
that  I 
consider 


lOJ 
12J 
13J 

14 

17, 
16J 

21 
22] 

23 


2: 


291 

30J 


321 


■■'^^^^^•••••i 


^^^^^^mmmmmmmmmmmm 


30.  1W7 


SATURDAY,  MARCH  30,  1W7 


TMl  DAILY  TAR  HHt 


PAGI  THIII* 


i 


HNAL  STATEMENTS 


In 
n 


famous 
»s  to  the 
liaecs.   di- 
observa- 
rhere  the 
is  call- 
bathing; 
|s  so  wide 
)ver.   The 
?st.  when 
Heine  in   j 
[ountains  / 
111    of  the  i 

far.  Goet-j 

>icture  ofi 

Grimm's; 

seen.  The 

(city 

ll.  serving 

iva*  a  stu- 

T  and   a 

•   of  the 

lay  «#ter- 
|the  "Ra- 
of  th* 
kring  th» 
|the  half 
ll  of  th« 

teles  that 
[nd  Satur- 
lin  every- 
iseil  Ihem 
four  or 
id  buyers. 
|"ican  cur\) 

raditionali 
certain-  \ 
1st   famous 
Bismarck 

beside    the 

pfoettingen 

ide    as    a 

wall,  but 

|s  by  a  de- 

ungentle- 

?fore    his 

much. 

:ks    Goet- 

ticked  out 

U    dueller. 

cut    clean 

sewed  up 

id  of  their 

ing   an    ir- 

keep    them 

I  professor 

this  cut 

lis  excMS 

Insult  to  a 

told  that 

^ened  him 

"ttingen    is 

•up  ot   cof- 

the  daily 

lor  its  cus- 

kskeller"  is 
Jnight.  The 
le  hats  and 
|d   sing   the 

lace    is    the 

|ie  house  (a 

main    at- 

•ican    west- 

lorst  movies 

the   show 

ryonc  tries 
theater, 
only  long 
remark. 

[Ooettingen. 
fill  and  in- 
my  of  Ger- 

an   insight 
[kinu 

jply  for  the 
|ich    has    af- 

and  exper- 


(Continued  From   Page   1) 

•making     physical     education     for 

'  veterans    voluntary. 

*  "These  are  all  instances  where 
we  can  succeed  only  through  co- 
operation with  South  Building." 
Evans  said.  | 

"And  finally,  the  appointments 
that  I  will  have  to  make  will  be 
considered  by  the  same  merit  sys- 


tem   that    was    used    this    year," 
Evans   concluded. 


ROMER 

Dr.  Alfred  S.  Romer,  Harvard 
University  scientist  will  deliver  a 
lecture  here  Thursday  at  8  p.m. 
in  Wilson  Hall  on  "The  Early 
History   of    Land    Vertebrates.    " 


Covering  The  Campus 


COME    TO 

VARLEY'S  MEN'S   SHOP 

For    Your 

COOPER'S   PRODUCTS 


Men  in  the  know 

know  true  from  false 


P^lv^ 


More  than  50%  of  college  men 
earn  at  least  half  their  way 
through  school 

Q]  TRUB        Q  FALSI 

False.  While  71  %  earn  part  or  all  of 
their  expenses,  the  breakdown  is: 
17%  earn  nothing;  25%  earn  less 
than  Vi;  20%  earn  V4  to  Vi;  14% 
earn  Vi  to  ^4;  24%  earn  ^  to  all. 


College  men  usually  marry 
college  women 

□  TWU«       Q  PALSB 

False.'They  might  like  to,  but  there 
are  just  so  many  more  college  men 
than  college  women  that  they  can't. 
However,  it  is  true  that  college  girls 
usually  marry  college  men. 


The  vital  part  of  Jockey 
underwear  lasts  longer  than 
the  rest  of  the  garment 

r~j  rmum      Q  mu.ss 

True.  The  waistband  is  usually  the 
weak  point  of  most  underwear,  but 
Jockey  developed  a  special,  long- 
wearing,  heat-resistani  elastic  (with 
U.S.  Rubber  and  the  American  In- 
stitute of  Laundering)  that  actually 
outwears  the  garment  itself. 


PRESS  CLUB 

'Ja«nes  H.  Parker,  news  editor  -of 
the  Siler  City  Chatham  News,  will 
discuss  QRportunities  4n  the  week- 
ly newspaper  field  at  a  meeting 
Monday  of  the  Press  Club.  The 
meeting  will  be  held  at  7:30  p.m. 
at  the  home  of  Journalism  Dean 
Nerval  Neil  Luxon  on  Mt.  Bolus 
Rd. 

DEADLINE 

Students  who  are  interested  in 
becon^ng  a  counselor  in  the  1957 
Orientation  program  must  submit 
an  application  form  to  the  YMCA 
or  Graham  Memorial  by  April  9, 
according  to  Chainnan  Jerry  Op- 
penheiroer.  • 

ORIENTATION 

The  Orientation  Committe? 
needs  girls  to  help  with  typing 
each  afternoon  for  the  next  few 
weeks  and  would  appreciate  any 
help,  according  to  an  announce- 
ment. Any  girls  who  are  interest- 
ed have  >been  asked  to  contact 
Miss  Mary  Jane  Fisher  in  319  Mc- 
Iver,  8-9134. 
HORN 

Dr.  Andrew  H.  Horn,  retiring 
University  Librarian,  will  speak 
on  'Interlibrary  Cooperation 
Among  Research  Libraries"  at  the 


Faculty  Club  *lunc^heon  Tuesday  at ! 
1  p.m.  in  the  Carolina  Inn. 

;ymposium        '  I 

The   third    general    meeting  ofj 
the  Carolina  Symposium  Commit- 
tee foe  1958  will  be  held  in  the  | 
Assembly  Room  of  the  Wilson  Li- 
brary at  4  p.m.  Wednesday.  All  in- 1 
terested  faculty  members  and  stu- 
lents  have  been  urged  to  attend. 

PHILOLOGICAL 

Th°  Philological  Club  wUl  hdld 
^its  joint  annual  meeting  with  the 
Erasmus  CK*  of  Duke  on  Monday 
at  8  p.m.  in  the  Green  Room  of 
the  East  Duke  Building.  UNC 
•English  Professor  Richmond  P. 
Bond  will  present  a  paper  •entit- 
led "New^  Letters  1o  the  Tatler 
and  the  Spectator." 

FTA  * 

There  will  be  a  meeting  Tues- 
day of  the  Future  Teachers  of 
America  at  8  p.m.  in  the  Pea- 
body  Hall  Curriculum  Lab.  Paul 
A.  Johnson,  administrative  assist- 
ant to  Gov.  Hodges,  will  speak  on 
the  Pearsall  Plan.  Tickets  for  the 
May  Banquet  will  be  on  sale  at  the 
meeting,  according  to  an  an- 
nouncement. 


Deadline  For  Women 
Reservations  April  5  | 

Applications   for   room    reseira-l 
tions  for  women  students  are  now 
being    received    for    the    fall    se- 
mester   and    two    summer    terms, ' 
according  to  the  dean  of  women's 
office. 

Reservations  are  being  receiv- 
ed in  the  dean  of  women's  office 
in  104-C  South  Building. 

Reservatrons  must  be  made  by 
April  5.  the  announcement  said. 
If  reservations  have  not  been 
made  by  that  time,  the  office  will 
assume  the  student  is  either  not 
returning  for  the  fall  semester  or 
is  moving  int^  a  sorority  house. 

The  procedure  for  making  a 
room  reservation  as  announced  by 
the  dean  of  women's  office  is  as 
follows:  , 

(1)  The  student  should  pay  a 
^10  room  deposit  for  each  term 
at  the  cashier's  office  in  South 
fiuUding  basement.  She  will  re- 
ceive a  receipt. 

(2)  lite  receipts  should  be 
brought  to  the  dean  of  women's 
office,  where  application  cards 
for  reservation  may  be  filled  out. 

(3)  The  card  should  be  marked 
"paid." 


Election  To BeHetdSvnday 
By  Westmimter  f  d/Zowsfrip 


The  Westminster  Fellowship 
election  for  the  1957-58  academic 
year  w  schfeduled  fw  Simday 
night  during  the  regular  Fellow- 
ship meeting  from  6-8  p.m. 

The  approved  slate  from  the 
nominating  committee  will  be 
read  4ind  further  nominations  from 
the  floor  will  be  called  for.  ac- 
cording to  an  announcement. 

The  approved  slate  is  as  follows: 

President — Miss  A  n  ti  Morgan, 
Holland  McSwain  and  Ted  Edlich; 
Vice  President — Misses  Joyce  Bry- 
ant and  Kathy  Webster;  Secretary 
— ^Misses  Betsy  McKinnon  and  Ann 
Inman  and  Treasurer — Bob  Kuhns 
and   Al   Culp. 


The  electiph  is  of  primary  im- 
portance to  all  those  affiliated 
with  the  'Westminster  iPellvwahip, 
said  the  announcement.  The  ques- 
tion of  next  year's  leader^^p.  wiU 
bear  an  important  relationship  to 
"^  the  success  of  the  ■entire  program. 
All  members  have  been  invited 
td  nominate  further  caBdidat€s 
£or  any  of  the  executive  offices  and 
to  cast  your  vote  with  prayerful 
consideration  for  the  nominees  of 
your  choice,  the  announcement 
said. 


RAGSDALE 

(Contimied  front  Page  1> 

Ifeve   that   from    him    I  can    learn 
how-to  J»enefit  next  year's  sewers 
,  in  a  newer  and  better  way." 

He  urged  a  united  Vf  «i»di- 
I  date  slate,  saying  it  couW  "work 
etosely  with  the  meanbers  of  our 
j  class  in  high  hopes  that  next  year 
!  we  shiill  obtain  a  unification  and 
,  ac4i4ievem«Qt  that  will  set  an  ex- 
i  sntnple  for  years  to  come  . . ." 


MTHoHizt  rem 

«   ADVEKTiSIJtS   • 


Rhp  Chi  Taps  Eleven 
For  Society  Members 


Rho  Chi,  the  national  honorary 
pharmaceutical  society,  has  tapped 
1 1  members  of  the  student  body 
of  the  UNC  School  of  Pharmacy. 

Those  honored  were  Ronald  L. 
Austell.  Shelby;  Charles  P.  Copses, 
Charlotte;  David  R.  Davis,  Will- 
iamston;  James  L.  Inabinet,  Wins- 


ton-Salem; Owen  F.  Phifer,  Marsh- 
ville;  William  N.  Ponder,  Hender- 
sonville;  James  M.  Prevo,  Thorn- 
asville;  Paul -A.  Stevenson,  Eliza- 
beth City;  Henry  Cheng,  Formosa; 
Rosemarie  Fussenegger,  Austria 
and  Carazon  Ramirez,  Philippine 
Islands. 


CLASSIFIEDS 


FIVE  ROOM  BRICK  HOUSE  IN 
center  of  town — has  hobby  work- 
shop. Call  9458  during  day  or 
•2926  after  5:30  and  during 
weekend. 


FOR  SALE:  CONVERTIBLE  1948 
Olds,  r  &  h.  hydramatic.  $290. 
-Call  Robert  Koestler.  fi-9155,  and 
leave    message. 


Wmi  MERZBACHER: 


Ba  I  lenger  Wants  Public 
Debate  On  His  Theory 


By  CURTIS  CROTTY 
The   validity  of  Sir  Isaac  New- 


Men  on  the  go 

QO  for  ^/OCMTCl/underweai 


universe  is  held  together  by  cen- 
trifugal   force   and   gravity,    with- 

A  IKT       vailUK'V      \9^      59U~     M9MVIZ     I'^^f^WW"  I 

tons  theory  on  graviUtW  ie  llie   ««».<**»«  *''^  .^T^'^'f.""^"  .,^? 
subject    of   question   between    two   "^'^    ^l''"^  f    magnetic   equ.lifi- 

i    •     j-u.       1  TSUI  rium,  he  said, 

people  m  Chapel  HtU.  «  ,,  ,    »w  .     ,»    4V.„« ' 

o  ,     .  •aTii\-  _    -B-i         Balletiger's  theory  contends  that  ; 

Several   days    ago  William  Bal-  *         .     _  j  »*  k«^ 

,,    J       ^    .      .      •  •  ♦    the  universe  is  made  up  of  bod- 
1  lenger,    a    self-educated    physicist    .   ^   ".^.  ^.  ,  .     »v.    i 

L  ^         r.  J    «  ^Si.i„AA  i« '  »es  w^th  negative     poles     at     the 

from  Cape  Cod.  Mass.,  arrived  »n  i      ^  ,  r     _    *      t      »i,;o 

,      ...1,  J  ui-  1 i        i  outer    surface    of    crusts.    In    this 

Chapel     Hill     -'^^  P^'W.^^/.  way  the  universe  is  held  together 

i  theory    of    bis    in    the    Daily    Tar        J  gradually  expand 

Heel    that   put    the   UNC    Physics    «^    the ,  polari^itL    of    the    gava 

:  ^«P^-  °"  '^  ^°"  gravitational  fields.  The  old  adag*. 

FAU.UR£  I  "opposites    attract."    explains    his 

According     to     Ballenger.     the  ^  ^jj^^^y 

!  coming  plans  fo  the  U.  S.  govern 


HOME  FOR  RENT:  "HANDSOME 
and  convenient  in-town  home 
for  a  big  family  or  a  group  of 
serious  graduate  students  or 
other  responsible  adults.  A  four 
bedroom,  2>^  bath  house  on  a 
spacious  shaded  lot  at  404  West- 
weod  Drive.  Walking  distance 
from  hospital  and  campus.  Com- 
pletely furnished  including  dish 
washer  and  \vasher-dryer.  Sep- 
arate dining  room,  porch,  and 
garage.  Available  April  through 
February  1.  1958.  Call  John 
Foushee   Agency,  8431. 


Everybody 
Loves 

X         SUITMATE  .  .  . 


America's 
Best  Fashion 
Shoe  Value 
in 


'M 


Town  t  Uountry  Shoes 

It's  going  everyplace  on  the  gayest 
young  feet.  A  fashion 
sensation,  cute  as  a  button  ^nd  divinely 
comfortable.  In  a  variety  of  colors, 
$11.95  the  pair. 


Shatpshooters 
Welcome 

Practitioners  of  that  ancient  and 
delightful  spOTt,  old  book  .jollect- 
ittg,  have  varied  sources  of  delight, 
not  the  least  of  which  is  .Titcliing 
the  dealer  in  a  dreamj'  moment. 

Since  anyone  who  could  know  all 
there  is  to  know  about  old  lx>oks 
could  make  his  fortune  by  answer- 
ing questions  for  seme  television 
hiwter,  and  since  the  collector  is 
a  specialist  m.  a  narrower  field 
than  the  dealer,  it  stands  to  rea- 
son that  from  time  to  time  a  true 
gem  in  its  field  will  pop  up  on 
the  bargain  s-helves. 

When  this  happens,  it  is  etiquette 
far  the  collector  to  crow  loudly, 
and  for  the  dealer  to  weep. 

Your  old  bookseller  hopes  his 
groans,  when  an  occasion  of  this 
sort  arises,  are  .sufficiently  con- 
vincing to  add  to  your  pleasure. 

But  the  plain  truth  is,  tiiat  when 
he  pulls  a  boner  he'd  a  whale  of 
a  lot  rather  one  of  you  chaps  found 
it  than  some  Northern  dealer  on 
his."  way  home  from  Florida! 

The  Intimate 
Bookshop 


20$  €.  Franklin  St. 
Open  Tilt  10  P.  M. 


o 


made  only  by 


ment  i^r  launching  a  space  satel- 
lite will  be  a  failure.  He  states 
the  whole  approach  is  wrong. 

The    government    .scientists    are 
going  by  the  assumption  that  the 


JOCKEY   UNDERWEAR 

AVAILABLE   AT 

BERMAN'S  DEPT.   STORE 


DAILY    CROSSWORD 


ACROSS 

1.  Skirt 

borders 
5.  Jane , 

Bronte 

hexoine 
9.  Proofread- 

er'a  mark 
10.  Peruses 

12.  Fragrance 

13.  Makes  dog:t 
itch 

14.  Affirmative 
tep!y 

15. -Shine 

17.  Intended 

18.  Walking 
stick 

21.  Pronoun 

22.  Sky  ^od 
( Babyl. ) 

23.  Rugged 
mountain 
crest 

27.  Kind  of 
crane 

29.  Galled 

30.  Negative 
reply 

32.  Sktn  mark 
from  whip 

33.  A  dressing 
(med. ) 

35.  French 

dramatist 
38.  Peck 

41.  A  willow 

42.  Kind  of  cloth 

44.  Canal  boat 

45.  Eskers 

46.  Bamboolike 
grass 

47.  Underworld 
river 
(myth.)    . 

DOWN 
1.  Long- eared  , 
rodent 


God  of  love 
Letter 
(Heb.) 
Platform 
Clothed  in 
furs 
Brefid 
ingredient 
Scold 
Border 
Low  island 
Coin  (Jap.) 
Escape 
(slang) 
Encoun- 
tered 
,  Vehicle 
Constella. 
tjon 


aoM    i^ziaii      '*i:<i 
[lEas  Baas 


20.  Fresh 

22.  Topa2 
hum- 
ming- 

•       bird 

23.  Noticing 

24.  Indian 
(Utah) 

26.  Came  in 
28.  Astonish. 

ment 

31.  Pronoun    Y«it#r<«y'«  A««wm 
33.  Beleaguer*       38.  A  sixe 


ment 

34.  Parts  of 
bui^els 

35.  Crowd 

36.  Eskers 

37.  Coins  (It.) 


of  paper 

39.  Top 

40.  God  of 
pleasure 
(Egsrpt.) 

43.  Rodent 


NONSENSE 

"Nonsense"  was  the  reply  given 
to  this  theory  by  Dr.  Eugene 
Merzhacher  of  the  UNC  Physics 
Dept.  Merzbacher  says  Ballenger  j 
is  "mia-informed."  He  %dded  that 
ideas  like  Ballenger's  were  re- 
ceived by  the  Physics  Dept.  every  | 
day. 

There  was  not  hesitancy  in  Bal- 
lenger's voice  yesterday  when  he 
announced  his  desire  for  a  pub- 
lic debate  with  Merzbacher.  Free- 
lance physicist  Ballenger  also 
used  the  word  "nonsense"  in  a 
description  of  the  studies  on  the 
physics  classes  here. 

Merzbacher.  upon  being  asked  to 
participate  in  the  debate,  declin- 
ed, saying  he  did  not  have  the 
time  and  the  discussion  would  be 
useless.  He  did  say  that  he  would 
be  glad  te  hold  a  private  conver- 
^jQ„g  sation    with    Ballenger    in    which 

According  to  the  procedure  set  j  they  could  discpss  their  different 
up  by  the  County  Board  of  Elec- j  beliefs. 
tions  the  four  candidates  polling  ™'*-0^^.**0* 
the  highest  number  of  vot^  -will  |     Ballenger,  in  stating  his  position 
be  declared  elected,  with  the  top  I  concerning  his  revolutionary  theo- 
two  being  named  to  regular  six-   ry.  said  I?r.  Merzhacher's  cnt*ism 


Dean  Brandis 
Seeks  School 
Board  Position 

Dean  Henry  P.  Brandis  of  the 
UNC  Law  School  has  become  the 
fifth  candidate  for  the  four  seats 
to  be  elected  on  the  Chapel  Hill 
School  Board  this  spring. 

The  elections  in  the  school  dis- 
trict will  be  ^eld  at  the  same  time 
and  at  the  same  polling  places  as 
the  May  7  Chapel  Hill  Town  elec- 


year  terms  and  rt»  next  two  'be- 
ing named  tb  fill  in  the  two  years 
remaining  in  the  terms  of  Board 
members  who  have  resigned. 

Dean  Brandis  is  48-years-old  and 
a  resident  of  Arrowhead  Road  in 
Greenwood.  A  UNC  graduate  in 
the  class  of  1924,  he  joined  the 
staff  of  the  Institute  of  Govern- 
ment here  in  1933.  He  joined  the 
University)  faculty  in  1940  and  has 
been  dean  o^  the  Law  S<?ho«l 
since  1940. 

Other  candidates  in  the  runnijig 


ot  his  theories  is  not  unique.  He 
is  following  the  mob.  The  doctor 
would  find  he  is  not  taking  a 
course  In  which  all  universities  and 
all  physics  teachers  share  his 
opinions  about  my  works,  he  said. 

At  least  some  faith  in  his  theo- 
ries has  been  expressed  by  the 
chief  of  the  "Physics  Dept.  of  Ho- 
bart  College  In  Lake  Geneva, 
N.Y..  he  said. 

"I  am  not  resentful  of  opposi- 
tion to  my  works  nor  do  I  hold  any 
resentment  to  the  people  who  fight 


for  the  School  Board  ppsts  to  date    against   new   ideas.   In   all   things 
are    Board    Chainnan    Gray    Ctil-   it  is  the  dature  of  people  to  op- 
breth  and  incumbent  members  Bin  I  pose    anything    new    and    revolu- 
H        isiffan.and  Dr.  J.  Kempton  Jones,  i  tionary. 


wlio  was  appointed  te  replace  the 
resigned    Gordon    Blackwell    last 
week.   Mrs.   Marvhi   Allen   is  also 
seeking  election  to  the  Board. 
Mrs.  O.  David  Garvin  has  said 


'This  Is  as  it  should  be  because 
if  people  did  not  oppose  new 
things,  every  crack-pot  in  the  na- 
tion would  gather  a  sect  of  fol- 
lowers.  True   9<nenc.^    would   sink. 


CALCNDAft  says  it's  spring  ...  but  it  ain't  necessarily 
so.  The  freezin*  season  may  still  come  up  with  one  last 
blast.  And  when  that  happens,  your  cigarette  smoke 
makes  a  mighty  Crisp  Wisp!  Of  course,  with  Luckies, 
you  can  forget  the  weather.  Luckies  taste  fine  all  year 
round— and  no  wonder!  A  Luqky  is  all  cigarette  .  .  . 
nothing  but  fine,  mild,  gopd-tasting  tobacco  that's 
TOASTED  to  taste  even  better.  Forecast irJYou'll  say 
Luckies  are  the  best-tasting  cigarette  you  ever  smpked! 


J. 


WHAT  CAUSeS  A  LOST  SAPAMf 


Jungle  BungU 

CDVARD  SAMPLE. 
WtSTtKN  MICH4«*N  COLS. 


WHAT  IS  A 

PCTCIt  SCMBITZ 
NCMASKA 

STOCKING   MCNOE«? 

Sock  Doc 

WHAT  tS  A  GAY  90S  OteSSJNG 
'  PiOUEMf 


BuatU  Tufte 


MAIILTH  SHURTE*. 
■  lABI  U 


she  will  retire  upon  expiration  of    Progress  would  stop 


her  first  six-year  term  on  July  1. 
Charles  Milner  and  Richard  E. 
Jamerson  are  hold-over  members 
of  the  Board  .  


'When  a  man  has  a  true  find, 
he  must  have  the  guts  and  intelli- 
gence to  force  it  on  its  way  against 
any  opposition,"  Ballenger  said. 


START  STKKimGI 
MAKE  »25  "^ 

We'll  pay  $25  for  every  Stickler  we 
print— and  for  hundreds  more  that 
never  get  used!  So  start  Stickling— 
they're  bo  easy  you  can  think  of  dozens 
in  aecondsl  Sticklers  are  simple  riddles 
with  two-word  rhyming  answers.  Both 
words  must  have  the  same  numtjer  of 
■yllables.  (Don't  do  drawings.)  Send 
'em  all  with  your  name,  address, 
college  and  class  to  H«ppy-J<»-Lucky , 
Box  67A,  Mount  Vernon,  N.  Y. 


Luckies 
Taste  Better 

"IT'S  TOASTED"  TO  TASTE  BETTER  :  ;  :  CLiANEft,  FRESfifeR,  SMOOTHER! 


■.^jf-i-^-if:  >.■■:':■: y-y.':i,ii^- 


0A.T.CO. 


PKODVCT  or 


t^J!4a*<*a*»t%i<S«»-^y»-y  «M«ic*«  t*a»,i.o  *Mi»racTu..«  or  cxaaa.TT.a 


I^WV^P^^^FV 


1 


PA61  FOUR 


THt  DAILY  TAt  MtlL 


SATURDAY,  MARCH  it,  1*57 


I 


Krepp  Cops  200  Backstroke; 
Two  Wins  For  Yale's  Jecko 


broke  the  existing  meet  record  of 
2:04.2  set  by  Wardrop  of  Michi- 
gan in  1955.  His  time  also  unof- 
ficially set  new  world.  American 
and  NCAA  standards. 


By  STEWART  BIRD 

Thirteen  records  from  pool  to 
world  were  swept  from  the  record 
books  in  last  night's  NCAA  action 
before  a  capacity  throng  in  Bow- 
man Gray  Pool  which  was  treated  ^ 
to  the  finest  swimming  by  the  ^h^  ^^^  ^^^"^  breaststroke  saw 
nation's    best    along    with   a    few   ^"°^^"    ^^''''^^^    ^'"^^^   ^^^^   ^^^ 

amazing     upsets     by     unheralded  ^"^^^^^^  «"  ^'^'^  «^S«  ^^  ^^^^^  ««»t« 

'  is  Julian  Dyason  of  Oklahoma  up- 
set   pre-meet    favorites    Cy    Hop- 


front  of  leader  Gary  Morris  of 
Iowa  in  the  last  35  yards  to  win 
by  two  strokes  in  the  time  of 
2:09-4.  For  the  Eli  star  it  was  his 
second  title  of  the  night,  making 
him  the  meet's  first  double  event 
winner. 


mermen. 

Tim  Jecko  of  Yale,  swimming 
in  his  first  NCAA  championships, 
stroked  his  way  to  a  yard  and  a 


18,   Iowa    10,    Amherst   7. 

western  5.  and  Bowdon  3.  | 

I  • 

The  third  and  final  day  of  the 

i  swimming  championships  will  get 

j  underway   at   10:30   this   morning 

I  wth  trials  in  the  final  seven  events 

I  followed  by  semi-finals     at     1:30- 

Going  into  the  final  event,  the  I  and  finals  at  8  p.m.  this  evening.  • 

400  freestyle  relay,  favorite  Yalej     The    100-yard    freestyle    should 


Carolina  Netters  Lose: 
5-4  Decision  To  Terpsj 

j  Carolina's  Cinderella  tennis  team  |  Terp's  best  doubles  team  of ; 
came  ..back  strongly  and  all  but :  Freistate  and  Carl  Bucks,  3-6,  6-1, ' 
play«ii^    Maryland's     high-ranking '  6-3.  j 

j  squadi/  off  the  court  yesterday  be- ;     The  Tar  Heel  netters  return  to  ^ 

j  for*  showing   in   a   close  decision,   action    Monday    and    Tuesday    on 
North-  5-4.     '  {the   Carolina   courts  against  Har- j 

I     Steve   Bank  served   notice  that  {  yard, 
he  is  to  be  contended  with  in  ACC 
individual   competition  by  defeat- 
ing highly-regarded  Dave  Freistat, 
6-3,  4-6.  6-3 

The  match  of  the  day  found  the 
J.    B.    Walker    and    Pete    Steward 


Howard  Johnson  Restaurant 


BREAKFAST 


LUNCH 


DINNER 

SNACKS 
'Undmark  For  Hungry  Tarheels*^ 


was   tied    with    Michigan   for   the 


half  lead  in  the  last  50  yards  to^j^^  ^^  ^.q^q_  ^^^  ^^^^  ^roke  the 


kins  of  Michigan  and  Paul  Reiake  [  lead  at  the  end  of  the  first  night's 
of  Michigan  State  to  win  by  two  competition.  Rex  Aubrey,  swim- 
tenths    of    a    second   in    the    fine :  ming    like    the    champion    he    is. 


be  one  of  the  closest  of  all.  No 
less  than  nine  sprinters,  led  by 
Dyer  of  Harvard  at  49,0,  are 
grouped    within    two    seconds    of 


take  the  200  yard  butterfly  in  the 
time  of  2:09.5.  for  a  new  meet. 
NCAA,  and  pool  records.  The 
former  standard  of  2:12.3  was 
hung  up  by  the  Eli  sophomore  in 
the  afternoon   trials. 

In  a  finish  so  close  it  took  the 
hawkeyed  judges  and  timers  five 
minutes  to  decide  the  result.  Rob- 
ert Keiter  of  Amherst  emerged 
the  winner  in  the  meet  record  ty- 


overcame    a    Michigan    State    leaJ  each   other.  Only  six  can  qualify 


pool  record  Of  1:03.6.  set  by  Dick  i  in  the  anchor  leg  of  the  relay  to 


Fadgen  of  N.  C.  State  in  1957, 
and  was  three  seconds  faster  than 
he  had  ever  done  before.  Being 
a  new  event  to  the  NCAA  pro- 
gram, his  clocking  automatically 
set  new  meet  and  NCAA  records. 


give  Yale  the  win  with  a  time  of 
3:23.8.  This  gave  the  Eli  14  points 
and  a  new  pool  record,  breaking 
the  former  time  of  3:26.0  held  by 
UNC. 


for  the  finals,  and  there  are  some 
others  who  could  pull  an  upset 
and  make  the  final  round. 

Carolina's  Charlie  Krepp  leads 
the  pack  in  the  100  yard  back- 
stroke   with    a    clocking   of    56.5, 


By    the    narrow  margin    of   two 

points.   Dick  Kimball  of  Michigan  up  from  last  to  fifth  place  in  fhe 

nosed  out   favorite  Ron  Smith   of  same  event  to  garner  an   all  im- 

S!\IU  to  take  the  one  meter  diving  portant    4    points     for     the     Tar 

ing  time  of  22.1.   Fourth  was  last .  {jtig  with  a  t,otaI  of  401.65  points.  Heels. 

Sensational  Yale  sophomore  Tim  Point  totals  at  the  end  of  nine 

.Icncke,    trailing   through   six   and  events  are:  Yale  45.  Michigan  34, 

a  half   laps  of   the  gruelling   200  Michigan     State     23,     Indiana   23, 


Tony  Schiffman  ,Walt  Rose.  Bill   with  eight  others  all  under  a  min- 
Zickgraf  and  Bill  Roth  pulled  UNC   ute.  so  this  will  be  another  hotly 


Rex    Aubrey 


year's    co-champion 
of  Yale. 

All  .American  and  UNC  team 
captain  Charlie  Krepp.  despite  a 
pulled  arm  muscle,  led  from  the 
.start  to  win  his  first  NCAA  title 
in  three  years  of  trying  as  he 
stroked  200  yards  backstroke  in 
2:07.8.  It  was  a  grinning  Krepp 
and  a  proud  and  happy  Ralph 
Casey  that  linked  hands  as  the 
UNC  coach  presented  his  graduat- 
ing star  his  medal. 

Bill  Woolsey,  defending  champ- 
ion, made  up  a  half  body  length 
lead  in  the  last  forty  yeards  of  the 
220  freestyle  to  nip  Dick  Hand- 
ley  of  Michigan  by  a  stroke  in  a 
sensational  time   of  2:023.  which 


contested  event. 

Bill  Woolsey  of  Indiana,  defend- 
in?  titleholder,  leads  the  list  of 
440  yard  freestyle  aspirants,  and 
is  favored  to  retain  his  crown 
successfully. 

Yale    will    rule    the    favorite    in 


doubles  team  of  Carolina  losing  a 
gruelling  duel  with  the  Terp^ 
Jack  Dunham  and  Doug  Dixon.  7- 
5,  1-6,  6-4. 

In    another     top     match.     Ray  j 
Newsome   won   his  singles  match 
from  Don  Kammerer.  6-3.  6-3,  then 
went  on  to  help  Bank  defeat  the 

PHARMACY  WIVES 

The  Pliarmacy  Wives  organiza- 
tion will  meet  Wednesday  at  the 
Institute  of  Pharmacy.  Mrs.  R.  H. 
Totten  will  give  a  demonstration 
talk  on  flower  arrangement.  Mem- 
bers have  b<^n  authorized  to  in- 
vite guests  to  the  meeting. 


"Utme 
t«ll  you  about 

OEAN  martin's 

i     hi«H-jinkB  in M-GM's  j 

I 
I 
I 
I 
I 
I 
I 


individual  medley,  sprinted  out  in   UNC    11.    Harvard    13.    Oklahoma  the  final  event  of  the  program,  the 


PLAY  HERE  TODAY 


^..*^^-^ 


^iiik^  i^^m 


Tar  Heel  Baseballers  Defeat 
Ithaca,  8-4  For  fifth  Victory 


400  yard  medley  relay,  closely 
followed  by  Michigan  State.  In- 
diana, and  North  Carolina. 

Other  events  to  be  run  off  will 
be  the  100  yard  butterfly,  200  yard 
breaststroke.  and  high  board  div- 
ing. 


TEN  THOUSAND 
BEDROOMS 

He  sings, 
makes  love, 
has  to  choose  j 
among  four      I 
pretty  sisters.    | 
It  takes  place 
in  romantic 
Rome.  Very 
enticing!" 


Frosh  Win 

Carolina's  freshman  tf&seball 
squad  opened  their  season  W^ed- 
nesday  by  defeating  Oak  Ridge 
Military-    on   the    losers    diamond. 

8-4 

Wayne  Young  went  the  first  six 
frames  for  the  Tar  Babies  before 
s.iving  way  to  Ben  Hammett. 

Young  gave  up  one  hit,  one 
run,  fanned  eight  and  walked 
three.  Hammelt  was  touched  for 
a  trio  of  markers,  struck  out 
three   and  walked  three. 

The  Tar  Babies  will  open  their 
l{t57  home  schedule  in  Chapel 
Hill.  April  3  against  North  Caro- 
lina State  College.  Following  that, 
they  play  Oberlio  twice.  April  4- 
5.  ' 


By  BILL  KING  i 

Carolina  combined  an  effective 
7-hit  pitching  performance  by  i 
Charlie  Cross  and  Tom  Maultsby  j 
with  an  8-hit  attack  against  three 
Ithaca  pitchers  to  defeat  the 
Bombers  from  New  York,  8-4  in 
Emerson    Stadium   yesterday. 

The  Tar  Heels  collected  all  of 
their  runs  in  three  innings  as 
they  took  advantage  of  five  Itha- 
ca errors  and  cashed  in  on  seven 
walks  by  the  three  Bomber  hurl- 
I  ers. 

I      Cross,   a  crafty  little  lefthander  , 
I  who  was  knocked  out  in  the  sec- 1 
I  ond  inning  in  the  Tar  Heel's  home  ; 
!  opener     against     Delaware,      was 
sailing   smoothly   behind   a    three- 
hit   performance   before  the   visit- 
ing New  Yorkers  got  to  him  for 
three   runs   and   four  hits  in   the 
eighth    frame.    Righthander    Tom 
Maultsby    relieved    Cross    in    the 
eighth  with  the  bases  jammed  and 
two   men   out.     The     big     fellow 
I  promptly   fanned   the   next  batter 
I  to  end  the  inning,  Maultsby  faced 


only  four  men  in  the  final  frame. , 
Carolina  took  a  3-0  lead  in  the 
very  first  inning  by  virtue  of  five 
walks.    Ithaca  starter,   Joe   Mater- : 
ile  walked  four  men  and  could  get 
only  one  out  before  giving  way  to 
l?fty    Basil    Curry.    Curry    walked  | 
the  next  batter,  then  set  down  the  ■ 
side   with  two  straight  strikeouts. ' 
Joe  Shook,  Jim  Legette.  and  Ivalec 
Hill  scored  for  the  Tar  Heels. 

Ithaca  was  able  to  come  back 
with  one  run  in  the  third  on  two 
walks  and  a  single  by  rightfielder 
Roy  Teeter. 

The  Tar  Heels  were  throttled  by 


Hill  and  Honeycutt  and  moving 
Harwell  to  third.  Harwell  scored 
moments  later  on  a  balk  by  the 
Ithaca    hurler.  .    j 

In  the  eighth  inning.  Cross 
was  tagged  for  four  runs  on  two ' 
walks,  a  triple,  a  double,  and  a 
single  before  Maultsby  came  on  to 
silence  the  sudden  looming  of 
the  visitor's  bats.  j 

Carolina  pickejj  up  two  insur-| 
ance  runs  in  the  eighth  inning 
off  righthander  Bob  Graham,] 
who  relieved  Curr>'  in  the! 
seventh.  The  Tar  Heels  did  iti 
the  hard  way — with  two  men  out. . 


t^he  fifth  Inning  when  Hill  singled  I 
and   went    to   second    on    a    wild 


ed  a  drive  to  center  which  Jack  j 
Kahn  dropped  .moving  Hill  t0| 
third  and  allowing  Honeycutt  tO; 
move  to  second.  Third  baseman 
Jim  Harwell  was  hit  by  a  Curry 
pitch  to  lad  the  bases.  This  set  \ 
the  stage  for  big  Russell  Perry , 
who  lined  a  single  to  left,  scoring 


hf 


m 


tJ'd  you  EVER  61/  In  h^/e^  with 
a  TEACHER? 


In  almost  everyone's  life,  there  is  at  least  one  teacher  wAva  haa  exerted 
tremendous  influence,  who  has  taught  lessons  that  stand  tune's  test 

Through  the  Treasury  Department's  School  Savings  Program,  many 
of  today's  teachers  are  helping  your  youngst«n  learn  the  meaning  of 
thrift  and  the  value  of  savings. 

By  putting  their  dimes  and  quarters  into  Savings  Stamps,  himdreds 
of  thousands  of  children  are  saving  towards  the  purchase  of  U.  S.  Series 
£  Savings  Bonds. 

If  your  child's  school  participating  in  this  important  program? 
Why  not  speak  to  your  principal,  school  superintendent  or  P.T.A. 
group  about  it  today? 

U.  S.  Savings  Stamps  point  th«  way  ymu 
want  your  child  to  growl 


the    hard    throwing    Curry    until  \  Honeycutt.  the  hero  of  Thursday^  1 

game    against   Maryland,   provided 
the  big  blow  with  a  single  to  left 
pitch.  Rog  Heneycutt  then  smash- !  after  Joe   Shook  walked  and  Hill 

and  catcher  Jim  Legette  chipped 
in  successive  singles. 

The  victory  was  number  fivjc 
for  Walt  Rabb's  Tar  Heels  who 
now  have  a  5-3  over-all  mark,  and 
a  1-0  conference  record.  The  Tar 
Heels  play  the  fourth  of  a  five- 
game  home  stand  today  against 
Washington  and  Lee.  Game  time 
is  3  p.m. 

ITHACA  ab     h    «     a 

Seerbo.  ss  3     113 

Teeter,  rf  4    10    0 

Levinc,  lb  ^  4     16    0 

Schnellbaccher,    If         2    0    0    0 
Noun,   If  1     0    ;     0 

Kahn,   cf  4    2    10 

fPepitto.   3b  3    0    0    4 

Edwards.  2b  4    0    2    0 

Borow,  2b  0     0     10 

Lenhoff.   c  10    0    1 

Seidleck,   c  2     12    0 

Meterile,  p  0    0    0    0 

Currie,  p  10    0    0 

Graham,  p  1111 

bbaBranski  10    0    0 

TOTALS  33     7  24  10 

NORTH   CAROLINA     ab     h     o    • 
Lewis.  2b  2    0    2    2 

Shook.  If      .  3     13    0 

Legette.   c  4    2    5    1 

Hill,  rf  5     2    3    0 

Honeycutt,  ss  4     114 

Harwell,   3b  2    1    0    1  j 

Rushton,    cf  3    0    4    0  1 

aPons  10    0    0 

Hudson,  cf  0    0    1    0 1 

Perry,  lb  4     18    0 

Cross,  p  3    0    0    0' 

Maultsby.  p  1    0    0    0  ! 

TOTALS  31     8  27  10  I 

a — Grounded   out  for  Rushton  in 
8th. 

bba — Flied  out  for  Graham  in  9th. 
Ithaca  001  000  030-^ 

North  Carolina  300  030  02x~S 
E— Lenhoff  3,  Kahn.  Seerbo, 
Shook.  R— Levine,  Lenhoff.  Seid- 
leck, Graham,  Shook  2,  Legette  2, 
Hill  2,  Honeycutt.  Htirwell.  RBI- 
Teeter  2,  Perry  2.  Levine  2,  Kahn, 
Honeycutt  2.  2B— Legette,  Seid- 
leck. 3B— Levine.  SB— Lewis.  "SF 
—Teeter.  DP— Lewis,  Honeycutt 
and  Perry.  Left— Ithaca  7,  North 
Carolina  8.  BB— Off  Meterile  4, 
Currie  2,  Cross  4.  Graham  2.  SO— 

I  By  Currie  "8,  Cross  3,  Graham  2. 

I  Maultsby  1.  HO— Meterile  0  in  Vj; 

I  Currie  4  in  4%;   Graham  4  in  3; 

j  Cross  7  in  7%;  Maultsby  0  in  1>4. 
.WP— Cross,  Currie.  Balk— Currie. 
PB — Lenhoff.  I,— Meterile.  W— 
Cross.      T— 2:48.      U— Beck     and 

'  Hicks. 


Ev«n  linifli*'  thin  •♦'t 
PuMm  P'iz*  play' 

Marlon  BRANDO 

Glenn  FORD 

Maehiko  KYO 

\liktltaiiMSt 

_  ornac 

"  CIHtMASCOH  « 

Aiifriiocoto/t 

■*  Eddie  ALBERT 


Every  hour 

begets 

smaller 

and 
smaller 

and 
■nalkMrt 


and  every 
moment 
the  terror 
mounts ! 


nmm 


LAST  TIMES 
TODAY 

LATE  SHOW  TONITE! 

SUNDAY  -  MONDAY 


Carolina 


LAST  TIMES  TODAY 


m  ONEIMSCOK  iik  METROCOIOP  co  simrm 

ANNA  MARIA  ALBER6HETTI 

EVA  BARTOK- DEWEY  MARTIN 

WALTER  SLEZAK- PAUL  HENREID 

LATE  SHOW  TONIGHT 

REGULAR  SHOWING 

SUN.-MON.- TUE. 


CAROLINA 


.4lf*i 


A  GUY...  A  GAL 
AND  A  DOG  IN 
A  STORY  YOUR 
HEART  WILL 
REMEAABER! 


^^„vt^''.Av.i^'"^  ■ 


SH 


YanJohnson 


Piper  Laurie  ^ 
Martha  Hyer  ^ 

•  HERBEUT  ANDERSON  •  FRANK  V 


•vl^'- 


"What's  it  like  to  be  ^ 

A  SYSTEMS  ANALYST  AT  IBM?!' 


Two  years  ago,  colleg*  senior  Thomas  Whoolor  oskod  himsolf  this  t^v^' 
Hon«  Today,  a  Systoms  Analyst  in  IBM's  Data  Procossing  Division,  Tom 
rtviows  his  •xporionco  and  givos  somo  pointers  that  moy  be  holpful  t« 
you  in  taking  the  first,  most'  important  step  in  your  butiness  caroor. 


"What  I  probably  like  lyost  about 
this  job."  says  Tom,  "is  that  you're 
never  tied  down  to  one  desk  and  the 
same  routine.  There's  always  a  new 
problem  ...  a  new  approach  needed 
, . .  new  people  to  meet  and  work  with." 

But  first,  what  does  a  Systems 
Analyst  do?  "briefly,  we  study  a  cus- 
tomer's present  sjistem— payroll,  in- 
ventory control,  billing  (k  whatever 
—and  convert  it  to  a  merl^mzed  sjti- 
tem  using  either  conventi|»nal  IBM 
business  machines  or  IBKf's  high- 
speed electronic  computew." 

Tom  works  out  of  the  IBM  Balti- 
more Office  with  some  of  America's 


fined  by  Tom  as  "converting  the  flow 
of  instructions  and  information  into 
the  most  eflScient  operation  for  an 
IBM  magnetic  drum  computer.  Bell- 
wood,"  Tom  points  out,  "is  the  In- 
ventory Control  Center  for  all 


f' 


Why  Tom  chose  IBM  *  C: 
How  does  a  senior  like  Tom,  who  was 
interviewed  by  at  least  twenty  com- 
panies while  in  college,  select  his 
future  employer?  'In  my  case,"  Tom 
says,  "the  choice  was  easy.  IBM 
offered  the  best  opportunilitt.  I  knew 
IBM  sales  were  about  doubling" every 
five  years— and  when  I  considered 
the  tremendous  growth  potential  of 
the  electronic  computer  field— I  had 
no  trouble  making  up  my  mind. 

"Besides.  I  was  impressed  by  the 
caliber  of  IBM  personnel.  They  had 
a  broader  outlook  and  an  approach  to 


biggest  companies  as  his  customers. 
Graduated  from  Johns  Hopkins  in 
August,  '55,  with  a  B.S.I.E.,  he  came 
immediately  to  IBM.  During  his  train- 
ing period,  Tom  atudied  IBM's 
Punched  Card  and  Electronic  Data 
Processing  Machines.  He  learned  theif 
uses,  their  applications,  and  was  in- 
structed in  the  theories  and  methods 
of  data  processing. 

Diversified  Assignnfionts 

A  leading  aircraft  company  was  Tom's 
first  major  assignment.  "My  job 
there,"  he  explains,  "was  to  analyze 
the  application  of  IBM's  latest  elec- 
tronic computer — the  705 — to  regu- 
late the  flow  of  materials  and  machines 
used  to  fill  Government  contracts." 

Then  came  a  short,  but  highly  sat- 
isfying assignment.  Ai  the  Bellwood 
Quartermaster  Corps.  Tom  set  up  a 
"SOAP"  system  (System  for  Opti- 
mum Automatic  Programming)  de- 


A  problem  in  inventory  control 

Quartermaster  centers  in  the  country. 
The  new  system  will  achieve  balanced 
supply  and  demand  of  material 
throughout  the  entire  U.  S.— will  save 
money  for  the  Government— and  re- 
lieve many  men  from  the  drudger>' 
of  details."  v 

For  the  past  six  months,  Tom  has 
been  working  with  the  Statistical 
Services  Division  of  Headquarters 
Air  Research  &  Development  Cpm- 


Ixpkilning  IBM's  705  slacironic  cemputtr 

mand.  "We  are  designing  and  imple- 
menting a  system  to  link  eleven 
reporting  centers  to  Headquarters  by 
wire  transmission."  Tom  reports. 
"Data  transmitted  to  Headquarters 
by  this  system  will  lie  coordinated 
and  then  processed  by  an  IBM  650 
electronic  computer." 


At  the  coitlrol  ptmol  of  IMA'*  #Se 

business  which  I  eah  beat  describe 

as  professional. 

"My  future?  It  looks  good— very 
good.  I've  already  received  two  gen- 
erous raises  in  less  than  two  years, 
and  at  the  rate  IBM  and  the  elec- 
tronic computer  field  are  expanding, 
my  future  is  both  assured  —  and 
rewarding!" 

•  •  o 

IBM  hopes  this  message  will  help  to  |i\-e 
you  some  idea  of  what  it's  like  to  be  a 
Systems  Analyst  in  the  Data  Processing 
Di\-ision.  Thf>re  are  equal  opportunities 
forE.E.'s,  I.E.'s,  M  JJ.'s,  phyadsts,  math- 
ematicians. Liberal  Arts  majors,  and 
Business  Administration  graduates  in 
IBM's  many  divisions— Research.  Prod- 
uct Development,  Manufacturing  En- 
gineering, Sales  and  Sales  Assistanc**. 
Why  not  drop  in  and  discuss  IBM  with 
your  Placement  Director?  He  can  supply 
our  brochure  and  tell  you  when  IBM  will 
next  interview  on  your  campus.  Mesa- 
whil*,  our  Manager  of  College  Relations, 
P.  H.  Bradley,  will  be  happy  to  answw 
your  (— ^^i^nsjust  write  him  at  IBM. 
RooL  •»«    Madison  Ave.,   Ktm 

York  22.  K.  Y. 


IBM 


IMTISMATIOMAL 
SVSlNtSS  M^CaiNiS 
COSrOI&TION 


DATA   PSOCMiSINa 


CLKCTRIC  TYPCWRITENS 


TtMt     teUIPMENT 


MILITARV    peo0ucrs 


^ 
f 


XJ.II.C.   Library 
Serials     Dept. 

Chapel   Hill,    ?;•    C.     - 


5». 


WEATHER 

Cool    with    an   •xpcctcd   high   of 


■^s'rrf 


L  I  S  T  L  E  S  i>  ^^ 

An»th*r  iMst  possikk  *d  i«cf Hr«. 


VOL.  LVII>  KO.  155 


Complete  (JPf  Wirt  Strviet 


CHAPEL    HILL,   NORTH  CAROLINA,   SUNDAY,   MARCH   31,    1»57 


Offiett  m  Gni^fft  VMiorMl 


FOUR  PAGES  THIS  iS^Uf 


BY  SLOAN: 


Purpose  And  Functions 
Of  Editor  Are  Reviewed 


Daily  Tar  Heel  Eklitor  candidate  i 
Charlie  Sloan  reviewed  the  func-' 
tii>ns  and  purpose  of  the  office  of  ■ 
editor  yesterday  artd  stated  hi^- 
pledge  to  give  the  campus  the  best 
newspaper  possible  if  elected  to 
the  position  Tliesday. 

"A  gc:d  editor  must  have  tech- 
nical knowledge  as  well  as  journal- 
istic know-how  and  writing  abili- 
ty." he  said  "Writing  editorials  is 
only  a  .mall  part  of  the  editors 
job.  The  editor  has  to  make  up : 
pasc  two,  or  see  that  it  is  made  j 
up."  I 

NUMEROUS  DUTIES 

"He  has  tj  make  sure  the  pa-' 
per's  deadlines  are  met,  for  he  is 
responsible  for  The  Daily  Tar 
Heel's  appearance  every  morning. 
And  he  has  many  other  duties  too 
numerous  to  list  hei"e. 

'•The  editor  frequently  finds 
himself  sitting  in  as  peacemaker 
when  argumenij  arise  in  the  dif- 
ferent parts  of  the  newspaper.  He 
must  also  be  the  paper's  repre  ' 
sentative,  a  public  relations  per- 
.«on  of  the  first  degree,  because 
confidence  in  the  editor  means  coh- : 
fidcnce  in  the  paper.  i 


"I  can  do  all  these  things.  When 
the  present  editor  has  been  out 
of  town.  I  have  filled  in  for  him. 
1  haven't  agreed  with  him  all  the 
time,  but  I  have  been  able  to  car- 
ry out  the  mechanics  of  the  job  as 
he  wanted  it  done. 
IMPROVEMENT  j 

"Now  I  want  the  chance  to  do 
the  job  my  way.  I  thing  I  have 
;  me  ideas  that  will  improve  the 
paper.  A  •  editor  I  will  be  able  to 
carry  them  out  for  your  benefit. 

"Two  of  these  ideas  are  the  pro- 
posed dormitory  "stringer"  system 
and  the  relating  of  national  and 
international  news  to  the  campijs 
through  1  cal  experts.  I  have  out- 
lined both  these  plans  in  earlier 
statements.  | 

"I  think  I  can  make  the  paper 
more  accurate,"  Sloan  said.  He  in- 
dicated he  has  planned  some 
mechanical  changes  in  the  office 
which  would  be  of  a  technical  na- 
tuie  and  too  lengthy  to  describe  in 
this  Xatement. 

"I  want  to  put  these  ideas  and 
plans  to  work.  With-  your  votes  I 
can  dj  it  and  I  can  do  it  well,"  he 
concluded. 


CaHin  Will  Present 
Weil  Lectures  Here 
Thursday-Saturday 

Changes  In       Noted  Canadian  To  Talk 
Faculty  Are       On  Struggle  For  Minds 


New  IWA  Officers 

Th«  Independent  Woman's  Assn.,  composed  of  UNC  coeds  qot  connected  with  a 
elected  officers  for  the  coming  year.  From  left  to  rght,  are  Misses  Harriet  Shafer, 
Jernigan,  vice   president:    Betsy   McKinnon,   president  and  Sally  Peter,  secretary. 


sorority,  recently 
treasurer;    Nancy 


UNC  Offers 
Welcome  To 
Baton  Champ 


World  News 


twirling 
plans   Ij 


CHARLIE   SLOAN 

for  paper,  improvement 


BSU  Officers  Election  Tomorrow 


Miss  Janet  Harper  of  Jackson- 
ville recently  was  elected  presi- 
dent of  the  Baptist  Student  Union 
for  the  coming  year. 

The  election  of  the  remaining 
officers  will  be  held  tonight  at 
Supper-Forura  ahd  the  floor  will 
be  open  for  nominations. 

Installation  services  will  be  held 
next  Sunday  at  11  a.m.  in  the  sanc- 
tuary of  the  Chapel  Hill  Baptist 
Church  This  pro|pr8m  will  be 
televised  by  WUNC-TV,  according 
tT  ah  announcement. 

Following  elections  tonight.  Dr 
Ben  Lyons,  pastor  of  the  Wake 
Forest  Baptist  Church,  will  speak 
on    "What    Can    A    Man    Believe 


About  The  Cross?"  This  is  the 
third  in  the  series  on  "What  Can 
A  Man   Believe?" 

The  series  will  close  next  Sun- 
day night  with  Dr.  Habel.  Past* 
of  the  Chapel  Hill  Baptist  Ckurch. 
speaking  on  "What  Can  A  Man 
Believe  About  The  Life  To  Come?" 


'  Not  Listed 

David     Evans,     freshman     from 

}  Fayetteville.  is  a  selections  board 

;  candidate   for  the   Honor  Council. 

His  name  was  not  iflclnded  in  the 

list  of  candidates  which  appeared 

in   Friday's  Daily  Tar  Heel. 


(.\P)— .\  South  Carolina  baton 
champion  who  cancelled 
enroll  at  her  state  uni- 
versity Saturday  was  offered  a 
welcome  to  UNC. 

Gallant  leader.s  of  the  student 
b'xly.  where  men  outnumber  co- 
eds by  better  than  five-to-one. 
dusted  off  flowery  phrases  to 
fliake  it  plain  that  Carolyn  Willis 
of  Chesterfield,  "S.C,  would  be  a 
welcome  campus  addition. 

Miss  Willis  ruled  out  the  Uni- 
versity of. South  Carolina  after  the 
band:  director  there  expressed  a 
diin  view  of  majorettes^s  an  «t-  { 
traction  for  a  college  band.  She 
has  been  reported  considering 
North  Carolina,  along  with  other 
schools.  Including  Clemson  Col- 
lege in  her  home  state. 

The  Daily  Tar  Heel,  student 
newspaper,  chastised  the  South 
C^aroUna  attitude  in  an  editorial 
in  today's  issue.  "Tliank  goodness 
North  Carolina,  the  valley  of  hu- 
mility, is  more  cognizant  of  local 
beauty  and  talent  than  her  neigh- 
boring mountain  of  conceit,"  the 
editor   declared. 

Opposing  candidates  for  presi- 
dency of  the  North  Carolina  stu- 
jlent  body  foqnd  an  area  of  agree- 
ment on  the  subject  of  Miss  Will- 
is. 

Sonny  Evans  of  Durham  said  he 
was  certain  the  UNC  students 
would  welcome  Miss  Willis  "with 
open  arms,''  and  that  the  band 
would  be  glad  to  put  her  talents 
tu  use.  "A  Saturday  would  not 
be  a  Saturday  during  football  sea- 
son without  the  spirit  created  by 
the  band  majorettes,"  said  cajidi- 
date  Evans. 

Bill  Baum  of  Elizabeth  City,  op- 
posing Evans  in  the  Tuesday  elec- 
tions, said  "the  talents  and  ap- 
parent scholastic  ability  of  Miss 
Willis  would  be  welcomed  if  she 
wants  to  enroll  at  a  state  school 
that  has   majorettes.'" 

This  year  the  UNC  marching 
band  has  a  chief  and  three  other 
majorettes.  Miss  Jane  Brock,  one 
of  them,  is  'Mifis  Atlanta  of  1936." 


Shah's  Police  Reported 
Moving  In  On  Bandits 


TEHRAN.  Iran  —  ..?i  —  Hopes 
soared  Satuixlay  night  that  pretty 
35-year-old  Mrs.  Aiiita  Carroll 
would  be  rescued  form  the  dcseri 
bandits  who  seized,  her  Ax  days 
ago. 

The  U.  S.  Embassy  .said  the 
Shah's  police  are  closing  in  on  two 
segments  of  the  bandit  ga«C  >" 
the  desert  of  soutlieaat'Ican. 


up  after  the  ambush  in  which  Mrs. 
Carroll's  husband  and  three  other 
men  were  killed   last  Sunday. 


Full  Cooperation 


Announced 

Six  appointments  and  two  resig- 
nations are  among  personnel 
changes  for  UNC  announced  Sat- 
urda.v  by  Chancellor  Robert  B., 
House  following  approval  by  Pres- 
dent  William  Friday  and  the 
Board  of  Trustees. 

Heading  the  appointment  list 
are  Dr.  Henr>'  Carrison  Thomas, 
named  professor  in  the  Dept.  of 
Chemistry;  and  Dr.  Lyle  Vincent 
Jones  .named  associate  professor, 
Department  of  Psychology,  and 
director.  Psychometric  Laboratory. 

Other  new  faculty  members  are 
these  four  assistant  professors: 
Dr.  Osborne  Bennett  Hardison  Jr., 
Dept.  of  English;  Dr.  Gordon  E, 
Radcr,  Depts.  of  Psychology  and 
Psychiatry;  Dr.  John  Sanders  Pike, 
Dept.  of  Pedodontics,  School  of 
Dentistry;  and  Clifford  M.  Foust 
Jr..  Department  of  History. 

Dr.  Pike  and  Dr.  Rader  have 
already  begun  their  duties  in 
I  Chapel  Hill.  The  other 'four  ap- 
pointments arc  effective  Septem- 
ber 1.  1957.  * 

The  two  resignations,  also  ef- 
Mc-    fective    September    1.    involve    Dr. 


Experience 

Qualifies 

Evans 


WASHINGTON   —  <p  — Sen 
Clellan  (D-Ark)  pledged  full  coup- 1  G-  Gordon  Ellis,  associate  profess 
cration*  ^.aturday    with    the    AFL- 


CIO     inve-ligalion     of     Teamsters 
,  President     Dave     Beck     and     any 
A  doctor  and  li  nw:5c:,wcrc  r^-    4^her  Jabor  erXorls  to  rid  its-iaoks 


ed  to  the  area  800  miles  southeast 
of  thi.    Iranian  capital  to  stand  by. 

While  the  embassy  remained 
non-committal,  an  informed  source 
said  ""it  looks  quite  hopeful."" 

The  embassy  said  it  had  been 
determined   the   outlaw  gang 'split 


Tom  Lambeth,  campaign  man- 
ager for  Student  Party  presidential 
nominee  Sonny  Evans,  said  Friday 
Evans,  if  elected,  would  iN"Ovide 
campus  leadership  "equat  to  that 
of  the  past  months." 

Lambeth,  in  issuing  the  final 
campaign  statemt»t,  said  "On 
Toie^'day.  students  will  again  name 
a  president  to  represent  them  and 
their  unique  system  of  student 
government  in  the  coming -year. 

"They  will  do  so  at  a  time  when 
they  have  a  student  government 
which  has  attained  unprecedented 
respect  and  responsibility." 

Tlie  students  also  '"will  have  on 
their  shoulders  the  resp<?nsibility 
of  .-•ceing  that  the  coming  year  will 
be  marked  by  student  leadership 
equal  to  that  of  the  past  months. 

"I  am  sttre  that  the  election  of 
Sonny  Evans  as  president  of  the 
student  body  will  provide  such 
!  leadership,"  be  said. 

Lan^th,  in  talking  aboat  Evans 


Bulganin  Warns 


,  of   what    he    called    "unwholesome 
I  elements.""  { 

I      .McClellan    is    chairman    of    the 
!  special   Senate   Rackets  Committee  j 
I  which   tried    for   two   days   earlier  i 

this  week   to    draw  answers  from  ; 

Beck   about   his   financial   dealings  | 
j  with    the   giant   Teamsters    Union, 
I  the  nation's  largest. 


or  in  tl)c  School  of  Education,  and 
Dr.  Reuben  Hill,  pi-ofessor  in  the 
D?pt.  of  SodalogyT  "  '     '^ .. 

Dr.  EUifi  will  join  t|he  faculty  of  i 
Iowa  State  College,  while  bV.  flill  15^*"**^^:  T^  bis  c*ndKlrte  haji 
hal    accepted    a    position    at    flw   ^'^«^'»""'*  '»«  ^JI  three  branches 


University  of  Minnesota. 

Both  Dr.  Ellis  and  Dr.  Hill  join- 
(Sce    FofiUltff   Ouaiges,    Page   3) 


♦  George  Catlin,  political  philos- 
}  ophcr  and  writer,  will  deliver  the 
I  1957  Weil  Lectures  on  American 
I  Citieenship  here  Thursday.  Friday 
and  Saturday. 

He  will  speak  about  'On  Po- 
litical Goals — The  Struggle  for  the. 
MincTs  of  Men"  in  Carroll  Hall 
at  8:30  p.m. 

Currently  a  professor  of  politi- 
cal science  at  McGill  University, 
Montreal,  Catlin  has  lectured 
widely  as  "one  of  the  world's 
leading  authorities  on  interna- 
tional affairs.''  He  has  produced 
also  several  authorative  books  on 
politics  and  international  affairs. 

Professor  James  Godfrey  of  the 
Dept.  of  History,  a  member  of  the 
T^NC  Committee  on  Established 
Lectures,  announced  plans  for  the 
Weil  lectures  which  have  been 
delivered  in  recent  years  by  such 
distinguished  world  citizens  a§ 
Robert  A.  Taft,  Zechariah  Chafee 
Jr.  and  Galo  Plaza. 

Originating  at  the  University 
during  the  school  year  1914-15. 
the  lectures  were  later  endowed 
by  the  families  of  Sol  Weil  and 
Henry  Weil  of  Goldsboro.  William 
Howard  Taft  delivered  the  first 
lectures. 

The  1956  lectures  were  given  by 
Gen.     Carlos     Romulo.     Phillipine 
delegate  to  ^e  United  Naitioos. 
I  «.^<fiat|in  3P«s  a  trip\e  prizeman  as 
.  a    student    at    Oxford    University 
1  and  cam^  to  Cornel]   L'nivcrjiJt^-  as 
I  A  tVbfte  Fellow  UWZ3f9l.  remain- 
ing there  ss  professor  of  politics 
until    1935.    He    has    held    various 

Cal- 


of  student  government. 
He 'has  been  a  <^jrj!|   president 

and  vice  president' «*"^e  student    lecture  posts  at  V»te.  Pskinj 

cutta.    Columbia.    Heidelberg    and 
other  universities. 


No  Ticket 


COPENILVGEIN.  Denmark  — ;/P 
—Premier  Nikolai  Bulganin  warn- 
ed in  a  letter  published  Saturday 
it  would  be  suicidal  for  Denmark, 

to    permit    use    of    her    bases    for ,  ^'^"t  Eisenhower  isn't  gDing  to  get 
atomic  war  against  the  Soviet  Un 


'Caligula'  Plays 
Here  Sunday 


WASIHNGTON— W^—  The  police  , 
made  it  official  Saturday  -  Pre.n- 1      T^e    newly-formed    Petites   Dra- 

matiques     dramatic     organization 


ion. 

Ominously,  the  Soviet  leader  re- 
minded Danish  Premier  H.  C.  Han- 
sen that  a  single  h^xirogcn  bomb 
might  destory  a  territory  "with  a 
radius  of  hundreds  of  kilometers." 
and  said  the  Soviet  reaction  would 
not  be  limited  to  one  bomb. 


Nasser  Charges 


CAIRO  —  .f>—  President  Nasser 
charged  Saturday  the  United  States 
is  trying  "to  star\e  us."  But  despite 
this  U.S.  pressure,  he  said,  Egypt 
will  run  the  Suez  Cahal  by  itself 
and  will  not  let  Israeli  ships  use 
it. 

Na.sser  spoke  to  visiting  Ameri- 
can editors  as  the  first  ship  con- 
voys in  five  months  transited  the 
newly  reopened  waterway,  paying 
tolls  to  Elgypt  on  Eigypt's  terms. 


will  present  its  first  production, 
"Caligula."  here  next  Sunday  at 
8  p.m.  I 

The  production  stars  Lloyd  Skin- 1 
ner  and  Page  Williams,  with  Tay- , 
lor  Williams  and  Stan  Baker.  Un- , 
dcr  the  direction  of  Miss  Bettina ! 

'  Jinctte.  tlte  play  will  be  present- ; 

t  ed  in  the  itiain  lounge  of  Graham  ' 

I  Memorial.  j 

The    play    is    described    by    its 
i  producer^  and    the    originator    of  j 
Petites  Dramatiques,  Seamoh  Gott-  \ 
lieb,  as  a-  "very  bloody"  story  of  j 
the  Roman  emperor  Galigula.         { 
Miss  Hope     Sparger     is     stage 
manager  for  the   play,  to  be   pre- 
j  sented    in    modern    costuming    in 
"thcater-in«the-round"    style.  j 

Materials  connected  with  the 
'  play  itself  and  dealing  with  the 
w  hich  negotiated  a  new  Soviet-  time  of  the  emperor  Caligula  arc 
Hungarian  agreement  covering  on  in  display  in  the  basement  of 
economic,  military  and  other  sub-  Wilson  Ubrarj-,  according  to  Gotl- 
jects.  •  i  lieb. 


any  ticket  for  hitting  70-75  miles  j 
an  hour  on  that  trip  to  Gettysburg  i 
Friday.  i 

In  fact,  the  police  vow  they  did , 
not  even  "observe"  the  President's  I 
car  going  that  fast,  and  as  far  ai ' 
they  are  concerned  the  incident  is  j 
closed. 

Kadar  Greeted 

BUDAPEST.  Hungary— (AP)— 
Four  thousand  new  Communist 
worker  guards  paraded  through 
Budapest's  streets  Saturday,  ap- 
parently in  preparation  for  the 
return  today  of  Premier  Janos 
Kadar    from   Moscow. 

Hungarian  officials  .said  a  large 
crowd  was  expected  to  turn  out 
to    greet     the     Kadar     delegation. 


body — positions  which  have  given 
him  the  actual  experience  of  e.xe- 
c6tive  responsi'oility. 

"He  has  beeh  leader  of  the  stu- 
dent legislature  —  a  job  that  has 
given  him  an  appreciation  of  the 
legislative  functions  of  student  gov- 
ernment," Lambeth  said. 

He  has  ser^'ed  a.;  a  meml>er  of 
the  Honor  Council,  an  invaluable 
experience  for  one  who  must,  aj 
president  of  the  student  body,  be 
equally  concerned  with  the  success- 
ful maintenance  of  the  Honor  Sys- 
tem and  the  absolutely  just  treat- 
ment  of  all   students  under  it. 

".\s  chairman  of  the  student 
committee  which  worked  on  nam- 
ing a  chancelltM-  of  the  L'niversity 
he  gained  valuable  contacts  with 
officials  of  the  University,  its 
trustees  and  alumni,""  Lambeth 
said. 

"In  work  with  Graham  Memorial 
and  other  groups  he  has  received 
first  hand  appreciation  ci  the  pro- 
blems and  potentialities  which 
characterize  the  scores  of  organi- 
zations and  hundreds  of  individuals 
who  make  up  student  government 
here  at  Carolina. 

(See    LAMBETH,   Page   3) 


One  of  Professor  Catlin's  books. 
"The  Science  and  Method  of  Poli- 
tics,"" is  now  considered  a  mile- 
stone in  the  development  of  con- 
temporary political  science. 

During  1948.  Catlin  led  the 
British  delegation  to  the  Luxem- 
bourg Conference,  which  mot  with 
Frfench  and  German  representa- 
tives, headed  by  Maurice  Schu- 
mann and  Konrad  Adenauer.  The 
same  year  he  prepared  memoranda 
on  international  coordination  of 
projection  of  ideas,  discussed  with 
Mrs.  F.  D.  Roosevelt.  General  Eis- 
enhower and   John   Foster   Dulles. 


Picfton  Contest  Deadfine 
tottiorrdw  For  Quarterly 


HAPFENINGS.ON  THE  HILL 


Pledge  Parties  Highlight  Weekend 


Pictui4v  abOYt  la  Harry  Ellerbe,  independent  candidate  for  sen- 
•r  claM  pretidff^.  He  will  oppose  Coerge  Ragsdale,  University  l*«rty 
and  Paul  C«rr,  Stwdetit  Party,  for  tha  position  in  the  election  Tuet- 


By  SUI   ATCHISON 

SWARMS  OF  CAROUNA  stu 
dents  descended  upon  Wilmington 
this  weekend  to  take  part  in  the 
annual  Azalea  Festival.  Many  of 
the  Chapel  Hillians  added  to  the 
festivities  of  the  festival  with  surf 
and  sand  parties  at  near-by 
Wrightsville  beach. 

THE  SIGMA  NU's  celebrated  ihe 
weekend  with  several  parlies  in 
honor  of  their  fall  and  spring 
plcxlge  classes.  The  Crystal  Ball- 
room of  the  Washington  Duke  was 
the  scene  of  their  dance  Friday 
night. 

Members  q(  tte  pled^  clas^-es 
and  their  dates  seep  dancing  were: 
Pete  Brake  with  Miss  Charlotte- 
Mixon;   Robert    Parker    and    Miss 


Patricia   Gholson:    John    Crawford 

j  with    Miss  Betty   Ccvington;   Ashe 

Exum    with    Miss    Connie    Hobby; 

Art  Kilpatrick.  with  Miss  Angeling 

Popasus:  i 

j      Dick  Hayes  with  Joy  O'Connell; 

Lyle    Crumpler    with    Mijs    Joyce 

I  Harris;    Brjan    Lathan    with   Miss 

|Ginny  Whitehuret;  Francis  Porcher 

j  with  Miss  Janie  Procter;  Don  Las-  j 

siter  with  Miss  Ann  Hogan;  Dick 

I  Arthur  with  yMiss   Mary    Killian; 

Page    Bernstein    with    ^Miss    Carol  i 

j  Liner;  | 

I      Jack  Crutchfield  with  Miss  Judy 

.Patterson:  Don  Reading  with  MLs 

I  Frances  Strickland;   Bob  Edwards 

I  with   Miss  Nancy  Troutman:   Mal- 

I  com  Gay  with   Miss  Mary   Philps; 

j  and  Mr.  and  Mrs.  Den  Kember. 

Yest<;rday    afternoon    they    had 


parties  at  the  house  in  both  the 
afternoon  and  evening  with  a  com- 
to  for  each  occasion.  j 

SEVERAL  OF  THE  BETA's  were  | 
in  Camden,  S.  C.  yesterday  for  the  j 
23rd  running  of  the  Carolina  Cup 
and  the  round  of  parties  which  al- 
ways    accompanies     t  h  c     annual 
horsemen'..-  event. 

THE  DKE's  held  formal  initia- 
tion for  their  pledges  this  week- 
end. • 

THURSDAY  NIGHT  the  new  in- 
itiates of  Alpha  Gamma  Delta  gave 
a  surprise  supper  party  for  their 
"Big  Sisters".  The  pai-ty  was  an 
informal  picnic  type  affair  and 
was  highlighted  by  the  presenta- 
tion of  small  gifts  to  the  graduat- 
ing sL'ters. 

THE  KAPPA  DELTA  s  held  in- 


stallation services  for  their  new  of- 
ficers  W^cbiwday    evening. 

IN  RECENT  ELECTIONS  Miss 
Bobbi  Madison  was  elected  presi- 
dent of  PI  Beta  Phi  fcr  the  com- 
ing year.  Other  officers  elected  to 
assist  her  arc:  Misses  Kitty  Corr, 
vice  pre^ud*nt:  Deedce  Fenwick, 
recording  secretarj-;  Sarah  Jane 
Shaw,  corresponding  secretarj" 

Susie  Fagan,  treasurer;  Kit 
Whitehurat,  rush  chairman;  Arn- 
old Gar\'in,  pledge  trainer;  Rol>er- 
ta  Hastings,  house  manager  and 
Nancy  Uewellyn,  social  chairman. 

Miss  Shirley  Carpenter,  an  Alpha 
Gamma  Delta  of  Oagboro.  was  mar- 
ried to  G.  C.  Pridgen,  Jr.  a  Sigma 
Nu  of  Jtstiky  Mount  on  Maicb  23rd 
in  Chesterfield.  S.  C. 


Props  Book 
In  Demand? 

ILVLEIGH  —<f>—  Colleges  and 
universities  and  industrial  compan- 
ies planning  and  designing  atomic 
reactors  are  expected  to  create 
quite  a  demand  for  a  book  written 
by  a  N.  C.  State  College  professor. 

The  book,  which  explores  the 
future  peacetime  development  of 
atomic  energy,  has  been  writtfen 
by  Dr.  Ra}-mond  L  Murr»j%  acting 
director  of  the  Nuclear  Reactor  at 
N.  C.  State. 

Entitled  "Nudear  Reactor  Phy- 
sics."" the  317-volume  will  soon  be 
dL-lributed  on  a  national  basis. 

The  book  covers  the  technical 
factors  relating  to  puclear  reactors, 
neutron  motion,  flux,  distribution 
and  critical  mass,  heterogeneous 
reactors,  Two-^oup  tbeorj,  the 
time  dependent  reactor,  tempera- 
ture effects  on  multiplication,  re- 
actor canti-ol,  transport  control, 
and  neutron  slowing  <iuu  multi- 
group  methods. 


Tomorrow  is  the  deadliae  for 
entries  in  the  CaVolina  Quarter- 
ly's annual  fiction  contest  for  the 
Spring  1937  issue,  according  to 
.Miss  Marcclline  Krafchick,  editor. 

For  th?  two  best  short  stories 
submitted,  she  .said,  awards  of 
$50  and  S25  will  be  made. 

Entries  should  be  unsigned  with 
the  name  and  address  of  the  auth- 
or attached  separately,  with  an 
enclosed  return  envelope.  Miss 
Krafchick  .said. 

They  may  be  mailed  to  the 
contest  editor,  the  Carolina  Quar- 
terly. Box  317,  or  left  at  the 
Graham  Memorial  information 
desk,  she  said. 


De«n  Cermichael  Attends 
Meeting  fn  San  Francisco 

;      The    National    Assn.   of    Women 
I  Deahs  aild  Counselors  is  meeting 
this  wedtend     in     San   Francisco. 
\  Calif.,  with  Dr.  Katherine  Kenne- 
j  dy  Ciirmichael  of  UNC  as  discuss- 
'  ant  at   three  sessions. 
I      Mia«    Carmichacl.    who    is    dean 
i  of  women  at  Chape!  Hill,  will  ap- 
pear   on    a   discussion   session    to- 
■  morrow    along    with    deans    from 
I  the   Universities   of    North    Dakota 
I  and  Rochester.  Stanford  Universi- 
I  ty  and  Chico  State  College  in  Cal- 
ifornia. 

!  She  will  take,  part  in  a  pro- 
;  gram  tonight  designed  to  acquaint 
jnew  and  old  members  of  the  .\a- 
i  tienal    A«»n. 


j;^  ,#*(«*»«*-'-*«l»'- 


PAtfl  TWO 


THE  OAA.Y  TAR  Hf  11^ 


SUNDAY,  MARCH  31,  19S7 


The  Week  In 


SP  Planks, 
Nominees 


Nancy  NitI 


ew:  Top 
Offices,  AncT  Political 

Baum  And  Evani:  Their 
Records  And  Campaigns 


Candiddtes  For 
Parties  Planks 


Campus 
In  Retrospect 


The  Student  Part;^  entered  the 
current  political  carhpaigji  with 
t\)f  nomination  of  Sonny  Evans; 
junior  from  Durham:  for  the  top 
:»tudent  goVfetnmeiit  post.  Shar- 
ing the  ticket  with  Evans  are 
D«n  Furtado  for  vice-president. 
Miss  Betty  Huffman  for  secre- 
tary and  Bob  Carter  for  treasur- 
er. 

Evans  announced  early  in  the 
campaign  the  appointment  of 
former  Student  Pti*y  Chairman 
Tom  Lambeth  as  his  campaign 
manager. 

In  a  delineation  several  days 
luter  of  the  SP  platform,  the 
party  established  as  a  foremost 
plank  the  sepai-ation  of  investi- 
gating and  prosecuting  powers 
from  the  judgment  pow^rs^  jof. 
the  student  judiciijry.  THls  Was' 
to  be  done  through;  an  investi- 
gating and  prosecution  branch  to 
be  set  up  and  to  function  through 
the  office  of  the  Attdrtiey  .  Gen- 
eral. >Vy-  \    >        I 

The  platform  also  '  included 
three  planks  dedicated  to  park- 
ing, including  •more  equal  treat- 
ment of  student  violators."  sup- 
port of  suggestions  m^de  by  the 
Student  Governri»«lnt  to  obtain 
fimds  for  proposed  parking  lots, 
and  faculty  andcyjirfltiinistrative 
personnel  pay  fee^:  for  the  pro- 
posed lots.  :  '-'-m 
« 

The  party  pieced  to  work  for 

television  coveragi^j<>f  all  sellout 
hom^  basketb^IL^m^  and  ex- 
tension  oi ,  date-ti^^t  price  low-, 
erinf'hj?  p^oa|e'*TOib«U   ganoes. 

The  party  als^jrllKvocated  later 
w  ut'king  i|fl)ur&:  t^ jtbie  moaogtam 
club  and  ScUttleb«|tt  f6r  fratern- 
ity and  dormitory  re^ident£.  and 
a  stand  on  working  conditions  at 
Lenoir  Hall  fn' regard  to  effect- 
ing payment  in  cash  on  unused 
"^eal  Ti'ckets.  —  ■  • 

The   final   plank   was   address- 
i' ed  to  the  "impor^ce  of  realir- 
i  ing  establishment  of  a  new  stu- 
I  dent    union    heri^  Sind    the    con- 
tiaited  -jeffocL.  UmmjumI  .tb«   suc- 
cessful   completion    of    a    build- 
ing program. 

Student  Party  Chairman  Sonny 
Hallford  March  20  called  for  a 
■'vote  of  confidence"  for  the 
legislative  work  of  the  party. 
HalU.)rd  pointed  out  that  of  32 
bills  introduced  in  the  current 
session  of  the  Student  Legisla- 
ture. 22  were  Study  Party-spon- 
iored.  Seven  of  the  remaining 
10.  he  said,  were  jointly  pass- 
ed by  SP  and  the  University 
Party. 

Sonny  Evans,  in  introducipg 
his  platform,  promised  to  bring 
the  student  government  -'closer 
to  the  students.'"  Evans  also 
promised  to  cut  do\yn  on  the  of- 
fices held  "by  political  exped- 
iency and  to  extend  the  "nferit 
system""  in  choosing  new  officers. 

Evans  also  promised  to  at- 
tempt to  establish  a  fund  for 
the  repair  of  dormitory  televis- 
ion sets.  The  money  for  the  fund 
would  come  from  "a  percentage 
of  profits  from  dormitory  vend- 
ing machines." 

Evans  went  on  to  say  he  would 
use  the  power  and  influence  of 
■the  president  to  gain:  "the  new 
fraternity  court,  more  and  better 
housing  for  married  students, 
and  to  make  physical  education 
for  veterans  voluntary.  Evans 
stated.  "These  are  all  in  all  in- 
stances where  we  can  succeed 
only  through  co-operalidh  With 
South   Building." 


WdtMr  iSckrwntek 

On  April  2nd  the  front-run- 
ning presidential  'candidates; 
Sonity  Evans  (Student  Party)  and 
Bin  Baum  (University  Party) 
will  come  to  grips  in  a  final  bat- 
tle of  the  ballot;,  which  will  dis- 
tinguish the  victor  as  next  year's 
number-one  representative  and 
spokesman  for  the  student  body 
of   UNC. 

Since  announcement  of  their 
candidacy  several  weeks  ago. 
Evans  and  Baum  have  brought 
their  views,  plans  and  platforms 
before  the  student  body  and 
numerous  campus  groups  in  an 
effort  to  win  support  to  their 
programs  and  tor  their  parties. 


SONNY    EVANS 

...separation  of  powers 

Who  are  Sonny  Evans  and 
Bill  Baum  though?  What  have 
ihey  been  saying  in  the  iiews- 
papers  and  before  various  camp- 
us groups  these  past  weeks'." 
And  just  what  do  they  stand  for 
and  what  would  they  stand  for 
as  ihe  next  president  of  the  stu- 
dent   body? 

These  are  the  questions  the 
voter  must  ask  himself  when 
B^um  ajid  Evans  clash  at  the 
polls  this  week.  These  are  the 
considerations  he  must  weigh 
and  evaluate  when  he  casts  his 
■l)anol  one  1^'ay  or  the  other 
Tu^sd^. 

All  right,  just  who  are  Bill 
Baum  and  Sonny  Evans? 

William  O.  Baum  came  to  the 
University  from  Elizabeth  City 
in  1^4  and  as  a  freshman  act- 
ed as  a  member  of  the  Student 
Legislature,   was   appointed   serg- 


IN  ELECTION  TUESDAY: 


eant-at-arms  of  the  UP.  served 
on  the  orientation  committee 
and  led  the  Rules  committee  of 
legislature   as  chairman. 

In  1955  Baum  devoted  hLs  time 
to  the  N.  C.  Conference  of  the 
Methodist  Youth  Fellowship  and 
served  as  its  president. 

Since  the  fall  of  '56.  he  has 
served  as  a  local  minister  of  the 
University  MethodisJ  Church,  as 
a  member  of  the  legislature  and 
the  Constitution  Revision  Com- 
mittee. 

Eli  N.  Evans  comes  from  near- 
by Durham  and  he  too  entered 
U.N'C  with  the  freshman  class  of 
1964.1  In  his  first  year  he  was 
elected  president  of  the  fresh- 
man class  and  later  in  the  spring, 
was  appointed  to  the  Men's 
Honor  Council.  He  also  served 
as  a  representative  of  the  Stu- 
dent  Council   Court   of  Appeals. 

As  a  sophomore,  Evans  was 
•  elected  to  the  vice-presidency  of 
the  student  body  behind  present 
outgoing  president  Bob  Young. 
In  addition,  he  served  as  a  mem- 
ber of  the  Consolidated  Uni- 
versity student  council  and  the 
student  Chancellor  Selection 
Committee. 

In  the  spring  of  '56  he  was 
initiated  in  the  Order  of  the 
Grail  and  expects  this  spring  to 
be  initiated  into  Phi  Beta  Kap- 
pa. 

What  have  they  been  saying 
since  they  were  nominated  by 
their  parties  and  presented  to 
the  student  body  for  endorse- 
ment  a  few  weeks  ago? 

Basing  his  eanly  campaigning 
on  plans  to  initiate  a  Student 
Senate  if  elected  president. 
Baum  cited  his  program  as  one 
which  would  offer  "responsible 
and  vital  leadership"  to  student 
government. 

Baum  promoted  his  Student 
Senate  plan  a.<!  the  foundation  of 
his  platform  during  the  first 
days  of  the  campaign.  In  his 
early  statements  he  elected  to 
elaborate  on  the  Senate  and  de- 
fine  its  functions. 

Kis  insistence  on  a  "Student 
Senate  platfoi'm"  brought  criti- 
cisnrj  from  a  Daily  Tar  Heel  edi- 
torial which  wa.s  answered  by 
belief  that  the  student  senate 
would  bring  student  government 
back  to  the  student. 

Sonny  Evans  announced  upon 
his  nomination  that  he  would 
pledge   his   support   to  the    plat- 


fonji  of  the  Student  Party  (See 
SP  platform  elsewhere  on  this 
page).  He  promised  to  state  the 
principle,  purposes  and  records 
of  his  party  on  the  basis  of  its 
platform. 

At  the*  start  of  the  second  week 
of  campaigning.  Evans  presented 
his  plan  for  the  initiation  of  an 
investigation  branch  to  the  Hon- 
or Council  Judiciary  if  elected 
to  the,  presidency.     _      > 

He  pledged  his  energies  to  the 
preparation  of  a  prospectus  for ' 
a  new  student  union*' building,  a 
special  rebate  on  date  football 
tickets,  a  reserve  fund  for  the 
repair  of  dorm  television  sets. 
and    promised    ''to   take    student 


BILL   BAUM 

. . .  Sfrdewf    Senate 

government  closer  to  every  stu- 
dent."' 

As  the  campaign  wore  into  the 
third  week,  the  need  for  specific 
issues  became  increasingly  ap- 
parent and  both  candidates  were 
.asked  to  air  their  views  on  par- 
.-iiculaj.  .*nd  «>e.cific  imebl^nn* 
here. 

At  a  meeting  of  the  Westmin- 
.ster  Fellowship,  they  were  asked 
to  state  their  views  on  the  in- 
tegration problem  at  UN'C.  Later 
in  the  week,  both  presented  def- 
inite programs  for  financing  pro* 
posed  parking  lot  facilities. 

These,  then.  ar%  the  candi- 
dates and  in  skeleton  form 
this  Ls  what  they  have  said  and 
stand  for.  On  the  basis  of  the 
ballot-choice  on  Tuesday,  one 
will  be  the  next  president  of 
the  student  body  of  UNC. 


Students  Should  Answer  Charges 
Of  Apathy  With  Large  Turnout 


JAi 


Walter  Schruntek 

Two  days  from  now  the  camp- 
us-community will  be  given  an 
opportunity  to  answer  one  way  or 
another  the  charges  of  "apathy" 
and  "'disinterest"  which  have 
been  levied  against  it  by  admin- 
istration, faculty  and  student 
leaders    in    recent    months. 

On  Tuesday  th?  student  body 
will  be  asked  to  turn  out  at  the 
ballot  boxes  and  at  polling  areas 
throughout  the  campus  to  vote 
fnr  the  most  important  offices 
in  student  government  and  func- 
tion  here  at  Carolina. 

The  student  body  will  be  ask- 
ed to  express  itself  through  its 
response  on  significant  aspects 
of  a  government  which  is  act- 
ually designed   to  elucidate   tra- 


The  official  student  pubHcatioo -of  .the  Publications  Board  of 'the 
University  of  North  Caroliaa.^wbere  it  -js  piublishe^  daily  except  Mon-, 
day  and  examination  and  vacation  periods  and  summer  terms.  Entered 
as  second  class  matter  in  the  post  office  at  Chapel  Hill.  N.  C,  under 
the  act  of  March  8,  1870.  Subscriptioc  rates:  Mailed,  $4  a  year.  $2.50 
per  semester:  delivered,  $6  a  year,  $3.50  a  semester. 
Editor I ...A FRED  POWLEDGE 


Managing  Editor  — . 


CLARKE  JONES 


Staff  Writers  Bill  King,  Walter  Schruntek,  Anthony  Woff, 

Nancy  Hill  and  Man^  Sirring. 

Niebt  News  feditor _ 


Bob  High 


Night  Editor 


BiU  Weekes 


THI  1^:^11. Y  TAR  HIIL  WeEK  lit  RIVIEW 


ditional  freedoms  of  student  self- 
government. 

By  its  turnout  at  the  polls  .the 
student  body  can  refute  the 
charges  of  indifference  which 
have  been  heavily  underscored 
recently  by  serious  and  alarm- 
ing proposals  by  the  administra- 
tion to  take  action  on  its  own 
where  student  initiative  seems 
lacking.  / 

By  its  turnout  the  campus  body 
can,  in  the  most  positive  man- 
ner possible,  define  its  subscrip- 
tion to  the  values  of  self-govern- 
ment, to  the  vital  existence  of 
student  concern  and  <ot  he  fal- 
lacy of  student  apathy. 

No  more  positive  statement  of 
"caring  what  happens  to  student 
freedom"  could  be  issued  than 
a  turnout  greater  than  anytime 
in  the  past,  surpassing  any  elec- 
tion year  in  the  history  of  UNC. 

The  student  body.*  be  merely 
taking  time  out  to  yote,  by  per- 
forming the  nec«ssaj|:;y  balancing 
and  weighing  of  candidates  and 
issues  analogous  to  choosing  be- 
tween values,  by  showing  enough 
that  they  do  care,  will  be  do- 
ing themselves  a  service  which 
cannot  be  accurately  estimated. 

They  will  be  exeniising  a  right, 
inherent  in  our  traditions,  "far 
above  the  mere  power  to  add 
or  detract''  which  in  the  final 
analysis  will  make  them  better 
men,   better   oitiaens,    and  more 


rounded    individuals. 

And    not    only    would    such    a 
response  convince  the  critics  of 
(See  STUDENTS,  Page  3) 

I'll  Abnw 


UP  Stands 
And  Senate 

Manly  Springs 

Durin/  the  past  weeks  of  cam- 
pairing  the  University  Party 
has  endorsed  as  the  main  plank 
of  its  platform." ...  an  idea 
which,  if  the  student  body  al- 
lows it  to  be  put  into  action, 
will  be  one  step  toward  turning 
student  government  back  to  real- 
istic service  to  the  students." 

The  UP  feels  the  student  legis- 
lature is  no  longer  as  represent- 
ative as  it  was  in  the  beginning 
of  studant  government.  Bill 
Baum,  the  UP  candidate  for 
student  body  President,  formed 
a  plan  which  would  create  a  rep- 
resentative Student  Senate  with 
the  purpose  of  recommendini 
objectives  of  student  government 
to  the  prMideat. 

Running  with  Baum  are  Benny 
Thomas  fop  vice  president.  Miss 
Dot  Pressiy  for  secretary  and 
Jerry   Jones   for  treasurer. 

The  proposed  Student  Senate 
would  meet  once  a  year,  except 
when  reeaUed  by  Baum.  It's  rep- 
resentatives would  be  elected  on 
a  non-partisan  basis  from  every 
dormitWy.'^  fraternity,  sorority 
nnd  tn"'n  resident  section.  From 
its  members  an  elected  cabinet 
ot  10  students  would  meet  with 
Bai'.m  and  .other  student  govern- 
ment officials  to  advise  them  of 
Ihe    Senate's    recommendations. 

The  UP  presented  the  follow- 
ing platform,  headed  by  the  Stu- 
dent Senate  proposal,  with  the 
belief  that  by  following  these 
goals  instead  of  meaningless 
promises  we  can  give  to  the  stu- 
dents of  this  University  a  better 
Student  Government: 

1.  To  support  and  back  the 
idea    of  a    Student    Senate. 

2.  To  capably  meet  student 
problems  as  they  arLse  and  now 
«.\ist.  .  -.-  - 

ment  to  a  position  of  greater  re- 
spect, dignity  and  honor. 

4.  To  govern  maturely  in  the 
best  interest  of  the  entire  camp- 
us. 

5.  To  work  realistically  to- 
wards; end  of  freshman  car  re- 
striction; the  building  of  a  new 
Student  Union;  new  parking 
lots;  new  housing  units  for  mar- 
ried students;  an  increase  in 
salaries  for  university  professors 
and  better  working  conditions  for 
Lenoir  liell  workers. 

In  his  final  statement  of  the 
campaign  Friday,  Baum  outlined 
".  .  .  the  \jniversity  Party's  sug- 
gestions for  a  better  Carolina 
student  government: 

"1.  If  elected,  my  first  offic- 
ial act  shall  be  to  call  into  sess- 
ion a  Stuiient  Senate,  composed 
of  representatives  elected  from 
and  by  every  dcwTnitory,  sorority 
and  fraternity  in  order  to  give 
each  student  a  chance  to  voice 
his  opinions  in  determining  the 
objectives  toward  which  student 
government  will  work  during  the 
coming  year. 

(S«H  l/P.  Page  3)      .> 

^""^     • 


'The  Frantic  Search  For  Issues' 


BETWEEN  SLOAN,  BASS: 


Differences  In  Office  Undertakings 
Main  Issue  In  Editorial  Campaign 


At  the  outset  of  the  spring 
1956  campaign  season  three  in- 
dependent candidates  announced 
their  intention  to  s«^  the  edi- 
torship of  The  Daily  Tar  Heel. 

The  field  narrowed  at  a  tnid- 


Charlie  Sloan  and  Neil  Bass. 

In  the  course  of  the  general 
campaign,  the  editorial  contest 
undoubtedly  provided  the  most 
liv'ely  action  with  respect  to  the 
opposing,  sometimes  clashing 
views  of  the  two  candidates. 


CHARLIE    SLOAN 

. .  .  wants    stringer   system 

way  point  in  the  campaign  when 
one  of  the  aspirants  removed  his 
name  and  left  tlie  definition  of 
stands  and  issues   to  contenders 


NEIL   BASS 

.-  ,vmore    cavipiis    nexvs 

Dfeagreement     between     Sloan 

and  Bass  centered  for  the  most 
part  on  their  approach  to  specif- 
ic   tasks    and    undertakings    re- 


(- BECAUSE  rna  yi/o/ld 

fKQA/H>S  /¥/Af  ASA  A/i/T 


Pogo 


By  Walt  Kelly 


quired  by  the  office  of  editor. 
And  as  the  weeks  drew  closer 
to  election  day,  these  differ- 
ences assumed  tJie  ground  upon 
which  each  candidate  would 
handle  the  editorship  if  elected. 
Upon  announcement  of  his 
candidacy,  Neil  Bass,  a  .lunior 
from  Nashville  who  has  covered 
student  politics  for  the  paper 
for  three  years,  announced  a 
platform  of  experience,  interest 
and  capability. 

His  initial  platform  contained 
three    principles: 

1 . — Professional  athletics  —  "1 
am  for  a  winning  team  and  1 
shall  continue  to  be  for  a  win- 
ning team." 

2.— Closed  IFC  meeting— He 
indicated  that  he  was  against 
closed    meetings   on   principle 

3. — "Afghanistanism"  —  He  in- 
dicated here  that  there  was  an 
over-emphasis  of   world  news. 

Charlie  Sloan,  a  sophomore 
from  Arlington.  Va.  who  had 
been  managing  editor  of  the  pap- 
er since  last  fall,  announced  his 
contention  on  the  basis  of  his 
experience  and  background  in 
all  phases  of  Daily  Tar  Heel 
operation. 

His  initial  platform  stated  that 
he  would  try  to  eliminate  "off 
the  record"'  and  -'no  comment" 
situations  and  that  his  platform 
specified: 

1- — Better  coverage. 

2. — Less  dropping  of  the  fla^l 
(the  paper's  nameplate)  than  in 
(he  past  year  ev^n  though  world 
news   is   necessary. 

3. — "The  purpose  of  The  Dgil.v 
Tar  Heel  is  to  inform  rather  than 
incite. 

4.— A  belief  that  Tar  Heel 
coverage  of  closed  meetings  is 
necessary,  citing  the  case  of  the 
IFC  where  the  paper  should  have 
a  right  to  determine  what  is  and 
what  is  not  news. 

On  these  skeleton  frames,  the 
candidates  conducted  their  first- 
week  campaigning  by  defining 
and  elaborating  on  their  Individ 
ual  stands  to  features  contained 
in  :heir  platforms. 

Body  began  to  fill  the  skeleton 
structures  of  these  platforms  dur- 
ing the  first  days  as  Sloan  prom- 
ised sound  editorials  and  unbiased 
news  coverage  and  when  Bass 
brought  .forth  his  slogan  'to 
bring  the  paper  back  to  the  stu- 
dent." 

Tuesday's  election  will  tell  us 
whose  views  tie  student  body 
wants  to  represent  them  for  the 
coming  year. 


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SUNOAY,  MARCH  31,  \H7 


THl  DAILY  TAR  Hill 


LAMBETH 

(Continued  from  Ptofle   i; 

But  most  of  all  in  his  actions 
as  a  leader  and  ar.atudeat  he  has 
exemplified  the  spirit., of  Carolina 
which  is  characterized  by  a  fuhda- 
montal  belief  in  the  individual  stu- 
dent, as  the  most  impcalant  con- 
sideration of  all  the  University 
community,  he  said. 

Carolina  has  witnessed  in  its 
basketball  team  this  year  the  mag- 
nil  icent  achievements  of  a  group 
working  together,  sacrificing  at 
many  times  individual  ^lory  to 
team  victorr,  I  am  atire  that  with 
Sonny  as  leader  of  student  govern- 
ment we  will  see  an  equal  per- 
formance in  that  area  of  campus 
life."  Lambeth  said. 

i  hope  that  all  voters  will  care- 
fully consider  his  record  and  his 
program  before  they  vote  on  Tues- 
day. 


fAGI  THRia 


PATRONIZE  YOUR 
•    ADVERTISERS    • 


Qbidffl  (jB^atttii 


y 


on  a  new  Foundation 


'    ^M^ABETH  AROE\*§ 


Counselors 
Are  Important, 
Says  Levy 

'The  position  of  orientation 
counselor  is  one  of  the  most  im- 
portant and  self-satisfying  ones 
on  campus."  Edwin  Levy,  chair^^i 
of  the  counselor  selection  com- 
mittee /aid  Saturday. 

Levy  said  "Not  only  does  the 
success  of  the  orientation  program 
hinga  upon  the  counselor's  per- 
formance and  ability,  but  also  he 
can  engender  in  his  counselees  the 
true  Carolina  spirit." 

He  said  the  orientation  coun- 
selor was  responsible  for  the  in- 
troduction of  the  new  students  to 
•such  integral  aspects  of  Uni- 
versity life  as  the  Honor  System 
and  student  government."' 
SELECTION 

The  initial  phase  of  counselor 
selection  will  take  place  on  April 
9  at  7:30  p.m.  in  106  Carrall 
Hall,  he  said.  During  this  time, 
all  counselor  applicants  will  be 
given  a  test  on  the  material  con- 
tained in  the  1956  counselor  man- 
ual. 

The  manuals  are  available  at 
the  YMCA.  Graham  Memorial  and 
the  Wilson  Library,  Levy  said. 

Interviews  will  be  conducted  at 
a  later  date  and  the  final  selec- 
tion will  be  based  on  the  test  and 
interview    .<K!ores,    he    said. 


BY  LOCAL  RESR>ENrr: 


Producrion  Is  D^ridet 


A  local  resident  took  issue  yes- 
terday with  a  Daily  Tar  Heel  re- 
view of  the  curren;t  Pls^maker's 
production  '^Stranger  in  the  Land" 
by  Christian  Moe. 

Mrs.  Betty  Sinclair,  in  a  letter 
to  the  paper  yesterday  said  that  it 
is   "a  slfame 

Heel's  review  .  .  .  was  at  fiTot  sight 
an  exception  to  the  .rule  .  .  .  fw 
the  reader  might  be  deceived  by 
the  bad  opinions  it  expresses  in 
good  prose." 

Mrs.  Sinclair's  letter  was  in  re- 
ply to  a  review  of  the  play  by 
Daily  Tar  Heel  staf|  writer  An- 
thony Wolff  which  appeared  hi  the 
paper  Friday. 

Mrs.  Sinclair's  letter  continued: 

"Making  all  allowances  for  a 
difference  in  first  night  perform- 
ance and  the  one  I  saw  on  Friday, 
there  are  certain  basic  facts  which 


remain  constant.  The  play  by 
Christian  Hoffis  Moe  is  senflitivff 
and  often  moving.  It  treats  of  a 
difficult  ttteme  «f  the  social  profb- 
lems  fo  postwar  Japan  with  in- 
sight and  understatukng.  And  the 
treatment  is  nowhere  comparable 
that  the  Dairjr  Tsrj  to  the  musieals  "Sooth  Pacific"  and 
"Teahouse  of  the  August  Moon," 
she  said.  < 

SAILORS 

"The  American  sailors  here  are 
a  very  integral  part  of  the  plot, 
j  but  in  a  way  they  are  a  contrasting 
background  against  which  the  Jap- 
anese tragedies,  ma^or  and  minor, 
are  played  out  The  leaser  Japanese 
characters,  regarded  as  redundant 
by  the  Daily  Tar  Heel's  critic,  are 
in  actuality  devM-  little  human 
studies  which  point  up  the  near 
destruction  of  a  culture  first  by 
an  atomic  explosion  and  then  by 
occupation  Of  these  the  ragged 
man  of  Tassa  Spanos  and  the  pros 


ing  job  by  Tommy  Ressuto. 

"With  obi^ous  freshmsm  attitud- 
inzin^  the  Daily  Tar  Heel  critic 
makes  some  curious  value  judg- 
ments about  human  behavior  in 
general  and  this  play  in  particular. 
Only  In  a  Hollywood  movie  would 
the  conventional  happy  ending  be' 
possible.  In  a  tender  little  scene 
before  we  hear  of  the  death  of  the 
heroine's  father,  we  already  have 
a  foreboding.  When  the  lovers 
talk  of  a  future  in  the  U.S.   one 


Whitty  and  Nancetta  Hudson,  "fbe 
crude  petty  ,<rfficer*of  Ken  Lfliwy 
was  rettuittMe  ia  that  k  evolee 
more  pity  than  contempt,  and  Har- 
vey G.  Knox  aa  Sivi&eney  was  oftea 
very  good^ad«ed.  Mary  Jeimstoa 
was  charmng  and  sympathetic  as 
Lowry's  >  erstwhile  mistress;  and 
Harold  Williapison  *brought  under- 
standing to  his  role  as  Japanese 
suitor,"  the  letter  said. 

"Perhaps  understanding  was  the* 
keynote  of  the  presentation.  I  felt 


UP 


was  made  to  feel  that  it  wa.,-  all  [  both  the  cai^  and  the  director  were 
a  dream  incapable  of  realization,"  j  jjjropathetic    \xy  the    playwright's 

intention,   and   were   serious    and 
enthusiastic    about    vitalizing   his 


(Continued   from    Page   2) 
'•2.    The     UP     will     work   in 
every  possible  way  with  the  ad- 
ministration to  see  that  the  pro- 
posed parking  lot    plan    is    ap- 


Mrs.  Sinclair  said.  A 

"And  I  am  curious  to  know  what 
ihe  critic  means  by  lack  of  poetry. 
There  was  no  iambic  pentameter, 
but  the  essence  of  much  of  the  di- 
alogoue  was  poetic. 

The  frequency  of  Japanese  say- 
ings,    actually    overestimated,    is 
surely  valid  in  the  attempt  to  il- 
luminate a  culture  alien  from  our 
titu^e  of  Betty  Jiaette  were  clever  own.  And  incidentally,  dear  critic, 
and  convincing  sketches,"  the  let-  Confusious  was  Chinese,"  ^e  said. 


ter  said. 

"The  scenery,  so  undesirably  un- 
^btnu-ive  to  our  critic,  was  suffi- 
ciently authentic  to  me.  The  tex- 


proved,     and    that    construction  j  ^"''^  loveliness  of  the  settings  in 


fn."*  fi>rmuta) 


rASIC  SHEEN ...  a  new  formula 
.  .  .  and  a  new  size!  The 
most  perfect  fiowiog  cream 
foundation  you've  ever  used 
...  to  give  your  skin  a  smooth 
radiant  flawlessness.  Tliis 
perfect  raake-ap  base  goes  on 
so  smoothly  and  eaeily — krpps 
vou  fresh  and  glowing  all 
day  long.  In  8  exquisite 
complexion  shades. 
3.00  and  5.00        ■  pncn  yUt  t>i 


Sharpshooters 
Welcome 


Practitioners  of  that  ancient  and 
delightful  sport,  old  book  collect- 
ing, have  varied  s-ources  of  delight, 
not  the  least  of  which  is  catching 
the  dealer  in  a  dreamy  moment. 

Since  anyone  who  could  know  all 
there  is  to  know  about  old  boojcs 
could  make  his  fortime  by  answer- 
ing questions  for  some  television 
huifter.  and  since  the  collector  is 
a  specialist  in  a  narrower  field 
than  the  dealer,  it  stands  to  rea- 
son that  from  time  to  time  a  true 
gem  in  its  field  will  pop  up  on 
the  biu^ain  Selves. 


begins  immediately,  having  ap- 
proximately aoo  spaces  ready  by 
the  fall  of  1957;  and  we  will 
work  toward  removing  all  re- 
strictions on  student  possession 
of  cars. 

"We  will  work  for  non-restrict- 
ed parking  in  the  Columbia  St. 
area  and  see  every  chance  of  ac- 
complishing this  goal:  and  the 
UP  will  work  with  the  Universi- 1 
ty  Maintenance  Dept.  to  outline  I 
into  individual  spaces  the  park- 
ing area  in  the  Lower  Quad  reg- 
ion so  as  to  accommodate  more 
cars  in  the  parking  areas  that 
now  exist. 

"3.  TTte  UP  offers  a  plan  for 
an  increase  in  Honor  Geuncil 
membership  to  make  it',  possible 
for  a  violator  of  the  Honor  Code 
to  not   be  tried   by 


Japanese  movies  would   not  have 

been  in  place  here:  they  belong  to 

a    happier   age.    These    were   the 

remnants  of  houses,  not  graceful 

homes.    The    costumes   also    were 

good. 

MINOR  LAWS 

"There  was  some  awkward  block- 
ing in  several  places,  and  one  im- 
portant sicene  between  ithe  Jap- 
ane;.e  fiance  and  the  father  had 
the  former  too  notch  u)>5taked. 
I  But  these  are  quite  minor  flaws 
j  in  an  otherwise  competent  direct- 


ACTING 

'We  are  left  with  acting.  On  Fri- 
day most  of  it  was  not  merely  con- 
vincing but  often  excellent.  There 
were  numerous  studies  incontrast, 
uneven  sometimes,  but  largely  ef- 
fective. 
The     American     hero     and    the 


t^eme.  The  result  was  to  me  re- 
freshing   and    thought-provoking," 
she  said. 
AVOIDED 

"tt  may  not  have  been  as  pro- 
fessional a  Playmaker's  production 
as-say-"Desire  Under  the  El  mar" 
last  December,  but  it  avoided  the 
bad  taste  of  much  of  "Brigado<Mi ' 
and  was  infinitely  superior  to  the 
"Midsummer  Nightmare"  of  last 
spring. 

'To  established  playmaker  tal- 
ent that  stayed  home  to  get  ready 
for  "Peer  Gynt"  let  me  just  say 
that  the  youngsters  did  right  well," 
Mrs.  Sinclair  said. 

Wolff 'o-  comment   on   Mrs.   Sin- 


Japanese  heroine  were  played  with  i  clair's   statement   was,   "Glad  you 
depth    and    tenderness    by    John  I  liked  the  play.  Sorry  I  missed  it." 


FACULTY  CHANGES 


CoVidHng  The  Carnpus 


NURSING  OFFICERS 

N^  officers  wees'  el«eted  al  the 
clofiong  sessieo  of  the  fifth  annuaJ 
cohvention  of  the  North  Carolina 
League  for  Nur^n*.  Tke  meeting,  ^tbematics 
Wao  h^]^  here  Thursday  and  Fri- 
dagr. 

fiCNTAL  WORKSHOP 

A  total  ol  32  dentists  prom  four 
.states  a^wl  the  District  of  Colum- 


participate  in  the  Siinuner  Insti- 
tute on  Mathematics  in  9odal 
Science,  to  be  held  at  Stanford  Uni- 
versity   fw    ooUege    teachers    of 


HtOHWAY    URPkOYlfS 

There  will  tar  a  meeting  of  high- 
way efli|»i^«ee  and  state  employees 
£n>m  are.'s  8,  €A.  7  and  8  ia  Me- 
naori^  jfudko^iliAJi  ia-  Raleigli.at 


bia  attended  a  ooe-^y  workshop  j  7:30    J>jn.    Wednesday.     An    an- 
ait  the  School  of  Dentistry  here  this  i  nouncement  of  the  meeting  yester- 


week.  The  four  states  represented 
were    North    Carolina,    Virginia, 

Maryland  and  Georgia _ 

AUTHIMATICIAN 
Prof.  L.  L,  Garner  of  the  D€pt. 


day  stated  th«t  while  the  meeting 
L-  -not  statewide,  "it  is  of  utmost 
importance"  that  empl<^ees  from 
the  areas  mentioned  attend  "in 
their  own  interest  and  in  the  in- 


of  Mathematics  tuLt  been  invited  to  terest  of  all  state  employees' 


SMVS  YOURSELF^ 


EVERY  SUNDAY 


5:30-7:30  P.M. 


At  Thr 


RANCH   HOUSE 

HOME  OF  CHOICE  HICKpRY-SMOKED  CHARCOAL  BROILED  STEAKS 


Anne  Queen  To  Be  Dean 
Of  Washington  Seminar 

Miss   Ann   Qae«n^  associate   di- 
rector of  the  YWCA  here,  will  be 
dean  of  a  government  seminar  in 
bi£  investi- i  Washington  April  IH3  on  "Strug- 
gle   for  Civil   Liberty— A    Nation 


Cosmetic  Dept. 


'^When  this  happens,  it  is  etiquette 
I  for   the  collector   to  crow   loudly, 
and  for  the  dealer  to  weep. 

Your    old    bookseller  ^  hopes     his  j 
groans,  when  an   occasion  of  this  j 
sort   arises,    are    sufficiently   con- 
vincing to  add  to  your  pleasure. 

But  the  plain  truth  is,  that  when 
he  pnlls  a  boner  he'd  a  whale  of 
a  lot  rather  one  of  you  chaps  found 
it  than  some  Northern  dealer  on 
hL'  way  home  from  Florida! 

The  Intimate 
Bookshop 

205  E.  Franklin  St. 
Open  Till  10  P.  M. 


gators,  and  we  promise  to  form 

an   Honor   Council   Study   Com- 1  Weigtu  its  Fi«edom  and   Securi- 

mission  to     study    the     present  ty." 

standing    of    the    Honor  System !     The  seminar  will  be  sponsored 

within  the  student  body.  j  hy  the  American  Priends  Service 

"4.  Finally,  the  University  j  Coram  ittee. 
Party  will  work  with  the  Uai-  lo  an  announcement  Saturday, 
versity  administration  to  coor-  students  interested  in  the  aemiaar 
dinate  the  present  prereffistratioA  I  »«»e  ucyetf  to  mafei  plMU  tar  «t- 
and  adviser  setup  so  as  to  lessen',  tend.  The  cost  of  the  trip  includ- 
confusion  and  misadviec.  and  to  |  ing  transportation,  meals,  lodging 
arrange  a  plan  whereby  students  j  while  ia  Washington  will  be  ap- 
needing  specific  courses  as  pre-  proximately  $13.  the  announce- 
requisites  in  their  plans  of  study ;  meat  said. 

will  be  given  precedence  in  the.     The  seminar  will  be  opened  by 
pulling  of  class  tickets  fw  those !  lawyers    from    three    Washington 


courses. 


firms. 


(Con^jrwied  from  Page  1> 
ed  the  UNC  faculty  in  1M(^  and 
both  took  their  master's  and  Ph.D. 
degrees  at  the  University  of  Wis- 
consin. Dr.  Ellis  received  his  A.B. 
irom  Iowa  State  Teachers  Coltege 
and  Dr.  Hill  did  his  undergrad- 
uate work  at  Utah  State. 

The  new  member  of  the  chem- 
istry staff.  Dr.  Thomas,  is  a  native 
of  Cheraw,  S.  C.  After  completing 
his  B.S.  and  M.S.  degre_ef  at  UNC, 
he  took  his  Ph.D.  at  Yale.  After 
two  years'  research  work  with  du 
Pont,  1933-37,  he  returned  to  Yale 
and  has  continued  to  teach  there, 
currently  holding  the  rank  of  as- 
sociate professor. 

The  new  director  of  -the  Pys- 
chometric  Laboratory.  Dr.  Jones, 
has  held  a  similar  position  at  the 
Oirtversity  of-  Chicago.  wtici«  he 
was  also  assistant  professor  in 
the  P.sychology  Department.  Ow- 
ing the  1056  calendar  year  he 
was  a  visiting  professor  at  the 
University  of  Texas  in  Austin. 

A  native  of  Washington  state, 
Jiones  received  his  B.S.  and  M.S. 


Washington  and  his  Ph  D.  at  Stan- 
ford. 

Dr.  Rader  is  also  a  native  of 
Washington  and  attended  the  state 
university.  He  took  his  M.S.  and 
Ph.D.  degrees  at  Yale  and  woiiced 
at  several  penal  and  mental  in-i 
stitutions  in  that  area.  During  i 
the  past  year  he  has  been  clin- 
ical psychotogtst  at  the  V.A.  Hos- 
ptial  in  Roanoke,  Va. 

Dr.  Hardison,  a  native  of  ^ali^ 
fornia,  received  his  B.A.  and  lfI.A. 
degrees  from  UNC  and  his  Ph.0. 
from  the  University  of  Wi«eOBsifl. 
He  has  taught  at  the  Uoiv«ritity  of 
Tennessee  and,  during  tho  past 
year,  at  Princeton. 

Dr.  Pike,  a  native  of  Georgia, 
attended  Emory  University^  Jrq- 
oeiving  his  A3.  In  104S<  AiMi  bis 
D,D,$.  i^  ljK53,  ,He,  ej^jcli,  |;o  r^ 
ceive  his  M.S.  from  the  Universi- 
ty of  Nebraska  this  year.- 

A  native  of  New  York.  Foust 
took  his  B.A.  at  Syracuse  Univers- 
ity and  his  M.A.  at  the  Oiriversi- 
ty  of  Chicago,  where  he.  will  com- 


jack's 
a 

r>)vfth  his  new  ^ 

L..-§PM- 


Ever  since  Jack  bou^t  his  new 
Sonic  CAPRI  phonograph  at  the 
local  c<^ege  store  —  he'»  becoaiv 
Che  biggest  BMO.C  ever.  You 
hai  loin  him  and  be  the  biggest  cy«r, 
too.  foe  you  can  buy  »  CAPRI 
phpoograph  foe  as  little  as  $19.95. 

This  sooath's  spocial  is  tb«  CAPRI 
550  -^  a  twin  speaker  high 
fidfltky  portable  with  4-sp«td 
'^{faboor-  autonaatic  chma^sr, 
hi-i'oapU&«r  ia  »tt*a«tiyt  ^^ 

«%«»HHMM  Potest  Gracn.       #nly  '5>^ 

«t  y*w  Ucal  Jj>ator» 
^9R3!NIC  INDUS^RIE^,  MNC.   \9  WHbwr  ifnM,  lyi*w<n>»,  N.Y 


See  Our  Complete  Une  Of 
SONfC  PHONOGiAPHS 

BELK-  LEGGETT-  NORTON  ' 


degrees      at     the     University    of  plete  his  Ph.D.  this  year; 


DAILY    CROSSWORD 


ACROSS 

1.  Mud  flats 

(Ire.) 

«.  Wild  pigs 

11.  Land  of 

the  Iwnas 

12.  Dr«mat>  • 

«N«w.  1 

11  Worship 

14  Pith 

hclm<^  - 

IS  A  dance 

17.  Uttle-  island 

It.  Droads 

20.  Not  right 

13.  Young  cat 

tl.To  bt 

in  debt 

M.Cotn 

(Swcd.) 

3»  Docile 

tS.  Projecting 

mitt 

OrdiUfch 

14.  Storms 

S«.  DeUst 

89.  Poisoned 

in  warfare 

43.  Deputy 

45.  Defile 

46.  Midday 

meal 

47.  Rub  out 

4S.  Underworld 

river 

(n^Ob.) 

i*-  Ancl«*rt 

Greek 

townships 
DOWN 

1  PiaMw 

2  Reoart 

(It.) 

t  Old  coin 

(Gr.) 

4  Left 

iiagtitiif# 

9.  Cubic 
meter 
t  Morsel 
7.  Orchestra 

member 
S.  Vipers 
9.  Stagger 
10.  Dirk 
le.  Tree 

19.  Small- 
est 
state 
(ikbbr.) 

20.  Ship's 
record 

21.  Female 
•heep 

22.  Marsh 


24.  Spin, 
ining 
toy 
26.  Bitter 
vetch 

20.  Born 
30.  Ditch 

21.  Music 
note 

32.  Ovum 

33.  Vouch 
35.  Relieved 
30.  Corridor 
37.  Chills  and 

fever 
S8.  Canva» 

shelter 
40.  Bang 


ErjMBy    Bi.-;:  «T!  4 
-..1    i7,iri!i|i"i 


••tMr4*jr'«  ikBMiee 

i\.  Otherwise 
42.  Coloring 

agents  . 
44  Definite 

article 


STUDENtS 

(Continued  from  Puge  2) 
student  gavernment,     the     pro- 
ponents   of    stadent    apatti^   of 
their  error,  but  it. would  serve 
a  greater  purpose  still. 

What  better  time  and  place 
than  Tuesday  and  here  on  the 
campus  of  UNC  to  practice-  our 
heritageT  What  better  way  to 
show  that  we  come  here  foe  more 
purposes  than  to  learn  "the  mere 
power  to  add  or  detract?"  What 
better  ;ii»y  to  .apeak  ovrtr.«s  a 
bo<iy  ami  to  prove  that  we  do 
care  how  and  hy  whom  we're 
governed  than  to  come  out  Tues- 
day as  a  body  and  vote? 

Answer  apathy  Tuesday  with 
your  vote. 


yrr 


"f>  ^- 


i5*S% 


mtinished 


CtASSIFIfOS 


DUPCEX  APAATMISNT:  NEARLY 
new.  $65—3  quiet  rooms.  G.E. 
aiK>Jiances  and  floor  furnace  (you 
bvff  .oil)  20  minute  eAc/oU .  from 
Souik  DuUding.  Call  MiSBM. 

wfm  iioosr  iwck  iiovSE~m 

center  of  to«^-~fta8  holj^by  work- 
sliop.  Call  945a  during  day  or 
2920  alter  5:30  and  during 
weekend. 


(OR)  nmc  BANz  m&  ro  rass? 


i'»hi«.», 


ThixigB  were  pretty  rOviilb  tot  Fraiut  CP***)  Schtubert  when  h^wtt^-Utushix^ 
achool  in  Vienna.  All  day  long  he  ducked  spitbails  and  flat  notea,  and  sA 
night,  when  the  village  began  to  jump,  Pete  was  just  too  pooped  to  pop. 
He  would  go  home,  knock  out  an  octet  or  two  and  hit  the  sack. 

One  nii^tr  l(hough,  the  pianist  in  a  anaa^  little  combo  cadled  tho  Btitiskrieg 
¥w9  slipped  a  disc  and  Pete  had  a  chance  to  sit  in.  The  group  waa.  beating 
it  out  in  a  taa-daooe  trap  called  the  Vienna  Opera  House  when  Pate 
improYised  for  an  eno(H«. 

"Cool!  Cool!"  the  cats  howled  - ,  -  and  bought  tickete  by  the  yard.  Natw- 
dly  the;|nanageai«it  slapped  a  "Hold-Over"  sign  on  Pete,  and  he  waenaadei 

Night  aitar  night  he  i4ayOd  tltm  make)-it-up-as-you-go-^ong  jazz,  and  the 
Vienna  teenagers  went  into  dislbcmtjcxisr.  His  biggest  hit,  of  course,  was 
"You  A^n't  Nothing  but  a  VolkswagiStt." 


FOR  INEXPENSIVE  LIVING:  27 
ft  Iiiashuai:  traUer— has  bath, 
tub.  shower,  porch,  oil  heater. 
added  poouL  Coiniected  to  util- 
ities and  septle  twdk  I  mile  out 
on  aicport  road.  $2300.  Call 
8472. 


HOME  FOR  RENT:  HANDSOME 
and  Qpnvenient  hi^tSwm  home 
for  a  Ug  f^ifti^  or  a  iDCOup  of 
serious  gtatfa^te  stodeio^  or 
.  other;  responsiMe  ad«I\s.  fi.  four 
bedpoom,  2W  Hsth  houae  on  a 
spacious  shaded  lot  at  404  West- 
WOfd  Divn.  Walking  distance 
from  Bbspftal  and  campus.  Com- 
pletely farnished  including  dish 
wiash^  aarf  wa^er-dryer.  Sep- 
arate dining  room,  porch,  and  | 
garage.  Available  April  throygh 
Febmary  f.  tt6i>  Calf'  John 
Fouihee  Agency,  8431. 


-  1 


0x19  iSotuxday  PM,  the  "Five"  was  trying  t»  blitz  one  ofPete'a  crasier 
symphonies  so  tihey  could  out  out  ^  a  beer  buat  the  Vieima  Musiciaaas 
I/ical  was  giving.  Pete  altvays  pla|»|d  slowly  smd  he  was  only  half  flnished 
f^ea  the  other  boy*  started  to  pack  up  their  tools. 

"Go»  Man.  Go,"  yeOed  the  drummer.  "Tlie  beer's  getting  warm  and  Vm^ 
only  paid  up  till  niklni|d^t»"  "But  Fm  not  fimahed,"  cried  Pete  in  anguiah, 
>MigiT>wii>g  to  bvun  up  the  keys.  "So  what!"  cried  the  Blitzkrieg  Four  to 
tho.Fiflh— "they'co  aerying  Budweiiik,"  "Bud^eiaer!"  gurgled  Piste,  push- 
ing  the  piano  off  hia  lap.  "Why  didaft  you  aay  ao.  Man*  thia  m  tho^  u» 
finiidaed  asrmi^Mmy.'* 


MORAL:  No  party  will  bet&nu  "unfinifh^'  with  Biuiwei$er.  Otisr  the  King 

§f  Bears . , .  and  nwurof  tht  cai9wilicut  out!  ^^ 


t^- 


Budifelser. 


AMHKtnMt-BUSCH.  INC  •  ST.  lOHna  •  NSWARK  •  U»  ANOBUO 


KING  OP  BBERA 


WPWV^W 


^■^^F^>^>^^F^>«  ■««■■! 


FAGt  FOUt 


THt  DAILY  TAR  HtlL 


SUNDAY,  MARCH  J1,  lf57 


Yale  To  Capture  NCAA  Swimming  Crown 


Krepp  Wins  200-B^ck 
To  Become  Dual  Champ 


■^  By   STEWART   BIRD 

The' Wolverines  ^f  the  Uniyers- 
Tv  of  Michigan,  rated  secondM>e- 
fore  the  start  of  the  National  Col- 
legiate Swimming  Championships, 
upended  favorite    Yale    by    eight 

points,  69  to  61,  to  cajry  back  Jp'  the  Tar ^  Heals,  having,  t^J^en  thC 
Ann  Arbor  "their  firsf ,  natit^al  J200  yard  backg-oke  title  .Friday 
crovrh  since  1948,  as  tl»l  34th'Jan- 


th^ee  frujstrjitiog     years,     finally  i 
.i^adhediAk  4oi^g^  sought  for  goalj 
hy  taking  the  100  yard  1t>ackStroke  \ 
in   the    time    of  58.1    seconds.   It 
was  the  sec^ond  win  of  the  meet  for 
the    graduating    team    captain    of 


nual.meet  came  to  f  successful 
close  last  night  in  Bowman  Gray 
pool.  Carolina  finished  6th  with 
24  points. 

Tim  Jecko  of  Yale,  sensation  of 
the  me^t.  came  up  from  third  po- 
sition in  the  last  30  yards  to  win 
the  100  yard  butterfly  in  the  time 
of  54.6  to  become  the  first  triple 
winner,  in  this  meet  since  the  late 
John  Marshall  of  these  same  Elis 
in  1951.  The  sophomore  flash,  who 
Friday  night  won  the  200  butter- 
fly and  200  individual  medley,  set 
new  meet.  NCAA,  and  pool  rec- 
ords in  his  victory.  All  six  plac- 
ers were  timed  below  the  meet 
standard  of  52.8  set  by  Davies  of 
Michigan  in  1952. 

Hanard'-:   Henrv  Dver  led  from 


'night. 

■    The,"  king  ot  tibie-midtilleiXlistance 
events,    for   the    past    two   years, 
Bill   Woolsey  of  Indiana,  success- 
fully defended  his  440  yard  free- 
^ptylc  title  by  the  wi^e  margin  of 
ten  yards  in  a  time  «of  .4.38.2.  For 
the   Hoosier  star   it  ..was   his  sec- 
ond win  of  the  nieet  .having  re- 
■  tained    his    220    freestyle    cro^ 
I  Friday   night.    Second,    third,    and 
'  fourth  places  were-  ho*ly  contest- 
ed   throughout    the    gruelling    17 
I  laps  with  Clemens     of  .Uichigan 
I  State    being   judged    second    in    a 
blauAet    finish   in     the     time     of 
4:43.9.    Third    was    Ellison.    Yale 
(4:44.2).    and    fourth.      Myers      of 
Michigan.   (4:44.4). 
I     Dick,  Kimball    of    Michigan    be- 
came   the   last    double    winner   of 


the  start  to  eke  out  a  narrow  vie-  [  the  meet  as  he  took  the  3  meter 
tory  in  the  100  yard  freestyle  with  !  springboard  title  with  441.35.  Sec- 
a  clocking  of  49.4  to  defend  his 
title   won   last  year. 

Gradually  increasing     his     lead 
over   the   last   75   yard*.   Cy  Hop- 


kin^  of  Michigan  flashed  his  way 
to  the  200  breaststroke  title  with 
a  new  meet  record  of  2:20.0  to 
join  the  ranks  of  sophomores  who 
have  dominated  this  34th  annual 
champion.ship. 

Carolina's     pridlT'    and '  joy     of 
swimming.    AU-American    Charlie 


ond  was  Ron  Smith  of  SMU,  who 
was  also  runnerup  to  Kimball  in 
the  1  meter  diving  Friday  even- 
ing. 

In  the  sixteenth  and  final  event 
of  the  championships  Michigan 
and  Michigan  State  tied  for  first 
in  a  time  of  3:50.0,  to  set  new 
meet,  NCAA  and  pool 
Indiana  was  third  (3:50.7)  and 
fourth  was  UNC  (5:53.5).  Yale  was 
disqualified     when     their     anchor 


<l9fnik  Named  j 
Mew  UNC  Head 
Tennis  Coath      ! 

A  former  C^eellMlovakian' Dav- 
is Cup  player  has  been  appointed 


Wild  Pitching  Gives  Tar  Heels 
6- J  Victory  Ovef  Ger^erals 


By  BILL  KING 


[had.puiled  off  a  double  steal.  With 


I  Saine  on  firoft,  I>on  Lewis  lifted  a 
Righthander   Charlie   Aycock  ^jy  ^^  jg^j  ^.j^i^,^  ^^^t  tHe  Carolina 


head  instructor  of  tennis  at  the  turned  in  a  fine  seven  inning  per- ,  ^^^^^  ^^  gg^^^^j  ^^^Y  ^^  c^tch. 
University  of  North  Carolina  for  {^"^*"f«  ,**^^^i^*__  ^^"*_^,*[i  Saine  came  home  moments  later 
t^e  1937  season. 

Vjadimir  Cernik,  a  political  ref; 
u^oe  who  for  many* y^ars  was  a 
partner  of  Jaroslav  Dirobny  in  Da- 
vis Cup  tourney  competitipn,  will 
itssnme  his  new  '  duties  Monday, 
athletic  director  G.  T.  (Chuck) 
Erickson  announced  yesterday. 

Cernik  will  be  associated  with 
Ham  Strayhorn,  for  several  years 
freshman  coach  and  who  has  been 
acting  varsity  coach. 


Heels  tojk,  advantage   of   erratic  ^  ^„  ^  gj^gj^  .^y  catcher  Jim  LegcUe. 

pitching  by  three  Washington  and      tarolina^got  its  first  run  in  the 

Lee  hurlers  as  the  Tar  Heels  de-  ^.^^^^  f^^^^  ^.^^^  ^^^j.  H^^gy. 

feated  the  Generals,  6-1  in  Emer 

jon  Stadium  yesterday.  | 

Aycock.   who   was    lifted    for    a  ^  then  to  third  on  a  single  by  Dick 

pinch-hitter  in  the  seventh  inning,  ]  Hudson.  "With   the   bases  loaded, 

gave  up  only  one  run  and  four  hits  Honcycutt  crossed  the  plate  when 

while  fanning  nine.during  his  sev|x^vvis  walked. 

en     inning    stint.    Veteran     Don       i-he   Washington   and   Lee   run 

Saine  hurled  the  final  two  frames   carne  in  the  3rd  inning  when  start- 
{ for  the  Tar  Heels  and  faced  only ,  jng   pitching  Joe   Knackal  walked 

....^  I  ^^^  came  all  the  way  home^on  a 
single  by  third  twseman  John  Turn- 
er. 


Cernik  is  tennis  professional  at  seven  batters  to  clinch  the  victory 
the  Everglades  Club  at  Palm ;'  for  ^^  predecessor. 
Beach,  Fla.  He  previously  held  aj  Meanwhile,  the  (Jenerals,  who 
similar  post  with  a  Greenville,  \  were  playing  their  first  game  of 
S.C,  countrj-  cjub  and  was  rec-  j  the  season,  found  the  going  tough 
ommended  here  by  former  North  as  they  conunitted  four  errors  and 
Carolina  stars  of  that  area.  |  L-sued  r^leven  walks  to  the  Tar 

Cernik  teamed  with  Drobny  to  Heels  who  collected  only  four  hit.s. 
win  the  European  Davi§  Cup  zone  j  Carolina  picked  up  runs  in  the 
twice  and  the  Inter-ozne  finals  s«cond.  .fifth,  and  seventh  inning 
against  Australia  in  1947  and ;  while  WiL  got  their  lone  tally  in 
1948.  He  competed  six  times  at  the  third.  The  Tar  Heels  carried 
Wimbleton  and  Paris,  three  times  a  5-1  advantage  into  the  eighth 
at  Forest  Hills  and  Los  Angeles  frame,  then  the  ^oof  feU  in  on  the 
and  compiled  a  notable  playing  Generals, 
record.  I     ^**^^   Hudson   and   Carson   Old- 

During  his  tournament  career  ham  led  off  the  inning  by  drawing 
as  a  singles  player,  he  defeated  i  w^^'^s  off  the  General's  second  pit- 
at  one  time  or  another  many  of  I  c^er,  Skippy  Isreal.  Saine  then 
the  world's  finest  players,  includ-  [  l'n«<l  ^  single  to  right  field  to 
ing  Art   Larsen.  Gardner  Malloy.  j  drive    in    two  runs    for    the   Tar 

after  Hudson  and  (Mdham 


W.,4  L. 

j  cytt^dr(>W.  a  \\'alk.  moved  to  second  j  Jklden  ss 
bri'^I^Walk   to  Jiip   Harwell,   and  Turner  3b 

Couch  If 
Aiford  c 
Moore  rf 
BroU  cf 
Hoopes   lb 
Williams  2b 
Knadial  p 
Isreal  p 
Payne  p 
Totals 
UNC 


five  game  home  stand  Tuesday  as 
they  entertain  South  Carolina ,  in 
their  Second  ACC  outing.  Wednes- 
day, the  Tar  Heels  travel  to  Ra- 
leigh for  a  Big  Four  test  against 
N.  C.  State. 

THE    BOX 
AB       H 
4         1 


records.   Straight  Clark.  Earl  Cochell.  Ad- !  Iftels, 
rian  Quist  and   Kurt  NieUen.        i 


In  the    fifth  inning,  Joe  .Shook 
drew  a  walk  and  went  to  third  on  Lewis  2b 
a  double  by  Ivalee  Hill.  Knackal  Shook  rf 
then  uncbrked  a  pitch  which  got  c-McMullin  If 
by  catcher  John  Aiford  and  Shook  Legette  c 
came  home  ^-tanding  up  with  Car-  Hill  rf 
blina's  second  run.  Honeycutt  ss 

■    The  third  Carolina  tally  came  in   Harwell  3b 
the  seventh  when  Al  Pons  hit  for  Hudson  cf 
Aycock  and  collected  a  single  to  Oldham  lb 
right  field.  A  throwing  error  and  Aycodt  p 
a    fielder's    choice    moved    pinch-  a-Pons 
runner  Dick  Reston  to  third,  and  l^Rcst{Hl 
Rest  on    scored    moments   later   on  Saine  p 
another  single  by  Legette.  Totab 

The  tictory  was  the  third  in  a 
row  •  for  the  Tar  Heels  who  have 
a  seasonal  record  of  6-3.  Coach 
Walt   Rabb's  charges   conclude    a 


3 

4 

4 

4 

3 

4 

3 
'  2 

0 

0 
31 
AB 

3 

3 

0 

4 

4 

3 

3 

3 

3 

2 

1 

0 

1 
30 


1 

0 

2 

0 

1 

0 

0 

0 

0 

0 

5 

H 

0 

0 

0 

1 
1 

0 
0 

1 

0 
0 

1 

0 

1 

5 


O 

0 
0 
4 
6 
1 
1 
9 
3 
0 
0 
0 
24 
O 
1 
0 
0 
10 
2 
1 
1 
3 
9 
0 
0 
0 
0 
27 


L'inksters  Top  Spartans 


The  Carolina  golfers  won  their  i  der  par  70  to  take  medalist  hon- 
ors for  Carolina.  The  SparUns 
picked  up  nearly  ail  their  points 
in  the  second  foursome  as  Alrin 
Dell  and  Bob  Nodus  whipped  Tar 
Heels  Walt  Summerville  and  Sam 
Patrick.  81^   -  ^• 


second  victory  of  the  season  Fri- 
day by  defeating  the  Michigan 
State  Spartans,  20^!   -  9»^. 

Gene   Lookabill,   the   "rtir  Heel's 
number  two   man.   fired   a   2   un- 


Howard  Johnson  Restaura^ 

BREAKFAST 

LUNCH 

DINNER 

SNACKS 
"Landmark  For  Hungry  Tarheels" 


Krepp,  denied  of  victory  through  man  jumped  ahead  of  the  gun. 

Beatty,  2-Mile  Relay  Team 
Cop  Firsh  In  Fla.  Relays 


Jim  Beatty  and  a  speedy  2-mile 
relay  team  each  cracked  the  win- ; 
ner's    column    yesterday     as     the 
North  Carolina  cindermen  opened  i 
their   1957    outdoor   season   at  the 
Florida  Relays  in  Gainsville,  Fla. 

Beatty   romped   to   an    easy  win 
in  the  2-mile  event,  posting  a  medi- 


Relay  record  in  sweeping  to  an 
easy  victory  in  their  event.  Their 
time  of  7:42  put  them  far  ahead 
jf  second  place  Alabama. 

The  Tar  Heels  also  picked  up 
,  a  couple  of  second  place  medals. 
I  The  distance  medley  r»lay  jquad 
fiidshed    close    behind    Maryland, 


ocre   time   of  9:48.0.    UNC  sopho- 1  while  the  mile  relay  team  was  sec- 
more  Wayne  Bishop  followed  him   ond  to  ISU. 
in  second  place.  Beatty  holds-  the  [     In  other  events,  Tar  Heel  repre- 
meet    record  *  for  .  the    2-raile    at  sentatives  fared  not  no  well.  The 
9:^9:8.  1 440-yard  relay  team  finished  fifth. 

The  2-mile  relay  team,  made  up  i  the  sprint  medley  relay  squad  was 
ot  Beatty,  Ben  William*,  Howwd  alsd.iifih,  aitd  Clete  Oakley  grab- 
Kahn  and  Dave  Scurlock.  set  a  new  j  bed  fourth  in  the  javelin. 

Rosey  Signs  To  Play 
On  Globetrotter  Tour 

RALEIGH — (AP)— All    America       Kennedy    announced    also    that 
Lennie    Rosenbluth,    North    Caro-!  Dick  Duckett  of  St.  Johns  has  been  ' 
Una's  fabulous  scorer,  has  signed  \  added  to  the  All  America  roster, 
to  tour  with  the  College  All-Amer-  j  The   squad  includes  John  Maglio, ' 
ica  team  to  play  against  the  "Har-  j  N.    C.    State;    John   Smyth,    Notre 
lem  Globetrotters.  I  Dame;  Dick  Heise,  DePaul,  Hank 

The  announcement  was  made  Nowak.  Canisius;  George  Fergu- 
from  New  York  by  Walter  Ken-  son.  Michigan  State;  Sam  Jones, 
ncdy.  Globetrotter  publicity  chief,  j  North  Carolina  College;  and  Jack 

Rosenbluth.     who    averaged    29 1  Sullivan,   Mt.   Saint   Mary's, 
points     a      game     for   Carolina's       ^be       Saperstein's      >:lowning 

Globetrotters    will    be    paced    by 


UNC  Fencers 
Fare  Well  In 
National  Meet 

Robert  Clay,  a  sophomore  from 
Raleigh,  swept  eleven  victories  in 
the  NCAA  Fencing  meet  at  De- 
troit last  weekend  to  pace  a  four- 
man  Carolina  contingent  at  the 
meet. 

Clay,  competing  in  the  dueling 
sword  division,  scored  two  wins 
over  members  of  the  1957  All- 
America  team.  The  remainder  of 
the  nineteen  bouts  won  at  the 
meet  l>y  Carolina^  if'tre  adsred  by 
team  captain  Don  Cdrb^n  and  Jim 
Proctor. 

Corbin  won  five  bouts  in  the  foil 
division  while  Proctor  picked  up 
a  trio  of  victories-  in  the  sabre 
division. 

The      veteran      NVU      fencers, 

coached    by   Hugo    Costello,   took ! ' 

top  honors  on  a  total  score  basis,  as  the  club's  leading  scorer  with 
followed  closely  by  Columbia,  with  an  average  an  eyelash  shy  of  28 
Wisconsin  and  Navy  tied  for  third,   points  per   game,   coming   out  to 

The  most  outstanding  individual  27.968,  a  UNC  record.  Brennan 
performance  of  the  meet  was 'finished  second  with  14.7,  Tommy 
turned  in  by  the  new  1957  col-  Kearns  12.8.  Joe  Quigg  10.3  and 
legiate  foil  champion,  Bruce  Davis  Bob  Cunningham  7.3  to  round  out 
of  Wayne  State  University.  Davis  the  starting  five, 
scored  an  amazing  26  victories  inj  Brennan's  record  was  for  total 
27  bouts.  rebounds  in  a  season,  as  the  hand- 


Ed  Sutton  Honored  At 
Carolina  Grid  Banquet 


j  (AP> — ^The  University  of  North 
:  Carolina  Friday  turned  from 
;  championship  basketball  to  foot- 
i  ball  and  celebrated  with  an  elab- 
I  orate  gridiron  dinner  dance  at 
{  which  graduating  halfback  Ed  3ut- 
I  ton   took   major  honors. 

Sutton,  a  Morehead  Scholar 
Xrpm  ,Cul|ow|)ee.  ishp  avATMgt^ 
6.2  yards  per  carry  last  fall  in  a 
losing  season,  was  awarded  both 
the  E.  Carrington  Smith,  "Mo^t 
Valuable  Player"  award  and  the 
newly  established  William  Prouty 
Memorial  Trophy,  for  excellence 
in  athletics  and  all  phases  of 
campus  life. 

The  Prouty  trophy,  awarded  for 

the  first  time,  was   presented  by 

William    F.    Prouty    Jr..    Chapel 

Hill  newspaperman. 

It  has  been  set  up  by  ..him  and 


&-nngied  for  A^'cock  in  7th. 

b-r»n  and  scored  for  Pons  in  7th. 

c-walfced  for  Shoi>k  in-9lh. 
SCORE  BY  INNINGS: 
W, -A,  I,.  001     000     000—1 

UNC  010     010     13x— 6 


TAKE  YOUR  DATE  FOR  SUNDAY  DINNER  TO 

DANZIGER'S  OLD  WORLD  RESTAURANT 

For  an  International   Fair  of  Quality  Food 


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Served  with  s«iad,  2  vegetables,  br««d,  buttsr,  coff*c  or  iced  tea 


FRENCH  ONION  SOUP  .. 
HUNGARIAN    GOULASH 

GERMAN  SAUERBRATEN  W.  DUMPLING  '  1., 

CZECH  MEAT  ROULADE  W.  SOUR  CREAM  l^:^-^ 
STUFFED  ROAST  CHICKEN  .  .f  _^__l_uiT^ 
WIENER   SCHNITZEL  ! :.. 


**4-r 


Homemade  French  and  Viennese  Pastries 

Hours  from   11:30  A.  M.  to  7:30  P.  M. 


NCAA  champs,  will  be  in  the  line- ! 
up    Thursday  .  night     when      the' 
teams  meet  in  Reynolds  Coliseum  j 
.in  the  fifth  game  of  the  tour.  The 
series  opens  in  New  York  Sunday.  I 


lanky  Meadowlark  Lemon,  the  Wil- 
mington native  who  replaced 
Goose  Tatum. 


For  Better  Advertising 

R  E  S  U  L IS 

Use  The  Columns  Of 

The  Daily  Tar  Heel 


Commenting  on  the  meet.  Tar 
Heel  Coach  Pebley  Barrow  said: 
"1  was  especially  proud  to  hear 
the  compliments  of  some  of  the 
other  coaches  and  officials  on  our 
fencer's    courtesy,    sportsmanship 


some    Brooklynite    picked   off  332 
for  an  average  of  10.3. 

Rorfcnbluth  turned  out  to  be  the 
team's  best  shot,  with  305  of  631 
atten^rts  for  4S.3  percent,  another 
record.    His   376   free    throws    at- 


and  poise.  Of  cotirsc.  it  shoyld  be  ]  tempted  and  285  free  throws  made 
remembered  that  we  are  meeting  { were    also    new    marks."  The   895 
here  Uie  finest  collegiate  fencers :  points  rounded  out  R^sie's  season 
in  the  country.  All  our  boys  are  I  record-busting, 
sophomores    and    when    they    are]     UNC's     43.1     percent     accuracy 
seniors  we  n^ight  expect  to  be  in  j  from  the  floor  and  70.1  from  the 
the  first  ten  with  the  ad^ed  ex- 1  free  throw   line  both   established  I 
pcrience.  Bob  Clay  showed  great '  new    standard:?.    The    2^37    to'tal^j 
promise    in    defeating     two      AH-   podnts  bettered  the  2014  of   1953.! 


his   brothers   in  memory  ot   their 
father,     distinguished     University  | 
professor  who  headed  the  Geology 
Dept.   for  many  years.  j 

Prouty  was  introduced  by  Dr.  | 
O.  K.  Cornwell.  faculty  athletic' 
representative.  I 

The  34  lettermcn  of  last  season  ; 
were   presented  their^  monograms ' 
by  Athletic  Director  C.  T.  (Chuck) 
Erickson  during  the  two-hour  pro- 
gram. I 

Jake  Connors,   president  of  the 
Chapel   Hill  Athletic  Club,  which 
jointly   sponsored   the   partj'  with 
the  UNC  Athletic  Assn.,  presented : 
trophies  and  watches  to  eight  sen-] 
ior  members  of  the  squad. 

This  group  consisted  of  Co-Cap- ! 
tain    Sutton,    Co-Captain    George 
Stavnitski,  John  Jones.  Don  Lear,  | 
Dough  Farmer,   John   Bilich,   Bill  | 
Eilingtoii'  amd  Larry  McMulIen.       I 

Dr.  James  L.  Godfrey,  chairman 
of  the  Faculty  and  W.  D.  Car- 
michael  Jr.,  vice  president  of  the 
Consolidated  University,  were  the 
chief  speakers.  Both  spoke  in  a 
light  vein  and  drew  tremendous 
applause. 

Coach  Jim  Tatum  was  master  of 
ceremonies  and  introduced  play- 
ers and  distinguished  guests, 
amohg  them  members  of  the  facul- 
ty, committee  on  athletics,  the 
athl«tic  council  and  University 
officials.  Most  were  accompanied 
by  wives  or  dates. 

Dance  music  was  provided  by 
Bruno  Rdsb's  combo.  Rasco  is  an 
outstanding  rising  sophomore 
guard. 


FUBLIC  HEALTH 

A  course  in  "Records  Manage- 
ment in  Public  Health"  will  begin 
here  at  the  School  of  Public  Health 
tomorrow.  The  course  is  being 
sponsored  by  the  School  of  Public 
Health  in  collaboration  with  the 
U.S.  Dept.  of  Health,  Education 
and  Welfare. 


Its  IMIANCE  SET  TO  MUSIC! 

^Qf(-^iU«(l!  Joyous  high- jinx  ! 


It44l  mum 

TENHttOUSAND 

;ANNAmRtAAL6ER6HETTI 

MfiAf^TOK- DEWEY  UARTIN 

mtBSlEZAK'PAUlHENREID 

NOW  PLAYING 


Carolina 


Tccrt**!! 


I  SDELLYandME   I 


Piper  Laurie  Martha  Hyer 


TODAY 

And 
MONDAY 


•«tr4 


Crmntwnlnm 
for  Ex«m»7 


Americans  and  placed  as  21st  in 
the   nation." 


NCAA  Chqmps 
Set  Many  New 
School  Marks 

fiQccH^^breaking  was  a  matter 
of  covffse  for  the  1966-57  NCAA 
eham|)4Qnship  Carolina  team  and 
its  All- American  Leiurie~  Rosen- 
bluth. 

Seven  individual  seasofi  records 
were  bettered,  with  Rosenbluth 
getting  six  of  th^ih  tiM  Pete  Bren- 
;  nan  one.  As  a  team,  the  Tar  Heels 
broke  thre«  markff  ai^  c^gie  close 
to  others.  The'  32  tvihs,  of  courj.*, 
is  a  record  ior  coausecutive  vic- 
tories. 

Four  single  ganw  recon^s  were 
broken  ipnd  one  tier,  with' Rosen- 
bluth getting  thrdfe  fi  those. 

Final  ijtatistics  Mi^   Rosenbluth 

■     r 


The  Tar  Heels  averaged   79.3  for] 
the  32  games,  just  under  the  79.9  ji 
recotxl  of  last  year.  1 


ANNOUNCEMENT  BY 

Illinois  College  ol 
OPTOMETRY' 

Application*  for  admiMton  to 
clasaet  beginning  Srptetnber  9, 
1957    are   now   being    received. 

Three  year  course    . 
of  professional  study 
Leading  to  the  Degree  of 
Doctor  of  Optometry 

Requirements  for  Entrance: 
Two  yean  (60  semeater  hour*  or 
equivalent  quarter  hr*.)  in  ape- 
eified  liberal  arta  and  acieneet. 

WRITE  FOR  BULLETIN 
TO:  REGISTRAR 

ILtLINOlS   COLLEGE 
o/  OPTOMETRY 

3241   So.  Ux^aa  Av«. 

Tpchnolof  y  CrntCT.  Chicago  1^  IH. 


Fi|ht*'BoikFatiprSiUf| 

Your  doctor  will  tdl  yo«— •  ; 
NoDoz  Awakener  m  «fife  .m  «•  ' 
average  cup  of  hot,  ^ack  cof»  ] 
fee.  Take  a  N0D02  Awakener  j 
when  you  cram  for  tlut  Mcini 
. .  .5>r  when  inid*aftern«oa 
brings  on  those  "3  o'clock  cob* 
webs."  You'll  find  NoDosf  ivea 
vou  a  lift  without  a  letdowa . , .  i 
Kelps  you  snap  back  Co  a»raul  \ 
and  fight  fatigue  safelyt        1 


If  t«bl*H- 


35 


Clar**  acoMwy  Hif  fl#^ 
(Ur  GrMk  K»»  ami  SQ* 


mppoz 

AWAKENfRi 


Xf^fK^XJ 


uce 


J 


PRE-ELECTRIC 
SHAVE  LOTION 


to  gat  a  better  shqva  I 


Quicker  .  .  .  closer  .  . » smoother  .  .  , 
00  mottor  what  mochint  yov  use.  1.00 

SHU  LTO  N    N«w  Yarii  •  Terant« 


-» 

'i 


-•'<jm*f^mi*-'*>^-^ 


tJ.W.C*  LIBRARY 
SERIALS   DEPT.' 


WEAT+IER 

Partly  cloudy  »OKi  mild  with  an 
•xpaatad  high  of  65. 


c  3)a(lu 


^Tar  3HCccl 


FREEDOM 

It   hlngas,   in   a    way,   en   stV' 
dent  elections.  See  editorial,  p«9* 


VOL.  I.VU,  NO.  1M 


Complete  (^  Win  Seniee 


CHAPEL   HILL,  NORTH   CAROLINA.  TUESDAY,  APRIL  2,   1957 


Offieen  m  Graham  UeiMihal 


FOUR  PAGES  THIS  l$5Uf 


Father-Son  Grants 
Go  To  Spear  mans 

A  UNC  journalism  professor  and »  The  rest  of  the  Spearman  family, 
his  son  have  received  awards  for '  including  Mar)'  Lindsay  Spearman, 
extraordinary  study  next  year,  it  11,  and  Mtj.  Spearman,  the  former 
was  announced  Monday.  j  Mary  Elizabeth  Dale  of  Nashville, 

Walter  S.  Spcannan  and  his  son ;  Tenn.,  will  live  in   Cambridge  for 
Robert.   14.  are    the  recipients  of ,  the    school    year    beginning    next 
the    distinguished    fellowship    and   September, 
scholarship       awards.       Professor 


Spearman   will    study    at    Harvai-d 
Voiverj.ly.      Robert      at      Groton 
School.  35  miles  north  of  Boston. 
FUND 

The  Fund  for  Adult  Educatit>n 
announced  Spearman  as  one  of  the 
recipients  of  nationwide  grants  lo 
53  educators,  newspapermen,  radio 
and  television  bioadcasters  and 
others  concerned  with  liberal  edu- 
cation for  adults. 

The  Fund  is  an  independent  or- 
ganization established  by  the  Ford 
Foundation. 

Spearman  will  receive  a  fellow 
ship    for    a    nine-month    study    at 
Harvard  in  American  and  Southern 
Hi>or\.      .Vmerican      political 
thought,  history  of  modern  science, 
human    relations   and    social    rela- 
tions. I 
CONTRIBUTING  \ 
Professor  Spearman,   a   member 
of  the  journalism  faculty  at  Chapel . 
Hill  since  1{>35,  also  is  a  contribut- , 
ins  editorial  writer  for  the  Greens- 
b(,ro  Daily  News  and  the  Sroithfield 
IloTald  and  is  author  of  a  book  re- 
view column.  "The  Literarj'  Lan-  e.xcited  c«>mment  in  this  University 
tern"  whith  appears  in  a  number   where  the  Spearman  family  take  .t 
of  North  Carolina  newspapers.        i  leading  part  in  community  affairs. 
It  wa.'  announced  two  weeks  ago        Bob   Spearman    is    president    of 
that  Mr.  Spearman's  son  has  won    ihe     student     council     at     Chape] 
a   scliolarship  covering  the   major   Hill   clcn»entary   school,    is   a   Life 
p:rtion  of  his  expenses  at  Groton   Scout,  and  Is  active  in  school  ath 
School   in   Massachusetts  and   will    letics.  He  won  the  scholarship  in 
enter  the  third  form  (ninth  grade)   competitive     examinations     based 
there    next   Fall.    The   scholarship  i  on   scholarship,   character   and   i\- 
is   renewable   annually.                      '  nancial  need. 


VETERAN 

Professor  Spearman,  a  Phi  Beta 
Kappa  president  and  graduate  of 
the  University  of  North  Carolina 
in  1929,  is  a  veteran  newspaper* 
man  and  journalism  educator.  His 
newspaper  experience  also  includes 
editorial  work  with  The  New  Or- 
leans Item  and  The  Charlotte  News. 

An  adviser  to  jludent  publica- 
ti(ms  and  to  other  student  organi- 
zations. Prof.  Spearman  was  honor- 
ed in  the  1954  student  annual  as 
one  of  six  faculty  members  '•who 
were  teachers  in  the  true  sense  ol 
the  word,  whose  influence  was 
formative,  not  mei'ely  infonnative. 
wht  ,  gave  friendship,  understand- 
ing and  ideas  aj  well  as  facts." 

Professor  Spearman  expects  to 
pursue  studios  which  will  enhance 
effectiveness  in  teaching  journal- 
ism, especially  editorial  writing, 
and  in  writing  editorials  for  vari- ) 
ous   papers. 

COI^MENT 

The  father-and-sjn  awards,  com- 
ing so  v-'jon  upon  each  other,  have 


Campus  Offices  Are  Voted  On  Today; 
Evans,  Baum  Contending  For  President; 
Editor's  Post  Sought  By  Sloan,  Bass 

President  Young  Urges 
Large  Turnout  At  Polls 


Voting  Places 
Announced 
For  Election 


Top  Candidates  Say    'May  Best  Man  Win' 


-♦     An    anticipated   60  per  cent    of 

I  the   student   body   will    go   to   the 

polls  today  to  vote  for  student  gov- 

I  ernment.  dorm,  and  class  officers 

and   honor   Council    members. 

Contesting  for  the  head  position 
in  student  government  are  Uni- 
versity Party  presidential  candi- 
date Bill  Baum  and  Student  Party 
Candidate  Sonny   Evans. 

Candidates    for    editor     of     the 
Daily  Tar  Heel  are  Noi!  Bass  aacf 
Charlie  Sloan.  Ix)th   running  inde- 
pendently. 
(OTHER  THREE 

Running  for  the  other  three  of- 
fices   of   the    "big    four"    student 
government    posts    arc    vice-presi- 
Residents  of  Connor  will  vote  in  '  dent,  Benny  Thomas  (UP)  and  Don 
Winston.  |  Furtado  (SP);  secretary.  Misses  Dot 

i  Pressly  (UP)  and  Carolyn  Huffman 
(SP);    and    treasurer.    Jerry    Jon?s 


Voters  in  today's  election  will 
cast  their  ballot.-  in  the  following 
places,  as  announced  recently  by 
Sections  Board  Vice  -  Chairman 
Arthur  Sobel:  -v^-  ;• 

•  •    1  ^  V  V*  I 

Residents  of  Kenan  Dwm  will 
vote  in  Mclver.  i 


Residents    of    Emerson  Stadium 
will  vote  in  Ruffin.  ',^,  ■  ..r.. 


House  To  Be  Honored, 
Lee  Wlh  Give  Address 

fey  WALTER  SCHRUNTEK         which  draws  the  top  businessmen 

Chancellor  Robert  B.  Hou^e  will   ol  North  Carolina  back  to  "school" 

):f  honored  at  the  graduation  exer- 1  for  the   purposes   of   investing   in 

ci.^^cs  of  the  Executive  Program  of    them  a  new  approach  to  business 

the    School    of   Business   Adminis  I  management. 

t ration   Friday    for    his    assistance!      The    stated    overall    purpoc«    ofi 
to    the    unique    program    initiated    the  program  is  to  "raise  the  stand- 
hcrc  four  years   ago.  ards  of  business  practice  and  ethics 

A  special  hand  carved  Honduras  »nd  to  increase  the  social  responsi- 
mahogany  plaque  will  be  presented  biUty  of  the  businessman." 
to  Chancellor  House  bearing  the  Also  featured  in  the  program 
inscription.  "He  lived  the  motto  of  '  will  be  Dean  Maurice  Lee's  gradu- 
his  native  state''  by  rowrtb  Group  |  ation  address  "Redesigning  The 
racmberj  of  the  Executive  Pro- 1  Products  of.  The  Business  School, " 
gram.  Recipient  of  last  year's  which  business  school  sources 
award  was  Harold  F.  Smiddy,  vice  promise  to  be  an  indication  of  long- 
prestdent.  Management  Consulta- 
tinn  Service  of  General  Electric. 
SCHOOL 
The    executive    program    is    one 


The  past  Mvcral  weeks  of  campaigning  come  to  a  climax  virhen 
students  vote  in  today's  election.  Shewn  above  are  the  top  four 
candidates  for  campus  offices.  Looking  at  each  other  are  Daily  Tar 
H«*l  Editor  candidates  Charlie  Sloan,  left  and  Nell   Bass.  The  two 


looking  hopefully  toward  students  art  Sonny  Evans,  left  and  Bill 
Baum,  respective  Student  and  University  Party  candidates  for  stu- 
dent  body   president. 


Residents  of  Memorial  Hall  and 


(UP)  and  Bob  Carter  (SP). 

Farther  down  on  the  ticket  will 


all   other   university   owned  build-   '>e   nominees    for   senior   class   of- 
ings  will  vote  i«  Old  East.  I  f'<=«s,  both  party  endorsed  and  in- 


nevs 

in 

H-Bomb  Tests 

LONDON  — (AP)—  Britain  and 
the  Soviet  Union  refused  today  to 
call   off   hydrogen   bomb   tests. 

In  foreign  affairs  debate  in  the 
House  of  Commons.  British  Prime 
Minister    Harold    Macmillan 
"the  tests  must  go  on." 


Competition 
ForMangum 
Medal  April  10 


Dorm  Residents  Urged 
To  Vote  For  OHicers 


I  dependent.     Nominees     for 
Men's  I>orrtiitory  Di^lricts  are  as  i  president     are     Paul     Can- 


follows: 


In  ct»r»>uncti«>n  with   todayV  Ken- 
Competition       for       the      annual    era!    campus    elections.    IDC    Presi- 
Willic    P.    Mangum    Medal    in    ora-    dent     Sonny     Hallford     has    urged 


Even   as    he   spoke   the   Russian  | 
government  announced    in   a   note 
to   Japan   that    it   would    not   give ' 
any    advance    notice    of    H-Bomb 
tests  as  the  Japanese   had   asked,  | 
and  that  it  would  not  stop  nuclear 
tests      unless      Britain      and      the  j 
United  States  do.  I 


tory.  the  University's  oldest 
award,  will  open  at  8  p.m..  April 
10.    in    the    Dialectic    Senate    Hall. 

All  graduating  .seniors,  includ- 
ing seniors  graduating  at  the  end 
said  of  summer  school,  are  eligible  to 
j  compete. 

The  Mangum  Medal  is  an  ora- 
torical award  given  under  the  pa- 
tronage of  the  Philanthropic  Lit- 
erary Society  and  the  Dialectic 
Senate. 


Atphtn  Withdraws  Name 
For  IDC  Presidency 

Al  Alphin,  candidate  for  presi- 
dent of  the  Interdcrmitory  Coun- 
cil Monday  announced  he  was 
withdrawing  from  the  race  due  to 
■  an  increased  academic  load"  for 
nrxt  fall. 

Alphin  said  the  increased  load, 
along  witli  his  "many  other  student 
jiivcrnment  acti\itie8,  would  make 
it  impos.-lble  for  me  to  devote  the 
necessary  time  needed  to  do  a 
conscientious  job  as  IDC  presi- 
dent." 

He  said  "It  is  an  honor  to  have 
l>€en  nominated  by  the  IDC  nomin 
ating  committee  for  the  presidency 
of  the  EDC.  It  is  with  great  reluc- 
tance that  I  withdraw  my  candi- 
dacy but  under  the  circumstances 
I  feel  that  I  should." 

The  election  will  be  held  Wed- 
r:  ?.vflay  at  the  regular  IDC  meet- 
ing. 


sought  changes  within,  the  school 

here. 

LEADERS 

Dean  Lee  is  widely  acknowledg- 
ed as  a  leader  of  thought  on  col 
legiate  business  education  and  has 
been  primarily  responsible  for 
the  preparation  of  the  statement 
of  standards  governing  undergrad- 
uate collegiate  education  for  busi 
nest  in  the  countiy. 

He  has  been  Dean  of  the  School 
of   Business  Administration   here  ,  again 
since  September  of   1956  and  was ' 
previously    Dean    of    Washington  j 
State  College  since  1947.  j 

According  to  Dr.  William  J.  Gra- 
ham, director  of  the  executive  pro- ' 
gram  here.  Dean  Lee's  speech  may  | 
answer  some  of  the  recent  charges  i 
and    criticism    of    professionalism 
which  have  been  levied  against  the 
business  school. 
SCHOLARSHIP 

The  graduating  executive  group 
this  year,  in  lieu  of  gifts  to  the 
faculty,  will  award  a  $500  .aicbolar- 
ship  to  the  School  of  Business  Ad- 


Civil  Rights 


Soccer  Practice 

.      Spring  soccer  practice  will  begin 
tomorrow    afternoon    at    3    o'clock 
I  on  the  intramural  field. 


dormitory  residents  to  vote  for 
their  officers  and  announced  al- 
'terations  in  the  proposed  slate. 

Hallford  pointed  out  in  his  state- 
ment tliat  "this  is  an  important 
occasion  in  dormitory  govern- 
ment. I  hope  that  the  residents 
of  the  dormitories  will  recognize 
the  importance  of  this  election. 
The  success  of  a  dormitory's  ac-  i 
tivity  program  rests  largely  with 
the  individuals  whom  they  elect 
to  be   their  representatives.  j 

"I  would  like  to  urge  all  dormi- 
tory residents  to  turn  out  in  mass 


for     pi-esident     and     vic€-presi«ie»t 
in    their   respective   dorms." 

Hallford  stated  that  the  slate 
for  dormitory  officers  had  been 
altered  due  lo  the  fact  that  some 
candidates  had  been  disqualified 
because  thoy  did  not  hold  a  "C" 
average. 

The  modified  slate  is  as  follows: 

Cobb    — President  — Bill    McGee 

and    Jerry  Shaver;    Vice-President 

—Ray    Stanly,    Bill    Sermons.    Er- 

win   Fuller,    and   Avery   Thomas. 

Winston  —  President  —  Frank 
Berrj;  Vice-President  —  Billy 
Burke,    and    Tom    Gable. 

Everett  —  President  —  Warren 
Miller      and  Rudy  Edwards;  Vice- 


Dorm  Men's  1:   Cobb. 

Dorm    Men's    II:    Stacy,    Everett, 
Graham,  Lewis,  Aycock. 

>Dorn»    Men's    III: 
ander  and  Winston. 

Dorm     Men's    IV:    JoynBt 


class 
(SP), 

1  George  Ragsgdalc  (UP)  and  Harry 

I  Ellerbe. 

I     Other    class    office     conteslanls 

1  are    vice-president,   Frankie   Black 

r.-.««^     t.\^  Uk»)  and  Herry  »-axton  (UP);  sec- 
Connor,    Alcx-l      .  ,„  .        .        ».  » 
tretary.     Misses     Jennie     Margaret 

I  .Afeador    iSP)    anti    Bubhi    M&Oison 
Man- 1  ,, ._,     .■  ^ 


WASHINGTON  —  CAP)  —  Sen. 
McClellan  (D-Ark)  said  today  two 
witnesses  for  the  NAACT  in  be- 
half of  civil  rights  legislation 
have  been  accused  of  lying  under 
oath. 

He  demanded  further  hearings, 
by  the  Senate  Judiciary  commit- 
tee,  so   they   could   b^  questioned 


No  action  was  announced  on 
McClellan's  request,  following  a 
closed  hearing  of  the  committee. 
It  was  disclosed  that  the  commit- 
tee took  no  action  on  a  proposal 
by  Sen.  Hennings  (D-Mo)  to 
force  a  vote  on  the  civil  rights 
bill  by  April  15. 


today    and    vote    for    their    choice  President  —  Jimmy  Highsmith. 


j  gtim,   Manley.  Grimes,  Ruffin,  and 
Elmerson  Stadium. 

Dorm    Mens    V:    OW    E^ast.    Old 
West.     Battle  -  Vance  -  Pettigrew, 
Steele,   Whitehead,  Memorial  Hall. 
j      Town  Men's  districts  are  a^-  fol- 
lows: 

TowTi  Men's  I:  Carolina  Inn, 
Town  Men's  II:  Scuttleh«Jtt,  Town 
Men's  HI:  Graham  Memorial, 
Town  Men's  IV:  Victory  Village. 

Town   women   will   vote   in   Ger- 

rard  Hall,  said  Sobel.  They  will  be 

composed  of  all  women  not  living 

,  in  University  owned  buildings  and 

I  those  living  in  sorority  houses.  The 

women's  dormitory  district  will  be 

<  composed    of    all    those    living    in 

I  University    owned    buildings. 


(IfP);   treasurer.   Tom   tValters  (SP) 
and   Charlie    Ashford    IJP):    social 
chairman.  Misses  Ann  Morgan  (SP) 
and  Fat  Dillon  (UP). 
Seats  on  the  Mens  Honor  Coun- 
I  cil  will  be  sought  by  13  freshmen, 
sophomore  and  junior  men. 
Contesting  for  four  senior  seats 
'  will     be     Bob     McCartney.     Glenn 
I  Pickard,     Charles    .\shford.    Kelly 
j  Maness  and  Robert  Exum. 
j      One  junior  seat   will    be  sought 
by   Tommy   Rand.    Mason    Wilkins 
and    Lawrence    Kouri.    Contesting 
I  for    one    sophomore    seat    will    be 


.■*s. 


o 


Suez  Crisis 


UNITED  NATIONS,  N.  Y.  — 
(AP)  —  Dag  Hammarskjold  said 
today  Egypt  has  agreed  to  pre- 
vent   infiltration*  from    the    Gaza 


■MaiH 


GM'S  SIATE 

mmmmmmmmmm'mm 


ministration.  |  strip   into   Israel   and    has   accept 

Graduation  exercises  for  the  I  ed  the  help  of  the  U.N.  Emergen- 
Executive  Progranv  Fourth  Group  cy  Force  (UNEF)  to  seal  the 
will  begin  at  2:30  p.m.,  following  |  demarcation  line, 
a  luncheon  at  the  Morehead  Plane 


1!tii*«© 


et0r.TB.X'd  Hall 


The  fellcwin«  (»C»iyitl*s  are 
scheduled  for  Gr«H#in  Memeriel 
today: 

Orientation  Commlttoe,  4-6, 
Grell  Room;  WAA,  7-1,  Grail 
Reom;  AFO,  t^f,  6r«ll  Room; 
Oanee  Class  6:30-l,  R«lMtd  Park- 
er 1-2;  Petite  Dramatii|ue,  t-ll, 
Reland  Parker  1-2;  ilections 
Beerd,  *-11,  Rol«n4  Parkar  3  aisd 
Woedhouse  Confrim  Room; 
Men's  Honor  C«uncH,  7-11, 
Wo«dhow*e  CeitforMco  Room; 
Bridfo  Class,  4:3M  Rendezvous 
Room;  Potite  Dramatl^ue,  7:30- 
11,  APO  Room. 


tarium  for  guests,  faculty  and  in- 
terested spectators  from  other  uni- 
versities and  colleges. 


Israel  Ambassador  Abba  Eban. 
after  meeting  almost  two  hours 
with  Hammarskjold,  said  the  sec- 
retary general  had  asked  Egypt 
whether  it  still  considered  itself 
in  a  state  of  war  with  Israel. 


Begins  Wednesday 

Selection   committee    for  choos- 
ing  women's   orientation   counsel- '.      "A    reply    to    that    question    is 
ors  will  begin  meeting  Wednesday, !  awaited."    Eban    told   reporters. 
April  3.  Late  applications  will  be       He  emphasized  Israel  considers 


accepted  by  Martha  Decker.  Dean 
of  Women's  Office  before  noon 
on  Wednesday.       / 


LUNCHEON 

The  UNC  Faculty  Club  wUl  hold 
its  regular  bi-weekly  luncheon  to-  that 
day  al  1  p.m.  at  the  Car9lina  Ian.  war. 


that  question  primary,  and  dis- 
cussion of  other  arrangements 
cannot  proceed  without  an  an- 
awer. 

Egypt  bars  Israel's  ships   from 

the    Suez    Canal    oh    the    grounds 

the   two   nations   still   are   at 


I 

.       I  '-^V     ' 

:::.i, .; 

Here  Are  Voting  Places  For  Town  Men's  Districts 


Voting  pieces  for  town  men,  as  announced  by  the  Elections  Board, 
•f  shown  above  outlined  in  black.  Students  in  Town  Men's   I,  the 
area  irKluded  in  the  lower  left  hand  corner,  will  vote  in  the  Caro- 
lina Inn.  Town  Men's  II  district,  compoeed  of  all  men  students  liv- 
ing in  the  rectangle  bounded  by  W,  Comoron  i^ve.,  S.  Columbia  St., 


W.  Franklin  St.  and  the  Carrboro  city  limits  has  its  ballot  box  in 
the  Scuttlebutt.  Town  Men's  III  includes  all  students  exce|>tlng  thost 
provided  for  in  the  first  two  districts.  Ballot  box  for  this  area  wiM 
be  in  Graham  Memorial.  Town  Men's  IV  is  composed  of  mon  ktudents 
living  in  the  Victory  Village  area.  These  students  will  vote  in  Victory 
Village.  * 


Student  Body  President  Bob 
Young  yesterday  issued  a  call 
to  students  to  vote  in  campus- 
wide   elections   today. 

Yourtg's  statement  read  in 
part,  "Regardless  of  who  wins 
the  election  today,  it  will  be  of 
little  significance  to  the  persons 
elected  unless  a  large  majority 
of  the  students  participate  in  the 
voting. 

Young  said  that  the  campaign 
"has  not  been  as  controversial 
and  stimulating  as  some  persons 
would  have  liked,"  but  that  "the 
candidates  for  major  offices  have 
expressed  themselves  enough  so 
that  each  student  should  be  able 
to  vote  with  a  good  idea  as  to 
the  type  of  work  each  candidate 
would  d4." 

Walker  Lockctt,  Jack  Spain.  Da\e 
EXans.  Sandy  Ainslee  and  Pringle 
Pipkin. 

Candidates  for  seats  on  the 
Women's  Honor  Council  arc  Misses 
Cindy  Seagraves.  I*unkin  Coc. 
Nancy  Davis.  Hannah  Kirby,  Fat 
Dillon.  Andrea  Staivey  and  Deb- 
orah Sink. 

Miss  Julia  Ann  Crater  is  the  sole 
contendant  for  chairman  of 
Women's  Residence  Council 

Running     for     Student     Council 
seat.-  are  Gerry  Hartzos.  John  Kerr 
and  Mike  Tanner. 
WAA 

Only  one  office  in  the  Women's 

(see   ELECTION,    page   3.) 


iN  THE  INFIRMARY 

Mrs.  Phyllis  Topping,  Mrs.  Bet- 
ty Savage,  Misses  Sarah  Parkar, 
Eve  McClatchery,  Rea  Miller,  and 
Benton  Beard,  Sanford  Thomp- 
son, Roy  Caahlon,  Arthur  Jones, 
Thomas  LippOrt,  Fred  Phillips, 
Wesley  Jackson,  Fred  Baber  and 
Robert  Scholse. 


T 


pa«i  two 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEBL 


TUESDAY,  APftiL  2,  19S7 


Get  Off  Your 
Rear  And  Vote 


A  senior  of  our  acquaintaiue  was  viewing 
Willi  alarm  today's  election.  If  anyone  asked 
me  for  a-nv  advice  on  Ik>w  to  vote.*  he  said 
"I  would  tell  them  not  to  vote  at  all.. That's 
just  how  bad  this  (ampaign  has  turned  out 
to   be. "  ""'■         '"         t 

It  would  l>e  veK>  ea.<iy  to.^v  doo't  vote. 
For  the  students  Really  haven't  been  given 
anvUunj'  to  vote  For.  T^ey  know  the  presi- 
dential Candidates  are  in  favor  of  parking,  a 
student  un'um  buil^tig.  and  a  few  other  ^xkI 
things.  They  do  not  know  what  the  candidat- 
es stand  for.  ov  hoiv  they  intend  to  condurt 
iheurseives  in  the  future  academic  year.  They 
lan  only  guess,  fo^  the  ondidates  have  given 
them   nothing   but,  luianswercd  questions. 

.\s  for  the  editoiial  candidates,  little  more 
has  been  presented.  Both  c;uididates  are  for 
big-time  ;uhleii<s.  both  of  thent  have  said 
little  alxnn  how 'they  are  going  t(»  make  next 
vear's  newspaper,  ^he  lx\st  Daily  Tar  Heel 
in  history.  Again  the  stutleuts  Jiave  little 
toustrut  ti\e  leasoii  for  voting  the  wav  they 
will  vole. 

What  tliis  means,  of  «ourse.  is  that  the 
election,  will  turn  into  a  sort  of  popularity 
contest.  ThM  will  be  evidenced  by  the  fact 
ih.u  the  (oeds.  wh<»  are  not  known  for  their 
sensible  approach  to  sut  h  matters,  probably 
\\\\\  vote  in  a  blink  for  various  candidates. 

Nothing  has  been  cu.ssed  so  much  or 
tou^ht  s<i  hard  as  a  popularitv  race  in  place 
of  ?A\  elet  tion.  But  when  the  candidates  re- 
fuse to  ;u(ept  the  issues,  when  they  refuse 
lo  submit  anything  better  than  the  most 
general  of  platforms  what  else  can  one  ex- 
pect r 

*  ♦  * 

So.  there  is  little  reason  ft>r  getting  out 
the  vote  this  vear.  Hut.  at  the  same  time,  it 
is  essential    that   students  vote  any  wav. 

For  some  time  tliere  has  been  a  cloud 
toming  over  the  trnipu>.  It  tomes  fix)m  the 

iliiectlon  oi  South   Building. 

*  *  * 

South  Huilding;^s  administratois  have  been 
hiniin'4  al>out  irises  and  the  inadequacy  ol 
I  he  luMior  svstem  a\u\  the  irresponsibility  of 
ihf  stutlents.  This  can  mean  only  one  thing: 
Den  eased  student  freedom  in  the  fiuure. 
\'erv  few  things  ctnild  hurt  the  I'niversity  of 
North  C'ar(»l'na  anv  more  than  a  more  limit- 
ed stuilent  freedom. 

Ri,;lit  now.  Soinh  Building  i-^  worrying 
al>oiu  oiiur  ihings.  But  the  liuu"  will  come 
regain,  as  it  has  «i»me  several  times  this  year, 
when  South  liuildinu  will  turn  to  the  stu- 
deiio  <iU(i  stall  vieuii);^  uiih. alarm. 

Tlie  Itest  uay  students  can  combat  tJiis  is 
b\  beinft  responsible  —  being  able  to  bark 
up.  wftli  fat  ts.  the  things  thev  do  and  the 
ihinos  thev  sav.  I^fie  seiond  best  wa;j  is  to 
elect  a  solid  student  g<Mernment  and  belieinc 


SAYS  DR.  W.  C.  GEOnSE: 


ni  It. 


Three   Sides 
Of  Campaign 

Vou  have  undoubtedly  heard  this  during 
the  election  <>r  previous  ones  from  a  would- 
f>e  tampus  )>oliti<<>.  It  is  a  < onglotner.ate 
lan^jjuaj^e  ol  doubleta>lk  and  journalistic  ex- 
pressi«Hi  (aUiilated  to  ap|K'ase  the  masses 
and  offend  no  one. 

I  like  to  tall  it  journalease.  This  case  in 
point  deals  with  a  legislative  candidate  a-nd 
a  native  heshman.  somewhat  iar  removed 
from  tampus  [jolitits.  The  spiel  goc»_soine- 
thing  like  this: 

(Candidate:  "Kxtuse,  gentlemen.  Id  like 
to  introthue  myself.  I'm  Yogint  Borstht.  a 
candidate  for  Studeiu  Legislature  from  this 
distrit  t.  " 

Translation:    "I    feel    sorta    tpieasy    inside 
anti   I  hoj)e  I  dtuTt  lose  vour  vote  by  inter- 
rupting your  studying.   I  sure  would  like  to 
gel  out  «»l   here.   Buf  you're  nasty-looking."' 
-     Studeiu:   "What   party  do  you   represent?' 

C'.andid;ue:  Tniversity  Party,  but  I'm  a 
dt»rmitorv  man."  (AUernatc  answer:  "Stu- 
dent  Party,  but   I'm  a  fraternity  man.") 

Translation:  "I  hope  vou're  not  piejudic- 
ed." 

Student:  "How  a'lM>ut  telling  me  what 
your  party  pioposes  as  platform  planks?" 

Cantlidatc:  "My  part  v.  ot  ct>urse.  suppt>ris 
the  movemein  fV»r  a  new  student  union 
buiUtin<4.  eliminatitui  of  parking  restrictions. 
Ireshman  tars,  no  Satiuday  t  lavses.  uidimit- 
etl  cuts.  eti.  " 

Translaiitui:  "III  promise  anything  to  get 
a  vote,  but  I  doubt  whether  anything  will 
betome  ol  mv  pnmiise.  All  my  classes  iue 
9s  and  10s  and  I  don't  have  a  car." 

.Student:    "  Ihat's   terrific." 

Candidate:  "Only  a  smaril  part  of  what 
student  gtnernment  uiKler  capable  leader- 
ship can  df>." 

Transition:  We'd  sure  like  to  be  in  of- 
fice. 

Stiulent:   (Lost)     Hmmm.  " 

C'andicbte:  The  important  thing  is  to  get 
out  and  vote  on  elettion  day.  regardless  of 
whom  you  vote  lor. " 

Translation:  "Betausc  I'm  eice  enough  to 
say  tiiai,  I  ex  pet  1  your  vote.  Personally,  I 
don't  care  whom  else  vou  vote  for. " 

Student:  "I  will.    I  hanks  for  eoming  bv." 
Candidate:    (Back  out  in  the  hall)   'D^unn! 
.\Vhat  a  creep.  Three  more  <iorins  to  go." 


Negro  Race  Biologically  Inferior 


Dr.  W.  C.  George 


is   part   «f   M  speech 
fivMi    l«st    lifl  •*  Dartmouth 
Celkf*  in  H«nov*r,  N.  H.,  by 
.Dr.  W.  Critx  6— nf,  profaMor 
..;»f  histary  add  ambryaloty   of 
tha  UNC  JMMicat  School.  Mara 
;  Gaorga  apoaks  an  "Human  *n»- 
frass  a«4  tHa  ftaca  Prablom. 
When  our  early  American  fore- 
,ljears   Iwou^t  Negro   slaves    to 
■this  country  ibey  laid  the  .faun- 
dation  for  a  problem  for  which 
there  se«ns  to  be  no  wholly  ac- 
ceptable solutiou.   In   the  North 
slavery  proved  unprofitable  and 
s9  the  number  of  W^groes  did  not 
increase    grentjy    and    no    very 
grave     interracial     problem     de- 
veloped. 

The  South  has  had  large  num- 
bers of  Negroes  for  a  fong  time 
fund  for  an  equally  long  time  has 
been  struggling  with  the  problem 
of  interracial  relations  and  <  ad- 
justments. Few  in  the  Soutii 
would  claim  pei^ect  success  or 
perfect  justice  in  handling  the 
problem  nor  would  they  claim 
the  absence  of  much  human 
meanness   in  our  behavior. 

But.  with  con.siderable  travail, 
we  havt  worked  out  a  system  of 
social  custonis  and  laws,  aod  per- 
sonal and  group  understandinK-v. 
that  have  enabled  two  greatly  dif- 
ferent peoples  to  live  together  in 
peace,  mutual  tolerance  and  help- 
fulness. Under  this  system  we 
have  developed  increasingly 
good,  friendly  and  cordial  race 
relations. ' 

Most  of  us  who  fa^ve  grown  up 
and  lived  in  the  South  alongside 
Nefroe'^  have  necesBarily  come  to 
know  their  good  qualities  as -well 
as  their  bad  one.v,  and  we  are  not 
unaware  of  the  evil  in  white  peo- 
ple. We  have  many  Negro  friends 
with  whom  we  have  cordial  rela 
tions.  They  have  our  good  wish- 
es and  we  have  theirs,  so  we  be- 
lieve. 

ftwt  whtt^imr  tfea  cordiality 
or  tha  enmity  in  the  relations 
between  individuals  of  the  two 
races,  thera  is  recognition  of 
the  fact  that  we  are  of  separate 
races  and  that  this  praparly 
makes  a  differenc*  in  the  na- 
ture of  aur  relations. 

It  would  t)e  a  more  agreeable 
task  at  this  time  for  me  to  say 
plea-ant  ttogs  abojij  tfUJHifl  , 
M'ith  truth^I  could  say  many.  But 
the  situation  forced  on  us  by 
Ne^o  organizations.  )ay  the  courts 
and  others  is  such  that  we  cann(A 
j^nore  unpleasant  facts  ol  signifi- 
caoee. 

For  more  than  three  decades 
there  has  been  an  organized  cam 
paign  to  defame  and  destroy  the 
South 's  mode  of  handling  the 
race  problem  and.  to  force  inte- 
gration of  the  races  in  every 
phase  of  life.  This  campaign  is 
not  entirely  endorsed  by  north 
em  people  but  it  has  been  fin- 
anced largely  by  northern  people 
and  foundations. 

Wa  h*va  our  integrationists 
in  the  South,  however.  In  fact, 
I  should  b«  surprised  to  meet 
with  ony  «raater  intolerance  to- 
wards my  paint  af  view  en  the 
campus  af  Dartmouth  Callete 
than  I  encounter  on  the  camp- 
us af  the  University  of  Narth 
'  Caralina. 

The  people  of  the  entire  coun- 
try might  well  concern  them^elv 

• 


es  with  the  race  problem  in  a 
most  serious,  and  thoughtful  way. 
It  requires  our  best  thought  and 
i  careful  coosideration  of  all  per- 
tinent facts-.  It  will  not  be  solved 
by  good  intentiooed  but  ill  in- 
formed people  giving  what  they 
consider  to  be  idealistic,  inspired 
advice  and  exerting  pressures  to 
bring  about  ill  advised  revolution. 
In  spite  of  the  efforts  of  press 
andxadio  to  play  down  interracial 
friction  in  the  North  while  they 
give  it  prominent  coverage  if  it 
occurs  in  the  South,  part  of  the 
public,  has  become  aware  that 
there  is  a  race  problem  in  various 
northern  cities.  Many  people  were 
surprised  to  bear  of  the  incident 
in  Buffalo,  New  York,  where  a 
riot  occurred  "some  months'  ago 
on  the  lake  steaitier  carrying  a 
picnic  crowd  of  Negro  and  young 
white  people. 

Informed  people  have  long 
known  that  there  is  a  race  pro- 
blem in  New  York  City  where 
the  teen-age  gangs  of  Harlem 
defy  the  police  and  where  the 
Negro  vote  is  a  potent  but  ques- 
tionable factor  in  politics. 

They  ai"e  becoming  aware  thai 
there  is  a  race  problem  in  Wa:sh- 
ington  City  where  white  pareni.> 
with  school -age  children  are  flee- 
ing the  city  to  escape  the  demor- 
alizing  effects  of  the   eonstanlI> 
increasing  Negro  population;  and 
in  Philadelphia  where  the  white 
population     dropped     30,000     be- 
tween   1930   and    1950    while    the 
Negro  population  ir.^-reased   100.: 
000  during  those  20  years:  and  in 
Detroit,     where    the    worst    racf 
riot  in  the  nation's-  history  occur 
red  in  1943  and  where  race  ten 
sions  are  on  the  rise,  again;   and 
in    Chicago,    where    Negroes    art- 
said  to  be  arriving  at°  the  rate  ot 
3.000  a   month   and    where    they 
swallow    up   former   white    areas 
at  the  rate  of  24   blocks  a  week 
and  oon^itute  an  increasing  eco- 
nomic, social  and  police  problem, 
and  where  they  are  said  to  com- 
mit  2  out   of   three   murders   al- 
though they  constitute  only  one- 
ftfth   of    the    popiUation:    and    in 
Los  .Angeles,  where  new  NegM>es 
are  arriving  at  the  rate  of  1.000 
a  month,  have  reached  a  Iota!  al 
present  ol  about  255,000  and  now 
occupy    30    square    miles    of    the 
city. 
^  •  ,4^.3lP^  yfaii^*'*'  race  problem 
is  no  longer  just  a  Southern  pro- 
blem but  is  becoming  increasing 
ly    widespread    and    increasingly 
urgent.  If  the  wrong  decisions  are 
made    and    the   wrong    programs 
followed,  it  is  not  just  the  South 
that   will    suffer.   If   the   Integra- 
ti(mists   prevail   and   if   they  are 
wrong,  and  I   am  sure  they  are, 
the     tragedy     of     their     success 
would  affect  the  whole  nation. 
This    problem    is    so    fateful 
for    future   generations    that    a 
decision  as  to  wftether  tha  in- 
togrationists  are  right  or  wrong 
is  tha  question  of  first  national 
JnHMM-tance. 
If  I  were  to  close  my  mind  to 
tl»e  facts  and  think  only  in  terms 
ol  political  and  religious  slogan.s, 
I   should    probably  oppoo-e  segre- 
gation;   but    when    one   consider."; 
all    the    facts,    such    a   decision 
seems    impossible.     Perhaps    we 
should  consider    first  of  all   the 
arguments  and  assertions  used  by 
the  proponents  of  racial  integra- 
tion. 


We  are  told  that  we  must  elim- 
inate all  racial  bars  for  the  sake 
of  our  foreign  policy  —  because 
that  is  what  the  people  of  the 
backward  nations  want.  Does  that 
really  make  sense?  Should  we 
make  the  decisions  regarding  our 
.national  problems  or  should  we 
submit  those  problenis-  for  de- 
.cisioQ  to  people  who  have  made 
a  failure  of  running  their  own 
countries? 

We  are  told  that  compulsory 
mixing  of  the  races  is  the  demo- 
cratic, the  American  way.  Thai, 
of  course,  is  false.  The  United 
States  was  founded  and  for  180 
years  has  prospered  on  the  prin- 
ciple of  union  and  strength  in  di- 
versity. -Compulsory  conformity 
and  uniformity  is  not  the  Ameri- 
can way:  it  is-  a  perversion  ol 
the  American  way. 

We  are  told  that  there  is  no 

• 


suppose  that  any  one  really  be- 
lieves that  we  can  reach  wise  de- 
cisions through  the  proces-.s  of 
disregarding  major  facts  and 
reaching  decisions  on  the  basis 
of  cliches  such  as  "second  class 
citizens?" 

It  is  asserted  that  integration 
is^the  Christian  vay  and  that  sep- 
aration of  the  races  is  un-Christ- 
ian.  It  is  not  clear  why  anything 
should  be  accepted  as  Christian 
when  its  virtue  has  not  been 
demonstrated.  Strange  connota- 
tions have  been  given  to  words 
now  adays.  I  believe  you  will 
join  me  in  saying  that  it  is  a 
religious  fraud  to  claim  that 
Christianity  would  require'  us  to 
adopt  a  public  policy  that  would 
lead  to  dCi'truction  of  our  race. 

It  seems  to  me,  therefore,  that 
the  arguments  used  by  integra- 
tionists  are  almost  wholly  speci- 


Voter's  Apathv  Or  Hon^'t  Ore«m  —  Vote! 


The  Daily  Tar  Heel 


Th<  pffa:ial  ftudeni  publioattoB  af  tke 
Publications  ^oard  of  the  Univeraity  uf 
North  CaroLiaa,  where  it  ia  publiabed 
dailf  except  Monday  and  examination 
•Pd  vacation  periods  and  summer  terJM 
Entered  as  .second  class  matter  io  tlH 
»rt»t  office  in  Chapel  Hill.  N.  C.  uodei 
fhe  Act  oi  Marc^  $,  I87fl  Subscriptioo 
rates  mailed.  $4  per  v»ar,  $2  50  «  aemea 
tor;  d*Mv«red.  U  a  year.  S3.50  a  aeaiea 
tar 


L'il  Abner 


• 

fundamer^tal  diffaranco  be- 
tween m»n.  How  often  have 
you  heard  "All  men  arc  created 
equal,"  quoted  with  the  impli- 
cation that  it  applias  to  men's 
abilities?  Most  ol  us  will  admit 
that  all  men  should  b«  equal 
in  thair  right  ta  iutttca  and 
fair  play;  but  in  tha  biological 
sense  there  is  no  truth  in  the 
quotation  and  it  has  no  valid 
force  or  use  in  solving  the  race 
problem. 

We  are  reminded  of  "the 
Fatherhood  of  God  and  the  Broth 
erhood  of  man.'"  Fatherhood  and 
brotherhowl  are  fine  ideas  and 
factual  states  but  they  do  not 
solve  social  problems-  without  re 
gard  to  other  facts  any  more 
than  they  solve  family  problems. 
In  reaching  decisions  on  vital 
social  problems  we  are  admonish- 
ed to  disregard  -race,  creed, 
color  and  national  origin."  These 
are  all  major  facts  of  life.  Do  you 

• 

a 


ous.  And  yet  the  persistent  use  of 
virtuoiLs  words  and  slogans  has 
had  a  hypnotic  effect  upon  mil- 
lion.s  of  ptHtple  and  has-  softened 
them  up  to  the  point  of  being 
ready  to  accept  integration  of 
Negroes  into  the  intimate  lives 
of  white  people.  It  is  my  task  to 
show  you  why  that  must  not  be. 
Race  mixing  and  race  amalga- 
mation may  not  seem  a  serious 
matter  in  Hanover  where  you 
doubtless  have  a  small  and  possi- 
bly select  Negi-o  population,  but 
in  the  South  and  in  many  other 
areas  it  would  be  tragic  for  us  to 
.-nibmit  to  mixing  white  and  Ne- 
gro children  in  the  scht>ols  for 
two  major  reasons. 

One  of  these  reasons  is  tl>at 
wise  and  cautious  parents  dare 
not  subject  their  children  to 
the  Negroes'  standards  of  so- 
cial behavior.  The  moral  stand- 
ards of  tt»e  white  race  are  none 
too  high  but  social   delinquen- 

• 


NOT  THE  BEST,  BUT; 

Playmakers' 
Show   Enjoyable 

Cortland  Edwards 

The  Playmakerj  have  done  it  again. 
Ilieir     latest     production     of     Christian     Moe's 
•Sirapger  in  The  Land",  although  it  isn't  the  best 
they  have  done,  is  a  fine  example  of  one  of  then 
top  theatrical  productions. 

The  story  is  an  old  one  and  follows  American 
serno^nen  wherever  they  go.  It  tells  the  story  ol 
two  lonely  sailors  who  feU  in  love  with  Japanese 
"josans"  and  wanted  to  get  n^arried.  The  com- 
manaing  officer  forbade  the  marriages,  Imt  ihi- 
was  not  enough — especially  for  an  American.  The 
sailors  were  convinced  that  this  was  the  real  thin^ 
and  they  wanted  desperately  to  get  married  any- 
way. 

As  an  underlying  theme,  one  of  the  josans. 
Ayame-san  by  name,  had  lost  part  of  her  family 
in  the  bombing  of  Nagasaki.  With  this  deep  lo.ss 
came  a  bilterne^s  toward  Americans,  e.'/pecially 
those  in  uniform. 

Tha  scene  portrayed  in  the  play  is  a  transitory 
one.   It  portrays  the  changing  of  the  old  way  of 
life  into  a  new  one.  This  transition  breaks  through 
to   the   audience   only  by   the  excellent   portrayal 
of   Ayamc  Yamada,  dene  by  Nancetta   Hudson. 
Nancetla  did  much  more  than  act  out  a  role  oi. 
the   stage.   She   put  something  that    not   all   people 
can   ivnuerstand.  For  to  appreciate  Japan  and   the 
Japanese  way  of  life,  one  must  be  able  to  hear  tht- 
s'.ars  twinkle. 

'through  Nancetta's  superb  acting,  we,  too,  could 
heai  the  stars.  And  like  Adele  Liipert  in  Briga 
doon,  Nancetta  literally  made  the  play 

The  major  male  leads  were  tlie  three  American 
sailors  aptly  poitrayed  by  John  Whitty  (as  Dan 
Oillford),  Ken  Lowry  (as  Gil  Larkin),  and  Harvey 
G.  Knox  ao-  the  unforgettable  Ignatius  Patrick 
Sweeney. 

All  three  of  them  got  off  rather  slowly  in  the 
play,  but  after  the  first  act  they  became  quite 
realistic.  Many  men  like  them  have  been  seen  in 
bar  after  bar  from  Frisco  to  Hong  Kong. 

A  third  highlight  in  the  show  was  ttw  portrayal 
of  a^"B-girl",  Akadan>a  Potonko,  played  by  Mary 
Johnston.  The  setting  of  the  play  centered  around 
Akadama's  room — a  room  where  she  was  living 
with  one  of  the  sailors. 

Akadama  was  a  representation  of  the  aftemiaih 
(A  wai-.  She  had  no  family  to  support  her  and  nu 
special  talents  to  earn   a  living.   So  she  ohosr  iJi^- 
2.7  per  cent   of  the  total   white   ^^^^  ^^  making  lonely  GIs  happy, 
births;  Negro  illegitimate  births        '^'*'^*   Johnston  couldn't  have  done  a  better  jol). 
aie  a3i5  per  -eent  of  total  Negrj    ^^*"  a*^c«nt  was  excellent  and  by  her  acting  she  .set 
births.    In    Michigan    illegitimate    ****  "^^^  ^^  the  play.  Her  photographic  portrayal 
white  births  are  .1.5  per  cent  of  '"^   *    person    of    the  old    school    highlighted    rhe 
total  white  births;  Negro  illegiti-    ^'^ange  in  s-tatus  of  the  Japanese  woman 
mate  births  are   13  per  cent    of       There  was,  however,  one    bad  part  in  the  play. 
total  Negro  births.  Ayame's  papasan   (father)  was,   unfortunately,  rais- 

A    similar    disparity     between    *^^^-  General  Yamada  was  supposed  to  represent  the 
the  races  prevails  in  other  fields    °^  Japan  refusing  to  accept  the  new.  The  General 

of  anti-.Aocial  behavior.  The   1950    P^a>ed  by  Richard  Newdick.  did but  J  cmihi 

census  shows    that  Negroes  con-    '"'°^  conceive   of  him   as    an   Oriental   Or  even  a-     ' 
slitute  10  per  cent  of  the  popula-    Ajnerican.  He  reminded  me  of  an  old  aristocratic    " 
tmn  of  the  United  States.  Yet  the    gentleman  of  Freud's  society  in  Au.«tria  back  in  the 
Pept.   of  Justice   statisUcs   show    ^*^'>  l^OO's.  He  played  hi.,-  part  quite  well   but  he 
that  this  10  per  cent  of  the  popu-    J"**  wasn't  in  the  right  play. 

^  '^^*'*  *••••  *^  "»•••  weak  parts  in  the  play, 
but  w.th  the  excellent  artistry  of  the  five  major 
rolas  these  parts  can  easily  be  skipped  over.  One 

!!!L!.    „!,"*'''"'  "i**^'  **^  ^^  ^.ylor  Wmiams, 

his   voice   and    ac- 


cy  is  far  more  prevalent  anMng 
Negroes. 

Some  months  ago  one  of  oiu* 
national  journals  of  news  and 
opinion  reported  that  the  Ger- 
man people  were  becoming  re- 
sentful of  the  presence  of  ABfteci- 
can  troops  because  of  their  bad 
behavioi',  and  referred  especially 
to  the  crimes  of  Negro  troops. 

Subsequently,  on  August  24th, 
the  'A!ssociated  Press  sent  out  a 
story  from  Wuerzburg,  Germany, 
sajing  that  an  Army  court-mar- 
tial had  convicted  seven  U.  S. 
soldiers  charged  with  raping  a 
15-year  old  German  girl..  It  re- 
ported that  the  defendants  were 
all  Negroes.  (Many  papers  omit- 
ted this  latter  fact.) 

Low  standards  of  social  be- 
havior are  common  not  only 
among  troops.  It  has  been  reliab- 
ly reported  that  five  Negro  girls 
became  pregnant  in  a  single 
Washington  City  high  school  dur- 
ing the  first  year  of  integration. 
That  jjemed  a  pretty  bad  situa- 
tion at  the  time  it  was  first  re- 
ptH^ed,  iivtl  during  the  recent 
Congressional  investigation  of 
the  Washington  schools,  one  high 
school  principal  reported  that 
during  the  second  yeai-  of  inte 
gration  there  were  twenty-seven 
pregnancies  in  his  school  —  two 
white  girls  and  twenty-five  Ne- 
gro girls. 

Perhaps    >oo     say    that     we 
should  not  iudge  a  race  by  two 
incidents.  I  agree.  But  the  sta- 
tistical   record   presents   a   pic- 
ture hard  to  ignore.  The  record 
released   for    last   year   by   the 
North  Carolina   Board  of  Wel- 
fare  shows   ttiat  the   ration   of 
illegitimate   births   is   about   20 
times  higher  for  Negroes  than 
for  white  people. 
The  statistics  for  other  states. 
both  rf^uthern   and  northern,  re- 
veal similar  conditions  elsewhere 
In  Maine,  for  example,  it  is  said 
that  illegitimate  white  births  are 


lation  committed  more  than  half 
of  the  murders  and  manslaught- 
ers in  our  country  in  1950. 

Lest  you  think  that  this  is 
due  to  the  horrible  conditiona 
tfiat  you  have  heard  prevail  in 
♦he  South,  let  me  inform  you 
that  the  Megro  crime  rate  in 
the  integrated  states  is  twice 
the  rate  in  the  Southern  United 
States. 


the 


started 
up    being 


out 
too 


fnc; 


editor 

rBED  POWJ.FPGI 

Managing  Editor 

^   CL.iRKE  JONES 

tilewa  Editor 

NANrv   HII.l. 

Sparta  EifitAr 

LARRY  mRRr 

•uaiaeaa  Manager  _ 

-  BILL  BOB  PEXL 

Advertising  Manager 

FRED  KAT2IN 

'»»(. 


iT'/TPCr'S'^^ 


BECAUSE  YOtJ,  PROOEMCE 
PIMPLETON,  ARE  THE  WOMAN 
WHO  LOVES  ME,  I  HAVE  COME 
TO  >OU  WPFH  MV  TRAGIC 
PROBLEM  ff 


whoae  acting   wasn't   bad   but 
cent  were, 

iitt?\''*^r  ""'^^^  ^^''  ^^  ^''•'^  Yamada.  .^vames 

AJvtn  Whmtr.gh.ll.  He  was  a  typical  American  kid. 
but  a  far  cry  from  the  warmth  of  Japanese  chUdren. 
Another  good  actor  in  this  play  was  Harold  Wil 
Let  me  remind  you  also  that  i^amson  who  played  the  part  of  Takashi  Mishima 
e  Philadelphia  Presbytery  .  Ayame's  chosen  husband.  His  makeurand  S^'on 
few  years  ago  found  that  in  the  ^^''^  excellent,  but  hi.-  acting  which 
city  of  Philadelphia  four  cui  of  **^'"«  natural  and  realistic 
every  five  Negro  boys  come  into  «ff«<?ted. 
some  scrape  with  the  law  by  the  The  smallest  pan  and  also  one  of  the  hardest  to 
ime  they  reached  18.  Would  you.  ^f.  was  one  of  the  best  done.  The  part  t^  hit 
knowing  these  facts,  want  to  send    <»^  »  Prostitute-grade  Z— a  role  uhi.h  T  \!T 

yom-  children  to  school  with  peo-  ^^^  to  portray.  However   Pllylk!^^  r  '  t    7 
Pie  having  such  standards  of  con-    ^i<i  not  treat  it  as  a  smalf  rT';::terLf  Zed 

^rfeett.'"''       '  "*"^  ''"'**''''""'    ^"^   ^^^  ^'   " 

The^^^rl^t"'""^'    T*'^    *'*    *"«»    "»i^   -»♦---- 

The  first  was  makeup.  The  mak.... 

on  all  k.^  M.    ^  makeup  was  very  poor 

on  ail  but  the  three  sailors  Avam.   -^j  ai-  ^ 

In  th»  ftrc*  .-^  '^ym;  and  Akadama. 

on  Takashi  and  on  AkHaml    ,*  "  ^" 

•nakeup  can  be  sTa^  !;  *   **  '"'"'"'»  **"** 

fe  people  are  very  mot    ^h^  h  °"''  """'' 

-xiu  sparKiing  with  Jjfe. 


duct? 


(To   Be    Continued) 
• 

By  a:  Capp 


I've  BEE.N 

FIRED 
FROM  THE 
FORCE . 

TMEV 
SAV 


1  VOU  CERTAlklLV 

r*!  ARE,  IF  VOU 

I  I     THINK  I'M  GCMfJG 

J      TOFEEPVOU 

FOR  ANOTHER 

17  yftARS.fr 


We  will  alwavs 


Land' 


as   a   ver>-   rich 


remember  the  "Stranger  In  Th- 


^  Perhaps  ^ven  go^see  U  i^aln."'"'*"'^^   ^^°'"^''°" 


P09O 


By  Walt  Kelly 


tDITORlAL    SrtAFY  —  Woody 
Joey  Payne,  Stim.  Shaw. 


Sear*. 


NEWS  STAFF— Graham  Snyder,  Edith 
MacKinnon,  Walter  Schruntek,  Pringle 
Pipkin,  Bob  High,  Jim  Purks,  Ben  Tay- 
lor, H.  Joost  Pqdak,  Patsy  MiUar,  Wal- 
^  l^urjUt,  Bill  lyog,  Curtis  Grotty. 

BUSD^TESS  STAFF— John  Minter,  Marian 
Hobeck,  Jane  Patten,  Johnny  Whitaker. 


Night  Editor 


Iftoley  Sjtriap 


Asian   Industry 
On   Channel  4 

Anthony  Wolff 

The  surging  industrialiration  of  Asia  is  consider- 
ed tonight  on  Channel  4  at  6:30.  Thio-  show  titled 
•The  Industrial  Revolution  Moves  East— Into  Asia- 
is  another  installment  of  the  World  Geography  part 
of  the  new  weekday  live  educational  programs  car- 
ried by  the  University  station 

At  7:80  p.m.  on  Channel  5  is  the  Jonathan  Winters 
Show.  Phil  Silvers  carries  the  comedv  at  8  oti  Chan- 
nel 2.  spoofing  the  Academy  Award-winning 
"Around  The  Wwld  In  Ei^ty  Days." 

Channel  9  (if  you  can  get  it)  debuts  the  Spike 
Jones  show,  if  you  can  take  it.  Starting  time  is 
IQM  p.m. 


TUCl 


Letter^ 
Young 
several 
this  weeii 
for  the 
rVC    ba4 

The  le^ 
Carolina 
College, 
the    Car 
the    Unit 
dent  Ass| 

Eddie 
Ea.st    Car 
th:-.  to  si 
this  opF 
ulation? 
North     C| 
for     the 
mainiaii 
student 
support 
Our    h>'a^ 
Coach    Fr 
and  the 
lina  ' 

From 
from    Pa^ 
of  their 
at  Lenoirl 
thusiastic 
teams   hai 
years     ar 
join    you 
the  natioi 
wi.<>h    you  I 
vear." 


FIVE  h( 
center 
shop. 
2926 
weekend 


W.VNTE.) 
tion    bah.%1 

Need^-d 

5391 


"I  b.| 

Bi 


MOI 

real 

like 

real- 

mor 

it's 

smol 

Smoke  I 

»60for, 
tion.  CJ^.i 


DA 


"«' 

a 

Fi( 

» 

Sn 

10 

Co 

tio 

12 

Fa 

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14 

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ha 

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19 

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C<: 

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28 

Al 

29 

Ri 

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Ir 

39 

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41 

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42 

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le 


Moe's 
ie  best 
)t  their 

itericaQ 
^tory  of 

tpanese 
com- 

it  thu 
la.  The 
ki  thing 
:'d   any- 

josans. 
tamily 

Jep   loss 
itxially 

isitory 
»*y    of 

rtrcyal 

|rule  on 

people 

^ud   th« 

i-ar  the 

couid 
Bhga- 

lerican 
Dan 
|H:tt>ey 
jpairick 

m  the 
quite 
'n  in 

MUry 

living 

lemiath 
md  no 
>Ne   ihr 

?r  job. 
jshe  set 
JrtrayaJ 

ti    the 

play. 

mis- 

►nt  the 

|eneral, 

cotiid 

>'eB    an 

lucratic 

in  the 

I  but  he 

pi«y. 

imajor 

On« 

lliams, 

•c* 

Lyame's 
life,  &s 
Un  kid. 
liWren. 
Id  WU- 
shima, 
diction 
ted  out 
fng    too 

rdest  to 
\as  that 
ry  dif£i- 
finnette. 
piayed 
did   it 


that 
poor 
R.9- 

|»<rener>. 

\(H>  dark 

is    very 

where 

aiwaya 

In  Th« 
Muctjoa. 


y 
4 


Winters 

Ion  Chan- 

winnins 

\he   Spike 
tune   is 


^ 


■■■ 


TUESDAY.  APRIL  2.  1957 


THt  OAUY  TAR  HBIL 


■■■■ 


PA6t  THMft 


■9 


Team  Receives  Plaudits 
For  Wonderful'  Season 

Letters  were  received  by  Bob]  Jim  Peden.  Jr..  chairman  of 
Young  from  the  student  bodies  of  |  the  Carolinas- Virginia  Region  of 
several  North  Carolina  colleges '  the  United  States  National  Stu- 
this  week,  sending  praise  and  glory  I  dent  Assn..  summed  it  up  this  way: 
for  the  season  turned  in  by  the  "I  know  that  many  have  already 
r\C    basketball    team.  |  expressed  their  sentiments  to  you 

The  letters  were  sent  from  East  •  '"  ^^^  ^^^  ^^^'  °''  ^"^^  concerning 

'  the  fabulous  record  and  the  cham- 
pionships piled  up  by  your  No.  1 
basketball  team  this  season,  but 
I  would  like  to  take  this  oppor- 
tunity to  add  my  heartiest  con- 
gratulations, and  my  hopes  for  as 
successful  a  season  next  year.'' 


Carolina    CoHege.    Lenoir    Rhyne 
C  ollege,  and  from   the   offices   of  \ 
the    Carolina-Virginia    Region    of 
the    United    States    National    Stu- 1 
dent   Assn.  | 

Eddie  Dennis,   president  of  the  ! 
East    Carolina    College    SGA    had  I 
this  to  say:  "I  would  like  to  take  I 
this  opportunity   to  offer  congrat-  ' 
ulations     to     the     University     of 
North    Carolina    basketball    tejen 
for     the     splendid     record     they 
maintained  this  season,  and  to  the 
student  body   for  the  magnificent  i 
support   which   was   demonstrated.  | 
Our    heartiest    congratulations    to 
Coach    Frank    McGuire.    his    team, ' 
and  the  University  of  North  Caro-  , 
Una."  I 

From   Lenoir  Rhyne  came  word 
from    Paulwyn    Bolick,    president 
of  their  SGA.  to  this  effect:   "We 
at  Lenoir  Rhyne,  who  are  so  en-  ' 
thusiastic     over    the     record     our 
teams  have   made  throughout  the 
years     and    especially    this    year, 
join   you   at    Carolina    in   saluting 
the  nation's  number  one  team  and  i 
wish  you  continued   success   next ' 
year." 


CLASSIFIEDS 


FIVE  ROOM  BRICK  HOUSE  IN 
center  of  town — has  hobby  work- 
shop. Call  9458  during  day  or 
2926  after  5:30  and  during 
weekend. 


April  10  Date 
Set  In  Tryouts 
For  Peer  Gynt 

Tryouts  for  Iben's  "Peer  Gynt", 
the  Carolina  Playmakers'  final 
production  of  the  season,  will  be 
conducted  Wednesday,  April  10, 
at*  4  and  7:30  p.m.  in  the  outdoor 
Forest   The^er. 

The  production  will  be  a  new 
version  of  the  drama,  adopted  by 
director  Kai  Jurgensen,  associate 
professor  of  Dramatic  Art,  from 
his  and  Robert  Schenkkan's  trans- 
lation. 

According  to  Jurgensen,  ''This 
is  an  extremely  diUficult  show 
and  all  local  talent  is  needed."      ' 

Only  seven  of  the  cast  of  32 
will  be  asked  to  stay  over  the 
Easter  vacation.  j 

Ten  copies  of  the  script  are 
now   on  reserve  in   the   Library 


Covering  The  University  Campus 


WAAC 

The  W.A.A.  Council  meeting  will 
be  held  tonight  in  Graham  Me- 
morial  at   7   p.m.   All   representa- 


Sigma  Nu  Pledge  Class  Officers'  Dates 


Three  dat^es  of  the  Sigma  Nu  fall  pledge  class  officers  are  pictur- 
ed above.  The  large  picture  is  Miss  Ardis  Messick,  the  Star  Princess, 
of  Duke  University  She  is  pinned  to  Jim  Kimzey.  Top  left  is  Miss 
Connie  Hobby  of  New  Bern,  date  of  Ashe  Exum,  vice  president.  At 
botlcm  left  is  Miss  Angeline  Papazisis,  date  of  Art  Kilpatrick,  social 
chairman.  Not  pictured  are  Misses  Betty  Covington  and  CharloHe 
Mixon,  respective  dates  of  John  Crawford,  secretary-treasurer,  and 
Pete  Brake,  president. 


If  '    . 

COSMOPOLITAN  CLUB  I 

I     The  Cosmopolitan  Club  will  have  j 
I  its   annual    spring   o-emester.  open  { 
house  Sunday  afternoon'  at  Hillelj 
House  on  Cameron  Ave.  Displays  j 
from  different  countries  arranged  [ 
by  members  and  their  friends  will  j 
be  on  exhibit,  according, to  an  an- j 
nouncement.    Members    will    wear 
their  native  dress.  A  program  of 
dances,   singing   and    other   enter- 
tainment will  follow.  Refreshments 
with  an  international  flavor  will  be 
served.  The  public  ha^-  been  invit-  j 
I  ed,  the  announcement  said.  i 

1  STUDY  GROUP  j 

'     The     World     Religions     Study' 
Group  will  hold  its  regular  weekly 
meeting  tonight  at  6   p.m.  in  the  \ 
upstairs    dining    room,    of    Lenoir ! 
Hall  to  discus  Jewish  faith.  All  in- 
terested persons  have  been  invited. 
HIGHWAY    EMPLOYEES 

There  will  be  a  meeting  of  high- i 
way  employees  and  state  employees  { 
from  areas  6,  6A,  7  and  8  in  Me-  { 
morial    auditorium    in    Raleigh    at 
7:30  Wednesday.  An  announcement  j 
of    the    meeting    yesterday    i-lated 
that    while    the    meeting    is    not  i 
statewide,  "it  is  of  utmost  import-  i 
anoe''    that    employees    from    the 
areas  mentioned  attend   "in  their  j 
own  interest  and  the  interest  of  all  > 
state  employees."  I 

PSYCHOLOGY  CLL»  j 

The  Psychologj'  Club  will  nteet  | 
Wednesday  night  in  room  102  of  j 
New  West  at  7:30.  Dr.  John  Kelton  i 
will  .speak  on  "Psychometric  Lab.'  ; 
All  undergraduate  psychology  stu-  j 
dents'  and  other  students  interest-  j 
©d  in  psychology  have  been  invited  ! 
to  attend. 


FTA 


There  will  be  a  meeting  tonight 
of  the  Future  Teachers  of  America 
at  8  p.m.  in  Peabody  Curriculum 
Lab.  Paul  A.  Johnson,  administra- 
tive assistant  to  Gov.  Hodges,  will 
speak  on  the  Pearsall  Plan.  Tickets 
for  the  May 'Banquet  will  be  on 
sale  at  the  meeting,  according  to 
an  announcement. 

HOSPITAL  SERVICE 

The  YMCA  Hospital  Service 
Committee  will  meet  tomorrow  at 
4  p.m.  in  the  office  of  John 
Riebel,  former  YMCA  associate  di- 
rector. 
BIOLOGISTS 

Some  85  leading  biologists  from 


'T'S  ROMANCF  Sn  T?  ML'SJC 


T«rrt4c  ■■  hi*  irM  mI*  ■tarrii^  rota 

m  CtNEMASCOPE  ma  MeROCOlOR 

NOW  PLAYING 


Carolina 


througho\^  the  United  States  will 
gather  at  UNC  this  week  for  a 
four-day  study  of  courses  and  cur- 
ricula for  undergraduate  students 
in  biological  sciences.  . 


TODAY   ONLY! 


[SSRsrqj 


W.AJiJTF*)    TO    BUY:     COMBINA- 

tion    baby    carriage    and   stroller,  i  tives   have   been    urged   to   attend 
Please   call  and   to   present    their   yearly   re- 
ports. , 


Needed    immediately. 
5391 


IT  S  FOR  REAL! 


by  Che5fer  Field 


SP^IHO 


"I  bef  your  pardon,  pretty  Miss, 

But  would  you  give  me  one  small  kiss?" 

"And  why  should  I  do  such  a  thing?" 
"Because,  my  dear,  today  it's  spring 
Because  there's  romance  in  the  air 
Because  you  are  so  very  fair!" 

"TTiere's  a  lot  in  what  you've  said. 

Okay,  kiss  me  ...  go  ahead.*? 


MORAL*  Faint  heart  never  won 
real  satiafoction  in  anKdcing.  If  you 
like  your  pleasure  BIG,  smoke  for 
real — smoke  Chesterfield.  Packed 
more  smoothly  by  ACCU«RAY, 
it's  the  smoothest  tasting 
smoke  today. 

Smoke  fer  real  ...  smoke  Chostorfloldl 

$60  for  tnery  ^Uomtphieal  vtrtt  accepted  for  publiea- 
tion.  CMetHrfleU,  P.O.  Box  21.  New  York  46,  N.Y. 

OUa<B  *■*«  TokMM  C*. 


Educator  Dies 
In  High  Point 

HIGH  POINT  — (AP)  —  Mi.ss 
Mary  Owen  Craham,  a  retired  ed- 
ucator and  a  cou.sin  of  Dr.  Frank 
Porter  Graham,  Ignited  Nations 
mediator,  died  at  8:45  o'clock 
Sunday  night  in  the  Presbyterian 
home  h«'re. 

She  was  a  professor  at  Woman's 


Symposium 

Meeting 

TomofTow 


Hiilel  Festival 
Starts  Monday 

The  Ffth  Annual  Uillel  Festival 
of  Jewish  Music  will  begin  here 
Monday  night  with  an  hour  pro- 
gram  of  "The   Old   Testament 


The  theme,  format  and  possible  p^""'*^"  '''"'^  ^*^»'""  ^UNC. 

,         ,             ,          ,     ^      ,.            An  hour's  program  of  the  same 

.speakers  for  next  years  Carolina '  ,k^.„„     k  ,        *u    j  rf        .  ^ 

'  theme,    but    with    different  com- 

Collegp.    Greensboro,    from     1908   Svinpo-sium   will    be   di.scussed    to- j  positions    will    be    pre.sent«d   »t    1 
to    1912.   and   was  a   former  presi- j  morrow    at    a    meeting    in    Wilson  j  p.m.  over  .station  WCHL. 
dent  of  Peace  Institute  at  Raleigh,  i  Library  a.ssembly  room   at  4   p.m.!      Thereafter,    on    each    successive 
now   Peace  Junior  College.  j  j  Monday  and  Tuesday,  at  the  same 

She  was  an  aunt  Qf  Dr,  Edward  I      ^"   interested  faculty  ^d<8mber«   ^our  throuehout  April,  other  iwo- 

and  students  have  heen  ^arged  to  |  ^^^^^^  ^^  ^  pre.sented. 

The  .second  program  will  be  de- 
vHed  to  "Jewish  Themes  by  Jew- 
ish   Composers,"    The    third    pro- 


Kiddor      Gr-jham,      fStnuiF  ».eban- 

cellor  of  Woman's  College,  who 
is  now   at   Wellesley.   Mass. 

She  had  been  at  the  Presby- 
terian home  since  last  June  26. 
She  had  been  critically  ill  for 
four  days. 

Funeral  arrangements  were  in- 
complete as  of  Sunday   night. 


attend,  according  to  an  announce- 
ment Monday. 

Interim  Chairman  Jim  Exum  an- 


DAILY    CROSSWORD 


ACltOSS 

1.  Look  out! 
(foH) 

5.  Flock 

9.  Small  candle 
10.  Constella- 
tion 

12.  Faultily 

13.  Cant 

14.  Faaten 

15.  Heavy 
hammer 

1«  Indisposi- 


3.  Property  24.  Fellow 
(L.)  (slang) 

4.  Bitter  vetch  25.  Storage 

5.  Stop!  area 

6.  A  Great  26.  Excuse* 
Lake  27.  Kind  of 

7.  Skin  lottery 

8.  Followed  28.  Mend 

9.  An  ungulat*  29.  Musical 
11.  Carol*  instru. 
15.  Perch 
17.  Ostrichlike 

bird 


HEEMO  aaaHS 


ELECTION 

(Continued  from  page  3) 

Athletic  Assn.  race  will  be  con- 
tested. Misses  Marilyn  Strum* and 
Emily  Sommers  are  both  contend- 
ing for  secretary  of  the  organiza- 
tion. Candidates  for  the  other  of- 
fices are  president.  Miss  Frances 
Reynolds:  vice  president,  Mi.:.^  Pat 
Anderson;  treasurer,  Mi$s  Ka 
Smith;  and  awards  chairman,  Miss 
Helen  Walker. 

Running  unopposed  for  presi- 
dent of  the  Carolina  Athletic  Assn. 
is  Wayne  Bishop. 

Also  unoppoi-ed  is  Whit  "Whit- 
field, seeking  the  post  of  campus 
National  Student  Assn.  coordina- 
tor. 

Harold  Williamson,  (independ- 
ent) and  Frankie  Black  (SP)  are 
competing  for  head  cheerleader. 

Gene  Whitehead  is  the  sole  con- 
tender for  editor  of  the  Yackety 
Yack. 


nounced  that  he  expects  between  |  ^ra*"-  "The  Music  and  Worship. 
40  and  50  faculty  representatives ,  Traditional  and  Modern.'  and  the 
to  be  present,  as  well  as  approxi-  fo"'-th  program:  "Jew-ish  Folk 
mately  35  to  40  students.  The  over- i  Music.  Traditional  and  Modern, 
al!  group  will  be  divided  into  sev-  The  first  program,  as  well  as 
eral  smaller  groups,  to  discuss  descriptive  notes,  have  been  pre- 
the  topics.  From  these  discussions.    P^red  by  Mrs.  May  McAll.  a  grad 


the  theme  for  next  year's  Sympo- 
sium  will  be   adopted  as  soon  as 


I  uate   in    musicology    from    Colum- 
I  bia    University   who    now   lives   in 


all      the 


has   been 


opinions      have      been  |  Chapel   Hill, 
thoroughly    exploited    and    weigh-       The   second    Program 

,'     *^'       *^  ,,  .„    J;^     prepared  by  Dr.   and   Mrs.  Aaron 

ed  by  the  overall  group,  he  said.    P  •'»""''"   "i^" 

•*  *       r  siegman;     The     Third     by     Joel 

Exum  also  said  that  the  Interim  j  Fleishman.    UNC    student    in    the 
Committee  is  highly  pleased  with    school     of    Law. 
the      enthusiasm       and      interest;  . 


ce»r«i«Nr  im7  txc  co<;«-coui  caM#«iir 


Dont  just  sit  theiel 


23.  Half  an  em 


tion  to  move   18.  Pull 
1»  Elevated  22.  Rave 

train 
(colloq.) 

20.  Music  note 

21.  Rude 
dwelltnf 

22  Colon 

24.  Plead 

25.  Forbid 
2«.  Malayan 

boat 

26.  Arm  (slang) 
29.  River  (It. » 
31.  Music  note 
S2.  Duck 
34.  Outflow 

37.  Not  good 

38.  In  collision 

39.  New  Eng- 
land state 

41  Hits 
heavily 

42  Enthuaiasm 

43  Gaelic 
44.  Exact 

points 

DOWN 

1.  Hunger 
8.  Think 


ments 
30  Of 

greater  age 

32.  Throb 

33.  Dwell 
35.  Number 


V««tcr4»y'*  Aatwar 

36.  Carries 

39.  Cushion 

40.  Land 
measure 


shown     by     the     new     committee 
members,  and  hopes  to  turn  over  i 
his    responsibilities    to     the     new  1 
chairman  as  soon  as  he  is  selected,  i 


ORIENTATION 

The  Orientation  Committee  needs 
girls  to  help  with  typing  every  af- 
ternoon for  the  next  few  weeks, 
and  would  appreciate  any  help, 
according  to  an  announcement. 


Any  girls  whwo  are  interested 
have  been  asked  to  contact  Mary 
Jane ,  Fisher  in  319  Mclver,  phone  { son  Library,  Graham  Memorial  and 


Applications  Are  Due 

students  who  are  interested  in 
becoming  a  counselor  in  the  1957 
Orientation  program  must  submit 
an  application  form  to  the  YMCA 
or  Graham  Memorial  by  April  9. 

Orientation  Chairman  Jerry  Op- 
penheimer  made  the  announcement 
earlier  this  week. 

All  applicants  will  be  given  a 
test  on  the  material  contained  in 
the  1956  manual  at  7:30  p.m.  on 
that  date  in  Carroll  Hall.  The  man- 
uals have  been  placed  in  the  Wil- 


^xtttcn 


ORWC  STORf 


CNA^U  lll«X.»>^ 


You'll  enjoy  today^s  copy  <rf  this  publication 
much  more  if  you'll  get  up  right  now  and  get 
yoiu-self  an  ice-cold  bottle  of  Coca-Cola. 
(Naturally,  we'd  be  happier,  too!) 


0'i!(ui.. 


Bottled  iNtdar  ovMMirtty  «f  Tha  Coca-Cola  Compony  by 

DURHAM  COCA-COLA  BOHLING  CO. 


*e*hs*  b  « t»«'a(af*d  \tmim-m»A. 


•i«aa,  iHf  cocA-coiA  compamy 


8dl34. 


the  YMCA.  he  said. 


ENGINEERJNG  GF?ADUATES 


How  KEARFOTT'S 

Xraining  Program 
Work«... 

A  "learning  bg  doing"  phiiMcphy  i*  basic  at 

Kaarfott.  Aa  an  ausistaut  Project-Engineer, 

yo»  are  given  ussignmfntM  in  teveral 

engineering  laboratories  to  determine  in 

which  you  can  make  your%e8t  contributiotis 

and  find  your  greafe^  satisfaction.  Under  the 

guidance  of  senior  engineers  and  specialists, 

each  man  takes  his  project  throiigh  from 

inception  to  final  produetion,  thus  acquiring 

a  broad  ejcperience  background.  Success 

dspsud*  Oh  individual  initiative  and 

resoureefnlnes*. 


'Caligula'  Leads 

"Callgols,"  tha  newly-formed  Patitas  Dramatiqua    production  opaning    Sunday,  stars   Lloyd  Skinnar, 
^•ft  and  Miss  Paga  Williams.  Tha  play  will  ba  prasanlad  at  B  p.m.  in  tha  Graham  Mamorlal  Main  Launga. 


KEARFOTT 

is  interviewing 
on  your  campus 

TUESDAY,  APIIiL  9 

Make  your  appointment  now 
with  your  CoUege  Placement  Ofice 

Kearfott's  leading  position  in  the  deyelopment 
and  production  of  aircraft  contpol  and 
navigation  instruraents  makes  the  company  a 
fertile  ground  for  the  young  engmeer  to  develop 
his  talents  and  gain  the  experience  which  mean* 
success  in  his  chosen  profession. 

Assisting  in  the  design  and  development  of 
today's  most  advanced  systems,  the  graduate 
engineer  quickly  gains  in  icnowledge  of  the 
functions  and  applications  of  the  gyros,  synchros 
and  other  eomponewts  which  comprise  systems. 
You  will  share  in  Kearfott's  vital  role  in 
TACAN,  inertial  guidance,  stable  platforms 
*and  other  servo  mechanisms  for  today's  most 

•  important  jet  aircraft  and  industrial  development. 

In  addition  to  close  association  with  the 
engineers  whose  work  has  set  new  standards 

•  for  the  industry,  you  enjoy  an  educational 
assistance  program  to  help  you  further  your 
formal  education,*upplementing  the  "learning 
by  doing"  program  through  which  you  will 
choose  your  field  of  special  interest. 
Decentralised  plants  provide  ample  opportunity 
to  become  familiar  with  top  management  and 
ilistinguish  yourself  through  initiative  and 
imagination.  Salaries  and  benefits  are  liberal, 
and  advancenxent  is  based  on  your  cjvn 

value  and  contribtttion. 

I^^TIt  //  you  etmnml  mttend  tin  inlervism 
on  thU  dmy,  ikl»a*s  terite  for  more  information  f 
Robert  J.  Sperl,  TschsiicM  Placsmsnt  Supmnis^r, 
£nfii»Mrl»c  Fsrtcnntl  Offus. 


tt  COMPANY,  INCORPORATED 

\V%  MAIN  AVE.,  CunON,  NfW  JUUY  Wok 


7 


PAGi  FOUR 


THl  DAILY  TAK  Hill 


TUESDAY,  APRIL  2,  ^9X7 


*w^yv  ^ 

,                           '«S2^         S 

>-Q  jq  I",  C 

:,5rr^^ 

/  Cheek   Sports  Editor 

Ted«y's  column  is  written 
King.  Editor's  not*.) 


by      Assistant     Sports      Editor,      0411 


Netters   Beaten;  Baseball  Today 

Harvard  >N^^/^^rmen  OHTo  Florida 

Cctrolina,  14-1    ;  ,  —    , 

InQuesfOflndTitle 


Tomorrow  afternoon  the  '5*r 
Heels  open  their  Big  Four  ^a»»fl 
mgainst  N(^tb  Carotina  State  in^*' 
lei^.  "  ■   ' 


latt  Starting  Ttme  Hard  On  Attendance 

Ttiis  «nem<^on  the  Cartrfina  hasoball  team  makes  its  fi£th  sftxaifiht 
*)H>«^r«nce  in  Kmerson  Stadium,  concluding  a  long  home  stand  that 
l;»>t<^  Wcdm^sdAj   thrNijfh  Saturday  last  week. 

Th<»  j;«mc  •  l«st  w  ock  affofdod  a  R(H>d  opportunity  for  Carolina 
s:\h1<^nl,v  to  c%^  «H»t  and  watch  their  ball  club  in  action,  and  a  good  many 
»H  th<'««  dKt  Yet  there  is  still  much  to  l>c  desired  in  the  w^y  of  at- 
toniiancr  at  the  baseball  s^antes.  The  weather  last  week  was  conducive 
to  ,cxH>d  attendance  and  the  student.>;  who  did  get  out  were  fairly  re- 
>poiu«»\  c 

Porhaps  eno  of  tho  factors  which  koops  many  students  away  is 
tttt  fact  tt>at  tt>o  gamos  Mui  too  lato.  In  most  instances,  many  of  the 
fens  who  ere  on  hand  fo^  the  first  of  the  9an>e  don't  stay  around 
until  tlM  end  royardlots  of  the  score.  Many  of  them  have  a  sot  moal- 
ttn>e  and  dont  want  to  eat  late. 
The  merit  of  starting  week-da.v  game.s  at  3:30  hao-  been  rehaslied 
over  and  over  and   the  University  apparently  feels  that  3:30  is  the 
be.st  time. 

There  is  some  doubt  in  our  minds  as  to  the  soundness  of  a  rui* 
saying  that  athletic  teams  cannot  begin  contests  until  3:90;  eapecially 
wt>en,  by  special  permission,  the  golf  and  tennis' teams  are  aUowod 
to  start  earlier.  Neverttteless,  it  is  a  University  regulation  .and  there 
is  little  than  can  be  don^  about  it.  In  the  opinion  of  this  vtowor, 
though,  baseball  attendance  would  increase  considerably  if  the  time 
were  moved  op  at  least  a  half-hour  and  better  still,  an  hour. 
» 

Basebaliers  Off  To  Good  Start 

Thus  far.  the  basebaliers  have  a  6-3  record  and  have  shown  signs 
of  developing  into  a  very  good  ball  club.  Coach  Waller  Rabb  remarked 
at  the  oul..\.t  of  Ihe  season  that  he  would  have  a  strong  defensive  club 
but  that  the  hitting  remained  a  question  mark. 

The   hitting  so  far  has  not  been   powerful   but  it  has  been  con- 
sistent.  Actually,  the  Tar  Heels  haven't  had  a  good  opportunity  «o    { 
display    their    power    at   the    plate   since,    schedule-wise,   they    have    ' 
^  been    a    few    games    ahead    of    their    opponents    and,    conseifuontly,    J 
^  haven't  faced  any  top-notch  pitching.   In  the  four  games  last  week, 
'   the  Tar  Heels  drew  a  total  of  34  walks.  | 

Coach  Rabb  ha^-  been  alternating  hi.s  infield  regularly  trying  to  I 
come  up  with  a  combination  that  will  be  able  to  go  well  when  the  i 
season  gets  tougher.  The  outfield,  however,  seems  pretty  well  set  j 
with  Joe  Shook.  Dick  Hudson,  and  Bomber  Hill.  i 

Tw-o  brigh,t  spots  in  the  Carolina  lineup  are  shortstop  and  catching.  ! 
.lunior  Roger  Honeycutt  has  done  a  very  good  job  at  short  and  his  ! 
flitting  has  been  very  encouraging  Thursday,  he  won  a  game  for  Jim  ! 
Raugh  wi^  a  tie-breaking  single  in  the  bottom  of  the  ninth.  j 

Catcher  Jim  Legette  is  probably  the  biggest  surprise  of  the  Mta- 
»•"•  LegeHe  is  a  Catcher-first  basenoan  who  took  over  tt»e  backet^p- 
ping  cHeres  when  Jim  Love  was  declared  ineligible  and  has  done  a    ' 
remarkable   iob  both  oiffensively  and  defensively. 

The  pitching  department  this  season  seems  to  be  much  :»troQger 
Than  it  was   la^-t  year.   Righthander  Jim  Raugh.   the  ace  last  seaaoo. 


By  JIM  CROWNOVER 

Carolina's     on-again.     off-again 
tennis  team   iufiered    one   of   its ;  By  STEWARD  BIRD  Roth  will  join  Rose  in  the  sprints 

wdrst  beatings  of  the  young  season ;  a  swimming  team  comprised  of  with  Tony  Schiffman  going  in  the 
on  the  local  courts,  losing  14-1  to  |  stars  from  Carolina,  N.C.  State  and  distance  events.  Pete  Grodskey  will 
Harvard  yesterday  ■  Duke  will  leave  at  one  o'clock  this  be  team  manager. 

The  visitors  from  Massachusetts  afternoon  for  Daytona  Beach,  Fla.'  Dave  Mclntyre  in  the  sprints, 
showed  no  mercy  as  they  swept  |  for  the  National  AAU  indoor  swim- '  Dick  Fadgen-in  the  breast  stride 
superbly  through  all  ten  of  the  |  niing  championships  where  the '  and  butterfly  events.  Frank  Nauss 
oingles  matches  and  four  out  of -group,  under  the  title  of  North  I  in  the  distance  races,-  along  with 
the  five  doubles.  j  Carolina  Athletic  Club,  will  defend '  relay   men   Saunders   and    Robert- 

Harvard's  senior-studded  netters 
'  far  out-classed  the  Tar  Heels  and 
served  notice  that  they  are  to  be 


its  title  of  lasrt  year. 


son  will  make  up  the  State  portion 


The  fifteen  man  agregation  un-    of   the   team.    Ken   Whitney   from 
der  the  direction  of  coaches  Ralph   Duke   and   possibly   former   Caro- 
reckoned  with  in  NCAA  compete-  j  Casey  of  Carolina  and  brother  Wil-   Una  star  of  last  year.  Jack  Nelson, 


tion.  The  Harvard  boys  arc  defend- 
ing Elastern  Intercollegiate  champs. 
The  one  bright  spot  in  the  Caro- 
lina camp  was  the  doubles  victory 
of  the  number  two  combination 
of  Geoff  Black  and  dimutive  Frank 
Livingstone.  They  defeated,  in  fine 
style  6-2,  6-4,  Harvard's  a-econd  duo  1  Krepp,  winner  of  the  NCAA 


lis  of  State,  will  compete  against  ^  will  further  aid  the  Carolina  AC 
the  best  college  and  non-collegiate  |  cause. 

swimmers  in  the  nation  during  the  |  Headquarters  for  the  swimmers 
three  day  meet  commencing  Wed- 1  will  be  the  Princess  Issena  Hotel 
nesday  night.  |in    Daytcna    Beach    until    Sunday 

Heading  the  Tar  Heel  delegationlmorning  when  they  will  return  to 
will     be     All -American     Charlie   native  soil   with   what   they    hope 


T  Meet  Gamecocks  Here  At  3:30 

•y  BILL  KINO  Rabb  has  used  only  four  men  in 

The  Carolina  Tar  Heels  go  after  the  outfield.  Dick  Reston  played 
win  number  7  this  afternoon  as  in  the  WasMngton  and  Lee  game 
they  entertain  the  Gamecocks  of  in  place  of  regular  centerfielder, 
South  Carolina  at  3:30  in  Emerson  Dick  Hudson.  The  other  two  regu- 
Stadium.  lar  outfielders  are  Joe  Shook  and 

The  Tar  Heels  are  concluding  a  Ivale«  Hill, 
five  game  home  stand  and  are  Jim  Legette,  a  sophomore  who 
seeking  their  second  straight  At-  took  over  the  catching  duties  when 
lantic  Coast  Conference  victory.  Jim  Love  was  ruled  ineligible,  is 
T^iiu-sday,  the  Rabbmen  defeated  the  number  one  catcher  and  one 
Maryland  on  a  three-hit  pitching  of  the  club's  top  batters, 
performance  by  righthander  Jim  The  Tar  Heels-  have  hit  beyond 
Raugh.  Roger  Honeycutt  broke  up'  expectations  so  far  this  season, 
the  ball  game  with  a  single  in  the  This  was  supposed  to  be  the  weak 
bottomof  the  ninth  inning  driving  spot  of  the  club.  The  top  two  hit- 
across  the  only  run  in  tiie  game,     i  ters    Jire    Legette    and    shortstop 

After    returning    from    Florida  i  Roger  Honeycutt. 
with  a  3-2  record,  the  Tar  Heels  |  '  ' 

dropped  an  11-7  decision  to  Dela 


of  Cal  Place  and  Ben  Heckscher.     ' 
The  netters  meet  Harvard  again 
here  this  afternoon. 
The  Summary 

Singles:  JanU  (H)  defeated  Bank. 
6-1.  6-i;  Gottlieb  (H)  defeated 
Black.  6*1.  6-2:  Heckscher  (H)  de 
fcated  Livingstone,  8-6,  9-7;  Sears 
(H)  defeated  Newsome,  6-1.  6-4; 
Place  (H)  defeated  Van  , Winkle 
6-0.  6-1:  Gianett  (H)  defeated  Mc 
Iver.  6-2.  6-3;  Mills  (H)  defeated 
Smith.  6-2.  6-0;  Goldman.  (H)  de- 
feated Walker,  6-2,  6-1;  Cameron 
(H)  defeated  Koc^ntz,  6-1,  6-4; 
Krogh  (H)  defeated  Pultz.  6-4.  6-2. 

Doubles:  Junta  and  Sears  (R)  Mary 
defeated  Bank  and  Newsome,  0-6,  world's 
6-2.  6-3;  Black  and  Livingstone  (C)   hold   a 


100  will 


ware,  then  came  back  with  wins 
over  Maryland,  Ithaca,  and  Wash- 1 
ington  and  Lee. 

Coach    Eabb    has    been  /  experi- 

n>enting  with  his   infield  and  as 

be   their   second   consecutive  I  y^^-  ^»^'  ^°^  come  up  with  an  es- 


and  200  yard  backstroke  titles  this 
past  weekend.  Walt  Rose  will  go 
in  the  100  and  220  freestyles,  the 
breaststroke.  and  the  relays.  Along 
with  him  in  the  breaststroke  and 
butterfly  events  will  be  Bill  Zick- 
graf,  "Mac"  Mahaffy,  and  fre.-.-h- 
man  star  Paul  Wachendorfer.  Bill 


national  championship. 


FICTION    BOARD 

An  important  meeting  of  the 
Carolina  Quarterly  Fiction  Board 
will  be  held  at  5  p.m.  today  in  the 
Quarterly  office  at  Graham  Me- 
morial.    ,  . 


Noted  Net  Star  Holds 
Clinic  Here  Thursday 


defeated  Heckster  and  Place,  6-2, 
6-4:  Gottlieb  ami  Weld  (H)  defeat- 
ed Walker  and  Mclver,  6-0  6-4; 
Mills  and  Pratt  (H)  defeated  Stew 

ard  and  Smith,  6-2,  6-2;  Goldman  j  ^f    the    British     Wightman    Cup 
and  Cameraa  (H)  defeated  Koontz    Tpgrn   and    British   and    Scandina 


Hard  wick,     one     of     the 
best'  tennis    players,    will 
tennis   clinic   on   the   var- 
sity courts  Thursday  at  3:00  p.m. 
Since    1936   .Miss   Hardwiek   has 
been  in  the  tennis  spotlight.  Her 
record    includes   b^ing   a    member 


they  won  the  World's  Mixed 
Doubles  Professional  Champion- 
ship by  defeating  Pauline  Bet 
and  Frank  Kovacs.  in  1953. 

The  clinic  is  open  to  the  public. 
In  case  of  rain  it  will  be  held  in 
the  Women's  Gym. 


and  Pulti,  6-4,  6-2. 


Mermen  Lose 
In  NCAA  Meet; 
But  Are  Proud 

By  RON  MILLIGAN 

Carolina's  five  top  wrestlers  to 
the   NCAA   wrestling   tournament, 
held  in  Pittsburgh,  Pa.  Friday  and 
Satitrday,    Vvtarned     beaten    but 
hould  get  a  great  deal  of  help  from  lefty  Charlie  Cross.  Cross  is  only  i  ^^'^    ^^^    *   clear   conscience    of 
a  sophomore  but  h^  has  the  potential  of  turning  in  some  good  work  !  having  done  his  best  against  some 
this  season.  Righthanders  Don  Saine.  Charlie  Aycock,  and  Tom  MauRs-    '^^  *«  natitm's   best 
by,  should  give  tJie  mound  staff  a  tremendous  boo„t.  Big  things  are        Tar     Heel     grappler, 
also   expected   of   lefthander  Joe   Morgan.    .Ail    of   these    hurlers   will 
probably  get   a  starting  assignment  at  some  time  during   the  .season 
with  Raugh.  Cross  and  Aycock  leading  the  way. 


A  Tennis  Team  With  Fight 


Despite  the  fact  that  the  Carolina  netters  were  severely  hit  by 
graduation  and  acedemic  problems,  this  year'^-  team  takes  a  backseat 
to, no  one  for  sheer  guts.  The  netters  have  been  improving  with  every 
outing  and  should  have,  by  the  end  of  the  season,  come  up  with  some 
promising  material  for  the  future. 

The  new  tennis  coach  is  Valdimir  Cemik.  Cemik  is  a  voteran  of 

many  matches  and  has  played  and  beaten  some  of  the  top  nottors 

In  the  country    Ho  will  be  aided  by  freshman  coach.  Ham  Strayhom. 

Strayhorn  is  the  freshman  coach  and  has  been  acting  head  cooch 

of  the  varsity  since  the  illness  of  John  Kensfield. 


115  lb. 
David  Wall  just  couldn't  seem  to' 
turn  over  on  his  ventral  side  and  ] 
was  pinned  esgrly  in  his  match  by| 
Bob  Mysrs  of  Lehigh.  j 

Scrappy  little  130  lb.  Bob  Wag- 1 
ner  bad  the  same  trouble  as  Wall. ' 
Wagner  was  pinned  by  a  very  good 
wrestler.    Vic    DeFelice    of    Pitts- 
burgh,   who   placed   third   in   the  ■ 
nation  last  year. 

The     most     outstanding    repre- 
sentative   for    Carolina    was    137 
lb.   Perrin  Henderson.   Henderson 
was  decisioned  4:0  by  Ted  fiien-  ^ 
kowski  of  Pittsburgh. 


{  vian    singles    and    doubles    cham- 
I  pion. 

i      In  1940  Miss  Hardwiek  won  the 
,  National   Championship  at   Forest 
I  Hills,     the     U.S.L.T.A.     .sectional 
'  tournaments  in  Los  Angeles.   San 
Francisco,     Palm     Beach.     Miami. 
Hot  Springs.  St.  Louis  and  Chica- 
go. 
1      As  a  professional  Miss  Hardwiek 
has  played   against  and  with  such 
players     as    Tony     Trabert.     Mau- 1 
,««en     CoonoUy.     Ken     Jiosewall.  i 
Alice    Marble,     Don     Budge     and  i 
Bobby   Riggs.    She    won   the    Wo-j 
men's  Professional  Singles  Cham- 1 
pionship    in     England     and     with 
Pancho  Gonzales   as  her  partner,  < 


A's  First  Six 


Golf  Team  As  Strong  As  Ever 


Hopes  are  high  for  another  banner  golf  season.  The  defending  ACC 
champs  have  what  is  believed  by  many  to  be  one  of  the  greatest  teanu 
in  Carolina  history. 

Athletic  Director,  Chuck  Erickson,  in  his  17th  season  m  «olf 
coach,  has  a  strong  team  with  virhich  to  work.  The  Tar  Heol  linkslers 
arc  highly  regarded  in  the  Atlantic  Coast  Conference  and  are  favored 
to  successfully  defend  their  conference  championship. 


Duke  Opens  Defense  Of  ACC 
Title  Against  South  Carolina 


I      WEST   PALM    BEACH.    Fla.    — 

'  (AP)  —  Manager  Lou  Boudreau 
of  the  Kansas  City  Athletics  to- 
day   named    the  six    starting    pit- 

;  chers  he  expects  to  start  with  this 

I  season. 

Named  were  Tom  Morgan  and 
Rip  Coleman.  New  Garvcr.  Alex 
Kellner,  Tom  Gorman  and  Wally 

,  Burnette.     all     members     of     last 

I  year's  A's. 

Kellner.   veteran  southpaw,   and 
Burnette.    a  young   right   bander, 
were  starters  last  year,   although 
Burnette  was  only  with   the   Ath- , 
letics  part  of  the  time,  being  ob- ' 
tained  from  Denver  where  he  ap- 


-1MART  HARDWIOK 


tabliahed  eombination.  Rabb  has 
been  alternating  Chuck  Hartman 
and  Jim  Harwell  at  third,  and  Car- 
son Oldham  and  Russel  Perry  dt 
first  * 

j  Spring  Humor . 

j      Bill  Skowron.  Yankee  first  base- 
I  man,  was  sitti^ng  jp  Jhe  press  box 
j  at  Al  Lang  field,  his  broken  thumb  , 
in  a  cast.  He  yelled  to  teammate 
Billy    Martin,    strolling    onto    the 
field  from  the  clubhouse.  , 

The  little  second  baseman  look- 
ed up  and  grinned.  He  pulled  a 
first  baseman's  mitt  from  under 
his  arm.  "I'm  taking  over, 
Moosel"    he    yelled. 

"Yeah?"  answered  Skowron. 
"But  who's  gonna  hit  for  you?"    , 

Manager  Casey  Stengel  even  is 
outdoing  fainiiself  wiille  platooning 
his  New  York  Yankees. 

In  yesterday's  game  against 
Kansas  City,  old  Casey  had  El- 
ston  Howad  in  left  frield.  Tony 
Kubek  in  c<:nter  and  Joe  Collins 
in  right.  Howard  came  up  the  ma- 
jors as  a  catcher,  Collins  as  a 
first  baseman  and  Kubek  played 
shortstop  for  Denver  last  season. 

!  Jack  Tighe,  new  manager  of 
i  the  Detroit  Tigers,  was  talking 
I  about  Heih  Score  and  Boston's 
million -<k>Uar  "offer*'  for  him. 
"that  kid's  going  to  be  one  hell- 
uva pitcher."  he  aaid.  "He's  fast 
al]  the  time. 

"You  know  most  fast  ball  pitch- 
ers slow  up  a  bit  somewhere  in  a 
game.  But  that  cookie's  fast  for 
the  whole  niM  innings. 

"He  lets  up  once  in  a  while,  and 
when  he  does  he's  just  doing  you 
a  favor.  'Course,  when  he  lets  up 
it  just  makes  that  fast  ball  look 
all  the  faster. 

"I'll  tell  you.  No  other  pitcher 
I  know  of  ever  struck  out  Harvey 
Kuenn  twice  in  one  game.  But 
this  guy's  done  it  a  couple  times." 


Summer  Work 

EARN  $80  PER  WEEK 

plus   cash    scholarship    and 

p»-!d  vacation.  This  is  your 

invitation  for  interview. 
a 
105  GARDNER  HALL 

2  P.M.  THURSDAY 

APRIL  4      . 

Please   be   prompt 


Charlie  Boyette  also  looked 
good  in  his  bout  with  Dale  Kettle- 
son  from  Iowa  State.  Boyette  was 
decisioned  5:0.  Kettleson  went 
on  to  place  fourth  in  the  157  lb. 
division  of  the  nation. 

Dave  Atkinson  fought  very ;  peared  in  20  games  with  a  7-6  rec- 
hard  throughout  his  match  in  the  |  ord  and  w  inding  up  the  year  at 
167  lb.  division  with  Jerry  Powell ,  columbus  where  he  appeared  in 
of  Pittsburgh,  but  Atkinson  seem-  28  games  and  had  an  11-10  rec- 
ed  to  have  run  out  of  "gas"  to-   ^^^    ^jth   the   As  he   was   in   18 


DURHAM  — (AP)  —  Back  in 
home  territory  after  a  week  long' 
stay. in  Tallahassee,  Fla..  Duke's 
baseball  team  opens  defense  of 
its  Atlantic  Coast  Conference 
title  Wednesday  afternoon  here 
against  South  Carolina's  Game- 
rocks. 

The  Blue  Devils  experienced  a 
week  termed  "highly  successful  in 
all  aspects"  by  coach  Ace  Parker 
in  the  Florida  State  Invitational 
Baseball  Tourney.  Duke  beat  de- 
fending champion  Florida  State 
on  Saturday  night.  8-1.  to  throw 
the  round  robin  event  into  a 
three-way  tie  among  Duke.  Flori- 
da State  and  Michigan  State,  each 
with  4-2  marks. 

The  losses  suffered  to  Florida 
State  (2-0)  and  Michigan  State 
(3-2)  are  the  only  setbacks  suffer- 
ed by  Duke  this  season.  The  de- 
fending champs  carrj-  a  6-2  mark 
into  the  conference  wars. 

Parker  said  he  hopes  to  start 
lefthander  Dick  Smallwood  against 
the  Gamecocks,  if  the  classy  pit- 
cher's arm  i.s  back  to  normal. 
After    pitching    an     84     triumph 


over  Yale  last  Monday,.  Small- 
woods'  arm  developed  sorenesi 
and  would  not  respond  to  treat- 
ment last  week.  He  had  a  6-4 
mark  last  season,  and  Is  1-0  thus 
far  this  year. 

If  Smallwood  is  not  ready, 
Dick  Burton  (2-1)  and  Harleigh 
Fatzinger  (2-0)  are  both  ready. 
They  combined  to  pitch  the  two 
wins  Saturday  night. 

Sophomore  Pete  Maynard  and 
Junor  Dave  Sime  are  leading. 
Duke's  hitting.  Maynard,  most 
valuable  in  the  tourney,  is  hitting 
and  even  .500.  Sime  is  right  be- 
hind  with   .452. 


wards  the  last  few  minues.  At- 
kinson lost  by  decision  5:0. 

Coach  Barnes  took  movies  and 
notes  of  the  matches  that  his 
men  participated  in  and  this  in- 
formation should  \}c  helpful  next 
winter  when  Barnes  begins  mold- 
ing a  prospective  championship 
team. 

The  NCAA  tournament  ended 
wrestling  for  1966-57  and  the 
weary  gi^pplers  now  hang  up 
their  tights  and  unlace  their  soft 
shoes  for  the  last  time  this  season. 


Giliey  Joins  All-Stars 

RALEIGH— (AP)— Woke  ^r- 
est  Center  Jim  Giiley  has  koon 
signed  to  play  with  the  Coflogc 
All-Antericlns  and  will  soo  action 
when  the  team  meet*  The  Har- 
lem GlobetroHers  hero  Ttturs- 
day  night. 

Giiley,  6-6,  a  native  ef  Winston* 
Salem,  averaged  15  points  por 
game  this  season. 


Deadline  For  Tri  Delta 

Deadline  for  the  1957  Tri  Delta 
Scholarship  Competition  which  be- 
gan Monday,  March  18,  is  Friday.  1  good  job  we'll  be  quick  to  make 
according    to    an     announcement  \  a  change." 


games  and  had  a  6-8  mark.  Kell- 
ner in  20  games  had  a  7-4  show- 
ing. 

Only  surprise  in  Boudreau's 
choices  was  Ned  Garver.  who  had 
arm  trouble  last  year  and  saw  lit- 
tle action.  He  has  been  bringing 
himself  along  slowly  this  spring 
purposely  and  the  A's  manager 
admitted  he  was  banking  more  on 
Ned's  over-all  pitching  record 
than  on  his  spring  training  show- 
ing. 

"These  six  men  are  the  ones  I 
expect  to  be  our  starters  when  the 
season  opens,"  Boudreau  said. 
•Of  course  if  they  falter  and 
someone  else  comes  along  to  do  a 


Milton's  Spring  Sweepstakes 

Starting  TUESDAY,  APRIL  2  and  Ending 
SATURDAY,  APRIL  6 

WITH   THE   FIRST   AND   EACH   ADDITIONAL   $10.00   PUR- 
CHASE, YOU'LL  RECEIVE  A  SWEEPSTAKES  TICKET  FOR 
A   $39.95    IMPORTED  COTTON 

SHETLAND  JACKET  OF  YOUR  CHOICE 

DURING    THIS    CONTEST    PERIOD,    THE    LUCKY    CO-ED 

WILL    RECEIVE    A    $U.9S    POLISHED    COTTON    BLAZER 

OF  HER  CHOICE. 

(For.  instance,  if  you  make  a  $40.00  purchase,  you'll  receive 

four  tickets  for  the  drawing,  to  be  field  Monday,  April  8th, 

and  announced  in  the  Tuesday,  April  9tli  iuue  of  the  Tar 

Heel.) 

Milton's 
Clothing  Cupboard 


from  Miss  Betty  Dale  Pressly,  serv- 
ice projects  chairman. 

The  sorority's  scholarship  pro- 
gram ill  an  international  service, 
irrespective  of  sorority  affiliation. 

All  women  students  of  UNC  are 
eligible  to  apply  for  the  scholar- 
ijhips,  and  application  blanks  may 
be  obtained  from  the  Dean  of 
Women's  office,  according  to  a 
sorority  spokesman. 

Judges  ol  the  applications   will 

be  Miss  Isftbelle   MacLeod;   Dean 

i  E.  L.  MackJe:  Mx^.  Robert  M.  MiU- 

er,   altimnae   advisor;    Betty   Bell, 


Selection  of  Gorman  for  a  start-  j 
ing   assignment  leaves   a   gap   in 
the  A's  bullpen.  For  the  past  two  j 
years   Gorman  has   been  the   No. 
1    fireman.    He    appeared    in    52 
games    last    season,    winding    up ' 
with  a  9-10  won-lost  record.  j 

Morgan  was  a  bullpen  pitgher  i 
for  the  Yankees  but  he  has  been  \ 
almost  'sensational  as  a  starter  i 
for  the  A's  in  spring  training. 

Coleman,  a  southpaw,  was  only  ' 
3-5  wilh  New  York  last  season  but  I 
has    been   firing    impressively    in 
training  and   showing  an   amount 


president;    and  Betty  Dale   Press-  of  control  regarded  as  unusual  for^ 
ly,  service  jMrojects  chairman.       .  him.  .    _     •_    \J.>  \ 


COME  AND  GET  IT! 
IVe  Still  Got  ESSO  EXTRA 

Dpwntoy/n  Prices  For 
Regular  Gos 

and 

My  Regular  3^  Under  That 

Plus 

Bring  This  Ad  and  GaI  1  Cant  OH  Per  G«l.  Gas, 

5  Cants  Par  Qt.  Oil 

Credit  Cards  Honereil  Agein 

At  The  Students'  ffietid 

WHIPPLE'S  ESSO  SERVICE 


The  Art  Of  Tailoring 

"Every  man  to  his  business, 
is  beyond  all  doubt  as  noble  and 
but  indeed  the  craft  ef  a  tailor 
as  secret  as  any  in  the  world." 

HAVE  OTHERS  FAILED? 

With  expert  workmanship  »n6 
the  best  service  possible  Pete 
The  Tailor  has  and  will  continue 
to  give  you  the  ultimate  in 
tailoring  needs. 

And  while  you  are  at 
Pete's,  won't  you  check  and 
see  if  you  have  left  any 
clothes  and  overlooked  pick- 
ing them  up7 

PETE  THE  TAILOR 

Specializing  in 
"Ivy   Leaguelzing" 

133V3    E.   Franklin  Strttt 


J 


WASH  and  WEAR 

LONDON  F06 

...the  mmlm  coat  yow  moM 

The  weatherman  may  )«► 
wrong,  Jbut  you're  afway* 
right  in  this  lightweight 
LONDON  FOG  all-weather 
coat.  Smartly  tailored  ^f 
Calibrt  Cloth,  an  exclusiv* 
super  blend  of  Daeron  and 
fine  combed  cotton... Tvind; 
rain,  and  wrinUIe-resista^C  • 
Washes  in  machine  or  tub*..' 
drip  driei  overnight.  Colors; 

White  *  H9turM\    _  S2f:?!5 

Matching  Cap  %  3<95 

COLLCOE   SHOP-    'f 


Howard  Johnson  Restaurant 

BREAKFAST  U    ;     ? 

LUNCH  -^  ;:-*%^t^ 

DINNER 

SNACKS 
"Landmark  For  Hunqry  Tarheels" 


What  A  Wonderful 

i ,,  Boqk  Season!     ^ 


Hugh  Rankin 
And  George  Scheer 


Van.Wyek  Brooks 


Walter  Lord 


,^'\. 


Arthur  Schlessinger,  Jr. 


Rebels  and  Reilcoats  —  The  Am- 
erican Revolution  seen  thrcmgh 
contemporary  eyes.  A  fascinatiqg 
job! 

Days  of  thf  Phoenix  —  A  very 
perceptive  crhic  remembeiS  the 
wild  Twenties,  Interesting  materi- 
al on  Lewis,  I>reic«r,  Anderson, 
Mencken,  and  a  host  of  lesser  4it- 
crary  lighU  of  that  glamorous 
period. 

A  Day  of  Infamy  —  a  dramatic, 
but  factual,  account  of  the  eventi. 
that  took  place  at  Pearl  Hartwr 
on  December  7th,  1941.  The  re- 
sult of  great  research,  it  movefi  at 
a  heart-thumping  pace! 

The    Critis     in     the     Old     Order. 

The  first  of  a  projected  four- 
volume  portrait  of  the  A|pB  of 
Roosevelt",  this  book;  traces  U»o 
social  and  economic  tensions  that 
reached  a  crijis  in  the  election  of 
Roosevelt. 


Enjoy  All  The  New  Books  At 

The  Intimate  Booksho|» 

Open  Till  10  P.M. 


205  E.  Franklin  St. 


WEATHER 

Partly    cloudy    and    cooler    with 
an  axpected  hish  of  65. 


U.H.C.   Ubfary 

Serisils   Dspt. 
Ch?.pel    Hill,    K.    C. 
8-5X-49 


onft  c  3)atty  it  ^Tar  >Cc  c  I 


EXCHANGE 

ConwTien   sefisc    is   in    dantand 
thare.  Saa  editorial,  page  2. 


VOL.  LVII     NO.  157 


Complete  UPi  Wir§  5«rvie« 


CHAPEL  HILL,  NORTH  CAROLINA,  WEDNESDAY,  APRIL  3,  1957 


Offiett  in  Graham  ifcmorM 


FOUR  PAGES  THIS   ISSUE 


EDITOR;  EVANS  NEW  PRESIDENT 


New  Editor  Pledges 
Best  Paper  Possible 

Neil  Bass  last  night  won  the  ed- 1  Jennie  Margaret  Meador.  Bab 
itorship  of  The  Daily  Tar  Heel  by  Hornik  and  Tom  Long.  "I  pledge 
more  than  300  votes  over  his  op-  my  every  effort  and  waking  mom- 
ponent,  Charlie  Sloan.  |  ent  toward  giving  you  as  students 

The  total  was  unofficial  as  of :  the  best  paper  possible,"  he  said. 
1:30  a.m.  All  returns  were  in  ex-  "You,  as  students,  have  given  me 
cept  Town  Men's  II.  ,  your  faith  and  trust.  I  shall  not  lei 

Bass  received  his  biggest  single,  you  down,"  Bass  said 
margin  from  Dorm  Men's  I  diotrict  |      Bas  •    is    a    rising    senior    from 
with  242  votes.  Sloffn's  largest  sin- ;  Spring  Hope.  He  has  covered  stu- 
gle  total  came  from  Dorm   Mens   dent    politics    for   The    Daily    Tar 
IV  where  he  picked  up  183  votes.   Heel  for  the  past  three  years. 

Bass  said,     I  enjoyed  the  cam-       His  platform,  as  announced  dur- 
paign  very  much.  I  feel  that  my  op-  j  ing  the  campaign,  contained  three 
ponent,  Charlie  Sloan,  ran  a  very  '  principles: 
gooti  and  clean  race.  |      1.— Professional   athletics   —   "I 

"1  appreciate  very  much  all  the  am  for  a  winning  team  and  1  shall 
work  which  my  supporters  did  for  [  continue  to  be  for  a  winning  team." 
me.  Without  their  effort  ind'  cd-  2.— Closed  IFC  meeting  —  He 
operation,  my  victory  would  not,  j  indicated  that  he  was  against  clos- 
ol  course,  have  been  possible, '  he  j  ed  meetings  on  principle. 
said.  1      3.— "Aighanij.anism"— He    indl- 

Bass  .-aid  he  especially  thanked '  cated  here  ihsti  there  was  an  over- 
his  campaign  staff,  Al  Goldsmith,  emphasis  of  world  news 


NEIL  BASS 

students  voice   their  opinions 


Wilson  Is  Youngest  Person; 
To  Have  Book  Published  Soon 


SONNY    EVANS 

tieic  sttident  body  head 


COUNT  INCOMPLETE: 


By  PJETE  rV'EY 

i 

I  The  youngest  person  in  Chapel 
I  Hill  is  ,86  years  old  Prof.  Louis 
{  Round     Wilson. 

i  He  proves  his  >'outhful  outlook  in 
j  hi.s  book  to  be  published  by  the  Uni- 
1  versity  of  North  Carolina  Pres.s 
j  -May    1.- 

I      The   History  of  the  University  of 
North    Carolina    during    its    period 
The    Uiuversity    Party,    with    in-   ton  (UP)  won  a  6-months  seat  with     ct    greatest    growth.    1900   to    1«30— 
complete  returns  from  one  district,    708  votes.  Al  Goldsmith,  alao  UP,  j  when    U    achieved    national   stature 
dominated   the  legislative  seats   in    won   with   702.  j  ami    ranking,    i^    written    with    wit. 

'tumor,  ptalnslaklns  care  for  his- 
torical details  and  illustration  and 
with  an  obvious  zeal  for  educa- 
tional excellence  attained  by  the 
I'niversity. 

Most  Notable  Change 
UXC  has  seen  change  since  it 
started  as  the  first  American  state 
University  m  1793.  but  "at  no  time 
Ivas  it  l>een  more  notable  than  in 
the  ifrst  period  of  the  twentieth 
century,"    writes    Prof.     Wilson. 


UP  Dominates  Election 
In   Legislature   Seats 


last  nishl'-s  election  T<!wn    Men's    II — .Jeff    Hare   and 

In  D  rm  Men's  1  a  recount  was    J»«k  Lawing.  BtAh  elected  were  in 
necessary  and  had  not  been  tabu-    ^^^ 


North  Carolina  is  the  l>est  produ<'t 
'  ,if  her  civilization  that  North  Caro- 
'  Ihia  has  to  show  to  the  world."  4 
Brought    Coker   Here  * 

It  was  Venable  who  brought 
j  William  C.  Coker  to  Chapel  Hill 
'  and  appointed  him  director  of  th^ 
I  ArtxM-etum.  k 

'Under  u|e 


GM  Full  Of  Smoke 
And  Election  Talk 


lated  a.s  cf  1  am.  The  three  can- 
didates leading  were  Phil  Gerde.-: 
(SP).  Ed  Levy  (UP),  and  Chas.  Col- 
ey'  (SP). 

Following  are  the  votes  of  the 
Dorm   Men's  Districts: 

Dorm  Mens  n — Rudy  Edwards 
<.SP),  230  votes  and  Charley  WU 
son  (LT),  193. 

Etorm  .Men's  HI  —  Tally  Ed- 
dirgs  142  and  Harold  O'Tuel,  117. 
Don  Jacobs  won  the  si.x  months 
seat  unopposed  with  155  votes.  All 
three  were  on  the  SP  ticket. 

Dorm  .Men's  IV  —  Everett  James, 
266;   Al   Alphin.   253;    Bob   Brown- 


Town  Men*.,-  HI— Again  the  UP 
made  a  clean  sweep  with  Pete  Kel- 
ly 126,  Tom  Kenan,  104,  and  Bob 
by  Perry,  93. 

Town    Men's   IV — Dick   Sessoms, 
UP,  defeated  Al  Brown,  SP,  48-21. 


Carr  Chosen 
Senior  Class 
President 


The   lights   burned    late   in   Gra- ;      By    11:00    a  few   of   the  returns 
ham   Memorial  last  night.  i  were  definitely  in.  By  12:00  'trends 

And  smoke-filled  rooms  gave  ev-    began  to  take  form.  By  1:(X)  every- 
idence  to  the  fact   that  something  |  thing   was    pretty    well   organized. 

_^„„  .-,-.,-_—  extraordinary  was  going  on  in  the  ;  Winnerj  were  announced   and  the 

PrcsWen"    Edward    KkMer     gm^'^'****""**'*'   *>»^«n^'*<    rooms   which  ^  hanf^:r«n  crowd  began  to  disp^gne. 

of    \*ll-    ''''^^   *"^   refilled  with  people   in- 1      Some  wore  fatigued  smiles,  some 

lent  on  some   bu.sy  task.  tired,  dejected  frowns.  Some  were 

There   was   a    bustle   of   activity,    winners,    some     were     losers     and 
an  occasional  lull  broken  by  a  ner- ,  some  were  just  interested, 
vous  tittle  of  laughter.  '      The    battle    of    the    ballots    had  j 

The   Rendezvous    Room   crowded  '  been  fought  and  decided.  The  scene 
w^th     interested     bystanders     who    faded   and    the   picture   would    be 
wandered  nervously  from  table  to   still — until  next  year, 
table,    peering    over    busy    figures  | 


Prof.  Wilson  writes, 
artistry  of  Coker,  and  the  m^ac'^ 
of    rain    and    aun.    an    unlnT^tiat 
crayfish  bf  wns  chanc«il  lnto>  n 
thJnc  of  nhUlna  iooolhuno 


ham.  one  ot  the  "heroes" 
son's  history,  had  this  to  say  £>f 
uiuversity  ediK-ation;  •'The  advJn- 
•jre  of  discovering  and  liberatifig 
i.ne's  mind,  far  fronti  being  a  dull 
j;nd  dreary  performance,  is  (he 
most  thrilling  of  all  youthful  ad- 
ventures." 


It   was   apparent   by   press   time 
last  night  that  Paul  Carr,  SP,  was 
ing,    241:    and    Caleb    White,    234.  ^^^<^^*^^  s^"*<^^  <^^^s  President  over 
All  were  on  the  SP  ticket.  Harry    Ellerbe    (independent)    and 

Dorm    Mens    V   —    Pat    Adams !  ^^^'"^^  Ragsdale,  (SP). 
(SP),    169.    and    Eddie    Bass    (UP),       ^^""   ^^^  received  295  votes   to 
140.  274  for  Ragsdale  and   155  fw  EU- 

The  LT  captured  two  seats  in  ^'^^^^  ^'^^^  3^'  ^^^^s  ^^  except  for 
the  Dorm  Women's  district.  MLss-  ^^^^^  ^^^"^  "^o*"  M^"'*  li- 
es Nancy  Llewellyn  and  Julia  Ann  ^^^^^  Madison  (UP)  apparenUy 
Crater,  with  222  and  219  votes  re-  *^"  ^^^  secretary  po^-ntion.  Char- 
spectively,  won  for  the  UP  Mi.s  ''*  Ashford  of  the  UP  was  elected 
Libby  Straughn  with  196  took  the  \  treasurer  and  Miss  Pat  Dillon  (UP), 
third  seat  for  the  SP.  ;  ^^^^^  chairman  . 

Winning  the  two  Town  Women's  j      ^^'^  '"eceived  252  votes  from  the 
seats    were    two    UP    candidates  '  ^^"^   districts  while  Ragsdale  re- 
Mis,  .'s  Tog  Sanders,  95,   and  Ann  '  ^'^'^^^'^  ^^  ^"^  Ellerbe.  124. 
Holt,  76. 

Following  is  the  list  of  legisla- 
tor seats  elected  in  Town  Mens 
districts: 

Town    Men's  I — Charles   Huting- 


Servlces   To  N.  C.          .  i  huddled  intently  over  their  extra- 
s 

It    was   President   E.   K.   Grahgm  ordinary  tasks. 

before   he   died   in    19;l^,    who   ™>k  Grouped    at    tables    were    threes 

•when    the   University    .    .    .    made'tne    University    "beyond    the    w.»ls  and  fours  engrossed  in  tabulating  j 

the   transition    from    the    status   of }  of  the  campus"  to  perform  greater  returns  from  the  spring  ballots  cast  i 

a    good    college   of   liberal    arts    to  1  service  for  the  people  of  the  state,  earlier    in    the    day.    Voices    hum- ! 

that  of  a  modern  university."                  The   University,    through    its    Ex-  med.  and  pencils  marked  abstract  | 

The   career   of   President  Fran-     tension   services,    stressed    the    im-  lines   which    in    turn    were    added, ' 

cis  Preston  Venable  was  marked     [wrtance   of   many    phases   of   edu-  checked,  computed  and  (by  the  in- 1 

cational,    economic,     governmental,  |  tent    grouping   around,   from    time  ; 

industrial  and  rural  life  of  the  state  to  time)  analyzed.                                | 

and    what    the    University    had    to  After  the  first  indefinite   hours ' 


Yack  Editor 


Says  He  Is  Confident 
Of  Successful  Year 

Sonny  Evans.  The  new  president  made  the  fol- 

He  was  the  choice  and-  majority  j  lowing  statement  upon  learning  of 
victor  last  night  in  the  contest  of    his  good  fortune: 
ballots  which  was  marked  by  a  ^ur- 1      "I  would  like  to  thank  everyone 
prisingly  large  turnout  at  the  polls  who  worked  so  hard  for  me  during 
for    the    spring    1957    election    of   the  campaign, 
campus  officers   and   positions.        j      "There  i.^-  much  work  to  be  done 

Sonny  E>ans  is  the  new  presi- :  in  the  months  ahead  and  I  am  look- 
dent  of  the  student  body  of  the  i  ing  forward  to  it  with  much  en- 
University  of   North  Carolina.        ( thusiasm  and  interest.  I  will  cer- 

He  won  by  a  margin  which  was   tainly  be  dedicated  to  working  for 
dot  tabulated   for  official   release  the    best    interests    of    the    entire 
at  the    time  The   Daily  Tar   Heel   campus, 
went  to  pres^-.  |     "W^ith  cooperation  and  assistance 

Shortly  before  midnight,  howev-  from  everyone,  I  am  confdent  that 
er,  with  approximately  half  the  re-   student    government    will    have    a 
tums*in,  E\'ans  led  Baum  779-602.  i  most  successful  year." 
This  figure  was  compiled  from  to-  \     When  he  learned  of  his  victor>-, 
tals  of  three  dorm  men's  and  dorm  !  vice  prej,ident  Furtado  said: 
and  town  women's'  districts.  j      "This  is  undoubtedly  the  gi-eat- 

Also  elected  to  support  Evans'  i  3st  honor  which  has  ever  been  be- 
Student   Party   iM-ograras  was   his  i  stowed  on  me. 
running  mate    for  vice   president,       "I  would  like  to  express  my  sin- 
Don  Furtado.  j  cere  thanks  to  the  students  of  the 

A  complete  ^weep  of  the  top '  University  of  North  Carolina  for 
four  student  government  offices  their  vote  ol  confidence. 
was  prevented  by  the  election  of'  "In  the  coming  year,  I  will  do 
Miss  Dot  Pressly  of  the  University  j  all  in  my  power  to  serve  capably 
Party  to  secretary  of  the  student  j  in  the  position  of  vice  president 
body.  Bob  Carter  was  elected  to  of  our  student  body,  devoting  my 
the  office  of  treastirer  to  round ,  full  attention  to  my  newly  as^um- 
out  the  SP  sweep.  ed  responsibilities." 

Sororities  Announce 
Next  Years  Officers 

UNC's    six    social    sororities   have       Delxirah  H.  Sink,  MooresviUe,  cor- 
asnounced  new  officers  for  the  com-    <-esponding  secretary;   Nola  J.  Hat- 
I  ing  year.  ;  ten.  Pascasoula,  Miss.,  house  man- 

PresidCTifs  of  the   six   groups   are   s;^er:    Pearla    A.    Reveile.    Conway, 
.Alpha    Delta    Pi.    Miss    Mary    Susan    .social    chairman;    and    Kathryn    K. 
VVhiteley,  Towson,  Md.;  Alpha  Gam-    Webb,    Raleigh,    rush    chai"man. 
n.a    Delta.    Miss   Barbara   A.    Fowl-       Alpha    Delta    Pi    officer.^    include 
e:.     Mt.     Airy;     Chi    Omega,     Miss    Misses     .Ajine    W.     Shaw.     Wagram. 
Katherine      K.      Coe,      Washington,    \  ice    president;     Dorothy    B.    Pres- 
D.     C. ;     Kappa     Delta,     Miss    Edith   f>y.     Raleigh,    corresponding    secre- 
V\'.    Mackinnon,    Charlotte;    Pi    Beta    tary;    Barbara    Hope   Broun.    Carth- 
I'hi,     Miss     Barbara     W.     .Madison,   ;ige.   recording  secretary,    Ellen   K. 
Washington.  D.   C.  and  Delta  Delta    J'-»hnson,    Raleigh,    treasurer;    Molly 
Delta,  Miss  Betty  Bell.  Greensboro.    R.     .Adams,     Wilmington,      as.sistant 

Other   .Alpha    Gamma    Delta   offi-   treasurer;    and    .Mary    Ann    Hofler, 
ccrs   are  Misses    Frances   E.    Rey-   Gatesville,    house    manager, 
iields.   Newton,   first   vice  president,       Chi  Omega  officers:    Misses  Mar- 
EmUy   L.   Somers.   Wilkesboro,  sec-    ^aret    (Peggj-i     Funk,     Wilmington, 

viee   president;    Katherine   A. 


Gene    Whitehead,    jimior    from 
Scotland  Neck  was  elected   editor  ^  ond   vice  president:   Margaret   Ruth   lei 


by  three  characteristics,  says 
Prof.  Wilson:  (1)  Sound,  scholar- 
ly work.  (2)  An  objective  scien- 
tific pr>lnt  of  view.  (3)  Skill  as 
M  constnictiYe  organizer  and 
builder. 

In  1912  Mr.  Venable  stated  in  a 
speech:  "Measured  in  terms  of  her 
greatest  dimensions,  interpreted  in 
terms  of  the  profound  realities  for 
'Ahich  she  stands.  Judged  on  a  na- 
t.onal  basis  and  by  national  stand- 
ards,   I    believe    the    University    of 


offer  to  help. 


of  the  Yackety  Yack  for  the  com- 
ing year.  Whitehead,  running  un- 
opposed, had  a  total  of  1613  votes 
as  of  12:15  a.m.  today.  The  returns 
in  at  that  time  included  all  dis- 
tricts except  Dorm  Men's  V  and 
three  Town  Men's  district*.  He 
will  succeed  Tommy  Johnson. 


Honor  Council 

Named  to  positions  on  the  wo- 
men's Honor  Council  are  Misses 
i  Punkin  Coe  (299),  Cindy  Seagraves 
I  (291),  and  Pat  Dillon  (271).  They 
I  won  the  three  seat.v  open  over 
j  Misses  Nancy  Davis,  Hannah  Kir- 
Women's  Athletic  Assn.   are  as    by,  Andrea  Stalvey,  and  Deborah 


WAA 


IcUows: 

President,  Miss  Frances  Rey- 
nolds, 523;  Vice-President,  Miss 
Pat  AnJerson,  521:  Secretary,  Miss 
Emily  Summers,  330;  Treasurer, 
.Miss  Ka  Smith,  522;  and  Awards 
Chairman,  Miss  Helen  Walker,  520. 


Sink. 


IN  THE  INFIRMARY 


Studonts  in  fho  Infirmary 
yesterday   includod: 

AArs.  Botty  Savage,  Misses 
Elizabeth  McKay  and  Eve  Mc- 
Clatchy;  ond  Roy  Cashion,  Rey 
Miller,  Thomas  Lippert,,  Joseph 
Creech,,  Fred  Phillips,  Wesley 
Jackson,  Fred  Baber,  Robert 
Schoize,  Herbert  Owen,  Wallace 
Kuralt,  and  Ben   Beard. 


Dormitory  Presidents  Win  In 
Big  Turnout  Of  UNC  Students 


Meeting  Today 
For  Symposium 

The    Carolina    Symposium    Com- 
mittee for  1958  will  meet  today   in'  they  were  posted  for  another  wait 
the    assembly    rt>om    of    Wilson    Li-   ing,  interested  crowd, 
brary  at  4  p.m.  , 

This  will  be  the  third  general 
meeting  of  the  Symposium  and  it 
hap  been  urged  that  all  faculty  and 
student  members  who  are  inter- 
ested in  participation  on  the  com- 
mittee   be   present   at    the  session. 

The  larger  group  of  faculty  and 
students  wUl  be  divided  into  a 
number,  of  smaller  discussion 
groups,  (each  of  which  will  focus 
its  attention  upon  three  •basic  ques- 
tionsi 

The  issues  are:  (1>  What  should 
be  the  major  themes  of  the  1958 
Symposium?  (2)  What  kind  of  pro- 
gram should  be  organized  to  pre- 
sent   these    issiies?     (3)     Who    are 


Whit  Whitfield    From  Illinois 


had  passed,  trends  began  to  appear  | 
and  uncertain  smiles  began  to  mark 
the  faces  of  some  of  the  onlookers. 

The  crowds  wandered  aimlessly,  i 
listlessly  back  and  forth  from  la-  I 
ble  to  table  j 

But  the  work  continued  stead- ;  As  of  press  time  early  this  morn- 
ily.  Figures  mounted,  were  tabu- ;  ing,  Whit  Whitfield  had  been  el- 
lated,  checked,  rechecked  and  sent  |  eoted  National  Student  Assn.  Co- 
forward    to    another    room    where    ordinator.   He    ran   for    the    office 

unopposed   and    will  succeed   Stan 
Shaw. 


.\eisler.    Concord,    treasurer;    Sher-  Hannan.       Lumtjerton,       secretary; 

rv    L.     Puckett,    Guilford    College,  Priscflla     Norman.     Dartnrtouwh, 

recording  secretary;  i  Mass.,    treasurer;    .Jane   L.    Welch, 

~  ■  • — ■ —        -      I  Washington,    social    chairman;    and 

■^  -      B^  I  i  Alarianna     Miller.     Pineville.      rush 

Best  Dressed 


Coed  Is  Junior 


GM'S  SLATE 


Activities  scheduled  for  Gra- 
ham Memorial  today  include: 

Senior  Social  Committee,  3- 
4:30,  Grail  Room;  Grail,  9-11 
p.m.,  Grail  Room;  Panhelienic, 
4:45-5:30,  Roland  Parker  1;  Je- 
hovah's Witnesses,  8-9,  Roland 
Parker*  1;  Law  Wives,  8-11,  Ro- 
land Parker  2-3;  Ways  and 
Means  Committee,  4-5:30,  Wood- 
house  Conference  Room;  IDC 
Court,  7-f:30  Weodhouse  Con- 
ference Room:  Bridge  Class, 
4:30  6,  Rendezvous  Room;  Pe- 
tites  Dramatiquas,  7:30-11,  APO 
Room. 


With  heavy  student  turnouts  yes-  Vice-President,  Duke  Haynie;  Man-  I  some  of  the  outstanding  people  who 
terday,  the  dormitory  presidents  jy.  president  Harvey  Allen  Vice-  >"^rit  consideration  as  possible 
were  elected  last  night.  I  p.^^^^^^    ■  ^[^^^^   ^    Funderbunk;  |  "■'^^''^''  °"  '^^'^  '^"^^-  . 

The   presidents    and    vice-presi- 1  It   is  hoped  that  the  stimulatmg 

dents  are  as  follows:  Stacy:  President.  Eddie  House,  Vice  ^  ^.^phange  of  ideas   at  this   meeting 

BVP:  President,  Bob  Kuhn^;  {  President,  Fred  Propst;  Alexander:  ^ill  be  a  good  start  on  developing  | 
Vice-President,  Ed  Proescher;  Ay- '  Pre.-ldent,  John  Hamnett,  Vice  program  plans  for  the  Symposium 
cock:     President,     Clifford     Mann,    President,  Dave  Parrish.  j  v.eek     next     year,     stated    Interim 

Vice-President,  Denton  Lots;   Ruf-  j      Steele:   President,  Mike  Kizziah,  '  Chairman  Jim  Exum  and   Faculty 
fin:  President,  Bob  Lowder,  Vice-   Vice  President,  Max  Price;  Grimes:  }  Advisor  Dr.  F.  N.  Cleveland. 
President,      Gus      Revis;      Joyner: !  President,  Clyde  Ingle,  Vice  Presi-        Exum   explained   that   during   the 

dent,  Leon  Holt;  Mangum:  Presi-  next  several  weeks,  the  central 
dent,  Doug  Bayliff,  Vice  President.  Symposium  committee,  composed 
Bo  Morgan;  Old  West:  President,  i  of  some  50  students  and  faculty 
James  F.  James,  Vice  President,  I  members,  >\'ill  be  formed.  The  in- 
Bruce  Miller;  uobb:  President,  Bill  '  terim  chairman  also  expre.%d  his 
ry,  Vice-President,  Tom  Gable;  j  Bailey,  Vice  Prefiident,  Bill  Sein-  j  wish  that  all  those  with  the  Jp- 
Lewis:  President,,  Paul  Woodard,  j  ure.-;  Everett:  President,  Rudy  Ed-  ^  terest  and  the  time  will  avail  them- 
VJce  -  President,  Carroll  Martin;  j  wards,  Vice  President,  Don  Mc- j  selves  to  serve  on  tbls  central  com-! 
Graham:    President,   Bob   Forrest, '  Gregor.  _        ,  mittee.  | 


President,     Jerry      Baynes,     Vice- 
President,    Jim    Casey;    Old    East: 
President,     Kelly     Wallace,     Vice- 
President,  Thomas  Husa-; 
Winston:   President,  Frank  Ber- 


SARAH  VAN  WEYK 

the  be^t  drensed  on  campus 


ciiairman. 

Delta  Delta  Delta  officers:    .Mis.ses 
Lucinda      Holderiie<s.      Greenslx)ro, 
vice    president;    Julia    Ann    Crater, 
Ualeigh,    secretary:    F'loi^nce    Fear- 
•iiigton,     Wiuston-Salem.    treasurer; 
Patricia   A.   DiUon.   StatesvUle.  rush 
Miss   Sarah    van    Weyk   has    been    chairman;    Eve   L.    .MiCIatchey.  At- 
^clected    the    best    dressed    coed   on'  lanta.    Ga.,    chaplain;    and    Eleanor 
the.  Carolina   campus.  C.    WilllaiTison,    Wirtnsboro.    La..   so- 

Selected  over  12  other  nominees]  -ial  chairman, 
by  various  groups  on  campus.  Mis,sj  Kappa  Delta  officers:  Mis.ses  Jane 
\aa  Weyk  will  represent  UNC  in  a'  1--  Patten,  Charlotte,  vice  president; 
search  being  conducted  by  a  wom-i  -line  Y.  Potter.  Wallace,  .secretary; 
r.n's  magazine  to  find  the  -TeniKetty  R.  Webster.  .Madison,  treas- 
Best  Dressed  College  Girls  inj  u'er;  .Nancy  W.  Graham,  ChartoUe, 
.\meriea."  The  ten  national  win-l  a.^sistant  treasurer;  .Van  Schaefrer. 
iiers  will  be  photographed  for  the-  Tallahassee,  Fla.,  rush  chairman; 
.\iigust  issue  which  will  be  devoted  i  Barbara  J.  Moore.  Crown  Point. 
f}»r  the  first  time  .solely  to  college |  Ind.,  assistant  rush  chairman; 
lashion.  I  .X-lice      S.      Eller.       Winston-Salem. 

A  junior  from  Winnetka,  111.  andi  l>ouse  manager;  Bart)ara  K.  Honey, 
a  member  of  Pi  Beta  Phi  Sorority,'  Chartotfe.  social  chairman;  and 
Mis.s  van  Weyk  was  sponsored  by|  Nancy  L.  Lyon.  Whiteville.  a^isLstaiit 
Carr  Dormitory.  At  the  nucleus  of  sucial  chaimvan. 
licr  wardrobe  are  a  number  of|  Pi  Beta  Phi  officers:  Misses 
very  basic  outfits  which  she  enjoys  Kathleen  L.  Corr,  Bronxville.  X.  Y.. 
transforming  to  fit  many  occasions,  ^^ee  president;  Elizabeth  L.  Fen- 
.She  prefers  wearing  strong  colors  wick.  Winston-Salem,  recording  sec- 
end  designs  and  makes  over  half!  retary;  Sarah  Jane  Shaw.  St.  Pe- 
nt her  wardrobe.  i  terkburg.  Fla..  corresponding  sec- 
A  board  of  judges  chose  UNC's  retary;  Susie  Fagen.  .Miami.  Fla., 
representative  on  the  basis  of  cer-'  'reasurer; 

ta'*n    Mandards    reconrmiended     by  I      Mildred   H.    Whitehurst.    Danville. 
the  magazine.  ;  Vo..   rush   chairman;    Mary   Arnold 

These  Inncluded  imagination  in  Garvin,  .\lken,  S.  C,  pledge  trainer; 
wearing  colors  and  accessories,  ap-  Roberta  A.  Hastings,  Orange.  Va., 
propria teness  of  dress  on  and  off  house  manager;  and  Nancy  Llewel- 
the  campus,  a  knowledge  of  how  to  ba.  Bronxville,  N.  Y.,  social  chair- 
use  make-up  effectively,  a  neat  and  man. 
becoming  hair  style,  a  clothes  bud-j 
get  and  wardrol>e  plan,  slimness, ; 
wearing  clothes  that  suit  your  type,' 
and  personal  grooming  and  impec- 
eableness.  |      Miss   Julia  .Ann  Crater   won  the 

Judges  of  the  contest  included  chairmanship  of  Woman's  Resi- 
Mrs.  Kay  Kyser,  Miss  Martha  dence  Council  with  488  votes.  She 
Decker.  Miss  Peggy  Funk,  Miss  ran  unopposed.  .Miss  Crater  will 
Peg  Humphrey.  Ed  Sutton,  Truman  succeed  MU«.-  Peggy  Funk  as  cbair- 
Moore,  and  Sonny  Hallford.  '  man. 


WRC  HeacJ 


FAOt  TWO 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


WEDNESDAY,  APRIL  J,  1W7 


Law  At  The  Book  Exchange: 
Someone  Should  Be  Careful 

The  Book  Exchange,  which  has  long  been  characterized  as  the  big- 
gest robber  in  Chapel  Hill,  haci  to  take  a  dose  of  medicine  reeemly. 

The  exchange  installed  a  rack  of  phonograph  records  for  sale  to 
the  students.  Sliortly  afterward  the  rack  was  removed. 

The  reason  for  the  sudden  rerao\'al  was^  state  law  ivhicli  says: 
".  .  .  it  shall  be  unlawful  for  any  unit,  department  or  agency  of  the 
state  government  ...  to  engage  directly  or  indirectly  in  the  sale  of 
oo<xIs.    wares    or    merchandise    in 

tioii  research,  articles  of  incidence 
to  classroom  work,  meals,  txx>ks  or 
to  articles  of  merchandise  not  ex- 
ceeding 25  cents  in  value  when 
sold  to  members  of  the  education 
staff  ...  or  to  duly  enrolled  stu- 
dents .  .  ." 

This  casts  in  doubt  the  ex- 
change's riglit  to  sell  tyfjewritevs, 
pipe  tobacco  costing  more  than 
2-,  cents  and  other  articles  not  con- 
nected with  education. 


YOU  Said  IT: 


com}x-tilion  with  citizens  of  tlvis 
state  .   .   ." 

In  other  words,  the  IJook  Kx- 
( hauge  was  untairhv'  competing 
witli  downtown  record  sellers. 

\\  hciher  or  not  the  law  (known 
as  the  L'mstead  Law,  after  Orange 
Ciounty  Rep.  John  l'mstead)  is  a 
gootl  one  is  not  im|x>rtant  here. 
What  is  important  is  that  the 
lWK)k  Kxchange  violated  it. 

We  are  happy  that  the  exchange 
turned  around  and  did  the  right 
thing  a^  s(K)n  as  the  illegality  was 
reported.  But  it  is  sad  that  the 
violation  should  come  about  in  the 

first  place. 

*  *  * 

The  Umstead  Laiv  exempts  or- 
ganizations of  the  Consolidated 
I  Diversity  from  the  law  only 
when  they  are  concerned  with 
selling  articles  produced  incident 
to  opeiaiing  of  incident  depart- 
ments, articles  incident   to  educar* 


It  is  f)ad  that  it  took  a  sugges- 
tion from  someone  outside  the 
University  (i.e.,  a  downtown 
merchant)  to  remind  the  Book 
Exchange  that  Elvis  Presley  rec- 
ords aren't  edncatioijal.  WTien 
one  remembers  the  high  liook 
prices  at  the  beginning  of  each  se- 
mester, one  begins  to  wonder  if  a 
member  of  the  law  fitxulty  should 
not  be  assigned  c  as  permanent 
guardian  of  the  exchange. 


It's  Time  For  Contemplation 


.\fter  a  mild  winter  and  seveial 
false  starts,  spring  has  finally  come 
to  the  campus.  With  it  come  hopes 
and  ambitions  and^  notes  from 
South  Building,  and  something 
else. 

The  something  else  Itas  been 
described  as  long  as  man  has  writ- 
ten aiid  spoken.  The  curent  ex- 
pression for  it  is  "the  re-birth." 

Like  m^ny  cliches,  "re-birtli"  is 
a  iruely  dcstriptive  word.  You  can 
"•c  the  rebirtli  in  nature,  up  on 
Ml  Corklc  Place  and  in  the  cher- 
vv  trees  and  throughout  the  Ar- 
Ixiretum:  vou  ran  hear  it  in  youi 
rlassmates  and  roommates;  you 
I  an  feel  it  within  yourself,  and 
you  can  even  detect  a  new  feeling 
in  vour  professor's  lectures.  The 
stirrino  has  started:  It  will  not  end 
imtil  the  heat  of  late  May  slows 
<  la>ses  down  and  pushes  ciowds  in- 
to ^  -Court  for  orangeades  iiiitesd 
of  hot  coffee. 


11  there  evei  was  a  time  of  year 
made  lor  self-contemplation,  it  is 
spring.  Spring  offers  a  plate  for 
(onteniplation  —  the  grasses  aiKi 
helds  and  woods  are  wartn  ami 
green  and  kindly  toward  one  s 
mind.  It  offers  the  time  for  con- 
templation—there is  an  hour  or  so 
oT  soft  daylight  left.  now.  after  din- 
ner, a  time  made  for  wanderin,; 
and  sitting  and  thinking.  And 
spring  offers  the  material  for  lon- 
tcmplation.  too  —  aren't  all  the 
ino.st  beautiful  fx>ems  afx)Ut  this 
time  of  the  year,  aren't  the  most 
creative  thoughts  born  during  the 
sp]  ing?  -  -^w 


The  Daily  Tar  Heel 

Thf  official  iTutteni  publtcatloD  of  tbc 
Pithtir'atinn^  Board  of  tb*  University  of 
North  Carol tna.  wher*  It  H  publislMd 
4aihr  except  Monday  snd  emainattw 
trtti  vacatmn  periods  »nd  mminier  ter«t 
Enfpred  as  <n>cond  class  ^natter  in  thi 
•oat  rvffk^  in  rhap^l  Hill.  N  C.  undet 
dre  Art  ««  March  «,  1870.  SohseriptioB 
nfen-  mailed.  94  per  f^tt.  t2  50^  nttmmt 
ter:  delivpred  $6  a  ffT\  S350  a 
ter 


Editor 


FRED  POWLEDai 


Managing  Editor  CLARKE  JONES 


NeWs  Editor 


NANCY  HILL 


Sports  Editor 


LARRY  CHEEK 


Buainess  Ifasager 


BILL  BOB  FUEL 


Advertising  Manager  _^  FRED  KATZIN 

CDrrORIAL    STAfr  —  Woody    Sem. 
Joey  Payne,  Stan  Shaw. 


NEWS  STAFF— Graham  &iyder,  Edith 
MacKinnon,  Walter  Schruntek,  Pring>e 
Pipkin,  Bob  Hi:gh,  Jim  Purks,  Ben  Tay- 
lor, H.  Joost  Polak,  Patsy  Miller,  Wal- 
ly  Kuralt.  Bill  King,  Cortis  Crotty. 

BUSINESS  STAFF— John  Minter,  Marian 
Hobeck,  Jane  Patten,  Johnny  Whitaker. 


What  can  come  of  self  contem- 
plation? One  thing,  the  most  im- 
p)ortant.  is  a  personal  philosophy. 
Too  many  students  have  philoso- 
phies and  codes  of  ethics  that  were 
formed  for  them  by  their  parents, 
by  their  schoolteachers  and  pro- 
fessors, by  magazines  and  news- 
papers, by  lx)ok  review  sections, 
by  moving  pictures,  television  and 
Society  with  a  capital  S.  Too  many 
of  them  fail  to  leaiii  that  su<h 
philosophies,  while  they  may  be 
the  best  in  the  world,  mean  noth- 
ing if  they  aiT  second-hand,  , 


.\  personal  philosophy  iv  the 
result  of  learning,  reading,  argu- 
ing, fighting,  perceiving,  of  being 
forced  to  do  something  in  a  cer- 
ti:in  situation.  It  also  is  the  re- 
sult of  calm,  quiet  self-contem- 
plation under  a  cherrv  tree  or  next 
to  a  cool  little  stream. 

(ihapcl  Hill  has  those  places, 
and  has  had  them  many  years.  No 
other  place  in  North  Carolina  is 
so  conducive  to  self-contemplation 
in  the  spring. 


Officers 
Serve  No 
Purposes 


Night  Editor .  ihanley  Spring* 


Last  week  one  of  the  candidates 
for  class  office  said  such  officers 
have  a  "concrete  and  definite  func- 
tion to  perform  for  the  better- 
ment and  enjoyment  of  the  mem- 
bets    of    their    cla»is." 

We  disagree.  Rather,  class'of li- 
ters have  nothing  to  do,  and  their 
offices  should  be  eliminated. 

Atwjut  the  only  class  functions 
here  are  social  ones.  Why  a  presi- 
dent, vice  president,  treasurer  and 
secretary  are  required  is  hard  to 
fathom. 

And  the  practice  of  electing  a 
senior  class  presidetit  is  a  foolish 
one.  I'snally  he  is  the  second 
choice  of  the  senior  class — the  first 
choice  is  elected  president  of  the 
student  body. 

But  the  senior  class  piesident  is 
the  one  ^\ho  delivers  a  speech  at 
graduation.  This  is  the  first  time 
many  of  his  classmates  ever  see 
him.  And  he  often  does  some  fool- 
ish things,  as  did  last  year'.s  presi- 
dent, who  hinted  at  commence- 
ment at  another  Civil  War(  much 
to  the  enjoyment  of  some  state 
legislators  and  other  racially  intol- 
erant persons  in   the  audience). 

The  student  body  president, 
who  is  supposed  to  represent  the 
student  body  for  a  year,  jrhowfd 
represent  it  at  graduation.  The 
other  officers  of  the  classes  do 
nothing  and  should  be  abolished. 


Sitwell's  Reading  Time  VJ osier? 


Editor: 

We  wonder  at  the  unprece- 
dented audacity  of  the  pseudo- 
intellectual  who  dared  pen  the 
tirade  in  Thursday's  Daily  Tar 
Heel  condemning  the  apathy  of 
"students  who  don't  even  try  to 
learn." 

This,  to  quote  a  very  famous 
and  revered  professor  here, 
"mouthing  of  high-sounding  plat- 
itudes" is  more  than  enough  to 
make  the  greatest  conformists 
among  us  rise  up  in  wrathful  and 
rightful  indignation  and  sack 
The  Daily  Tar  Heel  office.  To 
think  that  the  "mouthpiece  of 
student  opinion  would  stand  be- 
hind one  who  he  obviously  has 
a  Messianic  complex)  purports 
to  know  just  what  an  "educa- 
tion" really  is,  and  exactly  how 
each  of  us  should  acquire  it,  is 
almost  beyond  belief. 

We  wonder  just  how  the  sta- 
tistics concerning  attendance  at 
the  frost  reading  were  computed. 
Did  the  editor  count  the  faculty 
and  student  representatives  to 
arrive  at  he  startling  fact  that 
19  of  20  students  stayed  away? 
We  wonder  what  the  percentage 


weaker  one;  since  your  prelim- 
inary assumptions  are  so  falla* 
cious.  You  contend  that  "Most  of 
the  rest  (Americans)  do  not 
speak,  read  or  comprehend  the 
language  well  enough  to  feel  the 
beauty  of  her  poetry,  much  less 
to  understand  it  and  just  how 
many  different  interpretations 
we  could  elicit  were  we  to  in- 
quire. 

We  know  full  well  no  one 
could  understand  it  simply  by 
thumbing  through  her  poetry  or 
from  hearing  her  read  it;  but 
these  are  what  you  contend  and 
you  contend  that  "this  is  some- 
times  called    learning." 

Her  "cold."  coupled  with  thj 
terrible  accoustics  in  Hill  Hall, 
added  to  the  very  large  crowd 
there,  rendered  hearing  impossi- 
ble. Those  of  us  who  did  become 
eggheaded"  cnou^  to  read  Dame 
Sitwell's  poetry  and  did  find 
enough  energy  to  visit  Hill  Hall 
were   doubly   disappointed. 

Now  to  Memorial  Hall  and  the 
learned  Mr.  Don  Shirley.  It  seems 
to  us  that  you  are  much  more  im- 
pressed by  the  fact  that  Shirley 
holds   two    doctorates   than    that 


"his  virtuosity  is  worthy  of  the 
gods." 

In  any  event,  if  a  man  holds 
a  formidable  array  of  degrees 
and  if  this  man  appears  in  Mem- 
orial Hall,  it  immediately  be- 
comes an  absolutely  "unforgiv- 
able slight"  and  conclusive  man- 
ifestation of  apathy  and  listless- 
ness  on  the  part  of  the  wayward 
Carolinian  who  fails  to  attend 
despite  well-night  impossible 
weather  and  the  hours  during 
which  the  performance  was  giv- 
en (4-6  p.m.  when  many  labs 
are  in  progress  and  many  self- 
help  students  are  working). 

Llndoubtedly  the  worth  of 
these  "wonderful  parts  of  an 
education"  cannot  be  overesti- 
mated: but  there  is  far  more  to 
an  education  than  attending  the 
readings  and  concerts  of  various 
and  sundry  personages  who  are 
"honoring  our  campus." 

What  happens  to  one's  re- 
search and  .^'Ludy  while  one  is  in 
attendance  at  these  worthy 
evenl.s  which  happen  here  almost 
daily?  And  what  does  one  do 
about  one's  grades  after  he  takes 
an     exam,     unprepared     because 


one  was  in  attendance  at   some 
events  the  two  preceding  nights? 

These  questions  are  of  the 
foremost  importance  unless  one 
intends  to  remain  a  perpetual 
undergraduate  and  l^y  were 
kindly  left  unanswered  by  the 
editor. 

And,  in  conclusion,  exactly 
what  is  so  unsubstantial  about 
"getting  drunk  over  a  winning 
ball  team?" 

Personally  we  feel  far  more 
enthusiastic  about  being  part  of 
a  university  which  is  able  to 
present  such  a  noble  group  as 
our  basketball  team  has  proved 
itself  and  about  having  the  no,  1 
(mind  you,  no.  1)  team  in  the 
nation  here  at  Carolina,  than 
we  do  sitting  in  the  middle  of 
Hill  Hall  and  being  extremely 
bored  by  the  unseemly  remarkly 
of  the  pseudo-intellectuals  around 
us,  who  obviously  cannot  hear 
Dame  Edith  either  but  who  look 
look  around  demurely  from  time 
to  time  and  say.  '«he  reads 
well,  doesn't  she?"  or.  "Yes.  but 
her  voice  is  a  bit  thin,  don't  you 
think?' 

Nam*  WiHiheld  by  Request 


*  m.    %,    ■>■        Oil 


'»«a  -iM 


PriJIaman's  Dream  Team 

•  .  • 


would  be  concerning  the  facul- 
ty. 

But,  even  if  a  great  many  more 
people  bad  turned  out  for  the 
Frost  reading.  wher«  did  the 
learned  editor  intend  to  seat 
them?  , 

We  fee]  that  practically  every 
student  of  this  university,  at 
least  all  above  their  freshman 
year,  knows  full  well  who  Rob- 
ert Frost  is;  so  we  won't  waste 
time  belaboring  this  point. 

The  next  point,  that  those  who 
have  heard,  him  before  can't 
spend  the  time  to  hear  him 
again,  is  not  so  insupportable  as 
you  may  believe;  since  for  some 
of  us,  the  reading  of  Mr.  Frost's 
poetry  by  Mr.  Frost  adds  little 
and  detracts  much  from  the 
beauty  and  meaning. 

In  the  case  of  Dame  Edith  Sit- 
well,  here  is  not  a  somewhat 
"stronger  case,"     but     a     much 


t'il  Abner 


Dr.  Georges  Article  Concluded 


The  second  and  more  funda- 
mental reason  why  we  must  not 
yield  to  pressures  to  mix  the  rac- 
es in  the  schools  has  its  basis  in 
genetics.  It  is  based  on  the  fact.s. 
or  the  a.<«umptions,  if  you  wish, 
that  (1)  The  white  and  Negro 
races  differ  in  talents  and  abili- 
ties that  are  hereditary,  and  (2) 
The  greater  social  intimacy  re- 
sulting from  integration,  especial- 
ly of  young  people  in  school,  will 
promote  interbreeding  and  the 
protoplasmic  mixing  of  the  races. 
This  will  result  as  generations 
come  and  go  in  the  production  of 
an  ever  increasing  proportion  of 
mixed  breed  people  and  a  lessen- 
ing of  pure  strains.  That  is-,  the 
nation  will  become  progressively 
Negroid. 


If  these  facts,  or  assumptions 
ar*   not   supportable,   then   my 
major  objection  to  racial  inte- 
gration  collapses.    If    they    »v 
supportable,      integration      be- 
contes  the  greatest  folly.  What 
is  the  evidence? 
It    is  common   knowledge   that 
differences  in  performance  siiown 
by  different   breeds  of    animals 
are  rooted  in  differences  in  their 
inherent,  hereditary  natures,  al- 
though the  fulfillment  of  heredi- 
tary capacities  is  affected  by  en- 
vironment. Everyone  ^cnows  that 
a  Holstein  cow  does  not  produce 
at  her  maximum  capacity  if  pas- 
ture and  feed  conditions  are  not 
favorable. 

Everyone  knows  also  that  you 
do  not  endow  a  Hereford  cow  or 


her  calf  with  the  milk  producing 
capacity  of  a  Holstein  by  turning 
her  into  the  pasture  and  feed  lot 
with  the  Holsteins. 

When  thinking  in  term^-  of  low- 
er animals,  people  are  willing 
enough  to  accept  these  facts.  But 
when  thinking  in  terms  of  peo- 
ple and  social  and  political  pro- 
blems, it  is  the  fashion  to  aban- 
don common  knowledge  and  com- 
mon sense  and  .substitute  slogans 
as  a  basis  for  decision^'. 

Actually,  everyone  with  ex- 
perience .and  judgment  knows 
that  although  white  people  and 
Negroes  are  all  human,  they  are 
very  different  people  and  you 
cannot  convert  a  Negro  child  into 
a  white  child  by  sending  him  to 
school  with  white  children. 


By  a:  Capp 


Fogo 


llouhH  meonUie  /  UAve  oui? 
he«d,«na  all  iQ!)  liPiOSyNCPASlK. 
l>f<e  tVe  ife^tnked  \  ^ 

pcopk  u^  do  ilu%^ 


vV»uu,ivi 

IlKiaSf  ic/  CbNTCDUAty 
dhoul  I^U.  I  £nt>^<3U6M 


"n. 


tn  f9C\  rv«     [/my  PBeUiN(3S  KVVHAT  IfiOUKt]  lV«ct««lti 


aluuu4  ha4  a 
itxetadtxa  di$' 


ABOUT  Vou.' 
MfHDMD 


ABOUT  yOii  14 

'-  \MOMeyMcarni 

WKei?E  UE 


fiv  Walt  Kelly 

'  2 


uifittu^l 

U^tt^houi'ii'uc 
«hip 


COLUMNIST  WONDERS: 

Are  Hungarian 
RefugeesHappy? 

Our  (America's)  song  is  a  song  of  Freedom,  or 
so  it  has  been  called  by  the  poets.  Those  who  live  in 
other  lands  have  heard  the  fairy  Ule  about  our 
OQUBtry . . .  the  streets  of  gold,  the  wonderful  op- 
portunities, etc.  They  have  heard  that  everyone 
over  here  is  wealthy,  at  least  by  their  standards, 
since  everjone  in  America  has  at  least  0|pe  car. 

In  truth,  ours  is  a  wonderful  country,  and  the 
things  we  take  for  granted  are  missing  in  many 
other  lands.  We  are  very  casual  about  freedom 
and  opportunity,  things  which  do  not  exist  in  many 
parts  of  the  world. 

We  are  very  lucky.  But   ... 

What  about  our  "new"  Americans,  the  Hungarian 
refugees  in  particular?  How  do  they  feel  about  all 
this  splendor? 

Our  propagandists  tell  us  that  the  refugees  were 
very  happy  to  be  able  to  come  to  America.  We 
were  told  of  the  tears  of  joy  which  these  people 
shed  upon  their  arrival,  and  we  saw  in  the  papers 
pictures  of  them  lining  the  rails  of  ships  to  see 
the  Statue  of  Liberty,  that  magnificent  edifice  which 
is  symbolic  of  our  way  of  life. 

We,  as  a  nation,  felt  proud  of  ourselves  for  be- 
ing so  magnanimous.  We  recognized  our  great  deed 
as  a  tremendous  humanitarian  effort.  We  thought 
\i*e  had  done  something  wonderful. 

And  now  we  have  cause  to  wonder. 

A  Raleigh  paper  recently  carried  an  account 
of  an  unusual  problem.  A  family  wanted  to  leave 
America.  It  was  a  Hungarian  family. 

They  wanted  to  go  back  to  Hungary  because 
they  were  having  financial  problems.  The  article 
hinted  at  the  fact  that  the  father  didn't/like  being 
a  carpenter;  in  Hungary  he  had  been  a  trainer  for 
bicycle  racers.  Their  problem  was  finding  someone 
to  foot  the  bill  for  plane  fare  back  so  they  could 
meet  the  Reds'  March  31  deadline  for  amnesty. 

A  somewhat  similar  incident  occurred  back 
in  January  in  one  of  our  northern  cities.  It  seems 
that  a  hotel  owner  had  offered  to  give  jobs  to 
several  of  the  refugees,  and  found  that  he  had  to 
fire  them  after  only  a  short  time. 

Why?  Because,  he  said,  all  they  wanted  to  do 
was  sit  around  in  the  kitchen  eating  and  drinkin? 
beer.  He  said  they  appeared  to  be  offended  when 
he  suggested  that  they  should  work  a  little. 

•  These  are  just  two  instances.  How  many  more 
have  there  been?  Have  there  been  more  than  these 
two?  Have  there  been  instances  which  have  not 
been  released  to  the  press  because  someon  "sat'"  on 
the  story? 

This  is  an  interesting  question  irom  a  sociologi 
cal  point  of  view.  Have  we,  in  our  efforts  to  propa 
gandize  our  wonderful  way  of  life,  created  false  im- 
pressions? Do  foreigners  come  to  this  country  with 
the  idea  that  it's  all  "milk  and  honey,"  that  they 
won't  have  toVork  for  a  living?  Do  they  think  tliey 
are  entitled  to  sit  art)und  drinking  beer  just  be- 
cause they  are  here? 

I 

Or  arc  these  two  cases  just  isolated  instances, 
reflecting  the  truth  of  the  adage  that  there  are  rot- 
ten apples  in  every  <>arrel? 

At  any  rate,  it  seems  that  there  may  be  some 
unfortunate  propagandizing  done  by  our  govern- 
ment. Are  we  overempha.sizing  the  comparative 
wealth  of  our  people  and  neglecting  to  mention  that 
most  folks  over  here  work  hard  and  conscientious- 
ly for  their  two  autos  and  fine  homes?  Maybe  so. 

There  is  still  another  interesting  point.  What 
can  our  government  do  when  these  folks  want  to 
go  home  because  they  can't  take  the  pace?  We  can 
hardly  keep  them  prisoners,  but  we  cant  let  them 
go  back  to  be  used  as  propaganda  tools  for  the 
Reds.  Yet  neither  can  we.  with  an  degree  of  pride 
or  integrity,  let  them  sit  around  while  we  feed 
them  and  let  them  get  fat  and  lazy  like  cats  in 
a  convent.  If  this  were  done  there  would  certainly 
be  an  air  of  concubinage  about  the  matter  which 
wouldn't  fit  in  too  well  with  the  American  Wav  of 
Life. 

At  best,  sometliing  of  this  sort  is  very  ungrat- 
ifying.  It  is  rather  like  biting  the  hand  that  su- 
stains. We  can't  say  "Send  the  ungrateful  wTCtchcs 
home,"  nor  can  we,  if  we  hear  many  such  talcs, 
get  very  excited  at  the  prospect  of  bringing  more  of 
them  into  the  country. 

Possibly  this  is  an  occasion  when  news  censor- 
ship would  be  a  good  thing,  for  it  definitely  gives 
rise  to  "America  for  Americans"  feelings.  This 
must,  of  necessity,  remain  bnried  with  the  era  of 
the  Black  Shirt  boys  of  the  thirties. 

This  makes  good  food  for  the  cynic,  for  he  see* 
once  again  that  as  you  do  for  others,  so  shall  he  do 
you  in  . . .  and  that  you  can't  be  nice  to  people.* 

Most  Americans  realise  that  our  freedom  bears 
with  it  great  responsibilities.  Our  great  responsi- 
bilities at  this  time  make  many  demands  upon  us, 
but  one  of  the  biggest  things  is  to  convince  people 
that  ours  is  the  only  way  to  live  ...  as  opposed  to 
other  forms  of  government. 

These  two  instances  may  reflect  some  errors  in 
our  "education"  program. 

We  can  find  good  cause  at  the  present  to  wish 
for  isolation  from  the  rest  of  the  world,  yet  more 
than  ever  we  must  fight  these  tendencies  on  our 
part  to  succumb  to  "Laissez  faire"  attitudes. 

We  have  a  big  Job  to  do. 


WEDNEi 


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WEDNESDAY,  APRIL  3,  1957 


THE  DAILY  TAR  Hilt 


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Covering  The  Cainpus 


PHARMACY  SEMINAR  ,  kins.    Dr.    E.   Earl   Baughman.   Dr. 

The    School    of   "Pharmacy    will  |  Mary   G.   Clarke,     Dr.   W.    Grant 

.hold  a  one-day  postgraduate  semi-  i  Dashiell    and'  Dr.    Milton    Rosen- 

rar   today,   beginning    at    10   a.m.  I  baum. 


..nd  endin?  at  4  p.m. 
TAX  ASSN. 

J.  Douglas  David  of  Moore  Coun- 
ty was  elected  president  of  the 
North  Carolina  Tax  Collectors 
Assn.  at  the  organization's  annual 
conference  held  recently  at  the 
.Joseph  Palmer  Knapp  Building  of 
the  Institute  of  Government  here. 
PSCHOLOGY  CONVENTION 

Si.\  members  of  the  staff  of  the 
I  \C  Dept.  of  Psychology  attend- i  RESERVATIONS  DUE 
v(\  the  annual  convention  of  the 
Southeastern  Psychology  Assn.  at 
N.ishville.  Tenn.  last  week.  At- 
tending were  Dr.  Dorothy  C.  Ad- 


Peace  Over  Taxes 

WASHINOTON    iJf^  —  President 
STATISTICS  COLLOQUIUM  j  Esenhower,    speaking    informally 

Dr.    J.    E.    Moyal.    specialist    in    to    a    group    of    business    leaders, 
the  field  of  random  motions,  will  i  said  Tuesday  a  cut  in  taxcj  must 
present   two     lectures     here     this  '  take  a  back  seat  to  the  winning  of 
week.  The  first,  on  "The  Ironiza-  j  a  lasting  world  peace. 
tion   Cascade,"  will   be  at  5  p.m.  i     "Much  as  we  hate  taxes,"  Eisen- 


Thursday  and  the  second,  "Stoch- 1  ^nrwer  said,  world  peace  "is  an  ob- 


Halt  Called 


CLASSIFIEDS 


yf)R  INEXPENSIVE  LIVING:  27 
ft.  Nashua  trailer — has  bath,' 
tub.  shower,  porch,  oil  heater, 
added  room.  Connected  to  util- 
ities and  septic  tank.  1  mile  out 
on     airport     road.     $2300.     Call 

P^OR   SALE   CONVERTIBLE,    1948 

Olds  '98— R  and  H,  Hydra.  Top 

like     new.     $195.     Call     Robert 

Koestler.  89155.  Leave  message. 

.  (1-3169-1) 

•42  PLYMOUTH  FOR  SALeT^ 
new  tires,  valve  job,  uphol- 
stcrj-,  paint  job.  Gas  heater, 
backup  lights,  turn  signals. 
Phone  92471. 


astic    Differential    Equations,"    is  :  jective  that  overrides  high  takes." 
set  for  4  p.m.  Friday.  The  lectures  i 
will  be  in  Phillips  Hall.  | 

LONDON  <^  —  Union  bosses  | 
Tuesday  called  a  halt  to  nation-  j 
R?servations  for  dormitory  wide  walkouts  in  Britain's  ship- ! 
rooms  for  this  summer  and  for  yards  and  factories  and  ordered ! 
next  fall  must  be  made  by  April  1,700,000  strikers  to  return  to  1 
25.  according  to  UNC  Housing  Di- '  work  tomorrow, 
rector  James  Wadsworth.  i     The    unions    warned,     however,  i 

t  Uhat  the  strikes  will   be   resumed  i 

WUNC-TV  ' 

rwv.^y.  i»  ;  if  a  govcmment  court  of  inquiry  | 

Today's    schedule    for    WUNC- '  which  is  to  probe  their  wage  de- j 

TV,    the    University's  educational  jmands  returns  an  "unacceplable ' ' 


television  station  is  as  follows: 

12:45  Music 

1:00  Today   on   the  Farm 

1:30  Career  for  Your 

^:15  Music 

5:30  Solid  Geometry 

6:00  Legislative    Review 

6:20  News  and  Safety 

6:30  Mathematics 

7:00  Industrial   Artisan 

7:30  Magic  of  Mexico 

8:00  Carolina    Churches:    Sum- 
mer Season 

8:30  Russia:   Past  and   Present 

9:30  Mr.  O'Flynn's  Wheels 

1000  Final  Edition 


T 


No  more 
. . .  sticky  cream 
. . .  runny  liquid 
. . .  messy  fingers  I 


decision. 
I 
I      Dulles  Gives  Notice 

j      WASHINGTON  .^—Secretary  of 
'  State  Dulles  gave  notice  Tuesday 
I  that  western  confidence  in  Egypt's 
word    might    hinge    on    whether 
!  President    Nasser    accepts    Ameri- 
can revis4cns  in  the  Eg>'ptian  plan  i 
j  for  operating  the  Suez  Canal.         j 
j     Developments  within  the  ne.xt  24 
to  48  hours,  he    said,  should   de- 
termine whether  Egypt  is  ready  to 
engage  in  serious  n^otiations.         j 

Worst  Blizzard  j 

DENVER  <.?)— The  worst  spring] 
blizzard  in  22  fears  staggered  the  ; 
Rocky  Mountain  states  Tuesday  i 
with  up  to  30  inches  of  fresh  snow.  I 
Power  and  communications-  were  ' 
disrupted.  Ground  and  air  travel ' 
was  at  a  virtual  standstill.  | 

After  more  than  24  hours  of 
continuous  snowfall,  at  least  three 
deaths  were  attributable  to  the 
massive  storm.  The  Weather  Bu- 
reau said  it  would  continue 
through  today. 

'Moral  Responsibility' 


John  EMe's  first  Book 
Qn  Sale  At  Bookstore 

"Move  Over.  Mountain,"  the  first 
novel  of  John  Ehle,  instructor  in 
Bie   CommunicaiJon   Dept.    here.    Is 


IDC  To  fleet 
New  Officers 
Tonight  At  7 

The  IDC   meets   tonight  in  Phi ;  currently   on    sale    at   a    downtown 
Hall  at  7  p.m.  ot  elect  its  new  offi-  j  bookstore. 
cers  for  the  year  1957-58.  |      The  book  is  the  story  of  a  Negro 

The  slate  «f  candidates  coansts  j  family  in  "Leafwood.  North  Caiv>- 
of :  President:  "Paul  Carr  and  Tom ,  lina.'^ 

Walters;  Vice-President;  Bob  Car-!  Ehle  received  his  A.B.  degree 
ter  and  Bill  McGee;  Secretary;  i  from  the  University  and  before 
Neil  Bender  and  Jimmy  Wtwible;  i  graduation  was  hired  as   a  writer 

Treasurer:  Don  E^dy  and  Mike  j  by  the  Communications  Dept.  While 
Hayes;  Chairman  ID  Court:  Frank  j  workhig  toward  an  ^  M.  A.  here. 
Brown  and  Craig  GibbOTU-;  and  i  Ehle  wrote  non-fiction  films  and 
Clerk  of  IDC  Court:  ^el  Dim-  [  historical  plays  for  the  University, 
mette  and  Pat  Leonard.  A   recent   series    of   radio    plays, 

IDC    President    Sonny    Hallford    "American    Adventure."    by    Ehle 
urged  all  newly  elected  dorm  pres-  j  leeeived  six  nationaJ  awards, 
idcnts  to  be  jwesent  at  the  meet- 1     Ehle's  courses  in  Communications 
ing   to   be  sworn   in.   He    also   en-  i  £:re    Radio,    Television    and    Motion 
couraged    all   IDC   representatives  j  Picture  78  and  79. 
to  come  to  the  meeting.  . 

Hallford  added  that  the  presen- ! 
tation  of  Council  awards  would  be 
made  at  the  meeting. 


KD's  Win  Hi-Fi  Set 


Tryouts  j 

Tryouts  for  Ibsen's  Peer  Gynt.*'  i 
the  Carolina  Playmakers'  final  i 
.  production  of  the  season,  will  be  j 
I  conducted  Wednesday,  April  10, ! 
I  at  4  and  7:30  p.m.  in  the  outdoor  j 
I  Forest  Theater. 

The   production   will   be   a   new  ■ 


Kappa  Delta  sorority  has  wen  the  hi-fi  set,  which  was  given   to  the  organization    which   collected 
the  most  packages  of  a  major  cigarette  firm.  The  packages  are  in  front  of  the  set  with  representatives 
of  the  girls'  organixation,  along  with  Joe  Quigg,  campus  representative  for  the  tobacco  firm,  surround-    |  version  of  the  drama,  adopted  by  j 
ing  the   some  7,000  odd  packages.   From  left  to  right,   front,   Martha    Richardson,   Nan    Shaffer,   Sally    Ulirectcr    Kai   Jurgensen,   associate  | 
Patterson,  and  Doris   Adkin^   Back,  Mrs.  Graham,    housemother,   Quigg,    Betty    Rene   Webster,    Evelyn 
HostemMn  and  Pe«  Wee  Batten. 


Maltby  Band  Will  Give 
Concert  Here  April  25 


Library  Hours 


By   BOB  HIGH 

The  man  whom  Benny  Good- 
man says  is  responsible  for  the  big 
sale  of  'The  Man  I  Love"  will  be 
here  on  April  25th  in  Memorial 
Hall  to  give  a  concert  with  his 
orchestra. 

Richard  .Maltby  and  his  ensem- 
ble, featuring  Miss  Franky  Croc- 
kett  as    vocalist,    will .  be    sponsor- 


FOR  MEN 
STICK  DEODORANT 

lOO 


/ 


^ 


plus  tax 


A  NEW  KIND  OF  SOCIAL 
SECLTIITY  that  pays  Big 
dividends  in  business,         I 
eports  and  social  life! 
Old  Spice  deodorant  in  solid  stick  foTm. 
Quickest,  easiest,  neatest  type  to  use. 
And  it  gives  you  lasting  security.  Try 
Old  Spice  Stick  Deodorant  today. 


JERUS.\LEM.  Israeli  Section  .J^  I  <'d   by   Panhellenic   and   Intcr-Fra- 
Foreign     Minister     Golda     Meir  I  ternity  Council. 

Maltby  jnd  his  orchestra  played 
for  23  colleges  last  year  and  re- 


Free  Delivery 


Phone  9-8781 


said  Tuesday  the  United  States 
had  a.sumed  a  "moral  re^>onsibil- 
ity"  in  the  G«ba  problem. 

In  a  speefsh  to  the  Kneaset 
fParJiiment).  Mrs.  Melr  expressed 
"deep  disappointment"  that  the 
United  States  had  not  exerted  all 
its  influence  in  preventing  what 
she  called  a  worsening  of  the  situ- 
ation in  Gaza. 

Case  Referred 

WASHINGTON  Wl— The  income 
tax  case  of  Dave  Beck,  beleaguer- 
ed bo.ss  of  the  Teamsters  Union, 
has  been  referred  to  the  Juslice 
Dept.  for  possible  prosecution,  it 
was  learned  Tuesday.       ' 

There  were  signs,  however,  that 
the  Dept.  will  proceed  cautiously 
in  acting  on  information  collected 
during  a  three-year  investigation 
by  the  Internal  Revenue  Service. 

I      Ala  Resigns 

I  TEHRAN,  Iran  iJP) — Prime  Min- 
I  ijtcr  Hussein  Ala  submitted  his 
!  resignation  Tuesday  because  of 
I  the  murder  of  three  Americans  by 
i  Iranian  bandits.  ^ 

The  venerable  74-year-oW  states- 
man is  to  be  replaced  by  Dr.  Man- 
ouchehr  E^hbai,  energetic  49- 
ye«r-okl  court  minister  to  Shah 
Mohaiwm«?d  ^eza  Pahlevi.  Ala  will 
take  Eghbal's  job. 


Weil  Talks 
Will  Start 
Tomorrow 


ceived    rave    notices   from   all 
engagements. 


George  Catlin.  author  of  "The 
Science  and  Method  of  Politics." 
wiir  deliver  tne  first  of  the  1957  it's 
Weil  Lectures  on  American  Citi- 1  example,  of  Maltby "s  orchestrating 
zenship  tomorrow  at  8.30  p.m.  in  ability,  fusing  successfully  the 
Carroll  Hall  wiien  he  speaks  on  |  idioms  of  popular  jazz,  music  with 
•The  Struggle  for  the  Minds  of'  the  pure  sound  of  the  symphony 
Men."  orchestra. 

On  Friday  evening  the  professor  j  Other  comments  on  Maltby's 
of  political  science  from  .McGill;  work  and  arranging  include  one 
University,  Montreal  will  lecture!  from  Paul  Whiteman.  dean  of 
on  "Can  We  Co-Exist  with  Coloni-I  American  musicans.  "To  my  mind, 
alism,  Imperialism,  Racialism  and  Dick  is  one  of  the  best  and  most 
Sovietism?"  ]  versatile  arrangers  in  the  business 

Continuing  with  the  same  stream |  today.  His  .scoring  for  my  orches- 
of  thought  he  will  lecture  on  "The|  trat  at  various  times  during  the 
Free  World   Commonwealth  of  Na-|last  ten  years,  and  more  recently 


j  The  Wilson  Libra>'y  wUl  be  open 
!  fix)m  9  a.m.  to  5  p.m.  on  'weiekdays 
j  during  spring  holidays.  April  17-23. 
I  The  recess  schedule  will  begin  Wed- 
!  nesday,  April  17,  according  to  an 
his  ■  rimouncement  from  the  Library  of- 
I  lice. 

The  musical  leader  is  conductor-  j  On  Saturday.  April  20.  the  li- 
arranger  for  RC.\  Victor's  VIK  la- '  brary  will  be  open  from  9  a.m.  to 
bel  and  has  recorded  such  name }  I  p.m.  It  will  be  closed  all  day 
tunes   as   "Man   With   The   Golden '  Sunday. 

Arm,''     '"Deep     Blue     Sea."    "The!      The    regular     schedule     will     be 
Birth  of  the  Blues."  and  "Theme '  resumed  Tuesday,  .\pril  23". 
From  War  and  Peace."  j .____ 

Having  for  CBS.  { |||B||^^m||B|HmBHB 

MBS  and  NBC.  Maltby  i.s  not  only 
one  of  the  most  talented  musicians 
of  the  day  but  aLso  one  of  the 
mo(5t  imaginative. 

Maltby  has  worked  with  Benny 
Goodman.  Artie  Shaw.  R  u  s  s 
BK>wn,  Gordon  MacRac,  Lisa  Kirk. 
Peggy  Lee.  Sarah  Vaughn,  Vaughn 
Monroe.  Vic  Damone.  Giselle  Mac- 
Kenzie  and  Robert  Merrill. 

Artie  Shaw  said  of  M'kltby,  "The 
•Fantasy  On  Three  American 
Softgs'  for  clarinet  and  orchestra, 
which  I  have  played  with  many 
symphony  orchestras  throughout 
the  country,  has  always  been  won- 
derfully received.  In  my  opinion, 
a    remarkably    well-balanced 


professor  of  Dramatic  Art,  from 
his  and  Robert  Schenkkan's  trans 
lation. 


Summer  Work 

EARN  $80  PER  WEEK 

plus  cash  scholarship  and 
p«-'d  vccsfion.  This  is  your 
invitation  for   interview. 


105  GARDNER  HALL 
2  P.M.  THURSDAY 

APRIL  4 
Please  be   prompt 


What  A  Wonderful 

Book  Season! 


m 


\rtcarvec 


DIAMOND     RINGS 


Your 


Once-in-A-Lifetime 


Gift 


tions   and  Its   Leadership"   on  Sat- 
urday. 
Not     only    has     Pi-ofessor    Catlin 


here  with  our  ABC  Concert  Or- 
chestra, has  been  outstanding,  and 
on  his  own  network  shows  he  has 


Beloved  By  Brides 
For  Over  100  Years 

WENTWORTH  &  SLOAN 
JEWELERS 


Hugh  Rankin 
And  George  Scheer 


Van  Wyek  Brooks 


Walter  Lord 


DAILY    CROSSWORD 


ACRO.««S 

1   High 

moun  tarns 
5  Journey 
9  Around 
10  Piercmg 

tool 

12  Moon 
jroddess 

13  Rent 

14  Sum  up 
i.T  Departs 

1 7  Tantalum 
'  s>Tn. » 

18  Pronoun 

1 9  Conquers 

20  Everything 
2i  Hair  on 

lion«  neck 

22  Vegetable 

23  MeUIlic 
sourd 

25  Dull  and 
tedious 

26  Iron 
corrosion 

27.  Thin 

28.  Antlered 
animal 

29  Disavow 
BO  Samarium 

<sym) 
82.  Man's 

nickname 
S3  The  shank 
>       (anat.) 
34  Observed 
as  Pacific 

island 
S7.  Likeness 

39  Black  wood 

40  Weather, 
cocks 

41  Wild  oxen 
'Tibet  > 

42  Units  of 
work 


DOWN 

1    DwpU 
2.  Burden 

3  Play  on 
words 

4  Putting  on 
a  play 

5.  Stories 

6.  Regrets 
7  Old 

province 
(Honshu. 
Jap.) 

8.  Braying 
instruments 

9.  First  man 
11.  R*al  estate 
16.  Undivided 


19  Do,<«irc 

20  An 
age 

21  Dis- 
guise 

22.  Sound, 

as 

an  ass 
23  Wrinkle 
24.  Kind 

of 

song  TetUrdiy't  Aii»w»r 

25  Thoughtful      31  Astonishts 
27  MoneUry         33.  Head 

unit  (Rum.)  ( slang t 

29  Strong  34.  Chanted 

wagons  36.  Extinct  bird 

30.  Wise  men        38.  Injure 


QS  disa  i^ass 

mEi       UnCQUUDi! 

aaannia aas 

aniT^i-:   H[:iif;'A"j:i 


Agreement  Signed 

RABAT,  Morocco  (JP — The  Unit- 
tJd  States  and  Morocco  Tuesday 
signed  an  agreement  under  which 
the  United  States  will  supply 
Worocco  tdth  20  million  dollars  in 
economic  aid. 


held  various  lecture  posts  at  Yale,  I  proved  to  be  an  able  conductor 
Peking.  Calcutta.  Columbia,  Heidel-  as  well." 

berg  and  otiier  universities,  but  hej  If  it  had  not  been  for  his  wife, 
lias  served  the  British  government  Richard  Maltby  would  have  never 
in  the  diplomatic  field.  I  entered    the    profession    of   music. 

In  1948,  Catlin  led  the  British  dele-   Virginia  Maltby.  however,  insisted 
gallon   to  the   Luxembourg   Confer-]  that  Dick  dedicate  his  talent  cx- 
ence,    which   met   with   French   and  clusively  to  music. 
German  representatives,  headed  by,      MalttJy's"  big  break  came   when  j 
Maurice  Schumann  «nd  Konrad  Ad-,  one     of     his     compositions   "Six 
j-nauer.  j  F^ats  UnfurnLshed"  was  recorded 

The    same    year     he     prepared ;  by    Benny    Goodman    and    proved 

DEADLINE  j  memoranda    on     international     co-|to  be  one  of  Benny's  biggest  sell- 

All    students    interested    in    be- !  ordination    of    projection    of    ideas,    ing    records.    This    ^^.^f^^^  ,1^ 

coming    a    counselor   in    the    1957 !  discussed   wiUi  .Mrs.    F.    D.    Roose-ithe  early  1940's  when  Maltby  was, 

Orientation  program  must  submit    velt.  General  Eisenhower  and  John  working  at  WBBM  in  Chicago  as 

an  application  form  to  the  YMCA    Foster  Dulles.  I  staff  arranger. 

or  Graham  Memorial  by  Tuesday, 

according  to  Chairman  Jerry  Op- 

penheimer.    On    Tuesday,    a    te^t 

will   be   given   applicants   on    the 

material    corrtained    in    the    1956 

Orientation  Manual. 


Arthur  Schlessinger,  Jr. 


Rabels  and  Radcoats  —  The  Am- 
erican Revolution  seen  through 
contemporary  eyes.  A  fascinating 
job: 

Days   of   the   Phoanix   —    A   very 

perceptive  critic  remembers  the 
wild  Twenties.  Interesting  materi- 
al <Mi  Lfcwis, .  Dreiser.  Anderson, 
Mencken,  and  a  host  of  lesser  lit- 
erary lights  of  that  glamorous 
period. 

A  DmY  of  Infamy  —  a  dramatic, 
but  factual,  account  of  the  events 
that  took  place  at  Pearl  Harbor 
on  December  7th,  1941.  The  re- 
sult of  great  research,  it  moves  at 
a  heart-thumping  pace: 

Tha     Crisis     in     Hie     Old     Ordar. 

The  first  of  a  projected  four- 
volume  portrait  of  "the  Age  of 
Roosevelt",  this  book  traces  the 
social  and  economic  tensions  that 
reached  a  crisis  in  the  election  of 
Roosevelt. 


\ 


Enjoy  All  The  New  Books  At 

The  Intimate  Bookshop 


205  E.  Franklin  St. 


Open  Till   10  P.M. 


HIGHWAY  EMPLOYEES 


Library  Cooperation  Natural 
Result:  UNC  Librarian  Horn 


•Cooperation  between  research  li-i  the  country." 
braries  has  been  made  inevitable.!  Today,  however,  it  is  practically 
Highway  employees  and  state  necessary  and  natural'  by  the  twin  ^  impossible  for  an  individual  to  col- 
employees  from  Areas  6,  6A,  7 1  revolutions  in  scholarship  and  in|  lect  "the  overwhelming  nunAer  of 
and  8  will  meet  tonight  at  7:30  in  :he  mechanization  of  printing  which  j  books  and  periodicals"  which  have 
Memorial  Atiditorium  in  Raleigh,      came  in  the  last  half  of  the   19th    resulted  from  new  fields  of  investi- 

.— i  ^.^ntury "  gation  and   new  discoveries  in  old 

IVCF  MEET  I     This    view    of     Interiibrary     ex-    fields.  Dr.  Horn  said. 

•  The  ^InterA^^ty  Christian  Fel-  '  change  was  given  the  Faculty  Club       "An    individual    can     no     lon^ 
lowship   meets   tonight   at   7   p.m.  I  by  UNC  Librarian  Andrew.  H.  Horn    hope  to  acquire  a  conxpletely  ade- 

in  a  luncheon  address  Tuesday.  quale  library  even  in  hvs  special 
Dr.  Horn  explained  that  "a  cen-'  field  of  interest  unless  he  has  un- 
(ury  ago  it  was  possible  for  a  limited  funds  with  which  to  pur- 
member  of  the  University  faculty,  chase  books,  unlimited  space  in 
to  collect  his  own  private  library,  j  w hich  to^ store  them,  and  unlimited 
adequate  to  serve  his  needs  m  both!,  time  4»- spend  in  keeping  them  in 
rtsearch  and  teaching.  The  univer-!  order.'  Even  great  libraries  such 
sity  library  could  operate,  in  tliose|  as  Harvard's  and  the  Library  of 
di^ys.  pretty  much  without  regard  i  Congress  are  afr  from  compk'te  in 
to  the  contents  of,other  libraries  in'  aU  fields  of  knowledge,"  he  added. 


in  the  Choral  Rehearsal  Room  in 
Hill  Hall.  I>ave  Mesler,  a  mem- 
ber of  the  rVGF  Staff  will  be  the 
visiting  speaker. 


GALLERY  TALK 

John  V.  Allcott  will  speak  today 
at  5  iJ.ni.  rn  Person  Hall  Art  Gal- 
lery on  the  current  exhibition  of 
prints  by  old  and  modern  masters. 


AFTER  SHAVE 
LOTION 


R«fresh'uig  antiseptic  action  heols 
razor  nicks.  Mpt  keep  yoor  tkin 
in  top  condition,  1 .00  s 'us  <oi 

SHUITON        H«w  Y«rk  •   Tcrofi* 


f  AQf  POUR 


THI  DAILY  TAR  Hill 


WEDNESDAY,  APRIL  J,  IW 


Tar  Heels  Defeat  Gamecocks  3-2  On  Hiirs  Homer  In  9th 


Jim  Raugh  Fires  His 
Second  Three-Hitter 


ay  BILL   KING 

Pinch-hitter  Don  Hill  smashed 
Jim  Craig's  first  pitch  for  a  home 
run  with  one  on  in  the  bottom  of 
the  ninth  inning  to  give  Jim 
Raiigh  and  Carolina  a  three-hit 
victory  ovw  the  South  Carolina 
Gamecoclcs.  S-2  in  Emerson  Sta- 
dium yesterday. 

Hill's  clutch  hit  came  after 
Roger  Honeycutt  had  singled  to 
right  to  lead  off  the  inning.  The 
hit  saved  Honeycutt  from  being 
the  "goat"  as  the  Carolina  short- 
stop had  committed  two  errors  in 
the  eigChth  inning  which  put  the 
(iantecocks  ahead,  2-1.  The  win 
was  number  2  in  ACC  play  for 
Carolina. 

It  was  the  second  straight  time 
that  Raugh  had  had  to  wait  until 
the  last  inning  to  see  if  his  bril- 
liant effort  wac-  to  be  in  vain.  The 
Tar  Heel  ace  allowed  but  three 
hits  and  fanned  eleven  in  going 
the  distance  for  his  third  straight 
victory-  this  season. 

Eight  of  Raughs  strikeouts 
came  in  the  first  three  inning  as 
he  had  the  Gamecock  batters 
swinging  at  air.  F'or  Raugh,  it  was 
three-hitter  number  two.  Last 
Thiu^day  he  shut  out  Maryland 
1-0  on  Roger  Honeycutt '*•  single  in 
the  bottom  of  the  ninth. 

Raugh  tangled  with  Jim  Craig,  a 
clavsy  right-hander  who  allowed 
the  Tar  Heels  eight  hits.  Craig 
failed  to  issue  a  walk  and  Raugh 
gave  up  only  one  free  pass. 

South  Carolina  drew  first  blood 
in  the  first  inning  when  second 
baseman  Lary  Jewell  lined  a  home 
run  to  left  field.  The  ball  hit  '.n ' 
front  of  left-fielder  Joe  Shook  and 
boimced  over  his  bead  enabling 
Jewell  to  circle  the  abses. 

After  that,  the  game  settled 
down  into  a  thrilling  pitching  duel 
between  the  two  righthanders. 

Carolina  threatened  to  even  the 
count  in  the  fourth  inning  as  Jim 
Legette,  Ivalec  Hill,  and  Dick 
Hudi-on  all  singled.  But  the  upris- 
ing was  smothered  when  Legette 
was  thrown  out  at  the  plate  as  ho 
tried  to  score  on  Hudson's  single. 

The  Tar  Heels  tied  the  score  in 
the  seventh  when-  HilJ  and  Honey- 
cutt both  reached  first  base  on 
bunts.  With  two  men~on  and  two 
out.  third  baseman  Chuck  Hart- 
man  hit  a  ball  to  the  inside  of 
third  base.  Third  baseman  Paul 
Rawl  backhanded  the  ball  but  the 
speedy  Hartman  beat  the  throw 
to  first  as  Hill  scored  from  third. 

With  the  score  knotted  at  1-1  in 
the  top  of  the  eighth  inning,  the 
visitors  took  advantage  of  two  sin- 
gles and  two  errors  by  Honeycutt 
to  make  it  2-1,  South  Carolina.  A 
short  rhubarb  broke  out  in  that 
inning  when  Don  Lewis  tagged  a 
South  Carolina  runner  and  then 
threw  to  first  base  for  what  the 
Tar  Heels   thought   was   a   double 


I  play,  but  the  runner  remained  on 
j  first. 

I  The  win  was  the  seventh  of  the 
I  i-eason  for  the  Tar  Heels  who  now 
i  have  a  7-3  record. 
[  This  afternoon  Carolina  travels 
to  Raleigh  'for  a  Big  Four  game 
'with  N.  C.  State.  Coach  Walter 
I  Rabb  has  not  named  his  starter. 
I  State  is  expected  to  go  with  right- 
!  bander  Roger  Hs^wootl. 

The  box: 
!  U.S.C.  Ab. 


j  Stokes,  ss  

Jewell,  2b    .... 

iNidiffer,  cf  .. 

I  Fisher,  c 

Rawl,  3b  

'  Coker.  If 

Ketchum,  rf    _ 
Rosefield,  lb 
b-Reese      

j  Norton,   lb  .... 

;  CVaig.   p    

Totals 


U.N.C. 

Lewis,  2b  

Shook,  If    

Legette.  c  

1.   HiU.  rf  

Honeycutt,   ss  ... 

Hudson,  cf  

OWham,  lb  

a-Pons    

Mault^by.  lb      , 

c-D.  Hill     

Hartman.  33b  _. 
Raugh.  p      


O. 
6 

A 
2 
4 
0 
1 
2 
5 
0 
1 
0 


30      3     25     10 


Ab.    H.    O. 

4       2       1 

0  1 

1  11 
2 
1 
1 
0 
0 
0 
1 
1 
0 


....  4 

_.  4 

...    4 

..    4 

...    2 

....  2 

...    1 

0 

1 

3 

3 


A. 

1 

0' 

0' 

0; 

4, 

0 

0 

0 

0 

o| 
4' 
1 

_l 
9 


Harvard  Beats  { 
Netter$J5-0      j 

Hanrard's     great     tennis     team 
swept  through  the  C^irolina  netters  j 
for  the  second  straight  day  as  they  j 
white^washed   the    Tar   Heels,    on 
the  Carolina  courts  yesterday. 

The  Tar  Heels,  who  were  play- 
ing before  their  new  coach,  VaWi- 
nur  Cernik,  were  completely  out- 
played by  the  terrific  Harvard 
team,  as  the  visitors  swept  every 
set. 

The  Tar  Heels  now  have  a  week 
break     before     resuming     action 
against  the  Wake  Forest  netters  in 
Winston-Salem  April  8th. 
The  Svmmary 

Singles:  Goettlieb  (H)  defeated 
Bank,  fr4,  6-3;  JunU  (H)  defeated 
Black,  6-1,  6-3:  Sears  (H)  defeated 
Livingstone,  7-5,  6-1;  Heckscher 
(H)  defeated  Newsome,  6-2.  6-2; 
6-2;  Gianetti  (H)  defeated  Jacobus, 
6-4,  6-1;  Place  (H)  defeated  Mc- 
Iver,  6-0.  6-0. 

Doublej:  Heckscher  and  Place 
(H)  defeated  Bank  and  Newsome, 
6-3,  7-5:  Junta  and  Sears  (H)  de- 
feated Black  and  Livingstone,  6-3, 
6-1: 

Gianetti  and  Mills  (H)  defeated 
Walker     and     Steward,     6-4,     6-2; 


Rosenbluth  Will  Lead 
College  All- Americans 

Three  Atlantic  Coast  Conference  have  John  Smyth  of  Notre  Dame, 
stars  will  be  in  the  starting  lineup  Dick  Heise  of  DePaul,  Hank  Nowak 
Thursday  night  when  the  College'  cf  Canisius,  George  Ferguson  of 
.\il-Americans  and  Harlem  Globe-!  Michigan  State,  Dick  Ducket  of 
trotters  square  off  in  the  fifth  game'  St.  Johns,  and  Sam  Jor-is  of  North 


ol    the   eight   annual   tour. 

All-America  Lennie  Rosenbluth  of 
Carolina,    the   ACC's   player   of   the 


Carolina  College. 

The  .Mi-Americans  are  coached  by  , 
the  Tar  Heel's  Frank  McGuire  and 


year,    will    start    at    forward,    John'  ^^y  Me.ver  of  DePaul.  j 

Maglio  of  North  Carolina  State  will^  Abe  Sapersteins  clowning  Globe- 
piart  at  guard  and  Jim  Gilley  of  trotters  beat  the  Collegians  64-44 
Wake   Forest.  i  Sunday   before   15,000  fans   in   New^ 

The  game  will  get  underway  at  ^*°^^  '"  ^^^  series  openCT.  The 
8  o'clock  in  Reynolds  Coliseum.  \  t<"ams  met  in  Chicago,  Cleveland 
This  marks  the  first  time  in  two !  ^"^  Buffalo  before  coming  to  Ra-  j 
years   that   the   tour  has  played   in;  '*^i6h. 

The  Globetrotters  are  sparked  by . 
Willie  Gardner,  Andy  Johnson  and 
Charlie  Hoxie,  a  trio  of  sharp- 
shooting  cage  veterans.  Wilmington 
native  Meadowlark  Lemon,  a  gang- 
ling, fun-loving  pivotman  handles 
the  comic  rdutincs.  1 

Also    on    the    Globetrotter    squad 
21  e   Ermer   Robinson.    Roman   Tur-| 
man,    Tex    Harrison.    Tarzan    Spen- , 
c-er.   Leon  HiUiard,  Clarence  Wilson 


Raleigh. 

In  addition  to  Rosenbluth.  Maglio 
ind   Gilley,   the  >\11-Americans   will 

Spdhn  Goes  9 
As  Braves  Win 

ATLANTA,  Ga.  i^fi— Although  he 
was    nicked    for    four    home    runs,  ]  and    Woody   Salusberry. 
WaiTen    Spahn   today    became   the 


.\n  all-stai^  variety  show  has  been 

lined  up  for  the  half.   Entertainers 

include   Lonnie   Donegan.   England's 

and    Cameron    (H)    defeated    Pultz    ^  ^e  turned  back  the  Braves'  At-  I  newest    i-ecord   star;    the    Palermos 


Weld  and  Cameron   (H)   defeated ;  {jrsl  Milwaukee  Braves  pitcher  to 
Mclver  and  Smith,  6-1,  6-2.  Krogh  I  g^  ^he  full  nine  innings  this  spring 


Ken  Venturi  In 
Masters  Golf 

AUGUSTA,  Ga.  0^^— A  year  ago 
he  was  t^e  amateur  golf  sensation 
who  aknost  set  the  pros  on  their 
collective  ears  as  he  missed  win- 
ning the  Masters  by  a  single 
stroke.  Today  he's  just  another 
young  golf  pro  struggling  to  make 
a  few  dollars. 

But  Ken  Ventiu-i  hasn't  lost  any 
of  the  confidence  that  marked  his 
three  great  rounds  in  1956  over 
the  Augusta  National  Coiu-se. 

Hurt  and  bewildered  after  the 
final  round  of  80,  Ken  had  some 
rather  harsh  words  to  say  when 
he  returned  to  California.  Now  he 
seems  to  realize  he  was  very  for- 
tunate to  lead  the  select  Masters 
field  for  three  day»"  before  pres- 
sure and  inexperience  caught  up 
with  him  and  gave  the  title  to 
steady  Jackie  Burke. 

"To  win  the  big  ones  you  have 
to  be  very  lucky  as  well  as  good, ' 
the  tall,  dark-haired  San  Francis- 
can said  today  between  tuneup 
shots  for  the  tournament's  open- 
ing Thursday. 

"You  have  to  have  a  few  good 
rounds  at  just  the  right  time.  You 
can  be  playing  awfully  well  and 
not  win." 


and  Jacobus,  6-2,  6-4. 


Red  Sox  Lose 
To  Yonks,  1-0 


lanta  farm  club,  8-5.  j  brothers.     Mexican     juggler     Rudy 

The  stylish  southpaw  yielded  |  Cardenas,  the  Farais  Trio,  and 
eight  hits.  The  four  round  trippers  i  R('lando  and  Lilly  Yokoi,  the  sen- 
off  his  delivery — two  by  Bill  [  sational  Japanese  husband-wife  bal- 
Reynolds  and  one  each  by  Dick !  <'  neing  team  which  was  the  hit  of 
Phillip.'  and  Ed  McHugh — account 


Bob  Hope... in  a  role 
that  out-joys  "The 
Seven  Littif  Foys"! 


Totals  31      f    27 

a— Flied  out  for  Oldham  in  7th. 

b — Safe  on  fielder's  choice  for 
Rosefield  in  8th. 

c— Homered  for  .Mauksby  in  9th. 

Score  by  irmings: 
South  Carolina  100  000  010 

North  Carolina  000  000  102 

R— Jewell,  Coker,  L  Hill,  Honey- 
cutt,  D.  Hill.  E>— Honeycutt  2.  RBI 
-Jewell.  Hartman,  Coker,  D.  Hill 
2.  2fi— Uwis.  HO— D.  HiU.  S— 
Hudson  2.  DP— Stokes  and  Norton. 
I L— South  Carolina  3.  North  Caro- 
;lina  6.  BB— off  Raugh  1.  SO—  by 
'Raugh  11.  Craig  3.  T— 2:11.  U— 
Tail  aynd  Hicks. 


ST.     PETTERSVURG.     Fla.     (JV- 
Righthander  Johnny  Kucks  pitch-: 
ed  his  second  successive  complete  j 
game  today,  allowing  only  five  hits 
as  the  New  York  Yankees  defeat- 
ed the  Boston  Red  Sox,  1-0. 

The  Yanks  scored  the  only  rim 
in  the  ninth  on  singles  by  E^os 
Slaughter,  Gil  McDougald  and 
rookie  phenom  Tohy  Kubek  off 
Red  Sox  rookie  Jack  Spring. 

Spring  took  over  in  the  eighth 
innmg  after  Boston  .-rtarter  Tom 
Brewer  had  blanked  the  world 
champions  in  the  first  seven. 


I  ed  for  all  of  Atlanta's  scoring. 
Joe  Adcock   put   the   Braves  out 
m  front  in  the  first  inr.ing  with  a 
three-run    homer  and  the  Milwau- 
keeans  never  were  headed.  .. 


Frosh  Game 

The  Carolina  freshman  baseball 
teams  makes  its  home  debut  in 
Emerson  Stadium  this  afternoon 
against  the  N  C.  State  Wolflets  at 
3:30. 

Tne  Tar  Babies  were  scheduled 
to  play  two  games  here  previou:^ 
ly.  but  both  were  rained  out. 


Bums  Beat  Bucs 
On  2  Homers 

i  FT.  MEYERS.  Fla.  i/VU-Home 
j  runs  by  Randy  Jackson  and  John 
}  Ro.?eboro  featured  a  l3-hit  attack 
I  that  powered  the  Brooklyn  Dodg- 
'  ers  to  an  11-5  victory  over  the 
Pittsburgh  Pirates  today. 

Roseboro's  homer  accounted  for 
;  three  runs  in  the  ninth  inning, 
:  long  after  the  Dodgers  had  broken 
i  the  game  wide  open.  Jackson  hit 
'.  his  round  tripper  in  the  sixth  with 
i  none  on. 

j  The  Dodgers  pounded  four  Pi- 
j  rate  pitchers,  starting  with  a 
,  three-hit,  three  run  attack  in  the 
i  first  inning.  Four  Pirate  errors  al- 
sb  contributed  to  the  Dodger  vic- 
tory. 

Roger  Craig,  who  started  on 
the  mound  for  Brooklyn,  was  cred- 
ited with  the  victory.  Paul  Minner, 
the  Pirate  iytarter,  was  charged 
with  the  loss. 


Phffe  fdge  Sox 
On  Rookie's  Hit 


Dramatic  Play 
Opens  Sunday 


last  year's  tour. 

Tickets  are  on  sale  at  the  Colis- 
e.im  Box  Office,  Kerr  Drugs  in 
Cameron  Village  and  Womble's  in! 
downtown  Raleigh.  Prices  are  $3.,] 
$2.50    and    $2.      - 


The    play    "Caligula,"    de;>cribed  I 
by    its    producer   Seamon    Gottleib 
as  a   "very   bloody"    story    of   the  j 
Roman  emperor  Caligula,   will   be  | 
presented  here  Sunday  at  8  p.m. 

The   play   will   be   the   fir;.l   pro- 
duction   of   the   newly-formed    Pe-l 
tites  Dramatiques  dramatic  organ- 
CLEARW.^TEa.      Fla.      (iW— The  j  «a*io-  L'nder  the  direction  of  Miss 
Philadelphia    IHiillies,    stifled    for^"'"^   Jinette,    the    play    will   be 
five  innings  by  the  one-hit  pitch- 1 P'"^**'^^*'*'   '"   ^^'^   "'^'"    lounge   of 
ing    of    Billy    Pierce,    jumped    on  K'^^^^'"  M»'niorial. 
rookie  bomis  pitcher  Jim  Derrinfj- 1      ^af"on  Gottlieb  is  the    origina- 
ton  for  four  nms  in  two  innings!  ^o'"    <»f    I*etites    Dramatiques.    The. 
today  to   beat   the   Chicago   White  |  production     .stars     Lloyd     Skinner 

and    Page    Williams,    with    Taylor 
Williams  and  Stan  Baker.  | 

The  play  is  to  be  presented  in  j 
modern  co.stuming  in  "theater-in- 
the-round"  style.  Miss  Hope  Spar- 1 
ger  i.-y  stage  manager  for  the  play. 
According  to  Gottlieb,  ntaterials 
connected  with  the  play  itself  and 
dealing  with  the  time  of  the  em- 
peror Caligula  are  on  display  in 
the  basement  of  Wilson  Library. 


Howard  Johnson  Restaurant 

BREAKFAST 

LUNCH 

DINNER 

SNACKS 
landmark  For  Hungry  Tarheels" 


TWat 
Feeling 


Sox.  4-2. 

The  Phils  were  trailing  2-0  when 
Derrington  came  on  in  the  sixth. 
A  triple  by  Ed  Bouchee  brought 
one  run  across  in  that  inning  and 
a  walk,  three  singles  and  a  mis- 
judged pop  fly  brought  across 
three  more  in  the  seveth. 


11  •«CMT  ANO  lANCAi't* 

II  UMaSTER  ^CURTIS 
I  \        L0U0BRI6IDA 

imZScoP^ 


Rosenbluth,  Carolina 
Chosen  Tops  In  '56-57 


Tot  the  first  time  in  the  history 
of  the  school.  North  Carolina  has 
made  a  clean  gweep  of  the  Helms 
Athletic  Foundation  basketball 
awards. 

Carolina's  national  diampions  and 
Ail-American  Lennie  H0.senl3J.uth 
were  named  the  coUegiate  team 
fand  player  of  the  year  by  the  Foun- 
cation  today. 

The  Tar  Heels,  who  won  32 
straight  games  without  a  loss  on 
the  way  to  the  NCAA  title,  were 
declared  national  champions  by  all 
the  press  services  at  the  season's 
end  and  the  Helms  award  makes  it 
unanimous.  It  was  the  second  Tar 
Heel  team  so  honored,  the  1924 
club,  also  undefeated,  being  the 
ether. 

Rosenbluth,  in  winning  the  col- 
i^ge  player  of  the  Year  award, 
stepped  into  the  company  of  UNC 
greats  Jack  Cobb  <  19a6.>  and  George 
Glamack  (1»40.  1941  •.  He  headis  an 
All- America  ten-man  team  that  in- 
cludes Grady  Wallace  of  South 
Carolina.  Joseph  Gibbon  of  ^ssis- 
.sippi,  Chet  Forte  of  Columbia,  Wilt 
Chamberlaip  of  Kansas,  Jim  Krebs 
of  Southern  iiethodift,   Rod  liund- 


ley  of  West  Virginia.  Jim  A&hmore 
of  Mississippi  State,  J«ck  4)ui«gle 
or  Michigan  State  and  Gary  Tbomp- 
s«>n  of  Iowa  State.  Chamberlaia  is 
the  only  sophomore  and  Qulggle  the 
only  junior  on  the  first  team. 

Rosenbluth,  who  made  every- 
ijody's  All-America,  led  the  Tar 
Heels  to  the  NCAA  title  with  a 
27.968  scoring  average.  The  895 
points  he  scored  included  142  io 
five  NCAA  tourney  games  —  29 
against  Yale,  39  against  Canisius; 
23  against  Syracuse,  31  against 
Michigan  State  and  20  against  Kan- 
sas. 

His  three-year  toUl  was  2,045. 
He  holds   every  scoring  record  la 

j  the  UNC  books. 

The  Tar  Heels  won  24  regular 
.season  games,  14  in  the  Atlantic 
Coast  Conference,  and  took  the 
Dixie  Clasic  championship.  After 
winning  the  ACC  tourney  to  get 
the  NCAA  berth,  they  toppled  Yale, 
t^anisius  and  Syracuse  for  the 
Eastern  Regional  title,  Michigan 
Stale  in  the  semi-finals  in  a  tri^le- 
overtimer,  and  Kansas  for  the  title. 

I  la  another  triple-ovenlmc  gcune. 


Deacs  Lose 

GAINESVILLE.  Fin.  uf)— Pinch 
hitter  Bemie  Parrish,  playing 
against  doctor's  orders,  delivered 
«  lOtb  nning  wrong"  field  single 
which  enabled  Florida  to  squeeze 
by  Wake  Forest  2-1  here  today. 

Parrish,  a  halfback  who  broke 
his  finger  March  22  in  Florida's 
spring  football  game,  took  an  iron 
cast  off  his  finger  just  before  he 
went  to  the  plate  with  the  bas<es 
loaded  and  two  out  in  the  extra 
inning. 

He  promptly  hit  the  first  pitch 
by  reliefer  Tom  McGinley  into 
right  field  sending  Charlie  King, 
who  had  walked,  home  with  the 
winning  run. 

The  loss  was  credited  to  starter 
Jack  Stokoe,  who  struck  out  14  in 
nine  innings.  Stokoe  was  lifted  aft- 
er ^e  had  walked  King,  the  lead- 
off  batter  for  the  Gators  in  the 
10th.  Stokoe,  who  locked  horns 
with  Gator  starter  Tim  Twomey  in 
a  southpaw  duel,  spaced  egiht  hits 
and  walked  four. 

After  McGinley  replaced  Stokoe, 
King  stole  second,  then  went  to 
third  on  9n  infield  out.  McGinley 
got  the  next  batter  on  an  infield 
pc^p,  but  then  delivered  the 
game-winning  pitch  to  Parrish. 

Stokoe  fanned  one  man  in  every 
inning,  and  a^lruck  out  two  in  each 
of  the  third,  fourth,  fifth  and  sev- 
enth frames.  He  allwoed  only  four 
balls  out  of  the  infield,  but  his 
balk  in  the  fifth  allowed  Florida 
to  score  its  first  run 

Twomey,  who  was  lifted  for  a 
pinch  hitter  in  the  ninth,  was 
equally  effective,  allowing  only  7 
hits,  but  one  of  them  was  an  in- 
side the  park  home  run  by  center- 
fielder  Rex  McMillan  in  the  7th 
that  forced  the  game  into  extra 
innings. 


Today  and  Thursday 


gr/teecrrW 


PSARL  [gAlLEY 


r.ORMAN  PANAMA 
«na  MrtViN  FRAMK 

NOWMAN  PANAMA 

•nd  MElVIN  FF.ANK. 

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ADDRESS- 
CITT 


_ZO\E_ 


—STATE- 


_D£CR£^ 


-MAJOR  SUBJECT. 


WEATHER 

Cooler  and  rain  with  an  axpact- 
«d  hish  of  65. 


tJ.H.C.  Library 
Serials  Dept. 
Chapel  Hill,  K.  C. 
8-3*1-49 


3r()  e  3)altu  li^rar  Hied 


TASK 

Th»  biggoct  on»  in  hisfory.  i— 
•ditsriat,  p»g»  2. 


VOL.  LVII  NO.  158 


Complete  Uf)  Wire  Service 


CHAPEL   HILL,  NORTH  CAROLINA,  THURSDAY,  APRIL  4.   1957 


Offieee  in  Graham  Memorial 


FOUR  PAGES  THIS   ISSUff 


Catlin  Gives  First 
Weil  Talk  Tonight 


The  first  of  three  1957  Weil 
Lectures  on  Citizenship  will  be 
delivered  by  Political  Philosopher 
George  Catlin  at  8:30  tonight  in 
Carroll  Hall. 

•The  Struggle  for  the  Minds  of 
Men"  is  the  topic  for  the  first 
l?cture  by  the  professor  of  politi- 
cal science  at  McGill  University 
in  Montreal.  Canada. 

Catlin  will  speak  tomorrow 
night  on  "Can  We  Co-Exist  With 
Colonialism.  Imperialism.  Racial- 
ism and  Sovietism?"  and  on  Sat- 
urday night  on  "The  Common- 
wealth of  Free  Nations  and  Its 
Leaders."  Both  lectures  will  also 
be  given  at  8:30  in  Carroll  Hall. 

The  lectures,  which  originated 
at  the  University  during  the  1914- 
15  .school  year,  were  later  endow- 
ed by  the  families  of  Sol  Weil 
and  Henry  Weil  of  Goldsboro.  The 
lecturers  have  ranged  from  Will- 
iam Howard  Taft.  who  gave  the 
first  series,  to  Gen.  Carlos  Rom- 
ula,  Philippine  delegate  to  the 
United  Nations,  who  spoke  in 
1956. 

Prof.  James  Godfrey,  of  the 
UNC  History  Dept.  is  handling  pro- 
gram arrangements  as  chairman 
of  the  Committee  on  Established 
Lectures   for  the  University. 

Catlin.  an  honor  graduate  of 
Oxford,  won  a  fellowship  to  Cor- 

Winners 
Saluted    ' 
By  Young 


nev5 

m 
brief 


GEORGE    CATLIN 

.  .  .  opens    lectiires    tonight 

nell  University  in  1923-24  and  re- 
mained there  on  the  faculty  un- 
til 1935.  Other  schools  at  which 
he  has  taught  are  Yale,  Peking, 
Calcutta.  Columbia  and  Heidel- 
berg. 

In  addition  to  representing  the 
British  government  at  internation- 
al conferences  since  World  War  II, 
Catlin  has  written  a  number  of 
books,  the  most  prominent  of 
which  is  "The  Science  and  Meth- 
od   of   Politics." 


Bandit  Killed 

TEHRAN,  Iran  ii?i— Loyal  tribes- 
men have  shot  dead  a  bandit  offi- 
cially identified  as  the  slayer  of 
.Mrs.  Anita  Carroll,  one  of  tlu-ee 
Americans  killed  by  an  outlaw 
gang  in  southeast  Iran  March  24. 

Police  announced  the  bandit, 
Ghaderdad.  and  two  of  the  loyal 
tribesmen  died  in  a  two-hour  gun- 
iight  Tuesday  after  a  part  of  the 
gang — hard-pressed  by  troops  and 
armed  citizenry — approached  the 
village  of  Benet  hunting  food  and 
water.  His  companions  escaped. 


hji 


New  Anguish 


D.ALLAS  (,'P)— Dallas  s-affered 
new  anguish  from  raging  thunder 
storms  and  twister  threats  Wed- 
nesday after  Tuesday  s  tornado 
which  killed  10  persons  and  laid 
waste  to  60  blocks — the  worst  de- 
struction'in  the  city's  history. 

Near  200  person^  were  treated 
at  hospitals  for  injuries. 


Ragsdale 
President, 
Not  Corr 


Chile  Riot 

,  SANTIACrO,      Chile      i.'P— Street 
mobs  fought  soldiers  and  police  in 
ihe  heart    of  Chile's  capital  Wed- 
nesday in  renewed  rioting  against 
.he  runaway  cost  of  living. 
From  40  to  70  persons  are  un- 
fficially  estimated   to   have   been 
cilled   and  more   than   20    injured 
n   a   week-long  wave   of   disorder 
that  has  caused  property  damage- 
:n  exces.'  of  two  million  dollars. 


3tudent     Body     President     Bob 


Gecrge    Ragsdale    was    correctly 
named    and    verified    president    of 
Young    Wednesday    congratulated   the  senior  class  yesterdav  in  a  341 
all  winning  candidates  in  the  eiee-  '  to  307  plurality  over  Paul  Carr. 
ttoB   Tuesday.  j      ^„   ^^^    j^^^^   erroneously   re- 

Young  said  "There  is  indeed  a  ported  as  the  winner  of  the  senior 
challenge  ahead  for  all  of  you  I  class  post  on  the  ba.-ls  of  ineom 
am  confident  that  each  person  piete  returns  early  Wedne!>daj 
will   more .  than  fulfill  the   obliga-    morning. 

tions  of   his   office   in   the   months        Ragsdale  is  a   native   of   Raleigh 
ahead."  ;  and  a  member  of  Delta  Kappa  Ep 

He  said  he  hoped  the  losing  silon  fraternity.  He  has  been  clerk 
candidates  would  "retain  their  in-  ^i  the  .Mens  Honor  Council  this 
terest  in  student  government  and  past  year  and  was  recently  elect- 
work  in  the  capacity  best  suited 
for  them  in  the  coming  year. 

Young  said  there  was  a  posi- 
tion of  responsibility  for  "both 
the  winning  and  losing  candi- 
dates." 

The  outgoing  president  said 
further  "I  am  very  pleased  with 
the  results  of  the  major  student 
body  races." 

Young  said  he  was  sure  the 
four  student  government  winners 
—  President  Sonny  Evans.  Vice 
President  Don  Furtado.  Secretary 
Miss  Dot  Pressly  and  Treasurer 
Bob  Carter  —  would  "success- 
fully 'pick  up  the  reins'  where 
we  are  leaving  off  at  this  time." 
They  certainly  will  be  faced 
with  problems,  he  said,  "but  none  j  the  memher,:^-  of  their  classes.' 

too    large    to    be   solved    with    the  1 ■ 

proper    amount    of    interest    and 
determination." 

Young  said  "Next  year  can  be 
successful  for  everyone  —  if 
everyone  will  cooperate  to  the 
fullest  extent." 


No  Israeli  Ships 

CAIRO.  EgyptMji'i — A  responsible 
Egyptian  source  .said  today  Egypt 
>vili  not  let  Israeli  ships  enter 
Egyptian  territorial  waters  and  so 
there  is  no  possibility  of  them 
-eaching  the  Suez   Canal. 


ed  to  the  chairmanship  of  that  or- 
ganization. 

Ragsdale  won  the  presidency  be- 
hind UP  support.  In  his  campaign 
•atements,  he  indic?ited  that  if 
elected  he  would  work  closely 
with  Jim  Raugh,  present  senior 
class  president,  in  his  preparation 
for  Senior  Week  and  other  activi- 
ties concerning  the  senior  class. 

He  said: 

I  believe  that  from  him  I  can 
learn  how  to  benefit  next  year's 
seniors  in  a  newer  and  better 
way." 

He  further  indicated  that  class 
officers     have     a     "concrete     and 


WASHINGTON  »/P«-— The    Atomic  [ 

Energy  Commission  (AED  .said  ' 
Wednesday  its  new  ^vries  of  tost  | 
explosions  in  Nevada  will  begin  i 
about  May  13  and  continue  inter- 1 
mittently  throughout  the  summer.  I 


New  Press  Club  Officers 
Elected  For  Next  Year 

A    new    slate    of    officers    have 
been    elected    for   the   UNC   Press  [ 
Club,  including  the  new  president,  i 
W.  Davis  Merritt  Jr..  rising  senior 
from     Hickory.    Merritt    succeeds ' 
Charles  M.  Johnson,  a  senior  from 
Lenoir. 

Other  new  officers  are  John  D. 
\shrord,  Scotland  Neck,  vice 
president;  Miss  Jacqueline  V. 
Haithcock.  Kannapolis.  secretary; 
and  Bob  E.  Myers.  Thomasville, 
treasurer. 

The  new  officers,  all  rising  sen- 
iors,   replace    Robert    E.    Gedney, 


definite    function   to   perform    for !  Chappaqua,  N.  Y..  vice  president: 
the  betterment  and  enjoyment  of    Mrs.  Mary  V.  Finley.  Marion,  sec- 
retary;    and     Sherwood     Canada, 
Chapel  Hill,  treasurer. 

The  Press  Club  is  composed 
mostly  of  students  majoring  in 
journalism,  and  sponsors  address- 
es by  visiting  newspapermen  along 
with  various  other  professional 
activities. 


Lacrosse  Practice 

All  aspirants  for  varsity  and 
freshman  lacrosse  are  asked  to 
be  on  Navy  Field  this  afternoon 
at  3  o'clock. 


Evans  Carries 
Dorm  Districts 
By  Big  Margin 

In  totaling  the  votes  cast  Igt 
Tuesday's  election.  Sonny  Evai^, 
(Student  Party)  who  won  the  posi- 
tion of  student  body  president  ov 
Bill  Baum,  (University  Party) 
a  294  edge  over  hi^  opponent. 

The  new  student  govemmelit 
head  carried  all  the  dorm  distri^ 
and  posted  a  high  of  305  votes  % 
the  Dorm  Men's  IV  section.  Bau^i 
showed  his  highest  advantage  lb 
the  district  of  Town  Men  II  wijh 
a  219  total.  j 

The  unofficial  returns  are  Evanis, 
1556  and  Baum,   1260. 

In  the  race  for  the  editorship, 
Neil  Bass  bested  Charlie  Sloan  by 
1541  to  1159.  Bas..-  failed  to  win 
but  one  district  in  winning  the 
position.  ' 

The  new  editor  ran  up  his  larg* 
est  total  in  Dorm  Men's  U,  garner- 
ing 242  votes  and  Sloan  picked  up 
191  in  Dofm  Women's  district. 

Don  Furfado  (SP)  won  the  race 
for  vice-president  of  the  student 
body  over  Benny  Thomas  (LTJ  by 
a  margin  of  163  votes  with  Furtado 
getting  1489  and  Thomas  1326. 

Bob  Carter  (SP)  had  a  total  of 
1437  ballots  cast  in  his  favor  in 
winning  the  treasurer'.,-  po.sition  of 
the  student  body  over  Jerry  Jones 
(UP)  who  gathered  1336  votes. 

In  the  race  far  secretly  of  the 
student  body.  Bety  Huffman  (SP) 
lost  to  Dot  Pressly  (UP),  1304  to 
1504. 

Frankie  Black  (SP). naming  for 
two  offices,  copped  victories  in 
both  races.  Black's  opponent  for 
vice-president  of  the  senior  class. 
Harry  Braxton  (UP)  got  395  votes 
and  the  Student  Party  candidate, 
Black,  won  over  Harold  William- 
.•on,  independent,  for, the  position 
oi  head  cheerleader 
.  Wayne  Bishop,  rdttfltftg  ui}Q|t 
posed,  f«*r  the  president  of  the 
Carolina  Athletic  Association,  post- 
ed 2151  ballots. 

Gaining  seats  on  the  Student 
Council  were  Gerry  Hartzog,  John 
Kerr  and   Mike  Tanner. 

Gene  Whitehead  ran  unopposed 
for  the  office  of  editor  of  the 
Yackety  Yack  and  posted  2472  bal- 
lots. Whit  Whitfield  won  the  office 
of  National  Student  Association  co- 
ordinator with  2449  votes.  He  ran 
unopposed. 

Running  for  chairman  of  Wo- 
men's Residence  Council,  Julia 
Ann  Carter  poited  4«8  votes  as  she 
ran  with  no  opponent. 

Other  offices  filled  for  the  sen- 
ior class  included  Bobbi  Madison 
(UP)  over  Jennie  Margaret  Mea- 
dor,  for  secretary,  Charlie 
Ashford  (UP)  over  Tom  Walters 
(SP)  for  the  office  of  treasurer. 
Pat  Dillon  (UP)  won  over  Ann  Mor- 
gan (SP)  for  the  office  of  social 
chairman. 

The    four    senior    seats    on    the 

Men's  Honor  Council  went  to  Bob 

I  McCartney.  Charles   Ashford.  who 

won    his    second    po.'^tion,    Kelly 

I  Maness    and    Robert     Elxum.    Top 

man  for  the  sophomore  seat  was 

David  Evans   over  Pringle  Pipkin. 

j  Jack  Spain.   Walker  Lockette  and 

I  Sandy  Ainslie. 


Tom  Walters  Chosen  As 
New   President  Of   IDC 

Mangum  Given  Trophy 
As  Outstanding  Dorm 


TOM  WALTERS 

.  .  new  IDC  prexy 


Preservation  Of  Unity 
Is  Grail's  Main  Purpose 

'    The  Order  of  the  Grail,  second    active  expression  of  the  lesson  of 
highest    campus    honorary    .>jcicty  ■  the  Holy  Grail. "  Weaver  said. 


By   GRAHAM   SNYDER 

Tom  \Valieis  was  eledod  new  Imer-noiniitory  Council 
President  lov  iO')7-r)''^  l•^st  ni^hi  at  an  ele(  tions  meeting  i" 
Phi  Hall. 

.\  junior  from  Tarhoro,  Walters  took  a  phiraliiy  of  the 
representative  votes  to  dele;it   Paul  Clair  lor  the  President's 

■ ♦  office . 

\  Walters  told  the  IL»C  represen- 
'  tatives  thai  he  intended  to  work 
;  f«r  the  betterment  of  more  dormi- 
i  tory  participation  in  campus  ac- 
{ tivities. 

1      The  new  Vice  President  of  the 
IDC  will  be  Bob  Carter.  In  the  se- 
cret  ballot   voting.   Carter   defeat- 
ed Bill  McGee  for  the  position. 
The    elected    Secretary    will    be 


for  men,  was  organized  in  the 
1920's  to  eliminate  friction  be- 
tween fraternity  and  non-fraterni- 
ty men. 

The  Order  takes  13  men  into  its 
ranks   each   year    who    have   dem- 


Baum  Pledges 
His  Support 

To  Sonny  Evans 

I 

Bill  Baum,  defeated  University  \ 
Party  candidal?  for  student  body  :.  Neil  Bender.  He  won  over  his  op- 
president,  Wednesday  extended  ponent,  Jim  Womble.  A  withdraw- 
his  congratulations  to  the  newly-  al  by  Don  Eudy  from  the  running 
elected  '  president.  Sonny  Evans  for  Treasurer,  and  no  new  nomi- 
iStudent  Party)  and  pledged  his  nations  from  the  floor  left  Mike 
full  support  to  the  Evans  adminis-  Hayes  unopp>osed.  Hayes  was  sub- 
tration.  sequently    voted     by    acclamation 

Baum  said  "President  Evans  has   for  the  office, 
won  the  confidence  of  a  majority       Frank  Brown  was  elected  Chair- 
"The    watchwords    of    the    Grail  |  of  the  student  body  and  I  extend   man  of  IDC  Court  over  Craig  Gib-. 


are    Friendship.    Truth,    Courage, 
and   Service.   Of   these,   Service  is 
the  foremost  in  the  minds  of  the 
Knights  of  the  Grail. 
"The     Order     performs     manj' 


onstrated  outstanding  leadership  services  for  the  campus.  It  spon- 
and  exemplified  unselfish  service  |  sors  a  series  of  dances  on  home 
to  the  campus. 


to    him    my    sincere 
lions." 

He  said  he  would  help  Elvans  in 
any  way  he  could. 

"I  have  counted  him  among  my 
valued  friends  since  our  work  to- 
gether  at   Boys'   State   four  years 


congratula-  bons.  Election  of  Clerk  of  ID 
Court  gave  the  office  to  Pat  Leon- 
ard over  Joel  Dimmette. 

The  meeting,  in  addition  to  one 
of  electing  officers,  was  partly 
given     over     to     award      giving. 


WEAVER 

The  following  is  a  statement  by 

Dean  of  Student   Affairs   Fred   H. 

Weaver     concerning     the     Order's 

purpo.rcs: 
I      "The    purpo.se    of    the    Order    of 

the   Grail    is   to    preserve    unity   in 
L«wr  student   life.    Rccognixing  4h«|.|„^ 

the  alms  of  the  University  can  jScholar.ships  and  (hraujf'i'^'contri 
I  best  be  served  by  a  student  bodylbutions  to  worthy  cause.--,"  Weav- 
1  sensitive     to     the     values     which 

transcend      differences      of      race. 


football  weekends,  manages  the  i  age,"  Baum  said,  "and  I  have  corn- 
sale  of  class  rings,  and  composes,  plete  faith  that  he  will  give  a  good 
sells,    and    distributes    graduation-  administration. "' 


invitation^*. 
TRUSTEE 

"It  regards  itself  as  a  trustee 
of  the  funds  it  realizes  through 
these  activities,  and  retvurns  them 
J»    .the     campas    .through     Grail 


(see   RESULTS,   page  3.) 

120  Counselors 
Will  Be  Needed 

An    anticipated    increase    in    en- 


means  ap- 


creed,  background,  and  social  sta- 
tion, the  Order  .seeks  to  cultivate 
harmonious  .student  reiationiihips 
and  democratic  student  life,'' 
Weaver  .said. 

"The    Order   was    founded    at    a 


er  said. 

"It  also  seeks  out  and  recog- 
nizes contributions  to  campus 
unity  and  welfare  that  might  oth- 
erwise go  unnoticed.  It  stands 
ready  to  offer  its  help  to  any  in- 
dividual or  group  that  needs  its 
assistance — in    the    form   of   idea^-. 


(time  when  the  student  body  was  "f  financial  aid.  or  physical  laboi 
j  divided  by  antagonism  between  |  —working  always  to  "help  the 
I  fraternity  and  non-fraternity   men.  |  campus   in   every   po.ssible   way   in 


i  The  ideals   of  the   University    had 

:  been  subordinated   to  conflict   be- 

,  tween    the    factcions    within    the 

i  University.      .  ■■' 

I  VALUES 

j      "The  founders  of  the  Grail  rcc 

I  ognized  the  higher  values  of  toler- 

,  ance,   unselfishness,    modesty,    and  i  ''^    recognition,    skill 

•  -service.  They  undertook  to  afford  !  priminence,     are     not 


making  it  a  better  place  in  which 
to  live  and  work,"  Weaver  said. 
SELECTION 

"In    the    selection    of    its    mem- 
bers  the  Grail   looks  for  students 
who     already     bear     evidence     of 
leadership,  unselfish  ^■ervice.  Pub- 
and    social 


considered 
;a   substitute   motivation    for   strife  |  qualifications    for    membership    in 
by  inspiratipn  of  example  and  the  j  ^^'^  Grail. 

"Modesty,  self-effacement,  and 
unostentatious  service  to  the  end 
of  unity,  the  positive  in.spiration 
to  character,  principle,  and  in- 
tegrity, through  exemplary  cam- 
pus ctzenship  are  the  values  which 
are  ncce.v;ary  to  the  realization  of 


I  Legislature 

i      The     student     legislature     will 

:  meet   at   7    p.m.    tod^y    instead    oi 

'  the  regular  time  of  7;30  p.m. 

Legislature  speaker  and  student 
hotly   president-elect   Sonny  Evans ;  ^j^^  ^jj^^.  ^^  ,^p  q^^^j. 
said     the     meeting     was     starting  |      "Membership  in  the  Grail  is  in- 
early    so    legi.'lators    would    finish 

1  at  an  earlier  hour  '  Tsf'^   GRAIL,   page   3.) 


governmen 
Baum  also  thanked  all  students 
who  worked  and  voted  for  him. 
'The  fact  that  I  have  been  able  to 
meet  and  talk  with  them,  and  can 
now  count  them  among  my  friends, 
has  itself  made  the  campaign 
worthwhile,"  he  said. 


Baum  said  he  was  proud  of  the 
manner  in  which  the  UP  waged  its 
campaign.  He  said  he  believed 
every  UP- menaber  would  work  hard 

with  ^he    SP    administration    "to ,  rcllment  for  next  year 
Ipromote  a  better  and  more  bene     proximately   t^   orientation  coun- 
,  ficial  government.  ■  /  ^^^^^    „.j„    ^^    selected    for    next 

fall,  according  to  Jerry  Oppen- 
heimer.  chairman  of  the  Orienta- 
tion   Committee. 

All  interested  men  have  been 
encouraged  to  fill  out  an  appli- 
cation blank  and  study  the  1956 
f  Manual  in  order  to  prepare  for 
the  quiz  to  be  given  at  7:30  p.m. 
Tuesday  in  Carroll   Hall. 

The  manuals  are  now  on  four 
hour  reserve  at  the  Y.  Graham 
.Memorial,  and    the   library. 

The  blanks  are  available  at  GM, 
the  YMCA.  Lenoir  Hall,  the  li- 
brary, the  Monogram  Club,  and 
from  fraternity  and  dormitory 
presidents.  Interviews  for  the 
counselors  will  be  held  at  a  date 
to  bs  announced  later. 

Sam    Magill.    coordinator   of   or- 


W.  p.  Mangum 
Award  Contest 
On  Wednesday 

All  persons  interested  in  com- 
petition for  the  Willie  P.  Man- 
gum award  in  oratory  must  sub- 
mit their  subjects  to  Dean  Mackie's    icntation;    George    Prillaman.    di- 


it 


office    by    4:30    p.m.    Monday 

was  announced  yesterday. 

Competition   for  the  award  will 

be    held   at    8   p.m.   Wednesday    in 

the   Dialectic     Senate     Hall.     All 

graduating        seniors.        including    meals   for   th 
j  those    graduating    after    summer    subsidized. 
'  school  are  eligible  to  compete,  the 
I  announcement  said. 

The  Mangum  award  is  the  old- 
'  est  award  presented  al  the  Uni- 
j    versity. 


rector  of  Lenoir  Hall:  Miss  Linda 
Mann,  director  of  Graham  Me- 
morial; and  Jerry  Oppenheimer. 
chairman  of  the  campus  Orien- 
tation Committee  announced  all 
counselors  will   be 


The  meals  will  be  subsidized 
from  Thursday,  Sept.  12.  the  first 
day  of  orientation,  to  Tuesday. 
Sept.  16  with  the  exception  of 
Sunday,    Sept.    14. 


ON  ELECTION  DAY:    VOTING.  COUNTING.  WORRYING 


they  conferred 


.  they  voted 


Photcts   by  Bill   King  .  .  .  tLey  counted 


.  .  .  I'ttey  worried 


f  AOI  TWO      • 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


THURSDAY,  APRIL  4,  19S7 


A  Job  For  The  New  Leaders: 
Combatting  UNCs  Laziness 

Now  that  the  elections  are  over  and  the  winners  have  been  ceni- 
fied.  the  canipus  can  settle  back  into  its  usual  apathetic  state  Of  nadai. 
That's  prer  isely  what  student  government's  new  officials  must  combat. 

The  new  presidents  and  vice  presidents  and  editors  and  chairmen 
and  legislators  have  been  handed  the  torch,  or  put  in  the  electric  chair, 
or  whatever  you  want  to  call  it.  Their  primary  respcmsibility  now  is  to 
see  that  the  student  bodv  of  the  University  of  North  Carolina  does  aot 
die  honi  boredom  and.  more  im- 


portant, that  the  student  body  is 
supplied  with  issues  and  contro- 
\ersies  and  tacts  so  it  can  form 
opinions  about  those  issues  and 
CDUtioversies. 

^Ve  have  no  idea  what  next 
vears  issues  will  be.  They  may  in- 
vjjlve  drinking  in  the  fraternities, 
as  they  did  a  few-  years  ago.  They 
inav  be  centered  around  the  grow- 
ing jxjpulation,  as  last  year  when 
parking  was  a  major  consideration. 
But  one  trend  may  \x  noted:  As 
the  University  grows — and  it  is 
currently  in  the  niXddle  of  a  tre- 
mendous expansion,  both  in  num- 
l>er  of  people  here  and  in  the  si/e 
of  its  physical  body— the  student 
ImxIv  will  find  itself  tied  tg  the 
same  growing  pr^lems  that  as- 
s.juh  the  folks  in  South  Building. 

The  problem  of  ^Atoney  will  not 
be  a  htige  one  for  the  student  body. 
Student  fees  take  care  of  our  grow- 
ing budget  adequately.  But  in 
many  other  areas  the  growing  Uni- 
\ersitv  makes  problems  for  student 
government.  Parking  is  one  item. 
Now,  freshmen  are  prohibited  from 
having  automobiles  here.  The 
problem  remains.  Something  will 
have  to  be  done  soon. 

-  The  studeiu  union  building  was 
built  a  long  time  ago.  Even  then 
its  builders  thought  it  would.,  be 
enlarged  shortly.  It  has  not  been 
enlarged,  and  now  only  a  tiny  per- 
<  cntaye  of  the  students  can  get  in- 
to Ciraham  Memorial. 

C.(M»rdination  of  events  has  al- 
>\.i\s  been  a  nasty  problem  of  the 
I  ni\ersity.  and  it  continued  so  this 
year.  ^ 

AVhile  it  is  a  matter  of  Universi- 
ty   pt)licv    a-iid    t]»e    students    have 


nothii^  to  say  about  it,  the  idea 
of  %vi4o  shall  get  in  the  University 
is  also  a  student  problem,  and  tlie 
students  should  concern  the;n- 
selves  with  it.  .\lready  our  dormi- 
tories are  full  and  too  full;  in  a 
few  years,  when  the  new  dormi- 
tories are  opened,  there  will  stiH 
be  three  men  in  a  room.  It  o4?- 
viously  is  a  student  problem. 

.\dded  to  the  physical  problem 
of  housing  is  the  even  more  im- 
portant problem  of  quality  of  stu- 
dents. It  is  low  now.  The  unof- 
ficial but  officially  sanctioned 
method  of  trimming  down  on  stu- 
dents is  to  fail  out  a  certain  num- 
ber in  their  freshman  year.  A  new, 
better  method  must  be  found.  The 
students  can  help  with  this,  too. 

The  always-problem  of  student 
government  is  student  freedom.  It 
exists  wjien  students  want  it  to 
exist.  It  alwavs  will  exist  when 
there  are  a  few  students  who  are 
willing  to  tell  the  administration 
to  go  to  hell,  and  who  can  give 
good  reasons  why.  But  when  only 
a  handful  of  such  students  exists, 
fighting  for  student  freedom  is  a 
tiresome  and  even  boring  job.  Sup- 
port from  the  whole  student  body 
is  needed. 

That,  perhaps,  is  the  greatest 
duty  facing  the  new  student  gov- 
ernment officers  and  editors.  If 
they  could  tell  the  story  of  student 
freedom  to  the  rest  of  the  student 
body— the  men  who  lie  on  their 
backs  in  their  shorts  all  afternoon 
in  the  Lower  Quad  and  those  who 
take  in  the  flicks  and  the  parties 
in  the  Big  Fratemitv  Court  and 
the  coeds  who  devote  their  thoughts 
to  costume  and  getting  a  liusband 
— then  Carelina  puly  will  havT 
made  progiess. 


A  Fine  Leader  Steps  Down 


In  the  midst  of  all  the  post- 
election patting  of  backs  and  shak- 
ing of  hands,  one  student  will  be 
lea\  ing  soon  who  deserves  a  stand- 
ing o\ation.  * 

We  refer  to  '?^tJtgoing  student 
body  President  Bob  Young.  He 
has   turned   oiu   as   the   best    presi- 


The  Daily  Tar  Heel 


Tbe  official  itudeni  put>lic«tinn  of  ^\^t 
Publications  Board  of  the  University  ^f 
North  Carolina,  where  it  is  published 
daily  except  Monday  and  examinatiot 
and  vacation  periods  and  summer  terms 
Entered  as  second  class  matter  in  tbi 
Vi^iit  office  in  Chapel  Hill.  N.  C,  umiei 
tbe  Act  of  March  8,  1870  SubscriptiOB 
rates:  mailed.  .S4  per  year.  $250  a  semes 
ter;  delivpred.  $6  a  year.  $3.50  a  mbm 
ter 


editor 


FRED  POWLEDGI 


Managing  Editor' 


CLARKE  JONES 


News  Editor 


NANCY  HILL 


Sporto  Editor 


LABRY  CHEEK 


Busine&s  Manager  _   .  John  C.  Whitaker 
Advertising  Manager  _    FRED  KATZIN 

EDITORIAL  STA^  —  Woody  Sean. 
Joey  Payne,  Stan  Shaw. 

NEWS  STAFF— Graham  Snyder,  Edith 
MacKinnon,  Walter  Schruntek,  Pringle 
Pipkin,  Bob  High,  Jim  Purks,  Ben  Tay- 
lor, H.  Joost  Polak,  Patsy  Miller,  Wal- 
ly  Kuralt,  Bill  King,  Curtis  Crotty. 

BUSINESS  STAFF-John  Minter,  Marian 
Hobeck,  Jane  Patten,  Johany  Whitaker. 

SPORTS  STAFF:  Dave  Wible.  Stmraft 
Bird,  Ron  Milligan. 


SubscriptiOB  Manager  _ 

Circtiiatioa  Manager  

Assistant  Sports  Editor. 


.  Dale  StaMf 

Charlie  Bolt 

Bill  King 


Staff  Photographers Wootiy  Sears, 

Norman  Kantor 
UtH-arians—Sue  Gichner,  Marilyn  Strum 


Night  Editor 


_  BILL  W££K3 


dent   in    the    p;<st    student   genera- 
tion. 

It  is  difficult  for  a  newspaper. 
e\en  a  .student  newspaper,  to,  say 
nice  thinj^s  about  someone  whose 
job  is  political.  By  tradition,  il 
by  jiotlii)ig  else,  newspapers  have 
constantly  criticized  student  body 
presideiHs  for  their  xveakness. 

We  can't  do  this  with  Bob 
Voung.  He  has  shown  his  calm 
stiength  time  and  time  again,  and 
at  the  same  time  he  has  maintain- 
ed the  respect  of  most  of  the  stu- 
dents, inost  of  the  townspeople, 
most  of  the  faculty  and  most  of 
the  administration. 


Young  didn't  arrive  at  this  ^es- 
f>cct  by  being  a  bendable  reed.  He 
has  not  shincd  the  shoes  of  any- 
one. He  ^has  been  strong,  sincere 
and  respected. 

It  was  Young  who,  a  few  days 
after  his  election  a  year  ago,  moved 
swiftly  to  show  the  state  how  stu- 
dent government  felt  about  the 
Ugly  Club.  He  was  part  of  the 
movement  to  wipe  out  a  cheating 
ring  last  summer. 

He  did  what  he  felt  was  right 
on  the  matter  of  student  parking. 

He  worked  many  hours  on  the 
questtoi>  of  a  i^w  student  union 
building. 

^'oung  has  devoted  a  great  deal 
of  liis  presidential  waking  hours 
to  the  abstract  problems  of  the 
University— teacliers'  pay,  teachers' 
leaving  UNC,  studerlt  apathy  and ' 
student    responsibility. 

lie  was  first  to  break  up  panty 
raids  and  the  first  to  greet  the  Tar 
Heel  basketball  team  returning 
from  Kansas  City. 

He  has  served  his  campus  posi- 
tively and  courageously.  He  would 
make  a  fine  model  for  every  elect- 
ed official  of  student  government 
—and  ever)'  student— next  y.ear. 


FOR  'INFERIORITY'  CLAIM: 


Dr.  Georges    Evidence  Given 


Dr.  W.  C.  George 

Dr.  GMr9«,  9*  the  UNC  MmK- 
cal  School  hero,  continues  hit 
•rgumint  that  Nogroes  are  blo- 
lofically  mforier  to  white  pM- 
»»ew 

There  is  much  evidence  to 
sbovr  that  the  Cauca&oid  people, 
the  white  race,  have  creative  tal- 
ents and  abilities  that  have  not. 
been  demonstrated  to  any  consid- 
ei'ahile  extent  by  the  Negro  race. 

Great  achievement  in  human 
individuals  is  correlated  with  a 
high  decree  of  intelligence  com- 
bined with  a  number  of  traits 
such  as  zeal,  vigor,  persistence, 
CQoperativeness,  adaptability,  im- 
agination, courage,  self-confi- 
dence. Great  achievement  in  pop- 
tdation  groups  is  correlated  with 
th^  number  of  individuals  of 
great  talent  and  drive  the  group 
possesses.  Compare,  for  example. 
the  pe<H>le  ai^d  the  achievements 
of  ancient  and  modern  Greece. 


Psycltologists  have  devised  a 
variety  of  tests  for  determining 
relative  degrees  of  intelligence 
and  intellectual  achievement. 
Many  studies  done  with  these 
teats  under  a  variety  of  geo- 
graphic, cultural  and  economic 
backgrounds  show  average  scores 
for  Negroes  lower  than  average 
scores  of  similar  groups  of  white 
people. 

I  shall  merely  refer  to  and  pass 
over  the  well  known  U.S.  Army 
tests  that  indicate  a  level  of  in- 
telligence for  Negroes  roughly 
23  per  cent  lower  than  that  of 
whites.  In  Wilmington.  N.  C. 
■vrhere.  it  is  claimed,  Negroes 
since  the  Civil  War  have  had  edu- 
cational advantages  superior  to 
more  than  90  per  cent  of  North 
Carolina's  white  children,  tests 
show  that  20  per  cent  of  the  white 
children  have  IQs  IlO-up  while 
only  1.6  per  cent  of  the  Negroes 
are  in  this  highest  ability  group. 
Only  23  per  cent  of  the  white 
children  were  in  tbe  various  clas- 
sifications below  average  while 
72  per  cent  of  the  Negroes  were 
in  the  classifications  below  aver- 
a«e... 


Effort.?  to  explain  away  such 
results  and  conclusions  as  I  have 
cited  are  not  conviiwing.  Further- 
more, the  psychologists'  tests  are 
not  the  only  evidence  we  have 
concerning  the  relative  abilities 
of  whites  and  Negroes  in  the  field 
of  intellectual  and  cultural 
achievement. 

ft  is  a  well  established  fact  of 
history  that  the  great  civilizations 
ol  the  world  have  been  produced 
primarily  by  the  Cauca^-oid  or 
white  races,  secondarily  by  the 
yellow  races;  none  at  all  by  the 
Negro  race.  . 


The  civilizations  of  the  white 
and  yellow  races  have  been  creat- 
ed in  almost  every  type  of  climate 
and  geographical  area  from  tropi- 
cal jungles  to  subarctic  areas.  We 
cannot,  therefore,  accept  the 
theory  that  the  Negroes'  lack  of 


achievement  must  be  excused  be- 
cause of  the  climate  of  Afrca. 
Africa  is  really  a  continent  of 
vast  size,  great  resources  and 
varied  climate.  The  Nep'oes 
could  have  explored  and  discov- 
ered and  created  if  they  had  had 


the  urge  and  the  intellectual  and 
personality  qmlities  necessary  to 
succeed  at  it.  Do  you  think  that 
we  can  safely  ignore  the  records 
and  base  a  national  policy  on  as- 
sumed abilities  that  have  not 
been  demonstrated? 


'Poor  Guy— All  You  Had  Was  An  Ex-Senator' 


./•: 


>»»-*•«••«  ^  r-^t 


TELEVISION  PREVIEW  -  AND  S&F: 


Congratulations  Around  To  Cast 


Anthony  Wolff 

The  Channel  4  series  on 
"American  Government"  con- 
tinues this  evening  at  6:30  with 
Senator  J.  W.  Pulbright  of  Ark- 
ansas as  guest.  The  topic  under 
discussion    is    "The   Senate." 

Shelly  Winters  stars  tonight 
on  "Climax"  in  a  psychological 
play  complete  with  emotional 
breakdown  and  accompanying 
phenomena.  It  begins  on  Chan- 
nel 2  at  8. 

*  «  • 

For  a  number  of  reasons  I 
have  refrained  till  now  from  say- 
ing a/iything  about  the  recently 
departed  "Thieves'  Holiday."  It 
is  now  time  to  offer  congratula- 
tions all  around. 

Honors  must  go  first  to  every- 


one connected  with  the  writing, 
directing  and  producing  of  the 
.show.  The  fact  that  they  made 
the  whole  thing  look  so  easy  is 
proof  that  they  worked  hard  and 
well. 

It  is  somewhat  more  difficult 
to  praise  the  acting,  running  the 
risk  of  mentioning  someone 
first  and  thus  slighting  the  rest. 
Jim  Thompson  must  come  high 
on  the  list — his  characterization 
of  the  goulish  Bhrudah  was  per- 
fect and  several  bits  of  business 
might  well  be  remembered  as 
brilliant  examples  of  comedy 
acting. 

Nancy  Stephans  was  also  im- 
pressive as  "the  broad  who  lures 
them  on."  She  was  definitely 
sexy  in  a  subversive,  thoroughly 


un-.\merican  way.  Her  voice 
was  perfect  for  the  play,  and 
without  the  accent  would  prob- 
ably be  an  asset  to  any  musical 
comedy. 

If  anything  more  can  be  add- 
ed to  Pee  Wee  Batten's  record 
as  an  entertainer,  I  don't  know 
what  it  is.  Suffice  to  say  that 
her  unerring  timing  and  mug- 
ging were  further  testimony  to 
the  supurb  comic  senSe  which 
has   become  her  trademark. 

And  so  on  down  the  list:  Ken 
Callender,  Ronny  White.  Carol 
Jean  Suther.  Louise  Whatley — 
there  is  not  space  here  for  all  of 
them.  To  everyone  who  had  any- 
thing whatsoever  to  do  with 
the  production,  then,  congratula- 
tions and  many  thanks. 


I'll  Abner 


By  A!  Capp 


R7I 


Siwi^ 


Mtf 


TViE  POLICE  FORCE  ME 
LOVED,  AND  THE  GlRL  WHO 

lon/ed  him,  have  both 
TOSSED  FOSDICK  OOT.rT 


/N  H'S  floorer  -  or  a 

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AWT  GOr  TyAT  ^/^D     , 

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PofH^ 


By  Walt  Kelly 


«)i4U  be  ditHdnea 

> Wtejjcome 

ouHtttiie  Ocean 
of  thelndi^. 


^O  MUCH  tUel-lPttt  «!«  tt)4U« 


CANAU  6MOU10 
CONNeCT  WITH 


y(?U  fi5l?6BT..P?0M  HKg  THffU 
\^^AU  POmfMi4,f  THE 

CARpyiNfi  aj«  €>wipp)N© 
ON  Me*?g  wATRScueetNT 

TO  THg  OTHf  r  ©iPfc  OF 
TMi\^fr|.P-A  VAUiAStr 

PRopeeTT^peACJON^, 


The     Holiday 
Was  Enjoyabte 


Jim  Armstrong 

With  all  the  color  and  splendor  of  a  weekend 
•f  New  Orleans  Mardi  Gras,  Sound  and  Fury's  1957 
^ition  of.  the  original  "Thieves'  Holiday"  closed 
this  week. 

For  approximately  two  hours  and  40  minutes 
the  student-produced  and  directed  musical-  come- 
dy inspired  and  captivated  a  near  capacity  audience 
in  Memorial  Hall.  The  Ludwig-Stephens  edition 
merits  much  recognition. 

Director  John  Ludwig's  ability  to  organize  a 
staged  Mardi  Gras  was  made  to  order,  for  the 
native  New  Orleanser  has  undoubtly  taken  part  in 
many  a  Mardi  Gras.  With  swiftness  and  decisive 
ne^s  the  slender  (firector  combined  the  talents  of 
Cecil  Hartsoe,  musical  director,  choreographer 
Blynn  Burning  and  costume  designer  Fou  Fou 
Semmes  into  one  of  the  finest  presentations  ol 
Sound  and  Fury. 

From  the  opening  overture  by  Levaot-$hrled 
pianist  Cecil  Hartsoo  to  the  closing  bars  of  the 
f  inele  by  the  chorus  and  entire  cast,  the  show  dis- 
played an  abundanc*  of  fresh,  original  telent.  This 
production  was  an  examine  of  character  sketch 
diversity,  graceful  and  virell  coordinated  choreogra- 
phy, and  scene  simplicity  that  created  the  gay  at- 
mosphere of  New  Orleans  during  the  Mardi  Gres 
season  it  was  also  a  succcessful  display  of  lyric 
and  composition  genius. 

The  smoothness  and  coordinated  effort  of  the 
dancers  resulted  in  a  stage  poise  seldom  seen  in 
amateur  musicals  and  due  credit  goes  to  choreo 
graher  Blynn  Burning,  whose  capable  handling 
blended  form  and  color  into  a  well  integrated  pat- 
tern of  concise  rhythm  and  unity. 

Costume  designer  Fou  Fou  Semmes  did  a  mag- 
nificant  job  in  assembling  appropriate  dress  for 
the  cast  of  over  60,  many  with  a  scene  change  to 
be  effected.  The  costumes  were  neither  too  gaudy 
nor  over-decorative,  but  blended  in  with  the  light- 
ing, producing  a  pleasing  effect  to  the  eye.  Dra- 
matic contrast  often  used  by  musicals  was  replaced 
with  pastel  colors  in  the  chorus  line  up  which  add- 
ed variety  to  the  conservative  and  stylish  dress  of 
the  leads. 

However,  adjacent  combinations  often  clashed, 
perhaps  due  to  individual  tastes.  Nevertheless,  the 
diversity  of  color  and  the  simplicity  of  line  in  de- 
sign added  sparkle  to  the  show.  Particularly  inter- 
esting was  the  costume  of  Auntie  with  her  enorm- 
ous Victorian  styled  head  piece. 

Technically,  the  same  sin>plicity,  clarity  and 
pleasing  effects  dominated,  establishing  the  proper 
nrK>od  and  atmosphere.  Credit  here  goes  to  tech- 
nical director  Nancetta  Hudson.  Although  master 
electrician  Dave  Jenkins  and  his  crew  had  un- 
cxcusable  difficvfty  in  administering  the  master 
.  .  switch  »\  times,  the  lighting  added  both  depth  and 
brillance  to  the  costumes  and  sets. 

The  quality  of  the  light  was  adequate,  with  a 
minimum  of  spill  into  the  audience  and  excellen! 
lighting  distribution  for  an  enormous  stage  as  thai 
of  Memorial  Hall.  Special  credit  goes  to  Miss  Hud 
son.  Anne  Fitzgibbons.  and  Pete  O'Sullivan,  who 
designed  the  sets.  Although  the  hotel  set  could 
almost  be  called  over-simplified  and  too  much  like 
a  formalistic  styling,  it  was  generally  accepted 
by  the  audience.  In  fact  it  was  amusing  to  see  Larr.v 
Evans  (Pepper  Tice)  in  his  intoxicated  mood  lean 
against   an    imaginative   wall. 

It  would  be  a  difficult  task  to  single  out  any 
one  actor,  actress,  soloist,  or  dancer  as  being  the 
star,  for  there  were  many  outstanding  personalities 
The  antics  of  Pepper  Tice  as  the  inebriated  college 
vacationist  Larry  Evans  were  well  acted,  but  due  to 
tht  script  Tice  was  often  out  of  place,  in  the  'third- 
one-makes-a-crowd"  variety. 

In  other  words,  this  reviewer  was  disappointed 
with  Tices  character  sketch  which  lagged  until  the 
tea  party  scene  when  once  again  he  seemed  to  ha\  c 
a  part  assigned  to  his  personality.  The  audience* 
attention  shifted  here  from  the  unimpressive  ren- 
dition of  "Youth  Is  a  Gay  Thing"  by  Auntie  (Louise 
Whatley)  to  the  seduction  attempts  of  Marina  (Nan 
cy  Stephans)  on  Larry  Evans.  What  followed  was 
some  of  the  finest  character  acting  by  Tice  and 
Stephans  in  the  musical. 

Jack  Bemis  (Dick  Stoker)  was  well  cast  as  an 
actor,  but  weak  as  a  singer  opposite  tde  dynamic 
range  of  Carol  Jean  Suther.  who  played  Betty  Anne 
She  indeed  s-aved  the  hotel  scene  from  complete 
boredom  with  her  rendition,  "Could  I  Be  In  LoveV 
The  seductive  Marina  (Nancy  Stephans)  displayed 
incredible  ability  in  her  characterization.  She  un 
doubtly  spent  many  hours  on  this  year's  produc 
tion  as  producer,  writer  and  actress  She  well  do 
served  the  bouquet  of  yellow  roses  she  received  at 
the  finale. 

Her  comrades  in  the  plot  to  rediscover  the 
stolen  "pizpur"  diamond  were  well  cast.  Ronny 
W^hite  as  the  notorious  Igor  had  clear  diction  and 
strong  voice  range  except  in  the  tricky  bxics  of  hL- 
solo  numbers,  where  his  enunciation  lacked  stres? 
or  emphasis.  Much  of  the  fault  lies  in  the  difficulty 
of  the  lyrics  and  a  speedy  tempo  which  could  not 
be  deciphered  by  the  audience. 

Jim   Thompson's  portrayal   of   Bhrudah  -was  a 
splondid  example  of  mastory  of  characterization. 
His  deformed   posture     end     fecial     expressions 
amused  the  audience  as  he  went  through  the  mo- 
tions of  a  terrorfcted  "yes-man"  assistant  thief. 
The  diction  of  the  Surete  detectives  Louis  and 
Pierre  played   by  Jean  Pierre   Boissavit  and   Alan 
Pultz  respectively  was  generally  inaudible,  whereas 
George  Stefanon  and  Nick  Kearns  did  a  good  job 
as  C.I.D.  detectives.  It  goes  without  saying  that  a 
good-natured    Hall    Henderson    turned    a    slip    into 
a  good  commonly-shared  laugh  when  he  muffed  his 
line. 

Not  to  be  overlooked  was  the  terrific  clowning 
of  Ken  Callender  and  Pee  Wee  Batten  ir.  the  Fam 
ous  Door  Nightclub  scene.  Pee  Wee's  talent  makes 
her  at  home  on  any  stage  and  in  any  situation,  and 
She  handled  owner-gangster  Joey  (Callender)  with 
all  the  poise  of  a  professional  comedienne.  She 
matched  every  line  with  a  jest  or  mimic  showin:; 
reahsUc  traits  of  slap  stick  comedy. 

And  last  but  not  least,  credit  goes  to  Jane  Brock 
whose  gyrations  would  fill  the  bill  af  any  R.uirh..u 
St.  spot  in  the  heart  of  Vieux  Carre 


I 


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10 
11. 
12. 
14. 
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16 
17. 

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20 
21 
23 
24 
26 
28 
31 
32 
33 
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37 
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444 


tHURSDAY,  APRIL  4,  1957 


THI  OAH.V  TAR  Hill 


PAGE  THRU 


leckcnd 
s  1957 
closed 

|in,iiutes 

come- 

liictience 

t>dition 

|aniz«  a 
.>r  the 
lart   in 

ici.i<ive- 

Jents  of 
jraphei 
J     Fou 

M'>ni.    ol 

-sty»«d 
of  the 
»w  dis- 

)t.  This 
sketch 

lr«ogra- 

!o»y  at- 
Gras 

»♦   lyric 

of  the 
■icen  in 
clioreo- 

'.andling 
ited  pal- 

a  maj- 
?>s    for 
lange  to 
gaudy 
le  light- 
lye.   Dra- 
I  replaced 
lich  add- 
I  dress  of 

clashed. 

Mess,  the 

in  de- 

f\y  intcr- 

enonn- 

(ity  and 
proper 

|to  tech- 
master 
lad  un- 
master 

^pth  and 

with  a 
■xcellent 
iv  as  that 
jUiss  Hud 
Ivan,  who 
n  could 
luch  like 
accepted 
|.-ee  Larry 
lood  lean 

out   any 

|being  the 

sonalities. 

pd  college 

»ut  due  to 

•third- 

ippointed 

until  the 
to  have 

ludience's 
Issive  ren- 
^e  (Louise 

rina  (Nan- 
lovved   was 

Tke    and 

:ast   as  an 

dynamic 

etty  Anne. 

complete 

I  In  Love?" 

displayed 

.    She    un- 

•s  produc- 

viell  de- 

eceived  at 

bcover    the 

bt.    Ronny 

iction  and 

rics  of  his 

irked  stress 

difficulty 

could  not 

•h   was  a 
torizatiofi. 
Kprassions 
the  mo- 
thief. 
Louis  and 
and   Alan 
lie.  whereas 
la  good  job 
^ing  that  a 
slip    into 
muffed  bis 

ic  clowning 
in  the  Fam- 
ilcnt  makes 
luaticn,  and 
:nder)  with 
liennc.  She 
)ic  showing 

I  Jane  Brock. 
in\   P..»urhou 


J 


APO  Completes  Rush  Meeting 


The  APO  fraternity, 
►crvice  organization  on 
has  completed  its  rush 
for  this  semester. 

Twelve   students  were   initiated 


national 
campus, 
meeting 


For  Someone  You 

Want  To  Rember 

At 

EASTER 


Your  Every  EASTER 
Need  Available  at 


Phone  9-8781 


in   pledging  ceremonies  held  last 
Tuesday  night. 

The  new  pledges  are:  Swayn 
Hamlet,  Reidsville;  Jim  Budian-. 
an,  Hickory;  Jerry  Ferguson,  Mill- 
brook;  Allan  Spader,  Parkersbur^, 
W.  Va.;  Charlie  Sanders,  Rodcy 
Mount;  Mike  Smith,  Belmont;  Jim 
Scott,  Winchester,  Va.;  Elwood 
Hill,  Deep  Run;  Charles  Sheets, 
Greensboro;  Bob  Carter.  Selma; 
Ralph  Albercombe,  Challotte;  and 
Frank    Williams.    Burlington. 


I  LAW  WIVES  MEET 

I     The  Law  Wives  Ai.'Sn.  will  meet 


CLASSIHEDS 


FOR  INEXPENSIVE  LIVING:  27 
ft.  Nashua  trailer — has  bath, 
tub,  shower,  porch,  oil  heater, 
added  room.  Connected  to  util- 
ities and  septic  tank.  1  mile  out 
on    airport    road.    $2300.    Call 


Lounges  2  and  3.   All   law   wives 
have  been  urged  to  attend. 
SCHOLARSHIP  COMPETITION 

T*he  Trt  Delta  scholarship  com- 
petition closes  Monday  night, 
April  18.  All  applications  muat  be 
in  the  offlce  of  the  Dean  of  Wo- 
men by  this  date,  it  has  been  an- 
nounced. 
THERAPISTS  MEETING 

The    North    Carolina 
Therapists    Assn.    will 


'42  PLYMOUTH  FOR  SALE:  4 
new  tires,  valve  job,  uphol- 
stery, paint  job.  Gas  heater, 
backup  lights,  turn  signals. 
Phone  92471. 


COUNSELORS  —  EXPERIENCED, 
top  salaries,  for  a  children's  co- 
ed summer  camp  in  lake  region 
of  Florida.  Specialties  including 
arts  and  craft,  waterfront,  ath- 
letics, nature,  music,  and.  gen- 
eral. Write  (uU  details  to  Camp 
Ocala,  316  N.  E.  14th  Terrace, 
Miami  32,  Fla. 


FIVE  ROOM  BRICK  HOUSE  IN 
center  of  town  —  has  hobby 
workshop.  Call  9456. 


spring  meeting  tomorrow  and  Sat- 1 
urday  in  Memorial  Hospital.  To- 
morrow at  5  p.m.  the  coordinating 
committee  on  rehabilitation  will 
meet,  with  the  executive  commit- 
tee meeting  at  8  p.m. 
NEA  CELEBRATION 

The  Qrang^  county.  Chapel  Hill, 
and  UNC  units  of  the  North  Caro- 
lina Education  Assn.  join  today  in 
the  nationwide  National  Education 
Assn.  centennial  celebration.  Their 
annual  banquet  will  be  held  at  6:30 
p.m.  in  Lenoir  Hall 
MATHEMATICS  LECTURE 

Dr.  J.  E.  Moyal,  mathematical 
statistics  expert  from  France  and 
England,  will  give  two  Statictics 
Colloquium  lectures  here  today 
and  tomorrow.  At  5  p.m.  in  Philiipo  j 
Hall  today,  he  will  speak  on  "The  j 
Ionization    Cascade".    The    second  I 


lecture,     "Stoekastic     Diiferential 
Elquations,"  is-  set  far  4  p.m.  to- 
morrow. 
ZOOLOGY  LECTURE 

Dr.  Alfred  S.  Homer,  director  of 
the  Museum"  of  Comparative  Zoo- 
logy at  Harvard,  will  give  a  public 
lecture  in  Wilson  Hall  at  8  p.m. 
tonight.  He  will  discuss  the  early 
history  of  land  vertelirates. 
DENTISTRY  SEMINAR 

The  North  Carolina  unit  of  the 

American  Society  of  Dentistry  fw 

Physical  1  Children  will  hold  its  third  annual 

hold    its  I  periodontics  seminar  today. 


What  A  Wonderful 

Book  Season! 


Hugh  Rankin 
And  George  Scheer 


Van  Wyek  Brooks 


Rebels  and  Redcoats  —  The  Am- 
erican Revolution  seen  through 
contemporary  eyes.  A  fascinating 
job! 

Days  of  the  Phoenix  —  A  very 
perceptive  critic  remembers  the 
wild  Twenties.  Interesting  mareri- 
al    on    Lewis,    Dreis-er,    Anderson, 


Phi  Eta  Sigma  Initiation 
Will  Be  Held  Toniqht 

Phi  Eta  Sigma  initiation  will 
be  held  tonight  at  7:30  in  the  Dia- 
lectic  Senate   ^all   according  to 'sensed  a  gavel  by  Representative 


RESULTS 

(Continued  frmn  Page  1) 

Trophies  were  given  for  the 
most  outstanding  dormitories  with 
first  place  awarded  to  Mangum. 

Second  place  was  awarded  to 
Grimes  and  Cobb  took  the  third 
place  trophy.  Grimes  dorm  took 
an  additional  trophy  when  award- 
ed the  one  for  Most  Improved, 
giv'en  to  its  president,  Jim  Wom- 
ble.  Steve  Lyons.  Cobb  President, 
was  awarded  a  trophy  for  most 
outstanding  dorm  President. 

The  newly  elected  dormitory 
Presidents  in  yesterday's  election 
were  sworn  in  at  the  meeting  by 
outgoing  Vice  President  Neil  Bass. 

Sonny  Hallford.  outgoing  IDC 
President,  delivered  a  brief  re- 
sume of  his  past  administration's 
work,  and  at  its  conclusion,  was 
given  a  standing  ovation  by  the 
representatives.  He  was  later  pre- 


an  announcement  frpm  Ernest 
Mackie,   dean   of   student   awards. 

The  organization  is  a  freshman 
scholarship  fraternity  for  men. 

All  freshman  men  who  make  at 
least  half  A's  and  the  rest  B's 
their   first    semester    or  first   se- 


Whit    Whitfield, 
of  his  IDC  work. 


in    appreciation 


GRAIL 


(CoTitmued  from  Page  1) 
mesters  are  eligible  for  member- 1  dicative  not  only  of  high  recogni- 


ship. 


Handbook 
Editor  Named 


Don    Herring,    sophomore    from 
,f,„  .  .       .     ,     ,  .Clinton,  has  been  named  editor  of 

Mencken,  and  a  host  of  lesser  Ut- '  the  1957-58  Carolina  Handbook. 


erary    lights 
period. 


of    that    glamorous 


Walter  Lord 


A  Day  of  Infamy  -  a  dramatic, 
but  factual,  account  of  the  events 
that  took  place  at  Pearl  Harbor 
oa  December  7th,  1941.  The  re- 
sult of  great  research,  it  moves  at 
a  heart-thumping  pace! 


the     Old     Order. 

a     projected   four- 
of    "the    Age    of 


Arthur  Schlessinger,  Jr. 


V- 


The     Crisis     in 

The    first     of 

volume    portrait 

Roosevelt",    this    bcK)k    traces    the 

social  and  economic  tensions  that 

reached  a  criais  in  the  election  of 

Roosevelt. 


Enjoy  All  The  New  Books  At 

The  Intimate  Bookshop 


The  handbook,  the  only  piece  of 
matrial  to  be  sent  to  new  students, 
will     have    larger    pa^s,    greater  j 
coverage  of  extra-curricular  activi-  i 
ties,  and  special  emphasis  on  the  i 
organization  and  work  of  the  stu- 
dent    government,     according     to 
Herring.  He  said  nwre  space   willJ 

also  be  devoted  to  the   "Carolina '. 
I  way  of  life.' 

Staff  position  are  nov  open  for 
'  interested  students,  he  said.  Posi- 
I  tions    open    are    a»"sistant    edit(wr, 

business  manager,  .art  editor,  and 

divisional  editors. 
Students  interested  in  applying 

for   a    position    on   the    handbook 

have   been    asked   to   leave   their 

i  names  in  the  Y  office. 
An   organizational    meeting   for 
students  wishing  to  work  on  the 
handbook  is  scheduled  for  2  p.m. 
tomcHTOw  in  the  Y. 


tion  for  achievement  and  unselfish 
devotion  to  altruistic  endeavors, 
but  also  of  the  willingness  to  serve 
and  to  exhibit  these  qualities  in 
the  interest  of  the  student  body," 
Weaver  said. 

Grail  officers  for  this_year  are: 
Delegata — ^Luther  Hodgea-;'  Scribe 
— Neil  Bass;  EJxchequer^^^Bill  Mc- 
Lean and  Vice  lixchequer — Bob 
Hornik. 


205  E.  Franklin  St. 


Open  Till   10  P.M. 


DAILY    CROSSWORD 


ACROSS 

1.  Thick  slice 
5.  Raised 
9.  Fuss 

<  colloq.  > 
.'0.  Stsjid  up 

11.  Hair  color 

12.  Beginning 

14.  £xist 

15.  Deity 

16.  Perform 

17.  Germanium 
(sym.) 

18.  U.  S. 
President 

20.  Fowl 

21.  Flee 

23.  Surface 

24.  Assaults 
26.  Planet 
28.  Sounds 

31.  Not  yeuiif 

32.  ContAiJied 

33.  Music  note 

34.  Siberian 
gulf 

35.  Pronoun 

36.  Ukely 

37.  Candle 

39.  Motherless 

calf 
41  Roman 

emperor 

42.  German 
river 

43.  Spun  wool 

44.  Manu- 
factured 

DOWN 

1  Gazes 
fixedly 
3  Solitary 
8  Affix 


4.  Youth 

5.  Small 
stream 

6.  Peel 

7.  Large  worm 

8.  Conveyed 
11.  An  herb 
13.  Movie  actor 
15.  Gatherer 

18.  Caresses 

19.  Make  choice 

20.  Sound,  »M 
a  goose 

22.  Droll 
fellow 
(colloq  ) 


23.  Slide,  as 
a  car 

25.  Moun- 
tain 
pass 

26.  Debate 
27  Capital 

(NY.) 

29.  Do- 
minion 

30.  Loca- 
tion y*«teH»jr'«  Aeiwcr 

32.  Wading  bird    38.  Coal  size 

35.  Mister  39.  Title   ( Bene- 
( Ger. )  dictine } 

36.  Matured  10.  Harem  room 


KD's  Win  Hi-Fi 
Set  With  7,000 

Q — Who  won  the  hi-fi  set  and 
collected  the  largest  amount  of 
crush-proof  cigarette  packages. 

A— The  KD's. 

Now  to  why  the  white  oak  con- 
sole was  given  the  girls  organiza- 
tion. A  major  cigarette  firm  of- 
fered the  set  as  the  prize  of  a 
contest,  to  see  which  Carolina  or- 
ganization could  amass  the  largest 
number  of  packages, 
j  These  packs  were  to  be  oi  the 
cigarettej'  manufactured  by  the  to- 
bacco firm. 

The  Kappa  Delta  sorMrity,  accu- 
mulated over  7,000  of  these  packs 
and  boxe9  to  win  the  set  easily. 

The  contest  went  on  for  about 
two  months  and  it  was  the  only 
one  of  its  kind  in  North  Carolina. 

Joe  Quigg,  campus  representa- 
tive lor  the  tobacco  company,  was 
on  hand  Tuesday  morning  for  the 
presentation. 


UP  Dominated 
Legislature 
Last  Tuesday 

The  University  Party  dominated 
the  legislative  seats  in  last  night's 
election. 

Following  are  the  votes  of  the 
Dorm  Men's  Districts: 

Dorm  Men's  U— Rudy  Edwards 
(SP),  230  votes  and  Charley  Wil- 
son (UP),  193. 

Dorm  Mens  III— TaUy  Eddings 
142  and  Harold  O'Tuel,  117.  Don 
Jacobs  won  the  six  months  seat 
unoppo.^-ed  with  155  votes.  All 
three  were  on  the  SP  ticket 

Dorm  Men's  IV— Everett  James, 
2fi6;  Al  Alphin.  253;  Bob  Brown- 
ing. 241;  and  Caleb  White,  234. 
All  were  on  the  SP  ticket. 

Dorm  Men's  V— Pat  Adams , 
(SP),  169,  and  Eddie  Bass  (UP),  | 
140. 

The  UP  captured  two  seats  in 
the  Dorm  Women's  district.  Miss- 
es Nancy  Llewellyn  and  Julia  Ann 
Crater,  with  222  and  219  votes  re- 
spectively, won  for  the  UP.  Miss 
Libby  Straugta  with  196  took  the 
third  seat  for  the  SP. 

Winning  the  two  Town  Women's 
seats  were  two  UP  candidates. 
Misses  Tog  Sanders,  95,  and  Ann 
Holt,  J6. 

Following  is  the  list  of  legisla- 
tor seats  elected  in  Town  Men's 
districts: 

Town  Men's  I— <:harles  Huting- 
ton  (UP)  won  a  6-months  seat  with 
108  voles.  Al  Ck)ldsmith,  also  UP, 
won  with  102. 

Town  Men's  U— Jeff  Hare  and 
Jock  Lawing.  Both  elected  were  in 
UP.  ^  ^ 

Town  Men's  III— Again  the  UP 
made  a  clean  sweep  with  Pete  Kel- 


Alse  present  for  the  ceremony 
was  J.   O.   Inman.   district  repre-  '  !>'  126,  Tom  Kenan,  104,  and  Bob- 


sentative  for  the  sponsoring  com- 
pany, who  congratulated  the  mem- 
bers of  the  sorority  on  thejr  fine 
effort 


Three  Cruises  Planned 
For  NROTC  Midshipmen 

Plans  were  announced  yesterday 
for  three  crui^-es  set  this  summer 
for  academy  and  NROTC  midship- 
men. 

Two  of  the  cruises  will  go  to 
South  America,  and  one  to  Can- 
ada. 

One  South  American  Cruiie  will 
leave  JiMie  7,  snother  June  10, 
and  the  Canadian  cruise  July  7, 
said  an  ansouncement. 


by  Perry,  93. 

Town  Mens  lY— Dick  Sessoms, 
UP,  defeated  Al  Brown,  SP,  49-21. 

Named  to  pOi>itions  on  the  wom- 
en's Honor  Council  are  Misses 
Punkin  Coe  (299),  Cindy  Seagraves 
(291),  and  Pat  Dflkm  (271).  They 
won  the  three  scats  open  over 
Misses  Nancy  Davis,  Hannah  Kir- 
by,.  Andrea  Stalvey,  and  Deborah 
Sink. 

Women's  Athletic  Assn.  are  as 
follows: 

President,  Mis..«  Frances  Reyn- 
olds, 523;  Vice-President,  Miss  Pat 
AndersQn,  531;  Secretary,  Miss 
Emily  Sommers,  330;  Treasurer, 
Miss  Kay  Smith,  522;  and  A\xrar(^ 
•'  Chairman,  Miss  Helen  Walker,  520. 


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M'lk-L('a<>(^tl-1  |()r(()n('o. 


^^ 


West  Franklin  St. 


Chapel  Hill,  N.  C. 


Wolfpack  Downs  Carolina,  12-6 


Loss  Is  First  In  ACC 
Play  For   Tar  Heels 


RALEIGH  UP>— North  Carolina 
State  whacked  five  pitchers  for  12 
hitj  and  routed  North  Caroline 
12-6  in  an  Atlantic  Coast  Confer- 
ence game  that  saw  Tar  Heei 
Coach  Walter  Rabb  ejected  in  the 
fifth  for  arguing  too  long  on  a 
home  play  decision. 

Hefty  hitting  plus  some  wobbly 
fielding  by  the  Tar  Heels,  who 
were  guilty  of  five  errors,  brought 
the  Wolfpack  it,s  first  ACC  victory 
in  its  first  try.  In  its  other  game 
State  lost  to  Delaware. 

It  was  North  Carolina's  finst 
ACC  loss  againa-l  two  win;*.  Its 
season  record  is  now  7-4. 

Umpire  Bobby  Hicks  thumbed 
Coach  Rabb  out  of  the  game  ir 
the  fifth. 

Right-hander  Roger  Hagwood, 
who  blanked  the  Tar  Heels  for 
four  innings  before  running  into 
trouble  in  the  fifth,  was  tlie  win- 
ning pitcher.  He  left  in  the  sixth 
with  Slate  holding  a  6-5  lead.  Jim 
Waleh  finished  up,  giving  up  one 
hit  and  one  run. 


one-suit 
wardrobe 


HASPEL 


9%%  gAcaoM  25X  contu 


Take  a  remarkably 
good-looking  suit... 
bless  It  with  the 
attributes  of  being  abk 
to  be  washed  and  woim 
the  next  mcrning 
without  need  ol 
ironing ...  and  you'v* 
got  an  amazingly 
jtTikctyc^l  9txX\  Just 
about  a  one-suit 
wardrobe.  Chopae 
your  Sir  Perior 
fi  om  handson>e 
combinations  of  cotA' 
edge  stripes  in  kgh( 
and  dark  tones. 


'39'* 


^ 


ITEVBKl  -  SHBPHBRD 


Don  Hater  homered  in  the  ^ 

for  State. 

The  box:      ^ 

CAROLINA    . 

Lewis,  2b  ^-, 


Shook.  If   .^-i. 

I.  Hill,  rf,  ,^."., 
l^gette,  c  .- , . 
Honeycutt,  ss 
Hudson,  cf  '.  _ 
llartman.  ^b^ 
.Vlault^'oy,   lb 

a-Ponds     . 

DIdham,   lb  ... 
Cross,   p    .  .-^... 

>aine,  p      

.Morgan,   p   

0.'  Hill,  p    .. -_ 

Aycock,  p  _ 

b-Strauss    

Totals     


34      «    24     10 


N.  C.  STATE            Ab.  H.     O.  A. 

Bradshaw,  2b  4  12  3 

J.  HiU.  rf    _.._ ^  2  J       2  0 

Wyant,    lb  5  1      7  0 

Keanel,  c  6  3      7  d 

Hafer,   cf  ^.^y_:....^.  4  1      2  ft 

Hunter.  If   ..__...  5  3      5  0 

Creekmore,  jM)  5  10  1 

Hurst,  ss    -^ 2  12  8 

Hag^^•ood,  p,...:.i-_.  1  0      0  1 

Walsh,  p  10      0  0 

Totals     ^ &4     12    27      8 

North  Carolina       000  310  014—  « 

N.  C  Stat*   300  032  13x->1) 

a— Walked  for  Maultsby  in  4tlL 
b — Flied  out  for  Aycock  in  9tli. 

E^— I.  Hill  2.  Honeycutt,  Hudson, 
Oldham.  Creeknwre.  R — Lewis, 
Lcgette,  Hudson  2,  Hartman, 
Ponds.  Bradshaw'  2,  J.  Hill,  Wyant 
2,  Kennel  3,  Hafer  2,  Creekmore, 
Walch.  RBI— Lewis'  2.  Honeycutt, 
Hartman  2,  Saine,  Bradshaw,  Wy 
ant  2.  Kennel,  Hafer  2,  Hunter  2. 
2B-4Iu«%r,  Kennel,  Bradshaw, 
Creekmore.  HR— Hafer.  SB— Hud- 
son. S— liagwood,  J.  Hill.  SF- 
Honeycutt.  I>P— Honeycutt,  Lewis 
and  Oldham  2:  Bradshaw,  iiorst 
and  Wyant.  Left-— North  Carolina 
10,  N.  C.  State  10.  BB— Saine  4. 
Cro.ss  1,  Morgan  1,  D.  Hill  2,  Ay- 
cock 1.  Hagn-ood  3.  Walch  5.  SO— 
Saine  2,  Cros.«  1,  Aycock  1.  Hag- 
wood  2.  Walch  3.  HO—JIagwood  7 


Tar  Babies 
Beat  State 
Frosh,  11-2 

i»  to  ftOWLAMO 

The  Carolina  freslunan  baseball 
team  chalked  up  its  tliird  straight 
victory'  of  the  season  here  yester- 
day as  tbe  Tar  Babies  blasted  the 
N.  C.  State  Frosh,  11-2  in  Emerson 
SUdium. 

Wayn«  Young,  a  tall  right-hand- 
er from  l)d[ooresville,  held  the 
Wolflets  scoreless'  for  seven 
frames,  giving  up  both  runs  in  the 
ei^th  inning.  Young  displayed 
fine  control  as  he  fanned  nine 
State  batters  and  allowed  but 
three  walks. 

The  Tar  B»bies  jumped  on  State 
starter  Danny  CBSte«n  for  three 
hits  and  eight  runs  \jx  the  first 
iiming.  Only  two  of  the  tallies 
were  earned  as  tJhe  Wolflets  were 
guilty  of  five  errors  before  the 
side  Was  fin^y  retired. 

The  Carolina  frosh  pushed 
across  two  more  runs  in  the  third 
inning  and  scored  their  final  tally 
in  the  slicth. 

Tommy  .jaintsing  unloaded  two 
triples  and  drove  in  four  runs  to 
pace  the  Tar  Babies  at  the  plate. 
Gerald  Griffm  collected  the  only 
other  extra  base  blow  for  the  Tar  ' 
Babie«  with  a  double  in  the  eighth 
inninf,.  Griffin  bad  two  for  five 
for  th^  afteniooR.  I 

Yesterday's  victory  combined 
with  victories  over  Oak  Ridge  and 
PJC  leaves  th^  Tar  Babies  unde  ^ 
feated  under  their  new  coach, 
Wayn*  WhHe. 

This  aft(fernoon  the  freshmen 
play  host  \K^  Oberlia  College  at 
3:30  in  Emtrson  Stadium.  Tomor- 
row the  two  teams  meet  here 
agaitt.^.  .•/    *,■> 

-.■^^■>^'-irHs  BOX 

CAKOilMA  A|. 

Graver,  h .  -  -   I 

Montgomery,  If      _ 

Brj'son,  lb  

a-Baldwih  ..., 

OnHln,  cfi. .„_„,.. 
Claytott,  ab  ••.^..... 
Workjnao',  ^  .^:„^ 
Crun>p/.r.„^.u;;^.; 


Saine  2  in  3  1/3;  Morgaa  1  in  X;  " 
D.  Hill  5  in  1  2/3;  Aycock  1  is  1. 
R  and  ER — Cross  3-3,  Saine  8-3, 
Morgan  2-2,  D.  HiU  3-3,  Aycock 
0-0,  Hagwood  5-5,  Walch  1-1.  WP— 
D.  Hill  1.  PB— Legette  3.  W— Hag 
wood.  L — Saine.  U— Bet*  and 
Hicks.  T— 3:05.  A— «00. 


TODAY'S  MURALS 

Softball:  (4:00)  ZBT  vs.  ATO, 
Dll  vs.  WKA,  Mangum  vi.  Cobb, 
Sig.Chi  vs.  Kap^Sig  (W).  KA  vs. 
Zete  (W),  Sig  Nu  vs.  Beta.  (5:00) 
Alpha  Chi  Sig  vs.  Med  Sch  1, 
Lewis  v.s.  Dent  Sch-2,  Dent  Sch-1 
vs.  Mong  Club,  Phi  Delt  Ctx  Vs. 
Med  Soh-2,  Law  Sch-2  vs.  BVP, 
Dke  vs.  PiKA. 

Tennis:  (4.00)  Peacock's  vs. 
Graham.   (5:00)   Zete  vs.  SPB. 


2 

4 
1 

4 

■4^ 

y 

Ab. 

■i* 
I* 

l^oote^,  ss  .,.^, t 

Smith,  c  .:..- ,_!._,„  .4 
UazutiStt  t  -.v^,l..-  i 

Cox.  ab  :_;..^ 4 

Lambert,  X^  A-^;-  1 
Caroth«r,  p.-Ji™.  1 
GUbert.  p  ^^,.^'1 
b-Mc!LeaA  v-^-u,,! 
Casteen,  p-lb <!;.„,-  $ 


THE    NEW   YORK   UFE  AGENT' 

ON  YOUR  CAMPUS 
IS  A  GOOD  MAN  TO  KNOW  : -f  < 

George  L  Coxhead 

UNC,   '42  M^'^l^^i  Campus  R*pr*s«ntatty» 

A    Mutual    Company    ^*^o|^^^  Founded   IMI 

IMEVIf  YORK  UPS 

INBURANGm  OOM^M^n^ 


Young,   p, 

Totalit'C  v--:i^ 

STAtl/f  ROSM 

Brawley.  H .:.':,. 
Elbridgi,  sab 
Lancaete^,  i£    ^ 


H. 

0 

0 

1 
0 
2 
0 
3 

2 

0 


7     11 


It 
0 
0 

1 
1 

0 
0 
0 
0 
0 
0 
0 
0 


H. 
0 

1 
1 

0 
0 

1 
1 

0 
0 
0 
0 
0 


Total*'    34       2       4       7j 

Scoire  by  inoinfe:  | 

SUte  Frosh  -...  QdO  OpC  020—  2  i 
Carolina  Frosh  W2  OOl  OOx— 1 1 1 
a — Flie<i  out  for  Bryson  in  7th. 
b— WiJlwd  foir  Carother  in  7th. 


i«Mii 


Milton's  Spring  Sweepstakes 

Starting  TUESDAY,  APRIL  2  and  Ending 
SATURDAY,  APRIL  6 

WITH   THE   FIRST  AND   EACH   ADDITIONAL  $10.00  l^UR- 

CHASE,  YOU'LL  RECEIVE  A  SWEEPSTAKES  TICKET  FOft 

A   139.95    IMPORTED  COTTON 

SHETLAND  JACKET  OF  YOUR  CHOICE 

DURING    THIS    CONTEST    PERIOD,    THE    LUCKY    C^gO 

WILL    RECEIVE    A    $14.95    POLISHED   COTTON    BLAZER 

OF  HER  CHOICE. 

(For  instance,  if  you  make  a  $40.00  purchase,  you'll  r*«#ive 

four  tickets  for  the  drawing,  to  ba  held  Monday,  April  Ifh, 

and  announced  in  the  Tuesday,  April  9th  issue  af  ih4  tar 

Heel.) 

Milton's 
Clothing  Cupboard 


Detroit  Beats 
Carcl$  tn  10th 

ST.  Pi£TE«SEURG,  Fla.— (Ai 
—  A  three-run  upirising  in  the 
10th  inning  on  a  triple  hy  Earl 
Torfesdn.  successive  singles  by 
Charley  Maxwell,  Jim  Finigan  and 
iFfank  Hmsit  and  a  passed  ball 
f ave  the  Detroit  Tigers  an  8-5  vic- 
tory 6V*r  the  St.  Louis  Cardinals 
today. 

Tli«  winning  runs  came  against 
soutbpiw  Jim  Davis. 

Pinch  runner  Don  S  a  m  f  o  r  d 
tcorcd  the  tying  run  for  Detroit  in 
th«  ninth  ma  passed  ball  by 
Hobie  Landrith^ 

Th6  Cardinals,  Stan  Musial  con- 
tinued big  batting  spree  with  a 
hom<  tun  apd  a  single  in  three 
trips  t6  boost  bis  spring  average 
ta  .469. 


timm 


Summer  Work 

lAiN  $fe  PIR  WEEK 

Mui  cash  scholarship  and 
0»id  nk^ti.  flhit  isprour 
IrMlfiHttff  f»r  int^rviaw. 

lOS  GARPNBR  HALL 

1  WM.  THURSOAY 

Af»RlL  4 

^laM«  k«  prampt 


■tfWW 


-M^ 


Rosy,  Maglio,  Gilley 
In  Colisuem  Tonight 

Th«  Coll«g«  All-Stars  go  against 
the  Harlant  Globe-Trotters  to- 
night in  the  Colisevm  in  Raleigh 
in  the  fifth  game-  of  the  current 
3|0-ganie  tour. 

The  Alh-Stars  will  be  coached 
by  Coach  Frank  McGuire  and 
will  feature  such  local  stars  as 
Len  Rosenbluth,  John  Maglio, 
Jim  Gilley  and  "Sad"  Sam  Jones. 


Tlie  Carolina  basketbaU  team 
went  over  the  centiuy  mark  only 
once  this  season.  The  Tar  Heels 
defeated  Virginia  here,  102-90. 


FIRST  TIME  AT 

POPULAR  PRICES! 


RODGERS  & 
HAMMERSTEIN 


Oklahoivia 


CinkmaScopE  c^ 

ColM  by  TECHMICOtW 

EXTRA! 

IN  THE  NEWS!  .  .  . 

The  Tar  Heels  Go  Against 

The  Jayhawks  Of  Kansas 

TODAY 


Carolina 


Howard  Johnson  Restaurant 

BREAKFAST 

LUNCH 

•  *  DINNER 

SNACKS 
"Landmark  For  Hungry  Tarheels" 


^^* 


1^  Comfort 
-  comes 

first ...  in 


FLORSHEIM 

Lasting  good  lit,  longer  wear,  finer  appearance  ar« 
the  extra  dividends  in  satisfaction  you'll  receive 
—  beraiise  Florsheim  invests  superior  mater* 
ial8  and  painstaking  construction  in  these  gen«». 

ine  Cordovan  Moccasins — America's  finest! 


Julian'] 


\fMm 


^'^^'^'i^^^^^^^mmm'mmmmmmmmmimmmKf^Kmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm 


tJ  H  C  LIBt^AHY 
SERIALS   DE?T. 

iL   HILL,    N.    C. 


ScaHertd  showers  and  thund«r- 
stormt  with   an  •xpMtad   high   ©f 


71. 


2rt)c  Datty  li^rar  Heel 


30 

Some   thoughts    in    passing.    Saa 
aditerial,  page  2. 


VOL    LVII   NO.   159 


Complete  OPi  Wire  Strvtet 


,    CHAPEL   HILL,  NORTH  CAROLINA,  FRIDAY,  APRIL  5,   1957 


Offices   in   Graham   Memorial 


FOUR  PAGES  THIS   iStUE 


IN   BACKYARD 

. .  conditions  in  toicn 


ON    STREET 

have  not  improved 


Garbage  Disposal 
Still  Problem  Here 


IN   ALLEYWAY 
.  .  during  the  last 


AT  BACK  DOOR 

. . . four  years 


By   WALT  SCHRUNTEK 

Four  years  ago  the  District  Health  Dept  conducted  a  campaign 
to  clear  up  a  sanitary  problem  which  existed  as  on  evesore  and  health 


Students  Are 
Urged  To  Apply 
By  Levy,  Young 


i'^.%  * 


Initiated  Into 


f  %* 


T 


0''- 


menace  to  a  business  area  of  Chapel  Hill  in  addition  to  several  campus  ' 


locations. 


Edwin    Levy,    chairman    of    the 
Orientation     Counselor     Selection 
I  Subcommittee,    and    outgoing   stu- 
dent   body    President    Bob   Young 
rru     J     *       r.  ,   .  .       .  Thursday  urged  students  to  make 

Ihc  dept..  after  a  series  of  investigations  and   sun'eys,  ordered  j  applications    for 
several     fraternity    and   business   locations   to   correct   the   conditions 
which  they  found  to  exist 

Because  of  the  large  abundance  of  garbage  materiaL-  they  found 
conducive  to  fly-breeding,  the  dept.  required  that  violators  construct 
separate  "garbage  houses"  to  facilitate  their  debris  until  it  was  picked 
up  by  collectors. 

The  purpose  of  the  covered  garbage  houses  was  primarily  a  san- 
itation promotion  but  it  was  intended  to  serve  a  social  function  as 
well.  Debri-  and  garbage  cluttering  would,  under  the  Health  Dept. 
plan,  no  longer  exist  as  an  eyesore  to  the  back  alley.s  of  the  com- 
munity. , 

Fraternity  houses  almost  immediately  set  to  work  to  correct  the    ,        t      h 
situatioa  as  dii^ected  and  within   two  years   every  house   approached  ,      ^J!  JT    .7h 
b>  the  dept.  met  prescriced  sanitation  requirements.  j      .^•^"'"'^     "*' 

>  Tlie  campaign  bog^fed  down  in  Chapef  HIU,  Jiiwevet.  When  severaT  ^^*S"  °^  "''  significanee  If 
ttt-tha.  lM.«mM.,..<wtafafaghmftts  cited  discovered  a  contingent  of  ^a<^lo^.^|^'^_  ^!??^-i-i^v**^V  . 
would  prevent  their  complying  with  the  Health  Dept.  ofdei*. 

Condition.^  depending  upon  the  number  of  times  'garbage '•was''col-, 


-h 


>- 


House 


lected  each  week,  the  type  of  building  to  be  constructed  and  a  town 
ordinance  covering  specific  aspects  of  the  problem.^  pivAided.  the 
initial  drawbacks.  '  »  ' 

Later 


positions    as    or- 
ientation counselors  for  the  com- 
ing year. 
I      Levy  emphasized  the  fact  more 

counselors  will  be  needed   due  to 
i 
,  the    expected    increase    in    enroll- 

.  ment  for  the  1957  fall  semester, 
i      He  said  as  yet  no  selections  have 
been    made,    but    reminded    Inter- 
ested students  they  mast  turn  in 
their   application   blanks   to   Grah- 
i  am    Memorial    or    the    Y.MCA    be- 
day.  I 

Stating   -the  work  of  the  com- 

the 

.aelectedt 

\  to  serve  aTorftntafioii  counselors." 

1  Young  called   the     work     of     the 

a     "challenge     and     a 


coMnselor 
privilege." 

In    speaking   of   the   counselors. 

when  it  was  discovered  that  the  town  proposed  to  pave  I  ^"^""^  **'"*•  "^*'^*''*  '^'^^  ^^^  P'^'" 
»  road  behind  the  stores,  property  line  considerations  entered  in '  ''^"^  ^'^°  '"^'**  *  ^'"*  ^"^  '*^^' 
tc  confuse  the  .-Ituatlcn.  i  ^^  impressions  upon   all   the  stu- 

Several  business  establishments  discovered  their  property  space  ^*''"^^  *'^'^'"  ^^*''"  '"^^'^idual 
was  completely  utilized  and  it  would  not  be  possible  to  construct  •  ^''""P-  ^  ^"^  ^"""^  ^^^^  ^^^^  °^  "^ 
the  buildings  required  by  the  Health  Dept.  vividly  remembers  the  impression 

The    Dept.    yielded   to   these    facts,    according    to   Dr    O     David    ^^^^  °"'"  ^'''entation  counselor  had  _ 
Garvin    of   the    District    Health   office,    although   every    attempt    was    "'*°"  "^    ^^^^  °^  ^^  should  real- , 
made  to  effect  a  WOTkable  ^-anitation  program  under  the  existing  con-    "^  ^^^  importance  of  the  work  of 
ditions.  these  persons. 

Where  possible,  the  merchants  Were  required  to  construct  the  "^°^f  ^^  ^^^  ^'""^  ^^^  orienta- 
necessary  garbage  houses  and  where  not  possible,  the  Dept.  tried  to  '  ''""  counselor  is  responsible  for 
prevail  for  the  establishment  of  daily  garbage  collection.  j  g"'*^*"g    ^nd    preparing    members 

Since  the  initial  campaign  by  health  officials,  much  has  been  '  ^^  '^'^  group  for  their  entire  col- 
done  to  correct  the  problem  which  existed  four  years  ago  !  '^^e  career."  Young  stated.  I 


As  Honorary 

New  Members  Become  Knights 
During  Ceremonies  Last  Night 

riiiriefn  mt-n  aiul  C^uolina  s  rciirinjj,  <  liaiut-llwr  were 
tapped  last  nig^ht  into  the  Order  of  the  Grail,  hifrhest  iiudet- 
<i;radiiate  men's  honorary. 

The  14  who  were  scletted  on  the  basis  oi  tnilh.  friend-^ 
ship,  <()uiaj»e  and  sevvi<e  are: 

Retirinn  Chancellor  Rol>ert  House,  as  an  honorary 
member;  Kddie  Rass,  Rob  Carter,  Tom  Wallers.  George 
Rag.sda]e. 

♦     Herman    Godwin.    Don    Furtado, 

j^^  ^       .     ■%.«  I  Sandy  Sanders.  Jerry  Oppenheim- 

One-Act  Plays 
Will  Be  Given 
By  Playmakers 


CCC  Planning  Committee  Members 


The  Planning  Committee  for  the  Campus  Christian  Council  Spring  Forum  this  week  drew  up  its 
final  plans  for  the  three-day  conference  to  be  held  April  14,  15  and  16.  Members  of  the  commiTtee 
seated  around  the  table  (left  to  right)  are  Larkin  Kirkman,  Holland  McSwain,  Miss  Jackie  Haithceck, 
Chairman  Donn  Welts,  Rev.  James  O.  Cansler,  Bu  i  Stalnaker  and  Miss  Phyllis  Krafft.  Looking  on  in 
the   back   are   (left  to   right)    Bill   Weeks,   Miss   Marion  Harris,  Jackie  Cooper  and  Bill   Kane. 


The  overaH  problem  which  existed  then  ha^- been  tampered  to  aj      Application    blanks   for   orienta-    SpriMQ   ForUm 

Preparations 
Almost  Finished 


large  degree.  Dr.   Garvin   said  Thursday  conditions   in  the  fraternity  '  *'""  counselor  may  be  obtained  at 

areas,  as  a  result  of  this  program,  have  improved  immensely.  " 

"Whether  it  has  been  solely  a  result  of  our  campaign  or  the  pride 
taken  by  the  boys  themselves,  We  can't  say, 


Dr.  Garvin  said. 
But  as  to   the  conditions  which  exist   behind   the   business   area 
in  Chapel  Hill  at-pre.sent  the  Health  Dept.  hasnt  been  able  to  do  any- 
thing definite. 

The  Dept.  hasn't  received  any  outstanding  complaints,  Dr.  Garvin 
indicated,  nor  has  it  been  able  to  contend  with  the  conditions  which 
existed  as  a  deterrent  four  years  ago  and  which  still  exist  today. 

He  further  indicated  the  Dept.  was  not  actively  involved  in  this 
problem  at  present  but  was  of  the  opinion  that  it  would  as.^me  more 
importance  as  summer  drew  near. 

.       Summer,  it  .seems,  L-  fly  breeding  and  health-sanitation  campaign 
^ason. 

Phi  Eta  Sigma  Inducts 
Fifty  For  Achievements 

Fifty  freshmen  here  were  init-  j  ford  Amos,  Charlotte;  David  Staf- 
iated  Thursday  night  in  Phi  Eta  I  ford  Ball.  Winston-Salem;  Terry 
Sigma,  the  "freshman  iKjuivalentj  Samuel  Barkin,  Winter  Haven, 
to  Phi  Beta  Kappa"  in  the  Dia-JFla.;  Bruce  Holt  BerryhilL.^har- 
lectic  Senate   Hall.  j  lotte; 

They  have  achieved  scholarship;      Silas  Walker  Blanton,  Jr..  Mar- 


the  YM(?A,  Graham  Memorial 
Monogram  Club,  Lenoir  Hall  and 
the  library. 

A  test  for  prospective  counselors 
will  be  given  Tuesday  at  7:30  p.m. 
in  106  Carroll  HaH  on  material  in 
the  1956  Counselor's  manual. 
Manuals  may  be  obtained  at  the 
YMCA,  Graham  Memorial  or  the 
library. 


honors  of  either  A's  or  B's  on  their 
studies  during  the  first  year  of 
school,  up  to  da.te.  J 

Dean    of    Awards    and;    Distinc-| 
tions    Ernest   Mackie,    faculty    ad- 
viser,     assisted     with     ceremonies 
presided  over  by  Herman  Godwin 
of  Dunn,  a  sophomore  who  is  pres- : 
idem  of  Phi  Eta  Sigma.  1 

Other  officers  are  Ilobert  J. 
Cowan  of  Greensboro.  Harvey 
Peck  of  Durham.  Ted  Rogers  of 
Waynesville  and  Dave  DaVis  of 
Chattanooga.  Tenn.  i 

INITIATES 

Those  initiated  and  their  home 
towns   are:  ,   '• 

Richard    Banthardt    Alexander, 


ion;  Ralph  Waldo  Cummings,  Jr., 
Raleigh;  William  Glenn  Davis.  Jr., 
Winston- Salem;  Albert  Leonard 
Deal,  HL  Hickory;  William  Bul- 
lard  Edmund,  Jr..  Lumberton; 
Roger  Babson  Foushee,  Burling- 
ton; 

Walter  Erwin  Fuller,  Jr.,  Lou- 
isburg;  John  Alden  Gardiner, 
Greensboro;  Albert  Lewis  Gold- 
smith, Jr.,  Lincolnton;  William 
Happer,  Jr.,  Lenoir;  Frederick 
Henry  Harris.  Rocky  Mount;  Ray 
Milton    Hayworth,    Asheboro; 

Clauston  Levi  Jenkins,  Jr..  Ral- 
eigh; Edward  Lewis  Jennings, 
Wadesboro;  Jackie  Lee  Lawing. 
Marion;    Thomas   Towles   Lawson, 


Cummings  Is 
Congratulated 
For  Hard  Work 

'Outgoing  Student  body  I^resi- 
dent  Bob  Young  Thursday  con- 
gratulated Elections  Board  Chair- 
man Ralph  Cummings  for  the 
board's  work  in  Tuesday's  elec- 
tion and  during  the  past  year. 

"For  the  first  time  in  four 
years  there  was  no  controversial 
fiasco  during  the  elections,"  Young 
said. 

Young  also  praised   the  board's 


The  planning  committee  for  the 
Campus  Christian  Council  Spring 
Forum  drew  up  its  final  plans  for 
the  three-day  campus  conference 
at  a  meeting  in  the  YMCA  Wed- 
nesday  at   4:30   p.m. 

Donn  Wells,  chairman  of  the 
planning  committee,  announced 
preparation  for  the  CCC  Spring 
Forum  on  the  theme  "The  Chris- 
tian Faith — Protest  and  Affirma- 
tion" to  be  held  here  April  14.  15 
and  16  Ls  almost  completed. 
Working  oru  the  interdenomi- 
'  national  program's  planning  com- 
'  mittee  are  representatives  of  most 
'  of  the  church  groups  on  campus. 
They  are  as  follows:  Jackie  Coop- 
er. Worship;  Marion  Harris,  Bud- 
get and  Finances;  Holland  Mc- 
Swain and  Phyllis  Krafft,  Pro- 
'  gramming;  Jackie  Haithcock,  Pu- 
I  blicity;  Henry  Heitman,  Book  Dis- 
play; Bud  Stalnaker,  Topic-Cen- 
work  in  revision  of  election.s  laws  tcred  Discussions;  and  Larkin 
this  year  "I  am  confident  that  the  Kirkpian  and  Dale  Austin.  Group 
revisions  for  which  your  board  is  Centered  Discussions;  and  Gerry 
responsible  will  be  an  asset  to  Mayo.  Continuation, 
the  future  functioning  of  campus-  Rev.  James  O.  Cansler.  local  j 
elections."  Baptist  Student  Union  director,  is  j 

Voting   totals   released   Wednes-    serving  as  student  pastor  advisor. 


Validity  Of  Ballenger's 
Theory  To  Be  Tested 


An  experiment  will  be  con- 
ducted in  the  Physics  Dept.  here 
today  or  tomorrow  to  determine 
the  validity  of  the  theory  of 
William        Ballengcr.        free-lance 

physicist,     who     claims     Newton's'      Ballenger  .said  of  the  smaller  ex- 
law  does  not  hold  true.  '  periment.     "This     could     possibly 

Ballenger  met  with  members  of '  P''''^'^    "^^   ^^eory   but    the    results 
the  Physics  Dept.  Thursday  morn- 
ing to  discuss  his  theory  and  make 
arrangements  for  a  public  debate. 


to   stimulate   interest    in    a    larger 

experiment,    one    which    physicists    Rothrock  of  Springdale.  Ark..  Miss 


Three  one-act  plays  written,  di- 
rected, produced  and  acted  by 
U.VC  students  will  be  presented 
by  The  Carolina  Playmakers  at 
the  Playmaker's  Theaer  at  7:30 
p.m.    Monday    and    Tuesday. 

No  admission  will  be  charged 
for  the  three  presentations,  a 
fantasy-romance,  a  farce-comedy, 
and  a  serious  play. 

"  Dramatic  Art  Professor  Foster 
Fitz-Simons  is  faculty  adviser  for 
the  program.  Jim  Armstrong  of 
High  Point  is  general  stage  man- 
ager. 

"Lost  Goddess",  written  by 
Christopher  Reynolds  of  New 
"Vorit.  N.Y.,  and  directed  by  Miss 
Marcelline  Krafchick  of  Phila- 
delphia, Pa.,  will  be  acted  bv  Dick 


said  would  cost  from  $5-10  thous- 
and. 


!  would  not  be  nearly  as  conclusive 
'  as    tests    using    highiiy    magnetic 
materials." 


Ballenger  said  following  the 
meeting:  "We've  come  so  close  in 
our  thinking  that  there  would  be 
no   point   in   having   a   debate."        I 

Members    of    the    Physics    Dept.  ' 
said,  however.   "We  are   in  agree-  \ 
ment  concerning  a  way  as  to  how  , 
to  test  this  theory.  We  are  in  no 
other   agreeement."  | 

Ballenger    said    he     asked      for  , 
public  debate  with  UNC  physicists 


A  petition  was  presented  Wed- 
nesday to  Consolidat€>d  Universi- 
ty President  William  C.  Friday, 
ri'questing  that  a  public  debate 
be  held  on  Ballenger's  theory.  The 
petition  was  referred  to  Universi- 
ty Chancellor  Robert  House,  who 
could  not  be  reached  for  com- 
ment yesterday. 

The  petition  had  approximately 
150  signatures. 


Anne  Fitzgibbon  of  Chapel  Hill. 
Gene  Parsons  of  Chapel  Hill  and 
Michael   Casey  of  Chapel   Hill. 

Stage  manager  and  set  designer 
are  Miss  Barbara  Battle  of  Miami. 
Fla..  and  David  Small  of  Morehead 
City.  The  play  is  about  an  enor- 
ous  deity  who  returns  after  3,000 
years. 


er.   John   Brooks. 
J       Mac    Fatten.    Danny    Lotz.    Ben- 
ny  Thomas   a&d    WilJiam   Redding. 
,  VARIOUS   FIELDS 
j      The    initiates    come    from     var- 
ious   fields     of    University     life— 
;  athletics,  slude.it  government  and 
religious    groups.    They    are    now 
Knights    of    the    Holy   Grail,    with 
their  chief  purpose   as  service  to 
the  campus. 

The  new  members  were  initiat- 
ed last  night  in  secret  ceremonies. 
They  will  -be  honored  at  a  dinner 
April  12.  at  which  .Vorth  Carolina 
Gov.  Luther  Hodges   will  speak. 

The  Grail  was  founded  in  the 
1920s  for  the  elimination  of  fric- 
tion between  fraternity  men  and 
independents.  The  order  annual- 
ly initiates  13  men.  with  six  fra- 
ternity members  and  seven  non- 
I'raternlty  men   in   alternate  years. 

New  fraternity  members  jnclude 
Ragsdale.  Godwin,  Furtado.  San- 
ders. Oppenheimer,  Patton  and 
Redding.  Independent  members  are 
Bass.  Carter.  Walters.  Brooks, 
Lotz  and  Thomas. 

OFFICERS 

Present  officers  of  the  Grail 
a.'-e  Luther  Hodges  Jr..  delegata; 
.Neil  Bass,  scribe;  Bill  .McLean, 
exchequer,  and  Bob  Hornik.  vice- 
exchequer. 

Current  members  of  the  active 
order  include  Don  Miller.  Bob 
Hornik.  Bob  Young.  Sonny  Evans, 
Tom  Lambeth,  John  Kerr.  Neil 
Bass.  Mehane  Pritchett,  Bill  Mc- 
Lean, 

Doug  Farmer.  Jim  Exum.  Fred 
Powledge.  Joel  Fleishman  and 
Luther  Hodges  Jr. 


"The  Spaceman  Cometh."  writ- 
ten by  Miss  Page  Williams  of  Ft. 
Thomas,  Ky.,  and  directed  by 
Peter    B.   O'Sullivan    of    Valhalla, 

N.  Y.,  will  include  Miss  Joan  Van 

Sise     of     Huntington,   N.Y.,   Ken 

Callender   of  Greensboro,    Harvey   New    Editor  To   Hold   First 

Knox   of   Greensboro,    and    Chris 

topher  Reynolds. 


Exchange  Scholarship  Winner 
Will  Be  Announced  Next  Week 


Fort  Lauderdait,  Fla.;  Jerry  Wof-,    (See  PHI  ETA  SIGMA.  Page  3) 


day  revealed  that  slightly  fewer 
people  voted  in  this  year's  spring 
election  that  did  last  year. 

In  dorm  men's  districts,  1594 
votes  were  cast,  under  1607  cast 
last  year.  Approximately  135  few- 
er dorm  women  voted  this  spring. 
In  the  combined  men  and  women's 
town  districts,  732  votes  were 
cast  this  year,  as  opposed  to  941 
cast  in  1956. 


Students  interested  in  the  Goet- 
tingen  scholarship  should  apply  at 
for  the  group  and  Sam  Magill.  UNC    the  YMCA   this   week,   it    was  an- 
director  of  student  affairs,  is  serv-  »nounced   Wednesday. 


Stage  manager  and  set  design- 
er are  Pat  Mulvihill  of  Evanston, 
111.,  and  Bob  Bailey  of  Statesville. 

The  play  concerns  a  Brooklyn 
spinster  who  reports  the  presence 
of  a  man  from  Mars  to  unbeliev- 
ing authorities. 

•The  Thief  and  the  Hunch- 
back," by  Leon  Rooke  of  Roanoke 
students   Rapids,   directed   by  Charles   Bar- 


ing   as    administration    advisor. 
BEACH 

The  three-day  campus  wide  con- 
ference will  feature  Dr.  Waldo 
Beach,  professor  of  Christian  Eth- 
ics at  Duke  Divinity  School,  as  its 
main  speaker.  Dr.  Beach  will  de- 
liver the  three  main  addresses  of 
I    (see  FORUM,  page  3) 


I  Selection  for  this  honor  will  be 
made  during  the  following  week. 
In  order  to  qualify  for  the  Goet- 
tingcn  Exchange  Scholarship,  stu- 
dents must  have  a  satisfactory 
scholastic  record,  take  an  inter- 
est in  student  affairs  and  have 
sufficient  knowledge  of  German, 
so   as   to   profit   from   class   room 


lectures  in  German,  the  announce- 
ment said. 

It  is  preferred  that 
have  had  courses  in  German  at '  rett  of  Hickory,  will  be  acted  by 
this  University;  however,  students  1  Joe  Whiteaker  of  Pine  Bluft.  Ark., 
who  have  not,  had  German  may '  Rusti  Rothrock  of  Anniston,  Ala., 
apply  on  the  condition  that  they  Jerry  Young  of  Marion,  Robert 
are  willing  to  spend  the  summer ;  Insko     of     Chapel    Hill.    Morgan 


learning    the    language     in    Ger- 
many  at   their  own   expense. 

The  announcement  said  it  is  ad- 
vi.sable  for  students  to  reach  Ger- 
(see  EXCHANGE,  page  3) 


Jackson  of  Charlotte,  and  Frank 
Rinaldi  of  Waterbury,  Conn.  Tlie 
drama  takes  place  in  the  time  of 
Christ  and  involves  the  thief,  Bar- 
abbas. 


Staff  Meeting  Today  At  3 

There  will  be  a  meeting  of  Daily 
Tar  Heel  staffers  today  at  3  p.m.. 
newly  elected  Editor  Neil  Bass  an- 
nounced yesterday. 

All  staff  members  and  students 
interested  in  joining  the  staff  are 
urged  to  attend. 

"As  I  said  during  the  cam- 
paign, I  feel  the  papers  staff  is 
not  large  enough  to  comprehens- 
ively cover  the  campus.  Thus  *I 
would  like,  first  of  ail.  to  acquire 
and  orient  a  large  staff."  Bass 
said. 

"Experience  is  not  necessarily 
a  prerequisite.  Jf  you  have  any  in- 
terest in  or  "inclination  toward 
newspaper  work.  I  would  appre- 
ciate your  attending  this  meeting," 
Bass  said. 


#AGt  rwo 


f  Hf  DAILY  TAR  HttL 


FRIDAY,  APRIL  5,  195/ 


FRIDAY,  APRI 


SOMEWHERE   IN   OUR   MIDST   ARE    WONDERFUL    TROUBLEMAKERS 


Our   Silent  Generation' 
And  The  Seekers  Of  Truth 

"A  iicnetuliun  goes,  and  a  generation  comes,  but  the  earth  re' 
mums  iorever.  The  sun  rises  and  the  sun  goes  down,  and  hastens  to 
the  fjlace  where  it  rises." — Ecclesiastes. 

A  follfi^f  generation  goes,  and  another  takes  its  place,  and  in  the 
I  vo  oi  those  who  sit  in  the  ivied  halls  and  observe  and  judge  the  college 
generations,  there  ate  new  trends  as  well  as  new  faces,  but  nothing  really 
new  exists  under  the  sun.  A  student  will  shout  when  lie  stumbles  upon 
a  new  idea,  and  his  professor  will  smile  at  him  and  share  the  ecstasv  of 
the  new  idea  with  him,  at  the  same  time  knowing  the  idea  is  as  old  as 
time. 


Student  geFieraiions  stumble 
along,  tour  years  at  the  time,  most 
of  their  members  remaining  silent 
and  faceless  at  the  back  of  the 
ciowd.  some  of  them,  the  t)oister- 
ous.  noisv.  troublemaking  ones, 
leading  and  drawing  attention  and 
prai.sc  and  criticism.  But  still  the 
maiority  sir.ys  in  the  back  of  the 
crowd,  silent  and  Jaccless  and  e\- 
treniely  carefirl. 

He(  ause  we  are  careful  we  have 

Ircji  gi\en  the  title,     "the     silent 

generation.'    flic   cautious   college 

men  and  women,  the  ones  %vithout 

(leativitv  and   passion  and  ability 

3iid  (ourage.  Aiid  it  all  is  true.  We 

are  >iltnt  and  careful,     dull     and 

pav»ionltNS.  funibling  and  coward- 

Iv.  '9m 

♦  *  * 

We  dress  alike,  not  so  much  to 
topv  other>  or  because  we  fear  s<x- 
ial    disapproval,  bm    because    it    is 

The  Daily  Tar  Heel 

Th*»  official  <iui{?ni  piihlu-4fi<'»n  of  the 
Fiiblirations  Board"  of  the  University  of 
North  Carolina  wh<*re  it  is  published 
4«iIt  except  Monday  and  examinatior 
•pH  vacation  periods  and  summer  terms 
Entered  as  second  class  matter  in  th* 
Dost  office  in  Chapel  Hill.  N  C  .  undei 
the  Act  of  March  8,  1870  SiibscriptioB 
ratrs  mailed.  $4  per  Tear.  $2  50  a  aemea 
^ter;  delivered.  SA  a  year.  $3.50  a  leatea 
tcr 


editor 


PTtED  POWLEDOI 


&l9na<4ing  Editor 


CLARKE  JONES 


News  Editor 


NANCY  raLL 


Sports  Editor LARRY  CHEEK 


Business  Manager  JOHN  C.  WHTTAKER 


Advertisi:.j  Manager    ...  FRED  KATZIN 


EDITORIAL    STAT  —  Woody    Scar*. 
Joey  Payne,  Stan  Shaw. 


NEWS  STAFF— Graham  Snyder,  Edith 
MacKiiuifOn,  Walter  Schruntek,  Priivgle 
Pipkin,  Bob  High,  Jim  Purks,  Ben  Tay- 
lor, H.  Joost  Polak,  Patsy  Miller,  Wal- 
ly  Kuralt.  Bill  King,  Curtis  Crotty. 

BUSINESS  STAFF— JohB  Minter,  M»riao 
Hobeck,  Jane  Patten,  Juimay  Whitaker. 

SPORTS  STAFF:  Dave  Wible,  Stewart 
Bird,  Ron  Milligan. 


SttbacripUoB  Manager  _ 
Cbvulatioo  Manager  — 

Assistant  Sports  Editor. 


.  Daie  Staiey 

Charlie  Holt 

Bill  King 


Staff  Photographers Woodjr  Sears, 

Norman  Kantor 
Librarians  ...Sue  Gichner,  Marilyn  Strum 

Night  Editor  — ^^-^  Manley  Springs 


easy  to  dress  like  otluhs.  W^e  read 
alike,  da'iiug  uot  to  read  too  much 
or  to  read  an  unknown  author.  We 
play  recordings  of  West  (x>ast  mu- 
sicians and  join  in  friendly  musi- 
cal arguments,  some  of  us.  about 
Beethoven   and  Bach. 

We  are  dull,  unimaginative  and 
scared. 

auls  when  we  don't  understanji  i?r 
don't  a;2free  v.ith  thcin.  We  ai^ue- 
for  man's  light  to  i>ay  wliat  lie 
pleases,  but  when  Dr.  W.  C.  George 
writes  about  his  belief  intheJ?i- 
ological  inferiorky  of  the  N^e^ro, 
we  call  hiin  names  and  denwnd 
that  he  be  shut  up. 

^Vc  believe  in  dcn)ocracy  and 
the  flag,  but  when  there  is  a  camp- 
us election  less  than  half  of  us 
v(rte,  and  we  cheer  Russians  in 
newsreels. 

We  have  om  own  bank  ac- 
(oimts  and  charge  accounts  be- 
rau.se  we  are  mature  students,  but 
we  also  put  masks  over  our  faces 
and  pull  pauty  raids  and  set  fire 
to  the  police  station. 

We  give  other  people  less  than 
half  a  chance  to  express  themselves, 
and  when  they  do  anyway  we  want 
to  <  rucify  them  on  tfie  spot. 

We  hate  leadersliip  and  we 
spend  a  lot  of  our  time  devijang 
methods  of  escajping  studying.  We 
sign  a  pledge  of  honor  and  then 
sj>end  four  years  not  noticing  oth- 
er people  who  cheat. 

If  theie  evei  was  a  generation 
which  appeared  well  on  its  way  to 
being  lost,  we  are  it.  But.  as  Ec- 
clesiastes states,  the  eartli  remains 

fore  vet. 

*  *  * 

Forever  there  will  be  the  student 
who  doesn't  wear  a  three-button 
sui.t  and  read  the  new&magazines. 
4'ore\er  there  will  be  the  student 
vvljto  siiKlies  because  tJiere  is  a 
cei  tain  fire  witbin  him,  and  wIk) 
loves  music  and  books  because  tlie 
strain  and  words  feed  the  fire. 

Forever  there  will  be  tlic  stu- 
deiu  who  cheii&hes  his  own  be- 
liefs and  also  belic\es  others  have 
equal  rights  to  their  own  opin- 
ions, even  if  tliey  be  diametrical- 
ly of^ioscd  to  his. 

forever  tfiere  will  be  the  student 
who  will  do  skil  these  things  and 
still  not  be  ashamed  of  hims€4f. 

These  people  are  in  short  sup- 
ply. We  need  more  of  them.  But 
tliey  will  always  be  around,  short 
supply  or  not. 

The  generation  stumbles  oii- 
Avard  toward  tile  diploma,  some  oi 
its  members  to  hell,  some  to  heav- 
en, Ai}d  some  will  run  along  in 
front  of  the  generation,  slioutiiif 
x^uestions.  asking  Why?. 

On  these  seekers  the  sun  will 
shine  as  thev  toil. 


A  FAMOUS  EDUCATOR  SAYS: 


One  Of  The  Duties  Of  Educaflon: 
Achieving  Your  Personal  Identity 


Harold  Taylor 

Last  sumi  .er.  President  Har- 
old Taylor  of  Sarah  Lawranc* 
Col  lag*  dalivarad  an  address  at 
the  National  Student  Associa- 
tion's congross  in  Chicago.  Por- 
tions of  that  spooch  are  re- 
printed here.  Thay  affect  ail 
students,  hart  and  elsewhere. 

What  kind  of  private  instruc- 
tion can  teach  young  men  and 
women  to  be  free,  to  be  inde- 
pendent, to  want  to  think  and 
act  for  themselves? 

In  a  way,  it  is  a  question  of 
teaching  people  to  find  them- 
selves, to  establish  their  own 
identity,  an  identity  which  is 
theirs  and  no  ebe  else's;  it  i^  a 
tquestiMT  oi  teaehin|Hl>e< 
know  what  they  believe,  about 
themselves  and  their  world, 
^about  other  people,  to  know  who 
they  are,  to  know  what  there  is 
in  life,  what  they  wast  from 
life  and  what  they  want  to  give 
to  it.  All  this  is  involved  in  the 
struggle  for  personal  indepen- 
dence. 

I  would  like  to  suggest  that 
this  is  what  cotlages  and  uni- 
versities »r»  for,  to  enabia  tha 
young  to  find  a  personal  idanti- 
ty,  to  help  tham  to  achieve  a 
personal   independence. 

I  would  like  to  suggest  that 
this  i.s  what  students  are  in  col- 
lege to  do.  and  that  if  they  are 
not  doing  that,  they  are  failing 
to  achieve  a  true  education  .... 
A  student  is  a  person  who  is' 
learning  to  fulfill  his  powers 
and  to  find  ways  of  using  them 
in  the  .service  of  mankind. 

The  student  at  his  best  has  a 
purity  of  motive  which  is  the 
mark  of  bis  true  function.  He 
wants  to  know  the  truth,  to  know": 


V\\  Abner 


what  is  £;ood,  not  merely  for  his 
own  or  for  other  peoples"  ad- 
vantage, but  in  order  to  achieve 
his  maturity  as  a  student. 

Ha   is  granted   the   priceless 
advantage  of  looking  openly  at 
the  world  to  discover   its  sec- 
rets. 
He  is  given  the  rare  privilege 


of  withholding  his  assent  to  the 
claims  the  world  makes  for  its 
own  particular  brand  of  truth, 
-and  he  can  decide  what  he  thinks 
on  the  basis  of  the  evidence,  not 
on  the  basis  of  pressure,  bfecause 
this  is  infact  what  it  means  to  be 
a  student,  and  what  the  world 
asks  the  .student  to  be. 


It  remains  only  to  say  thai 
3'ou  have  the  trust  and  confidence 
of  the  American  public.  You  art 
looked  to  abroad  for  leadership 
and  help ...  I  count  it  a  privi- 
lege to  be  able  to  say  to  you  that 
people  like  myself  believe  in 
*  you  more  than  in  almost  any- 
thing else. 


•  •  • 

Dr.  George:  We  Can't  Gamble 
On  Integration  Of  The  Rates 


J>r.  W.  C.  Georde^ 

Or.  George,  a  UNC  Medical 
School  professor,  believes  that 
Nognoes  arc  biologically  infer- 
ior to  whites.  Hare,  in  tha  Ust 
sag ment  of  a  speech  he  de- 
lltarod  recently,  Dt.  George 
concludes  his  support  of  his 
argument.  While  The  Daily  Tar 
Heel  violently  disagrees  with 
what  Dr.  George  believes,  it 
feels  his  renMrkt  sra  worth 
reading. 

In  spite  of  the  grave  danger.« 
suggested  by  science,  there  are 
people  who  insist  that  we  should 
go  ahead  with  integration.  Some 
of  them  -say  that  amalgamation 
will  not  occur.  We  cannot  afford 
to  gamble  the  future  of  our  na- 
tion and  our  race  on  that  as 
sumption. 

If  we  bring  together  in  social 
relations  children  and  teenage 
people  of  both  sexes  and  botfi 
races  and  break  down  their  sense 
of  racial  integrity  we  may  ex- 
pect" a    progressive    increase    in 


our  mi.\ed  blood  pbpujiation.  This 
•  «>  has  •oocuraed   in  some'  cou^triW 


Today  ministers  tell  us  that 
they  know  God's  will  on  all  sorts 
of  worldy  matters  that  they  know- 
little  about,  and  they  tell  us 
what  is  the  Christian  thing  to  do. 
w^hcn  a  careful,  critical  consid- 
eration of  the  facts  leads  to  the 
conclusion  that  the  thing  is  evil, 
not  good.  They  preach  sociologi- 
cal .sermons  that  will ''not  stand 
the  test  of  analysis,  they  pass 
resolutions,  they  quote  the  Gold- 
en I^ule. 

They  seem  not  to  realize  that 
quoting  the  Golden  Rule  does 
not  answer  the  question.  What  is 
the  right  and  moral  thing  to  do? 

It  merely  raises  the  question. 
The  admonition  "Do  imto  others 
as  you  would  have  them  do  to 
you."  applies  not  only  to  our 
relations  with  Negroes.  It  ap- 
plies also  to  our  children  and  to 
our  children's  children  through 
future  generations.  Do  you  think 
that  the  Golden  Rule  requires  or 


p^'rmU4  that  j^Vejmak^  racial  hy- 
'  brids  1 0^  tour  "^ijo^erity?  I  hardly 
think    so  . . . 

It  is  undoubtedly  *  thle  that 
many  good  men  of  the  church 
believe  that  they  are  doing  right 
in  promoting  integration  of  the 
races,  blinded  as  they  are  by 
shibolcths  and  virtuous  sounding 
phrases.  But,  for  reasons  that  I 
have  given,  evil  results  are  in- 
dicated if  they  succeed  in  their 
purpose  .... 

It  is  not  enough  merely  to  as- 
sert that  something  is  ethical,  the 
Christian  thing  to  do  and  God's 
will.  There  is  no  reason  to  as- 
sume that  God's  will  is  more 
clearly  revealed  to  inlegrational- 
ists  than  to  other  men,  nor  is 
there  any  reason  why  they  should 
be  exempted  from  proving  the 
merit  of  the  program  they  advo- 
cate. This  they  have  not  done  . . . 

I  do  not  claim  to  be  an  angel 
of  God,  my  friends,  but  I  be- 
lieve thai  we  should  resist  those 
people  who  are  telling  us  to  sac- 
rifice our  children  on  the  alter 
of  integration. 


By  A!  Capp 


MY.?"- THIS  SMELLS 
GOOD.T' —  "=»■=»— 
THAT  TICklldG.?' 
I  CAN  HEAR  IT 

PLAINLY.'!'' 


^  vwmrcH 

^i    MUST  K 


Pogo 


By  Walt  Kalty 


THWf '6  C?t' CMUPCHV    VV 

THfty'tf  eON^4A  ^fj/F^' 

CANAU  WITH  ONJ^OP- 
-THBIR  OWN 


THAT'd  WHAT /\UKte 

/TMfeypON'T<NOW»R 
tUftt  -'-0UT  irfi  dOIN' 


Any  PiN6PON6  wpo&Lt-Hekp]  Ho.rHty  ^ay^ 
<HOW^  THAT'#  /M^oss/Mig/  JrHeye  gonna  pi6 

fOlf  OMf  TM IN6 ,  WMAT%  TMf V 

60NHA  vo  tviTH  Aut  t^  Asrr 

tH«y  TA<e$  OUT?  Pitt  IT u^ 
KH*  9\i\\:p  k  MOtOiTAM 

N»A?uy«,OOOMiU&» 

^\6u? mp/ct/i-ous/,  " 


OJIf, 

.    WfW, 
ANOTHee  HOI*  THC  '  IN  rjUkT 
«AME  $<7e  AN  cAee 

THiteW  Twe        /  Me00e  %r/ 

PiCT  IN  TMHflr.  y/  Q^T  'T  AUt 
NMCfffR 


Reply  To  George: 
Just  One   Race' 

Anthony  Wolff 

This  may  be  considered  a.s  an  open  letter  to 
Dr.  W.  C.  George,  regarding  the  statements  which 
he  has  made  recently  and  in  the  past,  and  some 
of  which  were  printed  recently  in  The  Daily  Tar 
Heel. 

It  amazes  me  that  a  man  of  Dr,  George  s  years 
and  his  education,  not  to  mention  his  supposed  de 
votion  to  the  methods  and  ethics  of  science,  should 
persist  in  this  reiteration  of  unscienific  and  in- 
human ideologies. 

What  is  even  more  amazing  and  deplorabit  is 
that  Dr.  George  seems  to  feel  It  his  duty  to  air 
his  opinions  far  and  wide. 

In  the  address  delivered  at  Dartmouth  last  fall. 
Dr.  George  began  by  perpetuating  a  myth  which 
has  become  so  firmly  ingrained  in  some  people  that 
they  still  accept  it  as  true.  The  myth  says:  'We  have 
.'■forked  out  a  system  of  social  customs  and  laws, 
'  and  personal  and  group  understandings,  that  have 
enabled  two  greatly  different  peoples  to  live  to- 
gether in  peace,  mutuaLtoIerancc  and  helpfulness. 
Under  this  System  we' nave? 'fltlvctoped  i«CT«a8\ng\y 
good,  friendly  and  cordial  race  relations." 

This  is.  insultingly  condescending,  as  well  as 
palpably  untrue. 

It  should  be   unnecesary  for  me  to  go  through 
Dr.   George's   speech    and    pick   it   apart— its  basic 
fallacy   is    obvious.    .\s   Dr.    George   himself   noted 
(missing  the   obvious   implication),  he  is  no  more 
warmly  received  here  than  he  is  at  Dartmouth. 
So  I  am  not  writing  this  in  an  effort  to  con- 
vert Dr.  George  to  what  is  rapidly  becoming  rec- 
ognized even  in  the  Southern  regions  as  empirical- 
ly true.  Nor  am  I  writing  it  to  prove  to  this  camp- 
us that  which   it  evidently  knows  and  which,  if  it 
does  not  know  already,  it  cannot  now  learn. 

Rather.  I  am  writing  this  because  Dr.  George 
his  conspicuously  presented  his  opinion  in  situa- 
tions where  his  name  has  been  linked  with  ftie 
name  of  this  university:  as  this  newspaper  travels 
farther  than  does  the  doctor,  this  seems  to  be  the 
best  way  of  letting  people  know  that  Dr.  George's 
bui.combe  is  not  the  only  opinion  in  Chapel  Hill— 
and  letting  the  world  know.  too.  that  those  w^o  do 
entertain  the  misconceptions  which  constitute  Dr. 
George's  despicible  creed  usually  have  the  decency 
and  common  sense  to  keep  it  to  themselves. 

And  I  am  writing  this  because  there  is  an  at- 
tractive possibility  that  some  enlightened  institution 
in  Alabama  or  Mississippi,  hearing  of  the  opinions 
which  Dr.  George  insists  on  mouthing,  will  per- 
suade him  to  join  its  staff  in  its  losing  war  against 
its  own  conscience  and  humanity. 

I  have  only  one  request  to  make  of  Dr.  George: 
You  seem  to  feel  that  the  purely  accidental  as- 
signment of  minor  physical  characteristics  is  a  suf- 
ficient basis  for  segregation.  In  view  of  thi.* 
would  you  please  consider  making  another,  far  more 
ba.sic,  distinction:  There  really  ought  to  be  one 
classification  for  you  and  your  "Patriots'  (what  a 
l.ving  misnomer  that  isl),  and  another  for  men  and 
the  others  who  think  as  I  do. 

I  consider  you,  sir,  neither  patriotic  nor  Ameri- 
can nor  Christian.  If  consider  you  I  must.  I  do  so 
as  an  insult  to  this  university  and  this  country,  and 
to  the  only  "race"  which  matters  in  this  context— 
the  human  race. 

In  short,  my  real  reason  for  writing  this  is  that 
for  the  first  time  in  a  long  time  I  am  deeply 
angry.  To  life  a  fitting  line  from  E.  E.  Cummings. 
"There  is  some  s.  I  will  not  eat." 

• 
Television  Preview: 
Another  Van  Doren 

On  Channel  2  at  8:30  this  evening,  Ralph  Meek 
er  and  Julie  London  star  in  a  play  called  "A  Time 
To  Live."  W^ith  these  two  heading  the  cast,  it  is 
quite  possible  that  the  play  will  rise  above  the 
level  of  most  "adult  westerns." 

Edward  R.  Murrow  visits  Michael  Todd  and  his 
wife.  Elizabeth  Taylor,  as  well  as  Mark  Van  Doren. 
Todd  is  responsible  for  "Around  The  World  In  80 
Days"  and  is  quite  a  figure  in  the  entertainment 
world;  his  wife  is  in  need  of  little  editorial  com- 
ment: Mark  Van  Doren.  aside  from  siring  the  re 
cently  famous  Charles  of  the  same  name,  is  a 
Pulitzer  Prize  winning  poet  and  a  respected  critic 
and  prose  writer.— ANTHONY  WOLFF. 


Glee  Club 
At  Durham! 

The  U\C  si 
centiy  returnc 
spring  tour, 
at  Durham  H\ 
ham  Tuesday 

A  spokesmaij 
said  yesterdaj 
was  given 
enthusiastic  at 
dents." 

Directed  bv 
club  rendered] 
hers  sung  on 
ments  of  a  cor 
Freedom."   by 
"Integer  Vitac 
secular  numbe^ 
"To  Thee  Wee| 
numbers    were 
program. 

A  small  Ciioij 
dent  director 
fered     two 
Hoke    Simpsor 
artist    for    the| 
three  calypso 
a   quartet,   anc 
barbershop  qu| 
the  Glee  Club, 
bers. 

Accompanistl 
was  Hunter  Tij 


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V.A. 
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FRIDAY,  APRIL  5,  1957 


rM«  DAILY  TAR  HUL 


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one 

lat   a 

and 


Meek 

Time 

it   is 

Ire   the 


Glee  Club  Gives  Cpiuert 
At  Durham  High  Sthooi 

The  UNC  Men's  Glee  Club,  re- 
cently returned  from  its  annual 
spring  tour,  presented  a  concert 
at  Durham  High  School  in  Dur- 
ham Tuesday  morning, 


Limon  Dance  Cornpany 
Will  Appear  Thursday 


A  spokesman  for  the  Glee  Club '  ?'"'*"  *"  ""  "'**^  "°""''  '"'"^ 

day. 


Jose  Limon  and  his  Dance  Com- 1  only  in  the  dance  but  also  in  the  i 
pany  will   bring  "Theatre   in   the !  acting  field.     - 

The  Dance  Company  ,made  up 
entirely  of  featured  soloists,  in- 
cludes    in     addition    to     Limon, 


said    yesterday    that   the    conc«^ 

w  as    given    before   "around    1.000 '      Sponsored   by  the   Student  En  ,  „.    ,     ^.  ,  „     ,.       ^ 

enthusiastic  and  appreciative  rttt- '  tertainment  Committee,  the  dance '^^*  "'^^  ^'''^'^  ^°^'"'  ^°"^- 


dents." 

Directed  bv  Dr.  Joel  Carter,  the 
club  rendered  most  of  the  num- 
bers sung  on  the  spring  tour.  Seg- 
ments of  a  contata.  "Testament  of 


program     will     be     presented  in 
Memorial  Hall  at  8  p.m. 


,  er  Jooss  Ballet  star  Lucas  Hoving. 
i  Betty  Jones,  Ruth  Currier.  Lavina 
j  Nielsen,    and   concert    pianist   Si- 
Jose  Limon,  who  has  been  called '  nion   Sadoff,    musical   director   of 
by    dance    critics    "certainly    the  |  *e    company.    Artistic    direction 


Freedom."  by  Randall  TTiompson. '  ^i"est  male  dancer  of  his  time,"  j  will  be  in  the  bands  of  choreog- 
"Integer  Vitae."  several  folk  and   ^^  ^  leading  exponent  of  the  mod-   rapher  Doris  Humphrey. 
secular  numbers,  a  Russian  Uturgy,  i  e^"  ^^^^e  movement.  He  has  in-       Limon's  comany  has  a  long  rec- 
•To  Thee  Wee  Sing,"  and  special ;  c'^ded    in   his   company   a   group  I  ord  of  honors  and  worldwide  ap- 
numbers    were    included    on    the  ■  of    dancers    who    specializes    not ,  pearances.  It  has  been  chosen  by 

the  State  Dept.,  through  the 
Agency  of  the  American  National 
Theater  and  Academy,'  to  be  sent 
as  cultural  emissaries  to  South 
Amcrtca  in  1964. 

The  Company  is  featured  on 
major  artistic  series  annually, 
New  York  seasons  with  the  Juil- 
liard     Orchestra,      soloists      with 


program. 

A  small  choral  group  led  by  stu- 
dent director  James  Chamblee  of- 
fered two  comical  selections. 
Hoke  Simpson,  the  club's  guest 
artist    for   the    recent  tour,    sang 

three  calypso  numbers  backed  by  ^^^^ygg.^  Ggrnj^j^'^uring  Septe^i 
a   quartet,  and   'The   Flatters,^   a 
barbershop  quartet  selected  from 
the  Glee  Club,  rendered  two  num- : 
hers.  ! 

Accompanist  for  the  concert 
wHj.  Hunter  Tillman. 


EXCHANGE 

(CwUinued  front  Page  1> 
many  in   time     for     a     refresher 


ber  and  October  before  the  first 


NEED  A 
HOME? 

Plenty  Of 
V.A.  and  F.H.A. 
Money  Available 
For  Construction 

Of 

LESCO   HOMES 

Dial  83446 


vision    appearances    and    coast-to- 
coast  tours. 

Students  will  be  admitted  free 
to  the  Limon  program  upon  pre- 
sentation  of  ID   cards.  A  $1    ad- 


of    November.    The    summer    se-  i^g^ing  sj-mphony  orchestras,  tele- 
mester  ends  around   the  first  of 
Aiigust  so  that  it  would  be  possi- 
ble to  return  to  Carolina  for  the 
j  fall   semester  the  following  year. 

I     The  scholarship  provides  trans- 

i  portation    to   and    from    Germany    mission    fee    will    t>e    charged    to 
j  and  the  Goettingen  student  body   student  wives,  with  a  $2  admiss- 
provides   room,   board,    and   inci-  ^°"  ^°  othws. 

dental   expenses.  The  recipient  of  I  

the  scholarship  must  provide  the   ^      ^  ^    »%  •     r      ^ 

expenses  for  any  travel  which  he|.^^"^«"r  O^ltC^  Jo  Feature 
might  undertake  during  the  school !  CU  Day  Tomorrow  At  WC 
vacations,  said  the  announcement. ! 

Womcin's    College    of    the    Urn- 


Credits  for  courses  taken  must 


versity     of     North     Carolina  will 


be  worked  out  with  the  individual   celebrate   Consolidated   University 


involved,  the   announcement  said 


CLASSIFIEDS 


FIVE  ROOM  BRICK  HOUSE  IN 
center  of  town  —  has  hobby 
workshop.  CaU  9458. 


COMING  ALL  NEXT  WEEK 
OUR   SEVENTH   ANNUAL 


Day  Saturday  with  an  open  house, 
a  concert  and  an  informal  dance. 

Men  from  Carolina  and  State 
College  in  Raleigh  have  been  in- 
vited to  attend  open  houses  dur- 
ing the  afternoon  and  a  dance 
starting  at  8:30  p.m. 

The  dance  will  be  held  in  El- 
liot Hall,  the  student  union  buQd- 
ing.  Tickets  will  be  50  cents,  ac 
cording  to  an  announcement 

The  Consolidated  University 
Student  Council  will  meet  in  El- 
liot H#ll  .on'the  Women's  College 
(Campus  'at  2  p.m. 


Training  Cruise 
Will  Be  Taken 
This  Summer 

One  hundred  and  twelve  UNC 
midshipmen  will  take  a  summer 
training  cruise  with  5,985  acad- 
emy and  NROTC  Midshipment.  ac- 
cording to  Capt.  A.  M.  Patterson, 
U3N,  professor  of  naval  science. 

Sixty  seven  regular  juniors  and 
freshmen  will  take  part  in  the 
first  cruise,  Alf S,  which  will  ar- 
rive at  the  Naval  Academy  on 
June  7th  to  participate  in  the 
June-week  graduation  activities. 
The  practice  squadron  will  then 
go  to  Norfolk,  said  Patterson. 

The  ships  will  remain  in  Nor- 
folk where  they  will  participate 
in  the  International  Na^  Re- 
view in  connection  with  the 
Jamestown  Festival,  commemorat- 
ing its  356th  year  of  existence. 
The  cruise  will  depart  June  13tii 
for  the  first  ports  of  call.  Rio  De 
Janerio  and  then  Santos,  Brazil,  he 
said. 

The  midshipmen  will  tour  the 
Caribbean  landing  at  Trinidad.  St. 
Thomas,  San  Juan.  Puerto  Rico 
and  Guantanamo  Bay,  Cuba.  The 
squadron  will  return  to  Annap- 
olis August  5th,  Patterson  said. 
THIRTY  f!fV€ 

Thirty  five  contract  juniors  in 
the  company  of  1120  other  mid- 
dies will  leave  from  Norfolk  on 
cruise  Charlie  July  7.  The  squad- 
ron will  cruise  to  Quebec  and 
visit  there  for  six  days.  Then  they 
will  visit  Boston  from  the  26th 
to  the  30thi  of  July.  The  cruise 
will  end  August  7th  when  the 
ships  return  to  Norfolk,  he  said. 

The  navy  has  also  _  scheduled 
cruise  Bravo,  which  will  leave 
Norfolk  June  10th.  go  through 
the  Panama  Canal  to  Valpariso. 
Chile,  and  then  cruise  in  the  Ca- 
ribbean area.  No  Carolina  stu- 
dents are  expected  to  be  on  this 
cruise,  Patterson  said. 

A  Navy  department  release  said 
the  cruises  "are  designed  to  give 
midshipmen  an  opportunity  to 
learn  first  hand  the  jobs  they  are 
training  for  in  their  /uture  ca- 
reers as  naval  officers." 


GOING-GOING-GONE  SAiJE    UNC^Duke,N£.  State 

A  table  piled  high  with  used  books  -  everything    \Q/'Jll  JeOmS  To  CompCte 

from  texts  to  lively  novels  —  offered  at  prices  that 
get  lower  and  lower  until  they  vanish! 


Monday 

April  t 

Your  Choico 

29< 


Tuesday 

April  9 

Whafs  Loft 

19< 


Thursday 

April   11 

Whofs  Loft 

9< 


Saturday 
April  13th 

What's  Loft 

FREE 


You  pick  your  bargain  and  you  pick  your  price. 
Bring  along  your  wheelbarrow  and  have  fun! 

The  Intimate  Bookshop 


205  E.  Franklin  St. 


Open  Till   10  P.M. 


DAILY    CROSSWORD 


N 


ACROSS 

1.  Bridge 
B.  Tams 
9.  Game,  on 

horseback 
10.  OstrichUko 

bird  (var. ) 
1.  Walked 

teck  and 

forth 
12.  Flower 

14.  Chest 

15.  Sign  a« 
correct 

16.  Strange 

17.  Beetle 

20.  Cheese 

21.  Soft 

23.  Man's 
nicKMBH 

24.  Haras* 
26.  Firearm 
28.  Hewing 

tool 
29  Curved 
lines  and 
shellwork 
SI.  Resortf 
33.  Questioning 

36.  Sesame 

37.  At  home 

38.  Game  of 
cards 

39.  Glossy 
fabric 

41  A  beatified 
sou) 

43.  Small  nail 

44.  Skin 
disorder^ 

45.  Epochs   ' 

46  Wooden  pina 

nows 

1.  Extra 

2.  Pouotea 


3.  Malt 
beverage 

4.  Greet 
casually 

5.  "The 
dickens" 

e.  Wine 

receptacle 
7.  Singing 

voice 

8;  A  time 

piece 

11.  Animal's 

foot 
13.  Girl'f  name 
15.  Not  young 

18.  Swerves 

19.  Preposition 


20.  Build- 
ing 
block 

22.  God 
of 
love 

24.  Strong, 
woody 
fibers 

25.  Atone 
27.  Balk. 

Jng 
30.  Metal 
container 
^  32.  Place  of 
worship 

34.  Roman  date 

35.  Obtained 


HHQE3    aC3L4i*: 


The  first  annual  N€  Drill  Com- 
petition between  drill  teams  from 
Duke,  N.  C.  State  and  UNC  will 
be  held  tomorrow  at  3  p.m.  on  the 
intramural  field  be&ide  Woollen 
Gymnasium. 

Bd^th  straight  and  crack  field 
drill  movements  will  be  executed, 
according  to  an  announcement. 

Bob  Harrington,  commander  of 
the  drill  team  here,  said  Wednes- 
day awards  in  the  form  of  trophies 
will  be  given  in  both  divisions. 

"There  will  be  five  minutes  of 
straight  drill  and  ten  minutes-  of 
crack  drill  by  each  unit,"  Har- 
rington staled. 

HarringtOQ  said  Brigadier  Gen. 
F.  Carlyle  Shepard  of  the  NC  Na- 
tional Guard  wttl  be  director  of 
the  event.  He  is  the  Military  Af- 
fairs  Co-ordinator   for   UNC. 

The  judges  will  be  Maj.  Law- 
rence C.  Norton,  USMC,  asst.  pro- 
fessor of  naval  science  here  at 
U"NC;  Maj.  ICarence  L.  Morrison, 
USMC,   Asst   Professor   of    naval 


37.  Writing 
fluids 

40.  River  (3.  A.) 

41.  Weaken 

42.  High  card 


PHI  ETA 

(Continued  from  Page  1) 
Roanoke.    Va.;    Edwin   Levy,    Jr., 
New  Orleans,   La.;  Robert  6lenn 
Lewis,  Morehead  City; 

Denton  Lotz,  Northport,  N.Y.; 
Malcolm  Hector  McLean,  III,  Lum- 
berton;  Clifton  Darrell  Mann, 
Newport;  Theodore  Carlton 
Moore,  Jr.,  Chapel  Hill;  Robert 
Cutler  Noble,  Raleigh;  James  Am- 
brose Packard,  Providence.  Rhode 
Island;  ^  | 

James  Lee  Paricer,  Fairfield; 
Wilson  Burton  Partin,  Jr.,  Scot-^ 
land  Neck;  Hugh  Lester  Patter-, 
son.  Edenton;  Ashmead  Pringle 
PipXin,  Reidsville;  Herman-Joost 
Polak,  Waabington,  D.  C;  Richard 
Beverly  Saney,  Jr..  Chapel  HHl; 

Julius  Rowan  Raper,  Oxford; 
Charles  Green  Raeder,  Laurel. 
Miss.;  Bryan  Wilson  Roberts.  Hills- 
boro;  Richard  Hill  Robinson,  Jr., 
Greensboro;  Norman  Barrett 
Smith,  FraokUn;  Edwjard  Lee 
Smithwich,  Jr.,  Morobead  City; 

Jack  HoUand  Spain,  Green- 
ville. N.  C;  David  Henry  Suckow. 
Bowmansville,  N.  Y.;  Chester  Win- 
field  Taylor,  Jr.,  Castle  Hayne; 
Anthony  Garland  Turner,  Rocky 
Mount; 

James  Battey  White,  Pineville; 
James  Lynch  Williams,  Ashevflle; 
Mark  King  Wilson,  III,  Chatta- 
nooga. Tenn.;  Herter  Wilkinson 
Windley.  Jr..  Washington.  N.  C; 
Michael  Lee  Collins,  High  Point. 


science  at  Duke  University  and 
Lt.  Colonel  Basil  I.  Mishtowt,  US.'^. 
Asst.  Professor  of  military  science 
and  tactics  at  N.  C.  State.  Harring- 
ton said. 

i      "This  drill   competition  will  be 
an  annual  event  and  will  be  held 
next    year    at    Duke    University," 
I  Harrington  stated. 

The  competiti6n  this  year  is  be- 
:  ing  sponsored     by     the     Jesse  J. 
'  Morehead  chapter  of   the   Arnold 
i  Air  Society.  This  group  is  an  ad- 
vance   AFROTC    cadet    honorary 
society. 

j  Commander  Harrington  will  lead 
I  the  UNC  Drill  Team.  Cadet  Maj. 
I  Lary  Roysler  will  command  the 
!  N.  C.  State  team  and  Master  Cgt. 
Henry  Custer  will  lead  the  Duke 
team. 

"The  drill  competition  will  be 
judged  on  the  basis  of  showman- 
ship, performance  of  various  drill 
movements,  and  overall  general 
appearance,"  Harrington  conclud- 
ed. 

No  admission  will  be  charged 
for  the  event. 


FORUM 

(Continued  from  Page  1) 

the    conference    each    night    at    8 
p.m.  in  Memorial  HaU. 

Informal  discussion  groups  will 
be  held  in  the  various  fraternities 
and  sororities  on  campus  preced- 
ing these  main  addresses  each 
night.  Local  faculty  members  will 
lead  the  discussions. 

Following  the  program  in  Mem- 
orial Hall,  group-centered  dis-  j 
cussions  Will  take  place  at  various  | 
spots  around  campus  such  as : 
Graham  Memorial,  the  Library  As-  i 
sembly  Room,  and  Carroll  Hall.  I 
These  will  also  be  led  by  outstand-  j 
ing  faculty  and  administration  per- 
sonnel of  the  University. 

Rev.  Maurice  Kidder  of  the  local 
Episcopalian  Church  will  lead  the 
two  campus-wide  worship  services 
April  15  and  16  that    are    being' 
featured    as    part   of    the    Spring 
Forum.  These  wiH  be   at   1   p.m.  j 
in  Gerrard  Hall.  All  students  have  j 
been  invtted  to  attend.  i 


Powledge's  Last 

Today's  Daily  Tar  Heel  is  the 
last    for    Editor  Fred    Powledge. 

Powledge,  elected  editor  a  year 
ago,  today  will  turn  over  Uie 
management  of  the  newspaper  to 
Neil  Bass,  who  was.  eln^ed  edi; 
tor  in  Tuesday's  campus  election. 


Congratulations  .  .' .  Jane    Stainback 
This  Month's  Winner  Of  The  Title  Of 

MISS    FASHIONPLATE 


Next    Month's    Candidates 


MISS  SARAH  VAN  WEYK  ^  MISS   ELIZABETH  THOMPSON 

A  junior  English  major  and  member  A  junior  education  major  and  member 

of   Pi   Beta   Phi   sorority,   from  ^     of   Delta   Delta   Delta   sorority, 

Winnetka,  Illinois.  "       .^.     from  Rocky  Mount. 


MISS   SUE    MAYHUE 

A  junior  sociology  major  and  member 

of  Chi  Omega  sororitj',  from 

Ft.  Lauderdale.  Florida. 


YOUR  VOTE  WILL  BE  APPRECIATED 


•r.-^  i 


Vote  by  ballot  at  J.  B.  R06B/NS 


Nothing  to  buy  —  just  come  in  and  complete  and  cast  your  ballot  for  your  favorite. 
Both  male  and  female  are  eligible  to  vote.  .     "' 

The  v\/inner  receives  a  valuable  gift  from  Robbins. 


Note:  This  Is  The  Last-Fashionplate  Contest 

Next  month  we  will  have  a  contest  from  amongst  previous  MISS    FASHIONPLATE  winr^rs  to 
decide  on  the  1956-57 


FASHION    QUEEN 


The  Winner  Of  This  Contest  Will  Receive  A  Complete  Ensemble  From 


yferr:) 


VOfE 


VOTE 


OF  CHAPEL  HILL 


f  Aei  POUR 


TMt  DAILY  TAH  MttL 


FRIDAY,  APRIL  5,  1M7 


Frosh  Drop  7-5  Decision  To  Oberlin 


•HI 


4-Run  Rally 
Falls  Short 


My    ED    ROWLAHO 

Oberlin  College  built  up  a  steady  ^ 
i  l(;ad  over  the  UNC  fro.-li  baseball- 
;  ers  yestwday  afternoon  and  witli- , 
I  stood  a  4-run  ninth  inning  rally  tOw 


Today's  column   is   written   by   Assistant   Sports   Editor, 
King.   Ed's   note. 

Chamberlain  Featured,  Not  Carolina  ....  .».      ^    *         „p 

How  good  is  a  basketball  team  which  can  win   32  straight  b*U,^»'  ^-5.  It  was  their  fjrs    win  of 
games  in  one  season?  Good  enough  to  make  the  headlines  of  the  daUy !  J**^  *«»*2,°'  "^^  !^  "^^^  ""^  ^ 

newspapers?  Yes!  Good  enough  to  receive  number  one  ranking  in  the  i  '^^  .  *^  ^^' 

nation?  Yes!   Good  enough  to  rate  feature  coverage ,  from  a  leading 
weekly  magazine? 

Apparently  not,  according  to  Sports  Illustrated. 

We  are  in  accord  with  tho  ntany  fans  wtio  picked  up  the  AprH 
1   issue  of  Sports  Illustrated  and  road  with  disgust  tho  ••)•  pag* 
spread    given    the   NCAA   besketbell    tournament   in    Kamw   City 
March  22-23. 
The  story  starts  out  well  enough.  The  headline,  •Cool  32  In  Kansas 
City"  and  a  picture  of  the  Coach  of  The  Year  Frank  McGufare,  gives 
every  indication  that  at  last  the  Carolina  Tar  Heels  will  receive  "just" 
credit  for  their  miraculous  achievements  during  the  1956-57  basketball 
ivason  from   SI. 

But  such  is  not  the  case.  One  has  to  read  well  dewn  hmtrn  the 
second  paragraph  of  the  story  to  find  that  the  Tar  Heels  are  evan 
mentioned.  The  first  of  the  article  is  centered  around,  yaw  guess- 
ed  it.  Wilt  Chamberlain. 

According  to  one  Jermiah  Tax.  the  writer  of  the'  story,  Chamber- 
lain is  the    •Lord  High  Executioner,"  "ihe  greatest  basketball  threat  ] 
to  peace  of  mind  on  a  court  today."'  and  a  stripper  of  strippers. 

Everybody's  Heard  Of  Chamberlain 

Writer  Tax  wa^-  right  in  indicating  that  Chambertain  was  the 
big  drawing  card  at  the  Kansas  City  extravaganza.  It  seems  feasible 
that  he  would  be  since  LawTence,  the  home  of  the  Jawhawks,  is  only 
forty  miles  away  and  the  fans  oat  Ihere  have  heard  nothing  but  Cham- 
Jjprlain  since  the  sabre  thin  center  first  hit  the  KU  camptts. 

The  point  is,  >that  the  writer  seemed  to  forget  that  he  was  writ- 
ing for  a  magazine  that  would  circulate  all  over  the  nation.  Every- 
body had  heard  time  and  again  how  great  the  big  fellow  was.  In  our 
opnion.  the  majority  of  the  fan^-  would  much  rather  have  read  about 
the  ability  of  the  championship  team  than  about  the  "smooth-limbed 


In  the  ninth,  Frank  Montgomery; 
slammed  his  second  homer  of  the , 
afterno(»i  to  raise  hopes  for  a  Car- 
olina comeback.  Ray  Burroughs  f ol-  \ 
lowed  him  with  a  triple,  but  ani 
alert  Oaerlin  infield  converted  a 
grounder  into  the  final  out. 

Montgomery  hit  hi^-  first  homer 
in  the  first  inning  to  provide  the 
only  run  for  Carolina  until  the 
ninth.  Burroughs  provided  first 
inning  fireworks  with  his  initial 
triple,  but  he  died  on  third. 

Tar  Baby  pitcher  Ben  Hammett 
scattered  ten  Oberlin  hits  well,  but 
nine  Carolina  errors  paved  the 
way  for  his  downfall.  He  gave  up 
a  homer  and  a  triple  to  Joe  Hodg- 
son for  the  lone  extra  base  blows 
the  visiting  Yeomen  could  muster. 

Hodgson's  homer  in  the  fifth 
giive  Oberlin  the  lead  for  keeps, 
and  they  increased  it  with  four 
more  tallieA"  in  the  eighth.  Two 
hits,  a  sacrifice,  and  three  consecu- 
tive Tar  Baby  errors  handed  Ober- 
liii  their  four  runs. 

Bill  Guerrera  hurled  seven  fram- 
es for  Oberlin  and  won  his  first. 
Hammett  suffered  his  first  loss. 
The  game  lasted  three  hours. 


Bucs  Beat  A's 

FT.  MYERS.  Fla.  _(AP)— Re- 
lying exclusively  on  singles,  the 
Pittsburgh  Pirates  today  rammed 
across  four  runs  in  the  first  two 
innings  and  hung  on  for  a  4-3 
exhibition  victory  over  the  Kansas 
City  Athletics. 

Bobby  Friend,  ace  Pirate  right- 
hander, was  credited  with  the  tri- 
umph. He  gave  up  nine  hits  and 
all  of  the  Athletics'  runs  in  his 
seven  innings  on  the  mound. 

The  Pirates  hopped  on  Virgil 
Trucks,  veteran  righthander  who 
went  all  the  way,  right  from  the 
start.  They  pushed  across  a  run 
on  successive  singles  by  Bill  Vir- 
don.  Bo*  Skinner  and  Gene  Freese 
in  the  first. 


Pete  Brennan  set  a  new  UNC  re-  j  Lennie  Rosenbluth  broke  the 
cord  this  year  by  pulling  down  332  j  UNC  record  for  field  goals  made 
rebounds.  Lennie  Rosenbluth  was  I  this  past  season  as  he  hit  305  ou« 
second  with  280.  of  631  shots-. 


Howard  Johnson  Restaurant 

STUDENT    SPECIALS 

Barbecued    Chicken 
Choice  Steak  Sandwiches 

2:00-    5:00  P.M. 
8:00-11:00  P.M. 
'Landmark  For  Hunqry  Tarheels" 


SERVED 


MIHALY   IGLOI 

New  Assistnnt  Track  Coach  . 


Igloi    Is  Assistant 
Track  Coach  At  UNC 


By  DAVE  WIBLE 


giant  who  was  designed  for  basketball  as  surely  as  an  eagle  for  flight."  I     Oberlin  and  the  Tar  Babieg  will 

Incidentally,   the   name  Rosenbluth  appeared  only   twice   in   the   tangle  again  this  aftemon  at  3:30    team  of  Roxboro  high  school  came 
article  and  he  wa.^-  not  the  Carolina  AU-American,  he  was  "their  great 
forward." 


Tax  finally  Issued  a  few  bouquets  to  the  Tar  Heels  in  the  last 
paragraph  saying  that  they  played  well  under  presc-ure  and  that  "it 
is  impossible  to  give  too  much  credit  tcf  Frank  McGuire  and  his  crew 
of  Tar  Heels."  Well,  writer  Tax  Certainly  made  sure  that  he  didn't 
give  the  Tar  Heels  too  much  credit. 

There  is  a  rumor  that  Sports  Illustrated  has  received  a  great  many 
letters  concerning  the  article  and  has  decided  to  give  it  another  try 
this  week.  Lets  hope  so. 

Carolina  Has  New  Baseball  Coaches 

Little  haj  been  said  about  the  new  baseball  coaches  at  Carolina. 
This  sea.son.  the  Tar  Heels  have  three  new  men  in  baseball. 

The  new  varsity  assistant  coach  is  Bill  Wilhelhi,  a  graduate  stu- 
dent who  got  his  sheepskin  from  North  Carolina  State.  Wilhelm  is 
assisting  head  coach  Walter  Rabb,  who  only  thiif  year  was  Boade  tfi* 
ficial   head  coach. 


in   Esntraon  stadium  to  conclude    to   Chapel  Hill   to  get  some  tips 
a  four<g)une  North  Carolina  tour  ^  on  running   from     the     Carolina 
by    the    visitwrs    from    northern  ^  track  coaches.  They  assembled  at   ^^'^ 
Ohio.  I  a  corn^  of  Fetzer  Field  to  hear 


Previously    they    had    lost    two 
games  to  E3on.  12-1  and  10-1.  ! 

TNi  »OX 
UNC 


Name       Pos. 
Craver,  as 
Montgomery,  Lf 
Burroughs,  rf 
Griffin,  cf 
a'Saintsing 
<;aayton,  2b 
!  Baldwin,  lb 
b-Pelligrini 

KilpatrickVsb 
fehiinp,  b 
Frost,  c 
H^mcn^  p 
tOTAU. 
Oheriin 
bfacne       Pots. 
Hodgson,  ef 


Wayne  White,  a  '53  graduate  here  is  handling  the  freshmen  this 
season.  White  succeeded  Henry  House  who  resigned  to 'devote  more 
time  to  his  work  as  a  general  college  advisor.  White,  who  captained 
the  1953  Tar  Heels,  is  working  on  a  masters  in  Phy^cal  Education. 

Assisting  White  with  the  frosh  is  Nelville  Cooper,  another  grad 
student.  Cooper  is  a  graduate  of  El  on  College;  All  three  men  have  piay- 
ed  professional  baseball.  -  ;   C**-'*;-'' 

Mural  Schedule  To  Run  Everyday 

A  new  policy  of  the  Daily  Tar  Heel  Sports  Department  will  be, 
space  permitting,  to  publish  the  intramural  o-chedule  every  day  on  the  i"^®*****"'   ^'** 
sports  page.  Due  to  the  tact  that  results  come  in  too  late  for  print  on  I  ^shcraft,  2b 
the  next  day.  the  Tar  Heel  is  working  with  the  intramural  department    SlickCT,  c 
on   a   plan   that    will   carry   the   up-to-date   standings-   at   least   once    a  i  c^*»««ker 
week.  i  Buck,  c 

C^ristian^Kta.  If 
WUfley,  rf 
Peterson,  3b 
Williams,  sg 
Guerrera,  p 
4-<a»lvily 
e-&iryder 
Clark,  p 
TOTALS 


Swede  Student  Wants 
American   Pen   Pal 


Even  the  folks  in  Sweden  appar- 
ently, were  rooting  for  the  Univer- 
sity of  North  Carolina  basketball 
team  in  its  final  NCAA  game  with 
the  University  of  Kansas. 

A  Swedish  boy,  Lars  Jo{ians^.'dn, 


wrote  to  the  university  expre&eiing 
interest  in  becoming  a  student 

In  a  letter  addressed  to  "The 
Head-Master,"  the  18-year-old  Jo- 
hansson explained  he  heard  the 
game  over  a  U.  S.  Armed  Foi^es 
Radio  Service  broadcast. 


H 

2 

2x 
0 
1 
0 
0 
0 
1 
1 
2 
0 
0 
0 
0 
9 
a-flied  out  for  Griffin  in  eighth 


Ah 
3 
4 
5 
2 
2 
4 
8 
1 
p 
4 
0 
2 
3 
32 

Ab 
4 
5 
4 
4 
1 
0 
4 
4 
4 
5 
2 
0 
0 
1. 
38 


H 
0 
3 
3 
0 
0 
0 

I 
0 


the   four   minute  barrier   himself. 

.  ,      Fifteen,  of    the   eighteen    world 

Wednesday  afternoon   the  track '  ^a^ks  that  Igloi  runners  have  set 

were  by  three  runners:  RoKavol- 
gy  set  five.  Tabori  three  and 
Tharos  Soindor  seven.  All  three  of 
.w  runners  lowered  the  1500 
meter  mark.  Soindor  was  the  first 
Igloi-man  to  set  a  new  record  in 
this  event  with  a  time  of  3:40.8. 
Tabori  came  along  and  tied  that 
mark    and    then    came    Rozsav<J[gy 


The  Art  Of  Tailoring 

"Every  man  to  his  business, 
is  beyond  all  doubt  as  noble  and 
iMt  indaad  the  craft  of  a  tailor 
as  secret  as  any  in  the  world." 

HAVE   OTHERS   FAILED? 

With  expert  workmanship  and 
the  best  service  possible  Pete 
The  TaHor  has  and  wiji  continue 
to  five  you  fh*  ultimate  in 
tailoring  needs. 

And     while     you     are     at' 
Pete's,  won't  you   check   and 
sea     if    you     have     left     any 
clothes  and   overlooked    pick- 
ing fham  up? 

PETI  THE  TAILOR 

Speclaliiing  in 
"Ivy   Leagueizing" 

133V2   E.  Franklin  Street 


TEMPTATION 
and  TERROR... 

in  a  savage  land 
of  wild  desire ! 


what  head  track  coach  Dale  Han- 
son and  his  staff  had  to  say.  One 
member  of  the  staff  was  a  little 
hard   to   understand.    He   did    not 


know  English  very  well   and  the   ^,^^  j^^.^^^^  ^^^  ^^^^^  two-tenths 


FIRST  TIME  AT 

POPULAR  PRICES! 


high  school  boys  could  tell  he  had 
not  been  in  the  United  States  very 
long. 


0      9, 


The  preps  were  hearing  Milhaly 

Igloi,  the  Hungarian  distance  run- , 

ner   coach  who,  with   his  protege 

':  Laszlo    Tabori,    c)iose    the    United 

i  States  to  revolution>torn  Hungary 

U  af^r  last  year's     Olympics     and. 

.  I  whether  the   Roxboro-  boys  knew 

^ '  it  or.  not,  they  were  hearing  the  ' 

;  man  who  is  considered  the  "best 


1 
0 
0 
0 
0 
0 
0 

1 
1 

0 

1 

0 

t 


distance  coach  in  he  world." 


Igloi  and  Tabori  came  to  Chap- 
E  el  Hill  this  winter  to  train  for  the 
0  big  indoor  meets  held  in  New 
1 1  York,   Washington,    Boston,   Cleve- 

0  land  and  Milwaukee.  After  the  in- 
0 ;  door    .season    was     overlgloi     de- 

0 1  cided   to  stay   in  Chapel   Hill   and 

0  '■  work   wth   the   Tar  Heel    distance 

1  i  runners  this  spring.  The  tracl^  i  Mihaly  Igloi  stepped  off  the  track 
0  I  team  is  very  fortunate.'  said  3"^  watched  the  young  runners  as 
0  Coach  Ranson,  referring  to  his  as- '  ^^^y  ^^nt  by.  "Could  there  be  an- 
0  sociate.  'Carolina  is  very  fortunate  «^f»<-''"  Rozsavolgy,  Soinder  or  Ta- 
0  :  indeed  to  have  a  tracl^  coach  who    ^"^'    '"    ^'"'^   "*^'  homeland?"   he 


of  a  second.  Rozsavolgy's  mark  stiU 
stands. 

Besides  the  1500  meter  record, 
Rozsavolgy  has  the  record  for  the 
1000  meter  and  the  2000  meter 
runs.  Soidor  is  world  champion  in 
the  two  mile,  three  mile,  and  the 
six  mile  runs.  The  other  records 
these  three  have  sot  have  since 
been  broken. 

Although  these  runners  are  Ig- 
loi's  best,  he  has  coached  matiy 
other  champions:  A  6000  meter 
relay  team  he  coached  still  holds 
the  world  crown  as  does  a  26 
mile  pupil  and  even  several  lady 
runners. 

"The  world's  best  distance 
coach"  finished  Ifis  brief  talk  and 
the  Roxboro  boys  were  sent  to  jog 
around   the  track  for  a   few  laps. 


RODGERS  & 
HAMMERSTEIN 

OKlAHOIViA 


0   has  coached  runners  that  have  set 

0  18  world  records. 

0 1  In   Hungary,   Igoli   coached   the 

2  I  Hoyed  Club  (an  athletic  club).  In 
!  1955.  the  athletes  of  this  club  set 


wondered. 


"I  should  like  to  know  some- 
thing about  the  studies  at  North 
Carolina  University,"  he  wrote. 

"I   should  like   to   study   at   an 

American  college  or  university  but 

I    think    its   rather    expensive.    I 

wildness   to   score   two  runs  i  would   rather   like   to  get   a  "pen 

went    on    to    defeat   the    De-   friend  from  North  Carolina,  so  if 


Cardinals  Cop 

LAKELAND.    Fla— (AP)— Th e 
St.    Louis    Cardinals    took    advant- 
age of  Pete   Wojey's  seventh   in- 
ning 
and 

troit   Tigers   5-4  yesterday    in    an  '.  you  J"JOw  some  sweet  gill  or  a  boy 
e.xhibition  baseball  game.  !  ^^^o    should    like    to    write    to    a 

In    the    hectic    seventh    Wojey,  j  Swede  you  can  give  them  my  ad- 
Detroit's     second     pitcher,     twice  |  dress, 
threw  the  ball  away  on  attempted  : 
pick  off  plays  and  forced  in  one  j 
run  by  walking  Bobby  Del  Greco 
with  the  bases  loaded. 

A    Detroit    rally    against    Hoyt 
Wilhelm  in  the  eighth  fell  a  run  i 
short  when  the  Tigers  could  score  ' 
only  once  after  loading  the  bases  | 
on   two  wallis  and   a  single    with 
one  out.  I 


b-struck  out  {(h*  Baldwin  in  eighth 
c-safe  on  error  for  Slicker  in  eighth 
d-walked  for  Guerrera  in  eighth 
e-r«n  for  Chivily  in  eighth 


Ob«rlin 
VNC 


001 
100 


020 
000 


Studvnf  Party  Meeting 
Scheduled  Wednesday 

The  Student  Party  will  meet 
Wednesday  at  7:30  p.m.  instead  of 
Monday  a$  originally  scheduled. 
Chairman  Sonny  Hallford  said 
Thursday. 

Hallford  said  at  this  time  the 
party  offices  would  be  filled.  He 
urged  all  mejoobers  to  be  present. 


seven   different  world    records    in 
seven    successive    months.    Later  1 
that    year    in    London,    he    substi- 1 
tuted  a  two  miler  for  an  air  sick  I 
040 — 7-^2  I  miler  and  at  the  end  of  the  race  { 
004— 5-8-S   had  had  the  third  runner  to  run  [ 
the  mile  under  four  minutes.  Lasz- 
lo. Tabori.    the    sub.   had   run   the 
distance   in   3:59.    The    next    year 
Jstvan      Rozsavolgy,      the      miler 
Tabori  had  substituted  for,  broke 


The  University  of  North  Caro- 
lina set  a  new  season's  record  with 
a  percentage  of  .431  on  shots  from 
the  floor. 


CiNbmaScoPE  Q 

Mw  by  TECHNICUOK 

TODAY 


Carolina 


starring 

RICHARD  DENNING 
BEVERLY  GARLAND -Lisa  Montell 


TODAY  And 
SATURDAY 


What   Is 


B 


■MMMM 


"^ 


The  Staff  of  The  Daily  Tar  Heel . 
wishes  to  publicly  thank 

•    -  • 

Mtio  rowuMt 

for  his  inspirirtg  leadership, 
valued'guidance,  and  unselfish 

devotiqn  to  this  newspaper. 

/I 

waammmmmmmmmrnkmrnammmrmmmmmm 


PATRONIZE  YOUR 
•    ADVERTISERS    • 


The  University  of  Connecticut 

and 

The  Frank  C.  Munson  Memorial  Institute  of 


^<5H^^^' 


American  Maritime  History 

offer  in  the  unrivaled  setting  of 

MYSTIC  SEAPORT 

a  completely  unique  graduate  history  course 


in 


American  Maritime  History 

»     Six  Credits 

July  8  —  August  16 

Address  your  inquiries  to:  Dept.  C,  Summer 
Session  Office,  University  of  Connecticut, 
Storrs,  Connecticut  .... 


ENGINEERING  GRADUATES 


How  KEARFOTT'S 

Training  Progrann 
Works... 

A  "Uarninff  by  doing"  philosophy  is  basic  at 

Kmrf9tt.  As  an  assistant  Project  Engineer, 

you  are  given  assignments  in  several 

enginetHng  laboratories  to  determine  in 

which  you  can  make  your  best  contributions 

•nd  fhtd  your  greatest  satisfaction.  Under  the 

fitidanee  of  senior  engineers  and  specialists, 

each  man  takes  his  project  through  from 

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a  broad  experience  background.  Success 

4sp*Hd$  OH  individual  initiative  and 

resourcefulness. 


KEARFOTT 

is  inte)'viewing 
on  your  campus 

TUESDAY,  APRIL  9 

Make  your  appointment  now 
with  your  College  Placement  Office 

Kearfott's  leading  position  in  the  development 
and  production  of  aircraft  control  and 
navigation  instruments  makes  the  company  a 
fertile  prround  for  the  young  engineer  to  develop 
his  talents  and  gain  the  experience  which  meuns 
success  in  his  chosen  profession. 

Assisting  in  the  design  and  development  of 
today's  most  advanced  systems,  the  graduate 
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functions  and  applications  of  the  gyros,  synchro* 
and  other  components  which  comprii«e  systems. 
You  will  share  in  Kearfott's  vital  role  in 
TACAN,  inertial  guidance,  stable  platforms 
and  other  servo  mechanisms  for  today's  most 
important  jet  aircraft  and  industrial  development. 

In  addition  to  61ose  association  with  the 
engineers  who.se  work  has  set  new  standards 
for  the  industry,  you  enjoy  an  educational 
assistance  program  to  help  you  further  your 
formal  education,  supplementing  the  "learning 
by  doing"  program  through  which  you  will  , 

choose  your  field  of  special  interest. 

Decentralized  plants  provide  ample  opportunity 
to  become  familiar  with  top  management  and 
distinguish  yourself  through  initiative  and 
imagination.  Salaries  and  benefits  are  liberal, 
and  advancement  is  based  on  your  own 
value  and  contribution. 

N  OTE :  //  you  cannot  attend  an  imerviet* 
on  this  day,  please  write  for  more  information  tm 
Robert  J.  Sperl,  Technical  Placement  Suparvltor, 
Engineering  Personnel  Ofjfiea, 


Vtt  COMPANY,  INCORPORATED 


utxtdlarr  ef  Gtnerti  Precltloo  Equlpaient  C«rMntt«a 
1371  tUiXH  AVL.  CUPTON.  NEW  ilMiVt 


WEATHER 

Partly  ctovdy  and  mild  w»th  an 
•xp«cted'  high  of  65. 


t3  tJ  C  tlBf^ART 
SERIALS  DEPT. 
CHAP 
8-3X 


rfie 


HORIZO  N 

Th#.  Edit«r  »••«  a   a9W  on*  on 
Pa9»  Two. 


VOt     LVII     NO.    160 


Complete  OP)   Wire  Strvtct 


CHAPEL  HILL,  NORTH  CAROLINA,  SATURDAY,  APRIL  6,   1957 


Offices  in  Graham  Mtmonai 


POUR  PAGES  THIS   IStUl 


Racism  Hindering  iLibeml  Arts  CoursBS  Criticized; 

Propaganda  Fight  .  _  _  . .  _ 


in 


Making   progress   against   Soviet  must    be    self-critical    because 

propaganda    is    rendered    all    the  the  "war  of  ideas"  the  position  of 

more  difficult  for  the  free   world  the   west   must  be   set   forth  with 

because  of  the  presence  of  racism,  clarity     and     without     ambiguity, 

it  was  declared  here  Friday  night  Catlin  said. 
by  ProfL«ssor  Georg?  Catlin  of  Mc- 


Gill  University  in  Montreal,  Cana- 
da. 

Catlin  made  the  statement  in 
delivering  the  second  1957  Weil 
Lectures  at  8:30  p.m.  in  Carroll 
Hall.  His  tapic  was  "Can  We  Co- 
Exist  with  Colonialism,  Imperial- 
ism.  Racialism    and   Sovietism'''" 

Segregation  has  been  called  by 
Bishop  Jonnard  of  Louisiana  as  a 
"unAm?rican.  unCatholic  and  un- 
Chri.-ti>i."  and  Catlin  declared 
he  believes  that  position  is  the 
correct  one. 

C.)mparing  the  struggle  for  in- 
dependence in  South  Africa  with 
slruijgles  for  fr3edom  and  democ- 
racy in  other  nations,  Catlin  said 
it  is  true  imperialism  called  the 
tune  in  many  places  in  Africa. 

But  he  added  "racism  was  no 
less  a  test  for  our  civilization." 

The    west 


"No  headway  can  be  made 
against  Soviet  propaganda  in 
South  Africa  unless  all  species  of 
ths  Nazi  race  theory  which  dis- 
figures South  Africa  can  be  dis- 
carded and  ail  people  are  made  to 
feel  thut  their  contributions  are 
a  part  ol  a  common  enterprise  of 
freedom." 

Catlin  will  speak  tonight  on 
"The  C:mmonwealth  of  Free  Na- 
t.  ons  and  Its  L?aders.''  The  final 
lecture  will  be  given  at  8:30  p. hi. 
in  Carroll  Hall. 

An  honor  graduate  of  Oxford, 
Catlin  won  a  fellowship  to  Corn- 
ell Univei-sity  in  1923-24  and  re- 
mained there  on  the  faculty  until 
1935. 

He  has  written  a  number  of 
bocks,  the  most  prominent  of 
which  is  "The  Science  and  Meth- 


Lee  Sayls  Program  Must  Change 

Jo  p/leet  Needs  Of  BA  Students 

Probe  Is  Underway 
For  Possible  Changes 


Fleece  Tapping 
To  Be  Staged 
Monday  At  7 

I  Carolina's  highest  honorary  or- 
,  ganizations  will  stage  their  an- 
1  nual  colorful  performance  next 
,  Mr^day. 

I  Th?  Order  of  the  Golden 
j  Fleece,  highest  men's  honorary, 
I  will  tap  new  members  in  Memor- 
'  ial  Hall  at  7  p.m.  The  Valkyries. 

coed   honorary,    will    hold    its    an- 
I  nual   sing    immediately    afterward. 
Fleece  tappings  are  held  in  near 

darkness,  wfith  only  the  light  from 

two    spotlights    sweeping    the    au- 1 

dience.   Two  hooded     and     robed 

monsters   roam     the     aisles     and , 

."eats,  snatching  up  the  new  init-  i 

iates. 
The  Valkyrie  Sing  is  sponsored 

by    the    coed    organization    for    all 

organizations      on    '  the      campus.  • 

Groups   enter*  original    songs   and  i 

skits   in   the  contest.  Winners   will 

receive  trophies. 

Both     organizations     will     hold 

their    performances    on    the    stage  '■ 

of   Memorial    Hall.    Doors   will   be 

locked    at    7    p.m.    for   the    Fleece 

tapping,    instead    of   7:30    p.m.    as 

anno.^ced     elsewhere,     according 

to  a  spokesman     for     the     Fleece. 

The  ceremony     is     scheduled     to  , 

start,  shortly   afterwards,   said   the! 

spokesman.  >  ^-  L    Applications  for  p<)$itl9&s  onj^fce  |     Committee       memlMirshiix-     and 

The    Fleece   taps   men   from   a>iy    Orahaiii  Memorial  A«UvtUe8  Bnard  I  chau-manship  is  open  in  the  music. 

and    all    phases   of  University   life,    for    the    academic    year     1957-1958 1  dance,  recreation,  publicity,  office,, 

regardless  of  field  or  vear.  Alum-    are  now  available  at  the  Informa- :  reception.  polU,  Forum.  Sound  and  < 

ai    have    been    tapped.' as  well  as  t.on  desk  of  GM.  according  to  Boar    I  Fury  and  film  programs,  Lambeth' 

faculty  and  administrative  person-    Chairman   Tob   Lambeth.  I  indicated. 

nel   and   students.  !      Applications  can   be  secured  for 


news 


m 
htief 


IDC  Court  Chairman 


Pictured  above  is  Frank  Brown,  new  Interdormitory  Council 
Chairman.  He  was  elected  Wednesday  night  during  the  Interdorm-" 
itory  Council  elections. 


Positions  Now  Open 
On  GMAB:  Lambeth 


William  Lee  Ballenger  (right) 

...  th,-  biy  cxpcriutcnt 

Theory  Said  Disproved 


The  Physics  Dept.  ttere  conclud 
ed  an  experiment  yesterday  de- 
signed to  prove  or  disprove  a 
theory  held  by  self-styled  physic- 
ist Lee  Ballenger.  recent  visitor 
to  the  UNC  campus. 

Dr.    E.    D.    Palmatier.    chairman 
of  the  Physics'  Dept.,  indicated  in  ; 
an    interview    yesterday    that    the, 
Dept.    had    conclusively    disproved' 
Ballenger's  theory. 

-He     (Ballenger)     violated     two 
major   laws  of   physics."   Dr.  Pal- 1 
matter   pointed   out.   "There   were 
(1)    the    Conservation    of    Energy; 
and  (2)  the  Conservation  of  Ang- j 
ular   Momentum."  i 

"Mr.    Ballenger    claimed    as    a 


suggested    he    construction    of    an 
experiment  utilizing  a  flat,  circu- 


Special  Session 
Of  Legislature 
To  Be  Tuesday 


The     Student     Legislature     will 


'      The  lop  six  officers  will   be  no- 

j  minated  by  a  selections  board  of 
the  GM  Board  of  Directors  and  el- 

i  ected   by  the   Board. 

I      Individual  chairmanships  will  be 

.- -  I  decided  by  the  newly  elected  pre- 

information  desk  by  Thursday,  Ap- '  g- j^.,^,  ^^  GMAB  when  he  assumts 

""'l  11-  (his     duties  at  the   start   of 

OFFICES  '  month,  Lambeth  said. 

Positions  currently   open  are  in  |      He  added  all  students  are  eligi 


top  offices,  committee  chairman- 
ships and  committee  memberships. 
Lambeth  said.  He  urged  all  inter- 
ested students  to  pick  up  the  ap- 
plications and  return  them  to  the 


I      Poland  Gets  Offer 

WASHINGTON  —  (AP)  —  The 
United  States  was  reported  Fri- 
day night  to  have  offered  Com- 
munist Poland  economic  a  i  d 
amounting   to  about     75     million 

I  dollars.  The  purpose  has  been  de- 

i  fined  by  President  Eisenhower  as 
being   to  encourage  a   "trend"   to 

I  independence    in    eastern   Europe. 

j      The    Chief    of    the    Polish    Eco- 

j  nomic   .Mis.sion   here.   Henryk   Kot- 

j  licki,  said  that  an  American  offer 

j  had  been  made  and  that  "we  shall 
continue    negotiations    so    we    can 

1  come  to  an  agreement."   Kotlicki 

1  would  not  disclose  the  size  of  pro- 

I  posed   aid   program,  which    would 

i  consist   of   credits   for   farm    and 

I  mine  machinery  and  provision  for 
surplus    farm    commodities. 

Suez  Crisis 

j  WASHINGTON  —  (AP)  —  Is- 
rael  was  reported  Friday  to  have 

j  told  the  United  States  that  Mid- 
dle Ea.st  fighting  may  flare  up 
again  if  any  Suez  settlement  fails 
to  life  the  ban  on  Israeli  shipping 
through   the  canal. 

Diplomatic  sources  disclosed 
this  as  bad  weather  foiled  an  at- 
tempt by  Secretary  of  State  Dul- 
les to  fly  to  New  York  for  a  Mid- 
dle East  consultation  with  :>ecre- 
tary  General  Dag  Hammarskjold 
of  the  United  Nations. 

Human  Torches  'lina  as  a  coed,  with  the  aid  of  the 

LOS    ANGELES— (AP) —Police    Student      Legislature,      the  .corn- 
Friday  staged   a   massive  hunt   for    bined    six   women's   sororities   a,ad 
two    men   who,    full    of    hate    and    the    University    Scholarship    Com- 
booze.  made  human  torches  of  five    mittee. 
men  and  a  woman  quietly  enjoy- 


Df-an Mauike  \V.  Lee  of  the  I'NC  liiisiiiess  .\dii. iiu.stra- 
tion  School  Friday  tiif^ht  challentred  the  liberal  arts  fadihie.s 
to  '"make  the  libera)  nts  more  liberal"  than  they  are  now. 

He  told  members  of  the  fourth  R,aduatin«  class  of  the 
Kxeciitive  Program  libeial  arts  courses  "arc  neither  lilxTal 
nor  ( apable  of  «ivins  an  appreciation  of  the  arts." 

Dean  Lee  s.  id  "7  hey  aK-  not  cultural  <ouises,  thev  are 

often  meaninglessly  repetitive  and 
they  are  often  more  fragmented 
and  diluted  than  anything  within 
the  imagination  of  earlier  day 
faculty  members  in  business  ad- 
ministration." 

Too  much  "how-to-do-it"  em- 
phasis in  the  education  of  men 
going  into  business,  he  said,  is 
being  replaced  by  insistence  up 
on  building  a  strong  background 
in  the  arts  and  sciences  as  a  pre- 
liminary to  professional  business 
training. 

Dean  Lee  also  disclosed  a  cur- 
rent investigation  here  on  the 
possibility  of  changing  the  educa- 
tion system  used  for  business  stu- 
dents. 

A  proposal  is  now  being  ex- 
plored with  the  College  of  Arts 
and  Sciences  to  have  business  stu- 


DEAN  LEE 

. . .  liberal  arts  rmist  change 

: . ^ 

UNC  May  Have 
Hungarian 
Coed  Next  Fait 


i—  pa«*  3   for   story   on   pur- 
po«M  of   Executive   Program. 

dents  take  three  years  of  pre-pro- 

fessioilal  education  instead  of  two 

before  starting  ttie  intensive  pro- 

grmai  l—di*^  to  the  Mmster  of  Bu*> 

inesg    Ad'mitiistrAtion    ^igree. 

-  The   prtjposal    Ls  sfill  in   its  ear- 

I      A     Hungarian     woman     refugee  ,      .  j  .  .  .    , 

'        .     ,  »     ,-.  Iv  stages  and  has  not  come  before 

'student   may   soon   come   to  Caro-  .;       „  ..  ..... 


next 


lar.  cylindrical  magnet  to  prove  or    meet  in  a 


disprove  Ballenger's  theory.  Bal-  at  7:30  p.m.  in  Phi  Hall  to  discuss 
lenger  agreed  to  the  experiment  the  $100,000  budget  for  next  year, 
whkh  was  conducted  yesterday.  |  The  legislature  will  also  dis- 
According  to  Dr.  Palmatier,  Bal-  cuss  sudent  government  for  1957- 
lenger's  prediction  was  that  these  58.  according  to  Miss  Jennie  Mar- 
bodies  would  rotate  around  a  garet  Meador.  secretary.  She  urged 
vertical  axis.  \  all  men^bers  to  be  present. 

The   Finance   Committee   of  the 


"No   one  ^saw    any    rotation   or   ^  legislature  will  meet  Mon- 

movement  other  than  that  caused    ^_       ^ "^  ^ _^     t^.^.a^^- 

by  the  torsion  of  the  string,"  Dr 


thrown  out   of  the  bar  last  night  mer,  NJ.,  for  acceptance  of  a  wo- 

for   forcing   their  attentions   on  a  man  regugee  at  UJ^C,  she  will  be- 

ident     Leeislature     will       '                  .'      "^ "  "• "^    ,  woman   patron.    Two   of   them   re-  come    a    student    here,     probably 

.  ,          •       rr,      J        presidential    and    vice-presidential  ■  ^jp  for  any  of  the^-s  positions  and  .  turned  in  a  rage  and  touched  off  next  fall. 

special  session  lues  ay  „_;.;_,  T„.iM^nri  omnna  th^se  of- ! ^   „.,„...„„„   i.,.oroct„H   in  «p-   ^  flash  fire  that  killed  six  and  hos-  -The   Hungarian  Refugee   Com- 

pitalized  three.  The  fire  occurred  mittee   has  been   diligently   work- 
at   11:40   p.m.   Thursday   night  in  jng  toward  the  goal  of  settling  a 
the    Club    Mecca,    a   quiet    neigh-  Hungarian  on  the  Carolina  camp 
borhood  cocktail  bar  on  Norman-  us.   jsfow   the  goal   is  almost   real- 
Frankie    Black      newly  -  elected    die    Avenue   in   the   south   central  jzed,"    said   Miss    Aldridge. 
head  cheerleader!   announced  Fri-    district.   Arrested   and   booked  on  From    the    University    Scholar- 
day  everyone  interested  in  trying    suspicion    of    murder    are    Clyde  ship  Committee  will  come  a  $250 


positions.  Included  among  these  of- 
fices are: 

i  Vice  pre.-ident  in  charge  of  en- 
tertainment whose  capacity  will 
entail  supervising  next  year's  GM- 
AB programming  in  the  field  of 
;  Sound  and  Fury,  sponsored  plays, 
'  petite  musicales  and  dramatiques, 
concerts,  etc 


urged   everyone    interested   to   se- 
cure applications  before  next  week. 

Cheerleader  Tryouts 


the  College  at  this  time,  accord- 
ing to  the  Arts  and  Sciences  dept. 
Dean  Lee  said  most  schools  of 
business  administratiort  in  the 
country  are  now  insisting  upon  an 
,    ,.     .,_,  ..       „  approximate     50-50     divLsion     be- 

.         ,        .  .,>,,.       Miss  Jackie  Aldndge.  Hungarian    ^^^^  ^^^  ^^^  ^^^^.^^ 

ing  themselves  in  a  neighborhood    Refugee      Committee      Chairman        ^^    ^.^^^^    ^^^^^    ^^.^^^    ^^^^^ 

^''-  ,  '         l^^'''>'"^.^"''^^^"P""^'*"!P'"''"'L°/.with    the   vocation^^     concept     of 

Detectives  say  four     men    were    processing    plans    at    Camp    Kil-    ^^^.^^^^    ^^^.^.^^      .^      collegiate 

.schools  of  business: 

1.  College  teaching  would  al- 
ways be  out  of  date. 

2.  Nc^two  business  firms  fol- 
low  identical   methods. 

3.  The  business  firms  can  do 
a  much  better  job  than  the  uni- 
versities can  in  teaching  how  to 
do  a  particular  operation  as  the 
firm  wants  it  done. 

"If   the   universities   have   noth- 


Palmaticr  said.  "Newton  would 
have  predicted  the  result,"  he  add- 
ed. 

in  reply  to  the  results  of  the 
experiment,  Ballenger  said,  "The 
experiment    was,    in    my    opinion 


day    from  2-5  p.m.    and    Juesday 
from  2-4  p.m.  in    the    Woodhouse , 
Conference  Room  to  consider  the ; 
proposed  student  government  bud-  j 
get  for  1957-58.  I 

Jerry    Oppenheimer.    committee 


,ncerts    etc                                         l^^V  ^^'^'"J'O"^  interested  in  trying  suspicion    oi     '""rue.     «..c    v.,».  sn  p  commmee  wu.  .^u  e  .  ^.uv.  ^^ 

incerts,  etc.                                                        „h»ori*>cHpr   npv*    v^ar  is  Bates.  36.  and  Oscar  S.  Brenhaug.  tuition    scholarship   for    the    Hun-  ?.,....  ...          „ 

viep  nresident  of  recreation  who    o"f   for  cheerleader   next   >ear  is  Ddit.>.  ou,  «.  u  ^  calional  traimng  it  would  be  wel! 

vice  presiaeni  OI  recreauon  wuu ..  _. ,-. ;.,  aa    momhors  nf  a  sienbord  wreck-  garian    woman   refucee.    Mis    Aid-  .  .           .  "  .  .      . 


will  handle  supervision  of  weekend 
combos,  Mardi  Gras  Weekend, 
ping-pong  tournapients  etc. 

Vice  president  in  charge  of  .spe- 
cial   projects   who    will    supervi.se 


,  special  activities  such  as  polls  and  ,  after    the    spring 
chairman,  urged  all  people  interest-    fQ^yn^g  i  said.    No 


••Mr^    Ballenger    claimed    as    a .  „periment    was,    in    my   op.mon  ^.,^^_.  ^^^^^     ...  u  ...^  „e !  net-essarv 

prediol.on  of  his  .heor>;  that  two  j  „„,  eonelns.ve.  .  w.U  contmu     to  _,.esenta.ives     U.     the' ,,?'''"  "rL:.-      n  d  sec- ^Ul  be  d 


invited  to  attend  a  meeting  in 
Kenan  Stadium  Thursday  at  3 
p.m. 

Instruction   will   be  given   those 
interested    from    that    time    until 
vacation,    Black 
previous    experience    is 


44.  members  of  a  signbord  wreck-    garian    woman   refugee.    Mis    Aid 


ridge    said    she    would    live    in    a 
dormitory  and  her  room-rent  would 


spherical  magnets,  constructed  so 
that  the  center  of  each  was  a 
south  pole  and  the  surface  of 
each  a  north  pole,  would  rotate 
around  one  another  if  brought 
into  close  contact. 
Members  of   the   Physics   Dept. 

Editorship  Of  Quarterly 
Open  For  Applications 

Quiilified  students,  either  grad- : 
uale  or  undergraduate,  who  are 
interested  in  applying  for  the  ed- 
itorship of  the  Carolina  Quarter- 
ly, UNC  literary  magazine,  for 
the  coming  year  have  been  ask- 
ed to  see  Miss  Jessie  Rehder  of 
the  English  Dept.  in  109  Bingham 
Hall. 

T  loso  pot  being  able  to  person- 
ally see  Miss  Rehder  have  been 
asked  to  send  a  letter  of  applica- 
tion to  the  Quarterly  Advisory 
Board,  in  care  of  Miss  Rehder,  be- 
fore  April   29. 

The  new  editor  is  not  required 
to  come  from  the  present  staff, 
according  to  an  announcement, 
but  should  be  somewhat  familiar 
with  publishing  procedure  and 
should  be  prepared  to  work  on 
the  last  stages  of  the  Spring  issue 
ior  this  year.  __ 


*)elieve    in    it    until    a 
is  made  with  spheres." 


nother    trial    or   send   representatives 


meetings. 


those   of   the   treasurer   and   sec- 
\  rctary. 


he  added,  and  no  one 
will  be  dropped  until  after  spring 
vacation. 


ing  crew. 

I      Flood  Of  Money 

BOWLING  GREEN,  Ky.— (AP) 
— Money  literally  gushed  out  of  a 
thrse- block -long,  rain -swollen 
storm  sewer  Friday  and  hundreds 
of  persons  lined  the  streets  snalch- 

ing  up  the  soggy  currency^              committee  hopes  that 
I      Police  Chief  Murell  Waddle  said    ^^.^^  ^^^^^^^^  ^.^^  ^^  ^^^  ^.  ^^^^ 
he  could  offer  no  explanation,  and    ___ ^^^^  ^^^  ,^_^  imciich 


calional  training  it  would  be  well 
to  withdraw  their  sources  of  funds 
for  such  education."  he  said.  This 


-."i.      ^u      o.   J     »    .    .,-  i„     can    be    done    "more   cheaply    and 
be   paid   by   the   Student   Legisla-   ........  ,. 

better     by  business  firms. 

In   order     to     strengthen     and 


ture. 

Her  board  will  be  provided  for 
by  the  women's  sororities;  she  will 
eat  for  six  weeks  at  each  sorority. 

Miss  Aldridge  said  ""Hie  Refugee 
our  Car- 


estimated   upwards   of  $1,000  had 


way  to  help  her  learn  English 


estimated   upwards   oi   »i,uuu  aau    ^^^  ^^  ^^^  ^.^^  ^.^^^^  ^^^^ 

been  picked  up.  The  most  popular  ^^^^  ^^^^  ^^  ^.^^^^  ^^^  ^.^^ 
theory  offered  by  townspeople  was 
that  heavy  rains  which  had  fallen 
since  the  first  of  the  week  flush- 
ed out  money  that  had  been  hid- 
den away  in  the  sewer. 

Postal  Services 


make  more  meaningful  the  busi- 
nessman's background,  he  must 
have  more  and  not  less  work  in 
the  arts  and  sciences.  Dean  Lee 
said. 

He  specified  six  areas  of 
able  pre-professional   training: 

1.  Social     sciences,     includ 
economics,    political    sciences,    s 
ciology   and   economic   geography: 

2.  Biological        and        physical  "\ 


around  this  huge  campus." 

The    Campus    Chest,    the    Chap- 
el Hill  community  churches,  and  u        . 
,-     ,,„r^ »       -11           -J     *i-     ti,.„     sciences,   meaning  chemistry, 
the  YWCA  will  provide  the  Hun-                 ^  u-  i     -     i 

v..    .     .  .^  .  ,  ^„    logy  and  biological  sciences, 
garian  refugee  with  incidental  ex-       o      „  u  . 

*  ,  ,.  ,,  ■  „^       3.     Behavioral    sciences    or 

5  penses,     clothes     allowance,     and   ,^        ,  .  ,  .  .  „ 

rr-i-  J  .•       1-  •  .„.     thropology.  sociology  and  psycho- 

WASHINGTON  —  (.AP)  —  The    summer  and  vacation  living  quar-    j^^^ 

House    Appropriations    Committee   ters. 

voted  Friday  to  notify  Postmaster       The   granting     of     the     tuition 

General  Summerfield  he  can  count    scholarship    completed    the    Refu 


eo-    \    ■ 
aJi        \1 


General  Summeriieia  ne  eun  t-uuni    M.-uuidiaiiip    tuiiipici..:^^     i..v.     x»v.»-     ^^^^  ^^^ 
r  on  at  least  17  million  dollars  more    gee    Committee's    efforts    on    the 


logy. 

4.     Humanities,  including  litera- 
ture, music,  philosophy     and     the 


to  maintain     full 
through  June  30 


postal 


services    project.   The   conditions     of     the 
scholarship   are  that   (1)   she  can 


5.     Quantitative      subjects,      in- 
cluding mathematics,  statistics,  ac- 


rougn  June  Ju.  svuu.u.....h  «^-  -• -^   -,   ^..^  ^-y   ^.Q^n^ng 

Summerfield    wants   47   million,  meet  the  admissions  requirements       ^     communication 

He  had  threatened  to  curtain  some  for   University   entrance  and    (2) 

services  drastically— beginning  to  that   all   her   expenses   have   been 

day— unless  the   full   amount  was  foreseen  and  provided  for. 

forthcoming   from   Congress 


Stars  of  Petite  Dramatique  Presentation 


Tho  newly-formed  Petites  Drwnatique  dramatic  orflaniiation  will     stars.  Miss  Page  Williams,  graduate  student  from  Ft.  Thomas,  Ky.  and 
present  its  first  production.  •'Caligula,"  here  tomorrow  at  8  p.m.  in       Lloyd  Skinner,  senior  from  Burlington.    The  play  is  about  the  story  ot 
the  main  lounge  of  Graham  Memorial.   Shown  abov*  art  the  two  main    the  Roman  emptror  Caligula.  


The    House    committee    agreed 
yesterday  to  consider  next  Friday  j 
the   extra   30   million   dollars   the 
Post  Office  Department  says  it  has 
to  have  this  year. 

But  Chairman  Cannon  (D-Mo.) 
of  the  Appropriations  Committee 
accused  Summerfield  of  pulling 
"an  unadultered  bluff."  "They'll 
deliver  the  mail.  "  he  told  the 
House  in  a  speech  from  the  floor. 


IN  THE  INFIRMARY 

Misses  Sarah  ParkerTISoberta 
Chapin,  Lucie  Crossland  and  Ben- 
ton Beard,  Roy  Cashion.  John 
Tate,  Edward  Britt,  James  White, 
Richard  Oresman,  Jon  Fitehen, 
Robert  Scholze.  Wally  Kuralt, 
Jesse  Ward,  Arthur  Schwerzer, 
Robert  Rhoades  and  Jantes  Wal- 
ker. 


arts,  which 
jneans  learning  to  write  and  speak 
so  they  can  communicate  effective- 
ly their  meaning  to  others. 

Dean  Lee  said  the  number  of 
people  majoring  in  business  ad- 
ministration will  double  in  the 
next  ten  years.  Graduate  enroll- 
ment will  be  even  more  spectacu- 
lar, he  said. 

omTslate 


Petite        Dramatique, 
p.m.,  main  lounfe. 


7:30-11 


#AGI  two 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEBL 


SATURDAY,  APRIL  «,  IWr 


Upon  The  New  Horizon: 
Silhouettes  Of  Success? 

A  new  horizon,  good  or  bad,  has  dawned  as  we  assume  with  grati- 
tude and  humility  tlie  editorship  reins  for  the  coming  year. 

Whether  there  will  be  silhouttes  of  success  or  failure  upon  this 
horizon  only  time  will  tell.  We  can  only  be  optimistic  and  hope  for  the 
best. 

C>andidates  perennially  direct  an  onslaught  of  promises  ugainst  the 
electorate  during  any  campaign.  Following  the  tradition,  we  Ic^ed  our 
promise    artillery    on    the    student 

boikxi  Student  Council  Chairman  Luth-, 
er  Hodges  and  Honor  Council 
Chairmen  Jim  Exum  and  Miss  Pat 
McQueen,  we  shall  offer  only 
praises  for  it.  Providing,  of  course, 
the  two  judi^ary  bodies— as  is  con- 
stitutionally stipulated* —  report 
their  actions  periodically  to  The 
Daily  Tar  Heel. 


YOU  said  it: 


WISE  AND  OTHERWISE: 


body.     Our     ammunition 
down  to  this: 


We  pledged  you  the  best  stu- 
dent newspaper  possible. 

We  shall  keep  Our  promise.  At 
the  same  time,  we  shall  cast  our 
editorial  eve  upon  the  other  suc- 
ce.s.sful  candidates  and  exf>ect  them 
to  do  likewise. 

Should  President  Sonny  Evans 
fill  the  tremendous  shoes  bc- 
cjueatfied  him  by  outgoing  Presi- 
dent iiob  ^'oimg,  we  shall  have 
no  complaints  in  that  area.  Stu- 
dent government  will  flourish  and 
grow  in  statue. 

Should  the  student  Legislature. 
as  in  the  past  assembly,  take  ac- 
tion on  a  recortf-4>feaking  number 
of  measures,  we  shall  have  only 
l.'jdc'torv  w^^rds  fdr  it. 

Should  the  student  judiciarv 
bnuidi    follow   the   trail    bla/ed   bv 


But  there  is  no  room  for  coii\- 
placency. 

.The  new  horizon  always  has 
dark  shadows  of  apathy  cast  upon 
it.  shadows  lurking  in  wait  for  the 
unwarv  and  uninterested. 

'  The  golden  glow  of  success  may 
dominate  the  horizon  if  student 
leaders  assunic  their  just  lesponsi- 
bility.  if  they  assume  the  necessary 
initiative,  if  they  lulUill  their  cam- 
paign promises. 

We  shall  anticipate  success;  we 
shall  congratulate  the  successful; 
we  shall  not  hesitate  to  criticize, 
nor  shall  we  condone  failure. 


Education   For  The   Many: 
Figure   Upon   The   Cross? 


When  installatia»  of  the  public 
Mh(M)ls  system  made  education  for 
the  inanv  a  reality,  it  assuredly  was 
a  milestone  toward  advancing 
Americas  intellectual!  statu.s. 

Fii inking  men  evervvvheie  re- 
joiced cxhuheraritly  that  the  ef- 
Urvestent  drink  —  learning;  —  had 
been  offered  to  parched  lips  on  a 
massive  basis. 

.\o\\-  this  trend  have  been  re- 
\er.se<^.  ft  seems  some  oTbur  edu- 
cators feel  tJie  effervescent  drink 
sliould  onlv  be  offered  to  the  in- 
tellegtntsia.  whatever  that  animal 
is. 


The  Daily  Tar  Heel 

The  officiaJ  itudent  publicMtion  of  the 
Piihhrations  Board  of  the  Universitj  of 
Nnnh  Carolina  where  it  is  poblishert 
4*11?  except  Monday  and  examinatinr 
•prt  vacation  periods  and  summer  terms 
Cuiered  as  second  cIms  matter  in  th. 
•oat  office  in  Cbap<»l  HM.  N  C  .  undr, 
Che  Act  of  March  8.  1870  SubscriptioB 
rates  m&ileri.  $4  per  .T*>ar.  $2  50  a  seme« 
ter;  delivired  $ff  ,  t^ar.  $3  50  a  •koim 
ter 


Editor           ,  . :.  ;t 

:^  -     -._-    NEIL  BASS 

Managing  Editor 

-    CLARKE  JONES 

Associate  Editor 

NANCY  HILL 

Sports  Editor 

BILL  KING 

News  Editor  . 

%^ALT  SCHRUNTKK 

Business  Manager  JOHN  C.  WUITAKER 


Advertisir,rf  Manager 


FRED  KATZIN 


SDITORIAL     STAFF  —   Woody     Sear* 
Joey  I'ajne,  Stan  Shaw. 

NEWS  STAl-F-^GlStnQ    Snyder,    Edith 
MacKinnoQ,  Wi^ipi  Scbruotek,  Pringlc 
/       Pipkin,  Bob  Wffil^'Sim  Purks,  Ben  Tay- 
lor, H.  Joost  F^iM  PaUy  MUler,  Wal- 
ly  Kuralt,  BilT-^^  Curtis  Crotty. 

BUSINESS  STAFF— 4obn  Minter,  Marian 
Hobeck,  Jane  PatteH,  Jubnny  Whitaker. 


SPORTS  STAFF:  Dave  Wible,  Stu  Bird, 
Ed  Rowland,  Jim  Cownover. 


Subicriptioo  Manager  _ 

Circulation  Manager  

Assistant  Sports  Editor. 


.  Dale  Stai«i7 
Charlie  Boll 
..    Bill  King 


Staff  Photographers 
Norman  Kantor 


Woody  Sears, 


Librarians— Sue  Gichner.  Marilyn  Strum 


Night  Editor 


So  in  response  to  the  questions, 
should  we  expand  our  educaiio!ial 
facilities  or  should  we  make  en- 
trance leqnirenients  more  string- 
ent, educators  have  answered: 

Down  with  the  pioletariat!  (An- 
other vaque  tenn)  feet's  educate 
the  favored  few,  of  which  I  am 
naturally  a-  select  n>ember. 

It's    the  same      type      sentiment 
wliicJi    is    e\iden<:ed    wlien    a  .self-*' 
aniM>inted  God  looks  down  his  nose 
at  "the  man  in  the  lower  quad." 

So  self-annoiuted  C»ods.  to  mak< 
theiiMelves  feel  smug  and  secure, 
have  assumed  the  head  of  the  table 
to  seive  a  Last  Supper  to  l•ura^ 
children  whose  preparatory  edu- 
cation doesn't  always  put  them  on 
an  equal  plane  with  other  pros- 
pective college  entrants,  to  youth 
everywhere  who  don't  have  t  h  c 
econoiniv  advantage  of  prep  school 
iiainint»; 

The  menu  for  thi^  Last  Supper 
is,  inevitably,  die  coarse  bread  of 
ignorance  and  the  purple  wine  ol 
consolation  —  consolation-  in  tl»e 
form  of  'trade  schools"  and  "vo- 
(ational  guidance.  ' 

Iti  short,  we  don't  like  the  idea 
ot  stringein  entrance  requirements. 
We  don't  tlvink  them  fair. 

Education  lor  the  many,  under 
them,  sags  piostrate  upon  the 
cross. 


Congrats 
For  A  Job 
Well  Done 


A  young  man  from  Raleigh  who 
entered  the  portals  of  dais  Uni- 
versity only  last  fall  iias  .set  an 
example  which  seasoned  student 
leaders  would  do  well  to  fwUow. 

Tliis  young  man,  with  no  pre- 
vious experience,  had  chairman- 
ship of  the  Elections  Board  thrust 
upon  him  abruptly.  But  he  ac- 
cepted tlie  task  and  did  a  laudable 
job. 

Tliose  who  witnessed  the  "dis- 
crepancies" which  occurred  dur- 
ing the  election  last  fall,  before 
Ralph*  Cummings  took  over,  can 
only  offer  praises  for  his  werk. 

Congratulations  for  a  job  well 
done  to  Chairman  Cummings  ■asad 


Dr.  George:  Laughable,  A  Parable;    Student  Union- 
Lenoir  Hall:  Still  A  Crusade 


EditM-: 

Once  -there  were  two  islands 
some  distance  apart,  one  of  wbich 
waj  inhabitied  by  brown  monkeys 
and  the  other  by  white  monkeys. 
The  island  of  the  brown  monkeys 
was  half  barren  dessert  and  half 
tropical  swamp  and  there  was  no 
fit  place  to  live  in  the  whole  of  it. 

Consequently  its  inhabitants 
were  rather  backward  and  stunted 
in  c<miiparison  to  the  white  mon- 
keys whose  island  was  a  large, 
fertile  land  upon  which  bananas 
grew  in  great  profusion. 

As  time  passed  the  white  motj 


keep  the  brown  monkeys  in  a  low 
caste  and  to  exclude  them  from 
things  *  thai  were  meant  for  de- 
cent, that  is  to  say  white  mon- 
keys. 

Despite  this,  the  brown  mon- 
keys produced  many  famous  doc- 
tors, artists,  statesmen,  scientists 
and  athletes.  But  some  of  the 
whites  protested  that  the  whole' 
island  would  be  better  off  if  the 
brown  monkeys  were  granted  full 
equality.  It  was  pointed  out  that 
poor  education,  living  conditions, 
moral  standards  and  health  had 
resulted  trora  the  supresaion,  of 

"Who~Me?"       . 


tired  of  hearing  him  scream  and 
put  him  away  in  a  nice  safe  place 
with  a  room  full  of  brown  dolls 
and  a  bucket  of  white  ^i^ash  where 
he  could  finish  out  his  days  in 
bliss  and  oblivion. 

Perhaps  this  is  an  odd  parable, 
but  then  monl^eye-  always  were 
queer  little  beasts. 

Tom  Parramor* 

Editor: 

Oongr«atulations  to  the  Daily 
Tar  Heel  for  printing  Dr.  George's 
article  in  its  proper  place  in  the 
paper  along  with  Pogo  and  Fear 


)*ji>Li--! 


keys  grew  prosperous  and  leisure- 
ly and  began  to  dislike  hard  work 
even  though  their  prosperity  de- 
pended upon  it.  At  length  some- 
one suggested  that  the  business 
of  growing  bananas  was  dirty 
work  and  might  well  be  more  sui- 
tably delegated  to  the  brown  heat- 
hens in  the  other  island.  A  boat- 
load of  brown  monkeys  was 
brought  over  and  it  was  found 
that  indeed  they  worked  well  and 
were  inexpensive  to  maintain. 

But  not  everj'onc  agreed  that 
they  should  be  slaves  and  event- 
ually a  war  was  fought  and  the 
slaves  set  free.  But  the  owners  of 
the   banana   trees   continued    to 


V\\  Abner 


the  brown  monkeys. 
About  this  time  a  great  patriot, 
the  "Snow-White  Ape,"  clearly  a 
superior  being  due  to  the  purity 
of  his  hue,  arose  to  the  defense 
of  those  who  proposed  to  main- 
tain the  .\atus  quo  and  proclaim- 
ed that  the  brown  monkeys  were 
biologically  inferior.  After  all, 
were  they  not  brown?  He  pointed 
out  that  if  you  allowed  them  all 
the  privileges  of  the  white  mon- 
keys you  would  soon  have  inter- 
marriage and  this  would  lead  to 
a  mongi-ol  breed  no  better  than 
custard  colored. 


less  Fosdick.  The  three  provide 
the  same  recreation;  readable  to 
kill  time,  light  humor  and  to  be 
read  only  as  such  by  any  intelli- 
gem  person. 

In  his  address  Dr.  George  ut>es 
almost  all  the  device*  available 
to  sway  opinion  by  oral  attempt. 
He  appeals  to  religion,  patriotism, 
parental  protection,  quotes  out  of 
cootext  and  uses  incomplete  sta- 
tistics, providing  the  whole  with 
a  cloak  of  respectable  scientific 
evaluation  by  use  of  his  positio:n 
with  the  University  of  Nerth  Ca- 
rolina. 


After     a  time  everybody     got     ,      The     professor  eontend^.-     that 


S6«V/r  TO  T/-/£  l^OMESr 
CRM/t\/AL  TO  SA^£ 


through  intermarriage  and  the  re- 
sulting offspring  that  we  will  gra- 
dually become  a  race  of  negroid 
'peoples.  Yet  in  the  early-part  ol 
big  address  he  offers  the  fact  that 
Negroes  constitute  only  10  per- 
cent of  the  population. 

He  has  the  gall  to  submit  to 
intelligent  people  that  this  W  per 
cent  will  corrupt  the  blood  lines 
of  the  other  90  percent  and  that  in 
the  corruption  the  negroid  strain 
will  predominate.  It  seems  that 
mathematically  the  (jonverse 
would  be  true. 

Through  all  the  professor's 
rambling  he  has  failed  to  offer 
any  factual  evidence  to  support 
his  contention  that  the  Negro  is 
biologically  inferior.  What  he  ac- 
tually does  is  to  use  the  present 
undisputed  shortcomings  of  the 
Negro  as  "proof"  of  his  inferior- 
ity. It  is  a  sorry  logic  indeed 
which  take„*  the  results  of  segre- 
gation as  a  reason  for  its  contin- 
uance. 

It  seems  tnal  the  professor's 
action  is  speaking  before  a  gath- 
ering of  students  and  faculty  of 
another  university  in  such  a  ridi- 
culous manner  would  certainly 
lower  the  opinion  of  the  Univer- 
sity of  North  Carolina  in  the  eyes 
of  everyone  hearing  or  reading 
the   profesoiar's   address. 

As  Pogo  might  say.  '1  can  see 
how  he  can  do  it,  but  I  can't  see 
why  he  would  want  to  do  it." 
Williano  M.  HvwU 

Editor: 

On  March  29  the  following  pa- 
ragraph appeared  in  an  article 
which  a  Lenoir  student  worker 
bad  written  for  The  Daily  Tar 
HmI: 

"This  obviously  was  a  means 
to  wondicate  himself  with  Len- 
oir Hall  management.  This  dip- 
lomatic error   by   White  could 
be  the  deaith  knell  for  our  de- 
ntends  which  are  practical  and 
well-mea/flng. 
Since    the   publication    of   this 
article  many  people  have  asked 
me,  "Is  tbis  true?"  My  answer  to 
this  question  is  a  mostf.emphatic, 
"No''.  It  is  immaterial  if  the  man- 
ager's opinion  of  me  be  unfavor- 
ablc  because  I  am  supporting  a 
movement  fw  the  betterment  (rf 
Lenoir  Student  Workers.  I  have 
in  the  past  expressed  a  desire  for 
a  change  in  the  system  of  pay- 
ment to  Lenoir  student  workers, 
and  I  will  not  under  any  circum- 
stances stop  efforts  to  help  reach 
this  gola. 

It  will  not  be  too  long  before 
someone  will  have  to  give  in,  and 
I  may  assure  you  that  it  wiU  not 
be  me  nor  any  worker  of  Lenoir 
Halt  We  were  restrained  in  our 
efforts  a  short  (time  due  to  the 
unfaverable  pressure  which  Len- 
oir Hall  managers  are  so  capable 
of  exerting,  but  we  will  aever 
stop  until  the  demand;:  are  met. 
Our  demands  are  most  practical 
— that  the  student  workers  at  Len- 
oir Hall  receive  compensation  for 
their  work.  .  . 

To  these  ends  the  crusade  will 
continue,  not  only  by  Lenoir  Hall 
workers,  but  also  by  other  inter- 
ested students. 

Caleb  White 


By  A!  Capp 


(-BunMosraE , 

GfSATeruL.'f-) 
THAMK  -VOU, 
EZIO.  VOU'VE 
GOT  SOMETHIt>16 


Pogo 


By  Walt  Ksily 


THRZS 
'60f»TM6l 


Need  New  One? 

Whit  Whitfield 

In  recent  months  there  has  been  much  agfta- 
tion  for  a  new  student  union  building  such  as  the 
Cow  College  students  enjoy.  A  committee  has  worked 
diligently  to  this  end.  and  both  political  parties  have 
pledged  their  support  for  thii*  cause. 

I  should  like  to  state  several  reasons  why  we 
don't  need  a  new  union,  for  the  benefit  of-students. 
administration,  trustees,  and  members  of  the  State 
Lfci'islature  who  might  be  interested. 

Graham  Memorial  Activities  Board  doesn't  need 
more  office  space.  Mike  Strong  always  does-  his  best 
work  on  tlie  table  in  the  hall. 

The  National  Students  Association  doesn't  need 
an  office,  because  who  knows  what  good  they  can 
do  anyway. 

Why  should  the  veep  of  the  student  body  have 
an  office?  The  speaker's  chair  in  Phi  Hall  should 
suffice. 

The  Carolina  Forum,  Publications  Board.  NSA, 
Pan-Hellenic,  ■  Valkyi'ies,  Grail,  etc.  are  al;  very  cozy 
in  their  cubicle,  all  200  (?)  square  feet  of  it. 

The  Orientation  Committee  is  als-o  content  with 
their  lO'xlO'. 

The  Daily  Tar  Heel  enjoys  working  in  a  crowded 
office.  It  makes  for  more  intimate  relations,  con- 
fusion, and  errors. 

Why  should  we  have  more  space  for  organization- 
al meetings?  The  organizations  are  legion,  but  they 
have  three  Roland  Parker  Lounges  in  which  to  meet. 
Why  have  more  space? 

I  don't  really  think  that  students  would  enjoy 
a  modern  bowiing  alley,  table  tennis  room,  or  mod- 
ern pool  {excuse  me.  billiards.)  room.  Carolina  stu- 
dents just  don't  have  an  interest  in  such  ephemeral 
pursuits.  (Besides  that,  it's  always  best  to  wait  in 
line  for  a  cue,  your  games  means  more  that  way.) 

Briefly,  these  are  just  a  few  of  the  many  reas<Mis 
why  we  don't  need  a  new  student  unicm  building. 
You  can  probably  think  of  many  more. 


On   State  Vote 

The  Franklin  Press 

In  a  bridge  game,  if  all  the  aces  were  given  one 
player  before  the  cards  we'-e  deaith,  there'd  be  an 
exchange  of  hard  words  among  the  ladies. 

If  it  were  poker,  the  exchange  probably  would 
be  of  .-omething  harder  than  words. 

Yet  that  is  exactly  tlie  way  a  large  propOTtion  of 
North  Carolina's  citizens  are  short-changed  on  their 
voting,  every  two  years.  For  though  the  state  senate 
Ls  supposed  to  represent  population  alone,  650,000 
North  Carolinians  elect  almost  twice  as  many  mem- 
bers of  the  senate  as  another  group  of  nearly  a  mil- 
lion. Six  hundred  fifty  thousand  can  out-vote  a 
million,  and  by  a  margin  of  nearly  two  to  one. 

The  reason  that  is  true  is  because  the  General 
Assembly  "shall"  rc-allorsJfenators,  after  each  census, 
in  line  with  population  changes. 

If  it  were  Iwidge  or  pc^er,  there'd  be  a  row.  But, 
since  it  is  merely  citizenship  rights,  North  Carolin- 
ians take  it  with  never  a  camplaint.         •>-  .    .    -^     . . 


WC  Plans  Dance 
For  UNC  Men 

Editor: 

April  6  should  prove  to  be  one  of  the  most  en 
joyable  of  the  year.  It  is  Consolidated  University 
Day  at  Woman's*  College,  in  Greensboro. 

The  girls  under  the  leadership  of  Mary  Mahoney, 
have  planned  a  terrific  chain  of  activities  to  enter- 
tain ther  guests.  Each  dormitory  on  W.  C.'s  campus 
will  hold  open  house  prior  to  a  dance.  At  the  same 
time,  weather  permitting,  their  band  will  be  giving 
a  concert  on  the  lawn  in  the  quad.  The  dance  (in- 
formal) uill  be  held  from  8:30-12  in  the  ballroom  of 
Ellliot  Hall,  at  a  price  of  50  cents. 

The  Consolidated  University  Student  Council  will 
meet  at  2  p.m.  in  Elliot  Hall.    -^   q  -. 

"  Ed  Rom 

■;-.,■-■■:  ■*--'^^' 

TV    Preview: 


»•> 


Baseball 


^f.H  0V 


.-  Bill  Weekes  the  entire  Election  Board. 


Anthony  Wolff 

As  a  sneak  preview  of  the  major  league  baseball 
aeason,  two  exhibition  games  are  being  televi^'Cd 
•oday.  On  Channel  2  at  2:15  the  Cleveland  Indians 
take  on  the  New  York  Giants;  on  Channel  5  fifteen 
minutes  later,  the  Brooklyn  Dodgers  meet  the  Mil- 
waukee Braves. 

This  evening  at  8,  Jackie  Gleason  returns  to 
Channel  2  with  more  of  the  Kramdens  and  the  Nor- 
tons. 

iPerry  Como,  on  Channel  5  at  the  same  hour, 
features  UNC  alumnus  Jack  Palance,  along  with 
Teresa  Brewer  and  the  Stepp  Brothers.  The  choice 
ij  obvious,  except  to  dyed-in-the-wool  Gleason  ad- 
dicts. Mr.  Palance  and  Miss  Brewer  need  no  intro- 
duction; the  Stepp  Brothers  are  one  ef  the  finest 
dance  teams  around. 

Those  interested  in  art,  and  particularly  in  sculp- 
ture, will  enjoy  Channel  4's  "Art  and  Artists"  pres- 
entation at  8  p.m.  The  subject  this  evening  is  an 
analysis  of  Henrj'  Moore  and  hii-  work. 

At  8:30,  Channel  4  continues  its  discussion  of 
Africa,  tonight  concentrating  on  South  Africa  and 
its  history. 

The  Sid  Caesar  show,  on  Channel  5  at  9  p.m., 
promises  more  of  the  same  routines  which  have 
carried  Sid  and  crew  through  the  past  season.  Many 
of  hi,j  programs  have  been  pretty  thin  of  late,  bat 
the  star  himself  is  fun  to  watch. 

TMnorrow  evening,  Graham  Memeriat— "Odigu- 


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AJiApplicqrtfs 
To  Be  Ej^cused 
From  Di^  Phi 

The  Di.  Phi  and  APO  have  coa  , 
.scnted  to  excuse  from  their  meet- ! 
ings  Tuesday  those  members  who  ! 
have  applied  for  positions  as  Or- 1 
ientation  Counselors  and  who  are 
required  to  attend  a  meeting  Tues- ' 
day  at  7:30  p.m.  in  Carroll  Hall.  ] 

Jerr>-  Oppenheimer,  chairman  of 
the  Campus  Orientetion  Commit-  j 
tec.  made  the  announcement  Fri- 
day. 

Jim  Monteith.  Pat  Adams  and 
Bill  Jones  have  urged  the  mem- ' 
bers  of  their  respective  organiza- 
tions to  take  advantage  of  this  op-  j 
portunity  to  do  an  outstanding  ser-  j 
vice  for  the  University,  Oppen- ' 
hoimer  said.  | 

Sonny  Hallford,  president  of  the  | 
IDC.  also  joined  the  bandwagon  i 
in  urging  students  to  apply  for  i 
counselor  jobs.  j 

"This  is  an  excellent  opportuni- 1 
ty,"  said  Hallford.  "for  students' 
to  render  a  real  service  to  the  j 
campus." 

Mike  Weinman,  chairman  of ! 
the  University  Party,  announced 
there  would  b  eno  party  meeting  '■ 
Tuesday     and    encouraged     party 


Sarah  Lawrence  Coeds 
To  Visit  UNC  Campus 


Norn  Markowitz 

. . . exchange  student 


Annual  Open  House  Tomorrow 


The    University's    Cosmopolitan 
Club    has    scheduled    its    annual 
open  house  for  tomorrow  from  3 
to  5  p.m.  at  Hillel  House.  210  W.  ■ 
Cameron  Ave. 

Exhibits  and  events  from 
around  the  world  will  be  featur- j 
ed.  Exhibits  will  be  displayed  on  j 
walls  and  tables  of  the  main  room,  j 
Included  will  be  clothing,  jewel-  \ 
members  to  try^  to  fill  any  of  the  ry,  decorative  objects,  books  and 
120  counselor   positions  open.        J  descriptive      literature,      painting 

I  and  articles.  [ 

The  displays  will  come  from; 
club  members  and  friends  from  I 
Some  100  pharmacists  from  thro-  Central  and  South  America.  Ger- 1 
uijhout  North  Carolina  attended  a  I  many.  Austria,  Belgium,  France, ' 
pi>st^aduate  seminar  in  prescrip- 1  Norway.  Denmark,  Sweden,  Po- 
tion pharmacy  this  week  at  the  |  land.  Greece.  South  Africa,  Egypt, 
\rSC  School   of  Pharmacy. 


SEMINAR 


tan. 

The  Cosmopolitan  Club,  an  or- 
ganization of  exchange  and  Amer- 
ican students,  holds  meetings 
throughout  both  semesters.  The 
Sunday  program  is  presented  as 
the  highlight  of  the  spring  semes- 
ter programming. 

Ted  Yohanna.  graduate  student 
from  Iraq,  will  be  master  of  cere- 
monies. Miss  Sipra  Bose  is  presi- 
dent of  the  group. 

In  the  past  the  open  house  has 
attracted  capacity  audiences  of 
students  and  townspeople  and  a 
similar  turnout  is  anticipated  for 
Sunday's  program. 

All  interested  persons  have  been 
invited    to    attend   this   year's   af- 


The  UNC  campus  will  come  un- 
der observation  next  week  when 
two  Sarah  Lawrence  College  ex- 
change students  arrive  tomorrow 
to  study  conditions  here. 

Mi.-j  Noni  Markowitz  and  Miss 
Elizabeth  Coe  will  remain  on  cam- 
pus through  Sunday,  April  14  to 
compare  UNC's  educational  system 
and  extra-curricular  activities  with 
their  own  at  the  Bronx ville,  New 
York  college. 

Their  visit  will  be  in  conjunction 
with  the  exchange  program  attend- 
ed by  Carolina  students  Miss  Jackie 
Aldrdge  and  Miss  Dorothy  Press- 
ly  this  winter. 

^VISITS  ^  ^ 

I  Plans  for  the  Sarah  Lawrence 
I  students  include  visits  to  Student 
i  legislature,  student  government 
!  offices,  Valk>Tie  sing,  and  various 
1  classes.  According  to  Miss  Aldrid- 
ge,  the  girls  are  particularly  inter- 
ested in  the  large  lecture  classes, 
as  the  Sarah  Lawrence  clas'ses 
range  from  12-15  students  in  size. 
The  Honor  Council  will  provide 
a  mock  trial  to  explain  the  honor, 
system,  which  Sarah  Lawrence  does 
not  have,  to  the  visitors.  The  Wo- 
men's Residence  Council  has  made 
plans  to  entertain  Miss  Coe  and 
Miss  Markkowitz  at  a  tea.  A  brief 
ausincy  meeting  will  follow.  " 
Miss  Aldridge  said  the  exchange 
students  also  hope  to  see  a  house 
council  in  operation.  Miss  Marko- 
witz is  president  of  her  dormitory 
and  is  "very  interested  in  how  the 


ciplinc  and  activities." 
STUDENT  UNION 

Plan.;  have  been  made  to  take  the 
visitors  to  the  student  union  at 
State  College,  where  they  will  in- 
vestigate   dating   facilities. 

The  exchange  students  plan  to 
study  the  UNC  educational  system 
in  comparison  to  the  Sarah  Law- 
rence program  which  includes  no 
exa'ms,  required  coiirses,  or  de- 
partmentalization and  few  quizzes. 

During  the  week's  visit,  Mia-s  Coe 
and     Miss   Markowitz   will     have 


Covering  The  University  Campus 


The  Cosmopolitan  Club  will  hold  inten'iewed  here  today  for  Aubrey 
its  annual  open  "house  tomorrow  ^  Lee  Brooks  Scholarships  valued  at 
from  3-5  p.m.  at  the  Hillel  House,  j  $500  per  year  for  either  of  the 
210  W.  Cameron  Ave.  The  event  three  units  of  the  Consolidated 
will  feature  exhibits  and  entertain- ;  University.       • 


The  Brooks  grants,  initiated  last 
yeai-,  were  set  up  to  aid  needy  stu- 
dents from  the  Jl  counties  in  North 


ment  from  around  the  world.  The 
public  has  been  cordially  invited. 

ELISHA   MITCHELL     ~ 

The  Elisha  Mitchell  Scientific  So- 
ciety  will   meet   Tuesday   at   7:30  District.   Eleven   grants   are  given 
p.m.  in  206  Phillips  Hall.  Botany  |  each  year. 
Professor  W.   J.   Koch  will   speak    '"^     — —  : 

on  the  "Structure  of  the  Swrimming 
Sporei-  of  Aquatic  Fungi."  Psycho 


ACCOUNTING  CLUl f_ 

The  Accounting  Club  will  hold 
a  supper  meeting  Monday  at  6:30 
p.m.  in  the  banquet  room  of  Lenoir 
Hall.  Speaker  for  the  occasion  will 
be  Walter  C.  Webb,  bank  executive 
of  Winston-Salem.  All  membel^  of 
the   club   and    accounting   majors 


Carolina's  old  Fifth  Congrfess-ionla ;  have  been  a^ed  to  sign  up  to  at^ 

tend  the  dinner  with  officers  of  the 
.Accounting  Club. 


lunch  with  the  sororities  and  din-  logy  Professor  E.  R.  lAmg  will  spea* 
ner  with  th^  fraternities  on  cam-   on    "Preliminary   Observations   of 


pus.  Two  coeds  from  each  dormi- 
tory will  act  as  hostesses  for  the 
exchange  students. 

Sarah  Lawrence  College  hopes 
to  develop  into  a  coordinate  school 
in  the  future.  Regarding  thes-e 
plans.  Miss  Markowitz  has  said  she 
■'would  be  interested  in  seeing  how 
girls  react  to  males  in  classes." 


Men's  Giee  Club  Names 
New  Slate  Of  Officers 

A    new    slate    of    officers    were 
elected    Thursday    by    the 
Glee    Club. 

Those     officers     elected 


Operant  Conditioning  in  Children." 
Business  during  the  meeting  will 
consist  of  election  of  officers,  ac- 
cording to  an  announcement. 
PILGRAM  FELLOWSHIP 

The  Pilgram  Fellowship  of  the 
United  Congregational  Christian 
Church  will  hold  an  outdoor  sup- 
per party  today  at  6  p.m.  at  the 
home  of  Mr.  and  Mrs.  J.  R.  Ellis 
on  Davie  Circle.  Plans  will  be  dis- 
cu.:jsed  after  the  supper  for  par- 
ticipation in  the  May  12  dedication 
were   of  tjjg  ^g^  Parish  House  at  211  W. 

Men's  Cameron  Ave. 
I  INITIATIONS 

were:  I     The  three  North  Carolina  colle- 


President,  Charles  Shoe;  Vice-jgiate  inns  of  Phi  DelU  Phi,  inter- 
President.  Ralph  Harrington;  Sec-  national  legal  fraternity,  will  hold 
retary.  Don  Murphy;  Publicity  their  annual  initation  ceremonies 
Chairman.  Ben  Taylor;  Librarians,  I  today  at  the  State  Supreme  Court 
James  Kinney  and  Darrell  Haw- j  chambers  in  Raleigh, 
kins;  and  Business  Manager,  Ken- 1  Student  pledges  from  U.N.C., 
neth  James.  i  Luke,  and  Wake  Forest  will  be  in- 


Jordan.    Israel,   India    and    Pakis-  fair.  Refreshments  will  be  served.  I  UNC  dorms  operate  concerning  dis- 


BY  EXECUTIVE  PROGRAM: 


Standards,  Ethics  Are  Being  Raised 


By  WALT  SCHRUNTEK 

"It's  never  too  late  to  learn." 
Ask  any  member  of  the  fourth 
group  graduating  class  of  the 
Executive  Program  today  and  you 
might  be  surprised  at  the  re- 
sponse. 

And  the  comments  of  these  men 
are  well  worth  listening  to  be- 
cause these  34  men,  these  grad- 
uating 'students"  are  successful 
presidents,  vice  presidents,  direc- 
<:  tors  and  managers  of  North  Caro- 

*^~i^  I,  Una's  insurance  companies,  banks, 
public  accounting  firms,  many 
lacturing  firms  and  public  utili- 
ties. 

ANSWER  NEED  '^'^^ff . 

These  men.  already  established 
in  their  fields,  have  seen  and 
answered  a  need  which  exists  in 
the  business  world  today  for  re- 
Icarning  and  readjusting  their 
business  techniques  in  a  cbanging, 
progressive  atmosphere  of  com- 
petition. 

These  are  men  who  answer  the 
existing  need  by  giving  ol  their 
time,  of  their  energies  in  an  ef- 
fort to  orient  themselves  tc  ai 
changing  scene — to  avail  them- 
selves of  new  and  different  per- 
spectives. 

They  are  able  to  do  these  things 
through    the    Executive   Program 


of  the  School  of  Business  Ad- 
ministration here  at  Carolina, 
which  in  its  fourth  year  was  es- 
tablished by  Dr.  William  J.  Gra- 
ham, a  pioneer  in  the  field. 
SCHOOL' 


managerial  uses  of  economics,  ae- 

C|jnting  and  statistics.  | 

4.     To    develop   a   fuller   under- ' 

standing    of    the    importance  be- 


lems,  and  writing  reports — in  ad- 
dition to  about  150  hours  in  class 
and    informal    discussion." 
Sufficiently      forewarning,      the 


tween    government    and    business   program  makes  its  appeal,  and  the 
and  to  provide  a  basis  for  an  ap-    businessmen    of    North    Carolina 


Both  retiring  President  Zane 
Eargle  and  Director  Joel  Carter 
offered  their  respective  apprecia- 
tion and  gratitude  to  the  retiring 
slate  of  officers  and  outlined  the 
duties  of  the  newly  elected  ones. 

own  problems. 

On  this  basis  is  the  Executive 
Program  of  the  School  of  Busi- 
ness undertaken  and  for  these 
reason-s  is  it  apparently  a  suc- 
cess and  credit  to  the  faculty 
which  forms  it  and  the  individ- 
uals who  support  it. 


itiated   into  the  fraternity   at   the 
4:30  p.m.  session. 
INTERVIEWS 

Thirty-one   high  school     seniors 
from  11  Piedmont  counties  will  be 


HOW  WAS  THE  CROOK  TOOK? 


5.  To  consider  methods  of  dis- 
charging the  admiiiistrator's  re- 
sponsibilities'in  the  area  of  hu- 
man relations. 

t 

6.  To    prT)\ide   training   in  the 


CLASSIFIEDS 


nVE  ROOM  BMCK  HOUSE  IN 
center  of  town  —  has  hobby 
workshop.  Call  9458. 


This  program     is     designed    to !  praisal    of    government    policy, 
draw    the    top    business    men    of ; 
North   Carolina    back    to   "school"! 
for    the    purpose    of    investing   in 
them  a  new  approach  to  business 
management.  j 

Its  overall  stated  purpose  is  to 
raise  the  standards     of     business ' 
practice   and  ethics     and     to     in- 1 
crease  ttie  social  responsibility  of 
the   businessman.  j 

Dr.    Graham,     director    of    the 
program   has   said    of   it:   "Execu- ' 
jves,    in    addition    to    a    new    ap- ' 
proach  to  business  echniques.  get ! 
a  sense  of  the  impact  of  their  in- 
dividual decisions  on  industry  and 
other    business.    It    is    a   cultural 
program  as  well."  | 

3BJECTIVES 

A  prime  objective  of  the  Execu- 
tive Program  is  "the  development 
of  broad-guage  senior  manage- 
ment personnel."  Other  specific 
objectives  are: 

1.  To  provide  an  undetstami* 
ing  and  interpretation  of  busi- 
nes  institutions  and  processes  as 
well  as  those  factors  which  un- 
derlie and  affect  them. 

2.  To  develop  habits  of  criti- 
cal reading  and  or  orderly  think- 
ing, and  skills  in  effective  re- 
porting of  conclusions  both  orally 
and  in  writing. 

3.  To    develop    facility   in    the 


and  the  surroundii^g  area^  answer 
it  emphatically.       ;t,        \ 

The  program  draws  "executive- 
students"  from  Greensboro,  Mor- 
g*nton,  $pindale.  Spray.  Fay5itte- 
vllle,      Charlotte.      Drexel.     Hi^ 


analysis   of   business   problem^   at  ^  Poiint.  Witjston  -  Salem,  Gastoaja, 


Asheville  to   name   but  a 

NEW    MANAGEMENT  ? 

With  the  trend  in  most  business 
organizations  today  running- ttto- 
ward  handing  down  authocity^to 
lower  levels' and  giving  people' in 
charge  more  voice  in  their  fields, 
a  new  type  of  management  is 
needed  and  it  is  this  management 
that  the  Executive  Program  at- 
tempts to  facilitate. 

As  the  program  member  is  able 

to    exchange    opinions  and   points 

of  view  with  seasoned  executives! 

The  broad   context  of  this  Pro- .concerned    with    other    functional 

gram    requires    each    enroUee    to,  ^^^^  j^^^   ^^j^^^  companies   and 

I  industries,  he  is  able  to  see  prob- 
i  lems  from  another  point  of  view. 


the  policy-making  level. 

7.  To  develop  a  general  man- 
agement approach  to  the  solution 
of  business  problems — an  ap- 
proach that  goes  beyond  specific 
departments  or  functions  to  a 
company-wide  or  even  industry- 
wide point  of  view. 

8.  To  develop  a  wider  and 
deeper  appreciation  of  the  func- 
tion of  busines  in  our  social,  eco- 
nomic and  political  system  and  a 
sense  of  the  social  responsibilities 
of   business  leaders. 


DAILY    CROSSWORD 


ACROSS 

1.  Forehead 

5.  Seise 

9.  Weird  (v«r  ) 

10.  Part 

11.  Position 

12.  External 

14.  Lubricate 

15.  Brown 

16.  Music  note 

17.  Offtprinf 
(obs.) 

19.  Conjunction 

20.  At  home 

21.  EaforneM 

23.  InM(^ 

24.  Poverty. 
lUrlciccn 

26.  Fruit 
infeiAerf 

25.  GoddeM  of 
barvesU 
(It.) 

29.  Native  of 
Morocco 

30.  Umc  nBt* 

31.  GrMk  loiter 
33.UnroU 

36.  Clooe  to 

37.  Coal  acuktlo 

38.  PoeM 
29.  A  fact 
4l.CanaIboat 

43.  Skin  openinf 

44.  Poker  stake 

45.  Containcil 

46.  Rumpla 

DOWN 
I.  Miwepre. 

»ent 
2  Compr*' 

hcuda 

8  GMUBpU* 

4.  River 
iBng.) 


5.  Moanini^ 
sound 

6.  Circular 

7.  High  (mufl.) 
8-  Shortest 

line 

to  a  place 
11.  Bah! 
13.  Scolds 
15.  Dancers' 

cymbals 
18.  Color 

22.  Affirmative 
vote  (var.) 

23.  Airway 
terminate 

24.  A  wanderer 


25.  Tomb 
m- 

script, 
tion 

26.  Buddha 
(Chin.) 

27.  Game 
of 
cards 

29.  Middle 

31.  A 
iwor 

32.  Sent  to 
a  home 

34.  Borders 

35.  Born 
40.  Digit 


uaasi  [aiaaw  ■ 
iHtic     aa  BBS 

EiL4Baa  anaES 
HUUEi  taaaniKJa 


41.  Cheat 
(Slang) 

42.  Father  of 
the  heavens 

( Babyl. ) 


give  of  his  time  to  the  extent  of 
I  40  days  from  his  business  sched- 
ule. (The  course  of  study  requires  i 
his  presence  here  on  eight  alter- 
'  nate  weekends  and  two  full  weeks 
during  the  year.)  | 

This  means,  as  Dr.  Graham  put 
it,  the  man  either  has  to  get  his 
work  done  before  he  leaves  or 
(;atch  up  when  he  returns  to  the ! 
desk  again.  "No  one  else  i$  go- 1 
ing  to  do  his  job  for  him,''  he ' 
pointed  out. 

This  stands  as  an  indication  of 
the  sacrifice  which  the  individual  | 
must  make  to  participate  in  the  | 
program.  Although  the  company 
pays  the  $1000  tuition  bill  (to  be  ^ 
raised  to  $1250  next  year),  the  i 
time  burden  is  on  the  individual,  j 

Potential  members  of  the  pro-  j 
gram  are  warned  of  the  sacrifice ! 
their  enrollment  will  mean  in  no  i 
uncertain  terms:  A  message  in  the  ^ 
program's  handbook'  slates:  I 

"This  program  is  not  a  series  of  i 
weekend  conference^.  It  is  a  I 
tough,  work-a n d-study  program' 
that  will  demand  about  200  hours  | 
of  homework — such  as  reading,! 
study,    sollving 'cases    and    prob- i 


By  so  doing,  he  broadens  his  un- 
derstanding  and  ciproaches  to  his' 


tMAMi  NIIX.I6.C 

Phone  9.8781 


With 


\rtcarved 


DIAMOND    RINGS 


You  Receive 
A  Year's 
Insurance 

Against  Loss! 


QUlMBY,  Wise.;  (March  3). 
Police  today  arrested  the  foul 
felon  who  heisted  the  cash  reg- 
ister at  Jones'  Gas  Station. 
When  arrested,  the  base  serv- 
ant of  the  devil  i<ept  mutter- 
ing, "Drat  the  shirt,  drat  the 
shirt." 

Let's  look  at  the  events 
leading  up  to  this  story.  After 
the  lioldup,  the  police  quizzed 
Victim  Jones.  Jones  couldn't 
identify  tlie  yegg.  "The  wan- 
ton jackdaw  who  cabbaged  my 
cash  wore  a  mask,"  said  Jones. 
"The  only  distinguishing  fea- 
ture about  him  was  his  shirt. 
A  beauty!  The  collar  was  ab- 
solutely free  of  wrinkles.  Oh, 
he  was  a  neat  one!" 

Meanwhile,  the  scoundrel, 
knowing  that  his  wrinkle-free 
and  enviably-neat  collar  was  a. 
dead  giveaway,  tried  desper- 


ately to  slip  some  wTinkles  into 
it.  He  stamped  on  it  with  hob- 
nail boots.  He  slugged  away 
at  it  with  a  club.  But  not  a 
WTinkle!  So  later,  as  he  skulked 
do'R'n  Main  Street,  his  shirt 
was  noticed,  admiringly,  by  a 
detective  and  he  wfis* arrested 
lickety-split.  Go'od  work, 
copper! 

By  now  you  will  have 
guessed  that  the  miscreant 
wore  a  Van  Heusen  Century 
Shirt.  But  of  course!  It's  the 
only  shirt  in  the  world  with  the 
soft  collar  that  won't  ^vTinkle 
erer.  It  never  needs  starch, 
so  it's  always  comfortable.  The 
Van  Heusen  Century  also  lasts 
up  to  t^ice  as  long  as  ordinary 
shirts,  yet  costs  no  more.  S4.00. 

Phillips-Jones  Corp.,  417 
Fifth  Ave.,  New  York  16,  N.Y. 


Visit 

Wentworth  &  Sloan 

Jewelers 

Ask  about  the 

Permanent  Value  Plan 


WE   ARE   THE   EXCLUSIVE 


VAN  HEUSEN 


DEALER  IN  CHAPEL  HILL 


«^* 


'-r-. 


WINSTON 


scores  top  marks  for  flavor! 

with 


DAILY  aurroauotE  —  ««»'» *»«^  ^  '"•'''  •*- 


Fans  Have  Hard  Time 

Following  BasketbaUefs 

The  nation's  number  one  basket- 
ball team  has  fans  of  all  sizes 
and  ages. 

Evidence  of  this  showed  up  in 
The  Daily  Tar  Heel  offices  yes- 
terday When  two  very  young  ladies 
appeared  to  ask  shyly  for  "pictures 
of  any  of  the  basketball  players." 

Their  following  of  the  Tar  Heel's 
successful  season  was  apparently 
hampered  by  circumstances  be- 
yond their  control,  however. 
When  asked  if  they  had  watched 
the  championship  finats  on  TV, 
they  answered  regretfully,  "Yes, 
but  we  couldn't  stay  until  the 
et)d.  Motiher  made  us  go  to  bed  at 
9." 

They  '  got  '  their  pictures  "and 
walked  out  grinning  proudly. 


■  What's  all  the  shouting  about  ?  Flavor ! 
Full,  rich  fijavor  —  in  a  filter  smoke!  Yes, 
and  Winstoi^'s  escclusive  filter  —  a  filter  that 


Switdi  to  WINSTON  Americas  best-sdiing,  best-tSigng  frtto-  curette! 


REYNOLDS 

»<»»«cco  CO.. 

iT3K.SALb.M.    N 


^Aei  f»duii 


TMI  OAILV  TA»  MltL 


SATURDAY,  APRIL  6,  1f57 


Jim  Beatty  and  Dave  Scurlock 

Pictured  above  are  Jim  Beatty  and  Dave  Scurlock  who  will  lead 
the  Carolina  track  team  against  Wake  Forest  here  this  afternoon. 
This  is  the  first  ACC  spring  meet  for  Carolina. 


Trackmen   Entertain    Wake  Forest 
In   First  Spring   Conference   Test 


By  DAVE  WIBLE 


run    in   two   gruelling   events,   the 
mile  and  the  2-mile.  Scurlock  will 
put  his  talents  to  use  on  three  oc- 
casions, the  440.  the  880.  and  he 
will  anchor  the  mile  relay  team. 
Running  with  Beatty  in  the  mile  ' 
Todays  meet  will  be  the  confer-   will  be  Perrin  Hendero-on  and  John 
ence    opener   for    the    Tar   Heels.    Reaves.     Wayne   Bishop.     Everett  i 
Last  weekend  Coach  Dale  Ransons    W'hatley  and  .\lex  Coffin  will   be  j 


Carolina's  varsity  track  team  will 
meet  the  Deacon  trackmen  of  Wake 
Forest  this  afternoon  at  3:00  on 
Fetzer  field. 


.•printing  for  the  Tar  Heels.  These 
three  will  run  in  both  the  100  and 
the  220  yard   dashes. 

Carolina  hurdlers  will  be  Lyn- 
don DeBoide,  Jerr>'  Sowers  and 
Bill  Lyons.  DeBoide  and  Sowers 
will  run  the  highs,  and  Lyons  and 
Sowers  will  run  the  lows. 

The  running  events  are  schedul- 


charges  made  the  long  trip  to  Flo-  seen  wearing  the  blue  and  white 
rida  to  participate  in  the  Florida  with  Beatty  in  the  2-mile  contest. 
Relays  and  open  the  1957  season.       Bishop  took  second  behind  Beatty 

The  Tar  Heels  will  be  heavily  in  the  Florida  Relays, 
favored  this  afternoon.  Wake  For- 1  Tar  Heels  in  the  440  with  Scur- 
e..*;.  is  usually  not  very  strong  and  ^  lock  will  be  Dick  MacFaddin  and 
this  years  moving  of  the  college  i  John  Sylvester.  Ben  Williams  and 
from  Wake  Forest  to  Winston-Sa-  i  Howard  Kahn  will  go  with  him  in 
lem  did  not  help  matters  any.  The  }  the  880.  In  the  Mile  relay  Scur- 
Deacon  tracksters  found  that  their  lock  will  rely  on  Williams.  Siyves- 
beautiful  new  campus  did  not  have  ter  and  .MacFaddin  to  carry  the 
a  track.  {baton   the   first    three   quarters   of  j  will  throw  the  discus. 

Jm    Beatty    and    Dave    Scurlock  j  the  distance.  The  Freshman  teams  from  both 

will  be  the  workhorses  for  the  Tar        Jim    Varnum,    Jim    "Moe"  ^loss    schools  will  be  competing  against 
Heels   this    afternoon.    Beatty   will '  and     Emil  DeCantis   will  do     the  j  each  other  in  all  of  the  events. 


ed  to  start  at  3:30  with  the  last 
event  and  usually  the  most  excit- 
ing the  mile  relay  on  tab  for  5:00. 
In  the  field  events^  which  will 
begin  at  3:00,  Tar  Heels  Kemper. 
Jonej  and  Belich  will  throw  the 
shot,  Oakley,  Payne  and  McCalles- 
ter  will  throw  the  Javlin,  Bryant 
and  Lyons  will  high  jump.  Davis 
will  pole  vault,  Brawley  and  Rase- 
mond  will  broad  jump,  and  Jones 


Krepp  Wins 
Title  In  AAU 
Swim  Meet 

DAYTONA  BE.\CH.  Fla.— (AP) 
— Albert  Wiggins  beat  back  the 
challenge  of  young  Timothy  Jecko 
tonight  and  retained  his  100-yard 
butterfly  title  in  the  national 
AAU  men's  indoor  swimming  and 
diving  championships. 

It  was  the   second  title  in  the 
meet   for  Wiggins,   an  Ohio   State 
Univer.sity      senior      from      Pitts- 
burgh.  Pa.,  who  is  competing  un- '  on  balls  by  Hoecker,  and  a  single 
der  the  banner'  of  the  Swim  Club !  ^y  Ty  Clayton. 


Frosh  Baseballers  In 
4-2  Win  Over  Oberlin 

By  ED  ROWLAND  |      Coach    Wayne    White's    hustling 

Pla>-ing     heads-up  ba.seball     be-  [  team  next  plays  five  straight  games 

hind    pitcher   Bobby    Wooten,   the  I  away  from  Chapel  Hill  before  re- 


Carolina  Tar  Babie-  defeated  Ober- 
lin College  here  yesterday  after- 
noon, 4-2.  The  win  was  Wooten'.-> 
first  deci.-;ion,  and  the  fourth  vic- 
tory for  the  Tar  Babies.  They  have 
lost   one,  to  Oberlin  Thursday. 

The  frosh  scored  two  runs  in  the 
first  inoing   on   an   error,   a   base 


of    Cincinnati.    He    won    the 
yard   freestyle  Thursday. 


100- 


Through  the  first  of  the  four 
laps,  the  contestants  were  bunch- 
ed. Then  Wiggins  pulled  in  front 
and   won   by  a  good   margin.   His 


Tommy  Saintsing  drove  a  long 
homer  into  right  field  on  the  sec- 
ond pitch  of  the  .second  inning  to 
provide   the   winning    run. 

The  visiting  Yeomen  tallied  a 
lone  run  in  the  third  on  a  single, 
a  fielder's  choice,  and  another  sin- 


turning  on  April  23rd  to  face  Duke 
The  next  two  weeks  will  see  them 
traveling  to  N.  C.  State,  Duke, 
Campbell,  and  to  Pfeiffer  whei-e 
they  will  play  two  games. 
Score  by  Innings: 

Oberlin— 001  000  100—2-6-4 
UNC—      210  000  Olx— 4-9-3 
Hoecker  and  Chivily;  Wooten  and 
Frost. 


Track  And  Golf  Action  Here 


Today 


Tar  Heel  Golfers  Face  Deacs 


U  NC-Terps  ,  /„  ^ ,„,  conference  Battle 

Postponed 


The  Carolina-Maryland  baseball 
game  which  was  scheduled  for 
this  afternoon  at  Maryland  has 
been  rained  oi^t. 

The  Atlantic  Coast  Conference 
attraction  has  been  re-scheduled 
for  Monday  afternoon  at  College 
Park.  Md.  From  there,  the  Tar 
Heels  will  travel  to  Charlottes- 
ville, Va.  for  another  conference 
encounter  with  Virginia  on  Tues- 
day afternoon  and  will  return 
home  to  face  Virginia  again  Wed- 
nesday. 

The  Tar  Heels  will  be  seeking 
to  get  back  into  the  win  column 
Monday  after  sustaining  a  12-6 
defeat  at  the  hand  of  North  Car- 
olina State  Wednesday.  Coach 
Walt  Rabb  sent  five  pitchers  to 
the  mound  to  try  to  silence  the 
Wolfpack  bats,  but  all  was  in 
vain. 

Rabb  will  probably  go  with  his 
ace  in  the  hole,  Jim  Raugh,  against' 
hte  Terps  Monday,  Raugh  has  a 
3-0  record,  two  of  which  are  three- 
hitters.  The  first  came  when 
Raugh  fired  a  three-hitter  at  Mary- 
land early  la.st  week  in  a  game 
that  was  broken  up  by  Roger  Hon- 
eycutt's  run-producing  single  in 
the  last  of  the  ninth  inning. 

Raugh's  second  fine  performance 
was  almost  duplicate  oft  he  first, 
against  South  Carolina.  This  time 
it  was  pinch-hitter  Don  Hill  who 
broke  it  up  with  a  homer  in  the 
ninth. 


By   JIM  CROWNOVER 

Carolina's  undefeated  golf  team 
faces  one  of  its  toughejt  matches 
of  the  season  this  morning  at  ^0:3d 
when  the  Tar  Heels  play  host  to 
the  Wake  Forest  Deacons  on  the 
Finley  Course. 

Wake  is  expected  to  furnish  the 
main  obstacle  to  a  second  straight 
AOC  title  for  Coach  Chuek  Erick- 
son's  linkstery. 

The  Tar  Heels  have  looked  very 
good  in  matches  thus  far,  clobber 
ing  Cornell  and  Michigan  State, 
and  gaining  a  hard-fought  tie  with 
Rollins.  Rollias  was  the  only  club 
to  beat  la.st  year's  conference  cham- 
pions. 

The  Deacons,  however,  were 
quite  strong  and  the  Tar  Heels 
were  pushed  hard  n  taking  two 
matches  from  them  last  ifed.&on. 

This  afternon,  the  Tar  Heels  will 
u.se  their  usual  strong  six  of  Tom- 
my Langley.  Gene  Lookabill,  Buck 
Adams,  Sam  Patrick,  Walt  Sum- 
merville,  and  Tuffy  Henderson. 


In  practice  rounds  Wednesday, 
the  Ta^  Meets  showed  the  type  of 
golf  they  are  now  playing  with  Ad- 
ams carding  a  red-hit  68,  and  Lang- 
ley,  Lookabill,  and  Summerville  one  j 
under  par  at  71. 

The  Deacons  will  be  led  by  John 
Gerring,  Ralph  James,  Dave   Ogi- ' 
livie.   Tommy    Helms,   Red    Sapp, 
and   Sonny  George.  The   Deacons 
have  lost  only  to  Rollins. 

After  today's  headline  match, 
the  Tar  Heels  face  Atlantic  Coast 
Conference  competition  away  from 
home  against  South  Carolina  and 
Clemson.  Their  next  home  battle 
will  come  Thursday  when  they  go 
against  the  University  of  Michi- 
gan on  the  local  course. 


Cagers  Swamped 

UNO  sports  publicity  depart- 
ment has  been  besieged  by  ad- 
mirers of  the  Tar  Heel  cage 
champions  for  pictures,  the  re- 
quests coming  from  all  over  the 
nation.  And  Coach  Frank  Mc- 
Guire  and  his  players  have  been 
besieged  with  -,  iitvittttjo^s  to  din- 
ner and  parties  throughout  the 
state  by  alumni  groups  and  other 
well  wishers. 


The  Betrayal  I 


Howard  Johnson  Restaurant 

STUDENT    SPECIALS 


Barbecued    Chicken 
Choice  Steak  Sandwiches 

2:00  -    5:00  P.M 
SERVED  8:00-11:00  P.M. 

'Landmark  For  Hungry  Tarheels'' 


IN  WXDK  VISION  COLOR 

Richard  DENNiNG-Beverly  GARLAND 


LAST  TIM6S  TODAY 


jac 
a 


^  8.M.0.C 


I  Wl 


ith  hi 


s  new 


Ever  since  Jack  bought  his  new 
Sonic  CAPRI  phonogra1)h  at  the 
local  college  store  —  he's  become 
the  biggest  B  M  O  C  ever.  You 
can  join  him  and  be  the  biggest  ever, 
too,  for  you  can  buy  a  CAPRI 
phonograph  for  as  little  as  $19.95. 

This  month's  special  is  the  CAPRI 

550  —  a  twin  speaker  high 

fidelity  portable  with  4-speed 

Webcor  automatic  changer, 

hi-fi  amplifier  in  attractive 

two'tooe  Forest  Green.      only  '59 

at  your  local  dealer. 
SONIC   INDUSTRIES,  INC.    1 9  Wilbur  Street/ Lynbrook,  N.  Y. 


'      RUTH  ROMAN 
:'     $T£RUNG  MAYDBN 

ftitttfi  thru  Uniiti/ Art'Stt 

LATE  SHOW  TONIGHT 
SUNDAY-MONDAY 


'm. 


See  Our  Complete   Line  Of   ^-^ 
P  SONIC  PI^OMOGRAPHS 


BELK  -  LEGOETT .  HORTON 


I 


RAW  VIOLENCE -SAVAGE  FURY 


// 


FLESHJ- 


and  the 


SPUR 


// 


WMi 


\       JOHN  AGAR 
MARLA  ENGLISH 
TOUCH  CONNORS 

TODAY 


Carolina 


wiin  p  irip  , 


\ti79^\ 


PLUS  50 

LAND  CAMERA 

PRIZES 


time   was  55  seconds   flat   to  55.9  i  -^le  by  Joe  Hodg.s*on.  Then  Wooten 
for  Jecko,  a  Yale  University  soph- 1  gave  up  his  only  base  on  balls,  and 


omore  competing  for  New  Haven, 
Conn.,  Swim   Club.  » 

Phil  Drake  of  the  University  of 
Florida  was  third,  Frank  Brunell 
of  Vesper  Swim  club  in  Philadel- 
phia fourth.  Jack  Nelson  of  North 
Carolina  Athletic  Club  fifth  and 
Don  Cherry  o  fCincinnati  sixth. 

Charlie  Krepp,  a  University  of 
North  Carolina  iwnior  from  Balti- 
more, won  the  100-yard  backstroke 
title.  Wiggins,  last  year's  winner, 
passed  up  this  event  to  concen- 
trate on  the  butterfly. 

Frank  McKinney,  18-year-old  In- 


an  erroi*  by  shortstop  Larry  Craver 
loaded  the  ba.ses.  But  Wooten  for- 
ced the  next  hitter  to  ground  out 
to  short  to  end   the  threat, 

Oberln  scored  its  last  run  in  the 
seventh  on  a  single,  an  error  by 
the  pitcher  on  a  chopping  bunt, 
and  a,  single  by  Hodgson.  ' 

The  Tar  Babies  scored  the  final 
tally  in  the  eighth  when  with  the 
basea-   loaded    Gerald    Griffin    was 
hit  by  a  pitched  ball, 
j     Carolina  hit  safely  in  eveiT  ina-  { 
j  ing  but  one,  but  they  left  13  men  \ 
stranded.  Three  men  were  left  on 


COMING  ALL  NEXT  WEEK 
OUR    SEVENTH    ANNUAL 

GOiNG-GOlNG-GONE  SALE 

A  table  piled  high  with  used  books  —  everything 
from  texts  to  lively  novels  —  offered  at  prices  that 
get  lower  and  lower  until  they  vanish! 


dianapolis  Cathedral  High    School    base  in  three  innings. 


pupil,  caught  Krepp  at  the  75-yard 
mark  but  Krepp  had  the  better 
finishing  kick  and  pulled  away  to 
win  in  57.8  seconds.  McKinney 's 
time  wa.s  58.4. 

Krepp  represents  the  North  Caro- 
lina Athletic  Club  and  McKinney 
the  Indianapolis  .Athletic  Club. 


Wooten  spaced  six  Oberlin  hits 
'veil,  and  he  only  got  in  trouble 
once.  Four  runners  was  all  he  al- 
lowed as  far  as  second,  and  two  of 
them  scored.  The  Tar  Babies  pulled 
a  double  play  in  the  first  inning  to 
begin  their  support.  They  made 
only  three  errors  on  the  wet  field, 


Monday 

April  8 

Your  Cheict 

79i 


Tuesday 

April  9 

What's  Ltft 

19< 


Thursday 

April   11 

What's  L»ft 

9< 


Saturday 
April  13th 
What's  L*ft 

FREE 


PICK  THE  PACK 
THAT  SUITS  YOU  BEST 

Ybs,  try  LtM  in  te  new  Cntsft-proof  Box. 
Try  the  handy  LiM  Pack . . .  tlran  finish  the 
limerick  about  the  pack  that  suits  you  best! 

(MIAMIWIAAM^ 
around  the  world  this  summer! 

The  adventure  af  i  Lifetlne ...  is  waltinc  for  You! 

Travel  the  route  of  Jules  Verne's  fabulous 
hero  to  the  mo$t  romantic  places  in  the 
world.  London !  Paris . . .  Rome , . .  Istanbul 
.  .  .  Calcutta  .  .  .  Hong  Kong  .  .  .  Tokyo! 
This  could  be  your  summer  vacation  .  .  . 
79  days  of  enchantment  with  all  expenses 
paid.  And  all  you  have  to  do  is  HTite  one 
simple  line  of  English! 

Just  finish  the  limerick  shout  the  pack 
that  suits  you  best  ...  the  Crush-proof 
L&M  Box  or  the  Handy  L&M  Pack.  See 
simple  rules  in  box  bdow  .  .  .  and  send  in 
your  entry  TODAY!  ^^ 


Bill    Sonncr   of    North    Carolina    campared  with  the  nine  committed 
Athletic  Club  wan  third.  Bill  Clin  i  Thur^-Jay. 

ton      of   New   Haven    Swim     Club  I     ' 

fourth,   Dave   Mclntyre     of  North  '  Michigan  successfully  defended  his 
Carolina   Athletic    Club   fifth   and    220 -yard  freestyle  title,  leading  all 
Him  Dolbey  of  New  Haven  Swim  inhe  way. 
Club  sixth.  I      His  lime  was  2  minutes  5.1  sec 

Pick  Hanley  of  tlie  Umversity  ol  onds. 


You  pick  your  bargain  and  you  pick  your  price. 
Bring  along  your  wheelbarrow  and  have  funi 

The  intimate  Bookshop 


EASY    CONTEST    FVULEb 


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NEXT  50 
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{Contest  void  wherever  UlejfUf) 


Finish  the  limerick  about  whichever 
LiM  pack  suits  you  best. 
Send  your  last  line  with  the  wrapper 
or  box  from  the  LiM  pack  you  prefer 
(a  facsiraiie  will  do)  .  .  .  along  with  your 
ovne  and  address,  to  L&M,  P.  O.  Box 
1635,  New  York  46.  N.  Y. 

CooUst  restricted  to  college  students. 
Entries  must  t>e  postmarked  no  later 
that)  midnight,  April  30^  1957. 
Entries  will  t>e  judged  on  literary  ex- 
pression, originality,  sincerity  and  apt- 
ness of  thought.  Decision  of  our  judges 
is  fin«l.  Winners  will  be  notified  by  mail. 


Said  a  popular  B.M.O.C.: 
"The  New  Crush-proof  Box 
is  for  me! 
It  closes  so  tight,  "'■.;.,*; 
Keeps  my  L&iM's  right, 


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Plus  the  Pure  White  Miracle  Tip 


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Partly  cloudy  and  mild  with  an  B-'^X-^V 


WEATHER 


txp«cttd  high  of  6S. 


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REVIEW 

Th«  Tar  >4«»1  WMk  in  r*vitw. 
$••  pag«  2. 


VOL.   LVII   NO.   161 


Complete  (/Pi  Wire  Sermee 


CHAPEL   HILL,   NORTH  CAROLINA,  SUNDAY,  APRIL   7,   1957 


Officeg  in  Graham  Memorial 


FOUR  PAO»S  THIS  iSSUf 


Large  Grant  Awarded  To  University 
For  Study  In  State  Urban  Problems; 
Out'Of'State  Tuition  May  Be  Raised 


Featured  Germans  Vocalist 

The  final  Germans  concert  and  dance  of  the  year,  to  be  held 
Saturday,  will  feature  the  striking  recording  star  Paula  Georg*, 
shown  above.  She  wilt  team  with  Ray  Eberle,  long  a  prominent  nam* 
in  American  popular  music,  in  performing  for  the  program. 

IN  F!NAl  GERMANS: 

Vocalists  Eberle^  George 
Are  featured  Saturday 


The  vocal  talents  of  Paula 
George  and  Ray  Eberle.  backed 
by  Eberles  "Serenade  in  Blue" 
band,  will  perforrri  for  both  the 
afternon  concert  and  dance  to  be 
given  by  the  Gesjmans'  Club  Sat- 
urday night.         , 

The  Eberle-Georg3  presentation 
will  be  this  years  finale  in  the 
German's  Club's  annua!  program 
of  three  outstanding  dance-con- 
certs. 

The  German's  Club  is  comprised 
of  13  0^  the  University's  outstand- 
ing; social  fraternities.  The  Club's 
fraternity  representatives  change 
occasionally,  but  the  number  of 
fraternities  represented  is  kept  at 
13. 

Fraternity  membership  is  pres- 
ently composed  of:  ^ta  Psi,  Beta 
Theta  Pi.  Phi  Delta  Theta.  Sigma 
Alpha  Epsilon,  Pi  Kappa  Alpha. 
Phi  Gamma  Delta.  Sigma  Nu.  Kap- 
pa Alpha,  Delta  Kappa  Upsilon, 
St.  .■Xnthony's  Hall.  Alpha  Tau 
Omega,   and   Sigma   Chi. 

Eberles  has  been  a  prominent 
name  in  American  popular  music 
since  he  became  the  featured  vo- 
calist with  the  late  Glenn  Miller 
and  his  band  at  the  age  of  18. 

Since  leaving  Miller's  organiza- 
tion afer  six  successful  years, 
Eberle  has  been  featured  in  num- 
erous films  and  starred  in  his  own 


radio  program  over  the  CBS  net- 
work. 

Personal  and  television  appear- 
ances have  rounded  out  his  varied 
career.  Four  records  and  two  al- 
bums featuring  his  vocalizations 
have   sold   over  a   million   copies. 

Miss  George,  a  relatively  new 
and  very  talented  recording  star, 
has  a  unique  quality  to  her  voice 
which  has  been  likened  to  that  of 
Julie  London. 

The  throaty  songbird  is  a  petite 
and  striking  brunette  whose  sing- 
ing is  enhanced  by  a  radiant  and 
effervescent  stage   personality. 

College  audiences  throughout 
the  country  have  been  enthralled 
by  her  ability  to  weave  her  lyrics 
into   spellbinding  melody. 


WOMEN'S    CLUB 

The  LJniversity  Women's  Club 
will  sponsor  a  luncheon  at  12:30 
Thursday  at  the  Carolina  Inn.  The 
speaker  will  be  Chancellor  Robert 
•  B.  House.  Reservations,  which  must 
be  made  by  tomorrow  noon,  can 
be  obtained  from  Mrs.  C.  P.  E^rick- 
son,  601  Park  Place,  telephone 
5131. 


GM'S  SLATE 

The     following     activties     are 
scheduled  for  Graham  Memorial 
today: 

Petite  Dramatique,  8:00-11:30 
p.m.,  main  lounge;  Young 
Friends,  9:45-11  a.m.,  Grail 
Room;  Quakers,  11  a.m.-l  p.m., 
Grail  Room;  Presbyterian 
Church,  9:30-11  a.m.,  Roland 
Parker  2  and  3  and  Rendexvous 
P--^-  Westminster  Fellowship, 
9:30-10:45  a.m.,  RaUnd  Parkor 
1. 


Grad  Student 
Wins  Fulbright 
For  Next  Year 

Albert  B.  Smith  Jr..  a  UNC  grad- 
uate student  from  Jonesboro,  Ga., 
has  been  awarded  a  Fulbright  Fel- 
lowship for  study  during  the  1957- 
58  school  year  at  the  University 
of  Montpellier,  in  southern 
France. 

Smith  is  currently  working  to- 
ward his  Ph.  D.  in  French  Litera- 
ture and  serving  as  a  teaching  as- 
sistant in  the  UNC  Romance  Lang- 
uages Dept.  He  expects  to  resume 
his  studies  here  in  the  fall  of 
1958,  completing  his  doctorate 
with  two  more  years  of  work  and 
continuing  teaching  on  the  col- 
lege level. 

After  completing  his  A,  B.  de- 
gree in  German  and  his  M.  A.  in 
French,  both  at  Emory  University, 
Smith  served  three  years  in  the 
U.  S.  Army.  Prior  to  coming  to 
Ux\C,  he  taught  at  Union  Colttge 
in   Barbourville,   Ky. 

He  will  begin  his  orientation 
period  in  Paris  in  mid-September, 
and  begin  his  actual  studies  at 
.Montpellier  by  late  October.  He 
is  specializing  in  19th  century 
literature. 

Mrs.  Smith,  the  former  Rita 
Censale  of  Leomister,  Mass.,  and 
their  son  will  join  him  next  March 
and  remain  until  he  completes  his 
studies  in  June.  They  expect  to 
visit  friends  in  Italy  before  re- 
turning to  the  United  States. 


nev5 

m 
brief 

Postal  Services 

WASHINGTON  —  ( AP)  —  Post 
master  General  Summerfield  Sat- 
urday was  threatened  with  a  court 
fight  if  he  goes  through  with  his 
plan  to  slash  mail  service  unless 
Congress  grants  him  47  million 
djllars  extra. 

The  Associated  Third  Class  Mail 
Users,  a  trade  association,  said 
that  if  Summerfield  halts  third 
class  mail  "we  will  move  prompt- 
ly for  a  restraining  order  in  Fed- 
eral   courts." 

"It  is  our  firm  convictioh  that 
the  postmaster  general  has  no 
legal  authority  to  refuse  to  handle 
any  category  of  mail,"  said  Har- 
ry Maginnis,  executive  manager  of 
the  association.  / 

Summerfield,  saying  he  is  run- 
ning out  of  funds,  has  .served 
notice  he  will  start  putting  a  ser- 
ies of  cuts  into  effect  April  13. 
They  would  include  closing  of  all 
post  offices  on  Saturdays  and 
Sundays,  the  discontinuance  of 
Saturday  mail  deliveries,  except 
special  delivery  items,  and  the 
embargo  on  third  class  mail,  which 
consists  of  small  merchandise  and 
advertising  matter. 

"Ike's  Car" 

WASHINGTON  —  ( AP)  —  Presi- 
dent Eisenhower,  who  likes  to  get 
around  tn  a  hurry,  wfll  have  his 
now-celebrated  helicopters  in  about 
a  month,  as  soon  as  the  Air  Force 
gets    through    testing    them. 

But  whether  the  President  is  al- 
so about  to  acquire  an  ultra-fancy, 
20-foot  long,  hand-built  limousine 
depends  on  w;hether  you  listen  to 
the  Italian  or  the  Detroit  version. 

An  Italian  builder  of  automobile 
bodies  said  in  Turin  Saturday  that 
his  factory  has  finished  "the 
world's  biggest  litnousine  "  and  that 
it  is  ready  for  shipment  to  Wash- 
ington next  week  for  Eisenhow- 
er's use.  He  called  it  "Ike's  Car." 

First  Load  Of  Oil 

EILAT.  Israel— (AP)— A  16.000- 
ton  American  tanker  sailed  safely 
from  the  Red  Sea  up  the  Gulf  of 
Aqaba  Saturday  and  anchored  at 
Eilat  with  the  first  cargo  of  crude 
oil  ever  shipped  to  this  southern 
Israeli  port.  It  was  big  news  in 
Israel. 

Israeli  authorities  declined  to 
permit  disclosure  of  the  name  of 
the  tanker,  at  sea  the  last  12  days. 
Other  tankers  are  to  follow  and 
the  Israelis  prefer  to  limit  infor- 
mation to  the  Arab  world. 

Suez  Conference 

WASHINGTON.  — (AP)—  State 
Department  officials  seized  hope- 
fully Saturday  on  Cairo  rumors  that 
Egypt  would  call  a  big  internation- 
al conference  on  operating  the 
Suez  Canal.  They  thought  Egypt 
might  be  prepftrting  to  reco^ize 
some  rights  of  user  nations  in  the 
watherway. 

The  situation  was  quite  unusual, 
because  both  the  State  Depart- 
ment and  the  Egyptian  Embassy 
professed  to  be  without  any  of- 
ficial information  respecting  a 
canal  conferfence. 


Friday  Will  Determine 
UNC's  Position  Mon. 

Students    fronj   out   of   state   at- .  University  tomorrow  afternoon  to 
tendipg  the  three  units  of  the  Con- 1  decide  what  position  to  take, 
solidated   University  may  have  to ; 

pay   an   exti^a   $200    per   year   for       '^"  ^^^^^  chancellors  are  Carey 
tuition  starting  next  fall.  J  «•    »ostian,    N.    C.    State.    W.   W. 

State  Representative  L.  H.  Ross  P'^^^".  ,  Woman's  College  and 
of  Beaufort  introduced  a  bill  to  ^^""^  "•  "«"«^-  UNC. 
the  General  Assembly  this  week'  '^'^  *'^"'  '^  P»*^«<*'  ^°"'''  ^'- 
calling  for  not  less  than  $700  from  ^^^  ^^^  University's  Board  of 
non-resident  undergraduates.  The  Trustees  to  establish  the  proposed 
rate  is  now  $500.  j  '"'^'"^^se. 

The  measure  has  been  referred 


Honoraries' 

Performance 

Tomorrow 


A  large  attendance  is  expected 
tomorrow  evening  in  Memorial 
Hall  for  two  annual  events  of 
great  significance  on  the  Carolina 
campus:  the  Golden  Fleece  tap- 
ping and  the  Valkyrie  Sing. 

The  Golden  Fleece,     which     is 
the  highest  honorary  organization 
If  th?  measure  is  passed,  it  will   for  men  on  campus,  will  hold  its 
to   the    assembly's    Appropriations    mark  the  second  time  within  the   solemn  and  impressive  ceremonies 

1(1   which   an  undisclosed   number 
of  men  will  be  tapped. 
DARKENED   HALL 

Two  hooded,  black-robed  Fleece 
members  will  stalk  through  the 
darkened  hall  in  search  of  the 
men  on  this  campus  who  merit  rec- 
ognition through  their  unselfish 
service,  devotion  to  ideals,  un- 
questionable character  and  high 
scholarship. 

Those  tapped  may  be  either  stu- 
dents, faculty  members  or  others 
deserving  recognition. 

Since  the  doors  are  to  be  locked 
at  7  p.m.  when  the  tapping  be- 
gins, all  persons  wishing  to  attend 


Committee.  It  is  not  known  when  last  two  years  the  out-of-state  tu 

he  bill  will  come  to  the  floor  for  ition  has  been  increased, 
a  vote.                                                    j      In   May.    1955,    the   Gejieral    As- 

Cons.lidated    University    PresI-  sembly  voted  a  $140  increase  for 

dent  William  C.  Friday  said  yes-  non-resident  students  of  the   Uni- 

terday   he   would  confer  with  th«  versity.  The  hike  brought  the  rate 

three  chancellors   of   the   Greater  to  the  present  $500. 


Catlin  Calls  For 
Free   Commonwealth 


Prof.  George  Catlin  tonight 
called  for  the  formation  of  a  "Com- 
monwealth of  Free  Nations"  as  a 
force  of  world  peace. 
Prof.  Catlin,  delivering  the  third 
and  last  of  the  Weil  lectures,  said 
that  he  saw  its  formation  "a 
scheme  that  recognizes  a  world 
gov«mm«nt  in  th«  shtiping.  on§ 
which  we  will  not  reach  over- 
night or  by   rushing   it." 

Terming  the  world  govern- 
ment "a  common  aspiration,"  Prof. 
Catlin  said  it  could  result  from  a 
preceding  united  Europe  with  the 
United  States  and  those  countries 
linked  with  western  countries. 


Ford  Foundation's  Gift 
Is  $88,000  Annually 

The  lord  Foundation  has  awarded  a  lar2,e  j>;rant  to 
L'.\C  for  a  hi,t»h!v  important  program  of  rcseanh  and  training 
in  North  Carolina  urban  problems. 

Joint  announcement  oi  tlic  grant  wa.s  made  here  Sat- 
urday night  by  ChaiKellor  Robert  Pi.  House  and  Dr.  (iordon 
\V.  Blackwell,  divectoroi  the  Institute  f<n-  Research  in  Social 
Science. 

♦     The  award  will  be  divided  into 

annual    grants    of   $88,000    over    a 

period  of  the  next  five  to  six  years. 

The    project    will    »eek    to    find 

new    approaches    "to    the    crucial 

I  growth  and  development  problems 

which  lie  ahead  for  urban  centers 

of  North  Carolina  and  the  South 

'  in  the  next  20  years." 

PROGRAMS 

The  grant,  which  stems  from  the 
three  year  work  of  an  Urban  Stu- 
dies Committee  exploring  trends 
of  urban  development  probleqis. 
will  further  the  continuation  of 
this     and    other   research    groups. 


pies  of   this   were   cited   by   Prof. 

Catlin   as    the     Steel     and     Coal 

Community  of   Europe     and     the  the  program  have  been  urged  to  1 

more  recent     consideration    of     a  be  seated  before  that  hour.             | 

"common  market"  by  England.       |      Immediately       following       the 

From  the  possibility  of  a  Com-  pieece    tapping,    various    campus 

monwealth    of   Europe,   said   Prof,  organizations    will    participate    in 

Catliiv,  would  come     the     one     of  the    Valkyrie    Sing,    sponsored    by 

"whether    we    can    shape    an    At-  the   highest   campus   honorary   for 

ianlic     Pact    Or     Integration."    He  women. 

called    the    concept    'a    great    ad-  QUALITIES 

vance  on  the  horizon."  In  this  pact,  «rhLs  group  limits  its  member- 
Prof,  said  "I  strongly  hope  the  ^hip  to  two  percent  of  the  coed 
United  States  will  join,"                  |  enrollment    and,    in    the    selection 

Prof.  Catlin  compared  by  analo-  of  members,  stresses  the  qualities 

gy    the    three    concepts   of    Euro-  of  character,  effective  leadership, 

t  pean,     Atlantic    and     world    com-  unselfish    service,    cre.-itivity    and 


For     stwy    o«    another     Ford 
Foundation   grant,   see   page   3. 


Prof.   Catlin    said   that   "we   are    monwealths  with  a  Chinese  box,  in    scholarship. 


passing  into  a  condition  of  forms 
and  changes  which  will  surpass 
the  old  sovereign  state."  The  con- 
cept of  "world  sovereignty"  is  be- 
ing considered  more  strongly  by 
European  nations,  he  said. 

The  hope  of  a  European  Com- 
monwealth has  become  more  prob- 
able because  of  "a  pooling  of  so- 
vereignty in  a  community  of  val- 
ues," said  Prof.  Catlin.  TTie  exam- 


rientation 
Meetings 
Postponed 


which  one  would  fit  inside  the  The  Sing  is  designed  to  further 
other.  He  said:  "In  this  box  of  a  spirit  of  cooperation  and  unified 
the  free  world,  we  would  have  activity  among  the  different  or- 
the  three  forms  "  j  ganizations    on   campus.  | 

However,  said  Prof.  Catlin,  "My       For  the  winner  in  each  of  the 
attitude   toward   this    (world   gov-   five  divisions  entered  a  cup  will, 
ernment )    is    purely    empiric.    At   be     awarded.     Program     officials ' 
this   moment   I  will     press     most    have   pointed   out   the   mere   com- 
strongly  for  a  European  Common-   petition  should  not  overshadow  the 
wealth."  I  purpose  of  the  Sing.  Money  from 

Coupled  with  the  idea  of  a  "free    entry  fees  is  used  to  defray  the , 
world  commonwealth,  Prof.  Catlin  expenses  of  the  l^ing  and  to  make  ' 
said   that   "we   are   in   need   for   a '  passlbl?   the   Valkyrie  scholarship, 
blinding  vLsion  of  a  nature  of  man  j      Judges    for    the    event    will    be 
to  get  dedicated  men  and  women '  Miss    Tita    White,    Gene    Strassler 
into  its  service."  j  and    Orvllle  Campbell.   While   the  , 

"We  are  in  search  of  a  publjc  I  judges  are  selecting  the  winners, 
philosophy  with  a  liberal  out-  the  UNC  Glee  Club  will  enter- 
look."  he  said.  "Changes  will  de-  j  tain  the  group  with  some  musical 
pend    upon    the    decisions    of   in-    selections.  1 

dividual  resolution  and  opinions,  "  i  DRESS  REHEARSAL 
said  Prof.  Catlin.  i      Joy  Earp,  chairman  of  the  Sing, 

The  problem  is  the  one  of  cast-  i  said   all   participating  groups  will 


Because  of  a  conflict  created  by 

the  special  session  of  the  student  '"8  o"^  °^  '^^^^  ^"^  ^  ^*''>'  ^^  ^^°    take  part  in  a  dress  reh?arsal  Sun 

legislature    Tuesdav,    a   previously  cause  of  the  spiriLs  of  freedom  and    day   afternoon   in  Memorial   Hall, 

announced  meeting  of  prospective  Justice  under  the  shield  of  truth..      Organizations    participating   are 

Orientation    Counselors    has    been  *hile  yet   being  aware   that  they  j      special    Group    Division: 


Delta 


Topic  Deadline 
Is  Tomorrow 

All    persons   interested    in   com- 

i  peting  for  the  Willie  P.  Mangum 

oratory  award  must  submit  their 

subjects   to   Dean  Ernest  L.   Mac- 

kie's  office  in  312  South  Building 

by  4:30  p.m.   tomorrow,  according 

,  to  a«  announcement. 

I      Competition  for  the  University's 

oldest    awar^    will    be   held    at    8 

p.m.   Wednesday   in  the   Dialectic 

Senate  Hall. 

All  graduating  seniors,  including 
those  'graduating  after  summer 
schoc)l,  are  eligible  to  compete, 
said  the  announcement. 


postponed  until  Tuesday,  April  16, 
program  chairman  Jerry  Oppen- 
heimer  said  yesterday. 

The  Counselor  meeting  is  sched- 
uled to  be  held  as  previously  an- 
nounced in  106  Carroll  Hall  at 
7:30  p.m. 

In  a  statement  yesterday,  Op- 
f)enheiiTier  said: 

"I  wish  to  tiiank  all  of  those 
m3n  who  have  applied  and  I  hope 
this  postponement  will  not  create 
any   difficulties   for   them. 

"We  will  also  extend  the  dead- 
line for  applications  until  the 
16th,  and  again  I  encourage  all 
men  to  apply  for  one  of  the  120 
positions  opon,"  he  said. 


will  have  to  be  defended  with  the  ^  Sigma  Pi,  Monogram   Club, 
sword  of  courage." 


IN  THE  INFIRMARY 

Missas  Sarah  Parker  and  Susan 
Edmundson;   and   Banton    Beard, 
Roy    Cashin,    Richard    Oresman, 
Arthur      Schwerxel      and      James  ]  Pi,  Chi  Omega,  Delta  Delta  Delta, 
Walker.  I  Kappa  Delta.  Pi  Beta  Phi. 


Men's  Dormitory  Division:  Ever- 
ett. Grimes.  Mangum. 

Women's  Dormitory  Division: 
Carr,    Nurses,    Smith. 

Fraternity  Division:  St.  Anthony 
Hall.  i 

Sorority   Division:    Alpha   Delta 


One-Act  Plays  To  Be  Given 
Tomorrow  And  Tuesday  Nights 


Three  one-act  plays  written,  di-  Marcelline  Krafchick   of  Philadel- ! 

reeled,  produced    and    acted     by  phia.   Pa.,  will  be  acted  by  Dick 

"I    am    sure    we    will    all    agree    UNC    students    w  ill    be    presented  Rothrock  of  Springdale,  Ark..  Miss 

that   the   selected   counselors   will    by    The    Carolina    Playmakers    at  Anne  Fitzgibbon    of    Chapel  Hill, 

hold    one    of   the   fhost   important    the    Playmakers'   Theater   at   7:30  Gene  Parsons  of  Chapel  Hill  and 
and     self-satisfying    positions    on   p.m.  Monday  and  Tuesday, 
campus.  A  good  counselor  can  in-        No    admission    will    be    charged 
still   in  his  group  the  true  Caro-    for    the     three     presentations,    a 
Una    spirit    and    provide    the    im-    fantasyromance,    a    farce-comedy, 

petus  to  start  the  new  student  on    and  a  serious  play.  Dramatic  Art  head   City.  The   play  is   about  an 

a   productive  college  career.            Associate    Professor    Foster    Fitz-  amorous  deity   who  returns  after 

"It    is   the    counselor    who    has    Simons  is  faculty  adviser  for  the  3000  years, 
the    responsibility    of    introducing    program.                                               !      "The   Spaceman   Cometh ".  writ- 

thc   newcomer    to    such    integral       "Lost     Goddess",     written     by  ten  by  Miss  Page  Williams  of  Ft. 

phases   of    University   life    as   the    Christopher      Reynolds      of     New  Thomas.  Ky..  and  directed  by  Pet- 

(see  POSPONED,  page  3)      j  York,  N.V..  and  directed  by  Miss  !  (see  PLAY,  page  4) 


Michael    Casey   of   Chapel   Hill. 

Stage  manager  and  set  designer 
are  Miss  Barbara  Battle  of  Miami. 
Fla..    and    David    Small    of    More- 


DR.  WALDO  BEACH 

.   .   .  ftynini's  inain   speaker 

Spring  Forum 
I  To  Be  featured 
i  By  Dr.  Beach 

Dr.  Waldo  Beach,  professor  of 
Chistian  Ethics  at  Duke  Divinity 
School,  will  be  featured  as  the 
main  speaker  of  Campus  Christian 
Council  Spring  Forum  starting 
here  nexf  Sunday. 

Widely  known  throughout  the 
south?ast  for  his  interdenomina- ^ 
tional  work.  Beach  will  deliver 
the  three  man  addresses  of  the 
forum  on  "The  Christian  Faith — 
Protest    and    Affirmation." 

Beach    is    a    graduate    of    Yale,  < 
getting    both    his    D.D.    and   Ph  D. ' 
there.  He  is  a   notsd  speaker  for  . 
student     conferences     throughout : 
this  area.  Most  widely  read  among 
his   various  writings  is  a  book   he 
did  in  collaboration  with  H-  Rich- 
ard  Niebuhr,   "ChrLstian   Ethics."    j 

FIVE   LEADERS 

Five  outstanding  UNC  faculty 
and  administrative  members  will 
lead  Various  discussion  groups  on 
campus  following  the  main  ad- 1 
dresses.  Professor  David  Basile  of 
the  Geography  Dept.  will  lead  a 
group  discussing-  "The  Christian. 
Faith  and  the  Honor  Code"  which 
will   meet  in  300  Carroll  Hall.        j 

Administration  advisor  for  the 
conference.  Director  of  Student 
Affairs  Sam  Magill,  will  lead  stu- 
dent thinking  alon  lines  of  "The 
Christian  Faith  and  Campus  Poli- 
tics". This  group  will  meet  in  Ro- 
land Parker  Lounge  No.  3. 

Roy  Rogers,  a  member  of  the 
UNC  Sociology  Dept.  who  is  pres- 1 
entfy  teaching  several  marriage 
courses,  will' lead  the  group  dis- j 
cussing  "The  Christian  Faith  and 
Social  Morality."  The  Library  As- 
sembly Room  will  be  the  meeting 
place   for  this   group.  [ 

William  Geer  will  direct  the 
thinking  along  the  lines  of  "The 
ChristiSn  Faith  and  Academic  Mo- 
rale" in  200  Carroll.  Dr.  Geer  is 
a  member  of  the  UNC  Social 
Science  Dept.  | 

Dr.  George  Taylor  of  the  his- 
tory dept.  will  lead  a  group  dis- 
cussing a  local  controversial  sub- 
ject. "The  Christian  Faith  and 
Religious  Apathy."  This  group 
will  meet  in  the  YMC.\  Library.    | 

Rev.  Maurice  Kidder  of  the  lo- 
cal Episcopalian  Church  will  round 
out  the  list  of  speakers  for  the 
forum.  He  will  direct  the  worship 
services  of  the  forum  which  are 
being  held  in  Gerrard  Hall  at  1 
p.m.  Monday  and  Tuesday  of  next 
week.  ' 


The  grant  will  finance  three  re- 
lated programs  which  are  supple- 
mental to  the  University's  on-go- 
ng  work: 

1.  Bajic  research  on  problems  re- 
sulting from  the  current  rapid  ur- 
>anzation. 
I  2.  Encouragement  of  co-opera- 
I  ive  urban  research  studies  among 
I  jolleges  and  universities  of  the 
I  ioutM. 

3.  Provisision  ffO'  training  and 
hort  courses  on  urban  probJem.s 
or  local  leaders  of  southern  cities. 

STEP   FORWARD' 

President  William  C.  Friday  said 
)f  the  grant:  "Thia*  research  pro- 
gram can  mean  much  to  the  devel- 
opment of  North  Carolina.  It  is  a 
4ep  forward  in  making  vital  the 
oncept  of  the  Governor's  Re- 
search Triangle.  ■ 

The  research  team  has  selected 
as  a  laboratory  area  the  "Pied- 
mont Industrial  Crescent."  This  is 
a  string  of  cities  tied  together  by 
a  backbone  of  railroad  and  high- 
way systems  extending  from  Ra- 
legh, down  through  Greensboro  to 
Charlotte  and  .-juthwest  to  Green- 
ville, S.  C. 

Dr.  Blackwell  said  the  grant  will 
also  provide  research  assistantships 
for  10  or  12  graduate  studenti 
each  year.  They  will  receive  nine- 
month  stipends  of  $1500  each,  he 
said. 
WORK   AREAS 

In  launching  their  research 
groups  into  the  problems  of  urban 
development,  the  Ford  F^oundation- 
supported  program  will  center 
around  five  major  groups  of  wwk. 
The  group_'  will   make   studies   of: 

1.  Urbanization  trends  in  the 
South  and  the  role  of  southern 
cities  in  national  trends  of  urban 
growth. 

2.  Economic  forces  and  Indus 
trial  development  underlying  ur- 
canization. 

3.  Public  policies  effecting  ur- 
ban growth, 

4.  Approaches  for  minimizing 
haphazard  and  uneconomic  growth 
and  development. 

5.  Community  organization  and 
civic  leadership  in  urban  develop^ 
ment. 


Deadline  Is  Tomorrow 
For  Tri  Delta  Award 

Deadline  for  the  1957  Tri  Delta 
Scholarship  Competition  is  tomor- 
row, according  to  Miss  Betty  Dale 
Pressly,  service  projects  chairman. 
Applications  must  be  submitted  to 
the  Dean  of  Women's  Office 

The  sorority's  scholarship  pro- 
gram is  an  international  sen'ice 
irrespective  of  sorority  affiliation. 

All  women  students  of  UNC  are 
eligible  to  apply  for  the  scholar- 
ships and  application  blanks  may 
be  obtained  from  the  Dean  of 
Women's  office,  a  sorority  spokes- 
man said. 


J  i 


^A6t  rwo 


THE  DAILY  TAR  MEtL 


SUNDAY,  APRIL  T.  IWr 


jnti- 


CAMPUS 
STATE 
WORLD 


riMMlii 


mi> 


HAPPENINGS  ON  THE  HILL: 


Tom  Walters:  Versatile,  Determined 
Bill  Redding:  Industrious,  Capable 


Syn< 


Editorial   synopsis: 
People  And  The  Week 

While  the  elements  turned  th^r  fury  on  most  of  the  nation  in 
the  form  of  tornadoes  and  general  inclement  weather  throughout  the 
week,  the  campus  was  subjected  to  its  own  private  tempest  —  the 
election. 

The  cynic  wsuld  say  it  was  a  tempest  in  a  teapot,  but  we  contend 
differently. 

Student  government  at  this  "cus.'ad"  and  discussed  institution 
has,  in  the  past,  enjoyed  a  position  of  prominence  among  other  col- 
leges and  universities. 

As  proof,  v«*  have  contributed  two  presidents  to  the  National 
Student  Associallon.  composed  of  leading  institutions  throughout  the 
nation,  in  its  bare  decade  of  existence. 

Our  primary  r.e-t>onsibility  in  governing  ourselves  —  and  half 
ot  freedom  is  responsibility  —  is  discipling  ourselves.  Thus  when 
students  go  to  the  polls  to  elect  members  of  a  student  judiciary  with 
p^wer  to  remove  tf^student  from  schooJ,  to  elect  ttienabers!  of  a -Student 
Legislature  with  authorty  to  appropriate  a  $100,000-plus  budget,  to 
elect  an  executive  with  va^l  appointive  powers,  they  should  g«  in 
numbers  and  relish  their  democratic  priviledge.  '*'       ■  -y  ■■" 

Tuesday's  election  in  which  approximately  40  per  cent  fo  the 
student  body  c^tHjallots  is  a  moclceity'tJf  the  "wOrd  rtSponsribiHty. 

True  it  is  a  small  improvement  over  last  fall's  38.  per  cent.  But 
such  participation  remains  a  mockery  of  the  word  "freedom." 

Upon  working  with  the  University  administration,  one  finds*  that 
our  administrators  arent  a  flock  of  ogres,  lurking  in  the  shadows 
and  anxiously  awaiting  the  opportunity  to  seize  and  destroy  student 
freedom.         ...  , 

,    But  it  would  simplify  matters  for  University  administrators  if  they 
didn't  have  to  deal  with  organized  student  government. 

.4  dictatorsHfpk  though  proved  ..'Olf-annihilating,  is  more  efficient. 

Consequently,  if  students  —  or  more  specifically  student  voters  — 
continue  to  abtise^  their  privilige  of  expression  and  their  vehicle  of 
expresssion  —  the  ballot  —  then  student  autonomy  will  fly  out  the 
window  and  into  (he  waiting  arms  of  adndnistration  control. 

Ballot  or'!b*4iel? 

tt^  •  ■ 

An  ingrown  Toenail: 
Oufbf  State  tuitibh 


How  provincial  can  our  state  get? 

There  i^HH^efinite  analogy  between  the  provincial  philoBophy 
behind  State  Iw^  L.  H.  Ross'  bill  to  hike  out-of-state  tuition  $20©  ^d 
a  massive  iijggfSfn  toenail. 

This  inifpgtii  phil060pl|y  seems  to  echo: 

•Were  ^^ior  to  «lf  others.  W^  don't  need  the  ^change  of 
ideas  and  in^wurse  of  divert*  thou^t  which  wakes,  for  a  liberal 
mind.  In  short,  we  love  iis,'  '' 

If  Ross'.j  $£%.  paises,  then,  pursuing  this  metaphoa  furthi^.  the 
University's  ;i|fllft5:  or  method  of  motivation  —  the  mind  —  will  be 
crippled  by  a^" giant  ingrown  toenail  —  thought  without  diversification. 

In  the  shortest  of  shorts,  we  don't  like  Ross's  brand  of  provinci- 
alism. And  if  the  General  Assembly  serves  it  up,  we're  afraid  the 
Univer.-lty  indigestion  will  result  in  a  bellyache  not  commensurate 
with  the  constitutions  of  liheral  institutions. 

The  World's  Weekt 
Still  Trouble  In  Israel 

Bob  High 

In  the  world  this  week  there  was  the  seemingly  unending  struggle 
between  Eg>  pt  and  Israel  over  the  Suez  Canal  and  the  Aqaba  Bay  areas. 
Israel  threatened  a  new  war  if  the  Nasser-controled  nation  did  not 
let  the  Israelis'  ship--  pass  through  the  international  waterway. 

Russia  has  voiced  threats  to  the  Scandinavian  countries  concern- 
ing the  installment  of  atomic  weapons  under  the  NATO  program. 
The  threats  said'  that  if  the  Soviet  Union  were  attacked  and  the 
striking  force  included  weapons  from  these  northern  nations,  they 
would  be  strongly  retaliated  upon  with  atomic  weapons  from  the  Com- 
muni..!  country. 

Here  at  home,  the  nation,  at  least  the  southern  and  eastern  half, 
have  suffered  tornadoes,  severe  thunderstroms  and  high  winds  for 
the  last  week  and  the  activities  of  nature  have  caused  untold  damage 
at  least  44  deaths  have  been  contributed  directly  to  the  storms. 

In  Los  Angeles,  four  men  filled  with  hate  and  booze,  poured   a 
can  of  gasoline  on  the  floor   of  a  neighborhood  bar,  threw  a  match 
intc  the  fuel  and  turned  five  men  and  ta  woman  into  human  torches. 
Police  are  now  digging  a  massive  manhunt  for  the  remaining  couple 
of  a  group  <tf  fottr  men  who  are  alleged  to  have  started  the  inferno. 
Postmaster  Ggneral  Sunmierfield  has  stated   that  the  Post  Office 
Department  wifl  have  to  make  drastic  cuts  in  service  because  Congress 
will  not  give  his'  department  the  47  million  dollars  to  maintain  full 
service  through. :^4ine  30. 

In  the  GiN%JSf  the  American  woman  believed  to  have  been  kid- 
'  naped  by  Iranw^&andit*,  Mrj.  Anita  Carroll  of  Washington  State,  was 
found  slain  -sokj^  two  miles  from  where  her  husband  and  another 
fellow  Ameitcspiliv^ere  ambushed  by  the  desert  criminals.  Because  of 
this  incident^  j^e'Iraniam  prime  minster,  Hussein  Ala  has  resgned  his 
position.  *. 


Versatile  and  determined. 

These  adjectives  best  describe  Thomas  N.  Walters,  recently  elect- 
ed president  of  the  Interdormitory  Council. 

Tom's  versatility  is  evidenced  by  his  combination  of  artistic 
ability  and  leadership. 

As  proof  of  the  former,  he  tjad  an  individual  exljibit  of  paint 
ings  in  the  Morehead  Planetarium  ju.'t  recently. 

As  proof  of  the  latter.  The  Order  of  the  Qrail  Wednesdny 
night  recognised  him  at'  one  of  thirteen  of  the  most  outstanding 
undergraduates  on  campus. 

As  for  determination,  Tom  was 
thwarted  during  the  spring  elec- 
tion in  both  his  campaign  for  the 
senior  class  treasuxierstoip  and 
legislature  seat  in  Dorm  Mens  V. 
But  he  went  on  to  take  the  presi- 
dency of  the  IDC  over  Paul  Carr. 
Tom  hails  from  North  Caro- 
lina's coastal  plain,  specifically 
from  Tarboro.  He  is  a  junior  and 
is  majoring  in  english. 

As  for  the  past  year,  Tom  was 
busy  with  Interdormitory  Coun- 
cil work.  He' served  as  secretary, 
and  according  to  Prc-ident  Son- 
ny Hallford,  did  an  "outstanding" 
job. 

A>  a  testimonial  to  Tom's  ami- 
ability, his  roommate  in  Steele 
Dorm  Neil  Bender  told  IDC  mem- 
bers Wednesday  night  as  Tom 
ran  f6r  president,  "He's  one  of 
the  best  liked  men  in  the  dorm." 
Maybe  this  dispels  the  old  adage 
that  no  man  is  a  king  in  his  own 
castle. 

*j  As  for  hia-  plans  for  t^e  WC, 
Tom  seems  already  to  have  some 
set  ideas  in  mind.  One  of  these 
ideas  is  to  srengthen  the  Inter- 
dormitory Court.  He  told  coun- 
cil members  he  felt  the  coui-t 
could  operate  more  efficiently 
and  wduld  work  toward  that  end. 
CoLcerning  other  council  plans, 
members  who  voted  him  the 
presidency  apparently  feel  the 
interest  and  energy  he  has  shown 
during  the  paoi  year  will  be  very 
efficiently  put  to  work  during 
.the  academe  year  1957-58. 

Tom  is  a  quiet-spoken  kind  of 
man.  Council  n^embers  remember 
him  as  the  man  who  sat  on  Presi- 
dent Sonny  Hallford's  left  and 
silently  took  notes  during  mecl- 
'  ings  throughout  the  year.  He 
rarely  spoke,  but  when  he  spoke 
he  had  something  to  say. 

That  pretty  well  sums  up  Tom 
Walters.  A  quite  and  sincere  kind 
of  g«y  who  commando-  respect 
when  he  speaks. 


Netl  Bass 

Industrious  and  capable 
Appropriate    description 


most  would  contend,  for  William 
HowlJ^  Redding  Jr.,  new  president  of  the  Interfritemity  Council. 
Industrious  must  be  the  fitting  adjective  for  a  man  who  has 
served  on  the  Honor  Council,  as  speaker  pw>  tempoie  of  the  ,«udent 
Legislature,  as  treasurer  of  Phi  Gamma  Delta  Fratehlity  antf  in  the 
orientation  program. 


Elections.  Grail  Head 
Campus  News  Wbek 

Nancy  Hill  '    '^* 

omni'«  for  three  weeks  was 
The  question  that  faced  the  Carolina  c^mpi^^^^^^    ^^   ^^^   ^^^^^^. 

answered  Tuesday   when    slig^"^    "°  *  ^,  ^gu  aasa  to  top  campus 
body  turned  out  to  elect  Sonny  Evans  and  xh 

positions.  ^^  •-      .  _  ,^  ticket  carried  all  dorm  dis- 

-  Sonny  Bhrans.  on  t«e  Student  Pam  t^^  ^^p^^ent  6ill  Baum. 

tricts  by  a  294rVOte  over  his  Umv^--  ^^feated  his  independent  op 

Neil  Ba§s,  running  ^^^^''^''^^^'^^ 
ponent  Qhaj^fie  SDoan  by  a  ^^^l^^^  student  Party  candidates: 

Two  bther  "big  four    oi^]^ J^^""^^^  ^^^^^^^  ^y  vice-president. 


itation  program.  hi  .i.*.--'         .  Two.otner    o»b  *"»*         ««.«««  f«r  student  body  vu 

capable  must  be  a  just  adjective  for  a  «|Ui:«<fcttit- liMf^fUjf ,    j^  Furta^o  ^T      C«  fw  treasurer's  post. 

o«aiitv  ^  the  week  Tom  Walter.,  was  topped  *We^fes(i*ytt<«fe^     ^j^  Bob  Carter  defeated  Jerry  Jo^es  i  . 


personality  of  the  week  Tom  Walter.\  was  topped  ^We^fesday  ttlghX  anj  Bob  Carter  _. 

into  The  Order  of  the  Grail  for  outstanding  leadership  and;  adher-  Thfc  only^'University  ^^^^  ^rf  _git:o„  ^f  secretary. 

ance  to  the  virtues,  "friendship,  feated  Miss  Betty  Huffman  for  the  posm^^^   ^^^  ^, 

truth,  coiu-age  and  service." 


when  Miss  Dot  Pressly  de- 

PU.«  «m.=e  Wldm  "^^"t^^e  M«k  as  head  cheer- 

BUl  i.  a  junior  Iron,  the  foot-  '-""'""^^^-IfBi^^-  ^^S  oYthe  Carolina  AthleUc  Assn. 

Hi„s  <.  Piedmont  NorU.Car„,ina.  ^-^O  ^^  ^"l  B,a^K._  ^nnin,  on  the  Stud.^  .art.^^^^ 


Being   geographically    exact,    he  "^^^  ^;^;i:^t"m.roM  WiUiamson.  Wayne 


hails  from  Asheboro. 


Bishop  was  also 
pposed  for  editor  of  the  Yackety  Yack. 

*"  ..ja-..-..,.     /^A^«*#«A    TI.oefc^olA 


unopposed. 
Bill  is  majoring  in  economics  G^ne  WMtehead  ran  ""oi-^""-  ._  candidates:  George  Ragsdale 

and   plans  to   go  into  executive  All  senior  class  officers  weni  w ^^„,,j„  Achfnrd    treasurer 

leirtil?  work,  following  the  foot-   president;  Mis^; 


IWMvl   WMI.rcKb 

IDC  president 


BILL    REDOING 

....  IFC  head 


y^ 


In  The  State:  Storm 
Speed,   Students 

Jackie  HaitKcock 


steps  of  his  father,  when  he  grad- 
uates. 

His  plans  for  the  WC  include: 

(1)  General  strengthening  of 
the  council's  authority  as  spokes- 
man for  the  individual  houses. 
"I  want  the  administration  to 
more  frequently  use  the  IFC  when 
collective  matters  dealing  with 
the  houses  are  concerned,"  Bill 
said. 

(2)  Bfetter  service  to  and  rjep- 
resentation  of  ^lie  individual  fra- 
ternities. 

Along  this  second  line.  Bill 
mentioned  the  charity  concert 
which  the  council  co-.^'ponsors  an- 
nually with  the  Pan-Hellenic 
Council. 


=  .  Bobbi  Madison,  secretary,  Charlie  Ashford.  treasurer 
and  Miss  Pa.  Dil^t  social  chairman  OPPOsing  men,^on  the  SP_^t,cke. 


.      ,  ikfo«^ai-o4  Meador  Tom  Walters  and  Miss 

LT  Krrir-e-  r rinTeSndent  candidate  tor  Cas. 

-^"XDormitory  Council  elections  We^.-^ ^tllf  ffiTo^^'wi: 
pre-ident  over  Paul  Carr.  Appointed  chamnan  of  the  ID  Court  .as 

Frank  Brown.  -  ,  ,1,,,  ()ie  University 

party's;  IT a^SoXT  sits^'r^t  I^gislat^.  U  later 
rariy  n«iu  wmu  »        j  norm  Mens  I  were  disputed,  however. 

c»me  out  that  two  seats  from  Dorm  Mens  i  w^ic  u^  »- 
OuTof^SO  legislature  seats,  the  University  Party  will  have  from  a 
me  to  an  eight  seat  majority,  pending  results  of  a  run-off. 

WhUe  election  figures  were  still  fresh  m  students  minds,  he 
annuLweif  Sures  St  underway  Thursday  when  Dr.  George  Cat^m 
political  philosopher,  gave  the  tirst  of  three  'f^l^,^^l^^:''"  • 
lectures  were  on  "The  Struggle  for  the  Minds  of  Men,      Can  W 


Catlins 
e  Co- 
Exist  Wirh'coloniauTmr'inSrialism,  Racialism  and  Sovi^tism.'     and 
"The  Commonwealth  of  Free  Nations  and  its  Leaders^ 


Thirteen    student^: 


This 


Golfers  Win 
}BV2-8Vi  in 
ACC  Match 

The  Carolina  golf  team  re- 
mained undefeated  yesterday 
with  an  18^ -8 '2  win  over  the 
Wake  Forest  I>eacons. 

The  Tar  Heel  golfers  are  the 
defending  Atlantic  Coast  Con- 
ference champions  and  are  odds- 
on  favorites  to  retain  the  title 
this  sea.«?on. 

The  linksmen  have  a  tie  with 
Rollins  and  wins  over  Cornell 
(27-0).  Michigan  State  (20i^- 
9V2),  and  Wake  Forest.  The 
Deacons  are  considered  the 
strongest  threat  to  the  Tar  Heel's 
title. 

• 

L'il  Abner 


North  Carolina,  like  the  r^st  of  the  nauon  had  a  "stormy"  time 
this  pa  \  week. 

TornadJes  slashed  across  the  nation  this  week  and  left  in  their 
path  a  out  45  person  •  dead  and  Considerable  damage  in  many  areas. 
North  Carolina  felt  the  effect  of  these  twisters  when  at  least  three 
tornadoes  hit  near  Elizabeth  City.  High  Point  and  Yadkinville.  One 
person  was  killed  and  several  other  persons  were  injured  as  a  re- 
sult *of  the  fake  spring  weather  in  the  Tar  Heel  Statfe. 

Another  phenomena  of  national  repute  blew  into  the  state  this 
week  with  the  various  storm  •.  James  C.  Hagerty.  press  secretary 
for  the  White  House,  visited  Duke  University  Tuesday  as  a  guest 
speaker  for  the  Duke  Student  Unions  Educational  Affairs  Com- 
mittee. Hagerty  spoke  to  a  Page  Auditorium  audience  on  "The  Job 
and  the  Times." 

The  North  Carolina  General  Assembly  seemed  appropriately  af- 
fected by  the  weather,  too,  .as  they  dealt  out  decision^'  on  several 
controversial    issues.    A    bill    allowing    a    60-mile-per-hour   limit    on 
.  selected    highways  ^    North   Carolina    became    law   Thursday    after 
the  Senate  took,  final  action  on  it. 

The  highways  on  which  the  new  speed  limit  wUl  be  allowed  are 
are  to  be  designated  by  the  State  Highway  Commission.  According 
to  W.  H.  Rogers,  chief  highway  engineer,  these  will  probably  be 
interstate,  limited  acces^-  highways. 

To  make  for  more  safety  on  state  highways,  a  bill  proposing  a 
program  of  high  school  driver  education  passed  the  House  on  a 
roll  call  vote  'Friday.  The  program  would  be  financed  by  a  $1  in- 
crease in  auto  license  tags.  Such  courses  would  provide  no  credits 
toward  graduation.  Final  action  will  probably  be  taken  on  the  bill 
this  coming  week. 

Of  particular  interest  to  local  out-of-i-tate  students  was  a  bill 
introduced  in  the  House  this  week  by  Rep.  L.  H.  Ross  of  Beaufort. 
The  bill  calls  for  an  increase  in  tuition  for  out-of-state  students  at 
the  three  units  of  the  Consolidated  University  of  North  Carolina. 
The  bill,  if  passed,  would  require  a  boost  in  tuition  for  such  students 
from  S500  to  $700  a  year. 

Chapel  Hill  also  figured  in  state  news  this  week  when  85  per 
cent  of  its  voters  turned  out  for  a  special  bond  election  Tuesday. 
Local  voters  overwhelmingly  voted  against  a  proposed  general  rec- 
reation program  and  a  $250  thousand  bond  is.vue  which  would 
provide  fbr  the  construction  of  recreational  facilities. 

North  Carolina  again  functioned  in  national  sports  news  this 
week  when  a  Shelby  attorney  made  an  offer  to  buy  the  Washington 
Rod.skins  of  the  National  Football  League.  Ralph  Gardner,  now  living 
in  Washington,  approached  the  present  owner  of  the  club,  George 
Preston  Marshall,  about  the  purcha.>je,  but  no  proposition  has  been  ^ 
made.  Gardner  indicated  that  if  he  were  to^  buy  the  club  he  would 
like  to  move  it  south.  "''•.• 


_  and   retiring   ChanceUor   Robert   House   were 

tapped  "nIo"thrO^*er  of  the  Grail  Thursday  nighty  Members  of  the 
hi^est  undergraduate  honorary  were  selected  on  the  basis  (rf  truth. 

.ear   the   proceeds   from   ^^^^^^  ^^^ .r^C^^^ 

;,  Herman  Godwin,  Don  Furtado.  Sandy 
Sanders,  Jerry  Oppenheimer.  John  Brooks,  Mac  Patton,  Danny  Lotz. 


the  concert,  to  be  held  April  25,  Tr„^-,-„  ri/iHwin 

will  « go    to    the    Victory   Village  ^om  Walters,  George  Ragsdale,  HermanGo^^ 
Da^   care  Center  and  the  Chapel    Sanders,  Jerry  Oppenheimer  John  Brooks,  Mac 

Benny  Thomas  and  W^iUiam  Redding.  ,     ,     _.u 

Dean  Maurice  W.  Lee,  speaking  Friday  night  to  the  fourth  graduat- 
ing clao-5  of  the  Executive  Program  sponsored  by  the  School  of  Busi- 
ness Administration,  called  liberal  arts  courses  '-neither  liberal  nor 
capable  of  giving  an  appreciation  of  the  arts." 

Dean  Lee  called  upon  liberal  arts  faculties  to  "make  liberal  arts 


Hill  Recreation  Center,  according 
to  Bill. 


Bill  is  a  lively  kind  of  guy,  as 
members  of  the  Student  Legisla- 
ture will  agree.  The  case  in  mind 


happened  during  the  recent  legis-   ^lore  liberal"  than  they  are  now. 
iative   assembly. 


It  seems  Bill  got  stuck  with  a 
bill  which  should  have  been  paid 
from  the  not  overly  large  Honor 
Council  treasury.  In  lieu  of  being 
stuck  with  the  bill.  Bill  introduc- 
ed a  finance  bill  which  called  for 


And  while  campus  politics,  liberal  arts  and  world  politics  held 
attention  here,  the  case  of  BaUenger  versus  the  Physics  Dept.  drew 
to  a  climax  anti^pated  by  neither  the  self-styled  physicist  or  scientists 

William   Lee   Ballenger,   who  came  to   Chapel  HHl  recently  as 
a   pt>rtrait   artist,   became   involved    in   an   ai:gtiment  with  the  UNC 
Physics  Dept.  when  he  stated  that  Newton's  theory  of  gravitation  was 
LUbrementrBlir^dd^n;   -rcnious  and  that  the  artificial  sateiites  planned  by  the  U.S.  govern- 
fTSo^C^ncU^Z^^         "^ent  would  not  work.  When   a   physicii:^lied   Baliengera  theor, 
for  Honor  Council  Expense..  ..^^^^^^^^^  the  artist  challenged  the  department  to  a  pubic  debate. 

Ballenger  stated  that  the  debate  was  not  necessary  after  an  in- 
terview with  physicists  Thursday  morning  ivhich  resulted  in  an  ex 
periment  to  test  the  theory  Friday. 

The  experiment  disproved  Ballenger's  theory,  according  to  Dr. 
E.  D.  Palmatier. 

But  Ballenger  won't  give  up,  he  says.  "The  experiment  was.  in  m.v 


Mayl>e  all  these  terms  pretty 
well  sum  up.  Bill's  disposition  and 
general  personality:  industrious, 
capable  and  lively. 

The  Interfraternity  Council, 
which  placed  such  a  load  of  re* 
sponsibility   upon   his   shoulders, 


apparenUy  looks  for    big  things  oP»nion,  not  conclusive,'  he  said 
from  Bill.  And  if  part  record  has 
anything  to  do  with  it,  the  coun^ 
cil    has   justly   placed   its   confi- 
dence. 


Murals  Tomorraw 

Softball:  (4:00)  Graham  vs. 
Stacy;  SAE  vs.  Sig  Nu  (W); 
Grimes  vs.  B-V-P;  Wesley  vs. 
Lutherans.  (5:00)  Beta  vs.  PIKA 
(W);  Dent  Sch-2  vs.  Everett; 
Manly  vs.  Law  Sch-1;  Cobb  vs. 
JojTier  2;  Zete  vs.  Kap  Sig  (W). 

Tennis:  (4:00)  ATO  vs.  Beta 
(W).  (5:00)  Med  Sch-2  vs.  Ruf- 
fin. 

Horseshoe^:  (7:00)  Beta  vs. 
DKE   fW).    ^  ■■"• 


By  A!  Capp 


pone  PosoiCKff-  he's  th' 

V  MOST  BRIU-Vt>JT  DETECTIVE 
M  TH'VORLD  — 


VET,  HE'S  TOO  STOOPID  TQ 

REELIZE  THET  WATCH  HE'S 

f  AFTER  -IS  INSIDE  HIS 

OV7NJ  H/K'.Off 


Pogo 


Bv  Walt  Kelly 


The  official  student  publication  of  the  Publications  Board  of  the 
University  of  North  Carolina,  where  it  is  published  daily  except  Mon- 
day and  examination  and  vacation  periods  and  summer  terms.  Entered 
as  second  class  matter  in  the  ppst  office  at  Chapel  Hill.  N.  C,  under 
the  act  of  March  8,  1870.  Subscription  rates:  Mailed,  $4  a  year,  S2^0 
per  semester;  delivered,  $6  a  year»  18.50  a  semester. 
Editor    ,  ^ • NEIL  BASS 


Managing  Editbr 


CLARKE  JONES 


Staff  Writers 'x.??' Neil  Bass,  Naney  Hill,  Jackie  Haithcock, 

Anthony  Wolff  and  Bob  High. 


Night  News  Editor _. 


Graham  Snyder 


Night  Editor 


Manley  Springs 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL  WEEK  IN  REVIEW 


*  • 

Petites  Dramatiques 
Human  FamHy.  Calypso 

Anthony  Wolff 

TELEVISION 

SLT«)AY. 

Professor  Frank  Baxter  begins  a  discussion  of  "Much  Ado  About 
Nothing"  tonight  at  7:30  on  Channel  4.  The  specific  topic  for  this 
show  is  the  more  serious  side  of  the  play. 

At  8:00  on  Channel  2.  Ed  Sullivan  presents  an  assortment  of  guests 
even  more  varied  than  usual.  Included  in  the  crowd  are  Fred  Astairc 
(to  talk,  not  dance),  Paul  Douglas,  a  group  of  French  stage  stars  greet- 
ed by  some  Americans  of  the  same  genre,  Jacqueline  Francois,  and 
three  current  rock-and-roll  anngers. 

Steve  Allen  has-  almost  as  great  a  variety  of  talents  on  Channel 
5.  Rosemary  Clooney,  comedian  Buddy  Hackett,  and  Somethin'  Smith 
and  the  Redheads  will  be  there,  along  with  the  All-American  basket- 
ball team. 

Bob  Hope  is  doing  one  of  his  hour-long  variety  shows  at  9  p  m. 
on  Channel  5.  Featured  in  the  zany  business  will  be  Natalie  Wood, 
Frank  Sinatra,  and  Janis  Paige  (star  of  "Pajama  Game"). 

Calypso  music  ^et^-  the -^ull  treatment  tonight  on  "All  About 
Music",  on  Channel  11  at  10.  Milton  Cross  hosts,  and  the  musicians 
include  the  Duke  of  Iron,  Johnny  Barracuda,  and  the  King  Carib 
Steel  Band.  -  '•- 

MONDAY.  ~- 

Clair  Bloom    plays   the   title   role    in    'Victora   Regina"   on   the 
Robert  Mcmtgomery  show  Monday  evening.  The  play  starts  at  9:30 
on  Channel  5;  the  story  is  made  up  of   episodes  from  the  life  of 
Elngland's  Queen  Victoria. 
THEATRE 

Tonight  markj  the  debut  of  the  Petites  Dramatiques  in  GM  lounge. 
The  play  is  "Caligula",  a  passionate,  bloody  bit  of  poetry  by  Albert 
Camus.  Lloyd  Skinner  and  Page  Willams  star,  supported  by  Taylor 
Williams  and  Stan  Baker. 

The  Petites  Dramatiques  promise  to  add  a  gr^t  deal  to  the 
dramatic  scene  at  Carolina;  they  are  an  admittedly  experimenUl 
^oup,  and  experimentation  is  as  vital  to  the  theatre  as  it  is  to  science. 
"•  Three  one-act  plays  are  on  the  boardi-  Monday  and  Tuesday  even- 
ing at  the  Playmakers  Theatre.  No  admission  wiU  be  charged;  cur- 
tain time  is  7:30  pjn. 

The  program  is  varied,  running  the  gamut  from  farce  comedy, 
through  fantasy  and  romance,  to  "serious"  drama. 

Jose  Limon  and  company  take  over  Memorial  Hall  Tjhursday  even- 
ing at  8  p.m.  Limon  has  been  considered  one  of  the  world's  finest 
Spanish  dancers  for  many  years,  and  hi^-  troupe  is  also  excellent 
BOOKS 

The  years  1919  through  1933  in  American  history  are  examined 
carefully  and  well  by  A.  M.  Schlesinger,  Jr.  in  his  reoBirdy  published 
'The  Crisis  of  the  Old  Order."  The  book  i.-  the  first  An  a  series  en- 
tiUed  "The  Age  of  Roosevelt."  Anyone  interested  in  Aai^can  history, 
politics,  Roo.H;velt,  etc..  might  well  be  interested  in  tjjis.  Mr.  ScUe 
singer  is  a  Harvard  professor  of  history  and  a  Pulitzen^  prize  winning 
author  (The  Age  of  Jackson). 


SUNDAY, 


Aboi 
To 


A  "very 
Roman  em^ 
presented 
lounge    of 
petites  Draj 
ed  dramati^ 

The  pres 
Skinner   an| 

Also  stai 
Taylor  Wilj 
Miss   Bettii 

Miss  Hopl 
ager  for  th| 
in  modern 
in-the-roun( 
lieb  is  the 

Materiah 
play  itself 
time  of  th« 
on  display 
son  Librai 
lieb,  who 
ganization 


Concei 

Seven 

The   UNi 

ducted  by 
play    a    se* 
during  its 

Morning 
are    schedi 
ington.    Hi< 
Greensborc 
in  Lenoir 

The  proi 
original  wi 
criptions. 
music,  mar 
cities  and 

The    tou^ 
University 
dent  gover 


-  an 


Elizi 
FI 


Mi! 

Treat 

detind 

lifteJl 

pie 

rema 

your 

can 

the  fll 

of  vol 

PIRMC 
SALOl 

sfsaJ 


«;is 


op 

ites: 
lent, 

k  de- 
field 
leer- 

cket, 
also 


le, 

fcurer, 

iicket 

Miss 

class 

liters 
was 

?rsity 
later 
rever. 
>ni   a 

the 

patlin. 

itlins 

Co- 

and 

were 
bf  the 
[truth. 

tcr. 

idy 


idiial- 
Bu«- 

nor 

arts 

held 

drew 

»ntist5 

Uj    as 

UNC 

was 

lovern- 

itc. 

|an  in- 
la   ex 

to  Dr. 

I  in  m>- 


About 
lor  this 

guests 
lAstaire 

greet- 
^is.  and 

lannel 

&iiith 

ba-sket- 

9  pro. 
Wood. 

About 
[usieians 
jg  C?iib 


on  the 
at  9:30 
life   of 


lounge. 
Albert 
Taylor 

to  the 
rimental 
science. 
Jay  even- 
jfd;  cur- 
comedy, 

lay  even- 
's finest 
ellent. 

xa  mined 
published' 
erie&  en- 
1  history, 
■Ir.  Sclile 
winning; 


SUNDAY,  AFRfL  7,  1^7   . 

'Bloody'  PJay 
About  Eiyiperor 
To  Open  Toddy 

A  very  bloody"  Story  about  the 
Roman  emperor  Caligtila  wUl  be 
presented  tonight  at  8  in  ^  main 
lounge  of  Graham  Memorial  by 
r'etites  Dramatique,  a  newly-form- 
td  dramatic  organization. 

The  presentation  stars  Lloyd 
Skinner  and  Miss  Page  Williams. 

Also  starring  in  the  show  are 
Taylor  Williams  and  Stan  Baker. 
Miss  Bettina  Jinette  is  director. 

Miss  Hope  Sparger  is  stage  man- 
ager for  the  play,  to  be  presented 
jn  modern  costuming  in  "theater- 
in-the-round''  st;fle.  Seamon  Gott- 
lieb is  the  producer. 

Materials  connected  with  the 
play  itself  and  dealing  with  the 
time  of  the  emperor  Caligula  are 
on  display  in  the  basement  of  Wil- 
son Library,  according  to  Gott-*- 
iicb,  who  also  originated  the  or- ; 
ganization.  i 


?tti  DAILY  TAft  Hitl 


^ 


#A«C  TNMI 


'Caligula' Stdrs 

Picfurcd  above  is  a  scene  from  the  Petite  Dramatique  presenta- 
tion Caligula,  to  be  given  tonight  at  8  p.m.  in  the  main  lounge  of 
Graham  Memorial..  From  left  to  right  are  star*  Lloyd  Skinner,  Miss 
Page  Williams  and  James  Sechrest. 


UNC  Education  School 
Given  Research  Grant 


Mrs.  Thurstone  came  to  Chapel 


Concert  Band  To  Play 
Seven  Concerts  In  Tour 

The    UNC    Concert    Band,    con-'^J^  ^ /J^f   "^  "^'"^'  ^'^"-  ^- 

ducted  by  Herbert  W.  Fred,  will   J       "  and  Welfare  has  awarded  a   Hill  in  1952.  For  many  years,  she 

play    a  series   of    seven    concerts  j  1^,'?',?."''^  ^"^^  attention  is  the   directed  the  Division  of  Child  Stu 

during  its  spring  tour,  April  10-12.    '^f9.344  research  grant  to  the  UNC   dy  in  the  Chicago  public  schools. 

^  of  slow  learning  children.  |  -^ _____ 

Morning  and  afternoon  concerts  \  Dean  Arnold  Perry  of  the  School 
are  scheduled  in  Asheboro,  Lex- !  of  Education  announced  the  grant 
ington.  Hickory.  Mooresville  and  Saturday.  He  said  the  three-year 
Greensboro,  and  evening  programs  j  research  project  will  be  coordinat- 
in  Lenoir  and  Winston-Salem.  "  ed   by   Dr.   Thelma  Gwinn   Thur- 


Alumni  Meet  Aycock 


The  UNC  alumni  will  have  an 


stone,    university    Education   pro- '  ^E""^^^^,  "^'l^   ="';  ^^L''' 

*^      ^ijUainted     with     Cbancellw -Elect 


The  programs  to  include  many  !  fessor 

original  works  and  special  trans- 1     The  study  will  seek  new  insight '  ^"l"""  ^-  '^'^^'^^  ^^^^  *"  ^*** 

criptions.  will  consist  of  romantic ,  int^,  ^he  learning  pattern  and  pri- 1  "" 

music,  marches,  "pop"  tunes,  nov- 1  ^ary  mental     abilities     of     slow' 

elties  and  solos.        »  I  learning  children  who  need  spec-i 

The    tour   is   sponsored   by   ihe'^^^    education.    Project    personnel '  "°7/:^'»*'^*f  °*  *^i<=h  >^e«  f«il- 
niversity   Musi^  Tpt.    a^  ^u-!  will  go  into  North  Carolina  pub-'l^'T^  ^^'^  .\'  all_Alumm  A^. 


nesday. 

The  occasion  is  the  annual  Alum- 
ni Assembly,  invitations  and  an- 


University   Music    Dept. 
dent  government. 


A  younger  look 


'  anofher  life! 


lie  schools  to  compare  the  results  j  "J^*"^"   residing   ia   North  Car- 
!  of  regular  classroom     study     for  i  °""^- 

slow  learners  with  the  results  of  ■      ^"^   informal    buffet    supper   in 
I  special  educaUon  classes  !  *"^  Morehead  Building  will  climax 

Approximately  10  administrative  I  ^'^^  ^^^'^'  P^'og^'a'"- 
units,  including  city,  county  and'  Another  feature  will  be  a 
town  systems,  will  cooperate.  The  l"«cheon  at  1  p.m.  in  the  Caro- 
Division  of  Special  Education  of  ''"^  ^""  '^^^'"  ^^^^^^  will  be  giv- 
the  State  Dept.  of  Public  Instruc-  *^"  ^^  alumni  officers  and  com- 
tion  also  will  cooperate.  ;  mittees.     including    Alumni     An- 

Dr.  Thurstone  said   the  project 
will  tr>    to  discover  the  basic  Advertising  Salesmen 

nature  of  slow  learning  children.    Need'gxtra   Interesf 


nual  Giving,  reunion  plans^  nomi* 
nation  of  officers  for  1957-58.  and 
other  business. 


The  Woman's  College  Choir,  ac- 
companied by  Julia  Jessup,  will 
open  the  concert  pr(%ram  with 
"The  Earth  is  the  Lord's"  compos- 
ed for  the  Choir  in  1956  by  Carl 
Alexius  and  presented  for  the 
first  time  last  spring. 

Other  numbers  include  "lustor- 
um  Animae,"  a  Renaissance  motet 
by  William  Byrd,  and  a  medley 
of  folk  songs  of  the  four  seasons 
arranged  for  women's  voices  by 
Kalph  Vaughan  Williams. 


UNC,  WC  Glee  Clubs 
To  Give  Joinf  Concert 

Purcell's  "Dido  and  Aenej^5,'«of-  James  Chamblee  of  Fayetteville 
ten  referred  to  as  "the  oldei  Eng-  as  Aeneas,  the  Trojan  prince;  and ! 
lish  opera  ever  performed,"  will  Richard  Peterson  of  Asheville  as ' 
highlight  a  concert  program  here  a  sailor. 
'  Tuesday  evening.  It  will  feature 
the  combined  voices  of  the  UNC 
j  Glee  Club  and  the  Woman's  Col- 
lege Choir. 

The  concert.  12th  in  this  year's 
Tuesday  Evening  Series,  will  be 
given  in  Hfll  Music  Hall  at  8  p.m. 
and  is  open  to  th»  pufblic  without 
charge. 

Dr.  Robert  B.  Morris  will  direct 
the  60-voice  Woman's  College 
Choir.  Dr.  Joel  Carter  will  lead 
the  40-voice  University  Glee  Clu*. 

The  opera,  termed  a  "forgotten 
masterpiece"  by  Dr.  Carter,  was 
written  for  a  school  production  and 
first  presented  about  1680.  It  was 
not  until  200  years  after  compos- 
er Henry  Purcell's  death  that  the 
opera  was  again  performed. 

Its  presentation  by  the  cast  of 
"Horn  in  the  West"  at  Boone  four 
years  ago  was  the  only  instance  Dr. 
Carter  could  recall  of  its  being 
performed  for  a  North  Carolina 
audience. 

Singing  the  principal  roles  wlU^ 
be  Carolyn  Denny  as  Dido,  (^ueeif. 
of  Carthage;  Jo  Ann  Curlee  as  fie* 
linda.  first  I4dy  in  waiting;  Eli- 
nor Dorsk  Bloom  as  the  Sorceress; 


_- ^ p. . 

Covering  f/ie  University  Carr^us 


w^ 


COSMOPOLITAN  CLUB 

The  Cosmopolitan  Club  will 
hold  its  annual  open  house  today 
from  3  to  .5  p.m.  at  Hillel  House. 

210  W.  Cameron  Ave.  l&e  event  j  E.  R.   Long     of     the   Psychology 
will   feature    exhibits   and  enter- '  Dept.    on    "Preiiminary    Observa- 
tainment  from  around  the  world.!  tions   of  Operant  Conditioning  in 
The    public   has    been   inwted   toachildren." 
attend.  *  H  |gRA0  CLUB 


gram  will  feature  talks  by  W.  J.  a  party  Friday  at  8  p.m.  in   the  i 
Koch   of  the     Botany   Dept.     on    basement  of  Cobb  dormitory  feat- 
"Structure      of      the      Swimming    uring    the    5-Dime&sian    Bind    of 
Spores  of  Aquatic  Fungi"  and  by ,  Bob  Olson.  \  % 

Dancing,  entertainment  and  re- 
freshments  will   highlight   an  In- 


formal program  open  to  all  grad- 
uate students,  faculty  members, 
administration   members   and    old- 


Foundation  Gift 
To  UNC  Press 
Is  Disclosed 

An  annual  grant  of  $10,300  for 
five  years  to  the  University  Press 
at  UNC  from  the  Ford  Founda- 
tion was  announced  here  last  night 
by  Lambert  Davis.  University 
Press  director. 

Tltc  UNC  grant,  one  dT  30  given 
by  the  Ford  Foundation  to  various 
university  presses,  was  awarded 
"to  stimulate  scholarly  publica- 
tion in  the  humanities  and  social 
sciences." 


TTiere  will  also  be  meeti^^csrOt 
the    Alumni    Assn.    directow,   the 


One  of  the  primary  purposes  of 
the  grant  is  "to  alleviate  the  posi- 
tion of  scholars  who  can  not  af- 

.•  •!      ,    »i         •    .  ford    to    subsidize    publication    ol 

executive  council  of  Alumni  An-  ^u  .  ,     ,  ,  r     j  .. 

„„,  ^.      „         .       ,  ^c>'.-  their  works  from  personal  funds. 

nual  Giving,  and  several  reunion 

I  Eligible  university  presses  were 
invited  to  apply  for  the  grant  last 
Oct.  15.  1^6.  Davis  said  the  Uni- 
versity Press'  application  was  ac- 

I  cepted  and  that  in  early  January,  i 


and   to  apply  he  findings  to  im 
proving  the  education  program  for) 
them."  i 

In  actdition  to  her  professorship  < 
in  the  School  of  Education,  Dr. 
Thurstone  is  Acting  Director  of 
the  University  Psychometric  Lab-| 
orator>'.  Her  husband.  Dr.  Louis 
Leon   Thurstone,   headed  the   lab- 


The  first  rule  for  an  jidvertislng 

salesman  is  "an  extra  interest  in 
the  man  you  are  selling."  an  ad- 
vertising clinic  here  was  told  Sat- 
urday. 

Robert  J.  Alander,  advertising 
director  of  The  Charlotte  Observer, 
was  the  speaker  before  some  200 


iving 
committees. 

A  "Workshop"  tot  Alumni  An- 
nual Giving  class  and  area  agents 
will  be  held  following  the  lunch- 
eon. 

At  3:30  p.m.  alumni  visitors  will 
attend  the  Carolina-Virginia  base- 
ball game. 

Reservations  have  been  request- 
ed for  the  luncheon  and  buffet 
supper  at  which  Chancellor-Elect 
and  Mrs.  Aycock  have  been  invit- 
ed to  meet  alumni  together  with 
other  University  officials.  The 
Alumni  Office  is  handling  arrange- 
ments of  the  day's  {Program. 


UNC  ALUMNI  REUNION 

Twelve  UNC  classes,  schiduled 
to  hold  reunions  during  conBenee- 
ment  in  June,  will  hold  a  com- 
mittee planning  session  here  Wed- 
nesday, as  part  of  the  annual 
alumni  assembly   program. 

Officers  and  reunion  commit- 
tees of  the  12  classes  have  been 
called  to  meet  at  12  noon  at  the 
Carolina  Inn.  The  annual  business 
meeting  of  the  alumni  association 
will  follow  at  a  luncheon. 

The  classes  to  hold  reunions  at 
commencement  include  the  50-year  [ 
class  of  1907,  the  25-year  class  of 
1932  and  ten  others:  '11,  '12.  17, 
'22,  '27,  '37.  '41,  '42.  '47  and  '52. 
EXHIBITS 

An  exhibition  of  "'Water  Colors 
of  the  United  States."  painted  by 
30  of  the  world's  leading  artists, 
will  formally  open  in  both  the 
North  and  South  Art  Gallerie'$  of 
the  Morehead  Planetarium  todajr. 

A  part  of  the  permanent  col- 
lection of  the  Dept  of  Arts  and 
Sciences  of  International  Business 
Machines  Corporation,  the  paint- 
ings will  be  on  exhibit  through 
the  month  of  April., 
ELISHA  MITCHEI^L 

The  Elisha  Mitc|iell  Scientific 
Society  will  meet  Tuesday  in  206 
Phillips   at  7:30   p.m.     The     pro- 


The  Graduate  Club  will  sponsor    er  undergraduates  over  age  21. 


SERVE  ^VogRskliF-r 


EVERY  SUNDAY 


5:30-7:30 -P-M. 


BUFFET 

At  Th« 

RANCH   HOUSE 

HOME  OF  CHOICE  HICKORY-SMOKED  CHARCOAL  BROILED  STEAKS 

COMING  ALL  NEXT  WEEK 
OUR   SEVENTH   ANNUAL 

GOING-GOIN&GONE  SALE 

A  table  piled  high  with  used  books  —  everything 
from  texts  to  lively  novels  —  offered  at  prices  that 
get  lower  and  lower  until  they  vanish! 


the  Press  received  the  first  allo- 
cation of  over  $10,000. 

The  complete  amount  was  epent 
on  the  publication  of  nine  books 
now  in  proof  stages,  said  Davis. 

Davis  said  the  financing  of  an 
author's  subsidy  will  greatly  aid 
scholars  and  faculty  members  in 
publication  of  their  future  bo(As. 


Special  Course 
ferCeilese  Women] 

ThoroaKii  teduucal  triinlac 
with  concarrrnt  progran  of 
business  orientation.  Re*i- 
dencn  is  New  York  aw)  B«»- 
ton.    Write  Collie  Dean  itk 

ClBBS  GlBLS  AT  WORK. 

kathariiM* ' 


Monday 

April  • 

Yaur  Choice 


79i 


Tuesday 

A4>ril  f 

Whafi  Laft 


19< 


A 


Thursday 

April   n 

What's  L*ft 

9t 


Saturday 
April  13th 
What's  Left 

FREE 


S^ 


8«er»tlkriail 


a»;g&!w"'.r«'S»*ft 


You  pick  your  bargain  and  you  pick  your  price. 
Bring  along  your  wheelbarrow  and  have  funl 

The  Intimate  Bookshop 


205!|4lfrtihklin  St. 


Open  Till  iq  P.M. 


oratory  until  his  death  in  the  fall    advertising  men  from  North  Car- 


of  1955. 


Elizabeib  Ar den's 

Famous 

FIRMO-LIFT 


Special  Package 

8.00  V9bt« 

Mis«  Arden's  Firmo-Lift 
Treatment  Ivings  you  a  clear 
defined  throatline,  a  firm  up- 
lifted contour,  a  smooth  sup- 
ple skin!  For  with  these 
remarkable  preparations  (and 
your  own  two  hands)  you 
can  recapture  and  maintain 
the  flawless  line  and  contour 
of  youth  in  its  flower. 

PIRMO-IIFT  LOTION 

. . .  3.00,  5.00,  8.00,  10.00 
SALON  TRtATMENT  OR. 

. .,.  2.00,  3.75,  10.00 
SffCIAL  HORMONI  CRIAJM 

. . .  3.30,  6.30,  12.00 

,  Prie—pliuUx 


olina  and   South  Carolina  attend- 
ing the  "grassroots"  clinic.  j 
A.    L.    Brandon    of    The    Rocky  j 
Mount  Telegram  served  as  chair- 1 
man  of  the  one-day  conference.       I 


Pharmacy  Officers 

A  new  slate  of  Pharmacy  School 
officers  was  elected  Tuesday. 

Elected  to  head  the  pharmacy 
student  body  was  Hugh  Hinton, 
president;  Wayne  Buic.  vice-pres- 
ident; Miss  Loretta  Johnson,  sec- 
retary-treasurer and  Dave  Davis. 
Honor  Council  representative. 

Officers  of  the  North  Carolina 


POSTPONED 

(Continued  from  Page  ^)  ..     j-        ^  .     ^     ^      ,  ^      ..i.  •    ,      *  j      *i. 

Alander  advised  ad  salesmen  to    Pharmaceuical      Assn.      and     the 

Honor    System    and    the    Student   help    customers   with    displays   in   American     Pharmaceutical     AsSn. 

Government,"  Oppenheimer  said,     j  his  stores,  with  his  business  prob- 

As    previously    announced,    ap-    lems,  and  with  his  personal  prob- 

plication  blanks  will  be  available   lems.   Such  extra  atention  is  the 

at  the  Y,   Graham  Memorial,  Le- 1  way  to  assure  continued  sales  on 

ttoir  Hall,  the  Monogram  Club  and    the  Aewspafper  retail  level,  he  ex- 

the  Library.  plained. 


student  branches  are.  president, 
Jim  Inabinet;  vice-president,  Don 
Carter;  secretary  -  treasurer,  Ben 
Alexander,  assistant  to  the  pres- 
ident, Ray  Hagwood  and  Billy  Al- 
len, executive  member. 


Spring  Fever  Hits  Campus 


Cosmetic  E>ept. 


THE    RIVALRY  between   Caro- 
lina and  Wake  Forest  was  temp- 
orarily put  away  last  night  yAen 
the    SPE's     from     both     scliools 
banded   together  to  serve  as  co- 
hosts  for  the  annual  Sig  Ep  Ball 
held  at  the  Robert  E.  Lee  in  Wins- 
ton-Salem.   The    Carolina    gentle- 
men were  sponsored  by  three  love-  j 
ly    ladies,    namely:    Miss    Joanne 
Farmer  with  Butch  Smith;   Miss  J 
Dottie  Caton  with  Harry  Holding;  ^ 
and   Mrs.  Bill  Self  with  huaband  i 
Bill.  I 

The  Carolina  chapter  got  is  the ; 
spirit  of  the  weekend  with  an  in-* 
formal     party     at  the  Little  Redj 
Schoolhouse  on  Friday  night  and 
will  usher  the  weekend   out  with 
another    informal    party    today. 

THIS  HAS  BEEN  the  Big  Fourj 
weekend  for  the  Pika's.  Chapters 
from  the  big  four — Carolina, 
Duke,  State  and  Wake  Forest  got 
together  last  night  at  the  Mohawk 
Club  in  Raleigh  to  celebrate  the 
occasion.  Several  informal  parties 
preceeded  and  will  follow  the  big 


£ARN  youR'MASTER'S  DEGREE 

AND  PREPARE  FOR 

AN  EXECUTIVE  CAREER  in  RETAILING 

Compreheniive  nm«-month  proKram  for  A.B.  and  B.S. 
graduates;  emphaBis  on  executive  direction  in  major 
•tor««  do\etailed  with  clissroom  work.  Total  pay  for 
•tore  work  1460.  Co-ed.  SrhoUrsiijpa.  Seleetive  job  place- 
ment before  jiraduation.  G.f.  approved.  N<?Jtt  eiaai. 
SavtMiber  8.  1«6T.    Appl}'  now.    Write  for  Bulletin  C. 


SCHOOL  OF  RETAILING 

UNIVEltSny  Of  PlTrSBURUH  fi«*»i«»  i».  ^a. 


event. 

WHO  WILL  BE  the  Sweetheart 
of  Sigma  Chi?  Many  people  are 
wondering  and  hoping  that  it  will 
be  some  girl  they  know.  The  Sig- 
ma Chi's  say  they  themselves 
don't  know  yet  who  their  new 
queen  will  be,  but  they've  made 
some  very  fancy  plans  for  the  an- 
nouncement. Tlie  queen  will  be 
named  April  27  following  a  cock- 
tail party  and  .banquet  in  Greens- 
boro. To  make  the  weekend  com- 
plete they've  planned  a  cabin  party 
and  a  part/  in  the  country. 

DESPITE  THE  COOL  wieather 
yesterday  the  Theta  Chi  pledges 
gave  a  picnic  out  at  Hogan's  for 
their  brothers  and  dates. 

SOME  OF  THE  LAMBDA  CHI's 
with  their  dates  celebrated  the  ad- 
dition of  five  new  pledges  to  the 
fraternity  at  the  Saddle  Club  last 
night,  the  pledges  are:  Fred  Ore- 
gory  of  Charlotte;  Doug  Little  of 
Charlotte;  Kim  Partin  of.  Chapel 
Hill;  Bill  Jones  of  Asheville;  and 
Gary  Goodson  of  Winston-Salem. 

THE  WSATHER  MAY  have  been 
unusually  cool  yesterday,  but 
spring  fever  HAS  hit  the  campus 
and  along  with  it  have  come  sev- 
eral pinnings.  Pi  Phi  Susan  Don- 
ald is  wearing  the  pin  of  Dave 
Davis,  a  Phi  Delta  Theta  who  pin- 
ned her  a  few  days  ago.  Kathryn 
Webb,  an  AGD,  has  been  wearing 
the  pin  of  Neil  Birch,  A  Sigma  Chi 
from  State,  for  over  a  week  now. 
ADII  Mary  Ann  Hofler  is  pinned 
to  Burt  Davis,  a  Phi  Kappa  Sig- 
ma. 

Two  Chi  Psi's  are  without  .pins 


today.  John  Lasley  gave  up  his 
when  he  pinned  Sandy  Ro^  of 
Winston-Salem,  and  Joe  Keller  is 
without  his  pin  due  to  Barbara 
Brown  of  Rocky  Mount  whom  he 
recently  pinned.  j 

SMITH  BBADFI£LD  has  been 
elected  president  of  the  Phi  Gam's 
for  the  coming  year.  His  four 
supporting  officers  will  be:  Bill 
Redding,  treasurer;  Gerry  Gard- 
ner, recording  secretary;  Jeff 
Hare,  corresponding  secretary  |ind 
Phil  Pitt,  historian.  i 

THE  ALPHA  GAM's  served  cof- 
fee and  cake  at  a  dessert  party 
Tuesday  evening  given  for  the 
ADII's,  Chi  O's,  and  KD's  on  the 
porch  of  the  AGD  house.  l 

MARTHA  RICHARDSON  AND 
Nan  Schaeffer  have  already 
brought  their  records  down  to  in- 
crease the  size  of  the  record  col- 
lection being  used  with  the  new 
hi-fi  set  the  KD's  recently  won.    j 

Nancy  Graha^  has  given  up  her 
turn  to  play  records  to  attend  the 
KD  rally  in  Charlotte  this  week- 
end. I 

ALDERMAN  DOIUA  was  the 
scene  of  an  infohnal  party  given 
by  the  graduating  seniors  Thurs- 
day evening  after  housemeeting 
for  the  girts  who'll  soon  be  the 
new  seniors. 

THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL  staff 
gaw  an  informal  dinner  party 
Friday  night  in  honor  of  retiring 
editor  Fred  Powledge.  Fred  was 
presented  with  four  books  by  the 
staff  as  a  small  token  of  their 
appreciation  for  the  four  years 
that  he  gave  to  the  paper.  | 


IVMAT 


ISA 


H/CMYAT 


UJttCH 


TIME? 


sn 


p^AOK^f^ 


AT 


iu^kt) 


WHAT  A  MENU!  A  dank  frank,  an  oI'  roll,  a  palJid  salad,  and 
a  dry  pie.  Let's  face  it,  friend— your  lunch-time  fare  needs 
brightening!  ilecipe:  light  up  a  Lucky!  It  won't  make  a  filet 
out  of  that  frank,  but  it's  a  Noon  Boon  nevertheless.  A  Lucky, 
you  see,  is  all  cigarette— ail  great  smoking,  all  the  way  through. 
It's  made  of  fine  tobacco— mild,  good-tasting  tobaccSj -'that's 
TOASTED  to  taste  even  better.  But  why  wait  till  noon  to 
try  one?  Right  now,  you'li  say  Luckies  are  the  best -tasting 
cigarette  you  ev6r  smoked! 


WHAT  WAS  MEUN  OF  TITOYt 

^^^® 

w^m 

.^feiSJS^ 

Chie  Greek 

JICK   FItU. 

u.  or  tttkntki 

WHAT  IS  A  GREENHOUSE  t 


Bloom  Room 


■    CUf  WILSOK. 
U.  OF  VIRCIIII* 


WHAT  IS  A  STRICT  OlSaPUNARIAN  f 


Mean  Dean 


Clause  (■■SEK. 

AMHtUST 


WHAT'S  A  SHY  HINDU  SOlDtttf 


Meek  Sikh 


laiHT  raiiDHAH. 
u.  OF  cALiroimiA 


WHAT  IS  A  STOl»l  lOATf 

Vi*»  •  • 

^ 

-^^ 

'^^r^ 

Hot  YacNt 

R»VI«  KLEm. 

LOrOlA   U.  OF  LOS  t( 

MXES 

WHAT  IS  A  OtEEOY  ENGUSHMAN* 

^0 

Wl 

IICHAIO  ilANIIIIK, 
FITT 

Mutton  Glutton 

WHAT  a  A  CUiMSY  SAHOfft 

V 

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^ntharClunhtr 

]  •A.T.CA 


^lODVCT 


SniDENTSI  MMCE  $25 

B^^yT    Do  you  like  to  shirk  work?  Here's  some  easy  money — 

*^^^fey  start  Stickling!  We'll  pay  $28  far  every  Stickler  we 
^^^^  print— and  for  hundreds  more  that  never  get  used. 
Stickleni  are  simple  riddles  with  tx^-o-word' rhyming  answers.  Both  w-ords 
must  have  the  same  number  of  syllables.  (Don't  do  drawing».^  Send 
your  Sticklers  with  j-our  name,  address,  college  and  claas  to  Happy-Joe- 
Lucky.  Box  67A,  Mount  Vernon.  N.  Y. 

Luckies  Taste  Better 

*'irS  TOASTED'*    TO  TASTE  BETTER  .  .  .  CLEANER,   FRESHER,   SMOOTHER! 

•»  ^rnt %.w»m\ijMn  iAfMLBtihX^onyuMm^  Aii»incA'>  lcaoims  utMxxr kctvnxm  or  cigarbttb* 


MerfouR 


TMI  DAILY  TA»  HIM. 


SUNDAY,  APRIL   7,  1957 


Varsity  Golfers,  Trackmen  Take  Wins  Over  Wake  Forest 


K 


ING'S 
ORNER 


By  BILL  KING 
SPORTS 


EDIT 


Golfers 
Remain 
Unbeaten 

Carolina's  powerful  golf  team 
renuined  undefeated  yesterday  as 
the  Hnksmen  downed  the  Wake 
Forest  Deacons.  ISJ-i-Sl-z  on  Fin- 
ley  Golf  Course. 

The  win  was  number  one  in 
Atlantic  Coast  Conference  com- 
petition for  the  Carolina  golfers 
.and    their    third    victory    of    the 


Masters  Rule 
Becomes  Very 
Controversial 

AUGUSTA.  Ga.  —  (AP)  —  The 
new  cutback  rule  of  the  Masters 
Golf  Tournament,  which  sent 
Ben  Hogan  and  Gary  Middlecoff 
to  the  sidelines  for  the  final 
rounds  was  the  object  of  a  seeth- 
ing controversy  yesterday — with 
more  beets  than  bouquets. 

Cliff   Roberts,  tournament  com- 


) 


Trackmen  Blast  Deacs 
115-18;  Freshmen  Win 


young  season.  The  only  blemish' '"'"^'^  chairman,  acknowledged 
on  the  UNC  record  is  a  tie  with  ^^^  ^^  ^'^s  aware  of  dissatisfac- 
Roliins  in  the  first  match  of  the  ^'^'^  '"  «<*™«  quarters  and  hinted 
season.  I  changes  may  be  nrade  before  1958. 

Carolina's   Gene   Lookabill   took  '      "The  man  who  pays  for  the  tick- 
medalist  honors  for  the  day  with   ets  to  see  the  tournament  is  one 
a  two  under  par  70  over  the  wind- ,  of  our  chief  cancerns."  he  said, 
swept    Finley    course.    Red    S^p       Indications  are  that  a  move  will 

be  made  to 'cut  down  the  size  of 
the  original  field,  which  this  year 


By  DAVE  WIOLE 

Carolina's  varsity  track  squad 
led  by  oniddle  dist^ce  runner 
Dave  Scurlock  complete^  over- 
whelmed Wake  Forest  115-18  yw* 
terday  afternoorw  to  give  the  Tar 
Heels  their  first  conference  victofy 
of  the  season. 

ih  the  freshman  division,  the 
Tar  Babies  followed  suit  defeait- 
ing  the  Deaclets  '98Mj  to  31%. 
Ward  Sims  was  the  outstanding 
Carolina  freshman,  taking  first  in 


Ctje  ©ail?  tiat  ftcel 

Is  Rosenbluth  Making  A  Mistake? 

Lennie  Rosenbluth's  decision  to  join  The  College  All-Stars  on  a 
barnstroming  tour  with  The  Harlem  Globetrotters  has  created  a  great 
deal  of  speculation  among  sports  fans  in  this  areas. 

MMiy  fans  had  hoped  that  L«nni»weuld  net  decide  to  play  with 
the  All-Stars  because  the  minute  he  signed  to  ioin  the  group,  he 
became  a  professional  athlete.  New,  much  to  the  sorrow  of  a  lot  of 
people,  Rosenbluth  will  not  be  able  to  play  AAU  baskeH>all. 

Rosy  is  certan  to  tx>-  his'  hand  at  professional  ball  and  the  feel-    and  Tommy  Helms  were  co-medal 
ing  among  many  is  that  he  will  go  the  route  of  VicMolodet,  Ron  Shav     jst   for   the   Deacons   with   an   18 

lik   and  many  other  great  college  .stars  who  couldn't  make  the  grade    hole  total  of  7«.  Lookabill  defeated  | ''°*^  ^°  ^n  unwieldy  102,  and  that 

in  pro  ball    '  I  Sapp   3-0   in   the   main'  match    9i  ^^^  cutback  rule,  if  kept  in  force. 

A  casual  remark  by  a  friend  the  other  day  about  summed  up  the    the  day.  \  "^^^   ^^   modified   to  take   in  the 

thoughts  of  a  lot  of  local  observers.  "Rosy  will  never  make  it  in  pro  ,      The    Tar    Heel    golfers   are    the    ^o*  ^0   instead  of  40  players. 

ball    he's  too  skinnv. -  i  defending    AGO    champions    and '      "^g^"  a"d  Middlecoff.   the  two 

While  this  is  not  the  most  tactful  way  of  expressing  it,  there      are    favored   to   win   their   second    strongtst      sentimental      favorites. 

is  food  for  thought  there.  straight   championship   tJiis   year.    •  ^nd  a  host  of  other  topflight  stars 

The  great  Carolina  Ail-American  definitely  has  his  work  cut  out       Their  next  match  will  be  a  tri-    *'«''«  ^"""ned  into  spectators  when 

for  him.  The  strain  of  pro  ball  demands  a  physical  peak  at  aU  timeo,    angular    affair    with    South    Caro- ■  ^^^    ^>'^^-    ^^"    Friday    to    chop   

and.  while  Lennie  appeared  to  be  plenty  durable  diu-ing  the  1956-57    Una   and   Clemson   at  Clemson  on    '^^^  ^^  players  below  the   top  40 -^j^^   AU-Artie'rican   won  the,e*vent 


Discus — 1.  Jones  (C);  2.  Ladner 
(WF).  Distance— 117  feet,  8  in- 
ches. ^ 

889- Yard  Run— 1.  Scurlock  j(C);. 
2.  K»hn.  (C);'  3.  Williams  (C). 
Tinie^l:S6.9. 

220- Yard  Dash  — 1.  Moss  (C); 
2.  Deeadti«  (C);  3.  Varnum  (C). 
Tirtie— 22.5, 

6r»M  Jumi>— 1.  Scalf  (WF);  2. 
Brswkfy  (C);  3.  Rosemond  (C). 
Distance — 21  feet,  2  inches. 

Two-Mile  Run— 1.  Whatley  (C); 


three  events:     broad  jump,     pole '  2-   Coffin    (C);   3.   Bullard    (WF). 


Time — 10:04.9. 

Low  Hurdles— 1.  Lyons  (C);  2. 
DeBortte  tO;  3.  Sugg  (C).  Time 
-^24.4. 


vault  and  .low  hurdles.  Sims  bet- 
tered the  varsity  marks  in  the  pole 
vault  and  broad  jump. 

In  the  varsity  competition.  Scur- 
lock was  the  big  gun  all  the  way. 
He  took  firsts  in  the  440  and  the 
880.   His  440  time.  48.6,  tied  the 
long    standing    school   record   set ;  «st  had  no  entry) 
by  Royce  Jennings  in  1939.  Scur-  I 
lock  was  also  the  anchor  man  on  j 
the  mile  relay  team.  His  learn  of  i 
Ben    Williams,    Dick    MacFaddin, 
and  John  Sylvteter  won  the  event 
running  against  another  Carolina  I 
sqpad.  Wake  did  not  compete.        j 

Jim  Beatty     used     his     running  [ 
ability  in  only  one  event,  the  mile 


Special  Track 
Event  At  UNC 

A  prime  sports  attraction  will 
be  offered  here-- Tuesday  when  a 
special  mile  run  event  will  be 
held  in  connection  with  the  an- 
nual state  track  meet 

Laszlo  Tabori,  th  gt4ai  Hua- 
garian  distance  star,  will  compete 
against  Carolina's  Jim  Beatty  and 
Dave  Scurlock.  The  event  will  be 
held  about  mid-way  the  regular 
meet,  at  4:15  p.m. 
_  Carolina  coach  Dale  Ranson,  in 
arranging  the  event,  said  he  ex- 
pected a  large  gallery  of  track 
fans  at  Fetzer  field  to  see  this 
race.  Mihaly  Igloi.  who  brought 
Tabori.  is  now  associated  with 
Ranson  in  training  Carolina  run- 
ners,  and  has  been  working  with 


Mile    Relay — 1.   Cai^olina    (Will-   all  three  men. 
iams,    McFaddin.    Sylvester,    Scur- 1      Beatty  ran  second  to  the  great 
loct).    Time — 3:22.5.    (Wake    For-   Ron  Delaney  at  the  recent  Cleve- 

I  land   indoor   games    in   the    mile. 


Intormal   Photograpbv 

(By  appointment  fat  your  home) 

f 

Wedding   Photug 
A  Specialty 

PRESS  PHOTO  SERVICE 

tOLAND  GIOUI 

Offc. — News  Building, 

Main   St^  Carrbor* 


^ 


TRAILED.  TRAPPED. 
TORTURED... 


JIMMY  PIERSALL 

•■Boi.to/i_  Reu  Sux^k.-'  Outfielder' 


season,  things  will  be  even  tougher  for  him  once  he  gets  into  pro-    Tuesday 
fcssional  basketball.  I 

Ho  will  have  a  good  deal  of  trouble  gotting  rebounds  against 
those  "giants"  which  dominate  pro  ball.  He  will  not  be  abl«  to  play 
tho  pivot  as  he  did  hora — a  position  whore  ho  amassed  a  ^reat  many 
of  his  points. 


SUMMARY 

Tommy  Langley  (C)  defeated 
John  Gerring,  2-1;  Sonny  CJeorge 
(WF)  defeated  Buck  Adams.  2V2- 
^2;  team  score  Carolina  3,  Wake 
Forest  0. 

Gene  Lokabill  (C)  defeated  Red 
Sapp,  3-0;     Ralph     James     (WF) 


Defensive  Ability,  Good  Or  Poor? 

^       Rosy's  defensive  ability  has  likewise  been  an  element  of  di§sention 

Manv  say  that  the  Tar  Heels  used  a  zone  this  ^-eason  to  cover  up  for    defeated    Sam    Patrick,   2-1;    team 

his  deficiencies.  To  thi.-  idea  we  inject  an  opinion.  Bosh!  Rosenbluth    ^^^^  Carolina  2Vft.  W.  Forest  Mj. 

was  a  pillar  of  strength  throughout  the  season  on  defense.  Had  it  not 

been  for  his  defensive  work,  the  Tar  Heels  probably  would  never  have 

won  thirty-two  straight  games. 

Tho  quiet  follow  also  has  a  lot  of  things  going  for  him.  Ho  can, 
for  instance,  hit  his  jump  shot  from  anywhoro,  and  sihco  pro  basket- 
ball is  predominantly  a  "jump  shot  game,"  Rosenbluth  should  net 
have  to  worry  about  a  deficiency  there.  As  a  rival  coach  said,  "that 
guy  can  kill  you  from  anywhoro  on  tho  court."  ^. 

Mentally.  Rosenbluth  stacks  up  against  the  best.  He  belongs  on  a 

basketball  court,  and  the  fans  who  watched  him   perform  for  t)iree 

years  al  Carolina  will  admit  that  on  the  court  he  i:^  as  smart  as  they 

come.  Lennie  gives  the  impression  that  he  was  bom  with  a  basketball 

in  his  hand  and  hasn't  ever  released  it. 

HeMI  Always  Be  A  Champion  To  UNC  Fans 

So,  the  greatest  basketball  player  in  Carolina  history  has  made  the 
big  decirioin.   There  is  no  doUbt  that  he  will  gp  into,  pro   ball.  It  is 
ii  tile  NB.\  would  turn  down  the  opportunity 


and  ties. 

Hogan,  at   151,  and  Middlecoff, ! 
at   152.  were     left     lorfcing     sur-j 
prised.    Other    victims    were    Te*d 
Kroll,    last   year's   leading   money 
winner;      Julius      Boros.      former 
winner  of  the  National  Open  andj 
the  Tam  O'Sihanter,  "world's"  tit- 
les;   Mike    Souchak,    Tommy    Bolt! 
and  Gene  Littler.  ] 

Six   former  champions   made   it  1 
Walt  SummervUle  (C)  defeated   «"d  six  didn't,  but  the  major  com-' 


safe  to  say  that  no  team 
to  get  him  either. 

Lermie  Rosenbluth  has  done  a  lot  for  basketball  »i  Carolina.  Ho 
has  conducted  himself  well  and  he  has  proven  his  ability  as  a  great 
college  player.  Ho  will  leave  the  Carolina  campus  a  .champion.  Re- 
gardless of  his  fate  in  professional  ball,  he  wiM,  to  Carolina  fans,  still 
bo  the  follow  who  broke  every  scoring  record  in  th^  history  of  the 
school — ^the  greatest  player   in  tho  annals  of  Carolina  baskotbalj. 

Picking  The  Major  Leagues  Winners 

.\t  this  time  every  year  the  e.xpert  and  the  amateur  prognostica 


plaints  centered  arjund  the  elim- 
ination of  Hogan  and  Middlecoff. ' 
the  current  National  Open  Cham-  j 
pion  who  is  generally  recognized 
as    the    best    current    competitive 
player. 

One  spectator  was  heard  to 
gripe: 

"It's  like  going  to  the  World 
Series  and  finding  Mickey  Mantle 
benched  because  he  went  O-for-5 
the  day  before." 

Horton  Smith,  •winner  of  the 
first  Masters  Tournament  in  1934 
and  the  only  man  who  had  played 

Carolina's    spring    sport    teams   '"  ^""^^  '""""^  """^  ^^  *'^^  ^l''"" 

inated    by     Friday's    cutoff,    com- 
mented: 

•*!  think  the   Masters  is  differ- 
ent   than    other    tournaments.    It 
has  has  been  a   gathering  of  the , 
great  golf  names  of  the  past  and 
'present.    It's  an    invitation    affair. } 

"Now    the    new    rule    makes    it : 


Dave  Agilvie,  212-^2;  Tuffy  Hen- 
derson (C)  defeated  Tommy 
Helms,  2-1;  team  score,  Carolina 
2,  Wake  Forest  1. 

Medalist:     Lookabill      (C)      70; 
Sapp  and  Helms   (WF)  76. 


Active  Week 
Scheduled  For 
Spring  Spprts 


continue  to  move  along  in  ixigh 
gcsM-  next  week  with  twenty-two 
events,  on  tap.  j 

The  varsity  b'aseballers  go 
against  Maryland  tomorrow  after- 
noon in  College  Park,  Md.  for  the 
fir^t  of  four  conference  tilts  dur- 


hands   down    with    the   slow    (for 
him)   time  of  4:30.7. 

Tar  Heel  Clete  Oakley  was  the 
outstanding  varsity  field  man.  He 
threw  the  javlin  195  feet.  Dash- 
men  Jim  Varnum  and  Ji.m  Moss 
ran  with  midseason  form.  Varnum 
took  the  100  in  10.0,  and  Moss  took 
the  220  in  22.3  seconds. 
THE  SUAAA^RIES 

Javelin  —  1.  Ladner  (WF);  2. 
Oakley  (C);  3.  Payne  (C).  Dis- 
tance— 201  feet.  7  inches. 

High  Jump— 1.  Bryant  (C);  2. 
Lyon  (C).  Distance— 6  feet. 

Shot  Put— 1.  Kemper  (C);  2. 
Jones  (C);  3.  Ladner  (WF).  Dis- 
tance— 45  feet.  3?8   inches. 

Pole  Vault— I.  Davis  (C);  2. 
Scalf  (WF),  and  Griffith  (C),  tie. 
Distance — 12  feet. 

One  Mile  Run— I.  Beatty  (C); 
2.  Reaves  (C);  3.  Griffin  (C). 
Time— 4:30.7. 

440- Yard  Run— 1.  Scurlock  (C); 
2.  McFaddin  (C);  3.  Sylvester  (C). 
Time — #6.6. 

100-Yard  Dash— 1.  Varnum  (C); 
2.  DeCantis  (C);  3.  Moss  (C).  Time 
— 10  seconds. 

High  Hurdles— 1.  DeBorde  (C); 
2.    Sowers    (C).    Time— 15.6. 


CLASSIFIEDS 


ing  the  week.  Walt  Rabb's  charges 

meet    Virginia    in    Charlottesville   ^'^'  ^^'"«  «"^'»t<=*^  ^«  «  ^°"'^  for ,  nVE    ROOM    BRICK    HOUSE   IN 

Tuesday    and    in    Chapel    Hill    on    '*'""*''  «"^  ^^^'^  ^°  «**  "P  ^"**  ^et       center    of    town  -  has     hobby 


tors  Jeel  that  its  time  to  decide  who  will  be  playing  in  the  World  1  Wednesday.    The   Tar  Heels  close   °"^  before   they  serve  dessert"  ' 


center    of    town  —  has 
workshop.  Call  9458. 


Series  this  fall.  Since  EJverybody's  doing  it,  we  will  too. 

In  tho  Antorican  League,  we'll  have  to  90  along  with  the  poron- 
nial  favorite,  The  New  York  Yankees.  Casy  Stongol's  club  once  again 
has  the  best  notorial  to  bo  found  anywhoro,  and  oven  »n  injury  to 
Miekety  Mantle  probably  couldn't  stop  tho  Bronx  Bombers. 

Our  second  choice  ii'  a  stab  in  the  dark,  Detroit.  T^ie  Tigers  have 
the  makings  of  a  great  club.  Boston  rates  third  best  in  our  books 
with  Chicago  rounding  nut  the  first  division. 

It's  extremely  hard  to  conceive  that  Cleveland  ^ill  ever  loiave 
the  first  division  but  it  looks  like  the  man  with  tho  scyfho  wHi 
finally  get  to  Tho  Indians.  Washington  will  be  stronger  and  should 
be  good  for  sixth  place.  Baltimore  and  Kansas  City,  or  vice  versa 
for  the  cellar;  take  your   pick. 

In  our  opinion,  The  National  League  should  have  a  new  cham- 
pion in  1957.  We  don't  see  how  MUw^aukee  could  let  it  slip  away 
again  this  season.  Brooklyn  rates  a  strong  second,  with  Cincinatti  the 
league's  darkhorse. 

Philadelphia  and  St.  Louis  should  fight  it  out  for  tho  fourth 
slot.  Well  take  The  Cards  with  The  Phils  a  good  fifth.  Pittsburgh 
is  a  good  bet  for  sixth  with  Mew  York  and  Chicago  in  seventh  and 
eighth  place. 

For  the  World  Series,  we  look  for  the  Yanks  to  keep  the  cham- 
pionship flag  waving  in  Yankee  Stadium. 


PI 


ays 


back",  by  Leon  Rooke  of  Roanoke 
Rapids,   directed   by  Charles  Bar- 


(Continiied  frcnn  Page  1) 
er  B.  O'Sullivan  of  Valhalla,  N.  Y.. 
will  include  Miss  Joan  Van  Sise  ..  , 
of  Huntington.  N.  Y..  Ken  Cal- i  ""^^  **^  Hickory,  wUl  be  acted  bt 
lender  of  Greensboro,  Harvey  J^  ^J''**^''*'"  °^  ^^*  ^^""' ^^•• 
Knox    of  Greensboro,    and    Chris- '  ^"-  ^*^'  Rothrock  of  Anniston, 


topher  Reynolds. 

Stage  manager  and  set  designer 
are  Pat  Mulvihill  of  Evanston,  111., 
and  Bob  Bailey  of  Statesville.  The 
play  concerns  a  Brooklyn  spinster 
who  reports  the  presence  of  a  man 
from  Mars  to  unbelieving  authori- 
ties. ■■  •■•" 

"The   Thi^f     and     the     Hunch- 


Ala..  Jerry  Young  of  Marion, 
Robert  Insko  of  Chapel  Hill,  Mor- 
gan Jackson  of  Charlotte,  and 
Frank  Rinaldi  of  Waterbury,  Conn| 
The  drama  takes  place  in  the  time 
of  Christ  and  involves  the  thief, 
Barabbas. 

Audience-playwright   discussions 
■will  follow  each  production. 


out  the  week  with  a  Big  Four  en- 
gagement with  Duke  in  Chapel 
Hill  Saturday. 

The  varsity  tennis  team  has 
three  matches  slated  for  the  week. 
Tomorrow,  the  netters  go  against 
Wake  Forest  in  Winston  Salem. 
Friday  they  entertain  Clemson 
here,  and  Saturday,  travel  to  (Co- 
lumbia, S.  C.  for  a  match  with 
South  Carolina. 

In  golf,  the  undefeated  varsity 
team  has  a  tri-angular  meet  with 
Clemson  and  South  Carolina  at 
Clemson  Tuesday,  and  a  home 
match  with  Michigan  on  Thursday. 
The  freshman  golfers  meet  Wake 
Forest  here  tomorrow. 

Rounding  out  the  varsity  sched- 
ule for  the  week,  the  track  team 
goes  against  N.  C.  State  here  on 
Tuesday  and  against  South  Caro- 
lina here  Saturday. 

The  freshman  ba.scballers  have 
two  games  on  tap  next  week,  both 
away  from  home.  Tomorrow,  the 
frosh  meet  the  N.  C.  State  Wolflet 
in  Raleigh,  and  on  Saturday,  they 
play  the  Duke  Blue  Imps  in  Dur- 
ham. 


Howard  Johnson  Restaurant 

STUDENT    SPECIALS 

''•-,'r  Barbecued    Chicken  .V  '     '.."       '' 

^"-        Choice  Steak  Sandwiches      ■  ;^ 

2:00-    5:00  P.M. 
SERVED  8:00-11:00  P.M. 

"Landmark  For  Hungry  Tarheels^^ 


DAILY    CROSSWORD 


l»ATIIOIIIZE  YOUR 
o    ADVERTISIRS    • 


Dixie  Baseball  Classic  Will  Be  Resumed 


WINSTON-SALEM— (AP)— The    days   of.  the   round   robin  touraa- 
Dixie  Baseball  Classic,  with  North    ment  in  Winston-Salem. 
Carolina's  big  lour  teams  as  hosts,} 

will   be   played   in   Winston-Salem        ^  committee  is  now  in  the  pro- 
March  3l-April  2.  1958.  j  ^.^'«  ""^  selecting  four  teams  out- 

i  side  of  the  Atlantic  Coast  Confer- 

The  Big  Four  coaches,  in  a  meet-    ence    to   participate   in   the   three- 
ing   this  week,  agreed  to  resume    day  tournament, 
the  classic   after  its  absence   this  j      The  four  coaches  making  plans 
spring  and  will  play  the  final  two    for  the  tournament     are     Walter 


Rabb  of  North  Carolina.  Vic  Sor- 
rell  of  N.  C.  State,  Gene  Hooks 
of  Wake  Forest  and  Ace  Parker 
of  Duke  University. 

Under  the  plans  the  four  North 
Carolina  schools  will  be  hosts  al 
home  diamonds  for  the  first  round 
play.  Then  the  eight  schools  will 
gather  in  Winston-Salem  for  the 
final  two  days  of -play. 


ACRO.SS 

1.  Collide 
6.  Plump 

11.  Chief    city 
of  Tonkin 

12.  Concise 

13.  Queer 

14.  Hurry 

15.  Pronoun 

16.  Describe 
vividly 

18.  Tanflea 
20.  High  card 

23.  Music  note 

24.  Burats  of 
cheers 

27.  Sound,  &■ 
a  hoj 

30.  Garden 
amphibians 

31.  April  21 

33.  Roman 
weight 

34.  Hole 
of  a 
needle 

35.  Nlmrod 
39.  Vegetablea 
41.  Greek  letter 

49.  A  Gorgon 
45.  Offer 

4«.  Fruit  of 

the  oak 
47,  Degrade 
4»,«oapital 

employe 

50.  Teen. 
as  cloth 

DOWN 
tDogs  (kind) 

2.  Burdened 

3.  Conjunc- 
tion 

4.  Thus 

5.  Exclama- 
tion  of 
greeting 

6.  Mr.  Musial 
7  Examina- 

uon       _^- 


8.  A  food  leav- 
ing 

9.  Employ 
10.  Number 
14.  Sound  of  a 

gooae 

16.  Figured 
fabric 

17.  Mulberry 

19.  Entertain 

20.  Stop! 
(naut.) 

Jll.Piah 
22.  Large 
worm 

25.  Close  to 

26.  Borrowed 
moneys 


29.  Tel- 
luri- 
um 
(sym.) 

32.  Ameri- 
can 
oetrich 

S6.  Gttido's 
low- 
est 
note 

37  Uve 

38  Travels 
by 
horseback 

39.  Prickly   en 
velopes  of 
fruit 


EBB       HPK?    lit' 

isiaHBica   ur.iiiijj^ 
canim  Emay 


27.  To  the  right!  40.  Serf 

28.  Mans  nick-     42.  Equip  with 
name  men 


43.  Old  rr«rlch 
coin 

44.  Buttlnf 
beetle 

45.  Forbid 

47.  Land  meu* 
ur« 

48.  Extot 


THtY  CARRIED  A  HELL-BOMB 
HORF^OR  FROM  EAST  BERLIN 

ACROSS  TEN  ^  "^ 
THOl'SAND  .  ,  y 
MMFS-Td  A/^     ^  ^'  . 

SFG^ET  U.S./  »^  L    ""   1 

POCKET^      (: 
BASE!        '      / 


;jr 


TODAYS 
COUNTER 
SPY 
WAR 
fOR 
TOMORROWS 
DEADUEST 
WEAPON! 


TONY  PEi^ KINS 


TODAY 
And 
MONDAY 


/^UTH  ROMAN 
STERLING  HAYDEN 

WEma  mmmn .  wum  turn 

CNMIB  MVK  .  KMME  CNf  a 

«ltT  kl  Htnlj  V    Rtl(«f .  frMtfCM  Wt4  OwtcM  kv 

<ir ',  i  Milti .  Stv>  *t  nnuU  HwmnM  aM    , 

,  rainier  Walkv  .  ejiM  •«  tlM  S>l»<ir  l«"»< 
fnl  Unti  kf  0«n»lf  Hamtfrwi 


The  exciting  reai-Ufe  story  of  the 
sensctwnal  all-star  ball  player  at 
reported  in  the  Saturday  Lreninf 
Post  and  Reader's  Digfut. 


Paramount  Presents 

FEAR  SmnOES  OUT 

NOW  PLAYING 


eardiha 


please  care... 

because  hunger  hurts! 


bccout*  this  little  boy's  not  inter- 
ested in  catcher's  mitts  or  chem- 
istry sets ...  all  he  asks  is  enough 
tor  eat! 

b«cmiM  a  single  dollar  to  CARE 
will  send  hife  family  22  lbs.  of 
food  in  your  name! 

b«eatis»  your  dollar  will  help 
feed  a  family  overseas  for  a  month ! 


Send  *1  fo^ 

CARE   FOOD   CRUSADE 

NEW    YORK    16,    NEW    YORK 
or  to  your  local  CARE  office 


mm,     V 


STlals      Dept. 
Hill.    '^ 


^    DR.  WILLIAM  POTEAT 

.  .  .  TWt  for  salary  Teas<mi 


idR: 


Is 


•  ;  • 

There-  Pressure 


Dr.  Poteat  Resigns  From  University 


By  FRED  POWLEDGE 

Dr.  William  Poteat,  who  has  endeared  himself  to  many  UNC  slu- 
denL-  in  the  past  13  years,  has  resigned  from  the  University. 

The  37-year-old  philosophy  professor  will  finish  this  semester  antl 
teach  two  summer  classes  before  going  to  Episcopal  Seminary  of  the 
Southwest,  in  Austin,  Texas. 

He  will  become  Clinton  S.  Quin  Professor  of  Theology  and  Chris- 
tian Criticism.  His  resignation  here  is  effective  Sept.  1,  1957.  tt  was 
.'admitted  to  Chancellor  Robert  House  recently. 

NOT  HIGHER  SALARY 

While  he  is  offered  "generous  inducements"  at  the  Austin  college, 
he  maintained  the  higher  salary  is  not  the  prime  reason  for  hiaUeav- 
ing  the  University.  Said  Dr.  Poteat: 

"it  is  the  expanding  economy  of  the  mind,  with  an  open  frontier 
en  which  to  vmrk.  This  is  the  attraction  to  me,  in  the  last  analysis." 

It  was  learned  thai  the  "genei*ous  inducements"  included  jnoro 
time  for  research,  writing  and  study  than  Dr.  Poteat,  an  associate  pro- 
fessor in  the'Dept.  of  Philosophy  here,  presently  is  allowed. 

He  ..aid  his  w  irk  at  Austin  will  be  similar  to  that  he  has  done 
here — the  philosophy  of  religion  and  the  philosophy  of  litwaturf.  "It 
covers  some  of  the  material  I  have  covered  in  my  graduate  sentinars 
here, '  he  said. 

EXPRESSIONS  OF   SORROW  v        ,%  ^  •     ^-^ 

Expressions  of  sorrow  for  his  departure  came  from  many  students 
and  faculty  members,  as  well  as  the  administration.  Dr.  Poteat'a' classes 
have  always  been  filled,  and  he  has  been  in  demand  as  a  faculty  help- 
er in  several  student  organizations.  He  was  the  student  bodv's  choice 


On  Lenoir  Workers 


for  the  position  of  chancellor  to  fill  the  office  of  retiring  Chancellor 
House. 

Several  students  and  faculty  members  tried  to  persuade  Dr.  Po> 
teat  to  stay  here,  but  he  has  said  his  decision  to  leave  is  finaL 

Chancellor  House  said  "I  hate  to  see  him  go.  He  has  been  a  very 
valuable  man  in  the  University  and  I  wish  him  well  in  his  new  situ- 
ation." 
I  Outgoing  .student  body  President  Bob  Young  said  "I  am  confident 
j  .hat  he  will  inspire,  challenge  and  stimulate  the  thinking  of  his  stu- 
I  dents  in  Austin  as  well  as  he  has  in  Chapel  Hill. 
!  "In  addition,  he  will  in  the  years  to  come,  be  able  to  cotitribute 
}  'Much  to  the  academic  world  in  the  form  of  understandable  and  pe- 
I  warding  philosophical  writings." 

!        Young  called  Poteat  a  man  completely  dedicated  to  the  cause  of 
'  learning  in  its  broadest  and  most  meaningful  ^ense." 
I  He  said  "In  my  opinion,  he  has  been  the  best  and  truest  friend 

:    of  students  who  have  had  the  privilege  of  working  with  him. 
;        "I  sincerely  hope, '  .said  Young,  "that  he  will  enjoy  the  vocation 
for  which  he  feels  that  he  has  been  preparing  himself.  His  influence 
'  and  inspirations  will  linger  with  this  campu^-  and  all  of  his  friends 
I  for  many  days  to  come." 

1  Dr.  Poteat  was  born  in  China,  where  his  father,  the  late  Dr.  Edwin 
I  McNeill  Poteat,  was  a  missionary  for  the  Baptist  Mission  Board.  His 
I  father,  pastor  of  Pullen  Memorial  Baptist  Church  in  Raleigh  from 
I  1929-37,  was  an  internationally-known  author,  composer  and  clergy- 
man. 

Dfc  Poteat  came  to  the  United  States  when  "he  was- 10  years  of  age, 

•  and  attended  grammar  and  high  school  in  Raleigh.  He  .spent  a  year 

at  Mars  Hill   College,  then  went  to  Oberlin,  where  he  received  bis 

■—•"■■■•  -k^"^  "'  ' 

Because  Of  Letters 


bachelcw's  degree  in  19*1.  He  received  his  bachelor  of  divinity  degree 
from  Yale  in  1944,  and  his  PM)  from  Duke  in  1^1. 

While  he  was  studying  at  Duke,  he  worked  at  the  Univerifity  here. 
He  was  associate  secretary  of  the  YMCA  here  in  1944,  and  later  be- 
came acting  gen»al  .secretary.  - 

He  joined  th#  UNC  Oept.  of  Philosophy  in  1947  as  an  instructor. 
He  worked  en  his  degree  at  Duke  and  taught  here  simultaneously 
until    19S0. 

Dr.  Poteat  became  an  assistant  professor  in  1951.  and  an  a^-sociate 
professor  in  1955. 

He  is  now  a  mefjvber   of  Graham  Memorial  Board  of  Directors, 
the  administrative  ioard  of  the  Division  of  Student  Affairs  and  the 
Committee  on  Established  Lectures.  He  has  been  a  member  of   the 
faculty  EScecutive  Committee. 
NUMEROUS  DISTINCTIONS 

His  p4"ofesj^v>nal  distinctioos  have  been  numerous.  He  is  a  fellow 
in  the  National  Council  fw  Religion  in  Higher  Education,  and  ha.<) 
been  chairman  of  its  central  committee.  He  is  one  of  the  founders 
and  now  an  associate  editor  of  The  Christian  Scholar. 

Last  year  be  was  co^hairman  for  philosophy  of  the  Southern  So- 
ciety for  Philosophy  and  Psychyj:g>'.  He  represented  the  United 
States  at  the  Dons'  Advisory  Conference,  Univer.\ty  of  Sheffield,  Eng 
land,  in  1955. 

He  was  a  delegate  to  the  Conference  on  the  Relations  of  Philosophy 
and  Thtwlogy  at  Chateau  de  Bossey,  near  Geneva,  Switzerland,  in  1955 
He  is  a  member  of  the  American  Philo.sophical  Assn.  and  Phi  Beta 
Kappa.  Last  month  he  was  lecturer  to  the  University  of  Georgia  faculty 
on  relations  between. religion  and  higher  education. 

Dr.  and  Mrs.  Poteat  have  three  children,  two  girls  and  one  boy. 

To  tM  Editor? 


WEATHER 

Partly  cloudy  and  mild  with  an 
expected  high  of  65.     ^ 


3r()  e  Daily 


3rar 


SEWER 

Fotdiek  in  sewer,  see  page  2. 


VOL.  LVII     NO.   162 


Compictc  (/P)    Wtre  atrmct 


CHAPEL    HILL,   NORTH   CAROLINA,   TUESDAY,   APRIL   9,    1957 


Officti  in  Graham  Mtmeriftl 


FOUR   PAGES  THIS  IS'TUf 


Friday  Says_,University  Will  Oppose  Tuition 


f^i  ■ 


Thirty  Men  Are  Tapped  Inito  Order  Of  Goldeil  f  ieice 


Hall  at  the  same  time. 

The  complete  list  of  new  Fleece 
•members  follows: 


Coaches  Honored 

'I  hirty  men  rcc tivt-d  the  student  body's  liitji-hest  honor 
I:i>t  nidit.  They  were  tapped  into  the  Order  of  tlie  (rolden 
I-lecre.  hij;he.«it  I'.XC.  mens  honorary  Society. 

The  .'»,o  mtlnded  the  championshin  UNC  basketball  live 
and  iis  head  (oarhes. 

I Kjni  outside  the  I'niversity  campus  the  Order  rap])ed 
Pan!  (.reen.  narion.dh -known  playwright  and  author;  Jona- 
than Daniels,  editor  of  The  (Ra- 
leigh) News  and  Observer;  form- 
er U.N'C  Librarian  Louis  Round 
Wilson,  and  dramatist  Foster  Fitz- 
gj^ppg  Edward    W.    Sutton.   CuHowhee; 

UNC  philosophy  instructor  Wil-  Jerry  L.  Oppenheimer,  Birming- 
liam  Poteat.  who  announced  his  ham.  Ala.;  Eddie  C.  Bass.  Farm- 
resignation  yesterday,  was  tapped,    ville;  the  Evans  brothers,  both  of 

One  alumni.  Rabert  Mayer  Durham;  Tommy  Kearns.  Bergen- 
Evans,  was  tapped  across  the  At-  field,  N.  J.;. George  R.  Ragsdale, 
lantic  Ocean  by  five  Fleece  mem- ,  Raleigh;  John  A.  Sneden  Jr..  Tena- 
bers  who  are  Rhodes  Scholars,  fly,  N.  J.;  William  Hardman 
Evans  is  librarian  of  the  Oxford  Poteat,  Chapel  Hill; 
Union    at   Oxford    University.  ,      WiUiam  Snyder  Pate.  Pikeville; 

Evans"     brother.     Eli     (Sonny)    Lennie      Rosenbluth,      Greenville,^ 
Evans     was    tapped    in    Memorial  Tenn;  Paul  Gene  Strassler.  Appol- 

— !  lo,  Penn.;  Robert  B.  Patteson,  Wil- 

json;    James   T.    Beatty,    Charlotte; 
Edward  U.  Hallford,  Rocky  Mount; 


At  Staff  Meeting 


By  CLARKE  JONtS 

The  Consolidated  I'niveisity  .administration  "will  op- 
pose" the  prop<osal  to  raise  ttiirion  for  out-of-state  students 
.vaendino  the  three  units  of  the  University. 

This  was  disclosed  yesterday  by,  President  William  C. 
Friday  after  a  confcrenre  .Monday  morning  witli  the  (.reater 

1 :- ♦University    administration    staff. 

!      The   bill,   introduced   last    week 
by  State  Rep.  L.  H.  Ross  of  Beau- 
fort,   calls    for    a    $200    increase 
I  for    non-resident     undergraduate.* 
in    the    three    brances.   It   will    go 
I  into  effect  next  fall  in  the  event 
i  the  legislature  approves  it. 

!  Hi  KID  sibo 

'  This  measure,  if  passed,  would 
hike  the  figure  from  the  pre-sent 
S500    to    $700.    The    rate    was    in- 


Conflict  Forces 
Meeting  Delay 
For  Counselors 


The  larg*  group  of  men  pictured  above  ere  the  1957  initiates  in 
the  Order  of  the  Golden  Fleece,  the  highest  m«n's  honorary.  They 
were  tapped  last  night  in  a  s&lemn  and  impressive  ceremony  in  Me- 


morial Hall.  The  list  includes  several  honorary  members  and  stu- 
dents. The  entire  basketball  first  string  along  with  its  coaches  was 
tapped  into  the  organization.  (Photo  by  Woody  Sears) 


Tornadoes  Hit 


Tornadoes,  or  the  same  one, 
hitting  $outhta«ttrn  North  Caro- 
lina last  night  killed  *t  least 
four  and  scorM  el  others  have 
b««n    injured    and    unaccounted 


Fitz-Simons;    Robert    Cunningham, 
New  York; 

John  McKay  Ludwig,  New  Or- 
leans; Carl  D.  Farmer,  Pulaski, 
Va.;   Wilson;  James   M.  Chamblee, 

.„, —  , '"•— li^'Tton:     Peter     J.     Brennan, 

for  dv*  to  the  destruction  of  the  Brooklyn;  Zane  E.  Eargle,  Wax- 
storm.  ;  .,^vv;  narry  E.  Whitelock,  Balti- 
Simpson,  Scotland,  Robeson,  ^^ore;  Frank  McGuire,  Chapel  Hill; 
Bladen  and  Brunswick  counties  Joseph  F.  Quigg,  Long  Island; 
were  either  hit  by  the  storm  or  i  James  A.  (Buck)  Freeman,  Chapel 
some  method  of  destruction  was  i  Hill;  Luther  Hartwell  Hodges-  Jr., 
used  and  helped  by  the  high  i  Raleigh,  and  Green. 
winds  last  night  at  11  p.m.  j  The  tappings  came  in  Memorial 
Brunswick  County  reported  a  Hall  last  night  as  hooded  and  rob- 
forest  fire,  whipped  by  60-mile-  [  ed  "giants"  roamed  through  the 
per-hour  winds,  burned  a  path  !  audience  and  snatched  up  the  new 
two  miles  wide  in  the  midst  of  j  members.  A  dinner  for  new  mem- 
the  coastal  area.  Sampson  Coun-  j  >ers,  active  members  and  alumni 
t-f  reported  two  deaths  near  j  followed  at  the  Carolina  Inn,  and 
Reseboro  and  another  couple  ,  a  formal  initiation  was  held  early 
•re  believed  to  hewe  been  kill-'    this  morning. 

ed  near  Raeford.  Top  officers  of  the  Fleece  Were 

announced    last    night.    They    are 
Thomas    Creasy,    JIason;    WiUiam 


In  GreensbOfp,  three  ears  were 
stalled     and     several     low-lying 


•rees  were  flooded  with  a  heavy    ,  Wolf.     Hyparchos;     William     Ray 


rain.  The  Raloifh-Crorham  are* 
reported  9u«t»  up  »o  42-mi!es- 
per-hour   and   rain. 

Chapel  Hill  only  received  stiff 
breezes  and  a  small  shower  in 
"the  spring  etorms  which  have 
blanketed  the  eastern  United 
States. 

Today  i»  ♦©  be  partly  cloudy 
and  colder  tonight.  Wednesday's 
forecast  n  partly  cloudy  and 
cool.  Jh*  twnpTtiuf*  will 
range  from  51  to  65. 


Long,  Grmmateus,  and  Thomas 
Lambeth,  Chrystopher.  This  is 
the  second  year  Creasy,  a  former 
student  body  president  now  in 
law  school,  has  held  the  top  po- 
sition. 

Present  active  members,  in  ad- 
dition to  the  officers,  are  James 
Exum,  Joel  Fleishman,  Roy 
Moose,  Fred  Powledgc,  Burt  Vea- 
zey,  James  Wallace.  Sam  Wells, 
Charles  Yarborough  anfl  Bob 
Young.  J 


UP's  Election 
Postponed,        | 
Says  Weinman 

Elections  of  new  University  Par- 
ly officers  scheduled  for  tonight 
has  been  cancelled  until  .\pril  30 
due  to  the  special  legislative  ses-, 
sion  tonight  and  the  upoomiing 
spring  vacation.  Party  Chairman 
Mike  Weinman  said  yesterday.  j 

In  a  congratulatory  statement  to 
r.-'cent  winners  of  student  govern- 
ment positions  ^In  the  spring  elec- 
tions,   Weinman   said:  ! 

•'I  want  to  congratulate  Sonny 
Fvans  in  his  presidential  victory 
and  I  want  to  ask  him  at  this  time 
to  make  his  adm.lnistratlon  truly  for 
tlie   students. 

I      "Student  Government  at  Carolina 
I  is  for  the  student  and  should  at  all 
t.nies  be  run  by  them." 

The  UP  chairman  also  congratul- 
ated all  newly  elected  officers  ol 
student  government  and  cited  the 
now  UP  legislators  for  their  show- 
u'.a.  in  the  election. 


OF  STUDENT  WORKERS: 


Prillaman  Explains  Layoff 


ORIENTATION  { 

The  Orientation  Committee 
needs  girls  to  help  with  typing 
any  afternoon  for  the  next'  few 
weeks  and  would  appreciate  any 
help  offered,  according  to  a  recent 
announcement.  Everyone  interest- j 
ed  has  been  asked  to  contact  Miss  | 
Mary  Jane  Fisher  in  319  Mclver, 
8-9134. 


By  BOB  HIGH 

The  situation  at  Lenoir  Hall 
seems  to  be  getting  worse  as 
time  goes  on  and  there  has  not 
as  yet  been  a  solution  found.  | 

The  student  workers  of  the ! 
campus  eating  establishment  have 
requested  cash  payment  of  the 
work  done  by  them  instead  of  the 
$1.90  food  allotment  per  day.  and 
they  have  been  refused. 

George   W.    Prillaman,   manager] 
of    Lenoir    Hall,    has    repeatedly  1 
told    the    representatives    of    the 
workers  and  the  Student  Legisla- 
ture committee  investigating  con- 
1  ditions    in    Lenoir    Hall   that    the 
'  cafeteria  cannot  afford  to  pay  the 
student  workers  in  cash. 
NO  HEADWAY 
'      Al  Alphin,  chairman  of  the  in- 
vestigating    committee      for      the 
Sudent  Legislature,  has  stated  his 
group  has  made  no  headway  with 
I  Prillaman     on     the     question     of 
j  wages  for  the  workers. 

The  committee  chairman  said 
he  and  his  committee  will  seek  to 
find  an  answer  to  the  problem  by 
going    through    other   channels. 

In  regards  to  the  rumor  the 
student  workers  were  being  fired 
by  Prillaman  for  the  writing  of 
letters  to  The  Daily  Tar  Heel. 
Prillaman  has  stated  he  has  not 
and  will  not  dismiss  student  work 


ers   for  the   writing   of   letters   to  i 
the  editor.  ' 

CUT  TO  MINIMUM       -— 

The  manager  explained  the  lay- 
of  the  workers  is  due  to  the  an- 
nual spring  period  when  the  staff 


GM'S  SLATE 


.  The  following  activities  are 
scheduled  for  Graham  Memorial 
today: 

Board  of  Directors,  4-6  p.m.,  '< 
Williams  Wolfe;  IFC  7-8  p.m.  , 
Srail  Room;  Orientation  Commit- 
tee, 4-6  p.m.,  Roland  Parker  1; 
UP,  7-11  p.m.,  Roland  Parker  1 
and  2;  Finance  Committee,  2-4 
p.m.,  Woodhouse  Conference 
Room;  Audit  Board,  4-5:30  p.m., 
Woodhouse  Conference  Room; 
Men's  Honor  Council,  7-11  p.m., 
Woodhouse  Conference  Room; 
Peer  Gynt,.  3-5:30  p.m.,  Rendei- 
vous  Room;  Dance  Class,  6:30-8 
p.m.,  Rendervous  Room;  APO, 
7-9  p.m.  APO  Room. 

YOUNG   ADULTS 

The  Young  Adults  will  meet  to 
night  at  8  p.m.  in  the  Methodi^-t 
Church,  according  to  an  announce- 
ment made  yesterday.  Featured 
speaker  at  the  meeting  will  be  Mr. 
George  Vincent. 


of   Lenoir  Hall    is    always    cut    to 
a  minimum. 

Prillaman  said  there  would  be 
further  cuts  in  the  working  staff, 
but  none  of  these  would  be  in- 
fluenced by  letters  to  the  editor 
of  the  newspaper. 

The  seemingly  self-appointed 
leader  of  the  student  workers, 
Caleb  White,  has  resigned  his  po- 
tition  in  the  self-supporting  estab- 
lishment. He  said  he  left  his  job 
on  his  own  fijee  will  but  he 
thought  pressure  was  being  plac- 
ed upon  him  for  his  activities  in  j 
the  campus   problem.  j 

DENIES  PRESSURE  I 

Prillaman  has  denied  any  pres-| 
sure    upon    any    of    the    student 
workers   and    says  they  have  the 
perfect   right   to   voice   their  opin- 
ions. I 

While    on    the    subject,    Prilla- 
man said  he  thought  some  of  the 
letters    to    the    editor    have    con- , 
tained  statements  which  were  en- 
tirely    unnecessary.  \  \ 

After  the  mass  meeting  of  the' 
student  workers  with  Prillaman 
last  month,  petitions  were  posted 
in  Lenoir  Hall  to  apoligize  to  the 
manager  for  thinkng  he  had  re- 
ceived the  workers  petition  for 
wages  instead  of  food  allotment 
The  petition  went  unsigned  ex- 
cept for  a  few  ficticous  names. 


A  previously  announced  and  pre- 
viously postponed  meeting  of  pro- 
spective Orientation  Counselors  has  creased  from  S360  to  S500  during 
been  postponed  again  until  next  the  1955  .session  of  the  General 
Tuesday,     Orientation      Committee  Assembly. 

Chairman   Jerry  Oppenheimer   said,      Ross'  bill   has  been   referred   to 
yesterday.  j  the  Joint  Appropriations  Commit- 

™^            u  J  1  J   r^       o^i^w.   ^,^i  '  tee.    It    is    not    known  when    the 

The  rescheduled   Counselor  meet-                                           .  .u      ,i 

•..  w    u  ij        A..«i  i.c»K  :„  lAR  proposal    will    come    to  the    floor 
mg  wnll  be  held  on  April  loth  ui  106  ^    '^ 

CarroU  lUdl  at  7:30  p.m.  because  o/,  for  a  vote. 

«•  .  .^    K      ti,„    orw„ioi       Fridav  said     If  given  the  oppor 

a    confhct   created    by    the    special.        ,,      :  .    ,         ..        . 

c   .1.     ct„A^r.t   T  .acrid at.irA !  tunity   to   appear    before    the    Ap- 

session   of   the    Student    Leguslature  '  '^»'  .       ,t   • 

.  ,  proprlations   Committee,   the   Uni- 

)  versity  administration  will  oppose 

Deadline  for  applications  has  alsoj  the   proposal." 

been  extended    until   the    16th.    Op-'      Meeting      with      Friday      were 

penheimer  once  again  asked  every-   chancellors  W.  W   Pierson  of  Wo 


one   interestd   to  apply   for  any  of 
the  120  positions  available. 


man's  College,  Carey  H.  Bostian  of 
State  College  and  Robert  B.  House 

Application    blanks    may    be    se-j^  ^  .  j     tt  •        •.       n...; 

r  ,  A.     u         »t  -„  •  1    »»,»       Consolidated     University     Busi- 

cured  from  Graham  Memorial,  the  j      «    cu^^^^h 

,,.„.       ^      , ..  ,    _,.      „^„!  nes8  Officer  Alexander  H.  Shepard 

VMC.\,    the    Library,    Lenoir    Hall,  ,     o     j     *       c^.-^i^- 

.    •    ,  „,  ,         .  „      ♦„land    Dean    of    Graduate    Studies 

JT  the  Monogram  Club  and  are  toif^  '  „4t^„w 

,  .        J   .     .u     V         r-,oi,o«,   William  M.  Whyburn  also  attend- 

;je   returned   to   the   Y  or  Graham 


Memorial,  Oppenheimer  said. 


Special  Session 

The  Student  Legislature  will 
meet  in  a  speciaf  sestien  tonight 
at  7:90  p.n(k  in  Phi  Halt  to  dis- 
cuss the  $100,000  budget  for  next 
year. 

The  legislature  will  alto  dis- 
cuss student  gevemm*nt  far 
W57-5I,  according  »o  Miss  Jen- 
nie Margaret  Meeden  secretary. 
She  urged  all  members  to  be 
present. 

The  Finance  Cotmnlnee  Off  the 
student  legUleture  will  meet  to- 
day from  2-4  pjii.  U»-M»*  Wood- 
house  Conference  Reern  te  con- 
sider the  ^ei>osed  stuiient  gov- 
ernment budget  for  1957-58. 


led. 

!  ON  SCHOLARSHIP 
j  The  bill  as  proposed  will  ap- 
i  parently  affect  all  out-of-state  stu- 
I  dents  including  those  here  on 
j  scholarship.  Ross  could  not  he 
1  reached  Monday  for  verification 
'  of  this. 

1  A  spokesman  in  the  Attorney 
i  General's  office  in  Raleigh  said 
Monday  the  details  of  the  mea- 
I  sure  would  probably  be  worked 
j  out  while  the  bill  is  in  the  Appro- 
priations  Committee's   hands. 


ONE  MILLION  TESTS  ' 

In  the  two  and  one  half  years 
jince  its  establishment,  the  School 
Tests  and  Materials  section  of  the 
UNC  Extension  Di\ision  has  sup- 
plied nearly  one  million  tests  to 
more  than  900  North  Carolina 
I  schools. 


#A6t  rwo 


THt  DAILY  TAR  HtlL 


Four  Y4ars  thsurahcd: 
The  Orientation  Program 


Opportunity    unlimited. 

This  aptly  describes,  we  feiel, 
the  thance  to  serve  our  University 
in  the  orientation  program. 

Kducators  generally  agree  that 
the  best  time  to  effectively  impress 
matters  upon  the  mind  is  dur\ng 
its  formulative  state. 

Thus  incoming  freshmen  should 
certainly  be  subjected  fully  and 
compresensively  to  the  traditions 
of  the  Honor  System — the  Camp- 
us and  Honor  Cddes. 

They  should  be  super-saturated 
with  the  working  of  this  institu- 
tion, both  academically  and  from 
the  standpoint  of  extra-curricu- 
lars. 

To  provide  this  tyj)e  of  orientia- 
lion.  a  large  staff  of  interested  and 
enthusiastic  students  must  devote 
iheiv  time  and  effort  as  orienta- 
tion counselors.  ■ 

According  to  men's  orientation 
("hairman  |en>  Oppenheimer,  he 
needs  2r,o  applicants.  As  of  Friday*. 


only  i5o  or  so  applications  had 
been  filed  in  tlie  atudeilt  govern- 
ment office  in  Graham  Memorifi'l. 

Consequently,  loo  more  stu- 
dents are  needed  to  devote  their 
invaluable  service  to  the  Univer- 
sity. 

There  is  hardly  any  better  op- 
portunity available  to  forward  the 
standards  of  honor  and  academic 
freedom  for  which  this  institution 
ostensibly  stands. 

.\nd  what  better  insurance  of 
four  years  success  could  be  afford- 
ed than  an  initial  well  planned 
and  well  operated  week  during 
which  a  newcomer  can  get  off  on 
the  right   foot. 

If  yoii  are  proud  of  your  Uni- 
versity, serve  it. 

Your  service  as  a  counselor  to 
liefiiddled  and  bewildered  fresh- 
men is  a  serAice,  in  its  own  way. 
as  large  as  tliat  whidi  the  out- 
standing chaches  of  Frank  Mc- 
Guire  j>erformed  a  week  ago. 


Wanf;-lSelf*Satisf  action? 
Try   Ross's   Complacency 


W'c  grow  or  wctlie. 

1  his  is  an  otol  .^§dage  which  ap- 
jMopriately  liTS-'i^^  present  status 
«)l  our  instiiiniou^s  ue  know  and 
l«)\c  it. 

Tlie  University  lias  grown  by 
leaps  and  boinids  since  its  found- 
ing ill  tlu"  twilight  of  the  Eigh- 
U'cMth   Centurv. 

This  growth  Vve  attribute  pri- 
mal ilv   to  two  reast>ns: 

(I)  1  lit-  h>iesight  of  outstand- 
in'4,  leaders  likcAVilliam  R.  Davie, 
suivcyov-trustee  for-  whom  the 
na\ic  Poplar  is  named:  first  Presi- 
dent |()epli  .CaV4well.  for  whom 
(aldwcll  Hall  i^  named;  Samuel 
K.  MiC'.orklc.  minister-fund  raiser 
tin  iVRoiu  .\Ic€kM*le  PtSter  area 
defined  bv  South  Building  north- 
war<l  to  Franklin  St.,  is  named. 


exi  hiding  women  until  the  Twen- 
tietli  Century  and  Negix>es  until 
sli(»rtly  a'fter   May.    1954. 

Fhis   second   reason    for  growth 

-we  emphasise  particularly 'in  ligfit 

of  Rep.   L.   H.  Ross  of  Beaufort  s 

bill    to    hike    out-of-state    tuition 

by  $200. 

\\'hen  Sam  McCorkle  fought  for 
implementation  of  .\rticle  41  of 
the  -North  Carolina  Constitution 
which  called  lor  establishment  of 
a  state  university,  it  read  this  wav: 

"  \  school  or  schools  shall  be 
established  by  tjie  legislature  lor 
the  convenient  instruction  of 
youth,  with  such  salaries  to  the 
masters,  paid  by  the  public,  as  may 
enable  them  to  instruct  at  low 
pricci;^and.allaiie£ul-leaiJiing  sh^ll 
be  encouraged  and  promoted  in 
one  or  more  universities." 


(•j)  Freedom  of  ingress,  the  fact  ^o  mention,  in  any  shape,  form 
that  l^niversity  '^instruction  was  or  fashion,  is  tliere  listed  of  "con- 
limited  to  no  particular  group  —  venient  intruction"  merely  for 
—   —  North  Carolina  youth. 


The  Dcrily  Tar  Reel 

The  official  itudeii  pubik-dtion  of  tbe 
Punluations  Board  ol  the  Univenity  of 
Hnrxh  Carolina  wh«re  U  is  published 
4ailT  except  Monday  and  examinatioi 
•pd  vacation  periods  and  summer  terms 
Ctitered  as  second  class  matter  tn  thi 
Dost  office  in  Chapel  Hill,  N.  C .  unde> 
che  Act  of  March  9,  1870.  Subscription 
rates  mailed.  $4  per  year.  $2.50  a  semes 
ter;  delivered.  W  a  .rear.  S3  50  «  seme* 
ter 


Editor           '.^ 

r^ — 

l}:^ NEIL  BASS 

Managing  Editor 

.     CL/MIKE  JONES 

Associate  Editor 

•          NANCY  HILL 

Sports  Editor 

.  ,      Bn.T,  KING 

News  Editor 

.^IjrALT  SCHRUNTEK 

Business  Manager.  JOHN  C.  ^MHTAKER 


A.ivprlisi:,.j  Manager         FRED  KATZIN 


-gpj^ 

EI>ITORlAL     STA^F  —   Woody     Sears 

<•'«•>   I'.ixne.  Stan  Shaw. 

NEAVS  .STAFF-  CJraiiara  Snyder,  Edith 
MacKinnon,  Pringle  Pipkin,  Bob  High, 
Ben  Taylor,  H.  Joost  Polak,  Patsy  Mill- 
er. Wally  Kuralt,  Bill  King,  Curtis 
Crotty. 


BUSINESS  STAFF— John  Minter,  Marian 
Hobeck,  Jane  Patten,  Johnny  Whitaker. 

MX>RTS  STAFF:  Dave  Wible,  Stu  Bird, 
Ed  Rowland,  Jim  Crownover,  Ron  Mil- 
ligan. 


Subscription  Manager 
Circulation  Manager  . 


.  Dale  Stti«9 
Charlie  Hoil 


Stah  Photographers 
Norman  Kantor 


Woody  Sears, 


Librarians.  Sue  Giolner,  Marilyn  Strum 


■M- 


tff^ ^. 


Night J^ews  RdlfSF^ ^ ftob  High 

Night  Editor  — Manley   Springs 


Vet  with  an  attitude  of  salf- 
satisfaction  and  apparent  com- 
placency. Rep.  Ross  of  Beaufort 
iias  proptised  to  push  forward  the 
trend  toward  University  educa- 
tion only  for  home-grown  i»nd 
dyed-in-tlie-wool  North  Carolin- 
ians. 

M  present,  of  a  total  6,634  en- 
lollment,  only  1,269  students  hail 
from  other  states. 

This  scant  thousand,  among 
whom  are  contributors  to  all  phases 
of  campus  life,  certainly  may  be 
much  more  scanty  next  year  if 
Ross's  limitation,  in  effect,  bill 
pas.ses. 

.\s  an  exanrple  of  student  con- 
tribution from  ail  out-of-stater, 
we  point  to  Mike  Weinman,  Uni- 
versity Partv  chairman  who  hails 
from  the  geographic  banana 
Florida. 

Other  student  leaders  in  every 
Held  could  be  pointed  to  with 
f)ride.  students  who  aren't  home 
giown  and  dyed-in-the-wool  North 
Caroliniatis. 

Some  might  even  puff  out  their 
chest  a  little  a't  the  name  Rosen- 
bluth.  or  Quigg  or  Brennan  or 
Kearns  or  Currihgham  —  all  New 
Vork  boys  originallv. 

Still  Rep.  Ross  wants  die  op- 
jx)rtunity  to  attend  the  Uiiiversity 
to  be  finanically  available  only  to 
students    with   tarred   heels. 

VV^e'ie  from  Eastern  North  Car- 
olina. But  we're  iishamod  of  the 
man  from  Beaufords  provincial- 
ism, especially  in  light  of  the  out- 
of-state  raise  which  went  through 
only  two  years  ago. 

We  wonder  what  progressive 
leaders  like  Davie  and  Caldwell 
and  McCorkle  would  have  thought 
of  Mr.  Ross's  complacency  —  even 
retrogressive— attitude. 

"A  school  or  schools  shall  be 
established  ...  for  the  convenient 
instruction  of  yOuth  (no  geo- 
graphical limitation)  .  .  .  to  In- 
struct at  low  prices." 

Shame,  shame  on  you  Mr.  RoiM. 
Your  consn'tntiona-r  slrp  is  show-r 

We  grow  or  wc  die. 


YOU  Said  It: 


The  Silent 


Editpr: 

I  am  what  is  called  by  the  edi- 
tors (see  editorial,  April  5  issue) 
a  member  of  the  Silent  Genera- 
tion, stumbling  along  these  four 
years  of  college,  silent,  faceless, 
never  judging  for  fear  of  being 
judged. 

But,  alas  and  alack,  I  have 
stumbled  upon  a  few  obc.'tacles 
(some  ^ould  call  them  articles) 
in  the  past  few  days  that  have 
not  only  injured  my  pride  and 
dignity  and  withered  a  part  of 
the  in-group  feeling  associated 
with  the  university  and  its  con- 
stitaents,  but  have  given  me  the . 
energy  and  fire  to  want  to  rid 
myself  momentarily  of  this  state 
of  inertia  so  obviosuly  endowed 
me  and  my  cohorts  as  membero-  of 
this  faceless  generation  and  pose 
a  question  to  the  W.  C.  Georges 
and  Anthony  Wolffs  who  so 
graciously  have  taken  upon  them- 
selves the  indubious  positions  of 
Chijef  Justices  and  jury  to  re.;jlve 
in  the  Court  of  Reform  the  task 
of  Segregation  or  Integration. 

"If  Ye  must  judge,  then  !ct 
Ye  be  Judged"  or  however  the 
.saying  goes.  I  say  thai  tbe  segre- 
gation issue  48  insignificant  rela- 
tive to  these  issues  of  sides^ 
(which  are  without  doubt  valued 
judgment.')  in  so  far  as  the  degra- 
dation of  the  human  race,  physi- 
cally as  the  George's  would  have.' 
and  morally,  as  the  W  olfls  would 
have  it  (at  least  in  the  south). 

in    choosing    sides,    I    would 
prefer  to  remain  in  the  middle 


Reader  Hits 
Ediforial  Page 
Emotionalism 

Editor: 

I  recently  read  an  article  in 
The  Daily  Tar  Heel  complaining 
about  the  garbage  disposal  pro- 
blem in  Chapel  Hill.  In  the  same 
issue,  1  noticed  that  editors  of 
The  Daily  Tar  Heel  are  doing 
their  utmost  too  alleviate  thio  un- 
healthy iiituation. 

They  have  hit  upon  the  ingen- 
ious device  of  installing  garbage 
disposal  units  in  the  newspaper. 
I  am  referring,  of  course,  to  the 
editorial  sheet.  I  have  had  the 
mi^ortunc  of  watching  untold 
quantities  of  mental  garbage  fil- 
ter through  tjiat  journalistic  abor- 
tion this  year. 

I  believe,  however,  that  The 
Daily  Tar  Heel  reached  unassail- 
able heights  of  emotionalism  in 
the  jemi-hysterical  attack  by  Mr. 
Anthony  Wolff  upon  Dr.  W.  C. 
George.  This  is  not  to  say  that  I 
am  in  complete  agreement  wiAh 
Dr.  George's  somewhat  medieval 
theories. 

I  believe  that  the  "inferiority " 
of  the  Southern  Negro  stems 
mwe  from  environment  than 
from  hcreditj-.  I  do  believe,  how- 
ever, in  the  individual  expression 
of  ideas  without  the  risk  of  journ- 
alistic assassination. 

Please,      gentlemen,     give     u:, 

articles  written  by  men  who  do 

their   reasoning    with    something 

other  than  their  adrenal  glands! 

Charles  Roeder 


and  let  thes*  Ptto  extrome  fac- 
tions "icindle  the  fir*  that  will 
•vontually      drag      them     and 
"seme    of    thoir    members    to 
Hoil."   Who   are    these   Wolffs 
wIm  have  "carpetbagged"  their 
way  to  thi»  University  to  judge 
and   condemn   their  fellow   be- 
ings for  a   situation  that   was 
brought    about    by    forefathers 
who  were  southerners  and  Yan- 
kees? Suffice  it  to  be  that  many 
•  coin  of  slavery  was  pocketted 
by    those    "merchants"    above 
the  Mason-Dixon  Line  ...     , 
But  let  us  leave  the  past  and 
reconnoiter  the  present — X  think 
oi   the   integration   movement   as 
analogous  to  the  labor  movement 
since  both  have  bathed  infamous- 
ly in  the  ^ools   of   public    sym- 
pathy,      'kindling      the      firCo" 
against  coercion,  segregation  and 
condemnation,    ^t    hasn't    some 
trite   phrase   been   coined   some- 
where along  the  road  of  slang  and 
salvation  to  the  effect  of  "prac- 
tice what  yoju  preach?" 

Senator  McClcllan  has  said  it 
to  Beck,  and  1.  as  representative 
of  my  silent  partners,  say  it  to 
the  Wolffs  and  Georges. 

I  am  taking  the  middle  of  Iht' 
road.  I  «aid.  therefore  a  .'iap  on 
the   hand   to   the   \V.   C.   George.^ 


for  having  the  audacity  as  scien- 
tists with  scientific  backgrounds 
of  facts  and  operational  defini- 
tions to  base  such  nonsense  (my 
valued  judgment)  as  the  biologi- 
cal inferiority  of  the  Negro  on 
subjective  impressions. 

In  such  a  technical  society  as 
ours,     AAessrs.     George,     with 
chemistry    sets,    do-it-yourself 
kits,    and    atomic    firecrackers, 
subjective  impressions  are  not 
enough.    We    want    the    facts, 
George,    pure    and    simple,    to 
substantiate  your  conclusions. 
Gather  your  evidence,  observe 
ic.  test  its  validity,  and  accept  01 
reject   your   propositions   —   it's 
plain  and  simple.  They  taught  it 
to  you  and  me  as  we  stumbled 
along  silently.  Give  us,  the  face- 
less ones,  the  authenticity,  accu- 
racy, and  integrity  of  your  opin- 
ions in  order  that  we  may  make 
our    own    conclu.-»ions    as    to    the 
validity  of  yours. 

Before  I  become  exhausted  and 
lose  momentum,  stumbling  bacK 
amongst  my  people.  I  wish  to  go 
down  saying  (and  this  again  is 
my  valued  judgment); 

Why  all  this  furor  about  seg- 
regation and  integregation?  Let 
us  not  kindle  the  forest  while 
putting    out    each    others    fires. 


This  Issue  will  gel  out  of  h#rvl 
only  if  these  over-anxMKiw  rafli* 
cals,  heroes,  noq-cofif^rmi^ 
or  what-have-yous  are  ff^^if^ 
to  woo  us  against  Mr  bft^lH' 
judgment. 

It  is  an  accepted  fact  t^at  the 
present  generation  doe<  not  ^e.el 
as  strongly  towards  segreg.atfon 
as  that  previous  to  it  —  j^ix  4id 
that  generation  of  our  fathers  feei 
as  oppo.a-ed  to  integregation  as  did 
thejr  fathers. 

It  seems  that  time  is  th.e  jt)est 
healer  of  wounds,  whether  tiiey 
be  physical  or  emotional,  wpile 
educatfon  is  the  best  preventor 
of  them.  The  cave-man  as  well  as 
the  foundling  found  by  the  edu- 
cation of  experience  that  fire  was 
dangerous  out  of  it's  place. 

To  use  another  expression,  "Let 
us  stop  and  count  to  ten"  before 
We  let  this  issue  get  the  best  of 
us — maybe  ten  years,  maybe  ten 
generations.  Were  it  possible  to 
preconceive,  wc  would  find  in  all 
probabilities  the  word  "segrega- 
tion" a  foreign  word  when  ap- 
plied to  mankind.  Segregation  in 
mores,  folkways,  and  customs 
would  have  disappeared  as  well 
as  .v^gregation  in  law. 

My  silent  people,  here  I  come. 
Joseph  B.  Alala  Jr. 


'Because  I  Said  So— That's  Why'  , 


»'»S!k'-.j' 


Lenoir  Takes  Unexplained  Steps 


Editor: 

This  is. to  inform  the  manage- 
ment of  Lenoir  Hall  that  the  stu- 
dent workers  will  not  be  intimi- 
dated or  forced  into  silence  by 
the  use  of  full  time  employees  or 
the  closing  of  dining  rooms. 
Both    of    these    threats    were 


made  (by  implication,  of  course) 
at  Mr.  Prillamano-  meeting  sever- 
al weeks  ago,  but  it  was  not  until 
last  week  thai  any  step  was  made 
in  this  direction.  Amazingly 
enough  the  full  time  workers 
were  hired  before  the  student 
workers   were    released,    vet    the 


reason  for  closing  the  food  line 
(incidently  throwing  several  boys 
out  of  work)  was  the  small  vol- 
ume of  business:  on  that  line.  Why 
hire  more  full  time  workers  then'.' 
Shades  of  Upton  Sinclair,  when 
will  something  be  done? 

William  E.  Brigman 


L'il  Abnvr 


i£S^ 


By  a:  Capp 


^Wk^  %  mr 


■«f.w<iB^MaBMaaaw»«iP9v>gBn 


WISH  I  HAD-m'NOIVtTO 
I  SIMPLV  CLEAVE  HIS  HEAD 
OPEN,  AN' GET  IT— Bur 
t'M  J- JUST  A  P'PKTiri 
TH-THHEF,  OPPOSE.O  T 
V-VIOLENCE.Y 


Pogo    jai^ 


id     ^    i 


By  Walt  Kelly 


Writes 


Editctr:  ^ 

Dr.  George's  speech,  as  reprinted  in  The  Daily 
Tar  Heel,  has  prompted  me  to  write  this  letter,  not 
as  an  answer  to  his  «?onuneot*  nor  as  the  brief  of 
one  of  the  participants  in  some  sort  of  debate.  I 
have  such  an  answer;  more,  I  have  had  tMch  an 
answ^.  I  see  little  or  nothing  to  be  gained  by 
writing  it  eps^. 

I  ntf  intajn  Or.  Gow»»'s  vim^s  ere  wrong.  Mere- 
py^,  a  h9c»,  yea  aa  armr  of  Mci^togists,  psycho- 
tp^fH,  e<iiical»rs,  j^itical  •nd  religious  leaders 
Rl#fl>^aii»  he  iswronq.  Their  argument  has  been 
pra«ent«d  •lf*»dY,  entirely  too  many  times. 
This  general  question  was  first  raised  in  this 
country   before    1800,    when  many   Quakers   freed 
their  slaves.  It  has  been  soundly  debated  since  then. 
Of  course,  as  is  usually  the  case,  complete  agree- 
ment has  not  been  reached  amcng   our  countries 
leaders;    but,   roughlj'   at   the   antipodes   from   Dr. 
George's.  The  debate  can  now  be  considered  more 
or  less  closed. 

"There  is  only  a  question  of  implementation"  of 
the  c'^incepts  we  have  decided  are  correct  For  these 
leaders  of  the  U.  S.  to  pause  and  engage  in  this 
argument  again,  with  Dr.  George  or  anyone  else, 
is  unhelpful.  They  do  not  have  the  time,  nor  should 
they,  have  the  inclination  to  do  so. 

Further,  we,  thI  tibarafs,  are  making,  it  seems 
to     me,    a    serious   mistake  by  encouraging  Or. 
George  and  other  proponents  of  "white  suprem- 
acy" to  present  their  views. 
Consider  an  analogy.  There  is  an  inactive  minori- 
ty in  this  country  who  believe  that  labor  unions  are 
the  gift  of  the  Devil,  and,  in  general,  that  the  lowef 
economic  clas.-^s  which  the  unions  represent  are  all 
made  up  of  worthless  "dirty  foreigners"  and  shi^'t- 
less  immoral  animals. 

These    people    had    their    say    in    1900.    Booth 
Tarkington  was  one  of  their  many  representatives 
at  that  time. 
,  In  what  situation  would  this  country  be  if  this 

point  of  view  were  still   to  be  reckoned  with?   I 
shudder. 

Rather,  instead,  it  has  been  becoming  a  bit  em- 
barrassing to  admit  that  one  believes  "the  poor  do 
tfJt  deserve  bathtubs  as  they  would  only  ^tore  their 
coal  in  it."   a  popular  idiom    in   the   days  of  the 
sweatshops.  This  is  as  it  should  be,  it  seems  to  me. 
There   is  a  cultural   lag,  clearly.   At  different 
times  each  of  us  find  himself  a  reactionary  and 
in  disagreement  with  the  nMjority.  When  this  is 
the  case,  we  are  free  to  speak. 

Often,  however,  wc  say  to  ourselves.  "Well.  I 
guess  I'm  wrong,'  or  simpler,  "I  dont  see  much 
point  in  arguing,  if  everyone  is  on  the  other  side," 
M-  mM^e  scientifically,  "Well,  if  Fm  right  let's  try 
and  prove  it."  Thus>,  we  are  temporarily  quiet  and 
tlve  world  progresses. 

I  am  sure  that  there  are  many  people  who  regret 
^ving  women  the  right  to'^v^te.  But  they  do  not 
make  speeches. 

A  year  ago,  Bridey  Murphy  was  the  scientific 
discovery  of  the  century.  Now.  who  wUl  support 
Bndey  at  the  next  meeting  of  the  Ammcan  Assn. 
for  the  Advancement  of  Science? 

Yet  there  are  millions  of  good  An^ricans  who, 

faithfully    rea<iing   True    m«9aaine,   wonder    why 

their  horo   is    ignored.  Thank  God,  titey  »f  not 

In   a   position   to   force   our  scientists   to  believe 

this-  hoax;   they   don't  form   citit»ns   councils  to 

defefld  Bridey  Murphy.  (N«t  ev«i  in  Los  Angeles.) 

I  believe  my  point  is  made  clear.  It  is  timo  for 

Dr.  George  to  take  his  views,  retire  to  his  living 

room,  reread  his  Bilbe  speeches  and  his  Mell-thumb- 

ed   "Mem  Kampf,"  and  contemplate  the  good  old 

days. 

It  is  time  for  Dartmouth  n-ot  to  invite  him  to     ' 
speak,  and  time  not  to  print  his  ideas.  The  rest  of 
us  have  work   to  do. 

Rol»ert  L.  Grain 


Tuition  Increase 
Will  Hurt  U  N  C 


Anthony  Wolff 


Thij  is  an  open  letter  to  the  Legislature  of  the 
State  of  North  Carolina,  and  to  the  faculty,  students, 
and  administration  of  this  University. 
Sirs: 

A.t  this  moment  there  is  a  bill  befoie  the  state 
legislature  to  raise  the  tuition  fee  for  out-of-state 
students  at  this  Universiy  by  $200  —  from  $500  to 

I  wish  here  to  speak  against  the  passage  of 
this  bill;  in  so  doing,  I  hope  and  believe  that  I 
speak  for  the  majority  of  the  >hidents,r  in  their 
best  interest  and  in  the  bes*  intorest  •#  the  Con- 
solidated  University  and  the  State  of  North  Caro- 
lirw. 

The  effect  the  bill  will  have  if  it  is  passed  is  ob- 
vious: there  will  be  a  6fop  in  the  nu;nber  of  out 
of-.tate  students  in  the  Consolidated  University. 

This  drop  may  not  be  noticeable  for  four  years, 
for  those  out-of-state  students  already  settled  at 
Carolina  will  be  understandably  and  hearteningly 
reluctant  to  leave.  But  the  loss  wiU  become  increas- 
ingly apparent. 

The  incraase  in  tuitiMi  will  n*t  only  hurt  the 
students  who  for  one  reason  or  another  want  to 
como  to  Caroline  but  cannot;  It  will  by  the  same 
*ok»n  hurt  the  university,  and  iH  hurt  will  be 
much  greator. 
It  has  become  axiomatic  that  a  university  must 
aUract  a  student  body  which  includes  differences 
in   background    and  interest,   fa  fact,  the    present 
day  university  finds  its  roots  in  the  ''studia  gener- 
alia"  of  the  Middle  Ages,   and  these  first  univer- 
sities were  e.-iablished  as  resorts  for  scholars  from 
all  over  Blurope. 

This  is  still  the  meaning  of  the  word  univereity 
m  Europe,  and  it  would  be  wrong  to  so  sadly  revise 
that  meaning  here. 

More  than  ever  before,  and  more  in  this  univer- 
sity than  almost  any  other,  it  is  important  that  we 
keep  our  doors  open  to  aa>  student  who  «ishe.s 
to  come. 


TUESDAY, 


Tal( 
To 
By  J. 


Vrtien 
Memorial 
he    brings 
talented    in| 
drama. 

The    repe 
Ibe     Da.ncel 
both  Limo! 
phrey.  the 
who    is    ai 
company, 
ist  on   the 
Pauline    K( 
own  compai 
group. 

ALso  witl 
cas    Hovini 
Miss    Ruth 
Nielsen  am 

Formerly 
as  a   featurl 
ing   left   ch 
the  moderni 
Limon. 

Miss  Bett 
in  his  teac) 
stitute.  Sar 
and  his  owl 

Musical 
tion,  Simonl 
cert    pianlsj 
has   had   ej 
mon  compai 
Mexico   Citjj 
Sponsorec 
tertainment 
Limon  danc 
sented  free 
sentation 
■wiv^s  will 
charge,  witl 


Final  Pri 
Of  Thn 

Tlie  final 
one-act    plaij 
Playmakcrs 
at    7:30    p. 
Theater. 

The   thre 
romance,    a 
serious  play. 
charged.     a<| 
nouncementJ 


DA 

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18  Gi 


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19 

Jo 

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24 

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33. 

Pi 

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M 

TUESDAY,  APRIL  %  1957 


THi  DAILY  TAR  Hf IL 


P/k%t  tHtH 


rn 

»-» 

aily 

not 

f  of 

*.  I 

an 

by 

Dr. 
>re 

of 
Ihesc 

this 

I  else, 

>uki 

tms 
Dr. 


lori- 
are 
lower 
rc  all 

shi't 


this 
^h?   I 

em- 

>r  do 
I  their 
the 
mo. 
|r*nt 
I  and 
it 

leU.   I 

|mucb 
fcide,'" 

\s  try 
and 

Jgret 

not 

^ntific 
|pport 
.\ssn. 


[why 
net 


Grain 


of 
iHMt   I 
«h*ir 

Coo- 


is  ob- 
of  out- 
lity. 

years, 

tle^l    at 

!j>in|ily 

lincreas- 

irt  th« 
ml  »• 

■Mlt* 

ill   b« 

|ty  must 

[erenccs 

present 

fener- 

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from 

liveraity 
revise 

univer- 

that  we 

Aishes 


Talented  Group  I  ^^    ~~    '        "ZZ.       "Z 

To  Be  Brought  ^^^^""9   '"®  Campus 

By  JOSG  LimOn  ^**^  alumni  reunion  :  uon  of  the  Department  of  arts  and 

Twelve   UNC  classes,   scheduled !  Sciences  of  International  Busines 

When   Jose    Limon    appears    in  ^°  ^°^^  reunions  during  commence- 1  Machines  Corporation  will   be  or 
Memorial  Hall  Ttiursday  at  8  p.m.,  I  '"^"^  ^"  "^""6'  wi^^  bold  a  commit- :  exhibit    through    the     month     oi 
he    brings    with    him    a    company    ^^^    planning  session    here    today,  |  April, 
talented    in   both    the    dance    and   ^^  P^^^  °^  ^^^   annual  alumni  as-  j  H|i_|_g|_  MUSIC 
drama.  I  sembly  program.  *  i     „.      ,..^.  ,  „.,,  ,   _,    ,. 

-,,,.  .  .,1     The  fifth  annual  Hillcl  Festiva 

Officers    and    reunion    commit- •    ,  t^   t  u  %*    ■        n  u 

The  repertory  of  "Theater  in  tees  of  the  12  classes  have  been  °^ -'7/'*^ '"A^fJi  *'"  '^^  Tf  ' 
Iho  Dance"  includes  works  by  called  t.  meet  at  12  noon  at  the!°"  ''^'''''  ^^^^  '°^?,f\'  P*" 
both  Limon  and  Miss  Doris  Hum-  Carolina  Inn.  The  annual  business  i  ^^^J':'.^.?'"'  ^'^'"^  X^siamen 
phrey.  the  modern  choreographer  meeting  of  the  alumni  association!'"  ^"'"^'  ^^"^""''  T."'"  ^ 
.vho    is    artistic    director    of    the   will  follow  at  a  luncheon.  l^r^JT     *"^, P«"««^^"f  '"  ^• 

company.   Featured   as   guest   art-!     The  classe.-  to  hold  reunions  at  T     .      iT^'i'  T^',!;* 
ist  on  the  program  will  be  Miss  I  commencement  include  the  50-year   '"""^'^  °^  "**''^"  ^"^  Honneser. 
Pauline   Koner,    who   headed   her  |  class  of  1907,  the  25-year  class  of    ELISHA  MITCHELL, 
own  company  until  oining  Limon's^l932  and  ten  others:  '11,  '12,  '17,1     The    Elisha    Mitchell    Scientifi: 
"roup.  '22,  '27,  '37,  '41,  '42.  '47  and  '52. 

Also  with  the  company  are  Lu- ;  EXHIBITS 
cas    Hoving,    Miss    Betty    Jones,  I     ^^  exhibition  of  "Water  Colors 
Miss   Ruth    Currier,    Miss    Lavina  ■  **^  ^^^  United  States,"  painted  by 
.Nielsen  and  Simon  Sadoff.  |  ^0  of  the   worid's  leading  artists 

Formeriy  with  the  Joos  BaUeti^**  formally  opened  in  both  the 
as  a  featured  soloist.  Lucas  Hov- !  ^°'"^'^  ^"^  South  Art  Galleries  of 
ing  left  classical  ballet  to  enter '  ^^®  Morehead  Planetarium  Sunday 
the  modern  dance  field  wit;h  Jose  i     ^  P^^  ^^  ^^^  permanent  collec 


Society  will  meet  today  in  20t 
Phillips  at  7:30  p.m.  The  progran 
will  feature  talks  by  W.  J.  Koc! 
of  the  Botany  Dept.  on  "Struct  ur( 
of  the  Swimming  Spores  of  Aqua 
tic  Fungi"  and  by  E.  R.  Long  o 
the  Psychology  Dept.  on  "Prelin-. 
inary  Obser\'ations  of  Opera  n 
Conditioning  in  Chldren." 


Limon. 

Miss  Betty  Jones  assists  Limon 
in  his  teaching  at  the  Julliard  In- 
stitute. Sarah  Lawrence  College 
and  his  own  school. 

.Musical  director  -of  the  produc- 
tion, Simon  Sadoff.  is  also  a  con- 
cert   pianist   and    conductor    and  i 
has  had   experience  with   the  Li-} 
mon  company  in  its  tours  to  Paris,  i 
Mexico  City,  and  South  America.] 

Sponsored  by  the  Student  En- 
tertainment  Committee,   the  Jose 

Limon  dance  program  will  be-jMre-i  ?"^sram  ,  ,      „   ^ 

-.ented  free  to  students  upon  pre-l  ^^^  *^^"^""^  ^  •^"^^'  ^\  ^^  ^^f" 

sentation    of    ID    cards.    Student  I  ^^""  ^'^^^  '"""  ^'■°'"  "^"'^  ^'  ^  ^"' 

gu.st  21. 

Phillips   said    full   college    credits 
can   be  obtained   in   both  graduate 


Summer  Sessibn  Plans 
Announced  By  Phillips 

Summer  School   Director  Guy  B    i.re     pursuing     undergraduate     anc 

Phillips    Sunday    announced     plans   graduate   courses,    plus   other   stu 

are  moving  ahead  for  the  80th  con-    dents  from  colleges  throughout   thi 

}  secutive   summer   session   here.        !  nation,   are   expected   to   bring   thi.' 

f     The    first    term   of   the   two-term    summer's  enrollment  to  about  3.200 

will    begin    June    6    and       -^  number  of  visiting  faculty  mem 


wiv?s  will  be  admitted  with  a  $1^ 
charge,  with  a  $2  charge  to  others. ' 


Final  Presentation  Tonitei 
Of  Three  One-Act  Plays  '\ 


The  final  presentation  of  three 
one-act   plays  given  by   the   UNC '  here   as   the   first  siunmer  session 
Playmakcrs  will  be  staged  tonight    program  in  the  United  States, 
at   7:30    p.m.    in    the    Playraakers' 
Theater. 

The  three  plays  are  a  fantasy- 


bers  will  be  in  Chapel  Hill  to  teach 

summer  courses,    according   to   an 

announcement. 
In    the   School   of   Education    wil! 

be  Dr.  Louis  E.  .\rmstrong  ol 
£nd  undergraduate!  work  during  th«  j  Alabama.  Dr.  Roland  R.  Morgan, 
♦wo  6-week  terms.  |  superintendent  of  M  o  o  r  e  s  v  i  1 1  c 

This  summer's  program  wiU  mark!  schools;  Dr.  Neill  A.  Rosser.  prin 
the  80th  such  session  at  UNC  sinc«  |  ^^1*^K  of  ""3^  Mor.son  High  School 
a     -Normal    School"    was    opened    «al«igb:  Dr.  Bealer  Smotherman  oi 


Middle  Tennessee  State  College  and 
Dr.  Lealand  D.  Stier  of  Santa  Bar 
bara  CoUese.  University  of  Cali 
fornia. 


romance,    a    farce-comedy    and    a 


serious  play.  No  admission  will  be    last   summer,   a  slight   climb  from 

charged,     according     to     an     an-    the  previous  year. 

nouncemcnt. 


Since  that   first   program,  enroll 
ment  has  varied  from  year  to  year, 

but  reached  a  maximum  of  4,500  inj     Seyenty-five    teachers    of    science 
1948.  There  were  3,140  students  here ;  and    mathematics    will    study    hen 

during  the  first  summer  term  unde; 
in-ants    by    the    i^itional    Sciem^'e 


Foundation. 

Under  the  Dozier  Loan  Fund, 
qualified  teaching  personnel  ma> 
borrow  sofHcleat  sums.  to~i««vide 
ftr  the  summer  .session  expenses 
and  then  repay  at  a  small  interest 
after  empK>yment   begins. 


singl«  persons  may  be  acquired  al 
UNC  for  either  of  the  two  .summer 
terms,  which  include  Avide  areas 
of    recreational    and    cultural    fea 

turcs. 


Quarterly  Post 
Applications 
Now  Accepted 

•  Qualified   undergraduate  or  grau-| 

uate  students  interested  in  applying 

tor  editor  of  the  Carolina  Quarterly  | 

liave    been    asked    to   contact    Miss ! 

Jessie  Rehder  of  the  English  Dept.  I 

Miss    Rehder's    office    is    in    1«9 

Bingham  Hall.  j 

Those  not  being  able  to  see  Miss 

Rehder   personally    have    been   ask*- 

f.d   to   send   a   letter  of   application 

o    the    Quarterly    .\dvisory    Boaixl,' 

.11  care  of  Miss  Rehder,  before  Aprfi' 

29.  <( 

.Members   of   the   Advisory  3<>'aHP 

nclude: 

Walter  Spearman  of  the  Journal- 
ism   School;     Lambert    Davis,     di- 
ector  of  the  UNC  Press;  John  Ehle 
<f  the  Radio.   Motion  Pictures  and^j 
:olevision  Dept.  and  Miss  Rehder. 
The    new    editor    is    not    required ! 
J  come  from  the  present  staffc  ac- 
;)rdirig  to  'an  announcement. 
The    position    requires,    however, 
,ome    familiarity    with    publishing 
procedures.    The    editor    should    be 
/repared  to  work  on  the  last  stages] 
)f   the   Spring    issue    for   tliis    jear 
ho  announcement  said. 


Phi  Eta  Sigma  President 

Richard  Hill  Robinson  Jr.,  Greens-] 
joro,  Thursday  night  was  elected 
^resident  of  Plii  Eta  Sigma,  the' 
'ireihnian  equivalent  of  Phi  Beta  I 
Kappa,"  Dean  Ernest  Mackie  an-i 
.lounced  yesterday. 

The  other  newly  elected  officers 
we:  Jackie  Lee  Lawing.  Marion, 
vice-president:  .\shmead  Pringlej 
;''pkin.  Reidsville,  .secretary;  Hugh| 
Licster  Patterson.  Edenton,  treas- 
irer  and  Jack  Holland  Spain,  Green- 
ville,   historian. 

The  officers  are  members  of  the 
,'roup   of   twenty-fi\e   freshmen   do- 
iig    advanced    work.    The   group   is 
ommonly    called    "suicide    twenty- 
five." 


Valkyrie  Sing 
Honors  Taken 
By  Five  Groups 

Mangum  dormitory,  Smit}^jj|^- 
lory,  St.  Anthony  Hall  fraternity, 
he  Monogram  Cltrtr"Trtifl*?1Cft>P*  ^' 
)elta  sorority  won  the  awards  in 
he  Valkyrie  Sing  last  nigljt. 
Mangum  won  the  men's  dormi- 
Facilities    for    both    married    anditorv   division  wnth    "Songs^of   the 


Four  Freshmen  Add,ed 
For  Germans  Saturday 

The   varied  talents  of  the   Four  alternate  between   bass  and   trom- 

Freshmen,    one    of    the    country's  bone. 

most   versatile    vocal   and    instru-  Each  has  at  least  a  dual  func- 

mental  groups,   have   been   added  tion.  They  are  possessed  of  greai 

to  the  list  of  stars  to  perform  in  range  and  versatility  in  their  pre- 

Saturday's  Spring  Germans  dance-  sentations. 
concert. 


The  foursome  will  alternate 
with  the  Ray  Eberle  group  at 
both  the  3:30  to  5:30  p.m.  con- 
cert in  Memorial  Hall  and  the 
8  to  12  p.m.  dance  to  be  held  in 
Woollen   Gym. 

The  four  Indiana  boys  who  were 
discovered  by  Stan  Kenton  in 
Dayton,  Ohio,  have  been  chosen 
by  the  'readers  of  several  national 
music  magazines  as  the  nation's 
outstanding  vocal  group. 

Members  of  the  group  include 
Ross  Barbour  on  drums  and  trum-  ' 
pet.  his  brother  Don  playing 
guitar  and  sharing  the  vocal  so-  j 
los  with  Ken  Albers  who  can  also 
be  found  on  trumpet,  bass  and 
nfellophone.    Bob    Hanigan    will 


NEED  A 
HOME? 

Plenty ;  Of 
V.A.  and  F.H.A. 
Money  Available 
For  Construction 

Of 

LESCO   HOMES 

Dial  83446 

MinJnMiln  Down  Payment'  2% 


JT'S  FOR  REAL! 


by  Chester  Field 


The  Four  Freshmen 

In  addition  to  Ray  Eberl*  and   Paula  Gaorga,  the  varied  talents 
(^  the   Four   Freshmen   have   been   added   for  the  Germans  concert 
•nd   dance   Saturday   afternoon   and   night.   Pictured    above   are   the    ' 
inentbers  of  fhe  group,  Ross  Barbour,  Don  Barbour,  Ken  Albers  and    | 
'^Pteb   Fl^igan.  | 


CLASSIFIEDS 


nVE  ROOM  BRICR  HOUSE  I^ 
center  of  town  —  has  hobb; 
workshop.  Call  9458. 


MALE  AND  FEMALE  HELP 
wanted:  Summer  position.  In- 
teresting secure  position  for 
ambitious  teacher  or  college 
student.  $480  for  60  days.  Write 
P.O.  Box  1635,  Greensboro,  N.  C 


Free  Delivery 


TEACHERS   WANTED:    MAN   TO 

assist  in  coaching  football  and 
baseball,  Public  School  Music 
Teacher,  Seventh  and  Eighth 
Grade  Teachers.  Contact  the 
Principal,  Mebane  High  School, 
Mebane,   N.  C. 


DAILY    CROSSWORD 


ACKOM 

1  Elector 
6  Exclama- 
tion 
10.  Eat  awfty 

11  Kind  of  pier 

12  Culture 
medium 

13.  Coerced' 

15.  DlccuM 

csflUAlIy 

17  Astonish- 
ment 

18  Guido's  low- 
est not« 

i».  JounMir 
21.  Anieri^an 

Indiana 
24.  Anchored 
ii.  Anesthetic 

30.  L«no  knot 

31.  rtah  Mis 
33.  P»UM 

44.  Story 
3«.G«oriH' 

37.  Exist«l 
40.  Conference* 
43.  Greet 

45.  ReviM 
4€.  Growl 

47.  ProjectJnf 
roof  ed««« 
4f .  Withered 

50.tMfc       > 
DOWW 
1.  Grow.  A* 

2.S««p0ri 

(Algerte) 

3.  avU  wrqW 

4.  lUn#,J»lck- 
name 

ft  Correct 


«  Sailor 

(Brtt  ) 
7  Indian 

(Peru) 
8.  Simmer 
9  Anfle 

made 

by  fault 


20.  Emer- 
son, 
for 
in- 
stance 
27  Hate 
29.  Har- 
vests 


plane  (geol.)  32.  Rocks 

12.  Entertains  35  Erbium 

14.  Vegetable  _  («ym  ) 

10.  Pronoun  37  Wits 

20.  Needy  38.  Skin  dis- 

22.  Greek  letter  order 

23.  Dispstched  39  Cicatrix 
25.  Spawn  of  41.  Son  of 

fish  Jacob 


ERE        iifJHUaCl 
mS    UEMHHD 

HacaHB      aaa 

ujaaaa  an 

aaaaci  uuuaa! 
saciaaa  uoeub 


FOUND:  SILVER  FILGRE  EAR- 
ing  set  with  blue  stone.  Friday 
in  vicinity  of  Intimate  Book- 
shop, Phone  8-9468. 


Yr«ter4*]r'«  Am»mw 

42.  Famous 
garden 

44.  MeUlIic 
rock 

48.  Close  to 


THREE  ROOM  APARTMENT  FOR 
rent  —  summer  only.  Complete- 
ly furnished.  Near  post  office. 
Call  8-7937  after  9:00  p.m. 


Carolina  Gentleman."  Grimes  ana 

Everett   were   the   only    other   m 

tries.  Jf 

In  the  women's  dormitory  ^ivijp 

on.  Smith  won  with  its  "Gracio« 

•iving"     skit.     Carr     and     Nursjp 

lormitorieo-  were  other  entgics.  .jj. 

St.  Anthony  Hall,  the  loq^  entri 

n  the  fraternity  division,  won  with 

Songs  by  the  Thirsty  Thlftce^" 

The  Monogram  Club  skit,;';TSjgi4.e 

he  Team,  won  over  Delta   Sigma 

H  in  the  special  group  division. 

Kappa  Delta,  with  "EUoise  Comes 
o  Carolina,"  took  a  "hard  fought" 
victory  over  Alpha  Delta  Pi,  Delta 
Delta  Delta,  Chi  Omega  and  Pi 
3»ta  Phi. 


Red  Sox  Beat 
PirateS;  8-7 

FT.  MYERS.  Fla.  —  (AP)  — 
Milt  Boiling  broke  up  a  tie  ball 
game  today  with  a  10th  inning 
hbme  run  that  gave  the  Boston 
Red  Sox  an  8-7  exhibition  victory 
over    the    Pittsburgh    Pirates. 

Boiling's  10th  inning  homer  was 
the  third  of  the  day  for  the  Red 
Sox.  Jack  Jensen  and  Jim  Piersall 
both  connected  for  circuit  clouts 
in  the  first  inning. 


Tryouts  Scheduled  For  Today 

Tryouts  for  the  upcoming  Play-  director  Jurgenson^has  said  that 
njia^ers  production  of  Ibsen's  of  the  cast  of  32.  only  seven  prin- 
•H^eer  Gynf  will  be  held  in  the  cipal  players  would  be  asked  to 
dJitdoor  Forest  Theater  tomorrow  stay  on  campus  for  rehearsal  dur- 
from  4-7:30  p.m..  according  to  ing  Easter  vacation, 
associate  professor  Kai  Jurgen- 
sen  of  the  dramatic  art  depart- 
ment here. 

The  final  production  of  the  sea- 
son will  be  a  new  version  of  the 
drama,    adapted    by   director   Jur-  . 

r  u-        „j     i>«K«.^f    quirements  of  various  parts, 

gensen      from     his     and     Robert    ^ 

Schenkkan's  translation.  1      Ten  copies  of  the  script  are  now 

Twelve     persons     have     already    on  reserve  in  Wilson  Library,  the 
been   assigned   dancing   roles   and  director  said. 


STORM  WARNING*^ 

Hurricanes  are  moody,  temperamental; 

Hurricanes  peiHform  in  fits  and  starts. 
Hurricanes  have  eyes  serene  and  gentle;    ' 

Hurricanes  have  predatory  hearts.         - 
Hurricanes  attack  when  least  expected; 

Hurricanes  delight  in  cutting  whirls. 
Hurricanes  can  leave  you  broke,  dejected  . .  . 

Fimny  we  should  name  them  after  girls. 

MORAL:  Vive  la  fenune!  And  vive  le 
felG,  BIG  pleasure  of  Chesterfield  King! 
Majestic  length— plus  the  smoothest 
qntural  toba«;co  filter.  Chesterteld 
King  is  the  smoothest  tasting 
emoke  today  becaxise  it's  packed 
more  smoothly  by  ACCU-RAY. 

T«k«  yowr  pl*aswr*  MG I 

Clwsf  rfi»ld  Mtng-  »Iim»s  yov  mor* 

•ff  whcrt  yewV*  smoklns  fori 

*$S0  goa  to  DanM  J.  SuUwan.  Holy  Cnm  CalU^. 

for  Am  Chetttr  FMd  poem. 

$IIO  for  «Mty  pkOaaophical  nrae  aeeepMftir  /nM- 


emtiim.  CkttrrfuU,  P.  O.  B^21 

qU»««t«*MT«r»Tob«cc»Co. 


rork4€,N.Y. 


"This  is  an  extremely-  difficult 
show,  for  which  we  must  muster 
all  available  talent,"  he  said,  add- 
ing he  is  available  prior  to  tr.v- 
outs     for     discussion     of    the    re- 


•4  » 


Books  In  T^ 
ing-Gomg-Gohe 

Sale  (Cost 

19^  Toddy 

Thursday  What's  ieft  Wjll  Be  9i 

The  Intimate  Bookshop 

205  e.  Franklin  St.  Open  Tilf  10  P.M. 


FRIBNOLV    FASSKNQKRS    AND    DRIVCRS 
MAKK    IT    IWOP7K    FUN    TO... 

Qo  TRAILWAYS 

...opecia lists  in  'friendly 
first? -class -travel  ! 


Statistic ! 


The  other  day  our  vice  president  in  charge  of  good 

news  announced  that  someon^,  somewhere,  enjoys  Coke 
58  million  times  a  day.  You  can  look  at  this  2  ways: 

Either  we've  got  an  incredibly  thirsty 
individual  on  our  hands.  Or  Coca-Cola  is  the 
best -loved  sparkling  drink  in  the  worid. 

We  lean  to  the  latter  interpretation. 


1-w«v 
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Bottled  under  authority  of  The  Coca-Cdfa  Cotnpony  kyr 

DURHAM  COCA-COLA  BOnilNG  CO, 


"Coke"  it  o  r«9iit«r»d  trodv-mork. 


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T  R  A  I  l-W A Y  S 

The    rvUJt.f   <M   Ihe       Kru-win-'S 


^Aee  p6u# 


TMft    nAii  V    tA»    M«»l 


TUESpAY,  APRIU  9,  1757 


Special  AAU  Mile  To  Feature  UNC-State  Track  Meet 


Tabori  Will  Run  Mile 
With  Beatty,  Scurlock 


By   DAVE   WIBLE 

The  Carolina  trackmen  under 
the  direction  of  Coach  Dale  Kan- 
son  will  be  out  to  get  their  second 
conference  win  in  as  many  starts 
this  afternoon  when  they  rtieet  the 
cinder  squad  of  State  College  on 
Fetzer  Field  at  3  p.m. 

The  meet  will  be  highlighted 
with  a  v-^ry  special  event.  Tar 
Heels  Jim  Beatty  and  Dave  Scur- 
lock and  I'^rmcr  Hungarian  star 
Laszlo  Tabori  will  run  an  AAU 
sanctioned  mile.  The  event  s-chedul- 
ed  for  4:15  promises  to  be  one  of 
the  top  miles  this  section  of  the 
country  has  ever  seen. 

Jim  Beatty.  an  All,'American  in 
his  sophomore  and  juniors  years 
and  a  cinch  for  honors  this  year, 
is  called  by  Ranson.  "the  best  dis- 
tance runner  in  the  history  of 
this  area."    .• 

Beatty  ha-;  run  a  4:08.8  mile  in- 
doors and  a  4:09.4  outdoors.  Pri- 
marily a  two  miler,  he  has  conceit 
trated  on  the  mile  this  spring,  de- 
veloped more  speed,  and  should 
be  capable  of  lowering  his  time 
this  afternoon. 


Scurlock,  a  sophomore  from 
Greensboro,  will  be  running  his 
first  competiti-n  mile  today. 

A   midille   distance   man.   he   is 
considered    by    Ranson    the    beA 
such    runn«r    to    enter    Carolina. 
When  he  was  a  freshman,  he  un- 
j  officially  set  a  new  school  record 
for  the   h«lf  mile.  Last  Saturday 
aftexnoon,    he    officially    tied    the 
school  mark  in  the  440. 
I     He  has  run  a  4:23  mile  in  prac- 
tice,  but   C^ach  Ranson  feels   he 
'  can  lower  that  time  this  afternoon. 
When   asked    about   the    outcome, 
i  Ranson    said,    "These    three    fine 
I  runner o-  are  all  capable  of  running 
well  under  4:10." 

Tabori  is  the  most  experienced 
of  the  three.  ,He  has  set  many 
I  Evu?opean  and  Hungarian  records 
•  and  he  was  the  third  man  to  run 
the  mile  under  four  minutes.  He 
I  was  fourt.^  in  the  Olympic  1500 
I  meters.  His  best  U.S.  mile  is  a 
I  4:07  indoor  run  at  the  Knights  of 
I  Columbus  meet  in  New  York.  He 
'  and  his  coach,  Mihaly  Igloi  have 
■  been  working  with  Carolina  run- 
I  ners  this  s-pring. 


National  Loop  To  Have  3^ay 
Race  This  Year,  Says  Expert 


AHENTION    GIRLS! 
A  PRE-EASTER  SPECIAL 

Our  Entire  Stock  of  Lady  Manhattan  Shirts  has 

been  reduced: 

*■■ 

Oxford  Cloth  &  Ginghams— Reg.  $3.95 

NOW        •_      - ^--i-  $2.99 

Short-Sleeved  Batistes  &  Stripes— Reg. 

$5.00-NOW  $3.99 

Egyptian  Cottons  &  Linens— Reg.  $5.95 

Now        —  -  $4.99 

Most  pf  tH*s«   numbers  are  Short-SI*«vMl  &  Sl««v*l*ss. 

STEVBWS  •  SHBWfiSRD 


By  JACK  HAND 

ST.  PETERSBURG,  Fla.,  (AP)-- 
All  signs  point  to  another  terrific 
pennant  scramble  in  the  National 
League  among  Milwaukee.  Brook-  ] 
lyn  and  Cincinnati  with  the  Braves 
the  choice  here  to  outlast  the 
Dodgers  on  their  fine  pitching.       I 

Many  think  Milwaukee  has  de- 
veloped a  "second  place  complex" 
after  three  of  the  last  four  years 
in  the  runner-up  arpot.  It  is  general-  ^ 
ly  accepted  the  Braves  should 
have  won  last  year  but  "blew  ifj 

The  thinking  in  this  corner  is 
that  Manager  Fred  Haney  who  has 
been  goading  the  Braves  through 
gruelling  practice  sessions  in 
Florida,  will  have  them  ready  to 
make  a  fast  break  for  the  first 
time.  I 

The  Braves  were  the  only  club ' 
to  take  the  season  series'  from  the  , 
Dodgers  last  year,  12-10.  although 
Cincinnati  broke  even  with  Brook-  j 
lyn.  It  does  not  seem  likely  that 
Milwaukee     will     have     as     much 
trouble  with  this  years  Phillies  as 
they  did  a  year  ago.  ) 

The  age  of  Brooklyn's  regulars 
and  the  absence  of  Jackie  Robin- 
son are  the  factors  that  dropped 
them  down  a  peg  in  thi^>-  rating. 
At  this  moment,  it  is  no  certainty 
that  Roy  Campanella  has  regained 
his  old  batting  power  after  the  op- 


eration on  his  hand.  Pee  Wee 
Reese  may  need  more  rest  than  he 
did  last  year  and  Carl  Furillo  is 
in  -the  35-year-old  bracket. 

Cincinnati  has  the  same  i>ower- 
packed  lineup,  plus  an  added 
starting  pitcher  in  Warren  Hack- 
er. However  the  Redlegs  still  arc 
a«hy  on  top  .flight  pitching  and  still 
are  a  bit  concerned  about  the  phys 
ical  condition  of  Frank  Robinson, 
the  Rookie  of  the  Year  of  1956 
who  has  a  sore  arm.  and  Ted 
Kluszewski.  whio  haa  been  slow 
coming  around. 

St.  Louis  has  added  punch  in  Del 
Ennis  but  is  thin  in  bench 
strength.  If  Vinegar  Bend  Mizoll 
hits  hi.v  stride  and  Sam  Jones  can 
win  regularly,  the  pitching  should 
be  better. 

Philadelphia  has  real  good  pitch- 
ing but  little  else  while  Pittsburgh, 
the  surpise  of  last  spring,  has  a 
good  first  line  ball  club  with  only 
two  dependable  starting  pitchers, 
Bob  Friend  and  Ronnie  Kline. 

Both  the  Chicago  Cubs  and  the 
hard-hit  New  York  Giants  appear 
to  be  outdistanced  in  this  other- 
wL-h;  well-balanced  field.  If  Andre 
Rodgers.  the  rookie  shortstop, 
stands  up,  the  Giants  might  40' 
better  than  lexpected.  The  Cubs 
are  in  the  midst  of  a  major  re- 
building pr'ocess. 


Baseball,  Net 
Teams  Hit  Rain 

The  Tar  Heel  baseball  squad, 
rained  out  of  their  scheduled 
game  with  the  Maryland  Terps 
on  Saturday,  met  the  same  fate 
in  College  Park,  Md.,  yesterday 
and  the  game  was  cancelled 
once  more. 

The  Carolina  tennis  team 
journeyed  to  Winiton-Salem  for 
a  match  against  the  Deamon 
Deacons  of  Wake  Forest,  but 
met  the  same  conditions  as  the 
baseballers  and  the  match  was 
postponed. 

MURALS   TODAY 

Softball:  (4:00)  KA  vs  Phi  Gam 
(W);  Lewis  vs  Alpha  Chi  Sig;  Man- 
gum  vs.  Monogram  Club;  Kap  Sig 
vs.  Pi  Lamb;  Phi  Delt  vs.  Beta; 
(5:00)  Med  Sch-1  vs  Joyner-1;  Ruf- 
fin  vs.  Phi  Delt  Chi;  Winston  vs. 
Dent  Sch-1:  Graham  vs.  Old  East; 
Delt  Sig  vs  DU. 

Tennis:  (4:00)  Joyner  vs.  B-V-P; 
(5:00)  Law  Sch-1  v.v  C^)bb; 

Horseshoes:  (7:00)  Sig  Nu  vs. 
DKE;  SAE  (W)  vs.  Winner  (Beta 
vs  DKE)  (W);  (7:40)  Law  Sch  vs. 
Dent  Sch. 


COME  AND  G£T  IT! 
I've  Still  Got  ESSO  EXTRA 


at 


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Sanforized  cotton  cords  or  khaki  slacks 14.95 

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COLUMBIA  —  (AP)  —  Th« 
I  outstanding  man  and  woman  ama- 
1  teur  athletes  of  the  Carolinas  were 
j  honored  .at  a  banquet  last  night. 
The  occasion  was  presentation 
:  of  the  Teague  Awards  to  Dave 
:  Sime  of  Duke  University  and  Lee 
j  Skidmore,  teenage  Columbia 
I  swimmer. 

{      Sime    is    Dukes    da^h    star.    He 

j  was   here   yesterday   to   play   with 

the    Duke    baseball    team    against 

I  the   University   of  South  Carolina. 

Miss  Skidmore,  now  in  a  girls' 

school   in   Florida,   flew  home   for 

the  banquet. 

The  15-year-old  daughter  of  Earl 
Skidmore,  Columbia  city  parks  rb- 
creation    specialist    in    charge    of  j 
swimming,  already  is  training  for ' 
a    chance    at    the    1960    Olympics 
team. 

Sime  missed  the  1956  Olympics 
when  he  pulled  a  muscle  painfully 
in  early  tryouts. 

He  holds  the  world  mark  for 
the  220  yard  dash  of  20.0  seconds, 


and  has  run  the   100  yard  dash  in 
9.3. 

The  two  were  selected  in  a  poll 
of  sportswriters   of  the    Carolinas. 

The  banquet  was  sponsored  by 
the  Columbia  Lions  Club  with  Doe 
Phillips,  football  great  of  Erskine 
College  40  years  ago.  heading  the 
program  of  sprakers.  j 

The  annual  awards  are  in  mem 
ory    of    Judge    Lewis    Teague    of 
High  Point,  N.  C,  longtime  AAU 
official. 


-  WINNERS  - 

Milton's    Spring    Sweepstakes 

MR.   BERT  DAVIS 

MISS   PATRICIA  CARTER 

MILTON'S 
Clothing  Cupboard 


Cinemascope 


,-ta  »" 


tlH* 


••nt,. 


tk<  mki  il  <-I(uk.  liik-fiMitf  SUIEirillliC  SMU 

NOW  PLAYING 


Frosh  Lose,  3-0 

The  Carolina  Frosh  baseball 
team  played  only  4V3  innings  of 
a  scheduled  regulation  game 
Nvith  the  North  Carolina  State 
Wolf  lets  and  dropped  a  3-0  de- 
cision in  Raleigh   yesterday. 


LAST  CALL! 


All  clothes  that  have  been 
here  for  a  yoac  or  more  will  be 
•old  for  altorttion  charges  be- 
fore Easter  if  not  called  for. 

It  is  more  than  a  pleasure  to 
do  buslneu  with  you,  but  we 
must  rid  ourselves  of  these 
clothes.  We  would  hate  to  sell 
your  suit,  pants,  or  sport  coat 
to  sonteone  else,  but  we  must 
if  you  don't  claim  them.  So  want 
you  come  by  and  make  sure 
that  you  have  picked  up  all 
your  things. 

PETE    THE   TAILOR 

Specializing  In 
"Ivy   Leagueizing" 


OPENS  WEDNESDAY 

[MarioD*/ Alonoco 
<  fife  Cobbj  ,n 

I  THE  LIFE  t  MUSiG 

OF  ClUStPPE  

\tHt  •  IIT„v,i„t  MILTON   CROSS 
lOttllt  •  1*  TrlvJala    Cueil   Ccmmtnlata, 


Deboroh  KERR  •  Robert  MITCHUM 


Heaven  Kpo^.  Mr  Allison 


.CBio  k,  oi  ij>i  V.INbmaScoPE 


Siiead  Would  Take 
Ford  in  Short  Game 


ay  MERCER   BAILEY 

AUCUSTA.  Ga.,  (AP)  —  Doug 
Ford,  who  just  added  the  Masters 
title  to  the  PGA  crown  he  collect- 
ed in  1855,  has  earned  the  repu 
tation  as  the  golfingest  golfer  in 
the  game.  And  he  has  no  piano-  to 
ease  off  on  his  workhorse  playing 
schedule  just  because  he  now  is 
one  pf  the  "ifr.  Bigs." 

"I  think  We  owe  it  to  the  spon- 
sors,' Ford  explained  after  his  re- 
markable closing  66  vaulted  him 
past  pace-setting  Sam  Snead  and 
into  the  green  coat  emblematic  of 
a  Mastera'  triumph. 

One  of  the  most  active  of  the 
touring  .pr:>fessionals,  the  husky, 
round-faced  Ford  played  121 
rounds  in  1955,  a  PGA  record. 

This  year  he  won  the  Los  An- 
geles Open,  flew  to  Panama  and 
won  a  tourney  there,  then  flew  to 
Caliente  for  his  third  tournament 
in  as  many  weeks.  He  has  played 
every  tournament  on  the  winter 
circuit  except  one,  when  he  flew 
home  to  Yonkers,  N.Y.,  because 
one  of  his  three  children  was  ill. 

Although  Ford  is  a  glutton  for 
golf,  he  is  making  it  pay  rather 
handsomely.  The  $8,500  check  he 
pocketed  for  his  Masters  triumph 
yesterday  brought  his  1957  win- 
nings to  $25,684  this  year.  That  av- 
erages out  to  more  than  $260  a 
day,  seven  days  a  week. 

Snead  was  well  on  his  way  to- 
ward an  unprecedented  fourth 
Masters  championship  until  Ford 
let  loose  "with  a  barage  of  birdies 
which  clipped  six  strokes  off  par 
over  the  sprawling,  rugged  Au- 
gusta National  course. 

Snead,  noted  for  his  long  game. 


said  he'd  take  Ford  against  any- 
body around  the  greens.  And 
Ford's  short  game  was  what  won 
for  him. 

He  exploded  out  of  a  trap  at  No. 
18  and  the  ball  plunked  neatly 
into  the  cup  for  a  birdie.  Ford 
called  jt  "the  greatest  a-hot  I  ever 
made."  He  chipped  into  the  cup 
for  a  birdie  on  No.  8  and  blasted 
out  of  a  trap  at  the  ninth  within 
a  foot  of  the  cup  for  his  par. 

Ford's  66  was  the  finest  final 
round  ever  sKat  in  the  Masters 
and  made  his  chart  read  73-73-72- 
66—283.  Snead,  leading  the  field 
by  two  strokes  and  Ford  by  three 
starting  the  final  round,  scram- 
bled to  a  par  72  for  a  286  total 
and  second  place.  Jimmy  Demaret, 
the  golfing  grandfather  who  holds 
three  Masters  titles,  shot  a  clos 
ing  70  for  287  and  third  place 
and  natianal  amateur  champion 
Harvie  Ward  took  a  73  for  288. 

Although  Ford's  victory  was  a 
thrilling  one,  the  21st  Masters  will 
be  remembered  equally  well  as  the 
one   in  which   Ben   Hogan, 


bod's  imported  French  lisle  wash- 
able sport  shirt  flatterins  fit,  In  nine 
virile  coiort.  «lw«ys  fresh  looking. 
"tnt-slMpt"ribbad  collar  and  cuffs. 
ItngtheMd  "stay-in"  shirt  tail. 

$7.95 
Red,  Heather  Grey,  Navy,  Black, 
Carolina  Blue,  dive.  Tan  Heath- 
er, White,  and  Canary. 

Julian's 

COLLEGE   SHOP 


Howard  Johnson  Restaurant 

STUDENT    SPECIALS 

Barbecued    Chicken 
»  Choice  Steak  Sandwiches 

2:00-    5:00  P.M 
8:00-11:00  P.M. 
'Landmark  For  Hungry  Tarheels" 


SERVED 


QUALITY  COSTS   YOU  LESS 

AT  BELK-LEGGETT-HORTON-CHAPEL  HILL'S  SHOPPING  CENTER 


.»••   :'u«   •  '  ■  >'^'. 


Repeating  A  Sell  Out 

MEN'S  COTTON 

CORD  SUITS 


Sorry  we  couldn't  take  care  of  the  crowd  on  the  greatest  suit 
buy  in  Chapol  Hill  .  .  .  These  cotton  cord  suits  t^  the  latest 
thing  in  college  styles.  Lightweight  for  spring  artd  summer 
wear,  with  three-button  coat  and  pleated  or  ivy  pants.  Easy  to 
wash  and  iron,  and  wrinkles  smooth  out.  A  terrific  buy  at  this 
low,  low  price.  .      ••      , 


^v.* 


Regular 
$29.95 
Value 


$ 


15 


88 


Comple  Selection  -:•  Dacron-Wool  -:-  Dacron  Cotton  Suits  $34.95  Up 


MEN'S 


Cotton   Cord   Slacks 


These  Dan  River  wrinkle  shed  slacks  are 
the  most  for  the  money.  Ivy  league  and 
pleated  styles,  absolutely  fast  color,  never 
shrink  out  of  fit,  easy  to  iron,  need  no 
starch,  and  many  more  wonderful  feetures. 
Come  to  BELK'S  and  save  .  .  . 


4 


$^95 


R(^lk-Leggett-H()ii()M{'o. 


West  Franklin  St. 


Chapel  Hill,  N.  C. 


'.it; 


tJ  K   C  LIBn.\T?Y 
SFHTALS    DEPT. 
CMAPEL    HILL,    M.    C. 
8-3X-49 


WEATHER 

Sunny  mkI  warm«r  with  an  ex- 
pected high  of  65. 


3ni)  e  3)aUu  li^rar  Mt  1 1 


GRADUALISM 

The  editor  urges  it  on  page  2. 


VOL.    LVII    NO.    163 


Complete  iA^  Wirt  Strviet 


CHAPEL  HILL,  NORTH  CAROLINA,  WEDNESDAY,  APRIL   10,  1957 


Offict$  in  Grahgm  MemarM 


FOUR   PAGES   THIS   iSSUf 


Teacher  Pay  Raise  Student  Legislature  PassGs  Budget 

Asked  By  Hodges 


RALEIGH — (AP) — Gov.    Hodges    and    determine    what   each   county 


vff^to  a  joint  House  and 


Tuesday  asked  the  General  As- 
sembly to  raise  the  pay  of  school 
teachers  15  per  cent  and  other 
state  workers  11  per  cent,  but  he 
cautioned  the  lawmakers  against 
badsting  the  pay  figures  any  high- 

*'■       V 

Speaiim^^ii 

Senate  sessi^  at  noon,  Hodges 
said  he  was  willing  to  take  a  "cal- 
culated risk"  that  the  state's  ec- 
ohomy  would  produce  sufficient 
rtvenues  to  avoid  a  deficit  in  fu- 
ture years  "in  order  to  provide 
these   salary   raises." 

But.  he  added.  "I  caution  you 
.  .  .  that  you  go  any  higher  on 
these  and  other  figures  would  be 
very  risky  and  a  course  of  action 
of  vv'hich  I  could  not  willingly  be 
a  part." 
OUTLINES  PLAN 

The  Govern  r  outlined  a  plan 
to  rais.e  25  million  dollars  to  pro- 
vide the  pay  raises  and  to  leave 
about  1^4  million  dollars  "which 
can  be  used  for  other  appropria- 
tions and  contingencies." 

Reaction  among  he  lawmakers 
was  favorable.  Some  predicted  it 
would  be  followed.  Others  prais- 
ed the  Governor's  proposals  as  a 
big  tep  toward  solution  of  the 
pay  problem  while  they  reserved 
a  decision  as  to  whether  they 
would  support  it. 

In  his  spe2ch  the  Governor 
touched  on  his  proposals  that  lo- 
cal governments  assume  a  great- 
er share  of  school  support.  He 
urged  the  lawmakers  as  part  of  a 
long-range  program  to  /create  a 
commission  to  study  tli>  question 
of    "school    support    at    all    levels 

Lima's  Group 
To  Perform 
Thursday  Night 

Jose  Limon.  who  has  been  re- 
garded by  many  as  the  top  male 
mcdern  dancer  in  the  Americas, 
will  appear  in  Memorial  Hali  to- 
morrow night  at  8  p.m. 

Appearing  with  Limon  as  fea- 
tured guest  artist  will  be  Pauline 
KOner,  known  as  one  of  the  fore- 
most dancers  of  the  day. 

Lucas  Hoving,  M'us  Betty  Jones, 
Miss  Ruth  Currier  and  Miss  La- 
vina  Nielsen  will  also  appear  with 
the  c:;mpany. 

Limon's  Dance  company  has 
been  considered  one  of  the  cul- 
tural assets  of  this  country  and 
is  featured  on  major  artistic  sc- 
rips annually. 

Mu 'leal  director  of  the  produc- 
tion is  Simon  Sadoff. 

Pauline  Lawrence,,  wife  cf  Jose 
Limon,  designs  and  creates  the 
costumes  for  the  fepertoire  of  the 
company. 

Miss  Doris  Humphrey,  modern 
choreographer,  is  artistic  director 
of  the  company. 

The  Jose  Limon  dance  program 
is  sponsored  by  the  Student  Enter- 
tainment Committee.  Students  will 


can   afford   t©   pay   for   its   school 
costs,     building     operations     and 
teachers"  salaries. " 
"ALMOST  OPPOSITE" 

He  said  some  folks  had  accus- 
ed him   of  wishing  to  unload  the 

;  state's  burden  on  the  counties  and 
cities  but  "I  would  like  to  say  that 
our  thinking  is  almost  the  oppo 
site." 

Hodges  stated  that  after  he 
study  is  made  "the  total  coists  of 
buildings,  operating  expenses,  and 
teachers'  salaries  could  be  allo- 
cated between  the  state  and^  the 
100  qounties  based  on  each  coun- 
ty's ability"  and  then  the  state 
"would  put  up  so  many  millions 
of  dollars  which  would  be  given 
to  counties,   by  formula   prescrib- 

j  ed  by  law." 

.  This  would  assure  "a  good  min- 
imum program,"  the  Governor  ad- 
ded. Then  any  school  district 
which  wished  could  "supplement 
salaries  or  enrich  its  school  pro- 
gram" as  it  saw  fit. 
COMPARISONS 

The    increased    salaries    recom- 
mended by  the  Governor  compar- 
ed  with   a   9.1    per  cent  raise   for    ^ith  Coach   McGuire  for  the  aud- 
teachers  and  8  per  cent  for  state    ience's  benefit. 


Final  Total  Of  $114,369.90  Approved 
As  22nd  Assembly  Concludes  Sessions 

Measure  Against  Hike 
In  Tuition  Approved 


Coach  McGuire 
Honored  At 
Ceremonies 

Coach  Frank  McGuire  was  dou- 
bly honored  Monday  night  when 
he  was  tapped  into  the  Order  of 
the  Golden  Fl?ece  and  presented 
with  the  Monogram  Club's  trophy 
as  an  indication  of  his  selection 
as  Coach  of  the  Year. 

The  dapper,  smiling  Irishman 
was  presented  with  the  Coach  of 
the  Year  trophy  by  John  Bilich. 
president  of  the  Monogram  Club 
after  a  whimsical  "Salute  to  the 
ream"  which  brought  the  entire 
basketball  team  to  the  stage  along 


employees  he  and  the  Budget 
Commission  originally  proposed. 
It    alsn    compares   with    19.31    p^ 


Actually,  the  award  was  an- 
nounced earlier  in  the  season  at 
the  annual   Blue-White  game,  but 


cent  requested  by  the  State  Board    due   to  Coach   McGuires  required 


Germans  Club 
Elects  Cherry 
As  President 


By  PRINGLE   PIPKIN 

In    a  lame   duck  session   of  the 
Mark  Cherrv  of  PhV  Delta  TheU  '  ^^^^^^"^  Legislature  ,  a  budget  au- 


named  president  thorizing  the  expenditure  of  $114.- 
369.90  was  passed  with  minor 
changes. 


fraternity     was 

of  the  German's  Club  recently  for 

the  upcoming  year  1957-58. 


Also   installed   by   the  Club   for  ; 
next    rear's    activities    were    Dave 


paint  costing  $247.35  was  strongly 
attacked. 


of  Education  for  teachers*  and  15 
per  cent  asked   by  state .  employe 
representatives. 
The  Governor  stuck  by  his  guns 


presence  in  New  York,  the  actual 
presentation  was  delayed  until 
Monday. 

Earlier,  as  a  result  of  the  moun- 


in  urging  tha  the  pay  raise  for  ting  tension  and  the  great  esteem 
state  employes  be  allocated  ac-  felt  for  the  Carolina'  coach  here, 
cording  to  a  formula  forked  out  the  audience  rose  and  applauded 
by    the    Sate    Personnel    Council.  '  >"  an  unprecedented  asknowledge-^ 

— — ^- ' —  j  ment  of  McGuire's  recognition  by 

the  S^ety. 

When    asked    to    speak    a    few 

"WJHfe"  rdl}»«t^rh"e*1pi'^ese1Trafion.' 

McGuire    said    he    was    more    sure 

than  ever  that  "Carolina  students 

were  the  best  in  the  world." 


Coach  Receives  Award 

Basketball  Coach  Frartk  McGuire  is  all  smiles  as  he  receives  the 
trcphy  for  Coach  of  the  Year-;  from  the  Monogram  Club  President 
John  Bilich.  The  presentation  was  made  at  the  annual  tapping  of 
the  Golden  Fleece  and  the  Valkyrie  Sing.  McGuire,  along  with  the 
varsity  members  of  the  team,  w;as  also  initiated  into  the  men's  honor- 
ary. ; 
L . 4^-A : — , . 

OF  PRESIDENT  FRIDAY: 


The  budget  for  the  University 
Club,  which  is  rej-ponsible  for  Car- 
olina pep  rallies  received  the  great- 
Moye  of  Sigma  Nu-vice  president; ;  ^^^  revision.  The  item  of  washable 
Thad  Bostic.  Kappa  Alpha,  sec- 
retary, and  Kelly  Manness.  Beta 
Theta  Pi.  treasurer. 

I     Frank  Inman,  President    of  the 
The  new  officers     will     be     in- 1  Ui.iversity  Club,  said  that  the  paint , 
stalled  following  the  Germans  next    ^^uld    be   distributed    to  the    slu- 1 
fall.  The  program  finale  this  year  jents    so    that    thev    could    paint  ] 
will   feature  a  program  highlight    ^^^^^  ^^  t^eir  cars  before  pep  ral 
ed  by  the  Four  Freshmen  and  Ray    n^,   ^jig  appropriation  for  that  it 
Eborle's  'Serenade  in  Blue"  band. 


was  next  with  S28.235.  then  The 
Daily.  Tar  Heel  with  $23,000.40. 
The  following  organizations  receiv- 
ed more  than  one  thousand  dol- 
lars and  less  than  two:  Carolina 
Forum.  Debate  Cbuncil.  Carolina 
Handbook,  Interdormitory  Coun- 
cil. Foreign  Student  Leadership 
Program,  and  the  Carolina  Quar- 
terly. 


Integration 
Is  Favored 


em  was  cut  to  S70.60. 


The 


WoClasseifScheduf^d^ 
For  May  8  Inauguration 


Four  Freshmen,  who  are.  Representatives  John  Brooks 
considered  to  be  one  of  the  coun-  I  tried  to  increase  the  appropriati  ^n 
try's  most  versatile  vocal  and  in  ;  f^r  the  Debate  Council  by  $1,000 
strumenal  groups  will  alternate  go  that  it  would  equal  the  request 
with  the  Eberle  group  at  both  the  ■ 

3:30  to  5:30  p.m.  concert  in  Me- 
morial Hall  and  the  8  p.m.  to  12 
micfnight  dance  to  be  held  in 
Woollen  Gym. 


An  added  attraction  to  the  en-  j 
tertainment  will  be  provided  by : 
■thf  diistaff  THCwIWr  of  ()w  Ebe/te; 


*  JOSE    LIMON 

.  .  .  top  nwdern  dancer  here 

be   admitted    free   upon    presenta- 
tion of  ID  cardj. 

Student   wives   admission    is   $1 
and  others  wUl  be  charged  $2. 


Run-Off  Election 


As  a  resultof  a  run-off  election 
held  yesterday.  Ed  Levy.  Univers- 
ity Party,  and  Phil  Gerdes.  Stu- 
dent   Party,   were   elected    to   the'Fahm 


news 

m 
brief 

War  Continues 

TEL  AVIV,  Israel— (AP)—Tr- 
my  headquarters  said  today  an 
Israel  patrol  sought  a  running  bat- 
tle with  five  Jordanian  infiltra- 
tors intercepted  three  miles  in' 
side  Israel  territory  *at  Beit  Guv- 
rin. 

A  spokesman  said  the  maraud-  ■  formal  reception  for  delegates  and 
ers  escaped  across  the  border,  i  out-of-town  guests, 
carrying  one  of  their  number  who  |  There  will  be  a  luncheon  for  del- 
was  hit  by  Israeli  fire.  Beit  Guv- L^ggipj,  gnj  special  guests,  includ- 
rin  is  a  settlement  in  central  Is-  j  j^g  faculty  and  participating  stu- 
rael  about  25  miles  southwest  of  fjents. 
Jerusalem.  |     Fjrmer     University 

The  spokesman  also  said  anoth- 1  Gordon  Gray  and  Dr.  Frank  P. 
er  t^roup  of  Jordan  infiltrators  Graham  will  be  speakers  for  the 
crossed    the    border    at    Umm    El  :  affair.         -    ■ 

about    40    miles    northeast       As    many    student.'    as    possible 


organization,  Paula  George,  who 
is  a  relatively  new  recording , 
artist.  Miss  George's  voice  has , 
been  favorably  compared  to  that } 
of  popular  Julie  London.  < 


A  holiday  is  in  store  for  UNC 
students  on  Wednesday.  May  8, 
when  William  C.  Friday  is  inaugu- 
rated as  Consolidated  University 
president.  \       . ,     ;    ^  , 

There  will  be  no  clajscs  and  all 
offices  will  be  closed  on  tUat  day, 
according  to  Mrs.  Frances  McCon- 
nell.  personnel  assistant  in  the 
Consolidated   University   office. 

The  inauguration,  which  will 
take  place  at  Reynolds  Coliseum 
in  Raleigh,  is  scheduled  as  follows; 

The  academic  procession  begin,> 
at   10:30  a.m.   followed   by   an   in 


be  an  unreserved  .section  for  them, 
said  Mrs.  McConncli. 

UNC  has  been  asked  to  provide 
50  ushers  for  the  ceremony,  as 
was  State  College  in  Raleigh  and 
Woman's  College  in  Greensboro, 
student  body  President-elect  Son- 
ny Evans  announced  Tue.-Jay. 

Evans  asked  that  anyone  inter- 
ested in  ushering  to  contact  the 
student  government  office. 


Through  passage  of  special  or- 
ders, the  legislature  passed  a  re- 
solution putting  that  body  on  re- 
cord as  opposing  the  Ross  Bill 
to  increase  out-of-state  tuition 
$200  per  year. 

Rl^  Wi  M,  »mt  -.»<  Boavford's 
bill  is  now  bofore  the  Joint  Ap- 
propriations Committee  of  the 
G«noral  Assembly. 

This    paper,    like    tho    Consoli- 
dated  University  Administration 
•nd  the  Student  Legislature,  un- 
alterably opposes  the   Ross   Bill. 
The  Editor 


Outgoing  officers  this  year  have 

expressed     hopes     the     weekend  \ 

ahead  will 'prove  the  best  of  two  j 

previously    successful    and    enjoy- 1 

able  Germans  celebrations. 

I  proposed  that  the  grant  be  increas- 

They  have     urged     the     entire  '  ed  by  $500  in  order  to  equal  last 

campus  of  Carolina  to  attend  this  j  year's  $1,532. 

final  affair  and  to  join  in  making 


it   a 
son. 


climax   to   a   successful    sea- 


student   legislature   as  representa- 
tives from  Dorm  Men's  I. 


of  Tel  Aviv,  and  'stole  a  flock  of    have  been  urged  to  attend  the  in- 
150  sheep.  auguration    activities.    There    will 


Student  Party  To  Elect 
New  Officers  Tonight 

The  Student  Party  will  elect  new- 
officers  at  a  meeting  to  be  held  in 
Roland  Parker  I  at    7:30  p.m.   to- 
day, according  to  Sonny  Hall  ford, 
present  party  chairman. 
I      Hallford   said   he   would    like   to 
Presidents   encourage  all   members,   new   and 
old,  to  be  present  at  this  meeting. 
"This  i..'  a  very  important  meet-  , 
ing    and    there    are    several    other  j 
matters    of    business    to    be    dealt 
with  in  addition  to  the  election  of  i 
new  officers,"  Hallford  said.  ' 


Cheerleader  Tryouts 

Frankie  Black,  newly-elected 
head  cheerleader,  has  announc- 
ed that  everyone  Interested  in 
trying  out  for  cheerleader  next 
year  is  invit-»d  to  attend  a  meet- 
ing in  Kenan  Stadium  tomorrow 
at  3  p.m. 

Instruction  will  be  given  those 
interested  from  that  time  until 
after  the  spring  vacation.  Black 
said.  No  previous  experience  is 
necessary,  he  added,  and  no  one 
will  be  dropped  until  af^er 
spring  vacation. 


Duke  University's  law  school 
student.'  voted  37  to  .30  Monday  in 
favor  of  integration  of  the  races 
at  Duke  and  adopted  a  resolution 
calling  upon  upwn  the  university 
trustees  to  "discontinue  forthwith 
discriminatory  practices,  if  any, 
based  on  race,  color  or  creed." 

The   resolution   was   adopted   by 
the  Duke  Bar  .Assn.,  after  lengthy 
debate,  with  76   of   the    120   mem- 
bers   of    the    group    present,    but 
with   nine  abstaining   from   voting. 
I      The  resolution   a>ks   for   an   end 
I  to    discriminatory   practices   in  all 
•  college  ..schools     and    colleges    of 
I  Duke    Uni"ersit3'.    and    specifically 
iCquests   that    applicatiftns   for   ad- 
mission to  the  university  omit  any 
reference  to  race,  creed  or  color. 

The    resolution    adopted    yester- 
day    follows     similar     re.olution-. 
pa.ssed    in    recent    month.s    by    stu 
dents  cf  the  Woman's  College  and 
a^iH^MH^HBHi^^Hm^BHaMiM    ^^^  Divlnity  School   at   Duke.  The 
ed  amount.  Speaker  Sonny  Evans    Petition    by    the    Divinity    School 

students  asking  for  an  end  to  seg- 
regation   in    the    Divinity    School 
was    rejected    by    the    university's 
I  trustees  in  January. 

Ask^d  for  comment  on  the  ac- 
tion by  the  law  students.  Dr.  A. 
Hollis  Edcns,  president  of  the  uni- 
versity, said:  "Yes.  I  have  heard 
that  the  law  .students  have  ex- 
pressed their  opinion,  which,  of 
j  couhse,  is  their  right.  It  seems  to 
me  that  the  student  action  speaks 
for*  itself,  and  I  .>'ee  no  need  for 
ad(iitional  comment." 


The  Orientation  Committee  re- 
ceived an  increase  of  $220  to  make 
its  final  budget  81,438.50.  The 
changes  included  $125  for  special 
events  which  would  include  an  ac- 
tivities session  in  Lenoir  Hall  for 
the  new  students. 

Brooks  recommended  that  the 
Foreign  Student  Leadership  Pro- 
gram appropriation  be  placed  un- 
der the  Ebcchange  Scholarship  it- 
em.  Favorable   action   was   taken. 

A  bill  giving  the  Carolina  Coffee 
Shop  $100  for  property  destroyed 
during  a  pep  rally  Nov.  23,  was 
passed.  The  property  was  valued 
at  $197.45. 

Graham  Memorial,  receiving 
$41,325,  got  the  greatest  percent 
of  the   budget.  The  Yackety-Yack 


Brooklyn  Wins 

TLT.S»^,  Okia..  April  9.  'JH— 
Charlie  Neals  two-run  double  olf 
Corkcy  Valentine  with  one  out  in 
the  ninth  climaxed  a  four-run 
rally  by  the  Brooklyn  Dodgers  %o 
overcome  the  .Milwaukee  Braves, 
5-4.  today,  ft  ended  the  Brooks 
four-game  losing  streak. 


SKIT,  SURPRISES  AND  SPEECH  FEATURED  AT  SING 


•     -J  r^-  -         .  •  :.   ■'  ■  • 

■    ,    C-^    '^       ■  "^^ V  m 

^)•^     i'^:,,      1..     ■      -a^^                    -■'."■ 

1     '                                                                                     -     .'    .                                    •         ' 

^D^^^^^^^^l^^^^^^^^^£f                                 ^  ^*^<^  v'^*-  J?^5^  ^'^'J^^^^k        '  .^bI^^^^^^h 

pl^^2 .  '■' 

'yfwKmiBKKUHSi 

HHHHHT  I'^riHI 

ELOISE  AND  CAST 

,  ,  .  win  sorority  division 

Photo  by  Norman  Kantor 


THE  "BASKETBALL  TEAM' 

.  .  .*' fights  hard' 
~  Photo  by  Norn^an  Kantor 


JONATHAN  DANIELS 

.  .  .  nabbed  by  giant 


AFTER  THE  TAPPING 

k  .  .   House   addresses   fleece 


Photo  by  Woody  Seara 


Photo  by  BiU  King 


^A6I    TWO 


THi  DAILY  TAR  HECL 


WEDNESDAY,  APRIL  10,  IfS^ 


WEDNEi 


Integrational   Gradualism 
And  The  Souths  Consctence 


"\o  man  ever  becatne  extreme- 
ly   wicked   all  at    once."— Juvenal, 
fake    time    enough:    all    othei 
g;races 

Will  soon  fill    up  their  proper 
places."— John    By  ram. 

We  believe  in  the  integrity  of 
man.  reoardless  of  race,  color  or 
creed. 

But,  in  reference  to  Juvenal's 
(juotable  quotation,  we  also  be- 
lic\c  that  the  South  has  but  a  few 
years  to  go  before  educational  de- 
segregation   is   feasible. 

The  wicked  institution — slav- 
ery—was introchic-ed  into  our  land 
alniast  as  soon  as  settlers  landed 
in  fainestown,  the  approximate 
date  is  Uiio. 

Before  it  was  uprooted  justly  by 
President  Lincoln's  Emancipation 
Proclamation,  it  had  sunken  its 
tap  roots— from  an  economic  stand- 
point— into  soutliern  cotton  fields. 
From  the  standpoint  of  justice  and 
the  integrity  of  man,  such  rooting 
was  completely  unjust.  From  the 
standpoint  of  economics,  such 
rooting  was  practical  to  the  plant- 
er and  beneficial  to  the  unlanded 
and  primitive  Negro. 

After  Lincoln's  Proclamation, 
slavery  was  imavoidably  continued 
in  a  semi-feudal  condition  known 
as  tenant  fanii(|gK.  This  semi-feu- 
dal but  necessary  condition  h,  of 
course,  still  in  existence  today: 

All  this  background  merely 
points  out  and  applies  Juvenal's 
(juotation.  The  evil  conditron  of 
racial  inequality  didn't  suddenly 
loom  out  of  the  night. 
'  Nor  can  such  racial  inequality 
and  inifairness  be  eradicated  by 
one  fell  swoop,  the  Ma'\',  1954  Su- 
preme Court  decision. 

At  this  point  Burom's  quotation 
(tmcerning  'time"  must  be  ap- 
olied  to  the  problem. 

Tlu-  nation  needs  a  breathing 
s|hII  after  such  a  far-reaching  de- 
« isicjn.  The  South  needs  time  to 
catch  its  breath. 

^Ve  believe  with  a  policy  of  gra- 
dualism  as    is   siipjxisedlv    and   os- 


tensibly being  put  into  effect  un- 
der the  North  Carolina-  Pupil  As- 
signmerft  Law,  our  state  will  in- 
evitably "fill  up  its  proper  plac- 
es." 

The  fact  of.  llie  matter  is,  howT 
ever,  that  the  Fupil  Asi&igntnent 
l^w  isn't,  we  contend,  being  prop- 
erly put  into  effect. 

The  fact  of  the  matter  is,  how- 
ever, that  the  Pearsall  ^lan  is  a 
hopeless  and  grasping  struggle  to 
avoid  the  Supreme  Law  of  the 
Land. 

The  fact  i)f  the  matter  is,  how- 
ever, that  "administrative  remed- 
ies" to  avoid  "hardships"  by  coun- 
ty and  city  boards  under  the  Pu- 
pil .Assignment  Law  are  not  being 
justlv  applied. 

We  believe  that  the  Pupil  As- 
signment La-w,  whereby  Negroes 
and  Whites  alike  are  theoretically 
assigned  to  schools  to  which  their 
locale  is  appurtenant,  is  tlie  grad- 
ual solution  to  the  desegregation 
problem.  We  believe  it  the  only 
sane  solution  at  present. 

But  the  law  must  be  executed' 
without  partisanship.  The  quest- 
ion, can  the  l.-^nv  be  applied  fairly 
without  prejudices  seeping  in? 

\Ve  shall  attempt  to  be  optimis- 
tic and  hope  the  integiity  of  man 
shall   prevail. 

We  shall  hope  and  prav  that  the 
southern  conscience  shall  pre\'ail 
for  the  good  of  all  men,  without 
fanaticism  bv  the  National  Assn. 
for  the  Advancement  of  Colored 
Peoi^le.  without  retrogressive-  re- 
action by  the  Patriots?  of  North 
Carolina. 

If  the  southern  "integrity"  con- 
science doesn't  prevail  but  fails  as 
it  did  under  the  separate  but  eq- 
ual mvth,  then  we  shall  hope  and 
pray  for  further  inevitaible  litiga- 
tion. 

Yel,  hopefully,  we  remind 
agains 

"Take  time  enough;  all  other 
graces 

"Will  soon   fill   up   their  proper 
places." 


Golden   Fleece  Tapees: 
Carolina   Contributors 


The  tortunate  students  who 
were  tapped  into  the  Order  of  the 

The  Daily  Tar  Heel 

The  official  itudem  publication  of  tbe 
Pubhcations  Board  of  the  University  of 
N'nrth  Carolina.  wi»«re  it  is  published 
daily  except  Mondaj  and  examinatio; 
■  nd  vacation  period's  and  summer  terms 
Catered  as  second  class  matter  in  tb« 
oost  office  in  Chapel  Hill.  N  C.  undei 
ihe  Act  oi  March' )^.  1870  SubsrriptJOB 
rates  mail«d.  S4  p«)^  y«>ar.  $2  ISO  a  !teniei 
ter;  d«»ltv*»r»>d  ^.  ^*'a«'  M  ^  »  "^m** 
t*r 


Editor   : 

rv^ NEIL  BASS 

Managing  Editor 

....    cL\RKE  JONES 

Associate  Editor 

NANCY  HILL 

Sports  Editor  .. 

__.  BILL  KING 

News  Editor 

WALT  SCHBUNTEK 

Business  Managel^JOHN  C.  WHTTAKER 


Advcrtisi:,:^  Manner  _    FRED  KATZIN 


f  DITORIAL    SttffT  -  Woody 
Joey  Payne,  Stifco  Shaw. 


Scan, 


NEWS  STAFF— G|aham  Snyder,  Edith 
MacKinnon,  Px!iigle  Pipkin,  Bob  High, 
Ben  Taylor,  H.  Joost  P&Iak,  Palsy  Mill- 
er, Wally  Kuralt,  Bill  King,  Curtis 
Crotty. 


BUSINESS  STAFF— John  Minter,  Marian 
Hobeck,  Jane  Patten,  Juhnny  Whitaker. 


SpORTS  STAFF:  DaVe  WiWe,  Stu  Bird, 
Ed  Rowland,  Jim  Crownover,  Ron  Mil- 
ligan. 


Subscription  Manager 
OrculatioD  Manager  . 


.  Dale  StiMy 
CharUe  Holl 


Staff  Photographers  Woody  Sears, 

Norman  Kantor 
Librarians...  Sue  Gichner.  Marilyn  Strum 


Night  News  Editor  .^ 

::^ight  Editor 


.„.  Bob  High 
Bill  Weekes 


Golden  Heecc  last  night  were  all. 
we  feel,  con tribn tors,  each  in  his 
own  way,  to  the  Ciarolina  Wav  ol 
life  of  which  we  are  proiid. 

The  fifty-plus  year  old  organi- 
zation outdid  itself  in  an  extragan- 
za  which  lasted  almost  two  hours. 

Though  the  impressive  cere- 
mony was  evidently  well-planned, 
students  began  to  be  restless  tow- 
ard its  conclusion.  We  wonder  if 
perhaps  recognition  of  thirty  peo- 
ple at  one  fell  swoop  isn't  .too 
much  of  a  good  thing. 

The  record  -  breaking  number 
may  indicate  that  there  are  more 
outstanding  students  on  campus 
than  ever  before.  We  hope  so. 

We  agiee  with  the  Fleece  that 
the  basketball  team  was  a  major 
contributor  toward  forwarding  the 
principles  of  good  sportsmanship 
for  which  college  athletics  must 
strive. 

But  we  do  feel  this  top  honor- 
i:tv  soiietv  should  make  its  stand- 
ards for  admittance  a  little  more 
well  known.  Some  students  ap- 
peared a  bit  confused  as  to  en- 
trance qualifications. 

We  wonder,  too,  whether  tap- 
ping "in  absentia"  is  wholly  effec- 
tive. 

The  tapping  evidently,  however, 
was  the  culmination  of  liiuch  time 
aiid  effort. 

For  such  time  and  eliort  the 
Fleece  is  to  be  congratulated. 

To  students  not  tapped,  the  or- 
ganization's symbol  and  recogni- 
tion should  be  an  added  incentive 
to  put  forth  renewed  effort  toward 
forwarding  our  University's  aca- 
demic standing,  student  govern- 
ment and  standard  of  honor. 

Our  heartiest  congratulations  to 
the  new  initiates. 

Yours  is  a  much-coveted  honor. 
The  mantle  of  recognition  which 
was  cast  upon  your  -shoulders 
should  make  you  redouble  your 
efforts,  not  become  complacent. 
Our  University  and  society  in  gen- 
eral look  forward  to  big  things 
from  you. 


New  Coliseum: 
With  Woollen, 
Why  Get  One? 

Whit  Whitfield 

Last  Saturday  a  girl  stopped 
me  in  Y-Court  and  said,  "I  cer- 
tainly do  agree  with  your  article. 
I  don't  see  why  we  need  a  new 
Student  Union  building,  'cause 
nobody  uses  the  one  we've  got. 
We  ought  to  have  a  new  gym  in- 
stead. 

I'm  afraid  that  she  didn't  quite 
get  the  point  at  first,  so  I'll  try 
■again.  She  said  we  needed  a  new 
gym.  lliis  has  been  the  senti- 
ment of  Carolina  basketball  fans 
everywhere  since  the  "McGuire 
Elra"  began.  It  is  a  major  topic 
of  conversation  at  game-time,  in 
Y-Court,  in  the  Coffee  Shop, 
T«npo  Room,  Spiro's,  and  dormi- 
tory bull  sessions. 

It  is  said  that  McGuire  was 
promised  a  new  gym  before  his 
arrival  at  the  Hill.  (A  campaign 
promise,  no  doubt.)  Anyone  can 
make  promises — even  Democrats 
and  Republicans. 

To  get  back  to  the  young  lady 
I  mentioned  earlier,  I  must  say 
f<^  her  edification  as  well  as  for 
others  who  might  be  interested, 
that  we  do  not  need  a  new  gym 
any  more  than  we  need  a  new 
Student  Union  building.  Here'  are 
just  a  few  of  the  reasons: 

To  alumni  and  friends  of  the 
University  who  visit  the  Hill  dur- 
ing basketball  season.  Woollen 
<Jym  is  typical  of  the  other 
structures  on  campus  —  quaint 
rustic,  antedated,  archaic,  an- 
tique. These  are  just  a  few  of 
the  adjectives  to  describe  Wool- 
len. It  is  in  a  proper  setting 
with  the  other  buildings  on 
campus  to  say  the  least. 

As  for  the  basketball  facilities 
inside  the  plant,  they  are  as  good 
as  ever.  The  bleachers  are  quite 
comfortable  still,  and  Fm  sure 
that  everyone  prefers  them  to 
individual  seats. 

Just  because  the  bleachers  sur- 
round the  court,  and  feet,  little 
boys,  and  wires  are  within  centi- 
meters of  the  play  means  noth- 
ing This  is  to  be  expected.  On 
layups,  some  players  land  in  the 
bleachers,  but  they  are  usually 
not  hurl,  so  why  worry?  Photog- 
raphers often  get  stomped,  but 
who  wants  pictures  of  UNC 
games  in  the  papers?  Our  press 
box  ranks  favorably  with  other 
garret  structures  of  that  nature 
in  other  schools  (i.e  junior  high, 
'^grammar,  etc.) 

•  For  those  who  get  tired  dui*- 
ing  the  game,  they  can  stand  in 
line  and  really  be  exhausted  hj 
no  time.  < 

Thirsty?  The  Monogram  Club 
is  only  a  quarter  mile  away  and 
the  Scuttlebutt  is  just  a  little 
farther.  The  walk  is  most  health- 
ful, if  you  don't  mind  missing 
the  second  half. 

Wake  Forest.  Duke,  and  State 
have  adequate  structures  for  the 
type  basketball  played  in  the  Big 
Four.  Don't  you  think  we  do? 

It  is  perfectly  alright  for  A-L 
to  see  the  Duke  game  and  M-Z  to 
see  the  State  game.  You  can  see 
all  the  games  by  just  changing 
your  name  several  times.  Simple 
enough,  isn't  it? 

All  in  all,  I  don't  think  the 
nation's  number  One  team  needs 
a  new  coliseum  to  play  in.  They 
can't  field  but  five  men  at  a 
time,  and  five  men  dont'  take  up 
much  room. 

• 

L'il  Abn«r 


RETORT  TO  RETORTS: 


Reader  Defends  Dr.  George 


Mr.  Editor:  ^ 

Your  recently  published  criti- 
cisms of  Dr.  George's  Dartnjouth 
College  address  have  ranged 
from  the  blandly  inane  "parable" 
of  the  brown  monkeys  to  an  at- 
tack the  contents  of  which  in- 
cluded a  remark  more  often  in' 
scribed  on  the  wal's  of  a  public 
lavatory  than  on  the  editorial 
page  of  a  respectable  newspaper. 

In  airing  their  views  on  your 
pages,  some  of  his  critics  even 
go  so  far  as  to  decry  the  exer- 
cise of  the  same  privilege  by  Dr. 
George.  No  doubt  Dr.  George  has 


long  since  learned  that  often 
those  who  preach  the  virtues  of 
tolerance  are  not  so  tolerant  of 
opinions  that  conflict  with  their 
own.  ' 

There  was  a  time  at  our  uni- 
versity when  Junius  Scales,  no- 
torious Communist  leader  and 
one-time  UNC  student,  was  laud- 
ed and  even  worshipped  here  be- 
cause of  his  "individualism." 
While  the  Scales-sponsored  Karl 
Marx  Study  Grou^  was  widely 
applauded  and  even  given  rec- 
ognition in  the  Yackety  Yack. 
Dr.  George  and  the  Patriots  are 
described    in    your    columns    as 


"neither  patriotic  nor  American 
nor  Christiah." 

While  I  do  not  purport  to  com- 
pare any  mortal  favorably  with 
Christ,  and  while  I  recognize 
that  Bible  references  are  in  great 
disrepute  among  our  enlightened 
student  body,  I  am  reminded  of 
how  "the  chief  priests  and  eld- 
ers persuaded  the  multitude 
that  they  should  ask  Barabbas, 
and  destroy  Jesus." 

Yet  despite  these  -caustic  at- 
tacks upon  Dr.  George,  some  of 
us  admire  and  respect  him. 

WILLIAM  P.  CHESHIRE 


'Reilly,  Cinderella!  We're  Not  Made  Of  Money!" 


;■*  >  ,  •  '.v»  ■*> 


FROM  THE  DAILY  TEXAN: 


Editor  Calls  For  Academic  Freedom 


April  1  through  April  7  has 
been  set  aside  by  the  National 
Student  Association  as  Academic 
Freedom  Week. 

This  week  provides  the  mo- 
mentum and  the  concentrated 
motivation  for  a  clear  definition 
of  the  student's  relationship  to 
the  university — his  rights,  privi- 
leges and  responsibilities.  It  gives 
the  student  the  opportunity  to 
view  closely  and  earnestly  his 
role  in  education — in  his  own 
and  in  the  international  student 
community. 

Academic   Freedom   is   only   a 


part  of  the  total  of  all  freedoms 
— the  freedom  to  live,  study  and 
work  in  a  democratic  communi- 
ty free  from  the  restructions  of 
religion,  -race,  politics  and  eco- 
nomic status.  Just  as  the  student 
has  certain  responsibilities  to  his 
educational  community,  so  does 
the  community  owe  to  him  cer- 
tain rights,  privileges  and  re- 
sponsibilities. 

It  must  create  an  atmosphere  of 
free  inquiry  and  intellectual  de- 
velopment. 

It  must  insist  on  the  presence 
of  opportunity  to  study  all  sides 


of  all  juestions   objectively. 

It  must  insure  the  fulfillment 
of  the  individual's  capabilities  as 
a  person,  a  student,  a  scholar,  a 
citizen. 

It  must  encourage  the  realiza- 
tion of  the  responsibility  owed 
to  society  by  the  educated  per- 
son. 

Academic  Freedom  must  be 
preserved  whereever  it  is  found 
....  It  is  found  in  the  dormitory, 
in  student  government  and 
wherever  the  quest  for  knowl- 
edge lives. 


• 

By  a:  Capp 


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WHAT  DROVE  HIM 
CRAZ>/  — 


^  —AND  GOT  HIM  KICKED 
OFFA  THE  POLICE 
FORCE,  SO  WE  GOX 
KJO  RALS  BUT  ME.T 


A  MILLION -DOLLAR 
WATCH,  IN  ATEN- 
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HOW  CAN  WE 
GET  IT  our— 


vmEN    ^ 

VOUR  EVES 
GPDWOXD 
LIKE  THAT, 
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FRIGHTENS 


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Writer  Tips  Hat 
To  'Caligula'  Cast 


Cort  Edwards 

The  newly  formed  Petites  Dramatique  presented 
an  electrifying  and  an  unforgetable  performance 
of  "Caligula"  as  their  first  production  in  Graham 
Memorial  Sunday  night. 

Like  Brooks  Atkinson  said  in  the  New  York 
Times,  "As  Chekov  once  Observed  sagaciously, 
'There's  no  making  out  anj-thing.' "  Wet  would  Hke 
10  add  the  same  comment  to  the  performance  of 
Caligula  as  he  did  about  "Brigadoon." 

He  said,  "Only  a  little  while  ago  we  wiere  be- 
laboring the  City  Center  (not  ua-similar  to  Graham 
Memorial)  for  a  dull,  inept  performance  of  John 
Gay's  TTie  Beggar's  Opera!,'  (and)  now  f.^e  are 
swearing  eternal  allegiance  for  a  captivating  pro- 
duction of  Brigadoon  (Caligula)." 

There  were  no  miscasts,  no  bad  acting,  no  slips, 
no  poor  -timing,  no  bad  set,  it  was  just  one  tre- 
mendous performance. 

The  first  scene  opened  at  the  state  room  in  the 
Imperial  Palace  of  the  Roman  Emperor  Caligula. 
Instead  of  seeing  a  costly  set  of  ancient  roman 
splendor  placed  in  a  comer  of  he  lounge  in  Graham 
Memorial,  here  was  a  theatre-on-the-round.  That 
is,  the  stage  was  sitting  in  the  middle  of  the  lounge 
with  the  audience  seated  completely  around  it.  The 
actors  and  actresses  got  on  and  off  st3S0e  by  using 
one  of  the  four  isles  left  open. 

Although  this  type  of  staging  is  tlie  mo.st  dif- 
ficult to  do  effectively,  the  lack  of  props  and 
scenery  added,  through  the  stage  managing  of  Miss 
Hope  Sparger,  to  the  intensity  of  the  drama. 

In  addition  to  this  type  of  staging,  instead  of 
t(^as  (or  togi)  the  cast  wore  tuxedos  and  cock- 
tail dresses.  This  modem  version  made  an  old 
play  into  a  new  and  exciting  one. 

Caligula,  the  emperor,  had  lost  his  sister  (whom 
he  was  sleeping  with)  and  with  it  he  lost  his 
sanity.  His  new  goal  in  life  was  to  r-jach  the  moon 
for  only  the  impossible  was  obtainable. 

The  members  of  the  court  were  talking  of  this 
new  role  tlie  emperor  was  playing  and  how  to 
take  it.  As  the  play  progressed  Caligula  really 
became  obnoxious.  He  had  Lepidus'  son  put  to  death 
to  show  his  affection  to  Lepiduns.  He  then  made 
love  to  Mucius'  uife.while  Mucius  stood  there  with 
an  open  mouth.  •--— 

Caligula  grabbed  hold  of  Lavinia.  the  wife,  ex- 
cused himself  from  the  meeting,  said  that  he  had  to 
go  perform  a  natural  function  with  Lavinia  and 
dragged  her  off.  Interestingly  enough,  he  also 
dragged  with  him  three-fourths  of  the  audience, 
who  by  this  time  were  left  grasping  in  their  seats. 

Before  the  play  is  over,  however,  he  atones  for 
.his  sins  by  poisoning  one  of  his  staff  and  then 
strangling  his  mistress  Caesonia  on  top  of  the  main 
prop,  a  coffee  table. 

In  ^e  third  act  the  men  were  getting  tired  of 
Caligula  and  decided  to  do  him  in.  which  I  guess 
they  did:  but  then  the  light  were  out. 

As  each  act  ended  the  audience  of  250  people 
were  too  shocked  and  tense  to  applaud.  Applause 
w  IK  an  after-thought.  After  the  first  act  the  audi- 
ence remained  staring  at  the  stage  after  the  house 
lights  went  up.  The  final  five  minute  ovation  was 
only  a  small  token  of  appreciation  for  the  perform- 
ance, perhaps  because  the  shock  still  had  not  worn 
off.  .  .  ^    .  ,     .  \ 

Caligula,  played  by  Lloyd  Skinner,  started  out 
in  the  first  act  speaking  too  fast  and  repeating  him- 
self too  often.  However,  in  the  second  and  third  act 
he  did  a.  perfect  job. 

Casesonia,  played  by  Page  Williams  (a  tall 
Romanesque  beauty  in  her  own  right),  was  equally 
professional  in  her  performance  of  Caligula's  worn 
out  mistress. 

If  we  had  to  pick  out  one  best  role  of  acting, 
which  would  be  a  very  difficult  job,  we  would  have 
to  give  a  bouquet  of  roses  to  Lavinia  (Miss  .\manda 
Meiggs)  for  her  performance  in  the  rape  sequence. 

There  were  three  other  outstanding  perform- 
ances which  deserve  honorable  mention.  TTiey  were 
Cassius  (Robert  Ketler,  whose  pantos  were  too 
short),  Lepidus  (Al  Gordon),  and  Scipio  (Samuel 
Baker). 

There  was.  however,  one  weak  part  in  ihe  play. 
It  was  not  bad,  bu\  was  weak  enough  to  merit 
comment.  Cherefc.  played  by  Taylor  Williams,  was 
much  too  harsh  and  haughty  in  the  first  two  acts, 
and  we  feel  that  it  took  a  little  something  from 
the  whole  performance.  He  seemed  too  anxious  to 
be  good. 

Tlie  rest  of  the  players  M'ere  good  enough   to 

deserve  a   special   mention.     They     were     Musius 

(James  Sechrest).  Helicon  the  rhubarb  eater  (Leon 

Rooke),  Mereia  (George  Hill),  Cassius'  wife  (Miss 

Hope    Sparger),    and    the    poets    (Joel   Fleishman. 

John  Ludwig,  Darwin  Soloman). 

« 

Last  of  all.  we  would  like  to  heap  flowers  on  | 
Miss  Bettina  Jinnette.  the  director,  who  spent  many  • 
hours  in  perfecting  the  hit  performance  of  Caligula.   '. 

We  are  anxiously  awaiting  the  next  performance  . 
of  the  Peties  Dramatiques.   and  if  it  is  only  half 
as  good  a.s  was  Ca1ig«ila,  then  it  .ftill  would  be  an 
excellent  performance. 


STATIST 

Di     H.j 
Sweden 
ing  profj 
listics  zi 
speak  at 
M-:nday 
Hall.  Hel 
concerni| 
typo  of 
spoi.se  .\ 
ans  and 
curved 
invited. 
FAREI 

AH  orj 
L'NC  M« 
held  in 
vance  o| 
School 

progTj 
of  N. 
ning  atl 


10' 


,  * 


0,  1*S^ 

[at 
ist 


?sciited 
)rniance 
Graham 


|w   York 
Mously, 
luld  like     "^ 
lance  of 


ere  be- 
I  Graham 

)f  JKihn. 
|ve    a  re 

>g   pro- 


lo  slips, 
me  tre- 


in  the 
^aligula. 

roman 
iClraham 
That 

lounge 

it.  The 
|y  using 


\f^A  dif- 
^ps    and 

of  Mi55 

la. 

|5tead  of 

id  cock- 

an    old 


(whom 

lost    his 

^he  moon 


;  of  this 

how   to 

la    really 

to  death 

ien  made 

Ihere  with 


wife,  ex- 
he  had  to 
iTinia  and 
he     also 

audience. 

Jeir  seats. 

•tones  for 
and  then 
the  main 


tired  of 
•h  I  guess 


50  people 
Applause 
the  audi- 
the  house 
ation  was 
perform- 
not  worn 


tarted  out 
iating  him- 
d  third  act 


s  (a  tall 
as  equally 
ula's  worn 


of  acting. 

ould  have 

ss  Amanda 

sequence. 

perform- 
Thej  were 
were    too 
(Samuel 


n  the  play, 
to  merit 
Jiams,  was 
t  two  acts, 
thing  from 
anxious  to 


enough  to 
re  Musius 
ater  (Leon 
wife  (Miss 
Fleishman. 


ilowcrs  on 
spent  many 
of  Caligula. 

performance 
[s  only  half 
rould  be  an 


r 


WEOMCSDAY,  APWL  tO,  tWT 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HtlL 


PA6t  THftlt 


Cov^ing  The  University  Campus 


STATISTICS  COLLOQUIUM 

Di.  R  Robert  van  der  Vaart  of 
Sweden  and  Amsterdan,  row  visit- 
ing professor  of  Ebcperimental  Sta- 
tistics at  N.  C.  State  College,  will 
speak  at  the  Statistics  Colloguium 
Monday  at  4  p.m.  in  206  Phillips 
Hall.  He  will  talk  on  "Some  results 
concerning  the  estimation  of  the 
type  of  quadric  to  be  fitted  to  re- 
sponse ^-jrface  data."  All  statistici- 
ans and  others  interested  in  fitting 
curved  surfaces  to  data  have  been 
invited. 
PARBMTS-  DAY       * 

AH  organizational  meeting  of  the 
L'NC  Medical  Parents'  Club  will  be 
held  in  connection  with  the  obser- 
vance of  Parents'  Day  at  the  UNC 
SciMK^.of  Ifedicine  Saturday. 

RegistrattHl  for  the  day-long 
program  will  bMeld  in  the  lobby 
of  N.  C.  Mentoriali^ospital  begin- 
ning at  9:30  a.m.  The  organization- 


HI-FI 

Recordings 

OF 
SOUND  &  FURY'S 

TWEVES' 
HOLIDAY 

Tf»  Oriler: 

XaU  S^U 

-Or  tU>iyie  By 

"CM. 

Information  Office 

Between  9 'A.M.-1  P.M. 

Thru  Saturday,  i^rll  13 

10"  LP ^2.50 

RCAl^fCTQR 

New  Orthophonic 


la)  meeting  will  be  held  at  ll  a.m.  i  Thursday  night  by  Willard  W.  Gat- 
[  following  a  tour  of  the  hospital ^  chell,  general  counsel  for  the  Fed 
;  and  School  of  Medicine.  The  Rev.  eral  Power  Commission  in  Wash- 
!  Samuel  H.  Howie   of  Fayettevillfe  |  ington,  D.  C. 

twill  preside  at  this  meeting.  Gatchell  will  speak  at  8  p.m.  in 

NEW  OFFICERS  [Manning  Hall  Courtroom  on  "Some 

New  officers  have  been  elected  i  Attractions  for  the  Lawyer  in  Gov- 
at  the  spring  meeting  of  the  N.  C.  i  erraneni  Service."  Arrangements 
Physical  Therapy  Aj^n.  held  at  Me-  j  for  his  talk  are  being  handled  by 
m.^rial  Hospital  here.  j  the  LSA  speakers  committee,  head- 

The    new    officers    are    Charles  ;  ed  by  Jerry  A.  Campbell. 
Schuch,    Raleigh'    president;    Mrs.  j  HEALTH  SERIES 
Lucy   Straw,   Gastonia,    vice-presi- !      "Project  Health,"  the   series  of 
dent;    Miss    Jean    Gregory,    Ashe-  j  television  shows  on  various  aspects 
ville,  secretary;   Miss  Amy  Camp- '  of  health  will  be  ^.laged  this  week 
bell,    Fayetteville,    treasurer    and  i  hy  the  Hearing  and  Speech  Center 
Miss  Anne  Parrish,  Raleigh,  direc- :  of  N.  C.  Memorial  Hospital  here, 
tor.  j     This  program  will  originate  live 

•ANNIVERSARY  from  the  N.  C.  Memorial  Hpspital 

Dr.  Dorothy  C.  Adkins,  chairman  tin  the  L'NC  campus, 
of  the  UNC  Dept.  of  Psychology,  FELLOWSHIP 
has  been  invited  to  participate  in  ■  The  Inter-Varsity  Christian  Fcl- 
the  celebration  thi„-  week  of  the  lowship  will  meet  tonight  at  7  p.m. 
jSOth  anniversary  of  the  School  ofUn  the  Choral  Rehearsal  Room 
j  Education  at  Ohio  State  Univer-(108)  in  Hill  Hall.  Bill  Dcalon  will 
isity.  lead  a  discussion  on  the  Beck  ol 

I     She  is  one  of  three  persons  hold- '  Philippians.  All  interested  persons 
{ ing  Ph.D.   degrees  in  psychology  have  been  urged  to  attend. 
from   OSU  who  will   lecture   and]  ORIENTATION 
I  bold    informal    con.<!ultation    with 
I  faculty  and  graduate  students. 
I  LAW   STUDENTS 


The  Orientation   Committee 

needs   girls   to   help   with   typing 

any   afternoon   for   the    next    few 

The  L^w  Students  Assn.  at  UNC ;  weeks   and  would  appreciate   any 

will  sponsor  a  public  address  on   '^^^P  offered,  according  to  a  recent  j 

'^^^m^^m^mi^m^^^m^^^^mmmL '  ^"°^"°*^^''^®nt.    Evetyonc  interest- ' 

I  ed  has  been  asked  to  contact  Miss  j 

■"'■^■"■^^■^■■^■^^■■■'■'■^"  I  Mary  Jane  Fisher  in  319  Mclver  ' 
— ■— ^-■^— — ■— —  i  8-9134.  i 

GRAD  CLUB  | 

The  Graduate  Club  will  sponsor ' 
a  party  Friday  at  8  p.m.  in  the  I 
basement  of  Cobb  dormitory  fea- 
turing  the  S^Dimension    Band    of  I 
Bob  Olson.  ! 

Dancing,  entertainment  and  re-j 
freshments  will  highlight  an  in- 
formal program  open  to  all  gradu-  j 
ate  students,  faculty  members  ad- 1 
ministration  members  and  older  i 
undergraduates  over  age  21. 


AT  VAlKYRrE  SING: 


Tfouble-Ma^er  '£lotse' 
Wins  Trophy  for  KD's 


PATRONIZE  YOUR 
•    AI^VERTISERS    • 


Psychology  StMdents'  Best  Friend 

Tarheel,  the  mascot  of  Uf^'s  graduate  students  in  psychology, 
.appears  to  be  the  object  of  a  ^tudy  concerning  whether  his  "aggres- 
sive" traits  are  due  to  heredity  or  Environment.  While  the  studeht* 
debate  the  question,  Tarheel  hopefully  begs  for  snacks  and  ice 
cream. 

Mascot  Slightly  Phobic 
After  Recent  Encounter 


DINNER  JACKETS 

OR 

TUXEDOS 

FOR    RENT   OR   SALE 
single  Or  Double  Breasted 


I Yl 


■I 


arieys 

Mens  Shop. 


THE    NEW   YORK  LIFE   AGENT 

ON  YOUR  CAMPUS 
IS  A  GOOD  MAN  TO  KNOW 

George  L  Coxhead 


UNC,   '42 
A    Mutual    Company 


Campus  Representative 
Founded   1845 


NEVIf  YORK  UFE 


Concert  Bond 
Leaves  Today 

The  University  Concert  Band 
will  leave  this  morning  for  a 
three-day  coneert  tour  of  western 
North  Carolina  and  will  play  a 
series  of  seven  eagacenents  dur- 
ing the  spring  session. 

Morning  and  afternoon  concerts 
are  scheduled  for  Asheboro,  Lex- 
ington. Hickory,  Mooresville  and 
Greensboro,  and  evening  programs 
will  be  given  in  Lenoir  and  Win- 
ston-Salem. 

The  programs,  conducted  by 
Director  Herbert  W.  fYed,  will  in- 
clude original  handworks,  trans- 
criptions, "pop"  tunes,  novelties 
and  solos. 

This  year's  spring  tour  is  spon- 
sored jointly  by  the  University 
Music  Dept.  and  student  govern- 
ment. 


By  CHERRY  PARKER 

He  "ain't  nuthin'  '"  but  a  cur 
dog.  However,  Tarheel,  unofficial 
mascot  of  UNCs  graduate  students 
in  Psychology,  is  a  special  sort  of 
cur  dog. 

Tarheel,  also  called  "Pavlov""  by 
a  few  students,  wao-  born  in  a  cage 
at  the  Ciba  Pharmaceutical  Lab  in 
New  Jersey  where  his  mother  was 
an  experimental  animal.  Ted  Hol- 
den,  who  was  then  working  for 
Ciba,  thought  he  was  such  a  cute 
little  beast  that  he  claimed  him. 

When    Tarheel    was    six    weeks 
old,    and   Ted    came    south    to    do 
graduate  work,  he  brought  the  dog 
with'  him. 
GOOD  QUESTION 

Tarheel  very  soon  began***  to 
show  traits  interesting  to.  psychol- 
ogy .-.-tudents.  It  is  a  good  question 
as  to  whether  his  traits  are  due 
to  his  heredity  or  his  environment. 

"He   has    a   tail  like   a  chows,"' 
Holden  says,"'  and  like  a  chow,  he 
has     an     aggressive     personality."  I 
Tarheel   ha^?  often   been   known   to 
challenge  larger  dogs  to  duals. 

"I  think  he  is  pseudo-aggres- 
sive," another  student  says.  "Have- 
n't you  noticed  how  he  hides  "un- 
der a  japonica  bush  jf  he  thinks 
the  other  dog  means  business?.^'. 

Someone     else     answers^     *IBul 


[that's  only  since  he  has  twen  'con- 
ditioned.' "  It  seems  one  month 
ago  Tarheel  spent  a  week  at  the 
Vet's  after  an  encounter  with  a 
boxer  twice  his  size,  and  he  haa 
been  slightly  phobic  ever  since. 

The  talk  goes  on.  Meanwhile, 
Tarheel  sits  and  begs  for  snacks 
and  ice  cream.  (He  will  eat  choco- 
late, but  he  prefers  vanilla.) 

And  it  is  evident  it  doesn't  re- 
ally matter  if  he  is  phobic,  or  ag- 
gressive or  even  dependent.  Be- 
cause Tarheel  serve.-  a  purpose  to 
the  p.sychology  students,  and  they 
serve  a  purpose  to  him.  They  are 
"mutual  reinforcement"  to  each 
other. 


Show,  Monteitli 
In  Competition 
For  Medal 


uAILY    CROSSWORD! 


AdUMW 

I.TurkUh  tlUe 

4.  Rumple 
10.  i>un  pAiiw 
ll.Prectoua 
•tone 

12.  Pluck  fuiUr 
strings 

13.  Bfff  •alMptd 

14.  Wlllliit 

15.  Dried  frap« 
l«.  You   (dUl. 

vw.) 

17.  Flaminf 
Ufht 

l».  l^bltc  iMtiee 

30.  Thrash 

21.  Devburcd 

21.  lUls* 

24.  Arbor  . 

24.  Operate 

27.TtUe  «t 
respect 

24  Jtwteh 
month    - 

2«.Sm«UMll 

Si.Giri's  nick- 
name 

33.  Velvet 
35.  Send  out 
37.Chotee 

group 

34.  Old  woman 
3*.  Part  «t 

ehair  k«ck 

40.  Reigning 
beauty 

41.  Russian 
news 
agency 

43.  ReguUted 
the  pitch 
DOWN 

1.  Courtyard 

2.  Land  meaa- 
ure 

3  Walk  slop- 
pily 


4.  Oarm^nt 

22.  Most 

border 

coura- 

S.Uke 

geous 

4.  Motion 

23.  German 

pIc- 

measles 

turc 

24.  Storage 

7.  Java 

place 

tree 

25.  Me- 

4. Glut 

thodi- 

».Slim 

cal 

12.  cunning 

27.  Girl's 

13.  Rowing 

name 

imple- 

29. Mongrel 

ment. 

dogs 

15.  Beam 

SO.CMn 

14.  Youth 

(Swcd.) 

SO.Bog 

31.  Maiiced 

21.  Solemn 

32.  Indian 

wonder 

(UUh) 

YMlcfftejr'*  Aat««r 

34.  A  series  df 
bluish  roeiu 

34.  Burrowing 
animal 

34.  Letter 

40.Ba<ric 
(aM>r.) 


CDA's  Annual  Festival 
Begins  At  2  Tomorrow 


Featured,  production  in  the  Car- 
olina Dramatic  Assn.'s  annual  fes- 
tival here  tomorrow  through  Sat- 
urday will  be  the  Seaboard-Jack- 
son Neighborhood  Players'  presen- 
tation of  a  new  play  by  noted  Car- 
olina writer,  Bernice  Kelly  Hanis, 
of  Seaboard. 

The  play,  entitled  "Yellow  Color 
Suit",  will  be  given  at  the  Play- 
makers'  Theater  Friday  at  8  p.m. 

The  34th  annual  festival,  which 
will  include  25  plays,  will  begin  at 
2  p.m.  tomorrow  and  continue 
through  the  final  se^'sion  Saturday 
at  7:30  p.m.  All  performances  will 
be  held  in  the  Playmakers'  The- 
ater and  an  admission  fee  of  $.50 
will  be  charged. 

"Yellow  Color  Suit",,  directed  by 
Gewge  Harris  of  Seaboard,  was 
adapted  by  Mrs.  Harris  from  part 


CLASSIFIEDS 


TEACHERS  WANTED:  MAN  TO 
assist  in  cfoaching  football  and 
baseball.  Public  School  Music 
Teacher,  Seventh  and  Eighth 
Grade  Teachers.  Contact  the 
Principal,  Mebane  High  School, 
Mebane,  N.  C. 


THREE  ROOM  APARTMENT  FOR 
rent  —  summer  only.  Complete- 
ly furnished.  Near  post  office. 
Call  8-7937  after  9:00  p.m. 


of  her  nov!;],  "Hearthstones',  pub- 
lished in  1048,  which  developed 
from  a  short  story  in  Colliers  in 
1942.  Mrs.  Harris'  novel  "Purs- 
lane" won  the  Mayflower  Cup.  and 
jix  of  her  plays  have  been  pub- 
lished as  "Folk  Plays  of  Eastern 
Carolina". 

The  Playmakers  have  had  all  of 

her  ,  plays   at   Chapei   Hill   at    one 

time  or  another,  several  of  which 

have  won  awards,  such  as  "Three 

Foolish    Virgins".    The    new    play 

will  be  the  first  representing  Sea- 

l>oard   9t  the   CDA  Festival   since 

1939,  although   three   members  of 

I  the  cast   have   been   appearing   in 

jf  clival     plays     since     the     early 

1  1930's.  » 

The  three-act  play  concerns  four 
elderly  sisters  during  World  War 
II  who  have  been  secluded  on  an 
island  in  Eastern  North  Carolina, 
j  isolated  from  the  rest  of  the  World 
I  since  their  fathers  desertion  dur 
ing  the  Civil  War.  In  the  cast  are: 
Blanche     Gay,     Bickley  .  Bullock, 
Frances  Magee,  Rebie  Long,  Betty 
j  Gay.  and  Byrgess  Stephenson.- 
'      A  one-act  play  by  the  Campbell 
College    playerc.-,    originally    sche- 
duled to  follcw  Mrs.  Harris'  play 
Friday  night,  has  been  switched  to 
Saturday   afternoon    at    2   o'clock. 
The  play.  "Four  on  a  Heath,"  was 
written   by  Foster  Fitz-Simons   of 
^le  UNC  Dept.   of  Dramatic  Art 
when  he  wws  a  student. 


Competition  for  the  annual  Wil- 
lie P.  Manguni  Medal  in  oratory 
will  be  held  at  8  p.m.  tonight  in 
the  Dialectic  Senate  Hall  in  New- 
West,  f 

All  graduating  seniors,  includ- 
ing those  seniors  graduating  after 
I  ^-ummer  school,  are  eligible  to 
j  compete.  ; 

At  least  two  persons  have  en- 
tered the  competition.  They  are 
Jim  Monteith,  senior  from  Sylvg 
and  Stan  Shaw,  senior  from  Ham- 
ilton. Ohio.  I 

Deadline  for  entrance  into  the 
contest  has  been  set  at  4:30  today,  ' 
it  was  announced  yesterday.  Ora- 
tion subject  must  be  submitted  to 
Dean  Mackie's  office  in  312  South 
Bldg.  before  the  deadline.  I 


By  PATSY  MILLER 

"Eioise"  came  to  college  -Mon- 
day night  and  romped  around  Me- 
morial Hall  stage  long  enough  to 
win  the  hearts  of  her  audience  and 
the  Valkyrie  sing  competition  for 
Kappa  Delta  sorority.  j 

Placing  fir.st  in  the  sorority  di  | 
vision,  the  KD's  gathered  around  j 
the    trouble-making    "Eloise,"    in ! 
the  personage   of  Miss   Pee  Wee 
I  Batten,    and    her    friends,    "Baby 
i  Doll"  and  "Hvis,"  to  escort  them 
among  the  Carolina  populace. 

When  it  was  all  over,  "Eloise  ' 
had  lived  up  to  her  billing  to  be- 
come the  "campus  rage."  j 
The    remaining    entries-    in    the] 
sorority  group,   the    largest   divi- 1 
j  sion,  presented  a  wide  variety  of 
j  harmony,  calypso  beat,  and  novel 
ty  numbers.  Skit  and  musical  com- ! 
binations  were  given  by  the  Alpha  j 
Delta    Pi's,    in    "Stairway   to    the  | 
Stars,'  the  Chi  Omega's  in  "Chi  O  i 

Evans  Supports! 
Orientation  j 
Program  Drives! 

Sonny  Evans,  president-elect  of 
the  student  body,  gave  his  full 
support  yesterday  to  the  Orienta- 
tion Counselor  program  which  isj 
currently  in  the  organizational 
processes  of  recruiting  new  mem- 
bers. 

]     In  a  statement  yesterday,  Evans 
said: 

"The  responsibilities  of  an  ori- 
entation counselor  fall  into  the 
category  of  one  of  the  real  con- 
tributions an  individual  can  make 
to  the  campus. 

"The  impression  he  makes  is 
often  the  most  lasting  one  and  for 
that  reason  it  is  important  that 
the  most  capable  and  able  people 
apply  for  the  job."  he  said. 

"With  the  expanding  student 
population,  there  is  a  correspond- 
ing expanding  need,  for  mtich  of 
a  student's  attitudes  and  feelings 
are  developed  during  that  all  im- 
portant first  week.  Adequate  at 
tention  must  be  given  to  each  in 
coming  freshman."  Evans  said. 

Jerry  Oppenheimer.  chairman  of 
the  Orienta'tion  Committee  repeat- 
ed his  announcement  of  yesterday 
that     a     meeting    of    prospective! 
counselors  has  been  po^-tponed  un-| 
til  next  Tuesday. 

The  rescheduled  meeting  will  be 
held  in  106  Carroll  Hall  at  7:30 
p.m.  Deadline  for  applications  has 
been  extended  to  that  date. 

Oppenheimer  urged  wice  again 
that  everyone  interested  apply  for 
any  of  th  120  positions  open. 

Application  blanks  may  be  se- 
cured from  Graham  Memorial,  the 
YMCA,  the  Library,  Lenoir  Hall  or 
the  Monogram  Club  and  are  to  be 
returned  to  the  Y  or  Graham  Me- 
morial. 


Calypso,"  the  Delta  Delta  Delta's 
in  "A  ^ring  Bouquet,"  and  tike 
Pi  Beta  Pti's  in  "The  Boy 
Friend." 

Mangum  in  the  uncontested 
dormitory  division  sang  "Standing 
on  the  Comer"  and  "We  Aint 
Got  Dames." 

In  the  women'i,-  dormitory  com- 
petition Smith  won  with  improve- 
ments suggested  for  Carolina  in 
their  skit  "Gracious  Living.'"  Carr 
sang  a  medley  of  songs  entitled 
"Americana." 
RETAIN  EO 

St.  Anthony's  Hall  retained  the 
fraternity  division  cup  by  singing 
a  few  close  harmony  numbers: 
"Saloon"  and  "Slow  Motion,"  Pep- 
per Tice  did  a  guitar  solo.  No 
other  fraternities  competed. 

The  Monogram  club  won  the 
special  group  division  by  humor- 
ously introducing  the  fir^-t  string 
of  the  basketball  team  and  coach- 
es. Delta  Sigma  Pi,  competing  in 
this  division,  sang  the  "Roses  of 
Delta  Sig." 

Then  the  UNC  Glee  Club  sang 
a  few  selections  and  Hoke  Simp- 
son entertained  with  his  giiitar 
and  calypso  songs. 

The  judges  were:  Miss  Sara  Q. 
White,  Orville  Campbell  and  Gene 
Strassler. 


tJNC1>riH  Team 
Places  First 
In  Competition 

The  irsc  drill  team  won  first 
place  in  the  first  annual  North 
Carolina  AFROTC  Drill  Compe- 
tition  held  here  Saturday.  Duke 
University  received  top  honors  in 
the  crack  drill  contest  portion  of 
the  program. 

The  competition  which  was 
sponsored  by  the  Arnold  Air  So- 
ciety was  composed  of  teams  rep- 

j  resenting  Duke  Uniwrsity,  N.  C 

I  State  and  UNC. 

Col.  George  J.  Smith  presented 
trt^hies  to  the  winning  teams. 
Commander  James  Howey  of  the 
i  Arnold  Air  Society  here  said  the 
I  drill  competntion  will  be  an  an- 
nual event.  He  indicated  it  will 
be  held  at  Duke  next  year. 

Competition  in  future  years 
will  include  allROTC  drill  teams 
in  the  state,  a  spokesman  of  the 
Arnold  Air  Society  said. 

Judges  for  the  drill  competi- 
tion Saturday  were:  Lt.  Col.  Basil 
L  Mishtowt  (USA).  N.  C.  State, 
Maj.  Clarence  L.  Morrison  (US- 
MC),  Duke  and  Maj.  Lawrence  C 
Norton   (USMC).  UNC. 

Following  the  completion  of 
coinpetitioBf  and  drill  events  a 
party  was  held  for  participants  in 
the  Lambda  Chi  Alpiha  House. 


Books  In  The 

Going-Going-Gone 

Sale  Cost 

19<  Today 

Thursday  Whaf  $  Left  Will  Be  ^< 

The  Inf  jmate  Bopfcshop 

205  E.  Franklin  St.  Open  Tiff   10  P.M. 


Raleigh  Student  Winner  ; 

Of  Daniels  Scholarship 

• 

Bryce  Butler  Raynor.  Jr.,  has 
been  named  winner  of  the  coveted 
Josephus  Daniels  Scholarship  to 
U.\C.  J 

Bruce  Butler  Raynoi-  Jr.,  a  mem- 
ber of  ,the  graduating  class  at 
\eedham  B.  Broughton  High  School, 
will  be  awarded  $500  per  amiimi 
for  the  1957-58  and  three  succeed- 
ing school  years.  i 

The    scholarship,    established     by 

the  late  Mr.  Daniels  in  his  will,  is 

awarded  once  every  fbur  years  io 

j  an  entering  freshman  and  is  valued 

at  $2,000  for  the  four-year  period.     | 

Selection  is  based  on  scholastic 
rank,  leadership,  participation  in! 
extra-curricular  activities,  general 
character,  need  for  financial  assis- : 
lance  and  promise  of  future  distlnc-' 
ticn. 

Raynor  is  graduating  as  nine-j 
teenth  in  his  class  of  416  and  hasj 
been  active  in  a  ntunber  of  school 
activities. 
I  He  is  the  the  son  of  Mrs.  Marit 
;  Best  Ra>Tior  and  the  late  Mr.  Ray- 
nor of  609  Mills  Street  in  Raleigh. 


Senior  Day 
On  May  1 


Graduating  seniors  will  hold  the 
annual  cefebration  of  Senior  Day 
this  year  on  Wednesday,  May  1, 
according  to  Publicity  Chairman 
Lou  Ro.sen.$tock. 

Senior  Day,  a  traditional  feat- 
ure at  Carolina,  is  a  day  set  aside 
for  recreation  and  final  partici- 
pation in  group  activities  for  the 
graduating  class. 

This  year,  as  usual,  Rosenstock 
said,  a  free  movie  .will  be  open 
to  the  seniors  the  night  before 
(April  30)  at  one  of  the  local 
theaters. 

At  10  a.m.  Wednesday  the  sen- 
iors will  "hold  an  organizational  • 
meeting  in  Memorial  Hall  to  be 
followed  later  in  the  afternoon 
by  senior  athletic  events  from  2 
to  4:30  p.m.  i 

Later,  from  5:30  p.m.  on,  a  bar- 
becue will  be  held  at  the  Patio  and 
entertainment  will  be  provided  by 
four  different  bands.  i 

A  grand  prize  will  be  awarded  at 
a  ticket  drawing     that     evening 
from  stubs  which  will  be  distrib-  i 
uted  at   the   organizational  meet- J 
ing   in    the   morning,    Rosenstock  ■ 
said.  4i.jii|ji5i 


No  more 
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. .  runny  liquid 


. . .  messy  fingers ! 


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THI  DAILY  TAR  HfiL 


WEDNESDAY,  APRIL   10,  IM7 


1^^ 


UNC   Beats  Virginia;  Tabpri  Takes  Mile;   Golfers   Win 


K 


ING'S 
ORNER 

By  BILL  KING 

DTH  Sports  Editor 


Raugh  Gets  fieof/y  Second  In   Special  Mile; 
Fourth,  6-1    Tracksters  Beat  Wolf  pack,  97-34 


McGuire-Tatum,  No  Rest  For  The  Weary 

Down  in  Woollen  Gym,  two  Carolina  coaches  make  their  office  at 
opposite  ends  of  the  front  lobby.  Neither  is  doing  any  coaching  right 
now.  but  don't  think  that  means  rest  for  either  of  them. 

W«  dropped  in  on  coaches  Frank  McGuirc  and  Jim  Tatum  tho 
other  day  just  to  find  out  what  they  were  dding  during  the  off- 
season. To  coin  an  already  over-coined  expression,  both  were  busy 
as  a  one-arnt  paper  hanger. 
"I've  never  seen   anything  like  it."    remarked   McGuire   from   be- 
hind his  big  desk.  'My  schedule  is  full  for  the  next  two  months.  I 
have  speaking  engagements  every  night  this  month,  and  all  of  May." 
The  nation's  number  one  basketball   coach   has  been  flooded 
with  requests  to  appear  at  high  school  banquets  as  guest  speaker. 
"I'm  doing  as  many  as  possible,"  he  continued,  "but  I'm  just  com- 
pletely swan>ped  with  speaking  engagements." 
The  weekends  are  no  different  from  any  other  days  for  the  per- 
sonable Irishman.  His  commitments  keep  him  away  from  his  family  a 
lot  and  he  can't  even  call  a  weekend  his  own. 

This  Summer,  Back  To  Coaching 

This  c'ummep.  McGuire  will  get  back  to  the  business  of  coaching. 
He  will  hold  a  number  of  clinics  all  over  the  country,  mostly  for  high 
school  ballplayers. 

June  1st,  He  will  travel  to  Utah  for  a  one-vreek  clinic  there. 
He  then  goes  to  a  place  in   South  Carolna  called   Camp  Pla  Mor 
for  a  three-week  stay.  At  Camp  Pla  Mor,  McGuire  will  teach  bas- 
ketball to  high  school   boys  from  the  Palmetto  State. 
It's   hard  tn  keep   McGuire  away  from  his  native  New   York,   and 
nobody  here  minds  one  bit  as  long  as  he  comes  back.  He  will  spend 
the  month  of  July  touring  New  York  State,  holding  variou  .•  clinics  in 
and  around'  the  Metropolitan  area. 

It's  a  pretty  safe  bet  that  McGuire  will  make  the  most  of  his 
trip  to  the  big  city.  There  is  probably  another  Rosenbluth  lurch- 
ing there,  and  you  can  bet  your  bottom  dollar  that  McGuire  knows 
about  him.  As  one  person  remarked,  he's  got  more  contacts  in 
New  York  than  Bob  Hope  has  writers." 

After  New  York.  McGuire  returns  to  South  Carolina  for  a  big 
coaching  clinic.  Then  back  to  Chapel  Hill  and  the  worries  of  another 
ba.sketball  season.   Every  coach   c-hould  have  such  problems. 

Tatum,  Looking  After  Things  Here 

.\  trip  down  to  the  office  of  Jim  Tatum  found  the  hefty  football 
mentor  looking  well-rested  and  a  bit  overweight.  He  had  just  finished 
a  conference   and  was  talking  on  the  telephone. 

We  tried  to  ask  Coach  Tatum    about  the  same   questions  that 
we  had  asked  McGuire.  What  was  he  doing  during  the  off-season? 
"W«Ji,    I    don't    h««M»-  toe   mmov    speaJuog.  ui9»amnittK"    hm. 
stmrttd.   "As  good  deaf  of  my  work  can  °  be  done  right  here,"  he 
said  indicating  his  desk. 
"I  have  my  coaching  staff  looking  after  various  jobs  concerning 
the  boys,  "  he  remarked    We  try  to  keep  them  healthy  and  make  sure 
they  stay  in  good  academic  standing.  I  guess  you  might  say  that  I  try 
to  call  signals  for  the  whole  group." 

Actually  Tatum  was  a  little  modest  in  his  appraisal  of  his  off- 
season work.  The  hefty  football  coKh  has  several  football  clinic* 
scheduled    between    now    and    next    fall.    He    is    also    cioing    seme 
speaking  at  alumni  banquets  around  the  state. 
Last    week,   Tatum    made    appearances    in    Kingsport.    Tenn.,    and 
attended  a  football  clinic  in  Cleveland.  This  weekend  he'll  go  to  Wash- 
ington to  "do  a  little  scouting."  In  addition,  he  has  several  scouting 
trips  planned  for  the  next  few  months.  ,.  i 

t 

A  Football  Co-op  Plan  '; 

Another  thing  that  my  staff  and  I  do,"  Tatum  conlynued,  is  to 
watch  movies  of  some  of  the  opponents  that  we  have  plaj^d  and  will 
play  next  season.  There  is  a  lot  of  work  analyzing  opponents,  and  it 
takes  up  a  good  deal  of  our  time." 

One  of  the  most  interesting  things  that  we  learned  during  our 
short  visit  with  Sunny  Jim  was  what  we  would  call  a  co-op  agree- 
ment with  ether  schools. 

Tatum  explained  the  plan  to  us."  Whenever  we  see  a  team  having 
lots  of  success  with  a  certain  phase  of  the  game  we  go  out  to  them 
or  watch  pictures  of  their  team  in  action.  We  try  to  work  together 
in  helping  each  other." 

Tatum  continued  that  "at  present  we  have  3  coaches  out  at 
Georgia   Tech   for  four   days   of   their   spring   practice.   We   don't 
play    each   other   but   we   do    have   some   common    opponents   and 
we'll  work  with  Tech  and  vice  versa." 
The  telephone  rang  again  and  we  decided  that  we  had  taken  up 
enough  of  Tatum's  time.   He   bade  us  call  again  at  anytime  and  we 
left  completely  unenvious  of  the  chores  which  confront  the  two  Tar 
Heel  coaches  for  the  next  few  months. 

A  Salute  To  The  New  Fleece  Members 

Our  sincerest  congratulations  to  the  seven  athletes  and  two  great 
coaches  who  were  tapped  into  the  Golden  Fleece  Monday  night. 
This  is  in  honor  that  each  will  cherish  always  because  of  its 
great  significance.  Carolina's  five  g^eat  basketballers  and  coaches 
McGuire  and   Freeman  plus  Jim   Beatty  and   Ed  button  were  se- 
lected  not  only  for  their   part   in   athletics  at   Carolina,  but  for 
their  contribution  to  various  phases  of  campus  life. 
All  nine  of  the  tapees  are  worthy  of  the  honor,  for  each  is  an  out- 
standing  individual.   All   have   proven   that   athletic   prowe=,:s   can    be 
crmbined  with  other  outstanding  talents  and  we  heartily  salute  them 
all. 


CHARLOTTESVILLE,  Va.  iJ?^— 
North  Carolina's  ace  right-hander 
Jim  Raugh  iK^attered  six  hits  and 
struck  out  eight  here  today  to 
pitch  the  Tar  Heels  to  a  6-1  At- 
lantic Coast  Conferepce  baseball 
triumph  over  Virginia's  Cavaliers. 

It  was  North  Carolina's  third 
conference  victory  in  four  starts 
and  left  Virginia  with  a  1-2  league 
record.  Herb  Busch  went  the  dis- 
tance for  the  Cavaliers  and  suf- 
fered his  first  defeat  in  three  de- 
cisions. The  victory  wa.v  Kaughs 
fourth. 

The  Tar  Heels  broke  up  a  score- 
less pitching  duel  in  the  fifth 
when  Dick  Hudson  beat  out  an  in- 
field single,  was  sacrificed  to  sec- 
ond and  scored  on  a  wild  throw  by 
first  baseman  Bob  Hard>'.  A  walit 
to  Joe  Shook,  a  stolen  base  and  a 
single  by  Roger  Honeycutt  gavt 
them  another  run  in  the  sixth. 

North  Carolina  ovored  twice  aft- 
er two  were  out  in  the  seventh  on 
a  walk,  a  single  by  Jim  Legette 
an  error,  another  walk  and  a  sin- 
gle by  Don  Lewis.  The  Tar  Heels 
added  two  insurance  runs  in  the 
ninth. 


THE  BOX 


UNC 

Lewis,   2b  .. 

I  Shook.    If    

'L.  Hill,  lb    .., 

Honeycutt,  ss  .  _ 

D.  Hill,  rf 

Hudson,  cf  .... 

Hartman,     8b  .... 

Legette,  c     .-a. - 

Raugh,  p 

Totals    

VIRGINIA 

I  Moyer,  rf  - 

(Joseph.  3b  

I  Hardy,  lb  

Harrison,  c  

Powell,  cf  

Busch,  p    

Hall.  If      ._: 

a-Larison    

1  Inge,   2b     

j  Whitley,  cf-c  

Martin,  ss    


Ab.    H. 

5       1 


A 

4 
0 
0 
3 

0 
0 

1 

0 
2 


33       8     27     10 


Ab.    H. 

4       1 


0 
0 
0 

10 
7 
0 
0 
1 
0 
5 
3 
1 


A. 

0 
3 
0 
2 
0 
2 
0 
0 
2 
1 
4 


Totals-  32       6     27     14 

a — Grounded  out  for  Hall  in  ^th. 
Nortli  Carolina         000  Oil  202— « 
Virginia  000  000  010—1 

R — Shook.  Hudson  2,  Hartman  2, 
Legette.  Moyer.  E  —  Logclto, 
Hardy.  Raugh.  RBI— Honeycutt, 
Lewis  2.  Hardy,  Legette.  2B — Har- 
dy, Hudson.  SB— Inge.  Shook.  S— 
Hartman.  DP —  H'man,  l.,ewis  and 
Raugh  and  Honeycutt.  Left — North 
Carolina  5,  Virginia  6.  BB— Bu3ch 
4.  Raugh  2.  SO— Busch  9.  Raugh 
8.  PB— Legette.  W— Raugh  .  L-- 
Busch.  U — ^Driscoll  and  Lowery. 
T— 2:02. 


Carolina's  cindermen  without  j 
the  aid  of  their  two  top  pex-f  orm-  j 
ers  Jim  Beatty  and  Dave  Scurlock 
won  their  second  conference  meet  j 
of  the  seajon  yesterday  afternoon  f 
when  they  defeated  State,  97-34. 

El\'erett    Whatley    was    the    iron 
man  for  the  Tar  Heels.  He  took  a  I 
first  in  the  mile  and  later  came  i 
back  to  take  a  close  second  in  the ; 
two-mile.  *  j 

Scurlock.  after  running  a  4:l6i 
mile  took  to  the  cinders  again  for  | 
the  mile  relay.  He  anchored  the ' 
team  which  won  going  away.  j 

In  the  freshman  division,  the  : 
Tar  Bailies  defeated  the  Wolflets  I 
93Vj  to  37':!.  Tar  Baby  javelin  j 
nftin  Danny  O'Neal  set  a  new  [ 
freshman  record  in  the  javelin ' 
with  a   180  foot  throw.  j 

Ward  Sims  was  again  the  star  j 
for  the  Carolina  frosh.  He  tookj 
first..-  in  the  120  yard  high  hur-  j 
dies,  the  broad  jump  and  the  pole  i- 
vault.  He  valted  12'4".  which  was  I 
ten  inches  better  than  the  best  i 
varsity  vault.  ! 

THE    SUMMARY 

•  Mile— Whatley  (Ck  Kahn  (C), 
Greazza  (S)  4:25. 

440— Matthews  (S),  Sylvester 
(C).  McFaddin  (C)  50.2. 

Shot— Kemper  (C),  Jones  (C), 
Pallandrini  (S)  44.9' 4. 

100— Varnum.  (C),  McMullen 
(C).  DeCantis  (C)  10.3. 

High  Jump — Phillips  (S),  Bry- 
ant  (C)  Lyons  (C)   6-0. 

High  Hurdles — DeBorde  (C), 
Miketa  (S),  Sowers  (C)  15.5. 

Javelin— Oakley  (C),  Thorp  (S), 
Payne  (C)  184.4. 

880— Kahn  (C),  Williams  (C), 
Crcazzo  (S)  1:58.8. 

Broad  jump — Brawley  (C),  Rose- 
mond  (C),  Millar  (S)  21-7V8. 

220— Moss  (C),  Matthew^-  (S), 
Varnum  (C)  22.1. 

Discus — Roth  (C),  Jones  (C),  Pal- 
landrina   (S)    1:24-2. 

2-mile— Walker  (S),  Whatley 
(C).  Reaves  (C)   10:00.3. 

Lows — DeBordc  (C).  Lyons  (C). 
Miketa  (S),  25.4 

Mile  Relay— UNC  (Mow,  Sylves- 
ter, McFadden,  Scurlock),  3:24. 

Pole  Vault— Tit  Davis  (C)  and 
Allen  (S),  Griffeth  (C)  11-6. 


By  DAVE   WIBLE 

Laszlo  Tabori,  the  third  man  in 
the  world  ever  to  run  a  three  min- 
ute plus  mile,  passed  Carolina's 
Jim  Beatty  half-way  in  the  third 
lap  and  extended  the  lead  to  ten 
yards  to  win  the  AAU  invitation- 
al milf  event  here  yesterday  after-  j 
noon,  before  a  crowd  of  1,500. 

Tabori's   time   was   4:06.6  while 
Beatty     clocked     4:09.9.     Beatty  s  i 
time  was    the    third    best    he    has  i 
ever    run,    having    had    4:08.8    in- 
doors and  4:09.4  outdoors. 

Dave  Scurlock,  the  third  man  in 
the  race,  was  about  forty  yards 
behind  Tabori  and  completed  the 
distance  in  4:16.  It  wa.,-  the  first 
time  the  middle  distance  cham- 
pian  has  ever  run  the  mile  in  com- 
petition. 

The  1,500  spectators  roared  as 
the  "Dream  Mile"  was  being  run 
during  the  dual  meet  between 
UNC  and  N.  C.  State. 

At  the  gun,  Beatty  took  the  lead 
followed  by  Scurlock  and  Tabori. 
The  runners  stayed  in  those   posi- 


tions for  the  first  lap  which  was 
clocked  in  60.0  seconds.  Midway 
the  second  lap,  Tabori  caught 
Scurlock  but  did  not  make  a  move 
to  take  the  lead.  After  clocking 
2:02  in  the  second  time  around  the 
track,  the  Hungarian  took  the  lead 
from  Beatty  in  the  back  slretch, 
passed  the  three-quarter  mark  in 
3:03  and  went  on  to  win. 

Both  Coaches  Dale  Ransom  and 
Mihaly  Igloe  thougght  the  time 
would  be  around  4:04  but  the 
weather  was  chilly  and  a  strong 
breeze  bothered  the  runners  on 
the  curves. 


A  Motion  Picture  For  Anyone 
Who  Has  Ever  Loved! 


Howard  Johnson  Restaurant 

STUDENT    SPECIALS 

Barbecued    Chicken 
Choice  Steak  Sandwiches 

2:00-    5:00  P.M. 
SERVED  8:00-11:00  P.M. 

^landmark  For  Hungry  Tarheels'' 


NOT  SINCE  SCARLEH  AND  JEZEBEL  HAS  THE 
SOUTH  PRODUCED  SUCH  A  WOMAN! 


Spring  At 

MILTON'S 


"Spring  is  here!  I  like  spring. 
Spring  is  sunny  times.  Sprirlg  is 
when  flowers  come  up.  And 
trees  have  new  gowns."  by 
Shan  Julian — 1st  grade — Cal- 
vert School. 

Spring  at  Milton's  means  you 
have  your  choice  of  everything 
from  soup  to  nuts.  Never  have 
our  selections  been  more  inter- 
esting and   unusual. 


l.lml«ocl 
Erkigci^CKrra^n-t 


4  HIM  MASrttmCf  in  lICHNICOiO* 


MARIO  DEL  MONACO 
TITOGOBSi 
IRENE  GENNA 

MILTON  CROSS 

;M.t..pol.,„..   Ocr.«   ol  :•,,    A 

GUtiT  COMMCNTATOK 
LA  IMAVIATA  AIOA 

RiaoLrrTO  otcllo 

iL  thovatoiic        falstaff 

MAaucCO  CMNAMI 


■z:7:7. 


mat  kind 
of  town  is 
Pompey's  Head 
and  what  kind  of 
"very  respectable" 
people  are  these? 

20th  CENTURY-FOX 
presents 


Actwolly 
photographed 
in  America'! 
Soothland! 


TODAY 
ONLY 


Carolina 


WggJgXOO         10*  CINTUtY-rOX  pr.i.nlt 

Debofth  KERR  •  Robert  MITCHUM 


Heaven  IQ[iows,Mr.  AUisoir 


_C0lO>   b.   01  lUXI 


OnemaScOP£  - 


niM  Rmpek^Head 


^-^  COLOR  by  DE  LUXE  ^  , 

Cl  N  EM  aScoPE 


starring 

RICHARD 


DANA  CAMERON 

EG  AN  •  W  YNTER  -  MITCHELL 


I 

I 


TODAY 
ONLY 


sr/vecct^rW 


Murals  Today 

Softball:  (4:00)  SAE  vs  Sig 
Nu;  Wesley  vs.  Presby.;  PiKA 
vs.  SAE  (W);  Lamb  Chi  vs  ATO. 
(5:00)  Chi  Phi  vs.  Phi  Kap  Sig; 
Grinws  vs.  Med  Sch-2;  Lap  Psi 
vs.  ZBT;  SAH  vs.   KA. 

Tennis:  (4:00)  Joyner  vs.  BVP. 
(5:00)  Kap  Sig  vs.  ZBT. 


•V^.»r 


•Vl- 


Marlboro 


Soccer:     (5:00)     Winn«r 
(W)  vs.  DKE  vs.  Law  Sch. 


DKE 


the  Mist  practical  firmal  nade! 


Tar  Heel  Linksters  Cop 
Over  Tigers  And  USC 


CLEMSON,  S.  C.  '^—The  Uni- 
versity of  North  Carolina  defeated 
both  Clemson  and  South  Carolina 
in  a  triangular  golf  match  yester- 
day, whipping  the  home  squad 
16-2  and  the  Gamecocks,  14-4. 

South  Carolina's  Bobby  McCarty 
took  medalist  honor?  for  the  day 
with  a  four-under-par  68.  In  the 
Clemson-North  Carolina  match, 
Tom  Langley  of  the  Tar  Heels 
claimed  low  ^■core  with  a  70. 

The  summary: 

Langley  (NO  defeated  McCar- 
ley   (SC)  3-30;  McCarty  (SC)  de- 


fpated  Adam^-  (NC)  3-0;  Looka- 
bill  (NC)  defeated  Melton  (SC) 
2-1;  Patrick  (NC)  defeated  Wootcn 
(SO  3-0;  Summerville  (NC)  de- 
feated Bryant  (SO  3-0;  (Hender- 
son (NC)  defeated  Mahoney  (SC) 
3-0. 

Langley  (NC)  defeated  Warren 
(C)  3-0;  Adams  (NC)  defeated 
Schaefer  (C>  3-0;  Lookabill  (NC) 
defeated  Hane  (C)  2\2-^;  Patrick 
(NC)  defeated  Mattison  iC)  2-1; 
Summervilie  (NO  defeated  Oit- 
.tenden  (C)  2Ms-»^;  Henderson  (NC) 
[  defeated  Yarborough  (C)  3-30. 


Stain-Shy 


•  RESISTS  STAINS 

•  REPELS  WATER 

•  WRINKLE  PR" 


fMunwc  Maac  nmsH 

Smart  and 
cooifortabl*  ahawl 
oollar  atyling,  plua 
practical  * 'Stain-Shy 
fabric  finish  add  up 
to  greater  aummer 
formal  enjoyment. 
Siofle  <Nr  double 
breasted  . . .  white 
or  psstels. 


$34.50 


MIONMHT  11111  SktSt 
TIOUfMI 


FCSMAL  ^ 

HEADOUAR^ERS 


iTEVEKS  -  SHEPHERD 


Sturdy  to  keep 

ci(arettea  from 

cruahinc 

No  tobacco  in 

your  pocket 

Up  to  datai. 


Here's  old-fashioned  flavor  in  the  new  way  to  smoke.  Man-size 
taste  of  honest  tobacco  comes  full  through.  Smooth-drawing  filter 
feels  right  in  your  mouth.  Works  fine  but  doesn't  get  in  the  way.  Modem 

Flip-Top  Box  keeps  every  cigarette  firm  and  fresh  untU  you  smoke  it. 

JMAOI  IN  RKHMONB,  V|I«1NIA.  ftOM  A  NfW  MAtuew»  B|«if^ 


Serials  Dept. 
Chapsl  Hill,    K.    C. 
8-31-49 


WEATHER 

Partly  cleudv  and  mild.  Expcct- 
•d  high  in  th»  70's. 


mtl)sAinm^SixMtti 


2. 


VOL.   LVII   NO.   164 


Lotuvteir.   UP)   Wirt  S9rvK€ 


CHAPEL  HILL,  NORTH  CAROLINA,  THURSDAY,  APRIL  11,  1957 


Offices  m  Graham  Memariai 


SIX   PACES   THIS    ISSUfe 


Citations  For  Golden  F/eece  |f PPf°"'T*^ 

1  For  Counselors 

Released  For  New  Inductees  iFor  orientation 


( c'liinoin  ol  ilic  Order  of  the  Ciolden  Mecce, 
cd  \e>tcrflav. 


(■isitioiiN  rtad  at   Moiulav  nights  tappiii 
Carolina's  highest  men's  honorary,  were  rele 

I. nations  lor  the  .{o  inductees  are  4s  Fol  own: 

Kdwajd  Wike  Sutton,  ('.nllowhce— Kxlii  .)itor  ol  hi-^h  excellence  in  scholarship,  ath- 
Ictits  and  sportsniairship.  An  athlete  antl  a  ge  nkinan  in  wiioni  all  Carolina  takes  pride. 

Kddic  Coxington  liass.  l;rnui]1e — Ixade.  ni  (  (iiipiis  musical  activities,  talented  j)cr- 
fornur  ami  nuisiiian.  important  lontvibuior  i.i  caujpiis  religious  lite  and  student  govern- 
ment. ♦ — 


Jerry  Lovcman  Oppenheimer, 
Birmingham.  Ala. — Cheerful  bear- 
er of  heavy  responsibilities  in 
.student  government.  effective 
leader  in  the  areas  of  student  fin- 
ance and  fraternity  activities,  and 
a  scholar. 

Carl  Douglas  Farmer.  Pulaski. 
Va. — Devoted  leader  in  campus 
rcli^io'-s  life,  modest  and  courag- 
eous leader  in  athlrtics  and  ser- 
vice activities. 

Thomas  Francis  Kearns.  Berg- 
ensfield.  N.J.  —  Resourceful  and 
as'^ressive  athlete,  courageous, 
cool,  with  an  undaunted  wijl  to 
win. 

Luther  Hartwell  Hodges,  Jr.. 
Raleigh — Tireless  leader  in  all 
phases  of  student  government,  di- 
rector of  impoitant  service  activ- 
ities, and  scholar. 

John  T.  Sneeden.  Jr..  Tenafly, 
N.J. — Distinguished  actor,  scholar, 
and  leader  in  the  Dept.  of  Dra- 
matic Arts. 

William  Snyder  Pate.  Pikevilie. 
NC. — Dcvot-d  leader  in  student 
act'vities.  and  scholar  of  high  dis- 
tinction in  the  Department  of 
French. 

Leonard  Robert  R^senbluth, 
Grecnvill?.  Tenn.  —  Displayor  of 
inimitable  ability  in  athletics,  and 
the  ultimate  in  .sportsmanship. 
Cnrolinas  outstanding  example  ol 
a  truly  great  .\U-Amer;can. 

Robert  B.  Patteson.  Jr.  Wilson 
— Leader   in   and    invaluable   con- , 

I 
(sec  CITATIONS,  page  5.)        ' 


LEGISLATURE  ROUNDUP: 


Solons  Pass  Resolution 
Against  Tuition  Raise 


By  PRINGLE   PIPKIN 

,\  resolution  "disfavoring  any 
increase  in  tuition  for  non-resident 
undergraduate   .vudcnts    at    UNC" 


!  quested  $350,  but  the  finance  com- 
mittee    recommended     only     $300 
which  was  approved. 
The   Orientation    Committee    re- ' 


was    enc    of   the    most    significant  \  quested  $1,218.50  and  was  granted 


pieces  of  legisJaticn  in  addition  to 
the  budget,  passed  at  the  final  ses-  j 
ston    ol    the    Student    Legislature 
luesday  night.  | 

1  he    resolution    was    introduced  \ 
by  Benny  Thomas  and  Sonny  Hall- 1 
ford.  Benny  Th(.mas  read  the  res- ; 
olution.     The     "whereas"     claujos ' 
argued      that      increa.sed      tuition 
would  decrease  the  number  of  out- 
of-state  students;  UNC  would  ben- ' 
cfit  from  the  stimulation  and  con- 
tributions of  the  nonresident  stu- 
ilei-.s  and.  "if  the  University  must 
be    decreased,    a    more    selective 
means  other   than    an    increase   io  i 
tuition    should   and    mu^t    be   era  ! 
ployed."  I 

The  reSv-lulion  was  passed  with 
he  favor  of  the  entire  body  e.\cept 
Uill  McNaull.  ' 

The  budget  in  detail  is  as  fol- 
lows; for  the  General  administra  | 
i<  n  of  the  Student  Government  i 
E.\ecufive  Branch.  $3,485.  request-  i 
cd  and  approved;  executive  secrc- 
tari',  $1,300.  requested  and  ap- ! 
provej}; .  the    elections   JBo«ed    re- , 


$1,438.50.  Thomas  sponsored  the 
amendment,  Tho  extra  money  was 
awarded  for  new  orientation  coun- 
cilors handbooks,  a  better  activi- 
ties day  in  Lenoir  Hall  and  S5 
more  for  the  coed  dorm  breakfast 
because  the  price  of  a  doughnut 
has  increased  a  third  of  a  cent. 

The  National  Student  Assn.  re- 
ceived its  request  of  $1,057.  The 
Student  I.iegislature  was  granted 
$100  and  the  Women's  residence 
Council  received  $510. 

The   Student   Council   requested 

(see  LEGISLATURE,  page  5.) 


The  shortage  of  applicants  for  | 
the  job  of  orientation  counselor ! 
for  next  fall  prompted  the  Coun- 1 
selor  Selection  Subcommittee  yes-  \ 
terday  to  issue  a  new  appeal  for  ' 
volunteers.  1 

The  statement,  by  5*ibcomniittec 
Chairman     Edwin     Levy,    A'tresses : 
the  responsibility  and   sa|tisfaction  , 
which  this  .job  entails.  The  orien-  j 
tation  counsellors  have  the  impor- 
lant    function    of    acquainting   the 
incoming  freshmen  with  their  new 
envirorimcnt.   and   of  instilling   in 
them  "a  living  enthusiasm  for  the  ■ 
University  of  North  Carolina."  he 
.<aid. 

All  applications  must  be  turned 
in  at  Graham  Memorial  or  the 
YMCA  before  April  16,  he  said. 
The  application  blanks  are  avail- 
able at  the  Y.MO'.\,  Graham  Me- 
morial, the  Monogram  Club,  Le- 
11.  ir  Hall,  or  the  Library.  , 

April  16.  in  106  Carroll  Hall,' 
there  will  be  a  test  given  to  all 
applicant.-  on  the  material  con- 
tained in  the  1956  Counsellor's 
manual.  The  manual  may  be  ol> 
tained  at  the  YMC.\.  Gi-aham  Me- 
morial, or  the   Librarv.  i 


Lenoir  Workers  Meet 
ffiiWith  Administration 


f  -:^^ 


Discuss  Pay  Situation 

White  Says  Officials 
Think  Workers  Slighted 


Student  Government  Officers 
To  Be  Sworn  In  Today  At  7:30 


Free  Flick  Friday 

Grah«m  Memorial  will  spon- 
sor the  flick  "Birth  of  «  N«- 
ticn,"  Friday,  7:30  and  10  p.m., 
in   Carroll   Hall. 

Admission  it  10  ctnts. 


President-elect  Sonny  Evans 
and  newly  designated  student  gov- 
ernment officers  will  be  sworn 
into  office  at  7:30  tonitjbt  at  the 
innaugural  ceremonies  for  student 
government  officers  which  will 
coincide  with  the  last  session  of 
the  22n(l  and  the  first  meeting 
of  the  23rd   .\.ssemblies. 

Luther  Hodges  Jr..  Chairman 
of  the  Student  Council,  will  ad- 
minister tho  oath  of  office  to  the 
iour  top  officials  (President 
Evans.  Vice  President  Furtado. 
Secretary  Dnt  Pressly  and  Treas- 
urer  Bob   Carter).  ' 

Vice  President  Furtado  will  as- 
sume his  duties  as  speaker  of  the 
Asiembiy  and  his  first  act  will  be 
to  swear   in   the  legislature. 


\n  innaugural  address  will  be 
given  by  Sonny  Evans  in  which  he 
intends  to  "set  the  patterns  for 
plans  next  year  and  in  coming 
weeks." 

The  swegring-in  ceremony  and 
"organization"  of  the  new  assem- 
bly is  scheduled   to  take  place  in 

1  the  Phi  Hall   on  the   fourth  floor 
of  New  East. 

In  a  statement  yesterday.  Sonny 
Evans  said  that  the  ceremony  will 
be  open  to  all  interested  persons. 
He  went  on  to  urge  that  everyone 
interested  attend  tonight. 

I      Evans   went   on   to  say   that  all 
legislative    sessions    are    open    to 
all  students  on  campus  as  well  as' 
anyone  interested  in  the  functions 

j  of  student  government. 


Spring  Exam  Schedule 
I  Is  Released  By  Office 

According  to  the  Central  Office  of  Records,  the   time  of  an    ex- 
anunatioa  may  not  be  changed  after  it  has  been  fixed  in  the  schedule,  i 
No  student  ma>'  be  excused  from  a  .scheduled  examination  vxeepH  ' 
by   the    L^niversity  Infiri9«r}'.   in  case  of  ^Boess;    of  by    his   <jcj>«i^  j 
j  College  (itettlty  adviser  or  by  his  dean,  in  case  of  any  other   emer- 
j  gcncy  compelling  his  ab.cnce. 

'  .\11  8:00  a.m.  Classes  on  ^V,VF  Wed.. 

.All  10:00  a.m.  Classes  on  MWT  Wed. 

.\i\  'French,  ^German  and  ^'Spanish  courses 

numbered  1,  2,  3.  3X  and  4  Thurs 

.\1'  11:00  a.m.  Classes  on  TTHS      ^ . Thurs.. 

.VII  10:00  a.m.  Classes  on  TTHS .;?._.     Fri., 

AM   11:00   a.m.   Oajici   on  MWF  tVi 

All  3:00  p.m.  Classes.     Chem.  21.  *BA  71 

Si  72.  and  all  classes  not  otherwise  provided 


Whitfield  To  Head  SP; 
Brooks  Vice-Chairman 


The  Student  Party  met  last 
night  to  elect  party  officers  for 
the  remainder  of  the  spring  term. 


The  office  of  party  chaiinnan 
was  won  by  Whit  Whitfield  over 
Gary   Greer.  .  ^  ; 


May  22.  8:30  a.m. 
.  May  22,  2:00  p.m. 

.  May  23.  8:30  a.m. 

,  May  23,  2:00  p.m. 

May  24.  8:30  a.m; 

May   24,   2:00  p.m. 


nev5 

in 
brief 

Suez  Crisis 


Sat..  May  26,  8:30  a.m. 
Sat..  May  25,  2:00  p.m 
Mon„  May  27.  8:30  a.m. 
Men,,  May  27.  2:00  p.m 


r    Tues.,  May  28.  8:30  a.m. 


foi   in   the  schedule 
All  8:00  a.m.  Classes  en  TIUS      ,    . 
All  2:00  p.m.  C]as.ses  on  MWT.  *BA  130   .. 
\l\  12:00  Noon  Classes  on  ifWF  —:^_:i„_^ 
\\\  2:00  p.m.  Clas.-o*  on  TTHS         -,  ,  ="     . 

Econ  31,  32.  61  &  70 
All  12:00  Noon  Classes  on  TTHS.  all 

Naval  Science  and  Air  Science 
.Vll  1:00  p.m.  Classes  on  MWT,  "^'Pol. 

Sci.  41.  *Econ.  81 . 

Al!  9:00  a.m.  Classes  on  MWT    

.\11  9:00  a.m.  Classes  en  TTHS    Thurs 

All  E.\ams  resulting  in  conflict.;  from 

Common  E^xam  scheduled  above       '      .  Thurs..  May  30.  2:00  p.m 

'In  ca-«e  of  any  conflict,  the  rcgiilary  scheduled  exam  will  take 
precedcrce  over  tho  common  exam  (Common  exams  arc  indicated  by 
an  asterisk.) 


Tues., 

May 

28. 

2:00  p.m. 

Wed.. 

May 

29. 

8:30  a.m. 

Wed.. 

May 

29, 

2:00  p.m. 

"hurs.. 

May 

30. 

8:30  a.m. 

AMMAN.  .Jordan.  —  (AP)  — 
Premier  Suleiman  Nabulsi's  gov- 
ernment resigned  yesterday  at  the 
request  of  Young  King  Hussein. 
The  d:nelopmcnt  cast  doubt  on 
the  future  of  this  little  country, 
center  of  a  possible  Mddle  East 
explosion. 

The   action   came   as   a   surprise, 
less  than  24  hours  after  the  Pre- 
mier   publicy    acknowledged    that 
I  the   government   had   been   having 
,  a  crisis,  but   claimed   that   it  had 
I  ended.  •    • 

I 

i      CAIRO.  Egypt  —  (AP)  —  Presi- 
j  dent    Nasser  was  represented  yes- 
i  terday    as    feeling    that    he    holds 
all    the   cards    in    the    present   ne- 
gotiations  with   the   United   States 

'      (see  WORLD  NEWS,  page  5.) 


'      John     Brooks     was     proclaitfied 
!  vicc-chairnian    by    acclamation    of 
the   body. 

Betty  4^rolyii  HufXmao  was  sim- 
ilarly elected  to  serve  as  party 
secretary,    also,    by    acclamation. 

The  treasurers  position  was 
won  by  Denton  Lotz  over  ex-j 
roasurer    Tom    Long.  _       | 

Leon    Holt    and    Chuck    Marsh 
were  elected  to  the   posts  of  Sexy  ' 
:ieant   at   Arms    and    Filing   Clerk 
respectively,     both     by     acclama- 
ion  of  the  body.  j 

For  positions  on  the  Party  Ad- 
.isory  Board,  of  which  four  were 
open,  nominees  were  Brandon! 
Kincaid.  Jim  Merritt,  Caroline 
Brown,  Caleb  White.  David  Evans, ; 
and  Philip  Gerdes.  Final  Winners 
were  Kincaid,  Brown,  Evan.-,  and 
White. 

In  a  short  speech  welcoming 
the  new  officers  and  thanking  the 
body  for  Its  kindness,  outgoing 
\  party  chairman  Sonny  Hallford 
I  expressed  confidence  in  the  par- 
!  t.v's  future,  stating  that  he  was 
;  sure  the  ''party  will  move  for- 
;  ward   under  its  new.  leadership." 


r     Administrative       representatives 
'  were  Dr.  W.  D.  Perry,  Dean  of  the 
University's    Division    of   Student 
'■  Affairs.    Sam    Magill,    Director    of 
Student  Activities,  and  Miss  Edith 
I  Winslow,  of  the  Student   Aid  De- 
partment. 

Voicing  the  workers'  views  were 
'  Leo    Mulvaney,    William    Brigman, 
I  and  ex-Lenoir  worker  Caleb  White. 
!      Actual  coverage  of  the  two  and 
I  one  half  hour  meeting  was  denied 
I  this    paper,    but    despite    no    com- 
!  ments  from  all  the  conc'avc'a-  par- 
I  ticipants    after    its    finish    White 
later   furnished    the  Tarheel   with 
an   approved  version  of  the  meet- 
ings results. 

According  to  White  the  meeting 
j  was   closed    due    to   fear   that    the 
'presence  of  the  press  might  cause 
'  the  student  participants  to  be  hesi- 
'  tant  in  freely  voicing  their  views-. 
White's     summation     of     griev- 
'•  ances   aired    during    the    meeting: 
i  student  workers  at  Lenoir  feel  that 
they    are    not     compensated    ade- 
!  quately  for  their  labor:  they  feel 
;  that  the  administration   of  Lenoir 
i  Hall  has   been   too  arbitrary;    and 
they     feel     that     Lenoir     director 
Phillaman  has  been  exerting  pres- 
sure  on    them  iby    simultaneously 
removing     student     workers      and 
hiring  paid  non-.studenr  hjelp. 

The  administrative  representa- 
tive- present  were  said  by  White 
In  his  wrlBBing  speech.  Mojitieth  iq  have  agreed  that  student  work- 
revised  dramaticallj'  the  life-  j  ers  in  Lenoir  are  being  maltreated 
span  and  final  significance  of  j  and  expressed  a  wish  to  raise  the 
^i^duation  to  a  senior.  He  recogniz- ,  overall  desirability  of  student  self- 
ed  the  sym  oolic  significance  of  his  ,  help  jobs. 

One  change  which  the  admin- 
istration seenis  to  be  seriously  con- 
templating is  a  conversion  of  Le- 
noir compensation  from  the  pre.-.- 
ent  non-transferable,  non-continu- 
ous $1.90  per  day  set  up  to  the 
redeemable  ticket  br>ok  system 
mow  in  use  at  North  Carolina 
State  College. 

Miss  Winslow.  the  Student  Aid 
Office  representative  at  the  meet- 
ing  stressed    the    fact    that    being 


By  H.  JOOST  POLAK 

The      Lenoir      Hall      grievances 
group  met  yesterday  afternoon  in  ■ 
Peabody  Hall  w'ith  a  select  group 
of   administrative    officials    in    hv, 
attempt  to  clarify  the  differences  ' 
between      the      dining      establish-  i 
ment's  s'tudent  workers  and  Lenoir  I 
Director  George  W.  Prillaman.         j 

AAontieth,  | 
Winner  In 
Di  Contest 

James  Montieth,  a  senior  from  ' 
Sylva.  North  Carolina,  was  winner  , 
of  the  1957  Mangum  award  la.st  i 
night  for  his  oratorical  presenta- 
tion before  the  Dialectic  Senate,  ■ 
"On  Canaan  Land." 

The  Mangum  award,  which  is  one 
of  the  University's  oldest  awards, 
is  also  one  oi  the  roost  sought 
after  oratorical  pri;(cs  by  graduat- 
ing senior,^'.  It  is  presented  annual- 
I  ly  under  the  auspices  of  the  Dia- 
lectic 'Senate  and  the  Philanthropic 
Society. 


hwr  years  of  college  education 
wrapped  up  in  a  'stiff,  word-filled 
piece  of  paper"  and  posed  the 
question.  "But  is  it  enough?'" 

;'We  have  learned,"  he  replied, 
"through  the  painful  experience  of 
inexperience.  We  have  lost  much 
ol  the  uncertainty  and  fear  of  early 
days  and  have  found  here  the  an- 
jA'ers  to  many  of  our  early  ques- 
tions." 


Three  Named  To  Daily  Tar  Heel  Posts 


RAY    EBERLE 

It-ere  for  Gervians 


Eberle  And  Freshmen 
In  Saturday  Germans 


Kay  Bicrle,  (Mie  of  the  big 
names  in  American  popular  music 
an  '  one  of  the  all-time  college  fa- 
vorites ^s  the  featured  vocalist 
with  the  late,  gieil  Glenn  .Miller 
Orchc  •  -a.  will  appear  with  his 
"Serenade  in  Blue"  Band  here  Sat 
urda.\  for  the  final  celebiation  of 
the  annual  spring  Germans. 

Eberle  will  share  the  weekend 
spotlight  at  the  wmcert  and  dance 
with  the  currently  popular  "Four 
Freshmen,"  who  in  addition  tJ 
th<;ir  wall  known  vocal  talents  are 
widely  acclaimed  instrumentalisl.s. 

According  to  spokesmen  for  the 
Germans  celebration  this  year,  ar- 
rangements arc  being  made  where- 
by each  of  the  two  featured 
group-s  will  present  two  alternat- 
ing 30-minute  programs  at  the 
concert  in  Memorial  Hall  and  the 
dance  to  be  held  later  at  Woollen 
Gym. 


On  hand  to  convplement  the 
concert-danec  program  Saturday 
will  be  a  relatively  new  artist  in 
the  popular  mu  •  c  field  in  the  per- 
son of  Mi.ss  Paula  George, 

A  newcomer  to  the  entertain- 
ment world.  .Miss  George  has  been 
favorably  compared    in   voice   and. 

\  style    to    current    favorite,    sultry 

'  Julie  London. 

Eberle.  with  his  'Serenade  in 
Blue"  Band  plus  the  talents  of 
Miss  George,  will  bring  to  the 
Cwolina  campus  Saturday  a  long 

I  list  of  successful  appearance^-  and 

'  engagements. 

j  To  his  Icng  list  of  successes  in 
television,  the  movies  and  numer- 

'  ous  singing  dates,  Eberle  can  add 

>  such  all-time  record  hits  as  "Sere 

i  nada  in  Blue."  "At  Last,"  "Elmer's 
Tunc,"  "Moonlight,  Cocktails," 
and    two    Glenn    Miller    Memorial 

i         (See    GERMANS,   Page   5) 


Daily  Tar  Heel  Editor  Neil  Bass 
yesterday  announced  appointments 
to  three  major  posts  on  the  pa- 
per. 

Named   as  business  manager  of 

the    paper    was   John    Whitacker. 

junior    from    Winston-Salem. 

Whitacker     replaced      Bill      Bob 

Peel  in  the  p#8t.  « 

Named  as  associate  editor  wa.-. 
Miss  Nancy  Hill,  junior  from  High 
Point.  Miss  Hill  previously  ^  serv- 
ed as  news  editor  of  the  paper. 

Named  to  the  post  of  news  edi 
tor  was  Walter  Schruntek,  junior 
from  Levlttown,  New  York. 

Bass  stated  in  announcing  the 
-appointments,  "It  is  with  a  great 
deal  of  pride  that  I  announce  of- 
ficially these  appointments.  They 
were  madL>  solely  on  the  basis  of 
individual  merit.  I  look  for  out- 
standing contributions  from  each 
of  them  toward  giving  you — the 
student  —  the  finest  newspaper 
possible." 

Managing  editor  of  the  paper 
is  Clarke  Jones,  whose  appoint- 
ment as  replacement  for  Charlie 
Sloun  came  recently. 


"Here  we  have  lost  time,  money 
and  our  foolhardy  impetuousne.ss," 
he  concluded,  '"but  here  we  have 
found  ourselves." 

Competing  with  Montieth  for  the 
highly  coveted  oratorical  aware! 
was  Cyrus  Robert  Harrington  who 
spoke  on  "The  Electoral  College 
System"  and  Stan  Shaw  who  s^oke 
on  "The  Re-Evaluation."       '";      J- 

Judges  for  the  competition  were 
Di .  James  Godfrey.  Dr.  J.  R.  Cald- 
1  well  and  Mr.  Charles  Bernard. 


fired  from  one  stuf'-^nt  Hid  job 
does  U'lt.  as  seem  ,  to  be  common- 
ly thought.  nece.';saril>  "blackball" 
a  student  from  ever  receiving  an 
ether  similar  position. 

Magllt,  Perry,  and  Winslow  also 
pointed  out  thai  they  had  not 
knrwn  of  the  dining  hall's  policy 
that  work  in  Lenoir  is  of  greater 
impoi-tance  than  academic  phase.< 
of  student  activity.  They  further 
voiced  the  opinirn  that  such  a  poi 
icy  is  in  direct  contradiction  with 
the  aims  of  tlie  Univer.-'.ty. 


Seven  Delegates  From  UNC 
To  Attend  NSA  Regionot  Meet 


MISS   NANCY    HILL    AND   WALTER   SCHRUNTEK 

.  ,  .  aasOfUi'iX'  editw  and  t-.cir.'i  editw 


Seven  UNC  delegate.-  will  attend 
the  annual  .spring  Regional  Assem- 
bly of  the  National  Students' 
.\ssn..  Carolinas-Virginia  Region, 
April  11-13. 

Representing  Carolina  at  the 
Hollins  College  assembly  will  be 
Don  Furtado,  Sonny  EXans.  Bran- 
don Kincaid,  Stan  Shaw,  Whit 
\\Tiitfield.  Miss  Esther  Ballentine. 
and  Miss  Caroline  Brown. 

The  NSA  as.  jm  jly  will   consist  ^ 
of  over  100  delegates  from  North 
and  South   Carolina  and  Vii-ginia.  [ 

Discussion  groups  will  deal  with 
such  problems  as  leadership  train- 
ing, orientation,  international 
awareness  and  student-faculty  re- 
lations. The  election  of  regional 
officers  is  als<i  scheduled  for  thij 
meeting.  4.  j 

Offices  for  the  Carolinas-Vir- 
ginia region  are  chairman,  x-ice- 
chairman  for  educational  affairs, 
vice  chairman  for  international 
afifairs,  secretary  and  treasurer.       \ 

Carolina  students  in  the  past ' 
haA'e  held  many  of  these  offices. ' 
the  most  recent  being  Jim  Turner.  I 
who     was     Student     Government 


Vice-chairman  in   1955. 

.\ccording  to  NSA  Coordinator 
Whit  Whitfield,  the  most  valuablo 
pha.-j  of  the  assembly  is  the  dis- 
cussions which  take  place  in  an 
effort  to  find  answers  to  the  nu- 
merous campus  problems  with 
which  NS.\  deab. 

GM'S  SLATE 


Today's  activities  for  Grah«m 
Memorial  are  as  follows: 

Debate  Squad,  4:30-6  p.m.. 
Kir»i\  Room;  Student  Council,  7- 
11  p.m..  Grail  Room;  I.  D.  C,  10 
a.m.-4  p.m.,  Roland  Parker 
Lounse  No.  1;  University  Party 
Caucus,  6-7:30  p.m.,  Roland  Par- 
ker Lounge  No.  1;  University 
Club  7-9  p.Wi.,  Roland  Parker 
Loung*  No,  2;  Student  Party 
Caucus.  6:30-7:15  p.m.,  Roland 
Parker  Lounge  No.  3;  Finance 
Con>mittee,  4-6  p.m.,  Woodhouse 
Conference  Room;  Prof.  Inter- 
frat.  Council.  7-8  p.m..  Wood- 
house  Conference  Room;  Rules 
Convmittee.  4-5  p.m.,  Council 
Room. 


f A6I    TWO 


THC' DAILY- TAR  "HffL 

;  !.r"'i  ^  ''  J.M.       -I'  ..  "»t"! 


THURSDAY,  APRIL  11.  \9S7 


TMUl 


■lU...        * 


Jnteilectual  Migration 
And  .The  Emptied  Desks 


".4  trtuhcr  ttfffcf.s  fteruity;  lir 
canH(*x't'r  teU  i^ctf  Ins  infiiiftKr 
stops."   —Hffiry    Brooks   .-idatus. 

i>(}\.  Ijitiif^f lodges  requested 
a  1',  jK-i  tent^pjy  raise  for  state 
Sili(M>l  te:i(  liej*s"  ])et(ifreya  jtmit  ses- 
sion <>r  the  Ciencral  Assembly 
rueschiy.  lit  also  retommended 
an  I  1  |K'r  rert^aise  lor  "otlier  state 
workers."  ..i»i^li«dii\;j^  ^^  LJniversity 
facidty   nuMiitiers.      ^  .*, 

Cliaiuell«>r  1<oI)ei^  House  told 
the  Alunnii  Ksscnialion  at  a  Inneli- 
t'on  \esttrda\  tiiat  the  market  lor 
outstandiu!^  fa<ult\  members  was 
hi«»hly   'competitive.' 

()iU'4oin;4  stndrnl  ImmIv  Prt-si- 
deiu  Hob  ^'oun•.^  reminded  student 
legislators  in  ;ui  atldress  leb.  ti8. 
that  the  l'rafifsiiv'>  iac  tdty  salaiA 
s<ale\was  <«Hnparable  to  a  small 
inb  tractor  expected  to  cidtivate 
a   two-liundred  :i;ie  lanti. 

(■.lunuellov  H(nist'"s  and  Presi- 
dent ^'(»nnn  s  staienu'ius  serve  to 
e'upbasi/e  thip  Tieifssitv  —  il  tiie 
I'nixersitv  is  to  thrixe.  e\en  snr- 
\ive  —  ot  passaiL»e  of  (iov.  Hodges' 
re<  onnnended   pay   hike. 

Piesident  ^'u^n^;4^s  address  to  4bc 
lei»islaturc'  was  full  of  farts  and 
fii^urc-s  .  to  sh^ke  us  oiu  of  our 
soniftimes  sonmambidistie  •  stare. 
Here  are  so^ne  of  them: 

li\  Dnrinii  '!'*'  '•I'^t  iM  months. 
Sj  nuinbeis  of  the  l'ni\ersitv's 
ni\ision  of  Ac  adetnii  Affairs  and 
Dixision  ol  Health  Affairs  have 
cleared  out  of  these  hallowed  halls 
dne  mainlv  to  what  Ycunig  railed 
"'increased   induceujeiH.  ' 

(ii)  .SKuistics  complied  on  ic)  of 
theie  persons  whose  salaries  at 
oiiur  instittuions  were  known  re- 
ve;-led  an  axeraj^e  yt.'2   increase  in 

i-\)  I'niversitv  salaries  lor  lull 
proU  ssors  T^mye  fr(»nj  5i.too  to 
S'j.cMM)  below  salaries  lor  compar- 
able positions  ai  three  other  lead- 
ing institutions  included  in  the 
study.  Sixties  for  asscK  iate  pror 
r  -isovN  are'i,»n  the  avera;j,e.  .S\.r,oo 
below  those  ol  ilie  other  three  stu- 
dicil  insiiiiuimrs:  .  sulat  ies  lor  as- 
sistant prolessois  are  .'*si,2ck»  less: 
salaries  lor.^i,w»tru<t<»r.s  arc  approxi- 
mately  5  !.-*<«  "less. 

(.\)  A  compilation  of  liH  ulty  sal- 
aries ai  J  J  leadiiifj^  *niix'ersities 
ranked  oui^^pl  ••'^'frsity  il:iyii  in 
proft-ssois'  salarv  bracket.  2Kth  for 
:'<sistaiu  professors.  u.|ih  lor  .isso- 
c  iate  professcns  and  '27th  for  in- 
structors. 


The  Daily  Tar  Heel 


The  official ^i/udeni  publication  of  ibt 
Puhlic-ations  Bo<<rcl  uf  the  Univei^ity  ol 
North  Carolines  where  it  is  publtsheci 
lailv  except  llonday  and  examination 
ipd  vacation  periods  and  summer  term* 
fcniered  as  second  class  matter  in  th» 
o.nt  office  in  Chapel  Hill.  N  C.  undei 
ihe  Act  f)i  March  S  1870  .SuhscriptioB 
ratef  mail'*d.  S4  p^r  y»-ar.  $2  50  a  lemet 
ter:  de1iv>>rf^    SK  »<*«»•  S3  5fl  a  »enie* 


Editor 


NEIL  BASS 


.Managing  EdU^r  CL.\RKE  JONES 


As.sociate   Ec^itor■ 


NANCY   HILL 


Sports  Editor 


BILL  KING 


News  Editor;  ^    WALT  SCHRUNTEK 

— i — *,_ 

Bu>iiness  >lalfiig<b JOHN  C.  WHITAKER 


Advertisii-i  Manager  .      FRED  KATZIN 


4 


NEAVS  STAFF— Ifc-aham  Snyder.  Edith 
MacKinnoii,-  I^JPSle  Pipkin,  Bob  High, 
Ben  Tavl.ir.  H^oost  Polalc.  Patsy  >mi- 
er,  Wally  Kuralt.  Bill  King,  Curtis 
Crotty,  Vtidit^  WhitfieW,  A«thony 
Wolff. 


BUSINESS  ST^FF— John  Minter,  Marian 
Hobecfc,  Jane  Patten,  Johnny  Whitaker. 

SPORTS  STAFF:  Dave  AVible,  Stu  Bird, 
Ed  RowlanfL  Jim  Crownover,  Ron  Mil- 
ligan.  '■*' 


Subtcriptioa  UtMgn 
Circulation  Manager  . 


.  Dale  Stalvy 
Charlie  Holt 


Staff  Photographers Woody  Sears, 

Nornuin  Kai^or 
Librarians  .  Sue  Gichner,  Marilyn  Strum 


fegbt  News  Editar  , Bob  High 

Night  Editor Bill  Weekes 


These  aie  slKHkinj;  fioures  and 
comparisons.  Hoiv  may  onr  l^ni- 
\ersity  "rou  if  an  incessant  mig- 
<;ratifm  <ff  intellectual  talent  con- 
sistently <?mpties  our  classrooms  of 
tbeir  guiding  Iwnds?    .';_,, 

How  may  our  I'niversity  even 
keep  its  academic  head  above  ,the 
comj)etitive  u-^ter  of  comparison 
scales  and  ratitig  with  other  higgl- 
er saterted  tmive-tsities?     '  ' 

jC  Ion  so  fi  dated  Universirv  Presi- 
dent William  Fridav  said  vester- 
dav: 

'llu  re<piest  foi  iiuneased  fac- 
ulty salaries  (of  appioxini.'itely  1 1 
{>er  ceiH),  as  sithmiited  to  the 
Joint  Apptopriations  ('otnmittee. 
Would  iio't  be  cut  according  to  the 
recotimiendation  made  by  Go\. 
Hodges    Tuesday." 

ttut  tfie  salarv  inciease  must 
now  pass  a  sub-committee  of  the 
joint  .\ppropriations  <'omtn»tree. 
the  committee  itself  and  the  Gen- 
era!  Assembly   proper. 

II  the  incre.'se  passes  the  (ien- 
eral  Assemblv— and  we  only  hope 
and  piay  for  the  sake  ot  our  be- 
loved institution  it  does  —  the 
larger  iipp'oprt;jitic>n  uould  n<H 
conspic  Hott^ly  elevate  rlie  Univer-, 
sifvs  status  anioQg  the  .faciiky  jwy 
scales  of  'orher  c^omparable  insti- 
tutions. 

Such  an  inciease  woidd  oidy  en- 
able it  to  retain  its  present  rela- 
tive status. 

W'c  cannot  afford  to  retrogi-ess. 
II  we  cannot  advance,  then  int 
nuist  at  least  reniain  status  cpio. 

.\(cordin<4  to  a  siatemeiU  made 
bv  the  Ccmsolidated  I'niversitv 
.Klministration  to  the  alumni  on 
Jan.  X.  tite  additional  faculty 
finids.  il  |>assed.  will  lie- distribut- 
ed in  this  maimer: 

(1)  Faculty  met^tbers:  a  live  per 
i:e«t  itic  rei*se  ac  toss  tiie  ijoarcl:  an 
4 additional  five  \icvt  cent  tc»  pro- 
vide a  salarv  senile  increase  by  aca- 
demic and  |)i()lessional  rank:  the 
remainder  t«i  J)e  used,  appropri- 
atetv.  for  mejit  salary  increases  to 
hold  distiut>iiished  and  Itonored 
f.rculty  members. 

(L»)  .\on-:uademic  laculty  mem- 
bers;  :<•  tetr  per  cmt    merit  salary 

increase. 

\((<trding  to"  Preiridenr  Friday. 
the  Inixeisiiys  request,  which 
wcudd  l>c  allcKated  in  a  limfp  sinn 

if  passed,  is  still  "intac  i.'" 
« 
If  the  I'niversity  is  to  remain 
inrac  I.  if  iis  standards  <*f  academic 
achievement  are  to  be  retained, 
then  ihv  (^cnenvl  Assemhlv  nuist 
pass  liie  pi:cn>osed  1  i  per  cent  hike. 

An  empiv  desk  In-lore  a  ciass- 
r(»om. 

'A  teacher  affects  eternity:  be 
c:ui  never  tell  whieie  his  influence 

StOj>S." 

Congrats  To 
Legislature 

The  student  Legislatute  is  to  be 
highly  complimented  lot  its  stand 
in  opjMisition  to  the  out-of-.state 
tuition  hike  pro{x>sed  by  Rep.  X.. 
H.  Ross  of  Beaufort. 

Student  lawmakers  pas-sed  sptci- 
al  orders  to  enable  approval]  of 
the  opposition  resolution  on  the 
si.ine  night  as  the  measure's  in- 
troduction. 

The  resoUuicin.  proposed  joint- 
Iv  by  the  Student  Party's  i^onny 
Hallfoid  and  the  UniveDtityf  arty^ 
UeiHiy  Thcmias,  is  apt  <lenionsrra- 
tion  thit  partisan  politics  may  be 
clioj>ped  and  ccM)fX'ration  substi- 
tuted wheti  a  matter  of  ccmeern 
lor  tl*e  entile  Uni\ejsiry  is  in 
volved. 

The  resolution  hit  nvo  rmjx>rt- 
aiu   jMunts: 

( 1 )  That  oui.-of-staters  havt 
made  valuable  contriburiorw  to 
the  University  in  every  field. 

(2)  rhat  Ross's  bill  bikfnj?  <»ut- 
olbstate  tuition  S200  ivoiild  |»re- 
vent  cotuinuaticm,  for  evideat  liitt- 
ancial  reascms,  of  many  non-iar 
heeled  students'  educatiorfs;  and 
that  it  would  dis«:c>urage  prcai^xr- 
tive  entrants  from  other  states. 

C^on^ratulations  for  such  coop- 
erative spirit  —  aliovc  and  beyond 
party  lines  —  to  htoth  the  Student 
and  University  Parties.  _^ 


FROM  A  BRITISH  WEEKLY: 


:!h 


'Cautious  Young  Men'  Are  Not 
Limited  To  American  Undergrads 


Manchester  Guardian 

Serioujs  rtiservers  of  tH*jJirtn-  , 
ners.  morals  and  motives  of  TOe'' 
younger  generation  would  prob 
ably  agree  thai  ('cautiou^'t  1^  a 
Autre  useful  generalization  about 
thn?  than  "ai^fy:"  "The  Cam-, 
i-ous  Young  Men"  is  in  fact  the 
title  of  an  excellent  symposium 
on  the  Amerlead  undergrciduate  • 
which  was  published  recently  in 
"The  Nation."  It  consists  of  re- 
ports -from  16  university  teachers 
whieh  are  reOiarkable  not  only 
for  the  general  level  of  agree- 
ment among  them  but  because 
much  of  what  they  say  has  al- 
ready been  said,  with  different 
accents,  by  British  teachers  about 
their  students. 

At  Queen's  College.  New  York, 
"they  matriculate  cautious, 
wanting  above  all —  so  well  con- 
ditioned are  they  by  the  prevail- 
ing .social  climate —  to  buy  se- 
curity for  themselves  in  the  full 
knowledge  that  the  price  is  con- 
formity." ("*Why  should  we  go 
out  on  a  limb  about  anything? 
....  We  know  what  happened  to 
those  who  did."  said  one  student. 
And  another  "another  expressed 
a  OKlBasure  of  gratitude  tQ  Sen.  « 
MeCafthy  for  having  taught  his 
generation  a  valuable  lesson:  to 
keep  it^,  mouth   shut.") 

Allan  Seager  of  Michigan  finds 
that  "war"  and  "the  bomb"  are 
the  words  that  eventually  come 
out  of  any  discussion.  The  stu- 
dent says  "he  wants  to  get  some 
living  done  before  anything  hap- 
pens." but,  characteri.stically, 
"the  living  he  wants  to  do  is  not 
self-indulgent.  He  is  eager  to 
break  iiTto  the  accepted  social 
pattern  of  marriage  and  a  ca- 
reer." 

.Most    of    the    contributors    try 

Preview:  Flick, 
Jbse  Lrmon 

Anthony  Wolff 

The  major  event  tonight  is 
the  appearance  of  Jose  Limon 
and  bis  dance  troup  in  Memorial 
Hall  at  8  p.m.  Limon  has  been 
called  by  many  the  greatest  male 
dancer  in  the  world,  and  his 
troup  is  made  up  of  recognized 
stars  of  the  modern  dance. 

Those  untamiliar  with  the 
modern  dance  could  a.sk  for  no 
better  introduction  to  it  than 
through  the  exciting  artistry  of 
Jose  Limon.  Those  who  know 
his  work  will  undoubtedly  need 
no  urging  to  attend. 

The  Spring  Film  Series  pre- 
sents a  Russian  cla.ssic  "Battle- 
ship Potemkin"  in  Carroll  Hall 
at  8  p.m.  This  is  considered  by 
s?rious  students  of  the  cinema 
to  be  one  of  the  all  time  greats. 
The  story  concern.s  the  action 
aboard  the  battleship  Potemkin 
dutring  the  uprising  ol  1905. 

Tomorrow  night,  Carroll  Hall, 
8  and  10  p.m.:  "Birth  Oi  A  Na- 
tion". Another  classic,  this  one  is 
sure  to  hit  cidser  to  home. 


not  to  be  too  shocked  by  the 
-jirevaMing  "monuiTjentar  indif- 
.ilii^ce  to  "politics  or  reform 
Or  rebellion."  and  offer  a  num- 
ber of  theories  as  to  why  mod- 
etn  students  have  few  common 
literar>-  and  philosophical  gods. 
Favlkner  is  one  of  the  few  they 
do  share:  Orwell,  perhaps,  an- 
other. Leo  Marx,  of  the  Uni- 
'versitV'  of  Minnesota,  has  dis- 
covered that  "students  often 
sound  as  if  they  have  been  read- 
ing him  (Orwell)  even^;.;%hen 
they  haven't.  They  shar*'  many 
of    his     deepest      instiitfcts,     his 


scepticism,  his  anarchism.  He 
confirms  their  wariness  ol  slo- 
gans. .  enhusiasms.  passionate 
convictions . .. ." 

Another  .ymfiHer  l»eneves  that 

the  generatibn  ilj^il^in  a  med- 

Viypa    of     low     pHssftM    «loiilit 

I  wAich   wotiltf  b«   intolerable  to 

•ny«h«  who  had  ever  experienc-  ; 

f>d  t)ie  exhileratton  of   convic- 

'ii»h'':  several,  wdy)^  agree  4rilh  < 

Sta^jey  kimlt^;Hift  "the  moefi- 

bruilJM    religloti^:  r^ivai  ,  .  . 

represents   one   ef   the   several 

expressions    of    the    return    to 

orthodoxy    on    the   part   of   the 


many  rather  than  a  significant 

cMiversfwn." 

One  gathers  from  what  one 
h^  rf ad  and  heard  recently  from 
Bril^iMi;  <loas  that  the  brighter 
BrJti^  ^fWdent  would  get  along 
ifferJTr^fil'.-with  his  American 
c<)u;Bin,  %ost  of  the  American 
tia^tb*^  itiake  it  clear  that  they 
are  talking  mainly  about  the  live- 
liest 5  i>er  cent  of  their  pupils." 

.;Th?,  one  outstanding  difference 
bet^'eeo  them,  of  course,  is  that 
very  few  of  the  Americans  are 
thinking  of  emigrating  to  Brit- 
ain. 


"Do  You  Think  We've  Gotten  Any  Closer?' 


►W;  f.}- 


fi'.'tv 


THE  STUDENTS'  FOffrtM- 


Readers  Speak  On  Tuition,  George 


Editor: 

This  letter  is  to  be.  taken  as 
a  vehement  protest  against  H.  L. 
Ross'  bill  before  the  legislature 
of  North  Carolina  to  raisje  out- 
of-state  tuition  from  $500^  per 
year  to  $700.00.  Wh^t.^oe.s  Ross 
ssoek  to  do?  Does  he  seejt  to  elim- 
inate out-of-state  stujIeRts,  from 
the  University?  Surely  .he  will 
do  an  adecjuate  job.  if  tfiis  bill 
is   passed. 

Tuition  for  put-flf-slate  stu- 
dents is  high  enough  cIqw,  and 


is  above  that  of  many  other  state 
supported  universities.  To  raise, 
the  lee  higher  could'  produce 
nothing  but  a  severe  detriment 
to  this  great  institution  of  high- 
er learning.  To  have  people  from 
only  one  locale  will  not  produce 
a  well-rounded,  educated  person; 
is  not  the  latter  the  object  of 
this   University? 

1  would  like  to  strongly  com- 
mend the  administration  of  the 
Consolidated  University  for  reg- 
istering their  dissent  against  this 


detestable    and    deleterious    pro- 
position. 

Perhaps  it  would  be  of  little 
use  for  the  out-of-state  students 
and  the  interested  in-state  stu- 
dents to  post  a  protest  against 
the  bill  to  H.  L.  Ross  at  the 
North  Carolina  Legislature  in 
Raleigh,  but  we  believe  we  should 

try 

George  G.  Menk* 
Merritt  K.  Mitchell 
:*      *  ■       Charles  J.  Erdman 
Anthony  CrMm 


Rv  Walt  Keny 


Drama  Well  Done- 
Campus'  'CalFgula' 


«    AJ    « 


Anthony  Wolff 

When  he  wrote  "Caligula."  Albert  Camus  wTote 
a  big  play,  expressing  great  and  abstract  ideas  with 
grand  pa&sicn:  on  Sunday  evening  it ^as- presented 
by  the  Petites  Dramatiques  with' e?i«3  passion  and 
compelling  artistry.  This  was  the  Jfen^  theatre  with 
any  real  vitality  and  slrengUi  tlffit^e  have  spen 
this  year,  and  it  was  a  welcome  strainer. 

The  obvious  virtues  of  Sunday's  production 
were  twice  multiplied  —  first  by  thi  fact  that 
this  was  the  most  artistic  Mid  cen)K»quent!y  the 
ntost  difficult  play  attempted  her*  so  far  this 
season;  second,  because  the  Petites  Oramatiqves 
took  this  lalay  with  all  its  depth  mndr  strength;  — 
all  its  art  —  and  did  not  compromise  it.      ■■  ''^^. 

Rather,  by  some  skillful  and  imaginative' di- 
rection on  the  part  of  Bettina  Jinnette  ?»nd  the 
group,  the  drama  was  realized  altnost  to  its  full 
potential.  Even  the  cutting  of  the  c<rginal  transia 
tion  served  in  same  places  to  Ughten  up  the'  ac- 
tion and  so  strengthen  the  impact. 

That  something  was  lost  was  unfortunate,  but 
with  few  exceptions  the  lass  was  not  great. 

The  four-sided  platform  created  some  problems 
in  staging,  as  by  its  very  nature  it  must  lor  any- 
one who  attempts  theatre  in  the  round.  The  stag- 
ing b2comes  almost  impossibly  complicated  by  tht- 
necessity  of  having  a  con.siderable  part  of  the 
audience  faced  with  the  actor's  backs,  and  by  the 
unavoidable  crowding  which  often  blocks  the  au- 
dience's view. 

However,  theatre  in  the  round  has  advantages 
which  to  my  mind  more  than  compensate  for 
iff  drawbacks.  The  sacrifice  of  almost  all  scenery 
and  all  but  the  barest  props  often  contributes 
tc  the  effectiveness  of  the  action,  as  it  did  in  this 
case.  The  bareness  of  the  stage  and  the  nearness 
of  the  audience  to  the  action  give. the  play  an 
imntediacy  and  effectiveness  which^  is  quite  dif- 
ferent from  that  of  a  play  don^under  a  procehium 
arch  with  the  usual   trappings.  .^ 

And  Director  Jinnette  made  go«d  use  of  the 
little  physical  equipment  at  her  di-sposal.  The  en- 
trances and  exits  were  well  done,  and  one  in  par- 
ticular—Mucins'  exit  with  Lavinia  after  she  had 
been  raped  by  Caligula — was  stunning. 

The  direction  of  the  players  around  the  round 
table — the  only  ••scenery" — was  exceptionally  well 
handled.  There  was  always  the  feeling  that  the 
characters  were  maneuvering  for  position;  the  in- 
tricate interplay  going  on  between  and  within  the 
emotions  of  the  characters  was  translated  into  a 
dance  around  the  table.  ,         -  .,    •  -s  . 

The  acting  above  all  was  very  rfne.  Miss  Jin- 
nette must  have  had  a  cStmr  picfu^'  of  what  she 
wanted,  and  she  must  have  known  what  her  cast 
wa*  capable  of  doing;  the  cast  in  turn  responded 
well  to  her  direction  and  to  their  own  under- 
standing of  their  roles  and  the  play.  As  a  result, 
"Caligula"  was  a  production  which  had  many 
«t<ong  points,  no  seriously  damaging  weaknesses, 
«nd  a  unity  and  pace  which  made  tt  alm6st  un- 
bearably absorbing.  \ : 

If  the  acting  was  very  fine  ati  .^pround.  in  sev- 
eral roles  it  was  superb.  Lloyd  SkJnner.  in  the  title 
role,  gave  a  moving  and  artistic  performance  in  as 
demanding  a  role  as  any  actor  coultf  want.  If  pride 
is  a  sin,  then  the  gods  should  have  considered  Mr. 
Skinner's  audacity  as  an  act  of  hebris;  how  disap- 
pointed th:y  must  have  been  to  see  Skinner  ful- 
fil his  boast.  (It  was  a  boast  for  him — for  all  of 
them — to  say   'I  can  do  'Caligula'!"). 

Caligula — the  role  and  the  play — was  acted 
with  excruciating  tautness;  Mr.  Skinner's  restraint 
of  voice  and  gesture  brought  the  tension  to  the 
limit,  tot  he  point  where  either  he  or  the  audience 
had  to  scream — ^and  then  he  let  Caligula's  passion 
''each   a   pitch   which   brought   release. 

There  were  several  moments  in  Skinner's  per- 
formance which  exist  by  themselves  as  examples  of 
beautiful  acting.  One  is  the  scene  where  he  forced 
the  assembled  plotters  to  humiliate  themselves  by 
liftighing  at  a  joke  which  to  them  was  all  too  ter- 
rible and  real.  .Another,  immediately  following 
this,  is  his  public  abuse  and  subsejuent  violation 
of  Mucins'  wife.  " 

Credit  for  the  latter  scene  must  go  also  to 
Amanda  Meiggs,  who  conveyed  the  whole  com- 
plex of  fear,  hatred  and  helplessness  without  speak- 
ing a  line. 

As  Caligula's  ill-fated  mistress,  Caesonia,  Page 
Williams  did  another  outstanding  job  in  a  de- 
manding role,  (n  voice,  posture,  and  attitude  she 
was  completely  the  woman  who  hated  and  feared 
her  insane  master,  and  yet  found  in  him  some- 
thing so  vital  and  demanding  that  she  loved  him, 
enough  even  to  die  for  him.  Miss  Williams  is  by 
no  means  aging  and  her  beauty  s  far  from  being 
en  the  wane,  and  yet  her  acting  was  so  forceful 
hni  tkillful  that  these  things  seemed  to  be  the 
case. 

Miss  Williams  was  best  in  her  scenes  with  Skin- 
ner, most  impressive  of  all  when  she  drew  from 
Caligula  what  amounted  to  an  admission  of  love; 
this  was  Caesonia's  supreme  triumph  and  her 
worst  mistake,  for  his  admission  of  love  for  her 
justified  her  existence  and  at  the  same  time  com- 
mitted Caligula   to  her  murder. 

Special  mention  mu.st  go  also  to  Taylor  Will- 
iams, who  played  Cherea,  the  most  perceptive  and 
potent  of  the  r;»l>els.  lie  was  stern,  and  yet  never 
overbearing.  His  scene  with  Skinner,  which  con- 
cained  so  mnch  of  the  guts  of  the  play,  was  mas- 
terful I  done  by  both  actors. 

In  almost  every  respect  this  was  a  grand  per- 
formance. Those  who  are  neglected  by  this  re- 
view are  unjustly  slighted — there  is  just  not  enough 
snace  to  give  proper  mention  to  ever.vone.  Congral 
ulations  to  Scamon  Gottlieb,  originator  of  the  idea 
of  Petites  Dramatiques  and  producer  of  this  show. 
!o  the  whole  cast,  and  all  the  other  people  who  had 
the  vijion,  conviction,  and  guts  to  do    "Caligula". 


•  ln< 
Sprinl 
do  b{ 
Divinl 
Sund/ 
-   I>r 


Fthicv 
addres 
Christ! 
firmat] 

Fiv< 
and    al 
lead   V 
campu| 
drcsse 

Geod 
Basiie 


I 

I- 


"»immtmmat  im -ttm 


t957 


THURSDAY,  APRIL  11,  1»57 


THE   DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


PASI  THRlt 


wrote 

s  with 

>sented 

and 

[■e  «?ith 

seen 

iction 

that 

the 

this 

Itiques 

|th  — 

live  di- 
|nd  the 
its  full 
transla- 
hhe  ac- 

|tt'.    but 

roblems 
lor   any- 
|io  slag- 
by  the 
of    the 
by  the 
It  he    au- 


[ntages 
te    for 

|cenery 
ributes 

lin  this 
harness 

|iay  an 
»c  dif- 
Eenium 

of    the 
The   ea- 
rn par- 
|!ie    had 

round 
Illy    well 
[hat    the 
the   in- 
thin  the 
inio    a 

Liss    Jin 

^hat  she 

ler  cast 

(ponded 

under- 

res«>Jt, 

many 

messes, 

st   un- 


in  sev- 
lihe  title 
ice  in  as 
If  pride 
?red  Mr. 
|w  disap- 
in^r  ful- 
all   of 


ras  acted 
[restraint 
to  the 
[audience 

passion 


lor  s  per- 
[mples  of 
je  forced 

slves   by 

too  ter- 

following 

violation 

also  to 
jole  com- 
^ut  speak- 

lia.  Page 
^n    a    de- 
tude  she 
feared 
sonne- 
ted him, 
IS  is  by 
^m  being 
ferceful 
be   the 

nth  Skin- 
re  w   from 
of    love; 
land     her 
for   her 
time   com- 


;rand  per- 
this    re- 

|jol  enough 
Congrat- 

If  the  idea 

Ithis  show, 
who  had 
ligula". 


Council  Spring  Forum 
Co  Open  Here  Sunday 


:«''nie  Cantjkis  Christian  Council 
"i^pring  Forum,  featuring  Dr.  Wal- 
40  Beach  of  the  Duke  University 
tJivinity  School,  will  open  here 
tSunday. 


"The  Christian  Faith  and  the 
Honor  Code"  in  300  Carroll  Hall. 
Director  of  Student  Activities 
Sam  Magi  11  will  lead  student 
thinking     along     lines    of    "The 


y  .Dr.  Be.ich.  professor  of  Christian    Christian  Faith  and  Campus  Poli-  j 

tics."  This  group  will  meet  in  Ro- 
land Parker  Lounge  3  in  Graham  | 
Memorial.  ' 

Roy  Rogers,  a  member  of  the 
UNC  Sociology  Dept.,  who  is  pres-  j 
ently  teaching  several  marriage  I 
courses,  will  lead  a  discussion 
group  on  "The  Christian  Faith  : 
and  Social  Morality."  The  Library  j 
Assembly  Room  will  b^  the  meet-  i 
ing  pJace  for  this  group. 

Dr.  William  G«er  will  direct  a  . 
discussion  on  "The  Christian  | 
Faith  and  Academic  Morale"  in ' 
200  Carroll.  Dr.  Geer  is  a  member  j 
of  the  Social  Science  Dept.  ' 

History   Professor    George   Tay-  i 
lor   will  lead   a   group  along   the ' 
lines  of  "The  Christian  Faith  and 
Religious   Apathy"   in  the   YMCA 
Library. 

A  sixth  speaker.  Rev.  Maurice  [ 
Kidder  of  the  Local  E>piscopalian ' 


JOSE  LIMON  DANCERS 

for  students,  tclent 


-  OtJ' 


SAM  MAGILL 

•' v^. . . /or»m.  disctissicni   leader 
^':?  Photo  By  Bill  King 

fithics.  will  deliver  the  three  main 
addresses  of  the  forum  on  "The 
Christian  Faith  — Protest  and  Af- 
firmation." 

Five  outstanding  UNC  faculty 
and  administrative  members  will 
lead  various  discussion  groups  on 


campus    following    the    main    ad- 
dresses. '      He   is   a   graduate  of  Yale,   re- 
Geography    Proiessor   David    G.    ceiving   both   his   D.D   and   Ph.D. 
Basiie  will  lead  a  group  discussing    there. 


Jose  Limon  To  Perform  Tonight 

Carolina  students  will  have  an  I  Featured  as  guest  artist  on  the  ] 
j  Church,  will    direct    the    worship   opportunity  to  see  a  talented  dance  ^  program  will  be  Miss  Pauline  Kon- ' 

er,  who  headed  her  own  company' 
uniil  she  joined  Limon's  group.       j 

The  repertory  of  "Theater  in  the  i 
Dance"  will  include  works  by  bpth  j 
Limon  and  Miss  Doris  Humphrey,  I 
the  modern  choreographer  whe  is  ; 
artistic  director  of  the  company,     j 

Also  with  the  company  are  Lu' 
cas    Hoving,    Miss     Betty    Jones, ; 


services  of  the  forum  which  are !  and  drama  company  tonight  at  8 
being  held  in  Gerrard  Hall  at  1  pm.  when  Jose  Limon  appears 
p.m.  Monday  and  Tuesday.  j  with  his  group. 

Dr.     Beach     is    widely    known !     The  performance  will  be  given 
throughout   the   southeast  for  his  j  in  Memorial  Hall, 
interdenominational    work.    He    is  I 

a  noted  speaker  for  student  con 
ferences  throughout  this  area. 


QniC^r^ 


Mth 


-.4* 


(Author  of  "Barefoot  Boy  With  Chook."  tie.) 


VIDEOT'S  DELIGHT  \U^h 

Xhe  academic  world  has  made  its  first  tentative  steps. \ 
into  television.  A  few  lectures,  a  few  setninahs,  but  may 
I  respectfully  suggest  that  the  academic  world  ha.«i  not 
yet  learned  the  full  potential  of  teilevision? 

Wliy  don't  the  colleges  use  television's  vast  capacity 
to  dramatize,  to  amuse,  to  unshat;kle  the  imagination? 
Like,  for  example,  this: 

Aknouncer:  Howdy,  folks.  Weil,  it's  time  again  for 

■  that  lovable,  laughable  pair,  JBmipett  Xwonkey  Magruder, 

,„iPJti.p^..  «p(|.,Fei(cia  Max  Ccimscott*  JiLA.,  in  that  roFlick- 

.    ing,  roistering  tun  snow,  American  Hi.story  101. . . .  And 

here  they  are.  the  team  that  took  the  "hiss"  out  of 

"history"— Emmett  Twonkey  Maginider  and  Felicia  May 

Crimscott  I 


Annual  Senior 
Celebration 
To  Be  May  1 

The  annual  Senior  Day  celebra- 
tion for  graduating  seniors  will  be 
'  held  thL'  year  on  Wednesday,  May 
1.  Publi(fty  Chairman  Lou  Rosen- 
stock  has  announced. 
j      A  traditional  feature  at  Carolina, 
I  Senior  Day  is  a  day  set  aside  for 
I  recreation  and    final  participation 
I  in  group  activities  for  the  graduat- 
I  ing  class. 

'  According  to  Rosenstock,  a  fl^e 
i  movie  will  as  usual  be  shown  to 
I  the  seniors  on  the  night  of  April 
I  30  at  one  of  the  local  theaters. 

The  senior^'  will  hold  a  norgani- 
f  zational  meeting  at  10  a.m.)  Wed-; 

I  nesday  in  Memorial  Hall  to  be  f ol-  fseiitation    of    Q>    cards.    Students 
lowed  later  in  the  day  by^  athletic  j  wives  will  be  admitted  with  a  t]^ 
events   scheduled   from   2 'ib  4;30   charge,  -^rtt^  a  1^  ^^^WfM^  Jfeilff*ffM  '^ 
p.m.  *  '  j 

Later  still,  from  5:30  p.m.  on,  a  |  at  a  ticket   drawing  that  evening 


Miss   Ruth   Currier,    Miis   Lavina : 
Nielsen  and  Simon  Sadoff. 

Formerly  with  the  Joos  Ballet  i 
as  a  featured  soloist,  Lucas  Hov-  ! 
ing  left  classical  ballet  to  enter  \ 
the  modern  dance  field  with  Jose  ; 
Limon.  | 

Miss  Betty  Jones  assists  Limon  | 
in  hij  teaching  at  the  JuUiard  In-  { 
stitute,  Sarah  Lawrence  College ' 
and  his  own  school.  ' 

Musical  director  of  the  produc- ; 
tion,  Simon  Sadoff.  is  also  a  «con- 
cert    pianist    and    conductor  and  i 
has    experience    with    the    LiAon  | 
company    in    its    tours   to   Paris 
Mexico  City,  and  South  ^Unetica. 

Sponsored  by  the  Student  Enter- 
tainment Committee,  the  Jose  Li 
mon  dance  program  will  be  pre- 
sented free  to  studcntir  upon  pre- 


barbecue  will  be  held  at  the  Patio 
and  entertainment  will  be  provid- 
ed by  four  different  bands. 


A  grand  prize  will  be  awarded    scnstock 


from  stubs  which  will  be  distribu- 
ted at  the  organization*!  meeting 
in  the  morning,  according  to  Ro- 


Reverend-Jazz  Music  Expert 
Will  Speak  Here  Next  Month 


i. 


Vl  iii^^  \hm  ki^pendJ  ioVaOn 


Dr.  Magruder:  Howdy,  folks.  A  funny  thing  hap- 
pened to  me  on  the  way  to  my  doctorate.  A  mendicant 
approached  me  and  said,  "Excuse  me,  sir,  will  you  give 
me  25  cents  for  a  .-sandwich?"  I  replied,  ^Terhapa  I  will, 
my  good  man.  Let  me  see  the  sandwich." 

Miss  Crimscott:  Oh.  how  droll,  Dr.  Magruder!  How 
piquant !  How  je  ne  sais  quoi!  . . .  But  enough  of  badi- 
nage. Let  us  get  on  with  our  rollicking,  roistering  fun 
show,  American  History  101.  :;  / 

Dr.  Magruder:  Today  we  will  dramatize  the  taut  and 
tingling  story  of  John  Smith  and  Pocahontas.  I  will  play 
Captain  Smith  and  Miss  Crimscott  will  play  Pocahontas. 

^Announcer:  But  first  a  message  from  our  sponsor. 
. . .  Folks,  have  you  tried  a  Philip  Morris  lately?  Have  you 
treated  yourself  to  that  good  natural  tobacco  —  zestf ul 
vet  mild,  hearty  yet  gentle,  rich  yet  dulcet?  Hmmm? 
Have  you  ?  ...  If  not,  light  a  Philip  Morris  soon.   Light 

either  end And  now  to  our  grim  and  gripping  story. 

Picture,  if  you  will,  a  still  summer  night.  An  Indian 
maid  stands  by  a  moonlit  brook.  Suddenly  she  hears  a 
footstep  behind  her.    She  turns  . . . 

Miss  Crimscott:  Oh!  John  Smith!  You-um  startle- 
um  me-um ! 

Dr.  Magruder:  Hello,  Pocahontas.  What  are  you 
doing  down  by  the  brook? 

Miss  Crimscott:  Just  washing  out  a  few  scalps.  But 
what-um  you-um  want-um? 

Dr.  Magruder:  1  came  to  see  the  Chief. 

Miss  Crimscott:  You-um  can't-um.  Chief  is  leaving 
for  Chicago. 

Dr.  Magruder:  On  what  track? 

Announcer:  And  speaking  of  tracks,  stay  on  the 
right  track  with  Philip  Morris  —  the  track  that  heads 
straight  for  smoking  pleasure,  for  fun,  for  frolic,  for 
sweet  content. . . .  And  now  back  to  those  two  cool  cats, 
Emmett  "Twonkey  Magruder  and  Felicia  May  Crimscott. 

Dr.  Magruder:  Well,  folks,  that's  all  for  today.  See 
you  next  week,  same  time,  .same  station. 

Miss  Crimscott:  Stay  tuned  now  for  "William  Cullen 
Bryant:  Girl  Intern." 

Announcer:  And  remember,  folks,  each  end  of  Philip 
Morris  is  ignitable.  It's  just  good,  rich,  natural  tobacco, 
any  way  you  light  it ! 

(SMitzShuhiuin,  1«5T 

Any  way  you  light  it,  it'n  great.  Any  way  you  like  it  —  long 
Mse  or  regular  —  tve^ce  gnt  it.  Natural  Phitip  Morrint  Made 
Iry   the  peuple  ir/io  bring  you  this  column. 


A  theologian  who  recently  won : 
532,000  on   the   $64,000  television  j 
quiz    program,     wili     speak     here ; 
May  5,  6  and  7  at  the  YM-YWCA 
Speakers  Forum. 

The    Rev.    A.    L.    Kershaw   will 

speak  on  the  relationship  between  j 

theology    and    modern    literature 

and  drama  during  the  thriee  day  j 

program.  | 

I      He  will  preach  Sunday  morning,  | 

May  5,  in  the  local  Episcopalian 

Church  at  11  a.m.  The  next  night 

.  he  will  be  the  keynote  speaker  at  i 

j  the    annual    "Y    Nite"    gathering 

'  where  he  will  talk  on  the  religious ; 

,  significance   of   jazz.  j 

'      On   Tuesday   night.   May   7,   the ' 

Rev.    Kershaw   will  speak    at   an 


open    forum    where    all    students 
and  guests  will  have  an  opportun- 
ity to  question  him,  according  to' 
an  announcement  ; 

Any  group  which  is  interested ' 
in  having  Rev.  Kershaw  speak  to  i 
them  Sunday  morning  at  Sunday  | 
School,    Sunday  evening   at  their 
student  fellowship  meetings  or  to 
any  class  Monday  and  Tuesday  has 
been  asked  to  contact  YWCA  As- 
sociate Director  Miss  Anne  Queen 
at  the  YWCA  by  tomorrow. 

Rev.  Kershaw,  currently  doing 
graduate  work  at  Harvard  Univers- 
ity, is  a  graduate  of  the  Univers- 
ity of  Louisville.  He  is  the  rector 
of  any  Episcopal  parish  in  New 
Hampshire. 


MONCY MANAGERS:  SCORES  OF  VALUES  EVERY  DAY  WILL  HELP  YOU  TO... 

'       2      3      4      5     ^^  .      --        '    _.  a  6      7      1      ♦ 


idySavi 


Woman>  Day  f 

7o; 


Spam  Luncheon  Meat .  ''ca'^n 


MAGAZrKE 

'        Per  Copy. 

4ic      KntyMoereBeefSfew^'^.''^'  41c 

FROZEN  ^         „        ,   -  STRIETMANN 

Excelsior  Veai  Cullels   y?l  59e      Chocolate  Drop  Cookies  'ik^  47e 

FR0Z5N   GREEN  FROZEN 

A&p  Fancy       PoBS  2  '^,  33c      Soabrook  Fanis  Peaehes'lt^/  20e 

Uncle  Ben's  Converted  Rice  -  -'^S-  17c  »?  33c 

SUNSHINE 

Hydrox  Cookies 


!^#   FRESH   EASTER   CANDY  *"* 


Pk«. 


Worlhmorc    Spiced  Wftrthn.orc     MarvhmaUow 

--  'pwk''29c     Cottontails  __  ^^k°"29c 


I  Gum  Drops 

j   Worthmorc 

J  Marshmallow  Eggs  .--....   pS  29c 

.  Worthmore    Kitchen    Fresh 

Jelly  Eggs  -  p^  23c 

GRAND  LOW  PRICE! 

Sultana  Cocoa  i-^:  25c  p^,'  45 

.        NEW  LOW  COFFEE  PRICES 


FX.AVOR  OF  THE  MO:^TH  —  CRESTMCWMT  BANANA  NUT 


PL 
Ctn. 


Ice  Cream  -  - 

Sunnybrook  Grode    'A** 

Large  Eggs 


25c 

A 

20c  ^s- 75c 
47c 


Ctn. 
of  12 


Mild  And  Mellow 

EIGHT  O'CLOCK 
3  Lb.  Bag  $2.43 


1-Lb. 
Bag 

83 


3-Lb. 


Rich  And  Full  Bodied 

RED  CIRCLE   ^^  89c  ^aT  $2.61 

■•sag 
Vigorous  And  Wiiley 

^-  93c  'i:    $2.73 


BOKAR 


KRAFT 


FT 

Solad   Dressing 


GE  Light  Bulbs 

•  REGULAR  FROSTED  TYPE  • 

60  Watt  Size  Each  21  c 
75  Watt  Size  Each  21  c 
100  Watt  Size  Each  23c 
150  Watt  Size  Each  27c 

60  Watt  White  Frosted  ...  Each  23c 
100  Watt  White  Frosted  ...  Each  28c 

*****************  ■^i^i'*i'*»*B*u*u*^_fxj^j'uvrLru*u 


Save  onXT  Meats 


pt 


Jar     39C    Jar     65c 


ANN  PAGE  SANDWICH 

Spread 


8-Ot 
Jar 


21c    !ir    35c 


KRAFT  FRENCH 

Dressing 

BotUe   £.jC 
KRAFT 

MayonnQisie 


Pt. 

Jar 


41c   Sr,73c 


FROZEN    GREEN 

Dulany*  Beans 

t£  19c 


You'll  Save 
Af   A&P 

"Super-Right"    Heavy   Western    Grain    Fed    Beef — Blade 

Chuck  Roasts  -  ^  35c 

Super-Right"   End  Cut 

Fresh  Pork  Chops  ^  39c 

"Super-Right"  Delicious  Atl  Meat 

Sliced  Bologna  vt  45c 

Cap'n  John's  Pre-Cooked  i 

Fish  Sticks  -  -  ^^  29c 


Jane  Parker  Blueberry  or 


CUT  CREAM  STYLE     / 

Dulany  Corn 

^        lO-Oz. 

-*     pkps.  35c 


Cerberus  foods 

Chopped         2   ^»"  29c 
Strai«ed        3    •'■"  31  C 


WHITE   TOILET 

Delsey  Tissue 

4  Assort ed/[Q-. 
Rolls     ^^C 


HEINZ  FAMOUS  FOODS 

Rot  Dog  Retisb  11-qz  mr  31c 
India  Rolish  11  -oz.  jar  27c 
Keshor  Dill    25-oz.    ^^ 
Pickles         jar     '*'*^ 


Salad  Dressing  ^'r-^  35c  Peach  Pfes  -"^^SMBc 

Sultana   Prepared  '  Jane  Parker  Eoriched  White 

Pork  &  Beans  c£  29c    Bread  >^  15c  '^^  21c 


\qx  y^m  ^000  tosfe 
ond  saving- sence 


Golden  Firm,  Fresh 


FmjS  &  VEGETI^Blt^ 


*}  r'ii 


BANANAS  LB.  12 


Presh.  Juicy,  Florida 

Oranges  -  -  8  b^;.  49g 

Golden,   Fresh— Crisp 

Carrots  r  r  2J^.15e 

Ftesh,  Juicy  -. 

GTrult  -  -T  8^".  45c 


Colnfomia  Fresh    x 

Asparagus 

GRAND  1  Dl» 

LOW        Lb  I   riv 

PRICE!  I   \0 


NO  LIMIT— STOCK  UP!  Our  Finest  Quality'' 


24-Oz. 

Bottle 


IN 

THE 

DAILY 

TAR 

HEEL 


25c 


DICED  CARROTS  2 II  25c 


ADVERTISE    A&P  GRAPE  JUICE 


SI'HCIAL  LOW  I'lilCH.'  loiiu  Brand  or  Packer's  Label 


TEXIZE   HOUSEHOLD  PRODUCTS 

Liquid  Defwgenl  l?.  33e   lliqnid  Bleach    b"^.    1 5e 
«»e  Oil  E'o.  43c  b''.!!  75c   F'*"  Gleaner    &  69e 

Plastic  Starch             _.  Qt.  Bot.  5»c 
RlAAHAr      ^^     3C||«   ^^     HQt       Transparent  Starrh Qt.  Bot.  23c 


AMMHCA-S   fOllMMT   MM  HTAIIH  . .  .  trKI    ••*• 


^^S^P®'^  Markets 


I 


Prices  This  Ad  Effective  Throagh  Sat..  April  13        | 


Laundry  Starch 


Qt.  Bot    19c 


?I^^^o^      2'0  WEST    FRANKLIN  STREET 
ADDRESS 


I 


Blue   Label 

Karo 
Syrup 

Rot      ZjC 


^  m 


Sanitary  N'apkins 

Kotex 


Of 

Pkg 
Of  48 


^^^  85c 


$1.65 


Kleenex 
Tissue 


Of  400    ^yQ 


Bab-0 

Cleanser 

*••    CartoDf  OC 

Giant       1 7^ 
Carton      I  'C 


New  Blue 

Dutch 
Cleanser 

2    .^*|.  25c 


Bosco 

Milk 

Amplifier 

^ia?-  37c 


ANN  PAGE  PURE 

STRAWBERRY  PRESERVES  SPECI AL! 2  Lb.  Jar  59c 


PAGE  POUR 


THE    DAILY    TAR    HEEL 


THURSDAY,  APRIL   IT,   1957 


FOR  'ACTION  AND  CREATIVITY': 


Oldest  Citizens  Have  Great  Potential 


5*^-  Executive  Program  Honors  House 

A  citaHon  to  UNC  Chancellor  Robert  B.  Hous  e  was  presented  by  the  Fourth  Executive  Group  at 
graduation  exercises  last  weekend.  He  is  shown  seated  at  right  receiving  the  plaque  from  John  R. 
Knott  of  Charlotte,  standing  at  center,  president  of  the  1956-57  Executive  Group.  Dr.  Willard  Graham, 
director  of  .the -Executive  Program  is  standihg  at  right   looking  on,  , 


By    DOUGLAS    EISELE 

Detailed  research  into  the  cul- 
t»""al  background  of  North  Car- 
dSina's  oldest  citizens  is  being 
conducted  here  with  hopes  that  the 
findings  "will  be  of  some  value 
a.«;  they  plan  foi*  the  future." 

The  so-called  "Cross-Cultural 
Labosatory."  a  detailed  program 
backed  by  the  Ford  Foundation 
and  under  direction  of  Dr.  John 
Gulick.  is  a  sociological  study  of 
the  background  of  Cherokee  In- 
dians. 
SEARCH 

It  is  keyed  Ho  an  understanding 
of  current  attitudes  and  problems 
of  the  3,200-member  tribe  in 
search  for  social  and  economic 
spheres  of  improvement  indicative 
of  the  Indians'  "potential  action 
and  creativity." 

"If  the  tribe  is  to  participate 
satisfactorily  in  current  affairs, 
members  will  need  to  reorient 
themselves  into  the  modern  so- 
ciety \^ich  has  penetrated  their 
once-isolated  settlement."  said  Dr 
Gulick. 

And  to  achieve  this,  he  added, 
an  under.standing  of  their  present 
attitudes  and  problems,  colored 
by  influences  of  centuries-old  cus- 
toms, is  necessary. 

"At  present,"  remarked  the 
VNC  sociologist,  "many  members 
of  the  tribe  still  live  the  way  of 
life  of  the  period  of  isolation.  Yet 
they  are  a  source  of  great  poten- 
tial action  and  creativity." 
REMAIN  BCHIND 

The  Cherokees,  granted  North 
Carolina  citizenship  in  1868,  arc 
descendants  of  a  small  band  ol 
Indians  who  refused  to  be  driven 
from  their  homeland  in  the  in 
famous  "Removal"  to  Oklahoma  in 
1838. 


HEALTH   SERIES 

\  The  Hearing,  and  Speech  Center 
of  N.  C.  Memorial  Hospital  will 
stage  the  "Project  Health"  series 
next  television  show. 

The  show  Will-appear  on  WUNC- 
TV,  Channel  4.  at  9  p.m.  Friday. 


New  Season  s  Fashions 
See  No  Drastic  Change 


This  band  reorganized  itself  in- 
to tire  present  six  townships  which 
comprise  the  reservation  in  West- 
ern North  Carolina  and  set  up  a 
tribal  government.  Federal  act 
made  the  area  a  reservation  in 
'  1876. 

Following  years  broiight  to  the 

reservation   a   combination  of   old 

Indian    traditon    and    contrasting 

customs  of  white  mountaineers,  in 

eluding  settlement  pattern,  house 

types,  clothes  and  religion. 

i      But  despite     a    school     system, 

'  Cheokees  for  the  most  part  were 

"very    isolated"    from   the   outside 

world,     earning     their     living    at 

home    by    mountainside    farming 

and   logging.  They  still  used  the 

I  Cheuokee    language,   practiced   old 

dances  and  rough  stickball  game& 

I  between  communities. 

I      Since  World  War  I.  Dr.  Gulick 

I  said,  Cherokee  isloation  has  been 

'  reduced   by  construction   of  high- 

1  ways  and  the  development  of  rap- 

I  id     transportation.      Two      major 

i  highways    now    intersect    on    the 

i  reservation  site. 

\  'RAPID   DEVELOPMENT' 

These     developments,     he     con- 
tinued, have  encouraged  many  In- 
i  dians  to  seek  their  fortunes  away 
LfroTn   home,    while    tourist    trade 
"has    brought    a    very    rapid    de- 
velopment" in  the  Western  North 
Carolina  area  as  a  whole. 
I      "The  Cherokees  have  T>een  play- 
ing   an    increasing    part    in    these 
\  matters,  not  only   for  the  benefit 
I  of  the  state  but  for  their  own  as 
well."    Dr.    Gulick    remarked. 

Meanwhile,  motels  and  curio 
shops  have  sprung  up  under 
Cherokee  ownership,  and  the  re- 
1  cently  organized  Cherokee  Cham- 
ber of  Commerce  aids  in  coor- 
dinating many  tourist  trades. 


Other     enterprises     include     a 
restaurant,  museum  and  the  high- 
ly successful  outdoor  drama,  "Un- ,' 
to    These    Hills,"    which    employs 
many  members  of  the  Tribe  and 
attracts     literally     thoiosands     of 
Blue   Ridge   tourists. 
PROBLEMS   PERSIST  | 

"Tourist     trade     definitely    has  \ 
been  a  boon  to  the  Cherokees,"  Dr.  i 
Gulick  asserted,   "but  it  is  not  a 
cure-all   for   their  economic   prob- 1 
lems."  I 

One  reason  for  this,  he  said,  is 
a  relative  seasonal  employment 
which  is  most  secure  only  in  the  j 
summer  months  of  tourist  trade. ! 
He  termed  the  off-season  lack  of  j 
work  "a  problem  which  calls  for , 
creative  planning." 

In  addition  to  this,  the  Chero- 1 
kees  are  essentially  two  groups: '; 
one  lives  along  the  main  roads  '■. 
and  highways,  while  the  second  is 
still  an  isolated  group  living  in , 
the  hills  away  from  modern  so-  ] 
ciety  and  influence.  \ 

NATIVE   LANGUAGE  i 

"In  those  areas,"  said  Dr.  Gul-  j 
ick.    "about    one    half   the    people 
in  every  home     still     speak     the 
Cherokee  language  by  preference." 

The  "Cross-Cultural  Laboratory"  , 
was  established  in  1955  "to  study 
the  contpmporary  life  of  the 
Cherokees  with  the  methods  of 
modern  social  science,  anthropolo-  , 
gy  in  particular,  but  also  sociology 
and    p.sychology."  | 

Slated  to  continue  through  at 
least  September,  1958.  it  is  a  part 
of  UNC's  Institute  for  Research 
in  Social  Science  and  is  being  con- 
ducted by  Dr.  Gulick  and  grad- 
uate students  at  UNC,  Harvard 
and  the  University    ^f     Pennsyl- 


Research  is  concentrated  on  two 
reservation  communities,  thus  al- 
lowing a  good  cross-section  of  the 
varied  life.  One  community  is  iso- 
lated while  the  other  is  along  a 
highway  and  exposed  to  current 
developments. 

"Since  the  researchers  wish  to 
understand  Cherokee  life  from  the 
point  of  view  of  the  Cherokees 
themselves,  they  try  to  live  as 
close  to  them  as  possible  and  to 
participate  in  community  events," 
said  Dr.  Gulick. 

The  researchers  conduct  house- 
to-house  surveys  on  population  and 
membership  in  organized  groups, 
use  the  Cherokee  language  and 
make  themselves  acquainted 
through  visiting  habits  and  gen 
eral  orientation. 

"Another  phase  of  research  is 
the  use  of  certain  psychological 
tests  whose  essential  purpose  is 
to  find  out  something  about  basic 
attitudes  toward  life  which  most 
people  ordinarily  find  hard  to  put 
into  words." 
SUPPLEMENTED 

All  these  methods,  the  sociolog- 
ist said,  are  supplemented  by  tak- 
ing part  in  baseball  and  football 
games,  attending  church  services 
and  other-  meetings,  fishing,  "and 
just  sitting  around  passing  the 
time  of  day." 

"In  these  activities."  he  added, 
"the  researchers  .have  found  many 
community  raembei-s  not  only 
patient  and  cooperative  in  regard 
to  questions  and  tests,  but  also 
friendly    and    hospitable." 

Dr.  Gulick  said  the  research 
program  "represents  one  of  the 
ways  by  which  UNC  is  making  con- 
tributions to  social  science  and 
also  serving  the  State  of  North 
Carolina. 


Play  By  Harris 

Heads  List 

For  Meet  Today 

Featured  production  in  the  Car- 
olina Dramatic  Assn.s  annual  fes- 
tival here  today  through  Satur- 
day will  beihe  Seaboard-Jackson 
Neighborhood  Players'  presenta- 
tion of  a  new  play  by  noted  Caro- 
lina writer.  Bernice  Kelly  Harris, 
of  Seaboard. 

The  play,  entitled  'Yellow  Color 
Suit",  will  be  given  at  the  Play- 
makers'  Theater  tomorrow  at  8 
p.m. 

The  34th  annual  festival,  which 
will  include  25  plays,  will  begin  at 
2  p.m.  tDday  and  continue  through 
the  final  session  Saturday  at  7:30 
p.m.  All  performances  will  be 
held  in  the  Playmakers'  Theater 
and  an  admission  fee  of  $  .50  will 
be  charged. 

"Yellow  Color  Suit",  directed 
by  George' Harris  of  Seaboard,  was 
adapted  by  Mrs.  Harris  from  part 
of  her  novel.  "Hearthstones",  pub- 
lished in  1948,  which  developed 
from  a  shDrt  story  in  Colliers  in 
1942.  Mrs.  Harris'  novel  "Pur.s 
lane"  won  the  Mayflower  Cup. 
and  six  of  her  plays  have  been 
published  as  "Folk  Plays  of  East- 
ern Carolina '. 

The  three-act  play  concerns  four 
elderly  sisters  during  World  War 
11  who  have  been  secluded  on  an 
island  in  Eastern  North  Carolina, 
isolated  from  the  rest  of  the  world 
since  their  father's  desertion  dur- 
ing the  Civil  War.  In  the  cast  are: 
Blanche.  Gay,  Bickley  Bullock, 
Frances  Magee.  Rebie  Long,  Bet 
ty  Gay,  and  Burgess  Stephenson. 


"The  personnel  of  the  labora- 
tory earnestly  hope  that  their 
findings  will  not  only  be  of  in 
terest  to  the  Cherokees  but  also 
of  some  value  to  them  as  they 
plan  for  the  future,"  he  concluded. 


iTsmiPi  wneM  you... 


ytS    >■        MP 


''■  V 


By  PEG   HUMPHREY 


The  Intimate 
Bookshop 

205  E.  Franklin  St. 
Open  Til!  10  P.  M. 


look.  Instead  of  being  well  starch-  ! 

ed  and  buttoned  up  high  or  mere 
of     prints     and     new    ,  w  ..       j  ^   .*  .u 

1  ly    unbuttoned    one    button,    they 

cottons    will    soon    be    a,.(.  „o^^.  ^y^^n  minus  the  starch  and  ■ 
forth   on   the  Carolina  i  unbuttoned  to  the  third  button.        I 
The    neckline    is   then    filled    in  i 
with     L;old     chains    or    yards    and  ' 
•  yards  of  pearls  or  .sparked   by  an  | 
elegant    pin.    For   clas&'oom    wear  \ 
■  simply  a   cluster   of   flowers   or   a 
simple  pin  could   be  added  to  ac- 
;  cent  the  flattering  v  neckline. 
TRANSFORMED 

.Shirtdrc.  se^    have    undergone    a 
similar    transformation    and    thus 
can  be  dressed  up  or  down  as  the 
cccassijn   demands.   Silk   styles   in 
prints  and  stripe.s  are  popular  for 
\  dressy    occassion,.-,    and    the    dark 
j  striped     styles    abound     for  class- 1 
I  room  wear.  j 

The   biggest    difference   in   fash- 1 
ion  this  season  is  in  added  softness. 
Line.;  are  softened,  colors   muted, ' 
and  prints  su'idued  in  accnrd  with  i 
the  popular  ladylike  look  in  fash- 
ion. 

Shoes  are  designed  to  make  you 
feel  frivolous.  They  come  with 
saucy  l>ows,  pilgrim  buckles,  very 
skinny  heels  and  if  possible  more 
pointed  toes.  Grays  and  beiges 
rival  in  p.pularity. 


Spla..*hes 
springtime 
blossoming 
campus. 

Actually  Jhere  are  no  drastic 
changes  "in  fashion  this  seas>:;n. 
Hemlines  are  about  an  inch  long- 
er, brass  buttons  are  dotting  navy 
styles,  gray  ha  ■  zoomed  into  the 
liujeUglit.  and  grid  t-hain  belts  are 
<  ecoming  popular.  However,  with 
a  bit  of  imagination  and  an  aware- 
ness of  the  latest  accessory  tricks, 
coeds  can  easily  add  these  finish- 
ing touches  and  turn  last  year's 
basic  outfits  into  a  breath  of  1957. 

UNTAILORED  SHIRTS 

Tailored  jhirts.  for  instance, 
have  taken  on  a  more  untailored 


dOISF.I.E.SS  ROLND  BKEF 


FLAVORFUL  BEEf   CHUCK 

ROAST 


BUDGET 

BEEF 

LB. 


BUDGET 
BEEF 

LB 


59< 
29 


NATUR- 

TENDER 

LB 


NATUR- 

TENDEfi 

LB. 


69 
35 


SWIFT'S   PflFMIUM   TOP-OIAI.ITY 

FRANKS 

SMITH  S    PMIOL   OK    HIGH 

HENS 


1-LB 
CELLO 


SMITH  S    PHIOL   OK    HIGHI..\M>   K.\KMS   COHMSH 

1-L».  SIZE 
EACH 


47c 

MSH 

79c 


FRESH^FROZEIS  PORGIES  ^_,.,  ,     j%  ■■ 

FRESti-FROZEIS  CROAKERS        rurtra      «    #( 
FRESH-FROZEIS    PAIS    TROVT  .V" -51^    \f  |  ' 


FRESH-FROZEN   BL'TTERFISH 


1-LB   PKG 


Chef's  Pride  Pimento  Cheese,  8*oz.  cup     43o 
Chef's  Pride  Fruit  Jell,   12-oz.  cup 35c 


SPECIAL   VAl-LT--.!  -  S.WK   8c  ON   ARMOl'R'S   STAR 


BLAZERS 


Blazer  fittings  for  men  and 
women  will  b*  held  totiay  only 
in  the  Roland  Parker  Lounge  of 
Graham  Memorial  from  11:30 
a  m.-5:00  p.m. 

Fraternity  and  sorority  blaz- 
ers and  skirts  and  bermudas  for 
v/omen  will  also  be  sold. 


DAILY    CROSSWORD 


ACROSS 

1.  Cuplike 

spoon 
6  Billiard  shot 

11.  Directional 
figure 

12.  Hawaiian 
greeting- 
is  Mole  «k4n 

color 

14  Kindled 

•gain 

15.  Shade  tree 

16.  Compass 
point  (abbr) 

17.  GoddesA  of 
dawn 

18  Confections 
22  Month 

labbr  ) 
24.  County 

(Scot  ) 
23.  Com  cover- 
ing 
29.  Silk  scarf 

(eccl.) 
31.  Prance 
32  A  fertilizer 
33.  Tree 

34  Riv^r  (Lat  » 
3.5  Qrtor 
38  Goddess  of 

har\'est8 

(It  ) 
41.  Pish 
42  In  wlj»t 

manner 
45  Well 

grounded 
47  Platform 

49  Swiftly 

50  Rhee  s  .tend 

51  More  crip- 
pled     ! 

52  SBrmi«fc' 

DOWN 
1   TBWtjF* 
2.  Inland  tea 


3  Band    Instru-    26.  Over- 


ments 
4.  Cut  off 

5  Female 
sheep 

6  Insertion 
mark 

7.  Malt  drink 

8.  Part 

9.  Buckeye 
State 

10  Cushions 

16.  Weight 
(Ind  ) 

19  Man's  nick- 
name 

20.  Observe 

21.  Military  cap 

22  Mother 

23  Openings 
(anat  ) 


head 

27.  The 
ocean 

28.  Isthmus 
( Asia ) 

30.  Argent 
(abbr.) 

31.  Presi- 
dent's 
nick- 
name 

33  Not 
young 

36.  Kind -of  duck 

37.  Pier 

38.  Egg-shaped 
39  Father 
40.  Bang 
43  S-shaped 

molding 


am  HHEtas  0 

aio  issBciis)  a 

mnau:^  aitEisTii 
snao  [3SiB!i[i: 


Ycitcrtfay'a  Aaswcr 
44.  Dispttiy. 
as 

a  smile 

46.  Frozen 
water 

47.  Norwegian 
snow  shoe 

48.  Heavy  * 
weight 


4-»» 


Undergrods 
Spend  About 
$1500  Annually 

If  you  are  a  full-time  under- 
.^'raduate.  chances  are  thai  your 
expenditure  per  year  will  average 
about  $1,500.  according  to  a  re- 
cent .survey  by  the  Ofifce  of  Edu- 
cation. 

A  .student  in  a  private  college 
pay.s  about  $2,000  a  year.  The  aver- 
age expenditure  in  1939-40  was 
$747  for  a  student  in  a  public  col- 
lege, $1,023  for  a  private  college 
student. 

In  1952-.53  living  costs  repre- 
.sentfd  five-sixths  -of  the  total  for 
the  student  in  a  state-supported 
institution.  Then  average  tuition 
and  lees  at  public  colleges  were 
about  $175,  according  to  the  sur- 
vey. 

^  Families  supplied  41  percent  of 
the  money  for  the  bills;  29  per- 
cent came  from  the  students'  own 
savings;  and  students  earned  17 
percent. 

The  two-thirds  of  the  men  stu- 
dents, who  work,  ea^n  on  the  aver- 
age $486  per  yeai.  Half  of  the 
women  work  and  on  the  average 
earn  $256  annually. 

Mors  than  15,000  students  from 
110  colleges  were  included  in  the 
random  sample  for  the  survey 
which  was  conducted  by  Ernest  V. 
Hollis.  director  of  the  College  and 
University  Administrjition  Branch  j 
of  the  Oiiice  of  Education.  [ 


CORNED  BEEF    ^  39 

SPECIAL   VALUE!  -  S.WE    lie  ON  WAIXEB'S  AUSTEX 

BEEF  STEW     2  -  49 

SPECL\L   VALUE!  -  SAVE  9i   ON  CS  ALL-GREEN   FANCY  TINT 

LIMA  BEANS   2 -45 


c 

c 
c 


Fresh  Firm  Green 


CABBAGE 

u.     ^c 


Save  At 
y\  ^      Colonial! 


'JHEW  CHOP  FLORIDA  RED  BLISS 


POTATOES 


LBS. 


19< 


CS   Froaen 


Neiv!  Equal  To  The  Best,  Yet  Costs  Far  Less! 


KiMAS    3.D  DETEBGENT 

2     12-OZ.       t%  !■ 
PKGS.      JmhC 


LARG€ 
SIZE 
PKG. 


SPECIAL  IISTRODUCTORY  LOW  PRICE! 


Outdoor  Cooking  Time!  Get  Stipplies  At  Colonial  .  .  . 


BLACK   PANTHER   HICKOHA 


CHARCOAL 

CSTOMATO 

CATSUP 

FONDA   HEAVY-DUTY   WHITE   PAPER 

PLATES 

•THRIFTY"  WHITE  SLUED 

BREAD 


lO-LB 
BAG 

14-OZ 
BOT. 

PKG 
OF  40 


KING-SIZE 
24  OZ.  LOAF 


89c 
21c 
50c 
21c 


SWIFPS 
JEWEL  OIL 


SPECIAL  VALUE!  BIG  STAR  COLOMEO 

MARGARINE 

"LITTLE  SISTER  SWEET  MLXEO 

PICKLES 

FRENCH'S  PREPARED 

MUSTARD 

OUR   PRIDE  HAMBURGER 

BUMS 

ULy  PAPilR  COLD  DRINK 

CUPS        2 

MARCAL  PAPER 

NAPKINS    2 

llfcID    I.ABI:L   COFFEE    WITH   CHICORY 

LUZIANNE 

WBISCO   PRE.MIL..M   SALTINE 

CRACKERS 


THURSI 


t- 


Spri 
enjoy  it| 
green  gr 
in  the  pi 


BY 
DEI 

3^ 
IN 

m 

A 


EUA 

mm 


Cir 

JULIE  I 
RAYMl 


IT 


W.  Franklin  St  at  Graham 


Glen  Lennox  Shopping  Center 


1957 

s     , 


THURSDAY,  APRIL  11,  1957 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


PAGE  FIVE 


[Color 
Play 
at    8 

I  which 
igin  at 
krough 
It  7:30 
111  be 
leater 
will 

Irected 

\d.  was 

part 

pub- 

jloped 

|ers   i  n 

Purs 

Cup. 

been 

East- 

js  four 
Id  War 

on  an 
irolina. 

world 
in  dur- 
iist  are: 
tuUock. 
Ifi.  Bet 
?nson. 

labora- 
their 
of  in- 
it  also 
they 
Muded. 


X0 


LEGISLATIVE  ROUNDUP 


It's  Spiina  On  McCorkle  Place 

Spring  is  in  Chaoel  Hill  and  no  better  place  could  be  found  to 
enjoy  it  than  McCorkle  place  with  its  blooming  trees  and  newly- 
green  grass.  This  student  is  one  of  many  who  discovered  that  fact 
in  the  past  week  as  the  sun  shone  and  the  air  warmed  up. 

Photo  by  Woody  Sears 

Canadian  Affair 

W.^SHINGTON  —  (AP)  —  Cana 
da  yesterday  branded  insinuations 
of  Communism  against  the  late 
diplom'at.  Herbert  Norman,  as 
"Intolerable"  U.  S.  intervention 
in  Canadian  affairs.  It  threatened 
to  withhold  certain  security  in- 
formation from  this  country  if 
necessary  to  "protect"  its  citi- 
zens. 


nr  OVERWHELMING 
DEMAND! 


(Continued  from  Page  1) 
and  received  S25,  the  I>Ien'^'  Coun- 
cil $53  and  Women's  Council  S25. 

The  Carolina  Forum  was  given 
$1,725  of  which  $1,350  will  be  used 
to  procure  speakers.  The  Debate 
Council  was  granted  $1,535.  $510 
less  than  requested  though  $940 
more  than  was  recommended  by 
the  finance  committee.  The  ma- 
jority of  the  money  will  be  used 
for  tournament  e"<.opnses  and  trav- 
el. 

The  Independent  Women'  < 
Coun;?il  requested  $365,  but  wa: 
granted  $295.  The  deduction  of  $7( 
excluded  a  page  in  the  Yack  foi 
the  Council.  The  Consolidated  Uni 
versify  Council  roque ..ed  and  wa.' 
granted  $260.  The  budget  for  the 
University  Club  was  finally-  ap 
proved. at  $676.  an  increa.se  cvC; 
last  year's  figure. 

The  Class  Organization  Fund 
(senior  class)  requested  Sl,500 
The  finance  committee  and  legi.s 
lature  approved  Sl.OJO.  The  ex- 
change scholarship  when  cr.mhin 
ed  with  the  Foreign. Studer.i  Lead 
ership  Program  Received  S1.6U0 
The  band  requested  $1,000,  but  the 
finance  committee  cut  cut  the 
money  for  awards,  and  the  legis- 
lature passed  S825.  The  glee  cluh 
asked  for  and  received  $850. 

The  student  Covcrnmciit  self 
help  scholarship  receive!  $200 
Graham  Memorial  Student  Unioi. 
$41,325  which  i.s  provided  by  stu 
dent  fees  of  S6  per  .student.  The 
State  Student  Legislature  received 
$150. 

The  Men's  Interdormitory  Coun 
cil's  uidget  was  set  at  $1,500.  T'nJ 
Publications  B  ard  <iot  SIOO.  At 
fir.'t  the  Carolina  Handbook  go; 
$2,250,  but  then  V  ice-Preside  n' 
Evans,  realized  he  had  read  thi 
wrong  figure  and  the  Handbook 
war.  granted  $1,200,  the  amount 
approved  by  the  finance  .commit- 
tee. 

The  Vackety-Yack  received  $28,- 


235.  The  other  third  of  its  budget 
will  be  provided  by  the  Yack.  The 
Daily  Tar  Heel  received  $23,000.40. 
The  Daily  Tar  Heel  will  provide 
hall  of  its  $46,000.40  budget. 

The  Carolina  Quarterly  received 
$1,000;  the  other  two-tnirds  of  its 
budget  it  will  provide  itself.  Five 
hundred  dollars  was  allocated  for 
^  campus  humor  magazine;  the 
lew  magazine  will  not  be  responsi- 
ble for  any  of  the  past  debts  ol 
he  Tarnation. 


The  budget  was  prepared  by  the 
Budget  Committee  under  the 
chairmanship  of  .lohn  H.  Kerr. 

Representative.-  Alphin,  Crater. 
Cushman,  Farrell,  David  Evans, 
Peele,  Woltz.  Wardrup,  Whitfield, 
and  Hughes  were  not  present. 

At  the  meeting  it  was  announc- 
ed that  Bob  Carter  would  replace 
Al  Goldsmith  on  the  Orientation 
Committee  and  Dann  Woltz  had  to 
resij;n  hi«  seat  becau.se  of  increa.s- 
ed  fraternity  duties. 


GOLDEN  FLEECE  CITATIOISIS 


Positions  Are  Open  For  Trip 
To  St.  Helena  Island  Camp 


There  is  rocm  for  several  more 
Ttudents  to  attend  a  five-day  work  j 
?amp  on  St.  Helena  Island  spon-  j 
cred  by  the  Cosmopoplitan  Club  i 
:iid  the  YM-'YWCA  during  spring  ' 
olidays.  I 

Fifteen   overseas   and   American  ] 
JNC     .\udents     already     plan     to  i 
jpend  the  spring  holidays  on  the 
vork  camp. 

The  ecumenical  group  will  re- 
pair the  Penn  Community  crnfer- 
n?e  grounds  for  future  use.   The 


conference  grounds  are  located  on 
the  Atlantic  Ocean  near  Frogmore, 
S.  C. 

Included  in  the  plans  are  com- 
munity sings,  clambakes,  and 
beach  parties. 

Transportation  to  and  from  St. 
Helena  Island  is  the  only  expense. 
R  om  and  board  will  be  paid  by 
the  Ponn  Community  Camp. 

Interested  students  may  ai>ply 
at  the  YWC.\  b^v  Monday  morning, 
according  to  an  announcement. 


World   News 


(Continued  from.  Page  \) 

I 

iver  the  Suez  Canal. 

Inf:;rmants  said  Na.sser  has  not 
Tiade  a  single  major  concession 
since  U.  S.  Ambassador  Raymond 
Hare  b:gan  last  week  a  series  of 
six  conferences  with  Foreign 
Minister  Mahmond  Fawzi.  and 
Washington  reports  said  Britain 
and  France  are  convinced  the 
United  States  is  getting  nowhere. 
The  two  western  powers  were  said 
to  be  urging  that  the  issue  again 
be  t  )ssed  in  the  lap  of  the  U.  N. 
Security  Council.  | 


GAZA,  (AP)— The  U.  N.  Emer- 
gency Force  said  yesterday  two 
UNEF  soldiers  from  India  were 
killed  by  a  land  mine  blast  while 
clearing  mnes  siown  near  the 
Gaza  airstrip. 

TEL  AVIV.  Israel,  (AP)  —  An 
Israeli  army  spokesman  claimed 
Jordainian  border  guards  fired 
across  th?  frontier  at  an  Israeli 
Patrol  south  of  Mount  Hebron 
yesterday,  wounding  one  Israeli 
soldier.        « 


INTH6«iCrURE 
IMHIRDEHIM 
A  SENSATION! 


EUA  KAZAN'S  fmnm  NHDCTioii 
m  JOHN  STEINBECK'S 


ONeiMA5cX}p£ 

JULIE  HAMIS- JAMES  DEAN  (^ 
RAYMOND  MASSE  Y.,BuM«sW 

NOW  CLAYING 
OPENS  FRIDAY 


GERMANS 

(CoHtimtcd    from    Page    IJ 
.Albums  which  have  siirpassed,  the 
milliun  mark  in  sales.  < 

Outgoing;  officers  this  year  have 

•xpreslieafiopes   that   their   enter- 

'■  lainmenl  card  will  prove  the  best 

.  „f   twt;   previou  \y   successful    ana 

1  WL'll    attended     Germans     celcira 

ticns. 

'Ihey  have  urged  the  entire  cam- 

j  pus  to  attend  this  final  affair  and 

j  to  join  in  making  it  a  climax  to  a 

j  successful  season. 

Jerry  Cold  Is  New  Head  ' 
j  Of  AFROTC  Honor  Society 

j  Jeiry  Col?  wa^  elected  com- 
'  mander  of  the  Arnold  Air  Society, 
:  local  Air  F.rce  ROTC  honqr  so- 
;  -iety,  in  elections  held  Monday.' 

Other  officers  elected  were  ex- 
I  jcutive  officer.  Ralph  Hunt;  conip- 
'  troller,  Jerry  Smith:  adjutant  re- 
:  corde:,  Bill  Aldred;  and  opera- 
i  tions  officer,  Thomas  Farrell. 
,  !  Out-going  commander.  Cadet 
Major  .lames  H  wey,  was  awarded 
the  annual  Robert  A.  Gray  award 
as  outstanding  member  of  the  so- 
ciety during  the  past  year. 


a  body  In  the  street 

a  bullet  in  its  back 
and  lipstick  smeared 
on  its  face... 


and  a 

wanton 

giggling 

girl  in  a 

torn  and 

tattered 

dress! 


(Continued   from    page    1)        \ 

tributor  to  the  student  Honor 
System  and  stfldent  government,  j 
Fearless  and  persistant  in  the 
face  of  tremendously  difficult 
tasks  in  the  realm  of  the  student 
judiciary. 

James  TuUy  Beatty,  Charlotte — 
Athlete    of    international    renown  | 
and     sensational     ability,     often ! 
bringing  the  eyes    of    the    sports ! 
world  to  the  Carolina  campus.       ! 

Edward    Ulysses    Hallford,    Jr. 
Rocky    Mount — Skillful    leader   in 
campus  dormitory  life  and  student  i 
government.   Effective   in   all   his  j 
many  campus  undertakings. 

Paul     Qene    Strassler,     Apollo,  j 
Pa. — Courageous    individual,    mu-  j 
sician   of   exceptional    ability,   pa- , 
tient  teacher,  and  director  of  many 
musical    and    music-dramatic    pro- 
ductions. 

Robert  Joseph  Cunningham,  New 
York  City  —  Skillful  athlete,  ex- 
emplar of  the  Carolina  tradition 
of  high  sportsmanship  in  athletics, 
and  exhibitor  of  this  traditipn  to 
the  entire  nation. 

Zane  Emerson  Eargle,  Waxhaw 
—Creative  leader  in  the  religious 
life  of  the  campus,  musician, 
example  of  Christian  service  to 
his  fellow  students. 

John  McKay  Ludwig,  New  Or- 
leans, La.  —  Aggressive  director 
and  perennial  leader  in  campus 
dramatic,  musical,  and  other  cul- 
tural activities. 

Eli  Naehamson  Evans,  Durham 
— Scholar,  aggressive,  capable  lead- 
er of  campus  Student  Government, 
and  proud  exponent  of  effective, 
responsible    .student    leadership. 

James    Monroe    Chamblee,    Fay- 
etteville — Talented  musician,   long 
time  leader  in  campus  cultural  and  ' 
religious  life.  | 

Peter    Joseph    Brennan,    Brook- 
lyn,   N.    Y.— Athlete    of    outstand- ' 
ing    ability,    well    known    for    his ' 
good     sportsman<5hip,     a     tireless ' 
woker   and    perfectionist   .  in     his 
athletic  and  academic  work.  j 

Harry    Earl     Whitelock,     Balti- ' 
more,    Md. — Scholar   of    unusually 
high  achievement   in   the  field   of 
cl^sics,  active  in  the  student  ju- 
diciary and  campus  life. 

George   Robin.son    Ragsdale,   Ra- 
leigh— Able  leader  in  the  student 
judiciary,    prime    example    of    re-  i 
sponsible    stud.nt    leaderfihip     in  j 
his  <jj:i.ss  and  other  activities.  | 

Joieph     Francis     Quigg,     Levit- ' 


town,  N.Y. — Athlete  of  great  skill 
and  ability,  leader  through  ex- 
cellence and  example  in  athletics, 
and  scholar  of  distinction. 

Robert  Mayer  Evans,  Durham — 
Tapped  -at  Oxford  University.  Eitg- 
land,  by  Argonauts  Ed  Yoder. 
Dick  Baker,  and  Paul  Likens  (all 
Rhodes  Scholars),  student  at  the 
University  in  the  class  of  1952, 
outstanding  representative  of  the 
United  States  and  the  University 
of  North  Carolina  in  scholarship, 
athletics,  and  student  government 
in  Great  Britain. 

Louis  Round  Wilson.  Chapel 
Hill — Long  time  librarian  ^t  the 
University  and  educator,  to  whom 
the  University  owes  a  lasting  debt 
of  gratitude  for  his  successful  ef- 
forts in  the  twenties  to  raise  the 
University  from  the  status  of  a 
provincial  Southern^  school  to  the 
greatest   Southern   university. 

Frank  J.  McGuire,  Chapel  Hill 
— Coach  McGuire  -  peerless  leader 
in  and  teacher  of  sportsmanship, 
important  contributor  to  the  Car- 
olina way  of  life,  an  inspiration  to 
the  campus  as  well  as  to  his  team. 

James  A.  Freeman.  Chapel  Hill 
— Coach  Buck  Freeman,  long  a  stu- 
dent and  teacher  of  the  art  ot 
basketball,  contributor  emeritus  to 
(he  success  of  the  nation's  num- 
ber one  basketball  team,  a  de- 
vout. Christian  gentleman. 

J.nathan     Worth     Daniels.     Ra- 


l^gli— Editor  of  the  News  and 
!  oujerver,  unswerving  in  his  -de- 
!  votion  tothe  beX  interests  of  the 
I  state  of  North  Cdcolina  and  the 
j  Univwsity,    responstti^e    exponent 

of  freedom  of  the  pre;^ 

Foster  Fitz-Simons.  Chamsl  Hill 
— I*rofessor  Fitz-Simons.  talented 
director  of  dramatic  productions, 
tireless  in  his  efforts  to  achieve 
perfection,  able  leader,  counselor 
i  generous  with  his  time  and  ex- 
perience. 

j  Paul  M.  Green,  Chapel  Hill— 
'  Pulitzer  Prize  winning  playwTite 
who  revived  the  outdoor  histori- 
P3i  drama,  and  significant  con- 
tributor to  the  cultural  life  <^  th« 
state  and  nation  in  the  field  of 
dramatic  art. 

William  H.  Poteat,  Chapel  Hill 
— Professor  Poteat,  inspiring  teach- 
er of  philosophy,  generous  coun- 
,  selor  of  student,  leaders,  giving  un- 
slintingly  of  time  and  effort  to  in- 
crease the  value  of  education  at 
the  University  Both  in  and  out  of 
the  classroom. 


Phone  9-8781 


LASTING  PRIDE 

and 
SATISFACTION 

goes  with  your 


Aftcarvec 


DIAMOND    RINGS 


.  .  because    they 
are   guaranteed 

for  LASTING 
Diamond   Value. 

As  Advertised  In 
Life  and   Look 

WSNIWORTH 

&  SLOAN 

Jewelers 


'Mr  FORMAL'  wears 


^„/   ,V    -f'vV 


Grad  Club  Officers 

The  Grad  Club  officers  from   left  to  right:   Bill    Deaton,  president:  Helen  Hawfreld,  secretary;  Elean- 
or Riggins,  advisor;  Bob  Rennick.  treasurer;  and  Bfll    Kirkman,  program  chairman.       Photo  by  Bill  King 


Covering  The  University  Can^pus 


nSbteifid.!) 


'Ae&A^ 


lEFF  CHANDLER  -JEANNE  GRAIN  -JACK  CARSON 
GAIL  RUSSELL  •  ELAINE  STEWART 

CiNemaScOPIE 


Iter 


STARTS 
TODAY 


NEWMAN  CLUB 

The    Newman    Club    will    meet 
I  Sunday    at   6:30   p.m.    in   the   New 
I  Catholic  Chapel  on  Ginigoul  Koad.  j 
'  There  will  be  a   buffet  speaker.      | 
'      All   members  and   Catholic   stu  i 
i  dohts  have  been  urged  and  invited  ! 
!  to  attend. 
LAW  STUDENTS  | 

The  Lav^  Students  Assn.  at  UN'C  1 
will  sponsor  a  public  addres..-  on  i 
Thursday  night  by  Willard  W.  Gat-  ; 
chell,  genaral  counsel  for  the  Fed-  j 
eral  Power  Commission  in  Wash- 1 
ington,  D.  C. 

Gatcbell  will  speak  at  8  p.m.  in 
Manning  Hall  CourtrQ,om  on  "Some 
Attractions  for  the  Lawyer  in  Gov- 
ernment Service.'  Arrangements 
for  his  talk  are  being  handled  by 
the  LS.A  speakers  c^  mmittee,  hoai- 
ed  by  Jerry  A.  Campbell. 
f»ARENTS'  DAY 

An  organizational  meeting  of  the 
UNC  Medical  Parer.ti'  C!nb  will 
be  held  in  connection  with  ob- : 
serv^nce  of  Parents*  Day  at  thej 
UNC  School  of  Medicine  i-atuiday  | 
Registration  for  the  day-long  I 
program  will  be  held  in  the  l(»i)by  j 
of  N;  C.  Memorial  Hu.pital  begin- : 


ning  at  9:30  a.m.  The  organization-  } 
al  meeting  will  be  held  at  U  a.m.  i 
following  a  'tour  of  ihe  hospital 
and  School  of  Medicine.  I 

The   Rev.   Samuel   H.   Howie   of 
Faycrteville    will    preside    at    this 
meetrng. 
STATISTICS  COLLOQUIUM 

D..  H.  Robert  van  der  Vaart  of 
Sweden  and  Amsterdam,  noM-  visit- 1 
ing  prcfessor  of  Experimental  Sta- 1 
tisttes  at  N.  C.  State  College,  will 
speak  at  the  Statistics  Colloquium 
Mf-nday  at  4  p.m.  in  206  Phillips 
Hall.  [ 

He  will  talk  on  "Some  results 
concerning  the  estimation  of  the 
type  of  quadric  to  be  fitted  to  re- 
spi.nse  .-.irface  data."'  All  statisti- 
cians and  others  interested  in  lil- 
iin'J,  curved  surfaces  to  I^Sla  have 
been  invited. 

ORIENTATION 

Girls  I  inttTTcsted  in  iyjntYg  an|' 
afternoon  for  the  n  \l  few  weeks 
'a  the  orjinlatiLn  oftice-itjay  con- 
tact Mif*  Mary  Jane  Fisher  in  319 
Mclver,  8-ftl34.  Any  he4p  will  be 
appreciated  by  the  Oo^it^lion 
Committee.  { v  '  ' 


GRAD  CLUB 

/rhe  Graduate  Club  will  sponsor 
a  party  Friday 'at  8  p.m.  in  Cobb 
dormitory  basement.  The  5-Dimen- 
sion  Band  of  Bob  Olson  will  be 
featured. 

Dancing,  entertainment  and  re- 
frchmenls  will  highlight  an  in- 
formal program  open  to  all  gradu- 
ate students,  faculty  members,  ad- 
ministration members  and  older 
undergraduates  over  age  21. 
WUNC-TV 

today's  schedule  for  WUNC-TV, 
t^  University's   educational   tele- 
vi  ^on  station,  k  -as  follows: 
12:45     Music 

1:00     Today  on  the  Farm 

1:30     Play  Period 

SI.")     Mu.sic 

5:80     Mr.  Murgle's  Musee 

5:45     Draw    Me   A   Story 

'6:00     Legislative  Review 

G  20     N'.'ws  and  Safety 

6:.'?0    American  Government 

7:00     Museum  of  Art    • 

7:30    German   Conrse 

8:15    Dr.  Sihriver 

9:00    World  of  Man 

9  30     Lecture  Hall 
10:00    iFiqal   Edition 


at  all 
college 
'formals' 


G^^RMaNS 
At'RiL  12  a  13 


Won't  wrinkle!  Resists  stains! 

Sheds  water!  Long  distance  packing 
won't  mar  its  "just  pressed"  looks! 

No  wonder  more  grads  and  undergrads 
wear  AFTER  SIX  than  all  other 
formals  combined. 


TROPICAL   TUXEDOS 

WHITE  DINNER  JACKETS 

CAROLINA    BLUE    DINNER   JACKETS 

ALL   ACCESSORIES 


•  -*-:>^w^:?^  -i^ir  /'^  -vvji^^.-uu.*^. 


f  »Asi  snc 


THE   DAILY  TAR   HEEL 


THURSDAY,  APRIL  11,  1957 


Tar  Heels  Survive  Late  Virginia  Rally  For  5-4  ACC  Win 


New  Tennis  Coach  Has 
Netters  Working  Hard 


Pictured  abov*  are  Carolina  outfielders  Dick  H  jdscn  and  Joe  Shook  whase  hitting  contributed  to 
the  Tar  Heels  Atlantic  Cdast  Conference  win  over  Virginia  yesterday.  Both  are  veterans  and  are  ar;iong 
the  leading  hitters  for  the  Tar  Heels  this  season. 


Carolina  Gets  11  Hits  In 
Win;  Aycock  Winner 


By  BILL   KING 

The  Carolina  Tar  Heels  collec- 
cd  five  runs  in  the  first  u\  e  in- 
nings then  sur\ivcd  a  late  Virginia 
rally  to  hand  the  Cavaliers  a  5-4 
ACC  defeat  in  Emerson  Stadium 
yesterday. 

The  Tar  Heels  held  a  5-0  lead 
going  into  the  top  of  the  .jventh 
inning  behind  the  two-hit  pitching 
of  Charlie  Ajcock.  but  three  Caro- 
lina errors  and  two  Virginia  hit.s 
enabled  the  visitors  to  collect 
three  runs. 

Tom  Maultsby,  a  big  right-hand- 
er from  Chapel  Hill,  wa5  called 
up^n  in  the  seventh  to  relieve  Ay- 
cock  with  two  runs  already  across 
and  the  bases  loaded.  Maultsby 
got  the  next  batter  to  hit  into  a 
double  pJay,  scoring  the  runner 
from  third,  then  got  first  base- 
man Bob  Hardy  to  ground  out  to 
end  the  inning.  I 

Mault.  :y  got  into  trouble  again 
in  the  top  of  the  ninth  after  get- 
ting three  up  and  three  dtwn  in 
the  eighth.  The  Tar  Heel  •  held  a 
5-3  lead  in  the  top  of  the  ninth 
when  Maultsby  walked  relief 
pitcher  Doyle  Dawson.  A  hit  bat- 
ter moved  Daws:n  to  second  and 
a  .single  by  pinch-hitter  Chuck 
Arnold  sent  him  home  with  the 
fourth  Virginia  run. 

The  Carolina  senior  then  set- 
tled down  to  preserve  Aycock's 
game  as  Hardy  ended  the  contest 
by  g'-ounding  out  w.Ui  two  runners 
on  base.  ; 

The  Tar  Heels  banged  out 
eleven  hits  off  three  Virginia 
pitchers  in  defeating  the  Cavaliers 
for  the  .-ocond  straight  day.  , 

In  the  first  inning  leadoff  bat- ; 
ter  Don   Lewis  singled   to  center. 
Joe  Shock's  sacrifice  and  a  single 
by    first     baseman     Bomber    Hill 
brought    Lewis    around    with    the 


Tar  Heels  first  tally. 

Carolina  increased  its  lead  to  3-0 
in  the  third.  Shook  singled  and 
stJle  second  base.  Roger  Honey- 
cutt  then  lined  a  single  to  right 
to  •  ore  Shook  from  second. 
Bomber  Hill  then  reached  first  on 
a  fielder's  choice  as  Honeycutt 
was  cut  down  at  second  ba.  <:.  Cen- 
terfielder  Dick  Hudson  brought 
Hill  around  with  the  second  run 
of  the  inning  with  a  solid  dou  -le 
to  center. 

Run  number  four  for  the  Tar 
Heels  came  in  the  home  fourth 
after  two  men  were  out.  Lewis  col- 
lected a  single  and  moved  all  the 
way  to  third  when  catcher  Pres- 
ton Harrison  threw  high  to  second 
base  trjir.g  to  get  Lewis  stealing. 
Shook  once  again  came  through 
(or,  Carolina  with  a  run- vofing 
single  to  right-center  field. 

Kighl-fif-ider  Don  Hill  scored 
the  final  Carolina  run  in  the  fifth 
inning.  Hill  singled  and  moved  to 
third  on  an  error  by  Virginia  cen- 
tcr-fi'-dder  Reecc  Whitley.  Hudson 
brought  Hill  home  with  the  run 
that  eventually  proved  the  margin 
of  the  ccntest  with  a  line  single  to ' 
right.  I 

The  win  was  number  fotw  in  At- j 
lantic  Coast  Conference  compeli-i 
tion  f:r  Carolina  against  one  loss.' 
The  Tar  Heel's  over  all  mark  new ; 
•  ands  at  9-4.  For  Aycock.  it  was 
his  second  win  of  liic  sca.'.^n  with-; 
out  a  loss. 

Carolina's  next  game   is  a  very 
important  Big  Four  battle  with  the  ; 
Duk'«  Blue  Devils  here  Saturday  at 
3   o'clock.   C.ach    Walt   Kabb   will! 
probably     send     his     undefeated - 
pitching    ace    Jim    Raugh    against! 
the  W'est  Durham  club.  The  Blue 
Devils  will   pr'.bably  counter  with; 
either  Dick  Smallwood  or  Harleigh  i 
Fatsingar.  ; 


[                         THE  BOX 

!  VIRGINI.!V 

Ab. 

H. 

0. 

A. 

'  Moyer.   If 

4 

0 

2 

0 

1  Joseph,  3b 

3 

0 

0 

2 

j  Hardy,  lb 

4 

0 

9 

1 

I  Whitley,  cf-c 

4 

0 

1 

0 

Yarborough.  rf 

4 

1 

0 

0 

Inge.  2b 

3 

2 

5 

3 

Powell,    p 

1 

0 

0 

3 

Russell,  p 

0 

0 

0 

0 

a-Larison 

1 

1 

0 

0 

Daw  •  n,   p 

1 

0 

1 

1 

Harris: n,  e 

2 

0 

2 

0 

b-Hall,  cf 

1 

0 

0 

0 

Martin,  ss     .. 

3 

0 

4 

2 

c-.\rAold   

1 

1 

0 

0 

Totals   

32 

5 

^4 

12 

;  UNC 

Ab. 

H. 

0. 

A. 

Lewis.  2b    . . 

5 

2 

3 

3 

!  Shook.    If 

3 

2 

3 

0 

,1.    Hill 

4 

1 

8 

2 

'  Hnneycutt,  ss 

4 

i 

4 

3 

Id.  Hill,  rf 

4 

1 

1 

0 

Hudscn,  cf 

4 

2 

2 

1 

'  Hartman,  3b 

3 

0 

3 

2 

Leggettc,  c 

4 

1 

2 

1 

Aycock.  p 

3 

1 

0 

1 

Mault -by,   p 

1 

0 

1 

0 

Totals    35     n     27     13 

Virginia    .j^ „      000  000  301—4 

Carclina       -  102  110  OOx— 5 

R  —  Yarbcrough,  Inge.  Larison, 
Dawsrn,  L^wis  2.  cshc  .k,  1).  ilill  2 
h" — Hartman  2,  Powell,  Harrison. 
Whitley,  Lewi.*,  .Aycock.  RIII— 
iloneycult.  D.  Hill,  IIud.si-n  2. 
Shook.  Arnold,  Mr>yrr  ^  Ilud- 
s.n.  SB — Moyer,  Shook.  Lewis,  .\r- 
nr>Id.  S— Inge.  DP— Lewis  and  I. 
Hill:  Htn'^ycutt,  Lewis  and  I.  Hill. 
L— Virginia  6.  Carolina  8.  BB— 
.Vycock  2,  Russ'-^ll  2,  Maull>by  3. 
Dawsor.  1.  SO — Harrison  I,  Ayock  \ 
1.  Ru.ssell  1  HO— Harrison  6  in  3;  | 
Russell  5  in  3:  Dawson  0  in  2;  .\y-  | 
cock  4  in  8;  Maultsby  1  in  3  HBP 
—By  Maultsby  (Hall).  D— Aycock. 
L— Harrin.  T— 2:0^.  U— Talley 
and  Joe  Mills.  ' 


Former  Czechoslovakian  Davi? 
Cup  s'.ar  Valdimir  Cernik  arrived 
at  Carolina  la.st  week  to  find  thai 
the  Tar  Hcol  t^nn's  team  apparent- 
ly, faces  one  of  its  bleakest  sea 
sons. 

Cornik  is  the  new  tennis  instruc- 
tor here.  He  is  not  too  discourag- 
ed. 

"I  have  always  heard  that  North 
Carolina  has  one  of  the  finest 
collego  tennis  teams  in  the  United 
States."  he  said.  "This  is  just  an 
interim  period.  I  understand  we 
have  lost  s?me  good  boys  through 
graduation  and  scht*lastic  dififi- 
cu!ties.  but  we  will  do  better."  I 
Five  of  last  year's  Atlantic 
Coast  Conference  Champions  grad- 
uated inchuling  Tommy  Bradford, 
captain  and  nunib?r-one  player 
Three  others  are  forced  to  sit  the 
sc'iison  out  because  of  scholastic 
difficulties.  ^  i 

Cernik  is  making  every  effort 
to  improve  the  play  of  his  varsity. 
He  believes  the  Tar  Heels  still 
have  a  chance  to  capture  the  ACC 
Championship.  | 

j      The   new   coach   calls   his   num- 
I  bcr-onc  man.   Steve  Bank,   '"really 
good.  "He  has  an  excellent  serve 
and  a   very  good  backhand,"  Cor- 
nik   said.    "I    think    he    could    be 
ranked  in  this  country  if  he  work- 
ed   hard."  | 
Jeff     Black.     Frank     Livingston 
and     Ray     Newsome     also     drew 
praise  from  th?  coach.  Cernik  be- 
lieves    they     are     all     potentially 
good    and    only    lack    experience. 
The   former   Czechoslovakian   star , 
is  also  working  with  several  fresh-  { 
men    who    he    hopes    will    lift    his; 
'team    back    into    nalional    conten- 
tion again  next  year.                          | 
•'We  can't  expect  too  much  this 
season,"  Cernik  emphasized,  "but 
we    are    going   to    work   hard    and 
make  the  best  of  what  wo  have." , 
It    shouldn't    be    too    long    before 
North    Carolina    is    again    one    of 
the     top    teams    in    the    United 
States."                                                  I 

The  Tar  Heel  netters  know  ex- 
actly what  their  new  coach  means 
by  working  hard.  Cornik  insists 
the  boys  go  all  out  to  win.  His 
training    program     includes     run- ; 

Frosh  Game  I 

The  freshman  baseball  team 
ola.vs  host  to  Campbell  Junior 
College  here  this  afternoon  at 
3:30  in  Emerson  Stadium.  The 
'game  was  re-scheduled  from  earl- 
ier in  the  season  after  rain  forced 
postponement.  * 


ning  and  rope-skipping  in  addi- 
tion to  plenty  of  practice. 

Cornik  comes  to  North  Caro- 
lina from  the  Everglades  Club  in 
Palm  Beach.  Florida.  He  arrived 
in  the  United  States  in  1956  after 
playing  in  all  of  the  world's  big- 
t»est  tcurnaments.  and  he  has 
beaten  most  of  the  famous  n«tters 
in  this  country  and  abroad. 

Whib  playing  in  the  Swiss 
Championships  in  1949.  Cernik 
and  his  Davis  Cup  doubles  part- 
ner. Jaroslav  Drobny,  decided 
not  to  return  to  Communist  Czec- 
hoslovakia. 

Cernik  is  married  and  the  fath- 
er of  a  two-year  old  son. 


Two  Veterans, 
Cne  Soph  Lead 
Tar  Heel  Nine 

Two  proven  veterans  and  a 
lanky  sophomore  are  the  main 
rrasons  for  Carolina's  measure  of 
baseball  success  so  far  this  spring. 

Sonirrs  Jim  Raugh  and  Ivalec 
Hill  and  sophomore  catcher  iJim 
Legette  have  been  the  difference 
in  most  of  th-  Tar  Heel  wins  to 
dale^with  Hill  and  Legette  wield- 
ing heavy  offensive  clubs  and 
Rau^h   pitching   air-tight   ba.seball. 

Going  into  this  week's  games. 
Hill  was  leading  the  club  at  the 
plate  with  .341  and  five  runs  bat- 
ted in.  while  Legette  was  at  .310 
and    leading   in   stolen   bases. 

Raugh  has  been  by  far  the  top 
Tar  Heel  pitcher,  winning  four 
games  without  a  loss  and  posting 
a  brilliant  1.35  ER.\.  Over  his  last 
18  innings,  Raugh  has  given  up 
six  hits,  three  walks,  s^nd  only 
cne  run  while  striking  out  20. 

The  Tar  H?els  returned  from  a 
Northern  trip  yesterday  to  meet 
Virginia  on  Emerson  Field.  In  the 
only  other  game  this  week,  and 
an  important  one.  UNC  and  Duke's 
strong  Blue  Devils  tangle  on 
Emerson  Field  Saturday  after- 
noon. 

Legette  has  been  at  a  disad- 
vantage in  trying  to  get  his  bait 
in^  to  c^me  around  this  season 
as  a  result  of  a  position  switch. 
He  was  originally  a.  first  base- 
man, but  wh?n  regular  backstop 
Jim  Love  was  declared  ineligible. 
Legette  was  moved  behind  Uie 
plate.  He  has  had  to  concentrate 
on  catching  rather  than  hitting, 
but   has   bc:n   strong   there. 


Golfers  Face 
Michigan  Here 
Today  At  Two 

j  By   Jm  CROWNOVER 

Carolina's  undefeated  golf  team, 
returning  from  a  double-victory 
jaunt  into  South  Caroling,  ^11  ^e 
seckiAg  its  sixth  straight  wiB;thiB 
afternoon -' at  2  o'clock  when  If 
takes  on  the  Michigan  Wolverinfes 
here.         •  / 

I  The  Tar  Heels,  who  h^e  won 
decisively  time  and  again;  already 
in  this  young  season,  will  counter 
with  their  usually  potent  sixsome 
of  Tommy  Langley,  Gene  Looka- 
'Jill,  Buck  Adams,  Sam  Patrick, 
Walt  Siiinmerville  and  Tuffy  Hen- 
ri er.->n. 

These  six  made  up  the  team 
that  took  the  triangular  meet  from 
Clcmson  and  South  Carolina  in 
Clemson  earlier  this  week. 

Nothing  has  been  heard  about 
this  year's  Michigan  aggregation, 
but  they  arc  perennially  strong  in 
the  Big  Ten  Conference,  and  a 
close  match  is  expected. 

Their  chief  threat  is  reported  to 
be  Sohubeck,  who  three  years  ago 
was  runner-up  in  the  Ns^iiwial  Jay- 
cees  Junior  Tournament.  ' 

If  successful  thij  afternoon,  Car- 
olina will  get  a  chance  to  continue 
its  winning  ways  Monday  and 
Tuesday  of  next  week  &gahist  Da- 
vidson and  West  Illinois  State  on 
the  local  links,  Finley  course. 


Red  ^x  Win  | 

GREEIWILLE,  S.  C.  —  (AP)  —  j 
Four  home  runs  and  five  doubles  j 
were  laced  into  the  scoring  as  [ 
the  Boston  Red  Sox  gained  a  6-?  j 
victory  yesterday  over  the  Phila-  j 
delphia  Phillies  in  their  first  stop , 
of  their  barnstorming  trip  north,  j 

Ted  Williams,  Dick  Gernert,  Ed 
Bouchce  and  Chico  Fernandez  hit 
four-  the  circuit,  and  Boston  held  a  i 
4-1  edge  in  two  base  hits.  i 


Murals  Today 

Softball:  (4:00)  Phi  Gam  vs. 
Kap  Sig  (W);  DKE  vs.  S19  Nu 
(W);  Everett  vs.  Alpha  Chi  Sig; 
Law  Seh-1  vs.  Stacy;  RuKin  vs. 
BVP;  (5:00)  Sig  Chi  vs.  KA  (W); 
Lewis  vs.  Med  Sch-1;  Joyner  vs. 
Dent  Sch-2;  Steele  vs.  Manly; 
Mangum  vs.  Winston. 

Tennis:  (4:00)  Phi  Delt  vs. 
SAE  (play  off  tie);  PiKA  vs. 
Beta.  (5:00)  Sig  Chi  vs.  KA. 


Howard  Johnson  Restaurant 

STUDENT    SPECIALS     . 

Barbecued   Chicken 
Choice  Steak  Sandwiches 

2:00-    5:00  P.M 
SERVED  8:00-11:00  P.M. 

"Landmark  For  Hungry  Tarheels" 


CLASSIFIEDS 


■im 


TEACHERS   WANTED:    MAN   TO 

assist  in  coaching  football  and 
baseball,  Public  School  Music 
Teacher.  Seventh  and  Eighth 
Gra4e  .  Teachers.  Contact  the 
Principal,  Mebane  High  School, 
Mobaije,  N.  C. 


THREE  ROOM  APARTMENT  FOR 
rent  —  summer  only.  Complete- 
ly furnished.  Near  post  office. 
Call  8-7937  after  9:00  p.m. 


COUNSELORS  —  EXPERIENCED. 
tof>  salaries,  for  a  children's  co- 
ed summer  camp  in  lake  region 
of  Florida.  Specialties  Including 
arts  and  craft,  waferfront,  ath- 
letics, nature,  music,  and  gen- 
eral. Write  full  details  to  Camp 
Ocala,  318  N.  E.  14lh  Terrace, 
Miami  32,  Fla.  j 

DRIVING  TO  ANN  ARBOR.  MICH., 
for  Easter  holidays.  Need  rider.s. 
Call  Fred  Powledgc,  8-8602,  any- 
time. 


i>OMfcTH!NG  TO  START  THE 

GERMANS  WEEKEND 
LESSUTORIUS 

FRIDAY  FROM  4-6 

THE  PATIO 

REFRESHMENTS  WILL  BE  SERVED 


NORCrE  REaTHGERATOR  FOR 
sale:  Size  10.  new  model  in  good 
condition,  reasonable  price  — 
call  8-6557  before  this  bars  a  in 
is  gone. 


D/W 
CLASSICS 

^^f?^The  Dacron 

gind  Worsted 

■  ^^V      Tropicals 

that  Suit 

''':;--the  Weather 

10  months 
of  the  yearl 


Noture  .and  tcienc*  outdid 

themselves  when  they  created 

this  best  of  all  miracle  bfends  — 

Dacron  and  wool. 

Now  in  one  fabric  you  have  the 

richness  and  luxury  of  wool 

end  the  extro  durability  and 

wrinkle-resistonce  of  Oocron. 

This  lightweight,  tropical  suit 

keeps  its  handsome, 

fresh-pressed  look  days  longer 

ond  wears  comfortobly  through 

ten  whole  montFra  of  the  year! 

Tailored  '•rtaturally'.  in 
straight  and  narrow  lines 
that   have  become  the 
mai-k  of  the  successful 
authenic,  well-lMred, 


Handsome  Heather  Tones  of  British  Oxford 

and  Scotch  Mist  in  solids,  hairline 
^^_,^.^        stripes,  and  muted  piaids. 


■*^>»*-iri-"*i'** 


iiop 


La$f  season's 


MS 


Wfifof  S^es  Yanks  And  Braves 
Playing  In  '57  World  Series 


By  JACK   HAND 

ST.  PETERSBURG,  Fla.— {.\P)— 
Maybe  it's  too  much  Florida  sun 
on  a  balding  Uip,  but  seems  from 
here  that:         '  j 

Milwaukee  and  the  New  York ! 
Yankees  will  play  the  1957  World 
Series.  The  Braves  beating  out 
Brooklyn  in  another  tight  finish 
and  the  YanlEs  breezing  home  to 
clinch  it  in  early  September. 

Tony  Ku'.^k  of  the  Yanks  will 
win  the  "rookie  of  the  year" 
award  in  the  American  League  as 
the  regular  left  fielder  at  Yankee 
Stadium  with  Washington's  Ted 
Abernathy  his  chief  competition. 

Henry  Aaron  of  Milwaukee  will 
make  it  two  in  a  row  by  taking 
the  National  League  baiting  cham- 
pionship after  a  stiff  battle  from 
Stan  Mujial. 


j  shortstop,  will  turn  out  to  be  the 
I  best  of  a  slim  crop  of  newcomers 
in  the  National  League  with  Jack 
i  Sanford  of  tjie  Phillies  and  Tom 
I  Cheney  of  the  Cards,  a  pair  of 
j  pitchers,  also  in  the  running. 

The  National  League  will  win 
the  All-Star  game  again  witn  nine 
starters  from  Cincinnati  but  the 
American  will  take  the  Seriej> 
once  more. 

I      George  Crowe  will  see  plenty  of 

action  at  first  base  for  Cincinnati 

I  after  his  spring  bon^bing.  He  was 

I  the  hottest  hitter  in  Florida  while 

filling  in  for  Ted  Kluszewski. 

I  Tom  Brewer  finally  will  beat  the 
Yankees,  breaking  his  lifetime  0-7 
record,  and  will  go  on  to  top  the 
Boston  pitching  staff  with  another 
fine  season. 

Boto   Friend    again    will    be 


Mickey  Mantle  will  lead  the  ,  knowlcdged  the  best  pitcher  in  the 
American  League  in  home  runs  |  National  League  although  his  won 
and  runs-batted-in  but  will  yield  and  lost  record  will  suffer  from 
up  his  hatting  crown  to  Harvey  |  lack  of  support  by  his  Pirate 
Kuenn  of  Deitroit  in  s  three-way  mates. 

fight  that  aLso  involves  M  Kaliue.      Herb   Score   positively   will    not 
Andre  Rodgers,  the  Giants'  new  be  sold  for  $1,000,000. 


uce 


AFTER   SHAVE 
LOTION 


Refreshing  antiseptic  action  heals 

rozoii  nickS'  ^P*  l^**P  Y^**'  'I'"* 
in  top  condition.         1.00  ciwit«i 

SHULTON       N*w  York  •  Ter*R(e 


This  Arrow  University  oxiord  shirt 
was  such  a  smash  hit  last  season, 
you  asked  for  an  encore.  And  for 
good  reason !  The  collar  8  button- 
down — ^both  front  and  center^ 
back.  Full  length  box  pleat  in  back. 
Pcncfl-line  stripes  on  white  back- 
grounds— ^plus  white  and  five  solid 
colors.  Arrow  University,  $5.00  up. 
Shantung  strq)c  ties,  $2.^0. 


ARROW 

—first  in  fqshion 
swan  •  TIB 


^*? 


WEATHER 

Partly  clouder  and  cooler  with 
•n  expocted  high  of  65. 


arhe 


STar  Keel 


ACADEMICS 

Tht    editor    pr*f»rc    thorn.    On 
p<98  two. 


VOL    LVn  NO.  16S 


LotHpiete  iA^    Wtre  &ervie« 


CHAPEL  HILL,  NORTH  CAROLINA',  FRIDAY,  APRIL    12,   1957" 


OfHeu   M   GfttMMi   NnMHai 


FOUR  PACES  THIS   ISSUI 


White  States  Own 
Opinion;  Alphin 


brief 


"Caleb    White'.'  words    Wednes- 
day to  a   Daily  Tar  Heel  reporter 
(concerning  the  Lenoir  Hall  situa- ' 
tion)  were  as  far  as  we  are  con- 1 
cerned  his  own  opinion  and  as  far  i 

Egyptian  To  | 
Study  Here  I 
On  Exchange     J 

By  EDITH  Mac  KINNON  ' 

UNC  will  be  tiie  home  of  an 
Egyptian  exchange  student  for  the 
year    1957-58.  j 

Hussein  Ibrahim  Hussein  Nasrj 
of  Hawamdieh.  Egypt,  is  the  spe-j 
cial  student  taking  part  in  the! 
program  of  the  Foreign  Student ; 
Leadership  Project  of  the  U.S.! 
National   Stttdent   Assn.  i 

According  to  retiring  student' 
body  President  Bob  Young,  the  j 
purpose  of  Nasrs  coming  to  the 
Carolina  campus  is  to  observe 
conditions  in  all  fields  of  activi- 
ty, including  the  academic  pro- 
gram, student  organizations  and 
student    leadership    opportunities. ! 

'"He   will    have  the   opportunity 
to   se?   not   cnly   the   lives   of  the 
student   .ijovernment  and   its   lead- i 
ers  but   also  the   lives  of  typital 
students. "  said   Young.  \ 

Financing  the  Egyptian's  year 
at  use  will  be  a  $1000  appropri- 
ation from  the  Student  Legisla- 
ture which  has  been  approved  by 
the  University.  The  appropriation 
includes  scholarship  aid  covering 
tuition,  room  and  board,  and  in- 
cidental   expenses.  j 

Nasr  will  arrive  at  Carolina  as 
a  special  student  in  the  College 
of  Arts  and  Sciences  on  Sept.  15 
and  will  remain  until.  June  7, 
1957.  While  here  he  will  live  in 
one  of  the  men's  dormitories  on 
campus-. -■*-!.;::>. --:r.----      ••  J 

In  Egypt  Nasr  has  had  a  varied 
career  at  Cairo  University  as  a 
student,  athlete,  student  govern- 
ment leader,  and  member  of  the 
Faculty  Union.  During  his  attend- 
ance at  Cairo  University  he  was 
(See    OTUDENT,   Page  3)        i 


as  our  work  is  concerned  were  an- 
tagonistic in  nature."  Al  Alphin 
stated  yesterday. 

Alphin  is  chairman  of  the  Stu- 
dent Legislative  Investigating  Com- 
raittee  on   Lenoir   Hall. 

White  gave  the  Tar  Heel  what 
WAS  reported  to  be  an  approved 
version  of  a  meeting  between  a 
s«^lect  group  of  administrative  of- 
ficials and  throe  student  work- 
ers from   Lenoir  Holl. 

According  to  Alphin  it  was  "not 
an  approved  version — there  was 
no  such  thing  as  an  approved  ver- 
sion." 

"As  far  as  I  or  anyone  else 
kncws.  no  one  approved  anything 
to  be  printed  in  the  Daily  Tar  Heel 
yesterday  about  the  meeting,"  Al 
phin  further  stated. 

The  meeting  Wednesday  was 
held  strictly  in  order  for  the  select 
group  of  admini.\rative  officials  to 
get  an  idea  of  th«  Lenoir  Hall  sit- 
uation. 

As  a  result  of  the  "informative 
discussion"  with  Lenoir  Hall  stu- 
dent workers,  the  administrative 
officials  will  decide  what  measure 
to  take,  if  any.  regarding  the  din- 
ing hall  situation. 

Administrative  representatives 
were  Dr.  W.  D.  Perry,  Dean  of 
the  University's  Division  of  Stu- 
dent Affairs;  Sam  Magill,  Director 
of  Student  Activities;  and  Miss 
Edith  Winslcw,  ot  the  Student  Aid 
Department. 

Loo  Mulvaney.  William  Brigman, 
and  ex-Lenoir  worker  Caleb  White 
represented  the  Lenoir  student 
worker.^. 

The  Wednesday  meeting  was 
closed  to  Daily  Tar  Heel  reporters.' 
White  said  yesterday  in  an  in- 
terview that  ho  did  not  intend 
to  convey  that  >he  meeting's  re- 
suits  were  officially  approved  by 
•ny  one  person  or  any  group. 

■•It  was' mel>wy  my' version  of 
the   meeting,"   White    said. 

"The  word  'approved*  was  put 
in  the  story  through  a"  misintepre- 
taticn  by  The  Daily  Tar  Heel  re- 
porter,"  White   said 

It    wjs    only    White's    approved 
version   of   the    meeting,   h«  said. 


I  Canadian  Affair 

:  WASHINGTON  —  (AP)  —  The 
I  State  Department,  yesterday  tak- 
'  ing  direct  issue  with  the  Senate 
I  Internal  Security  subcommittee 
j  yc/teixiay  denied  any  responsi- 
'  bility  for  allegations  of  Commu- 
j  nism  made  against  the  late  Her- 
'  bert  Norman,  a  Canadian  diplo- 
mat 
I  Norman,  Canadian  Ambassador 
I  to  Egypt,  committed  suicide  in 
Cairo  a  week  ago  today. 

Canadian  officials  have  blamed 
his  death  in  part  on  the  charges 
I  aired  by  the  Senate  subcommit 
tee.  and  the  affair  has  put  a 
severe  strain  on  Canadian-Ameri- 
can relations. 

{         Ike  And  Baseball 

WASHINGTON  —  (AP)  — 
President  Eisenhower  agreed  yes- 
terday to  toss  out  the  first  ball 
at  the  traditional  opening  of  the 

,  major  league  baseball  season 
Monday. 

The  Washington  Senators  and 
Baltimore  Orioles  of  the  Ameri- 
can League  will  play  at  Griffith 
Stadium. 

t  Eisenhower  got  his  annual  pass 
to  the  Senators'  games,  along 
with  one  for  Mrs.  Eistnhower. 
from  the  club  president,  Calvin 
Griffith. 

Postal  Services 

WASHINGTON— (AP)—  A  suit 
to  restrain  Postmaster  General 
Summerfield      from      suspending 

,  third-class  mail  service  was  filed 
yesterday     in     Federal     District 

'■  court  here. 


WASHINGTON  — (AP)—  Post- 
master General  Summerfield  said 
yesterday  he  will  not  be  able  to  re- 
store ally  of  the  postal  service  cuts 
«efae.dule^  Ub-  start  Sat|Ur(il»y^ jintiJU. , 
President  Etferthow^r  "  has  signed' 
a  bill  giving  him  more  money. 


Evans  Calls  For  Cooperation; 
Hopes  For  Permanent  Director 
Of  Graham  Memorial  By  June 

New  President  Wants 
Student  Fees  For  Lots 


Orlentafion 
Applications 
By  April  18 


PRESIDENT    SONNY    EVANS 

takes  over  as  sUident   body   h^ead 


Photo  by  Bill   King 


THE  STUDENTS'  FORUM: 


Quarterly  Post 

Aiip^icortons  ^  ^Sororittes,  Fraternities 
Now  Accepted  Will  Hold  Discussions 


"Peter  Rabbitt" 

QUINCY.      Mas*.— (AP)— "Bun- 
ny"  will   be   one   year   old   Easter  |      Qualified       undergraduate       or       Six  UNC  .sororities  and  eight  lo-        Dr.    Erie    Peacock   of    the    Busi- ' 

Sunday  and  she  probably  will  re- ,  graduate    students     interested     in  cal     fraternities    will    hold    after-    ncss     Administration     Dept.     will 

ceive,    among    other    gifts,    a    toy    applying   for   editor   of  the    Caro-  dinner   discussion    groups   in   con-    lead    a    discussion    group    at    the  | 

rabbit  to  accompany  the  big  furry   Una  Quarterly  have  been  asked  to  nection    with    the    Campus    Chris-    Alpha    Delta    Pi    House    Tuesday 

one    presently    her    favorite    play-    contact  Miss  Jessie  Rehder  of  the  tian    Council    Spring    Forum    be-    night.   The  group  has  no  definite 

^'"S-  English  Dept.  ginning    here    Sunday    night.  i  topic  for  discussion.  j 

•Bunny's"  proper  name  is  Anne:      Mis.s   Rehder's   office   is  in    109       The  fraternity  and  sorority  dis- 
Marie  Rabbitt.  She's  the  daughter    Bingham  Hall.  :  eussion  groups  will   be  held   Mon- 

of   Mr.    and    Mrs.   James    Rabbitt.  j      Those  not  being  able  to  see  Miss  dav    and    Tuesday    nights    foUow- 

Among   her  guests   Easter  Sun- ,  Rehder  personally  have  been  ask-  jng  supper. -They  will  precede  the 

day     will     be#    her     grandfather. ;  ed  to  send  a  letter  of  application  platform    addresses   of   the    forum 

Peter  Rabbitt.  j  to  the  Quarterly  Advisory  Board.  t„  bp  given  Sunday.  Monday  and 

in   care    of    Miss    Rehder,    before  Tuesday    at    8    p.m.    in    Memorial 

Hall. 


"Continued  cooperation  by  all  involved  uiil  once  again 
he  the  kev  to  any  success  that  wt  uill  experience."  was  a 
|x>int  strongly  emphasized  hv  student  hotly  President  Sonny 
F.vans  in  his  inaugural  address  last  night. 

.\ftcr  praising   Bob   Young's   administration.    I\ans    listed 
first  the  Graham   Memorial  student  union   problem  as  one 
♦ • — ♦  of    six    important    problems    fac- 
ing the  students.  He  said  he  hoped 
;  a     permanent     director     for     GM 
j  would  be  hired  by  the  end  of  the 
I  semester. 

"I    believe    that    the    most    far- 
I  reaching    achievement     that     stu- 
dent  government   can   make    next 
year  is  working  with  the  director 
in  the  preparation  of  a  prospectus 
The    deadlilne    for    Orientation    for    a   new    building. "    he    stated. 
Counselor     applicaions     is     next   The  prospectus  will  be  presented 
Tuesday,  program  chairman  Jerry    to  the  Budget  Commission. 
Oppenheimer  said  yesterday.  ,      -i  plan  to  establish  an  arm  of 

Application  forms  can  be  ob-  student  Government  to  aid  the 
tained  from  the  'iTMCA.  Graham  '  student  Affairs  Office  in  the  pro- 
Memorial,  the  Library.  Lenoir  cessing  of  campus  violations." 
Hall  and  the  Monogram  Club,  he  gvans  stated.  He  hopes  to  use  the 
said,  and  should  be  returned  to  money  from  student  fees  to  fin- 
(he  Y  or  Graham  Memorial.  ^^ce    parking    lots    already    plan- 

In  a  statement  urging  all  inter-    ^ed   by   the    University   Engineer- 
ested   students   to   apply   for   any    jng  Dept. 
of    the     100-odd     positions    open,    jV  REPAIR 

outgoing    student    body    president,      p^r    t^g    repair    of    dormitory 
Bob  Young  said  yesterday.  '  television  sets  Evans  hopes  to  set 

"The  opportunity  to  work  as  ^^p  ^  contingency  fund  obtained 
an  orientation  counselor  is  one  from  a  percentage  of  vending  ma- 
which  should  not  be  i>assed  up  by  chines  profits, 
anyone  who  feels  qualified.  Any  gygns  plans  to  try  to  make 
person  who  has  the  time  to  de-  physical  education  voluntary  for 
vote  to  the  program  and  has  the    veterans 

desire   to    help    new    student    be-       The  new  president  pledged  him- 

come  adjusted  to  Carolina  should    g^if    j^    ^^.^^k    again    for    reduced 

certainly  apply  lor  an  interview.'    j-a^es     tor    date    tickets    for    the 

^        :  '  h-^me  games.  Evans  hopes  to  pre- 

_  I  sent  a   bill   to   the  Student  Legis- 

ryours  lature   which    would   .separate   the 

Tryouts      for      the      University    investigation       and       prosecution 


I  Club's  spring  show.-  "The  Drunk-  powers  from  the  judgement  pow- 

The   Alpha   Gainma   Deltas   will    ard."  will  be  held  today  at  2  p.m.  ers  in   the  Judiciary   Branch, 

hold  a  discussion  on  -Christianity    in  106  Carroll  Hall.  "And    finally,    student    govern- 

and  Marriage"  Monday  night.  Rev.  '•      The  early  American  melodrama  ment     must     present     a     unified 

Harry    Smith,    local    Presbyterian    by    William     H.     Smith     includes  front    for   the  new   administrative 

student    director,    will    lead    the    several    parts   for   both    men    ahd  officials   coming   here   in  June   if 


discussion. 


Dr.  Waldo  Beach,  professor  of 
Christian  Ethics  at  Duke  Divinity 
School,  will  deliver  the  platform 
addres.ses  of  the  forum  under  the 
general  theme  of  "The  Christian 
Faith — Protest    and    Affirmation." 


New  chairman  Congratulated 

Outgoing  SttMknt  Party  Chairman  Sonny  Hallford  (left)  gives 
rt«w  ChairnriMi  Whit  Whitfield  a  handshake  as  an  expression  of  con- 
fidence in  the  party's  leader  for  the  coming  year.  Whitfield  was 
elected  chairman  Monday  night  at  the  Party's  regular  nweting. 
Other  officers  n«m*d  were  Vice  Chairman  John  Brooks,  Secretary 
V.iss  Betty  Huffman,  Treasurer  Denton  Lotx  and  Sergeant-^At-Arim 
Leon  Holt.  Photo   by  Bill  King 

SP  Officers  Look  Ahead 


Germany  Warned         |  April  29 

MOSCOW— (AP)—Pravda  de- ;  Members  of  the  Advisory  Board 
clared    yesterday    West    Germany  j  include: 

armed  forces  have  nuclear  weap-       Walter  Spearman   of   the  Jour- 
o"«-  nalism  School;  Lambert  Davis,  di- 

The  Communist  Party  newspa-  j  rector  of  the  UNC  Press;  John 
per  asserted  that  West  German  ,  Ehte  of  the  Radio,  Motion  Pic- 
Chancellor      Adenauer's      govern- i  tures    and    Television    Dept.    and 

ment   is   "brain  washing   the   peo-  j  yug^  Rehder. 

pie  "    of   West  Germany   in    order        -phe  new  editor  is  not  required    TO  CAROLINA  STUDENTS: 

to    gel    them    accustomed    to    the    to   come    from    the    present   staff. 

idea  that  their  new  army  should    according  to  an  announcement. 

have  atomic  arms.  j  

Soviet  Solidarity 

HONG  KONG  —  (AP)  —  Poland 
and  Red  China  agreed  yesterday 
to  combat  all  deviation  in  Com- 
munist theory  and  strengthen 
solidarity  of  Communist  nations 
with  the  Soviet  Union. 

Peiping  Radio  broadcast  a  joint 
ccmmiliique    stating    their    com- 


Dr.  William  Poteat.  of  the  UNC 
Philosophy  Dept.  will  lead  the 
after-dinner  discussion  for  the 
Tri  Deltas  Monday  night.  They 
will  center  their  discussion  around  ^ 
the  theme  of  the  three-day  forum.  ' 

(See  FORUM,  Page  3) 


Annual  Senior 
Celebration' 
To  Be  May  T 


Germans  Brings  Top  Talent 


women,  according  to  Dave  Jon<?s,    we    are    to    continue    the    respect 
University  Club   representative.        that   is  so   necessary  to  achieve." 

Featured  in  the  production  will    he  said   in  his  conclusion, 
be   between-the-acts   "oleos,"   pliis       He   stated,    "we   must   continue 
hissing  and  booing  for  the  %illian    to   take   our   place    in    the   affairs 
and   cheers  tor  the   hero.  of  the  siate  in  taking  firm  stands 
Direction   will   be  in  the  hands    on  ismes  which   effect   University 
of  John  Ludwig,  assisted  by  Miss    life." 
Nancy  Stevens  and  Cecil  Hartsoe.    LOOKS  FORWARD 
Evans    said    he    would    fill    .stu- 
dent government    "on  the  basis  of 
ability,    interest    and    experience." 
He  concluded.  "I  look  forward  to 
a    grand    year    oi*  accomplishment 
and   service    to   the   University   of 
North  Carolina  student  body." 
Also  .sworn  in  were  Vice  Presi- 


ft:" 


v..- 


Newly  elected  Student  Paitty 
Chairman  Whit  Whitfield  and 
outgoing  Chairman  Sonny  Hall- 
ford  released  statements  yester- 
day in'  review  and  preview  of 
party  activity. 

Whitfield,  a  rising  senior  from 
Durham,   said: 

"During  the  last  year,  under 
Bob  Young's  administration,  stu- 
dent   government    rose     to    new 


GM'$  SLATF 


The  following  activities  are  | 
Bcheduied  for  GrsKam  Memorial  ; 
today: 

publications    Bo*rd,    2-6    p.m., 
Woodhouse     Conf«r«n«e     Room;  • 
Tri  lota,    10-11    a.m.,   Woodhouse   j 
Conferoncr  Room. 


^-^:rrs♦^  in  the  p'ps  of  the  student, 
faculty  and  administration.  It  is 
up  to  us  as  a  party  to  see  that 
this  pattern  is  followed  under  the 
new    administration. 

'One  of  the  ways  we  intend  to 
do  this  is  by  beginning  work  on , 
our  platform  immediately.  I'm  i 
looking  forward  to  a  very  success- 1 
ful  year  for  the  student  party  ■ 
and   student  government." 

Retiring       chairman       Hallford ! 
said;> 

"The    Student    Party    has    come  \ 
a  long  way  and  under  the  leader-  j 
ship  of  Whit,  the  parly  will  take 
great    strides.    I    wish    all    newly . 
elected   officers  the  best  of  luck 
in  the  coming  year  and  feel  sure  \ 
they   will    do   their   best   for   the 
good  of  the  campus."  ' 


Car,>lina's  German  Club,  as  long         An   unidentified   UNC  historian  year, 
on    history   as   it    i.s    on    ability    to    revealed    in    a    telephone    conver-        The  Fall  German,  held  on  Oct.    dent  Don  Furlado.  Secretary  Mis.« 
bring    the    nation's    top    talent   to    ^^ation      with      outgoing      German    26,    introduced    Carolina    students    Dot    Pressly    and    Treasurer    Bob 
UNC.    will    present    its    final   con- !  Club  President  Keith  Palmer  that    Fats  Domino,  king  of  "Rock   and    Carter.   Luther   Hodges  Jr..  chair- 
cert    and    dance    of    the    year   to-  i  "the  German  Club  was  on  campus    Roll"    music    and    the    Billy    May    man   of  the   Student   Council,  ad- 
morrow  night.  I  when    I    first    came    to    UNC    in    orchestra  directed  by  Stan  Dona-    ministered   the   oath    to    the    four 
"The     Four     Freshmen."     often    1890."  I  hue.  |  officials. 
The  annual  Senior  Day  celebra-    proclaimed  to  be  the  nation's  tops    VOID  IN   PAST                                  i      For    the   Winter    German.    Feb.       Furtado    swore    in    new    mem- 
mon    aim    was    a    Communist    so- ,  tjo/i    for    graduating    seniors    will    in   popular  vocal  music,  vivacious       But  a  chain  of  telephone  calls    16,  the  German  Club  joined  with    hers  of  the  legislature. 

ciety    "to    bind    up    closely    the    5^   hpij  t^is  year  on  Wednesday.    Paula  George  and  the  band  of  Ray    produced    ought    in    attempts    to    Graham  Memorial  and  the  ears  of ;  

Soviet  Union.  Roland.   China   and    jyiay    1.    Publicity    Chairman    Lou    Eberle    will    round    out    the    1957    ascertain    the   exact   beginning   of    Monitor  to  present  the  sojnds  ^^\     ^  A    J  u 

other  socialist  countries."  Rosenstock  has  announced.  •  series    of    three    Germans    tomor-   the      German      Club.      Thumbing   "the  trumpet  man."  Louis  "Satch-      Armitrong  And  House 

(See  WORLD  NEWS,  Page  ')  ^    traditional    feature   it    Caro-    row  night.  j  through   the   volumes  in   the  Wil-    mo"    Armstrong.   The   imcompara       Jq  Visit  Denver  Friday 

~  '       lina.  Senior  Day  is  a  day  set  aside .      The      German      Club,      600-700   son     Library     produced     only     a    ble    king    of    jazz    and    Dixieland       Director     of     Admissions     Roy 

Questionnaires  Are  Sent  for  recreation  and  final  participa-  strong  at  present,  has  guided  the  photograph  of  the  German  Club  filled  Memorial  Hall  in  concert  Armstrong  and  Chancellor  Robert 
T      01*4  \A/    II  0  ♦  '  ^'''"    '"    Sroup    activities    for    the    eyes     of     the     nation     onto     the    members  in  the  Yackety  Yack  %t ,  as  well  as  Woollen  Gym  in  dance.  ,  b.  House  leave  here  April  19  for 

10  Uia   well  rrOSpeCTS  [graduating   cla.ss.  j  Chapel  Hill  campus  through  their    1901.  |  EQUAL  PERFORMANCE  i  Denver.    Colo.,    where    Armstrong 

Questionnaires  have  been  sent  '  According  to  Rosen.stock.  a  free  importation  of  some  of  the  best  This  void  in  the  organization's '.  And  it  appears  that  tomorrow  ^-[w  bp  installed  as  the  president 
out  to  prospective  initiates  into  movie  will  as  usual  be  shown  to  talent  in  the  entertainment  fields  past  has  prompted  president-elect  flight  will  at  least  equal  the  per-  of  the  American  Assn.  of  CoUegi- 
the    Old    Well,   President    Mebane    the  seniors  on  the  night  of  April    of   jazz,    swing,    and   popular   mu- ,  for  next  year  Mark  Cherry  to  be- i  formances  of  fall  and  winter.  ate  Registrars  and  Admissions  Of- 

Pritchett  announced  this  week.        i  30  at  one  of  the  local  theaters.      I  sic.  :  gin    a    campaign    to    unlock    the       "The  Four  Freshmen,"  with  in-    fleers. 

Any  junior  or  senior  who  feels  I      The  seniors  will  hold  an  organi-    LONGWAY  !  mystery  of  the  club's  history.         j  struments  as  well  as  the  nation's  ,      Chancellor    House    will    deliver 

that  he  or  she  merits  possible  |  zational  meeting  at  10  a.m.  Wed-  j  Although  Carolina  students  ac- '  "Plans  are  in  progress  to  con-  j  top  vocal  quality,  will  visit  the '  the  keynote  address  to  the  na- 
membership  into  the  order  and  !  nesday  in  Memorial  Hall  to  be  fol-  cept  this  top  entertainment  to  be  duct  a  campaign  to  find  out  the  campus.  Paula  George,  sultry  tional  meeting  of  the  1400-mem- 
has  not  received  a  questionnaire  j  lowed  later  in  the  day  by  athletic  synonymous  with  the  German  origin  of  the  club,  its  history, '  songstress  of  the  Julie  London  ber  college  organization,  on  April 
has    been    asked   to   contact   Prit  1  events  scheduled   from   2  to  4:30    Club,    the   organization    has    come    membership,   etc.   Letters   will   be   style,    will    accompany   the   group    24. 

chett  immediately  at  the  Phi  Delta  j  p.m.  j  a  long  way  since  1890.  !  written  to  the   1901   and   1902  of-    in       intermittent       performances. .      Armstrong  and  House  will  meet 

Theta  fraternity  house,  89147.         |      Later  still,  from  .5:30  p.m.  on,  a        The   solemn  group   of  44   mem-    fleers  of  the  German  Club  to  de- ;  Ray  Eberle  and  his  orchestra  will    with  a  gathering  of  UNC  alumni 
Students  may  also  call  Dean  of  1  barbecue  will  l>e  held  at  the  Patio    hers,  with  their  hair  parted  down    termine   aspects   of   its   derivation '  play  for  the  dance.  ■  in    Denver    on    the    day    before 

Student   Awards   E.   L.   Mackie    in  1  and  entertainment  will  be  provid-  ^  the   middle,   draped   in   dark   tails    and  functions.  Anyone  knowing  of  ;      Both  the  "Four  Freshman"  and   Houses  address. 
312  South  Building,  5781,  he  said,    ied  by  four  different  bands.  |  and    sitting    stiffly    on    the    steps    any    information    relating   to   this    Eberle     will     entertain     German'      President-elect   Armstrong,    who 

Membership  in  the  order  is  bas-  i  A  grand  prize  will  be  awarded  of  Wilson  Memorial  Library  pos-  period  of  the  Club's  history  is  members  and  their  dates  in  a  was  elected  to  the  top  office  of 
ed  solely  on  a  point  system  deter- 1  at  a  ticket  drawing  that  evening  ing  for  what  was  probably  their  urged  to  contact  me  at  the  Phi  concert  to  be  held  in  Memorial  the  AACRAO  last  April  at  its 
mined  by  excellence  in  ircholastic    from  stubs  which  will  be  distribu- 1  first  formal  picture,  could  hardly   Delta  Theta  house.  "  Cherry  said.  1  Hall  tomorrow  from  3:30  to  5:30    meeting   in   Detroit,   will    be   offi- 


achievement  as  well  as  participa- 
tion in  extracurricular  activities, 
said  Pritchett. 


ted  at  the  organizational  meeting   have   produced    the   array  of   na-       The  German  Club  has  had  three  1  p.m.   The    dance   tomorrow   night  cially  installed  on  the  last  day  of 
in  the  morning,  according  to  Ro- '  tionally     famous     talent     offered    of  the   top  attractions  in  the  na- 1  will   last  from  8   p.m.   un:il   mid-    the    week-long    conference.    April 
senstock.  Carolina  students  recently.  I  tion  appear  at  their  programs  this   night.  1 26. 


#Aoi  rwo 


THE   DAILY  TAR   HEEL 


FRIDAY,  APRIL   12,  IW^ 


Ivy   League  Clothes 
Are   Unjusf  Scapegoat 


Much  comment  has  been  lavish- 
ed recently  upon  such  terms  as 
"The  Silent  Generation,"  such  la- 
bels as  "Cautious  Young  Men," 
such   description  as  "conformists.  " 

Nabbed  as  the  scapegoat  for  this 
description  is,  primarily,  mass 
media — television,  periodicals  and 
the   like. 

The  trend  is  appiarent;  it  is  to 
(onibated  by  allowing  diverse 
ideas,  differing  ideas,  without  cru- 
cifying their  proponents:  but  we 
d(»  not  see  the  necessity  for  hys- 
teria. 

Buckles  on  pants  are  not  neces- 
sarily a  symbol  of  conforming 
minds.  Ivy  League  clothes,  we 
contend,  are  botii  trim  and  pleas- 
ini"  to  the  eye  and  comfortable.  A 
black  leatiier  jacket  and  pegged 
pants  which  prevent  wind  whip- 
pins;  up  your  leg  might  be  warm- 
er: l)ut  straight-lined  Ivy  League 
ilotlies  are  assirnedly  more  appro- 
priate and   bettrr  looking. 


Further,  willingness  to  pursue 
newly-created  trends  and  fashions 
demonstrates,  not  necessarily  con- 
formity, but  a  liberality  and  read- 
iness to  progress.  Conversely,  fail- 
ure to  ptx>gre«s  with  this  rapi41y 
revolving  atomic  age  demoiujprJUes 
a  reactionary  mind  without  neces- 
sary adaptablity.  , 

iVe  are  not  defending  conformi- 
ty; we  are  not  condemnirig  those 
who  are  reticent  in  both  mind  and 
fashion.  To  each  his  own.  We 
should  and  must  be  tolerant. 

But  we  would  like  to  iconoclas- 
tically  tear  down  a  symbol  whicli 
was  imjustly,  ^ve  feel,  established 
as  a  scapegoat  by  anti-conformists 
— Jvv   League  clothes. 

We  believe,  in  actuality,  the 
symbol  was  set  up  by  thpse  who 
were  too  reactionary  to  adjust  to 
current  trends. 

.\nd  we  belie\'e  they  hid  behind 
the  symbol  due  to  a  slothful  un- 
willingness to  adapt  and  adjust. 


University's  Tenet; 
Acad^ics  Or  Lenoir? 


"Freedom  of  ^inquiry,  freedom 
of  expression,  freedom  to  differ, 
freedom  from  oVthodovy,  freedom 
of  students  to  think,  decide  and 
;Kt  for  themselves— all  under  the 
influence  of  directed  study  ,  .  .  — 
this  is  not  mere  training:  it  is 
liberation.  It  is  the  indispensible 
(ondition  of  learning.  It  is  tlie 
meaning  of  Lux  et  Libertas."  Dean 
oi   Students  Fred  H.  Weaver. 

The  alx>ve  is  a  powerful  quota- 
tion with  which  to  lead  into  com- 
meiu  iipon  the  Lenoir  Hall  situ- 
ation. But  it  is  applicable. 

Director  Georfee  W.  Prillaman 
is  apparentlv  an  uncompromising 
in(li\idual.  Though  he  has  come 
under  fire  from  ui  Student  Legis- 
1 J  tine  investigating  committee  and 
tin*  Lenoir  workers  themselves. 
Iiis    policies   remain    unchanged. 

We  think  it  rather  ridiculous 
tliat  Lenoir  Hall  Operating  Pro- 
cedures should  be  loaded  with 
such  sentences  as,  "Bear  in  mind 
that  vom-  empf6yment  here  is  a 
benefit  offered  by  the  Universitv. " 
and.  "we  wish  loim press  upon  you 
the  fact  that  vour  employment 
here  is  a  privilege  gianted  by  the 
rni\ersitv.  '  and,  "Anvthing  short 
of  hill  ccK)peration  will  be  grounds 
for   immediate  dismissal." 

I'ndoubtedly  many  students 
^vDrking  in  Lenoir  Hall  would  not 
be  able  to  attend  our  l^niversity 
were  it  not  for  such  self-help  jobs. 
But   thev  should  not  be  hinnbkd 


The  Daily  Tar  Heel 

Tb«  official  itudeoi  publiciitioo  of  the 
Publicatiorw  Board  of  the  University  of 
\nrlh  Tarnlina  whorr  it  i»  DliliHshert 
iailf  excppt  Mnnda^  and  fxaminatio? 
•  nH  vacation  periods  and  «ii»»»fn*'r  termi. 
Euiered  as  second  class  matter  in  th« 
oost  office  in  Chapel  Hill.  N  C.  unrte» 
vhe  \c\  of  March  ^  1870.  Subscriptine 
ratpf  •  mailed.  $4  per  tear.  S2  50  a  semet 
ter:  de'iveped  W  •  year.  $3  50  a  ttmtf 
ter 


Editor 

NEIL  BASS 

Managing  Editor 

CLARKE  JONES 

Associate  Editor 

NANCY  HILL 

Sports  Editor   .  . 

BILL  KING 

N'ews  Editor  

WALT  SCHRUNTEK 

Business  Manafifit  OOHN  C:  VVTHTAKER 


Advertisiii^  Manager   _   FRED  KATZIN 


NEWS  STAFF— Graham  Snyder,  Edith 
MacKinnon,  Priiigle  Pipkin,  Bob  Hi^h, 
Ben  Tajior,  H.  Joost  Polak,  Patsy  Mill- 
er, Wally  KuraH,  KU  King,  Curti? 
Crottv,  Ben  'dykir,  Sue  Atchison. 

EDTT  STAFF— Whit  Whitfield,  Anthony 
Wolff,  Stan  Shaw,  Woody  Sears. 


BU^NESS  STAFir— John  Minter,  Marian 
Hobeck,  Jane  IN||mi.  Johnny  Whitaker. 

SPORTS  STAER;jB|»ve  WiWe,  Stu  Bird, 
Ed  RowlancC  Ji^Qxnniever,  Ron  Mil- 
ligan. 


Subscription  Manager 
Circulation  Manager  . 


.  Dile  Sttiwy 
CharUe  Holt 


Staff  Photographers  Woody  Sears, 

Norman  Kantor,  Bill  King. 

Librarians-.-Sue  Gichner.  Msrilyit  Strua 


Night  News  Editor  — 
Night  Editor  _ 


.._  Bob  High 
£iU  Weekes 


to  their  knees  in  exchange  for  the 
opportunity  to  work  in  the  dining 
hall. 

Director  Prillaman  appears  to 
constaiuly  remind  his  workers 
that  it  would  be  nuich  easier  for 
him  to  hire  at  staff  of  oiuside  work- 
ers who  would  not  be  harassed  by 
a  double  obligation— University 
academics  and  a  job. 

The  logical  question  is,  froni 
whence  could  Director  Prillaman 
get  workers  with  the  college  level 
mentality  for  $1.90  a  day? 

.More  imjx>rtantly.  however,  is 
another  ckuse  in  the  dining  haJl's 
operating  procedures: 

"Vour  innnediate  exam  sihedule 
is  always  subordinated  to  oin-  work 
St  hedule  here  at  Lenoir." 

The  primary  purpose  which 
thinking  students  have  in  mind 
when  they  enter  this  University's 
portals  is  to  acquire  an  education, 
to  strive  for  academic  excellence- 
whicJi  will  better  piepare  fliem 
for  useful  titi^cnship  in  hiter  life. 

Suth  a  preparation  has  the  Uni- 
veisitv  as  a  whole,  .\cademics  are 
to  be  subordinated  to  nothing 
else— neither  athletics  nor  socializ' 
ing  nor  l^noir  Hall. 

Subordination  of  our  academic 
progTaju  to  the  Lenoir  Ha-ll  "work 
scliednle"  is  a  blatant  mockerv  of 
Dean  Weavers  assertion:  "free- 
dom of  students  to  think,  decide 
and  act  for  themselves — all  under 
the  influence  of  directed  study  — 
tl)is  is  not  mere  training:  it  is  lib- 
eration." 

Director  Prillaman  may  turn  a 
deaf  ear  to  grievances  that  "stu- 
•dent  workers  feel  they  are  not 
compensated  adequately  for  their 
labor:  that  the  administration  of 
Lenoir  Mall  has  been  too  arbi- 
tral y;'  that  student  workers  want 
redeemable  meal  tickets  or  cash 
in  lieu  of  straight  meal  remunera- 
tion which  must  be  taken  at  the 
designated  time  or  missed  com- 
pletely. 

But  when  Director  Prillaman 
begins  tieading  upon  the  iacred 
giound  of  academics  and  subordi- 
nating them  to  Lenoir  Hall's  work 
schedule  .then  diastic  steps  sliould 
be  taken. 

The  sutnmation  of  our  criticism 
against  Director  Prillaman  is  ihis: 

(1)  Tl>e  dominating  philosophy 
behind  employment  of  students 
in  Lenoir  Hall  appears  to  be  that 
a  gracious  and  God-sent  privilege 
is  bestowed  upon  the  few  wIk)  are 
allowed  such  opportunity.  Thus 
students  should  keep  their  mouth- 
es  shut  and  forsake  all  else  in  hum- 
ble   submission — even    academics. 

(2)  The  management  ha^  ap 
parently  set  itself  upon  an  un- 
compromising pedestal  frou>  wliicli 
the  criticism  of  plea  of  student 
workers  may  not  be  heard,  aiid 
from  which  no  negotiation  is  pos- 
sible. 

We  suggest  that  Director  Prilla- 
mnii  make  clear  the  business  en- 
tanglements which  he  asserts  will 
ensue  transferajice  from  the  pretj- 
ent  payment  in  meals  to  meal 
tickets.  This  would,  at  least  alloAC 
students  who  missed  meals  at 
designated  times  to  get  their  just 
recompense. 

We  also  suggest  that  he  revise 
his  operating  procedures  to  coin- 
cide with  the  University's  plaloso- 
phy.  "academics  first. " 


WISE  AND  OTHERWISE;       FROM  THE  PUKE  CHRONICLE; 

A  Revolution? 

* 

PrillokovAnd 


Dook'  Battles  With  Segregation 


Wotery  Vodka 

^  Whit  Whitfield 

Once  upon  a  time  before  the 
Revolution,  there  was  a  state 
owned  Stroganoff  and  Vodka 
Palace  in  St.  Petersburg.  It  was 
operated  by  a  cruel  and  heart- 
less man  called  Anton  Prillakov. 

The  profits  from  the  Palace 
regularly  lined  the  Czar's  trea- 
sury with  gold  and  he,  of  course, 
was  very  interested  in  its  op- 
erations and  its  public  relations. 

He.  nevertheless,  only  heard 
reports  from  Boss  Prillakov.  He 
had  almost  no  contact  with  the 
proletariat  workers. 

The  workers  for  the  most  part 
were  students  who  were  enroll- 
ed at  a  nearby  university  and 
needed  the  jobs  badly  to  further 
their  educations. 

This  I>rillakov  was  well  aware 
of,  so  he  capitalized  on  it  and 
life  for  the  workers  was  misera- 
ble. 

They  worked  quite  often  binder 
extreme  hardships  and  justifi- 
able fear.  Their  conduct  was 
carefuly  scrutinized.  They  were 
paid  three  times  per  day  in 
watered'down  Vodka  and  second- 
rate  Stroganoff. 

Tliey  were  so  fearful  of  Prilla- 
kov that  they  dared  not  speak 
up  for  their  rights  (which  they 
had  relinquished  actually  when 
they  took  the  jobs). 


Some  student  workers  sold 
blood  to  buy  texts  and  other 
necessities,  while  other  wore 
dirty  rags  because  Ihef  could 
not  afford  to  pay  laundry  bills. 

The  braver  ones  spoke  up  for 
their  rights  one  day  but, their 
arguments  fell  upon  <ieaf  ears. 

Some  of  the  workers  request- 
ed they  be  allowed  to  share 
their  Stroganoff  and  Vodka  with 
roommates  who  were  dying  of 
starvation.  Prillakov  refused 
Some  of  the  starving  students 
died  but  were  removed  quietly 
and  caused  little  distrubance. 

•  •  • 

At  about  this  point.  Prillakov's 
kind  heart  began  to  show 
through.  He  ordered  that  each 
worker  be  given  two  cups  of 
watered    Vodka   per   day   extra. 

This  was  not  enough  to  ap- 
pease the  workers. 

Finally,  they  could  stand  the 
yoke  of  oppression  no  longer. 
They  organized  quietly,  but  ex- 
pertly, and  planned  a  revolution. 

They  decided  upon  the  name 
"Bolshe\<i{s''  'for  their  group. 
The  rest  is  history. 


Prillakov  escaped  to  the 
United  States  where  he  was 
granted  political  asylum.  Since 
that  time  he  has  been  working 
in  a  like  capacity  at  a  well- 
known  Southern  plantation 
house,  whose  owners  recognize 
his    diabolical   genius. 

• 

L'il  Abnar 


(While  other  univsrsities  ar« 
witnessing  th«  struggia  fpr  or 
■gainst  racial  integragation,  it 
soams  our  educational  naighber 
is  still  harassed  by  an  entirely 
different  problem — segregation 
of  tha  sexes. — Editor) 

The  first  women  students  to 
attend-  classes  at  Trinity  College 
did  so  with  a  screen  to  separate 
them  from  their  predatory  male 
counterparts.  Times  have  chang- 
ed, and  women  are  conunon  oc- 
currences on  the  Gothic  campus. 

However,  the  currents  of 
modern  philosophy  in  education 
have  not  swept  from  the  corners 
in  Allen  and  East  Duke  the  ves- 
tiges of  the  old  tenets,  that  is: 
If 


that  coeducational  cljasses  are 
detrimental  to  students  of  both 
sexes,  the  reason  being  obvious, 
and  the  less  said  about  them 
the  better  ... 

We  refer  to  the  administra- 
tion's policy  prohibiting  coeds 
from  taking  classes  on  West 
campus  which  are  offered  on 
East,  unless  there  is  a  schedule 
conflict.  The  policy  applies 
equally  to  men  students,  but  its 
restriction  is  not  so  severely  felt, 
as  more  courses  are  offered  on 
West. 

The  reason  given  for  the 
policy  is  that  it  saves  students 
the  time,  expense  and  trouble 
of  treking  to  the  other  campu$. 


We  fail  to  see  that  it  does  any- 
thing but  deny  coeds  the  time 
and  trouble  they  would  choose 
to  take  if  they  had  the  choice. 
Expense— who  takes  the  bus?  . . . 

However,  the  most  serious  ob- 
jection to  the  ruling  lies  in  the 
fact  that  it  coldly  disregards 
the  student's  preference  in  time 
and  professors  .  .  . 

Yet  educators  and  the  educat- 
ed advise  students  to  choose 
courses  for  the  professors,  be- 
cause the  value  of  any  course 
depends  91)  per  cent  on  the  pro- 
fessor. In  denying  a  student  this 
opportunity  the  administration 
steals  $65G  .  .  . 


...^ 


"Who's  Ahead?' 


Oi«5 


THE  STUDENTS'  FORUM: 


Susie  Q.  Sorosis  Speaks  Out 


Editor: 

We  would  like  to  call  atten- 
tion to  the  spirit  of  the  Valkyrie 
Sing.  When  entered  into  wiflN 
th?  right  attitude,  the  Sing  does, 
as  it  is  supposed  to  do,  provide 
fellowship. 

This  spirit  of  fellowship  is, 
however,  lost  in  one  division  — 
the  sorority  division.  And  for 
these  girls,  the  true  purpose  of 
the  Valk>Tie  Sing  is  lost. 

As  the  merchant  has  exploited 
Christmas,  so  the  sorority-  has 
used    to   its   own   advantage   the 


Valkyrie  Sing.  It  is  a  time  of 
bitter  competition  when  all  that 
matters  is  beating  the  other 
sororities.  Instead  of  a  merry 
sing,  it  becomes  a  production. 

The  sisters  don  helmets  and 
cleats  and  rush  into  battle. 
Susie  Q.  Sororis.  with  a  night- 
ingale's voice  or  a  bull  frog's 
vocal  cords,  is  compelled  to 
sing,  spending  from  20  to  40 
hours  in  practice.  In  a  sorority 
approximately  1800  man  hours 
are  spent  in  preparation  for  this 
event.     This     appears     a     gross 


waste  of  time.  The  motivation 
forHhis  waste  of  time  is  nothing 
more  than  sorority  status.  If  a 
sorority  is  rated  on  the  basis 
of  its  vocal  cords,  heaven  help 
it. 

Whose  fault  is  this?  Aloof, 
inert  Panhells?  The  individual 
sororities?  We  think  that  it  is 
primarily  the  fault  of  the  seniw: 
sorority^  members  who  have 
climbed  these  ropes  before. 

Our   hats  are   off  to  the  one 
sorority  which  did  not  enter. 
Disgustadly, 
Susio  Q.  Sororis 


• 

By  a:  Capp 


ONE.  HOUR  LATER 


you  KNOW 
WHERE  EES  ZEE 
FABU  LOUSE 
MILLIOKJ-DOLLAIRE 
bE  AN  FORT 
KNOX  WATCH? 


^FORA 

L  [ten r< 


MERE" 
T'OOSAN' 
IN 


-I  WILL 
SHOW 
VOUSE 
WMEF%E 


Pogo 


iM    ^  -i 


Bv  Walt  Kelly 


*%e*t\0o  taum,     l^  If  Hg  pip, 

flo  oou  'hippose^  Iwi^JSO  STUPID 
v-r  ^he  heaS-f  ET?  "^  "^^^^w  WHAT 


We'd  taStf  o\?«i» 

iloWlUbtild 

We  do  it? 


GOETTINGEN  LEHER: 

Fraternities  in 
Germany  Viewed 

Dan  Southerland 

(Southerland,  like  John  Rapor,  is  a.  University 
student  currontiy  on  exchange  with  th»  Univer»jty 
of  Goettingon  in  Germany.— Editor) 

After  the  second  World  War  there  was  a  great_ 
deal  of  opposition  to  any  sort  of  German  national- 
ism and  consequently  opposition  to  fraternities, 
which  had  had  nationalistic  tendencies.  Therefore 
as  fraternities  began  to  appear  again  in  1949  after 
the  establishment  of  the  Federal  Republic  of 
'  Germany,  although  they  claimed  no  attachment  to 
the  old  fiaternities  except  for  the  names,  they  were 
forbidden  by  the  universities  and  not  allowed  to 
wear  their  identifying  colorful  caps  and  bands  at 
university  grounds  or  buildings. 

Today  the  fraternities  are  again  active,  but  have 
no  influence  in  politics  such  as  they  had  earlier. 
They  are  not  recognized  by  the  universities,  but 
are   tolerated. 

About  35  per  cent  of  the  students  at  Goettingen 
are  m^bers  of  37  different  fraternities.  Law  and 
medical  students  are  most  active.  There  are  few 
science  students  or  humanistic  majors  such  a? 
language  or  history  majors  in  fraternities. 

The  method  of  rushing  and  pledging  is  similar 
to  that  in  the  United  States.  The  big  difference 
is  that  the  German  fraternities  are  not  dependent 
financially  on  fees  from  each  new  pledge  class  in 
order  to  meet  the  coming  budget.  They  are  strong- 
ly supported  financially  by  the  Alumnai,  the  "Alle 
Herren."  "old  men"  (translated  literally).  As  a 
result  pledge  classes  are  much  smaller,  usually 
"with  about  four  or  five  pledges  and  at  the  most 
ten  or  fifteen. 

Rushing  last  six  weeks  at  the  beginning  of  the 
semester  and  is  at  first  a  bit  hectic  and  confused 
like  our  rushing. 

The  pledge  or  "Fuchs"  gots  through  a  one  or 
two  semester  trial  or  pledge  period.  During  this 
time  he  runs  errands  and  does  small  jobs  for  the 
brothers.  Then  he  is  initiated  and  becomes  an  ac- 
tive "Bursch".  He  must  remain  active  for  three 
or  four  semesters  which  means  he  is  required  to 
take  part  in  all  fraternity  functions.  The  'Alte 
Herren"  are  the  graduates  who  still  have  an  in- 
terest in  the  fraternities  after  graduating  and  at- 
taining a  respectable  position  in  the  world.  On  a 
summer  day  at  the  market  place,  you  might  see 
^ey-haircd  gentlement  at  beer-laden  tables  wearing 
their  caps  and  bands  and  singing  and  drinking 
with  the  yoynger  fraternity  members.  They  con- 
tribute largely  to  the  support  of  the  fraternities 
and  are  especially  known  for  supplying  the  "beer 
money."  -    *  ^ 

When  you  see  a  student  with  om  or  several 
scars  on  his  face,  the  identification  of  the  German 
student  in  the  old  days,  you  know  ttirt  he*  belongs 
to  one  of  the  fraternities  which  have  the  "mensur" 
or  fencing.  More  than  two-thirds  have  fencing.  In 
the  Catholic  fraternities  it  is  forbidden.  Members 
are  net  required  to  fence  in  some  fraternities:  in 
most,  one  to  four  times  are  required.  The  "Fuchs" 
practice  regularly  on  dummies  and  with  masks 
under  the  direction  of  an  older  member. 

The  traditional  fencing  is  supposed  to  be  a  test 
of  courage  and  a  chance  for  the  brotheip  to  fight 
for  his  colors  against  another  fratemitj^'s  man.  Ht 
does  not  know  his  opoonent  until  the  fight  begins. 

Most  of  the  "frei  Studenten,  "not  in  fraternities, 
are  opposed  to  them,  although  perhaps  not  as 
strongly  as  just  after  the  war. 

Their  main  criticisms  are:  (1)  that  the  more 
radical  fraternities  are  still  nationalistic;  (2)  that 
they  hold  too  much  to  tradition  and  are  trying  to 
live  as  people  did  in  the  "old  days".  FYatemity 
men  claim  they  treasure  traditions  realizing  their 
meaning  in  their  time:  (3)  that  the  Alle  Herren 
give  preference  to  fraternity  men  seeking  jobs 
after  graduation.  It  is  known  that  fraternity  men 
don't  need  to  worry  agout  finding  a  good  job 
especially  in  the  professional  fields;  (4)  that  fenc- 
ing is  morally  wrong  and  they  contend  that  some 
fraternities  continue  dueling  in  secret:  that  many 
are  prcnd  of  their  scars  and  purposely  do  not  iet 
them  heal  properly  in  order  to  distinguish  them- 
selves; (5)  that  the  fraternities  are  trying  to  create 
an  academic  man's  class  which  is  better  than  the 
common  man,  the  sign  of  this  class  being  the 
scar  from  the  "Mensur":  (6)  that  they  are  not 
politically  active  and  take  no  stand.  Fraternity 
men  deny  this  saying  that  collectively  they  do  not 
take  a  stand,  but  their  leaders  do. 

The  strong  feeling  of  the  free  students  against 
fraternities  came  out  in  1950  in  Goettingen.  One 
sunny  Sunday  morning,  two  or  three  hundred 
Corps  students  had  a  "Kneipe"  in  public  for  the 
first  time  in  front  of  the  Rathaus  at  the  Market 
place  where  they  sang  and  drank. 

Free  students  paraded  to  the  Market  with  donk- 
eys wearing  fraternity  caps  and  bands,  accom- 
panied by  a  combo  playing  American  jazz  to  drown 
out  the  fraternity  songs.  It  finished  in  what  is 
known  is  a  "Schlaegerei"  or  brawl.  In  1952,  there 
was  another  such  occurrence. 

We  recently  had  student  government  elections 
for  parlianvent.  Someone  came  to  a  friend  of  mine 
and  asked  him  to  run  with  other  free  students  in 
order  to  keep  the  fraternitj'  students  from  getting 
the  majority  in  the  legislature. 

At  the  last  Studentenrat  (parliament)  meeting, 
the  fraternity  members  sat  on  one  side  of  the  hall 
and  the  free  students  on  the  other,  divided  50-50. 
With  almost  every  issue,  it  was  one  group  against 
the  other.  An  hour  was  spent  arguing  »ver  a  com- 
,  plaint  that  scholarship  committees  were  asking 
candidates  if  they  were  "corporiert"  (fraternity 
members)  or  not.  They  considered  this  an  unfair 
question. 

One  thing  can  definitely  be  said  in  favor  of  the 
German  fraternities;  they  are  the  only  large  group, 
with  the  exception  of  a  very  few  student  home> 
and  clubs,  which  bring  students  in  contact  with 
one  another  and  provide  some  kind  of  community 
life  at  the  Germ*an  university.  Whether  they  are 
going*  about  it  in  the  right  way  or  not.  they  are 
tr\ing  to  meet  a  definite  need. 


PHIDAY, 

Bryoj 

Are 

Schi 

Two  UN( 
neth  Bryan^ 
per)  Tice 
larsbip.v  her 

.  teyant. 
named  win^ 
lernity  schi 

Tice,  froil 
named  wini 
Hall    Founc 

The  Chi 
ship  is  aw; 
Chi  Psi  mc 
strated 
leadership 
and    in    hia 
has  need 

Brj-ant  h^ 
president 
his  fraterr 

He  is  a 
precision 
has   held 
is  co-capta^ 
team  and 
gram  Club.| 

He  also 
and  the  Ba| 

The   Si. 
tion.  Schol^ 
year  to  a 
Hall  frater 
graduate  w| 
tained    a 
tic   record' 

Tice    i- 
the  Dept. 
is  a  winner 
ship  from 
Carnegie 

His  plan^ 
tinue  his 
University 
ligion  majc 

As  an  ui 
UNC  Tice 
team     mer 
class   treasij 

He  wn^ 
Kappa     >c 

Recently 
of    the    'ie| 
spring  pre 
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unfair 


Bryant,  fke 
Are  Awarded 
Scholarships 


Two  VNC  students,  Jaxnes  Ken- 
neth Bryant,  Jr.  and  John  K.  (Pep- 
per) Tice  have  recently  won  scho- 
larship.-.- here. 


Covering  The  University  Campus 


MCGUIRE  TO  SPEAK  ,  of  comparative   literature   at  Yale  i 

Head    Basketball    Coach    Frank  \  University,  will  give  his  second  lec- 
McGuire  will  speak  Tuesday  at  the    ture    of    the     week   here   tonight 
Faculty  Club  Luncheon  in  the  Car-   when  he  will  speak  at  8  oclock  in  i 
olina  Inn  at  1  p.m,,  according  to  j  the  Assembly  Room  ol  the  Wilson  ' 
an  announcement  from  Dr.  Arthur  ]  Library.      *  j 

Roe,  president.  j      The   English   Club    will   sponsor 

Bryant,   from  Elkin,     has    beenj  EASTER  PREPARATIONS  I  Ws  talk  on   "Main  Trends  in  Twen- 1 

named  winner  of  the  Chi  Psi  Fra-j     The  N.  C.  Memorial  Hospital  at   tieth-Century  Critici^-m,"  which  is  ^ 
ternity  scholarship.  i  unC  is  preparing  for  Easter.  The   open  to  the  public.  ! 

Tice.  from  High  Point,  has  been   H«sPJtality   Shop  in  the  lobby  of    PAPER  | 


the  hospital  has  put  in  a  stock  oi       D'  •  Warfield  Garson  of  the  Dept. 

EaXer  baskets  and  toys  and  Easter  i  of  E.\perimental  Medicine  of  the! 
i  cards.  Arrangements  have  been  UNC  School  of  Public  Health  will  | 
'■  made  with  the  YWCA  to  have  j  deliver  a  paper  in  Dayton,  OhioJ 
\  Easter  favors  on  the  patients  food  !  »n  Wednesday.  | 

I  trays  on  Easter  Sunday.  |     The  title  of  the  paper  will   be  j 

i  COURSE  ENDS  '  "Current  Status  of  Gonorrhea."        ! 

i  A  course  in  '-Records  Manage- 1  ^^  ^ill  be  delivered  oefore  a| 
i  ment  in  Public  Health"  will  end  at  j  meeting  sponsored  by  the  United  | 
I  the  L^T  School  of  PuJlic  Health '  ^'^^^    P"^'^^    "^^'^^    Service,    the  , 

i  Ohio  State  Dept.  of  Health  and  the  i 
;  American     Academy     of     General  | 

it" "'"'"■' 'k^,     ,  »t,     xTD/vfv  '  April   1   with  an  enrollment  of  26  I  ^'"^^^'^^  i 

He  IS  a  member  of  the  NROTL ,    "^ ,  ^  k„  i  last  day 

r.r«^;c;o„   Hi-iii  too«,   i^  «,m«v,  u^ '  students.    Over    100    students    ap- !  ^'**'    "*^^ 

precision    drill    team    m    which    he,     ,.    ^    ,  ,     -     .  ,  i       The   OraHnafo    Offiri>    annoimccH 

Ho     Koi^    ™,«„   i^oW^^i,i«  r^^ctc    Pl*e<i  fo'"  admission  to  the  course;      ^"^  ^.^raauate  urtict    announced 

has    held    many   leadership  posts,'  ,       ..    .       i  today   that    Anril   25   will    be   the 

...  .;  ♦_„»!,    but  the  enrollment  was  limited.      p""'*.>    t"<»i    /\pi  u    -j    win    ue    uie 

is  co-captain  of  the  varsity  track    ;  last  day  for  submitting  applications  I 


named  winner  of  the  St.  Anthony 
Hall   Foundation  Scholarship. 

The  Chi  Psi  Fraternity  .scholar- ; 
ship  is  awarded  to  an  outstanding 
Chi  Psi  member  who  has  demon- 
strated '-scholastic  achievement, 
leadership  in  can)pus  activities 
and  in  his  fraternity,  and  who 
has  need." 

Bryant  has  been  treasurer,  vice- , 
president    and    pledge    master   of ,  °^" 
his  fraternity.  '     ^"^ 


course    go    underway 


team  and  a  member  of  the  Mono- 
gram Club. 

He  also  is  active  in  the  YMCA 
and  the  Baptist  Student  Union. 

The  St.  Anthony  Hall  Founda- 
tion, Scholarship  is  awarded  each 
year  to  a  member  of  St.  Anthony 
Hall  fraternity  who  intends  to  do 
graduate  work  and  who  has  main- 
tained a  "commendable  scholas- 
tic record"  at  UNC. 

"Hce  is  a  graduate  student  in 
the  Dept.  of  Philosophy  here.  He 
is  a  winner  of  a  graduate  fellow- 
ship from  the  Graham-Kenan  and 
Carnegie  Funds. 

His  plans  next  year  are  to  con- 
tinue his  graduate  studies  at  Yale 
University  as  a  philosophy  of  re- 
ligion major. 

As  an  undergraduate  student  at 
UNC  Tice  was  a  varsity  swimming 
team  member  and  sophomore 
class  treasurer. 

He  was  also  elected  to  Phi  Beta 
Kappa    scholastic    fraternity. 

Recently  Tice  appeared  as  one 
of  the  "lead"  characters  in  the 
spring  production  by  Sound  and 
Fury,  student   musical  comedy. 


GOOD  FOOD 
HERE 


SERVING 

BREAKFAST 

LUNCH 

DINNER 

OPEN  7:»  AJA.-'}Q:PM. 
DELICIOUS  REGULAR 

Lunch  And  Dinners 
65<  -$1.00 

ALSO  STEAKS,  CHOPS,  SEA- 
FOOD, SNACKS,  SANPWICHES 

FOODS   FOR    EVERY   MOOD 
HOMECOOKED   AT 

Andrews 
Restaurant 

423  W.  Franklin  St. 
Across  From  Hospital  Saving 


CHARTER  FELLOWS 

Four  faculty  memt>era-  of  the 
UNC  School  of  Medicine  have  ac- 
cepted invitations  to  become  char- 
ter fellows  of  the  American  Aca- 
demy of  Microbiology. 

They  are  Dr.  William  J.  Cromar- 
ti,  associate  professor  of  bacteri- 
ologv'  and  medicine  and  director  of 
the  Bacteriological  and  Serological 
Lal)oratories;  Dr.  Edward  C.  Curn- 
en,  professor  and  chairman  of  the 
Dept.  of  Pediatrics;  Dr.  Daniel  A. 
MacPhersno,  professor  of  bacteri- 
ology and  Dr.  G.  P.  Manire,  asso- 
ciate professor  of  bacteriology. 
HIGH  OFFICES 

Two  UNC  education  majors 
were  elected  to  high  officers  with 
4he  Dept.  of  Future  Teachers  ol 
the  North  Carolina  Education  Assn. 
at  the  recent  Wilmington  meeting. 

Vernon  C.  Culpepper  of  Rocky 
Mount  was  named  state  president, 
and  Miss  Sue  Atchison  of  Wash- 
ington, D.  C.  was  chosen  as  corres- 
ponding secretary. 
HEALTH  PROGRAM 

The  Hearing  and  Speech  Center 
of  N.  C.  Memorial  Hospital  here 
will  sponsor  the  "Project  Health' 
televi.  ion  show  today  at  9  a.m. 

The  "Project  Health"  programs 
are  seen  every  other  Friday  night  1  ^^^y    in    Government."    discussed  ! 
during  the  academic  year  over  tel-    by  Rep.  John  E.  Moss  of  Califoi^ 
evision  station  WUNC-TV,  Channel !  n»a;  ;ind    'Photo  Coverage  of  Ciyil 
4.  j  Violence."       -'----^    .   J.  '  'V^  .' .  " 

SECOND  LECTURE  i      The    second   topic  will    be    dis- 

Rene  W'ellek,  Sterling  professor  j  cussed  on   Editor's  Day,  April  27. 

I  with  C.  A.   (Pete)  McKnight,  edi- 

"^■■""■"'^■"^■■■^■"■^'■■•^^^^  I  tor  of  The  Charlotte  Observer,  as 

Q[J^5SIFIEDS  i  P^"*^'     ni'^erator.    McKnight    for- 

'  merly   was  director  of  the  South- 

TEACHERS   WANTED:    MAN   tO  '  ^'•"  .  ^t^^^'"."^'    Reporting    Serv- 
...  .  .        r     *u  II        J  I  'ce   in   Nashville.  Tenn. 

assist   m  coaching  football   and 

baseball.     Public    School    Music 

Teacher,     Seventh     and    Eighth 

Grade     Teachers.    Contact    the 


'  for  admission  to  candidacy  for  the ; 
I  masters  degree  for  the  August  | 
I  commencement.  i 

I  UNIVERSITY  CLUB  \ 

\      Tryouts  for  the  University   Club 
j  Show  will  be  held  from  2-4  p.m.  in  ; 
j  Carroll   Hall   today.  ,       j 

I  CAROLINA  HANDBOOK  | 

I  There  will  be  an  important  staff  i 
j  meeting  of  the  Carolina  Handbook 
I  at  4  p.m.  today  in  the  YMCA.  .\11  ; 
i  members  of  the  staff  and  any  other : 
interested  students  have  been  urg-  , 
I  ed  to  attend.  i 

i 

Photo  Meeting 
Features  Moss,  \ 
McKnight  \ 

Cameramen     and     editors     from ' 
nine    southeastern    states    are    ex- 
pected to  gather  here  April  25-27  i 
for    the    eighth    annual    Southern 
Short    Course   in    Press   Photogra- ' 
phy.  j 

The  1957  short  course  will  in-  ■ 
elude  two  topics  of  especial  cur- ' 
rent    interest:    '"Unnecessary    Sec- 1 


Principal,  Mebane  High  School, 
Mebane,   N.  C. 

THREE  ROOM  APARTMENT  FOR 
rent  —  summer  only.  Complete- 
ly furnished.  Near  post  office. 
Call  8-7937  after  9:00  p.m. 

DRIVING  TO  ANN  ARBOR,  MICH., 
for  Easter  holidays.  Need  riders. 
Call  Fred  Pdwledge,  8  8602.  any- 
time. 


NORGE  REFRIGERATOR  FOR 
sale:  Size  10,  new  model  in  good 
condition,  reasonable  price  — 
call  8-6357  before  this  bargain 
is  gone. 


DAILY    CROSSWORD 


2.  Large  roof-  19.  Cavalry 

inf  alate  sword 

a.  Topaz  hum-  21.  Harden 

mtof  bird  (var.) 

4.  Fumiahco  22.  Meas- 

wtth  a  ceil-  ure  of 

ingr  length 

8l  AjngU>-StLX..  23.  A 

on  aerf  drtnking 

•.  ItMiM  mug 

7.  IijUnd  tea  26  Bxcla- 

(llusa.)  mation 

t.  Scotch-  2S.  Siberian 

man's  hat  gulf 
t.8hoahonean  29.  Shining 
^                  Indiaxi  32.  Slight  taate 

24.  Wfaw  recep-  10.  Scotch  muai-  36.  More  at 
'  tacle                      c*l  congress  ,     liberty 

25.  Large  celea-   16  Breach  37.  Laborer 
tial  body         17.Ught  wood  (Sp.) 

27.  Work  18.  City    (Neb.)  SS.Otherwiae 

30.  Inclined 
trough 
(vtr.) 

31.  BibUcal 

(pOM.) 

33.  Nam*  (Bib.) 

34.  SwtM  river 
35  Twofold 

(pMtx) 
36 


ACROSS 

1.  A  support 
«.  A  fact 

11.  Projecting 
roof 
edge* 

12.  Muse  of 
lyric  poetry 

13.  Once  tnon 

14.  DoRiesti- 
eatcd 

15.  Lawful 
17.  Foreman 

20.  Sloth 

21.  Town 
<Prus«.) 


Ye>terd«y'*  A««wer 

39.  Indian 
(Wash.) 

40.  Openings 
(anat.) 

41.  Uttle  girl 

43.  A  marble 

44.  Biblical 
name 

45.  Snare 


37.  ?M 

ofBamlin 
3I.Hobr«w 

proplMt 
42.8hada«< 

yrilow 
4«.Oonitdla« 

tlon 
4T  River  (Fr) 
48  Oontrae*    . 

tion 
41  DiSCMt  of 

rye 
DOWN 
1  G<ri  s   nick' 


I      Annual    photo    competition    will 
I  also  be  held,  open  to  all  persons 
j  registered      and       attending       the 
j  short  course.  Judging  will  be  held 
!  in  these  categories:  general  news, 
spot   news,  advertising  and   public 
relations,   portraits  and   personali- 
ties,  pictorial,   feature  story,  spot 
news   in   movies,   feature   news   in 
movies,    sports    and    color    trans- 
parencies. 

The  Carolinas  Press  Photogra- 
phers Assn.  sponsors  the  Southern 
Short  Course,  in  cooperation  with 
the  National  Press  Photographers 
Assn..  the  N.C.  Press  Assn.  and 
the  V'iiC  Extension  Division. 

Freshman  Car 
Registration 
Is  Down  200 

Last  year  freshmen  had  317  cars 
registered  with  the  office  of  Stu- 
dent Affairs  a  check  revealed  yes- 
terday. 

This  year  handicapped  freshmen 
have  107  cars.  The  sophomores 
have  650  cars  registered  thi.^*  year 
while  last  year  581  were  register- 
ed. Students  in  the  college  of  Arts 
and  Sciences  registered  415  cars 
last  year  and  533  this  year. 

The  number  of  cars  registered 
by  the  full-time  faculty  and  staff 
during  the  past  year  fell  from 
about  1600  to  1,525.  During  th« 
past  year  total  number  of  cars  reg- 
istered by  undergraduates-  rose 
from  1,793  to  1,862.  All  depart- 
ments showed  increases  in  regis- 
I  tration. 

i  .  The  total  number  of  automobiles 
I  registered  by  the  graduates  in- 
j  treased  from  760  to  1,0M.  Students 
I  living  in  town  registered  93  more 
I  automobiles  this  year  for  the  great- 
I  est  increiise  of  any  area. 
I  Ray  Jefferies,  assistant  to  the 
!  dean  of  stuclenl  affairs,  said  the 
I  rise  in  the  number  of  registered 
I  cars  was  due  largely  to  more  stren- 
i  uous  efforts  to  have  the  students 
j  register  the  cars. 

ilr  said  it  would  not  he  enough 
ior  a  student  jujt  to  register  his 
car,  ibut  he  must  also  display  the 
sticker,  according  to  trustee  regu- 
lations. 


NEWMAN   CLUB 

The  Newman  Club  will  meet 
Sunday  at  6:30  p.m.  in  the  New 
Catholic  Chapel  on  Gimgoul  Road. 
There  will  be  a  buffet  speaker. 

All   members  and  Catholic  stu- 
dents have  been  urged  and  iavit- 
ed  to  attend. 
PARENTS'  DAY 

An  organizational  meeting  of  the 
UNC  Medical  Parents'  Club  will 
be  held  in  connection  with  obser- 
vance of  Parents'  Day  at  the  UNC 
School  of  Medicine  tomorrow. 

Registration  for  the  day-long 
program  will  be  held  in  the  lobby 
of  N.  C.  Memorial  Hospital  begin- 
ning at  9:30  a.m.  The  organization- 
al meeting  will  be  held  at  11  a.m. 
following  a  tour  of  the  ho.ypital 
and  School  of  Medicine. 

The   Rev.   Samuel   H.   Howie   of 
Fayetteville    will    {H-eside    at    the 
meeting. 
ORIENTATION 

Girls  interested  in  typing  any 
afternoon  for  the  next  few  weeks 
in  the  orientation  office  have  been 
asked  to  contact  Miss  Mary  Jane 
Fisher  in  319  Mclver,  8-9134.  Any 
help  will  be  appreciated  by  the 
Orientation  Committee. 
GRADUATE  CLUB 

The  Graduate  Club  will  sponsor 
a  pai'ty  tonight  at  8  p.m.  in  Cobb 
dormitory  basement.  The  5-Difnen- 
sion  Band  of  Bob  Olson  will  be 
featured.  Dancing,  entertainment 
and  refreshments  will  highlight  an 
informal  program  open  to  all  grad- 
uate students,  faculty  members,  ad- 
mini..-tration  members  and  older 
undergraduates  over  age  21. 
WUNC-TV 

Todays  schedule  for  WUNC-TV, 
the    Universitys    educational    tele- 
vision station,  is  as  follows: 
12:45     Music 

1:00    Today  on  the  Farm 

1:30    EIngineering  Visits 

2:00     Sign  Off 

5:15     Music 

5:30    Music  for  Young  People 

6:00    Magic  Lantern 

6:15    News  and  Safety 

6:30    Opera  History 

7:00     Science  Fair 

7:30    The  humanities 

8:00     Air  Age 

8:30     Prelude 

9:00    Project  Health 
10:00    Final  Edition 


fnterviews 
Fof  GMAB 
25th-26th 


Interviews  for  positions  on  the 
Graham       Memorial        Activities  \ 
Board     for     the     academic     year  \ 
1957-1958  will   be   held   April   25 
and  26,  according  to  Board  Chair- 
man Tom  Lambeth. 

Applications  can  be  secured  for 
top  officers,  committee  chairman- 
ships and  committee  member- 
ships at  the  information  desk  of 
GM,  Lambeth  said. 

He  urged  all  interested  students 
to  pick  up  the  applications  and 
return  them  to  the  information 
desk  before  the  end  of  the  week. 

Positions  currently  open  are  in 
presidential  and  vice  presidential 
positions.  Included  among  these 
offices  are: 

Vice  president  in  charge  of  en- 
tertainment whose  capacity  will 
entail  supervising  next  year's 
GMAB  programming  in  the  field 
of  Sound  and  Fury,  sporisored 
plays,  petite  musicales  and  dra- 
matiques,  concerts,  etc. 

Vice  president  of  recreation 
who  will  handle  supervision  of 
weekend  combos,  Mardi  Gras 
Weekend,  ping-pong  tournaments, 
etc. 

Vice  president  in  charge  of 
special  projects  who  will  supervise 
special  activities  as  polls  and 
forums. 

Other  offices  to  be  filled  are 
those  of  the  treasurer  and  secre- 
tary. 

Committee  jnembership  and 
chairmanship  is  open  in  he  mu- 
sic, dance,  recreation,  publicity, 
office,  reception,  polls.  Forum 
Sound  and  Fury  and  film  pro- 
grams,   Lambeth    said. 

The  top  six  officers  will  be 
nominated  by  a  selections  board 
of  the  GM  Board  of  Directors  and 
elected  by  the  Board. 

Individual  chairmanships  will 
be  decided  by  the  newly  elected 
president  of  GMAB  when  he  as- 
sumes his  duties  at  the  start  of 
next  month,  Lambeth  said. 


STUDENT 

(Continued  from  Page  1) 

accorded  the  privilege  of  repre- 
senting Egyptian  universities  in 
the  University  Leaders'  Confer- 
ence held   in   Argentina  in  1955. 

Following  his  activities  in  the 
University  student  movement,  he 
was  elected  in  a  faculty  compe- 
tition, "The  Ideal  Student  Com- 
petition." As  an  athlete  Nasr  won 
the  1956  tennis  championship  for 
all  Egyptian  universities. 

UNC  has  been  chosen  as  one 
of  the  American  universities  to 
participate  in  the  Foreign  Stu- 
dent  Leadership  Project. 

In  a  letter  informing  Young  of 
UNC's  inclusion  in  the  1957-58 
program,  the  Committee  of  Ad- 
visers slated  it  was  "impressed 
with  the  enthusiasm  which  has 
been  manifested,  the  likelihood  of 
effective  planning  and  program- 
ming, and  the  generous  financial 
support  which  youf  institution  has 
offered." 


Training  Retreat  Will  Be  Held 
April  27-28  For  New  Leaders 


The  Student  Government  Lead-j 
ership    Training    Retreat   will    be 
held  at  Camp  Monroe  near  Laur- ! 
inburg  April  27-28,  according  to  a ! 
report    released    by   a   committee 
working  on  this  project. 

The  leport  said,  "The  aim  Is 
to  train  the  new  student  leaders ! 
of  1957-58  while  at  the  same  time : 
trying  to  unify  all  sections  of  the  ; 
student  body."  Campus  officers  ^ 
frwn  all  types  of  student  admin- ^ 
istration  have  been  invited  to  at- ; 
tend.  j 

The  group  plans  to  discuss  par- 
liamentary procedure  and  overall 
campus  problems.  The  report  also ! 
said  "the  retreat  idea  was  used ; 
this  year  because  in  past  years  | 
the  training  period  Vas  so  short  [ 
thereby  limited  in  scope."  i 

The  cost  will  be  $3  per  student, ! 
including    the   cost    of   chartered 


buses  which  will  lesiye  from  Grt- 
ham  Memorial  at  7:30  a.m.  Satur» 
day.  "April  27. 

T^e  committee  making  the 
plans  for  the  retreat  is  under  the 
leadership  of  John  Brooks  and 
Misses  Mary  Ellen  MacDonald  and 
Tish  Harrer. 


DEAN    CARMICHAEL 

Dean  of  Women  Miss  Katherine 
Carmichael  wiH  travel  to  W^il- 
mington  today  to  attend,  as  a  rep- 
resentative, a  weekend  meeting  of 
the  state  convention  of  the  Ameri- 
can Assn.  of  University  Women. 

The  convention  will  be  held  to- 
morrow, Saturday  and  Sunday  in 
the  Cape  Fear  Hotel. 

Attending  the  convention  with 
Dean  Carmichael  will  be  Mrs. 
Paul  Guthrie  and  Dr.  Kathleen 
Goldie-Smith. 


Don'f  Miss 
Today's  ^ 
9<  Books 
On  The 
Going 
Going 
Gone 
Table! 

The  Intimate 
Bookshop 

205  E.  Franklin  St. 
Open  Till  10  P.  M. 


-^  ■    *  If-.  -  - 


FORUM 

(Continued  from  Pcge  1) 

•'Tl\e  Christian  Faith  —  Protest 
and  Affirmation." 

Prof.  F.  W.  Hanft  of  the  UNC 
Law  School  will  lead  the  Kappa 
Delta  discussion  group  Monday 
night.  No  definite  topic  has  been 
set  for  this  group. 

The  Pi  Phi's  will  also  hdVe  a 
free-range  discussion  group.  Prof. 
Fred  Cleveland  of  the  Political 
Science  Dept.  will  head  this 
group  as  it  meets  Tuesday  night. 

Rev.  James  0.  Cansler,  local 
Baptist  Student  Union  director, 
will  lead  the  discussion  group  for 
the  Chi  Omega  Sorority  Monday 
night.  This  will  also  be  a  free- 
range   discussion. 

"Social  Issues"  will  be  the  topic 
of  the  Chi  Psis  at  their  Monday 
night  discussion-  group.  Rev. 
Charles  Jones  of  the  Community 
Church  will  lead  the  discussion. 

Roy  Rodgcrs  of  the  Sociology 
Dept.  who  is  presently  teaching 
several  marriage  courses,  will 
lead  the  discussion  group  at  the 
Phi  Delta  Theta  House  Monday 
night.  The  group  will  center  its 
discussion  around  "Christianity 
and  Marriage."  '    " 

Lt,  Commander  Howard  Chil- 
dress, assistant  professor  of  Na« 
val  Science,  will  lead  the  Tues- 
day night  discussion  group  at  the 
Phi  Gamma  Delta  House.  No  dejf- 
inite  topic  has  been  chosen  loj 
this  group. 

The  Delta  Sigma  Pis  will  cetP- 
ter  their  Tuesday  night  discus- 
sion around  "The  Christian  Fiith 
and  Marriage."  Guy  Johnson,  pro- 
fessor of  Sociology  and  Antltto- 
pjlogy.  wil^  head  the  group. 

Dr.  Erie  Peacock  will  also  lead 
a  group  on  "Christianity  aad 
Marriage "  Monday  night.  He  will 
be  the  guest  of  the  Phi  Kappa 
Sigmas  at  their  discussion  group. 

The  Kappa  Psis  will  have  as 
their  loader  Dr.  Francis  Hammer- 
ncss,  assistant  professor-  is  tbf' 
Pharmcy  School,  Monday  night. 
No  definite  topic  has  been  set 
for  the  discussion. 

The  Sigma  Nu  House  will  hold 
a  discussion  on  "The  Chrtatian 
Faith  and  Marriage"  Monday 
night.  Rev.  Charles  Hubbard,  pj^ 
tor  of  the  local  Methodist  Church, 
will  lead  the  discussion. 

Fred  Cleveland  of  the  Political 
Science  Dept  will  lead  the  Sigma 
Phi  Epsilon  discussion  Monday 
nigkt.  No  definite,  topie  has  befC 
chosen  for  the  group. 


DIAL  9-481 

All    Cars    Equipted   With 
TwO'Way    Radios 

Service  To  And  From 
Raleiqh-Durham    Airport 

"Call   Us   And   Count 
The   Minutes" 


CAROLINA  CAB  CO. 


FOR  THAT 


GERAAAN'S  WEEKEND 
SNACK 


ICE  CREAM 


SODAS 


29 


FRESH   STRAWBERRY 


SUNDAE 


29 


Try  Our  Delicious  Fresh-Made  Sandwiches 

DAIRYLAND  FARMS 


GLEN  LENNOX 


r 

^ 


Who  rates  what  for  performance 
and  smoother  riding  in  the  low- 
priced  three?  Chevrolet  has  laid 
the  answer  and  the  proof  on 
the  line! 

First,  Chevrolet  won  the  Auto 
Decathlon  over  every  car  in  its 
field,  and  over  the  higher  priced 
cars  that  were  tested,  too.  This 
rugged  ten-way  test  (right,  beloiv) 
showed  Chevrolet  was  the  champ 
in  handling  ease,  braking,  acceler- 
ation, passing  ability,  smooth- 


ness of  ride  and  other  driving 
qualities  you  want  in  a  car. 

Then,  Chevy  won  the  Pure 
Oil  Performance  Trophy  at 
Daytona  {left,  below)  as  "best 
performing  U.  S.  automobile." 

It's  quite  a  feeling  to  know 
that  you  are  driving  a  car  that 
performs  so  well,  responds  so 
beautifully  and  is  so  finely  built. 
You  feel  proud,  of  course.  But 
>oii  also  enjoy  a  surer,  smooths, 
steadier  way  of  going,  a  keen 


cat-quick  response  of  power,  and 
the  easiest  handling  you've  ever 
experienced  behind  a  wheel.  Just 
try  this  Chevrolet  (V8  or  Six) 
and  see! 


lUSA 


id/ 


S^ 


Oievy  showed  its  still  the  champ... 
at  Daytona...  and  in  the  Decathlon! 


E.N  TER  CHEVROLET'S  $275,000  "LUCKY  TRAVELER"  CONTEST! 
Come  in  novi''—  get  a  winoiug  deal  on  the  champion! 


Onlr  franchi§ed  Cherrolet  dealnv  display  this  famous  trademark 


See  Your  Authorized  Chevrolet  Dealer 


#Adt  P6un 


THE  DAfLY  TAR   HEEL 


PRIDAY,  APRIL    12,  1957 


Varsity  Golf  And   Frosh    Baseballers  Take  Victories 


Frosh  Blast 
CJQ  21-7; 
Fifth  Win 

By    ED    ROWLAND 


Yanks  Will 
Be  Loaded 


By  JAKE  WADE 


When  Carolina  track  coach  Dale 

Ranson   learned   Tuesday   morning 

,     ,     ,       that  hs  great  distance  runner,  Jim 
"loaded.      Casey   Stengel   had   the    g^^j^^^   ^^^   ^^^^^   ^^^^^^   ^^^  ^^^ 


NEW   YORK,  (AP)  —The   word 
for     the    New     York    Yankees    is 


ed  and  had  assembled  to  give  him 
a  hand  on  the  occasion. 

The  huge  Jeff  Thomas  trophy 
will  be  awarded  for  the  first  time 
this  year  .   .  .  This  award  goes  to 


„.     _  1  best  crop  of  youngsters  in  Florida  :  ^„,  .„„  ri,.^ .u„  „i«v,.  u^r^^^  v,^  ' 

The  Tar  Baby  basebaU  team  pow-  ^^^  ^e  heads  into  the  American  ■  ^  '  i  the  UNC  athlete  (any  sport)  who 
ered  across  21  run^-  to  stomp  Camp-  League  race  with  a  well-balanced  ^'^^  '"  "^  '^^^^^^  '  '  '  ^'^^^^^  ^^^  J  is  judged  by  var.ity  head  coaches 
bellJunior  college  yesterday  after-:  ball  dub  made  up  of  iv^o.^^y\''T  '^^' J^^i^^^j;;;^^;^  ^i^U^  having  been  most  outstandin 
noon  in  Emerson  stadium.  Scoring !    ,a  -  i /.ai.so  h„  kn^^-  that  nrHmaniv  thA    .  


in  every  inning  but  one,  the  frosh 
banged  out  16  hits  off  the  slants 


Although  the  Yanks  lost  to  their 


cause  he  knew  that  ordinarily  the 
Fleece  puts  its  neophytes  through 


in  sportsmanship  and  ability  . 
It   honors  the  long  time  operator 


A's  Beat  Bums 

KANSAS  CITY  _  (AP)  —  Irv 
Noren's  single  off,  Don  Bessent  in 
the  ninth  inning  scoring  Bill 
Shantz  capped  a  four-run  rally 
and  gave  the  Kansas  City  Athletics 
a  5-4  exhibition  victory  today 
over  the  Brooklyn  Dodgers  as 
light  snow  began  to  fall  over  Mu- 
nicipal Stadium  in  34-degree  wea- 
ther. 

Trailing  4-1  coming  into  the 
ninth,  the  A's  gave  the  shivering 


the  fifth  win  for  the  frosh. 
Freddie  Hirsch,  a  lean  left  hand- 


Thompson  and  Billy  Hunter  led 
off  with  singles.  After  Cletus 
Boyer    looked   at    a    third    strike. 


Tom  Langley  And  Gene  Lookabill 

Pictured  above  are  Tom  Langley  and  Gene  Lookabill  the  number 
one  and  two  men  on  the  undefeated  Carolina  golf  team.  The  Tar 
Heels  win  over  Michigan  yesterday  was  their  sixth   win. 

Linksmen  Take  241/^-5 V2 
Win  Over  Wolverines 


a  mighty  rough  before-dawn    'voy-      <■    Tpffo     rnnfpotinnarv     a    riown    0=0, 'r  *    •  n       ^  t;«, 

1        „       ■       nT     .       ■  A    /» ■  L^onieciionarj ,    a    aown    8,531  fans  a  warming  rally  as  Tim 

of   two   Campbell   hurlers.   It    was    Richmond     farm     club     yesterday    age     alter  the    tapping   .  .   .  Anu :  ^0^^^  haven  for  the  sports-minded 

after    barely    struggling    past    two  1  Beaty    was    scheduled    that    after- j         j^ff  j^g^  jj^g^  ggj-JQ^^jy  m  f^j. 
other  minor  league  team,:.-  on   the  j  "<>«"  fo''  the  special  mile  run  and ,  n^g^y  months   .   .   .   Whid   Powell, 

er  from  Charlotte    ^.g„.  ^^e  route   "^"^^  ^''"''"' '^  '' ^^' ^^'"'''^ ''"'''''"  L^^'t.'*  ^'^  ^  ™'   insurance  man-about- 1  ;r;;k7e   Milt  Graff   singled    to   fill 

/    7     Y*''^^*'"^'  ^^"^  V^""  '^''"^*'    sion  that  they  can't  mLss  when  the  j  the  Fleece  wa.v  kind,  knowing  the  -  j^wn,   is  one  of  the  chief  moving    the  bases 

lor   Carolina   and   picked    up   his    ^eli  rings  for  the  regular  season,  j  circumstances,  and  passed  up  Jim-       jrit..    behind    the    Jeff    Thomas       •         „  "    .  ,.      .     ,       ,,.,„„ 
first  win.  The  visiting  Camels,  how- ,  only    injuries     to     kev    men    like    my  when   it   took  to  the  tall  tim-    tJ^phy  There  is  wide  specula- ^      ^'"'  Zernial  s  single  plated  two 

ever,    banged    out    11    ^fetie..  to    j^li.key     Mantle     or     Yogi     Berra  ' '><^rs  vviih  the  honored  young  men.  :  ^j^^  3,  ,^- ^^e  athlete  to  be  chosen.  '  ™"j,    ""\^:^'"     Bessent    threw 
keep  the  pressure  on.  ;  ^Q^^^^  change  the  picture.  i      Never   any   Fleece   tapping   like  \  [  wildly  on  Johnny  Groth  s  topped 

Tommy     Saintsing     and     Frank  |  this  one,  with  an  unprecedented  30  1     Same    goes    for    the    Patterson    roller  Graff  raced  home  with  the 

Montgomery    led   the    hitting    for        While    other   clubs    must    settle  i  honored  .  .  .  Usually  this  venerable  '  n^edal,   long   regarded   as   the   top  [  tying  run. 
the  Tar  Babies.  Montgomery,  play-    for  a  man  who  can  handle  one  po     honorary  society  includes  only  one  '  athletic  award  here  .  .  .  This  goes 

j  ing  shortstop  after  patrolling  the  sition.  Stengel  demands  the  two-  |  or  two  athletes  in  its  round-up  .  . .  :  to  the  top  all-around  senior  athlete 
outfield    in    previous    games,    got    way   or   three-way    ballplayer.    An  I  jhis  trip  it  took  the  entire  start-  ;  with  scholarship  considered  along 

ithiee  singles  for  four  trips  to  the    infielder  must  bo  ready  to  shift  to  j  ing  national  championship  basket-    with  ability,  leadership  and  sports- 

;  plate.  Saintsing  slammed  his  third  !  the  outfield  and  an  outfielder  must  j  ball  team  and  its  coaches,  plu^  i  manship  .  .  .  Footballeiv  Ed  Sul- 
homer  of  the  season  and  then  hit  be  prepared  to  catch  or  play  short- 1  footballer  Ed  Sutton  and  trackman  i  ton  and  Don  Redding  recently  re- 
a  single  in  four  appearances-.  »*top.  i  jimmy    Beatty    .    .    .    Coach    Farnk  \  ceived  certificates  and  encylopedia 

The  other  long  extra-base  blow       j^^^^  ^,^^^^  ^  j^^^j.  ^^   ^^^  Yankee  '  ^*'^'"'''p  i-eceiv^-d  probably  the  big- 1  sets   for  being  chosen  on  the  All- 
came   from   the    bat   01^  Ray   Bor-    ijneup  that  probably  will  open  the  j  ^^^^  ^^'^^'°"   ''''  S'^'-^"    «   Fleece  ;  Scholastic  All-America, 
roughs,    a    triple    in    the    second.    ^^^^^„    Everybody  can  handle  two  \  »«PP^^ 
Clayton  and  Hirsch  had  doubles.        .^  ,      Incidentally,     McGuire    and    his 

j     Carolina  played  a  flawless  game  :  young   men    swear   they    had    not 

j  in  the  field,  but  Campbell  commit-       That  is  one  reason  some  people  !  been  tipped  off  and  were  greatly 

I  ted   ten   miscues.   Only  seven   Tar   predict  the  rest  of  the  league  I  surprised  when  plucked  .  .  .  They 

j  Baby  runs  were  earned.                   ■  might  as  well    "wait  til  next  year"  j  did  have  the  grapevine  word  that 
the  alert  freshmen  were  handed  ;  'before  making  any  serious  moves  I  Lennie  Rosenbluth  would  be  pick- 
four  straight  walks  in  the  opening;  to  challenge  Stengels  authority.      |      -       ■ 


»W?NER  BROS  »«•■•/>• 

JAMES  DEAN 

NATALIE  WOOD 

SAL  MINED 

'REBEL 

WITHOUT 

A  CAUSE' 

Om«maScOP6 

NOW  PLAYING 


Carolina 


OPENS  SATURDAY 

}Oth  CENTUIY-FOX  prcicnit 

f^  Deborah 


Robert         |^S 

KERR.MITCHUM    *J 


Heaven  Knows. 


re...*  c.  s^wxt  •,    - 


The  Tar  Heel  golf  team  is  so 
loaded  with  talent  that  frequent 
challenge  matches  are  necessary  to 
determine  the  lineups  .  .  .  Tom- 
my Langley  is  currently  playing 
number  one. 


Howard  Johnson  Restaurant 

STUDENT    SPECIALS 

Barbecued    Chicken 
Choice  Steak  Sandwiches 
.  2:00-    5:00  P.M 

SERVED  8:00-11:00  P.M. 

'"Landmark  For  Hungry  Tarheels" 


I  the  Wolverines  in  decisiA^e  fashion,  i  ^"'"^'  "'^"'"'"^  ^  »■""  «  ^^^  ^  t^'°- 

run   error   and   a   fielder's   choice 


By  JIM  CROWNOVER 

The  Carolina  golf  team  took  its 
sixth   straight   victory  of  the   sea- 
son  on   the  Firtley  layout   yester-  j 
day  a^'  the  Tar  Heels  defeated  Mic-  j 
higan  24i2-5i-...  I 

The  Tar   Heels,   with   two   men 

firing  sub-par   70's.    showed   great  ,  1" V"    7"  u-n  " 

,    ,  ^  ,    ,         \  Gene  Lookabill. 
team  balance  as  they  mowed  down  1     ^-u    .u  n-       1.  u 
The  three  golfer^-  have  each  won 


j     The  two  Carolina  men  who  shot 

i  two-under-par-  were    Buck    AcTam* 

'  and    Bob    Ruffin.    Adams'     round 

gave  him  the   distinction  of  being 

medalist    or   co-medalist    as    many 

times  this  year  as  the  number  one 


started  the  rout.  They  were  never 
headed. 

After  the  duA  had  died  two 
hour^  and  52  minutes  later,  Dunn 
and    .Mazemore   for   Campbell    had 


and  two  mc'n.  Tommy  Langley  and    '^'"^^  ^^^^^'^  ^^««  P^^^^' 


or  tied  for  the  medal  twice. 

Also  firing  a  70  yesterday  was 
Bob  Ruffin,  who  only  Tuesday  wu? 
added    to   the    roster   as   seventh  '  ^""^".^^   ^^^   Camel's   runs   were 


Carolina 


Doug  Ford  Has 
68  To  Take 
Lead  In  GGO 

Doug  Furd,  winner  of  the  Mas 

ters  golf  championship   only  four  Langley.  by  shooUng  his  72.  was 

days    ago.    continued    in    his    hot  able  to  defeat  the  highlv-regarded  '  ^^^^^^^-  ''^ 

streak    yesterday    as    he    knocked  john     Schubeck.     2'.-V2'      Adams  ^^''^■^''"'  ^^ 

two  shots  off  par  with  a  34-34—68  ^-ith  hi.  third  sub-par  round  of  the  i  ^'^'^^^'  ^^ 
to  lead  the  first  round  of  the  S15.  i  season,    was    aided    bv   his    steady '  ^"^^'"'  *^^ 

Greater     Greensboro     Open  partner    Sam    Patrick     and    they  \  ^'"^•^"'an-  3b 


Hirsch  had  to  bear  down  con- 
stantly in  each  inning.  He  only  re- 
tired three  men  in  a  row  twice. 
He  started  shakily,  but  improved 
toward  the   end  of  the  marathon. 


World  News 

(Continued  from  Page  \) 

Iranian  Bandit 

TEHRAN.  Iran— (AP)— A  po- 
lice spokesman  said  today  a  16- 
year-old  son  of  the  bandit  leader 
Dadshah  has  been  killed  in  the 
running  fight  with  the  gang  that 
sltw  three  Americans  March  24. 


earned.  Hirsch  walked  seven. 
SummariM: 


man.  replacing  Cal  Mitchell. 

Adams  and  Ruffin  were  closely 
followed   toy    Langlev    and    Michi- 
gan's    John    Law.    who    both    had !  i^'^^^T^'^'   ^* 
even-par  72's.  Law'  round  was  low 
I  for  the  Wolverines 


Bryson,  lb 
a-Baldwin 
Burroughs,  rf 


made  a  clean  sweep  of  their  four- 


Kilpatrick,  31) 


000 

tournament  by  one  stroke 

The  Mahopac,  N.  Y..  profession-  some,  9-0.                "  "    1  Saintsing,  If 

al's    nearest    rivals    were    Greens-  The  Tar  Heels  return  to  the  links   ^^^^'  ^ 

boro     amateur     Willard     Gourley  Monday  against  Davidson,  as  they  i  ^'.^''^^^ 

and    Marty    Furgol.    veteran     Le-  continue      preparations      for      the '  ^*"'^^'  ^ 

mont.    111.,    professional.  Southern     Intercollegiate     Tourna-       TOTALS 

Those  three  were  the  only  ones  ment    to   be    held    in    Athens,    Ga.    ^•'"'*''*" 

in   the   field   of  135   to  break   par  May  2-4.                                       '            Bancroft,  cf 


70    of    the    6,720-yard    Sedgefield 


The   Summary 


1  Creech,  cf 


Country  Club  course.  Tommy    Langley     (C)     defeated  •  ^^^^^^^^'  «* 

Five  men  came  in  at  par  70,  in-  John  Schubeck,  2V2-4';  John  Law    ^*^*'""®'  ^ 

eluding  Julius  Boros.  former  U.S.  (M)  defeated  Gene  Lookabill,  3-0.    ^''"^^^'  ^f 

Open    champion     from     Southern  Best  ball:   IV2-II2  (tie).  " 

Pines,    N.C..    who    had    bogis    on        Buck  Adams  (C)   defeated   Fred 

three  of  the  first  five  holes  com-  MickloV.  3-0:  Sam  Patrick  (C)  de-  '  ^''3'"P'o°.  ••> 

ing  home  to  lose  a  chance  at  gain-  feated    Pat    Keith,    3-0.    Best    ball  i  '^'^^'^'s,  3b'2b 

ing   at    least    a    tie    for    the    lead  (C)  3-0.  ' !  Barkeley.  2b 

He  was   joined   by   Gardner  Dick-        Walt    Summerville   (C)   defeated   ^*^^^**">  ^^ 


Person,  If 
c-Sharon 


Turbeville,  c 
Dunn,   p 
-Mazemore.  p* 
TOTALS 


Ab 

4 
4 

2 

3 

1 

3 

1 

5 

4 

1 

4 

3 

0 

6 
41 
Ab 

1 

2 

2 

2 

3 

1 

2 

4 

3 

1 

3 

4 

3 

2 
35 


R 

4 
3 
0 
2 
0 
4 
0 
2 
1 
1 
2 
0 
1 
1 
21 
R 
0 
0 
2 
1 
0 
0 

1 

0 
0 
0 

I 

2 
0 
0 
7 


H 
3 
2 
0 
1 
0 
2 
0 
2 
1 
1 
2 
1 
0 
1 

16 
H 
0 
0 
1 
1 
0 
0 

1 

2 
1 
0 
1 
2 
1 
1 
11 


a-flied  out  for  Bryson  in  seventh 
b-walked  for  Cranz  in  eighth 
c-ran  for  Person  in  fifth 


Netters  Play 


inson  of  Panama  City  Beach.  Fla..  Steve   Uzelac,   2"2-^'2;   Tuffy   Hen- 

despite    his    34    putts:    All    Besse  derson    (C)    defeated    Stan    Kwa»-i- 

link  and  Mike  Souchak.  both  reg  borsk.  3-0.  Best  ball  (C)  3-0. 
istering    from    Grossinger's,    N.Y..        Bob   Ruffin    (C)    defeated    Mike 

and  Bob  Maxwell  of  Abilene,  Tex.  MacMichael,  3-0. 

Ten    men    posted    71.    including  "  ' 

three  foreign  threats  Gary  Player  two  putts  of  20  feet  and  another 

and  Trevor  Wilkes,  both  of  Johan-  of  15. 

nesburg.  South  Africa,  and  Peter        Furgol,    seldom    a    tournament 

Thomson,  the  Australian  who  has  winner,   but  often   a    high-rankin" 

won  the  last  three  British  Opens,  player  on  the  money-winning  lists,  I      The  Carolina  tennis  team  plays 

Sam    Snead    of    White    Sulphur  was  out  in  33  with  two  birdies  and    hbst    to    the    Clemson    Tigers    on ! 

Springs.    W.    Va.,    the    defending  seven    pars.    But    he    went    until !  the  local  courts  this  afternoon  at  1 

champion     and     winner     of     six  the    last   hole   on   the   home    trip '  3:00. 

Greensboro  tournaments  since  the  before   he  got   another   bird,   thi.s  I      It    will    be    the    first    time    this 

first    in    1938,    was    one    of    nine  from  two  feet.  j  year   that   the   Heels   have   played 

tied  at  72.  He  had  nine  pars  on        Bobby  Maxwell,  twin  brother  of    under  fire  since  the  former  Czech 

the  way  out,  but  needed  37  com- .  Billy    Maxwell,    former    National  I  Davis    Cupper,    Valdimir    Cernik. 

ing  home.  Amateur  champion,  hit  a  ball  out '  took  over  the  coaching  reins. 

The  group   included   Paul   Har-  of  bounds  for  a  double  bogey  six !      Cernik  has  announced  that  the 

ney  of  Bolton,  Mass.,  who  follow-  on  the   15th  and  those  two  shots    following    will    make   up    the   six 

ed  a  fat  front  nine  40  with  an  in-  and   his   resultant  70  cost  him*  a    man     team:     Steve     Bank,     lefty 

coming  32.  best  nine  of  the  day.  (  chance  to  tie  Ford  for  the  lead. }  Geoff   Black,    Frank    Livingstone. 

Ford,    whose   $23,000   leads   the        Snead,  in  good  position  with  an  |  much-improved      Ray      Newsome  ; 

pro  golf  monty  winners  this  year,  outgoing   35   that  saw   him   make   Tom  Mclver.  and  Fritz  Van  Win- ' 

had  only  on*  bogey,  on  the  15th  three  difficult  pars  in  succession    kle,  in  that  order.  j 

hole   where  he   missed   the   green  just  before  reaching  the  turn,  ran!      Bank  recently  has  given  indica- ' 

and  took  a  five.  His  potter  serv  into    bogey   trouble    on  the   way,  tions  that  when  he  is  hot.  there! 

ed  him   well  as  he  racked  up  a  back.  -  -.j     j  isn't  a  man  in  the  conference  able  ' 

deuce  from   10  feet  for  a  birdie        He    three-putted    the    10th    and    to  beat  him.  Cernik,  since  his  ar- 

on    the    seventh    and    a   20-footer  was  trapped  on  No.  11.  He  missed,  rival,  has  been  very  high  on  Bank  ' 

for  a  birdie  three  on  11.  He  fin  the  next  two  greens,  but  recover- 1  and  has  referred  to  him  as  "a  po-  i 

ished  with  a  W-footer  for  a  birdie  ed  for  his  pars.  A  missed  green    tentially-ranking    player    with    a  i 

four  on  the  la<t  hole.  on   15  cost  him  a  stroke  to  par, '  good  service  and  backhand.'  | 

Gouriey.    29-year-ohi    mortgage  however,  and  he  had  to  colfle  in ,      Following    today's    match    with  I 

loan  dealer  and  a  former  Greens-  with  a  seven-foot  putt  for  a  birdie  ]  the     Tigers,     Carolina    takes    on 

boro    city    ^nd    Sedgefidd    Club  four  on  18  to  finish  two  over  for    South    Carolina    tomorrow 

champion,    is    a    member   of    the  the  round. 

sponsoring    Junior     Chamber    of  ; 

Commerce.   His  34-35  card   result-  ,  , 

ed  from  what  he  termed  "an  ut-        Cheerleader  Practice 

terly  fantastic  round."  He  hit  only 


The  yough,  Kamal,  was  report- 
ed killed  in  a  gunfight  with  police 
^  between  April  1  and  April  5.  The 
0  spokesman  said  there  .still  is  no 
0  evidence  that  Dadshah  himself 
^  :  has  been  slain,  as  claimed  by  ^tis 
^  ''  brother  Ahmed,  who  was  captur- 
^  ed  Sunday  in  Paki-stan  with  an- 
^  other  brother  and  other  gang 
0    members. 

0  

0 

0  Jordan  Gov't 

0 

0        AMMAN.     Jordan— (AP)— King 

0  j  Hussein's  choice  as  the  new  pre- 
0 ;  mier  of  Jordan.  Dr.  Hussein 
0  Fakhri  Khalidi,  was  reported  to- 
E  night  to  have  failed  in  his  ef- 
0  forts  to  form  a  new  government. 
0 
4 
1 
1 
1 
0 
1 
2 
0 
0 
0 
0 
0 
10 


MILTON'S 
SHIRT    HEAVEN 

Just  received  the  best 
looking  short  sleeve 
ivy  buttondown  shirts 
we've  ever  had  —  with 
matching  belts  and 
watchbands  —  you  can 
coordinate  all  the  way. 

(ClotljinB  Cupboartr 


LAST  CALL! 


All  clothes  that  have  been 
here  for  a  year  or  more  will  be 
sold  for  alteration  charges  be- 
fore   Easter    if   not   called   for. 

It  is  more  than  a  pleasure  to 
do  business  with  you,  but  we 
must  rid  ourselves  of  these 
clothes.  We  would  hate  to  sell 
your  suit,  pants,  or  sport  coat 
to  someone  else,  but  we  must 
if  you  don't  claim  them.  So 
won't  you  come  by  and  make 
sure  that  you  have  picked  up 
all  your  things. 

PETE   THE    TAILOR 

Specializing    In 
"Ivy    Leagueizing" 


a  body  in  the  street 


a  bullet  in  its  back 


and  lipstrck  smeared 


on  its  face... 


and  a    ■ 

wanton 

giggling 

girl  in  a 

torn  and 

tattered 

dress! 


One  informant  said  Khalidi  al- 
ready has  told  the  King  he  was 
unable  to  organize  a  cabinet  to 
replace  that  of  Premier  Suleiman 
1  Nabulsi,  sacked  by  the  King  yes- 
I  terday.  There  was  no  official  con- 
formation of  this  report. 


Carolina's  Hottest  Combo 

LISTEN  TO 

LES  SUTORIUS 

TODAY  FORM  4-6 
AT 

THE  PATIO 

REFRESHMENTS  WILL  BE  SERVED 


"'■    •:'%':     '  STARRING  .   '-^    >■ 

JM  CHANDLER -JEANNE  GRAIN  JACK  CARSOf^  i 
:/  '  ■    GAIL  RUSSELL  •  EUINE  STEWART         --^ 

V  CinemaScop£ 


The    Carolina    baseball    roster 

lists    eleven     pitchers    of    which 

:  only   three   are   lefthanders.   Only 


A  cheerleader  practice  will  be ,  Ben  Harding  throw  from  the  port- 
five  greens,  three  times  rolled  in   held  at  Kenan  Stadium  from  3-5  j  Charlie    Cross.    Joe   Morgan,    and  | 
putts   from   off   the   edge    of   the    p.m.    today,    Frank    Black,    head  |  side.  Of  the  three,  Cross  has  seen 
green   and,  in   addition,   dropped   cheerleader,  announced  yesterday,  j  the  most  competition  this  season. 


AS    NAVIGATOR    OR    PILOT 

,  •  f-  •; ' 
„.    ■  The  flyiryg  U.  S,  Air  Force  is  a  team  of  men  who  command  the  aircraft  and  men 

who  plam  the  attack.  These  are  the  pUots  and  navigators,  both  equally  important  to 
the  defer>se  of  Anr^erica. 

You,  as  a  young  man  of  inteltigence  and  sound  physical  health,  may  join  this 
select  group  in  the  world's  most  exciting  and  rewarding  adventure.  Your  training 
will  stand  you  in  good  stead,  whatever  your  future  plans  may  be  — and  you'll  be 
earning  over  $6,000  a  year  18  months  after  training.* 

If  you  are  between  19  and  26'A  years  of  age,  investigate  your  opportunities  as  an 
Aviation  Cadet  In  the  LI.)  S.  Air  Force.  Priority  consideration  is  now  being  given  to 
college  graduates.  For  details,  write:  Aviation  Cadet  Information,  P.O.  Box.7608, 

VA/aShingtOn    4,  D.  C  'Ba^sd  on  pay  of  married  lstLi»utenant  on 

ti'g^!  status  wit":  2  yMrj'  service  or  mofe. 

Graduate -Then  Fly...U.  S,  AIR  FORCE  AVIATION  CADET  PROGRAM 


GET  ON 

THE  TEAM 

THAT   DEFENDS 

AMERICA 


BUG  Llbr?iry 


WEATHER 

Ceef*r  tod«y  with   an   •xp«cttil 
high  of  62. 


c3)avlu 


SUEZCANAL 

Problem    is    finally    solvad.    Sm 
Pego,  Pag*  2. 


VOL   LVII  NO.  166 


Complete  (/F)  Wirt  Strviet 


CHAPEL  HILL,  NORTH  CAROLINA,  SATURDAY,  APRIL  13,  1957 


Officea  m  Graham  ifcuMrteJ 


POUR  PACES  THIS  ISSUf 


No  Mail  Today 

W.^SHINGTOX.   f.f*  —   The   House  | 

Appropriations    committee    gave    in 

y«-sterda.v    to    Postmaster    G«ieralj 

Siimmertield's    domands    for    more: 

■money   —  but   appaivatly   too  late' 

to  prevent   a   weekend  m^il  mora-' 
;  toriimi.  | 

j      All  38.000  U.  S.  Post  Offices  have  j 
!  been  ordered   closed   to  the  pnj>lJoi 

en    Saturday    and    Sunday,    and  ^o  | 

mail   is   scheduled   to  be   d^ivenad 

o\'er  the  weekend  unless  it  beare  s 

syjecial  delivery  stamp.  ! 

Summerfield    has    asked    for    4? 

million   dollars    to   maintain    a    full 

postal  ser\ioe  through  June  30.  the ;  of      Student 
t  tnd  of  the   fiscal   year.    The   hous«  '  Thursday  night. 

committee    agneed    today    to    giv« 

lilm   41   million. 

V 

Atomic  Arms 

BONN.  Germany.  (*»  —  Opposition    a^  /x  T      1 1  -^ 

to  atomic  armaments  welled  up  tej^OH   T    iGll 
Germany.    Britain    and   Japan    yes- ; 
terday.    But    Governments    '^c^^j^totnAf  NfltUTA 


Hodges  Speaks  To  Grail; 
Opfjmistic  On  Pay  Hike 


For   University  Faculty 

Chancellor  House  Also 
Feted  At  Grail  Banquet  • 


UP  Sleeps  In  Election 


Dance,  Concert? 


t.greement    for  haltmg  the   atomic 


Sponsors  For  Germans  Club  Members 

Spring  Germans  begins  today  with  a  eoncart  fro-n  3:30-5:30  p.m.  in  Mamorial  Hall  featuring  the  Four 
•  Freshmen,  vocalist  Paula  George  and  Ray  Eberles  "Serenade  in  Blue"  orchestra.  From  8  p.m.  to  12  mid- 
night a  formal  dance  will  be  held  in  Wellen  Gymnasium.  Ebcrle  and  the  Four  Freshmen  will  also  pro- 
vide entertainmam  and  music  for  the  dance.  Sponsor  for  German  Club  members  are,  top  row,  left  to 
righ  Misa  Diana  Ashley  with  C.  Keith  Palmer,  Ger  nans  Club  president;  Miss  Melissa  Pedan  with  George 
Ragsdale,  vice  president;  Miss  GInny  Dawson  with  Mirk  Cherry,  secretary  and  president-elect  for  1957- 
5*  and  Miss  Bess  Hart  with  Gordon  Brown  treasure  Second  row— Mrs.  Erie  Haste  with  Mr,  Haste;  Miss 
Patnca  Lee  Poythress  with  Sam  Yancey;  Miss  Pat  E /erton  with  Julian  E.  Winslow  and  Miss  Carolina 
Bickett  with  Kelly  Maness.  Third  row-^lss  Totsle  K  ngman  with  Don  McMillan;  Miss  Susan  Donald  with 
Dave  Davis;  Miss  Shan  Helms  with  George  Wray  Jr.;  Miss  Carol  McDonald  and  Charles  W.  Oyer  and  Miss 
Ginger  Floyd  with  John  McKee. 


race,  forged  ahead  with  plans  to'  Mother  Nature  and  Old  Sol 
equip  mllitarj-  forces  with  nuclear  don't  seem  to  realize  that  this  is 
{>rms.  I  Germans  weekend. 

Britain's  socialists  jM-oposed  to  They  apparently  have  gotten  to- 
censure  the  government  for  its  new  gether  and  decided  to  call  a  halt 
policy  of  rel>1ng  chiefly  on  atomic  halt  to  the  balmy  spring  weather 
power.  Japan  stoked  its  campaign  evidenced  in  the  Chapel  Hill  area 
against  atomic  tests.  I  Over  the  past  week.  According  to 

Elehteen  West  German  nuclear  ^^e  U.  S.  Weather  Bureau  at  the 
scientists,  including  Four  Nobe!  Raleigh  -  Durham  Airport,  old 
Prize  winners,  sounded  an  alarm  Man  Winter  is  gathering  up  .stren- 
against   arming  the   federal   repub  ,  ^th  for  a  final  stand. 


weapons 
Socialist 


SENIOR  WEEK 
REDUCED 
TO  ONE  DAY 

The  annual  Senior  Day  celebratiun 
for  graduations  seniors  will  be  held 
tbis  year  on  Wednesday.  May  1. 
I'll  ilicity  C'lairman  Lou  Rosen- 
.stock   has   announced. 

In  a  statement  concerning 
traditional  day  set  aside  each  year 
fcr  the  recreation  and  final  partici- 
pation in  group  activities  for  the 
graduating  class.  Rosenstock  said 
yesterday: 


"This  year.  Senior  Week  has  been 
reduced  to  one  day  because  it  is 
felt  that  previous  Senior  Weeks  have 
rot  been  as  successful  as  they 
.should  have   been. 

"The  change  has  been  made  in 
order  to  concentrate  the  interests 
-ij  the  more  than  600  seniors." 

A  free  late  show  for  seniors  will 
or  presented  at  the  Carolina  The- 
cter  at  11  p.jn.  Tuesday,  Rosenstoc-k 
said. 

Rosenstock  went  on  to  point  out 
t'nt  a  brief  organizational  meeting 
will  be  held  at  10  a.m.  Wednesday 
momin?  in  Memorial  Hall.  Since 
sen'ors  £ire  to  be  excused  from  all 
classes  that  day.  he  urged  that 
f .  e-vone  attend  the  meeting. 

Tickets  will  be  distributed  at  the 
f-gsnizational  meeting  which  Avill 
be  important  later  in  the  day  in.  a 
drawing  to  be  held  at  the  Patio. 
Trrand  prize  has  been  announced  as 
an  autcmobUe. 

At  2:30  in  the  afternoon,  the  tradi- 
tional faculty-senior  athletic  contes's 
will  be  held. 

Tho  Senior  Barbecue  will  be?in 
ai  o-.W  D.m.  and  's  s"heduled  to  end 
."t  10:30  pm.  The  affair  wUl  be 
sia?  or  dme  and  entertainment  will 
be  p'-ovided  by  four  bands,'  Rosen- 
stock said. 

^ 

Chancellor  HoUse  Talks 


Honor  Council  Reports 
Student  Suspension 

One  suspension  from  the  Univer-  asked  this  student  to  turn  hiniaeli 
t^ity  has  been  reported  by  the  Men's  in  tor  a  violation  of  Honor  Code. 
Honor  Council  in  a  statement  of  its  It  is  also  strongly  urged  that  al> 
:ecent    activities.  people    so     implicated    should     not 

The  case  involved  a  student  who    hesitate  to  turn   (.hemselves   in.   foi 
had  been  seen  by  a  fellow  student    tnis  action  is  higly  regarded  by  the 
the    ^opying  a  paper  during  a  quiz,  had    Council   deciding   the  case. 

Been  asked  to  report  himself  and  "The  next  point  to  be  made  is 
tailed  to  do  .so.  and  had  been  sub-  that  the  Honor  CouncU  deals  witli 
.'cquently  reported  to  Honor  Council  each  case  indi\idually  and  decide.*- 
t/v  the  instructor  of  the  course.         J  solely  on  the  valid  evidence  at  hand. 

Following   the  trial    in   which   the    By   this,   the   possibility  always  ex- 
sti'dent   was  found  guilt.v  of  a  vio- 
lation of  the  Honor  Code,  action  was 
tiiken  by  the  Coimcil  in.  the   torm 
of  a  suspension. 

Due  to  extenuating  family  condi 
t'ons.  however,  the  student  was 
granted  leniency  and  was  allowed 
to  return  to  the  University  the  fol- 
lowing semester.  Normal  suspension 
entails  the  suspension  of  the  person 
involved  from  the  University  for 
one  full  semester. 

The  Honor  CouncU  report,  releas- 
ed by  Gar>'  Cooper.  Council  Clerk, 
also  included  the  following  state- 
ment : 

"Two  important  points  are  to  be 
drawn  from  the  above  case.  The 
first  point  is  that  it  is  strongly  urg- 
ed that  students,  once  they  are 
aware  of  the  fact  that  violation  ol 
the  Honor  Code  has  occured  not  to 
hesitate  to  take  proper  action. 

"The  proper  action  was  taken  in 
♦  nc  above  case  when  the  student 
observed      another     cheating     and 


^c's  forces  with  atomic 
They  were  joined  by 
Leader  Erich  Ollenhauer. 

'I.  S,  Prf*n«'^»\ 

LOVDON.  i*  —  The  United  States 
proposed  yesterday  that  all  pro- 
duction of  fissionable  materials 
after  April  I.  1958.  be  confined  t« 
ronweapons   purposes. 

Harold  E.  Stasson.  Piesideat 
Eisenhower's  disarmament  adviser. 
jnissested  to  the  United  ^^ 
Tif.sWflianrreitf  SotJcotiitlfttteo  teaci 
ntcians  begin  Sept.  1  to  study  how 
fuch  an  agreement  could  be  en 
forced. 

Valerian  Z^)rin.  Russia'js  repre- 
-  sentatlve  on  the  five-nation  subeom 
mitteo.  said  he  would  .study  Stas 
sen's  proposal  and  have  more  tf 
!-ay  later.  He  ga\e  no  firm  indica 
tion  as  to  M-hether  it  would  be  ac 
cepted  or  rejected. 


By  PRINGLE  PIPKIN  I     In    the    election    of    the    speaker 

Voting  along   the  party  line,    the    protempore  .M  Goldsmith   <UPt  de- 

,  Vnivershy  Party  swept  the  election   :eated     Pat     Adams     (SP>.     22-18. 

Legislature      officers    Caleb  White  (&P^  nominated  Eddie 

j  Bass    (UP>    for  this  position. 

j     Bass  was  not  present  at  the  meet- 
ing and  so  had  not  been  sworn  into 
office.  HLs  nomination  was  ruled  out 
:  of  order. 

!     By    acclamation    Ed    Levy    (UP) 

'■  was      made    parlimentarian ;     Miss 

i  was    made    parliamentarian;    Miss 

Charles  Huntington   (UP>.  sergeant- 

at-arms. 

Jim  Alford  was  acclaimed  the 
chairman  of  the  ways  and  means 
committee.  Bob  Carter  'SP'  oppos- 
ed Ron  Bclk  fUP)  for  chairman  of 
the   finance   committee. 

There  was  a  question  as  to  wheth- 
n     a     member    of    the    executive 
branch     (Carter     is     student     body 
'  t.-easurer)  could  legeally  be  a  chair- 
man of  a  legislative  committee.       | 
The  nomination  was  ruled  in  or- ' 
der.    Belk   defeated   Carter.   22-18.     j 
Miss  Julia  .\nn  Crater  (UPV  was 
unopposed  in  the  election  for  chair- 
man of  the  Rules  Committee. 

Harold  OTuel  (SP>  and  Jerry 
<.'ole  fUPt  were  named  representa- 
tives of  the  Student  Legislature  on 
the  Publication  Board. 

Vice-President  I>on   Furtado    <SP» 


GOV.  LUTHER  HODGES 

.   .  spoke  at  Grcdl  banquet 


Today's  prediction  calls  for  fair 

«nd    chilly    weather,    with    lowest 

Expected  temperatures  in  the  40's. 

,  Some  luck  is  with  German-goers 

though,    in    the    form    of    Chapel 

!  Hill's     traditional     misty,     moisty 

!  climate's   decision   to   hold   off   at 

I  least   until  Monday.  No  rain  is  on 

:  schedule  for  the  weekend  period. 

I      To   cheer    on    those   individuals 

I  who  plan   to  recuperate  from  the 

y^.  j^tivitloa  of  the  day  before  out  at 

I^^I^L^JloRaiUB.    Sunday    offers    a    rather. 

promising   prospect. 


Evans  To  Start 
Interviewing 
For  Positions 

student    body    President    Sonny 

„        J    .       V   J    f  J  1  Evans      will      begin  interviewing 

announced   he  had    formed    an    ap-    w„„j„     -     u-       «•  *        .   j     . 
,  ^^     .                ...       ...  1      J      '  Monday  m  his  office  for  students 

imintments   committee   to   mtervlew,  .„,„„„  .  j    •      t.  -  ... 

...  .       «         .  J     .  interested    m    being  appointed   to 

candidates   for    student    govern-  ,,. 

"  '  govermneni  offices. 


all 


(^ce  UP. 

•   ■■■•yi — 


Page  4) 


Council  Sponsoring  Book  Sole 
In  Connection  With  Discussions 


ists  that  due  to  certain  extenuating 
circumstances     leniency     may     be 
granted. 
"The   Council   feels   that   there   is 
(See   REPORT,   page   3) 


GM'S  SLATE 

The    following    activities      aae 
scheduled  for  Graham  Mamorifl 


The  Campus  Christian   Council   is 
sponsoring  a  sale  of  books  today  in 
connection  with  its  upcoming  sprinji 
Koi"um,  according  to  an  announce- , 
nient  made  .ve<terday. 

Book.s    will    be    on    .sale    fn>m    9 
ajii.  to  3  p.m.   in  the  lobb.v  of  the 


Another  collection  of  displa.v  books 
may  Ix*  taken  from  the  case  on  re- 
quest and  used  in  the  library  a 
spc-ke.sman  for  the  books  sale  said. 
Among  the  books  on  sale  in  tJie 
V  are  " 'Campus  God.s  on  Trial"  by 
(.had  Walsh:     'The  Superstitions  of 


'Y"    and   are   being  sold    to   make    the  Irreligious"  by  George  Hadley 


today: 

Class  Conference,  11  a.m.,  Ro- 
land Parker  3,  Woedheus«  Con- 
ference Room. 


available  to  students  information  on 
the  forum  theme.  "The  Christian 
Faith— Prote'st  and  Affirmation." 

Manj'  of  ti«?  books  are  available 
at  the  reser\'e  desk  in  the  library. 


and     "Faith     and     Education"     b.v 
George  Buttrick. 

'Christian  Ethics"  by  Dr.  Waldo 
Reach,  the  forums  featured  speaker. 
wiU  be  available  in  the  library. 


IN  UNIVERSITY: 


Liberal  Education  Or  Specialization  • 


By  PETE  IV  EY 

Educators  here  seem  to  be  on  a 


I 

3.  Journalism  Dean  \.  N.  Luxun,     tentative    of    the    Carnegie    organi- 


delivering    the    Spring    Humanities    zntion.    "Other  parts  of  the  college  | 


many    re- 
work  now 


.41.TERNATr\'T:S 

I     These   questions    have 
spree    oi    selfcriticism.  i  Lecture,     hammered     strongly     in  \-nd     university    program    are    de-' plies.   Educators  are   at 

'Five  tilings  have  happened   here    favor   of    broader    training    in    arts '  ;^ii|gned    to   oroduce    not    necessarily    digging  out  the  answers, 
in   the  space  of  Just   a   few  we^ks    and   sciences   fbr  newspapermen.      >'  a    more   sk'llcd   professional    but    a       Here     is     one  •  interim     thought 

tiiat  reveal  a  bubbling  trend  toward       4.  An  Institute  of  Natural  Sciences '  ix.>tter.      wi.ser.      more      cultivated    Perhaps  the  educators  don't  have  to    Student    Council.    15    positions    on 
self-examination  in  a  riddle  of  the   hcs   been  established   to  centralize    wan.   It  is   to  this  latter  phase  of   jrakc    a   last-ditch   choice    between 


JPeAsident  Evaas  ^said  ho  ^Ifuis 
to  be  in  his  office  on  the  second 
floor  of  Graham  Memorial  from 
2-5  p.m.  each  day  before  spring 
vacation.- 

He  said  the  interviews  would 
continue  for  an  indefinite  period 
of  time  after  the  holidays  which 
start  WA^dnesday  and  end  Mon- 
day. April  23. 

In  order  to  apply.  Evans  said, 
students  must  get  an  application 
blank  at  either  the  student  gov- 
ernment' office  of  or  the  informa- 
tion  office,  both  in  Graham  Me- 
morial. 
MERIT  SYSTEM 

"The  amount  of  work  that  has 
to  be  done  is  enormous,  and  we 
will  ail  need  as  much  help  as  pos- 
sible if  student  government  is  to 
be  successful.  ' 

"Once  again  we  will  fill  all  ap- 
pointments by  the  merit  s.vstem, 
considering  all  individuals  as  I  be- 
j  lieve  they  should  be  considered 
— on  the  basis  of  ability,  interest. 
I  and  desire  to  serve,"  commented 
President  Evans. 

The  appointments  to  be  filled 
arc:  Attorney  General.  2  positions 
on     the     Consolidated     University 


Gov.  Luther  Hodges  expressed 
optimism  last  night  concerning  hi.« 
recommendation  for  an  11  per  cent 
hike  in  University  faculty  salaries. 
Gov.  Hodges.  inter\iewed  after 
delivering  an  address  before  the 
Order  of  the  Grails  annual  initia- 
t'on  banquet  in  tiie  Carolina  Inn. 
said  he  felt  the  hike  "will  go 
through." 

"Generally  sjjeaking.  it  ithe  pro- 
posed hike'  ha.s  been  very  receiv- 
ed." Hodges  said. 

"I  am  happy  we  were  able  to  do 
more  than  originally  suggested.' 
the   governor  said. 

Gov.     Hodges    originally    re<«om- 
mended    a    straight-across-the-board 
nine  per  cent  hike  for  state  teach 
f-rs.    In   an    address   before  a   joint 
session    of    the    General    Assembb 
Tuesday.    Hodges    recommended    a 
>  15   per    cent    hike   in    public    school 
teachers'    salaries    and    an    11    per 
;  cont  bike  f<M-  other  state  employees, 
[  including   University    faculty   mem 
bers. 

In   his   address   l)€fore    the   Grail. 
I  highest  undergraduate  honorary  or- 
i  ^anization  on  canxpus.  Gov.  Hodges 
'  called  the  University  a   "unique   in- 
stitution" wh<;re  "there  is  a  feeling 
of  freedom  to  grow  as  much  as  one 
is   capable  of   growing." 

llie  Grail's  annual  banquet  bon- 
;  ored  new  initiates  tapped  into  the 
Order  two  .weeks  9so.  Tapited  _as 
nn  honorar.v  member  was  retiring 
Chancellor  Robert  Houae  who  spolu 
briefly  to  the  sroup  on  the  beaut.f 
and   academic   traditions   of  Chapel 

mn. 


times:    what    changes   ought    to   be  j  and  enhance  the  effectiveness  of  the    jhe    college    prosram    that    we    ap 


made  in   "humanizing  the  scientist    science  teachings  in  the  University,    piy  (j,e  term  'liberal  education" 
and  simonizing  the  humanist".'"  !  One  result  ha-s   been  an  award  of 

1.  Thirty-five  of  the  'nation's  out-    more  than   a   quarter  of  a  million 
standing    biotoglsLs    were   here   last    dollars    to    the    University    by    the       While  there  is  a  natural   interest 


SHORTAGE 


week,   making  up  a  list  of  recom-    Nat  onal  Science  Foundation  to  un- 
mendations   which   will   change   the    dertake     special     teacher     training 


in  broadening  the   cultural  horizon.* 


the  liberal  arts  and  the  sciences. 
Maybe  more  people  will  go  unto 
the  sciences  If  they  have  their 
s.'ientific  studies  gami.shed  and 
leadened  with  liberal  arts. 
Perhaps   the   liberal   arts   can   be 


the  Elections  Board,  2  positions 
on  the  Campus  Chest.  5  positions 
on  National  Student  Assn.  Com- 
mittee. 7  positions  of  the  Library 
Committee. 

Also    3    positions    on    Campus 
Stores   Committee,  2  positions  on 


College  Bootleqger 

OXFORD.  Miss..— (AP)_  One 
member  of  what  officers  called  a 
student  bootlegging  ring  at  the 
I'niversity  of  Mississippi  was  per- 
manently expelled  today  and  lour 
others  were  suspended  for  vary- 
ing  periods. 

The  action  by  the  Student  .Tu- 
diciary  Council  followed  a  raid 
on  a  dormitory  late  yesterday  in 
which  liquor  was  seized,  and  guil- 
ty picas  to  liquor  charges  by  four 
of  the  youths  in  justice  of  peace 
court   today. 

Holy  Week 

John  Clayton  will  speak  Mon- 
day at  the  YM-YWCA  sponsored 
Holy  W^eck  Service  to  be  held  in 
the  small  chapel  of  the  Method- 
ist  Church   from  5-5:-10  p.m. 

Clayton  received  his  Masters 
degree  here  in  Dramatic  .Arts  and 
is  now  serving  as  an  assistant  pro- 
fessor of  Radio.  TV  and  Motion 
Pictures.  He  will  speak  on  the 
significance  of  Holy  Week.  Every- 
one interested  has  been  in\itcd 
to  attend  the  service. 


cf   collegians   and   profe.ssional   and    made    more 


meaningful    bv    basic   the  University  Traffic  Committee, 


Oppenheimer 
Says  Deadline 
Is  Tuesday 


content     of     courses    in    the    "life 
'■  sciences"  —  including  botany,  phy- 
siology,   zoology. 
One  finding:  students  majoring  in 
>  biological    sciences    should    devote 
I  .n  least  50  per  cent  of  their  time 
]  stud.ving  non-s'jjence  subjects.   That 
Jerry     Oppenheimer.     chairman    i'^.  they  should  take  rtiore  English. 
6f   the   Campus   Orientation   Com- '  l-reign   languages,   social   sciences, 
mitlee.  haa  reminded  students  the    history,  other  of  the  humanities  sul)- 


programs.  both  this  sununer  and 
next  year,  one  result  of  ^^'hieh  will 
be  to  relieve  the  shortage  of  scien- 
tists and  science  teachers  in  the 
nation. 
NATIONWIDE  PATTERN 

This  heightened  Interest  accom- 
panied by  re.solves  to  do  sontething 
about    it    is   in   the   same   sphrit  oi 


deadline    for    turning    in    applica- 
tions for  the  position  of  Orienta- 


HALIFAX  —  Chancellor    Robert    tion  Counselor  is  Tuesday. 


B.  House  spoke  Friday  at  cere- 
monies commemorating  the  sign- 
ing of  what  some  persons  claim 
was  tljE  first  declaration  of  inde- 
pendence of  the  18  colonies. 

Tradition  says  the  signing  took 
place  here  April  12,  1776.  Com- 
memoration ceremonies  were  be- 
gun three  years  ago. 

House  also  presented  a  rare 
book  to  the  Halifax  museum.  The 
book,  a  mathematics  work,  was 
uncovered  in  demolition  work  re- 
cently and  in  dated   1793. 


Application  forms  may  be  se- 
cured from  Graham  Memorial,  the 
YMCA,  Library,  Lenoir  Hall,  and 
the  Monogram  Club,  and  should 
be  returned  either  to  the  "Y"  or 
Graham  Memorial,  he  said. 

There  will  be  a  meeting,  of  all 
applicants  and  a  test  given  on 
the  material  in  the  1956  Counsel- 
or's Manual  dn  Tuesday  at  7:30 
p.m.  in  106  Carroll  Hall.  The  man- 
uals may  be  borrowed  from  the 
YMCA,  Library,  or  Graham  Mem- 
orial.   Oppenheimer    said. 


educational    soul-searching    that    is 
jects.  i  sweeping    through    the    couatry    to- 

2.  Dean  Maurice  W.  Lee  of  the  day. 
School  of  Business  Administration '  Specialists  are  seeing  the  need  to 
made  a  speech,  aa.viug  men  going  acquire  broader  and  more  liberal 
into  the  modem  business  world  education.  And  the  liberal  arts  fac- 
ought  to  take  more  liberal  arts  i:lties  are  trying  to  see  to  it  that 
studies.  However,  the  "liberal  arts  |  they  do  not   also  fall    into   the  pit    centrates 


technical  people  e^'erj'where  in  the   levelations    which   come  daily   into 

countr>'.  there  is  at  the  same  time    all    men's    lives    from    the    labura- 

a     discouraging     shortage     of     en-    lories  of  electronics,  atomic  energj'. 

gineers.  of  doctors,  of  chemists  ^nd    biology,  medicine,   and  economics. 

physicists    and    statisticians.  j      It  may  be  that  both  the  humani- 

At  the  same  time  we  urge  liber-   ties     and     the     sciences     can     t>e 

alization.  there  is  an  equally  urgent    strengthened    by    mixing  each   with 

i»iaint  that  we  need  more  scientists   the  other. 

of    any   kind    we   can    get.    and   all       This  problem  and  opportunity,  na- 

kinds.  '  tional  in  scope  .ascends  in  import- 

North    Carolina    is    trying    to    at-    ance  in  North  Carolina.  W^e  are  try 

ti-act  new  industry  and  is  undergo-   jng  to  balance  our  economy  at  the    Honor  System  Commission.   14  po 

ing  the  economy  with  a  better  bJil-    same  time  we  re-appraise  our  edu-    sitions   in   summer  school   student 

cnced       agricultural-indiustrial-busi- '  cational   potential.  |  government,    and    9    positions    on 

i-ess-educational-research        founda- '      The    investigations    and    develop-    |^<^  ^'Sh  school  honor  system  pro- 

tlon.    The    Research    Triangle    con- '  nients  here  are  bring  ing  the  pro-    i^^^- 

the   blem 


7  positions  on  the  Traffic  .\dvis- 
ory  Commission.  10  positions  on 
the  president's  cabinet.  5  posi- 
tions on  the  Dance  Committee. 
5  positions  on  the.  Audit  "Board. 
3  positions  on  Graham  Memorial 
Board  of  Directors.       •  ^ 

.-Mso  one  position  in  the  Student 
Council,  7  positions  on  the  Vic- 
tory Village  -  Veterans  Affairs 
Commission,   21    positions   on    the 


Middle  East 

UNITED  NATIONS.  N.  Y  .  HP'  - 
The  U.  N.  reported  yesterday  its 
mission  headed  by  Lt.  Gen.  Ray- 
mond .A.  ^Ticeler  cleared  the  Sue/ 
Canal  of  sunken  obstacles  for  less 
than  11  million  doJlans.  It  said  the 
full  cost  was  covered  by  loans  in 
iiand  from  10  countries. 
.  A  U.  N.  spokesman  meanwhile  de- 
clared, in  comment  on  a  syndicat- 
ed 'Joseph  .Msopi  report  to  the 
contrar\'.  that  "no  concession  was 
made  by  the  U.  N  to  the  govern- 
ment of  Egypt"'  in  a  recent  und  / 
.standing  on  deplojTnent  of  the  U.  N. 
Emergency  Force  iL'N'EF' 


its    expectations    on 


and     oossible    solutions    into 


than]  of  speciahzation  and  fragmmitatioo. 

"  There 


must   be   made   more  liberal' 

they  are  at  the  present  time,  said       What  is  a  liberal  education 
Dean  Lee.  '  pre    differences    of   opinion,    but    a 

He  disclosed  a  study  now  going  v.orkable  explanation  of  it  by  the 
on  here  whereby  students  going  in-  Carnegie  Foundation  is  useful: 
to  the  school  of  Business  Adminis  |  "Much  of  the  work  in  our  colleges 
tration  may  be  able  to  take  three  and  universities  is  designed  to 
years  of  general  college  type  studies  eq^ip  the  individual  with  profes- 
before  entrance  to  the  School  of  Bus-  sional  or  vocational  skills  of  a  spe 
mess   .Administration. 


ti?chnical  capacit.v  of  Duke  Univer-   .perspective.  j 

sity.  State  College  and  UNC.  \     The  rewards  of  tomorrow  will  go 

What.  then,  is  the  dilenmia?  Do  to  the  skillful.  "Wbether  North  Caro- 
we  have  to  make  a  choice  in  North  lina  is  skillful  enough  to  draw  Hs 
Carolina  between  liberal  arts  and  share  of  new  industry-  may  depend 
technical  specialization?  If  we  pro-!  upon  how  well  the  educators  today 
mote  one  out  of  proportion,  does  chart  the  plans  for  education  both 
the  other  suffer?  Is  a  tug  of  war '.  iu  technical  training  and  in  cultural 
between    humanities    and    sciences    studies,  or  in  a  combination  of  the 


cialist     natiu-e."'     writes     a    repre- 1  jusi  the  wa;.'  things  ought  to  be?       !  two. 


IN  THE  INFIR/AARY 

Students  In  the  tnfirmary  yester- 
day included: 

Misses  Elizabeth  MacKay  and 
Elizabeth  McKinnon;.  and  Roy 
Cashion,  Brant  Nash.  James  W. 
Adams,  Carl  Barbour  and  Ken- 
neth Michaleve. 


ZOOLOGIST   LECTURE 

.\  University  of  Pennsylvania 
zoologist  will  deliver  a  lecture  here 
Monday  under  the  au.spices  ©f  the 
North  Carolina  chapter,  the  Society 
of  Sigma  Xi. 

The  lecture  by  Dr.  William  H 
Telfer  will  be  given  at  8  p.m.  in 
Wilson  Hall.  His  ;-ab|ect  will  be 
"Contributions  of  Metamorphosing 
Insects  to  the  Physiology  of  Pro- 
;  teins." 


r" 


PA«i  wro 


THE   DAILY   TAR   HEEL 


SATURDAY,  APRIL  13.  1f57 


Unit)^  Or  Parasiticism  ? 
The  Town  and  University 


"HV  %nu!it  all  Itang  together,  or 
o-ssurefily  we  shall  all  hang  separ' 
a tel\."— Benjamin  Fmnklin. 

Student  j»t>veniuient  has  dem- 
onstrated a  willingncs*  lo  cooper- 
ate uuh  the  town  of  Chapel  Hill 
uhiih   should    be   (omphiiientrd. 

\\\'  reler  speiititally  to  the  es- 
tablishment of  a  Bad  Check  Com- 
mittee with  resjX)nsibility  to  pro- 
vide liaiwm  between  student  pass- 
ers and  merthants  to  whom  thry 
are  passed. 

\Vhat  wc  rail  for  is  deuionstra- 
tion  of  a  iiK*e  (x)<jpcl'ati\e  spirit 
bv  Chapel   Hill  menhants. 

The  recent  (<>m}jetition  be- 
tween a  lotal  jeweler  and  the  hij*h- 
est  inidergTailnate  honoraiy  org- 
I  ani/ati(N)  diii  tan>piis— the  Order 
of  the  Craii— ^or  the  sale  of  I'ni- 
versiiN  ( lasA  rinjis  is  a  demtmstra- 
ti\e   point.^'f  ._^ 

The  ChapN^Hill  \f en  hunts"  As- 
smiation  isj'to  l)r  lauieled  fur  es- 
liiblishnRn*^^  a  Public  Relations 
Committee  "  which  thforeticallv 
functions  tiv^-Mbetter  relations  be- 
tween  studeinj  and   nterchants. 

I'niversity  \t students  and  the 
town  miitualBv  I^enefit  eath  oth- 
er. Student^  'provide  a  lucrative 
market,  and  merchants  provide 
•ht  nctessarv  yuods.  Thus  the  two 
groups  should,  as  lien  Franklin 
a>%rrted.  'Ii'ano  toji^ether.'  Neither 
sluuiid  aitem^M  to  eKpk>it  the  oth- 
ei'.  '    *• 

A  stude^rt^odv  *jS  G.ikio  shoidd 
and     does     funiish     an     abundant 


market  for  all  town  merchants, 
jewelers  included.  Thus  no  mer- 
that  the  sale  of  class  rings  be  han- 
dled by  a  responsible  University 
honoi-ury  —  The  Order  of  the 
Cirail,  Such  a  sale  is  fhe  primary 
means  of  finaiuial  subsistence  f©r 
the  Grail.  The  small  profits  accru- 
ed by  the  Grail  are  used  to  pro- 
vide scholarships,  approximately 
!.'>.  for  deserving  University  stu- 
dents who  itiight  not  be  able  to 
t hant  should  en<roach  upon  Uni- 
versity   tradition. 

The  tradition  h,  iti  this  cxse, 
pinsuc  their  education  further 
tviihfuit   stub   a<ssistance. 

In  taking  finuls  from  the  Grail, 
the  l(.Hal  jeweler  is.  in  effect,  de- 
nying an  education  to  several  self- 
help  students. 

The  questiou  is:  just  how  far 
will   the  merchants  go? 

Ihere  was  some  talk  in  recent 
months  of  iKjycotting  the  kxail 
merchants  due  to  what  was  term- 
ed "extortinate  "  prices.  Such  talk 
was  precipitr.ved  by  the  hiking  of 
haircut  prices  to  .Si.2f,:  and  is.  of 
course,  non-feasible  and  ridicul- 
«>us. 

But  stmie  at  t ion  should  be  tak- 
en to  alleviate  or  obliterate  a  sit- 
uation by  which  a  local  merchant 
has  entered  into  competition  with 
a  tradition— the  sale  of  class  rings 
by  the  Grail. 

The  town  and  University  should 
Ik-  symbiotic  —  iniuually  benefic- 
ial. Neither  should  be  parasitic  — 
predatory  and  cut -throat. 


Editor  Defends  So-Cailed 


/ 


Brain-Washed  Generation 


The  typual  itudent  todav 
iiHues  to  (vUege  because  it  will 
enaVile  hiiu  to  get  a  better  30b. 
While  at  college  he  indulges  in 
social  u:ui  «<^va-t  urricular  activi-. 
ties  ot  little  or  no  value.  And  his 
intellectual    tone   is   one   of  indif- 


The  Doily  Tar  Heel 

The  official  itudeoi  publication  of  tit 
Publications  Boirci  of  the  University  uf 
North  Carolina,  whrre  it  it  published 
daily  except  Monday  and  exanainatioi 
•0(1  vacation  periods  and  summer  term* 
Locered  as  aeevod  class  matter  in  tht 
ooat  office  in  Chapel  Hill.  N.  C,  undei 
tk*  Act  of  March  8,  1870.  Subsaripttoe 
rates:  mailed,  $4  per  year.  $2  50  a  semes 
ter:  delivered.  $8  a  year.  $350  a  seme* 
t*r 


Editor          At;..r.  • 

NEIL  BASS 

Managing  Editor  - 

CLARKE  JONES 

Associate  Editor 

NANCY   Hn.L 

Sports  Ekiitor  .'AL' 


BILL  KING 


News  Editor      .      WALT  SCHRUNTEK 


Business  Manager  JOHN  C.  \^TIIT.\KER 


Advertisii:*  Manager         FRED  KAT2IN 


NilWS  STAFF— Graham  Snyder.  Edith 
ilacKinnon,  Pringle  Pipkin,  Bob  High, 
Ben  Tayljr.  H.  Joost  Polak.  Patsy  Mill- 
er, Wally  Kuralt,  Bill  King,  Curtis 
Crotly.  Ben  Taylor,  Sue  Atchison. 


EDIT  STAFF— Whit  Whitfield,  Anthuny 
Wolff.  Stan  Shaw.  Woody  Sears. 


BUSINESS  STAFF-John  Minter,  Marian 
Hobeck,  JaD«  Patten,  Johnny  Whitaker. 


SPORTS  STAFF:  Dave  Wibl«,  Stu  Bird, 
Fkl  Rowland,  Jin  Crownover,  Ron  Mil- 
iigan. 


Subscription  Maaafer 
CirculatioD  Manager  . 


.  Dale  Stalcy 
CharUe  Holf 


Staff  Photographers  Woody  Sears, 

Norman  Kant  or,  Bill  King. 


Librarians    Ste  wchner,  Marilyn  Strum 

^iilighi  News  Editor Bob  High 

Night  Editor -        Guy  Ellis 

Pr'-^freader Manley  Springs 


feren<e,   (onfonnity.   <oinplacency, 
compliance   and   caution. 

This  is  the  opinitm  of  j6  profes- 
sor* tron\  irt  colle<;es  scattered 
tliioiij^hout  the  country  as  report- 
ed in  a  recent  issue  of  Nation  in 
aji  artitle  entitled  "The  Careful 
Voun;4  Men." 

.\ltlu»ui;li  none  of  the  {>i t>fes'k)rs 
((MUiuunicated  uith  their  colleao- 
ues  lu"foie  answering  the  cpiestion- 
n;  iie  <»m  (olie^e  youth.  tJte  unil^M- 
niitv  of  their  answers  indicates 
that  the  probkius  are  widespread, 
not  only  on  a  «;eoj;mphiral  basis, 
but  also  ainou};  big  and  little 
s<  liiM>ls,  and  public  and  private 
oiies. 

Needless  to  say.  these  aie  seiitms 
( h:i  r«>es  that  our  profes.sors  are 
tuakin<»  against  us:  chai<«;es  that  we. 
personally,  are  not  going  to  swal- 
low and  digest,  as  they  seem  to 
suggest  we  swallow  everything  else 
we  read  nuA  hear  in  our  classes. 

.Several  years  ago  we  were  *;lab- 
eled  '  The  Silent  (ieneration." 
.Now  in  this  article,  one  professor 
goes  as  far  as  to  suggest  the  name 
■"Brain-Washed  (ienevation."  By 
ijiaking  this  analogy,  that  piofes- 
soi  leaves  himself  and  his  profes- 
sion wide  o|)en  to  attack.  If  we  are 
l)elng  ■■  brain- washed. "  sotneone 
nnist  be  doing  th^  'brain-wash- 
ing." W'hor  ...  i 
{ 

^Ve  logi<ally  as»inne  that  our 
enxironiuent  has  much  to  do  with 
the  shaping  of  our  ideas.  Who  in- 
lluences  our  environment;  and 
who  (ultivates  the  gardens  of 
thou;;ht  in  ulu<h  tnir  values  and 
pliilosophies  are  nurtured  and  de- 
\eloped?  Very  siinplv.  it's  ou^r  en- 
tire s(K:iety  that  has  done  most  to 
make. us  what  we  are. 

If  we  aie  indiffeieiit.  or  "brain- 
witshed."  we  don't  want  to  carry 
the  whole  blame  on  our  hesitant 
"cautious"  shoulders.  .Society  must 
share  part  of  the  burden  too. 

(Sir,  we,  as  the  new  genera- 
tion, arc  a  part  of  this  intangi- 
ble "sotiety"  of  which  you 
speak.  If  we  ate  "The  S^knt 
(ieneration."  a  term  which  we 
neither  relish  digesting,  then 
the  blarae  does  fall  scpiarely  on 
our  shoulders.  We  should  at- 
tem|>t  to  transfer  it  to  none.  The 
Editor.)  


Reader  Warns 
Students  Of 
Penicillin 

Dear  Editor: 

This  is  a  WARNING  to  all 
UNC  students  who  may  avail 
themselves  in  the^  future  of  the 
use  of  the  excellent  facilities  oi 
our  Infirmary.  Bead  it  careful- 
ly. 

The  subject  is  penicillin  — 
known  by  many  as  the  "wonder- 
drug,  the  cure-all."  of  our  era 
of  modern  medical  miracles.  The 
poiftt  is,  it  won't  cure  any  and 
everything;  it  will  only  knock 
out  certain  infecti6n.s.  This  is  es- 
pecially true  in  the  case  of  the 
common  cold,  for  which  it  does 
absolutely    nothing. 

Dr.  W.  G.  Morgan.  University 
physician,  cites  as  illustrative  of 
this  point  that  one  patient  was 
given  2  and  one-half  million  un- 
its Of  peaicillih  per  day  for  two 
weeks,  and  developed  a  terrible 
cold  during  this  concentrated 
treatment!  Tliis' should  convince 
anyone.  Yet.  he  and  several  oth- 
er infirmary  doctors  say  that 
many  students  come  over  de- 
manding shots  of  penicillin  for 
ills  such  as  colds,  and  actually 
get  mad  when  they  refuse  to  give 
it.  Obviously  there  is  gross  mis- 
understanding as  to  the  uses  of 
penicillin. 

Now  there  is  a  second  and 
most  viUl  point  —  the  primary 
reason  I  am  writing  this  letter 
— and  that  is  to  describe  a  "Pen- 
icillin reaction."  I  am  now  af- 
flicted with  such  a  reaction, 
though  I  had  taken  some  before 
wi$li  no  adverse  results.  It  was 
given  to  me  to  treat  tonsils — a 
valid  purpose.  I  took  it  in  tablet 
form  for  ten  days.  The  resuUs 
are  as  follows: 

My  head  began  to  itch  unbear- 
ably and  I  felt  as  though  I  would 
like  to  pull  my  hair  out.  Then 
the  swelling  started,  concentrat- 
ed on  my  head,  hands  and  feet. 
Ait£r  four  days,  my  eyes  were 
swollen  shut;  my  hands  were  so 
swollen  I  couldn't  use  them.  If 
I  tried  to  walk,  it  felt  as  though 
nails  were  being  driven  through 
the  soles  of  my  feet  in  several 
places.  The  itching  is  indescrib- 
able, and  even  worse.  If  I  scrat- 
ched to  relieve  the  itching,  hor- 
•  rible  stabbing  pains  occurred  ev- 
every  place  I  had  scratched. 

There  is  one  more  aspect  to 
this  horror:  and  that  is  the  leng- 
th of  the  reaction.  Since  it  is  an 
allergy,  and  can  only  be  con- 
trolled, not  knocked  out.  it  may 
at  a  later  date  start  all  over 
again.  In  one  instance  there  was 
a  subsequent  reaction  two  and 
one-half  years  later.  All  that  can 
be  done  is  to  increase  the  con- 
trolling drug,  and  hope  for  the 
best. 

So  take  heed.  If  your  doctor 
advises  no  penicillin,  don't  try 
to  get  it  somewhere  else.  Don't 
take  it. 

Incidentally.  I  .should  like  to 
take  this  opportunity  to  com- 
mend the  doctore.  nurses,  and 
their  staff  for  the  courteous,  ef- 
ficient manner  in  which  they  op- 
erate the  Infirmary.  We  are  in- 
deed fortunate  to  have  these 
people  and  the  top-flight  facili- 
ties available. 

D.  B.  Herring,  Jr. 
• 

111  Abn«r 


THE  NEWS  AND  OBSERVER: 


Kilroy  Was  Here 


You  can't  keep  a  good  man  down-.  When  the 
tugboat  Edgar  Bonnet  was  raised  recently  from  the 
bottom  of  the  Suez  Canal,  the  old,  irrepressible 
World  War  II  legend.  "Kilroy  Was  Here,"  was-  em- 
blazoned bti  the  bow.  It  is  good  to  have  the  ubiqui- 
tous fellow  Uack  again.  For,  beyond  peradventure. 
during  times  of  crisis,  KiliTJy  has  tiu-ned  up  amaz- 
ingly when  monumental  tasks  were  to  effected.  Ever 
in  the  hazardous  vanguard,  Kilroy  has  turned  up 
where  even  stout-hearted  ^anjgels  might  fear  to  walk. 
During  the  long,  black  years  when  the  world  was 
engullfed  with  fire,  he  was  always  around  when  vital 
work  was  needed  to  \>e  done. 

Eternally  invi.-,-ible  to  man's  ineffectual  sight,  he 
could  appear  in  a  dozen  different  places,  thousands 
of  mile-s  apart,  all  in  the  course  of  a  nunutc  When 


weary  civilians  needed  a  lift,  he  was  around  out  of 
nowhere  to  give  the  shot  in  the  arm,  and  often  when 
fighting  men  reached  an  objective  they  found  to 
their  astonishment  that  Kilroy  had  preceded  them. 

It  is  proper  and  important  that  he  should  aiise 
from  the  floor  of  the  Suez  Canal  so  suddenly.  No 
one  knows  where  he  has  been  hiding.  Maybe  he  8 
been  .,-kin-diving  over  there  all  the  time.  But  you 
can  count  on  him  to  come  up  where  he's  needea 
And  those  of  us  w-ho  have  been  des-pairing  that  an>' 
thing  tangible  could  be  done  about  the  Suez  mesh 
can  now  lake  renewed  confidence.  Kilroy  is  right 
there  on  the  job,  and  before  you  can  tie  your  tit 
things  will  be  looking  up. 

Welcome,  thrice  welcome,  friend  Klroy.  We  have 
inissed  you  dreadfuLlj-.  It's  grand  to  have  you  back 
asiain. 


'I  Haven't  Said  Stop,  Yet' 


«(•«  1  -n**  i-<A#K<»*«-r*«   P**T    •* 


Business  World  Looks  Bright 


New  York  Time* 

Hope  blooms  eternal  with  the 
advent  of  spring.  On  the  business 
landscape,  the  greatest  of  all  ex- 
pectations is  now  held  by  the  au- 
tomobile industry. 

.^nd  with  reason.  Spring  is  tradi- 
tionally the  big  sales  season  for 
new  cars.  It  is  the  period  that 
usuaHy  decides  just  how  good  a 
year  auto  makers  will  have. 

That  was  painfully  time  last 
year.  The  anticipated  spring  pick- 
up* failed  to  materialize.  As  a  re- 
sult,  the  industry  ended   up   with 


its  fourth  best  year.  It  turned  ou! 
5,801.315  cars,  still  far  below  the 
7.920,186  assembled  in  1955.  It  was 
also  far  below  confident  industry 
predictions. 

Will  liistory  jepeat?  No.  says 
Detroit.  Maybe,  say  many  trade 
.sources.  Quite  posstible,  say  the 
facts. 

Spokesmen  for  the  leading  com- 
panies have  said  and  repeated 
that  sales  this  year  will  hit  or 
top  the  6.500.000  mark.  Many  rea- 
sons have  been  cited— to  wit,  the 


normal  population  increase,  the 
migration  to  the  suburbs,  the  huge 
Federal  highway  program. 

The  industry  was  so  confident 
of  a  market  this  size  that  it  in- 
vested something  like  $1,250,000,- 
000  in  re-styled  1957  models. 

The  trade  sources  report  that 
sales  so  far  have  been  just  about 
keeping  up  with  the  1956  pace — 
with  some  notable  exceptions.  It 
in  hardly  a  secret  that  some  buyer 
resistance  has  developed  to  the 
higher  price  tags  on  the  1957  mo- 


• 

By  A!  Capp 


m 


^0^^^uta 


t.TVPTt"5^ 


I  GAVE  YOU  ZE  TEN 
THOUSAND.V-  NOW. 
VOU  SHOW  MC 
WHERE  ZE  WATCH  1|  FOLLOW 
IS  HIPDEN.':''- 


Pogo 


By  Wait  Kelly 


'due mmnmS    fazuMfM^us^tp^ 

K>gTy  KOT  «3gNP$  Of  9W\C 
INfRriAWHlCMlg'rVggOUAU 

)  OP  eevgNfy  two  INCH06 

OR  IN OTHiS  VMO?^«:  PtUM0 

BOB 


NOW,  P9os\Pfn6  r^ioim^i  cas^^ 

<Sgr$  BK<  P^fK  tUHCH  ATONI 
F9ffWA(7PACCUMuAM  PIfl 

\MDui.e?  er  u$  w^  hohq  mm 

IN  ■n^^g  ^01?  dUPPSl?  mi997 
UN't^WgrAKgd 


—  .•-»..-4T#,  ,-».« 


Ttirt'i  That; 

UNC  or  The  Besf 
View  0/  Corrboro 

Roy  Moose 

(/Ar.  AAoose.  memb€r  of  tht  EnfHsh  DeM-  ♦»«• 
wUy  and  f  ormw  OKonian,  wr»M  tM^  poignant  and 
acrid  viaw  •!  Hie  University  fram  rt»«  ftrvlty^ya 
l»oint-«#-vi»w.) 

Since  the  student  at  U.N.C.  sewaas  confused  about 
his  b^ing  at  the  school,  I  feel  that  it  i*-  necessary  to 
aid  the  neophyte  in  his  effort  to  learn  our  "game ' 
at  Carolina.  Certainly,  one  cannot  >lay  the  game 
without  first  knowing  the  rules. 

4|fi^s  the  following  suggestions  are  humbly  sub 
miull  a^-  an  attempt  to  foster  better  relations  be- 
tweeii  the  student  and  his  betters. 

(Suffice  to  say,  the  suggestions  have  been  adapted 
from  another  source,  as  benefits  a  scholar;  in  fact,  if 
the  Honor  Council  wishes  to  investigate,  this  paper 
is  downright  plagiarism.) 

THE  TOWN:  Chapel  HilJ  is  an  up-to-date  com- 
mercial city  with  some  of  the  finest  suburbs  in  the 
country  (cf .  Carrboro).  The  walk  from  Rosemary 
Laundry  to  Carrboro  city  limits  is  justly  famed  and 
admired. 

The  visitor  is  advised  to  waste  no  time  on  the 
campus  in  the  city,  as  it  contains  nothing  of  intedest 
except  crumbling  buildings  of  an  obsolete  pattern 
and  large  quantity  of  objectionable  youths  of  both 
sexes.  It  i.j  hoped  that  both  of  these  undesirable 
features  will  eventually  be  cleared  away;  and  the 
project  of  converting  the  campus  into  one  huge 
paved  parking  lot,  bisected  by  a  six-lane  highway 
through  the  heart  of  this  decadefttr  quarter,  is  to 
be  welcomed  as  a  positive  step  in  the  fight  directiou. 

THE  UNTVEKSITY:  To  belong  to  this  bourgeois 
organization  is  often  the  only  way  to  obtain  lodgings 
within  easy  bus-ride  of  Durham.  In  order  to  enable 
studentj  to  put  up  a  passing  show  of  interest  in  the 
place,  here  are  a  few  pieces  of  information  that  the 
more  crusted  reactionaries  expect  one  to  know. 

THE  ADMINISTRA.TION  AND  CAMPUS  PQUCE; 
Least  said  soonest  mended. 

THE  FRATERNITIBS;  Here  is  a  representative 
selection  of  college  fraternities  which  will  provide 
the  discerning  with  a  good  indication  of  their  sev- 
erally undersirable  characters: 

Sigma  NU— Too  much  is  not  en(>u|:h. 
Phi  Beta  Kappa — Better  than  nothing. 
Phi  Kappa  Sigma — Vive  le  Sport.  'j 

Sigma  Chi — Vino  in  Magnum.  "'^ 

St.  Anthony  HalJ— Respondeat  Cafeteria.        ,, 
SAE— One  Good  Turn,  -  •  %. 

SPE— De.-,'erves   Another.         ••    •;    »  y. 

Chi  Phi— Turn  Again.        ...  :'..'-i.- ,:    .-,  jr.;.   .. 
Phi  Eta  Sigma — Everything  in  Excelsior. 
Beta  House — Everything  in  Selaer. 
Chi  Omega — ^Elverything!  '^'"' 

Pi  Beta  Phi—  When  Did  We  Last  See  Your 
Father? 

LTNIVERSTTY  ACTIVmES:  Dress-designing  and 
very  small  talk. 


UNlVE2lSrrY  SPORTS:   Racing,  poker, 
ture  speeches,  Tri-Delts. 


legisla- 


LBCTURES:  These  are  ritual  cermonie*  carried 
out  continuously  during  the  term  and  attended  by 
a  clique  of  devout  lecture-worshippers,  distinguished 
by  a  pair  of  levis-  and  a  T-shirt  fClean  levis-minor 
acolytes;  filthy  levis— class  I.  fanatics.)  FresJunen 
are  advised  to  be  wary  of  attending  too  many  of 
these  functions.  Their  effort  is  sitttilar  to  drugs, 
being  both  narcotic  and  habit-forming.  Once  the 
habit  has  a  hold  it  may  last  a  lifetime. 

LIBRARY:  A  place  of  assignation  and  a  conven- 
ient cloak  for  dubious  advances.  Gatp-craAers  are 
strictly  prohibited,  and  double-knoeks  are  sternly 
enforced  between  8:00  and  10:30  p.m. 

PROFESSORS:  Officials  appointed  by  the  Uni- 
vefsity  tc  outwit  students.  The  rules  of  the  game 
and  the  method  of  scoring  are  given  below: 

HOW  TO  PLAY:  1  Professor  sends  Advisor  a 
card  requesting  attendance  of  student  in  hi^;  class 
to  arrange  work  for  term, 

2.  Student  sends  long  list  of  exruses  (preferably 
not  printed). 

3.  Professor  either  (a)  demolishes  excuses  or  (h) 
suggests  the  next  class  If  (b)  student  returns  to  2. 
If  (a): 

4.  Student  falls  ill.  •       ' 

5.  Professor  waits  patientlf .  \ 

6.  Student  gets  bored  and  recovws. 

7.  Professor  repeats  1.  .    \   \  'J  Jg 

8.  Student  repeats  2.  >-  • 

E^^entually  the  student  visit?  the  class  or  the 
term  ends.  After  each  visit  the  Professor  scores  as 
marked  below  and  begins  again  at  1. 


SCORING: 

t 

'   ,-^\ 

St  periods  atttnd«d: 

Student  sc«r* 

Fr«f.  ScM-* 

None 

IW 

• 

1—  5 

m- 

M 

5—10 

m 

ao 

ir>-15 

TO 

30 

1&-20 

60 

m 

20—25 

30 

M 

25-^30 

40 

M 

30—35 

30 

70 

35—40 

30 

60 

40--45 

10 

M 

i&— 50 

0 

100 

SATt 
EnH 

Ci 
stands] 
5.271 

from 
stale.« 
MaW 
male. 
3.6»»: 
1.033 
isterec 


a   cor 

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ing    fr<| 
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CounciJ 
diet  of 
of  "gui^ 
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speak, 
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s<"ntenc< 
a   kMk 
lence<; 


For  ob^ 
seller 
that   cl( 
for  all 
the  son^ 
the  ph 
Never-tl 
sympati 
like  thel 
some  bi| 
about  tl 
leather 
heart 
The  oldl 
bird-wat 
plomu^i 
write. 
V  Illume 
leather, 
A  beau^ 
Roger's 
in   ji   si 
tag  i-s 
Old  bool 
tomorroi 
mwe. 
books 
lucky    cj 
ah,  toi 
ed    -na] 
Keep  y< 
comer, 
cular  pr 


2( 
01 


11 


12 

13 
14 

15 


2« 

21 

24 
23 
2: 

2% 

%i 

t4 


M 

M 

«1 
4» 

4« 

4T 

4i 


I. 


>» 


13.  1W7 


int  «n4 
fltyay* 


nbly  sub- 
itions  be- 


ate  com- 
as in  the 
toaeanary 
nted  and 


on  the 

intedest 
i  pattern 

of  both 
desirable 

and  the 
ne  huge 

highway 
er,  is  to 
lirection. 


POUCK: 


r*     Your 


iin«  and 


legLsla- 


»  cani^ 
ended  by 
inguished 
vis-minor 
Freshmen 
many  of 
to  drugs. 
Once    the 


the  Uni- 
the  same 


Advisor  a 
hiy  class 


prelerably 


iscis  or  (b) 
urns  U)  2. 


iss  or   the 
scores  as 


rat.  Scara 

f 
10 
20 
30 
40 
90 
80 
70 

to 
m 

100 


SATURDAY,  A«Jk  13,  \H7 

Enrollment  Statistics 

Current  University  enrollment 
stands  at  6,634.  Of  this  number 
5.271  are  North  Carolinians;  1,289 
from  other  stMs;^  £ro|m  foreign 
states  and  U.S.*  possessions. 

Male  veterals  total  1.744;  fe- 
male. 19.  Ma^  doWeteraiis  total 
3.699:  female  non-veterans,  1.172. 
1.033  graduate  students  are  reg- 
i.<;tered. 


THE   DAILY  TAR   HEEL 


rACt  THttS 


REPORT 


(Continned  from  Page  1) 
a  comon  mtsconcepdon  aoKMig  tht: 
University  students  regarding  the 
actions  of  the  Council  in  cases  aris-  j 
ing  from  viol{|tions  of  the  H<Mior 
Code.  Some  students  feel  that  the 
mere  fact  of  appearing  bef<»%  tJbe 
Council  is  tantamount  to  a  ver- 
dict of  guilty'  and  that  all  verdicts 
of  'guilty'  lead  Vo  suspension. 

"First  of  ail.  each  studeat  is 
guaranteed  —  and  receives  —  a  fair 
hearing,  with  prc4)er  indictment,  j 
witnesses,  and  facts  relevant  only 
;o  the  case  in  question.  The  Coun- 
cil 'bends  over  backwards.'  so  to 
speak,  to  give  each  defendant  the 
fsirest  and  most  sound  hearing 
possible. 

"Prejudice  is  non-existent  on  the 
Council,  and  the  preliminary  inves- 
tigation is  carried  out  honestly  and 
impartially.  It  is  a  common  prac- 
tice that  the  Council  member  con- 
ducting the  prdiminary  investiga- 
tion is  excluded  from  voting  on 
that  particular  case. 

Secondly,  with  regaM  to  the 
s<»ntences  of  a  person  found  'gtiilty' 
a  look  at  the  possibilities  of  sen- 
tences   may   clear   this   nutter.    A 


HAPPENINGS  6n  the  HILL: 


an 


Old  South  Ball  Is  Today 


By  SUE  ATCHISON 

THOSE  LONG  BEARDS  the 
KA's  have  been  wearing  will  be 
gone  by  Monday.  The  Old  South 
Ball  for  which  they've  been  gi-ow- 
ing  them  will  be  held  this  even- 
ing at  the  Radio  Center  in  Char- 
lotte complete  with  KA's  dressed 
as  Confederate  officers  and  "Sou- 
thern gentlemen"  and  their  la- 
dies in  full-flowing  dresses  remin- 
iscent of  the  plantation  days.  Bil- 
ly Knauff  and  his  orchestra  will 
provide  the  music  for  the  ball. 

During  the  ball,  Jane  Sawyer,  a 
Pi  Phi,  who  is  pinned  to  presi- 
dent elect  Chuck  Flack  will  be 
presented  as  Upsilon  chapter's 
rose. 


evening  there 
at   the   Ranch 


Out  weekend.  This 

will  be  a  banquet 

House   honoring   the   guests 

banquet    will   be    followed    by    an 

informal  get-together  at  the  house. 


This  afternoon  a  parade  at  noon 
from  the  Hotel  Charlotte  to  the 
Mecklenburg  County  Court  Hottse, 
followed  by  a  colorful  secession 
ceremony  in  front  of  the  court 
house  will  begin  the  weekend  fes- 
tivities. A  reception  and  barbecue 
will  follow  the  parade  at  the  Ra- 
dio Center  with  alumni  and  other  at  their  house.  This  afternoon 
guests.  I  from  2-5  they're  giving  an  inf or- 

The  Old  South  weekend  is  not'  ^^^  P^rtv  at  4heir  house  for  their 
only  a  social  event  but  the  KA's    ^^^^^s. 
annual    memorial    to    the    ^'irtue6 
of    chivalry    and   gracious  society 
which  are  part  of  Southern  heri- 
t^e. 


Student  pqrty 
Meets  Monday 


The  Student  Pirty  will  meet 
Mftnday  in  the  Roland  Parker 
Lounge  of  Graham  Memorial  for 
the  purpose  of  making  appoint* 
'.^"i  ments  to  party  committees.  Chab^ 
man  Whit  Whitfield  said  yester* 
day. 

Wnitfield  indicated   the  meetiig 

THE  ATO'S  began  the  weekend ;  will   be   important  and   urged   aU 

with  a  Shrimp  Supper  last  night  j  members    to    attend.    He    pointed 

I  out    only    four    regular    meeting 
'  dates  remain  until  the  end  of  the 


ST.    A.    Gordon    Bradford    Hall 
is  engaged  to  Carol  Jean  Suther. 


semester. 

Also  to  come  under  discussion 
will  be  a  social  function  for  par- 
ty members,  the  SP  chairman 
said. 


ALUMS  OF  ST.  ANTHONY 
HALL  have  returned  this  week- 
end for  the  St.  A's  annual  Swing- 


l    Literature 
And  Old  Gold 

For  obvious  reasons,  your  old  l>ook- 
seller  would  be  the  last  to  claim 
that  clothes  make  the  man,  nor 
for  all  its  plumage  does  he  prefer 
the  song  of  the  toucan  to  that  of 
the  plain  old  mockingbird. 
Never-the-less  be  has  a  sneaking 
sympathy  for  those  collectors-  who 
like  their  chosen  authors  in  hand- 
some bindings.  There's  something 
about  the  gleam  of  gold  on  old 
leather  that  i&<  wanning  to.  the 
heart. 

The  old  book  collector,  unlike  the 
bird-watcher,  c^  have  music  and 
plomage.  too.  For  example,  as  we 
write,  there  is  a  very  handsome . 
V(jJ.ume  of  Longfellow,  gold.,  and' 
leather,  and  priced  at  just  $2.50. 
A  beautiful  leather-bound  copy  of 
Roger's  The  Scottish  Minstrel  is 
in  a  shelf  near-by,  and  the  price 
tag  is  $6.00. 

Old  t>ooks  are  here  today  and  gone 
tomorrow — and  you  can't  order 
more.  Tomorrow  these  particular 
books  may  be  discovered  by  some 
lucky  collector.  But  tomorrow — 
ah,  tomorrow  treasurers  undream- 
ed may  appear! 

Keep  your  eye  on  the  Old  Book 
comer,  pal.  Don't  miss  yotu*  parti- 
cular prize  I 

The  Intimate 
Bookshop 

205  E.  Franklin  St. 
Open  Till  10  P.  M. 


Old  South  Ball  Sponsors 


Shown  above  are  the  sponsors  and  Roses  who  will  be  presented  at  the  K»ppa  Alpha  Old  South  Ball 
in  Charlotte  today.  They  are:  top  row.  left  to  right.  Miss  Jaye  P.  Wolfe  for  Jerry  Shinn  of  UNC;  MJM 
Thorn*  Satteriee  for  Jim  Connell  of  UNC;  Miss  Jane  Sawyer,  Rose  of  Upsilon  chapter,  UNC,  for  Chicl( 
Flack  and  Miss  Frances  Cranston  for  Jim  Johnson  of  Duke.  Middle  row— Miss  Ellen  Eaglo,  Rose  of  Alphj^ 
Phi  chaj»ter,  Duke,  for  Bucky  Alien;  Miss  Lu  Jones,  Rose  of  Tau  chapter,  Wake  Forest,  for  Charlie  Snipetf 
Miss  Edith  Conrad  for  Tom  Toaguo  of  Wake  Forest  and  Miss  Mary  Kathryn  Hale  for  Clifton  Sn«Ml«n  af 
Wako  Forest.  Bottom  rew--M!ss  Mary  Loyall  Gratx  for  Bachman  Doar  of  N.  C.  State;  Miss  Dorothy 
Ann  Poirson  for  Bill  Lano  of  N.  C.  Stat*  and  Mrs.  Mary  Ann  Heath,  Rose  of  Alpha  Omega  chaptor,  N;  C 
State  for  J.  Canty  Heath. 


person  found  'guilty'  can  be  expell- 
ed (never  be  allowed  to  return  to 
the  University)  but  this  !s  exceed- 
ingly rare. 

"Also,  a  person  may  be  given  in- 
deHnite  suspensino,  which  is  normal- 
ly for  one  fuU  semester:   a  person 
may  receive   a  sentence  of  proba- 
{  tion:   or,  a  person  may  receive  a 
I  reprimand.  It  must  be  remembered. 
I  however,     that     the    possibility    ot 
leniency  always  exists   and  that  a 


Covering  The  Campus 


MODERN  LOOK 

"A  Modern  Look  at  the  Ricard- 
ian  and  Marxian  Systems"  is  the 
topic  to  be  discussed  here  Tuc»-- 
day  by  Professor  Paul  A.  Samuel- 
son  of  the  Massachusetts  Institu- 
te of  Technology  Dept.  of  Econo- 
spirit   of  open-mindedness   prevaiU  j  mics  at  4  p.m.  in  Carroll  Hall.  Pro- 


in   the   Council." 


IF 

YOU  CARE 

ENOUGH 

GIVE  HER  THE 

BEST! 


GIVE  HER 


From 

WENTWORTH  &  SLOAN 

« 

JEWELERS 


DAILY 

ACROSS 

1.  Throb* 
C.  Dried 
orchid 
tuber 
ll.Rinc- 
ahaped 
ialand 
12  Suiun'i  de- 
cree 
Vi.  Pairs 
14.  Tardier 
15  A  U.  a.  vice 

preaident 
17  AraWan 

garment* 
20.  Half  an  am 
21  Mouaelike 
mammal 
24  Middle 
25.  Regain* 
27  flower 

smell 
2i.  Additional 
M.  Penman 
»2.  High,  crafty 
hUl 
'  S3.  I^onoun 
.  t4.  ClevatM 
train 
(eBll*4.) 
!  M.  Laira 
\  M.  Of  f  r4ftt4« 
■        kg* 
1  H.  scop? 
i  41.  AaaiathfiU 

•  4S.  Oiriff*- 

<        Uke  mammal 
:  iff.  Bbndaman 
r  47.  sanau  iti**« 
I       aAngcn 
41.  Church  H' 

•  ficiAl 

DOWN 

X.  Knave  of 
clubs  (loo) 

2  CMnus  of 
U<ar4l 


CROSSWORD 

3.  Piece  of  land  23.  Rusa- 


4.  Snow  ve- 
hicles 

5.  Girl's  nama 
«.  Quiet* 

7.  ICacaws 
i.  ifoneUry 
unit   (Lat. 
via) 
S.Dutch  com- 

mtin* 
10.  Through 
Iff.  Tiny 
1*.  Accumulate 
18.  "Tree 
Iff.  Worahip 
21.  City 

(Mont.) 

22  Protectiv* 

garment 


ian 

rulers 
25.  French 

satirist 
2ff.  Farm 

ani- 
mal 
Sff.  Music 

note 
31.  Old 

time* 

(archaic) 
56.  Hole-borlnf 

tool 
3ff^  Leather 

Git 

nasl< 
37.  Comfort 
SS.  Jump 


aqj'jaa  ansuE 
dfli      an?   '^^3 

B'i-^PISM.'"J        I 


j  fessor  Samuelson  will  lead  a  busi- ' 
I  ness  and  economic^-  seminar.  Stu- ! 
j  dents  and  faculty  in  the  School  of  j 
j  Business  Administration  have  been ; 
;  invited  to  attend.  | 

I  MEDICAL  PARENTS  CLUB  j 

j      An    organizational    meeting    of 
the  Medical  Parents'  Club  will  be ' 
I  held  today  at  the  UNC  5>chool  of  j 
I  Medicine   at    11    a.m.   The   meeting, 
^will  be  heid  in  connection  with  Pa- 1 
rents     Day  at  the  UNC     Medical 
School.    Registration   for   th^   day- 
long   meeting  will  he   held   in  the 
lobby  of  N.  C.  memorial   Hospital 
!  beginning   at   9:30  a.m.    A   tour   of 
the     hospital  and  the  School     ol 
Medicine  will  follow. 
HOLY  WEEK 
j      Holy   Week   will    be   marked   by 
the  annual  broadcast  of  Giuseppe  | 
I  Verdi's    "Requiem    Mas:^"    on    the 
I  Let's   Listen   to      Opera"    program 
I  over  a  Mt.  Mitchell  radio  station. 
The  program,  which  will  be  broad- 
cast  tomorrow  at   12:15  p.m..  v/ill 
be  dedicated  to  the  memory  of  the 
great    Italian   patriot.     Alessandro 
Manzoni. 

AFCW  DEDEGATE 
I      The  Athletic  Federation  of  Col- 
j  lege  Women  will  hold  their  nation- 
I  al     conference     Monday     through 
'  Thursday  at  the  University  of  Ne- 
braska   in    Lincoln.    Miss    Frances 
I  Reynolds,  sophomore   from     New- 
;  ton,  will  be  the  delegate  from  UNC. 
The  purpose  of  AFCW  is  to  further 
!  athletic      interests    and      activities 
I  throughout  the    United  States. 
I  HEADS  COURSE 
j      Dr.  Warfield  Garson  of  the  Dept. 
I  of  Experimental   Medicine   in  the 
UNC  School  of  Public  Health,  will 
be  co-chairman  of  the    faculty   of 
the  26th   annual   Veneral   Disease 
I  Postgraduate   Course   at   the    Uni- 
j  versity    of   Tennessee    College    of 
I  Medicine.  The  meeting  will  be  from 
I  Thursday  through  Saturday. 


HEIDELBERG  PROFESSOR 

Professor  Paul  Bockman  of  the 
University  of  Heidelberg  will  speak 
in  German  on  'The  Novels  of  Theo- 
dor  Fontane"  Monday  at  8  p.m.  in 
105  Hanes  Hall.  The  Dept.  of  Ger- 
manic Languages  will  spon«or  his 
talk.  The  public  has  been  invited 
to  hear  Dr.  Bockman,  who  teaches 
German  Literature   at   Heidelberg. 

WUNC-TV 

4:00— Locu.vt  Street 
4:30— Boy  Scoi^t  Circus 
5:00— Sign  Off 
6:30 — Yesterday's  Worlds 
7:00 — ^Delinquency 
7:30— The  Elements 
8:00 — Boy  Scout  Circuis 
9:00— ^gn  OCt.  '" 


RMO.C  W 

I  with  his  new  ^      } 

1^     SONIC jGyEyiz-  I 

Ever  since  Jack  bought  his  new 
Sonic  CAPRI  phonograph  at  the 
local  college  store  —  he's  become 
the  biggest  B  M  O  C  ever.  You 
caa  join  him  and  be  the  biggest  ever, 
too,  for  you  can  buy  a  CAPRI 
phonograph  for  as  little  as  $19.95. 

This  month's  special  is  the  CAPRI 

350  —  a  twin  speaker  high 

fidelity  portable  with  4-speed 

Webcor  automatic  changer, 

hi-fi  amplifier  in  attractive 

two-tone  Forest  Green.       only  *59 

at  your  local  dealer. 
SONIC   INDUSTRIES,  INC.    1 9  Wilbur  Street,  Lynbrook,  N.  Y. 


FOR  THAT 


GERAAAN'S  WEEKEND 
SNACK 


ICE  CREAM 


SODAS 


29 


FRESH   STRAWBERRY 


SUNDAE 


29 


(Try  Our  Delicious  Freth«Macle  Sanmiches 

DAIRYLAND  FARMS 


ANNOUNCEMENT  BY 

Illinois  College  of 
OPTOMETRY 

Applications  for  adtniMion  to 
classes  beginning  September  9, 
1957    are    now    being    received. 

Three  year  course 
of  professional  study 
Leading  to  the  Degree, of  \ 
Doctor  of  Optometry 

Requirements  for  Entrance; 
Two  years  (60  semester  hours  or 
equivalent  quarter  hrs.)  in  spe- 
cified liberal  arts  and  science*. 

WRITE  FOR  BULLETIN 
TO:  REGISTRAR 

ILLINOIS   COLLEGE 
of  OPTOMETRY 

3241   So.   Mkfaica*  At*. 
Technology  Center,  Chicago  16,  OL 


Tacteriajr's  Aaawee 

39.  Weight 
(Turk.) 

40.  Loiter 

42.  Father 

43.  Evening 
(poet.) 

44. IndiaA 
weight 


CLASSIREOS 


TEACHERS  WANTED:  MAN  TO 
assist  in  coaching  footkall  and 
haseball.  Public  School  Music 
Teacher,  Seventh  and  Eighth 
Grade  Teachers.  Contact  the 
Principal.  Mebane  High  School, 
Mebane,   N.  C. 


THREE  ROOM  APARTMENT  FOR 
rent  —  summer  only.  Complete 
ly  furnished.  Near  post  office. 
Call  8-7937  after  9:00  p.m. 

I  DRIVING  TO  ANN  ARBOrTmICH., 
for  Easter  holidays.  Need  riders. 
Call  Fred  Powledge,  8-8602,  any- 
time. 

NORGE      REFRIGERATOR      FOR 
.sale:  Size  10,  new  model  in  good 
condition,    reasonable    price  — 
call    8-6557   before   thi.s   bargain 
is  gone. 


FOR  SALE:  WILCOX-GAY  TAPE 
recorder.  Almost  new — 2  Speeds, 
hi-fi  model.  Also  new  Bell  & 
Howell      movie    camera — 8  mm. 

Contact     Jim  Evan.s  at   14     Old 

We.>*t  or  phone  8-902& 


LAB  STUDENTS  (and  most  folks  with  a 
flair  for  the  scientific)  know  that  one 
Lucky  is  an  Ample  Sample — conclusive 
evidence  that  Luckies  are  the  finest 
smoking  an5rwhere!  Check  this  your- 
self. Try  a  couple — or  a  carton.  You'll 
find  that  every  Lucky  tastes  as  good 
as  the  first  one.  You  see,  every  Lucky 
is  made  of  fine  tobacco  .  .  .  mild,  good- 
tasting  tobacco  that's  TOASTED  to 
taste  even  better.  Light  up  a  Lucky 
right  now.  You'll  agree  Luckies  are  the 
best- tasting  cigarette  you  ever  smoked! 


DON'T  JUST  STAND  THERI 

STICKLE!  MAKE  <25  "^ 

Sticklers  are  simple  riddles  with  two-word  rhyming 
nn.swers.  Both  words  must-  have  the  same  numiKT  of 
syllables.  (No  drawings,  pleuiie!l  We'll  shell  out  $2^} 
for  all  we  use — and  for  hundreds  that  never  see  print. 
So  .send  Btai  Im  of  'em  with  your 
name,  addreits,  college  and  cla.ss 
to  Happy-Joe-Lucky,  Box  67A, 
Mount  Vernon,  N.  Y. 


WHAT  IS  A 

MARItlACE 

fROPOSAU 

fe 

^ 

^^2 

w 

Hitch  Pitch 

HEMtAN 

HOtNI 

HOLIMC   COHMUNITT   COLLCOt                                  1 

WHAT  IS  A  SMAJtT  SHCGOATf 


MAkCIA   WILLIAM* 

WCfTIRN    KCNTUCKT 

STATC   COLL(«t 


Canny  Nanny 


Free  Delivery 


LUCKIES  TASTE  BETTER 

.  CLEANER,  FRESHER,  SMOOTHER  I 


'irS  TOASTED"  TO  TASTE  BETTER 


r«#B0CT  er 


er  ctoAKSTTva 


I   I 


■PT 


PAf  I  FOUft 


THE    DAILY   TAR   HEEL 


SATURDAY,  APRIL  13,  1W7 


K 


ING'S 
ORNER 

By  BILL  KING 

DTH  Sports  Editor 


Netters    In    8-1    Victory    Over    Clemson 


Tar  Heel  Baseballers  Doing  Well 

It's  a  little  early  in  the  season  to  be  making  any  definite  predic- 
tions about  the  final  outcome  of  the  Atlantic  Coast  Conference  baseball 
race,  but  from  where  we  sit,  our  Tar  Heels  look  like  a  good  bet  to  make 
a  determined  bid  for  the  title. 

North  Carolina  St«t«  currantly  it  sitting  atop  tha  ACC  standings 
with  a  2-0  racord,  bwt  tha  Tar  Haals  hold  sacond  placa  with  a  4<1 
mark.  This  aftarnoon.  Coach  Wait  Rabb's  beys  will  ba  out  ^to  ntaka 
it  5-1  whan  thay  maat  tha  Duka  Biua  Davils  in  Entarson  Stadium. 
We  were  chatting  with  Coach  Rabb  yesterday  as  he  watched  his 
Tar  Heels  go  through  preparations  for  their  Big  Four  encounter  this 
afternoon. 

Tha  cenganial  Tar  Hoaf  chiafttan  wasn't  making  any  pradictions 
«ithar.  "Wa'ra  just  trying  to  taka  tham  as  thay  coma,"  ha  ramarked 
batwaan  shauts  to  th«  boys  in  tha  batting  caga  to  spaad  up  tha  action. 

Thi^f  is  a  tough  league  we're  in. "  Rabb  continued.  "The  Big  Four 
IS  always  tough  and  this  yea^^  the  other  four  teams  are  too.  South  Ca- 
rolina and  Clemson  are  stronger  this  season  and  bear  watching." 

'We've  Been  Fortunate-'  Rabb 

Rabb  feels  that  his  ball  club  has  been  lucky  in  some  respects, 
namely  that  "our  defensive  lapses  haven't  hurt  uif  too  much.''  Rabb 
continued  that,  "most  of  our  deficiencies  on  defense  have  been  physical 
rather  than  mental.  You  expect  a  boy  to  make  mistakes  physically  and 
hope  that  he  doesn't  make  them  mentally." 

Rabb  was  askad  to  compara  last  yaar's  squad  with  this  ana.  "I 
think  the  m»in  difforanca  is  that  wo  have  mora  dapth  tl<!s  soasan," 
ha  answcrad.  "Wa  finally  havt  soma  dapth  in  th«  pitching  dapart- 
mcnt  and  wa'va  baon  gatting  soma  good  hurling  thus  far.**  Tha  Tar 
Haals  war*  woefully  short  of  capabJa  pitchers  Ust  seasan,  a  ma  jar 
factor  in  their  lata  season  decline  which  saw  them  ifnish  in  third 
place. 

"We  have  also  been  very  fortunate  in  that  we  have  made  a  good 
many  adjustments  and  have  ^lill  w-on  some  ball  games."  (Carolina  is 
9-4  for  the  season).  "The  boys  whom  we've  switched  around  have  done 
?  good  job  for  us." 

Rabb  was  vary  pleased  at  the  way  his  ball  club  has  bean  working. 
"These  bays  love  to  play,  and  thay  know  how  to  play,"  ha  stated 
rather  proudly.  'They've  been  hustling  end  their  attitude  is  good." 

A  Battle  All  The  Way 

The  Tar  Heels  don't  have  a  tremendous  hitting  team  but  they've 
made  their  hit.-  count.  Clutch  hitting  has  l)een  a  big  asset  for  them 
this  -eason.  "\Vc  have  a  good  defensive  team."  Rabb  continued.  "We're 
improving  on  our  hitting,  especially  in  the  clutch.  The  boys  have  a  lot  i 
of  poise  out  there." 

At  this  point,  Rebb  unloaded  a  big  plug  of  tobacco  and  walked 
over  toward  tha  baHing  cage  to  talk  with  one  of  his  top  batters. 
Bomber  Hill. 
The  Tar  Heels  still  have  an  uphill  battle  against  a  lot  of  good  ball 
clubs  before  the  season  ends  in  the  middle  of  May.  but  as  Rab'}  remark- 
ed before  he  left  us.  we're  not  conceding  the  championship  to  anybody. 
We  feel  like  we're  as  good  as  any  other  team  and  we'll  stay  in  there 
all  the  way." 

Attendence  On  The  Decline 

While  were  on  the  subject  of  Carolina  baseball,  wo  might  has  well 
have  a  few  A»«ords  to  say  about  one  of  our  pet  peeves— baseball  atten- 
dence. 

^*  *'»•  ••»»•*  of  tfco  season,  the  Tar  N*eis  were  getting  fairly 
good  support  from  the  home  crowd,  but  in  the  past  few  gamin  there 
has  been  »n  uppannf  decline  in  attendence. 

It  i5  a  mystery  to  us  why  more  students  do  not  come  out  to  support 
their  baU  cltfb.  R  is  a  privilege  that  too  few  Carolina  students  take  | 
.ivantage  of.  and  that  includes  both  male  and  female.  Many  of  those 
v  hoprofes*  t()  have  a  kpen  interest  in  baseball  apparently  say  so  for 
impression  only. 

If  this  were  a  university  which  simply  did  nothing  about  fielding 
a  good  ball  team,  lack  of  atlondonco  would  be  understandable  But 
such  IS  no*  the  case.  Carolina  hat  aNrays  had  good  baseball  vet 
attendence  is  on  the  decline. 

Many  Reasons  For  Lack  Of  Attendence 

There  are  many  reasons,  some  feasible  and  some  rediculous.  given 

toTt^^X  r  'f'^^r^^''  '''''  ^°°'^  **^^"^  '^^  g^'"^^-  They  range 
7a^vluv  fV!?  ""^  ^'^'^"  ^"^'""^  ^"^  "'^  ^«te  starting  time" 
uJJ  .  "•  !1  ^™  ^'^""^  '"''  ^^"^  *^  ^^^'^  ^^^  a  look  at  the  latest 
literature,  (nnnd  you,  we  have  nothing  against  the  latter,  in  its  place) 
In  our  opinion,  the  main  reason,  .s  we  have  stated  before,  U  the 
Utajtartlng  tim*.  Thraa^lrty  is  absolutely  too  late  for  sta^^ng  . 

ni:  r:,:c:::u:;tatr.r  ^"'  •"  -  ^--'^^  -  -  -  •- 

Whether  or  not  ths  would  boost  attendence  is  something  we  can't 
definitely  s^y.  but  we  think  that  it  would.  How  o  do  it?  WeU  there's 
always  the  old  .standby— the  petition.  This  corner  would  be  the  first  to 
sign  Meanwhile,  come  what  may.  we  plan  to  look  into  the  matter 
further. 

ProbaWy  nothing  can  ba  done  for  the  remainder  of  this  soaaen 
bu  until  proven  otherwise  to  us,  we  still  contend  that  If  the  starting 
time  were  moved  up  attendence  would  move  likewise.  In  he  m*an- 

^tTm,  v;::!.'"*  ••""•"^  -  •"•  '-^ '~-"  •••"• "-" 

Tar  Heel  Runners  Meef 
Gamecocks  Today 


Win  Is  Number i 
3  For  Netmen    I 

The  Carolina  netters  showed 
their  new  coach,  Valdimir  Cernik  I 
the  kind  of  tennis  they  are  capable  j 
of  playing  here  yesterday  as  the  j 
Tar  Heels  defeated  the  Clemson 
Tigers.  8-1  for  the  3rd  time. 

The  Tar  Heel  leam  swept  thru 
the  singles  matches  with  only  one 
defeat.  That  loss  was  handed  to 
Frank  Livingstone  by  Nick  Carter 
in  three  sets. 

Number  one  and  two  men  Steve 
Bank  and  Geoff  Black  sWtpt 
through  their  matches  with  ea,:;e. 
Bank  defeated  Ed  Scarpa.  6-1.  6-2 
and  Black  won  over  Chris  Theos, 
6-1,  6-3. 

Ray  Newsome,  number  four  man 
for  the  Tar  Heels  also  made  a  \ 
clean  sweep  as  did  Fritz  Van  Win- ; 
kle. 

The  Tar  Heels  won  easily  in  the  ; 
doubles  matches,  with  Bank  and ' 
Newsome  leading  the  way. 


Baseballers  Seek  5th  Conference 
Victory  Against  Duke  Here  Today 


right.   Big  Jim  Legette  will  han-]  be    another   conference    battle    a- 
dle    the    backstopping   chores   for  1  gainst  the  South  Carolina  Game- 
Carolina,  j  cocks  in  Emerson  Stadium  AprU 
The  Tar  Heels'  next  outing  will  I  17th. 


By  DAVE  WIBLE 

With  a  good  showing  at  the  Flo- 
rida Relays  and  two  conference 
victories  behind  them  fhis  -'eason 
Carolina's  varsity  cindermen  will 
meet  South  Carolina  here  this  af- 
ternoon at  2  with  the  aim  of  con- 
tinuing their  winning  season. 

The  Tar  Heels'  conference  wins 
came  at  the  expense  of  Wake  For- 
est and  Sate.  Both  were  one-sided 
affairs.  The  well-rounded  Tar 
Heels  achieved  last  Tuesday's  97- 
34  victory  over  Stat«  without  the 
aid  of  the  top  two  Carolina  run- 
ners, Jim  Beatty  and  Dave  Scur- 
lock  who  were  running  in  a  spe- 
cial invitational  mile  event. 

This  afternoon  Beatty  will  run 
in  the  two-mile  event  and  Scur- 
lock  will  be  in  the  440  and  anchor 
the  mile  relay  team. 

In  their  only  previous  meet,  a 
triangular  affair,  the  Gapiecocks 
beat  Georgia  and  were  beaten  by 
Georgia  Tech.  The  top  members 
of  the  South  Carolina  squad  are 
Billy  Latham,  a  distance  mail  who 


was  fourh  in  the  ACC  cross-coun- 
try championships  last  fall,  and 
Don  Goodroe.  a  14.5  high  hurdler. 

The  freshmen  pf  the  two  school.^ 
will  also  be  competing  this  after 
noon.  The  Carolina  frosh  has  had 
the  same  undefeated  success  as 
their  big  brothers  with  wins  over 
the  yearlings  of  Wake  Forest  and 
State.  1    «*► 

Today  the  Tar  Babies  will  be 
without  the  services  of  their  out 
standing  performer.  Ward  Sims, 
who  will  not  participate  due  to  a 
death  in  his  family.  Sims  has  set 
the  pace  for  the  Tar  Babies  by 
taking  three  firsts  in  each  of  the 
last  two  meets.  He  pole  vaults  and 
broad  jumps  better  than  the  var- 
sity and  has  equaled  varsity  times 
on  the  high  and  low  hurdles  sev- 
eral times. 

Frosh  Play 

Corotina'*  freshman  basoball 
team  travels  to  Durham  today  to 
meet  the  Duke  Btue  Imps  in  a 
.Big   Four  f i^f^hfiMHt^^battlit,  1 


UP 


(Continued   from   Page    1) 

ment  jobs  filled  by  appointment 
Tom  Long  (SP)  is  chairman;  Bill 
Baum  MJP)  and  Miss  Betty  Huff- 
man (SP>  are  the  other  members. 

Before  the  22nd  session  closed* 
Sonny  Evans  (SP>  read  a  list  of 
he  ^pointments  to  the  Foreign 
Exchange  Student  Committee.  Lar- 
kin  Kirkman  will  be  chairman; 
Kelly  Maness.  Miss  Phylliss  Krafft, 
Daiyl  Farrington.  and  John  Brooks 
are  the  ether  members. 

Baum  introduced  a  resolution  'of- 
fering to  President  (Bob)  Young 
our  most  sincere  appreciation  tor 
a  job  well  done  and  for  a  spirit 
which  has  unified  us  and  led  us 
to  greater  accomploshments.  Long 
asked  the  vote  be  unanimously  re- 
corded. 

Misses  Noni  Markowitz  and  Eliza- 
beth Ooes  from  St.  Lawrence  Col- 
lege were  welcomed  by  the  Legis- 
lature. 

Representatives  not  present  in- 
cluded Bass.  Eddings.  Kelly  and 
kenan. 


By  BILL   KING 

The  Carolina  baseiwllers  will 
be  shooting  for  their  tenth  vic- 
tory and  fifth  in  ACC  play  this 
afternoon  when  they  entertain  the 
Duke  Blue  Devils  in  Emerson  Sta- 
dium at  3  o'clock. 

This  is  the  fii"st  meeting  be- 
tween the  two  schools  this  season 
and  the  Tar  Heels'  second  Big 
Four  contest.  Their  first  was  a 
12-6  loss  to  N.  C.  State  last  week. 
That  was  the  only  conference  loss 
sustained  by  the  Tar  Heels  thus 
far. 

The  Blue  Devils  are  the  reign- 
ing Atlantic  Coast  Conference 
champs  and  arc  the  5dds-on  fav- 


orite to  take  the  title  again  this 
season.  Coach  Ace  Parker  has  al- 
most the  same  materfal .  that  took 
the  title  a  year  ago,  plus  the  fab- 
ulous track  star,   Dave  Sime. 

Carolina  coach  Walter  Rabb 
said  yesterday  that,  "this  is  just 
another  ball  game  for  us.  We'll 
play  it  inning  by  inning  just  like 
we  do  all  the  others." 

A  win  today  would  put  Caro- 
lina high  in  the  ACC  standings 
and  if  the  Wolfpack  should  drop 
a  game,  the  Tar  Heels  would 
move  into  first  place. 

Rabb  will  go  with  his  ace  right- 
hander Jim  Raugh  against  the  vis- 
iting Blue  Devils.  Raugh  is  4-0 
pn  the  season  and  has  been   the 


big  gun  among  the  Tar  Heel  hurl-  j 
ers  this  season.   The   Blue   Devils; 
will  probably  come  back  with  ei- 
ther  Harleigh    Fatsinger   or  Dicki 
Smallwood. 

The  Tar  Heels'   starting  lineup 
will  have  Ivalee  Hill  at  first,  Don ; 
Lewis  at  second.  Roger  Honeycutt 
at  short   and   either   Chuck   Hart-: 
man  or  Jim  Harwell  at  third.  j 

In  the  outfield.  Rabb  will  call  j 
on  Joe  Shook  in  left.  Dick  Hud-, 
son    in   center,    and   Don   Hill   in 


Howard  Johnson  Restaurant 

STUDENT    SPECIALS 

Barbecued    Chicken 
Choice  Steak  Sandwiches 

SERVED  ^'^-'    5:00  P.M. 

^^^^^^  8:00- 11:00  P.M. 

'landmark  For  Hungry  Tarheels'' 


Yanks  And 
Braves  Are 
Predicted 


NEW  YORK— (AP)— The  world 
champion^New  York  Yankees  and 
last  year's  National  League  run- 
nerup  Milwaukee  Braves,  recniv- 
ing  an  overwhelming  vote  of  con- 
fidence by  the  nation's  baseball 
experts,  were  picked  yesterday  to 
meetin  the  World  Series  next  fall 
in  the  largest  Associated  Press 
preseason  poll  on  record. 

The  Yankees  were  almost  an  un- 
animous choice.  Of  the  563  votes 
cast.  512  sports  writers  and  Sports- 
casters  selected  them  to  nail  their 
third  consecutive  American  Lea- 
gue flag,  44  picked  them  to  fin- 
ish second,  and  seven  reactionar- 
ies had  them  finishing  as  low  as 
third.  No  one  placed  them  any 
lower. 

Milwaukee's  first  place  margin 
over  defending  champion  Brook- 
lyn and  the  Cincinnati  Rcdlegs 
was  not  as  huge.  The  Braves  were 
named  tbe  coming  winner  on  260 
ballots.  The  Dodgers  drew  157 
first  place  votes,  while  130  favor- 
ed the  Reds.  There  was  agreement 
on  one  point — the  National  Lea- 
gue race  will  be  a  three-team  af- 
fair, since  the  remaining  five 
teams  collected  a  total  of  only  16 
first  place  votes. 

Asked  for  the  first  time  in  the 
AP    poll's    history    to    forecast    a 
World  Series  winner,   359  named 
the  Yankees   and    108  picked   the 
Braves.     The     Reds     surprisingly! 
drew    more    championship    votes  j 
than  the  Dodgers,  41  to  29.  prob-i 
ably   because   Brooklyn  has  been ' 
able  to  defeat  the   Yankees  only  | 
once    in    seven    postseas6n    strug-  1 
glcs. 

Detroit,  a  fifth  place  finisher 
in  1956.  earned  second  place  in 
the  American  League,  far  behind 
the  Yankees  in  points.  Based  on 
eight  points  for  a  first  place  bal- 
lot, seven  for  a  second  place  and 
so  on  down  the  line  finishing  with 
one  point  for  an  eighth  place 
nomination,  the  Yankees  drew  4.- 
M6  points  to  Detroit's  3,481.  The 
Tigers  had  26  first  place  votes. 

The  biggest  surprises  were  the 
first  place  votes  accorded  Pitts 
burgh  and  the  top  votes  cast  foi 
Philadelphia  and  the  New  York 
Giants  who  received  one  each. 


a  body  in  the  street 

a  bullet  in  its  back 

and  lipstick  smeared    ^ 

on  its  face... 


and  a 

wanton 

giggling 

girl  in  a 

torn  and 

tattered 

dress! 


iKt 


JEFF  CHANDLER  JEANNE  GRAIN  JACK  CARSON  - 
GAfL  RUSSELL  -  ELAINE  STEWART 

CinemaScoP^ 


LAST  TIMES 
TODAY 


One  of  the  rare  and  distinguished  entertainment 
achievements  ...  as  only  director  John  Huston 
could  capture  it ...  in  all  its  abundant  faith 
glowing  heart . . .  surging  power. . .  and  divine  inspiration! 


SI        G 


"HeaveiiKnows?  A  Mr. Allison' 


COLOR  hy  DE  LUXE 

CINemaScOPJ^ 


o«ccTco  av 


BUDDY  ADlER-EUGEliE  mmJoAnIfuStOn\m  lEE  ii'-'iOHN  HUSTON 


Carolina 


OPENS 
TODAY 


Prices  This  Attraction 
Adults  65c»Children  15c 


'^••».. 


i 


^  'OR) 

V^u  can  -find  mos^  anything 
.  i-f  you  know  where  to  look. 


,■•» 


A  long  time  ago  there  was  a  gTade  A  explorer  named  V.  N. 
Balboa.  Like  a  pogo  stick  with  a  hot  foot,  he  hopped  from 
place  to  place,  discovering  this  and  that. 

One  day,  paging  through  an  old  copy  of  the  National  Geo- 
graphic, he  became  intrigued  with  the  idea  of  discovering  the 
Pacific  Ocean.  He  set  sail  for  Laguna  Beach  and  landed  one 
night  in  Panama  (his  navigator  was  left-handed  and  a  little 
heavy  on  the  stick). 

Neit  morning  our  hero  found  himself  out  at  the  inn  .  .  .  and 
out  plenty.  He  was  in  a  heavy-stakes  poker  game".  Employ- 
ing an  old  gambling  custom  often  used  but  seldom  effective, 


,^««.a«  '."--r- 


.V 


ocCC^ 


Mr.  B.  got  up  and  walked  around  his  chair.  On  the  third 
time  arovmd,  Bal  espied  in  the  distance  a  strange  wet  undulat- 
ing object.  He  climbed  atop  his  chair  (it  was  a  high  chair) 
and  lo,  below  him  was  the  Pacific  Ocean.  "Man,  that  ain't 
dew,"  he  cried  aloud,  "that  is  an  ocean  of  much  magnitude!" 
^ .  .  and  instantly  spread  the  news  of  this  discovery  to  the 
world  via  the  AP,  UP  and  INS.  (The  rest  is  history.) 

Now,  it's  beyond  us  just  why  Balboa  should  receive  such 
acckdm  for  discovering  the  Pacific  Ocean,  which  every  Indian 
in  the  vicinity  worth  his  scalp-lock  knew  was  there  all  the 
time.  We  only  relate  this  story  in  a  sneaky  effort  to  get 
around  to  a  moral ...  J      I 

MORAL:  When  you  discover  Budweiser, you'll  discover  that  Budweiaer 
is  to  beer  as  the  Pacific  is  to  oceans  .  . .  the  most! 


Budweiser. 


ANHEUSER-BUSCH,  INC.    •    ST.  LOUIS   •    NEWARK    •    LOB  ANGKLBi 


.T 


A 


KING  OF  BEBRS 


m 


~-^— 


^immmmmmmfmmmi\ 


wmm 


WEATHER 

fair  and  ^»«  c<»«l  with  an  tx- 
PtH4  hi9h  of  IQi, 


e  Dailu 


^Tar  Mtti 


REVIEW 

This  w*«k's  n«w«  in  r*vi«w,  ••• 
pas*  2. 


VOL.  LVII     MO.  147 


Lomptete  uP>  Wtrt  Strvtet 


CHAPEL  HILL,  NORTH  CAROLINA,  SUNDAY,  APRIL  14,  1957 


Offieet  m  Gflum  MemofMi 


FOUR   PAGES  THIS  IS5Uf 


Hodges  Urges  Students 
To  Teach  Honor  System 

Hi;nor  Council  Chairman  Luther  lalion  Counselor   is  Tuesday.   Ap- 

iliodgcs  Jr.  Salurdaj'  urged  all  stu-  plication    fornix    may    be  secured 

dom '    to    apply    for    Orientation  irom      Graham      Memorial,      the 

Counselor  positions.  YAIC^V,  Library.  Lenoir  Hall,   arid 

Hodges,   speaking    on    behalf   of  the  Monogram  Club,  and  should  be 

the  Honor  Council,  said  the  "im-  returned  cither  to  the  Y  or  Gra- 

portancc  of  Orientation  to  the  Car-  ha'"    Memorial    an    announcement 

olina  Honor  System  can  never  be  said, 

over  estimated.  Alt  7:30  p.m.  in  106  Carroll  Hall, 

■  It   is   throujih  Orientation   that  ^'^'^^<^  ^^•^  ^'^  *  meeting  of  all  ap- 


thc  new  student  receives  his  initi- 
al, and  most  enduring,  impression 
of  that  all-important  Carolina  'Way 
ot  Life  —  our  Honor  System. "' 

He  appealed  to  studento  to 
"speak  of  the  benefits  of  the  Car- 
olina Honor  System  to  the  new 
students." 

The  Honor  System  is  something 
to  be  pr.ud  oi.  ho  said,  "but  the 
tradition  must  be  prcser\ed  by 
special  emphasis  on  the  imlividu- 
al's  rcspci.  '.ilities  to  the  student 
c(.mmiini!v. 


plicants  and  a  test  given  on  the 
material  in  the  1956  Counselor's 
Manual.  The  manuals  may  be  bor- 
rowed from  the  YMCA.  Library,  or 
Graham  Memorial,  said  the  an- 
nouncement. . 


Aycock  To  Be  Speaker 
At  Leadership  Training 


LTvC  Chancellor-elect  V»'illiam  B. 
.\ycock  will  be  the  featured  speak 
er    at    the    Student    Government 

"Our  Htinor  System  depends  on  Leadership  Ti'aining  Weekend  Sun- 
interest  and  participation."  Hodges  da\,  April  28,  at  Camp  Monroe,  it 
said,  "and  it  is  to  this  end  that  was  announced  yesterday, 
the  Orientation  Committee.  .\11  persons  interested  in  meet 
through  the  applications  of  con-  ing  ajid  knowing  more  about  the 
scientious  students,  seeks  to  initi-  new  chancellor  have  been  urged 
etc  the  cla.-s  of  196L"  '  to  attend  the  Leadership  Weekend 

The  only  way  the  Honor  System  j  during  April  27  and  2«. 
will   sur\'ive,    he   said    is   for   stu- '     Persons  who  -wiJh  to  attend  the 
dcBts  to  be  willing  "to  assume  the    Camp   Monroe   weekend   were   re- 
responsibility  of  educating  the  stu-  j  minded  yesterday  the  deadline  for 
dents  of  tomorrow."  |  returning  postal  cards  which  they 

The  deadline  for  turning  in  ap-  received  earlier  is  Wednesday,  the 
plication  for  the  position  of  Orien-  day  before  spring  vacation. 

'Place  Of  Worship'  Is  Planned 
In  YMCA  Building  For  Students 

"A  place  of  worship  for  all  stu-  Room..  Remaining  work  on  the 
dents"  is  being  planned  by  a  room  includes  painting  the  walls, 
group  of  Carolina  students  on  the   »*'"-'^»''S    and    polishing    the    floor 

second   floor   of   the   Y  buildinj?    *°^.  '"'^'"^  *°*^  painting  several 

chairs. 
Miss  Sandy  Clarke  announced  Fri-       r^u  •  •         .      l  . 

aiiuuMucta  rn       Chairs  were  given  to  the  project 

'*^-'"  W  the  University. 

Mis-  Clarke  spoke  for  the  group       When  asked  bow  the  plan   got   .. 
wftiking  on  the  w:u»- i^om..  She  started   Mfss  Clarke  sald^-  scver^  ^'"'^.'^  scrytce,  w^  iyflUulKd i«r , the 


New  Government 

AxMMA.    Jordan— (AP)—Abdel 

Halun    Nimr,    strong    man    of    the 

I  Nationalist  Socialist  Party,  formed 

a    new    government    last    Saturday 

night  ending  the  longest  crisis  in 

(Jordan^s  hij.ory. 

•  The  three-day  crisis  had  brought 
an  armored  regiment  in  from  Syria 
and  touched  off  anti-American 
.<lemcnstrations  in  this  capital. 


300  In  34th  Drama 
Festival  Last  Night 


FESTIVAL 
CONCLUDED 


Atomic  Explosion 

W.\SHLNGTON  —  (AP)  —  The 
-Vtomic  Enery  Energy  Commission 
(AEC)  said  Saturday  Russia  set  ofl 
another  nuclear  test  explosion  yes- 
terday —  the  fourth  in  10  days. 

Chairman  Lewis  L.  Strauss  of 
the  AEC  made  the  announcement 
in  a  two  sentence  statement  which 
gave  no  indication  of  the  size  of 
the  blast. 


An  estimated  300  amateur  actors 
and  stage  personnel  from  across 
the  state  took  part  in  the  Carolina  ; 
Dramatic  Association's  34th  an-  - 
nual  fc^vival  here  last  night  with  j 
the  presentation  of  four  palys  and  ■ 
announcement  of  award  winners.    I 

The     festival     was     highlighted 
after    a   three-day   program   of  24  j 
plays     representing     the     winning 
one-act    productions    from    disU'ict  I 
festivals    throughout    the   stale    by  1 
the    presentation    of    awards    last  I 
night  by  Dr.  Gordon  Blackwell,  di- 
rector of  the  Institute  for  Research  ' 
in  Social  Science  here. 


Meeting  Places  for  Addresses 
Has  Been  Changed  To  Carroll 


Hall  each  night  during  the  forum. 
Professor  William  Geer  will  lead 
a  group  discussing  "The  Chri:,tidn 
Faith  and  Academic  Morale"  in 
203  Carroll  Hall,  The  Christian 
Faith  and  Sr>cial  Morality"  will  be 


Coeds  Model  Spring  Fashions 

Spring  fashions  around  the  Carolina  campus  are  modeled  by 
these  coeds  from  Chapel  Hill.  They  are  (left  to  right)  Miss  Stuart 
Pendergraft,  showinq  a  fashionable  cotton  for  afternoon  and  inform- 
al evening  oarties  and  dates;  Miss  Nancy  Royster,  displaying  a  silk 
bouffant  dress  accented  with  matching  jacket  and  hat,  to  be  featured 
in  the  Easter  Parade;  Miss  Sandra  Kednocker,  modeling  her  sailor 
girl  sheath  for  all  campus  and  class  activities  and  Miss  Ka  Smith, 
wearing  sports  plaid  bermudas  and  contrasting  shirt  that  can  be 
worn   at  the    beach   or    for   athletic   events   on   campus   . 

Post  Office  Here  Feels 
Effects  From  Argument 


Small  Earthquake 

DALY    CITY.    Calif.  —  (AP)  — 
Another     small    x^arthquake    after 
shock  occurred  Saturday  apparent 
ly   centering    chiefly    in    parts    ot 
Daly  City. 

It  caused  little  aiarm  and  no 
evident  damage,  police  reported. 
Several  householders  said  their 
chandeliers  swayed  slightly  after 
the  quake  at  about  5:20  a.m. 


The  recent  national  controversy 
between  Postmaster  (Jeneral  Ar- 
thur E.  Summerfield  and  the  House 
Appropriations  Committee  was  felt 
in  Chapel  Hill  yesterday  when  de- 


Censorship  Reimposed 

CAIRO.  Egypt  — (AP)—  Egypt  has 
reimposed  censorship  on  outgoing 
radio  broadcasts.  A  formal  notice 
posted  Saturday  in  the  office  irom 
which  c.-uch  broadcasts  are  made 
said  all  scripts  must  be  submitted 
to  a  censor. 


"Who  Are  These  Christians?" 
will  be  the  topic  of  the  first  ses- 
sion of  the  Campus  Christian  Coun- 
cil Spring  Forum  beginning  here 
tonight  at  8  p.m.  The  meeting  place 
for  the  main  addre.-ses  of  the  for- 
um has  been  changed  from  Me- '  the  subject  of  discussion  in  the  Li- 
morial  Hall  to  Carroll  Hall  Audi- '  brary  Assembly  Room.  Roy  Rod- 
torium.  i  gers  will  lead  the  discussion. 

Dr.  •  Waldo  Beach,  platform  j  Sam  Magill  will  lead  a  discus- 
speaker  for  the  forum  on  the  sion  group  on  "The  Christian  Faith 
theme  'The  Christian  Faith  —  and  Campu.>'  Politics"  in  Roland 
Protest  and  Affirmation,"  will  Parker  Lounge  No.  3.  Dr.  David 
open  the  three-day  program  with  Basile  will  be  the  leader  of  the  dis- 
a  talk  dealing  with  several  pseudo- j  cussion  concerning  "The  Christian 
In  addition  to  rating  for  over-  Christian  views  prevalent  on  camp-  Faith  and  the  Honor  Code"  meet- 
all   performance,  the   Betty  Smith   us  such  as  "Biole  thumbers"   and   ing  in  300  Carroll  Hall. 

Award-  for  the  two   best   original ;  "Churchgoers. '   He   plans    to    end;     71,^  yMCA  LibraiT  will  be  the 

scripts  and  the  Pearl  Selzer  Deal  \  tonight's  address  with  a  prctinta- '  meeting  place  for  a  group  discusJi- 

Award  for  the  best  religious  play  tion  of  the  true  meaning  of   the  j^g  ...xhe  Christian  Faith  and  Kc- 

were  presented.  |  Christian  faith. 

Four  plays  by  city   high  school  |     The  forum  will  deal  in  general 

drama  groups  were  presented  last ,  with  the  modern  students  protest 

night.     They   were    The    Goldmas- ;  of    seeming    perversions     of     the 

quers    of    Goldsboro.    performing  '  Christian  faith  as  is  should  be.  Dr. 

"The  Sheriff.  •  directed  by  Clifton   Beach    will    follow    up    tonight's !  Kane,    president    of    the    Campus 

Britton;     The     Advanced     Players   talk  with  an  address  on  "What  Do  j  christian  Council,  will  preside  over 

from    Meyers    Park    High    School.  •  They      (Christian..-)      More      Than' 

Cj;iarlotte  in  "Sotoba  Komachi. '  di-  i  Others?"  tomorrow    night.   In  this 

reeled  by  Fred  Sitton;  Rocky  Mount !  second   platform  topic.   Dr.    Beach 

Senior     High,     directed     by     Ada   plans  to  deal  with  the  relationship 

Hobbs    in     "Fog    on    the    Valley";    of   "being"    and   "doing"    and   the 

and  The  Central  High  School  Play- ;  subject  of  motivation. 

ers   of  Charlotte   in   "The   Imagin 

ary     Invalid,"     directed     by    Jack 


ligious  Apathy."    Dr.  George  Tay- 
lor will  lead  this  discussion. 

Dr.  William  Poteat  will  intro- 
duce Dr.  Beach  in  tonight's  first 
session     of     the     forum.     William 


asked    all    students    interested    in  students  recognized  the  need    for 
helping   the  committee .  finish  the   such    a    place    of    worsltip.    "The 
project  to  call  her  at  the  Tri  D*Ua  campus  needj  a  focal  point  and  I 
Hi'use  or  to  leave  their  names  at   know  of  no  better  one." 
the  Y  office.  Besides   Miss  Clarke    and  Gillis 

Norman  Gillis  is  building  an  al-  the  group  includes  Miss  Janet  Har- 
tai  and  cross  for  the  room,  which  pei.  Miss  Kathy  Websster,  Bert 
is  located  in  the  old  Town  Girls'   Warren  and  Pat  Leonard. 


entire  day 

Effects  from  the  post  offije-bud- 
get  jquabble  will  continue  to  be 
felt  throughout  the  week  on  a  less 
noticeable  scale,  however.  Begin- 
ning tomorrow,  the  local  post  of- 
fice will  keep  its  windows  open 
8^'s  hours  (from  9  a.m.  to  5:30 
p.m.). 

Postal  officials  here  announced 
this  .schedule  will  be  in  keeping 
with  Summerfield's  diVective  which 
went  into  effect  mid-night  Friday. 
They  further  indicated  the  cut 
actually  entails  only  30  minute.s 
from  the  regular  schedule  for  this 
time  of  year. 

Those    area.,'   to    be    effected    by 
Kai   Jurgensen,   of  the   staff   of!  College     this     year.     Betty     has  the  Postmaster  General's  directive 
the      Carolina     Playmakers     and  appeared  in  four  of  the  five  Play-  pridav  included: 


Teamsters  Gather 

GALVESTON,  Tex.  —  (AP)  — 
pr£Lvails  OBi&be  iugmig»  -ol  the  stormy  Team- 
sters' Union,  headed  by  Dave  Beck, 
gather  here  .Monday  for  a  closed- 
door  strategy  conference  to  map 
the  course  of  the  investigation- 
buffeted  labor  giant. 


TO  BE  MAY  8-10: 


Jurgei 


•-A' 


insen  Announces 
Cast  Members  For  Play 


Dramatic   Art  Dept.   at   UNC,   has  makers    productions    so    far    this 
announced     the    cast    for     "Peer  |  yeai ,  and  was  director  of  the  Pet- 
Gynt".  which  he  will  direct  for  pro-  j  ites     Dramatiques     theater-in-the- 
duction  in  the  outdoor  Forest  The-  <  round  production  of  "Caligula", 
atre.  May  8.  9  and  10.  The  Button  Moulder  is  to  be  por- 

The    new   version   of   the   Ibsen   trayed    by  Al   Gordon   of  Greens- 
play  is  Jurgen.  jn's  own  adaptation   boro.     Gordon    is    known    for    his 


1 — A  halt  in  window   service   in 


all  post  offices  on  Saturday. 

2 — No  delivery  of  mail  on  Sat- 
urdays except  special  delivery. 

3 — Reduction  in  the  collection  of 
Saturday  mail  to  the  limit|;.4  sche- 
dule   which    normally 
Sunda.N^s. 

4 — Keeping  windows  open  only 
3*2  hours  per  day  Monday  through 
Frida.N . 

5 — An    embargo,    starling    April 

29,  on  third  cla.ss  mail  and  an  end 

to  the  .ale  of  postal  money  orders. 

Although       Summerfield       was  Student   Party 

granted  $41  million  of  the  §47  mil-  The  Student  Party  will  meet  to- 
lion  he  originally  requested,  he  has  ,  morrow  night  in  the  Roland  Park- 
indcated  his  intention  to  persist  to  er  Lounge  of  Graham  .Memorial  for 
hold  out  for  the  ifull  "and  neces-  the  purpose  of  making  appoint- 
sary"  amount.  ments    to    party    committees,    ac- 

cording   to   party    chairman     Whit 

CLASS   REUNION  Whitfield. 

Five  class  reunions  will  be  held  Whitfield  said  the  meeting  will 
in  connection  with  the  annual  be  an  important  one.  He  urged  all 
alumni  day  at  the  UNC  School  01  members  to  attend. 
Medicine    on    Thursday.    Reunions 


Wernette. 

Earlier  in  the  day.  the  Campbell 
College  Little  Theatre  from  Buie's 
'  Creek  presented  "Four  on  a 
I  Heath."  directed  by  Charles  M. 
Billings;  Alpha  Psi  Omega  of  Ap- 
palachian State  Teachers  College, 
Bi)onc.  played  "My  Last  Duchess.  ' 
directed  by  Roberta  Hamilton;  and 
The  Guil'ord  College  Revelers  un- 
der the  direction  of  Donal  D. 
Dcagon  played  "By  Judgment  of 
Court.  ■ 

Saturday  morning  was  devoted 
to  a  business  meeting,  theatre  arts 
exhibit  and  a  curriculum  confer- 
ence. Samuel  Selden,  director  of 
the  Carolina  Playmakers.  led  a  dis- ; 
cus.^'ion  session.  Association  Presi- , 
dent  Jack  Wernette  of  Charlotte 
presided.  [ 

At  the  conclusion  of  ttie  pro- 
gram last  night.  Dr.  Gordon  Black- 
well  was  to  announce  receipients 
of   certificates    of    merit    and    the 


Dr.  Beach's  final  address  will  be 
"What's  The  Use  of  The  Church?" 
Tuesday    night.    This    will     be    a 


this  evening's  session. 
Donn    Wells,    chairman    of    the 

planning  committee  for  the  forum. 

will  be  presiding  tomorrow  night. 

Bob    Young,    former    president    of 

the  student  body,  will   preside   in 

the  final  session  Tuesday  night. 
A  worship  service  will   be  held 

in  Gerrard  Hall  Monday  and  Tues- 
treatment  of  the  purpose  and  min-  \  day  at  1  p.m.  as  a  part  of  the 
istry  of  the  Church  in  the  Christ- ,  forum.  These  45f-minute  medita- 
ian  life,  according  to  Dr.  Beach.  |  tions  will  be  led  by  Rev.  Maurice 
The  Chrij-tian  faith  will  be  re-  Kidder  of  the  local  Episcopalian 
lated  to  several  areas  of  campus  Church  and  will  emphasize  the  af- 
lite  in  a  series  of  discussion  groups  firmative  aspect  of  the  theme. 
foUouuag  tba  addresses  in  CaLrroU.  (See  MEBTtNG  PLACES,  page   t) 

Four  Non-Residents  Will  Head 
Women's  Dorms  For  Next  Year 


of  Rocky  Mount,  social  chairman. 
Nurses"  Dorm:  Mi  .-j  Jo  .\nn  Sow- 
ers of  High  Point,  vice  president, 
Gail  McCuiston  of  Burlington,  scc- 
retarj-:  Peggy  Brown  of  Hickorj-. 
treasurer  and  Dewey  Dance  of  Fay- 
_'tteville,  social  chairman. 


will  be  held  by  the  clas.ses  of  1907, 
1917,    1927.    1937    and    1947. 


He  said  a  social  function  for  the  special  awards.  Award  winners 
party  members  would  come  under  will  be  listed  in  a  forthcoming  an- 
di.-.'cussion.  nouncement. 


Oi    his    and 
translation. 


Robert    Schcnkkan's 


characterizations  in  "Ondinc",  "A  i 
Midsummer-Night's  Dream",  "Sev-  i 

In  the  role  of  Peer  Gynt  will  be  enteen ",  "Blood  Wedding".  "Desire 
Ken  Lowry  of  Trov.  Qhio.  a  Chi  |  Under  the  Elms.",  and  other  play^- 
Psi  senior  majoring  io  English.  l»'  the  Playmakers,  as  well  as  his 
Lowry  has  spent  the  past  two  sum-  performance  in  Cherokee's  "Unto 
vmitrs  working  in  summer  stock,  These  Hills  . 
and  has  appeared  in  such  Playma-  S^l^eig,  Peer's  faithful  sweet- 
kers'  production.-  as  "The  Rain-  heart,  will  be  played  by  Martha 
maker",  which  toured  the  South  ^^o"se  of  Chapel  Hill,  who  appear- 
last  year,  "Seventeen",  "Desire  !  ed  in  the  Playmakers'  "Showboaf  1 
Under  the  Elms",  and  most  re-  and  "B.lood  Wedding",  and  has' 
ccnlly  'Stranger  In  the  Land".       I  presented 

Cast  as  Aase,  Peer's  mother,  is 
Miss  Betty  Jinnette  of  Goldsboro 
A  transfer  student  from  Woman's 


GM*S  SUTS 


The  follcrwins  MHvHtM  *r* 
Kheduled  f*r  Graham  Memerial 
today: 

Young  Friends,  f:4S-t1  a.m., 
Qrail  Room;  Quakers,  11  a.m.-l 
p.m.,  Grail  Room;  AlfMia  Kappa 
Rsi,  3-4  p.m.,  Grail  k—m,  Roland 
Parker  1,  Roland  Ptrktr  2;  Gold- 
en Fleoco,  10  a.m.-12  p.m.,  Grail 
Room;  Wostminstor  Fellowship, 
9:30 10:45  a.m.,  Mland  Parker 
1;  Community  Church,  11  a.m.- 
12  p.m.,  RoMnd  R«rker  1;  New- 
man Club,  7«9  p.mt.  R*l«nd  Per- 
icer  1  and  2;  Pr«sbyterian 
Church,  9:30-11  ».9lu,  Roland  Par- 
ker 2,  3  and  RofHiaivMia  Room; 
Campus  ChHstiaA  Cevncil,  9- 
1C:30  a.m.;  Community  Church, 
11  a.m.-12  p.m.  Rendezvous 
Room. 


several  voice  recitals. 
The  Greenclad  will  be  Mis.i-  Aman- 
da Meiggs  of  Moyock,  who  toured 
;  this  year  in  "Androcles  and  the 
Lion"  and  danced  in  "Brigadoon"'. 
!  The  Mountain  King  will  be  acted 
by  David  Small  of  Morehead  City, 
j  baritone  in  "Showboat".  "Seven 
I  leen"  and  "Brigadoon"  and  lion  in 
j  "Androcles  and  the  Lion". 
I  James  Sechrest  of  Thomasville 
'  will  play  the  groom,  Miss  Mary 
I  Vann  Finley  0?  Chapel  Hill,  In- 
'  grid;  Stan  Shaw  of  Hamilton,  Ohio, 
j  the  boy  who  is  knocked  down; 
I  Gene  Parsons  of  Chapel  Hill, 
!  Groom's  -fat&er;  Miss  iterbai-a  Bat- 
I  tic  of  Miami,  Fla.,  groom's  moth- 
j  er;  Ru-.iell  Link  of  Jamaica,  N.  Y., 
I  Solveig's  father;  Miss  Barbara 
I  Zwahlen  of  Chapel  Hill,  Solveig's 
mother  and  Miss  Hope  Sparger  of 
'  Scarsdale,  N.  Y.,  a  woman. 
;  Others  in  the  acting  cast,  besides 
I  the  dancers,  ore  Bob  Ketler  of 
;  Wyncote,  Pa.;  Phil  Williamson  of 
j  Wilson  and  Misses  Judith  Jarman 
I  and  Joan  Jarman  of  Durham:  Vir- 
;  ginia  O'Sullivan  of  Valhalla,  N.  Y. 
I  and  Loui.,'?  Whatley  of  Chapel  Hill. 


Four  out-of-state  coeds  and  three 
Tar  Heels  will  serve  as  presidents 
of  the  seven  women's  dorms  for 
next  year. 

The  new  dorm  heads,  who  were 
recently  elected,  are  Misses  Caro- 
line Brown  of  Wilmington,  Mclver: 
Barbara  Miles  of  Burlington.  Nurs- 
es' Dorm;  Marjorie  Holland  of 
Lumberton,  Spencer;  Pamela  Jew- 
ett  of  Woodbridge.  Conn.,  Kenan; 
Ann  Morgan  of  Charleston.  W.  Va.. 
Smith:  Pat  Anderson  of  Crete.  111.. 
Carr  and  Martha  Parshley  of  Glas- 
tonbury. Conn..  Alderman.  Other 
new  fform  officers  include: 

Mclver:  Misses  Joyce  Alligood  of 
Washington,  vice  president;  Phy- 
llis Maultsby  of  Mebanc.  secretary; 
Julia  Kamme  of  Oxford,  treasurer; 
Betty  Recce  of  Lincolnton,  social 
chairman:  Flo  Davenport  of  Co- 
lumbia and  Adcilaide  Schncll  of 
Pinebluff,   house  council. 

Alderman:  Missc  Susan  Maybue 
ot  Fort  Lauderdale.  Fla.,  vice  presi- 
dent; Judith  Robbins  of  Laurelton. 
N.  Y.,  secretarv"  Amoret  Bell  of 
Lewisburg,  W.  Va..  treasurer  and 
Harriett  Schafer  of  Mount  Air?-,  so- 
cial chairman. 

Smith:  Misses  Nancy  Jernigan  of 
Dunn,  vice  president:  Joyce  Bryant 
of  Corinth,  Mass.,  secretary  and 
Fay  Jenny  of  Charlotte,  social 
chairman.     , 

Carr:  Misj.is  Sue  Ballcntinc  of 
Hamlet,  xice  president;  Carolyn 
Hofler  of  Gatesville,  secretary  and 
JuJu  Stokes  of '  Hertford,  social 
chairman. 

Spencer:  Misses  Carolyn  Warren 
of  Winchester,  Tenn.,  vice  presi- 
dent; Marian  Harris  of  Engelhard. 

secretar>';  Glerida  Caldwell  of  Hie-   p,    Honigmann   is    a    book.    "Cul- 
kory.  treasurer  and  M^ry  Proctor  .^yre  apd  Personality,"  published  m 

1954. 


Dr.  Honigmann 
Wins  Fulbright 
Research  Grant 

A  Fulbright  Research  Grant  lot 

cultural    anthropological"    investi 

gatiohj     in     Pakistan     has     Ix-ci. 

awarded  to  Dr.  John  J.  Honigmann. 

UNC  professor  of  anthropolus>"- 

The  research  a.s  /ciale  in  the  in- 
.stitute  for  Research  in  Social 
Science  here  will  spend  nine  mon- 
ths in  Pakistan,  ou  leave  of  absence 
granted  by  L'NC.  b<'ginnin;i  in 
September  of  this  year. 

A  large  part  of  Dr.  Honigmanns 
research  will  be  carried  out  m  the 
Pakistan  state  of  Swat  and  other 
parts  of  the  Himalayan  foothill 
country. 

Di .  Honigmann.  who  received  his 
B.  A.  degree-  in  1942  from  Brook- 
lyn College.  Brooklyn.  N.  Y..  and 
his  Ph.  D.  from  Yale  in  1947.  came 
to  UNC  from  New  York  Universi- 
t\,  where  he  wa^'  assistant  profes- 
sor in  anihropology  and  sociology. 

He  held  a  similar  post  earlier  at 
Washington  Stale  College,  and  was 
an  assistant  professor  in  sociologj' 
and.  aiithropologj-  at  UNC  prior  to 
elevation  to  full  professor  in  1956. 

.Ain^ng  numerous  publications  by 


Recording  Gift  Inspected  By  Wynn 


A  25  album  library  of  classical  recordings  was  given  to  the 
UNC  Dept.  of  Radio,  Television  and  Motion  Pictures  by  the  Nerth 
Carolina   Broadcasting    Foundation   last  week.   Earl  Wynn   (rifht),  di- 


rector of  the  UNC  Communications  Center,  is  shown  inspecting  one 
of  the  records.  Frank  Jarman,  Durham  radioman,  made  the  pre- 
-sentation. 


Douglas  To  Talk 

William  O.  Douglas,  associate 
justice  of  the  Supreme  Court,  will 
speak  in  Duke  University's  Page 
Auditorium  Tuesday  night  at  8:30 
p.m. 

He  will  speak  on  "Russian  Jour- 
ney," t>a.:>ing  his  address  on  person- 
al experiences  on  his  travels  be- 
hind the  Iron  Curtain.. 

His  talk,  open  to  the  public  with- 
out charge,  will  be  illustrated  m  ith 
slides  which  will  be  shown  by  his 
wife. 


The  professor  is  a  member  »l 
the  American  Anthropological 
.\:5sn..  .'\merican  Assru  for  the  Ad- 
vancement of  Science,  .and.  the 
Society  of  Sigma   Xi. 


IN  THE  INFIRMARY 

Students  in  the  infirmary  yes- 
terday included: 

Misses  Elizabeth  MacKay  and 
Carolyn  WiM  and  Roy  Cashion 
•nd  Rrant  Nath. 


^Aai  TWO 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


SUNDAY,  APRIL  14,  \H7 


REVIEW: 

CAMPUS 


PERSONALITIES  OF  THE  WEEK: 


-'b 


STATE 


^ 


WORLD 


Miss  Dot  Pressley:  Dual  Leader 
Don  Furtado:  Energetic  Spokesman 


Edifbrial  Synopsis: 
People  And  The  Week 


"hx'i'iy    nru'    tnoveinenl   or   nuniijrstaliou    of    Inniinn 
at  tix'itw  u'/u'ii  iniffnniliar  to  f)fof>h^'s  initifls.  i\  Mitr  to 
he  tnisundfrstood."  .  .  .  /.(twayd  Carptntfi. 
last   utek.  rhfie  was  a  tmn-ovei   in  student  adtninistra- 
tion.    Vhc  Order  «)J  the  (ioUlen   Fleece  ie<(><»iii/ed  students 
who   ('enionst rated      exiellenie "    throughout    the   past   veaf. 
New  olfiecrs  assumed  the  helm." 

.\cwl\-inaui;nrate(i  Fresideiu  Sonny  Kvans  iee<)j»ni/ed 
two  e\tieniely  inipoitain  ohjettives  lor  which  student  gov- 
cinnient   uuisi   siri\e  next   \l-a\\ 

Kstahlishinent  ol  a  permanent  director  lor  om  strident 
union  would  he  a  greatly  needed  improvement.  Such  a  di- 
rector toiild  make  loni>  ran^e  plans,  provide  continuity  and, 
in  fjeneial.  ;^row  and  de\elo|> — were  he  a  ytumo  and  ener- 
getic   indi\ichial — with   the  union. 

Formulation  ol  a  prospt^tirs  l«>r  the  proposed  new  iniion 
is  also  an  admirable  goal   for  \\hich   to  strixe. 

But  the  creation  ol  new  and  adecpiate  parking  facilities, 
we  contend.  w<jidd  he  the  'most  far-reathing  achievement" 
that    student   govennneni   coidd    make   next    year. 

Students— Iresh men  and  sopJioniores  without  "C"  aver- 
ages—aie  ciirreiuly  being  deniecf  the  privilege  of  keeping 
an  automobile  on  campus. 

Student  government,  under  the  able  leadership  of  Presi- 
dent Hob  \oiuiiJ.  took  an  admirable  and  respcmsible  staaici 
in  leconnueuding  sue  h  limitation  before  the  administration 
stepped  in.  Bin  the  iniderstanding  was  that  this  limitation 
and  inuiesiral)1e  piohibition  was  to  l>e  onlv  a  temliorary 
one. 

The  multiplicitv  of  student  natfic  courts  and  ccjinmit- 
tees.  the  distress  and  inconvenience  of  sttidents  and  the  dif- 
ticiiliv  imposed  upon  sometimes  oNer-eagef  in  the  matter 
of  tickets  icjwii  police  coidd  all  be  alleviated  and  removed 
bv  additional  parking  l<ns  already  planned  bv  the  I'nivers- 
itv   Ktigineeting  Dept. 

President  K\aus  })roj>)sed  implementation  of  the  plan  for 
new  ofl-campris  parking  lots  dining  the  campaign.  He  pro- 
|K>.sed  lo  tinancc-  construction  of  such   lots  in   this  manner: 
(i)    rhvmvril  ■inuneciiate  l>orrowii\g  of  funds  from  avail- 
able sources.  ' 

-     (3)  With  refiavment  of  sticli  a  loan  on  a  jtell-liquidating 
basis  through  utilization  of  registration  fees  on  cars, 

•  •, 

Suez,  Trouble;  Queen, 
Furor:  World's  Week 

Bob  High 

On  the  world  news  from.  Ki»ypi.  Israel.  Britain.  France 
and  (he  I'liitcd  States  are  liaving  their  troubles  with  the 
problem  of  the  Suez  Canal  and  tlie  Acjaba  Bay  area. 

F.gypt  still  refused  to  niake  any  concessions  to  the  free 
world  on  the  use  of  the  international  waterway  and  Nasser 
seenx*  to  think  he  holds  tlie  high  cards  if  a  conference  on 
the  siiua-tion  is  called. 

Saudi  Aralj^i  has  announced  that  it  will  n(»t  let  Israeli 
shipping  |jass*<hrough  the  (itdf  of  Acjaba.  This  stateyient 
was  prompted  by  the  American  tankei  Kern  Hills  going 
thiough  the  gulf  to  deliver  oil  from  Iran  in  Kilat.  Israel 
last  week. 

There  has  l>een  contiinnms  fighting  over  and  in  the  (ia/a 
Snip  for  tlw  jxist  two  weeks  and  this  week  was  no  exce|>tion. 
Rej>orts  of  infiltrators  were  announced  dining  the  last  few 
days  and  reports  of  casualties. 

Here  at  home,  the  fight  o\er  ci\il  rights  has  begini  and 
the  House  Rides  committee  li;is  said  it  will  consider  a  bill 
on  the  touchy  cjuestion  iimnediately  after  the  Faster  recess 
and  predictcci  approval  of  the  measure.' 

.\t  the  leQutst  of  King  Hussein.  Premier  Suleiman  Na- 
bulsi  and  ti|>  jjro-F.gyjJtian  government  resigned  Wednes- 
dav.  Friday,  ^ii  a j)|H^ned  the  forming  of  a  new  Jordanian 
governtnent  \%i\\  fall  iiHo  the  hancLs  of  Nabulsis  associate, 
.\  I  »de  1  H  at^ai, ;  N  i  u  i  r . 

A  .New  ¥f»^  newspaperman  was  convicted  of  contempt 
of  Congress*^^"  r^l using  to  name  his  one-time  (loramunist 
asscKi;  res.  .MB^h  Whitman  i-dmitted  he  had  beeiik  a  mem- 
ber of  the  Omnmunist  Partv.  but  lefused  to  name  others 
he  knew  as  C.crtmmniists. 

Post  office^,  all  across  the  nation  will  be  c  losed  on  the 
weekends  froof  now  on.  unless  Congress  gives  Postmaster 
(ieneial  Siiimnerfield  and  his  department  more  money  to 
operate  and  cjUptinue  their  services, 

if:  it 


The  official  stiildeiit  publication  of  ttie  Pubfications  Board  of  the 
University  of  North  Carohna,  where  it  is  published  daily  except  Mon- 
day and  examiQ9.tiQii  and  vacation  periods  and  summer  terms.  Entered 
as  second  class  matter  in  the  post  office  at  Chapel  Hill.  N.  C,  undM* 
th,e  act  of  March'  8,  1870.  Subscriptic^r  rates:  Mailed,  $4  a  year,  $2.50 
per  semester;  delivered,  $6  a  year,  $3.50  a  semester. 
Editor  _  ^ NHL  BASS 


Manaj^ng  Editor 


CLARKE  JONES 


Staff  Writers  ..  Neil  Bass,  Nancy  Hill,  Jackie  Haithcock, 

Anthony  Wolff  ;^and  Bob  High. 


Pringte  Pipkin 

Being  elected  secretary  of  the 
student  body  is  just  one  of  sev- 
eral of  Oot  PressJey's  major  ac- 
complishments during  her  years 
of  college. 

At  Peace  Junior  College.  Ra- 
leigh, Dot  was  president  of  the 
freshman  class  and  the  next  year 
president  of  the  Honor  Court. 
By  her  classmates  she  was  chas- 
en  Miss  Peace,  the  student  best 
representing  the*  ideals  of  Peace 
College  and  was  named  the  most 
outstanding  student  in  her  class. 
The  choice  seems  to  have  been 
a  good  one.  At  Carolina.  Dot 
soon  distinguished  hei-self.  In 
the  fall  she  was  elected  social 
chairman  of  the  junior  class. 
She  is  now  a  member  of  Wo- 
men's Residence  Council  and 
serves  on  the  Graham  Memorial 
board   of  directors. 

Dot  is  a  member  of  Alpha  Del- 
ta I*i  sorority  and  is  correspond- 
ing secretary  for  that  organiza- 
tion. Early  this  year  Dot  went 
lo  Sarah  Lawrence  College  on  an 
exchange  program.  During  the 
past  week  she  has  been  taking 
care  of  the  2  girls  from  Sarah 
Lawrence  now  visiting  the  Uni- 
vereity. 

Although  Dot  is  the  only  Uni- 
versity Party  executive  officer 
to  be  elected,  she  said  of  her 
present  relationship  with  the 
other  student  government  exec- 
utive officers.  "Were  no  longer 
UP  or  SP:  were  student  body 
officers." 

The  Student  Constitution 
state.*!  that  the  secretary  "shall 
maintain  all  records  and  files  of 
the  student  body  and  shall  ay- 
range  for  a  permanent  preserva- 
tion of  its  archives." 

"As  I  see  it  I'm  supposed  to 
know  everything  about  anything 
on  the  campus."  .she  said  with  a 
smile.  Dot  feels  that  the  secre- 
tary must  be  able  to  tell  the 
President  nearly  everything  he 
wants  to  know  about  meetings, 
problems  and  future  appoint- 
ments. 

She  feels  that  the  secretary 
whose  desk  is  just  outside  the 
president's  door  will  have  to  be 
able  to  answer  a  whole  lot  of 
Cfuestions  which  would  otherwise 
have  to  be  directed  to  the  presi- 
dent. 

"To  me  being  in  the  student 
government  office  is  just  like 
being  in  the  heart  of  Carolina, 
and  I  look  forward  to  seeing  all 
the  people  come  in  and  out  of 
the  office."  she  commented. 

Although  Friday  was  the  first 
day  of  official  work,  .she  has 
been  working  and  getting  ori- 
ented in  the  office  since  Jackie 
Aldridge  had  to  resign  in  early 
April:  in  order  to  begin  practice 
teaching. 

This  summer.  Dot.  who  is  ma- 
joring in  sociology,  has  won  a 
.scholarship  to  study  in  New 
York.  She  is  not  yet  sure  whsft 
courses  she  will  be  taking. 

However,  if  you  meet  Dot  on 
the  campus,  you  probably  won't 
hear  a  single  word  about  her  ac- 
complishments, for  with  them 
she  also  has  a  fitting  sense  of 
modesty. 


Neii  Bass 

A   serious-minded  3'oung   man 
with   a   destiny — Don   FSirtado. 


A     combination     scholftf 
leader — ^Don    Furtade. 


and 


MISS  DOT  PR^f^Y 
net<7  secre 


DON   FURTADO 

)U'w  vice  president 


Tornadoes,  Salaries, 
Grants,  State's  Week 

A  loiecast  tiKir  went  out  c-ai  ly  this  week  warning  of  jx>s- 
sible  tornadoes  in  .\oiih  Caiolina  came  true  Monday  night 
when    several    tornadoes,   or   one    that    jumped 


aicunid,    hit 
ni   .Sotiihc-stfiM    .\oiih  Caiolina. 

At  le.jM  lour  peisons  were  iep<iried  dead  awd  an  unknown 
mnnber  nijnied  when  the  whirlwind  hit  in  Sampson.  Scot- 
i.tnd.  Robeson.  Bladen  and  Brunswick  comities  at  appro.vi- 
mately   1  1   p.m.  .Monday. 

In  the  stales  educational  circles.  Duke  Tniversity  early 
tliis  week  recei\ed  giants  totalling  Syb.ti.y)  from  the  Ford 
honndaiioii  and  the  I'niversitv  of  .\orth  Carolina  received 
a  giant  of  ,Sf,2  7.ooo. 

Dukes  grants  were  alienated  to  the  l)e|)t.  of  Kccuumiics 
and  business  .\dministiafi(ni  and  the  Political  Science 
Dept. 

The  Carolina  grant  will  cover  a'  live  to  six-vear  period 
and  will  be  used  lo  find  irew  appioaches  to  urban  giowth 
and  development  jnoblems  in  this  area  for  the  next  L'o 
years. 

(iov.  Luther  Hcnlges  Monday  raised  hopes  in  .North  Cat  - 
c»lina  ptd)lic  schools  when  he  recommended  a  ir,  per  cent 
hike  in  teachers  salaries  lor  the  new  budget.  Hcniges  also 
reconnnended  an  i  1  j)er  c  em  raise  for  rniversity^faculty 
members. 

A  resolution  urging  Congress  to  pjuw  a  law  lecpiiring  to- 
bacco mannfac  fillers  to  label  their  products- as  to  whetlier 
they  contain  "lionKigeni/ed.  reconsiiinted  or  synthetic  to- 
bacco" was  killed  bv  the  House  Jndic  iarv  commiuee  Thurs- 
d.'iv. 

•Also  on  I'Inusdav  the  House  enacted  into  law  a  ineasme 
designed  to  bolster  literarv  tests  for  \oting  preregistration. 


Glowing  but  appropriate  de- 
scription, most  feel,  for  the  new 
student  body  veep. 

Don.  who  is  only  a  sophomore, 
has  a  list  of  acccmipli^ments 
and  offices  which  would  ordi- 
narily supercede  those  of  a  gra- 
duating   senior.    These    include: 

Presidency  of  the  sophomore 
class.  legislature  member  and 
present  speaker,  membership  on 
the  Ccmsolidated  University  Stu- 
dent Council  and  Graham  Idem' 
orial  Board  of  Directors,  secre- 
taryship of  his  freshman  class — 
all  these  and  inclusion  on  the 
Dean's  List  for  his  three  semes- 
ters running. 

Don  hails  from  the  coastal 
plains  of  North  Carolina,  a  little 
town  called  Garner.  He  likes  to 
say  that  Raleigh  is  near  Garner. 

Those  who  know  Don  i%g&rd 
him  as  a  semi-taciturn  guy  who 
speaks  with  a  (itiiet  voice  but 
means  what  he  says. 

Apparently  Don  is  heading  for 
big  things.  A  majority  of  the 
voting  student  body  looked  with 
approval  at  his  assets  during  the 
recent  election.  He  now  holds 
the  important  speaker's  spot  in 
the  Student  Legislature — a  spot 
vacated  by  newly  elected  Presi- 
dent Sonny  Evans.  Thus  it  seems 
a  logical'  spot  from  which  stu- 
dent body  presidents  move.  Next 
year? 

Don's  immediafe  plans  alter 
graduation  have  been  formed  by 
the  United  States  government. 
He's  on  scholarship  with  the  Na- 
val ROTC. 

As  for  more  far-reaching 
plans,  Don  say^^  he  wants  to  and 
anticipates  enrolling  in  the  Uni- 
versity Law  School  after  a  three- 
year  tour  with  the  United  States 
Marines. 

As  speaker  of  the  Student 
Legislature,  Don  may  claim  au- 
thority to  speak,  himself,  for  a 
representative  cross-section  of 
the  campus.  He  is  a  member  of 
Phi  Gamma  Delta  fraternity  and 
a  resident  of  Mangum  Dorm. 

In  his  campaigns  for  political 
and  non-politiciil  offices  and  po- 
sitions on  campus,  Don  has  nev- 
er lost.  Thus,  assuredly,  he  may 
be  cl&ssifned  a  winner  without 
doubt. 

The  stars  seem  to  forecast 
much  for  Don  Furtado.  His  back- 
ground is  excellent  toward  prep- 
aration  for  later  endeavor. 

Those  students  who  know  Don 
would  certainly  project  an  opin- 
ion with  the  stars. 

The  University,  most  would 
say.  does  itself  well  to  claim 
among  it«  numbers  such  leaders 
as  Don  Furtado. 


Inauguration,  Budget, 
Tapping:  Campus  Week 

Mancy  Hill 

Student  government  got  off  to  a  fresJi  start  this  week  as 
old  leaders  turned  over  their  desks  to  new,  and  recognition 
was  awarded  both  in  the  tapping  of  the  Goldeu  Fleece. 

Thirty  men  were  tapped  into  the  l^niversity's  highest 
men's  honorary  Monday  night  at  the  annual  Valkrie  sing. 

Among  them  were  newly  elected  Student  Body  President 
Sonny  Evans,  oMtgoing  Student  Party  Chairman  Sonny  Hall- 
ford,  next  year's  Orientation  Chairman  J^try  Oppenheimei 
and  new  Men's  Honor  CkHinci)  head  Genr^  Ragsdale. 

Others  inducted  were  Dr.  William  Poteat,  Whose  resigna- 
tion from  tlie  l-'niversity  faculty  was  liiinoimcred  Tiiesdav, 
Jonathan  Daniels,  editor  of  rhe  (Raleigh)  IS^^  and  Ob- 
server, former  VSQ  1  librarian  Louis  Round  Wiison.  dram- 
atist Foster  Fitz-Simmons,  alumnus  Robert  F.vans,  now 
studying  at  Oxford  University,  England,  and  Paul  Creeii, 
plrywright.  * 

Students  tapped  into  the  order  included  Ed  Sutton,  Fd- 
die  Bass,  Tommy  tLcarns,  John  Sneden,  William  Pate,  Len- 
nie  Rosenbhith,  Paul  Stj-assler,  Robert  Patterson,  James 
Beatty,  Jo^hn  Ludwig,  James  Chamblee,  Pete  Brennan,  Zane 
Pargle.  H-arry  Whitelock,  Joe  Quigg,  Lutfaer -Hodges  and 
Bob  Cunningham.  ,       ** 

Tapped  with  the  varsity  basketball  tearft  tVere  Coaches 
Frank  McGuire  and  James  A.    ("Buck")  Freeman. 

On  Tuesdav  morning  came  the  annoimcement  ot  the  res- 
ignation of  Dr.  William  Poteat  after   13  years  at  Carolina. 

Dr.  Poteat  resigned  to  accept  the  Clinton  S.  Oninn  Chaii 
of  Theology  and  Christian  Criticism  at  Episcopal  Seminary 
of  the  Southwest  in  Austin,  Texas.  His  resignation  will  be- 
come effective  Sept.  1. 

Poteat  stated  that  while  !ie  is  offered  "generous  iridnce- 
ments  at  the  Texas  school,  his  reason  for  leaving  the  Uni- 
versity is  "the  expanding  economy  of  the  mind,  with  an 
open  frontier  on  which  to  work.  This  is  the  attraction  to  me, 
in  the  last  analysis.  "  ^ 


Regret  at  Poteat  s  leaving  was  voiced  by  Ch.irtcellor  Rob- 
eit  House,  who  said,  "I  hate  to  sec  him  go.  Ife  has  been  » 
verv  valuable  man  in  the  L^niversiiy  and  I  wish  him  wel 
in  his  new  situation.  " 

Anot^ier  big  question  was  raised  this  week  bv  the  North 
Carolina  legislature.  Will  tuition  for  out-of-state  students 
here  be  raised?  The  ConsolidatH  Universitv  came  out  in 
opposition  to  the  measure  in  a  statement  Tuesdav  bv  C  U 
President  William  C.  Friday.  7     >      •    • 

Fridny  said  that  if  he  were  given  the  opportunity  to  ap- 
pear before  the  Appropriations  Committee  to  -which  the 
bill  was  referred  "the  University  administration  will  oppose 
the  proposal."  ' ' 

The  measure,  if  passed,  would  laise  tuition  for  out  of 
state  students  .$200,  from  S5oo  to  S700. 

Starting  the  new  student  government  vear.  ihe  Student 
legislature  sat  m  special  session  Tue.sdav  night  to  approve 
a   budget  of  $114,369.90.  ^^ 

nrM^^  L^^T"  ^"'  ''^/i''  "^'^'  ^"^S«»  ^^ent  to  Graham  Metn^- 
orial  which  received  S.U..825.  Next  in  line  were  the  V.ick- 
ety-^ack  and  The  Daily  Tar  Heel,  receiving  %2R.o'and 
:i23.ooo..|o,  respectively.  "  -^'^ 

An  announcement  came  Wednesday  th.it  classes  will  be 
dismissed  VVednesday.  May  8,  for  the  Inaugum.^n  of  W.> 
ham  C.  Friday  as  Consolidated  University  president.  The 
jnauguranon  will  take  place  at  Reynolds  ciliseum  in  Ra- 

..  j.''\;;^»^^^  M"^«""n  t'^ok  precedence  in- the  campus  mind 
a.gain  Wednesday  when  workers  met  with  the  dinhv^  halls 
director  George  Prillaman  and  administrative  officials  in 
an  efft»rt  to  clarify  differences  l)etween  the  workers  and 
Prillaman. 

Rt^presenting  Hit  administration  at  the  meeting  in  Pea- 
bodv  Hall  were  Dr.  W.  D.  Perrv,  dean  of  the  Universitys 
division  ostmlenr  affairs.  Director  of  St«d«£  Activities 
Sam  .NfagilUand  Miss  Edith  Winslow  of  the  student  aid 
<iept. 

Tliougll  The  Daily  Tar  Heel  was  detned  admission  .0 
the  meeting  on  rhe  grounds  that  students  might  not  feel 
as  free  to  speak,  it  u-as  stated  later  that  thv  administration 
favored  revision  of  the  present  system  for  renumeration  of 
uorkcrs. 


I  WCKJLDN4T 
DO  IMT.  PAL 


JUST  GETALITTU: 
CLOSER  -no  DAT 
SLEE.DJW'  BEAUTV- 


»     ZE  V/ATCH  IS  IN  HIS    -^ 


*       •       • 

Miss    Winslow    reportedly    stated    that    the   dining   halls 
Uenoir   is  of  greater  importance   than 


policy   of   work 


mmtrf*-  well,  »  kept  m 

ENP  O'TH'  BAR,GAIN.f'- 
ITOLD  VA  v/HERE  THE 
\MATCH  IS//-TH'  REST 
jlSUPTO  VOO  ff- 


academic  phases  of  student  activitV  is  in  dire<n  opposition 
to  the  aims  ot  the  University 

d.v^nll!^'!'"?^'^'?'*  .John   Brooks  were  named  Wednes- 
day night  to  head  the  Student   Partv  until  electi* 

Whitfield  defeated  Gary  Greer  for  the  chairmanship  of 

.  ,  .  ^  ^^-"^s  elected  to  the  vice-chairmanship 

by  acclamation.  '^ 


tions  next 


the  party.  John  Brooks  was  elected 


JZ'*f  *^*''"'^"^  !vas  named  winner  of  the  .057  Mangum 
award  for  oratory  ,n  judging  Wednesday  night,  \fonteith 
spoke  on  "Canaan  Land.' 


Poge 


BvWdtK^tty 


Night  Editor 


Guy  Ellis 


Prool  Beader 


MAnley   Springs 


New  Student  Government  President  Sonny  Evans  Thurs- 
day night  cited  cooperation  as  the  key  to  "any  success"  stu- 
dent government  jvill  have  in  his  inaugural  address 

Evans  praised  the  administration  this  year  of  liob  Young, 
and  cited  the  problem  of  a  studem  union  as  one  of  the  most 
important  /act ng  the  campus  and  the  new  administration. 

Evans  said.  I  believe  that  the  most  far-reaching  achieve- 
ment that  student  government  ca^  make  next  year  is  work- 
ing With  the  director  in  the  preparation  of  a  prospectus  for 
a  new  butiding,  ' 

Other  problems  on  which  his  administration  will  act  he 
said,  are  student  cimpus  parking  violations,  funds  for' re- 
pair of  dormitory  television  sets,  physical  education  require- 
ments for  veterans,  and  reduced-rate  date  tickets  for  home 
ball  games. 

.Vnd  the  week  ended  with  the  prime  social  event  ol  the 
Carolina  spring  season,  the  thinl  Germans  concert  and  dance 
of  the  year. 

Heading  the  list  of  performers  at  the  event  were  the  Four 
Freshmen,  Paula  George,  and  the  band  of  Ray  Eberle. 

The  Fieshmen  and  Ray  E\>er\t  performed  yesterdav  af- 
ternoon to  a  packed  audience  in  Memorial  Hall.  I^ist  night 
they  performed  for  the  formal  Germans  dance  in  Woollen 
Gym  from  8  p.m.  to  niidiiighL. 


I 


SUNDAY 
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Neuly 
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SONbAV;  AMUL  U,  1^ 


THE   DAILY   TAR  HEEL 


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New  Officers 

Phi  Delta  Kappa^  jjaiiopjil  honj 
orary  frateniity  for  men  in  educa- 
tion, elected  offic'vs /or  the  com- 
ing year  andinitu|&i^20-n«w-mcm> 
bers  at  a  meetinf^  Thursday. ' 

Newly  elected  officers  are:  Wil- 
liam G.  Kornegay  of  Warsaw,  pres- 
ident; Paul  B.  Walter  of  Ashville, 
vice  pre.'ident;  and  David  J.  MicU 
dletoh  of  Warsaw,  secretary-trea- 
surer. 


And  Members  J 

Herbert  Brantley.   Cliude  Brooks, 
Eppie   Cox.    Bruce    Davis,    Elwood ' 
'  Dale  Davi&.  Zane  E^  £ar{(le,  bving 
Glover,*  Homer   Hopkins,    Kenneth 
Jordan.   Jay   Kline,   Jack  Luttrell, 
Paul     Peeples.     John     L.     Porter, 
'  Charles  Rierson  Jr.,  Richard  Rog- 
;  ers.     Peter     Whittaker    Jr.,    Billy 
*  Yates,    James    Young,    Jack    Chat- 
ham and  Johrr  Burt. 


JOCKEY  UNDERWEAR 

AVAILABLE  AT 

fiERMAN'S  DEPT.  STORE 


DAILY 

ACROSS 

1.  Fairy  queen 
4.G4rtr 

nickname 
T.  Beleaguer* 

ment 
%  Swiftly 

n.  T.  s.  — k 

author 
tftExclaim* 
cncerinfiy 
14.  Valuable 

metal 
19.  Man's 

nickname 
IT.  Cut 
i8.Agitle 
20;  Sodium 
(•ym.) 
21,  A»clent 
Jewish  tffm 
ofrcpro*^ 
2^  A  lever 
27.  Rub  out 
2*.  Wcb-footM 

bird 
:•.  More 

qualified 
32.  Pocnur 
13.  Proootur 
t4.8ectletto(   ■" 

CMcAffo 
M.  Aatcaiak 
Itt.PerfflMn 
40.  Letter 
43,Aiucioutf 
49.  Hume  —  >n 
airplane 

47.  Fiah  net 

48.  Southeast 
wind 

49.  Strange 

50.  Arid 

DOWN   ; 
1.  Chlaeae 
noodlea 


CROSSWORD 


3.  Species  of 

pep|>er 
41  Invalid's 

food 
S.  Epic 

poetry 
«.  Prison 
(G.B.) 
T.  Place 
S.  River  (AsU) 

10.  Asians 

11.  Landed 
properties 

t4.  Speck 
18.  A  strong 

woody  fHier 
1».  Wit 
21.  Rejecter 


22.  Beards 

23.  Feline 

25.  Deck 
(naut.) 

26.  Seed 
vessel 

28.  Lam. 


prey 

31.  Pole 

35.  Per- 
co- 
lated »etBrd«r'«  Aatwee 

37.  Exchange        41.  OatricWika 


premium 
38.  Wrest 
40.  PoUtical 
party 
(Eng.) 


bird 
42.  Ljirge 

worn* 
44.  A  sea 

46.  Pronoun 


of  Jewish  life."  he  said.'  |  and   through   their  "fmisie  come   to 

'Tt  is  most  inter^tine  t(^  listen  swne  understanding  of  the  role 
to  work  by  men  lil^e  Bloch,  Mil-  their  Jewiifhness  plate  in  their  liv- 
haud,  Ravel,  Berristeih,  and  others,    es  as  creative  arti^^'  he  said. 


SERVE  YOURSELF— 


BUFFET 


EVERY  SUNDAY 
J- 

5:30-7:30  P.M. 


At  The 


RANCH   HOUSE 

HOME  OR  CHOICE, HICKORY-SMOKED  CHARCOAL  BROILED  STEAKS 


Pi  Kappa  Phi  Rose  Ball  Sponsors 


Sponsors  for  the  annual  Pi  Kappa  Pht  Ro«e  Ball,  held  this  week- 
end, are  top  row  (left  to  right)  Miss  Claire  Pike,  Fremont,  wil'h  Ed 
Mackie,  secretary;  Miss  Jeannette  Buhl*r>  Miamt,  Plav,  wtth  Hatiry- 
B.  Smith,  historian;  Miss  Carolyn  Bennett,  Wadesboro,  with  Georse 

HILL  HAPPENINGS: 


Gangsters,  Shipwreck 
And  Informal  Parfies 

By  SUE  ATCHISON  mans. 

THE  "GANGSTERS'  AND  "GUN       THIS    HAS    BEEN     PROVINCE 

MOLLS"     seen     on     campus     last  I  Convention  weekend  for  the  Kap- 

night  were  the  Phi  Kappa  Signvasjpa  P.;i's.  Representatives  of  chap- 

and  their  dates  on  their  way  to  the  \  ters  from  Wash.,  D.  C,  West  Va., 


gangster    party    at    the    Phi    Kap, 
house.   A"  combo  was  on   band   to 
add  to  the  atmosphere  of  the  un- 1 
derworld  motif. 

THE     UTTLE     RED     SCHOOL-; 
HOUSE  was  the  scene  of  the  Kappa  ] 
Sigma's     Bermuda 
night.  The  'Topn" 


Va.,  S.  C,  and  Ga.  have  been  meet- 
ing here  this  weekend  to  discuss 
fraternity  business,  but  have  man- 
aged to  find  a  few  free  minutes 
for  informal  parties. 

AN    INFORMAL,     PAJRTY     oomr 
party     Friday  |  plete  with  combo  was  held  at  the 
were  on  hand    Beta,  house  Friday   night.  Ycstcr- 
i  to  provide  the  music  for  the  even-'  day    they    continued    to    celebrate 
ing.  with    a    cocktail     party,     and    the 

Yesterday  afternoon  following  -Quarter  Notes"  were  on  hand  to 
the  concert  they  entertained  with  provide  music  for  thcxve  who.want- 
an  informal  cocktail  party  and  cd  to  dance.  Today  they  will  con- 
buffet  supper.  Later  in  the  even-  j  elude  the  weekend  with  an  inform- 
ing   they    attended    the    Germans ,  al   party. 

dance.  I     THE  CASTLE  IN  DURHAM  was 

THE  PHI  BELT'S  got  into  the  the  scene  of  the  Chi  Psi's  dinner 
spirit  of  the  weekend  with  a  party 
Friday  night  at  their  house,  an- 
other party  at  their  house  yester- 
day. Today  they  are  going  to  bring 
the  weekend  to  a  close  with  an 
other   party  at  Hogan's. 


Anderson,  archon  and  Miss  Pat  Anderson,  Crete,  III.,  with  Joe  Ben- 
nett, warden.  Bottom  row  —  Miss  Barbara  Herr,  Long  Island,  N.  Y., 
with  Glenn  Holt,  treasurer  and  AAiss  Jo  Carpenter,  Thomasville, 
with  Ted  Richardson,  chaplian. 

> 

Music  Program  Tomorrow  Night 

The  second  program  in  the  Hill- 
el  Foundations  fifth  annual  festi- 
val of  Jewi.>"h  music,  scheduled  for 
8  p.m.  tomorrow  night  and  Tues- 
day night,  is  entitled  "Jewish 
Themes  by  Jewish  composer!--." 

The  program  will  be  presented 
over  the  University's  F'M  radio  sta- 
tion, WUNC,  at  8  p.m.  both  nights. 

Joel  Fleishman,  UNC  graduate 
student  in  law,,  has  made  the  selec- 
tions and  arranged  the  annotations 
for' both  part.^  of  the  programs. 
Mrs.  Marian  Rosenzweig  will  be 
narrator,  according  to  an  an- 
nouncement. 


"  In  commenting  on  this  program, 
Rahbi  Efraim  Rosenzweig,  director 
of  the  Hillel  Foundation,  stated: 
"There  are  of  course  some  inter- 
esting questions  involved  in  a  pro- 
gram of  this  sort.  What  is  a  Jew- 
ish theme?  Does  a  composition  on 
a  Jewish  theme,  by  a  Jewiarh  com- 
poser, constitute  Jewish  music? 

"I  suppose  that  some  kind  of  an 
answer  lies  in  what  a  Jewish  com- 
j  poser  feels  about  his  Jewishness 
I  as  a  factor  in  his  creativity.  Then, 
!  too,  the  Jewish  quality  of  the 
1  theme  may  actually  reside  in  speci- 
I  fie  melodies  identified  with  aspect* 


Elizabeth  Arden's 

Great 
Classic  Fragrance 


Flowep  Mist 

T  se  this  pure,  refreshing 
fragrance  as  lavishly  as  vou 
please  .  .  .  for  it  is  the  light 
version  of  one  of  the  world's 
great  classic  Perfumes. 

Blue  Grasx  F/oiiw  Mist, 
4oz §2.00;  So:...«  3.50. 


Cosmetic  Dept. 


LiteratMre 
AirdO^Gold 

Fot-  obvious  reasons,  your  old  book- 
seller would  be  the  last  to  claim 
that  clothes  make  the  man,  nor 
for  all  its  plumage  does  he  prefer 
the  song  of  the  toucan  to  that  of 
the  plain  old  mockingbird. 
Never-the-less  he  has  a  sneaking 
sympatliy  for  those  collector.^-  who 
like  their  chosen  authors  in  hand- 
some bindings.  There's  something 
about  the  gleam  of  gold  on  old 
leather  that  is  warming  to  the 
heart. 

The  old  book  collector,  unlike  the 
bird-watcher,  can  have  music  and 
plumage,  too.  For  example,  as  we 
write,  there  is  a  ver\'  handsome 
voJume  of  Longfellow,  gold  and 
leather,  and  priced  at  just  $2.50. 
A  beautiful  leather-bound  copy  of 
Roger's  The  Scottish  Min.vtrel  is 
in  a  shelf  near-by,  and  the  price 
tag  is  $6.00. 

Old  books  are  here  today  and  gone 
tomorrow — and  you  can't  order 
more.  Tomorrow  these  particular 
books  may  be  discovered  by  some 
lucky  collector.  Bui  tomorrow — 
ah,  tomorrow  treasurers  undream- 
ed may  appear!  '., 
Keep  your  eye  on  the  Old  Book 
comer,  pal.  Don't  miss  yoiu-  parti- 
cular prize! 

The  Intimate 
Bookshop 

205  E.  FranWrm  St. 
Open  TiU  lO  F.  M. 


ESSO    RESEARCH  works  wonders  witK  oil 


Smoother,  quieter  flight 


party  Friday  night.  Last  night  after] 
Germans  they  had  a  combo  at  the 
lodge    to    provide   ithe    music    for 
their  party.  > 

LAST  MONDAY  THE  TEP'S  had  J 
a  party  and  a  double  celebration 


"A  SHIPWRECK"  was  the  theme  |,pj,g  p^^^y  ^j^  ^J^  honor  of  the  in- 
of    the    Phi    Gams    party    Friday  j  .^.^^.^^     ^^    ^^^    ^^^^^^    ^^^    ^^e 
night  .Last  night,  however,  the  m-                                                              . 
?o?mal    style    was    reversed     and  1  election  of  Sonny  Evans  as  pres.- 
everybody  went  "formal'  to  Ger- 1 dent  of  the  student  body. 


Covering  The  Campus 


NEWMAN   CLUB 

The  Newman  Club  will  meet  to- 
day at  6:30  p.m.  in  the  new'  Catho- 
lic Chapel  on  Gimgoul  Road.  There 
will  be  a  buffet  speaker.  Ail  mem- 
bers and  Catholic  students-  have 
been  urged   and  invited  to  attend.  , 

WEStMINSTER  FELLOWSHIP         I 

A  series  of  small  Bible  study 
groups  will  discuss  the  Resurrec- 1 
tion  at  the  Westminster  Fellow-  j 
ship  at  6  p.m.  tonight.  The  study  j 
will  be  led  by  Mr.  Bacon,  pastor  j 
of  the  First  Pre.vbyterian  Church  ] 
here.  Supper  will  be  served  at  6 
p.m.  and  "all  interested  persons  j 
have  been  invited  to  attend.  ' 

WESTINGHOUSE  AWARD 

Lester   EJugene   Waters,   an   ac-  ' 
counting  major  in   the  School  of 
Business  Administration,  has  been 
awarded      the      Westinghouse 
Achievement  Scholarship  for  1957. 

Dean  Maurice  Lee  announced  the 
awarding  of  the  $500  grant  to  Wa- 
ters, who  has  the  highe^'t  cumula- 


CLASSIFIEDS 


TEACHERS  WANTED:  MAN  TO 
assist  in  coaching  football  and 
baseball,  Public  School  Music 
Teacher,  Seventh  and  Eighth 
Grade  Teachers.  Contact  the 
Principal.  Mebane  High  School, 
Mebane.  N.  C. 


DRIVING  TO  ANN  ARBOR,  MICH., 
for  Easter  holidays.  Need  riders. 
Call  Fred  Powledge,  8  8602,  any- 
time. 


tive   average  for  juniors  enrolled 
in  the  Business  School. 

GEOGRAPHY    PROFESSOR 

Dr.  George  B.  Gressey  of  Syra- 
cuse Univerjity  will  give  a  public 
lecture  Tuesday  at  8  p.m.  in  112 
New  East  on  the  subject  "Problems 
and  Prospects  in  Southwest  Asia. ' 
Dr.  Cressey  is  the  Maxwell  Profes- 
sor of  Geography  at  Syracuse  and 
is  sometime:.-  called  "the  Dean  of 
j  Asiatic  geographers."  He  has  writ- 
j  ten   numerous  books   on   the  ^eo- 
'  graphy  of  that  area. 

I  MODERN  LOOK 

I     "A  Modern  Look  at  the  Richar- 
dian  and  Marxian  Systems"  is  the 
I  topic  to  be  discussed  here  Tuesday 
;  by   Professor  Paul    A.    Samuelson 
I  of  the    Ma--3achusetts  Institute  of 
I  Technology  Dept.  of  Economics  at 
4  p.m.  in  Carroll  Hall.  Professor 
Samuelson  will  lead  a  business  and 
economics  seminar.    Students   and 
faculty  in  the  School  of  Business 
Administration   have  been  invited 
to  attend. 

AFCW  DELEGATE 

The  Athletic  Federation  of  Col- 
lege Women  will  hold  their  nation- 
al   conference    starting    tomorrow! 
through  Thursday    at  the  Univer- 
sity of  Nebra  ■'.:&  in  Lincoln.'  Mis;*  | 
F  ranees  Reynolds,  sophomore  fi'Qjn  j 
Newton,,  will  be  the  delegaleirom 
UNC.  The  purpose  of  the  AFCW 
is  to  further  athletics  interests  and 
activities    throughout    the    United 
i  SUtes. 


You're  aloft,  in  a  Viscount  hut  you  d" scarcely  know  it.  So  free  from  vibration-you  can  balance  a  house  of  cards  . . . 

and  noise  seenis  left  behind.  Such  comfort  and  speed  is  made  possible  by  new,  jet-prop  engines^ 

engines  that  operate  exclusively  with  a  special  synthetic  lubricant  developed  by  Esso  Research. 

In  these  and  hundreds  of  ways-  ESSO  RESEARCH  warh  ivonders  with  aUl  ^^ '^^ 


(csso) 


FASI  FOUt 


THE   DAILY  TAR   HEEL 


SUNDAY,  APRIL  14,  19S7 


Errors  Gostly  As  Baseballers  Lose  9-4  To  Blue  Devils 


Second  ACC  Defeat  For 
UNC;  Rough  Is  Loset 


By   BILL    KING 

The  Duke  Blue  DeviLs  capatilis- 
ed  on  two  big  Carolina  errors  in 
the  seventh  inning  to  push  across 
five  runs  and  hand  the  Tar  Heels 
a  9-4  Atlantic  Coast  Conference  de- 
feat in  Emerjon  Stadium  yester- 
day. 

The  Tar  Heels  held  a  4-3  lead 
going  into  the  fatal  sixth  frame  as 
the  result  of  one  run  in  the  bottom 
01    the    fifth.    Righthander    Jim 

Bores,  Ford 
Lead  Way  In 
GGO  Tourney 

GREZXSBORO,   N.    C      (AP)   — 

Julius  Boros,  after  watching  his 
four-stroke  36-hole  lead  melt 
away,  birdied  the  la.t  hole  yester- 
day for  a  one  over  par  71  finish 
that  gave  him  a  54-hole  tie  at  206 
■with  Doug  Ford  in  the  $15,000 
Greater  Greensboro  Open  golf 
tournament. 

Boros.     Southern     Pines,    N.    C. 
professional  who  won  the  National ; 
Open  title  fiire  years  ago.  made  a 
fine  chip  and  followed  with  an  18- 
inch  putt  for  a  birdie  four  on  the 
final  hole  to  move  into  a  tie  with  | 
Ford,    whom   be    had.  replaced   as : 
the  leader  Friday. 

Ford,  playing  from  Mahopac, 
N.  v..  still  winging  after  winning ' 
the  Masters  title  last  Sunday,  had  | 
eagled  the  saro^  hole  from  12  feet : 
a  short  time  earlier  for  a  three- ; 
under  par  67. 

Boros  and  Ford  faced  a  twin ! 
foreign  threat  going  into  todays  | 
row's  final  18  hole^'.  Stan  Leonard. ' 
Lachute.  Canada.  professional. ; 
fired  a  67  and  Gar>-  Player,  youth- ; 
ful  Johannesburg.  South  Africa-.  • 
pro.  came  in  with  a  68  to  tie  for' 
third  at  207.  only  one  shot  back  i 
of  the  lead«:^. 

Mike  Souchak  of  Grossingcr's, 
N.  v..  in  fifth  place  at  209  after 
a  69  yesterday  to  trail  by  three 
shots,  appeared  in  the  best  posi- 
tion o^  the  others  to  challenge  to- 
day. 

He  was  followed  by  Trevoi 
Wilkes  of  JohanneAurg.  traveling 
companion  of  Player  on  their  ex- 
cursion to  America  which  began 
only  a  month  ago.  Wilkes  had  211. 

Sam  a&ead  of  White  Sulphur 
Springs.  W.  Va..  bidding  for  his 
third  Greensboro  title  in  a  row  i 
and  seventh  since  the  first  in  1938. 
fell  seven  strokes  off  the  pace  at 
213. 


Murals  Tomorrow 

Softball:  (4:00)  DKE  vs.  Lamb 
Chi;  SPE  vs.  Sig  Nw;  Winston  vs. 
Joynor;  (5.-00)  Z«to  vf.  K»p  Si«; 
KA  vs.  Bota;  Phi  Doit  Chi  vs. 
Law  Sch-2. 

Tonnis:  (4:00)  Zoto  vs.  DKE; 
(5:00)  Phi  Oam  vs,  Sig  Nu. 


Meeting  Places 

(Continued  /torn  Page  1) 

Local  fraternities  and  sororities 
are  holding  informal  after-dinner 
discussion  groups  in  connection 
with  the  ^ring  Forum  Monday 
and  Tuesday  nights.  Local  faculty 
members  and  student  pastors  will 
lead  these  groups  as  they  discu.ss 
varied  topic*.'  In  connection  with 
^e  theme  of  the  forum. 
BOOK  SALE 

A  special  book  t'ale  has  been 
planned  as  a  part  of  the  Spring 
Forum.  Books  'will  be  sold  in  the  Y 
lobby  Monday  and  Tuesday  from 
9  a.m.  untH  3_p.m.  These  books 
will  be  related' to  the  theme  of 
the  forum. 

Among  the, books  being  sold  are 
'Campus  Gods  on  Trial"  by  Chad 
Walsh;  "The  Superstitions  of  the 
Irreligious"  by  George  Hadley; 
and  ."Faith  and  Education"  by 
George  Buttrick. 

Many  of  the  books  featured  for 
sale  will  also  be  available  in  Wil- 
son Library,  One  of  Dr.  Beach's 
besWcnown  vrorks,  "Christian 
Khlcs,"  will  be  among  these  books 
on  reserve. 


Raugh,  who  pitched  a  creditable 
:  six  and  one  third  innings,  got  the 
I  first  batter  on  strikes  before  the 
,  Tar  Heel's  costly  defensive  lapse. 

I  With  one  out.  The  Blue  Devils 
g-Qt  rutiners  at  second  and  third. 
Pete  MajTiard  then  singled  driving 

,  in  the  tying  i*un  for  Duke.  The 
DeviL-  then  loaded  the  bases  and 

:  first  baseman  Charlie  Dunlcvy  hit 

;  a  grounder  to  Carolina  first  suck- 
er Bomber  Hill.   Hill  tried  to  cut 

i  off  the  run  at  the  plate  but  his 
throw  was  wild  and  two  more  Duke 
runners  came  across. 

With  Dunlevy   on  at  first,   and 
Andy   Cockrell  at   third   shortstop 
Lon  Bonczek  singled  to  left   scor- 
ing    Cockrell.     Leftfield     Jje 
,  Shook  hobbled  the  ball  and  Dun- 
;  levy    circled    the    base.-   with    the 
I  Blue  Devil's  fifth  run  of  the  inn- 
:  in;;.  Don  Saine  then  came  on  to  re- 
lieve Raugh  and  got  the  sides  out 
with.  Ill   further   damage. 

Carolina  jumped  off  to  a  2-0  lead 
in  the  first  inning  against  Duke 
starter  Dick  Burton;  Dob  Lewis 
and  Jjv  Shook  hit  successive  singl- 
es. Hill  then  got  on  first  as  the 
i-esull  of  au  eiror  by  Cockrell  at 
third,  and  Lewis  came  acro^y  with 
the  first  run  of  the  game.  Shook 
scored  moments  later  when  l>on 
Hill  lifted  a  sacrifice  ily  to  right- 
field. 

The  Blue  Devils  grabbed  the  lead 
trom  Carolina  in  the  bottom  of  the 
second  with  three  big  runs  and 
only  one  hit.  Burton  was  lifted  for 
a  pinch-hitter  in  the  .second  and 
lefty  I>ick  Smallwood  took  over 
the  pitching  chores  for  the  Blue 
Devils  in  the  top  of  the  third  and 
went  the  rest  of  the  way  to  pick 
up  the  victory. 

After  the  second  inning,  which 
saw  Duke  holding  a  3-2  advantage, 
the  contest  turned  into  a  fine  pit- 
ching duel  between  the  side-arm 
;  throwing  Burton  and  hard-throw- 
ing Raugh. 

Neither  team  threated  again  un- 
jtil  the  fifth  frame  aa-  Raugh  and 
!  Burton  settled  down  to  pitch  cf- 
j  fectivc   ball   for  three   innings. 

In  the  home  fifth,  Carolina  came 

'  back  to  tie  it  up  at  three  each  as 

[  ceiiterfielder  -  Dick    Hudson,    who 

'  turned    in   another   fine   perform-  j 

ance  for  the  Tar  Heels,  doubled  to 

left,  moved  to  third  on  a  wild  pitch  i 

and   scored    on    an    error   by    thei 

Duke  shortstop.  ' 

The  Tar  Heels  took  the  lead  in 
the  bottom  of  the  sixth  as  Don ' 
Hill  doubled  with  one  out  and  \ 
came  home  on  Jim  Legette's  single  | 
to  center.  Then  the  roof  collapsed  I 
on  the  Tar  Heels.  j 

The  losrf  was  the  second  in  ACC  [ 
competition  for  Carolina  and  the 
fifth  of  the  season.  The  Tar  Heels 
now  hold  a  4-2  conference  record  ■ 
and  are  9-5  for  the  season.  For; 
Raugh,  it  was  his  first  loss  of  the  \ 
\  year  against  four  victories.  ' 

I  The  Tar  lUeels  next  game  will  be 
j  against  the  Clemson  Tigers  here 
on  Wednesday. 


JIM    BEATTY    AND    DAVE    SCURLOCK 

Lead  Tar  Heel   Trackmeyi 


Spring  Planting 
Of  Shrubbery 
To  End  Soon 

Operations  Director  J.  S.  Ben- 
nett said  Friday  the  spring  plant- 
ing of  shrubbery  will  soon  be  con- 
cluded. 

He  i'aid  this  year  most  of  the 
plants  have  been  placed  around 
some  of  the  older  buildings  be- 
cause after  eight  to  fifteen  years 
the  shrubbery  outgrows  its  useful- 
ness. 

He  explained  as  shrubbery  grew 
the  bottom  part  of  the  plant  be- 
came "leggy"  and  was  no  longer 
attractive.  The  ground  crew  usual- 
ly leaves  a  bit  of  the  better  old 
shrubbery  around^ 

Thi  •  year  Bennett  said  approxi 
mately  $2000  has  been  spent  for 
shrubbery.  During  the  year  the 
trees  also  have  to  be  replaced,  con- 
trary to  popular  belief,  he  said. 

F.  J.  LeClair  is  in  charge  of  the 
landscaping  and  takes  care  of 
plants  which  the  University  buys 
in  bulk  and  then  plants  through- 
out the  year. 

It  haii  been  only  during  the  last 
few  years  that  new  shrubs  in  large 
numbers  have  been  planted  to  re- 
place old  ones.  Last  year,  accord- 
ing to  Bennett,  the  shrubs  around 


Buddy  Payne  And  Dave  Reed 
Picked  As  Football  Leaders 


Quarterback  Dave  Reed  of  Sham- 
okin.  Pa.,  and  end  Buddy  Payne  of 
Norfolk,  Vja.,  have  been  elected 
co-captains  of  the  Carolina  1957 
football  team.  Both  are  rising  sen- 
iors. 

"Reed"  says-  Coach  Jim  Tatum, 
■'should  be  one  of  the  nation's 
finest  quarterbacks  next  fall.  He 
is  an  excellent  football  player  in 
every  respect.  We  would  have  done 
much  better  last  season,  if  he  had 
been  available  to  us  throughout  the 
year.  In  our  off-season  practice 
this  year  he  seemed  even  more  im- 


Phillips    and 
reworked. 


Peabody   Hall   were 


proved." 
Reed  last  fall  sustained  an  ankl? 

injury  on  the  first  day  of  pre-sca 
j  son  practice.  He  missed  ail  of  th( 

early  work  and  did  not  sec  action 
j  until  the  third  game  with  Souti) 
•  Carolina.  He  was  used  sparing!; 
;  until  it  was  certain  he  had  fully 
1  recovered  from  the  injury. 
'  Reed  finished  the  season  as  th.-- 
j  teams  leading  pa^jscr  with  22  com 
I  pletions  in  54  aUempts  for  315 
j  yards  and  foUr>  touchdown  .  In 
I  rushing  he  gained  118  net  yard> 
j  in  58  carries. 

j      Payne  caught  five  passes  for  84 
'  yards   and  was  a  fine  all  around 

player. 


Howard  Johnson  Restaurant 

STUDENT    SPECIALS 

Barbecued    Chicken 

.s-   .  Choice  Steak  Sandwiches'^ 

2:00-    5:00  P.M 
SERVED 
DtKvcu  8:00-11:00  P.M. 

"'Landmark  For  Hungry  Tarheels" 


Trackmen  Rout  South     Carolina; 
Beatty  and  Scuriock  Lead  Way 


HilDELBER9  PROFISSOR 

Professor  Paul  Bookman  of  the 
University  of  Heidelberg  will  speak 
in  German  on  "The  Novels  of  The- 
odor  Fontane"  tomorrow  at  8  p.m. 
in  105  Hanefi  Hall.  The  Dept.  of 
Germanic  Lafiiguage.>-  will  sponsor 
his  talk.  The  ^blic  ha*  been  in- 
vited  to   hear  Dr.  Bockman  who 

teaches    'German  ],  lalerature     al 

. ,  ..  "*"    ^*-        *  •     ... 

Hetdeibers. 


Tennis  Team     i 
Beats  SC 

The  Carolina  tennis  team  won 
its  second  straight  Atlantic  Coa.^ 
Conference  match  in  as  many  days 
here  yesterday  as  it  defeated  the 
South  Carolina  Gamecocks,  8-1.      I 

This  was  the  identical  score  of! 
their  triumph  over  the  Clemson  I 
Tigers  here  Friday  and  gives  the  [ 
Tar  Heels  a  respectable  4-5  sea-; 
.-•onal  record. 

i  ! 

:     Only  Carolina's  Fritz  Van  Wink- 
1  le  was  not  able  to  come  through  t 
i  for  the  Tar  Heel  netters,  losing  his  I 
'  match  6-4,  6-1. 

The  Summary 

I  '  1 

Singles:  Bank  (C)  defeated  Gantt,  ■ 
6K),  e^;  Black  (Ci  defeated  Burns,  I 
6-0,    8-6;    Newsome    (C)    defeated 
Tuft,  6-0,  6-3;  Mclver  (C)  defeated  ' 
Haynes»6-1,  frO;  Spruell  (SC)  de- 
feated Van  Winklfe,  6-4,  6-1;  Smith 
(C)  defeated  Gregory.  3-6,  6-2,  6-1. 

Doubles:  Bank  and  Newsome  (C) 
defeated  Tuft  and  Gnatt,  6-3,  6-3, 
Black  and  Van  Winkle  (C)  defeat- 
ed Burns  and  Spruell,  6-3,  6-1;  Mc- 
lver and  Walker  (C)  defeated  Hay- 
nes  and  Gregory,  6-1,  6-2. 


I  PA1 


PATRONIZI  YOUK 
ADVillTlSERS    • 


By  DAVE  WIBLE 

Led  by  Jim  Beatty  and  Dave 
Scuriock  the  powerful  Tar  Heel 
trackmen  continued  on  the  unde- 
feated road  in  yesterday's  cold 
afternoon  with  a  lopsided  85-37  vic- 
tory over  the  Gamecocks  of  South 
Carolina. 

In  the  freshman  competition,  the 
Tar    Babies    were    victorious    with 
twelve    first    places    compared    to 
1  the  Biddies  three. 

AJl-American  Jim  Beatty  used 
'  tu&  well  developed  running  ability 
I  in  the  two-mile  event.  He  took  the 
'  lead  from  the  start  and  gradually 
built  it  up  until  he  had  lapped  | 
the  field.  He  then  a-lowed  down  to ' 
talk  to  Coach  Ranson  and  then 
went  on  to  win  with  the  very  good 
time   of   9:16.2. 

Tar  Heel  distance   man   Everett 
Whatley  who  usually  runs  both  the  ■ 
mile  and  the  two-mile,  put  all  his 
eggs  in  one  basket,  the  mile,  and 
ran  a  beautiful  4:17.  This  now  giv-  ■ 
es  the  Tar  Heels  three  men.  Beat- ! 
ty,  Dave  Scuriock  and  Whatley  who  ' 
can  riin  the  distance  under  4:20.    I 

Scuriock   ran    his   speciality   the  | 
440  twice   yesterday.    He  won   the  i 
440  run  with  a  49.2  and  he  anchor- 
ed the  winning  mile  relay  team  of 
Jim  Fox,  Tony  Arey,  and  Ben  Wil- 
liams. 
THE  SUMMARYS: 

High  Jump  —  l-Bi-yant  (C)  2- 
Lyons  (C)  3-Macedon  (SC),  5'10". 

Shot  Put— 1-Kemper  (C)  2-Jones 
(C)  3-Bartulski  (SC),  44"9". 

Miie  —  1-Whatley  (C)  2-Kahn 
(C)  3-Latham  (C),  4:17. 

440  —  l-Scurlock  (C)  2-WiIIiams 
(C)  3-Mayfield  (SC),  49.2. 

100  —  1-Varnum  (C)  2-DeCantis 
(C)  3-Thomas  frSC.  :10.0. 

High  Hurdles  —  1-Goodroe  (SC) 
2-DoBoarde  (C)  3-Sowers  (C),  14.7. 

880  —  1-Macfaddin  (C)  2-SyIve.s- 
ter  (C)  3-Kahn  (C),  2:00.3. 

Javlein  —  1-McCallister  (C)  2- 
Bartulski  (SC)  3-Maros  (SC)  194". 

220  —  1-Moss  (C)  2-Mayfield 
(SO  3-Thonias  (SC),  22.6. 

Broad  Jump  —  1-Hosemond  (C) 
2-Brawley  (C)  3-Snipes  (C).  20'6'4'. 

2-Mile  —  1-Beatty  (C)  2-Latham 
(SC)  3-Reevea-  (C),  9:162. 

Low  Hurdles  —  1-Goodroe  (SC) 
2-Lyons  (C)  3-DeBoarde  (C),  24.8. 

Discus  —  1-Roth  (C)  2-Jones  (C) 
3-Bartulski  (SC),   120'. 

Pole  Vault  —  1-Snipes  (SC)  2- 
Davies  (CJ,  3-Macedon  (SC),  12,. 

Mile  Relay  —  1-Carolina  (Fox, 
Arey,  Williams,  Scuriock),  3:30.1. 
Frnhman 

High  Jump  —    1-Shaffer  (C)  2- 
Prichett  (SC)  3-Ainslee  (C),  5'10". 
Shot  Put  —  1-Cotton  (C)  2-Raso  (C) 
3-Diggle  (SC„  42'5". 

Mile  —  1-Uipfert  (C)  2-Gore 
(SC)  3-Packard  (C),  4:25.5. 

440  —  1-Daily  (C)  2-Clames  (SC> 
56.0. 

100  —  1 -Everett  (C)  2-Prichett 
(SC)  3-Jones   (SC),   10.6. 

High  Hurdles  —  l-Glasa-cock  (C) 
2-Hudson  (SC)  3-Schenck  (C),  15.5. 

880  —  1-Chappell  (C)  2-Sirianni 
(C)  (no  time  taken). 

Javlin  —  1-0'Neal  (C)  2-Cook 
(C)  3-Prichess  (SC),  178"10".  \ 


220  —  1-E\erett  (C)  2  Jones  (SC),  j  (C)  3-Bagwell  (C).   10:12.5. 
23.6.  I      Discus  —  1-ONeal   (C)  2-Cotton 

Broad   Jump   —    1-Andrews    (C)   (C)  3-Raso  (C),  123'4". 
2-Prichett    (SC)    3-Smith    (C),   19-]      Pole  Vault  —  1-Clames  (SC).  11". 
9'j".  I      Mile  Relay  —  1-Carolina  (Chap- 

2-Mile  —  1-Gore    (SC)  2-Arthur    pell.  Liipfert,  Mann,  Sirianni),  3:38. 


rr  WILL  BE  REMEMBERED 
LIKE  'WS./UAmJ 

A  bottl*  for  survival  faw  frontiar 
•pics  can  equal! 


Carolina 


NOW   PLAYING 

n  the  magnificent 
entertainment  tradition  of 

"The  King  and  l^^The  Robe", 
'.      ,    "The  Song  of  Bernadette" 
';  ;    and "  Anastasia" 

20th  Century-Fox  Proudly  presents 

Deborah^iTaniRpbeHMUchum 


■4''  "'''^ 


V  -  '\  i. 


m 


{/ 


jS.it 


l^i 


■i'l- 


AuDiE  Murphy 

sansotionol  stor  of  "To  H«ll  and  Back" 


The  GtJNS 

or 

Fort  Petticoat 


-^^  Kithryi  Grjst  ■  Hope  Emerson  •  JeW  Deaiell 

'^\       JeaJieRo  Noim  ■  Sean  McClsnf  ■  Ernestine  W«tf« 
L.  I  TECHNICOLOR"  •  A  COLUMBIA  PICTURE 


kroM  r\rt kr  whm  oosiccn  •  hotKtt  bj  ww*  lOt.  Bf ;*n  •  Hhkm  by  CEOHGt  m*«-,hau  • » ai>owN  vM-n-:  'r.y.u.h.)' 


TODAY 

And 

MONDAY 


»< 


^ytiatFa' 


"Heaven 
Kiiows, 


m 


Allison 

CINemaScoPE 

COLOR   by    OE   LUXE 


>L«»^' 


m 


Directed  by 


Scrtenplay  by 


BUDDY  HOLER  EUGENE  FKENKE  ■  JohnHuStOR  ■  lOHN  LEE  MAHIN "  JOHN  HUSIOK 


You  smoke  refreshed 

A  new  idea  in  smoking... all-new 


.1  ?^ 


em 


'/'"I'iicco  Cov'pany. 


menthol  fresh 
•  rich  tobacco  taste 
•  most  modern  filter 


Think  of  how  a  Spring  day  refreshes  you  and  you'll  have  a  good  idea 
how  refreshing  all-new  Salem  cigarettes  taste.  The  freshest  taste  in 
cigarettes  flows  through  Salems  pure  white  filter.  Rich  tobacco  taste 
with  surprise  softness... menthol-fresh  comfort.  Salem— you'll  love  'ein, 

Salem  refreshes  your  taste 


«eM«« 


ft  ♦♦.r. 


tItRAHY 


WEATHER 

F»ir    Mid   warmer   with   mi   •*• 
P«cf«d  ht«h  el  65. 


SERIALS    DEPT. 
BOX  870 


STar  Heel 


REVIEW 

This  week's  news  in  review, 
page  2. 


VOL.  LVII    NO.   1M 


Vomviet*  (A*)  Wtrt  Strvte* 


CHAPEL  HILL,  NORTH  CAROLINA,  TUESDAY,  APRIL   16,   1957 


Ofjieu   in   Graham   Memorial 


FOUR   PAGES  THIS   IS^UI 


Training  Program 
Needs  Support 

Underlining  the  poor  response  ment  officials  for  the  coming  year 
indicated  by  student  leaders  to  will  attend." 
the  forthcoming  Stu(}ent  Govern-  Executive,  Judicial.  Legislative 
ment  Leadership  Retreat,  Student  j  and  resident  officials  are  expect 
Body  President  Sonny  Evans  is-  ed  to  participate  together  in  a 
sued  a  call  yesterday  for  more  program  wrhich  will  include  con- 
active  interest  and  participation  ;  siderations  of  many  of  the  present 
in  the  program.  j  campus  problems. 

Evans  reviewed  the  importance  The  Retreat  will  be  held  a1 
and  significance  of  the  program  j  Camp  Monroe  during  the  April 
and  urged  all  campus  leaders  as  ;  27-28  weekend,  following  the 
well  as  everyone  interested  in  stu- 1  spring  vacation, 
dent  government  to  attend  and ;  In  his  statement  yesterday, 
make  this  retreat  the  success  it  ■  Evans  went  on  to  say  that  "the 
<;hould  be.  i  response     from     student"  leaders 

"This   is  the  first   such   retreat  \  hasn't  been  as  it  should  be  and 


for    student    government    leaders 
in   a   number  of  years,"  he  said. 


if    we    stop    to    consider    its    im- 
portance, I  think  all  will  realize 


Honor  System's 
Importance 
is  Described 


•and  it  is  hoped  that  all  govern-    how  essential  the  retreat  is." 

-  ;      "One  of  the  great  problems  we 

have  faced  lor  years  in  student 
government  is  that  of  continuity; 
administrations  and  offices  chang- 
ng  in  the  spring  turnover  and  all 
philosophy  and  drive  of  tlie  past  | 
being  lost.  | 

"This  is  an  opportunity  for  all 
of  us  to  get  together,  talk  over,  I 
talk  Over  our  plans  and  program  | 
and  develop  the  proper  spirit  to  i 
carry  us  through  the  coming  year,  i 
"I    certainly    hope    that    every 
person   in   a   responsible    position ; 
next  year,  as  well  as  those  who  \ 
have  just  left  the  scene,  will  real- 
ize   the    effect   that    such    a   get- , 
together   can    have.    I   urge    each 
oi  you  to   realize   your   responsi-  ^ 
bilities  and  to  attend  the  Leader- 
ship Retreat."  | 


Outgoing  Honor  Council  Chair- 
man Jim  Exum  yesterday  describ- 
ed the  important  and  significant 
roles  played  each  year  by  fresh- 
man orientation  counselors  in 
their  function  of  introducing  UNO 
to  the  new  student  and  initiating 
him  into  'the  Carolina  Honor  Sys- 
tem. 

Exum  put  his  approval  to  the 
work  being  done  by  the  Campus 
Orientation  Committee.  He  fur- 
ther MTP'^.d  all  potential  counselors 
apply  fur  one  of  the  many  posi- 
tion:  siill   open. 

Prospective       counselors       will 


Carse  Is  Appointed 

i  • 

To  Replace  Riebel 


Civil  Rights 

WASHINGTON  —  CAP) 
Senate  Judiciary  committee  put 
off  action  on  the  civil  rights  is- 
sue again  yesterday,  but  Chair- 
man Eastland  (R-Miss)  said  it 
probably  would  begin  considering 
the    legislation   April   29. 

Eastland  wouldn't  predict  when 
the  committee  might  take  a  vote, 
but   Sen.   Neely    (D-WVa)    offered 


New  YMCA  Associate  Director 
Will  Assume  Duties  On  July  J 

Jim    (Skip)    Carse,    now  attend-    YMCA.   announced   yesterday. 

ing  Yale  Divinity  School,  will  re- 1      Carse    will    assume    his    duties 

place   John    Riebel    as    YMCA    as-    July    1. 

I  sociate    secretary,   Claude    Shotts,        Riebel    resigned    several    weeks 

,^^  I  general    secretary     of     the     YW-    ago  in  order  to  work   in  physical 

""■  j  therapy  at  Duke  Hospital  in  Dur- 


ham. His  resignation  was  effec- 
tive the'  end  of  March. 

Riebel  served  here  as  associate 
director  of  the  Y  for  six  years. 

Carse  will  graduate  from  Yale 
Divinity  School  in  June  with  a 
B.D.  degree  and  three  years 
WASHINGTON  —  (AP)  —  The    training  as  a  YMC.\  .secretary. 

He  attended  Northwestern  Uni- 


House  Okays 
41  Million  For 
Post  Office 


an   estimate   that  it  never  would. '  ^^^^^  approved  an  extra  41  mil 

Neely.'    who    supports    the    pro-    ''°"    dollars    for    the    Post    Office  versity    for    three    years.    1950-53, 

posed   legislation    said   that  if  ac-    Department  yesterday   in   a   move  where   he  enrolled   in   the   School 

tion  depends  on  'what  the  commit- .  ^°  ^^^  ^"^^^^  restoration  of  normal  of  Speech.  He  played  football  and 

I  tee   does    "you   are   going   to   get    '"^'^   services.                              *       |  participated  in  other  sports  there. 

Th»  students  shown  abov*  changing  classM  w  II  get  a  week's  break  from  the  routine  starting  to-   j  ,„^„_„„;    „„    ;.,^«_„„,   ^„„  „                The   deficiency   bill   was   passed  In    1954    Carse    graduated    from 

on   a   voice   vote  and   sent  to   the  Ohio   Wesleyan   with    an    A.B.   de- 


Only  One  More  Day 


morrow  when  spring  holidays  begin.  The  vacation  period  will  officially  begin  at  6  p.m.  tomorrow 
and  will  end  Tuesday,  April  23  at  8  a.m.  when  students  wiK  once  again  find  themselves  on  their  way 
to  classes. 


Student  Party  Nam^s 
Committee  Chairmen 


Beach  Definos 
Religion  For 
Forum  Crowd 


judgment   on   judgment  day.' 

Two   motions  were  reported  ,to 
have    been    made    at    yesterday's    Senate,   which   may   act   on  it  to- ;  gree  in  English. 

closed    session,    with    neither    of      ^^^  ; 

them  coming  to  a  vote.  Sen.  Hen- 1      Postmaster     General     Summer- 

nings    (D-Mo)    offered    a    mfition    ^'^^'^    ^^^     announced     he     won't 


to  take  a  vote  on  May  6  and  Sen.    start   to   restore   the   service  cut 
Ervin  (D-NC)  offered  one  to  post-    ^^^cks  until  President  Eisenhower 

\  signs  the  legislation  and  Summer- 


Massey  Given  Surprise  Concert 


-♦     With  a  post-election   mood    pre- 


"Your  religion  is  whatever  you 
would  riot  for!" 
vailing   among   the    members,   the       This  was  part  of  the  definition  \  decraring"she"intend7"to  stay"put 
Student   Party   met    last    night    to    of    religion    given    by    Dr.    Waldo 
vote   on   committee    chainnen   up-    Beach     as    he    opened    the    first 


The    Four    Freshmen    gave    an    their  smallest  audience  on  record. '  pointments  and  to  consider  chang-    session    of   the   Campus    Christian 


Goettingen  Applications 
Must  Be  Turned  in  Today 

i  pone  consideration.                             '  signs  mc  i«:gi:>iaiiun  ana  aummer-  Goettingen    Scholarship   applica' 

j                Q-           I      fkiATO                '  ^^^^^     ^     certain     he     will     have  tions    are    due    in    the    tffice    of 

j               Mays  in  NAIVI               |  enough  money  to  maintain  normal  Claude   Schotts   by   3   p.wi.   today, 

OSLO.    Norway— (AP)— Norway    (jpgrations    through    June    30,    the  according     to     an     announcement 

i '!';!l?*!.  fJ.Tlf  _!"!!,-_  IT!^^^^^  ;made    yesterday    by    the    Foreign 

Post  office   officials   today   esti-    Exchange   Scholarship   Committee. 

mated  the  department  saved  about        Selection    of    next    years    Goet- 

in   NATO.  She  said  great  powers    ^^^    million    dollars    by    the    cur-    tingen   scholar  will   be   made   the 

such   as  the  Soviet  Union  can  do  ^g.^^^j^j^   ^^   service   on   Saturday    week    following    the    spring    hoU- 


meet   at    7:30   p.m.    today   in    106  j  impromptu      concert      over      the       In    addition    to   their   successful  es  in  the  party  bylaws. 
Carroll     Hall.     Orientation     Com-  j  weekend   for  what   was    probably  appearance  at  the   German   Club 


mittee     Chairman    Jerry    Oppen 
beimer  joined  Exam  in  uri^ng  HI 


.         .    _.  „        J  ^         Presiding  a..' chairman  of  a  part>    ;«       ,  .  lu '»     •     ..«ru      *  — 

■  concert   and   dance  Saturday,   the   „^„„„,   .^  .h»   fir.t   Hn,»    whu    ^P^aking  on  the  topic     Who  Are 


»c:^iu,,    u.    u.e   campus    .„r..ua„ ,  ^^^^    ^^^^^   relieving   world    ten-;    ^^s^,„^ 
i  Council     Spring     Forum     Sunday ;  ^.^^^  ^na  aunaay. 

night   at   8    p.m.    in    Carroll    Hall.  ;      premier  Einar  Gerhardsen  pub- 


days,  the  announcement  said. 


:^.:^";^,^,,.2Z':;^  air-^^o.^..*,,-' nL^Lz^'^'^^-i^-i-i^ij:^!^.;-^ 


meeUng  for  the  tet   time.   Wbll    Xt.    "r-hl,,!.."      n        ..^h  i ''^'''''  '  ""»  "»"■"  ■*■"'   '"  ** 
..-,..     ....  .    These     Christians?  ,     Dr.     Beach    ...^_    „,    e».^-»   D.<.»i^.    xiso»ioi 


held    that    a    person's    relision    is 


letter   of    Soviet   Premier    Nicolai 


BuUanin  received  March  21.  That 
letter    threatened    atomic    destru^ 


1  'y. 


UNC    literary    magazine,    for    formance  made  Saturday  night. 

Thanks    to   Zeta    Psi    fraternity 


pUcaikHU-  end  ^remiiided    all    po-!    0|Mfl  for  Applications       '  audience  ot.w»e.  *^*  following  committee  chairmen;^^^  ^^j^^  ,^  ..^^^  ^^^  ^^  ..^^^ 

leiitial    counselors    to    attend    the        q     ....    .   -t„dent».  either  arad-       Charles  Knox  Mas.s^y.   confined  Membership:     Jennie     Margaret    life    and    that   you    take    with    the  ;  j.^^  for  Norway  in  case  of  war  if 

meeting  tomght.                                    uafe    or   undergradt^^^^^^                     i'^  ^^e  ho^it.l  with  a  broken  leg,  Meador    and    Frank    Brown;    Pro-    utmost  seriousness."                           !  ^^^            ^.^  j^^^O  to  locate  guid- 

m      his     statement      *«»terday.  |  ««« ^^   unaer^^^^^^^                              ^^^    ^^^   ^.^^^^^^      ^^^         ^^   ^  ^^^^.   ^^^.  ^^^^^.   ^.^^^^^.   j^„.        one    wide-spread    misconception    ^^    ^j^^,,^,   ^^^    ^,^^,^   ^^^^^   „„ 

sro.'vrr.ur«::r  ^-^  -e  .o„o„.,ue« .  ..p,.  u^^<^~><^.^^:^  ,t/"rper^r.'Lfrie':  'z^:^;:^^^:^:^:,^ 

^*"«h.  inol    have    faith.    Beach    said    that,      Authoritative    Non^egian    sourc- 

es have  said  the  Soviet  threat 
against  this  northern  Sank  oJI 
NATO  is  backed  up  by  1,500 
planes,  530  naval  craft  and  six 
to  eight  army  divisions  close  to 
Norway's  Arctic  frontier. 

Foreign  Aid  Cut 

WASHINGTON— (AP)— An  800- 
new    student    to    the    mechanics,  i  fo'-e  A^pril  29.  I  "-^"S^^    ^^^^^   ^''«  Sroup   to   make ;  ^^hitfield  left  the  idea,  for  a  ban- 1  dividual.  '  !  million-dollar    cut     in     President 

philosophies  and  tradition  of  the!      The  new  editor  U  not  required   a  special  appearance  at  the  hos-jq^g^  ^^  ^^e  work  of  the  newly  ap- '      The  trouble  with  "gentle  skep- j  Eisenhower's  foreign  aid  program 
Honor    System    is    not   only    vital  i  ^o   <^'''"«    ^^^^   ^^^   present   staff,   pital.  j  pointed  Social  Committee.  i  ticism."    according    to    Beach,    is    was    advocated    yesterday   by    the 


Exum  said: 

"Probably    the    most    important; 
single    jobs    student    government  i 

does  each  year  is  orientating)^^  coming  year  have  been  ask-  *"'""*\,.'"  "^'"  v*  "'  ""'^'"""•'  Whitfield  read  to  the  party  gath-  every  person  has  .some  kind  of  re- 
freshmen  and  new  students  to  the !  ^<i  to  see  Miss  Jessie  Rehder  of  brother.  Miller  Barber.  Knox  was  ^^j^^  ^^^^^^,  ^^^^^^^  .^  ^^^^^^^  ,jg.^^^  ^^-^^  ^^.^^^^^^  -^  .^  the 
Carolina  campus  early  in  Septem- 1  *«  English  Dept.  in  109  Bingham  visited  in  h.s  room  by  the  vocaJ  ^^j^^.^  ^^  ^^^  ^^^^^,  ^on.stitution.  Christian  faith  or  not. 
her.  Probably,  too.  the  most  im- '  ^'*"-  '  ^u°"^  before  their  appearance  ^V  The  changes  were  Ubled  until  the  Dr.  Beach,  in  fact,  labeled  the 
portant  single  aspect  of  the  cam- ;  Those  not  being  able  to  person-  the  Germans  formal  dance.  Know-  ^^^^  p^^^^  meeting  three  weeks  present  generation  as  one  of 
pus  to  which  the  new  students  1  ^"^  ^ee  Miss  Rehder  have  been  mg  that  Knox,  a  great  fan  of  the  ^^^^^^  ^^^^  ^^^^,  ^j„  ^  ^^^^^  -polytheists".  where  here  are  not 
are  introduced  is  Carolina's  j  ^^^k^d  to  send  a  letter  of  applica-  Four  Freshmen  close  harmony  ^^^^  i  ^j^  ^^^^,  different  faiths  among 
Honor  System                                     ♦'«>"    ^'>    ^^^    Quarterly    Advisory   style,  wou.d  be  unable  to  attend  ^^^^^  ^^^^^j   ^^.^^  suggestions    different    people,    but    also   many, 

"Proper  indoctrination  of  every    B^ard,  in  care  of  Miss  Rehder.  be- ,  the  German  festivities.  Barber  ar-;^^    ^^^   .^^^   ^^  ^  ^^^^^,  banquet,    conflicting   faiths  even  in  one  in 

'--•'—  I  ranged    with    the   group   to    make 


to  the  life  and  workings  of  the 
.system,  but  is  necessary  for  the 
protection  of  the  individual 
against  possible  violations  due  to 
ignorance  of  it,"  he  said. 

'•In  spite  of  the  thorough  job 
which  last  year's  orientation 
counselors  and  Honor  System 
Commission  did  in  presenting  the 
system  to  freshman,  I  can  cite 
examples  from  cases  this  year  to 
show  that  students  are  still  left 
in  ignorance  about  certain  aspects 
even  after  orientation  is  com- 
pleted. 

Exum  cited  an  instance  where 
a  student  did  not  think  it  a  vio- 
lation to  copy  another's  theme 
(that  not  signing  the  pledge 
would  in  effect  negate  the  viola- 
tion. He  said  that  confusion  still 
persists  over  laboratory  assign- 
ments and  that  many  freshman, 
according  to  Englicji  I  and  II 
instructors,  do  not  actually  under- 
stand the  meaning  of  plagiarism. 

"Although  no  orientation  can 
perfectly  instill  the  Honor  Sys- 
tem into  every  student,"  he  said, 
"we  must  recognize  an  ever  pres- 
ent need  for  much  improvement. 

"Er.ch  year  the  Chairman  of 
Orientation,  the  committee  and 
counselors  should  strive  to  make 
their    orientation    the    best    ever, 

(See  ORIENTATION,  page  3) 


according    to    an    announcement.  The  Freshmen  went  to  Massey'sj     As  a  result  of  an  Advisory  Board  that  it  won't  satisfy  for  long  be- 1  US.  Chamber  of  Commerce, 

but  should  be  somewhat  familiar  room,  talked  with  him.  and  sang  j  meeting    Sunday    night,  two  new  cau.se  the  great  object  of  trust  is!      A   Chamber  spokesman   recom- 

with    publishing    procedure     and  two   of   their   latest  record   selec- ;  changes    were    instituted    in    the  a    vacuum.   "And    nature    hates   a   mended  to  a  special  Senate  com- 

should    be    prepared    to   work    on  tions.   They   left   behind   a   pretty  j  party   structure.    If   the   measures  vacuum."                                             |  mittee  that  foreign  aid  appropria- 

the  last  stages  of  the  Spring  issue  happy— if    somewhat    surprised— j  are    approved   at   the    next   party  The    third    religion    li-sted    by  j  I'ons  be   held   to   3,600,00,000   for 


for  this  year. 


fan. 


meeting,  they  will  be  permanent. 


(.fee   BEACH,   page   3) 


iN  HONOR  OF  ELISHA  MITCHELL: 


Century  Commemoration  Set  For  May 

By  PETE  IVEY  ]      Dr.    Thomas   Clingman    had    sa  <J      Black    Dome.  traveled    over    the    state    in    actual 

A  sudden  thunder  storm  delayed   —in  1856— that  he  doubted  Dr.  Mi  •  i  RISKY  j  geological   surveys.    He   was  known 

Dr,   Elisba  Mitchell,  and  he  waited  j  ihell  had  ever  climbed  to  the  top       Even    in    daylight    it    is    risky    to   .-.nd  respc'cted  hand  his  death  came 
until    it    passed    before   groping   his   of  Black  Dome.  Clingman  asserted    walk     far     from    paths    on     BlacJc   as  a  shock, 
.vay   down   Black   Dome   Mountain,  I  that  he  him."ielf  was  the  man  who   Dome.    The    wilderness    is    like    a   MAN  OF  ACTION 
;he    highest    summit    east    of    the   had   gone   to  this   "highest"    moun-   trap.   One   is  likely  to   step  in   the|     He   was   a    furmer  and    he   att  d 


BANDLEADER    RICHARD   MALTBy 

.  .  .  rcnsafi/c  arranger  to  pcrfonn  here 

Richard  Maitby  And  Orchestra 
To  Present  Concert  April  25 

Earlier  on  that  Saturday  evening,!     Dr.  Mitchell,  a  profesor  of  math-   tteep  precipice.  j  trate  of  i>;)lice.  He  also  was  college   ^^   '"    ^^^   smashup   of   a    British!      Richard  Maitby  and  his  orches-    per  person.  The  proceeds  are  go- 

while    it    was    stiU    light,    he    .said;  ematics,  mineralogy  and  geology  at      It   was  exactly   at  nineteen   m^n-   bursar.  He  was  a  man  of  big  frame  ,  "^'"^   "'"   ^'O"^"*   )^'^"   royalties  ,  tra    will    be    here    April    25th    in    in?   toward   the   Chapel   Hill    Rec 


the  fiscal  year  starting  July  1  and 
that  the  whole  program  be  placed 
on  a  "longer  range"  basis. 

Eisenhower  has  asked  for  $4,- 
400,000.000  to  continue  the  foreign 
aid  program  through  fiscal  1958. 
Many  members  of  Congress  are 
proposing  cuts  a  gootl  deal  deeper 
than  the  800  million  suggested  by 
the  Chamber  of  Commerce. 

Writer  Better 

PARIS— (AP)—Francoise  Sagan 
regained  consciousness  yesterday 
after    a    lung    operation    starting 


Rockies. 


tain. 


I  wrong    place    and    plunge    over    a   at    times    as    Chaj>el    Hill's    mag  s-   ^"^e'"'  '^'^^''  °J  '"J"""^'  f  ff.^' 


eoodbye    to    his    son,    Charles    Mit-i  I'XC,  had  first  revealed  the  height   utes  after  eight  o'clock  that  Dr.  Mit-   and  a  mzin  of  action.  He  was  never 


from  her  sexy  novels. 


Memorial    Hall    to   give    what    ad-    reation    Center    and    the    Victory 


cheU.  and  asked  him  to  return  on  of  Black   Dome   in   1835.   With   the   chell  fell.  The  evidence  is  that  his   ifiie.                                                      |      The    21-year-old    author   of    the ,  yance   notices    have   said    will    be  Village   Day   Nursery. 

Monday    so    that    they    could    con-i  uid   of   a   barometer  he  calculated   foot   slipped   and    that   he  "grabbed      When    anyone    wanted    to   ask    a   ^estselling     "Bonjour     Tristesse    |  one    of   the   most   successful   con-  Artie     Shaw     said     of     Maitby, 

tinue   exloratton   and    measurement   the  height  of  the  mountain,  a  part   at  an  overhangir^g  bough  but   fail-    question  and  found  difficulty  getting   ^"*^   "^  Certain  Smile     was  able  ,  certs  given  here  this  year.  "The    'Fantasy   On    Three    Ameri- 

of  this  mountain.  It  was  in  Yancey   of   the   Black   Mountain    P^nge,    as   ed  to  hold  on.                                      'the  answer,  thev  went   to  Dr.   Mi'-   ^^^^^  surgery  to  chat    15  minu  es  •      Tyjaltby's  ensemble  has  received  ca^    Songs'    for    clarinet    and    or- 

(•ounty  in  North  Carolina.                  !  6,t84  feet  high  .                                   |     The  64-year-old  man  feU  40  feet   chell,    for   he   was  known   as    "the   *'^**  ^^^  brother,  Jacques  Quoirez.    excellent      reviews      from      Yale,  chestra.  which  I  have  p»ayed  with 

.\GREEMENT                              "^1  HIGHEST                                            j  -nio  an  icy  pool  at  the  foot  of  a   walking  encyclopedia."                       j                 Eager  Beaver                   Michigan.    Maryland    and    Cornell  "lan.v         symphony         orchestras 

The  agreement  was  to  meet  agaU j     Up    until    that   time   it   had   been   waterfall.    The    time    is    known    be-|     Dr.    Eli.sha    Mitchell   was   born   in       UMATILLA,    Ore.  —  (AP) —No  j  universities.  Miss  Franky  Crockett  throughout    the    countr>-.    has    al- 

it  Mountain  House,  two  days  later    thought    that    Mt.    Washington    in    cause    Dr.     Mitchell's    watch    was   in  Connecticut  and  was  a  graduate   longer  eager,  Joe  the  beaver  has .  is  featured  as  vocalist  for  the  ar-  »«ys    been    wonderfully    received. 

Charles  Mitchell  left  his  father.  Vermont  was  the'highest  mountain  broken  in  the  fall.  of  Yale  University.  He  came  to  packed  his  dam-repair  kit  and  I  ranger-conductor's  group.  I"  my  opinion,  its  a  remarkably 
to  go  into  the  valley.  UntU  they  in  eastern  America.  ■  It  was  11  daj's  later,  July  8,  that  Chapel  Hill  to  tf>ach  in  1818.  moved  elsewhere  on  the  Colum- 1  The  man  whom  Benny  Good-  well-balanced  example  of  Maltby's 
would  meet  again,  the  plan  was  Dr.  Mitchell  came  back  for  other  Dr.  Mitchell's  body  was  found.  For  his  abilities  as  a  teacher  of  bia  River.  He  left  man  to  make  |  man  says  is  responsible  for  the  orchestrating  ability,  fusing  sue- 
that  Dr.  Elisha  Mitchell  would  des  j  climbings  and  tests  in  1838  and  in    More    than     500     mountain      men    science    and    for    his    qualities    Of   his  own  repairs  at  McNary  Da.m.  ,  big    hit    "The    Man    I    Love"    has  cessfully    the    idioms    of    popular 


Gm'%  SLATE 


cend    the    mountain    on    the    other'  1844.    the   latter   time    accompanied   searched  for  him. 

.tide.   H's  purpose  was  to  visit  the   by  Tom  WUson.  He  made  the  jour-    REMEMBERED  ROUTE 


character  and  principles  and  for  his       All   last   week,  Joe   kept   trying '  played    for    many   colleges    in    his    jazz    music    with    the    pure    sound 
devotion  to  the  religous  li'e  he  has    to    repair    a    "leak"    in    the    giant  j  tours    and    last    year    covered    23    of   the    symphony   orchestra." 


Th*  fellMrinf  activitiM  ar* 
•eh«dul*d  for  Oraham  Memorial 
today: 

Ori«ntation  Comrmttoo,  4^ 
p.m.,  Grail  HoMn;  Univortity 
Party,  7-11  p.tn.,  Roland  Parfcor 
Loungo  1  »n4  2;  Campus  Christ- 
ian Council,  f>10:30  p.m.,  Roland 
Parkor  Loimyo  S;'  Dane*  Class, 
i:30-l  p.m.,  Rtndosvous  Room; 
AFO,  7-f  p.m.,  AFO  Room. 


home  of   "B'g   Tom"   Wilson,    bear    ney    again    in    1836,    the   year   that'  The  person  who  finally  discover-  been  honored  through  the  years  by  dam.    The    "leak"    was   the    dam's  ^  campuses  on  his   travels. 

hunter  and   mountain   guide.             j  Thomas    Clingman   challenged  him.  ed  the  body  wa?  Big  Tom  Wilson,  a   society  whi<h  exists  at   the  Uni  navigation  lock.  Everytime  Joe  had  i      The    dean    of    American    music, 

All    this    took    place    almost    10«       The    objective    of    this    side    trip  the  mountain  guide.  Wilson  remem-  »epsity.    the   Elisha    Mitchell   Scien  it  fixed,  opening  of  the  lock  wip- 1  Paul   Whiteman.   sfaled   Maitby   is 

years    ago— the    exact     date     wai   now,  on  June  27,   1857,  was  to  .see  tJered    t'ne    route    they    had    tfiken  tific  Society.  That»society  was  form-  ed  out  Joe's  work.                             I  one  of  the  best  and  most  versatile 

June  27,  1857.                                      ^  j  Tom    Wilson   and    perhaps   get   the  down  the  mountain  13  years  before,  ed  in  1883.  The   days   of  frustration   finally  i  arrangers    in    the   business    today. 

n  1844  Dr.  Mitchell  had  explored   old  guide  to  be  a  witness  to  prove  and  he  picked  up  the  trail  taken  by      On   May   14,   the  Elisha   MitchelJ  took    their    toll.    Attendants    said    Whiteman  went  on  to  say  he  has 

Black  Dome,  sometimes  called  Ths '  their  earlier  trip  to  the  summit  of  Dr.  Mitche'l  and  followed  it  to  the  Scientific    Societv    will    honor    'he  over   the    weekend   Joe   "chucked  j  proved    to   be   an   able   conductor 


Maitby   has   worked   with   Good- 
(See   MALTBY.   page   3) 


Big  Black,  for  the  third  time.   His    Black   Dome. 


edge  of  the  slieer  drop  into  the  pool,   name  of  Dr.   Mitchell  in  the  lOOtl    the  task  and  swam  off  in  disgust"  ;  as  well. 


suide  was  Tom  Wilson 
PRIDE   AND  PROOF 


IN  THE  INFIRMARY 

Students   in   the   Infirmary   yes- 
terday included: 

Misses    Elizabeth    MacKav    and 


Dr.    Mitchell    started   down   the      Dr.    Elisha   Mitchell   was   a   man  «»nni\ersary  of  bis  death  on  Black  heading  downstream.                         }      Tickets   for    the    concert,    spon- 

mountain    when    the    storm    broke,  of    great    reputation,    not    only    in  Dome,    the    mountain    which    la'er  There     may     be     harder     days    sored  by  Panhellenic  andvthe  In-  charlotte  Hoeil;    and   James   Bur- 

Thre    reason    he    wanted    to    set    He   waited   until   the  rain   slacken- 1  Chapel  Hill,  but  all  over  the  state,  came   to   be   named    for    him.    His  ahead    for    Joe.    Downstream    lies  |ter-Fraternity   Council,  have  gone  goyne,   Roy  Cashion.   Brant   Nash. 

Tjm    Wilson    again    concftmed    a   ed,   but  meanwhile  it  was  growing  Besides  his  teaching  at  the  Univer-  body  now  rests  on  the  summit  ol  the     Ds^lles     Dam.     It,     too,     has  ^  on    sale   in   several    stores    down  James     Adams.     Edward     Sutton, 

matter  of  pride  and  proof.  dark.   Darkness   settles   quickly  on   .'•ity  for  38  and  a  half  years,  he  h^d  Mount  Mitchell.  "leaks."  _^       town  and  they  are  priced  at  $1.25  Thomas  Hall  and  Albert  Baldwin. 


Pkat  rwo 


THE   DAILY  TAR   HEEL 


TUESDAY,   APRIL   U,   19Sr 


Rain,  Snow,  Sleet  And 
Mr.  Summerfield's  Hail 

The  dictatorial,  coercive  tactics  of  Postmaster  General  Arthur  E.  Sum- 
merfield  would  be  more  applicable  on  the  Patagonian  Plateau  of  Peron- 
tainted  Argentina  than  in  these  United  States. 

Summerfield's  rationalization  that  the  "unprecedented  growth  of  pop- 
ulation and  economic  activity  in  the  U.S.  had  increased  the  amount' of 
mail  handled  yearly"  immeasureabiy  d"<s:ing  the  past  ten  years  doesn't 
satisf>  us. 


Mr.  Summerfield  knew  his  de- 
partment's financial  status  was  at 
a  low  ebb  when  Congress  convened 
'u  January. 

Yet  he  has  procrastinately  wait- 
ed until  April  to  throw  a  coercive 
curtailment  of  postal  ser\ices  into 
effect. 

He  has  hit  the  American  public 
where  it  hurts  most— in  the  mail 
p)ouch. 

We  wonder  if  Rep.  John  Lesin- 
ki.  a  member  of  the  House  Post 
Office  Committee  hasn't  got  a 
valid  point  in  his  assertion  that 
summerfield  should  be  prosecuted 
under  terms  of  the  anti-deficiency 
law.  designed  M>  legally  spank  gov- 
ernment officials  who  mis-juggle 
their  agencies'  money  with  a  re- 
sultant acute  shortage. 

In  Iiis  assertion  for  a  S17  mil- 
lion monetary  tide-over  till  the 
fisciil  years  «nd.  Jime  ^o,  Som- 
nambulistic Sinnmerfield  present- 
ed a  multiplicity  of  charts  and 
other  paraphai^lia  which  were  ob- 


viously prepared  far  in  advance. 

It  seems  a  shame  the  Peronistic 
Summerfield  couldn't  have  as 
much  foresight  in  his  preparation 
of  the  Postal  Dept.'s  bu<%et. 

Vet  Summerfield  curtailsf  mail 
services  and  delivery  without  com- 
punction. He  throws  pavement 
pounding  deliverers  out  of  work 
without  any  pangs  of  conscience. 
He  inconveniences  the  American 
public  without  thought  of  the  ob- 
vious repercussions. 

Dominantly  purple  prosaic  Time 
magazine  reported: 

"The  day  after  Summerfield's 
press  conference,  the  .Appropria- 
tions Committee  turned  tail,  vot- 
ed to  reconsider  his  request." 

Oiu  raged  .\merican  citizens 
wt)uld  >av  the  same  thing  for  Post- 
niangler  Summerfield.  He  has 
shown  the  phvsiologica!  area  re- 
ferred to  by  rime  to  the  .\mcri- 
cati  |HopIe  in  an  cxhibitionalist 
fashiofi.  and  thev  don't  like  the 
\'iew. 


Haggling  And  Deaf  Ear: 
Problems  Of  Lenoirites 


This  is  no  time  for  disunity. 

If  leaders  in  the  Lenoir  Hall 
movement  to  negotiate  with  un- 
ncgotiable  Director  George  Pnlla-- 
man  are  to  niake  anv  progress, 
there  must  be  no  haggling  among 
them. 

The  incident  in  point  is  the  epi- 
sode last   week   in   which   the   ap- 
parent   leader    of    Lenoir    workers 
Caleb    White    and    Student    Legis- 
lature   Lenoir    Hall  '  Investigation 
Connnittee   Cha-irman   Al    Alphine 
presented   conflicting  reports  of  a 
meeting   to  The  Daily  Tar    Heel. 
The  Daily  Tar  Heel  feels  strong- 
Iv     that     Lenoir     workers     should 
/laVe    rhe    following    "grievances"' 
satisfied; 


; 

rhe  Daily  Tar  Heel 

Tbr  official  jtudeat  publication  of  tbe 
ftihlirations  Bftard  of  tbe  University  of 
S#»rth  Carolina  where  it  is  published 
dailv  except  M4)nday  and  examinatio? 
•nH  varatinn  pwiod!:  and  summer  ternts 
Eutered  as  second  class  matter  in  th< 
t>«>ft  office  in  Chfpel  Hill.  N  C  .  undei 
uh#  ^rt  of  March, %.  1^70  Suh?icripfioB 
rates  mailed.  $%-P<er  year.  $2  SO  a  semes 
ler:  delivered  Sil  a  year.  $3  50  »  seme» 
ter 


Editor 


-^^ 


#y 


NEIL  B.\SS 


Managing  Editor  J         C:L.\RKE  JONES 


.\.s?ociate   Editor  _ 


NAXCY   HILL 


Sports  Editor 


News  Editor 


BILL  KING 


WALT  SCHKUNTEK 


Business  Manager  JOHN  C.  WIIITAKER 


A;lvprtisir.i  Manager         FRED  KAT2nN 


NFTV^  S  STAFF— Graham  Snyder,  Erfith 
MacKinnon.  I»ringle  Pipkin,  Bob  High, 
Ben  Taylor.  H.  Joost  Polak.  Palsy-  Mill- 
er. Wally  Kuralt,  Bill  King,  Curti? 
Cnrtty,  Bea  Tayjpr,  Sue  Atchison. 


EDIT  STAFF-^hit  Whitfield,  Anthony 
Wolff,  Stan  ^aw,  Woody  Sears. 


BU^NESS  STAFF— John  Minter,  Marian 
Hobeck,  Jane  Patten,  Johnny  Whitaker. 

SPORTS  STAFF:  Dave  Wible,  Stu  Bird, 
Ed  Rowland,  Jim  Crownover,  Ron  Mil- 
ligan. 


SubtcriptiAB  Manner 
Circulation  Manager  . 


.  Dale  StaMy 
CharUe  Holt 


Staff  Photographers  Woody  Sears, 

Norman  Kantor,  Bill  King. 


Librarians—Sue  Gichncr.  Marilyn  Strum 


Night  News  Editor 

Night   Editor   

Ti'i  jfread'cr  ^.- 


Bob  High 

Guy  Ellis 

,.  Manley  J^rings 


( 1 )  Niore  adequate  compensa- 
tion  for  their  labor. 

(2)  Less  arbitary  administration 
of  the  dinin2[  hall. 

(%)  Establishment  of  redeema- 
ble meal  tickets  or  cash  in  lieu  of 
straight  meal  remuneration  which 
nnist  be  taken  at  the  designated 
time  or  missed  completely. 

There  was  a  tone  of  optimism 
in  the  .  r  when  two  years  aofo  Di- 
rector Prillaman  gave  free  meals 
lor  a  week  to  YMC.\  nvembers  in 
return  for  suggestions  as  to  im- 
pvovements  of  Lenoir  Hall's  op- 
(j^ration. 

But  apparently  Director  Prilla- 
man's  eardnnn  has  been  burst 
•iince  that  initial  .show  of  interest. 
Now  he  turns  a  deaf  ear  to  the 
workers'  pleas. 

Haggling  and  disiinitv  among 
leaders  in  the  movement  toward 
brin^'ing  Diret  tf)r  Prillaman  to  ne- 
goti;ible  terms  will  not  hasten  the 
return  of  his  audition  sense. 

.Wain  we  (hallenge  that  Direc- 
tor Prillaman  to  make  clear  the 
business  eiuanglements  which  he 
asserts  will  follow  transference 
from  the  present  pavmcnt  in 
meal   tickets. 

And  again  we  urge  him  to 
climb  off  his  omnipotent  pedestal 
and  negotiate. 

Gracious 
Living:  A 
New  Series 

Students  stroll  ittg  across  the 
campi  aiound  New  East  Annex 
are  due   tor  an  olfactory  mistreat. 

To  the  Buildings  and  Grounds 
Dept.  we  address,  out  of  context, 
the  lyrics  of  a  post-World  War  I 
didflv: 

">fow  ya  gonna'  keep  it  down 
on  the  farm,  after  it's  seen  I'.N'C?" 

We  wonder  if  there  aren't  more 
appropriate  dressings  to  ?pply  on 
the  University's  wrongjy-trodden 
dirt  patlres  across  our  beautiful 
grass  lawns  than  this  transported 
residue. 

And  we  wonder  if  the  atmos- 
phere created  is  conducive  to  any- 
thing except  handkerchiefs  across 
the  nose  and  gas  masks. 

We  agree  with  the  Buildings  and 
Grounds  Dept.  that  the  lawns 
should  not  l>e  vivisected  by  tlie 
patter  of  students*  feet. 

But  we  prefer  barbed  wire  or 
trenches  or  moats  or  anything 
namable  to  this  incongrous  except 
in  stalls  matter  -^f  which  we  hcisi- 
taie  to'  speak. 


Wise  and  Otherwise: 

Our  Friends, 
Merchants  Are 
Pur  Pals,  Etc. 

Merchant  prices  are  a  perennial 
topic  for  discussion  at  Chapel  Hill, 
and  many  businessmen  are  criti- 
cized adversely  for  their  high 
rates. 

An  editorial  of  last  Friday  was 
an  unwarranted  attack  on  the  in- 
tegrity of  our  friends,  the  mer- 
chants. To  pr^ve  how  wrong  the 
critics  are,  here  are  a  few  cases 
in   point. 


One  down  town  business  man 
charts  twenty  cents  for  a  scram- 
bled egg  while  another  charges' 
only*  Jime.  I  rather  imagine  that 
the  former  sells  eggs  from  an 
ivy  league  hen.  which  accounts 
for  the  difference  in  price. 

.\t  another  eating  establishment, 
the  price  of  a  spaghetti  plate  has 
ssone  up  from  seventy-five  cents 
to  ninety-five  cents  in  one  yoar 
while  the  amount  of  spaghetti  has 
decreased  bv  about  twenty  per 
cent.  This  is  understandable  tl 
^ruessV 

^Vnother  eating  establishment 
se^ls  a  particular  kind  of  sand- 
wich for  thirty-cents  which  cost  = 
V'ss  than  ten  cents  to  make,  but 
fhis  is  only  a  200  per  cent  prof  t 
For  an  extra  slice  of  bread  w  th 
a  cold  plate,  you  pay  a  nickel.  It 
*>osts  the  merchant  about  a  penny, 
find  the'  400  oer  cent  profit  is  to 
help  jwiy  for  the  cost  of  slicing  i: 
for   you. 


.Most  of  the  downtown  haber- 
dashers charge  reasonable  prices, 
however.  Ju-;t  because  you  can 
buy  the  same  quality  clothes  in 
Raleigh,  Durham,  Greenslwro,  etc. 
at  twenty-five  per  cent  le.ss  should 
be  no  objection,  because  after  all 
the  labels   are  expensive. 

.Another  reason  for  the  mark-up 
IS  that  almost  all  weav'ng  apparel 
you  buy  in  Chapel  Hill  comes  from 
■England,  Denmark.  France,  or 
Patagonia:  and  sh'ppiivg  charge- 
Siin't  what  they  used  to  ■was. 
There's  not^in?  'in-groupish" 
about  our  merchants.  They  have 
trade  relations  the  world  over. 
No  wonder  the.se  lorelgn  countries 
need  loans  from  the  United  States; 
they  spend  all  their  money  on 
'vearin^  apparel. 


I  i>aid  $20  for  a  pair  of  exclusive 
-mported  pants  at  one  of  the  down- 
town stores  last  year  (with  the 
local  mer:hant*s  label  added). 
They  wore  fine  until  they  were 
dry-cleaned  and  .shrank.  It  didn't 
•matter  so  much  because  didn't 
really  like  the  color  or  the  cut.  1 
could  use  them  for  Bermudas  this 
year  pr^sibly.  (if  I  lose  10  or  IE 
pounds.  > 


1  could  go  on  indefinitely,  bui 
T  think  I've  made  my  point  clear 
by  now.  Don't  pick  on  (^ur  friends 
the  merchants,  .\fter  all.  they 
have  troubles  too,  what  with  gas 
going  up  all  the  time,  and  yvv 
know   how    tho.se   Cadillacs    drink 

• 

111  Abn«r 


'Great  News!  Another  P^rt  Of  The  Administration  Has 
Come  Out  For  An  Administration  Policy' 


i  ¥»«t  . 


V 


The  Readers'  Forum: 


Professor  Defends  His  Acridity; 
Reader  Assails  'Smear  Fantasy 


Editor:  -— - 

Satire,  as  hag  been  a)l  \o(\  'r  - 
quently  painted  out  to  me  since 
the  puiriication  of  my  "poignant 
r.nd  acrid  view."  should  have  a 
focal  point.  In  satire,  one  does 
not  use  a  shot-gun  technique;  yet 
this  Ls  the  effect  given  by  the 
column  that  you  printed  on  Satur- 
day. Your  omission  of  the  title 
of  my  opus  gave  the  effect  of  one 
who  is  bitterly  thrashing  out  at 
everything  that  we  hold  so  dearly 
at  Caroina.  For  the  information 
,  of  the  readers  who  were  bewilder- 
ed by  tbe  colurtin  I  should  like  to 
state  that  the  column  was  entitlec 
by  me  as  "Thoughts  while  reading 
the  Daily  Tar  Heel." 

Further,  for  those  like  yoursell 
who  .still  do  not  .M>e  the  .satire  in 
volved.  should  like  to  evplain  in 
plain  terTns  that  the  purpose  o! 
the  article  was  to  satiri7e  The 
Daily  Tar  Heel's  presentation  of 
the  news  and  the  criticism  by  th* 
editors  thereof.  Thus  the  columr 
included  practically  e\ery  subject 
that  one  sees  presented  in  Th* 
Daily  Tar  Heel  each  day— usual 
ly    somewhat    distorted,      as     the 


manglin;;     of      m>      petite      satire 
illustijates. 

Moreover,  we  hear  so  much  ol 
the  "freedom  of  the  press "  that 
we  sometimes  wonder  about  tht 
'responsibility  of  the  press"  ir 
presenting  accurately  an  author's; 
<  ndeavor.  1  am  fully  aware  thai 
Cobb,  Old  West,  and  other  dormi- 
tories are  not  fraternities.  How- 
ever, satire  to  be  effective  must 
contain  some  elements  of  burl^ 
que  in  order  to  let  the  reader  kno\^ 
that  the  author's  intention  is  nd 
serious.  Thus  1  am  not  at  all  nat- 
tered that  some  editorial  work 
deleted  those  burlesque  passage; 
in  order  to  protect  the  liniforrn 
"acrid"  tone  of  the  pece. 

Dear  Sir,  the  article  was  ft 
jest,  not  in  bitterness.  I  hope  that 
this  explanation  will  clear  up  some 
of  the  confused  impressions  left 
by  the  article  as  printed.  However, 
since  modern  man  seems  to  be 
too  literal-minded,  a  piece  of  sa- 
t  re,  burlesque,  or  any  metaphori 
cal  type  of  writing  might  well  Ix 
eliminated  from  our  literary  heri- 
tage. 

Roy  C.  Moose 


Editor:     •;••   r      ^y      -;.- 

That  saiear  pha'i^sy  by  Whit- 
field about  Russia  was  worthy  o< 
a  Wisconsin   senator. 

Tlie  sympathies  I  had  for  Lenoir 
students  are  rapidly  disappearing 
when  1  see  what  depths  The  Dally 
Tar  Heel  will  stoop  to  in  support- 
ing their  cause. 

I  hope  you  have  checked  on  the 
laws  (rf  slander  and  libel.  Maybe 
tliey  don't  aa>ply  in  the  U.  S. 
Senate,  but  they  do  here. 

L.  Mcntwi 

(Conversely,  we  wonder  if  Mr. 
"Menton"  has  checked  th«  libel 
laws  in  his  somewhat  confused  *t 
tack  on  Mr.  WhiHicld.  And  w« 
wonder  if  "L.  Menton"  actually 
exists  since  his  name  is  not  listed 
in  the  Student-Facutty-^dminis- 
trative  and  Clerical  Staffs  Direc- 
tory; or  if  Mr.  "Menton"  is  some- 
one without  fortitude  who  seri- 
ously shoots  from  behind  the 
cloak  of  anonymity  at  obviously 
humorous  satire.  The  Editor). 


• 

By  A)  Capp 


Critic  Laurels 
Lemon  Company 

(Mr.  Fiti-Simons  is  assistant  director  of  the 
Carolina  Playmakers  end  a  dt«tin«tn$hed  prof«. 
Uit  in  the  DramaHc   Arts  Dept.  -Editor). 

fofter  Fitx-Simpns 

This  past  Thar- day  evening  in  Memorial  Hall  the 
Student  Entertainment  Committee  presented  Jose 
Limon  and  his  Dance  Company  in  a  program  under 
the  general  title  "Theatre  in  The  Dance'  .  Mr.  Lim- 
on no  newcomer,  is  one  of  our  great  exponents  of 
the  American  Dance  and  this  was  his  first  \nsit 
to  the  campus. 

The  occasion  was  an  auspicious  one  for  all  con- 
cerned, both  performer.-  and  audience.  It  was  an 
essence  of  theatre,  vibrant  with  meaning  and  com- 
municative power,  kinestheUcally  rich  and  visually 
i>eautiful  from  first  to  la^t.  The  audience's  con- 
tmued  warm  and  enthusiastic  response  throughout 
the  performance  bore  ample  witness  to  this. 

Mr.  Limon's  company  is  small  in  number,  con- 
:.-isting  of  only  eight  dancers  —  four  women  and 
four  men  —  b^Kide  himself.  But  so  technically  su- 
perb are  they  as  performers  and  so  obviously  dedi- 
cated to  the  business  at  hand  at  every  moment  they 
are  on  the  stage  the  effect  is  always  one  of  large 
and  profound  implications. 

E\'^ery  detail  of  costumes,  lighting  and  mu^ic  is 
bent  to  one  aesthetic  end.  Nothing  is  superfluous. 
Everj'thing  is  meaningful  and  disciplined  by  im- 
peccable taste.  This  generates  a  kind  of  theatrical 
excitement  too  rarely  experienced  by  our  frequently 
jaded  present  day  palates. 


The  evening  was  given  over  to  four  long  com- 
positions covering  a  wide  variety  of  thematic  ma- 
terial and  su'oject  matter.  Mr.  Limon  and  the  entire 
company  opened  with  Ritmo  Jondo  (Surinach)  cho- 
reographed by  hi.-  artistic  director,  Miss  Doris  Hum- 
phrej,  one  of  American  Dance's  great  choreograph- 
ers. This  is  a  fine  composition,  deceptively  simple 
and  direct  in  construction,  obviously  Iberian  in 
theme  and  style  without  ever  once  falling  into  the 
erroi  of  being  pseudo  "Spanish".  In  it  the  qualities 
of  male  arrogance  and  pride  were  beautifally  and 
often  humorously  set  off  against  feminine  piety  and 
passivity. 

The  second  offering.  The  Exiles  (Schonberg), 
choreographed  by  Limon  and  danced  by  himself  and 
Miss  Ruth  Currier,  this  reviewer  felt  was  the  m 'St 
difficult  of  the  evening  and  on  some  points  the 
least  satisfactory.  Composed  in  long,  sustained  and 
convoluted  patterns-  of  movement  and  beautifully 
performed  it  dealt  with  eternal  man  and  womaa 
and  the  eternal  search  for  the  lost  pardise. 

Perhaps  the  difficulties  of  the  Schonberg  scot* 
and  the  fact  that  it  was  recorded  instead  of  "live"' 
accompaniment  contributed  to  this  feeling  of  dis- 
satisfaction. But  no  composition  of  depth  can  be 
fairly  judged  on  the  basis  of  one  seeing  and  a  fur- 
ther experience  of  it  would,  no  doubt,  serve  to  cor- 
rect the  negativency  of  this  impression. 

La  Malinche,  also  composed  by  Limon  and  danced 
by  himself,  Miss  Pauline  Koner  and  Lucas  Hoving 
was  a  delight  from  start  to  finish.  Cast  in  a  con- 
sciously native  style  as  though  it  were  being  per- 
formed hy  a  trio  of  strolling  Mexican  players  it 
told  the  old  story  of  the  conquL\ador.  the  obdurate 
patient  peon  and  his  woman. 

The  Moor's  Pavane  (Purcell),  which  completed  the 
evening,  is  one  of  ).he  great  classics  of  the  Ameri- 
can Dance.  In  it  Mr.  Limoa  has  seized  the  tragic 
essence  of  the  Othello  story  and  enclosed  it  most 
tellingly  within  the  formal  framework  of  a  court 
dance.  Its  performance  by  himself.  Misc-  Koner,  Miss 
Betty  Jones  and  Mr.  HoWng  on  Thursday  evening 
only  served  to  again  reveal  its  sombre  magnificence 
and  greatness  as  a  theatrical  triumph  of  the  first 
ordei.  The  audience  rightfully  accorded  it  a  re 
sponsc  little  short  of  an  ovation.  ... 


Although  the  evening  was  loaded  with  a  number 
of  felicities  t.hat  i,<pace  does  not  permit  commenting 
upon,  it  would  be  impossible  to  leave  out  some 
mention  of  the  sensitive  and  brilliant  accompani 
ment  of  Simon  Sadoff.  He  often  sounded  like  two 
fine  pianists  in  the  pit,  and  that  is  no  mean  ac- 
complishment at  any  time  in  Memorial  HaU. 


How's  This  For 
Student  Apathy? 

Itameses  IV 

Those  who  consistently  use  labels  like  "The 
Silent  Generation"  and  constantly  assail  student 
"apathy"  must  certainly  be  oblivious  to  the  fact 
that  The  Order  of  the  Golden  Fleece  recognized 
20-plus  students  for  "excellence"  last    week 


Along  this  same  line,  enterprising  students  at 
the  University  of  Mississippi  who  organized  a  boot- 
legging ring  must  certainly  be  commended  for  their 
non-apathetic  outlook  on  life.  Theirs  is  a  display 
of  energy  of  sorts-. 


And  again  on  our  own  campus  a  student  is  mak- 
ing a  national  name  for  herself.  Miss  "Peewee"  Bat- 
tens recording,  according  to  one  national  magazine, 
is  currently  number  four  in  the  nation.  She's  as- 
suredly an  outstanding  member  of  this  so-called 
"Silent  Generation." 


UE! 


Chj 
well 
ed   a\ 

Una 
festivl 
amat* 
nel  fJ 
petitij 
Th( 

host: 

sentcij 
act 
folk 
Harrij 

Wal 
High 
the 
writir 
SeconI 
Wh:t( 
of  N. 

ThH 
for  tl 
ligioul 


Al 
hercl 

soldi 
fere  I 

It 
do 

must 
clott 
your 
to 
if  yJ 
^on' 
iure  I 
111 


Dl 

1 

iij 

121 

is) 

151 

lel 

3*1 


lany 

|er   of   th« 

»r). 


Ml  Hall  the 

pnted    Jos« 

am  under 

Mr.  Lim- 

^ponents  of 

first  visit 


for  all  con- 
It  was  an 
and  com- 
nd  visually 

ences   con- 

I  throughout 

this. 

Imber.  con- 
romen  and 
mically  su- 
lcus! y  dedi- 
Joment  they 
Je  of  large 


id  muaic  is 
Superfluous, 
led  by  im- 
|f  theatrical 
frequently 


long  com- 

^ematic  ma- 

the  entire 

knach)  cho- 

IDoris  Hiun- 

loreograph- 

^•ely  simple 

Iberian   in 

Ing  into  the 

|he  qualities 

JtifuUy  and 

kc  piety  and 


ISchonberg), 

jhimself  and 

IS  the  most 

points  the 

stained  and 

beautifully 

>nd  woman 

rdise. 

itnberg  score 
lad  of  "live" 
hing  of  dis- 
bpth  can  be 
and  a  fur- 
kTvc  to  cor- 


and  danced 
icas  Hoving 
St  in  a  con- 
being  per- 
players    it 
the  obdurate 


>mpleted  the 

the  Ameri- 

the   tragic 

>ed  it  most 

of  a  court 

Koner,  Miss 

^day  evening 
lagnificencc 
of  the  first 

led    it    a    re- 


|ih  a  number 
commenting 
>'c    out   some 
It  accompani- 
ed like  two 
I  no  mean   ac- 
HaU. 


For 
hy? 


lis  like  "The 
Assail  student 
>  to  the  fact 
fe  recognized 
t    week. 


:  students  at 
nized  a  boot- 
ided  for  their 
is   a   display 


udcot  is  mak- 
Teewee"  Bat- 
mat  magazine, 
ion.  She's  as- 
ttii^   >o^alled 


UESDAY,  APRIL   16,  1957 


THE   DAILY  TAR   HEEL 


f AOI  THttt 


Festival  Awards  Are  Presented 


Chancellor-elect  Gordon  Black- 
well  of  Woman's  College  present- 
ed awards  Satuldny  at  the  Caro- 
lina Dramatic  Aasn.'s  34th  annual 
festival  which  brought  some  300 
amateur  actors  and  stage  person- 
nel from  across  the  state  in  com- 1 
petition  for  top  prizes. 

The   Carolina  Playmakers   were 
hosts    to    the    festival    which    pre- ! 
sented  24  district  winners  of  one-  '• 
act   plays   and   a   new   full-length 
folk   play   by  Mrs"    Bernice   Kelly  j 
Harris.  I 

Wallace  Wood  of  Goldsboro  I 
High  School  won  tirst  place  and : 
the  Betty  Smith  Award  in  play-  i 
writing  for  his  'Guinea  Pig.*'  j 
Second  place  was  won  by  Barbara  j 
White  and  Harvey  Bumgardner ; 
of  N.C.  State  for  "The  Tea  Cup.'  ; 

The  Pearl  Setzer  Deal  Award  j 
for  the  best  original  play  of  a  re-  j 
ligious  nature  was  given  to  Mrs.  ■ 


Elizabeth  Watson  of  the  Mars  Hill 
Dramateers    for    "The    Sparrow." 

Highest  awards  in  play  produc- 
tion were  given  to  the  Limelight- 
ers  of  Myers  Park  High  School, 
Charlotte,  for  "Noah";  The  Gold 
masquers  for  "Guinea  Pig";  the 
NC  State  Drama  Club  for  "The 
Tea   Cup"; 

Mars  Hill  Dramateers  for  "The 
Sparrow":  the  Thespians  of 
North  Wilkes  High  School  for 
"Yes    Means    No";    the 


Covering  The  University  Campus 


WORLD  RELIGION 

The  World  Religion  Study  Group 
will   meet   in   the   upstairs    dining 
room  in  Lenoir  Hall  tonight  from 
6   to   7:30    p.m.   Rev.   Charles   M. 
Jones  will   speak   on   the   subject  i  dents    now 
"Introduction  to  Christianity."  All !  have    been 
interested  persons   have   been   in 
vited  to  attend. 
Beginning  i  STUDENT  WIVES 


LAST  CALL! 


All  clothes  that  have  been 
here  for  »  year  or  more  will  be 
sold  for  alteration  charges  be- 
fore   Easter    if   not   called   for. 

.  It  is  nK>re  than  a  pleasure  tc 
<lo  business  with  you,  but  we 
must  rid  ourselves  of  these 
clothes.  We  would  hate  to  set: 
yoor  suit,  pants,  or  sport  coaJ 
to  someone  else,  but  we  must 
if  you  don't  claim  them.  So 
won't  you  come  by  and  make 
sure  that  you  have  picked  up 
all  your  things. 

PETE   THE   TAILOR 

Specializing    In 
"Ivy  Leagueizing" 


Players,  Myers  Park  High  School 
for  "The  Wandering  Stholar 
from   Paradise"; 

The  Playmasters  of  Greensboro 
Senior  ^igh  School  for  "The 
Gypsy";  the  Campbell  College 
Little  Theater  for  "Four  on  a 
Heath"  and  the  Guilford  College 
Revelers  for  "By  Judgment  of 
Court." 

Honorable  mention  in  play  pro- 
duction went  to  the  Needham 
Broughton  Golden  Masquers  of 
Raleigh:  the  Masquers  of  South- 
ern Pines  High  School;  the  Camp- 
bell Opera  Workhouse  of  Buies 
Creek;  the  N.C.  State  Drama 
Club; 

The  Wake  Forest  High  School 
Dramatic  Club,  the  Shallotte  Dra- 
matic Club,  the  Brown  High  Play- 
makers  of  Kanrapolis  and  Alpha 
Psi  Omega  of  Appalachian  State 
Teacher's    College.    Boone. 


George  L.  Coxhead 

U.N.C.  '42 
Campus  Representative 


The  Student  Wives  Club  will 
visit  a  Durham  furniture  store  to 
day.  All  wives  who  wish  to  attend 


BEACH 

(Continued  from.  Page  ^) 


have  been  asked  to  meet  at  the 
Victory  Village  Nursery  at  7:40 
p.m. 

COLORADO  ALUMNI 

More  than  70  former  UNC  stu- 
residing  in  Colorado 
invited  to  attend  an 
alumni  dinner  at  the  Denver  Coun- 
try Club  on  Tuesday,  April  23. 
University  Chancellor  Robert  B. 
House  and  Director  of  Admijsions 
Roy  Armstrong,  who  will  be  in 
Denver  at  that  time  to  attend  a 
national  educational  conference,  j  12:45 
will  be   principal  speakers.  |    1:00 

MEDICAL  COURSE  !    1:30 

A  two-day   postgraduate   course    2:00 
in  medicine  will  begin  here  today 
at   the   UNC    School    of   Medicine. 


SERVICE  AWARDS 

The  presentation  of  distinguish-  \ 
ed  service  awards  will  highlight' 
the  annual  alumni  day  at  the  UNC  i 
School  of  Medicine  Thursday,  j 
Those  receiving  the  awards  will  be 
announced  at  a  dinner  session  i 
Thursday  night  at  the  Carolina  i 
Inn.  I 


Beach     was    "liberal    humanism.    ,_,,..     ^    ,.,  . 

He    labeled    it    as    the    refuge    of '  ^*^'^  ^  ^*^^  ^.'.^^.^  3".""2'  Pi"°g"m  in 

those  people  who  have  tried  "Bib 
lical    piety"    and    "gentle    skepti 


general  medicine.  It  is  expected  to 
I  attract  physicians  from  througfifeut  i 

cism."    Beach    held    that    this    re- '  ^^r!!'^^i'-°""^^,,^.^,,^^        J 
ligion    might   be   typical   of   many    "^":"^*   "^  WASHINGTON        ^| 

I     Various   members   of    the   Dept. 
P      j  of  Experimental  Medicine  and  the  I 
j  Venereal      Disease      Experimental  | 
"Liberal    humanism,"    according '  Laboratory  of  the  UNC  School  of  j 
to     Beach,     believes     that     moral  |  Public  Health  will  take  part  in  the  j 


college 
fessors. 


juniors    and    college 


teachings    are    good    and    people  annual   Venereal   Disease  Seminar  j    9:45 


NEW  YORK  LIFE 

INSURANCE   COMPANY 


WOOLEN  STORAGE 
-  STUDENTS - 

WHY  LUG  ALL  OF  YOUR  WINTER  WOOLENS 
HOME  WITH  YOU  FOR  THE  SUMMER  AND  THEN 
LUG  THEM  BACK  AGAIN  IN  THE  FALL,  WHEN 
WE  CAN  KEEP  THEM  HERE  FOR  YOU  ALL  SUM- 
MER. WE  GUARANTEE  SURE  PROTECTION 
AGAINST  FIRE,  THEFT,  MOTHS,  MOISTURE,  AND 
HEAT  ...  TO  INSURE  YOUR  CLOTHES  OF  THE 
AMPLE  STORAGE  SPACE  THEY  NEED  TO  PRE- 
VENT DETERIORATION  ...  TO  GUARANTEE 
THEM  SCIENTIFIC  SUPERVISION  AND  EXPERT 
HANDLING:  SEND  THEM  HERE  FOR  A  WARM 
WEATHER  VACATION. 

ONE  CALL  TO  US  IS  ALL  IT  TAKES  TO  MAKE 
SURE  YOUR  WOOLENS  GET  THE  PROTECTION 
THEY  NEED  THIS  SUMMER.  WE'LL  PICK  THEM  UP 
.  .  .  DOUBLE  QUICK  .  .  .  STORE  THEM  IN  OUR 
MODERN  PLANT  .  .  .  AND  BRING  THEM  BACK 
TO  YOU  IN  THE  FALL  ...  ALL  AT  LOW  COST. 

SAUNDERS 

NU-WAY  DRY  CLEANERS 


For  Storage 

Laundry   Service 

Rug   Cleaning 

South   Graham   Street 


Hats 
Cleaned 
Blocked 

Phone  9-3498 


DAILY    CROSSWORD 


ACROSS 

1.  Not  soiled 
6.  Move 
sideways 

11.  Passageway 

12.  Preceding 

13.  Tree 

14.  Manacles 

15.  Before 

16.  Citrus  fruit 

17.  Evening 
I       warning 

bell 
20.  Kind  of 

piano 
22.  WhiU  ant 

(var.) 

26.  Ancient     7 
Syria 
(poM.) 

27.  Take  as 
one's  own 

28.  Indian 
weight 

29.  Whirlpools 

30.  Atomisers 
«2.  BriUsb 

statesman 

{pom.) 
'  35.  Frozen 

water 
'  33.  Benefit 
39.  Strict 
■41.  Fish  net 

42.  RetielHtd 

43.  Suspends 

44.  Quotes 

DOWN 
1.  Arrived. 
2  Fibber 

3.  Uncommon 

4.  Entire 

5.  Bom 

«.  Taperbif 
roof 


7.  River 

( Burma  > 

8.  Dionysius 
(short- 
ened) 

9.  Of  great 
length 

10.  Gaelic 
16.  Often 
(poet.) 

18.  Exposing 

19.  A  thing  (L.) 
?0.  Perched 

21.  For 

23.  Most 
clamorous 

24.  Mimic 


25.  Con- 

Lrac- 

tion 
.27.  Girl's 

name 
29.  Bitter 

vetch 

31.  God- 
dess 
of 
vol- 
canoes 
(pops.) 

32.  Smash 
( dial. ) 

33.  Part  of 
the  eye 


[i2;:L'  Hsa  eae 

@Dii    1-2^0    nSQ 


Yetterday't  AMW«r 

34.  Shower 

36.  American 
Indian 

37.  Finishes 

39.  Dry,  as  wine 


should  live  by  them  without  both 
ering   with    any   theological   ques- 
tions. The  object  o£  ultimate  tru.st 
among  such  believers  was  pointed 
out  to  be  mankind. 

The  weakness  of  "liberal  hu- 
manism" he  said  is  that  when 
•good  and  educated"  mankind 
fails  then  this  faith  comes  close 
to  despair.  The  result  of  such  de- 
spair is  often  the  development  ol 
a  cynic,  said  Beach. 

Religion  number  four  in  Beach's 
categories  was  that  of  "happiness, 
conventionality  and  security." 
"This  is  the  religion  of  Americans 
in  their  suburban  Utopia."  Beach 
said.  "The  great  end  of  man  is 
security  and  happiness,  air-con- 
ditioned if  possible." 

The  ethics  of  this  conventional 
.\merican  religion  are  deceftcy, 
honesty,  friendliness  and  all  those 
"things  which  make  up  real  nice 
guys."  "This  religion  is  often  con- 
fused with  Christianity."  Beach 
stated,  "for  Church-going  is  very 
important  to  these  people. 

"God  is  to  them  an  indulgent 
grandfather,"  the  speaker  con- 
tinued, "with  Christ  as  his  sales- 
man of  a  good  and  nice  product." 

The  final  religion  listed  by 
Beach  was  that  of  Christianity. 
Calling  it  a  minority  movement 
on  campus  and  through  histiwry. 
Beach  said  that  Christianity  is 
often  hard  to  detect  from  its 
many  counterfeits. 

The  last  in  a  series  of  address 
on  the  theme  "The  Christian 
Faith— Pr3test  and  Affirmation" 
will  be  given  by  Dr.  Waldo  Beach 
tonight  ia  Carroll  Hall  at  8  p.m. 
He  will  speak  on  "Wliafs  the  Use 
of  the  Church?". 


in  Washington,  D. 
24. 


C.  on  April  23- 


WUNC-TV 

Todays  schedule  for  WTfNC-TV. 
the  University's  educational  tele- 
vision elation,  is  as  follows: 

Music 

Today  on  the  Farm 

Built  for  Living 

Sign  Off 

Vusic 

Buckskin  Bob 

Legislative  Review 

News  and  Safety 

Geography  for  Decision 

Of  Books  and  People 

Sports 

German  Course 

Crisis 

Common  Enemy 

Ideas     ' 

UN  Review 

Tree  Bank 

Final  Edition 

Sign  Off 


5:15 
5:30 
6:00 
6:20 
6:30 
7:00 
7:15 
7:30 
8:15 
8:30 
9:00 
9:30 


10:00 
10:05 


EVANS  SAYS 
100  POSTS 
NOW  OPEN 

student  body  President  Sonny 
Evans  has  announced  that  100  ap- 
pointments for  positions  in  Stu- 
dent Government  are  now  avail- 
able in  the  Executive  Office. 

Evans  stated  much  personnel 
would  be  needed  for  1957-1958  if 
the  success  made  over  the  past 
years  is  to  be  continued. 

"I'm  eager  to  talk  to  each  and 
every  person  interested  and  will 
consider  every  appointment  on 
the  basis  of  interest,  ability,  anS 
desire,"  Evans  said. 

The  following  list  of  appoint- 
ments will  be  made: 

Attorney  General.  Consolidated 
University  Student  Council  (2); 
Elections  Board  (15);  Campus 
Chest  (2);  NSA  Committee  (5); 
Library  Committee  (7);  Campus 
Stores  Committee  (3); 

University  Traffic  Committee 
(2);  Traffic  Ad\isory  Commission 
(2);  Campus  Traffic  Board  (8); 
Cabinet  (10);  Dance  Committee 
(5);  Audit  Board  (5):  Graham 
Memorial  Board  of  Directors  (3); 
Student  Council  (1); 

Victory  Village  Veterans  Af- 
fairs Commission  (7);  Honor  Sys- 
tem Commission  (21);  Summer 
School  Student  Government: 
Men's  Honor  Council  (7); 
Women's  Honor  Council  (7);  and 
High  School  Honor  System  Proj- 
ect. 


Over  WO  Education  Seniors 
Have  Begun  Practice  Teaching 


One-hundred  and  eleven  seniors 
in  the  School  of  Education  began 
Mieir  six  weeks  of  student  teaching 
recently   in   schools   of  eight   North 

Carolina  cities. 

i 

Student  teaching  is  the  final  phase 
of  the  four-year  teacher  training 
program.  The  seniors  will  first  be 
pi  iced  in  classrooms  as  observers 
and  then   t>e  allowed  to  take  over 

gradually  the  teaching  duties.  , 

i 

They  will  remain  under  the  su- 
pervision of  the  regular  classroom 
teacher  and  the  faculty  of  the  Edu- 
cation School.  .■\t  the  end  of  six 
weeks  they  will  return  to  Chapel 
HiE  for  a  period  of  evaluation. 

The  education  majors  are  divided 
among  eight  fields:  elementary  edu- 


cation 40:  social  studies  20,  English 
16.  science  10.  French  3.  Spanish  .X 
art  3.  physical  'education  <  men  <  8. 
.■^nd  physical  education   f women'    5. 

Kaleigh  and  Wake  Countv  have 
rsceived  35  seniors.  Chapel  Hill  20, 
WQmington  19.  Durham  and  Dur- 
ham County  15,  Winston-Salem  6. 
Burlington  and  .Alamance  County  8 
Charlotte  5,  and  Greensboro  3. 


Correction 

It  was  incorrectly  r«.-ported  ia 
Sunday's  paper  Luther  Hodges  Jr. 
is  chairman  of  the  Honor  CouncIL 
He  is  chairman  of  the  Student  Coun« 


MALTBY 

(Continued  frani  Page  1) 

man,  Shaw,  Russ  Brown,  Gordon 
MacRae.  Lisa  Kirk,  Peggy  Lee. 
Sarah  Vaughn,  Vaughn  Monroe, 
Vic  Damone,  Giselle  MacKenzie 
and    Robert   Merrill. 

The  musician  has  recorded  such 
tunes  as  "Man  With  The  Golden 
Arm."  "Deep  Blue  Sea,"  "The 
Birth  of  The  Blues"  and  "The 
Theme  From  War  And  Peace." 

Last  year  a  similar  concert  fea- 
tured Earl  Garner  and  was  high- 
ly successful.  Tickets  have  been 
placed  on  sale  in  Y-Court  and 
downtown  and  will  be  sold  until 
concert  time.  Members  of  vari- 
ous sororities  will  be  on  hand 
to  handle  any  request  for  tidcets. 


Morehead  Scholar  And  Family 

Claude  William  (Dick)  Weaver  Jr.  and  his  wife,  Shirley  and 
daughter,  Vickie  Lee  are  pictured  above  at  their  home  at  Lees  McRae 
College.  Weaver  it  the  fecen*  winner  of  a  Morehead  Scholarship. 
He  will   study  to  be  a  college  history  professor  while  here. 


AFROTC  Honor  Society 
Elects  1957-58  Officers 

The  AFROTC  Honor  Society,  the  i 
Arnold  Air  Society,  elected  officers  \ 
last  week  for  the  coming  year.        1 

Cadets  named  to  lead  the  honor 
group  are  Commander  Jerry  Cole,  I 
Executive  Officer  Ralph  Hunt,  Op- 1 
erations  Officer  Thoma*  Farrell, ' 
Comptroller  Jerry  Smith  and  Ad- j 
jutant   Recorder  Bill   Aldred. 

Outgoing  Commander  James 
Howey  was  named  by  acclamation  I 
the  outstanding  cadet  member  of 
the  honor  group  during  the  past 
year.  He  received  the  annual  Rob- 
ert A.  Gray  Award  for  the  honor 


With  this  ad  and  $1.00  Waller 
Studio  will  make  for  yeifer  any 
member  of  yoor  family  on* 
BXIO    Inch    silvartona    portrait. 

Our  regular  $7.50  valu*. 

Waller  Studio 

343  W.  Moin  A»  S  Pts. 

Durham,  N.  C. 

Durham's  Only  Down  Town 

Ground  Floor  Studio 


Aim  Of  Weaver 
Is  To  Teach 
College  History 

Lees  McRae  College  will  send 
its  fifth  Morehead  scholarship 
winner  to  Carolina  next  fall. 

He  is  26-year  old  Claude  (Dick) 
William  Weaver  Jr.,  a  veteran 
whose  life's  ambition  has  been  to 
become  a  teacher. 

"From    early    boyhood,    I    have 

i  wanted  to  be  a  teacher.  Now  with 

,  the  assistance  of  Morehead.  I  in- 

I  tend  to  prepare  myself  to  become 

a  college  teacher  of  history  with 

a    minor    in     applied     sociology," 

Weaver   said    recently. 

Weaver,  who  will  receive  his 
Associates  in  Arts  degree  from 
Lees  McRae  May  27,  said.  "I  am 
looking  forward  to  studying  at 
the  University  of  North  Carolina 
because  both  the  history  and  so- 
ciology departments  have  superior 


of  staff  sergeant  in  the  U.S.  Ma- 
rine  Corps. 

While  at  Lees  McRae.  Weaver 
has  been  a  member  of  Phi  Kappa 
Theta,  Demosfcheneans.  Green 
and  Gold  Masquers  and  was  pick- 
ed by  his  class  as  "best  all  round" 
senior  superlative. 

Weaver  graduated  from  Rankin 


ratings  with   the   national   accredi- 
tation agencies." 

Currently  president  of  the  Lees 
McRae  student  body.  Weaver  is  a  High  School  in  Greensboro 
veteran  of  the  Korean  war.  He  He  expects  to  bring  his  wife 
holds  the  Purple  Heart  and  the  and  14  months  old  daughter  with 
Silver  Star,  and  attained  the  rank    him  to  the  University. 


CLASSIFIEDS 


FOR  SALE:  '55  PLYMOUTH  CON- 
vertible.  V-8,  WW  tires,  power- 
flyte,  extras,  customized.  Call  AJ 
Baldwin,  212  Manly.  Phone 
8-9130. 

FORSALE:  '49  pEyMOUTH  4 
door  sedan,  radio  and  heater, 
$10e.  Call  at  room  No.  1  above 
Ledbetter-Pickard  between  2  and 
5  p.m. 


DRIVING  TO  ANN  ARBOR,  MJCIf  . 
for  Easter  holidays.  Need  riders. 
Call  Fred  Powledge,  8-8602,  any- 
time. 


FOR  SALE:  BEIGE  CAMELS  HAIR 
coat  —  size  12.  rcsonahly  priced. 
Call  Mary  Lou  Wills  at  8-9083 
between  5:00  and  7:00  p.m. 


ORIENTATION 

(Continued  from  Page  1) 
especially    regarding    the    Hl^or 
system,"  Exum  said. 

"I  would  like  to  urge  all  "those 
students  who  realize  the  tQflhen- 
dous  importance  of  orientation 
and  who  feel  they  have  a  mature 
grasp  of  the  meaning  and  Ijline- 
fits  of  our  Honor  System  to  apply 
for  Orientation  Counselorships 
immediately. 

"The  orientation  program  next 
fall  will  need  you.  The  future 
of  the  Honor  System  and  the 
future  at  Carolina  of  the'  individ- 
ual student  with  whom  you  may 
work  best  with  you."  he  said. 

Orientation  Chairman  Jerry 
^penheimer  added  that  the  Di, 
Phi  and  APO  presidents,  in  co- 
operation with  the  program,  have 
excused  from  their  meetings  those 
instructors  who  applied  for  the 
program,  have  excused  from  their 
meetings  those  instructors  who 
applied   fcr  Lhe"'57   program. 

He  .said  that  applications  should 
be  submitted  to  Graham  Memorial 
or  the  Y  by  7:30  tonight  and  in- 
dicated that  interested  persons 
have  not  applied  beforehand,  they 
mav  do  so  at  tonights  meeting. 


COME  AND  GET  IT! 
I've  Still  Got  ESSO  EXTRA 

at 

Downtown  Prices  For 
Regular  Gas 

«nd 

My  Regular  3^  Under  That 

Plus 

Bring  This  Ad  and  Get  1  Cent  Off  Per  Gal.  Gas, 

5  Cents  Per  Qt.  Oil 

Credit  Cards  Honored  Again 

At  The  Students'  Friend 

WHIPPLE'S  ESSO  SERVICE 


£/fjoy  longer  Holidays 

For  Fast,  Convenient  Service 
Bristol-Kingsport 
Johnson  Citir 

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and  mqny  other  points 


Call  5160  (Raleigh)  or  Your  Travel 
Agent  For  Reservotions,  Information 


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PiCDmoni. 


SURPRISE  THAT  SPECIAL  SOMEONE  WITH 

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FROM 

DANZIGER'S 

Imported  Chocolate  Easter  Eggs 
Panorama  Eggs 
Foiled  Milkchocolate  Eggs 
Chocolate  Merry-Go-Rounds 
I      Easter  Bunnies 


FOR    EASTfR 

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SPECTATOR 

TIME 

THE  PERFECT 
MIXER  WITH 

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SILK  TWILLS. 
LINENS,  AND 

TWEEDS. 
The  price  .  ..  $17.95 


Of  Chapel  Hill 


ENJOY  3-WAY  ADJUSTABLE  SEATS,  VISTA 

WINDOWS  AND  AIR  CONDITIONING  IN  TRAIVWAYS 

NEW  RESTROOM-EQUIPPED  BUS  FLEET 

Go  TRAILWAYS 

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■iiii»iiwiiliiiilll>IW»liniliilHiiinrnTinrfifi'il'[  " ..A.v■v■x,Mo»^J«MM«wr■wi^y■M«»x■>w^^^■^■'»^•vw«<M««^>^ 

-    FROM  CHAPEL  HILL  to   1-way 

*  WASHINGTON  -  $7  10 

Thru  ^.iner  (no  change)  service  daily 

•  ASHEVILLE  $*.55 

6  Trips  including  4  Thru  Liners 

•  WILMINGTON  K75 

Thru  Liner  (no  change)  service  daily  '•?■}> 

*  ATLANTA  S9.40 
[  4  Departures  daily  (plu*  t«x) 
\       Ship  by  Trailways.  Express  goes  ovt  on  "next"  bus. 


»vA«wj6%yyj>i.r. 


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UNION  BUS  STATION 

311  W.  FRANKL1NST. 


PHONE  42ST 


I   I 


tAOl  POUK 


THI  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


TUESDAY,  APRIL  16,  1W7 


4 


Golfers  Conquer  Davidson,  42^2-2^2 


K 


ING'S 
ORNER 

By  BILL  KING 

DTH  Sports  Editor 


Easter:  A  Break  For  Athletes  Too 

With  the  Easter  Holidays  upon  us,  spring  sport  activity  at  UNC 
slackens  a  bit  for  a  few  days.  Most  of  the  athletes  join  other  stu- 
dents in  a  mass  exodous  to  their  respective  home:,-. 

Only  the  varsity  and  freshman  baseball  teams  will  miss  the  five- 
day  respite,  as  diamond  activity  continues  at  a  rapid  pace  throughout 
the  holidays. 

Golfers  Strong,  Tennis  Improving 

Over  all,  the  Tar  Heel  spring  sporTs  teams  have  done  well. 
Only  the  tennis  team  is  behind  its  record  from  a  year  ago,  and  thU 
was  to  be  expected  since  the  netters  lost  almost  an  entire  team 
through   graduation   and   academic  troubles. 

Coach  Chuck  Ei-icksons  fine  golf  team  is  experiencing  another 
great  seao-on  similar  to  that  which  netted  the  golfers  the  Atlantic 
Coast  Conference  title  a  year  ago.  The  linksmen  have  virtually  the 
same  club  which  copped  the  title  last  season  and  are  favored  to  make 
it  two  in  a  row  at  the  close  of  the  1957  campaign. 

At  the  outset  of  the  season,  the  Wake  Forest  golfers  were  con- 
sidered the  best  bet  to  stop  the  Tar  Heels.  In  the  iirA  match  of  the 
season  between  the  two  clubs.  Carolina  handed  the  Deacons  an  184- 
84  defeat. 

The  fabulous  tennis  team  of  1956  is  no  more.  That  great  squad 
won  18  matches  and  lost  but  one  and  was  probably  the  best  in  the 
history  of  th«  school.  But  Valdimir  Cemik  (pronounced  Chernik), 
the  new  "instructor  of  tennis''  at  Carolina  has  expressed  optimism. 
He  recently  called  his  club  a  "good  but  inexperienced  group." 

Actually,  since  Cemik  joined  the  Tar  Heels  the  netters  have 
swept  through  two  straight  conference  matches.  That  leaues  them  with 
a  respectable  4-5  record  on  the  sea^-on.  Tha  Tar  Heels  are  also  sup- 
posed to  have  one  of  the  finest  freshman  squads  in  a  long  while. 
Thus,  the  gloomy  outlook  at  the  beginning  of  the  campaign  is  now 
filled  with  optimism  and  fine  potential. 

We  have  been  asked  by  several  people  exactly  how  the  con- 
ference championship  in  tennis  and  golf  is  decided.  We  were  a 
little  vague  on  th«  questions  so  we  consulted  our  ACC  spring  Sports 
Yearbook. 

According  to  this  handy  little  brochure,  the  golf  championship 
is  determined  at  the  conference  tournament  which  last  year  was  held 
in  Winston  Salem.  This  includes  both  individual  and  team  champion 
ships. 

The  policy  of  the  tennis  championship  is  a  little  different. 
The  Team  title  is  determined  by  the  dual  meet  standings  of  the 
regular  season  play,  while  the  individual  titles  are  decided  by  a  con- 
ference tournament  at  the   end  of  the  season. 

Baseballers  StilJ  Definitely  In  Contention 

The  Carolina  baseballer's  loss  to  Duke  l^st  Saturday  was  a  tough 
one  for  the  Tar  Heels  Had  they  won,  they  would  have  moved  into 
first  place  in  the  Atlantic  Coast  Conference.  One  bad  inning,  however, 
knocked  Walt  Rabb's  chargej  into  third  place. 

This  is  not  a  bad  position  for  the  Tar  Heels  this  early  in  the 
season.  In  fact,  it  might  be  a  blessing  in  disguise,  for  now  the  pres- 
sure is  on  the  top  two  teams.  State  and  Wake  Forest.  The  Deacons, 
incidentally,  were  not  given  much  chance  to  win  the  title  at  the 
beginning  of  the  season,  but  their  jump  from  last  to  second  place 
last  week  labels  them  a  definite  threat. 

The  Tar  Heels  play  only  two  conference  games  out  of  four  over 
the  holidays,  but  a  couple  of  wins  against  Clemson  and  South  Caro- 
lina could  put  them  back  in  the  thick  of  the  ACC  race. 

Beatty,  Scurlocic  And  Others 

From  Fetzer  Field  comes  about  the  mo^t  consistently  productive 
teams  on  the  Carolina  campus.  Jim  Beatty,  the  best  runner  in  Carolina 
history,  and  Dave  Sciirlock.  a  sophomore  who  eventually  will  challenge 
Beatty  as  the  holder  of  that  distinction,  are  leading  the  Tar  Heel  cin- 
dermen  through  a  great  spring  season. 

This  combination  is  not  the  entire  squad  by  any  means.  Coach 
Dale  Ransen  hes  »t  his  disposoi  a  tremendous  amount  of  potential, 
both  freshman  and  varsity.  The  loss  of  Beatty  will  hurt,  but  come 
next  fall,  Ranson  will  have  enough  talent  to  make  up  for  the  abeerKe 
of  the  great  little  All-American. 

So,  as  Carolina  students  prepare  to  take  their  first  break  since 
that  fabulous  night  in  Kansas  City  when  a  national  championship 
came  to  the  campu^r.  they  can  boast  proudly  that  basketball  is  not 
the  only  sport  at  Carolina.  We've  got  some  pretty  fair  spring  sports 
too. 


I  Tar  Heels 
Are  Still 
Unbeaten 

By  JIM  CROWNOVER 

The  Carolina  golf  team  kept  roll- 
ing along  yesterday  as  they  whal- 
loped  The  Davidson  Wildcats,  424- 
24    on  Finley    Course. 

It  was  the  seventh  straight  vic- 
tory for  Coach  Chuck  Erickson's 
linksmen  since  their  tie  with  Rol- 
lins in  the  season  opener. 

Tuffy  Henderson  became  the 
sixth  Tar  Heel  of  the  s-eason  to 
gain  medalist  honors  as  he  fired  a 
very  fine  two  under  par  70.  He 
was  followed  in  the  ten  man  match 
■■yy  Don  McMillan  who  garnered  a 

[12. 

I 

!      Four  of  the  eight  other  Carolina  I 
men  shot  one-over  the  alloted  fig- 
ure  with   73's.    Low   for   Davidson  ' 
was  Gary  Heesman  with  a  73. 

McMillan  and  Gene  Lookabill, 
one  f  the  73  shooters,  had  some- 
what erratic  rounds,  both  firing 
five  birdies  but  having  enougn 
trouble  on  other  holes  to  keep  their 
scores  above  par. 


Baltimore  Beats  Washington 
As  Major  Leagues  Open  Play 

By   WHITNEY  SHOEMAKER        League    in    1954,   tallied   twice    in 

WASHINGTON— AP)— The   Bal-    the    fifth    and    shot    ahead    in   the 

tjmore    Orioles    kept    hammering   seventh  on  Gus  Triandos'  booming 


Hunter  Is 
Bat  Leader 


away  at  Wa-shington  pitchers  to- 
day and  finally,  after  11  innings, 
won  a  7-6  opening  day  victory 
over  the  Senators. 

President  Eisenhower  sat 
through  all  3  hours  and  17  min- 
utes of  the  game.  He  cheered  the 


two-run    homer   into    the   left-cen- 


GREENSBORO    (AP)  —  Speedy 
Dick    Hunter,   5-foot-7,    155-pound 
ter  bleachers.  j  outfielder  for  North  Carolina  State, 

Clint    Courtney   doubled   in   the  today    leads   Atlantic   Coach    Con- 
Washington    run    in    the    eighth, '  ference  batters  with  an  average  oi 


making  it  six-all  and  sending  the 
game    into   overtime. 
Triandos  also  drove  in  the  Ori- 


Senators  in  vain  after  getting  the    olis'    two    fifth    inning   runs    with 


contest  started  by  throwing  out 
the  traditional  first  ball.* 

At  the  finish  it  was  a  29-year- 
old  Baltimore  rookie,  Carl  Powis, 
who  knocked  in  the  winning  ri'.n 
with  a  sacrifice  fly  to  center  field. 

Dick  Williams,  who  had  opened 


.52^  after  the  first  three  weeks  of 
the  '57  sea.^\)n. 

i     Hunter,  who  is  also  a  Wolfpack 
halfback  star  in  the  football  sea- 


a    single    and    and    added   a    two- '  ^^^   j^^  j,^^^  ^^  ^^^  ^^^^  jg  ^-^^^ 


bagger   after    Powi^    had    ushered 
Williams  home  in  tie  11th. 

Baltmore,  known  for  its  lack  of 
plate  power,  found  no  difficulty 
with    Bob   Chakales    of   Asheville, 


as  compared  to  51  for  Duke's  Pete 
Maynard,  No.  2  batter  with  an 
average  of  .431.  But  the  Blue  Devils 
have  played  13  games  to  only  five 
;  for  the  Wolfpack,  which  was  tied 


.\.C..  and  Camilo  Pascual  as  they  j  ^^h    Wake     Forest   for  the  ACC 
the    nth    with    a    double,    scored    pounded  out  15  hits.  Pascual,  who  j  igad  as  of  games  of  last  Saturday, 
to  send  the  crowd  of  23.872  home,    relieved    starter   Chakales    in    the 
EiseYihower    had    a    chance    to   eighth,  gave  up  only  ^ne  run  but 


shout  in  the  fourth  when  the  Sen- 
ators clouted  Baltimore  starter 
Hal  "Skinny  Brown"  of  Greens- 
boro, N.C..  and  reliefer  Mike 
F^ornieles    for   five  juns. 

The  Orioles,  edging  toward  their 
first  opening  day  triumph  since 
they       entered       the       American 


that    was    the    big    one.    He    was 
charged   with   the    loss. 

Billy  Loes,  a  veteran  at  27, 
pitched  the  last  two  innings,  al- 
lowed three  hits  but  no  runs  and 
gained  the  decision.  He  succeeded 
Brown.  P'ornieles  and  Billy  O'Dell 
on    the   mound. 


The 'Tar  Heels  ran  away  from  the 
j  Wildcats   without    the   services   of 
I  their    number    one    man,    Tommy , 
I  Langley.  Langley  missed  the  match 
i  because  of  illness  in  the  family. 
j     The  undefeated  linksters  will  be 
i  shooting   for   win    number   8   this 
1  afternoon  as  they  play  host  to  West  | 
j  Illinois  State  College  at  2  o'clock. 
I  The  Summary 
j      Adams   (C)   defeated   Scott,   3-0; , 

Lookabill  tC)  defeated  Sloan,  3-0. 
I  Best  ball  (C)  3-0. 

I  Patrick  (C)  defeated  Heesman.  2- 
j  1;  Summerville  (C)  defeated  IX*n- 
i  nis.  3-0;  Best  ball  (C)  3-0. 
I  Henderson  (C)  defeated  Alexand- 
I  er.  3-0;  Ruff  in  (C)  defeated  Payne. 
124-4;  Best  ball  (C)  3-0. 
j     Rothrock  (C)  defeated  Mackorell, 

3-0;  Bell  (C)  defeated  Vaughn.  2  4- 
1  4 ;  Best  ball  (C)  3-0. 
I      McMillan  (C)  defeated  Armfield, 
!33-0;    Mitchell    (C)    defeated    Bell. 

24-4;   Best  ball  (C)  3-0. 


Doug  Ford  Would  Like 
To  Take  British  Open 


According  to  ACC  a-ervice  bureau 
figures  through  games  for  the 
same  date,  Don  Shealy  of  Clemson 
is  the  No.  3  batter  with  an  average 
of  .421,  followed  closely  by  Dave 
Sime  of  Duke,  .404,  and  Jack  Phil 
lips  of  Wake  Forest,  .400. 

Maynard,  a  6-foot,  170-pound 
Duke  sophomore  from  Winsor, 
Conn.,  is  the  conference's  No.  1 
man  in  runs-batted-in  with  17  and 
is  tied  with  Jim  Legette  of  North 
Carolina  for  stolen  base  honors, 
each  with  ^'cven.  Mayard  and  Sime, 
the  Duke  sprint  phenom,  each  have 
hit  two  home  runs  to  trail  Wake 
Forest's  Al  Baker  in  that  depart- 
ment. Baker  has  hit  three  homers. 

Leggette  is  the  leading  batter 
for   North   Carolina   which    has    a 


By  HUGH  FULLERTON  JR.       ;  prize   money. 

NEW    YORK  —  (AP)  —  Doug       Although  he  has  done  very  well 

Ford,    the    hard-working   golf   pro  so  far  this  year  wi^th  victories  in 

who  recently  added  the  green  coat  the     Los     Angeles     and     Panama    season  record  of  9-5.  I^eggette  has 

of    the   Masters    champion    to    his  Opens  and  the  Masters,  and  more    a    .321    percentage,    17   hits   in   53 

collection,  of  trophies,  would  like  than  $25,000  in  prize  money,  Doug    times  at  the  plate, 

to   try   a   taste   of  the   glory   that  hopes   to   make   his   best   showing 

goes  with  the  British  Open  cham-  during  the  summer  months, 
pioniihip.    But    two    factors,    TTT       "There's  a  great  difference  be- 


Coombs  Dies 

PALESTINE,  Tex.— (AP)-John 
"Iron  Man  Jack"  Coombs,  one  of 
the  greatest  pitchers  in  the  his- 
tory of  baseball,  died  here  today. 
He  has  74. 

He  was  believed  to  have  suf- 
fered a  heart  attack.  Coombs  re- 
tired from  baseball  about  three 
years  ago  after  having  coached  at 
Duke  University  for  26  years. 

Coombs,  who  won  hLs  nickname 
in  pitching  three  full  World  Se- 
ries games  against  the  Chicago 
Cubs  in  five  days  in  1910,  was  a 
member  of  Connie  Mack's  Phila- 
delphia Athletics  from  1905 
through    1915. 

He  also  was  credited  with  pitch- 
ing the  longest  complete  game  on 
record  in  the  history  of  the  Ameri- 
can League.  That  was  a  24-inning 
marathon  with  the  Boston  Red 
Sox,  which  he  won,  on  Sept.  1. 
1906. 

In  1910  he  set  a  record  of  13 
shutouts  which  still  stands  for 
the  most  pitched   in  one  season. 


points  and  the  smaller  British  ball 
may  keep  him  on  the  American 
tour. 

Just  before  the  Masters.  Ford 
.switched  his  affiliation  to  a  sport- 
ing goods  company  with  headquar- 
ters in  Britain.  He  stopped  in 
New  York  between  tournaments  northern  courses, 
today  to  attend  a  luncheon,  col- 
lect a  $5,000  check  from  the  com- 
pany for  winning  the  Masters  and 
to  discuss  the  possibility  of  going 
to  England  to  help  design  a  new 
line   of  golf  clubs. 

"They  want  me  to  go  there  and 
I'd  like  to  try  playing  in  the 
Open,"  Doug  said.  "But  I'm  afraid 
I'd  miss  too  many  tournaments. 

It  would  take  me  at  lea.st  a 
couple  of  weeks  to  get  used  to 
playing  the  smaller  ball  and  in 
the  meantime  I  might  miss  too 
many  tournaments.  Those  TTT 
points  may  be  worth  $10,000  next 
year." 

The  points  Ford  mentioned  are 
awarded  on  the  basis  of  weekly 
trvurnament  performances  under  a 
plan  adopted  this  year  by  the  Pro- 
fessional Golfers  A-ssn.  They  will 
determine  the  top  10  tournament 
players,  who  will  receive  spec- 
ial awards  next  season  just  for 
appearing  in  the  spon.soring  tour- 
naments. 

Thi5  could  mean  quite  a  bundle 
of  dough  to  Ford,  who  seldom 
misses  a  tournament,  anyway.  If 
he  can  pile  up  enough  points  to 
earn  the  No.  1  position,  he'll  col- 
lect a  guaranteed  $400  a  tourna- 
ment   in    addition    to    his    other 


tween  the  courses  you  play  on 
the  winter  tour  and  those  you 
play  in  summer,"  he  explained. 
"Usually  1  do  pretty  well  at  Los 
Angeles,  which  is  more  like  a  sum- 
mer course,  and  then  don't  do 
much    until    I    get    on    the    softer 


Leading    Batte 

rs:    AB 

R 

H 

Pet. 

Hunter,  NCS 

19 

3 

10 

.526 

Maynard,  D 

51 

14 

22 

.431 

Shealy,  Clem. 

19 

4 

22 

.421 

Sime,  D 

47 

16 

19 

.404 

Phillips,  WF 

30 

3 

12 

.400 

Bonczek,  D 

43 

5 

17 

.395 

Kennel,  NCS 

21 

7 

8 

.380 

Arnold,  Va. 

22 

5 

8 

.364 

G.  Miller.  WF 

28 

4 

10 

.357 

"On  those  hard  winter  courses, 
if  you  miss  the  green  about  all 
you  can  do  is  try   to  putt   it   up." 

Ford's  speciality,  it  might  be 
added,   is   accurate   chipping. 


Frosh  Netters 

The  freshman  tennis  team  de- 
feated Greensboro  High  School 
8-0  yesterday   •fternoon. 


DIAL  9-481 

All    Cars    Equipted    With 
Two-Way    Radios 

Service  To  And  From 
Raleigh-Durham    Airport 

"Call   Us  And  Count 
The  Minutes" 


CAROLINA  CAB  CO. 


Murals  Today 

Softball:  (4:00)  Phi  Kap  Sig  vs. 
SAE;  Zete  vs.  Phi  Oelt;  Steele 
vs.  Graham;  Joyner-1  vs.  Lewis; 
Stacy  vs.  Old  East;  Beta  vs.  SAE 
<W);  (5:00)  DU  vs.  Sig  Chi;  Dent 
Sch-2  vs.  Alpha  Chi  Sig;  Mm! 
Sch-1  vs  Everette;  Law  Sch-2  vs 
Med  Sch-2;  DKE  vs.  Sig  Nu  (W). 

Tennis:  (4:00)  Chi  Phi  vs. 
Lamb  Chi.  (5:00)  PiKA  vs.  Phi 
Gam-2  (W). 

(Today's  action  concludes  In- 
tramural participation  until  after 
the  Easter  Holidays.  Action  will 
resume  Tuesday,  April  23rd.). 


Rod  And  Gun 

The  first  Rod  and  Gun  Field 
Meet  between  Carolina  and  N.  C. 
State  is  tentattvely  scheduled  for 
May  1st.  All  persons  interested  in 
participating  are  urged  to  call  or 
come  by  the  Intramural  Office 
Monday,  April  15th.  The  event  in- 
clude archery,  bait  casting,  target 
rifle  shooting  and  and  trap  shoot- 
ing. 


FOR   THAT  I 

ONCE-IN-A-LIFETIME 

EASTER    GIFT 
choose 


MEDICAL  LECTURE 

Dr.  David  Alexander  Cooper  will 
present   a   lecture,    "Bronchogenic 
Carcinoma    (cancer    of    the    bron- : 
chial  tubes)"  at  the  annual  Phi  Chi  ] 
Medical  Fraternity  lecture  in  the 
Clinic     Auditorium     of    Memorial ' 
Hospital  at4  p.m.  tomorrow.  [ 


Vrtcarvec 


DIAMOND     RINGS 


Value  Assured  by 

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Wentworth  &  Sloan 
Jewelers 


IT  S  FOR  REAL! 


by  Chester  Field 


TOI  DANCER  CY* 


At  campus  hops,  Cy  guards  the  wall. 

Why,  he  doesn't  know  at  all. 

Cy  thinks  he's  really  quite  a  prancer — 

In  point  of  fact,  a  real  toe  daijcer. 

But,  as  every  wise  girl  knows. 

He  doesn't  dance  on  his  own  toes! 

MORAL  t  Stay  on  your  toes!  Take  your 
pleasure  BIG  with  Chesterfield  King! 
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of  what  you're  smoking  for. 

Llk*  yeur  pleasvre  MOT 

Ch«sferfi«M  Kin* 

hcM  Ivrythlnel 

*$S9  m—  *»  John  A.  Htiulriekton,  Florida  Statt 
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tSO  far  mmy  phtioaophical  vara*  atotpttd  for  puUi- 
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A'^OS^ 

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,0 


Confession 


\ 


We'd  like  to  admit  right  here  and  now  that  the 
main  reason  we  rim  advertisements  like  this  is  to 
get  you,  dear  reader,  to  drink  Coca-Cola  to  the 
virtual  exclusion  of  all  other  beverages.  The 
sooner  you  start  going  along  with  us,  the  sooner 
we'll  both  begin  to  get  more  out  of  life. 


C^mcla 


Bottied  under  authority  of  Th*  Coca-Cola  Company  by 

DURHAM  COCA-COLA  BOTTLING  CO. 


Howard  Johnson  Restaurant 

STUDENT    SPECIALS 

Barbecued    Chicken 
Choice  Steak  Sandwiches 

2:00-    5:00  P.M 
SERVED  8:00- 11:00  P.M. 

"Landmark  For  Hungry  Tarheels' 


HAVE  A  SWELL 

EASTER  VACATION 

.-.■■:-'■  ■   • 

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•  IfM,  TNI  COCA-COU  COMPANY 


Attractive    patterns 
normally  to  be  expected 
in   superfine   worsteds   are   per- 
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imported  cotton  and  dacron  in  discreet 
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SERIALS  LEFT. 


Dean  KMgiLOf  Graduate  Sc 


iticizes  Tuition  Increase  Proposal 


WEATHER 

Scatt*r«<l    showers    with    an    ex- 
ptH4  high  of  68. 


2r()  c  Daily  11  STar  Jiccl 


REVIEW 


This  week's  news  in  review,  see 


page  2. 


VOL.  LVil  NO.  U9 


COf/iplrte   on    Wire  Strvtet 


CHA^BL   MILL.  NORTH  CAMLINA,   WEDNESDAY,  APRJL   17,   1957 


Officu  in  Graham   Memorial 


FOUR  PAGES  THIS  iSSUf 


Role  Of  Graduates 
IsVital  To  Faculty 

The  retent  pi()|M)sa]  to  hike  tuition  for  oiit-ot-statc  stu- 
dents attendin<;  the  three  Consolidated  University  units 
has  drawn  criticism  frt)ni  the  UNC  Graduate  School. 

Associate  Dean  A.  K.  King  said  the  proj>osal,  il  passed, 
would  eventually  deprive  the  Tniversity  of  some  distinguish- 
ed facidty  members. 

Dean   King  pointed  out   the  "indispensable"   benefits  the 
University   receives   from  non-res-     ^^^^^^^  students.  He  listed  three 


ident  graduate  students  who  study 
here  and  later  join  the  UNC  fac- 
ulty. 

He  also  emphasized,  in  a  re- 
port to  UNC  Chancellor  Robert  B. 
House,  the  high  caliber  of  out-of- 
gtate  undergraduates  who  have  lat- 
*r  taken  graduate  work  and  be- 
come  members  of  the  faculty. 

The  increase  proposal  was  made 
recently  by  State  Rep.  L.  H.  Ross 
of    Beaufort.    The    measure    calls 


other  factors  to  be  considered  in 
getting    good    graduate    students: 

1.  Stipends  paid  to  graduate 
students  in  appointments  should 
'oe  raised  by   twenty   per  cent. 

2.  Housing  for  married  grad- 
uate students  must  be  improved 
in  quality  and  quantity  for  that  is 
an  important  consideration  in 
competition  for  able  graduate 
students  as  well  as  for  faculty. 


Prillaman  AnrmUnces  Student  Workers 
To  Receive  Ticket  Books  For  Payment; 
Directot  Fhllows  Legislature  Suggestion 

I  Latest  Move  Approved 
By  White,  Alphin,  Evans 


,  3.  A  high  rate  of  tuition  is 
for  a  tuition  increase  of  not  niore^^^^^  ^  AetervexM  for  non-resident 
than   $200   per   year  for  non-resi-   ^^^^^^^^  ^^^^^^^^ 


dent  students. 


REVITALIZATION 

"Should  those  three  factors  be 
materially  improved  in  the  next 
few  years,  the  general  quality  of 
the  University's  graduate  program 
vculd  attract  a  sufficient  number 


In  the  event  the  General  As- 
sembly approves  the  bill,  the  Uni- 
versity Board  of  Trustees  would 
be  directed  to  put  the  hike  into 
effect   starting  next  fall. 

Ross'    measure    is    currently    in 
the  hands  of  the  Joint  Appropria- 1  «f  the  finest  minds  of  the  nation 
tions  committee.  ,  ^«      revitalize     continuously      our 

■       I  teaching,     service     and     creative 
ABOUT  HALF  .         ,    I  functions."  Dean  King  said. 

Dtan    King    said    approximately  I  .,    ^      ,  . 

half  of  the     former     holders     ofj      He  .said  the  University  is  among 
graduate    appointments'  h^re    who    ^^e    twenty    five    most   productive 

»     .1.     _  >.i.».o  «.„«««  »_  nstitutions  of  higher   learning   in 
are  now  facultv  members  came  toi  ^  ° 

-,.,_    ,  .:        .f.*^^  \'  he  United  States. 

use    from    other   states. 

Of  the  353  holders  of  graduate  I      "There  has  been  assembled  here 

appointments    in    the    University  I  'n    Chapel    Hiil    intellectual    re- 

this  year.  Dean  King  said,  227  are  I  sources     which     constitute     t  h  e 

torn    out-of-state.  I  state's    most    priceless    asset."    he  i 

Of  the  faculty  members  now  in ,  ^'d.  j 

the  Unjvwcsity  who  hold  the  rank!     One  of  the  most  difficult  prob-| 

of   a.sslstan^   p^ofes-so-    or    higher,  |  lems     eoofronting    the     Unfvewl-j 

one  tlHttl  began  here  as  graduate  I  ty  in  the  next  ieny««rs.  i>e  said,  i 

students   with    some    type    of    ser-     vill  be  that  of  maintaining  a  dis- 

•ice  appointments.  •  tin«;uished    faculty.    The    Graduate  i 

"If  we  are  to  build  a  great  far- 1  School  should  be  a  key  factor  in , 

ultv   here,"   Dean   Khig   said,   "we    planning    to    solve    the    personnel 

will  have  to  have  our  share  of  the  i  pr  blem.  he  said. 

best  graduate  students  not  only  in       Officials     of     the     Consolidated 

North   Carolina   but  in   the   entire .  University  last  week  indicated. they 

nation."  \  would    opopse   Ross'    bill   if    given 

Dean  King  called  graduate  stu-  j  an    opportunity    to    appear   before 

dents  -indiiipensable  to  our  opera-    the     Joint     Appropriations     Com- 

tion  and  vital  assets  for  the  fut-   mittee. 

ure."  Consolidated     University     Presi- 

THREE  FACTORS  dent'william  C.  Friday  announced 

In  the  report,  he  said  the  Uni-    the  policy  at  a  meeting  with  the 

versity  also  strives  to  attract  un-   Greater   University   administration 

dergraduates  of  quality,  as  well  as  staff. 


BY  HOUSE: 


SAM  WELLS 

wins  two  felUnoships 


Frank  Crov/ther  Elected 
1958  Symposium  Head 


Frank  Crowther,  sophomore 
from  Chewy  Chase,  Md..  has  been 
elected  chairman  of  the  1958  Car- 
olina Symposium  on  Public  Af- 
fairs. 

He  was  elected  Monday  by  a 
vote  of  the  Interim  Committee  and 
the  new  committee  in  the  Assem- 
bly  Room  of  the  Wilson  Library. 

Crowther  said  the  "prospects 
for  next  year's  Symposium  are 
e.ttfemely  high."  He  said  he  be- 
lieved the  "only  restrictions  we 
have,  aside  from  those  of  finance, 
are  those  we  place  on  ourselves 
and  our  capabilities." 

He  expressed  gratitude  and  ap- 
preciation to  the  1958  committee 
an(l  assured  them  he  would  "try  to 
uphold  the  confidence  they  have 
pi^ijd  in  me"  by  the  election. 

.  <*  • 

FULLY  CAFABLi 

Our  committee,  he  said,  is  fully 
capable  of  "carrying  on  the  stand- 
ard that  was  set  by  the  1956  or- 
ganization." 

He  also  thanked  the  Interim 
Committee  and  its  chairman  Jim 
Exum.  "Without  their  efforts  and 
a.ssistance.  our  new  organization 
would  have  been  at  quite  a  loss 
and  would  have  been  much  longer 
in  organiaang  and  preparing  our- 
selves for  1958." 


.■several  outstanding  speakers  to 
the  ?»jmpus  to  speak  "in  open 
forum  on  critical  problems  of  our 
times." 

The  time  and  place  for  the  1958 
Symposium  have  not  been  de- 
termined. Crowther  said  the  pro- 
gram would  "most  likely  be  one 
week  in  duration." 


Sam  Welts 
Wins  Two 
Fellowships 

Sam  Wells,  senior  history  major 
and  member  of  Phi  Alpha  Theta 
national  honorary  history  fra- 
ternity, has  been  awarded  two 
fellowships  for  graduate  study. 

It  was  announced  yesterday  Uiat 
Wells ;:ia  the  recipient  of  the  DajB- 
forth  -Foundation  FeDowsM^ 
which  win  cover  all  expenses  in 
graduate  work  for  a  Ph.D.  degree. 
Wells  was  notified  recently  he 
was  awarded  the  Woodrow  Wil- 
son Fellowship  for  gradjate  stu- 
dy. 

Wells  is  a  member  of  Phi  Beta 
Kappa,  and  was  a  member  of  Phi 
Eta  Sigma,  freshman  honor  so- 
ciety. He  has  served  as  president 
of  Phi  Alpha  Theta. 

He  Ls  at  present  an  active  mem- 
ber  of   the  Order   of  the  Golden 
i  Fleece,    highest    men's    honorary. 
j  He  has  served  as  attorney  general 
1  of  the  student  body. 

Following  a  tour  of  duty  with 
the  U.  S.  Marine  Corps  after  grad- 
uation from  Carolina,  Wells  will 
do  graduate  work  at  Harvard. 

Wells  is  the  second  Carolina  stu- 
dent to  receive  the  Danforth  Fel- 
I  lowship. 

I  Last  Issue 

I  Today's  issue  will  be  the  last  one 
i  until  after  the  spring  holidays.  The 
i  paper  will  resume  publication  next 
;  Wednesday  morning. 


Patrol  Givdh  Authority 
To  Use  Uhmarked  Cars 

RALEIGH— .(AP)—  jUefJislative  the  cars  except  to  enforce  the 
approval  of  a  plea  from  the  State  i  laws  against  highway  racing  and 
Highway  Patrol  for  permission  t3 '  in  emergencies, 
use  unmarked  cars  to  nab  high-1  Under  the  White  amendment, 
way  racers  and  other  traffic  law  |  no  patrolmen  could  have  halted 
violators  was  assured  today.  I  a  motorist   unless  he  was  wilful- 

The  assurance  came  vtotn  the !  ly  violating  the  law  or  the  offi- 
House  amended  and  then  passed  jeer  believed  he  was  about  to  wil- 
by  a  voice  vote  a  measure  to  a*-|fully  violate  the  law.  It  w^ould 
thorize  some  patrolmen  to  cruise  have  forbade  patrolmen  to  search 
the  highways  in  plain  automo-|  halted  cars  except  when  hey  made 
biles.  Before  becoming  law,  the  halted  cars  except  when  they  made 
bill  must  go  to  the  Senate  for! 
approval  of  the  House  amend-! 
ments.  •  } 

One  of  the  amendmeols,  pr9^[ 
posed  by  Rep.  John  Y.  Jordan  Jt%  I 
of  Buncombe,  would  not  aUotri 
more  than  21  per  cent  of  the  p±A 
trol's  581-«ar  fleet  to  be  of  th« 
I  unmarked    variety.    Another    an^«  ■ 


By    EDITH   MACKINNON 


Diplotmat  Slain 


ijf>- 


Three  Negroes 
Not  To  Change 
Duke's  Policy 


UNITED  NATIONS,  N.  Y 
Egypt  informed  the  U.N.  Trustee- 
ship Council  that  an  Egyptian  dip- 
lomat, Kamal  Eddine  Salah,  wa..- 
assassinated  yesterday  in  Somalia, 
a  UN  trusteeship  territory  in  Af- 
rica  under  Italian   administration. 

Salah  was  chairman  of  the  U.N. 
Advisory  Council  in  Somaliland. 
Hi-  had  served  with  the  group 
there  since  April  1954.  Omar 
Loutfi,  Egyptian  U.N.  delegate 
who  reported  the  assassination, 
said  he  had  no  details. 


Lenoir  Hall  Director  George  W. 
Prillaman  yesterday  announced 
that  definite  action  had  been 
taken    toward     alleviating    condi- 


tions    revolving    around 
workers  in  Lenoir. 


student 


Di-.  Hollia-  Edens,  president  of 
Duke  University,  revealed  yestcr- 
endment.  by  Mecklenburg's  Frank  j  ^^^  ^^^^^  ^^ree  Negro  schoolteach- 
Snepp.  would  require  all  patrol  1^^.^  j^^^^  j^^^^  awarded  nine-week 
cars  to  be  equipped  with  sirens ;  ^^^j^^j^jp^  ^^  a^en^  the  .summer 
and  would  require  patrolmen  t»  j  i^gtitute  for  teachers  of  science 
use  them  in  halting  perwws  on:  ^^  j^^g^^gj^a^j^  ^^  p„^p 
the  highways.  [    -h^    pointed    out,    however,    that 

Snepp,  like  Rep.  George  Unell '  t2Us  announcement  does  not  repre- 
of   Rowan,    was   cooeerned    aV>Ut|gent  any  change  in  administrative 
wompn  drivers  beuig  halted  by  j^j  j^iicjes  of  the  jiniversitjr. 
ficers    in   jmunarJted   cws,  ,S*SMj     "The  In-'lilute  is  a 'special  pro- 
said  that  while  he  thodght  the  pa-    ^am    and    is    being   sponsored    by 


trol  should  have  the  plain  cars, 
patrolmen  "ought  to  be  required 
to  identify  th<jmselves  in  some" 
way. 

The  House  beat  down  bj  a  57- 
41    vote   an   ahfendment    by    Rep. 
Thomas  White  of  Lenoir.  It  would 
have    required    the    patrol    to 
the  Governor's  permission  to 


the  National  Science  Foundation 
on  a  contract  basis."  Dr.  Mens 
said. 

"Since  the  foundation  is  a  fed- 
eral    agency,     the     administrative 
policies  of  the  federal  government 
are  controlling.  The  University  is 
get !  cooperating    in    the    program    be- 
use '.  cause  of  the  urgency  of  the  need 


any  unmarked  cars  if^d  then  not  for  improvement  in  the  teaching 
more  than  20  per  cent  of  its  fleet  [  of  science  and  mathematics  in  the 
could  be  unmarked.  In  addition, 'secondary  and  elementary 
th*  patrol   could    not    have  used  |  schools." 


Parent's  Ikty  Set  For  May  5 

Parent's  Day,  an  annual  event  a  reception  in  Graham  Memorial 
sponsored  on  campus  by  Alpha  at  3  p.m.  Also  scheduled  is  a  con- 
Phi  Omega  service  fraternity  has  ^  cert  under  the  Davie  Poplar.  Fom* 
been  set  for  May  5.  it  was  an- 
nounced  yesterday.  I 

Parents'  Day  activities  this 
year  will  include  open  house  in 
all  men's  dormitories.  Added  to 
this  year's  events  is  «n  op^ 
house    in    the    University    Infirm- 


ary. 


Scheduled  for  the  afternoon   is 


bands  are  set  to  perform  at  the 
4  p.m.  event. 

In  addition  to  activities  plan- 
ned by  Alpha  Phi  Omega,  Chi 
Omega  .sorority  plans  a  faculty 
tea   for  the   afternoon. 

Shows  are  also  scheduled  for 
the  afternoon  at  Morehead  Plane- 
tarium. 


Britain  Lifts  Ban 

LONDON  <-*»— Britain  la.«t  night  j 
was  reported  willing  to  lift  a  ban  i 
on  British  ships  going  through  the  I 
Suez  Canal  on  Egypt's  terms  if  I 
other  user  nations  do  the  same.      { 

Informed  sources  said  the  Mac- 1 
Millan  government  was  ready  to  i 
let  the  ships  pay  transit  tolls  to 
Eg>'pt,  but  under  protest,  until  a  j 
final  :^ttlement  of  the  canal  dis-j 
pute  is  negotiated. 

The  United  States  was  reported 
ready  Mto  approve  a  similar  ar- 
rangement for  U.  S.  ships. 

The  sources  here  said  Britain's 
position  was  outlined  in  a  proposal 
secretly  circulated  last  week 
among  members  of  the  15-naiion 
Suez  Canal  Users'  A^yn.  | 


DR.  BENSON 

. .  receives  grant 


Health  Service 
Awards  Grant 
To  Dr.  Benson 


Russia  Warned 

IvONDON  tjfi — Soviet  Russia  got 
a  warning  from  Harold  Stassen  to- 
day against  figuring  the  United 
States  would  never,  under  any  cir- 
cumstances, loose  its  atomic  weap- 
ons. 

In  a  related  development,  Brit- 
ish Defense  Minister  Duncan 
Sandys  told  the  House  of  Com- 
mon.j  "the  protective  power  of  the 
free  world  depends  at  present  al- 
most entirely  on  the  nuclear 
strength  of  the  United  States." 

"Nuclear  disarmament  by  itself 
would  be  disastrous  since  it  would 
give  decisive  superiority  to  Rus- 
sia, which  will  always  be  able  to 
maintain  larger  conventional 
forces."  Sandys  declared,  under 
Laborite  heckling,  in  a  defen.>«  de- 
bate. 


Dr.   Walter  R.   Benson     of 
School   of   Medicine   here   was 
centiy   awarded   a   two  year  grant 
of    $19,768    by    the    U.    S.    Public 


,\ccording  to  Prillaman,  student 
workers  will  receive  food  ticket 
books  valued  at  $1.90  in  place  of 
the  present  system  of  compensa- 
tion of  $1.90  worth  of  food  per 
day. 


The  Lenoir  Hall  director  said 
"In  deference  to  student  govern- 
ment and  student  lcgi.-lature.  we 
have  decided,  even  in  the  face  of 
many  problems  which  will  arise, 
to  establish  plan  two  as  suggest- 
ed by  student  Legislature  in  bill 
RW-22-34,  Feb.   14.   1957.' 

The  bill  calls  for  the  establish- 
ment of  a  system  of  ticket  books 
with  each  worker  receiving  the 
value  of  $1.90  per  working  day 
in  tickets.  These  booko*  are  to  be 
;  issued  at  the  end  of  a  specified 
1  work  period  according  to  the  value 
of  the  book. 

I  REDEEMABLE 

j  Tickets  will  be  redeemable  for 
food  in  Lenoir  Hall  or  the  Pine 
JRoom  at  any  time  by  the  student 
!  worker.  Prillaman  said  there 
1  would  be  no  cash  redemptions  for 
'  tickets  except  under  extenuating 
circunistances. 

The   Lenoir    HalJ    announcement 
came    as    the    latest    development 
J  following  the  series   of  grievances 
the   ^''■^^  ^y    'ludent  workers  over  pay 
j.g.j  conditions  in  the  dining  establish- 
ment. 


Ex-Lenoir  worker  Caleb  White 
Health  Service  for  a  study  of  dis- '  !^*^*^"  ^^^  circulation  of  a  petition 
turbances   in   amino  acid   metabol-  i '"  February  seeking  improvements 

!  in  the  Lenoir  Hall  situation. 
Foremost    among     the    grievances 
'  wa.s  the  Lenoir  policy  of  payment 
^  of  student   workers  through  $1.90 
in  food  per  day.  The  workers  were 
1  required  to  eat  in  Lenoir  Hall  dur- 
!  ing  specified  hours 
;  DIFFERENT  METHODS 
'     The  petition  called  for  a  differ- 


AS  SPRING  HOLIDAYS  BEGIN: 


Mass  Exodus  Sidrfs  Today 


FRANK  CROWTHER 

, .  1958  Symposium  chairman ' 


GM'S  SLATE 


Th«    only    activity    scheduled 
for   Graham   Memorial    today    is 


Johova's    Witnosscs,    9-11     p.m.. 
The      1956     Symposium,      the, 
seventh  in  UNC's  hiatory,  brought ;    in  Roland  Parker  Loungt  No.  1. 


By  PATSY  MILLER 

At  last  the  long-awiited  time 
has  finally  arrived— spring  vaca- 
tion—and students  feel  as  free  as 
birds  freed  from  their  cages  of 
drudgery. 

The  mass  migration  of  a-tudents 
from  UNC  to  various  points  of 
"'relaxation"  will  begin  at  rapid 
pace  this  morning  and  afternoon. 

The  place  to  flpend  the  holidays 
is  not  so  important  as  the  fact 
that  there  is  a  holiday,  or  so  it 
seems  by  the  variety  of  spots 
chosen  for  the  annual  vacation. 

Pee  Wee  Batten,  campus  song- 
bird, will  leave  Thursday  on  a 
personal  appearance  tour  for  a  lo- 
cal record  company  which  record- 
ed her  current  release,  "My  Big 
Brothers  Friend."  Miss  Batten 
will  make  stops  in  Chicago,  Wash- 
ington, Baltimore  and  Philadel- 
I  phia. 

I      Carolina's  Debate  Team,  plus  a 
j  few    atmosphere-seeking    individu- 
I  als,  will  be  heading  for  New  Or- 
leans over  the  holidays.  All  that  day  with  scattered  showers 
can  be  elicittd  from  the  students       South   Carolina:   riaing  temper.^ 
making  the  trip  has  been  a  little '  atuTes  with  chance  of  rain  l»t«r 
I  hazy.  j  today. 


The  majority  of  students  will  go 
home  to  visit  friends,  or  relatives, 

Rainy  GutlcM^c 

The  long  range  weather  fore- 
cast for  the  period  covering  the 
spring  holidays  was  far  from 
spring-like  in  outlook,  according 
to  a  report  yesterday  from  the 
wealiher  bureau  at  the  Raleigh- 
Durham   Airport. 

For  travelers  North,  the  wea- 
ther department  predicted  cool 
breezes  beginning  Friday  as  a  re- 
sult of  a  storm  centered  in  Min- 
nesota slowly  moving  across  the 
northern  section   of  the   country. 

Stay-at-home  Carolinians  and 
travellers  as  far  south  as  Florida 
are   also   expected  to  feel   reper- 


or  vacation  on  the  beaches.  They 
will  leave  behind  them  empty 
dorms,    Y-Courl,    new    flames,    old 


Postal  Services 

WASHINGTON  -J^  —  President 
Eisenhower  signed  a  41-million- 
dollar  appropriation  bill  for  the 
Post  Office  Department  last  night. 

Postmaster  General  Surftmer- 
field  immediately  announced  the 
resumption  of  normal  mail  serv- 
ice, to  be  made  effective  within  24 


ism. 

The  research  project  will  deal 
with  the  effects  of  disturbance  of 
amino  acid  metabolism  on  pro- 
tein formation  growth  and  tumor 
formation  in  animals.  A  total  of 
$9,993  will  be  expended  in  the 
first  year  of  the  work  and  the  re- 
mainder has  been  s^t  aside  for  the 
completion  of  the  second  year's 
research. 

Dr.  Ben.son  began  his  work  on 
this  project  three  years  ago.  He 
joined  the  faculty  of  the  UNC 
School  of  Medicine  last  year  and 
Ls  currently  an  a.ssistant  professor 
in  the  Dept.  of  Pathology. 

He  was  educated  at  Duko  Uni- 
versity and  Muhlenburg  College 
and  received  his  M.C.  degree 
through  the  Duke  University 
School  of  Medicine. 

Dr.  Benson  is  a  member  of  the 
College  of  American  Pathologist. 
International  Academy  of  Patholo- 
gy, the  New  York  Academy  of 
Science  and  the  American  Medical 
Assn. 


1 1  a  m  e  s,     wonderful     professors,  |  hours. 


The  money  will  provide  addi- 
tional operating  funds  for  the  re- 
mainder of  this  fiscal  year,  end- 
ing June  30. 

Summerfield,  who  had  curtailed 
mail  service  last  week,  said  in  his 


parking  places,  bridge  and  happy 
policemen. 

Some  of  those  going  home  will 
be  looking  for  a  quiet  rest,  some 
will    visit   future   in-laws,    outlaws ' 
renew  old  acquaintances,  visit  the  | 

old  school,  harass  the  old  teachers !  statement  last  night,  "I  am  happy 
or  scout  for  a  possible  mate.  to    announce    the    resumption    of 

As     usual,     the    Atlantic     coast !  normal  mail  service  and  am  grati- '  treat   Ls  6  p.m.    on   April   23.    ac- 
beaches  will    be  filled  with  Caro-  j  fied  to  have  the  overwhelming  af- !  cording  to  an  announcement  made 
Una     students,     but     the     Florida  jfirmative  vote  of  the  Congress  giv-    yesterday 
beaches    will    also    have    a    large  I  ing  the  department  funds  for  this 
number   in   evidence.   Chapel   Hill   purpose. 


Reply  Deadline 
For  Retreat 
Set  On  April  23 


The  deadline  for  returnal  reply 
postal  cards  for  attendance  at  the 
student  government  leadership  re- !  fees 

According 


ent  method  of  .student  payment, 
with  an  easing  of  restrictions  re- 
quiring the  vvork«?r.-  to  cat  in  Le- 
noir. 

Meeting  with  administrative  of- 
ficials on  April  10  in  an  attempt 
to  clarify  the  differences,  the  stu- 
,  dent  group  voiced  its  views  and 
suggested  changes  to  be  made  in 
the  present  .sy.stcm. 

The  matter  has  al.so  been 
brought  before  the  Student  legis- 
lature,   where    a    Lenoir    Hall    In- 

I     (See    LATEST   MOVE,    page   3) 

'    Long  Announces  Plans 
For  New  Humor  Mag. 

I  Tom  Long  (SP).  who  recently 
I  introduced  u  bill  to  investigate 
1  the  estjblishment  of  a  campus 
i  humor  magazine  has  announced 
;  he  will  introduce  a  bill  to  estab- 
;  lish  a  committee  to  select  the  edi- 
1  tor   and    business    manager. 

The    last    legislature    authorized 
(a   budget  of  $1,425  for  the  maga- 
zine.  Five  hundred  dollars  of  this 
',  amount    will    come    from    student 


will  soon  be  on  the  map  for  the 
inhabitant..-   of    Daytona,    Jackson- 
ville and  Miami. 
There    are    a    great    man^    "big 


cussions  from  the  Minnesota  wea- ,  i>i»sts"  scheduled  to  "rock"  the 
ther  in  the  form  of  scattered  sho- 1  beaches  of  Virginia,  Myrtle, 
wers  starting  Friday.  For  the  most ;  Wrightsville  and  Nags  Head, 
part,  however,  the  forecasters  pre-  Believe  it  or  not.  some  of  the 
diet  mild  weather  throughout  the  i  more  industrious  students  will  re- 
south.  I  main  on  campus  during  Easter. 
North  Carolina:  mostly  mild  to--  Student     body     President     Sonny 

Evans  and  Jerry  Oppenheimer, 
Orientation  chairman  plan  to 
study  and  work  on  campus  activi- 
ties. 


W.  Va.  Explosion 

CHARLESTON,  W.  Va.  J^— An 
explosion  rocked  the  huge  nitro 
plant  of  Monsanto  Chemical  Corp. 
15  miles  west  of  he^e  late  yester- 
day. 

First  reports  said  at  lea^-t  four 


The  retreat,  which  will  take 
place  over  the  April  27-28  week- 
end,  will   feature   Chancellor-elect 


to  the  budget  the 
magazine  should  hope  to  raise 
$200  by  advertisements.  Maga- 
zines will  be  sold  at  $.25  apiece. 
Long  said  the  magazine  would 
in   no  way  be  connected  with   the 


William  B.  Aycock  as  guest  speak-  j  now   defunct   Tarnation,   the   cam- 


er  and  will  be  directly  concerned 
with  student  problems  for  the  up- ' 
coming  year. 

Transportation  to  Camp  Mon- 
roe, site  of  the  retreat,  will  be 
provided  for  all  interested  stu- 
dent government   leaders  as   well 


pus  humor  magazine  up  until  last 
year. 


persons  were  injured  and  sent  to  i  a#  others  interested  in  attending, 
hospitals  in  the  Charleston  area,  j  a  member  of  the  planning  corn- 
Company  officials  said  the  blast  ifiittee  said  yesterday, 
started  a  fire  in  a  large  chemical  j  Everyone  concerned  with  stu- 
manufacturing  stnK?ture  and  was,  dent  and  campus  government  has 
still  raging  out  of  control  later.        '  been  urged  to  attend. 


IN  THE  INFIRAAARY 

Stodonts  in  the  Infirmary  yoo- 
tcrday   includod: 

Miss  Chariot!*  Nowell;  and 
Brant  Nash,.  James  Scott,  Law* 
renca  Snyd«r,  A.  Rothrock,  Na- 
than Wood,  Jo«y  Brown  and 
Thomas   Hall. 


Mot  rwo 


THE  DAH.Y  Vifll'XlBL 


WEDNESDAY,  APRlt   17,   W7 


Intelledt  Or  Prejudice  ? 
Ross  s  tuition  Boost 


"Opinion  is  ultimately  determ- 
ined by  the  feelings,  and  not  by 
the   intellect."— Herbert  Spencer. 

"I  hold  that  man  is  right  who  is 
most  closely  in  league  with  the  fu- 
ture:"—Hrnrik  Ib^en. 

Tlie  Daily  Tar  Heel  believes 
.\ssociate  Dean  of  the  Gi^aduate 
Sthool  A.  K.  King  completely 
viofhr  in  liis  warning  against  erec- 
tion of  higher  tuition  barriers  for 
out-of-state   students. 

Dean  King,  in  speaking  his 
mind  admirably,  gave  these  vital 
and  enlightening  statistics  con- 
cerning  the  graduate   program: 

Of  the  355  holders  of  graduate 
ap^x)intments  here  during  the  cur- 
rent year.  227  are  non-residents  of 
North   Carolina. 

These  figures,  coupled  with  a 
storv  in  The  Dailv  Tar  Heel  that 
four  of  seven  women's  dormitorv 
presidents  elected  are  non-Tai 
Heels,  cniphasi/es  and  accentu- 
ates the  importance  of  out-of- 
staters  at  this  institution. 

>id  they  combine  to  make  Rep. 
]..  H.  Ross  of  Beaufort's  bill  to 
hike  out-of-state  t^uition  look  all 
the  more  provincial  and  ridicul- 
ous. 

Rep.   Ross  pro<^  that  Spencers 


assertion  that  man  is  governed 
more  by  feelings,  in  this  case,  pre- 
judice, than   by  his  intellect. 

And  those  who  love  the  Uni- 
versity and  wish  to  see  its  academ- 
ic adiievements  and  status  preser- 
ved through  the  morrows  would 
say  Rep.  Ross's  lack  of  foresight 
puts  him  at  the  fartherest  p0le 
from  Ibsen's  likihg  of  the  man 
"most  closelv  in  league  with  the 
future." 

Many  students  will  be  dtnied, 
lor  obvious  firiancial  reasons»  right 
of  ingre&i  into  the  Uiiiversitv; 
many  non^tar-heeled  students  will 
be  denied  right  to  continue  their 
education:  many  prospective  stu- 
dents will  be  dis^couraged  from  en- 
rolling in  the  University. 

We  plead  for  the  continuation 
of  the  University's  tenets  of  edu- 
cation   without    linn'tation. 

To  the  General  Assembly,  we 
plei-d  that  your  sense  of  fairness 
and  foresi^^ht  reign. 

The  University  will  suffer,  es- 
|)e(  iallv  in  lio;ht  of  the  intellectual 
migration  of  underpaid  professors 
alreadv  evidenced,  if  out-of-state 
tuition   barriers  are   hiked  again. 

The  General  Assembly  nuist 
kill  the  infamous  Rossian  brand 
of  provincialism. 


Lenoir;  I mprovement^: 
Congrats  And  Regrets 


Director  (ieorge  Prillaman  is  to 
be  heartily  congratulated  for  com- 
ing to  terms  \nth  Lenoir  Hall 
workers. 

Director  Pyillaman  finally  saw 
the  light  in  initiating  a-  new  sys- 
tem of  meal  tickets  wliereby  Len- 
oiritcs  may  be  .^^laranteed  their 
just  renumeratipn'  withoiu  bein;jr 
fort  id  to  cat  str^?:fit  meals  at  des- 
ignated times. 

Di lector  Prillaman  has  also  stat- 
ed that  he  plans  to  revamp  the 
ditiing  hall  <^erating  procedures. 
This  asfain  is  admirable.  ^V'e  sug- 
gest that  such  phrases  as  "privi- 
lege qranted  bv  the  Universitv," 
and.  "^'our  iirimediate  exam  sche- 


fhe  DailyTar  Heel 

The  nfficisl  ttudeni  publicattoB  of  tbe 
Piihlicttions  Board  of  the  Univerwij  of 
N'nrth  Carolina,  where  it  i»  published 
duly  except  MondaT  and  examinatioi 
■nd  vacation  periods  and  summer  terms 
Entered  as  second  class  matter  in  Ibi 
9'»s»  office  in  Chapel  Hill.  N  C.  iindei 
ch*  Art  of  Marrh  <.  1870  SutmcriptloB 
rites:  mailed,  S4  p^r  jear.  $290  a  9^mH 
ler.  delivpr^d  $«  t  jpat.  $3  SO  a  aemt^ 
ter 


Editor 

NEIL  B-\SS 

Managing  Mitor 

CLARKE  JONES 

Associate  Editor 

-    .    NANCY   HILL 

Sports  Editor 

.          Bn.T,  KING 

News  Editor 

WALT  SCHRUNl-EK 

Business  JWanager  JOHN  C  y^UITAKER 


A(lvertisi:.g  .Manager  ..    FRED  KATZIN 


NFTVS  STAFF— Graham  Sftyder,  Editta 
.MacKinnon,  Pringle  Pipkin,  Bob  High, 
Ben  Tayl  Jr.  H.  Joost  Polak,  Patsy  Mill- 
er, Wally  Kuralt,  Bill  King,  Ctirti? 
Crotty.  Ben  Taylor,  Sue  Atchison. 


EDIT  STAl-T— Whit  Whitfield,  Anthony 
Wolff,  Stan  Shaw,  Woody  Sears. 


BUSINESS  STAFF^jifgbo  Minter,  Marian 
Hobeck,  Jane  Pattel^  Johnny  Whitaker. 


SPORTS  STAFF:  DaW^Wible,  Stu  Bird, 
Ed  Rowland,  Jim  Crownover,  Ron  Mil- 
ligan. 


Subscription  Maiuger 
Circulation  Manager  . 


.  Dal»  Staitif 
ChuUt  Boll 


Staff  Photographers 


Woody  Sean, 


Norman  Kantor,  I|ill.  King. 


Librarian^  ...Sue  Giciuer,  Marilyn  Strum 


Night  News  Editor 
Night  Editor  — ^ 


.    ft6b  High 
^.  Guy  Ellis 


dule  is  to  be  .subordinated  to  the 
>vork  schedule"  be  stricken. 

•Xothincf.  as  we  pointed  om.  is 
to  subordinate  University  academ- 
ics. 

.\nd  the  guiding  philosophy 
that  it  is  a  great  honor,  which 
should  humble  workers,  to  be  al- 
lowed to  wi)rk  in  Lenoir  should  be 
obliterated. 

We  oiler  another  suggestion  to 
Director  Prillaman,  whom  we  con- 
gratulate for  his  long-awaited 
willingness   to   negotiate: 

That*-4M»-i'eorgani/e  his  chain  of 
comm'  :id  a  bit  so  that  the  griev- 
ances of  Ix?noir  workers  mav  reach 
him  bef</re  tliey  reach  the  boiling 
point. 

He  should  not  have  to  be  prod- 
ded bv  a  Student  Legislature  In- 
vcstiijation  ("oinmittec  to  offer  sat- 
isfactovv  Avorkirrg  rondifions  for 
his  employees. 

\Ve  suggest  that,  under  Pr ilia- 
man's  present  organizational 
scheme,  "captains"  of_  worker 
(TOWS  and  the  student  supervisor. 
Direttor  PviHaman  and  his  three 
assistant  managers  hold  periodical 
(onferences  Avhereby  workers*  gri- 
evances mav  be  aired  without  en- 
dangering  tenure   of   employment. 

In  adopting  'TUni  B"  promul- 
gated by  the  Student  l,egislature 
Investigation  Committee  —  which 
did  an  admirable  job  under  the 
chairmanship  of  Rep.  Al  .Alphin— 
Director  Prillaman  did  all  con- 
cerned a  great  service. 

It  is  unfortunate,  however,  that 
the  director  had  to  be  prodded 
into  negotiation  by  the  shaip 
knife  of  legislature  investigation 
and  long-term  workers'  ple<is. 


AnpnymQus 
Artillery 

It  is  regrettable  that  the  state 
Highway  iPatTol  has  to  lesort  to 
anonymity  to  catch  socedcrs  and 
general  law-breakers. 

Passage  bv  the  House  ol  a  bill 
allowing  uinnarked  patrol  cars  to 
prey  upon  motorists  is  the  eqttiva- 
lent  of  bksting  with  a  shotgun 
from  behind  a  bush. 

It  is  regrettable  also,  that  "drag 
racers"  and  speeders  in  general  so 
flagrantly  destroy  property  and 
endanger  lives  without  compunc- 
tion. 

With  unseen  electronic  eyes 
trained  from  behind  observation 
points  and  unmarked  cars  con- 
stantly on  the  predatory  prowl,  the 
harassed  law-breaker  is  given  lit- 
tle chance. 

Big  Brother  is  watching  you. 


Violator  Of 
onor  Code 
Lquds  4ustice 

To  My  Fellow  Sivdonts: 

I  am  one  of  the  many  students 
here  at  Carolina  who  has  been 
miJead  by  false  rumors  about 
the  Honor  Council.  I  had  heard 
ti^t  the  Council  consisted  of  a 
gfout>  of  very  square  individtnils 
who  took  great  pleasure  in  sus- 
pending students  from  school.  I 
had  also  heard  that  the  only  way 
to  keep  from  getting  suspended 
when  you  have  made  a  mistake 
was  to  lie  about  it  and  not  tell 
the  Coimcil  a  thing. 


I  would  like  to  tell  you  how  the 
Honor  Council  is.  First  of  all,  it 
is  composed  of  a  group  of  very 
sharp  and  fine  young  men  who 
know  the  score.  I  do  not  believe 
that  you  can  pull  the  wool  over 
their  eyes  very  easily.  As  for  be- 
ing fair,  they  are  the  fairest  and 
most  considerate  people  with 
whom  I  have  ever  come  into  con- 
tact. 


I  am  an  Honor  System  offender. 
But  I  am  not  ashamed  to  admit 
this  to  you  or  to  my.self.  nor  have 
I  ever  been.  I  copied  another 
boy's  paper  during  a  quiz  and  I 
was  confronted  by  a  member  of 
the  Council.  I  could  not  hold  it 
within  myself,  and  I  decided  to 
admit  my  guilt  and  take  the  pun- 
ishment that  I  believe  I  desen'cd. 

From  what  I  had  heard,  I  wa^ 
sure  that  I  would  be  rudely  kick- 
ed out  of  school.  I  shall  not  teil 
you  what  the  outcome  was,  but  I 
feel  that  my  case  was  handled 
with  justice  first,  and  then  mercy. 
I  l)elieve  that  it  was  handled  fair- 
ly, and  I  was  treated  with  cour- 
tesy and  consideration  at  all  times 
before,  during,  and  after  the 
trial. 


I  want  to  write  this  to  the  stu- 
dents who  have  made  a  mistake 
as  I  have  and  to  tho^t;  who  will 
make  mistakes  in  the  future.  I 
say  to  you,  listen  to  no  one.  List- 
en to  yourself.  Listen  to  the  voice 
of  your  own  conscience. 


You  will  hear  the  bigots  rail 
at  you  and  they  will  tell  you  to 
lie  and  cover  up  and  try  to  get 
away  with  your  mistake.  They 
are  •wTong.  They  will  always  be 
WTong,  and  they  arc  doubly  false 
by  trying  to  infest  you  with  their 
erroneous  beliefs.  Listen  instead 
to  youTjelf.  Shakespeare  said  it 
very  well:  "To  thy  own  ficlf  be 
true,  and  as  tbe  night  follows  the 
day,  thou  canst  not  be  false  to 
any   man." 

Nom*  withold   by    request 


• 

L'il  Abnar 


Reader  Defends  Local  Merchant; 
Coed  Opposes  Spitting'  Trend 


Editor: 

Shame  on  you!  Has  the  concept 
of  co-ops.  commissaries  and  com- 
pany stores  become  so  dominant 
in  American  thinking  that  The 
Daily  Tar  Heel  can  criticize  a 
Chapel  Hill  jeweler  for  selling 
clas'  rings?  True,  the  Grail  aini.s 
at  worthy  purposes:  its  scholar- 
ship program  —  like  all  charitie.s 
—  is  commendable.  But  it  does 
more  harm  than  good  if  it  sHbit- 
circuits  the  system  of  business 
which  has  brought  so  much  pros- 
perity to  our  country. 

The  Grail,  or  any  campus  or- 
ganization, has  the  legal  right  to 
submit  to  fellow  students  any 
merchandise  ''  r,ervices  in  order 
to  make  2  profit;  it  can  sell 
jewclr>-  or  Danish  pastries  or  in- 
timate books  or  cupboard  cloth- 
ing or  tempo  beer.  But,  surely, 
it  has  not  the  right  to  expect  pro- 
tection that  will  remove  all  com- 
petition. 

1  hope  the  Grail  member^  don't 
sympathize  with  your  editorial; 
in  fact,  I  hope  you  editors  don'l 
really  believe  what  you  wrote. 
I'd  rather  think  that  you  publish 
these  things  in  order  to  invite 
enough  letters  to  fill  in  the  next 
days  editorial  page  —  at  no  ex- 
pense! 

Ed  Bagley 
(We  wonder  if  Mr.  Bagley's 
being  from  Chapel  Hill  might 
not  make  his  sentiments  coin- 
cide with  those  of  the  local 
merchants.   — The    Editor). 


Editor: 

This  Ls  to  the  Carolina  Gentle-] 
man?? 

Is  it  the  latest  fad  at  Carolina 
to  engage  in  .pitting?  This  is  no 
joke.  It  has  become  a  common 
.sight  on  campus  to  see  many  a 
male  .<jpit  —  in  the  halls,  on  the 
walk.s,  and  even  in  the  presence 
ol  their  dates.  Yes,  these  actions 
have  been  seen  with  recurring 
frequency. 

Such  a  public  display  is  not 
only  vulgar,  crude  and  ill-mah- 
ncred  but  also  unsanitary. 

Just  what  ^•ianda^ds  have  the 
Carolina  gentlemen  set  for  them- 
selves that  justify  their  many 
disrespectful  actions'?? 

Revolted  Coed 


Editor:         /^'  . ^  ■ .  i  . '  '.f  f v.f ,»  ; 

Why  have  you  sin^^d  Out  one 
merchant  in  the  town  of  Chapel 
Hill  to  condemn  for  providing  a 
mere  efficient  and  inexpensive 
service? 

I  refer  to  your  recent  editorial 
on  the  local  jeweler  who  sells 
class  rings  as  a  part  of  his  busi- 
nesj,  and  who,  according  to  your 
editorial,  deprives  several  self- 
help  students  of  an  education. 

This,  sir,  is  ridiculous. 

Why  should  a  "responsible 
University  honorary"  be  permit- 
ted to  sell  something  with  ex- 
clusive rights  (a  monopoly)  and 
thuj  deny  the  opportunity  to  a 
merchant?  This  is  unfair  practice. 


I 


A  new  company  from  Okla- 
homa makes  a  prettier  ring,  a 
stronger  ring,  a  finer  engraved 
ring,  and  it  is  a  little  less  expen- 
sive ring  than  the  Balfour  Co. 
makes.  Should  the  older,  more 
established  company  be  allowed 
to  put  the  new  one  out  of  buci- 
hoss  because  it  is  doing  a  better 
job?  I   think  not. 

Should    a    state    university   go 
into  competition  with  local  mer- 
chants?   If   so,    then   I   presume 
you  are  in  favor  of  the  Book  Ex 
'  selling  phonograph  records. 

When  I  buy  something,  I  buy 
it    for   its  quality.  That's  why    I 

.  b:  ught  my  class  ring  (a  beautiful 
silver  one)  from  a  local  jeweler. 

I  instead  of  a  tradition-bound  hon- 

• orary. 


In  the  future,  Mr.  Editor,  I  hope 
^you  devote  your  editorial  column 
^to  the  many  important  things 
that  are  truly  worthwhile,  in- 
stead of  slamming  the  integrity 
of  our  lociil  merchants. 

Cort  Edwards 

(Mr.  Edwards,  when  we  men- 
tioned a  responsible  student 
honorary,  that's  what  we 
meant.  The  Grail  had  the 
"beautiful"  ring  of  which  you 
refer  appraised  by  three  Dur- 
ham jewelers;  and  all  agreed 
that  it  was  much  inferior,  in  - 
penny  weight,  engraving,  etc. 
to  that  of  the  company  serving 
the     Grail. 


• 

By  AJ  C«pp 


The  Silent  Generation; 
Materialistic  Bound? 


Stan  Shaw 

We  have  been  called  tlie  silent  generation  by 
some,  and  bv  others  we  are  known  as  the  genera- 
tion that  is  "afraid  of  itself.  Our  main  attributes 
have  been  listed  as  apathy,  an  overwhelming  desire 
for  security,  and  conformity,  both  social  and  in- 
tellectual. Many  have  accused  us  of  buying  our 
thoughts  predigested  in  such  publicatiofas  as  the 
Readers'  Digest  and  Time  Magazine,  others  point 
to  our  similar  fashions  as  a  sign  of  our  need  for 
group  acceptance. 

This  type  of  thought  is  not  only  limited  to  our 
elders,  but  we  find  it  among  many  of  our  own  con- 
temporaries. At  various  times  the  movies,  television 
and  other  phases  of  the  mass  media  are  pointed  out 
as  our  ready  made  hallucinations.  This  then,  is  an 
apologia  for  our  present  generation,  for  we,  as  ail 
must,  stand  or  go  down  with  it. 

It  is  accepted  as  a  reality,  if  not  admitted,  that 
the  world  has  gone  too  far  for  one  person  to  say 
that  he  is  the  master  of  his  fate  and  the  captain  of 
his  soul  as  Henley  did  in  the  last  century.  Whether 
it  is  for  the  good  or  the  bad,  mankind  will  have  to 
make  its  way  together  or  not  at  all. 

Although  individualism  cannot  and  d)ould  not 
be  destroyed  the  day  when  we  can  have  such  bril- 
liant jewels  of  personal  power  as  we  see  in  the 
Renaissance  man  of  Italy  and  the  industrial  mon- 
arch of  the  19th  century  is  past.  When  so  many 
factors  count  human  beings  are  not  likely  to  give 
one  man  that  much  power,  no  matter  what  the 
possible  gains  and  enrichments  might  be.  The 
great  mass  of  people  demand  that  all  of  the  mem- 
bers of  society  conform  to  the  will  of  the  group 
and  they  must  do  so  or  be  destroyed. 

We  grant  that  there  is  room  to  think  and  that 
artistic  achievement  is  open  almost  without  limit, 
but  power  is  the  property  of  the  group.  And  yet  we 
do  not  think  that  the  current  feeling  can  be  called 
*  anywhere  near  right.  We  do  not  believe  that  men 
with  souls  and  minds  will  allow  themselves  to  rot 
so  that  society  may  achieve  some  sort  of  tran- 
quilized  peace  and  security.  Furthermore  we  do  not 
believe  that  men  with  the  power  of  the  knowledge 
of  good  and  evil  will  be  torn  down  by  a  vengeful 
and  jealous  mob. 

Ours  is  the  generation  that  fully  realizes  the 
loss  of  its  innocence.  It  is,  the  generation  that  has 
been  fully  betrayed  by  its  own  ideals  and  the  ideals 
of  others.  It  is  the  generation  thai  had  the  soft 
dr:>am  of  Utopia  yanked  from  beneath  its  head  and 
came  face  to  face  with  a  rather  cruel  world  of 
responsibility,  and  like  it  or  not  that  is  a  collective 
responsibility. 

For  the  first  time  man  understands  that  he  has 
the  power  to  overcome  any  and  all  of  his  problems. 
It  is  a  world  in  which  automation  and_the  industrial 
age  have  created  enough  surplus  to  allow  the  so* 
ciety  to  properly  rear  all, of  its  children,  and  still 
we  have  an  ever  increasing  crime  rate  among  juve- 
niles and  a  steadily  deteriorating  international 
scene.  Ail  of  the  cures  for  the  ills  of  man  lie  before 
us  and  we  find  that  we  are  helpless  to  use  them 
and  we  wonder  why. 

Our  hope  has  been  defeated  on  every  side.  Our 
first  disillusionment  was  that  which  we  received 
from  our  parents  when  we  found  out  that  the 
First  World  War  didn't  make  the  world  safe  for 
democracy.  This  was  abetted  by  the  Second  World 
War  and  thfe  great  depression.  And  now  we  find 
man  faced  for  the  first  time  with  a  truly  ideological 
war  when  all  men  know  that  there  can  be  nothing 
gained  by  eithf:^'"  side  through  conquest  or  fighting. 
Never  before  have  we.  a  supposedly  logical  peo- 
ple, found  that  we  can  hope  to  reap  absolutely  no 
benefits  from  the  struggle  appears  to  be  inevitable, 
and  on  top  of  all  of  this  there  are  those  who  won- 
der why  our  society,  most  especially  the  present 
generation,  is  in  somewhat  of  a  stupor.  They  won- 
der why  we  seek  security,  and  why  it  appears  that 
there  is  apathy  on  ex-ery  hand. 

We  would  say  in  defense  that  in  all  of  the  his- 
tory of  man  there  has  never  been  a  generation 
which  examined  itself  so  completely.  There  has 
never  been  a  youth  that  tried  more  painstakingly, 
more  passionately  to  understand  itself  an^  the 
world  around  it,  and  yet  it  is  afraid  to  act,  afraid 
to  make  the  same  mistakes  as  in  the  past  or  to 
make  new  mistakes  in  the  pattern  of  the  past. 

There  is  a  searching,  there  is  a  questing  for 
reality  that  is  hard  to  imagine  when  it  appears 
that  there  is  so  little  responsibility.  Yes,  there  is 
little  responsibility  for  materialism  and  the  Utopias 
that  grew  and  were  a  child  of  this  materialism. 
There  is  an  inclination  to  scoff  and  to  banish  to 
nonexistence  the  elaborate  plans  which  find  their 
rational  and  justification  in  an  outmoded  manner 
of  thought.  Tfie  frantic  scramble  for  bigger  TV  sets 
and  more  automobiles  and  easier  pajTnent  plans 
exhibits  the  very  little  concern  that  the  youth  of 
today  has  for  Uiese  very  things,  no  matter  what 
it  might  appear  to  be.  It  is  an  effort  to  forget  about 
materialishi  in  a  world  that  is  based,  solely  and  • 
completely  on  that  materialism. 

The  savage  .problem  of  food,  clothing  and  shel- 
ter is  no  longer  the  main  quest  of  man.  Man's 
quest,  all  of  mankind's  quest,  is  to  understand  him- 
self, and  he  doesn't  have  a  world  or  a  lan^age  in 
which  to  do  tl\is  and  he  is  searching  for  them.  He 
tries  every  avenue  of  his  mind  and  his  existence 
to  find  them  and  he  doesn't  know  that  the  answer 
must  lie  within  himself  alone. 

We  are  an  age  in  despair  over  the  fntility  of 
man's  material  dreams.  For  these  drvams  could 
he  realized  and  have  now  come  to' the  point  where 
realization  is  a  practical  possibility.  For  man  is  a 
creature  who  must  be  forever  reaching  before  him- 
self and  when  that  for  which  he  reached  is  in  his 
grasp  he  cannot  abide  himself.  If  we  are  able  to 
find  our  way  out  of  our  despair  before  self-de- 
struction we  may  create  our  new  world  and  realize 
the  Utopian  dreams  of  the  old,  but  that' dream  can- 
not be  the  goal.  It  must  be  something  which  comes 
about  as  a  means  to  our  own  self -understanding. 
We  can  ntvver  go  back  into  the  patterns,  much  le«s 
the  methods  of  the  pabt. 


^ffOMEl 


t   . 


W 


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through  2d 


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desire 

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to  say 
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lave  to 

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fh  brU- 

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mon- 

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in    the 

The 

mcm- 

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limit. 

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called 

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to  rot 
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do  not 
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the  so- 

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lational 

before 

them 


WEDNESDAY,  APRIL   17,  1W7 


TMf  DAILY   TAH  HEEL 


PA9I  THtM 


TENNIS 
CHAMPION^ 

says: 


VICEROY  HAS 
THE  SMOOTHEST 

TASTE  OF  ALL  r 


SMOOTH  !   From  the  finest  tobacco  grown.  Viceroy  selects  only 
the  Smooth  FlaNor  Leaf  .  «  *  Deep-Cured  golden  brown  for  extra  smoothness  f 


SUPER     SMOOTH!    Only  viceroy  smooths  each  puff 
throogh  20,000  Mters  made  from  pure  cellulose— soft,  snow-white,  natural! 


DAILY    CROSSWORD 


ACROSS 

1  Strike 
5.  Terror 
t.  Inventor  of 
sewUif 
maehlne 
10  River  (6«r.) 
II.  River  (Fr.) 
13.  Thin,  brittle 

cookie 
U  Queer 

15.  Wayside 
hotel 

16.  Music  note 
IT.  Arousck 
W.  Girl's 

mekname 
2i.MoUieror 

Irish  fods 
U  Unad0m«4 
U.  Crude 
M.  Minister's 

house 

(Scot.) 
ST.  Listen 
28.  Line  aeroM 

staff  (mus.) 
M  Writinr  VoM 
30  Stinging 

insects 
U  Sign  as 

correct 
ts  Body  of 

water 
S«  Fold  over 
i7.  Quench 
39.  Sincerely 
41  Man'aname 
*2  AasistaHt 
<3  Weycena 
44  Matures 
DOWN 

1  Shadow 

2  Members  of 
I'arHament 


3.  denrd  of  rye 

4.  Letter 

5.  Toadtea 

6.  Ardor 

7.  Mr.  Lnndon 
S.  Short. 

douMe- 

breasted 

jackets 
11.  Crowd 
13.  E.  Indteii 

cereal  erase 

(var.) 
19.  Man's  name 
18-  Job 
If.  Those  In 

omet 


!.r»n:-]ii 

-  rs  ■« 

1  J'.; 

■'  •" 

.   i« 

ta.!- 

:^ 

».     i 

i    4il"JI  • 

n 

20.  God 
of 
flocks 

22.  Farm 
building 

23.  Greek 
island 

24.  Festers 
26.  Chest 
26.  Dis- 
figure 

28.  Snake        TlMUft*»r'9  Mm»wm 

30.  Backs  of  feet  M.  GnnAanui 

31.  Escape  tree 

32.  Stories  39. 

33.  Enemy  scout 
^.Leap  40.' 


Covering  The  University  Campus 


JOINT  COLLOQUIUM  I 

A  joint  UNC-Duke  Physics  Col] 
loquium   will  be  held  today  at  8{ 
p.m.    in   the   Physics    Building    at 
Duke  Uhiversity.  The  speaker,  Dr. 
R.  M.  Williamson  ,will  talk  on  "D-P ' 


School  of  Library  Science  and  its 
Center  for  Documentation  and  I 
Communication  Research.  i 

RECOMMENDATIONS 

Some    conclusive    recommeDda- : 


in.NorfoIk,  Va.  Friday.  Professor 
OitldiFell  wa-,'  past  Grand  Masto- 
and  past  High  Priest  of  North  Car- 
olina. 


ABOUT  RUSSIA: 


I  Bootc  By  Ehle^ 

Douglasl  Says  Americans  I  Now  On  Sa^e 
Brainwash'  Themselves     !"  Chapel  H^I 


Angular  Correlations." 
ATTENDING  SYMPOSIUM 

Robert  A.  Miller,  assistant  pro- 
fessor in  the  UNC  School  of  Li- 
brary Science,  h'  attending  a  "Sym- 
posium on  Systems  for  Informa- 
tion Retrieval"  which  is  now  being 
held  in  Cleveland,  Ohio. 

TTie  symposium  i?  sponsored  by 
Western       Reserve       University's 


WUIlC-TV 

Today's  schedule  for  WUNC-TV, 

tele- 


'Cfectric  Eye'  Of 
State  Student 
Wins  Contest 


j  tions  for  a  :jludy  on  teacher  work 

I  days   per  year  and   on   accredita-  i  the   University's   educational 

tion    requirements    are    expected   vision  station,  is  as  follows: 
i  from  the  State  Committee  on  Ele-   12:45    Music 

mentary    Education     at    its    next'    l^Op 

meeting,  set  for  June  25  here.         1    1:30 

The      committee     concluded     a ; 
i  weekend  session  at  UNC  with  elec- , 
j  tion   of   officers   and  selection   of 
j  the  June  date,  which  will  coincide 
{ with  the  annual  School  Week  on  i 
I  the  campus.  j 


2:00 
5:15 
5:30 
6:00 
6:20 


LITERARY  AWARD  | 

A  book  published  by  the  UNC ' 
Press  has  won  the  first  literary, 
award  of  the  Alabama  Library! 
Ai?sn. 
The  author  L-  Professor  Malcolm  j 
RAL4J1GH— (AP)— A  Pittsboro  ^  C.  McMillan,  research  professor  of} 
st^^nt  at  North  Carolina  Slate  history  at  Auburn  University,  who  j 
College  has  invented  an  "electric  wrote  the  volume  published  by  the  j 
brain"  that  won  him  first  place  UN^C  press  la.st  year,  entitled  "Con-  j 
in    a    regional    contest    sponsored    stitutional     Development    in    Ala-  j 


Today  on  the  Farm 
Common  Entry 
Sign  Off 
Music 

Your  Doorstep 
Legislative   Review 
News  and  Safety 
6:30  ^  Mathematics 
.  7:00    Industrial  ArtLs-an 
=5:30    Built  for  Living 
8?00    Carolina  Churches 
8:3Q-  Russia:  Past  and  Present 
9:30  Jafer  Highways 
10:00  "Final  Edition 
10:05    Sign  Off 


History  Ctubs  Elect 
Next  Year's  Officers 


by  the  American  Institute  of  El- 
ectrical  Engineers. 

Leonard  Wayne  Cotton,  a  sen- 
ior in  electrical  engineering,  dem- 
onstrated and  read  a  paper  ex- 
plaining his  "link  circuit  compu- 
ter" at  the  meeting  of  the  south- 
eastern section  of  the  AIEE  in 
Jaekson.  Miss.,  last  week. 

Cotton    received     a    $25    cash 


bama.  1798-1901;  A  Study  in  Poli- 
tics, the  Negro  and  Sectionalism." 

GLASS  BLOWERS 

The  American  Scientific  Glass 
Blowers  Society  will  hold  its  regu- 
lar quarterly  meeting  here  this 
week.  spon.iored  jointly  by  U^NC 
and  Duke  University.  Some  60  per- 
sons are  expected  to  attend  the 
.       ^  session  Friday  and  Saturday,  with 

award   and   will   be  given   an   ex-  headquarters  at  the  Carolina  Inn 
pense-paid  trip  to  he  national  con- 
vention of  the  AIEE  in  Montreal,  j  WASON  MEETING 
Canada,  the  last  of  June.  j     Professor  Wallace  E.  Caldwell  of 

Cotton's  prize-winning  device  is  ^he  history  dept.  addressed  a  large 
an  electronic  brain  that  can  beat   meeting  of  Masons  and  their  wives 
a  human  in  the  tic-tac-toe.  It  has ! ' 
practical  application  as  an  indus- 
trial   comjKiter   and    as    a    facility 
of  making  complex   mathematical 
solutions. 

Second  prize  in  the  regional 
contest  went  to  James  W.  Vau- 
ghan,  Jr.,  of  Duke  University  for 
his  paper  on  "the  electronic  an- 
alog computer  for  educational 
use." 

Cotton  said  although  the  "link 
cifcuit  computer"  is  confined  to 
simple  games  like  tic-tac-toe,  the 
computer's  principles  could  be 
used  to  solve  more  intricate  prob- 
lems. 


Geor|(e  Gibson  of  Charlotte  was 
elected  president  of  the  Graduate 
Hii-tory  Club  and  J  B..  Smallwood 
of  Fort  Worth,  Texas  was  elected 
IH>esident  of  Phi  Alpha  Theta  his- 
torj'  fraternity  in  a  dual  meeting 
of  the  two  organizations  Monday, 
it  was  announced  yesterday. 

Other  new  officers  for  the  '57- 
'58  academic  year  include:  Addi- 
nell  Michie,  vice  president  and 
Elaire  Nowaczyk.  secretary-treasur- 
er of  the  Grad  History  Club;  and 
Don  Freeman  vice  president  and 
Taylor  Albert,  secretai-y-treasurer 
I  of  Phi  Alpha  TheU. 


DURHAM— (AP)—  "Americans 
have  brainwashed  themselves 
about  Russia.'  Supreme  Court 
Justice  William  0.  Douglas  said 
at  Duke  University  Tuesday  night. 
"The  tourists  who  are  travel- 
ing inside  Russia  today  are  find- 
ing that  the  people  of  that  coun- 
try hawe  progressed  far  ahead  of 
what  we  had  imagined,"  the  much 
traveled  jurist  told  a  Page  Audi- 
torium audience. 

Douglas  spoke  on  his  1955  "Rus- 
sian   journey"    in    an    illustrated 
lecture    sponsored    by    the    Duke 
Student     Union's     Education     Af- 
fairs Committee,  headed  by  Bud- 
dy Beacham  of  Miami,  Fla. 
He  pointed  to  Russian  progress 
j  in   industry  and   agriculture,   say- 
ing   "they're    the    second   greatest 
;  industrial    power    in    the    world. 
j  and     their     engineers,     physicists 
j  and   chemists  are   very  talented." 
!      "The  Russians  have  done  a  great 
j  job  in   bringing  their  country  up 
out  of  the  feudal  state  to  a  stand- 

I  LATEST  MOVE 

i         (Continued   from   Page   1) 


ard  of  living  far  in  advance  of 
anything  yoi»  find  in  Asia,  the 
Middle  East  or  Africa — even  high- 
er than  the  living  standards  of 
Italy  and  Spain  and  Portugal  and 
competing  with  those  of  France," 
Douglas  added.  They  still  are  far 
below  those  of  America,  howev- 
er, he  noted. 


Of  his  Soviet  visit   specifically,  i 
the  Supreme  Court  member  said,  ■ 
"Russia  is  a  very  interesting  place 
to  visit:  every  American  who  goes' 
there  finds  the  people  very  friend- 
ly i^id  intecested  in  America."     | 

With  the  government  press,  he  ■ 
said,   the  people  get  a  very  cen- , 
sored  version  of  America  and  its 
people,   and   they   are   anxious   to 
talk  to  those  visiting  in  the  coun-  \ 
try  and  learn  everything  they  oan 
about  them.  i 

"A  Russian  censor  sits  astride 


I  A  novel  by  JTohh  Ehle  9(  the 
University  Communicatio^ns  Centcr- 

.  is  currently  on  sale  in  downt9«'n 
bookstores. 

'Move  Over,  Moimtain."  dealing 

with  the  growth  and  rise  of  a  man 

;  in    the    fictional    North    Carolina 

]  community   of  Leafwood   was   re- 

I  cently    released   by   a  New  Vork 

publi^'Iiing  company. 

Ehle  says  of  his  book,  It  is  the 
story  if  a  man  I  respect  who  lives 
in  a  town  I  like,  and  the  man  and 
the  town  are  presented  as  tknow 
them. 

Ehle  has  written  and  directed 
three  films  about  North  Carolina, 
and  is  the  authtH-  of  over  thirty 
short  stories  and  plays. 


every  news   story."   he   remarked. 
Mrs.  Douglas   showed   slides   il- 
lustrating  her   husband's   lecture. 


Van  Hecke 
Officiates 

Professor  M.  T.  Van  Hecke  of 
the  UNC  Law  School  and  Car- 
thage Attorney  Herbert  Sewell 
officiated  at  the  formal  initiation 
ceremonies  of  the  Thomas  Ruffin 
chapter  of  Phi  Alpha  Delta  law 
fraternity   here    Saturday. 

The  formal  affair  which  intro- 
duced 22  members  into  the  nat- 
ional organization  was  held  in  the 
Phi  Hall  of  New  East.  Following 
the  initiation  a  reception,  ban- 
quet and  dance  was  held  in  Dur- 
ham for  new  inductees  and 
guests. 

At  the  dinner-'banquet,  Andrew 
H.  McDaniel  of  Forest  City  was 
presented  the  award  for  the  out- 
standing active  member.  Arm- 
stead  W.  Sapp,  Jr.  of  Greensboro 
received  the  award  for  the  out- 
standing alumnus  of  the  year. 

Those  brought  into  the  law  fra- 
ternity Saturday  were:  Irwin  Ald- 
ridge,  Durham;  Jobn  Alfred, 
Dunn;  John  Campbell.  Burling- 
ton; Giles  Clark,  Elizabethown;  A. 
E.  Cleveland  III,  Murfreesboro; 
George  Coggin,  Star; 

Carl  GoWfarb,  Charlotte;  Hugh 
Hester,  Reidsville;  Dalton  Loftin, 
Trenton;  Phillip  Logan,  Chapel 
Hill;  Jimmy  Love,  Sanford;  Nick 
Miller.  'Charh>tte;  Carl  Milsted. 
Sw«nsboro;  Earmine  Poteat,  Yan- 
ceyVille;  David  Reed,  Gastonia; 
Henry  Rosser,  Hamlet; 

Benjamin  Sadler,  Chapel  Hill; 
John  Shackelford,  Rocky  Monnt; 
R.  C.  Soles,  Tabor  City;  Patrt  Syl- 
vester,   Richlands;    Richard    Tug- 


Four  UNC  Art  Students 
Take  Prizes  In  Contest 

Four  art  students  from  UNC  re- ,  abstraction     in     red.     white    an 
ceived  awards  recently  in  the  an-  {  grey-blue  oils, 
nual    Henderson    Belk    art  compe-i      The    competition    was    open    to 
tition   held    in   the   Mint   Museum!  art   students  from   all   senior  col- 
of  Art.  Charlotte.  i  leges    and    universities    of    North 

James  Brewer,  a  senior  art  stu-  {  and'  Snuth    Carolina.    The    e.\hibi- 
dent  from  Asheville.  received  sec-  J  tion  will  remain  on  display  at  the 
ond   prize  in  sculpture  for  "Mas- -Mint  Museum  of  Art  in  Charlotte 
I  aulew."     a     painted     terra     cotta  j  th^,tfgh  April  28. 
I  sculpture.    Brewer    also    received  !      "Two  art  jstudents  have  also  been 
j  first    honorable   mention   in   sculp- 1  accepted  by  the  Art  Assn.  of  New 


1  ture  for  "Soldier,"  a  figure  con- 
j  strocted  in  steel  and  cast  stone. 
I  Third  prize  in  sculpture  was 
I  awarded  to  Frew  Crisp,  a  senior 
!  from  Chapel  Hill,  for  his  "Mod- 
ern Venus."  It  is  a  figure  of  cast 
stone  and   aluminum. 

John  Spivey  received  an  hon- 
1  orable  mention  in  sculpture  for 
;  "Figure  Two."  a  sculpture  in  cast 
I  stone. 

1      First     honorable     mention     in 

I  painting  went  to  Williard  Payne, 

a  graduate  student  from  Winslon- 

I  Salem,   for  "Painting  No.  5,"   an 


Orleans  for  exhibition  in  a  na- 
tional art  sho>w  held  in  the  Isaac 
Delgado  Museum  of  Art  in  New 
Orleans,    Louisiana. 

James  Brewer  is  exhibiting 
"Phoenix,"  a  sculpture  in  a  bird- 
like form  constructed  of  steel, 
lead  and  cast  stone.  Ed  Higgins, 
a  graduate  student  from  Gaffney, 
South  Carolina,  is  exhibiting  two 
sculptures. 

One,  entitled  "Love  Nest."  is  a 
welded  steel  construction.  The 
•ther,  "iPortrait  of  a  Friend,"  is 
a  brazed  steel  construction. 


vestigating  Committee  was  set  up 
under  the  direction  of  Al  Alphin. 
When  contacted  concerning  the 
Prillaman  announcement,  Caleb 
White,  Al  Alphin  and  indent 
body  President  Sonny  Evans  voic- 
ed their  approval  and  support  for 
the  latest  move. 

Calling  the  statement  "very  en- 
couraging  news,"   Alphin   said    he 
had    "no    idea    that    a   settlement 
was  this  close."  He  stated  he  felLJ 
the    workers    "will    definitely    be 
encouraged,"  and    the   new  policy] 
j  'will  be  bound  lo  help  the  situa- 1 
j  tion."  j 

j     White  said  the  new  development' 
-  i  is  "most  encouraging  toward  alle- . 
i  viating   the   Lenoir   Hall    problem. 
We  knew  that  improvement  would 
come    only    through    a    complete 
look  at  the  situation  over  the  con- 
ference table.  ! 
"Much   credit   i>-hould    go   to  the 
quiet  efforts  of  the  student  Legis- 
lature and  the  cooperation  of  the 
administration,"  he  said. 
EVANS 

'  President  E^ans  expressed  his 
cncourageaaent  in  the  following 
statement: 

"After      much      discussion      and 
meeting  with  student  government^ 
personnel    and    interested    people,  ■ 
Prillaman  has  at  la.vt  decided  that  I 
the  students   were  right   in   their  I 


Pay  Newsmen 
More,  Luxon 
Tells  Owners 

Dean  Norval  Neil  Luxon  of  the 
Journalism  School  will  explain 
why  newspapers  should  pay  their 
writers  more  in  the  forthcoming 
April  "Nieman  Reports"  published 
by  Harvard  University. 

Dean  Luxon  will  pres-ent  his  ar- 
ticle, "Are  Newspapers  Losing  the 
Competition  for  Talent,"  on#  the 
basis  -of  a  speech  he  ^originally 
made  to  the  National  Associated 
Press  Managing  Editors  Confer- 
ence recently. 

"Newspapers  are  facing  tough 
competition  in  today's  market  for 
the  college  graduate,"  Dean  Luxon 
says.  He  points  out  that  in  two 
schooL-  of  journalism — Minnesota 
and  UNC — only  three  of  five  grad' 
uates  enter  the  newspap^*  hazi- 
ness. 

The  remainder  go  to  graduate 
schools,  advertising  jobs,,  public 
relations,  sales  and  trade  journal- 


demands   for    fairer   treatment   at  i 
Lenoir  Hall.  j 

"This  is  another  fine  example  of 
what  student  initiative  can  achieve  | 
when  it  works  through  the  proper- 
channels.    Student    government ! 
through       the       Legislature      and 
through  the  fine  wotk   of  Al   Al- ' 


Works    of    art    being    exhibited   phin,  Caleb  White   and  the  Com- 


gle.  Kannapolis;  and  James  Smith.  \  »«m     positions.     The    reason,     he 
Chapel  Hill.  '  points  out,  'w  that  starting  salaries 

I  are  far  better  in  these  fields. 

Offering  a  suggestion  to  combat 
this  tendency,  Dean  Luxon  asks 
the  question,  "Why  shouldn't 
newspapers  approach  the  problem 
of  hiring  news  personnel  and 
keeping  them  after  they  are  hired 
as  intelligently  as  most  busine.^ 
firms?" 

He  further  suggests  that  in  ad- 
dition   to    upward    salary    adjust- 


were  selected  iiy  a  jury  compos- 
ed of  Jerry  Bywaters,  Director, 
Dallas  Museum  of  Fine  Arts,  War- 
ren Robeson,  Art  Dept.,  South- 
western Louisiana  Institute  and 
Ben  Shute.  Head,  Fine  Arts  Dept., 
Atlanta  Art  Institute. 

The  exhibition  opened  in  New 
Orleans  March  24  and  continued 
through  April  14. 


mittee  has  shown  what  we  can  do 
when  all  put  forth  a  unified  ef- 
fort. 

"1  want  to  express  our  tfea«*s 
to  Prillaman  and  to  all  the  admin- 
istration officials  who  sat  in  on 
the  discussions  for  their  mature 
understanding  of  the  problems 
which  face  students  in  their  cam- 
pus life,"  Evans  said. 


EdUerial  Writfng  Award 
vpOOS  to  ruiiiiei  sniaeni 

Sylvan  Meyer,  1943  graduate  of 
the  UnivSisitj^  School  of  Journal- 
ism, has  Men  awarded  the  1956 
Si^a  Delta  Chi  Editorial  Writ- 
ing Award  for  hi^  editorial  idvo- 
eatteg  moderation  in  deaItT\g  with 
^e    race  situation   in    the   South. 

White  Meyer  was  at  Caroftna,  j  ments,  improved  forms  of  in-serv- 
he  was  managing  editor  of  *nie  j  ice  training  on  newspapers,  mean.s 
Daily  Tar  Heel  and  editor  of  the  of  recognition  for  work  especially 
Carolina  Jtfagaane.  ;  w^"  *one  in  journalism  and  pride 

He  was  a  member  of  the  Order  ^  «n  the  profe^-sion  be  fostered, 
of    the    Golden    FJeece,    highest      Dean    Luxon's    report    can    be 
men's    honorary.    Amphoterothen  ■  found  in  the  lead  article  of  the 
debating  group  and  Tau  Epsilon  Nieman  Reports  which  were    re- 


r#«f  i 


moi 


jack's 
a 

RMQC  ^ 

ith  his  new  ^ 


I  wi 

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SONIC 


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Ever  since  Jack  bought  his  new 
Sonic  CAPRI  phooograph  at  the 
local  college  store  —  he's  become 
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can  foin  him  and  be  the  biggest  ever, 
too.  for  you  can  buy  a  CAPRI 
phonograph  for  as  little  as  $19.9'. 

This  month's  special  is  the  CAPRI 

550  -  a  twin  speaker  high 

fidelity  pombhs  with  4-speed 

Webcor  automatic  changer, 

hi-fi  amplifier  in  actraaive 

two-tone  Forest  Greeo.       only  '59 

t  at  your  lecpl  dealer. 

SONIC  INDUSTRIES,  INC.   19  Wilbur  Street,  Lynbrook,  N.Y. 


Phi  social  fraternity. 


I  leased  earlier  last  week. 


See  Our  Complete  Line  Of 
SONrC  PHONOGRAPHS 

BaK-LEGGEH-HORTON 


WOOLEN  STORAGE 
-STUDENTS- 

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THt  DAILY  TAR   HEEL 


WEDNESDAY,  APRIL    17,   1957 


^A 


Th 


Piihll 
\orti 

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Eatej 

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rttet: 
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ter 


Edita 

Mana} 
Assoc 

Sport.' 
News 


Bu 


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Aflve» 


Lilwi 

Nigh 


Golfers   Suffer   First   Loss:   Frosh   Baseballers   Lose,   1-0 


*Four-Bagger  In  fZi        '.  '  ]    _ 

Sixth  inning      I  Trackmen  Invade  Terps 
Beats  Freshmen  At  College  Park  Today 


*  Lose  Tight  One  *' 
To  W.  Illinois 


By  DAVE  WIBLE 


By   ED  ROWLAND 

Held  hitles's  for  five  and  two- 
thirds  innings  yesterday  after- 
noon by  Ben  Hammett,  the  Win- 
gate   Jr.   College   Bulldogs   scored  |  ".~'^„' 'J'    *—'"*'■""""" 

u  u    o  I.  n«         '  ^'^^  T^  Heels  will  attempt  to  over- 

one  run  on  a  homer  by  Bob  Moore  i„,„^^  ,.^.       ,.  ,^l     ,, 

*     u     *  .u    /r      o  u-        1  n  power  their  old   nva  s  the   Mary- 

to  beat  the  Tar  Babies,  1-0.  ,  ,„ „  .  t  u  . 

o     *u  tT  *.        .  II  «r    » '■  ^^"'^  Terrapins  who  are  the  pres- 

Southpaw  Hammett,  a  tall  West  k  „,   .^,-^  .    .  .         .  , 

,,„...  u  J  ^    r       '  ^"^  ^^C  mdoor  and  outdoor  track 

Virginia     boy,     had  .  spaced     ioixr  ^  ^^^^^^^^ 

walks    well    up    to    the    sixth.    He  ;„..,,,      .^     , 

,,„.       1     w         •     .       Ki  .The  Tar  Heels  gained  their  un- 

:  had  only  been  m  trouble  once,  in     .„,    ,    ,  ^  •       . 

,.,•:..        .    .  u     u        J         '  defeated    record  in    the    hands   of 

the  first  inning,  but  he  bore  down   ».„,„  ^ t 

.        ,.      ..       r'        ...  three-conference  foes,   Wake   For- 

est,  State,  and  South  Carolina.  All 

three  of  these  victories  were  one 


a  new  freshman  record  in  the  880. 


Roger  Honeycutt 

Pictured  above  is  Carolina  shortstop  Roger  Honeycutt  wtto  will 
be  one  of  the  starters  in  this  afternoon's  contest  with  the  Clemson 
Tigers.  Honeycutt  just  this  season  fought  his  way  into  the  starting 
lineup  and  has  been  a  valuable  m«n  to  the  Tar  Heols  thus  fftr. 


Tar  Heel  Baseballers 
Play  Tigers  Here  Today 


to  retire  the  side  with  runners  on 
first  and  second.  j 

The    Bulldogs    took    their    thirt- i 
ccnth  win.  They  have  lost  but  one.  ' 

Carolina's  lo.'i  was  their   third. ; 
They  have  won  six.  j 

The   game    was    Hammett's   sec- 
ond loss  in  as  m^ny  games. 

The  Tar  Babies  threatened  seri-  i 

ously  in  the  fourth  and  the  eighth.  ; 

Both  times   mental   errors   by   thej 

frosh    prevented    a    score.    In    the 

fourth  the  bases  were  loaded  with  ; 

Hammett     at     the     plate..    Harold  I 

Workman  wa.-  on  third   and  came  i 

racing     home     on     an     attempted  ! 

squeeze.  Hammett  missed  the  sign  j 

and   Workman    was   easilv   throu-ji '  ..     ,  , 

out  ;  ever  worn  the  blue  and  white.  .Jim 

In  the  eighth  Ray  Burroughs  i  ^^'"^;^ '"^  ^^''^'  ^"^'^^^^  have 
walked  and  Gerald  Griffins  sin- 1  ^*''"  L^*!  "^'^'^  '""'^"  Neither  ha.s 
gle  sent  him  to  third.  Tv  Clayton ''**'*"". '^'^^f^^^  ^^''  ^^«^«"-  B^aty 

j  soared  a  r6?ig  fly  to  left"  but  Bur- j  f "':"t."^_   .'l^^^^.  '^^'''"  ^"'"^^^•^ 

I  roughs    left    third    a    second    too 


^„,„,j .        .  ,    .    ,        -.  .        I  In  the  second  meet  this  esason  he 

Carolina  s  undefeated  track  team    ,.    .    .,„  ^^n.      u     .  ^     "    7 

.,  •,,  ■  „  „f4-        ■  ^  ,,  tied    the  440  school   record  which 

will  be  off  and  running  at  CoUege  | 

Park.    Md.    this    afternoon    where    ^^^  "'"'^  ^'"'^^  ^^^^• 

Today  Beatty  will  run  in  both 
the  mile  and  the  2-mile,  and  Scur- 
lock  will  tackle  three  events,  the 
440.  the  880,  and  he  will  anchor 
the  mile  relay  team. 

Two  more  of  Carolina's  top 
flight  performers  are  Everett 
Whatley  and  Wayne  Bishop.  What- 
ley  usually  doubles  in  the  mile 
and  the  two-mile,  but  last  Satur- 
day against  Slate  he  stayed  with 
the  mile  and  fini.»+ied  with  a  4:17 
time  which  speaks  for  itself. 
Bishop  has  been  bothered  this  sea- 
son with  injuries,  ^ut  they  have 
cleared  up  and  he  should  be  in 
top  shape  for  todays  two-mile 
event. 

Although  the  Terps  are  said  to 
have   their   strength   in   the   field 


Frosh  Football 

C.    p.    (Chuck)'  Erickson,    Ath-lland  at  College  Park;  October  2.5. 
leti«  Director,  today  announced  a    Wake     Forest     at     undetermmed 


By  BILL   KING 


for   a    game 


The  Carolina  baseballers  will 
be  shooting  to  get  back  into  the 
win  column  this  afternoon  as  the 
Tar  Heels  entertain  the  Clemson 
Tigers  in  an  Atlantic  Coast  Con- 
ference battle  at  3:30  in  Emerson 
Stadium. 

In    the    Tar   Heel's    last    outing. 
Coach   Walt    Rabbs   club   suffered 
a  9-4  setback  at  the  hands  of  the 
Duke   Blue   Devils.     One     inning, 
which  saw  the  Carolina  club  com-  j 
mit  two  costly   errors   in   the   sev-  ' 
enth.  pr.  bably  cost  the  Tar  Heels  i 
the    ball    game    as    they   carried    a . 
one  run  lead  into  the  seventh.        j 

The  loss  to  Duke  marked  the 
first  time  this  season  that  right- 
hander Jim  Raugh  had  been  beat- 
en and  gave  the  Tar  Heels  a  rec- 
ord of  4  wins  and  2  losses  in  ACC 
competition.  Their  other  loss  was 
to  league-leading  N.  C.  State.  Car- 
olina is  now  9-5  for  the  season. 

This  afternoon's  encounter  will 
mark  the  first  of  four  games  for 
the  Tar  Heels  during  the  Easter 
holidays.  This  will  be  the  first  of 
two  conference  games.  Carolina 
travels  to  Columbia.  S.'  C.  for  a 
game  with  South  Carolina  April 
20th.  The  Tar  Heels  will  also  play 
Furman  and  The  McCrary  Eagles 
during  the  break.  April  25th  Car- 


soon    and   was    called    out    on    ap- 
peal. 

The  Tar  Babies  collected  six 
hits  off  the  slants  of  l.efty  Harrell. 
They  left  eight  men  on  base.. 

THE  BOX 
WINGATE  Ab. 

Altman,  cf 5 

W>ddle.  rf  3 


sided  deci.lons.  The  Terps  showed 
their  strength  last  Saturday  after- 
noon at  Duke  when  they  defeated 
the  strong  Blue  Devils  100-31. 

Today  the  Tar  Heels  hope  to  get 
a  little  revenge.  The  Terrapins 
edged  the  Carolina  squad  out  of 
the  ACC  indoor  crown  last  March 
in  the  Ccw  Palace  at  Raleigh. 

Carolina  will  have  the  edge  over 
the  Terps    in   the   middle-distance  j  events,  they  have  some  good  run- 
and  distance  running  departments,    ners  that   will   make  it  tough   for 
Coach  Dale  Ranson  has  under  his  i  Carolina.   Burr  Grimm  is   the  top 
guiding    hand    the   greatest    group  |  Terp    runner.    He    can    run    under 
of  runners  in  thio-  class  that  has    4:20  in  the  mile,  and  he  has  prov- 
en   to    be   a   top   two-miler.   Steve 
Scheck   is  a   top  notch  dash  man 
on    the    Terps    side.    He    is    very 
strong    in    the    100    and    220   yard 
dashes. 

After  today's  meet  the  Tar  Heels 
will  take  time  off  for  the  Holidays. 
When  they  return  they  will  have 
four  days  to  get  ready  for  the 
Penn  Relays  which  will  be  on 
April  26. 


lina  has  dominated  the  ACC  mile 
and  iwo  mile  competition.  Scur- 
lock  is  running  for  the  Tar  Heels 
as  a  varsity  member  for  his  first 
..vason.  He  started  his  ;Carolina 
track  career  by  unofficially  setting 


By   JIM   CROWNOVER 

The  Carolina  linksters  suffered 
their  first  defeat  of  the  season  yes- 
terday aj  they  lost  a  close  14V^- 
12Vi  decision  to  West  Illinois  State 
on  Finley  Course. 

With  Tommy  Langley,  Gene 
Lookabiil,  and  Tuffy  Henderson 
way  off  their  usual  form,  the  Tar 
Heels  all  but  handed  the  match  to 
the  visitors. 

The  only  bright  spot  in  the  TJNC 
camp  was  Sam  Patrick  who  fired 
a  front  side  32  and  an  18-hole  to- 
tal of  70  for  medalist  honors  of 
the  day.  He  had  four  birdies  and 
an  eagle  33  on  the  par  5  ninth 
hole. 

For  the  Western  Illinois  club,  it 
was  completely  a  team  victory 
with  their  low  man,  Jame?  King 
garnering  no  better  than  a  one- 
over  73. 

The  Tar  Heels,  who  now  sport 
a  7-1-1  record,  will  return  to  ac- 
tion a  week  from  Thursday  when 
they  journey  to  Charlottesville,  Va. 
to  face  the  University  of  Virginia. 
Th*  Summary 

Meyer  (I)  defetaed  Langley, 
2Vi-Vi;  Wag  (I)  defeated  Looka- 
biil. 3-0;  best  ball.  IV2-IV2  (tie). 

Adams  (C)  defeated  King,  2-1; 
Patrick  (C)  defeated  Goetz.  3-0; 
best   ball    (C)    3-0. 

Summerville  (C)  defeated  Cole- 
man, 2-1;  Ghindina  (I)  defeated 
Henderson,     3-0;     best     ball,     (I) 


five-game  schedule  for  the  Caro- 
lina freshman  football  team  next 
fall. 


The  schedule:  Octaber  11.  Mary-   ber  28,  Duke  at  Chapel  Hill 


site;  November  8,  N.  C.  State  at 
Raleigh  (night);  November  15, 
Virginia    at    Chapel    Hill;    Novem- 


Howard  Johnson  Restaurant 

STUDENT    SPECIALS 

Barbecued   Chicken 
^  '    Choice  Steak  Sandwiches 

2:00-   5:00  P.M 
8:00-11:00  P.M. 
"Landmark  For  Hungry  Tarheels" 


SERVED 


olina    returns    home 
with  Wake  Forest. 

In  both  of  the  Tar  Heel  losses 
errors  have  been  very  costly.  Hit 

ting   has   been   about   average   for ;  Cribb,  ss  3 

the  season  and  Rabb  has  called  his   Moore,  3b  3 

defense,    'overall,   good."  ;  Williams,  If  3 

The   Tar   Heels   have    been    get-   Jones,   lb   4 

ting     .some     fine     pitching     from   Newsome.  2b  .^ 4 

Raugh,  Charlie  Aycock  and  relief  i  Carpenter,   c   1 

men      Tom      Maultsby      and    Don   Harrell,  p  2 

Saine.  Both  have  done  fine  work  — 

in    relief    all    season    and   should       Totali     — 
see  a  good  deal  of  action  through- 
out  the  campaign.  i  CAROLINA 

Rabb   has   not   named  his  start- i  ^^o"^S"'^*^'"y.   ■ 

I  ing  pitcher  for  today's  contest  but  j  ^>'sjn,   lb 
he    will    probably   go   with    either ;  ^"^'"o^g^'s,   rf 

j  Charlie  Cross. or  Ayock.  There  is^'"*^f*"'    c^      ■ 

i  a    possibility    that    the    Tar    Heel    Clayton,    2b    . 

I  coach      will      use      Raugh    again,  j  ^^orkma'n,   3b 
though    he    pitched    last    Saturday. '^^^"^*"g-  'f 

The     Carolina     infield     should  ^'^""'P-   ** 
have  Ivalee  Hill  at  first  base,  Don!^^"""^"-  P  - 

j  Lewis  at  second.  Roger  Honeycutt   ^"^os^     — 

'  at   short,   and   either  Chuck   Hart- 
man  or  Jim  Harwell  at  third. 

In  the  outfield,  Joe  Shook  should 
be  in  left,  Dick  Hudson  in  center 
and  Don  Hill  in  right. 


0 
0 
0 
1 
0 
0 
0 
0 
0 


28       1 


Ab. 
3 

4 
3 
4 
4 
1 
3 
2 
3 
1 

28 


Jim  Raugh,  Dick  Burton  Are 
Leading  Pitchers  In  ACC 


GREENSBORO 
of    Carolina    and 


1*1 — Jim    Raugh 
Dick    Burton   of 


O.Duke    today    lead    Atlantic    Coast 


E. 
0 
0 
0 
0 
0 
0 
0 
0 
0  0 
0 


Conferences    pitchers   with   identi-   loss. 


and  Jerry  Donal  of  South  Carolina 
still  boast  perfect  records,  having 
won    tWv)    games    each    without    a 


Totals 

a— Struck  out  for  Hammett  in  9th. 
Ecort  by  innings: 

Wingate    000  001  000—1 

Carolina    000  000  000--0 


UNC  Lettermen  Are  Announced 


Two  Losses  In 
NCAA  Tourney 
To  Test  Teams 


Varsity     letter     and     freshman, 
numeral     winners     in     swimming 
and    wrestling    at    Carolina    were 
announced    today   by    Athletic    Di- , 
rector   C.   P.    Erickson. 

There    was    a    total    of    30    var- 
sity and  21  freshman  awards. 

Varsity     swimming:     James     T. 
Atwater.      Greensboro.      N.      C,- 


A  double  elimination  tourna- :  James  C.  Goad,  Jr..  McLeansville, 
ment  i.r  planned  to  decide  the  \  N-  C:  Manager  Peter  P.  Grod- 
NCAA  district  three  baseball  sky,  Durham,  N.  C:  Charles  A. 
championship  in  order  that  each  Krepp,  Baltimore,  Md.;  Telefair 
team's  pitching  strength  may  be  ;  Mahaffy,  Jacksonville,  N.  C;  Kel- 
well  tested,  Walter  Rabb.  district  1  b'     Maness.     Greensboro,     N.     C; 


chairman  announced  yesterday. 


N. 


Edmund    L.   Meekins,    Raleigh, 
C; 

Christopher  L.  Mercer,  Wash- 
ington, D.  C;  David  Mclnnis,  Jr., 
Sumpter,  S.  C;  Brent  D.  Nash. 
Tarboro.    N.   C;    Charles    T.    Par- 

,   ,      .  .,  ^         ,      t.,     ,        I  ^^^'    Gastonia.    N,    C;    Walter    T. 

at  least  three  and  preferably  four    i>„„„     .       „     ^,    .,.      .    .„. 

o.o-4:.,„      .  u        .  n  uu  .  Rose,  Jr.,  South  Miami.  Fa.;  Wil- 

starting  pitchers,  Rabb  wrote.        '  .   »»!■ 


"Our  committee  recognizes  the 
fact  that  no  team  at  Omaha  (where 
the  winner  goes  for  the  National 
championships)  will  be  able  to 
make  a  creditable  showing  without 


Kernersville,  N.  C;  Perrin  Q. 
Henderson  Charlotte.  N.  C;  Ken- 
neth A.  Hoke,  Staiesville,  N.  C; 

Stanley  G.  Leftwich,  Chapel 
Hill.  N.  C;  William  S,  McGehee. 
Washington,  D.  C;  Henr>'  H. 
Rhyne.  Mt.  Holly,  N.  C;  Bobby 
M.  Wagner,  Lexington,  N.  C;  Da- 
vid L.  Wall,  Winston-Salem,  N.  C 

Freshman  swimming:  William 
Anderson.  Washington,  D.  C;  Al 
Cain,  Fayetteville.  N.  C:  Glen 
Greene,  Charlotte,  N.  C;  William 
Jobes,  Ponte  Vedra,  Fla.;  Nash 
Mcintosh.  Savannah.  Ga.;  Ted 
Moore,  Chapel  Hill,  N.  C;  Charles 
Pittman,  Columbia.  S.  C;  Mich- 
ael    Rosen.     Woodbridge.     Conn.; 


cal  4-1  records,  and  the  Tar  Heel 
right-hander  also  tops  the  confer- 
ence in  two  other  important  de- 
partments— strikeouts-  and  earned 
run  average. 

Raugh.  a  frfoot-1'z  190-pound 
senior  from  Rosemont,  Pa.,  has  an 
ERA  of  1.31  and  has  fanned  49 
batters  in  48* 3  innings,  according 
to  ACC  service  bureau  figures 
through  games  of  last  Saturday. 

Burton,  a  left-hander,  has  an 
ERA  of  2.87,  has  struck  out  32  and 
walked  only  four,  posting  the  con- 
ference's   best   control    record. 

Buck  Fichter  of  Wake  Forest. 
Charles  Aycock  of  North  Carolina 


Louis  Terrill.  Baltimore,  Md,; 
Paul  Wachendorfer.  Vienna,  Aus- 
tria. 

Freshman  wrestling:  Curtis  G. 
Ch^mplin.  Summet,  N.  J.;  Wil- 
liam L.  Gautier,  Kendall,  Fla.; 
James  M.  Hudson.  Jefferson.  N^ 
C;  Jo-seph  J.  Perrini,  Queens  Vil- 
lage, N.  Y.;  Ralph  M.  Pittman. 
Atlanta.  Ga.:  Ronald  H.  Purdy. 
Yardley,  Pa.;  Raymond  W.  Rus- 
sell. c;[»»pel  Hill.  N.  C;  Bernhard 
H.  Sack,  Villanova,  Pa.:  William 
B.  Suttle,  Charlotte,  N.  C;  John 
W.  Welborn,  Boone.  N.  C;  Char- 
les  L.   Whitfield.  Atlanta.  Ga. 


Netters  Lose 

The  Carolina  netters  dropped  a  j 
7-2  decision  to  the  Chapel  Hill  { 
Tennis  Club  here  .vesterday  in  a! 
practice  match.  , 

The  Tar  Heel  netmen  were  able  : 
to  win   only   two   singles   matches 
and    the    Chapel    Hill    club    com- ' 
pletely  swept  the  doubles  matches,  j 
The    Tar    Heels    will    play    one  | 
more     match     before    taking    the  I 
Easter     vacation.     This     will     be  [ 
against    the    University   of   Illinois  | 
here  Thursday.   They   now    have   a 
record  of  4  win.!.*  and  5  losses. 
Th*  Sunun»ry 

Singles:  Bank  (C)  defeated  Jar- 
rard.  8-6,  6-4;  Clark  (CH)  defeated 
Newsome,  6-2,  6-2;  Livingstone  (C) 
defeated  Sharpless,  6-2,  6-1;  Mc- 
Ginty  (CH)  defeated  Smith.  6-4. 
6-1;  Cowden  (CH)  defeated  Mclver. 
5-7,  6-0,  6-0;  Reichert  (CH)  defeat- 
ed Van  Winkle.  2-6.  6-1.  6-2. 
Doubles:  Jarrard  and  Sharpless 
State  tops  ACC  batters  with  an  j  (CH)  defeated  Bank  and  New- 
average  of  .525,  Al  Baker  of  Wake  I  some,  6-3.  6-4;  McGinty  and  Hudg- 
Forest  leads  in  home  runa<  with ;  ins  (CH)  defeated  Livingstone  and 
three.  Herb  Busch  of  Virginia  i  Mclver.  1-6.  8-4,  7-5:  Jordan  and 
triples  with  three.  Paul  Rawl  of!  Clark  (CH)  defeated  Steward  and; 
South   Carolina  doubles  with  five.   Walker,  6-0;  9-7. 


FREE!  INVISIBLE  SHJRTS! 


Jim    Craig    of    South    Carolina, 

(2-1),  trails  Raugh  in  the  ERA  de- 
partment with  a  mark  of  2.25.  He 
also  has  fanned  30  to  place  fourth 
behind  John  Stokoe  of  Wake  For- 
est, 34,  and  Burton.  323.  Stokoe 
has  a  1-3  record. 

Harleigh  Fatzinger  and  Dick 
Smallwood  of  Duke  and  Fred  Gep- 
hardt of  Maryland  all  have  2-1 
pitching  records  to  trail  the  lead- 
ers. 

Meantime.  Dick  Hunter  of  N.  C,  j 


It  is  a  little  known  fact  that 
Van  Heusen,  in  addition  to 
its  regular  merchandise,  also 
makes  a  grand  line  of  invisible 
shirts.  Alas,  they  have  never 
proved  very  popular.  People 
lose  them  easily.  Laundries  are 
confused  by  them.  And  people 
wearing  these  invisible  shirts 
are  not  just  walked  over,  they're 
sometimes  walked  through. 

So,  we're  stuck  with  thou- 
sands of  them,  and  we've  just 
decided  to  give  them  away.  To 
you!  Just  write  Van  Heusen. 
We  will  send  you  free  a  com- 
plete wardrobe  of  invisible 
shirts.  Not  just  one  or  two! 
Not  us.  We'll  send  you  hun- 


dreds of  them.  In  every  style! 
Every  size!  Every  collar  fash- 
ion! All  handsome.  All  invis- 
ible. Probably  the  finest  you've 
never  se«i. 

As  for  visible  shirts  —  and 
shorts,  sport  shirts,  sweaters, 
pajamas,  handkerchiefs  and  ties 
—well,  you  know  Van  Heusen. 
We  have  most  of  the  new  styles 
before  anybody  else.  And  we 
handle  traditional  favorites  in 
a  way  that  explains  why  cer- 
tain styles  last  a  long,  long 
time.  Your  local  haberdasher 
carries  a  large  Van  Heusen 
selection.  See  him  soon. 

Phillips-Jones  Corp.,  417 
Fifth  Ave.,  New  York  16,  X.Y. 


One  Of  The  Greatest  Westerns  Ever  Produced 

THE  BIG  SKY 

.  Starring  "~ 

Kirk  Douglas  —  Arthur  Hunnicutt 

TODAY 
ONLY 


WE   ARE  THE   EXCLUSIVE 


VAN  HEUSEN 


DEALER  IN  CHAPEL  HILL 


Ham  C.  Roth,  Elkin,  N.  C;  Tony 
Schiffman,  Greensboro.  N.  C; 
Robert  A.  Turner.  Lanett,  Ga.; 
Milton  M.  Veasy.  Jr.,  Durham.  N. 
C;  William  G,  Zickgraf,  Frank- 
lin. N.  C. 

.,  .  .  ,       Varsity     wrestling:     David     B. 

the  second  year  m   succession   at ,  Atkinson.   Asheville, 


"Therefore,  we  are  using  a  type 
of  tournament  which  will  necessi- 
tate the  use  of  more  than  two 
pitchers." 

The  tournament  will  be  held  for 


The  quick] 
'brown  fox"l 

Smart  c-oUege  women  know  that 
GIbbs  thorourh  secrrlarial  traln- 
inir  )•  the  4ak.-keiit  route  to  buai- 
next  «ncc«4a. 

Sp«ciil  Coarst  tn  Colin*  Womtn.  Write 
Ctllti*  Dmn  hi  GIBBS  6IRLS  AT  WORK. 


Gastbiria,  N.  C,  and  the  dates  se- 


The  National  tournament  at  Oma- 
ha is  scheduled  June  8-13. 


N.   C;  Char- 

1     .  J  .c      o,    V         u  w         ..  i  les  O.  Boyette,  Chadbourn.  N.  C; 

lected  are  May  31  through  June  3.    R„hort  n    n,,.,„t»o    nv.    u 

Th„  M.H..O.  .«...„„„.„♦  .,  ^^.  1  ^""^^^^  O-  Boyette.  Charbourn,  N. 

C:  Donald  W.  Childs.  Akron, 
Ohio;  Glenn  D.  Daughtry.  Mt. 
The  schedule  at   Gastonia  calls  I  O'Jve,  N,  C;  Lawrence  D.  Hayes, 

for  two   afternoon    and   two  night 

games    on    Friday.    May    31.    Two 

games  are  scheduled  on  Saturday ' 

night.    A   seventh   game    may   be  I 

necessary  and.  if  so,  this  will   bet 

played  on  Monday.  i 

Champions  of  the  Atlantic  Coast. 
Southern  and  Southeastern  Con- 1 
ferences,  along  with  an  "at  large"  1 
team  in  the  district,  will  compete, 
^abb  has  asked  "at  large"  or  in- 
dependent teams  which  desire  con- 
sideration for  the  fourth  berth,  to 
aend  in  their  records  by  May  21. 


VIDENK  ■ 
VMiri7. 


U  IhrMwMth  a. 

.  .  .  IM  AiHll  St. 

.  ZVPatkAv*. 

:  :  U  PlyuMdi  St 


DIAL  9-481 

All    C«rf    Ei|uipt«d   With 
Tw».Way    Radios 

Service  To  And  From 
Raleigh-Durham    Airport 

"Call  Us  And  Count 
The  Minutts" 


CAROLINA  CAB  CO. 


HAVE  A  SWELL 

EASTER  VACATION 

Be  a  big  shot  at  home 

with  books  and  smart 

new  Easter  Cards 

from  Chapel  Hill's 

Famous  Emporium- 

The  Intimate  Bookshop 

205  E.  Franklin  St.  Open  Till   10  P.M. 


IMC 

STICK   DEODORANT 

For  absolute  security,  all  day,  every  day. 
So  quick  and  clean  . . .  melts  in  instantly. 
Gives  you  Social  Security  in  just  3  seconds! 

1.00  plus  tax 


Or  use  the  new 

OLD  %?\Ql  %?f(^'{ 

DEODORANT- 

in  travel-light 

plastic. 

1 .00  plus  tax 

S  H  U  LTON    N«w  York  •  Toronto 


8fl^ 


tJ.W.C.  Llbfary 
8*?^^^^^  Dept . 
Chapel   Hill.    !'•    C, 


WEATHER 

Sratt*r«d    thowvrs    with 
p«c»*d  hish  of  M. 


mtmiin 


STat  Xcct 


REVIEW 

This  wcclc's  iMws  in  r«vi«w,  ••• 
p«9«  2. 


VOL.  LVIi     NO.  170 


Complete  OfO  VVtrc  Seroie« 


CHAPEL   HILL,  NORTH   CAROLINA,  WEDNESDAY,  APRIL  24,  1957 


Ofiieet  in  Graham  Memorial 


FOUR   PA4ES  TH"   "•Ui 


news 

m 

linef 


Sure  Cure 

BALTIMORE,  im  —  A  26-year-old 
former  theater  manager  who  said 
he  "got  dow-n  in  the  dumps"  ad- 
mitted yesterday  he  boosted  his 
morale  by  liking  a  "little  blonde"  I 
on  a  vacation  with  $1,663  from  the 
tht-atti-   safe. 

Geortje  David  Duncan  pleaded 
guilty  in  circuit  court  to  stealing 
the  money.  Judge  John  T.  Tucker 
deferred  sentencing  pending  a  piro- 
bationary   report.  ^ 

"Watch  Out!" 

CHICAGO.  L?^  -  The  bandage  Us 
growing  —  figuratively  —  wich  the 
ivy  on   college  campuses. 

The  National  Safety  Council  re- 
ported jesterday  that:  The  acci- 
oeiil  loll  tinoug  collegians  is  •al- 
aimingly  big  and  growing  bigger." 

More  students  get  hurt  in  their 
dormitories  than  in  cars.  Each  year 
one  out  of  every  nine  students  in 
American  colleges  and  universities 
sufiers  injuries  requiring  medical 
attoniion. 

Airf  more  of  them  get  hurt  on 
the  campus  than  away  from  it. 

Starved  To  Death 


Tuition  Increase  Is  Opposed 


By  Several 

Detriment  To  Graduate 
Program  Is  Objection 


UNC   Professors 


By   GRAHAM   SNYDER 


LOS  ANGELES,  (JS  -  Malnutri- 
tion caused  the  death  of  Caren  Lynn 
Crabbe,  20.  daughter  of  actor-swim- 
mer Larry  (Buster)  Crabbe,  the 
coroner  jeported  yesterday. 

Dr.  Frederick  Newbarr.  chief  au- 
topsy surgeon,  said  the  University  of 
Souihern  California  coed  was  suf- 
ferian  from  anorexia  neiS'csa  —  a 
nervous  conditiun  causea  by  loss  of 
th,.'  cesire  »  eat.  Miss  Crabbe 
Wfc.gheU  only  60  poiUMis  wbeu  she 
died  Apra  10  \u  suburban  Paeilic 
Palisades. 

Peace  At  Last? 

LOXDOX,  <;1^  —  Soviet  Premier 
Bul^anin  has  sent  a  pergonal  letter 
to  Prime  Minister  Macmillan  ex- 
pressing hope  for  agreement  on  all 
issues-  in  the  Middle  East.  He  also 
prf.m^ised  to  stop  nuclear  tests  if 
the  W-5t  will. 

Moscow  radio  last  night  broad- 
cast details  of  the  letter  delivered 
to  Macmillan  three  days  ago.  Re- 
liable informants  in  London  said  it 
was    8.000-words    long. 

The  letter  appeared  to  be  geared 

to   the    Soviet   campaign   to  depict 

Moscow    as    a    .oeace-loving  friend 
of  the  Arab  world. 

"Taking  into  con«idei*ation  the 
complexity  of  the  existing  pro- 
blems," Bulganin  wrote,  "one 
should,  with  the  object  of  improving 
and  normalizing  the  situation  in  ti:e 
Middle  East,  immediately  take  such 
steps  on  which  it  is  possible  to 
reach  an  agreement." 

Bulganin  said  the  possibilities  of 
a  settlement  have  not  been  exhaust- 
ed and  added:  "I  do  not  lose  the 
hope  that,  given  the  good  will  on 
the  part  of  the  governments  of  the 
states  concerned,  agreement  can  be 
reached  on  all  dism>ied  issues." 


Wins  In  Contest 

Miss  Sarah  van  Weyk,  winner  in  Glamour  Mag.  search  for  the 
ten  best  dressed  college  girls  in  America.  She  will  be  seen  in  the 
August   issue. 

Photo  by  Truman  Moore 

Coed  Wins  Dress  Award 


rate,  ,il  will  mean  we  are  becom- 
ing provinciaL" 

Dr.  Norman  E.  Eliason  stated  he 
was  against  the  bill  because  of 
its  particular  negative  effect  on 
graduate  students  "whom  we  need 
badly." 

The  price  (for  tuition)  should 
All  of  the  professors  expressed  ,  n^t  be  so  high  as  to  drive  gradu- 
primary  objection  to  the  possible  j  ^^^  students  awav,"  said  Dr.  Ar- 
ii.crease  because  of  the  detriment  ,hur  Roe,  chairman  of  the  Dept. 
tf  the  graduate  program  it  would  .f  chemistrv.  In  the  case  of  the 
brmg  by  discouraging  out  of  state  |  increase  proposal,  Dr.  Roe  said  it 
graduate    students    from    entering ;  .^.Quid  be  a  bit  too  high." 

!      Asst.  Psychology  Professor  Mil- 
Outcome  of  the  bill,  which  wa.   ton   Rosenbaum   saw   the   increase 
mtroduced  to  the  General  Assem-  j  as  ''ieading  to  a  decrease  in  grad- 
bly  three  weeks  ago  by  Rep.  L.  H.  j  uate  student  enrollment,  and  any- 
thing conducive  to  bringing  grad- 


A  consensus  of  several  profes-  j 
sors  on  the  pending  out-of-state  j 
tuition  increase  bill  brought : 
unanimous  dio-approval  and  objec-  j 
tion  here  yesterday  to  the  pro-' 
posed  $200  increase. 


''Ross,  is  not  known.  If  the  increase 
jgoes  through,  the  out  of  state  tui- 
!  tion    rate     which    is    now    $500, 

wculd  be  raised  to  not  more  than 

$700. 

"REGIONAL   CENTER' 


uate  students  to  the  university  is 
good." 

Several  professors  who  declined 
comment  on  the  increase  because 
of  an  insufficient  knowledge  of  its 


By  PEG   HUMPHREY 

A  Carolina  coed  has  been  select- 
ed one  of  the  "Ten  Best  Dressed 
College  Girls  in  America." 


along  with  the  reason  why  Caro- 
lina's judges  considered  her  to  be 
the  best  dressed  coed  on  the  L'NC 
campus. 


Dr.    Arnold   Perry,   dean    of   the   details,   generally   objected   to  the 
Education  School  said,   "1  am  op-  j  bill  because  of  the  consequence  of 

creating   a    "one    state    univer- 


In  a  national  contest  conducted 
by  Glamour  Magazine,  Miss  Sarah !  s°"^^ 
van  Weyk.  junior  from  Winnetka, 
QJinois,  was  chosen  from  repre- 
sentatives of  over  200  college.^'  and 
universities  across  the  nation. 

Miss  van  Weyk  and  the  nine 
O'ther  winners  will  be  featured  in  I 
the  Aks4»Cv  issue  'which  for  tl^e 
fiist  time  will  be  devoted  st)lel>' 
to  college  fashion.  They  will  al.so 
receive  a    'Best  Drc.-jed"  award. 

The  criteria  which  the  magazine 
iet  up  for  the  best  dressed  college 
uirl  included  a:Ppropriateness  of 
dress  on  and  off  tiie  campus,  im 
peccableness,  a  styli.\i  neat  and 
clean  hair  style,  individuality  with 
color  and  accessories,  a  wardrobe' 
plan,  a  knowledge  of  how  to  wear 
make-up,  and  the  ability  to  dress 
according  tj  a   personal  style. 

A  local  judging  committee  se- 
eded Miss  van  Weyk  from  nom- 
!  inccs  of  various  campus  organiza- 
tions, dormitories,  fraternities  and 
sororities.  Carr  Dormitory  entered 
Carolina'„-  winner. 

Three  pictures  of  Miss  van  Weyk 
were    submitted    to    the    magazine 


^iss  Van  Weyk  builds  her  per- 
wardrobe     around     simple 


posed  to  the  out-of-state  tuition 
increase.  UNC  has  been  a  region- 
al center  for  graduate  work.  It  has 
gained  pre.^ige  through  its  grad- 
uate work. 
"When  people  looked  for  a  uni- 


it 

sity." 

Dr.  William  S.  Wells,  English 
professor,  a-aid  the  increase  would 
be  "a  most  unfortunate  thing.  The 
nature   of   a   university   as   a   uni- 


vyles  many  of  which  she  designs  graduate  work,  they  always  looked 
ai.:l  sews.  She  enjoys  wearing  |  t.i  UNC.  However  there  is  no  long- 
"strong"  colors  and  dashing  ac-  '  er  any  GI  bill  to  finance  this  ex- 
cessories.  pense.    With    the    increase    in    the 


versity  in  which  to  continue  their  i  versity  is  that  it  has  a  cosmopoli- 
tan atmospihere,  which  comes 
from  out  of  state  students." 

Dr.   Wells  said   "it  will  particu- 


Construction  Begins  On  Dormitories 

Construction  for  three  new  men's  dormitories,  tj  be  built  on  the  hill  overlooking  Navy  ar>d  Fetxor 
Fields,  began  recently.  Shown  above  are  several  w  orkmen  employed  by  a  Monroe  eonttruction  com- 
pany, in  the  beginning  process  of  the  construction.  The  buildings  should  be  conf>plet^  by  summer  of 
1958,  according  to  University  Engineer  M.  J.  Hakan.  Photo  By  Bill  King 


larly     affect     the     graduate     pro- 
gram." 

Dr.  .J.  Burton  Linker,  mathe- 
it;ptics  profe.*jor,  .said  he  thought 
jtfie  bill^  would  not  be  "a  good 
'mave^fpr  llh^ ''«{udeats  and  admin- 
istration." However,  he  said, 
"There  is  a  strong  feeling  among 
many  people  to  have  it  increased." 


Campus  Beauties  Vie 
Tuesday  For  Venus  Title 


STAFF   MEETING 

There  will  be  a  meeting  today 
of  all  Daily  Tar  Heel  staff  mem- 
bers at  3  p.m.  in  the  newsroom. 
Managing  Editor  Clarke  Jones  has 
urged   all   staffer^-  to  attend. 


Navy  l-ield  Renovations 

The  UNC  Athletic  Assn.  is  completely  renovating  Navy  Field  at 
an  approximate  cost  of  between  $15,000  and  $20,000.  Athletic  Busi- 
ness Manager  Vernon  Crook  hopes  the  job  will  be  completed  in 
time  for  the  football  team  to  use  it  by  September.  Shown  above  is 
the  current  progress  made  toward  improving  the  drainage  system 
of  the  current  field. 


Alden  To  Play 
Beethoven 
During  Concert 

Beethoven's  Violin  Concerto  in 
D  major,  performed  by  Edgar  Al- 
den, will  highlight  the  spring  con- 
cert scheduled  for  Tuesday,  by  the 
University  Symphony  Orchestra 
conducted  by  Elarl  Slocum. 

The     program,     133th     in     this 
year's     Tue^-day     evening     series, 
will    be    presented    in    Hill   Music 
Hall    and    is    open    to    the    public 
I  without  charge. 

I     Composed  in  1806,  which  was  a 

j  period    of   great   creative   activity 

for  the  musician,  the  Violin  Con- 

(Sec   CINCERT,  page  3) 


A  parade  down  Franklin  St.  will  |  gram  will  be  the  selection  of  Miss 
start  off  the  festivities  featured  in   Modern    Venus,    with    21    campus ; 
the  annual  Sigma  Chi  Derby  to  be  |  beauties  v>'ing  for  the  title, 
held  Tuesday.  I      The  1957  "Miss  Modern  Venus" 


Orientation 
Make-Up  Quiz 
Tomorrow 


Immediately     following^     the     2 }  ^i\\  t^ome  from  a  cmu't  composed  ' 


Tlie    Campus    OrlentatioB    Com- 
mittee  will    give   a   make-up   qui* 

roll    Hail  for   all   men    who   tailed 

to  take  the  test  on  April  16,  Com- 

I  mittee  Chairman  Jerry  Openheim- 

_       ,          ,r      j-.u      iwr  ^^  said  yesterday. 

Carolyn     Meredith,         


gin  at  Kenan  Stadium. 

Highlighting     this     year':>- 


pro- 


GM'S  SLATE 


The  fellowins  activities  are 
scheduled  for  Graham  Memorial 
today: 

Penhellenk  Ceuncil,  5-6  p.m., 
Grail  Room;  Al#h«  Kappa  Psi, 
«-«:30  p.m.,  Orail  Room;  Ways 
and  Mean*  CemmiHee,  4-5:30 
p.m..  Roland  Parker  1:  Alpha 
Kappa  Psi,  *-7:30  p.m.,  Roland 
Parker  1;  JelMvaha  Witnesses, 
t-9  p.m.,  Rohm^  Parker  1;  Ori- 
entation Committee,  4-4  p.m., 
Roland  Parker  2;  Alpha  Kappa 
Psi,  6-7:30  p.m.,  Roland  Parker 
2;  Orienta«l«n  CemmJHee,  2-9 
p.m.,  Roland  Parfcar  3;  Publica- 
tions Board,  4-4  p.m..  Wood- 
house  Conferenee  Koem;  IDC,  7- 
9:30  p.m.,  Woedh«ute  Confer- 
ence Room;  Student  Govern- 
ment Leadership  Retreat  Com- 
mittee, 5-6  p.m.,  deuncil  Room; 
Bridge  Class,  4:M-4  p.m.,  Ren- 
deivous  Room;  Alpha  Pi  Omega, 
7:30-11   p.m..  Combo  Room. 


BY  TAKING  REMEDIAL  COURSE: 


Reading  Comprehension  May  Improve 


By  MARY  ALYS  VOORHEES  I  However,  although  the  program  '  speed  varied  from  154  words  per 
Having       trouble       with       your '  deals    chiefly    with    reading,    the    minute     (the     slowest)     to     1,808 

courses?  Perhaps  it'^'  because  you  [  course    offers — individual    instruc-   words    per    minute    (the    fastest). 

can't  read  well  enough.  tion    in    allied    subjects    such    as  When    students    first    began    the 

According     to     educators,,     this '  .'pelling,  oral  reading  and  vocabu-   course  the  average  speed  was  250 

seems  to  be  one  of  the  basic  prol>  j  lary    depending    on    the    student's  words  per  minute  while  the  aver- 


lems  of  students  who  find  them 
selves  falling  behind  in  their 
courses,  and  to  cope  with  the 
problem    the     University    Testing 


weaknesses.  age    on    completion    rose    to    525 

PURPOSE  words  per  minute. 

First  offered  in  February,  1956,  i      And   in   improving   the  reading 
the   course   is   primarily  designed  speed,  "ordinarily,  comprehension 


Service  offero  a  program  which  to  help  students  who  can't  under- 1  improves  except  in  the  case  of  stu- 
might  be  of  interest  to  students  in  stand  what  they  are  reading,  or  dents  whose  comprehension  is  ex- 
this  category.  those    who    may    be    too   slow    in    ceilent    to    begin    with,"     reports 

The  course  is  entitled  remedial  i  reading.  According  to  Irvine,  some   Irvine, 
reading,    but    after    talking    with   of  /the  students-  who  apply  for  the       Compo^'3d  mostly  of  undergrad- 


we  have  arranged  our  program  so 
no  one  will  have  to  wait  more 
than  one  semester." 

Asked  to  comment  on  the  read- 
ing program,  several  UNC  profes- 
sors were  in  agreement  on  the 
usefulness  of  the  course. 

Dean  Norval  Neil  Luxon  of  the 
School  of  Journalism  has  found 
the  course  to  be  very  worthwhile, 
both  here  and  on  another  campuo, 
by  helping  students  with  vocabu- 
lary as  well  as  reading  compre- 
hension. One  case  he  used  to  ex- 
emplify hs    thoughts  concerned   a 


Paul  Irvine,  director  of  the  read- 
ing program,  the  subject  seems  to 
be  farther  reaching  than  the  name 
indicates. 
PROCEDURE 

Offered  to  any  UNC  student 
who  ijeeds  to  improve  in  reading 
and  studying  efficiency,  applicants 
first  take  a  test  to  diagnose  their 


course  just  want  to  improve  their   uates  (85  per  cent)  fairly  well  dis-!  student  who  was  having  difficulty 


reading     habits:     however,     some   tributed      among     the     freshman, 
are  very   poor   in   reading.   Others   sophomore,      junior      and      senior 


with  his  reading,  but  after  taking 
the  course  went  on  to  make  Phi 


report   they   are    falling    down    in  classes,  the  course  is  offered  three  |  Beta  Kappa. 


their  grades  because  they  are  un- 
able to  understand  what  they  read 
in  their  textbooks. 

Since     the     program     has     only 
been  offered  for  two  previous  se- 


times    a   week,   any   hour  from   8 
a.m.    to    4  :p.m.,   lx)th    semesters. 
This  semester  247   were    enrolled 
in  the  couro'3. 
The    program    is    not    given    in 


reading   ability,   after  which   they  mesters,  no  figures  were  available  summer  school.  Students  hiterest- 


complete  ^vveral  exercises   to  de- 
termine   which    points    need    im- . 

provement.  j  course,  but  on  filling  out  a  ques- 

From  then  on  students  work  tionnaire,  97  per  cent  of  the  stu- 
from  a  reading  manual  which  dents  have  reported  they  felt  they 
gives  pointerj  on  how  to  attain  had  been  helped  by  the  program, 
mere  speed  in  reading,  how  to  bet-  j  However,  improvement  varies 
ter  comprehend  the  njaterial,  etc..  with  different  studt^nts  anywhere 
after  which  they  do  exercises  on  from  15  per  cent  to  450  per  cent, 
what  they  have  read.  jLast  spring  the  range   in   reading 


aj  to  hew  students  have  improved   ed    in   registering   for   the   coiu*se 
in  their  work  after  completing  the   can   do  so  by  going  by  the  Read- 
ing Program  Office,  06   Peabody, 
during   the    first   week   of   school 
next  fall. 

"Next  fall  we  expect  to  be  able 
to  take  all  applicants  for  the 
course.  However,  it  may  be  neces- 
sary to  ask  a  few  to  wait  uatil  the 
next  semester,"  Irvfne  s'aid.  "If  so, 


Dean  Arnold  Perry  of  the  School 
of  Education  felt  that  "through 
the  service  of  this  worthwhile  pro- 
gram students  are  increa.->'ing  their 
competence  in  one  of  the  most 
important  of  basic  skills  used  in 
study.' 

Prof.  Harold  A.  Bierck  of  the 
Dept.  of  History  welcomed  the 
fact  the  course  was  provided. 
"Some  students  in  difficulty  don't 
realize  their  problem  is  reading," 
he  said,  going  on  to  point  out  he 
considered  speed  and  comprehen- 
sion the  two  biggest  problems  of 
studenti. 


Symposium  Committee 
Holds  Meet  Tomorrow 


Raw  Is 
I  Delta: 
I  Mary 

Lewis 

Miss 


and     Marian    Dickens,    Tri 

Mis^vs     Donna     Anderson, 

Moore     Mason,     and     Marj- 

Rountree,    Alpha    Delta    Pi; 

Nurses 


The    Carolina    Symposium    Com- 


I  I>orm. 
Also 


Misses    Nancy    Davis,    Val 


mitee  for  1958  will  meet  in  the  X""_.A'"'^°"'  ^"i!  .^°^^i  Madison 
Rendezvous  Room  of  Graham  Me- 
morial tomorrow,  acco^rding  to  an 
announcement  made  yesterday  by 
Symposium  Chairman  Frank  Crow- 
ther. 

Crowther  »iid  nomination*-  for, 
and  election  of  the  vice  chairman 
of  the  1958  committee  will  take 
place  during  the  meeting. 

Also  on  the  agenda  will  be  fur- 
ther discussion  of  the  possible 
theme  or  themes  for  next  year'N 
presentation.  Crowther  said.  He 
pointed  out  it  is  "most  imperative 
that  the  committee  move  rapidly 
on  this  problem."  He  urged  all  in- 
terested student  and  faculty  mem- 
bers to  attend. 

Within  the  next  few  weeks-,  the 
overall  body  of  the  1958  commit- 
tee will  be  formed  and  the  "cri- 
teria for  inclusion  in  ths  group 
will  be  interest,  enthusiasm  and 
participation  in  meetings."  the 
new  chairman  said. 


In    his    statement    Oppenheimer 

said   it   is   iiecessary   for  everyone 

who  missed  the  quiz  to  attend  this 

Pi  Phi;   Misses  Shirlec  Prestwood.j  meeting  in  order  to  complete  hi* 

Barbarce  I*re.itwood,   Jo  Ann   As- (  application. 

tor,     and    Judith     Dockerv,     Inde  i 

pendent  Women;  Miss  Nan  Schaef-  i      "<^  indicated  n  is  possible  to  br 
fer.    Barbara    Hcnev,    and    Marcia , '"•^""'^^'^'^   ^'"t    '^  «">•   ^^   *»»«** 

Doris   P^^P'^  have  been   notified  to   ap- 


Leatherwood  Out  On  Bail 
Pending  Further  Trial 

CHARLOTTE  — ( AP)—  Jerry  R. 
Leatherwood,  29- year-old  pharma- 
cy student  from  Waynesville,  Tues- 
day waived  preliminary  hearing 
in  Mecklenburg  County  recorder's 
court  on  a  charge  of  raping 
UNC  undergraduate  coed. 

Leatherwood  was  released 
$10,000  bail  pending  his  trial 
Superior  Court. 

Leatherwood    was    arrested 


McCord,   Kappa   Delta;   Miss 
Woody,   Stray   Greek;    and    Misses 
Lennic   Von   Wilier,,   Martha  For- 
tune, and  Barbara   Murray,  Alpha 
Gamma  Delta. 

Included     on     the     afternoon's 
schedule     are      such     events     as 
the  Race  to  the  Flesh,  the  Grand 
National,   several  i  kits,    a    c'>jcret 
event,  and  the  Hit  the  Gook  con- . 
test,    which   features    a   senior   se- 
lected by  the  brothers  of  the  fra-  j 
ternity.  Trophies  will  be   awarded  j 
to  winners  of  all  events.     .  J 

ALL   SORORITIES  fall    terms    began    yesterday    and 

Representatives  of  all  sororities, { will   continue  through  .April    SO. 
the  Stray  Greeks,  the  Nurse.:,  andi     General   College   officials    asked 
the  Independent  W'omen  will  lake   students     to     sign     the     appoint- 
part  in  the  activities.  ment   .-heet   to    .see    advisors   until 

Door     prizes     donated     by     the 'April  30  iij  308  South  Building. 
Chapel     Hill-Carrboro      Merchants       Sessions  with    advisors  will  last 
Assn.  will  be  given  to  the  holders   from  May   l-ll.  The  General  Col- 
of  the  lucky  ticket  numbers  to  be  lege  asked  that  the  students  meet 
given  away  at  the  entrance  to  the  j. their  appointments  to  obtain  their 


pear  before  Thursday. 

"I  hope  this  time  will  be  con- 
venient.*' Oppenheimer  said.  He 
added  that  if  everyone  is  prompL 
the  meeting  should  be  completed 
in  ample  time  to  allow  those  who 
plan  to  attend  the  Richard  Maliby 
concert   at  8   o.m.   to   do   so. 


Preregistration 

Preregis'tration   for  summer  and 


stadium. 


green  forms. 


GAAAB  Interviews  Tomorrow 

I 

!      Interviews  for  positions  on  the   notices  of  times  for  interviears  wU' 
)  Graham  Memorial  Acti\ities  Board    be  mailed  to  applicants. 

Fri-:      Applications       for       committee 
membership  will  also  be  available 


in    will    be    held    tomorrow   and 

jn    day,    according    to    an    announce 


at 


ment    made    yesterday. 
Everyone  interested  in  applying 


Waynesville    last    Friday    on    war-  j  for  any  of  the  six  positions  open 


rants  sworn  out  in  Mecklenburg 
County  by  T.  F.  Bridges,  Shelby 
contractor  and  father  of  22-year- 
old  Effie  Joann  Bridges. 

Mecklenburg  Rural  Police  said 
the  girl  reported  that  while  en 
route  home  with  Leatherwood 
from  Chapel  Hill  for  spring  holi- 


has  been  urged  by  GMAB  Presi- 
dent Tom  Lambeth  to  acquire  ap- 
plications from  the  information 
desk  in  Graham  Memorial  and  re- 
turn them  to  the  desk  by  tomor- 
row morning. 

Lambeth  indicated  the  offices  of 
president,    three    vice    presidents. 


at  the  information  desk  in  GM 
and  are  to  be  returned  by  Mon- 
day, Lambeth  said.  The  newly 
elected  president  -will  interview 
these  applicants  and  make  ap- 
pointments later  in  the   week. 

Committees  now  iunctionin^ 
include:  Films.  Recreation,  Dance. 
Musio,  Petite  Dramatiques,  Office, 
Receptions,  Mardi  Gras,  Sound 
and  Fur>'  and  Calendar. 


days  she  was  raped  in  his  car  and   secretary  and  treasurer  of  GMAB 


INFIRMARY  LIST 


that  she  again  was     raped     in    a ,  are  still  vacant  and  that  each  ap- 

Mecklenburg  County  motel,  where, !  plicant   has   equal    opportunity   to  a 

she  said,  Leatherwood  had  rcgist-    fill  any  position.  >      Students   in   the   Infirmary   yes- 

ered  them  as  man  and  wife.  According  to  Lambeth,  each  of  terday  included: 

The  girl  added,  police  said,  I  the  vice  presidential  officers  will :  Misses  Mary  Kangley  and  Mar- 
that  she  was  sick  and  frightened  ;  be  responsible  for  supervision  of  a  garet  Lindeman;  and  Jean  Pierre 
and  was  unable  to  carry  out  her  ^  separate  area  of  GMAB  program-  Boissault;  Charles  Shelton,  Otlit 
plan  to  escape.  She  added  that ,  ming:  entertainment,  recreation :  Olivet ,  Larry  CarroU,  John  Ped- 
Leatherwood  drove  her  to  hei  and  special  prcjects.  dei,  John  Munroe,  Eugene  Spake, 
home  and  released  her.  i      The      GMAB      president     said  and  Thomas  Hall.  , 


/ 


MOe  TWO 


THE   DAILY  TAR   HEEL 


WEOMISDAY,  AMlfL  24,  IfS/ 


Expression's   Suppression       Another  Look 
And  Prime  Paper  Puppets 


'You  See— Propaganda  Everywhere' 


We  are  inHnitely  proud  of  the 
constitutional  guarantee  of  free- 
dom of  expression,  whether  it  be 
in  the  form  of  speech,  of  religion 
or  of  the   press. 

^'et  the  Student  Legislature  at 
Stanford  has  made  a  mockery  of 
this  so-called  inalienable  right. 
And  the  Stanford  Daily  staff  has 
justly  retaliated. 

The  legislatme  blatantly  passed 
a  law  which  enables  that  body  to 
"disapprove  or  recall"  the  paper's 
editor  u^on  petition  by  only  five 
per  cent  of  the  student  body. 

As  retaliation,  the  Stanford 
Daily's  staff  staged  a  walk-out. 

A  front  page  editorial  asserted 
admirably  the  following: 

"We  are  walking  out  ior  an 
ideal — an^deal  of  a  free,  enlight- 
ened, critical  Sunford  Daily  with 
no  legislative  shackles  on  ii.  " 

It  is  never  admirable  to  throw 
up  your  hands  in  weak  submission 
in  the  face  of  a  little  opjjosition. 
Tims  the  paper's  staff  is  to  be 
lightly  chastized. 

But  their  assertion  h)r  freedom 
of  expression  is  in  this  case  justi- 
fied. Sudi  an  arrangement  as  the 
Stanford  legislature  has  entered 
upcm'will  pave-  the  oppressed  road 
toward   relegating    the    paper    into 


a  passive  mouthpiece  and  verbal 
puppet— with  the  apparently  be- 
yond criticism  legisature  pulling 
the  strings. 

It  is  a  slur  upon  the  name  of  a 
great  institution  —  suppression  of 
expression. 

In  this  time  when  faculty  ad\is- 
ers — faculty  censors— and  adminis- 
trative consultants — administrative 
brain  -  washers  —  and  threatened 
subjugation  to  institutional  schools 
of  journalism — ultimate  expressors 
of  the  administration's  viewpoint 
only— are  always  threateningly  up- 
on the  horizon,  it  is  indeed  a  tra- 
gedy when  students  themselves 
put  a  yoke  of  oppression  upon 
their  organ  of  expression-^the  stu- 
dent  newspaper. 

AVilliam  Story's  quotation  is  in- 
deed ironic.  Thus  we  submit  a 
substitute  (me: 

"Of  e\ery  noble  work  the  vo^al 
part  is  best.    . 

"Of  all  expression,  that  which 
cannot   be  suppressed. ' 

How  else  may  governmental 
flaws  be  rexealed  and  corrected? 
how  t'h.f-  may  threatened  lonspir- 
aries  be  prexenied  and  potential 
dictators  stripj)ed  of  ijieir  (iod 
complex?  than  ihiough  freedom 
of  expression  and  revelation. 


Consolidation   Of   Forces: 
Leadership   Training   Meet 


if  student  go\ernment  is  to 
prosper  throughout  the  coming 
academic  vear.  then  a  c<msolida- 
tion  of  forces  and  a  harnassing  of 
these  foices  through  training  are 
both   netessarv. 

The  jjroposed  Student  (»o\ern- 
ment  Leadership  Training  Retreat 
at  (lamp  Monroe  near  Laurinburg 
ailords  this  op|)ortiniitv. 

Accortling  to  President  Sonny 
Fvans.  refusals  for  particijration  in 
this   retreat  are  omniously   heavy. 

Transportation  to  and  from  the 
retreat— lo  be  lie'.d  this  Saturday 
and  Simday— ^vill  be  provided  by 
buses  chai  lered  by  student  goN - 
ernnient. 

Tiuis  it  will  l>e  relatively  easy 
for  tfn)se  interested  to  attend. 

Outstanding  administrative  and 
student  leaders  are  slated  to  ad- 
dress the  conclave,  leaders  like 
Chancellor-to-be  William    Avcock. 

Thus  it  would  be  infinitely  ben- 
eficial to  student  government  stal- 
warts in  all  phases  of  campus  life 
to   participate  in   the  (onvotation. 

It  is  an  opportunitv  for  the 
newly  elected  and  newly  appoint- 
ed to  hear  the  omgoing  |:K)litical 
warhorses  relate  their  experiences 
and  outline  their  duties.   It  is  an 


The  Daily  Tar  Heel 


The  official  student  publication  of  the 
Publications  Board  c»f  the  University  cf 
North  Carolina,  where  it  is  published 
daily  except  Monday  and  examination 
and  vacation  periods  and  summer  terms. 
Entered  as  second  class  matter  in  the 
po.st  office  in  Chapel  Hill.  N.  C.  under 
the  Act  of  March  8.  1870.  Subscription 
rates:  mailed.  S4  per  year.  $2.50  a  semes- 
ter: delivered  $6  a  year,  $3.50  a  semes- 
ter. 


Editor 


NEIL  BASS 


Managing  Edito 
Associate  Editor 
Sports  Editor.  ..j, 
r^wj  Editor 


CLARKE  JONES 
-   NANCY  HILL 


BILL  KING 


WALT  SCHRUNTEK 


Business  Manager  JOHN  C.  WHITAKEK 

Advertising  Manager        FRED  KATZIN 

NEWS  STAFF^Graham '  Snyder^  Edith 
MacKinnon,  Pringle  Pipkin,  Bob  High, 
Ben  Taylor,  H.  Joost  Pjlak,  Patsy 
Miller,  Wally  Kuralt,  Bill  King,,  Cur- 
tis CYotty,  Sue  Atchison. 

EDIT  STAFF-Whit'whUf'ieTd,,  Aiithonj^ 
Wolff,  Stan  Shaw,  Woody  Sears. 

BUSINESS  STAFrl^John  MTntwTM^ 
an  Hobeck,  Jane  Patten,  Johnny 
Whitaker. 

Srt>RTS  STAFF:  Dave"wible7 sTu~ Bird, 
Ed  Rowland,  Jim  Crownover,  Rjn 
MiiHgan. 


Subscription  Manager 
Crciilation  Manager 


Dale  Staley 
Charlie  Holt 


^taxl>notograpJiers       .     Woody  Sears, 
Norman  Kantor,  Bill  King. 

Lihrarians.  Sue  Gichner,  Marilyn  Strum 

Night  News  Editor . •  Bob  High 

Night  Editor Guy.Hlis 


.jpportiuiity  for  the  giving  and 
taking  of  advice.  It  is  a  seldom-af- 
forded op|x)rtunitv  h)r  an  inter- 
course and  exchange  of  ideas.  It 
is  a  golden   opportunity. 

There  has  been  a  perpetual  and 
pereimial  tendency  among  politi- 
cos  to  cast  off  the  robe  of  emhu- 
siasm  once  the  campaign  for  of- 
fice is  successfullv  completed. 

It  will  be  indicative  of  a  change 
for  the  better  if  this  vears  jK)riti- 
cal  crop  begins  their  tenme  of  of- 
fice by  participating  in  an  e\eiu 
which  will  enable  them  t(S  admin- 
ister their  duties  more  eriectivelv 
t^vou'ihout   the  year. 

^Vc  uelcoMie  a  plea.sant  air  of 
demonstrated  enthusiasm  through 
participation    in    this   conclave. 

And  we  shall  watch  with  inter- 
est the  number  of  pai  ticijiants. 

Pork  Barrel, 


Legislators 


There  is  an  old  frowned-upon 
political  practice  known  as  pork- 
barreling  in  which  a  representa- 
tive feathers  the  nests  of  his  own 
constituents. 

\S'e  openly  ad\ocate  pork-bar- 
reling among  student  legislators jis 
the  new  .i^^rd  assembly  .swings  in- 
to session. 

In  the  past  there  has  been  a  ten- 
dency among  studem  representa- 
ti\es  to  play  luish-mouth  through- 
out meetings  when  theoretically 
he  is  entrusted  with  the  respmsi- 
bility  of  playing  mouthpiece  for  a 
constituency  cjf  2,">o  or  more  stu- 
dents. 

Kvery  student  is  supposedly  \ei« 
bally  represented  by  a  spokesman 
in  the  legislatitre.  Thus  an  elected 
representat:\e  nnist  imestigate  the 
problems  of  his  constituents,  af- 
ford them  opportmVity  to  express 
their  gripes  and  complaints,  and 
air  his  findings  before  the  law- 
makers assembled  on  Thursday 
night. 

The  piist  22nci  assenil.U  \\as 
commendable  in  that  (io-phis  mea- 
sures ran  the  legislati\e  gamei.  But 
still  there  were  representatives  up- 
on whom  was  ihnrst  the  responsi- 
bilit\  of  sj)e3king  for  their  consti- 
tuency yet  did  not  once  sj>cak  duv 
ing  the  assembly. 

There  .are  too  many  Thursday 
night  legislators — the  rest  of  the 
week  during  which  in\estigation 
should   be  conducted   be  hanged. 

Thus  we  make  open  advocation 
lor  pork  fjarreling. 

Feather  your  constituents'  nests, 
lawmakers.  That's  why  you're 
there. 


At  Dr.  George: 
Fire  With  Fire? 

Frank  Crowther 

Our  right  to  express  opinion, 
be  it  radical,  conservative  or 
liberal,  as  an  American  tradition 
and  right  afforded  all  men  and 
women  under  the  jurisdiction  of 
the  U.  S.  Constitution.  In  ex- 
pressing my  own  opinion,  I  shall 
have  to  resort  to  extremes  in 
refuting  another's,  because  he  has 
dealt  solely  in  extrenjes  himself. 
This  does  not  mean  that  I  do  not 
have  any  tolerance  of  another's 
views.  The  liberality  and  open- 
mindedness  of  our  university  is 
something  of  which  I  am  very 
proud.  It  has  been  a  great  in- 
fluence in  the  South  and  in  the 
country,  and  I  hope  that  we  are 
not  losing  it  through  our  pres- 
ent crisis.  I  for  one  hope  that 
"Mortuary  Hill "  reverts  to 
Chapel  Hill.  But,  when  other 
opinions  become  contorted, 
warped  and  garbled,  we  must 
answer  and  negate  them  as 
vehemently   as    we    know    how. 

We  could  refute  any  of  his 
particular  statements,  which  be- 
gan to  come  to  public  attention 
in  the  spring  of  1956,  the  most 
vitriolic  of  which  was  that  print- 
ed in  this  journal  on  March  3, 
1956.  There  were  others  reeking 
of  the  same  staunch,  and  1  shall 
extract    from    several. 

Dr.  George  used  Saint  Paul's 
words.  "Prove  all  things;  hold 
fast  that  which  is  good."  He  in- 
ferred that  if  this  were  applied 
to  the  Supreme  Court's  decision, 
the  law  should  not  be  enforced. 

This  is  paradoxical.  Saint 
Paul.  Saul  of  Tarsus,  was  the  man 
who  recognized  it  as  God's  will 
that  the  gospel  of  salvation  in 
Christ  should  bo  taken  directly 
and  deliberately  to  the  Gentiles. 
His  work  broke  open  the  Jewish 
framework  in  which  primitive 
Chrisianity  before  him  had  been 
confined,  and  opened  the  way  to 
winning  the  non-Jewi.sh  world 
Arc  we  to  believe  that  this  great 
man  would  apply  his  words  to 
the  suppression  of  a  people? 

Dr.  George  also  said,  "I  became 
active  in  the  race  problem  not 
because  of  my  animosity  toward 
the  Negroes,  but  because  of  my 
desire  that  five.  10  generations 
from  now  we  might  have  in  this 
country  a  breed  of  people  cap- 
able of  maintaining  our  civiliza- 
tion." 

This  to  me  eviscerates  his  arg- 
ument from  the  beginning. 

Are  we  to  believe  that  he  is 
abounding  with  charity  and  be- 
nevolence toward  the  Negro? 
He  goes  on  to  say  that  he  de- 
fires  a  breed  "capable  of  main- 
aining  our  civilization."  Non- 
senc?!  In  wt)rld  history,  those 
who  have  helped  build  the  same 
culture  are  not  necessarily  of  1 
race,  and  those  of  the  same  race 
not  all  participated  in  one  cul- 
ture. In  science,  culture  is  not  a 
function  of  race.  Our  civiliza- 
tion has  been  built  on  many 
things;  to  mention  a  few:  steel, 
gunpowder,  paper  and  printing, 
corn,  tobacco,  algebra,  -etc.  But 
steel  came  from  either  India  or 
Turkestan;  gunpowder  was  in- 
vented in  China,  as  was  paper 
and  the  printing  process;  the 
American  Indian  domesticated 
corn    and    tobacco;    and    algebra 


:.^^.^-^^J^^ 


came  from  the  Greeks,  Babylon- 
ians, Egyptians  and  Hindus. 

He  again  extracted  facts  which 
he  could  twi.st  in  his  own  sclf- 
.satisfying  way  when  speaking  of 
Portugal's  decline  after  large 
numbers  oi  Negroes  were  intro- 
duced in  1442.  But  these  events 
are  Tiot  necessarily  correlated. 
Was  one  the  direct  result  of  the 
other?  He  docs  not  prove  this 
or  even  attempt  to  do  so.  His- 
tory has  shown  that  such  mixed 
races  have  flourished  and  prog- 
ressed even  in  extreme  cases  of 
intermixture.  Arabs  are  Caucas- 
ians, and  they  have  always  tak- 
en native,  wivc^i.  In  western  Su- 
dan, a  mixed  race  culminated  in 
the  16th  century  in  the  great 
empire  of  Bornu.  Moslems  nev- 
er have  attached  importance  to 
ancestry. 

Our  Merlin  also  quoted  Arn- 
old Toynbee's  'A  Study  Of  His- 
tory" thusly:  "The  black  races 
alone  have  not  contributed  to 
any  civilization."  "Alone"  is  pos- 
sibly the  key  word  here  and 
should  be  emphasized;  at  any 
rate,  it  could  not  have  possibly 
implied  what  George  inferred 
it  did.  He  completely  disregard- 
ed Toynbee's  summary  of  this 
book,  a  portion  of  which  reads: 
"The  so-called  racial  explana- 
tion of  differences  in  human 
performances  and  achievement 
is  either  an  ineptitude  or  a 
fraud." 

Nature  apparently  does  not 
condemn  the  half-caste  or  half- 
breed  to  physiological  inferior- 
ity. Mixed  blood  shows  over  and 
over  again  evidence  of  increas- 
ed fertility.  Stature  in  the  In- 
dian-White has  been  greater 
than  either  race  contributing  to 
the  cross.  Almost  every  record- 
ed   civilized    group   has    been    a 


form  of  hybred  group.  This  dis- 
poses of  the  croncept  that  hybred 
people  are  inferior  to  those  sup- 
posedly pure-bred  ones,  if  there 
is  such  an  animal.  E.  A.  Hooten. 
renouned  American  anthropolo- 
gist, said  in  his  book  "Twilight 
Of  Man."  "AH  reputable  anthro- 
pologists condemn  the  malignant 
nonsense  about  racial  psychology 
which  is  preached  and  publish- 
ed by  those  who  try  to  justify 
the  oppression  of  ethnic  minor- 
ities. Political  theories  about 
race  are  nothing  more  than  in- 
struments of  propaganda,  devis- 
ed for  the  child  minds  of  the 
totalitarian    populations." 

Actually,  this  is  not  a  ques- 
tion of  "mongrelization"  or  en- 
forced social  mixing  as  Dr. 
George  infers.  No- one  is  telling 
us  how  to  breed  our  families. 
But.  the  Supreme  Court  stands 
behind  integration,  and.  in  the 
end.  this  cannot  be  circumvent- 
ed. This  is  the  highest  law  body 
in  our  country  as  stated  in  our 
Constitution,  and,  if  we  are  to 
condemn  and  disregard  it.  by 
what  else  are  we  to  live? 

Dr.  George  is  also  a  scientist. 
I  have  spent  many  hours  in  Wil- 
.son  library  reading  most  of  his 
works  produced  during  some  35 
years  here  at  the  university. 
Some  of  that  work  does  the  man 
credit,  and  I  admire  him  for  it. 
As  a  medical  professor  of  his- 
tology and  embryology,  i  can  but 
respect  him. 

But  the  scientist  nas  a  special 
responsibility  of  cleaning  out 
any  of  the  falsities  which  mas- 
querade under  the  name  of  sci- 
ence in  our  colleges.  In  our  high 
schools,  or  in  our  publications 
which  are  influential  on  the  peo- 
ple. He  cannot  be  permitted  to  , 
preach  false   statements  such   as 


"everybody  knows  .  .  .,"  follow- 
ed by  "the  Caucasian  race  is 
superior."  when  everybody  does 
not  know,  and  the  Caucasion 
race  has  by  no  means  been  prov- 
ed superior. 

Our  people  today  are  yet  full 
of  dangerous  hatreds,  suspicions, 
animosities,  bigotries  and  intol- 
erances. We  are  using  racism  as 
a  new  way  of  distinguishing  be- 
tween horses  and  mules.  A  cre- 
ation of  our  time  is  the  claim 
that  we  know  our  enemies  by 
nothing  more  than  their  hered- 
itary anatomy.  This  misconcep- 
tion leads  people  to  believe  that 
man's  destiny,  damnation,  salva- 
tion or  place  in  the  sun  is  pre- 
determined before  he  may.  utter 
his  first  words.  This  puts  the 
Negro  behind  before  he  can  ev- 
en begin.  As  a  result  of  ojwerv- 
ing  the  society  in  which  he  lives, 
the  Negro  must  associate  "white- 
ness" with  superior  advantage, 
achievement,  progress  and  pow- 
er, all  of  which  are  essential  to 
successful  competition  in  our 
American  society.  Our  youths 
who  are  exposed  to  these  preju- 
dices are  being  taught  a  hatred 
and  rejection  of  others. 


Dr.  George's  humpbacked 
viewpoint  has  contributed  to  one 
of  the  sickening  travesties  of 
America,  racial  prejudice. 

How  can  an  honest  man  pro- 
fess to  be  a  good  Christian  and 
appear  so  mild  and  benevolent 
in  church  on  Sunday,  and  go  out 
Monday  morning  and  spit  so 
banefully  right  in  the  face  of 
his  fellow-man?  To  do  this,  and 
there  are  many  who  do,  is  to  be 
guilty  of  the  greatest  hypocriscy 
ever   attributed   to   man. 


Pogo 


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From  Notre  Dame  Scholastic; 

Blase  Youths? 
Legacy  Dulled? 

It  is  omnisciently  .superficial  to  la'bel  any 
generation.  But  it  is  worthwhile,  to  me  an^-way.  to 
point  out  a  few  of  its  characteristics.  It  is  bene- 
ficial to  understand  the  past,  for  it  has  helped 
shape  the  ^deas  that  have  influenced  the  world 
cf  the  present.  Historical  knowledge  goes  back- 
i^ard  and  forward. 

We  of  ihe  New  Deal  years  seem  to  have  a  nat- 
ural fcuriosity  for  the  romanticized  years  whose 
shenanigans  were  unpretentiously  recorded  by  F. 
Scott  Fitzgerald.  Many  historians  and  dilletantes 
have  labeled  the  1920's,  the  "Lost  Generation."  It 
sterns  interesting  to  pry  open  the  crushed  flowers 
of  the  jewel-box  world  that  many  of  our  parents 
face*— a  world  that  seemed  to  shrug  its  shoulders 
at  the  thoiight  of  bread  lines. 

Unlike  our  parents,  we  of  the  New  Deal  years 
grew  .with  the  shadow  of  a  world-wide,  full-scale 
war.  Most  of  us  recall  the  sneak  attack.  Most  of  us 
recall  the  battle  line  maps  in  the  newspapers.  Most 
of  us  recall  the  united  effort  of  freeing  Europe. 
Too  many  of  us  recall  War  Department  letters. 

War  has  played  such  a  familiar  part  in  our 
lives  that  we  seem  to  take  universal  terror  for 
granted.  We  have  read  so  many  editorials,  heard 
so  many  news  analysts  discuss  Russia's  possession 
of  the  atom  bomb  threat  that  it  is  commonplace 
knowledge.  "V\'e  have  seen  so  many  war  movies  that 
we  consider  their  plots  hackneyed.  The  Korean 
"police  action "  reopened  our  teenage  eyes  to  our 
omnipresent  companion.  As  a  result,  the  Hungar- 
ian revolt  did  not  particularly  move  us  .  .  .  not 
uiitil  we  saw  those  too  familiar  pictures  in  Life 
magazine.  Our  parents  learned  otir  lesson  -vnth  a 
rude  jolt.  We  learned  it  with  the  age  of  reason. 
We  are  not  immune  yet.  We  are  simply  blase. 

We  college  students  accept  ROTC  as  an  ac- 
credited course.  None  have  disregarded  the  nat- 
ural right  of  the  services'  claim.  Yet  there  are 
many  of  us  who  do  not  really  want  to  accept  this 
claim  of  universal  experience. 

•         •  • 

The  world  of  the  I920's  is  recorded  as  a  boom- 
ing bubble — a  bubble  that  loosely  bound  the  world 
in  a  gala  tickertape.  The  world  of  the  1920's  saw 
the  opportunity  for  our  parents  to  sail  in  the  un- 
captained  ship  of  industrial  expansion.  Unlike  to- 
day success  was  not  a  pressure  but  an  option.  Peo- 
ple were  less  financially  definable.  They  did  not 
enjoy  the  type  of  option  that  mass  goods  present 
to  us. 

A  teenager  of  the  1920's  was  not  a  consumer 
in  the  sense  that  we  know.  The  advertisements  our 
parents  read  were  geared  to  their  parents'  bill- 
folds— not  their  own.  Today's  time  payments  and 
job  opportunities  enable  the  high  school  sophomore 
to  be  an  automobile  consumer — a  freshman,  a  rec- 
ord and  movie  consumer.  The  teenagers  of  today 
are  subjecting  the  nation's  motion  pictures,  radio 
and  television  to  the  fad  of  an  unusual  "dance  mu- 
sic" called  rock  and  roll.  The  songwriters  of  the 
1920's  did  not  subject  their  music  to  the  whims 
of  the  exuberant  teenagers. 

The  world  of  the  1920's  has  been  recorded  as 
an  age  of  romantic  disillusionment.  Many  college 
graduates  who  could  not  afford  foreign  travel  join- 
ed the  service  to  "see  the  world."  Many  disgusted 
artists  fled  the  tranquil  rebuilding  of  Europe's 
"provincialism." 

•  •  • 

The  scientific  aptitude  tests  of  today  tend  to 
label  the  college  freshman  to  the  degree  that  he 
"knows"  that  he  will  be  a  doctor,  lawyer,  engin- 
eer or  a  merchant  chief.  Our  generation  directly 
contradicts,  I  beliive,  the  romantic  notions  of  the 
past.  The  death  of  the  romanticized,  speculative, 
g3t  rich,  see  the  world  I920's  is  contradicted  by 
our  generation's  drive  to  seek  a  label — a  label  of 
June  3  marriages,  placement  bureauism  and  my- 
riads of  white  picket  fences  aside  an  expressway. 
No  longer  is  the  gathering  of  wealth  a  demand- 
it  is  a  natural  presupposition. 

Today  our  society  is  a  consumption  society. 
The  multiplicity  of  jobs  and  advertisements  testi- 
fy to  our  economy  of  plenty.  This  js  the  only  t3-?e 
of  economy  that  we  can  remember  in  our  short 
lifetimes. 

This  label-seeking  seems  to  have  grown  from 
the  experience  of  the  "Great  Depression."  The  gov- 
ernment is  making  everj'  effort  to  preserve  their 
"peace  and  prosperity"  platform.  Technology  and 
teamwork  have  set  the  pace  for  our  consumption 
economy.  The  merchant  chiefs  of  today  prefer  to 
join  a  big  experienced  team  like  General  Motors 
rather  than  follow  the  growing  footsteps  of  his 
father  or  grandfather's  smaller  concerns. 

Today's  corporations  have  a  dearth  of  last  ty- 
coons, for  business  is  more  technically  organic  and 
technicians  are  plentiful.  Today  a  person  is  label- 
ed by  his  neighborhood,  automobile  and  job  con- 
temporaries. Our  generation  enjoys  the  sociii  mo- 
bility of  corporative  position.  If  a  sales  manager 
is  promoted  to  the  top  of  sales,  he  is  immediately 
accepted  as  a  hob-n<rf>er  with  Cash-^oot  Mr.  Mc- 
Call. 

•  •  • 

Many  of  our  parents  learned  the  bitter  lesson 
of  the  Great  Depression.  They  are  more '  inclined 
to  look  into  the  background  of  a  political  candi- 
date whereas  many  of  us  are  inclined  to  "X"  him 
on  his  campaign  slogans.  The  last  election  had  few 
rfeal  issues.  Many  of  our  parents  are  more  inclined 
to  express  disgust  with  political  corruption  where- 
as many  of  us  are  inclined  to  assume  its  necessity 
"to  make  the  wheels  go  round." 

These  few  facts  point,  I  think,  to  our  great 
desire  for  security— the  security  of  freedom  to 
express  ourselves.  We  are  deathly  sick  of  war,  ter- 
ror and  destruction.  We  have  seen  the  futility  of 
a  peace  without  victory  and  a  peace  through  occu- 
pation. 


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Seniors  To  Celebrate 
Their  Day'  On  May  1 

S«lors  Witt  tove  tbeh-  day.  |  duced  to  one  day  because  program 

»  M-  ^^.!!f';  "1.  ^"^"^"^  ^^th  officials  have  felt  that  previous 
established  Carokna  tradition,  grad-  Senior  Weeks  were  not  a^  success- 
uating  seniors  wffl  celebrate  "thefa-  fui  as  they  should  have  been, 
oay  of  recreation  and  group  par- 
ticipation on  Wednesday,  May  1.  •  According  to  Lou  Rosenstock. 
Unlike  years  past,  however,  the  Publicity  Chairman  of  Senior  Day, 
traditional  festivities  have  been  re-    ^^  change  has  been  made  in  order 


CLASSIFIEDS 


TEACHERS  NEEDED  FOR  CALI- 
fomia,  Arizona,  New  Mexico. 
Manj'  other  western  states. 
Beautiful  towns,  cities.  Need 
grade  teachers,  high  school 
teacher?  for  commerce,  home 
ec.,  English,  music,  ind.  arts, 
science.      Salaries      $4,000      up. 


to  concentrate  the  interests  of  more 
than  600  students. 

In  keeping  with  features  of  by- 
gone Senior  occasions,  however, 
seniors  this  year  will  be  treated  to 
a  late  movie  at  the  Carolina  The- 
ater on  Mav  30  —  a  prelude  to  ac-  i 
tivitiy  the  fWtowing  day.  | 

May  1,  of  course,  will  be  devoted  j 
entirely  to  the  whims  and  recrea- 
tional enjov-ment  of  all  seniors  on 
campus.   The   first  scheduled  event 


^AOE  THtEt 


Teachers      Specialists      Bureau,  j  in  the  class-free  Senior  Day  affau- 
Boulder,  Colorado.  ^^ j  ,viU  be  a  brief  organizational  meet- 

ing  to  be  held  at   10  a.m.   in  Me- 


WANTED:      COLLEGE      MEN, 

part-time  and  summer.  Earn  $60 !  "**"*^  ^^^• 


to  $100  per  week  plus  $100-$300 } 


Program  officials  have  urged 
scholarship  award.  Must  have  I  ^^"^^°^  ^  ^"®°^  *^  meeting 
use  of  car.  Contact  W.  P.  Cran-  •  ^"**^^  tickets  will  he  distributed 
ford.  Box  170e,  Raleigh,  N.  C.        I  ^^'^'^  ***^  ^  important  later  in  the 

j  day  in  a  drawing  to  be  held  at  the 
Patio.  Grand  prize  has  been  an- 
nounced as  an  automobile. 

A  highlight  in  the  afternoon  pro- 
gramming includes  "hand-to-hand" 
combat  in  the  traditional  faculty- 
senior  athletic  contest. 


FTLATERNrriES  OR  CAMPUS  OR- 
ganizations  wishing  to  make 
money  for  activities.  .As-  much 
as  $5  per  member  with  ease. 
Write  C.  W.  Doak.  120  Wood- 
burn  Road,  Raleigh,  N.  C. 


Mayors  Proclaim  Mother's  Day 

The  mayors  of  Carrboro  and  Chapel  Hill  Tuesday  announced 
May  12  as  fhe  date  for  the  second  annual  Mother's  Day  in  the  two 
towns.  Carrboro  Mayor  R  B.  Todd  (left)  signs  a  resolution  to  that 
effect  while  Chapel  Hill  AAayor  O.  K.  Cornwell  looks  on.  The  con- 
test is  sponsored  by  the  Chapel  Hill  Merchants'  Assn.  with  t|ie  aid 
of  UNC's  student  government  leaders. 

i 
Town  Mayors  Proclaim  May  12 

Second  Annual  Mother's  Day 

Dormitories,  sororities  and  frater-i  Mother's   day  has   been  officially 

nities  may  enter  their  housemothei-s  proclaimed  as  .May  12  this  year  by 

in  the  second  annual  Mother's  day  Mayor  Oliver  K.  Cornwell  of  Chapel 

contest    sponsored    by    the    Chapel  Hin  and  Mayor  R.  B.  Todd  of  Carr- 

Hill-Carrboro   Merchants   .Assn.,   ac-  boro. 


FOR  A  NEW  LOOK  IN 

TOWN  GOVERNMENT 

REGISTER  AND  VOTE  FOR 

MRS.  HAROLD  WALTERS 

FOR 

ALDERAAAN 

This  ad  paid  for  by  friends  of  Mrs.  Walters 


IT  S  FOR  REAL! 


DIFFERENT  TASTES'^ 


S«in'e  Kirl  is  tall  and  thin 

My  girl  is  fat  and  low 

Sam's  girl  wean  silk  and  satiA 

My  girl  wears  calico 

Sun's  girl  is  f^sst  and  *p*edy 

My  girl  is  slow  but  good 

Think  I'd  swap*  my  giri  for  Sam's? 

You're  dam  well  right  I  would! 


KIOtAli  Whether  you  swap,  switdi,  or  mitch  a 
Chesterfield  King  you'll  discoTsr  the 
biggest  pleasure  in  smoking  today 
Majestic  length — i^us  the 
■moothesi  natural  tobacco 
filter  because  Chesterfields 
u*  packed  more  smoothly 
by  ACCU'RAY.  Try  'em! 

Ch»>frfl»ld  King  ffir—  ym  mmt* 
•f  vrhflt  you'r*  8in«klii«  fori 


•too  to—  <»  JohH  A.  Citron, 
for  Am  Ch—Ur  TiaU  potm. 

iUforOMryphOooophiealvtrmaeevttdftr'piMiem' 
tienVChelirfiad,  P^.  Box  2i.  Now  York  46.  N.  Y. 


DAILY    CROSSWORD 


ACROSS 

1.  Tree 

4.  Wall  (Scot  > 

8  Aslem 

9  Stan  — — . 
comedian 

11.  A  garland 
(H.  I.> 

12.  Seasoned 

13.  Music  group 

14.  Top  of 
a  wave 

15.  Untidy 
(colloq. ) 

16.  Exist 

17.  Egress 

19.  Coin  <Iran) 
22.  Buries 
26.  Uterary 
compositioii 

28.  Satan 

29.  BarrM  parts 

31.  Mature 

32.  Certainly 
(archaic) 

34.  George  W. 
Russell 

35.  Game  of 
skill 

31.  A  hamlet 
41.iMeinn 
promise 

42.  Tempera- 
ment 

43.  Can 

'  44.  Girl's  name 
45.  Guide's 
higt)^ 
note 

44.  SUtch 
47.  Ahead 

DOWN 

1.  A  pessimist 

2.  Auction 

3.  Rude 
tfw«lli«gs 

4.  Marry 


5  Mulberry 

6.  Exclama- 
tion of 
sorrow 

7.  Bogs 
S  Neat 

10.  Network 
IS.  Frightens 
13.  Dairy 

oroduct 
15.  Ot/ey 
IS.  Greek 

letter 
20.  Man's 

name 
21  Profuse 
23  Biblical 

name 


cording  to  Howard  Yandle.   contest 
chairman. 

Entry   blank.s   may   be   picked   up 
at   most   Chapel   Hill   and  Carrboro 
merchants.  Mothers  may  be  enter- , 
ed   from   now   to   May   4. 

The    contest    is    being    sponsored 
with    the   aid   of   the   UNC   student  I 
government.     Three     outstanding  ' 
mothers    of   Chapel    HiJl,    Carrboro 
and  the  University   will   be  chosen 
to  receive  gifts. 

Mothers  will  be  cliosen  on  their 
individual  merits  rather  than  the  the  fine  qualities  inherent  in  the 
style  of  tieseri'7tion  on  the  entry  j  mothers  of  these  cities,  and  every- 
blanks.  The  mothers  residence  j  w  here,  and  pay  them  the  homage 
should  be  included  on  the  entry  they  so  justly  deserve,"  the  two  of- 
blank,  according  to  Yandle.  '  ficials  said. 


Covering  The  University  Campus 


-AW  SPEECH 

Dr.  Albert  J.  Hamo.  67-year-old 
lean  of  the'  University  of  Illinois 
College  of  Law,  will  speak  here 
tomorrow  in  the  courtroom  in 
Manning  Hall.  Dr.  Hamo  has  re- 
:ently  accepted  a  post  as  visit- 
ng  professor  and  acting  dean  of 
he  UCLA  Law  School  in  Los 
Angeles,  Calif.  The  public  has  been 
invited  to  attend. 
:lass  rings  ""  ' 


the  UNC  Dept.  of  Phy^cal  Theri-l  of  treatment:   geriatrics   or  treat 


py  at  Memorial  Hospital  w^ill 
speak  at  the  University  of  Con- 
necticut tomorrow  and  Friday. 
She  will  speak  on  "£?aiuation  and 
Grading  of  Students  in  Clinical 
Training  Situations." 
NC  SYMPHONY 

The  North   Carolina  Symphony, 


ment  for  the  aged;  psychiatric  ill- ; 
ness  and  cardiac  cases. 

ty'pers  needed 

The  Orientation  Committee 
needs  girls  to  help  with  typing  any 
afternoon  and  would  appreciate 
any  help,  according  to  an  an- 
nouncement.   Everyone    interested 


conducted  by  Dr.  Benjamin  Swal- !  has  been  asked  to  contact  Miss 
in,  will  make  a  45-minute  appear^  |  Mary  Jane  Fisher  in  319  Mclver, 
ance     Saturday     over    WFMY-TV, !  phone  89134. 


Orders   for   class   rings   will   be    Greensboro.  The  program,  to  start  j  WUNC-TV 


In  a  joint  statement  the  mayors 
said.  "Recognising  that  the  service 
rendered  the  United  States  by  the 
American  mother  is  the  greatest 
source  of  the  country's  strength  and 
inspiration,'  Mother's  Day  is  the 
most  conscious  and  deliberate  ef- 
fort any  nation  has  ever  made  pub- 
licly to  honor  the  mothers. of  our 
country. 

"We  hope  that  the  people  will 
take  this  opportunity  to  reflect  on 


aken  today  from  9  a.m.  to  4  p.m 
in   Y-Court,    according   to    an    an- 
nouncement.    The     ring     sale   is 
sponsored    by    the    Order   of    the 
Grail. 
ROOM  RESERVATIONS 

Men  students  will  have  until  to- 
morrow to  reserve  dormitory 
rooms  for  this  summer  and  next 
fall,  according  to  the  Housing  Of- 
fice, located  in  New  East  Annex. 
PLANS  CHANGED 

A  lecture  scheduled  for  today 
by  Dr.  Aziz  Atiya  will  be  given  in- 
stead tomorrow  at  8  p.m.  The 
Dept.  of  Religion  said  the  change 
was  due  to  unavoidable  oircum* 
stances.  He  will  speak  tomorrow  in 
105  Gardner  Hall  on  'The  Coptic 
Church  and  Ecumenity  from  Chal- 
cedon  to  Evanston."  All  interested 
persons  have  been  invited  to  at- 
tend. 
FULBRIGHT  WINNER 

Miss  Caroline  O.  Sites,  graduate 
student  from  West  Virginia,  will 
spend  the  1957-58  school  year 
studying  music  at  the  University 
of  Florence,  Italy,  under  a  Ful- 
bright  Grant.  Currently  working 
toward  her  Ph.D.  degree,  she  is 
a  teaching  assistant  in  the  Music 
Dept.  After  her  year  in  Italy,  she 
plans  to  return  to  UNC  to  com- 
plete her  doctorate  in  prepara- 
tion for  college-level  teaching. 
HEALTH  PROGRAM 


Selection  Of  University 
Trustees  Is  Discussed 


at   I  p.m.,  will  range  from  Bach,  |      Today's    schedule    f  o  r    WUNC- 

Brahms  and  Wagner  to  orchestral  |  TV,    the    University's    educational 

arrangements     of    such     familiar 

songs  as  "Sometimes  I  Feel  Like 

a    Motherless   Child"    and    "When 

the  Saints  Go  Marching  In." 

RESEARCH   CONFERENCE 

The    regular    monthly    research 

conference  will  be  held  today  at 

4  p.m.  at  the  UNC  School  of  Medi- 
cine.  Drs.  W.  E.  Dossel     of     the 

Anatomy  Dept.,  C.  G.  Thomas  Jr. 

of  the   Surgery  Dept.  and  W.   J. 

Cromatrie    and   J.    H.    Schwab   of 

the    Bacteriology    Dept.    will    be 

featured. 

WASHINGTON  SYMPOSIUM 
Several  staff    members    of    the 

UNC  School  of  PubUc  Health  wiU 

take  part  today  and  tomorrow  in 

the  annual  national  venereal  dis- 
ease symposium  in  Washington, 
D.C.  Those  taking  part  in  the 
meeting,  sponsored  by  the  U.  S. 
Public  Health  Service  are  from 
the  Dept  of  Experimental  Medi- 
cine and  the  Venereal  Disease  Ex- 
perimental Laboratory. 
DR.  GARSON 

Dr.  Warfield  Garson  of  the 
UNC  School  of  Public  Health 
Saturday  will  address  the  District 
III  meeting  of  the  American  Col- 
lege of  Obstetricians  and  Gyneco- 
logists in  Atlantic  Ci^,  N.C.  He 
will  speak  on  "Public  Health  As- 
pects  of  Gonorrhea   in  Females". 


television  station,  is  as  follows: 

12:45 

Music 

1:00 

Today  on  the  Farm 

1:30 

Careers  For  You 

2:00 

Sign   Off 

5:15 

Music 

O:30 

Purple  Cow 

6:00 

Legislative   Review 

6:20 

News  and  Safety 

6:30 

Mathematics 

7:00 

Industrial  Artisan 

7:30 

The  Magic  Cup 

8:00 

Carolina  Churches 

8:30 

Russia:    Past  and  Present 

9:30 

Beneath  the  Sea 

10:00 

Final  Edition 

10:05 

Sign  Off 

SPECLVL! 

^lizabeth 
Arden 

HAND 
LOTION 

with  Gift  Duet 

of  Soap  and  Lotion 

for  the  handbag 


Greensboro  will  be  the  point  of  |  RECREATION  PERSONNEL 

origin  of  the  next  program  in  the  |  Hospital  recreation  personnel 
current  .series  of  "Project  Health"  j  from  throughout  the  South  will  be 
programs  seen  every  other  Friday :  here  Sunday  through  Tuesday  for 


RALEIGH  —  ( AP )— Senate  and 
House  committees  apparently  were 
at  loggerheads  Tuesday  on  the 
procedure  they  will  follow  in  nom- 
inating some  29  members  of  the 
£k)ard  of  Trustees  of  the  Con- 
solidated University  of  North 
Carolina. 


Rep.  Roy  C.  Coates  of  Johnston 
County,  Chairman  of  the  House 
Committee  on  University  trustees, 
said  the  House  group  voted  Tues- 
day not  to  agree  to  a  Achate'  com- 
mittee plan  for  making  the  nomi- 
nations but  wanted  the  commit- 
tees to  meet  as  they  have  in  the 
past  in  joint  session  to  vote  on 
the  tru:>'tee  nominations. 


night  over  WUNC-TV,  channel  4. 
The    hour-long    show    at    9    p.m. 
will  be  on  the  subject  of  mental 
health. 
MARGARET  MOORE 


the  third  annual  Southern  Reg- 
ional Institnte  on  Hospital  Rec- 
reation. The  institute's  emphasis, 
according  to  Dr.  Harold  D.  Meyer, 
chairman   of   the   UNC   recreation 


Miss   Margaret   Moore,   head   of  curriculum,  will  be  on  three  areas 


SAY  NINE  STUDENTS: 


Government  Posts 
Still  Open,  Says  Evans 

One   reason    the    Senate    group  | 

Student  Government  still  has  over  i  joes  not  .want  the  matter  settled  j 

100  positions  open  for  1957-58  which    by  a  vote  in  a  single  joint  session ' 


Building  Bell  Tower 
Worthwhile  Task 


Just   Bought    In! 

Encyclopaedia  Brittanica —  A  very 
good  set  of  the  14th  edition.  Priced  I 
low.  j 

Sandburg's  Lincoln  The  War  Years  ' 
A  pristine  set,  at  a  saving  of  eleven  ; 
dollars.  | 

Philosophy  and  Sociology  —  A  | 
small  library  that  may  contain  vol- ! 
umes  you're  lookng  for.  Priced  j 
mostly  from  75c  to  $1.50.  j 

Comfiton's  Picturod  Encyclopaedia ! 
A  very  good  15-volume  set  of  thi.f  j 
popular  parent's  friend,  priced  to ' 
sell.  I 

History  —  A  small  but  distinguish- 
ed   library    of    American    history ' 
highspots.  Better  check  them.  1 

N«iw's  th«  tinie  to  catch  a  bargain  i 
in   ovr  Used   Book   Corn«r!         \ 

THE  INTIMATE 
BOOKSHOP 

205    East    Franklin    St. 
OoMi   Till    10    P.M. 


BOTH 

FOR 

ONLY 


3 


50 


{giant  17  o:. size 
— 4.50  vahw) 


Now  with  leak-proof 
loc-top  that  releases  one 
precious  drop  at  a  time. 

This  famous  hand  lotion 
contains  a  secret  ingre- 
dient that  makes  the 
hands  softer,  whiter,  less 
Hkely  to  chap  than  ever 
before!  Scented  with 
June  Geranium  or  Blue 
Grass. 

Regular  4  oz.  size. 
1.25;  8  oz.  2.25 

prices  plus  tax 


ff^utti 


Phone  9-8781 


By  CHARLIE   SLOAN 
SpMial  To  The  Daily  Tar  HmI 


muat   be.  filled   by  presidential   ai>  \  jg  that   the  House  committee   has  i     ST.   HELENA  ISLAND,   S.   C—  { 


WON'T  FALL 

Thanks   to   the   support  of  steel 
pipe   the    tower   will    both    fit    in 
i  with  the  hia'torical  atmosphere  and 


pointment. 

Student  body  President  Sonny 
Evans  yesterday  issued  a  state- 
ment  stressing  the   need   for  inter- 


I  42  members  and  the  Senate  com- 
I  niiltee  21. 

Coates  said  the  House  commit- 
tee agreed  the  names  of  some  20 


ested  persons  in  these  positions  and  ^present  members  of  the  board  of 
urging  students  to  make  applica- '♦'trustees  will  be  placed  in  nomi- 
tioh.  I  nation.    He    said    there    are   some 

"I'm  sure  that  every  person  who  I  29    additional    candidates    for    the 
wants   to   work   in   student   govern- 1  29  vacancies  on  the  board. 


24  Of  a 

river 
bank 

25.  Snoozes 

27  Ever- 
greens 

30.  River 
(Chin  I 

33.  Scatter 

G5.  Shed 
for 
birds 

36.  Cheer 

37.  Italian 
volcano 

39. 

March, 
emcee 


Ti-t-j  ijfju  aaa 
cjiuuM  BaanPi 
i^^'"    iiiM^   3fj:-i 


Y««t»rdsy'«  Aatwer 

40.  Capital 
( Nor. ) 

42.  Hint 

44  Left 
side 
(abbi.) 


ment  next  year  can  find  something 
which  will  suit  his  own  individual 
needs  and  interest.  You  can  be  as- 
sured that  we  will  consider  this  ap- 
pointment on  tlie  basis  of  the  in- 
dividual's merit,  interest,  and  de- 
sire to  serve,"  Evans  said. 

He  continued,  "I  hope  that  every 
one  interested  will  get  ^A  appli- 
cation blank  from  the  student  gov- 
ernment   office   or   from   tiie    infor- 


Tbe  Senate  committee,  Coates 
said,  had  suggested  the  two  com- 
mittees meet  in  joint  session  and 
ballot  on  the  29  names  with  the 
top  10  being  nominated  and  that 
the  committees  would  hold  an- 
other joint  session  later  to  agree 
on  the  othor  19  nominees. 

After  the  trustees  are  nomi- 
nated by  the  joint  committees,  the 


Building    a  bell  tower  proved  re-  l-remain  standing  for  awhile, 
warding  holiday  activity  for  nine  |     ^^^  ^^^-^^^  vacation  was  not  all 


Carolina  students. 

Some  cynics  might  measure  the 
reward  in  terms  of  blisters  and 
sunburn,  and  the  idealists  might 
measure  it  in  terms  of  service. 
Regardless  of  the  unit  of  measure 


work  and  no  play  for  the  group. 
An  oyster  roast,  the  first  for  most 
of  the  students,  and  a  day  at  the 
beach  were  also  included  in  the 
long  weekend's  activities. 
Part  of  the  group  was  driven  to 


mation  desk  at  Graham  Memorial  I  Senate  and  House  will  meet  m 
and  place  their  name  into  considera-  j  joint  session  later  to  elect  the 
tion."  trustees. 


the   project  added  up  to  a   busy  i  ^j^g   -^^^^^^  i,y   Cortland   Edwards, 
four  days.  -phe  car  was  lent  to  the  spoos-or- 

WORK  CAMP  I  "^S  organizations  by  a  local  auto- 

mobile dealer. 

The    group,    representing    four!  

foreign  countries  and  two  states,  | 
traveled  to  the  South  Carolina  j 
coast  to  take  part  in  a  work  camp  i 
sponsored  jointly  by  the  Cosmo- , 
politan  club  and  the  YMCA.  ' 

Participating  in  the  work  ca*ip    cecrto  was  dedicated  to  a  youthful 


CONCERT 


{Cvntinuei  f-rwn  Page  1) 


companion  of  Beethoven  and  first ; 
performed  in  public  that  year  by  ' 
violinist  Franz  Clement.  I 

Today,  150  years  after  its  pub- 
lication, this  famous  concerto  is  in  ! 
the   repertoire   of  every   virtuoso 
violinist. 


A  Few  Moments  Of  Rest 

Building  a  b«ll  tcwar  ovar  th«  spring  holidays  turn*d  out  to  b« 
a  rewarding  axparienca  for  nine  students  who  withstood  blisters 
and  sunburn  to  build  tha  tower.  Taking  time  out  for  rest  are  threa 
of  the  studants  shown  above.  From  left  to  right  they  are  Guanter 
Tlchopci^  Rainor  Monkiny^  and  Y.  M.  Dtssousky. 


were  Miss  Sipra  Bose,  Miss  Vir- 
ginia Jone^,  a  senior  at  Chapel 
Hill  High  School,  Miss  Marlene 
Johnson,  Flora  Macdonald  College, 
Ranier  Mcnking,  Guenter  Tscho- 
lel,  Y.  M.  Dssouky,  John  Ghanin, 
Wally  Satterfield,  and  Charlie 
Sloan. 

The  students  cleaned  brick  and 
built  a  bell  tower  for  Penn  Com- 
munity Services. 

ONCE  A  REFUGE 

Penn  Community  was  originally 
set  up  in  1862  to  accommodate 
run-away  slaves.  Today  it  serves 
as  a  community  center  for  the 
people  of  St.  Helena  and*  the 
aeighboring  sea  ialands. 

According  to  Courtney  Sicelofl, 
he  camp's  director,  Penn  also  { townspeople,  will  play  the  over- 
;erves  as  a  friendly  meeting  place  ture  to  the  opera  "Iphigenia  in 
.'or  conferences  on  the  race  issue  Aulis."  The  composition,  which 
md  other  problems  of  the  South,  j  was  first  performed  in   1774,  was 

The  South's  problems  were  not  wTitten  by  Christoph  W.  Gluck, 
ippermost  in  the  minds  of  the  1  ore  of  the  outstanding  early  classi- 
visiting  students.  More  immedate  j  cal  composers,  noted  for  the  ex- 
waj  the  question  of  how  to  lay :  pressivenesj  of  his  music, 
wick  in  a  fairly  presentable  man-  Turning  to  an  oriental  theme 
ler.  j  after   intermission,    the  orchestra 

One  observer  noted  the  finished  !  will   present  the   symphonic  suite 


WELL  KNOWN  j 

Alden,  a.-sociate  conductor  of  i 
the  orchestra,  is  well  known  ia ; 
North  Carolina  for  his  work  with  i 
the  University  String  Quartet  and  ; 
Trio,  his  sonata  recitals  with  Wil-  j 
liam  S.  Newman  and  as  concert- 1 
master  and  soloist  with  the  Mozart  I 

Festival  wchestra  in  Asheville  in  ;  FROM  CHAPEL  HILL  to 
the  summers  of  1938-42.  I*   CHARLOTTE      - 

To    open    the    concert,    the    60-  j       5  Departures  daily 
piece  orchestra — composed  of  stu- 
dents,   faculty    and    Chapel    Hill 


MAKK    IT    aWOWK    FUW    TO... 

Go  TRAILWAYS 

•••opeciaiists  in  Triendli^ 
-first -dass  -travel  ! 


Trailways  go«t  THRU  fo  mptt  dMtinotions  I 


NORFOLK    -  -  -      

8  Trips  including  3  Thru  Linors  deity 
RALEIGH 

9  Conventenr  trips  dally                                     v 
KNOXVILLE       

S  Tri^  including  Thru  Linar  service 

UNION  BUS  STATION 

311   W.  FRANKLIN  ST.  "— :— 


1-way 
(3.90 

$5.35 


.__     51.70 
(plufc  tax) 


PHONE  4281 


oreduct  is  a  fine  piece  of  making 
lew  corstruclion  look  like  a  his- 
toric relic. 

Community  Church  minister 
Charlie  Jones,  who  drove  one  car- 
load of  workers  down,  commented 
in  jest  that  the  tower  looks  like 
it  has  been  up  a  long  time  and  is 
ready  to  collapse. 


"Scheherazade,"  by  Rimsky-Korsa- 
kov.  This  colorful  work  is  divided 
into  four  stories  supposedly  relat- 
ed by  Queen  Scheherazade:  (1) 
The  Sea  and  the  Ve^yel  of  Sinbad, 
(2)  The  Tale  of  the  Prince  Kalen- 
der,  (3)  The  Young  Prince  and 
the  Young  Princess,  and  (4)  The 
Festival  at  Bagdad. 


Ask  ahipper*  to  aend  packages  express  to  you  by 
Trailways.  It's  faster.  Buses  Chartered  for  trips 
anywhere— any  time. 


T  i?  A  I  LWAY  S 

Ttie   route  of   the   Thrd-Liners! 


PAftl  POUt 


THt  OAtLY  TA«  HBK 


WEDNESDAY,  APRIL  24,  19S7 


K 


ING'S 
ORNER 

By  BILL  KING 

DTH  Sports  Editor 


Frosh  Baseballers  Beat  Blue  Imps,  7-5 


Looks  Like  Tight  Finish  In  ACC 


The  Atlantic  Coast  Conference  baseball  race  haj  ttirned  into  a  nip 
ant!  tuck  battle  that  in  all  probability  will  go  right  down  to  the  wire 
anr<  perhaps  intc  a  playoff  before  the  championship  is  finally  decided. 

The  ACC  standing*  has  been  shifting  around  aimott  as  much  as 
the  barnstorming  Harlem  Globetrotters  in  the  past  few  weeks  and 
it  is  safe  to  say  that  this  year's  big  eight  is  about  the  finest  fleW 
in  the  history  of  the  young  conference. 

Thus  far,  the  Big  Four  has  been  in  command  over  the  other  four 
club  •.  but  any  ot  the  others  are  capable  of  stopping  the  North  Caro- 
lina teams  in  the  stretch  drive.  All  of  the  Big  Four  clubs  are  in  con- 
tention f  r  the  title  currently  held  by  Duke  and  all  will  have  to  be 
at  their  very  best  for  the  remainder  of  the  season.  This  factor  should 
improve  attendance  around  the  ACC  considerably. 


Tar  Heels  Right  In  There 


A  •  long  as  Carolina  continues  to  play  ball  as  it  has  been  doing  up 
'til  now.  Walt  Rabbs  Tar  Heels  will  have  to  be  considered  very  defi- 
nite threats  to  dethrone  the  Blue  Devils. 

The  Tar  Heels  ^r*  im|»roving  with  every  game.  The  sudden 
hitting  spurt  by  centerfielder  Dick  Hudson  and  the  consistently 
fine  pitching  of  righthander  Jim  Raugh  have  been  instrumental 
in  Carolina's  fine  showing. 

Thi-  Rabhmen  have  been  good  in  the  clutch.  They  have  come  up 
with  the  big  one  mcst  (.f  the  time;  winning  several  in  the  last  in- 
ning of  play.  A  good  example  of  their  ability  to  take  the  ones  that 
count  came  during  the  Easter  holidays.  The  Tar  Heels  played  four 
games  during  the  break  and  won  but  two.  But  their  two  victories 
camt  against  ACC  foes,  Clemson  and  South  Carolina,  while  their 
losses  were  to  Furman  and  McCrary. 

The  business  of  winning  ball  games  now  will  become  an  ob- 
session with  the  ACC  clubs.  A  great  deal  will  be  riding  on  every 
game  and  it  should  be  an  interesting  race  to  watch  right  dvwn 
to  the  final  out. 


Tar  Babies 
Now  Have 
8-6  Record 

After  a  disastrous  holiday  road 
trip,  the  Carolina  Tar  Babies  wal- 
loped the  Duke  Blue  Imps  yesterday 
afternoon,  7-5.  The  win  was  the  sec- 
.ind  for  Carolina  over  tlie  boys  from 
Duke,  and  their  eighth  of  the  sea- 
son.  The  Tar  Babies  have  lost  six. 

Freddie  Hirsch  took  his  second 
win  by  holding  Duke  to  seven  hits. 
He  gave  up  extra-base  blows  to 
Butch  .\llie.  Bob  Pabst.  and  Richard 
Walker.  Walker  homered  with  the 
bases  empty  in  the  fourth.  Allie  and 
Pabst  had  doubles. 

Carolina  broke  out  of  a  3-3  dead- 
lock in  the  fifth  to  ice  the  win.  Four 
inns  were  tallied  on  four  hits,  an 
error,  and  a  base  on  balls.  Consecu- 
tive doubles  by  Tommy  SainLsing' 
and  Gearld  Griffin  provided  the  big 
;Hmch. 

Hu'sch  walked  six  and  struck  out 
three  Blue  Imps.  He  balked  a  run 
home  in  the  eighth  on  a  question- 


Score  Blanks  White  Sox,  5-0; 
Yanks  Lose  As  Sievers  Homers 

CHICAGO.  uP>-Cleveland's  youth-  WASHINGTON,  <fl  —  Roy  Sievers 
ful  Herb  Score,  a  20-game  winner  .^lammed  a  two-run  homer  in  the 
last  season,  notched  his  first  tri-  bottom  of  the  ninth  inning  today  to 
umph  of  the  year  today  with  a  mas-  bring  an  abrupt  finish  to  a  blister- 
terful.  four-hit,  5-0  victory  over  ing  pitchers'  ■tjattle  and  give  the 
Chicago,  inflicting  the  first  White  Washington  Senators  a  3-1  triumph 
Sox  loss  in  live  games.  ,  over  the  New  York  Yankees. 

'     Sievers'   blast,  his  fouitt  for  the 

Despite  the  defeat,  the  Sox  clung  ^.^^^^  ^  ^^^^^  lined  into  the 
to  first  place  by  a  half  game.  ^  left^enter    bleachers    and    wrecked 

Score    thus    avenged    a    loss    to    a   brilUant   mound  performance   by 
Chicago  in  last  week's  season  open-    t'''^  Yankees'  Johnny  Kucks. 
cr  at  Cleveland  when  Billy  Pierce 


bested  him  in  11  innings,  .1-2.  Pierce 
was  chased  today  in  the  third  in- 
ning, yielding  three  runs  and  seven 

hits. 


It  was  only  the  fifth  hit  off 
Kuc-ks.  but  with  Eddie  Yost  on 
base  via  a  walk  it  was  enough  to 
hand  the  righthander  his  first  loss 
ol  the  spring. 
■  pi;-k  Hyde,  a  submarine  tossing 
,  rightliander,  pitcher  only  one  in 
i  ning  to  receive  credit  for  a  vic- 
I  tory  set  up  for  him  by  another 
sidearmer.  Ted  Abemathy. 
Through  eight  innings  Abemathy 


I  i.« 


2ible  play  that  was  ai^ued  by  botli 

coaches.  But  with  two  runs  already!  '"  ^^'^^  ^^^^  ^'^^^  '«  *»d  ^^  "^^^ 

inning    after     Nellie     Fox    doubled 


Cleveland's  10-hit  attack  includ- 
ed a  fifth-inning  homer  by  Rocky 
Colavito   with   the   bases  empty. 

Score.    23-year-old    southpaw,    al- 
lowed a  double  in  the  first,  a  sin- 
gle  in    the   sixth,    a    single   in    the  '  yielded  only  one  run  and  five  hits, 
seventh,  and  a  single  in  the  ninth.  |  "^hjie  fanning  seven. 

Fine    defensive    play    helped    the  ,     wUdness  cost  Abemathy  the  mn 
shutout  by   the  slick   Tribe  hurler.    i^^   ^ut    the    Yanks   ahead   in   the 
who  walked  onl.v  two.   Roger  Mar-  j  ihird.  Jerry  Coleman  got  one  of  two 
made   a   great   shoestring  catch    bases  on   balLs   in   that    inning,   got 


A  Real  Good  Prospect 


While  were  on  the  subject  of  baseball,  we'd  like  to  offer  a  little 
tip  to  major  league  baseball  scouts.  Stick  around  Chapel  Hill  fellows, 
there's  a  terrific,  prospect  right  here  on  the  Carolina  campus. 

We're  speaking,  of  course,  of  Jim  Raugh.  Raugh,  the  ruddy- 
face  senior  from  Rosemond,  Pa.  is  one  of  the  finest  college  huriers 
this  corner  has  ever  seen.  He  has  a  great  variety  of  pitches,  a  good 
strong   arm,   and  a  good   head.  And  that's  not  all,  he's  a  pretty 
fair  hitting  pitcher. 
The  big  fellow  is  the  kind  of  guy  you'd  want  around  you  anyway. 
He  is  an  .outstanding  student   and  a  contributor  to  several  phase^y  of 
campus   activities.  Raugh  is  what  Al  Heifer  the  former  Mutual  Game 
ol  the  Day  announcer  and  now  with  Brooklyn  would  call,  "one  of  the 
nice  guys  in  the  business." 

Wc  don't  knew  whether  or  not  Raugh  is  interested  in  pro  ball, 
but  if  the  scouts  itart  waving'  those  enticing  bonus  checks  around 
in  his  face,  there's  a  goad  chance  that  he'll  be  tempted.  In  our 
opinion,  Raugh  could  make  it  in  pro  bail.  We're  speaking  of  the 
major  leagues. 

Track  Talk 

Although  the  Carolina  track  team  dropped  its  first  decision  of  thv 
scison  to  Maryland  last  week,  the  Tar  Heel's  top  two  i-unners  con- 
tinued to  add  prestige  for  their  running  ability. 

Dave    Scurlock,    the    sophomore    sensation    from    Greensboro, 
broke  the  Atlantic  Coast  Conference  record  in  the  half-mile  with 
a  time  of    1:52.t.   This   topped   the  old   record  of    1:53.5    held   by 
Bobby  Jones  of  N.  C.  State  since  19S5. 
The  Tar  Heel's  two-time  -\1I-American  and  a  swe  bet  to  make  it 
three  in  a  row  this  year,  Jim  Beatty  finished  second  l>ehind  his  old 
rival  Burr  Grim  in  the  mile  and  still  finished  in  the  best  time  ever 
by  a  North  Carolina  miler  at  4:06.5.  Grim  won  it  with  a  flat  4:06,  the 
best  collegiate  outdojr  mark  in  the  country  this  year. 

Burdette,  Giles  And  The  Spitter 

Milwaukee  pitcher.  Lew  Burdette  does  not  throw  a  s-pitball,  ac- 
cording to  National  League  President,  Warren  Giles.  Burdette  has 
been  accused  of  throwing  the  illegal  pitch  for  a  long  time.  His  latest 
incident  was  with  Birdie  Tebbetts'  Cincinnati  Reglegs.  Two  of  the 
more  recent  spitters,  (not  Ted  Williams)  were  Preacher  Roe  of  Brook- 
lyn and  former  Yankee  relief  ace,  Joe  Page.  Both  admitted  that  they 
threw  the  "doctored"  ball  after  their  retirement. 

We  received  a  very  nice  letter  a  few  weeks  back  from  George 
B.   Ingle  of  West   Asheville  informing  us  that  everyone  up  there 
was  pulling  for  the  Carolina  basketball  team. 
"The  beat  Dpok  .slogan  is  still  with  us  old  grads,"  wrote  Mr.  Ingle, 
a   1937  grad.  He  also  wanted  to  know  about  the  high  school  footmall 
and  basketball  prospects  for  next  season. 

Since  receiving  the  leHer,  we  have  talked  with  coaches  Tatum 
and  McGuire  about  this.  Neither  of  them  dropped  any  names  but 
both  seemed  to  be  well-pleased  with  the  outlook. 

Sports  Humor 

From  a  friend  on  the  Carolina  track  team  comes  a  little  story 
about  a  baseball  track  meet. 

Seems  that  when  the   Duke  baseballers  made   their  southern 
tour  early  in  the  season,  they  ran   up  against  a  rather  boastful 
outfit  at  Florida  U.  The  Blue  Devils  were  informed  by  the  Florida 
boys  that  they   had  the  fastest   man   in  college  baseball   playing 
second  base. 
';Just  for  jport,"  the  Floridians  said,  "we'll  run  him  sixty  yards 
against  your  best  runner  and  give  him  a  ten  yard  start."  The  Blue 
Devils  casually  mentioned  that  t&ey  had  a  rather  fast  left  fielder  and 
that  if  they  made  the  race  a  hundred  yards  Duke  would  run  their 
man  even  with  the  speedy  Floridian. 

The   race  was  arranged  and  the  Duke  left  fielder  won  it  by 
about   ten   yards.    Evidently   the   Florida    boys  didn't  realiie   that 
Dave  Sime  was  back  in  the  outfield  for  the  Blue  Devils. 
Yogi  Berra.  the  funny  book  reading  catcher  of  the  New  York  Yan- 
kees is  always  good  for  a  laugh. 

Thijj  one  concerns  the  time  that  the  New  York  folks  decided  tb 
have  Yogi  Berra  Day  in  Yankee  Stadium.  After  "ole  Yogi "  had  been 
flooded  with  gifts  by  the 'hometown  fans,  he  was  called  upon  to  make 
a  short  speecli. 

Yogi  willingly  stepped  forward  and  in  his  best  grammar  said, 
"I  want  to  thank  all  my  good  friends  and  tearnmaUbs  for  making 
this  occasion  necessary." 


aci'oss  and  a  runner  on  second,  he 
settled  down  and  got  the  next  three 
men   out. 

The  Tar  Babies  provided  top 
notch  fielding  support  behind  Hir- 
sch. They  made  but  one  error. 
Shortstop  Frank  Montgomery  led 
the  defensive  play  by  being  the 
pivot  man  on  a  second-inning  double 
play,  m^ing  a  near-impossible  play 
on  a  hard-hit  grounder  in  the  fifth. 


with  one  out. 

Chicago  had  two  men  on  in  the 
seventh  as  Minnie  Minoso  led  off 
with  a  single  and  Lollar  walked. 
Score's  sixth  strikeout  and  a  dou- 
ble play  ended  that  Sox  threat. 
I  Aonther  Tribe  double  play  erased 
j  Score's     walk     to     Phillips     in     the 

eighth. 
I      MinosO  also  singled  with  two  out 


and  luring  a  Duke  runner  off  secono   "'  ^^^  °"^^'  *>"'  Score  naUed  Lol- 

j  lar    for   his    seventh    strikeout    vic- 
tim to  end  the  game. 


in  the  fifth. 
THE  BOX 
Duke  Ftmh 

Klein,  s^    ^a^-Si  > ' 
Pabst,  If        •     I 
AlUe,  3b 
Drye,  2b 
Taylor,  cf 
Owens,  c 
Walker,  rf 
Wood,   lb 
Wayand.  p 

Totals 
Carolina  Frosh 
Montgomery,   ss 
Bryson,   lb 
Burroughs,  rf 
Clayton.  2b 
Workman,  3b 
Saintsing,  If 
Griffin,   cf 
Frost,  c 
Hirsch.   p 

Totals 
Scene  by  Innings: 
Duke 
Carolina 


Ab 
3 

4 

5 

2 

4 

4 

4 

3 

4 
33 
Ab 

3 

4 

4 

4 

3 

4 

3 

4 

4 
33 


R 
0 

I 
2 
1 
0 
0 

I 

0 
0 
5 
R 

2 
0 
o 
1 

I 
2 
1 
0 
0 


200 
110 


100    020 
1-M)    000 


Frosh  Golf 
Team  Beats 
GW,  20-7 

Carolina's  powerful  freshman 
linksters  outswatted  the  prep  golfers 
of  Danville's  George  Washington 
High  School  20-7  yesterday  after- 
noon on  sun-baked  Finley  course. 

Tar  Baby  Dick  Reader  turned  in 
the  low  card  for  the  afternoon  with 
a  71  for  the  medalist  honor.  George 
Washington  Highs  Wright  Garett 
made  the  round  in  72  to  be  low  man 
on  his  squad. 

The  Danville  pretxs  managed  to 
take  only  one  match  and  a  tie  in 
aucther.  Carolina's  Louis  Whelcss 
was  overpowered  by  George  Wa^sh- 
ington's    Garrett,    and    the   number 


to  second  on  Kucks'  sacrifice  bunt 
and  scoi-ed  on  the  first  of  BlUy  Mar- 
tin's foiu-  singles. 

The  5,619  spectators  who  turned 
out  to  Griffith  Stadium  had  U>  wait 
until  the  eighth  for  the  Senators  to 
pu.sh  a  run  acro.sj?.  Then  if  was  on 
a   fluke. 

Rodkie  left-fielder  Tony  Kubek, 
starting  his  first  game  for  the 
Yanks  in  left,  lost  Lou  Berberefs 
lly  in  the  sun.  The  ball  dropped  20 
yards  away  from  Kubek  for  a 
double  and  enabled  Jim  Lemon  to 
.score  from  first. 

The  Senators  thus  won  their  first 
I  decision    of    the    season    frOm    New 
York  and  kept  the  Yanks  in  second 
place  in  the  standings. 


Plans  Made  For 
Rod,  Gun  Meet 

By   TOMMY   JOHNSON 

Carolina  Rod  and  Gun  enthusiasts 
will  match  their  skill  against  re- 
presentatives from  the  State  Col 
lege  campus  on  Wednesday,  Ma> 
1st  at  3:00.  Site  of  the  event  is  ten- 
tkively  set  for  the  Durham  Wild- 
life Club  Area.  The  meet  will  be 
sponsored  'by  the  Intramural  De- 
partments of  the  two   schools. 

Next  year  the  event  will  be  held 
on  a  Big  Four  basis  with  Wake  For- 
est and  Duke  participating.  The.se 
two  schools  do  not  have  a  Rod  and 
Gun  group  at  the  present  time. 

Four  men  from  each  school  will 
participate  in  each  of  the  four 
events,  Archery,  Bait  Casting,  Trap 
Shooting  and  Target  Rifle.  Team 
points  will  be  totaled  and  the  .school 
with  the  highest  number  wins. 

The  Carolina  outdoorsmen  have 
two  years  of  exp>erience  in  Rod  and 
Gun  competition  and  are  favored 
to  take  the  honors.  Clete  Oakley 
was  the  individual  winner  in  the 
fall  meet. 

Champion  Scotty  Hester.  Charles 
Ik>wen  and  Ira  Kap  are  strong  men; 
in  Archery.  John  Crawford  is  the 
champion  in  target  rifle.  I 

G.  G.  Taylor,  winner  in  the  baii 
casting  event,  will  be  backed  up, 
by  Morris  Jones. 

Try-outs  for  the  four  teams  will; 
be  held  on  Thursday  afternoon  j 
.April  25th  at  3:30.  All  persons  in- 1 
(crested  are  asked  to  meet  in  room 
301- A  Woollen  Gym  at  this  time.! 
The  Intramural  Department  re-j 
quests  that  all  these  persons  call  I 
the  office  (9424)  .sometime  before! 
Thursday. 


Gi7es  Says  Milwaukee  Hurler 
Nof  Guilty  Of  Using  Spitter 


Track  Meet 
Here,  May  10-11 

Preliminary  plans,  including  ar-  j 
rangemem  of  the  time  schedule, 
have  been  made  for  the  foiuih  an- 
nual Atlantic  Coast  track  and  f.eld 
championships  on  Carolina'.s  Feeder 
Field  May  10-11. 

The  schedule,  announced  by  Car- 
olina Coach  Dale  Ranson,  the  meet 
director,  calls  for  trials  in  four 
field  and  six  track  events  to  be 
held  on  Friday,  bejiinning  at  3  p.m. 
.AH  finaLs  will   be  held  on  Saturday 


Murals  Today 

Softball:  (4:00)  SPE  vs.  Phi  Kap 
Sig;  Zeta  vs.  KA.  (5:00)  Kap  Psi  vs. 
ATO:  Chi  Phi  vs.  SAE. 

Tennis:  (4:00)  Phi  Gam-1  vs. 
Zeta  Psi  (VV)  (5:00)  Law  Sch-1  vs. 
E\'erett. 


CINCINNATI.  <if)  —  Warren  C 
Giles,  president  of  the  National  Lea- 
gue, said  today  neither  he  nor  his 
veteran  umpires  believe  pitcher  Lou 
Burdette  of  the  Milwaukee  Braves, 
has  been  throwing  a  spit  ball. 

Manager  Birdie  Tebbetts  of  the 
Cincinnati  Redlegs  claimed  Bur- 
dette used  the  illegal  spitter  in  a 
1-0  victory  over  his  club  last  Thui-s- 
day  in  Milwaukee.  He  said  he  sup- 
ported the  opinion  with  his  16'^ 
years  of  catching  experience. 

In  replying  to  a  letter  from  Gabe 
Paul,  general  manager  of  the  Red- 
leg-s.   President  Giles   said: 

"There  is  nothing  in  the  rule 
that  I  can  interpret  as  prohibiting 
a  pitcher  from  moistening  his  fin- 
gers if  he  does  not  apply  the 
moisture  spit  to  the  ball.  If  a 
pitcher,  after  appearing  to  mois- 
ten his  fingers,  wipes  them  off. 
that  to  me  is  sufficient  evidence 
that  the  moisture  if  any  that  may 
have  been  on  his  fingei-s  Ls  not 
applied   to  the  ball. 

".As  to  your  specific  mention  of 
Birdie  Tebbetts'  complaint  about 
Burdette.  I  personally  have  watch- 
ed Burdette  and  studied  his  actions 
and  inquired  of  all  our  umpires, 
including  veterans  such  as  Larry 
Goetz,  Babe  Pinelli,  Lee  Ballanfant, 
and  others  and  neither  I  nor  they 
are-  of  the  opinion  that  he  has.  up 
to  now.  violated  the  intent  or  lan- 
guage of  rule  8.02. 

"If  and  when  he  or  any  other 
pitcher  does.  1  feel  confident  the 
umpires  will  call  it. 

•/  .d  . 

"There    may    have    been    times 


when  pitchers  and  infielders  ac- 
tually have  rubbed  the  ball  on  his 
glove  as  I  have  seen  hundreds  of 
times  over  the  j^ears  and  which, 
by  common  practice,  has  been 
overlooked   by   the   umpires. 

"The  intent  of  that  portion  of 
the  rule  is  to  prohibit  discoloring 
a  new  ball  put  into  play." 

After  reading  Giles'  letter,   Paul 
issued   a  statement  sajing  he  was 
j  satisfied 

I      "We     asked     for    a    clarification 
i  and  interpretation  of  nile  8.02  and 
j  we  have  received  it,"  Paul  .said. 
I      "We  are  not  attempting  to  deter- 
,  mine  the  merits  of  the  rule  of  the 
I  clarification,   or  the  interpretation. 
Until  now  it  has  never  been  defin- 
itely determined  whether  it  was  per- 
missible  for  a  pitcher  to  go  to  his 
mouth.  Since  we  and  all  clubs  are 
being  advised  this  is  the  interpre- 
tation, that  satisfies  us." 


You'll  Enjoy 
Move  Over, 

Mountain       '*'"*, 
by  Chapel  Hill's  Own 
JOHN  EHLE 

$3.95  At 

The  Intimate  Bookshop 

205  last  Franklin  Street 


Athletic  Assn. 
is  Renovating 
Navy  Field        ! 

Navy  field,  the  area  below  Fet- 
2er  field,  is  being  completely  re-' 
novated  by  the  UNC  Athletic 
Assn.  at  an  estamated  cost  of 
$15,000  to  $20,000.  according  to 
Vernon  Crook,  business  manager 
of  athletic?.  I 

The  primary  change  will  be 
made  in>  the  drainage  system. 
Around  2,000  feet  of  eight  inch' 
terra  cotta  pipe  will  be  used  in  ! 
leading  the  water  to  underground 
catch  basins.  I 


I  cne  match  between  Carolina's  Mike  i  ^^'^  ^'^*'**  events  beginning  at  2  p.m 
Hill  and  Jennings  ended  in  a  Pa-lMs  I  "•"*  running  events  at  2:30  p.m. 


draw. 

The  Summary: 

Hill.  (C»,  tie  Jennings.  (GW).  iVi- 
14:  Reeder.  (C).  defeated  Mer- 
chant. 2M!-»i!:  best  baU,  Carolina 
3-0. 

Garrett,  (GWi.  defeated  Wheless, 
3-0;  DhIh,  (C),  defeated  Vander- 
weff.  2>/i-Vi:  best  ball.  Carolina    l^. 

•Morris.  iCt.  defeated  G.  Mer- 
chant. 3-0:  Webster.  (Ci.  defeated 
HaU.  3-0:   best  ball,  Carolina  3-0. 


'Cubs  Defeat  Braves 

MILWAUKEE.   <iP)   —    A    10th   in- 
ning homer  by  rookie  Cal  Neeman. 


The  middle  of  the  field  will  be  his  first  in  the  major  leagues,  gave 
raised  to  give  it  a  "turtle-back" ,  the  Chicago  Cubs  a  3-2  victory  to- 
effect.  so  the  water  will  follow  to '  day  and  handed  the  Milwaukee 
the  sides.  It  is  hoped  there  will  be 
enough  grass  in  the  field  so  the 
football  team  can  use  it  in  Sep- 
tember. 

The  football  team*  and  other 
groups  which  have  formerly  used 
the  field  will  continue  to  use  it. 


Braves'    their    first    defeat    in    six 
starts   this   season. 

Neeman's  blow  tagged  Braves' 
righthander  Lew  Burdette  for  his 
first  loss  of  the  year.  Burdette 
blanked  Cincinnati  1-0  last  Thurs- 
day. 


COME  AND  GET  IT! 
I've  Still  Got  ESSO  EXTRA 

at 

Downtown  Prices  For 
Regular  Gas 

and 

My  Regular  3<  Under  That 

Plus 

Bring  This  Ad  and  Get  1  Cent  Off  Per  Gal.  Gas, 

5  Cents  Per  Qt.  Oil 

Credit  Cards  Honored  Again 

At  The  Students'  Friend 

WHIPPLE'S  ESSO  SERVICE 


Coaches  will  meet  in  Woollen 
G>mnasium  Friday  moj-ning  at  «j 
o'clock,  when  drawings  for  heata 
will  be  made. 

Coach  Ranson  predicts  one  of  the 
liveliest  meets  yet  held  with  a  fine 
field  on  hand  and  interest  especial- 
ly keen  in  some  of  the  running 
events,  which  shoiUd  be  .spectacu 
lar. 

While  Maryland,  the  defending 
champion,  will  again  be  top  favored 
to  win  the  team  title,  such  individu- 
al performers  as  Duke's  Dave  Sime 
and  Carolina's  Jim  Beatty  will  draw 
the  spotlight. 

Sime  has  concentrated  on  base- 
ball this  spring,  but  it  is  under- 
stood he  will  take  part  in  the  track 
meet,  running  his  specialties,  the 
sprints.  Beatty  is  running  the  dis- 
tance races  this  spring  the  best  he 
ever  did. 


LACROSSE   CLUB 

A  lacrosse  club  has  been  organ- 
ized at  use.  with  28  candidates 
from  the  student  body  now  practic- 
ing   daily. 

Lacrosse  has  not  been  a  var^iity 
.*iport  at  U.\C  since  1953.  but  there 
:>   talk  of  reviving  it  next  >'ear. 

The  club  team  plans  to  play  sev- 
eral  informal  matches  this  year. 


When  Audrey,  rocks 
everybody  rolls! 


Howard  Johnson  Restaurant 

STUDENT    SPECIALS 

Barbecued   Chicken 
Choice  Steak  Sandwiches 

SERVED  ^^^~    ^'^'''^ 

itKVtu  8:00-11:00  P.M. 

''Landmark  For  Hungry  Tarheels" 


JULIAN'S 

DACRON  AND  COTTON      '' 
"WORSTED-WEAVE"  SUJTS 

WILL  WASH   AND   HANG   DRY    (3  HOURS)   FOR   WEAR 
WITHOUT  PRESSING  EXCEPT  FOR  OCCASIONAL 
"TOUCH-UP"  •       ,    . 


llEPBURNlJiSTAIRE 

NOW  PLAYING 


Carolina 


Most  people  wouW  love  to  do  it . . .  hut  don't  dare! 
He  had  the  nerve  to . . .  and  almost  did! 


A  story  of  high-pressure 
affairs  and  low -resistance 
ladies.  From  the  droll 
pen  of  William  Rose  who 
generated  "Genevieve" 
and  the  laugrhter  of 
"The  Ladykillers." 


COiO*  ST 

TKHNICOIOR 


^lig^T^ 


_  HAWKINS 

MAIWAUCT  JOHt^ON-wyND  CjAVtJ  '^*^;^'S;S^'' 


NOW 
PLAYING 


ryA'RS7Tt1 


Attractive    patterns 
normally  to  be  expected 
in   superfine   worsteds   are    per- 
fectly  adapted    in    these    blends   of 
importvd  cotton  and  dacron  in  discreet 
screen   dot   and   striped    patterns.   Ail    ar* 
tailored    in    the   three-button,   single   breasted 
model    with    lap   seams,   regular   pockets,    and 
hook  vent.  Plain  front,  slim  cut  trousers. 


Desert 
Tan 

Olive 

Dark 

Blu* 

Mixtur* 

Stripes 

And  Solids 

S42.95 

Covert 
Mixture 

Black 
Faced 
Brown 

Black 
Olive 

Plann*! 
Gr*y 

Julian* 


- 11 


WiATHER 

MMtiy    fair    mnI    vns«a»onabty 
w|irin  with  an  •Jqpcctad  high  •!  U. 


tj  H  c  tib<»anr 

S8t*ials  Dept. 
Chapel  Hli:^,    N.    C 


aTat:  IHCcel 


SECRECY 

Tfi«  •difor  \nmhn»H  H  en  P99* 


VOL.  LVII  Mb.  171 


C<mipi«t«  UFi  Wirt  Strvtet 


CHAPEL    HILL,   NORTH   CAROLINA,   THURSDAY,   APRIL   25,    1957 


Offices   in  Graham   Memorial 


FOUR  PACiS  TH»'   *«*U1 


~WWS 

m 
lirief 


Bifi  Four  Meeting 


LONDON,    ijfi   —    Pressures    wcrr 

!<i"M  II"   I'l   Irs'    iv?lit    for   a    new 

B'ri  Fc't"   summit  cinfexjnce  on 

\va>"s  to  hnll  the  nuclear  arms  race 

ami  t  y  to  set  the  world  on  tlie  path 

low  ax'  pccitc. 

S(«v"et  Piemicr  Bul^anin's  Easter 

■  \c/t\r  to  Prime  Minister  Macmillan 

v^^.s  s  jen  as  a   oos^ible  prelucl?  to 

A  Sosif'  p'.cxrs  1  f-r  a  meet  ng  of 

'Bulga^n,       Macmillan.       Pitsident 

£  seniiower    a/nA    Frencii    Premier 

Mcilct. 

Anolliftr  War? 

JBRUS.\LEM,  Israel,  i*  -  Israel 
RfKlo  rcpcrted  yesterday  that  Iraq 
had  warned  Syria  and  Egy;:t  .she 
w?s  ready  to  begin  a  "widespread 
military  operation'  that  would  pit 
Arab  against  Arab  if  any  attempt 
is  made  to  dismember  Jordan. 

Irsq  is  ruled  by  a  Hashimite 
<ousln  of  Joi^an's  King  Hussein. 
The  broadcasf  saki  the  warning  had 
been  sent  to  Cairo  and  Damascus 
through  Iraqi  ambassadors. 

The  l»-08dcast  followed  a  state- 
ment of  ALKibe  Lehem.  Israeli  for- 
^gn  office  spokesman,  that  Egypt 
has  'come  out  in  the  open"  in  an 
effort  to  overthrow  the  Jordan 
government  hv  siia-uig  up  Leftists 
fUKi  Nationalists  by  radio  and  press 
f  t  .cks.  Tho  object,  he  said,  was 
tj  m  .';e  Jordan  dependent  on 
oUifer  .Arab  slaici  and  lo  prevent 
Jordan  ixMance  on  the  Eisenhjw- 
ci  djctrine. 

Plan  Falls  Short 

WASHINGTON.  Jt  ~  .\me.i-.an  of- 
f  ci  .k  said  yesterday  the  announced 
Epv-  iaij  pj  n  for  runn  ng  the  Suez 
(See    W^RLD   NEWS.    Page   3) 


PEGGY   FUNK 

in   secret   ceremonies 


JOANNA  SCROGGS 

.    .   early   this  vioming 


SHIRLEY  BUMGARDNER 

.  .   .   these  seven  girls 


SALLY   PRICE 

.  .  have  received 


JACKIE  ALDRIDGE 

.  .  the  highest  honor 


SALLY  HORNER 

.  .  to  be  besUnved 


SUSIE   WALKER 

.  .  oil  use  coeds 


Counselors  For  1957 


Over  70  Coeds  Named  Highest  Honoroty  For  Women 

Taps  Seven  For  Membership; 
Secret  Cerernonies  Observed 

'  Service,  Leadership 


The  Women's  Orientation  Com- 
mittee yesterday  announced  the 
selection  of  73  counselors  for  the 
fall    1957  school  year. 


The  selections  Committee,  which 
is  composed  of  student  leaders 
assisted  by  several  administration 
members,  considered  over  160  ap- 
plicants^ this  year. 

According  to  Miss  Sue  Mayhue. 
chairman  of  the  cmmittee.  the  73 
selected  were  chosen  on  the 
basi.s  of  their  applications  and  rec- 
ommendations. 

New  counselors  will  begin  an 
extensive  training  program  to- 
day. Miss  Mayhue  said,  which  will 
continue  until  exam  time.  They 
will  return  to  the  campus  early 
next  September  to  prepare  for  the 
arrival  of  new  students. 


RICHARD  MALTBY 

to  offer  talent,  imagination 


Me^t  Maltby  Musicians 
In  Memorial  Hall  At  8 


Tonight  at  8  o'clock  in  Memorial 
Hall,  ftichard  Maltby  and  his  or- 
chestra will  be  presented  in  a 
concert  which  many  observers 
feel  will  be  one  of  the  most  suc- 
cessful of  the  year. 

aMltby's  ensemble,  featuring 
Miss  Franky  Crockett  as  volalist, 
has  received  excellent  reviews 
from  numerous  colleges  where  his 
orchestra  has  performed  this 
season. 

The  arraager  -  conductor  has 
been  lasded  by  the  big  names  in 
show  bu.sin«8s  and  has  recorded 
many  hit  tunes.  Among  his  records 
UK  **Man  With  A  Oorden  Arm," 
•'Deep  Blue  Sea,"  "The  Birth  Of 
The  Blues"  and  "The  Theme  From 
War  And  Peace." 

Last  year  a  similar  concert 
featured  Earl  Gamer  and  was 
highly  successful.  The  Panhellen 
ic  and  the  Inter-Fraternity  Coun- 
cils are  co-sponsors  of  the  event 
with  the  proceeds  going  to  the 
Chapel  Hill  Recreation  Center 
and  the  "Victory  VHlage  Day  Nurs- 
ery. 


Benny  Goodman  says  Maltby  is 
responsible  for  his  big  hit  "The 
Man  I  Love."  Paul  Whitman,  dean 
of  American  music,  states  Maltby 
is  one  of  the  best  and  most  vers- 
atile arrangers  in  the  business  to- 
day. 

Tickets  for  the  concert  are  still 
on  sale  in  the  Y-Court  and  will 
remain  on  sale  throughout  the 
day.  Ducats  will  also  be  sold  at 
the  door.  Many  stores  in  the  Chap- 
el Hill  business  district  have  tick- 
ets. 

Maltby  is  considered  by  many 
to  be  not  only  tme  of  the  most 
talented  musicians  of  the  day  but 
also  one  of  the  most  imaginative, 
His  creative  mind  has  lead  him  to 
explore  the  classical  and  sym- 
phonic realm  as  well  as  the  pop- 
ular  dance   medium. 

The  bandleader  has  worked 
with  Goodman,  Whiteman,  Artie 
Shaw,  Russ  Brown,  Gordon  Mac- 
Rae,  Lisa  Kirk.  Peggy  Lee,  Sarah 
Vaughn,  Vaughn  Monroe.  Vic  Da- 
mone,  Giselle  MacKenzie  and  Rob- 
ert Jlerrill, 


In   a   statement  yesterday,  Miss 

.Mayhue  said: 

"Choosing  from  the  high  caliber 

j  of   applicants    was    very    difficult. 

Those    not    selected   can    still    aid 

'  the  orientation  program,  however, 

j  by  personally  helping  the  new  stu- 

'  dents  to  become  acquainted  with 

;  the  Carolina  way  of  life. 

"On  behalf  of  the  Women's  Or- 
,  ientation  Committee.  I  would  like 
to  take  this  opportunity  to  thank 
,  he  many  applicants  who  demon- 
'trated  their  interest  in  this  most 
I  raportant  phase  of  the  program." 
j  she  said.  " 

"I'm  very  proud  of  our  new  Or- 
ientation counselors.  On  the  basis 
i  of  their  recommendations,  both 
written  and  spoken,  they  have 
•b:en  truly  selected  in  the  highest 
sense 'Of  the  word, 

"They  will  find  a  demanding 
job  ahead  of  them  in  living  up  to 
the  per^i^mances  of  whie^;  we  be- 
ti«ve  they  ar^  cai^tbla,'' ,  she  said. 
"tEp  "Iji^'f "%0mcil'S  Ontnta^nn 
Counselors   arc    as   follows: 

Misses  Molly  Adams.  Slie  Bal- 
lantine.  Frances  Anne  Bell,  Mary 
Louise  Bizzefl.  Marylou  Brinker- 
hoff.  Barbara  Brown.  Catherine 
Cardcn.  Roberta  Chapin.  Betty  Sue 
Clark,  Debbie  Conner.  Geraldine 
Cook.  Kitty  Corr.  Julia  Ann 
Crater.  Mary  Dewey  Dance.  Carol 
Dannis.  Marian  Lou  Dickens. 

Eliabeth  Lloyd  Dougherty,  Alice 
Seely  Ellcr.  Susie  Fagen.  Nancy 
Faison.  Daryl  farrington.  Mary 
Pearl  Felts.  Arnold  Garvin.  Nancy 
Watts  Graham,  Roberta  Hastings. 
Nola  Jean  Hatten.  Betty  Hobson, 
Lucinda  Holderness. 

Barbara    Honey,    Betty    Carolyn 
Huffman.     Carole     Jean     Hylton, 
(See  COUNSELORS,  Page  3) 

Poor  Response 
Causes  Retreat 
Postponement 

The  student  government  spring 
;  leadership  training  retreat,  planned 
I  for  this  weekend  at  Camp  Monroe, 
:  was  cancelled  yesterday  due  to  lack 
!  of  responsie,  program  spokesmen 
I  said. 

According  to  the  Planning  Com- 
mittee which  handled  program  prep- 
arations, only  65  rej^s  of  153  in- 
vitations had  been  received  to  date. 
Of  tins  number,  only  23  were  ac- 
I  ceptances. 

I  'Following  announcement  of  can- 
cellation of  the  retreat  yesterday, 
the  Conmiittee  issued  the  following 
statement:  <*■ 

"We  feel  tKat  a  program  of  this 
sort  is  needed  to  help  new  officers 
become  aware  of  the  probleans  con- 
fronting all  pha'Ses  of  stiident  ac- 
tivity. We  hope  that  more  interest 
will  be  shown  when  auth  a  program 
is  held  in  the  future." 

A  date  for  the  next  retreat  has 
not  been  decided  upon  as  yet,  ac- 
cording to  the  announoement. 


Among  Valkyrie  Ideals 

In  secret  pre-dawn  cerenioiiies  this  nioniiig,  the  \'al- 
kyrics  tapped  seven  toeds  wlio  will  for  the  first  time  wear  the 
golden  key  of  the  top  women's  honorary. 

lapped  were  Misses  Sara  Faith  Price,  junior  nursing 
student  from  Buckhannon.  West  Virginia:  Margaret  Eunice 
Funk,  junior  Medical  Technology  major  from  Wilnungton, 
Delaware;  Susan*  Leah  Walker,  senior  education  major  from 
Wilmington:  Shirley  Weaver  Bumgardner.  senior  Pharmacy 
^ ♦  naior  from  West  Jefferson;  Jean 

Math  Professor 
Will  Receive 
Di'Phi  Award 


najor 

Jacquelyn  Aldridge.  ^-jnoir  educa- 
tion major  from  Winsion-Salem; 
[Joanna  Hill  Scroggs.  senior  Eng- 
I  luib -Haa jor  from  Cf^tpel  HIU;  and 
I  Mrs.  Sally   MeK4«  Harner,  .seiuo* 

chemLlT)'  major  tr^m  Chapel  HiU. 
I  The  purpose  of  the  Valkyries  is 
J  to  unite  in  a  common  bond  ttiosf 
'  women  who  have  shown  by  their 
lives  such  a  devotion  to  the  ideals 


By  PRINGLE   PIPKiN 

Dr.    E.    A.   CaJTieron,   professor  of 
mathematics,    will    receive  .the   an-  . 

nual  Di-Phi  reward  for  being  tbe^'  .chffabter,  attitude,  «^rvice. 
most  outstanding  alummis  of  those -^0""^  .judgment,  leadership,  and 
IxKiit^.  it  was  amK,uneed  at  the  Fni  |scholarsh,p  that  the>-  may  insp.ro 
meeting  Tuesday  »ight. 


MAY  6  IS  COMING  SOON 

so  isold  eierytliiny  milil  then 


Representative  John  Brooks  open- 
ed discussion  to  remove  the  Philan- 
thropic Literary  Societj-  represen- 
tative from   the  Debate  Council. 

He  said  the  representative  could 
render  rttlf  service  to  the  society 
and  tlie  council  members  should  be 
in  the  UXC  intercollegiate  debate 
pre  gram. 

He  went  on  to  say  the  Debate 
Council  could  reorganize  itself  with 
two-thirds  vote  and  the  approval  of 
the  Student   Legislature. 

Representative  David  .Matthews 
rose  in  opposition  and  said  the  Phi 
would  be  giving  up  one  of  its  last 
bits  of  power  and  the  members  of 


this  devotion  in  others  and  that 
they  may  strive  together  toward 
these  ideaL*. 

i      Following  are   the  citations  for 

,  each  initiate: 

Susie    Walker:      One    who    has 
demonstrated   her  ability   to  work 

'  well  with  others  and  w  ho,  through 

I  her  vivacious  personality,  has  com- 
bined enthusiasm  with  creativity 
in  adding  to  ^-jrority  and  campus 

.  life.  Through  her  work  on  student- 
faculty  committees  and  on  .student 
reviewing   boards,   she   has   shown 

:  an    active  and  sincere  interest  in 
student   welfare    and    the   better- 
ment of  student-faculty  relations.' 
Joanna      Hill      Scroggs:      "Miss 


SENIORS: 


Want  To  Win 
An  Automobile? 


see  page  3 


Handbook  Staff,  Plans 
Announced  By  Herring 


Scroggs     is     recognized     for     her 
'^.^  !^'!l.l'^."!:^  "^  ^'^^^''i  strength  of  character,  her  interest 

•  in  people,  and  the  exercise  of  her 
superior  abilities.  She  has  excelled 
the    Dialectic    Senate,    which   chose    .„    scholarship    and    has    exhibited 
the  recipient  of  the  award  this  year  ;  ^^^^^.^    ^^.y^^^.    -^    jj^^    ^-^^^    ^ 
the    concurrence   of    the    Phi. 


acUvitj'   in  this   field. 
Dr.    Cameron    was    a    member  of 


with 


(See  AWARDS,  Page  3) 


Don  Herring,  editor  of  the  Car- 
lina     Handbook,     Wednesday     an- 
'  nounced    the   staff   and   plans   for 
j  the   1957-58  edition. 


Scholastic  Averages  Announced 


INFIRMARY  LIST 


Studantt  in  the  Infirmary  yes- 
terday includad: 

M  i  s  s  •  s  Gwendolyn  L«mly, 
Nancy  Fullar  Ll«w*llyn,  Marlon 
Dudley  and  Sh«ila  Boon*  Cro- 
nan;  and  Jaan  Piarr*  Boitsavit, 
CKirIa*  Shai«*n,  Rabart  Back- 
nail,  John  Monr«B,  Baxtar  Cul- 
ler, Gus  Louis  Oavis,  John  Ai- 
ry Carroll,  luyona  Spaka  and 
frod  Taddor,  Oravar  Brown,  Lar- 
Thomas   Halt, 


Zota    Beta    Tau    fraternity    and 
Delta    Delta    Delta    sorority    were 
announced  as  leading  the  relative  ; 
rank  of  fraternities  and  sororities  | 
in  scholastic  averages  for  the  fall., 
semester.  j 

On    a    letter   grade    value    basis 
from    A    -    1.00   to   F   -  5,00.   Del- 
ta   Delta    Delta    topped    both    fra- j 
ternities    and    sororities    with    an 
average  of  2.3462.  The  average  of 

Zeta  Beta  Tau  was  2.5506.  ; 

i 
The  all-sorority  average  was , 
2.456.  again  better  than  the  all-j 
fraternity  average  which  was  2,  | 
8969.  Through  a  sampling  method,} 
the  all-men's  average  was  2.8656, 

The  list  of  sororities  with  their 
average  is  as  follows:  Delta  Delta 
Delta.  2.3462;  Alpha  Delta  Phi.  2.- 
3748;  Alpha  Gamma  Delta.  2.4190; 
Chi  Omega,  2.4562:  Pi  Peta  Phi.  I  not  meet  tonight,  according  to 
2.4601;   Kappa  Delta.  2.4942.  j  Speaker    Don    uFrtado.   The    legis- 

The  fraternities  and  their  aver-  j  lature  as  a  rule  does  not  meet  on 
ages  are  as  follows:  the  first  Thursday  after  a  holiday 

Zeta    Beta    Tau,    2.5i506;    Sigma  period. 


Nu.  2.6103:  Beta  Theta  Pi.  2.6296; 
Delta  Kappa  Epsilon.  2.6743;  St. 
Anthony.  2.7509;  Phi  Gamma  Del- 
ta. 2.7686:  Phi  Delta  Theta,  2,7911; 
Chi  Psi.  2.8123;  Pi  Kappa  Alpha. 
2.8239:  Pi  Lambda  Phi.  2.8271; 
Kappa  Sigma,  2.8407;  Sigma  Al- 
pha Epsilon,  2.8481. 

Sigraa  Phi  Epsilon,  2.9188:  Kap- 
pa Alpha.  2%250:  Delta  Upsilon, 
2.93202:  Alpha  Tau  Omega,  2.- 
9457:  Tau  Epsilon  Phi,  2.9862; 
Zeta  Psi,  3.0223:  Lambda  Chi  Al- 
pha, 3.0335:  Sigma  Chi.  3.0439; 
Theta  Chi,  3.1946;  Phi  Kappa  Sig- 
ma, 3.2032;  Chi  Phi.  3.2952;  Pi 
Kappa  Phi,  3.4882. 


Not  Meeting 

The     Student     Legislature     will 


John  Minter    will     be     business 
manager;  Mike  Smith  will  handle ! 
I  photography.  Hearing  said. 
I      Editors  of  the  various  divisions 
I  include     Misses     Caroly^i     Hofler, 
Beverly   Culbreth   and  Marge   Mc- ' 
Mahan  and  Tony  Dees.  Fred  Rop-  i 
er.  George  Rowland.  Claude  Vess 
and  Melvin  Hipps.  j 

I  Herring  said  next  year's  hand- 1 
j  book  will  be  almost  completely  ■. 
\  revised  from  cover  to  cover  in 
I  order  to  give  new  students  a 
I  more  complete  picture  of  the  ad- 
j  vantages,  opportunities  and  func- 
I  tions  of  the  University.  | 

I      In   order   to   give   more   variety  \ 

1  and  create  more  interest.  Herring  j 

said,  two-color  plates  will  be  used , 

;  in  the  book.  In  revising  old  page  | 

j  layouts    and    creating    new   ones, ' 

{  simplicity  of  design  and  effective-  \ 

ness  of  photographic  arrangement 

will  play  a  major  part,  he  said,     i 

l^he    editor   also   said    increased! 

coverage  will  be  given  to  all  camp- 1 

us   organizations. 

Next  year's  Handbook  will  be| 
approximately  the  size  of  the  stu-  i 
dent  directory,  Herring  said,  and  j 
will  be  160  pages  in  length — an ! 
increase  of  30  pages  over  last  I 
year's   publication.  ' 

A  staff  meeting  will  be  held  to- 
morrow at  2  p.m.  in  the  YMCA.      ' 


Orientation 
Test  Today 


j  English.   Through    her   support    of 
I  musical   productions    of   the    cam- 
j  pus.  she  has  shown  her  unselfish 
u^-2  of  her  musical  talent." 

Sara  Faith  Price:  "One  whose 
spontaneous  f/iendliness.  concern 
for  others,  and  unselfish  spirit  of 
The  Camphs  Orientation  Com-  cooperation  have  benefitted  every 
mittee  "Will  give  a  make-up  ghiz  activity  in  which  she  has  taken 
on  the  1953  counselor's  manual  |  part.  Her  sincerity  of  purpose  and 
at  6:45  p.m.  today  tin  106  Carroll  humble  devotion  to  the  highest 
Hall.  I  ideals    of    character,    scholarship. 

Chairman  Jerry  Oppenheimer  j  end  leadership  have  been  a  con- 
said  the  quiz  would  be  given  for ,  .\ant  inspiration  to  those  about 
all  counselor  applicants  who  miss-  j  her.  She  has  devoted  her  efforts 
ed  the  quiz  April  16.  I  not  only  in  the  field  of  nursing, 

He  said  it  was  necessary  for  [  but  also  to  the  betterment  of  life 
those   who  missed  it  to  be  there,  j  of  the  women  students  on  the  cam- 

•I  hope   this  time  will  be   con-; pus." 
venient,"  he  said,  adding  if  every- '     Mrs.  Sally  Melvin  Homer:  "Rec- 
one  was  prompt,  the  test  would  be ;  ognized  for  her  dedicated  work  in 
over  in  time  for  the  Richard  Malt-  |  the  Department  of  Chemistry,  both 


by  contest. 


GM'S  SLATE 


Debase  Squad,  4:304  p.m., 
Grail  Room;  Finance  Committa*. 
4-6  p.m.,  Roland  Parkar  1;  UP 
,  Caucus,  6-7:30  p.m.,  Roland  Par- 
ker 1;  SP  Caucus,  6:30-7:15,  Ro- 
land Parkar  2;  Oriantation  Com- 
mittoe,  4-6  p.m.,  Roland  Parkor 
3  Woodhousc  Confaranc*  Room; 
Rules     ConHnittoa,     4-5     p.m.. 


in  regular  classwork  and  in  re- 
search. An  outstanding  student,  as 
evidenced  by  her  straight-A  rec- 
ord, Mrs,  Horner  is  the  modecrt  re- 
cipient of  a  National  Science 
Foundation  Fellowship  an-d  the  Al- 
pha Phi  award  for  the  outstanding 
major  in  Chemistry.  She  has  con- 
tributed much  of  her  time  to  re- 
search and  has  successfully  car- 
ried out  the  study  in  "Sterio  Fac- 
tors in  Cmnplex  Formation"  which 
she  undertook  in  the  past  year." 

Margaret    Eiiuice     Funk:     "Miss 
Funk  has  given  af  her^-vlf  to  her 


Council     Room;     Carolina     Sym- 
posium,   4-6    p.m.,    Randezvdus  '  campus  obligations,  both  academic 
Room.  i        [See  VALKYmES,  Page  3) 


^Aai  TWO 


TNC  OAILV  TAR  HEEU 


THUftSOAY,  APkii.  25.  '•9S7 


TbcSbroud  Of  Secrecy,        The  Match: 
AncWMhumb  Of  The  Nose 


i#i 


Uh 


t  ■  '1 !;;  f.   ■■'  -i '?&"■*'"?!? '■■»?« 


-^  U|»  Hlif^lt  Lppftstike  Ttl6helerst6rms 


A  \cil  .of  mystery  and  sctieiv 
.sinnmnds  operations  ol  the  C'iniip- 
iis  Stores. 

It   seems  appareiu  to  those  toii- 
terned— all   the  student   bodv — that 
eampns  stores^ are  makinji;  Uuratixe 
profit^    to  ihe   tunc  <^}    S.-,o,opo   a 
vear.   Vei  tjiere  is  no  piihlit  ly  ot- 
tered iteini/ed  aaoiint  as  to  where  "! 
the  pioHts..;)^  fjefn^fdflej^ateitl.,  <I|^' 
I  he  Catjimj.s  ^u>rc>  (^omiiuite^^, 
<«»mpn>sed-^    Joliit    studienis    aiVfl 
toin"    factdtv    membeis.    nieet^s    bi- 
aiiniidMy   Vi-?ffr'  Ttih  etsFt^    Business*  ' 
Manager  piii4tde 'J^jeagwc.  Biu  jimt  ', 
«\i»at    progress   is   being   made? 

.\<i<)i{Iiii<>  to  (onimittee  Chair- 
man |ohn  Urook.s.  the  bodv  is 
lorjjdatino  a  report  \vhi(  h  \viH  be 
submitted  lo  the  student   l)odv. 

We  call  lor  immediate  release  ol 
this   rrjx)rt.*^  -j 

W.  k.  R%ii4  hie.  <>ciieral  maiiat»er 
ol  retail  stores,  inloims  us  that  the 
seemiui^lv  extortionate  .S-,o.oo<i  net 
protit  is  beiiUCu&ed  lu  provide  aca- 
demie  sebi^itthipsv  liut  he  reluses 
to  releasevypifl  what  j)ert:enta<4e.s  ol 
tins  ama/iu^.  piolit  cfune  hrom 
from  dormitory  vending  machines, 
from  ilie  U<juk  F.xi  han<;e.  from  the 
Monogram  (iTTib  Circus  R(M)ni,  ett. • 
It  seein*~s^  <iefinitelv  ;y>parent. 
from  r>tishie'^s  Manager  re;mue"s 
relu>al  to  j^jed  anv  liolit  on  the 
dclevjation  aiut  athnation  of  Camp- 
us Stores'  |)i()lits.  that,  tlie  admin- 
istration is  thiniibini;  its  nose  at 
.sttidenis. 

.\nd  '^-it  tilt*'  same  time  student 
customers  ((Muiniie  to  fill  Campus 
St()rcs'  coffers. 

While  We  ;js>uiedl\  aj^iec  with 
the  priiu  ffyfi*'-V>f  affording:  atadem- 
ic  « ln)larshif>s  to  deser\ini>  stu- 
dents—since the  piimarx  pin"))ose 
ot  I  he  rniy!&Ysiiy  is  its  academic 
progvant— iv^  Hvoncfer  at  the  fair- 
ness of  ta'V"'*?  »hc  entire  student 
bcjflv  uitfi  t«»«)-hioh  prices  lor  the 
benefit  of-^^sniall,  faNored  sej»- 
ment.  •  «- 

It  seents  that  d<»ruiitorics  should 
ccrtiinlv  111-  allowed  a  relativelv 
small  perccntajic  ol  the  tunds  they 
}ioin    into  xejl^in,:  machines  to  fa- 


cilitate  establishment  of  a  con- 
tin<2[encv  fnnd  lot  the  maintenance 
of  television  sets. 

Dormitories  ha\e  onlv  a  miserly 
financial  set  up  with  whit  h  to  pro- 
vide a  scK'ial  pto^am  lor  their, 
resident*  in  pitiouslv  inadeciiiate 
smial  rooMsii  Thiife*!  they  cannot 
afford  exj^cV^sive'  .ihd  HraJnin«>  tele- 
vision   r^pk'ffs;  '      fi 

^  et  .\resSi;s.  Teagftiie  and  Ritchie 
continue  tcV  yuj»j;^e'  student  fuiid.s 
without  re\ealinj4  in  specifics  just 
where  tfie  J)n)Fits '»#eHie'irt<»  tHt^ 

At^XU  ■'■)>, ..u^    ..::  '\,j' .[:  .'I  :,:     fj 

Ave  deplore  \ehenientiy  this  latJc 
of  information  and  itetni/ation. 
We  deplore  the  bldck  shroud  of 
secrecy  which  has  been  cast  upon 
the  operations  of  (."fthptts  stores. 
We  deplore  the  fact  that  students 
are  beiix*  hit  in  the  }>c>c  ket  nerve 
ulule  blindfolded  as  to  the  allo- 
cation of  then'  finances. 

A^ain  we  leitterare: 

To  what  specific  vantage  point 
is  a  .S-,o.oo<>""  lucrati\e  net  profit 
l>eini»  applied. 

The  DaiK  Tar  Heel  makes  three 
su,i>gestion.s: 

(i)  That  the  pi  ice  of  campus 
stores  school  supjilics  be  lowered, 
since  we'  In-lieve  this  would  not 
conflict  with  piovisions  of  the 
I'mstead  .Act.  pre\eniin][;  institu- 
tional mono|x)ly  and  direct  com- 
petition with  meichants. 

(li)  That  the  campus  stores  con- 
tinue to  allocate  a  j)erceinaj»e  of 
theii  profits  to  sc  holaiships.  yet 
aiso  allocate  a  certain  jjercenLio'e 
to  deser\in;4  student  '^loups,  such 
as  doiniitories,  wito  prc»\ide  the 
fiMids  initially. 

(l\)  riiat  the  (lampus  Stc>res 
Committee  immediatelv  release  ,yn 
itemized  statement  specilvinjj;  the 
exact  allcMation  ol  profits  and  the 
exact  original  soince  of  these  prof- 
its. ^ 

We  aWior  this  cam|>us  stores  veil 
ol  secrecy  and  tall  hn   its  removal. 

StudeiUs  will  not  and  should  not 
tolerate  blindly  emptyin*;  their 
pocket  books  into  an  unknown  cof- 
fer. 


Advantage, 
Et  Cetera 

Whit  Whitfield . 

These  ne.xt  fc^w  lines  are  to  be 
concerned,  with  matches.  So  if 
you  do^it  ismoke,  ^hen  djpn't 
bother  to  -read  ^e^,  becii|i|e 
.you'll  b^  e(vtn  morWilfcredJiij^^ 
those  wHo-^  sm«l^^4-        i'^Tji.' 

The    togj^,  at    ^^n^;  hasl'ion^'       ^'  U 
been  over'lob''ked  on  the  editorial  '  ■ 

ly  be  plaPed   under  the  heading  |? 

h?r<...   ; 

Mo.st  of  you  have  bought  cig- 
arettes at  one  time  or  another  at 
the  -Monogram  Club,  Book  Ex- 
change, or  the  Scuttlebutt.  Have 
you  ever  wondered  about  the 
matches  you  g?t?  "V  for  Vic- 
tory." "Buy  War  Bonds."  "Free- 
dom." etc.  are  a  1 1  stirring 
thoughts  to  be  sure. .  but  they 
don't  help  light  cigarettes.  There 
are  actvantages.  however,  de- 
spite this  drawback. 

Besides  the  feeling  of  patriot- 
ism one  gets  when  he  takes  the.se 
matches  out  of  his  pocket,  he 
knows  that  they  are  valuable  as 
collectors  items.  Where  else  £an 
they  be  found  but  in  Chapel 
Hill? 

I    know    of    one    student    who  ' 

graduated  last  year  who  did 
nothing  for  four  years  but  s?ll 
the  covers  to  collectors.  I  would 
not  say  that  he  got  rich,  but  the 
government  offered  him  Rhode 
Island    instead    of   a    tax   refund. 

Speaking  quite  seriously, 
though,    most    people     seem      to 


Rest?icfion  On  AuTdS: 
Temporary  Is  Forever? 


The  I'niversiiy  has  admirably 
be.min  work  On  tiiree  long  overdue 
men's   dormitoiies. 

Ihc  (^onnitories.  slated  ic»  be 
completed  by  the  summer  of  i<)-|K. 
are  to  Ije  constructed  on  .1  setf- 
licpiidatinji  hasis  Avith  initial  pay- 
ment bein'4  madcj  throuj^h  a  loan 
fiom  the  Federal  Mousino  .\dmis- 
isiiation. 

N'et  there  is  another  pressiui; 
construe  ttoii      project      for      whicli 

The  Daily  Tar  Heel 

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NEIL  BASS 


-Managing  Editor 
Associate  Editor 


Sports  Editor 
New.-  Editor 


.     CLARKE  JONES 

NANCY  HIU. 

BILL  KING 

WALT  SCHRUNTEK 


Buaiiiiess  Mahager  JOHN  C.  WiTif  AKER 
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-MacKinnon-^ngle  Pipkin,  Bob  High, 
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-Miller,  Wally  Kuralf,  Bill  King.,  Cur- 
tis Crotty,  Sue  .\tchison. 

EDrr  STAFF— Whit  Whitfield,,  Anthony 
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BUSlNKjS^TA*^F-Ijobn^innt'©i7Marn 
an  Hobeek,*  Jane  Patten,  Johnny 
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Librarians   •S«»*Gichner,  Marilyn  Stnim 

a»»-  -  r-v.  -  — -^ 

iter 


Night  News 
Night  Editor 


Bob  High 
Guy  Ellis 


limds  will  continue  to  poiu"  in 
over  an  infinite  niunber  of  vears, 
yet  upon  which  no  work  other 
than   planninj;  has  been  done.' 

We  reler.  of  course,  to  the  park- 
in'4  problem  and  additional  park- 
in:;  areas  already  planned  l)\  the 
rni\ersitv    I- in>iueerin;4    I)e|>t. 

.Students — frc'shmen  and  ^sopho- 
mores withoiu  '■("."  axeraj^e.s — are 
t  iirreiiilv  beinj^  denied  |>rivile,<»e  c»f 
maintaijiino  an  aut<)mol>ile  on 
campus.  Other  sludenis  are  re- 
cpiiied  to  j)ay  a  S'.'.-,o  automobile 
I e'.^ist ration  fee  which  supf)o.sedlv 
js  to  ultimately  finance  construc- 
tion of  additional   parking  lots. 

\'et  this  re<i,istration  fund  has 
not  as  yet  been  applied  toward 
pro\  ision  of  nnu  h-needed  parkin<> 
lots.  .And  restrictions  on  freshmen 
and  so|)homoies  have  not  been 
lilted. 

When  student  <4oe\rnment  dis- 
plaved  excellent  initiative  last 
.spring  bv  lecommeiidinji  atuctmo- 
bile  restiictions  before  tjie  admin- 
istiation  and  trustees  stepped  in. 
it  uas  stipulated  that  such  re- 
stiictions were  to  be  only  Irtnfw 
tfiiy. 

Tint  IrinlKnnry.  '  as  it  the  c  itse 
^^itlJ  supposedlv  trnifinrnry  I'ni- 
\(isif\  structures  such  as  the  un- 
sicjhtedlv  wooden  annex  buildii>ms, 
has  apparently  come  to  mean  />rr- 
nifinrnf. 

"vttident  government  has  cst;d)- 
Ii*ihed  two  committees  to  deal  with 
tlie  parkiu'i  problem,  the  I'nivers- 
itv  YrafHr  Cc-jnimittce  and  the 
I  ralfic*  .AdvisoiA'  (lommissinn. 

Ihe  Traffic-  .Vchisfnv  Com- 
mission under  the  U-Jidnship  of 
Wilburn  "Drivis  did  admirable 
Avork  on  the  Clolumbi:!  St.  restric- 
tion pioblem,  thou'^Ji  the  work 
wa)>  only  teiii|)orarily  alleviarins.   ' 

Now.  however,  it  appears  the 
Tniversifv  needs  some  proddiuj; 
befoie  much-needed  and  loii'jf- 
awaited  parkinjr  lots  will  be  built. 

I  bus  the  committee  and  cc)m- 
mission  should  join  forces  with 
President  .Sonny  Evans,  who  prom- 
ised durin}4  the  (ampai<»n  to  work 
toward  toinpletion  of  more  park- 
ing lots,  and  prod   for  results. 

StirfTents  are  beino  denied  a 
coNctcd  car  maintenance  privilege. 


WHAT  OTHER  PAPERS  SAY: 


prefer  these  matches.  There's  al- 
ways   the    challenge — "Can    you 

strike  one?"  Sure  you  can.  Just 

scrape    off    the    mold.    It's    easy. 

Unless,    of    course,    the    wind    is 

blowing  or  il's  rainy,  or  the  sun 

is   shining. 

If   they    fail    to   strike    for   one 

reason    or    another    its    not    im- 
portant,  because  with    the   other 

advantages    these    matches    have, 

we  really  cant   expect   them   to 

.strike,    too.    What    do    we    w^ht, 

blood? 
Two!  things    could    happen    to 

disrupt    this    phase    ol    Clracious     ..    Indeed,    if   higbflr  education    is 
~Li vingn^Qae- Mt^tbat   spvntaneoustrv^-to-^voW  fh-  mediocrity  lo  whieh. 

many  already  have,  doomed  it, 
such  re-examinatiori  is  impera- 
tive. 

A     rehifionship     which     needs 
study   is   that   between   classroom 


Fewer  Class  Hours  Could  Mean 
Gain  Through  Individual  Study 


During  the  next  decade  col- 
lege enrollment  is  expect-ed  to 
double,  and  this  situation  pre- 
sents a  fine  opportunity  to  re- 
examine leaching  mefhods  and 
the  values  of  differing  education- 
al  e.xpcriences. 


combustion  could  decimate  the 
10  million  plus  supply  we  still 
have,  or  the  wholesalers  who 
stock  them  could  realize  the  war 
i.s  over.  Either  would  suffice. 

• 

Parking: 
A  Problem 
Elsewhere . 

The  role  to  be  played  by  the 
campus  planning  committee  in 
future  parking  develpoments  on 
or  about  the  University  campus 
will  b?  prmarily  one  of-  recom- 
mendations based  upon  inform- 
ed surveys.  But  the  .job  of  this 
group  is  confined  to  advising  the 
best  method  of  installing  the 
facilities. 

Here  is  where  student  respon- 
sibility and  leadership  should 
enter   the    issue.   The    basic    pro- 

• 

en  Abn«r 


blems  concerning  parking  re- 
main with  the  students  them- 
selves. VVhat  abotit  the  near 
campus  residents?  What  about 
the  numerous  comrhuters  living 
in  and  around  Eugene?  What 
about  overnii,'ht  and  most-ofthe- 
day  parkins'  on  campus  lots?  And 
what  about  restrictions  of  off- 
street  parking  which  may  soon 
be  facing  .students? 

The  problems  are  emerging. 
Administration  officials  have 
.shown  intentions  to  work  close- 
ly with  the  students  on  the  is- 
sue. Inly  with  the  coordination 
and  effective  Mason  can  the  pro- 
blem be  resolved.  Again,  money 
is  a  question,  but  development 
and  regulation  of  permanent  fa- 
cilities are  at  stake,  as  is  the  fu- 
ture of  a  rapidly  -  expanding 
campus  bottleneck.   (A.J.) 


work   and   outside   preparation. 

Today's  University  student  is 
expected  to  study  two  hours  for 
every  hour  in  class,  based  on  an 
average  load  of  15  c^redit  hours. 

The  prgsent  system  puts  un- 
due emphasi.^  on  the  value  of 
classroom  work  and  lectures.  The 
mere  •  meaniwgfnf  learning  ex- 
perience is.  we  think,  private,  in- 
dividual work. 

L'jcturcs  should  give  direction 
to  learning,  they  should  clarify 
material  too  advanced  for  the 
.student"  to  comprehend  alone. 
But  research,  reading,  individ- 
ual work  on  projects  —  these 
.should  be  the  core  of  the  learn- 
ing experience. 

Much  could  be  gained  by  re- 
ducing the  average  load  to  10 
hours  and  requiring  more  individ- 
ual work,  perhaps  three  hours 
for  each  in  class. 

Teaching  three  courses,  a  fac- 
ulty member  must  conduct  and 
prepare  150  classes  a  year.  It  is 
difficult  to  prepare  this  many 
provocative  and  stimulating  lec- 
tures. As  a  result,  a  great  many 
lectures  arc  either  stale  or  ex- 
temporaneous- either  boring  or 
••chatty". 

By  reducing  the  number  of 
lectures  by  one  third  the  quality 
of  each  should  be  improved.  Al- 
so, the  large  number  of  lectures 


that  ara  simply  reha.shes  of  ma- 
terial the  student  could  read  on 
his  own  should  decrease. 

Another  advantage  of  reducing 
class  work  is  that  it  should  help 
stimulate  personal  initiative,  if 
programs  are  thoughtfully  pre- 
pared. 

The  suggested  reduction  need 
not  be  taken  too  rigidly.  Clearly 
tile  value  of  classroom  work  var- 
ies from  course  to  course.  But 
it  is  nonetheless  being  overrated 
in  most  courses. 

Although  the  suggestion  is  in- 
tended as  an  across-the-board 
change  in  teaching  methods,  and 
not  as  a  special  aid  to  the  super- 
ior .student,  it  is  within  the  scope 
of  the  newly-formed  Honors 
Council. 

College  all  too  often  becomes  a 
continuation  of  high  school. 
Much  of  this  is  due  to  the  em- 
phasis on  the  classroom. 

I*rograms  designed  to  force 
students  to  work  independently, 
to  think  and  formulate  their  own 
opinions,  with  a  minimum  of 
formal  help  from  the  faculty, 
would  help  correct  this. 

Fewer  classes,  better  prepared, 
and  more  outside  work,  would 
benefit  both  students  and  facul- 
tv. 


^^5S5^ 


??-ARMAND//- 

INSANELV  JEALOUS 
FIANCE'// 


VOU  AVE  OPFENDED 
ARMAND  LA  SLICE, 
THE  DEADLIEST 
DUELLIST  IM 
PAR.IS.':'' 


Pogo 


BvWaIr  Kelly 


FROM  THE  B-V-P  TIMES: 

B-V-P  Air 
Is  Superiority 

Stan  Shaw 

The  men  of  Battle-Vance-Pettig?ew  should  r^c 
ogTiize  the  favored  position  of  their  cBxistence^  Thiy 
should  come  to  the  realization  that  they -are  n.i 
ot  the  same  material  as  the  ordinary  peasant.^  n 
campus.  They  are  something  sjp«cial.  They  ;:, 
something  special.  They  are  something  won^l-rui; 
that  can  ae  found  no  where  else  In  the  whole  ft  ni 
vervty.  There  are  many  indications  of  this  supe:i 
ority  and  we  should  take  note  of  them  as  we  -.(.f 
them*  and  cherish  them  as  our  rightful  heritaut 
We  must  build  on  that  great  inherit^ nre  whuh 
we  have  received  from  the  past  and  plan  to.  pass 
the  torch  of  greatness  on  to  our  .saccessgrs. : 

Tlie  first  and  most  noticesfble  featiire^  tliat  di  - 
Linguish  us  from  our  erstwhile  brothers  founcJ  else- 
where are  the  physical  differences  of  <iur  ven 
buildings.  I  ask  you,  where  eke  on  this*campu> 
ear  be  found  students  living  in  suite.-.  The;an.swer 
is  self  obvious  There  are  no  more  suites  ^n  cam- 
pus. We  live  in  twin-roomed  splendor  while  our 
brethren  in  less  favorable  climes  fre  found  tb  e.xist 
in  a  series  of  small  and  over-crowded  rooms,  .While 
we  enjoy  the  comfort.,*  of  high-fi  and  brc^  ex- 
panses of  op^n  windows  the  reitr  of  the  c^ipu, 
dwells  in  dingy  flats  which  inhibits  their  nbture 
and  compresses  their  creative  enerjjies.         \';  | 

The  souls  of  men  seem  lo  operate  in  direcit  pro- 
portion to  the  amount  of  .space  in  w^ich  they  dwtll 
and  therefore  .a^  the  first  axiom  of  BVP  exi  \ence 
we  would  cite  the  glories  of  our  Jwin  rooms  and 
the  spaciousness  of  mind  that  they  engender  in  u.<:. 
We  are  men  with  big  thoughts  and  large  imagina- 
tions. We  live  in  a  different  wotld  from  the  rest 
of  the  campus  for  we  live  in  a  Idfg^r  world. 

The  second  obvi-ous  point  of  separation  that  we 
come  upon  is  the  style  of  architecture  tha^  enconi 
pa.^es  our  noble  edifice.  While  the  loWer  quad,  the 
upper  quad   and  in   fact   every  other  dwelling  on 
campus  is  patterned  after  some  dastaWly  variation 
or  another  of  Georgian  or  Williamsburg  we  alone 
live  in  neo-gothic  splendor.  We  are  the  sole  posses 
sors  of  real  and  true  gargoyles.  Nowhere  else  on  the 
campus    will   you    find    gargoyles    which   carry  out 
theii  assigned  duty  aj  rain  spouts.  This  great  heri- 
tage ties  us  directly  to  the  great  scholastic  age  of 
the  Middle  Ages.  Little  wonder  that  you  find  the 
men  of  BVP  engaged  in  more  intellectual  pursuits 
than  the  great  unwashed  student  body.  They  have* 
a  constant  reminder  of  their  ties  with  the  greatne« 
01  the  past  every  time  that  it  rains.  The  gentle  and 
soothing  drip  from  the  gargoylco,-  for  several  days 
after  each  shower   serve   as    mute    and  expressive 
reminders  of  that  which  we  must  accomplish  if  we 
are  to  be  of  the  same  greatness^  as  our  schnlssuc 
ties  of  the  great  centuries. 

The  third  and  perhaps  the  mo.vt  mponanl 
physical  distinguishment  is  the  fact  that  BVP  alone 
is  enclosed  by  a  stone  wall.  There  are  two  enclos- 
ing stone  walls  on  campus.  The  one  that  separates 
the  University  from  the  unwashed  and  untutored 
masse  •  of  North  Carolina  and  the  one  that  .sepa- 
rates BVP  from  the  unva^hed  and  untutored  masses 
of  the  University.  This  rare  and  very  symbolic  wall 
encloses  our  own  private  grounds.  We  have  a  park 
in  which  we  may  stroll  and  take  our  leisure  in  the 
cool  of  the  evening.  After  our  evening  repast  we 
may  amble  'neath  the  cool  limbs  of  our  noble  oaks 
ancl  elm-  and  contemplate  the  wretched  state  in 
which  the  rest  of  the  campus  finds  itself.  Truly 
this  is  a  privilege  which  is  to  be  found  nowhere  on 
campus,  except  for  those  of  BVP. 

I  need  not  deal  with  the  higher  intellectual  at 
tainments  of  BVP  rnen.  We  see  the  evidences  i 
this  every  day  as  we  pass  the  old  room  ef  a  one 
time  BVPer,  Thomas  Wolfe  and  as  we  hear  the 
•  ge  words  of  God  on  Earth  and  the  Pharaoh  of 
the  World  who  has  deigned  to  live  in  BVP.  Onlv 
here  i^  such  gog-like  eminence  to  be  found.  The 
rest  of  the  University  may  be  going  to  h«ll  anu 
the  United  States  may  be  degenerating  at  an  un- 
believable rate,  but  Battle-Vance-  Pettigrew  remain 
m  solitary  splendor,  alone  in  greatness  and  objec- 
tivity. 


An  Ohio  \A<riter 
Likes  The  Hill 

Editor 


I  just  wanted  to  thank  you  for  sending  me  The 
Daily  Tar  Heel  Also,  if  l  „,ay.  I'd  like  to  thank 
all  concerned  for  treating  us  so  well  during  our 
sta>  at  the  University.  As  you  may  know,  this  was 
Oberlm  •  fu-st  real  southern  trip,  and  the  fine  treat 
ment  we  received  has  helped  immeasurably  tu 
make  the  trip  a  continued  thing. 

We  heard  some  complaints  bj-  the  freshman  hall 
players  that  the  weather  was  "cool'  when  we 
pla>'ed.  Well,  all  I  can  say  is  that  we  returned  to 
Ohio  Saturday  in  a,  blizzard  and  it  snowed  for  five 
days. 

Item?  of  interest  in  The  Daily  Tar  Heel  to  my- 
self and  many  other  players  on  the  team  were 
tlie  articles  concerning  segregation  bj'  Dr.  George 
and  the  resulting  replie  •.  We  who  do  not  live  in 
or  near  the  South  often  received  mistaken  impres- 
sions that  the  anti-Negro  opinion  is  nearly  a  stereo- 
type in  that  section  or  the  couniry.  i  was  very  glad 
to  see  the  article  by  Anthony  Wolff  and  the  letters 
by  Tom  Parramore  and  William  Howell.  It  was 
good  to  ktiow  that  you  are  thinkers  and  not  follow- 
ers, and  that  these  reactions  probably  were  paralfr* 
to  those  encountered  by  Dr.  George  at  Dartmouth 
But  most  imporant,  both  sidci-  were  heard,  and  the 
final  decision  left  to  the  thinking  people. 


.^.UL     A.l.^     ^ 


Ed  Sundt 
Ofc«rlin^hi» 


r 


art 

The) 

ConcI 


I- 

I- 

t 


^m^mmmmmm'mmmmm^mimmmmmmm^imf^ 


'^^^^^^'i^^^mmmmtmmmammmmmmmammmmmmm 


IS.  \H7 


'TMURSDAY,  APRIL  M,  ^95T 


THS   DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


Ishould  rec- 
Ttence^  They 
|e>  arp  not 

easant^  on 
They^  >are 

whole  fUni- 
ihis  siiperi- 

as  we  see 
■1  heritage. 
Ince  which 
Ian  tb  pass 
furs. 

tttat  di  - 

fftHind-  else- 

<^iir    very 

bis  ^campus 

The;  answer 

es  ^.cam- 

w'hBe   our 

id  t^  exist 

oms.  ;While 

broid    ex- 

■he   cilmpus 

leir   aVture 

i 

■\ 
Idkecit  Wo- 

|they  dwell 

exi.,vence 
rooms  and 
|ider  in  us. 
imagina- 
the  rest 
t^orld. 

~  • 
|»n  that  we 
ia|  encom- 
quad,  the 
refling   on 
variation 
we  alone 
>le  posses- 
blse  on  the 
carr\-   out 
kreat  heri- 
^tic  age  of 
find   the 
^1  pursuits 
They  havei 
greatnesoi 
senile  and 
l^eral  days 
fxpressive 
lli^h  if  we 
schoJa.stic 

[important 

JVP  alone 

ro  enelos- 

separates 

I  untutored 

that  sepa- 

masses 

>lic  wall 

|ve  a  park 

re  in  the 

|repast  we 

loble  oaks 

state   in 

?lf.   Truly 

Jwhere  on 

(Ctual  at- 

Idencei)  •  f 

•f  a  ttne 

hear   the 

^h^raoh  of 

JVP.  Only 

>und.   The 

hdl   and 

I  at  an  un- 

Ew  remain 

:nd  objec- 


her 

in 


ig  me  The 
tj  thank 
luring  our 
this  was 
fitie  treat- 
iurahly    to 

ihmjn  l>all 

whfn    we 

elurned  to 

'd  for  five 

eel  to  my- 
team  were 
>r.  (Jeorge, 
not  live  in 
;en  inipres- 
ly  a  St  ere  u- 
«  very  glad 
the  letters 
ell.  It  was 
n4  follow- 
ere  parain* 
Dartmouth. 
f^  and  the 
e 

^  SumH 
riinX>hi* 


FACE  THRCR 


J^i^' 


City  Planning  Students  Study  Zoning  Ciiart      ,  ..^  .   - 

V  '     Two  students  of  the  City  and   Regional  Planning  Dept.  cf  UNC  will   have  no  difficulty  getting  a   fob  In  th*  futur.  If  th«  ^ploy- 

•re   shown   above   at   a    chart   showing    desirable   zoning    practices.  men!   situation   regarding   planning   studonts    here   stays   the   same. 

Tt»ey  »r»  (left)  G^rge  Dodson  of  Wilmington  and  Dennis  Daye  of  The  demand  for  experienced  planners  far  exceeds  the  supply. 
Concord.  The  two  students,  both  graduate  students,  in  all  probability 


QnCsn^us 


with 
McShokan 


(Author  of  "Bartfoot  Boy  With  Ckstk,"  ote.) 


THE  THUNDERING  MARCH 
OF  PROGRESS 

Today,  as  everyone  knows,  is  the  forty-sixth  annf- 
versary  of  the  founding  of  Gransraire  College  for  Women 
which,  as  everyone  knows,  was  the  first  Progressive 
Education  college  in  the  United  States. 

Well  do  I  recollect  the  tizzy  in  the  academic  world 
when  Gransmire  first  opened  its  portals!  What  a  buzz 
there  was,  what  a  brouhaha  in  faculty  common  rooms, 
what  a  rattling  of  teacups,  when  Dr.  Agnes  Thudd  Siga- 
foos,  first  president  of  Gransmire,  lifted  her  shaggy  head 
and  announced  defiantly,  "This  here  is  no  stuffy,  old- 
fashioned  college.  This  here,  by  gum,  is  Pi'ogressive 
Education.  We  will  teach  the  student,  not  the  course. 
There  will  be  no  marks,  no  exams,  no  requirements.  We 
will  break  the  iron  mold  of  orthodoxy,  hey." 

Well  sir,  f orvsard-looking  maidens  all  over  the  country 
cast  off  their  fetters  and  came  rushing  to  New  Hampshire 
to  enroll  at  Gransmire.  Here  they  found  freedom.  They 
broadened  their  vistas.  They  lengthened  their  hoinzons. 
They  unstopped  their  bottled  personalities.  They  roamed 
the  campus  in  togas,  leading  ocelots  on  leashes. 

And,  of  course,  they  smoked  Philip  Morris.  (I  say 
"of  course."  Why  do  I  say  "of  course"?  I  say  "of  course" 
because  it  is  a  matter  of  course  that  anyone  in  search 
of  freedom  should  naturally  turn  to  Philip  Morris,  for 
Philip  Morris  is  a  natural  smoke,  with  no  filter  to  get 
in  the  way  of  its  true  tobacco  taste.) 

But  all  was  not  Philip  Morris  and  ocelots.  There  was 
"Work  and  study  too  —  not  in  the  ordinary  sense,  for  there 
were  no  formal  classes.  Instead  there  was  a  broad 
approach  to  enlarging  each  girl's  potentials. 


Planning  Grads  Are 
Facing  Problems 

By  MARY  ALICE  GRIFFIN  federal    levels    of    government    as 

A  perplexed  graduate  student  Well  as  with  private  consultant 
recentjy  stood  before  his  mail  box  firms  and  overseas  programs, 
trying  to  decide  between  the  nu- '  This  year's  planning  graduateii 
merous  equally  enticing  job  offers  |  are  finding  starting  salaries  at  a 
he  had  just  received.  His  is  the  j  higher  level  than  ever.  Jab  offers 
typical,  but  popular,  dilemma  fac-  j  pouring  into  the  Department  of 
ing  each  member  of  this  year's  j  City  'and  Regional  Planning  have 
graduating  clasj  of  the  Dept.  of '  ranged  from  $5,000  to  $7,500. 
City  and  Regional  Planning  here.  I  One  need  not  look  far  to  find 
Although  planning  is  a  well  es-  the  reason  for  this  tremendous 
tablished  profession,  it  is  a  rela-  \  boom  of  the  planning  profession. 
lively    new    one,    and   the    demand  i  One    hundred    million    people    arc 


for   trained  planners   far   outstrips 
the  supply. 

Congress  is  currently  consider- 
ing a  bill  to  provide  fellowships 
for  graduate  training  in  urban 
planning.  Introduced  by  Senator 
John  Sparkman  (D-Ala.),  ii  points 
I  out  the  urgent  need  to  alleviate 
the  acute  i'hortage  of  personnel  in 
the  field  of  planning. 
HIGHER  SALARIES 

During  the  past  year,  an  esti- 
mated 300  to  400  new  positions  in 
planning  were  opened  in  local 
government  agencies  alone.  Op- 
portunities also  await  the  plan- 
ning  gradualte   at    the    state    and 


iiKe  the  aourse  c<^l[e^  d^SLC  T^^tor  ^kitt^ 


Take,  for  example,  the  course  called  B.M.S.  (Basic 
Motor  Skills  ^  B.M.S.  was  divided  into  L.D.  (Lying 
Down),  S.U.  (Standing  Up)  and  W.  (Walking).  Once 
the  student  had  mastered  L.D.  and  S.U.,  she  was  taught 
to  W-  —  but  not  just  to  W.  any  old  way!  No,  sir!  She 
was  taught  to  W.  with  poise,  dignity,  bearing !  To  incul- 
cate a  sense  of  balance  in  the  girl,  she  began  her  exercises 
by  walking  with  a  suitcase  in  each  hand.  (One  girl,  Mary 
Ellen  Dorgenicht,  got  so  good  at  it  that  today  she  is  bell 
captain  at  the  Dinkier- Plaza  Hotel  in  Atlanta,  Georgia.) 

When  the  girls  had  walking  under  their  belts,  they 
were  aliowed  to  dance.  Again  no  formality  was  imposed. 
"They  were  simply  told  to  fling  themselves  about  in  any 
way  their  impulses  dictated,  and  believe  you  me,  it  was 
quite  an  impressive  sight  to  see  them  go  bounding  into 
thp  woods  with  their  togas  flying.  (Several  later  joined 
the  U.S.  Forestry  Service.) 

There  was  also  a  lot  of  finger  painting  and  gourd 
rattling  and  sculpture  with  coat  hangers  and  all  like  that, 
and  soon  the  fresh  wind  of  Progressivism  came  whistling 
out  of  Gransmire  to  blow  the  ancient  dust  of  pedantry 
off  curricula  everywhere,  and  today,  thanks  to  the  pio- 
neers at  Gransmire,  we  are  all  free,  every  man-jack  of  us. 

If  you  are  ever  in  New  Hampshire,  be  sure  to  visit 
the  Gransmire  campus.  It  is  now  a  tannery. 

CMax  Shulman,  1957 

AnA  be  $ure  $o  light  a  Philip  Morrit  whmn  you  viait  Cran»mire, 
or  mnynhere  el»B  for  that  matter,  beemmse  Phiiip  MorrU  u 
alwntyo  a  naturully  perfect  companion  and  brlnga  you  thit 
column  each  week  and  i»  ignitable  at  either  end. 


now  living  in  metropolitan  arca.s. 
By  1975  this  number  is  expected 
to  increase  by  about  one-third,  or 

over  another  30  million  people. 

« 

CONTINUOUS  CITY? 

Sixty     years     ago.     Sir     Patrick 
Geddes,  British  .-jciologist  and  bi- 
ologist, predicted  the  entire  East- 
I  ern  seaboard  of  the  United  States 
would  some  day  be  one  continuous 
city.  Current  figures  back  up  his 
i  prophecy.  An  estimated  32  million 
I  people  live  in  a  continuous  urban 
j  area  reaching  from  Boston,  Mass., 
I  to    the    southern    tip    of    Fairfax 
I  County  Va. 

This  urbanizing  trend  is  by  no 
meanj  limited  to  the  Easjt,  but  is 
taking  place  in  all  sections  of  the 
country.  Villages,  town,  cities,  as 
well  as  the  greater  metropolitan 
areas,  are  gainfng  population  at 
the  expense  of  the  rural  areas. 

This    rapid    and    haphazard 
growth  of  cities  has  brought  in  its 
wake  a  multitude  of  new  and  com- 
plex    problems     involving     slums, 
1  traffic    congestion,     a     need    for 
schools  and  recreational  facilities, 
I  to  name  only  a  few. 
I  CITY  PLANNING 
i      City  planning  has  become  recog- 
I  nized  in  recent  years  as  the  chief 
I  means  of  solving  these  bewilder- 
ing problems. 

The  National  Housing  A  c  t  of 
1954  served  as  an  added  impetus 
to  the  demand  for  trained  plan- 
ning personnel  with  its  urban  re- 
newal program.  To  qualify  for  fed- 
eral aid  to  improve  its  living  en- 
vironment, a  city  must  have  "a 
comprehensive  community  plan." 

Such  overall  planning  must  en- 
compass housing,  industry,  street 
systems,  commerce,  zoning,  build- 
ing codes,  etc.  Few  city  govern- 
ments have  personnel  qualified  to 
relate  and  coordinate  these  compo- 
nent elements  of  a  city  into  an 
acceptable  program.  So  .  .  .  once 
again  the  cry  is  raised  for  the 
services  of  the  professional  plan- 
ner. 

The  UNC  department  of  plan- 
ning, headed  by  Professor  John  A. 
Parker  and  now  completing  its 
11th  year,  "places  special  empha- 
sis upon  encouraging  its  graduate 
students  to  undertake  projects  in 
'live'  situations." 

The  program  and  date  of  exhib-  [  ^^r  43  North  Carohna  commu- 
its  will  be  announced  later.  A  di-  |  nities  have  served  as  subjects  of 
rector  will  also  be  hirefd  by  the  studies  made  by  the  students  in 
university.  I  collalxM-ation   with   local    officiala-. 

The  museum  was  designed  by  t  ^  niany  cases  the  results  of  these 
Eggers  and  Higgins  of  New  York  I  studies  have  aided  in  the  organi- 
with  Raymond  Weeks  of  Durham  "»tion  and  guidance  of  h)cal  plan- 
as  associate  architect.  I  "'"?  programs.  ' 


ART  MUSEUM 
TO  BE  READY 
BY  NEXT  FALL 

The  Ackland  Memorial  Art  Mu- 
seum will  probably  be  ready  for 
use  by  next  fall,  John  V.  Allcott, 
head  of  the  art  department  said 
yesterday. 

Money  for  the  museum  was 
donated  to  the  University  by  the 
late  Williap  Hayes  Ackland,  a 
Tennessee  businessman. 

Hie  building  will  house  an  art 
gallery,  art  library,  study  rooms, 
art  classrooms  and  office^.  Con- 
struction was  started  last  fall  af- 
ter five  years  of  planning. 

"It  will  round  out  the  art  side 
of  the  university.  It  will  also  pro- 
vide an  extra-curricular  course 
for  students,"  said  Allcott. 

There  is  also  a  fund  for  teach- 
ers and  collection  of  art  teachers. 

Allcott  stated  there  will  be  loan 
exhibits  along  with  the  permanent 
exhibits.  Tliis  will  aid  both  art 
students  and  the  general  public. 

The  gallery  operation  will  serve 
as  a  laboratory  for  art  students 
and  staff. 


OVEN-^FRESH    AND 
SO  DELICIOUS   .       . 


JANE  PARKER  BAKED  GOOmi 


Jane  Parker— Enriched  White 
l-Lb 


Jane  Parker 

Bread     ii?f  15c     ^Loa?  21c       sugar         Cookies  p»^«  27c 

Jane  Parker  —  Freshly  Baked  Jane  Parker  —   Freshly '  Baked 

Blackberry  Pies  ^^^^^  49c      Strawberry  Pies  ^^"^^  53c 


(SPECIAL  PRICE!  Jone  Porker  Sponish  Bor 


.-.-^^Hv^XX^.. 


CAKE 


EACH 


^'^^^^^%^^$^<^>^:;5^>^ 


DEL-MONTE  SPRING  GARDEN  SHI»W  OF  FINE  FOODS 

^P"^°t  Seedless 

9)    NECTAR 12-Oz.  Can  15<        RAISINS 15-Oz,  Box  20<t 


(■  Extra  Large  DRIED  PRUNES l-Lb  Box  35<         ^r  .  i-y  .  AT  ^ 

n.     -r.  WK  -.r.      Chemes    17-oz.  iar45i 


^:cv-i^^\v 


Large  Dried  Prunes 


l-Lb. 
Box 


29c 


FRUIT  COCKTAIL 


No.  303 

16-Oz. 

Con 


QUALITY   BABY   FOOBS 

Assorted  Varieties  —  Gerber's 

Strained  Foods   3  J^^   31c 

Assorted   Flavors 

Bib's  Juices -.3  '^n.  25c 

Assorted   Varieties 

Pablum  Cereals     'pg:   19c 

For  Babies  —  Assorted 

Swift's  Meats...   ?/r'  23c 


Gween  Giant 

GREEN  PEAS 


No.  303 
Cans 


35< 


Special  Low  Price! 

A&P  Pears 


No.  303 
16-Oz. 
Cans 


45< 


230/' 


Grand  Low  Price!  Dried 


2-Lb. 
Bag 


Navy  Pea 

Beans 

A&P's  Own  Mogozine 

Woman's 

Day 

For  Household  Use  * 

Glorox  Bleach . . 


Still 
Only 


25 
7 


Bot.       wIC 


"Super-Right" 


loe^ 


GRADE  "A"  QUICK   FROZEN 

CHICKEN 

Plate  Stew —  ^  1%  'irrrrrrrel  17 «« ^sa$ 

$1.59 1  SI  .35 1  $1.29 


Chopped  Ham  -  p^^  35c 

"Supcr-Righl"'    Heavy    Western   Beef — Bone   In 


Rigl^ 


ly-i  Lb.  Box 
"Super-Right"  Heevy  Wetteni  Gram  Fed  Beef — Standing  7"  Cut  —  RIB 


Roasts 


Far 
Lb. 


69 


A&P  OWN   BRAND!  ^^^^  "Super-Right 

CRESTMONT Pt.  20< 

ICE  CREAM Vi  Gal.  7bi 


STRIETMANN  HONEY  GRAHAMS    lib.  pkg.  37c 
NABISCO  COOKIES  ^'^^^^t'^.'^Dro^'"  lib.  pk«    «t 


CORNED  BEEF  HASH c  29c 

NEW!  "Super-Right"  With  Beans  i 

CHILI  CON  CARNE  ^  23e 


MINUTE   MAID   JUICES         special  low  PRICEI  prepared  With  Vegetoblet 


FBOZEN    lOMt.XTRATE    OKANGE     ..     t— S-Oz     Can;.  Sic 
IKOZE.\    CONCENTKAli;    LEMON  t—^^^^-Oz.     Cans  53e 

FCOZEN  CON'CENTRATE  GRAPEF«L1T  ?— «-Oz    Cans  Me 


AUSTEX  Beef  STEW -25e 


Golden.   Kirm 


Carrots 2 

Large,  Firm       ^  r 

Celery 


Lb 
Bag 


15c 


No  2'^  in^ 
stalk      I  vC 


A&P  Fres/i 
Fruifs  And 
Vegetables 


Large,  Crisp 

Fresh  Lettuce  .-.2  Hds .  25c 

Tender,  Golden                      *     ■  * 

Fresh  Corn 4  e««  29c 


LARGE,  FIRM,  RIPE 


Bananas  - 1 2 


Special  lOc  Off  Label  Deal  —  ANN  PAGE 


Strawberry  Preserves  2    ^o'  59t 


Jar 


^    Creamy    Mayonnaise 

-;»\zr^i^    •  FINE   A&P  COFFEES  *     ^V^ 

Mild  And  Mellow  Coffee 


Ana  Page  —  Assorted 

"^^     55c       Sparkle  Gelatins  -  -  3  ^^^  20c 

AtMMCAt  nmuon  mo*  uuttit . . .  »mcim* 


wAP^S^p^'^M*"^*^^*^ 


h 


8  O'CLOCK  B^  83c  3b-s243 

Ricb  And  FuU  Bodied  Coffee  *  Vigorous  And  Winey  Coffee 

Red  Circle  B^a^89c    3  k%  $2.6 1    Bokar ^a'. 93c  ^^.,  $2.73 


210  W.  FRANKLIN 
STREET 


Palmolive 
Toilet  Soop 


Ideal 

DOG  FOOD 


I  Lb. 
Cans 


47c 


Regular  ^^^ 


Bar 


Bath 
Bar 


13 


Octagon 

SOAP 


Laundry 
Bar 


10< 


i--MK«. 


FA6I  POUll 


THE   DAILY  TAt   HEEL 


THURSDAY,  APRIL  25,  1957 


THt 


■v.—,      S      iv,  .• 


-„f    f.  ^.,- 


t    -     r-^  s 


Varied  Probratn  Is  Pleih 
QfSphinier  Piano  Clinic 

By  FRANK  WALM^EY  j     Promising     young    high     school 

Teachers  and  studenrs  attending  students  of  several  North  Carolina 
UNC's  seventh  annual  Clinic  for  teachers  will  give  a  joint  recital 
Piano  Teachers  and  Students  this  on  the  Clinic's  opening  night.  An- 
summer  will  hear  the  remarkable  j  other  recital  will  be  given  by  Mrs. 
Hungarian  pianist  Uly  Keleti  in  a  Ruth  S.  Phillips,  teacher  at  Coun- 
special  recital.  tcil  Bluff.s.  Iowa,  later  in  the  Clinic. 

The  Clinic,  to  be  given  June  34-  Two  well-known  authors  and 
27,  was  originally  started  by  the  |  specialists  in  their  fields-  will  be 
UNC  Extension  Division  and  Mu..ic  ;  guest  lecturers.  Mrs.  Madeleine 
Dept.   as   an   in-state   service,    but !  Carabo-Cone  .co-author  of  "How  to 


has  developed   to   nationwide   im- 
portance. 
IMPRESSIVE  PROGRAM 

Di.  William  S.  Newman,  profes- 
sor of  music  and  chairman  of  pi- 
ano instruction  at  UNC.  announced 
an  impjressive  program  to  be  of- 
fered .at  the  clinic.  In  addition  to 
Lily. '  Keleti,   several    other   accom- 


Help  Children  Lcafh  Music."  and 
Mrs.  Ruth  Halle  Rowen.  author  of 
"Elarly  Chamber*  Music,"  both 
from  New  York,  are  the  guest 
speakers. 

GOLQES  TO  ATTEND 

According  to  Dr.  Newman,  Lili- 
an and  Walter  Golde,  two  of  North 
I  pushed   pianists  will  give  recitals,  i  Carolina's    most   beloved   teachers, 
There     will     also     be     lecture^.  I  ^ili   attend   the   Clinic   and   share 
guest  speakers,  demonstration  les- 1  their  broad   experiences   with   the 
sons     and     movies,     and     special  |  teacher.-  and  students, 
awards.  j 

Dr.  Newman  will  conduct  after- 
noon and  morning  sessions  in  the 
well  -  equipped.  summer  -  cooled 
choral  room  of  Hill  Music  Hall. 
However,  participants  will  have 
ample  time  to  attend  individual 
conferences  and  music  exhibits 
and  for  recreation. 


Council  Officers 
\  Elected  Before 
SprmgiftoVidays 

Last  Tuesday  when  most  of  the 
j  campus  was  preparing  for  the  up- 
1  coming  holidays  Student  Council 
'  met  and  elected  Mac  Patton.  chair- 
1  man,    and    Jay   Walker,    clerk,    of 

Student    Council    for  the    coming 

year. 

I 

1     Patton,   a   member  of   Zeta  Psi 

,  social  fraternity,  comes  to  the 
campus  from  Durham.  Walker,  a 
member  of  Sigma  Alpha  Epsilon 
social  fraternity,  hails  from  Roa- 
noke, Va. 

The  Student  Council,  which 
.•jcts  as  the  Supreme  Court  on 
campus,  was  revised  last  year  and 
now  serv^  not  only  as  a  court  of 
appeals  but  tries  cases  involving 
the  campus  code  and  reviews  con- 
stitutions   of  student   clubs. 


Soccdr  Practice 

Ail  iMrsons  interested  in  pley- 
ing  soccer  this  year  are  asked  to 
be  on  the  intramural  field  today 
at  3  p.m.  for  practice. 


You'll  Enjoy 

Move  Over, 

Mountain 

by  Chapel  Hill's  Ov^n 

JOHN  EHLE 

$3.95  At 

The  Intimate  Bookshop 

205  East  Franklin  Street 


New  Law  Student  Officers 


New  officers  for  1957-58  have  recenfly  been  chosen  by  the  Law 
Students'  Assn.  here.  On  the  front  row,  left  to  right,  are  President 
James  E.  Ran%sey,  Roxboro;  Secretary  Jimmy  Kiser,  Charlotte,  and 
Vice  President  William  G.  Ransdell  Jr.,  Fu^uay-Varina.  On  the  back 


row  are  Treasurer  Luke  R.  Corbett,  Pinehurst,  and  Chief  Justice 
Lemuel  S.  Blades  III,  Elizabeth  City.  These  five  will  represent  the 
Law  School  students  at  a  national  meeting  this  summer  at  New  York 
University. 


"The  purpose  of  the  Clinic."  Dr. 
Newmiin  said,  "has  always  been  to 
provide  the  rich  experience  of  a 
balanced  refresher  course  for 
teacher.'  and  students  at  all  levels 
who  are  eager  to  keep  up-to-date 
in  the-  piano  world." 
' PROBLEM  SURVEY 

The  Clinic  endeavors  to  aid 
teachers  and  students  through  a 
survey  of  the  basic  problems  of 
the  piano.  Technical  drills  and 
touches,  questions  of  interpreta- 
tion and  historical  styles,  per- 
formance in  public,  and  the  re- 
lated skills  of  sight  reading,  play- 


As  at  past  Clinics,  the  UNC  Ex- 
tension Division  will  award  Certi- 
ficates of  Achie,vement  on  the  fi- 
nal day  of  the  Clinic. 

The  Clinic  for  Piano  Teachers 
and  Students-  operates  on  a  non- 
profit basis  and  cost  of  attending 


ing  by  ear  and  keyboard  harmony  [  is  consequently  low.  Complete  fa- 
are  imme  of  the  topics  to  be  dis-   cilities  of  the  University  are  avail- 
cussed.  Dr.  Newman  said.  i  able  to  Clinic  attendees. 


THE    NEW  YORK  LIFE  AGENT 

ON  YOUR  CAMPUS 
IS  A  GOOD  MAN  TO  KNOW 

George  L.  Coxhead 

UNC,   '42  (l^lJllC)  ^""P"'  Representative 

A   Mutual    Company    ^>>^r»»— -^  Founded  1845 

NEW  YORK  E-IFE 


ts 


PHOTO  CONTEST  TO  BE  HIGHLIGHT: 


Three-Day  Southern  Short  Course 
Scheduled  To  Get  Underwqy  Today 


Press  photography — from  tech- 
nical processes  of  color  film  to 
"sensible  procedures"  for  civil  vi- 
olence coverage  will  be  analyzed 
at  the  eighth  annual  Southern 
Short  Course  in  Press  Photogra- 
phy i'3t  for  today  through  Satur- 
day here.    ^^«.\ 

Some  200  cameraman  and 
tors  from  nine  Southeastern  states 
are    expected    to   attend   the   ses- 
sions. 

The  three-day  short  course  will 
get  under  way  this  morning,  with 
famous  photographer  Frank 
Scherschel  telling  of  his  photo  as- 
signments in   Europe.   During  the 


photo    supervisor    for    the    N.    Y.  ] 

Mirror  and   King  Features  Syndi- ! 

cate.  ' 

Climaxing  the  first  day's  session 

will  be  judging  oi  the  annual  pho- 
to contest  and  selection  of  the 
"Southern     Photographer     of     the 

.Year."    Announcement  of   winners 
ed_i-l  will  be  made  at  a  Saturday  night 

I  blanquet,      concluding      the      1957 

I  short  course. 
SPONSORS 

Sponsors  lof  ithe  trophies  and 
ribbons  and  their  contest  cate- 
goric.; are  Durham  Herald-Sun,  ad- 
vertising and  public  relations;  Co- 
lumbia    StatC'Record,     general 


news; 
,port  raits 


Asheville 


and    pef- 


past   three  year-;  he    has   covered  news;  Raleigh  News  and  Observer 
Big   Four    meetings,    the    Corona- 
tion,  Grace  Kelly's   wedding    and 
the  Winter  Olympics. 
OTHER   SPEAKERS 

Four  other  speakers  slated  for 
today  are  J.  Winton  Lemen,  man- 
ager of  Eastman  Kodak's  press 
photo  sales;  Lewis  P.  Watson,  Ra- 
leigh commercial  photographer; 
Marion  Johnsdn,  manager  of  the 
Atlanta  Journal  and  Constitution's 
photo  department  and  Joe  Co.vta. 


Times.  spot 
Citizen-Times, 
sonalities; 

Charlotte  News,  pictorial;  High 
Point  Ekiterprise,  feature;  Char- 
lotte Observer,  picture  story;  Win- 
ston -  Salem  Journal  -  Sentinel, 
-•ports;  WFMY-TV  Greensboro, 
feature  jiews  movies;  WBTV  Char- 
lotte, spot  news  movies  and  Wil- 
mington Star-News,  color  trans- 
parencies. 

Three  special  awards  to  be  giv- 
en are  the  Tom  Franklin  Memori- 
al Award   for  the   best   individual 


photograph;  Graflex  Award  to  the 
newspaper  with  the  best  picture 
display  and  Sylvania  Flash  Award 
for  the  best  picture  taken  with  a 
flash  bulb  or  bulbs. 

The  "Southern  Photographer  of 
the  Year"  trophy  goe.-,-  to  the  win- 
ner of  the  most  first,  second  and 
I  third  place  points  in  the  11  con- 
[  test  divisions.  Duplicate  trophies 
are  awarded  in  the  ca.se  of  a  tie. 
COACH  MCGUIRE 

Two  speakers  are  scheduled 
both  the  morning  and  afternoon 
ses>sions  tomorrow,  after  which  a 
"shooting  session"  will  be  held  at 
4  p.m.  with  Basketball  Coach 
Frank  McGuire  and  Lennie  Rosen 
bluth  among  the  camera  subjects. 

Tomorrow  night  has  been  desig- 
nated "Manufacturer's  Night,* 
with  discussion  oi  news  product.*- 
and  processes  by  representatives 
oi  firms  pr.)ducing  photographic 
materials  and  equipment. 

"Editors  Day"  on  Saturday  will 
be  highlighted  by  two  di^icussions 
of  very  pertinent  topics.  Congress- 
man John  E.  Moss  of  California 
will  speak  on  "Unneces^vary  Se- 
crecy in  Government"  and  a  panel 
will  discuss  "Photographic  Cover- 
age of  Civil,  Violence." 


Air  And  Navy 
Units  To  Hold 
Parade  Today 

The  Air  Force  Rt)TC  and  Naval 
ROTC  will  hold  a  joint  presenta- 
tion of  awards  ceremony  followed 
by  a  joint  review  and  parade  on 
Navy  Field  at  12  p.m.  today. 

Normally,     during     the     school 
year  the  two  units  conduct  sepa-i^^'^^^  home  have  (Combined  their  I  stitute.  and  did  graduate  work  at 
rate  drills  for  their  respective  or-  \  writing    talents    to    create    a    572 


Historical  Co-Authors 
Will  Discuss  Their  Book 

A   Reidsville   native  and   a  Vir- 1  Reidsville.  Ho  attended  Elon  Col- 
ginian  who  now  calls  North  Caro-  i  lege,   the   Virginia   Polytechnic  In- 


ganizations.  However,  as  the  cli- 
max to  the  year's  drill  activities, 
and  in  honor  of  the  recipients  of 
Unit  awards,  the  joint  review  has 
been  scheduled  for  this  year,  an 
announcement  said. 

The  organization  of.  the  two 
units  will  combine  to  form  a  reg- 
iment,   commanded     by     Midship- 


page  book.  Rebels  and  Redcoats. 
The  book  has  received  rave  notices 
from  such  periodicals  as  The  Sat- 
urday Aeview,  The  New  York 
Times  Book  Review,  The  Wall 
Street  Journal,  and  The  Chicago 
Tribune   Magazine   of   Books. 

Of  Rebels  and  Redcoats,  written 
by  Hugh  F.  Rankin  and  George  F. 


UNC    where    he    was    a    Morehead 
Scholar. 

Scheer  is  a  native  of  Richmond, 
Virginia  where  he  attended  the 
University  of  Richniond.  He  is  a  | 
profcssionaj  journalist,  and  has 
heen  a  sales  and  advertizing  man- 
ager for  the  VNC  Press.  | 

It   is   rumored    that   in   spite   of 
their    serious    historic.11     interest 


man  Gordon  B.  Hall  of  the  Naval    Scheer,  the  New  York  Times  Re- ;  and  ability  to  make  history  come 


ROTC  Unit  with  Cadet  Col.  Mem- 1 
ory  H.  Elmore  as  the  Regimental 
Executive  Officer.  \ 

Dr.  James  L.  Godfrey.  Prof,  of 
English  history  and  Chairman  of 
of  the  Faculty  will  represent 
ChiBticellor  Robert  B.  House  in  re- 
ceiving the  review  end  in  pre- 
senting awards  to  the  Air  Force 
ROffC  Cadets  and  Naval  ROTC 
mi<|8hipmen  for  excelten^  and 
disUoctive  achievement  in  various 
pha^s  of  their  individual  pro- 
grams. 

The  public  has  been  invited  to 
attend  this  ceremony  and  parade. 
The  event  will  be  the  only  one 
during  the  year  in  which  the  Navy 
and  Air  Force  ROTC  Units  per- 
form jointly,  ^-i 

Gratidstacd^  seats  will  be  avail- 


view  says.  "Diaries,  journals  and 
lettsrs  are  the  substance  of  this 
book  which  tells  the  story  of  the 
American  Revolution  in  the  words 
of  the  men  and  women  who  were 
there.  It  is  the  personal  history 
out  of  the  private  lives  of  the  gen- 
eration which  heard  the  birth  cries 
of  a  nation. 

"And  it  is  often  more  revealing, 
lively  and  colorful  history  than 
the  official  records  .  .  .  The  net 
result  is  a  Cyclorama  of  a  book." 

The  two  authors  will  discuss 
Rebels  and  Redcoats  at  a  BuUfs 
Head  Bookshop  Tea  in  the  As- 
sembly-Exhibition Room  of  the 
North  Carolina  University  Library 
tomorrow  at  3:45  p.m.  The  public 
has  been  invited  to  attend. 


alive.  Scheer  and  Rankin  both 
have  a  flair  for  humor  when  on 
the  pi^blic-speaking  platform. 

Japanese  Professor 

The  Comparative  Literature 
Curriculum  here  will  sponsor  a 
talk  tonight  on  "The  Social  Status 
of  Women  as  Revealed  in  Modern  ! 
Japanese  Novels"  by  Prof.  K.  Hay- 
ashi. 

The  public  has  been  invited  to 
hear  the  talk  at  8  p.m.  in  Bing- 
ham 103.  Professor  Hayashi  is  in 
Chapel  Hill  for  the  spring  semes- 
ter as  visiting  professor,  teach- 
ing Comparatice  Literature  65,  a 
survey  cour.se  on  HiteraiUine  of 
China.  Japan,  India  and  Arabia. 

During   the  fall  Professor  Hay- 


Jlankin,  currently  a  research 
able  and  theye  .will  be  adequate '  associate  in  the  Dept.  of  Reseach, !  ashi  was  teaching  in  Massachu- 
space  for  PliW^g  on  the  south  Colonial  Williamsburg.  Inc..  Will-  |  setts.  He  will  return  to  Japan  at 
side  of  Navy  Field.  iam^urg,  Virginia,  is  a  native  of  ;  the  end  of  the  scholastic  year. 


SAVE   At    COLO.MAL  O.N   TE.NDER   LEA'S   MEATY 


PORK  CHOPS 

YOUR   BES1    BUY    tOR  FAMILY   ENJOYMENT  —  TOP-QLALI 

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ECONOMY 
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LEGS  ^'/'-^B^   $1-39 


f.hef»  Pride  Fr^sh-Made  Stdad  .  .  . 
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local 
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CANS 


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CANS 


GIANT 
PKG. 


59c 
79« 
53< 


W.  Franklin  St  dt  Graham 


Glen  Lennox  Shopping  Center 


SenH 
wh«n   h{ 

toieJ 
out. 


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On    Ui 

«>r*e    fortui 
jrra^iuati 
owner  of 
ir.r   Day 
d.avvin.,^   f^ 
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.'.tnior   bal 

Tickets 
pivcn  «HU 
iiig  f(»  be 
10  a.m 

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evening  vi-| 
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mit«ic   at 
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bo  21  ken 

Senior*; 
tie  W<^o'1. 


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Covering  The  University  Campus 


VALKYRIES 


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Some  Senior  To  Win  Car  Wednesday 


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Senior  Day  next  Wednesday  will  be  a  happy  day  for  some  member  of  this  year's  graduating  class 
when  he  drives  off  with  an  automobile,  to  be  a-warded  during  the  occasion.  Will  the  MG  above,  being 
toied  by  senior  Miss  Val  von  Ammon,  be  the  prize?  You'll  have  to  enter  the  grand  drawing  to  fir>d 
our. 


Grand  Drawing  And  Barbecue 
To  Be  Highlights  Of  Senior  Day 


>Vho  will  be  the  lucky  senfer? 

On  Wednesday  evening.  May  1. 
one  fortunate  senior  in  this  years 
grJKluatlng  class  will  be  the  proud 
owner  of  a  car.  According  to  Sen- 
ior Day  program  officials,  a  grand 
d>  awing  for  the  automobile  will  be 
held  at  the  Patio  during  the  gala 
senior  barbecue. 

Tickets  for  the  drawing  will  be 
given  out  at  the  senior  class  meet- 
ing to  be  held  in  Memorial  Hall  at 
10  a.m.   Wednesday. 

Also  ;on  tke  prograon  later  iff  the 
evening  wiU  be  tht  accompaniment 
of  four  bands  playing  continuous 
niiusic  at  the  Patio.  An  added  fea- 
ture will  Ije  the  naming  of  a  num- 
ber of  seniors  as  this  year's  su- 
pe.iatives,  tor  wbich  awards  will 
be  given. 

Seniors  were  urged  by  Miss  Dot- 
tie  Wood,  Senior  Day  social   chair- 


man, to  "a  tend  and  enjoy  the  best 
senior   day  ever   presented." 

The  affair  is  stag  or  drag  only  oo* 
of  any  attending  couple  Ls  required 
to  be  a  senior,  program  officials 
said. 


AWARDS 

(Continued   from   page    1) 

Last  year  the  Phi  chose  its  member. 
Chancellor  Robert  B.  House  the 
most  outstanding  alumnus. 

The  Phi  voted  awards  to  Don 
Jacobs,  "outstanding  freshman," 
Miss  Elizabeth  Dent  .'•outstanding 
senior."  and  Jim  Montieth.  •"out- 
standing speaker." 

These,  awards  will  be  presented 
at  the  annual  Di-Phi  banquet  tc 
be  at  the  Pine  Room.  Caroina  Inn, 
May  1  at  6:30  p.m. 


4  ^£^c^Mcm^ 
OUR  GIGANTIC 

ONE  CENT 


m 


f  BIG  DAYS . . . 

STARTS  MONDAY  APRIL  29  th 


JlttCTt 


WORLD  NEWS 

I  (Continued   from    page    ^) 

\  Canal  falls  sh<irt  of  the  U.  S.   iric; 
!  of  doing  it. 

j      And    tur    that    rea.son,    they    .said 

the     United     States     li)oks     to     the 

I  United     MatJoits     Security     Council 

I  for  guidanve  on  what  to  do  next. 

Egypt's    President    Gamal    Abdel 

Na.s.ser  published  his  plan  at  Caii*o 

yesterday.    .American    (.tf.cials.    not 

yet  given  a  copy  of  this  declaration. 

withheld    'inal    comment. 

Russia  Accii<:es  U.  S. 

MOSCOW,  IV)  —  Tlie  Soviet  Union 
accused  the  United  States  yester- 
day of  a  defamation  campaign 
against  Sovtt  t>'>->h-s<v  and  U.  N. 
officials  in  the  United  States. 

Richard  Davs.  U.  S.  thaage  D' 
affaiies  .was  ."summoned  to  the 
oregn  ministry  and  handed  a  mem- 
irandum  chrging  that  •this  im- 
permi-^s'ble  campaign"  was  liein? 
foster?d  by  "certain  official  Ameri- 
can  circles." 

Davis  told  a  reporter  the  accu- 
sation was  presented  in  general 
terms  and  he  could  not  obtain  any 
speciii;-  exam-iles  of -the  alleged  de- 
.;:m:.fion  from  A.  A.  Solda4>ov,  who 
iad  .^^ummoned  him  to  44)«  forei«^ 
ii'nistr.N.    ' 

Government  Resigns 

AMM.W,  Jordan,  */P  —  l*remieT 
Hussein  Khalidi's  government  has 
:esigncd,  two  cabinet  ministers  re- 
poi'ted   e:  riy   .vesterday. 

The  western-inclined  regime  had 
.xen  under  steady  attack  since  it 
was  installed  at  young  King  Hus- 
sein's behest  eight  days  ago. 

P'oreign  Minisicf  Suleiman  .\abul- 
.;i  and  Development  Minister  Amin 
Madjaj  emerged  from  a  long  cab- 
inet session  saying  the  re<;ignatk)n 
.'lad  been  presented  and  accepted 
by  King  Husj-ein. 

Street  rioting,  a  famUiar  device 
n  Jordan  politics,  had  driven  the 
-•abinet  into  urgent  ses.sion. 


EDUCATION  CONFERENCE 

Guy  B.  Phillips  is  representing 
;he  University's  School  of  Edu- 
cation in  a  conferfnce  this  week 
with  the  Board  of  Education  of 
the  Roanoke.  Va.  city  schools.  The 
board  is  in  the  process  of  evaluat- 
ing various  phases  of  the  school 
proyraf  and  has  called  on  the 
UNC  Sch.  ol  of  Education  for  con- 
sultant services. 
DEBATE  FINALS 

Twelve  hign  school  debating 
teams,  each  team  a  district  cham- 
pion on  the  affirmafive  or  nega- 
ive.  will  enter  the  final  contest 
;'or  the  Aycock  Memorial  Cup  here 
today.  This  will  be  the  45th  an- 
nual final  contest  of  the  North 
Carolina  High  School  Debating 
Union  for  the  trophy  estaplished 
by  Ihd  intercollegiate  debaters  of 
he    University.  I 

/OMEN'S  AUXILIARY  I 

A  meeting  oi  the  Women's  Au- 
xiliary of  Memorial  Hospital  here 
Aill  be  held  today  at  10:30  a.m.  in 
the  Medical  School  Clinic  Audi- 
torium. The  meeting  will  combine 
i  recognition  ceremony  for  volun- 


Two  Members 
Of  Glee  Club 
At  MSU  Meet 


teers    with    a   program    from    the 
Dept.  of  Physical  Therapy  design- 
ed to  show     how     home     nursing 
skills  can  be  of  help  to  all. 
TICKETS  AVAILABLE 

Cosmopolitan  Club  members 
may  still  buy  tickets  for  the  pic- 
nic Sunday,  according  to  an  an- 
nouncement. Tickets  may  be  pur- 
chased from  Nora  Hurd,  secretary 
in  the  YMCA  Building,  until  4:30 
p.m.  today. 
NAA  TENNIS 

The  W.  A.  A.  Tennis  Club  will 
meet  on  the  courts  today  at  3  p.m. 
according  to  an  announcement 
made  .yesterday  by  Miss  May  El- 
len Sample.  All  interested  coeds 
have  be?n  invited  to  attend. 
YOUNG  REPUBLICANS 

The  University  Young  Republi- 
cans will  meet  at  7:30  p.m.  today 
in  Roland  Parker  3  to  nominate 
and  elect  new  officers  for  the 
coming  year,  it  was  announced 
yesterday.  IPans  for  the  spring 
social  will  also  be  discussed  and 
members  have  been  urged  to  at- 
tend the  "brief  but  important 
meeting." 
iEWMAN   CLUB 

Father  Stephen  Lout.  S.G„  will 


ORUC  5TOR€ 


CMAMi  HIM..!*.*- 


DAILY 

'       ACROSS 

1.  Forth 
5.  Man's 

nickname 

( poss. ) 
g.  Plant  nfe  . 
10.  Take  as 

one's  own 

12.  Cherished 

13.  Worship 

14.  Exist 

15.  A  machine 
tool 

16.  Sousa's 
works  . 

19.  Lair 
2©.  Letter 

21.  Monetary 
unfl 
(Latvia) 

22.  Measure 

( Cypress  > 
2J.  Shorif  lecess 

24.  TImia 

25.  Kf  lied 

27.  Weight 
(Siami 

28.  Thus 

30,  Audience 

31.  ReShless 
persons  . 

33.  A-  fodmothei 
(Scot.) 

35.  Hawk 
pfcrrot 

36.  Mere  real 

37.  Shitrounded 

by 
3&.  Kind  of 
grass 

40.  Recipient  of 

a  gift 

4L,  Young  girl 

42.  Loose  hmng- 

ing  ends 

DOWN 

'    1,  Like  flowers 

2.  Wanderer 


CROSSWORD 

23 


3.  Metallic 

rock 
4. Insane 
5.  .Ancient 

Semitic 

local  deities 
6  Did 

Norse 

work 

7.  Midday 

8.  Frolics 

9.  Blaze 
11.  Gull-hkc 

birds 
15.  Cherished 
animal 

17.  Nail 

18.  Cow'3 
food 

22.  Stylish 


A 

vaca- 
tion 
spot 

24.  Un- 
happy 

25.  De- 
nomi- 
nations 

26.  Flower- 
ing 
bush 

27.  Equal 

28.  Back- 
bones 

29.  Tributary  of 
Missouri  R.. 

31.  Small 
pools 
(archaic) 


2BE    CE    "30 

i^^aHua  L':tdaiiB! 

i.jnK  aai2  Hii  i 


Yril<>rd*y'«  Anawrr 

32.  Lowest 
official  in 
mosque 
(Chin.) 

34.  Girl's  nick- 
name (poss.  I 

37.  Sum  up 

38.  Extinct   bird 


"The  officers  of  the  UNC  Men's 
Glee  Club  are  attending  the  in- 
tercollegiate Musical  Council  Con- 
ference being  held  on  the  campus 
of  Michigan  Stale  University  at 
iSast  Lansing,  today  through  Sat- 
urday," a  spokesman  for  the  Glee 
.  lub  said   .yesterday. 

Charles  Shoe,  president  and  Ken- 
..eMi  James,  business  manager,  are 
attending  the  annual  conlei^nce  as 
repi  esentatives  of  the  club. 

The  national  conference  will  draw 
itpie.sentati\'e.s  of  college  musicat 
-.rganization.s  from  every  state  in 
the  union. 

Planning   sessions,    instruction   on  l-!Stephens 
hor£;l    techniques,    advice    on    Im- 
proving both  the  quality  and.  qua n- 
1  t.\  of  musical  groups,  and  seminars 
on    choral    problems    led    by    na- 
tionally recognized  figures   in  vari- 1 
ous    field^    will    be  ..features   jrihe] 
i wo-day  -»onfgieiicey 

.Numerous     concerts     by     college 
glee  clubs,  an  armed  service  band,  | 
and   guest   performers   will   pi-ovkle  I 
the    entertainment    for    the'  visiting ' 
group.  [ 

Shoe  and  James  left  by  plane  last  j 
n-ghl  and  expect  to  return  early  | 
Sunday  morning. 


COUNSELORS 

(Continvi^   from    Page    1) 

Nancy  Jernigan,  Barbara  Johnson. 
Libby  Johnson,  Hannah  Kirby, 
Phillis  Krafft,  I>ouglas  Sue  Lo- 
gan. Marjorie  Lou  Lyon,  Eliza- 
beth Mac  Kay,  Eve  Leath  McClat- 
chey,  Bobbi  Madison,  Joyce  Ann 
Marshall,  Jennie  Margaret  Meador.  ! 

Ann  Morgan.  Jane  Patten,  Ellen  | 
Pemberton,  Sally  Peter,  Dorothy  | 
Pressly.  Pat  Pressly,  Betty  York 
Reece,  Pearla  Ann  Revelle,  Fran- 
ces Ellen  Reynolds.  Nancy  Jane 
Royster,  Mary  Rucker,  Nancy  Jo 
Rush,    Margaret    "Tog"    Sanders. 

Harriet  Schaler,  .Anne  Winborne 
•Shaw,  Sarah  Jane  Shaw,  Faye 
Lorraine  Smith.  Margaret  Ann 
^niith,  Hope  Sparger.  Eleanor 
Julia  Stokes,  Elizabeth 
Tate.  Elizabeth  Thompson,  Sara 
Ann  Van  Weyk,  Ginger  Walser, 
Jane  Welch,  Connie  Whitaker, 
Gail  Willingham,  Pat  Wilson,  and 
Marriette  Zimmerman. 


"»?ak  to  the  Newman  Club  San- 
iay  «n  ITie  Paper  Back  Industry 
.nd  Christianfty.  A  buffet  supper 
t  6:30  p.tit  will  precede  the  talk. 
Vll  inemibers  and  CathoMc  stu- 
'enfis  hnvfi  he^n  T«vUert  to  attend. 
ORIENTATION  MEETING 

live  Campus  Onejjtation  Coim- 
nittee  will  meet  today  in  the 
iVordhonse  Conference  Room  of 
Graham-  Memorial  from  4-6  p.m.  to 
.nterview  men  who  have  applied 
"'•  *h«  1?)57  Coun'telor  program. 
SYMPOSrOM  COMMITTEE 

The  1958  Carolina  Symposium 
Committee  for  1968  will  meet  in 
the  Rendezvous  Room  of  Graham 
Memorial  today  from-  4-3  p.m..  ac- 
cording to  Chairman  Fi^nk  Crow- 
iher.  Nominations  and  elections 
of  the  viee  chairman  will  take 
place.  Th3re  will  also  be  a  further 
discussion  of  the  possible  theme 
for  ncjrt  ■veir'.'?  '^n>gram. 
PREREGISTRATION 

Prereg;stration  lur  the  summer 
school  sessions  and  the  fall  term 
will  continue  through  Tuesday, 
according  to  an  announcement. 
General  College  students  have 
been  asked  to  sign  the  appoint- 
ment sheet  to  see  advi.sors'  in  308 
^outh  Building. 
ROOM  DEADLINE 

Today  is  the  last  day  stud?nts 
may  reserve  rooms  for  this  sum- 
mer and  next  fall,  an  announce- 
ment said.  Those  wishing  to  make 
reservations  have  been  asked  to 
come  by  the  UNC  Housing  Office 
in  New  East  Annex. 
WUNC-TV  -  ^^ 

Today's  schedule  for  WUNC-TV, 
the    University's   educational    tele- 
vision "station,  is  as  follows: 
12:45     Music 

Today  on  the  Farm 

Play   Period 

Sign  Off 

Music 

Mr.   Murgle's  Musee 

Legislative    Review 

News  and  Safety 

American   Government 

Museum  of  Art 

German  Course 

Williamsburg 

Family   Affair 

World  of  Man 

Holiday    Afloat 

Final  Edition 

Sign  Off 


1:00 
1:30 
2:00 
5:15 
5.30 
6.00 
6:20 
6(30 
7:00 
7:30 
8:15 
8:30 
9:00 
9:30 
10:00 
10:15 


(Continued  from  Page  1 ) 
and  extracurricular,  and  has  ac- 
complished gladly  and  quietly  the 
ta^cs  which. lay  -before  her.  In  her 
chairmanship  of  Woman's  Resi- 
dence Council,  she  has  shown  a«i 
active  interest  in  the  welfare  of 
her  fellow  students  and  has  acted 
with  a  spirit  of  helpftilwe^j.  in- 
spiring cooperation  in  others." 

Shirley  Bumbardner:  "Recog- 
nieed  fch*  the  outstanding  example 
ihe  has  set  in  scholarship  and 
leadership  in  the  School  of  Phar- 
macy, for  her  friendliness  and  co- 
operative attitude  in  her  partici- 
pation in  student  groups  o(  her 
department,  and  for  her  conscien- 
tious contributions  to  the  better- 
ment of  her  profes  -ion.  Her  work 
:n  legislative  bodies  and  profes- 
iiorraf  honararies  has  exemplified 
1  depth  of  high  ideals." 

Jeafi  Jacqulyn  Aldridge:  'One 
vho  has  unselfishly  given  of  her 
time  and  energy  in  representing 
Carolina  well.  She  has  served 
faithfully  in  and  contributed  much 
to  student  government.  Her 
heightened  interest  in  the  stu- 
dents' welfare  ha..*  encouraged 
others  to  those  same  high  ideals  of  ^ 
dedication  and  service." 

Other  undergraduate  Valkyries 
are  MisseS  Barbara  OHie  Bennett, 
Chapel  Hill;  Lee  Ann  Curtis,  Nor- 
folk, Virginia;  Joy  Frances  Earp, 
laleigh;  Ginger  Lee  Floyd,  Haine; 
City,  Florida;  Kathryn  Jewel  Le- 
Grande,  Daytona  Beach,  Florida, 
ihirley  Lee  Guenthner,,  Washing- 
ton. D.  C; 

Margot  Carrington  Hammond, 
Greensboro;  Mary  Ann  Keeter, 
Shelby;    Patricia   Grace   McQueen, 


Lunfkerton;  Barbara  Gaii  Moore, 
Cantmi;  Martha  Anse  Richardson, 
lidlathian,  Virginia;  Martha  Jean 
>n!ay.  Atlanta,  Georgia;  nad  Bar- 
bara Wadsworth,  Hendersonville. 


Carolina 


NOW  PLAYING 

W*  are  proud  to  announce  the 
rvforn  «n9«9«m*nt  of  "ANAS- 
TASiA"  starriAg  the  two  great 
Acadomy  Award  Winners  of 
19S4!  —  Ingrid  Borgman  and  Yul 
Brynnor  —  as  best  »ctr»»s  and 
astor  of  the  yoar. 


Most  people  would  love  to  do  it ...  6Mi  don*t  dai  ef 
He  had  the  nerve  to . . .  and  almost  did! 

A  story  of  high -pressure 
attairs  and  low-resistance 
ladies.  From  the  droll 
pen  of  William  Rose  who 
generated  "Genevieve" 
and  the  laughter  of 
'"nie  LadykiUera." 

.A 


Illinois  Dean  To  Speak 

Dean  Albert  J.  Harno  of  the 
University  of  Illinois  College '  of 
Law  will  address  law  students 
here  today. 

Scheduled  to  speak  later  in  the 
week  at  the  Wake  Forest  College 
Law  School  dedication.  Dean  Har- 
no will  speak  at  9:45  a.m.  in  Man- 
ning Hall  courtroom.  His  talk  is 
open  to  the  public. 


AUGUST.X,'  Ga..  t^  —  President 
ELsenhdwer  and  Secretary  of  State 
Dulles  discussed  the  crisis  in  Jor- 
dan as  the  eight-day-old  govern- }  In  February  Dean  Harno  ac- 
ment  of  Pi-emier  Hussein  Khalidi  re-  j  cepted  a  position  as  visiting  pro- 
signed.  Thev  declared  they  regard  I  fessor  and  acting  dean  of  the 
that  natic:ns  "Independence  and  in-  |  UCLA  Law  Schol  in  Los  Angeles. 


tegrity   as    vital." 

Their  view  of  the  situation  seem- 
ed to  amount  to  a  warning  against 
I  anv   Communist   aggression   in    that 
j  Mideast  area,  and  came  after  mobs 
rioted  in  Amman,  Jordan,  and  drove 
k Khalidi's    cabinet    into    urgent    ses- 
sion. , 


Before  joining  the  Illinois  faculty 
in  1922,  he  was  dean  of  the  Wash- 
burn College  of  Law. 

Dean  Harno  has  held  a  number 
of  posts  in  Illinois  penal  and 
judiciary  divisions,  and  is  past 
president  of  the  Association  of 
American   Law   Schools. 


Famed  Lecturer 
To  Give  Talk 
In  Gordner  Hall 

Professor  .Wiz  S.  Atiya  will  de- 
liver a  lecture  at  8  tonight  in  105 
Gardner  Hall  on  "The  Coptic 
Church  and  Ecumenicity  from 
Chalcedon  to  Evanston."  according 
to  an  announcement  yesterday  by 
the  Dept.  of  Religion. 

Prnf.     At'va     is    a    distinguished 
Coptic  Christian  scholar  who  is  the 
Henry  W.   Luce  Professor  of  World 
Christianity     at     Union     Theologic 
Seminary  in  New  York.  He  was  vis- 
iting   professor    of    history    at    the 
Near  and   Middle   East  Institute  of 
Columbia  University  last  year. 
j     The   author  of   approximately  40 
I  bocks  and  articles,  he  is  best  known 
I  in   America    for  his   contribution   to 
I  the  Mount  Sinai  Expedition,   which 
I  microfilmed    many   pages  of   price- 
less   manuscriptjs    i»   twelve   langu- 
ages for  the  Library  of  Congress. 

Prof,  .\tiya  retired  in  1950  from 
the  Dept.  of  History  in  the  Univer- 
sity of  Alexander  to  l)eccme  co- 
founder  and  first  president  of 
Coptic  Studies  in  Ci.ro.  Since  tlH^n 
he  has  lectured  in  over  twenty 
.American  universities. 


CLASSIFIEDS 


WANTED:  COLLEGE  ME2V, 
part-time  and  summer.  Earn  $50  ^ 
to  $100  per  week  plus  $100-$300  | 
scholarship  award.  Must  havel 
use  of  car.  Contact  W.  P.  Cran- ' 
ford.  Box  1703,  Raleigh,  N.  C.        ! 


eciot  i* 
TKHNICOIOI 


„^,^  JACK  HAWKINS 

MARGARET  JOHNSTON  •  KXano  cuivt«  •  x>hn  nusCT  •  June  iho«»o«n 

gk«CW4  hr  MtCHAIl  HUMAN  •  Scn-t.pbr  b>  wmUM  »OSt  •  AtMM^fdmSm  HOtt 


A  UNIVHSM.INmNATlONAl  I 


N  O  W 
PLAYING 


Students,  Shores  And  Sunshine 

Studies  gave  way  to  sun  worshipping  yesterday  at  Carolina  itudeitts  turned  out  in  nun>bers  on  lawns 
ail  over  campus  yesterday.  Taking  advantage  of  what  the  weather  bureaus  in  the  tr—  have  bean  call- 
ing "unseasonable  heat"  during  the  past  week,  stu  dents  ra^lmacted  ^s  scane  in  many  placts  en  the 
camihis.--  '  ,     ■  ' 


SHOP  FOR  LESS  AT  BELK'S 

Your  Store  of  Better  Values  In  Chapel  Hill 

DIRTYJiOCKS 


by  NATURAL  BRIDGE 


v"-V-. 


The.;>e  shoes  .  .  sturdily  constructed  by  master  craftsmen  .  .  will  give  you  many 
years  of  comfortable,  easy  life  .  .  .  use  for  work  or  for  leisure.  Good-looking  good- 
wearing  .  .  .  sturdy  with  excellent  foot  support.  Red  rubber  soles,  extra  stitched  for 
long  mileage.  You  have  to  see  them  to  believe  that  such  a  shoe  could  be  sold  for 
this  unheard  of  price.  Belk's  has  the  greatest  values  for  every  pocketbook. 


«10.95 

PLENTY  OF  FREE  PARKING 


•  t^n    .*  c    »!■••'' 


ielk-Lc<><>('t(-Il()rl()ii('(). 


I 


I 

4'.  * 


I  I 


•»nm-4i  ».«♦«-♦  »  »• —(. 


f»A8fl  SIK 


Tflt  OAILT  TAt  HttL 


THURSDAY,  APRIL  25,  lf57 


Carolina   Plays   Host  To  Wake   Forest  This  Afternoon 


*  Jim  Rough  On  Mound 
For  Tor  Heels  Todoy 

By  BILL  KING  diAitces  today  as  he  goes  to, the  top 

A  vt  ry  imrortant  AUantic  Coast ,'  'f  hfe  maund  staff  for  his  ace  in  thfe 
Conferee  ^,  baseball  contest  Li  slated  j  v^i,  '  Jim  Raugh.  TUp  Roscmont, 
.or  3:30  litre  this  afternoon  as  the  !  t'y.  ^cn  or  Is  the  top  t>!lcl<fT  in  ilie 
Caroiinac  t<^i-  Hoc  s  nlay  hott  to  the  '■  onftr-nce'  with'  a  6^1  record  and 
Wake  'forest    r>emon    Deacons    jn '  >l  >.t.k€ou!s   to  his   credit. 

I     The  \>.''kc  F.rest  siartiBg  pitel^w 


Golfers,  Netters  Play  TSday 


Jim  Raugh 


Jim  Legette 


Pictured  abovt  are  Jim  Raugh  and  Jim  Legett  t,  Carolina's  battery  for  this  afternoon's  oncountor 
with  th*  Wake  Forest  Demon  Deacons.  Raugh  is  tii  c  leading  pitcher  in  the  ACC  with  a  60  record,  and 
Legette  is  the  leading  batter  for  the  Ter  Heels. 

Mick  Homers  For  Yank  Win; 

Braves  Defeat  Cards,  8-7,.  Jieatty  After  sTd^Title 


Ennerson  Stadium. 

This  js  a  trucial  outing  for  the 
Tfr  Heels  as  they  will  be  battling 
:•'>  t!e  for«  the  iead  in  ACC  play 
wMh  six  grmes  remaining  in  fon- 
iCrence  c-moetition.  The  Tar  H«»ls 
aie  currently  in  ^^econd  place,  omv 
ha'"  game  behind  the  Duke  Blue 
I')eviUi. 

Coacli  Wa't  Rabb's  charges  bold 
ri  6-2  confer  nee  mark  and  are  U- 
7  on  Uic  tesson.  The  Dcacs  are 
n  fourtii  plHce  with  a  5-4  mark  and 
have    a    6-7    seasonal    record. 

The  Tar  Heels  will  also  be  battl- 
ing to  overccme  a  Big  Fcur  jinx 
as  they  go  against  the  Deacs  for  the 
lirst  time  this  year.  Their  only  two 
lostes  in  conference  play  this  sea- 
son ''ame  at  the  hands  of  Big  Four 
I'lvals  State  and  Duke. 

At  present  the-  ACC  race  \b  dom- 
iivatcd  by  the  Bifi  Four.  X.  C.  State 
has  a  3-3  mark,  good  enough  for 
tliu'd  place  in  the  conference.  No 
team  in  ttie  league  has  been  able  to 
tiiaintain  first  place  for  as  much  as 
a  week,  as  the  schools  battle  furio- 
usly^ down  the  stretch  trjlng  to  de- 
throne .  tbc  current  title  holder 
Oi^e. 

Coach    Rabb    is    not    taking    any 


Ati  a<H  'bceh  announced  but  form- 
Ji-i;ea.ou  star  diid  no\^  e.^h  kJroiJn 
il^ooks  will  p.vbabiy  go  wub  one  of 
j\s  I  p  th  -ee"  rieJithaoders.  BK-k 
(^luhLer,  Jatk  McGlktoy  or  John 
Stokoe. 

'JHijw^ar  llceJs  startii»g  lineup, 
lairAj*  well  set  now  after  uwjtergo- 
ii^numerous  changes  c^ril^r  in  liie 
Jtisjii,  Will  probably  have  Bomber 
au  dt  fi>t  bate,  staady  fielding 
ton  t-ewii  at  second,  Roger  Honey- 
(uU  at  sl.ortstop  and  either  Jim 
Harwell  or  Chuck  Hartman  at  the 
hct  comer. 

In  the  outfield,  Rabb  ^ill  probab- 
ly caU .  on  Joe  Shook  in  left,  Dick 
Uud.sou  in  center,  and  pitdier-out- 
flcidre  Don  HJU  In  right.  Jim  Leg- 
ette wLU  be  the  Carolina  catcher. 

For  the  ho^  and  cold  Deacons,  t^ 
infield  should  have  Jack  Phillips  at 
first,  .VI  Baker  at  second,  Harold 
Moore  at  short  and  BUI  Barnes  at 
third. 

The  Dedcbn  outfield  should  be 
cortiposed  of  ex-Ralelgh  High  .star. 
Rex  McMUlian  In  left,  John  Stodcoe 
in  center,  and  George  Mjller  in 
right.  Baskettialler  Jackie  Murdock 
will  be  behind  the  plate. 


Carolina's  varsity  golf  and  ten- 
nis team  will  return  to  action  af- 
ter a  brief  Easter  recess  this  af- i 
ternoon  as  both  clubs  go  against 
Atlantic  Coast  Conference  com- 
petition, j 

Coach  Chuck  Erickson's  links- 
men  will  be  shooting  to  get  back 
into  tha  win  column  after  an 
humiliating  loss  to  West  Illinois; 
State  in  their  last  match.  The 
golfers  travel  to  Charlottesville,' 
Va,  for  a  match  with  the  Virginia 
Cavaliers.  i 

Hic  well-rounded  golf  team  now 
holds  a  record  of  7  victories,  a 
loss  and  a  ti?.  "The  tic  came  in 
their  first  match  of  the  season 
against  a  strong  Rollins  team.       j 

Toda)''s  affair  will  make  the 
first  outing  between  these  two  • 
clubs  this  season.  The  Tar  Heels  j 
hold  conference  victories  overj 
Wake  Forest,  South  Carolina, ' 
and  Clemson.  The  latter  two  they  j 
defeated  in  a  triangular  meet 
earlier  in  the  season.  ' 

Dulie  University  will  furnish  the 
competition  for  the   fast   improv-, 


ing  tennis  team  onthe  local  courts 
this  afternoon. 

The  Tar  Heels,  defending  ACC 
champions,  lost  most  of  their 
team  through  graduation  and  aca 
demic  troubles  last  season,  but 
have  been  coming  along  slowly 
but  surely  this  season  with  an  al- 
most   complete    lineup    turnover. 

The    netters,    under    the    guid- 


ance of  Ham  Strayhorn  and  Val 
dimir  Cemik,  have  won  their  la-,t 
\wo  contests  against  Clemson  and 
South  Ca'rolina  and  now  hold  a 
record  of  4  wins  and  5  defeats 
Their  last  official  match  was 
against  the  University  of  Illinois, 
which  they  won.  The  nert  match 
is  scheduled  for  Saturday  here 
against   the   Davidson   Wildcats. 


Howard  Johnson  Restavrant 

STUDENT    SPECIALS 

Barbecued    Chicker\ 
Choice  Steak  Sandwiches 

2:00-   5KX)  P.M 
SERVED  8:00-11:00  P.M. 

"Landmark  For  Hungry  Tarheels" 


NZW  YORK,  i.t>  -  .Mi:kcy  Man 
fj  liucd  a  hpm.  run  into  the  right 
fi^ld  bicaefceis  with  the  score  tied 
ill  tii.>  tJguh  iuniny  jcstcrday  for 
a  3-2  New  Yo;k  Vank'<  victory 
i.c  --pi  c  12  Baltimore  h'ts. 

Bjb  Grl.n  w.  a  liK;  w^jiuing  pitcher 
in  lelicf  of  &t.  ■'.  ter  .\rt  Dilmar. 

Mantle  s  -m^^h,  liis  second  hom- 
er ot   ihc  ya.  r.   came  on  the  first 
pitth     oy    Cotulne    Jo^i.aja    in    tho 
e  ghih.  Mlc  cy  hit  only  two  against  j  Ed     Mathews 
BaliLmore  li-it  ;'cav,  be  !i  at  Yarikee  !  runs    with    hi's 
St?diuTn. 

Y  gi  BiTra's  second  h me  tub 
of  lb?  s  _■  son  fallmvlng  a  single  by 
Man.Ie  ."n  tlic  firjs<  Inuir^  had 
gA  en  D:  mar  an  early  2-0  lead. 
HoMe\cr  t  e  (cr.ncr  K  n  ss  Citj' 
pilrfccj."  -.fuidnt  hold  tlie  edge  and 
flnaily  !^ft  for  a  -jin.-h  hitt.r,  giv- 
ing G  ni  the  chan  e  tj  win  his 
s.  :>cnd  gr  m?  in  relief. 

Man.lc  and  Bll  £k  .wi"  n  led  the 
Y'anks  \\i  h  three  hits  each  whUe 
Bob  Boyd  and  Ct  r?c  l^i\  each 
had  three  for  Baltimcre. 

The  Orio  ers  ke,"t  pecking  away 
at  Difmar.  who  was  malting  Ms 
fist  "isrt  rs  a  Yankee.  Successive 
t'.vo-out  sinTles  by  Biilv  Gardner, 
and  Di"k  Williams  ga-.e  Baltimore 
a  run  in  the  Ih  rd.  Ke'l's  third  iin- 
gle.  an  inf  ckl  out  and  Willie  Mir- 
anda's sin^e  tied  f'e  score  iH  the 
sixth  after  the  Orioles  missed 
scoring  chanica  in  the  fourth  and 
fifth. 

Bob  Nieman  made  the  f'elding 
play  of  t.he  day  when  he  grabbed 
GU  McDjugaid's  long  smash  with 
a  one-handed  stab  near  the  left 
field  fen:e.  The  Orioles  also  made 
four  douole  plays,  equalling  their 
season  to. a!  in  soven  p.evious 
games.  - 


M1LW,\UKEE,  li!1  -  The  Milwau-^ 
kee  Braves  maintained  their  po- 
.,itlon  atcp  the  National  League 
yesteixlay  when  Del  Crandall  hit 
a  home  run  in  the  last  of  the  ninth 
for  an  8-7  decision  over  St.  Louis. 

.\11   the  Braves  runs  in   the  free- 
swinging    contest     in     which     fliey 
twice  came  from  behind  to  tie  the 
core,     were     brought     across     by 
!iom3rs.     Before    Crandall's     blast, 
drove     H:me     three 
first    homer   of    the 
season,    Henry    Aaron   hit    his    third 
—  also  with  two  on  —  and  Joe  Ad- 
CO.  k    his    second,    with    the    bases 
einpty. 

For  Aaron,  it  was  the  seventh 
straight  g-mc  in  which  he  hit 
safely    in    a    streak     that 


Reds'  Big  Klu 
Still  Out  With 
Sore  Left  Hip 


Jim  Beatty.  Carolina's  pint-sire  ed  second  to  Olympic  Chainpiuo 
(rack  star,  wiU  attempt  to  win  his  Tom  Courtney  in  the  880,  and  Beatly 
th'rd  consecutive  Penn  Relay  two-  w  ill  pace  the  relay  team  in  both 
mile  champwnsliip  this  weekend  in  '  e\-ents.  Howard  Kahn  and  Ben  W.J- 


CINC.NNATl,  Uf>  —  Just  when 
Ted  Klusiewski  will  return  to  the 
Cincinnati  Redlej  lineup  as  a  regu- 
lar -still  was  n  quefition  todny  after 
a  group  of  doctors  examined  him 
at    Christ   Hospital. 

Ga.be    Paul,    general   mamiger   of 
the   club,   said   treatments   will  be 
ccntinued.  A  physician  recently  con- 
started  I  clu<led  that  calciimi  deposits   were 
opening    d?'-.    In    the    process    the  I  causing    the    pain    in    the    left   hip 
Braves   have   won   six  against  one  '  which   has  kept   him   from   playing 
loss.    -Attendance   today   was    15,368.  I  first    base   since  the  opening   gaiiK? 
Taylor    Philip,     ycung    Milwau-  =  .Apr  1    16. 


Philadelphia. 

The  Charlotte  senior  has  won  the 
c\  ent  ever>'  year  since  he  joined  the 
Tar  Heel  vajrslty  in  1956. 

.Accompanying  Beatty  to  Phila- 
delphia will  be  the  Tar  Heel  relay 
team  which  wiH  enter  both  the  two 
and  four  mile  re'ays.  The  UNC  two- 
inile  team  turned  In  a  fane  of  7:42 

'  in    the    Florida    Relays   earlier    this 
nroWh. 

I     Dave  Scurloek.  a  promising  soph- 
omore who  earlier  tliis  j-ear  finish- 


liams  or   Everett    What'ey   are   tlie 
other  members  of  the  team. 

Beatty  vs  111  de'cnd  his  title  against 
iTO'C^cge  d'.stance  stars  on  Friday. 
tast  year  he  .set  a  new  Penn  Relay 
rer<ird  with  a  time  of  9:09.9. 
!     ThR  Tar  .HecL  relay  team  is  rated 
among    the    favorites    in    the    two- 
mile  event,  and  Coach  Dale  Ranson 
hMLjfttuni  down  an  inviation  form 
I  Drflie    Relays    to    enter    his    team 
!  against    such    etatem    powers    as 
I  Mq^nhDttnn  and   Pittsburgh. 


iMd's  impofM  Frtnch  lislt  wash- 
lilt  MOft  sMrt  flatteriNf  fit.  in  nine 
wirilt  Mitn,  limn  frMli  lookinc. 
"tra-akapt'^ribM  wnar  and  cuffs. 
iMflMMi  "stay-in"  Urirt  tail 


i:ee  lef.hr  nder  who  came  to  the 
niound  in  the  fourth  to  relieve 
starter  Ray  Crone,  got  the  deci- 
sion, his  first  of  the  year. 

Loser  was  Wiilard  Schmidt,  who 
relieved  St.  Louis  starter  Herm 
Wehmeier  with  three  runs  hom  • 
and  none  out  in  the  fifth.  Schmidt 
5ave  up  only  one  run  the  rest  ol 
the  way.  but  that  was  to  Crandall. 


Paul  said  he  couldn't  say  when 
Kluszciki  would  Ijc  back  at  first 
base. 

K'u  took  an  X-ra\'  treatment  yes- 
terday in  St.  Louis  and  said  his 
hip  was  "sore  as  heck."  He  at- 
iril.uled  the  sorene-s  to  after-effects 
of  the  treatment. 

Geor::e  Crowe  has  been  filling  in 
at   fir.*Jt   base   for  Cincinnati. 


Duke  Has  Leading  Batters 

DURHAM,  N.  C,  </P)  —  A  tight  Us  now  occupy  the  top  places  in  the 
batting  race  has  developed  in  the  '■  conference  batting  race.  Dick  Hunt- 
Atlantic    Coast    Conference    amonj; 


RedlegsWolk 
I  To  Easy  Win 

I  CINCINNATI,  iJP  —  Tlie  Cincin- 
I  nati  Redlegs  "walked"  to  a  9-5  vic- 
i  lory  over  the  Chicago  Cubs  here 
I  If  St  night  as  Bruin  pltcbe.'-s  set 
;  a  new  National  League  record  for 
i  walks  in  one  inning  -by  gi\-ing 
j'l>ases  on  balls  to  nine  Redleg  bat- 
I  ters  in  the  fifth.  The  Redlegs  scored 
.  seven  runs  In  that  fraime  with  only 

one  nit. 

It     was    Cincinnati's    third    con- 

iecuth'e  victory  after  foiu:  straight 

season-opening  losses. 
Moe     I>raibowsky,     Cub    starting 

pitcher,    was    breezing    along    with 

a  2-1  lead  when  he  suddenly  lost 


Probable  Pitchers 

AMERICAN  LEAGUE 

Detroit  at  Chicago — Lary  l-l  vs. 
tiar-hman   1-0. 

•  Boston     at     Washington — Nixon 
do  vs.  Pa.scual   1-1. 


$7.95 
Red,  HeaHter  Grey,  Navy,  Black, 
Cerolina  Blue,  Olive,  Tan  Heath- 
er, White,  and  Canary. 

Julian's 

COLLEGE   SHOP 


Julian's 

RIPPLE  SOLE 

...  get 

_, 

■  ,-.  » 

the                  ^ 

•<..^Si^iii^S9^fl9i 

Sf^^ 

answer         ^M8 

l^n 

HM^ 

to            jx     i^           ^ 

W^ 

wy^^ 

walking               ^ 

g^Q 

Wtj^y 

comfort              fg| 

■B 

pP*^' 

Here's  the  ideal  shoe  for  work  or  leisure  ...  the  revolutionary 
Ripple  Casual.  The  deep,  resilient  ripples  put  spring  in  Vwur 
step,  roll  to  absorb  heel  shock  and  glide  to  increase  your  stride. 
They  actually  help  you  walk  .  .  .  longer  and  more  comfoiiably. 
The  Ripple  Casual  comes  in  brown  glove  leather  with  lightwcisht 
brcwn  ripple  sole.                                                    .          $16.95 

^^'' 

:>  J^^Ji'    "r^y**"'*     •      ■ 

jMlian'l 

M 

mMo9 

Cleveland 


at      Kansas     City — 
Burtnette  1-0. 


Wynn  0-1  vs 
;  Only  games  scheduled. 

NATIONAL  LEAGUE 

•  New  York  at  Brooklyn,  night— 
Antonelli  1-1  vs.  Podres  1-0. 

Chicago   at    Cincinnati — Hillman 
0-0  vs.  Nuxhall  0-0. 
Only  games  scheduled.  ' 


three     Duke     University     basebal] 
players  after  the  Blue  Devils'  slug- 
fest     16-.3    victoo'    over    Marylajwf 
Monday. 
Coiisequently.  the  three  Blue  Dev- 


er,    N.    C.    Stale   slugger,    who    led 

with  an  average  of  .407  aft^r  games  '  *"  ^^^  "^  ^  ^^^  ^  ^  «"»» 

of  last  week,  has   gone  one  for  10 


in   two   games 
.400  mark. 


to   drop   below   the 


Inman  Leading 
DerbyTourney 

By  KYLE   V.lLVCE 

LOUISVILLE.  Ky..  l<P  —  Rugged 
liiUs  and  tricky  greens  tamed  golf- 
dom's  top  par  busters  today,  but 
Walker  Inman  Jr.  sneaked  in  with 
a  4-under-par  67  to  get  the  jump  on 
the  first  Kentucky^  Derby  Open  field. 

Tlie  transplanted  Georgian,  play- 
ing v)ut  of  BetlDn,  Mass.,  birdied 
the  first  three  boles  and  kept  mov- 
ing in  what  prQved  to  be  a  spec- 
tacular round  when  compared  with 
many  other  scares. 

Inman.  an  unmarried  26-year-old. 
was  starting  on  his  second  tourna- 
ment ci  the  current  pro  tour. 

"I  >ust  needed  the  rest,"  he  said. 
•*I  tock  the  winter  off." 

In  his  first  effort  of  the  year,  he 
finished  in  a  tie  for  21st  in  the  re- 
cent Greensboro  Open. 

Others  who  solved  Sonecta  Course's 
ti-ying  6,575  yards  include<l  Jack 
Fleck.  Bobby  Maxwell  and  Peter 
Thompson,  eack  with  a  69. 

The  70  shooters  included  Pat 
Schwab  of  Oajrton,  Ohio  and  Bu 
Wininger  of  Odessa,  Tex. 

Even  with  ]tar  71*  were  Den 
iPalrfied  of  OftMy,  IE.,  Oserge 
Ba^^r  of 'Los  Angeles,  Jack  Burke 

of  Kiameshat  Utie,  N.  Y.,  Gardner   Gejie  Littler  and   Ed  Furgol   well 
Dickins.m   of  Prnianm   C.Uy   Bemdi,  crff-the  pace. 


Six  From  South  America 
Are  Visiting  Chapel  Hill 

Six  senoritas  and  senoras  from 
south  of  the  border  arrived  in 
Chapel  Hill  Monday  to  observe 
local  government  in  this  state  and 
activities  of  women  in  politics. 

They  will  stay  here  through 
Sunday. 

The  visitors,  staying  at  the  In- 
stitute of  Government's  Knapp 
Building,  will  examine  certain  ac- 
tivities in  the  University  and 
make  trips  to  Raleigh  and  other 
places.  I 

Included  in  the  group  are  Miss 
Hilda  Macedo  of  Sao  Paulo,  Bra- 
zil; Mrs.  Leticia  Antezana  de  Al- 
berdi  of  Bolivia;  Dr.  Anita  Arroyo 
of  Cuba;  Mrs.  Celeste  Epada. 
Guatemala;  Mrs.  Maria  Esther 
Talamantes  of  Mexico  and  Mrs. 
Marie  Edelia  Romero  of  Venezue- 
la. I 

Th?y  are  traveling  under  the 
auspices  of  the  U.  S.  State  Dept 
and  the  Dept.  of  Labor. 

Fla.,  and  Arnold  Palmer  of  La- 
trcbe.  Pa. 

Inman's  best  shot  was  a  SMbot 
birdie  putt  on  the  ISth  hole.  He 
finished  the  day  with  six  hdaxUes. 

A  leg-testing  back  nine  took  its 
toll,     dropping     such     slingers     as 


'  Leftfielder  Pete  Maynard,  who 
I  has  been  below  the  .400  mark  only 
jone  time  this  year,  collected  three 
for  four  against  the  Terps  to  put 
his  average  up  to  .424  for  17  games. 
The  Windsor,  Conn.,  sophomore  has 
28  hits  in  66  appearances. 

Ihike's  second  .400  hitter  is  short- 
stop Lon  Bonczek  with  .415. 

The  number  thiee  hitter,  right- 
fielder  Dave  Sinae,  is  hitting  .404 
for '  14  games. 


He  walked  five  straight  hatters 
after  one  waS  out.  Jackie  CoUum 
came  in  but  he  walked  Bob  Thur- 
man  to  force  home  another  run. 

Gus  Bell's  infield  out  scored  an- 
other run.  WaUy  Post  was  given 
an  intentional  pass  but  George 
Crowe  singled  home  two  nuis  and 
then  the  bases  on  balls  business 
started  all  over  again. 


LENOIR  RHYNE  CHOIR 

The  Lenoir  Rhyne  College  Choir 
will  give  a  concert  in  the  Holy 
Trinity  Lutheran  Church  at  8  p.m. 
today,  it  was  announced  yesterday. 
The  choir  which  contains  60  voices 
will  stop  here  as  a  part  of  its 
spring  concert  tour. 


Murals  Today 

Tennis:  (4:00)  Sig  Nu  v?.  Winner 
(ATO  vs.  Beta)  White;  (5:00)  Med 
Sch-1  vs.  Peacocks. 


.  lAtT   DAY 

;■.    ,-:''   >0R    , 

S  t  y^e  II  t    Special 

LCT  THE 

Chat  V  Nibble 

KEEO  YOUR  DATE 

FREE 

•Rl^fG  YOUR  I.  D.  CARD 

CHAT  'N'  NIBBLE 


Located   ene   and   ene^half   mile*  from  campus  en   Greensbore 

Highway— On  yeur  viray  to  W.  C.  and  Hogans. 

SMVIIIO  LONG  MEADOW  MII^K.AND  ICE  CREAM 

m^mmmmmmmmmmmmmmammmmmBmmBmmmmmmm 


Shirt  Heaven 


Never  have  our  sflectien*  in 
our  warm  weather  shirts  besQ 
mere  interesting  and  extensivf. 

Alligator  polo  shirtf-^the  best 
looking  poor  boy  version  of  the 
IIJO0  ene  only  $3.9S 

Ivy  button-down  pel*  shirts— 4 
good  colors  „ ._ $4.50 

Cflmplete     assortment     of     Ivy 

bUflvn-dewnsM   s;,hort   sleeves — 

from  14.00 

Oi^  1Mb  ^itrs  W  bermudas— 
tvy  model  —  to  go  with  the 
shirts ._.  from  $3.fS 

For  added  spice  to  your  ligfct- 
^iifght  wardrobe,  visit  Milton's 
tUay. 


iWilton'tf 


RICHARD    MALTBY 

And  His  Orchestra 

TONIGHT -8PM.     ' 
MEMORIAL^  HALL 

Tickets  $1.25  , 

On  Sale  In  Y-Court  And  Downtown  Chapel  Hill 

.     PROCEEDS  GO  TO     ;^^  i 

VICTORY  VILLAGE  DAY  NURSERY 

AND 

CHAPEL  HILL  RECREATION  CENTER 

IMrtlM r#l   AArvlf  k\#    ^^^  played  at  Yale,  Michigan,  Maryland,  Cornell, 
■Viwriarq   lYlOirpy    ^^^  p^j^^  universities  where  he  received  excel- 
lent reviews. 

Di^k#«r^   IUI#i«l«U«#    has  worked  with  such  outstanding  personalities 
I^ICnarg   IViairoy    ^^   ^^^^^  Goodman,   Artie  Shaw,   Russ  Brown, 

and  Vaughn  Monroe. 
BirknrrI   M<ilfk%/    ^^^  recorded  such  hits  as  Man  With  the  Golden 

War  and  Peace. 
SEE  AND  HEAR 

Richard  Maltby  And  His  Orchestra 

Sponsored    By 
PANHELLENIC  AND  INTERFRATERNITY  COUNCILS 


•f 


Serials     Dept. 
Ch3p3l    Hill,    N.    C. 
8-31-49 


rrv 


WEATHER 

Mostly  fair  Mid  continued  warm 
with  an  tx|>«ct«d  high  of  88. 


SThc 


arkt  3<cci 


SECRECY 

Th«  odi^or  lamkaslt  it  on  payo 
two. 


VOL.  LVII  NO.  172 


Complete  (/P)  Wire  Service 


CHAPEL   HILL,  NORTH  CAROLINA,  FRIDAY,  APRIL   26,  1957 


Offieu  m  Graham  Memorial 


POUR  PAGES  TH"   ••tUi 


Chorus  Rehearsals  For  'Peer  Gynt' 


The  annual  outdoor  production  of  the  Carolina  Playmakers  this  year  will  be  Henrik  Ibsen's  'Peer 
Cynt,'  to  be  given  in  thr<>e  performances  on  May  8,  9  and  10  in  the  Forest  Theater  The  play  will  be 
a  new  versicn  adapted  by  Assistant  Director  Kai  Jjrgensen  and  Robert  Schenkkan.  Shown  above  is  an 
informal   rehearsal   scene  of  the  chorus  for  the  production. 


Hundreds  of  newspaper  photo- 
graphers were  judged  today  in  the 
anaual  southeastern  contest  for  ex- 
ceMcnce.  Winners  wUI  be  announe- 
cd  al  a  banquet  Saturday  night. 


PHOTOGRAPHY 

.       >       ^-     ■  - 

ShortCourse  Here  Best 
In  Entire  Nation;  Costa 

A  national  magazine  photograph-  j  more  are  e.vpected  to  enroll  today 
er  advised  news  photographers  to  I  and  Saturday, 
learn    the   language    of   a*  country       Hugh  Morton  of  Wilmington    is 
before  they  try  to  talk  foreigners   chairman  of  the  program, 
into  posing  for  pictures. 
;      The    advice    came    from    Frank 
I  Scherschd,     Life     fijagazine     news 
'  photographer,  at  thci  opening  ses-  < 
sion    here  yesterday   of   the   eighth 
!  annual   Southern    Short   Course    in 
!  press  photography. 

Scherschcl    based    hi^   advise    on 
experiences    of    hand-talking    and 
I  translators   that   he   had   to   use   in 
j  European  assignments. 

"Too  many  Americans'  he  said. 
I  "make  the  stupid  mistake  of  talk 
j  ing  loud  over  there  istead  of  learn 
'  ing  the  language." 
I      Other   speakers  at  the  first  ses^ 

siort  of  the  three-day  course  were'      The    first    of    two    spring    con  ^ 
Joseph  Costa,  photo  supervisor  for '  certs    by    the   UNC    Band    will    be  , 

held  Sunday  afternoon  at  4:30  un- 
der Davie  Poplar. 


6th  Fleet  Moves 

WASHINGTON  —  (AP)  —  The 
United  States  ye»ierday  sent  its 
powerful  6th  fleet  steaming  toward 
the  troubled  Middle  E^ast  in  a  show 
of  strength  aimed  at  bringtag  calm 
to  strife-torn  Jordan. 

This  muscle  flexing  came  as  the 
government  blamed  "international 
Communism"  for  the  unrest  in  Jor- 
dan and  ordered  President  Eisen- 
hower's special  ambassador,  ^«nies 
V.  Richards,  temporarily  out  of  the 
area. 

Sccrctarj-  of  State  Dulles,  mean- 
while, met  for  40  minutes  with 
Sens.  Knowland  (R-Calif)  anfl  Mans- 
field (D-Mont),  representing  the 
Senate  leadership  of  both  parties. 
Dulles  and  his  fides  also  tele- 
phoned other  leaders  in  the  House 
and  Senate. 

All  of  these  moves  came  a.>> 
Young  King  Hussein  fought  at 
Amman  to  keep  hio-  kingdom  fron^ 
falling  apart.  -  '.■<r         :  \~:  r 

Martial  Law 

AMMAN,  Jordan  —  (AP)  —  King 
Hussein,  fighting  for  his  throne, 
imposed  military  law  on  imperilled 
Jordan  yesterday  in  a  series  of  dra- 
matic moves  against  his  enemies 
inside  and  outside  the  country. 

The  embattled  young  king  nam- 
ed a  new  government,  clamped  a  i 
curfew  on  the  nation's  main  cities'^ 
as  a  safeguard  against  rioting,  and-! 
aboli.iicd  the  country's  10  political  I 
parties.  i 

j 

Secret  Conference 


Top  Officers  Named;  13 
Members  Initiated  Into 
Order  Of  The  Holy  Grail 

Kerr  Named  Delegata 
Of  Highest  Honorary 


The  Order  of  the  Grail  announc- 
ed the  election  of  four  top  officer^ 
and  the  recent  jnkiation  »>f  13 
"neophytes'*  into  the  highest  un- 
dergraduate  honorarj    on  campus. 

John  Kerr,  a  junior  from  James- 
town has  been  named  Delegata 
succeeding  Luther  Hodges  Jr.  in 
that  position,  according  to  the  an- 
nouncement yesterday. 

Also  elected  to  top  positions  in 

the  undergraduate   honorary  were 
backed   pay   mcrease   proposal   for   ^^^^^^  ^.^^.j^^        j^^^^^.^  j^^^ 

state    employes. 

I      This    one ,  came    from    the    Wo- 
man's   College    in    Greensboro.    It 


Second  Protest 
Mode  By  UNC 
On  Pay  Raises 

RALEIGH  —  (AP)  —  A  second 
protest  by  personnel  of  the  Con- 
solidated University  has  been  reg- 
istered against  the  administration- 


Dunn,    scribe;    Bennct    Thomas,    a 
junior    from    Morvcn.    exchequer; 
and  Macon  Patton,  a  junior  from 
followed  on   the   heels  of   another   D^^rham,  vice  exchequer. 


JOHN  WHiTAKER 

.  .nejf  business  viaimgcr 


from    UNC    maintenance   workers. 

(]k)v.  Hodges  and  the  State  Per- 

i  sonnel  Dept.  say  the   formula — ^by 

which  an  overall  11  per  cent  raise 

would   be   meted   out— is   designed    recently  at  the  Carolina  Inn 
to  give  larger  dollar  raises  to  low-  j      -pj^g   Grail    taps    13 


The  Grail  further  announced 
that  Gov.  Luther  Hodges  was 
pre.jnt  al  the  initiation  of  the  13 
"neophytes"  during  a  banquet  held 


persons   an- 


tK>NALD   MILLEl 

...  to  c'l^ir  piiarinacy  meeting 

Donald  Miller 
Will  Preside 
At  Annual  Meet 

Senior  piiarmacy  student  Donald 
J.  Miller  will  preside  ovtr  the  an- 
nual conveulion  of  the  Student  Sec- 
tion of  the  .■\merican  Pharmaceuti- 
cal Asso.  in  New  York  City  next 
v.-cek. 

The  nfteeting  widl  be  held  from 
Sunday  through  next  Friday.  |  of     the 

Hailing  from  Raleigh,  he  is  pasft '  tion. 
president  of  tlie  University  of  North  I      Costa     discussed      problems     of 
Carolina  School  of  Pharmacy,  past    news  photography  from  shooting  a  '  ' 
president  of  Kappa  Psi  pharmaceuti-    battleship  to  snapping  a  flea.         j 
cal  fraternity,  treasurer  of  the  sen-  '      Theme  of  his  speech  was  "'nuts 
ior    class,    and    ciiairman    of    the    and  bolts."  He  described  differing 
DaiK-e   Ccmrrultec.   Miller  has  been    problems  of  hewy  photography  and 
recognized  for  his  activities  by  the    solutions  to  those  problems.  i 

Oi-ders    of    the    Grail    and    the    Old 


First  Concert 
By  UNC  Band 
To  Be  Sunday 


CAIRC^—<AP)— Syria's   President 
Shukri  Kuwatly  flew  to  Cairo  yes-; 
terday  for  an  urgent,  secret   con-|! 
fercncG   with  President   N«a' 
the  crisis  in  Jordan.  'meirf  of  JoTin"  Whltaker 

Reliable     informants      .sakl      the    from    Winston-Sjilem.     j 
chief   reason   for  the   meeting  was    manager. 

a  demand  by  Iraq  that  Syria  pull  '  Whitaker  .succt^eds  WiUiam  Ro- 
out  the  5,0(X)  troops  it  has  in  hert  Peel,  law  student  from  Wil- 
northern  Jordan.  '.  liamston.    who   re.slgned   recentl.v. 

These  Sj  rian  army  .units  entered  |  As  businei;s  manager  he  will  han- 
Jordan  last  fall  at  the  time  of  the  <llt?  the  paper's  finances  and  will 
Israeli    invasion    of    Egypt.    Their  I  ^^  '"  charge  of  keeping  in  line  the 


Whitaker  Is  Appointed 
New  Business  Manager 


i-ually  who  best  exemplify  ••friend- 
ship, courage  and  service. "  and  it 
recognizes  outstanding  scholars 
and  students  who  have  devotedly 


salaried  employes  than  an  across- 
the-board  percentage  raise. 

The    Greensboro    protest   of   the 
formula    concerns    Woman's    Col- 
lege dining  hall  and  building  and  j  ,^i-ved  {,„  campus, 
grounds  employes.  i      Established    in    1920.    the   Grail 

It  was  contained  in  a  letter  to  |  from  the  fir^^  attempted  to  build 
the  Guilford  General  Assembly  j  better  relations  between  fraternity 
delegation  from  the  Woman's  Col- 1  and    non-fraternity    men    on    cam- 


Daily  Tar  Heel   Bditvir  Neil  Bass  I     Bass  said  "'It  is  with  a  ^reat  deal  > 
on    Thursday    announred    the    appoint-    of    pride    and     snlLsfaetion    that    1  I 

sophomore    make   official"    ^^^^itakeT*s    appoint-  ' 
business    ment.  I 

■Johnny  has   had   two   veai-s"   ex-  I 

I 
perience    with     the    business    dept.  i 

I  and    is   assuredly    well   qualified   for  ' 

his  :icw  position. '■  the  editor  said.    \ 

Bass  said   he   also   regretted^  tliat  j 

Peel   had   to  resign.   He  called    the 


and !  dances  with  dual  puropse    of   iaa- 
j  proving   social   life   and   obtaining 


the  New  York  Daily  Mirror  and 
King  Features  Syndicate:  J.  Win- 
ton  Lemcn,  manager  of  Eastman 
Kodaks  press  photo  sales;  Lewis 
P.  Watoon.  Raleigh  commercial 
photographer:  and  William  Wilson 
Atlanta    Journal-Constitu- 


ostensible  purpose  wa.v  to  aid  King 
Hussein's  army  if  Israel  also  at- 
tacked Jordan. 

-Moscow  Accuses  U.  S. 


budget  appropriations  from  the  stu-  '  pa.st  busines  manager  '"capable  and 


the  new  maximums  proposed,  it 
was  explained.  The  letter  added 
that  these  employes  are  automati- 
cally "frozen"  in  their  salary 
ranges  with  little  hope  of  future 
I  increases. 


The    public    has    been    cordially 
invited  to  attend  the  free  concert. 

Director   Herbert  Fred   said   the 
music  will  be  of  a  light  nature. 


LONDON— (AP)— Moscow  accus- 
ed the  United  States  of  'blatant 
interference "  in  the  internal  af- 
fairs of  Jordan  last  night. 

An  anonymous  commentator  on 

Moscow  Radio's  home  service  said 

I  the  Jordan  situation  remains  tense  i 

Included  in  the  music  that  will   amid  an  "atmosphere  of  a  deep  in- 

be  presented  are  Victor  Herbert's   terpolitical  crisis." 

Gypsy     Life ",     Richard     Strauss'  j      Moscow  Radio   said    the   United 

'Allerseclen".   a   medley  of  Peter  ^  states    "by   means    of   behind-the- 

Roses    hits.    Robert    Russell    Ben-  ^  scenes  machinations  are  trying  to 

nett's  "Suite     of     Old     American    get  up  a  Jordan  government  which 

Dances"    and    several    marches.        would  adopt  the  aggressive -Elisen- 


Costa  said  of  all  the  short  cours-  Calvin  Hubbert  will  play  Tchai-  j  hower  doctrine  and  give  up  the 
es  in  news  photography  offered' in  kovsky's  "None  But  the  Lonely  policy  of  protecting  the  national 
this    nation,     "the    one    at    Chapel }  Heart"  as  a  trombone  solo.  j  interests  and  unity  with  other  free 

Hill  does  the  most  good. '  i      Senior  music  majors  John  Dear-  [  ^^^  countries." 

Approximately  160   news  photo-    and    Don    Jefferson    will    conduct  j 
graphers    from   nine    southeastern  j  ing  and  Don'jefferson  will  conduct 
manship  at  the  A. Ph. A.  Convention  j  states  registered  for  the  course  and]  ng  the  concert,  Fred  stated, 
in   Detroit,    \lleh.   last   April.  -      - — ^ ■ — 


Well 

After  being  elected  to  the  posi- 
tion of  vice  chairman  of  the  section 
in  Miami  Beach,  Fla.  two  years 
ago,   Miller  advanced  to  the  chair- 


The  Student  Section  of  the  A. 
Ph.A.  is  composed  of  delegates 
from  72  colleges  of  pharnvacy 
throughout  the  United  Sttaes.  At 
least  one  thousand  students  are  ex- 
pected to  attend  the  meetings  which 
will  be  held  in  the  spacious  ball- 
room of  the   Hotel   Sfcatler. 

Other  University  of  North  Carolina 
pharmacy  students  planning  to  at- 
tend this  year's  convention  are  Miss 
Shirley  Bumgardner  and  BiUy  Lan- 
ier, who  are  also  delegates  to  the 
Rho  Chi  Convention  which  is  held 
m  conjunction  with  the  A. Ph. A. 
.Also  going  are  Joe  E.  Smith,  John- 
ny Williams.  David  R.  Davis  and 
MJke   Lazarus. 


HAPPENINGS  ON  THE  HILL: 


Phi  Gam's  To  Beat  Heat 
Sigma  Chi  Engagements 


By  sue  ATCHISON 

THE  PHI  GAM'S  are  doing  what 
every  Carolina  student  would  like 
to  be  doing  this  weekend — they  re 
heading  toVvards  the  coast  and  the 
beaches  where  they  can  get  tem- 
porary relief  from  the  heat  of  the 
classrooms. 

A  SOFTBALL  GAME   and   beer 


,  be     celebrated     at     the     chapters 
I  throughout  this  country  and  Cana- 
1  da.     The     celebration     will     begin 
I  with  a  business  meeting  to  be  fol- 
1  lowed  by  a  luncheon  and  talk  by 
Rev.  Charles  Hubbard.  The  activi- 
ties  of   the    day   will    come    to   a 
close  with  an  informal  social  hour. 
i      ENGAGEMENTS    HAVE    BEEN 
ANNOUNCED  by  the  Sigma  Chi's 


MAY  6 

Is  Coming  Soon 
ONLY  1 1  MORE  DAYS 


GM'S  SLATE 


Orientation  Interviews,  2-6 
p.m.,  Roland  Parker  2,  Wood- 
house  Conference  Room;  Faculty 
Newcomers  Club,  8-11  p.m.,  Ro- 
land Parker  2;  Tri  lota,  10-11 
p.m.  Woodhouse  Conference 
Room;  Publicetions  Board,  4-6 
p.m..  Council  Room;  Women's 
Honor  Council,  7  p.m..  Council 
Room;  Combo,  7:30-11  p.m.,  APO 
Room. 


Chi's  ehgaged  include  Billy  Knauff 
to  Miss  Doris  McCall;  Charles 
Stephens  to  Miss  Patricia  Johnson; 
J.  B.  Lopp  to  Miss  Betty  Wilkin- 
son, and  Charles  Forbes  to  Miss 
Ann  Shelley. 


party   make    up   the    formula   that  j  and  Theta  Chi's   this  week.  Sigma 
the  Chi  Psi's  are  going  to  use  to- 
morrow in  an  attempt  to  find  re- 
lief from  the  heat,  relax,  and  have 
some  fun. 

THIS  IS  PLEDGE  WEEKEIND  for 
the  Zate's.  Among  the  many  high- 
lights  of  the   weekend   will   be   a 

cocktail  party  tonight  and  a  par- 1  gaged  to  Miss  Hilda  Donaldson,  a 
ty  at  Hogan's  tomorrow.  |  student   at   Woman's   College. 

THE  ALPHA  GAM'S  iiave  invit- !      ONE  PINNING  HAS  BEEN  AN- 
ed  all  their  alum:?  to  return  tomor- 1  NOUNCED  this  week.  Bobby  Tim- 
row  for   the   sorority's   annual   In-   berlake.  a  .Sigma  Chi,  pinned  Kay 
'  ternational  Reunion  Day  which  will    Musgraves. 


Annual  Dog 
Show  May  19 

Plans  for  the  Exchange  Club 
Dog  Show  to  be  held  here  Sunday, 
May  19.  were  announced  tltts  w«ek. 
Dr.  Lou  Vine  and  Bill  Tyler  are 
in  charge  of  the  project,  wfcich 
will  include  all  standard  classes 
and  obedience  trials. 

Applications  for  entering  dogs 
may  be  obtained  from  Vine's  Vet- 
erinary Hospital,  and  dogs  m«y  be 
entered   the   day   of   the   show   at 


Wednesday  is  Lucky  Day  For  Senior 


Senior  Day  Publicity  Chairman  Lou  Rosenstock  announced  yesterday  a  fo^rtunate  senior  «vil|  drive 
off  Wednesday  with  a  Ford  automobile.  The  winner  will  be  determined  by  a  grand  drawing  to  be  held 
on  the  seniors'  special  day.  Miss  Dottie  Wood,  senior  from  Yonkers,  N.Y.,  proudly  exhibits  a  1957  Ford, 
presented  for  approval  to  the  senior  class  by  Rosenstock. 


perintendent     of     buildings 
gi^ounds  and  auditor. 

If   the   formula   is  enacted   into!  a  firm  unification  of  the  Student 
law,    the    letter   sajs.    32    per   centi  3ody. 

of   the    dining   hall    employes    will  |      After     providing    tor    the    first 

receive    no   increase.  .;  lime    a   successful   social   program 

The   present   salaries    are   above    it    next    organized    various    drives 

for  better  conduct  by  the  students 
at  athletic  games  and  for  provid- 
ing athlete./  with  better  equip- 
ment. 

The  Grail  also  established  an 
intramural  program  for  campua 
participation,  carefully-  including 
fraternity  and  non  -  fraternity 
groups.  It  sponsored  a  song  con- 
!  lest  which  resulted  in  the  adoption 
if  "Here  Comes  Carolina." 

Friendship,  truth,  courage  and 
service  have  been  the  watchwords 
of  the  organization  that  stands 
ready  to  offer  its  help  to  any  in- 
dividual or  group  that  needs  aj- 
distance  in  the  form  of  ideas,  fi- 
nancial aid  or  phy.sical  labor,  ac- 
•cording  to  mem))er«. 

Outgoing  officers  of  the  Grail 
are  Luther  Hodges.  Delegata;  Neil 
Bass,  scribe:  Robert  Hornik.  vice 
exchequer;  and  Bill  .McLean,  ex- 
chequer. 

IDC  Meeting 

Frank  "Brown.  Interdormitory 
Council  member,  was  appointed  by 
IDC  Piesident  Tom  Walters  to  in- 
vestigate getting  anotHer  telephone 
installed  in  the  f^'ilsoij  Librarj-,  at 
the  Tuesday  night  meeting. 

At  the  meeting  new  members 
Were  given  membership  certifi- 
cates and  by-laws.  The  roll  was 
called  and  the  organization  of  the 
IDC  wao-  completed. 

.\fter  the  meeting  was  adjourned 
there  was  a  ""smoker"  during 
which  the  new  members  in- 
troduced themselves  to  each  other. 


Rosenstock  Presents  New  Ford 
For  Approval  Of  Senior  Class 

The  winner  of  this  year's  senior  prizes  to  a  number  of  seniors  and 
grand  drawing  at  the  Patio  Wed- }  continuous  music  to  be  furnished 
nesday  evening.  May  1,  will  be  by  four  bands.  Rosenstock  empha- 
"the  proud  possessor  of  a  Ford  sized  there  will  be  no  admission 
automobile,'*  Senior  Day  Publicity  |  charge  to  the  affair. 
Chairman  Lou  Rosenstock  said 
yesterday. 


Comet  Is  Visible  Here, 
Says  Planetarium  Head 

A  comet,  discovered  in  the  heav- 
ens just  last  year,  can  be  seen  with  i  Clarke   Jones 


News  Deadline 

The  deadline  for  news  articles 
from  campus  organizations  will  be 
4  p.m.  from  now  on.  according  to 
Daily   Tar  Heel   Managing   Editor 


Contrary       to      announcements 
earlier,  however,  there  will  be  no 
In  response     to     numerous     de-  i  faculty-senior   contests   in   the    af- 
mands  made  by  seniors  yesterday  \  ternoon,    the    Publicity    Chairman 


Emerson    Field    by    1   p.m.,    when  i  that  they  know  what  type  of  car  j  said. 
Theta  Chi  Craig  Horsman  is  en-    the  show  will  start.  the    winner    would    receive,    Ro^■- 

Tickets   for    tJie    show    may    bej  enstock  has  presented  a  1957  Ford       -"^  s«'<J  «"'y  «"«  of  any  attend 

j  ing  couple  need    to    be    a  senior, 
other !  Tickets  for  the  automobile  draw- 


purchased  ftM*  50  cents  each  from 
any  Exchange  Club  member  or 
from  Dr.  Vine's.  Door  prizes  and 
a  transistor  radio  will  be  given 
away  at  the  show. 


for  senior  approval. 

He  went  on     to     review 
events     of     the     evening     which '  ing  will  be  given  out  at  the  sen- 
would   include     a     beer     baseball  1  ior  meeting   in   Memorial   Hall   at 
1  game;    Uie    awarding    of    special;  10    a.m.    Wednesday.        . 


the  naked  eye  just  after  sunset. 
Anthony  F.  Jenzano,  Morehead 
Planetarium  manager,  said  Thurs- 
day. 

The  comet,  the  Arend-Roland 
Comet,  will  continue  to  be  visible 
under  favorable  conditions  for 
about  a  month.  It  will  l)egin  to 
disappear  the  latter  part  of  May. 
he  said. 

It  can  be  seen  by  facing  the 
northwest  juo«t  after  sunset  and 
looking  just  above  the  horizon.  It 
appears  almost  stationary,  he  said, 
aiid  has  a  tail  that  is  "quite  ^n''"t 
and  wide."' 


News  articles  submitted  after 
this  time  will  be  held  over  an 
extra  day.  he  said,  unless  they 
absolutely  have  to  be  published 
immediately. 


INFIRMARY  LIST 


Misses  Mary  Goodwin,  SuMn 
Donald,  Alice  Johnson,  June 
Craft,  Ann*  Llewellyn,  Helen 
Williams  and  Mrs.  Shirley  Weisii; 
and  Jean  Pierre  BeissauH,  Ed> 
ward  Madden,  Eveene  Felten, 
Theodore  WoMbrwck,  Grever 
Brown,  Eugen*  S^ke  and 
Thomas  Hall. 


#A6t  TWO 


THE   DAILY  TAR  M6EL 


PRiDAV,  A^RIL  U,  ]H7 


Portentous  Shadows  Of 
Apathetic  Demonstration 

Poor   Rt'spnnsf  Clauses   Rt'treat      ;iii(l     p<).ssil)lc    complete    anniliila- 
Postponenient"  lion. 


A  sjnall  but  exceedinsilv  oinin- 
ous  aiul  trai;>i(  headline  in  The 
Dailv    Far   fieel. 

The  student  g<)\ernnient  lead- 
ership trainin.o  letieat  piainied 
tor  this  weekend  at  (lamp  Monroe 
near  Laininl)ing  affords  an  ex( el- 
lent  And  sf  Idoiu-ofiered  oppor- 
tiniitv  for  eonsolidation  of  forces 
lot  the  (ontino  year,  and  an  excel- 
lent op|)ortunitv  lo)-  orient;rtion 
ot  tile  neuly  elected  student  go\" 
ernnient   officials. 

\  c't  ominous  and  discouraging 
shadows  are  cast  upon  the  i9,')7".")'*^ 
academic  year's  governmental  ho- 
rizon due  to  a  generaj  lack  of  in- 
terest and  entluisiasm. 

Stiiflent  goNfrument  offered  the 
necessary  trans|)ortation  to  this 
conclaxe.  btit  disintetested  and 
apathetic  student  officials  doomed 
the   cfnudcation    to    posifKniement 


(iovernment,  throughout  the 
world,  the  nation,  ttre  campus  is 
onlv  as  strong  as  is  t!ic  interest  a«d 
enthusiasm  of  those  in\olved  make 


It. 


And  this  initial  display  looks 
threateningly   pcxienKJUS. 

To  former  student  fx)dy  Presi- 
dent Bob  Young.  A\ho  promulgat- 
ed the  retreat  proposal,  this  must 
assinedlv  seent  a  discoinaging  re- 
buff. 

To  other  planners  of  this  re- 
treat which  would  provide  an  un- 
deniaf)le  and  golden  opportiniity 
lor  intercom se  and  exchange  of 
ideas  and  j>lairs,  this  is  a  f)low  l)e- 
lou-  the  nudriff.  But  we  ask  that 
vou  iecfouf)le  yom  efforts  fc^r  org- 
ani/ation  atid  participation  lather 
than  allow  this  admirable  project 
to  chop. 

Sucfj  apatlietic  response  is  a  def- 
inite cause  for  pessimism,  but  not 
h)r  defeatism. 


Laurels  And  Congrats 
For  Academic  Excellence 


f  he  Daily  lar  Heel  olleis  its 
most  lieartv  congratulations  to  /e- 
la  Beta  Tan  Fraternity  and  Delta 
Delta  Delta  'Soioritv  for  demon- 
strated  excellence   in   academics. 

Delta  Delta  Delta  took  top  po- 
sition in  the  scliolastic-  race  with 
an  average  of  2.sj(>2.  Zeta  Beta 
Fan  registerei^  the  adn>iral)le  av- 
erage of  2.-,3flJU"to  take  top  honors 
am<»ng   fraternities. 

Willi  i.oo  or  an  ■A"  being  the 
epitome  of  perfection  in  academ- 
i4  >.  the  overall  average  of  these 
two  grouj)s  is  both  laudable  and 
I  ommcnd.ible. 


Fo   Uu>se  cvnics  who  arf)iirarily 

ittiverNiiv      a      "party 

scfiolarship      is 


lal>e1      the 
scfKM>r"      wliereui 


ing  evidence  to   the  contrary. 

Special  congiatulations  should 
be  accorded  /.eta  Beta  Tau  for 
consistant  academic  excellence. 
Fhe  fiaternity  has  walked  off  with 
Ktp  scholastic  honois  among  fra- 
ternities for  nine  of  the  last  12 
semesters. 

Such  achievement  is  to  be  high- 
Iv   lameled. 

.\  tip  of  the  tvpevviiter.  also,  to 
the  second-place  fratertiitv.  Sigma 
.\u.  and  the  second  high  soroiitv. 
Alpha   Delta  Pi. 

"Fo  those  fraternities  and  soior- 
iiies  which  failed  to  register  higli- 
Iv  on  tlie  acadeniit  scale,  tlic  ac- 
complishments     ol       the      winning 


sirfKirdinared  to  ir  com  in  t«rf  srt(f»l — 'grmrp^  slrmrfrfhr  added  incentive 
wftirl.   this   s/iodid   afford   convine-       toward   greater   endeavor   tliroiigh- 

out   the   presetit   setnester. 


The  Daily  Tar+leel 

The  official  student  publication  of  tho 
Publications  Board  of  the  University  of 
North  Carolina,  where  it  is  published 
daily  except  Monday  and  examination 
and  vacation  periods  and  summer  ternus. 
Entered  as  second  class  matter  in  the 
post  office  in  Chapel  Hill.  N.  C.  under 
the  .\ct  of  March  8.  1870.  Subscription 
rates:  mailed.  $4  per  year.  $2.50  a  semes- 
ter: delivered  S6  a  year.  S3. 50  a  semes- 
ter. 


Editor 

NEIL  BASS 

\ 

Managing  Editor    . 

CLARKE  JONES 

.Associate  Editor   . 

NANCY  HJU. 

Sports  Editor 

BILL  KING 

Nov; J  Editor 

WALT  SCHRU^fTEK 

Business  Manager 

JOHN  C.  WHITAKER 

Advertising  Manager 

.     FRED  KATZIN 

NEWS  STAFF— Graham  Snyder,  Edith 
MacKinnon,  Pringle  Pipkin,  Bob  High, 
Ben  Taylor.  H.  Joost  Polak,  Patsy 
Miller,  Waliy  Kuralt.  Bill  King,,  Cur- 
tis Crotty.  Sue  Atchison. 


EDIT  STAFF— Whit  Whitfield,.  Anthony 
Wolff.  Stan  Shaw,  Woodv  Sears. 


BUSINESS  STAFF— John  Minter,  Mari- 
an :iobeck,  Jane  Patten,  Johnny 
Whitakfer. 


SPORTS  STAFF:  Dave  Wible,  Stu  Bird, 
Ed  Rowland.  Jim  Crownover,  Ron 
Milligan. 


Subscription  Manager Dale  Staley 


Crculation  Manager 


Charlie  Holt 


Staff  Photographers  ..  Woody  Sears, 

Norman  Kantor,  Bill  King. 


librarians    Sue  Gichner,  Marilyn  Strum 


Night  News  Editor Bob  High 

Ni«ht  Editor Mauley  Spring* 


In  this  age  of  emj)hasi/ed  ath- 
letics and  extra-c  inric  idar  whirls, 
such  academic  excellence'  is  a  re- 
freshing  and   comforting  c  hai>ge.   * 

We  lamel  these  outstanding 
groups  and  hojje  their  demon- 
strated scholastic  supremacy  will 
afford  an  inspirational  illumina- 
tion for  the  jjaths  of  similar  org- 
anizations. 


A  Tip  Of  The 
Typewriter 

.\  tip  of  the  editorial  derby  to 
Delta  Delta  Delt.i  .Sorority  and 
/.eta    Ucta    Fan    Fraternitv. 


Fhe  Fri-Deltas  took  the  top  spot 
in  the  race  for  high  academic  hon- 
ors with  an  average  01  2.;vi(i2.  Per- 
fect f)eing  an  " .\"  or  1.00.  the  so- 
rority's overall  average  is  mcjst 
lauclaf)le. 

High  honors  among  fraternities 
went  to  the  Z.Ii.T.'s  with  an  aver- 
age of  ''.-y'yoi'}.  Vhv  group  has  taken 
top  honors  among  fraternities  for 
six  of  the  past  eight  semesters.  For 
such  distinction,  The  Daily  Tar 
Heel  offers  its  cojnmendation  and 
most   heartv  congratulatioirs. 

To  those  cynics  who  label  us 
the  "lir/H-'W'ashed  (ieneraiion,"" 
Ave  offer  this  as  prooof  that  an  ar- 
bitrarily designated  "party  sdiool" 
may  excel  1  in  academic  etideavors 
also. 

Sigma  Nil  Fiaternity  with  an 
average  of  LJ.HiO'^  is  to  be  con- 
gratulated also  for  their  close  sec- 
ond. Second  place  honors  among 
sororities  laudably  went  to  Alpha 
Delta  Pi  Sorority. 

In  this  age  of  emphasized  ath- 
letics and  extia-curi*icidar  whirls, 
such  bright  spots  of  academic  ex- 
cellence are  refreshing  and  com- 
forting. 

Most  hearty  congratulations. 


Spring,  Mores 
And  Valleys 
Of  Shadow 

Neil  Bass 

The  sun  shone  perpendicular 
to  the  earth's  axis;  'day  and 
night  were  equal  the  world  over: 
it  was  the  vernal  equinox;  Chap- 
el Hill  donned  the  luxuriant  robe 
of  spring.  ' 

Politicians  buzzed  around 
Graham  Memorial  like  bees  at 
a  hive,  coeds  burst  forth  in 
shiny  cotton  skirts;  the  sap  rose 
in  vegetable  and  animal; 
thoughts  piroutted  around  loung- 
ing in  the  sun.  vegetating  and 
rusticating  at  Hogans  Lake: 
academics  were  crowded  from 
minds. 

All  this  in  Chapel  Hill  over- 
looking an  ancient  Triassic  Basin. 

All  this  in  Chapel  Hill- 
around  which  the  state's  cul- 
tural blood  circulates  bringing 
renewed  life  to  sectional  organs 
fron  Fraying  Pan  Shoals  to  Cling 
man's   Dome. 

*  *  • 

The  University  has  made  tre- 
mendous strides  since  first  stu- 
dent Hinton  James  made  the  long 
trek  from  Wilmington  to  Chapel 
Hill  in  the  twilight  of  the  Eigh- 
teenth Century— 1795.  since  Old 
East,  the  first  building  con- 
structed on  a  state  university 
campus,   was  completed   in   1793. 

It  has  borne  witness  to  high, 
progressive  peaks  and  low  val- 
leys of  shadow  since  that  initial 
enrollment  of  one. 

Examples  of  progressive  peak** 
are  development  of  the  Coker 
Arboretum  naturalistic  garden 
through  the  hearty  endeavor  of 
W.  C.  Coker  in  the  early  1900's 
— Dr.  Coker  converted  a  swampy, 
unsightly  area  to  a  bountiful  gar- 
cfen  with  assistance,  at  one 
point,  of  only  one  laborer — and 
completion  of  the  Wilson  Libra- 
ry in  1929  with  original  space 
for  over  450.000  volumes. 

Examples  of  valleys  of  shadow 
in  the  University's  long  and  * 
eventful  history  include  the 
massive  drop  in  enrollmer\t  dur- 
ing the  Civil  War  years  from 
1861-65 — it  was  also  during  this 
period  that  General  Sherman 
boasted  of  his  well-educated 
horses  quartered  in  the  Univers- 
ity Li'brary  —  and  the  current 
threatened  drop  in  enrollment  if 
out-of-state  tuition  is  hiked  again 
for  the  second     time     in     three 

years. 

«  *  • 

We  are  all  proud  of  the  long 
tradition  of  which  the  Universi- 
ty may  boast— from  the  initial  en- 
deavors of  Rep.  Sam  McCorkle 
who  fought  for  implementation 
of  Article  41  of  the  state  Con- 
stitution in  the  1770's  and  80s 
to  the  present  culminated  6.000- 
plus  enrollment.      , 

We  are  also  proud  of  that  Art. 
41  which  asserts; 

•A  school  or  schools -shall  be 
established   by   the   leglature. .  . . 
to  instruct  at  low  prices." 
*  *  » 

Now  a  long  tradition  is  threat- 
ened due  primarily  to  the  short 
sightedness  of  an  apparently 
provincial-minded  legislator  who 
wants  an.  in  effect,  exclusion  act 
passed  by  the  General  Assembly. 
«  *  >» 

Already  an  intellectual  migra- 
tion of  professors     is     departing 

• 

L'il  Abn«r 


"Man,  Listen  To  That  Beat' 


4»i«^T  -me  w^*H#<a<-r,»*>  ' 


From  The  Cornell  Daily  Sun: 


Pelvic   Contortionist   Or   Ludwig; 
Trend  Toward  Howling  Or  Scowling? 


It  seems  something  of  a 
shame  that  the  well-known  group, 
variously  defined  as  the  "college 
(or  is  that  "silent"?)  genera- 
tion." 'youthful  set."  and  ivy- 
ists."  never  really  got  around  to 
appreciating  the  stupendous 
capacities  of  that  well-known 
performer,  variously  defined  as 
"disrupting."  'dreamy"  and  "dis- 
turbing. " 

No.  we  do  not  refer  to  Jasha 
Heifitz.  Arturo  Toscanini  or  Fan- 
dibaldini  Caracinetti.  We  refer, 
with  all  due  humility,  to  Elivs 
Pi'esley. 

Here  is  a  .  .  .  well,  "'man"  ...  . 
who  has  gained  the  money  and 
admiration  of  thousands,  who  has 
set  whole  new  patterns  in  such 
important  sociological  areas  as 
dress,  guitars,  and  hair  styles. 
And  yet.   through   it  all,  he   has 


from  the  University  due  to  too- 
low  salaries.  Now  the  Ross  Bill 
to  hike  non-Tar  Heel  tuition  $200 
imminently  thrt-atens  to  cut  off 
a  valuable  source  of  additional 
faculty  and  outstanding  .students. 
*  «  • 

Again  the  University  enters  a 
valley  of  shadow  from  which  on- 
ly alert  and  liberal-minded  leg- 
islators may  rescue  it  by  immed- 
iately killing  the  Ross  Bill.  The 
right  of  freedom  of  ingress  must 
be  as.serted.  -  •- 


never    captured    the    real,    deep- 
down     frenzy     of     the     College 

Youth. 

*  *  *       ♦ 

It  comes  as  little  surprise, 
therefore,  to  note  that  a  few  of 
the  more  socially-conscious  citi- 
zens of  Now  Haven.  Conn. — 
that's  where  Dartmouth  is — have 
started  a  campaign  which  seems 
to  us  to  have  a  great  future:  an 
"I  Like  Ludwig"  campaign. 
These  noteworthy  citizens  have 
founded  a  National  "I  Like  Lud- 
wig" Club,  they  have  sent  out  lit- 
tle buttons  which  let  the  wear- 
er proclaim  his  devotion  for  this 
Ludwig.  and  they  claim  that  they 
have  10.000  ^herents.  "Identify 
yourself  with  civilization."  they 
say.  "Join  the  swing  to  Ludwig." 
(Ludwig  was  a  Swing  man?) 

We  had.  of  cour.se,  predicted 
this  movement  all  along,  but  we 
had  envisioned  it  a  little  differ- 
ently. We  know  it  would  come, 
but  we  thought  that  it  would  be 
a  Trend  to  To.scanini.  or  a  Move 
to  Mozart,  or  a  Swing  to  Stradi- 
varius.  But  the  important  part 
is  not  precisely  who  is  featured 
in  the  reaction,  but  that  the  re- 
action exists. 

One  thing  puzzles  us  a  little, 
however.  Just  who  is  this  Lud- 
wig fellow.  The  Club  doesn't 
say  at  any  point,  their  face  on 
the  button  is  completely  indis- 
tinguishable. (In  fact  th*  por- 
trait   on    the    button,    though    it 


.•shows  a  man  in  something  like 
18th  century  dress,  has  a  face 
that  outdoes  Presley:  scowling, 
.sexy  and  sneering.)  Try  as  we 
might,  we  have  not  yet  been  able 
to  comprehend  who  this 'fellow 
really  is. 

We  remember  in  history  learn- 
ing about  some  Ludwig  Smith 
and  a  Miss  P.  Hontus.  and  there 
was  some  German  reactionary, 
Martin  Ludwig.  but  we  don't  see 
what  those  two  figures  have  to 
do  with  this  new  movement. 
There  was  also  a  young  French- 
man named  Jaques  Lud  who  was 
a  famous  17th  century  wig  manu- 
facturer, but  even  his  connection 
is   dubious. 

Our  anguish  at,  not  knowing 
the  identity  of  this  figure  is 
even  greater  because  we  tend 
to  favor  new  stars  on  the  musical 
scene.  Not  that  we  repudiate  this 
Mr,  Presley — not  that.  But  just 
that  we  like  to  see  new  person- 
alities, coming  performers  and 
able   musicians. 

And  so  we  would  ask  all  of 
you  who  are  erudite  and  brill- 
iant, perhaps  those  who  frequent 
the  Music  Room  to  solve  this 
plight.  Who — yea.  what-^is  Lud- 
w-ig?  And  lest  anyone  think  this 
a  thankless  task,  we  have  a  good- 
sized  button,  with  a  pleasantly 
scowling  face  and  three  cryptic 
words,  "I  Like  Ludwig,"  for  the 
lucky  person  who  can  help  us 
out. 


-TH'DAIDLIEST  DUELLIST  IN  ALL  PARIS, 
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rO&DiCK  WILL  BE  KILT  IF  MES  STOOPID 
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Prom  Intercollegiate  Press: 

Controversial: 
Time   Division 


The  faculty  at  Knox  College  has  adopted  a  pro- 
posal of  the  college  executive  committee  to  return 
tc  the  semester  o-ystem.  Knox  has  operated  sticcess 
fully  on  both  the  semester  and  the  qaarter  system 
The  quarter  system  was  adopted  by  the  college  dur- 
ing the  wnr  to  enable  men  to  accelerate  their  edu- 
cation program. 

TTie  following  informatkm,  taken  'from  a  com- 
plete and  objective  repl»-t  prepared  by  Dr.  Bum- 
stead,  chairman  of  the  psychology  department,  was 
issued  to  the  faculty  to  etjpedite  deliberation  on 
the  topic: 

Claimed  Advantages  of  Quarter  System: 

V 

Administrative  — 

1.  Presentj  the  possil)ility  K'>f  students  entering 
Knox  at  three  different  times  each  year. 

2.  Expenses  of  student  can  be  handled  is  three 
rather  than  two  installments. 

3.  Provides  neat  and  even  spacing  for  three  ma- 
jor theatre  productions  per  year.  If  four  were  at- 
tempted under  the  semesfer  system,  the  program 
of  student  laboratory  productions  would  be  limited. 

Academic  — 

1.  With  three  quarters,  and  the  possibility  of 
offering  a  course  as  3,  4,  or  5  hours,  a  department 
has  nine  different  ways  of  offering  a  course.  A 
comparable  figure  for  the  semester  system  would 
be  six. 

2.  The  possibility  of  offering  courses  more  fre- 
quently makeis  it  ea»*ier  for  a  student  to  make  up 
deficiencies;  the  quarter  system  also  permits  a 
change  in  a  sttident's  vocational  plans  to  be  reflect- 
ed more  rapidly  in  his  enrollment. 
,  3.  The  student  can  enroll  in  as  many  as  60  dif- 
ferent courses  during' his  college  career. 

4.  Christmas  and  spring  vacations  come  as  na- 
tural breaks  at  the  end  of  a  school  unit;  end  of 
quarter  examinations  automatically  eliminate  the 
pre-vacation  absenteeism  of  the  semester  system. 

5.  The  tendency  under  the  quarter  system  to  com- 
press work  into  a  shorter  time  places  great  re 
spoa«flbility  on  the  student  to  plan,  organize  and 
carry  out  his  own  woA. 

Claimed  Disadvantages  of  Quarter  System; 

Administrative  — 

1.  Since  the  quarter  system  is  used  in  the  minor- 
ity of  American  colleges,  students  transferring  to 
or  from  Knox  with  less  than  a  full  year's  credit  in 
a  course  tend  to  loi-e  credit.  Most  academic  records 
are  kept  in  semester-hour  units. 

2.  During  March  many  companies  want  to  aeui 
representatives  to  the  campus  to  interview  students. 
For  two  weeks  of  this  month  job  placement  service 
must  cease  because  of  winter  quarter  final  mm 
and  ^^riog  vacation. 

3.  On  transcripts  from  most  other  colleges,  there 
is  the  necessity  of  translating  from  semester  hour> 
to   quarter  hours. 

Academic  — 

1.  Most  textbooks  are  planned  for  a  semester 
course. 

2.  If  a  student  la'  temporarily  disabled  he  misses 
a  greater  proportion  of  class  meetings  of  each 
course. 

Claimed  Advantages  of  Semester  System: 
Administrative  — 

1.  Facilitates  entrance  to  and  transfer  to  Kjios. 
since  end  of  first  semester  coincides  approximately 
with  end  of  term  of  high  schools  and  raosi  otheT 
colleges  and  universities. 

2.  There  would  he  two  periods  of  enrollment, 
billing  and  collection  of  fees  instead  of  three. 

3.  The  administration  of  the  inter-coUegiate 
athletic  program  would  be  simplified  and  made 
more  effective. 

Academic  — 

1.    Most    textbooks    are    planned    for    semester 
course. 
•    2.    The    longer    time    of   the    semester   provides 
better  "pacing"  and  a  longer  period    in  which  to 
a^imilate  material. 

Claimed  Disadvantages  of  Semester  System. 

Administrative  — 

1.  We  are  now  on  the  quarter  system.  A  clijiuge 
to  the  semester  system  would  occasion  much  extra 
work  for  faculty  and  administration  and  an  esiend 
ed   period  of  confusion  and  adjustment. 

2.  There  seems  U  !be  strox^  student  feeiiniis 
favoring  the  quarter  gystetn. 

Academic — 

1.  Christmas  atid  spring  vacatioa*  came  as  arti- 
ficial breaks;  the  after-Christmas  period  tends  t  ■ 
become  a  review  period  during  wkicb  litUe  or  do 
new  work  is  done.  There  is  a  problem  of  abse.tee- 
ism  juftt  before  and  after  vacations. 

2.  With  two  semesters  and  the  possibUity  of  of 
fenng  a  cour..-^  as  3,4,  or  5  hours,  a  department  hu. 
only  SIX  different  ways  of  offeriaj  a  course  lA 
comparable  figure  for  the  quarter  system  would  Br 
nine.) 


Rameses   IV 

The  secrecy  surrounding  operations  of  the  camp- 
us stores  is  reminiscient  of  another  brand  of  closed 
action  which  eventually  erupted  in  a  congressional 
investigation.  Shades  of  Dave  Beck?? 

It  is  indeed  admirable  that  Umversity  pnrfessors 
have  spoken  up  on  Rep.  L.  R  Ross's  infamous  biU 
to  hike  out-of-state  tuiition.  Is  it  possiWe  that  leg- 
islators can  completely  diiregard  that  plans  «C  stu- 
dents and  the  warnings  of  faculty? 

The  "B"  average  recorded  by  the  top  fraternity 
in  the  scholastic  race  is  assuredly  a  relniff  for  those 
cynics  who  label  the  University  a  "puty  school' 
with  lighteninf-f ast  rapidity. 


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THE  DAILY  TAR  ttC|t 


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AFROTC  Award  Winners 

Pictured  above  are  the  cadets  who  received  awards  given  by  the  Air  Force  ROTC  unit  here.  Front 
row  left  to  right:  Eric  Jacobsen,  Kenneth  Callendor,  Thomas  Farrell.  Douglas  Kelly  and  Michael  Smith. 
Standing  left  to  right:  Memory  H.  Elmore,  Don  C. Strickland,  James  H.  Howey,  Bill  Ratledge,  Jose  Stunti 
and  Darwin  L.  Bell. 

ROTC  Awards  Presented 


SAYS  WINSIOW: 


Fourth  BA  School  Goal      Covering  The  University  Campus 
Is  Education  For  Adults 


OfilEMTAflOM   COMMITTEE  School   of  Dentistry   has   been   ap- 

The    Campus    Orientation    Com-  j  pointed  section  chairman  of  opera- 


PHILADELPHIA,  Pa.  —  A  UNC  j  plight  of  business  school  deans 
Business  Administration  professor  wondering  what  to  do  about  add- 
said  Thursday  adult  education,  es-  j  ing  to  the  present  goals— ^)usiness 
pecially  adult  education  for  buai- !  education  for  undergraduates,  for 
aessmen,  is  a  two-way  benefit  and  j  graduates  and  research. 

Winslow  said  the  fourth  goal  — 
education    for    business    men 


is  the  fourth  great  goal  of  a  busi- 
ness school. 
Professor  Rex  S.  Winslow  ol  the 


mittee  will  meet  today  from  2-6 
p.m.  in  the  Woodhouse  Conference 
Room  of  Graham  Memorial.  Com- 
mittee Chairman  Jerry  Oppen- 
heimer  said  interviewi»  will  be  con- 
ducted for  men  who  have  appHed 
for  the  1957  counselor  program. 
•  Tliose  who  are  to   be  interviewed 


annual  meeting  o^  the  N.  (".  Aca- 
demy of  Science  at  Wake  ForMt. 


short     courses,    clinics,    executive 


have  been  notified,  he  said. 


sented  to  Midshipman  Lt.  Walter 
E.  Barbee,  senior  math  major  from 
Durham.  This  medal  is  awarded 
annually  to  the  Outstanding  mem- 
ber of  the  Naval  ROTC  Precision 
Drill  Team. 

The  Best  Drilled  Company  Tro- 
phy was  presented  to  'C'  Com- 
pany and  received  by  Midshipman 
Lt.  Samuel  F.  Wells  Jr.,  senior  his- 
tory major  from  Reidaville.  This 
award  is  made  annually  to  the  best 
drilled  company  during  the  regu- 
lar annual  spring  drill  competition. 


The  Best  Drilled  Platoon  trophy    P^^^e  of  summer  training 


The  .Air  Force  and  Naval  ROTC 
units  held  a  joint  presentation  of 
awards  ceremony  followed  by  a 
joint  review  and  parade  on  Fetze;- 
Field  here  at  12  noon. 

The  joint  review  was  scheduled 
a^'  a  climax  to  the  year's  drill  ac- 
tivities and  to  honor  the  recipients 
of  unit  awards. 
GODFREY 

Dr.  James  L.  Godfrey,  professor 
of  English  history  and  chairman 
of  the  faculty  represented  Chan- 
cellor Robert  B.  House  in  receiv- 
ing the  review  'and  in  presenting 
the  following  awards: 

The  Professor  of  Navl  Science 
Award,  was  presented  to  Mid^ip- 
man  Capt.  Gordon  B.  Hall  Jr..  sen- 
ior math  major,  from  Evanilon, '  Concord.  This  award  is  made  an- 
111.  This  award  is  made  annually  nually  to  the  best  drilled  platoon 
to  the  midshipman  who  has  con- 1  during  the  regular  annual  drill 
tributed  most  to  the  welfare  of  the  !  competition. 

unit  in  the  current  academic  year.  ^  ^a»#ai    ....t-^.^..^^ 
•Pi.^  CAO  «<•      4  m.  J  ,  NAVAL  INSTITUTE 

The  SAR  Mmuteman  Medal  was  ,      ,,.       .         ... 

}      The    two    Naval    Institute    Pro- 
ceedings awards  were  presented  to 
I  Mid.>*iipman    Lt.    Commander    Me- 
bane   M.   Pritchett,   senior   English 
major,   from   Lenoir   and    to    Mid- 
Hodges   Jr., 


Raleigh.  A  two  year  subscription 
to  the  Marine  Corps  Gazette  is 
awirded  annually  by  the  Marine 
Corps  Institute  to  the  most  out 
standing  graduating  Marine  can- 
didate in  his  class. 

CONVAIR  AWARD 

T^e  Convair  Award  was  present- 
ed to  Mid-vhipman  Leo  C.  Wardrup 
Jr.,  junior  English  major,  from 
Middlesboro.  Ky.  This  award  i>; 
made  annually  to  the  outstanding 
junior  taking  part  in  the  aviation 


was  presented  to  the  3rd  Platoon 
of  Company  "C"  and  received  by 
Midshipman  Ensign  Larry  R.  Wil- 
liams, senior  English  major  from 


presented  to  Midshipman  Com- 
mander James  K.  Brydnt  Jr.,  sen- j 
ior  English  major,  from  Elkin.  This  ; 
medal  is  awarded- annually  by  the  i 

North  Carolina  chapter  of  the  Sons  i   .  ,    ,. 

^,  ..      .  r.       1  ..•       XL    ishipman    Luther    H. 

of  the  American  Revolution  to  the  i       T      _         -  .  .       , 

midshipman  ^o  has  demonstrat- 1^"^  Economics  major  from  Ra- 

ed  the   most   out.^anding  qualities ',  ""^^^  year -subscriptions  to  Naval 

of     leadership,     soldierly     bearing  jj^^^.^^^^  p^^^^^^ 

and  military  excellence  during  the 


academic  year. 
DRILL   TEAM 
The  Drill  Team  Medal  was  pre- 


For  Only  $695.97 

Complete  You  Can 

Attend  The  6th 

WORLD 

YOUTH    FESTIVAL 
In 

MOSCOW 

July  28th  to  August  11,  1957 
for  further  information:  U.  S. 
Youth  Festival  Committoe  Box 
5793,  Main  Post  Office  Chicago, 
Illinois. 


ings  are  awarded 
i  annually  to  the  Regular  and  Con- 
i  tract  Seniors  who  have  demonstrat- 
I  ed  exceptional  interest  in  profcs- 
i  sional,  literary  and  scientific  know- 
ledge of  the  Navy. 
j  The  Gazette  Award  was  present- 
j  ed  Midshipman  Capt.  James  J. 
!  Bynum,  senior  English  major  from 


The  Navigation  Award  was  pre- 
sented to  Midshipman  Joel  A 
Snow,  junior  physics  major,  from 
St.  Peterstuirg,  Fla.  This  medal  is 
awarded  annually  to  the  2nd  class 
midshipman  attaining  the  highest 
average  in  Navigation  during  the 
current  academic  year. 

The  Supply  Corps  Award  was 
IM-e.sentcd  to  Midshipman  William 
G.  Jones,  junior  industrial  rela- 
tions major,  from  Louisville,  Ky. 
This  medal  is  awarded  annually  to 
the  2nd  class  midshipman  attain- 
ing the  highest  average  in  Supply 
Science  during  the  current  aca- 
demic year. 

MARINE    AWARD 

The  Marine  Corps  Award  was 
presented  to  Mid.vhipman  Stanley 
G.  Cook,  junior  English  major 
from  Pinehurst.  This  medal  is 
awarded  annually  to  the  midship- 
man who  has  attained  the  highest 
average  in  Marine  Science  during 
the  junior  year. 


University  Press  in  September. 
In  "A  Rare   Pattern"  Mrs.   Rus- 
The  Ordnance  and  Gunnery  Award  j  sell  describes   the   post-Civil    War 
was  presented  to  Midshipman  Ted  j  days  in  Chapel  Hill. 
Rogers,  sophomore,  Irom  Waynes- 1     The  mother  of  retired  UNC  Pro- 


CLASSIFIEDS 


ville.  This  medal  is  awarded  an- 
nually to  the  3rd  class  midshipman 
attaining   the    highest    average    in 


WANTED.       COLLEGE      MEN, 
part-time  and  summer.  Earn  $50  1  ^^val  Ordnance  and  Gunnery 


to  $100  per  week  plus  $100-8300 
scholarship  award.  Must  have 
use  of  car.  Contact  W.  P.  Cran- 
ford.  Box  1708,  Raleigh,  N.  C. 


j  WANTED:  RIDE  TO  ASHEVILLE. 
1     N.   C.   Saturday   afternoon.  Con- 
tact S.  Merrick,  8-9009. 


CAR  FOR  SALE:  '49  FORD.  GOOD 
condition.'  Contact  Giles  Gaca, 
238  Cobb  Dorm. 


DAILY    CROSSWORD 


ACROSS 

1.  Twining 

stem 
k.  Boast 
t.  More  painful 
10.  Canters 

12.  Cite 

13.  Beginning 

14.  Receptacles 
for  coffee 

15.  Wheel   tooth 
le  Girr* 

nickname 
17  Like 

18.  Male  cat 

19.  Lubricate 

20.  Give. 

K  Unti  island 
24.  Blunders 

i  slang ) 
26.  A  stitch 
28.  Standards  of 

perfection 

51.  Often 
(poet  ) 

52.  Onf -ai^t 
card 

33  BxcUma- 

Uoo 
34.  From 
39..Meaaure  ot 

length 

(fcgypt) 
3*.  A  lady 
38  Apporti00«<! 

40.  Talkeia 
irrationally 

41.  Breathe 
noisily  in 
slcap     > 

42  Images 

43  Specks 

44  Fleked 

DOWN. 
1  Paris  ateck 

cxchaiife 
2.  A  matal 


3.  Snares 

4.  Before 

5.  Flower 

6  Of  great 
length 

7.  Goddess  of 
harvests 
(It  ) 

8.  Beetle 

».  Nestling  of 
a  pigeon 

11  Steps  over 
a  fence 

15.  Stubborn 
hair  lock 

18  Pull 

19  Mountain 
(Thessaly) 


aascj  aaaa 

iir2L:]ailL3E    idCa 


21.  In- 
jec- 
tion 

22  Apex 

23.  Anger 

25  Com- 
mune 
(Ncth 

26.  Comes 
in- 
to 

view  Yr*lrr4lay't  Aniwrr 

27.  Diapleaae         37.  Shake- 


29.  Deplore 

30.  Molts 

32  Assistants 

35.  Saucy 

36  Fish   ( Eur. ) 


speare  s 

river 
39  Also 
40.  Vem  of 

a  leaf 


The  John  Bishop  Marksmanship 
award  was  presented  to  Midship- 
man Faustin  E.  Wirkus  Jr.,  sopho- 
more from  Baltimore.  Md.  This 
medal  is  awarded  annually  to  the 
sophomore  attaining  the  highest 
scores  in  rifle  markamanship. 

MARKSA^NSHIP 

The  Rifle  Marksmanship  Award 
also  was  presented  to  Midshipman 
Wirkus.  This  trophy  is  awarded 
annually  to  the  midshipman  at- 
taining the  highest  average  score 
with  a  rifle  during  the  current 
academic  year.  / 

The  Best  Ail-Round  Freshman 
award  was  presented  to  Midship- 
man Hugh  C.  Elmbry  from  Fred- 
ricksburg,  Va.  This  medal  is  award- 
ed annually  to  the  freshmen  con- 
sideted  to  possess  to  the  highest 
degree  the  qualities  necessary  in  a 
Naval  Officer. 

The  Catter  Award  was  present- 
ed to  Midshipman  Clifton  B.  Met- 
calf,  sophomore  from  Brevard. 
This  medal  is  awarded  annually  to 
the  midshipman  contributing  most 
to  the  unit  newspaper. 


"Members  of  the  University 
faculty  who  participate  can  find 
the  experience  rewarddng,"  .said 
Winslow.  'In  addition  to  financial 
renumeration.  adult  education  af- 
fords a  tremendous  professional 
challenge.  A  real  contribution  by 
the  faculty  man  to  the  experience 
of  the  businessman  will  be  reward- 
ed  with  immediate  an%  sincere 
gratitude." 

Ofi  the  other  hand,  added  Wins- 
low,  "there  is  little  tolerance  for 
sloppy  and  ineffectual  work." 
'NEW   SPARKLE' 

Both    the    faculty    member   and 
the  businessman  gains,  he  said.  "It 
gives     to   'the    faculty     member's 
teaching  a  new  sparkle  and  vitali- 
ty" 
More  than  that,  and  most  pleas- 
Durham,    Dr.    Jack   Noffsinger    of  j  ing,  is  the  attitude  of  the  business- 
Gainesville,  Fla.  and  Rev.  Sam  Hill 
Jr.   of   Duke  Divinity    School  will 
give  these  talks  falling  under  the 
theme  of  the  convention,  "Our  Wit- 
ness to  the  Campus." 

Local  students  leaving  today  for 
the  conference  include.  Miss  Janet 
Harper,  newly-elected  BSU  presi- 
dent; Bud  Stalnaker,  outgoing  lo- 
cal president;  Bob  Hudson,  Ned 
jilliam,  Ivey  Heath,  Jimmy  Scott, 
Clifton  Mann,  Miss  Beverly  See- 
%ee.  Miss  Anita  Whitener,  Mel- 
•in  Hipps,  and  Oscar  Bolch. 

Also  included  are:  Jerry  Mc- 
3aniel,  Miss  Frances  McKnight, 
Ronald  Purdy,  Ronald  Young, 
Jack  Jourdan,  Pat  Leonard,  Danny 
.\llen.  Boib  Noel.  Miss  Jackie  Haith- 
cock.  Bob  Browning,  Danny  Lotz, 
Denton  Lotz.  Willis  Whitehead. 
Frd  Smith,  John  Dale.  Wyck  Hof- 

;ler.  Misses  Betsy  Lyon,  Ann  Ell ij,-.  '  l^mily^  Wednesday  night. 
hYances  Plyler,  and  Noah  Lindsey.  "Jerry  Jones  was  made  lieuten- 
ant commander;  James  Edgar 
Moore,  treasurer;  Pete  Brake,  re- 
I  corder;  Ed  Jennings,  marshall; 
j  Charles  Bolton  and  George  Holden. 
intramural  managers,  and  Clem 
!  Davis,  hous^  manager. 

Fred  Burrell  was  elected  alumni 
'  contact   officer   and   editor  of   the 
news   letter;    Jim    Talley    and    Jim 
'  Grumpier,     social     chairmen;     Jim 
'  Kinuey  and   Lyie  Grumpier;  Ashe 
Mrs.    Russell's    work.    "A    Rare ;  Exum,     IFC     representative,     and 
Pattern,"  will  be  published  by  the   John  Crawford,  German  Club  rep- 
resentative. 

Byran  Latham  was  made  the 
University  Cfub  representative; 
Dave  Davis,  chaplain;  Charles  Mad- 
drey,  reporter  and  historan;  Har- 
ry Schoen.  scholarship  chairman; 
Dick  Hayes,  song  chairman;  Jim 
Little,  s-sntincl;  and  Harry  Scott 
and  Jim  Grumpier,  steering  com- 
mittee members. 


BA     School     Bureau     of    Business  j  programs,  work.vhops  and  the  like  j '**^'5*^  ^^^"^ 
Services    used    the'  phrase    "The  ^— poses  a  new  opportunity 
Great   Migraine"    to   describe   the ' 

BSU  Members 
Will  Leave 
forMeetTodpy 

Baptist  students,  totaling  31, 
will  leave  today  for  the  stateividc 
Baptist  Student  Leadership  Con- 
ference at  Sanford. 

These  students,  members  of  the 
Chapel  Hill  Baptist  Student  Union, 
will  take  part  in  the  three-day  con- 
ference designed  to  train  newly- 
elected  officers  for  their  various 
positions'. 

There  will  also  be  three  main 
addresses.    Rev.    Warren    Carr    of 


man.  Besides  returning  year  after 
year,  his  attitude  and  his  concept 
of  business  "are  apt  to  undergo 
a  subtle  and  gradual  but  profound 
changg,"  said  Wina-low. 

'His  interest  may  gradually 
shift  from  immediate  dollar  catch- 
ing gimmicks  to  fundamental  ques- 
tions which  have  always  challenged 
educated  men.  Businessmen  have 
been  known  to  shift  their  interest 
from  how  to  collect  overdue  ac- 
counts to  cultural  anthropology," 
said  Winslow. 


Maye  Is  Head 
Of  Sigma  Nu's 

Dave  Maye  was  elected  emmin- 
ent   coirtmander  of  Sigma  Nu  fra- 


Mrs.  Russell  Writing, 
Not  Knitting  After  90 

In  the  old  days,  women  turned 

'to  knitting  when  their  life  span 
reached  nine  decades.  Now  they 
turn  to  writing.  At  lea.st  Mrs.  Lucy 
Phillips  Russell  did,  and  at  96  her 
fir^'t  book  has  been  accepted  for 
publication. 


An  opera  in  the  Polish  language 
will  be  broadcast  for  the  first  time 
tonight  at  8  when  Halka  is  present- 
ed over  WUNC's  Let's  Listen  to 
Opera.  The  performance  of  Halka 
to  be  aired  was  recorded  in  Poz- 
iian,  Poland  by  the  Moniuszko  Phil- 
harmonic Society.  It  was  composed 
by  Stanislaw  Moniuszko. 
WRITING  SCHOLARSHIPS 

New  scholarships  in  television 
writing  have  been  announced  for 
the  coming  year  by  the  Dept.  of 
Radio,  Television  and  Motion  Pic- 
tures, which  will  assist  students  to 
undertake  graduate  work  in  that 
department.  Applicants  have  been 
asked  to  submit  two  original  tele- 
vision plays  to  the  RTVMP  Dept. 
by  Wednesday.  The  winners  will 
be  announced  June  1. 
NEW  POSITION 

Miss  Margaret  Hurlocker  has 
been  appointed  to  the  new  posi- 
tion of  rehabilitation  nurs-e  at  N.  C. 
Memorial  Hospital  here.  In  her 
new  position,  she  will  work  with 
the  physical  and  occupational  ther- 
apists and  social  workers  of  the 
hospital  staff. 
VISIT  HEALTH  BOARD 

The  second  year  dental  hygiene 
students  of  the  School  of  Dentistry 
this  we^  visited  the  Oral  Hygiene 
Division  of  the  State  Board  of 
Health  in  Raleigh.  The  students 
were  accompanied  by  Misses  Al- 
berta M.  Beat,  Eleanor  A.  Forbes 
and  Doris  E.  Griffin,  all  Dentistry 
School  faculty  members. 
NOTED  CHEMIST 

Dr.  Herbert  C.  Brown  of  Purdue 
University,  a  leading  American 
ch«mist,  will  give  a  public  address 
here  tonight  at  8  in  207  Venable 
Hall.  His  talk  will  be  on  "Chemi- 
cal Effects  of  Steric  Strains." 
THREE  COURSES  » 

The  School  of  Denistry  is  com- 
pleting plans  for -three  poat-gradu- 
ate  dental  courses  to  be  offered  in 
July.  AU  three  of  the  courses  will 
be  in  the  field  of  dentistry  for 
children.  Dentists  desiring  addi- 
tional information  on  the  courses 
have  l>een  asked  to  contact  the 
School  of  Dentistry. 
APPOINTED  CHAIRMAN 

Dr.  Roger  E.  Sturdevant  of  the 


tive     dentistry    of    the   American  i  The  annual  Poteat  Award  will  be 


Dental  A^yn.  He  will  preside  over 
this  section  at  the  1958  scientific 
session  in  Dallas,  Texas. 

OR.  WESTBERG 

Dr.  Granger  Westberg  of  the 
University  of  Chicago  will  speak 
here  at  8  p.m.  today  to  the  UNC 
School  of  Medicine  in  the  Clinic 
Auditorirura.  Dr.  Westberg,  a  pro- 
fessor of  religion  and  health  of  the 
medical  and  federated  theological 
faculty,  will  speak  on  "A  Clergy- 
man Reflects  Upon  the  Meaning 
of  nines.;,'."  The  public  has  been 
invited  to  attend. 
GLASS    BLOWERS 

The  Southeastern  Section  of  the  { 
American  Scientific  Glass  Blowers  ! 
Society  was  formally  organized  re- 
cently at  the  ASGS  meeting  here. 
Dan  E.  Sampson,  head  of  the 
Chemistry  Dept.  glass  shop,  was 
elected  chairman.  Other  officers 
are  R.  H.  Aiken  Searle  of  Aiken, 

I  S.   C,   vice   chairman,    and    T.   H. 

j  Henson     of     Durham,     secretary- 

' treasurer. 

I  SEVERAL  PAPERS 

A  number  of  papers  will  be  pre- 
sented May  3  and  4  by  personnel 
of  the  School  of  Medicine  at  the 


presented  to  the  author  or  authors 
preaenting  the  best  paper  in  the 
biochemistry-physiology  section. 
The  award  is  a  citation  and  a  cash 
grant  of  S50. 
WUNC-TV 

Today's  schedule  for  WIj'NC-TV, 
the   University's*  educational   tele- 
vision station,  is  as  follows: 
12:45     Music 

1:00  .Today  on  the  Farm 

1:30    Engineering  Visits 


With  this  ad  and  $L00  Waller 
Studio  will  make  for  you  or  any 
member  of  your  family  one 
8X10    inch    siivertone    portrait. 

Our  regular  $7.50  value. 

Waller  Studio 

343  W.  Main  At  5  Pts. 

Durham,  N.  C. 

Durham's  Only  Down  Town 

Ground  Floor  Studio 


2:00 

Sign  Off 

5:15 

Music 

5:30 

Family  Affair 

6:00 

Magic  Lantern 

6:15 

News  and  Safety 

6:30 

Opera  History 

7:00 

Science  Fair 

7:30 

Making  Music 

8:00 

Air  Age 

8:30 

Prelude 

9:00 

Project  Health 

10:00 

Final  Edition 

10:05 

Sign  Off 

The  New 

JOHN 

STEINBECK 

Novel  Is' Here 

Come  Early  For  A  Rrst 

Edition 

THE   INTIMATE 
BOOKSHOP 

205   East  Franklin  St. 


'Project  Health'  Show  To 
Come  From  Greensboro 

The  "Project  Health"' television 
show,  generally  originating  from 
here,  will  come  from  Greenshoro 
today  at  9  p.m. 

Tlie  hour-long  show  will  he  seen 
over  WUNC-TV,  Channel  4.  The 
program,  on  mental  health,  is  be- 
ing co-sponsored  by  the  UNC 
School  of  Public  Health  and  the 
Gilford  County  Health  Dept.  The 
current  programs  are  seen  every 
other  Friday  night  during  the  aca- 
demic year.  ' 

The  "Project  Health"  series  of 
programs  is  sponsored  by  the  UNG 
i>ivisien  of  HetAtit  Affairs.  The  Di- 
vision is  compo^-ed  of  the  Schools 
of  Public  Health,  Dentistry,  Medi- 
cine, Nursing,  Pharmacy  and  the 
N.C.  Memorial  Hospital. 


fessor  I*hillipa-  Russell,  she  is  the 
daughter  of  Charles  Phillips  and 
the  granddaughter  of  James  Phil- 
lips, who  were  both  professors 
here. 


Free  Flicks 

"Kismet,"  starring  Ann  Blyth 
and  Howard  Keel,  will  be  the  GM 
free  flick  today  and  "The  High 
and  the  Mighty."  starring  John 
Wayne  and  Laraine  Day.  will  be 
the  one  Saturday. 

The  movies  will  be  shown  be- 
ginning at  7:30  and  10  p.m.  both 
nights  in  Carroll  Hall. 


OUR  GIGAN^TIC 

ONE  CENT 


im 


f BIG  DAYS... 

STARTS  MONDAY  APRIL  29  th 


niK<  DSj;  s-:«f 


^oki  UdiMds  %})A'y[ljMMx>\ 


W I  MfSTON  is  !n  a  class  by  itself  for  flavor! 


It's  fun  to  share  a  good  thing!  That's  why  you 
see  so  many  Winstons  Iseing  passed  around  these 
days.  Try  'em.  You'll  like  their  rich,  full  flavor, 
too.  And  yoi^'ll  like  the  way  the  Winston  filter, 


snowy-white  and  pure,  lets  tliat  rich  flavor  come 
through.  Smoke  America's  best-selling,  hest- 
tasting  filter  cigarette!  Find  out  for  yourself: 
Winston  tastes  good  —  like  a  cigarette  should ! 


Smoke  ¥in[liSION... enjoy  the  snow-white  fiHer  in  the  cork-smooth  tip! 


K.  J.  REYNOLDS  TOBACCO  CO.,  WINSTON-ft/U.1 


PA«ll>OU« 


THI  DAILY  TAR  HflL 


FRIDAY,  APRIL  76,  1fS7 


Tar  Heels  Tie  For  First  Place  With  8-2  Win  Over  Deacs 


Deadlock  Blue  Devils; 
Rough  Gets  Number  7 

By  BILL   KING 

The  Carolina  Tar  Heels  moved  into  a  tie  for  first  place  in  The  At- 
lantic Coast  Conference  here  yesterday  as  they  defeated  the  Wake 
Forest  Demon  Deacons,  8-2  in  Emerson  Stadium  before  the  largest 
crowd  of  the  season. 

As  the  temperature  soared,  so  did  the  Tar  Heels  right  into  a  dead- 
lock with  the  Duke  Blue  D«vils  at  the  top  of  the  league  standings. 
Both  clubs  now  have  a  7-2  conference  record.  This  was  the  only  action 
m  the  ACC  yesterday. 

The  Tar  Heels  actually  won  the  ballgame  in  the  third  inning  when 
they  pounded  Wake  Forest  starter,  Jack  McGinley  for  six  runs  and 
four  hits  before  the  Deacon  hurler  was  lifted  in  favor  of  John  Stokoe. 
Stokoc  allowed  two  more  hits  and 
the  final  two  runs  of  the  inning   against  five  defeats   and   it  costs 


for  Carolina.  Both  runs  were  charg- 
ed to  McGinley. 

From  there  out  it  was  smooth 
sailing  for  Carolina  righthander 
Jim  Raugh  who  went  the  distance 
for  his  seventh  win  of  the  season 
against  one  loss.  Raugh  was  never 
in  trouble  except  in  the  fourth 
when  he  was  tagged  for 'the  Deac's 
only  two  tallies. 

The  Tar  Heels  hadn't  gotten  a 
hit  off  .McGinley  going  into  the 
home  third.  Don  Hill  led  off  the 
I  lining  with  a  single  and  this-  start- 
( <1  the  biggest  inning  of  the  season 
for  Carolina.  After  Carson  Oldham 
popped  out.  Bomber  Hill  lined  a 
double  to  leftfield  to  score  Don 
Hill.  Raugh  then  picked  up  an  RBI 
with  a  single  to  left  scoring  The 
Bomber. 


the  Wake  Forest  club  undisputed 
possession  of  fourth  place.  South 
Carolina  also  hold^;  a  5-3  mark, 
thus  moving  into  a  fourth  place 
tie  with  the  Deacs.  McGinley  was 
charged  with  his  third  defeat  with- 
out a  win. 

Carolina's  next  conference  en- 
counter is  with  the  Clemson 
Tigers  at  Clemson  Monday.  The 
Tar  Heels  play  their  final  game 
in  Emerson  Stadium  against  N.C. 
State,  May  11th. 

The  Box: 

i  Wake   Pormtf 

I  Murdock,  c  . 
■  Barnes.  3b  ... 
i  Miller,  rf   4 


UNC  Beats  Duke  In  Final  Doubles 


By  JIM  CROWNOVER 

The  Carolina  tennis  team,  figura- 
tively speaking,  made  their  season 
a  success  here  yesterday  afternoon 
by  defeating  the  Duke  Blue  Devil 
netters,  5-4  on  the  local  courts. 

With  Steve  Bank  and  Geoff 
Black  finally  reaching  the  peak  of 
their  ability,  the  Tar  Heels-  swept 
through  four  of  six  of  the  singles 
matches. 

Bank,  nimiber  1  man,  played  the 
best  tennis  that  he  has  played  all 
season  and  defeated  Lief  Beck  of 
Duke.  7-5,  6-4.  Black,  the  number 
two  Carolina  player,  though  hard- 
pressed,  showed  that  he  is  begin- 
ning to  reach  top  form  as  he  de- 
feated Don  Romhilt,  6-4,  5-7,  7-5. 


In  the  match  of  the  day,  the 
doubles  combo  of  Tom  Mdver  and 
Fritz  Van  Winkle  of  Carolina  won 
a  grculling  two  hour  battle  from 
Bob  Lawrence  and  tlaude  Jack, 
I  3-6,  7-5,  8-6. 

The  long  struggle  saw  the  two 
\  doubled  teams  still  fighting  it  out 
nearly  an  hour  after  all  other  ac- 
■  tion  had  been  completed. 
i     After  this  great  win  over  their 
'  arch    rivals,    the    vastly-improved 
!  UNC  team  takes  it  easy  until  Mon- 
j  day  when  it  journeys  to  Massachu- 
setts to  face  Williams  College.  The 
I  Tar  Heels  were  scheduled  to  face 
Davidson  Saturday  but  the   match 
j  has  been  cancelled. 

CoachftX'^aldimir  Cernik  was  ex- 


McMillan,  If 

PhUlips.  lb 

,  Baker.  2b 

Second  baseman  I>on  Lewis  kept  |  stokoe,  cf-p  _ 

things  rolling  for    the  Tar  Heels !  B.]^iuse' "~ 

with    a    single    to    right    moving  kjooj-p    ^g      _...!_„ 
Raugh   to  third.    With  runners   at ;  McGinley,  p     1  _ 
first  and  third,  Dick  Hudson  singl- 1  Bullard   cf    Zl  "1 
ed  to  bring  Raugh  hom©  with  the  j  A-Guthrie  _U111_  _ 
second  tally.  Catcher  Jim  Legette  Scruggs,  cf  J      l 

then  hit  to  the  pitcher  but  Mc-j     ToTtU  _  ti 

Ginley'o-  attempt  to  cutoff  Hudson! 
at  second  was  wild   and  the  Tar  c«r*lln« 

Heels  had  the  bases  jammed.         i  Lewis,  ss      5 

Joe  Shook  came  through  with  a  j  Hudson,  cf 5 

single  driving  Hudson  across  with  j  Lcgeltc,  c 
the  fourth  run.  Stokoe  then  came  Shook,  If 
on  to  pitch  for  the  Deacs.  He  got 
Rog  Honeycutl  to  ground  out,  but 
Don    Hill    promptly    unloaded    a 
single  to  left  center  driving  in  the 

fifth  and  sixth  runs  for  The  Tar  i  Raugh,  p  

Heels.  I     Totals 

The    Deacs    got    a    glimmer    of  I 
hope  in  the  fourth  inning  with  two  |  A-grounded  out  for  Bullard  in  7th. 
runs  on   three  singles  oU  Baogh.  B-groiinded  out  for  Stokoe  Ia  9th. 
but  the  Tar  Heel  righthander  set- 


Honeycutt,  3b 

D.  Hill,  rf  

Oldham,  2b  _ _  _ 

,1.  Hill,  lb 


tied  down  to  retire  the  aide  and 
Wake  Forest  never  again  threat- 
ened seriously. 

Carolina  added  a  couple  of  in- 
surance runs  in  the  sixth  frame 
against  Stokoe,  who  did  a  fine  job 
in  relief  for  the  Deacs,  striking 
out  seven  Carolina  batters. 


Don  HiU  scored  the  seventh  UNC  i  Shook,  Honeycutt,  D.  Hill  2,  Moore 
run  moving  from  second  on  Bomb-  J  2,  L  Hill.  2B— I.  Hill,  Honeycutt. 
cr  Hill's  triple  to  left,  the  second  3B—L  HiU.  SB— LHill.  DP— Barnes^ 
extra  base  blow  for  the  Carolina' Baker  and  Phillips.   Left  — Wake 

first  Mcker.  Raugh  then  aided  his  I  Forest  8,  Carolina  6.  BB off  Raugh 

own    cause    again    with    another  1 3,  Stokoe  1.  SO— by  Raugh  4,  Sto- 
single  driving  Bomber  home  with  koe  7.  HO— McGinley  (cq)  5  in  2'*j 
the  final  Tar  Heel  tally.  j  Stokoe  5  in  5  2-3.  WP  —  Stokoe 

P'or  the  Deacs,  it  was  loss  num-  PB— Legette.  L— McGinley  (0-3).  T 
ber     five     in     ACC     competition |— 1:58.  U— Joe  Mills  and  Tally. 

Spring  Exam  Schedule 
Is  Released  By  Office 

According  to  the  Central  Office  of  Records,  the  time  A  an  ex- 
amination may  not  be  changed  after  it  has  been  fixed  in  the  schedule. 

No  student  may  be  excused  from  a  scheduled  examination  except 
by  the   University  Infirmary,  in  case  of  illness;   or  by   his  General 
College  faculty  adviser  or  by  his  dean,  in  case  of  any  other  emer- 
gency compelling  his  abdence.  , 
Ail  8:00  a.m.  Classes  on  MWF Wed.,  May  22,  8:30  a.m 


tremely  pleased  with  the  team's 
performance.  He  said,  "Coach 
(Ham)  Strayhorn  and  I  are  very 
pleased,  and  we  realize  that  the 
boys  have  improved  a  great  deal. 
I  have  no  doubts  that  if  we  were 
to  play  Maryland  again,  we  could 
avenge  our  5-4  loss  to  them  and 
j  replace  them  as  conference  lead' 

\cTS." 

I      *     >        The  Summaria*. 

Singles:  Steve  Bank  (C)  defeated 
iLeif  Beck,  7-5,  6-4;  Geoff  Black 
I  iC)  defeated  I>on  Romhilt,  6-4,  5-?, 
j7-5;  Jack  Williams  (D)  defeated 
;  Frank  .  Livingstone,  7-5,  6-4;  Ray 
'  Newsq*e  (C)  defeated  Bob  Law- 
I  ren^-  6-4,  6-3.  Claude  Jack  (D) 
I  delved    Fritz    Van    Winkle,    7-5, 


6-1;  Tom  Mclver  (C)  defeated  Ed 
Rude,  7-5,  6-2. 

Doubles:  Beck  and  Ronhilt  (D) 
defeated  Bank  and  Newsome,  6-3, 
«-4;  Williams  and  Rude  (D)  defeat- 
ed Black  and  Livingstone,  6-2,  6-1; 
Van  Winkle  and  Mclver  (C)  defeat- 
ed Lawrence  and  Jack,  3-6,  7-5,  £-6. 

North-South  Golf 

PINEHURST  (AP)— Hillman  Rob- 
bins,  the  medalist  and  defending 
champion,  rallied  from  a  two 
down,  seven  holes  to  play  situa- 
tion today  for  a  hard-earned  2  up 
North  and  South  amateur  golf 
tournament  quarterfinals  victory 
over  Don  Bisplinghoff  of  Winter 
Park,  Fla. 


Carolina  Trackmen  Run 
In  Penn  Relays  Today 


Gonzales  And  Rosewall  Meet 
In  Tennis  Duel  At  Colisuem 


Pancho  Gonzales  and  Ken  Rose- 
wall bring  their  professional  tennis 
duel  to  Raleigh  April  30  as  the 
highlight  of  Jack  Kramer's  coast- 
to-coast  world  championship  series. 

The  match  will  be  played  in  Rey- 
nolds Coliseum  beginning  at  8 
o'clock.  Also  featured  on  the  pro- 
gram is  a  singles  match  between 
Pancho  Segura  and  Dinny  Pails 
and  a  doubles  match  with  Gonzales 
and  Segura  paired  against  Rose- 
wall  and  Pails. 

Gonzales,  the  lanky,  hard-serv- 
ing professional  king,  recently 
won  his  fourth  straight  pro  title 
by  downing  Segura  in  the  World 
Professional  Tournament.  He  has 
won  Kramer's  tour  twice  in  suc- 
cession. 

A   native  of   Los   Angeles.  Gon-  j 
zales    turned    back    Tony   Trabert 
74-27  last  year  and  won  a  round 
robin     over     Segura     and     Frank 
Sedgman  in  1955. 

Gonzales'  opponent.  Rosewall. 
turned  professional  this  year  af- 
ter dominating  the  amateur  ranka 
for  a  number  of  years.  The  Aus- 
tralian Davis  Cup  star  won  the 
United     States.     Australian     and 


French  singles  titles  and  missed 
out  on  only  one  major  title  — 
the   Wimbledon    singles. 

RosewaU  played  in  eight  Davis; 
Cup  challenge  round  singles  mat- ; 
ches  against  the  United  States ' 
and  won  six.  In  1953  he  won  the 
deciding  Davis  Cup  singles  match . 
for  his  country. 

At  last  count,  Gonzales  led 
Rosewall  37-16  but  the  Aussie, 
gaining  experience  each  day,  won 
five  out  of  the  last  10  matches  to 
start  closing  the  gap. 

Segura,  the  bow-legged,  two- 
handed  swinger,  is  having  little 
trouble  with  Pails,  a  35-year-old 
Australian  who  won  his  country's 
singles  crown  in  1947.  Segura 
copped  the  pro  crown  in  1950  and 
1952  and  has  been  runnerup  four 
times. 

Tickets  for  the  attraction  are 
on  saJe  at  the  Coliseum  Box  Of- 
fice, Kerr  Drugs  in  Cameron  Vil- 
lage and  Womble's  invdowntown 
Raleigh.  Reserved  seats  are  $2., 
with  general  admission  $1.50.  C.ol 
lege  students  will  be  admitted  for 
$1. 


By  DAVE  WIBLE 

Four  members  of  the  Carolina 
track  team  have  made  the  trip 
across  the  Mason-Dixon  line  to  par- 
ticipate in  the  63rd  annual  Penn 
Relays  which  begin?  in  Philadel- 
phia this  afternoon. 

Jim  Beatty,  Dave  Scurlock, 
Everett  Whatley  and  Howard  Kahn 
will  be  going  for  Carolina  honors 
against  a  field  of  3,387  other  track 
men  competing  in  the  relays  carni- 
val. 

Beatty,  holder  of  many  track 
laurals,  will  be  going  for  his  third 
oon.»ecutive  Penn  Relay  two-mile 
championship.  This  event  will  be 
run  today.  Tomorrow  Beatty  will 
join  teammates  Scurlock,  Kahn, 
and  Whatley  in  the  two-mile  re- 
lay. 

Beatty  will  be  favored  to  hang 
on  to  this  crown  and  the  relay 
team  ranks  high  on  the  favorite 
list  in  that  event.  The  team  is 
loaded  with  some  of  the  best  run 
ners  Carolina  has*  ever  seen. 

Joist   last   week,    two    time    All- 


American  Beatty  ran  a  4:06.5  mile 
at  a  Carolina-Maryland  duel  meet 
at  College  Park,  but  he  was  edged 
out  of  first  by  his  old  Terp  rival 
Burr  Grim  who  ran  the  distance 
in  4:06.  This  was  the  best  College 
mile  this  season  and  Beattys  time, 
although  he  did  not  win.  was  the 
best  mile  a  North  Carolinian  has 
ever  mn. 

Scsftrlock  is  proving  to  be  the 
top  middle-distance  man  ever  to 
hit  Carolina.  At  the  same  Caro- 
linla-Maryland  meet  the  striding 
sophomore  finished  the  880  with 
a  new  ACC  record  of  152.3. 

Whatley  and  Kahn  have  both 
been  finishing  close  behind  Beatty 
and  Scurlock  all  season.  Whatley 
ran  a  4:15  mile  at  the  record  rid- 
dling Tar  Hc-el-Terp  meet  making 
him  the  second  best  miler  in  Caro- 
lina history. 


JUST 
RECEIVED 

Those  Fine 
COTTON   BATISTE 
B.D.  DRESS  SHIRTS 

LONG  OR  SHORT  SLEEVE 

POWDER    BLUE    OR   WHITE 

COMPARE  AT  ONLY: 


Carolina 


NOW  PLAYING 

We  are  proud  to  announce  the 
return  engagement  of  "ANAS- 
TASIA"  starring  the  two  great 
Academy  Award  Winners  of 
1956  —  Ingrid  Bergman  and  Yul 
Brynncr  —  as  best  actress  and 
actor  of  the  year. 


SCORE  BY  INNINGS: 

Wake  Forest  000  200  000—2 

North  Carolina        006  002  OOx— 8 

E— Moore  2,  McGinley,  Bullard. 
R— I.  Hill  2,  Lewis,  Raugh,  Hudson, 
D.  Hill,  Shook,  Legette,  McMillan, 
Baker.     RBI— Raugh     2,    Hudson 


Bomber  Hill 

Pictured  above  is  Carolina  first  baseman,  Ivalee  (Bomber)  Hill, 
one  of  the  leading  batters  for  the  Tar  Heels  in  yesterday's  8-2  con- 
ference victory  over  the  Wake  Forest  Deacons.  .     . 

UNC,  State,  Deacs  3rd 
Games  Will  Not  Count 


All  10:00  a.m.  Classes  on  MWF 


—  Wed.,  May  22,  2:00  p.m. 


All  *French,  *German  and  ^Spanish  courses 

numbered  1,  2,  3,  3X  and  4 Tliurs.,  May  23,  8:30  a.m 


All  11:00  am  Classes  on  TTH5  - 

All  10:00  a-m.  Clajtses  on  TTHS  _ 

All  11:00  am.  Classes  on  MWF  . 

All  3:00  pjn.  Classes,  ♦Chem.  21,  *BA  71 

&  72,  and  all  classes  not  otherwise  provided 

for  in  the  schedule 

All  8:00  a.m.  Classes  on  TTHS  „_____ 
All  2:00  p.m.  Classes  on  MWF,  *BA  130 

All  12:00  Noon  Classes  on  MWF 


Thurs.,  May  23.  2:00  p.m. 
„  Fri.,  May  24,  8:30  a.m 


.. FTi.,  May  24,  2:00  p.m. 


Sat,  May  25,  8:30  a.m 

Sat.,  May  25,  2:00  p.m 

Mon.,  May  27,  8:30  a.m. 

Jton.,  May  27,  2:00  p.m 


All  2:00  p.m   Classes  on  TTHS 
*Econ  31,  32.  61  &  70  


All  12:00  Noon  Classes  on  TTHS,  all 
Naval  Science  and  Air  Science  _ 

All  1:00  p.m.  Classes  on  KWF,  *Fol. 


Sci.  41,  «£con,  81 


All  9:00  a-m.  CSasses  on  MWF 

All  9:00  a.m.  Oasses  on  TTHS 

All  Exams  remlthig  in  con£ltct»  from 
Common  Exam  scheduled  above  


Tues.,  May  28,  8:30  a.m. 

Tues.,  May  28,  2:00  p.m. 

_. Wed.,  May  29,  8:30  a.m. 

^-  Wed.,  May  29,  2:00  p.m. 

Thurs.,  May  30,  8:30  a.m. 

Tfauns.,  May  30,  2:00  p.m 


♦In  case  of  any  conflict,  the  regulary  scheduled  exam  will  tike 
precedence  over  the  common  exam  (Common  exams  .are  indidited  by 

an  asterisk.)  ■        -  _„...,., 


GREENSBORO— <AP)— Only  the 
first  home  -  and  -  home  baseball 
games  in  the  Atlantic  Coast  Con- 
ference schedule  will  count  in  the 
championship  standings',  leaving  as 
unofficial  the  third  contests  slated 
between  Wake  Forest,  North  Caro- 
lina and  JJorth  Carolnia  State. 

ACC  Commissioner  Jim  Weaver 
reported  the  decision  of  the  con- 
ference baseball  committee  last 
summer  to  clear  up  the  possible 
problem  that  might  have  arisen  in 
the  tight  baseball  race  which  cur- 
rently has  the  four  North  Carolina 
teams  only  a  half-game  from  each 
other.  Duke  lead?  the  standings. 

These  "third"  games  which  do 
not  count  are  State  at  Wake  Forest 
May   8,   North   Carolina   at   State 

Golfers  Win 

CHARLOTTESVILLE,  Va.— (AP) 
— ^North  Carolina  golfers  won  all 
nine  points  in  the  first  foursome 
here  yesterday  and  went  on  to  de- 
feat Virginia,  15-12,  in  an  Atlantic 
Coast  Conference  match. 

Tuffy  Henderson  of  North  Caro- 
lina was  medalist  with  a  73.  Glenn 
Mitchell  and  Paul  Sackett  of  Vir- 
ginia each  carded  74s. 

The  Cavaliers  won  best  ball  on 
the  last  two  foursomes,  but  the 
matches  went  to  the  Tar  Heels  by 
the  count  of  four  to  two.  Tom 
Langley  and  Gene  Lookabill  dis- 
posed of  their  opponents  easily 
and  won  their  matches  by  the 
score  of  3-0. 


May  9  (moved  from  May  15  and 
North  Carolina  at  Wake  Forest  May 
13. 

The  conference  champion  par- 
ticipates in  the  NCAA  district  play- 
offs at  Gastonia  May  31 — June  3, 
leading  to  the  NCAA  College 
World  Series  in  Omaha,  Neb. 


Mew  Rule  Stops 
Interference 

CINCINNATI  — (AP)— The  major 
leagues  acted  today  to  put  an  end 
to  bas£  runners  deliberately  letting 
a  b^t^d  ball  hit  them  to  prevent 
a  dowble  play. 

Effective  immediately,  both  the 
runner  who  is  hit  by  a  batted  ball 
ana  the  next  succeeding  runner  or 
batter  will  be  declared  out.  In  the 
past,  when  the  runner  let  the  ball 
hit  him,  only  he  was  called  out. 

Warren  C.  Giles,  president  of 
the  National  League,  said  Ameri- 
can League  President  Will  Har- 
ridgc  had  agreed  with  him  that 
the  change  in  regulations  be  made. 

It  will  be  up  to  the  umpires  to 
determine  whether  a  runner  wil- 
fully lets  himself  be  hit. 


Howard  Johnson  Restaurant 


Soccer  Candidates 

All  soccer  candidates  are  urged 
to  see  manager  Lief  Erickson  as 
soon  as  possible  in  order  to  give 
pertinent  information  and  uniform. 
Erickson  is  in  room  5,  Vance. 


Murals  Today 

Tennis:  (4:00)  BVP  vs.  Win- 
ner M«d  Seh-2  vs.  Ruffin;  (5:00) 
Kap   Sig   vs.   Winner    (PiK»    vs. 

Beta). 


jock's 


o 


8.M.o.cy| 

with  his  new  ^       | 

[SONIC- 

Ever  since  Jack  bought  his  new 
Sonic  CAPRI  phonograph  at  the 
local  college  store  -  he's  become 
the  biggest  B  M  O  C  ever.  You 
can  join  him  anc'  be  the  biggest  ever, 
too,  for  you  can  buy  a  CAPRI 
phonograph  for  as  little  as  $19.95. 

This  inooth's  special  is  the  CAPRI 
550  —  a  twin  speaker  high 
fidelity  ponable  with  4-speed 
Webcof  automatic  changer, 
hi-fi  amplifier  in  attraaive    * 
two-tone  Forest  Green.      only  ^59'* 

of  your  locol  dfolt. 
SONIC  INDUSTRIES,  INC.   19  Wllbw  Street,  lynbrocit,  N.  T. 


See   Our  Compile   Line  Of 
.    SONIC  PHONOGRAPHS 

BELK  -  LEGGEH  -  HORTON 


V  in  this  picture  is  the  human  heart. 
It  beats  in  every  single  scene...as  it 
brings  you  one  of  the  most  unusual 
stories  of  love  ever  filmed.. .ever  felt! 


If  you  see  only  one  more  picture 
this  year.,.make  sure  it's  this  one. 


THE  KING  BROTHERS  pr....i 


mw%  ©us 


INTRODUCING 

MICHEL  RAY 
OnemaSc 

fiCHNICOLX>R 


TODAY  AND 
SATURDAY 


WEATHER 

Mostly  fair  Mid  continued  warm 
with  an  axpccttd  high  of  87. 


O.K.C.   Ltbt»ary 

-     Serials   Dept. 

Chapel    Hill,    K.    C. 
8-31-49 

arhc 


aTar  Mtti 


SECRECY 

Th«  aditor  tambatts  it  en  page 


VOL  LVIi,  NO.  173 


Comvlete  {Jf^  Wire  Service 


CHAPEL   HILL,   NORTH  CAROLINA,  SATURDAY,  APRIL  27,   1957 


Officu  iM  Graham  MewurUl 


FOUR  PAGES  TH"  '"•Ui 


SAYS  GORDON  BLACKWELL: 


Closed  Circuit  TV 
Could  Be  Solution 


LOUISVILLE,  Ky.— Closed  cir- 
cuit television  may  be  one  solu- 
tion to  the  problem  of  large 
classes  when  college  students 
••swamp  the  campuses"  in  the  next 
10  years.  Woman's  College  Chan- 
cellor-elect Gordon  Blackwell  said 
here  Friday. 

Blackwell,  who  is  director  of  the 
Institute    for    Research    in    Social 


UOKUON   BLACKWELL 

.  TV  may  be  solution 


Sciences,  was  one  of  the  conclud- 
ing speakers  at  the  Southern  Reg- 
ional Conference  on  Education 
Beyond  High  School. 

New  devices   and   new  methods 
!  of   teaching   are    going   to    be    re- 
quired in  the  future,  he  said.  Ex- 
j  ploration    on    how    closed    circuit 
I  educational   television   can    be   ef- 
fectively   used    to    instruct    large 
classes  must  be  continued,  Black- 
well  said. 

He  said  more  scholarship  aid  for 
students  is  going  to  be  necessary 
to  assure  that  "top  quality  stu- 
dents attend  college"  whether  or 
not  they  are  financially  able  to  do 
so. 
TUITION 

Blackwell  also  deplored  the 
practice  of  raising  tuition  rates 
for  out  of  state  students. 

"Here  we  may  be  drying  up  our 
supply  of  college  teachers."  Many 
of  the  non-resident  students  later 
join  the  faculties  of  universities 
where  they  get  their  graduate  de- 
grees, he  said. 

Blackwell  was  named  Woman's 
College  Chancellor  last  February. 
He  will  assume  his  new  position 
this  summer. 


Is  Awarded 
Art  Scholarshii3 


Academy  of  Art,  Bloomfield  Hills,  j 
Alich..  according  to  the  Art  Dept. ' 
The  $1400  annual  scholarship! 
was  awarded  Brewer  for  advanced  i 
study  in  sculpture  for  the  1957- 1 
58  scholastic  year. 


BY  LAWt  STODENTS'  ASSN.: 

Friday,  Aycock  Feted 
At  Banquet  Yesterday 

Oiit-.-landing  UNC  law  students  of  ,  Friday  night  at  the  annual  spring 
1956-57  were  honored  along  with  banquet  of  the  Law  Students  Asn. 
President  William  C.  Friday  andj  The  Clark  Awards,  which  go  to 
Chancellor-«lect  William  B.  Aycock  the  five  senior  students  with  the 

highest  overall  average,  were  given 
to  Richmond  G.  Bernhardt  Jr.,  Len» 
oir;  James  C.  Fox  and  Spencer  L. 
Blaylock  Jr.,  Greensboro;  J.  Duane 
Gilliam,  Thomasville  and  Jack  T. 
Hamilton,  Smithfield. 

Professor  M.  S.  Breckenridge  pre- 
sented the  awards,  which  are  sets 
James    Brewer,    senior    art   stu- i  "^  ^he  two-volume  work.  "The  Pa- 
dent  in  sculpture,  has  been  award-   P^^s  o     Walter  Clark.     pre.,*nted 
J  .w     T  c  -:..—  o^*v.  Mo™,  I  hy  the  UNC  Press  through  the  gen- 

ed  the  James  Scnpps  Booth  Mem-     '     .^       r  *v     *       i     ^  *u     i„*^ 
•  •  o  u  1      u-    V    *u    n-„„v-««u'  erosity  of  the  family  of  the  late 
onal  Scholarship  .by  the  Cranbrooki^j^.^/^^^^.^^  ^,^^^^^  ^^^^ 

James  Fox  also  won  the  Block 
Improvement  Award,  which  goes 
to  the  senior  who,  in  the  opinion  of 
the  faculty,  has  made  Ihe  ,most  con- 
stant improvement  in  his  academic 

_  ,    ,      ,..  ^.^.     iwork  from  time  oi  enrollment  to 

The   scholarship,    a   competitive  ^^^^  ^^^  ^^  ^.^  ^.^^^  ^^^^^^^ 

one,  was  open  to  any  artist  in  tlie  j.^-  GIFT 

United    States    and    was    awarded       consisting    of    a   $300    gift,    the 

solely  on  the  ment  of  the  artist  s  ^^^^^  ^^.  established  three  years 

^'^  ago  in   memory  of  the  late    Max 

Brewer  began  his  art  study  here  ^^^.^^^  gj^^^  ^^  ^^^  Greensboro 

in  1952.  with  the  exception  of  attorney  Norman  Block,  presented 
two  years  in  the  army.  For  the  ^^e  award  to  Fox. 
last  two  years  he  has  studied  ^  Richmond  Bernhardt  Jr.  also  re- 
sculpture  under  Robert  A.  How- :  ^g^yg^j  a^otj,er  top  honor,  the  Law- 
ard.  assistant  professor  of  Art.  y^j.^.  jj^j^  insurance  Corporation 
Last  year  he  was  appointed,  as- ,  ^ward  of  $100,  for  having  the  high- 
sistant  to  Howard.  |  est   grade   in   the  courses   in    real 

Among  the  art  shows  in  which  property,  future  interest  and  tit- 
Brewer    has    exhibited    his    work  igg. 

are:  North  Carolina  Museum  of  |  Presented  by  Professor  Fred  B. 
Art.  Raleigh;  Isaac  Delgado  Mu-  McCall,  the  award  is  made  in  order 
seum  of  Art,  New  Orleans,  La.  j  to  encourage  diligent  interest  in 
(national  exhibition);  Mint  Mu-ujjg  study  of  real  property  law  and 
scum  of  Art,  Charlotte  and  the  >  gogj,  each  year  to  a  senior.  • 
Person  Hall  Art  Gallery  annual  staff  members  of  "The  North 
student  exhibition.  |  Carolina  Law  Review"  received  cer- 

He  won  several  awards  in  sculp-  j  tificates  from  Leonard  S.  Powers, 

visiting  professor  of  law.  They  in- 
clude Bernhart,  editor  -  in  •  chief 
Hamilton,  associate  editor;  L.  Poin- 
dexter  Watts  Jr.  of  Charlotte,  and 
Ted  G.  West  of  Lenoir,  both  asso- 
ciate editors. 

Blaylock  and  Thomas  P.  Walker 
of  Bostic,  business  managers-;  Ed- 
win T.  Pullen  in,  Henry  W.  Con- 
nelly and  Crews,  all  of  Winston- 
Salem;  Robert  B.  Midgette,  Ra- 
leigh; Hamlin  Wade,  Harriet  Holt 
and   H.   WaHace   Roberts,    all   of 


Playmakers 
To  Present 
'Peer  Gynf 

This  season's  outdoor  production 
^y  the  Carolina  Playmakers  will  be 
a  new  version  of /fbsen's  •Peei 
Gynf",  directed  by  Dramatic  Art 
Professor  Kai  Jurgensen.  at  the 
Forest  Theatre  May  10,  11  and  12 
at  8:30  p.m. 

liie  play  has  been  adapted  t>> 
Jurgensen  from  his  and  Robert 
Schenkkan's  translation.  Special 
nusic  for  this  production  was  writ-  i 
.en  and  directed  by  Joel  Shadabe, 
music  student  from  New  York  City. 
LEAD  ROLE  i* 

Playing  Peer  Gynt  will  he  Ken 
Lowry  of  Troy,  Ohio,  a  L'.VC  senior 
najcring  in  English.  Lowry  has 
•  enl  the  past  two  summers  work- 
ng  in  summer  stock,  and  has  ap- 
peared in  several  Playmakers'  pro- 
luction^. 

Appearing  as  Aasc,  Peer's  moth- 
er, is  Miss  Betty  Jinnette  of  Golds- 
boro.  A  transfer  student  from  Wo- 
man's College  this  year,  she  ha^ 
acted  in  four  of  the  five  Play- 
maker  productions  so  far  this  year. 
Al  Gordon  of  Greensboro  will  ap- 
pear as  the  Button  Moulder.  Gor- 
don Ls  known  locally  for  his  char- 
acterizations in  "Ondine  ".  "A  Mid- 
summer-Night's Dream".  •"Seven- 
teen". 'Blood  Wedding",  "Desire 
Under  the  Elms",  and  other  plays. 
■  He  is  a  performer  in  the  Chero- 
kee symphonic  drama,  •'Unto  The..e 
Hills." 

Solveig,     Peer's  faithful     sweet- 
heart, will  be  played  by  Mrs.  Mar- 
tha Fouse  cf  Chapel  Hill,  who  ap- 
peared in  the  Playmakers'  "Show 
boat "  and   "'Blood  Wedding,"  and 
has  presented  several  voice  recitals,  j 
The  Greenclad   (Anitra)  will   be  I 
Miss  Amanda  Meiggs  of  Moyock.  a 
former   Woman's   College   student, 
who  toured  this  year  in  "•Androcles 
and      the    Lion"      and    danced      in' 
•Brigadoon".  ; 

The  Mountain  King  will  be  acted  | 
by  David  Small  of  Morehead  City, '' 
baritone     in  "Showboat".     "Seven 
teen",   and    '"Brigadoon" 


New  GM  Director 
To  Be  Named  Next 
Week  Says  Magill 


^  Chancellor  House  To  Receive 
Names  By  First  Of  Week 


MISS   SHIRLEY    CARPENTER 

last  year's^liss  Modern  Venus 


!N  SIGMA  CHI  DERRY: 


j      Five    other    entertaining    events' 
I  will  precede  the  Miss  Modern  Ven- 
I  us  contest,  program  officials  have 
i  indicated. 
i      The  derby  will  be  held  in  Kenan 

.,..,,  ^""^   ''""  i  Stadium,  with  a  parade  at  2  p.m. 

in     Androcle.v  and  the  Lion".         I 
OTHERS  i 


Race  To  Flesh  Champ 
Back  To  Defend  Title 

Highlighting  the  13th  annual  Piesh.  Last  year's  -Race  to  the 
Sigma  Chi  Derby  Tuesday  is  the  Flesh  winner.  Miss  Pee  Wee  Bat- 
Miss   Modern    Venus  contest.  I  ften,  will   be   back   to   defend   her 

Jottle. 

Hit  the  Geek  is  to  be  the  third 


6th  Fleet 

NORFOLK,  Va.—(AP)— William 
B.  Franke,  Undersecretary  of  the 
Navy,  said  today  one  reason  the 
6th  Fleet  is  going  to  the  Eastern 
Mediterranean  is  to  be  ready  to 
evacuate  Americans  from  the 
trouble-torn  Jordan  area  if  that 
should  prove  necessary. 

At  a  news  conference,  Franke 
said  the  fleet  is  being  moved  from 
the  Western  Mediterranean  for  two 
reasons:  "Partly  as  a  result  of 
training  exercises"  and  "partly  be- 
cause we  may  have  to  evacuate 
Americans." 


has  been  named  fund  campaign 
chairman  for  the  Nort^  Carolina 
Assn.  for  Mental  Health. 

Announcement  of  McGuire's  ap- 
pointment was  made  Friday  by 
Dr.  Marshall  Fisher  of  Charlotte, 
president  of  the  Assn. , 

During  Mental  Health  Week, 
April  28  to  May  4,  North  Caro- 
He  did  not  mention  what  of-  j  lina,  in  conjunction  with  the  Na- 
ficials  in  Washington  have  private-  tional  Assn.  for  Mental  Health,  is 
ly  described  as  the  main  purpose    attempting  to  mobilize  citizen  in- 


♦  The  Graham  Memorial  Board  of 
Directors  is  slated  to  submit  nom- 
inations to  Director  of  Student  Ac- 
tivities Sam  MaGill  for  the  long- 
sought  GM  Director  by  the  first 
of  next  week,  it  was  announced 
yesterday. 

According  to  MaGill.  the  approv- 
ed  names  will  ultimately  be  sent 
Basketball  Coach  Frank  McGuire  '  ^^•;«"S'^^proper  channel,  to  Chan- 

cellor   Robert    House    who   is    ex- 


McGuire  Made 
Fund  Chairman 
For  NC  Drive 


Others  in  the  cast  arc:  James 
Sechrest  of  Thomasville;  Miss  Mary 
Vann  Finley  of  Marion;  Stan  Shaw 
of  Hamilton,  Ohio;  Gene  Parsons  of 
Chapel  Hill:  Mi.ss  Barbara  Battle 
of  Miami,  Fla.;  Russell  Link  of  Ja- 
macia,  N.  Y. 
Miss  Barbara  Zwahlen  of  Chapel 
\see  I'LAYMAKERS.  Page  3) 


and  the  derby  at  2:30  p.m.  ( 

Nurses,  Stray  Greeks,  Independ- ! 
ent  Women  and  five  sororities  will] 
participate  in  the  rest  of  the  pro- . 
gram.  \ 

The  Sigma  Chi  Derby,  modeled 
after  the  Kentucky  Derby  and 
handled  the  same  way,  features 
the  Grand  National  as  its  first 
event. 
It  is  followed  by  the  Race  to  the 


event. 

The  Secret  fevent,  fourth  on  the 
agenda,   has   been    imported   from  I 
Raleigh   by  tractor-trailer,   accord- ' 
ing  to  Sigma  Chi  spokesmen.  I 


of  the  move — to  make  a  show  of 
force  in  support  of  the  threatened 
government  of  Jordan. 

Southern  War 

TEGUCIGALPA,  Honduras  — 
(AP) — ^Honduras  yesterday  recall- 
ed its  ambassador  to  Nicaragua  and 
made  fresh  charges  that  Nicarag- 
uan  troops  have  invaded  Hon- 
duran  territory. 

The  Honduran  government  said 
the  return  of  Ambassador  Leoni- 
das  Pineda  from  Managua  is  the 
first  step  toward  breaking  diplo- 
matic relations  with  Nicaragua. 

Honduras  sent  air  force  planes 
to  the  disputed  border  area.  It 
also  was  visited  by  some  members 


terest  and  action  in  behalf  of  the 
mentally  ill. 

In  a  statement.  McGuire  said 
"If  there  is  a  mental  health  asso- 
ciation in  your  community,  get  in 
touch  with  it  to  find  out  what  you 
can  do. 


pected  to  make  the  final  appoint- 
ment sometime  during  the  week. 

'  The  GM  Board  of  Directors  has 
been  working  over  a  period  of  two 
semesters  toward  filling  the  direc- 
torship vacancy  which  has  existed 
since  James  Wallace  resigned  the 
post_  last  spring. 

Solution  toward  filling  the  GM 
vacancy  has  been  i^Iow  in  coming 
about,  according  to  MaGill,  because 
of  the  deliberate  consideration  the 
Board  members  have  given  to  var- 
ious candidates.  He  also  cited  th» 
problem  of  transporting  various 
candidates  to  the  university  for  in- 
terviews as  a  drawback  to  filing 
the  post. 


Since  Wallace's  resignation  last 
fail,  Misj  Linda  Mann  has  been 
acting  in  the  capacity  of  GM  Dir- 
ector. She  is  expected  to  leave  the 
position  in  June,  however. 


The   Board   of   Directors   is   e»- 
jiected   to   submit  four   m 
MagUl    by   the   first   of   the   we 


Skits    by    participating    groups  |  °f  the  ruling  military  junta 
will  comprise  the  fifth   event. 
JUDGES 

Judges  of  the  derby  will  be  Jim 
Tatum,    head  .football    coach;    E. 


Battleships  Junked 

LONDON— (AP)— Britain  wrote 
the  end  yesterday    to    a    historic 


Carrington     Smith,    local    theater   chapter  in  the  story  of  the  Royal 
operator;  Joe  Augustine  and  Mrs.   j^avy. 


ture  in  the  Charlotte  showing. 

Brewer,  of  Ashevile.  will  leave 
for  Cranbrook  Academy  in  early 
September. 


Osto  Grants 

A  university  professor  and  his 
wife  have  been  iwarded  scholar- 
ships to  the  University  of  Oslo  for 
the  summer,  according  to  an  an- 
nouncement yesterday. 

Thomas  L.  Gillette,  of  the  Sociol-  .     „    „ 

ogy  Dept..  and  his  wite,  of  Duke  |  ^^ape^^^  "J;!!;^  «nd^  Le^^^^^       Par- _ 
University,  will  leave  June  26  and 
will  return  in  September.  All  ex- 
penses will  be  paid. 

Gillette  will  study  social  science. 
His  wife  plans  to  study  foreign 
languages  and  litarature,  the  an- 
nouncement said. 


GA/fS  SLATE 

Graham  M0mor\»l'%  anly  activi- 
ty for  today  is  Class  Graop,  11 
a.m.  Roland  Farktr  Lounga  N«. 
3  and  Woadfcauaa  Cortfaranca 
Raom. 


ham,  Charlotte  and  Gilliam. 


CERTIFICATE 

Ham  Wade,  who  presided  at  the 
banquet  as  president  of  the  Law 
Student  Assn.,  presented  a  certi- 
ficate signifying  25  years  service' 
on  the  faculty  to  Profess-or  Frank 
W.  Hanft. 

Dean  Henry  Brandis  and  Duane 
Gilliam  made  sho^'t  speeches  honor- 
ing President  Friday  and  Mr.  Ay- 
cock,  both  of  whom  were  graduated 
from  the  School  of  Law  in  1948. 

Jim  Ramsey  of  Roxboro,  presi- 
dent-elect of  the  Assn.,  also  spoke 
J  t»:ie£ly  at  the  banquet 


Sutton,  representatives  of  two 
i  other  local  business  enterprises. 
I  The  Geek,  voted  on  by  all  fra- 
I  ternity  members,  is  Aubrey 
Rolhrock.  member  of  the  golf 
team. 

The  Sigma  Chi  Derby,  now  a 
feature  at  over  one  hundred  Sigma 
Chi  chapters,  began  in  the  early 
30"s  at  the  University  of  Californ- 
ia. It  came  to  UNC  in  1944. 


The  government  announced  plans 
for  a  nuclear  age  navy  with  the 
emphasis  on  small,  fast  ships  in- 
stead of  the  heavy  battleships  and 
cruisers  which  spearheaded  Brit- 
ain's fighting  fleet  in  two  world 
wars. 

Bound  for  the  scrap  heap  are 
four  famed  battleships — the  King 
George  V,  The  Duke  of  York,  the 
Anson  and  the  Howe.  Traditional 


Events   vary  in  different   chap- ,  cruisers  are  to  make  way  for  fast 
ters  from  year  to  year.  figgt  ^geort  vessels  carrying  juid- 

Officials    for    this    year's    derby  ^j  missiles 
are  Sonny  Forbes,  presiding  stew 


"If  your  community  does  not 
have  a  local  mental  health  asso- 
ciation, we  strongly  recommend 
that  you  make  'mental  ilbiess' 
the  subject  of  the  next  meeting 
of  the  organization  to  which  you 
belong  and  that  your  organization 

go   on  record   in   behalf  of  a   fair    Board  members  will  interview  t. 
break    for    the    mentally    ill.    The   final  candidate  under  coasideratio 
mentally    ill    can    come    back — re-    this  weekend, 
covered,    healthy,    normal — if   you 

wUl   help   them."  ,.  ^^*''"  ^^e   Boards   recommenda 

tions  are  submitted  to  MaGill,  he 
McGuire  called  attention  to  a  will  forward  the  names  and  his 
report  of  the  National  Assn.  for  comments  to  Dean  Arnold  Perry 
Mental  Health  which  showed  that  who  will  be  acting  in  lieu  of  the 
for  the  first  time  in  many  years  Dean  of  Student  Affairs.  ' 
there  was  a  definite  slow-down  in  Chancellor  Hou.-a  will  then  re- 
the    rise    of    the    nation's    mental    ceive    the    accumulated    comments 


hospital  population. 

"This  is  heartening  news  in- 
deed," he  declared.  "For  the  past 
30  years,  mental  hospital  rolls 
have    been   climbing   steeply    and 


and  considerations  and  formulate 
his  decision  sometime  in  the  im- 
mediate   future^    .Magill    said. 

When  the  new  GM  director  as- 
sumes his  position,  his  function 
will   entail  supervising   the   main- 


ard.  Brokie  Lipeweaver,  Sonny 
Lacy  and  Bobby  Cowell,  also 
stewards. 


Receives  Cartoonist  Awai;d 

Herbert  L.  'Block — "Herblock" — whose  cartoons  appear  often 
in  this  paper,  celebrates  cartoonwise  his  reception  of  the  National 
Cartoonists  Society's  coveted  Reuben  Award  as  "the  outstanding  car- 
toonist of  the  year  1956."  This  is  the  first  time  the  award,  based  on 
balloting  by  fellow  cartoonists,  has  gone  to  an  editorial  cartoonist. 
The  trophy  was  presented  to  Herblock  Tuesday  at  tha  annual  dinner 
of  tha  Society  ituh»vt  York  City. 


SENIOR  GIFT 
WILL  NOT  BE 
1957  FORD 

Seniors  are  in  a  state  of  perplex- 
ity. They  apparently  have  cars, 
1957  Fords  and  cream-colored  MG's 
on  the  mind — all  in  connection 
with  the  forthcoming  Senior  Day 
Wednesday.  ^ 

As  a  result  of  the  presentation  of 
a  1957  Ford  in  The  Daily  Tar 
Heel  yesterday,  a  good  many  sep 
iors  have  inferred  this  particular 
car  will  be  offered  as  a  prize  Wed- 
nesday night  at  the  Senior  Bar- 
becue, Publicity  Chairman  Lou 
Rosenstock   said   yesterday. 

"On  the  contrary,"  Rosenstock 
said,  "the  car  was  presented  only 
for  approval.  The  selection  com- 
mittee has  remained  quiet  about 
what  car  will  actually  be  awarded, 
saying  only  that  it  will  be  a  Ford." 
Rosenstock  also  said  the  com- 
mittee has  urged-  all  seniors  to 
j  attend  the  gala  senior  barbecue 
i  Wednesday  at  5:30  p.m.  at  the 
I  Patio  to  see  the  pri2e  winning  se- 
I  lecion. 

I  Tickets  for  the  drawing  may 
I  only  be  obtained  at  the  senior 
meeting  Wednesday  morning  at 
I  10  a.m.  in  Memorial  Hall,  he 
I  pointed  out 


109  Years  Of  Duty 

JACKSONVILLE,  Fla.— (API- 
Yesterday  was  Confederate  Mem- 
orial Day  in  Florida.  Georgia,  Mis- 
sissippi  and   Alabama. 

These  two  incidents  were  report- 
ed by  the  Jacksonville  Journal: 
Someone  telephoned  the  news- 
paper to  ask  where  he  could  buy 
a  "big"  Confederate  flag  to  fly 
and  the  Journal  telephoned  Laural 
Hill.  Fla.  to  ask  about  the  health 
of  William  A.  Lundy,  109,  one  ol 
the  three  surviving  Civil  War 
veterans. 

The  telephone  operator  appar- 
ently never  heard  of  him  because 
she  asked  if  he  were  on  active 
'duty. 

It  turned  out  he  doesn't  have  a 
telephone. 

Kinq  Appoints  Toukin 

LONDON— (AP)— King  Huase- 
in's  appointment  of  Suleiman  Tou- 
kan  as  military  governor  of  Jor- 
dan was  seen  by  western  diplomats 
here  last  night  as  a  master  stroke 
in  the  young  monarch's  struggle 
against  Egyptian  domination. 

The  pro-western  Toukan  is  con- 
sidered one  of  the  most  influential 
personalities  on  the  West  Bank 
of  the  River  Jordan. 

It  is  in  this  region  that  Egypt's 
President  Gamal  Abdel  Nasser  is 
making  his  biggest  pitch  for  the 
support  of  Jordan's  Nationalists 
and  Left  Wingers  in  his  dream  to 

(See  WORU)  NEWS,  Page  3) 


steadily,  until  in  1956  they  reach-    tenance  ^f  Graham  Memorial  and 

acting   as    an   advisor   to    the   Ac- 
tivities!,^ Board. 

He  will,  in  effect,  act  a.,  a  con- 
solidating figure  in  th?  GM  pro- 
gram and  a  liason  between  the 
Activities  Board  and  the  program- 
ming ai  outside  events. 


ed  the  staggering  iigure  of  more 
than  750,000.  This  figure  may  have 
little  meaning  until  we  realize 
that  it  exceeds  the  total  of  all  other 
hospitals    conTbineu." 

The  state  president  of  the  Assn. 
for  Mental  Health  also  announced 
today  that  exchange  clubs  through- 
out North  Carolina  have  adopted 
mental  health  as  one  of  their 
major  projects  for  the  coming 
year.  l 


ORIENTATION 

INTERVIEWS 

ANNOUNCED 

The  Campus  Orientation  Com- 
nittee  will  meet  in  the  Woodhouse 
Conference  Room  of  Graham  Mem- 
)rial  to  interview  men  for  the  1957 
counselor  program  at  the  following 
imes:  tomorrow  6-9  p.m.;  Monday 
—2-6  p.m.  and  7-9  p.m. 

Interview.:>>  will  end  Monday  night 
ind  it  will  be  necessary  for  all 
nen  interested  to  complete  their 
nterviews  by  then,  an  announce- 
.nent  said. 

"I  hope  that  the  men  will  be 
ible  to  appear  at  their  scheduled 
imes  but  in  the  event  that  this 
is  impossible  any  of  the  above 
limes  will  be  satisfactory  with  the 
committee,"  said  Jerry  Oppenheim- 
er.    campus   orientation  chairman. 


Planetarium  Easter  Show 
Schedule  To  End  Monday 

"Easter,  the  Awakening."  which 
has  been  .seen  by  more  than  21,000 
persons  at  the  Morehead  Plane- 
tarium here  this  year,  will  end 
Monday  night,  it  was  announced 
FViday  by  Planetarium  Manager 
A.   F.   Jenzano. 

"The  Easter  story  will  not  be 
continued  beyond  its  scheduled 
closing  date."  Jenzano  said,  ex- 
plaining he  believed  the  an- 
nouncement necessary  because  in 
a  number  of  prior  years  the  run 
has  been  extended. 

"There  is  still  ample  time  to 
see  the  colorful  show,"  he  said. 
"because  it  will  be  given  four 
times  on  Saturday  and  Sunday  and 
three   times  on  Monday." 

A  new  demonstration  titled 
"Signals  from  the  Star"  will  open 
at  the   Planetarium   on  Tuesday. 


INFIRAAARY  LIST 


Golfers  Lose,  17-0 

The  University  of  MaryJand's 
golf  team  routed  the*  North  Caro- 
lina Tar  Heels  yesterday  by 
blanking  them  17-0,  UNC  is  de- 
fending champion  in  the  confer- 
ence and  this  was  the  first  con- 
ference loss  of  the  s««son  for  the 
Tar  Haaii. 


Students  in  the  Infirmary  yes- 
terday included: 

Misses  Mary  Goodwin,  Susan 
Donald,  June  Craft,  Sheila  Cran- 
an,  Anna  Llewellyn,  Helen  Wil- 
liams and  Mrs.  Shirley  Weiss: 
and  Jean  Pierre  Boissauit,  Char- 
les Sh#lton,  Edward  Madden, 
Charles  Palmer.  Eugene  Felton, 
Theodore  Wohlbruck,  Willis 
Whitehead,  Ralph  Hawkins,  Dav- 
id Ansail,  and  Thames  Hall. 


•# 


^AOI  TWO 


THE    DAILY    TAR   HEEL 


SATURDAY,  AHIIL  17,  }^i7 


ftATUKI 


University    Shackled 
By   Irrate  Minority? 

The  Daily  Tar  Heel  wonders  that  no  progress  has  been  made  on 
the  construction  of  two  new  haternity  courts  already  planned. 

Apparently  a  few  irrate  local  citizens  who  ostensibly  fear  the  noise 
and  disturbance  w^ich  might  arise  in  their  residential  section,  were  the 
courts  constructed,  are  preventing  further  progress. 

Thus  we  offer  the  tdwn  of  Chapel  Hill  some  advantages  which 
would  ensue  construction  of  a  new  social  and  a  new  professional  fra- 
ternity court. 


(0  General  relief  for  the  con- 
gestion of  traffic  downtown  by  vir- 
tue of  more  off-campus  parking. 
(2)  Additional  source  of  reve- 
nue through  property  taxation  for 
the  town. 


dance  of  confusion  and  noise. 

Naturally  the  residents  have  the 
right  to  speak  up  when  appurten- 
ant property  is  concerned.  But 
they  must  reconcile  themselves  to 
the  fact  that  the  l^niversity  is  pro- 


(^)     An     elimination      of      the      gressing  and  growing  by  leaps  and 
fire  hazard  imposed  through  hous^      bounds. 


ing   in   obselete,   outmoded   frame 
dwellings. 

To  the  l^niversity  proper  we  of- 
fer the  following  advantage: 

(1)  .\dditional  housing  for 
hundreds  of  students  at  no  addi- 
tional cost,  since  such  fraternities 
are  to  pay  for  the  additional  facili- 
ties with  the  University  only  do- 
nating the  land  on  a  99-year  lease 
basis. 


riuis  they  must  not  impede  the 
IhiiversityS  growth,  especially 
when  the  issue  at  stake  would  also 
provide  definite  benefits  to  the 
town  proper. 

There  is  little  question  that  the 
town,  with  its  primary  industry 
being  a  tax-exempt  University, 
could  use  additional   tax  revenue. 


The  Interfraternitv  Council  and 

the    Panhellenic    Council    recently 

With    all    these    advantages,    we      sponsored  a  concert,   the   proceeds 

offer  the  disadvantages  purportedly      of  which    went   partiallv      to     the 

submitted  by  an  irrate  minority  of      Chapel   Hill   Recreation  Center. 

the  residents  off  Pittsboro  Rd.  and 

Mason  Farm  Rd.:  Thus  not  only  would  allowance 

of   the  fraternitv  courts'   construc- 
(0     That    the    additional    fra-      tion  and  subsequent  reveime  from 
ternities  will  •  spoil     the     natural      them  aid  the  general  Chapel  Hill 


beauty  of  the  region  in  question. 

(•>)     That    the    additional    fra- 
ternities  will   ca&se   an   overabun- 


The  Daily  Tar  Heel 

The  official  student  publication  of  the 
Publications  Board  of  the  University  of 
North  Carolina,  where  it  is  published 
daily  except  Monday  and  examination 
and  vacation  periods  and  summer  terms. 
Tntercd  as  second  class  matter  in  the 
lost  office  in  Chapel  Hill.  N.  C.  under 
the  .\ct  of  .March  8.  1870.  Subscription 
rates;  mailed.  $4  per  year.  $2.50  a  semes- 
ter: delivered  $6  a  year,  $3.50  a  semes- 
ter. 


Editor          ,, 

Kvn   RAS.<; 

Managing  Editor  .. 

.  CLARKE  JONES 

Associate  l^ditor  .. 

NANCY  HIU. 

Sports  Ekiitor  _ 

Bnj.  KING 

New*  Editor 

WALT  SCHRUNTEK 

BuMness  Manager 

JOHN  C.  WHITAKER 

Advertising  Manager        FRED  KATZm 


NEWS  STaFF— Graham  Snyder,  Edith 
MacKinnon,  Pringle  Pipkin,  Bob  High, 
Ben  Taylor,  H.  Joost  Polak,  Patsy 
Miller,  Wally  Kuralt,  Bill  King,,  Cur- 
tis Crotty,  Sue  Atchison. 


EDIT  STAFF— Whit  Whitfield,,  Anthony 
Wolff,  Stan  Shaw,  Woody  Sears. 


BUSINESS  STAFF— John  Minter,  Mari- 
an Inbeck,  Jane  Patten,  Johnny 
Wbitaker. 


SPORTS  STAFF:  Dave  Wible,  Stu  Bird, 
Ed  Rowland,  Jim  Crownover,  Ron 
Milligan. 


Subscription  Manager Dale  Staley 

Crciilation  Manager Charlie  Holt 

Staff  Photographers  Woody  Sears, 

Norman  Kantor,  Bill  King. 


Librarians  -  Sue  Gichner,  Marilyn  Strum 


Sight  News  Editor 
Night  Editor 


Bob  High 

Uanley  Springs 


recreational  proop-am;  but  it  woidd 
displav  a  willingness  to  cooperate 
on  a  reciprocal  basis  with  the  stu- 
dent body. 

The  construction  matter  now 
lies  in  the  hands  of  the  University, 
the  town  Board  of  .\ldernien  and 
the  /.onins>  C^ommission. 

One  enuninent  obstacle  does  ap- 
pear uj  impede  construction  on 
the  fraternity  courts: 

That  one  jSfroup  of  citizens  is 
preventing  the  Uni\ersity's  growth 
and  prt),<;ression  due  to  their  own 
personal  whims  and  idiosyncrasies. 

The  I'niversitv  nnist  grow  or 
die.  and  the  minority  group  of  ir- 
rate citizens  should  have  taken 
this  into  tonsideration  before  con- 
strutting  dwellings  appurtenat  to 
I'niversity-owned   land.* 

In  this' instance,  it  is  obvious 
that  ad\antages  far  outweigh  dis- 
adxantages. 

It  is  also  obviously  reactionery 
and  retrogressive  to  attempt  a 
shackling  of  Cniversity  growth. 


Pseudos: 
They   Stink 

Pseudo-intellectualism    and    as- 
.sertion  tor  natural  action. 


There  is  an  apparent  trend 
among  some  University  stiidents 
to  assume  a  cloak  of  pseudo-intel- 
lectualism and  an  effusive  affront- 
ery. 

Some  students  have  the  satlly 
mistaken  idea  that  they  nuist  piove 
themselves  a  staunch  intellectual 
in  every  conversation,  in  every  af- 
fected action. 

They  don't  speak;  they  orate. 
They  don't  act  nomally;  they  as- 
sume affected   mannerisms. 

Their  mannerisms  seem  to  echo: 

"Vm  a  big  Joe  College  now;  I'm 
an  intellectual,  a  real,  live  intel- 
lectual; I'm  great;  if  you  don't  be- 
lieve me  I'll  assume  a  lew  affected 
actions." 

We  believe  that  no  one  ever 
progesses  far  in  these  times  that 
try  men's  souls  without  just  being 
himself. 

In  short,  if  you're  not  a  walking 
Britianica,  a  youthful,  stream-lined 
version  of  the  Bard  or  Al  Eistein. 

don't   attempt   to  appear  so. 

1 

Just  l>e  yom self  without  neces- 
sarily trying  to  impress  every l)ody 
with  every  breath  and  every  ac- 
tion. 

If  you're  a  scrounge,  act  the  p*it. 
If  yourre  not,  don't  act  like  one. 
But  just  act  yourself. 


Wise  And  Otherwise; 

Tuition  Hike; 

Ante-Bellum 

In-Groupism 

Whit  Whitfield 

N 

Rep.  Ross  has  shown  great 
presence  of  mind  in  introducing 
the  infamous  •"Ro.s^  Bill"  to  the 
State  Legislature.  Who  should 
know  better  than  he  that  more 
out-of-state  students  will  not  want 
to  enroll  here  at  Carolina  if  this 
tuition  hike  is  passed? 

This  is  a  good  sign  to  diehard 
southerners.  It  probably  means 
that  seces..-ion  is  next  for  our 
great  state.  Then  mayb^  we  can 
declare  war  on  Virginia  or  South 
Carolina  (or  possibly  both).  We 
need  room  for  expansion  at  any 
rate,  and  we  could  certainly  use 
some  slaves  to  rebuilt  our  planta- 
tion houses  and  rejuvenate  the 
ante-bellum  spirit  of  in-groupism. 


If  such  a  thing  were  to  hap- 
pen we  wouldn't  need  to  woiTv 
about  manufactured  products,  for 
we  could  rebuild  our  cotton  trade 
with  Great  Britain.  If  things 
"worked  out  right  then  North  Car- 
olina could  take  her  rightful 
pilace  among  the  great  nations 
of  the  world. 

Thii-  all  may  sound  a  little  ab- 
surd to  those  who  are  literal- 
minded,  but  in  actuality  it  may 
be  part  of  a  great  master  plan 
to  produce  a  "super  race"  of 
North  Carolinians  and  to  discrim- 
inate against  "out-siders." 

Realistically  speaking,  it  would 
make  little  difference  if  out-of- 
state  tuition  were  increased  again, 
because  those  brilliant  gradiiate 
and  undergraduate  students  from 
out  of  state  could  all  go  eLe- 
where.  Just  because  they  are  lead- 
ers in  scholastics,  athletics,  and 
extra-curriculars  should  be  no 
cause  for  concern,  at  least  no 
more  than  the  legion  of  educa- 
tors who  are  leaving  each  year 
for  places  where  they  are  better 
appreciated. 


The  end  is  obvious,  it  seems  to 
me.  The  means<  are  ridiculou.sly 
low  salaries  for  professors  and  in- 
creased tution  for  out-of-state 
students. 


Rameses  IV 


Is  there  an  administrative  bug 
which  prevents  outstanding  di- 
rectors from  assuming  the  reins 
of  Graham  Memorial?  And  is  Di- 
rector of  Student  Activities  Sam 
Magill  attempting  to  hide  this 
bug  in  order  to  maintain  his  full 
authority? 


Just  why  ,are  some  townspeo- 
ple objecting  to  construction  of 
the  new  fraternity  courts?  Is 
there  a  possibility  that  these 
townspeople's  property  is  en- 
croaching upon  the  University 
property  upon  which  the  courts 
are  slated  to  be  built? 

* 

I'll  Abnar 


Goettingen  letter: 


^Let  Me  Know  When  You  Deeide  Something'^ 


From    Concerts  And  Tours: 


UNC   Men's   Glee   Club   Receives 
Laurels   As   Talented   Tonsils' 


Ben  Taylor 


The  UNC  Meui  Glee  Club  has 
apparently  experienced  one  of  its 
most  successful  years  in  a  long 
time. 

The  numerous  cards  and*  let- 
ters received  by  the  Glee  Club 
since  Sept.  indicate  that  the  well- 
btlanced  choral  group  has  given 
its  audiences  a  new  outlook  on 
fhe  'Carolina  way  of  life." 
•  •  • 

A  check  with  the  club's  public- 
ity office  produced  some  letters 
of  praise  from  organizations  and 
institutions  throughout  Virginia, 
North  and  South  Carolina  who 
have  heard  the  group  during  in 
two  concerts. 

A  letter  from  Stratford  College 
in  Danville,  Va.  related  how  the 
all  -  female  audience  there 
thoroughly  enjoyed  the  concert 
presented  by  the  Glee  Club  on  its 
fall  tour,  bidding  them  to  return 
next  year, 

A  columnist  for  the  Chowan 
Herald  in  Edentota  said,  "Here's 
one  who  thorougnly  enjoyed  the 
program  presented  by  the  UNC 
Men's  Glee  Club."  He  was  com- 


menting on  the  concert  presented 
in  Edcnton  on  the  club's  i-ecent 
sprinj;  tour. 

■k  it  it 

"We  considered  your  appear- 
ance one  of  the  highlights  of  the 
year  at  Chicora,"  stated  H.  L. 
Corder,  Principal  of  Chicora 
.  High  School  in  Charleston,  S.  C. 
The  Glee  Club  presented  its  var- 
ied concert  on  the  lao1  leg  of  its 
annual  spring  tour.  Between  1,- 
000  and  1,200  heard  the  group 
perform  in  the  school's  spacious 
gymnasium. 

Singing  before  a  body  of  over 
one  thousand  students,  teachers, 
and  parents  at  Durham  High 
School  a  few  days  before  Spring 
holidays,  the  Glee  Club  present- 
ed a  replica  of  its  full  spring 
concert  numbers.  A  spokesman 
for  the  high  school  forwarded 
this  comment  to  Director  Dr.  Joel 
Carter: 

"Thank  you  for  bringing  to  our 
school  a  varied  program  which 
pleased  everyone." 

•  •  • 

A  Glee  Club  spokesman  said 
that  such  compliments  have  come 
to  the  club  after  each  engage- 
ment this  year  and  that,  accord- 


ing to  the  spokesman,  "it  indi- 
cates that  we  have  raised  the  pop- 
ularity of  choral  music  here  at 
Carolina  and  have  the  opportua- 
ity  to  further  advance  the  repu- 
tation of  UNC  as  a  good,  well- 
balanced    musical   outlet." 

•  •  • 

The  45-member  group  rehirned 
from  an  extenave  spring  tour 
just  a  few  weeks  ago  in  time  to 
present  a  joint  concert  with  the 
Woman's  College  Chorus  in  pre- 
sentations both  here  at  Hill  Hall 
and   in  Greensboro. 

The  club  is  apparently  still  go- 
ing at  top  speed. 

They  reportedly  have  finished 
the  cutting  of  a  record  of  Caro- 
lina loyalty  songs  and  they  have 
a  concert  planned  in  Raleigh 
soon,  a  banquet  and  commence- 
ment performances  ahead  of 
them. 

•  •  • 

Plans  for  next  year  are  already 
in  the  advanced  stagcsr  and  the 
Glee  Club  plans  to  repeat  its  two 
tours  each  year  while  at  the  same 
time  offering  more  of  its  talents 
to  student  body  here  at  UNC, 
President  Charles  Shoe  stated 
recently. 


By  A!  Capp 


jev. 


!8»iiOia°^m. 


i  WILL  ACCEPT  VOUR 
CHALLENGE,  ARMANO 
LA  SLICE  .'."  , — 


WE  ARE  FRENCHMEN  ff 
MOV?  CAN  WE  EXPECT  HIM 
TO  RtSK  HIS  LIPE  IN  A 
ROMANTIC  DUEL     HE 
WAS  BROUGHT  UP  AS 
AN  A»4EAICAN- 


-A^4D  NOU 
KNOW  MO*/ 
TMryARE- 


WE  ARE  MOT.? 

I'LL  TAKE 
VOU  ON, 
LA  SLICE.":^ 


Pogo 


r-^^%.  ^$-: 


yOuZ  PUAN*  \6  A  U\%'  CONfUtflN' 
>  "WHAT,  FOa  eXAMP^^,  l«  THAT 

-^^-^f  "rhAT,A9AHy 

1/  plAd«^M  O^A 


By  W«lf  Kelly 


I  THOUSHT 
V/A«  PI.ANNIN 
ACANAI* 

hOT^HflN 


"      /ThAT  COUNT  IN 


NOW  WMAT  B46fMii\,P 
PWANtf"HOWAiOUTA      J 


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German   Private 
Social  Affairs 


John  Raper 


.  (University  «tudeot  M\n  R«p«r,  like  Din  South-  ^ 
erUind,  u  currently  on  oxehaofo  with  Oo*ttln««n  ' 
University  in  Germeny.  Here  he  records  his  •*• 
porien«es  «t  a  GeroMn  private  fraternity  party.— 
Editor)  « 

The  Corps  Hannovera,  Prince  Bismark'i-  corps 
auring  his  student  days  at  Goettingen,  invited  me 
recentlj'  to  their  annual  Winter  Ball.  Although  I 
have  attended  several  public  social  functions  in 
Germany,  it  was  the  first  time  I  had  an  opportunity 
to  glimpse  into  the  private  German  social  life. 

On  the  back  of  my  invitation,  when  I  received  it, 
stood  the  entrance  price  for  guests  who  wished  to 
attend  the  ball.  In  German*  student  circles  this  was 
quite  normal;  the  guests  are  expected  to  help  pay 
the  party's  expense  by  paying  an  entrance  fee.  Even 
the  feminine  guests  must  pay!  Unlike  America  the 
girls  must  pay  her  own  way;  the  Germans  feel  a 
coed  has  as  much  money  as  the  male  student  and 
should  do  so. 


To  all  of  it3  mixed  social  functions  a  corps  (one 
of  the  four  types  of  German  fraternities)  asks  two 
groups  of  girls.  In  the  first  group  belong  the  so- 
called  "color  ladies."  Their  fathers  are  Alte  Keren 
(alumni)  of  the  fraternity,  belong  to  that  social  class 
with  a  von  between  their  first  and  family  names 
(their  family  names  normally  are  the  names  of  a 
land  regioiji),  or  are  government  or  university  dig- 
nitaries. These  women  are  protected  under  the  corps' 
"colors"  in  the  same  way  that  a  lady  in  the  days 
ol  chivalry  had  a  knight  to  protect  her  lair  name. 
An  act  of  discourtesy  to  a  girl  of  this  group  \ty  a 
member  would  probably  result  in  his  dismissal  from 
the  corps. 


The  other  group  of  girls  invited  are  those  chosen 
.  for  their  personality,  beauty,  and  charm  without 
t  consideration  being  given  to  how  high  their  family 
standj  on  the  social  lader.  The  girls  of  both  groups 
are  invited  by  the  corporation  (frjaternity)  sa^  a 
whole,  not  by  the  individual  members  according  to 
their  personal  tastes.  Thus  the  girl  is  not  her  es- 
corls  date,  but  partner  for  the  evening.  When  a 
girl  accepts,  she  is  placed  with  one  of  tht  brothers. 
Most  of  the  time  not  well  acquainted,  they  first 
come  together  inside  the  dance,  each  having  paid 
for  his  own  entrance.  If  a  girl  of  the  second  group's 
partner  finds  her  personality  unsuitable  and  lea\ts 
her,  no  one  feels  he  has  done  anything  wrong.  Very 
few  of  the  partners  see  each  other  again;  the  ac- 
quaintanceship of  an  evening  is  so  formal  that  they 
hardly  speak  when  they  see  one  another  again  on 
the  street. 

At  the  Corps  Hannovera's  dance  there  were  about 
150  people.  The  Alte  Herren  from  all  over  (Jermany 
returned  with  their  wives  and  celebrated  with  the 
active  members.  Students  from  other  corps  were 
also  invited. 

The  dance  was  hdd  in  a  small  village  near  Goet- 
tingen. The  Corps  rented  a  bus  to  take  its  members 
and  guests  out  and  back.  We  arrived  at  eight. 

Upon  entering  we  found  our  partners  and  then 
our  table  places.  My  date  was  a  quite  attractive 
Colour  Dame,  a  daughter  of  an  Alter  Herr.  After 
everyone  was  settled,  the  evening  was  begun  with 
a  polonaise.  Alunmi,  tnrothers,  and  guei^  all  joined 
in. 

The  people  danced  or  sat  around  talking  until 
eleven,  when  a  tremendous  table  of  food,  buffet 
style,  was  offered.  The  buffet  lasted  until  four 
in  the  morning.  Everyone  would  eat  as  much  »& 
he  could,  dance  it  down,  and  come  back  for  more. 

The  band  played  a  variety  of  music  from  the  Vi- 
ennese waltz  to  our  own  jazx  (I  often  wonder  iX 
jazz  is  not  more  popular  in  Ekirope  than  in  America, 
especially  as  danc«  music.)  During  the  evening  the 
hosts  and  theii'  partner*  performed  a  five  set  quad- 
rille. As  I  was  a  special  guest,  they  asked  me  to 
dance  with  them,  but  tliank  goodness  I  declined.  The 
quadrille  was  quite  an  intricate  affair — something 
like  a  square  dance  with  a  caller  and  figure,  but 
performed  by  formal  dressed  people  to  music  from 
a  violin  played  under  the  chin,  not  in  the  crook  of 
the  arm.  It  was  exactly  what  I  expected  at  a  (mer- 
man dance.  I  was  disappointed  when  they  did  not 
perform  a  minuet,  but  I  guess  they  do  not  carry 
tradition  back  that  far. 


Following  my  hosts*  customs,  I  addressed  my 
-date  with  the  "Sie"  form,  the  formal,  respectful 
form  of  "you."  Or  if  I  used  her  name,  1  had  to  refer 
to  her  as  "Miss  Donell".  To  have  called  her  by  her 
first  name  would  not  have  been  too  socially  accep- 
table. I  was  expected  to  introduce  mys^  as  "Herr 
Raper"  while  jerking  to  erect  attention,  not  as  "John 
Raper." 

At  five  we  climbed  back  uito  the  bus  and  returned 
to  Goettingen.  The  dance  did  not  disappoint  ay  pre- 
viously formed  idea^  of  what  a  German  social  affair 
should  be  in  all  its  tradition  and  formalitv. 


A     fn| 
luggage, 
service. 

set  will 

winning! 

annual 

cording 

man. 

The 
several 
stores 
test    on  I 
being 
Kill-Cai 
with 
student 

The 
b«"    pre^ 
nKdaliol 
radio  st| 
ors  to 

The  fl 
eludes 
case, 
case. 
$130. 

A  ti 
creamed 
bowl  cc 
the  sih 
at  $175J 

l^c 
at  o^'cr  1 
screen. 

Moth^ 
dividual 
of  re.sifl 
try  bla^ 

Ent 
each  d<j 
ternity 
blanks 
dent  gc 


W.\NTI 
part- 
to  %\i 
schol^ 
use 
ford. 

CAR  \y 
condi 
23* 


Mf57 


te 


ftATUKDAY,  APRIt.  t7,  1957 


THt  DAILY   TAR  HttL 


PASI  THtU 


I 

I 


South- 

his  •■- 

irty.— 


y  corps 

ited  mc 

iugh  I 

ions  in 

}Qrtuniiy 

i\  life. 

tived  it, 
risbed  to 
this  was 
Ihelp  pay 
ie«.  Even 
srica  the 
feel  a 
lent  and 


srps  (one 

I  asks  two 

the  so- 

|te  Ueren 

class 

les  of  a 

ity  dig- 

I  the  corps' 

the  days 

name. 

ip  by  a 

Lssal  from 


s^e  chosen 

without 

ill  family 

>lh  groups 

^nity)  as  a 

ing  to 

>t  her  es- 

When  a 

teothers. 

they  first 

iving  paid 

Ind  group's 

land  leaves 

:oQg.  Vary 

the  ac- 

tkat  Uey 

again  on 


ere  about 
Germany 
d  with  the 
rorps  were 


near  Goet- 
members 
gbt. 

and  then 
■  attractive 
err.  After 
begun  with 
5  all  joined 


Ikint  until 
ood,  buffet 
until  ioar 
•  much  aft 
tor  more. 

cm  the  Vi- 

wonder  if 

in  America, 

evening  tlM; 

vt  set  4ua4'> 

taked  me  to 

eclined.  The 

-something 

figure,  but 

music  from 

the  crook  of 

d  at  a  Gcr- 

Jiey  did  not 

Q  not  carry 


ddrcfised  any 
1.  respectful 
had  to  refer 
her  by  her 
•cjally  aeeef- 
«lf  as  ''Hwr 
not  as  "John 


and  rcturnt^ 
point  ^y  pre- 
n  aocid  s^^ 
mality. 


Television  Set, 
LuggogQ  Pieces 
Among  Gifts 

A  five  piece  s^  of  matched 
luggage,  a  seven  piece  silver  tea 
service,  and  a  portable  television 
set  will  be  awarded  to  the  three 
winning  mothers  in  the  second 
annual  Mcflher's  Day  Contest,  ac- 
cording to  Howard  Yandle,  chair- 
man. 

The  gifts  will  be, on  display  at 
several  Chapel  Hill  and  Carrboro 
stores  until  the  close  of  the  con- 
test on  May  4.  The  contest  is 
being  sponsored  by  the  Chapel 
Hill-Carrboro  Merchants'  Assn., 
with  the  assistance  of  the  UNC 
student  government. 

The  winning  mothers  will  also 
be  presented  with  corsages  and 
medalions.  Interviews  on  a  local 
radio  station  will  give  added  hon- 
ors to  the  three  top  contestants. 

The  five  piece  set  of  luggage  in- 
cludes a  Pullman  case,  weekend 
case,  train  case,  hatbox,  and  party 
case.  This  set  is  valued  at  over 
$130. 

A  teapot,  coffee  pot.  sugar, 
creamer,  kettle,  tray,  and  waste 
bowl  compose  the  seven  pieces  of 
the  silver  tea  service.  It  is  valued 
at  $175. 

The  portable  TV  set  is  valued 
at  over  $100.  The  set  has  a  14-inch 
screen. 

Mothers  will  be  judged  on  in- 
dividual merits.  The  mother's  place 
of  residence  must  be  on  the  en- 
try blank. 

Entry  blanks  have  be^  sent  to 
each  dormitory,  sorority,  and  fra- 
ternity house.  Additional  entry 
blanks  are  available  in  the  stu- 
dent government  oltice. 


Covering  The  University  Campus 


I 


ORIENTATION  COUNSELORS  | 

According  to  Orientation  Coun  i 
selor  Chairman  Jerry  Oppenheim-  i 
er  there  are  still  several  men  who 
filled  out  applications  recently  but 
failed  to  take  the  required  test.  Op- ' 
penheimer  said  tjaose  persons  still 
interested  in  becoming  counselors 
can  make  up  the  test  by  contacting 


/WAY  6 


Will  Be  Here 

IN  10  DAYS 


CLASSIFIEDS 


WANTED:  COLLEGE  MEN, 
part-time  and  summer.  Earn  $50 
to  $100  per  week  plus  $100-$300 
scholarship  award.  Must  have 
use  of  car.  Contact  W.  P.  Cran- 
fwd.  Box  1708,  Raleigh,  N.  C. 


CAR  FOR  SALE:  '49  FORD.  GOOD 
condition.  Contact  Giles  Gaca, 
238  Cobb  Dorm. 


PLAYMAKERS 

(Continued  from   page    1) 

Hill;  Bob  Ketler  of  Wyncote,  Pa.; 
Hiil  Williamson  of  Wilson;  Frank 
Range  of  Chapel  Hill;  Misses  Judith 
and  Joan  Jarman  ot  Durham;  Miss 
Elaine  Beard  of  Chapel  Hill;  and 
Miss  Maria  Hunter  of  Roanoke  Ra- 
pids. 

Dancers  for  the  production  are: 
Ted  Parker  of  Clinton;  Thorn  Stui 
of  Asheville;  Jerry  Young  of  Mar- 
ion; Darwin  Soloman  of  Kerners- 
ville;  Bill  Jones  oi  Indianapolis, 
Ind,;  and  John  Steed  of  Chapel 
Hill; 

Misses  Joan  Van  Sise  of  Hunt- 
ington, N.  Y.;  Bobby  Bounds  and 
Jane  Walker  of  Chapel  Hill;  San- 
dra Thompson  of  Presho,  S.  D.; 
Bami  Bourne  of  Lakewood,  N.  Y.; 
and  Cami  Goodwin  of  Louisville, 
Ky. 

Choreography  is  being  directed 
'oy  Mrs.  Yvonne  Parker  and  Mrs. 
Beth  Okum,  both  of  Chapel  HiU. 
Setting  and  lights  are  by  Tommy 
Rezzuto  of  the  Playmakers'  staff 
and  Lew  Goldstein  of  Baltimore, 
Md. 

Costumes  are  by  the  Playmakers' 
Mrs.  Irene  Rains  and  Miss  June 
Craft,  and  Miss  Nancy  Christ  of 
Newark,  N.  J.,  is  master  electric- 
ian, with  Mrs.  Anne  Fitzgibbon  as 
stage  manager. 


JAILY    CROSSWORD 


ACROSS 

1.  Exhibit 
5.  Reach  acreaa 
§.  Setting 
lOi  Attitudtfw 
ised 

13.  Voided 
•scutcheon 

1^.  Incrusta- 
tion on  teeth 

14.  Cover 

15.  Stormy 
(ver.) 

1«.  Girl'i 

nickname 
17.  Submerged 
It.  EnckMure 

(Scot.) 
It.  A  parasite 

(colloq.) 
21.  A  whirring 

sound 
39.  Jumbled 

type 
St.  Distress 

aicnal 
34.  Pry 
3i.  To  lenf 

(fvr) 
3f.BtuBder 
M.  Greet 

number 
31.  Greek  letter 
arBlbUcel 
mount 
(poss.) 
14.  Goddeav^ttC 
death 
(Norse) 
%  Unkeelcd 
jj^  Speck  of 
ftoating  dust 

37.  Range 

38.  Gnria  white- 
ti.  GOd  of  w«r 
40.  Rive«  (QT-^) 


DOWN 

1 .  To  skimp 

2.  Ck>Btaine<i 

3.  Single  unit 

4.  Pronoun 

5.  Strike,  as 
to  punish 

«.  Harbor 

7.  SUr 

8.  Closer 

9.  Bottoms  of 
shoes 

11.  Pound  in  a 

beauty 

parlor 

(var.) 
13  Prong 
15.  Carry  on 


17.  Cut 
20  Man- 


ager 
of 

mining 
prop- 
erty 
21.  Thin,  a.9 
a  dog 

23.  With, 
out 
<Fr.) 

24.  Fruita 

25.  Errors  with 
corrections 
( print. ) 

26.  Detest 

27.  (Sty  (Eng  ) 


(Ljua   :iia'.i3  an 

3j    J113  a:ju=« 

anajw  aasf3H 


28.  Irritates 
30.  Pairs 

33.  Split 

34.  Cavity 
36.  Insane 
38.  River  (It.) 


him  at  8-1286  or  6031  before  Tues- 
day. 
PROFESSOR  RETURHS 

Dr.  Charles  Henderson  Jr.  of 
the  Dept  of  Classics  has  returned 
from  a  two-day  visit  to  Princeton 
where  he  participated  in  a  plan- 
ning seasion  for  the  American 
Council  of  Learned  Societies'  next 
annual  program.  The  program  will 
be  held  at  the  University  of  In- 
diana in  January  1958,  Dr.  Hender- 
son said,  and  will  feature  discus- 
sion of  20th  century  works  id  art. 
music  and  drama  which  reveal 
Greek  and  Roman  influence. 
VISITING  LIBRARIAN 

William  K.  Lamb,  librarian  of 
the  National  library  of  Canada,  is 
visiting  the  campus  this  week  to 
study  the  collection  of  all  the  pub- 
lic documents  of  the  U.  S.  on  mic- 
rofilm which  is  currently  disnlavod 
in  the  Bureau  of  Pidlte  BecorM 
here. 
OPERA  ON  WMIT 

'The  Barber  of  Seville"  will  be 
heard  at  2:15  p.m.  tomorrow 
through  WMITs  "Let's  Listen  to 
Opera,"  according  to  program  com- 
mentator Norman  Cordon  yester- 
day. The  presentation  will  be  spon- 
sored by  the  UNC  Extension  Di- 
vision. 
PHYSICS  COLLOQUIUM 

The  Joint  Duke-UNC  Physics  Col- 
loquium will  feature  Dr.  Lawrence 
WUets  from  Los  Alamos  Labora- 
tory at  Duke  University  Monday  at 
8  p.m.,  a«^rding  to  jftn  announce- 
ment made  yesterday  The  topic  oi 
Dr.  "Wilets'  speech  will  be  "Neu- 
tron and  Proton  Densities  and  Tty 
tentials  in  Nuclei." 
WRITING  SCHOLARSHIPS 

New  scholarships  in  television 
writing  have  been  announced  for 
the  coming  year  by  the  Dept  of 
Radio,  Television  and  Motion  Pic- 
tures, which  will  assist  students  to 
undertake  graduate  work  in  that 
department.  Applicants  have  been 
asked  to  submit  two  original  tele- 
vision plays  to  the  RTVMP  Dept 
by  Wednesday.  The  winners  will 
be  announced  June  1. 
SEVERAL  PAPERS 

A  number  of  papers  will  be  pre- 
sented May  3  and  4  by  personnel 
of  the  School  of  Medicine  at  the 
annual  meeting  bf  the  N.C.  Acad- 
emy of  Science  at  Wake  Forest. 
The  annual  Poteat  Award  will  be 
presented  to  the  author  or  authors 
presenting  the  best   paper  in  the 


bi<x:hemistry  -  physiology      section. 
The   award    is   a   citation   and   a 
cash  grant  of  $50. 
WUNC-TV 

Today's  schedule  for  WUNC-TV, 
{ the  University's  educational  tele- 
j  vision  station,  is  a^*  follows: 

6:30    Yesterday's  Worlds 
-    7:00    Delinquency 

7:30    The  Elements 

8:00    Art  and  Artists 

8:30    America  Looks  Abroad 

9:00    Sign  Off 
BRUNO'S  COMBO 

Bruno's  Combo  will  play  in  the 
Rendesvous  Room  from  8  to  12 
p.m.  tonight,  according  to  an  an- 
nouncement made  yesterday.  This 
is  the  last  combo  date  scheduled 
by  the  Graham  Memorial  Activi- 
ties Board  this  year.  Bruno's  Ciwn- 
bo,  which  (was  organized  at  the 
beginning  of  the  fall  semester,  has 
played  several  times  for  GMA3 
and  has  had  a  number  of  other 
engagements  on  campus.  Last  fall 
it  was  a  winner  in  the  CaroliB* 
Cavalcade  of  Talent,  a  GMAB-Y 
sponsored  talent  show. 

The  presentation  tonight  is  one 
of  a  series  annually  sponsored  by 
GMAB  to  provide  inexpensive  dat- 
ing entertainment  for  the  campus. 
GMAB  offcials  said. 
GRAIL  NOTICE 

Class  rings  will  be  on  sale  in 
Y-Court  Tuesday  from  9  to  4:36 
p.m.,  according  to  an  announce- 
ment made  yesterday.  A  sales  rep- 
resentative from  the  ring  company 
will  be  on  hand  to  assist  the  Order 
of  the  Grail.  Persons-  desiring  fur- 
ther information  concerning  the 
sale  have  been  asked  to  call  Mac 
Patten  at  the  Zeta  Psi  house. 
COSMOPOLITAN  CLUB 

The  cosmopolitan  Club  will  hold 
its  tannual  spring  supper  picnic 
with  a  group  from  N.  C.  State  at 
the  William  B.  Umstead  State  Park 
tomorrow.  Tickets  are  available  at 
the  Y  office  for  $.50.  Those  who 
wish  to  attend  have  been  request- 
ed to  meet  at  the  Y  Sunday  at 
1:15  p.m. 
PARISH  HOUSE  DEDICATION 

The  United  Congregational 
Christian  Church  Parish  House  at 
211  W.  Cameron  Ave.  will  be  dedi- 
cated on  May  12  at  4  p.m.,  accord- 
ing to  an  announcement  made  yes- 
terday. Rev.  Richard  L.  Jackson, 
formerly  pastor  of  the  church, 
will  present  an  adress  at  the  dedi- 
!  cation  service. 


WORLD  NEWS  \Gray  Will  Be  Women's 

Spring  Fashion  Notes 


U.  S.  Accepts  Plan 


(Continued   from   Page    1) 

spread  Egyptian  influence  through- 
out the  Middle  East. 

Columnist  Dies 

SANTA  MONICA,  Calif.— (AP) 
— ^Dr.  Albert  Edward  Wiggam,  84, 
author,  lecturer  and  newspaper 
columnist,  died  at  his  home  here 
yesterday. 

A  native  of  Austin,  Ind.,  Dr. 
Wiggam  was  a  lecturer  on  the  old 
Chautauqua  Circuit  and  author  of 
the  syndicated  newspaper  column 
"Let's  explore  your  mind." 

His  books  included  "Fruit  of  The 
Family  Tree,"  "New  Decalogue  of 
Science"  and  "Marks  of  The  Edu- 
cated Man."  He  received  a  bache- 
lor of  science,  master's  and  doctor  i 
of  law  degrees  from  Hanover  Col- 
lege, and  his  honorary  degrees  in- 
cluded one  each  from  Colgate  Col- 
lege' and  the  University  of  Ver- 
mont. 


Law  Building  At  Wake  Forest 
Is  Dedicated;  Brandis  Speaks 


Olympic  Lovers  FinaHy 
Leave  Red  Iron  Curtain 

WASHINGTON— ( AP )  —  Secre- 
tary of  State  Dulles  shook  hands 
today  with  the  young  couple  for 
whom  he  played  cupid  across  the 
Iron  curtain — Mr.  and  Mrs.  Har- 
old Connolly. 

"I've  heard  quite  a  lot  about  you 
'folks,'  Dulles  told  them  at  his 
office. 

Connolly,  26,  is  America's  Olym- 
pic hammer  throw  champion.  He 
wooed  and  won  Olga  Fikatova,  Red 
Czechoslovakia's  Olympic  discus 
thrower,  despite  international  dif- 
ficulties. 

They  were  married  March  27  at 
Prague.  In  fact,  they  had  three 
weddings — one  Roman  Catholic, 
one  protestant  and  one  civil — and 
drew  big  pro-American  crowds. 

After  seeing  Dulles,  the  Con- 
nollys went  to  the  Caech  Embassy 
to  pay  their  respects  to  Ambassa- 
dor Karel  Petrzelka. 

Unlike  Dulles,  Petrzelka  re- 
fused to  sec  newsmen  or  allow 
pictures  to  be  taken  at  the  em- 
bassy. He  sent  out  word  that  the 
visit  was  private. 

The  ConnoJlys  met  at  Canberra, 
Australia,  where  they  won  their 
Olympic  medals  last  year. 


By  PEG  HUMPHREY 

It's  'gray  gray"  this  season  ac- 
cording to  the  ladies  in  New  York. 

Gray  dresses,  gray  shoes,  gray 
scarves,  gray  hats  and  so  forth 
abound  in  the  stores  this  spring. 
Second  in  importance  are  beige, 
Newport  navy  and  sun  coral,  often 
seen  as  companion  colors  to  gray. 

Flowered  prints  and  madras 
plaids  flourish  as  the  chief  flavor- 
ing elements  in  summertime  ap- 
parel. Jackets  and  shirts  oi  these 
prints  are  often  used  to  spai^  basic 
dark  sheaths  with  plain  necklines. 
Shirts  are  joined  at  the  waistline 
and  the  throat  is  filled  in  with 
pearls  or  juanty  colored  beads. 


Flowering    printed    pumps    arc 
designed    to   grace   frivolous    feet 
and  come  with  skinnier  than  ever ; 
heels  and    sharply    pointed    toes,  i 
Flowered  attache     cases     for    the 
ladies    are    popular    accents    for 
gray  ensembles.  j 

Good  lines  to  watch  for  this  sea- 1 
son  are  the  blouson  sheath  or  two  ^ 
piece   outfit   with   the   drawstring 
tbp,  slightly  full  skirts  and  shirt 
dresses    which    come   with    either  '• 
full  or  slim  skirts.  i 

Fabric-wise  gentle  flattering 
tj-pes  are  especially  good.  Silks,  { 
knits,    chiffons,    cotton    with    the 


look  of  silk  and  cotton 
are  among  the  favorites. 


dacron 


\    What  a  man  uses  on  his  face 


is  important 


CHOOSE   QUALITY 
SHAVE   WITH 

*■         .  - . .. 


UNITED  NATIONS.  N.Y.— f  AP) 
— The  United  States  today  accept- 
ed Egypt's  new  Suez  Canal  'plan 
on  a  trial  basis  but  six  other  mem- 
bers of  the  U.N.  Security  Cooncil 
said  an  international  agreement  is 
needed. 

Tlie  six  are  Australia.  Britain. 
Colombia,  Cuba,  France  and  Swed- 
en. 

Nationalist  China  and  The  Phil- 
ippines, like  the  United  States, 
expressed  belief  that  Egypt's  plan 
might  prove  satisfactory  in  prac- 
tice. Iraq  and  the  Soviet  Union 
said  it  was  all  right  as  it  stood. 

After  a  full  day  of  debate  coun- 
cil President  Sir  Pierson  Dixon 
of  Britain  summed  up  "the  gen- 
eral feeling  that  the  Egyptian 
declaration  had  referred  to  fur- 
ther negotiations,  possibly  under 
U.  N.  auspices,  but  no  formal  pro- 
posal was  made. 


Rich,  creamy  quality  for 
shaving  comfort  and  skin 
heolth.   New   formula   OW 
Spice    Shaving    Creams    *n 
giant  tubes: 
Brushless  .60    latfier  .65 
Old  Spice  aerosol 
Smooth  Shave  1 .00 


S  H  U  LT  O  N 

NEW   TOtK     •     TQIONTO. 


WINSTON-SALEM  —  (AP)  — 
Wake  Forest  College  formally  de- 
dicated its  law  school  building  here 
Friday. 

More  than  200  Wake  Forest  law 
students  and  alumni,  jurists,  at- 
torney, delegates  from  the  na- 
tion's law  schools  and  visitors  fil- 
led the  Moot  Courtroom  in  the 
three-story  T-shaped  building  as  the 
program  began  at  11  a.m. 

Dean  Albert  J.  Harno  of  the  Uni- 
versity of  Illinois  College  of  Law 
delivered  the  principal  dedication 
address.  He  traced  the  development 
of  legal  education  and  the  law  in 
the  United  .States. 

The  educator  emphasized  that 
law  schools  "occupy  today  a  stra- 
tegic place  in  the  profession.  They 
have  the  responsibility  to  prepare 
the  recruits  for  profession,  not  on- 
ly to  educate  them  in  legal  doctrine 


Commie  Threat 
Reason  For  6th 
Fleet  Sailing? 

UNITED  NATIONS,  N.  Y..  — 
(AP)— The  Soviet  Union  yester- 
day accused  the  United  States  of 
using  what  it  called  a  non-existent 
Communist  threat  as  a  pretext  for 
sending  the  6th  fleet  into  the  East- 
ern Mediterranean. 

The  charge  was  made  by  Soviet 
Delegate  Arkady  A.  Sobolev.  He 
said  "attempts  are  being  made  to 
exercise  vindictive  measures 
against  the  people  of  Jordan  which 
is  refusing  to  accei»t  the  Eisen- 
hower Doctrine  and  join  the  ag- 
gressive Baghdad  Pact." 

Sobolev  brought  up  the  Jordan 
crisis  daring  Security  Council  de- 
bate on  the  Suez  Canal  question. 
He  was  called  to  order  by  the 
council  president,  Sir  Pierson 
Dixon  of  Britain,  but  his  remarks 
brought  replies  Irom  both  the 
United  States  and  Iraq. 

U.  S.  Delegate  Henry  Cabot 
Lodge  called  the  Sobolev  state- 
ment "the  latest  in  an  apparently 
endless  series  of  attacks  on  the 
United  Stated. 


and  practice,  but  to  give  them  in- 
sight into  and  vision  on  their  res- 
ponsibilities to  the  public. 

"The  schools  have  the  further 
responsibility  of  providing  scholar- 
ship for  the  profession  and  through 
scholarship  and  research  constant- 
ly of  preparing  the  path  for  law 
improvement." 

Dean  Harno  traced  what  he  ter- 
med "'evolution  in  the  profession" 
between  the  early  years  of  the 
codonies  and  the  present.  "Gone  are 
the  days'  of  the  resonant  phrases 
of  the  constitutional  lawyer  of  the 
last  century,"  he  declared. 
BRANDIS  WELCOMED 

Dr.  Harold  Trihble,  Wake  Forest 
president,  extenold  a  welcome  to 
the  delegates  and  guests  and  in- 
troduced the  first  speaker,  Dean 
Henry  Brandis  Jr.  of  the  UNC 
School  of  Law. 

Dean  Brandis  Jr.,  representing 
the  law  schools  of  the  state,  con- 
gratulated Wake  Forest  for  the 
Law  Building,  calling  it  "a  tribute 
to  the  high  esteem  in  which  Dean 
Carroll  Weathers  is  held  by  your 
alumni  and  by  the  entire  bar  of 
the  state." 

Dean  Carroll  Weathers  followed 
with  a  message  of  appreciation  to 
those  who  made  the  law  building 
possible. 

Dean  Weathers  also  summed  up 
the  dedication  purpose  by  commit^ 
ting  the  use  of  the  building  te  "the 
maintenance  of  exacting  standards 
of  scholarship.  .  .to  the  improve- 
ment of  legal  education." 


WHAT  IS  A  TALKATiVI  FARM  tOYt 


The  New 

JOHN 
STEINBECK 

Novel  Is  Here 

Come  Early  For  A  First 

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WHAT  IS  A  LEAKY  PENt 


lAKL  HILLH. 
U    OF  MIAMI 


Blotter  Dotter 


WHAT  IS  A  SMART  HFt 


ROICRT  lAtOMiC*. 
U.  or  MINHESOTA 


Bright  Sprite 


WHAT'S  AN  IMPROVED  HANDCUFF? 


mcHAIIO  SULLIVAN. 
U.  OF  CHICACO 


Better  Fetter 


WHAT  DO  HYPOCHONDRUCS  DOt 


NOIL  OOYLC.  JR.. 
PttOVIDEHCC  COLLE«e 


Feign  Pain 


THIS  HOMERE  lives  in  a  Dallas  palace.  He's  got 
oceans  of  oil,  carloads  of  cattle — and  plenty  of 
Luckiest,  too.  But  if  he's  always  begging  for  a 
match  at  hght-up  time,  this  affable  gent  becomes 
a  Vexin'  Texan!  Give  him  credit  for  knowing  his 
brands,  though:  a  Lucky  tastes  like  a  million  bucks 
— two  million,  in  Texas!  That's  because  a  Lucky 
is  all  cigarette  .  .  .  nothing  but  fiDe»  mi|d,  good- 
tasting  tobacco  that's  TOASTED  to  taste  even 
better.  Try  a  Lucky  right  now.  Reckon  you'll  say 
it's  the  best-tasting  cigarette  you  ever  smoked! 


WHAT  IS  A  SAKBCS  WAGONI 


SAM  JOSI  JR    CCLLERt 


TaHCart 


Luckies  Taste  Better 

VJTJI^TOASTED*:  TO  TASTE  BETTER  .  .  .  CLEANER,  FRESHER^  SMOOTHER! 


STUCK  FOR  DOUOHT 

c?.  START  STKKUNGI 
MAKE  <25 

We'll  pay  $25  for  ever>'  Stickler  w«i 
print — and  for  buDclreds  more  Lbat 
never  get  used!  So  start  StickJinc — 
they're  ao  easy  youoajn  think  of  doaena 
in  seconds!  Sticklers  are  simp>  riddin 
witbtwo-word  rfayming  answer*.  Beth 
words  must  have  the  same  number  of 
syllables.  (Don't  do  drawings.)  Send 
'em  all  with  your  name.  addresB, 
college  andclaas  to  Happy-Joe-Lucky, 
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THI  DAILY  TAR  HtlL 


SATURDAY,  APRIL  V.  IW 


KING'S 
ORMER 


By  BILL  KING 

DTH  Sports  Editor 


Carolina-Duke  Rivalry  Fading 


Wliat  has  happened  to  the  tense  rivalry  between  Carolina  and 
Duke? 

This  is  a  question  that  has  been  in  the  back  of  this  writer's  mind 
for  some  time.  In  our  opinion,  tradition  has  been  almost  absorbed  dur- 
ing the  past  few  years. 

Although  stHI  us«d  quitt  fr*qu»ntly.  Hi*  ttrm'  "«rch  rival"  no 
longer  applies  to  the  Tar  H«els  and  Blue  Devils.  There  is  no  lenyer 
that  feeling  of  "if  we  can  beat  Duke  or  vice  versa,  the  season  will  be 
a  success."  This  was  the  prevelant  idea  for  so  many  years,  but  now 
a  contest  between  the  two  schools  has  almost  become  "just  another 
ballgame." 

It  is  exteremely  hard  to  discern  just  what  ha^*  caused  this  obvious 
loss  of  spirit  on  the  part  of  both  schools.  Since  we  have  only  been  here 
for  two  years,  we  do  not  know  whether  or  not  the  rivalry  has  ever 
flourished  as  much  as  it  seemed  from  the  outside. 

We,  lilce  other  local  fans  who  have  observed  sports  in  the  Big 
Four  area  for  some  time,  have  always  had  the  conception  that  when 
the  two  schools  met,  be  it  in  soccer  or  football,  every  man  on  the 
team  was  keyed  up  and  out  to  save  the  honor  of  their  school  by 
"trouncing"  their  opponent.  This  was  the  big  game. 


Upset  In  Relays  Two-Mile  Run 


Stieglltz  Runs  9:01.7; 
Beatty  Has  Same  Time 


By  ED  CORRIGAN 

PHILADELPHIA,  — <AP)—  Lew 
Stieglitz  of  the  University  of  Con- 
necticut up^v't  North  Carolina's 
Jim  Beatty  in  a  speedy  9:07.7  two- 
mile  run  on  sunbake<i  Franklin 
Field  here  yesterday  where  the 
Penn  Relays  are  taking  place. 

This  effort  erased  the  meet  stan- 
dard of  9:09.9  set  last  year  by  Beat- 
ty. The  Carolina  distance  runner 
was  seeking  his  third  consecutive 
title  in  the  event. 

The  race  turned  into  a  hym- 
dinger  that  had  the  5,000  opening 
day  spectators  on  their  feet  for 
the  last  lap.  Stieglitz  and  Beatty 
were  running  shoulder  to  o-houlder, 
each  trying  desperately  to  get  even 
a  half  step  in  front. 


Maybe  Rivalry  Is  Spreading 


Jim  Beatty 

Jim  Beatty,  who  was  upset  yes- 
terday in  his  try  for  third  consec- 
utive two-mile  title  in  Penn  Re- 
lays. 


Elias  Gilbert  ran  a  14  flat  120- 
yard  high  hurdles  to  better  the 
meet  mark  of  14.1  set  by  Duke's 
Joel  Shankle  in  1955.  However,  it 
was  done  in  a  heat  and  Gilbert 
.rUll  could  lose  the  final.  In  fact, 
he  will  be  no  better  than  the  sec- 
ond choice  in  the  final  tomorrow, 
for  he  must  face  Olympic  cham- 
pion Lee  Calhoun  of  North  Caro- 
lina College. 

With  Ronnie  Delany  finishing  all 
by  himself — just  as  he  did  in  the 
same  event  a  year  ago — VillaQova 
scored  an  easy  10:10.7  victory  in 
the  distance  medley. 

This  was  the  only  one  of  the 
eight  major  relays  on  the  open- 
ing day's  program,  and  it  was  a 
foregone  conclusion  that  Villanova 
which  has  high  hopes  of  winning 


Five     strides     from   the     tape,    at  lea.?t  a  couple  more  today,  would 


Stieglitz  moved  ahead  and  with  one 
final   burst,   hit   the    tape   first.   It 
was  so  close  Beatty  also  was  cloc- 
ked in  9:01.7. 


take  it. 

The  Wildcats,  IC4A  and  Nation- 
al  AAU   indoor   champions,   lived 
i  up  to  expectations. 


The' possibility  that  interest  in  sports  haj  declined  over  the: past  few 
years  does  not  seem  valid  to  us.  Attendence.  for  the  most  part  is  still 
good  in  both  quarters. 

The  answer  to  the  quetHon  We  can  only  con  lecture.  In  our  opinion 
the  rivalry  has  slowly  spread.  The  two  schools  no  longer  feel  that 
their  main  purpose  for  d  successful  season  is  to  beat  each  ether. 
There  seems  to  be  a  feeling  that  a  win  over  State  or  Wake  Forest 
i;  just  as  important.  The  rivalry  between  Carolina  and  Duke  has  now 
spread  throughout  the  Big  Four. 

For  the  mo.rt.  part  this  is  good.  Still  we'd  like  to  see  some  of  that 
old  tension  revived.  It  used  to  be  great  to  hear  and  watch  the  capers 
and  conversations  that  took  place  before  a  Carolina-Duke  affair;  now 
there's  only  an  empty  feeling. 

First  NC  Baseball  Game  Televised 

An  interesting  innovation  will  take  place  at  Duke  this  afternoon 
as  WTVD  in  Durham  will  televise  the  Duke  State  baseball  game;  the 
first  time  that  a  collegiate  baseball  game  has  ever  been  televised  in 
North  Carolina. 

The  televising  et  the  game  will  be  under  a  handicap  from  ti>e 
very  start,  since  there  will  be  two  ntaior  league  games  coming  from 
nearby  Channels. 

Continuance  Will  Hvrt  Attendence 

It  is  the  hope  of  this  column  that  this  unprecedented  action  of  tele- 
vising a  Big  Four  baseball  game  will  end  as  quickly  as  it  started. 

It  is  our  firm  belief  that  if  fans  convince  local  stations  that  they 
should  continue  televisiiig  collece  games  in  this  area,  and  there  will 
most  certainly  be  some  talk  of  this.  Big  Four  baseball  will  suffer  a 
devastating  blow. 

The  raincNT  leagues  have  suffered  because  of  television,  the  colleges 
will  be  hurt  even  more.  Attendence  will,  in  all  probability,  hit  an  aU 
time  low    and  there  is  certainly  no  room  for  decline  in  attendence 
It  might  seem  a  bit  ridiculous  at  this  point  to  condemn  something 
that  is  completely  tentative.  But  we  simply  do  not  want  to  see  a  move 
started  to  make  this  a  permanent  thirtg.  It  is  quite  obvious  that  the 
comparatively  small  number  of  fans  and  students  do  go  out  and  sup- 
port their  teams  will  dwindle. 

It  will  be  interesting  to  compare  attendence  at  the  Duke-State  game 
today  with  attendence  at  the  rest  of  the  Duke  l\ome  games  this  season. 
This  writer  sincerely  hopes  that  thi:*  will  be  a  one  shot  affair  and  will 
rot  create  a  demand  for  more. 

UNC  Aces;  Senior  Football 

State  College  Sports  Publicist,  Bill  Hensley  recently  announce^  that 
plans  are  being  considered  for  an  annual  football  game  pitting  the 
seniors  of  State  an'*  Carolina  against  the  Wake  Forest  and  Duke  sen- 
iors. .Carolina  tennis  star,  Steve  Bank  is  a  former  Easrtern  Inter-Col- 
legiate singles  and  doubles  champion.  .  .  .Another  Carolina  athlete, 
golfing  ace  Pete  Langley  is  a  former  conference  champ. 

Of  Carolina's  seven  ACC  victories  this  season,  righthander  Jim 
Raugh  has  won  five.  .  .  .Middleweight  contender  and  former  champ 
Sugar  Ray  Robinson  must  have  been  heartened  Thursday  .when  he 
learned  that  his  opponent.  Champion  Gene  Fullmer  was  knocked 
down  by  a  sparring  partner  as  he  prepared  for  the  cham^onship 
fight  Wednesday  night.  ... 

Miscellaneous 

Example  of  a  'quick  money"  man:  golfer  Gene  Littler.  Littler  xe- 
cently  won  his  third  straight  Thunderbird  tournament  at  Las  Vaga* 
and  pocketed  enough  to  live  nicely  for  another  year.  .  .  .Tennis  fans 
won't  want  to  miss  the  Pancho  Gonzales-Ken  Rosewall  duel  in  Raleigh 
Thursday  night.  This  is  a  great  chance  to  see  probably  the  twp  best 
netters  in  the  business  today.  ... 

Looks  like  a  heated  race  for  the  batting  title  in  the  American  Lea- 
gue this  season.  ThumpinTed  Williams  will  make  things  hot  for  cur- 
rent champion,  Mickey  Mantle.  .  .  . 

Former  golfing  great  Gene  Sarazen,  said  recently  that  "today's  golf 

courses  are  as  obselete  as  a  Model  T  Ford The  most  disappointing 

team  in  the  majors  thus  far  is  Detroit.  The  Tigers  haven't  been  doing 
anything  well,  and  this  in  the  club  that  has  been  picked  for  second 
or  third  place  by  many. 


Tracksters  Meet  Virginia 
Today  Seeking  4th  Win 


By  DAVE  WIBLE 


lays  has  the  Carolina  backbone  in 

J   „  ,   .    I  the  races  longer  that  220  yards  but 
The  Carolma  track  squad.  3-1  m   ^^^^^^  ^^^^^  ^^^^  ^^^^^^  ^^  ^^j^^^ 

conference  meets  this  season,  will  I       ....    . 

be  trying  to  get  back  into  the  win-  j 

ners  bracket  this  afternoon  when        Sophomore   Wayne    Bishop   will  erican  League  Tigers. 

they  meet  Virginia  in  Charlottes- ,  pull  Jim  Bcattys  trick  by  running  |     ^  j^ont  office  squabble  resulted 


Spike  Briggs 
Quits  Detroit 


DETROIT,  — <AP)  —  Walter  O. 
Spike  Briggs  quit  yesterday  as 
ijxecutive  vce  president,  general 
manager  and  a  director  of  the  De- 
troit Baseball  Co.,  ending  a  37- 
year  era  in  the  history  of  the  Ara- 


yille. 

The   Tar   Heels   lost 


in  both  the  mile  and  the  two-mile.  I 


their   last   John   Sylvester,   Dick    MacFaddin  |  j^^^    ^jj^g 


i  in     his  resignation.  And  for     the 


aince    his    late    father. 


meet  jusf  before  the  Easter  holi-   and  John  Fox  will  run  in  the  440 1  ^Vajter  O.  Briggs  Sr.,  bought  into 


days  when  the  were  topped  by  the  I  and  along  with  dash  man  Jim  Moss 
present  conference  champions,  these  three  will  make  up  the  mile 
Maryland.  j  relay  team. 

Today's  meet  will  be  a  real  chal- 1  Lyndon  DeBorde,  Charles  Sow- 
lenge  for  the  Heels  since  the  "big  i  erj,  and  Bill  Lyons  will  be  hop- 
four"  of  Jim  Beatty,  Dave  Scur-  j  ping  the  hj>rdlers.  Moss,  Jim  Var- 
lock,  E^ve^ett  Whatley  and  Ben  num,  Moe  DeCmtis,  and  Larry  Mc- 
Williams  will  not  be  on  hand  to  Mullen  take  to  the  straight-away 
help  them  out.  These  four  Caro- 1  for  the  100  and  220. 
Una  track  stars  are  in  Philadel- 1  In  the  Field  events  weight  men 
phia  taking  part  in  the  Penn  Re-   Don  Kemper  and  John  Jones  will 


lays. 

,    Track  Coach  Dale  Ranson  said, ' 

It  will   take  a   lot   of  hustle  from 


throw  the  shot;  Clete  Oakley,  Ric- 
hard McCallister  and  Roland  Payne 
will  throw  the  Javlin;  Oscar  Davis 


the  club  in  1920  there  is  no  Briggs 
in  the  management  No  successor 
was  named. 

Only  Wednesday  Spike,  45,  was 
quoted  as  saying  new  owners  who 
acquired  the  Tigers  from  his  fa- 
ther's estate  for  5\i  million 
dollars  l&A  summer  "aren't  going 
to  give  me  any  trouble — Til  walk 
out  first." 

But  yesterday  he  took  his  walk. 
It  followed  by  a  week  the  resigna- 
tion of  Fred  Kherr,  who  had  head- 


the.  remaining   boys    to   win    this  I  will  Pole  Vault.   Jim  Bryant  and  |  ed  an  11-member  Syndicate  of  new 


meet  with  the  relay  team  gone.' 
The  Penn  Relays  boys  are  going  to 
run  the  2-mile  relay  tomorrow. 
They  are  listed  among  the  favorites 
in  that  event. 

The  Tar  Heels  will  have  their 
full  strength  in  the  field  events-, 
dashes,  and  hurtles.  The  Penn  Re- 


Bill  Lyons   will   High   jump;    and   owners,  as   president.   Kherr   said 
John  Jones  and  Bill  Roth  will  heave  I  pressure  of  his  radio  and  televis- 


the  discus. 

May  4  the  Tar  Heels  will  play 
host  to  the  Duke  Blue  Devils  in 
the  final  conference  meet  before 
the  ACC  Cbampionofhips  on  May 
10th  and  11th. 


Dick  Jamerson  Selected  As 
April  Nominee  For  Honor  Roll 

GREENSBORO    — (AP  —    Dick  rolinas   through   his   activities   as 


12 
ANGRY  MEN 

Starring 
Henry  Fonda  Lee  J.  Cobb 


LATE  SHOW 

TONIGHT 
SUN.-MON. 


Jamerson,  veteran  swimming  in- 
structor and  coach  at  the  Univer- 
sity of  North  Carolina  has  been  se- 
lected as  the  April  nominee  for; 
the  AAU  honor  roll  for  outstand- 
ing contribution  to  amateur  ath- 
letics in  the  Carolinas. 

In  making  the  announcement  for 
the  Carolinas  AAU,  president  Joe 
Glynn  stated  "Jamerson  has  aided 
the  swimming  program  in  the  Ca- 


coach'  at  the  University,  but  just 
as  much  by  his  work  in  the  physi- 
cal education  department  and 
youth  programs.  We  are  particul- 
arly happy  to  add  his  name  to  the 
honor  r^ll  at  this  time  and  wish 
him  a  opeedy  recovery  of  his  recent 
illness." 

Previously  chosen  for  the  honor 
roll  have  been  George  Perrin  of 
Greensboro,  Paul  Appel  of  High 
Point  and  Bob  Chambers  of  Duke. 


Casper  Leads  Derby 


LOUISVILLE.  Ky.— (AP)— BUI 
Casper  Jr.  turned  into  the  home 
stretch  of  the  Kentucky  Derby 
Open  golf  tournament  today  with 
a  two  stroke  le^d  over  the  field 


Red  Sox  Win 

NEW  YORK— (AP)— Jim  Pier- 
sail's  thr«&-run  homer  and  Jackie 
Jensen's  two-run  double  gave 
Dave  Sisler  and  the  Boston  Red 
Sox  a  6-2  victory  over  the  New 
York  Yankees  yesterday  despite 
home  runs  by  Enos  Slaughter  and 
Gil  McDougald. 

Ted  Williama,  who  has  been 
setting  a  torrid  spring  pace,  went 
hitless  in  four  official  trips,  walk- 
ing once.  His  batting  average 
dropped  50  points  to  .405.  It  was 
the  first  game  in  nine  in  which 
Williams  failed  to  hit  safely  this 
season. 

Bost  got  to  Tom  Stfirdivant  for 
a  run  in  tbe  second  on  Dick  Ger- 
nert's  double  and  Gene  Maudi's 
single  to  rl^t.  The  Yanks  came 
right  back  to  tie  in  their  half  of 
the  second  when  Slaughter,  who 
will  be  41  tomorrow,  hit  his  first 
home  run  of  the  year"  into  the  up- 
per deck  in  right  iield.       _ 


as   par  continued   an  elusive   tar- 
get on  the  tough  Seneca  Course, 

The  hurley  Bonita,  Calif.,  strok- 
er  nursed  a  tricky  15-foot  putt  into 
the  cup  on  the  last  hole  for  a  71 
to  finish  yesterday's  third  round 
with   207 — six  under  par. 

Sunday's  final  18  holes  will  find 
Johnny  Pett,  Peter  Thomson,  and 
Jack  Fleck  battling  head  and  head 
in  the  runner-up  spot  with  209s' 

Pett,  21,  was  the  big  advancer 
today  as 'he  fashioned  a  sharp  67, 
four  under  par.  The  former  Louisi- 
ana State  University  star  from 
Shreveport.  La.,  has  been  a  pro- 
fessional seven  months. 

Thomson  and  Fleck  went  72— 
one  over  par— to  give  ground  to 
the    easy-going    Casper. 


ion  business  required  more  time, 
but  sports  writers'  attached  more 
significance  than  that  to  it.  • 

Some  reported  disagreement  on 
policy  had  developed.  This  never 
was  confirmed. 


TODAY'S  SCHEDULE 

AMERICAN  LEAGUE 

Boston  at  New  York — Brewer  1-1 

vs.  Shantz  1-0. 
Detroit   at  Cleveland — Foytack  0-0 

vs.  Score  1-1. 
Chicago  at  Kansas  City  night — Do- 
novan 0-0  vs.  Kellner  0-1. 
Washington   at   Baltimore — Stobbs 
0-2  vs.  Fornieles  1-0. 
NATIONAL  LEAGUE 
Brooklyn  at  Pittsburgh — ^Newcombe 

0-1  vs.  Kline  0-2. 
New  York  at  Philadelphia — Gomez 

2-0  vs.  Roberts  0-2. 
Milwaukee   at   Cincinnati,   night— 

Burnette  1-1  vs.  Hacker  0-0. 
St.  Loui6>  at  Chicago — McDaniel  0-0 

vs.  Rush  0-2. 


ANNOUNCEMENT  BY 

Illmois  College  of 
OPTOMETRY 

Applications  for  adtniwion  to 
dasaet  beginning  September  9, 
1957    are    now   being    received. 

Three  year  course 

of  professional  study 

Leading  to  the  Degree  of 

Doctor  of  Optometry 

Requirements  for  Bittrano*: 
Two  yeart  (60  semester  hours  or 
equivalent  quarter  hrs.)  in  spe- 
cified liberal  arts  and  science*. 

WRITE  FOR  BULLETIN 
TO:  REOISTRAR 

ILLINOIS   COLLEGE 
of  OPTOMETRY 

3241   So.   Michigaa  ArvSh 
T«cfaiiolaC7  Center.  Chirapt  IC,  OL 


Robbins  Plays 
In  N-S  Finals 

PINEHURST,  N.  C.  —  (AP) — 
Hillflian  Robbins,  the  defending 
champion,  and  Bill  Campbell,  win- 
ner twice  since  1950,  yesterday 
gained  the  finals  of  the  North  and 
South    Amateur   golf    tournament. 

Robbins  won  four  of  the  first 
six  holes  as  he  scored  a  4  and  3 
semi-finals  victory  over  Dr.  Bud 
Taylor  of  Pomona,  Calif.,  and 
Campbell  putted  his  way  to  a  3-2 
conquest  of  Bill  Hyndman  pf 
Abington,  Pa. 

The  championship  match  today 
will  be  over  36  holes,  starting  at 
9:45  ajn.  EST. 

Robbins,  a  25-year-cid  second 
lieutenant  at  the  Blytheville,  Ark., 
Air  FOTce  Base,  defeated  Camp- 
bell, 5-1,  in  the  quarterfinals  last 
year. 

Campbell,  a  33-year-old  Hunt- 
ington, W.  Va.,  insurance  man  and 
captain  cf  the  1955  Walker  Cup 
team,  was  two  under  par.  He  had 
entered  the  match  eight  over  par 
for  four  earlier  match  play  vic- 
tories this  week,  compared  with 
Hyndman's  record  of  six  under. 


T- 


GO,  VAN,  GOGHT      ^ 


Howard  Johnson  Restaurant 

STUDENT   SPECIALS 

Barbecued   Chicken 
i  Choice  Steak  Sandwiches 

SERVED  8:00- 11:00  P.M. 

'landmark  For  Hungry  Tarheels'' 


Crossfires  of  Vengeance 
at  Crossroads  of  Empire! 


Once  upon  a  time,  when  the 
world  was  really  evil,  and  a 
thief  lurked  behind  every  bush, 
cautious  men  had  their  shirts 
painted  on,!  The  reason  for  this 
is  explained  by  a  perceptive 
saying  of  those  days: 

"Forsooth,  nothing  deters 
those  rapscallioTis  abovi  town. 

They'll  steal  anything  that 
isn't  buttoned  down." 

Rough  days  —  particularly 
for  the  shirt  business,  what 
^  with  painters  picking  up  all 
the  profits.  Until,  suddenly, 
an  idea  of  genius  appeared. 
The  button-down  shirt!  This 
shirt  was  actually  buttoned  on 
to  the  chest  of  the  wearer,  making 
it  absolutely  steal-proof! 

Today,  in  these  honest  times, 
we  still  feel  its  influence.  It  is 


the  true  ancestor  of  that  glori- 
ous style — the  shirt  with  the 
button  down  eoUar!  Isn't  his- 
tory interesting? 

Van  Heusen — because  they 
know  so  much  about  the  but- 
ton-down —  has  done  more 
with  it  than  anybody  else. 
Take  our  new  line  called  the 
Van  Ivy,  for  instance.  Here 
are  button-downs  in  tartan 
checks  and  stripes.  Van  Ivys 
look  marvelous  with  suits  and 
sport  coats,  and  worn  open  at 
the  neck  give  you  a  roguish 
look.  They  also  have  a  button 
on  the  back  of  the  collar,  for 
authenticity's  sake.  See  them. 
$4.00  in  short  sleeve,  $5.00 
long  sleeves. 

Phillips-Jones  Corp.,  417 
Fifth  Ave.,  New  York  16, '  J.Y. 


STORM  RIDE8 


NOW  PLAYING 


Carolina 


WE   ARE  THE   EXCLUSIVE 


VAN  HEUSEN 


DEALER  IN  CHAPEL  HILL 


Wiismmmatm 


The  real  star 

in  this  picture  is  the  human  heart. 
It  beats  in  every  single  scene...as  it 
brings  you  one  of  the  most  unusual 
stories  of  love  ever  filmed...ever  felt! 

If  you  see  only  one  more  picture 
this  year. . .make  sure  it's  this  one. 


\ 


^ 
.'^ 


U.N.C.  Library 
Serials  Dapt. 
Chapel  Hill,  N.  C. 
8-3X-49 


WEATHER 

Mostly  fair  M)(i  continued  warm 
with  an  axpoclod  high  of  M.  i 


Med 


REVIEW 

National,   stato   and   campus   on 
post  two. 


VOL.  LVII,  NO.  174 


Complete  iJP)  Wir*  Strwiet 


CHAPEL  HILL,  NORTH  CAROLINA,  SUNDAY,  APRIL  28,  1957 


OffictB  in  Graham  Memoriml 


FOUR  PASES  TH«»   •«*Ut 


In  Politicdi  Crisis: 

Jordon  Sets  Up 
Military   Courts 

U.  S.  ^mmitted  In  Mid-East 

AMMAN  JORDAN  —  !f* —  Jordan's  new  anti-Leftist  regime  estab- 
lished military  courts  yesterday  to  try  all  cases  growing  out  of  Jordan's 
Political  crisis. 

The  Two-day-old  cabinet  of  Premier  Ibrahim  Hashem,  69,  arrang- 
ed for  the  new  courts  in  a  two-hour  meeting. 

(The  censored  dispatch  did  not  say  whom  the  new  courts  would 
trj.  Unconfirmed  reports  in  other  Arab  capitals  said  Jordan  authorities 
had  arrested  several  hundred  Communitsts,  Leftists  and  extreme  Na- 
tionalists —  including  Nationalst  ex-premier  Suleiman  Nabulsi.) 

King  Hussein  meanwhile,  got  a  cheering  message  from  King  Saud 
of  Saudi  Arabia,  congratulating  him  on  bringing  law  and  order  to 
Jordan  after  nearly  three  weeks  of  disturbances,  it  was  one  of  many 
such  messages  received. 

WASHINGTON  _  ./Pi  —  The  United  States  will  be  deeply  com- 
mitted from  now  on  to  play  a  hand  in  the  dangerous  and  violent  game 
of  Middle  Eafttern  power  politices. 

Thij  commitment  is  a  result  of  the  decision  by  President  Eisen- 
hower and  Secretary  of  State  Dulles  this  week  to  throw  American 
power  and  prestige  t>ehind  King  Hussein  in  his  fight  to  prevent  ex- 
tremists, spurred  on  by  anti-Western  and  Communist  agitators,  from 
taking  over  Jordan. 

Until  the  United  States  cast  its  influence  and  the  threat  of  its 
military^  power  into  the  struggle  on  HuSv.'ein's  side,  it  had  some  free- 
dom of  choice  about  whether  to  take  part  in  any  particular  middle 
eastern  crisis.  From  here  on,  however,  the  prestige  of  the  United 
States  will  be  involved  in  any  new  conflict  within  the  area  and  its 
stature  and  effectiveness  seem  certain  to  be  judged  by  the  outcome. 


Syrian  Says 


DAMASCUS.  Syria— (AP)— An 
official  Syrian  source  said  yester- 
day the  movement 'of  the  U.S.  6th 
Fleet  into  the  Ea^Jern  Mediterran- 
ean will  increase  tension  in  the 
Middle  East.  ^ 

The   government   source    told    a 


Roy  Armstrong 
Named  To  Head 
NatfOfiof^^Group 

."Rov  Armst/on§.  UNC  director  of 
admissions.  /  was  installed  this 
week  as  pi'esident  of  the  Ameri- 
can Assn.  of  University  and  Col- 
Icg?  Admissions  Officers  and  Reg- 
istrars. 

At  the  annual  meeting  in  Den- 
ver. Colo..  Armstrong  took  over 
the  top  post,  having  been  named 
president-elect  at  the  1956  meet- 
ing. Chancellor  Robert  B.  Rouse 
also  represented  UNC  at  the  gath- 
ering, giving  a  major  address  at 
mid-week. 

Armstrong,  who  is  past  presi- 
dent of  the  Southern  Assn.  of  Col- 
legiate Registrars,  has  served  as 
vice  president  of  the  national  or- 
ganization. 

A  native  of  Spencer,  be  was 
graduated  from  the  University  in 
1926  aiid  taught  in  Greensboro 
for  two  years.  Rettirning  to  UNC 


Last  Professor 
Here  This  Week 
For  Lectures 

A  Cuban  professor  of  contitu- 
tional  law  and  the  history  of  poli- 
tical theory  in  the  University  of 
Havana  will  be  here  this  week  as 
Burton  Craige  Visiting  Lecturer  in 
Jurisprudence. 

Dr.  Ramon  Infiestra  will  conduct 
a  series  of  seminars  on  Cuban  con- 
situtional  law  and  deliver  a  public 
lecture  on  the  distinguished  Cu- 
ban patriot  and  jurnalial,  Jose 
Marti. 

His  tallcs  will  begin  tomorrow 
aad  will  run  through  Friday. 

For  the  seminars  to  be  held  to- 
morrow and  Tuesday  afternoons. 
Professor  Infiejtra's  topic  will  be 
the  "Cuban  ^ysteili^  of  Government 
—  A  Comparison  between  a  Parli- 
amentar>^  and  a  Presidential  Re- 
gime." 
FINAL  TALKS 

On  Thursday  arid  Friday  after 
noons,  the  seminar  discussions  will 
revolve  about  the  topic  "Judicial 
Power  and  the  Court  System  in 
Cuba." 

The    subject    of    Professor    In- 
fiesra's  public  lecttire,  to  be  held 
Wednesday  at  8  p.m.  in  the  Libr- ; 
ary  Assembly  Room,  will  be  "Mar-  • 
ti  and  Politics."  | 

Marti,  whose  distinguished  jour-  j 
nalistic  career  spanned  the  latter  | 
reporter    foreign    influences    were    part  of  the  nineteenth  century  has  i 
trying  to  stir   up   iiouble  in  Jor-    been  called    'the  apostle  of  Cuban 
dan.   He   declined    to    name   these    liberty."  i 

countries.  j     As  a  foreign  correspondent    he  j 

did  much  to  interpret  the  United 
States  and  its  political  institutions  i 
to  his  fellow  Cubans. 
FUNDAMENTALS  I 

In  addition  to  teaching  constitu- 
tional law  and  political   theory  at  I 
the  University  of  Havana,  Ekwtor ! 
Infiesta   is   professor   of    the    fun- 
damentals of  politics  ill  the  Cuban 
Institute   for  Advanced  Studies  in 
Journalism.    He    also    lectures    on  j 
J  Contei]|porary    Political    Ideas    in  | 
ntlUt  NationaJ  Znatltut«  at  Plmtmingl 
and  Social  Reforms.  ! 

He  serves  from  time  to  time  as 
•pccial  vlsitng  professor  in  the  I 
School  of  Political  and  Social  Sci-  i 
ences  at  the  University  of  Mexico 
and  has  on  several  occasions  been 
a  visiting  professor  at  the  Univer- 
sity of  Miami.  Fla. 


Newsmen,   Photogs 
Give  Approval  Of  Plan 

A    panel    of    veteran    newsmen   certainly  his  editor  must  know  the 
and    photographers    agreed    here   law  as  applied  to  his  civil  rights. 
Saturday  on  a  five  point  program       5.    The   cameraman   should   co- 
for    news    photographers   covering    operate  with  the  law  enforcement 


agencies  whenever  possible. 

The  panel  discussion  on  "pho- 
tographic coverage  of  civil  A'io- 
lence"  was  part  of  a  southern  short 
course  in  press  photugrai^y  given 


civil  violence. 

C.  A.  McKnight.  editor  of  The 
(Charlotte)  Observer  and  Panel 
moderator,  summarized  the  sug- 
guestions  as  follows: 

1.  A  press   photographer   must    here. 

use      resourcefulness,      ingenuity        Members    oiF     the     panel    were: 
and  "good,  common  horse  sense."    William  A.  Emerson.  Atlanta  Bu- 

2.  In  taking  his  pictures  the  reau  chief,  Newsweek;  Rudy  Fair- 
man  with  the  camera  should  be  cloth.  Staff  photographer,  Assoc- 
as  quiet  and  unnoticed  as  possible,    iated  Press.  Raleigh;  Jack  Young, 

3.  The  photographer  must  re-  souhem  division  manager.  Unit- 
member  that  each  situation  is  dif-   ed  Press. 

ferent  and   must  be   handled   dif-!      Newspictures:    W.    Horace    Car- 
ferently.  '  ^er,    editor.    Taixtr   City    tribune; 

4.  The  news  photographer  and  Major  David  T.  Lambert,  enforce- 
— — i  ment     division,     North     Carolina 

I  Highway  Patrol  and  Milton  Freier, 
I  United  Press  White  House  photog- 
!  rapher. 


He  Can  Dream,  Can't  He? 


Tha  hot  wtather  in  recant  days  has  probably  caused  many  students  to  want  to  forget  studying  for 
awhila.  And  the  unidentified  student  shown  above  in  the  Wilson  Libray,  has  decided  to  do  that. 
Whether  he's  dreaming  about  the  beach,  a  pretty  girl,  or  the  end  of  the  school  year  is  anybody's  guess. 

Photo  by  Bill  King 


"Any  country  trying  to  stir  up 
more    trouble    will     very     shortly 
have    its    plans    exposed   and    will 
lose  all  its  prestige  in   the  area 
be  declared. 


Schedules  Announced 
For  Pre-Registration 


ROY  ARMSTRONG 

.  .  .  takes  over  top  post 

he  studied  law  for  two  years  be- 
fore joining  the  administrative 
staff.  He  has  been  director  of  ad- 
mission's here  since  1940.  with 
four  years  away  for  naval  ser- 
vice during  World  War  II. 


LIGHT  MUSIC 
PLANNED 
FOR  CONCERT 

A  program  of  light  musical  se- 
lections has  been  planned  for  to- 
day's concert  by  the  UNC  Band. 
Director  Herbert  Fred  has  an- 
nounced. 

The  concert,  to  which  the  pub- 
lic is  invited,  will  begin  at  4:30 
p.m.  around  Davie  Poplar. 

Calvin  HubiJr  of  Chapel  Hill 
will  play  a  trontbone  solo  of  Tchai- 
kovsky's 'None  But  the  Lonely 
Heart."  Guest  conductors  will  be 
two  senior  music  majors.  John 
Dcaring  of  Chevy  Chase.  Md.,  and 
Don  Jefferson  of  Chapel  Hill. 

Other  selections  on  the  pro- 
ijram  are  Victor  Herbert's  "Gypsy 
Life."  Richard  Strauss'  "AUersee- 
len."  a  medley  of  Peter  Rose's 
hits,  Robert  Ruisell  Bennett's 
"Suite  of  Old  American  Dances" 
and  several  marches. 


The  Office  of  Registration  has 
announced  a  pre  -  registration 
schedule  for  the  coming  summer 
and  fall  semesters  and  has  urg^ 
all  students  planning  to  pre-re|(- 
ister  to  take  note  of  the  notice 
and  times  listed. 

Students  enrolled  in  the  General 
College  may  pre-register  lor  aum- 
mcT  ind  fati  session*  fmm  '  Wto j  'T 
through  May  11.  They  will  be  ex- 
pected to  have  signed  the  appoint- 
ment sheet  in  308  South  Building 
by  Tuesday. 

The  students  will  meet  with 
their  advisors  at  appointed  \imes 
and  arrange  a  schedule  of  courses 
for  the  indicated  term,  A  green 
form  will  be  obtained  from  the 
advisor  which  is  to  be  taken  to  the 
Registration  Office  in  Hanes  Hall 
for  final  processing  and  further  in- 
structions. 

Pre-registration  in  the  College 
of  Arts  and  Sciences  will  be  held 
from  May  1  through  May  IP,  and 
students  who  have  a  major  have 
been  instructed  to  see  the  De- 
partmental Advisor,  secure  the 
green  form  and  go  to  Hanes  Hall 


for  processing. 

Pre-Law.  Pre-Med.  Pre-Dental 
and  special  students  have  been  in- 
structed to  see  the  advisor  in  the 
Dean's  Office. 

The  School  of  Business  Admin- 
istration advises  students  to  sign 
the  appointment  book  in  the  main 
entrance  to  Carroll  Hall  before 
Wht  •«  fn  oTtlfrr  ^thut  tfrey  be  per- 
mitted to  see  Iheir  advisers  dur- 
ing   the    pre-registration    period. 

On  pre-registration  days.  May 
6.  T.  9.  10.  each  student  will  first 
see  his  adviser  and  then  come  to 
the  administrative  desk  in  the 
main  entrance  to  Carroll  Hall. 

The  School  of  Education  will 
hold  pre-rcgiitration  May  6  to 
May  11.  After  obtaining  the  green 
form  in  duplicate  from  their  ad- 
visers, students  have  been  in- 
structed to  take  their  schedules 
to    127   Peabody   for   approval. 

One  copy  of  the  .schedule  is  to 
be  recorded  here  and  the  original 
is  to  be  brought  to  No  1  Hanes 
Hall  for  further  processing. 

Students  in  the  School  of  Journ- 
(See  Registration,   page   3) 


Two  exhilarated  nature  men 
stvinging  from  a  tree  near  Cald- 
well Hall  apparently  answering 
the  call  of  Spring. 

*  *     .        * 

Harassed  Book  Exchange  clerk 
trying  to  pacify  a  couple  of 
gradiMting  seniors  who  insisted 
she  tell  them  what  degree  they 
iiere  to  receive  so  they  could 
fill  out  their  cvJp  and  goivn  res- 
vroati&n. 


INFIRMARY  LIST 

Students  in  the  Infirmary  yes- 
terday  included. 

Misses  June  Craft,  Gale  Hodg- 
son, Mary  Anne  Keeter,  Betty 
Kell,  Elizabeth  McKinnon,  Edith 
Drexler,  tAifry  Goodwin,  Susan 
Donald,  Anne  Llewellyn,  Sheila 
Cronan  and  Helen  Williams;  and 
Grover  Brown,  William  Branner, 
Dcmlnick  Marlon,  Harold  Clark, 
Thomas  Hall,  Eugene  Felton, 
Theodore  Wohlbruck,  Willis 
Whitehead,  Ralph  Hawkins  and 
David   Ansell. 


Fetzer  Is  First 
To  Win  Service 
Sports  Award 


1957  Seniors 
;^  In  Last  Fling 
On  Wednesday 


mm 


MAY  6 


Will  Be  Here 
8  MORE  DAYS 


GM'S  SL'ATE 


Anitra  The  Greenclad 

Mist  Amanda  Meiggs  of  Moyock,  a  junior  in  the  Dept.  of  Dram- 
atic Art,  will  be  featured  as  the  Greenclad  (Anitra)  In  the  Playmak- 
ers'  production  "Pear  Gynt,"  scheduled  for  May  10-12  in  the  Forest 
Theater.  Ticket*  for  unreserved  seats  will  go  on  sale  next  week 
for  $1.50  aMi  may  be  used  for  any  of  the  three  performance*. 


The  following  activities  are 
scheduled  for  Greham  Memorial 
today: 

Young  Friend*,  9:45-11  a.m., 
Grail  Room;  Quakers,  11  a.m.- 
1  p.m.,  (^ail  R«*m;  Westminster 
Fellowship,  ftlt'lOtiS  a.m.,  Ro- 
land Parker  1;  Cennmunity 
Church,  11  a.m.*12  p.m.;  Newman 
Club,  7-1  p.m.  Reland  Parker  1 
and  2;  PreebtUrian  Chutxh, 
9:30-11  a.m.,  Roland  Parker  2 
end  3;  Orientation  Interviews,  6- 
9  p.m.,  Roland  Parker  3  and 
WoodAouse  Conference  Room; 
Presbyterian  Church  9:30-11  a.m., 
APO  Room  and  Rendezvous 
iRoom. 


RALEIGH  —  ( AP )  —  Robert 
(Coach  Bob)   Fetzer,  former  UNC 
Athletic  Director,  is  the  first  wm- 
ner  of  the  Service  to  Sports  Award 

of  the  Atlantic  Coast  Sports  Writ-  on  Wednesday,  the  1937  senior 
ers  Assn.,  it  was  announced  FYiday  class  will  have  their  last  oppor- 
night.  I  tunity    to   participate    as   a    group 

The  Associations  new  honor  is  at  Carolina  during  the  day-long 
for  "long,  distinguished,  and  Senior  Day  activities  planned  to 
unselfish  service '  to  amateur  celebrate  the  occasion, 
sports  in  the  area  embracing  Mary-  The  Senior  Day  program,  plan- 
land,  District  of  Columbia,  Vir-  ned  by  Miss  Dottie  Wood  and  the 
ginia.  and  the  Carolinas.  (  social  committee  will  actually  be 

Fetzer.    Athletic    Director    and   set  off  Tuesday  evening  with  the 
track  coach  for  30  years  until  he    free   movie  scheduled   for  seniors 
became  executive  secretary  of  the    at  the  Carolina  Theater. 
Morehead   Scholarship   Foundation'      Seniors    will    be    asked    to    rise 
in  1S52,  was  selected  "for  his  con- '  and  shine  Wednesday  morning  de- 
tributions .  to   the    growth   of    ath-    spite  the  fact  the y  are  to  be  ex- 
letics  and  for  the  lasting  impi:ess-    cused    from    cUases    for    the    day 
iun  he    made   on   all   of   those    as-    in    order    to    attend    an    orgaoiia- 
sociated  with  him."  Presentation -of    tional  meeting  at  M  a.m.  in  Mem- 
a  plaque  signalizing  the  bonor-wUl    orial  Ha'U. 

he   made    in    sevei-aJ    WeekK.  j      The  Day  is  expected  to  be  high- 

Speaking  for  the  Association's  lighted  Wednesday  eveniag  dur- 
committec  that  made  the  stlec-  ing  the  annual  social  affair  slated 
tion.  Chairman  Dick  Herbert  of  to  begin  at  5:30  at  the  Patio.  Ac- 
The  (Raleigh)  News  and  Observer  tivities  at  the  barbecue  include  a 
said.  "Coach  Bob  Fetzer's  theorj'  ^  carnival,  the  grand  drawing  for 
of  athletic  participation  for  all  a  car  and  the  continuous  music 
and  his  stress  on  a  well   rounded  '  of  four  bands 

athletic  program  on  a  wholesome  i  The  social  side  of  the  program 
level  were  regarded  as  major  con-j  will  be  touched  off  at  5:30  by  a 
tributions  to  amateur  athletics  in '  beer  baseball  gawe  to  be  plaj'ed 
this  area.  ;  at  the  Patio. 

"In  addition,  his  wonderful  per- :  And  an  added  Icature  to  this 
sonality  makes  him  one  of  the  year's  senior  activities,  according 
most  highly  regarded  men  with  to  program  officials,  will  be  the 
whom  members  of  the  association  naming  of  the  senior  class's  l)est 
have  had  contact  in  their  work.  We  couple,  best  looking,  biggest  bull- 
feel  no  man  is  more  qualified  to ;  thrower,  biggest  wheel  and  larg- 
be  the  first  to  receive  this  annual ,  est  lizard. 

award."  i      The  affair  is  free  and  requires 

that  only  one  of  any  attending 
couple  be  a  senior.  Stags  arc  to 
be  permitted. 

Senior  Day  officials  ha\c  urged 
all  seniors  to  participate  in  the 
.May  1  activities  and  make  it  the 
most  succesijful  senior  day  pro- 
gram ever. 


INTERVIEWS 
TOMORROW 

The  Campus  Orientation  Com- 
mittee will  meet  in  the  Woodhouse 
Conference  Room  of  Graham 
Memorial  to  interview  men  for  the 
1957  counselor  program  from  2-6 
p.m.  and  7-9  p.m.  tomorrow,  ac- 
cording to  Orientation  Chairman 
Jerry  Oppenheimer. 

Interviews  will  end  tomorrow 
night  and  it  will  i>c  necessary  for 
all  men  interested  to  complete 
their  interviews  by  then,  an  an- 
nouncement, said  he  hoped  that 
men  slated  for  interviews  will  be 
able  to  appear  at  ttieir  scheduled 
times,  but  in  t4»e  event  this  is 
impossible  any  of  tbe  al)ove  times 
would  be  satisfactory  to  the  com- 
mittee. 


James  Brewer,  center,  has  been  awarded  a  scholarship  for  ad- 
vanced study  in  sculpture.  He  is  shown  above  with  Professor  Robert 
A.  Howard,  left,  of  the  UUC  Art  Dept.  Miss  Barbara  Madison  of 
Washington,   D.C.   is  at  right.   Brewer   first  came  here   in    1952  and 


Professor  Views  Art  Student's  Sculpture 

was  away  for  Army  service  1953-55.  The  scholarship,  worth  $1400,  is 
awarded  annually  to  any  artist  in  the  country  and  is  given  solely  on 
the  merit  of  the  artist's  work. 


H-Bomb  Hearings 

WASHINGTON  —  (AP)  —  The 
world  -  ranging  argument  over 
whether  H-bomb  tests  should  be 
curbed  seems  sure  to  l)e  renewed 
soon  befoe  a  congressional  com- 
mittee. 

Hearings  have  been  called  by 
a  Senate-House  Atomic  Energy 
Subcommittee  for  May  27  -  June  7 
on  the  whole  problem,  of  fallout. 
This  is  the  dropping  back  to  earth 
of  radioactive  particules  hurled 
jnto  the  atmosjifaere  by  nucleat 
explosions. 


♦ 


#A6t  TWO 


THE  OAiLV  TAft  HEEL 


SuNaAV,  apAil  U,  Hi? 


'     REVIEW: 

CAMPUS 
STATE 


WORLD 


Personalities  Of  The  Week: 


Editorial  Synopsis: 
People  And  The  Week 

Se<  rt'cv:  restrii  tinn.  sii))  press  ion.  pork  hairclin,t>— .iTl 
ni. liters  (oitnTiented  upon  editoriallv  ihroii<»hont  tl»e  past 
pv>st-!)o!id.nv   week. 

l.ann'K  were  <  ast  upon  leaders  in  the  sdiolastic  race- 
Delta  Delia  Delta  .Sorority  and  Zeia  Beta  I  an  Iraternitv; 
and  an  editorial  lainbast  was  taken  at  the  "irrate  minority" 
whicli   is  prexentinin  ( onstriiction  of      iwn     new     Iraternitv 

*  •  • 

'  I  lie  shroud  (»l  seereiv"  whi(  h  surrounds  operations  ol 
the  «ainpus  stores  is  a  major  problem  for  students  who  (on- 
stantlv  pour  inonev  into  t'niveisity  coHers  without  ever  re- 
reixuio  itenn/ed  accoiun  of  jusi  how  this  .S-,o.oo{)  jxr  annum 
pi(»lil   is  l)ein<>   used.  * 

I  he  Dailv  I  ar  Heel  issued  three  stiG;*?esrions  to  Messrs. 
Claude  Teai^ue.  I'nixersity  business  manager,  and  H.  "K. 
Ritehie.  oeneral   manager  ol  retail  stores: 

(O  That  the  price  oF  (ampu.s  stores'  school  supplies 
be  lowered,  siiue  we  are  certain— throuiLjh  consultation  with 
I. aw  School  students  similarlv  distiubed  bv  exhorbiiaiu 
piolits— t!)at  such  action  would  not  contlict  with  |)to\isions 
of  the  rn)sfead  Act.  pre\eiHiui;  institutional  monopob  and 
direct  competition  with   merchants. 

(2)  That  campus  stores  continue  to  allocate  a  per- 
ienta<>e  of  their  profits  to  sc  holaisliips.  yet  also  allocate  a 
certain  }H'rcetita:>e  to  de.ser\ini>  student  i>roups.  sue  h  as  dor- 
mitorirs.   who  pio\ide   the   funds   initiallv. 

(;{i  I  hat  the  (iampus  .Stores  Committee  inunediatelv 
release  an  itemized  statement  spec  ilvin^i  the  exact  all(Katii)n 
of  profits  .md  tlie  exaction  original  st)urce  of  these  profits. 

*  •  • 

_  The  Dailv  Far  Heel  abhors  and  detests  the  stalking, 
secrecy  and  mysterv  which  veils  oj)erations  of  campus  st<»res. 
from  the  eyes  ol  student  crmsumers. 

.\  considtant  in  the  Cniversitv  I^aw  School  who  is 
vcjualK  concerned  alMiut  the  lucrative  profits  which  campus 
stores  amass  vearly  has  released  *a  sample  relati\e  pric  in<T 
i»n  one  particular  item,  a  leinal   j)ad: 

Appr<»ximate  wholesale  price. —  lo  cetus. 

Price  at  SI   relaliveh   hi'^h  downtown   linn — ^^o  cents. 

Price  at  the  l'ni\ersitv  Hook.iteria—;{<»  cents. 

^'et  campus  stoies  refuse  to  release  any  of  their  hic  la- 
ii\e  prolits  to  a  contin<>ency  fund  for  the  uiaiiueuatic  e  of 
clor!uitor\  tele\  ision  sets;  they  refuse  to  loAver  prices:  they 
refuse  to  enen  release  an  itemi/d  statement  of  their  profits 
and  the  soince  of  thes-e  piofits:  they  coiuitiue  to  tax  the 
entile  student  bodv  with  extcji  tionate  prices  for  the  bene- 
fit ol  a  mijioritv  ol  scholarship  recipients. 

A'^aiu  we  call  for  release  of  a  iteini/ed  statement. 

.Ai^ain  we  call  for  demonstration  of  a  willinviuess  to  ne- 
uotiate  with  student  consuijiers  who  must  blindly  empty 
their  |>oeketbooks  while  the  administration  thumbs  its  nose 
at  student  c  uri<»silv.  i 


Hear,  Wage  Measure, 
Peace:   States   Week 

Walt  Schruntek 

P.es^inniiij;  the  new  week  with  a  holiday,  most  North 
Caiohnians  last  week  were  content  to  avail  themselves  of 
what  the  weather  bineaus  throughout  the  area  have  been 
cillin;'      ifUHeasoiiable   heat'     since   early    .\pril. 

State  ac  tivitv  j^ot  off  to  a  slow  post-holiday  start  as  the 
thermometer  seemed  to  place  a  restraining  hand  every- 
where. I  emperatures  tose  and  settled  firmly  over  the  Car- 
ol iuas— mi  d^lj,e  and  upper  Sos  were  the  mean:  aiid  some 
areas  reported  recoicliiv^s  in  the  low  an'd  middle  <)os. 

Ralei^U"  legislators  worked  throujj^h  the  heat,  however, 
and  towarcf  lyidweek  passed  a  bill  to  regulate  and  license 
re\il  e^st ate  l;rokers  and  salesmen  throughout  the  state.  \  sig- 
nificant l)ifl  eonceinin<i  compulsory  1i«l)ilit\  insurance  for 
automobile  owners  was  |)osi]X)ned  milil  .April  ",o  bv  the-law- 
makers. 

I  he  .Senate  passed  a  y-^-cent  minimum  waf>e  law  Wed- 
nesdav  which  was  sent  to  the*  House  to  face  an  uncertain 
fate,  accordiu'.;  t(»  most  |K)litical  obsei\ors. 

The  heat  scHinecl  to  lend  itself  to  conflict  in  the  state 
c  apitol  when  op|)osinn  elements  met  to  settle  c^uestions  con- 
cemiiii;  operation  and  control  ol  Peace  College.  The  (iran- 
\ille  Presbvterv  was  asked  to  retain  ccmtrol  of  the  college, 
bin  dissension  grew  oin  of  where  the  sc  hool  was  to  be  sit- 
uated. 

One  group  favored  retaining  the  college  in  Raleigh 
while  another  held  for  its  esiablishment  in  Laurinbur^. 

:.  -■  *  "*" 

The  official  student  publication  of  the  Publications  Board  of  the 
University  of  North  Carolina,  where  it  is  published  daily  except  Mor\ 
day  and  examination  and  vacation  periods  and  summer  terms.  Entered 
as  second  class  matter  in  the  post  office  at  Chapel  Hill.  N.  C,  under 
the  act  of  March  8,  1870.  Subscription  rates:  Mailed.  $4  a  year.  $2.50 
per  semester;  delivered,  $6  a  year,  $3.50  a  semester. 

Editor  NEIL  BASS 

Managing  Editor - CLARKE  JONES 

Staff  Writers       ' Neil  Ba.ss,  Nancy  Hill,  Jackie  Haithcock, 

Anthony  Wolff  and  Bob  High. 


George  Ragsdale:  Doubly-Recognized  Leader 
Mack  Patton:  Efficient,  Scholarly  Leader 


Nancy  Hill 

(ieorge  Ragsdale.  next  year's  head  of  .Nfeu's  Honor 
Council,  is  well  suited  by  interest  for  the  position— he  plans 
to  l)e  jt  lawvei. 

Ragsdale  has  been  delegated  great  lesponsifjility  in  his 
post  as  Honor  Counc  il  head.  The  jurisdic  tion  of  the  Mens 
Hont)r  Council  includes  all  \iolaiion  bv  men  of  the  Honor 
Code  and  all  other  lules  exc  ept  those  falling  under  the  juris- 
diction of  the  Student  Council,  Mens  Intel -l>ormitorv 
Council  Court,  and  the  Dance  Committee,  according  to  the 
Constitution  of  student  goxeinment. 

.An  F.nglish  major,  Ragsdale  plans  lo  enter  law  school 
after  graduation  from  Carolina  next  June. 

And  his  senior  year  will  be  a  full  one— the  frank,  pleas- 
ant former  c  lerk  of  the  Honor  Counc  il  will   in  addition  to 


Neil  Bass 

.A  man  with  quiet  and  sincere  dignitv — Macon  Patton. 

An  able  man  who  combines  athletic  prowess  and  schol- 
astic aptness — .Macon  Patton. 

.Apt  and  fitting  description,  most  would  agree,  for  next 
vear's  Student  Cioinicil  Chairman  Mack  Patton. 

Mack's  council  handles  a  muhiplicity  of  duties  wiiich 
are  not  fully  in  the  students'  eyes,  hut  which  certainly 
shoidd  l>e. 

•  Student  Goinuil  jurisdiction  includes: 

(i)  Origitial  jurisdiction  in  all  cases  involving  con- 
stitutionality of  legislati\e  or  judicial  action. 

(2)  Original  jurisdiction  in  all  cases  involving  viola- 
tion of  tlie  Campus  CcKle- which  puts  students  on  their 
honor  to   beha\e   in   a  gentlemanly   fashion   and   to   report 


his  duties  in  the  judicial  branch  of  student  goxernment  serve    anvone^seen  not  doing  so— by  men  students. 


as  president  of  the  senior 
class.  He  was  elected  to  this 
post  in  spring  elec  tions  Ajiiil 

Ragsdale's  outstanding 
record  beg;ui  pili\ig  up  in 
his  freshman  vear.  'All  1  did 
that  vear."  he  savs  modesth. 
was  to  pledge  Delta  Kam)a 
Kpsilon  soe  iai  fiateuutv.  oc - 
come  a  member  of  the  Cer- 
mans  Club,  and  join  the  I'n- 
ivtNsitv  Party,  on  whose  tic- 
ket he  ran  in  the  recent  elec- 
tion. 

Ill  his  sophomore  vear 
Ragsdale  ran  lV»r  a  seat  on 
Honoi  Council,  and  won. 
He  was  also  elected  vice  |>ies- 
ident  of  the  (ierman  Club, 
and  initiated  into  "  The  Or- 
der of  the  Sheiks."  an  or- 
gani/ation  which  he  dese  ribes 
as  "a  nebulous  group  th;ii 
pleelges  itself  to  good  times. 

riiis  vear  Ragsdale  has 
.served  as  president  of  the 
junior  cl;iss  and  c  lerk  of  the 
Ilonor  Counc  il. 

Ragsdale  was  doublv  rec-" 
ogni/ed  this  spring  for  his 
endea\ors  in  student  govern' 
nient  and  fiaternitv  activi- 
ties when  he  was  iap|)ed  into 
first  the  Order  of  the  Holv 
C.rail  and  then  the  Ordei  of 
the  (iroldeii  lleecc.  highest 
men's  honor;nv. 

Ragsdale'c  cit.uion  upon 
his  initiation  into  the  l-Kecc 
read.  ".Able  leader  in  the 
student  judic  iarv.  |)rime  ex- 
am))le  of  responsif)le  student 
leadership  in  his  c  las.<i  aiu 
other  acti\ities." 

Further  rec(»gnition  has 
been  shoAvn  Ragsdale  this 
spring.  He  is  to  be  chiel 
marshal  I  at  giaduatic:)n,  and 
a  tnarshall  at  the  inaugura- 
tion of  William  C.  Kriclav 
as  president  of  the  Consoli- 
dated  l'ni\ersitv. 

His  summer  record  is 
quite  different  from  his 
winter  record.  For  the  past 
t\vo  sunnners  this  Deke  has 
finined.  He  raised  tobacco 
and  cattle  for  his  lather  on 
the  elder  Ragsdale's  ianii 
near  their  home  iii   Raleigh. 

Ragsdale's  schedule  *fvor 
this  coming  \acaiion  is  a  far 
cry  from  farming — he  will 
tour  F.urope  with  a  group 
guided  by  Dr.   j.  C.  Lyons. 

So  here  we  have  (ieorge 
Ragsdale:  Deke.  summertime 
farmer,  fiitine  lawyer,  (ier- 
mans  Chd>  officer,  .senior 
class  president.  Honor  Coun- 
cil chairman,  member  ol  the 
(ioiden  Fleece  and  Order  ol 
the  (irail,  ^         ; 

• 

en  Abnsr 


.  George   Ragsdale   heads   Men's   Couivcil 


.  .  .  Macl^  Pattoti  Will  chair  Stiidcnt  Cmiru:U 

•k        ■  • 

r 

Administrative  Flaw 
Binds  Student  UnionJ 

It  is  indeed  rcgietable  that  the  I'niversitv— a  pioneer  in 
the  student  utiion  mo\emeni  in  the  .South — has  progressed 
so  little  in  recent   years. 

Oiher  colleges  and  universities  are  the  proud  po.ssessors 
of  elal)or;uc-  multi-million  dollar  structures,  and  the  I'ni- 
\crsiiy  still  clings  to  conspii  uously  inaclet]uate  (iraham 
Memorial. 

I  he  logical  cpiesiion  is:  whv  no  progress? 

{)b\ioiisl\  there  are  many  rea.sons  including  a  finani- 
callv  hampeied  si atif  legislature. 

Uut  another  rieason  wfi^'  be  the  administrative  oi-ganl/a- 
lion.  ^ 

Our  present  organi/ation  scheme  has  the  (iM  director 
subjigated  to  the  director  of  .student  activities,  the  junior  ad- 
miiiistr;iti\e  official.  This  set  u|)  ma\  be  the  reason  whv  at 
Iciisi  two  outstanchng.  potential  CM  directors  have  refused 
the  job.  11  so.  the  organizational  scheme  should  be  immed- 
iatelv  re\amped. 

•  • 


(3)  Appellate  jufi.sdiction 
ill  cases  involving  the  Flec- 
tions Law. 

ie  it  -k 

Chairman  Patton  is  a  Zeta 
Psi  and  hails  from  the  Caro- 
lina Piedmont  —  Durham. 
home  al.so  of  student  !x>dy 
President  Scmny  Fvans,  Stu- 
dent Party  Chairtnan  Whit 
Whitfield  and  other  notable 
Cniversitv  students. 

Mack  is  a  junior  and  pre- 
med.  He  hopes  to  attend  the 
Lniversity  Medi<al  School, 
and  with  his  "90"  plus  aver- 
age, he  should  have  little  dif- 
ficulty making  entrance. 
«  *         « 

Semi-taciturn  Mack  pos- 
sess indefatigable  energy. 
This  is  evidenced  by  his  al- 
ready fornnilated  plans  for 
his  cotincil— although  he  has 
just  recently  assumed  the 
chairmanship    reins. 

Afac  k's  primary  objective 
as  far  as  next  year's  coimcil 
is  concerned  is  "making  the 
students  aware  of  the  juris- 
diction and  workings  of  the 
Student   Coimcil.  " 

-Along  with  this  "aware- 
ness" program.  Mack  has  the 
following  plans  already 
shued: 

(1)  Monthly  reports  to 
Lhe  Dailv  Tar  Heel  to  in- 
form the  student  body  of  the 
council's  aeticms  without  re- 
Ncaling  names. 

(2)  .A  meeting  with  mem^ 
bers  of  ihe  other  two  judic— 
iarv  l)odies  and  the  Facul- 
ty Board  to  clearly  define 
jurisdictional  boimclaries  to 
avoid  confused  jeopardy,  so 
that  students  may  be  com- 
pletely clear* as  to  the  fiuu- 
lions  and  duties  of  each 
council. 

*  *  • 

l^hose  who  know  Mack 
and  his  cjuiet  brand  of  sup- 
er-efficiency would  be  quick 
to  admit  this  admirable  com- 
bination of  <]ualities  and 
lapabilities: 

A  ready  and  sinootlily- 
c  >pera t  i ng  leader— reccjgn  i/ed 
bv  the  (>rder  of  the  Grail— 
a  cpiiet  man  with  pity  and 
concise  and  meaningfid  lang- 
uage, a  scholar  and  an  ath- 
lete who  gave  up  athletics — 
he  was  a  member  of  his 
freshman  basketball  and 
track  teams— in  deference  to 
a  busv  pre-medical  curric- 
uhnn. 

All  in  all,  a  man  who 
ihinks  before  he  speaks. 
s|)eaks  when  he  nutans  it. 
does  what  he  says — a  leader. 

• 

By  AS  Capp 


I'LL  V^IN  THE 
DUEL,DAD.T- 
VCDU'LL  BE 
PROUD  OF  ME 


(-Z£  ^UiLLOfTTNErr- 

ZAT  \/\K)RTHLE.SS  H£AD. 
COA/rA/A//^0  2AT  \^tJ.(JAaLE 
WATCH  WJLL  SOON 
3E  MMm.T-J 


Poge 


By  Watt  Kelly 


eoTAUm 


Proof  Reader 


Asbmead  P.  Pipkin 


faculty,  Valkfries, 
Grail:  Campus  Week 

Nancy  Hill 

This  campus  week  started  off  on  the  tail-end  of  a  holi  - 
day,  but  thinks  perked  up  Wednesday  tvhen  a  group  of  pro- 
fessors voiced  disapproval  of  the  proposed  hike  in  oia-of- 
state  tuition,  and  a  Carolina  coed  wa«  named  one  of  the 
ten  best  dressed  college  girls  in  the  nati(»n  by  Clamour  mag- 
azine. 

SeveraJ  professors  interviewed  by  ;>  reporter  this  week 
voiced  disapproval  of  the  proposed  .S200  incTpase  in  tuition 
for  out-of-state  students,  primarily  because  of  the  harm  it 
would  do  to  the  graduate  program. 

Dean  .Arnold  Perry  of  the  graduate  school  said,  'i  am 
opposed  to  the  out-of-state  tuition  increase,  V\C  has  been 
a  regional  center  for  graduate  work.  Whet)  people  looked 
for  a  university  in  which  to  continue  their  graduate  work, 
thev  always  looked  to  UXC.  However  there  il  no  longer 
any  G.L  Bill  to  finance  thi«  expense.  With  the  increase  in 
the  rate,  it  will  mean  we  ate  becoming  provincial." 

Dr.  Arthur  Roe.  chairman  of  the  Physics  Dept.  said, 
"the  price  (for  tuition)  slK>uld  not  be  so  high  as  to  drive 
graduate  students  away.  U  would  be  a  l>it  too  high"  if  the 
new  propcKsal  goes  through,  he  said. 

Dr.  William  S.  Wells,  professor  of  Fjiglish,  said  the  in- 
crease would  he  "a  most  unfortimate  thing.  The  nature  ol 
a  university  as  a  university  is  that  it  has  a  cosmopolitan 
atmosphere,  which  comes  from  out  of  state  students.  ' 

Lhe  outcome  oi  the  bill  introduced  three  weeks  ago  is 

not  as  yet  known. 

•  •  * 

And  Miss  Sarah  van  Weyk,  jimior  from  Winnetka,  111., 
has  been  named  a  "best  dressed  college  girHn.  the  nation.' 
The  residts  of  competition  to  select  the  ten  besiiparessed  girls 
from  representatives  of  over  200  colleges  were  learned  here 
Tuesday.  Miss  van  Weyk  will  receive  a  "Best  Dressed'  award 
and  will  be  featured  with  the  nioe  other  winners  in  the 
August  issue  of  Glamour  magazine,  to  be  devoted  entirelv 
to  campus  fashions. 

The  initiation  of  seven  coeds  into  Carorinas  highest 
women's  honorary  came  Wednesday  morning.  The  coeds 
were  recognized  for  character,  attitude,  service,  sound  judge- 
ment, leadership  and  scholarship  by  the  Valkyries  in  pre- 
dawn ceremonies  W^ednesday. 

Initiated  were  Misses  Sara  Faith  Price,  junior  nursing 
.student  fiom  Buskhannon,  W.  Va.;  Margaret  Eimice  Funk, 
junior  medical  technology  student  major  from  Wilming- 
ton, Del.:  Susan  I'eah  Wait;er,  senior  education  major  from 
Wilmington:  Shirlev  Weaver  Bumgarder,  senior  pharmacy 
'  major  from  West  Jefferson :  Jeap  jaoquelyn  AWridge,  sen- 
ior education  major  from  Winston -Sai^ffli;  joanna  Hill 
Scroggs,  senior  English  major  fm..i  Chapel  Hill:  and  Mrs. 
Sallv  Melvin  Horner,  senior  chemistry  major  from  ChaprI 
Hill. 

An  announcement  came  Friday  of  the  election  of  of- 
ficers of  the  Order  of  the  Holy  Grail,  top  campus  under- 
graduate honc^rarv  for  men.  John  Ken,  jimior  from  James- 
town, was  named  delegata  to  succeed  Luther  Hodges,  jr.  m 
the  tCH^  position.  Other  officers  for  next  year  will  he  Herman 
(.odwin.  sophomore  from  Dunn,  scribe:  Bennei  Thomas, 
jimior  from  Morven.  exchequer:  and  Macon  Patton,  junior 
from  Durham,  vice  exchequer. 

John  Whitaker,  sophomore  from  Winston-Salem,  was 
named  Friday  bv  Daily  Tar  Heel  Editor  Neil  Bass  as  busi- 
ness manager  of  the  paper.  He  succeeds  William  Robert 
Peel,  law  student,  who  resigned  recently. 

The  Senior  Class  will  present  a  Ford  automobile  to  the 
Avinner  of  the  grand  senior  class  drawing  Wednesday,  May  1. 
according  to  Lou  Rosenstock,  Senior  Day  publicity  chair- 
man. The  drawing  will  be  held  at  the  Patio. 

V  Director  of  Student  .Activities  Sam  Magill  announcecf 
Saturday  that  a  permanent  director  for  Graham  Memorial 
will  be  named  this  week.  Nominations  were  slated  to  be  pre- 
sented to  the  (;M  Board  of  DiiT^tors  the  first  of  the  week,  ht 
said. 

.Approved  names  will  be  sent  to  Chancellot  Robert 
House  for  final  approval.  He  is  expected  to  make  the  ap- 
pc|intment  during  the  week. 

The  choice  of  a  director  will  mark  the  culmination  of 
two  smesters  work  for  the  G\I  Board,  which  has  worked  on 
the  problem  since  the  resignation  of  James  Wallace  last 
spriiig.  Miss  Linda  Mann  has  acted  as  director  this  year,  but 
is  exj>ected  to  leave  the  position  in  June. 

.And  the  week  that  started  on  the  tail-end  of  a  vacation 
ends  with  promise  of  bigger  news  this  week. 

Fleet  Shift,  Jordanian 
Collapse:  World's  Week 

t    B«b   High 

The  biggest  nex\'s  in  the  world  this  week  was  the  send- 
ing of  the  6th  flei?i  by  the  Tnited  States  to  the  Eastern  Med- 
iterranean to  let  the  nations  involved  in  the  crisis  over  the 
Suez  Canal  and  Jordan  know  the  V.  S.  is  going  to  safeguaid 
the  peace. 

In  South  America,  another  war  broke  (Hit,  this  one  in 
small  proportions  to  the  haggles  in  the  Middle  East.  Hon- 
duras has  charged  that  Nicaragiian  troops  invaded  Hon- 
duran  tenitor\  and  have  ht^oken  diplomatic  relations  with 
Nicaragua. 

The  United  States  has  accepted  Egypt's  plan  put  f>efore 
the  United  Nations  Security  Council  for  the  running  of  the 
Suez  Canal.  Six  other  nations  rejected  the  declaration  with 
Russia,  strangely  enough,  agreeing  with  the  United  States. 

The  eight-dav-old  Jordanian  government  of  Premier 
Hussein  Khalidi  fell  Wedne-sdav  as  it  was  forced  to  resign. 
King  Hussein,  fighting  for  his  throne,  has  imposed  martial 
law  on  the  imperilled  country  of  jordati. 

.Another  .Arab  nation  got  into  tbe  act  this  week  as  Irac] 
warned  Syria  and  F.gvpt  ^e  was  ready  to  begin  a  wide- 
spread military  operation  against  them  if  any  attempt  was 
made  to  dismember  Jordan. 

Cincinr^^ati— Five  monkeys  made  a  jail  break  from  a 
escape  proof  monkev  island  at  the  too*.  Chicago— ,\  mild 
mannered.  17-vear-old  salesman  w-ith  ji  harv  Ynrmovv  and 
apparently  faultv  arithmetic  recalled  nine  miarriai^  in  the 
last  \v,  years,  but  onlv  one  divorce. 

Detroit — A  fantastic  plot  was  descril^ed  to  norice  by  a 
psychiatrist  who  said  he  hired  a  gimman  to  kill,  him  and 
then  called  the  deal  off.  Mineola,  N.  V.— .A  bov's  biggest 
drp!»m  came  true  for  him  last  week  when  Ravmcmd  Kajowski 
toAt-  the  conjTcOs  of  a  I  on<r  Island  R;«ilroad  passen<Ter  tr-'in. 
guided  and  help'*d  bv  the  enirineer.  The  6-year-old  is  blind 
andA«Tote  the  railroad  a  letter  in  braille. 


Farrelf 
Of  9n 

Frank 
junior   fi 
*pleoted 
'cliapter 
^re-medic; 

CHher 
Neil  C. 
presidenf| 
ton.  seer 
ton,  Abeii 

TW 
chapter 
in  1936, 
scholarstil 
tion  and 
pre-m*-di£ 


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THE   DAILY  TA»  MEK 


PAGl  TRKei 


la  hoh- 
>f  pro- 
>iit-of- 
of  the 

|r  mag"- 

is  week 
Ituition 
^arm  it 

•I  am 

s  been 

looked 

work, 

long^er 
?asc  in 

\i.  said, 
drive 
if  the 

jthe  in- 
jture  ot 
jpolitan 

ago  is 


|ka.  111.. 

kation." 

girls 

here 

award 

in  the 

•nttrely 

highest 

coeds 

jiidge- 

lin  pre- 

|niiT^ng 

Funk, 

filming- 

hx>m 

innacy 

sen- 

ba  Hill 

)<i  Mrs. 

Chaprl 

ot  of- 
under- 

)ames- 

]r.  in 

letman 

'homas. 

iiinioT 

fHi.   was 

las  busi- 

Robert 

to  the 
May  I, 

\y  chair- 

iiuxd 

lemorial 

be  fwrc- 

week,  ht 

Robert 
the  ap- 

ation  of 
►rked  on 
lace  last 
rear,  but 

vacation 


an 
eek 


the  send- 
Med- 
over  the 
safeguard 

is  one  in 
ast.  Hon- 
ied Hon- 
ions  with 

ut  before 
ing  of  the 
tiori  with 
ed  States. 

Premier 
to  resign, 
martial 

'k  as  Iraq 
a  'A-ide- 
empt  was 

from  a 
A  mild 
■morv  and 

tj?es  in  the 

olite  by  a 
L  him  nnd 
v*s  biggest 
1  Kaiowski 
n'^er  tr-^in. 
Id  is  blind 


Farrell  Named  President 
bfPre-Me^¥  Society 

Prank  W.  F^eU  J#.,  a  rising 
junior  from  JJ^fitpbn.  kas  been 
'elected  presidenl  'of  the  UNC 
chapter  of  Alpha  Epsilon  Oelta. 
pre-medical  fraternity. 

Other  officers  from  1967-M  we 
Neil  C.  Bendec,  Pollodisville,  vice 


STUDENT^  WIVES 

The  Student  Wives    will  hold   a 

special  meeting  Tuesday  ta  8  p.m. 

at     Victory  Village,     it     was     an- 

-^    -J     *    r^i       «    ^._      ^    ^.       I  nouaced   yesterday.    All    members 
president:   Clay ,  F.   Church.  Kins-  U.        w  j/^^j-        j 

f  J  ,  i  .  ^^'"_';^'-^"^'J'*  I  have  been  urged  to  attend  m  order 

to  discuss  the  May  entertainment 

program.  • 


ton,  secretary;  «ad  J«se^  |^.  te> 
ton,  Aberdeen,  :^MStirer. 
Tile  h<wor  «eciety.  whose  Beta 

chapter  was  established  at  UNC 
in  1936,  encourages  excellence  in 
.scholarship  and  .promotes  coopera- 
tion and  common  interests  among 
pre-medical  students. 


^!^J\,iep  cool 


^ 


ELIZABETH  ARDE.N 

Blue  Grass 
Flower  Mist 


YOUNG  DEMOCRATS 

The  Young  Democratic  CliiT)  will 
meet  tomorrow  at  7  p.m.  in  'Oer- 
rard  Hall,  according  to  club  Pres- 
ident George  Miller  yesterday. 
Plans  for  a  forthcoming  picnic  will 
be  discussed  and  officers  for  the 
coming  year  will  be  elected. 
STATISTICS  COLLOQililUM 

Professor  Wassily  Hoef fdiag  will 
speak  on  "DistinguishabiUty  oi 
Sets  of  DisU>ibutiMi"  at  the  Sta< 
tistics  Colloquium  meeting  tomor 
row,at  4  p.m.  in  206  Phillips  Hall, 
it  was  announced  yesterday.  The 
meeting  is  open  to  the  public  and 
all  Intereo-ted  persons  have  been 
invited  to  attend. 
PHYSICS  COLLOQUIUM 

Dr.  C.  O.  O'Ceallaigh  from  the 
Dublin  Institute  of  Advahced  Stu- 
dy will  speak  in  Phillips  Hall  at  8 
p.m.  Wednesday  on  "K-Particle" 
Studies.  Memt>ers  and  interested 
persons  have  been  urged  to  attend. 
JOINT  COLLOQUIUM 

The  Joint  Duke  -  UNC  Physics 
Colloquium  will  feature  Dr.  Law- 
rence WUets  from  Los  Alamos  Lab- 
oratory at  Duke  University  tomor- 
row at  8  p.m.,  according  to  an  an- 
nouncement made  yesterday.  The 
topic  or  Dr.  Wilets"  speecli  will  be 
"Neutron  and  Proton  Densities  and 
Potentials  in  Nuclei." 
ORIENTATION  COUNSELMIS 

According  to  Orientation  Coun- 
selor Chairman  Jerry  Oppenheimer 
there  are  still  several  men  who 
filled  out  applications  recently  but 
failed  to  take  the  required  test. 
Oppenheimer  said  those  persons 
still  interested  in  becoming  coun- 
selors can  make  up  the  test  by 
contacting  him  at  8-1286  or  6031 
before  Tuesday. 
SYMPHONY  TRYOUTS 


according 
yesterday. 
POLIO  VACONC 

University  Physician  E.  M.  McG. 
Hedgepeth  announced  yesterday 
that  polio  vaccine  is  now  available 
for  those  persons  who  need  secopd 
doses.  According  to  Dr.  Hedgpeth 
the  vaccine  will  be  available  dur- 
ing the  weel%from  9-11:30  a.m.  and 
from  2-5  p.m.  The  Health  Service 
also  has  vaccine  on  hand  which 
can  be  given  free  to  students  un- 
der 20  years  of  age,  he  said. 
REGIONAL  SCHOOLS 

Regional  Schools  for  NC  sewage 
works  operators-  will  be  held  again 
this  year.  Associate  Director  of  t|ie 
UNC  Extension  Division  Dtwight  C. 
Rhyne  announced  yesterday.  The 
schools  are  to  be  set  up  at  Hickorj'. 
Winston  -  Salem,  Charlotte  and 
Rocky  Mount,  and  will  begin  class- 
es during  the  week  of  May  6. 

The  courses  are  designed  to  be 
of  most  benefit  to  the  ^-mall  plant 
operator  and  the  mechanical  opera- 


to     an    tmnouncement ,  Pnit   and    Prof,   of   Naval   Science 
i  here. 
GI^TS  RECEIVED 

The  UNC  Pharmacy  Museum  an- 
nounced that  it  recently  received 
gifts  for  display  from  E.  S.  Benson 
of  Wilmington  and  H.  C.  McAllister 
of  Chapel  HiM.  Included  among 
the  gifts  were  an  old  soda  glass 
used  decades  ago  in  soda  shoppes, 
an  atomizer  over  50  years  old  and 
a  sat  of  old  square  apothecary  \ 
weights  which  were  originally  used 
in  ithe  drug  store  of  F.  S.  Duffy  in 
New  Bern  when  his  store  first 
opened  in  1935. 
COURSE  OFFERED 

The  UNC  Extension  Division  will 
offer  a  I'V  education  course  over 
WUNC-TV  beginning  June  3  en- 
titled "Maladjustment  Among 
Children,"  according  to  an  an- 
nouncement made  yesterday.  The 
course  can  be  taken  for  college  cre- 
dit and  will  be  taught  by  Dr.  Rich- 
ard L.  Beard,  assoc.  Prof,  of  Edu- 
cation. Three  lectures  will  be  giveri 
tors  of  larger  plant*.  Qualified  ,  ga^h  week  -  on  Monday,  Wedne^- 
members  of  the  N.  C.  Sewage  and  |  ^ay  and  Friday  nights  from  7:45  to 
Industrial  Wastes  Association,  the  i  ^.^q  ^  ^ 

-,   «„.._-     ^^.  '    FA.CULTY  LUNCHEON 


Driving  Contest  H&e  May  IS 

A  Teen-Age  Road-E-O  driving  The  compctKion  will  consist  of 
skill  contest  will  be  sta^d  locals!  a  written  quiz  aiid  ti)«  perform- 
]y  on  May  18  by  the  Jaycees  of ,  anoe  of  four  obstacle-type  exer- 
Chapel  Hill,  it  was  announced  |  cises  in  cars  provided  by  tb«  Jajr- 
recently.  j  cees.  No  entrant  will  be  permitted 

Pr(^gram  spokesmen  have  said .  to  drive  his  own  car  in  the  con- 
any  person  who  will  not  havt  i  test.  v 
reached  his  or  her  20th  birthday  j  The  local  winner  will  te  giVea 
by  August  is.  the  date  of  the  a  trip  to  tiie  state  i^ontest  in  Mon- 
national  Road-E.O  finals  ia  Wash-  j  roe  on  June  1  and  2.  Nortii  Caro- 
ington,  D.  C,  will,  be  eligible  to.  line's  entrant  i  n  the  national 
enter.  The  Jaycees  specifically  ex- ;  competition  will  be  contending  for 
tended  an  invitation  to  Carolina  {  three  top  scholarship  awards  of 
students  who  meet>  the  age  re-j  $200,  $1,500  and  SI  ,000  respective- 
quirements  specified.                         '  ly. 


SERVE  YOURSELF— 


EVERY  SUNDAT 


5:30-7:30  P.M. 


Dept.   of  Sanitary  Engineering  of 

N.  C.  State  and  staff  members  of 

the    State    Board    6f   Health   will 

make  up  the  teaching  staff,  Rhyne 

said. 

GRAIL  NOTICE 

Clss  rings  will  be  on  sale  in  Y- 
Court  from  9  to  4:30  p.m.  Tuesday, 
accordng  to  an  announcement  re- 
cently. A  aales  representative  from 
the  ring  company  will  be  on  hand 
to  assist  the  Order  of  the  Grail. 
Persons  desiring  further  informa-  j 
tion  concerning  the  sale  have,  been 
asked  to  call  Mac  Patten  at  the 
Zeta  Psi  house. 
RECEIVES  AWARD 

U.  Brooks  F.  Warner  U.  S.  Navy, 
Asst.  Prof,  of  Navy  Science  here 
has  been  awarded  the  Navy  Unit 
Commendation  for  services  aboard 
the  aircraft  carrier  "Phillipine 
Sea,'  during  1951. 

The  award  was  presented  on  bo- 
half  of  the  Chief  of  Naval  Per^ion- 


Dr.  A.  K.  King,  aso'ociate  dean  i 
of  the  Graduate  School  will  speak  i 
on  "Graduate  Education  at  the  Uni-  j 
versity  of  North  Carolina"  at  a  Pac-  j 
ulty  Club  Luncheon  in  the  Canb-  j 
lina  Inn  Tuesday  at  1  p.m.,  accord- 1 
ing  to  Club  President  Arthur  Roe  j 
yesterday.  Luncheon  will  be  $1.30 
and  reservations  must  be  made  be- 
fore tomorrow. 
WOMEN'S  COLLEGE  DEAN 

Dr.  Weldon  Marquis  of  Woman's 
College,  will  be  guest  speaker  Wed- 
nesday at  a  meeting  of  the  South- 
eastern chapter  of  the  American 
Musicological  Society  at  8  p.m.  in 
Hill  Hall.  Dean  Marquis  will  dis- 
cuss "Harmonic  Tendencies  in 
14th  Centiu-y  French  Music. "  i 

COURT  CLERKS  TO  MEET 

The  39th  annual  convention  ofj 
the  N.  C.  Assn.  of  Superior  Court , 
Clerks   will    be    held    in    Winston- 1 


Venus  And  Admirer 

One  of  them's  a  Carolina  coed.  She's  on  the  right,  and  her  name 
is  Phyllis  Krafft,  a  junior  from  River  Forest,  III.  Miss  Krafft,  along 
with  more  than  20  other  coeds,  will  compete  Tuesday  in  the  Sigma 
Chi  Derby  for  the  title  "Miss  Modern  Venus."  Venus,  also  known  as 
Aphrodite,  stands  now  as  a  well-known  statue  in  the  Paris  Louvre. 
The  plaster  cast  above  was  a  gift  of  the  Class  of  1900  to  the  Uni- 
venity.  (Photo  by  Fred  Powledgef 


SPECIAL  SALEI 
Blue  Crafis  Flower  Miaf 

WITH  GIFT  OF 
$1  DUSTING  POWDER,  $.3  V.\LUE 


'2 


both  far 

8  OZ.  BLUE  CKASS  FLOWKfi  M1?r 
WITHitlMVO  IJODUSTIVt;  POWDER 

$5  VAt.UE  3.50 
Kmited  timf  ett/v 

BlueGra.ss  FfowerMist  .  .  .  one 
of  the  lovely  lasting  delights  you 
can  live  with  all  day  long.  Spray 
it.  fipiash  it,  play  it  ever  you  for 
cooiaess;  never  be  without  it.s 
eni-liuiteil  aiira.  Now  «\-vn  the 
price  18  extravaffintly  light  .  .  . 
and  it  comes  to  you  with  a 
special  gift  of  Din-ring  Powder. 

priest  plus  tux 


Preluninary   tryouts    for 
♦j  soloists    with   the  North   Carolina  i  Reserve 

Symphony  C^hestra  will  be  held  j  — 

Saturday,   May   11,    in    the   choral 
room  of  Hill  Hall,  according  to  an 
announcement    yesterday. 
Applicants  wiU  be  scheduled  for  j        (C^tin^iew   from 


inninri"**    ^^'   ^^P*^'"   ^     ^^-   PattcrsoH,  yesterday  by  Royal  Shannonhouse 
.""'.ri^^^'"'^"'^*"*!  <'"**^*'  of  ^^*  Naval   of  the  Institute  of  Government. 
Officer    Training    Corps 


Coast  Conference  for  it.s  annual 
spring  meeting  at  Sedgefield  May 
3,  but  there  are  .several  proposed 
amendments  on  the  agenda  which 
Salem  July  3-6,  it"  was  announced  j  n™ay   '^•"^^'^   considerable   debate. 

Grants-in-aid. 
pective  students 


AT  ACC  MEETING: 

Proposed  Amendments 
May  Be  Controversial 

GREENSBORO— (AP)— Routine  Hill  Wednesday  witii  the  athletic 
business  matters  appear  to  be  the '  directors  meeting  to  discuss  sched- 
major  concern     of     the     Atlantic   ule  matters  at  10  a.m. 

Of  additional  interest  will  be 
the  visit  of  two  members  of  the 
Orange  Bowl  committee.  Commis- 
sioner Weaver  said.  The  Atlantic 


lid^tsJ^raHon 


Page    1) 


I  tryouts   and   notified   of  the   time 

■  at  which  they  will  appear  after  |  alism  may  pre-register  from  May 
they  have  filed  suitable  forms  with  •  1  to  May  10  in  202  Bynum.  Fur- 
the  N.C.  Symphony  Society  through!  ther  information  will  be  posted  on 

I  Mrs.  Fred  B.  McCall,  chairman  of  |  the  School  of  Journalism  Bulletin 

j  the  chihireR's  divisioii. 

)  MEDICAL  MEETING 

Staff   members   from   the  UNC 
School  of  Medicine  will  participate 


in  the  103rd  annual  session  of  the 
Medical  Society  of  North  Caro- 
liha  in  Asheville  from  Mai  5  to  8, 


CLASSIFIEDS 


PhpneMTBI 


WANTED:  COLLEGE  MEN, 
part-time  and  summer.  ELam  $50 
to  $100  per  week  plus  $100^$300 
scholarship  award.  Must  have 
use  of  car.  Contact  W.  P.  Cran- 
ford.  Box  1706,  Raleigh.  N.  C. 

FOR  INEXPENSIVE  UVING:  27' 
Nashua  Trailer  —  has  bath  tub, 
shower,  porch,  oil  heater,  added 
room,  connected  to  utilities  and 
septic  tank.  One  mile  out  on 
airport  road.  Call  8412.  $2,300. 


DAILY    CROSSWORD 


I.  The       " 
WUch 


t.  Alrfew 
itttton 

(Afr.)  , 
11.  A  Bavorinc 
I2.^a>tiy 
13. 6re«ves 

in 

mud 

14.  A  profeiaioh 

15.  tSiUter  Of  the 
'Betirs 
(•atron.) 

l«.  Perform 
17.  Behold! 
IS.  Direction 

(abbr.j 
It.  Shosh9ne«n 

IiMlian 
M.  H*  trained 

Samuel 
2l.Ruwian 

waport 

24.  Blemiih 

25.  Pinetraces 
27.  Cry 

29.  Chwmcl  of 
conimttni- 
cation 

32.  Itii^r 

S3,  oald 
S4.f'rMieuR 

S5.  BicclamaF  . 

HtVk 
M.  Stfciial 

37.  WM  «K 
39.  SJAikki 

4i.Detti«f  ' 
42.  Mistake 
49.Lait<l 

•ftke 
,     lamia  . 
44'.  B«tte 
45.  Domineer- 

ing 


DOWN 

1 .  Fkmovis 
operatic 
singer 

2.  Hardened 

3.  Morsels 

4.  Mountain 
(Theasaly) 

5.  The 
(Fr.) 

6.  Coated 
with 
icinff 

7.  injure 

8.  Exiit 

»  Mettiod 
of 

decoratiai: 
metal 
10.  Dexter»t«B 
14.  Water- 
falls 


19.  Em- 
^oy 

20.  Other- 
wise 

22.  Fenc- 
ing 
sword 

23.  Slight 
taste 

24.  A 
wa|:er 

26.  Weep 

27.  Makes. 
as 
cloth 

29.  Ady>4* 

earnestly 

30.  Aegean 
island 

il.  Frethy 

33.  Slug.     . 

gish 


man}  cziOSiidMiitei 


Board. 

The  Graduate  School  advises  its 
students  can  pre-register  from 
May  1  through  May  10.  Regular 
students  now  enrolled  in  the  Grad- 
uate school  have  been  instructed 
to  see  their  departmental  adviser,  r^^  award 
secure  a  gree  form  and  go  to 
Hanes  Hall   for  further  process. 

Undergraduate  students  who  will 
graduate  in  June  and  plan  to  en- 
roll in  the  School  in  the  summer 
or  fall  are  not  eligible  to  pre- 
register  and  must  register  on  the 
regular  registration  day. 

Dates    and    details    for    pre-reg- 
i^ration   in   the   School   of   Nurs-   ii:00 
ing  and   Dental   Hygiene   will  be   i2:00 
announced  to  the  classes.  12:30 

Freshman  and  sophomore  Phar- 1  ^-^q 
nvacy  students  have  been  instinict- 
ed  to  register  on  May  9  and  jun- 
iors and  graduate  students  on  May 
10.  Green  forms  will  be  secured 
and  taken  to  Hanes  Hall  for  fur- 
ther processing. 

Pre-registration    dates    and  de- 
tails will  be  posted  on  the  Bulle- 
i  tin  Board  on  the  Ground  Floor  of 
the  Medical  Building  for  the  De- 
partment of  Public  Health. 

The  School  of  Social  Work  has 
instructed    students   to   report    to 


Headquarters  for  the  convention 
will  be  the  Robert  E.  Lee  Hotel. 
Registration  will  begin  at  2  p.m. 
July  3  and  opening  ceremonies  will 
be  held  in  the  evening.  The  a-ssoci- 
ation  iMin^et  will  be  heM  Fri«lay, 
July  i.  ' 
SEVERAL  PAPERS 

A  number  of  papers  will  be  pre- 
sented May  3  and  4  by  personnel 
of  the  School  of  Medicine  at  the 
annual  meeting  of  the  N.  C.  Aca- 
demy of  Science  at  Wake  Forest. 
The  annual  Poteat  Award  will  be 
prcented  to  the  author  or  authors 


Coast  Conference  has  a  contract 
whereby  pros-  ^^jth  the  Orange  Bowl  and  the  Big 
commitments  are  seven  Conference  to  participate  in 
honored  by  other  schools,  again  j^he  annual  New  Year's  day  foot- 
appear  on  the  list  of  amendments  ball  spectacle  in  Miami, 
announced  Saturday  by  Commiss-  \^^^  current  uiree-year  con- 
ioner  Jim  Weaver.  This  scholar-  ^^^^^  concludes  with  the  1957 
ship  recognition  project  has  ap-  ^^^^  ^^^  Orange  Bowl  officials 
peared  before   the   conference   for ,  ^^^^.^     ^^    coramisftionor     they 

would  like  to  have  representatives 


Tseveral  years  in  various  forms. 
Two  other  proposals  are  new 
for  consideration.  However.  Only 
upperclassmen  are  now  eligible 
for  varsity  athletics  in  the  con- 
ference, but  it  is  being  proposed 
that  three-year  varsity  participa- 
tion bo  limited  to  baseball,  basket- 
ball   and    football,   thereby    allow- 


BUFFET 

At  The 

RANCH   HOUSE 


HOME  OF  CHOICE  HICKORY-SMOKED  CHARCOAL  BROILED  STEAKS 


After  The 
Band 

Concert 
Meet  Your 

Literate 
Friends  In 

The 

Intimate 
Bookshop 


at  the  spring  meeting. 


presenting  the  best  paper  in  the;  ing  freshmen     to     participate     in 
biochemistry-physiology  •     section.  1  other  varsity  sports. 


8s«M9S»]r'a  AeawM 

3%.  Acidity 
( med.  I 

37.  Eixchangt 
premium 

3«.  Heads 
(Slang) 

40.  Man's 
name 

43.  Tuberculo- 
sis (abbr.) 


is    a   citation    and    a 
grant  of  $50. 
WUNC-TV 

Today's  schedtile  for  WUNC-TV, 
the   University's   educational    tele- 
vision station.  Is  as  follows:    • 
9:45     Man  To  Man 
Sunday  School 
Christian  Laymen's  Witness 
Organ  Prelude 
Church  Service 
This  Is  The  Life 
Sign  Off 
Big  Picture 
Great'ldeas 
Shakespeare  On  TV 
Men  Toward  Light 
8:30   ISlusic  As  A  Language. 
9:00    Slffn  Off 
CANTERBURY  tLUB 

The  Canterbury  Club  at  the  Epis- 
copal Church  has  invited  everyone 
to  attend  a  religious  dialogue  call- 
ed "Even  .  .  .  Such  As  You"  to- 
night at  7:15  in  the  parish  house 
cloister.  Miss  Nancetta  Hud^-on" 
who  wrote  the  dialogue,   will   di- 


10:00 
10:30 
10:45 


7:00 
7:30 
8:15 


113   of   the  Alumni  Building   for  rect.     Supper     will     precede     the 
pre-registration  information.  drama  at  6  p.m. 


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Carolina 


ALSO 

LATEST    NEWS 

NOW 

PLAYING 


lU 


1^ 


12 

ANGRY  MEN 

Starring 

Henry  Fonda  Lee  J.  Cobb 

TOOAY-MONOAY 


Recruiting  comes  in  for  consid- 
erable attention,  including  the 
adoption  of  several  NCAA  regula- 
tions which  were  approved  at  the 
national    meeting    last   January. 

Among  them  is  the  banning  of 
contracts  or  interviews  with  play- 
ers in  high  school  all-star  games, 
either  en  route  to  the  game  and 
back  home  or  during  the  time  the 
athletes  are  at  the  site  of  the 
game. 

The  committee  on  constitution 
and  by-laws,  of  which  Dr.  O.  K. 
Cornwell  of  UNC  is  chairman, 
will  report. 

To  be  placed  on  the  floor  are 
proposed  changes  in  the  method 
of  public  announcement  of  repri- 
mands or  penalties  imposed  by 
the  commissioner  and  in  the  term 
of  ineligibility  for  a  student  or 
prospective  student  who  violates 
ACC  regulations. 

While  the  official  meeting  does 
not  open  until  10  a.m.  Friday,  May 
3,  with  Dean  Geary  Eppley  of 
Maryland  present  as  conference 
president,  there  is  a  full  scale  of 
group  meetings  which  always  ac- 
company the  spring  session. 

These  actually  begin  in  Chapel 

Dramatic  Group 
Will  Give  Next 
Play  May  19 

The  newly  formed  Petites  Dra- 
matique  dramatic  group  will  pre- 
sent on  May  19  its  first  produc- 
tion since  the  highly  successful 
presentation  of  Caligula  three 
weeks  ago,  according  to  an  an- 
nouncement made  yesterday. 

The  program,  "'An  evening  of 
Tennesse  Williams"  will  consist  of 
two  plays:  'Hello  from  Bertha." 
directed  by  Lloyd  Skinner  and 
"This  Property  is  Condemned,"  un- 
der the  direction  of  Taylor  Will- 
iams, j 

A  spokesman  for  the  Dramatique , 
group  has   indicated   the  program 
is  expected  to  be  highly  engaging 
and  in    true    Tennessee    Williams 
style.  He  said  cast   members  will ; 
be  revealed  at  a  later  date.  i 


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During  the  month  of  MAY  any  78  rpm,  45  rpm,  or  3SV^  L.  P. 
album  that  cost  you  $2.00  or  more  ^9^^  be  traded  in  on  a  BRAND 
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207  E.  FRANKUN   ST. 


FAf  ■  MOI 


THI  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


SUNDAY,  APRIL  21,  H57 


Trackmen  Upset  By  Virginia  Cavaliers 


K 


ING'S 
ORNER 

By  BILL  KING 

DTH  Sporfs  Editor 


Dick  Jamerson,  An  Unsung  Hero 

A  salute  to  Dick  Jamerson. 

The  unsung  h«ro  of  Carolina  swintming  h«»  rocantly  it—n 
Mlectad  as  the  April  nomina*  for  tha  AAU  honor  roll  for  "out- 
standing contribution  to  amateur  athletics  in  the  Carolines." 

The  handsome  ex-varsity  coach  has  beca  a  vital  cog  in  Carolina's 
rise  t(«  swimming  fame.  He  has  worked  dilligenlly  to  help  bring  UNC 
SAvimming  up  to  par  with  the  be„'t  in  the  country,  and  he  has  done 
it  without  glory. 

Jamerson.  who  suffered  a  stroke  at  the  Carolina  pool  while  of- 
ficiating a  high  school  championship  early  in  the  season,  has  beer 
ji'iing  through  a  rehabilitation  period  in  Memorial  Hospital  and  is 
now  coming  along  very  nicely. 

Coach  Jamersoji  has  also  been  a  great  contributor  to  the  physical 
education  and  teaching  program  at  Carolina.  He  has  given  his  time 
willingly  in  helping  Carolina  students;  whenever  he  could. 

This  corner  applauds  Coach  Jamerson,  a  man  whose  actions  have 
been  his  words,  and  looks  forward  to  his  recovery  and  return  to 
duties  as  an  instiumental  part  of  Carolina's  great  athletic  program. 


Rosy,  Pat  To  Wed  June  1st. 

Lennis  Rosenbluth.  the  great  Carolina  All-American.  has  proba- 
bly received  more  gifts  over  the  pa^^t  two  years  than  any  athlete  in 
Carolina  history,  but  come  June  1,  Rosy  will  be  doing  a  little  giving 
himself  —  at  the  altar. 

The  big  fellow  will  make  the  biggest  presentation  of  his  life 
when  he  places  a  ring  on  the  finger  of  his  bride  to  be,  Pat  Oliver 
of  Mt.  Airy. 

Lennie,  who  has  recently  been  on  a  barnstorming  tour  with  the 
College  All-Stars  and  Harlem  Globetrotters,  will  not  have  to  worry 
if  his  best  man  gets  nervous  and  loses  the  ring.  Rosenbluth  has  al- 
ready purchased  three  rings,  two  wedding  bands,  and  an  engagement 
ring. 

»       '  ./       »        ■ 

The  Old  Gang  Stays  Together 

Furthermore,  you  can't  let  a  thing  like  marriage  break  up  the 
team,  especially  a  team  that  went  undefeated  in  winning  the  Na- 
tional Basketball  Title.  The  same  group  which  took  the  floor  against 
Kansas  March  23  w^ill  contimie  to  support  Rosy. 

Pete  Brennen,  Joe  Quigg,  Bob  Cunningham,  and  Tommy  Kearns 
will  usher  at  the  wedding,  a^  will  Lennie's  roommate,  Ken  Rosemond. 
Freshman  Coach,  Vince  Gramaldi  and  ex-star,  Ernie  Schwartz  will 
also  serve  ms  usbera. 

Lennie,  who  has  been  hopping  around  the  country  by  airplane 
since  the  Kansas  game,  and  still  attending  classes,  will  take  a  well- 
earned  rest  until  the  big  day. 

After  the  wedding,  he  will  focus  hi^-  attention  on  professional 
basketball  with  the  Philadelphia  Warriors. 

This  writer  would  like  to  speak  on  behalf  of  every  student  on  the 
Carolina  campus  la  wishing  Lennie  Rosenbluth  the  best  of  every 
thing  in  his  new  life. 


ir  s 


UNC  Loses 
By  6Vz  Pts. 

'  CHARLaiTESVILLE,  Va..  \JD  — 
Sprinter  Sonny  Randle  and  field 
event  star  Henry  Davenport  spark- 
ed Virginia's  track  squad  to  an 
Atlantic  Coast  Conference  upset 
victory  over  Carolina  yesterday, 
68%  to  62 Ml. 

Randle  captured  firsts  in  the  100 
and  220-yard  dashes  and  anchored 
the  Cavaliers'  mile  relay  team  to 
victory  in  the  final  event,  which 
decided  the  outcome  of  the  meet. 

Davenport  shared  top  honors  in 
the  pole  vault  with  teammate 
Clarence  Roberts  at  13  feet  and 
won  the  discus  with  a  heave  of 
138  feet,  8  inches.  Doug  Campbell 
of  Virginia  turned  in  a  50.6-second 
quarter  mile. 

The   cavaliers   took  eight  firsts 
compared    to   seven    for    the    Tar 
Heels  and  scored  a  clean  s-weep  in 
the  pole  vault. 
The   suntNnaries: 

Mile  run — 1.  tie  between  Bishop 
and  Kahn  UNC.  3,  Havens  V.  4:29.4. 

100-yard  dash— 1.  Randle  V.  2, 
Gravins  V.  3.  Varnum  UNC.  :10.3. 

440-yard  dash— 1,  Campbell  V. 
2,  McFaddin  UNC.  3.  Sylvester 
UNC.   :50.6. 

Two-mile  run — 1,  Bishop  UNC?.  2. 
Reaves  UNC.  3,  Farrier  V.  10:07.7. 

High  jump  — 1, Bryant  UNC.  2, 
Tie  among  Feeley  and  James  V 
and  McAllister  UNC.  5  feet.  8 
inches. 

Pole  vault — 1.  Tie  between  Rob- 
erts and  Davenport  V.  3,  Whitaker 
V.  13  feet. 

220-yard  dash— 1,  Randle  V.  2. 
Gravins  V.  3,  Mcjs  UNC.  :22.5. 

880-yard  run— 1,  Kahn  UNC.  2. 
McFaddin  UNO.  3,  Borsody  V.  2:- 
01.1. 

High  hurdles— 1,  Deborde  UNC. 
2,  Lancaster  V.  3,  Whitaker  V.  0:- 
15.6. 

Broad  jump — 1,  Jennings  V.  2. 
Rosemond  UNC.  3.  Brawley  UNC. 
21  feet,  6=4  inches. 

Javelin— 1,  Oakley  UNC.  2,  Mc 
Callister  V.  3.  Moore  V  171  feet, 
1^4  inches. 

Shot  put  —1,  Kemper  UNC.  2, 
Call  V  3.  Outtcn  V.  45  feet.  8  in 
ches. 

Discus — 1,  Davenport  V.  2,  Out- 
ten  V.  3,  Roth  UNC.  138  feet,  8  in- 
ches. 

Low  hurdles  — 1,  Whitaker  V.  2, 
Deborde  UNC.  3,  Lancaster  V.  :24.- 
9. 

Mile  relay  —  Won  by  Virginia 
Collins,  Campbell,  Gravins.  Randel. 
3:33.6. 


Big  Week  For  Spring  Sports 


Afir  a  rather  slow  week  on  the  athletic  front  at  Carolina  this 
week,  action  hits  a  big  stride  starting  tomorrow  as  all  teams  prepare 
for  the  stretch  drive. 

Three  gsmms  are  on  slate  for  tho  Tar  Heel  baseballers,  two 
of    them  very   intportant   conference  outinfl^.   Tomorrow   the   Tar 
Heels  meet  Clenwon  at  Clemson   in  their  first   ACC   bout.  Then 
comes  Duke  In  Durham  on  Wednesday,  probably  the  big  game  of 
the  week  in  the  conference.  The  McCrary  Eagles  furnish  the  eom- 
petetion  in  the  final  game  Saturday. 
The  varsity  golf  team,  which  has  now  lost  its  last  two  matches, 
will  be  shooting  to  get  out  of  the  loss  cloumn  as  it  goes  against  N.  C. 
State  tomorrow.  Thursday,  Friday  and  Saturday  arc  the  big  days  for 
the  linksmen  as  they  participate  in  the  Southern  Inter-collegiate 'tour- 
nament. 

The  vastly  improved  tennis  team  has  three  games  on  tap  for 
the  week   The  netters  play  Williams  away  tomorrow,  then  wind  up 
their  eastern  tour  Tuesday  at  Harvard.  The  final  match  u  againtt 
Virginia  at  Charlottsville  on  Saturday. 
Dale  Ransom's  track  team  has  only  two  meets  slated  for  the  week. 
The  first  is  Friday  at  Princeton,  then  here  against  Duke  Saturday. 


Two  Teams  In  Title  Contention 

Thij  will  be  the  most  important  week  of  the  season  thus  far 
tor  Carolina  spring  spwts  teams.  The  basd>allers  and  golfers  are  in 
a  good  position  to  take  the  conference  championship  in  their  respec- 
tive divisions. 

The  linksmon  will  defend  their  titio  for  tho  second  timo, 
having  won  the  Itst  two  cenforonco  titles.  Tfio  bacelMiliors  will  be 
trying  to  avoid  th*  mild  clump  which  they  suffered  about  this 
timo  last  soMon,  finishing  third  in  tho  ACC. 

Duke  Pounds  Out  Win 
Over  N.C.  State,  9-2 


DURHAM  —  (Al»)  —  The  Duke 
Blue  Devils  pounded  out  17  hits 
here  yesterday  to  defeat  N.  C. 
State  College,  9-2.  and  move  back 
into  sole  possessi<Mi  of  first  place 
in  Alantic  Coast  Cooference  base- 
ball standings. 

Lefty  Dick  Smallwood  notched  | 
his  fourth  win  as  he  scattered 
%ight  Wolfpack  singles.  He  was  in 
trouble  only  in  the  second  inn- 
ing when  State  put  across  two  runs 
on  three  straight  singles  to  take 
a  stort-lived  2-1  lead. 

Smallwood,  who  has  lost  once 
this  season,  l«nn«d  U  ^d  walk- 


ed none.  He  struck  out  the  sid«  in 
the  fourth  frame. 

Duke,  which  had  tallied  one  in 
the  first  inning,  trailed  State  af- 
ter the  second  until  a  four-run 
fifth  inning. 

In  that  inning  George  Hoover 
and  Dave  Sime  singled  and  moved 
up  on  Andy  Cockrell's  sacrifice 
bunt.  Pete  Maynard  doubled  to 
score  them.  Len  Bonczek  kept  the 
rally  alive  with  a  single  and 
catcher  Bob  Weitzman  then  ungled 
to  score  Maynard  and  Bonczdr. 

Duke  put  across  one  more  in 
the    seventh    as   George    Atkinson 

singled  and  Weitzman  tripled. 


Alien  Returns 
From  6  Weeks' 
European  Tour 

Marvin  Allen,  UNC  soccer  coach 
and  member  of  the  physical  edu- 
cation faculty,  is  back  from  a  six 
weeks'  European  tour  on  which  he 
was  a  guest  of  the  United  States 
Seventh  Army. 

Allen  was  one  of  a  group  of 
nine,  seven  soccer  coaches,  a  ref- 
eree and  a  reporter,  assigned  to 
conduct  clinics  and  teaching  soc- 
cercer  to  the  Seventh  Army  per- 
sonnel, and  he  reports  a  most  in- 
teresting trip. 

The  long  time  UNC  coach  and 
faculty  memlber  worked  in  the 
American  zone  of  Germany — at 
Frankfort,  Hamburg.  Aschaffins- 
berg  and  Kltlzgen.  "We  had  long 
days  of  work,  too."  he  said,  "but 
it  was  a  fine  experience  and  I 
think  we  had  good  results." 

Allen  said  one  of  the  purposes 
was  "to  cement  German-American 
relations,"  In  addition  to  organ- 
izing battalion  soccer  teams  and 
teaching  the  sport 

The  tour  was  not  all  work.  The 
group  had  time  off  to  visit  Lon- 
don and  Paris,  each  for  several 
days'  duration. 

Allen  was  selected  for  the  tour 
along  with  fellow  coaches  Glenn 
Warner,  Navy;  Carl  Reilly,  Brook- 
lyn College;  Jack  Marshall,  Yale; 
Ken  Hosternfan,  Penn  State;  aud 
John  £mer,  East  Stroudsburg.  The 
referee  in  the  party  was  Jim  Wald- 
er  of  I%Uadelpbia,  aqd  Itie  writer 
was  Milt  Miller  of  the  Soccer 
News. 


Advertise 

In  The 
Tar   Heel 


Correction 

The  Daily  Tar  Heel  incorrectly 
roported  the  golf  score  between 
Carolina  and  the  University  of 
Maryland.  It  should  have*  been 
17-10. 


Mural  Activity  For  Monday 

Softball:  4:00.  Zete  vs.  Kap  Sig    (W):   4:00,    Kappa    Sig    vs.    Beta 


(W):  Phi  Gam  vs.  Pi  Lamb  Phi; 
ZBT  vs.  DKE;  5:00.  Med.  Sch.  2 
vs.  Ruff  in;  TEP  vs.  Lamb  Chi; 
Phi  Kap  Sig  vs.  SAE. 

Tennis:   3:30,   SAE  vs.   Phi  Gam 


5:00  Law  Sch.  1  vs.  Med  Sch.  1. 


PATRONIZE  YOUR 
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m  e  Daitu  i|3rat  Keel 


SHAME 

It's  an  ugly  mass.  S«a  paga  2. 


VOL.  LVII  NO.  175 


QampUit  OF)  Wtr«  Scrvtec 


CHAPEL  HILL,  NORTH  CAROLINA,  TUESOtAY,  APRIL  30,  1957 


Ofiieet  m  Graham  Memorial 


SIX    PAGES  THIS 


"isstJi 


U.S.  Responsible  In  j  Last  Call  Given 

I  For  Interviews 

Middle  East;  Russia  of  counselors 


LONIX)N  —  (AP)— Soviet  Rus- , 
sia  accused  the  United  States  last 
night   of   stirring   up  the   Jordan 
crisis  as  *a  step  under  the  Eisen- : 
bower   Doctrine   ts   dominate   the' 
Middle  East.  j 

It  warned  in  a  foreign  ministry  j 
statement  that  the  situation  "de- 
mands   the    adaption    of    urgent 
measures    to    avert    a    dangerous 
development  of  events."  I 

The  situation  can  lead  to  "grave 
consequences,"  said  the  declara- 
tion broadcast  by  Moscow  Radio. 

The  statement  said  "the  Soviet 
Union  cannot  pass  over  events  in 
this  area."  The  broadcast  did  not 
indicate  the   next  Kremlin  nwve. 

"The  events  in  Jordan  and  the 
deliberate  complication  of  the 
situation  in  the  Near  and  Middle 
East  is  in  fact  the  'Dulles-Eisen- 
hower' Doctrine  in  action  .  .  .," , 
the  statem'snt  said.  j 

The     statement     also     charged 
that    "military    preparations    are, 
openly    and    demonstrutively    tak-. 
ing  place  on  the  frontiers  of  Jor-j 
dan  and  that  this  time  also  Israel 
is    playing    a    particularly    unfor- 
tunate part."  j 

The  accusation  that  the  United 
States  was  trying  to  oust  Britain 
and  France  from  the  Middle  East 
apparently  is  designed  to  stir  up 
anti-American  sentiment  in  West- 
ern Europe.  j 

The  charge  of  U.S.  colonialism 
in  the  Middle  East  and  prctesta- 
tions  of  Soviet  friendship  for  the 
/U-abs  aim  at  solidifying  pro- 
Soviet  sintiment  in   the  area.        j 

The  Soviet  statement  condemn- 
ed the  mission  of  President  Eisen- 
hower's persona»l  envoy  to  the 
Middle  East,  James  P.  Richards.   | 

Richard$-has  baea  tourmji  Mid  I 
die    East   eouabi«»,   and    n   now 
ready  to  explain  the  Eisenhower  i 
miltkidry  •  ecuBihiift  pnttry  to  any ' 
Mwtttry   that  w'anta  aM   In   resist 
i«g   Colnmunism.      . 

Richards  has  not  been  formally 
invited  to  Jordan.  But  the  Soviet 
sUtement  charged  hi*  mission 
was  aimed  at  depriving  Jordan^ 
of  .iU  independence  through  ^ 
promises  of  financial  and  other 
lielf. 


AMMAN,  Jordan— (AP)— The 
United  States  yesterday  offered 
10  million  dollars  in  economic 
aid  to  King  Hussein's  new  anti 
Communist    government 

Jordan  indicated  immediate  ac- 
ceptance. Talks  began  at  once  on 
ways  to  put  the  money  to  quick 
use  in  this  troubled,  poverty- 
stricken  Middle  East  kingdom. 

The  Soviet  Union  called  the 
United  States  the  "main  culprit" 
in  the  Jordanian  crisis.  A  foreign 
office  '  statement  broadcast  by 
Moscow  radio  said  the  situation  is 
dangerous  and  could  lead  to 
"grave  consequences.'' 

The  Jordan  Radio  heard  in 
Cairo  said  Hussein  and  King  Saud 
had  agreed  in  their  surprise 
talks  in  Saudi  Arabia  Sunday  that 
the  Jordan  crisis  was  an  internal 
affair. 

The  new  Jordan  aid  offer  was 
announced  by  the  U.S.  embassy 
soon  after  Jordan's  foreign  min- 
ister emphasized  it  wants  noth- 
ing to  do  with  the  Eisenhower 
Middle  East  doctrine — possibly  for 
internal  political  reasons. 

The  aid  if  proferred  outside  the 
framework  of  the  doctrine  which 
provides  military  as  well  as  eco- 
nomic support  to  any  Middle  East 
nation  requesting  help  to  resist 
Communist   aggression. 

The  U.S.  embassy  announcement 
said  the  offer  was  made  in  recog- 
nition of  "the  brave  steps  taken 
by  his  majesty  King  Hussein  and 
the  government  and  people  of 
Jordan  to  maintain  the  integrity 
and  independence  of  their  na- 
tion." 


Orientation  Conunittee  Chairman 
Jerry  Oppenheimer  indicated  Mon- 
iay  that  all  applicants  must  be  in- 
\  .errcswcd  and  have  taiken  the  re- 
,  quired  quiz  before  6  p.m.  tonK?nrow, 
j  or  their  names  will  be  autoihati- 
I  cally  dropped  from  ooosideration. 

j  Oppertheimcr  said  init«*views  are 
'jeing  conducted   in  the  Woodbouse 

j  Conference  Room  in  Graham  Me- 
ino.al.  He  said  the  interview  wiU 

:  .ojv  .Hute  a  ma  jot  pcrtion  of  the 
C.Lrmt.ee's    eonsideratiion    toward 

'  >ek..on. 

Anc.iier  orit^ion^r  selection  will 
:e  "ne  oi\sii.&!..on  quiz  which  tan  be 
I  .akcii, today  xr  tomorrow  from  i-5 
>-.m.  in  the  Orientabion  Office  of 
Jr,'hajn  Memorial,  Oppei^eimer 
..aid.  '  • 

In  a  statement  yesterday  stress- 1 

;  g  the  importance  of  attending  iha  j 

I    ri*.n.a.K>n  interviews,  Oppenheimer  |. 

:aid:  I 

'•In   (lie  interest  of  choosing   the  1 
t^st  counselors  for  the  1957  orienta-  j 
..en  prcgram,  tlie  Campus  Orienta-  | 
.Ion    Committee    has    been,    is   and 
.uU   be  interviewing  all  appUcamts. 
"Thase  persons  who  have  ap>plied 
\.r  the  posXions  .anc  as  yet  have 
lot    appeared    lor    their    interview 
iniLSt  do  so  either  Ijetween  7-9  p.m. 
ct!ay  or  2-6  p.m.  tomorrow. 
To  d^te,   orjiy  atwut  50  per  cent  } 
f   the   f pplicants    have    completed 
he  neeessJHy  processing,  the  Com- 
nittee  chairman  said.   He  expiress-  j 
yd  hcpes  t'wit  e\  eryone  vvishtrii  to  | 
r.>r    th*-- projfam    and   who   has 
applied  to  date  w.111  complete  pro- 
ess  ng  befU-e  the  deadline  tomor- 
row. 


Four  Men  Being  Considered 
For  GAA  Director's  Position; 

I 

Appointment  Date  Is  Uncertain 

Board  Progress  Slow"^ 
In  Interviews  -  -  Young 


By  GRAHAM  SNYDER' 

The  Student  Activities  Office  an: 
nounced  yesterday  the  names  of 
the  four  men  who  have  been  in- 
terview by  Graham  Memorial 
Board  of  Directors  for  the  position 
of  Graham  Memorial  Dicretor.      ' 

The  f3ur  men  who  were  inter* 
viewed  are  William  Rion,  Univer- 
sity of  Florida;  James  Burgoyne; 
University    of 


'last  Blast' 
For  Seniors 
Is  Tomorrow 


WhiHieild  Announces 
^^1  Speech  By  Dr.  Pofedf 


GM'S  SLATE 

The  following  activities  are 
scheduled  for  Graham  Memorial 
today; 

Orientation  Committee,  4-6 
p.m.,  Grail  Room;  Phi  Delta  Phi, 
7:30-8:30,  Grail  Room;  Hospital 
Recreation  '  Instruction,  11:30 
a.m.-12:30  p.m.,  Roland  Parker 
1  and  2;  University  Party,  7-11 
p.m.;  Roland  Parker  1  and  2; 
Orientation  Interview,  2-9  p.m., 
Roland  Parker  3  and  Woodhouse 
Conference  Room;  Panhellenic 
Council,  2:15-4  p.m..  Council 
Room;  Women'.'  Resident  Coun- 
cil, 6:45-9  p.m.  Council  Room; 
APO,  7-9  p.m.,  APO  Room;  Hos- 
pital Recreation  Instruction,  1:30- 
2:15  p.m.,  Roland  Parker  1; 
Dance  Class,  6:3D-8  p.m..  Ren- 
dezvous  Room. 


The  announcement  of  an  upcom- 
ing speech  by  Dr.  William  Poteat, 
and  a  planned  social  gathering, 
plus  a  listing  of  committee  appoint- 
ments and  a  short  speech  by  Stu- 
dent Body  Prejldejit  Sonny  Evans, 
comprised  the  Student  Party  meet- 
ing last  night  in  the  Graham  Me- 
morial. 

Combining  party  advisory  board 
and  program  committee  reports, 
party  secretary  Betty  Carolyn 
Huffman  announced  tentatve  plans 
for  a  banquet  to  be  held  two  weeks 
from  last  night  at  Watt's  resturant. 
The  planned  price  for  tickets  was 
$1.50. 

Party  chairman  Whit  Whitfield 
announced  that  resigning  UNC 
philosophy  professor  Dr.  William 
H.  Poteat  would  addresa-  next  Mon- 
day night's  SP  meeting.  The  meet 
ing  wil!  be  open  to  visitors,  and 
its  exact  time  will  be  announced 
later  in  this  paper. 

Whitfield  plso  deferred  action 
on  a  proposed  revision  of  the 
party's  by-laws  until  a  later  date, 
due  to  lack  of  attendance  at  the 
meeting  last  night. 

In  a  short  speech  to  the  body 
Student     Body     President     Sonny 


Evans  issued  a  reminder  that  all 
applications  for  student-govern- 
ment appointive  positions  must  be 
turned  in  by  Thursday,  May  2nd. 

Evans  also  commented  on  the 
recent  solution  of  the  Lenoir  Hall 
problem,  stating  that  it  is  his  feel- 
ing that  the  solution  arrived  at 
was  most  satisfactwy  to  the  cafe- 
teria's student  workers,  and  com- 
plimenting SP  members  Al  Alphin 
and  C.  White,  and  The  Daily  Tar 
Heel,  for  their  roles  in  bringing 
the  situation  to  the  attention  of 
the  student  body. 

Evans  also  pointed  out  that  any 
action  on  the  appointment  of  a 
new  director  for  Ihe  Graham  Me- 
morial will  come  from  the  GM's 
board  of  directors,  not  from  the 
office  of  student  affairs,  as  pre- 
viously implied  by  this  paper. 

Chairnian  Whitfield  also  an- 
nounced the  following  committee 
appointments:  Finance  Committee, 
P.  G€rde„'  and  Bob  Herford;  Social 
Committee,  Rudy  Edwards  and  Jim 
Johnson;  Membership  Committee, 
C.  White,  Mike  Hayes,  Leon  Holt, 
and  Martha  Fortune;  Program 
Committee,  F.  Schultz  and  David 
Mathews. 


Chester    A.    Berry.    University    of  ^ 
abode  Island;  and  Charlie  Gibi-on, 
an    entertainment    manager   from 
Winston-Salem. 

The  Student  Activities  Office 
said  that,  in  all  probability,  one 
of  the  four  men  named  would  be 
appointed  the  new  GM  director. 

Bob  Young,   Board   of  Directors 

Chairman,   said   that   the  work  of 

Southern     Illinois;  interviewing    the    four    men    had 

^__--^^__  !  Ijgg^  gpj   ^35  progressing  slowly. 

^  INFORMAL   TALKS 

Young  said  that  the  Board  of 
Directors  had  not  as  yet  made  any 
decision,  but  had  only  had  inform- 
al talks  with  the  four  men. 

As  to  the  date  of  appointment. 
Young  cound  give  no  definite  time. 
He  said  he  hop^d  that  the  appoint- ; 

ment  would  come  within  a  week. 

Tcnic.row  t.is  gradualing  class  oi  j  but  that  he  could  not  be  sure  be-  j 
1957  will  have  Its  'last  blast"  and!cau.-j  of  the  careful  consideration y 
all   day   of  activiiit's  as   a   group,  j  of  the  appointment.  j 

PuLIicity  Chairman  Lou  Rosenstock  |      Student  Activities  Director  Sam 
.said  yesterday.  { Magill  said  that  the  final  appoint- 

Ihe  f.  ..ivities  begiu  tonight  with   ment  will  be  made  by  Chancellor  | 
la;e  i>:.ovv  at  Me  Car^jna  Theatei-  i  Robert  House.  | 

enUtied    Designing    Women,    Rosen-  j      The  appointment  of  a   new  GM  j 
stock    said.    He    urged    all    seniors.!  Director   will    be    the   culmination  j 
:o    take    advantage    of   this    initial '  af  a  two  semester  study  by  the  GM 
,  hapter  to  the  Senior  Day  acthitles  !  Board    of   Directors    in    seeking    a 
and  to  participate  la  the  social  af-  [  new  GM  head, 
telr  ttMnonvw.  i      Mias  Linda  Mann,  who  haa  been 

-^vTH*  .l««»-fcT»«ei»Jordii*^«ilMNtal*iOM,  Dirtkctor  sinee  last  rear  when 
wlU  be«m  scnnorrow  at  10  a.m.  wWi    former   director    Jim    Wallace    re- ^ 
^g^^^nt^^^^tm^^mmm^^^t^a^^^^  I  signed  the  position,  is  expected  to  | 

{ leave  the  position  in  June.  '  | 

I      The  new  director's  functions  wil)  j 
I  entail  supervising  the  maintenance  : 
I  of  Graham  Memorial  and  acting  as 
i  an  advisor  to  the  Activities  board,  i 
The  director  will   act  as  a  con- 
lisolidaling   figure   in   the    GM   pro- 
an  organiaational   meeting  in   Me-  !  gram  and  a  liason  between  the  Ac 


\ 


Senior  coeds  planniiHl  to  at- 
tond  the  special  mevio  tonight 
have  boon  given  lata  permission 
until  1:30  a.m.,  according  to  the 
Women's  Residence  Council  and 
the  office  of  the  dean  of  women. 


Scoring  Oh  The  Geek 

Sam  Maivin  takes  it  all  with  a  smile  as  amuied  bystanders  lend  encouragemont  from  safe  points 
of  vantage  at  Sigma  Chi's  "Hit  The  Geek"'  contest  last  year.  Smiling  support  to  the  happy  victim  ar; 
left   to    right.    Buddy    Payne,   standing.    Bob   McCart.iy   stooping   and   Bob   Bell   standing. 


4N  KENAN  STADIUM: 


morial  Hall  when  commencentiient 
plans  wUl  be  discussed. 

At  5:30  that  afternoon,  the  seniw 
t)arbecue  will  be  held  at  the  Patio. 
Ml  seniors  have  been  urged  to  at- 
tend. 

Activitiies  for  the  evening  include 
a  carnival,  special  entertaimnent, 
award^jirg  of  prizes  and  drawing  for 
11     Ford     automobile.      Continuous 


tivities    Board    and    the    program- 
ming of  outside  events. 


UP  Will  Elect 
New  Officers 


Sigma  Chi's  Present 
Gala  Program  Today 


rmtsic   is  slated  to  aceomr>any  the  |  Parker    Lounges    of    Graham    Me- 
program  at  the  Patio.  I  moriad    to    elect    new    officers    for 


It's  Sigma  Chi  Derby  Day. 
And  no  student  wM  have  to  worry 
about  what  he  will  find  to  fill  the 
The   University    Party    will    meet  I  afternoon   hours.    The   Sigma    Chi's 
at   7:45   p.m.   today   in   the   Roland  J  are  prepared  to  entertain  the  cam- 
pus wi:h  their  13th  annual  derby  to 


be  held  in  Kenan  Stadium  at  2:30 


Program     STokesmen     have     in-    tl*    coming    year,    UP    Chairman  \  p.m.   There  will  be  gala   co.=tumes 


dicated  tickets  for  the  drawing  can  j  Mike   Wt  inn>an  said   yesterday, 
be   obtained   only   at   the    10   a.m.       Offices  to  be  filled  include  party 


organi7iational  meeting  in  Memorial 
Hall.  They  urged  e\-er>\>ne  inter- 
ested to  aitend. 

In  the  event  of  rain,  the  barbecue  j  are    expected 
wiU  be  held  Thursday  at  the  Patio  |  posts. 


chairman,  vice  chairman,  secretarj' 

and    treasurer.    Weinman    indicated 

yesterday  thai   "Interesting  races" 

for    several    of    the 


chiring  the  hours  already  scheduled, 
Rosenstock  said.  He  further  urged 
all  semors  to  take  part  in  a  pro- 
gram which  has  required  great  ef- 
fort to  p'an  for  thslr  benefit. 


In  additiim  to  the  election  of  new 
officers,  a  resume  of  party  activity 
during  the  past  year  will  be  pre- 
"^nted  and  a  financial  report  will 
be  issued. 


worn  bv  each  participating  groiip, 
and  the  doer  prizes  will  be  better 
than  ever,  according  to  the  Sigma 
Chi's. 

This    year    the    merchants    have 
gone  all  out  in  helping  make  this  the    at  2  p.m. 


Mode.n  Venus  will  feature  15  lovely 
young  wcmen  from  different  social 
organii:ati<;;"s  around  the  campus. 
The  new  Derby  Qiieen  will  receive 
a  batting  «u:t  from  a  Iccal  store. 

Back  to  defend  her  title  rn  the 
RE;e  to  l-'e  Flesh  is  Miss  P-e  Wee 
Ba;t3n.  1  c:l  recording  2:ti:t. 

Pa:-l!.c:F3t>g  in  the  parade  and 
'live  events  are  nurses,  St -ay  Greeks, 
Independent  Women  and  five  scror- 
itios.  The  paradr.  led  by  the  Lifi- 
ccln    H  ?h    School    Band,   wild    begia 


largest  and  mc?t  successful  derby 
ever.  The  have  donated  more  prizes 
thian  ever  before. 

Events  stimulating!  the  most  inter- 
est are  th6  Mtss  Modern  Venus  con- 
test and  tlie  Race  to  the  Flesh.  Miss 


Trophies  vviil  be  preseiMed  to  the 
winner  of  each  event,  according  to 
Sigma  Chi  .'^.-rokesmen. 

One  of  tl:e  my.sterics  of  t'.ie  derby 
is  the  Sc'cret  Event.  Tlie  only  iifcr 
(See  DERBY.  Psge  5> 


Annual  Awards  Dinner 
j    Of  Press  Club  May  9 

I     The  .Annual  Awards  Dinner  of  the 

:  Univcisity  Press  Club  and  the  Jour- 
r^iism    Schcol    has    been    set    for 

I  T:iurs.iay,    May  9.   at   7:30  p.m.   at 

'  Brady's  Restaurant. 

Chancellor  Rotie^t  B.  House  wUl 
?peak,  and  winners  of  Jcurnalisin 
£:holarsh!ps  and  other  awards  wiil 
be     announced    at     it  he      banquefc. 

!  T  ckc'.s  ere  $1.50  each  and  can  b« 
oittained  from  Buzz  Merritt,  Stan 
Brennan,  J,  hn  Asliford.  Miss  Joan 
.McLcnn.  .Miss  Jackie  Hailhcock  and 
-Vrs.  Jsckie  Hospker. 

All    Journalism    majors    and    stu- 

:"er.t5  inlc:"es:cd»in  Jcurnal'sm  have 

teen    urged    by    President    Charlie 

•Ichi'^rn    to    eet    their   tickets,    early 

rrl  at  end  the  banquet. 

"Th  s  :s  the  one  big  nig^it  of  the 

Ic;  ~rali  m  School  for  the  academic 

jerr."  ^hnscn  said,  "so  let's  all  be 

ure  t7  a. tend." 

.\e.\t  year's  officers  will  also  be 
T:t:odu?ed  at   the  banquet. 


SUNI>AY  AFTERNOON  BAND  CONCERT  FASCINATES  KIDS: 


KETTLE  bRUM  SOUNDS 

•  I  .  drau7  cttrioiLs  young  ladiei 


CONDUCTOR  PROTEM 

(  .  .  getting  an  early  start 


(;Photofi  by  Bill  King) 


PEOPLE   ENJOY  SHADE 

,  ,  .  while  band  plays  on 


BEWILDERED  SPECTATOR 

.  .  .  what's  thUi  all  abouf! 


'^^w^'^^i^rw^m 


^AOI  TWO 


THE  DAILY   TAR   HEBL 


TUESDAY,  AWIIL  JO,  1f57 


HearHest  Commendation 
For  Scholastic  Prowess 

"/  consider  an  human  soul  xvithout  education  like  marble  in  the 
quarry,  which^^hows  none  of  its  inherent  till  the  skill  of  the  polisher 
fetches  out  tht  colors,  makes  the  surface  shine,  and  discovers  every  orna- 
mental cloud,  spot  and  vein  that  runs  through  the  body  of  it." 

*^  --Joseph  Addison 


Heartiest  *^t6ria.l  congiatula- 
tions  to  Baltle-Vance-Pettigiew 
Dormitory  and  Mclver  Dormitory 
for  their  top  positions  in  the  men's 
and  uomen's  ciormitory  scholastic 
races. 

Mclver  took^Cop  overall  honors 
in  the  academic  xace  w  ith  an  aver- 
age of  1.652,  an;  A"  or  3.000  be- 
ing the  epitome  of  academic 
prowess. 

o 

Batile-\'ance-Pettigrew  had  an 
average  of  1.363  for  the  fall  se- 
mester to  take  lead  po.sition  among 
mens  dormitories. 

Spencer  wa$;  second  among 
women's  dormitories  with  a  1.579 
average.  Whitehead  was  a  close 
second  amotig^  Men's  dormitories 
with  a  1 .354 . -average. 

.\11  wijmen's  dormitories  placed, 
higher  tlvin  thtj-top  men's  dormi- 
tory which  certainly  appears  to  in- 
dicate that  tTpiversity  coeds  arc 
applying  therm^lves  more  vigor- 
oiislv  to  the  scTiolastic  grind  than 
mep   studer 


are  to  be  highly  commended  for 
their  demonstrated  academic  ex- 
cellence. 

As  was  the  case  with  University 
fraternities  and  sororities.  The 
Daily  Tar  Heel  repeats  this  advice 
to  those  low  men  on  the  scholastic 
totem   pole. 

Do  not  feel  maliciously  envious, 
but  do  use  these  academic  suc- 
cess stories  as  incentive  toward 
forwarding  your  respective  aver- 
ages. 

It  should  be  universally  agreed 
that  the  main  purpose  of  this  Uni- 
versity is  its  academic  program.  It 
is  to.  be  subordinated  to  nothing 
else,  neither  athletics  nor  social 
life  nor  Lenoir  Hall. 

Again  we  offer  laurels  to  Mc- 
lver and  Battle-\'ance-Pettiffrew 
Dormitories  for  their  academic 
achievement. 

Again  we  feel  obligated  to  ver- 
bally chastize  those  dormiiories 
which  placed  av  low  as  .980,  .986 
and   .989. 

We  hx>k  for  improvement  in 
ilu"    present   semester. 


C.arr  Dormitory,  low  among  th( 
women's  donui|Jiad  a  1.458  aver- 
age as  compe^T^  to  men's  leader 
Battle  -  \'ance/^wettigrew  with  a 
1.363  averag^e. 

At  any  rate|»e  winning  dorms 

interr^tionaj  Smear 
On  tp©   State's   Face 

If  liberty  ailQitqiiality.  as  is  thought  t>y  some,  a>e  chiefly  to  be  found 
in  (lemfKracy,  4bey  will  l>e  best  attained  when  all  persons  alike  share 
to  the  utmost."— Aristotle. 

It  Is  indeed  linfortunate  that  an  international  delegation  must  be 
submitted  to  afr|&  embarrassed  by  southern  facial  prejudice. 

Such  was  the',casc  as  the  University  CosmopK>Htan  Club  attempted  to 

picnic  at   the   Umstead   Stale   Park 
--r—r- — :—._  over  the  weekend. 


31 


The  Daily  Tar  Heel 


The  official  studeat  publication  of  the 
Publications  Boardlbf  the  University  of 
North  Carolina.  %^re  it  is  published 
daily  except  Monday  and  examination 
and  vacation  periods  and  summer  terms. 
Entered  as  second  jljblass  matter  in  the 
post  office  in  Ch«pel  Hill,  N.  C,  under 
the  Act  of  March  8.  1870.  Subscription 
rates:  mailed.  $4  per  year.  S2.50  a  semes- 
ter: delivered  $6-'*  year,  $3.50  a  semes- 
ter. ; 


Editor 


NEIL  BASS 


Managing  Editor  CLARKE  JONES 


Associate  Ekiitor 


NANCY  HILI. 


Sports  Editor     .  .^>V-- .-  BILL  KING 


Newj  Editor  dWALT  SCHRUNTEK 


Business  Manager  ^*6HN  C.  WHITAKER 


Advertising  Maii^g^        FRED  KATZIN 


NEWS  STAFF— Graham  Snyder,  Edith 
MacKinnon,  Pringie  Pipkin,  Bob  High, 
Ben  Taylor,  H.  Joost  Polak,  Patsy 
Miller,  Wally  Kufijilt,  Bill  KiDg„  Cur- 
tis Crotty,  Sue  Atchison. 

EDIT  STAFF'— Wbit  Whitfield,,  Anthony 
Wolff,  Stan  Shaw,  Woody  Sears. 

BUSINESS  STAFF-pJohn  Minter,  Mari- 
an .'lobeck,  Jane  Patteai  Johnny 
Whitaker. 


SPODTS  STAFF:  Dave  Wible,  Stv  Bird, 
Ekl    Rowland,    Jim    Crbwnover,    Ron 
.  MiiUgaa.  ^ 


'^8  I'niversity  students,  all  but 
1-,  of  whom  were  from  locales  out 
of  the  continental  United  States, 
attempted  to  picnic  at  the  Um- 
stead Park  Sunday:  and  were  re- 
fused entrance  bv  an  ;*ttendant 
who  (informed  the  internationaJ 
delegation  of  the  state  law  deny- 
ing Negroes  equal  usage  o^^  state 
park    facilities. 

Certainly  this  was  an  unjust  ajid 
luifair  and  unpleasant   incident. 

Certainly  this  was  presenting  an 
odious  and  intolerant  and  con- 
piciously  prejudicial  side  of  the 
University,  state  and  nation  to  a 
delegation  refxresenting  many  ma- 
jor  nati(jns  of  the  world. 

.\o  section  likes  to  be  coerced, 
and  no  section  should  have  im- 
mediate and  far-reaching  integra- 
tion thrust  down  its  throat. 

But  to  students  from  countries 
threatened  by  Communist  infil- 
tration and  indoctrination,  this  is 
assuredly  an  odious  impression  of 
the  .America  we  all  love— an  im- 
pression witich  they,  as  future 
leaders  of  their  countries,  will  car- 
ry foremost  in  their  minds  as  they 
return  from  their  American  edu- 
cational tour. 

It  is  an  ugly  smear  on  the  face 
of  the  state. 

It  is  an  ugly  impression  of 
Americanism. 

It  is  an  ugly  smear  inipr  ^  ed 
on  the  faces  of  an  international 
delegation. 

It  is  an  ugly  smear. 


Subseriptioi^  Manager 


Dale  Staley 


CrcuUtion  Manager Charlie  Holt 


Staff »I»hotograpliera ;;!-.,_  Woody  Sears, 
Norman  KantcMr,  BUI  King. 


LilH-arians—JStie  Gichner,  Marilyn  Strum 


Night  News  Editor^ , Bob  High 

Night  Editor Woody  Sears 


MAY  6 


Is  Coming  ^9011 


THE  HILLTOP; 

Committees: 
Pro  And  Con 
On  Functions 

Nancy  Hill 

Deliniating  Student  Govern- 
ment committees  is  a  job  for 
the  Job-like.  Cataloging  the 
committees  set  up  since  the  re- 
formation of  student  govern- 
ment in  the  late  '40's  as  to 
origin  and  jurisdiction  would' 
probably  be  worthwhile,  but  it  is 
too  big  an  undertaking  for  one 
column. 

However,  several  of  tlie  nJanjr 
committees  currently  operating 
under  Sonny  EJvans  have  turn- 
ed out  or  promise  to  turn  out 
valuable  results.  The  student 
committee  on  class  cuts,  for  ex- 
ample, worked  with  the  admin- 
istration in  bringing  about  the 
ruling  now  in  operation.  And  it 
was  the  student  committee's 
recommemlations,  accepted  by 
the  administration^  thai  formed 
the  basis  for  he  new  system.  A 
basic  problem  in  drawing  up  the 

*  system,  incidently,  was  to  find 
a  way  to  keep  students  from  cut- 
ting before  and  after  holidays 
The  eventual  aim  of  the  student 
committee  is  complete  freedom 
from  cut  rulings. 

One  of  the  larger  standing 
groups  is  the  Constitutional  Re- 
visional  Commission.  Establish- 
ed five  years  ago.  the  commis- 
a'on  this  year  revised  the  struc- 
t:»re   of   hfc   student   government 

•  constitution.  In  doing  so  it  ac- 
complished what  previous  com- 
mittees, hampered  by  attempts 
to  revamp  the  principles  of  stu- 
dent government  as  well  as  the 
document  iself.  were  unable  to 
do.  Two  years  ago*  the  commis- 
sion concentrated  '  on  judicial 
organization  alone,  redefining 
the  jurisdiction  of  Honor  and 
Student  Councils  and  establish- 
ing a  court  of  app>eals.  The  ap- 
pellate court  includes  the  chair- ^ 
men  of  the  Honor  Council,  Stu- 
dent   Council.    Women's    Honor 

'  Council  and  throe  faculty  mem- 
bers. 

Two  groups  were  not  enough 
to  handle  the  ^traffic  and  park- 
ing problems  on  the  Hill.  Set 
up  recently  by  Sonny  Evans  was 
the  Campus  Traffic  Board,  to 
aid  the  Student  Affairs  Office 
in  processing  trafic  violations. 
Already  functioning  were  the 
University  Trafftc  Committee 
and  the  Traffic  Advisory  Com- 
mission. The  University  Com- 
mittee has  two  student  mem- 
bers and  is  working  with  the 
Universiy.  particularly  with  he 
engineering  department,  to  find 
ways  of  alleviating  parking  con- 
gestion. 

One  of  the  most  interesting 
reports  to  come  from  a  student 
government  committee  is  in  the 

*  working  now.  The  Campus 
Stwes  Committee,  with  four 
student  and  four  faculty  mem- 
bers, will  release  a  detailed  re- 
port on  profits  and  expendETA 
from  the  Book  Exchange,  Circus 
Room,  Scuttlebutt,  Y  Court  con- 
cession and  campus  vending  ma- 
chines   next    fall. 

There's  no  doubt  of  the  value 
of  some  Student  Government 
committees— others  have  yet  to 
prove   their   worth. 

L'il  AbRM 


'Maybe  Td  Better  Show  You  Where  The  Fire  Is.' 

^  fe«fe^Xt>,reci!^l  iff 


THE  STUDENTS'  FOohm. 


Student  Dislikes  Psychology 


Editor: 

There  were  two  patches  of 
light  emerging  starkly  from  the 
darkness  of  the  room,  one  on 
the  blind,  one  on  the  ceilj«ig.  I 
was  staring  at  the  one  or  the 
blind,  waitrfig  for  trfe  noise  to 
step.  It  would  not  stop,  but 
grew  louder — it  was  a  plane,  a 
plane  with  a  crazy  noise  like  a 
cymbal.  It  was  coming  over,  and 
it  was  not  safe  to  sit  up  you 
fool  but  flatten  yourself.  Be  stiP. 
and   wait. 

>  .Tiiis  occurred  at  ^ft.  »:ih«~mv-«, 
the  morning  of  Aprif  25.  Earlier 
in  the  semester  a  similar  event 
occurred  —  the  awakening,  the 
strange,  inexplicable  nbl.s^  — 
something  not  of  this  worlfi,  at 
all.  not  pertaimng  to  hum^n. be- 
ings— but  frightf  ningly  in|ium- 
an.  and  swelling  loader  and 
louder  past  the  point  pf  endur- 
ance. That  time  it  was  a  jgpng, 
beating  a  weird  long-short-short 
rhythm.  That  time  I  prepared 
m.vself  for  either  an  atomic  'at- 
tack, a  Martian  invasion,  or 
Judgment  Day.  Also,  it  happen- 
ed that  the  foster  sister  of  my 
roommate,  a  Korean  girl  who 
suffered  the  terrors  of  the  war. 
was  staying  with  us  that  night — 
attending  a  conference  of  for- 
eign students.  To  her,  the  noise 
of  the  gong  was  the  noise  of 
bombers:  and  she  suffered  mo- 
ments of  fear  which  I  am  sure 
she  will  remember  long  after 
the  favorable  impressions  of  the  . 
conference  have  worn  off. 

Both  the  noises,  both  the  ex- 
periences of  fear,  both  of  my 
personal  mental  preparations 
for    death    werfe    occasioned    by 


one  organization — the  ValkjTies 
— in  pursuit  of  one  end — the  in- 
duction of  new  members.  And 
because  my  only  two  experi- 
ences with  the  Valkyries  have 
been  shocking  and  painful  ones, 
I  know  nothing  better  to  call  the 
highest  honorary  organization. 
for  w;  men  at  the  Univerj^ty  ot',' 
North  Carolina  than  a  terrorist 
organization. 

According  to  the  Daily,  Tar  ■ 
Heel,  "the  purpose  of  the  Val- 
kyries is  to  unite  in  a  common. 
hAid  th^stf'*  wain«»%  «w>b(V  Jiave  * 
shown  by  their  lives  such  a  de- 
votion to  the  ideals,  of  charac- 
ter, attitude,  service,  sound 
judgment,  leadership,  and  scho- 
larship that  they  may  inspire 
this  devotion  in  others  and  that 
they  may  strive  together  toward 
these  ideals."  And  the  women 
individually,  at  least  the  ones 
I  knew,  fulfill  this  definitioa 
admirably.  I  have  also  heard 
that  some  of  this  year's  initiates 
were  extremely  frightened  by 
the^  initiation  ceremonies.  Be- 
cause of  this  and  because  of  the 
fact  that  these  women  are  recog- 
nized for  their  sound  judgment 
and  service,  it  seems  impossi- 
ble to  me  that  they  can  carry 
out  this  ceremony  with  good 
conscience. 

I  was  told  that  they  wear 
masks  covering  everything  but 
their  eyes  (there  is  an  anti- 
mask  law  in  North  Carolina 
under  which  one  University  stu- 
dent Was  prosecuted  this  year 
although  his  mask  was  much 
less  frightening  I  am  sure  than 
those  of  the  Valkyrie),  I  was 
told  that  last  year  one  girl  had 


hysterics  as  a  result  of  their 
middle-of-the-night,  weird  in- 
Vfision  of  the  dormitory.  I  was 
told  of  a  girl's  being  forcably 
pushed  into  her  room  by  one 
of  .  these .  masked  and  hooded 
creatures  upon  her  merely  step- 
ping cut  into  the  hall  to  dis- 
. cover  the  cause  of  the  horrid 
noise.  I  was  told  that  once  the 
Valkyries,  with  gong,  even  in- 
vaded the  infirmary  for  a  tap- 
ping. I  have  just  heard  of  an 
inductee's  waking  up  to  find 
herself  in  a  hell  of  fire  (do  the 
Valkyries  carry  torches?)  and 
silent  creatures,  of  roommates 
wanting  nothing  but  to  get  the 
creatures  out  of  the  room,  of 
the  group's  traveling  to  Ra.\eigh, 
with  gong,  to  tap  (and  to  ter- 
rorize  some   neighborhood?). 

I  d»  not  mtan  to  imply  a  dis- 
like of  mystery  in  general.  To 
me.  mysteries,  colorful  cere- 
monies, symbols  are  the  things 
which  make  life  meaningful.  My 
objection  here  is  to  the  time  and 
place  of  the  initiation;  and  I 
strongly  noted  that  the  initiation 
of  the  Golden  Fleece  was  an- 
notmced  in  advance  to  be  just 
that  and  was  held  in  a  public 
place  in  the  daytime  with  those 
attending  being  emotionally  pre- 
pared for  monsters  roaming  the 
aisles. 

None  of  these  things  are  fair 
to  the  fine  women  honored  by 
the  Valkyrie  nor  to  the  idea  of 
a  women's  honorary  organiza- 
tion. I  can  only  hope  that  the 
next  tapping  will  be  a  more  ap- 
propriate mirror  of  the  Valky- 
ries' ideals. 

Alma   Graham 


By  Al  Capp 


R^S^ 


0O^«fT  WORRV,  DAD  —SINCE 
r  WAS  MV  CHOICE  OF 
;EAP0NJS,  I  CHOSE  OSJk. 
POUCK  RK^MOLVKIIS 


Pogo 


Bv  Walt  Kelly 


FREEDOM  OF  THOUOHI& 


Essential 
Our 

Anthony  Wofff 


For  three  centuries  or  so,  Harvani  University  his 
been  a  center  of  liberal,  foward  t^ojiight  in'tlus 
country.  Particularly  in  recent  tinu^  wben  free- 
dom of  speech  and  thought  have  beei^so  inhibited 
in  academic'  circles,  Harvaj^  has.  im^  notable  ill 
protecting  these  basic  rights  of  AiUf^Beaxis. 

It  is  surprising,  therefore,  to  read  *  letter  irojja 
the  Harvard  "Veritas"  Committee,  a  group  of 
alumni  which  has  delegated  itself  the  responsi- 
bility of  exposing  the  Coamunist  and  sybversive 
infiltration  which  H  believes  has  taken  place  there. 
Its  particular  concert!  is  the  appointment  of  Dr. 
J.  Robert  Oppenheimer  to  deliver  the  1957  WlHiaa 
James  lectures  on  philosophy  at  Harvard.- 

In  1954,  the  Atomic  Energy  Commission,  aft^ 
carefully  reviewing  the  case,  finally  denied  Dr. 
Oppenheimer  access  to  the  classified  data  with 
which  he  had  been  working.  Dr.  (^penhelmer  was 
considered  a  "security  risk":  his  previous  history 
as  a  fellow  traveler,  his  apparent  lies  on  occasions 
which  called  for  nothing  short  of  the  truth,  and 
his  close  association  with  known  Party  members 
destroyed   his   value  to  the   government. 

By  the  same  token,  however,  his  value  as  a 
speaker  to  Americans  is  quite  enhanced.  Dr.  Op- 
penheimer is  no  eccentric  scientist;  rather,  he  s  a 
very  intelligent  scientist  (Director  and  Professor 
of  Physics  at  the  Institute  for  Advanced  Study  at 
Princeton)  and  a  man  who  thinks  seriously,  con- 
structively, and  well  ahftut  the  problem*  of  Ameri- 
ca today.  Whether  or  not  he  has  come  up  with  the 
answers,  and  if  so,  whether  or  not  they  are  the 
"right"  answers,  is  unimportant:  Dr.  Oppenheimer 
must  of  necessity  have  seriously  questioned  his 
activities  and  beliefs;  he  must  have  found  some 
justification  for  tJiem,  so  clearly  at  odds  were 
they  with  prescribed  conduct  for  high  government 
empldyees.  Especially  when  he  was  subjected  to 
the  pressures  of  au  official  investigation  and  pub- 
lic scrutiny  of  his  private  affairs,  he  must  haVe 
made  quite  sure  that  he  was  doing  what  he  f^lt 
was  right. 

It  now  becomes  the  duty  of  every  American  in- 
telligent and  patriotic  enough  to  care  to  listen  to 
Dr.  Oppenheimer,  to  test  the  Doctor's  philosophy 
against  his  own:  whichever  philosophy  prevails,  it 
will  be  all  the  more  mature  and  valid  for  the  test. 
When  this  country  reaches  the  point  where  men 
like  Oppenheimer  are  refused  the  ri^t  to  speak, 
even  to  believe,  as  they  choose,  then  America  i^ 
nothing  more  than  a  mockery  of  its  omtr  Constitu- 
ion.  It  seems  that  we  are  not  so  far  from  that  point 
as  would  best  become  us. 

This  is  the  day  in  America  when  "Loyalty  Oaths'* 
are  in  vogue:  Books  are  removed  from  the  shelves 
of  our  libraries  overseas,  often  simpljr*  because  of 
thp  Doliticai  leaning:-  of  their  authors  rather  thin 
their  content.  One  of  the  world's  foremost  poets 
has  been  imprisoned  in  an  insane  asylum  for 
eleven  years  for  pro-Mussolini  comments  he  made 
X)ver  the  Italian  radio  during  the  last  war.  When 
the  Libi;ary  of  Congress  awarded  this  poet.  Elra 
Pcund,  a  prize  for  his  poetry,  the  whole  serfes  of 
awards  was  permanently  canceled  by  the  govern- 
ment 

These  are  only  isolated  incidents,  but  the^  >  aire 
manifestations  of  a  growing  trend  in  this  coiintfy. 
a  trend  which  gave  Senator  McCarthy  his  d»^  and 
which  now  rears  its  ugly  head  at  Harvard.  That 
trend  is  becoming  increasingly  evident  everywhere 
in  American  life.  On  the  campus,  we  call  it 
apathy:  it  might  also  go  under  the  name  <rf  eom- 
placcncy,  conservatism,  misdirected  chauvanism.  ■ 

What  it  amounts  to  is  an  alarming  unwilling- 
ness in  America  to  listen  to  criticism;  even  more 
serious,  an  inability  to  engage  in  healthy  self- 
criticism.  Instead,  we  prefer  to  overlook  the  faults 
in  our  country  which  are  painfully  obvious  to  our 
allies  and  enemies  overseas  and  to  certain  think- 
ing individuals  here. 

We  shout  loud  and  long  about  a  democracy 
which  we  frightfully  and  flagrantly  abuse,  and 
proclaim  he  value  of  freedoms  which  -we  do  not 
use  and  which  we  often  deny.  In  short,  we  are 
fast  on  the  way  to  becoming  a  sraug  nation,  rich 
in  money  and  meaningless  leases,  but  desperate- 
ly poor  in  the  intellectual  freedom  and  plenty 
which  is  our  heritage. 

We  must  believe,  if  we  believe  in  America,  that 
ideologies  which  are  at  odds  with  basic  American 
ideals  will  never  find  sympathy  with  the  American 
people;  we  must  hope  that  such  ideologies  will 
never  be  forced  upon  us.  and  that  our  hi'and  of 
democracy  will  never  become  so  weak  that  it  may 
be  supplanted  by  some  other  way  of  life.  One 
way  to  prevent  this  from  happening,  to  strengthen 
•la:  democracy,  is  to  insist  that  evejy  man  be  en- 
couraged to  speat:  his  mind;  that  every  man  be 
given  the  rig|it  to  believe  in  ^  ri^t  as  he  «es 
it;  and  that  every  man  be  astired  of  the  tithi  to 
be  wrong.  ' 

It  is  time,  indeed  it  is  past  time,  for  Anieriea 
to  re-examine  her  ideals,  to  fix  her  eye  again  on 
those  goals  for  which  Americans  once  fought  so 
earnestly,  gloriously  won,  and  seem  about  to  re- 
linquish so  easily. 

It  is  time  we  stopped  guarding  our  democracy 
so  vigorously  that  ^  lose  si^t  (tf  democracy  it- 
self, excluding  democratic  ri^ts  as  being  threats 
to  the  freedom  of  which  they  are  an  integral  part. 
It  is  time  we  realized  that  in  this  coontry  a  man 
has  as  much  right  to  believe  in  Communism  as 
he  does  to  be  a  Democrat  or  a  Republicao.  We 
must  bear  in  mind  that  i^  is  not  implicit  in  Oom- 
mAnism  as  a  philosophy  to  impose  itself  by  force, 
and  that  a  man  may  desire  it  for  Ametica  out  of 
love  for  her,  just  as  the  drafters  of  the  beclara- 
tion  and  the  Constitiilion  believed  in  the  repuli^. 

It  is  time  we  came  again  to  value  our  radicals, 
knowing  hat  change  is .  necessarj'  to  survival  and 
that  no  conservative  ever  changed  ansrthing  great- 
ly. This  country  has  always  depended  upon  a  bal- 
ance between  the  conservative  and  progressive  ex- 
tremes for  the  dynafflie,  constant  ^ange  vUch 
makes  it  a  great  and  foward-moving  republic. 
"When  the  radicals  are  silenced,  America  will  cease 
to  make  History,  foir  history  will  pass  her  by. 


L7IVI 

«.!   Jhe 

\  is:n: 

brs 
B.jnril 

Jhe   Li 

inv;-i-d] 
ji  :t,  d 
f-   fi:] 
<u!iini 

P'.    hi 
v.'-rld 
••Th«' 
Cent;ir>| 
by    J.is 
Steele 
the  fari 
ill   the 


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RICHMOND  P    BOND  . 

...   adrif^ing  Texan^ 

Giving  Advice  At  Texas 

Kenan  Professor  Richmond  Bond 
«r  the  UXC  En&li^  facility,  is  ad- 
vising the  Umversity  of  Texas  Eng- 
lish Ce->t.  c.n  iis  research  and  li- 
brary resources. 

Bond  i"j  a  special  consultant  at 
the  Univ*'-sity  of  Texas  in  Austin 
th's  we^  tbr-ough  tonrorrow.  He  was 
invited  to  q.\  cvcounsel  in  a  pro- 
je^ned  program  of  re-examination 
f.r  thrt  In'^ritution's  English  curri- 
<ulum. 

Profei-.i?or  Bond  is  one  of  the 
world's  foremost  authorities  on 
"The  Spe-tator."  periodical  of  18th 
Century  England  which  was  edited 
by  Josej^i  Addision  and  Richard 
Steele.  Bond  also  is  chairman  of 
the  facnlfy  board  of  public  reiatioins 
in    the   University. 


Sports,  Religion 
Good  Mixers, 
McGuire  States 

WLXSTON-SALEM    —    UP)    Frank 

McGuire,  coach  of  UNC's  chiampion- 

:  ship  basektbiill  team,   told  Catholic 

laymen  ^thered  here  last  week  thai 

religion  and  athietks  mix  well. 

Speaking    at    a    luncheon    during 

'the    11th  aratual  convention  of   the 

Xorth   Ca:olina   Catholic   Laymen's 

'  .\ssn.  and  Cwnfiioternity  of  Christiao 

[  ilcctrine.   Coach  McGwire  explained 

lus  squad  prayed  before  each  game. 

He  pointed  out  that  athletics  is 
cne  of  the  best  ways  to  train  >xnuig 
people  for  adult  life. 

Nearly  900  delegates  from  the 
I>arishes  of  the  state  attended  the 
alWay  meeting  at  St.  Leo's  Catholic 
Church.  Theme  of  this  year's  con- 
ference was  "The  Year  of  the  Good 
Shepherd." 

Officers  for  1957-1958  wer«  elect- 
ed at  a  general  business  session. 
Xamed  as  president,  succeeeding 
-Mrs.  Mary  Bird  of  Wilson  was  Dr. 
Walter  Kulash  of  Raleigh.  Arnold 
Beerkins  of  Murphy  was  chosen 
vice  president;  Mrs.  Sterletta  Sas- 
so  of  Charlotte  secretary-treasurer, 
aiKl  Col.  Joseph  V.  Myers  of  Ahos- 
kie.    Executive    secretary. 


George  L.  Coxhead 

U.N.C.  '42 
Campus  Representativa 


m  9  >m> 


i        INSURANCE    COMPANY 

.............   ^.  -    ^.  J.  T    1    «    «    I  ^. 


I  'Signals  From  The  Stars' 
To  Open  At  Planetarium 

j      A     new    demonstration    titled 

j  Signals  from  the  Stars"  will  open 
at  the  Morehead  Planetarium  here 

'  today. 

I  Recommended  for  school  children 
in  grades  seven  through  12.  the 
show  will  run  through  May  27. 

Also  today  the  Planetariiim  will 
levcrt  to  its  usual  schedule  of  per- 
formances, which  are  dafly  at  8:30 
p.m.,  Saturday  matinees  at  3  pjn. 
and  Sunday  matinees  at  3  and  4  p.m. 
The  school  programs  for  which 
reservations  are  necessary  wfll  be 
pi-esented  daily  at  11  ajn.  and-  2 
p.m..  but  additional  shows  vriH  he 
cpened  as  the  schedules  are  filled. 


ON  12^0NTH  FIELD  TRIP: 


Botanists  Gather  Plants,  Eat  Snakes 


Sociology 


-4*- 


Spin  a  platter . . .  have  some  chattw . . . 
and  sip  that  real  great  taste  of  Coke. 
Sure,  you  can  have  a  party  without 
Coca-Cola— but  who  wants  to! 


6a^^t 


Bottled  under  authority  of  The  Coca-Cola  Company  by 

DURHAM  COCA-COLA  BOHlING  CO. 


By  CHIRRY  PARKER 

Twelve  moolhs,  five  cases  of  poi- 
son ivy,  and  half  a  doxen  scrapes 
wkfa  venomous  snafces  have  eiapsed 
since  VNC  botanists  atarted  their 
field  work  on  tlie  "Flora  of  ibe 
CaroUnas"  proi}ecit  last  j^xring. 

A  tiotal  ot  52,000  specitneos  of 
maqy  khids  of  plants  that  grow  in 
Ncrth  and  South  CaroUiDa  have  been 
{collected,  pressed,  and  filed  fW 
refereDce  by  the  UNC  botanists 
<duriitg  the  first  year  of  thds  Bcve- 
year  project. 

Oveir  25,000  miles  have  been  cov- 
ered by  the  botany  teams,  and  over 
45,000  speciroeos  collected  by  them, 
while  an  additiooal  7,000  spedmens 
came  in  from  botany  students  and 
iterested  coUectems  aft  other  insti- 
tutions in  the  Carolinas. 

Some    "work    weeks"    have    run 
over  100  hours,  which  means  wnrk- 
ing  in  the  f ieki  all  day  and  ikrocess- 
ing  the  plant  mtaerial  at  ni^^. 
HEADING  WORK 

Heading  the  field  work  of  thds  two- 
state  "busb-beadng"  search  for 
wild  planlt  Ufe  are  the  fbliowing 
meroibers  of  the  'UNC  Botany  De- 
partment: A.  E.  Radford,  H.  £. 
Ahles  and  C.  R.  Bdl.  In  additioo 
J.  £.  Adamisr  and  H.  R.  Totten  of 
UNC  and  H.  L.  Bhnnquist  ot  Duke 
are  also  working  on  the  project. 

"This  is  the  first  such  critical 
and  systemta&c  gathering  of  i^pe- 
cimens  of  all  trees  .shrubs,  flowers, 
weeds,  grasses,  and  ferns  growing 
naturaUy  in  the  two  states  in  over 
100  years,"  Dr.   Totten  say.?. 

According  to  Drs.  Bell  and  Rad- 
ford, a  county  by  county  siu^ey 
was  planned,  whh  worters  organ- 
ized dn  teams  of  two,  and  the  sur- 
vey is  currentJr  Ti^  an.  schedule. 
It  is  certainly  more  productive  than 
vfss  anticipftted  since  the  group  had 
only  expected  to  odpeot  25,000  plants 
the  first  year. 
•STATE  RECORDS' 

Among  the  specimens,  only  one- 
half  of  whdcfe  have  been  prooessed 
90  far,  are  over  100  "state  records" 
—plants    previously   unknown   fnbm 


fviithfai  Nmih  or  South  Carolina.  In  f 
additton  to  these  "state  records," 
several  plants  new  to  the  entiine 
southeast  were  found,  as  wene  tia%e 
species  of  plants  rfever  before  found 
ki  the  United  States. 

Some  of  these  new  records  ars 
of  native  i^ants  that  had  just  never 
been  discovered  in  our  area,  but 
most  of  the  plants  new  to  the  Caro- 
linas are  classified  as  "weeds." 

For  example,  a  new  weed  of  the 
buttercup  famiily  has  been  found  in 
'Wheat  flelds  of  Cabarrus  County 
and,  another  potentially  bad  Euro- 
pean species  of  onion  has  been  found 
tin  several  counties  of  North  and 
South  Carolina. 

A  new  lawn  weed,  which  belongs 
to  the  earrot  family  has  been  col- 
lected in  'both  states.  Another  very 
small  lawn  weed  ikUcfa  has  iniits 
"with  aharp  soxnes  has  been  discov- 
ered in  many  .areas. 

Many  i^ants  previously  oonsidered 
las  "mountain  plants"  have  been 
found  in  the  Piedmont  and  coastal 
plain,  and  many  "Coastal  Pladn 
plants"  were  found  in  the  mountain 
areas.  In  AddHion,  many  plants  pre^ 
\iously  reported  from  Florida  or 
Georgia  have  been  found  in  South 
Carolina. 

Althbu^  many  native  plants  are 
used  in  Carolina  gardens,  several 
additional  spedes  of  ^howy,  native 
plants  were  found  that  could  easily 
he  used  in  ciiltivation  with  little 
or  no  work  on  them  by  the  floiwer 
breeders. 

One  especially  beautiful  new  form 
of  azalea  was  found  by  a  stream. 
Cuttings  from  this  plant  are  being 
propagated  dn  the  Coker  Arlwretum 
for  further  study. 

Many  rural  famiUes  were  found 
who  cultivated  wild  flowers  in  their 
yards  and  gardens,  and  often  help- 
ed the  plant  hunters  by  directing 
tbem  to  the  source  of  their  plants. 

In  the  collecting  process,  the  bo- 
itanists  also  got  some  beautiful 
(Soakes.  After  seeing  a  four-foot  rat- 
tler on  a  South  Carolina  nxad,  Mr. 
Ahles  heid  the  snake  with  a  ftM^wd- 


COUECTEO  OVER  30  YEARS: 


Extension  Division 
Treasures  'Boners' 


By  FRANK  WAMSLBY 

Down  with  Harvard 

Down  with  Yale 

We  get  learning  through 

the  mail 
Stamp,  Stamp,  Stamp! 

This  old  pep-rally^ype  yell  is 
treasured  by  the  Bureau  of  Cor- 
i«espc^idence  Instructton  0|f  the 
UNC  Extension  Division  for  it 
represents  the  spirit  and  good  will 
with  which  they  go  about  an  im- 
portant job. 

That  job  is  to  bring  education 
to  the  people  of  North  Carolina 
by  means  of  correspondence 
courses. 

The  UNC  Bureau  of  Correspon- 
dence, which  is  directed  by  Miss 
Mary  H«|nry,  offers  more  than 
1700  courses  which  aire  inexpen- 
sive and  may  be  started  at  any 
time.  A  wide  variety,  ranging 
from  art  to  sociology,  may  be 
taken  either  for  or  without  col* 
lege  credit. 
BOflERS 

Over  the  past  30  years,  em- 
ployees of  the  Bureau  have  col- 
lected and  treasured  the  bright 
bits  of  humor  and  comic  boners 
which  cross  their  desks  almost 
daily.  Much  of  the  humor  is 
found  in  course  assignment  pa- 
pers and  letters. 

University  professors  who  grade 
the  papers,  often  run  across 
boners  or  candid  comment  that 
is  funny.  Some  of  these  are  too 
good  to  to  keep  secret  and  are 
passed  along  now  for  the  enjoy- 
ment of  readers. 

A  woman  taking  a  course  in 
Education  described  "Jerabell"  as 
being  "the  first  woman  to  use 
make-up  and  the  worst  harlot  on 
record."  Another  woman  said 
"Queen  Elizabeth  was  a  cro- 
quette" in  her  assignment. 

A  disillusioned  bride  wrote  that 
her  husband  had  promised  to  im- 
prove his  mind  if  she  would  mar- 
ry him.  Once  married,  the  hus- 
band refused  to  do  so.  The  young 
bride  hoped  the  Bureau  head 
would  tactfully  change  his  mind 
for  her. 
BROKEN   ROMANCE 

On  another  occasion  the  Bureau 
of  Correspondence  was  called 
upon  to  patch  up  a  broken  ro- 
mance. A  young  man  in  distress 
''wrote,  "My  fiancee  has  broken 
off  our  engagement.  Please  can- 


#AOt  TMRMI 
i 

t 


Botanist  Awarded  Fellowship; 
To  Stud/  Next  Year  In  India 


1 


MiSS  MARY  JANE  FISHER 

"...  examines  flora  and  fauna 

Photo  by  Woody  Sears 

stick,    while    Dr.    Bell    chopped   of f  ;  feast  was  one  of  the   "fringe-bene- 

his  head.  fits"   connected  with   botany  study. 

LIKE  FRIED  CHICKEN  The    general    collecting    wiU    be 

The  snake  was  skinned  and  pro-  j  finished  next  year,  then  the  writing 


perly  dressed,  then  lateh  was  fed  at 
a  banquet  to  the  graduate  students. 
One  student  said  the  meat  tasted 
like  fried  chicken,  then  added  this 


UNC  Symphony 
Spring  Concert 
Tonight  At  8 

The  60-pieee  UNC  SymphMiy 
Orchestra  will  pcesent  its  spring 
concert  today  at  8  p.m.  in  Hill  HaU, 
with  Edigar  Alden  as  vi<din  soloiist. 

The  public  has  been  invibed  to 
hear  the  concert,  which  will  open 
wiiht  the  overture  to  the  opera, 
"IpMgenia  hi  Aidis,"  oomposed  by 


of   the   botany   manual,    "Flora   of 
the  Carolinas,"  will  begin. 

According  to  Dr.  Adams,  this  book 
will  be  a  complete  and  authentic 
account  of  all  vasculair  plants  grow- 
mg  natiu-aUy  in  North  and  South 
Carolina,  clearly  illustrated  and  pro- 
vided with  easily  useable  keys  for 
identification  by  expert  <w  layman. 
The  publication  date  is  set  for  1962. 
WORK  CONTINUES 

Meanwhile,  the  work  goes  on — 
icollecting,  pnessing  and  Habeling 
specimens,  .  filling  and  '  cataloguiing 
in  the  heatMoiiiim  etc. 

Outside  collectors  are  also  notified 
of  the  identity  of  their  finds,  and 
Dr.  Radford  says,  "some  schools 
are  imdertaking  to  estaiUish  their 
ovs-n  herbarita  of  plants  of  their 
.county  or  section.  Thds  Is  a  good 
Cfaristoph  W.  Gluck  and  first  per-  .^^^y  ^  gain  knowledge  of  our  plant 
^formed  in  1774. 


John    Mielvin    Herr   Jr.,    wIk> 
completing    ins    doctomate    in    bo- 
tany here,  has  won  a  FuQni^it  Fel- 
iowshrlp  ior  ldS7-S8  to  study  at  tbe 
IJmvensity  of  Ddhi  in  India. 

Herr  came  here  in  1954  as  an 
assistaut  in  the  Botany  Dept.,  where 
he  was  a  teaching  Mlow  in  1955- 
56.  This  year  he  holds  the  William 
C.   Coker  FeHowship. 

"Embryoloigy  of  Several  BioiUy  Spe- 
cies i(Ilex)"  is  tne  tdtle  of  hi!s  dis- 
sertation for  his  Ph.D.,  which  be 
v/iU  receive  in  Jtme.  Botany  Profes- 
sor Dr.  J.  E.  Adams  has  directed 
Herr's  dissertation  worit. 

A  native  of  Ciiarlottesville,  Va., 
he  was  graduated  froon  the  Univer- 
sity of  Virginia,  with  a  B.A.  in  1951 
and  an  M.A.  the  kSkmiag  year. 
For  two  years  he  was  an  instructor 


I 

is  of  biology  at  Wasbii^taa  and  Itiei 
University^  | 

During  his  year  at  Delhi,  HcfX| 
w411  study  under  P.  MaheshwarL 

-. 4 


foUowing  institutions: 

Queen's  College,  Mass  HUi  Goi- 
iege,  Wingate  Jtuuor  College,  At- 
lantic Christian  CoUege,  Charlotte 
Codlege,  DavidsMi  CoHege,  Warren 
Wflsdn  College,  Catawba  College, 
Pembroke  State  Teacher's  College, 
Lees-McRae  College,  Brevard  Col- 
lege, C<^er  CoUege,  Ctemson  Col- 
liege,  and  the  University  of  South 
Carolina. 

This  project  has  been  made  pos- 
sible by  generous  grants  lirom  Mrs. 
W.  C.  Coker  of  Chapel  Hill,  and  by 
the  UNO"  Altmmi  Annual  Giving 
Fund. 


WE'LL  BUY  ALL       I 
YOUR  OLD  BOOKS 

•  Live  Texts 

We  pay  top  prices  for  texts 
that  will  be  used  again  at 
U.N.C. 

•  Dropped  Texts  \ 

•  We'll  search  the  market  foii 
a  spot  to  salvage  some  oi 
your  losi-  when  a  text  i^ 
dropped. 

•  Enjoyable  Books 

We  can  use  books  you  n 
longer  want  on  your  shelves. 
The  next  fellow  that  comes 
along  may  find  them  as  de- 
lightful as  you  did  a  year  oe 
so  agO;  f 

When  Exams  Are  Over,  | 

There'll  Be  Green  Mone^f 

For  You  At 

THE  INTIMATE 
BOOKSHOP 

205   East  Franklin  St. 
Open  Till    10   P.M. 


IT  S  FOR  REAL! 


by  Chester  Field 


AJdt'M  wiH  perform  Beethoven's 
VioUn  Concerto  In  D.  major,  com- 
posed  In   1806  and  first  performed 


■resources. 

The  collecting  program  has  aiso 
enabled  UNC  to  fiH  requests  ifrom 
Botanic   G<aTdens    for    some   of  our 


^C#H|r   li  V  #B9fSl0f#d  tmv^^noflL 


•  IffMk  HM  C0Ot«01A  COMT  ANY 


mas    present    —    she    always    re- 
sented my  trying  to  improve  her." 

Although  the  Bureau  of  Cor- 
respondence people  enjoy  such 
candid  comment,  they  laugh  with 
the  writers,  not  at  them;  Names 
remain   in  strictest  confidence. 

"The  churchmen  were  imbibed 
with  religion,"  and  "I  froze  in 
my  tracts"  were  misusages  glean- 
ed from  Freshman  English 
themes. 
'LAND  SCRAPE' 

Prospective  students  have  their 
problems  too.  One  inquired  about 
a  course  in  "land  scrape"  garden- 
ing. 

Another,  with  limited  funds, 
asked  for  advice.  He  couldn't 
decide  whether  to  buy  a  Morris 
chair,  a  dictionary  stand,  a  pair 
of  blankets  or  take  a  correspond- 
ence course. 

A  Sociology  student,  working 
bard  for  insight  into  a  difficult 
problem  wrote,  "Polygamy  is  im- 
mortal and  wicked  where  there 
is  children.  But  where  there  is 
no  children  concerned  —  if  the 
man  is  financially  able — there  is 
no  immortality  or  wickedness  con- 
nected with  polygamy." 
PLEAS  ] 

Older  women  occasionally  pre- 
sent difficult  problems.  One  ask- 
ed for  special  consideration  since 
she  had  been  struck  by  lightening 

Another  whose  grades  were 
rather  low  felt  abused  and  com- 
plained that  a  poor  little  orphan 
girl  without  mother  or  father 
shouldn't  be  so  mistreated.  Her 
age  was  55. 

A  letter  received  which  had 
been  opened  and  resealed  con- 
tained a  note  along  with  the  as- 
signment The  note  explained  that 
the  assignment  was  late  due  to 
the  baby  and  the  guinea  pig. 

Seems  the  baby  let  the  guinea 
pig  out  of  its  pen  and,  while 
they  were  frantically  searching 
for  the  "critter,"  the  mailman 
passed  by.  "This  was  a  real 
tragedy,"  the  lady  wrote,  "As  we 
are  on  a  rural  route  with  no 
more  mail  until  Monday." 

She  never  said  whether  or  not 
they  foimd  the  guinea  pig. 

The  Bureau  of  Correspondence 
carefully  guides  its  students 
through  he  difficulties  they  en- 
counter and  helps  them  wherever 
and  whenever  it  is  possible,  llie 
Bureau  is  justly  proud  of  the  role 


the   same   year   by   violfcilat   Franx    ^^^  ^^^^„  CaroUna  plants.  Seeds 

Clement.  joj.  pjants  (some  of  which  have  been 

Also  included  on  the  pPO«ram  is  ,  jj^  Venus  FIv  Trap  and  the  Pitcher 

"Scheherazade"    by    Rimsky-Korsa- jpia„t,   j^^,^   ^^„   ^^  ^  Botanic 

^**^-  [Gardens   as   far  away   as  Scotland 

and  Japan. 

OTHERS  IN  PROGRAM 

Other  cooperating  in  the  "Fkwa 
of  the  Carolinas"  program  besddes 
the  UNC  faculty  and  Ih-.  Blom- 
quist  of  Duke  are  Dr.  E.  O.  Beaie 
of  State  College,  faculty  members 
in  many  high   schools,    and  in  the 


Coed  Is  Offered 
Two  Awards; 
Takes  On/y  One 

Miss  Joanna  Scroggs,  senior  of 
Chapel  Hill,  faced  with  the  choice 
between  two  outstanding  national 
scholarship  offers,  has  selected  the 
tJxree-year  Southern  Fellowship 
grant  for  advanced  study  in  English. 

Miss  Scroggs  will  also  be  an 
honorary  Woodrow   Wilson   Fellow. 

She  was  offered  the  one-year  $2,- 
000  Woodrow  Wilson  scholarship  for 
advancement  in  a  teaching  career 
aixi  would  have  studied  in  Texas 
had  she  accepted  the  opportunity. 

Miss  Scroggs  chose  instead  to  take 
the  Sotxihern  Fellowship  grant  of 
(54.500  plus  tuition  which  will  be  for 
the  period  1957-1960.  The  Southern 
l-'ellowship  Fund,  connected  with 
the  Rockefeller  Foundation,  makes 
!  awards  to  outstanding  southern 
scholars  intent  upon  graduate  stu- 
dies. 


ON  CLOSE  EXAMINATION'*' 

Of  ill  the  diffacnot  sorts  of  guys 
!%«(«  axe  <9o]y  two  that  I  derauae: 

Tb*  first  I  lesUy  would  like  to  dam 
t«  tbs  on*  Wlu>  copies  firoxn  my  eacam. 

Tlpettwr  OMb*B  the  dizty  skunk 
Who  ooveti  his  and  kto  me  flank! 

MOIIAlt  You'll  pass  the  pleasure  test  with  Chesterfield 

King.  Yes,  if  you  want  your  pleasure 

Bumms  CTim  lau|de.  smoke  Chesterfield^ 

King!  BIG  length,  BIG  flavor,  the 

smoothest  tasting  smoke  today 

iM^»«iiff<t  it's  rarti»d 

mora  smoothly  by  ACCU*RAY. 

ChesterfleM  IOihi  filves  ye«  more 
of  what  ye«»Va  wekint  fori 


•9S0  «DM  m  houU  r.  WOek,  !• 
Amm.latm.fiir  kit  Ckttta-FiM 
$S0  far  tmrr  pkilotmUi 
cation.  CliUm»lliii.FjO.B0Kgl.Nm> 


TiMea  State  Aiff<S». 


puhll- 
46\N.r. 


JOANNA   SCRO<X»S 

.  .  has  choice  of  axoards 


SPECIAL  NOTICE  TO 

UNIVERSITY  EMPLOYEES 


Hospital  Care  Association's  Blue  Cross  group  for  University  Em- 
ployees  will  be  reopened  for  the  addition  of  new  members  Wed- 
nesday, May  1 .  If  your  family  is  not  protected  by  Blue  Cross, 
don't  miss  this  opportunity  to  get  Comprehensive  hospital  and 
surgical  care  at  low  group  rates,  on  a  payroll  deduction  basis. 


A 


FOR  FURTHER  INFORMATION  WITHOUT  OBLIGATION 
SEE  OUR  REPRESENTATIVE 


Mr.  John  Chapman 
YMCA  Lobby 


Wednesday,  May  1 

9K)0  A.M.  -  1:00  P.  M. 
2:00  P.  M.  -  4:00  P.M. 


CROSS 


:>    :-'<^-  ,1  ■jBB-.--'y»>' 


cel     the    correspondence     course  j  it  is  playing  in  bringing  educa- 
which  I  gave  her  iw  a  Christ-,  tion  to  people  in  J^^orth  CartOiiia. 


PATRONIZE  YOUR 
•   ADVERTISERS   • 


Hospital  Care  Association 


Durham,  N.  C. 


6«nM 


Serving  UNC  Employees  Since  1 933 


4 


■TT' 


■■l»"^W^^»»^ 


PAMMUtf 


THE  DAILY  TAR  Nttt 


TUESDAY,  APtin.  m,  ^9fr 


TUBtt>i 


»«fl»'*P 


MartHMiiii 


Deportinent  S^pre 

Est.  Siiice  1914 


Electric 
Construction  Company 


'-ii'i'ff|J**j''W' 


^Carolina 
Coffee  Shop 

>'Ch*#*l  Hilfs  Most  pApuUr  RMtauranf^ 


Jt 


,  ■*  • .  ^s*_//^^--  >.'i;,*-fc*"  i^<*^i*^-*,»-'^i> 


Bank  Of 
Chapel  Hill 


t  ■  .'t 


iilh 


^Caroiinn 
%>ortShop 

'If  Pays  To  f«^" 


ODAY! 


Blocksidge 


Thirteenth  Annual  Sigma  Chi  Derby 


Foister's 
Camera  Store 


KENAN    STADIUM 
2:30    p.m. 


RAGING  FORM 

This   Is  Your   Program  And  Scoreboard 


THE 


PATIO 


First  *•€• 

"Grand  National 
Relay" 


OAlttt  D*l»k  6*lla 
Pace  AaraM 
Mary  Eaiefl  Sample 
Biett  BttSer 
^Lime  ttatfe  BiUIer 
Joanae  Saunders 
Doona  Ito$t«|tler 


S«cMid  Rac*  - 
"Race  to  tie 
Flesh" 


-Martha  Williford 


Chi  Om«9« 

Punkln  Coe 
Tog  Sanders 
Libba  UcCord 
Linda  ClMppel 
N'ancy  l^ulord 
Carolyn  Seuffert 

Daryl  Fafrington 


Al^a  D*1ta  Pi 
Ann  Shaw 
Mary  Jane  Fisher 
Mary  Ana  Hoffler 
ItoOy  Adams 
Emory  Burkhart 
^Mtty  Royster 

Pat  Messer 


NuriM 

P]  Phi 

Kapp*  D«l«fe 

B'llie   Ruth 

Jane  Sawyer 

Jean  Sorrell 

Betty  Webster 

Mary  Felts 

Arnold  Gmrvin 

Sue  Ballantine 

Nancy  Craham 

l*e^gy  Brown 

R.  J.  MaddtsoB 

io  AJnn  Bri4B«rs 

hme  Pflcten 

Margie  Clemdenin 

Sugar  Dudley 

Ann  Ellis 

Bdie  MucKinnoa 

Mlcfcy  Reed 

Carc4  DcMb 

FYanees  Bell 

Betsy  Lym 

Nanc>'  Adams 

Nettle  Sander* 

Julia  Stokes 

Norma  Cupp 

Shitr  Gr*«lci 

Patsy  Smith 
Mary  Gravely 

i»*iey  ^tams 

S4ndy  Kft^rin 


Alpha  Gamma  Delta 

Katherine  Webb 

Jennie  Margaret  Meador 

Eimily  Somers 


■J     ■  «; 


.-4J  ,' 


Third  R»e» 

"Hit  the  Grfcek" 


JPat  Brandt 


Pourth 


'Secret  Bfenf 


Fifth  Rac» 

"Skit" 

Sixth  Ra<» 


Sarah  Waltos  ^       Nancy  Itoyster 

J^ggy  Svrea^gen  Anne  MeU(«  Barbara  Brown 

-Group  Group 


Gwcn  Lemly 

Nancy  Adams 
Ellen  ^emberton 


Joan  AslUey 


mili«  Rose  Britt 


Pat  Gregoty 


Barbaree  PreslwoMl 

Dot  Coplan 
Gail  Wright 


Pee  Wee  Batten 


Doris  Adkins 


Kater  Pot«at 


Mary  MariaHt  WilUims  Sue  Atchison 
Do«|s  Woo(^  Andrea  Stalvey 

M*ry  Biargrt  Wmiama     Shirley  Collins 


Doris  Woody  Bftv*rly  Culbreth 

Marf  Jttrgtret  WiUksfU  Ingrid  Qay 


'Miss  Modern 
Venus" 


(rail  WS&ngltaffi 
Gene  Raiwls 
Marian  Okkens 


Donna  Anderson 
Mary  Moore  Mason 
Mary  Loii;  Rountree 


Carolyn  Meridlth 


Nancy   Davis 
Val  VoD  Ammon 
Bobbi  Maddison 


Shirlee  Prestwood 
Barbaree  Prestwood 
Jo  Ann  Astor 
Judith  Dockery 


Nan  Sehaeffer 
Barbara  Honey 
Marcia  McCord 


Doris  Woody 


Lennie  Von  Wilier 
Martha  Fortune 
Barbara  Murray 


KEMPS 


Sutton's 
Drug  Store 


A.G.D. 

A.O.P. 

P.B.P. 

CO. 

D.D.D. 

K.D.            NursM 

%Xi.               i.W. 

W.P.S. 

W.P.S. 

W.P.S. 

W.P.S. 

W.P.S. 

W^.S.          W.PJ. 

W.P.S.          W.P.S. 

Isf 

Ind 

9rd 

4fh 

5th 

.... 

, ;  ,    f, .  i     '.  ■  ■ 

•  1      n«u»m>    9t.iihiA,i 

iA^MNkt-ir' 

6th 

\ 


Wentworth 
Sloan 

JewerSrs 


Town 


& 


,-^-<  fr-^vn^  t<: 


Stevens- 
Shephercf 


iSBb 


KEY 

W  —  Win 
P  —  Place 
S  ~  Show 


SCORE 

Win  —  5  points 
Placo  -—  3  points 
Shew  ~  1  poinr- 


The 


f 


Tempo  Room 


Harriss-Conners 
Chevrolet,  Inc. 


Jutian's 
Cbl^ge  Shop 


J.  B.  Robbitts,  Inc. 


Ledbetter-Pickord 


1  v. 


PETE 


THE 

TAILOR 


/ 


Umi 

Ijeroy 
Durteun. 
6C0r«0af< 
State  ?i 
aub  Pre: 
t«r(ki>. 

FrasierJ 
Negro 
gii.-*«  HK-r 
aaiza.(k>n 
p>cnic  m 

Wlien 
pCB-k   an 
FrasJer  v,\ 
gro  pork 


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.rifk  it? 
•,ttfe>  aMi_ 
oooal  arw 
' i«w  bodr 


Ul 
DRY 


35 


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15  NotI 
■uit 

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If  Hak 

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25.  S«l< 

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mvcl 

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3».B«ci 
3$.  Wou 

marii 
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44.  Riv. 
4|.  WithI 

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TUISOAY,  APIIIL  90/  ItSf 


THI  DAILY  TAI  HItl 


PAGE  FIVf 


?)A^ 


Asked  "fo  Leave 
UmsfecxI  Pork 


Leroy  Praster,  a  sopboKooce  Cram 
DiiNuKxn.  was  isked  to  leave  die 
t«^«9ated  'WaiMta.  B.  Umstead 
State  Park  Sunday.  CaranopoUtaii 
aut>  PBesiileaft  SIpra  Boee  said  yes- 
terday. 


HyjAN  PROFISSOR  SAYS; 


Greet  Studies  Aided  Understanding 


•V  PRMMCE  PIPKINS 
"I  have  found  Greek  ii«ss  to 
outlook  basic  to  living  and  pre* 
,  eminently  helpful   in   understand- 
ing both  myself  aad  the  woiid  is 
,  which  we  live,"  Dr.  P.  H.  Epps, 
!  retiriag  Keoan  Profesjor  classics 
l.said. 

Fnasier,  oie  of  the  University's  L  "Tho<Kh  1  have  s^nl  my  life 
Negro  uoderigraAiates,  was  tiie  teachmg  Greek,  in  light  of  what 
guest  member  of  ihiefhib.  The  org-  [  I  now  kaiow  I  would  have  taken 
enizatioa  wtas  to  have  had  its  sining  "i^  same  courses  even  if  I  were 
pkSiK  jn  Urn  pM%.  '  going  to  be  a  farmer  in  the  most 

( backward  part  of  the  country,"  he 
W3ien  the  group  atrtvi^  at  the  i  went  oo  to  say. 
park  aa  attendant  told  Qjem  that  j  NUMBER  IttdtEASES 

When  Dr.  E^ps  began  teaching 
at  UNC  in  1938  as  an  associate  pro- 
fessor of  Greek  there  were  18  stu- 
dents studying  the  language    and 


^rasier  would  have  tft  go  to  a  Ne- 
gro park  Itei  far  firam  X&nstead. 

.VxxvdiBg  to  Fred  Cravrfocd,  who 
was  present  at  the. tune,  Frasfcr  of- 
fered to  leave  and  Jet  the  diA  go    few  courses'  open  to  the  graduate 
DO  and  have  its  picnic.  Other  mem-    students.         '         -  ' 


bers  of  the  dub  said  Frasier  tried 
to  borrow  a  car  so  he  coudd  leave. 


Last   year  there  were   approxi- 
mately 6a  students   studying    the 


ly  a  member  of  the  American  Phil- 1  icear,  lOiidstor  of  the  Studem  Activi- 
ogical  Assn.  and  of  the  Classical  |  t^es  Ftuidwilitetisie  today  at  tbe 
Assn.  of  the  South  and  of  the  Mid-  i  ggp  j^f  gg;        . 

j     Kfe«|i^  has  beto  auditor  sdiKre  Feb- 


Aftie^2l  Years  At  Vmfersity 

Today  is  his  last  day.  I&rry  A.   a^aary.  1941,  except  for  a  hkch  in 


west 

CUTS  NUMBEli 

Several  years  ago  he  was  bn  sev- 
en committees,  but  because  he  is 
retiring  in  a  year,  he  has;  cut  the 
number  to  one  which  is  the  com- 
mittee on  superior  students. 

In  1942  Dr.  Bpps  translated  "The 
Poetics"  of  Aristotle.  This  trans- 
lation has  been  selling  well  since 
its  publication  15  years  ago. 

In  1948  he  revised  Howe  aod 
Harrer's  "Greek  literatiure  in 
Translatoion,"  including  hio*  trans 


(fUMtwued  from  page   1) 


ClASSiraDS 


The  giYHip,  consisting  of  labont,  40  ;  language   not   including   those    in 


students,  dcc-idied  ta  toave  the  perk 
end  have  tbe'r  ptiduc'elsewhene.  The 
event  was  held  at  Hoigao's  lake. 


STYLE- SET 

ffeibk 

KMfiDaiity 
trtsMs  0^  Crisp 
wmi  Frtsfc  « 

NEW! 

Delicate  fAbrict  msr 
lose  macfa  of  their 
ckana  if  wethcd.  Why 
risk  it?  Odc  Ssmi/mu  Dry  CttsiuHg  fea- 
ttr«s  AlBSziac  STYLE-SET.  the  seast- 
tioeal  Aew  "finish"  which  restores  like- 
«ew  bod;  aod  texture  to  sheer  conoa, 
filk^raTon^nj-lon,  etc.  Call  us  totdaf. 


translation  courses  and  the  num- 
ber of  courses  for  all  students  had 
been  increased. 

Dr.  I^ps  has  had  very  much  to 
do  with  thia'  growth  because  of 
both  his  attitude  towards  the  stu- 
dc^nts  and  his  interest  in  the  sub- 
ject. 
MAJOR  INTEREST 

Dr.  A.  C.  Howell's  book  on  the 


OR.  CHRISTIAN  EPPS; 

Greek  is  hefpful  in  tinder^anding 

—Photo  by  ^oodyvSears 


chylus  "AgameranoB 

1915  GRADUATE 

Dr.  Epps  was  graduated  from 
Durham  High  School  ahd  then 
from  UNC  three  years  later  in 
and' encourage  the  student  towards  terpretations  of  the  &ble.  HBs  first  ^  1915.  In  1916  he  did  work  lor  a 
a  clear  and  intelligent  understand-  interest  in  Greek  stemmed  from  |  MA.  in  English  with  a  minor  in 
ing:  of  themselves  and  the  world   the  desire  to  be  able  to  see  just  {Greek.  ^ 

what  the  Bible  said  in  the  original       In    1928  he   got   his  Ph.  D.   in 
Greek.  Greek  at  the  University  of  Chicago 

"But  when  I  began  the  study  of  studying  under  Professor  Shorey. 
Plato,   Sophocles   and   the  rest,  1  i     He   then  taught   in   Boys   High 
hear  future  there  would    also  be  found  them  so  attractive  and  help-  School  in  Atlanta  and  Furman  Uni 
courses  in  this  field.  ful  that  I've  never  been   able  to   versity,   Greenville,   S.   C,    before 

While  a  student  at  UNC,  1912-   let  them  go,"  he  commented.  he  camevto  the  UniversKy 

16,  Dr.  Epps  sang  for  churches  of  i      In   1956  Dr.   Epps  was  made    a 


rock,  r  In  case  he  is  absent.  HOsea 
"Hu^ga"  W^apti  w&l  recdve  the 
piee,  /conxpjthne-ttts  of  partkapatiing 

lation  of  Plato's  "Crito'^nd  Aes-  y«««;^*^- 

Vyinig  tor  Mf5S^Mod#m  Venus  are: 


the  anded  fonees  during  World -War 
If.  TJie  Sona^r  member,  of  the  book- 
"keeping  departmesi  has  been  asso- 
ciated with  the  University  for  21 
years  and  was  boosted  to  the  posi- 
tion of  avditoir  .when  two  ctate^  m 
flie  Sjikdeittt  A^tlvaaes  Fund-  wci'e 
wicked  iato  the  searviice  dttrteg  the 

matioB  the  Sigma  Chi's  will  release  I  Kear's  ette^ji^ioa  is  elective  tp- 
is  thai,  the  se:npet  event  was  impcrt-  \  nwtrow.  No  successor  has  been 
ed  Hn^  Raleigh  by  iractor-trailex.  inajned'as  yet. 

Hit  th<!  Geek  .  .  .  with  a  pie  .  .  .  i     The  audi^  is'  xwtiring  partly  b^ 
Will  star  gdjtf  thampibn  Aubrey  RoUi- 1  caufee  of  his.  heaJth  and  partly  be- 


in. which  they^llve." 

Now  tbereture  courses  in  all  ma- 
jor Greek  fields  except  lyric  poe- 
try. Dr.  EIpps  s^id  he  hoped  in  th« 


Kenan  Professors  says  of  him,  "His   different  denominations.  At  the^e   member  of  the  Golden  Fleece  and 
major  interest  was  always  to  help   services  he  heard  contrasting   in-   a  Kenan  Professor.  He  is  present- 


Dr.  Epps  says-  he  has  no  definte 
p'^ns  after  his  retirement  iiext 
year. 


SAYS  PRJESIDENT  EVANS: 


Deadline  Is  Thursday 
For  Goverhment  Posts 


Covering  The  Campus 


STUDENT  WIVES 

I  The  Student  Wives  will  hold  a 
special  meeting  today  at  8  p.m. 
I  at  Victory  Village.  All  members 
!  have  been  urged  to  attend  in  or 
!  der  to  discuss  the  May  entertain- 


cause  at  the  age  of  66,  he  is  one 
year  past  the  age  limit  when  most 
peo^;  retire."  ■-■■.■■ 


WANTED:  COLlfEGE  MEN. 
part-titne  and  suminer.  Earn  $50 
to  $WOp«!r*ee^  fills  $100-$300 
scholarsbip  award.  Must  have , 
use  tft  cw.  CoBta^  W.  P.  Cran- 
ford.  Box  1706,  Raleigh,  N.  C. 

FGiR  INEXPH^IVE  IIVING:  27' 
Nashua  Trailer  —  has  bath  tub, 
ste)wer^  porch,  qU, heater,  added 
reom,  Connected  to  utilities  and 
septic  tank.  One  mile  cut  on 
airport  road.  Cal^W2.  $2,300. 


FOR  R£NT  DURING  SUMMER 
months  Compiasly  furnished 
two  bedroom  houie.'-with  TV  and 
Automatic  Washing.  Machine. 
Phone  88591-^,^^ 


Student   Body  President   Sonny ;  qualifications,"  Evans  said. 

Evans  said  Monday   the   deadline   POSITIONS  OPEN 

for  appointments  in  student  gov-i      Evans    announced    vacancies   innient  program. 

ernment  positions  will  be  5  pjn. :  the  loUowiag  positions:  i  pi^ySICS  COLLOQUIUM 

Thursday.  Attorney    General    who    assists ' 

"„„.„,,,       ,      .  .        .  J   the  president  by  prosecuting  vio- 

He  urged  all  persons  interested   ,  .  ,  ^.     ^      r.^^^, 

. .  •  i.  ,  lators  of  the  Constitntion. 

m  workmg  as  appomtive  person-        *'*»«'»  »x.c  v^vudui.»uvu. 


I  nel  in  Student  GovemKhent  next |    ' Tuo   members  on   the   Consoli- 
year  to  submit  application  by  the ;  dated  University  Student  Council 


UNIVERSITY 
DRY  CLEANERS 


time  specified. 


who    meet    with,  students    from 
N.C.    State.   Women's   bollege   to 


LADY  MANHATTAN  SHIRT 
vS:ALEl    ■;^K  ■ 

d5%  To  55%  Savingi  Across  The  Board 
:  '  Our  Entire  Stock  Of 

Lady  Manhattan  Shirts  Reduced 
For  Quick  Sale. 

Reg.  $3.95  styles  Now  $1.95 

Reg.  $5.00  styles  l^ow  $2.95 

Reg.  $5.95  styles  Now  $3.95 

Short  Sleeve  And  Sleeveless  Styles 

Hurry  —  The  Supply  Is  Limited! 


"I    have    stated    that    all    indi-    .,  -    .     , 

viduals  wiU  be  considered  on  the^**'^"''^  *"*"*^  problems, 
basis   of   their  merit   alone,   with'      fifteen   iSections    Board    mem 
interest,  desire  to  serve,  willing- 1  ^^^  *^o  administer  elections  and 

ness    to     work     being     essential  N^*^**^^*  P^^- 

-  _         ^,  • ;-.    •    f     -Two    Campus    CSiest    members 

who* work  on  the  Campus  Chest 
campaign  next  year. 

Five   NSA  Committee   members 


the  University  of  North  Carolina" 
at  a  ("acuity  Club  Luncheon  in 
the  Carolina  Inn  at  1  p.ih.  today, 
according  to  Club  President 
Arthur  Roe.  Luncheon  will  be 
$1.30  and  reservations  will  be  re* 
quired. 

FRBSKMUN  CAMP 

Dr.  C.  0.  O'CeaUaigh  from  the       The     final     meeting     of     the| 

Dublin     Institute     of     Advanced  YMCA  Freshman  Camp  Planning  | 

Study  will  speak  in  Phillips  Hall    Committee    wUl    be   held    in    thej 

at  8  p.m.  tomorrow  on  "It-lParti- !  Phillips   Workshop   at   6r45    p.m.! 


Misses  >  Xraii  -  Wiihogham,  :  Marion  . 
Diekieiis,  Gf^  Raui^y^  of  Tri  Deka  | 
SororSy;  NaaOicy  Dawis,  Val  Vom  Am-  • 
men,  Bobbf  MadLson  iof  Pi  Phi  Sor-  \. 
ority:   . 

Sbhrlee  and- Barbarae  Prestwood, 
Judy  Doeskery»  Jo  Ann  Astor  of  the 
IndiepjpQdetM;  Women;  Bari>ara  Hon- 
ey, Nan  S;ba^fer,  A^rcia  McC<Mnd 
of  Kappa  Delta  Soro^aty; 

Martha  Fortune,  Barbara  Muriray, 
Lemue  Van  Willen  of  Alpha  Gam&na 
Delta  3MW«ty;  Doris  Woody  of  the 
Stray  <3!rerfcs. 

Ju(^g06.«{  itltK  derby  are  Jim  Ta- 
tum,  Iwad  iooieball  coach;  E.  Car- 
Tiogtoft;  Sli^thy'  local  thetat^  opetia- 
tor;  Jfilae  AugostiAe  dnd  Mrs.  Sutton, 
repre8€:ift»tit*«5  of  two  otiier  local 
buahMiSs  eiitecpcisss. 

tbtf  evetits  ia  Mxier  of  occurence 
are  the  parade,  Grand  Nataonal 
Race  to  the  Flesh,  Kit  the  Geek, 
Secret  ■E\'«a«aad^  Skits  by  particfc 
patingf^feups,  Si^md <3si stwhesnaeii 
i?a4d. .  ■  -  :■■  •  ■■ 


:  ^OME  AND  GET  IT! 
fv^^iU  QotiSSO  EXiFRA 

Downtown  Prteei  FpT; 
Regular  Gas    - 

My  Regular  3<  Under  That 

rtus 

Bring  This  Ad  and  Get  1  Cent  Off  Per  Gal.  Gas, 
5  Cents  Per  Qt.  Oil    >iD  ' 
/  .Credit  Cards  Honored  Agaht       >  ,, 

\^  -^'V   At  The  Student^'  iPriend    ^d^f' 

WHIPPLE'S  ESk)  SERVICE 


DAILY    CROSSWORD 


ACROSS 

1.  Arched 
•.  FrontierS'- 

mait's  shoe 
t.  Construct 

again 
10.  God  of 

Ipvc 

12.  Bmpyretii 

13.  White 
frost 

«14.  River  (Pr.) 
L-S.  Hot 

tuitabi* 
16.  Scrutitti^' 
1#.  Hahttiwi 

90.  S^MM  .^ 
a>.Aful6lt 

f«|ca 
25. 8«l««lum 

fayof.)    „, 
2C.PI«itof 

violet 

family 
3t.  Change 
M.  Man's 


S.  Fluttera 

4.  Piece 
out 

5.  LkM's 
cave  ' 

f.  A 

haney 

biilBMM 
7.0p«Mti« 

mehxhes 
$  A 

wtttar 

f.drAek 

letter 
11.  MufttiAg 

It,  Breathe 

in 
.17.  Bracelet 

ornaments 


IS.  River 
rLat- 
via> 

20.  Super. 
viae 

21.  Mock 

22.  ret- 
low 
fSfalttf) 

24.  Mul- 
berry 

27.  Look! 

29.  Tel. 
luri. 
um 
(aym.) 

S2.  Sloth 

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cle"  Studies.  Members  and  inter- 
ested persons  have  been  urged  to 
attend. 
POLIO  VACCINE 

University  Physician  E.  M.  McG. 
Hedgepeth  has  announced  polio 
vaccine  Is  now  available  for  those 
persons  who  need  second  doses. 
According  tc  Dr.  Hedgepeth,  the 
vaccine  will  be  available  during 
the  week  from  »-ll:30  a.m.  and 
The  Health  Service 


wb»  work  with  the  National  Stu-M*"*""  2-5  p.m 

dents  Association  in  notifying !  also  has  vaccine  on  hand  which  j 
universities  afl  over  the  country  |  ^«n  ^  S'^'^"  ^^f^  ^°  ^["**^".^^  ""1 
of  Student  Government  efforts.     |  ^er  20  years  of  age,  he  said.        j 

A  Library  Commrttee   of  seven   GRAIL  NOTICE 
members     who    work    with     the'     Class  rings  will  be  on  sale  in 
Library  administration  on  student    Y  -  Court    today    from    9    a.m.    to 


today,    according    to    Dave   Davis,! 
Planning     Committee     chairman,  j 
FinaU^NHinselor  selections  will  bej 
announced   and    a    group   picture  i 
vj^ll  be  taken,  Davis  said. 
WORLD  RELieiONS  STUDY         I 
The    World    Religions    Study   I 
k  Group  iRiU  meet  tonight  at  0  p.m. 
ih  the  second  floor  dining  room 
of  Lenoir  Hall  Tonight's  session   I 
will  be  thp  last  on  Christianity.    | 
Sepakcr  will   be  Dr.  John  Wcid-    I 
enger,  whose  topic  will  be  Cath-   i 
olicism.  A  question  and  answer    | 
period  will  follow  the  talk.  The   J 
public   has   been   invited   to   at-   j 
tend.  j 

MONOGRAM  CLUB  MEETING       I 
There  will  ■be  a  compuljary  meet- 


grievances.  The  committee  mem- '  4:30  p.m.,  according  to  a  recent  j^g  <,£  tj,e  Monogram  Club  tonight 
bers  will  receive  stack  permits.  |  announcement.  -A  sales  represen- 1  gt  7  p.m.  at  the  Monogram  Club. 
'    Three  members  of  the  Campus   tative  from  the  ring  company  will    Elections   for   next \  fall's   officer* 


yMt«r4ajr'i  Asawar 

41.  Arthurian 

knight 

42  An^- 

.        .  Saxon 

'•■    aitt  "  .   . 
43.  Ajrihnative 
r*P»y  i 

m.  A  VuUfliich 

<var.) 
46.  Coal  six* 


a.Spokw 
Bitter 
▼•tck 

S.Tear 
.Bcariaf 
S|.  Woimd 
marks 

49.  Comply   — 
44. River  iWri 
44.  Withstand 
4T.TMW 
48.  Oains 

knowledge 
4f .  Consume 

50.  Not  true 

DOHltf 
I.' Malt 

Wverafe 
2.  Inde.    • 
pendent 
'sultanate 


Stores  Committee  which  meetfc 
\dh  the  faculty  committee  to  con- 
trol profits  from  vending  ma- 
chines. Book-exchange,  Scuttle- 
butt, and  Circus  Room. 

Two  members  of  the  University 
Traffic  Committee  to  assist  the 
administration  on  parkibg  prob- 
lems. 

Seven  members  of  the  Traffic 
Advisory  Commission,  «  judicial 
body  to  try  violations  of  fresh- 
man car  ruling,,  excessive  tickets, 
etc. 

A  Canpus  Traffic  Board  to  aid 
the  Student  Affairs  in  processing 
traffic  violations. 

Ten  members  of  the' Cabinet  to 
assist  the  President 

A  Dance  CommiKBec  of  five 
members  who  make  and  enforce 
rules   governing  Carolina  dances. 

Five  members  of  the  Audit 
Board  to  handle  tbe^^^lo.OQO  that 
Student  Govenunpeat  expiends  an- 
nually. 

Three  members  of  the  Graham 
Memorial  Board  of  Directors,  the 
policy  making  board  for  Graham 
Memorial. 

,One  coed  oa  the  Student  Coun- 
cil  to  sit  in  on  casei  involving 


be  on  hand  to  assist  the  Order  of  will  be  held  and  final   plans  will 

the    Grail.    Persons    desiring   fur-  ^e  niade  for  the  spring  social,  an 

ther    information    concerning    the  announcement  said, 

sal^  have  been  asked  to  call  Mac  CAROLINA  QUARTERLY 


Patten  at  the  Zela  Psi  house 
FACULTY  LUNCHEON 

Dr.  A 
of     the 


There    will    be    an    important 

meeting  of  the  entire  staff  of  the 

K.  King,  associate  dean  Carolina  Quarterly  tomorrow  at  5 

Graduate    School,     will   p.m.  In  the  Quarterly  office,  it  was 


speak  on  "Graduate  Education  at   announced  yesterday. 


OF  PHARMACOLOGY: 


Guggenheim  Award 
Goes  To   Professor 


Dr.  Tihamer  Zolton  Csaky,  asso- 
ciate professor  of  pharmacology 
here,  has  been  named  as  one  of 
the  winners  of  the  ooveted  Guggen- 
heim Fellowships  far  scholarly  re- 
search and  extension  of  creative 
ability. 

Dr.  Csaky  will  share  with'  over 
300  other  scholars  and  artists  fel- 
lowsbit  grants  totalling  $1,500;000 
given  by  the  John  Simon  Guggen- 
heim Memorial  Foundation.  It  was 
th^  largest  number  of  fellowships 
violations  of  the  election  law  and  ,  and  the  largest  total  of  grants  «ver 
Constitution.  announced    by    the   foundation  in 

Seven  members  of  the  Victory  !<>««  V^^- 
Village  Veterans  Affairs  Conunis-  Interviewed  yesterday  concern- 
don  to  discuss,  study  and  recom-  ing  his  reaction  to  being  named, 
mend  solutions  to  any  problems }  Dr.  Csaky  said  he  was  "pleased  and 
concembig  Victory  Village  resi-  highly  honored."  He  said  he  is 
dents  and  veterans.  interested  in  the  mechanism  of  bi- 

'  The  Honor  System  Commission '  ologica!  transfers  and  intends  to 
of  21  members  to  study  the  sys-  j  study  in  Europe  next  year. 
t«m,  make  recommendations,  and  ,  COPENHAGEN 
ivesent  the  honor  system  to  the !     Dr.  Csaky  indicated  he  will  pro- 
freshnMin.  n  I  bably  sail  for  Copenhagen  in  10 

Seven   members   of   the   Men's  ihonths  where  he  will  engage  in 
Honor  Conhcil   and   seven    mem- (study  at  the  Institute  of  Biologi- 

hers  of  th«  Women's  Honor  Coun-  'cal  Isotope  Re^iearch. 

dl    for    sununer    school    student      While  in  Europe  he  will  proba- 
govemment  |  biy  attend  the  International  Bioch- 

Nine     members    of    the     high 
school    honor   system    project    to   the  campus, 
s^ak  to  high  schools  In  the  state       All  those  persons  interested  in 
td  acquaint  them  with  an  honor  these  offices  may  obtain  appfica- 
sjrstem.  |  tion  blanks  from  the  inlormatkm 

One    member    of   the   Carolina  desk  at  Graham  Memorial  or  at 
f^rum,  *which  brings  speidcers  to   the    student    government   o|£ice. 


emical  Congre.«iS  in  Vienna  which; 
is  scheduled  for  late  Ih  the  sum-j 
mer  of  1958.  He  expects  to  work' 
with  Professor  Ussing,  an  expert 
in  his  field,  while  in  Copenhagen. 

The  Guggenheim  grants  are 
awarded  to  persons  of  "unusual 
capacity  for  scholarly  research  . . . 
and  to  per^Kins  of  unusual  and 
proven  creative  ability  in  the  fine 
hits,"  according  to  an  announce- 
ment made  by  the  foundation.         j 

'HIGHER  LEVILS' 

"The  fellowships  are  designed 
to  assist  the  fellows  to  advance  to 
higher  leveia  af  aeconq>lishmettt 
in  their  fields  throi^h  carrying  on 
the  studies  for  which  the  fellow- 
ships are  swarded,"  a  r^ase  from 
the  Foundation  further  stated.  | 
"  The  Guggenheim  Foundation  was 
ejtablished  in  1925  by  the  late 
U.  S.  Senator  from  Colorado  Sim- 
on Guggenheim,  and  by  Mrs.  Gug- ; 
genheim  in  memory  of  a  son  who 
died  as  a  young  man  in  1922. 


MAY  6 

Is  Coming  Soon 
ONLY  6  MOR^  DAYS 


-  -'■,.«• 


ft.Q'l»rtxii  4.  .Mp  n.fe;|>;teiiiffi£',.^ 


Oil  IFI 


£:.-i 


c. 


1^ 


evec 


This  CLUB  CORD  is  made  of  wrinkle-resistant  Fadlity  Reevecord,  the  fabric  that 
keeps  you  looking  fresh  after  hoiurs  of  wear,  lliere's  no  re^ikOn  to  look  "wilted** 
when  you  wear  cotton  cord?,  if  you  ask  for  Gordon's  Club  Cords.  They  take  the 
htunility  out  of  humidity.  Completely  washable.  Only  $28.50.  Aslo  dacron/cotton  cords. 


o. 


ti? 


««v^*w^^ea 


■^^ 


f  A«t  tut 


THl  DAILT  TAR  HI RL 


TUESDAY,  APRIL  »,  }fSf 


Tar  Heels  Lose  To  Tigers,  4-3;  Clout  Three  Homers 


Mullis  Will  Go  To  Germany 


Clyde  E.  (Pete)  MuUis. •  associate 
pra.es&ar  of  pby^noSd  educadoa  has 
been  notified  by  tibe  DepaQtmeot  of 
the  Army  th.it  lie  will  fcave  Wc.sh- 
ing.on,  D.  C.  June  14  and  fly  to 
Kuril  berg,  Ge.inany  to  serve  as  an 
instructor  in  the  U.  S.  Army  Ath- 
k"'.^   Cl.iiic  in  Europe  Juae  24^ u- 

ly  5. 

Professor  Mullis  wJU  have  the 
rank  of  Cakmel  for  tlus  assigomeat. 

A  vei*i.tle  a.lTlete,  Mukis  li~^ 
besn  a  number  of  the  Phys-ical  Edu- 
cation fa.:rul:y  at  Chapel  Hill  the 
past  17  years.  During  &us  period 
be  has  published  numerous  articles 
ill  state  and  nai  ooal  pubMeaiions 
per.alning  to  p!iys.:.sll  educiton  and 
p.iy:;:cal   fitn-e^s. 

In  1939  Professor  MuIUs  originat- 
ed the  Ciildrcn's  Swimming  Pro- 
f  "m,  spcasoiBd  by  the  Physical 
Education  EJept.  This  program  has 
1'. '"g     :t.'ac:ed    ^tion:^    flttcntion 


«ar 


PETE 

.  .  off 


MULLIS 

to  Europe 


per:3ii:ag  lo  mass  teaching  of  chiJ- 
ui-e.i  to  swim. 

As  aaiistant  basketball  coach 
i.an  1948^19S2,  one  of  h.^  teams 
(19^3)  pi  yed  in  the  finals  of  the 
^i€.\A  ChampLonship  T^/Uiney  in 
Madis^ji  Squsine  Garden. 

As  an  uoKlengradfuate  oi  UNC 
Pio.essor  MuKiis  was  an  ouistsnd- 
ing  varisity  basketball  odayer.  Hie 
e.  ..*d  a  monogram  las  a  diver  and 
svi'jjnmeT.  He  was  a  member  of  Phi 
DelLa  Kappa — educafonai  scbclasbic 
sotiety;  presideBt  of  the  Monogram 
Club;  a  inember«f  the  ^udecjt  coun- 
cM— rhis  council  had  the  responsi- 
bil'ty  of  beariag  the  oases  off  the 
1996  Cheating  Ring;  and  was  presi- 
dent of  hizt  clfl;  s. 

Mullis  is  a  member  of  the  Order 
of  the  Gi-&il,  And  won  (• . '  Grt  1 
S.-.o.'-ar.vhpiaw'ttrd  in  basketball  and 
be!d  Mie  IIL?s  &femot4al  Scholarship 
C  .•  foi:r  jiears.  He  will  taarti  the 
tr^fwd  *«mmtr  session  at  UNC. 


Track  Preps  For  Duke    |  ^^^^^*["3 
After  Hard  Weekend 


By  DAVE   WIBLE  all     season.      The     injury    forced 

The  Carolina  varsity  track  team,    him  out  of  any  more  competition 
which    suffered    a    heart-breaking   for   the   day.    Carolina's    two-mile 
68  2-3  -  32  Vi  defeat  at  the  hands    relay     team,     Scurlock,     Whatley, 
of     the     Virginia     Cavaliers     last    Williams,   and  Beatty;   decided   to 
Saturday  afternoon  will  get  back   go  on  and  run  three  laps  of  the 
into  the  training  grind  this  week   event  giving  the  baton-  to  Beatty 
with    the    aim  of    getting    put    of    who  would  drop  out  of  the  race,  j 
their  two-meet  -losing  streak  this       The    Carolina    boys,    again    the; 
Saturday   when    they   meet    Duke    favorites,    ran    the    race    knovring! 
here.  they  could  not  finish.  When   the 

Carolina  track  has  had  a  rough  baton  was  passed  to  Beatty  the  I 
week  end  all  the  way  around.  The  team  held  second  place  slightly  i 
Virginia  meet  was  decided  in  the  behind  Manhattan  who  went  on! 
last    event    by   only    a    few   feet    to  win   the  event  j 

when  the  anchor  man  of  the  Cava  Beatty  will  take  it  easy  with 
liers  mile  relay  team  hit  the  tape  his  foot  so  that  he  will  be  in 
barely  ahead  of  Caroliha's  John  top  shape  for  the  ACC  meet  which 
Sylvester.  The  first  gave  Virginia  is  coming  up  in  two  weeks, 
the  valuable  five  points  and  the  The  strong  freshman  squad, 
victory    over   the   Heels.  which  has  been   inactive   since   it  j 

The  Carolina  men  that  took  defeated  the  South  Carolina  Bid  ] 
part  in  the  meet  are  to  be  con  dr:s  April  13,  travels  over  to 
gralulated  for  th3ir  near  niiss.  state  College  tpnight  to  run 
The  nucleus  of  the  squad  was  in  against  the  Wolf  lets  for  the  sec 
Philadelphia  taJElng  part  in  the  ond  time  this  season.  This  time 
Penn  Relays.  Jim  Beatty,  Dave  imder  the  lights  of  the  State 
Scurlock.    Everett    Whatley,    and  ^  lYack. 

Ben  Williams,  Carolina's  power  The  Tar  Baby  tracksters  have 
in  the  middle  distaiKe  and  dis-  been  undefeated  this  season  with 
tance  runs,  made  the  Penn  Delays  one  sided  wins  over  the  frosh  of 
trip  as  favorites  in  the  two  events  Wake  Forest,  South  Carolina,  and 
they   entered.  \  the  Wolflets. 

Again   Carolina   was  robbed   of       The  outstanding    freshman    for 
a  victory    by    a    minute    distance,    the  Tar  Ba'bies  has  been  versatile 
Jim    Beatty.    winner    and    record    Ward    Sims.   Sims   has   been   con 
holder  of  the  Penn  Relay  two-mile   sistently  taking  firsts  in  the  pole 
run   for  the    past   two   years   and    vault,  the   broad  jump,   and   both 
this  years'  choice  was  edged   out    the   high  and   low   hurdles.   Other 
of  first  place  by  such  a  slim  mar- ;  outstanding     freshmen     are     run- 
gin  that  his  time  for  the  distance   ners  Fick  Arthur  and  Cowles  Lip 
was    the    same    as    winner    Lew    fert.    These    yearlings   have    been 
Stieglitz  of  the  XJniverjity  of  Con-!  burning    up    the    freshman    mile, 
necticut,  9:01.7  a   new  meet  rec- ,  and  two-mile  runs, 
ord.  j      The    meet    is   scheduled    to  get 

Jim's  effort  irritated  a  foot  in-    underway  at  7:30.  The  squad  will 
jury  that  had  been  bothering  him  leave  Woollen  Gym  at  6. 

Lookabill,  AAcKee  Lead 
Golfers  Over  N.C.State 

By  JIM  CROWNOVRR  { 

The  Carolina  golf  team  looked 
very    impressive    yesterday    aft«r- : 
noon  as  it  U8e4  a  completely  re- 1 
vamped    lineup    to    trounce    the 
Wolfpack  of-l^l^te  College.  j 

The   Tar   Heels,   who   had   run  j 
into  a  bitter  itreak  of  hard  luck 
in    two    out    of    their    last    three 
matches,    won   going    away,    22-5,  | 
for  their  ninth  yictory.  The  win  j 
made  their  overall  season  record, 
B-2-1.  .  I 

The  revamped  lineup,  which 
found  such  season^long  stalwarts 
as  Tommy  Langley,  Sam  Partick 
and  Walt  Summ«rville  sitting  on 
the  sidelinesi  Io$t  no  time  as  it 
swept  through  .  all  thrfe  four-  j 
somes.  I 

The  Tar  Heels*  new  number  1 
and  2  men.  Gene  LookabiU  and 
John  McKee.  were  especially  iro- 
pressive  as  they  fired  three 
birdies  apiece  and  even  par  72's 
for  medalist  honors. 

Alex  Efird,  State's  No.  5  man. 
was  their  low  mm  with  a  medi- 
ocre 2-over  jwrr  74. 

The  Tar  Heels  le«ve  this  morn- 
ing for  Athena.  Oa.,  where  they 
will    compete    in    the    three-day 


GREENSBORO  —(AP>— Duke's 
Atlantic  Coast  Conference  base- 
ball leaders  completely  dominate 
batting  averages  in  the  ACC,  with 
Pete  Maynard,  Lon  Bonczek  and 
Dave  Sim6  ranking  one-two-tbree 
with  respective  averages  of  .423, 
.421  and  .419 

Dick  Hunter  of  N.C.  State,  lead- 
er for  the  past  two  weeks,  drop- 
ped all  the  way  to  18th  place  last 
week  when  he  collected  only  two 
hits  in  14  official  tiroes  at  bat. 
His  average  according  to  ACX: 
Service  Bureau  figures  through 
games  of  list  Saturday,  is  .317.  A 
week  ago  be  was  batting  .407. 

Closest  challenger  to  the  Blue 
Devil  trio  is  Wake  Forest's  Jack 
Phillips,  who  posts  a  .373  average. 

Maynard,  ii|. addition  to  pacing 
the  batting  race,  also  tops  the 
ACC  in  runs  batted  in  with  22. 
and  the  6*foot,  170  pound  sopho 
more  from  Windsor,  Conn.,  also 
has  been  to  bat  the  most  times 
(70)  and  has  collected  the  most 
hits   (30). 

i  Dick  Hudson  of  North  Carolina 
j  the  second  place  Tar  Heels'  No.  1 
.  batter  at  .323.  has  collected  the 
I  most    doubles    in    the    conference 


\  Rough  Loses 
As  Clemson 
Gets  5  Hits 

,  CLEMSON,  S.C— (AP)— Left- 
bander  Harold  Stowe  gave  up  six 
hits,  three  of  them  home  runs, 
in  pitching  last  place  Clemson  to 
a  4-3  victorj'  over  Nw^h  Carolina 
here  today  in  an  Atlantic  Coast 
Conference  baseball  game. 

The  loF9-4eft  North  Carolina  in 
second  place  in  the  ACC  stand- 
ings at  7-3. 

Clemson  bested  North  Caro- 
lina's ac?  pitcher,  Jim  Raogh, 
who  gave  up  only  five  hits  but 
weakened  in  the  fourth  when  the 
Tigers  .scored  all  their  runs. 
Raugh,  however,  got  poor  support 
from  his  mates  who  committed 
four  errors. 

The  Tar  Heels  pulled  ahead  in 
the  third  with  three  homers. 
Raugh  slammed  the  first  over  the 
left  field  wall  and  Dick  Hudson 
and  Ivalee  Hill  followed  suit. 


State  Blasts  Tar  Babies,  9-5 


By  ED  ROWLAND 

The  Tar  Baby  baseball  team  lost 
a  9-5  slugfest  .to  the  Wolflets 
from  N.C.  State  yesterday  after- 
noon* in  Emerson  Stadium.  The 
loss  brought  the  frosh  record  to 
9^-1  (tiie  tie  was  with  Wake 
Forest  last  week).  State  has  a 
6-1  slate  with  their  Oone  loss 
coming-,  from  the  Tar  Babies. 

State  garnered  12  hits  off  the 
of  feting  of  two  Carolina  hurlers. 
Starting    pitcher    Ben    Hammett 


absorbed  the  loss;  Bobb>i^  Wooten 
came  on  in  relief  in  the  sixth  and 
calmed  the  visitors'  bats. 

State  shortstop  Joe  Wooten  led 
the  slugging  parade  with  two 
long  homers,  in  the  fifth  and 
sixth.  He  also  had  a  single  for  a 
3  for  4  day  at  the  plate.  Glenn 
Sparrow  banged  out  a  triple  in 
the  second.  Catcher  Phil  Daniels 
collected  four  singles  for  four  ap- 
pearances for  a  perfect  afternoon 
at  the  plate. 

Rain  forced  the  two  teams   to 


Senotors  Send  Stone 
To  Boston  In  Big  Trade 


North  Carolina 

ab 

h 

o 

a 

Lewis  as 

4 

1 

2 

4 

Hudson  cf 

4 

1 

3 

0 

i.  Hill  lb 

3 

2 

8 

0 

Shook  If 

4 

0 

1 

0 

Hon'cutt  3b 

3 

0 

0 

1 

Reston   rf 

0 

0 

0 

0 

D.  Hill  rf 

3 

1 

1 

0 

Oldham  2b 

2 

0 

4 

4 

Legett  c 

3 

0 

5 

0 

Raugh  p 

3 

1 

0 

3 

a  Pond 

1 

0 

0 

0 

b  Strause 

0 

0 

0 

0 

Hartman 

0 

0 

0 

0 

Totals 

u 

6 

24 

12 

Clemson 

•b 

h 

o 

a 

Spiers  ss 

0 

3 

2 

Brown  rf 

1 

1 

0 

Bagwell   3b 

2 

3 

6 

Shealy  If 

0 

2 

0 

Cokcr  c 

0 

4 

Q 

Wilson  lb 

3 

0 

11 

0 

Hoffman  cf 

2 

I 

2 

0 

Hubbard   2b 

3 

1 

0 

0 

Stowe  p 

3 

0 

1 

1 

By  WHITNEY  SHOEAAAKER 

WASHINGTON,    \»   —   After 

months  of  dickering,  the  Washing- 
*ton  Senators  and  Boston  Red  Sox 

finally    got    together  today  on  a 
;  trade.  The  first  major  deal  since 

the  opening  of  the  1957  season  in- 
I  eluded  these  shifts: 
'     Veteran  pitchers  Dean  Stane  and 
I  Bob  Chakales  traveled  to  the  Red 

Sox. 
Shortstop  Milt  Boiling,  outfielder 

Faye     Throneberry     and     pitcher 

Ru,:»   Kemmerer   were   dispatched 

to  Washington. 
For    the    Senators,    the    2-for-3 

transaction  went  at  least  part  way 


toward  solving  weaknesses  at  cen- 
terfield  and  i|hortstop.  It  also 
found  them  taking  a  chance  with  a 
new  righthander  after  previously 
unavailing  attempts,  to  boU-ter  a 
glaringly  deficient  pitcning  staff. 

The  Red  Sox  received  in  Stone 
the  possible  an^-wer  to  their  need 
for  another  lefthander  and  in 
Chakales  a  righthanded  reliever  to 
fortify  their  bull  pen. 

The  trade  culminated  months  of 
negotiations  between  a  pair  of 
brothers-in-law:  Club  President 
Calvin  Griffith  of  the  Senators  and 
General  Nhinager  Joe  Cronin  of 
the  Red  Sox. 

No  cash  was  involved. 


sit  out  eight  minutes  in  the  bot- 
tom of  the  eighth,  but  the  wea- 
ther cleared  enough  for  the  game 
to  be  completed. 

Carolina,  though  they  collected 
nine  hits  off  three  State  hurlers, 
left  15  men  stranded  on  base  in 
the  losing  effort. 

An     eighth     inning    rally    for 
comeback  from  a  severi-ruh.  defi- 
cit,   but   the   rain  cooled   off   the 
Tar  Baby  bats. 
Score  By  innings: 
State  013  103  100—0  12  3 

UNC  000  200  030—5     9  1 


Rough  Leading  ACC  Hurlers 


Totals 


31 


5     27     9 


Southern     Intercollegiate     Cham- 
pior.jhips  beginning  play  Thursday. 

The  Summaries: 

LookabiU  (C)  defeated  Smith, 
3-0;  McKee  (C)  defeated  AtkinSr 
2-1;  best  ball,  Carolina,  3-0. 

Adams  (C)  defeated  Allen,  3-0; 
Mitchell'  (C)  defeated  Edmond- 
son,  3-0;   best  ball,  Carolina,  3-0. 

Efird  (S)  defeated  Ruffin,  2-1; 
McMiYian  (C)  defeated  Patton. 
2-1;  best  ball,  Carolina,  2-1. 


Carolina 


LAST  TIMES  TODAY 


HXl'in<^!\  }<  Fl'.\ 


(;kk(.()KY  vy.{\\ 


Netters  Lose 

North  Car^n«'«  ••wrl«f  ten- 
nte  twm  dr^m^  »»»«<r  ^i«t 
nwtch  9f  Hftr  —tfm  t«rfni  as 
thoy  lost  to  •  lltrwif  Wllfijwn* 


"DESIGNING  WOMAN' 


Is 


i)(i!()Kr..M,i;\\ 


WEDNESDAY 


ItHf  SCANMU. 

Of  aocHCMmti 


,THE  RIVERS  EDGE 


imum.MmwmumtmT 


Player,  School 
Maynard,   Ouke 
Bonczek.  Duke 
Sime.  Duke 
Phillips,    WF 
McMillan,   WF 
Arnold,   Va 
Shealy,  Clenj 
Inge.   Va 
Hudson.  NC 
Dare,  Mary 
Hunter,  NCS 


a-Grounded  out  for  D.  Hill  in  8th. 
a-Walker  for  Oldham  in  9th. 
c-Ran  for  Strause  in  9th. 


AB  R  H  Pet 
71  |8  30  .423 
57  \6  24  .421 
62  22  26  .419 
51  7  19  .373 
42  6  15  .357 
49  8  15  .326 
38  4  12  .324 
34  6  11  .324 
Se  14  19  ,322 
90  17  16  .320 
41    5  IS  .317 


North  Carolina 
Clonwon 


003  000  oofr  a 

000  400  OOx— 4 


R-Raugh,  Hudson,  I.  Hill,  Bagwell, 

Coker,  Wilson,  Hoffman.  E-Honey^ 
cutt,  Lewis,  Legette,  I.  Hill.  RBI- 
Raugh,  Hudson,  I.  Hill,  Wilson, 
hubbard  2,  Stowe.  HR-Raugh,  Hud- 
son, I.  Hill.  SB-D.  Hill.  S-Legette. 
DP-Honeycutt,  Oldham  and  I.  Hill; 
Raugh,  Lewis,  and  I.  Hill  ;  Bagwell 
and  Wilson.  Left-North  Carolina  7, 
Clemson  3.  BB-Stowe  3.  Raugh  1. 
SO-Stowe  2,  Raugh  4.  R-E3l-Raugh 
4-3;  Stowe  3-3.  HBP-by  Stowe  I. 
Hill,  Honeycutf.  W-Stowe  1-5.  L- 
Raugh  7-2.  U-Livingston  and  Bar- 
bary.  T-2:02. 


GREENSBORO,  N.  C.-^*— North 
Caix>llxuk'9  "mead  ticket"  iiigJvt-ih.an- 
. .  1-.  Jim  Rau@h,  already  bag  matob- 
ed  h »  1956  vittory  pi'oduction  of  six 
and  today  stands  two  wins  ahead 
of  his  closest  challenger  for  pitch- 
ing honors  in  the  Atlantic  Coast 
Conference. 

Raugh,  a  6-foot-two,  190-pound 
Pennsylvanlan,  Is  now  6-1  en  the 
sea.9on  with  an  earned  run  average 
of  1.41  which  Is  sjcond  l>est  in  the 
cchfei-enre  and  a  strikeout  total  of 
85  w'hicb  i^  far  the  best  in  the  lea- 

1  F.ed  Gebhardt,  Maj::ylaflid's  out- 
standing sophomcne  hurler.  sit^ 
leads  dil>  ACC  in  the  ERA  depait- 
ment  wRh  1.00.  He  has  yielded  on- 
ly iflve  eimed  runs  in  45  inoifngs. 

Murals  Today 

Softball:  (4:00)  ZBT  vs.  Lamb 
Chi;  Phi  Gam  vs.  Chi  Pti;  (5:00) 
TEP  vs.  K*p  Psi;  Dent  Sch-2  vs. 
Mm!  Sch-1;  If  Zeta's  lose,  vs. 
KA  (W> 

Ton^is:  (4:00)  ATO  vs.  Phi 
Kap  Si«;  Beta  vs  Zeta  (W);  5:00). 


He  has  wtm  three  games  and  lost 
two. 

Trailing  Raugh  in  the  won-lost  col- 
'  umn,  aitording  to  .ACC  Service  Bur- 
eau figures,  are  three  Duke  stars, 
jail  with  4-1.  TOey  &ve  Dicke  Small- 
I  wood,  Dick  Burton  and  Harlelgh 
I  Fatzingor.  Bu-rton's  ER.\  of  1.70  is 
Ihjrd  best  m  t'le  conference  and 
I  Smallwood's  strikoAiit  total  of  53  is 
'  second  to  Rough's  63. 


INFIRMARY  LIST 


MIsaot  kU  Robinson,  Patricia 
Gregory,  Susan  Mayhue,  Gene- 
va Prazior,  H«i«n  Williams,  N«l- 
tio  Sandors,  Janet  Johnson,  Edith 
Droxlor  and  Elizabeth  McKinnon; 
Grover  Brown,  Pet*  Kelley, 
Timothy  Jossup,  Oougal  Ci>rk, 
Richard  Stoker,  Phillip  Williams, 
Harold  Clark,  Thomas  .Hall,  Eu- 
gen*  Felton,  Theodore  Wohl- 
bruck,  Willis  Whitehead,  David 
Ansell,  Takey  Cries^,  Manley 
Springs,  Jamos  Thomson  and 
David  Burrows. 


Published  Tomorrow! 


h 


^itr; 


*».«   "  *..■< 


The  Town 


A  New  Novel  By 

WILLIAM 
FAULKNER 

Early  Birds  Get  First 
,  ■  Editions 

The  Intimate  Bookshop 


■SK.i\*»=^>-"»*"l 


In  'GOLD  OF  NAPLES' 
a  Company  of  Italians 
MaJces  the  Screen  Glitter." 

— New  York  Time* 


The  quality  of  one  scene 

is  such  that  it  seems  almost 

certain  to  become  at  least 

a  footnote  in  any  history 

of  film  comedy." 

— S'ewsiveek 


Toto,  Italy's  Chaplin,  is 

exquisitely  funny. 

Loren's  parts  fit  beautifully 

into  the  whole." 

— Time  Magazine 


The  Gold  of  Naples'  is 

a  noteworthy  example 

of  how  a  movie  ought 

to  be  put  together." 

-^Sew  Yorker 


205  E.  franklin  St. 


Open  Till  10  P.M. 


as%ii«  ■i^saaaff  spy  viMMw*  w^  vwi 


TODAY 

Thru 

THURSDAY 


— PLUS— 

'REMBRANDT' 


"THE  YEAR'S  MOST  EXCITING  FILM 

LAURENCE  MJVIER  in  shakespeases 


GHARD^I 


JOHN  cifLCyo.cumt  ■<-00m_^,.„ 

RALPH  aiCMAROSON.CCORIC  MAROVWCM 


IN  THE 
FULL  SCOPE 

OF 

VISTAVISION 

AND 

COLOR! 


WHY 

Throw  Away  Those 
Old  Worn-Out  Slacks? 

Let  us  convert  them  into  ber- 
muda  shorts.  We  will  take  out 
the  pleats,  and  m«fce  you  a 
real  ivy  league  pair  of  ber- 
mudas,  complete  with  back- 
strap.  All.  at  a  price  so  low 
that  you   won't   believe    it. 

PETE 

! 

THE   TAILOR 

"Specializing  in        %■■■  >^~« 

^ •*!»-/». "-,      Ivy  Leagueiiing'* 


SELECTIONS  AS 

YOUUKE  THEM 

Many  of  our  cuslomors  don't 
roaliio  the  oxfemlve  range  of 
sizes  In  our  suits  md  jackets — 
from  M  short  thTMigh  41  extra 
long-^wo  litoraliy  fit  ttte  long 
and  the  short  of  it^-f  rem  $2t.75 

A   most   interesting   buy— 55% 
dacron/45%      tropical      worsted' 
slacks,  side  Ituckle  ivy  model — 
5  good  shades— only  $13.95. 

Bermuda  shorts,  ivy  model,  irt 
baby  cord  or  peilktiod  cotton  — 
only  $3.91. 

Adier  athletic  socks,  fine  comb- 
ed cotton— |.ft5. 

Polo  shirts  in  every  conceivable 
color  and  style  combination  — 
from  $3.95. 

Over  75  different  assortments 
in  short  sleeve  hry  button-iCwn 
collars— from   $4.00. 

Our  new  English  tab  —  short 
sleeve— ours  aleno— from  $5.50. 

Reversible  brief  swim  shorts  — 
$4.95. 

Most  compietg  assortment  of  in- 
teresting belts  found  anywhere, 
without   exception — ^from  $2.00. 


Clotlitng  Cupboarb 


Howard  Johnson  Restaurant 


STUDENT   SPECIALS 


Barbecued    Chicken 

Choice  Steak  Sandwiches  j^ 

2:00—   5:00  i^;M 
'      SERVED 

itKVtu  8:00- 11:00  P.M. 

'landmark  For  Hungry  Tarheelf*' 


#: 


JULIAN'S 

DACRON  AND  COTTON 
"WORSTED-WEAVE"  SUITS 

WILL  WASH  AND  HANG  DRY   ^3  HOURS)  FOR  WEAR 

WITHOUT  PRESSING  EXCEPT  FOR  OCCASIONAL 

"TOUCH-UP" 


Attractive    patterns  \j^ 
normally  to  be  expected 
in  superfine  worsteds  are  per- 
fectly  adapted   in   these   blends  of 
imported  cotton  and  dacron  in  discreet 
screen   dot   and   striped   patterns.   All   are 
tailored    in   the  three-button,  single  breMt«f< 
model   with    lap  seams,   regukr  poeicotf,  9t^ 
hook  vent.  Plain  front,  slim  cut  trousers.        ^ 


Desert 
Tan 

Olive 

Dik 

Blue 
Mixturg 

^tHpos 

And  Sotids 

.H2.95 

Covert 
Mixture 

Black 
Faced 
Brown 

Bleck 
Olive 

l^lennel 
Oray 

Julian* 


Lisli  Ma 


■-^^ 


P«S«i«««S«P*«««««WB«i«i 


"""""""■"^^^"iii"i"MiHMMHHMnmMMHi 


WEATHER 

Pertly  el«»dy  m>cI  warm  with 
chance  of  afternoon  and  (even- 
ing showers  and  an  cxptfcted 
high  of  83. 


U.S.C.  Library 
Serials  Dept. 
Chapel   Hill.    N.    C. 
8-31-49 


FREEDOM 

Editor   asserts   for   faculty   fr#«* 
dom   See  P.  2. 


VOL.  LVII     NO.  176 


Complete  (Jf)  W&e  Serme* 


CHAPEL  HILU  NORTH  CAROLINA,  WEDNESDAY,  MAY   1,  1957 


O/ftcet  m  Graham  Memofhal 


FOUR   PACES   TH"   •«^at 


nevs 

m 
brief 


Disarmament  Plan 

LONDON      '/PI — Russia       offered 
last  night  to  open  up  part  of  the 


Mrs.  Wanda  AA.  Barry  To  Serve 
As  Temporary  Student  Auditor 


Applicants  To 
Take  Exam 
Today  By  6  p.m. 

.Jerry   Op;>e«lieimer.    c-hatrman   of 


Mrs.   Wanda  M.   Barry  has  been   .present  staff  in   fulfilling  her*  new  ♦- 

appointed  to  act  as  temporary  aud- t  .-ole,  Mrs.  Barry  said.    "It  will  cer- 

itor  of  tlie  Student  Activities  Bc»ard.  !  tainly    be  difficult    to   replace   Mr. 

according  to  an  announcement  re-  !  Kear  in  the  position.  I  do,  however, 
Soviet  Union  to  President  Eisen-  i  leased  yesterday  by  the  Student  \  look  forward  to  the  job.  even 
hower's    sky    patrol    plan    in    ex- j  Audit  Board.  [  though  it  is  only  temporary." 

change  for  Soviet  photo  surveys  ^^^"-  t*^"'y  will  replace  Han-y  A.  ;  Harry  Kear.  who  retired  yester- 
of  Alaska  and  poi-sibly  all  thc^*^^'"  ^  ^^^  position.  Kear  retired  |  day,  had  been  auditor  since  Febru- 
United  States  west  of  the  Missis- 1  >'^sierday  at  tiie  age  of  66  after  jary  of  1941,  except  for  a  hitch  in 
sippi   River  p^^    years   service   to  the  university,  'the  armed  forces  in  IMl. 

The    plan    was    laid    before    the       ^  spokesman  for  the  Student  Aud-  i     The  former  mennber  of  the  book- 
U.N.     disarmament     subcommittee  M^  ^°^"^  '"^l^^^*"*  ^hat  the  board  is  '  keeping    department    was    also    as-    the  .Campu,  Orientation  Committee 
and  was   plugged  heavily  by  Mos-'*'"'  looking  for  a  permanent  audi-  i  sociated   with  the  University  for  21    ,  ointcd   c-;t   yesterday   that   all   ^ 
cow  radio.  I''"'^^    ^"^    '^    interviewing    prosj)ects    years  and  was  named  to  the  posi-      .  can's  mii=t  ;:ave  been  interview- 

The  U.  S.  delegation  declined  to  I  ^'^'"^  ""  campus.  tion  when  two  clerks  m  the  office    eJ  nad  taken  iJie  required  quiz  be- 

comment,  and  other  subcommittee  i     ^^^^    ^^^-   '^^'^   '^^'"^^   ^'^''^  ^"  j  "'^'"^  ""^^^^  "'^"^  ^''^'''^  ^'"''"•S  ^'-^    ■■   e  6  p  m.  today, 
members   reacted   variously.   Some   ^^^'  ''^«  '"'^  *^^*'"y  ^^^  ^'^**  ^"^   '^^'^  i     „ 

thought    the    Soviet    plan    slightly  i  ^■'^*^"   "^   '*^^'   Student   Activities  o;- {     The    white-haired    man    who    be-'     "*    Po  n.ed    out    that    those    per- 
encouraging.    Other    rcacUon^was  !  ^'^■''-   "^'"  experience  over  the  past  I  came  somediing  of  a   tradition   at    ^^^"^  whv,  have  applied  for  podtioMs 

unfavorable.  I 

I 

U.  S.  Accuses  Russia      i 

WASHl.NGTON  — (^P*—  The  United  ! 
States,  striking  back  at  Russia,  yes-  j 
terday  blamed  the  crisis  in  Jordan  | 
en  intervention  by  Soviet-controlled  I 
'international  Commimrsm." 


eight    years    included    fillijig   in   -as  I  Carolina  and  around  G.M  during  his  "^  ^^  -^e'   ^^^*^  "^^  appeared  for 

!)ookkceper.    assistaiU    auditor,    ac-   tenure,    retired    partly    becuuse    of  '"'^^''^^^^^'5=  must  do  so  between  the 

jountant,  etc.                                          ihealth    and   partly    because    of    his  •'  '^'■^    "^    2-6    pjn.    today     in     the 

Because    Mi-s.    Barry    expects    to  ,  so  years.  Wooclliouse    Conference      Room     of 

ieave  Chapel  Hill  in  July,  the  Ac-  i     As    Mr.    Kear  left    his   office   for  ^'"aham  Mem»>rial. 

tJvities  Board  must  find  a  replace-  '  fhe    last    time    yesUrday,    he    said  "Interviews      will      constitute      a 

anent    before    that    time.  -A    Board  '  goodby   to  Student    Body   President  vajor  part  of  the  consideration  for 

spokesman  said  tlie  position  is  ex-    Sonny  Evans.  Said  an  observer  a'-  selection,    OppenheLmer    said.    "Hie 

A  .<fpakesman  declared  that  since  i^^^''^    '"    ^^    ^''^'^'^    sometime    in  i  ter  watching  Kear  descend  the  steps  olher   criterion    will    be    the   orien- 


Wopld  War  II  the  Soviet  Union  "has 
subjected  10  once  independent  na- 
tions to  its  rule."  His  application 
appeared  to  be  that  the  Reds  have 
been  trying  to  gain  domination  of 
Jordan. 

State  Department  Pre.«s  Officer 
j  Lincoln  White  made  the  cliarge  of 
foreign  intervention  at  a  news  con- 
ference in  response  to  requests  for 
U.  S.  gO"ernment  react'on  to  charg- 
Cj  made  iji  Moscow   Monday. 

The  Crisis  Is  Over' 

AMMAN.  Jolxlan-^;P^— King  Hus- 
sein announced  yesterday  "the  cri- 
sis in  Jordan  is  ended." 

The  21-\ear«>ld  monarch,  appar- 
ently feeling  himself  in  fii-m  con- 
trol after  throe  weeks  of  touch-and- 


June.  ^  from  the   .second    floor  of   Graham    trtion  quiz  which  may  be  taken  t9- 

Expressing  her  hopes  for  the  co-    Memorial,  "There  goes  another  Car-    day  between   1-5  p.m.  today,  in  tiie 
c])erat:on    and    assistance    of    the   olina  tradition."  '  Jricntation  Offi<.e  in  GM.  he  added. 

Oppcnheimer   said   that   aM   apjA\- 

•  ants    must    be     interviewed     and 

have  taken  the  quiz  tjefore  6  p.m. 

oday   or   their   names   wiil   be   au- 

•tcmatieally  (}ii>j>ped  frcwn  considera- 

itioD. 

In  a  sti'-tement  A-esterday  stress- 

irg    the    in»pBnance    of    completing 

necessary      orientation      procediux:. 

It  was  the  final   meeting   lor  a     h?  Orentatk»n  ChaimKin  sakl. 

few    officers    and    meml»ers,    and '     "in  the   intei-est   of   choosing  tbe 


UP   Elects   Braxton 
New  Party  Chairman 


ders. 


With  a  small  gathering  of  mem- 
bers and  a  sweep  of  acclamatory 
voting,  the  University  Party  last 
night  elected  Harry  Braxton  as  there  were  farewell  speeches  and  i)est  counsetors  for  the  1957  oricn- 
new  party  chairman  along  with  a  ■  encouragements  for  the  future,  tation  prograni.  the  Campos  Orien- 
new  ■date  of  officers  to  lead  the  '  Betore  yielding  the  chair  to  Brax- 1  tuiijn  Ccnunittee  hopes  to  inter- 
party  for  next  year.  'ton.  former  Chairman  Mike  Wein-    view  all  applicants.' 


The  voting  was  done  all  by  ac- 
clamation    as     Jerry     Jones     was 


man  thanked  the  people   who  had 
"contributed  so   much   to  the   suc- 


Those   persons    who   have  applied, 
or    p  sit.ons   and    as   N-et   have   not 


Highlights  Of  Th^eSigmf  Chi  Derby 


so    tens-^n    w  hjch    threatened    the    elected  vice-chairman  of  the   par-    cesj  of  the  spring  campaig.is  and  i  -p  pea  red    must    do    so   before    Om 


In  th«  pfhoto  Bt  t«p  left,  •  parii^  down  tM>w»krfh  Sf.  4««init)«rby  tftip«ting  yovfter  4»<»««v-  l»^-*#»»  "Hit  •*»•-  C>«tl"  mnnf.  Ttf  liiiKrtur 

Day.  Th«  'top   right  photo  shows   Miss  Pw  Wo«  B«tt«n  successfully  rifthf    photo    shows    a    protty    ceod    domonstrating    har    skill    in    tho 

defondlny  her  tltlo  in  tho  "Race  to  tho  Flosh."  Bottom  loft:  Hosea  "S^rot  Event.  ' 
Wilson  is  on  the  receiving  end   of  some  pies,  compliments  of  par-  Photos  by  Woody  Scars  and  Bill  King. 


Award  Winner  Judith  Dockory  New  Venus; 

Pee  Wee  Batten  Wins  Again 


peace  of  tlve  whole  Middle  East 
rejected  a  Soviet  complaint  that  the 
J/fBtiRd  State*  iiMtB  interfering  ia 
Jordan  affairs. 

At  the  same  time  he  told  a 
<Towded  news  confeiience  Jordan  is 
not  interested  in  the  Eisenliower 
IXk" trine  which  aims  to  defend  the 
Middle  East  from  Comntunist  ag- 
gression. 


The  Jane  Craige  Gray  .Memorial 
Award  will  be  presented  8  p.m. 
May  12  in  tlie  reception  room  of 
Morehead  Planetarium,  according 
to  an  annouacement  released  yes- 
terday. 

The  award  is  given  annually  by 
the  Beta  Chi  chapter  ol  the  Kaippa 
Delta  soit>rity  in  memory  of  Mrs. 
Gordon  Gray,  an  alunuius,  as  a 
tiibiite  to  the  idedls  which  she  ex- 
entpUtfied. 

Presented  on  the  has^s  of  charac- 
ter. leadersi>ip  and  scl»darship,  the 
award  is  presented  each  year  to 
the  cutstandinfi  junior  coed  on  cam- 
(pus. 

Winner    of    the    Gray     Memorial 
Award    last   year   was   Miss   Sylvia 
Tarantino,  a  Tr;  Uelt^  from  Tampa,  j 
Florida.    She   was  sdedled   from  a  ! 
field  of  30  girls  under  consideration  : 
for  the  award.  I 

This  year  Vi  e  Pi^esic'ent  William  i 
D.  Carmicbael  will  make  the  pre- 1 
sentation.  A  reception  will  follow  the  I 
formal  ceremonies  in  the  faculty  ; 
lounge  of  the  planetariimi,  it  was  j 
announced.  j 

Selection  of  the  award  Minner  is  j 
made  through  a  committee  headed 
by      Miss      Katfaerine     Carmichael, 
Dean  of  Wom«i.  as  chairman.  Other 
members  of  the  committee  Include:  j 

Dean    Eia^mesH    Mackie,    dean    of ; 
fctudcnt    awards;    Bob    Young,    ex- 1 
student  body  president;  Miss  Mary 
Ann    Kce.er   (replacing   Miss   Patri- 
cia McQueen,  chairman  of  the  Wom- 
en's   Honor   Council  i    Miss    Annette  : 
Niven,  fc.rmer  ithairman  of  Womens 
Or  ertlialjo^and   Ray  Jefferies,   as-  | 
sif^nt   to  the  dean  of  stttdent  af- 
fairs. 


By  BOB  HIGH 

Are  you  a  regular  fellow?  Then 
you  should  have  been  in  Kenan 
Stadium  yesterday  afternoon  and 
seen  Judith  Dockery  crowned 
"Miss  Modern   Venus  of   1957-58." 

While  there,  the  advice  was  to 
run,  don't  walk  to  your  nearest 
drugstore.  The  Kappa  Deltas,  last 
years  winners  of  the  Sigma  Chi 
Derby,  and,  the  Chi  Omegas  tied 
for  first  place  in  the  annual  event 
between  the  local  sororities  and 
women's  organization*-  on  this 
campus. 

In  the  Race  To  The  Flesh.  Pee 
Wee  Batten  retained  her  title  as 
the  "queen  of  strippers"  by  un- 
clothing first.  This  race  went  only 
down  to  a  bathing  suit,  however. 
Alpha  Gamma  Delta  as  second 
and  the  rest  of  the  participating 
organizations  tied  for  showing. 

The  KD's  and  Chi  O's  gained  the 
tie  with  15  points  apiece.  The 
Alpha  Gam's  were  third  with  11. 

The  2,000  people  in  the  battle- 
field of  Coach  Jim  Tatum's-  Blue 
and  White,  saw  everything  given 
away  to  lucky  ticket-holders  from 
panties  to  Bob  Cunningham  to  a 
case  of  beer  to  Peggy  Swarringen. 

Miss  Dockery  won  the  beauty 
Contest  over  Martha  P'ortune  of 
Alpha  Gamma  Delta  and  Val  Von 


!  Ammon  of  Pi  Beta  Phi.  Miss  For- ; 
tune  placed  second  and  Miss  Am-  j 
mon  .showed  for  third.  j 

Judging  for  the  event,  which  the 
whole    crowd    waited    for    till    the 
I  end.  was  E.  Carrington  Smith,  Ta-  ■ 
'  turn,  Joe  Augustine  and  Mrs.  Sut- 
ton. I 
The    famed     secret    event    was  ■ 
very  well    kept   under   cover   this! 
i  year,    for   when    the    Sigma    Chi's  | 
I  brought   out   a   herd   of   goats   fori 
the  girls  to  onilk.  the  crowd  went  j 
I  wild.  Other  incidents  cau.sed  much 
I  glee  with  the   bare-backed,   shirt- 1 
sleeved  spectators. 

In    the    first    event,    the    Grand 
National,  the  Chi  Os  won.  It  was 
run  relay  style  with  the  first  part 
!  consisting    of    two    females    going 
leapfrog  to  the  opposite  end  of  the 
j  track    and    then    sending    a    girl 
I  shooting    a    marble    to    the    other 
j  end,  all  the  while  styaing  on  her 
posterior.   Then   an   entry   had   to 
smoke  a   cigar  to  a  certain  mark, 
run  to   the   other   end,   and   touch 
another    girl    who    leaped    to    the 
I  last  entrant  in  a  burlap  bag.  The 
I  last  of  the  relay  team,  kept  a  po- 
tato between  her  feet  and  jumped 
i  to  the  finish  line. 
I     The   KD's   were   second   in    this 
race  and  the  Alpha  Gams  finished 
!  third. 


In  the  messiest  event  of  the 
day.  Hit  The  Geek,  Beverly  Cul- 
breth  of  the  Alpha  Gam's  splat- 
tered the  most  chocolate  pie  on 
the  stooge.  Hosea  Wilson.  Cater 
Poteat  of  the  KD's  was  the  next 
best  "chunking  pie"  and  the  Chi 
O's  Sarah  Walters,  a  fast  filly 
from  the  coast,  coated  the  Geek 
for  third. 

In  •  the  Secret  Event,  Mickey 
Reed  of  the  Nurses  put  the  most 
milk  in  the  jar  in  the  time  allot- 
ed  to  win  hands  pulling,  I  mean 
down.  Sally  Simpson  of  the  KD's 
was  second  and  Shirley  Collins  of 
Alpha  Gam  showed  for  position 
No.  3. 

The  skits  were  very  good  and 
hilarious.  Many  mistakes  were 
made,  but  everything  came  out  all 
right.  The  Nurses  won  with  "I 
Can  t  Say  No."  The  Chi  Omegas 
placed  for  second  with  "Playboy' 
and  Pi  Beta  Phi  showed  with  a 
country  program  from  Big  Still, 
Tennessee"? 

Miss  Nancy  Jo  Rush  was  pre- 
sented to  the  crowd  as  "Sweet- 
heart of  Sigma  Chi"  for  the  com- 
ing year  and  the  ball. 

All  in  all.  great  fun  was  had  by 
all  who  attended  and  participated. 
The  laughs  were  often  and  the 
"mij-Lakes"  were  more  often. 


Staff  Meeting 

There  will  be  an  "urgent'' 
meeting  of  The  Daily  Tar  Hee^ 
staff  otday  at  3  p.m.,  according 
to    Editor   Neil    Bass. 

Bass  urged  all  staff  members 
to  attend. 


ty.    The    new    treasurer    is    Edwin 
Levy;    the   secretary,   Susan   Saun- 


the  election.'"  i  deadline  today. 

Weinman  appraised  the  strength  |     The  committee  liopes  that  evwry. 
and  the   prospects  of  the  UP  and   one   wishing   to  enter   the   program 
Tuition  Increase  Is  Now     (**•*"   advimsa    the   party   members' aofd   everyone    who  lias    applied   4o 
_  that    "you    have   a   tremendous  re- '  date    will    complotc    processiag    to- 

Pending    Committee    Actj  sponsibility  ...   it  is   up   to  you. '.day. 

'With  control  of  the  legislature  ;  Student  Government  officers  have 
and  with  UP  members  in  impor- .  !en.t  their  supjx>rt  to  tbe  orienta' 
tant  student  positions,  Weinman  tion  program  and  h;ne  lu-ged  that 
said,  that  hie  UP  was  in  a  tavor-  j  applicants  and  ail  interested  per- 
able    po.-ition    tQ    lead     ne.\-t    yearjoons  take  an  active   interest  in   tiv. 


The  proposed  increase  in  tuition 
rdtes  for  non-resident  undergrad- 
uate students  here  is  current].y  rest- 
ing in  the  hands  of  a  General  As- 
sembly Joint  Appropriations  sub- 
committee. 

When   the   measure   will   come  to 

the  floor  of  the  House  of  Represen-  ,     ,,.         ^  ,     ,       ^       „.  . 

fo.;,.„  ^  J-        .      telling  the  party  body  that  VVem- 

tatives    IS    uncertaui.    according    to  I  ....  ..     . 


and   into  the  fall   elections. 

Benny   Thomas  praised   the  two 
year    chairmanship    of    Weinman, 


Last  Day 


''% 


the  bill's  spon,sor.  Rep.  K.  H.   Ross 
of  Beaufort. 

Ross  introduced  the  bill  several 
weeks  ago.  It  proposes  an  increase 
in  tuition  fcr  out-of^tate  under- 
graduate students  of  not  more  than 


man  "pulled  us  all  through  a  lot 
I  of  tight  places.  There  were  many 
j  times  when  we  couldn't  have  done 
j  without  him."  . 

1      The  new  chairman,  Braxton,  has 
r  been      former      Elections      Board ; 


Student  Body  Prp^ident  Sonii,v 
Evans  announced  yesterda.v  that  to- 
ia.v  is  the  last  day  for  applications 
o  be  received  for  student  govern- 
ment positions. 
Ap::lications    will    be    received    'in 


Latin  American  Relations  Helped 


GM'S  SLATE 


Debate  Squad,  4:30-6  p.m., 
Grail  Rown;  Student  Council,  7- 
11  p.m.,  Grail  Room;  University 
Party  C«iicw»,  6-7:30  p.m.,  Roland 
Parker  Lounge  No.  1;  I.F.C,  7:30- 
9  p.m.,  Roland  Parker  Lounge 
No.  1;  Studant  Party  Caucus, 
6:30-7:15  p.m.,.  Roland  Parker 
Lounge  No.  3;  Finance  Commit- 
4-6  p.m.,  Wae^hovse  Conference 
Room;  Profaasienal  I.  F.  C,  7-8 
p.  m.,  Woedhottse  Conference 
Room;  Ruiat  Committee,  4-S  p.m.. 
Council  R^em* 


Relations  l)etween  Latin  America 
and  the  United  States  were  streng-  j 
thened  here  last  week. 

At  least  that's  the  impression  I 
mc'g'ng  from  the  comments  of  six  • 
visiting  communiiy  leaders  from  j 
iSouth  AnaerJca. 

Selected    as    women     community  i 
leaders   in   civic,   educational,    poli- 
.itai  and  journalistic  activities,  they 
ire  touring  the  United  States  under  ; 
auspices    of    the    State    Dept.    and 
tbe  'Lat>or  Dept.'s  Women's  Bureau.  ■ 

The  delegation  included  Mrs.  Leti-  ■ 
cia  Antezana  de  Alberdi,  civic  lead-  ; 
er  of  La  Paz,  Bolivia;  Miss  Hilda  j 
Macedo,  chief  of  womens  >]>otice,  j 
Sao  Paulo.  Brazil ;  Dr.  Anita  Ar- ' 
royo,  literature  professor  and  news- 


(l>aper  columnist.  Havana.  Cutw; 
Mrs.  Celeste .JSamayoa  deE.spada, 


Senior  Invitation^ 

u 

Senio(<  invitations  can  be  pick- 
ed up  tomorrow  and  Friday  on 
the  second  floor  of  the  YMCA 
from  9  a.m.  to  2  p.m.  the  Order 
of  the  Grail  announced  yester- 
day. 

Seniors  h<ive  been  urged  to 
pick  up  their  graduation  invita- 
tions on  the  specified  days.  Tite 
Grail  announcement  further 
stated  that  a  limited  supply  of  in- 
vitations will''  be  available  for 
those  who  have  not  already  or- 
dered, 


club  leader.  Guatemala  City:  Miss 
Maria  E:sther  Talamantcs.  legal  and 
poljtioal  official,  Mexico  City  and 
Misis  Maria  Edilia  Valero,  freelance 
writer,   Caracas.   Venezuela.  ' 

As  they  departed  for  three  weeks 
of  travel,  which  wiH  take  them  to 
Tennessee,  Arizona.  California, 
Michigan  and  New  York,  they  ex- 
pressed impressions  of  their  visits, 
to  North  Carolina  schools,  offices, 
industries  and  private  hemes. 

During  their  stay  in  Chapel  Hfl!, 
the  six  women  studied  local  govem- 
Tnent  .saw  pi-eparations  for  the  lo- 
cal election  May  7  and  attended 
workshops  on  \vomen's  organiza- 
tions. 


Back  To  Bed 
Seniors;  This 
Is  Your  Day 

Seniors  who  rose  sleepily  from 
(hen-  bods  this  morning  and  trudged 
automatically  off  to  their  first  class, 
have  been  <Iu-ecied  to  read  this  no- 
tice: 

Today  is  SenM>r  Day. 

Ail  classes  f^r  graduating  seniors 
have  been  cancelled.  For  those  who 
are  up  and  about,  the  only  thing 
left  is  to  go  back  to  sleep  and  wake 
again  for  the  orgamzationai  to  be 
held  at  10  a.m.  in  Hill  Hall. 

Tliis  morn  big  and  afternoon  sen- 
iors win  l>e  meeting  to  organize  for 
comnieiM-'ement  and  celebrate  the 
fmLs  to  four  years  of  college. 

At  5:30  p.m.  seniors  will  gather 
at  the  Patio  for  a  final  informal  get- 
to-getlicr.  Pix>gram  officials  have  in- 
d'cated  that  a  fine  evening  of  en- 
tertainment is  planned  to  be  high- 
1  gji  ed  by  tlic  awaixiing  of  a  Ford 
autonwbile. 

The  affair  ends  at  10:30  and  all 
seniors  are  invited  to  paiticipate 
in  what  Publicity  Chiarman  Lou 
Aosenstock  promises  to  be  tlie 
•'finest  senior  day  yet." 

Rosenstock  extended  his  thanks  to 
Miss  Dottie  Wood  and  her  social 
icmmiUee  for  pUinnIng  the  even- 
ing's  activities. 


$200.                                                        I  Chairman,    party    floor    leader    m    ,^^    ,^^^^„j    government    office   or 
Non-residents    now    pay   $500   tui-  j  ^^^    legislature,    and    chairman    of   ^^    Graham    Memorial    informatiwi 
tion  per  vear.                                        |  numerous     UP    standing    comma- 1^,^^^^^  .^.^ 
.- -_ ^'ees.  ^ , ^ 


INFIRMARY  LIST 


Misses  Patricia  Gregory,  Janet 
Johnson,  Sandra  Wallace,  Eliza- 
beth McKinnon,  and  Edith  Drex- 
ler;  Jean  Pierre  Boissavit,  Tim- 
othy Jessup,  Richard  Stoker, 
Phillip  Williams,  Theodore 
Wohlburck,  David  Ansell,  Fred 
Blue,  James  Thompson,  David 
■urrows,  and  Har9ld  Clark. 


Guggenheim  Fellowship  Winner 


Dr.  T.  Z.  Csaky  of  the  UNC  School  of  Medicin'^,  recently  named  Guggenheim  Fellow,  will  travel  to 
Denmark  next  spring  i»  begin  studying  under  thf  fellowship.  He  will  be  accontpanied  by  his  wife  and 
two  children.  A  native  of  Hungary,  Dr.  Csaky  has  b>en  on  tiie  faculty  of  the  School  of  Medicine  sine* 
1951. 


mmmmm^^mmmm 


#A6I  TWO 


THE   DAILY   TAR   HfEL 


WEM1E$0AY.  MAY  1,  WS7 


WEOI 


A  Censuring   Deterrent 
And  Fr^eedom  Of  Thought 

Though  facts  behind  the  placing  of  Catawba  College,  Salisbury,  on  the  Ameri- 
can .\ssociation  of  Uaiversiiy  Professors'  censure  list  are  somewhat  nebulous,  the 
assertion  behind  such  action  is  indeed  admirable. 

The  censure  serves  notice  to  the  profession  and  the  public  that  "unsatisfactory 
conditioa.'  of  academic  freedom  and  tenure'  of  office  have  be^n  found  at  the  insti- 
tutions in  question. 

In  other  words,  professors  are  abruptly  dismissed  without  due  process  for  what 
might   be  expression  of   opinions   in   di- 


ametrical  opposition    to   those    held    by 
institutional  adnnnistration»-. 

In  the  action  against  Catawba,  addi 
tional  information  and  reasons  should 
have  been  released. 

The  censuring  action  is  too  severe  to 
be  cloaked  behind  any  veil  of  mystery 
and  nebulosity.  Reasons  behind  the  cen- 
suring and  condemnation  should  be 
made  public. 

The  release  of  sp«ific»'  pertinent  to 
Catawoa's  censuring  ivould  in  no  way 
be  vindictive  or  malicious.  .It  would, 
rather,  serve  as  a  ^©rrent  to  institu 
tions  which  stifle  qjssenting  opinions 
and  contradictory  thcrtight. 

Though  full  facts  have  not  been  made 
public,  the  association's  censuring  ac- 
tion s'hould  certaial*j»serve  as  a  warn- 
ing to  American  coUcges  and  universi- 
ties. % 

Professors  should  have  free  mental 
rein.  They  should  be  allowed  to  fully 
express  themselves,  not  only  concerning 
institutional  scholastir  programs,  but 
also  on  national  'anffj  international  af- 
fair.- and  problems  dealt  with  by  the 
administrations  of  li^^ir  respective  insti- 
tutions. ■ 

The  University  faculty  members  who 
spoke  out  in  oppositidi  to  the  proposed 
$200  out-of-state  tuition  hike  are  to  be 
commended. 

In  this  case,  the  professors  joined 
their  voices  to  the  Consolidated  Univer- 
sity administrations  opposition  chorus. 

As  The   Daily  Tar   Heel   has   asserted 


In  short,  using  Catawba's  censuring  as 
an  example,  we  assert  for  the  right  of 
faulty  members  to  completely  make  a 
dean-breast  of  their  opinions  and  feel- 
ings, regardless  of  administration  policy. 

It  would  be  an  admirable  and  deter- 
ring gesture  if  the  AALTP  would  release 
all  the  facts  behind  their  condemnation 
of  Catawba  College. 

But  their  assertion  for  the  right  of 
free  expre^^ion  without  shackling  by  in- 
stitutional administrations  is  certainly 
to  be  heartily  commended. 

Professors,  speak  your  minds. 

University 
And  Derby 

American  youth  may  be  becoming 
monagamous  in  their  search  for  securi- 
ty, but  Kenan  Stadium  witnessed  a  dis- 
play of  fun  and  good-naturedness  yes- 
terday which  would  seem -to  indicate  a 
well-adjusted  generation.  • 

The  Thirteenth  Annual  Sigma  Chi 
Derby  transpired  jovially,  a  bit  raucous- 
ly, but  all  in  the  spirit  of  fun  and  good 
sportsmanship. 

The  event  occurred,  from  the  '"Race 
to  the  Flesh"  to  the  "Secret  Event" 
(high-spirited  coeds'  goat  milking  com- 
petition) with  only  one  warning: 

"The     administration     requests     that 

.—    —    .     — ^Y —   spectators    hold    down    their    comments 

throughout,   the   profAsors  and  the  ad-      during  the  Mi.ss  Modern   Venus  Compe- 
ministration    have    taken    an    admirable      tition." 

In  these  times  when  American  youth 
dc  seek  security,  and  neuroses  are  the 
order  of  the  day,  the  occasion  for  a 
little  steam-letting  is  much-welcomed 
and  much-needed. 

Thus  the  University  administration 
demonstrates  a  modern  and  understand- 
ing policy  in  its  non-withstraint  except 
the  temperance  of  propriety  concerning 
such  events  as  the  Sigma  Chi  Derby. 

We  offer  our  most  laureling  laurels 
to  Sigma  Chi  Fraternity  for  its  well- 
planned  event,  to  M\^-i  Modern  Venus, 
Miss  Judy   Dockery — to   Chi   Omega    and 

.K*»PPa  J^elta  Sospxities,-^iaint  winners. 

But  our  most  hearty  commendati/)n 
goes  to  the  University  adminrstration 
for  its  non-interference  policy. 

Ignorance 
is  Bliss 

By  TOM  JOHNSON 

(In  The  Oxford  Ledger) 

High  school  students  who  are  realiz- 
ing, as  the  school  term  nears  an  end, 
that  they  have  not  mastered  French. 
Latin,  Spanish,  ect..  a&  well  as  it  seemed, 
and  have  come  to  the  conclusion  that 
these  languages  are  difficult,  should 
consider  for  a  moment  the  problems  of 
natives  of  other  lands  striving  to  mas- 
ter the  English  language. 

A  recent  ic-sue  of  North  Carolina  Edu- 
cation   supplies    a    good    illustration    of 
why  foreigners  find  English  a  difficult 
language.  Take  it  from  Education: 
"We'll    begin    with    box;     the    plural    is 

boxes. 
But  the  plural  of  ox  should  be  oxen, 

not  oxes. 
"One  fowl  is  a  goose,  but  two  are  called 

geese. 
Yet  the  plural  of  moose  should  never 

be  meese. 
"You  may  find  a  lone  mouse,  or  a  nest 

of  mice. 
But  the  plural  of  house  is-  houses,  not 

bice. 
"It    the  plural   of  man  is  always  called 
men,  ^ 

Why    shouldn't    the    plural    of    pan   be 
called  pen? 
"The  cow  in  the  plural  may   be  called 

cows,  or  kine; 
But  a  bow,  if  repeated,  is  never  called 

bine; 
And  the  plural  of  vow  is  vows,  never 

vine. 
"If  I  speak  of.  a  foot  and  you  show  mc 

two  feet  , 

And  I  give  you  a  boot,  would  a   pair 

be  called  beet? 
"If  one  is  a  tooth  and  a  whole  set  are 

teeth. 
Why  shouldn't  the  plural  of  booth  be 
called   beeth? 


stand — one  which  mig^t  not  be  com- 
mensurate with  the  provincial  mind  of 
Rep.  L.  H.  Ross  of  Beaufort.  But  it  is 
assuredly  a  stand  wlfich  will  be  benefi- 
cial to  the  University  for  years  into  the 
morrow:? 

However,  if  there  are  faculty  mem- 
bers who  agree  with  Ross's  infamous 
bill,  they  should  certainly  speak  their 
minds.  < 

Any  liberal  mind  ikftens  attentively  to 
both  -^ides  of  any  .^-gument,  if  both 
sides  are  logical. 


The  Daily  Tar  Heel 


The  official  student  publication  of  <he 
Publications  Board  of  the  University  of 
North  Carolina,  where  it  is  published 
daily  except  Monday  and  examination 
and  vacation  periods  and  summer  terms. 
Entered  as  second  class  matter  in  the 
po>t  office  in  Chapel  Hill,  N.  C.  under 
the  Act  of  March  8.  1870.  Subscription 
rates:  mailed.  S4  per  year,  $2.50  a  semes- 
ter: delivered  S6  a.  year,  $3.50  a  semes- 
ter. '  '    * 


Editor 


IT 


NEIL  BASS 


Managing  Editor  CLARKE  JONES 


Associate  Editor  NANCY  HIU. 


Sports  Editor 


BILL  KING 


New..-  Editor  .-  ;^I|^T  SCHRUNTEK 


Business  Manager  JOHN  C.  WHITAKER 


Advertising  Manager'^      FRED  KATZIN 

NEWS  STaFF— Graham  Snyder,  Edith 
MacKinnon.  Pringle  Pipkin,  Bob  High, 
Ben  Taylor.  H.  Jpost  Polak,  Patsy 
Miller.  Wally  Kuralt,  Bill  King,.  Cur- 
lisi  Crotty,  Sue  Atcttson. 


EDIT  STAFF— Whit^hitfield.,  Anthony 
Wolff,  Stan  Shaw,  Jfoody  Sears. 

BUSC>'ESS  STAFF— John  Minter.  Mari- 
an .lobeck,  Jarte  Patten,  Johnny 
Whitaker. 


SPOHTS  STAFF:  Dave  Wible,  SUi  Bird, 
Ekl  Rowland,  Jim  Crownover,  Ron 
Milligaa. 

1 ^ 


Subscription  Managifir 


Dale  Staley 


Crculation  Manager  JL Charlie  Holt 

. — -**■ 

■  i 
Staff  Photogiaphers  *         Woody  Sears, 
Norman  Kantor,  Bill  King. 


Librarians .  Sue  GicUaer,  Marilyn  Strum 


Night  News  Editor 
Night  Editor 


„„  Bob  High 
Woody  Sears 


MAY  6 

Is  Coming  Soon 
ONLY  5  MORE  DAYS 


WISE  AND  OTHERWISE- 

Confidential: 
The  Facts  On 
Percival  Hood 

Whit  Whitfield 

It's  strange  how  easily  we  are 
duped,  especially  when  we  are 
young.  All  of  you  have  heard  tl\e 
Robin  Hood  classic,  but  how  many 
of  you  have  heard  the  true  story 
just  published  in  one  of  the 
trash  magazines?  If  you  haven't 
been  .s-o  fortunate  as  yet.  here  it 
is  in  short  form: 


Robin  was  born  Aloucious  Per- 
cival Hood  on  July  22.  1131,  the 
youngest  of  12  son.s  in  a  family  of 
girls.  His  father  wmked  in  the 
Nottingham  branch  of  Rolls 
Royce  Limited,  but  was  a  high- 
wayman by  avocation.  Aloucious 
was  an  inveterate  kleptomaniac — 
hence  his  nickname  Robin. 

He  grew  up  on  the  outskirts  of 
Sherwood  Forest,  where  he  stole 
the  King's  acorns  and  sold  them 
on  the  open  market.  He  was  im- 
prisoned in  the  Nottingham  jail 
for  three  years,  where  he  rt»et 
some  of  his  lifelong  friends  and 

business    associates. 

I 

He  was  released  in  1150  on  the 
stipulation  that  he  serve  in  King 
Richard's  legion^  in  the  Holy 
Land.  During  his  stay  in  the  Holy 
Land.  Robin  amassed  quite  a  for- 
tune in  gold  and  jewels,  where- 
upon he  decided  to  return  tn 
England,  and  serve  the  rest  of 
his  hitch  in  the  reserves. 

Immediately  upon  his  return  he 
was  arrested  on  a  drunken  joust- 
ing charge  and  imprisoned  once 
more  at  Nottingham.  He  escaped 
shortly  thereafter  with  several 
friends  to  Sherwood  Forest  Dur- 
ing the  spring  and  summer  of  that 
year  he  gathered  around  him  a 
motley  array  of  Ix'ggars  and  out- 
laws who  stole  from  the  King's 
foresters  for  sustenance.  The  for- 
esters didn't  appreciate  this  im- 
position to  put  it  mildly,  so  they 
came  together  to  form  guild;,  for 
protection  from  Robin  and  his 
men. 

The  guilds  proving  too  strong, 
they  turned  to  robbing  the  poor 
peasants  ,but  ^he  peasants  were 
not  to  be  underestimated.  They 
fought  back  until  Robin  sued  for 
peace.  One  of  the  terms  of  the 
peace  was  that  Robin  should  pay 
the  peasants  a  certain  sum  of 
money  for  reparations.  Not  hav- 
ing the  money  they  turned  to 
robbing  th^  rich  to  pay  the  poor. 
All  of  the  stolen  money  was  not 
given  to  the  poor  however.  Robin 
kept  moA  of  it  for  him.self,  not 
even  telling  his  men. 

The  group  disbanded  in  1161, 
when  Friar  Tuck  repented.  Will 
Scarlet  got  married,  and  Robin 
absconded  with  all  the  money  to 
France,  where  he  lived  his  re- 
maining years  writing  his  mem- 
oirs. 


The  question  is.  how  can  a  per- 
son have  heroes  any  more  with 
all  these  confidential  magazines 
on  the  market? 


/^You'  Say  You  Have  This  Impression  That  You 
""  Keep  Smelling  Oil?" 


7  -n^  »<iM>fci»^««<T^*<  'Ri»*r  ••• 


tfitm/7  n^ 


I     I       • 


FROM  CONNECTICUT: 


Our  Snowballing  Population 
And  The  Educational  Problem 


More  people  than  ever  are  go- 
ing to  college  a.s  college  occupies 
the  sine  qua  non  role,  much  as 
high  school  did  in  former  years, 
to   job   success. 

As  the  nec^s^itj  for  going  to 
college  and  the  popiilation,  in- 
crease, the  actua)  fuoilUie.<;  ar<f,  iti 
effect,  standing  still,  lihus,  aii  al- 
most Malthusian  formula  can  he 
applied  to  this  if'righteiiing  situa- 
tion. 

Alarmed  about  the  crises,  the 
New  York  Times  moved  Bdh* 
jamin  Fine's  excellent  education- 
al column  off  the  editorial  pages 
and  onto  page  one  last  week. 

The  story  wa.-.-  a  rehash  of  wliat 
everyone  here  at  the  university 
is  already  aware  of.  According  to 
a  university  trustee,  twelve  thous 
and  applications  have  already 
been  received.  Obviously,  most  of 
the.se  people  will  be  rejected  and 
have  to  seek  education  elsewhere, 
which  is  not  going  to  be  easy 
since  college  entrance  require- 
ments do  not  get  any  lower  in 
most  of  the  worthwhile  institu- 
tion^ nearby. 

Another  aspect  of  the  problem, 
pointed  out  by  Mr.  Fine,  was  the 
necessary  practice  on  the  part  of 
students  of  applying  to  anywhere 
from  four  to  ten  colleges.  This 
not  only  means  extra  work  for  t|ie 
student  but  requires  the  colleges 
the  inefficient  and  risky  practice 
of  accepting  twice  as  many  stu- 


dents as  they  can  handle,  on  the 
as.-umption  that  half  of  them  will 
be  accepted  at  cne  of  the  stu- 
dent's earlier  choices. 

As  solutions  to  the  problem, 
construction  of  facilities  are  go- 
ing ahead  across  the  country  as 
fast  as  building  and  state  legisla- 
tures will  permij.  However,  the 
teacher  shortage  will  not  be  ov- 
ercome as  easily.  Mr.  Albert 
Waugh.  University  Provost,  has 
stated  that  closed  circuit  TV  will 
bo  employed  at  $torrs  within  the 
next  dozen  years.  President  Jor- 
gensen  has  outlined  his  plan  for 
a  redistribution  of  freshman  and 
sophomores  to  the  branches.  Pri- 
vate colleges  have  pledged  their 
help. 

These  measures,  however,  will 
not  be  enough,  nor  will  they  get 
to  the  core  of  the  problem,  be- 
cause by  the  time  all  these  grand 
plans  are  accomplished,  graduate 
school  will  have  assumed  the  role 
that  the  first  four  years  of  col- 
lege now  assume  as  a  vital  part  of 
an  Americans  career.  A.v  young- 
sters have  replied  to  their  parents 
since  the  second  year  that  history 
has  been  taught,  "Ya,  Pop,  but 
there's  more  to  learn  than  when 
you  went  to  .school." 

The  crux  of  the  problem  is  in 
the  method  in  which  education  is 
approached.  The  mere  filling  erf 
buildings  with  progressively  old- 
er and  older  students  i^  not  th« 


answer.  We  must  redefine  educa- 
tion in  terms  of  an  ever  changing 
world  and  start  this  education, 
not  at  the  college  level,  but  the 
elementary  level.  Efficiency  and 
fresh  ideas  must  replace  the 
dusty  tradition  which  could  now 
extend  the  graduating  age  of 
those  few  future  students  to  their 
late  twenties. 

SUNDAY  MORNING 

Deer   walk    >.iix)n    our    mountains, 
and  the  quail 

Whistle  about  us  their  spontaneous 
cries; 

Sweet  berries  ripen  in  the  wttder- 
ness: 

And  in  the  isolation  of  thfe  sky, 

M     evening       casual     flocks     of 
p:geons  make 

Ambiguous     undulations    as     they 
sink. 

Downwai-d     to    dailcness.    on    ex- 
tended  wings. 

—Wallace  Stevens 


.\  small  group  of  wise  thinkers 
is  better  than  a  wildernes  of  dul- 
laixls  and  stronger  than  the  might 
of  empires. 

Mary  Baker  Eddy 


Gi-eat  men  are  they  who  see 
Lliat  .spirit-ual  is  stronger  than  any 
material  force  —  that  thoughts 
rule  the  world. 

Emen^ 


• 

L'il  Abnar 


• 

By  A!  Cipp 


II 


HE  IS  DCAD.':''-     —^  LIKE 
OONORATULATION&'!      60 

VOU  HAVE  WON  ZE  j-J  MANV 
DUEL .'.''  —  ALSO,  AMERICANS 
CONDOl.ENCeS.r-  IN  PARI 
ZE  PENALTY  FOR  I  HAVE 
MURDER  IS  ZE.  rr/  LOST  f 
OUIULOTINE.r  \f  MV  ** 
^J^  HEAD.? 


Pogo      '^ 


Bv  Wait  Kelly 


FROM  REAPERS  PIQEST: 

American  Youth: 
Monagamous 

Not  long  ago,  three  college  seniors  were  ques- 
tioning me  about  the  social  customs  of  the  'iM>'s  - 
days  wWeh  to  them  are  as  quatnt  and  renwte  as 
the  '90*s  were  to  my  generation.  I  told  them  about 
stag  lines  at  dances  and  cutting  in  and  getting 
stuck  and  the  old  story  of  the  five-dollar  bill  held 
behind  the  girl'.-  back. 

Whereupon  one  of  the  seniors  askSi.  "But  why 
did  you  cOt  in  on  a  girl?" 

I  replied.  "W^ell.  maybe  she  Was  a  good  dancer 
6r  fun  to  talk  to  «•  had  what  we  called  a  tood  line. 
Or  perhaps  you  didn't  know  her  and  got  introduced 
and  cut  in.  then  if  the  two  Of  you  got  on  togther 
you  asked  he*  for  a  date." 

Ther*  was  a  hushed  pause.  Then  one  of  the  sen- 
iors questioned  me  a  little  timidly:  "Do  yOu  mean 
that  When  another  man  brought  the  girt,  fou  woirld 
ask  her  for  a  date  right  at  the  dance?" 

"Certainly,"  I  answered.  "That  was  the  way  you 
met  hew   girls." 

A  pall  of  di.-approving  sltehce  wttled  «ver  us 
as  the  young  man  contemplated  thfe  Immorality, 
the  stark  and  blatant  indecency  of  their  r>arents" 
generation. 

This  new  and  strange  chasm  between  two  gen 
erations  has  resulted  from  a  dramatic  revolution  la 
the  folkways  of  American  youth.  "Goihg  stewly" 
has  become  the  standard  pattern  for  the  social  life 
of  the  young.  Youth  today  is  almost  completely 
monogamous,  and  is  aggressively  sure  that  its  wajs 
are  right.  The  mother  who  says  to  a  daughter, 
•Why  do  you  always  have  dates  with  Jimmy?  Areh"i 
there  other  nice  boys?"  seems  to  the  daughter  to  be 
lacking  in  elementary  undefstah^Uhg  of  %lie  ifacts  of 
social  life. 

Dances,  perhaps,  have  changed  -most  visibly  of 
all  the  social  institutions.  While  the  system  of  going 
steady  has  become  more  formaliied,  dances  have 
tended  to  become  more  informal.  (Why  dre^.,  up 
for  someone  you  see  so  often?)  They  have  beeome 
shorter.  (When  you  dance  With  one  iwrtnet,  two 
hours  or  so  is  enough.)  The  dances  are  «  iittle  som- 
ber, because  the  excitement  and  shifting  around 
of  cutting  in  have  disappeared,  and  becansfi  neither 
the  boys  nor  the  girls  feel  under  any  speoiai  obli 
gation  to  be  gay  or  entertaining.  The  big  dance  of 
the  prom  type  is  fading  slowly  Rway;  siacf  a  couple 
are  going  to  dance  together  anyhow,  they  may  as 
well  do  it  to  phonograph  records,  without  the  trou 
ble  and  expense  of  attending  a  big  formal  affair. 

What  does  establish  «the  relationship  of  "going 
steady"?  In  general,  three  dates  in  fairly  rapid  soc- 
cession  are  not  enou^  ,and  six  dates  are  considered 
plenty.  So  the  fourth  or  fifth  date  can  be  crucial.  It 
is  then  that  a  girl  must  decide  whether  or  hot  s*e 
li*es  a  boy  well  enough  to  go  steady.  When  an  af- 
firmative decision  is  reached,  the  boy  if'ill  not  go 
out  with  any  other  girl  or  the  girl  with  jmy  other 
boy.  Elach  can  count  on  the  other  for  any  date,  dance 
or  other   social  event. 

Going  steady  is  a  progressive  relationship.  At  the 
start,  it  means  merely  a  monogamous  social  arrange- 
ment. But  it  is  likely  to  move  on  to  a  point  where 
the  couple  get  "pinned."  (The  typical  syml)ol  is  the 
fraternity  pin,  but  if  the  college  has  no  fraternities, 
a  Phi  Beta  key,  a  club  emblem  or  military  insignia 
may  be  used.)  This  implies  that  the  boy  and  girl 
plan  to  go  steady  in  the  future,  like  each  other  a 
good  deal  and  expect  the  relationship  to  develop 
further.  To  be  seriously  pinned  means  "engaged  to 
be  engaged,"  perhaps  even  preparing  to  get  a  ring, 
secure  parental  approval  and  clear  up  other  mar- 
riage details. 

The  relationship  of  going  steady,  evey  of  a  pin- 
ned couple,  may  be  ended  with  somewhat  more  ease 
than  an  engagement,  however.  If  either  the  boy  or 
the  girl  ends  it  firmly,  he  or  she  is  said  to  have 
"axed"  the  other.  Then,  so  monogamous  has  our 
youth  become,  it  is  thought  proper  to  wait  a  decent 
interval  before  seeking  another  steady. 

Why  have  our  young  people  reverted  so  sharply 
to  the  ways  of  an  earlier  era?  Thtf  change  has  often 
been  ascribed  to  the  Second  World  War,  when  the 
sudden  shortage  of  men  made  each  girl  eager  to 
hold  on  to  any  available  male.  But  it  was  well  under 
way  befoe  1939.  Some  trace  the  new  folkways  to 
the  Great  Depression,  when  a  boy  putting  out  money 
for  a  girl  on  dances  or  movies  wanted  to  be  sure  of 
some  return  on  his  investment. 

The  new  ways  may  also  be  related  to  the  search 
for  security.  The  boy  or  girl  who  has  a  steady  is  se- 
cure. In  a  day  when  the  population  moves  from  home 
to  home  so  freely,  when  so  many  homes  are  brok*-n 
by  divorce,  this  kind  of  secyrity  is  very  precious  to 
young  people.  Or,  they  maylbe  seeking  the  security 
outwardly  denied  by  the  uns«  ttled  state  of  the  world. 

Whatever  the  origin,  thl;;  pre-marital  monogamy 
i.?  one  of  the  most  important  phenomena  of  recent 
times.  One  result  is  that  the  average  age  at  which 
young  people  marry  has  dropped  rapidly.  The  idea  of 
married  undergraduates — with  one  or  both  sets  of 
parents   "helping" — has  become  acceptable. 

Today  young  people  often  play  with  the  idea  ol 
marriage  as  early  as  the  second  or  third  date,  and 
they  certainly  think  about  it  by  the  fifth  or  sixth 
The  fact  that  the  steady  may  well  be  a  future  spouse 
makes  social  life  more  s-arious,  less  frivolous.  The 
boys  and  girls  spend  a  lot  of  lime  discussing  their 
relationship  and  whether  it  is  solidly  founded  on 
bases  of  long-run  compatibility. 

Early  marriage,  in  turn,  is  at  least  partly  responsi 
bJe  for  the  new  birth  rate  that  ha^-  exploded  the 
idea  of  a  stable  population  in  the  United  Stales.  Al- 
ready it  has  produced  the  tidal  wave  of  babies  that 
will  overwhelm  the  high  .schools  and  colleges  in 
the  lOeCTs. 

What  will  this  "going  steady"  system  do  far  the 
stability  of  marriage?  Oldsters  would  predict  that  a 
boy  who  has  dated  only  one  girt,  or  at  the  most  half 
a  dozen,  would  be  le^-s  likely  to  find  a  permanently 
compatible  mate  than  one  who  has  gone  out  with 
50  or  100.  It  is  possiWe,  however,  that  a  marriage 
relationship  based  on  an  elaborate  system  of  pre 
marital  companionship  progressing  through  recog- 
nized stages— dating  going  steady,  getting  pinned, 
becoming  engaged— may  be  buHt  in  a  solid  and  en- 
during fashion.  It  is  conceivable,  too,  that  the  fi«ce- 
ly  monogamous  pre-marital  folkways  may  carry  over 
into  married  life  and  erect  strong  buttreasct  ta  the 
institutions  of  narriage  and  the  faBily. 


%»    -^ 


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WEONESOAY^MV  1.AH7 


TMft  DAILY  TAR  HIIL 


PAGE  TMRIt 


h4pPENiNGk  ON  THE  HILL: 


'Dream  Queen  Named 


By  SUE  ATCHISON 
M.\RTH.\     .^NN     6UTLER     better 
known  on  camntis  as  "Mott"  Butler 
v\as   named    "Dream   Girl"   of  tihe 
Pi  Kaippa  Aipba's  test  week.  Mott, 


MARTHA  ANN  BUTLER 

.'  .   .    Pika  dream  queen 


^miim^ 


Covering  The  Univetsity  Campus 


PHYSICS  COLLOQUIUM  l  Hedgepeth  has  announced  polio  vac- 1  ASTRONOMERS   CONVENTION 

Dt.    C.    O.    O'Ceallaigh   from   the  J  cine  is  now  available  for  those  per-  i     The  Southeast   Region  of  the  .\s- 
Dublin    Institute   of    .\dvanced    Stu-  ,  sons    who    need    second    doses.    \c-  !  tronomical      League     of     Ajtierica, 


dy   will   speak  in    PhiHipsr  Hall   at 
8  pjn.   today  on   "K-Paiticle"   Stu- 


cording  to  Dr.   Hedgepeth,  the  vac-  |  which    is    comprised     of 
<  ijte   will    be    available   during   the  I  astronomers      in      seven 


amateur 
southern 


Uniform  Lci>v 
Is  Asked 
For  College^ 

RALEIGH  _  (^  _  A  biH  ko  pro- 
vide a  uniform  law  for  the  opera- 
tion of  all  state-suppjorted  cotleges 
— ex-ept  imiis  of  the  Consolidated 
University— was  introduced'  in  the 
hou?e  yesterday. 

Rep.  William  F.  Womble  of  For- 
s>  th  introduced  the  measure  pro- 
iM>sed  bv  the  State  Board  of  Higher 
Education. 

The  bill  would  provide  a  12-mem- 
ber  beard  of  trustees  for  each  of 
the  nine  institutions.  Some  now  have 
i).  others  12,  and  others  15  trustees. 

The  GovermM-  would  appoint  all 
the  trustees.  He  appoints  most  of 
I  hem  now  Iwt  there  are  some  varia- 
tions. Und^  the  bill,  terms  of  pres- 
ent trustees  would  not  be  terminat- 
ed, but  the  chances  would  be  made 
as  their  tenms  expire. 

The  bill  gives  an  identical  state- 
ment of  puipose  for  East  Carolina 
College,  Western  Carolina  CoMege 
and  Ap{>alacihian  Staie  Teachers 
College.  These  purposes  include  the 
preparation  of 
ler's  degrees. 


a  Tri  Delt,  wlio  hails  from  Dimn. 
-N'.  C.  was  elected  to  the  honor  by 
ihe  brothers  of  the   fraternity. 

Daley  Goff  escorted  her  to  a  tea 
dance  last  Fiiday  held  ta  the  Chapel 
HHl  Country  Club  where  she  was 
announced  as  the  new  "Dream 
Girl."  A  few  moments  after  the 
announcement  she  was  presented 
with  the  Plka's  "Dream  Girl"  pin 
and  a  bouquet  of  flowers.  The  Quar- 
ter Notes  played  for  the  afternoon 
fiance. 

Friday  ni.!?ht  another  party  was 
Held  at  the  coimtry  club  and  this 
time  the  Frank  Wrig'ht  Ccmbo  was 
on  hand  to  provide  the  melodies  for 
the  evening. 

On  Satui-day  a  luncheon  was  held 
at  the  house.  It  was  followed  by  a 
•)arty  at  Hcgan's  in  the  early  even- 
ing and  another  party  at  the  Pika 
hous?  Itaer  that  night. 

LAST  SATURDAY  was  Charlie's 
day  for  the  SPE's.  The  U.N.C.  chap- 
ter was  host  at  the  annual  day 
named  after  Dr.  Charles  Henderson 
ol  the  classics  department  who  in- 
itiated Charlie's  day  in  1947.  The 
guests  were  the  other  Sig  Ep  chap- 
ters in  N.C.  and  S.C.  Highlights  of 
the  afternoon  were  a  softball  tour- 
nament and  -beer  party. 


Jbhior  Here 
Dies  In  Hospital 

At  Favettevitle  Is  In  Planetarium  Show 


Explanatton  Of  Comets 


Benton  Linwood  Beard,  UNC  jun- 
ior from  Fayetteville,  died  of  a 
heait  condition  in  the  Durham  Ve- 
terans'  Hospital   Saturday  ttiglH. 

Linton.  27.  was  a  resident  of 
Everett  Dorm  for  the  past  fbree 
years.  .An  Industrial  Relations  ma- 
jor, he  had  been  ill  for  38  days. 

Berird  was  the  .son  of  Mr.  and 
Mrs.  A.  B.  Beard,  both  of  Cum'ber- 
land  County,  who  survive  4iim.  He 
i;i  also  survived  by  his  wife,  Mrs. 
Peggie  Jones  Beard  of  Fayette- 
ville. three  brothers,  and  two  sis- 
ters. 

Funeral  services  will  be  held 
today  at  5  p.m.  at  the  Rogers  and 
Breece  Funeral  Chapel  in  Fayette- 
ville. Masonic  rites  will  be  held. 
Interment  wUl  be  in  Lafayette  Me- 
morial Park  cemetery. 


An  explanation  of  the  composition 
and  behavior  of  come-ts  has  been 
added  to  the  new  Planetarium  pro- 
gr  mawhich  opened  ihere  laM  night.. 

Planetarium  Manager  .\.  F.  Jen- 
zano  said  the  featiu*e  has  been  in- 
cluded because  of  the  public  in- 
terest in  the  Arend-Rpland  comet 
now  visible  in  the  northwestern 
sky   to  the  naked  eye. 

■'The  Planeanum  has  had  many 
inquiries  by  telephone  and  letter 
from  thrtHighout  the  state  sdnce 
^'orth  Carolinaians  began  seeing  the 
comet  about  ^a  week  ago,  '  Jen- 
zano  said  Tuesday  . 

For    this    reason,    he    said,    "we 


decicted  to  incorporate  an  e^ana- 
I  tion  of  comets  in  our  pn^rams 
!  from  now  throug'h  May  27.  Which 
I  will   be  about   ^e  la.st   day  Arend- 

Roland  conuet  will  be  \'isible." 

I  The  new  feat-urie  conc«Tis  what 
'  comets  wne  made  of,  how  they  act. 
I  what  they  do  and  where  they  go. 
'  The  regular  show,  'Signals  from 
I  the  Stars,"  deals  with  the  com- 
I  :iaratively  new  science  of  radiu 
;  astroncmy. 

j  The  main  show  itself  is  about 
;  Rounds  given  off  by  stars  and  gala- 
.  xies  and  what  scientists  hope  to 
i  learn  from  the  study  of  those 
sounds. 


PATRONIZE  YOUR 
•    ADVERTISERS    • 


students    for    mas- 


dies.  Members  and  interested  per- 1  week   from  9-11:30   a.m.    and   from  |  .states,  will  open  its  annual  two-day 
sons  have  been  urged  to  attend. 
CAROLINA  QUARTERLY 


12-5    p.m.    The    Health    Service    also  '  convention  here  Fridav. 


_ 


An  important  meeting  of  the  en- 
tire staff  9f  the  Carolina  Quarterly 
vt^ill  be  held  in  the  Quarterly  office 
at  »  pjn.  today^  it  was  announced 
yesterda>-. 
POLIO  VACClNp      ;  I 

University  Pbys^l^n  E,  M.  McG.J 


I  has  vaccine  on  hand  which  can  be 
given  free  to  students  under  20 
years  of  age.  he  said. 


The  program  will  feature  the  set- 
ting up  of  a  complete  eart|f  satel- 
lite Observing  post  by  the  Charlotte 
.Amateur  Astronomers  Club.  Other 
clubs  and  members  will  exhibit  in- 
struments and  discuss  observations. 


aASSIFlEDS 


PROFESSOR   APPOINTED 

I      Dr.    Man'in   E.    Cha'pin,   professor 

land  head  of  the  I>ept.  of  Oral  Sur- 

g«y  Of  the  School  of  Denti^rjr  hpre,  'MEDICAL  MEETING 
has  been' reajspjJnted  ctmsuttant  in|-,.s*aff    members     from    the    VJfC 

oral  surgery  to  t^e  Surgeon  General  1  Schocl    of    .Medicine   will    participMrte 
of    the    U.S..\.F..    according    to    an '  in    the    103rd    annual   session   of   the 


announcement  made  yesterday 


W.ANTED:  COLLEGE  MEN, 
part-time  and  summer.  Earn  $50 
to  $100  per  week  plus  $100-$300 
scholarship  awslrd.  Must  have 
use  of  car.  Contact  W.  P.  Cran- 
ford.  Box  1708,  Raleigh,  N.  C. 


FOR  LNEXPENSIVE  IIVING:    27* 
Nashua  Trailer  —  has  bath  tub, 
shower,  porch,  oil  heater,  added  i 
room,  connected  to  utilities  and  i 
septic    tank.    One    mile    out    on ; 
airport  roafl.  Call  8472.  ^,300.     i 

FOR    RENT    DURING     SUMMER! 
months'.     Completely     furnished 
two  bedroom. house,  with  TV  and 
Automatic     Washing     Machine. 
Phone  88591. 


FX)R  SALE:  NEW  WESTING- 
house  portable  radio,  $28.  Call 
Jim  Uttl6,  Sigma  Nu  House,' 
8-9077,  and  leave  name  and 
number.  (1-3182-1). 


Medical  Society  of  North  Carolina 
in  .Asheville  from  May  5  to  8,  ac- 
I  rorfling  to  an  announcement  recent- 
ly. 

CHRISTIAN   FELLOWSHIP 

The  Inter-Varsity  Christian  Fel- 
lowship will  meet  in  room  108  of 
Hill  Hall  at  7  p.m.  tonight,  k  wa.s 
jimounced  yesterday.  Subject  of  the 
•reeting  will  be  the  third  chapter 
3f   PhUlppiajis. 

SCHOLARSHIP  AWARD 

E.  R.  Rankin  of  the  UNC  Ex- 
ension  Division  annoimc^  ye.ster- 
..iay  that  Alton  Trip  of  Raleigh,  is 
winner  of  the  State  High  School 
.Mathematics  Contest  for  1957.  A 
ane-year  tuition  scholarship  valued 
at  $150  is  awarded  by  the  Univer- 
.".ity   Scholarjyhip   C.>mmittee   to   the 

I  winner,  provided  he  meets  entrance 

'  requirements    here. 


The  biU  «lso  gievs  an  identical 
statement  of  purpose  for  Elizabeth 
City  State  Teachers  College,  Fay- 
etteville State  Teachers  College  and 
Winston-Salem  State  Teachers  Col- 
lege and  separate  statenvents  of 
purpose  for  Agricultural  and  Tech- 
r.ical  College  at  Greensboro  and 
Noi-th  Carolina  College  at  Durham. 
The  bill  makes  no  mention  that 
these  five  colleges  are  for  negroes. 

Dr.  J.  Harris  Purks,  Director  of 
Higher  Education,  sakl  these  is  "a 
decided  lack  of  uniformity"  in 
present  law's  respecting  the  col- 
leges. He  said  the  Board  of  Higher 
"Educaikm  hoped  that  under.,  the 
proposed  new  law  the  board  ol 
ti-ustees  of  the  colleges  will  sliow 
"even  greater»iivterest"  and  a^5»ume 
more  responsibility." 


ATO  Elects  Officers 

James  Preston,  rtsing  senior  from 
.Matthews,  has  been  elected  presi- 
dent of  .Alpha  Tau  Omega  fratern- 
ity for  next  year.  • 

Other  officers  include;. 

Vice  President  Bill  Rand.  Wilson; 
Secretary  Sterling  Haig,  Rome, 
kaly;  Treasurer  Frank  Malone,  At- 
lanta. Ga.;  Historian  Rivers  Up- 
church,  Smithfield;  Usher  George 
John.son.  Atlanta,  Ga.;  and  Sentinal 
Buddy  Johnson,  Lumbeiion. 


Phi-Di  Banquet  Is  Set 
Tonight  In  Pine  Room 

The  Phi-Di  Banquet  will  be  held 
in  the  Pine  Room  of  the  Carolina 
Inn  at  6:30  p.m.  today  and  will  fea- 
ture the  presentation  of  awards 
to  outstanding  society  and  faculty 
members,  it  was  announced  yester- 
day. 

The  Philanthropic  Assembly  will 
present  awards  to  Don  Jacobs,  out- 
standing freshman;  Elizabeth  Dent, 
outstanding  senior;  and  Jim  Mon- 
tieth.    outstanding    speaker. 

A  faculty  award  will  be  given  to 
Dr.  James  W.  Patton.  Director  of 
ilie  Southern  Historical  Society,  by 
the  Dialectic  Senate  during  their 
-i^ortion  of  the  program. 

A  joiiU  award  will  be  presented 
by  both  groups  to  E.  C.  Cameron, 
Prof,  of  Mathematics,  as  an  added 
highlight  to  the  banquet.  Both .  the 
Phi  and  Di  urged  all  members  to 
be  present  at  the  banquet  tonight. 


STUDENTS 


»1 


A  Week 
Nothing  Down 

Buys  The  Finest 
The  REMINGTON 
QUIET-RITER 

The  Finest  Typewriter 
Money  C«n  Buy. 

LEDBETTER- 
PICKARD 


For    Ail    Your 

Summer  Wear 

Visit 

BERMANS 

For  The  Men: 

Shorts  N 

Bermudas 

Swim  Trunks 

Cord  Pants 

Sport  Shirts 

Knit  Shirts 

Northcool  Suits 

(wear,  wash,  no  press) 

For  The  Women: 

Ship-N-Shore 

Blouses  $2.98  Up 

Skirts 

Ladies  SKorts 

Bermudas 

Shortie  Pajamas 

And    Nightgowns 

$1.98  And  Up 

Bermans 

Department 

Store 


Hooray  For  The 
Class  of  '57! 

Knowing  you  has  brightened 
our  days  for  four  years 

'  now . . .  Well  miss  you  when 
you're  gone. 

We  hope  you've  had  your 
share  of  fun  in  U.N.C/s 
famous  old  book  barn. 

And  we  hope  you'll 
remember,  out  in  the  great 
ond  philistine  world,  that 
v\re're  sfill  here,  ond   sfiU 
eager  to  provide  civi/ized 
reading.         . 
-.  ■''    '  --  .■'  '•^-  ' '     '  .     •'■'  ■    '■.  * 

The  Intimate  Bookshop 


205  E.  Franklin  St. 


Open  Till  10  P.M. 


DAILY 

ACBOSft 

l.Chokinf 
biU 

9.  Steals  ,, 
'  9.  Rent  aC&in 
JO.  Way t  6ut 
12.  F«* 
IS.  MereMwry 
14.  Btinr 

iiMccta 
15  Writinf ' 

1*.  14lMi«      ' 

dot*      ' 

17.  Like    .  ,.. 

18.  In  io  fkr  tt 

1».  Tiree 
20.  A  «p- 

Umolf 
24.Wilr^    . 
2i.  Metrical . 

stirtii    ' 

(pro*.) 

n.  Ub^  ' 

:S0.CrO«r4f    C; 

S2.  Acoit. 

,^  P*lm  . 

(ASiO) 
M.  Jowiatk 

moiitj^    ., 
as  rutM' 

40.  MothOr^- 

p«*rl    , 

•  M  Fr»»r«IXt 
...  wOfltf  ■ 
.441  Fniitlnt 
♦^  apikes  , 
''.■  Of  fra* 
'44.Tr»Yrt 
POWX 

j    l.tUV9t 


CROSSWORD 


2.  Opposite 
of 
aweather 

3.  Jewels 

«.  l*ig:P«n 
5.  Disclosing 
•.Farm 
,    animals 
7.  Storage 

area 
g.  Booth 
t.To 

found 

acain 
11.  Bang 
1  j.  Young 

dog 


18.  Asks 

19.  Girl's 
name 

21.  Stiff- 
ly 

decor- 
ous 

22.  Metal 

23.  A 
shield 

26.  Spoke 

27.  Fish 
nets 

29.  EHectrifled 
particle 

30.  Jolts 

31.  Subside 


>it!2ia       a(3f3BO 

-gan  caacaa  ga 
nBHBn  ranoag 
aQ  aaoB  aaa 
una  t2a[^a 


saa  annua 


YetteHay'i  Amwer 

3.5.  To  whiz 

36.  Masculine 

37.  Image 

39.  Beverage 

40.  No  (slang) 


Earl  Dawkins 
Is  New  Head 
Of  YDC  Here 

Farl  Dawkins.  of  Mt.  Gilead,  was 
elected  president  of  the  Young  De- 
TiOLrats  Club  last  Monday,  accord- 
ing to  a  recent  announcement. 

Serving  with  him  are  William  G. 
Raitsdell.  Jr..  uquay-Varina,  first 
v:ce-president;  George  Coggin,  Star, 
second  vice-president;  Wiilltp  Rane- 
lel'l,  Fuquay-Varina.  treasurer;  Miss 
\nne  Shea,  Spartanburg,  S.  C.  sec- 
retary. 

/ 

Seven  other  members  livere  eleot- 
xl  to  serve  on  the  Executive  Com- 
nittee:  Jim  Shreve,  Mflyodaft;  Lar- 
ry McEilroy,  MarshaU;  Nettl  K. 
McMillan,  Chapel  HUl;  KUsa  B#«y 
Wray  Lester,  Reitkville;  Bob  Man- 
gum,  Chapel  Hill;  Frank  Brown, 
rarboro;   Frank   Berry,   Kinston. 

Charlie  Dean,  of  Fuquay  Sprtngs, 
WES  endorsed  by  the  ■chib  as  Vts 
.epresentative  to  the  Stale  YDC 
Conventwn  to  be  h;^ld  next  fall. 

The  YDC  will  sponsor  a  plcnie  at 
Megan's  Lake  Satairday  at  3  p.m. 
Ul  YDC  members  and  their  gnests 
lave  been  invited,  and  refreshments  j 
are    to    be    provided    by    the    ciub  j 
ree  of   charge,    the   announcement  i 
said. 

Invitations  to  Che  ipknk  have  also 

oeeri   extended   to   Steve  Nemoeks. 

state  YDC  presidefat;  David   Bxinn, 

national  president;  and  to  all  other 

colleige  YDC's  in  the  state. 


;    You  smoke  refreshed 

Anew  idea  in  smoking...all-newSalem 


..J 

i1 


Created  by  R.  J.  Rntnolds  Tobcrrc  Compavii. 


menthol  fresh 
•  rich  tobacco  taste 
•  most  modern  filter 


Think  of  how  a  Spring  day  refreshes  you  and  you'll  have  a  good  idea 
how  refreshing  all-new  Salem  cigarettes  taste.  The  freshest  taste  in 
cigarettes  flows  through  Salem's  pure  white  filter.  Rich  tobacco  taste 
with  surprise  softness... menthol-frefeh  comfort.  SALEM-you'll  love  'em, 

Salem  refreshes  your  taste 


PA9I  FOtlt 


Tf»  OAILT  TAR  RlfL 


WEDNESDAY,  MAY  1,  }H7 


•^inr^imm'  *¥    "v 


Baseballers  Meet  Blue  Devili  In  Durham  Today 


K 


ING'S 
ORNER 

By  BILL  KING 


DTH  Sports  Editor 


Rod,  Gun  Club 
Meets  State 


By  TOMMY  JOHNSON 


Tar  Heels  Will  Shoot 
For  First  Place  Tie 


Robert  Allison  Fetzer 


life  Club  area.  Tlie  meet  will  be 
sponsored  by  the  Intramural  De- 
parlJtnent  of  the  two  schooLs. 

^ext  jear  the  event  will  be  held 
CD  a  Big  Four  basis  with  Wake  For-  jtrme 
est   and   Duke  participating.    These 
two  schools  do  not  have  a  Rod  and 


'•Sportsmanship  is  that  ideal  practiced  on  the  athletic  field  which 
insure,  fair  play.  It  is  that  mdefinable  something  which  pervades  «"^  ^^Jf^^n  ^^^^  ^J^^^lcH^' wi 
games,  lu'ting  them   from  a  sordid  .struggle  for  physical  supremacy.  '     Four  men  from  each  scnooi  wi 
to  a  contest  where  fajr  play,  respect  for  the  rights  of  others,  and  a 
vpuil  of  gallant  competition  outweighs  mere  victory." 

These  words  were  spoken  a  t*w  years  b«ck  by   a  man  whose 
life  has  been  based  on  these  same  standards — RebM^  Allisoa  Fet- 


Fetzer.  affectionately  called  "Coach  Bob."  recently  received  the 
first   Service   To   Sports   Award   of   the   Atlantic   Coach   Conference 
Sports  Writers  Association.  His  citation  awarded  him  the  honor  for 
•long,  distinguished,  and  unselfish  service"  in  the  ACC  area. 

There  eoutd  have  been  no  better  choice  for  the  honor.  Coach 
Bob  Fetxer  has'  probably  contributed  more  to  the  athletic  program  at 
Carolina  than  any  other  person,  for  it  was  he  who  had  the  eevrage 
to  build  an  athletic  system  out  of  virtually  nothinfi:  a  system  vrhieh 
now  is  on  a  par  with  any  other  In  the  country. 

Coach  Bob  came  to  Carolina  in  1921.  In  1922  he  became  Athletic 
Director.  Before  him  lay  a  job  that  would  have  discouraged  a  weaker 
man— but  not  Coach  Bob.  He  went  to  work  with  a  desire  and  a  vision, 
"athletics  for  all  at  Carolina." 

The  wonderful  things  which  this  slender,  quiet  spoken  man  did 
for  Carolina  athletics  in  the  next  29  years  an  innwnterable. 

Coach  Bob  Was  A  Builder 

His  first  move  was  the  Tin  Can.  "The  Legislature  wasn't  giving 
out  money  for  athletics  at  the  time,"  he  said,  "so  I  knew  we  couldn't 
build  a  g>m,  so  we  built  the  Tin  Can  for  $55,000." 

With  only  one  athletic  field  to  facilitarte  all  of  Carolinf's  out 
door  sports.  Coach  Bob  went  to  work  on  a  football  field  and  in  1927 
came  out  with  what  we  know  today  as  Kenan  Stadium.  Coach  Bob  re- 
calls the  dedication  of  Kenap  with  25,000  fans  on  hand,  as  ene  of 
his  fondest  menwries. 

The  lovable  coach  then  turned  his  attention  to  (rack.  He  soon  be- 
came Carolina's  .coach  in  that  sport,  and  by  1936  The  University  had 
a  track  field,  the  same  one  which  is  used  today. 

The  field  was  duly  dedicated  to  Coach  Bob  as  Fetzer  Field. 
He  can  still  recall  vividly  the  old  day-;  when  the  track  team  used 
an  oval  encircling  lllmerson  Field. 

In  1936  a -regression  would  give  ample  indication  of  what  Coach 
Bob  had  done  over  fourteen  years.  There  were,  in  addition  to  the 
already  mentioned  track  field  and  stadium,  28  tennis  courts,  f  girl's 
athletic  field  and  a  half-dteen  intramural  fif  Ids. 

"Fetzer  Vi9ion"  Wms  ReaNzOTf 


By  BILL  KING  '  lJie   contest   with   the   Tar   Heels  a 

The     Carolina     baseballers     face  game  behind  at  7-3.  Each  club  has 
Caroliiia  Rtxl  ajid  Gun  enthusiasts '  thoir  severest  test  of  the  season  th's '  tliree  dstlferetoce  outings  remauung 
Mill   match  their  skill  against   rep- |  afternoon    as    they   invade   Coombs '  lifter  todaS^'s  meetiag. 

resentativcs  from  the  State  College  |  p^rk  in  Durham  for  a  crucial  Big  Duke  coach  Aee  Parker  has  nam- 

campus   today   at   3:00.    Sit   of  the  |  pour  and  .4CC  battle  with  the  Duke  cd    lefthander   Dick    B*»rton    to   do 
event  is  set  for  the  Durham  Wild- ,  Blue  Devils  at  3:30.                           j  tJie    hurling    for    the    Blue   Devils. 

Coach  Walt  Rabbs  Tar  Heels  will  Burton  started  in  the  first  meeting 

be  battling  for  a  share  of  the  con-  but  left  tlie  game  early  due  to  an 

lerence  leadersliip  as  they  meet  the  injury.   If  Burt<«i  is   not  in  ^ape, 

powerful  Blue  Devils  for  the  second  Parker    will    ga    with    ri^thander 

this   season,   and   will   be  out  Harleigh  Fatsinger. 
to  avenge  'the  ^  loss  to  the  DevUs  Rabb  had  not  decided  yesterday 
in    their    fii'^t    meeting   here    .\priJ  which   pitcher   he   would   tlu^ow   a- 
13tji.  gainst  the  Dukes,  but  it  wtU  he  one 
The   Tar  Heels  muffed  a  golden  <>1  twx>  lefthanders,  Charlie  Cross  or 
participate    in    each    of    the     four  '.  opportunity  to  mo\c  into  a  tie  with  J«^  Morgan.  Morgan  has  seen  some 
ev«its.  Archery.  Bait  Casting,  Trap   Di,ke    Monday   when    they   dropped  at-tion  of  late,  while  Cross  did  most 
Shooting    and    Target    Rifle.    Team  :  ^  4.3  decision  to  the  last-place  Clem-  of  his  work  at  the  first  of  the  sea- 
son   Tigers    at    Clemson.    The    less  son. 

was  only  the  second  of  the  season  Tlie  Carolina  lineup  will  prphably 
suffered  by  Tar  Heel  righthander 
J  an  Raugh.  Four  costly  errors  play- 
ed havoc  with  the  Tar  Heels'  bid 
for  a  first  place  tic.  This,  despite 
the  fact  that  the  Rabbnien  teetl  off 
fo  rthree  homers  in  the  third  inning. 
Rabb  said  yesterday  tliat  the 
Clemson    game    was    "just    one   of 


Harvard  Wins  Third  Match 
Over  North  Carolina,  8-1 


ill 


points  will  be  totaled  and  the  school 
-witJi  the  higliest  number  wins. 

The  Carolina  outdoorsmen  have 
two  years  of  experience  in  Rod  and 
Gun  compotitoin  and  are  favored 
ito  take  the  honoi-s.  Clete  Oakley 
was  the  individual  winner  in  the 
fiiLl  meet. 

Champion  Scotty  Hester.  Charles 
Bowen  and  Ira  Kap  are  strong  men 
in  .\rchery.  John  Crawford  is  the 
chajupioB  in  target  rifle. 

G.  G.  Taylor,  winner  in  the  bait 
casting  event,  will  be  backed  up  by 
Morris  Jones.  , 


have  Bomber  Hill  at  first,  Carson 
Oldliam  at  second,  Don  Lewis  at 
sJiort,  and  Roger  Honeycutt  at  third. 
ITie  outfield  will  be  comiposed  oi 
Jo%^  S^iook  in  lefK  Dick  Hudson  in 
center,  and  I>on  Hill  in  rj^ght.  Jim 
Legette  will  do  the  catclung. 
For  the  Blue  Devils,  it  should  bg 


those  games.  The  balls  were  bounc-  i  CJvarlie    Dunlevy    at    first,    «eo*^ge 


ing  high  to  the  infield  and  were  bard 
to  handle.  It   was  a  tough  one  to 
Jose." 
The  Tar  Heels  need  a  victory  bad- 


Hoover  at  second,  Ixumie  Booczek 

at    short,    and    AiKiy    Cockroll    at 

third,  in  the  infield.  The  outfielders 

!  will  probably  be  Pete  Maynard  in 


CAMBRIDGE,  Mass— <^V-Harvard  j  three 
cxiatimied  its  tennis  domination  over 
North  Carolina  with  a  wind-swept 
8-1  match  win  'here  today.  Hairvard 
had  beaten  the  Tar  Heeds  9-0  and 
8-1  in  previous  matches  in  Chapel 
Hill. 


sot     match     against     Larry 
The  score  was  9-7,  2-6,  7-5.      I 


Sears 

The  Summary 


defeated 


Frank  Livingston,  playing  the  No. 
3  singles,  notched  the  only  North 
CartitUna  win  in  an  extremely  close 


Frosh  Netters  Win 

The  Tar  Baby  tennis  team  de- 
feated Duke  yesterday  by  the  score 
o^  7-2.  TJ>e  next  matches  will  be 
plaj-ed  here  against  Greensboro 
High  "Hiursday  and  N.  C.  State  Sat- 
urday. 


Tigers  Get 
Gen.  Mgr. 


Dale    Junta,     Harvard, 
Steve  Bank,  3-6,  6-0.  64. 

Steve  Gottlieb,  Harvard,  defeated 
Georf  Black,  6-2,  6-4. 

Frank  Livingston,  North  Carolina, 
defeated  Larry  Sears  9-7,  2-6,  7*5. 

Ben  Hecksicher,   Harvard,   defeat- 
ed  Ray  Newsom.  3-6,6-1. 

Cal     Place.     Harvard,     defeated 
Fritz  Van   Winkle,  6-2.  6-2. 

Phil  Mills,  Harvaoxl,  defeated  Jim 
Mclver,  6-4,  6-0. 

Junta-Sears,     Harvard,     defeated 
Bank-Newsom,  6-2,  6-1. 

Heogscher-Place,  Harvard,  defeat- 
ed Black-Livingston,  6-2,  6-3. 

Gottlieb  -  Gianetti.    Harvard,     de- 
feated Van  Wtnkle-Mclver,  6-3,  6-3. 


Chisox  Win 

CHICAGO  -^i»W   With  lefty  BUly 
Pierce  t>ack  in  tfte  groove  after  be- 
ing bombed  from  the  mound  in  his 
last  two  starts,  the  Chicago  White 
'  So.x  today  stifled  the  Baltimore  Or- 
ioles on  six  lut£   U>  n»aintain  their 
i  .4.meriL-an   League   lead    with   a   6-1 
t  victory. 

I     A   dropped   bail  by   second   base- 
man Billy  Gardner  on  an  attempt- 
ed force  out  in  the  third  inning  led 
to  an  unearned  run  that  gave  the 
Sox  a  2-0  bulge.  And  after  yielding 
I  a   nui   in   tie   fifth,    the   Sox   shpok 
IjHxher  Ray  Moore  with  four  runs 
'  in   the   seventh   to   naa   down   their 
!  eighth  iriiunph  in  10  games, 
j     Pierce  boosted  his  recoi-d  to  3^1, 
'  becoming  the  first  .American  League 

IhurLer   of    the   season   U)   get   throe 
victortes. 
The  big  seventh  wxiuld  have  been 


Jy  today  if  they  hope  to  remain  in  '  left.  Dave  Sime  in  center,  and  Bcr- 
s'trong  contention  to  dethrone  the  nie  Blaney  in  rigbt.  Steve  CiMWieid 
Blue  Devils  as  ACC  champs.  Duke  will  probably  do  the  backstopping 
carries  an  8-2  conference  mark  into  '  .or   Duke. 


Fencing  Tournament  Is  Set 


By  P.  E.  BARROW 

The  Carolina  Fencing  Club  will 

;  sponsor  its  annual  individual  tour- 

j  ney  starting   this   Friday   evening 

'  at    Graham    Memorial    at    7    p.m. 

with  the  Foil  match.  On  successive 


lor  pui  poses  of  official  scoring. 

Fencers  are  requested  to  check 
out  mask,  jacket  and  glove  from 
Woollen  Gym  by  6  p.m.  the  day 
of  their  competition.  Weapons 
will  be  provided  at  the  competi- 
tion.  If  the   total   number   of  en 


Fridays  the  sabre  and  epee  (duel-  j  ^^.^^^  ^^  g^^^j  enough  in  any  weap- 


But  the  most  memorable -event  erf  '36  was  the  formation  of  Carb- ,  **^*^^  ^^^  "**^  shortstop  WlUie  Mi- 
ina's  Physical  Education  School.  ThP  -F*.t7.P,*  vision'  ha,l  h»o.,   ^„. '  randa  retii-ed  tlie  side  with  a  spec- 


There  was  sNII  the  metter  of  the  inadequate  Tin  Can,  and  Coach 
Bob  was  not  through.  In  1938,  Woollen  Gym  and  Bowman  Gray  Pool 
were  opened,  thus  rounding  out  "the  Bob  Fetzer  rebuilding  era." 

RebuiMing  was  only  one  of  Coach   Bob's  projects,  however.  He  ^^'^^  ^^^ 
did  such  a  wonderful  job  as  track  coach  that  he  is  known  in  many 
quarters  as  the  Dean   of  Southern  Track.  Back  in  the  old  SouthA-n 
•Jonference  days.  Coach  Bobs  track  teams  were  the  best.  Those  teams 
hold  some  records  that  may  never  be  equaled. 


tscular  t>ack-band  stab  near  thiixi 
of  Shcrm  Lollar's  grounder  to  throw 
him  out.  The  defensive  gem  brought 
a  roar  from  the  4,470  fans  at  Com- 


ing sword)  will  be  held.  The  tour 
namcnt  is  open  fco  anyone  in 
school  and  an  entrant  may  sign 
up  to  fence  in  as  many  of  the 
three  weapons  as  he  chooses.  Each 
contestant  will  fence  every  other 
fencer  in  his  weapon  and  the  win- 
ners for  the  three  trophies  to  be 
I  9wprded  in  each  weapon  will  be 
determined  by  the  first  three 
places  in  total  bouty  won.  In  the 
event  gf  «  tie  in  number  of  bouts, 
the  tie  will  be  broken  by  counting 
the  total  touches. 

Anyone  desiring  to  enter  any  of 
the    three    weapons    matches    will 


on  two  strips  will  be  run  simul- 
taneously and.  if  necesa-ary,  tjie 
competition  carried  over  to  the 
Sunday  evening  after  the  Friday 
of  the  scheduled  match.  It  is  not 
anticipate<jl  that  this  will  be  nec- 
essary however,  unless  the  total 
number  of  entries  in  one  weapon 
exceeds  fifteen.  ,  ' 

In  the  past  the  total  number  of 
entries  has  '  usually '  been  ten  or 
twelve  at  most.  Much  interest  on 
the  part  of  individuals  to  prepare 
for  thi»  -annual  tourney  has  beep 
j  showii  and  the  beautiful  trophies 
to  be  won  as  the  permanent  pos 


Tremendous  Contributor 


\ 


In  1952  Coach  Bob,  much  to  the  sorrow  of  his  friends,  left  his 
duties  as  Athletic  Director  and  assumed  the  position  of  executive  sec- 
retary of  the  Morehead  Foundation. 

What  Coach  Bob  Fetzer  has  done  for  athletics  at  Carolina  is  some- 
thing that  only  his  closest  associates  can  fully  realize.  But  more 
important,  he  has  exemplified  the  vritues  of  clean  living,  honesty 
and  fair  play  He  has  won  the  love  and  admuration  of  all  those  with 
whom  he  has  ever  dealt. 

Coach  Bob's  theory  of  life  might  well  have  been  the  words  of 
the  immortal  Grantiand  Rice,  who  said:  "And  when  iha  on«  great 
scorer  comes,  to  mark  you  by  your  name;  he  cares  not  if  you  won 
•r  lost,  but  how  you  played  the  amm:" 


Mural  Games  Slated 
For  Championship 


Young  Tosses  lb-0  Victory 

Wa>'ne   Youn«  piudi«d  a  iour-bit-    Bryson  had  three  and  two  hite  r«. 
i*rr    yt^tcrday   a«   ti»   Tar   Babie.  |  spectively  to  help  Young  coast  to 
downed  the   I>uk*  m^Me  Jinj*.   W-O,  ;  his  victory. 
« JJA  a  U  hit  btfrrat*  !     This   ia   the   third   time  the   Tar 

Yo«fj«    la  brit0«g  bit  r«»rd  Ui   hebum  have  beaten  the  Blue  Imps 
■>Z.   etnick  out  Mry«o  eaad   wcdJbed  ,  thin   tseanon.    They   play   the 
*^y  <*■*•  I  today  here  at  3:30. 

Har.*d  W<rkflutB  irienA/e<i  out  4  for  j     UNC 

Bethy  attack  «n  tiww  Duke  i>it«h 
erjb.  Frank  Moat^ponary  «cd  Vau{gla 


Imps 


320  101  030-19—13—9 
000  000  000-  ©—♦-3 
Voung  and  Crump;   Wilkin,  New- 
«4i  i'4t.  Wtakatooe  (8>  and  Owew. 


NAVAL  ROTC  MEN 

For  Your  Summer  Cruise 
Bermans  Has: 

flack  A  Srown  Crosby  Shoes 

(A  fo  0  Width) 

Khaki  A  Black  Socks 

White  Underware  Shorts 

And  Tee  Shirts 
Urge  White  Navy  Towels 

BERMANS    , 

DEPARTMENT    STORE 


The  playoffs  for  the  intra- 
mural Softball  championships 
begin  today  with  Law  Schrl,  5-0, 
meeting  Med  Sch-2,  5-0,  at  4:30; 
Dent  Sch-1,  5-0,  'meeting  Med 
Sch-1,  5-1,  at  4:30:  Delta  Sigma 
Pi,  4-0,  meeting  ATO,  4-1,  at 
4:30. 

Other  games  will  be  played 
Thursday  for  teams  wliich  re- 
ceived a  l»ye  or  did  net  have 
games  scheduled  for  today. 


Murals  Today 

Tennis:  (4:00)  Zeta  vs.  SAE; 
Phi  Gam  vs.  Sig  Nu;  BVP  vs. 
(winner  of  Med.  Sch-2  vs.  Ruf- 
fin). 


aosff  sfi/ice  9 


sign  up  in  the  Intramurals  Office  session  of  the  fencer  undoubtedly 
at  Woollen  Gym  by  Thursday  at  6  ]  has  helped  spur  these  efforts, 
p.m.  before  the  Friday  of  that  Almost  anj-  afternoon  the  sound 
match.  The  Foil  will  be  Friday,  of  clashing  steel  reverberates  on 
May  3rd;  Sabre  on  Friday,  May  the  terrace  outside  the  Gym 
10th;  and  the  epee  on  Friday.  May  where  the  eager  hopefuls  are 
17th.  The  Thursdays  of  May  2nd.  \  readying  themo^lves   for  the  final 

I  9th  and  16th  are  the  deadlines  for  j  competition  of  the  year, 
entries   for   the   respective   weap-  — 

'  ons.   Spectator:,   will   be   permitted  i 
and  the  public  is  cordially  invited 
to  see  this-,  the  last  fencing  com- 
petition for  'this  year. 

i  Competing  fencers  must  fence 
at  least  half  of  their  bouts  in  or- 
der for  the  bouts  to  be  counted 
as  official.  Anyone  who  withdraws 

j  having  fenced  less  than  half  will 

'  not  be  counted  at  all  and  scored 
as  if  they  had  not  been  fenced. 
Anyone  fencing  more  than  half  his 

i  bouts  who  withdraws  before  fenc- 

1  ing  all  his  bouts  will  forfeit  such 
remaining   bouLs   to  his    opponent 


DETROIT —<*— The  Detroit  Tig- 
ers today  completed  their  drastic 
front  office  realignment  by  select- 
ing 35- year-old  John  J.  McHale  as 
the  club's  new  general  nianager. 

McHaie  immediately  swung  into 
ssction,  making  a  deal  that  will 
bring  outfielder  Karl  Olson  to  the 
Tigers  from  the  Boston  Red  Sox. 
Jack  Phillips,  36-year-old  inudh- 
•traveled  first  baseman  who  had 
been  at  bat  only  ooce  for  Detroit 
this  year,  will  go  to  the  San  Fran- 
cisco Seals,  a  Red  Sox  farm  cli>b. 

A  veteran  of  16  years  in  the  Tiger 
organization,  nearly  half  of  them  be- 
hind  a  desk,  the  boylsh-looking  Mc- 
Hale tlHis  becomes  the  youngest 
genei'^l  manager  in  <  major  league 
baseball. 

Winding  up  changes  that  affected 
seven  ipen  over  a  three-week  'span, 
the  baseball  club  also  named  HaiYj- 
SisMn  executive  vice  president  in 
charge  ot  all  Briggs  Stadium  opera- 
tions and  chose  Charles  Gehringer 
for  an  advisory  role.  '    ' 

Three   wieedcs   ago    Herold   Muddy 
Ruel   announced   be   was   taking   a 
yiear's   leave   of  absence   from   liis 
job  as   assistant  fo  the   pi-esident. 
The  h)lk>wing  week  Fred  Knorr  re- 
signed after  lese  than  seven  months^ 
as   president.   Harvey   Hansen  was 
named  to  succeed  liim.   Then  lifet 
Friday  Walter  O.  Spike  Briggs  re- 
.signed  under  fire  as  general  man-  ] 
ager,    director   and   executive    vice  i 
president  i 


WE'LL  BUY  ALL 
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a  spot  to  salvage  some  of 
your  losi'  when  a  text  is 
dropped. 

•  Enjoyable  Books 

We  can  use  books  you  no 
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The  next  fellow  that  comes 
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Tar   Heel 


DETROIT  — t^^—  Frank  Boiling 
crackod  a  one-out  10th  inning  home 
run  and  rig'hthander  Duke  Maas  re- 
stricted the  world  champion  New 
Yortc  Yankees  to  three  liits  today  in 
a  2-1  Detroit  Tiger  triumph. 
Boiling's  home  run.  his   third  of  i 

I  the  season,  dissolved  a  tense  pitch- 
ing duel.  Maas,  beating  the  Yankees 
for   tile   first   time    in    his    career. 

I  struck  out  seven  and  was  in  tix)uble 
in  jusi  one  inning — the  third,  when 

j  New  York  scored  its  run  on  Andy 
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into  the  whole." 

— Time  htagazint 


PA  "  The  Gold  of  Naples'  is 

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tJ.n.C.  *  LTBRAHY 
SERIALS   DEPT. 
BOX  870 


WEATHER 

P.rtly  cloudy  with  tittl.  ch«„«. 
m  f.mpT.tur.  with  .„  ,,!^ 
high  of  80.  "xP^td 


mt  3)aily 


« 

2rat>Cccl 


UNC  PefeafsDuke; 
Ties  For  Top  Spot 


CHAPEL  HILL,  NORTH  CAROLINA,  THURSDAY,  MAY  1,   19S7 


"  »"■'■  •"-6  OUKH  Ak    R    H    O 

Ccnterfielder     Dick     Hudson'  ^'«"<">-  ^^  5    1     1 

i-Hucezed    in    Bomber    Hill    from   ^^'''^^'  2l>  5 

third  base  in  the  top  of  the  10th  i  ^''"^-  '"^  ^ 

inmng   (o  give  the  Carolina  base- !  ^°^'^^"'   ^b     4 

bailers  a  6-5  win  ovpr  n..u ,  I  Maynard,  If    ._ 5 

3 


Win  over  Duke  and ,  „ 
a  tic  with  the  Blue  DevUs  for  first '  ^°"e'^-  «» 


place  in  the  ACC  m  Coombs  Park 
yesterday. 

The  two  teams  now  have  identi- 
cal 8-3  records  in  the  conference. 

The  Tar  Heels  made  their  des- 
peration comeback  after  watch- 
ing the  Blue  Devils  .score  two  runs 
m  the  bottom  of  the  ninth  to  send 
«he  game  into  extra  innings.  Car- 
olina carried  a  5-3  lead  into  the 
n<nfh  but  the  Blue  Devils  knotted 
the  count  as  Carolina  coach  Walt 
Rabb  .ont  four  pitchers  to  the 
mound.  Don  Saine  was  the  last 
hurlcr  and  got  credit  for  the  win 
as  he  stopped  the  home  team  in 
the  bottom  of  the  tenth. 

Hudson's  squeeze  was  an  odd 
Play.  The  Tar  Heel  outfielder  had 
Hill  on  at  third  as  the  result  of 
a  smglc.  a  sacrifice,  and  Rog 
rfoneycutts  single.  Hudson  got 
the  bunt  sign.  The  pitch  was  in- 
side and  he  fell  back  to  hit  the 
(See  UNC,  Page  4) 

The  Box 


Atkinson,   lb 5 


Crihficld.  c 
Weitzman.   c 
Fatzinger.  p 
Burton,  p  ..... 
b-Domhoff 
Smallwood,  p 


c-Dutrow    _..    1 


Officea  in  Graham  Memorial 


FREEDOM 

Editor    asserts    4or    faculty    fr««- 
dom.  See  P.  2. 


FOUR   PACES  TH"   '"^UM 


UNC 

Hartman,  3b 
Lewio',  2  b 
I   Hill.  lb.  rf 
Shook.  If 
Honcycutt,  ss  4 

Hudson,  cf    : .. 

D.   Hill,  rf    ."I 
Legcttc,  c 
a-Raugh 
Reston.  rf 

Cross,   p   

Morgan,  p  _,,..._ 
Maultsby.  p,  lb  _ 
Saine,   p 


Totals    38     5     9  30  11 

a — Safe  on  fielder's  choice  for  D 

Hill  in  6th. 

b — Safe    on    fielders    choice    for 

Burton  in  9th. 

c— Flied    out    for    Smallwood    in 

10th. 

North  Carolina      002  002  100  1—6 

*>«'<•  Oil   100  00^  0—5 

E— I.  Hill  2,  Bonczek.  Fatzinger, 

Maultsby.    RBI— Fatzinger.    Shook 

2,  Sime  3.  Blaney.  Raugh.  I.  Hill. 
Hudson.  2B— Sime.  3B— Shook. 
Blaney.  Hartman.  HR— Sime.  S— 
Hartman.  Shook,  Hudson,  Weitz- 
man. SF— Fatzinger,  I.  Hill.  DP— 
Burton  and  Atkin^.-on.  Left— North 

Carlina   7.   Duke   11.   BB— Morgan 

2,  Fatzinger  3,  Maultsby  4.  Burton  '. 

2.  R_ER-Morgan  3  33.  Fatzinger    FRIDAY'S  INAUGURATION 
5-o;  Maultsby  2-2:   Smallwood   M.   ^^— — ~^-«— — — — ..i. 


Tatum  Congratulates  Venus  Finalists 

ara«funv''°V''"'  "^^''^ /^  ^'*""'  »•"*  '^"^  '^'**  P""V  "•<««  'hewn  above  that  winning  and  losing 
grace  uMy  a  so  appi.es  to  beauty  contests.  On  the  left  are  Misses  Val  von  Ammon  and  Martha  For 
tune  (part.ally  h.dd.n)  Miss  Judith  Dockery  (righf)  proudly  displays  the  trophy  received  after  she 
was  named  M.ss  Modern  Venus  of  1957-58. at  the  Sigma  Chi  Derby  Tuesday  afternoon.  Tatum 
of  the   events    ludges.  *  „^   .     ,^      „ 


was  one 

Photo  by  Bill  Kins 


SO— Fatzinger  3.  ..Morgan 
Maultsby  2.  Burton  2.  Smallwood 
6  ol  1  HO— Morgan  6  in  3  2/3;  Burton 
0  in  3;  Cross  0  in  0;  Fatzinger  6  in 
6  (none  out  in  7th);  Maultsby  2  in 
5;  Saine  1  in  1.  Smallwood  2  in  1 
inning.  WP— Morgan,  Fatzinger.  I 
PB— Crihfield.  L— Smallwood.  w! 
—Saine.  T-2:40.  U— MiUs  and 
Beck. 


University  To  Observe 
Holiday  On  Wednesday 


liricf 

U.  S.  Has  Atomic  Shell 

WASHINGTON  —  ( AP) )  _  The 
Defense  Department  officially 
confirmed  yesterday  long  publish- 
ed reports  that  United  States 
forces  have  an  eight-inch  atomic 
artillery  shell. 


Univei'sity  emplo.vees,  f  a  c  u  1  t  y 
members  and  students  alike  will  ob- 
.scrve  a  holiday  Wednesday  when 
William  C.  Friday  will  be  sworn  in 
a*;  Coiisoli<lated  Unive.'-sity  presi- 
dent. 

Hbe  cereiTiomes  wiil  ^tte  .  teld  in 
the  WUllarm  .VeaJ  TTe>Tiff!<ts  Ooliseuni 
in   Raleigh,  beginning  at    10.9«  a.m. 

The  inauguration,  according  to 
■the  siche<lule.  prt>mise,s  to  be  an  Ini- 
pre.ssi\'e  one.  Participating  in  the 
prcgram  will  be  official's,  both  past 
and  prciient.  of  the  three  Con.soli- 
dated  University  units. 

Several  ranking  state  officials  will 
also  take  part. 

Former  Consoiidateti  University 
Presidents  Frank  GraJiam  (1931-50  > 


New  Yorker 
Appointed 
New  Editor 


Cl»ance!lors-eleet  William  B.  Ay- 
jotk  of  UNX'  and  Gorok>n  BLaek- 
uell  of  Woman's  CoUege  will  also 
be  presented  h.v  Gov.  Hodiges. 

Introducing  Friday  will  t>e  W.  M. 
Wh>-bum.  vice  president  of  jsraduste 

f^  t'^.i:^'^-'^ ^ 5***^?*^  I  announced  ye.lerd.y. 
d»eed     Vi^^r^.    f*8rm    CarotHflr        Lo,f,hi„-o    is    an    E 


Christian  Leefeburc.  a  rising 
senior  from  Elmhurst.  New  York, 
has  been  named  to  the  editorship 
of  the  Carolina  Quarterly  replac- 
ing  Miss   Marcy   Krafchick,   it   was 


CAPT    RfOMAN 

.  •  .  holdivg  interviews  today 

Redman  Visiting  Campus 
For  Marine  Procurement 

Capt.  Charles  B.  Redman.  US 
Alariae  Corps  procurement  officer, 
is  making  a  fioai  visit  here  today 
this  vear  to  interview  freshmen, 
sophomore  and  Juniors  for  accep- 
tance in  the  PLC  program. 

Seniors  are  eligible  to  enroll  in 
the  oMicer  oandidate  program,  an 
annouiK-ement  said. 

Redman  said  both  prograias  will 
enable  students  to  earn  a  cojtuius- 
sioo  as  a  2ik1  lieutenant.  He  said 
it  would  in  no  way  interfere  with 
college  studies. 

Interviews  will  be  conthicted  at 
the  Naval  Annory.  he  said.* 


Sirpreme  Comrt  Chtef  Justice  J.  Wa\ 
lace  Winbome  wkU  adnninlster  the 
oath. 

Friday  will  give  his  inaugural  ad- 
dress foUowuig  the  oath. 

Also  featikred  in  the  pix>gram  will 
be  the  combined  glee  dubs  of  UNC. 
State  and  WC.  who  will  su>g  the 
'.horale  Now  Let  Every  Tongue 
.\dore  Thee.  The  Consolidated  Uni- 
versity band».  after  Friday's  ad- 
and  Gordon  Gray  1 1950-55 1  will  bet  dress,  will  play  God  of  our  Fath- 
oii  hand  to  give  short  talks.  jers. 

training  circular,  j  Graham  is  currently  United  Na-  The  invocation  and  benediction 
,  lions  mediator.  Gray  wa:s  recently  i  will  be  rendered  by  the  Rev.  W.  W. 
I  nrmcd  by  President  Eisenhower  as  j  Finlator.  pastor  of  the  Pullen  Me- 
1  director   of    the    Office    of    Defen.se  i  inorial  Baptist  Church  in  Raleigli 


GM'S  SLATE 


Th«  following  «ctivifiM  ar» 
schedaied  for  Or»h§m  Memorial 
tod«y: 

Dtbate     S^u^4,     4t30-4     p-tn., 

Grail    Room;    Student    Council, 

7-11   p.m.,  Greil   Room;   Univer- 

ti*v    Party    cau«ut,   6'7:30    p.m., 

Roland    Parker    Loun«o    1;    IFC, 

7:30  9    p.m.,    Roland    Parker 

l-oonge  1;  Student  Party  caucus, 

'30-7:15     p.m.,    Roland     Parker 

Lounge   3;    Finance   Committee', 

*^  Pm ,  WoodhouM  Conference 

•*«<>•»»;    ProfeMional    interfrater- 

"•♦y    Council,    7-1    p.m.,    Wood- 

'^•WM   Conference   Room;    Rule* 

Committae,     4-5     |i.m..     Council 

•^•om;    Rule*     Committee,    4-5 

P*"-    Council    Room;    Women'* 

[J*^  Council,  7-1  pnu.  Council 

"•"ni;  Carolina  fympecium,  4-6 

"•w-,  Rendtfvou*  Room. 


An  Army 
marked  '"for  official  use  only" 
until  yesterday,  also  disclosed 
that  the  army  has  both  eight-inch 
guns  and  eight-inch  howitzers  cap- 
able of  firing  nuclear  warheads. 
And  the  Marine  Corps  has  said 
that  its  reinforce  battalion,  now 
on  board  ships  of  the  6th  Fleet 
in  the  Mediterraneaa,  is  equip- 
ped with  eight-inch  howitzers. 

Reports  that  the  Army  was  i 
seeking  something  lighter  and  less 
cumbersome  than  its  huge  atomic 
cannon  were  published  as  early  as 
1955.  But  formal  confirmation 
that  atomic  charges  had  been 
packed  into  eight-inch  shells  has 
been  withheld.  The  Pentagon's 
written  statement  that  eight-inch 
atomic  shells  are  in  existence  was 
made  available  in  response  to  in- 
quiries that  have  been  made  by 
reporters    for    several    years. 


Mobilization. 

Gov.'  Lutlier  Hodges  will  introduce 
the  Coniiolidialed  University  chancel- 
lors—Robert B.  House  (UNCI.  Wu- 
liam  Whalley  Piersun  (Woman's 
College  1  >and  Carey  H.  Bostian  <N. 
C.  State). 


Thomas  Named 
GMAB  Head 


Benny  Thoracis,  a  junior  from 
Morvenpwas  named  president  of 
the  Graham  Memorial  Activities 
Board  Monday  to  replace  outgoing 
president  Tom  Lambeth,  according 
to  an  announcement  made  by  the 
GM  Board  of  Directors  yesterday,  j  si^p^j;„;  frelhman,    and 

Also  named  on  the  new  slate  of  Stessel,  sophomore.  Dr. 
GMAB  officers  were  Mike  Strong, 
a  junior  from  Rhinebeck,  N.  Y., 
is  vice  president  of  entertainment 
replacing  Miss  Susan  Walker  in 
the  position;  Gerry  Boudreau,  a 
junior  from  Augusta,  S.  C.  as  vice 
president  of  recreation  replacing 
John  Ludwig;  and  Lloyd  Shaw,  a 
junior  from  Statesville,  as  vice 
president  of  special  areas  replac- 
ing Bob  Slaton. 

The  newly  appointed  GMAB 
secretary  is  Miss  Martha  Fortune, 
a  junior  from  Brevard,  replacing 
Miss  Pat  McQueen  in  that  posi- 
tion 


Debate  Squad 
To  Have  Team 
In  Tournament 

The  Debate  Squad  will  enter 
one  team  in  the  Atlantic  Coast 
Conference  debate  tournament  to 
be  held  at  Wake  Forest  College 
tomorrow  and  Saturday,  accord- 
ing to  John  Brooks. 

Brooks  is  president  of  the  De- 
bate Squad  and  the  Debate  Coun- 
cil this  year.  He  will  serve  as 
president  of  the  Debate  Squad 
next  year. 

The  debate  team  participating 
in  the  tournament  is  entered  in 
the  novice  division.  The  affirma 
live  side  includes  Phillip  Gerdes, 
freshman,  and  Tom  Long,  sopho- 
more. 

On  the  negative  side  are  Clay 
Harold 
N.  W 
Mattis  coaches  the  te-am. 

All  four  mem'bers  of  the  team 
are  participating  in  their  first 
year  of  debating  for  UNC.  This 
tournament  is  the  sixth  and  last 
debate  of  the  year. 

The  proposal  to  be  argued  is 
resolved:  that  the  United  States 
should  discontinue  direct  econo- 
mic aid  to  foreign  countries. 

All  ACC  schools  except  Clem- 
son  and  State  College  in  Raleigh 
will  enter  teams  in  both  the  var- 
sity and  novice  divisions.  About 
50  debaters  and  their  coaches 
will  attend. 


Following  the  inauguration,  there 
will  be  an  Informal  reception  for 
delegates  and  guests. 


I  ».«.,. n. ... n n.  ij  du  EngliA"h  major 
I  specializing  in  comparative  litera- 
ture. He  came  to  the  United  States 
'  from  France  five  years  ago  and 
'  has  ."^ervcd  two  years  with  the  U. 
'  S.  Army, 

He  served  on  the  Fiction  Board 
i  this  year  and  was  chosen   for  the 
I  Quarterly     editorship    by    an    Ad- 
visory board  including  the  follow- 
ing members:   Miss  Jes.vie  Rchder, 
!  Lambert  Davis.  Harry  Russcl,  Tom 
j  Paterson     and     retiring     members 
I  Walter  Spearman  and  John   Ehle. 
1      In    a    statement    yesterday    con- 
'  cerning   his  plans    Tor  the  coming 
j  year,  Leefeburc  said  he  intends  to 
give   the   students   of   the   Univer- 
[  sitj^  and  all  persons  interested  in 
j  the  publication  the  best  and  most 
I  interesting  magazine  possible. 


Opposition  To  Spending 

WASHINGTON  —  (AP)  —  The 
United  States  Chamber  of  Com- 
merce yesterday  voted  over- 
whelming opposition  to  almost 
every  major  new  spending,  pro- 
posal   before    Congress. 


!  Concert  Tonight 

j  The  annual  Phi  Mu  Alpha-^  Sm- 
fonia  concert  will  be  presented 
j  tonight  at  8  p.m.  in  Hill  Music 
j  Hall,  by  the  Alpha  Rho  chapter  of 
I  the  national  honorary   and  profes- 


It's    target    included    President  j  sional  music  fraternity. 
Eisenhowers    programs    to    as.sist  1      No    admission    will    be    charged 
school  construction  and  depres.^ed  |  for   the   program   of  daj^ical    and 
cities,     and     a     Democratic     plan    neo-classical  music, 
for    government    coiustruction    of  ,      The  program  will  open  with  Ga- 
atomic  power  plants.  brioli's  canzonas  No.  3  and  4  by 

After  a  three-day  annual   miet  ^  a    brass    choir.    Following    this,    a 


ing  at  which  speakers  daily  be- 
labored high  taxes  and  federal 
spending,  the  Chamber  raced 
through  a  policy  session  in  3'>j 
hours.  It  declared  its  stand  on  89 
national   issues. 


clarinet  trio  will  play  Mozart's 
"Divermento  for  Woodwinds."  A 
neo-classical  note  will  be  struck 
with  Hindominth's  "Sonata  for 
Trumpet  and  Piano."  featuring  Ed- 
die Bass  on  trumpet. 


Selection  Of  'Angels'  To  Begin 
For  Honorary  Sponsor  Group 


Seleotion  will  begin  today  of  ik-w 
lionorary  .members  of  tlie  AFRO'I'C 
■Angel  Flight,  "  the  hoiiorarj'  t'ltKl 
sponsor  group  for  tlie  UNC  Air 
Force  Cadet  Corps. 

iNominations  ha\e  been  mii>te 
from  coeds  in  the  .oresent  jum-T 
iclass. 

A  tea  will  be  held  at  5  p.m.  lo- 
lay  in  the  Arnold-  Air  Society 
Lounge 'at  the  AFROTC  headqii;ir- 
lers.  ui  honor  of  the  nominees. 

Tomorrow  afternoon,  the  uoiiJ- 
in*s    will    be    interviewed    at    ^u" 


Those  who  have .  been  nominated 
are  Misses  Lucy  Cropland.  Sjrah 
Van  Weyk.  Alice  EUer,  Barbara 
Honey.  Eve  McClatchey.  Hannah 
Kirby.  Nancy  Jo  Rush.  Pat  An- 
derson. Margie  Holland.  Nancy 
^^an.  Jennie  Margaret  Mcador, 
Dz'iyl  Farrlngton,  Sarah  Jane  Shaw. 
Faye  Smith.  Pearla  Ann  Revelle. 
Caj-ob-n  Wistler,  Mary  Lewis  Roun- 
tree.  and  Miar>-  .\nn  Hofler. 

Four  dogates  fi-om  the  UNC 
Aagel  Flight.  Misses  Janet  John- 
cson.  Isabell  Holbrook.  Angeline  Pa- 


Force  headquarters  by  an  offi<  'a^  ,  pazi&is.  and  Carole  Dennis,  visited 
selections  board  set  up  by  tlie  New  York  City  during  the  spring 
Angel  Flight.  The  outcome  of  thise  .holidays  and  attended  a  national 
intciTvievvs  will  determine  those  v  ho  :  conclave  of  collegiate  " "  .\  n  g  e  1 
are  to  be  the  new  members.  Ei-bt  Flight"  groups,  according  to  Miss 
to  10  new  "angebj"  wiU  be  taken  Pat  DUlon,  cotmmander  of  the  UNC 
in  during  the  spring  »electj»>n.  |  chapter. 


Legislature  To  Hear 
Resolution  Censuring 
State  Park  Incident 


Experiment 
Is  Planned 
For  Cobb  Dorm 

Cobb  Dormitory  will  act  as  a 
proving  ground  next  September 
for  a  new  experiment  designed  to 
provide  a  specialized  counselling 
plan,  supervised  study  periods  and 
other  assistance  in  academic  areas 
for  the  445  students  living  in  the 
dorm. 

William  D.  Perry,  chairman  of 
the  Division  of  Student  Affairs  an- 
nounced that  the  program  will  act 
as  a  model  and  proving  center  for 
undergraduate  social  and  academic 
life. 

According  to  Perry  the  Univer- 
sity will  provide  four  counselors, 
one  for  each  floor  who  will  be 
available  for  individual  help  or 
group  instruction  in  mathematics, 
the  sciences,  English  and  other 
subjects. 

In   addition,   the   Athletic   Assn. 
will   provide  another  counselor  to 
aid  approximately  60  athletes  who  I 
will  be  living  in  the  dormitory. 

"Students  and  coun.:.'elors  will 
work  jointly  to  bring  about  a  bet- 
ter social  and  intellectual  environ- 
ment in  the  dormitory,"  Perry 
said. 

Room  a.ssignment  in  Cobb  will 
be  voluntary  and  by  application, 
according  to  the  announcement 
yesterday.  Students  who  choose  to 
take  part  in  tbe  experiment,  how- 
ever, will  be  expected  to  partici- 
pate in  the  study  and  other  pro- 
grams in  the  experiment. 

Graduate  student.s.  particularly 
in  the  fields  of  mathematics.  Eng- 
lish and  Romance  languages  have  i 
been  encouraged  to  apply  for  the 
counselor  position^f  in  the  Cobb' 
program.  They  have  been  asked  to  i 
contact  W.  D.  Perry,  103  Peabody  [ 
Hall.  I 

Students  interested  in  making 
applications  for  room  reservations 
have  been  asked  to  contact  the 
Housing  Oifice  in  New  East  An- 
nex. 


'  long  To  Introduce  Proposal; 
Embarrassment  To  Club  Cited 


The  Student  Legislature  tonight 
will   be   presented   with   a   resolu- 
tion   censuring   the    action    taken 
j  by     a     park     attendant     recently 
'  which    included    asking   a    Univer- 
,  sity  student  to  leave  the  grounds 
I  of  the  William  Um.stead  Park  be- 
j  tween  Durham  and   Raleigh. 
!      The   resolution  will   be  present- 
j  ed    by   Representative   Tom    Long 
j  in  connection  with  an   incident  at 
I  the   Park   whereby   Leroy   Frasier, 
I  a  Negro  undergraduate  here,  was 
asked     to     leave     the     segregated 
area. 

Frasier  was  a  guest  member  of 
the  Cosmopolitan  Club  which  was 
to  hold  its  annual  spring  picnic  at 
the  park  when  the  incident  took 
place. 

When  the  group  arrived,  an  at- 
tendant told  them  Frasier  would 
have  to  go  to  the  nearby  Reedy 
Creek  Park  for  Negroes.  The 
Club  picnic  was  ultimately  held  at 
Hogans  Lake. 

Included  in  Long's  resolution  is 
a  condition  that  copies  of  the  bill 
be  sent  to  the  Governor,  the  N.  C. 
State    Park    Administration.    Um- 


Feasting  In  Jordan 

AMMAN.  Jordan— (AP)— Feast- 
ing, frivolity  and  finery  were  the 
order  of  the  day  in  Jordan  yester- 
day. 

The  political  crisis  which  rock- 
ed the  country  recently,  and 
which  King  Hus.sein  says  is  end- 
ed, appeared  forgotten  by  crowds 
celebrating  the  three-day  feast 
that  marks  the  end  of  the  month- 
long   Moslem  Fast   of  Ramadan. 

At  dawn.  King  Hussein  headed 
a  motor  procession  to  a  mosque 
for  prayers. 


Deadline  Is 
Today  For 
Applications 

Today   is    the    last    day    for   stu- 

asQte    intereflted    it^  ajtu^ent    gov- 

I  ernrtent    positions    to,submU    ap- 

plications,     according  >  V»/  «Wident 

I  botly  President    Sonfly*B*a^^. 

•Tt    is    essential    that     all     who 
are   interested  <  in    working, 'as   ap- , 
pointive  personnel  in  student  gov- 
ernment   next    year    submit    their 
applications       by       today,"       said  ''^ 
Evans. 

"We  are  eager  to  begin  organ- 
izing student  government,  and 
I  want  to  assure  each  and  every 
person  that  all  appointments  will 
be  considered  by  the  merit  sys- 
tem with  desire,  willingness  to 
serve,  and  interest  as  chief  pre- 
requisites. "    Evans   said. 

Application  blanks  may  be  ob- 
tained from  either  the  student 
government  office  or  the  Infor- 
mation de^k  in  Graham  Memorial. 


stoad    State    Park    .\dmini.stratioo 

j  and    the   Cosmopolitan    Club   here 

His    ac*i;:n    requesting   censure   of 

'  the   Park   incident  states  that: 

j      Whereas:  A  student  of  the  Uni- 

1  versity    of    North    Carolina,    while 

participating*  in    his    capacity    as 

a    member    of    an    extracurricular 

organization    of    UNC.    was    asked 

by  an  attendant  to  leave  a  .North 

Carolina    State    Park:    and 

Whereas:  Though  this  student 
was  participating  in  an  interna- 
tional group  which  contained  men 
and  women  of  many  races,  creeds 
and  colors,  this  request  was  made 
solely  on  the  basis  of  his  race; 
and 

Whereas:  this  request  caused 
great  embarrassment  both  to  the 
particular  student  and  to  the 
members  of  ,the  organization, 
causing  the  movement  of  the  out- 
ing from  thi.*;  state  park  to  a  pri- 
vate grounds;  and 

Whereas:   This  act   did  the  slate 
of  North  Carolina  and   its  people, 
and    the  people   of  the   South,   ir- 
reparable   harm    by    presenting   to 
members     ot     foreign     nations     a 
bad    view    of    a    difficult    problem 
"or  which  there  is  all  hope  tor  an 
amicable    solution. 
!      Therefore:     Be    it    resolved    by 
1  the    Student   Legislature    of    UNC: 
!      Article   I:   The   Student   Legisla- 
j  ture    acting    as   representatives   of 
;  the  students  of  UNC  censures  the 
.  action   of    a   state   park   attendant. 

Article    II.-  Th^    members    of    the 
Student     Legis/ature.     as     citizens 
ot  the   great   Stale   of  Soi-th   Csro- 
•  lina.    and    as    Southerners,    extend 
their  apologies   to   the  Cosmopoli- 
tan Club  and  to  the  individual  in- 
volved     for     any     embarra.ssmcnf 
a|KJ    inconvenience    by    aforemen- 
.{iehed   act. 


INFIRMARY  LIST 

Misses  Janet  Johnson,  Martha 
Osborne,  June  Brock,  Kay  Proc- 
ter, Sandra  Wallace,  Elizabeth 
McKinnon,  and  Edith  Drexler; 
and  Timothy  Jessup,  Alton 
James,  Harold  Clark,  David  An- 
sel!, Janr>e$  Thomson,  Dayid  Bur- 
rows and  Wally   Haithcock. 


Glee  Club  Meeting  Today 
To  Be  'Highly  Important' 

The  UNC   Mens  Glee  Club  will 

hold  a   highly  important   rehearsal 

today  at  4:30  p.m    in   Hill  Hall,  a 

spokesman     for     the     organization 

,  said.  t 

The  choral  group,  under  the  di- 
rection of  T.^;iJo<;l  Carter,  "urgcj- 
'  all   members,  past  and' present,  to 
I  be.  at   the   rteeling,"'   according   to 
the  .»;p()kcsman. 

It    W.1S    explained    by    the    Glee 

Club  source  that   all   students  who 

have  sung  with  the  club  this  year 

should   be  present   because   of   the 

i  forlhcomin.g  Glee  Club  banquet. 

'  .\ny  student   who  i.s  interested 

in  singing  with  the  GUc  Club  next 

1  year  i.-  also  urged   to    be   present 

at    the    meeting,"    the    spokesmar 


AFROTC  Angel  Squadron 


Shewn  above  are  the  members  of  the  1956-19S7  AFROTC  Angel  Squadron.  Front  row,  left  to  right. 
Pee  Wee  Batten,  Isabel  Holbrook,  Edie  Moore,  Libba  Jemes,  Marian  Dickens,  Angeline  Papazisis  and 
Carolyn  Placak.  Back  row,  left  to  right.  Amy  Morse,  Isabel  Madry,  Anne  Newsom,  Petsy  Porthross, 
Mary  Louise  Bizzell,  Carol  Dennis,  Susan  Wallter,  Pat  Dillon,  Barbara  Milos,  Janet  Johnson  and  Jo- 
anne Knott.  *  ,  ■ 


#A6i  rwo 


THE  DAILY  TAft  ME6L 


THUft55Ay,  MAY  1  1457 


Ailing    President    Ike 
And  A  Secretary  Of  Fate 

-The  health  of  the  people  is  really  the  foundation  upcm  which  all  their 
happirurs;:  and  all  their  powers  as  a  state  depend."  —  Benjamin  Disraeli. 

It-  l>C((>ines  Tiu  ifasingly  and  threateningly  evident  that  election  of 
a  phvsicallv  ailing  man  to  the  presidencv  of  the  United  Slates  is  a  tragic 
an  dprattically  irrepaiable  mistake. 

This  tragic  mistake  is  accentuated  when  tlie  presidents  right-hand 
man — the  secretary  of  state — is  a  notorions  binigler. 

Presidem  Kisenhower.  as  a  result  of  his  coronary  thrombosis  and 
serions  abdominal  operati<»n.  must  take  freqnent  leisurely  rests  in  snn- 
basked  (ieorgia*^ 

Thus  Brinkisli  \  Foster  Dulles  contributed  by  I'nited  Kingdom 
nuist  make  r4^nimendations  to  Ambassador  John  Hav  W^hitney  to 
the      vac  ationtilg      president      Avho      (;()P  campaign  war  chest.  ^ 

merelv  conciiri^  with  ihe  secietarv  ,  >)    I  hat  Scciiritv  Officer  Siott 

of  fate.  Such  1^  tlie  case  in  the  Mi  I, cod  is  currentiy  a  politically 
r.  S.'s  flexin*  1^  its  Sixth  Heet  hot  potato  which  Foster  Dulles  is 
nuiscle    in    the    Middle    Fast.  attempting    to    dump    in    Ireland's 

The   latest   fiasco  which   has  re-      lap. 
suited    through,  .the    c  c)llaf)oration  (j)     That    leading    Western    ex- 

ol  bungling  Dulles  and  ailing  Fis-  j)ert  on  the  Soviet  rnion— Boiilen 
enhower  concerns  the  highlv  con-  —is  f>eing  shipped  to  the  Philip- 
troversial  foreign  ambassadorstiip  pines  primarilv  as  a  result  oi 
situation.  ,  ^  Iirinkisl)  Dulles's  jealousy. 

Two  e\am|)les  at  |>oint  are:  Presideiu    F.isenl»ower   is  report- 

(i)    The  removal  of  the   I'.  S.s      ediv   agaitist    the   shipping  of    .\lc- 
most  eminent  at^ihoriiv  on  the  Sn-      Lecni   to   Ireland.    Bin    he's  an   ail- 
ing   man    who  concuirs   with    Sec- 
retary c)f  Fate   Dulles. 

The  whole  situation  makes  evi- 
dent one  primary  c  onsider.itiou 
Avhich  the  \oters  shotdd  ha\e 
weighed  more  heaxilv   in    ic)-,(): 

Presideiu  Fisenhowcr  is  an  ailing 
man  Avho  must  handle  go\eiii- 
nu-ntal  difficulties  hoiii  (ieorgia 
links. 

Ptesident  F.isenhowei  must  con- 
c  uir  with  .Mangier  Dulles  when  he 
pn»p<)s<*s  ridiculous  shifts  of  am- 
bassadors, ex  en  when  he  proposes 
to     "rap    the    knuckles"    of   proud. 


\  iet  rnion— (:li||rles  F.  Bohlen— 
due  to  Dulles"  *)^isona I  jealousv. 
It  seems  the  leaner  of  the  \Vestern 
diplomatic  ct«r|*  in  Mostow  had 
atlmirers  which  were  Irecpientlv 
critics   of    Do'4iiiatic    Dulles. 

(21  Fhe  tb-rtfcuened  coinersion 
of  Iiel.uicl  i  II  tcilJr  diploma  tic  dump- 
ing ground  lil|f>n  which  Dulles 
mav  dump  a  coniroxersial  sccuri- 
t\  officer.  Dulles  hired  Scott  Mc - 
IcckI.  ill  the  first  place,  to  apj>ease 
rampai>iii'4.  Ixjok  -  burning  .Sen. 
)osi-pli  McC.aryly:  aiicF  to  get  on 
gcM»d  terms  witi|.  Sen.  Styles   liiid- 


ges  of  .\ew   Hrrftipshiie  who  sat  as      old   Britain  for  its  troop  cut-backs 
chairman     of     ftu*     apf)ropriations 
(ionnnittee.    McI.cckI    was    I>i  idges" 
achninisiiatixe  iWsistant. 

TliiVs  here  is  excellent  example 
that  foreign  ambassadors  under 
the  F.isenhower  regime  are  ap- 
poiiued  solelv  hn"  |)oIitical  expedi- 


from  the  North  Atlantic  Tieaty 
()r<>ani/ation. 

The  .\merican  elec  torate  should 
take  a  lesson  fi(»m  this  whole 
fiasco; 

.\  candidate's  broad  grin  and 
pei.sonal  fx)pulariiv  should  be  con- 


enc  v    and   con\enience.    (iapabilitv      sideied  onlv  along  with  his  plnsi- 
i.s  only  a  minor  consickration.  *  ;d   capabilities  and    limitations. 

Not  that  the  marriage  of  politi-  Presiclcni    FisenlioAvei    is  a    phv- 

c.il    spoils    and    appointments    is    a      sicallv  limited  man.   Knuckle  Raj)- 
itnicpie  one  to  tiie.  F.isenhcjwer  ad-      ping  Duller  is  a  bungler. 
ministtatton. 

I»ut  several  eminent  facts  con- 
cerning the  F.isenhower  appoint- 
meius  scbeine  ftiake  the  situation 
look  p:n  tit  lilaity  inconsistent  and 
torrtipw: 

M  )  Thar  22 '^uf  the  22  political 
a}>p»intmeius  in  tlie  19.").'^  group. 
If)  have  already  been  .sh<K)ed-oiu : 
and  tu'o  more  ate  on  the  way. 

(21   That    1^   of  fhe  ambassador 


fl'Hxtintecs  coniribiifcd  sums  ran 
in'4     from    .Si.ocm)    to    the     ''>:}:{•,'»<»<> 


The  Daity  Tar  Heei 

The  official  stiKfent  publication  of  the 
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Editor 


Manaoinu  Editor 


Associate  Elditor 


Spc)rts  Editor 
New.v  Editor 


NEIL  BASS 

'^,  CLARKE  JONES 

NANCY  HIU. 

^^  T~^     BILL  KING 

.  WALT  SCHRUNTEK 


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EDIT  STAFF— Whit  Whitfield,  Anthony 
Wolff.  Stan  Shaw. 

BUSINESS  STAFF— John  Minter,  Mari- 
an [iobeck,  Jane  Patten,  Johnny 
Whitaker. 


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u$ 

Staff  Photographers  Woody  Sears, 

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Librarians     Sue^ichner,  Marilyn  Strum 


Night  News  Ec$i^r -. Bob  High 

Night  Editor  1_ Mauley  Springs 


Legislature: 
A  Service? 

The  Student  Legislature  can 
perform  an  invaluable  service  tor 
the    I'niversity   tonight. 

It  can  perfoiin  a  serxice  which 
would  \itulicate  the  I'nixeisity 
from  any  lesjjonsibilitv  for  the 
odious  exeiit  which  happened  at 
I'msieafl  .State  Park  Sundav. 

Ihe  serxice  is.  sim|)lv  enough, 
passage  ol  a  lesolution  slated  to 
be  introduced  bv  Rep.  Fom  Long 
which  ccuideimis  the  park  attend- 
ant, the  State  Parks  (iommission 
and  all  concerned  for  not  allowing 
the  l'ni\ersity  C^(»smopoliian  ('.liib 
t(»  picnic  at  the  Lmstead  Park 
Sundav. 

Students  fiom  sexeial  loreign 
nations  were'subjec  lecl  to  an  ex- 
ceedingly odious  displav  ol  South- 
ern prejudice — a  display  which  as- 
surecily  made  a  vivid  impiession 
which  these  potential  leaders  in 
t^heir  respective  nations  will  carry 
hcune  with   them. 

The  Cosmopolitan  Chd).  coin- 
}M»sed  c»l  Luiversitv  stiulents,  was 
denied  admission^io  the  state  park 
simpiv  because  one  I'niversitv 
student  —  a  Negrc*  —  was  inc  hid- 
ed in  the  delegation. 

The  V.\I(:.\  is  to  be  mildly 
chasti/ed  lor  sending  the  interna- 
tional delegation  to  a  segregated 
park,  |)erliaps  through  lack  of 
knowledge  of  state  law.  jxrhaps 
through  an  attemjit  to  force  the 
issue  at  the  expense  of  an  itUerna- 
fional  incident  and  considerable 
embarrassment. 

.\t  aiiv  rate,  the  leiiislattire 
shofid  vindicate'  the  University 
from  any  responsibilitv  fc»r  this 
importunate  incitient  bv  transfer- 
ring the  blame  where  it  really  be- 
longs —  upon  the  shoulders  of  a 
})rejudic  ial  law  —  tluough  pa.s.sage 
of   the   Long  Resoluticju. 

Such  passage  won  It!  !)e  an  in- 
dicaficm  of  responsible  and  fair 
studein  gcnernment. 

Such  passage  would  be  a  dem- 
onstration that  the  present  Uni- 
versitv  generation  has  overcome 
the  prejudices  of  its  predecessors. 

Such  passage  would  provide  ex- 
celleni  and  fair  groundwork  \ipon 
which  the  Student  Legislature 
could  build  a  siucessful  2'ird  as- 
"temblv. 

Stw  h  passage  would  be  a  tribute 
to  the  stiength  of  non-biased 
minds. 


Penalties  For 
Curfew  Breach: 
Too  Arbitrary? 

Nancy  Hill 

/  As  advanced  as  the  University 
of  North  Carolina  is  in  nvany  re- 
spects, it  falls  behind  schools  of 
miith  narrower  scope  in  one  in- 
stance—that of  curfew  rules  for 
women  students. 

Although  the  rules  themselve.s 
are  not  unfair,  the  way  in  which 
they  are  administered — h  way  set 
bj'  certain  of  the  women  them- 
selves—is outmoded. 

.\  particular  instance  of  outmod- 
ed application  of  otherwise  rea- 
sonable tenets  is  tlie  punishment 
set  for  latenesse.s.  There  is  only 
one  piuiishments  as  any  women 
student  who  has  been  as  much  as 
a  second  late  knows:  she  is  cajn- 
pused  on  tlie  sarne  night  the  foJ- 
lovvuvg  weelt." 

And  while  this  may  not  be  so 
bad  on  the  surface,  a  woman  with 
six  such  offenses  mirst  appear  be- 
fore Women's  Honor  Coimcil.  An>' 
appearance  before  Honor  Council 
is  placed  on  a  student's  perman- 
ent record. 

The  metiftg  out  of  punisliment 
is  left  to  the  house  council  in 
each  women's  dormitory  or  sor- 
ority house.  These  gi"oups  are  con- 
.scJentious.  l>ut  they  ha\e  no  choice 
but  to  dt?clare  offenders  guilty  and 
met  out  the  prescribed  4>unioh- 
nieiit.  unless  a  woman  can  prcAe 
to  the  council's  satisfaction  that 
her  lateness  was  unavoidable  and 
tills  is  more  often  the  case  than 
mi^ht    be   Uioaght. 

This  situation  could  be  remedied 
in  two  ways. 

.\  practical  solution  would  be  to 
allow,  for  instance,  a  5  to  10  min- 
ute period  of  grace.  For  each  min- 
ute a  student  is  late  she  would 
be  gncn  a  demerit.  .\  certain  num- 
bev  of  ai  cuniulaU'd  demerits  would 
be  punishable  by  an  entire  cam- 
pused    weeliend. 

Having  to  sign  in  at  8  p.m.  e\ery 
night  c.ui-ing  a  weelcend,  as  punish- 
ment for  accumulated  of.en-^es, 
would  be  more  to  be  avoided  than 
a  s.ngle  nignt's  (.aimpus.  peuia,:.-; 
duiing  the  week,  for  each  single 
oflenie. 

.\nolher  partial  solution  of  the 
problem  would  l)e  to  set  the  Limit 
on  the  number  of  offenses  allowed 
a  woman  by  the  semester.  raLlier 
tlian  by  the '  combined  tail  ami 
spring  terms.  .\n  accumulation  ot 
perfjaps  Jour  oflen-se-oi  over  one 
hemesler  mfgbt  be  a  fairer  limit 
liian  five  over  the  entire  regular 
<e^-sion,  bcio^e  the  offender  is  re- 
qu.ic'd  10  t;pear  be/ore  Women's 
Honor  Council. 

Ei;her  one  of  these  suggest iiMis 
w\>uld  complicate  the  prcisent  s.\s- 
tem,  which  is,  after  all,  aomirably 
simple.  But  a  few  minor  complica- 
tions could  result  in  a  much  fair- 
er system. 

Tne  rules  printed  in  the  hand- 
bcM,k  are  worked  over  each  year 
1  y  the  Women's  Residence  Coun- 
liL  In  this  year's  revision,  none 
of  the  actual  lailes  were  chanijed, 
we  undeistand;  but  .seme  of  the 
wording  wa,s  simplified.  No  doubt 
the  council  did  a  go.id  and  thoug.it- 
ful  job.  However,  the  council  re- 
jetteti  the  idea  of  allowing  a  pe- 
riod of  grace   for  latenesses. 

The  Office  of  the  Dean  of  Wom- 
en the  Women's  Residence  Coun- 
cil might  do  well  to  pdl!  Carolina 
Women  as  to  tlieir  suggestions  lor 
a  di;ferent  ad.ministration  of  rules 
and  the  c-onsequences  of  breaking 
tlieni. 

•  . 

L'il  Abn«r 


"Tell  You  WKat-SII  Let  Some  Of  You  In 
If  You'll  Help  Me  Hold  the  Door" 


NEW  NOVEL: 


OREGON  DAIIY  EMERALD,  INTERCOLLEGIATE  PRESS 


Oregon:  Faculty  Pay  Hike  Likely 
Wellesley:   Faculty   Salaries   Up 


(While  the  North  Carolina 
General  Assembly  continues  to 
haggle  over  passage  of  a  meager 
11  percent  salary  boost  for  Uni- 
versity faculty  members,  these 
encouraging  reports  come  from 
other  institutions.  The  Editor) 

Faculty     3a1ai-.\'     iner<e<M«es     of    ut 

lea»t  20  per  cent  moved  a  atep 
nearer  realization  last  week  when 
the  legislature's  joint  ways  and 
means  committee  recanmiended 
such  an  appropriation.  The  com- 
mittee's 'nction  followed  a  similar 
recommendation  by  a  sub-commit- 
tee. 

Only  .sour  note  in  this  action 
was  a  recommendation  that  tui- 
tion fees  be  increased.  Oi'egon  .stu- 
dents would  be  charged  an  "addi- 
tional $6  per  term,  ami  out-of-state 
-tudents  would  pay  an  additional 
$11. 

Despite  The  Emerald's  objec- 
tion to  tuition  increases,  we  strong- 
Jy  commend  <he  committee's  ac- 
tion. \o  other  aspecl  of  higher 
education  is  in  more  dire  need 
of  adcftional  money  than  is  facul- 
ty salaries. 

The  commiitt>e's  reconm>enda- 
tion  Ls  not  quite  as  s'ood  as  fural 
leg:,*Iative  approval.  But  there  is 
no  reason  to  expect  the  legisla- 
ture to  reject  the  recommenda- 
tions of  the  comniilice  that   han- 


dles    state     e.xpeiisc^s     lor     both 
hc'-isc-:.  I 

The  likelihood  of  .salary  increases 
sh<  u!d  'iiirnove  {r.e  morale  of  Oiv- 
gon  professo^•^,  who  aTe  constant- 
ly being  tempted  by  offers  of  more 
money  in  other  states.  It  should 
reduce  the  faculty  losses  <  sev- 
eral of  our  l>est  have  already' 
agreed  to  move  to  greener  pas- 
tures next  yieari. 

The  great^^st  benefactors  in 
fa.uUy  salary  increases  would  not 
be  the  professors  themselves.  It 
wjuld  lie  ;he  students,  present  and 
future,  who  wxiuld  profit  most 
irom  the  better  education  tliat 
could  then  be  provided. 

.\n  estimated  a\erage  increase 
of  14.5  jK'r  cent  in  Wellesley  Col- 
lege facuhy  salaries  has  been  tak- 
ing  place  during    1956-57,    accoixi- 


MAY  6 


Is  Coming  Soon 


ONLY  4  MORE  DAYS 


ing  to  Mrs.  Lucy  Killbough.  profes- 
sor of  Economics. 

In  an  article  endded  "Facts 
and  Figures  on  Faculty  Salaries" 
in  the  Marc h  Jssue  of  the  Alumnae 
Magazine,  she  compares  this  with 
estimated  increases  of  7.7  per  dent 
in  non-pubuic  colleges  with  an  en- 
rollment of  l.OOO  students  or  jnore 
ihan  7.5  per  cent  in  non-public 
lunlvensities. 

The  article  dcjciares  chat  Wel- 
le.sle  salaries  in  1955-56  were  very 
similar  to  those  in  comparable  in- 
stitutions. Municipal  univei'sities, 
the  best  paying  institutions,  ap- 
pear to  have  salaries  higher  titan 
Wellesley  salaries  by  almost  $1,000 
in  every  rank.  Non-public  col- 
leges with  enroUmei^  of  over 
1.000  however,  averaged  almost 
$1,000  less  in  every  rank  but  in- 
j;tructor. 

New  England  institutions  aiso 
averaged  less,  but  paid  higher  for 
instructors.  Tlie  mean  salaries  of 
Wellesley  positions  in  1955-56  were 
.$7,707  for  Professors,  $6,294  for 
As-:o;iate  Pi-ofessors,  $5,255  few 
Assistant  J*rofessors  ,and  $3,937 
for  lostioictors. 

The  trustees  of  the  college  voted 
an  the  spring  of  1956  to  create  a 
Fund  for  Facidty  Salary  Advance- 
jiient,  according  to  Miss  Virginia 
Sides,  assistant  to  the  president. 
This  fluid  will  make  use  of  un- 
restricted gifts  and  bequests  to 
the  c-ollege. 


AH-H.'.'-VOU 
AMERICANS  ARE 
CLEVER.T  A  FOOLISH 
FRENCH  MURDERER 

WOULD  HAVE. 
HONORA&LY  GIVEN 

HIMSELF  oprr 


Pogo 


By  Walt  Kelly 


ANOTHER.' 


Review:   ^Mbve 
Over   Mountain 


Anthony  Wolff 


MOVE   OVER  MOUNTAIN   by   Je»in    Ehle: 
William  Morrow  A  Company.  $S.9S 


"Move  Over,  Mountain"  is  the  story  of  a  man  1 
respect  who  lives  in  a  town  I  Hke,  and  the  man 
and  the  town  are  predated  as  I  kntw  them.  It  is 
not  a  community  in  the  process  of  decay,  although 
it  is  a  southei;n  community.  J  know  Of  no  southern 
communities  in  the  process  right  off,  so  I  didn't 
seek  one  to  wTite  about.  I  like  all  the,  people  in  the 
novel,  white  and*Negro,  except  one,  and  he  doesn't 
amount  to  anything.  I  think  of  the  story  myself  a5 
being  one  written  about  strength  —  about  people 
reaching  up  and  working.  — John  BMe. 


Since  1619,  when  a  rather  ill-conceived  trading 
venture  resulted  in  a  small  ntunber  of  slavesf  being 
landed  at  Jamestown,  the  American  Negro  has  had 
a  varied  fate  at  the  hands  of  America's  novelists. 

In  the  stories  about  slavery  days,  filled  with  the 
scent  of  magnolia  and  the  sound  of  gentle  southern 
accents,  the  Negro  is  the  trui*ted  servant,  well-  treat- 
ed in  his  old  age  (he  is  always  old)  and  sadly 
mourned  when  he  dies  (he  usually  does).  The  mam- 
my, invariably  big-bosomed  and  good  natured,  wad- 
dles around  taking  care  of  ihc  blond  young  mistrei;s 
of  the  plantation. 

This  is  perhaps  the  most  ifatisfactory  Negro  io 
•literature  up  to  the  near  present;  if  he  is  something 
less  than   human,  at  least  he  is  unobtrusive  and 
amUsing  and  thoroughly  harmless. 

'  '  Another  caricature  oi  the  American  Negro  of- 
ten replaces  this  one  (slavery  went  out  of  vogue, 
and  so  something  new  had  to  be  found  for  ante- 
bellum plots).  But  the  'new"  Negro  is  no  radical 
departure  from  his  enslaved  predecessor.  He  is  stilj 
quite  distinct  from  the  human  (i.e.  white)  characters 
among  whom  he  moves,  and  just  a  bit  less  briglil, 
if  no  lea'a  cheerful,  than  before.  Most  are  Uncle 
Toms,  with  little  humanity  or  depth,  such  as  Roch- 
ester and  Amos  'N'  Andy:  they  are  not  even  Negros 
anymore,  as  much  as  they  are  comic  misfits  in  a 
white  man's  world,  making  genial  ai^es  of  them- 
selves trying  to  imitate  the  whites.  '  ""J 

Bi^t  these  treatments'  of  the  Negro^are  incompat- 
ible with.t^e  social  conscience  of  sdq^' writers,  and 
from  the|i»MTindeed  often  from  the  wwly-self  con- 
scious ^Ne^o' himself — comes  a  new  tSiaracte^;:  the 
social  syipbol,  sometimes  artI«?ula|«j>someil?m^f|not, 
but  alwaysj  crying  out  for  ju^tjfi^'and  (reedjimUraai 
the  ihesvapialfile  futility  o^  !his   exisbence.    ■  "      • '  ■ ' 

In  all,  there  have  been  few  accurate  and  luvaest 
treatments  of  the  American  Negro  in  literature. 
Two  come  to  mind:  the  first,  "Notes  of  a  Native 
Son."  by  James  Baldwin  <a  Negro);  the  sectmd,  a 
first  novel  by  John  Ehle,  of  the  University  Commu- 
nications Center.  Titled  "Move  Over,  Mountain,"  it 
is  an  honest  and  moving  story  about  a  youa]^  South- 
ern Negro  and  his  struggle  to  find  a  meaningful 
way  of  life  for  himself  and  his  family. 

The  locale  is  Leafwood — a  thinly  disguised  Carr- 
boro.  The  hero  is  Jordan  Cummings — a  human 
character  with  troubles  which,  if  they  are  in  some 
respects  uniquely  those  of  the  American  Negro, 
arc  still  easily  translatable  into  mare  catholic 
problems, 

Jordan  has  always  felt  drawn  toward  tlie  Ndrfh. 
his  father  having  drilled  into  him  s-ince  early  child- 
hood the  idea  that  ihc  ,North  is  the  place  for  a  man 
to  make  his  fortune  and "  escape  the  stagnancy  of 
the  South.  Because  of  the  promise  of  the  dream, 
Jordan  has  been  able  to  avoid  having  to  come  to 
terms  with  himself  and  his  family  and  community. 

All  of  Jordan's  brothers  have  gone.  North  and 
"made  their  fortune":  the  youngest,  Bryant,  returns 
to  Leafwood.  He  comes,  fat,'  wealthy,  a  dark- 
skinned  equivalent  of  Faulkner's'  Flero  Snopes,  out 
to  take  over  Leafwood's  Negro  section  and  his 
brother's  family. 

•'  ■       ■'.  -  vv.  ";■  -:  »,'  I  "^V 

For  Jordan,  this  becomes  the  issue  which  be 
cannot  dream-  away,  cannot  compromise.  When  his 
brother  moves,  not  only  to  make  Jordan's  family 
economically  dependent,  but  also  to  usurp  Jordan's 
position  as  father  and  head  of  the  family,  Jordan 
must  take  positive  action. 

The  positive  action  is  in  the  form  of  a  cab  com 
pany  which  Jordan  starts  with  a  frieftd:  his  brother 
immediately  starts  a  competing  company,  and  one 
ot  his  brother's  cabs  eventually  causes  an  accident 
in  which  Jordan's  partner  and  friend  is  killed. 

Jordan's  struggle  with  his  brother  and  the  busi- 
ness world  both  parallels  and  symbolizes  Jordan's 
growth  as  a  man.  As  he  achieves  success^  proving 
himself  against  his  brother,  he  abo  grows  to  re- 
alize that  his  home  is  in  the  South,  and  that  it  is 
in  the  South  that  he  must  find  his  destiny. 

The  style  of  the  book  is  simple,  as  befits  its 
story  and  characters.  It  rings  true,  not  only  be- 
cause it  io-  largely  taken  from  fact,  but  because 
the  people  who  live  in  this  story  are  human,  with 
human  souls,  human  problems,  human  feeling. 

There  is  no  "Negro  problem"  in  "Move  Over 
Mountain."  To  be  sure,  there  is  the  seldom  sUted 
i*aliMtion  of  the  hard  facts  of  life,  but  there  is 
no  protest. 

Nor  are  there  any  protestations  of  Negro  equal- 
ity: and  somehow,  out  of  this-  omission  of  pious 
sentiments  and  defensive  protests,  the  real  ©qual- 
ity, the  essential  humanity  of  the  Negro  is  poignant- 
ly and  forcefully  demonstrated. 

Ml .  Ehle  has  written  a  stirring  and  entertaining 
novel,  treating  what  could  well  have  become  a 
touchy  subject  with  an  honesty  and  art  which  keep 
i!  from  being  so. 


YACKI 

All 
no    the 
iiave 

tag  ta 

;>ietnoriai^ 

1968  £di 

l^-hiu 
iater^estec 
in 

everyxmel 
Offt  puMiij 


«t 


ts^l 


\ 


1.  1457 


in 


Ehla: 


a  nun  I 
[the  man 
It  is 
I  although 
I  southern 

I  dkin't 
\\e  in  the 
le  doesn't 
kyself  a& 
It  people 


trading 
^e*  being 
has  had 
i^elisu. 

with  the 
southern 
'11-  treat- 
id  sadl^ 
the  jii«in- 
red,  wad- 
mistress 


tegro  io 

lething 

sive   and 


iegro  ol- 
vogue. 
Iter  ante- 
radical 
Re  Li  still 
[haracters 
bright. 
re  (Jnde 
as  Roeh- 
^n  Negros 
its  in  a 
of  them- 


incompat- 
[iters.  and 
-self  cpn- 
ictes:  'the 
cimas;  net, 
h(U>ih  from 


iiMi  hymrtit 

I  litentare. 

a  Native 

second,  a 

Commu- 

it 

ing-South- 
leaninsful 


Carr- 

humaa 

in  soBte 

m   Negro, 

catholic 


the  North, 

riy  child- 

fcr  a  man 

ianc7  of 

dream, 

come  to 

>mmunity. 

iNortii  and 

It,  returns 

a    dark- 

lopes,  out 

m    and    his 


?  which  be 
.  When  hii 
an's  family 
irp  Jordan's 
lily    Jordan 


a  cab  Cum 
his  brother 

ly,  and  one 
an  accident 

Ls  killed. 

ind  the  buil- 
Izes  Jordan's 
'ss,  proving 
erows  to  re- 
nd that  it  is 
stiny. 

as  befits  its 
lot  only  be- 
but  because 
human,  with 
1  feelings. 
'Move  Over 
Jeldom  stated 
but  there  is 

Negro  eqnal- 
sion  of  pious 
»  real  equal- 
■o  is  poignant- 

1  entertaining 
ve  become  a 
rt  which  keep 


< 


THUlltoAY^iaJCJi"  1'»|7 


miBAlLt  tAII  HIIL 


/      ^A«l  THMt 


YACKETY  YAdic 

AU  persons  intei«9ted  in  working 
on  the  Ya<:kety  \^fyxk  next  year 
bave  been  asked  to  attend  a  moeet- 
b'  ft  ^  Yaek  Offioe  of  Graham 
Jlemorial  at  4  pin.  today  by  the 
195S  Editor  Gene  HVInt^iead. 

HTiitehead  said  he  as  pBrticularly 
iBteirested  in  people  with  experience 
in  photography,  'but  lu-ged  that 
everyone  mtneskd  in  wopking  on 
die  publicatkm  attend  the  short,  but 
taiportant  meeting. 


VICE  PRESIDENT 

Vice  President  Richard  M.  Nix- 
on will     be     the     guest  on  "The 
American    Government    and    the 
'  Pursuit    of    Happiness"    program 
j  presented  by  WUNC-TV,  Channel 
4,'  at  5:30   p.m.   today   when   the 
I  subject  will  be  "The  Vice  Presi- 
dency."   The    telecast    will    origi- 


Qiiv^npis 


MvSnQBisn 


MMtA«r  </  ««cr»/M«  S*y  With  Ckttk,"  tUJ 


LANGUAGE  MADE  SIMPLE:  No.  2 

Exaihs  loom  closer  and  closer.  The  sands  run  out ;  the 
c)hp8  are  Aowb.  This,  you  will  agree,  is  no  time  for  levity. 

Accordingly,  I  have  asked  the  makers  of  Philip  Morris 
whether  T  might  not  dispense  with  jesting  in  today's  col- 
umn and  inste&d  devote  it  to  a  cram  course  in  languages. 

Their  consent  was  cheerfully  given,  for  they  are  fine, 
irreat-hearted  men,  the  makers  of  Philip  Morris,  just  as 
full  of  natural  goodness  as  the  cigarettes  they  turn  out, 
just  as  friendly,  just  as  jolly,  just  as  regular,  just  as  un- 
filtered,  just  as  agreeable.  "Why,  bless  you,  child !"  cried 
the  makers.  "Of  course!"  Then  they  rumpled  my  chest- 
nut curls  and  stmiebody  cried  "Not  it!"  and  before  you 
could  say  flip-top  box,  a  game  of  Squat  Tag  was  on,  and 
we  played  'til  the  moon  was  over  the  yardarm,  and  then, 
pink  and  tousled,  we  all  went  inside  and  had  flagons  of 
temperance  punch  and  Philip  Morris  cigarettes  and  fell 
into  our  trundle  beds  and  slept  the- clock  around ! 

But  I  digress.  Today  let  us  turn  our  attention  to  the 
study  of  languages. 

Do  you  realize  how  in^Mrtant  languages  are?  I  must 
confess  that,  until  recently,  I  did  not.  "What  good  will 
Spanish  ever  do  me?"  I  kept  asking. 

Well  sir,  I  found  out.  Recently  I  took  a  trip  to  Latin 
America,  and  every  day  I  thanked  my  lucky  stars  for 
having  learned  Spanish  in  college.  While  my  fallow  tour- 
ists stumbled  and  bumbled,  I  was  perfectly  at  home. 


i|iate  in  Washington,  D.  C.  j 

BOARD  MEETING 

I     Two  faculty  members     of     the  I 
School   of  Nursing  are  attending 
a  meeting  of  the  Southern  Region- 
al   Education    Board    at    Daytona 

'  Beach,  Fla.  this  week.  They  are 
Dr.  Elizabeth  L.  Kemble,  dean, 
and  Miss  Mary  Walker  Randolph. 
The  meeting  'is  a  graduate  semi- 
nar in  nursing. 

MATRIX  SOCIETY 

Mrs.  Doris  Betts  of  Sanford. 
one  of  North  Carolina's  mosi 
promising  young  authors,  will  be 
the  featured  speaker  here  Monday 
at  a  banquet  of  the  Matrix  Socie- 
ty. The  Society  is  the  first  step 
here  toward  establishment  of 
Theta  Sigma  Phi,  Women's 
national  honorary  journalism  so- 
rority. 

TEACHING  FELLOWSHIP 

William  Kornegay,  currently 
working  on  his  doctorate  in  edu- 
cation, has  been  awarded  a  1957- 
58  teaching  fellowship  in  the 
School  of  Education.  The  $1800 
fellowship  was  granted  by  the' 
Graduate  School  with  selection  by 
the  School  of  Education. 
WOMEN  DEAN'S  MEETING  ; 

Reports  on  an  honor  code  sur-^ 
vey  and  the  national  meeting  ot- 
women  deans  in  San  Francisco^ 
1  highlighted  the  spring  meeting  of 
the  North  Carolina  Assn.  of  Wo-i 
men  Deans  and  Counselors  held 
here  Tuesday.  Chancellor  Robert 
B.  House  addressed  the  opening 
session. 


TTF.t 


I 


"^Mi^^  Vi^,  6e^^^/^/ 


'  \'  1  recall  oar  first  stop  in  Mexico  City.  I  stepped  from 
*'^'  the  airplane,  walked  over  to  the  hearest  colorful  native, 
*  tend  said,  "Hasta  la  ristu,  sennrita.  (Good  morning,  Jiir. ) 
^i'-^Pero  las  kiMimas  y  calimadadeit  se  afftaraban  mas  y  max 
si  eada  dia?"  (Has  thy  footman  finished  sweeping  out  thy 
chamber?) 


ih 


CLASSIFIEDS 


WANTED:  COLLEGE  MEN, 
part-time  and  summer.  E^n  $50 
to  $100  per  week  plus  $100-$300 
scholarship  award.  Must  have 
use  of  car.  Contact  W.  P.  Cran- 
ford.  Box  1708,  Raleigh,  N.  C. 


FOR  INEXPENSIVE  IIVING:  27* 
Nashua  Trailer  —  has  bath  tub, 
shower,  porch,  oil  heater,  added 
room,  connected  to  utilities  and 
septic  tank.  One  mile  out  on 
airport  road.  Call  8472.  $2,300. 


FOR  RENT  DURING  SUMMER 
month?.  Completely  furnished 
two  bedroom  house,  with  TV  and 
Automatic  Washing  Machine. 
l»hone  8^91. 


"No,  sir,"  he  replied  in  Spanish.  "He  is  an  idle  rogue," 

"How  is  thy  footman  called?"  I  asked. 

"He  is  called  Diego,"  replied  my  friend,  "and  the  little 
daughter  o^his  fat  sister  is  called  Juanita.  She  has  two 
s"mall  books,  one  gray  cat,  three  black  dogs,  24  red 
chickens,  one  fat  pig,  eight  pewter  mugs,  and  a  partridge 
in  a  pear  tree." 

"Wilt  thou  have  a  Philip  Morris  cigarette?"  I  asked. 

"Gracious,"  he  said  thankfully. 

We  lit  Philip  Morrises  and  smoked  contentedly  the 
better  part  of  the  day. 

"Perhaps  by  now  my  footman  shall  have  finished  sweep- 
ing my  chamber,"  he  said.  "Wilt  thou  not  come  to  my 
house?" 

"Gracious,"  I  said. 

Arm  in  arm  we  walked  to  his  house,  but,  alas,  his 
footmanhad  not  yet  swept  out  his  chamber.  So  we  each 
took  a  barrel  stave  and  beat  the  impudent  scamp  until 
it  was  tiitoe  for  my  airplane  to  take  off. 

Aloha,  Mexico,  brooding  land  of  enchantment! 

9U*x  Shulman,  1957 

Farewflt,  Mexico  . , .  HellOf  V.S.A.,  land  of  the  long  $i*e  and 
regular,  the  fiip-top  box,  the  freah,  naturai,  aestful  tmoke  — 
fhilip  M^rriSt  of  corrul  —tehoie  makert  bring  you  thit  column 
throughomt  the  aehool  year. 


iiiiaiD 
Fanlkner's 

new  nooel  of  the  Snopes  famtiy 

THE  TOWN 

By  Th«  Nobel  Prize  Winner 

C*piM  of  the  First  Printing 
$3.95 

THE   INTIMATE 
BOOKSHOP 

205  East  Franklin  St. 


K<i#p  your  eyo 
M  Wtitfii  tiiliiih 


Here's  a  fresh  new  idea  for  spring  in 
casual  wear.  It's  White  Tartan,  a 
nch-loddng  miniature  plaid-on-white 
^at«fn;'<5^rtly  taflorcd  like  all  Arrow 
shirts.  Fmbous  Arrow  University  design 
features  collar  diat  buttons  down  in 
front  4nid  center  ^k . . .  plus  action 
box  pfeat.  Cool-lookiig  White  Tartan, 
"Sanforiaed-labelkd"  gingham,  $5.95. 

ARROW^ 


DECENNIAL  CRLEBIiATION 

Two  UNC  German  professors 
recently  participated  in  the  De- 
cennial Celebration  of  the  Uni- 
versity of  Kentucky  Foreign  Lang 
uage  Conference  at  Lexington.  Dr. 
John  G.  Kunstmann,  chairman  of 
the  Dept.  of  Germanic  Langnages, 
and  Dr.  F.  E.  Coenen  prtt«nted 
papers  at  the  three-day  meeting. 

IMPROVEMENT  SUGGESTIONS 

An  approach  toward  achieving 
order  and  attractiveness  in  the 
city  with  less  congestion  and  less 
cost  is  the  subject  of  a  new  book 
by  F.  Stuart  Chapin  Jr.,  professor 
of  city  and  regional  planning 
here.  The  book,  "Urban  Land  Use 
Planning,"  brings  together  the  re- 
sults of  the  latest  research  in 
methods  of  studying  the  urban 
economy,  population  trends  and 
the  use  and  misuse  of  land  in  ur- 
ban areas. 

DEAN  CARMICHAEL 

Dr.  Katherine  Kennedy  Car- 
michaeU  dean  of  women,  address 
ed  the  Business  and  Professional 
Women  of  Thomasville  Tuesday 
night  at  the  annual  guest  night. 
Her  topic  was  "The  World  of  the 
Working  Woman." 

RECREATION  HELPS 

"The  real  effectiveness  of  hos- 
pital recreation  lies  in  its  ability 
to  treat  the  'wh<de  person'  while 
medical  treatment  oiten  can 
readi  only  a  portion  of  the  pa- 
tient," North  Carolina  recreation 
officials  said  here  Tuesday.  At 
the  closing  session  of  the  third 
Southern  Regional  Institute  on 
Hospital  Work  held  here,  recrea- 
tion personnel  heard  a  discuss- 
ion of  the  relationships  between 
hospital  and  community  recrea- 
tion. 

MONOGRAM  CLUB  OFFICERS 

Giles  Gaca  of  West  Miffin,  Pa., 
was  elected  president  of  the  Mon- 
ogram Club  Tuesday  night  for 
the  coming  fall  semester.  Other 
officers  elected  were  Vice  Presi-  j 
dent  Buddy  Payne,  Norfolk,  Va.; 
Secretary  David  Wall,  Winston- 
Salem;  Treasurer  Joe  Quigg,  Terel- 
town,  L.I.,  N.Y.;  Social  Chairman 
(Ken  Hoke.  Statesville,  and  CAA 
Representative  Daley  Goff,   Dunn.  ] 

CABINET  MEMBERS  { 

The  YMCA  is  now  in  the  pro- 
cess of  -selecting  new  cabinet  mem-i 
bcrs  for  next  year's  program,  ac-  ' 
cording  to  an  announcement.   The 
areas  open  are  Campus  Chest,  Con- 
ferences,      Intercollegiate       Rela- 
tions, World   Understanding,  Pub- 
lic Affairs,  discussion  groups  and 
Film    Forum.    Interested    students 
have  been   asked   to   see   Stewart 
Colson.    YMCA    president,    today 
from  12  noon  to  4  p.m.,  on  Friday 
from   2-6   p.m.   and   9   a.m.   to    12 
noon  Saturday  at  the  Y  office. 
ELISHA  MITCHELL 

AH  members  of  the  Elisha  Mit- 1 
chell  Scientific  Society  have  been 
invited  to  a  dinner  meeting  at  7 
p.m.  Tuesday,  May  14  in  tlie  Car- 
olina Inn  Ballroom.  The  dinner 
is  being  provided  free  of  charge 
by  the  University  as  a  part  of 
this  year's  celebration  in  honor  j 
of  the  memory  of  Elisha  Mitchell. 


NOW  THE  TIME  FOR 
BOOK  COLLECTORS 

i 

During  the  month  of  May  each 
year,  we  buy  in  almost  one; third 
of  our  total  year's  supply  of  old 
and  rare  books.  Shelves  that  were 
getting  parched  and  empty  blossom 
out  again  with  tempting  titles. 
Collectors  from  here  and  there 
throughout  the  State  appear,  like 
hawks  over  a  chicken  farm  in 
Spring. 

Now's  the  time  when  your  partic- 
ular gem  is  likely  to  show  up. 
Now's  the  time  when  somebody 
else  is  likely  to  nick  it  off  S  you're 
napping.  For  in^'tance,  as  this  is 
written,  our  Recent  Acquisitions 
shelf  includes: 

A  Small  Library  of  Philosophy 

A  Rare  Book  on  Oriental  Rugs 

A  Small  Clump  of  Ifistories 

A  First  Edition  of  Veblen 

A  Collection  of  Prints,  priced  at 
a  dime  each. 

What'll  show  up  tomorrow  we  do 
not  know.  It's  as  teuch  of  an  ad- 
venture for  us  as  it  is  for  you. 
Cwne  join  the  fun! 

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ANN  PAGE  SALAD  DRESSING Quart  Jar  ISc 

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ANN  PAGE  STRAWBERRY  PRESERVES 2-Lb.  Jar  S»c 

3  Packages  2«c 

l-Lb.  Loaf  15c 

l-Lb.  Loirf  25c 


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Kraft  Velveeta  Cheese  pS:  31c 
Kraft  Cheesc-Whiz  -  'g  33c 

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Ivory  White  Soap  2  ^L  31c 
Ivory  White  Soap  2  ll^.  19c 
Ivory  White  Soap  4  "ot"  25c 


•   CAfH  JOHN'S  SEA  FOODS   • 


'SUPER-RIGHT" 


**Super-RiKhf  Selected  Sliced  .      i 

Bfeef    LIVftr        ■>■  35c  F'Sh  SHcks  '?S?^"  33c      Chopped  Horn  ....   '^    35c 

WCCI     klVCI          ,  %*>^y.                 ^  Sausage,  PI..  i-o.«__.    ';"-*     IV 

•■S„per.Ki:.lK     Lean  Fresh  Pork  PerCh     FllletS..     Pki!  35c       Franks 


Back   Bones    "^    35c    Haddock  Fiilets  V^:  35c 


AXJL  MEAT 


Roil 
l-Lb 
Pkc 


SUced  Spiced 


Lgnchfon  Meat 1:?g     23c 


"Super-Right"  Heavy  Western  Beef— Boned  &  Rolled  Chuck 

ROAStS     55c 


MMMUTlOttMOSt  fOeO  KTAItSK ,  . .  »Act 


^' Super  J^^rket 


n 


Prices  This  Ad  Effective  Tkroagli  S^..  May  401      I 

210  West  Franklin  St. 


STOBE 
ADDRESS 


Lg. 
Pkg. 


Surff 

31c 


Breexe 


Pkg  32c ' 


SHvM*  Dust 

22i 


Lg. 
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Rlitso  Blue 

31^ 


Lg. 
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NEHI  CANNED 


DRINKS    Special!! 3  12-Oz. Cans  19fc 


PA9I  FOUt 


THI  DAILY  TAR  HI ■! 


THWIJOAY,  MAY  t  TfST? 


Tar  Babies  Defeat  Duke  Freshmen.  11-6.  Behind  Hirsch 


Seixas  In  Exhibitions 

Vk  S»ixas,  form*r  UNC  ten- 
nis grvat,  and  Allan  Morrft  of 
Charietta  will  stag*  axhi&ition 
matchas  today  and  Friday  in 
Durham  and  Raleigh. 

Saixas,  who  has  bean  on  th« 
U.  S.  Davis  Cup  squad  for  tha 
past  few  years,  will  play  Morris, 
who  starred  for  four  yeers  at 
Presbyterian  College  in  Clinton^ 
S.  C. 


Golfers  Off  For  Southern  Tifle 


^Frosh  Slam 
Out  14  Hits 


By   ED   ROWLAND 

The  frosh  basebaliers  rallied  in 


By  JIM  CROWNOVER  j  pected  upsets.  ;  over  72  holes.  Tlie  low  40  CfuaJificr.s 

'     Carolina's   fine   golf  team    begins  '     The  team  winner  at    .Athei>s  will    in  team  competition  today  and  Fri- 

.play  today  in  Athens,  Ga..  for  the  j  be  decided  by  adding  the  scoi-cs  of   day  wrll  continue  play  Saturday  in 

;  Southern    IntercoHegiate   Cham.pion-   the  low  four  out  of  six  team  mem-    a  36  hole  finale.  The.se  40  low  men 

sliip.    The  locals   are   now  sporting   <x>vs   in   two    18   hole   munds   to.iay    will  be  divided  into  Class  A  and  B 

a  9-2-1  record  and  are  expected  to  I  and  F'riday.  brackets,  therefore  allowing  two  in-   the  seventh  to  score  five  runs  and 

make  a  very  good  showing  in  the*     Repivsentins     Carolina     will     be    dividual  winners.  beat  the  Duke  freshmen,  11-6,  yes- 

:ourney.  ■  Tommy    I^angley.    Gene    r>ookabilJ.       The  Tar  Heels"   chief  competitor    terday  at   Emerson   Stadium.   Five 

Tlie  Tar  Heels,  who  liave  lost  ooiy '  Buck    .\d»ms.    Sa.m    Patrick.    Walt    w'Ul     probably    be     LSU.     Houston,    straight     hits,     including     a     long 

t:»  Western  Illinois  State  and  MJary-    SummerviHe  and   Tuffy   Hcnder.son.    smi;.    Florida   and    Georgia,    which    triple  by  Ty  Clayton,  knocked  out 

laiid.  are  expected  by  many  observ-  i  Those  six  ha\  e  nvade  tip  the  Civro-   ^-ju  be  playing  on  its  home  course 

ers  to  cop  their  biggest  win  of  the  :  lina  team  In  all  biit  three  of  its  12  ;  ____ 


{  Oolf«r  LoMf 

I      Id  tlie  fir»t   lYHind  of  plMy   tfl  tlM 
j  Carolona  Golf  Aryin.  ftrnMeiir  tottrn 

sanetA  at  Pinei)ur.»1  yenteTd«y.  Aub 
jrey  FU^iunock  of  UNC  w««  «3i,miiwM- 

ed    by  Dave   Smith   of   Gastrml^.    i 
hand   3.    Rodirock    (}uaii<fied    Uv   the  i  fin 
Itounicy  Tuesday  with  a  78. 

A  fonmer  UNC  Wnkabgr,  Bu/./.y  Fto- 
I  singer    of   Charlotte    also   <iuaUfied 

lor  the  meet  wirh  a  76  and  yenter- 


rmi^    M*M*  A.  4  w  <%»«  can 

v«    w'mm^    ht    iPt»l    '■;i«Tn  ^s;     Su. 
VJJiVti    R.    4  n«    f^i    f^»     ^    linner 
f,f  Phi   K-mnm  «si«  aT/»     ",  or»    f>«rfU 
Hth   vt    Winht^    RVl»  MWI    s^h    Hirf 


rt^ry  wfFn  bw  firs*   r/»»»ml  mui'  h 
WaMer  W»JM«''«  of  ,Ve^t>*rrr/     - 


w  CAUGHT  IN 

THE  MAOIiESS 

OF  THE 

VINTAGE 

SEASON! 


!  year   in   the   next   three  days,    'the  \  matches  and  lra\e  played  very  good 
'  local  liok.sters  were  also  tied  by  Rol-  '  liolf  as  a  team 

ll'n.s  College,   but    both  this   and   tlie  i      The   indiv,dii;il    champioi»ship   will 
;   two    losses    were    c»>nsidered    unex-  bt<    awai-rietl    to    the    lowest    si>oi*er 


UNC  Defeats 


(C(mtrnned  from  Page  I) 


(he  second  Blue  Imp  hurler  to  face 
the  slugging  Tar  Babies  in  the  sev- 
enth. 


// 


-TODAY  ONLY- 

MOULIN  ROUGE 


// 


itimt 


mANGEUHELFEMEK    ^ 
iONNKEMMICNELEI 


STARRING 
JOSE  FERRER    -:-    ZSA  ZSA  GABOR 

STARTS   SUNDAY 


ball  which  dribbled  back  toward 
the  mound.  By  the  time  Hill 
cro.r.<ed  home  plate  with  the  win- 
ning run.  Hudson  had  just  gotten 
up  and  started  toward  first.  ...  „     . 

Duke  jumped  off  to  a  1-0  lead   '^'^^.  ^^"^  g«'"«-  ^^  'ncreased  the 
in   the   second   off   lefty  Jee    Mor 


Carolina  collected  14  bits  in  the 
game,  at  least  one  in  every  frame 
and  8  in  the  seventh  and  eighth. 
Third  baseman  Frank  Workman 
had  a  field  day  at  the  plate  with 
four  s.*ingles  in  four  appearances. 

Winning  pitcher  Freddie  Hirsch 
brought  his   season   record   to  3-0 


'*"^ 


timmamitOLm 


NOW  PLAYING 


Carolih:! 


SUNDAY-MONDAY 


"THE  IWHO'S  WHOf '  9F  AC Ti  W G ! 
in'TlMViar's  Most  ExcmngVilm!" 


Rig  HA  It  o  nr 


IN  THE  FUtL  SCOPE  Or  ViSfAVlilON  AND  COLO«?» 


Ran  who  started  for  the  Tar  Heels. 
Carolina  came  back  with  two  runs 
in  the  third  as  Joe  Shook  drove 
in  both  runs  with  a  triple  to  left 
center 

The  Blue  Devils  tied  it  at  2-2  m 


freshman  record  to  10  wins, 
against  four  losses  and  one  tie. 
The  loss  was  Duke's  ninth  in  nine 
starts. 

In  the  seventh  aiter  one  man 
waj  out  Ray  Burroughs,  pinch- 
hitting  for  Hirsch,  was  safe  on  a 


the  bottom  of  the  third  and  made^'^'^"'^  ^'^^'^  ^^^^  ^""ed  Caro- 
lina's second  out.  Larry  Craver 
singled.  FYank  Montgomery  fol- 
lowed   with    another    single    that 


it  3-2  with  a  run  in  the  fourth. 
Righthander  Tom  MaulLsby  re 
lieved  Morgan  in  the  fourth  and 
pitched  runtess  ball  until  he  was 
relieved  in  the  ninth  inning 

Carolina  went  into 
trailing  3-2  but  came  through 
with  two  runs  to  go  ahead  4-3. 
Honeycutt  scored  the  firs-t  as  Jim 
Raugh  hit  to  the  infield  with  the 
bases  full  and  drew  a  throw  to 
first.    Hud.soo    scored    the    second 


sent  Burroughs  home. 

Al  Baldwin  drove  a  long  single 
the  sixth  '■  ^^  ^■^"^^'"  ^^^^^  that  drove  in  two 
more  runs.  Then  Clayton  hit  his 
triple  to  left. 

The  Duke  coach  replaced  his 
second  and  losing  pitcher.  Way- 
and.  with  Roger  NeweJl.  Fran^ 
Workman      promptly     singled     to 


on   a   wild   pitch   by  Duke   starter   •"i^^*'  '>"nging  in  Clayton  with  the 

fifth  run    of  the   inning.   He  was 


,, ,  FOLLOW  THE  CROWD  TO 

jfc    l'*r,  '•    i!    =■ 

GREATER 


«4 


SAVir^psX 


r.i^' 


BELK'S 


BETTER 
QUALITY 


i    4t^    fjHAPEL  HILL'S  LEADING  DEPARTMENT  STORE     ;    ,    c, 

LE^ir    FORM  FIT 
SPORT  SHIRTS 

t  BySTATLER 


■■''X ,' 


Stevens 
"HIGHLAND  PARK 


yiii»iw*;ii«T(iiYii» 


// 


t 


.t     - 


Fabric 


*  WRINKLE  RESISTANT     \f^f^ 

*  STAYS  FRESH  LONGER     *^-  '^  %  '^ 

*  SHRINKAGE  LESS  TH!aN  1%    "^^  H  :  f' 

*  FAST  COLORS  >^"  .^ 
if  GUARANTEED  WASHABLE 

*  NEEDS  NO  IRONING 


•  Harleigh  Fatsinger. 

The  Tar  Heels  scored  their  fifth 
j  run  in  the  seventh  as  Chuck 
'•  Hartman  started  the  inning  wit^ 
j  a  tremendous  triple  to  center  and 
'  scored  on  a  sacrifice  fly  by  Bomb- 
I  er  Hill. 

The  victory  was  the  greate.s't  of 
I  the  season  ,  for  the  hustling  Tar 
I  Heels,  a  team  that  was  considered 
I  a  'third  of  fourth  place  club"  in 
I  pre-.season  predictions  Coach  Walt 
'  Rabb's  boys,  who  have  done  it  on 
sheer  determination  and  intestinal 
,  fortitude,  are  now  in  a  good  p>osi- 
I  tion  to  replace  the  Blue  Devils  as 
]  ACC  champs. 


1  then  caught  trying  to  »»tretch  his 
hit  into  a  double. 

'  Carolina  added  one  more  run  in 
the  eighth  on  a  single   by  Tommy 

\  Saintsing.  who  promptly  stole  sec- 
ond and  third,  but  overran  the  lat- 
ter and  was  tagged  out.  Gerald 
Griffin'  walked,  went  to  second  on 
the  play  for  Saintsing  and  stole 
third,  and  came  home  on  Jack 
Frost's  single. 

Coach    Wayne    White    used   two 
pitchers   in  the  2:15  game.  Bobby 

I  Woolen  came  on  in   the  eighth   as 

I  Hirsch  tired  and  held  puke  score- 
less. 

j  R.  H.  E. 

Pttke    002  111   100—  6     8     3 

1  UNC       .      200  201  51x— 11  14    3 
Batterie;?:      Sell.      Wayand      <4), 
Newell    (8).     and    Owens;    Hirsch, 

j  Woolen    (8),    and    Frost.    Winner: 

i  Hirsch.  Loser:  Wa>'and. 


Volleyball  Practice 

AH   persons  interested   in   playing 

!  volle.\ball    in    the    Big   Footr   Intra- 

nmral  Day  at  N.   C.   State  on  May 

14  hcive  been  asked  to  be  at  practice 

t*>day  at  4  p  m.  in  Woollen  G>'m. 

Tlie  players  chosen  for  the  trip 
\siJl   be  excused   from   cla&ses. 


Short  sleeve  spor!  shirts  by  Statler. 
made  from  the  finest  "Highland 
Park'  fabric,  RESOiENT  wrinkle- 
resi-Ttant  cotton,  form  fitting  for 
greater  comfort.  Many  colors  and 
sizes  to  choose  from. 


$2.98 


IVY  LEAGUE 


WALKING   SHORTS 


You  can't  beat  this  buy  in  ivy  league  walking  shorts  The 
colors  and  blends  are  ju^  right  for  those  hot  spring  and 
summer  days.  Wear  them  anywhere,  anytime.  Plaids 
solids,  and  blends.  This  \&  the  Wggest  buy  of  a  lifetime 
at  this  low  price.  Sec  them  at  BELK'S 


»3.98-»7.95 


Sizes  28-38 


PUNTY  OF  FREE  PARKING  -  OPEN   FRIDAY   NIGHT  TILL  9 


)('lk-L('ooojj_lloi-j().i(;(). 


^!-> 


LONDON  FOG 

...tk*  mmlm  c«at  yen  bsa^ 

More  than  a  rafncoat— it's  the 
main  coat  you  need  in  any 
weather.  Tailored  of  choice 
cotton  poplin,  the  "Cruiser" 
keeps  out  wind  and  rain  . . . 
stays  wrinkle-free  through 
rugged  wear.  Brightened  with 
an  exclusive  tai-tan  plaid  lin- 
ing  under  the  coat,  collar, 

pocket    flaps.    Natural,    and 
white.  Sizes  36  to  46.  Regu- 
lar Long.  $29.75 
Matching  Cap — $3.95 


JULIAN'S 

COLLEGE  SHOP 


WE'LL   BUY  ALL 
YOUR  OLD  BOOKS 

•  Live  Texts 

We  pay  top  prices  for  texts 
that   will   be   used   again   at 

U.N.C. 

•  Dropped  Texts 

We'll  search  the  market  for 
a  spot  to  salvage  some  of 
your  losi;  when  a  text  is 
dropped. 

•  Enjoyable  Books 

We  can  use  books  you  no 
longer  want  on  your  shelves. 
The  next  fellow  that  comes 
along  may  find  them  as  de- 
lightful as  you  did  a  year  or 
so  ago. 

When  Exams  Are  Over, 

There'll  Be  Green  Money 

For  You  At 

THE  INTIMATE 
BOOKSHOP 

205  East  Franklin  St. 
Open   Till    10   P.M. 


Howard  Johnson  Restaurant 

STUDENT    SPECIALS 

Barbecued    Chicken 
Choice  Steak  Sandwiches 

SERVED  2^^-"    ^"^^'^ 

aCKVtU  g.QQ  -  11 :00  P.M. 

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Right  Now: 

Cash 

;    Sale 

Wonderful 
Book  Bargains 

3  for$l 

Bull's  Head 
Bookshop 

Ground  Floor 
UNC  Library 


YOU  CAN  HEAR  IT  NOW- 
■WITH  BOTH  EARS! 


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fci 


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PLAYS  BINAURAL  TAPES! 


HIGH  •  FIDELITY 

AND  STEREOPHONIC 

SOUND  aiNiC 

AT 

BELK-LEGGETT-HORTON 

Friday  and  Saturday 

May  3  &  4  (All  Day) 

OPEN  FRIDAY  TILL  8:30  PJM. 
A  FACTORY  REPRESENTATIVE 
OF  VOICE  OF  MUSIC  WILL  BE 
IM  THE  STORE  TO  DEMON- 
STRATI  THE  V-M  TAPE-0-MATIC 
HIFI  TAPE  RECORDERS  AND  HI- 
FI   RECORD  PLAYERS. 

DON'T  MISS  IT! 


BELK-LEGCETT-HORTON  will  be  glad  to  demon- 
strate the  ONLY  ^pular-priced  high  ficlelity  tap© 
recorder  that  lets  you  thrill  to  stereophonic  music! 
You've  heard  it  in  theaters— now  have  it  in  your 
home.  Ask  about  V-M  tape-o-raatic  Model  711. 

You'U  take  this  portable  tape-o-matic  ever>-where 
to  record  and  play  back  all  the  sounds  you  want  to 
save.  Use  it  foi  business,  for  pleasure.  Dual-speed, 
dual-track  tape-o-matic  711  in  attractive  two-tone 
gray  case,  just  $209.95. 


MODEL  210  —  4  SPEED 

PORTABLE  RECORD  PLAYER 

ONLY  SW.W  —  OTHERS 

From  $19.95  Up 


V-M  'Fldallt'  Modal  5«0 
Authentic  high  fidelity  S-speaker  syrtem,  Twi.^ 
matic  cx>ntrol.  exclusive  '^»^zy-Lit«''*^  .'Skl!^ 
Sw.tch;>  dozens  of  other  feature,  that  all  adHp 
to  musual  pleasure  for  you  .  for  year,  uToo^^ 
Blonde  or  mahogany,  $149.50.  Walnut  o-  ^^' 
only  slightly  higlH^r.  C'onverU  to  a^xTr^fe^J^?^ 
opUonal  black  or  brass  fi„i.h  le^  and^^^J 

USE  OUR  BUDGET  ACCOUNTS 


^mm 


Mi<-l.(><,'-ieJt-lT()ii,Mi(; 


ft 


i  I 


I 


U.!!.C.  '  IIBRARY 
SERIALS  DEPT. 
BOX  87Ci 

LpEL^iLL,   ;;. 


Library  Receives 
$80,000  Increase 


By  PRINGLE  PIPKIN 
The    Live    Ubrary    Wednesday! 
was  voted  an  increase   of  $80.000 1 
by  a  Joint  Appropriations  subcom  i 
mittce  for  the  1957-59  bienniuni. 

The    Advisory    Budget    Commis- i 
sion   had    originally  recommended  J 
that  the  library  be  granted  $125.- 
000  per  year  for  the  book  acquisi- 
tion fund  during  the  coming  bien- 
nium. 


of  the   library   and   the   people   of 
the  state. 

"I  am  quite  sure  that  ihe  rec- 
ognition of  inadequacy  was  pretty 
well  demonstrated  when  President 
Friday  presented  his  argument  to 
the  appropriations  committee."  » 
RISE   IN  PRICES 

Dr.  Horn  explained  while  the 
sum  ,-cems  like  a  lot.  the  money 
had  to  be  distributed  over  a  wide 


Legislature    Postpones    Action  ! 

On  Long  'Censure'  Resolution;  ' 

Measure  Sent  To  Ways  And  Means 


During  the  1955-57  biennium  the ;  field.  Also  recently  the  book  pric- 
library  was  granted  $100,000  per  cs  have  risen  and  the  colume  of 
year  for  books.  During  the  1953-  publishing  has  increased,  especiali- 
1955  biennium  the  library  received  i  ly  in  "important  books." 


S125.000  for  this  purpose. 

The  increase  will  provide  $165,- 
000  per  year  during  the  next  two 
years,  the  amount  originally  rec- 
ommended by  the  State  Board  of 
Higher  Education. 
FRIDAY  'GRATEFUL' 

Consolidated  University  Presi- 
dent Friday  commented  on  the  in- 
crease. "The  administration  is  very, 
grateful  that  the  subcommittee  on 
appropriations  has  recommended 
an  increav  of  $40,000  (per  year) 
ever  and  above    the   recommenda- 


As  the  departments  require 
more  specialized  books,  the  prices 
of  these  books  increase.  As  the 
size  of  the  library  increases,  the 
expense  of  cataloguing  the  books 
grows. 

He  said  any  prospective  head 
librarian  would  ask  what  the  bud 
get  was.  Dr.  Horn  did  not  think 
UNC  would  have  been  able  to  keep 
a  good  librarian  long  without  more 
money  to  buy  new  books. 

When  President  Friday  came 
before    the    Joint    Appropriations 


lion  of  the  budget  committee  for  Committee  on  March  20,  he  spent 
the  purchase  of  books  for  the  Uni-  one  half  of  the  time  allotted  him 
versity  Library."  for  talking  on   the  budget  of  the 

He  went  on  to  say,  "This  action  Consolidated  University  giving  the 
will  enable  our  library  to  acquire  rea  jns  for  an  increase  in  the  li- 
the  essential  volumes  and   manu- ,  brary  appropration. 


scripts  we  so  badly  need." 

Di  Andrew  Horn,  Head  Libra- 
rian, said  the  new  budget  would 
put  "us  much  closer  to  the  amount 
being  spent  in  other  comparable 
libraries." 

He  said  he  was  grateful  to  the 
pre.-s  and  the  administration  for 
calling  the  attention  of  the  legis 


He  pointed  out  what  the  other 
universities  were  spending  for  their 
libraries.  President  Friday  slated 
■'adequate  libraries  are  second 
only  to  salaries  in  maintaining 
faculty  members." 
ESSENTIAL 

He  explained  a  good  library  wa^ 
essential    to    graduate    study    and 


lature  to  this  problem  and  to  the  many  people  not  enrolled  in  the 
people  in  the  legislature  who  had ,  University  but  who  live  in  North 
been  willing  to  restudy  the  pro  ,  Carolina  u*e  the  library  facilities. 
''^®™-  "He  believed  in  it  (the  increase 

He  commented  he  appreciated .  in  funds);  and  he  was  the  one  who 
the  interest  in  this  problem  of  the  '.  accomplished  it,"  commented  Dr 
students,  UxauJMCuliy^the  friends 'Horn  about  Pi-esident  Friday. 

'Aini  Worth'  Troub/e, 
Spearman  s  Class  Told 


1^,       'Peer  Gynt'  Production  Shaping  Up 

Things  appear  to  be  shaping  up  nicely  for  Ken  Lowry  who  plays  Peer  Gynt  in  the  production 
of  the  same  name.  Here  he  reclines  amidst  the  luxurious  company  of  a  group  of  Arabian  dancng  girls. 
The  production,  the  annual  outdoor  presentation  of  the  Carolina  Playmakers,  will  be  given  in  the  For- 
est Theater  Wednesday,  Thursday  and  Friday  night.  The  play  will  be  a  new  version  adapted  by  Assis- 
tant Director   Kai   Jurgensen   and   Robert  Schenkkan 


By    EDITH    MacKINNON 


It  ain't 


"Get  in  another  racket 
worth  the  pain." 

These  were  the  words  of  advice 
given  to  potential  writers  and  re- 
viewers yesterday  by  author- 
columnist  Robert  Ruark. 

In  the  local  area  for  a  special 
showing  in  Raleigh  of  the  movie 
made  from  his  latest  book. 
"Something  of  Value,"  Ruark 
sf>oke  to  Walter  Spearman's 
journalism  reviewing  class  on  the 
writing  of  his  new  novel  and  his 

life  as  an  author  ,  hard-bound  copies  with  14  foreign 

Asked     why     he     had     written ' 

"Something    of    Value."    a    novel 


.Manhattan  telephone  books  of 
copy  and  a  new  book." 

Ruark  said  the  book  had  been 
cafled  *1he  monster."  but  he  at- 
tributes its  success  to  the  fact 
that  it  is  a  "peculiar  product  of 
timing." 

"If  the  timing  is  good,  the 
book  will  be  good,  and  this  one 
deals  with  the  unrest  of  a  part 
of  the  world  today,"  Ruark  ob- 
served. 

His  timing  has  proved  his  point, 
according  to  sales  records.  200.- 
000    copies    have    been    sold    in 


dealing  with  the  Mau  Mau  upris- ; 
ing    in    South    Africa,    the    well- , 
traveled    columnist    candidly    re- 
plied,    '1    needed    the    money.    I 
went    to    Kenya   to    buy    a    ranch 
and    got    involved    in    the    war.    It  | 
all    ended    up   -wiih    about    three! 


editions  being  printed.  The  author 
also  added  that  3  million  copies 
of  the  paper-backed  editions  had 
been   sold   in  3  weeks. 

The  UNC  graduate  was  asked 
how  he  had  gotten  into  journa- 
lism "First  of  all  you  have  to' fall 

(See  AIN'T  IT,  page  3) 


Second  Concert 
By  UNC  Band 
Will  Be  Sunday 

The  UNC  Concert  Band,  direct- 
ed by  Herbert  W.  Fred,  will 
present  its  second  lawn  concert 
of  the  spring  Sunday  afternoon 
as  part  of  the  annual  Parents'  Day 
program   on  campus. 

The  concert  will  begin  at  4:30 
p.m.  around  Davie  Poplar.  Earl 
Slocum,  conductor  of  the  Uni- 
versity Symphony  Orchestra,  will 
be  the  guest  conductor,  directing 
the  band  in  his  own  recently  pub- 
lished transcription  of  the  "Toc- 
cata"   by    Frescobaldi. 

Soloist    for  the   concert   will   be 

Eddie    Bass    of    Farmville.    presi- 

1  dent   of.  the   band,   who   will    play 

I  "Ode     for     Trumpet'     by     Alfred 

Reed. 

Other  works  will  be  the  "Mili 
tary  Symphony"  by  Gossec.  "Lady 
of  Spain  '  by  Evans,  "Ballet  Pari- 
sian" by  Offenbach.  "Water.  Mu- 
sic" by  Handel.  "American  Sym- 
phonette"  by  Gould,  "State  Fair" 
by  Richard  'Rogers.  "On  the  Es- 
planade" by  Akers.  "Entrance  of 
The  Emperor  and  His  Court"  from 
the  "Hary  Janos"  suite  by  Kodaly. 
and    selected    marches. 


Hollywood  Talent  Scout 
Observes  P4ay  Try  outs 


By   WOODY    SEARS 

What  happens  when  a  real,  live 
Hollywood  talent  .scout  comes  to 
town?  It's  fairly  obvious  that  all 
th^  thesbian  hopefuls  on  campus 
would   be  at   their  shining  best. " 

And  that's  just  the  very  silua- 
ation  that  was  to  be  found  at  the 
Forest  Theater   Wednesday   night. 

Tom  Conroy,  a  scout  for  Hccht- 
Lancaster  Studies  was  in  town 
Wednesday  night  and  dropped  by 
the  Forest  Theater  to  look  over 
the  talent  situation  on  campus. 
.Although  he  talked  to  many  of 
the  people  who  were  there,  there 
were  only  four  who  were  actually 
introduced   to   him. 

The  introductions  were  arrang- 
ed by  Samuel  Selden,  chairman 
of  the  Dramatic  Arts  Dept.  and 
Director  of  the  Carolina  Play- 
makers. 

The  four  who  received  intro- 
ductions to  Conroy  were  John 
Whitty.  a  sophomore  from  New  j 
Bern;  Miss  Louise  Fletcher,  a 
January  graduate  of  the  D.  A. 
Dept.;  Miss  Nancetta  Hudson,  a 
senior  D.  A.  major  from  Golds- 
boro;  and  James  Sechrest.  a  senior 
from    Thomasville. 

Conroy,  a  bush-beating  talent 
scout,  works  the  east  coast  for 
Hecht-LJancasiter  Studio.s  looking 
for    promising    matenjal.    Earlier 


"  Halliord  To  Be 
Atty.  General 
For  Next  Year 

student  body  President  Sonny 
Evans  Thursday  announced  Son- 
ny Hallford,  rising  senior  from 
Rocky  Mount,  as  Attorney  Gen- 
oral    for   next  year. 

Hallford  will  succeed  Sam  Wells, 
.senior  from  Reidsville,  in  the 
position. 

Evans  said  he  wa:s  "very  hap 
py"  to  announce  the  appoint- 
ment. "Because  of  possible  ex- 
panded duties  of  the  Attorney 
General.  I  feel  that  we  are  fortu 
nate  to  have  an  individual  of  (his) 
caliber    in    this    position." 

"He  is  a  person  for  whom  1 
have  a  great  deal  of  respect  and 
admiration   and   whose   ability   has 

I  been   proved    before.    Evans    said. 

:  adding  "student  government  will 
profit  greatly  by  his  appointment." 

Ai"    Attorney    General,    Hallford 
will  serve  as  the  number  one  ad- 
I  visor  to  Evans. 

I  QUALIFICATIONS 

1 

]      Evans    said    Hallford   was   quali- 
j  fied    for    the   position    in   that   he, 
"did   an   outstanding  job  as   presi- 
dent   of  the   Interdormitory   Coun- 
j  ci|    last   year  and   as  floorleader  in 
the    legislature. 


Hallford  Approved  As 
Attorney   General 

'^     ...  ..   /        !  By   NEIL    BASS 

Snident  legislators  last  ni<>lit  postpoiicil  ;u  ti«»n  on  the  coii- 
iroversial    l.oiij;    Re.solutioii. 

kep.  Tom  I,oii;;'>  re.solutioii  '(ensines"  application  of 
state  park  jw>li<y  uhidi  denied  the  rnixer.sitv  ('.osiiio|)olitaii 
Club  use  of  the  I 'instead  State  Park  last  Sundav. 

.A  park  attend;int  relused  the  ( lul)  adniittaiKe  to  the' parks 

picnic  grounds  becau.se  a  member 


ot   its  delegation- 
is  a  Negro. 


Leroy   Frasier- 


"As  chairman  of  the  Student 
Party."  Evans  said,  "he  gained  the 
proper  perspective  .so  essential 
for  effective  leadership." 


this    week    he    was    in    Raleigh    ta 
watch   a    rehearsal    at   the   Raleigh 
Little    Theater.    This    weekend    he' 
will   be   in  Columbia.   S.C.  to  look  - 
over  the   prospects  at  the   Univer- 
sity   of    South    Carolina. 

"So    far    as    1    know.''    he    said,  i      Hallford.    an    English    major,    is 
"Carolina    has    one    of    three    best  ,  a    member    of    the    Order    of    the 
drama     .schools    in    the    country."  ^  (Jolden   Fleece — the  highest   men's 
The    other    two    mentioncil    were  honoriiry — and    the    Order    of    the 
Yale  and  Carnegie  Tech.  Grail. 


SONNY    HALLFORD 

,  .  nu7»iber  one  assistant 


hAcCarfhy  U\es 
In  Washington 
At  Age  Of  47 


W.^SHI.N'GTON  —  (AP)  —  Death 

wrote    an    end    last    night    to    the 

j  storm-filled  career  of  Sen.  Joseph 

'  R.  McCarthy,  one  of  the  20th  cen- 

I  tury's    most    controversial   political 

figures. 

The  Wisconsin  Republican  died 
at  6.02  EDT  at  the  Naval  Medical 
Center  at  nearbj-  Bethesda.  Md.. 
of  an  inflammation  which  broke 
down  the  functioning  of  his  liver. 
He  was  47. 

In  this  capital,  which  saw  him 
rise  to  national  attention  with  hi? 
Red-'iUinting  campaigns  and  then 
fade  into  relative  obscurity, 
friend  and  foe  alike  expressed 
.shock    at    his   pa.ssing. 


Within    a    half    hour 
Carthv    died    the    flag 


after 
over 


Mc 
the 


Talent  Scout  Looks  Around 

Tom  Conroy,  a  talent  scout  for  Hecht-Lancaster  Studios  of  Holly- 
wood, dropped  by  the  Forest  Theater  last  night  to  watch  the  Peer 
Gynt  rehearsal.  He  is  shown  here  talking  with  two  local  hopefuls. 
Miss  Nancetta  Hudson  and  James  Stfchrest.     Photos  by  Woody  Sears 


Beauty  Contest 

Is  Entered         I        

By  Three  Coeds   Senate  Committee  On  Trustees 

Gives  Up  In  Selection  Efforts 


Throe  Carolina  coeds  today  be- 
came the  first  entrants  for  the  an- 
nual Chapel  Hill  Beauty  and  Per-; 
sonality  Pageant,  to  be  staged  in 
the  High  School  Auditorium  May 
16 


Senate  was  dropped  to  half  staff. 

McCarthy  was  a  key  figure  in 
the  inve.-.igations  of  Communism 
and  alleged  Communisni  which 
aroused  high  feelings  in  the  early 
1950's,  but  his  career  faded  aftei 
the  Senate  voted  condemnation 
of  some  of   his  conduct   in   1954. 

Officially  the  death  was  attri- 
buted   to    "acute    hepatic    failure." 

His  death  cuts  the  Republican 
membership  in  the  Senate  to  46. 
compared  with  the  Democrats'  49. 
Wisconsin's  Republican  Gov.  Vern- 
on W.  Thompson  will  fill  the  va--; 
cancy  with  a  Republican  after 
the  funeral.  | 

McCarthy's  death  came  five 
days  after  he  was  hospitalized  for 
a  liver  inflammation,  acute  hepa- 
titis;. 


Rep.  Long.  Student  Party,  at- 
tempted to  pas  •  special  orders  to 
enable  the  resolution's  passage  on 
the  same  night  as  its  introduction. 
C  ustomai->  legislative  procedure  is 
to  introduce  measures  at  one  ses- 
.•iion  and  vote  upon  them,  after 
ihey  have  been  processed  in  conn- 
mittee.  at  the  .-jssion  immediately 
following. 

But  Rep.  Pete  Kelly,  UnlversHy 
Party,  began  the  movement  lo 
block  immediate  action  on  the  reso 
lution.  Rep.  Kelly  said  the  "mipii 
cations "  of  the  resolution  were 
such  that  "a  committee  should 
have  time  to"  consider   it. 

Kelly   said    he    hadn't    had   time 
to   "feel    out"    his   constituent.*  as 
to  their  sentiments  on  the  re<.olu- 
^.ion.   When    asked    by    Rep.    BcrtV 
Huffman  (SP>  il  he.diJnt  kufl»*  «f 
the  resolution  pri<w  to  the  nigh\'> 
session,  Kelly  retorted  that  he  did, 
but    that    he    hadn't    had    adequate 
time  to   talk  with   his  constituents 

(on  the  measure. 
J  Rep.  Bill  Bauni  rti-'Tated  Kcl- 
I  lys  statements  on  thr  resolution. 
Baum  (UP)  said  he  favor*f1  the  "in- 
1  lent"  of  the  measure,  but  thought 
."ommittee  work  should  be  devoted 
to  it  to  make  it  applic^iile  to  "a 
wider  area." 

Special  orders  failed  with  only 
-icven  favorable  votes.  Thus  the  bill 
was  sent  to  Ways  and  Means  Com- 
mittee and  should  reappear  on  thr 
legislative   agenda    next    week. 

In  other  action,  student  law- 
makers: 

(1)  LTnanimously  approved  the 
appointment  of  Sonny  Hallford  to 
,uccecd  Sam  Wells  as  student  gov- 
•rnincnt    attorney   general. 

(2)  Approved  a  bill  establishing 
an  "organi/ational  scheme'"  for  a 
campu.^    humor    magazine. 

According  to  the  bill's  proviv- 
:ons.  a  committee  composed  of  the 
e(;itors  of  the  three  major  campus 
pulilications.  two  legislators  and 
two  presi  ij  Titial  appointees  will 
conduct  interA'iews  to  select  the 
magazines  editor  and  business 
manager. 


Freshman  Camp  Counselors 

Twenty  six  counselors  for  Freshman  Camp  next  fail  were  recently  announced.  On  the  front  row 
from  left  to  rifht  they  include  Lecn  Holt,  Mike  Givens,  Bob  Matthews,  Larry  Wilson,  Don  Gray,  Wil- 
ton Cooper,  Gene  AAcOenicI,  Jack  Raper,  Tom  All  red  and  Forrest  Patterson.  On  the  back  row,  left  to 
right,  £r«  Bill  Rand,  Hamp  Leflcr,  Bob  Carter,  Joe  Ferrell,  Coleman  Barks,  Charles  Pittman,  Steve 
Woody,  Ralph  Cumminfls,  Dave  Davis,  Jack  Lufkin,  Lin  Church,  Graham  Clayton,  YMCA  General  Sec- 
retary Claude  ShotH,  Stewart  Colson,  Jenky   Jenkins,  Tommy  Isely  and  Hobart  Steele. 


Pageant  Co-Chairman  Ty  Boyd 
and  J.  D.  Wright  of  the  sponsor- 
ing Jaycees  announced  them  as 
Jane  Brock,  entered  by  Chi  Phi 
fraternity:  Carolyn  Wise,  entered 
by  Phi  Gamma  Delta  fraternity; 
and  Nancetta  Hudson,  entered  by 
Phi  Delta  Theta.  Winner  of  the 
local  event  will  represent  Chapel 
Hill  in  the  state  finals  of  the  Miss 
.\merica  at  Burlington  in  July 
and  will  also  receive  a  college 
scholarship  check  and  a  wardrobe. 


I  R.\LE1GH  —  (AP)  —  The  Spnale 
Committee  on  University  Trus- 
tees Thursday  gave  up  its  effort 
to  persuade  its  Hou.se  counterpart 
committee  to  agree  to  a  change  in 
the  method  by  which  the  two 
groups  nominate  members  of  the 
Consolidated  University  Board  of 
Tru.stees. 

The  Senate  group  previously  had 
balked  at  following  past  practice 
of  meeting  in  joint  session  to  vote 
on  the  trustee  nominations.  The 
reason  was  that  the  House  com- 
mittee outnumbers  the  Senate 
committee  2  to   1. 

After   the   House   committee  re- 


fused to  give  ground  in  the  dis- 
pute, the  Senate  committee  voted 
yesterday  to  follow  the  previous 
practice  of  meeting  in  joint  sess- 
ion. ' 

The  committee  turned  down  a 
proposal  by  a  subcommittee  that 
it  recommend  that  University  trus- 
tees in  the  future  not  be  allowed 
to  suc'ceed    themselves. 

.\fter  the  two  committee  get  to- 
gether and  nominate  the  trustees.  • 
the    House   and   Senate   will   meet 
in    joint    session    to    elect    them.  ■ 
.About  29  vacancies  are  to  be  filled  I 
this  year,  j 


INFIRMARY  LIST 

Students  in  the  Infirmary  yes- 
terday  included: 

Misses  Janet  Johnson,  Martha 
Osborne,  Jane  Brock,  Patricia 
Gresory,  Kay  Proctor,  Nancy 
Stephens,  Sandra  Wallace,  Eliza- 
beth McKinnon,  and  Timothy 
Jessup,  William  Lytle,  Donald 
Corbin,  David  Ansell,  James 
Thon>pson,  David  Burrows,  Wylie 
Haithcock,   and  Harold  Clark. 


Interviews  For  GMAB 
^    Posts  To  Start  Thursday 

Applications    are    now    available 

for  work  on  the  Graham  Memorial 

.\ctivities     Board,     according     to 

I  GMAB    President    Bonny    Thomas. 

Thomas  said  interviews  will  be- 
gin Thursday.  All  applications 
must  be  filled  out  by  Tuesday,  he 
said. 

"1  strongly  urge  anyone  inter- 
ested in  participating  in  oik?  of 
the  most  satisfyin;i  and  rewarding 
ireas  of  extra-curricular  activities 
at  UNC  to  apply  for  work  on 
GMAB."  Thomas   said. 

Anyone  interested  in  .serving  on 
'he  board  has  l>een  urged  to  come 
by  the  information  desk  in  Gra- 
ham Memorial  and  fill  out  an 
application. 

Positions  now  open  include  the 
chairmanship  and  membership 
on  all  the 'committees,  he  said. 

The  committees  are  recreation. 
film  series  and  drama,  forum 
dance,  publicity,  office,  receptions 
and  decorations,  polls,  calendar, 
tournament.  Mardi  Gras.  Sound 
and  Fury,   music  and  free  films. 


#Aai  TWO 


THi  DAILY  TAft  HEEL 


PIUbAV,  MAY  i.  \H? 


iMomism  And  Segregation: 
New   University  Trends 

One  «)l  the  pillars  in  the  rniversity's  polity  toward  etjual  rij»hts  for 
all  students  has  been  its  lailine  to  se»ieoaie  the  various  classes. 

It  is  inlinitelv  benelit  iai  to  Freshmen  to  he  allowed  to  exchanj^e  ideas 
and  live  side  by  side  in  harmony  with  iippeidassnien. 

Iherti  is  no  diflerential  and  distriminatin^  polity— siuh  as  is  the  rase 
»t  other  institutions,  notably  Oiike— which  requires  ireshmen  to  assem- 
ble   in    nairowlv    se,i>re»>ated   (jnar- 
teis  with  little  beanies  whidi  the\      stiitlents  mijjht  rrv  when   I'niver- 


siiv  lile  thrca  tenet!  to  prepare 
them  atlet]uately  lor  later  uselid 
I'njversitv's  non-tlis-  and  indepeiitlenl  citizenship,  when 
tpiarterino;  j>olicv  academic  lite  attempted  to  snap 
them  out  of  dependeiu  leth;n<«ies 
and  nt'iessiiate  their  thinkinj;  .tnd 
a(iin<>   on  tju'ir  own. 


nuisi    wear. 

\vt     the 
crimination 
>c«.-ms  to  be  on   the   wav  <^in 


■  The  prop«)setl  arran<,',ement  for 
the  fall  semester  Avhereby  athletes 
wtmld  be  confined  in  a  wt)rld  all 
their  own  is  tliametrically  in  op- 
position with  past  I'niversity 
pt)li(  N. 

One  Cobb  resident  who  pub- 
lislu'd  a  (olinmi  in  The  Daily  Tar 
Heel  (^ppx»setl  the  rni\ersitys  new 
(jiianeriiiii  plan  beiause  of  the  ad- 
tlitional  luiisc  which  mi<»ht  aiise 
fiom  plating  athletes  in  one  mass 
coni^lomeration. 

^^'e  see  the  situation  as  a  far  more 
serious  re\ersal  of  l'ni\eisitv  non- 
tlifferential    housing. 

If  the   f(M)tball    team   is   to   lia\e 


Chairman  of  the  ni\isi(»n  of 
Student  Affairs  William  D.  Perty 
might   be  right   in  his  statement: 

"Stutlents  antl  ct^miselors  will 
work  jointly  tt)  bring  about  a  bet- 
ter stxial  and  intellectual  envirt>n- 
ment   in  the  dormitory."  * 

But   we  tontend  not. 

In  lieu  of  Dr.  Petty"  statement, 
we  offer  a  substitute  and  more 
realistic  one: 

"Students  and  cojuvselors  will 
work  jointly  to  present  the  ,big 
impersonal  world  from  crashing 
upon     the     shoulders     of    students 


separate  (|uarters ,and  a  segTegated      antl     making     them     adept     their 

role  as  intfependent  (iii/jt-ns  with 
auto-res|K)nsibilitv.  to  pro\  ide  a 
svsiem  whert'by  the  l'ni\eisitv 
may  suf)ervise  the  actions  of  stu- 
dents who  are  not  mat  me  enough 
to   take  taie  t»t   themsehes." 


li\inL;  arrangement,  why  not  tlie 
s.iine  stgiegation  for  the  baseball 
team  and  for  tiie  track  team  and 
for  tlie  Dialectic  Senate  antl  for 
^^l(.\  members  and  so  on  tlown 
ilie   lint? 

While  theie  is  some  merit  in 
h.i\iun  special  counselors  hir  atli- 
kits  who  fintl  it  rliffit  lilt  to  hold 
down  two  j<»l)s  at  ome— atatlemics 
ami  .ilhletits  —  l!ie  ,pro|>osal  for 
'stUKixised  stiidv  periotis  and  a 
sjHfc  i.ili/ed  counselling  j)Ian"'  i* 
abs<)liiuK    .il>sincl. 

We  propose  an  alteinate  plan: 
Why  not  initiate  a  House 
Mother  Svsttiu  wheref»y  everv  five 
students  would  ha\e  some  sym- 
patlteiic  soul  whc»  might  tuck 
iWin  in  .It  ni-lii  and  «  uddle  them 
.i/Ae.tionaielv  ivhen  the  grind  of 
liiixersitv  fife  rhre^^^"^*  ^^  niakr 
ihtiii  seli-NUstaiiv|T^g  ;«"d  iiulepen- 
dc-nir  -♦ 

Such  .1  bouse  uj<^ther  might  \ivn- 
\icle  ;i    soft    shotddei     u|)on    which 


The  Daily  Tar  Heel 

The  official  student  publication  of  the 
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■  .  A 


Editor 


NEIL  BASS 


Managmo  Editor      'S.  CLARKE  JONES 


Associate  Editor       iil 


Sports  Editor 
Newy  Editor 


NANCY  HILI. 
4  r~BttXKING 
^LT  SCHRUNTEK 


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Advertising  Manager  ,      FRED  KATZIN 

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EDIT  ST.\FF— Whit  Whitfield.  Anthony 
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Whitaker. 


SPORTS  STAFF:  Dave  Wible,  Stu  Bird, 
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Milligan. 


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Librarians  -  Sue  Gichn^r,  Marilyn  Strum 


Night  News  Editor 
Night  Editor  - 


xiir 


Bob  High 

Woody  Sears 


Perh;ips  we  aie  l>eing  extreme 
on  this  pioposal.  Bin  the  I'nixer- 
sitv  is  also  an  extremist,  and  an  ir- 
rational one.  ijnpropc>sing  this 
ne^^    dual    jMdicy: 

(i)  Segregated  and  distriminat- 
ing   housing. 

{•2)  Coddling  and  niomisiic  tlis- 
c  ipline   antl   super\isetl    study. 

The    whole    itlea    is    ridit  ulous. 

riie  l'ni\ersity  should  cast  asitle 
siuli  an  absurd  proposal  which  is 
a  reflection  of  a  tletesiable  ;»tii- 
tiitle,  an  aHitude  that  studeiUs  are 
not  m;iture  enough  to  go\ern  ;ind 
take  tare  of  themselves,  an  aiti- 
tutle  that  students  must  be  rided 
with  an  iron  hand  on  c  lass  .utentl- 
aiue  and  now  e'.eti  on  hoitsing 
antl  studv  houis. 

Students  shcjuld  not  consider 
appKing  h)r  cpiarters  in  Cobb  — 
where  the  I'niversity  is  .tttempt- 
ing  to  enforce  "supervised  stutly"' 
on  wh;u  it  nnist  feel  are  innnature 
and    tlependent    studeiUs. 

'Open  Skies' 
And    Nikita 

1  he  Russian  \eision  of  Presi- 
dent Kisenhower's  "Open  Sky"  in- 
sj^Kft  tif)n  plan  is  a  complete  antl 
mter  farce. 

Ihe  Kremlin  has  giati<>usly 
(oirsentetl  to  allow  the  I'.S.  to 
view  Siberian  waste  lands  in  ex- 
change for  a  comj>rehensive  in- 
sj)ection  t)f  the  western  two-thirds 
of   continental    I'nitetl    States, 

How  any  nation  toultl  f)e  so 
bra/en  as  lo  oflei  a  gantler  of  Si- 
f)erian  ice  in  retinti  h)r  a  chance 
to  stiutini/e  vital  in.u  leai  antl 
guitletf  missile  proxing  grountis  is 
beyond  compiehension.  Such  in- 
stallations are  locatetl  in  the 
Southwestern    states. 

It  is.  of  tcjturse.  an  obvious  at- 
tempt by  the  Khrushi  he\  istic  to- 
talitarians  to  manipulate  the  I'.S. 
into  a  tlefensivc  jjosition  such  that 
the  Kremlin  may  point  to  .Ameri- 
ca —  for  propaganda  reason^  — 
and   say: 

"We  tlon't  like  wai :  Nikita 
tloesn't  like  war;  .Nikita's  tlog 
floesn't  like  war;  we  will  let  you 
see;  whv  won't  you  let  us  see?" 

President  Kisenhowei  shotdd,  of 
course,  turn  the  tables  antl  reitter- 
ate  his  inspettion  plan;  but  he 
sht)idtl  offer  "all  or  none"  terms. 
Russia  vvonkl  of)viously  refuse. 
The  V.S.  w'oidd  again  have  Rus- 
sia on  the  defensive  in  the  propa- 
gandistic   war  of  nerves. 


Coed  Demands 
Equality  Of 
Dress  Rights 

By  Mary  Alys  Voorhees 

Men  might  as  well  give  up. 
Women  are  here  to  stay,  and  as 

0 

long  as  they  are  here  they're  go- 
ing to  be  demandi;ig  first  this 
and  then  that. 

Latest  in  the  "We  want  equal- 
ity" movement  is  the  crisis  which 
has  developed  in  the  coed  camp 
which  we  shall  call  "Operation 
Bermuda  Shorts. ' 

Possibly  it  is  a  matter  of 
jealousy:  but  regardle.ss.  coeds 
are  about  as  unhappy  as  a  fish 
away  from  water  over  the  fact 
that  they  are  unable  to  wear 
Bermudas  to  class. 

When  discussing  the  matter — 
which  is  generally  most  any  hour 
of  the  day — coeds  usually  bring 
up  the  following  pointers: 

(1)  The  weather  is  just  as  hot 
to  coeds  as  it  is  to  anyone  else, 
and  if  the  University  doesn't  plan 
to  air-condition,  the  least  they 
can  do  Ls  let  students  be  comfort- 
able. 

(2)  American  dressmakers  first 
designed  walking  shorts  for  wo- 
men— patterned  after  the  Brit- 
ish— but  here  women  don't  even 
have  the  right  to  wear  them. 

(3)  They  (Bermudas)  look 
much  better  on  coeds  who,  being 
more   fashion    conscious,    manage 

to  lcx)k  much  neater  in  them. 

After  giving  the  matter  con- 
siderable thought  we  have  come 
to  the  conclusion  that  coeds  are 
right  (we  agreed  with  them  to 
begin  with  but  wanted  to  spend 
some  time  thinking  about  it  to 
decide  whether  we  were  think- 
ing right),  but  just  to  be  sure 
that  every  corner  was  heard  from 
we  began  asking  various  persons 
we  encountered   during   the  day. 

^om  this  poll  (not  related  to 
Mr.  Gallup's)  we  cam^  up  with 
a  couple  of  interesting  items 
which  we  now  submit  for  your 
consideration. 

Just  about  every  Carolina  gen- 
tlemen agreed  that  coeds  should 
be  able  to  wear  Bermudas  to 
class.  However,  we  did  find  one 
of  the  old  school  who  felt  coeds 
don't  look  feminine  in  walking 
shorts,  (\laybe  not.  but  just  who 
can  look  ver  feminine  in  any- 
thing when  the  instructor  is  lec- 
turing about  the  days  back  in  "03 
and  the  temperature  is  almost 
topping  the  century  mark? 

The  only  other  person  we  came 
across  who  disagreed  was  a  c©- 
ed  who  felt  her  sister  classmates 
might  get  lax  in  their  dress  if 
allowed  to  wear  Bermudas  to 
da.s-s.  (i;ndoubtedly  she  hasn't 
seen  some  of  the  clothing  bills 
coeds  have  been  sending  home 
to  Papa  just  so  they  can  look  as 
if  they  are  fresh  out  of  a  fashion 
magazine— and.  by  the  Way, 
didn't  we  have  one  of  the  ten 
best-dres.sed  coeds  on  .\merican 
college  campu.ses"') 

Another  couple  of  dozen  people 
took  time  to  point  out  that  most 
northern  colleges  and  universi- 
ties allow  coeds  to  wear  slacks 
in  the  winter  and  Bermudas  in 
the  summer,  so  wl^y  should  U\C 
be  so  far  behind? 

In  conclusion,  we  have  one 
question:  Just  what  is  the  dif- 
ference in  Bermudas  and  the 
short  skirts  (they  didn't  even 
cover  the  knees)  which  coeds 
used  to  wear  here  about  10  years 
ago? 


''You'll  Find  Km  Not  Just  Thinking  Of  Egypt' 


Students  Laud  Professor's  Brand 
Of  Probing,  'Gadfish'  Classes 


(In  these  times  of  mass-edu- 
cation, large  classes  and  the 
resultant  impersnality,  it  is  In- 
deed admirable  to  see  f  seq- 
ment  of  students  who  t«kt  t 
sincere  interest  in  the  envrt.; 
of  their  professors. 

it  is  also  admirable  that  a 
professor  chooses  fp  allow  his 
students  full  discussion  rein 
and  free  expression  with  only 
his  moderating  hand  as  a  re- 
straining force.  The  University 
needs  more  of  such  "gadflies," 
if  this  is  an  appropriate  term. 

"Spoon-fed'  minds  tend  to 
become  completely  dependent 
and  lose  their  scientific  curios- 
ity. The  only  applicable  warn- 
ing is  that  students  fortunate 
enough  to  be  in  classes  such  as 
Dr.  Kattsoff's  lead  intelligent 
discussion,  not  propose  ridicu- 
lous questions  merely  to  chalk 
up  a  few  brownie  points-.- 

Congratulations  to  Dr.  Katts- 
off  for  his  probing,  "gadflish  " 
brand  of  education.  — The  Edi- 
tor.) 

Editor:      ' 

In  the  midst  of  the  current 
exodus  of  talented  profe.s.sors 
from  the  university  we  would 
like  to  express  our  public  thanks 
to  one  whom  we  believe  to  be 
among  the  most  talented,  soon 
to  depart. 


Professor  Louis  0.  Kattsoff 
has  been  with  the  university 
since  1935  and  has  seen  it 
through  its  period  of  greatest 
growth.  .Although  formally  af- 
filiated with  the  dej)artment  of 
philosophy,  he  has  taught  courses 
in  mathematics,  physics,  and 
psychjlogy.  In  his  versatility  as 
.a  teacher  he. has  tided  the  uni- 
versity through  some  of  its  most 
painful  years.  Next  fall  he  v^^ll 
teach  at  Harper  College  in  New 
York. 

.\.s  a  teacher  Dr.  Katt.soff  is  not 
the  kind  that'  draws  every  last- 
.semester  senior  into  his  classes. 
He  seldom  lectures,  and  it  is  a 
tribute  to  him  that  many  of  his 
students  become  perplexed — 
pi'rhaps  for  the  first  time  in  their 


MAY  6 


Is  Coming  Soon 


ONLY  3  MORE  DAYS 


live.s — about  what    it    is    they're 
"suppo.sed  to  be  doing." 

Dr.  Kattsoff  conducts  h  i  s 
classes  on  the  assumption  that 
the  students  are  interested 
enough  to  read,  ask  questions, 
and  start  discussion.  He  acts  as 
a  very  astute  moderator  rainer 
than  as  a  lecturer.  He  Is  adamant 
in  his  refusal  to  "spoon  feed" 
his  classes,  and  those  that  must 
be  "spoon  fed''  become  frustrat- 
ed. 

It's  uncomfortable  for  a  stu- 
dent to  have  to  take  responsibil- 
ity in  a  class,  but  it  may  prove 
to  be  one  of  the  most  valuable 
educational  experiences  he  will 
have.  We  might  even  go  so  far 
as  to  say  that  this  is  the  essence 
of  a  liberal  education.  We  thank 
— forcing  us  to  thinJt.  The  Uni- 
him  for  building  a  fire  under  us 
versify  is  losing  one  of  its  most 
valuable  gadflys.  Without  such 
gadflys   there   is   slumber. 


We     combine 

our 

sincerest 

thanks  to  him 

with 

our     best 

wishes  for  his  future  career.  We 

envy  the  students  to  whom  he  is 

going. 

H.  D.  B. 
J.   A.    K. 
D.  L.  M 
J.    N. 
Z.  B.  N. 
J.   C.    P. 

• 

B.  T.  W. 

• 

> 

By  a: 

Capp 

1 

Pogo 


Bv  Walt  Kelly 


man  ojuIA  ;$'/kA^v  \o 
death  vMlehe'^ 


Censuring  Action: 

The  Case  Against 
Catawba  College 

Earlier  this  week.  The  Daily  Tar  Heel  eom- 
Rlimented  editorially  the  action  taken  by  Th* 
American  Association  of  Unfversity  Professors  in 
placing  Catavyba  College,  Seiitbury,  en  its  censure 
list.  '- 

w 

The  Daily   Tar   Heel   statet^ 
"We  assert  for  the  right  of  faculty  mombors 
to  conf>pletcly  make  a  clean-breast  of  their  opin- 
ions   and    feelings,    regardless    of    administration 
policy." 

We  also  called  for  the  release  of  additional 
"information  and  reasons''  behind  the  consuring 
action.  In  response  to  this  request  Dr.  W.  A. 
Bowers  of  the  Physics*  Dept.,  president  of  the  local 
AAUP  chapter,  graciously  consented  to  give  us 
an  AAUP  Bulletin  outlining  the  case  against  Ca- 
'  ta,wba  College's  violation  of  "acadenUc  freedom 
and  tenure." 

The  following  is  a  res4ime  of  the  caso,  using 
the  AAUP  Bulletin  as  source  material.  — The  Edi- 
tor.) 

The  Board  of  Trustees  of  Catawba  College,  at  a 
regular  meeting  on  Feb.  19,  1952,  voted  to  termin- 
ate, as  of  Feb.  23,  1952,  the  services  of  three  mem- 
bers of  the  college  faculty: 

Christopher  J.  Thomas,  professor  of  music  and 
head  of  the  Dept.  of  Music;  Winifred  M.  TTiomas. 
as.?ociate  professor  of  music:  John  C.  Hadley,  pro- 
fessor of  education. 

All  three  teachers  were  entitled  to  "permanent 
and  continuous  tenure"  under  provisions  of  the  1940 
Statement  of  Principles  on  Academic  Freedom  and 
Tenure,  which  the  Trustees  of  Catawba  College 
adopted  in  1941. 

Charges  alleged  against  the  three  teachers,  in 
identical  letters,  were: 

(1)  That  you  have  breached  your  contract  with 
Catawba  College,  particularly  the  paragraph  read- 
ing, "Party  of  the  second  part  agrees  to  support  the 
general  objectives  of  Catawba  College,  to  give  pri- 
mary consideration  to  the  intellectual,  moral  and 
spiritual  development  of  the  student;  to  support  the 
administration;  and  together,  faculty  and  students, 
to  build  an  esprit  de  corps  second  to  none. 

(2)  That  you  have  been  disloyal  to  the  adminis- 
tration of  Catawba  College. 

(3)  That  you  have  made  slanderous  statements 
to  students,  faculty  members  and  other^-,  reflecting 
upon  the  institution  itself  and  officials  thereof. 

(4)  That  you  have  made  consistent  efforts  among 
students  and  faculty  members  to  incite  unrest,  sus- 
picion and  lack  of  confidence  in  the  institution, 
its  Board  of  Trustee.:  and  its  administration:  there 
by  damaging  the  college's  good  name  and  defaming 
the  character  of  certaiR  of  its- olfice^s. 

It  seems  apparent  to  The  Daily  Tar  Heel  thai 
the  three  faculty  members  were  allowed  the  proper 
hearings  and  opportunities  to  acquit  themselves. 
But  we  concurr  with  the  AAUP's  conclusion: 

Neither  the  grounds  upon  which  Professor  Rad- 

ley  and  the  Professors  Thomas  were  dismissed  nor 
the  consideration  given  to  their  cases  met  the  stand- 
ards ot  good  academic  practice.  Tkere  was,  it  is 
true,  compliance  with  the  formal  requirements  of 
due  process:  charges  were  stated  in  writing;  a  tri- 
bunal composed  equally  of  trustees  and  faculty 
members  heard  the  case;  full  opportunity  was*  giv- 
en for  defenses  to  be  made;  and  the  accused  facul- 
ty members  were  invited  to  appear  before  the  full 
Board  of  Trustees  before  final  action  was  taken.  It 
is  true  also  that  the  record  contains  evidence  which 
the  tribunal  could  regard  as  establishing  a  mea^iure 
of  fault  on  the  part  of  the  three  teachers.  The  in- 
vestigating committee  concludes',  however,  that 
these  considerations  do  not  justify  it  in  withhold 
ing  the  strong  criticism  which  it  believes  other  as- 
pects of  the  proceedings  and  the  board's  decision 
warrant. 

Other  issues  cloud  the  case  against  Catawba 
Serious  misconduct  of  the  treasurer  and  engineer 
of  the  college  had  occurred:  secrecy  had  veiled  the 
misconduct — secrecy  imposed  by  the  Board  of  Trus- 
tees and  college  President  Alvin  Robert  Keppel — 
and  rumors  were  rife.  This  misconduct  wa.s  ap- 
parently u.sed  to  cloud  the  case  .against  the  three 
faculty  members  who  were  predisposed  to  believe 
the  worst  about  the  college  admini..\ration  because 
of  past  disagreements. 

But  The  Daily  Tar  Heel  sees  a  clean-cut  issue: 
President  Keppel  continuously  and  unjustifiedly 
interfered  with  the  operation  of  Catawba's  Music 
Dept.  with  the  idea  of  promoting  public  relations 
at  the  expense  of  hacking'  theory  and  other  neces- 
sary course-  from  the  department's  curriculum;  Dr. 
Thomas  rebelled  and  asserted  for  a  far  degree  of 
autonomy;  President  Keppel  called  this  destruction 
of  the  college's  "esprit  de  corps;"  Thomas,  his  wife 
and  an  associate  were  dismissed  in  violation  of 
"continuous  tenure"  agreements. 

Thus  The  Daily  Tar  Heel  concurs  with  the  j\AUP 

Investigating  Committee's  conclusion.?: 

The  obligation  "to  build  an  esprit  de  corps  sec- 
ond to  none"  is  vague  and  of  doubtful  appropriate- 
ness; and  the  obligation  to  "'support  the  administra- 
tion" may  easily  come  into  conflict  with  the  pri- 
mary responsibility  of- the  faculty  member  to  the 
institution,  to  hi.^'  students  to.  society  and  to  the 
ruth. 

Too  ready  a  resort  by  faculty  members  to  out- 
side interventi(m  in  the  affairs  of  a  college  could 
easily  become  an  evil;  but  there  is  no  indication 
that  this  evil  threateas  to  become  widespread;  and 
punitive  measures  to  prevent  faculty  members  from 
invoking  the  judgment  of  the  appropriate  accredit- 
ing association  in  an  extremity  would  give  rise  to 
worse  evils. 

In  ^"hort,  The  Daily  Tar  Heel  asserts,  along  with 
the  AAUP,  for  fredom  of  thought  among  Univer- 
sity professors  regardless  of  administration  policy. 

If  censuring  action  is  necessary  to  bring  about 
such  freedom,  then  it  is  justified. 


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Kattsoff  Takes 
N.  Y.  ^sition 

L.  0.  Ka^U<tff,  professor  of 
philosophy  oli  the  University  fac- 
ulty, has  resigned  his  position 
here,  effect iw  Sept.  1  to  join  the 
faculty  of  the  State  University  of 
New  York. 

He  will  become  a  professor  at 
the  Harpur  College,  liberal  arts 
unit  of  the  Urfiversity  in  Endicott, 
New  York.  Prof.  Kattsoff  has  been 
on  the  University  faculty  since 
1»35.  coming  to  Chapel  Hill  from 
the  University  of  Virginia.  He  has 
been  Chairmati  of  the  Philosophy 
Department  in  Lhe  past. 

The  Kattsoffs  will  leave  Chapel 
Hill  at  the  end  of  this  month  to 
spend  the  summer  in  New  Jersey. 


May  6  Here  Monday; 
Y-Nite  Will  Be  Event 


AT  LAST! 

AN  Garments  •(  Wool 
Mil  WooMik*  Fabrics 

COR  MW  b« 

DRY  CLEANED 

with  M-igiaai  b«dy 

«d  texture  fully 

retaimd  every  time 

that's 

SOFT- SET® 

P»rfm<fd  by 

SANITONE! 


Y-Nite  Planning  Committee 


Members  of  the  planning  committee  for  Y-Nite  are  shown  above. 
From  left  to  right  they  are  Bobby  Love,  H.  G.  Snipes,  Daryi  Fer- 
rington,  Jerry  Coison   and  Miss   Eleanor   Riggins. 


Covering  The  Campus 


Spring    Is   Here! 

WHY   LUG   YOUR 
WINTER   GARMENTS   HOME? 

Why    don't    you    leave    them 
with   us  »n6    let   us  dry   clean, 
moth  proof,  and  store  them  for 
the  summer  months. 
PHONE   4921 

UNIVERSITY 

DRY    CLEANERS 


DENTAL  OFFICERS  i 

New  officers  have  been  installed 
by  the  UNC  chapter  of  Delta  Sig- ^ 
ma  Delta,  the  nation's  oldest  den-  \ 
tal  fraternity.  The  new  officers 
are  Grand  Master — Bennie  Barker. 
Biu-lington;  Worthy  Master— Wil- 
liam Current  Jr.,  Gastonia;  Treas-  i 


CLASSIFIEDS 

WANTED:  COLLEGE  MEN, 
part-time  and  summer.  Earn  $50 
to  $100  per  week  plus  $100-$300 
scholarship  award.  Must  have 
use  of  car.  Contact  W.  P.  Cran- 
ford,  Box  1708,  Raleigh,  N.  C. 


FOR  INEXPENSIVE  LIVING:  2T 
Nashua  Trailer  —  has  bath  tub, 
shower,  porch,  oil  heater,  added 
room,  connected  to  utilities  and 
septic  tank.  One  mile  out  on  j 
airport  road.  Call  8472.  $2,300. 


OMVC-IN 


RESTAURANT 


Never  a  Parking  Problem 
• .  •  When  Yon  Eot  Here! 


—SPECIAL    THIS    WEEK— 

ice    Cold 

LEMON  or  ORANGE 

FREEZE 

18  ounces  25< 


CHAT  &  NIBBLE 


IV2  Miles  from  Campus  on  Greensboro  Rd. 


urer — John    Archer    III,    Franklin; 
Scribe — Benny    Johnson.    Graham; 
Historian — Carl  Dann  III.  Orlando, 
Fla.;    Senior    Page — William    Deb- 
nam.    Raleigh;   Junior   Page — Fred 
Ogden  II.  Pisgah  Forest  and  Tyler 
— Robert   Holmes   Jr..   Lexington. 
PIANO    RECITAL 
Harvey  Miller,  a  student  in  the 
i  Music    Dept.        will    present     his 
,  junior  recital  Sunday  at  3:30  p.m. 
in    Hill     Hall.     Millers     program 
:  will   include  two  sonatas  by  Scar- 
latti, the  Sonata   in  C.  Major,  op. 
I  2,    no.    3    by    Beethoven,    the    Noc- 
•  turne   in  C  Minor   by  Chopin  and 
three   preludes    by   Debu.ssy. 
CLOSED    WEDNESDAY  j 

I  Graham  Memorial  will  be  closed  i 
I  Wednesday  until  1  p.m.  because  of  , 
of  the  inauguration  of  Con.soli-  I 
dated  University  President  Will- 
iac  C.  Friday,  according  to  an  an- 
nouncement from  Miss  Linda 
Mann.  dirL^ctor. 
EVENING  CONCERT 

The  annual  evening  concert  of 
the  North  Carolina  Symphony 
with  Dr.  Benjamin  Swalin  con- 
ducting will  be  presented  in  Mem- 
orial Hall  at  8:30  p.m.  Monday  • 
Admission  will  be  by  membership 
card  only.  Students  may  enroll  as 
members  and  attend  the  concert 
upon  payment  of  one  dollar.  0th- 
I'r  persons  may  be  admitted  by 
the  payment  of  three  dollars,  the 
regular  membership  fee,  accord- 
ing to  an  announcement. 
PHOTO  QUEEN 

The  Caroiinas  photo  queen- 
first  entrant  for  the  title  of  Miss 
.\alional  Press  Photographer  in 
1958— will  be  selected  under  the 
auspices  of  the  Carolina  Press 
Photographers  Assn.  June  15  at 
Grandfather  Mountain.  Plans  for 
the  event,  to  be  staged  in  con- 
nection with  the  annual  weekend 
cam*era  clinic  at  the  mountain  re-  ( 
sort,  were  made  here  Sunday  at ! 
the  meeting  of  the  a.ssociation.        | 


By  MARY   MOORE   MASON 

May  the  6th  is  coming. 
That  s  what  it  said  in  the  paper 
for  several  days.  But  what  is  May 
6th  and  what  happens  then? 

May  6 — Monday— is  Y-Nlte  and 
the  all-campus  bermuda  picnic  at 
Davie  Poplar  at  5:30  p.m.  It  is  jazz 
bands,  Miss  Pee  Wee  Baitlen,  Ken 
Callender  and  Hoke  Simpson  and 
his  calypso  group. 

It  is  also  the  Rev.  A.  L.  Kershaw, 
expert  on  jazz  and  famous  for  win- 
ning $32,000  recently  on  the  $64,- 
000  Question  quiz  prog^^m.  Rev. 
Kershaw  will  speak  at  the  picnic 
on  "Jazz  and  Religon."' 
BARBECUE  MENU 

The  picnic's  menu  wil  consist  of 
barbecue  with  hush  puppies,  to  he 
served  for  75  cents  per  person. 
Among  ithe  campus  group;.'  who 
have  already  canceled  their  supper 
meal  on  that  night  in  order  to  at- 
tend the  picnic  are: 

Phi  Delta  Theta,  Kappa  Sigma, 
Alpha  Tau  Omega,  Phi  Gama  Del- 
j  ta,  Theta  Chi,  Zeta  Beta  Tau,  Pi 
I  Kappa  Phi  and  Chi  Phi  fraternities 
i  and  Alpha  Delta  Pi.  Delta  Delta 
j  Delta.  Pi  Beta  Phi,  Chi  Omega, 
i  Alpha  Gamma  Delta,  and  Kappa 
Delta  sororities. 

j      Tickets     for    Y-Nite    will    be    on 
I  sale  in  the  Y  starting  today.  They 
will  remain  on   sale  through  Mon- 
i  day  at  noon. 

I      Committee     members     for     the 
j  event  are  Chairmen  Daryl  Farring- 
ton    and   Graham    Clayton;    Misses  j 
I  Nancetta  Hudson  and  H.  G.  Snipes,  i 
•publicity;     Richard     Rhymes,     ar- ; 
'  rangements;  Bobby  Lowe  and  Rich-  j 
ard    Strickland,    tickets    and    Ed 
Crow.  mu;>'ic  and  entertainment 
OTHER  FEATURES 

Although     the     barbecue    picnic 
will   highlight   the  program,  num- 
erous   other    activities    have    been 
planned  in  connection  with  Y-Nite. 
Monday   and    Tuesday    mornings 


the  Rev.  Kershaw,  will  speak  in 
various  classrooms. 

On  Monday  at  9  a.m.  he  will 
speak  to  the  Music  Appreciation 
.Class  in  Hill  Choral  Room;  and  at 
12  a.m.  he  will  speak  to  the  Ra- 
dio-TV-Motion Pictures  class  in 
Swain  Hall  classroom. 

On  Tuesday  at  8  a.m.  he  will 
speak  to  Music  Appreciation  41  in 
Hill  Hall;  and  at  11  a.m.  he  will 
speak  to  Dr.  Nash's  Religion  30 
class  in  200  Gardner. 

Monday  afternoon  at  1  p.m.  Rev. 
Kershaw  will  again  speak,  this 
time  at  a  luncheon  in  up  stairs 
Lenoir  Hall  which  is  open  to  the 
public.  His  subject  this  time  will 
be  "Alone  in  the  Crowd",  a  sub- 
ject about  which  he  has-  written  a 
well-known    booklet. 

On  Tuesday  at  12:30  p.m.  there 
will  be  a  faculty  and  advisory 
luncheon  in  Lenoir  Hall  in  his  hon- 
or. 

On  Tuesday  evening  at  5:45  p.m. 
a  banquet  in  honor  of  the  new 
YMCA  and  YWCA  officers  will  be 
held.  Rev.  Kershaw  will  speak  on 
"Challenge  to  the  New  Officers". 

The  public  has  been  invited  to 
both  of  these.  Tickets  for  the  ban- 
quet will  be  $1. 


Ain't  It 

(Continued  from  Page  1) 


Y-Teen  Barbecue  Feast 
Brings  Profit  Of  $450 

The  local  Y-Teens  realized  a  net 
profit  of  about  $450  from  their  bar- 
becue supper  Tuesday  night  in  the 
Univei-sity  Tin  Can.  .Mns.  B.  L. 
Ward,  over-all  chairman  for  the 
event,  .said  close  to  LOGO  people, 
including  chiJdreu,  were  present  at 
the  affair. 

All  profiLs  will  go  to  supplement 
(he  budget  for  the  Y-Teens  from  Che 
Community    Chest. 

Mrs.  Ward  wishtnl  to  express  her 
appi-eciation  to  everyone  who  work- 
ed on  the  supper  for  •their  won- 
derful help  and  co-operation." 


Brief  Gunfire 

HELMSTEDT^  Germany— (AP)— 
East  and  West  German  police  ex- 
changed gun  fire  briefly  Thursday. 
Communist  guards  tried  to  stop 
with  bullets  two  Ea^-t  German  work- 
men dashing  across  the  iron  cur- 
tain border. 

West  German  police  said  they 
fired  "warning  shots'  because  the 
East  Germans  fired  in  the  direction 
of  West  German  territory.  The  two 
refugees  slipped  through  barbed 
wire  marking  the  iron  curtain  and 
were  not  hit. 

The  two  men  asked  West  German 
authorities-  for  political   asylum. 

Ministers  Agree 

BONN,  Germany— <AP)— The  15 
NATO  foreign  ministers  agreed 
Thursday  that  the  western  allies 
must  base  their  defense  against  po- 
tential communist  attack  on  a 
balance  between  conventional  and 
nuclear  weapons. 

Even  such  avowed  advocates  of 
atomic  deterrent  as  Britain's  Sel- 
wyn  Lloyd  stressed  the  need  for 
both  conventional  and  atomic 
weapons. 

A  summary  of  closed-door  for- 
eign minister  council  sessions  was 
reported  by  NATO's  briefing  of- 
ficer. He  said  there  was  no  dis- 
agreement among  the  ministers  on 
the   need  for   a   balanced    defense. 

U.S.  Secretary  of  State  Dulles 
assured  the  minis-ters  the  United 
States  has  no  intention  of  backing 
down  on  its  NATO  commitments, 
including  five  full  divisions  in  West 
Germany. 

Five  Kidnapped 

RABAT,  Morocco  —  (AP)  —  Five 
rich  sons  of  the  late  Berber  Chief- 
tan  Th^mi  El  iGlaoui,  Pasha  of 
Marrakech,  were  reported  being 
held  for  ransom  Thursday  night  by 
a  Moroccan  guerrilla  army  which 
stormed  their  Marrakech  Palace. 

Soldiers  of  the  irregular  army  of 
national  liberation  were  holding 
the  vast  palace  and  turning  away 
representatives  of  the  central  gov- 
ernment  at  Rabat. 

Glaoui  while  he  lived,  was  hated 
by  Moroccan  nationalists  because 
he  worked  closely  with  the  French  \ 
wher\  they  ruled  this  country.  The 
army  of  national  liberation  was  of- 
ficially suppl.tnted  by  the  royal 
Moroccan  army  la  .•;  year  when  Sul- 
tan Mohammed  V  was  restored  to 
his  throne.  However,  the  liberation 
army  has  been  operating  freely  in 
parts  of  .Morocco. 

PHI   ETA  SIGMA 

The  membership  certificates  for« 
recent  initiates  into  Phi  Eta  Sig- 
ma hav?  arrived.  They  may  be 
picked  up  in  312  South  Building, 
according  to  Ernest  L.  Mackie, 
dean  of  student  awards.  Phi  Eta 
Sigma  is  a  freshman  honorary  or- 
ganization. 


PEE  WEE  BATTEN 

to  be  featured  in  Y-Nite 

Photo  by  Fred  Powledge 


DAILY    CROSSWORD 


ACROSS 

1  1.  Spill 
j       over 
!  ft.  AppUiud 
9.  Asian 

country 
10.  Intertwined 

12.  Chaos 

13.  Come  in 

14.  Piece  out 

15.  Insane 

16.  Wall 

( Scot. ) 

17.  Music  note 
18  At  a 

distance 

20.  Dress 
border 

21.  Kind  of 
bullet 

23.  Enemies 

24.  Bundles  of 
grain 

26  New  York 

canal 
28.  Capital 

(Maaa.) 

31.  By  way  of 

32.  Bovine 
animals 

33.  Sir  (P.  r.) 

34.  Proaoun 

35.  Coin  (Fr.) 

36.  Kind  of 
trae 

37.  HeaU 
39.  Assumed 

nam* 
41.  Con- 
taminate 
^12.  Sew 

loosely 
*i.  Youths 
44.  Sting 
DOWN 
1.  CockUil 

mixer 
S.  Kxiat 


3.  Biblical 
name 

4.  A   moccasin 

5.  Lucid 

6.  Property 

7.  Perform 

S.  Something 

tiny 
9.  Klintlilte 

rock 
11.  Units  of 

weight 
15.  Large 
stork 

18.  Pain 

19.  Service 
charge 

20.  A  throng 
22.  Continent 


23.  Band 
across 
es- 
cutch- 
eon 
<her.  ( 

25.  Solemn 
promise 

26.  Put 
out 

27.  Code 
of 

cere- 
monies 

29.  A  narcotic 

30.  Scandi- 
navian 

32.  Expenses 
35.  Dispatch 


Frats  Plan  Big  Weekend 


By  SUE  ATCHISON 

TONIGHT  THE  TAU  EPSILON 
PHI'S  begin  their  annual  spring 
houseparty  honoring  senions  with  ' 
a  champaign  party  and  dinner  | 
dance  in  Raleigh.  After  the  din- 
ner dance  they'll  return  to  the 
TEP  house  where  a  combo  will 
entertain    the    brothers  and    their  i 


dates. 

Tomorrow  their  day  will  begin 
with  a  swimming  party  in  Dur- 
ham. Later  in  the  day  in  accord- 
ance with  this  year's  theme — Ca- 
lypso houseparty — they'll  .  have  a 
cabin  party  with  Bruno's  Combo 
playing  Calypso. 

MOST    OF    THE    SIGMA   NU's 


V^ilcrday'i  Answer 

36.  Clenched 
hand 

38.  Narrow 
inlet 

39.  Wai-p-yam 

40.  Mongoloid 
dialect 


To  Preside  At  Library  Meeting 

George  M.  Stephens  of  AsheVille,  shown  above,  will  preside  at 
the  25th  anniversary  dinner  meeting  of  the  Friends  of  the  UNC  Li- 
brary, scheduled  to  be  held  here  Friday,  May  10.  The  organization 
is  dedicated  to  the  growth  and  progress  of  the  Wilson  Library. 


have  gone  to  Myrtle  Beach  for  the 
weekend  to  attend  the  annual 
I  Sigma  Nu  White  Rose  Formal 
I  where  State's  chapter  will  be  host 
I  this  year  to  the  chapter  from 
:  UNC.  Duke  and  USC. 
I  Tonight  the"  festivities  will  get 
I  underway  with  a  combo  and  beach 
party. 

i      Tomorrow   ev'ening   at   their   an- 
nual formal  dance  the  new  White 
Rose  Queen  will  be  crowned  and 
presented  with  a  trophy. 
THE   PHI    KAPPA   SIGMAS   are 
'  having   two   parties  this   weekend. 
I  Several  of  the  brothers  are  going 
i  down  to  Ocean  Drive  for  a  beach 
i  party  and  tonight  there  will  be  a 
I  party  at  their  house  to  christen  a 
new  ice  machme  donated  by  Rob- 
ert   Ruark. 

"APPETIZER"  PARTIES  were 
given  by  the  ADII's  yesterday  and 
Wednesday  in  the  late  afternoon 
Wednesday  their  guests  were  the 
new  initiates  of  AGD.  Chi  O,  and 
I  KD,  while  yesterday  afternoon  the 
i  Pi  Phis  and  Tri  Deltas  were 
guests  at'  their  party. 

TUESDAY  NIGHT  THE  KAPPA 
DELTA'S  gave  a  party  for  all  the 
fraternities  which  helped  them 
gather  the  cigarette  packages 
won  them  their  new  Hi-Fi  .set. 
Punch  and  cookies  were  served 
while  records  played  and  people 
talked. 

MYRTLE  BEACH  is  going  to  be 
the  scene  of  two  Carolina  Beach 
parties  this  weekend.  Both  the  Al 
pha  Gams  and  ATOs  will  leave 
this  afternoon  to  soak  up  some  sun 
down   there. 


GM'S^  SLATE 


in  love  with  a  good  looking  girl 
who  takes  journalism."  he  replied. 
From  tiiis  beginning,  the  former 
sociology  major  soon  found  him- 
self in  the  newspaper  world. 

Ruark  began  his  career  with  a 
job  on  a  Hamlet  newspaper.  The 
job  came  when  the  late  0.  J.  Cof- 
fin, former  head  of  the  UNC 
School  of  Journalism,  told  Ruark 
that  he  had  a  job  "so  bad  he 
didn't  know  anybody  mean  enough 
to  take  it." 

Ruark,  who  has  had  about  750 
magazine  articles  printed  since  1937. 
told  future  writers  that  maga- 
zines are  a  "risky  way  of  making 
a  living.  It  depends  too  much  on 
t)he  editors  digestion  and  how 
he's  getting  along  with  his  wife." 

A  new  Ruark  book  is  now  in  the 
offing,  which  explains  one  reason 
for  the  author's  return  to  the 
Chapel  Hill  area.  He  plans  to  lay 
its  setting  in  Chapel  Hill,  then 
move  to  New  York  and  Europe, 
and  finally  return  it  to  North 
Carolina. 


The     following     activities    are 
I    scheduled   for  graham   Memorial 
today: 


Mclver  Leads 
Dorm  Averages 

Mclver,  women's  dorm,  and  Bat- 
tle-Vance-Pettigrew,  men's  dorm, 
lead  the  various  dormitories  in 
quality  point  averages  for  the 
1956  fall  semester,  according  to 
Raymond  Strong,  Central  Office 
of  Records. 

Mclver's  average  was  1.652, 
and  Battle-Vance-Pettigrew's  was 
1.363. 

Averages  for  the  remaining 
women's  dorms  are:  Spencer. 
1.579;  Smith.  1.555:  Alderman, 
1.539  and  Carr,  1.458.  Quality 
point  averages  for  the  other 
men's  dorms  are:  Whitehead, 
1.354:  Ruffin.  1.346:  Steele,  1.341; 
Old  East,  1.315;  Old  West.  1.303; 
Winston,  1.223;  Manly,  1.195; 
Cobb,  1.181; 

Mangum.  1.169;  Joyner,  1.160; 
Grimes,  1.086;  Alexander,  1.072; 
Everett,  1.059;  Aycock.  1.015: 
Lewis,  .0989;  Graham,  .986:  Stacy 
.980. 


Fencing  Club,  7-11  p.m.  Re- 
land  Parker  Lounges  1,  2,  3;  Tri- 
lota,  10-11  p.m.,  Woodhouse  Con- 
ference Room;  Sociology  Class 
179,  12  noon-i  p.m.,  Rendezvous 
Ro*m;  Whitehead  Med.  Society, 
9:30-10:30  p.m.,  APO   Room. 


NOW  THE  TIME  FOR 
BOOK  COLLECTORS 

During  the  month  of  May  each 
year,  we  buy  in  almost  one  third 
of  our  total  years  supply  01  old 
and  rare  books.  Shelves  that  were 
getting  parched  and  empty  blossom 
out  again  with  tempting  titles. 
Collectors  from  here  and  there 
throughout  the  State  appear,  liKe 
hawks  over  a  chicken  farm  in 
Spring. 

Now's  the  time  when  your  partic- 
ular gem  is  likely  to  shpw  up. 
Now's  the  time  when  somebody 
else  is  likely  to  nick  it  off  if  you're 
napping.  For  in^'tance,  as  this  is 
written,  our  Recent  Acquisitions 
shelf  includes; 

A  Small  Library  of  Philosophy 

A  Rare  Book  on  Oriental  Rugs 

A  Small  Clump  of  Histories 

A  First  Edition  of  Veblen 

A  Collection  of  Prints,  priced  at 
a  dime  each. 

Whafll  show  up  tomorrow  we  do 
not  know.  Its  as  much  of  an  ad- 
ventpre  for  us  as  it  is  for  you. 
Come  join  the  fun! 

THE  INTIMATE 

BOOKSHOP 

205  East  Franklin  Street 
Open  Till  10  P.  M. 


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Studio  will  make  for  you  or  any 
member  of  your  family  one 
BX10    inch    silvertone    portrait. 

Our   regular  $7.50  value. 

Waller  Studio 

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At  Huggin's  beautiful  store  of 
exciting,  useful,  and  unusual 


FAOI  POUI 


THI  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


FRIDAY,  MAY  3,  IWT 


Carolina  Golfers  Take  Lead  In  Southern  College  Tourney 


K 


ING'S 
ORNER 

By  BILL  KING 

DTH  Sports  Editor 


Tar  Heel  Baseballers  And  Desire 

The  pressure  of  the  Atlantic  Coast  Conference  baseball  race  is 
now  hitting  its  peali.  Carolina's  great  victorj'  over  Duke  in  Durham 
Wednesday  has  turned  the  ACC  into  a  two-team  race  between  the 
two  schools,  a  race  that  should  go  right  down  to  the  wire. 

Th«  •xtr»-inning  win   over    tht   Blu«  D«vils  -was'  th*  finest 
thing  that  could   hav*  happened  to  Walt  Rabb's  courageous  Tar 
Heels.  Not  only  did  It  mean  a  tie  for  first  place,  but  it  showed 
the  Blue  Devils  and  the  rest  of  the  league  that  desire  is  a  tremend- 
ous factor  in  this  game  of  basebell. 
The  Tar  Heels  are  nothing  outstanding.  They  don't  have  any  real 
power  hitters.  They    are  good  on  defense  but  not  great.   Only  Jim 
Raugh  could  be  considered  a  "big"  pitcher.   But  Walt  Rabb  has  on 
his  ball  team  a  group  of  boys  who  don't  know  the  word  "quit."  The 
Tar  Heels  simply  have  that  spark  which  can  ignite  a  pretty  fair  team 
to  the  top.  They  have  proved  this  many  times  throughout  the  season. 
There  is  no  end  to  the  amount  of  credit  that  can  be  given 
Coach  Rabb.  The  friendly  Tar  Heel  chieftian  has  worked  patiently 
and  dilligently  with  his  club.  He  has  juggled  his  lineup  time  and 
again  to  come  up  with  a  winning  combination  and,  so  far,  he  has 
done  wonders. 

Great  Finish  To  Be  Expected 

Both  Duke  and  Carolina  now  have  three  conference  games  left. 
The  rest  of  the  league  probably  doesn't  care  who  wins  the  title,  but 


Sugar  Ray 
Will  Wait 

CHICAGO— <*v— Sugar  Ray  Robin- 
ison  is  sitting  on  top  of  the  world 
lagain,  but  he  doesn't  want  to  t>e 
rushed  into  a  potential  million  dol- 
lar match  Mith  welterweight  cham- 
pioo  Carmen  Ba&ilio  after  his  stun- 
ning knockout  of  Gene  Follmer. 

The  recrowned  middleweight 
champion  and  his  numerous  hand- 
lers pires.ided  at  a  news  conference 
in  his  hotel  room  after  Robinson 
had  visited  a  Catholic  seminary  in 
Suburban  Westmont,  111. 

E<arilteT  surmisal  that  Robinsod 
and  Basilio  would  meet  in  a  mid- 
July  bout,  possibly  at  Yankee  Sta- 
dium, got  a  dasli  of  cold  water 
from  Robinson. 

"It's  no  good  in  July,"  said  Rob- 
inson, without  conceding  he  was 
anxious  to  make  tliis  big  money 
!bout.  "Everybody  is  out  of  town. 
You  draw  better  in  September." 

Tliat  there  vvill  be  prolonged  wran- 
igling  o\er  terms  is  obvions. 

Said  Joe  Glaser,  Robinson's  "fin- 
ancial" manaiger.  "Basilio  niust  be 
made  to  realize  that  Robinson  is 
holding  a   royal  flush." 

George  Gainford,  Sugar  Ray's  just 
fiain  "adviser,"  pointed  at  Robin- 
son and  said,  "this  is  the  world's 
greatest  attraction  in  boxing." 

In  his  appearance  at  the  seminary 


it  will  be  throwing  its  best  pitchers  against  the  top  two  teams.  The 

co-leaders  will" likewise  be  gonig  with  their  very  best.  ACC  fans  can  •  ^''^^"son  visited  with  a  Franciscan 

count  on  some  teriffic  ba.-eball  from  here  out.  Both  teams  will  have  ,  P>'i«^'=t.  Rev.  Jovian  Lang,  whom  Su- 

to  improvise,    but   the   Tar  Heels  proved   that   improvisions   can    be  ;"^^  Ray  described  a^  'a  vei-y  dear 

pretty  effective  as  they  used  four  pitchers  against  the  Blue  Devils  ,^P^*"^-  «"ho  gave  vae  spiritual  help 

Wednesday. 

As  for  the  scheduie^jCerolina  has  games  remaining  with  Wake 
Forest,  N.  C.  State  and  a  game  that  was  rained  out  with  Maryland. 
The  latter  will  be  played  only  if  necessary, to  decide  the  champion- 
ship. It  is  pretty  definite  then,  that  this  gan>e  will  be  played.  The 
Blue  Devils  play  Maryland  and  Virginia  this  weekend  and  close 
out  the  season  tgvinst  State. 
It  would  seeni  that  Duke  has  the*  easier  schedule,  but  the  Tar 
Heels  will  have  time  for   more   rest,   since   their  games   are   pretty 


Buck  Adams 
Leads  With 
Fine  74 

Carolina's  Buck  Adams  fired  a 
35-39  total  of  74  to  take  the  lead 
in  the  first  round  of  the  Southern 
Intercollegiate  Golf  Tournament  in 
Athens,  Ga.  yesterday. 

Another  Carolina  linksman,  Walt 
Summerville  was  only  one  stroke 
behind  Adams  at  75.  Tied  for 
fourth  place  are  Carolina's  Bobby 
Langley  and  Gene  Lookabill  with 
79's. 

The  strong  Tar  Heels  thus  hold 
almost  complete  dominance  over 
the  rest  of  the  field  competing  in 
the  Athens  tournament  which  goes 
into  the  second  round  thi^'  after- 
noon. Tuffy  Henderson  and  Sara 
Patrick  had  81  and  82  respective- 
ly for  the  Tar  Heels. 
Adams,  Carolina,  35-39—74 

Summerville,  Carolina.  38-37 — 75 
Gerring,  Wake  Forest,  42-36—78 
Ogilvie,  Wake  Forest.  41-37—78 
Langley,  Carolina.  37-42—79 

Lookabill,  Carolina,  39-40—79 

Sapp,  Wake  Forest,  41-37—79 

George,  Wake  Forest.  43-37— -80 
Henderson,  Carolina,  43-38 — 81 
Patrick,  Caroliha.  41-42—63 

James,  Wake  Forest,  41-37—78 
Patton,  Carolina,  44-40—84 

Walters,  Pfeiffer,  43-39— «2 

Clayton,  Wake  Forest,  "  43-4a-«3 
Helms,  Wake  Forest.         41-40—81 


Dropo  H  its  Grand  Slam 

That  tied  tije  store  at  1-1  after 
Chicago  scored  a  first  inning  run  on 
Luis  Aparierio's  double  and  Nellie 
Fox's  single. 

All  the  passion 
and  suspense  of  the 
gripping  best-seller! 


CHICAGO  — o!V~  PLich-hitter  WaJt 
Dropo's  grand  slam  homer  off 
!  Chuck  Stobbs  in  tl«?  sixth  swirled 
the  pace-se'tins  CUcago  White  Sox 
to  their  10th  triumph  in  12  starts 
with  a  6-1  decision  over  the  Wash- 
ington  Senators   yesterday. 

Dropo's  big  clout  broke  up  a  duel 
between  Stobbs.  who  beat  the  Pale 
five  times  last  season,  and  Chica- 
go's Dick  Donovan,  who  finally  not- 
ched his  first  victory  in  three  starts 
with  a  five-hitter. 

A  tough  break  for  Stobbs  was  sec- 
ond baseman  Herb  Plew's  fumble 
of  a  double  play  ball  which  set  the 
wheels  in  motion  for  the  big  Sox 
5i.vth. 

Only  Wasliington  run  off  Donovan 
was  Roy  Siever's  No.  5  homer  lead- 
ing off  the  serond. 


Rod  And  Gun  Winner 

Pictured  alwve  are  the  winners  of  the  Rod  fnd  Gun  Field  Meet 
between  Carolina  and  State.  They  are  (left  to  right).  Bob  Waynick 
(State)  target  rifle  event,  Charlie  Bowan  (Carolina)  archery,  Jerry 
Hagler  (State)  bait  catting,  and  Gay  Cowan  (Carolina)  trap  shooting. 


during  my  Citicago  visit." 

Gilaser  said  his  advice  to  Robin- 
son was  to  "relax  and  rest  awhile." 
Ray's  handlers  said  he  had  receiv- 
ed phone  offers  ior  bouts  in  Eng- 
liuid.  France  and  Italy.  But  all  con- 
ceded the  Basilio  match  is  the  only 
one  that  will  <k<aw  monej'. 

Robinson  was  to  leave  on  a  late 


By  TOMMY  JOHNSON 


Orientation  To  Be  Held 
Next  Year  For  Graduates 

For  the  first  time,  the  graduate 
students  will  undertake  an  .orien- 
tation program  for  incoming  grad- 
uate  students  similar   to  the  one  , 

now  conducted  for  undergraduate  j  *^^^^-'    T^    shooimg 
e«..^«„.»  rifle  at   the   Durham    W 


Carolina-State  Battle 
To  Tie  In  Rod  And  Gun 


<^eleb^ate  what  be  says  is  his  36th 
.bLrthday,  but  which  the  record  booik 
sa\-s  is  Ms  37th. 

Sugar  Ray  said  he  thought  a  right 
to  the  body  just  before  was  a  better 
punch  than  the  whistling  left  ■which 
knocked  out  Fullmer  in  1:27  of  the 
fifth  round  at  the  Chicago  Stadium. 


well  spaced.  Thus,  all  things  considered,  this  should  be  one  of  the  i  ^'^^™**°°  ^""^  ^  ^^  ^^^^^  «« 
ben  baseball  finishes'  in  the  history  of  the  Atlantic  Coast  Conference    ^^  ^  '^'^  ^  "^^"^  <«"^»^  ^« 

Great  Day  For  Sugar  Ray 

Sugar  Ray  Robinson  will  probably  celebrate  the  greatest  birth 
day  of  his  career  today  for  he  is  once  again  middleweight  champion 
of  the  world  —  a  title  which  he  held  one  year  ago,  but  lost  back  in 
January. 

The  Sugar  nun,  wtMse  great  foot  work  may  be  attributed 
in  part  to  his  dancing  ability,  proved  to  the  world   that  age  is 
not  an  •U/niiMting  factor  in  the  ring  game.  The  3V2-1  underdog 
srmpfy  ovei  wiielined  Qmnm   Fuftnwr  Wednesday  nighT  witft   one 
vicious  left  lieolc  to  the  jaw  which  sent  Fulinter  sprawling  to  the 
canvas  for  the  first  time  in  his  career.  This  was  the  fourth  time 
that  Robinson  had  won  the  middleweight  title. 
The  fight  meant   a  great   deal  to  Robinson   financially   too.   He 
probably  will  not  make  much  on  the  fight  after  his  back  taxes  have 
been  paid,  but  with  the  tax  problem  out  of  the  way,  he   can   start 
looting  toward  receipts  from  his  proposed  match  with  welterweight 
champ  Carmen  Basilo  in  July.  _ 

For  the  25  year  old  Fullmer,  it  was  a  devasating  blow.  The 
husky  fellow  from   Utah    never    really   knew  what   happened.    But 
Fullmer  is  young  and  he  has  tasted  the  riches  of  being  a  champ. 
The  two  will  fight  again,  probably  early  in  the  fall,  and  this  time 
it  will  be  Fullmer  who  will   have  to  prove  himself. 
For  both  fighters,   it  will   mean   more   money.   Should    Fullmer 
come  back  with  a  win,  then  the  two  will  fight  again.  This  could   go 
on  for  some  time,  enhancing  the  financial  status  of   each  consider- 
ably,       • 

"Colonel  Muliis"  Back  To  Europe 

Pete  Muliis.   one   of  Carolina's  most   popular  physical   education 
instructors,  is  looking  forward  to  seven  wonderful  days  this  summer. 
The  humorous  ex-star  athlet  and  basketball  coach  leaves  here 
June  14th  for  a  trip  to  Germany  where  he  will  be  one  of  two    ' 
Americans  assisting  in  the  building  of  an  athletic  program  for 
service  personel  In  Nurnberg. 

Muliis,   now   associate   professor  of   physical   education,  will 
have  the  rank  of  Colonel  for  the  assignment.  He  will  be  in  Ger- 
many from  Jun#  i4th  until  July  5th. 
The  smiling  litUe  fellow,  who  could  probably  match  Casey  Stengel 
in  double-talk,  is  no  stranger  to  Europe.  He  went  over  in  1954  on  a 
tour.   "It  was  a   wonderful  experience,"  Muliis  declared  yesterday" 
and  I  am  really  looking  forward  to  my  return  trip  next  month." 

Miscellaneous 

Who  i&  the  biggest  pitcher  in  the  ACC?  Our  guess  would  be 
Herb  Busch  of  Virginia.  Busch  is  6-7  and  weights  245  pounds  .  .  . 
The  Carolina  spring  football  roster  lists  53  men  of  which  22  are  letter- 
•nen.  The  Tar  Heel  co-captains  for  next  season  are  Dave  Reed  and 
Buddy  Payne  .  .  .  Nothing  has  been  learned  yet  as  to  whether  or  not 
'"arolina  track  star,  Jim  Beatty  will  run  against  Duke  Saturday.  Beatty 
is  suffering  from  an  instep  injury. 

The  Duke  baseball  team  has  three  men  hitting  around  .425  this 
season.  They  are  Dave  Sime,  Pete  Maynard,  and  Lon  Bonczek  .  .  .  Len- 
nie  Rosenbluth'3  former  roommate  and  manager  of  the  team  in  '56, 
Bud  Lubin  will  be  Lennie's  best  man.  Rosenbluth,  incidentally,  was 
selected  on  over  6  Ail-American  teams  this  season  .  .  .  Sophomore 
trackman,  Dave  Scurlpck  is  already  being  considered  for  the  I960 
Olympics. 


students. 

It  was  announced  Wednesday 
that  a  brief  training  session  for 
graduate  orientation  counselors 
will  be  conducted  between  now 
and  final  exams. 

Bob  Rennick,  Chapel  Hill,  will 
be  chairman  of  the  group.  Bill 
Deaton,  Statesville;  Tom  Don- 
nell,  ChaperHill;  Bob  Crain,  Lou- 
isville, Ky.;  Helen  Hawfield  and 
Eleanor  Riggins.  Knoxville.  Tenn. 
will  serve  with  Rennick  on  the 
committee. 


Freshman  Track  Team 
BeatsState,  86^2-44^2 


I  "Caix)lina  and  State  Rod  and  Gun 
I  men  battled  to  a  tie  Wedi>esday  as 
!  they  comix'ted  in  archery,  bait 
and  target 
Qdlife  Club 
.\rea.  Carolina  took  first  in  archery 
and  trap  .shooting  and  State  iirat 
in  Target  rifle  and  bait  casting. 

Gay  Cowan  of  Carolina  shot  an 
amazing  23  out  of  a  possible  25  in 
the  trap  shooting  event  to  taVe  fi±st 
place.  William  Crutchfield  was  close 
behind  Cowan  witii  a  22  and  Clete 
Oakley  tied  State's  Lanny  Moore 
with  21  each. 

Charlie  Bowan  of  Carolina  .scored 
a  tofcal  of  216  p5iivts  Ln  arrhery  to 
edge  out  State's  Thomtis  Wood  who 
scored  215  points.  Seotty  Hester  and 
IVomniy  Helms  of  OaroUna  pSiaced 
third  and  fourth,  resp<>ctively. 
Jerry   Haigler  of   State   won   first 

Hoak  Recalls 


By  DAVE  WIBLE 

Lee  Shaffer,  star  pivot  man  on 
last  season's  freshman  basketball 
squad,  showed  what  is  meant  by  his 
natural  nickname,  "Leaping  Lee" 
Tuesday  night  at  State  College 
when  he  set  a  new  Carolina  fresh- 
man high  jump  record  of  six  feet 
as  the  undefeated  Tar  Baby  track 
team  took  their  second  win  of  this 
season  over  the  Wolflets  of  State 
86M:-44'^. 

Cowles  Liapfert,  who  usually  runs 
the  mQe  for  the  Carolina  yearlings, 
had  a  near  miss  on  another  Carolina 
freshman  r^ecord  when  he  ran  a 
1:56.8  half-mile.  Varsity  speedster 
Da\e  Scju-lock  set  the  pfresent  rec- 
ord (1:55.8)  last  year. 

Ward  Sims  was  the  leading  point 
getter  for  the  little  Heels  with  two 


MURALS   TODAY 

Softball:  (4:00)  Zeta  Psl  (4-0)  rec- 
ord and  DKE  (4-0)  will  play  for  the 
intramural  champtonsliip  of  the  frat- 
ernity white  division  on  field  1. 

Tennis:  (3:00)  Slg  Chi  vs.  Phi 
Gam;  (4:00)  SAE  vs.  Phi  Gam  (W). 


firsts,  the  pole  vault  (HV)  and  the 
low  hurdles  (26.2). 

Outstanding  men  in  tlie  field 
events  were  Charlie  Cotton,  wlw 
won  the  shot  put  with  a  42'7^t" 
I  heave;  and  Robert  Cooke,  who  took 
the  top  spot  in  the  javlin  competi- 
tion with  a  178'4>^5"  toss. 

The  Tar  Babies  will  join  the  var- 
sity this  Satiu-day  for  their  next 
meet  when  they  face  the  Blue  Imps 
of  Duke. 

The  Sumonary: 

lOO— Teasley  (S).^  10.2.  220— Teas- 
ley  (S).  23.3.  440— Crockett  (S).  no 
time.  ^80— Uipfert  (C),  1:56.8.  Mile 
—Arthur  (C),  4:42.2.  2-!VIUe-Cbap. 
pell  (C>.  10:21.  High  Hurdles— Glas- 
cock (CI,  15.8.  Low  Hurdles— Sims 
(C),  26.2.  Hi^  Jump— Shaffer  (C). 
6'.  New  North  Carolina  freshman 
rec-ord.  Broad  Jxnnp— Andrews  (C), 
Pole  Vault— Sims  (C),  11'.  Shot  Put 
-<:otton  (C).  42'7V^".  Javlin— Cooke 
iC),  178'4'/2".  Discus— O'Neal  (C), 
123'3".  Mile  Relay— North  Carolma 
State,  3:33.9. 


Free  Flicks 

Graham  Memorial  Activities 
Board  will  sponsor  free  flicks  to- 
night and  tomorrow  night  at  7:30 
p.m.  and  10  p.m.,  in  Carroll  Hall. 

"South  Sea  Woman,"  starring 
Burt  Lancaster  and  Virginia 
Mayo,  will  be  shown  today.  "Peo- 
ple Will  Talk,"  starring  Jeanne 
Crain   and    Cary    Grant,    will    be 


ike  Gives  Up 


YOUNG   REPUBLICANS 

The    Young    Republicans    Club 
WASHTNGTON  —  (AP)  —  Presi-t  will  have  a  picnic  tomorrow  at  3 


shown   tomorrow. 


UNC-Duke  Track  Meet 

Duke  'and  Carolina  meet  here  Sat- 
lirday  in  what  is  annually  one  of 
the  outdoor  track  meets  of  tlie  sea; 
son. 

Although  Maryland  has  taken  ov- 
er team  domination  of  the  Atlantic 
Coast  Conference  from  the  Tar 
Heels  and  Blue  Devils,  the  meet 
still  has  generated  considena/ble  in- 
terest. 

The  Tar  Heels,  upset  by  Vinginia 
•in  their  last  outing,  will  be  out  to 
raise  their  dual  naeet  record  to  4-2. 


dent  Eisenhower  Thiirsday  gave  up 
on  Egypt,  Syria  and  Jordan  as  par- 
ticipants at  this  time  in  his  mili- 
tary-economic plan  for  combatting 
Middle  East  communism. 

The  precedent  called  home  his 
special  ambassador,  James  P. 
Richards,  choosing  not  to  have,  him 
mark  time  waiting  for  invitations 
to  visit  these  three  Arab  countries. 

The  invitations  seemed  unlikely 
to  be  forthcoming.  All  three  na- 
tiMis  had  made  dear  they  took  a 
dim  view  of  the  Eisenhower  reso- 
lution and  ito  200  .milUon  ready 
dollars.  Each,  in  its  own  way,  had 
cold  shouldered  Richnrds, 


p.m.  All  members  have  been  in- 
vited to  attiend  and  bring  a  friend. 
All  those  needing  a  ride  have 
been  asked  to  be  in  Roland  Park- 
er Lounge  2  by  2:30  p.m.  Satui^ 
day. 

FTA  BANQUET 

The  annual  Future  Teachers  of 
America  banquet  will  be  .held 
Friday,  May  10,  in  Lenoir  Hall  at 
6  p.m.  Dr.  Robert  Seymour  will 
be  the  speaker]  Tickets  for  the 
event  are  on  sale  in  Y  Court  for 
$1.50.  All  persons  Interested  in 
education  have  been  invited  to  at- 
tend, according  to  an  announce- 
ment. 


BIKES 
FOR  RENT 


Carolina  Mower  Service 


Across  From  Fire  Slation 

$.50  Per  Hour 
$1.50Per  Half  Day 


NEW  YORK-4iP>— May  2  is  a  day 
Don  Hoak  thought  he  would  always 
like  to  forget.  Now  it's  one  he'd  like 
to  remember,  too. 

The  Cffvcinnali  tliird  baseman  yes- 
terday bombed  New  York  pitching 
for  three  singles  and  a  homer,  driv- 
ing in  five  runs,  including  the  win- 
ning pair  in  the  ninth  inning  for  a 
9-7  Cincinnati  victory  o\er  the 
Giants. 

A  year  ago  against  thoM?  same 
New  York  Ciants.  Hoak  tied  a  ma- 
jor league  recoixl  for  futility  when 
he  fanned  si.\  times  in  a  17-inning 
game. 

The  Giants  equalled  a  Nationa!) 
League  recoixi  j-estei-day  but  it  did 
not  do  them  much  good.  They  i^eel- 
ed  off  six  double  plays. 

Hoaks  final  hit,  a  single  through 
the  middle,  .came  with  (he  bases 
loaded  and  none  out.  He  scored 
Frank  RObui.son  and  Bob  Thurman. 
Robinson,  who  liad  lashed  out  three 
hits,  was  hit  by  Grissom,  fifth  and 
losing  pitcher,  to  start  off  the  big  in- 
ning. Thurman  walked  and  then  Ed 
Bailey  beat  out  a  bunt  to  load  the 
Ijases. 

Hershell  Freeman,  third  and  last 
of  t'he  Cincinnati  pitcliers,  was  the 
winner.  He  came  into  the  gaime  in 
the  seventh  after  Gail  Harris  hit  a 
homer  off  Don  Gxxjss  to  tie  tJie 
score,   7-7. 


WHY 

Throw  Away  Those 
Old  Worn-Out  Slacks? 

L«t  us  convert  them  into  ber- 
muda  shorts.  We  -will  take  out 
the  pleats,  end  make  you  a 
real  ivy  league  pair  of  Ber- 
mudas, complete  with  beck- 
strap.  All  at  a  price  so  low 
that  you  won't  believe  it. 

PETE 

THE  TAILOR 

"Specieiizing  in 

Ivy   Leagu^izing" 


place  in  bait  tasting  with  a  66. 
Bobby  ErnuU  also  of  State  scored 
a  60.  Rufus  Hackney  of  Carolina 
was  third  with  a  42. 

Bob  Waynick  of  State  scored  189 
out  of  a  possible  200  in  the  target 
rifle  to  take  top  honors.  William  B. 
Punny  of  State  and  John  Crawford 
of  Carolina  scored  179  to  tie  for  sec- 
ond place.  Lewis  Pi-ice  of  Carolina 
had  a  177  total  to  place  fourth. 

Rufus  Hackney,  .^s^stant  Direc- 
tor of  Intramurals  at  Carolina,  and 
Bill  Pangle.  AssLstant  at  State, 
termed  the  event  a  success.  The 
meet  will  be  held  on  a  Big  Four 
basis  next  year. 

Mr.  Jim  Coble  and  the  Durham 
Wildlife  Club  donated  time  and  fa- 
cilities in  order  to  make  the  event 
a  success.  S^.  Lanier,  NROTC  in- 
structor here  at  Carolina,  was  in 
charge  of  target  rifle. 


Don  Lee  In 
First  Win. 


DETROIT— i;!V-Rookie  righthand- 
er Don  Lee  cajkured  his  first  ma- 
jor league  vlctoi-y  j'esterday  when 
'J,e  Detroit  Tigers  scored  fi\e  rmis 
on  .lust  two  hits  in  a  wild  fourtli 
inning  and  defeated  tlie  Boston  Red 
Sox  7-5.  t 

Lee,  son  of  former  major  league 
pitcher  Thornton  Lee.  needed  relief 
help  from  southpaw  Al  Aber.  Jim 
Bunning  and  Steve  Gromek  over  tlie 
last  inning  and  a  third  to  pi-eserve 
the  decision.  The  23-year-i)id  new- 
comer, less  tl»an  a  year  off  tiie  cam- 
pus of  Arizona  University,  yielded 
four  Boston  runs  and  eight  safeties 
before  he  was  lifted  in  the  eighth 
•Aihen  the  Red  Sox  scored  one  run. 

Two  walks,  an  interference  call. 
a  wild  pitch  and  two  extra  ba.se 
hits— one  of  them  a  thi-ee-mn  hom- 
er by  Charley  Maxwell — enabled  the 
Tigers  to  push  over  five  runs  off 
starter  Tcm  Brewer  in  the  fourth. 


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your  losrf  when  a  text  is 
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•  Enjoyable  Books 

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JOHN  KERR  MICNELE  MORGAN 


THeVINTAae 


^  :»»»>:»  |«  CiNaMScoft  Mil  METROCOLO«,t..< 


Carolina 


LAST  TIMES 
TODAY 


Howard  Johnson  Restcurant 

STUDENT    SPECIALS  , 

Barbecued    Chicken 
Choice  Steak  Sandwiches 

2:00-    5:00  P.M. 
SERVED  8:00-11:00  P.M. 

''Landmark  For  Hungry  Tarheels" 


JQwk's 
a 

with  his  new  ^ 

^     SONIC 

Ever  since  Jack  bought  his  new 
Sonic  CAPRI  phonograph  at  the 
local  college  store  —  he's  become 
the  biggest  B  M  O  C  ever.  You 
can  join  hint  and  be  the  biggest  ever, 
too,  for  you  can  buy  a  CAPRI 
phonograph  for  as  little  as  $19.95. 

This  month's  special  is  the  CAPRI 

550  —  a  twin  speaker  high 

fidelity  portable  with  4-$peed 

Webcor  automatic  changer, 

hi-fi  amplifier  in  attractive 

two-tone  Forest  Green.       only  *59'* 

ot  your  local  daalar. 

SONIC  INDUSTRIES,  INC.  M  9  Wilbur  Stroof,  lynbrook,  N.  Y. 


See   Our  Complete   Line  Of 
SONIC   PHONOGRAPHS 

BELK  -  LEGGETT  -  HORTON 


WEATHER 


tJ  N   C  LI3:^AHY 
SERIALS   DEPT. 

.  CH^.PFL   HrMi..^.    C. 
8-31-49 


Partly  Cloudy     with  chanc*     of 
*howor$.  High  of  68  expected. 


VOL.  LVII,  NO.  179 


STar  Mtd 


Memo 

The  editor  gives  one  to  Presidont 
Eisenhower  -on  page  two. 


Complete  {Jf)  Wire  Service 


CHAPEL  HILL,  NORTH  CAROLINA,  SATURDAY,  MAY  4,  1957 


Officet  in  Graham  Memcrial 


FOUR   PAGES   TH' 


=«U« 


news 

m 
brief 


Hopkins  Dies 

WASHINGTON—  (AP)  —John 
Jay  Hopkins.  63,  board  chairman  of 
General  Dynamics  Corp..  died  yes- 
terday at  Georgetown  Universi- 
ty hospital.  He  was  suffering  from 
cancer. 

Hcpkins  entered  the  hospital 
last  Saturday.  He  had  become  ill 
while  returning  to  his  Washing- 
ton home  from  a  California  trip. 

General  Dynamics,  through  a 
subsidiary,  built  the  first  atomic 
submarine,  the  NautHus. 

Turbulent  Volcano 


N.  C.  Solons  Lend  Support 
For  No  Tuition  Increase 


Public   Health   Grant 
Given  Dental  School 


The  National  Institute  of  Health 
of  the  U.  S.  Public  Health  Service 
has  granted  S2.000  to  Dr.  J.  Wil- 
fred Gallagher,  professor  of  per- 
•odontology  and  oral  pathology  and 
dierctor  of  the  curriculum  of 
dental  hygiene  of  the  University 
of  North  Carolina  School  of  Den- 
BONN,  Germany  — ( AP)— N.4T0  ;  tistry. 
leaders  warned  yesterday  that  a  |  This  money  is  to  be  used  for  a 
turbulent  volcano  in  Eastern  Ger-  j  pjiot  study  of  actinomycetes  micro- 
many  threatens  peace  if  the  people  ;  organisms  and  their  relationship  to 
there  are  kept  in  Soviet  servitude.  :  the  disease  proce.-,es  of  the  tissues 

U.  S.  Secretary  of  State  Dulles  j  around  the  teeth, 
and  West  German  Foreign  Minis- 
ter Heinrich  Von  Brentano.  mem- 
bers of  the  N^rth  Atlantic  Treaty 
Council  strongly  appealed  to  Rus- 
sia to  release  the  East  Germaivs 
into  a  free  and  reunified  Gcrmanv 


Co-inve.stigators  of  this  pilot 
study  are  Dr.  Abraham  Widra,  in- 
structor of  mycology,  and  James 
Crawford,  graduate  student  and  re- 
search assistant,  both  of  the  De- 
partment of  Bacteriology  in  the 
At  the  same  time  the  NATO  |  School  of  Medicine  here. 
minister.>  warned  the  re.stless  pop- 1  The  constant  incidence  of  these 
ulation  of  East  Germany  against  I  organisms  in  salivary  calculuc-  in 
any  "imprudence"  which  could  pocket  areas  around  the  teeth 
only  increase  their  sufferings,  and  |  where   inflamatory   conditions   are 


DR.  J.  W.  GALLAGHER 

.   .   .  receires  grant 


The  Charlotte  Observer  s  General  Manager,  J.  E.  Dowd,  is  shown 
above  greeting  the  busload  of  students  from  the  School  of  Journal- 
ism who  went  to  Charlotte  as  guests  of  the  Observer  Thursday.  Ac- 


Observer's  Dowd  Greets  Journalism  Group         ' 

companying  the  students  was  Dean  Nerval  Neil  Luxon  of  the  Journ- 
alism Dept.,  shown  standing,  second  from  right.  .     f 

« i 


Journalism   Students 
Visit  Charlotte  Paper 


Thirty  students   and  six   faculty.      Dean    Luxon    has   indicated   that 
jnrm|]ors  from  the  School  ot  Journ-    trips    to     newspapers     throughout , 
alism  were  guests  of  the  Charlotte    the  state  may   become   a   perman'i 
Observer   Thursday  in   a  dti^ -long   suit  feature  in  the  jouiriaUsin  pro*i 
program  designed     to     orient     the^ 


Logical  Relation: 
Religion  And  Jjazz 


school  and  students  to  variou.s ' 
phases  of  newspaper  operation.  I 
Dean  Nerval  Neil  Luxon  and  his  ■ 
group  were  taken  to  Charlotte  by 
bus  to  participate  in  a  program  of 
afternoon  talks  by  the  heads  of  the 
news,  advertising,  circulation,  pro- 
motion  and    business    departments 


of  the  largest  paper  in  the  Caro- .  after    completed    the    last    pha^e 


linas. 


By   MARY  MOORE  MASON        ,  on   the  $64,000  question   quiz  pro- 
If-  you   had    to  connect  'any   two  I  gram.  ~* 

gram  in  the  future.  He  expressed  ?  subjects.  wTiich  two  would  you  i  As  long  as  he  can  remember, 
his  belief  in  the  success  ani .  think  of  as  being  the  two  most  il- j  Kershaw  has  been  interested  in 
value  of  the  pro,t;ram  to  both  the  logical  to  relate?  Would  it  be  re- 1  jazz.  Born  in  Louisville.  Kentucky, 
School    of    Journalism      and      the  'igJon  and  jazz"*  j  he    heard   some    of    the    real    New 

newspaper    organization    itself.  To  the  Rev.  A.  L.   Kershaw,  dy     Orleans   music   on   the   Ohio   River 

The  visitinii  group  was  enter- '  "^"li''  speaker  for  the  forthconv  |  excursion  boats  as  a  boy.  While 
tained  at  dinner  at  the  Elks  club  ^ '"g  Y-Nite  program,  the  connection  |  studying  theology  at  the  Univcr- 
followin"    the    afternoon    discu.ss-   i-    one    of   the    most    logical    ones,  i  sity  of  the  South  and  at  the  Uni- 

For,  Rev.  Kershaw  says,  jazz  offers  versity  of  Chicago,  he  became  in- 
"release  for  the  suppressed  cry  f or  j  creasingly  interested  in  the  rela- 
human  identity.  It  does  not  look  at  tionship  between  religious  faith  and 
the  world  sentimentally  or  cynical- 1  the  cultural  expressions  of  it  in 
ly.  but  the  context  of  deep  feeling 'the  arts,  including  jazz, 
in  jazz  is  faith  and  trust,  an  affir- 1  The  Rev.  Kershaw,  now  rector 
mation  that  for  all  lifes  sorrow  j  of  All  Saints  Parish.  Peter-, 
M.  Pollander,  Stuart  sn^l  ambiguity,  yet  life  is  good.       j  borough.  N.  H.,  is  well-known  not 


lions  of   the   operation    and   there- 


of the  program  following  the  me- 


SAYS  FACULTY  COMMITTEE 


General  Manager  J.  E.  Dowd,  Ed-  j  chanical    operations    of    the    news- 
itor   C.    A-   McKnight,    .Advertising !  paper. 

Manager  R.  J.  Alander,  Circula- :  Visiting  faculty  members  are 
tion  Manager  J.  G.  Ward,  Promo- |  William  S.  Caldweli.  Joseph  L. 
tion  Director  Dave  Henes  and  Con-    Alorrison.   L 

troller  Frank  H.  Trull  led  discuss-    W.    Sechriest,    Walter    Spearman, 
ion  periods  on  the  several  phases  [  and   Dean   Norval   Neil   Luxon. 
of  newspaper  work.  Visiting     undergraduates     were 

The  purpose  of  the  trip  as  indi-  ^  Charles  G.  Ashby  Jr.,  Elkin;  1 532,000  winner  in  the  Jazz  Category 
cated  by  spokesmen  lor  the  news- ,  Woods  G.  Atkins,  Gastonia;  Char- 1  ' 
paper  was  two-fold:  (1)  to  orienllles  M.  Johnson.  Lenoir;  John  W. 
the  School  of  Journalism  to  the  Kilgo  and  Winifred  Martin,  Char- 
opsration  and  capacities  of  the  lotte;  Alice  Joan  McLean,  Weaver- 
newspaper  and  (2)  to  interest  I  ville;  Rosa  Mae  Moore.  Battleboro; 
journalism  graduates  in  consider- 1  Eleanor  Rush.  Asheboro:  Donald 
ing   positions  with   the  Observer.    [  M.    Seaver.    Charlotte;    John    Ken 

Editor  McKnight.  Dowd,  Aland- :  neth  Clark.  Chapel  Hill. 
er  and  Ward  pointed  out.  during ,  Thomas  M.  Byrd.  Mount  Olive; 
the  course  of  their  talks  with  the  John  D.  Ashford.  Scotland  Neck; 
group,  the  extreme  interest  news-  Stanley  Brennan,  Chapel  Hill: 
papers  today  are  taking  in  locat- 1  William  P.  Cheshire.  Hillsboro; 
ing  college  graduates,  particular- '  Jacquelire  Haithcock.  Kannapolis; 
ly  journalism  students  in  their  de-  Walter  D.  Merritt  Jr..  Hickory; 
partments  and  over-all  operations.  >      (See  JOURNALISM.  Page  3) 


And  the  Rev.  Kershaw  should  only  as  being  an  expert  on  jazz, 
know  what  he  is  talking  about  be-  producer  and  director  of  a  movie 
cause  he  was  not  too  long  ago  the   on  jazz;  editor  of  the  commentary    Charles    Brown   abruptly   quit    the 


might  touch  off  global  conflict  if 
they  attempted  a  Budapest  -  type 
revolt. 

Churchill  Blasts  U.  N. 

LONDON— ( AP )— S  i  r  Winston 
Churchill.  82  and  still  brimming 
with  vigor  bounced  back  into  the 
political  arena  .yesterday  with  a 
speech  backing  the  invasion  of 
Suez,  and  criticizing  U.  N.  actions 
in  that  crisis. 

An  oifgan  thundered  'Land  of 
Hope  and  Glory"  and  6.000  Con- 
servatives packing  the  Royal  Al- 
bert Hall  raised  the  roof  with  ap- 
l>lause  fur  the  former  prime  min-  i 
Isfer  making  hi.<;  fir.st  public  ad- 
dress in  a  year. 

The  tough  old  warrior  was  near 
to  tears  as  he  stood  with  head 
bowed  during  the  cheering.  Hi- 
showed  no  signs  from  having  been 
up  until  nearly  2  a.m.  at  a  debut 
dinner  dance  for  his  granddaugh- 
ter. Edwina  Sandys. 

6th  Fleet  Leaves 

.A.BOARD  USS  S.\LEM— (AP)  — 
The  carrier  striking  force  of  the 
6th  Fleet  wheeled  westward  Fri- 
day a<  the  Jordan  crisis  which 
brought  the  ships  to  the  Eastern 
Mediterranean    appeared    over. 

Under  orders  from  Washington. 
30     warships     of     Vice     Admiral 


present,  leads  to   the  belief  these 
microorganisms  have  a   significant 
and  positive  action  in  calculus  for- 
mation   or    more    specifically   the 
I  disease  process  tisiilf. 
!      The  frequency  of  periodontal  in- 
i  flamatory  disease  is  sach  that  80 
I  per  cent  of  adults  have  varying  de- 
I  grees  of  it  and  65  per  cent  of  adult 


teeth  are  lost  because  of  it. 

If  it  is  possible  from  these  stud- 
ies to  know  more  about  the  opera- 
tions- of  these  organisims.  then  it 
would  be  possible  to  control  them 
and  reduce  the  incidence  of  per- 
iodontal disea.se. 

Dr.  Gallagher  was  born   in  Van- 

(See  HEALTH,  Page  3) 


-♦  Support  of  the  Student  Lcgis- 
I  latures  condemnation  of  the  in- 
I  crease  cf  tuition  for  out-of-state 
i  stude-nts  has  been  given  by  six 
I  state  legislators. 

i  Don  Furtado.  speaker  of  the 
j  student  legislature.  ha.-<  received 
.  letter  from  five  senators  and  one 
I  representative  since  spring  va- 
cation. 

He  said    that    he    had    informed 
the    Studvnt     Legislature    of    thj 
general   content   of   the   letters. 
One  state   legislator  said.  "As  a 
j  member     of     the     .-Vppropriations 
'  Committee  I  am  very  glad  to  have 
the  benefit  of  the  thinkinu  of  the 
members   of   the    Student    Legisla- 
ture on  this  matter." 

Another  commented.    "I   pm    op 
,  possd    tj   Senator   Rosss   bill    and 
'  shall   do  al!   I  can   to   bring   about 
its  defeat." 

One  feared  that,  if  t'le  Univers- 
ity raised  it>s  tuition,  the  other 
state  ^ch:'ols  in  the  country  would 
follow  su't.  and  the  N.  C.  students 
studying  out  of  state  would  be 
forced  to  interrupt  their  educa- 
I  ti  ns. 

i  He  also  felt  that  all  tuition  was 
I  too  high  and  .should  be  lowered. 
I  'I  am  deeply  interested  in  a'l 
'  matters  pertaining  to  the  Univerv- 
ity.  and  I  assure  you  I  will  -J^f 
this  matter  serious  consideratii'ii." 
said   one    legislator. 

"Having    received    a    re- iluiion 

pa.ssed    bv    the    Student    ix'gisla- 

tue,  I  shall   be  glad   to  call    it  to 

the    attention    of    the    .Appronria- 

(See  SOLONS,  Page  3) 


(See  Y-NITE,   Page  3) 


Eight  Advance  Courses 
To  Be  Offered  Next  Fall 

PRINGLE  PIPKIN 

A     program    of   eight      advance 
courses,  one  of  the  two  in  the  na-       ^^^  clescription  of  the  course  in- 
tion,    will    be    offered    to   .superior    ^.^,^^^^  ^^^^  ..p.^.  .j    ^  ^^.j„  ^e  limit- 
students  in  the  fall  semester.   Dr. 


flag  showing  operation  off  l^b 
anon  and  sprinted  for  Italian  wat- 
ers to  keep  a  date  with  forces  of 
four  other  nations  in  NATO  ex- 
cercises. 

Left    behind  were    1800  Marines 
of   the    fleet    amphibious   force.    A 


New  Grail  Officers 


Shewn   Above  are  the   newly  elected  officers  of    the    Grc-.i!.    Left    to    right    are:    Herman    Godwin, 
scribe;  John  Kerr,  delegata;  Mack   Patton,  vice-exch  equer;   and    Benny   Thtfmas,   exthequer. 


Crazy? 


McCarthy  Plays 
His  Final  Role 


E.  A.  Cameron,  chairman  of  the  fa- 
culty committee  on  superior  stu- 
dents, announced  yesterday. 

Sophomores  will  be  able  to  take 
history  2L  The  chemistry  depart- 
ment will   offer  an  advanced  sec- 


Poteat  To  Speak  To  SP 

Dr.  William  H.  Poteat  will  speak 
Fleet  spokesman  said  the  Marines  j  to  the  Student  Party  Monday  night 
are  remaining  in  the  Eastern  Med- 1  in  the  Roiand  Parker  Lounges  bf 
itcrranean  until  the  "situation  i  Graham  Memorial  at  8  oclock. 
ea.ses.'  The  Marines  Friday  board-  I  Visitors  and  party  members  are 
B  m  social  science  and  at  least  a  ed  six  transports  and  sailed  for  an  j  invited  to  attend  the  open  meet- 
B  average  for  the  freshman  year."    unannounced      destination       after  j  ing. 

'  three  days  of  liberty  in  Beirut.      I      Other  items  of  business,  such  as 
Cheers   greeted   the    new  orders    the    revision    of    by-laws    and    dis- 
for      this      flagship      of      Admiral    cussion  of  this  years  banquet,  arc 
Brown.  i-cheduled  to  take  place. 


Orientation  Counselors 
Named  For  Next  Year 


(See   EIGHT.   Page   3) 


At  a  luncheon  yesterday  honor 

ing   novelist  Robert   Ruark   at   the  v/ASHINGTON— (AP)— Sen 

Carolina   Inn,  the  following   menu  ,^.p^^  r   McCarthy  (R-Wis)  will  play 

was  posted:  j,^^  fj^ai  role  in  death  Monday  in 

SOUthport  Shrimp   cocktail   with  ^jje  U.  S.  Senate  chamber,  scene  of 

Ruark   sauce;   Salad,   head   lettuce,  j^js  rocketing  rise  and  fall  on  the 

with  choke  of  Luxon,  Spearman  or  American  political  horizon  . 

Pollander  dressing. 

Entre:  Spanish    bull    meat,    pot  Arrangements    were    announced 

roasted   Barcelona  style;  •    Wallace  yesterday  for  a  30-minute  funeral    ing   the   special   freshman   courses 

Caldwell  baked  potato;  J.  Penrose  service  at  11   a.m.  (EDT)  Monday,  j  will   have  special  courses  in   Phil- 

Harland     green     peas;     Mau  Mau  after  which   McCarthys  body  will  j  osophy  41  and  History   136.  Other 

olives;  pickles  and  celery;  Scripps-  be  taken  from  in  front  of  the  Sen- ' 

Howard  iced  tea  or  coffee.  ate   rostrum  and  flown  to  Apple- 
Dessert:  Something  of  Value  par- ,  ton.  Wis.  for  church  servicer  and 

burial  Tuesday. 


jQg. !  tion   of  chemistry   43,   and   seniors 

I  and  juniors  will  be  eligible  to  take 

'  an  advanced  course  in  English  97. 

\      During  the  .-.•pring  semester  there 

will  be  advanced  courses  in  history  , 

22.  English   50,  chemistry  44  and 

a  new  course  in  philosophy. 

,     The  students  who  have  been  tak- 


Student  Legislature  Triggered  As 
Long  'Censure'  Measure  Appeared 


By   NEIL   BASS  I  should  have  time  to  consider  it."       Thus  a  triggered  majority  of  the 

I  Rep.  Kelley  of  the  University  Party   legislature  sent   the  Long   Resolu- 
tion to  the  Ways  and  Means  Corn- 


Thursday  night's  Student   U^gis     ^^j^ 
lature    session    was    triggered    f or  | 
an  explosion.  It  was  evident   that   Kelley   had 

I  plotted  his  strategy  far  in  advance 

An  air  of  expectancy  prevailed.   ^^  ^^^  ^ssion. 

Student  lawmakers  had  been  .ser- 1 
ved  advance  notice  that  the  Long  I      Kelley    al.so    told    lawmakers    he 


Jerry     Oppenheimcr.     chairman    Craven  Brewer.  CiCuraL-  Bryci' 
of    the    Campus    Orientation    Com- 
mittee,   has    released    the    list    of 
coun.«- lors    selected    for    the    1957 
Orientation    program. 

'•I  think  that  these  men  should 
be  congratulated  on  their  ac- 
ceptance and  commended  for  their 
willingness  to  serve.  It  was  very 
difficult  for  us  tj  select  from  a 
group  of  over  200  very  qualified 
individuals,  but  I  am  certain  that 
we  have  one  of  the  finest  groups 
of  counselors   in   recent   .\ears. 

I  wish  \3  extend  my  sinci.>rest 
congratulations  to  those  who  have 
been   ch  sen   and    to   re-emphasize 


mittee  for  additional  deliberation. 

It  is  slated  to  reappear  on  the  th?  importance  of  this  useful  and 
legislative  agenda  next  Thursday  worthwhile  job  which  they  are 
night.  undertaking.      The      responsibilitv 

Student       representatives      also  #vhich     th^    individual     counselor 


fait  a  la  Phillips  Ru-,yell. 

*Bull  was  killed  yesterday  morn- 
ing in  ring,  butchered  and   flown 


cour.-v,'s   are   open   to   all   students   Resolution    was 

who  are  able  to  qualify.  ]  on  the  agenda.  [constituency    on    the 

The   special   program    for  fresh-       Thus     response  was  immediate '  merits, 

men.    which    will    be    entering    its   when   Rep.    Tom    Long  walked    toj      Should    you    rely   solely 


.-iated    to    appear   hadn't  had  time  to    "feel  out"  his   stamped    official    approval    on    the    carries   is    tremendous,    but    I    am 


resolution's    presidential    appointment    of    Son- 
ny Hallford.  former  Student  Parly 
on    the   chief,  to  succeed  Sam  Wells  as  stu- 


Flags  were  at  half  staff  today  on 
the  Capitol,  the  Whi^e  House  and 


fourth  year  in  the  fall,  will  be  con- 
tnued  with  courses  in  English,  so- 


Ihe  rostrum  to  read  his  resolution  ;  feelings    of    your    constituents,    or   dent  government  attorney  general. 


to  Chapel  Hill  by  an  international    ^ther  government  buildings  for  the '  ^'^^^  science,  mathematics  and  <;he-    park    policy   which    excluded    Uni 
'^  :  once -swashbuckling    senator    ^ho  j '"»'^^^' ^^*^  ""^  ^^^^  ^^"'-  .'.^^'-^'V^^ity  Negro  student    Leroy  Fra 


airline. 


CMS  SLATE 


died  at  47  last  night  from  an  acute 
liver  ailment. 


courses  and  the  last  an  eleciivc. 

Dr.  Cameron  said  this  year  is  the 
first  time  that  the  special  courses 


The  followirHi  activities  are  sc- 
hoduled  for  Graham  Memorial 
today: 

Class  Group;  11  a.m.,  Roland 
Parker  3  and  Woodhousc  Con- 
ference Room. 


Long     moved  special     orders  to 
enable   the   measure's   passage   on 


McCarthy,      whose      Communist !  have  been  offered  above  the  frosh 
chasing   tactics   inflamed   passions !  level,  and  the  new  courses  are  an 

all  about  him  while  he  v/aa  at  the  I  outgrdwth    of    the    freshman    pro-  \  the  same  night  as  its  introduction 
zenith  of  his  power,  failed  steadily  j  gram.  j  and  Rep.  Pete  Kejley  immediately 

after  being  admitted  to  the'Naval  !      An      announcement      concerning  I  came  to  his  feet, 
medical    center    in    suburban    Be-;  history  21  said,    "To  qualify,  stu- ;      'The  implications  of  the  bill  (re- 


■'censuring'  application  of  stale  should  you  assert  your  "leader- 
ship" and  own  judgement?  Rep. 
Pat  Adams  (Student  Party)  asked. 

Kelley  replied  that  he  attempted 
tc«  "reflect"  the  feelings  of  hia- 
constituents. 

Rep.    Bill  Baum  (LT)   concurred 


zier  from  the  Umstead  Park  Sun- 
day as  the  Cosmopolitan  Club  at- 
tempted to  use  picnic  facilities. 


The  legislatures  other  action  w 
passage  of  a  bill  laying  the  ground- 
work for  organization  of  a  cam- 
pus humor  magazine. 

Ab;-entees  from  the  session  were: 
Reps.  Charlie  Wilson.  Mike  Wea- 
ver. Val  Von  .\mmon,  Bobbv  Per 


t    thesda.  .Md..  last  Sundaj. 


dents  must  have  a  grade  of  at  least    solution)  are  such  that  a  committee   •applicable"  to  a  wider  area. 


with   Kelleys   sentiments   on   the   ry.  J"'ia  Ann  Crater.  Jim   Allord 
time  issue.  i  and  Floyd  Andrews  of  the  UP;  and 

Baum  said  that  he  favored  the  |  Reps-  Al  Alphin.  Tally  Eddings. 
resolution's  -intent,"  but  felt  com- '  Ravid  Evans.  Herb  Grecnblatf,  Don 
mittee  deliberation  would  make  it  Jacobs.  James  Everett.  Jim  John- 
son and  Whit  Whitfield  of  the  SP. 


sure  that  these  counselors  will 
successfully  complete  the  job.  " 
Oppenheimer  .stated. 

There  will  be  a  meeting  of  all 
selected  counselors  at  8:00  on 
Monday.  May  6  in  Gerrard  Hall. 
This  will  not  conflict  with  Y 
Night. 

The  counselors:  ' 

Billy  Allen.  John  Alley.  T.  S. 
Allred.  Wayne  Andenson.  Charlie 
Ashford.  Coleman  Barks.  Carl 
Barrington.  Bob  Barrow,  Bennie 
Baucom.  Bruce  Berryhill.  David 
Biren.  Jerry  Blumenthal.  Gerry 
Boudreau.    Smith    Bradtield. 

F'oy    Brakshaw,    Harrj    Braxton. 


Bob 
Burge.  B  b  Diirrouglis.  Dick 
Cashwcl.  Mark  C  lerry.  Ciay 
Church,  (iraham  Cla.vtor.  A\vx 
Coffin.  Bryan  Conry.  Cameron 
Cooke.  Gary  Copper.  Wiison 
Cooper.  Bob  Cowan.  Jim  Craw- 
ford. Bob  Cromley.  William 
Crutchfield.  Ralph   Cummings. 

Bill  Deal.  Bill  Dorroh.  Harry 
Ellcrbe.  David  EvaB.*;.  Don  Evans. 
Joe  Ferrell.  Edward  Fowlkes.  Dick 
Frazier.  Erwin  Fuiler.  Phillip 
Gerdcs.  Craig  Gibbons.  Howard 
Goldman.  Charles  D  Gray.  Gary 
(Jreer.  Jo:-  Hagedorn.  Phil  Haire. 
Ken  Hall.  Henry  Har;is.  Will 
Heath.  John  Himnicutt.  Charles 
Huntington.  Everette  James. 

Harold  Johnson.  James  Johnson. 
Jerry  *  Jones.     Brand  >n     Kincaid. 
Bill    King.    Mike    Kizziah.    Larkin 
(See    ORIENTATION,    Page    3) 


INFIRMARY  LIST 


Students  in  the  Infirmary  yes- 
terday included: 

Misses  Jo  Dewesse,  Shirley  An- 
derson, Sandra  Wallace,  Nancy 
Stephens,  Jean  Bolssavit,  and 
Timothy  Jessup,  William  Lytle, 
Robert  Pearlman,  Don  Corbin. 
Henry  Manning,  H<rrold  Clark. 
David  Ansell,  Jan^es  Thompson, 
Oave  Burrows,  Wiley.  Haithcock, 
and  John   Hvdson. 


^AGI  TWO 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


^AfuiioAy,  MAY  4,  mr 


M 


Memp  To  Ike:  The  World 
Was  Made  In  Six  Days 

"Co,  sir,  gallofj.  and  dou'l   forget   the  world   nuis  made  in  six 
days.  You  {an  ask  for  anything  you  like,  except  ti me. "—Si\p<)\eou 
The  time  for  Piesiciciu  KiseiiJiower  to  assert  his  leadersliip  in  Con- 
gress is  now. 

Already  th^  <|uestion  has  been  raised  hy  political  analvists  as' to 
whether  or  not  a-  second  term  president  mav  retain  (ontrol  of  his  party 
due  to  resnittions  imposed  hv  the  i.'2nd  Amendment. 

I  he  (ombitted  restrit  tion  of  the  2iind  .Amendment  and  Kisenhower's 
faili?io  health,  phis  the  insul>ordination  of  a  segnient  of  Ikes  'modem 
Repnblitans"     has     (ondenmed     a 


dent  Kisenhouer  to  retain  control 
of  rebellions  mendiers  of  his  own 
paty  and  Conj»iess  as  a  whole,  it 
is  due  lar^elv  to  his  physical  con- 
dition and  his  inability  to  impose 
a  strong  and  <>nidin«  hand  from 
the   .Xnj^nsta  links. 

II  it  is  netessary  for  the  presi- 
dent to  resort  to  mass  media  for  a 
■fireside  (hat'  to  force  ontstand- 
in<j;  se<»nients  of  his  prooram 
through  C:ongress,  then  this  shoidd 
be  his  course. 


large    portion    f)f    his    program    Ki 
ignoniiin'ous  defeat. 

I  he  presidrfTi's  budget  has 
been  untler  cotrstant  fire,  not  onlv 
bv  downhome  pork-l)arrelers  and 
\ote-seeker  for  itj^.S:  but  also  h\ 
financial  e:<perts  who  have  warned 
ol    a    ■hair-curling"   depression. 

Now  ailing  FisenhoAver's  pro- 
|M»sals  on  school  aid.  immigration, 
Hawaiian  stateliocxl  and  other 
items  are  threatened  Avirfi  brutal 
aufl    lightening-fast   death. 

Rut   Ailing  Ike's  second   term  is 

The  piesidents  resumption  of  doomed  to  ignominious  failure  un- 
duties  after  a  thirteen-dav  golfing  lt*ss  he  asserts  hinrsell  n(»w. 
xacation  at  August.*  began  Avith  a 
defense  of  his  foreign  aid  program 
before  i ;,o  membeis  of  the  Nation- 
al Comic  il  of  the  League  of  \\o- 
men  X'ott-is. 

Physically  limited  -Ike  nuist  do 
miic  h  more  if  more  than  a  negiiga- 
ble  }>ortion  of  his  overall  piogram 
is  to  slip  through  Congress. 

We  do  not.  as  does  the  ^'ale 
Dailv  News,  see  '■handwriting  on 
the  wall'  for  the  i.'2nd  Amend- 
iiicMt.  We  beliexe  that  healthv  go\ - 
ennnent  dejiends  largely  upon 
the  imposition  of  temue  of  office 
lestiuiions  in  the  executive 
braiu  li. 

If   tiuu    is   a    failiM-e    by   Presi- 


I'nless  Kisenhower.  does  make 
immediate  assertion,  we  nnist  con- 
cmr  fully  with  the  Democ  ratic  Di- 
gest which  pictures  she  president 
as:  * 


first 

(as) 


lOO 

an 


■Kmerging  from  this 
days  of  the  second  term 
iujage  of  an  irritable,  aging  and 
nervous  piesident  who  doesn't  con- 
centrate on  his  Avork  .  .  .  who  is 
iminformed  and  isolated  bv  a  pal- 
ace guard'  that  feeds  him  only  one- 
j)age  memos  .  .  .  (who)  has  aheadv 
lost  aroimd  the  world  nuu  h  ol 
the  respect  which  he  built  up  din- 
ing World  War  II.  ■ 


Library  Appropriation: 
The  Fight  Is  Not  Over 


It  is  admirabU  that  the  loint 
Appr»»priatio»is  "wilK-owiniittee  has 
voted  an  SSo.ooo  increase  in  l-ni- 
Acrsitv  library  appropriations  for 
the    H>:)7-r)0  bienin'tun. 

liut  there  is  no  loom  for  com- 
placency. The  appiopriation  Avill 
not  definitely  be  in  Cniversity 
coffers    luitil    the    (ieueral    Assem- 


The  Daily  Tar  Heel 

The  official  student  publication  of  the 
Publications  Board  of  the  University  of 
North  Carolina,  where  it  is  publisJveci 
daily  except  Monday  and  examination 
and  vacation  periods,  and  summer  terms. 
Entered  as  second  jilass  matter  in  the 
post  office  in  Chapel  Hill,  N.  C.  under 
the  Act  of  March  S,  1870.  Subscription 
rates-  mailed.  S4  pt^year.  $2.50  a  semes- 
ter: delivered  $6  a  year,  $3  50  a  semes- 
ter. 


bly    takes   liual   acficm. 

Head  Librarian  Dr.  .\ndreAV 
Horn  is  to  be  complimented  for 
his  courageous  assertion  of  the  li- 
brary's dire  needs  and  exergencies. 
Presidein  William  Friday  is  to  be 
complimented  for  his  designation 
of  half  his  allotted  time  beh)re 
the  Joint  .\{)j)ropriati<nis  Commit- 
tee March  -jc).  to  explanation  of 
the    library    fitiancial    problem. 

I>iu  the  light  h)t  additional  and 
necessary  library  appiopriations  is 
not  o\er.  Ihus  the  I'niAersitv  ad- 
ministration should  continue  to 
wage  the  battle  until  the  (ieneral 
.Assembly's  last  legislative  cog  has 
t  tuned. 


Shame  On 


Editor 


NEIL  BASS 


Old   use 


Managing  Editor  _.  CLARKE  JONES 


A.ssociate  Editor     »+, 


NANCY  HILI. 


Sports  Editor 


New.--  Editor 


BILL  KING 


WALT  SCHRUNTEK 
Business  "Manager  j6hN  C.  WHITAKER 
Advenising  Manager         FRED  KATZIN 

NEWS  STAFF— Gr.aham  Snyder,  Edith 
MacKinnon.  Bob  .High.  Ben  Taylor. 
Patsy  Miller,  BiLI^  King.  Sue  Achison, 
Mary  Alys  Vorhefes. 


EDIT  STAFF— Whit 'Whitfield,  Anthony 
Wolff,  Stan  Shaw!i 

BUSINESS  STAFF— John  Minter,  Mari- 
an ilobeck,  Jane  Patten,  Johnny 
Whitaker.  .  * 


SPORTS  ST.\FF:  Dave  Wible,  Stu  Bird, 
Ed  Rowland,  JhA  Crownover,  Ron 
Milligan. 


Subscription  Manager 


._  Dale  Staley 


Crculation  Manafer 


._  Charlie  Holt 


Staff  Photographer^ -;. Woody  Sears, 

Noraian  Kantor,  Bill  King. 


Librarians—Sue  Gichner,  Marilyn  Strum 


Night  News  Editor  „ 
Night  Edilor 


Bob  High 

Manley  Springs 


It  is  a  discouraging  note  fiom 
our  southern  sister  that  a  student 
has  been  bed-ridden  lor  to  davs 
as  a  lesult  of  injuries  received  in 
an  initiation. 

Inhiunane  ha/ing  has  stipposedlv 
been  stricken  from  the  programs 
ol  oiu"  modem  colleges  and  uni- 
\ersities. 

^'et  a  riii\eisity  of  .South  Caro- 
lina trackman  is  being  treated  by 
a  urologist  h)r  injinies  received  in 
an  athletic    association  initiation. 

.All  .Assoc  i  a  ted  Press  release  fail- 
ed to  c(estribe  the  natuie  of  the 
trackman's  injuries.  Htit  the  fact 
that  he  is  being  treated  bv  an  urcjl- 
ogist  implies  that  serious  and  ir- 
repable  physical  dam.l^e  may  have 
been  done  the  athlete. 

l^SC.  Dean  of  Men  James  T. 
Penney  is  a  bit  late  with  his  state- 
ment: 

"Hazard  of  personal  injury  \vill 
not  be  tolerated  in  any  phase  of 
initiation  activities." 

Another  demonstration  of  the 
reactionary  and  antiquated  cus- 
toms of  our  southern  neighbor. 

And  to  think  we  combined  ef- 
forts  in   the   early  sixties! ^^ 


WISE  AND  OTHERWISE 

Men:  Innately 
Superior?  No! 
Certainly  Not 

Whit  Whitfield 

Far  be  it  irom  me  to  criticize 
women,  or  to  imply  in  any  way 
that  women  are  not  equal  to 
men. 

Quite  the  contrary  —  women 
must  be  equ-al  to,  or  better 
than  men.  If  you  don't  believe 
it,  just  ask  the  man  who  owns 
one. 

Just  because  males  have  play- 
ed the  dominant  role,  in  west- 
ern culture  since  time  imme- 
morial is  no  indication  that  they 
are  innately  superior  in  any 
way. 

•  •  • 

The  explanation  for  the  fact 
that  males  have  played  this 
role  is  probably  that  the  cun 
ning  famales  have  been  toy- 
ing with  us,  biding  their  time 
for  several  thousand  years,  un- 
til such  time  when  they  could 
best  revolt,  and  best  show  how 
inferior   males  really  are. 

•  •  • 

One  sure  indication  of  fe- 
minine superiority  is  their  long- 
er lite  span  and  sturdier  const;- 
tion.  Male  occupaticms  such  as 
soldiering,  engineering,  b  u  .•*  i- 
ness  managing.  prizefighting, 
manual  laboring,  professional 
athletics,  truck  driving,  etc.,  are 
no  match  for  the  hazards 
of  schoolteaching.  typewriting 
bookkeeping,  housekeepinu.  etc. 
(.Ml    typical    femal    vocations) 

•  •  • 

It  seems  a  wonder  how  they 
can  survive  males  by  several 
years  on  the  average,  with  such 
dangers  involved  in  the.se  oc- 
cupations, especially  since  most 
accidents    happen    in    the   home. 

•  •  • 

The  fact  that  Western  cul- 
ture's most  'famous  'solctiers. 
artists,  poets,  musicians,  scien- 
tists, politicians,  statesmen,  athl- 
etes, and  businessmen  have  been 
males  isn't  hard  to  believe  es- 
pecially if  one  remembers  that 
behind  each  man  there  was  a 
woman.  Then  it  is  easy  to  sec 
how   much    we   owe    women. 

We  can  call  it  a  man's  world 
no  longer.  It  .seems  that  there 
will  be  no  more  Alexanders, 
Cae.sars.  Nfapoleon.s.  Washing- 
tons  or  Lincolns.  The  way 
things  are  progressing  now.  the 
females  will  doubtless  have  a 
wcman  in  the  White  House  and 
control  both  houses  of  Congress 
in  a  few  years. 

Why  not?  .Males  have  con- 
trolled the  government  >since 
its  inception,  and  look  what  a 
mess  it's  in.  Only  the  females 
can   pull   U.S  through. 

In  Twentieth  Century  Ameri- 
can culture,  females  have  be- 
gun to  assume  the  positions 
that  have  ben  riglitly  theirs 
from  the  dawn  of  time. 
''  •  •  • 

The  coup  d'etat  will  come 
precisely  when  women  are  draft- 
ed to  fight  the  wars,  replacing 
the  weaker  and  generally  in- 
ferior men.  Several  million 
males  are  waiting  for  the  time 
when  they  won't  have  to  worry 
about  the  draft. 


'We  Don't  Want  You  To  Feel  Left  Out  Of  This" 


* 

L'il  Abner 


^^^ 


FROM  THE  DUKE  CHRONICLE: 


American   Youth:   Suffering    From 
Delusions   Of   Auto-Pomposity? 


(The  student  publication  at 
our  neighboring  educational 
plant  has  admirably  hit  upon 
the  crux  of  a  problem  we  shall 
call  complacency  and  self-satis- 
faction. 

There  is  an  American  Legion 
brand  of  flag-waving  Ameri- 
canism prevalent  among  some 
tfuarfmn  of  our  American  youth. 
This  type  of  Americanism 
tends  to  make  students  become 
smug  and  complacent,  tends  to 
make  them  look  down  their 
noses  a^  the  "masses"  in  Asia 
and    the    European    "starvees." 

We  do  not  oppose  patriotism. 
Were  as  proud  of  the  Ameri- 
can fat  -wallet,  educational  sys- 
tem and  standard  of  iiving  as 
the  American  Legion  and  those 
complacents. 

We're  also  proud  of  the 
American  "liberal  mind"  and 
the  theory  that  all  men  are  ere 
ated  equal — as  far  as  rights  are 
concerned. 

But  a  liberal  mind  and  liberal 
thought  does  not  cast  aside' all 
cultures  dissimilar  to  our  own 
as  being  crude,  primitive  and 
ignorant. 

Thus  we  concurr  with  the 
Chronicle's  assertion  that  our 
own  complacent  propaganda  is 
"doing  us  more  harm  than  the 
opposition's.— The   Editor) 

It  took  Mr.  Justice  Douglass  to 


point  out  to  us  a  typically  Ameri- 
can disease  that  is  further  ad- 
vanced on  college  campuses  than 
in  other  segments  of  our  afflict- 
ed country. 

Douglac  says  that  we  are  brain- 
washing ourselves  and  that  a 
great  deal  of  the  propaganda  to 
which  we  arc  subjected  is  of  our 
own  making.  We,  not  the  Russ- 
ians, have  convinced  ourselves 
that  the  Russians  are  undei- 
nourished.  mentally  stunted  and 
nationally  degenerated.  We  have 
talked  ourselves  into  l)elieving 
that  we  are  well-fed,  intellectual- 
ly advanced  and  divinely  demo- 
cratic. 

Neither  of  these  extreme.^  is 
true.  Nor  is  it  true  that  college 
students  are  a  class  superior  to 
all  other  beings.  We.  the  college 
students,  have  propagandized  our- 


MAY  6 


Is  Coming  Soon 


ONLY  2  MORE  DAYS 


selves  into  a  state  of  dormancy. 
When  we  go  to  Florida  for  our 
vacations,  we  have  special  dis- 
pensations made  for  us  by  Jorn 
Law:  in  Durham,  the  ABC  stores 
will  sell  lif  uor  to  college  students 
but  not  to  other  minors.  Our 
manners  suffer  from  this  home- 
grown superiortiy  complex.  In  a 
bookstore  we  are  convinced  that 
we  arc  the  only  literates  and  thus 
able  to  bustle  others-  out  of  our 
way;  on  buses,  we  are  college  stu- 
dents and  therefore  our  loud 
songs  and  chatter  are  excused.     . 

In  both  cases,  international  and 
inlerniural,  we  Americans  are 
deluding  ourselves  to  a  danger- 
ous point.  We  may  be  the  health- 
iest people,  but  this  does  not  in- 
fer malnutrition  everj-where  else. 
We  may  have  better  educational 
plant.',  but  this  is  not  an  indica- 
tion of  illiteracy  outside  our  con- 
tinental limits.  We  may  be  the 
richest  financially  but  this  does 
not  mean  that  other  countries  suf- 
fer a   paucity  of  culture. 

The  time  has-  come  for  Ameri- 
cans, collegiate  and  otherwise  to 
grow  up.  We  must  recognize  the 
qualities  which  sister  nations  have 
that  we  would  do  well  to  borrow. 
We  can  no  longer  survive  by  shut- 
ting our  e.ves  to  the  virtuca-  of  all 
countries  and  classes  but  our 
own.  Our  own  propaganda  is  do- 
ing us  more  harm  than  any  of  the 
opposition's. 


• 

By  A'  Capp 


^m^^ 


I  HAD 

ZIS 
MADE, 
JUST 

FOR 
VOU.'.' 


But,  dad,  mv  zovh  will 

NEVER  FIT  IN  THAT— 

CUTE  AS  IT  IS  ff 


Pogo 


By  Walt  Kelly 


im  ina  jxwihon)  vvB'c?0gA 
\ooffei'^oa  /  5I6HT  STgAC?lgg 
.bats  sieadu 


■zr^  aj»j»aue4  in  the ' 


a*  >M>»  6«ta4Jr«,  mC.i 


lion? 

well  do 
pcr^onallu. 


I  AIN'T 
PEgN  UP 
6lNCg  THgy 

aUT  <5ME  us 

A  iru  boost; 

VOU. 


i9oi>fA}'If 


CAMPUS  ARCHITECTURE: 

Impediment, 
Arches,  Columns 

Anthony  Wolff 

In  his  opening  address  to  the  Incoming  fresh- 
men last  semester.  Chancellor  House  made  some 
heartwarming  statements  to  the  effect  that  this 
campus  is  the  most  beautiful  place  on  God's  earth, 
physically  as  well  as  intellectually.  On  both  counts, 
this  is  a  bit  of  Carolina  chauvinism  which  is  palpa- 
bly untrue. 

The  University,  however,  seems  to  take  such 
statements  quite  seriously,  particularly  in  respect 
to  the  campus  architecture.  Wittness  the  fact  that 
the  University  recently  stalled  the  Episcopal 
Church's  building  program  by  refusing  to  permit 
th%  erections  of  a  flat-roofed  structure  on  land  ad- 
joining the  campus.  CHie  church  had  hoped  to  save 
several  thousand  dollars  by  foregoing  the  usual 
sloping  roof.) 

The  only  possible  reason  that  the  University 
could  have  for  such  a  restrictive  iJolicy  is  a  feel- 
ing that  there  is  something  admirable  about  the 
architecture  on  this  campus.  A  very  brief  look 
around  will  convince  even  the  most  patriotic  that 
such  is  not  the  case;  in  the  few  instances  of  good, 
stlbeit  crumbling,  architecture,  the  surrounding 
structures  are  so  outlandish  as  to  make  the  good 
seem  as  out  of  place  as  the  rest. 

Consider,  for  instance,  the  adulterated  Greek 
temple  which  is  the  Playmakers  Theatre:  it  is  de- 
cently proportioned,  perhaps,  and  it  has  the  added 
virtue  of  representing  a  style  which  dates  back  to 
before  450  BC.  The  fact  that  it  is  a  mockery  of 
the  grand  and  meaningful  style  which  it  was  bad- 
ly designed  to  imitate  is  not  important  —  It  may 
well  be,  all  things  considered,  one  of  the  be^t 
pieces  of  architecture  on  this  campus. 

But  its  neighbors  include  such  grotesque  build- 
ings as  Carr  Dorm,  Bynum  Hall,  and.  a  ways 
away.  The  Alumni  Building.  The  theatre's  un- 
adorned rear  end  looks  toward  South  Building, 
which  is  in  itself  no  beauty. 

Memorial  Hospital  has  an  even  mora  amusing 
example.  On  the  side  facing  Pittsbore  Road  is 
the  complete  front  of  a  Gre»k  temple,  stuck  on 
the  face  of  a  building  of  dissmilor  style.  A  waste 
of  money,  this,  as  well  as  an  eyesore. 

But  these  buildings  are  in  the  past,  though  not 
quite  so  far  in  the  past  as  they  bel«ng.  What  about 
the  present?  Architecturally  speaking,  where  do 
we  go  from  here?  The  answer  is  obvious  in  the 
two  most  notable  building  projects  under  way  at 
present.  Both  the  new  art  museum  and  the  new 
dorms  are  being  built  in  the  style  which  we  like 
to  call  Georgian.  The  gallery  already  looks  like 
a  tomb,  which  function  it  also  serves;  the  latter 
will  probably  be  some  slight  improvpraent,  but 
not  much.  ■       ■      • 


One  may  surmise,  then,  that  tJie  University  has 

decided  upon  Georgian  as  the  style  in  which  to 
standardize  the  University's  architecture  from  now 
on.  Assuming  this  to  be  the  case,  it  is  interesting 
to  consider  quite  carefully  the  following  statem^t 
by  John  E.  Burchard  and  Albert  Bush-Brown,  ex- 
erpted  from  an  article  entitled  "Where  Does 
Architecture   Go   From    Here?"   in   the    May    Issue 

of   Harper's   Magazine: 

■* 

".  .  .  an  America  that  admires  ciiinge,  that 
loves  to  build  and  rebuild  .  .  .  shows  little  s»nse 
of  architecture.  Even  our  universities,  where  art 
might  be  expected  most  fully  to  serve  cultyr*, 
have  steadily  deferred  to  the  misjudgements  of 
trustees,  alumni,  and  patrons  who  have  believed 
either  that  new  buildings  must  conform  to  an 
existing  collection  of  nondescript  and  undistinq- 
uished  "Old  Mains"  or  that  collegiate  beauty  is  to 
be  found  only  '.n  Georgian  or  Gothic.  No  one  to- 
day can  design  well  in  those  styles;  no  one  can 
build  them  well;  the  institution  could  not  afford 
to  build  them  if  good  designs,  were  obtainable. 
The  result  is  mediocrity."  .  '    ,    '   ' 

Granted,  this  University  would  do  well  to  be- 
gin now  to  standardize  her  architecture;  but  what 
is  the  sense  in  building  for  the  past,  in  a  style 
popular  in  the  early  eightenth  century  which  lost 
prevalence  in  the  South  one  hundred  years  ago? 
To  Tie  sure,  if  we  build  in  a  contempwary  style, 
the  day  will  come  when  that  too  will  be  "'outinod- 
ed."  This  is  not  a  prospect  calculated  to  inspire 
investment  in  building,  but  it  is  an  inescapable  fact, 
no    matter    what    the    style. 

In  reply  to  this,  consider  the  proposition  that 
architecture  becomes  meaningful  as  a  function  of 
time,  place,  and  use:  the  degree  to  which  a  struc- 
ture reflects  the  culture  which  it  serves  is  the  de- 
gree to  which  it  is  "good,"  not  only  in  serving  that 
culture,  but  also  as  a  work  of  art  for  all  time. 
Thus  the  Greek  temple,  tho  Roman  arch,  the 
Gothic  cathedral  are  good  for  all  time.  By  the 
same  token,  the  best  of  modern  architecture  is 
good  for  us  now,  and  will  still  be  good — though  in 
a  different  sense — when  it  has  been  replaced  many 
times  over. 

The  logical  choice  for  a  standardized  style  would 
be  something  more  contemporary  than  Georgian; 
this  country  has  come  a  long  way  in  one  hundred 
years,  and  it  would  be  fitting  to  represent  the 
ideological  as  well  as  the  technological  develop- 
ments of  that  eventful  period  in  its  architecture. 

The  contemporary  architecture  is  most  admira- 
bly suited  to  the  modem  university:  in  its  design 
it  symbolizes  the  philosophy  and  the  needs  of  today. 
Georgian  architecture,  on  the  other  hand,  is  twice 
removed  from  being  meaningful,  being  borrowed 
two  hundreds  years  ago  from  the  Greeks,  and  now 
being   borrowed   again. 

Let  us  adopt  a  style  of  architecture  in  keeping 
with  the  best  traditions  of  this  country,  and  at 
the  same  time  in  keeping  with  the  intellectual 
tempo  and  forward  thought  which  this  university 
claims  as  its  reason  for  existence.  When  the  psy- 
sical  plant  of  this  university  both  symbolizes  and 
parallels  the  development  of  the  school,  then  it 
will  at  the  same  time  be  a  place  to  house  and  in- 
spire iurther  growth. 


2.T 

eroi 


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pasj 
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THf  DAILY  TA»  MBEL 


^A«l  rMMt 


ts, 
mns 


ommg  fresh- 
made  some 
that  this 
God's  earth, 
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lich  is  palpa* 

0  take  such 
y  in  respect 
the  fact  that 

Episcopal 
to  »ermit 
i  on  land  ad- 
loped  to  save 
g    tile    usual 

e    UniTersity 
c>-  is  a  feel- 
le   about  the 
brief    look 
triotic  that 
o#  good, 
surrounding 
(e   the   good 

crated  Greek 
tr»:  il  is  de- 
»s  the  added 
lates  back  to 
mockery    ol 

1  it  was  bad- 
It   —   It   may 

o!    the    be.<t 


tesque  build- 

d.    a    ways 

heatre*s    un- 

h    Buildirii*. 


re  amusinf 

0  Ro«d  is 
,   stuck   on 

t*.  A  wast* 

though  oot 
What  about 
H-here    do 
rious   in   the 
dt>r   way    at 
nd    the    new 
ich  we  like 
looks    like 
:   the    latter 
vement.    but 

niver<ity  has 
10  which  to 
V  :rom  now 
>  mieresting 
ng  stalem^t 
ii-Brown,  ex- 
.Vhere  Does 
.    May    Issue 

iwn9«,   that 

littl*  s»ns« 

,  wtwr*  art 

'V*    cwttwr«« 

»nt«  •# 

IV*  b*li*v*4 

Form   to   an 

I   undislin^ 

beauty  is  t« 

N*  on*  t*- 

no  Oft*  can 

not  afford 

obtainaM*. 

welJ  to  be- 
<e:  but  what 
:.  in  a  style 
wt»jch  lost 
years  ago? 
porary  style, 
be  "outmod- 
i  to  inspire 
^'■apable  fact. 

•ftition  that 
function  bf 

ikli  a  struc> 
s  ia  tti*  rf*- 

Mrvinf  tfiat 

1  all  tint*, 
arch.  ttt« 
w.    By   th* 

hitcctur*  it 
— thoufh  in 
i|«c*4  many 

style  would 
in  Oeor^an: 
one  hundred 
epresent  the 
il  develop- 
iiteclure. 

most  admira- 
in  its  design 
»d«i  of  today, 
and.  IS  twice 
ng  borrowed 
^kv.  and  now 


e  in  keeping 

ntry.    and    at 

inteUectual 

;  university 

tn  the  psy- 

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kool.   then   it 

ouse  ani  in- 


Award  Winner  States 
Challenges  To  Di-Phi 


Dr.    E.   a\  <::ameron,     as     this , 
year's   recipient     of     the     Di-Phi  | 
award,  spoke  Wednesday  evening 
at  the  Carolina  Inn  before  the  an- 
nual    Banquet   sponsored     jointly, 
by  the  two  literary  societies. 

On  hand  y^^s  a  special  class  of 
25  chosen  freshmen  of  outstand- 
ing abilities  who  heard  Dr.  Cam- 
eron indicate  that  ''learning  to 
express  oneself  is  the  most  im-j 
portant  lesson  to  be  learned  in ' 
college."  j 

He  went  on  to  say     that     the 
challelnge   facing   the   literary    so- 1 
cieties  today  is  that  of  training  in- ; 
terested    students    in    the    art    of 
expression.  j 

The  Di-Phi  Award  is  presented 
annually  to  that  person  who  is  a 
past  member  of  one  of  the  two 
societies  and  who  has  rendered 
distinguished  service  to  the  state ' 


of  North  Carolina  or  to  the  U.  1^ 
and   its  citizens. 

Other  awards  presented  at  the 
banquet  went  to  Jim  Montieth,  the 
Philanthropic  Society's  "most  out- 
standing speaker  of  the  year"; 
Miss  Betty  Dent,  the  Phi's  "most 
outstanding  senior  of  the  year"; 
and  Don  Jacobs,  the  Phi's  ''most 
outstanding  freshman  of  the  year." 

Montieth  was  also  the  recipient 
of  the  Mangum  Medal  as  the  out- 
standing senior  orator  in  the  class 
of   1957. 

Guests  at  the  banquet  included 
Dr.  and  Mrs.  Monroe  and  Dean 
and  Mrs.  Sitterson.  Dr.  James  W. 
Patton,  this  year's  recipient  of  the 
Di's  Faculty  Award  was  unable  to 
attend  the  banquet  and  will  re- 
ceive his  award  at  the  Di's  week- 
ly meeting  next  week,  it  was  an- 
nounced   yesterday. 


Eight  Advance 


(Continued  from  page  ^) 

ed  to  twenty  or  twenty-five  stu- 
dents at  the  maximum. 

"Second,  it  wfH  not  be  primarily 
a  lecture  course  but  will  be  de- 
voted for  the  most  part  to  the  read- 
ing and  discussion  oJt  selected  his- 
torical materials  designed  to  throw- 
light  on  major  problems  in  Ameri- 
can history." 

All  courses  will  have  a  limited 
number  of  students  and  the  work 
will  be  done  on  an  advanced  level. 

"Tho^e  special  courses  will  re- 
quire more  work  on  the  part  of 
the  student  and  more  individual  in- 
itiative." said  Dr.  Cameron. 

EJnroJlinent  in  these  courses  is 
voluntary.  The  courses  carry  the 
same  credit  as  the  regular  courses. 

Dr.  Cameron  said  that  the  com- 
mittee "on  superior  students  en- 
courges  the  creation  of  these  ad- 
vance courses,  but  each  department 
is  responsible  for  starting  and  con- 
ducting its   courses. 

At  present  the  program  is  being 
conducted  without  financial  assis- 


tance from  the  University. 

"The  courses  are  to  provide  an 
opportunity  for  able  and  serious- 
minded  students  to  work  up  to 
their  highest  capacities, '  explained 
Dr.  Cameron. 

He  said  he  knew  of  only  one 
other  institution,  Brown  Universi- 
ty, which  has  set  up  a  program 
comparable  to  UNC's. 

The  UNC  program  has  been  view- 
ed with  interest  in  academic  cir- 
cles. During  the  fall  semester  Dean 
Wagner  of  Kansas  University  spent 
i-everal  days  observing  the  fresh- 
man program. 


i^^:.^|Covering  The  Campus 


The  Activities  Session  of  next 
fall's  Orientation  Week  will  be 
discussed  at  the  Monday  meeting 
of  the  Campus  Orientation  Activ- 
ities Sub-Committee. 

The  4  p.m.  meeting  will  be  held 
in  the  Roland  Parker  Lounge  for  ^jjur^j^ 
all  heads  of  student  activities. 

Committee  chairman  Miss  Libby 
McCord  stated  that  "This  year's 
activities  session  will  be  quite  dif- 
ferent from  last  year's.  We  feel 
that  this  is  a  part  of  orientation 
which  can  and  should  be  improv- 
ed and  thus  can  only  be  accomp- 


BOYD  TO  SPEAK 

A  meeting  of  the  United  Stu 
dents  Fellowship  will  have  Dr.  Ber 
nard   Boyd  of   the    Religion   Dept.  \  Obstetrics  and  Gynecology  of  the 


turer  with   the   DepL  of  City  and 
Regional    Plannng.  this      weekend. 
Mr.   Blumenfeld   Was   for     aeveral 
years  Chief  of  the  Master  Plan  Di- 
vision     of   the    R^'^^delphia     City 
The   president    of   the   organixa-    Planning   Commission   and   is    now 
tion   is  Dr.  Robert  A.  Ross,  pro- 1  in  a  similar  position  with  the  Met- 
fessor   and   head   of   the   Dept."  of  I  ropolitan     Planning     Commission. 


speak  to  them   Sunday   at   7  p.m. 
in     the  Congregational     Christian 


The  public    is  cordially  invited 
to  attend  the  session. 


The  first  freshman  program  was   ^'*'^«'*  ^y  ^^^  interest  and  partic- 
started  in  1954-55  under  the  gui-    ipation  of  groups   on  campus 
dance  of  I*rofessors  E.  A.  Camer 
on,  E.  W.  liall,  J.  E.  King  and  W 


PICNIC 

The  UNC  Young  Republican  club 
will  have  a  picnic  at  Hogan's  Lake 
this  afternoon  at  3.  All  Y.R.C.s 
are  invited  to  come  and  bring  a 
friend.  Free  eats  will  be  served 
at  5. 


UNC  School  of  Medicine. 

An  executive  session  of  the  or- 
ganization will  be  held  Friday 
night.  Sport  and  social  events  are 
scheduled  for  Saturday  and  the 
scientific  session  will  be  held  Sun- 
day. 


"Only    a    small    percent   of    the  j 
students    on    this   campus    partici-j 


YRC  members.  All  thofte  desiring 
to   come   who  don't  have   a  ride, 
be  at  Roland  Parker  Lounge  2  in 
,  session  this  committee  is  planning '  Graham  Memorial  by  2:30. 
I  will  give  the  organizations  an  ex- !  LEARY  TO  SPEAK 
'cellent   opportunity   to   reach   the!     Dr.  Deborah  Leary   of  the  Uni- 
freshmen  and  transfers  during  the  |  ^^"^i^^'  °^  North   Carolina  School 
first  of  the  year. 


ATTEND  MEETING 

Three     professors   from       UNC 
attended  the  annual  meeting  of  the 
Meadieval  Academy  of  America  at 
Cambridge,  Mass.,  April  26-27.  Pro- 
Free  beer  will  also  be  served  to^fessor  Urban  Tigner  Holmes,  Jr.  of 

the  Dept.   of  Romance  Languages 


S.  Wells  of  the  deparmtents  of  P^^e  in  extra-curricular  activities, 
mathematics,  philosophy,  history,  ^"^  ^e  feel  that  the  activities 
and  English,  respectively. 

The  present  committee  o»  |u- 
perior  students  is*  composed  of 
Professors  E.  A.  Cameron,  R.  P. 
Bond,  P.  H.  Epps,  G.  V.  Taylor  and 
E.  C.  Markham. 


^yS:;V^  :.:-;-wi>- 


4 


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(Continued  fronn    page    \) 

tions  Committee  at  such  time  as 
the  bill  introduced  by  Rep.  Hoss 
is  considered,"  commented  an- 
other. 

One  said.  "I  shall  give  thi.s  mat- 
ter due  and  careful  considera- 
tion." 


Health 


finished     his  four-year   term     as 
clerk. 

Professor  R.  L.  Ullman-  of  the 
Dept.  of  Classics  was  elected  presi- 
dent of  the  Fellows  of  the  Aca- 
demy. Professor  Robert  A.  Pratt 
of  the  Dept.  of  English  was  elected 
a  councillor  for  a  three-year  term. 


Applications 
For  GMAB  Due 

Applications    for    work    on    the 

Graham  Memorial  Activities  Board 

are  due  to  be  turned  in  by  Tues- 

I  day.   according   to   Benny  Thomas, 

GMAB  president. 

Following  submission  of  appli- 
catioas.  interviewing  for  the  po.si- 
tions  will  begin  on  Thur.sday. 
.  Thomas  urged  that  anyone  in- 
terested in  working  with  the  Board 
for  next  year  should  pick  up  an 
application  blank  from  the  GM 
Information  Office. 

"I    want    to     stress      the     word 


(Continued  from  Page  1) 

couver.  British  Columbia.  Canada,  i  ::!'^'!|°SrV^''''r.""''.'T''''" 

I  jw>     .IT-.. 11    Term   Abdominal    Preg- 


YDC  HEAD  NAMED 

J.  Earl  Dawkias  Jr.,  a  junior 
from  Mt.  Gilead.  has  been  elected 

president  of  the  Young  Democrat-  He  attendedlhe  UnrversuV  of  Brit 
ic  Club  at  the  UNC  for  1957-58.     |  i^h  Columbia,  recevied  his  D.M.D. 

Other  new  officers  are  William  degree  from  the  University  of  Ore- 
G.  Ransdell  Jr..  Fuquay-Varina, '  gon.  He  was  formerly  assistant 
first  vice  president;  George  Cog- j  and  professor  at  the  School  of 
gin,  Starr,  second  vice  president;  |  Dentistry,  University  of  Washing- 
Phillip  Ransdell,  Fuquay-Varina.  ton  at  Seattle  before  coming  to  | 
treasurer;  and  Miss  Anne  Shea,  UNC  in  1962.  He  served  four  and  ; 
Spartanburg,  S.  C.  j  one-half  years  with  the  Canadian  ' 

Seven  members  were  named   to   Air  Force  in  Canada,   Alaska  and  | 
the     executive     committee:     Jim  Europe.  j 

Shreve,  Mayodan;  Larry  McElroy,  — j 

Marshall;  Neill  K.  McMillan  and 
Bob  Mangum,  Chapel  Hill;  Miss 
Betty  Wray  Lester.  ReidsviUe; 
Frank  Brown.  Tarboro;  and  Frank 
^  Berry,  Kinston. 

Charlie  Dean  of  Fuquay  Springs 
was  endorsed  by  the  club  as-  Us 
representative  to  the  .State  YDC 
Convention  which  will  be  held 
next  fail. 


i  of  Medicine  will  speak  in  Southern 
Pines  Sunday,  May  5,  at  9  a.m. 

Dr.  Leary,  assistant  professor  of  i  VISITING  LECTURER 
obstetrics    and     gynecology,    will  j     Hans   Blumenfeld,   distinguished 
speak     before  a  meeting      of    the  i  city   planner,  will  be   visiting  lec- 
North  Carolina  Obstetrical  and  Gy 


be    "Full 
nacy.** 


CLASSIFIEDS 


WANTED:  COLLEGE  MEN, 
part-time  and  summer.  E^rn  $50 
to  $100  per  week  plus  $100-$300 
scholarship  award.  Must  have 
use  of  car.  Contact  W.  P.  Cran- 
ford.  Box  1708,  Raleigh,  N.  C. 


Orientation 


(Contirtved  from   page   }) 


'anyone"  because  we  want  students 

from    all    phases    of    campus    life   Kirkman,  Jack  Lawing,  Hamp  Lcf- 


on  the  Activities  Board  —  from 
freshmen  to  seniors  from  dormi- 
tory residents  to  fraternity  and 
sorority  residents,  and  from  stu- 
dents who  live  in  town  to  com- 
muters. We  want  anyone  who  is 
interested  to  serve."  Thomas 
said. 

The  GMAB  president  added 
that  the  job  of  the  Board  and  its 
14  committees  "is  to  fulfill  the 
demands  and  desires  of  our  en- 
tire 7,000  strong  student  body 
through  recreation,  entertainment, 
and  any  other  way  wo  can  dream 
up.' 


Y-Nite 

(Continued  from  Page  1) 
for  an  album  on  jazz;  interpreter 
with  numerous  bands,  including 
Louis  Armstrong  and  Dave  Bru- 
bect;  and  chaplain  of  th^  George 
Lewis  New  Orleans  Ragtime  Band 
He  is  also  prominant  in  the  theo- 
logical field. 

He  is  editor  of  "Alone  in  the 
Crowd",  a  booklet  discussing  hu- 
man loneliness  and  insecurity  and 
how  it  is  transformed  in  the  Christ- 
ian community.  He  is  also  consider- 
ed by  many  to  be  the  spokesman 
for  new  frontiers  in  the  student 
Chri^lan  movement.  His  booklet, 
"New  Frontiers",  a  collection  of 
his  addresses,  has  been  the  basic 
material  for  study  in  this  connec- 
tion. 

Kershdw  bks  a  long  series  of 
other  achievements  behind  him:  he 
was  the  writer  and  host  for  an. 8 
weeks  s-eries  CBS  nationwide  TV 
program,  "Look  Up  and  Live",  a 
program  on  religion  and  the  cul- 
tural arts;  he  was  platform  speak- 
er at  the  Geneva  summor  confer- 
ence; he  was  a  member  of  the  Na- 
tional Student  Committee,  student 
YMCA;  and  he  was  an  instructor 
in  the  philosophy  department  at 
Miami  University  in  Ohio. 

Highlighting  Kershaw's  vi.sit  to 
the  campus  afe  several  activities. 

A  luncheon  open  to  the  public 
id  planned  for  Monday  at  1  p.m. 
upstairs  in  Lenior  Hall.  At  this 
time  Kershaw  will  speak,  having 
as  his  subject  "Alone  in  the 
Crowd." 

Y-Nite  itself  will  be  Monday  ev- 


ler.   John    Lewis,    Bailey    Liipfert. 
Peter   Liman,   Tom    Long,    Denton 
Lotz,    Ronald    McCarter,   Bob    Mc- 
Cartney.    Gene     McDanicl,     John 
McKee.  Kelly  Maness,  Bobby  Maul- 
din,    John  Mayo.    James    Merritt,  I 
William  Michael.  Hal  Miller,  John 
Minter.    Ed    Moore.    Don    Nichobi, 
Torn      Overman.      Evan      Palmer. 
David     Parker,     Hugh     Patterson, 
Harvey   Peck.  Charles  Pemberton. 
Glenn     Pickard,     Pringle     Pipkin. 
Thoo   Pitt,    Charles    Piltman,    Jim 
Pollard.    Alan    Pultz.    Bob  jQuinn. 
Forbe.s  Ramsey,  Gus  Re^vis.  Jolin 
Reed,  Bob  Rollins.  Eric  Roper,  Ed 
j  Rowland.   Harry  Scott,  Sam   Scott,  j 
Harold     Shepherd.     Keith     Smith. 
I  Mike    Smith,  Jack    Spain,    Manley 
I  Springs,  Arthur  Sobel,  Bill   Stem. 
Dick     Stoker.     Gordon     Street. 
Jesse     Stribling,     Louis     Terrell. ' 
Avery  Thomas.  Jim  Thomas,  Bill , 
Tucker,    Hu^    Upton.    Steve    Up-' 
ton,  Wayne  Venters,  Kelley  Wal-i 
lace,   Leo  Wardrup,   Harry  Wells. 
James    White,     Gene    Whitehead, ' 
Mason   Wilkins.   Stanley   William- 1 
son,     Mark   Wilson,     Van  Woltz, 
Tucker   Yates.    Charles    Younce. 


Journalism 

(Contimied  from    page    1) 
Bobby   Myers,   Thomasville;    Char 
les  Sloan.      Arlington.    Va.;      Ray- 
mond   P.    Smith.    Chapel    Hill. 

Leonard  H.  Sullivan.  Bath; 
Evan  Taylor,  Buies  Creek;  Wil- 
liam D.  Weekes,  Murphy;  Mary 
Alys  Vorhees.  Raleigh,  and  Walter 
Schruntek.    Leavittown.    .N.   Y. 

Also  in  the  delegation  \yere  art 
majors  Robert  Ferrell  of  Graham 
and  Fred  Crisp  of  Chapel  Hill. 
bu.siness  student  Bennett  Whisnant 
of  .Morganton  and  graduate  stu- 
dents Alice  ReavLs  of  Raleigh, 
James  K.  Sanford  of  Enka  and 
Jenkins  M.  Robertson*  of  Char- 
lotte. 


FOR  INEXPENSIVE  LIVING:  27* 
Nashua  Trailer  —  has  bath  tub. 
shower,  porch,  oil  heater,  added 
room,  connected  to  utilities  and 
septic  tank.  One  mile  out  on 
airport  road.  Call  8472.  $2,300. 


FURNISHED  APARTMENT:  4 
Rooms  and  Bath,  completely  eq- 
uipped kitchen,  2  blocks  from 
campus.  June  1  to  Sept.  1.  $50 
per  month.  Call  9-3981. 

LOST:  BROWN  LEATHER^  WAL^ 
let.  Contains  identification  and 
important  papers.  Believed  to 
have  been  lost  in  Var.sity  Thea- 
tre. Finder  may  keep  money,  but 
please  return  papers  to  John  W. 
Walker,  204  Manly  Dorm,  or  call 
8-9130. 


WEIL  BUY  ALL 
YOUR  OLD  BOOKS 

Live  Texts 

We  pay  top  prices  for  texts 
that  will  be  used  again  at 
U.N.C.       • 

Dropped  Texts 

Well  search  the  market  fo^ 
a  spot  to  salvage  some  of 
your  los:f  when  a  text  is 
dropped. 

Enjoyable  Books 

We  can  use  books  you  no 
longer  want  on  your  shelves. 
The  next  fellow  that  comes 
along  may  find  them  as  de 
lightful 
^0  ago. 


Toronto,   Canada. 

Well  versed  in  the  field  of  city 
and  regional  planning,  he  has  writ- 
ten numerous  articles  which  have 
appeared  in  American  and  British 
journals.  This  afternoon  at  2:30  he 
will  speak  to  the  Planner's  Forum 
on  "Metropolitan  Development"  in 
the  faculty  lounge  of  the  School  of 
Business  Acrministration,  Carroll 
Hall.  Interested  persons  are  invited 
to  attend. 


NOW  THE  TIME  FOR 
BOOK  COLLECTORS 

During  the  month  of  May  each 
year,  we  buy  in  almost  one  third 
of  our  total  years  supply  of  old 
and  rare  books.  Shelves  that  were 
getting  parched  and  empty  blossom 
out  again  with  tempting  titles. 
Collectors  from  here  and  there 
throughout  the  State  appear,  like 
hawks  over  a  chicken  farm  in 
Spring. 

Now's  the  time  when  your  partic- 
ular gem  is  likely  to  show  up. 
Now's  the  time  when  somebody 
else  is  likely  to  nick  it  off  if  you're 
napping.  For  instance,  as  this  is 
written,  our  Recent  Acquisitions 
shelf  includes: 

A  Small  Library  of  Philosophy 

A  Rare  Book  on  Oriental  Rups 

A  Small  Clump  of  Histories 

A  First  Edition  of  Veblen 

A  Collection  of  Prints,  priced  at 
a  dime  each. 


Whafll  show  up  tomorrow  we  on 
s  you  did  a  year  or  '  ^^^  know.  It's  as  much   of  aa  ad 
venture  for  us   as  it   is  for  vou 


When  Exams  Are  Over, 

There'll  Be  Green  Money 

For  You  At 

THE  INTIMATE 
BOOKSHOP 

205   East   Franklin  Sh 
Open   Till    10   P.M. 


Come  join  the  fun! 


THE  INTIMATE 
BOOKSHOP 

205  East  4ankfin  Street 
Open  Till  10  P.  M. 


WHAT'S  AN  INSCRIfTION  IN  A  CAVt? 


K»iMLiiH  POTTS  Grotto  Motto 

CORNEll 


WHAT  IS  SKIUFUl  LARCENY? 


MAVIS  ioLSTAD  Deft  Tkcft 

CNICO  STATE  OOLLEGI 


WHAT  IS  A  STURDY  BOAT? 


MARTHA  NOYES 
VASSAR 


Staunch  Launch 


WHAT   IS   A  MIDGET   PUYIOYI 


EDWARD   GOODWIN 
WEST  VIRGINIA  U. 


Short  Sport 


Truman  Bfosf s 
Ac/mimsfrafidfi 

WASHINGTON— ( AP)— Harry 
S.  Truman  came  to  town  in  fight- 
ing trim  yesterday  and  declfired 
the  Eisenhower  administration  is 
driving  him  toward  Socialism. 

In  his  old  "Give-'em-HsU"  style, 
he  jumped  on  Secretary  of  tixe 
Treasury  Hurapjirey  for  wantinf. 
he  said,  "to  choice  us  to  death 
with  interes.t  rates."  And  he 
charged  administration  policies  j 
are  forcing  the  little  fellow  out 
of  business.  , 

"I'm  not  a  Socialist."  the  form- 
er Democratic  president  said, 
"but  they're  driving  ijie  that  Way.'' 


A^ETING 


'Professors  Rupert  B.  Vance  and 
Daniel  O.  Price  of  UNC's  Depart- 
ment of  Sociology  and  Anthropol- 
ogy are  attending  the  annpal 
meeting  of  The  Population  Asso- 
ciation of  America  to  be  held 
ening  at  5:S0  around  the  Davie  Po-  j  this  weekend  at  the  University  of 
ular,    and   will    take   the    form   of  I  Pennsylvania    in    Philadalphia. 


a  bermuda  picnic  With ,  barbecue 
supper,  Ckmpus  jazz  bands  and 
oth«r  entertainment,  and  a  talk  by 
Kershaw  on  "Religion  and  Jazz.  ' 

Other  appearances  will  be  in 
tlafisroonu  on  the  two  mornings, 
at  a  faculty  luncheon  at  12:30  on 
Tuesday,  and  at  a  banquet  and  in- 
stallation of  officors  OB  Tuesday 
evening  at  5:45. 


Professor  Vance,  a  past  Presi- 
dent of  the  Association  is  Chair- 
man of  a  session  on  Current  Re- 
search and  Research  Programs. 
Price,  who  is  at  present  Secretary- 
Treasurer  of  the  Population  As- 
sociation, is  giving  a  paper  on  the 
''Estimated  color  and  liativity 
composition  of  the  United  States 
population  in  1B75. 


DONT  JUST 
STAND  THERE 


.  STICKIE!  MAKE  $25 


^ 


Sticklers  are  simple  riddle.s  with  two-word 
rhyming  answers.  Poth  words  must  have 
the  same  number  of  syllables.  (No  draw- 
ings, plea.se!)  We'll  shell  out  .$25  for  all  we  use — and  for 
hundreds  tiiat  never  see  print.  So  send  stacks  of  'em 
with  your  name,  address,  college  and  cla.s,s  to  Happy- 
Joe-Lucky,  Box  67A,  Mount  Vernon,  N.  Y. 


MILLIONAIRES:  do  your  friends 
yawn  at  yachts?  Do  they  think 
diamonds  are  dreary?  Here's  a  pres- 
ent that  would  make  even  a  banker 
hanker:  introduce  him  to  Luckies! 
While  you're  at  it,  be  a  sport:  give 
him  a  whole  Startin'  Carton!  A 
Lucky  is  all  cigarette  .  .  .  nothing 
but  fine  tobacco — mild,  good-tast- 
ing tobacco  that's  TOASTED  to 
taste  even  better.  Invest  in  a  car- 
ton yourself.  You'll  say  Luckies 
are  the  best- tasting  cigarette  you 
ever  smoked! 


Luckies  Taste  Better 


IT'S  TOASTED"  TO  TASTE   BETTER 


CLEANER,  FRESHER,  SMOOTHER! 


WHAT  IS  A  DISH  NOISE  I 


MARION  ftTNN 
MCKCCR  U 


WHAT  ARE  HAY   AND  OATSt 


STANLEY  PETERS. 
U     or  SANTA  CLARA 


Mule  Fuel 


WHATS  A   WORKER   IN   A 
CANDLE  fACTORY? 


PAUL   MILLER. 
U.   OF  FLORIbA 


Taper  Shaper 


WHAT  IS  A  SMAu  nca* 


CHARLES  (ONES        Dworf  Whotf 

WILKES  COLLC6E. 


•  A.T.  Co.      Product  cf  iAu- t/nn»44k€t^  Jviwg^t^^nyut^^J^^ 


V^^^^^^^IWWWWOTWI 


FAOt  pout 


THi  OAfLT  TAR  HBH 


SATURDAY,  MAY  4,  71S7 


Princeton  Loses  Only  Two  Sets;  Beats  UNC,  9-0 


Bank  E^ten  In 
Straight  Sets; 
Black  Wins  One 

PRINCETON.    N.J.  —    (AP) 
Princeton's    netmen    yielded    only 
two  sets   in   sweeping     over     tho 
North    Carolina   tennis   tetun.   9-0, 
yesterday.  , 

Geoff  Black  of  the  T«r  Heels 
grabbed  one  set  before  relinquish 
ing  to  Princeton's  No.  2  pl«>er 
John  McLean.  5-7.  63,  6-3. 

In  doubles.  .Black  and  partner 
Frank  Livin|{s;toa  <\t  the  Tar  Heels 
carried  a^n-ay  another  set  befwre 
bowing  to  the  Tiger  duo  o(  Mc 
Lean  and  Dave  Brw^hner.  tKS.  3«, 
C2. 

•    Sl'MMARlKS 

Siag)e!>: 

Jim  FjUTtn.  Prtnceton.  vlefeated 
Steven  Bank.  N    C.  6^,  6  1 

J^>hn  \lcl/e«n.  rrinc*tv>n.  de 
foattd  (;«^ft  nUick.  N  0 ,  5-7.  6-S. 
63. 

Pave  Brtvhner,  lMkWet«>n.  de- 
feated fYsnk  Livingston.  N.  C..  6- 
4.  6-4. 

Jeff  Arnold.  Princeton,  defeated 
l{.iy  Nevvsome.  X.  C.  6-0.  6-L 

Perry  Ruddtck.  Princeton,  dc- 
!.  ated  Fritx  Van  Winkle.  N.  C.  6 
2.  fr4. 

•  Dave  Soficld.  Princeton,  defeat- 
ed Tom  Mcl\-er.  N.  C.  6-4.  6-0. 

Doubles: 

Arnold  and  Ruddick.  Princeton, 
defeated  Bank  and  Newsome,  N.C., 
6-2.  6-2. 

Brechner  and  McLean.  Prince- 
ton, defeated  BJack  and  Living- 
ston. N.  C..  6-3.  3-6,  6-2. 

George  Reindel  and  Tony  Tully. 
Princeton,  defeated  Mclnver  and 
Dannv  Smith,  N.  C,  6-3.  8-6. 


Duke  Takes  Conference 
Lead  By  Beating  Terps 


(X>U.I'XIE  PARK.  Md..— (AP  — 
Duke,  capitalizing  on  the  steady 
pitching  of  Dick  Smallwood  and 
some  erratic  Maryland  fielding, 
defeated  the  Terps  6-2  today  to 
take  over  undisputed  poascsslon 
of  first  place  in  the  Atlantic  Coast 
Conference  baseball  standings. 

Smallwood  limited  Maryland  to 
a  hits,  .struck  out  9  and  walkt*d 
only  2.  Stan  Bobb.  hi.s  mound  op- 
ponent, was  equally  effective. 

Bol>b  allowed  only  7  hits  until 
the  9th  inning  -struck  out  5  and 
walked  I 

Duke  .soored  three  times  in  the 
fifth  without  a  hit.  George  Atkin- 
Sitn  was  hit  by  a  Bobb  pitch, 
Smallwood  got  the  Maryland  hurl- 
er's  ivnjy  walk,  .ind  Bernie  Blaney 
scortHl  when  the  ball  rolled  away 
fn>m   Ilintz. 

The  Blue   Devils  added  an  un- 


earned run  in  the  6th  and  two  earn 
ed  runs  in  the  ninth. 

The  victory  was  Duke's  15th  in 
20  games  and  gave  the  Blue  Dev- 
ils a  9-3  conference  record. 


Pinch  Homer 
Beats  Giants 

NEW  YORK— (AP)— Pete  Whis- 
enanl  slammed  a  pinch  hit  home 
run  with  two  mates  aboard  in  the 
ninth  inning  to  give  the  Cincin- 
nati Redlegs  victory  in  an  Jl-lO 
slugfcst  with  the  New  York  Giants 
rookie  lefthander  Pete  Burnside 
tonight.  Whisenant's  wallop  off- 
set a  five-run  Giant  rally  in  the 
sixth,  highlighted  by  Hank  Sauers 
fifth  home  run  of  the  season  with 
two  on. 


Tar  Heels  Play  |  Carolina  Trackmen  Host  To  Duke 

i 

McCrary  Today 


"THB  FUNNIEST 

KAVE  ON 
MOVIE  RECORDI' 


By  BILL  KING 

The  Carolina  baseballers,  co- 
leaders  in  the  hot  Atlantic  Coast 
Conference  baseball  race  as  of  yes- 
terday, get  away  from  the  mount- 
ing pressure  of  conference  com- 
petition this  afternoon  as  they  go 
against  the  semi-pro  McCrary  Ea- 
gles in  Asheboro. 

McCrary  defeated  the  Tar  Heels 
during  the  Easter  Holidays  in  one 
of  f  jur  contests  during  that  period 
for  Carolina. 

Tar  Heel  coach  Walt  Rabb  said 
yesterday  that  he  will  pitch  sev- 
eral men  tomorrow  in  a  final  tune- 
up  for  the  stretch  drive  in  the 
ACC.    "We'll    be    out    to   win    this 


Here  Today  Without  Jim  Beatty 


By  DAVE  WIBLE 

The  Carolina  varsity  cinderraen 
will  play  the  part  as  host  this  after- 
noon at  2  o'clock  when  they  meet 
the  Duke-minus-Dave-Sirae  track 
team  on  Fetzer  Field. 

Both  squads  w  ill  be  without  their 
top  performers  in  toda,y's  meet. 
The  Fabulou:.-  Sime  has  confined 
his  talents  to  Duke  baseball  this 
season  and  will  not  take  to  the 
track  for  the  Blue  Devils  until  the 
ACC  meet  which  will  be  here  next 


ning  the  Tar  Heels  .will  still  f ield ,  Tar  Heels  before  the  ACC  Chain- 


one  of  the  top  miiers  m  the  con- 
ference in  the  person  of  Everett 
Whatley.  Whatley  raia  a  4:15  mile 
at  the  Maryland  Carolina  meet,  and 
has  been  close  behind  Beatty  all 
lear. 

In  the  dash  departnuent  the  Tar 
Heels  have  done  very  well  this 
year  with  Jim  Varnunj,  Jim  Moss 
and  Emil  DeCantis.  These  three 
have  been  finishing  ota  or  near 
the  top  in  the  220  and  WO  all  sea- 


vvcekeud.  Carolina  will  be  without '  son. 

the  service  of  Jim  Beatty  who  is  i  Before  each  event  this  afternoon, 
resting  a  foot  injury  received  at  ^j^g  freshmen  from  the  two  schools 
the  Penn  Relays  last  Saturday. 


ACC  Football,  Basketball  TV 
Is  Approved  By  Officials 


Chi  SOX  Win 

I 

In  Big  3rd 

CHICAGO  -4AP—  Centerfielder  | 
Larry   Doby  s  baaes-loaded  double 

touched  oH  a  .u-nm  Chic&gc  third  j  the  highest  of  three  bidders 
inning  which  s^'.ed  way  the  fifth  i  said  Chesley     had     handled 


GREENSBORO— (AP)— Regional 
telecasting  of  Atlantic  Coast  Con- 
ference footbiiH'  and  basketball 
games  next  fall  and  winter  was 
approved  here  yesterday  by  the 
faculty  chairmen  of  the  eight 
member  schools. 

•  The  prospect  is  for  four  reg- 
ionally telecast  football  games  on 
dates  provided  by  the  National 
Collegiate  Athletic  Assn.  on  12 
Saturday  afternoon  basketball 
games. 

Shortly  after  the  reconnnenda- 
tion  was  read  by  TV  Committee 
Chairman  Rex  Enright,  athletic 
director  of  the  University  of  South 
Carolina,  he  announced  that  the 
rights  to  set  up  an  ACC  TV  net- 
work for  football  were  awarded 
to  C.  D.  Chesley  of  Philadelphia, 

He 

the 

tele- 


NCAA  -  approved    nationally 
vised  games  in  the  past. 


straight  victoey  far  the  rampaging 
White  Sox.  U-t,  o^-ir  the  Washing- 
ton Sf^aators  ;sxiay. 

Only  1,405  ittended  in  45-dcgrec 
weather. 

It  wa£  the  Uth  triumph  in  13 
starts  since  the  season  opened  for 
the  first-place  Pale  Hose  and  set 
up  an  interesting  three-game  in- 
vasion by  the  world  champion 
New  York  Yankees  starting  to- 
morrow. 

This    is  the  best  early    season 
start  in  White  Sox  history,  topping       It  will  be  the. first  regional  tele 
5  10-mark    in  the  first    13  games  «asUng  of  either  sport  on  a  reg- 
by  the  1920  Pale  Hose.  "l*""  ^^sis  in  the   ACC. 

Chicago  righthander   Bob  Kee- 


Th:e  comtnittee  ret  omm  e  nda^on 
said  the  program  would  allow  the 
Conference  "to  study  and  evalu- 
ate the  effects  of  TV  on  the  Con- 
ference and  the  Conference  area." 

"No  one  knows  what  effect  tele- 
vision will  have  but  this  will  give 
us  a  chance  to  find  out,"  Enright 
said.    - 


closed  session  following  the  meet- 
ing to  discuss  the  case  of  Don 
Coker,  University  of  North  Caro- 
lina freshman  declared  ineligible 
after  the  conference  accused  a 
friend  of  the  University  of  giving 
Coker  i  membership  in  the  neids- 
ville.  N.  C.  country  club. 

A  financial  report  by  Dr.  0.  K. 
Cornwell  of  North  Carolina  show- 
ed the  conference  with  $119,000 
on  hand,  plus  $40,000  in  three 
special  accounts.  Dr.  Cornwell 
said  $37,000  still  must  be  paid  to 
Clemson  for  its  trip  to  the  Or- 
ange Bowl  and  another  $15,000  to 
settle  an  Orange  Bowl  account. 


gan  failed  in  his  first  start,  but 
Gerr>'  Staley  took  over  in  the  mid- 
st of  a  four-run  Washington  sec- 
ond and  tamed  the  Senators  the 
rest  of  the  way*  to  earn  his  first 
victory  in  three  relief  appearances. 
Even  though  Staley  yielded  10  hits 
in  7  1/3  inning?,  he  blanked  the 
Senators  until  a  two-run  ninth. 

Russ  Kemmerer,  former  Boston 
Red  Soxer,  started  for  Washington 
but  became  the  fifth  righthander 
to  fizzle  against  the  White  Sox  in 
as  many  efforts. 


Carolina  Batting 

Centerfielder  Dick  Hudson,  with 
a  .308  batting  average,  is  the  lead- 
ing Carolina  batter  a?  of  Wednes- 
day's game  with  Duke  University. 
Hudson  replaces  catcher  Jim  Leg- 
ette  whose  average  has  dropped 
to  .303. 
THE  TOTALS 

Ab     R 

Dick  Hudson   .^ 65    18 

Tim  Legette  76     10 

Don  Lewis  7i      g 

Ivalee  Hill  74    13 

Joe  Shook ^  70    14 

Roger  Hon'cutt.l  74    11 

Jim  Raiigh 30      3 

Don  Hill  37      6 

Chuck  Hartman     39      9 


The    conference    also    took    the 

first  step  in  allowing  its  basket- 

I  ball  teams  to  participate  in  post- 

:  season    tournaments    other    than 

!  the  NCAA  play-offs. 

Eddie  Cameron,  athletic  direc- 
tor of  Duke  University  and  chair- 
man of  the  basketball  committee, 
said  his  group  recommended  that 
any  team  which  does  hot  win  the 
conference  tournament  but  which 
decides  the  ACC  championship 
should  be  allowed  to  participate 
in  other  post-season  tournaments. 

Facility  chairmen     met     in     a 


H 

20 

23 

18 

20 

16 

16 

7 

8 

7 


PCT. 
.308 
.303 
.254 
.273 
.229 
.206 
.233 
.216 
.179 


The  Brooklyn  Dodgers  have 
played  in  the  World  Series  eight 
times  against  (the  New  Ytork 
Yankees  and  have  lost  the  champ- 
ionship of  baseball  on  all  but  one 
occasion. 


Dodgers  Win 

JERSEY  CITY,  N.  .J.— (AP)— 
Don  Newcombe  extended  his 
winning  ■streak  over  St.  Louis  to 
nine  games  with  a  five-hit  shut- 
out tonight  as  the  Brooklyn  Dod- 
gers defeated  the  Cardnials  6-0  to 
even  the  series  at  one  victory  each. 

Cooper  Heads  Camp 

Wilson  Reid  Cooper,  Jr.,  rising 
junior  from  Chattanooga,  has  been 
selected  Chairman  of  the  1^7 
YMCA  Freshman  Camp.  He  suc- 
ceeds Dave  Davis,  who  recently 
won  the  UNC-Goettingen  E^xchange 
scholarship. 

Cooper,  a  Phi  Delta  Theta,  is  a 
member  of  the  student  legislature, 
varsity  soccer  and  swimming  teams 
and  the  YMCA  cabinet 


Foytack  In 
Shutout 

DETROIT— (AP)— Paul  Foytack 
blanked  the  Boston  Red  Sox  on 
4  hits  and  rightfielder  Al  Kaline 
kept  the  Detroit  rightnandcr  out 
of  trouble  with  four  spectactular 
catches  in  a  6-0  Tiger  triumph  in 
41  degree  weather  at  Briggs  Stad- 
ium yesterday. 

Kaline  robbed  the  Red  Sox  of 
four  base  hits  and  added  three 
consecutive  singles  in  the  Tiger 
attack  on  starter  Frank  Sullivan 
and  reliefer  Bob  Chakales. 

Shortstop  Harvey  Kuenn  tripled 
home  the  first  two  Detroit  runs 
in  the  fifth  with  his  second  hit  in 
his  last  23  at  bats.  Both  of  them 
have  been  triples.  Kuenn  came  on 
to  score  on  a  sacrifice  fly. 

Frank  House  clouted  a  three- 
run  homer  off  Chakales  in  the 
ninth  after  a  pair  of  walks. 

Foytack's  victory  wa^  his  first. 
He  struck  out  four  and  walked 
three  in  going  the  route  for  the 
first  time  and  retired  the  last  12 
men  in  order.  He  had  missed  one 
pitching  turn  because  of  a  muscle 
tear  in  his  side. 


one,"  Rabb  said,  "but  we'll  juggle 
the  lineup  a  bit  in  order  to  get 
some  practice." 

Rabb  called  the  Tar  Heel's  ten- 
inning  victory  over  the  Duke  Blue 
Devils  "a  great  win." 

"I  was  very,  very  proud  of  the 
boys  in  the  Duke  game,"  he  con- 
tinued. "They  knew  that  they  had 
a  job  to  do,  and  they  went  out 
and  won  themselves  a  big  ball- 
game." 

The'  Tar  Heels  now  have  three 
offical  conference  games  remain- 
ing and  two  practice  games.  Caro- 
lina will  play  Wake  Forest  and 
State  twice  more  but  only  with 
each  team  one  will  figure  in  the 
record  books.  The  other  game  is 
a  makeup  contest  with  the  Mary- 
land Terps. 


Ted  Williams  and  Stan  Musial 
lead  the  American  and  National 
Leagues  in  having  the  highest 
lifetime    batting   averages. 


To  date  the  Tar  Heels  have  suf- 
fered two  defeats,  Maryland's  pow- 
erful squad  took  a  one  sided  win, 
and  the  Virginia  Cavalier o-,  edged 
the  Tar  Heels  by  6  1/3  points.  The 
Virginia  defeat  is  no  sign  of  Ca- 
rolina wcaliness  since  the  neculus 
of  the  squad  was  at  the  Penn  Re- 
lays. 

Coach  Ranson  said  that  today's 
meet  will  be  a  real  challenge  for 
the  Tar  Heels.  The  Duke  squad 
came  out  on  top  last  year  71  1/2 
to  59  1/2. 

Although  Beatty  will  not  be  run- 


will  compete.  The  Tar  Babies  have 
yet  to  be  defeated  this  season  in 
four  meets. 

Today's  meet  is  the  last  for  the 


pionships  which  will  be  next  wei :k- 
end,  May  10th  and  11th. 


_  11 

Special  Course 
'for  College  Womnn] 

Thorough  technical  trairSiag 
with  concurrent  progrant  of 
business  orientation.  F^esi- 
dences  in  New  York  and.  Bos- 
ton. Write  College  Deasi  for 
GiBBS  Girls  at  Work. 

Katharine.  1_1_ 

Sxorr>s 
secret:ariaL 


BOSTON  le    :  : 

PROVIDENCE  S  . 
NEW  YORK  1;  .  . 
MONTCtAIR,  fix 


21  MarttMraifh  St 

.  .  .  155  >ll»|«ll  St 

.  .  .  230l'»rkAir«. 

.  32  Plywwth  St 


60%  Dacron  -  -  40%  Worsted 
Wool  -|-  Fine  Tailoring-Cool, 
Economical   Lightweight 


k..\ 


Kfi 


^\'Wv. 


ComlFort! 


imuy 

mE 

In  what  ". . .  may  wall  b«  th« 
most  lavish  comady  avar  mada!" 

THE 

COURT 
JESHER 

GCy'NfSJOHNS' 

RATHSOf^E-Wf^SBUfJ/fMKGl 

Cohf  b/TKHWiCOtOR, 


W^M  ^ 


^.0 


N«» 


«C*lJCO»£ . 

TODAY 


Carolina 


Here  are  the  advantages  that  a  DACRON-WORSTED 
SUIT  brings  to  you: 

•  A  Doroos  fabric  that  "breathns" 

•  A  7V^  ex.  fabric  that  ''floats'*  on  your  back 
■  A  fabric  that  rasitts  wrinkles  like  steel 

•  A  fabric  with  durability  and  strength  Styled  in  the  conventional 
natural  medcl  by  College  Hall.  Available  in:  Char.  Gray;  Brown/black; 
Canobridflc;  and  en  Olive  Stripe. 


SUN.  -  MON. 


ANTHONV   OKBAA 


MILUNDQUfNNPAGEl 


JOIK  k.-MuttfOi 


The 
Riveris  Edae 


CinkmaS»cop£   Milt »»  pi  in 


^ 


$55.00 


STEVBKS-  8HBPHBRD 


Wh*r«  Wall<«  My  Tru*  L«v« 

Baby  Ltt  M*  Taha  Veu  Oraam.ng 

Lift  Coutd  Not  Battar  Ba 

Tha  Maiadruaod  Jatta' 

My  Haart  Kno<»a  A  Lsva«y  %»^ 
Oiitfox  Tha  Fo« 


TODAY   ONLY! 


STARTS  SUNDAY 

'THE  YEAR'S  MOST 
^^.EXCITING  FILM" 


AGAZ/\.- 

UURENCE  OLiVIER 

Ut  SHAK£$PE.'.RE  3 


\ 


The  record  for  hoiner.s  in  one 
season  for  a  team  is  held  by  the 
New  York  Giants  and  Cincinati 
Redlegs  with  221.  The  Reds  tied 
the  mark  in  1956. 


Howard  Johnson  Restaurant 

STUDENT   SPECIALS 


mm 


Barbecued   Chicken 
Choice  Steak  Sandwiches 

SERVED  ^^^-    5:00  P.M; 

>EICVfcU  8:00- 11:00  P.M. 

""Undmark  For  Hungry  Tarheels" 


All  Garments  ef  Weel 

and  Weei-likt  Fabrics 

con  new  be 

DRY  CLEANED 

with  erigind  body 

and  texture  fully 

retained  every  time 

rAcrt's 

SOFT- SET® 

SANITONEI 


Spring    Is   Here( 

WHY  LUC  YOUR 
WINTER  GARMENTS  HOME? 

Why    don't    you    leave    them 
with   us  ar»d  let  us  dry  clean, 
moth  proof,  and  store  them  for 
the  summer  months. 
PHONE  4921 

UNIVERSITY 

DRY   CLEANERS 


«j 


Once  upon  a  time  (which  is  the  way  most  stones  begin — and  who's 
to  argue  with  success?)  there  was  an  argument  about  some  do-it-yourself 
veniaon  . . .  and  a  nice  nobleman  became  a  good  Hood. 

IVading  charcoal  gray  for  Lincoln  Green  wasn't  ea«y— Robin  had  a 
good  thing  working  for  him  before  he  started  tramping  the  woods. 
But,  with  a  philosophical  sigh,  he  gathered  a  crew  called  the  Merry 
Men,  and  began  "sKacting  tribute"  from  tyrannical  King  John.  Actually, 
he  was  stealing  the  old  boy  blind  . . .  but  King  John  was  pretty  much 
(^  a  crumb,  and  most  of  the  loot  went  to  the  poor,  so  nobody  really 
cared.  Besides — the  Sheriff  of  Nottingham  couldn't  catch  Robin! 


Well,  one  day,  when  things  were  kin^  of  slow,  in  pranced  Maid  Marian 
— idongflide  of  whom  Cleopatra  would  have  looked  like  a  Poland  China; 

"What'i  for  lunch,  Robbie?"  inquired  Marian.  "Cream  of  Nowhere, 
Doll,"  replied  R.  H.  "Have  a  Ipowl?" 

The  rest  of  the  story  is  history — the  Merry  Men  always  served 
Budweiser  with  their  meals,  and  what  girl  could  resist  hospitality  like 
iluit?  Marian  became  Mrs.  Hood  . . .  and  Robin?  He  hung  up  his  bow 
and  arrows  and  is  now  the  Budweiser  salesman  for  Sherwood  and 
pcunta  north.  (Sometimes,  he  points  south.) 


imiAL:  WenUon  or  kamburgen : ;  t  $park  up  your  next  mad 
tPiA  (he  merry  taste  of  the  King  of  Beers!  ' 


Budweiser. 


4UN(3  OP  BEERa 


-*'   - 


AMOBUBER-BUSCH.  INC.  •   ST.  LOUIS 


tJ.H.C.  Ubr^ry 
Serials     DeP^; 


WelcJome  Parents!  Have  A  Nice  Stay  At  Carolina 


WEATHER 

Partly  cloudy  mkI  ceoi.  Exp«ct«4 
high,  60. 


iKiclJattuil^arlieel 


REVIEW 

For  th*  w««k  in  r*vi«w«  him  to 
pag*  2. 


VOL.  LVII.  NO.   1M 


Complete  (/P)  Wire  Strvte^ 


CHAPEL  HILL,  NORTH  CAROLINA,  SUNDAY,  MAY  5,  1957 


Offices  in   Graham   Metmorial 


POUR    PAGES  THIS   ISSUE 


Nancy  Jo  Rush  Named 
Sigma  Chi  Sweetheart 

Nancy  Jo  Rush  has  been  hear-   ingen  of  Salisbury,  Daryl  Farring- 
ing  the  Sigma  Chi's  famous  sweet- '  ton  of  Short  Hills,  N.  J. 


heart   song   most   of   her   life,   but 
now  she  knows  the  true  meaning , 
of  the  tune.  ! 

Last    Saturday    night   this    blue- ' 
eyed  blonde  Tri  Delt  was  crowned ; 
•'Sweetheart  of  Sigma  Chi"  by  the 
newly-elected    Alpha   Tau   chapter 
president.    Van   Woltz   of   Greens- 
boro. 

A      junior      psychology      major 
from    Longmeadow,   Mass.,   Nancy 
Jo  was  crowned  at  the  sweetheart , 
banquet    h?ld    in    Greensboro    at 
the     Slarmount     Fori?.><t     Country , 
Club.  I 

Other  members    of    the    sweet- 
heart  C3urt   include  Ina  Gee   Rid- , 
ley    of    Courtland,    Va.,    Marianna 
Miller   of   Pineville,    Peggy    Swar- ; 


Liicinda  Holderness  of  Greens- 
boro, Gail  Willingham  of  St. 
Petersburg,  Fla.,  Anne  Shelley  of 
Louisville,  Ky.,  Hannah"  Kirby  of 
Louisville,  Ky.  and  Carol  Camp- 
bell of  Raleigh. 

Linda  Chappel  of  Charlotte. 
Nancy  Davis  of  Mooresvillc.  Gin- 
ny  Dawson  of  Stantonsburg.  Mary 
Leu  Brinckerhoff  of  Louisville, 
Ky.  and  Sara  Williamson  of  Darl- 
ington. S.  C. 

The  banquet  and  party  which 
followed  were  held  in  conjunction 
with  the  Sigma  Chi  sweetheart 
weekend  in  Greensboro.  Tlie  event 
was  concluded  Sunday  after  a  pic- 
nic held  at  one  of  the  brother's 
cabin. 


nev5 

m 
Jbricf 

Hopkins  Services 

GROTON.  Conn..  (AP)— Mem- 
orial services  for  the  founder  of 
the  General  Dynamics  Corp.  will 
be  held  here  Monday,  within 
sight  of  the  world's  first  two  atom- 
ic submarines  his  firm  built. 

John  J.  Hopkins,  who  was  also 
chairman  of  the  board,  died  yes- 
terday in  Washington.  He  was  61. 

The  long  gray  silhouettes  of  the , 
Nautilus  aiHl  Seawolf  will  be  vis-j 
ible  from  the  yards  of  the  corpo-  ■ 
ration's  electric  boat  division, 
where  they  are  moored  across  the  , 
Thames  River  at  the  New  London  j 
submarine  base. 

Not  far  from  the  place  in  the 
yards  where  the  service  will  be 
held  is  the  third  nuclear  sub.  USS 
Skate,  due  for  launching  later  this 
month.  Nearby,  work  has  begun 
on  two  more.  USS  Skipjack  and 
USS  Triton. 


German  Scholarship 
Awarded  Dave  Davis 

Supreme  Cooff  Award  Entitles  Winner 
Admits  Former  Year's  Study  Abroad 

UNC  Director 


Interested  In 
GMAB? 

Applications  are  available  for 
positions  on  the  Graham  Memor- 
ial Activities  Board  at  the  Infor- 
mation Desft  in  Graham  Memorial. 
GMAB  President  Benny  Thomas 
said  yesterday. 

Anyone  interested  in  serving  on 
any   of   the   committees   as   mem-  i 
bers    or   chairman    has    been    ask- 
ed  to  fill   out   an   application   be- 
fore Tuesday.  | 

Those  interested  in  participat- , 
ing  in  extra-curricular  activities 
and  in  serving  the  campus  and  | 
j^Utdent  body  have  been  renund-  j 
ed  by  Thomas  that  this  program  . 
presents  a  wonderful  opportunity 
to  fulfill  their  desires,  j 

Said  Thomas  yesterday:  "We 
have  a  big  year  before     us.     and  ,  ^  ^       ,.     .    , 

from  all  outlooks  it  appears  as  if  /^°"^^  ^"^  Iheuse  of  Carolina  s  fa^ 


Sweetheart  Of  Sigma  Chi 


Nancy  Jo  Rush,  junior  psychology  major  from  Longmeadow,  Mass,  was  crowned  "Sweetheart  of  Sic|- 
ma  Chi"  last  Saturday  night  in  Greensboro  during  the  UNC  chapter's  sweetheart  weekend.  A  member 
of  Delta  Delta  Delta  sorority,  Nancy  Jo  was  crowned   by  Van   Woltz,  n*wly-elected   Sigma  Chi   president. 

Photo  by  Bill   King 


UNC  Extends  Welcome  Of 
Campus  To  Visit'mq  Parents 


Two    North   Carolina    men    have 
been   admitted   to   practice    before 
,  the  Supreme  Court  of  the  United 
States,  according  to  an  announce- 
ment  from  Washington  yesterday. 

Named  to  practice  before  tfie 
nations  highest  tribunal  were 
North  Carolina  Attorney  General 
George  B.  Patton  and  Assistant  At- 
torney  General    Robert    E.   Giles. 

The  two  men  were  presented  to 
the  high  court  .vesterday  by  one 
of  its  best  known  critics,  Sen.  Sam 
Irvin   (D-NC). 

Giles,  a  resident  of  Chapel  Hill, 
was   formerly   director   of   the   In- 
stitute   of   Government   here.    Pat- 
i  ton  is  a  former  resident  of  Frank- 
Un. 


By  EDITH  MacKINNON 

Dave  Davis,  rising  jiinicr.  has 
been  named  the  winner  of  the 
Goettingen    Exchange   Scholarship. 


DAVE  DAVIS 

.   .  receives  yvaut 


it  is  going  to  be  one  of  the  best 
for  GMAB." 


Truman  BlasU  Ike 

WASHINGTOJl,  (AP)— Harcy 
S.  Truman  accused  President  Eis- 
enhower tonight  of  a  failure  of 
leadership  and  said  he  has  "play- 
ed political  bunk  with  the  bud- 
get." 

And  the  former  president  told 
fellow  Democrats  that  what  he 
called  the  "tight  money  policy" 
and  high  interest  rates  "can  bring 
on  a  depression." 

"This."  he  said,  "is  a  reversion 
to  the  trickle  down  theory  that 
has  guided  the  Republican  Party 
from  the  time  of  its  interception. 
It  is  a  means  of  transferring  in- 
come from  the  poor  who  need  it 
to  the  rich  who  don't." 


Old  Well 
Initiation 


By   WALT    SCHRUNTEK  campus    guests    include    Morehead 

Parents,    Welcome!    Today,    the    Planetarium,  which  houses  four  ex- j 
University  of  North  Carolina  Fac-   hibit  rooms  in  addition  to  the  pro- 
ulty.  Administration  and   students  jection  room.  North  of  the  Plane-  ^ 
join   in   extending   you    their   wel-   tarium  the  world's  largest  sundail, 

a  gift  of  philanthropist  John  Mot- 
ley Morehead  can  be  seen. 

A  stroll  along  a  red-brick  walk 
leading  from  the  Planetarium 
toward  South  Building  wilT  more 
than  likely  lead  the  wandering 
visitor  to  the  Old  Well,  a  camp- 
us trademark  and  tradition 
which  actually  defies  ttte  defini- 
tion of  tradition. 
It  is  one  of  those  landmark  fea- 


cilities    for    this    Seventh    Annual 
Parents  Day. 

A  slate  of  special  events  and  ac- 
tivities has  been  scheduled  for  you 
in  the  hopes  of  making  your  s-tay 
here  today  an  enjoyable  one  in  ad- 
dition to  affording  you  a  worth- 
while insight  into  UNC  life  and 
tradition. 


GM'S  SLATE 


Tha  following  activities  arc 
schadulad  for  Graham  Memorial: 

TODAY 

Westmimtar  Fallowship,  Ro- 
land Pa  Hear  1,  ♦:8M0:45  a.m.; 
Prasbytarian  Church,  9:30-11  a.- 
m.,  Roland  Parkar  2  and  3,  APO 
Room  and  Randazvous  Room: 
Young  Frianda,  9545-11,  Grail 
Room;  Quakars,  11  a.m.  to  1  p.- 
m.,  Grail  Room;  Community 
Church,  n  •.m.  fo  12,  Roland 
Parker  1;  Poncing  Club,  7-11 
p.m.,  Roland  Parkor  1,  2  and  3; 
Student  Party,  9-11  p.m..  Wood- 
house   Conforonca   Room. 

MONDAY 

Debate  CouneiL  4-5  p.m., 
Woodhouao  Conforonca  Room; 
Student  Entortalfim«nt  Commit- 
tee, 4-5:30  pjtu,  Orall  Room;  Or- 
ientation CommlttM,  4-5:30  p.m., 
Roland  Parkor  1  tnd  2;  Danca 
CoHMnittao,  7-1  p.m.,  Orall  Room; 
Student  Party,  7-|j|0  p.m.,  Ro- 
land Parkor  1  and  2;  Student 
Traffic  Comnwttoo,  frU  P-m., 
Weodhouso  Coftf«rtnca  Room; 
Order  of  »ho  Orall,  9-11  p.m., 
Grail  R( 


The  sights,  landmarks  and  tradi- 
tional   features    on    the    Carolina  I  ture^'  which  has  no  particular  his- 

I 

The  Order  of  the  Old  Well  will   campus  should  be  pointed  out  to  i  tory  —  a  feature  which  neverthe- 

.  hold   its   annual   initiation   Thurs- '  ^H   visitors   as    not  only   vital   as- '  less  has  an   important  and  prom- 

<  day  at  4  p.m    in  Gerrard  Hall,  it   Pects  of  Carolina-lore,  but  signifi-  inent  place  in  Carolina  lore. 

:  was  announced  yesterday  by  Pres-   ^^^^  indications  of  the  histon-  and  ]     A   look   east,   across   the   azalea 

'  ident  "Mebane  Pritchett.  function  of  the  University.  \  beds    surrounding    the    Old   Well, 

A  relative  newcomer  to  campus       Outstanding  among  the  features   will  place  the  eye  on  a  red-brick, 

honorary   societies,   the   Order   of  i  *°    ^  "°t^d   ^"d  pointed  out  to '  ivy-covered   building   that   is  Old 

;  the   Old   Well   was   established   in  I 
1949  by  Dean  of  Awards  Earnest    TO  HUFFAKER,  CORBETT: 

,  Mackie,    the    late    Dr.    Samuel   T. 

I  Emory  and   professor  of  English, 

]  Dr.  William  S.  Wells. 

With  the  support  of  a  few  in- 

j  terested   students,   the   idel   orig- 

;  inated  from  the  feeling  that  "too 

I  much  service  is  being  done  in  the 

j  University  and  too  little  recogni- 

I  tion  forthcoming." 

I     Membership    is    based    on     an 

I  equitable  point  system  represent- 
ing  tangible  accomplishments  of 
student  leaders. 

Officers  this  year   are:   Mebane 

I  Pritchett,  president;  Luther  Hod- 
ges, vice  president;  and  Mary  Ann 
Keeter,  secretary-treasurer. 


East  Dormitory.  Built  in  1793;  Old 
Ea.st  is  the  oldest  dorm  building 
in  America. 

Another  building  steeped  in  his- 
tory, and  ne.xt  to  Old  East  in  years 
Li  Person  Hall,  now  used  as  an  art 
gallery.  The  gallery  will  be  open 
today  for  guests  who  want  to  re- 
tire for  a  few  moments  of  quiet 
contemplation. 

Visitors  to  the  campus  should 
be  directed  to  Kenan  Stadium, 
one  of  the  truly  picturesque  am- 
phitheaters in  the  country.  Set- 
tled comfortably  in  the  brush- 
filled  hills  and  surrounded  on 
three  sides  by  tall  pines,  Kenan 
Stadium  establishes  the  quiet, 
serene  beauty  of  postcard  quali- 
ty, which  usually  follows  most 
visitors  who  have  observed  the 
scene. 

The  Bell  Tower,  Wilson  Library, 
(See   UNC,   Page  3) 


Parents  Day  Schedule 

Today's  Parents'  Day  schedule  includes  the  following  activities: 

11  a.m.-r-Church  service  at  various  Chapel   Hill  churches. 

12  a.m.-2  p.m. — Lunch.  P»r»nts.  h«v*  baan  invited  to  picnic  on  the 
campus. 

2-2:30  p.m. — Exhibits  and  open  house  at  Morehead  Planetarium 
and  the  Dept  of  Arts  and  Sciences.  Open  house  for  all  dormitories  on 
campus.  Exhibits  and  open  house  at  the  Chemistry  Dept.  (room  207, 
New  Venable),  the  Physics  Dept.  (room  206,  Phillips  Hall),  the  Geol- 
ogy Dept.  (Geology  museum);  the  Radio  and  Television  Dept.  (Swain 
Hall),  the  Art  Museum  and  the  Infirmary. 

3:30-4:30  p.m. — Reception  under  Davie  Poplar  with  the  Faculty 
and  Administration  ot  the  University. 

4:30-6  p.m. — Speech  by  Roy  Armstrong  and  Band  Concert  on  the 
lawn  near  Davie  Poplar. 

May  6:  One  More  Day; 
KershawHeadsY-Nite 

By  MARY  MOORE  MASON         and  ambiguity,  yet  life  is  good." 
One  more  day  till  May  6th.  And       He  will  illustrate  his  speech  on 
with  May  the  6th  comes  Y-Nite  in    "Religion  and  Jazz'  with  the  mi.- 
the  form  of  a  Bermuda  Picnic  at  sic     of     several     popular     campus 
5:30  around  the  Davie  Poplar;  the 


Du  Pont  Scholarships 


bands  which  have  been  brought  lo- 
Rev.   A.   L.    Ker.haw,   with   a   talk  gether  for  the  occasion  ^y  campus 
on    "Religion    and    Jazz";    campus 
jazz    bands,    other    entertainment' 
and    a 
from  Griffins. 


Ken 


drummer   Ed   Crow 

Miss    Pee-Wee    Batten    and 
"barbecue    supper    straight    Callender  will    also  .vrve  as  lea 

lure   entertainment    attractions. 


S:lection  for  tiie  h:)nor  entitles 
Davis  to  transportation  to  and 
from  Germany,  with  the  Goetting- 
en student  body  providing  room, 
beard,  and  incidental  expenses. 

Leaving  in  July  for  Germany. 
Davis  plans  first  to  travel  in  the 
country  before  going  to  the 
Gorthe  Institute  in  Munich  for  re- 
fresher courses  in  the  German 
language.  One  and  a  half  months 
will    be   spent   in    language    study. 

One  month  of  travel  is  also  in- 
cluded in  Davis"  schedule  befor? 
he  enleres  the  Goettingen  Uni 
versify  in  October.  During  this 
month  the  scholarship  winner 
says  that  he  would  like  to  vigil 
the  cities  and  small  towas  through- 
out Germany  in  an  effort  to  get 
to  know  the  German  people  and 
their  culture. 

At  Goettingen  Davis  will  live 
in  the  Sti^dent  House  with  approx- 
iamtely  100  other  students.  A  pre- 
med  student  at  UNC.  he  plans  to 
continue  this  line  of  study  at  the 
(Jerman  university,  with  special 
emphasis  on  language  and  local 
culture. 

Davis  said  that  he  is  "particul- 
arly impressed'"  with  the  Goet- 
fingen  department  of  physics. 
vfhich  ha.s  produced  four  Sobel 
Prize  winners. 

At  the  end  of  the  first  .semester. 
Davis  will  have  the  opportunity 
to  travel  to  other  part5  of  Europe. 
He  hopes  to  spend  the  six  week 
vacation  period  in  a  tour  of 
Franc?,  Spain.  Italy.  Switzerland, 
and  Austria. 

The  recipient  of  the  scholarship 
provides  the  expenses  for  any 
travel  which  he  undertakes  during 
the  school  vacations. 

In  order  to  qualify  for  the 
Go:ttingen  Exchange  scholarship, 
the  student  must  have  a  satisfac- 
tory scholastic  record,  take  an  in- 
terest in  student  affairs  and  have 
sufficient  knowledge  of  German 
to  profit  from  class  room  lectures 
in  German. 

Davis,  who  is  al.so  a  .Morehead 
.scholar  at  UNC.  .said  that  he  plans 
t'j  return  to  Carolina  after  his 
year  in  Germany  to  continue  his 
medical   studies. 


W.  Huffaker  Jr..  from  Char- 
lotte, and  Weldon  G.  Corbett. 
from  Spring  Hope  have  been  se- 
lected by  the  Graduate  Commit- 
tee on  Scholarships  in  the  School 
of  Education  here  to  receive 
1957  -  58  Du  Pont  scholarships. 
Dean  Arnold  Perry  announced 
yesterday. 

The  scholarships  pay  $1,200  each 


donated  by  the  Du  Pont  Co.  to  fur- 
ther  the  teaching  of  mathematics  ^ 
and  science   in   the   high   schools. , 
It  is  limited  to  teachers  and  those 
planning  to  teach   in   the  field,      i 

According  to  Dean  Perry  yes- 
terday, the  scholarship  committee 
considered  several  dozen  appli- 
cants for  National  Science  Foun- 
dation awards  before  choosing  the 


the 
was 
into 


plus  all  tuition  and  fee.s  and  are  |  two  winners. 


A  primary  purpose  of 
scholarship.  Dean  Perry  said 
to  attract  outstanding  men  ^ 
the  field  and  to  further  the  train- 
ing of  those  already  in  it  in 
science  and/ or  mathematics. 

Huffaker  is  a  graduate  of  Dav- 
idson College     and     is     currently 
'  serving   with   the   U.   S.   Army   in 
;  Europe.   Upon   discharge,   he   will 
i  (See  DU  PONT,  Page  3) 


The  picnic,  second  all-campus- 
Y-Nite  picnic,  is  the  highlight  of 
the  many  activities  planned  by  the 
YMCA  and  YWCA. 

Mr.  Kershaw,  dynamic  theologi- 
an, feels  that  religion  and  jazz  can 
be  connected  as  jazz  offers  "re- 
lease for  the  suppressed  cry  of  hu- 
man identity.  It  doe.>-  not  look  at 
the  world  sentimentally  or  cynical- 
ly, but  the  context  of  deep  feeling 
in  jazz  in  faith  and  trust,  an  af- 
firmation that  for  all  life's  sorrow 


Miss  Womack  Honored  'Senior  invites 

"r'r  Available  Now 


Kershaw  At  Luncheon 


SARAH  WOMACK 

.  .  .  Merit  award 


HA 


Miss  Sarah  Womack 
of  Dr.  and  Mrs.  Nathan  A.  Wo 
mack,  has  received  a  Merit  Schol- 
arship and  will  enter  Wellesley 
College  in  Massachusetts  next 
September. 

Dr.  Womack  is  head  of  the  De 
partment  of  Surgery  in  the  UNC 
School  of  Medicine.  • 

Miss  Womack,  a  student  at  St. 
Catherine's  School  in  Richmond, 
Va.,  won  the  scholarship  in  na- 
tionwide competition.  She  is  rated 
first  in  her  class  at  St.  Catherine's. 
She  is  an  honor  student  in  Latin, 
and  an  editor  of  the  yearbook. 
She  was  a  class  officer  last  year 
and  is  active  in  dramatics,  sing- 
ing, tennis  and   bridge. 

Her  scholarship  is  for  four 
years'  duration,  and  she  is  free  to 
choose  any  accredited  college  in 
the  country. 


Senior  invitations  can  be  pick- 
ed up  tomorrow  on  the  second 
floor  of  the  YMCA  from  9  a.m. 
to  2  p.m.,  according  to  an  an- 
nouncement  received    yesterday. 

Seniors  have  been  urged  to 
pick  up  their  graduation  invita- 
tions during  the  specified  time. 
The  deadline  has  been  extended 
from  last  Friday  because  not  ev- 
eryone has  droppad  by,  the  an- 
nouncement indicated. 

The  Grail  announcamant  fur- 
ther stated  that  a  limltad  supply 
of  invitations  will  be  available 
for  those  who  have  net  already 
erdartd. 


The  Rev.  A.  L.  Kershaw,  well- 
known  theologian  and  expert  on 
jazz,  will  speak  at  a  luncheon  to- 
morrow at  1  p.m.  upstairs  in  Le- 
nior  Hall. 

The  Rev.  Kershaw's  subject  will 
be  "Alone  in  the  Crowd, "  a  sub- 
ject about  which  he  has  written 
a  well-known  booklet.  The  book- 
let discusses  human  loneliness  and 
insecurity  and  how  it  is  transform- 
ed  in  the  Christian  community. 

The  public  is  invited  to  bring 
their  lunches  upstairs  from  the 
cafeteria  for  Kershaw's  talk  and 
discussion. 

!      Kershaw,  renowned  as  a  $32,000 
winner    on    the    $64,000    Question 

,  quiz  show,  is  considered  by  many 

i  to  be  the  spokesman  for  new  fron- 
tiers    in     the     student     Christian 

I  movement. 


REV.  KERSHAW 

,  .  luncheon  speaker 


The  barbecue  supper,  complete 
with  hush  puppies,  will  be  served 
by  Griffins,  famous  for  its  excell- 
ent food.  The  entire  meal  will 
cost  75  cent.s.  Tickets  for  this  will 
be  on  sale  in  Y-Court  Monday 
morning. 

Numerous  sororities  and  frater- 
nitiej  have  already  canceled  their 
evening  meals  in  order  to  come  to 
Y-Nite  in  mass. 

Kershaw  will  also  appear  in  sev- 
eral classes  on  Monday  and  Tues- 
day, at  a  luncheon  at  Lenoir  Hall 
on  Monday  afternoon  at  1:00.  and 
at  a  faculty  luncheon  at  12:30  on 
Tuesday. 

His  last  appearance  will  be  on 
Tuesday  night  at  5:45.  At  thi.'  time 
he  will  speak  on  "Challenge  to  the 
New  Officers'  at  a  banquet  at  Len- 
oir Hall.  The  banquet  will  be  open 
to  the  public,  and  the  co.st  will  be 
$1.25.  Installation  of  the  new  YM 
and  YW  officers  and  cabinets  will 
follow  the  banquet. 

Kershaw,    besides   exhibiting   an 
excellent  knowledge  of  jazz,  has  ;; 
long  series  of  theological  achieve 
ment  behind  him;  he  was  the  writ 
'  er  and  host  for  an  8  weeks  serie.- 
CBS      nationwide      TV      program. 
"Look  Up  and  Live."  a  program  or. 
religion  and  the  cultural  arts;   h( 
was   platform  speaker  at  the  Gen- 
eva sunmier  conference;  he  was  ; 
member   of   the   National    Studen 
,  Committee,  student  YMCA;  and  he 
;  was  an  instructor  in  the  philosoph: 
j  department  at  Miami  University  ir, 
Ohio. 


Training  Meet 

Th?  first  training  .session  for 
the  recently  selected  1957  orienta- 
tion counselors  will  be  held  Mon- 
day at  8  p.m.  in  Gerrard  Hall. 

At  this  time  Sam  Magill.  Di- 
rector of  student  Activities  and 
ct)-ordinator  of  orientation,  will  be 
gu;'st  speaker.  During  the  even- 
ing the  genei*8l  program  for  next 
fall  will  bi?  explained,  and  the  new- 
edition  of  the  orientation  manual 
will   be   distributed. 

Jerry  Oppenheimer.  orientation 
chairman,  pointed  rttit  that  the 
meeting  is  compulsory  and  that 
counselors  cannot  adequately  as- 
sume the  re.sponsibi!  ty  that  the 
position  demands  unless  they  at- 
t?nd  the  training  .session. 

The  meeting  has  been  arranged 
so  as  not  to  conflict  with  the  "Y 
Night"  picnic. 


INFIRMARY  LIST 


Students  in  the  Infirmary  yes- 
terday  included: 

Misses  Jo  de  Weise  and  San- 
dra Wallace  and  Jean  Beissant, 
Timothy  Jessup,  William  Lyple, 
Robert  Pearlman,  Don  Corbin, 
Kinzo  Yamantoto,  David  Ansell, 
James  Thompson,  David  Bur- 
rows, John  Hudson,  Robert 
Bucknall,  Charles  Sheets  and 
Harold   Clark. 


^AOI  TWO 


THE   DAILY   TAR   HEEL 


SUNDAY,  MAY  i,  1f57 


REVIEW: 

CAMPUS 
\  STATE 


WORLD 


PERSONALITIES  OF  THE  WEEK: 


Tom  Long:  Capable  Man  With  Convictions 
Miss  Sipra  Bose:  Lively  Lady  With  Tact 


Nell  Bass 


Editorial  Synopsis: 
People  And  The  Week 

9 

The  Dailv  Tar  Heel  commented  editorially  upon  these 
s.  among  others,  during  the  past  week: 


issue 

(n  Ailing  President  Eisenhower  and  his  "secretary  of 
fate.' 

(2)  Ihejkensuring  action  aimed  at  Catawba  College, 
Salisbury,  bv  The  American  Association  of  University  Pro- 
lessors  lor  \  iolation  of    'academic  freedom  and  tenure." 

(,^>,)  I  he  scholastic  pjowess  of  Mclver  and  Battle- 
\  uue-Pettigrew  Dormitories. 

'4)  The  l-niversitys  new  brand  of  "momism  " — the 
pro|X)sal  for  establishing.  Cc)bb  Dormitory  as  a  proving 
ground  lor  a  ■speciali/cd  (ounselling  plan  "  and  supervised 
Ntudv  lor  a  c»)nglomeiated  football  team. 

I-,  I  The  international  "smear"  on  the  stale's  face 
which  residted  when  the  I'niversity  Cosmopolitan  Club 
was  usliered  out  of  the  l^ntstead  State  Park  because  a  Neg- 
ro student — Leroy  Frasier— was  among  its  delegation. 

.-:0       *  *  *  • 

1  he  1  <.-4vrtms,si(ins  of  the  odious  Umstead  Park  incident 
were  iiatioiirwrde. 

l.iKalK.  Rep.  FOm  Long.  Student  Party  legislator, 
loiimtlated  ilii«rf.f»ng  Resolution  which  was  introduced  be- 
Legislature  Thursday  night. 


lore   the 


Stud 


,7 

11 J  1 


I  he  l.rtni*  Resolution  condemns  and  "censures  '  ad- 
ministration of  state  patk  polity  which  prohibited  the  use 
ol  I'mstead  pidiic  facilities  by  a  University  student. 

It  is  indeed  unfortunate  that  a  delegation  of  l^niveisity 
students  from  many  foreign  lands  was  subjected  to  such  an 
obstrusixe  and  ostentatious  display  of  soiahern  bigotry. 

All  laxorable  impressions  of  the  University,  state  and 
nati«)n  will  be  ^ul)()rdinated  to  a  \ivid  impression  of  in- 
toUraiKe  bv  this  *4roiip  of  potential  leaders  ft 6m  many 
lands. 

Ihe  Student  Legislature  had  ample  opportimitv  to 
vindicate  the  Unixeisitv  from  resjjonsibilitv  for  this  odious 
iiifident  riunsdav  night.  It  could  have  transferred  blame 
up<»n  the  shoulders  of  the  state  parks'  regulation,  which 
tnakes  segregaticm  niaiiTTathryt  b'^'  posing  the  1.ong~^escr- ■ 
Jution.  "T 

Hut  laxvuiTHcers  chose  to  muli  over  the  censuring  meas- 
ure h)r  a  week.  It  will  reajjpear  on  the  legislature  agenda 
jiext  Thursday  night  after  the  Ways  and  Means  Commit- 
tees processing. 

It  is  hoped  that  legislators  were  sinceie  in  their  post- 
jKJuing  action.  L  is  understandable  that  they  would  want  to 
consult  theii  cDtistituents  on  a  measuie  with  such  far-reach- 
ing repercussions.  If  postponement  was  merely  a  lilv-livered 
attempt  to  stall  action  on  the  resolution,  lawmakers  are  to 
be  (hasti/ed. 

Passage  of  the  resolution  would  be  a  demonstration  of 
justice— it  also  extends  apologies  to  the  C-osmopobtain  Club 
—and  a  demonstration  that  the  presetu  generation  has  be- 
come   liberal-minded   encuigh    to   transcend   the   prejudices 

and  bigotrv  ()f  its  predeces.sors. 

#  *  * 

That  the  Untstead  Park  incident  has  had  a  far-reach- 
ing aftermath  is  evidenced  by  an  inquiry  made  to  this  paper 
bv  the  Negro  Piitsbtirgh  Courier  concerning  it. 

The  Dailv  I  ar  Heel  advocated  a  |)olicy  of  gradualism 
earlier  tins  vear  on  the  desegregation  issue.  Prejudices  which 
have  grown  in  .America  since  ir»i(|  can  not  be  eiadicated  in 
one  fell  swooj> — the   May.   1954  Supreme  C-ourt  Decision. 

It  has  been  indicated  that  Durham  Negroes — with  the 
backing  ol  the  National  .\s.scm  iation  for  the  Advancement 
of  Colored  People-would  force  a  test  case  upon  the  state 
parks  segregation  regulation  by  attempting  admittance  in- 
to the   Umstead  Park. 

We  would  tind  this  as  odious  as  the  legulation   itself. 

We  woidd  prefer  that  state  government  be  allowed 
op|K)rtunitv  to  consider  implications  of  the  Umstead  Park 
inc  idem.  Then  if  no  remedial  action  is  taken,  other  meth- 
ods should  be  pursued. 

We  do  not  like  the  coercion  tactics  of  the  NAACP.  as 
we  do  not  like  the  reactkmarv  and  prejudicial  tactics  of  the 
Puriots  of  .North  C-arolina. 

Thus  The  Daily  Tar  Heel  urges: 

(i)  Ihat  the  Student  legislature  pass  the  Long  Res- 
olution, ihetebv  vindicating  the  University  from  any  re- 
sponsibility for  the  cjdious  Umstead  Park  incident  and  ex- 
tending apologies  to  the  polyglot  Cosmopolitan  Club. 

(2)  That  the  N.\.\CP  refiain  from  anycoercive  tac- 
tics which  would  ser\e  primarily  to  aggravate  an  already 
touchv  situation. 

(^^)  1  hat  the  state  parks'  authcjrity  revamp  its  seg- 
reo^ation  regulation  before  the  situation  blows  sky-high. 


The  official  student  publication  of  the  Publications  Board  of  the 
University  of  North  Carolina,  where  it  is  published  daily  except  Mon 
day  and  examination  and  vacation  periods  and  summer  terms.  Eintered 
as  second  class  matter  in  the  post  office  at  Chapel  Hill,  N.  C,  under 
the  act  of  March  8,  1870.  Subscriptioc  rates:  Mailed,  $4  a  year.  $2.50 
per  semester;  delivered,  $6  a  year,  $3.50  a  semester. 

Editor  NEIL  BASS 


A  quiet  kind  of  fellow  v.ith  a  stern  public  disposition. 

A  serious-minded  individtial  with  a  twinkling  private 
disposition  tempered  by  a  keen  wit. 

.■\  bidky  sort   of  man   with   extreme  c.ipability — a  man 
who  commands  respect  when  the  chips  are  down. 

AH  suitable  description,  most  would  say,  for  Thomiis 
V.  Long. 

•  •  • 

Tom's  latest  accomplishmeiu  is  the  stiiring  of  a  hornet's 
nest— the   desegregation -segregation   problem. 

Tom,  who  hails  from  Piedmont  .North  Carolina— Thom- 
asville— has  "censiued  "  in  a  resolution  to  the  Sttident  Legis- 
lature the  ajjplication  of  state  park  jxilicy  which  excluded 
Negro  student  Leroy  Frasier  from 
the  Umstead  State  Park  last  Sun- 
day. 

The  Long  Resolution,  as  it  has 
come  to  be  called,  is  to  be  pro- 
cessed by  the  legislature  Ways 
and  Means  Committee  and  is 
slated  to  reappear  on  the  legisla-  ' 

ture  floor  next  Thursday  night. 


Tom's  list  of  accomplishments 
since  his  admission  to  the  Uni- 
versity in  the  tall  of  1955 — he's 
only  a  sophomore — include: 

Student  Legislature  floorlead- 
ership  of  the  Student  Party, 
membership  in  the  Phi  Assem- 
bly. Phi  Mu  Alpha  music  fra- 
ternity, the  legislature  .Appoint- 
ments Committee  and  the  State 
Student  Legislature  Interium 
Committee;  treasurership  of  his 
freshman  class,  secretaryship  of 
his  current  sophomore  class. 

In  addition  to  those  achieve- 
ments. Tom  is  a  Morehcad  schol- 
ar and  was  a  member  of  his 
freshman  class'  "special  25" 
outstanding  students. 

As  for  future  aspiratiofts.  Tom 
plans  to  attend  medical  school, 
proba-bly  here  at   the   University. 

According  to  Tom's  inclusion 
on  the  Dean's  List  during  both 
his  freshman  semesters,  ho 
should -hav»  xw  trouble  in  mak- 
ing entrance. 


A  synoptic  view  of  Thomas 
Long  might  read  like  this: 

An  energetic,  yet  slow-moving 
individual  with  a  fast-moving  and 
fast-thinking  mind:  a  man  who 
speaks  his  convictions — who  as- 
serts for  the  dignity  of  man 
without  prohibitions  of  bigotry 
and  bias:  a  man  with  a  future. 


And  the  future  looks  bright 
for  this  combination  leader- 
scholar.  His  accomplishments, 
both  in  the  fields  of  govern- 
ment and  scholastic*  are  indica- 
tive  of   his  overall    capability. 

The  University,  state  and  na- 
tion expect  much  from  this 
Thomasville  native. 

And  a  record  of  dependabili- 
ty would  seem  to  indicate  that 
they  will  not  be  disappointed. 


An  energetic  yoiuig  lady  successfully  transplanted  from 
her  native  India  to  the  cultural  atmosphere  of  Chapel  Hill. 

A  vivacious  young  lady— not  yet  a  United  States  citizen 
— who  is  well-adjusted  to  University  life  and  is  attempting 
to  provide  iissistance  toward  better-adjustment  to  other  for- 
eign students. 

A  young  lady  dedicated  to  providing  "better  under- 
standing "  among  all  people  *of  all  -nations  .  .  .  regardless  of 
nationality,  treed  or  race. 

Miss  Sipra  Bose,  a  freshman  student  and  resident  of 
Chapel  Hill  who  has  already  assumed  the  presidency  of  the 
University  Cosmopolitan  Club. 


Sipra  —  prounced  "Shipra"  — 
came  to  Chapel  Hill  in  1949  with 
her  professor-father  Dr.  R.  C. 
Bose  of  the  I>ept.  of  Statistics. 

Dr.  Bose  came  to  the  Univers- 
ity as  a  visiting  professor  in 
1948,  decided  the  atmosphere 
was  to  his  liking,  returned  to 
Calcutta  in  1949  and  brought 
his  entire  family  to  Chai>el  Hill 
for  permanent  residence.    . 


Concerning  the  Cosmopolitan 
Club — an  organization  which  Sip- 
ra said  she  had  been  interested 
in  for  many  years — the  young 
president   listed   as  its   purposes: 

"To  allow  peoples  of  all  na- 
tions, regardless  of  nationality, 
creed  or  race,  to  get  together  to 
learn  from  each  other  about  their 
different  cultures;  and  to  as- 
sociate with  each  other  as  indi- 
viduals with  aims  to  promote 
world    understanding." 


The  University  Cosmopolitan 
Club,  composed  of  students  from 
many  nations,  began  its  existence 
as  a  subsidiary  organization  of 
the  YMCA. 

'  But    noU-.    according   to   Sipra. 

"The  club  is  an  autonomous  or 
'  ganization.   responsible      for     its 

■\  own  actions." 

•i  .   " 


Tom  Long,  Introducer  of  Long  Resolution 


Miss  Sipra   Bose,  Cosmopolitan  Club  President 


Compulsory  insurance, 
Taxes:  State  s  Week 

Principal  news  throughout  the  state  during  the  past  week— 
as  has  been  the  ca.se  since  its  convening  da^  in  January — was  the 
doings  of  the  General  A.ssembly  in   Raleigh. 

Speculation  around  the  capital  city  concerning  adjournment  date 
for  lawmakers  is  June  5.  ,  " 

The  Senate.  Wednesday,  passed  a  bill  making  liability  insurance 
mandatory  for  Tar  Heel  motorists.  The  bill  was  passed  on  to  the 
House  after  "acid''  verbal  exchanges. 

A  report  ,of  the  .state's  April  Tax  collections  dashed  the  hopes 
of  lawmakers  that  increased  revenues  would  bring  a  bigger-than- 
expected  general  fund  surplus  and  thus  solve  a  portion  of  the  tax 
and  spending  problem. 

And  again  in  Raleigh,  a  jet  milit,ary  training  plane  made  a 
safe  forced-landing  on  a  nearby  de.serted  road. 


Thus   the   state's  week   ends   as 
sections. 


a  cold   front   grips  the  eastern 


Concerning  the  Umstead  Park 
incident.  Sipra  said: 

"■When  the  club  went  to  Um- 
stead State  Park  for  its  annual 
picnic,  we  were  not  aware  that 
the  park  was  segregated.  The 
club  didn't  go  there  to  challenge 
the  law.  Since  one  member  of 
the  group  was  asked  to  leave, 
and  since  other  members  felt 
this  was  against  club  principles, 
it  was  decided  that  the  group 
would   leave  as  a  whole." 


Such  a  statement  is  indicative 
of  Sipra's  general   philosophy: 

Not  radical,  yet  unflinching  in 
her  insistence  upon  the  promo- 
tion of  international  cooperation 
— regardle-ss  of  race,  color  or 
creed. 


• 

L'il  Abnsr 


/.,' 


• 

By  A!  Capp 


> 


f  c,iMrF  vni  1  ARE  ruiR  c^uest.  Ur<  'T- 


SiNCE  VOO  ARE  OUR  GUEST, 
ZE  FRENCH  GOVERNMEf^Tf 
j  WANTS  >OUR  GUILLOTINING 
TO  BE  SATISFACTORV 
TO  VOO- 


SURE 
THAT  AFTER 
ITS  Ov/ER, 
I  VOO'LL 
HEARNX3 
COMPLAINT 
FROM  ME. 


AT  FABULOUS      '-^ 
EXPENSE,  WE  VXVE 
CALLED  OUT  OF 
RETIF^MENT  ZE 
CECIL  B.DE  MILLE 
OF  ZE  GUILLOTINE, 

ALDecAPrrATcr 


FOR  ENJOVABLE  GUILLOTINING, 
ABSOUJTC  QUiKr  IS  VrDU..'/ 
ZE  BANS  MUST  HEAR  THFCEE 
DELICATE  SOUNDS.''.''  — ZE 

"zur.'r''oF  ZE 

ZE"PLUNKJ 

BOUNCEf/' 


>W    HAS 
ANVBODV 
HEREGOTA 
BICARBONATE? 


Pogo 


By  Walt  Kelly 


\(  ueu  take  the  job  oP  b^iix^j 

u'caj?  a  xt\cnfle  'toeccm\r\a  \wpe\ 
—  oTiyiTigr.t:    ^ 


Managing  Editor 


CLARKE  JONES 


SUff  Writers 


Night  Editor  


Neil  Bass,  Nancy  Hill,  and  Bob  High. 
_ Manley  Springs 


rih<u  look  moi»c  like 
theuHnq«  of*  an  out- 


HAV?  1C3  INSUUT  W$ 


11^; 


g'!rMAt<gA  ^ 


t  di^^  ^«J  /  MgAM  W6'C -  . . 

,  the  utorKV  tOT  of  MOiSy  9f*0i*e 


Derby,  Resolution, 
GM:  Campus  Week 

Nancy  Hill 

Several  stories  that  promised  to  materialize  this  week  failed 
to  do  so.  And  so  the  campus  week  saw  the  postponement  of  an  an- 
nouncement of  a  new  director  for  Graham  Memorial  Sad  of  action 
on  a  censure  resolution  in  the  Student  Legislature. 

The  annual  Sigma  Chi  Derby  stole  the  show. 

The  candidacy  of  four  men  for  the  directorship  of  Graham 
Memorial  was  announced  Monday  by  Graham  Memorial  Activities 
Board.  Interviewed  for  the  position  which  has  been  vacant  sdnce 
the  resignation  a  year  ago  of  James  Wallace  were  William  Rion, 
University  of  Florida;  James  Burgoyne,  University  of  Southern  Illi- 
nois; Chester  A.  Berry,  University  of  Rhode  Island;  and  Charlie 
Gibson,  an  entertainment  manager  from  Winston-Salem. 

Bob  Young,  chairman  of  the  GM  Board  of  Directors,  said  that 
the  board  had  had  informal  talks  with  the  men  and  that  work  was 
progressing  slowly.  He  said  that  the  board  had,  on  Mmiday,  nuKie 
no  decision. 

The  final  appointment  of  GM  director  will  be  made  by  Chan- 
cellor Robert  House,  according  to  Director  of  Student  Activities  Sam 
Magill. 

Kappa  Deltas  and  Chi  Omegas  tied  Tuesday  for  first  rlace  in 
the  annual  Sigma  Chi  Derby.  Both  sororities  racked  up  a  total  of  15 
points  in  six  events  ranging  from  the  race  to  the  flesh  to  milking 
a  herd  of  goats. 

In  another  event  of  the  afternoon.  Miss  Judith  Dockery  was 
named  Miss  Modern  Venus,  defeating  Miss  Martha  Fortune  and  Mii>s 
Val  von  Ammon  for  the  title. 

Miss  Pee  Wee  Batten  retained  the  fame  she  gained  last  year  as 
fastest  stripper  in  the  race  to  the  flesh. 

An  announcement  came  Tuesday  of  the  appointment  of  Mrs. 
Wanda  M.  Barry  as  temporary  auditor  of  the  Student  Activities  Board. 
Mrs.  Barry  replaced  Harry  A.  Kear,  whose  resignation  from  the  post 
after  21  years  became  effective  Tuesday. 

Mrs.  Barry  will  serve  as  auditor  for  the  board  until  July.  A 
spokesman  for  the  board  indicated  that  the  board  is  still  looking 
for  a  permanent  auditor  and  is  interviewing  persons  for  the  job. 

The  University  Party  Tuesday  night  elected  Harry  Braxton  to 
head  its  slate  of  officers  for  next  year.  Also  voted  in  by  acclama- 
tion were  Jerry  Jones,  vice-president;  Edwin  Levy,  treasurer;  and 
Miss  Susan  Saunders,  secretary. 

The  Student  Legislature  Thursday  night  postponed  action  on 
a  resolution  to  "censure"  a  state  park  attendant  who  recently  de- 
nied admission  to  Umstead  State  Park  to  a  member  <rf  the  Cosmo- 
politan Club. 

The  resolution  was .  presented  by  Representative  Tom  Long  in 
connection  with  an  incident  at  the  park  whereby  Leroy  FYazier.  a 
Negro  undergraduate,  was  asked  to  leave  the  segregated  park  grounds. 

Long,  a  Student.  Party  representative,  attempted  to  pass  special 
orders  so  the  resolution  could  come  up  for  a  vote  Thursday.  Nor- 
mally the  measure  would  be  voted  on  the  week  following  its  intro- 
duction. 

The  movement  for  special  orders  was  blocked  on  the  grounds 
that  a  committee  should  consider  the  bill  before  it  is  brought  up  for 
.a  vote.  The  measure  was  referred  to  the  Ways  and  Means  Commit- 
tee. 

Sonny  Hallford  was  named  to  succeed  Sam  Wells  as  Attorney 
General  at  Thursday  night's  legislature  session.  The  appointment 
was  given  unanimous  approval. 

A  Joint  Appropriations  subcommittee  Wednesday  voted  the 
UNC  Library  an  $80,000  increase  for  the  1957-59  biennium.  The  in- 
crease will  provide  $165,000  per  year  during  the  next  two  years  for 
the  purchasing  of  books. 

Consolidated  University  President  William  C.  Friday  in  ex- 
pressing the  administration's  appreciation  for  the  increase  said, 
•Tliis  action  will  enable  our  library  to  acquire  the  essential  voltunes 
and  manuscripts  we  so  badly  need." 

Five  North  Carolina  senators  and  one  representative  have 
voiced  approval  of  the  Student  Legislature's  action  in  opposing  an 
increase  in  tuition  for  out-of-state  students  here. 

Speaker  of  the  Legislature  Don  Furtado  stated  Friday  that  he 
had  received  the  five  letters  since  spring  vacation. 


Jordanian  Aid,  NATO 
Meet:  World's  Week 

Bob  High 

III  the  world  this  week,  the  biggest  naise  was  the  ces- 
sation of  tlie  crisis  in  Jordan,  as  announced  bv  voung  King 
Hussein,  llic  Gth  Fleet  has  received  orders  to  return  to 
their  Italian  headquarters  as  the  Middle  Fast  turmoil  has 
eased  quite  a  bit. 

I  lie  Ignited  States  offered  the  Jordanian  government  10 
million  doihii-s  in  economic  aid.  Steps  liavc  been  taken  to 
put  the  money  to  quick  use  in  the  troubled,  poverty-strick- 
en kingdom.  Fhe  offer  was  indicated  to  have  inwnediatc 
acceptance.  Fhe  aid  progiam  was  announced  after  the  Mid- 
dle Fast  coinitry  emphasized  it  wants  nothing  to  do  with 
the  Eisenhower  Doctrine,  possible  for  intCTnal  political 
reasons. 

Soviet  Russia  stayed  in  the  eyes  and  ears  of  tlic  world 
this  Week  by  blasting  the  United  States  for  stirring  up  the 
Jordan  crisis  as  a  step  under  tiie  Eisenhower  LKxtrinc  to 
Sominate  the  Middle  East.  The  Kremlin  warned  that  tl>e 
dtuatlon  "demands  the  adoption  of  urgent  measures  to 
avert  a  dangerous  development  of  events." 

The  Defense  Department  officially  announced  tliat  tlie 
United  States  forces  have  an  eight-ingh  atomic  artillery 
shell.  The  .shell  is  aboard  the  ships  in  the  Gth  Fleet  whicli 
were  called  into  the  Mediterranean  to  protect  American  in- 
terests during  the  uprising  in  Jordan. 

In  Bonn,  Germany,  the  fifteen  NATO  foreign  min- 
isters agreed  that  the  western  allies  must  base  their  defense 
against  potential  Communist  attack  on  a  balance  between 
conventional  and  nuclear  weapons.  The  United  States  as- 
sured the  western  powers  that  it  has  no  intention  of  back- 
ing down  on  its  commitments  to  NATO,  including  five 
full  divisions  in  \V'est  Germany. 

,  Providence,  R.I.,  —From  now  on  maniage  licenses  in 
Rhode  Island  will  carry  the  wording  "prospective  bride." 
Up  to  now,  it  has  been  "expectant  bride."  Detriot— After 
having  met  at  a  social  club  for  older  people,  93-ycar-oJd 
William  Ruff  said  of  Mrs.  Nellie  B.  Smethers,  "Nellie  is 
partial  to  older  men,  but  I  had  to  do  most  of  the  chasing." 
Nellie  is  72. 

Luml>erion.  N.  C:. — William  .\pplin  cut  his  throat  to 
save  his  life  here  last  week.  The  quick  action  kept  him  from 
smothering  to  death.  He  has  had  hi«  larynx  removed  in 
an  operation  and  used  a  tube  to  breathe.  The  tube  fouled 
and  he  began  to  <  hoke,  so  Ap|>Iin  goi  a  lM<tcher  knife  and 
slit  his  throat. 


SER' 


HOMI 


Ji 


^Y  s.  m? 


SUNDAY,  mATS,  |f57 


T1«V  DAILY  TA«  Nlli 


f  AM  fMIBt 


y^ck  faded 
of  an  an- 
id  action 


>f  Graham 
Activities 
irant  since 
fliam  Rion, 
Uhera  Illi- 
id  Charlie 

said  that 
woiJc  was 
ly.  made 

by   Chan- 
ivit  cs  Sam 

h  place  in 
total  of  15 
I  To  milking 

rkerr   was 
and  Miss 

^t  year  as 

t   of    Mrs. 

|t!es  Board. 

the  post 

il  July.  A 
ill  looking 
the  job. 
raxton  to 
acelama- 
^urer:   and 

action  on 
»ntly  de- 
je  Cosmo- 
Long  in 
Prazier.  a 
rk  grounds. 
»ss  special 
Nor- 
its  intro- 

)e  grounds 
It  up  for 
Commit- 

Atiorney 
>poiQtmeDt 

\  oted    the 

(ni.  The  in- 

years  for 

ij    in    ex- 
said. 
|al  volumes 

itive    have 
Ipposing  aa 

lay  that  he 


ITO 
ek 


the  res- 
iling King 
return   to 
[nnoii  has 

'iiniciit  lo 
taken  to 
ri\-»trkk- 
Ininiediate 
the  Mid- 
do  n-ith 
political 

I  the  world 
y^  np  the 
iritif  to 
u^t  tlie 
lea ^u res  to 

fd  ilwit  the 

artillery 

licet  which 

•I  u  .in  in- 

^eiijii  iiiin- 
rir  defense 
\f  between 
Slates  as- 
n  of  back- 
ludiug  five 

luenses  in 
i\e  bride." 
;riot— Aher 
l^fycar-oJd 
"Nellie  is 
f  <  hasing." 

i  throat  to 
[  him  from 
emoved  in 
uhe  fouled 
Unite  and 


HUMANITIES   LECTURE 

Prof.  Wilt(JDr  Mason  of  the  Dept. 
of  Music  wiU  deliver  the  spring 
Humanities  Faculty  Lecture  here 
Wedaeaday  sBf.^  p.m.  in  106  CarroU 
Hall.  Prof.  Mason's  lecture  will  in- 
clude musical  illustrations  and  is 
entitled  "Thomas  Mace  and  His 
Music's  Monument." 


History  Professors 
Address  Association 


Preview 


-     VELVA 

|«OlSTURe' 
i-    Pli_M    , 


LINCOLN,  Neb..  —  The  origin 
and  background  of  the  Credit  Mo- 
bilier — a  "notoriously  corrupt  or- 
ganization which  built  the  Union 
Pacific  Railroad" — was  described 
by  the  chairman  of  the  University 
of  North  Carolina  History  De- 
partment in  an  address  here 
Thursday. 

Dr.  Fletcher  M.  Green.  Kenan 
professor  at  UNC,  appeared  be- 
fore the  annual  meeting  of  the 
Mississippi  Valley  Historical  As- 
sociation  being  held   here. 

Noting  that  the  origin  of  the 
Credit  Mobilier  has  always  been 
something  of  a  mystery.  Professor 
Green  described  how  it  evolved 
from  the  various  promotional 
schemes  of  Duff  Green,  an  import- 
ant political  supporter  of  Andrew 
Jackson  who  had  left  politics  for 
business. 

Interested  in  building  a  South- 
ern Pacific  Railroad  from  New 
Orleans  to  Mazatlan  on  the  Gulf 
of  California;  Green  consolidated 
existing  lines  in  the  region,  or- 
ganized others,  secured  the  neces- 


sary charters  fron^  Texas  and  Mex- 
ico, and  formed  a  holding  com- 
pany subsequently  chartered  as 
The  Pennsylvania  Fiscal  Agency 
to  complete  the   project. 

"Negotiations  for  support  by 
the  Federal  Government  proceed- 
ed -favorably  in  1860  but  were  cut 
short  by  the  Civil  War,"  contin 
ued  Professor  Green.  When  Dufl 
Green  cast  his  lot  with  the  Con- 
federacy, 'two  of  the  Pennsylvania 
directors  .  .  .  ordered  a  reorganiza- 
tion of  the  company,  gained  con- 
trol, and  in  1864  sold  the  Agenc\ 
to  Thomas  C.  Durant,  vice-presi- 
dent of  the  Union  Pacific  Railway 
Company.  Shortly  thereafter  the 
Pennsylvania  legislature  changed 
the  Agency's  name  to  The  Credit 
Mobilier."  Professor  Green  con- 
cluded his  paper  by  describing  the 
unsuccessful  attempts  by  Duff 
Green  to  regain  his  interests  in 
the  company. 


Jlist  arrived!  This  gentle,  last- 
ing,  transparent  film  that 
softens,  smooths  and  protects 
th«  skin,  giving  it  a  young  and 
dewy  look.  To  be  worn  under 
ony  of  the  Elizabeth  Arden 
"  foundations.  A  blessing  to  the 
most  sensitive  skin,  it  is  a  de- 
lightful body  lotion  too> 

3  oz.  5.00 
JYa  oz.  10.00 
17'/j  oz.  18.50 

orice?  p/'js  'ax 

Aik  to  ie«  Elizabeth  Arden 

Inyisible  Vail  Foca  Powdai 

ih«  SfMsf  in  >fc«  world.  2.75,  5.00 


CHAPEL  HILL.N.C. 

Phoi<e  9-8781 


Now  Is 
The  Time 
To  Nick 
Off 

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Treasure 
In  Our 
Old  Book 
Corner 

THE   INTIAAATE 
BOOKSHOP 

205  East  Franklin  St. 
Open  Till    10    P.M. 


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HOME  OF  CHOICE  HICKORY-SMOKED  CHARCOAL  BROILED  STEAKS 


DAILY    CROSSWORD 


DOWN 

1.  Awned 
(bot.) 

2.  Persist 

3.  Wide- 
mouthed 
jaf 

4.  Posterior 

5.  Forthwith 

6.  Act  of 
reaching 
a  throne 

7.  Songs  for 
two 

d.  Inter- 
jaction 

9.  River 
(Fr.) 
10.  Never 
(poet.) 


.\CROSS 

1.  Fruit  of 

the  oak 
«.  Biblical 

name 

11.  Contest  of 
btrling  logs 

12.  French 
chemist 

13.  Relative  by 
marriage 
(coUoq.) 

14.  Stop 

15.  llM.v«Uy 
body 

IS.  Prtferabia 

17.  Palm 
(Asia) 

18.  Found  on 
rocks 

1».  Those  which  16.  Marsh 
are  ainiilar 
(var.) 

32.  Wan>-ysni 
25.  Harmonised 
M.  Ancient 

district 
(Asia 
Minor) 
]t.Bvcm 
(BP«L)-^ 

away 
'SI.  Broad 

smile 
13.  River 

(Chin.) 

33.  Shriek 
36.  Moccasins 
33.  Seashore 

39.  Wooden 
slioe 

40.  Dispatch 
boat 

41.  Run  away 
and  marry 

42.  Singing 
voice 

43.  Kind  of  dog 


18.  Pre- 
sid- 
ing 
officer 

20.  Girl's 
name 

21.  Articlo 
(Fr.) 

33.  Cuck. 
oo 

33.  Motion 
picture 
projector 

34.  Baluster 
27.  Bone 

30.  Border 

31.  Gypsum 

33.  Begone! 

34.  Small, 
shettertd 
inlet 


[iifflno  "fjaiii   no 
r3[^      and   tjnp 

:Dua:j   yLSEGcn 


TMtoiteir'a  Aasww 

35.  Shower 
3«.Pol« 

(Sp.  Ant.) 
ST.Braoed 

aback 

(naut) 
M.  Egyptian 

evth  fod 

(var.) 


Du  Pont 

(Continued  from  Page  1) 
undertake     a     program      here   to 
prepare     himself     for     teaching 
science    and    mathematics    in    sec- 
ondary schools. 

Corbctt  is  a  graduate  of  Atlan- 
tic Christian  College  and  is  teach- 
ing science  in  the  high  school  at 
Benson.  He  will  begin  a  program 
here  to  increase  his  competence  in 
the  field. 

Dean  Perry  indicated  yester- 
day that  Corbett  contacted  him 
personally  and  has  acknowledged 
and   accepted   the   scholarship. 

The  School  of  Education  also 
announced  the  names  of  five 
school  administrators  who  were 
selected  to  receive  scholarships  for 
graduate  study  during  the  1957 
.summer   session. 

Winners    of    the    $150    scholar-, 
ships   were   selected  from   a   long  | 
list    of    applicants    in    administra- 
tive positions  in  the  public  schools 
of  the  state.  The  selections  were 
made  on  the  basis  of  scholarship, 
character,     personality,     effective- , 
ness  in   public  school   administra- 
tion and  promise  of  leadership  de-  i 
velopment.  i 

Award  winners  were.  Lynwood  I 
T.  Ragan.  principal  of  Turkey  ' 
Union  School;  Johnny  R.  Parker. ' 
principal  of  Edgewood  Elementary  ; 
School,  Whiteville;  W.  Henry  Ov- 
erman, superintendent  of  Halifa.x ! 
County  School;  Norwood  E.  Jones.  | 
principal  of  Erwin  Union  School; 
and  W.  Willard  Woodard,  princi- 1 
pal  of  Scotland  Neck  Union  School. 


TELEVISION   SUNDAY 

7:00 — Channel  2 — Ed  Sullivan 

The  guest  list  tonight  includes  Johnnie  Ray,  Walter  Pidgeon,  The 
Vagabonds,  and  the  Corps  de  Ballet  of  the  Ballet  Rus-se  de  Monte 
Caflo. 
Channel  5 — Steve  Allen 

Steve  plays  host  tonight  to  Orson  Welles,  Sammy  Davis,  Jr.  and 
family,  and  Jill  Corey.  This  sounds  like  one  of  Steve's  better  nights. 
9:00— Channel  11— Mike  Wallace  Interviews 

This  is  the  show  which  caused  the  big  stir  as  a  local  New  York 
affair.  Wallace's  interviewing  technique,  often  perceptive  and  occas- 
ionally sensational,  invariably  elicits  seme  intttresting  Mid  prDvecative 
statements  from  his  subjects. 

Tenighfs  guest  is  Eldon  Edwards,  Imperial  Wiaard  of  the  KKK„ 
Atlanta,  Ga.  The  possibilities  ar»  obvious  and  promising. 
TELEVISION^  MONDAY: 
2:00— Channel  11— Hamlet 

This  is  the  first  part  of  Sir  Laurence  Oliver's  classic  film  version 
of  this  immortal  tragedy.  The  second  part  will  run  temorrew. 
THINGS  TO  DO  * 

SUNDAY: 
Open  Air  Band  Concert 

This  is  the  s-econd  outdoor  concert,  and  there  are  few  more  pleas- 
ant ways  to  spend  the  late  afternoon  hours.  The  concert  begins  at  4:30 
under  the  Davie  Poplar  and  the  program  includes  some  light  fare 
along  with  the  classical. 
MONDAY: 
Y-Nite 

More  music  under  the  venerable  vegetable:  this  time  the  feature 
attraction  is  Rev.  A.  L.  ("$64,000  Question")  Kershaw,  who  will  talk 
on  one  of  his  favorite  topics:  "Jazz  and  Religion."  The  talk  should 
be  well  worth  hearing,  especially  as  there  will  be  live  musical  accom- 
paniment, including  Pee  Wee,  Ken  Callender,  and  Hoke  ^mpson. 

Somewhat  less  secular  is  Rev.  Kershaw's  talk  entitled  "Alone  In 
The  Crowd,"  to  be  delivered  at  a  public  luncheon  upstairs  in  Lenoir^ 
Hall  at  1  p.m. 


PHILOLOGICAL  CLUB 

Prof.  K.  Kayashi,  visiting  pro- 
fessor of  Comparative  Literature, 
will  prci-ent  a  paper  entitled  "A 
Survey  of  Post-War  Novels  in  Ja- 
pan" at  a  meeting  of  the  Philo- 
logical Club  Tuesday  at  7:30  p.m. 
in  the  Faculty  Lounge  of  More- 
head  Planetarium. 

All  interested  graduate  students 
and  faculty  members  have  been  in- 
vited to  attend.  A  short  business 
meeting  will  be  held  at  which  time 
the  nominating  committee  will  pre 


olina  Obstetrical  and  Gynecologi- 
cal Society.  Her  topic  will  be 
"Pull  Term  Abdominal  Pregnan- 
cy." 

The  president  of  the  organiza- 
tion is  Dr.  Robert  A,  Ross,  profes- 
sor and  head  of  the  Dept.  of  Obste- 
trics and  Gynecology  here. 

STATISTICS  COLLOQUIUM 

Thomas    George    Donnelly    will 

address  the  Statistics  Colloquium 

here   tomorrow  at  4  p.m.  in  206 

I  PhiUips  Hall  on  "A  Modified  Wald 


UNC  Extends 

(Continued  from  Page  1) 
the  Playmakers  Theater,  Y-Court, 
Manning  Hall,  Saunders  Hall,  and 
other  biuldings  and  areas  of  ac- 
tivity during  the  busy  school  week 
will  be  noticeably  des-erted  today, 
but  they  too  should  be  visited.  For 
they  are  the  centers  of  life  where- 
in students,  faculty  and  adminis- 
tration function  throughout  the 
year. 

Parents  visiting  the  campus  to- 
day may  be  interested  in  seeing 
where  their  offspring  spend  their 
sleeping  and  study  hours.  Caro- 
lina has  always  tried  to  provide 
"home  -  away  -  from  -  home"  atmos- 
phere for  the  students  and  parents 
may  be  interested  in  seeing  how 
the  comforts  and  desires  of  their 
daughters  are  being  tended  to  in 
these  days  of  rising  enrollment 
and  overcrowding. 

If,  m  the  course  of  travelling 
through  various  areas  of  the  camp- 
us, himger  overcomes  fatigue,  or 
if  both  combine  to  stall  the  fur- 
ther progress  of  our  guests,  they 
are  directed  to  take  their  respite 
at  any  of  the  dining  establishments 
located  on  campus. 

Included  among  these  are:  the 
Carolina  Inn  which  offers  both 
cafeteria  and  dining  room  facili- 
ties; the  Monogram  Club  and  par- 
ticularly the  Circus  Room,  an  in- 
teresting sight  for  its  walHength 
woodcarving  of  circus  activity, 
Lenoir  Hall  and  the  Pine  Room, 
where  a  substantial  number  of 
Carolina's  students  take  meals 
throughout  the  year. 

The  plaiMied  activities  include 
•  reception  under  Davie  Poplar 
witli  tite  faculty  and  adminis- 
tretion  from  3:30-4:30  p.m.  and 
it  is  here,  at  what  could  be  term- 


ed the  "geographic  center"  of 
the  campus  that  rest  should  be 
sought  from  a  full  day  of  walk- 
ing, visiting  and   sight-seeing. 

From  4:30  to  6  p.m.  a  band  con- 
cert will  be  given  near  Davie  Pop- 
lar, preceded  by  a  speech  by  Mr. 


expanses  of  green  grass  will  serve 
to  save  tired  feet  from  further 
torments.  Guests  and  visitors  bave 
been  asked  to  take  note  that  if  the 
weather  is  not  condusive  to  the 
outdoor  concert,  they  may  retire 
to  Hill  Hall  at  the  designated  time 


Roy  Armstrong.  Benches  and  large  for  their  musical  respite. 


sent  its  report  on  officers  for  the !  Sequential  Procedure." 

In    manufacturers'    quality 


Poteat  To  Speak  To  SP 

Dr.  William  H.  Poteat  will  speak 
to  the  Student  Party  Monday  night 
in  the  Roland  Parker  Lounges  of 
Graham  Memorial  at  8  o'clock. 

Visitors  and  party  members  are 
invited  to  attend  the  open  meet- 
ing. 

Other  items  of  business,  such 
as  the  revision  of  by-laws  and  dis- 
cussion of  this  year's  banquet,  are 
scheduled  to  take  place. 


Jets  To  Arabia 

WASHINGTON,  (AP)  —  The 
United  States  sent  eight  jet  train- 
ers to  Saudi  Arabia  yesterday  in 
the  start  of  new  air-ground-sea 
training  to  build  up  and  modern- 
ize Saudi  Arabia's  defenses. 

Brig.  Gen.  Dale  O.  Smith,  a  tall 
and  colorful  airman,  will  head  up 
the  new  program.  It  is  the  other 
side  of  a  deal  in  which  the  Unit- 
ed States  last  April  2  got  a  five- 
year  extension  of  its  right  to  use 
the  Dhaihran  Airfield,  within  1,- 
0(X)  miles  of  Russia's  Middle  East 
border. 


CLASSIFIEDS 


VTANTED:  college  MEN, 
part-time  and  summer.  Earn  $50 
to  $100  per  week  plus  $100-$300 
scholarship  award.  Must  have 
die  of  car.  Contact  W.  P.  C^ran- 
ford,  Box  1708,  Raleigh,  N.  C. 


FOR  INEXPENSIVE  LIVING:  2T 
Nashua  Trailer  —  has  bath  tub, 
shower,  porch,  oil  beater,  added 
room,  connected  to  utilities  and 
septic  tank.  One  mile  out  on 
airport  road.  Call  8472.  $2,300. 


LOST:  BROWN  LEATtlER  WAL- 
let.  Contains  identification  and 
important  papers.  Believed  toj 
have  been  lost  in  Varsity  Thea- , 
tre.  Finder  may  keep  money,  but 
please  retiuTi'  papers  to  John  W. 
Walker,  204  Manly  Donn,  or  call 
^8130. 


commg  year. 
PROFESSOR  HONORED 

Dr.  B.  L.  Ullman,  Kenan  profes- 
sor of  classics  here  was  elected 
President  of  the  Fellows  of  the 
Medieval  Academy  of  America  at 
its  annual  meeting  last  week  in 
Cambridge,  Mass. 

E>r.  RobiTt   A.   Pratt    of  the  En- 
gli.sh  Dept.  was  elected  Councillor.   . 
lor  a  three-year  term  at  the  same'****"^  reqmred 
meeting.  .\!so  attending  from  UfiC 
was  Dr.  Urban  T.  Holmes  Jr.,  Ken- 
an  profcsa'or  in   the   Dept.   of  Ro- 
mance Languages. 
"PROJECT  HEALTH" 

The  "Project  Health"  television 
show  will  originate  from  the  kit- 
chenji  of  Memorial  Hospital  Friday, 
it  was  announced  yesterday.  The 
program  will  be  staged  by  the  Die- 
tary Department  of  Memorial  Hos- 
pital in  connection  with  National 
Hospital  Week  (May  12-18).  The 
program  will  explain  how  food  is 
bought,  stored,  cooked  and  served 
in  a  modern  hospital.  It  will  also 
describe  dietitians  who  run  the 
kitchens  and  something  of  their 
duties. 
DOCTOR  SPEAKS  HERE 

Dr.  H.  Fleming  Fuller,   clinical 
associate    professor    of    obstetrics 
and  gynecology  here  will  speak  be- 
fore the  Asheville  meeting  of  the 
Medical   Society   of   the    State    of 
North   Carolina    tomorow,   accord- 
ing to  a  recent  announcement.        j 
Dr.  Fuller  will  speak  on  "Post- 1 
partum  Hemorrahage"  at  the  103rd 
annual  meeting  of  the  society.  Dr. 
James  F.  Donnelly,  clinical  assis- 
tant  professor    of   obstetrics    and 
gynecology  here  will  also  partici- 
pate in  the  program  tonvorrow. 
YOUNG   REPUBLICANS 

The  Young  Rebublican  Club  will 

hold  a  picnic  at  Hogan.<:  Lake  to- 

i  day  at  3  p.m.  All  Y.R.C.'s  and  their 

j  friends   have   been   invited    to   at- 

i  tend.  Food  and  refreshments  will 

be  served. 

BOTANY  DEPARTMENT 

The   Botany   Dept.   will    hold   a 
tea  at  4:45  p.m.  tomorrow  in  Room 
102  of  Davie  Hall,  it  was  announc- 
ed yesterday. 
BOTANY  SEMINAR 

Mr.  Donald  B.  Jeffries  will 
speak  on  Pollen  Adaptations  in 
Pollinating  Agents  in  Room  101  of 
Davie  Hall  at  5  p.m.  tomorrow  at 
a  meeting  of  the  Botany  Dept. 
Seminar,  according  to  an  announc- 
ment  received  yesterday. 
BOYD  TO  SPEAK 

A  meeting  of  the  United  Stu- 
dents Fellowship  will  have  Dr.  Ber- 
nard Boyd  of  the  Religion  Dept. 
speak  to  them  Sunday  at  7  p.m.  in 
t  h  e  Congregational  Christian 
Church.  The  public  has  been  cor- 
dially invited  to  attend. 
LEARY  TO  SPEAK 
Dr.  Deborah  Leary  of  the  UNC 


PARENTS 

In  Addition  To  Our 
Usual  "Regular  Dinners" . 
^     We  Now  Feature  £ 

"THE  BEST  IN     ' 
CHARCOALED  STEAK!" 

The 

r    PINES 

RESTAURANT 

On  Raleigh  Road  Open  on  Sunday 


trol,  great  economies  in  the  amount 
of  inspection  have  been  found  pos- 
sible, without  loss  of  average  qual- 
ity, by  the  use  of  sampling  plans 
that  call  for  a  number  of  inspec- 
tions not  fixed  in  advance. 

Mr.  Donnelly's  methods  are  de- [ 
signed  to  meet  a  need  to  modify 
the  maximum    nurabei;  of  inspec- 


WELCOME   PARENTS 


TRY  OUR 


-:-  Steaks 
-:-  Chops 


iwiches 
-:- Hamburgers 


THE 


-.    »;"V 


GOODY    SHOP 


). 


■si-* 


WELCOME 


.'  -  ^.. 


*••* 


B 


PARENTS 


-:  j.s 


FROM 


A  Pleasant  Inn 


It 


■'il 


t.«. 


•i 


School  of  Medicine  will  speak  in 
Southern  Pines  today  at  9  a.m.  Dr. ! 
Leary,   assistant   professor  of   ob-i 
stt'trics  and  gynecology  will  speak  j 
before  a  meeting  of  the  North  Car- 1 


Of  A  Great  University 


^Wf  :%>-/.  i^»  i,^ 


A  good  place  to  stay,  to  dine,  to  entertain  or  just  to  visit  and  en- 
joy the  congenial  homelike  atmosphere.  For  your  convenience 
and  pleasure  we  offer  clean  and  comfortable  guest  rooms,  appe<- 
tizing  and  wholesome  food  in  our  main  dining  room— The  Hill 
Room— and  in  our  cafeteria.  Private  dining  rooms  are  available 
for  parties,  banquets,  meetings  and  dances.  ^  * 

You  Are  Invited  To  Hospitable 


Carolina    Inn 


Owned' and  Operated  by  the  University  of  North  Carolina 


■U 


i  h 


f  AOt  FOUR 


THl  DAILY  TAR  HtBL 


SUNDAY,  MAY  5,  lf57 


Tar  Heel  Trackmen  Take  75-56  Decision  Over  Blue  Devils 


K 


ING'S 
ORNER 

By  BILL  KING 

DTH  Sports  Editor 


Major  Leagues  Now  Shaping  Up 

The  major  league  baseball  races  are  now  beginning  to  take  their 
normal  form.  The  uprising  of  the  second  division  clubs  in  the  early 
part  of  the  season  is  envitable.  Practically  every  season  some  team 
picked  for  the  bottom  of  the  standings  plays  great  ball  for  the  first 
few  weeks  then  slips  to  its  obvioiu  position  in  the  standings. 

This  s*»son  is  no  •«c«ption.  Both  Icaguos  have  already  s*«n 
the  uprising  of  the  second  division  clubs,  but  now  the  power  of 
the  stronger  clubs  is  shewipg  end  the  standings  are  shaping  up  at 
predicted. 


Are  White  Sox  Top  Material?  ■^''ii^ 

T\}e  most  surprising  team  thus  far  is  the  Chicago  White  Sox.  The 
Sox  have  been  playing  gr^at  ball  and  have  taken  a  fairly  commanding 
lead  in  the  American  League.  In  the  opinion  of  this  corner,  the  White 
Sox  will  not  remain  on  top  for  very  long.  The  Chicagoians  are  not  a 
first  place  team.  There  are  entirely  too  many  weak  spots  on  the  club. 
They  have  had  a  lot  of  luck,  but  it  is  doubtful  that  it  will  last  through- 
out the  season. 

The  Yankees  have  been  the  most  disappointing  team  thus  far. 
Mickey  Mantle's  early  heavy  hitting,  or  lack  of  same,  has  thrown 
fear  into  the  heart*  of  many  Yankee  fans,  but  there  is  no  noed 
for  panic.  This  l^as  happened  in  the  past  to  Casey  Stengel's  group, 
but  they  have  always  managed  to  come  through.  It  is  apparent 
that  the  Yanks  »r»  the  best  team  in  the  American  League. 

Cleveland,  Boston,  and  Detroit  probably  will  not  change  their  pres- 
ent a-tanding  much  during  the  season.  The  Tigers  have  now  started  to 
roll  and  will  give  the  Yanks  and  White  Sox  a  battle.  Boston  and  Cleve- 
land, more  than  likely,  will  make  no  more  than  a  mild  challenge  for 
the  top  spot. 


Freshman  Nine 
Takes  4-3  Win 
Over  Ffeiffer 

By   ED  ROWLAND 

The  Tar  Baby  baseball  team 
used  triples  by  Harold  Workman 
and  Tontuoy  Saintsing  and  a  sing- 
le by  Bruce  Crump  to  push 
across  two  runs  in  the  sixth  in- 
ning and  edge  Pfeiifer,  4-3.  here 
yesterday. 

Ben  Hammett  went  the  route  on 
the  mound  for  the  freshmen  and 
picked  up  his  second  win  of  the 
season.  He  has  lost  three.  The 
win  was  the  12th  for  the  frosh 
of  Coach  Wayne  White. 

Pieiffer  staged  a  short  rally  in 
the  ninth  to  threaten  the  Caro- 
lina team,  and  after  scoring  one 
riin  with  the  tying  run  on  base, 
Hammett  had  to  bear  down.  He 
ended  the  game  with  a  strikeout. 

Pfeiffer  scored  two  runs  in  the 
sixth  on  two  walks,  a  single  by 
Brack  Bailey,  and  a  fielder's 
choice. 

Carolina  broke  the  scoring  ice 
in  the  third  when  Bruce  Crump 
singled,  went  to  third  on  two 
bases  on  balls  given  up  by  Pfeiffer 
hurler  Jamieson,  and  raced  home 
on  a  play  for  the  runner  at  sec- 
ond. 

The  second  Tar  Baby  run  came 
in  the  fifth  on  Griffin's  single. 
Crump's  single,  and  a  passed  ball. 
THE   BOX 


*  Scurlock  Leads  Way  As 
Records  Fall  In  Meet 


.■*rt.  -  .  ■  —  .» 


Milwaukee,  Tops  In  National  %X 

The  Milwaukee  Braves  are,  at  present,  right  where  they  should 
be  when  the  season  ends — on  top  of  the  National  League.  It  is  our 
feeling  that  the  Braves  are  the  best  in  the  League.  It  is  doubtful  that 
they  will  fold  in  4ate  season  as  they  did  last  a-eason. 

It  would  be  a  bit  foolish  to  start  writing  any  obituaries  on  the 
Dodgers  at  thie  point.  Brooklyn  is  always  strong  and  Walt  Alston 
has  a  fairly  good  crop  of  rookies.  The  Dodgers,  however,  probably 
^    will  not  keep  «going  when  Hie  hot  months  arrive. 

Regardle^  of  what  has  been  said,  age  is  still  the  big  factor  going 
against  the  Dodgers,  and  unless  they  start  taking  miracle  vitamins  or 
come  up  with  some  great  rookie^,  they  will  hare  a  tonf  b  time  holding 
on  to  second  place. 

Cincinnati  has  been  called  lucky  becauso  of  its  fine  showing 
lest  seeson.  The  Rediegs  started  off  slowly  this  year  but  »f  new 
doing  better.  There  is  no  doubt  that  they  have  the  batting  power 
to  bid  for  the  title,  but  it  is  said  that  pitching  is  75  per  cent  of  the 
game.  The  Redleg  mound  staff  is  only  average.  Should  it  become 
better,  there  will  be  a  hot  race  in  the  NL. 

St.  Louis  and  Philadelphia  are  both  good  bets  for  fourth  place  in 
the  final  standings.  The  fight  for  fourth  or  better  s-hould  be  entirely 
between  the  two,  because  the  bottom  four  teatus  in  the  league  don't 
have  the  material  to  challenge. 


Coker  May  Be  Eligible 


From  what  has  been  so  far  in  the  Atlantic  Coast  Conference  meet- 
ing in  Greensboro,  Carolina'B  Don  Coker,  a  freshman  footballer  from 
Reidsville,  might  be  made  eligible  for  play  next  season. 

Coker  was  a  sensational  football  star  at  Reidsville.  He  was  de- 
c!ared  ineligible  for  football  last  season  because  he  had  received 
a  membership  in  the  Reidsville  Country  Club  from  a  friend. 

It  is  to  be  hoped  that  Don  will  be  declared  eligible.  He  contended 
from  the  very  start  that  he  wanted  to  go  to  Carolina,  and  even  when 
he  learned  that  he  was  ineligible  he  stayed  here  and  served  as  a  man- 
ager of  the  team- 
He  Loves  Carolina  t-  * 

A  boy  of  this  type  is  to  be  admired.  He  has  proved  that  he  loves 
the  school  by  sta}ring  here  rather  than  going  to  another  school  where 
he  could  have  put  his  iootball  prowess  in  action. 

It  is  our  sincere  hope  that  the  ACC  will  reverse  its  decision  en 
Coker.  It  should,  in  a  case  such  as  this,  tafco  into  consideration 
more  than  the  iron-clMl  rules  of  the  conference.  If  titere  is  any 
punishment,  it  should  not  be  inflicted  upon  him. 


Pheiffer 

Ab 

R 

H       E 

Irby,  3b 

5 

0 

1       0 

Wright,  s.s 

2 

1 

0       0 

Eaton,  cf 

3 

1 

0       1 

Coggins,  2b 

3 

1 

0       1 

Bailey,  rf 

4 

0 

1      0 

Jordan,  c 

4 

0 

0      0 

Arbo,   lb 

4 

0 

0      2 

Roberts.  If 

3 

1 

1       0 

Jamieson,  p 

.  2 

0 

0      0 

a-Tackett 

1 

0 

1      0 

Sherrill,  p 

1 

0 

1       0 

Totals 

32 

3 

6      3 

Carolina  Fresh 

Ab 

R 

H       E 

Graver,  ss 

2 

0 

0      0 

Bryson,  lb 

4 

0 

0      0 

Baldwin,  rf 

4 

0 

1       0 

CTayton,  2b 

4 

0 

0       0 

Workman,  3b 

4 

1 

2      0 

Saintsing,  If 

4 

1 

1       0 

1  Griffin,  cf 

4 

1 

1       0 

j  Crump,  c 

3 

1 

3      0 

Hammett,  p 

4 

0 

0      0 

Totals 

33 

4 

8      0 

a-Singled  for  Jamiesor 

in 

8th. 

Score  by  Innings: 

Pfeiffer 

000 

002 

001—3 

Carolina 

001 

012 

OOx— 4 

STUDENT  WIVES  MEET 

There  will  be  a  regular  business 

and  social  meeting  of  Student  Wiv- 

es Club  to  be 

held  Tuesday,  May 

7,  at  8  p.m.  in 

the  Victory  Village 

Nursery.  All  members 

of  the  club 

are  urged  to  attend. 

By  DAVE  WIBLE 

Dave  Scurlock,  sophomore  sensa- 
tion of  the  Carolina  track  squad, 
put  forth  a  tremendous  effort  in 
the  final  leg  of  the  mile-relay,  to 
put  a  beautiful  finishing  touch  on 
Carolina's  sweet  75-56  victory  over 
the  powerful  Duke  Blue  Devils 
ye^-terday  afternoon  on  Fetzcr 
Field. 

Scurlock  gradually  cut  down  the 
Blue  Devil's  ten  yard  advantage 
in  the  final  event  and  brought  the 
sparse  crowd  to  its  feet  as  he  took 
the  lead  coming  out  of  the  last 
turn. 

The  crowd  went  wild  as  he  rac- 
ed on  to  a  new  Carolina  record  in 
the  event.  Jim  Moss,  John  Sylves-, 
ter,  Dick  McFaddin  and  Sciu-lock 
ran  the  mile  in  3:18.5,  thus  break- 
ing the  long  holding  school  record 
of  3:19.3  set  in  1939. 

But  this  was  riot  the  only  record 
broken  by  the  lanky  Scurlock.  He 
ran  a  48.4  440  earlier  in  the  after- 
noon to  top  his  48.6  record  which 
was  aL'O  co-held  by  a  1939  runner. 
Record-breaking  was  the  word 
of  the  day  in  the  Carolina  fresh- 
man camp  also.  Jim  Beatty,  who 
did  not  run  against  Duke  because 
of  a  foot  injury,  got  to  see  his 
4:21.4  freshman  mile  record  he  set 
in  1954  get  topped  by  Tar  Baby 
Cowles  Liipfert.  Liipfert  fought  to 
the  finish  with  Duke's  ace  fresh- 
man miler  Cary  W'eisiger  and  with 
a  final  kick  took  first  and  a  Caro- 
lina    freshman     record.     Another 

i  Freshman  record  was  broken  when 
Bob  Cooke  threw  the  javelin  183'- 

I  Mi". 

I  Although  there  were  many  re- 
cords   broken,    the    Carolina    vic- 

I  tories    were    team    efforts.    Coach 

'  Ranson  said,  '"We  have  been  up  and 
down  this  year,  but  this  afternoon 

j  the  boys  saw  that  they  had  to  ap- 

I  ply  themselves  to  a  task  and  they 

I  did.  We're  on  the  upgrade.' 

The  meet  was  one  of  the  finest 

I  ever  held  at  Carolina.  The  two 
schools  ran  clos-e  together   in  the 

'  running  score  right  up  to  the  fin- 
al events  when  the  Tar  Heels  pull- 
ed ahead.  In  the  freshman  compe- 
tition the  two  schools  ran  even 
closer  and  when  the  dust,  cleared 
the  Tar  Babies  had  a  66-65  victory. 
Carolina  track  fans  missed  a  good 
one.  About  100  spectators  were  on 
hand. 

Ward  Sims  wa^  the  leading  point 
gatherer  for  the  Carolina  yearlings. 
He  took  first  in  all  four  events  he 
entered,  the  pole  vault,  the  broad 
jump,  and  the  high  and  low  hurd- 
les. 

This  was  the  final  meet  for  the 
varsity  before  the  ACC  meet  com- 
ing up  next  weekend. 


The  Summary: 

Varsity:  Mile  —  Whatley  (C), 
Kahn  (C),  Noble  (D),  time  4:22. 

440  —  Scurlock  (C),  Cobb  (D), 
Kline  (D),  time  48.4.  New  school 
record.  Old  record  48.6  co-held  by 
Jennings  (1939)  and  Scurlock 
(1957). 

High  Jump  —  Brooker  (D),  Ly- 
ons (C),  and  Barrett  (D)  tie  for 
second  &'l". 

100  —  Johnson  (D),  Moss  (C), 
Honeycutt  (D),  time  :10.0. 

Javelin— Strickland  (D).  Oakley 
(C).  McCallister  (C),  202'4". 

120  High  Hurdles'  —  Deborde 
(C),  Gk)odman  (D),  Sparrow  (D), 
time  15.1. 

880  —  Scurlock  (C),  Williams 
(C),  Peter  (D),  time  1:56.4. 

220  —  Moss  (C),  Johnson  (D), 
Honeycutt  (D),  time  21.8. 

2-Mile  —  Bishop  (C),  Reaves  (C), 
Griffin  (C),  time  9:31. 

Broad  Jump  —  Roscmond  (C), 
Brawley  ^C).  Givens  (D),  21'. 

Pole  Vault  —  Davis  (C),  Pratt 
(D),  Griffith  (C),  12'. 

220  Low  Hurdles  —  Lindon  (D), 
Lyons  (C),  Spearman  (D),  time  24.8. 

Discus  —  Speer  (D),  Scudier  (D), 
Roth   (C),    144'5". 

Shot  Put  —  Speer  (D).  Kemper 
(C).  Dupler  (D),  46'll»,i.". 

Mile  Relay  —  Carolina  (Mo.ss, 
Sylvester,  McFaddin,  Scurlock), 
time,  3:18.5.  New  school  record. 
Old  record.  Old  record  3:19.3  held 
by  Jenningj,  Groves,  Russell,  Hen- 
drix.  (1939). 

Freshman:  Mile  —  Liipfert  (C), 
Weisiger  (D),  Chappel  (C),  time, 
4:21.4.  New  school  freshman  re- 
cord. Old  record  4:22.6  held  by 
Beatty  (1954). 

440  —  Powell  (D),  Menaker  (D), 
Bazemore  (D)  time  49.9. 

High  Jump  —  Shaffer  (C)  and 
Graham  (C)  tied  for  first.  Sherill 
(D),  5'10". 

100  —  Boyd  (D),  Sulebacker  (D), 
Everitt  (C),  time,  10.3. 

Javlin  —  Walker  ,(D).  Cooke  (C), 
O'Neal  (C),  186'4".  Cooke's  throw 
(183' Vi")  is  a  new  school  freshman 
record.  Old  record  180'  held  by 
O'Neal   (1957). 

120  High  Hurdles  —  Sims  (C), 
Dow  (D),  Glascock  (C),  time  15.7. 

880  —  Chappell  (C),  2-Shielde 
(D).  Sirianni  (C),  time  2:00.2. 

220  —  Powell  (D),  Sulebacker 
(D),  Everitt  (C),  time  22.9. 

2-Mile  —  Arthur  (C),  Hurd  (D), 
Maloof  (D),  time  10:07.7. 

Broad  Jump  —  Sims  (C),  Boyd 
(D),  Newsome  (D),  2r2'. 

Pole  Vault  —  Sims  (C),  Mac- 
Donald  (D),  Aycock  (C),  12'. 

220  Low  Hurdles  —  Sims  (C), 
Glascock  <C),  Don  (D),  time  24.8. 

Discuss   —   Sulebacker   (D),   O'- 


Linksmen  Will 
Defend  Title 

WINSTON-SALEM,  (AP)— Host 
Wake  Forest  and  defending  cham- 
pion Carolina  will  be  co-favorites 
for  the  team  title  in  the  fourth 
Atlantic  Coast  Conference  golf 
tournament  beginning  here  Fri- 
day. 

Entries  are  expected  from  all 
eight  ACC  schools,  with  team  and 
ln(tividual  champions  to  be  deter- 
mined over  a  two-day,  36-hole 
route  on  the  par  71  Old  Town 
Club  course. 

Buzzy  Basinger  of  Carolina,  v/ho 
dropped  out  of  school  last  fall, 
will  not  defend  his  individual 
title. 

Carolina  won  the  team  cham- 
pionship last  year  with  a  four- 
man  total  score  of  574. 


Baseball  Canceled 

The  Carolina  varsity  baseball 
game  with  The  McCrary  Eagles 
yesterday  afternoon  was  called 
off  because  of  cold  weather. 
Carolina  plays  Wake  Forest 
there  Tuosday. 


Howard  Johnson  Restaurant 

STUDENT   SPECIALS 

Barbecued    Chicken 
Choice  Steak  Sandwiches 

2:00-    5:00  P.M. 
SERVED  8:00-11:00  P^. 

'^Landmark  For  Hungry  Tarheels" 


Neal  (C),  Cotton  (C),  123'4Vfe". 

Shot    I>ut  —  <:otton  (C),  Eaton 
(D),  Walker  (D),  43'6". 

Mile  Relay  —  Duke  (no  time). 


Filmed 
Jn  Mexico's 

Seething 

Gorge 

of  the 

Gods 

Cinemascope 

THE 

RIVEIIlS 


b«i  *Otc»  fiogeius  PnKhfCttv><^ 


TREMENDOUS 

. . .  done  in  colors  of  which  a 
Rembrandt  might  be  proud  I " 

Crowih»r,  N.  Y.  Iibi»« 

''THE  YEAR'S  MOST 
EXCITING  FILM'' 

-NEWiWEEK  MAGAZINE 

**A  mastery  so  complete  that  ^Richard 
lir  in  this  generation  can  surely  never 
be  himself  again!" 

.TiMf  MAGAZINE 

^'Olivier  and  a  brilliant  cost  bring  new 
life  to  Shakespeare!" 

RlGHABLOm: 

JOHN  CICLGUO  •  CUMRC  BLOOM  •  RALPH  RICHARDSON  •  CEORIC  HAROWICKC 


produf^  and  dirvclrd  hy 


LAURENCE  OUVIER.mTiJ|bp 


COLOR    BY    TBCHNICOUOR    dItfrW.d  by  IVBT  HUM  KT.  CW. 


/^ 


Admission: 
Adults  65c 

TODAY 
MON.  -  TUES. 


ANTHONV 


MILLAND  QUfNN 
obBRA  PAGE 


NOW  PLAYING 


Carolina 


Tennis  Squad  Defeats 
Virginia  By  Close  5-4 


CHARLOTTESVILLE.  Va..  (AP) 
— North  Carolina  won  the  first 
two  doubles  matcbes  yesterday  to 
insure  a  5-4  Atlantic  Coast  Con- 
ference tennis  victory  over  Vir- 
ginia. 

The  Tar  Heels  clinched  the  win 
when  Geoff  Black  and  Frank 
Livingston  defeated  Dick  Stoever 
and  Jim  Cromwell  6-4,  7-5  in  the 
second  doubles  engagement. 

The  Tar  Heels  got  off  to  a  goad 
start  when  number  one  man  Steve 
Bank  brezzed  past  past  the  Cal- 
vier's  top  man,  gherry  Snyder, 
6-0,  6-1.  Number  two  man  Geoff 
Black  found  the  going  a  little 
tougher,  but  won  8-6.  8-3.  The 
next  two  singles  matches  wece 
taken  by  Virginia.  Tom  Mclver 
took  the  number  six  singles  lor 
Carolina  6-3,  6-2.  Then  the  Tar 
Heel  doubles  team  took  over  the 
fituatien  to  iasurt  a  Carolina  vic- 


tory. 

May  7,  the  Tar  Heels  will  cwne 
back  home  after  a  four  match  tour 
and  play  the  N.  C.  State  aquad. 
That  match  will  be  the  last  for  the 
Carolina  men  before  the  ACC 
championships  May  9-11. 
Th«  Summary: 

Singles — Steve  Bank  (NC)  de 
feated  Sherry  Snyder  6-0,  6-1; 
Geoff  Black  (NC)  defeated  Dick 
Stoever  8-6,  ©-3;  Jim  Cromwell 
(V)  defeated  Frank  Livingston  6- 
4.  6-4;  John  Berkley  (V)  defeated 
Ray  Newsome  6-3,  6-1;  Lou  Bin- 
wick  (V)  defated  Fritz  Van  Wink- 
le 6-1,  6-2;  Tom  Mclver  (NC)  de- 
feated King  Burnett  6-3,  6-2. 

Doubles  —  Bank  and  Newsome 
(NC)  defeated  Snyder  and  Burn- 
ett 4-6.  6-2,  6-1;  Bla«k  and  Living- 
ston (NC)  defeated  Stoever  and 
Cromwell  6-4,  7-5;  Einwick  and 
Steve  Guggenheim  (V)  defeated 
Mclver  and  Smith  2-6,  7-5,  6-3. 


Don  Larsea  of  the  New  York 
Yakes  became  the  first  pitcher 
in  the  history  of  baseball  to  pitch 
a  penfect  gani«  in  the  World 
Series  whea  he  beat  the  Brook- 
lyn Dodgers  in  1956. 


Advertise 

In    The 

Tar   Heel 


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your  los9  when  a  text  is 
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•  Enjoyable  Books 

We  can  use  books  you  no 
longer  want  on  your  shelves. 
The  next  fellow  that  comes 
along  may  find  them  as  de- 
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When  Exams  Are  Over, 

There'll  Be  Green  Money 

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TREAT   Mother  and  Dad 
To  A  Delicious  Meal 

At  Chapel  Hill's  "MOST  POPULAR"  Restaurant 

CAROLINA  COFFEE  SHOP 

Choice  Steaks  ~  Chops  —  Seafood  —  Reasonable  Prices 
OPEN  ALL  DAY  SUNDAY  TILL  8  P.M.  '  ' 


WELCOME 
PARENTS 


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.>■.-■•■*    i".T»'''i  ::/•■■" 


-f    f 


RELAXATION 


*  ■    I 


'-..  4-..VJ. 


]'  -t "•■■•-  ^-  ■ 


1.- 


Reunion  With  Friends 

at 

THE  MONOGRAM  CLUB 
DINING  ROOM 


Serials  Dspt. 
Chapel   Hill,    II'    C. 
8-31-49 


WEATHER 

Partly  cloudy  and  cool.  Expected 
tiigh.  60. 


2r()c  3Jallu  i|3rar  Heel 


JEERS 

The   Editor  has  several   for   N««- 
ser  on  page  two. 


VOL.  LVil,  NO.  181 


Complete  iff^  Wirt  S<niie« 


CHAPEL   HILL.   NORTH   CAROLINA.   TUESDAY,   MAY    7,    1957 


Offiett   tn   Graham   Memorial 


SIX  PAGES   THIS  ISSUE 


Attendance  Urged  By  Evans 
For  Inauguration  Of  Friday 


Pulitter  Prizes  Given 


Graham,  Gray 
To  Participate 


Wiliiam  Friday  will  be  inaugurat- 


KEW  YORK  —  (AP;  —  Eugene    edition   time)    for   its   coverage   of 
O'Neill    yesterday   won    the    first    the   Grand   Canyon   crash    of   two  i 
posthumous     Pulitzer    Prize    ever  airliners  in  which  128  person^;  died.  ^  ^*  president  of  the  Consolidated  j 
awarded   for   his    autobiographical       Wallace     Turner     and     William  "^^luversity  of  North  Carolina.  Wed- 1 
drama   'Long   Days   Journey   Into  Lambert    of    the    Portland    (Ore.)  n^^day  at   10:30  a.m.  at   Reynold's 
Night."  It   is  a  current    broadway   Oregor:ian,  were  cited  jointly  for ;  ^°'^'''^"™  ^"  Raleigh, 
hit.  stories   exposing  Teamstei^  Union '     "<^^asses    have    been    called    off. 

The  la'te  playwright  thus  joined  'vice  and  corruption'  in  Portland.  ^"**  ^  "^'^^  ^'^  ^^^  ^^  opportunity 
two  other  men  as  four-time  win-  The  award  was  for  li)cal  reporting  ^  "^^e  each  and  every  person  to 
ners  in  the  40-year-old  history  of  (no  edition  time)  and  each  man  ^^^^-  ^'^  ^'^  ^'^  ^^"^"^  S^"*^^" 
the  awards.  The  others  were    the  gets  $1,(X)0.  i 

late   playwright-biographer   Robe.t       Other  awards  were: 

History-  —  "Russia     L,eaves     The 
War, "  by  George  F.  Kennan. 

Biography  —  "Profiles  In  Cour- 
age,"   by    Sen.   John    F.    Kennedy 
(D-Masj.) 
Poetry— "Things  Of  This  World." 


E.  Sherwood  and  poet  Robert  Frost 
The  Chicago  Daily  News  receiv- 
ed the  1957  Pulitzer  award  for 
meritoriou-?  public  service  for  ex- 
posing the  Hodge  scandal  in  Illin- 
ois. 


Kershaw   Discusses 
Religion   And   Jazz 

Y-Nite  Speaker  States 
That  Jazz  Is  Religious 


REV. 


James  Reston  of  The  New  York  by  Richard  Wilbur. 

Times, won  the  award  for  natignal  Music — "Meditations  On  Ecclesi- 

reporting.  astes,"  by  Normal  Dello  Joio. 

Russell    Jones    of    The     United  A  special  citation   was  awarded 

Press  won   the  award  for  interna-  Kenneth  Roberts  "for  his  historical 

tional   reporting.  novels  w"hich  have  long  contribul- 

The    Salt    Lake    (Utah)    Tribune  ed   io  the  creation   of  greater  in- 

was  selected  for  local  reporting  (on  (See   PULViZER.  Page   3i 

$15,000  Grant  Given 
School  Of  Medicine 


A.  L.  KERSHAW  SPEAKS  AT  Y-NITE 

.  jazz  us  not  the  "gutter"  type  vmsic 

Photo  by  Bill  King 


tion    can    consider    ourselves    fi>r- 

tunate  for  we  will  have  an  oppor-  , 

lunity  to  witness  an  event  that  takes  i 

p-lace,  only  onee  every  several  de-  ' 

cades,"  said  Sonny  Evans,  president 

of    the   student    body.    "1    hope   to  | 

s-ee  ever>x)ne  in  Raleigh  on  Wednes- 
day,"  Evans  further  stated.   "Over 

1500  delegates  have  been  invited 
!  from  every  major  university  and 
i  college  in  America  and  some  rep- 

lesenting  fore^n  unweisities  as 
i  ^'^'l- '  The    installation    of    the    YWCA   positions   are    the*  following:    Sarr. 

The  inauguration  activities  will  be  i  ^nd  the  YMCA  executive  officers  j  Williamson,  Darlington.  S.C,  Cam- 
linpresisve"  wltli  officials  of  the '  ^"^  cabinet  and  the  banquet  in '  pus  Christian  Council  representa- 
'  <hree  Consolidated  University  units,  j  their  honor  will  take  place  to-  five;  Margaret  Daughtridge,  Rocky 
limpoitant  political    figures,    bands    "ight   at    5:45   in   upstairs   Lenoir  i  Mount,   conferences;   Patsy   Miller, 


Y  Has  Installation 


and  choirs  of  U\C,  Woman's  Col- 
I  lege,  and  State  College  participat- 
ing. 


The  University  School  of  Medi- 
cine has  t  ?en  awarded  a  grant  of 
$15,400  for  heart  research  accord- 
ing- to  a  recent  announcement  by 
the  Life  Insurance  Medical  Re- 
search  Fund.  ' 

The  award  was  made  to  Dr.  Cari 


Scientific  director  of  the  Fund, 
Dr.  Francis  R.  Dieuaide,  announc- 
ed the  awards  for  1957.  He  said 
that  the  awards  would  support 
scientists  in  a  broad  attack  on  the 
vital    problem    of    heart    di^-ease 


Gov.  Luther  Hodges  will  introdince 
chace'lors  Robert  B.  House  of  UNC, 
William  Whatley  Pierson  of  Woman's 
College,    and    Carey    H.    Bostian   of 


Hall. 

At  this  lime  The  Rev.  A.  L.  Kcr 
shaw,  on  campu;:;  in  connection 
with  Y-Nite,  will  speak  on  "Chal- 
lenge to  New  Leaders  in  the  Stu- 
dent Christian  Movement". 


Kinston,    Dix    Hill;    EUeanor    Wil- 1 
tliamson,   Winnsboro,  Gravely  T.B. 
'Sanitorium;     Mary    Louise    Bizzel,  i 
Goldsboro,  Girl  Scout.*'.  | 

Also,  Cindy  Seagraves,  Jackson- 
ville, Fla.,    Holmes  Day  Nursery, 


The  public  is  invited  to  both  the  ,  Pat     Gregory,     Benson,     Hospital; 
banquet      and      the      installation. '  Jennie  Margaret  Meador,  Charlotte, 
State  College.  He  will  also  present  I  Tickets   for   the    banquet    are   on  '  inter-coUcgiate    relations;     Kathie 
.hancellors-elect    Williaan     B.     Ay- j  sale  for  $1.25.  j  Webster,     Princeton,    N.J.,    office 

cock  of  UNC  and  Gordon  BlackweU  [     The   executive   members   of   the   force;     Betty     Carolyn     Huffman, 
cf  Woman's  Colkc^e.  |  YWCA  are:   Belle   Corey,  Atlanta,  i  Catawba,  public  affairs. 

,     National    office    holders    such    as  |  ^^^°7»«-    President;    Ann    Morgan,'      Also    Mary  Moore  Mason    Roan- 
Prominent    among   the   subject*  prank   Grahaab   and   G^mxIoo  Gray  I  C^^'''*^^^'  ^   ^a..  vice  president  J  oke,    Va.,    publicity;    Martha   Jor- 
E.  Anderson  for   research  on  the '  of  study  are  diet,  stress  and  other   ^iH    make    short    soeectes   at    the !  ^**"y   Adams.    Wilmington,   seofe    tune.  Brevard,  publications  board; 

tary;  Ann  Holt,  Sanford,  treasar«ar; '-Marv'  Jane  Fisher,  Bristol,  Va., 
Phyllis  Krafft,  River  Forest,  Illi- ,  race  relations;  Eve  McClatchey, 
noij,  program  chairman;  and  Lu-  Atlanta,  Ga.,  ve.-ipers  and  worship; 
cinda  Holderncss.  Greensboro, '  Debbie  Sink,  Morcsville,  world 
membership  chairman.  '  understanding;  and  Daryl  Earring- 


chemistry  and  n^et^bpiisoi  of  ace- ,  fsct^urs   in    hardening    of    the    ar-   Uiauguration.  Both  are  former  Con- 


Independence  Day 

TEL  AVIV— (AP)— Israel  put 
on  an  all-out  show  of  military 
strength  yesterday  to  celebrate 
her  ninth   Independence  Day. 

For  nearly  two  hours,  tank,  ar- 
tillery and  infantry  columns  pass- 
ed in  review.  Overhead  French 
and  British-made  jets  of  Israel's 
small  air  force  flew  by  in  close 
formation. 

One  section  of  the  mechanized 
columns  was  made  up  entirely  of  i 
tanks,  artillery  and  armored  ve- 1 
hides  captured  from  Egyptians  ] 
in  last  fall's  Sinai  invasion.  This 
included  Soviet  T34  tanks.  Ameri-  ^ 
can  Shermans,  British  25-pound  | 
Howitzers  and  Czech  anti-aircraft  | 
guns.  I 

Premier  Resigns  | 

ROME  —  (AP)  —  Premier  An-; 
tonio    Segni    resigned    last    night,  i 
22  fnonths   to   the    day    after   his 
coalition   cabinet   took   office.  ! 

Withdrawal     of     Vice     Premier ; 
Giuseppe  Saragat  and  three  other 
Social    Democrat     ministers    from 
the  cabinet  forced  Segni's  step,      j 

Left  with  barely  an  ally  in  Par-  j 
liament  for  his  Christian  Demo-  ; 
cratic  Party,  "Segni  quit  a  sick 
bed,  went  to  Quirinale  Palace ' 
and  handled  his  resignation  to 
President  Giovanni  Gronchi. 


By   BOB   HIGH 

In  his  talk  laal  night,  before  some  400  students  under  the  Davie 
Poplar.  Rev.  A.  L.  Kershaw  spoke  on  the  relationship  between  re- 
ligion and  jazz,  the  music  so  many  people  condemn  becau.'.e  they 
think  it  was  written  and  inspired  in  a  bawdy  house. 

The  special  guest  of  the  second  annual  Y-Nite  observance  at  UNC, 
spoke  of  how   neurotic  the  popular  music  and  old  standard.-  are  in 

♦ocmparison  with  the  real  meaning 

of  th(?  mu.,ic  which  was  born  in  the 
area  called  ■Storyville"  in  New 
Orleans. 

"We  called  jazz  uncultured  Ne- 
gro music,  but  it  grew  from  many 
sources.  The  Psalms.  Scottish  folk 
music,  and  great  works  by  the  mu- 
scal  masters  were  used  m  deriving 
the  music  which  was  called  "gut- 
ter" music  and  indigenous  to 
divcA"  stated  Kershaw. 

Kershaw  went  on  to  say  that  if 
the  music  was  of  the  "gutter  "  va- 
riety, then  it  would  not  have  been 
played  in  Carnegie  Hall,  college 
student  unions  and  it  would  not 
have  been  sent  abroad  as  ambas- 
sadors to  countries  which  knew 
Link,  a  junior  from  '  ""^'^'"^  «^  ^^^  "'"sic  which  has 
Y.,  and  wiU  star  Page    ^^^'^^^^  out  of  the  bayous  of  Lou- 


May  17  Is  Date 
Of  Play 'No  Exit' 

An  group  of  dramatic  art  majors, 
working  under  the  .^i>onsorsh)-;>  ol 
Professor  Foster  Fitz'^imons  and  his 
undergraduate  directing  class,  will 
present  a  single  performance  of 
Jean  Paul.  Satre's  "No  Exit"  at 
«:00  p.m.  Friday.  May  17  at  the 
Playmakers"  Theatre:  No  admission 
•will  be  charged. 


The  one-act  exisfenticli-t  drama. 
in  a  translation  from  the  French 
by  Stuart  Gilbert,  will  be  direit.d 
by  Russell 
Jamaica  N 


Williams,  Bettina  Jinnette,  Taylor  '^'^"^  ^nd  swelled  from  the  South 
Williams  and  James  Sechrest.  Al- !  .^'^^  ^^  Chicago, 
though  admittedly  only  an  "ex-  |  "Sky.crapers,  gadgets  and  mon- 
,l>erimental  project"  the  play  will  *">'  will  not  impress  the  peoples 
be  fully  staged  with  complete  sot-  j  across  this  world  of  ours,  but  jazz 
ting  and  costumes.  (  helps  .to  bring   an   individual  out, 

that  is  in  a  lonely  crowd,  '  stated 


•No   Exit"    is   the  stcry   of  three 


the  visiting  minister. 


tal  phosphatides. 
The  entire  resource. 


I  teries,  coronary  occlusion  and  high   jsolidaied  University  presidents.  Gra- 


of  the  Life ;  blood  pressure. 


I  ham  is  now  mediator  of  the  United 


Insurance  Medicid  Research  Fund       In  other  programs  new  methods    Nations 
have    been    devoted   to    heart    re- '  are   being   developed   for   the   im- 1 
search   since    organization    of    the ;  provement    of  cardiovascular    sur-  j 
Fund  in  1954.  It  has  given  a  total ;  gery,  and  for  its  extension  to  con-  i 


and  Gray  Li  the  recently 
(See  GRAHAM,  Page  3) 


The  cabinet  chairmen  and  their   ton,  Y  Night. 


of    $9,211,000   for    heart    research 
over  the  pa.st  12  years. 


GM'S  SLATE 


The  fol Sowing  activitits  art 
scheduled  for  Graham  Memorial 
today: 

Orientation  Committee,  4  •  6 
p.m.  Grail  Room;  W.A.A.,  7-8 
p.m..  Grail  Reem;  University  Par- 
ty, 7-n  p.m.,  Relaitd  Parlcer 
Lounge  Nos.  1,2,;  University 
Club,  7-8  p.m.,  R^aitd  Par)ter 
Lounga  No.  3;  Careitlia  Symposi- 
tum,  4i6  p.m.,  Wo#4llouse  Con- 
ference Room;  IPC,  7:90-9  p.m., 
Woodhouse  Conference  Room; 
Women's  liesidence  Council,  6:45 
p.m..  Council  Rown;  Women's 
Honor  Council,  8-11  |t.m..  Coun- 
cil Room*  Dence  CIces,  6:30-8 
p.m.,  Rendexvevs  Rdom;  A.  P.  O., 
7-9  p.m.,  A.  P.  O.  AMm;  White- 
head Medical  Sociely,  9-11  p.m., 
A.  P.  O.  Room. 


ditions  hitherto  inoperable.  I 

A  total  of  $1,059,490,  the  greater 
part  of  the  1957  award.-^,  is  going  ] 
to  support  66  heart  research   pro- ' 
grams  in    medical   centers   in   the 
United  States,  Canada  and  Mexico.  | 
Fellowships  have  also  been  award- 
ed to  23  young  investgators  in  ths 
field. 

The  Life  Insurance   Medical  Re- ; 
search  Fund  is  supported  by    146 
large    and    small    life    insurance 
companiej. 


Poteat  Addresses  SP 
On  Freedom's  Dangers 


Don't  Despair; 
Study  &  Work 


Grah.am  Memorial  Closed 

Graham  Memorial  will  be  clos- 
ed Wednesday  morning,  accord- 
ing to  Linda  Mann,  director.  The 
building  will  open  at  1  p.m., 
however. 


Summer    job    necessary?     Dont 
By   WALT   SCHRUNTEK  basis   of   Anglo-Saxon     philosophy  '  despair;  you  can  take  and  complete 

Dr.    William    Poteat,    who    will '  relating  to  the  privacy  of  the  in-  University  Correspondence  courses 
soon  resign  as  professor  of  philo-   dividual  person.  in    a    minimum    of    seven    weeks 

sophy    here,    spoke    before    a    Stu-       He  said  that  "persons  who  would  ,  while  on  the  job. 
dent   Party  assemblage   last  night   deny  the    provisions    of    the    5th       The  University  offero-  more  than 
on  a  subject  which  he  introduced   amendment  do  not   recognize  the   100  Correspondence   courses    that 
as    "something    and   at  the  s-ame  jubtle  forces  which  seek  to  under-  a  student  may  choose  from  to  earn 
time  everything  that  has  to  do  with    mine   this   principle."  |  degree  credit  and  quality  points, 

freedom."  j     Pointing  out  that  the  problem  is  :     You  may  enroll  at  any  time  pro- 

He  directed  his  remarks  toward  not  one  of  politics  or  jurispru-  j  vided  that  you  are  not  attending 
Doh  Pugh  of  .\lpha  Kappa  Psi '  our  present-day  attitudes  toward  dence,  but  that  it  lies  at  the  root  I  regular  University  classes, 
fraternity  is  the  newly  elected  the  P'ifth  Amendment,  the  outright '  of  the  concept  of  human  privacy,  I  You  may  send  in  as  many  as 
president  of  the  Professional  In- 1  dangers  our  freedom  suffers  from  the  Prof,  of  Philosophy  served  as  i  four  le^-son  assignments  a  week  al- 
ter-Fraternity  Council,  according  totalitarian  philosophies,  the  sub- ;  example  the  totalitarian  state :  though,  you  are  allowed  thirteen 
to  an  announcement  received  yes-   tie  dangers  we  present  in  our  own  I  where  man  cannot  "exist  in  an  un- 1  months    in    which    to   finish    the 


NSA  Announces  Four 
Interesting  Activities 


New  IFC  Officers 


terday. 

.Also  elected  were  Jim  Inabinet, 
Phi  D:lta  Chi,  vice  president; 
Dave  Veasey,  Delta  Sigma  Pi, 
secretary;  and  Bill  Allen,  Kappa 
Psi,    treasurer. 


society  and  the  therat  these  com-   publicizable  relationship  with   an-   course. 

binationj^  are   to    our  freedom   as    other  person."  !      Correspondence    courses    should 

students    at    the    University    and  I      "Our  acquiescence  to  the  misuse    be    especially    appealing    to    those 
citizens  of  a  democratic  state.         of   the  5th  amendment,"   he  said   who  are  interrupting  their  college 
At  the   outset   of    his   talk.   Dr.    "testifiej  to  an  increasing  degree  1  careers  to  answer  the  call  of  the 
Poteat     reviewed     the     historical  j  (See  POTEAT.  Page  3)  draft  board. 


T/ie    U.    S.    National    Student    As- 

•soeiation  has  annoimced  four  activi- 

I  ties   c<xming   up  this   summer   that 

should    be   of    interest    to   Carolina 

.students. 

On  August  20-30  the  10th  National 
Student  Congress  will  be  held  on 
the  University  of  Michigan  Cainpus 
in  Ann  Arbor.  Whit  Whitfield.  UNC's 
NS.A  coordinater,  urges  all  those  in- 
j  terested  in  a.oplying  for  the  ten 
I  delegate  positions  to  contact  the 
'  Student  Union  Government  offices 
I  in  Graham  Memorial.  Interviews 
I  will  be  arranged  later. 
I  The  Congi«ess,  with  its  theme 
'■  "The  American  Student-Profile  and 
Promise,"  is  expected  to  be  at- 
tended  by   1000  delegates   who   will 


])eople  who  have  died  and  are 
caught  in  a  particular  kind  of  hell.  ^  '^he  giiest  speaker  condemned 
a  hell  without  demons  and  red-l;o:  j  'he  Lawrence  WeJk  t\p?  of  music 
pincers  which  is  nonethless  a  con-  sid  't  drew  the  bigge.-;t  burst  of 
stant  torture  fnr  its  inmates.  As  respon.se  from  the  audience, 
the  play  pn>2re.s.ses  the  audience  '  sprawled  on  the  Jawn  in  Bermuda 
sees  why  they  have  been  condemn-  ,  shorts  and  munch/ng  barbequt. 
ed.  "  -  *  fn  speaking  on   the  religion   as- 

pect cf  his  relation  between  the 
two  subjects.  Kershaw  said  that 
.s  me  of  the  most  accute  religious 
insights  of  our  time  i.ssues  from 
the  arts.  He  went  on  to  illustrate 
that  the  dramas  of  Tennessee 
Williams  and  .Arthur  Miller,  poe- 
i  try  of  Dillon  Thomas  and  the 
work  cf  Dynarc  Barnes  contained 
.^omc  of  th?  most  influential  be- 
liefs in  the  world  today  and  help- 
ed bring  the  issues  to  the  fore- 
front. 

"A  fundamental  relisious  in- 
sight or  experience  provides  in 
a  single  instant  th->  affirmation  of 
the  worth  of  the  individual,  inter- 
dependence of  persons  and  trust 
in   Providence."'   Kershaw   said. 

Kershaw  showed  the  implicit 
faith  of  jazz  by  stating  there  was 
candor  and  trust  in  th?  melodies. 
I  He  went  on  to  show  how  the  blues 
and  pop  songs  differ  in  giving  a 
person    the   true    m-janing   of   life. 


fonnuUae  the  policies  of  the  as.so- 
ciation  for  the  next  academic  ,\ear 
and  elect  national  officers  who  wil 
carry  out  the  legislative  mandates 
enacted  bv  the  student  government 
represent  a  ti  ves . 

Guests  of  the  foreign  student  un- 
ions, oducationai  consultants  and 
members  of  the  press  wiJl  ..be  in- 
vited to  observe  the  democratic- 
proceses  manifested  |  in  the  Con- 
gress. The  Congress  will  pro\ide 
work-shop  settings  in  which  the  stu- 
dent leaders  of  the  country  can 
meet  and  discuss  mutual  problems 
and   programs. 

Dr.  Buell  Gallagher,  president  of 
City  College  of  New  York,  will  key- 
(See  NSA.  Page  3) 


(S.e    KERSHAW     page    3) 


Parents'  Day  Brings  Hundreds  To  UNC 


The  Old  Well  Is  Used  Again 

,  .  .  something  to  remember 


Photo  by  Bill  King 


Sunday  last,  hundreds  of  holi- 
day-clad visitors  coiwerged  on 
the  Carolina  campus  and  good 
behavior  became  the  order  of  the 
day. 

Sunday  was  Parents'  Day  at 
UNC — the  seventh  such  annual 
event  to  be  sponsored  here  by 
th?  Alpha  Phi  Omega  service  fra- 
ternity. And  a  full  day  of  sche- 
duled and  informal  activities  were 
planned  for  visiting  Moms  and 
Dads  during  their  stay  here. 

The  weather,  held  up  remark- 
ably well— for  Chapel  Hill — and 
even  though  a  slight  chill  filled 
the  air,  the  sun's  Welcome  pres- 
ence made  the  day  an  enjoyable 
and  comfortable  one  for  those  who 
were  on  hand  to  visit  and  wander 
through  the  green  expanses  of  the 
campus. 

Visitors  made  their  first  visi- 
ble appearances  early  Sunday 
morning  as  new  faces  could  be 
seen  leaving  and  entering  the 
many  churches  and  chapels  around 
town.  One  minister  was  overheard 
to  remark  with  a  knowing  smile 
that  he  noticed  several  "strange 
and  delinquent  faces  in  the 
crowd'  that  morning. 

As  morning  wore  into  early  af-^ 


ternoon,  the  red-brick  walks 
throughout  the  campus  were  cov- 
ered with  smiling  stroHers,  be 
ing  led  (for  the  moit  part)  by 
well  informed  guides  (sons  and 
daughters  no  doubt)  and  annoint  j 
c'd  with  the  outstanding  lore  and 
tradition  that  is  the  University  of 
North   Carolina. 

Early  points  of  popularity  wers 
Graham  Memorial  and  Morehead 
Planetarium  where  most  parents 
seemed  to  have  made  previous  ap- 
pointments to  meet  sons  and 
daught?rs  for  conducted  tours  of 
the  campus. 

The  Old  Well,  always  a  popu- 
lar landmark  at  Carolina,  was  a  j 
stopping  place .  for  most  visitors  i 
who  came  to  see  what  makes  UNC ; 
tick.  The  water  fountain  located  j 
at.  the  well  might  have  been  the  | 
feature  w*ich  added  to  its  at-i 
traction.  '  j 

Numerous  buildings  held  Open  [ 
House  as  part  of  the  Parents'  Day  j 
program  and  Person  Hall,  New 
Venable,  Swain  Hall,  the  Infirm- j 
ary,  Morehead  Planetarium,  Gra- 1 
Itam  Memorial  and  the  dDrmitorj 
ies  were  much-visited  during  the 
day-long   affair.  j 

One   group   of   wanderers   took] 


the  Open  Hcu&e  invitations  posted 
aroijtid  the  campus  too  much  to 
heart.  h,iwever,  and  stormed  the 
second  floor  of  Stacey  Dorm  be- 
fore  being   discovered. 

An  alert  resident  of  the  dorm 
spotted  and  detoured  the  mixed 
group  of  visitors  before  they 
reached  their  objective  and  in- 
formed them  that  they  would 
have  to  wait  in  the  downstairs 
Social  Room.  (No  damage  or  em- 
barrassment resulted,  according 
to  information  received  here  yes- 
terday.) 

Toward  noon  and  thereafter, 
empty  stomaches  apparently  over- 
came the  urge  to  wander  and  a 
great  many  sightseers  could  be 
seen  taking  advantage  of  the  Uni- 
versity's green  evpanses  for  pic- 
nic pick-me-ups.  Baskets  filled 
with  fried  chicken,  cold  ham,  pies, 
cakes  and  all  manners  and  vari- 
eties of  delicacies  found  more 
than  one  hungry  group  of  fans. 

A  lull  in  activity  could  be  not- 
ed shortly  after  the  noontime 
period  as  most  sightseers  were 
content  to  rest  from  their  travels 
and  build  up  a  reserve  for  fur 
ther  strolls  around  the  campus. 

Most  parents,   after  their  noon 


meal,  were  apparently  content  to 
take  their  liesure  and  Carolina's 
scenic,  tree-lined  walks  were 
spars?ly  populated.  The  afternoon 
hours  were  spent  in  various  atti- 
tudes— some  in  quiert  conversa- 
tion, some  in  peaceful  and  rested 
contemplation  of  campus  pictoral 
qualities,  others  in  contented, 
liesurly  strolls  under  the  com- 
fortable shade  of  Carolina's  nu- 
merous  trees. 

From  3:30  on,  a  reception  was 
held  under  Davie  Popular  where- 
by visitors  and  guests  had  an  op- 
portunity to  meet  and  speak  with 
various  faculty  and  administra 
lion  members  of  the  university. 

Later,  parents  were  officiall.v 
velccmed  to  the  campus  by  Mr. 
Roy  Armstrong,  who  spoke  to 
Ihem  of  the  Universitys'  position 
in  the  south  as  an  advancing,  pro- 
gressive institution.  He  further 
•.\tcnded  his  thanks  to  the'APO-' 
for  making  the  Parents'  Day  pro 
^ram  available  and  the  success 
that  it  was. 

A    band    concert    rounded    out 
the     day     and     foot-sore     visitors 
sought  welcome  rest  on  the  bench- 
es   and   wide    expanses    of   green 
(See   PARENTS'.  Page  3) 


VISITORS  SUNDAY   WERE  MOM  AND  POP 

.  .  .  by  t.'ic  uaij,  my  money  .  .  . 

Photo  by  Bill  King 


#A8I  TWO 


TMI  DAILY  TAR  HtiL 


TUESDAY,  MAY  7,  1f$f 


Tuesc 


The  Cancerous  Mid  East: 
Three  Jeers  For  Nasser 

Tfie  iiTijxirtanct'  of  Jordanian  King  Hussein's  acceptance  ot  Sio  mil- 
lion worth  of  I'.S.  'technical  assistance  "  -hecomei  increasingly  e\ ident 
in  light  of  the  recent  Syrian  elections. 

Open  endorsiers  of  Qummunist-tainted  Egyptian  President  G.  A.  Nas- 
ser defeated  a^new  anti-Coniniunisi  coalition  in  three' special  parlia- 
mentary elections. 


Thus  King  Hussein's  acceptance 
of  U.S.  assistance  is  a  bright  spot 
in  the  glt)bes  cancerous  Middle 
Fast. 

Although  the  vigorous,  young 
kings  willingfness  to  accept  the 
Sio  million  is.  in  if  .self,  at  least 
semi  -  endorsement  of  the  Eisen- 
hower I)(Ktrine  approved  by  Con- 
giess  to  handle  the  Middle  East 
crisis.  Secretary  of  States  Dulles— 
in  typical  bungling  style  —  has 
threatened  to  throw  the  U.S.  pro- 
gress  flat   on   rts   democratic   fac^. 

Dulles  told  Bonn  colleagues 
attending  the  North  .\tlantic 
Treaty  Organization  Council 
meeting  thgt  Jprdan  had: 

"In  effect,  accepted  the  Eisen- 
hower   D(xtriire. " 

Dulles  made  this  bta/en  state- 
ment even  iljough  Hussein  must 
appear  non-partisan  liefore  his 
subjei  ts— a  mafnritv  of  whcmi  have 
\ioient!\    left%    indinatiims. 

Even  thoiigk  Dulles  has  cast  his 
clumsy  shadow  on  the  situation, 
it  is  still  evident  that  Nationalistic 
Nasser  is  bei^ming  increasingly 
isolated  in  his  attempt  to  ccmvert 
.Arab  nationalism  into  a  dit  tator- 
ship  for  himself. 

Onlv  the  (".airo-Damascus-'Mos- 
K)w  axis  now  remains  a  eminent 
emjx'dimeni  to  pre\MH  solution  of 
tlie  Middle  East  problem. 

.Anmian  is  conspicuously  miss- 
ing from  axis.  .And  in  lieu  of 
(ianial  .\bdel  Nasser  for  the  ini- 
tials ■  (i..\."  might  be  suitably  sub- 
stituted   "(ioing    (virtually)  Alone' 

A  Puffing  Smokestack 
And  State  Salvation    ? :. 

.\  faint  tiuf  of  black  on  the  Carolina  sk!es^'''''*;^ '''*;         i       ,,    .j    a 
.\  puffing  sTOokestack.  -•  ^-  -  ;/ ..J?f,         *•    '•'*•••     - -" 

Salvation   for  the  dominantly  agricultural  stateu^ . .' 1 
(ro\.  H(Kl«>es  is  to  be  lauded  lot  his  prop(jsal  to  lower  the  corporation 

tax  .leiK  e  which  the  state  has  constructed. 

Through  lowering  the  corporative  tax  "structure,  the  Old  North  Sta:e 

is  \irtually  assured   that  more   in 


Nasser.  He  has  cjlily  Syrian  sup- 
port in  his  megolomaniac  attempt 
to  extend  his  influence  through- 
out the  Middle  East. 

^^^len  Premier  Nasser's  transi- 
tion government  ended  in  1956: 
aiiH  a  dual  plebisite  elected  him 
president  by  an  ovcnvhelming 
majority  of  <)9.9  jicr  cent  of  the 
total  votes,  a  constitution  was  also 
appro\ed  which  calls  for  a  demo- 
cratic  form  of  government. 

If  flag-waving  Nasser  is  pursu- 
ing democratic  patterns  in  his  gov- 
ernmental scheme,  then  the  V.S. 
is  obviously  a  victim  of  totalita- 
rian   tactics. 

.\t  any  late.  the  U.S.  has  .secur- 
ed a  signally  important  ally  in  the 
malignant  Midtlle  East  ~  3f  only 
thiough  economic  aid. 

.And  at  least  one  proxision  of 
the  Eisenhower  Dcntrine  has 
stored  a  \  ictory. 

Republican  leaders  may  sneer 
at  tlie  .administraticrn  of  Give  "Em 
Hell  Harry  S.:  but  thev  must  agree 
that  "the  Republicans  have  plav- 
'M  political  bunk  with  the  budget" 
Truman  was  using  his  Missouri- 
i^rown  head  when  he  promul;^at- 
ed    the    "Truman    Doctrine. "' 

Tlie  Truman  D<Ktrine  —  after 
wliic  h  the  P.iscuhower  I>(h  trine 
wa>  obviously  patterned — proxid- 
c'd  economic  aid  for  Comnuuiist- 
threatened    Cireece    and    Turkey. 

Three  jeers  for  Nationalistic 
Nasser:  three  cheers  lor  Hustling 
Hussein  of  Jordan. 

Lonsf  live  the  kiny:. 


dustry    will    pick    up   its   machines 
and   move  south. 

Tofxicco,  {^better  or  worse,  is 
the  state's  chi^  staple  commodity. 


The  Daily  Tar  Heel 


The  official  sliSent  publication  of  the 
Publications  B4l^  of  the  University  of 
North  Carolina,*%here  it  is  published 
daily  except,  jl^day  and  examination 
and  vacation  t>«^ds  and  summer  terms. 
Entered  as  secoiki  class  matter  in  the 
post  office  in  d^apel  Hill.  N.  C,  under 
the  Act  of  Mar^  8.  1870  Subscription 
rates:  mailed.  »l%er  year.  S2.50  a  semes- 
ter: delivered  $R^a  year,  S3. 50  a  semes- 
ter, r 
« '-fs* 


Editor 


NEIL  BASS 


Managing  Editor 


BOB  HIGH 


Associate  Editor  NANCY  HILI> 


Sports  Eiditor  ^.^ 


BILL  KING 


Newrf  Editor  _„:*;.  WALT  SCHRUNTEK 


Busines.s  Manager  JOHN  C.  WHITAKER 


Advertising  Manager        FRED  KATZIN 

NK\VS  STAFF— Graham  Snyder,  Edith 
MacKinnon.  Bob  High.  Uen  Taylor. 
Patsy  Miller,  Sill  King,  Sue  Achison. 
Mary  Alys  Vorhees. 


EDIT  STAFF— Whit  Whitfield,  i»nthony 
Wolff,  iSbn  Shaw. 


BUSINESS  STAFF— John  Minter,  Mari- 
in  flobeck,  Jane  Patten,  Johnny 
Whitaker. 


SPORTS  STAFF*:  Dave  Wible,  Stu  Bird, 
Ed  Rowland,  Jim  Crownover,  Ron 
Milligan. 


Subscription  Manager  — —  Dale  Staley 


C'rculation  Bianag^r 


Charlie  Holt 


Staff  Pfaofographers Wo*ody  Sears, 

Norman  Kantbr,  Bill  Kiag. 


.\ih\  th't  econoniic  law  oi  supplv 
and  demand  has  necessitated  cut 
alter  cut  in  tobacco  at  reaj»e  allot- 
ment. 

Thus  other  sources  ol  income 
must  be  exploited. 

Industrv  must  be  the  answer. 

The  state  is,  and  has  been  fot 
soiiu-  tinve.  miserably  low  in  the 
state  bv  state  listing  of  j)er  capit.i 
income — approximately  44th. 

Low  |>er  capita  income  leads  to 
a  subsequently  lowered  standard 
ol  living,  lower  social,  educational 
and    moraJ    standards. 

Thus  the  state  must  take  ofl  its 
straw  hat  and  don  goggles  and  in- 
chistri^tl  <:ap)S»    •. 

Perhaps  Of)V.  Hodges  has  the 
answer. 

The  (iencral  Assembly  should 
back  him  to  the  hilt. 

Lcxal  ch.imbers  of  conmierce. 
no  matter  how  alluring  they  may 
make  their  respective  locates 
sound  in  chauvinistic  propaganda,' 
cant  make  a  dent  unless  the  state 
tears  down—in  a  modi  lied  and 
temporary  \May— the  tax  barriers 
which  trip  industry  as  it  attempts 
to   make  entiance. 

.\  puffing  smokestJick  and  sal- 
\ation. 


Gracious 
Living  II 

« 

(iratious  Living  in  Chajx:!  Hill 
suffered  a  set-back  receinlv  wIVeii 
Lenoir  Hall  cfid  away  with  jilastic 
dishes,  - 

China, is  prettier  than  plastic, 
but  beauty  isn't  everything.  Since 
the  introduction  of  china,  the 
pleasant  babble  of  voices  has  been 
intermittently— about  three  times 
in  every  twenty  minutes  by  actual 
count-y-disturbed  by  the  clash^  ol 
dishes  hitting  the  inlaid  floor. 
This  tends  to  stop  conversation 
and  disturb  appetites.  It  is  not 
conductive   to  Gratious   Living. 


Ubrarians-Sue  Gichner,  Marilyn  Strum  Oh,  for  the  days  of  the  splat  in- 

stead of  the  clash. 


The  Cornell  Daily  Sun:      , 

Apathy;  Is  It 
Universal  And 
Big  Problem? 

The  intellectual  apathy  that 
seems  to  be  etherizing  the  campus 
is  not  a  condition  peculiar  to  Cor- 
nell but  rather  a  symptom  of  a 
rather  widespread  situation.  A 
report  on  academic  nidifference 
at  Yale,  drawn  up  by  the  Aurelian 
Honor  Society,  appeared  in  the 
April  19  issue  of  the  Yale  Daily 
News.  This  report  included  two 
points  particularly  pertinent  to 
CorneU's  academic  problems  and 
which  have  been  the  subject  of 
much  comment  here  and  ebe 
where. 

One  of  these  problems  is  fresh- 
man orientation.  The  Yale  report 
recommended  the  development  of 
some  "definite  program  to  make 
use  of  the  exce..sive  amount  of 
free  time  during  Freshman  Week. 
One  such  program  would  be  a 
series  of  lectures  in  which  each 
department  head  would  speak  in 
an  attempt  to  stimulate  student 
interest  inhisdis  ETAOINET 
interest  in  his  discipline  by  out- 
lining its  aims,  methods  and 
value.  .At  this  time  sample  read- 
ing lists  and  course  outlines 
could  be  offered  to  tho.se  inter- 
ested." 

It  could,  perhaps,   be   argued 
that  students  who  have  reached 
college  age  and  have  chosen  to 
continue    their    studies    at    the 
university    level    should    be    in- 
tellectually   mature    enough    to 
make  the  academic   adjustment 
on  their  own.  The  fact  is,  hew- 
ever,   that    the    American   high 
school   system  does  not  pro</ide 
its   students   with   the    intellec- 
tual    awareness    and     maturity 
that    is    necessary    for     serious 
studying  at  the  university  level. 
American  hifh   schools  provide 
their  students  with  a  more  ade- 
quate  preparation   for   football 
games    and    cheerleading    than 
for  reflective  thinking  and  aca- 
demic discipline. 
The  other  academic  inadequacy 
that    we    have    in    common    with 
Yale  is  the   prevalence  of  monu- 
mental lecture  courses.  The  Yale 
report    states,    "The    administra- 
tion    should     use     all     rc-ources 
available' to  increase  the  number 
of    undergraduate    seminars.  '    So 
much    has    been    said    about    the 
need  for  the  elimination  of  "feed- 
back "  prelim  courses  and  for  the 
encouragement  of  individual  and 
creative  study  at  Cornell  that  we 
need  not  dwell   on   this  problem 
here. 

The   important  thing   is  that 
we    do    not    j^st    sit    back    and 
say   that  academic   indifference 
is     symptomatic     of     something 
bigger   than    Cornell    and    Yale 
and  that  we  can  do  nothing  to 
arrest  the  spread  of  this   intel- 
lectual stagnation.  Perhaps  it  is 
just    another    characteristic    of 
our  increasingly   institutiona'iiz- 
ed  society   in  which  even   indi- 
vidualists have  to  be  organized 
Perhaps  big  universities  and  big 
lecture  courses  with  IBM  exams 
are  natural  outgrowths  cf  such 
a  society. 
But    if    there    are    to    Ix*    any 
bastions    of   resistance    they    will 
have  to  be  the  colleges  and  uni- 
versities of  the  nation.  Yale  has 
is,.'ued  a  report;  we  have  written 
editoFials,    the    next    step    is    for 
the  administrators  to   take  some 
action, 

♦      • 

L'il  Abnar 


'We're  Not  Going  To  Keep  You  Cooped  Up  In  The  Hold' 


<0i*$7  T>te  <jAjM'<^tfr<pAJ  posr 


\        V 


The  Students'  Forum: 


Reader  Asserts  Club  Autonomy; 
LSU  Reveille  Hands  Out  Advice 


Editor: 

-In  your  editorial  of  May  2nd 
concerning  the  State  Park  inci- 
dent you  made  at  least  two  ra- 
ther  unfortunate   errors. 

One:  You  stated  that' because 
the  Cosmopolitan  Club  party 
included  a  .Nejjro  in  the  group, 
the  entire  party  was  turned 
away  fram  the  park.  This  was 
not  the  case.  The  only  person 
asked  to  leave  was  the  Negro 
student.  Since  the  Club  felt  that 
this  was  against  its  principles 
the  entire  group  left. 

Two:  You  implied  that  the 
YMC.\  was  to  be  "mildly  chas- 
tized" becau.se  it  was  either  ig- 
norant of  the  regulatioqs  gov- 
erning State  Parks,  or  that  it 
wanted  to  create  a  situation 
concerning  segregation  which 
would  result  in  an  issu-e.  Actual- 
ly the  Cosmopolitan  Club  is  an 
autonomous  organization  which 
is  responsible   for  its  actions. 

It  is  quite  true  that  the  group 
which  planned  the  picnic  was 
not  aware  that  the  park  might 
be  segregated.  We  did  not  go  out 
to  Umstead  Park  with  any  idea 
of  creating  an  isisue.  At  any 
rate,  the  YMCA  was  not  ia  any 
way  responsible  for  the  actions 
of  the   Cosmopolitan   Club. 

It  would  be  appreciated  in 
the  future  if.  before  editorial 
statements  are  made,  tjie  editor 
would   ascertain,   to  the  best   of 


his  ability,  all  the  relevant  faclf 
concerning  a  situation  and  then 
utilize   them. 

Sipra    Bose 
,^  Ram     Desikan 

Ken    Yang 

(The  Cosmopolitan  Club  had 
its  genesis  as  a  subsidiary  of  the 
YMC.\,  W?  share  the  clubs 
pride  in  its  newly-found  auton- 
omy. But  we  still  feel  the  "Y" 
has  a  moral  obligation  to  at 
least  offer  advice  to  the  group 
to  prevent  repetition  of  unfor- 
tunate occurrences  like  the  Um- 
stead Park  incident.  We  will  con- 
curr  with  Miss  Bose  that  the  in- 
cident resulted  due  to  a  lack  of 
knowledge  of  state  law.  This  in- 
dicates that  the  "Y"  should  of- 
fer  its    advisory    capacities. 

Furthermrire.  we  have  fought 
with  the  Cosmopolitan  Club  in 
its  battle  for  "better  understand- 
ing" among  all  peoples,  regard- 
less of  race,  color  ,  or  creed. 
Thus  this  caustic  attack  on  The 
Daily  Tar  Heel  seems  a  particu-  ' 
larly  unpalatable  display  of 
cJiauvinism.  Haggling  and  fool- 
ish pride  wnll  not  help  alleviate 
an  odious  situation.  We  suggest 
a  union  of  forces.— The  Editor) 
•  •  • 

N'ewlj'velected  mem'oers  ol 
the  student  government  are  be 
coming  accustomed  to  their  du- 
ties   as    representatives    of    the 


student   body. 

Now  that  political  philosophies 
have  been  boiled  and  feasted 
upon  and  glorious  victory  is 
rapidly  charging  into  the  hard 
work,  we  think  it  time  to  enum- 
erate what  we  believe  to  be  the 
most  important  duties  of  the  new 
student    governm3nt. 

In  the  past  there  has  been  far 
too  much  absenteeism.  If  mem- 
bers of  the  council  and  the  sen- 
ate cannot  t>erform  the  mini- 
mum requirement  of  office,  they 
do  not  deserve  the  title  of  lead- 
er. 

Speaking  in  sui>port  of  some- 
thing they  brlieve  right,  especi- 
ally when  in  conflict  with  ad- 
ministrative views,  might  be 
considered  extra  duties  to  those 
they  represent,  but  consistent 
attendance  —  by  proxy  only  in 
emergenc.v — is    imperative. 

All  problems  of  importance 
that  concern  the  student  body 
should  be  discussed  in  open 
session  with  a  view  to  finding 
a  solution  satisfactory  to  all. 
Closed  session  will  only  aggra- 
vate irascible  tempers  to  the 
boiling  point.  Except  in  rare 
cases,  we  have  a  right  to  know 
who  is  doing  most  of  the  talk- 
ing. 

Probably  the  biggest  task  of 
any  government  is  exercising 
the  proper  restraint  and  maturi- 
ty in  the  execution  of  its  duties. 


'i.Si 


• 

By  A!  Capp 


WIS 


Sm^H 


'tfUC 


WE  MUST  AVE  ABSOLUTE  QCNET. 

I  WILL  NOT  INJSULT  OUR  GUEST 
WIZ  A  NOISY  GUILLOTINING 


utrrr  1 

■ST   r^ 

■ZJ 


7     L_S    SOMEON 


ITIS 
DOKi 

ARE 

VOU 
SATISFY? 


-  STILL  I  HEAR      — 

A"TlCK-TOCK".^ 

SOMEONE  tS  QDNCEALING 

A  WATCH,  BUT  I  WILL    ,- 

FIND  IT.''/- 


F09O 


By  Walt  Kalty 

Hg     ywcc 


Night  News  B4Uor 
Night  Editat  — 


Bob  High 


Woody  Sears      Hooray  for  plastic  plates. 


A  Synoptic  View; 

Value  Of  Alumni 
Association 

Stan  Shaw 

If  you  are  a  member  of  the  Class  of  1957,  in 
the  next  few  days  you  will  be  approached  by  a 
member  of  yoar  class  and  asked  t»  join  the  Uni- 
versity of  NOTth  Carolina  Alumni  Association. 

You  may  sit  and  wonder  vdiat  it  will  benefit 
you  to  pay  a  dollar  so  that  5'ou  may  receive  10 
issu^  of  Alumni  Review,  and  other  information 
from   the'  University  Alumni  Association. 

You  wonder  why  you  should  keep  in  touch  with 
a  school  after  you  have  already  graduated. 

You  will  he^r  many  reasons,  most  of  them  fairly 
good  as  tc  why  you  should  pay  your  dolUr  and 
keep  in  touch  with  your  Alma  Mater,  but  some 
of  the  best  reasons,  the  ones  that  really  count 
will  have  to  come  from  inside  yourself. 
•        •        • 

These  will  be  the  reasons  that  make  you  under- 
stand why  you  joined,  although  you  will  probably 
give  your  dollar  without  thinking  of  them.  They 
arc  the  things  that  you  will  begin  to  think  about 
when  sit  there  in  your  room  and  realize  that 
your  graduation  is  only  four  weeks  away.  For  in 
four  weeks  you  will  no  longer  be  a  "college  kid" 
or  a  ".voung  adult."  You  will  b?  an  individual  who 
will  have  to  find  his  way  in  the  ■world  just  as 
even-one  else.  The  comfDrtable  days  of  indolence 
that  Thomas  Wolfe  talked  of  will  be  gone  and 
you  will  be  sitting  at  a  desk  or  planning  a  mar- 
riag?  and  family  or  finishing  your  militarj-  service. 

All  these  things  and  a  lot  more  ate  waiting-  for 
the  Class  of  '57.  aqd  you  are  a  member  of  that 
cJa.<is.  You  knTw  by  this  time  that  all  of  those 
undying  friendships  that  you  have  formed  aren't 
grring  to  last  as  you  one  time  thought  that  they 
would,  *and  you  must  hav?  realized  that  the  last 
vestige  of  your  childhood  is  drawing  to  a  rap'id 
conclusion.  There  isn't  time  and  there  isn't  a  place 
for  you  if  you  think  that  the  world  isn't  going  to 
change  around  you.  and  more  important  you.  are 
going  to  have  to  change  for  that  world.  You  at* 
going  to  have  to  take  r?sponsibilit,y  as  you  have 
never  taken  it  before  for  now  you  are  part  of 
that  great  group  known  as  college  graduates. 

You  wonder  why  this  has  any  bearing  on  the 
Alumni  Association  and  you  still  can't  see  that  the 
group  is  going  to  make  any  difference  in  what 
you  do,  but  think  of  tlie  fact  that  you  are  a  Caro- 
lina graduate  now.  and  think  of  all  the  implica- 
tions that  this  has  and  ^-ou  will  begin  to  under- 
stand what  the  Alumni  Association  will  do  for  you. 

You  are  a  member  of  a  very  special  breed  of 
persons,  this  is  not  to  say  that  tou  are  better  or 
worse  than  others,  for  this  has  to  be  decided  on 
your  o'ATi  personal  merit,  but  still  you  are  a  Tar- 
he3l.  You  went  to  Carolina  the  year  that  we  didn't 
lose  a  basketball  game,  and  one  of  the  greatest 
players  that  the  game  has  is  your  classmate. 

■^"^ou  sat  by  your  radio  and  by  your  television 
set  and  suffered  with  th3  rest  for  those  last  tw* 
nights  out  in  Kansas  City  and  it  gave  you  some- 
thing that  very  few  have  had.  It  gave  you  a  feel- 
ing of  belo'  ging  that  seldom  comes  to  human  be- 
ings. 

You  were  a  senior  the  year  that  a  new  adminis- 
tration was  bom  at  Carolina  and  as  a  ."student 
your  views  were  heard  as  to  how  this  administra- 
tion should  be  picked.  You  saw  Carolina  gel  a 
r»ew  football  coach,  and  in  the  record  of  his  past 
you  saw  a  chance  for  a  new  era  of  a  winning 
team  to  start.  You  sat  in  "Y"  Court  and  cuss?d 
this  paper  as  everyone  else  has  in  the  past  and 
will  do  in  the  future.  You  read  Pogo  and  Li'l 
Abner  and  did  the  crossword  puzzle  in  that  bor- 
ing ten  o'clock  class.  You  have  shared  so  mar? 
experiences  with  your  classmates  that  you  will 
never  be  able  to  forget  them  all  or  separate  your- 
self from  the  school  that  has  done  so  much  to 
form  you  and  to  make  you  what  you  are.        ^ . 

•        •        •  ..' 

And  if  after  all  of  thi^  you  wonder  what  ^ou 
would  lose  by  not  joining  the  Alumni  ^sociation 
then  all  that  we  can  say  is  that  you  have  never 
walked  across  the  campus  on  a  spring  night  and 
felt  that  the  world  was'  all  about  you;  you've 
never  been  to  Kenan  Stadium  in  the  fall  and  seen 
the  blaze  of  autumn  against  that  bright  Carolina- 
blue  sky;  you  were  never  a  part  of  that  team  th*t 
went  uhdeleated  for  you;  you  never  lay  out  in 
the  sun  and  got  the  annual  spring  tan;  you  ne\'« 
hissed  and  booed  at  the  late  show  and  you  ne\'er 
walked  past  the  Old  Well  and  wondered  if  the 
campus  would  change  as  much  in  the  future  as 
it  did  while  you  were  here. 

It's  corny  and  it  drips  with  out  of  date  senti- 
mentalitj',  but  it  meant  something  to  us  and  w? 
feel  very  sorrj-  for  those  who  never  knew  <*  were 
never  able  to  know  it.  We  don't  «-ant  to  lose  the 
good  things  that  we  achic\'ed  at  Carolina  and  we 
don't  want  to  forget  the  wonder  that  we  focod 
here.  Do  you? 


RameseslV  ' 

We  read  with  interest  that  Latin-American  stu- 
dents studying  in  Northeastern  colleges  hz\t 
fonned  a  "Latt-i-Ameiacan  Students  Contedera^ 
tion."  We  sincerely  Jiope  that  this  polyglut  organi- 
zation isn't  subjected  to  a  display  of  bigotry  simi- 
lar to  the  Umstead  PaA  incident  which  the  Uni- 
versity Cosmopolitan  Club  had  to  contend  with. 
'  King  Hussein's  admirable  assertion  for  J<»'danian 
autonomy  has  slapped  Natiooali«tic  Nasser  in  the 
face  with  a  cAld  fish.  Now  Nasser  and  his  Syrian 
cohorts  are  living  in  their  own  private  little  Com- 
munist-tainted towers.  Mayibe  the  world  situation 
would  continue  to  improve  if  Ike  made  his  stay 
at  Augusta  a  permanent  one. 

A  spot-check  amcmg  the  "irate"  local  citizens 
who  oppose  construction  of  additional  fraternity 
courts  might  reveal  some  encroachments  on  Uni- 
versity property  ...  a  chicken  house  or  so?? 


r 


ywc 
Dix  Hi 
Farrinfl 
ond  re  i 
Day  Nt 
Cou  nc  I 


II 

you  I 
youj 

CoiiJ 


: 
5 

10  I 

12 

nj 

14- 

.   ^^ 

»      191 


7,  i«r 


ni 


TUESDAY,  k^AXf^J^l9S7 


THt  OAILT  TA»  Hlh 


^Attt  f Nlllt 


1957,  in 
by  a 
the  Uni* 

ition. 

|1   bcnefU 

reive   10 

fornution 


)uch  with 
?d. 

jem  fairly 
)llar  and 
>ut  soin« 
lly    count 


>u  under- 
probably 
?m.  They 
Ink  about 
ilizo  that 
For  in 
lege  kid" 
{dual  tt-ho 
just  as 
lindolence 
fone  and 
|g  a  mar- 
service. 

^ting    for 

of  that 

of   those 

led   aren't 

that   they 

the   last 

a   rapid 

I't  a  place 

going  to 

you.  are 

You  are 

bou  have 

part   of 

on  the 
that  the 
in  what 

|e  a  Caro- 
implica- 

|to  under- 
for  you. 

breed  of 
better  or 
?cided  on 

ire  a  Tar- 
we  didn't 
greatest 

^mate. 

television 

last  ty)f 

p'ou  some- 

rou  a  feel- 

luman  be- 

adminis- 

a    stutt^nt 

tdministra- 

|ina    get    a 

his  past 

I  a    winning 

ind  cuss?d 

past  and 

and    Li'I 

that  bor- 

so   niarj 

you   "Will 

rate  your- 

much   to 


what   ^ou 
ssociation 
ive  never 
nij^  and 
fou:    yt>a'v« 
11  and  seen 
\t  Carolina- 
team  th«t 
I  lay   out  in 
you  never 
you  new 
ed   if   the 
future  as 

[date  senti- 
|us   and   we 
or  were 
Ito  lose  the 
and  we 
we   found 


wnean  atu- 
es  hM\t 
Coa(eden# 
glut  organi- 
igo'iry  aiai- 
h  the  tJni- 
id  with. 
Jordaaiui 
sser  in  tbe 
his  Syrian 
little  Corn- 
Id  situatioa 
de  his  stay 

1  citizens 
1  fraternity 
Its  on  Uni- 
or  so?? 


r  ywca  cabinet  for  next  year — Reading  from  left  to  right  on  th«  front  row  urmi  Miss  Patsy  Mi4l«r, 
Oix  Hill;  Miss  Debbie  Sink,  world  understanding;  Miss  Martha  Fortune,  publications  board;  Miss  Oaryl 
Farrington,  Y-Night;  Miss  Kathie  Webster,  office  force;  Miss  Mary  Moore  Mason,  publicity.  On  the  sec- 
ond rcw,  left  to  right  are:  Miss  Betty  Cerolyn  Huffman,  public  affairs;  Miss  Cindy  Seagraves,  Holmes 
Day  Nursery;  Miss  Eleanor  Williamson,  Graveiey  Sanitorium;  Miss  Sara  Williantson,  Campus  Chirisian 
Council;  Miss  Margaret  Daughtridge,  conferences;  and  Miss  Mary  Jane  Fisher,  race  relations. 


Covering  The  University  Campus 


It's  a  puzzlement 


When  you're  old  enough  to  go  to  college, 
you're  old  enough  to  go  out  wich  girls.  When 
you're  old  enough  to  go  out  with  girls,  who  needs 
college?  Oh  well,  there's  always  Coke. 


(^^^ifJa 


^ttled  under  authority  of  The  Coca-Cola  Company  by 

DURHAM  COCA-COLA  BOHLING  CO. 


^•ht"  b  a  rwgitlvrvd  tra<i*-in«rlL 


•  IfSib  VNI  COCA.COIA  COMT  ANT 


DAILY    CROSSWORD 


ACROSS 

1.  Food 

(slang) 
5.  Jewish 

month 
9.  Harangue 
10.  French 

painter 

12.  Roman 
date 

13.  Winged 

14.  Blockheads 
(slang)- 

15.  Tradesman 
J        ( deroga- 
tory) 

16.  Public., . 
notice 

*  17.  Like 

18.  Offspring 

19.  Splicing 
pin 

20.  Frothy 

23.  Badly 

24.  City    4       , 
(N.  J.I    C  ' 

26.  Nourish 
28.  Net  tpugh 

31.  Affix 

32.  Suburb  of 
London 

33.  Greek 
Initer 

•     84.I*SUm 
(Asia) 

35.  Roman 
money         • 

36.  Highway 
38.  Black  wood 

40.  Seeing  that 

41.  Kind  Of 
rock 

42.  Agree- 
ments 

43.  Pieced  out 

44.  Malt 
tevtfVigU 


DOWN 

1.  Grumble 

2.  Sounded, 
as  a  bell 

3.  Indians 

4.  God  of 
pleasure 

<  Egypt) 

5.  With 
niight 

6.  Stupid 
fellow 

7.  l^other  of 
Irish  gods 

8  Not  whole- 
sale 

9.  Decorative 
material 
in  relief 


11. 

Nadler 

15.  Prairie 
wolves 

18.  Pigpen 

19.  Ran 
away 

21.  Asleep 

22.  Mourn- 
ful 

23.  Way- 
side 
hotel 

25.  Fresh 

26.  Destinies 

27.  EaUble 

29.  Demands 

30.  Ridicules 
(coUoq.) 


□amaa  uardr^g 
BwonHOir^ti 


T«aterd»y'a  Aaaw*r 

32.  Attuned 

35.  Poker  stake 

36.  Silver  coin 
(I^an) 

37.  At  one  time 

39.  Ti-ee 

40.  Resort 


Parents 

(Continued   from  Page    1) 

grass.  The  concert  included  a  di- 
versity of  selections  in  the  popu- 


lar,   semi-classical,    classical 
march  field. 


amd 


Toward  late  afternoon  and  early 
evening,  our  visiting  parents  took 
their  leave  of  Chapel  Hill.  They 
were  for  the  most  part  tired,  as 
they  should  be  after  a  full  day's 
travels,  but  they  took  with  them 
a  warm  experience  and  insight 
into  the  University  of  North  Caro- 
lina. Some  got  a  glimpse  of  what 
UNC  means  by  its  traditions  and 
its  history  —  why  Carolina  life 
rates   with   Carolina    students. 


GERONTOLOGY  SEMINAR 

Dr.  Jack  Botwinick  of  the  Na- 
tional Institute  of  _  Mental  Healtji 
will  speak  before  the  Duke  Uni- 
versity Council  on  Gerontology  at 
Duke  ia  Room  208  Flowers  Build- 
ing at  5  p.m.  today,  it  was  an- 
nounced recently.  Dr.  Botwinick 
will  speak  on  "The  Role  of  Per- 
ception in  Age  Changes  in  Be- 
havior" at  the  May  seminar  which 
is  designged  for  per^-ons  in  educa- 
tional, health   and  welfare  fields. 

The  meeting  will  be  open  to  the 
public,  however,  and  all  interested 
persons  have  been  invited  to  at- 
tend. 

PHILOLOGICAL  CLUB 

Prof.  K.  Hayashi  will  speak  be- 
fore the  Philological  Club  at  7:30 
p.m.  tonight  in  the  Faculty  Lounge 
of  Morehead  Planetarium.  He  will 
discuss  the  post-war  novel  in 
Japan.  A  short  business  meeting 
will  also  be  held  and  a  report 
from  the  nominating  committee 
will  be  presented. 

ATTENDING   CONFERENCE 

Dr.  Dorothy  C.  Adkins,  Chair- 
man of  the  Dept.  of  Psychology 
here  will  be  serving  as  Chairman 
of  a  symposium  on  "Oral  Inter- 
views in  Personnel  Selection"  this 
week  at  the  Southern  Regional 
Conference  of  the  Public  Person- 
nel Assoc,  at  Edgewater  Park,  Mi.^. 
UNC  PRESS  CLUB 

Chancellor  Robert  House  will 
speak  before   the   annual    awards 


dinner  of  the  UNC  Press  Club  and 
the  School  of  Journalism  Thurs- 
day at  7:30  p.m.  at  Brady's  Res- 
taurant. Winners  of  journalism 
scholarships  will  be  announced. 
All  journalism  major  a-  and  students 
have  been  invited  to  attend. 
HUMANITIES    LECTURE 

Prof.  Wilton  Mason  of  the  Dept. 
cf  Music  will  deliver  the  spring 
Humanities  Faculty  Lecture  here 
tomorrow  at  8  p.m.  in  106  Carroll 
Hall.  Prof.  Mason's  lecture  will  in- 
clude musical  illustrations  and  is 
entitled  "Thomas  Mace  and  His 
,  Music's  Monument." 
INNAUGURATION 

William  Friday  will  be  innaug- 
urated  as  president  of  the  Con- 
i'olidated  University  of  North  Caro- 
lina tomorrow  in  Reynolds  Colli- 
seum  in  Raleigh.  All  interested 
UNC  students  have  been  invited  to 
attend  the  ceremonies  at  10:30 
p.m.  in  the  CoUiseum. 
"PROJECT  HEALTH' 

The  "Project  Health"  television 
show  will  originate  from  the 
kitchens  of  Memorial  Hospital  Fri- 
day, it  was  announced  recently. 
The  program  will  be  staged  by  the 
Dietary  Dept.  of  Memorial  Hospital 
in  connection  with  Natonal  Hos- 
pital Week  (May  12-18).  The  pro- 
gram will  explain  how  food  is 
bought,  stored,  cooked  and  served 
in  a  modern  hospital.  It  will  also 
describe  dietitians  who  run  the 
kitchens  and  something  of  their 
duties. 


SOLOIST  TRYOUTS 

I>reliminary  tryouts  for  junior 
soloists  with  the  North  Carolina 
Symphony  Orchestra  will  be  held 
Saturday  in  the  choral  room  of 
Hill  Music  Hall,  it  was  announced 
recently. 

Applicants  will  be  scheduled  for 
tryouto-  and  notified  of  the  time  at 
which  they  will  appear  after  they 
have  fUed  applications  with  Mrs. 
Fred  B.  McCall,  chairman  of  the 
children's  division. 
WUNC-TV 

Today's  schedule  for  WUNC-TV, 
the  University's  educational  tele- 
vision station,  is  as  follows: 

12:30— Music. 

1:00 — Today  On  The  Farm. 

1:30— Town   And  Country. 

2:00— Sign  Off. 

5:14 — Sign  On. 

5:15 — Music. 

5:30— <Jeography  For  Decision. 

6:00 — Legislative  Review. 

6:30 — Dio"covery. 

7:00— Of  Books  And  People. 

7:30 — German   Course. 

8:15— Irish  Holiday. 

8:30— Best  Things  In  Life. 

9:00— Ideas.  „    ,^' 

9:30— U.M.  Review. 

9:45 — Travelogue. 
10:00— Final  Edition. 
10:05— Sign  Off. 
WAA  COUNCIL 

The  WAA  Council  will  meet  at 
7  p.m.  in  Graham  Memorial  today. 
All  new  and  old  representatives 
have  been  urged  to  attend. 


Coed  To  Get  Gray  Award 


The  fourth  annual  Jane  Craige 
Gray  Award  will  be  presented 
Sunday  to  the  outstandng  junior 
girl  on  the  UNC  campus. 

Given  by  Beta  Chi  Chapter  of 
Kappa  Delta  sorority,  the  award 
will  be  made  in  a  ceremony  at 
Morehead  Planetarium  at  8  p.m. 

The  award  is  given  in  memory 
of  Mrs.  Gordon  Gray,  an  alumna 
of  the  Beta  Chi  Chapter,  as  a  tri- 
bute to  the  ideals  which  she  ex- 
emplified. Based  on  qualities  of 
leadership,  scholarship,  and  char- 
acter, the  selection  is  made  from 
the  coeds  on  campus  who  have 
proved  deserving  of  this  honor. 


Placement  Service 
Plays  Important  Part 


A  selection  committee  with 
Dean  Katherine  Carmichael  as 
chairman  has  completed  its  work 
in  preparation  for  the  announce- 
ment of  the  \yinner  Sunday.  Other 
committee  members  included 
Miss  Annette  Niven,  former 
Women's  Orientation  chairman, 
Miss  Mary  Ann  Keeter,  substitut- 
ing for  Women's  Honor  Council 
Chairman  Miss  Pat  McQueen,  ex- 
Student  Body  President  Bob 
Young,  Dean  of  Awards  E.  L. 
Mackie,  and  Ray  Jcfferies,  assist- 
ant dean  of  Student  Affairs. 

The  1957  award  will  be  present- 
ed by  William  D.  Carmichael,  Uni- 
versity vice-president.  A  reception 
honoring  the  recipient  will  be 
given  in  the  Faculty  Lounge  im- 
mediately following  the  presen- 
tation. 


By  JOHN  TALBUTT 

Since  its  conception  in  1948,  the 
Placement  Service  has  been  steadi- 
ly becoming  one  of  the  more  im- 
portant functions  of  the  adminis- 
tration of  UNC.  To  date,  the  Place- 
ment Service  has  found  well  over 
6000  jobs  for  graduating  students. 
This  year  the  Placement  Serv- 
ice has  accommodated  253  busi- 
ness and  governmental  organiza- 
tions on  recruiting  missions  to 
the  UNC  cantpus  and  has  arrang- 
ed for  3251  individual  interviews 
between  students  and  employers. 
An  all  time  high  of  close  to  900 
students  will  find  jobs  through 
the  Placement  Service  this  year. 
The  Placement  Service  is  housed 
in  three  small  rooms  on  the  second 
floor  of  Garner  Hall.  It  has  a  staff 
of  only  four.  Effeciency  is  its  by- 
word. 

Under  Director  Joe  Galloway,  an 
ex-captain  in  the  army  whose  job 
was  very  appropriately  one  of  co' 
ordination  of  operations,  the  Place- 
ment Service  has  cut  red  tape  and 
form  filling  to  a  minimum.  The 
jludent  who  seeks  placement  at- 
tends a  meeting  in  mid-October  of ' 
his  senior  year.  Heer  he  is  advised 
to  fill  out  to  brief  single-sheet  I 
forms  within  the  month. 

From  then  until  the  time  he  se- 
lects his  job,  the  student  will 
probably  spend  less  than  one  hour 
working  with  the  Placement  Serv- 
ice, except  for  the  time  spent  in 
interviews  with  prospective  em- 
ployers. 

However,  this    is    not  to   say 
that   it  is  all  a    cut  and  dryed 
mechanistic  operation.  As  Direc- 
tor Galloway  said  in  his  annual 
report  to  the  dean  of  student  af- 
fairs, the    Placement  Service  is 
as  concerned  with  the  placement 
of  the   student  whose  talenf   is 
net  so   readily   discernible  and 
■  whose  interests  are  not  so  clear- 
ly formed  as  it  is  with  the  place* 
ment  of  the  student  in  the  top 
ten  percent  of  hs  class. 
The   Placement   Service  is  also 
concerned  with  satisfying  the   de- 
mands of  the  more  than  300  com- 
panies which  recruit  from  UNC's 
graduates.  "It  is  a  competitive  op 
eration"   says  Director    Galloway. 
"If  we  don't  supply  students  to  the 
employra^  satisfaction,  they   drop 
us  from  their  list  and  go  to  some 
other  college  or  university." 
Efforts  vroro    even   medo  to 


satisfy  the  needs  of  a  South  Caro- 
lina employer  who  recently  made 
a  request  for  a  couple  to  manage 
a  monkey  farm.  The  Placement 
Service  couldn't  supply  the  cou- 
ple, however;  it  seems  that  no 
one  could  be  ^ound  with  the 
necessary  experience. 

How  does  UNC's  placement  or- 
ganization compare  with  the  simi- 
lar organizations-  of  other  univer- 
sities? It's  hard  to  .say,  but  the 
fact  that  over  300  companies  from 
all  over  the  country  annually 
come  to  UNC  to  recruit  employees 
speaks  for  itself.  Also  it  is  the 
voiced  opinion  of  many  of  these 
companies  that  UNC's  placement  and  others.  This  led  to  the  organi 
service  is  one  of  the  best  in  the  I  zation  of  state  procedures  to  pre- 
nation.  [  ^^"t  the  recurrence  of  the  fraud.'" 


Pulitzer 

(Continued  From  Page  1) 
terest  in  our  early  American  his- 
tory." 

Other   journalism  awards  were: 

Editorial  writing — Buford  Boone 
of  the  Tuscaloosa  (Ala.)  Newt. 

Cartoons — ^Tom  Little  of  the 
Nashville  (Tenn.)  Tennessean. 

News  photography  —  Harry  A. 
Trask  of  the  Boston  Traveler. 

The  Chicago  Daily  News  was  cit 
ed  for  "determined  and  courageous 
public  service  in  exposing  a  2% 
million  dollar  fraud  centering  in 
the  office  of  the  State  Auditor  of 
Illinois,  resulting  in  the  indictment 
and  conviction  of  the  State  Auditor 


Kershaw 

(Continued  from  page  1) 
He  pointed  out  that  the  most 
neurotic  song  he  had  heard  was 
the  old  standard,  "I'm  going  to 
buy  a  paper  doll,  which  I  can 
call  my  own,"  etc.  Kershaw  stat- 
ed that  this  song  relays  the  feel- 
ing of  not  really  having  a  person 
who  is  "down-to-earth"  but  a  per- 
son who  is  dreamed  of  and  will 
never  exist. 

The  minister  pointed  out  that 
the  color  line  never  entered  the 
picture  as  far  as  the  jazz  lovers 
were  concerned.  Benny  Goodman 
broke  the  color  line  with  Lionel 
Hampton  and  Teddy  Wilson  in  his 
large  and  great  band.  Back  in 
the  1920's  and  1930's  the  South 
Side  of  Chicago  would  be  the 
"stomping  grounds'  of  the  white 
musicians  who  went  to  listen  to 
their  idols,  who  were  of  the  op- 
posite race. 


NSA 


(Continued  from  page  })  . 
note  the  10th  Congress.  Others  ac- 
icompanying  Dr.  Gallagher  on  the 
(speakers  platform  will  be  prominent 
statesmen,  educators,  and  world 
leaders. 

Students  participating  in  the  Con- 
gress will  join  the  icele!brati<Mi  of 
the  USNSA's  ten  years  of  service 
to  the  eductaional  coanmunity  and 
wiitness  the  beginning  of  another 
decade  of  student  leadersfaiip. 

"UNC  has  always  produced  some 
of  the  more  outstanding  situdent 
leaders  at  this  congress/'  says  Whit- 
field. "Al  Lowenstedn,  a  UNC  grad- 
uate was  a  former  National  Presi- 
dent of  NSA. 

"In  order  to  assure  that  the  Caro- 
lina delegation  will  keep  its  com- 
manding position  in  NSA,  -vi-e  must 
send  only  the  most  interested  and 
best  qualified  student  leaders,"  said 
Whitfield. 


Student's  Asthma  Helped 
By  New  Singing  Class 

Dr.  Joel  Carter's  newly  organiz- 
ed singing  class  is  said  to  be  imi- 
Que  enough,  but  it  is  even  more  so 
smce  it  is  helping  one  UNC  student 
treat  his  asthmatic  condition. 

Dr.  Carter,  director  of  the  dass, 
sadi  the  student's  asthmatic  con- 
mtion  is  ibeing  improved  by  the 
exercises  in  breath  control  which 
are  an  important  part  of  the  course. 
The  student's  doctor  recommended 
the  course  as  an  enjoyable  kind  of 
therai^. 

Composed  of  eight  men  students, 
the  class  also  studies  diction  and 
the  international  phonetic  alphabet 
as  well  as  breath  controL 

Tbe  class  is  unusual  insofar  as 
sin^^ing  lessons  are  usually  taught 
on  a  private  basis.  Students  are 
given  one  hour  credit  for  taking 
the  course. 


Peer  Gynt  Choreography 

Yvonne  Parker,  left,  choreographer  for  the  production  "Peer 
Gynt,"  to  be  presented  by  the  Carolina  Playmakert  May  10-12,  works 
out  a  routine  with  Amanda  Meiggs  who  plays  the  part  of  "Amik; 
Tho  Greonciad." Photo  by  Woody  Sears 


Those  people  in  the  infirmary 
yesterday  included: 

Misses  Grace  Alley,  Sally  Simp- 
son, Sandra  Wallace,  and  Jose- 
phine Payne;  Timothy  Jesup, 
Clyde  Turlington,  AAorris  Low- 
ing, Donald  Corbin,  Alton  Jour- 
dan,  James  Thompson,  Robert 
Becknell,  Thomas  Saunders,  and 

Carl  Dann. 


Poteat 

(Contamed  from  Page  I) 

that  there  are  no  private  relation- 
ships." 

'The  danger  is  much  more  wide- 
spread here,  more  pernicious  be- 
cause it  is  more  subtle.  We  are  de- 
prived of  liberty  by  surrendering 
it  to  begin  with,"  he  explained. 

In  his  concluding  statements,  Dr. 
Poteat  ext>ressed  his  views  that 
this  condition  threatens  the  auto- 
nomy of  student  government  and 
fredom  in  ways  not  yet  assesse<^. 

Correlating  his  final  remarks  to 
an  analysis  of  "The  Lonely  Crowd" 
which  exists  in  society  today,  Dr. 
Poteat  told  those  assembled  that 
in  the  future  when  they  see  indi- 
cationi;  of  actions  which  seem  to 
over  compensate  that  they  should 
"weep  not  for  them,  but  for  them- 
selves." 


Fish  Story 


With  this  ad  and  $1.00  Waller 
Studio  will  make  for  you  or  any 
member  of  your  family  one 
BX10    inch    silvertone    portrait. 

Our  regular  $7.50  value. 

Waller  Studio 

343  W.  Main  At  5  Pts. 

Durham,  N.  C. 

Durham's  Only  Down  Town 

Ground  Floor  Studio 


MOSCOW  —  (AP)  —  Yesterday's 
Soviet  fish  story,  as  relayed  by 
Tasa:  A  Caspian  sea  fisherman 
caught  a  13  foot  1,200  pound 
sturgeon.  It  took  a  crane  and  15 
Inen  to  get  the  fish  from  ship  to 
shore  where  it  yielded  220  pounds 
of  caviar. 


WE'LL  BUY  ALL 
YOUR  OLD  BOOKS 

•  Live  Texts 

We  pay  top  prices  for  texts 
that  will  be  used  again  at 
U.N.C. 

•  Dropped  Texts 

We'll  search  the  market  for 
a  spot  to  salvage  some  of 
your  loss  when  a  text  is 
dropped. 

•  Enjoyable  Books 

We  can  use  books  you  no 
longer  want  on  your  shelves. 
The  next  fellow  that  comes 
along  may  find  them  as  de- 
lightful as  you  did  a  year  or 
so  ago. 

When  Exams  Are  Over, 

There'll  Be  Green  Money 

For  You  At 


IT'S  FOR  REAL! 


by  Chester  Field 


V  ^       OUR  LAWLESS  LANGUAGE* 

The  laws  that  govern  pliural  words 
..\i  I  think  are  strictly  for  the  birds. 

IS  goose  in  plural  comes  out  geese 
'  f  Why  are  not  two  of  moose  then  meesef 

If  two  of  mouse  comes  out  as  mice 

Should  not  the  plvural  house  be  kice? 
If  we  say  he,  and  his,  and  him 

Then  why  not  she,  and  shis,  and  shintt 
No  wonder  kids  flunk  out  of  schools 

.  . .  English  doesn't  f<^ow  rules! 

MOMALt  The  singularly  plural  pleasures 
of  Cheaterftetd  King  make  a  manfec^ 
tall  as  a  hice.  So  don't  be  a  geeae! 
Take  your  pleasure  BIG.  Take 
Chestofield  King.  Big  length  .  .  . 
big  flavor  . . .  the  smoothest  natoral 
tobacco  filter.  Try  'em.  /> 

Ch»a»mHUU  King  gjtvt  yen  mer* 
of  what  yov*r*  smoUng  for! 

*$S0  goet  to  Paul  R.  Satomont,  CMy  CoOege  cf 
N.  Y.,  for  hU  CHetUr  Field  poem. 
$50  for  eoery  phUoiophietil  vert  aecatedfor  publi- 
tation.  amterfMJP7o.B4tx21.N«uYork46.N.  Y. 

e  Un<H  ft  Mrtn  IMmm  Ok 


ENJOY  3-WAY  ADJUSTABLE  SEATS,  VISTA 
WINDOWS  AND  AIR  CONDITIONING  IN  TRAILWAYS 
NEW  RESTROOM-EQUIPPED  BUS  FLEET    ,; 

Go  TRAILWAYS 

^"♦..opeclalists  in  Triendly 
•first -class -travel  !  / 


I'Way 
$  1.35 


FROM  CHAPEL  HILL  To 

•  GREENSBORO 

9  Trips  daily 

•  MEMPHIS  $16.55 

3  Thm  Liner  (no  change)  trips  plus  addl  service 

•  NEW  YORK  $n.85 
Go  thru  without  changes  of  bus 

•  NORFOLK  $  5.35 

8  Trips  including  3  Thru  Liners  (plus  tax) 

Ship  by  Trailways.  Express  goes  out  en  "next"  bus. 


UNION  BUS  STATION 

311  W.  FRANKLIN  ST.  — :— 


PHONE  4281 


TvT^^^^^T^ 


PAMPem 


THi  DAILY   TAR  t4EEL 


TUESDAY,  MAY  7,  1f57 


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These  Are  The  Confestants  For  The  Title  Of 

i.B.Rohhms  FASHION 

All  Are  Previous  Winners  Of  Miss  Fashionpjafe 


r    t^i^'I-ict; 


MJSS  FASHIONPLATE  -  NOVEMBER 


MARTHA  WiLLIFORD  / 

•  .'  ■ 

A  Junior  from  Fayetteville,  a  Nursing  Student,  and  a  Member  ^j' 

of  Delta  Delta  Delta  Sorority. 


MISS   FASHIONPLATE  -  DECEMBER  ^ 

>• .  -" 

BARBARA  HONEY 

A  Junior  from  Charlotte,  a  Sociology  Major,  and  a  Member 
of  Kappa  Delta  Sorority. 


MISS  FASHIONPLATE  -  JANUARY 

MARY  "PEE  WEE"  BATTEN  :  ^ 

A  Senior  from  Mount  Gilead,  a  Radio -Tel  eyision  Major,  and.t^".^'' 
a"  Member  of  Kappa  Delta  Sorority.      .    > . ,...  \i.     ,^.  ,t;*,  ■'?r#>»^  '• 


u-  •     •  '■■>.- 


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MISS  FASHIONPLATE  -  FEBRUARY 

LIBBY  NICHOLSON 

A  Sophomore  from  High  Point  and  a  Nursing  Student. 


MISS  FASHIONPLATE  -  MARCH 

JANE  STAINBACK 

A    Sophomore    from   Jacksonville,    Florida,    and    a    Nursing 
Student. 


MISS  FASHIONPLATE  -  APRIL 

SARAH  VAN  WEYK 

A  Junior  from  Winnetra,  Illinois,  an  English  Major,  and  a 
member  of  Pi  Beta  Phi  Sorority. 
.   Student. 


Vot9  for  your  ^aworWe  to  wh  the  FASHION  QUEEN  title 

The  Winner  Will  Receive  A  COMPLETE  ENSEMBLE 


■     '  '  \  *  tf  «• 


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(FROM  HEAD  TO  TOE) 


NOTHING  TO.  BUY 


Men's  Votes  Are  Just  As  Important  As  Wonien's  Votes 


IN  ORDER  TO  VOTE,  JUST  STOP  BY  J.BROBBINS,  PICK  UP  YOUR  BALLOT,  MARK,  SIGN,  AND  DROP  IN  BALLQT  BOX.  THIS 
IS  A  BIO  PRIZE  AND  A  WORTHY  TITLE,  SO  HELP  YOUR  FAVORITE  BY  C^^TING  YOUR  BALLOT. 


5<si- 


YOUR  COOPERATIVE  STORE  (CooperQ|ti^  [^  Campus  Activities) 


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TUISDAY,  MAY  7,  1957 


THE   DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


PAGE  FIVE 


I 

it 

i 


IJl 


Foreign    Service    Field    Is    Open 


By  WALT  SCHRUNTEK 

A  bpandi  of  career  and  service 
which  is  for  the  most  part  only  re- 
motely considered  hiy  ■college  grad- 
uates today,  but  \v*ich  osn  never 
the  less  offer  fine  opportunity  for 
advance  and  satisfactioa  can  be 
found  in  tihe  Foregin  Ser\'Lce  and 
Depratment  of  State. 

College  gradutaes  aie  as  impor 
tant  and  significant  to  the  civU 
and  foreign  sei^ices  of  tlie  United 
States  as  .the  business  and  profes- 
jdonal  world  for  which  they  are 
trained. 

I  Too  often,  a  bureaucratic  st'gma 
accompanies  government  sei'vice 
and  it  is  shunned  by  qualified  peo- 
ple wlio  could  substantially  benefit 
themselves  fJid  the  United  States 
by  entering  into  the  vari.iis  fields 
and   <:reas   available. 

Too  often  as  well,  the  opportuni- 
ties ava!lat!e  in  government  ser- 
vice are  not  reognizcd.  Infomna 
tion  is  often  scarce.  The  goverR- 
oient  it: elf  is  .scmetrmcs  s'ow  in 
pi-^oimcling  its  product  where  busi- 
ness and  the  professional  fielc's  are 
tjargaitting  dearly  for*  college  grad- 
^    es. 

Survey 

Recently,  however,  the  College 
Relations  Staff  of  the  State  De- 
partment ccmnkted  a  survey  of 
the  munjer  cf  officers  in  the  For- 
eign Sei'vice  and  Depai-tment  hold- 
ing ollo^e  degre€.s.  Included  in  tlie 
]  St  released  were  names  of  31  UNC 
graduates  working  in  either  of  the 
4 wo  above-nnentioned  offices. 

Posts  being  filled  by  one-time 
Carolina  s.tiacnts  today  w^re:  For- 
eign Service  Ofiicer.  cmploj-ed  \tn 
a  career  basis;  Foreign  Service 
Reserve.    en\"'oy«l    on    a    limited 


Kenan  Professor  Henderson 

Dr.  Archibcid  Henderson,   Kenan  Professor  Enrsritus,  is  shown  above  on  the  porch  of  his  home  in 
'    Chap«|    Hiii,  Fordell.  Dr.  Henderson  will  be  the  featured  speaker  at  a  meeting  honoring  Dr    Elisha  Mit- 
chell  Mfy    14. 

Honoring  Dr.  Elisha  Mitchell 

Dr,  A,  Henderson  Featured 
Speaker  Af  May  14  Meeting 


Bamett.  AB  '33.  ^L\  '34,  Is  listed 
as  tbe  Offik-er  in  Charge  of  Econ- 
omics Organization  Affairs.  Stuart 
Blow,  who  ^received  his  AB  in  11J37 
is  on  the  leports  aaxi  Operations 
Staff. 

NSes    W.    Bond,    BA    '37.    is   Di- 
rector of  tlie  Office  of  UN  Political 
and    Security    Affairs.    Francis    P. 
Burton  is  Training  Officer  in  Profes- 
sional ifieid.   Thomas  Campen  who 
received  his  BS  in  1926  is  tlie  Ad- 
viser   <rf    the    Commerciai    Policy 
Staff.  William  B.  Cobb  Jr.,  AB  '43, 
is   a  Consul  in   Martinique,    Ralph 
S.  OoJins,  AB  '29  lamd  MA  '31,  is  a 
j  Public  Affairs  Specialist. 
I     Ben   F.   Dixon   who   received   his 
i  AB  in  193fl  Is  in  the  Bureau  cf  Nt  ar 
i  Eastern,    South    Asian   and   African 
j.\ffairs.  William  C.  Durai,  AB  1931. 
is    Cuncekw    of    the    Embasf.-    a. 
i  Baghdad.   Glen   H.   Fisher  received 
I  his  MA  in  1949  and  PhD  in  1952  and 
I  is  currently  employed   by  the  For 
i  eign   Service   Insititute. 
I  DefNity  Chief 

•  Mrs.  Mer'.e  B.  Greene,  BM  "32 
j  is  Ch'  :f  <rf  the  Standards  Section 
of  Office  of  Personnel.  Hairy  Gro;s- 
|man.  AB  '39.  is  I>c-'.:t>-  Chief  ^rf  :h: 
I  Mr.taion  Office  m  Fivnkfurt.  Wil- 
iam  P.  Hudson.  AB  '38  and  MA  "39, 
■  Is  a  Consul  at  Guadalaja  a.  H^wa^li 
i  Ijrbrey.  AB  '46,  is  .\s?t.  Afcache  at 

.\ddis  Ababa. 

.  _  ___- 

I  Electric  Co-op 
Seminar  Here 

j     The    second   annual    seminar   for 

office    managers    and    bockkei  ic i.? 

{    <■    Electric    Membershio    Corocva- 

tions  will  be  held  May  29-31  at  the 

j  University  of  >«>rth  Carolina. 

I     Some  50  eim.'>l'05ee5  of  North  Caro- 

i  'ina's    rural     elec-tric     cocperatrvcs 

}  aire  expected   to  attend   the   study 

I  session,   ^ransored  by  (be   Taiiieel 

;  Electric    Membership    Assn.,     Inc., 

i  and  the  UNC  School  of  Business  Ad- 

ininisti."atioB's  adult  education  pro- 

Dr.    See  Sirishinha,   dean   of  the  |  and   Howard    Uiriverstty.    When   he  j  gram. 

Dental  .School  of  the  University  ot  \  leaves  here,  he  will  go  to  Birming-  i     Dr.  Ear]  P.  Strong  of  Pennsyh'^- 

Medical  Sciences  of  Bangkok.  Thai-  I  Jiam.    New    Orleans,    Houston    and  I  ia  Sta.*  Universits'  will  instmct  dur- 

land.  is  <a  visitor  this  week  to  t3ie  San  Francisoo  before  i-eturoing  to 

University  of  North  Carolina  School  I  Iha  land. 

of  Dentistrv.  „  i    ^   x.     u-        -r^ 

\^     ^  ,  .     ^i.-  ^_. '     He   IS   accomnalned  bv  his   wife 

Dr.  See  vras  sent  to  tiu^-isouatry 

by^  h% jp.wrpmeDt    to   atterri  ^•>#j-^^  ^  "•  ^**^''-  ^''^  -necenOy  grad- 


eppointment  on  a  temporary  basis; 
Fareign  Service  Staff,  employed  on 
a  career  basis;  and  General  Sche- 
dule, which  designtaes  Civil  Ser- 
vice. 

The  positioifis  being  fflled  by  Caro- 
lina representatives  range  from  the 
professional  and  business  to  the 
arts,  languages  and  sciences.  As 
in  most-  government  service,  the 
chance  to  ti-avel  and  hold  posts  in 
countries  throughout  the  world  is 
still  one  of  its  eye-catching  fea- 
tures. 

Representing  areas  in  the  world 
currently  inhabited  by  the  represent- 
ative list  of  31  Carolina  graduates 
are  Paris,  Martinique.,  B  ;hdad. 
.Frankfurt.  Guadalajara,  Addis  Aba- 
ba. Bangkok,  Madrid  and  London  to 
jiame  tut  a  few. 

See  The  World 
The   bill-board   poster   wliich   has 
I  for  years   been  tempting   rnd   woo- 
!  '^z  the  T3re-co'lege  men  of  Ameri?a 
into  service  with   "Join   the  Army 
ioT  Navy  or   Air   Forced    and    See 
I  the  World"  can  still  be  applied  to 
!  llie  pc5,t-:o'lcge  men  of  today  who 
I  reek  attractive,  rewarding  and  sub- 
stantial fields  of  opportunity. 
I     Thirty-one     graduates     of      UNC 
I  sei"\e   as   examples   of   the  diverse 
:  and    Vc-r!ed    ficl.  s    available.    Their 
I  c'Terien^e  best  i'lustr^tes  the  types 
and   qualities  of  positions   and  ex- 
'  periences    goveinment    su  vice    eu 
j  !ails. 

;  A  review  of  thc^e  31  s>.or'd  pr> 
j  vide  an  insight  into  the  range  of 
opportunity  available.  This  lis!. 
:  should  be  studied  and  considei-ed 
as  an  index  f  )r  -  Indents  <  'proi.v.i- 
;  r.g  graduation  in  the  future. 

Franc  s  L.  Albert  Jr..  who  recciv- 
'cd  hi5  M.\  in  19511  i.s  currenly  ssrv- 
ing    Ei    Attache    in    Psris.    Robert 


Paul  M.  Kattenburg,  BS  '42,  is 
file  (Mficer  itf  charge  of  Viet  Nam 
Aitsdrs.  Mrs.  Maty  D.  Mack,  AB 
'29,  is  empolyed  by  the'  Foreign 
Service  Institute.  Robert  N.  Magill 
who  received  his  A3  in  1938,  if 
Attache  at  Bangkok,  Roger  Mann 
.\B  '42,  is  with  the  US  Missioo  U. 
the  United  Nations. 

Jolmston  V.  McGaH,  AB  '24.  AM 
'26,,  is  Chief  of  the  English  Braodh 
Thomas  G.  Murdock,  AB  '22,  is  i 
Consul  at  ElizabethviUe.  WSlliam  S 
Peacock,  BSC  '^,  is  with  the  Pub- 
lic Services  Division.  Frank  A.  Rice 
who  received  his  BA  in  1938.  is  a 
Scientific  L'ngu'st.  Jordan  T.  Ro- 
igMTS.   AB  '42,  is  Second   Secretary 


Thailand  Dental  Dean 
Visits  Here  This  Week 


In  Ch 


oosing 


rteal^efcl 


You  Receive 

Protections 
& 

Advantages 

Written  Guaranlee 

Nationally    Advertised 

Nationally  Established 

Prices 

Wentv/orth 
&  Sloan 


Jewelers 


and   Consul  at   Budai>est. 
}     Newtoo    O.    Sappinglon,    \L\    27, 
.;  is    with    the      Historica3      Division 

Robert  A.  Stevenson,  BS  '38,  is 
I  Pditifcal  Officer  at  Dusseldorf.  Har^ 
,  rison    SjuHnes   Jr..    ,\B    '42,    is   an 

Intelligence  Research  Specialii^. 

William  W.  Thomas,  .\B  '47.  is  a 
L<aagua;ge  Tradnee  in  Taichung.  Joim 
I  D.  Walker,  AB  '46,  is  an  .\ttache  in 
Paris.  Don  H.  Walther,  who  receiv- 
ed his  MA  in  1940  and  PhD  in  1948, 
is  an  Attache  ia  Madrid.  John  E. 
WillBams,  BA  '50  nad  \L\  '54.  is 
Third  Secretary  and  Vice  Consul  in 
Lon<k>n. 


MAY  12th  Is 

MOTHER'S  DAY 


I's  a  good  ejrg  —  she  deserves 
a  nice  token  from  you. 

But  take  §  word  of  advice  from 
your  ancient  bookseller  —  don't 
make  it  funerial.  At  heart,  Mem 
is  a  lot  closer  to  that  chick  you're 
trying  to  date  than  she  is  to 
Whistler's  rocking-chair  antique. 
And,  pal,  shell  thank  you  to  keep 
tha.  in  mind. 

That's  why  o«r  cards  are  gay  kid- 
ding yowHiful  designs.  That's  why, 
if  you  ask  us  ts  recommend  a 
bock,  for  a  Mother's  Day  gift,  we're 
tnore  likely  to  pick  a  lively  modern 
novel  than  a  book  of  meditation^ 
for  the  aged. 

A  woman's  as  ysung  as  she  feels. 
Clip  a  clump   of  years  off  Mom's 
score  wth   a   reminder  that  you 
km  /y  she's  a  lively  biddy  stiiii 


THE  INTIMATE 
BOOKSHOP 

205  East  Franklin  Street 
Open  Till  10  P.  M. 


ing    the    two-ctoy    seminar.    He    ts 
?nrfes«or  of    n»ana?ement    and   di- 
-ectoi-   of   the    Bureau   of   Business 
Research. 
The  Carolina  Imi  will  be  iostittrtt 


meetlBfi  of   the   Ainoncan  *.\ssocl#'' ^^'''^  from  'c()llogo  in  Jacksom'TlIel   headquarters,  and  das.«rs  will  m^IT 


•Dr.  .\rchibald  Henderson,  Kenan 
professor  en>eritus  at  the  Univer- 
sity of  North  Carolina,  wiU  be  the 
featured  speaker  at  a  meeting  hon- 
mriog  Dr.  Elisha  Mitchell  here  May 
14  at  6:30  p.m.  in  the  Carolina  Inn. 

r^.  Mitchell,  for  almost  40  years 
a  member  of  the  University  istcxMy, 
was  killed  a  hundred  years  ago, 
next  June  27.  in  a  fall  from  a  pre- 
cipice on  Mt.  Mitchell,  the  mountain 
later  named  for  him.  ' 

Dr.  Henderson  wiU  speak  at  a 
dinner  meeting  sponsored  hy  the 
Elisha  MitcheU  Scientific  Society. 
Dr.    .\rthur    Roe.    director    <rf    the 


UNC  Inlstitute  of  Natural  Science, 
is  chairman  of  the  society  and  is 
in  charge  of  arrangements  for  the 
eomimemoration  meeting. 

On  June  27,  another  commemora- 
tion meeting  mil  be  held  in  honor 
of    Dr.    Mitchell    on    Mt.    Mitchell, 
nd  D.  Hiden  Ratrksey  of  .^shcviTIe. 
Chairman    of    the    State    Board    of 
Higher  Education  and  former   gen- 
eral  manager  of  the   .'Vsheville  Cv- 
izen.  will   be  the  speaier. 
Dr.  Mit'-'hel!.  a  respected  and  be- 
I  cved    scientist    and    minister,    had 
I  A  i^iited  "Black  Dome"  Mountain,  as 
!  Mt.  Mitchell  was  then  knowTi,  sev- 
I  eral  times,  and  he  had,  established 


j  the  fact  that  the  mountain  was  the 
I  highest  summit  east  of  the  Rockies. 
1  He  was  on  a  further  journey  of 
exploration  and  verifictaion  wlten 
1  he  was  caught  by  a  thunderstonn 
an  the  mountain.  -As  he  groped  his 

I  wav  down  the  moimtain.  it  liecame 

j 

jdark.  and  he  .slipped  and  feU  to  his 
death. 

j  Eleven  days  later  Dr.  Mitchell's 
body  was  foumi  and  was  carried 
to  .^shev  ille  where  it  was  buried. 
Friends  of  Dr.  .Mit.hcM  had  ti  s 
body  reburied  later  on  the  summit 
of  Mt.  Mitchell,  which  is  today  own- 
ed by  the  University  of  North  Caro- 
lina. 


Dr.  Graham  Gets  $110,975  Grant 


By  ROBERT  H.  BARTHOLOMEW 

Dr.  John  B.  Graham  of  the  Uni- 
iversity  of  North  Carolina  School  of 
Medicine  has  been  granted  $110,- 
f75  for  a  five-year  study  of  the  in- 
iKritaDoe  of  ^lenMphilia  and  similar 
Ueeding  diseases. 

Hemophilia  is  a  hereditary  di- 
sease occmring  only  in  males  but 
transnuUed  by  females.  The  disease 
is  characterized  by  tlje  failure  of 
tbe  patient's  blood  to  elot. 

The  grant,  e.fective  immediately, 
comes  from  the  United  States  Pub- 
lic Health  Ser/ice. 

Ifr.  Graham  is  an  associate  pro- 
cessor in  the  school's  Department 
of  Pathology. 

Purpose 

The  purpose  of  the  study  is  to  ac- 
quire new  knowledge  in  the  fields 
of  Wood  ckxtting  by  learning  how 
tie  fiiseases  are  transmitted.  Also. 
B  number  of  young  pathologists, 
medical  students  and  investigators 
vdH  be  trained  in  the  experimental 
maethods  of  both  bk)od  coagulatjou 
land  family  *9tiMlies. 

niese  plans  wiU  be  accomplished 
by  making  a  joint  afcudy  of  the  blood 
ckytting  prohlen^  and  how  ipatioits 
wbo  are  hemophiliacs  have  inherit- 
ed their  disease. 

Dr.  Grabam  bma  been  en^aeed  in 
this  field  of  research  for  nine  years. 
He  is  completing  this  year  a  five- 
year  project  on  certain  aspects  of 
bkxxl  coagulation  whidi  has  been 
Rqvorted  by  the  United  States  Pub- 
lie  Health  Servk». 

Markle  Scholar 

Id  1949  he  was  named  a  Markle. 
S^wlar  and  given  a  grant  ol  $30,- 
OQD  from  the  Markle  Foundaition. 
lliiB  is  considered  oae  of  the  bigh- 
es*  honors  that  can  be  bestowed  on 
"  j-THj^  iaaa  w  Utp  ftoiri  nf  f""* 


t  on  of  Der.U^■  Schools  and  to  iour 
le^din^  4Jirited  Stales  ^dental 
BchooLs. 

The  vKsitting  dean  .said  of  tlic 
UNC  St-hool  of  Dentis'trj-.  "This  is 
my  first  trip  to  the  UNC  S  hool  o. 
Dentistrj-  and  1  am  greatly  impr.  SiOd 
wivh  your  prcgra.n  iierc.  Or.  Brauei 
(Dr.  John  C.  Brauer.  dean  o.'  the 
UNC  Schov)l  of  Dentistry^  is  to  be 
commended  for  his  line  woik  herv 
and  iji  furnishing  the  people  oi 
North  Carolina  with  an  outstand- 
irg  dentil  progr  m." 

Dr.  See  Ls  a  graduate  of  the  Uni- 
vcTSit  of  Penn-lvania  St'.iool  o. 
Dentistry,  receiving  his  degree  in 
1932.  So  far  he  has  visited  the  den 
ta]  scho.  !s  at  the  Universities  o^ 
Alabama.  Indiiana,  Michigan,  Ro.h 
ester,  C  o  1  u  m  b  i  a.  Penns\Ivan  . 
Marjland,    Washington    (St.    Louio' 


.\la 


in  CsjToJl  Hall. 


BIKES 
FOR  RENT 


Carolina  Mower  ServlcD 


Across  From  Fire  Station 

$.50  Per  Hour 
$1.50  Per  Half  Day 


Everybody  meets   v:^^ 

Und0oTke^(%€k 

at  the  BILTMORE   f 


With  students  everywhere,  "Meet 
Me  Under  the  Clock"  is  a  tradition ! 

It  mean*  "that  special  weekend"  at 
New  York's  most  convenient  location  .  .  . 
good  times  in  the  famous  Palm  Court 
Preferred  for  its  special  services  for 
students.  Write  the  College  Department 
for  reservations.  No  cab  fare 

neoessary — direct  private  elevator 
from  Grand  Central  Station. 


BILTMORE 

Modisen  Avenw*  at  43rd  St..  N.  T.  17,  N.  Y. 

OlUr  RtALTT  HOTCU— TAe  Barclcy  &  Park  Laru 
Harry  it.  Anholt.  President 


DR. 


JOHN   GRAHAM 

.  fvie^ear  study 


demic  medicine. 

Dr.  Graham  said  yesterday  that 
at  the  present  time  his  laboratory 
handles  all  bSood  clotting  problems 
at  N.  C.  Memorial  Hospital,  the 
teaching  hospital  of  the  UNC  Sdiool 
of  Medicine.  Many  patients  are 
referred'from  'Oither  doctors  in  North 
Carolina  and  nearby  states. 

The  ppoibaeim  of  the  diseases  ot 
uncontrolled  bleeding  will  be  .ap- 
proaeked  from  a  family  standsx>int 
ic  this  study.  When  a  ipatient  with 
hemophlla  is  presented  for  treat- 
iment,  a  study  oi  tbe  entire  family 
wiV  be  made,  if  the  case  warrants. 

This,  of  course,  is  a  long  range 
project.  However,  Dr.  Graham 
hopes  that  liefore  the  study  is  over 
every  heret^ftaiy  bleeder  in  North 
Carolina  wiid  be  tauod. 
Assistants 

Mtit9-  iwtmm-  Aimi9^~Dr.   "Gf-- 


ham  is  assisted  in  his  work  hy 
Mrs.  Emily  Barrow,  chief  (assistant, 
and  Mrs.   Mary  Vail,   technician. 

This  summer  he  will  add  four 
imedical  students  to  tug  staff.  Two 
of  these  wdU  study  blood  clotting 
and  two  will  study  the  families  of 
the  patients  suffering  from  other  in- 
herited diseases.  These  students  are 
Waiiaan  Bullock,  Bethel;  Thomas  R. 
Wynne,  Greenville.  S.  C;  David 
Whitaker,  Williamston;  sand  John 
Thompson  of  Richlands. 

Dr.  Graham's  ^noup  also,  will  in- 
vestigate certain  diseases  of  the 
kidney  which  also  are  inherited.  The 
research  team  wHl  investigate  cer- 
tain other  conditions  that  are  not 
related  to  blood  clotting  if  it  appears 
that  such  conditions  are  inherited.  | 
Dr.  Graham  says  that  wide  Imcdo-  ' 

.  philia  and  other  bleeding  diseases ' 
are  not  very  common,  tliere  are 
irumy  carriers  of  the  disease  who 
can  give  the  disease  to  their  chil- 
dren and  do  not  know  It  It  is 
hoped  that  methods  can  be  worked 
out  so  that  such  carriers  maay  be- 

ycome  detected  more  easily. 

Backi^Minds 

The  young  medical  professor  said 
that  infomuition  concerning  the 
tenMy  back^xninds  of  p«tients  with 
hemophilia  is  usually  poor  or  non- 
existent. He  says  that  a  careful 
study  in  this  area  onay  reveal  new  ' 
information  about  inherited  diseases 
in  general.  1 


AS    NAVIGATOR    OR   PILOT 


Dr.  Graham  Is  la  native  of  Golds- 
boro.  He  took  his  A.B.  degree  at 
Davidson  College  and  after  graduat- 
ing from  the  UNC  SchooQ  of  Medi- 
cine here  Vent  to  Cornell  Univer- 
sity for'  his  doctorate  degree.  He 
joined    the    facility     of     the     UNC 


GET  ON 

(   THB  TBAM 

THAT  DEFENDS 

AMERICA 


The  flytr>g  U.  S.  Air  Force  m  a  teann  of  men  who  oomwntmd  tt^e  aircraft  and  men 
who  plan  the  attack.  Thesa  are  the  pilots  and  navtgaiora,  both  equally  important  to 
the  defense  of  America. 

You,  as  a  young  man  of  InteHlgence  and  sound  pt>ysical  health,  may  join  this 
select  group  in  the  world's  most  exciting  and  rewarding  adventure.  Your  training 
will  stand  you  in  good  stead,  whatever  your  future  plans  may  be  — and  you'll  be 
earning  over  $6,CXDO  a  year  18  months  after  training.*      ijni^ 

If  you  are  between  19  and  26'A  years  of  age,  Investigate  your  opportunities  as  an 
Aviation  Cadei  in  the  U.\  S.  Air  Force.  Priority  consicieration  is  now  being  given  to 
college  graduates.  For  details,  write:  Aviation  Cadet  ^formation,  P.O.  Box  7608, 
Washington  4,  D.  C.  .^.^  ^  ^  ^  ^„  ^  ,^,  L*.<e.— .' 

ni«m  status  wrtn  2  years'  Mrvic«  of 


Graduate  T Then  FIy...U.  S.  AIR  FORCE  AVIATION  CAJDET  PROGRAM 


■■fff^^w^^p^ 


If  f  f  f  f  *  "f  ■¥  P  ■•  f   ?W  ?   *   »    I    ! 


7  -T  -J  T  -r  »  »^»  WW^ 


#Afti  SIX 


TMt  OAICy  TA«  M€it 


TUESDAY,  MAY  7,  I^ST 


Wake 


Pictured  above  is  basketball  s^ar  Tommy  Kearns 
hitting  the  tape  as  he  qualified  for  the  60  yard  dash  in  yesterday's 
intramural  track  meet  preMminaries. 


Linksmen  Meet 
Blue  Devils 
At  Duke  Today 

A  roughed-up  group  of  Carolina 
golfers  travel  to  Hope  Valley  Coun 
try  Club  in  Durham  today  to  fact 
the  Duke  Blue  Devils. 

The  Tar  Heels,  angry  with  them- 
selves after  a  dismal  allowing  ii. 
the  Southern  Collegiate  Tourney  in 
Athens  last  week,  will  be  placing 
their  9-2-1  record  on  the  line  ii 
their  final  regular  season  match. 

Friday,  however,  is  when  thi 
cards  are  really  laid  on  the  table 
That's  when  the  ACC  tournamen 
begins  in  Winston-Salem.  The  two- 
day  affair  will  see  the  Tar  Heel 
as  definite  favorites  to  cop  theii 
second  conjjculvc  crown,  but  ai 
improvement  over  their  Athen> 
showing  will  be  a  necessity. 

In  Athens,  the  tourney  was  a  bit 
ter  flop  for  the  Tar  Heels.  They 
went  there  hewing  for  a  victory 
and  instead  found  the  endless  tor- 
rents of  rain  shooting  their  scores 
higher  than  the  clouds  that  pro- 
duced the  unwanted  element. 

The  low  qualifiers  for  Carolina 
were:  Tommy  Langley,  152;  Tuffy 
Henderson.  153;  Buch  Adams,  154; 
and  Gene  Lookabill,  154.  This  gave 
them  a  team  total  of  613  and  plac- 
ed them  13th  in  the  field  of  34. 

The  613  total  placed  the  Tar 
Heels  slightly  ahead  of  Wake  For 
est,  the  other  ACC  entry. 


'  Tar  Heels  Strive  To 
Overcome  Blue  Devils 

By  BILL  KING  third  place  with  a  7-5  record  but 

The  Wake  Forest  Deacons  furn- 1  are     nwthematically       eliminated 
ih  the  first  of  three  crucial  tilts '  from  the  championship. 

Carolina  Coach  Walt  Rabb's  ob- 


Graham 


Mass  Gathering  As  Men 
Qualify  For  Murals 

Some  500  plus  dorm  and  frater-  to  qualify:  Johnston  (Zeta),  Steele 
nity  men  met  on  Fetzer  Field  yes-  (KA),  Payne  (Sig  Chi),  Leffer  (Kap 
terday  faternon  to  take  part  in  pre-   Sig),    Carpenter    (Kap    Sig).    and 
liminaries  for  todays  annual  inter-  Luesing  (DKE). 
mural  track  and  field  day.  i     Shot  put  qualifiers  were:  Steele 

The  finals  for  the  campuj  track  (KA),  Payne  (Sig  Chi)  Leffler  (Kap 
meet  will  start  today  at  4  o'clock  Sig),  Stoker  (DKE),  and  Jones 
for  the   field   events  and  4:45  for  (Zeta). 

the   track    contests.    The    officials       Broad     jump     qualifiers     were: 
asked   for  all    participants    in   the  Brown     (KA),     Goodman     (ATO), 
field  events  to  be  on  the  field  at  j  Smith  (DKE),  Hackney   (Chi  Phi),  I         (Continued   frtym  Pane    1) 
3:45.  Morgan  (Sig  Nu),  and  Jones  (SAE).   „a„^  director  of  the  Office  of  De- 

There  were  fourty  enterics  in  the  The  finals  for  the  high  jump  fense  MobiUzatioiL 
»4  mile  run.  Of  these  entries  the  were  decided  yesterday  with  the 
ten  were  picked  to  run  today.  The  i  Sigma  Nu's  Shingleton  taking  hon- 
ten  that  survived  the  mass  confus-  j  ors  with  a  5'8"  jump  second  was 
ion  of  the  first  turn  and  :."till  man- ;  Goodman  ATO,  and  third  was  Ba- 
aged     to     finish     were,     Liipfert,  j  ber  (Zeta). 

(Beta).  W.  Fitts  (K  A)  Mithchell,  Qualifying  for  The  60  yard  dash 
(Sig  Nu)  L.  Patseavouris  (Chi  Phi),  I  in  the  dorm  clajs  were:  Morris 
Palmer.  Luesing,  Wilaker  (DKE;,' (Dent  Sch),  Gibson  (Med  Sch),  Cam- 
Hare  (Phi  Gam),  Harris  iKap  Sig)  |  eron  (Law  Sch),  Kelso  (Law  Sch), 
and  Meuzel   of  (DU).  i  Murphy  (Law  Sch),  Lee  (Dent  Sch) 

Qualifying  for  the  220  were,  Pat-i  and  Morris  CMed  Sch). 
ton    (Zeta),     Moore    (Sig    Nu),    Mj-|      Running   for   Dorms    in  the   220 
Innis  (KA),  ElertJ^' (Sig  Chi),  Cobb!  will     be:     Chambliss     (Law     Sch), 
(DKE)  and  Tompkins  (SAE).  |  Young  (Med'  Sch),  Lee  (Dent  Sch), 

Qualifying  for  the  60  yard  dash '  J^^hnstcn   (Dent   Sch),   and  Patter- 
son and  Smith  (Med  Sch). 

Dong  the  honors  for  dorms  in 
the  100  will  be:  Cameron  (Law 
Sch),  Morris  (Med  Sch),  Holmes 
(Dent  Sch),  Delso  (Law  Sch),  and 
Morris    (Dent  Sch). 


J  the  fourtunes  of  the  "Carolina 
aseballers  this  afternoon  in  Win- 
ton-Salem  with  the  Tar  Heel^ 
leeding  a  victory  to  stay  in  top 
ontention  for  the  Atlantic  Coast 
'cnference  championship. 

The  Tar  Heels  are  now  one  game 
iff  the  pace  being  set  by  tht 
eague-leading  Duke  Blue  Devil.-, 
who  won  two  conference  games 
)ver  the  weekend  while  the  Tar 
leels  were  idle. 

The  heavy-hitting  Blue  Devils 
low  hold  a  10-3  conference  inark 
ind  have  only  today's  battle  with 
.v.  C.  State  remaining  in  confer- 
•nce  competetion.  The  Tar  Heels 
ire  now  8-3  in  ACC  play  with 
.hree  games  \o  go.  Should  Duke 
vin  today,  Carolina  would  have  to 
.vin  its  three  remaining  games  for 
a  tie  for  first  place.  Carolina's 
mly  chance  of  avoiding  a  playoff 
would  be  a  Duke  lo.is  and  three 
.'arolina  wins. 

In    the    first     meeting     between 


Netters  Host  To 
Wdlpack  Today 

fey  JIM  CROWNOVER 

An     inspired     Carolina     tennis 
team  with  aspirations  of  winning  ;|^j^y 
a   conference   championship   takes 
to  the  home  courts  against  State 


See  Thursday's  Paper 

For  those  interested  in  a  story 
on  the  newness  of  an  old  Chapel 
Hill  and  the  attitude  of  expectancy 
of  things  about  to  happen  on  tlie 
oampus  of  the  oldest  state  uiuver- 
sity  in  the  nation,  be  sure  to  see 
s  paper. 


OXf*  C!OUn^«K>...>W 


vious  choice  for  the  startmg  as-j^jg  afternoon  at  3  o'clock  for  its 
signment  for  this  big  contest  is '  j jng,  j-egular  season  match  before 
righthander  Jim  Raugh.  Raugh  was  |  ^Y^^  ^qq  -  tournament  starting 
the  victor  in  the  first  meeting  be-  j  Thursday* 

cween  the  two  club..-  and  has  been  I  »|.j,g  ^ar  Heels  at  present  are 
.he  big  man  all  season  winning  7  bearers  of  a  6-9  record  but  this 
and  losing  but  2.  record   is   very   deceiving.   Six   of 

Otherwise,  the  Tar  Heel  lineup   ^^^    nj^g    ^^^^^  suffered    by    the 
should  shape  up  about  like  it  has    setter  have  been  to  three  of  the 


for  the  latter  part  of  the  season. 

Sophomore  Jim  Legette  will  be 
behind  the  plate.  Bomber  Hill  will 
be  at  first,  Carson  Oldham  at  sec- 
ond, versatile  ^Don  Lewis  at  short- 
stop, and  Chuck  Hartman  at  third. 

The  outfield  should  have  Joe 
Shook  in  left,  Dick,  Hud^'jn  in  cen 
ter,  and  Don  HiU  in  right. 

The  Deacons  will  probably  go 
with  Jackie  Murdock  behind  the 
plate,  Jack  Phillips  at  first,  Al  Bak- 
er at  second,  Harold  Moore  at 
short,  and  Bill  Barnes  at  third. 
Coach  Gene  Hooks  will  probably 
have  in  his  outfield.  Rex  McMillan 


Jarolina  and     Wake    Forest   here  i  in  left,  John  Stokoe  in  center  and 


Vpril  27th,  the  Tar  Heels  handed 
he  Deacs  an  8-2  defeat.  The  Dea- 
jons,  incidentally,  are  currently  in 


George  Miller  in   right. 

Jack  McGinley    is   the   probable 
starting  pitcher  for  the  Deacs. 


Giants  Halted 


NE\V  YORK,  [^  —  Don  Kaiser, 
i2-year-oId  righthander,  stopped 
the  I>few  York.  Giants  on  six  hits 
oday  and  gave  the  Chicago  Cubs 
a  6-2  victory  in  the  third  and  rub- 
ber game  of  the  series  at  the  Polo  '  innings 
Grounds. 


Birds  Win 

DETTROrr,  I*)— Weak-hitting  Jim 
Bridewester  turned  his  first  base 
hit  of  the  1957  season  into  an  8-6 
Baltimore  victory  over  his  old  De- 
troit Tiger  mates  yesterday  in  13 


,  #.-.. 


were,  Sasser  (SAE),  Drouse  (ATO),  | 
Patseavouris     (Cffl    Phi),     Kearns; 
(Zeta),    Eaves  (Phi   Delt),   Carpen- 
ter (Kap  Sig),  and  Tompkin^*  (SAE). ' 
In   the  Discus!  these  were  able 


Ted  Williams  Leads  Batting, 
But  Can  He  Escape  Injuries? 


A  Coosolidaced  University  off.'cial, 
W.  .M.  Whiybum.  vice^ppesident  of 
graduate  studies  and  reserach,  will 
introduce  Friday.  North  Carolinr 
Sipreme  Court  Chief  Justice  J. 
Wallace  WinboB-ne  will  adnunister 
the  oajih  of  office.    ' 

Vollowing  theoath  Friday  will  give 
his  infaugural  address. 

Friday  has  been  acting  president 
of  t.^.e  Consolidated  University  for 
the  pa.«t  year  and  was  the  stwients 
choice  for  the  presidency. 

AisD  featured  on  the  prograim  are 
the  -ombiiied  iglee  clubs  of  the  three 
Consolidated  University  unKs.  Thej 
will  sing  Now  Let  Every  Tongue 
Adore  Thee.  The  Consolidated  Uni- 
versity bands  will  play  God  of  Our 
Fathers   after  Friday's   address. 

The  Re\-.  W.  W.  Finlator.  pastor 
of  the  PuHen  Memorial  Baptist 
ChurcJi  in  Raleigh,  will  asik  the  in- 
vocation and  benediction. 

Following  the  inauguration  there 
will  be  on  an  informal  reception  for 
delegates  and  guests. 


Ruben  Gomez,  who  had  won 
three  straight  for  the  Giants  be-  \ 
fore  being  bedded  by  a  sinus  at- 
tack, mj«de  his  first  appearance 
in  nine  days  and  was  the  victim  m 
a  ragged,  loosely  played  game  be- 
fore a  small  crowd  fo  1,604  fans,      j 

The  Cubs  halted  him  for  two 
runs  in  the  fifth  on  successive 
hits  —  single-double-single  —  by 
Jerry  Kindall.  Ernie  Banks  and 
Lee  Walls  with  two  out.  Then  tbey 
sent  him  to  the  showers  in  the 
wild  sixth  when  Chicago  scored 
four  runs  on  two  hits,  three  walks,  { 
an  error  and  a  wild  pitch.  | 

The  Giant.*  scored  once    in  the 

I  seventh  on  an  error  and  again  in 

the  ninth  on  a  walk,  single  and  a 

sacrifice  fly. 


Bridewester,  sold  to  the  Orioles 

after  batting  only  .218  for  the  Ti- 
gers last  season,,  doubled  into  the 
Tiger  bullpen  to  score  Gus  Train- 
dos  and  Dick  Williams  with  the  de- 
riding runs  off  Jack  Crimian,  fifth 
Detroit  pitcher.  Triandos  led  off 
the  inning  with  a  double  and  ),\i\- 
Hums  was  walked  intentionally. 

Righthander  George  Zuverink 
^Ilowed  the  Detroit  club  only  four 
hits .  in  seven  innings  of  relief 
pitching  and  gained  credit  for  hia; 
frecond  victory  against  no  losses, 
frimian  was  the  loser. 


top  tennis  feams  in  the  country. 
Maryland     is     the     only     ACC 
school    to-  have    turned    back    the 
Tar  Heels. 

The  Wolfpack  have  Hen  rela- 
tively unimpressive  this  season 
and  are  expected  to  furnish  lit- 
tle competition  for  the  rejuvenat- 
ed Tar  Heels. 

Coach  Cernlk  said  yesterday, 
"I  was  very  satisfied  with  our 
trip  (Eastern  swing  of  Williams. 
Princeton,  Harvard,  and  Virginia. 
I  thought  the  boys  played .  well 
against  very  good  opposition.  We 
beat  Virginia  who  had  earlier 
beaten  Duke  and  Princeton." 

Cernik  continued  that,  "the 
main  factor  against  the  boys  was 
the  lack  of  rest  since  they  played 
every  day  but  one.  If  the  same 
trip  is  made  again  next  season, 
we  will  allot  two  days  rest." 

The  conference  tournament  will 
be  played  Thursday-Saturday  at 
Duke.  The  competition  will  b? 
completely  individual  with  no 
team  trophy  awarded. 

Steve  Bank  will  be  the  Tar 
Heel's  chief  hope,  but  Geoff 
Black,  Frank  Livingston?,  Ray 
Newsome.  Fritz  Van  Winkle  Tom 
Mclver,  Canie  Smith,  and  Jay 
Walker  will  also  be  carrying  the 
Carolina   banner   in   the   field. 


Ben  Hogan  has  been  selected 
as  the  greatest  golfer  of  the  past 
ten  years. 


FROSH    PLAY 

The  fr*shman  bas*bail  team 
plays  host  to  tht  Wako  Fortst 
frosh  in  a  cloubl*-h«ad*r  begin- 
ning at  1:30  ir  Emerton  stadium 
this  afternoon.  This  will  be  the 
last  homo  contes<^  for  the  fresh- 
men. In  \/irinning  ) 2  of  19  games 
this  season,  the  Tar  Babies  won 
one  end  of  a  doubleheader  at 
Wake  Forest  and  tied  the  other. 


average.  A  cold  sidelined  him  for 
wo  days  last  week.  Yesterday,  he 
ivas  hit  by  a  pitched  bail  and  ^-af- 
ered  a  badly  bruised  forearm. 

Thais  four  games  Ted  has 
nissed  of  Boston's  18  ai;d  later  on 
-n  the  year  it's  believec  Manager 
Pinky  Higgins  will  keep  him  out 
A  second  games  of  doubleheaders. 

The  Thumper's  closest  competi- 
tor in  the  batting  race  u  Kansas 
Jity's  Harry  Simpson.  The  A's 
ilugger  is  hitting  .391  and  also 
shares  the  runs  batted  in  lead  with 
Roy  Sievers  of  Washington.  Each 
nas  knocked  home  19  runners. 


NEW  YORK,  \m~-  Ted  Williams 
is  the  American  Leagues  leading 
batter.  He'll  probably  be  in  con 
tent  ion  for  the  champiouo-hip  foi 
the  remainder  of  the  1957  base 
ball  season. 

But  will  the  slugging,  38-year-old 
Boston  Red  Sox  outfielder  be  able 
to  avoid  further  injury  and  illness 
and  reach  the  necessary  477  times- 
at-bat  total? 

Tis  477  figure  is  a  new  one.  It 
includes  bases  on  balls,  times  hit 
by  pitcher  and  all  a-acrifices.  Un- 
til this  year,  400  official  at  bats 
constituted  the  batting  title  re- 
quirement. 

And  there  are  those  who  believe 
the  rulesmakers  put  the  new  reg- 
ulation on  the  books  with  Williams 
in  mind.  In  1954,  Ted  finished  with 
the  highest  bat.ting  average  .345 
but  lost  the  crown  to  Cleveland  s  I  after  holding 
Bobby  Avila  because  he  had  only  j  halftime. 

386  official  trips  to  the  plate.  i  Leading  scorer  for  Carolina  was 
A  broken  collarbone  sustained  I  Les  Sutorius  who  contributed  four 
in  spring  training  and  a  mid-.o-aa- 1  Tar  Heel  goals.  Freshman  football- 
son  virus  infection  kept  him  out  of  I  er.  Jack  Cummings  contributed  the 
the  line-up  for  more  than  two  j  other  two  Tar  Heel  goals.  This  waj 
months.  the  first  outing  of  the  season  lor 

Even     without     those    setbacks   Carolina. 

Williams  might  have  won  his  fifth  \  — ' '■ ^- — 

league   titfe   that  year   if  he   had 


CLASSIFIEDS 


Lacross  Loss 


WANTED:  COLLEGE  MEN, 
part-time  and  summer.  Earn  $50 
to  $100  per  week  plus  $100-$300 
scholarship  award.  Must  have 
use  of  car.  Contact  W.  P.  Cran- 
ford.  Box  1708.  Raleigh,  N.  C. 


FOR  INEXPENSIVE  LIVING:  27' 
Nashua  Trailer  —  has  bath  tub, 
shower,  porch,  oil  heater,  added 
room,  connected  to  utilities  and 
septic  tank.  One  mile  out  on 
airport  road.  Call  8472.  $2,300. 


Carolina 


NOW  PLAYING 

'J^  *  -   ...,.,  M-G-M  presents 

STORY  OF  A  MAN  WITH 
UlSAnABLE  PASSION! 

In  Cinemascope 
and  MvtreCeler 

KIRK  DOUGUS 

"LUST  FOR 
LIFE" 


The  Carolina  lacross  club  drop- 
ped  a   7-6   derision    to    the   Duke 
Blue  Devils  in   Durham  yesterday' 
a  3-2   advantage  at 


not  drawn  136  b^es  on  balls.  In 
1955,  Ted  ^d  only  320  official  at 
bats  and  last  season  he  reached 
an  even  400  trips,  batting.  345.  He 
fini..-hed  seconi^  to  Mickey  Man- 
tles  .353.  > 

Williams'  1957  start  has  been 
right  in  keeping  with  those  of  pre- '  lowed  by  a  question  and  answer 
vious  seasons.  He  has  cracked  out  period.  The  public  has  been  invit- 
22    hits   in  51   at  bats  for  a   .431  ed  to  attend. 


WORLD  FELLOWSHIP 

The  World  Fellowship  study 
group  will  meet  at  6  p.m.  in  the 
upstairs  dining  rom  of  Lenoir  Hall. 
TTiey  will  discuss  Islam.  Dr.  W.  T. 
Stace  will  serve  as  group  chair- 
man. The    discussion  will  be  fol- 


COME  AND  GET  IT! 
IVe  Still  Got  ESSO  EXTRA 


Jr 


at 


Downtown  Prices  For 
Regular  Gas 

and 

My  Regular  3<  Under  That 

Plus 

Bring  This  Ad  and  Get  1  Cent  Off  Per  Gal.  Gas, 

5  Cents  Per  Qt.  Oil 

Credit  Cards  Honored  Again 

At  The  Students'  Friend 

WHIPPLE'S  ESSO  SERVICE 


TREMENDOUS 

. . .  done  in  colors  of  which  a 
Rembrandt  might  be  proud  I " 

Cfwtktr,  N.  Y.  Timti 

''THE  YEAR'S  MOST 
EXCITING  FILM'' 

''A  mastery  so  complete  thot  'Richard 
lir  in  this  generation  can  surely  never 
■    be  himself  again!" 

^'Olivier  and  a  brilliant  cast  bring  new 
life  to  ShakespeoreT 

-Lift  MAGAZiNt 

Richard:^ 

^HN  0(tl.auO>CLAIR(  ilOOM'ML^H  KiCHANOSON  •CEDHIC  HAMOMICKC 
prod»c*4  an4  direct  hy  LAURENCf  OUVIER  1.^11^ 
C  O  L^W    BY  TKCMWICOCOW   <iiWM.<  >r  UMI  HtW  BttT.  CWf. 


Admission: 
Adults  65c 

MON.  ■  TUE5. 


Children  25c 


WHY 

Throw  Away  Those 
Old  Worn-Out  Stacks? 

Let  us  convert  th*in  into  ber- 
muda  shorts.  We  will  take  out 
the  pleats,  and  make  you  a 
real  ivy  league  pair  of  ber- 
mudas,  complete  with  back- 
strap.  All  at  a  price  so  low 
that  you  won't  believe  it. 

PETE 

THE  TAILOR 


"Specializing  in 


Ivy  Leagueizing" 


bod's  importad  French  Nsle  wash- 
able  sport  shirt,  flattering  fit,  in  nint 
virile  colors,  always  fresh  looking, 
"tra  'Shape"  ribtad  ooliar  and  cuffs, 
tenfthened  "stay-in"  shirt  tail. 

$7.95 

Red,  Haathtr  Gray,  Navy,  Black, 
Carolina  Blue,  Oliva,  Tan  Heath- 
er, White  and  Canary. 


JULIAN'S 
College  Shop 


Howard  Johnson  Restaurant 

.       y  STUDENT   SPECIALS 

Barbecued    Chicken 
Choice  Steak  Sandwiches 

2:00-    5:00  P.M. 
SERVED  8:00-11:00  P.M. 

"Landmark  For  Hungry  Tarheels** 


fijt 


JULIAN'S 

DACRON  AND  COTTON 
"WORSTED-WEAVE"  SUITS 

WILL  WASH  AND  HANG  DRY   (3  HOURS)  FOR  WEAR 

WITHOUT  PRESSING  EXCEPT  FOR  OCCASIONAL 

"TOUCH-UP" 


Attractive    patterns   Vji 
normally  to  be  expected 
in   superfine   worsteds   are   per- 
fectly   adapted    in    tfiese    blends    oJF 
imported  cotton  and  dacron  in  discreet 
screen   dot    and    striped    patterns.    All    are 
tailored    in    the    three-button,   single    breasted 
model    with    lap   seams,   regular   pockets,   and 
hook  vent.  Plain  front,  slim  cut  trousers     . 


•.  * 

Desert 
Tan 

Oliv« 

Dark 

Blue 

Mixture 

'     Stripes 
Ar>d  Solids 
S42.95 

Covert 
Mixture 

Black 
Faced 
Brown 

Black 
Olive 

Flannel 
Gray 

Julian' 


ei»^ 


#MOM 


-MAY  12- 


REMEMBER   MOM 

WITH 
ONE    OF     THE    OUTSTANDING     CARDS 
FROM     OUR      VAST     SELECTION 

LEDBETTER.PICKARD 


Mf'thi'ffkd  to 
^ffet^m€3M 


U.N.C.  Library 
S-rials  pspt. 
Chapel  Hill.  ^•'.  C. 
8-31-49 


•    .  r  *   - 


-.f     *. 


WEATHER 


Fair  -arMl  modkrataly  warm.  Hi«H 


•0 


3r()e  DaituliSrar  Med 


VOL.  LVII,  NO.  112 


Complete  (/P)  Wire  Service 


CHAPEL  HILL,  NORTH  CAROLINA,  WEDNESDAY,  MAY  S,  ^9S7~ 


Offieee  m  Grahmm  Memeiriml 


MYOPIA 

Th*  editor  %»y%  it's  no  tim«  ff 
it  on   p«9«   two.  I 


FOUR   PAGES  THIS   ISSUE 


William  Friday  To  Be  Inaugurated    In  Raleigh  Today 


President  Friday 
Has  Great  Ability 

By  PETE  IV EY 

In  only  a  brief  space  of  time,  William  C.  Friday,  as  acting  presi- 
dent and  as  president  of  the  Consolidated  University  of  North  Caro- 
lina, has  demonstrated  astonishing  ability  ^-ignificd  by  measurable  ac- 
complishments. 

President  Friday  who  will  be  formally  inaugurated  at  Reynolds 
Coliseum  ii  Raleigh  today,  operates  so  quietly  that  he  remindc-  you 
of    a    masican.     While     you     are* ♦ 


news 

m 
brief 


Texas  Floods 


a    majlican 
•watching  his  calm  composure,  you 
suddenly  realize  he  has  pulled  a 
rabbit  out  of  a  hat. 

Here  are  some  cf  the  remark- 
able achievements  of  the  past  few 
months:  [ 

1.  In  his  statements  and  in  his 
actions.  President  Friday  has 
stressed  the  prime  importance  of ; 

graduate  studies  and  research  anil  p^LLAS  .i!^— More  Texas  resi 
basic  scholarship  in  the  three  in-  ^^^^^  jj^^j  ^j^j^  ^.^^^J.  yesterday  j 
slHutions  which  comprise  the  Con-  ^^^  ^  federal  official  estimated , 
solidated  University.  _.^^^^  damage    from  spring   torna- 

2.  His  administration  has  seen   ^^^^  ^^^  ^^^^^^^  ^^  35  million  dol- 
the    establishment    of   two   signifi-   j^^g  ' 
cant   academic   institutes     in     the  j     j^j^^g^   streams    receded   after  20 
University  at  Chapel  Hill— the  In-  ^^y^  ^f  ^^3^5.  rajng    flooding  ami 
stiiute    of    Natural    Sciences    and  ngaj.  flooding.  I 
the   Institute  of  Humanities.                 gut  on  the  Lower  Brazos  Ri\  or. 

3.  He  has  devoted  cl:se  at- ,  about  50  miles  southwest  of  Hous- 
tention  to  the  immediate  future  t^n.  scores  of  persons  moved  out 
needs  of  the  University,  with   re-  ■  3 .  ^ev,-  high  water  came  in. 

gard  to  salaries  of  faculty,  in-  jjje  National  Guard  sent  eight 
creased  library  support,  and  re-  guardsmen  to  Angleton  to  help  in 
search  emphasis.  To  secure  funds  rescue  work,  while  the  state  police 
for   those   purposes   he   has   been   sent  three  men  with  boats  to  take  i 


DR.   FRANK    P.    GRAHAM 

.  .  .  UN  official 


GOV.    LUTHER    HODGES 

.   .  .  top  state  official 


WILLIAM    C.    FRIDAY 

.  .  .  new  president 


GORDON   GRAY 

.  .  .  Defense  Dept. 


TELLS  MATRIX  SOCIETY 


Wouldnt  Miss  It  For  The  World:'  Belts 


1 0:30  Ceremonies; 
Hodges  To  Preside 

By   PATSY  MILLER 

The  inauguration  activities  will  be  impressive  today,  as  nationally 
recognized  figures,  Consolidated  University  officials,  and  outstanding 
North  Carolinians  take  part  in  inducting  William  Friday  as  president 
of  the  Consolidated  University. 

Choirs  and  bands  of  the  three  Cono-ohdated  University  units  will 
take  part.  Special  music  from  the  bell  tower  of  State  College  will  b^ 

# ♦presented    by  Richard   Stallings  of 

.  Pinetops.     State    College  '  student 

UNC  Loses 
See  Page  4 


and   remains   indefatigable   in    his 
presentations  to  the  current  N.  C 
General   .^ssemblj-. 
4.     He   has    been    successful    in 


residents  out  of  high  water. 

The  Brazos  spread  to  a  width  of 
13  miles  at  places  near  the  coast, 
bringing    floods    to    areas    around 


resolving   a    "code"  of   operations '  Angleton,    West     Columbia,     East 

for  the  nunageni«nt  of  the  Divis- :  Columbia,  anchor  and  other  towBa 

ion  of  Health. Affairs  at  UNC.  the   and  coramnnities. 

central     core     of     a     widespread '  ^ 

health  •  program    in    North    Caro-  i  Disarmament  Plan 

Una    which    has    its    apex    in    the       LONDON  ii?»— The  Unted  States 

University.  j  offered  today  to  tell  the  world  be- 

5.  He  has  exhibited  a  firmness  forehand  of  any  -  international 
of  purpose  and  has  made  it  clear ,  movement  of  U.  S.  troops,  even 
that  athletics  in  the  University  ■  including  transfer  of  forces  from 
shall  be  controlled  by  University  the  naainland  to  Alaska, 
authorities,  with  the  Chancellor  1  u.  S.  Delegate  Harold  Stassen 
*it  each  institution  responsible — '  made  the  offer  to  the  U.N.  Disarm- 
the  policy  being  affirmed  by  the ;  ament  Subcommittee  on  condition 
Board  of  Trust«es.  i  that   other  nations    agree    to   give 

6.  By  spcial     efforts     on     his  such  advance  notice. 

part  and  ori  the  part  of  his  staff  |  Stassen  also  called  on  the  So- 
in  the  University,  he  has  made :  viet  Union  to  accept  an  interna- 
vital  contacts  with  national  foun-  j  tional  control  system  over  imports 
dations  interested  In  education  and '  and  exports-  of  arms, 
and  t'  e  role  that  the  University  j  Stassen's  proposals  got  a  non- 
may  play  in  foundation  grants  committal  reception  from  the  So- 
and  accompanying  research  op-  viet  delegation, 
portunities.  Mr.  Friday  has  made;  Jules  Moch  of- France  gave  firm 
personal  calls  to  key  individuals '  support  to  the  U.  S.  proposal  on 
and  has  strengthened  the  Univers-  j  troop  movements,  authoritative 
ity's  position  in  relation  to  co-  sources  said 
operative  venttires  between  edu- 
cation and  supporting  founda- 
tions. I      APPLTON,  Wis.  *)— The  hectic 

7.  Two    most    recent    develop- !  career  of  Joseph  Raymond  McCar- 
ments    during    bis    administration  i  thy,  its  48  years  marked  by  hard- 

(See  FRibAY,  Page  3) 


•'I  wouldn't  mi-ss  it  for  the 
world."  was  Doris  Belts'  feeling 
toward  newspaper  work  as  ex- 
presst'd  ta  the  Matrix  Society 
banquet  Monday  evening  in  the 
Fine    Room   of  the   Carolina   Inn. 

Miss  Bett.s  has.  been  acclaimed 
nationally  for  her  prize-winning 
short  story  collection.  Gentle  In- 
surrection, and  her  novel  on  the 
South.  Tall  Hmtm-s  in  Winer. 

The  Matrix  Society  an  honorary 
professional  women's  journalism 
society  on  the  campus,  will  go 
through  a  training  period  of  three 
years  in  hopes  of  becoming  a  chap- 
ter of  Theta  Sigma  Phi.  national 
honorary  professional  sorority  for 
women  in  journalism. 

Outstandiug  North  Carolina  wo- 

EvahsnKmnnii^aiment 

Student  Body  President  Sonny 
Eh'ans  announced  yesterday  that 
he  will  be  in  his  office  from  2  to 
5  p.m.  throughout  the  week  to  in- ' 
terview  all  people  interested  in 
applying  for  student  government 
positions. 


men  journalists,  faculty  members 
in  journalism  and  related  field.s 
were  invited  to  the  banquet. 

Mrs.  Bctts  di.scussed  two  ef- 
fects of  newspaper  work:  the 
sense  of  detachment  or  imperson- 
alism  and  the  sense  of  involve- 
ment. She  stated  that  involve- 
ment was  the  reason  she  loved 
her  work. 

••This  feeling — just  one  tiny  lit- 
tie  thing — and  it  comes  into  the 
office — for  one  second  out  of 
time  1  have  held  a  mosaic  in  my 
hand — ."  The  feeling  that  she 
could  understand  what  goes  on 
in  others"  minds  and  have  "some 
idea  of  the  total"  of  life  was  Mrs. 
Betts'    explanation     of     being     in- 


volved   with    people    through    her 
work. 

.Another  point  Mrs.  Betts  made 
was.  '.Anytime  you  get  too  cer- 
tain about  life,  newspaper  work 
brings  in  the  exception.  The  com- 
plexity of  life  is  in  ncwc-paper 
work." 

Mrs.  Betts.  originally  from 
Statesville.  is  currently  working 
with  the  Sanford  Herald.  She  has 
recently  written  three  short  stor- 1 
ies  and  is  working  on  two  novels, ! 
one  of  which  she  hopes  to  have 
published  within  the  next  15 
months. 

The  Matrix  Society,  aided  by 
Dean  of  Journalism  Norval  Neil 
Luxon  and  advised  by  Theta  Sig- 


ma Phi  Alumnae  Mrs.  William 
Caldwell  and  Mrs.  Guion  Johnson, 
organized  here  this  year.  Its  of- 
ficers are:  president.  Joy  Brown; 
vice-president.  Jackie  Haithcock; 
.secretary.  Anne  Drake;  treasurer, 
Mary  Alys  Voorhees:  keeper  of 
archives.  Nancy  Sultle." 

Marv      Moore      Mason     was      in 


Grad  Students 
Needed  For  '57 

Graduate  students  at  the  Univer- 
sity of  North  Carolina  are  being 
urged  to  take  part  in  the  forth- 
coming graduate  orientation  pro- 
gram. 

This  fall,  for  the  first  time,  new 


and  bcllmaster. 
I      The    inauguration    program    will 
,  begin  at  10:30  a.m.  at  the  William 
Neal    Reynolds   Coliseum    at    State 
j  College  in  Raleigh. 

Gov.    Luther    Hodges,    chairman 
■  of   the    Board    of  Trustees   of   the 
i  Consolidated  University,   will    pre- 
'  side  at   tjie  inauguration   and  will 
formally  induct  Friday  into  office. 
i      Dr.   Willi.im    M.   Whyburn.   vicc- 
'  president   of  graduate  studies  and 
research  of  the  Consolidated   Uni- 
versity,  will    present    Friday,    and 
State  Supreme  Court  Chief  Justice 
J.  Wallace  Winborne  will  adminis- 
ter the  oath  of  office. 
j      Friday    will    deliv<>r    his    inaugu- 
ral address  after  the  induction. 


■^V*«5fc« 


^JdJ&4^.^~'.  •>!.'<^ 


I  .  Nationally   recognized    personali- 

char.ue  of  the  banquet  prepara-  j  graduate  students  will  be  a  part  oi  ^.^^  ^^^^^  Graham.  United  Na- 
tions. A  banquet  in  honor  of  out- 1  the  general  now  student  orienla-  ,  ^.^^^  Mediator,  and  Gordon  Grav. 
standing  women  journalists  isUion  program.  Under  the  sponsor- 
traditional  of  Theta  Sigma  Phi' ship  of  the  Graduate  Club,  this 
chapters  throughout  the  country,  i  program  will  attempt  to  introduce 
It  is  more  familiarly  known  as  the!  new  grads  to  life  and  activities  at 
Matrix  Table.  I  Carolina  and  to  help  them  get  set- 

The  Matrix  Society  will  hold  its !  tied  during  their  fir..-t  few   weeks 
first  initiation     within     the     next   on  campus. 

few     weeks,     according     to     Miss'      In  order  ti  put   on  an  effective 
jj,.y^y„  I  program   according  to  the   Gradu- 

_        -       -  -  ^  '  ate    Orientation    Committee    there 


Ken  Lowry's  Peer  Gy  nt 
Backed  By  Experience 


H«ctic  Career  Closes 


Pat  Aldridge 
Is  Dream  Girl 


won  triumphs  and  hard-fought  de- 
i  feats  that  were  cltmaxed  by  a 
!  turbulent  decade  in  the  U.  S.  Sen- 
j  ate,  came  to  a  quiet  close  yester- 
I  day. 

I  Alter  funeral  services  in  the 
I  overflowing  old  chui^ch  where  Mc- 
I  Carthy  was  baptized  a^'  a  child,  the 

body    of    Wisconsin's    Republican 


ience  in  many  summer  stock  pro- 
ductions. In  the  summer  of  1955 
he  was  a  member  of  the  Myrtle 
Beach  Playhouse  group,  acting  in 
plays  with  such  performers  as 
Sidney  Blackmer  and  Sylvia  Sid- 
ney. 

After  finishing  a  stint  with  the 
Air  Force  ROTC  last  summer,  he 
went  to  a  stock  company  in  Lan- 
caster. Pa.,  where  he  appeared  in 
productions  of  "Tea  and  Sympa- 
thy." "Picnic."  and  "'Stalag  17." 
Local  audiences  had  a  chance  to 
view  his  acting  ability  when  he 
portrayed  Morrell   in   the  Durham 


'  Graham  Memorial  Closed  I 

Graham  Memorial  will  be  closed 
thi.«  morning,  according  to  Linda 
Mann,  director.  The  building  will 
open  at  1  p.m.,  however. 


For  an  English  major  from 
Ohio  to  play  an  irresponsible  Nor- 
wegian would  seem  to  pose  some- 
thing of  a  problem.  Ken  Lowry. 
who  plays  the  title  role  in  "Peer 
Gynt"  this  weekend,  is  in  just 
such  a  position. 

Kai  Jurgensen.  who  is  directing 
the  production,  has  an  experienc- 
ed actor  in  Lowry.  With  the  Play- 
makers  he  has  appeared  in  "The 
Rainmaker."  "Seventeen.''  "De- 
sire Under  the  Elms."  and  "Stran- 
ger in  the  Land." 

The  Carolina  Playmakers"  pro- 
duction of  "Peer  Gynt"  will  be 
performed  Friday,  Saturday  and 
Sunday  at  8:30  p.m.  in  the  Forest 

Theater.    Ibsen's     play     has    been  j      In   his   plans   to   enter  the    pro- 
adapted    by    Kai    Jurgensen.    Dra  |  fessional  theatre.  Lowry  has  tried  \ 


Theatre     Guild's 
"Candida." 


production     of 


will  be  a  need  for  about  30  gradu- 
ate students  who  e.xpect  to  be  here 
next  semester  t«)  serve  as  orien- 
tation counselors. 

Any  grads  who  are  interested  in 
serving  as  counselors  fi>r  next  fall 
are  urged  to  contact  Eleanor  Rig 
gins  in  the  Y.MCA- 


GM^S  SLATE 

Jehovah's  Witnesses,  8-9  p.m., 
Grail  Room;  Chem  Femmes,  8-10 
p.m.,  Roland  Parker  Lounge  No. 
1;  Junior  Service  League,  7-11 
p.m.,  Roland  Parker  Lounges 
Nos.  2,  3;  Sociology  179,  12-1 
p.m..  Game  Room;  Junior  Serv- 
ice League,  7-11  p.m.,  Rendez- 
vous Room;  Bridge  Class,  4:30- 
6  p.m.,  Rendeivous  Room; 
Whitehead  Medical  Society, 
7:30-10,  A.P.O.   Room. 


SP  Revises  By-Laws 


By  SUf  ATCHISON 

PAT  ALDRIDGE.  a  coed   from 
Boone    N   C  .  wa«  named  "Dream  I  Junior  senator  was  borne  along  a  | 
Girl-   of  the  Theta  Chis  on  Fri- !  two-mile  route  lined  by  hundreds 
day   at   their   "Dream   Girl"    Ball  ■  more  of  his  old  friends  and  neigh-  i 
held   this  >-ear  at     the     Carolina  |  bors.  ^.,      ^      ^  .     .       I 

J  i     Then,  while  the  throng  hushed. 

During  the  dance,  for  which  Bob  i  McCarthy's  body  was  lowered  into 
Olson  and  his  owhestra  played,!*  g"ve  beneath  a  sheltering  oak. 
awards  were  made  to  the  out- 1  on  a  wooded  bluff  overlooking  the 
standing  brother  and  new  officers  i  beautiful  Fox  River  Valley,  in  the 
for  the  coming  year  were  pre  ^amUy  plot  beside  his  parents, 
sented.  The  new  officers  include:  j  • 
Bill  Walsh,  president;  Randy 
Maddux,  vice  president:  John 
Barefoot,  secretary;  E.  G.  Hobbs, 
treasurer;  and  All  Hutchison, 
pledge  marshall. 

The  weekend  was  concluded 
with  a  cabin  party  in  "countr> 
style  "  motiff  on  Saturday. 

THE  PHI  GAU'S  held  their  an 
nual  Pig  Dinner  Saturday  night 
at  the  Carolina  Inn  lor  their  alum- 
ni Tlie  dinner  was  preceeded  by 
a  party  in  the  aft«moon. 

THIS  THURSDAY  the  Kappa 
Alpha's  will  entertain  the  Pi  Phi's 
at  a  picnic  at  Hogan's. 

THE  LIST  of  those  pinned  has 
increased  and  now  includes:  Eric 
Roper.  Phi  Gam,  to  Marcia  Wof- 
ford.  a  student  at  W<Mnan's  Col- 
lege: Ira  Har4y,  Kappa  Sig.  to 
Mary  Ruth  Mitchell,  a  Tri  Delt. 


Or.  Wilt-on  Mason,  associate 
professor  of  music  at  the  Uni- 
versity of  North  Carolina,  will 
give.^he  Humanities  Faculty  Lec- 
ture for  the  spring  in  Chapel 
Hill  on  Wednesday  night.  May  8. 
Set  for  8  p.m.  in  Room  106  Car- 
roll Hall,  the  public  lecture  will 
concern  "Thomas  Mace  and  His 
Musick's  Monumont."  Professor 
Mason,  who  spent  last  year  in 
Italy  doing  post-doctoral  study 
on  a  Ford  Foundation  grant,  will 
include  musical  illustrations  in 
his  lecture. 


matic  Art  professor,  from  his  and 
Robg-t  Schenkkan's  1»42  transla- 
tion. 

For    the    lead    in    "Peer    Gynt. " 
Lowrv  has  had  background  exper- 


lo  play  as  many  roles  in  as  many 
theatres  as  possible.  His  recent 
experience  has  widened  with  his 
leading  role  performance  in  a 
student   television  drama. 


Dr.  David  G.  Monroe,  professor 
of  political  science  at  the  Uni- 
versity of  North  Carolina,  is  in 
Columbus,  Ohio,  for  the  annual 
meeting  of  the  Institute  for  Ed- 
ucation by  Radio-Television  at 
Ohio  State  University.  He  Will 
speak  Thursday,  May  9,  at  a 
panel-clinic  session  on  "The  Se- 
lection and  Training  of  Tele- 
vision Teachers.  '  Or.  Monroe  has 
conducted  several  credit  courses 
over  UNC's  educational  station, 
WUNC-TV. 


The  Student  Party  held  a  reg- 
ular business  session  following 
Dr.  William  Poteat's  talk  Monday 
at  which  time  they  voted  on  a  re- 
vision of  the  party  by-laws. 

The  changes  were  made  in  the 
interest  of  clarity  and  readability, 
acording  to  Party  Chairman  Whit 
Whitfield,  the  meeting  also  pass- 
ed on  reinstating  party  dues  at 
the  beginning  of  the  fall  semester. 

Another  change  in  policy  passed 
by  party  members  Monday  was 
the  election  of  treasurer  befoe 
instead  of  after  the  election  of 
other  officers.  Chairman  Whit- 
field indicated  that  this  change 
was  made  to  lend  more  continuity 


to  the  financial  organization  of 
the  party. 

A  vacancy  in  the  legislature 
from  Victory  Village  was  an- 
nounced which  will  be  filled  at 
the  next  meeting. 

The  party  also  voted  to  par- 
ticipate in  the  Activities  Session 
planned  by  the  Orientation  Com- 
mittee during  next  years'  Fresh- 
man Orientation  program.  Caleb 
White  was  appointed  to  chair  the 
committee  which  will  make  necess- 
ary  arrangements. 

Chairman  Whitfield  indicated 
at  the  conclusion  of  the  meeting 
that  new  coptes  of  the  by-laws 
will  be  printed  and  distributed  at 
the  next  meeting  of  the  party. 


Alumni  Group  Extends 
Invitation  To  Seniors 

Jim  Raugh's  Senior  Class  Alum-  the   class   learned    of    the    special  ; 
ni  Committee  is  one  of  the  busiest   on-campus  opportunity  to  join  the  j 
spot-action  groups  on  the  campus ,  Alumni  Association  for  $1.  Regu- ; 
this    week.     Currently    committee ,  lar  annual  dues  are  $5  a  year.   ^ 
members    and    committee-appoint-  j      During    a    12-month    period    all 
ed    area    solicitors    are   contacting ;  Association    members    receive     10 
all    seniors    living   on   the  campus  j  issues  of     the     alumni     magazine 
and  inviting  them  to  become  active  ;  with    football   supplements   follow- 
dues-paying  members  of  the  UNC 
Alumni    Association.    Membership 
becomes   effective  June   1  without 
regard  to  the  actual  date  of  grad- 
uation. 

Co-chairmen  Luther  Hodges.  Jr. 
arid  "Pokey"  McSorley  have  indi- 
cated that  the  committees  pri- 
mary concern  is  to  acquaint  mem- 
bers of  the  class  with  the  impor- 
tant role  of  the  Alumni  Associa- 
tion in  the  life  of  the  University 
and  its  alumni. 

As     seniors     actively     affiliated   Hodges,  other  committee  members  :  niance  Languages  at  Duke  Univer- 
with   the   Association   it  is   felt  by  j  are:    Jackie  Aldridge.  John  Bilich,    sity. 

the   committee   that  they  will   bei  Barney  Cashwell.  Lee  Ann  Curtis,!     The  Gillettes  are  the  recipieni-, 
preparing     themselves     for     their  ]  Bruce  Johnson,  I>on  Kentopp,  Belle  !  of  grants  from  the  Norwegian  gov- 


ing  each  game.  All  members  may 
vote  in  the  election  of  Associa- 
tion  officers.  ! 

To  all  seniors  Alumni  Secretary 
J.  Maryon  Saunders  issued  the  fol- 1 
lowing  welcome:  "Your  Alumni 
Association  is  happy  to  welcome 
you  and  others,-  of  the  Class  of  '57 
as  active  members.  Membership 
in  the  Association  will  help  you 
to  "keep  touch'  with  Carolina  and 
your  college  friends." 

In  addition     to     McSorley     and 


INFIRMARY  LIST 

Misses  Grace  Alley  and  Jose- 
phine Becknell;  and  Timothy 
Jessup,  Morris  Lawing,  James 
Wombler,  Owen  Leiand,  Alden 
Jourdan,  Robert  Becknell  and 
Thonrtas  Saunders. 


Want  Jo  Study 
This  Summer? 

.More  than  100  correspondence 
courses  have  been  offered  by  the 
Lrniver.sily  for  this  summer.  The 
courses  can  be  completed  in  a 
minimum   of  ^^-eyen   week.s. 

Conrplete  information  may  be 
obtained  from  the  Bureau  of  Cor- 
resjwndencc  Instruction  in  Abor- 
nethy  Hall. 

Students  may  earn  degree  and 
quality  point  credit  from  the 
courses.  Enrollment  in  the  courses 
begins  after  clas.ses  are  over  on 
May  21.  Anyone  may  enroll  if  he 
is  not  attending  regular  Univer- 
sity classes  at  the  time. 

As  many  a.t,-  four  lesson  assign- 
ments may  be  sent  in  a  week,  al- 
though 13  months  are  allowed  to 
finish  the  course. 

A  total  of  50  semester  hours  can 
be  earned  by  ,studei)ts  through -the 
correspondence  a:  plan. 


director  of  U.  S.  Office  of  De- 
fense Mobilisation,  will  make  short 
speeches.  Both  are  former  Consoli- 
dated University  presidents. 

Sons  of  O.  Max  Gardner  and  W. 
D.    Carmichael.    O     Max    Gardner. 
Jr.,  of  Shelby  and  W.  D.  Carmich- 
ael. Jr.,  of  Chapel   Hill   served    as 
chairman  and  vice-chairman  of  the 
committee    w'hich    made     arrangc- 
menf.s  (ot-  the  inaii^iirai  program. 
An  academic  procession  of  dclc- 
'  gates  from  other  colleges  and  uni- 
j  ver.  ities.  learned  societies  and  ed- 
ucational   and  profes.sional  organi- 
!  zations   and    faculties  of  the   Con- 
,  solidated   University  will  open   the 
I  activities. 
•      Faculty   marshals  of  the   proccs 
I  sions    will    be    W.    W.    Austin    of 
i  Stale  College.  John  B.  Bridgery  of 
j  Woman's     College     and     John     C. 
I  Lyons  of  UNC. 

i      Governor  Hodges  will   introduce 
I  chancellor.;    R/>l>ert     B     House    of 
I  L'.N'C.   W.   W.   Pierson    of  Woman's 
!  College   and    Carey    H.    Bostian   of 
1  State  College.  He  will  also  presenJ 
chancellors-elect    William    B.     .\y- 
cock   of    UNC    and    Gordon    Black- 
well  of  Woman's  Colle^je. 

The  invocation  and  benediction 
will  be  rendered  by  the  Rev.  W. 
W.  Finlator.  pastor  of  the-  Pullen 
Memorial  Baptist  Church  in  Ra- 
leigh. Former  Metropolitan  Opera 
star  Nor.man  Gordon  of  Chapel  Hill 
will  lead  the  auditnce  in  singing 
the  National  .^nthcm. 
The    prelude   will   be 


(See   CEREMONIES. 


performed 
poflc   3) 


Gillettes  Get  Grant 

Thomas  L.  Gillette  and  his  wife  i  state.  Mrs.  Gillette,  who  will  re- 
Janet  have  received  summer  schol- ;  ceive  her  M.A.  from  Duke  this 
arships  for  study  at  the  University  i  spring,  will  study  foreign  lan- 
of  Oslo.  Norway.  Gillette   is  a  so- '  guages  and  literature. 


ciology    instructor    here    and    his 
wife   teaches   in   the   Dept.   of  Ro- 


soon-to-be    status    as   members   of 
the  "Alumni  Class  of  1957." 
Orientation  of  scniprs  in  alumni 


Lee,  Steve  Lyon,  Don  Matkins.  An-  j  ernment.   given    to   further    inter- 

nette  Niven.  Mebane  Pritchett.  Jo  j  cultural  understanding. 

Ruffin.     Joanne     Saunders.     Stan !      Now      completing      his      Ph.D. 


When  the  Oslo  .-/ummer  session 
is  completed,  they  plan  to  tour 
Sweden  and  c.vcle  through  Den- 
mark and  the  Netherlands,  .\fter 
visiting  friends  in  Germany  and 
France,  they  will  return  to  the 
United  States  in  September.  j 

Both  are  natives  of  Kansas  City, 
Mo.    and    hold    degrees    from    the 


affairs  tiegan  with  the  committee- 1  Shaw.  Linda  Schoof.  Marthe  Traut-   studies  at  Chapel  Hill,  Mr.  Gillette   University  of  Kansas  City.  He  took 


sponsored    class    meeting  on    Sen- 
ior Day.  At  that  time  members  o'f 


mann.   David   Ward.    Harojd    Wat- 
ers, and  Bob  Young. 


will  study  social  science  and  fam- '  his  A.B.  at  the  University  of  Mis- 

ily    life    under    a    social    welfare ^souri  and  hi:?  »\.\.  ?.t  Kansas  City     on  Fetzer  Field 


Inspection  Tour 
SetForAFROTC 

.\ir  Forc"  ROTC  Dotachmen? 
590  will  participate  in  a  rhree- 
day  federal  rnspection  tour  be- 
ginning today  by  an  inspection 
team  from  Headquarters.  .-\FRO- 
TC,   Maxwell   AFB.   Texas. 

Inspect  r-in-Chief  Colonel  S.  L. 
Crosthwait  will  load  the  inspec- 
tion team  which  will  include  Lf 
Col.  Dohn  and  Major  Herron  dur- 
ing it.  tour  of  the  detachment. 

In  conjunction  with  a  .schedule 
Arranged  during  the  in.»pection 
tour  an  inspection  oi  the  admin- 
istrative functions  of  Headquart- 
trs  will  hi  held  today. 

Tomorrow,  a  Cadet  Staff  brief- 
ing will  be  held  with  the  inspec- 
tors at  11  a.m.  Inspection  and  Re- 
view of  the  Corps  will  be  held  dur- 
ing drill  period  at  12:,30  p.m.  to- 
morrow. 

.'\t  the  inspection  of  the  drill 
field,  it  will  be  determined  wheth- 
er proper  military  trainins  has 
been  afforded  the  24.5  participants 
ir    the  program. 

Friday,  the  .\ngel  Squadron 
which  spon.sors  most  events  for 
the  detachment,  will  hold  a  tea 
in  the  Cadet  Lounge.  ITic  public 
has  been  invited  to  view  the  cere- 
monies  as   well    as   the    in^ipectioB 


^A6I  TWO 


THI  DAILY  TAR  HIIL 


W6DN€S0AY.  MAY  t.   1^57 


weoMtsi 


The  Progressive  Era: 
No  Time  For  Myopia 

*'MV.  /'/;  Ihf  l'nn>f}.sily.  have  the  ilele^^nted  duty  to  cnrry  forward  the 
work  of  llifsf  institutions  and  to  insure  the  greatest  level  of  excellence 
atldin/ihlc.  I'ogether,  ice  have  a  dut\  to  all  the  (ifople  of  \orth  Carolina 
to  meet  these  reslionsihilities  squarely  and  -without  hesitation." — Con- 
sol/dated  tnix-etsily  President  William  Clyde  Friday  nccef>ting  his  aj/- 
ft(nnfint'nt  last  l"(>.  ^ 

r*lii-  (ionM>li(lari;d   Inixfrsity  tnters  a  new  ProgTessive  Era. 
Piisidiiit   Willijtjii  C.  Friday  assumes  the  presidential  reins  today   in 
truMKuiies  be<>iinjing  at    u>:'{()  in  Reynolds  Coli&euni. 

W  iili  lii>  iiiau!4inaii(»n.  President  Fridav  climaxes  a  meteoric  rise  with- 
in liu    (lonNoiidatetl  I'niversitv  administrative  stheme: 

n  (.raduated  Ivoui  the  Tniversity  Law  School  in   194^  alter  a  tour 
of  dntv  duiing  World  War  11.  *  ^    ?,  I 

i_»!    Iinmediatelv    named    assist-      slipped  into  a  lefTiarsjv — a  lethargv 

oi  compla(en(\  from  whicii  the 
Intel!e<tnal  .Nljjijration'"  ol  intel- 
Jectnal  talent  trom  these  hallowed 
halls  is  watched  with  little  misap- 
prehension. 

rinis  the  time  is  overripe  for  a 
lorcelul  asseition  of  leadership. 
Polities  must  be  fornnilated  with 
lon<4-ranj>e  visTon  —  vision  which 
encompasses  and  takes  into  con- 
sideiation  intreasino  and  iniindat- 
in,o  enrollment:  vision  which  en- 
compasses the  ever  iitcreasing  in- 
adeqnacy  of  present  eduiatiiMial 
laiilities — both  physital  and  horn 
the   peisonnel   stand|)oint. 

Such  vision  must  nt)t  be  myop- 
ic. 


.ntt   10  the  dean  ol  students. 

(•{I  Chosen  b\  President  (Gor- 
don C.iay  as  his  personal  assistant 
in    iM*, I. 

(|)  Natned  (!(HisoHdated  Fni- 
\ersiiv   secretary   in   195.'). 

'-,)  .\p[>ointed  acting;  CI'  jnesi- 
dcin  in   Mar.   i<);,(i. 

(li)  Offitialtv  approved  presi- 
dent bv  the  Uoaid  of  Trustees  in 
Oct.    I »(-,<"). 

Snt  h  rapid  and  astronottiical  vise 
could  onlv  iiuiklfie  a  progressive 
anil   di-ditated    indnidnal. 

The  rni\ersitv.  North  C^arolina 
-State  .ind  Woman's  College  were 
consolidated    in    if);;  1    to: 

■  \\oi{l  ntniei  t;'i^ar\  dn|)li(  ;ttion 
and  iiMndinaie  state  higher  edu- 
cation more  effectively.** 

The  Ci»!i>oIidated  I'nhersLtv 
u.is  a  headless.  tri~aiine<l  monster 
.dfer  the  resignation  of  President 
(.ra\  in  jiinc.  U)",",.  A(tin*4  j>fesi- 
dents  wfie  onlv  a  transient  parade 
—  a  jKnade  whit h  was  fleetint^  and 
had  1-ttle  time  to  ((M>rdinate  and 
<  <»ns(tlidati  tlie  I 'ni\ersitv's  aims 
and   pm  po>t's. 

Now  the  I'nixersity  has,  at  last. 
.«  peimanent  head— a  head  who  is 
\«Mnin  —  onl\  '^<A-and  mav  grow 
and  prourevs  wiiii^the  Consolidat- 
e<I  l"ni\ersii\  —  a  head  \\h(»  (an 
pioxitle  a  (hn.niiu    •'iiidin<>   foice. 

Snthris  the  wh4'  leadership  we 
l<M»k    lor    from   President    }fri<i^yr 

I  he     new    ]>r^^tkt;'h^Mfi>^y 


ting    hitin-.     .He 
ftetletttul  at  tiv- 


i)iol>lc-ins     cohf 

nnist  toord'niatt' 

itv  at    t b I ee   ium-M(»nioy:eneoiis   in 

siituii(«|»»^—    Iri) 

viewpoint  at  AV 

ciiijineer's       ajwi 

xiewpoirtt  at  Nta 

the  lil)eiaiarts  1I 

du-   ItjiverNitv.     '^■ 

File  I'niversity  1ias.  through  the 
fanit    ol    no   jrirtit  iilar   individual, 


Dining  the  j)ast  decade,  the 
Consolidatetl  Universitv  has  been 
in  a  peritnl  of  transition,  perturb- 
ed by  the  }V>rt  es  of  tlesegregation: 
ever-grt)wing  economit  opptirt un- 
ities antl  lesnltain  etbitational  ad- 
vantages without  adetpiately  ac- 
t(»nnnodaiing  physital  fatilities:  a 
release  of  vt)uthfnl  manpt>wer  from 
stringent  uiilitarv  obligations  after- 
Worlfl  War  II:  .m  administrative 
personnel    tin ti-over. 

This  Periofl  of  liansition  must 
be  ((unerietl  iiut)  a  Progressive 
Kia. 

We  envision  Presitlent  Fridav  as 
the  lortefid  head  who  will  nnifv 
lite  iri-annetl  nionster  into  a 
shit)oth -flowing,  rapidlv  finution- 
irtg  etlut  ational  plant. 

The  eltler  statesmen  of  the  t  nr- 
renf  I'niversiiy  -^  ailininistration, 
uifietl.    poetit     Chaiuelloi     Rt>bert 


agricuUiir^lists 
>.  Carolina  State, 
h's  V  iewpt)iin  at 


The  Dally  Tar  Heel 


The  official  student  publication  of  the 
Publications  Boa.-^d  of  the  University  of 
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Entered  a.s  secontfM^ss  matter  in  the 
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Fditor                

-1+4- 

.    NEH    BASS 

Managing  Editor 

— 

BOB  HIGH 

Associate  Editor 

NANCY  HILI. 

Sports  Elditor 

BILL  KING 

Newv  Editor 

WALT  SCHRUNTEK 

Basine.sii  Manager 

JOHN 

C.  WHITAKER 

Advertising  Manager 

FRED  KATZIN 

the     wtunan's-^    t>imt)n    }i(>irse~  alTcT  conscieiitious 

ii's:Ci«»IJej{e-.  rhe       Business    .Manager  (Haude    Feagne 

are    reintiving    their    sure     hands 

frtun    the   helm.   They   have  funt- 

ti(med  snperioraily. 

But  the  new  tri-armed  etliica- 
tional  plant  must  progress.  Youth- 
ful leaders  nnist  institute  a  pt)licy 
of  adaptability— atlajjtabilitv  to  a 
whirling,   rapidly   prt)gre.ssing  age. 

Presitlent  Fritlav  must  begin  his 
athninistratitm  with  stutlies  of  the 
enrollmeiu  -  latilities  pioblesn. 
with  lemedial  attitm  It)  halt  the 
Intellettual  .Migratitm  t>f  prt)fes- 
.st)rs,  with  all-ent  t)mpassing  and 
lt)ng-range  planning,  with  tlynam- 
it  antl  effit  ient  leadership  which 
never  overlooks  the  human  ele- 
ment and  the  prtjblems  of  the  cur- 
rctu  stutlent  generation  and  those 
of  the  mt)rrt)ws'  generations. 

President  Friday  must  reaffirm 
his  faith  in  the  right  of  student 
self-gt)vernment:  stutlent  govern- 
ment must  take  its  jjlate  in  the 
new  Pit>giessive  F.ra  and  justify 
the  atlministratit)n's  reaffirmed 
faith. 

The  dvnamic  hand  of  William 
Clyde  Friday  is  at  the  helm. 

The  l^niversity  revt)lves  from 
transition   to  progress. 

It   must. 


NEWS  ST.^FF— Graham  Snyder,  Edith 
ifacKinnon.  Bob  High.  Ben  Taylor, 
Patsy  Miller.  Bill  King.  Sue  Atchison, 
Marv   Alys  V^orhees. 


EDIT  STAFF— Whit  Whitfield,  /»nthony 
Wolff.  Stan  Shaw. 

BU.SINESS  STAFF— John  Minter.  Mari- 
an aobet±,  Jane  -Patten,  Johnny 
Whitaker. 


SPORTS  STAFF:  Dave  Wible,  Stu  Bird, 
Ed  Rowland,  Jim  Crownover,  Ron 
Milligan. 

Subscription  Manager  Dale  Staley 


Circulation  manager 


Charlie  Holt 


Staff  Photographers  .- _  Woody  Sears, 

Norman  Kantor,  Bi^  King. 

Librarians  -  Sue  Gichier,  Marilyn  Strum 


-^ 


Night  News  Editor  T..: Bob  High 

Night  Editor ..i-?—  ilanley  &priDj^ 


Subsidy  For 
Bastardy? 

Uelinont  .Abbev  College's  Sen- 
ate assertetl  atlmirably  in  its  prtj- 
testation  to  mandatory  steriliza- 
tion of  women  who  prtKliue  two 
or    more    illegitimate   thildien. 

"Fhe  sterilizatitju  bill,  t  iineinlv 
being  considered  bv  the  (.eiieral 
Assembly,  is  an  attempt  to  curb 
an  age-t>lfl  prtjblem.  But  it  is  as- 
suredly a  iiigli-hantletl  antl  ditta- 
toiial  .solutittn. 

Legislators  niay  be  partially 
right  in  their  contentitm  that  the 
stale,  through  welfare  payments  to 
unwetl  motheis,  is  subsitli/ing  bas- 
taidy. 

But  like  Bel  Hit  Hit  Abbey,  we  ag- 
ree that  the  General  .Vssembly  is 
sttjmping  an  hallt>wetl  grf)und 
where  t>nly  God  should  tread. 

Ct>mpidst)rv  death  ftjr  the  aged 
and  mentally  unbalanced— which 
would  definitely  trim  the  stale's 
budget — mt»iii  be  next  in  line. 


WISE  AND  OTHERWISE; 

Russian  ^Open 
Skies/  That 
Tundra's  Great 

Whit  Whitfield 

The  Russians  have  finally 
come  through  with  a  decent 
proposal  in  a  Disarmament  Com- 
mission session. 

■The  proposal  is  something  like 
this:  in  return  for  the  right 
to  photograph  parts  of  \ve.stern 
Russia  (the  vodka  distilleries,  no 
doubt),  part.s  of  frozen  Siberia. 
Kamatchka  and  Sakhalin,  they 
ask  for  the  right  to  photograph 
all  of  the  western  United  States 
and  Alaska.  Now  this  is  a  fair 
deal  if  we  ever  heard  one.  Where 
else  could  be  found  people  more 
willing  to  cooperate  and  people 
more  willing  to  sacrifice  than  in 
the  Soviet   Union? 

Let's  look  at  the  advantages 
from   our  point-of-view. 

'   •  •  • 

The  distilleries  of  America 
could  at  last  get  a  bird's  eye  view 
of  their  competitors  in  the  So- 
viet. Quite  possibly  some  .Ameri- 
can producer  could  make  a  sale- 
able vodka  to  cut  down  on  im- 
ports. Maybe  we  could  see  the 
grainfields  and  the  collective 
farms  in  operation  too  if  we  are 
lucky. 


In  the  frozen  wastes  of  the 
Arctic  tmr  anthropologists  could  » 

see    the    native    populace   of    Si-  ^ 

beria  and   sjet  further  insight  in- 

to  their  culture;     our    zoologists    The  StudentS*  Forum.' 
could    find    immeasureable    data  ■'■"~'^'" 

on  thi'  fauna  of  the  region,  it 
there  is  any.  American  botanist- 
would  be  in  seventh  heaven 
studying  the  flora-  via  Kodak. 
National  Geographic  .sales  would 
soar.  Likewise  Field  and  Stream 
•  •  • 

Seeing  for  the  first  time  the 
unparalleled  beauty  of  the  Rus.s- 
ian  steppes,  the  Arctic  tundra 
and  the  beautiful  island  of  Sak 
halin.  thou:;ands.  yea.  millions 
of  .American  tourists  will  flock 
to  the  Soviet  Union  for  vacations. 

As  enterprising  as  the  Russ- 
ians are.  .someone  will  surely 
find  a  use  for  all  that  ice  and 
.snow.  Maybe  some  ingenious 
Russian  will  invent  skis  or  bob- 
sleds. 


Hot  Rod 


♦ 


Reader  Retorts  On  'Ailing  Ike/ 
Mary  Baldwin  Discusses  Drinking 


Not  the  least  amazing  are  the 
maritime  ports  on  the  eastern 
coast  and  the  fishing  villages. 
The  fishing  spots  on  Sakhalin 
are  a  source  of  wonder  to  all 
who  have  been  fortunate  enough 
to  see  them. 

All  this  we  may  take  advant- 
age of  should  we  care  to.  by  on- 
ly allowing  the  Russians  to  pho- 
tograph Las  Vegas  and  Seward  s 
Folly.  Besides,  seeing  the  gamb- 
ling cults  of  Vegas  will  e.xpose 
a  facet  of  our  culture  that  will 
only  befuddle  the  Ru.ssian  so- 
ciologists. 

Up   to   this   time    the    Russians 
have  dealt  squarely  with  the  rest 
of  the  nations  of  the  world.  Why 
shouldn't  we  trust   them  now? 
•  •  • 

They  say  the  tundra  is  beauti- 
ful this  time  of  vear. 


Dear   Sir: 

Yes.  the  world  was  made  in  six 
days,  but  you  forgot  to  mention 
the  important  distinction  that 
this  was  the  work  of  God  when 
you  so'  ignorantly  used  it  as  a 
Memo  To  Ike.  To  compare  the 
work  of  God  and  Mans  measly 
efforts  is  pur?  nonsense  and  ex- 
poses clear  misinterpretation 
from   the   beginning. 

Now  that  you're  straight  on 
that,  let's  get  straight  on. a  few 
more  things.  You  seem  to  be  con- 
vinced that  the  President  is  rap- 
idly becoming  a  useless  invalid 
who  is  only  able  to  fly  to  Augus- 
ta and  play  a  few  rounds  of  golf, 
and  make  groans  which  can  on- 
ly be  heard  as  slight  whimpprs 
in  the  Capitol  building.  I'm  sor- 
ry that  you're  so  misinformed. 
Merely  look  around  you  and  then 
reconsider  what  you  thipk  "Ail- 
ing Ike"  (to -quote  you)  is  doing. 
After  this  quick  observation, 
you'll  try  to  forget  that  you  men- 
tioned or  even  thought  that  Pres- 
ident Eisenhowers  ".second  term 
is  doomed  to  ignominious  failure 
unless  he  asserts  him.self  now." 
You'll  know  he's  been  asserting 
himself  all  along  in  a  sensi'bre 
and  intelligent  way.  and  instead 
of  taking  your  advice,  he's  long 
known  that  "Rome  wasn't  bifflt 
in  a  day." 
I     To    attack     the    President     on 


the  grounds  of  his  physical  con- 
dition is  about  the  best  you  can 
d:\  and  here  you  have  no  justi- 
fication what.soever.  Besides,  the 
President's  health  is.  and  should 
be.  purely  non-political,  and  it 
it  is  failing  is  simply  unfortunate 
for  us  all! 

A  Republican 
{ Self-explanatory., —  The    Edi- 
tor) 

•  •  • 

It  is  time  to  talk  about  the 
controversy. 

While  we  have  held  off  a  week 
or  two  since  the  subject  was 
first  broached  publicly  in  Stu- 
dent Board,  the  fortnight  of  pon- 
dering has  done  us  good. 

The  reai  trouble  is  not  wheth- 
er or  not  the  drinking  rule-hon 
or  system  is  fair  and  reasonable; 
the  real  trouble  is  we  don't  know 
why  we're  at  Mary  Baldwin.  And 
the  easiest  way  to  see  if  this 
isn't  true  is  simply  to  sound  out 
campus  opinion  on  this  being  a 
church  school.  For  at  least  three 
years  now.  we  feel  the  consensu.^ 
of  the  thought  of  any  group  on 
campus  h^s  been  that  "the  Pres- 
b>'terian  church  is  more  a  hin- 
drance to  our  social  life  than  a 
boost    to    our   education." 

Whether  or  not  that  is  true 
the  important  thing  seems  to  iTe 
that  there  is  certainly  our  atti- 
tude. At  that  classic  town  meet- 


ing we  had  last  week  what  was 
the  conversation  stopper.  What 
always  halts  any  optimistijc 
threats  against  the  drinking  rule? 
The  gentle  reminder  that  "this 
is  after  all  a  church  school  .  .  ." 
When  a  fair  estimate  of.  say,  80 
percent  of  the  student  body 
thinks  whole-heartedly  that  th« 
social  rules  should  be  changed 
somehow  (though  there  may  be 
80  different  ideas  how),  then 
how  can  such  a  reminder  help 
but  needle  their  morale  and. 
more  important,  regard  for 
church  affiliation? 

Every  girl  in  this  student  body 
must  have  known  first  before 
she  came  here  that  it  was  -a 
Church  School.  If  she  is  sur- 
prised now  at  the  effects  of  the 
same  fact,  and  if  she  resents 
that  much  influence,  then  we 
say  she  has  gone  to  the  wrong 
school  and  her  not  realizing  the 
fact  is  all  the  moe  proof  why 
she  shouldn't  be  here. 

Why  did  we  come  to  College 
anyway?  If  for  social  prestige, 
then  Sweet  Briar  or  HoUins 
either  one  could  give  more.  If 
for  an  education,  other  schools 
could  give  a  better  one  and  are 
certainly  cheaper.  Are  our 
neighbors  thinking  of  us  as  an 
institution  of  higher  learning  for 
women,  or  do  we  seem  merely  as 
'a  boarding  house  for  blind  iUti|B? 


Pogo 


By  Walt  Kelly 


D(eT>ou0fgN  t     

-I  i5r 

rnf  $HriRB$Mwr^yo^  « 

POHB  A  sogp«vrro^THAT, 
$03  TO  ei  rHfBB-ci^ 


/IN'  THJ  6H0Vei.PUt«  OF 
'6  l,296,619iT^i^5 


life  COVfg  m  UP  WHIL.6T 
Wg'6AWAV"' INCASE 


THE  SYRACUSE  DAILY  ORANGE: 

Myriad  Views  On 
Student  Apathy 

At  Oklahoma,  Virginia.  Michigan,  and  Kansas: 
at  North  Carolina,  Pittsburgh,  Albany  ^te.  and 
Cornell,  one  of  the  loudest  complaints  heard  from 
college^  is  apathy,  apathy  and  more  apathy. 

Few  want  to  run  for  office;  seventy-five  per 
cent  don't  want,  or  don't  bother,  to  vote.  Universi- 
ties wth  enrollments  of  sevoral  thousand  put  out 
a  literary  magazine  and  a  meager  few  hundr^ 
copies  are  sold. 

An  editorial  >headline  in  the  University  of 
North  Carolina  Daily  Tar  Heel  reads,  "DNC's  List 
less  Students  Don't  Even  Try  To  Learn." 

Utica  College's  Tangerine  pathetically  a^ks, 
"Does  Anybody  Care??"  And  Michigan  .State's  State 
News  attempts  to  shed  light  on  the  situatioa  ivitb 
an  editoral  entitled,  "Major  Crisis." 

North  Carolina  is  one  of  the  few  colleges  which 
blasts  apathy  from  the  standpoint  of  lack  of  interest 
in  study.  The  most  common  cry  ia*  an  attempt  lo 
tear-soak  at  least  one  handkerchief  per  paragraph 
in  a  "what's  the  use"  article  or  attempt  to  make  the 
reader  go  right  out  and  join  every  organization  on 
campus  with  a  "let's-get-on-thestick"  editorial. 

STANDING  BY  , 

Up  here  where  the  vale  of  Onondaga  meets  the 
Eastern"  Sky— and  we  all  get  lumps  in  our  throats 
at  the  thought — the  problem  is  evident  in  several 
fields.  The  afore-mentioned  literary  magazine's 
i'truggle  for  existence  is  a  major  one.  It  seems  oui 
intellectuals  are  too  busy  trimming  their  beards 
to  read. 

Of  course,  the  1956  football  season  could  hard- 
ly be  called  an  apathetic  effort,  but  how  about  the 
atendance  at  the  other  sports?  Cross  country— a 
nationally-rated  basketball  team — a  solid  gymnastic 
team,  and  a  better-than-average  wrestling  squad: 
all  performed  before  more  empty  seats  or  opposing 
fans  than  before  their  own  supporters. 

Then  there's  the  old  standby,  campus  politics. 
So  what's  the  use?  This  is  the  old  stand  by  lo  the 
standby.  We  won't  go  into  the  rah  rati  for  patrio- 
tism bit  for  that's  old  stuff.  But  just  because  it's 
old,  doesn't  necessarily  mean  it  is  ineffective  or 
outmoded. 

Let's  face  it:  the  majority  of  students  just  don't 
give  a  damn  about  anything  other  than  having  j 
blast.  They'd  rather  sit  back  and  crab  about  clique's 
and  big  shots  running  the  campits  than  do  any 
thing  about  it  themselvca-.  The  obvious  trouble  is 
that  many  of  our  intellectual  individualists  haven't 

the  guts  to  be  what  they  claim. 

.  ■ . .  i 
FOR  ACTION  '  [j 

It  appears  reasonable  to  .say,  after  careful  ob-  '< 
servation,  that  the  majority  of  our  individualists 
are  content  to  talk  about  it  and  do'hothiag.  So 
someone  doesn't  like  the  way  things -«re  beii^  »«». 
Does  he  go  to  a  party  convention  and  ttjf  U^r 
the  nofninatic^n?  At  least  his  views  would  be  i«ard. 
Or  if  thiif  isn't  the  path  chosen,  a  word  or  two  with 
a  governmental  officer  can  do  wonders.  Most  camp- 
us officers  are  wondering  what  tkeir  constituent^ 
think. 

"If  this  hadn't  happened  at  least  a  dozen  times 
before,  we  could  say  it  was  spring  iever,  traditional 
spring  term  slump,  or  the  call  of  the  beaches  that 
caused  it.  We  can  blame  it  on  almost  an>'thing  we 
want — but  it  all  boils-  down  to  student  apathy,"  ^aid 
the  Michigan  State  publication  in  reference  to  the 
status  of  politics  on  the  Spartan  campus.  The  situ- 
ation there  was  so -bad  that  at  the  time  the  editorial 
was  written  there  were  more  governmental  posi- 
tions open  than  petitions  filed  for  them! 

ANO  JOINT  STUOEHT  GOVERNMENT 

Fortunately,  the  Syracuse  case  isn't  this  bad. 
In  fact,  people  who  could  be  called  liberals  have 
been  moving  student  government  forward  by  a^ikin^ 
for  and  getting  more  power.  And  of  course,  the 
move  to  Joint  Student  Government  is  definitely  pro- 
gress. 

Although  not  talked  up  as  much  as  campus 
politics,  the  struggles  of  student  literary  magazines 
is  constant  throughout  most  of  the  nation.  At  Stock- 
ton College  in  California  the  student  literary  maga- 
zine waj  forced  to  fold  because  of  revenue  diffi- 
culties. 

On  the  other  side  of  the  fence,  the  University 
of  Massachusetts  Quarterly  is  fortunate  enough  to 
have  cmopetition  for  publication  in  its  pages.  Tl»e 
New  York  University  Perstare  is  subsidized  by  the 
university  and  their  biggest  gripe  is  the  m^atertal 
which  appears  in  print.  There, again,  the  complain- 
ers  complain,  but  do  little. 

The  editors  of  the  Syracuse  Review  have  beg- 
ged for  copy.  Articles,  fiction,  poems — all  have  beer, 
asked  for  by  the  Review  staff.  Yet  they  have  been 
far  from  flooded  with  copy.  Where  are  our  intellec- 
tuals with  their  teeming  brains?  Or  are  their  chins 
teeming  more  than  theu-  craniums? 
AND  ARISTOTLE 

When  surveying  a  situation  such  a.v  exists  on 
the  American  campus  today,  it  is  easy  to  become 
cynical  and  pessimistic;  however,  when  one  Stops  to 
consider  that  a  university  is  nothing  more  than  a 
cross  section  of  American  life,  it  does-  not  appear 
to  be  so  bad. 

We  will  always  have  a  few  intellectuals  and  we 
will  always  have  a  lot  more  phonies.  Each  genera- 
tion somehow  seems  to  produce  .someone  outstand- 
ing. An  Aristotle,  a  St.  Augustine,  a  Spinoza,  a  Kant 
and  a  Mill  always  show  up,  a>Mally  to  be  appreci- 
ated by  later  generations  and  not  their  own. 

Apathy  will  continue  and  the  Siyracuse  Citizen- 
ship Department  will  strive  to  overcome  it.  But-ew^h 
new  crop  of  students  at  Piety  Hill  will  include  tlie 
rich  and  the  poor,  the  ambitious  and  the  iazy,  tl*e 
bright  and  the  none-to-bright,  the  'vinners,"  the 
•losers,"  and  the  lucky.  The  unfortunate  at  time^ 
seems  to  be  everywhere. 

More  people  will  read  The  Daily  Mirror  than 
The  New  York  Times,  and  more  people  mil  read 
the  Syracusan  than  the  Syracu»ie  Keview.  Pretty  or 
not,  the  facts  of  life  on  dear  old  terra  firnu  are 
what  they  are. 

And  one  of  them  is  certain:  .more  people  will 
complain  than  attempt  to  do  something  about  %a 
undesirahle  situation. 


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Preview:  Jazz,  'Rex 


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ANTHONY   WOLFF 


TELEVISION  TQNIGHT 

8:00— Channel  2— "Flesh  And  Blood"  with   Tommy  Sands.  This  pro-   MEDICAL  MEETING 

Dr.  Walter  Hollander  Jr 


Covering  The  Univers'rty  Cannpus 


'Peer  Gynt'  Instruction 


Composer  Joel  Chadabe  goes  over  some  points  in  the  script  for  ."Peer  Gyr»t"  with  Page  Williams. 
Chadabe,  a  sophomore  music  major  from  New  York,  wrote  the  score  for  the  Carolina  Playmaker  pro- 
duction and  set  the  orchestration  for  a  fifteen  piece  orchestra,  which  he  conducts.  He  is  also  direct- 
ing the  chorus  for  the  show.  '  King-Sears  photo— Woody  Sears. 


I  in  Raleigh.  All  UNC  students  h^ve 
bably  will  not  be  much  good,  but  Master  Sands  i^ems  to  be  the  i  l>r.  waiter  ttouanoer  jr.  of  the  j  been  invited  to  attend  the  ceije- 
new  idol.  Although  Elvis  may  have  his  faults,  Sands  looks  weak  { School  of  Medicine  here  will  dis-  monies  which  begin  at  -10:^0  p.m. 
by  comparison.  Maybe  he  wiU  prove  to  be  the  converse  of  the  cuss  "The  Effect  of  Potassium  |  PAPERS  PRESENTED 
rule— an  actor  who  cannot  sing.  At  any  rate,  the  producers  pro- 1  Depletion  on  the  Kidney"  before  » |  Four  papers  y/ere  presented  by 
mise  that  Tommy  will  launch  a  new  hit  on  this  show,  hoping,  j  meeting  of  the  Medical  Society  of ;  faculty  members  of  the  UNC 
obviously,  to  repeat  the  stunt  they  pulled  with  the  TV-previewed  j  North    Carolina    in    AshevUle    to-    School  of  Pharmacy  at  the  recent 

day.  I  convention  of  the  American  Phar- 

The  four-day  meeting  which  got  i  maceutical  Assoc,  in  New  York.  At- 

underway  Sund^  is  the  103rd  an-  j  tending  the  conference  were:  Dr. 

nual  meeting  of    the    society.  Dr.  |*f.    c.    Hammernes^.     Dr.    H.     O. 

Hollander  is  one  of  17  staff  mem-  \  Thompson,   Dr.   E.   A.   Brecht,   Dr. 

bers    of    the    School  of  Medicine  j  Nicholas  H.   Batuyos  and  Dr.  Ben 

here   who   is    taking    part    in    the' Cooper. 

statewide  meeting. 

RESEARCH   MEETiNG  ATTENDING  CONFERENCE 

Dr.   Dorothy   C.   Adkins,   Chaur- 


President    Friday 


(Coiuinned  from  page  1)  I  in  North  Carolina's  "Piedmonl| 
are  the  S527.000  Ford  Foundation!  Crescent."  and  the  participation 
supported  study  in  urban  prob-i  by  Slate  College  and  the  Uni- 
lems.    especially    those    noticeable '  versity  at   Chapel  Hill   in  the  Re- 


scientific-eco- 
that  promises 
for   economic 


DAILY    CROSSWORD 


ACROSS 

1.  Storm 
5.  Dressed  . 
9.  Tree 
10  Exterior 

12  Pays 
attention 

13  A  relative 

14.  Hail! 

15.  Donkey 

16.  Printer's 
measure 

17.  Repentant 
refret 

20  Weight 
(Siam) 
21.  Baseness 
23.  Plant  louaw 

26.  Narrow 
strips 

27.  Lagger 

29.  Anger 

30.  Very  young 
child 

84.  And  (L.) 

35.  Pigpen 

36.  ConsteU«« 
Uon 

37.  Of  the  note 
'  39.  Evade 

'41.  Bondsman 

42.  Forces 

'       onward 

43.  Snow 
vehicle 

44.  Require 

DOWK 

1.  Female 
sand- 

•    piper 

2.  Revoke 

3.  Wander 
about 
idly 


.  4.  Bitter 
vetch 

5.  Agreed 

6.  Man's 
name 
(Sp.) 

7.  Consumed 

8.  Death 

9.  Scorch 
11.  Negligent 
15.  Man's 

name 

18.  Leave 
out 

19.  Colonized 
again 


20.  Vim 

22.  Fra- 
grant 
oint- 
ment 

23.  Foreign 
ers 

24.  Doors 

25.  Hasten 

28.  Cow- 
boy 
Rogers 

31.  Big 

32.  Blundered 

33.  Beams 
35.  Keep 


nam  ldhs  [iwh 


Tcit«r4ar'a  Aa*ww 

38.  Salt 

39.  Play  on 
words 

40.  Exist 


"Teen  Age  Crush." 

9:00 — Channel  2 — Jazz  SpactacuUr:  Ellington's  "A  Drum  :*s  A  Woman." 
This  is  an  important  first  for  television,  a  landmark  in  the  his- 
tory of  iazz,  and  a  major  musical  event.  Besides  writing  some 
of  the  Classics  of  American  popular  music  ("Take  The  'A'  Train," 
"Mood  Indigo,"  "Don't  Get  Around  Much  Any  More,"  etc.),  Duke 
Ellington  is  also  one  of  America's  finest  composers  for  the  con- 
cert stage. 

Tonights  show  is  the  premier  of  Ellington's  first  concert  work 
in  too  many  years,  presented  as  a  visual  entertainment  with  >he 
dance  used  to  aid  in  telling  the  story.  "A  Drum  Is  A  Woman' 
is  Ellington's  conception  of  the  development  and  the  nature  of 
jazz. 

THINGS  TO  LOOK  FOwJpD  TO 

MOVIES— "Oedipus  Rex*  • 

This  is  the  wrong  t^e  in  the  semester  to  be  tempted  by  worth 
while  .films,  but  there  seems  to  be  an  abundance  of  them 
'  IVelve  Angry  Men,"  'Richard  HI,"  and  Lust  For  Life"  are  just 
departed:  coming  to^he  Varsity  on  Sunday  is  "Qedipus  Rex." 
The  film  is  a  faithtul  reproduction  of  the  production  given  at 
Stratford.  Ontario,  with  the  same  cast  and  setting.  Direction  is 
by  Tyrone  Guthrie. 

THEATRE— "Peer  Gynt"      .         '' 

Starting  f  ric<4y  evening  and  continuing  through  the  weekend  is 
the  Playmaker's  production  of  Ibsen's  "Peer  Gynt",  presented  in 
the  Forest  Theatre. 

Quite  apart  from  local  enthusiasm,  this  is  an  event  in  the 
theatre:  Director  Kai  Jurgenson  has  used  his  own  translation  of 
the  work,  coupled  with  original  music  and  dance,  all  set  against 
sonie  imfginative  scenery,  to  produce  his  version  of  "Peer." 
Weatlvtr  permitting,  there  are  few  better  ways  to  spend  a  sum- 
mer evening. 


1:00  Today  Onfi^e  Farm 

1:30  Career  For  You 

2?e0  Sign  Off 

5:14  Sign  On  41 

5:15  Music 

5:^0  lyiathematics 

6:00  Legislative  Review 

6:20  News  And  Safety 

6:30  Water  Magic 

7:00  Industrial  Artisan 

7:30  Down   Under 

8:00  Carolina  Churches 

8:30  Russia:  Past  and  Present 

9:00  Russia:  Past  and  Present 

9:30  Goggles  And  Gauntlets 

9:45  Pacific  Pioneers 

Final   Edition 

Sign  Off 


Dr.  Roy  E.  Carter  Jr.  of  the  I  ^^-  ^"^  ""•>  ^-  '^i'^"".  v.««tx-  io:20 
School  of  Journalism  and  Institute]  '"an  of  the  Dept.  of  P.-ychology  ;  io:05 
for  Research  in  Social  Science  will  *'"  ^^  '^'"'''"^  ^  Chairman  of  a  pel L OWSMip 

be  in  Washington.  D.  C,  this  week  symposium  on    'Oral  Interviews  in  ,  CHRISTIAN   FELLOWSHIP 

Personnel   Section"   this   week   at  i     ^he   Carolina  Christian    Fellow- 

the  Southern  Regional  Conference!   ,_..,,  .     ^  „  .    • -^u,  •» 

i-  *u     r.  ui-     T>  1    A     .V       4   ship  will  meet  at  7  p.m.  tonight  in 

of  the  Public  Personnel  Assoc,  at        *^ 


fpr  the  £uinual  meeting  of  the 
American  Ai«soc.  for  Public  Re- 
search Opinion.  He  will  read  a  pa- 
per entitled  "The  Reporter  and 
the  News  Source." 
INAUGURATION 

William  Friday  will  be  inaugu- 
rated as  president  of  the  Con- 
solidated University  of  North  Car- 
olina today  in  Reynolds  Cqliseum 


search    Triangle,    a 
nomic  social  agency 
to   be    a   wellspring 
development  in  the  slate  and  reg- 
ion. 

8.  President  Friday  has  made 
significant  appointments,  among 
them  being  two  Chancellors  al 
two  institutions  of  the  Consoli- 
dated University,  and  another  be 
ing  the  appointment  of  a  •  vice 
president  in  charge  of  graduate 
studies  and  research,  the  latter 
I  displaying  the  importance  he  at- 
taches to  the  role  of  graduate  re 
search  in  the  life  of  the  three 
fold  University. 

In  both  the  first  and  the 
i  eighth  of  the  list  of  accomplish 
ments  written  here,  emphasis  i^ 
placed  on  President  Friday's  de- 
termination to  put  academic 
achievement  and  scholarly  excell- 
ence at'  the  top  of  his  goals  for 
his  Presidency  of  the  University. 
Friday  is  an  administrator  who  re- 
lies upon  constituted  members  of 
the  faculties  of  the  three  institu- 
tions— in  the  colleges,  the  schooU 
and  departments — for  counsel  on 
vital  academic  aspects  of  Univers 
ity  life.  He  has  already  put  into 
motion  machinery  for  .selecting 
men  and  ideas,  and  it  is  already 
apparent  that  the  University  will 
be  characterized  by  both  team- 
work and  leadership  under  his 
administration. 

Bill  Friday  is  laboring  mightily 
on  that  address  right  now. 

Many  North  Carolinians,  all  the 
members  of  the  faculties  of  the 
University,  and  many  others,  will 
be  following  the  words  of  his  in- 
augural address  for  sign.s  of  what 
he  intends  to  do.  and  what  are 
his  aspirations  for  the  University. 

But  one  or  two  advance  indica- 
tiojis  of  what  he  is  going  to  do 
are  obvious.  A  look  at  his  record 
in  a  little  more  than  a  year  show.s 
clearly  that  the  University  of 
North  Carolina  has  a  man  of  vis- 
ion, of  dedication  to  academic  ex 
cellcnge  and  devoted  adherence 
to    democratic    education. 


Monday  N  ight  Is  Bridge 
Night  For  Many  In  GM 

All  is  quiet.  Play  has  begun,  and  |  as  all  other  E-W  pairs  do  not  pre 
bridge  pairs  are  hotly  contesting  j  vent  their  declares  from  making 
or  part-score,  game,  and  slam  |  an  overtrick — then  E-W  pair  5  has 
contract.?.  "Six  no  trump!"  thun- !  "beat  the  field"  and  got  a  top 
ders  a  familiar  voice  across  the  i  score  for  that  particular  board, 
.•oom.  All  turn  their  heads.  Some  The  Carolina  Bridge  Club  meets 
smile  affectionately.  Others  nod  regularly  each  Monday  night  at 
their  heads  doubtfully.  Its  another  |  7:30  p.m.  at  Graham  Memorial.  B\  \  an  attempt    to  determine  whether 


Mitchell  G6ts 
$5,906  G]-afit 

The  United  States  Public  Health 
Service  has  granted  $5,906  to  Dr. 
David  L.  Mitchell  of  the  Univer- 
sity of  North  Carolina  School  of 
Medicine,  Department  of  Anat- 
omy. 

The  money  will  be  used  for  a 
jne  year  .study  of  how  the  salivary 
glands  effect  dental  caries  (tooth 
decay). 

Specific  objectives  of  the  pro- 
posed study  are  two  fold.  One  as- 
pect isr  an  attempt  to  determine 
the  extent  to  which  cellular  fea- 
tures of  a  salivary  gland  are  re- 
lated to  the  products  of  its  secre- 
tary activity.  The  other  aspect  is 


EIdge"water  Park,  Miss. 


Hill  Hall,  it  waa-  announced  yester- 
!  day.  Mr.  W.  Detwiler,  pastor  of  the 
WUNC-TV  I  Drive  Ave.  Gospel  Center  in  Dur- 

Today's  .schedule  for  WUNC-TV,  I  ham  will  speak  on  "The  Difference 
the  University's  educational  tele  '  Between  Being  Religious  and  Re- 
vision station,  is  as  follows:  ing  A  Christian. "  The  public  has 
12:46     Music                                           been  invited  to  attend. 


ROTC  MEN 


For  Your  Summer  Cruise 
Bermans  Has: 

Black  &  Brown  Crosby  Shoes 

(A  to  D  Width) 

Khaki  &  Black  Socks 

White  Underware  Shorts 

;:  And  Tee  Shirts 

'■ .  Large  White  Navy  Towels 

BERMANS 

DEPARTMENT    STORE 
OPEN   ALL   DAY  WEDNESDAY 


light   of  Duplicate  bridge  at   Gra 
lam  Memorial. 


Each  Monday  night  is  the  night 
for  bridge  addicts,  and  students, 
acuity  members,  and  towns  peo- 
ple gather  downstairs  at  G.M.  foi 
.mother  nerve-wracking  s^^vsiQii  of 
duplicate  bridge. 

".  For  a  few  short  hours,  a  small 
number  of  pairs  will  compete  rab- 
bidiy  for  thin  pink  fraotional 
Master  Point  slip  awards — infin- 
tesimally  small  stepping  stones  to 
the  most  coveted  prize  of  all  for 
bridge  players  eminence  and  rec- 
jgnitinn  as  a  Life  Ma.ster  Bridge 
Player. 

Actually  the^f  pink  slip's  are  not 
[he  real  lure.  The  game  itself  is 
the  lure.  Bridge  is  a"  dueling, 
grueling,  highly  competitive,  not- 
always-social,  intellectual  game. 

It  demands  closest  attention  and 
cooperation  by  partners.  If  one 
dips,   both  slip.   And   because   the 


\  a  recent  change  of  policy,  all  Car- 
I  olina  or  Duke  students  are  invited 
I  to  play  free  as  gue.^is  of  the  cluh 
'  on  all  but  the  third  Monday  night. 
j  That  night  is  Club  Master  Point 
i  night,  and  all  participants  are 
I  welcomed,  but  all  must  pay  a  nom- 
j  inal  entry  fee  fo  50c. 

THIS  WEEK'S  WINNERS 
j        1st:  4Ar.  Johnny  Bt.elock  &  iMr. 
-\    N.  O.  O'Brient. 

2nd:  Mr.  and  Mrs.  M.  A.  Roy 
croft. 
I        3rd:  Mr.  and  AArs.  Paul  Smith. 


DUPLICAT€   BRIDGE 

Each  Monday  Night 

Graham  Men^oriai 

7:30-10:45 


Ceremonies 


(Continued  from   page   1) 


certain  constituents  of  saliva  are 
consistently  associated  with  den- 
tal caries. 

Dental  caries  are  known   to  oc- 
cur with   varying  severity   among 
different   people,   and    usually   oc 
ours    with     varying     incidence 
throughout  the  life  of  any  one  in* 
I  Jividual.  The  disease  may  be  com- 
I  pietely  absent  in  some  mouths. 
The  funds  granted  will   be  used 
to  determine  whether  the  salivarj 
constituents     are     in     fact     active 
agents     in     the     development     of 
caries  or  in  resistance  to  caries. 

Dr.  Mitchell  is  a  native  of  Can- 
ion,  N.  C.  He  attended  Duke  Uni- 
verjity,  and  received  his  D.D.S. 
degree  from  the  University  of 
North  Carolina  School  of  Dentis- 
try in  1956. 


"PROJECT   HEALTH" 

The  "Project  Health  '  television 
show  will  originate  from  the  kit- 
chens of  Memorial  Hospital  Fri- 
day, it  was  announced  recently. 
The  program  will  be  staged  by  the 
Dietary  Dept.  of  Memorial  Hospit 
in  connection  with  National 
•'Hospital  Week  (May  12-18).  The 
program  will  explain  how  food  is 
bought,  stored,  cooked  and  served 
in  a  modern  hospital.  It  will  also 
describe  dietitiana-  who  run  the 
kitchens  and  something  of  their 
duties. 


game  is  so  ego-invoiving,  tempers 
sometimej  flare.  Friendships  and  by  the  State  College  Band,  direct- 
marriages  quaver  in  disputes  |  ed  by  Christian  D.  Kutschinske 
about  the  proper  play  (or  improp  and  Robert  A.  Barnes:  University 
er  misplay)  of  bridge  hands.  i  of   North   Carolina   Band,   directed 

But  if  it  is  the  game  that  severs  by  Herbert  W.  Fred;  and  Woman's 
partnerships     momentarily,     it     is ;  College    Band,    directed    by    Mi^-s 


also  the  game  which  draws  them 
back  again  and  again  into  irresis- 
table  combat  for  pasteboard  kingo 
and  queens.  And  what  was  last 
week's  tragedy  becomes  this 
week's  triumph. 

Rubber  bridge  players  who  have 
not  converted  to  Duplicate  play 
are  in  for  a  real  treat.  Here  is  a 
game  where  card  holdings  do  not 


Sara  L.  Holroyd. 

The  combined  choral  groups  ol 
the  Consolidated  'TJniversity,  di- 
rected by  Robert  M.  Morris,  will 
sing  "Now  Let  Every  Tongue 
Adore  Thee." 

There  will  be  an  informal  recep- 
tion for  delegates  and  guests  fol- 
lowing the  inauguration.  A  lunch- 


matter.   Bridge  pairs  all   play  the  ;  eon  will  also  be  held  far  delegates, 
same  hands,   and  comparisons  are   trustees,  legislators,    faculties  and 


made  only  between  pairs  playing 
the  ^•ame  holding  of  cards. 

If  E-W  pair  No.  5,  for  example, 
is  defending  against  a  small  slam 


other  invited  guests. 

Inaugural  chairmen  of  the  Con- 
^•olidated  University  campuses  are 
Charles  W.  Phillips,  Woman's  Col- 


and  successfully  prevents  declarer   lege;  James  Godgrey,  UNC;  George 
from  rnaking  an  overtrick — where    A.  Gullette,  State  College. 


Wandering  Serenade 
By  Ffidtej-nity  Group 

A  group  of  between  20-30  Sig 
E)p'.?,  led  H&y  George  Ballard  anc 
his  guitar,  provided  a  wandering 
serenade  program  for  girls  in  tht 
Tri  Delt,  Alpha  Gamma  Delta, 
Kappa  Delta  and  Chi  Omega  soror- 
ity houses  Monday,  according  to 
an  announcement  released  yester- 
day from  Jim  Westbrook. 

The  minstrel-sty  I9  imprompti 
program  drew  a  wonderful  re 
spon.se  from  the  distaff  audience 
in  the  four  houses,  .Westbrook 
jaid.  The  Sig  Ep  group  sang  num 
bers  of  a  traditional  Carolina  pa 
ture  and  on  occasion,  according  U 
members  of  their  audience,  at 
tempted  vocalizations  in  a  mort* 
popular  mode. 


■■^"■SP" 


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THt  DAILY  TAR  HIH 


-WEOMESDAY^  MAY  1,  1fS7 


Carolina  Beaten  8-6  As  Wake  Forest  Rallies  In  Ei 


Tar  tteels  Still  Have 
Chance  As  Duke  Loses 


MVINSTON-SALEM  —  (AP)  — 
The  Wake  Forest  Deacons  rallied 
for  four  big  runs  in  the  last  of 
th?  eighth  inning  to  hand  the 
Carolina  Tar  Heels  an  S-*  defeat 
•t  Ernie  Shore  Field  here  yester- 
day. 

Jack  McGinley,  who  relieved 
starter  John  Stokoe  during  a  four 


pitched  well  until  he  gave  up  a 
double  to  George  Miller  to  open 
the  Deacon  eighth.  Coach  Walt 
:£labb  then  called  on  Joe  Morgan 
T»ho  pitched  to  one  man.  Then 
big  Tom  Maultsby  came  on  for 
Carolina  and  was  charged  with 
the  l«ss. 


frosh  Nine 
Splits  With 
Deaclets 


By   ED  ROWLAND 

The    freshman     baseball 
split 


Netters  Defeat  Duke,  9-0; 
Tourney  Starts  Tomorrow 


By  JIM  CROWNOVER 

The  Carolina   tennis   team   clos- 


team 
a  doubleheader  with  the 
.Wake  Forest  frosh  here  yesterday 
Carolina's  big  rally  c^me  in  the  I  jftemoon^  losing  the  opener,  4-3, 
run  Carolina  rally  in  tl%  fourth  j  second  and  fourth  innings  ^'l»eD  I  ^^^j  tajfi^g  the  nightcap,  5-4.  The 
inning,  proved  a  one  mail  wreck-  they  rapped  Stokoe  for  four  runs  gg^ies  brou^t  the  frosh  record  to 
ii  crew  as  he  drove  in  four  of  i  ,      ' 

th-   Deacons'   runs,   scored   anoth-  '"^  OOX: 

er  and   pitched  fin&'  ball  for  the  >  CAROLINA 


Ab 

5 

3 

4 
3 
4 
4 
3 
4 
3 
0 
0 
1 


O 

1 
2 
14 
0 
0 
1 
0 
6 
0 
0 
0 
0 


remainder  of  the  contest.  jHartman,  3b  

The     loss,     however,     did     °o*  Lewis    2b      

1  nock   the  Tai  Heels  out  of  con-  \  j  jj^jj    jj, 

tontion     for    the    Atlantic    Coast  j  shook  If  „  

Conference    championship    as    the '  jj^jjeygy^t^   gg   

loa^me-Ieading    Duke    Blue    E>«vils  |  gyji^^jj    ^f  

finished  their  season  by  dropping  p    jjjji^  ^f 

a  7-6  decision   to  North   Carolina  j  i^gette,  c ,_- 

S"atc.  This  made  the  Blue  Devils  j  ngugh,   p 

10-4.  Carolina  is  now  8-4  with  two    jiOTgan,  p    

jiamcs  to   play.   Two   wins   would  j  Maultsby,  p  ^._^ ^ 

aivc  the  Tar  Heels  a  tie  for  first  i  i>.pons      _.-...^::i . 

>lacc   and   make  a  playoff  nec*s-                              •    .   —    ^-     — 
.<ary.  Tettis    lL-'J...^ -84      i    24 

Mc<;;inley    held    the    Tar    Heels 
iitlcss   and    scoreless   through   the'vv.  FOREST        .'     Ab     H 

'ast  five  innings  of  the  game  and  j  Murdock,  c   ,_  4      1 

^lammed   a   three-run  hamer  over  j  Barnes.    3b    ._: 4      0 

he    leftfield    fence    in    the    sixth   g.   Miller,  rf  ..     .. .  4      1 

■  0  cut    the   Carolina   lead   to  6-4.   McMillan.   If   -  3      1 

It  had  led  going  into  the  intiing.'a-M  Miller 0      0 

In  the  eighth  inning,  McGinley  j  wiliams,  If 0      0 

>ingled    in    the    second   run    of   a   Phillips,   lb   2      0 

Wake  Forest  rally  to  tie  the  score   Baker,  2b  .. _ 3       0 

at   6-3    Then   John   Stokoe    hit   a   Bulkrd,  cf  1      0 

wo  run  doubl?  that  broke  up  the    McGinley,  p  3       2 

?ranie.  Moore,  ss   4       2 

Carolina     starter     Jim     Raugh  Stokoe,  p-cf  ... 4      2 


O 

12 
0 
2 
0 
0 
0 
8 
2 
0 
1 
1 
1 


13-7-1 
A  two-run  triple  by  Ty  Clayton, 
A    his  second  of  the  afternoon  in  the 
3 '  last   inning   of    the    second  game 
2   tied  the  score,  then  a  wild  pitch 

0  by  Pascal  gave  the  Tar  Babies  the 

1  victory.  Basccf  on  balls  to  Larry 
5  Craver  and  Frank  Montgomery 
0 !  had  put  the  tying  runs  on  base. 

0  Wake  Forest  gained  a  4-run 
0  lead  in  the  second  game  before 
2 1  Carolina  scored  after  Tommy 
0  I  Saintsing  dropped  a  two-run  fly  in 
0  the  fifth  to  pad  the  Deaclet's  lead. 
0       The  opener  was  a  hard  game  for 

Tar  3aby    ace    Wayne    Young    to 

]3 1  lose.  He  famed  ten,  gave  up  only 
{  four   hits   and    walked   none,    but 
five    Carolina    errors    handed    the 
game  away. 

Carolina  scored  two  runs  in  the 
fourth  inning  of  the  opener  on 
singles    by    Vaughn    Bryson    and 


Denton.  6-4,  4-6.  6-2. 
TOURNEY    PLAY 

Team-wise    the    conference    ten- 
ed  out  its  regular  season  yester- ,  ^.^  ehampio^ship  is  sewed  up  in 
day  afternoon  in  a  whirlwind  fin-    ^^^    ^^^^^   ^j   Maryland,   but   the 
ish.  as  they  clobbered  the   WoLf- 
pack   of  State  College,  9-0. 

The  Tar  Heels  played  their  best 
tennis  of  the  season  in  this  their 
final  match  losing  only  two  sets 
the  whole  day. 


Carolina  Trackmen  Preparing 
For  Conference  Meet  f  riday 


Bob  Lemon  needs  only  one 
more  homerun  to  break  the  pit- 
cher's record  of  3l  homers  in  a 
lifetime. 


By  DAVE  WIBLE 

Friday  is  ACC  track  meet  time 

for  Carolina  and  Tar  Heel  coaches 

Dale  Ranson  and  Joe  l^ilton   are 

.  . ,    ,     .  .     t^"tSr~ !  busily   getting  ready  for  the  big 

indivdual    champion   is   far   from  '  .*»         »  x 

"  event  m  which   many  conference 


being  conceded  to  anyone  as  the 
ACC  tourney  begins  play  tomor- 
row afternoon  on  the  Duke  Uni- 
versity courts. 

The    t^r    Heel    ftetters    led    by 
These  two  closer  matches  were   g^pyeBank,  who^is  undefeated  in 

the  conference  will  be  very  much 
in    contention    throughout    the    3- 


in    the    fpurth    singles   and    tliird 
doubles  encounters.  Ray  Newsome 


was  pushed  to  defeat  Ed  Dye,  9-7.  ^j^^  ^g^j  ^J^^  ^as  defeated  the 
2-6,  6-2.  and  the  Tom  Mclver- ,  ^^,,5,^^  ^^^  ^^^^  ^j  ajj  ^CC 
Canie  Smith  doubles  combo  de-lg^jj^^,^  ^.j^jj  ^jjg  exception  of 
feated  Harr>-  Beatty  and  Don  Den-  j  ^^^^     ^,^^.^5^     ^jjj,     ^j^^^^     ^^^ 


ton  6-4,  4-6,  6-2. 

The    match    of    the    day    found 
Steve   Bank.   Carolina    chief   hope 
in   the    ACC    tourney    coming    up 
this  weekend,  being  pushed  to  do-  j 
feat     State's     determined     sopho-  i 
more     hopeful     Mickey     Solomon,  i 
6-4.    7-5.    Bank    played    below    his 
usual  game,  having  frequent  trou- 


match  was  cancelled. 

The  drawings  for  seeding  in  the 
tourney  will,  take  place  tonight  at 
Duke.  This  will  determine  which 
netters  will  be  seeded  -in  the  64- 
man  field. 

Coach  Valdimir  CernQc  will  be 
on  hand  tonight  when  the  draw- 
ing takes  place,  and  according  to 


ble  with  his  serve.  Bank,   howev- j  j^j^^-   ..g^^j^  j^  ^  ,i^^,y  ^^^^^^  j^^ 


er,  showed  up  well  in  the  doubles 
and  is  expected  to  be  in  top  form 
for  the  ACC  competition  begin-_ 
ning  at  Duke  Thursday. 
THE  SUMMARY 
Singles:  Bank  (C)  defeated  Sol- 
omon, 6-4.  7-5.  Black  (C)  defeated 


records  are  destined  to  falL 

Through  the  season,  nine  con- 
ference marks  have  been  bettered 
but  conference  records  must  be  set 
at  the  conference  meet. 

Carolina  oas  nad  a  greaf  de^ 
to  do  with  those  bettered  marks 
by  way  of  Jim  Beatty,  Diive  Scur- 
lock,  aiM  the  mile  relay  team. 
Beatty  bettered  hiar  own  confer- 
ence record  time  in  the  mile  at 
the  Carolina-Maryland  meet  when 
he  ran  a  4:06.6.  He  has  also  bet- 
tered the  2-mile  conference  rec- 
ord of  9:25.3.  At  the  Penn  Relays 
Beatty  covered  the  distance  in 
9:01.7. 

Scurlock,  who  will  be  running  ie 
the  ACC  meet  for  the  first  time, 
has  bettered  the  conference  mark 
in  the  880.  He  has  run  a  1:52'.8. 
Defending  champion  Carle  Party 
of  Maryland  has  al^  bettered  his 
last  year's  time  with  a  1:53.8.  Ljist 


don  a  Duke  track  suit  to  defend! 
his  conference  marks  for  two  of. 
the  three  records  he  hold^.  He  j 
will  compete  in  the  100  and  the 
220,  but  he  will  not  defend  his; 
220  low  hurdle  title.  | 

All  together  "there  will  be  five; 
defending  champions  in  this  year's  j 
meet:  Beatty  in  the  mile;  Dave  i 
Leas  of  Maryland  defending  the  i 
440;  Carl  Party  of  Maryland  de- 
fending the  880;  Dave  Sime  ofj 
Duke  defending  ths  100  and  220;  j 
and  Ed  Cooke  of  Maryland  whoj 
will  defend  his  shot  put  mark.       \ 


Bob  Feiller  holds  the  major 
league  strikeout  mark  for  one 
season  with  348.  < 


STUDENTS 


»1 


A  Week 
Nothing  Down 

Buys  The  Finest 
The  REMINGTON 
QUIET-RITER 

Th«  Fin««t  Typewriter 
Money  Can- Buy. 

LEDBEHER- 
PiCKARD 


the  number  one  place  since  he  is 
unbeaten   in   the  Conference." 

Also  competing  in  the  tourney 
f  :^r  Carolina  will  be  Geoff  Black, '  year  Party  won  the  event  with  a  | 
Frank  Livingstone,  Fritz  Van  Win-  !  1:54.4.  1 

kle,   Bob  Jacobus,    Ray   Newsome.  \     Carolina's    relay    team    of '  Jim 


Piedmont  Good 
Player  Area  ,  „ ,, 

By   ED   ROWLAND 


Total*  ,     32     9  27  11 

a — Drew  walk  for  McMillan  in  Ith. 
b— Struck  out  for  Maultsby  in  fth. 

Score  by  innings 

Carolina ^_  020  400  000—6 


Harold  Workman,  a  'ba-'e  on  balls,  I  DeCoursey,  6-2.  6-2.  Livingston 
and  a  two-run  error  by  the  Wake  j  (C)  defeated  Campbell  6-0,  6-0. 
shortstop.  I  Newsome    (C)    defeated    Dye,   9-7. 

They  addbd  another  in  the  sixth  j  2-6,  6-2.  Van  Winkle  (C)  defeat 
on  Clayton's  first  triple  of  the  aft-  ed  Yionoulis,  6-1,  6-3.  Mclver  (C) 
emoon  and  a  single  by  Tommy  j  defeated  Denton.  6-1.  6-2. 
Saintsing.  Carolina  banged  out;  Doubles:  Bank:  Newsome  (C) 
seven  hits  in  that  game  off  the  defeated  Solomon: Yionoulis.  6-0, 
slants  of  winner  Jerry  West,  but  6-2.  Black:  Livingston  (C)  defeat 
five    men    were   left    on    base    in    ed  De  Coursey:  Dvc.  6-1.  6  2.  Mc 


and  Jay  Walker. 


strategic  moments. 

Wake's  frosh  tallied  the  winning 
run  •  in  the  fourth  after  Montgom- 
ery   errored    a    grounder,    Hauscri 


Ivor:    Smith    (C)    defeated   Beatty: 


Wake  Forest      010  003  04x— 8    singled,       and       catcher       Crump 

Rr-Shook,  Honeycutt,  McMillan. !  dropped  a  third  strike  to  send  both 


What    area    of    North    Carolina  .  .  riinnf«r<:  hnm* 

produces    the   best:  baseball   play-  »"^-°' ^- "^^^^^T' f  r^"' i  ^^^^^^^^^^ 
L?    Judging    from    former    hieh   Pb»"»P«' ^aker  McGmley  ^ 
school  and  legion  stars  now  play-  Williams.  G.  Miller.  &-Lewis,  Ba-^^^«^ 
ing    on   freshma%  squads    around   ^^'  P^]'P«'    ^egette.  RBI-Hud- 
tl.c  state  it  seeiS^hat  the  West-  »««'     McMiUan,     Legette,    Raugh. 
cm    Piedmont    between    Winston-  Pf^f  «°„  Lewis    McGinley  4,  Sto- 
Salem    and    Sali^^Hiry    holds    Ihc  j  S^  2.  2B-^.  Mrito    Mo<^e  3B- 
w  Hudson.  HR — McMillan,  McGmley. 

On  the  Carolina  freshman  team  I  S^-^f^';   Baker   and   Phillips; 
from    this    area    are    winston-Sa-  H°°^y^"",  Lewis  and  L  HilL  SF- 

Left^rCarolina     4, 


Golfers  Beat 
Duke,  I81/2-8I/2 

had  scored  their  in-'      DURHAM— (AP— Carolina    golf- 
brace   of   runs    in   the   third    ers  took  an  18'i;-84  deci.sion  from 


Mural  Track 

i 

The  finals  of  the  intramural  i 
track  meet  were  held  yesterday 
for  both  the  dormitory  and  fra- 
ternity   divisions. 

The  results  were: 

Broad  Jump,  Robinson  (Med 
Sch)   and  Goodman   (ATO). 

100  yard  dash,  Morris  (Dent 
Sch)    and    Patton    (Zeta   Psi). 

3-4  mile  run.  Mcrcady  (Dent 
.Sch)    and   Whitaker    (DKE). 

220  yard  dash.  Lee  (Dent  Sch) 
and  Patton   (Zeta  Psi). 

60   vard    dash,   Lee    (Dent    Sch) 


'  Lewis. 


Wake 


frame  on  a  triple  by  Neighbors 
and  three  errors. 

In  the  second  game  Carolina 
produced  only  three  hits  off  the 
two  Wake  pitchers.  Lang  and  Pas- 
cal. They  left  seven  men  on  base. 

Bobby  Wooten,  who  went  six 
innings,  has  the  only  unblemished 


TlLv^'^int^r'.n^'^X°h''eriF«'-««t,4.  BB-Stokoe  2,  lUugh  z.l'^^^^d  «"  ^^e  frosh  squad,  2-0.  He  =  son  play  for  the  losers.  Thej 
Tommy      v>aintsing,     and     pitcner  i  _  ■       '         *         *»t-oc  fr,mn,ra^  *«,  «  ^-.^^uum ;_    „i-...  :_  «i._    »/-/-  «.>..- _4 

Bobby  Woolen  from  West-  Yadkin 


Duke    here    today    in    an    Atlantic  and    Sasser    (SAE). 

Coast    Conference    golf    match    on        Shot     Put.    Harris     (Dent    Sch) 

the    Hope    Valley   course.  and   Steele   (KA). 

Walter     Summerville      led     the        High     Jump,     Shinglelon 

winners    with    a    69   for    medalist  Nu)   and  Oakley   (Dent  Sch) 
honors.    Tate     Lanning's    71    wafe        880    yard    relay.    Kap    Sig    andj 

high  for  the  Blue  Devils.  Med  Sch.  \ 

The    match    ended    regular    sea         400   yard    relay.    SAE   and    Law 

y  will  Sch.  ! 


Moss,  John  Sylvester,  Dick  McFad 
din  and  Dave  Scurlock  i>-ct  a  new 
school  record  in  the  Duke  meet 
last  Saturday  with  a  3:18.5.  The 
conference  record  in  the  event  is 
over  a  second  higher  at  3:19.7. 
I  The  high  jump  will  have  the 
greatest  competition  this  year, 
with  three  already  above  the  ACC 
record.  .These  are  George  Hogan 
and  Tom  Tait  of  Maryland,  and 
Tom  Cameron  of  Clemson.  Hogan 
will  be  trying  to  better  his  own 
conference  record.  i 

Don  Goodroe  of  South  Carolina 
seems  to  be  a  sure  bet  to  set  a 
new  record  in  the  120  high  hur- 
dles. He  has  been  under  Joel 
Shankles  conference  record  three 
times  thi.'  season. 

Dave  tSime,  Duke's  wondfi'  tJoy 

who    holds    claim    to   two    world's 

I  records  and  a  tic  on  another,  will 

^^1  leave  his  first  love    baseball   and 


Saintsing,     and     P'**^^^*" !  ^jo/gajj  j^  Maultsby  1,  SO— Stokoe '  ^'**  removed  for  a  pinchhitter  in    play  in  the  ACC  tourney  at  Win  .      Discus 


Also  Wayne  Young  from  Moores 


5,  Raugh  6,  McGinley  5,  HO — Sto- 


Duke  Loses 


vine  might  be  included,  though  | '^"^  «  in  3,  McGinley  2  in  6,  Raugh 
that  city  isnt  quite  in  the  speci- ! «  '"^  '''  *J°rga°  »  ^»  0'  Maultsby 
fied  area.  All  these  boys  are  show-j^  ^  \  R-ER^Stokoe  (5-3),  Raugh 
ing  up  well  for  Coach  Wayne  i  ^>'  ^cC^^ley  d-O),  Morgan  (1-0). 
White  and  wiU  be  competing  f  or  :)^-«\°koe.  W-McGmley  (1-3). 
spots  on  the  wsity  next  season.     I  ^^""iS'**^  ^^^^-  U-Thomas  and 

Former  Salisbury  high  school  Pierce.  T— 2:00. 
and  Legion  Junior  coach  Joe  Fere- 
bee  has  Salisbury's  Tommy  Eaton 
and  MocksviUe's  Brack  Bailey  on 
the  Pfeiffer  squad.  E^ton  is  the 
hurler  who  pitched  the  1953  Salis- 
bury Legion  team  to  the  Little 
World  Series  in  Minneapolis. 

Also  from  that  Salisbury  team 
i-  Butch  Allie,  who  hails  from 
Statesville  and  is  playing  for  the 
Duke  Blue  Imps.  Duke  also  has 
pitcher  Billy  Sell  from  Mocksville. 
From  this  imposing  list  of  stel- 
lar high  school  baseball  players 
vho  have  made  good  on  college 
f'eshman  teams,  it  seems  dear 
that  no  other  general  section  of 
the  Old  North  State  can  legiti- 
mately claim  to  produce  the  best 
p  ayers. 

Though  this  array  of  talent 
comes  along  only  occasionally,  col- 
lege coaches  and  major  league 
scouts  possibly  might  uncover  an- 
other Mickey  Mantle  or  Herb 
Score  by  appraising  the  talent  in 
This  baseball-mad  section. 


Harris    (Dent   Sch)    and 
the  bottom  of  the  sixth.  He  struck    ston-Salem    this   weekend.  >  Leffler  (Kap  Sig). 


out   two   and   walked 
stint  on  the  mound. 


two   in    his 


The  star  and  pro(ducer  of 
"An    American    In    Paris" 
offer  a  screenful  of  origin- 
ality, talent  and  imagina 
tion.  '••:  *^ 


MAY  12th  Is 

MOTHER'S  DAY 

Mom's  a  good  nw  —  she  deserves 
•  nice  token  from  you. 

RALEIGH— (AP)  —  Don     Hafer   But  tsk*  ■  word  of  advice  from   • 
and  Eddie   Wyant  were   the   bat-|yoor  snclont  bookSolkr  —  don't 
ting  stars  as  State  defeated  Duke '  „^,  jt  funorial.  At  hMrt,  Mom  | 
7-6  today  to  prevent  the  Blue  Dev- 1  j,  ,  lot  closer  to  that  chick  youVo  \ 
ils  from  cUnching  the  ACC  title.  I  trying  to   date  than  she   is    to      ! 

Horwever,   Uie    loss    didn't   keep  whistler's   roek|n«-chslr  antiquo. 
Duke  from  gaining  at  least  a  tie  I  And,  pal,  she'll  thank  you  to  kssp 
for  the  championship.  Hafer  and  that  In  mind. 
Wyant  batted  in  three  runs  apiece 


Nats  Get 
New  Mgr. 

DETROIT  — (AP)—  The  dvvra- 
trodden  Washington  Senates 
changed  managers  yesterday,  ous- 
ting Chuck  Dressen  and  naming 
Harry  Cookie  Lavagetto — tlie  man 
Dressen  picked  as  his  chief  coach 
and  sidekick  seven  years  ago — to 
replace  him. 

Off  to  their  worst  start  in  57 
seri'^ons  in  the  American  League, 
the  Senators  decided  drastic  chan- 
ges were  needed  to  pump  new  vig- 
or into  the  team  that  hasn't  fin- 
ished in  the  first  division  in  11 
seasons. 

After  the  last<9Uce  Senators 
dropped  their  eighth  consecutive 
sane  yesterday  and  ttieir  Ifltji  in 
20  starts.  President  Calvin  Grif- 
fith sped  to  Detroit  to  m^e  the 
cluinge. 


and  each  hit  a  home  run.  Junior 
righthander  Roger  Ha^ood  pit- 
ched an  8-hitter  that  spoiled  the 
conclusion  of  Duke's  regular  sea- 
son ACC  schedule. 

The  Blue  Devils,  finishing  with  [ 
a   10-4  record,  were  assured  of  a 
share  of  the  title  by  Wake  For- 
est's 8-6  victory  over  North  Caro- 
lina. 


Score  Hurt 


CLEVELAND —(AP)—  A  line 
drive   by   Gil  McDougald,   second 

Matter  for  the  New  York  Yankees, 
struck  pitcher  Herb  Score  of  the 

iCievdand  Indians  in  the  head  in 

'the  first  inning  of  tonight's  game. 
Score  was  carried  from  the  field 
on  a  stretcher,  but  was  not  uacon- 

■seious. 


That's  why  our  cards  art  gay  kid* 
ding  youthful  designs.  That's  why, 
if  you  ask  us  to  racommond  a 
book  for  a  Mother's  Day  gift,  we're 
ntora  likoly  to  pick  a  lively  modern 
novel  than  a  book  of  meditations 
for  the  aged. 

A  wonun's  as  young  as  she  feels. 
Clip  a  clump  of  years  off  Mom's 
Score  wth   a  romindor  that  you 
kntNt  sh#'s  a  lively  biddy  stilll 


THE  INTIMATE 
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THE  NEW  YORK  LIFE  AOENT 

ON  YOUR  CAMPUS 
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George  L  Coxhead 


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Founded  IMS 


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It  is  0  pleasure  to  report   WEE  GEOROIE   is  one  cf  the 
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•  *•• 

DELIGHTFUL! 


"   GEOROIE'  will  do  for  Scotland  what 
John  Ford's  The  Quiet  Man'  did  for  Ireland!" 


•ill  Trovers  is  ideol  in  the  title  role. 

Technicolor  has  been  used  with  artistry  to 

illuminote  the  pastel  shacks  of  green 

glens  and  woodlands,  deep-blue 

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FUU  OF  FIfiir 


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SUN.— MON.— TUE. 


Lliypp  'WB^^y  •  LORBN 


mmmm 


GAKT   or   kEW   HAVEN 

PATISTE... 

Woven  of  lust^us. 
long-staple  imported 
yanw,  it^has  a 
luxurious  look  and 
feei  that  enhances 
the  character- of  the 
styling  and  construc- 
tkin.  For  a  new 
concept  in  summer 
comfort,  order  it  in 
long  or  short  sleeves 
...both  with  the 
becomingly  arched 
button-down  collar 
that  reflects  your 
good  taste  and  yov- 
good  looks. 


JULIANAS 
College  Shop 


Howard  Johnson  Restaurant 

STUDENT    SPECIALS  ^ 

Barbecued   Chicken       "~^ 

Choice  Steak  Sandwiches 

2:00—    5:00  P.M 
SERVED 
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Newt  SMiot^-fype 

patterns  available 

in  cool,  fight  weight 

cottons,  af>d  imported 

Moygashei  linens. 

More  hondsome 
f 

than  ever- 

Takes  the  muggiest 
woother  in 
comfortable  slrkl* 
ond  adth  tfie 
dittinctioa  of  saHimi 


towofing  to  e^^o^ 


«  dual  blessing  at  a 
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LIOHT^^nOHT 

SPORT  COATS 
roil  SUMMAR 


a\    «M 


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■"■"■■■■■  ■■■■■■w^^P^w^^^««««VOTV«|«ai«POTMB«OT« 


80 


WEATHER 

Fair  and  moderately  warm.  High 


tJ  1^  C  LtP^'.AHt 
•SERIA1.5   DEFT. 

8-3,1-49 


aTair  Keel 


GENESIS 


The  editor  sees  one  on  Page  t. 


VOL.  LVil     NO.  183 


Compi«te  iffO  Wire  S^rviet 


CHAPEL  HILL,  NORTH  CAROLINA,  THURSDAY,  MAY  9,  1957 


Otfieet   m   Graham   Mewutrial 


SIX  pao^s  THts  issue 


President  William  C.  Friday  Takes  Oath  Of  Office 


President  Taking  Oath  Of  Office 

President  W.  C.  Friday  is  shown  above  taking  the  oath  of  office  from  Chief  Justice  of  the  North 
Caroline  Supreme  Court,  J.  Wallace  Winborne.  Behind  Friday  is  William  Marvin  Whyburn,  vice-presi- 
dent of  Graduate  Studies  and  Research  of  the  Consolidated  University  and  to  the  right  of  the  rostrum 
is   Governor    Luther   H.    Hodges,   who    presided    over  the  inaugural  services  in   Raleigh  yesterday. 

»  A  King-Sears  photo — Woody  Sears 

Colorful  Pageantry  Unfolded 
During  Inaugural  Ceremonies 


By  NANCY  HILL  ulty  marcned  on    to  the  Coliseum 

floor  to  music  performed  by  the 
R.\LEIGH-A  colorful  pageant  combined  bands  of  Carolina,  Slate 
unfolded  before  television  eam-coiiege,  and  Woman'.- College.  The 
eras  and  a  crowd  of  8.000  in  State  ^.^^bined  bands  had  minutes  ear- 
College's  Reynolds  Coli.-eum  yes-,igj.  performed  the  prelude  to  the 
terday  morning  when  William  Cceremonies. 
Friday  was  inaugurated  as  presi- 
dent  of  The  Consolidated  Univer-     The    bands    and   combined    glee 


sity   of  North   Carolina. 

Ceremonies  began  officially  at 
10:30  with  »n  academic  proces- 
sion including  1,700  representa- 
tives from  350  universities  and 
colleges  from  the  state  and  na- 
tion, 100  professional  organiza- 
tions and  learned  societies,  and 
the  combined  faculties  of  the 
Consolidated  University. 

The  academic  procession,  which 
took  approximately  a  half  an  hour 
to  fill  seats  set  up  in  the  middle 
of  the    Coliseum  floor  facing    the 
speakers     platform,     presented     a 
colorful  spectacle. 

Procession 


clubs  of  the  three  schools  were 
situated  behind  the  speaker's 
stand. 

Following  the  academic  pro- 
cession the  platform  dignitaries 
were  led  to  the  podium  by  Dr.  J. 
Corden  Lyons,  faculty  marshall. 
They  included  in  addition  to 
President  Friday,  Gov.  Luther 
Hodges;  Frank  Porter  Graham, 
United  Nations  mediator  and 
former  Consolidated  University 
president;  Gordon  Gray,  director 
of  U.  S.  Defense  Mobilization, 
and  a  former  Consolidated  Uni- 
versity president;  William  Mar- 
vin Whyburn,  C.  U.  vice-presi- 
dent of  graduate  studies  and  re- 


The  visiting  dignitaries  and  fac    search;    J.     Wallace    Winborne, 


chief  justice  of  the  Supreme 
Court  of  North  Carolina;  Rob- 
ert B.  House,  retiring  chancellor 
of  the  University  at  Chapel  Hill; 
Carey  H.  Bostian,  State  College 
chancellor;  Gordon  Blackwell, 
chancellor  of  Woman's  College; 
William  Aycock,  incomirtg  Caro- 
lina chancellor  and  William  W. 
PiersoQ,  acting  charKellor  of 
Woman's  College. 

Norman  Cordon — former  Metro- 
politan Opera  star — now  a  Chapel 
Hill  resident — led  the  assemblage 
in  the  "Star  Spangled  Banner"  fol- 
lowing the  procession. 

Governor  Hodges  then  introduc- 
ed   Dr.    FVank    Graham,    who    re- 
marked on  the  job  facing  a  pre^-i- 
I  dent   of   the  Consolidated   Univer- 
'  sity,  and  Gordon  Gray,  who  spoke 
briefly     on     Friday's     background 
i  and  the  University. 

Gov.  Hodges  presented  the 
chancellors  of  the  branches  of 
the  Consolidated  University,  and 
the  combined  glee  clubs  of  the 
three  institutions  sang  the  Bach 
chorale,  "Now  Let  Every  Tongue 
I    Adore  Thee." 


Consolidation  Cut 
Costs/States  Friday 

By  BOB  HIGH 

R.VLEIGH — "I  have  found  the  consolidation,  fathered  by  Governor 
Gardner,  interpreted  and  formulated  by  President  Graham  and  further 
developed  by  President  Gray,  was  not  for  false  economies,"  said  Wil- 
liam Clyde  Friday  ye^-terday  when  he  was  inaugurated  as  president  of 
The  Consolidated  University  of  North  Carolina  at  William  Neal 
Reynolds  Coliseum  in  Raleigh. 

Elimination  Of  Dupliciation 
Friday,  who   wa^.  inducted   into   office   by    Governor    Luther   H. 
Hodges,  explained  the  idea  of  no  untrue   economy  by  agreeing  that 
with  the  exception  of  a  strong,  co-ordinate  Woman's  College  of  liberal 
arts,  the  consolidation   was  for  the  elimination  of   costly  duplication 
01  curricula  on  the  upper  college,  professional  and  graduate  levels. 
"Consolidation  was  for  the  development,  on  a  broad  foundation, 
of   a   three-fold   professional   and   graduate   research   center    seeking 
the  most  inter»sive  specialization,  it   was  for  a    unified   administra- 
tion, one  Board  of  Trustees,  one  president  and  one  budget,"  stated 
Friday. 

Others  taking  part  in  the  inauguraton  of  the  third  president  of 
the  Consolidated  University  before  8,000  persons  were  former  presi 
dent  (1931-1950)  Dr.  Frank  Porter  Graham,  United  Nations  mediator, 
Di.  Gordon  Gray,  second  president  of  the  three-..'jhool  system  (1950 
1955),  and  J.  Wallace  Winborne.  Chief  .Justice  of  the  Supreme  Court 
of  North  Carolina,  who  administrated  the  oath  of  office  to  Friday. 

Meaning  Of  The  Oath 
Friday  .-poke  before  the  great  throng  of  educators  and  represent- 
atives of  learned  .-.-ocieties,  education  and  professional  organizations 
and  foundations  as  to  the  meaning  of  the  oath  which  he  took  and 
placed  the  ideals  of  the  three-school  system  in  the  open  and  what 
the  Consolidated  University  needs  to  maintain  its  high  position  among 
the  great  institutions  of  learning  in  the  world. 

"It  is  good  that  we  pause  for  a  day  in  our  busy  world  and  come 
together  in  the  common  cause  of  education,"  began  Friday.  "It  is 
good  that  we  gather  for  the  celebration  of  an  event  in  the  life  of 
a  great  University,  paying  full  respect  to  its  distinguished  past 
and  voicing  our  high  hopes  for  its  even  more  significant  future," 
the  president  continued. 

In  referring  to  the  forebearers  of  the  position  of  president  of 
the  Consolidated  University,  Friday  said,  "Dr.  Graham  and  Dr.  Gray, 
we  thank  you  for  your  insistence  on  excellence,  for  your  efforts  to 
build  strong  faculties,  and  for  your  efforts  in  the  greatei>t  building 
program  in  the  Univer^^ity's  history." 

Taking  the  oath  of  office  step-by-step,  the  new  president  swears 
"to  cherish  and  encourage  sound  scholarship  in  the  search  for  the 
truth."  Friday  commented  that  the  obligation  incurred  is  clear:  a 
constant  quest  for  the  truth  to  increase  the  sum  total  of  man's  know 
ledge  for  the  benefit   of  each  succeeding  generation. 

Consecrate  All  Powers 

"Second,  the  president  is  required  to  take  a  solemn  vow  to  con- 
secrate all  powers  of  the  Consolidated  University  to  the  intellectual, 
moral  and  physical  training  of  ytwth  for  the  most  loyal  and  enlight- 
ened citizenship."  Another  primary  mission  of  the  University:  to  teach 
and  train  our  youth  in  our  undergraduate,  graduate  and  professional 
schools,  to  develop  leaders  for  North  Carolina  —  leaders  who  will 
carry  knowledge,  understanding  and  a  sense  of  public  responsibility 
into  every  field  of  endeavor,"  stated  Friday. 

Getting  into  the  main  part  of  his  inaugural  address,  the  man 
honored  by  all  state  officials  and  every  thinking  person  in  the 
United  States  yesterday,  said  that  if  he  was  to  fulfill  the  oath  to 
"train  youth  for  the  most  loyal  and  enlightened  citizenship,"  then 
the  people  must  develop  and  strenghten  the  great  training-ground 
of  self-government  by  the  students.  In  continuing  his  praise  and 
for  the  campus  governments,   Friday  said: 

"I  wish  to  pay  tribute  to  this  and  the  other  .tudenl  generation> 
for  their  concern  for  good  campus  government,  good  scholarship  and 
their  constant  devotion  to  these  institutions." 

Freedom  In  Teaching 

The  president  stated,  on  the  subject  of  faculty,  "we  should  secure 
to  every  member  of  the  faculty  that  freedom  in  teaching  and  research 
which  is  an  esj3ntial  condition  of  the  proper  and  effective  discharge 
of  his  duties  as  a  member  of  the  faculty." 

In  the  conclusion  of  his  address,  Friday  stated,  "In  pledging  my 
best  as   I  assume   these  responsibilities",  I  repeat   the   humble  .petition 
in  the  last  foiu"  words  of  the  oath  I  have  sworn — So  help  me  God." 
♦ = ♦ 


The  New  President  Making  His  Address 


William  Clyde  Friday  is  shown  above  iust  arte  r  being  sworn  into  the  office  as  the  third  president 
of  the  Consolidated  University  of  North  Carolina.  He  is  making  the  principal  address  of  the  ceremon- 
ies atid  pointed  out  that  raises  in  salary  art  needed  to  keep  the  same  members  and  gain  new  mem- 
bers of  the  faculty  of  the  three-branch  system.  A   King-Sears  photo — Bill   King 

Friday  Welcomed  T&  Rolls 
Of  Leadership  By  Graham 


Former  President  Gordon  Gray 

Cray,  now  director  of  the  U.  S.  office  of  Defense  Mobilization, 
r^alled  Friday's  service  under  him  here.  He  described  the  new 
president  as  a  men  of  "deep  moral  conviction,  unimpeachable  In- 
tegrity ...  and  capacity  for  growth." 


A  King-Sears  photo— Woody  -Sears   [  ed  two  hour^. 


j     The  presentation   of   Friday  fol-  | 

I  lowed.  He  was  introduced  by  Why-  ; 

I  burn,  and  the  oath  of  office  was  : 

I  administered     by     State     Supreme  . 

,  Court  Justice  Winborne.  ' 

Friday  was  inducted  into  office  | 

by  Gov.  Hodges,  who  charged  him 

"with   the  full  realization"  of  his 

office. 

Ovation 

Friday  was  given  a  standing  ova- 
tion of  approximately  two  minute^ 
following  his  induction. 

Ceremonies  were  concluded 
following  an  inaugural  address 
lasting  approximately  half  an 
hour. 

Following  the  benediction  by  the 
Rev.  William  Wallace  Finlator, 
pastor  of  Pullen  Memorial  Baptist 
Church  in  Raleigh,  the  ceremonies 
were  adjo'urned. 

President   and    Mrs.    Friday   re- 
ceived congratulations   from  visit- 
ing dignitaries  and  friends  of  the 
j  University  at  thft,ioot  of  the  podi- 
um after  thff  ceremony,  which  last- 


President  And  Mrs.  W.  C.  Friday 

Shown  above  are  Mr.  and  Mrs.  Friday  just  before  the  delegates 
from  some  350  colleges  and  uniyersities  and  numerous  friends 
formed  an  endless  line  of  well-<wishers.  Mrs.  Friday  is  the  former  Ida 
Howell  of  Lumberton.  A  King-Sears  photo— Bill  King 


By  WALT  SCHRUNTEK 

RALEIGH— Dr.  Frank  Graham, 
a  former  President  of  the  Univer- 
sity of  North  Carolina  was  on 
hand  to  lend  his  prestige  .sup- 
port yesterday  to  formal  cere- 
monies inaugurating  William 
Clyde  Friday  to  the  leadership  ol 
the  Con.solidated  University  of 
North  Carolina. 

Pointing  to  Friday's  proven  "ca- 
pacities and  achievements  on  the 
job  in  difficult  days  .  .  .  and  (his) 
.  .  .  concentration  on  student  :5clf- 
government,  academic  freedom,  \ 
research,  publications,  extension 
services,  adequate  and  modern  li-  i 
braries,"  Dr.  Graham  welcomed 
Pres.  Friday  to  the  rolls  of  UNC 
leadership.  v 

Responsibility 
He  IJo'led  it  as  encompassing 
"The  University  at  Chapel  Hill, 
oldest  in  service  of  ail  the  state 
universities  and  now  in  robust 
equal  partnership,  the  ever  youth- 
fully creative  center  of  the  peo- 
ple's life;  the  State  College  in  Ra- 
leigh, one  of  the  most  dynamic 
and  rapidly  advancing  land  grant 
colleges  in  the  nation;  and  the 
Woman's  College  in  Greensboro,  a 
recognized  high  standard  coordi- ; 
nate  college  of  liberal  arts,  nobly  i 
useful  and  fairest  daughter  of  the 
Old.  North  State." 

"In    meeting    the    responsibili- 
ties of   leadership  as  President, 
his  life  as  a  student  leader,  act- 
ing dean  of  students,  assistant  to    : 
the   president,  secretary   of    the 
University  and  Acting  President 
have   revealed  that  William   Fri- 
day   has    always    been    his    own 
man,"  Dr.  Graham  said. 
"In  this  troublous  world  with  its 
many   crucial   problems,   local,   na-  , 
tional  and  international.  President 
I-riday  brings  to  all  issues  wisdom  > 
and   understanding  and   the  spirit 
of  Him  who  would  have  ail  us  trail  [ 
mortals    become    more    truly    the 
children  of  one  God  and   brothers  ! 
of  all  people,"  he  continued.  j 

The  current  United  Nation.,-  Me- 
diator went   on  to  stress  the  im- , 
portance  of  enlisting  in    a    "fresh 
crusade  of  the  people  for  the  pub- 
lic  schools   and    higher  education,  | 
liberal  learning  and  spiritual  faith.  I 
as  the  foundation  of   our  democ- 
racy and   the  source  of  our  f ret- | 
dom  and  hopes."  j 

Or.  Graham  concluded  with  a  ] 


hope  that  "in  the  atomic  age  in 
I  which  fatefully  fork  the  road  of 
human  destiny  .  .  .  may  the  in- 
auguration of  William  Clyde  Fri- 
day mean  the  dedication  of  the 
threefold  University  ...  to  the 
moral  imperative  of  universal 
brotherhood  as  the  way  of  hu- 
man freedom,  survival  and  prog- 
ress on  earth." 

Gray  Present 

Included  in  the  inauguration 
program  honoring-  President  Fri 
day  was  another  one-time  presi- 
dent of  the  University  in  the  per- 
son of  Gordon  Gray,  who  foil  .\v?d 
Di'.  Graham  to  the  speaker's  plat- 
form. 

Said  Dr.  Graham  in  his  opening 
statements  of  welcome  to  ex-presi- 
dent Gray:  "back  home  again. 
Gordon,  to  one  of  the  many  wel- 
come scenes  of  your  distinguished 
public  service,  loyal  son,  construc- 
tive president  and  the  ninlii 
alumnus  to  sit  in  or  with  the  Cab- 
inet Councils  of  Presidents  ol  the 
United  Statrs." 

Dr.  Graham  went  down  a  long 


list  of  figures,  prominent  in  the 
annals  of  University  history 
whom  he  would  muster  to  the 
new  President's  side — men  who, 
"in  hard  times  and  venturesome 
hopes,  have  builded  here  to- 
gether one  of  the  greatly  free 
and  integrated  universities  of 
the  people  in  oi'-  country." 

"It  seems  only  yesteryear  when 
O.  Max  Gardner  Jr.,  William  .\y- 
cock,  you  and  your  peers  on  the 
three  campuses  were  standing 
with  coutage  and  good  hu.Tior  for 
the  honorable  and  true  in  the 
scholastic,  civic,  aihletic  and  spiri- 
tual life  of  the  College."  Dr.  Gra- 
ham reflected  during  hi.  introduc- 
tory remarks. 

"The  promise  of  your  student 
leadership  at  Woman's  College, 
State  College  and  Chapel  Hill  is 
new  being  fulfilled  n  your  re- 
sistance to  any  pressures  of  priv- 
ilege, prejudice  and  power,  and 
your  forthright  stand  for  the  in- 
tegrity and  freedom  of  the 
threefold  community  of  schol- 
ars," Dr.   Graham  said. 


U.N.  Mediator  Frank  Graham 

Graham,  the  first  president  of  the  Consolidated  University,  laud- 
ed the  new  president  and  said,  "Friday  has  always  been  his  .«<vn 
man,  beholden  to  no  man,  authority  or  power,  except  lawful  author- 
ity and  his  own  consciertce  under  God." 

A  King-Sears  photo — Woody  Sears 


^AOt  TWO 


THI  OAlLf  TAR  HItL 


THURSDAY,  MAY  f,  IfST 


TMUB-D 


Inaugural  Extravaganza 
And  Progress  Genesis 

"/  chartrf  you  to  a  full  realization  of  the  responsi- 
bilities laid  ufjon  you  by  this  office,  to  the  necessity 
for  courageous  and  constructive  thought  in  their  ful- 
fillment and  to  the  duty  and  privilege  of  seeking  out 
the  intellectual  and  educational  needs  of  the  people." 
— (iov.  Lutlier  Hodges'  Induction  Into  Office  Of  Con- 
volidaied  I'niversity  President  Friday. 

And  a  new  era  has  its  genesis. 

Incandescent  liglu  streams  into  Reynolds  Coliseum; 
ilic  resolnani  tones  of  a  threefold  band  and  chorus  reverber- 
ate from  stone  and  steel:  a  majestic  procession  of  intellectual 
talent  streams  d<m  n  a  wide,  central  aisle;  .  .  .  the  genesis. 

riuis  amid  stirring  ceremony,,  the  star  of  William  Clyde 
Friday  rotkets  to  the  top  of  the  Consolidated  ITnivetsity 
>tratosphere. 

President  Fridav  is  the  jiarbinger  of  a  new  Progiessive 
Kia.  In  his  Inaugural  Address,  he  touched  upon  several  of 
the  Ckjiisolidated  I'niversity's  most  immediate  problems  and 
iiuporLint  areas.  To  wit:  , 

(I)     The  Intellectual  Migration  of  faculty  members; 

Much  has  been  said  and  written  about  the  great  maii- 
hinit  that  threatens  to  take  so  many  of  our  faculty  members 
to  other  institutions  and  to  positions  in  industry  at  salaries 
that  we  camiot  alford  to  })ay.  We  must  provide  salaries  coni- 
nien'surate  with  the  (jualiiv  and  excellence  of  the  work  (>\, 
our  f;icultv  meml>ers."     . 

To  accosnplish  this.  President  Friday  should  begin 
immediate  work  to  distribute  the  eleven  per  cent  pay  hike 
reconnnended  l>y  the  Advisory  Budget  Commission  accord- 
ing to  a  merit  >ystem.  He  should  also  begin  promulgation 
of  a  salary  increase  proposal  with  latitude  with  which  he 
((»uld  confront  the  i ()-,«)  Xiencral  Assembly. 

{'')     Academic   Freedom' 

■  It  i>  mv  cop.viction  that  the  Board  of  Trustees  and 
the  administration  should  secuie  to  every  member  of  tlie 
faculty  that  heedotn  in  teaching  and  research  which  is  an 
r>sential  condition  of  the  proper  and  effective  discharge  of 
his  duties  a>  a  mentber  of  the  faculty.'* 

President  Fridav  has  the  right  idea.  Faculty  members, 
in  order  to  piovide  >tudents  the  full  benefit  of  their  more 
ajicd  and  learned  opinions,  must  be  allowed  full  rein  to 
s}>eak   their  mind  on   all   issues.  _  . 

(^)     Student  Autonomy:  ' 

■  U  wf  are  to  fulfill  the  piesident's  oath  to  'train  youth 
foi  the  most  loyal  and  enlightened  citizenship,'  we  must  de- 
velop and  strengthen  tlie  great  training-ground  of  self-gov- 
ertmient  by  the  students.'      .  '..i.  i  :j*. 

Muis  thirtv-six  vear-old  Friday  has  reaffirmed  his  faith 
in  autonomous  student  governlnent.  Student  government 
must  respond  with  a  \igorous  program  which  includes  ex- 
pansion of  student  imion  facilities  and  construction  of  ad- 
ditional paiking  facilities.  It  must  take  Friday's  mandate 
Am\  conscientiously  justify  his  reaffirmation  of  faith. 

(4)     F.xpansion  of  Facilities:  '  ^^ 

We  uiuM  constantly  add  to  our  libraries  .  .  .  We  must 
keep  our  laboratories  scientifically  up-to-date  .  .  .  To  do 
their  best  work  even  the  most  distinguished  faculty  people 
must  have  good  f)ooks  and  good  etjuipment.  ' 

In  this  area.  President  Fridav  was  semi-myopic.  He 
recognized  the  need  for  increased  interior  facilities.  But 
he  must  also  promulgate  a  plan  for  expansion  of  the  Uni- 
versity's exterior  physical   facilities. 

He  nuist  recoiuile  the  Consolidated  I'niversitys  iti- 
undating  enrollment  with  its  limited  phvsical  facilities.  The 
Dailv  Tar  Heel  suggests  that  he  substitute  a  plan  for  greater 
facilities  in  lieu  of  restricting  entrants.  Fducation  for  the 
main  is  a  nuist  in  a  demcKracy. 

Finrance  examinations  were  aimned  at  ciicinnventing 

the    Supreme    Courts    May.    n)j.\,    desegregation    decisiojj. 

Fhev  were  not  instituted  h>r  the  good  of  the  overall  l^ni- 

\ersitv.    Fhey  were  not  instituted  to  leconcile  eniollement 

with   laciliiies. 

President  Fridav  was  also  delinquent  in  mentioning  the 
pr<»posed  out-ol-state  tuition  hike.  He  did  say,  however: 

"We  rejoice  that  students  from  all  the  forty-seven  other 
states  ol  our  nation  and  from  many  foreign  countries  come 
to  study  in  our  three  institutions." 

.\s  an  expression  of  his  rejoicing,  tJie  president  mjglit 
hav  reitterated  the  Consolidated  Univij^rsity  administration's 
stand  in  op|x»ition  to  the  proposed  $200  hike  before  the 
jx^ople  of  the  state. 

All  in  all.  however,  we  recognize  the  energetic,  new 
fircsident  as  an  obliterator  of  the  past  decade's  Period  of 
Transition  and  a  harbinger  of  the  new  progressive  Era. 

The  genesis  and  President  Friday. 

The  official  student  publication  of  the  PuWiettions  Board  of  the 
University  of  North  Carolina,  where  it  is  published  daily  except  Men 
day  and  examination  and  vacation  periods  and  i^nnmer  terms.  Entered 
as  second  class  matter  in  the  post  office  at  Chapel  Hill.  N.  C.  under 
the  act  of  March  8,  1870.  Subscriptior  rates:  Mailed.  $4  a  year.  f2.50 
per  semester:  delivered,  $6  a' year,  $3.50  a  semester. 

_ ; NEDL  BASS 


Editor 
Aapociate  Bditm* 


Mana^g  Editor 
Sports  Editor 


Newi  Editor 


_,_.  NANCY  HILL 


BOB  HiGlI 


BILL  KING 


WALT  SCHKUNTEK 


"...To  Perceive  The 
Educational  Needs..." 


(Below  is  the  full  text  of  Presi- 
dent W.  C.  Friday's  Inaugural 
Address  delivered  in  Reynolds 
CoUseum  yesterday.  —The  Editor. ) 

Governor  Hodges,  Chief  Justice 
Winborae,  Members  of  the  Gen- 
eral Assembly.  Members  of  the 
Board  of  Trustees.  Members  o^ 
the  Faculties.  Studentc.  Distin- 
:9dshed  Guests  and  Friends  of  the 
Consolidated    University: 

It  is  good  that  we  pause  for  a 
day  in  our  busy  world  and  come 
together  in  the  common  cause  of 
education.  It  is  good  that  we 
gatlier  for  the  celebration  of  an 
event  in  the  life  of  a  great  Uni- 
versity, jjaying  full  respect  to  Its 
distinguished  past  and  voicing  our 
hjgh  hopes  for  its  even  more  signi- 
ficant ■  future. 

We  are  gi'ateful  to  all  of  you 
who  are  here.  We  are  grateful 
to  many  pe<^le  who  cannot  be 
hei-e  but  have  sent  messages  of 
cheer  and  affection. 

We  are  grateful,  too.  to  the 
scores  of  people  who  have  laboi'ed 
beyond  the  call  of  duty  to  make 
this  day  one  that  will  live  long  in 
our  memories. 

The  first  twenty-five  yeai's  of 
the  CoH.solidated  Universit.v  under 
President  Grahajn  and  President 
Gray,  strongly  supported  by  their 
atkle  and  devoted  colleague,  Wil- 
liam D.  Carmichael.  Jr..  were 
years  of  leadership  and  service 
to  our  state  and  to  the  educational 
wTorld.  With  the  chancelloi-s  and 
the  faculties  of  our  three-fold  Uni- 
versity, these  men  brought  our 
institutions  to  new  levels  of  dis- 
tinction. 

In  studying  the  President's  Re- 
ports and  other  documents  and 
from  informal  conversations,  I 
have  fv)und  that  the  consolidation. 


Busioess  Manager 


JOHN  C.  WHITAKER 


Advertising  Manager 


Ni^ht  Editor 


FRED  KATAIN 
Woody  Sears. 


PRESIDENT   BILL    FRIDAY 

.  .   .  assiimes  tlie  hvlni   .  .  . 

fathered  b>-  Governor  Gardner, 
interpreted  and  formulated  by 
Pre.sident  Graham  and  further  de- 
veloped by  President  Gray,  was 
not  for  false  economies.  It  was 
not  for  the  elimination  of  duplica- 
tion of  basic  scientific,  social  and 
humane  course.  With  the  agreed 
exception  of  a  strong,  coordinate 
Woman's  College  of  liberal  arts, 
it  was  for  the  elimination  of  cost- 
ly duplication  of  curricula  on  the 
upper  college,  professional  and 
graduate  levels.  It  has  held  that 
general  education  and  liberal 
learning  should  not  be  apart  from 
but  a  part  of  the  most  specialized 
curricula.  Consolidation  was  for 
the  development,  on  a  broad  foun- 
dation, of  a  three-fold  professional 
and  graduate  research  center  seek- 
ing the  most  intensive  specializa- 


tion. It  was  for  a  unified  adminis- 
trtaion.  one  Board  of  Trustees, 
one  President  and  one  budget. 
Within  such  a  framework  firmly, 
established,  it  was  for  institutional 
autonomy,  administrative  co-ordin- 
ation, strong  faculties  and  excel- 
lence in  research  au^-eUt^j. 
:  *  In  exjM-e^sinfe  my  fi^.  iilnviction 
i,n  ihese  principles,'  1  iMiy  tribute 
to  those  faculty  memibef^  and  ad- 
iministi"ati;ve.  jofftcers  wlio  have 
brought  .  this  exiperlment  in  co- 
of>eratipn— 6tei>^y-step— to  an  ef- 
fective co-ordination  of  the  total 
iresoui-ces  of  these  institutions.  In 
the  month*  ahead,  we  shall  de- 
termine how,  with  fidelity  to  these 
principles,  we  .should  change  our 
course,  if  it  is  demonstrably  jus- 
tified, in  order  to  make  -further 
progress. 

Dr.  Graliam  and  Dr.  Gray,  we 
thank  you  for  your  insistence  on 
excellence,  for  your  efforts  to 
build  sti-ong  faculties,  and  for 
ycur  efforts  in  the  greatest  build- 
ing program  in  the  Univer.sity  s 
history.  Your  faith  in  education 
and  in  young  people  has  inspire.1 
us  all.  .North  Carolina  is  proud  of 
your  achievements  and  distinc- 
tions in  national  and  international  . 
affairs.  You  have  enhanced  the 
high  reputation  of  our  University 
throu'4hout  the  civilized  world.  For 
all  v)f  us.  and  with  deep  affection 
in  our  hearts,  may  I  thank  you 
for  coming  home  to  be  with  us 
today. 

.Any  time  that  a  man  takes  a 
solemn  oath  before  God  and  his 
fellow-men,  it  is  a  notewoi'thy  oc- 
casion. You  have  heard  the  his- 
toric presidential  oath  sworn  in 
the  past  by  my  predecesorss  and 
just  now  by  me.  Y'ou  have  heard 
the  mandate  read  by  the  Governor 
with  the  induction  into  office.  Such 
an  oath  and  such  a  mandate  can- 
not be  treated  lightly.  A  considered 
examination  of  their  meaningful 
language  will  reveal  their  true 
significances.  They  prescribe  with 
clarity  what  the  president  must 
do  in  order  that  the  University 
may  "achieve"  the  high  destiny 
which  was  the  vision  and  the  pur- 
pose of  the  founders." 

First,  the .  President  swears  "to 
cherish  and  encourage  sound  scho- 
larship in  the  search  for  the 
truth."  The  obligation  iiiourred  is 
cleai*;  a  "  constant  quest  for  .the 
truth  to  increase  the  sum  total  of 
mans  knowledge  for  the  benefit 
of  each  succeeding  generation. 
Here  the  President  pleds^es  to  pro- 
mote a  program  of  scholarly,  re- 
search. 

Second,  the  President  is  re- 
quired to  take  a  solemn  vow  "to 
consecrate  all  powers  of  the  Con- 
solidated University  to  the  in- 
tellectual, moral  .and  physical 
training  of  youth  for  the  most  loyal 
and  enlightend  citizenship."  An- 
other primary  mission  of  the  Uni- 
versity: to  teach  and  train  our 
undergraciuate.  graduate  and  pro- 
fessional schools,  to  develop  lead- 
ers for  North  Carolina — leaders 
wlio  will  carry  knowledge,  under- 
standing and  a  sense  of  public 
responsibility  into  every  field  of 
human  endea\or. 

Third,  the  President  pi-omises 
"that  wherever  and  in  whatever 
form  it  is  our  privilege  to  see 
need.  I  pledge.,  the  ^  University  in 
Chapel  Hill.  State  College  In  Ra- 
leigh,   and    the    Woman's    College 


^i^i^m^i^im 


.  .  South  Building 


th*  Consolidated  University  enters  a  new  Progressive  Era 


in  Gxeensboro  to  impartial  and 
s.\  in  pathetic  service  to  all  the 
iX'(  pie  of  North  Carolina."  Here 
again  i^  a  firm  pledge  that  a 
major  objective  in  both  teaching 
and  research  must  be  to  contri- 
bute to  the  welfare  of  our  citi- 
zenr.v.  Here  is  the  complete  dedi- 
cation ti)  the  stud>-  of  the  prob- 
lems of  our  people,  a  c-ommitment 
tliat  their  welfare,  their  economy, 
their  mental  and  physical  health, 
their  government,  their  agricul- 
ture— all  are  the  day-by-day  con- 
cern or  the  University. 

And  this  pledge  of  'service  to 
all  the  people  of  North  CaroJina" 
emphatically  promises  the  exten- 
sion of  University  knowledkge  and 
llie  benefits  of  its  scientific  dis- 
coveries out  beyond  our  three 
campuses  to  every  man.  woman 
and  child— in  every  walk  of  life. 

Fourth,  and  finally,  the  Gov- 
ernor's admonition::  "1  charge 
you  to  a  full  realiztaion  of  the  res- 
J)onsibilities  laid  upon  you  by  this 
office  to  the  necessity  for  cour- 
ageous and  constructive  thought 
in  their  fulfillment  and  tf  the  duty 
and  privilege  of  seeking  out  the 
intellectual  and  educational  needs 
of  the  people,"  This  places  upon 
the  President  of  the  University  a 
major  role  in  perceiving  the  edu- 
cational needs  of  the  jxx>ple  at  all 
levels.  It  bind.s  the  University  into 
partnership  with  the  public  schools. 
We  .must  ne\er  forget  that  90  per- 
cent of  our  students  are  products 
of  the  public  sc1k)oIs.  The  quality 
of  the  graduates  tumcKl  out  by 
the  University  depends  in  large 
Weasure  on  the  quality  of  the  stu- 
dents who  come  to  the  University 
fi-om  the  public  schools. 

The  base  upon  which  we  build 
for  the  future  of  North  Carolina 
is  the  proper  education  of  our 
youth  in  strong  and  adequate  pub- 
lic !«'hools  and  first-rate  institu- 
tions of  higher  leai-nirig.  We  are 
inseparable  partners.  This  last 
charge  commits  the  University  to 
minister  to  the  educational  needs 
vtf,all  our  adults. 


It  also  oWigates  us  to  the  re- 
warding experience  of  complete 
cooperation  with  all  other  colleges 
and  universities  that  lalx>r  for  tlie 
people  of  North  Carolina. 

The  magnitude  of  the  responsi- 
bilities incurred  and  imposed, 
would  be  overpowering  if  the  ad- 
ministration of  the  Consolidated 
University  were  the  task  of  the 
I*resident '  alone.  No  one  man 
woidd  dare  assume  these  exact- 
ing obligations  were  it  not  for  the 
secure  realization  that  the  Presi- 
dent w^ill  be  siipported  and  assist- 
ed constantly  by  his  administra- 
tive staff,  the  chancellors,  deans, 
members  of  the  faculties,  the  stu- 
dents, members  of  the  Board  of 
Trustees  nad  tlie  people  of  the 
state,  • 

There  can  be  no  evasion  or  avoi- 
dance of  the  ultimate  authority 
and  responsibility  of  the  Presi- 
dent, but  there  is  a  sense  of  se- 
curity in  tJie  fact  that  we  have 
three  Chancellors  who  are  wLUing 
aad  able  to  assume  inunediate 
day-b)'-day  responsibility  for  the 
orderly  administration  of  their  in- 
stitutions. The  President  will  work 
with  each  Chancellor  in  carrying 
out  that  part  of  the  program  al- 
located to  his  institution. 

The  Chancellors  must  be  held 
responsible  for  developing  and 
strengtliening  their  faculties.  And 
working  with  their  faculties  tliey 
must  be  held  responsible  for  the 
quality  erf  tlie  educational  pro- 
gram. 

The  Chancellors  uill  be  expected 
to  interpret  their  institutions  to 
the  people  of  tlie  state,  to  analyze 
the  needs  of  the  people  and  to  re- 
late tlie  work  of  their  institutions 
to  meeting  these  needs. 

The  Chancellors  will  be  held  ac- 
countable for  maintaining  res- 
jjonsible  .self-government  by  the 
students.  If  we  are  to  fulfill  the 
president's  oath  to  "train  youth 
for  the  most  loyal  and  enlightened 
citizenship,"  we  must  develop  and 
strengtlien  the  great  training- 
ground  of  self-goverimient  by  the 


students.  They  learn  and  develop 
self-discipline  under  freedom  of 
action,  and  in  performing  the  du- 
ties of  campus  citizenship,  they 
prepare  themselves  for  the  time 
when  they  must  shoulder  the  res- 
ponsibilities of  citizens  living  in 
a  free  nation.  I  wish  to  pay  tri- 
bute to  this  and  the  other  student 
generations  for  their  concern  for 
good  campus  government,  good 
scholarship  and  their  constant  de- 
votion to  these  institutions. 

Heartening,  too,  is  the  fact  that 
the  people  of  .North  Carolina,  since 
Revolutionary  days,  have  held 
steadfastly  to  their  faith  in  edu- 
cation. 

Since  1789,  each  generation  has 
shown  an  ever-increasing  appre- 
ciation of  the  importance  of  high- 
er education  in  the  development  of 
the  requisite  leadership  for  our 
state.  Our  goevmors  and  other 
state  o.''ficials  always  have  si«>- 
ported  this  three-fold  University. 
Our  trustees  have  responded  to 
every  request  made  of  them.  Our 
alumni  and  alumnae  are  as  loyal 
and  generous  as  can  be  fbund  in 
all  .\merica.  Our  General  Assem- 
blies of  the  past  have  provided  ior 
these  institutions  to  the  utmost 
limits  of  the  resources  of  the  peo- 
ple of  North  Carolina.  Our  bene- 
factors— a  long  and  notable  list — 
have  shared  their  good  fortune 
with  our  institutions,  and  with  our 
several  foundations,  have  assured 
supplements  to  the  state-paid  sail- 
aries  of  some  of  our  most  dis- 
tinguished faculty  members — there- 
by enabling  us  to  hold  many  com- 
petent and  talented  teachers  and 
scholars. 

Much  has  been  done  by  many 
•sacrificing  people  to  bring  oiu- 
Consolidated  University  to  this  daj' 
and  to  this  hour. 

Today  is  a  day  of  faith  and  hope. 
Today,  we  look  at  the  record  to 
reassure  ourselves  that  we  have 
kept  faith  with  the  dreams  of  the 
fOundere.  Today,  we  look  ahead — 
we  hope,  we  dream,  we  have  great 
ambitions  for  a  more  distinguished 
Consolidated  University  respected 
in  the  educational  world  for  the 
excellence  of  its  teaching  and  re- 
search, and  lov  ed  by  its  people  for 
its  devoted  service. 

Universities  become  great  be- 
cause they  have  great  teachers' 
and  great  scholars.  Our  distinc- 
tion, our  reputation  for*'good  teach- 
ing, our  tradition  of  scholarly  re 
search,  o>ir  reccaxl  of  servijce  to 
our  people — all  belong  to  our  facid- 
ties.  It  is  upon  their  demanding 
standards  of  excellence  in  studj-, 
the  inspiration  they  give  the  in- 
quiring mind  and  heart,  and  their 
ambition  to  contribute.  tbroi'Sh 
teaching  and  research,  to  the  well- 
being  of  people  everwhere  that  aU 
else  depends. 

We  must  provide  salaries  com- 
mensurate with  the  quality  and 
excellence  of  the  work  of  our 
faculty  members. 

We  iiave  traded  too  long  00  the 
loyalty  and  sense  of  pidiic  respon- 
sibility that  is  »>  characteristic 
of  these  men  and  women. 

.\s  we  seek  to  encourage  sound 
scholarshijp  in  its  search  for  the 
truth,  we  must  provide  our  facul- 
ties with  the  essential  resources 
for  getting  the  job  done.  We  must 
constantly  add  to  our  libraries 
those  v'olumes,  manuscripts,  pe- 
riodicals and  other  resources  es- 
sential  for  study  and  research  in 
the  many  suibject  matter  areas 
properly  the  concern  of  a  great 
university  faculty.  We  mu.st  keep 
our   lalxvratories  scieulilically   up- 


to-date.  To  do  a»eir  best  work 
eren  the  most  distinguished  facul- 
ty people  must  have  «ood  books 
and   good   equipment. 

And,  there  must  be  strong  sup- 
port for  our  graduate  program, 
R  has  been  said  that  a  univer- 
sity realizes  iiseH  in  the  graduate 
school  if  that  school  does  its  ^tj 
This  duty  must  be  met  fbr  now 
more  than  ever  before,  schrfaiiy 
research  and  the  developraient  of 
high-level  competence  in  young 
men  and  wxjnaen  throu^  inspired 
graduate  study  aire  indispasiMe 
to  the  future  of  these  instituti<ms. 
Today,  our  nation  relies  taeai^' 
on  university  ^aduate  schools 
and  the  work  of  the  quiet  scholar 
for  the  idea,  the  knowledge,  and 
the  competence  so  greatly  needed 
in  its  struggle  to  preserve  peace 
in  our  world. 

The  productive  faculty  which  we 
seek  and  vrUl  support  wiU  not  be 
judged  as  to  the  merits  of  their 
research  production  on  the  basis 
of  whether  or  not  that  research 
is  immediately  practical.  Basic 
and  applied  research  are  each 
needed  in  our  conunon  civilization. 
But,  there  is  no  yardstick  of 
which  I  know  by  which  one  can 
tell  whether  or  not  the  basic  re- 
search of  today  will  not  became 
the  applied  research  of  tomorrcW". 

Much  has  been  said  and  writ- 
ten a'bout  the  great  manhunt  that 
threatens  to  take  so  many  of  our 
faculty  members  to  other  institu- 
tions and  to  positions  in  industry 
at  salaries  that  we  cannot  afford 
to  pay. 

It  is  alarming.  But.  the**  are 
other  considerations  favoring  the 
University  that  influence  indivi- 
dual faculty  decisions.  The  nx>st 
important  of  these  is  the  atmos- 
phere of  1-esponsible  freedom  that 
surrounds  our  institutions:  free- 
dom of  inquiry,  freedom  of  action, 
freedom  ^,  of  thought,  and  freedom 
of  speech. 

It  is  my  conviction  that  the 
Board  of  Trustees  and  the  ad- 
ministration should  secure  to 
ev^ery  member  of  the  faoult>-  that 
freedom  in  teaching  and  research 
which  is  an  essential  condition  of 
the  proper  and  effective  discharge 
of  his  duties  as  a  member  of  the 
faculty. 

Furthermore,  we  must  reco'?- 
nize  that  ^aoidtj'  .members,  like 
Americans  everj-where,  ha\-e  the 
freedom  to  s^peak  as  responsible 
citizens  on  the  isues  before  the 
people. 

We  must  support  responsible 
and  free  student  self-government. 

The  Administration  must  be  tree 
to  act  in  carrying  out  the  pjriicy 
declarations  of  the  Board  of 
Trustees  if  the  assigned  respon- 
sibilities are  to  be  met. 

In  the  University,  the  answer 
to  individual  abuse  and  error  lies 
not  in  the  denial  of  freedfom  to 
all,  but  through  recognized  and 
accepted  standards  of  account - 
ability  Jbr  truthfulness,  decency 
and  rectitude  imposed  and  ex- 
acted by  the  University  contmun- 
ity. 

A  great  <±atiettge  to  any  ad- 
ministratk>n  in  any  coUege  or  uni- 
versity is  to  provide  those  condi- 
tions in  which  the  individual  facul- 
ty member  can  give  his  passioaate 
devotion  to  his  calling,  in  which 
he  can  feel  that  his  labor  in  search 
for  the  truth  is  understood  and 
respected  for  its  value  to  the 
world  about  him.  and  in  which  the 
student  may  find  greater  realixa- 


i 


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Fo! 
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THURSDAY,  MAY  9,  1957 


THi  DAII.Y  TAIl  HtIL 


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peace 


*  Servicemen  Learn  From  Carolina  Professors 

One  of  the  Fort  Sragg  Extension  classes  sponsored  by  the  UNC  Extension  Division.  Shown  is  Dr.  R.  M.  Miller's  class  in  American  History. 

Fort  Bragg  Soldiers  Still  Go  To  College 
As  Carolina  Profs  Teach  Twice  Weekly 


^cbich  «^ 
ill  not  be 
;  ot  tbeir 
he  basis 
research 
I.  Base 
are  eacb 
.-liiratioa. 
dtstick  of 
one  caa 
bas>c  re- 
c  become 
x%xoorr%rK. 
and  •writ- 
ihunt  t^t 
in>-  of  OUT 
■r  iBStitu- 
n  uidustry 
not  afford 

loere    are 

tbe 
»»-e  indivi- 
The  moKt 
the  atmos- 

>m  Uuit 

ot'  action, 
td   .*i>ee<kiat 

'hat  the 
id  tile  ad- 
ssccore  to 
an^t^  that 
researtA 
■onditioB  of 

di.«icharge 
iber  of  tbe 

ust  neco::- 
nbers,  like 
kaw  the 
responsibie 
before   the 

respoasible 
nt. 

Hist  be  free 

tbe  policy 

Board     of 

led    rc^oti- 

ti 

the  aaswer 
d  error  lies 
freedom  to 
gniaed  and 
accouat- 
tt.  decency 
and  cx- 
ly  commua- 

to  aay  ad- 
Hece  or  uni- 
thoae  ooQdi- 
^idual  facul- 

is  passkHMle 
12.  IB  which 
ior  iQ  search 
ierMood  and 
kic  to  the 
IB  >*ttich  Uie 
aier  realiaa- 


AAAY  12th  Is 

MOTHER'S  DAY 

Mom's  a  good  egg  —  she  deserves 
a   nice   token   from   you. 

But  take  a  word  of  advice  from  j 
your  ancient  bookseller  —  don't  j 
ma4ce  it  furterial.  At  heart.  Mom  i 
is  a  lot  closer  to  fHat  chick  you're  '• 
trying  to  date  than  she  is  to  i 
Whistler's  rocking-chair  antique. 
And,  pal,  shell  thank  you  to  keep 
that  in  mind. 

That's  why  our  cards  are  gay  kid- 
ding youthful  designs.  That's  why, 
if  you  ask  us  to  recommend  a 
book  for  a  Mother's  Day  gift,  we're 
more  likely  to  pick  a  lively  modern 
novel  than  a  book  of  meditations 
for  the  aged. 

A  woman's   as  young  as  she  feels. 
Clip  a  clump   of  years  off  Mom's 
score   wth    a   reminder   that   you 
know   she's  a  lively  biddy  stilll 

THE  INTIMATE 

BOOKSHOP 

205  East  Franklin  Street 

Open  Till  10  P.  M. 


By   FRANK   WAMSLEY 

They're  in  the  Army  now  but 
they  can  still  go  to  college. 

Untiring  professors  from  the 
University  of  North  Carolina 
transplant  knowledge  twice  week- 
ly from  the  University  to  the  huge 
Army  base  at  Fort  Bragg.  N.  C. 
Servicemen  are  thus  able  to  at- 
tend classes  taught  by  professors 
and  to  further  their  educations 
while  serving  their  country. 

The  trip  down  to  Ft.  Bragg  and 
back  again  is  a  long  but  reward- 
ing one  and  is  made  after  having 
already  taught  a  full  schedule  of 
classes.  In  spite  of  the  rigors  of 
!  the  trip,  the  faculty  members  en- 
i  joy  teaching  the  servicemen  and 
speak  highly  of  their  quest  for 
knowledge. 

Praise  Servicemen 
Dr.    J.    B.    Linker,    professor   of 
I  mathematics  and  himself  a  veter- 
!  an  of  two  world  wars,  praised  the 
i  servicemen's     desire     to     improve 
i  themselves  and  further  their  edu- 
cations.     "These      fellows     really 
want   to   learn,"   Dr.   Linker  said, 
.  "And   it   is  a   pleasure     to     find 
minds  so  receptive  to  knowledge 
and  so  willing  to  learn." 
j      Other    faculty    members    teach- 
I  ing  classes  at  Ft.  Bragg  are:  Dr. 
R.  M.  Miller,  Dept  of  History;  Dr. 
I  V.  A.  Hoyle,  Dept.  of  Mathematics; 
;  Dr.  C.  B.  Robson,  Dept' "of  Politi- 
i  cal  Science;  and  Mr.  Jerah  John- 
!  son,  Dept.  of  Social  Science. 


Seven  North  Carolinians  are 
taking  advantage  of  the  classes 
which  are  sponsored  by  the  Ex- 
tension Division  of  the  Universi- 
tyty  of  North  Carolina  as  part  of 
its  service  to  the  people  of  the 
state. 

On  April  5  a  new  term  opened 
at  the  Ft.  Bragg  Education  Cen- 
ter and  a  new  professor  turned  to 
greet  his  class.  The  scene  he  saw 
was  much  the  same  as  in  any 
othef  class  room,  "ntere  were 
chairs    and    the    inevitaWle  black- 


if   the    room    is   -warm,    there    is 
quite  a  struggle  to  stay  awake. 
Rank   Doesn't   Matter 

An  interesting  facet  of  this 
phase  of  army  life  is  that  rank 
does  not  enter  the  classroom. 
Every  man  is  "Mister"  regardless 
of  whether  he  has  stripes  on  his 
sleeves  or  bars  on  his  shoulders 
or  is  wearing  civilian  clothes.  Ex- 
cept for  the  men  just  coming  off 
duty,  most  of  'the  students  wear 
civilian  clothes. 

Typical  of  the   students  contin- 


boards,  but  the  students'  wer^  j  uing  their  studies  while  in  the 
somehow   different.  Army   is  John   W.   Martin,   20.   of 

Some  of  them  were  in  uniform,  i  Mount  Airy,  N.C.  He  is  the  son 
Some  were  older  than  one  ex-  of  Mrs.  Edith  L.  Martin  of  Mount 
pects  to  see  in  a  class  room.  But }  Airy,  N.C. 

the  difference  was  not  to  bel  Martin  is  a  private  with  thie 
found  in  any  of  these  superficial  440th  Army  Band.  He  enlisted  in 
things  for  there  were  also  stu-  the  Army  in  1956  after  having 
dents  dressed  in  the  bright  colors   completed    two    years    of   college 


of  youth. 


Desire  To  Laarn 

What  the  new  professor  saw 
that  was  different  was  a  desire 
to  learn  and  a  seriousness  of  pur- 
pose not  found  in  the  average 
classroom.  This  factor  makes 
teaching  servicemen  one  of  the 
most  rewarding  experiences  a 
teacher  can  have. 

Classes  are  temporarily  being  Bragg  glee  club,  believes  that  the 
held  in  barracks-type  buildings  I  servicemen  are  very  happy  to  be 
while  the  permanent  classrooms!  able  to  take  college  credit 
are  being  renovated.  This  fact  |  courses  while  in  the  Army.  "Our 
however  does  not  dampen  any  of  |  only  regret   is   that   there   is   not 


here.  Music  Education  was  his 
field  of  study  and  Martin  hopes 
to  get  his  degree  after  completing 
his  tour  of  duty  with  the  Army. 

"I  hope  someday  to  teach,"  Mar- 
tin  said,     "and     these     extension 
courses  will  save  me  a  lot  of  time 
when  I  go  back  to  school." 
Musician 

Martin,    who     plays     the    piano 
and  clarinet  and  sings  in  the  Fort 


DAILY    CROSSWORD 


ACROSS 

1.  French 
novelist 
5.  Bang 
9.  Spoken 

10.  Circle  of 
light 

11.  Sacred 
song 

12  Greek  letter 

14.  Questions 

15.  Swab 

16.  Biblical 
city 

17.  Music  note 

18.  Kind  of 
engine 

19.  Malt 
beverage 

20  Germinate 
23.  Fail  to  hit 
24  Enraged 
26.  Confront ' 
28.  Disuse,  as 

for  repairs 
31.  Writing 

fluid 
32  Fortify 

33.  FarrA 
animal 

34.  Music  note 
35  Large  worm 
36.  White  ant 

(var.) 
38.  Satan 

40.  Matured 

41.  River    (Fr.) 

42.  Strong 
wind 

43.  Let  it  stand 
(print.) 

44.  Voided 
escutcheon 
(her.) 

DOWT* 
1.  News- 
.  _  monger 


2.  Oil-rich 
country 

3.  Pigeon  peaa 

4.  Tree 

5.  Branch 

6.  Light 

7.  Malt 
beverage 

8.  Magnates 
11.  Cares.ses 
13.  God  of  war 
15.  Shooting 

stars 

18.  Container 

19.  "Verdi  opera 
2\,  A  frame  «i 
22.  Single 

unit 


23.  En- 
coun- 
tered 

25.  Alco- 
hoUc 
beve- 
rage 

26.  Set 
in 
order 

27.  Climb- 
ing 
fish 

29.  Hockey 
player 

30.  Egress 
32.  Thing  of 

value 


ai-i      aKiu  una 
wr=!rj!HDn  naiiQ 

tJEE  ass     cin 

tin  yaa  Esnra 

HflyuL:^  unaoH 
^aM[?j  f3iii3M 


8atar4a7'a  Aa«« 

35.  Ireland 
.    36.  Jewish 
month 
37.  Void 

39.  Ignited 

40.  Past 


I  the  enthusiasm  the  students  have. 
The    Army    has    been    very    co- 
I  operative   in   encouraging  service- 
men  to   further   their  educations. 


Orders    have    been    issued    to   the^.some  foreign  countries.  One,  Hugh 


effect  that  men  shall  be  released 
from  other  duties  in  order  to  en- 
able them  to  attend  classes.  At 
times  men  have  been  brought  in 
from  distant  field  exercises  by 
special  transport  to  enable  them 
to  attend  classes. 

To  further  encourage  the  ser- 
vicemen to  study,  the  Army  pays 
about  three-fourths  of  each  stu- 
dent's tuition. 

Sometimes  men  come  to  class 
who  have  just  been  relieved  of 
duty  after  a  full  day  of  hard  work. 


time  enough     to    take     more    of 
them."  he  concluded. 

Other    students  come    from    al- 
most every  state  in  the  union  plus 


Lunney,  immigrated  from  County 
Caven,  Ireland  where  he  attended 
St.  Patrick's  College  for  two  years. 
He,  like  John  Martin  and  the  oth- 
er students,  is  pleased  to  have  the 
opporunity  to  better  himself  while 
serving  his  time  with  the  Army. 

North  Carolina  students  attend- 
ing the  extension  classes  are:  Ed- 
ward J.  Gehrke  and  Beatrice  A. 
Bernstein.  Fayetteville;  Charles 
F.  Floyd,  Salisbury;  John  W.  Mar- 
tin. Mount  Airy;  Clifford  Bean, 
Hamlet;  Maurice  W.  Webster,  Row- 


Two  hours  of  classes  on  top  of  a    land;     Clyde    H.    Wallace,     High 
full  day  makes  it  pretty  r6ugh  and,  ,Point. 


Library  Receives  Over 
10.000  Gifts  Of  Books 


Dr.  Andrew  H.  Horn,  University 
Librarian,  announced  today  over 
10,000  gilts  of  books,  maouscripts 
and  other  works  ci  axi  and  litera- 
ture from  "Friends  of  the  Library" 
diu-ing  the  past  year. 

Horn's  announcement  comes  four 
days  before  the  25th  anniversary 
dinner  meeting  of  the  organization 
here  Friday,  May  10  at  6:30  p.m.  at 
the  Carolina  Inn. 

George  Stephens  of  Asheville, 
president  of  Friends  of  the  Library, 
win  preside. 

Some  of  tbe  books,  prints,  maps 
and   works    of   atrt   are   rare   and 


valuaible. 

Limestone  Figures 

Among  the  art  objects  are  a  groMP 
of  ancient  Grecian  carved  lime- 
stone figures  and  heads.  Repnes«tf- 
ative  gifts  are  on  display  in  the 
Louis  RouiKi  Wilson  Library  build- 
ing, and  some  of  them  will  be  ex- 
hibited at  the  Carolina  Inn  on  May 
10.  • 

Gifts  include: 

About  3,000  books,  434  manuscriji* 

items  and  450  miscellaneous  niapSi 

presented  by  Gray  McW.  Bryan  oC 

New    Yorjc    City,    in   honor   of   his 

(See  LIBRARY,  page  4J     _ 


May  ISSUE  OF  ^ 

Woman's  Day 

7c 


NEW 


Ann   Page 

Cake  Mixes 

FIVE  WONDERFUL  FLAVORS  TO  SELECT  FROM 

^   White    ^   Honey  Spice 
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'MNAAAAAAAAAAA 


ANN  PAGE  FINE  QUALITY  FOODS  • 

SPECIAL!  Ann  Page  Salad 

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PREPARED  SPAGHETTI  .  2  Tl°/  29c 


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THUftSOi 


Many  Services  In  The  Nation  s  Oldest  State  University 


By  PETE   IVEY  i     MEDICAL  SCHOOl^-The  School 

^.j  ^..       .  „•.    ^  '<rt  Medicine  lias  tlie  approval  of 

Old  Chapel  Hill  has  a  newness  ^    ^^„    ^j    American    Medical 

and  attitude  of  expectancy  these 

days. 


Colleges  and  of  the  Council  on 
Medical  Education  and  Hospitals 
of  the  American  "Medical  Assn. 

AMONG   LEADING    FIVE— The 
curriculum  of  Comparative  Litera 


WUNC-TV 

EDUCATIONAL  TV— WUNC-TV. 
the  educational  television  station, 
which  broadcasts  over  Channel  4, 
offers  a  wide  variety  of  intellect- 
ual and  cultural  programs  within 
a  radius  of  about  100  from  Chapel 
Hill. 


tur€  at  Chapel  Hill  belongs  to  the '     GRASSROOTS  GOVERNMENT— 


'^g  Five"  in  America:  Yale,  Wis- 
consin, Harvard,  Indiana  and  North 
Carolina. 

STATISTICAL    DISTINCTION- 
The  Dept.  of  Statistics  has  become 


Every  city  hall,  county  jailer,  high' 
way  patrolman,  court  house,  slier- 
iff,  city  manager,  judge,  county 
commissioner  and  everyone  who 
who  participates  in  town,  county 


in  only  a  short  period  of  time  and  state  government  in  this  state 
one  of  the  world's  outstanding  cen- 
ters for  training  and  research  in 
statistical  studies,  as  indicated  by 
the  demand  for  specialized  con- 
tract work  by  the  U.  S.  Govern- 
ment, industry,  business  artd  foun- 
dations, as  well  as  the  State  of 
North  Carolina. 


On*  Of  Fiv* 

ONE  OF  TOP  FIVE— The  Dept. 
of  City  and  Regional  Planning  is 
classified  as  on€  of  the  five  lead- 
ing planning  schools  (out  of  a 
total   of  23)   in   the  country,   the 


has  benefited  by  down-to-earth 
practical  guidance  and  instruc- 
tion offered  to  officers  of  grass- 
roots government  by  the  Institute 
of  Government.  These  local  of- 
ficials come  here  for  short  courses, 
and  specialists  from  UNC  go  to 
communities  of  the  state  for  spec- 
ial projects. 

RESEARCH  TRIANGLE— Chap- 
el Hill  is  one  acute  angle  of  "The 
Research  Triangle"  which  is  en- 
gaged in  developing  the  economic- 
industrial  •  social  potentiality  of 
this    state — bringing    in    new    in- 


other  four  being  Harvard,  M.I.T..  j  jjy5tj.y    raising   per  capita  wealth 
University  of  Pennsylvania  and  the  ' 


This  oldest  part  of  the  CoiBoli- 
dated  University  of  North  Caro- 
lina shared  with  State  College  in 
Raleigh  and  Woman's  College  in 
Greensboro  the  opportunities  of 
helping  to  inaugurate  a  new  Pres- 
ident. William  C  Friday. 

And  just  a  few  weelcs  from 
jnow,  July  1,  a  new  Chancellor 
will  assirme  administrative  leader- 
ship at  Chapel  Hill— William 
Brantley  Aycock. 

On  this  oldest  state  universi- 
ty campus  in  the  nation,  there  is 
a  fresh  spring  beauty,  and  the 
quiet  tranquil  atmosphere  serves 
as  an  appropriate  accompaniment 
to  a  mighty  ferment  of  activity  in 
the  Universit>"'s  14  colleges  and 
schools,  its  dozen  or  so  institutes 
and  other  academic-affiliated  or- 
ganizations and  its  seventy  special- 
ized departments. 

Questions 

What  is  the  University  at  Chap- 
el Hill?  What  have  you  got  here? 
What  is  the  distinction  of  i^s 
schools  and  colleges?  What  are 
the  achievements  of  the  faculty? 
What  extra  services  does  the  Uni- 
versity render  to  the  state: 

Herewith  presented,  in  staccato 
fashion,  are  some  of  the  recent 
accomplishments  of  faculty  mem- 
bers, indications  of  the  rank  ac- 
hieved by  colleges  and  schools, 
and  a  presentation  of  services 
which  the  University  at  Chapel 
Hill  renders  to  the  people  of  the 
state. 

What  Are   Th««e   Distmctfons 

AAU — The  University  at  Chapel 
Hill  is  one  of  S7  members  of  the 
American  Assn.  of  Universities, 
admission  to  which  is  governed  by 
the  strictest  standards. 

LIBER.\L  ARTS  —  UNC  stood 
second  in  the  South  in  a  recent 
nation-wide  survey  of  liberal  arts 
studies,  with  Chapel  Hill  adjudged 
to  be  among  the  best  in  the  rat- 
ings based  on  graduate  wortc,  both 
in  research  and  creative  activity,  in 
33  liberal  arts  fields. 

SECOND  IN  NATION— In  the 
Medieval  and  Renaissance  fields, 
UNC  is  ranked  second  among  state 
universities   in   the   nation. 

TEN  BEST  —  Ten  departments 
th£t  have  been  ranked  as  among 
the  best  in  the. nation  are:  Botany. 

Classics,  Drama,  Englij;h.  French.  :j,gj.  ^^^  service  to  grass-roots 
HL';tor>-.  Physics.  Psychology.  Ro- 1  government  -(city,  county  and 
mance  Languages.  Sociology.  j  ^^^^^^    j^    jj^e    only   agency  of  its 

WITH    BEST-A   committee    on.^j^d  in  the  nation, 
ratings  has  put  the  History  Dept.  ( 
equal  to  the  best  departments  in ! 
the    nation,    along   with    Harvard. !      BOOTSTRAPS     —     "Operation ;  the  executive  council  of  the  Assn. 
Yale.  Columbia  and  Wisconsin.       i  Bootstraps."   the    Governor's    pro- 1  of  Amenran  Medical  Colleges.  He 

NATIVE    DRAMA  — The    Dept.  i  gram     for    Tar  Heel  self-help  in   is   a   medical  research   adviser  to 
of  Dramatic  Art.  with  -ts  famous  j  promoting     homegrown     industry,  |  the  Veterans  Administration, 
thespia-   playwriting    organization,  i  toi   its    basic    eco'liomic    program  j  Puerto  Rico 

The  Carolina  Playmakers,  is  in  its  :  from     the     combined     efforts     of 
40th  year  as  one  of  the  nation's  j  economists,    social    scientists    and  j 
leading     native     drama     organiza 
tions. 


University  of  California  at  Berke- 
ley. 

AMONG  THE  BEST— The  Dept. 
of  Germanic  Languages  ranks  with 
the  best  departments  of  German 
and  Germanic  studies  in  the 
country  and  is  the  leading  under- 
graduate and  graduate  department 
in   the  Southeast. 

SIX-FOLD  HEALTH  COMPLEX 
— ^The  Division  of  liealth  Affairs 
is  one  of  the  few  combined  health 
complexes  in  the  world,  including 
schools  of  medicine,  piharmacy, 
dentistry,  nursing,  public  health 
and  a  teaching  hospital. 

MAJOR  WORLD  CENTER— The 
Psychometric  Laboratory  of  the 
Dept.    of   Psychology   is  xegarded 


improving   living    conditions   gen- 
erally. 

TEACHERS  —  Besides  sending 
hundreds  of  teachers  into  the 
North  Carolina  Public  School  sys- 
tem, the  School  of  Education 
furnishes  headquarters  for  the 
State  School  Boards  Assn.,  pro- 
vides non-credit  study  courses  fbr 
school  superintendents  and  super- 
visors, and  conducts  workshops  and 
institutes  for  teachers. 

Judged  By  Their  Peers 

Members  of  our  faculty  are  well 
known  and  highly  respected  by 
their  colleagues  in  regional  and 
national  associations. 

This  is  signified  by  the  regard 
professional   peers   show   for   oar 


faculty  when  they  meet  to  discuss 
^^.■""^"V^  /_^. ._*!?*     7.^t^.   their   specialties.  UNC  represent- 

ativies  have  a  good  score  in   ctf- 
fices  held  in  national  assemblies. 


Paul  N.  Guthrie,  chairman  of  the 
Dept.  of  Economics,  was  elected  . 
Feb,  2nd  president  of  the  Nation-  { 
al  Academy  of  Arbitrators.  Dr.  j 
Guthrie  is  a  prominent  arbitrator  I 
of  labor-management  disputes.        | 

SPECTATOR-^enan  Professor  \ 
of  English  Richmond  P.  Bond  is : 
the  w^M-ld's  foremost  living  author- ; 
ity  on  Addison  and  Steele's  "The  i 
Spectator."  I 

CHEMICTJIY— K^nan    Professor; 
Arthur   Roe,   director   of   the   Di-i 
vision   of  National   Sciences,  is   a 
member  of  the  council     of     thi 
American  Chemical     Society     and 
has     developed    several     research 
projects    for    the    Atomic  Energy  j 
Commission.  i 

INDIA    HONOR  —  Kenhn    Pro-  j 
fessor  John  N.  Couch  (Botany)  has 
been   elected   an  honorary  fellow  I 
of  National   Academy   of  Sciences 
in  India,  the  only  American  bot-i 
anist  to  bs  so  honored.  I 

RESEARCH — ^Professor    Edward 
William     Noland     (Sociology)     isj 
chairman  of  the  research  council ; 
of  the   American   Sociological   So-  j 
ciety. 

SOUTHERN    PRESIDENT— Pro- 
fessor  Milton  Heath    (Economics) 
is  president  of  the  Southern  Eco- 1 
nomic  Assn.  ] 

IN  TURKEY— Prof .  J.  0.  Bailey 
(English)    is   this   year   State   Dc- 1 
partment  Cultural  Lecturer  at  the  i 
University  of  Istanbul,  Turkey.       j 

TRIANGLE— Prof.  George  Simp-  j 

son  < Sociology)  is  Director  of  the  i 

Research  Triangle.  | 

Jamerson  i 

PHY^CAL  —  Professor  Richard 
E.  Jamerson  of  the  Dept.  of  Physi- 
cal Education  is  secretary  and 
treasurer  of  the  national  College 
Physical  Education  Assn.  and  edi- 
tor of  the  Annual  Proceedings. 


ADMINISTRATrVE— Dr.  Arnold 
K.  King,  assistant  dean  of  the 
Graduate  School,  is  chairman  of 
the  committee  on  administrative 
problems  of  the  Assn.  of  Deans  of 
Graduate  Schools  of  the  American 
Assn.  of  Universities. 

PIERSON— Dean  W.  W.  Pierson 
of  the  Graduate  School  is  acting 
chancellor  of  the  Woman's  (Al- 
lege and  is  chairman  of  the  Rocke- 
feller Foundation's  Southern  Fel- 
lowship Fund  selecting  outstand- 
ing graduates  for  advanced  study. 


WE'LL  BUY  ALL 
YOUR  OLD  BOOKS 

•  Live  Texts 

We  pay  top  prices  for  texts 
that  will  be  used  again  at 
U.N.C. 

•  Dropped  Texts 

We'll  search  the  market  for 
a  spot  to  salvage  some  of 
your  los9  when  a  text  is 
dropped. 

•  Enjoyable  Books 

We  can  use  books  you  bo 
longer  want  on  your  shelves. 
The  next  fellow  that  comes 
along  may  find  them  as  de- 
lightful as  you  did  a  year  or 
so  ago. 

When  Exams  Are  Over, 

There'll  Be  Green  Money 

For  You  At 

THE   INTIMATE 
BOOKSHOP 

205  East  Franklin  St. 


OPERA— "Let's  Listen  to  Ope- 
ra" is  the  title  of  a  course  offered 
by  WUNC  and  WMIJ,  through 
auspices  of  the  UNC  Extension 
Division,  and  handled  by  Norman 
Cordon,  formerly  of  the  Metropoli- 
tan Opera  Company.  The  program 
is  now  accepted  as  a  credit 
course  for  music  students  at  Ap- 
palachian State  Teachers  College 
in  Boone,  and  arrangements  are- 
being  made  for  credit  courses  at 
other  institutions. 


LIBRARY 

(Continued  from  page   3) 

I  great-grandfather,  James  W.  Bryan, 
UNC  dass  of  1824. 

Two  15th  Century  books  from 
Spain,  given  by  Miles  Horton  Jr., 
of  Lynchburg,  Va. 

Perceforest,"  printed  in  Paris  in 
15511,  one  of  the  'gpeaiest  romances 


of  chivalry  of  history  and  one  of 
the    landmarks    in    the    history    d(  ••' 
printing,   presented   by   Robert  M.  ■-. 
Btones  of  Winstoin-&dem. 

Dr.  Siamuel  Johnson's  famoas 
"IWctionary  of  the  En^ish  Langu- 
age" (a  first  edition  published  in  1755  ', 
in  London)  presented  by  Waiiam  A. 
Whitaker  of  New  York  City.  WM- 
taker  also  gave  fir^  editions  by 
Charles  Dickens  and  George  Cruik- 
shank. 

. — .  Itw 


Page  one  item: 

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permanent-stay  collar  is  for  you. 
These  stays  are  built  right  in, 
jwrmancntly  and  invisibly. 
They  can't  get  lost — ever! 

Permanent  staj^  are  introduced 
this  season  in  a  trim  short-pointed 
collar  model  with  French  cuffs. 
Yours  in  **Sanforized-labelIed" 
broadcloth,  just  $5.00.  Pure  sQk  tie,  $2 

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nouncemc^ 
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cipating 
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announce. 

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f. 


major  training  center  for  students 
in  the  field  of  mental  measure- 
ment 

FROM  THE  DEEP— The  Insti- 
tute ^f  Fisheries  Research,  a  part 
of  the  Dept.  of  Zoology,  is  at  More- 
head  City  and  is  one  of  the  few 
such  organizations  in  the  country 
dedicated  to  improving  the  abund- 
ance and  quality  of  foodstuffs  from 
the  sea  on  which  mankind  now 
and  in  the  future  will  so  vitally 
depend. 


commfttee  chairmanships  and  di- 
rectorshps,  and  in  the  significant 
invitations  to  individual  members 
of  our  faculty  to  present  specific 
information  to  add  to  the  enlight- 
enment of  the  professions. 

Here  are  some  indications  of 
that  professional  regard:  '' 

LAW  PREXY — ^Kenan  Professor 
of   Law  M.   T.   Van  Hecke   served 


last    year    as    president    of    the 
UNIQUE-The  Institute  of  Gov-  ^^^     ^^   American   Law   Schools, 
ernment  which  devetes  its  teach-.     jouRNAUSM-Dean  N.  N.  Lux- 

on  is  1957  president  of  the  Assn. 
for  Education  in  Journalism. 

TOP   MEDICAL   POST— Dr.    W. 

Reece  Berryhill,  dean  of  the  school 

'Services"  to  State  °^  Medicine,  served   last  year   on 


RESE.\RCH    CENTER   —   The 


CONSULTANT— ^Dr.    Henry    T. 

.  Clark,  director  of  the  Division  of 

others  at  Chapel  Hill  who  acted  as   jj^^j^^  ^jf^j,.,  j^  consultant  to  the 

advisers-consultants.  government  of  Puerto  Rico  in  tWe 

DOCTORS  TRAVEL  _  Doctors  Lonstruction     of     a     $50     million 
Institute    for    Research    in    Social  j  from  all  departments  of  the  School  |  figgj^j,  center. 

Science  is  a  nationally-prrttoiiient I  of   Medicine   have   gone   out   into;      GOVERNOR Prof     John    A 

brc^ad-phasea    research    agetfcy   in !  the  state    to    gr\'e    post-graduate   .^^^^^^   y^^^  ^f  ^^e  Dept-  of  City 


'Vj  ,?1 


X.    \      >-r.    -' 


finding  useful  facts  in  anthropolo- 
gy, economics,  history,  political 
science,  psychiatry,  public  ad- 
ministration, regional  ^nd  dtf 
planning.  st>cial  and  clinical  psy*^ 
chology.  social  aspects  of  health 
and  medicine,  sociology  and  sta- 
tistics. 


lecture  courses  to  medical  special-   ^^^  Regional  Planning  has  served 
ists   and   general   practitioners   in         ^^^  ^^^^^  ^j  Governors  of  the 


communitia  all  over  North  Caro 
Hha— ^presenting  the   latest   infor- 


American  Institute  of  Planners. 
DENTISTRY    ADVTSER  — Dean 


nriation  about  new  techniques  and   j^^^   ^^^^^^     ^^     ^^  _  Dentistry 


sjcills  in  medical  care 

tflftAMA — Gaining  its  momentum 
from  the  Carolina  Playmakers  and 


PRBSjS  —  The     University     of ,  the    Dramatic    Arts    Dept,   North 


North  Carolina  Press,  35  years  old 
(this  year,  is  a  member  of  the 
jAmerican  Association  of  Univers- 
ity Presses. 

PLANETARIUli  —  Morehead 
Planetariain  BuiUUng  contains  the 
sixth  Zeiss  Planetarium  installa- 
tion in  the  Western  Hemisphere, 
the  first  one  in  the  world  to  be 
Wned  by  a  university. 

Class  A 
I  FIRST  CLASS-^The  School  of 
Dentistry,  a  class  A  school  accred- 
ited by  the  American  Dental  Assn., 
4s  North  Carolina's  only  Dentt^tiy 
SchooL 

BUSINESS— The  School  of  Bus- 
iness Administration  is  the  lead- 
ing such  school  in  the  South  and 
among  the  few  excellent  schools 
of  business  adrainlsttatloh  in  the 
.country  and  is  accredited  by  the 
lAmerican  Assn.  <*  Collegiate 
Schools  of  Business. 

LAW— The  Law  Sehool  is  a 
member  of  the  Assn.  of  Ameri- 
can Law  Schools  and  is  on  the  ap- 
|proved  list  of  the  American  Bar 
(Assn. 

I  FOREMOST— In  scope  of  activi- 
Ties  and  in  effectivenes  of  service, 
the  UNC  Extension  Division  is 
counted  one  of  the  foremost  di- 
visions of  its  kind  in  the  nation. 

EXECUTIVE  PROGRAM— The 
"Executive  !»rogram"  in  the  School 
of  Business  Administration  is 
one  of  the  distinctive  programs  of 
the  nation  for  ^traii^g  in  ad- 
vanced management  -  dustrial  policies. 


Carolina's  summer  out-door  his- 
torical pageiant-Sramas  have  won 
national  reknown  —  -among  them 
"The  Lost  Colony,"  "Horn  in  the 
West,"  "Unto  These  Hills,"  -in  this 
state  and  "WilddTness'  Roed,^  and 
"The  Common  Glory"  in  Kentucky 
and  Virginia.  Little  theatre  com- 
munity drama  groups  also  are 
helped. 

CORRESPONDENCE    COURSES 

Hundreds  of  "^ottti  Carolinans 
take  correspondence  courses  from 
the  faculty  at  Chapel  Hill,  ar- 
raitged  through  the  UNC  Extens- 
ion Division.  Three  of  Aiese  courses 
are  currently  being  offered  on 
educational  tel^ision,  through 
WUNC-TV.  Last  year  a  total  of 
W80  individuals  enrolled  for  1769 
courses. 

SCIENCE  TEACHERS— to  train 
more  teachers  in  the  sciences,  the 
University  has  obtained  national 
support  for  a  special  summer 
dotMe  in  ItST  and  a  regular-term 
course  in  1957-56,  the  ultimate 
goal  of  which  is  to  relieve  the  state' 
and  n:fti<m«l  shortage  of  science' 
teachers  in  the  public  schools,  in' 
colleges  and  in   industry. 

NEWS  LETTER-^The  Univers- 
ity News  Letter,  a  sheet  giving 
basiie  and  definite  facts  aboat 
North  Carolina's  economic  social 
status,  presents  straightforward 
information  and  is  counted  a  pow- 
erful force  in  guilding  the  state's 
educatiootl,  governmental  and  invj  Busi^iess. 


School  is  an  adviser  to  the  office 
of  the  Secretary  of  Defense.  He 
also  is  president  of  the  Southerti 
Ccwiference  on  Dental  Deans. 

U.  S.  AND  CANADA-^Dr.  An- 
drew Horn  (Lidbrarian)  is  chair- 
man of  the  Joint  Committee  of  the 
American  Library  Aissn.  and  the 
Canadian  Library  Assn. 

THREE  TigCSS  PHESIDENTS— 
Director  Lambert  Davis  of  the 
University  of  North  Carolina 
Press  was  president  last  year  of 
the  American  Assn.  of  Universi- 
ty Presses,  be  b«lng  the  third  UNC 
iPress  chief  to  hold  that  position — 
the  othec  two  were  William  T. 
Couch  and  Thomas  J.  Wilson  III, 
now  director  of  the  Harvard  Uni- 
versity Presi. 

CLASfiiCAL  SCHOLARr—Kenan 
Professor  B.  L.  UUman  (Classiar) 
is  untfue^ontbly  oiie  of  the 
world's^  most  prominent  scholais 
in  Latin,  Roman  history  and.  in  thfe 
Medieval  4nd  Itenaissance  per- 
idds. 

ATOMIC  ADVISER— Dr;  -Char- 
les }i.  Burnett,  head  of  tiie^Dept. 
of  Medicine  in  the  Medical  SchocA, 
is  the  i^eiokm  member  of  a  team 
of  medical  eiB|>ert8  advising  thfe 
Atomle  Energy  Commission  oh 
radio-biology  use  of  isotopes  in 
medicine. 

Doan  La* 

TOP  COMMTTTEX-'Dean  Maur- 
ice W.  Lee  (Business  Administra- 
tration)  is  a  member  of  the  execu- 
tive committee  of  the  American 
Assn.  of  CoUegtate     Schools     of 


ARBITRATION  CHIEF  —  Prof» 


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THURSDAY,  MAY  9,   1957 


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Covering  The  Universify  Campus 


President  Friday  s  Address 


OLD  WELL  (NITIATION 

The  Order  of  the  Old  Well  will 
hold  initiations  at  4  p.m.  today  in; 
Gerard  Hall,  according  to  an   an 
nouncement  received  yesterday. 
HORSESHOE  PRACTICE    '  | 

All  per^'ons  interested  in  parti- ' 
cipating  in   the  "Big   Four   Field 
Daj'"  to  be  held  May  14,  have  been 
urged  to  attend  a  p/actice  session 
today  and  tomorrow  at  the  horse-  j 
shoe  pits  at  Woollen  Gym  it  was 
announced  yesterdav 
BAND  MEETING 

A  special  meeting  of  the  UNC 
band  will  be  held  today  at  4:30 
p.m.,  it  was  announced  yesterday. 
All  members  of  the  marching  band 
and  concert  band  have  been  urged 
to  attend.  Awards  will  be  made 
and  plans  for  the  coming  football 
i«ason  will  be  discuz.'sed. 
IVESTMINSTBR  FELLOWSHIP 

The  spring  retreat  of  the  West- 
minster Fellowship  will  be  held 
this  weekend  (May  10,  11  and  12), 
it  was  announced  yesterday.   The 


session  will  be  held  at  Fort  Cas- 
well, and  according  to  the  an- 
nouncement, will  feature  pleasure 
with  business-.  I 

Cars  will  leave  Y  Court  Friday 
at  2  p.m.  and  on  Saturday  at  1  p.m. : 
Everyone  interested  in   participat- , 
ing  in  the  program  has  been  urged 
to  contact  Jim  Merritt  at  8-9174.      I 
PRESS  CLUB 

The  UNC  Press  Club  and  School ; 
of  Journalism  will  hold  its  Annual ; 
Awards  Dinner  at  7:30  p.m.  today ' 
at  Brady's  Restaurant.  | 

MUSIC  RECITAL  { 

James  Chamblee  from  Balti- 
more, Maryland,  will  be  featured 
at  the  Music  Department's  Senior 
Recital  to  be  held  at  8  p.m.  today  ' 
in  Hill  Hall.  All  interested  per- 
son- have  been  invited  to  attend. 
WUNC-TV 

Today's  schedule  for  WUNC-TV, 
the   University's   educational   tele- 
vision station  is  as  follows: 
12:45    Music 
1:00    Today  On  The  Farm 


1:30  Play  Period 

2:00  Sign  Off 

5:14  Sign  On 

5:30  American  Government 

6:00  Legislative  Review 

6:20  News  and  Safety 

6:30  Mr.  Murgie's  Music 

7:00  Museum  of  Art 

7:30  German  Couri-e 

8:15  Sentinel  in  the  Sky 

8:30  On  the  Road 

9:0  World   of  Man 

9:30  Lecture  Hall 

10:00  Final  Edition 

10:05  Sign  Off 


BIG    30 
SALE 


SEE    BACk     PAGE 


(Continued   from    Page   2) 
tion  of  the  abilities   and   Ulents 
he  possesses. 

1  should  like  to  address  these 
next  words  partJoiMarly  to  the 
people  ot  North  Carohna.  We  re- 
joice that  students  from  all  the 
47  other  states  of  our  nation  and 
frron  .ntaoy  fOrevgn  countries  come 
to  study  in  our  three  instituti^ms. 
We  are  proud  that  the  iuflueace  o* 
our  (graduates  is  f^t  in  the  far 
comers  of  the  earth.  But  our  con- 
solidated institutions  belong  to  you. 
'You  have  not  heard  any  detailed 
speci/ictaiotts  for  the  educational 
develcpment  of  these  institutions. 
These  will  come  in  due  cooinse 
from  the  considered  recommenda- 
tions of  the  faculties  and  admin- 
istration working  together. 

Our  methods  will  change  and  our 
(programs  wiU  change,  bat  our 
(instant  purpose  will  'be  the  de-  ., 
velopmrat  of  a  three-foW  Univer- 
sity devoted  to  good  teaching, 
scholarty  researtrh  and  service  to 
the  peoiple  in  those  ways  properly 
the  happy  responsibility  of  our 
institutions. 

You  have  heard  of  our  convic- 
tion that  throui^  able  faculties 
provided  with  essential  resources, 
thjrmgh  strong  gradua^te  and  pro- . 
fessional  programs,  by  close  rela- 
tionships with  the  publLc  schools, 
throuigh  re^»nsjible  student  lead- 


ership," by  proper  concern  for  and 
action  in  meeting  the  needs  of  ouS* 
stage,  and  by  safeguarding  the 
underpinning  of  freedom,  you  may 
expect  that  which  you  have  every 
right  to  expect— the  leadership  of 
this  Coas(didated  University  in  the 
world  community  of  scholars  and 
in  the  life  of  North  Carolina* 

The  investment  of  large  sums 
of  money  will  be  required;  but, 
it  will  pay  pricriess  dividends. 
Your  representatives  in  the  Gen-^ 
eral  .\ssembdy  of  1957  have  de- 
monstrated their  appreciation  and 
understamting  of  the  work  that 
is  being  done  by  our  institutions 
of  higher  learning.  In  statesman- 
like manner  they  have  given  cleai 
evidence  that  they  intend  to  pro- 
vide,  in  your  name,  to  the  ftdlest 
possible  extent,  the  resources  so 
.unmistakably  needed  at  this  time. 

The  enthusiastic  nad  coirtinuing 
support  of  Governor  Hodges  is 
inspiring.  He  nad  other  officials 
of  the  state  have  shown  a  desire 
to  help  in  ways  far  beyond  the  re- 
quirements of  their  official  du- 
ties. 

It  is  with  you,  the  peoirfe  of 
Nwth  Carolina,  that  I  hare  en- 
tered into  solemn  compact  today. 
It  is  to  you  that  I  have  pledged 
my  mind,  my  heart,  my  hands 
and  my  strength. 

.\s  I  labor  for  you,  it  will  be 


my  bumble  jrayer  that  God  will 
bless  the  faculties  and  students  of 
the  Womna's  College,  State  Col- 
lege, and  the  University  in  Chapel 
Hill  in  their  efforts  to  achieve  j 
that  high  destiny  which  was  the  . 
\ision  and  purpose  of  the  founders. 

In  pledging  my   best   as   I   as-  i 
sume  these  responsibilities,  I  re-  | 
peat   the   hum:bile   petition   in   the 
last  four  words  of  the  oath  I  have 
sworn— ^  help  me  God. 


Patrolman  Hurt 

Patrolman  Mann  Norrls  cap- 
tared  a  1967  Pontiac  and  150  gal- 
lons of  liquor  following  a  chase  on 
Highway  70  last  Thursday. 

Charlie  M.  Wagner  of  Durham 
ran  through  a  speed  watch  on 
Highway  70  and  tried  to  outrun 
the  patrolman  when  he  gave  chase. 

Norris  fell  and  injured  his 
knee  as  he  jumped  from  his  car 
to  apprehend  Wagner  after  he 
stalled  his  car  and  ran.  He  was 
caught  by  an  aide  with  Norris 


rt^^.-^ 


W 


Adams  To  Be  On  TV 

Sherman  Adams,  the  assistant  to 
the  President,  Will  join  Dr.  Elmtr 
E.  Schattschneider  in  di;>cussion 
of  "The  E^xecutive  Office  of  the 
President"  on  '"The  American  Gov- 
ernment and  the  Pursuit  of  Happi- 
ness" program  at  5:50  p.m.  Thurs- 
day, May  9,  on  Channel  4.  WUNC- 
TV.  The  telecast  will  orignate  in 
the  broadcast  room  of  the  White 
House. 

This  is  one  of  five  programs, 
presented  by  NBC  in  cooperation 
with  the  Educational  Television 
and  Radio  Center,  which  are  be- 
ing sent  out  live  to  WUNC-TV  and 
the  nation's  other  educational  TV 
station.?  over  NBC's  regular  net- 
work fcailities  from  5:30  to  6  p.m., 
Monday  through  Friday. 

The  other  programs  of  this  edu- 
cational TV  project  arc  "The 
American  Scene,  Monday;  "Geog- 
raphy for  Decision,  Tuesday; 
Mathematics,  Wednesday.  "The 
American  Government  and  the 
Pursuit  of  Happiness"  is   present 

Thrtnifiiyi'i  


m.  9fsm&  m 


\      '> 


Petites  Dramatiqua 

The  newly  formed  Petites  Dram- 
atique  dramatic  group  will  pre- 
sent on  May  19  its  first  produc- 
tion since  the  highly  successful 
presentation  of  Caligula  several 
weeks  ago. 

The  program.  "An  evening  of 
Tennessee  Williams"  will  consist 
of  two  plays:  "Hello  Bertha,"  a 
story  of  a  prostitute  who  reminis- 
ces about  her  early  life  and  loves; 
and  "This  Property  Is  Condemn- 
ed," a  story  of  a  young  girl  liv- 
ing alone  in  a  condemned  house 
along  the  railroad  tracks  where 
she  "entertains"  her  railroadmen 
friends. 

"Hello  From  Bertha "  is  direct- 
ed by  Lloyd  Skinner  and  will  fca- 
,ture  Misses  Nancy  Stevens,  Hope 
Sparger  and  Amanda  Meiggs. 
"This  Property  is  Condemned"  is 
directed  by  Taylor  Williams  and 
features  Lloyd  Skinner  and  Miss 
Bettina  Jinette. 

TTje  presentation  nn!l  be  given 
May  19  at  8  p.m.  in  t|je  Main 
,1,  ^Pl6tff-0l  -Grgfeqm   Meagfrjal. 


Spaaker  For  FTA 

Dr.  Robert  Seymour,  minister 
of  the  Mars  Hill  Baptist  Church, 
will  be  the  speaker  at  the  annual 
spring  banquet  of  the  Frank  Por- 
ter Graham  Chapter  of  the  Fu- 
ture Teachers  of  America  to  be 
held  Friday,  May  10,  in  Lenoir 
Hall.  Dr.  Seymour  wil  speak  on 
the  general  theme  of  the  "Res- 
ponsibilities of  Teachers  for  the 
Education  of  our  Children." 


GM'S  SLATE 

Debate  Squad,  4:30-6  p.m.,  Grail 
Room;  Student  Council,  7-11  p.m.. 
Grail  Room;  IFC,  4-5:30  p.m.  Ro 
land  Parker  1;  UP  Caucus,  f>-7:30 
p.m.,  Rolantl  Parker  1;  Publica- 
tions Board,  4-6  p.m..  lioland  Par- 
ker 2;  Women's  Resident  Council, 
6*0  p.m.  Roland  Parker  2  and 
Council  Room;  Ways  and  Means 
Committee,  4-5:30  p.m.,  Roland 
Parker  3;  SP  Caucus,  6:30-7:15, 
Roland  Parker  3;  IFC,  7:30-10  p.m.. 
Woodhouse  Conference  Room;  IFC 
Court,  6:30-7:30  p.m.,  Woodhouse 
Conference  Room;  Rules  Commit- 
tee, 4-5  p.m.,  Council  Room. 


I        Boudreau  Elected 

!      Gerry     Boudreau     was     elected 
;  president  of  the   Dialectic  Senate 

■  during  elections  held  Tuesday. 

I      Also   elected   to   top   offices   in 
I  the  debate  society  were  Bill  Sap-  \ 
j  iston    as    president    pro    tern    and 
j  Irwin     Avery     as    critic.    Malcom 

■  Partin    was    appointed    clerk    and 
I  Gafy  Greer,   treasurer. 

Other  officers  are  Clifton  Mann,  : 
sgt-at-arms;  Betty  Huffman.  De-  i 
bate  Council  representative;  Ruby  . 
Alberts,  Carolina  Forum  repre-  [■ 
sentative;  and  Pat  Adams,  chap-  ]• 
lin.     ' 


A  n«w  adventure 
in  motion  picture 
;y:.  enioymentr  .  .  .1 
■^  From  the  stages 
"  of  two  continents 
came  the  fabulous 
talent  for  this 
remarkable  and 
original  idea  in 
entertainment'. 


TO  THE 


L^ANCE 


fECHNICOL.O*t 


DUSTY  TREASURE 
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Remember  how  you  picked  the  spring's  first  violeto 
Hul  put  them  into  a  bouquet-for  her? 

Remember  how  you  made  a  valentine  in  school  and 
ebuldn't  wait  to  take  it  home -to  her? 

Remember  her  this  Mother's  Day  with  a  lynbol 
of  the  tame  devotion  you  gave  her  as  ^  child. 

Remember  her  with  Wliite  Satin  by  Angelique. 


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Here  is  the  biggest  "once  in  a  life- 
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These  cotton  cord  suits  are  the  iat- 
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DON7  FORGET  MOTHER 

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FINE  FEATHERS  HOSIERY 

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Jewelry,  Gloves,  Pocketbooks 
SHEETS  AND  TOWELS 

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LUGGAGE 

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LADIES  SHOES 

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BunnHearnDay/'WillJTar  Heel  Netters 
Be  Honored  In  Raleigh  ]  i-.  Journev  Torlav 

The  North  Carolinian  who  con-    by  Haddock  and  Willie  Duke,  the  •     ■  '   ■       '    ^^  *^  ■    ■   1  ^^   jf        I    \^  VJ  ^3  jf 


The  North  Carolinian  who  con 
tributed  the  most  to  baseball  in 
1956  will  be  honored  at  a  base- 
ball game   in  Raleigh   tonight. 

Bunn  Hearn  of  Wilson,  who 
coached  the  University  of  North 
Carolina  for  27  years,  is  the  hofl- 
orce.  He  will  be  presented  the 
Will  Wynne  award  in  ceremonies 
prior  to  the  game  between  Stat^ 
and  Carolina. 

Gov.  Luther  Hodges,  who  has 
declared  today  as  "Bunn  Hearr 
Day"  thr:ughout  the  state,  wil 
throw  out  the  first  ball.  The  game 
is  sot  for  8  o'clock  in  Devereaux 
Meadow. 

A  special  program  has  been 
nlanned  for  the  occasion  by  the 
Ral?igh  chapter  of  the  Hot  Stovt- 
League,  the  sponsoring  organiza- 
tion. 

A  luncheon  at  12:30  in  the  Capi 
tol  Rorm  of  the  S&W  Cafeteria 
in  downtown  Raleigh  will  serve 
as  a  kickoff.  Edward  E.  Haddock, 
a  noted  baseball  authority  and 
foi-mer  mayor  of  Richmond,  Va. 
will  b?  the  principal  speaker 
Billy  Carmichael  Jr..  vice  presi 
dent  of  the  greater  University  o 
North  Cariina.  will  be  master  oi 
ceremonies. 

Dignitaries  who  will  attend  the 
!un.'heon  incliMe  Hearn,  Mayor 
Pr^d  Wheeler  and  coaches  Vic 
Sorrell  of  State  and  Walter  RabV' 
of  Carolina,  pic  public  is  in\'itpd. 

Ceremonies  at  the  ball  park 
will  begin  at  7:30  with  short  talks 


by  Haddock  and  Willie  Duke,  the 
presentation  of  the  Wynne  award 
to  Hearn.  and  the  presentation  of 
trophys  to  Ferg  Norton  of  Brough- 
ton  High  School  and  James  Hart- 
man  of  Raleigh. 

Hartman  will  be  honored  for 
his  work  with  amateur  baseball 
last  year,  and  Norton  will  be  giv- 
?n  the  American  Legion  sports 
Tianship  trophy  which  he  wen 
while  competing  in  the  junior 
baseball  program  last  summer. 

C.  A.  Dillon  Jr.  will  be  mastei- 
■)f  ceremonies.  The  State  College 
)and  and  ROTC  color  guard  also 
vill  take  part  in  the  program. 

Tickets  for  the  game  are  $1 
for  adults  and  50  cenU  for  stu- 
lents.  They  may  be  purchased  at 
the  Coliseum  Box  Office,  Wom 
)lo's  Inc.,  Lewis  Sporting  Goods 
md  Johnson-Lambe,  or  from 
■nembers  of  the  Hot  Stove  League. 

The  game  is  the  second  mcet- 
n^  l)et.veen  State  and  Carolina 
!)ut  will  net  count  in  the  ACC 
standings.  The  Wolfpack  beat  the 
Tar  Heels  12-6  earlier  in  the  vear. 


By  BILL  KING 

This  weekend  is  tournament 
time  in  the  Atlantic  Coast  Confer- 
ence as  three  of  Carolina's  four 
"spring  sports"  teams  move  into 
the  final  phase  of  the  season  in 
an  all  oi^t  attempt  to  win  the  big 
prize — a  conference  championship, 
both  team  and  individusL 

Coach  Valdimir  Cemik's  tennis 
team  i^*  the  first  to  see  action  as 
the  netters  begin  their  ACC  tour- 
ney play  in  Durham  on  the  Duke 
courts  this  afternoon. 

The  Tar  Heel  netters  will  come 
into  the  tourney  a  distinct  under- 


CLASSIFIEDS 


FOR  lNEXPE2SrSIVE  LIVING:  27 
Nashua  Trailer  —  has  bath  tub. 
shower,  porch,  oil  heater,  addeci 
room,  connected  to  utilities  and 
septic  tank^  One  mile  out  on 
airport  road.  Call  8472.  $2,300. 

GOOD  USED  KENMORE  VACU 
um  cleaner— $25.  Call  9-6621  be 
tween  1  &  3  p.m. 

FOR  SALE:  1953  FORD  8,  4-DR.  | 
New  whitewall  tires,  radio,  heat- , 
er,  overdrive.  Can  arrange  fi- 1 
nancing.  Call  9-1616  after  6  p.m.  j 

APARTMEPn*  FOR  RENT:  NEAR  i 
Post  Office.  Completely  fur- ; 
nished.  Available  as, of  June  1. ; 
Call  8-7939  after  10  p.m.  I 


WATCH   THIS   MAN! 


rA 


He  Is  The       ; 
Leader  In        , :. : 
The  Coolest 
Styles  For 
Spring  and  Summer 

SPORT  SHIRTS 


Th«r«'s  nothing  finer  than  a  cool,  comfortablo  aport 
shirt  from  our  vast  seioction.  Chooso  from  among 
plaids,  stripos,  checks,  or  solids,  by  Enro,  Manhattan, 
Van  Hauson,  and  Activair,  ivy  or  non-ivy  modols. 
Where  else  can  you   find   beHer  for  as  low  as  $3.f5. 


'W'  > 


BERMUDA  SHORTS 

MEN'S  AND  WOMEN'S 

Bermudas  af  just  the  thing  if  you  want  to  look  well  dr««s«tf  and  still  ba  free  frorl 
the  heat  and  unMsiness  caused  by  slacks  in  the  hot  summer  air.  Our  selection  ir.^ 
eludes  all  of  the  latest  colors  and  fabrics;  in  dacren/ cotton,  dacron/weol,  cotton, 
Reevec«rd,  and  many  ethers.  For  the  ultimate  in  summer  comfort,  ceme  in  and  see 
our  selection,  as  low  as  $4«95 

ALSO:  A  COMPLETE  LINE  OF  SHORTSLEEVE,  LIGHTWEIGHT 
DRESS  SHIRTS,  IN  WHITE  AND  COLORS. 


Track  Tourney 
Here  Friday 

By  DAVE  WIBLE 

At  3  o'clock  tomorrow  on  Fet- 
ter Field  the  ACC  track  and  field 
preliminaries  get  under  way,  and, 
with  fire  in  their  eyes  and  wings 
m  their  heels  the  Tar  Heel  thin- 
•lads  will  get  underway  an  at- 
tack on  favored  Maryland  and  a 
ACC  team  crown,  a  feat  which 
thoy  last  accomplished  in   1955. 

The  conference  crown  will  bo 
the  main  goal  for  Carolina's  cin- 
Jermen.  of  course,  but  while  go. 
ing  after  it  there  will  pe  some 
very  e.xciting  grudge  battles  fea- 
turing Tar  Heels. 

The  long  and  short  of  Caro- 
lina's squad.  Dave  Scurlock  and 
Jim  Realty,  will  be  out  to  prove 
that  they  are  the  top  in  the  con 
ference  despite  some  of  the  re- 
sults this  season. 

Beatty  and  Maryland's  Burr 
Grimm  can  be  depended  on  tc. 
give  the  spectators  one  of  the 
top  miles  ever  seen  in  this  part 
of  the  country.  When  they  met 
at  College  Park  this  spring,  they 
fini.shed  less  than  five  yards  apart 
with  Grimm  in  front  at  4:06.  and 
Beatty  at  4:06.5.  Grimm's  time 
was  the  second  best  collegiate 
mile  this  year. 

Scurlock,  a  sophomore,  has  yet 
to  see  anyone's  heels  at  the  tape. 
His  goal  for  the  meet  is  to  show 
Maryland's  Carl  Parly  and  Dave 
Leas  that  they  are  not  the  ACC's 
best. 

Leas  hold's  the  ACC  record  in 
the  440  at  48.0  which  he  set  at 
the  ACC  meet  last  year.  Scur- 
lock has  run  the  quarter  mile 
in  48.4.  With  only  four  tenth? 
of  a  second  difference  in  times 
there  can  be  no  way  of  predict- 
ing  a  champion  when   they   meet. 

Carl  Party  is  the  ACC  cham- 
pion in  the  half-mile.  Party  wa.s 
last  year's  champion  at  1:54.6. 
Scurlock  has  run  well  under  that 
time  several  times  this  year  and 
should  be  a  real  threat  for  the 
title. 


Ted  Slugs; 
Sox  Win 

CHICAGO,  (AP)— Ted  Williams 
slammed  thre  homers  today — giv- 
ing him  a  total  of  four  in  his 
last  five  times  at  bat— to  powei 
the  Boston  Red  Sox  to  their  four 
th  straight  vctory  a  4-1  triumph 
over  the  slumping  Chicago  White 
Sox. 

Williams  welded  three  home 
runs  in  a  row,  hitting  a  pair  in  his 
first  two  trips  today  after  his 
ninth-inning  two-run  smash  last 
night  had  given  Boston  a  4-3  vic- 
tory over  the  Pale  Hose. 

Taking  advantage  of  a  brisk 
Comiskey  Park  t  a  i  1  w  i  n  d.  the 
•^Splendid  Splinter"  lofted  a  four- 
bagger  into  the  right  field  upper 
deck  in  the  first  inning  and  park 
id  one  in  the  left  field  lower 
stands  in  the  third. 

The  league-leading  hitter,  hik 
ing  his  mark  to  .474,  now  has  col- 
lected nine  homers  for  the  sea 
son.  He  didn't  bag  that  many  last 
year  until  July  26.  winding  up 
with  24  for  the  campaign.  Only 
once  last  year  did  he  homer  in 
Comiskey  Park,  and  that  was  off 
Bob  Keegan.  today's  loser. 

Williams  flied  to  left  in  bis 
third  at  bat  today,  to  end  a  streak 
of  being  on  base  11  straight  times 
and  getting  five  consecutive  hits. 
But  then  he  found  the  target 
agala  in  the  8th. 


UNC  Cagers 
Feted  At 
Banquet  Here 

(AP) — Carolina's  national  re- 
cord-breaking basketball  cham- 
pions, who  this  past  season  won 
32  collrge  games,  plus  one  addi- 
Linal  game  against  an  independ- 
ent team  (McCrary)  without  a  de- 
feat, were  honored  at  an  elabo- 
rate banquet  here  last  night  by 
the  Chapel   Hill  athletic  club. 

Trophies  won  by  t'le  team  in 
the  Dixie  Classic,  Atlantic  Coast 
Conference  meet,  and  the  NC.\A 
regional  and  championship  iroeets, 
were  displayed  for  the  first  time 
at  the  Chapel  Hill  Country  Club, 
where  players,  coaches,  special 
guests  and  club  members  dined 
on   barbequed    chicken. 

New  awards  were  made,  includ- 
ing the  Chapel  Hill  Athletic  Club 
trophy  senior  members  of  the 
squad. 

The  Jeff  Thomas  Trophy  to  the 
school's  most  outstanding  senior 
athlete,  with  sportsmanship  and 
ability  the  main  factors  In  the 
award,  went  to  Lennie  Rosen- 
bluth,  the  team's  All-America 
player.  It  was  presented  by  Wid 
Powell,  one  of  the  town's  sports- 
men who  sat  up  the  huge  perpetu- 
ating cup  in  honor  of  Thomas, 
popular  sportsminded  restaurant 
operator  who  died  a  few  days  ago, 
following  an  extended  illness. 

Koscnbluth    also    was    awarded 
the     "Most     Outstanding     Player" 
trophy,  donated  annually  by  a  lo 
cat    theater,    with    manager     E. 
Carrington  Smith  making  the  pre- 
sentation;   and    the    Dorothy    0'- , 
Sullivan  trophy  to  the  player  wirti  I 
the     best     percentage     in     fouJj 
jihooting    (.758).  I 

Coach  Frank  McGuire,  who  paid 
tribute     to     all    members   of    the  j 
squad    said    he    was    proud    to    be  | 
affiliated  with  such  a  distinguish  j 
ed  group,  announced  that  the  Foy  ■ 
Robcrson  Medal  would  be  present- ' 
ed  later.  This  medal   is  awarded 
annually  to  the  player  judged  byi 
a  committee  as  having  conributed 
the  most  to  "Team  Morale."  | 

Assistant   Coach  Buck  Freeman , 
ako    spoke    and    compared    Caro- 1 
lina's   champions    to   a    great   St.  | 
John's  University  team   he  coach- 1 
ed  and  on  which  McGuire  played. 
He   recalled'  that  McGuire   was   a 
player  very   much  like  Bob   Cun- 
ningham of  the  UNC  team,  being 
a  tireless  competitor. 

Entertainment  included  calipso 
songs  by  a  student  combo  which 
recently  recorded  "No.  1"  a  song 
written  by  Orville  Campbell  W 
tribute  to  the  champions.  The 
group  consisted  of  vocalist  Hoke 
Simpson,  Ralph  Harrington,  K5^ 
Alvord,  Jerry  Purgesin  and  Roy 
Cain. 

Radio  announcer  Ty  Boyd  was 
master  of  ceremonies. 


dog  in  lieu  of  their  seasonal  rec- 
ord but  optimism  is  high  in  the 
Carolina  camp  that  their  netters 
will  make  a  good  showing. 

Of  course  the  team  champion 
has  already  been  decided  with  the 
Maryland  Terps  taking  the  top 
spot.  For  the  next  three  days  the 
ACC  schoolc?  will  be  bidding  for 
the  individual  championships  and 
the  Terps  will  be  the  favorites 
here  also. 

Chief  threat  to  break  up  the 
Maryland  dynasty  is  Carolina's  tal- 
ented Steve  Bank,  a  fellow  who 
has  beaten  the  number  one  man 
of  every  conference  team  but 
Wake  Forest  this  season. 

Bank  will  go  into  the  tourney 
as  the  number  one  seeded  player 
and  should  be  a  good  bet  to  lake 
the  individual  singles  champion- 
ship. 

The  Tar  Heels  finished  the  sea- 
son with  a  fairly  respectable  8-9 
record.  That  mark  is  enhanced  by 
the  fact  that  the  netters  came  into 
the  season  facing  an  almost  com- 
plete rebuilding  job  due  to  losses 
through  graduation  and  academic 
troubles.  The  Tar  Heels  have  also 
changed  coache^.-  during  the  course 
of  the  season  with  the  ex-net  star, 
Cernik  taking  over  from  freshman 
coach  Ham  Strayhorn. 

Improving  with  every  match, 
the  netters  have  won  the  respect 
of  the  rest  of  the  conference  with 
their  ability  to  fight  'til  the  end. 

The  Tar  Heels  will  carry  some 
talented  prospects  into  the  big 
tourney.  Along  with  Bank  will  be 
Geoff  Black,  Frank  Livingstone. 
Ray  Newsome,  Fritz  Van  Winkle, 
Bob  Jacobus,  Jay  Walker. 


Howard  Johnson  Restaurant 

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Barbecued    Chicken 
Choice  Steak  Sandwiches 

ccowcr.  2:00-  .5:00  P.M. 

SERVED  8:00- 11:00  P.M. 

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Natur«  and  ici«nc«  ovtdid 

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this  belt  of  all  miracle  blendi  — 

Docron  and  wool. 

Now  in  one  fobrk  you  hove  the 

richneis  and  luxury  of  wool 

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T^-:* 


—  ft. 


II 


IN  HAIRLINE  STRIPES,  MUTED  TONE.  GLEN  URQUHART, 
AND  HEATHERS  OF  HANDSOME  DOMESTIC  AND  IMPORT- 
ED COLORS. 

FROM  $59.50  To  U5.00 


{ 


Julian': 


Volleyball 

Tho  intramural  d»p»r^m»n* 
has  aniMuneed  that  thor«  will  ba 
a  vell*yb«ll  practict  this  afttr- 
neon  at  4:30  for  th*  Bifl  4  Sports 
Day  to  b«  hold  In  RaUlgtt.  All 
int«r«st*d  playtrs  ar*  urgtd  to 
attond. 


Advertise 
In    The 

Daily 
Tar  Heel 


KEMP'S  LAST  FLING! 


BIG   30   SALE 


(i..i 


THIS  IS  A  COMPLETE   SHOP  SALE  .  . 
ALL  L.  P.  RECORDS 

BIG  30%  OFF  LIST 

ALL  E.  P.  RECORDS 

70<  PER  RECORD 


t 


SEE  SPECIAL  OF  SPECIAL'S  TABLE 
12"  L.  P.  Records  $2.50  Down 


STARTS  TODAY 


207  E.  Franklin 


i  I 


U  N   C  LTB!^ARY 
SERIALS    DFPT, 
CH'\?EL   HILL,    !!.    C 
8-31-49 


WEATHER 


Fair  and  moderately  warm.  High 


SO. 


©)  e  3)aitM  il^ar  Mtd 


NEGATIVISM 

Th«  editor   scorns    it    on    pt0e 
two. 


OL.  LVII,  NO.  184 


Complete  (/Pf  Wire  Service 


CHAPEL   HILL,   NORTH    CAROLINA,   FRIDAY,  MAY   10,   1957 


OffictM  m  Graham  IfeuMfiai 


FOUR   PAGES  THIS  ISSUE 


Long  Resolution  Withheld 
From   Legislature  Action 


'  Playmaker's' 


Hjmstead  Park  Censure 
Held   By   Committee 

By  CHARLIE  SLOAN 

The  lesoliitioii  (CMisurin^  the  [xilicy  oi  tlu-  rin>tead  State 
park  will  be  held  in  (onnnittee.  Jim  .\ll<»i(l,  tonuniuee  chaii- 
uiaii.  said  yesterday. 
Peer    Gynt.    luider    the    direction  j  Under  the  Elms."  and  other  plays"  I  lOin    Lotiy;  submitted   the  lesolutiou   f(ill<t\\  iir^  the  ejc< - 

of     Prof.     Kai    Jurgensen     of     the    and  is  a  performer  in  the  Cherokee     t ion   ot    l.eiov    I'rasier   Iroin   the   park    two   \\eeks   ai^o.    Fiasier 
Dramatic    .^rt    Dept.    will    be    pre- |  symphonic     drama,     "Unto     These  Lvas  the  gueslOr  the  Ciosmopolilail  (Mill)  al  iheil  animal  >pring 

""^-  >  pHllK  . 

Solveig.  Peers  faithful  sweetheart,        "Though    this   student    was   par-        He    al5o    pointed    out    after    the 
wOl    be    plaved    bv    Mrs.    Martha  '  ticipating  in  an  international  group    meeting   that  either   way   the   leg- 

i  which   contained   men   and  women    islature    acted    it    would    get    un- 


Peer  Gynf  Opens 
Tonight  On  Campus 


sented  by  the  Carolina  Playmakers  '  Hills, 
in  the  Forest   Theater  at   8:30  p.m.  i 
t<'iii;;ht.  '  I 

The    play    will     feature     soecial  I 
music  written  and  directed  by  Joel  M'""''*'  «*   ^'^^P^^   "*»•   ^'h«  ^''P^^'"- i  of  manv  races    creeds  and   colors,    favorable     reaction.     If    the     body 
Chadabe.   a   music   student   here.    It  |  ^-'^  '"  "i*'  Playmakers'     -Showboaf  j  ^^^^    _   _^     ;_    ^^^,^    _^^,^,^.    „„    ^a.sscd    the    resolution      it      would 

and     has 


ed  in  the  Playmakers' 
and     "Blood     Weddini 


wilJ    be    j>rcsented    tomorrow    and 

Senday  at  the  .scheduled  times,  ac- ! '^''^sented     several     voice 


Ken  Lowry  As  Lead  In  Playmaker  Production 


Aase,  played  by    Betty  Jinnette,   has  difficulty   restraining    her 
adventurous  son.  Peer,  played  by  Ken  Lowry,  in  The  Carolina  Play- 


maker's  production  of  "Peer  Gynt"  to  be    presented   tonight,  Satur- 
day  and   Sunday  nights  in  the   Forest  Theatre. 


Best  Frat  To  Get  R .  B.  House  Award 


i 


cording    to   the   announcement    yes- 
terday. 

Playing    Peer    Gynt    will    be    Ken 
LowTy  of  Troy.  Ohio,  a  UNC  senior 
majoring    in    English.     LowTy    has 
.spent   the  past   two  summers  work- 
ing  in  summer  .stock,   and   has  ap- 
peared   in    such    Playmakei"s'    pro- 
ductions    as       "The     Rainmakers." 
-♦  v\hich    toured    the   South    last    year. 
I   "Seventeen,"     'Desire     Under     the 
I  Elms."  and  "Stranger  In  the  Land.  ' 
I      Apjiearing    as    .\sse.    Peer's    mo- 
'  ther.    is    .Miss     Betty     Jinnette     of 


this   request   was    made   solely    on  passed    the    resolution      it 

.,  ,     ,  the  basis  of  his  race."  the  resolu  hurt    the    Student    Legislature    in 

lecuals.  ,  ^.^^   ^^.^  ^,^p  ^^.gg  ^j  jjjp  gjgj^.   Legislature. 

The    paper    resolved      that      the  If    it    failed    the    move    the    body 

members   of   the    Student   Legisla-  would  'be  hurt  in  the  eyes  of  the 


The     Greendad     (.\nitrai     will     be 

Miss    Amanda    Meiggs    of    Moyock, 

a  former  Woman's  College  student,.  .     .  ^,       „,,  j„„«.   !„,.„• 

v.ho  toured  this  vear  in  ".^miracles  M"'"^  '^''"^  ^^eir  apologies  to  the    student.s  he.e. 

and  the  Lion"  and  danced  in  "Briga-  1  ^J"''  ^"^  ^^  ^^^'*'''" 
doon."  The  Mountain  King  will  be  !  ^^^^  Edward.s.  who  voted  to 
acted  bv  David  Small  of  Morehead  "^"^^  ^^^  resolution  out  of  com 
a»y.  baritone  in  "Showboat."  ,  "^'"ee.  said  "I  hate  to  think  the 
•Seventeen."  and  "Brigadoon."  and  •  legislature  is  going  to  become  a 
lion  in  "Andi-ocies  and  the  Lion."      I  S"tless    organization,    refusing    to 


Charlie    Wilson,    who    voted    in 
favf  r    of     holfiin-     the     resolution 


(See  PLAYMAKERS,  Page  3) 


face    responsibilities    coming    be- 
fore it." 


By  PATSY  MILLER  an  award,   and   it   is   hoped   that   it    activities   and   chairman   of   the   fa-    and   points   for  improvement.   Cam-    Geld.sboro.   A  transfer  student  from 

The    R.    B.    House   Award,    to   be   will  become  the  most  coveted  award    culty  committee  of  fraternities  and    pus  repnesenlation,'  "with  maximiun    Woman's  College  this  year,  .she  has 

presented  annually  to  the  outstand-    that  a  fraternity  can  receive.  "  Red-  ;  sororities.  of    224    points.    wil>    include    per-    acted  in  four  of  tJie  five  Playmak- 


ing    fraternity   en    campus,    will    be   ^m^  stated, 
sponsored    for    tiie    first    time    this 
year    by    the    Interfraternity    Coim- 
cii.   according  to  Bill  Redding.   IFC 
president. 


The  judges  this  year  representing 

The    present    trophy    will    be    re-    those  positions  will  be  Ray  Jofferies. 

tired    in   eight    \ears.    Each    cmnual    S.    .M.    Magill    and    George    Esser. 

Minnej-  will  keep  the  trophy  for  one    Only  the  judges  will  know  who  the 

year,  and  the  fraternity  having  won  ,  winner  is. 


The  ti-cphy   will    be   presented   at    ;j^    nioslf    UliieB    wJM "  permanemJ* 


the  la.st  IFC  nweting.  May  13.  toy 
its  namesake.  Chancellor  R!  B. 
House.  The  award  was  named  after 


tional  offices. 
IFC  partieipation  carries  at  maxi- 


centage  participation  in  some  extra-    cr  productions  .so  far  this  year. 
:  curricular   activity   outside  the  fra-  ,      .\\  Gordon  of  Greensboro  will  ap- 
j  temity    and   major    po<>itions,    such    ])car   as   the   Button    Moulder.   Gor- 
'  as  student  government  or  orgaRiza-    don  is  kno\ni  kK-ally  for  his  charae- 

ieri/.ations    in      'Ondine."     "'.\    Mid- 
sum  mer-\Lght's     Dream."     "Seven- 
•Blood    Wedding.  '     "Desire 
the  t»asi»t>f  a  point  system  in 
SiDte  the  award  is  to  be  perman-    oi    scholarship,    campus   representa-    tic^P^Mion.  maximum    of    15    points; 
ChanceMor    House    for    his    servk-e    ent.    a    second    trophy    will    follow    tion.    IFC   participtaion.    intramural    social    ai-tivitics.     nia.ximum    of    10 

to    fraternities'  since    he    has    been    the  fir<t  one.  participation,    social    acti\ities    and    points;     house     appearance      maxi-  ,       ATLANTA.     (AIM— The    presi- 

here  and  will  be  presented,  by  hirn       Permanent   judges   of   the    award    house  appearance.  I  mum  of  5  points.  Hou.se  appearance    dent  of  a  Negro  university  won  re 

as  long  as  he  lives.  are  to  be  the  assistant  dean  of  stu- j     Scholarship.   «ith   a   ma.vimum  of    will  be  judged  by  the  sorority  "house-  [  election    to   the    .\tlanta    Board    ol 

"There  has  been  a  need  for  such   dent    affairs,    director    of    student  '  30  points,  will  include  total  standing  ^  mothers. 


keep  the  troph>  after  its  retirement. 


TJtetrt>phv   is  to  be  awarded  on  !  ''  "    "'' ""    "   .  teen. 

^j.^p^    rmmi  of  17'i  points:  intramurBr^>ar- 1 


Negro  Elected 


Entertainment  Group 
Announces  New  Slate 

Larry  Harris,  chaii-man  of  the  Stu-  '  Jimmy  AlrPartland.    Lucky   Thnmp- 
deiu    Entertainment    Committee   an-    son  and  Jimmy   Rushing, 
mrunted  recently  that  the  committee 
has   planned    its    complete   program 
for  next  year. 

He  said.    '"I   believe   that   we  have 


Chamblee  Has 
Senior  Recital 

Baritone  James  Chamblee  present- 
ed a  senior  recital  at  Hill  Hall  last 
night  which  feature  a  program  of 
numljers  ranging  from  Old  English, 
Schubert  and  Mendel.ssohn  to  arias 
from  Hamlet  and  several  .\meri- 
can  folk  songs  and  Negro  spirituals. 


Bunn  Hearn  Honored; 
State  BeatsUNC,13-10 


'Angel  Flighf 


The  AFROTC  Angel  Flight  hero 
announced  the  selection  of  eleven 
new  "angels"  who  are  soon  to  t>e 
initiated   into  the  organization.   The 


Education  Wednesday,  defeating  a 
white  opponent. 

Dr.  Riifus  E.  Clement,  a  56- 
year-old  Negro  who  heads  Atlanta 
University 


Iva  Kitchell  will  be  featured  on 
I.Xuesday.  Detember  3.  Miss  Kitchell 
-performs  a  one-woman  show  as  a 
dance  satirist.  She  makes  fun  oi 
all  types  of  dances  from  ballet  and 
classieal  numbers  to  voodoo.  She 
will  also  do  several  Spanish  dance 
tMJes  and  t!ie  liiorus  girl  st>le  of 
Uie  twenties.   She   is   consit'ered   an 


Student  Legislators  passed  a 
resolution  expressing  "deep  re- 
gret tc  both  the  Cosmopolitan 
Club  and  its  guest,  Leroy  Fra»- 
ler"  last  night  at  the  regular 
legislature    meeting. 

An  amendment  struck  from  the 
bill  a  phrase  saying  the  legisla- 
ture does  not  feel  a  censure 
movement  Is  "feasible  or  proper 
at  this  time." 

Miss    Julia    Ann    Crater    asked 
the   legislature   if  it  felt   the  bill 
is  "as  strong"   as  the   legislature 
I     wanted  to  make  it. 
i         Whit  Whitfield  told  the  grou^ 
not  to  "bite  the  hand  that  feeds 
us."   He  reminded  them  that  the 
Urrversity    receives    money    from 
the  State   Legislature. 

Tom  Long  had  no  comment  en 
the  group's  action. 


said   the   resolution    was  good   but 
the  after-effect    "was  what  we  were 
excellent  comedianiie.  as  well  as  an    ajpajj   ^f  •• 


a  very  outstanding  schedule  of  pro- 
grams for  next  year  because  of  the 
high  quality  and  great  variety  that 
IS  offered." 

The  SEC  is  set  up  under  Graham 
Memorial  to  provide  free  educa- 
tional  as   well   as  entertaining   pn>-    „,,..„„„„.    ,io,.r.,... 

excellent    nancer.  ,      ir    a.  i   «•  u   j    »u„ 

grams  for  the  entire  student   Ijody.  .  If    the    resolution     reached    the 

The  program   entitled   The   Ency-  Jan    Pceixe   will   give  a   porf.)rm-    floor  "it  will  rai.se  a  big  stink."  he 

defeated      Charlie    dopedia  of  Jazz   will   be   presented  ance  on  Thursday.  February  6.  Mr.    said. 

Thui-sday,  October  24.    p:vory   phase  Peerce  is  a  rel<no\vned  tenor  soloist         Wilson    noted    that    the    bill    a» 

and    style  of  jazz   will    tie   analyzed  of    the    Metrojwlitin    Oiiera.    radio.     Long  wrote  it  is  a  good  thing,  but 

through  narration  by  Leonard  Fea-  recordings.  TV  and  motion  pictures,  i  jj    \^-on't    be    intcrpeted    as    it    wis 

(her.  a  roknowned  authorit.N"  on  jazz.  He  will  present  a  varied  ;>rogram  of    ^^-ritten. 


Vaughn  in  the  city  primary  35.200 
to   29.036. 

Clement    said    his    victory    made 

it    appear    that    the   people    of   .\t-    

RALEIGH -(AP)- Bunn  Hearn.  Hearn  received  the  Will  Wynne  I  i>ew  menibers  uill  acknowledge  ae-  j^^^^  ..^.^„,^^  ,^  ^^^.  ^^  j,^^  ^.^^,^,  ^  ^^^^^^^.^^  ^,_.^^^^^  ^,,  ^_^.^^^  ^.m  classical  and  cneratic  selec-tioios. 
who  spent  27  years  as  baseball ,  Award  in  ceremonies  preceding  ceptance  of  these  po&U.oas  ;b>'  at- |  j^^,  ^^^^  relations  here  remain  illustrate  .\ew  Orleans  and  Dixie  Mondav.  March  10  snll  feature  the 
coach  of  the  University  of  North  the  State-UNC  game  in  his  honor,  tending  a  meetmg  Monday  at  o  ^^  ^^^^  ^^^^  ^^^^^  .^  ^^  ^^^^^-^^  ..^^^  ^^^^^^^  ^^..^^^  boogie-w<K)gie,  Pitt.sburg  Svmphonv  Orchestra.  Toe 
Carolina  was  honored  yesterday  at        Hearn  heard  a  lot  of  nice  things  |  p.m..  it  was  announced  yesterday.      between   the   two   groups."  bop.     orogies.sive    jazz     and     We.st  i  oix-hestra     under    the    direc-tion    ot 

a  luncheon  and  a  game  last  night  j  .-aid    about    him    at    the    luncheon :     Selection   was    based   on    a   pouit        ^,,^^p^t  ^as  headed  the  univers-   Coast  jazz.  I  wmic:m    Steinberg    has    established 

between  North  Carolina  and  North; from  Raleigh  Mayor  Fred  B.  Whee-  system  measuimg  each  candidates    .^^,   ^.^^^  go  v^rs.    He   was   elected       The  audience  will  be  entertained  j  its  unqualified  right  to  be  c<.nside- 

1 1„^.  Willie  Duke,  president  of  the  '  poise,  personality,  interest  and  tvme, 


He    has    appeared    in    other    per 
formances  of   the    Music   Dept,    in 


Chamblee  is  a  music  major  here  i  Carolina  State.  '  ler 

and  a  native  of  North  Carolina  *Ra-i  At  the  luncheon.  W.  D.  Carmich- !  Raleigh  Hot  Stove  League.  spon-|and  leadership  and  responsibility. 
leigh.»  He  has  appeared  as  a  soloist)  gel  Jr  vice  president  of  the  Con- 'soring  organization  for  Bunnj  Named  to  supplement  the  Angel 
«ith  tiie  Mens  Glee  Club  and  with  golidated  Universitv  of  North  Car- j  Hearn  Day:  and  Edward  E.  Had- ,  Flight  were:  Masses  Pat  Anderson, 
the   University  Chorus.  I  dina    told  Hearn"  "You  may  have    dock,  former  mayor  of  Richmond,   Lucy  Cro.ssland.  Alice  Eller.  Eliza- 

'  lost    a    little    of    vour   steam,    and  U'ho  was  guest  speaker.  |  beth  Howell.  Eve  Mc-Clatchey.  Nan- 

may  be  the  curve  ball  doe.ttt  break        State  .s-cored  12  runs  in  the  first   O'    Mflan.    Jennie    Margaret    Mea- 

.-,        .           1^1-.          .                     four    innin!.'<:    last    niffht    and    de- '  dor.    .Marv  Lewis   Rountree.   Nancj' 
like  It    used  to,    but   you  ve   never    ^^^"    inninjjs    labv    nigni    aiiu    ul     wi ,  .      ^      

eluding  the  operas  The  .Magic  Flute  j  ^^^^  ^  friend,  Bunn."  ,  feated  the  Tar  Heels.  13-10 

and  Dido  and   Aeneas.   On   May   14.  |  '  j " — 

he  wUl   be   one  of  the  soloists   ap- 1      Hearn,    sitting    serenely    in    his 

•peering  in  the  presentation  of  Act  '  wheel  chair,  smiled  at  Carmichael. 

I  of    "Tales  of  Hoffman'  whith  will    The  luncheon  was  the  first  volley 

ibe    presented    by     the     University    in  a  salute  to  Hearn  who  was  con- 

Cborus.  nected  with  baseball  for  50  years. 


to    the    board    of    education    four  while  they  leani  how  jazz  evolved,  led    one   of   the   greatest    orchestras 

years  ago  over  a  member  who  had  and  hear  about  the  people  who  made  ,  or   the    U.    S.,    according    to    .some 

served    for    16  years.    He  was   the  it.  i  critics. 

first  Negro  to  serve  on  the  board       .\rtist.s   to   be   featured   with   Fea-  \      The    orchestra's    appearances    in 

and   the   first   Negro  to  qualify   as  ther  include  the  Jimmy  Guiffre  Trio.  •  Carnegie  Hsll  Have  been  hailed  by 

a  Democratic  candidate  in  .Mlanta  Don  Elliott.  Osic  Johnson.  Dick  Hy- ,  the    metrcjwliian    critics    as    major 


since  1871. 


iman,    Sonnv   Stitt.    Bob    Enevoldsen.    musical  events. 


One  of  the  questions  that  came 
up  during  the  di.scussion.  Wilson 
said,  was  'Do  you  think  just  be- 
cause aoybody  is  a  student  at  the 
University  he  can  break  the  poli- 
cies of  the  State?  ■ 

Al  Alphin  suggested  to  the  com- 
mittee that  Student  Body  Presi- 
dent Sonny  Evans  write  a  letter  to 
the  Cosmopolitan  Club  apologiz- 
ing for  any  embarrassment  and  in- 

[         (See    UMSTEAD.    Page    3) 


Jo     Rush,     CSarolyn 
Sarah  Van  Weyk. 


Whistler     and 


Order  Of  The  Old  Well 
Initiates  63  Students 


The  t)r(kr  of  llie  Old  Well  i»it-    lontinc,    Winton 
iatcd  63  students  into  its  honorary    Raleigh. 
at  4  p.m.   yesterday   during   cere-       Eddie    Covington     Bass.     Farm- 
monies  held  in  Gcrrard  Hall.  j  vile;    William    Cscar    Baun,    Eliza 

beth    City:     James    Tully     Bcatty, 
Luth:r    Hodges,    vice    president   charlotte;   Ralph   Luther   R^ntley, 

M';ravian     Falls;     John     Matthew 


World  News 

WASHINGTON,  (AP)  —  The 
Senate  Appropriations  commit- 
tee  voted  yesterday  against  re- 
storing any  of  the  SB  million  dil- 
lars  cut  by  the  House  from  the 
Post  Office  budget  for  the  com- 
ing year. 

In  doing  so,  the  full  conrwnit- 
tee  rejected  the  recommendation 


;  State  Accepts 
I  Two  Portraits 

I  RALEIGH-iffi-The  House  and  Sen- 
.  ate  yesterday  set  the  stage  for 
'  ceremonies  May  23  "when  the  state 

will  accept  portraits  of  two  fornieT 
!  governors. 
I      Sen.   Robert  Morgan  and  Rep.  B. 

T.  Falls,  both  of  Cleveland  County. 


Murtha    Barber  j    ^^  ^  sobcommlttte  that  32  mill-   |  sponsored   the   joint    resolution   for 


of  the  Order,  introduced  Mr.  Ins- 
ko  of  the  Episcopal  Church  here, 
who  gave  the  invLiacation.  Pres. 
Mcbanc      Pritohett     presented     a 


Bilich.  Aliquippa,  Pa.; 

Gordon   Rives   Brown.   Durham; 
James     Kenneth     Bryant,     Elkin; 


ons  of  the  House  cut  be  restored. 

Postmaster  General  Summer- 
field  told  the  subcommittee  Wed- 
nesday he  would  have  to  cut  post- 
al services  again  unless  he  gets 
the  58  millions  and  an  addition- 
al 70  to  90  million  dollars  in  the 
year  starting  July  1. 

The     White  House     yesterday 


acceptance    of    the    portraits    from  | 
the  families  of  Clyde  R.  HBe.v  and 
O.   Max  Gardner.  It  was  passed  by  , 
!x>th  bodies.  [ 

Hoev    and    Gardner,    abo    Cleve- 
land    County     natives.     tar\'ed    out  i 
distinghished    political     eareei-s    in 
their  lifetime.  | 

The   resolution   set   a  joint  House  ' 


brief    speech    and    delivered     the    ghirley  Weaver  Bumgardner,  West      asked   the   major  television   and   {and   Senate   session   for  8  p.m.   on 
traditional  charge  to  the  Order.       j  j^fferson:  Douglas  David  Cantrell,      radio  netvt^erks  for  time  for  Pres-     May  23  for  acceptance  of  the  por- 


This  year's  initiates  then  pass-  Seaford,  Del.:  .Marcus  Cicero  Step- 
ed  through  another  traditional  hon  Cherry,  HI,  Mount  Olive;  Dav 
portion  of  the  ceremonies  —  the  id  Marion  Connor,  Jr.,  Durham: 
signing  of  the  role.  Forty-five  of  ,  Lee  Ann  Curtis.  Norfolk,  Va.; 
the  total  63  initiates  were  listed  Charles  Reubpn  Daniel,  Roanoke 
as  residents  of  North  Carolina,  ac-  Rapids:  Curtiss  Wilson  Daughtry, 
c(M-ding  to  inforamtion  released  Smilhfield:  Elizabeth  Hunter  Dent, 
yesterdaj.  -  j  Spruce      Pine:      Eli      Nachamson 

Th<«e  mtrodtlced  into  the  Or-  Evans.  Durham;  Carl  Douglas 
der  this  year  were:  Miss  Jean  Farmer,  Pulaski,  Va.: 
Jacquelyn  Altfridge,  Winston-Sal-  Gardner  Patrick  Henry  Foley, 
em;  James  Paul  Armstrong.  High  Jr..  Greensboro:  Carolyn  Greene, 
Point;  Diana  *  Duncan  Ashley,  Durham;  Edward  Ulysses  Hallford, 
Greenwodil.  Miss.;  Esther   M.   Bal-  (^ee  OLD  WELL,  Page  3) 


ident      Eisenhower      to      make 
two  speeches    in    support  of  his 


ti-aits.    The   go\ernor.   the   Sirprem* 
Coart.  the  CouiKril  of  SUite.  the  Tar 


spending  budget  and  foreign  aid  i  Heel  delegation  in  Congpe.ss,  friends 

program.  I  of    the    former    governors   and   the 

The  first  request  was  for  time  Pu<>>ic  were  invited  U)  be  present, 

early  next  week,  preferably  Tues-  i 


day  evening.  Press  Secretary 
James  C.  Hagerty  said,  for  a  talk 
"to  the  American  people  on  the 
cost  of  their  government." 

Hagerty  said  he  also  had  ask- 
ed for  time  during  the  week  of 
May  19  for  another  Eisenhower 
address. 


GM'S  SLATE 


Fencbig  Club.  7-11  p.^m,,  Roland 
Parker  1.  2  and  3:  Trl  Delta. 
t:30-Il  p.m..  Woodhoose  Confer- 
ence Room:  Soc.  179.  12  «.m.-l 
p.m..  Rmde/^'oas  R««n, 


Honored  Group  Heading  For  Rostrum  -^ 

Shown  above   is  the  distinguished  party  of   featured   members   in        solidated    University    of    North    Carolina    in    William    Neal    ReynoMt 
the  ineuguratfon  of  William  Clyde   Friday  as  president  of  the  Con-     Coliseum   in   Raleigh   Wednesday.  A   King-Sears   photo-  Bill   Kiqg. 


^AAI  TWO 


THI  DAILY  TAR  MffL 


#ftiftAY«  MAV  16,  \H7 


ikiftAi 


Pathetic  Ragged  Moppet 
And  University  Negativism 

I  iu-  i.iJiUt'd  moppet  <>l  the  cinipiis: 

(>rahain   Memorial  Student   I'liiou.  • 

The  ina(le(ju;u\  ol  (.raliam  Memorial  heiomes  increasinglv  con- 
:kpii(iouN  as  the  tide  ot  eiiroHmeiit  eontiiiues  to  swell. 

Noiih  Catolina  Stale.  Wake  Forest  and  other  institutions  tlirough- 
i>ut  the  nation  point  with  pride  to  new  multi-million  dollar  student 
luiions.  Vet  the  I'niveisiiy  student  union  lontinues  to  plav  a  ignominious 
role  as  the  (ampus  ragged  moppet. 

Is  there  an  explanation  lor  the  lack  ot  progress  which  has  relegated 
(•rahani  Memoii a!  to  sue  h  a  minor  role  in  the  drama  of  student  activi- 


tic>.- 


\\ f  submit  thai  the  I'niversitv  administrations  policy  ot  negativism 
tow.nd  the  stuilent   union   has  been  a  constant   impediment   which -pre- 
vented healthv  and  <  ommensm  ate  growth. 
The    I'niversitvs    negiitiNism    is 


evideiued  bv  the  oigani/ational 
structure  of  the  Division  ol  Stu- 
dent   Affairs: 

C>raham     Memorials    director    is 


dent  miion  movement  in  the  South 
at   its  adveJH. 

Thus  the  present  organi/ational 
scheme  prounilgated  bv  the  admin- 


siilxtrdinated  to  tjte  junior  admin-  istration  seems  indicative  of  a  poli- 
cy of  neyjativism  toward  the  stu- 
dent union. 

Dormitory  social  facilities  are 
despairingly  and  hopelessly  inade- 
(juate.  A  modern  and  spacious  stu- 
cleni  union  would  provide  facili- 
ties u  hereby  the  campus  indepen- 
dent (ould  entertain  weekend 
guests  and  generally  provide  a 
more  healthy  s<m  ial  program  for 
the  entire  campirs.  "* 

Immediate  steps  should  be  taken 
ti>  remedy  the  present  nebulous 
set  up.  The  nebidositv  of  the  mat- 
ter is  that  the  imion  director  with 
a  salary  of  approximately  Sy.f>oo 
is  subordinated  to  the  director  of 
student  activities  whose  salary  ap- 
proaches some  5(».()<H>  per  annum. 

An  entile  year  has  passed  with 
(itaham  Memorial  under  a  tem- 
f)orary  directorship.  ()b\ioiisly  the 
Boaici   of   directors    has     failed     to 


istrative   division   member— the   di- 
rector of  sttideiit  acti\ilies. 

Admittedly,  for  organizational 
and  .tdministralixe  pur{)oses,  sii- 
iMndination  »J  the  union  diieitor 
miilht  make  for  more  efficient 
ojHi  aiion. 

itiit  the  diret  tor  himself  could 
hardly  be  classified  a  student  ac- 
lixitv.  He  is  a  mature  individual 
Avho  finds  the  necessity  of  having 
the  junior  administiative  mendxn 
rubber-stamp  his  actums  before 
ihev  are  iransntitted  to  the  divis- 
um  head  a  definite  obstac  le. 

The  direc  tor  should  be  elevated 
ujx»n  a  plane  ecpial  with  the  di- 
rector ol  student  activities.  Plate- 
meiu  service  director,  admissions 
head  and  so  on. 

Such  elev.ilion  of  statirs  wouhf 
eiuitie    the    luiion    director    to    lull 


lecommend   a   permanent   director 
mend)ership  on  the  Council  ol  Stu-      |,^.^,,j„^  d,^  present  administrative 

scheme    is    not    acceptable    to   any 
capable  prospect  h)r  the  job. 

First  things  should  come  first. 
Administrative  change  should  pre- 
cede employment  of  a  diiector  un- 
der imcertain  oigaiu'/ational  c  ir- 
c mnstances.  lint  the  Board  of  Di- 
rectots  is  to  be  tepriinanded  for 
awaiting  such  a  late  date  to  make 
their  grievances  against  the  ad- 
ministration known. 


dent  Allairs  aiuI  woidd  aid  im- 
nteastneablv  as  transition  and  imi- 
fication  between  the  student  union 
AUi\  the  overall  Division  ttf  Stu- 
tlriif    Allaiis. 


\\\vc  siuh  an  ailminisiialive 
c  haas^e  made,  tlie  director  ol  stu- 
dfut  .uiivities  would  have  more 
time  lo  apply  to  student  g(»vern- 
ment  ind  other  facets  of  student 
life   iimki    his  direct    jurisdiction. 

Disturbing;  facts  which  supjXMt 
siich    an    administrative    shift    are: 

I  I .  ]  \\(i  outstanding  leaders  in 
the  student  union  field  have  turn- 
«-d  down  the  (.rah:un  Memorial 
directorship  because  of  the  present 
or^ani/atioiial  subordination  of 
the  fMJsiiioii. 

'L'l  Fhe  union  has  progressed 
little  in  the  last  twenty-five  yeais. 
th'Minli    it   was  a   leader   in   the  stu- 


N evert heless.  student  who  pay  six 
dollars  of  tlieii  studetu  fees  for 
union  services  ea<h  year  aren't  get- 
ting their  money's  worth. 

Immediate  lemedial  administra- 
tive change  must  be  made. 

The  ragged  mopjiet  of  the  caiiip- 
us    must    be    lejuvinated. 

Hair-Curling 


The  Daily  Tar  Heel  And  Caution 


The  official  .student  publication  of  the 
Publications  Board  of  the  University  of 
North  Carolina,  where  it  is  published 
daily  except  Monday  and  examination 
and  vacation  periods  and  summer  terms. 
Entered  as  second  class  matter  in  the 
post  office  in  Chapel  Hill.  N.  C,  under 
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Wolff,  Stan  Shaw. 

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V.hitaker. 

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Night  News  Editor 
Ni«ht  Editor  ., 


Bob  High 

Maalejr  Springs 


Former  Ike-man  .Sen.  Harry  F. 
liMcl  has  called  the  president's  71.H 
billion  -  dollar  budget  the  "most 
inesponsible'  submitted  bv  a  chief 
executive  in  his  25  years  as  a  sena- 
tor 

Secretary  of  llie  Freasuiv  Hum- 
|)hrev  has  warned  of  a  ■hair-curl- 
ing   depression." 

The  seeds  of  discontent  have 
been  sown,  and  the  president  is 
leaping  an  of>noxious— to  him — 
crop  of  budgetary  slashin<>.  Thus 
he  is  "going  to  the  peojile"  \  ia 
television  and  radio  to  sa\e  his 
program. 

It  is  <)byiotis  that  the  neu  fiscal 
years  budget  can  stand  some 
careful  trimming.  But  we  concuir 
with  .Adlai  Stevenson  that  vote- 
.seekers  shouldn't  ■'meat-axe"  the 
budget. 

Trin»ming  of  the  loreii;!!  aid 
appropriation  should  come  only 
after  careful  and  lengthy  considera- 
tion. The  .Sio  million  recently 
granted  to  fordan  emphasizes  the 
merit  ol  foreign  aid  as  ;i  combat- 
tant  of  international  Communism. 

.Another  area  in  which  budget- 
whackers  should  tread  litfhtlv  is 
the  govertnnent's  educationil  ex- 
change program.  In  j)assing  the 
.\ppiopriation  Bill  h>r  the  Depart- 
mein  of  State,  the  House  leduced 
the  requsted  S'jo  million  to  .S17,- 
.r,7T,,ooo. 

The  exchange  of  students  and 
resultant  intercourse  of  ideas  and 
piomotion  of  international  luider- 
standing  can  hardfy  l>e  overly-em- 
pliasi/.ed.  Thus  the  House  should 
reconsider  its  irrational  monetary 
slash. 

.And  congressional  budget-trim- 
mers shoidd  proceed  With  caution 
in    their   Ijudgetarv  reducations. 

Cautious  and  thoughtful  trim- 
ming is  assuredly  justified. 


POLITICIAN'S  PRIMER: 

Tactics  Which 
MachiavelH 
Forgot  To  Use 

Stan  Shaw 

For  four  years  we  have  been  as- 
sociated '^ith  varicms  pha.ses  of 
student  government  on  this  cam- 
pus, and  since  this  is  the  case 
we  have  been  able  to  assemble 
a  great  deal  of  information  on 
what  makes  for  success  on  the 
campus  pcriitical  front. 

This  is  not  to  say  that  we  have 
ibeen  a  paragon  of  success  our- 
selves, ftw  often-times  -we  did  not 
take  our  own  best  judgment.  Nei- 
ther can  we  say  that  our  candi- 
dates have  always  been  success- 
ful, for  again  we  have  backed 
those  who  we  felt  would  lose:  but 
we  have  been  reniarkaWy  right 
in  picking  the  winners  in  the  lo- 
cal pools;  and  we  feel  that  we 
have  studied  the  variou.s  ca.se.s 
available  with  enough  discernment 
to  l>e  able  to  say  how  and  why 
tlie  winners  won. 

There  are  a  few  general  rules 
that  apply  to  everyone  who  ea- 
ters the  arena.  These  must  be 
obeyed  by  alt  ext;ept  the  very 
gifted  (who  mjiy  break  them 
•ut  of  the  sheer  clevemes  of 
their  owb  individual  tactics). 
However  these  who  are  allowed 
to  break  them  are  becomins  in- 
creasingly few,  nad  we  advise 
a  strict  adherence  iw  victory  in 
the  cursits    bonorum. 

The  nios^t  important  decision 
that  a  student  politician  or  poien- 
tjal  student  politician  makes  i.s 
his  route  to  the  top.  This  involves 
deciding  what  the  top  is  to  liim. 
for  there  are  .several  fields  open 
to  the  aspiring  nooph.\1e  ot  Caix)- 
lina  politics. 

In  any  of  the  fields  there  Ls  hon 
<M-  and  glory  to  be  achieved  am 
by  a  judicious  imderstanding  of 
himself  and  his  nascent  abilities 
he  may  gain  the  glory  that  he 
desires  with  a  minimum  of  of- 
foin  and  conformity  (for  conform 
you  must  my  friend). 

The  first  and  most  h'tgMy  plac- 
ed  position  is.  of  course,   tlie  ad- 

miniitrative  branch  of  student 
government.  The  distinction  that 
may  be  gained  by  being  president 
of  the  student  body  is  without  peer 
on  the  campus.  To  gain  this  ex- 
alted office  is  a  feat  of  no  mean 

achievement.  It  takes  a  terrific 
amount  of  work,  but  for  those 
who  set  their  aims  high  there  can 
be   no   txMter   goal. 

The  steps  to*  this  office  are 
fraught  with  ruin  for  the  careless 
for  it  is  a  process  that  rcKjuires 
delicacy,  balance  and  tact  on 
evei-y  hand.  \one  of  this  has  :o  be 
genuine,  of  coiu-se.  but  the  ap^ 
ipearance  should  be  there.  The  road 
consists  of  many  things. 

Tlie  first  is  proven  vote  get- 
ting ability,  and  here  is  where 
the  first  danger  approaches,  for 
the  potential  president  of  the 
stufieat  body  is  never  allowed  a 
seeond  chance.  He  cannot  lose 
•■  election  that  exposes  him  ti 
the  general  public,  for  to  do  so 


'Did  I  Hear  Somebody  Knock  A  Few  Months  Ago?' 


A  DEFINITION: 


would  start  the  old  guards  Utink- 
ing  that  tlieir  fair-haired  buy 
doesn't  click  with  that  ojnui- 
potent  group  known  as  the  elec- 
torate. ^ 

No  matter  how  small  '-or  in- 
significant the  election  may  be 
there  nvu-t  be  at  least  &n  cKjua.] 
chance  for  victory  between  you 
and  your  opponent.  If  this  chance 
does  not  exist — don^t  runl^  You 
have  three  years  in  which  td' prove 
.Yourself  so  don't  tJiink  tJMtt  you 
have  to  rush  thinszs.  The  route 
that  .vou  must  take  is. 

<  1 )  You  must  spend  at  least  one 
full  year  in  the  legislature..  Dur- 
ing this  time  you  shoulcj  introckice 
several  popular  and  non-conli-over- 
►sial  bills.  Vou  must  remember  at 
all  times  to  avoid  cMinroversy  for 
thus  loses  voles  later  on.  but  at 
the  same  time  you  should  not  gain 
the  reputation  of  being  weak.  Tlie 
way  to  a-void  this  is  to  bicker  with 
great  courage  over  .some  insignifi- 
cant points.  You  will  then  be 
known  as  a  man  wrto  stands  up 
for  what  he  believes. 

(2>  You  must  chair  an  admlni- 
Ntrativo  committee  which  makes 
an  elaborate  and  news-worthy  de- 
cision, but  does  not  say  anythint; 
offensive  to  any  but  the  most 
minor  groups.  Such  a  committee 
as  an  investigation  of  Book  "X"' 
prices  is  a  good  example,  or  bet- 
ter still  a  committee  which  or- 
ganizes, a  calendar  cooixlinaticm 
for  ."Student  events. 

(.*{>  You  must  get  in  with  the 
power  group  in  yoiu-  party  that  is 
one  class  ahead  of  you.  Do  odd 
ol)s  for  tJ>em  when  the>'  are  work- 
ing their  way  up.  Thi.s  make;^ 
them  think  that  you  arc  a  hard 
\vori\er  and  a  straight  shooter. 
Hemember.   the.se  are  the  peoplel 


who  will  be  rigging  .vour  nomina- 
tion. .\dopt  rheii-  thought  patterns, 
but  be  different  enough  so.  that 
they  wont  tiiink  tliat  you  are  a 
conformist. 

(4)  Build  up  a  personal  follow- 
ing or  arrange  to  adept  one.  These 
aj^  the  people  who  will  be  play- 
ing your  name  up  for  the  last  two 
months  prior  to  the  election.  They 
ai^  also  the  ones  who  will  run 
aix>und  putting  yoiu*  pasters  up  at 
three  o'clock  in  the  morning  and 
handing  out  your  campaign  litera- 
ture. 

(.'>)  Have  a  project  your  junior 
year.  This  involves  a  position 
w^here  you  are  the  head  of  some- 
thing. What  office  you  hpld  and 
what  you  do  with  it  is  entLi-ely  in- 
consequential, but  y\>\i  must  be 
able  to  point  with  prkle  to  some- 
thing that  you  have  accomplished. 
This  is  also  a  gocxl  place  to  build 
up  yoiu-  personal  following. 

(6i  Have  the  right  kind  of  cam- 
paign at  all  times.  This  means  a 
pui>llc  face  of  sincerity,  honest\'. 
humility  and  ability.  This  may 
soimd  difficult,  but  it  Ls  really 
easy.  AH  you  have  to  do  is  igo 
around,  shake  the  hand  of  at  least 
50  per  cent  of  .vour  electorate  for 
the  mincM-  offices,  ask  them  a  few 
questioas  of  interest,  and  ask  them 
humbly  for  their  vote.  Never  spend 
more  than  four  minutes  in  a  room, 
don't  stick  throw-aways  in  their 
hands  and  don't  get  involved  in 
controversial  questions,  to  do  that 
wcHtld   antagonize  .someone. 

This  is  about  all  thai  can  be 
said  at  the  iM'eseut,  but  wait  a 
few  days  and  we'll  branch  out 
into  further  fields  on  the  same 
subject.  Next  time— chairman  ot 
tlie  Men's  Honor  Council. 


SYRACUSE    ORANGE: 


The  South  Rises 
But  Still  Falls 

Ringing  renunciations  of  racial 
discrimination  is  an  easy  matter 
for  Northerners.  es.pecially  politi- 
cians see'king  electoral  support 
from  Ne.gro  voters.  It's  the  popu- 
lar thing  to  damn  segregation 
above  the  Mason-Dixon  line. 

But  when  a  group  of  white  South- 
erners—meeting  in  BiTHungiham, 
.\labama,  no  less— issues  a  vigor- 
ous statement  attacking  racial  se- 
gregation, it  is  not  the  type  of 
thing  that  will  go  well  in  Southern 
public  opinion. 

Yet  with  amazing  courage,  the 
current  meeting  of  the  Southern 
Presbjierian  Church  has  issued  a 
strong  condemnation  of  rax^ial  pre- 
judice  and  hate  organizaticms.  Al- 
though the  statement  is  •lit)«aHy 
sprinkled  with  Christian  teraniiw- 
logy,  we  feel  that  atterrtion  should 
be  gfven  to  it  from  members  of 
all  faiths. 

No  amount  of  raised-iftager  lec- 
tures from  Northerners  can,  we 
feel,  have  as  much  effect  on  South- 
em  thought  as  a  statement  by 
Southern  leaders,  .\fter  all,  no  cme 
likes  to  be  told  by  others  what  his 
actions  should  be. 

.And  vie  hope  that  mixing  religion 
with  this  social  problem  will  have 
a  more  positive  effect  than  an 
incident  which  happened  but  one 
day  before  the  Southern  Presby- 
terian convo. 

It  seems  that  in  Greensboro. 
North  Carolina,  a  Negro  mim.ster 
was  ordered  to  sit  in  a  segregated 
balcony  for  a  special  showing  of 
a   newly   released   motion  picture. 

The  title  of  the  film  was  "The 
Ten  Commandments," 


Pogo     j2 


Bv  Walt  Kelly 


•TOP' pi,arTfNfiA6Aih»rr 


of  Udh 


ri^ 


tJAP  wjtw  ewe 


The  Artist  And 
Ibsen's  'Peer" 


Kai  Jurgensen 

(MOTE:  K«i  Jurfcnson  is  AssistMM  Director 
•f  th*  Cairaliiia  Plfynuk«rs  «ntf  AssMiats  Pr»- 
ft—r  of  prunatic  Art.  H*  i»  also  ce-frranslatar 
and  diracfar  af  tlia  currant  "Paar  Grnt."  •n  viaw 
at  tha  Fartat  Thaatra  thraugh  Sunday  avanin«. 

In  this  articia  ha  writat  «#  hit  alms  and  math- 
ads  in  crating  a  naw  varsian  of  Ibsan's  play-) 

If  a  theatre-man  of  any  integritj^at  all  is  asked 
what  sort  of  play  he  would  like  to  produce,  it 
would  be  reasonatile  for  him  to  answer.  "One 
which  is  exciting  visually  (for  the  theatre  is  a  place 
for  seeing),  aurally  (for  the  theatre  is  a  place  far 
poetry),  emotionally  (for  the  theatre  is  a  place  for 
the  heart}),  and  mentally  (for  the  ttieatre  is  a  place 
for  the  mind)." 

•Veer  Gynt"  is  such  a  play.  .  r 

It  was  written  in  1«67  when  Henrik  Ibsen  was 
experiencing  a  wiM  upsurge  of  elation,  due  to  his 
recent  first  real  recognition  as  a  writer  by  the  ac- 
claim of  another  play,  called  "Brand."  'Teer  Gynt" 
is.  therefore,  an  exhuberant,  vital,  enormously  en- 
ergetic play  which  floods  the  stage?  with  wit  and 
son,  dance,   poetry   and   highspiritedi  drama. 

It  is  a  htige  portrait  of  an  individual,  painted 
on  a  huge  canvas  with  all  the  colots  of  life.  The 
individual  is  Peer,  himself,  or  better  yet,  the  Peer 
in  all  of  us. 

In  1»M  a  prolessoT  at  the  Univerity,  A.  E.  Zuck- 
er,  who  has  written  what  is  perhaps  the  finest  book 
about  fbsen  in  the  English  language.  "Ibsen,  The 
Masterbuilder,"  had  thts  to  say  alboul  the  character 
of  Peer: 

"Peer  is  not  a  bad  fellow  at  all.  He  is  lazy,  to 
be  sure,  but  who  wouldn't  be  after  be  had  been 
brought  up  the  son  of  a  rich  father  and  the  spoilt 
favorite  ot  a  weak  mother?  Yet  he  is  too  idealistic 
to  marry  a  girl  simply  for  her  property,  although 
his  mother  urges  him  to  do  so  in  order  to  improve 
their  really  very  miserable  lot.  He  is  not  vulgar, 
for  he  is  attracted  by  Solveig.  the  incarnation  of 
maidenly  modesty.  Nor  is  he  a  coward.  He  cer- 
tainly does  not  lack  charm,  nor  kind  ness,  nor  wit. 
He  is  not  without  a  sense  of  delicacy,  for  when 
confronted  by  the  results  of  his  #ild  oats,  he 
feels  himself  soiled  and  cannot  face  Solveig  again, 
happy  as  he  had  been  to  have  founfr  and  won  his 
"-Princess."  Nor  is  he  an  unsuccessful  man,  for 
when  he  makes  the  effort  he  amasses  a  huge 
fortune  in  America.  ' 

"But  he  is  not  a  great  man,  oae  who  would 
boldly  cross  the  Rubicon.  He  prefers  never  to 
commit  himself  to  such  an  extent  that  he  cannot 
draw  back.  Hence  he  has  no  core  ta-his  life,  only 
smatterings  of  this  and  that.  H^  i»4iever  wilJia^ 
to  be  himself  in  the  sense  of  devoting  bis  all  to 
one  cause;  he  is  not  one  who  would  save  his  life 
by  losing  it.  He  finds  it  unpleasant  to  look  fate 
squarely  in  the  eye;  he  prefers  to  change  the  sub- 
ject when  unpleasant  things  face  him.  He  deludes 
himself  by  taking  credit  to  himself  for  whatever 
circumstances  do  for  him,  and  by  Uaming  circum- 
stances for  his  failures.  He  believes  that  he  re- 
mains the  master  of  the  situation  just  because 
he  refuses  to  burn  his  bridges  behind  him.  He 
always  goes  around  his  difficulties  instead  of  over- 
coming them  or  dying  in  the  attempt.  The  re- 
sult of  his  calculating  selfishness  is  that  his 
character  shrinks  and  shrinks  more  and  more  the 
older  he  grows.  His  life  is  a  desolate  field  of 
missed  opportunities  and  his  morality  as  egoistic 
as  that  of  the  superman  without  the  latter's 
greatness." 

Peer,  then,  is  an  intensely  contemporary  por- 
trait of  a  man  w-ho  always  "plays  safe."  It  is  more 
than  that.  It  is  a  colorfully  poetic  portrait  stretched 
on  a  highly  dramatic  frame  work  which  calls  into 
servica  every  art  and  skill  of  the  theatre.  II  is  a 
tremendously  theatrical  piece.  » 

The  original  play  runs  for  four  and  a  half  hours 
and  leaps  like  a  mountain  goat  through  thirty-.seven 
romantically  correct  settings,  displaying  the  actions 
of  thirty-six  main  characters  and  some  forty  or  fifty 
extras,  ft  is  not  unusual,  in  Scandinavia,  to  see 
the  play  performed  viith  a  cast  of  at  least  a  hun- 
dred performers. 

As  far  as  the  true  portrait  of  Peer  is  con- 
cerned, however,  only  seven  of  the  thirty  -  si.r 
characters  are  es.sential:  Peer,  himself,  and  six 
others. 

The  current  Carolina  Playmakers'  production  ol 
tlie  play  is  based  on  this  assumption.  It  is  aimed  at 
a  concentrated  display  of  Peer  Gynt's  highly  con- 
temporary, even  American,  personality  through  a 
reduction  of  the  play's  extravaganza, 'its  prodigality, 
to  a  size  and  form  which  may  be  effectively  handled 
with  the  resources  available. 

The  nevr  translation  has  attempted  to  restate  the 
very  beautiful  original  Norwegian  poetry  in  mod- 
ern, American  language,  terms,  and  images.  For 
the  stage  adaptation  certain  scenes  have  been  cut 
and  others  have  been  rearranged  and  sharpened 
without  changing  Ibsen's  lines.  The  huge  cast  has 
been  reduced  to  thirty-two,  of  which  only  seven  ara 
principal  characters. 

In  order  to  avoid  the  fantastic  expense  and  dif- 
ficulties of  the  original  scenic  demands,  a  formal 
style  has  been  chosen  for  the  production,  which 
combines  certain  elements  of  expressionism  and 
impressionism  (including  the  use  of  masks)  into 
one,  imaginative  system  of  platform  staging,  which 
will  change  character  from  scene  to  scene  through 
the  media  of  highly  expressive,  theatrical  lighting 
and  the  use  of  electronic  sound  effects.  Naturally, 
the  old  romantic  score  of  Edvard  Grieg  would  be 
entirely  out.  of  place  in  such  a  modernistic  produc- 
tion, so  a  new  score  has  been  composed  in  keep- 
ing with  the  ci«Tent  style. 

The  dance  choreography  has  been  created  to 
support  tbb  conception  of  the  production,  all  the 
emphasis  of  which  has  been  thrown  on  the  revela- 
tion of  Peer's  dhartcter,  as  seen  through  modern, 
Amtricaii  eyes. 


WESTMLN^ 

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Coveiring  The  University  Campus 


WESTMINSTER    FELLOWSHIP 

The  spring  fe>tr^^  «if  the  West-! 
minster  Fe!llo^vshj;p  ^viU  be  held 
this  weekend  (May  U).  11  and  12). 
it  was  announced  »ecently.  The 
session  wiH  be  heW  at  Fort  Cas- 
\wU,  and  according  to  the  announce- 
ment will  feature  pleasure  with 
business.  ^    ' 

Cars  will  leave 'Y  Court  Friday 
at  2  p.m.  and  Saftirttay  at  1  p.m. 
E\'eryoiie  interesteiff  In  partici(patiAg 
in  the  pit^ram  hii§''been  urged  to 
contact  Jim  ilerritt  at  8-9174. 
HORSESHOE    PRACTICE 

.All    persons    interested    in    parti- 


5:15    ^iusic 

5:30    Opera  Historj' 

6:00    Magic  Lantern 

6:15    News  and  Safety 

6;30    Poise  of  Time 

7:00    Science   Fair 

7:30    Making  Music 

8:00    Air  Age 

8:30    Prelude 

9:00    Project  Health 

9:30    Project  Health 
10:00    Final  Edition 
10:05    Sgn  Off 
W.\A  PICNIC 

The  annual  W.A..\.  .picnic  will  be  ', 
held    Tuesday  at  5:30  p.m 


ciptaing  in  the  "Big  Four"  Field  outdoor  pool  near  Woollen  Gym.  it 
Day  to  be  held  May  14,  have  been  was  announced  yesterday.  Ed 
urged  to  attend  a  practice  session  Crow's  band  wiU  entertain  and 
today  at  the  horsesltoe  pits  at  Wool-  awards  will  be  presented  after  the 
len  Gym,  it  was  announced  ivcent-    sujpper. 

.Awards  will  include:  sorority  and 
'■  dormitory  cups,  plaques  for  in- 
tramural winners,  individual  mono- 
'  grams  and  stars,  and  outstanding 
representative  and  senior  awards. 
I  Following  the  picnic,  the  Splash 
Clitb  will  present  its  annual  water 


pageant.    The   entire    student    ixxiy 
has  been  invited  to  attend  the  s^ow 
at    the   outdoor   pool    which   begins 
at  8  pjn. 
FTA  BANQUET 

Dr.  Robert  Seymore,  minister  of 
the  Mars  Hill  Baptist  C5iurch.  will 
speak  at  the  annual  spring  banquet 
of  the  Frajric  Porter  Graham  Chap- 
ter of  the  Future  Teachers  of  Amer- 
ica in  Lenoir  Hall  today,  it  was  an- 
nounced yesterday.  He  will  speak 
on  "Re^HMisfbaities  of  Teachers  for 
the  Education  ot  Our  Children.  ' 

HoD(H-ed  guests  at  the  banquet  wiU 
at  the   include    Chancellor    Robert    House. 
Dean  Guy  Phillips  will  make  the  in- 
vocatkm. 


Pharmacy  Dance  Sat.; 
Beach  Parties  Start 


Umstead 


(Continued  from  page    ^) 

conveniences   caused   by   the   i 
dent. 


Changes   In    Cabinet 


WKftehurst  Elected 


HOT   SPRINGS,   Va.. 
least   four   changes    in 


(AP)— At  i      Miss   Mildred   H.    ''Kit")    Whit- 
President    hurst,  a  junior  from  Danville.  Va.. 


i 

fn  was 
to  his 
the  ae- 
Gynt" 
sly  en- 
it   and 

ly. 
WUNC-TV 

12:45    Music 

1:00    Today  On  the  Farm 
1:30    Engineering  Visit 
2:00    Sign  Off 
5: 14    Sign  On 

For  Mother's  Day 


summer  special  by 

SHULTON 


a  Gift  of  toilet  water  with 

re^.  size  dusting  powdcr 

both  for  the  price  of  dusting  powder  alone 

FRIENDSHIP'S  GARDEN     1.40 

Also:  Desert  Flower  1,65,  Early  American  (Wd  Spice  1.40, 

Esc^ade  1.66.  HURRY  — LBIITED  TIME  OFFER!  ' 

prtcM  phu  MS 


JAILY    CROSSWORD 


ACROSS 

1.  Puppet 

5.  Strike 

9.  Indian 
10.  Peel 
Jl.  Slope 
12.  Beginning 

14.  Search  for 

15.  Pole 

16.  Girl's 
nickname 

17.  Ovum 

IS.  Lftryc  win* 
caak 

19.  Skin 
tumor 

20.  Two-spot 
cards 

S2.  Ksnufsc- 

tund 
23.AHtt}o 

tmrt 
tS.  RoacJi 


3.  Fluff 

4.  Permit 
9.  Eating 

utensil 

4.  Disembark 
7.  Land 

measures 

5.  Irritated 
11.  Placard 
13.  Prone 
15.  Cattle 

tlUef 
It.  Thrice 

(musi) 
19.  Design  in 

paper 
11.  Tin 


au      ua{^:"  1 


22.  Encoun- 
tered 

24.  Youth 

25.  Strike 

2«.  High- 
seas 
robber 

28.  Tanned, 
napped 
skins 

29.  Num- 
bers        T*tter4sy'«  Aaewer 

31.  Hospital         37.  Perennial 
divisions  herb 

34.  Scoff  (H.I.) 

35.  KUIer  38.  Shore 
whale  recess 


uTrjniairJM   '-^tj|i 

u.TJllNW    Iir'JTJfTJ 

'A'liaTi      in 


ST.Nswstt 
SO.Qite 
Sl.lfiferry 
3S.]liftrBt 

..,    (afebr.) 

U.  J«tt . 

35.  Karsbodtaiff 

U.  Thin  nails  . 

S9.HauBd 

40.LMUI 

msMur* 
il.OrgaM  oi 

ymrtng 
«3.WiUI«x 

(POM.) 

DOWN 

l.A  flood 
2.  Anthropoid 


Old  Well 

(Continued  From  Page  I) 

Jr.,  Rocky  Mount;  James  Houghton 

Holmes,  Washington,  D.  C;  George 

,  Patrick  Hunter,  Charlotte;  Robert 

'  Bingham  Jacobus,   Raleigh; 

Donald  Elmore  Jefferson,  Chap- 
el Hill;  Thomas  Lindemann  John- 
son, Bayside,  Va.;  Harvey  Theo- 
dore Jones,  Gary;  John  Hosea  Kerr, 
ni.  Warrenton;  Kathryn  Jewel 
LeGrande,  Daytona  Beach.  Fla.; 
David  Aria  Lieberman,  Wilming- 
ton; 

Edward  Charles  Lipman,  New 
Bern;  Nancy  McFadden,  Atlanta. 
Ga.;  William  Sartor  McLean.  Lum- 
berton;  Colin  Riley  McMillan. 
Houston.  Tex.;  Archibald  Kelly 
Maness,  Jr.,  Greensboro;  Gerald 
Mack  Mayo,  Falkland;  Barbara 
Gail  Moore,  Canton: 

Bobby  Lawrence  Newton,  Creed 
moor;  Annette  Harrison  Niven. 
Charlotte;  Jerry  Loveman  Oppen- 
heimer,  Birmingham,  Ala.;  Will- 
iam Snyder  Pate,  Pikeville;  James 
Young  Preston,  Matthews;  Will- 
iam Forbes  Ram.sey,  Greensboro; 
James  Plummer  Raugh.  Jr.  Rose- 
mont.  Pa. 

Martha  Anne  Richardson,  Mid- 
lothian, Va.;  Josephine  Branch 
Ruffin,  Durham;  Nancy  Pope  Shu- 
ford,  Hickory:  Martha  Jean  Sillay, 
AtlanU.  Ga.;  Richard  Stanley  Sir- 
kin,  Miami,  Fla.;  Joe  Ephriam 
Smith,  Connelly  Springs;  Donald 
Steine.  Raleigh. 

Bennett  Allen  Tliomas.  Jr.,  Mor- 
ven;     Charles    Vawter    Tompkins, 
Jr.,  Alexandria,  Va.;  Joseph  Gaith- 
er  Walser,  High  Point;  David  Liv-  \ 
ingstone    Ward,    Jr.,    New    Bern; 
Michael     Henry     Weinmann,     St.  I 
Petersburg    Beach.    Fla.;    Eugene 
Thomas   Whitehead,   in,    Scotland) 
Neck;  Harry  Earl  Whitelock,   Bal  ■ 
timore,   Md.;    and    Paul    Edmund 
Willingham,  Chapel   Hill.  | 

Officers  this  year  have  been: 
Melbane  M.  Pritchett,  from  Le  ' 
noir.  president;  Luther  H.  Hod  ' 
ges  Jr.  from  Raleigh,  vice  presi 
dent;  Mary  Ann  Keeter,  from  Shel  j 
by,  secretary-treasurer;  and  Dr. ' 
Ernest  L.  Mackie,  recorder.  } 

Members  of  the  executive  com- 1 
mittee  are:  Jim  Martin,  Jim  Exutn. 
Trudy    Lefler.    Bob    Hornik,    Stan 
Shaw  and  Marion  Griffin. 


By  SUE  ATCHISON 

PHARMACY  WEEKEND  begins 
this  afternoon  with  a  softball  g^me^ 
IMcnic,  and  combo  at  Hogan'sjdThe 
teams  participating  in  the  gianve 
will  be  made  up  of  member^  of 
Kappa  Psi  and  Phi  Delta  Chi 
pharmaceutical  fraternities.  The 
party  at  Hogan's  will  be  followed 
by  "open  house"  at  both  the  Phi 
Delta  Chi's  and  Kappa  Psi's.  ' 

Tomorrow  evening  the  big  week- 
end will  continue  with  a  banquet 
at  the  Castle  Club  in  Durham,  and  a 


there  and  last  weekend  the  Pi  Lam's  ^       Evans  said  no     one     from     the 
as  well  as  the  ATOs  and  .\GDs  had    committee  has  contacted  him  yet. 


parties  there. 

NOW  THAT  GR.ADUATION  time 
k  almost  here  the  fraternities  have 
started  giving  their  Senior  Beer 
iparties  for  the  departing  brothers. 
The  Phi  Gams  gave  their  paity 
at  Hogan's  this  week  and  the  ZBT's 
wiD  give  their's  at  Hogan's  during 
the  coming  week. 

THE  SAEs  are  going  t«  "throw  " 
a  party  tonight  to  welcome  Ad- 
miral Mattox  and  a  recently  com- 


dance  in   Woman's  Gym  with  Jim   missiMied    brother,    Easign    James 
Cri.sp's     orchestra     providing     the,seely.    The   party    will    be   held    at 


music. 

Sponsors  of  the  dance  wiM  be: 
Miss  Annette  Niven  with  Donald  J. 
Miller,  president  of  student  body; 
Miss  Betty  Thomas  with  J<dm  M. 
Lazarus,    president    of    the    Sopho- 


more class;  Miss  Becky  Manos  witll^:  serenading     spree     Tuesday     night 


Gene  R.  Dutton,  president  of  Phi 
Delta  Chi;  Mrs.  J.  S.  O'Daniel  with 
Mr.  O'Daniel,  president  of  the 
Freshman  class;  Miss  Aim  Taylor 
with  Hugh  M.  Hinton,  pi^esident  of 
Kappa  Psi;  Miss  Janice  Pipes  with 
Dayve  Priest,  secretary-treasurer  of 
stud«it  body;  Miss  Sue  Sheet,  pres- 
ident of  Kappa  Epsilon  with  Wil- 
liam H.  Taylor;  and  Mrs.  B.  T. 
Huckaby  with  Mr.  Huckaby,  presi- 
dent of  student  branches  of  NCPA- 
APhA. 

MYRTLE  BEACH  seems  to  be 
one  of  the  most  popular  if  not  the 
favorite  beach  for  Carolina  students. 
This  weekned  the  SAE's  and  tbe 
ZBT's     are     having     houseparties 


their  house 

DOUGLAS  CLARK  and  the  Tops  j 
win  be  on  hand  tomorrow  night  at  j 
the  Beta  house  to  play  for  their  | 
infonnal  party. 

THE    SIG    EP's    continued    their  1 


when  they  traveled  to  Woman's 
College  and  serenaded  Dotte  Caton 
recently  pinned  by  Harry  Holding; 
Claudette  Butler  recently  pinned  by 
Curtis  Daughtry:  and  Lynne  Pyette 
recently  pinned  by  Jeff  Corbin. 

ENGAGEMENTS  AND  PINNINGS 
this  week  include:  Patricia  Carter. 
an  Alpha  Gam.ma  Delta,  engaged  to 
Ernest  Kemm.  a  Delta  Upsilon;  and 
Inna  Gee  Ridley,  a  Delta  Delta  Del- 
ta, pinned  to  Bill  Lue.sing.  a  Delta 
Kappa  Epsilon. 


He  added  that  he  had  intended  to 
write  such  a  letter  anyway  as 
soon  as  the  issue  settles  down. 

Four  of  the  six  members  of  the 
committee  present  voted  to  hold 
the  resolution  in  committee.  Vot- 
ing to  hold  the  resolution  were: 
Wilson.  Jerry  Cole,  Jack  Lowing, 
and  Al  Alphin.  Long  and  Edwards 
voted  against  the  move. 

Jim  Alford,  the  committee's 
chairman,  refused  to  comment  on 
the  issue.  He  said  the  committee 
"wanted  to  discuss  it  a  little  fur- 
ther." 

He  said  the  committee  discuss- 
ed the  resolution  about  an  hour, 
but  would  not  reveal  what  was 
said. 

The  committee's  move  post- 
pones the  bill's  reaching  the  legis- 
lature floor  until  the  next  regu- 
lar, meeting. 

This  means  that  the  legislature 
will  not  receive  the  paper  from 
the  Ways  and  Means  Committee 
until  its  first  meeting  next  fall. 
Last  night's  meeting  was  the  last 
of  the  present  school  year. 

Long  expressed  the  opinion  that 
the  issue  will  be  dead  by  then, 
and  that  the  bill  has  in  effect  been 
killed. 


Eisenhower's  Cabinet  this  year  are 
expected  by  top  industry  leaders 
assembling  here  for  a  weekend 
conference\with  Secretary  of  Com- 
merce Weeks  and  other  high  of- 
ficials. 

lUie  pending  wholesale  turnover 
in  the  Eisenhower     team     was     a 


has  been   named   president   of  the^ 
Women's    Honor    Council.    accord-*i 
ing  to  an  announcement  received 
recently. 

As  president  of  the  Women's 
Council.  Miss  Whitehurst  will  art 
in  a  •i>residing  capacity  over  all 
cases  covered     bv     the     Campus 


prime  topic  of  lobby  gossip  among    Code. 


members  of  the  .Commerce  De- 
partment's Business  Advisory 
(BAC).  The  council  includes  the 
heads  of  scores  of  the  countrS^'s 
biggest  corporations.  It  supplied 
three  members  of  the  present  cab- 
inet. 


The  Women's  Council  functions 
much  as  the  Men's  Honor  Coun- 
cil in  that  it  acts  as  an  investiga- 
tion and  prosecution  body  as  well 
as  a  judicial  branch. 

Miss  Whitehurst  is  a  member 
of  Pi  Beta  Phi  sorority. 


friendly 


Playmakers 

(Co7itinned  from  page  1) 
Others  in  the  ca.st  wre:  James 
Sechrest  of  Thomasville:  Miss  Marj 
Vann  Finley  of  Marion;  Stan  Shaw 
of  Hamilton,  Ohio;  Gene  Parson.>- 
ot  Chapel  Hill;  Miss  Barbara  Bat- 
tle of  -Miami,  Fla.;  Rui>sell  Link  of 
Jamica.  N.  Y.;  Miss  Barbara  Zwah- 
len  of  Chapel  Hill;  Bob  Ketler  of 
Wyncote.  Pa.;  Phil  WDliamson  of 
Wilson;  Frank  Range  of  Chapel  Hill; 
Misses  Judith  and  Joan  Jarman  of 
Durham;     .Miss    Elaine     Beard     o 

[Chapel  Hill;  and  MLss  Maria  Hun- 
ter of  Roanoke  Rapids. 

j     Dancers   for   the  production   are: 

I  Ted  Parker  of  Clinton;  Thorn  Stut 
of  Ashewille;  Jerry  Young  of  Mar 
ion;   Darwin    Solomon   of   Kemers- 

;  ville;  BiM  Jones  of  Indianapolis. 
Ind. ;  and  John  Steed  of  Chapel  Hill ; 

:  Mi»ses  Joan  Van  Sise  of  Huntington. 

!  .\.  Y.;  Bo'jby  Bounds  of  Chapel  Hill; 

<  Sandra  Thomson  of  Presho.  S.   D 


Chi  Phi  Elections 

Steve  Partridge,  a  rising  senior 
from  Charlotte,  was  elected  presi- 
dent of  Chi  Phi  social  fraternity  for 
the  coming  year  at  elections  held 
Wednesday,  it  was  announced  yes- 
terday. 

Other  new  officers  included:  Jim 
Purks.  vice-president:  .Al  Goldsmith, 
secretary:  Bobby  .Mauldin.  treas- 
urer; Sandy  Jarrell.  historian:  and 
John  Bish.  sgt-at-arms. 


JOSBPH  MORRISON 

.  .  .  CBS  fellowship 

Morrison  Given 
CBS  Fellowship 

Joseph  L.  Morrison,  associate 
professor  of  journalism  here,  is 
one  of  eight  winners  nationally  of 
the  new  CBS  Foundation  News 
and  Public  Affairs  Fellowships  at 
Columbia  University. 

Prof.  Morrison  will  be  on  leave 
from  Chapel  Hill  for  the  academic 
year  beginning  September,  1957. 
4e  will  follow  studies  at  Colum- 
)ia  "which,  in  the  opinion  of  the 
•^cllow  and  with  the  advice  of  a 
University  representative,  can  con- 
It  ibute  most  advantageously  to  a  I 
broadening  and  strengthening  of 
his  background  for  continued  work } 
in  news  and  public  affairs." 

Recipients    of    this    Fellowship  i 
will,    at    the    same    time,    form    a 
group  to  hear  invited  speakers  and  ; 
to  discuss  with   them  subjects   re- 1 
lating  to  the  news  and   public  af- 
fairs   field.    Tiiey    will    also    have  j 
access  to  radio  and  television  stu- 
dios of  the  Columbia  Broadcasting  i 
System  to  observe  techniques  and  i 
procedures.  j 

Prof.  Morrison  was  one  of  19 ; 
finalists  invited  to  New  York  EC-  j 
cently  for  interviews  with  individ-; 
ual  members  of  the  CBS  Founda-  • 
lion  selecting  c6mmittee.  i 

The  committee  member  under , 
whos?  general  direction  the'-Fel-' 
lowships  at  Columbia  University  \ 
will  be  administered  is  Dr.  Jacques  ; 
Barzun,  dean  of  the  Graduate  Fac-4 


With  this  ad  and  $1.00  Waller 
Studio  will  make  for  you  or  any 
men>ber  of  your  family  one 
BXIO    inch    silvertone    portrait. 

Our  regular  $7.50  value. 

Waller  Studio 

343  W.  Main  At  S  Pts. 

Durham,   N.  C. 

Durham's  Only  Down  Town 

Ground  Floo)'  Studio 


Remember 
Mom 
With  a 
Cheerful 
Card       ! 
From 

THE   INTIMATE 
BOOKSHOP 

205  East  Franklin  St. 
Open  Till   10    P.M. 


Friendly 's  saucy  little  shoe  with  a 
smug  little  bow  is  a  re^ol  shQW  off! 

In  all-over  black  kid  or  in 
pert  pastels  with  contrast  bows.     And 

underneath,  a  new  rounded  wooden 
heel!    Friendly  calls  it  the  "Hug  Me," 

and  rightly  so,  for  there's  a  bit  of  elastic 
at  the  back  to  make  it  fit  as  snugly  as  a 
hu^  THE  PRICE     $8.95 

'  Friendly 's  "Hug  Me" 
is  young  and  wonderful  for  going  places. 


Of  Chapel  Hi 


Marlboro 


Bami  Bourne  of  Lakewood,  N.  Y.:jultie.s.  Another  committee  member  j 


Jane    Walker   of    Chp.'>el    HtU,    and 
Crmi  Goodwin  of  Louisville,  Ky. 


CLASSIFIEDS 


FOR  INEXPENSIVE  UVING:  27 
Nashua  Trailer  —  has  bath  tub, 
shower,  porch,  oil  heater,  added 
room,  connected  to  utilities  and 
septic  tank.  One  mile  out  on 
airport  road.  Call  8472.  $2,300. 


is  the   well-known  CBS  news   ana 
lyst.   Edward  R.   Murrow. 

Th°  two  Morrison  children, 
Lucy,  8.  and  Peter,  6,  will  ac- 
company their  parents  \.to  New 
York  and  will  be  enrolled  in  the 
public   schools   there. 


GOOD  USED  KENMORE  VACU 
urn  cleaner— $25.  Call  9-6621  be 
tween  1  &  3  p.m. 

FOR  SALE:  1953  FORir8,~4-bR 
New  whitewall  tires,  radio,  heat 
er,   overdrive.    Can   arrange    fi 

.  nanciog.  Call  9-1616  after  6  p.m. 


APARTMia^T  FOR  RENT 
Post     Office.     Completely     fur 
nished.  Available  as  of  June   1 
CaU  8-7937  after  10  poo. 


CHEMISTRY  AWARDS 

Undergraduate  awards  in  Chemis- 
try will  presented  at  the  Journal 
Club  meeting  of  the  Chemistry  I>e- 
partment  in  Room  207  Venable  at 
4  p.m.  today,  according  to  an  an- 
nouncement received  yer>ter43y. 

Mr.  Richard  L.  Carter  from  the 
Statistics  Department  here  will 
•ypeak  on  "Statistical  Method.-:  in 
the  Lal)oratory.  The  award  segment 
of  the  program  will  consist  of 
awards  to  freshman,  .  so$^omore, 
NEAR  junior  and  senior  students. 

Refreshments  will  be  served  jjrior 
to  the  meeting.  AH  interested  per- 
j  SOBS  liavf  been  invited  to  attewL 


HT 


nivJ^ 


NEW 

riip.TOf  tox 

Sturdy  f  Im*p 

«i(«rettM  l^m 

«riwlun(. 

No  tobacco  in 

yoju  pocket. 

Up  to  d«t*. 


Here's  old-fashioned  flavor  in  the  ne^  way  to  smoke. 

The  man-size  taste  of  honest  tobacco  comes  full  through.  The  smooth-drawing 
filter  feels  right  in  your  mouth.  It  works  fine  but  doesn't  get  in  the 
way.  Modem  FUp-Top  Box  keep*  every  cigarette  firm  and  freeh. 


PO^UCAft 


{MAM  IN  RKHMONI^  WMOtIK  'MM  A  NIW  MA«UBf  tKlfV 


FAOI  POUI 


THI  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


FRIDAY,  MAY  10,  1957 


Trackmen,  Golfers  Begin  Conference  Tourney  Play  Today 


Steve  Bank  Upset 
In  Net  Tourney 

DURHAM,    (AP)  —  Mao'Iand's  upset,  as  he  dropped  an  8-6.  6-2. 


Uinksmen  Open  Defense  Of  Title 
I  In  ACC  Tourney  In  Winston  Salem 


Pictured  above  are  Jim  Beatty  (L)  and  Dfv*  Scurlock,  tha  two 
big  men  in  Carolina's  track  fortunes  in  the  next  two  days.  The  Tar 
Heels  will  entertain  the  ACC  in  the  4th  annual  tourney  on  Fetxer 
Field  today  and  Saturday. 


Cindermen  Are  Host 
To  ACC  Field  As  Trials 
Begin  At  Fetzer  Today 


By  DAVE  WIBLE 

The  4th  annual  Atlantic  Coast ! 
Conference  Ttracic  Championships 
get  under  way  this  afternoon  on 
Fetzer  Field  at  3  o'clock  when  the 
top  cindermen  of  the  eight  ACC 
schools  begin  fighting  for  qualify- 
ing positions  for  tomorrow's  fin- 
als. 

The  preliminaries  for  the  field 
events  will  begin  at  3  for  the  shot 
Pfit.  javelin  and  broad  jump.  The 
discuc  qualifiers  will  begin  throw- 
ing at  4:15.  The  running  trials  are 
scheduled  as  follows:  4:00,  440- 
yard  run;  4:20,  100-yard  dash;  4:40, 
120-yard  high  hurdles;  5:00,  880- 
yard  run;  5:20,  220-yard  dash;  5:40, ' 
220-yard  low  hurdles.  There  will 
be  no  trials  in  he  pole  valut,  high 
iump,  mile,  2-mile  and  n*ile  relay  I 
which  will  be  decided  tomorrow. 

The  meet  promises  to  be  one  of 
the  best  in  ACC  history.  Many  con- 
ference marks  have  been  topped 
luring  the  season  and  should  fall 
tomorrow.  Last  year  there  were 
eleven  new  marks  set  for  the  con- 
ference at  the  championships  held 
at  Duke.  I 

Maryland    is    highly  favored   to 
repeat  as  team  champions  for  the 
third   time.   Carolina   is   the   only . 
other  school  in   the  young  ACC's  ! 
hisory  to  hold  the  team  title.  That  \ 
was  in  1955.  { 

On  down  the  line,  it  looks  like! 
it  will  be  a  close  race  for  second  i 
between  Carolina,  Duke  and  Vir-  j 
ginia.  The  Tar  Heels  have  defeat- 1 
ed  Duke  in  duel  meet  compelition  { 
but  the  locals  were  defeated  by 
r>'-2  points  by  Virginia  in  a  duel 
meet. 

South  Carolina,  Clemson,  State, 
and  Wake  Forest  will  protoably 
fight  it  out  for  the  cellar  spot. 
The  Demon  Deacons  have  the 
green  flag  for  this  position  since 
they  will  have  only  six  men  in 
competition. 

There  is  much  speculation  con- 
cerning the  individual  champions 
but  based  on  preformances  this 
season  here  is  how  it  appears  that 
each  event  will  turn  out. 

In  the  big  event,  the  mile,  the 
competition  runs  hot  and  heavy, 
Carolina's  Jim  Beatty  holds  the 
record  at  4:09.4  but  both  he  and 
Maryland's  Burr  Grimm  have  been 
well  under  that  mark  this  year. 
In  their  last  meting,  Grimm  edged 
Beatty  by  a  few  yards,  clocking  at 
4:06.  Another  fine  miler  is  Caro- 
lina's Everett  Whatley  who  has 
run  the  distance  in  4:15  this  sea- 
son. 

In  the  440,  Maryland's  Dave 
Leas  will  be  defending  his  title 
and  is  favored  to  lepeal  Dave 
Scurlock  of  Carolina  will  be  in 
there  to  fight  for  the  first  and 
Duke's  Cobb  is  another  fine  440 
man. 

The  100-yard  dash  will  be  dom 
inated  by  world  record  tying  Dave 
Sime.  Sime  who  tied  the  world's 
record  at  9.3  holds  the  ACC  mark 
at  9.5.  Maryland's  Bayns  and 
Salmon  are  the  top  dash  men  be 
sides  Sime.  »•  ' 

South  Carolina's  Don  Goodroe 
has  twice  run  the  120  high  hurdles 
in  14.5  which  is  well  under  the 
ACC  record  of  14.7.  Maryland  has 
two  men  very  strong  in  this 
event  in  the  persons  of  Duncan 
and  Moore. 

The    880    record    of    1:54.1    has 

been    topped    several    times    this 

season.   Tar   Heeil  Dave   Scurlock 

has  topped  that     mark     with     a 

1:528    and    last    year's    <jhampinn 


Carl  Party  of  Maryland  has  run 
a  1:53.8.  Another  threat  for  the 
title  will  be  Howard  Kahn  of 
Carolina. 

Carolina  has  two  top  2-milers. 
Jim  Beatty  will  be  collegiate  de- 
fending champion.  He  ran  the 
second  fastest  two-miile  at  the 
Penn  Relays  this  year  where  he 
was  timed  at  9:01.7,  well  under  the 
established  ACC  mark.  Wayne 
Bishop  has  been  close  on  team- 
mate Beatty's  heels  this  year. 

Dave  Sime.  last  year's  champion 
in  the  220  low  hurdles,  will  not 
defend  his  title  this  year.  Mary- 
land is  favored  to  sweep  the 
event  with  Calmon,  Moore,  and 
Thompson. 

In  the  mile  relay,  the  Tar  Heels 
will  field  the  school  record  break- 
ing team  of  Jim  Moss,  John   Syl- 
i  vester.  Dick   McFaddin   and  Dave 
.  Scurlock.     These     four    combined 
'  efforts   and   ran   a   3:18.5    against 
Duke  last  weekend.  The  ACC  mark 
is  3:19.7.  Maryland  and  Duke  are 
expected  to  have  strong  teams  in 
tBe  event. 

In  the  field  events,  Maryland  is 
particularly  strong.  They  have  two 
top  men  in  the  broad  jump.  Lloyd 
and  Thompson.  Carolina's  Ed 
Brawley  has  made  some  very  good 
jumps  this  season. 

The  high  jump  will  feature  the 
greatest  competition  in  the  meet 
Already  three  men  have  been  ov- 
er the  ACC  record  of  6'2"  this  sea 
son.  They  are  Maryland's  George 
Hogan  and  Tom  Tait,  and  Tom 
Cameron  of  Clemson.  Hogan  will 
be  trying  td  better  his  own  ACC 
record. 

Jack  Ladner,  Wake  Forest's 
champion  in  the  javelin,  will  not 
compete  this  year.  The  Deacon 
quit  track  in  the  middle  of  the 
season.  Top  entries  are  Strick- 
land of  Duke  and  Carolina's 
Oakley  and  McCallister. 

Virginia  is  very  strong  in  the 
polp  vault  with  3  thirteen  foot 
vaulters:  Pat  Whitaker,  Henry 
Davenport  and  Clarence  Roberts. 

Th^  shot-put  competition  will 
find  Ed  Cook  of  Maryland  defend- 
ing his  last  year's  title.  Speer  of 
Duke,  Leras  ol  Maryland  and  Don 
Kemper  of  Carolina  are  very 
strong  in  this  event. 

Speer,  Cooke,  and  Laras  are  al- 
so the  top  conference  discus  men 
along  with  Laras  of  Maryland. 


Jackson  Yang,  a  Chinese-born  net- 
ter  now  living  in  this  country's 
capital,  upset  Carolina's  Steve 
Bank,  the  No.  1  seeded  player,  6-1. 
6-4,  here  today  as  the  Atlantic 
Coast  Conference  tennis  champion 
ships  got  under  way  on  the  Duke 
courts. 

Bank,  apparently  having  an  off- 
day,  simply  could  not  cope  with 
the  retrieving  style  game  of  the 
No.  3  player  from  Maryland's 
regular  season  champions. 

Mike  Solomon,  the  No.  4  seeded 
player  from  N.  C.  State,  also  was 

Dave  Could 
Run  Also 

Ten  powerglide  strides  seemed 
to  cover  the  basketball  court  in 
no  time  and  lots  of  people  gasped 
as  the  UNC  freshman  laid  up  a 
soft  shot. 

"If  he  can  do  everything  as  well 


decision 
eley. 


to  Virginia's  John  Bark- 


Dave  Freishtat  and  Carl  Buck^ 
of  Maryland  were  seeded  No.  1 
in  the  doubles.  Leif  Beck  and  Don 
Romhilt  of  Duke  were  seeded  No. 
2. 

Quarterfinals  singles  matches 
are  slated  for  this  morning  at  fi 
o'clock.  The  finals  of  both  sing 
les  and  doubles  will  be  played 
Saturday  afternoon. 

THE  SUMMARIES: 
Second  Round  Singles: 

Freishtat     (Md.)     over      Bryant 
(Clemson),  6-2,  6-2;  Dye  (NCS)  ov- 
er  McCall    (WF),   6-1,   6^;    Bucks 
(Md.)    over  LeBauer   (Duke),   7-5, 
6-2;    Livingston   (UNC)   over   Law- 
rence  (Duke).    1-6,   6-3,    6-0;    Beck 
(Duke)  over  Jack  (Duke),  6-4,  6-3; 
Gantt  (USC)  over  Theos  (Clemson), 
6-4,    6-4,   6-2;    Stoever   (Va.)   over] 
Van  Winkle  (UNC),   2-6,  6-4,    6-4;  i 
Yang  (Md.)  over  Bank  (UNX),  61,! 
6-4. 
Bottoms   (Duke)   over  Blackwell 
as  he  moves,     he'll     be     another  i  (USC),  6-0,  6-0;  Berkeley  (Va.)  ov- ' 
great,"  was  the  consensus.  |  er  Solomon    (NCS),    8S,  6-2;   Wil-  j 

It  turned  out  he  couldn't,  but  j  liams  (Duke)  over  Connor  (WF),  j 
it  was  probably  the  best  thing  that  j  8-6,  6-2;  Romhilt  (Duke)  over  Dun  1 
ever  happened  to  Dave  Scurlock.  1  ham  (Md.),  6-1,  6-1;  Kammerer ; 
While  his  taller  and  more }  (Md.)  over  Calloway  (Clemson),  | 
talented  mates  —  basketball-  wise  j  6-3,  6-2;  Black  (UNC)  over  Beatty  j 
at  least— were  making  names  for  \  (NCS),  6-1,  6-0;  Dixon  (Md.)  over  j 
themselves  around  the  nation  this  !  Jacobus  (UNC),  6-1,  9-7;  Carter  | 
winter.  21 -year -old  sophomore  (Clemson)  over  DeCourscy  (NCS),  i 
Scurlock  was  pounding  the  indoor  j  6-3,  7-9,  6-0.  | 

tracks  of  the  Atlantic  Coast  Con-  i      Third    round    singles:    Freishtat 
ference.  '  over  Dye,  6-0,  6-0;  Bucks  over  Liv- 

State     high     school     half  -  mile  \  ingston,   10-8,  6-3;   Beck  over  Dix-  \ 


Hie  Carolina  golfers  open  de- 
fense of  their  Atlantic  Coast  Con- 
ference title  this  afternoon  in 
Winston-Salem  on  the  par  7.1  Old 
Town  Club  course. 

The  linksmen  will  carry  a  10-2-1 
record  into  the  two-day  affair 
which  will  see  teams  from  ever>' 
school  in  the  ACC  competing  for 
the  conference  and  '  individual 
championships. 

The  Tar  Heels  will  share  the 
title  of  co-favorites  with  the  W^ake 
Forest  Deacons,  a  vastly  improved 
aggregate  which  has  itself  run  up 
a  gleaming  record  during  the  sea- 
son. The  Tar  Heels,  however,  de- 
feated the  Deacs  in  the  only  match 
between  the  two  schools  this  sea- 
son, 18\2  -  8»^.  This  should  give 
th,e  Tar  Heels  a  slight  edge  over 
the  Winston-Salem  club. 

Coach  Chuck  Erickson's  golfers, 
who  finished  the  season  last  year 
with  a  7-2  mark  in  conference 
play,  have  lost  only  to  Western 
Illinois  State  and  Maryland,  while 
being  tied  by  Rollins  in  the  first 
match  of  the  season. 

The  Tar  Heels   are   thought  to 


Carolina 


NOW  PLAYING 


of  several  of  the  present  Tar  Heel 
linksmen  could  come   out  on  top: 
but   this   year's   field    promises   to 
be  even  tougher  than  the  one  that  j 
participated   a   year  ago.  | 

This    years     Carolina    club     is 
composed   of  a   group  of  talented  , 
men.    each    of    whom    have    taken  ^ 
medalist  honors  at  least  once  dur- 1 
ing  the  regular  season. 

Leading    the    way    for    Carolina 
will      be     Tommy   Langley.    Gene  , 
Lookabill.    Tuffy    Henderson.   Sarti 


HIS 


HIT 


GREATEST 
SINCE 
'-HIGH  NOON' 


GARY 
COOPER 


FRIENDLY 


aPERSUASION 


Patrick.    Buck 
Summerville. 


Adams,    and    Wall 


AN  ALLIED  ARTISTS  P.CTUKt 


on,  6-1,  6-0;  Stoever  over  Gantt, 
6-2,  6-4;  Yang  over  Bottoms,  6-2, 
6-0;  Berkeley  over  Williams,  IS- 
IS, 6-2;  Black  over  Carter,  6-1,  6-2; 
Romhilt  over  Kammerer,  6-3,   6-0. 


Quarterfinal  Pairings: 

•  Freishtat  v.  Bucks;  Beck  v.  Slo- 
;  ever;  Yang  v.  Black;  Romhilt  v. 
I  Berkeley. 

Doubles   Results: 

Solomon-Yionoulis   over  Connor- 

McCall,   6-3,   6-3;    Yang-Kammerer 

;  over  Van  Winkle-Jacobus,  6-0,  6-3; 

i  Freishtat-Bucks    over    Vickcrs-Bry- 

j  ant,  6-0,   6-4;    fleck-Romhilt   over 


Hot   Baby  Diapers 

NORWALK,  Calf..  (AP)— Sher- 
iff's deputies  say  a  young  house- 
wife set  her  house  afire  because — 

"I've  been  doing  housework  and 
baby  diapers  for  so  long  I  just 
got  fed  jip  and  blew  my  stack." 

Mrs.  Nancy  Joyce  Stoner,  20, 
started  the  blaze  by  placing  seven 
stacks  of  diapers  and  dirty  clothes 
in  various  parts  of  the  house  and 
touching  matches  to  them,  said  Sgt. 
Al  Long. 

The  blonde  mother  hopped  into 
her  car  with  her  two  daughters 
and  drove  away.  When  a  neigh- 
bor yelled  that  her  house  was 
afire.  Long  said,  Mrs.  Stoner 
shouted  back: 

•That's  good.  Call  the  Fire  De 
partment." 

She  was  booked  on  suspicion  of 
arson.  Firemen  estimated  damage 
at  $2,000 


champ  and  record  holder  Scurlock 
traded  his  basketball  future  for 
a  favorite's  role  in  the  ACC  track 
meet  here  today  and  Saturday. 

Based  on  performances  indoors 
and  out  this  year,  Scurlock,  Greens- 
boro native,  must  be  spotlighted 
in  the  440  and  880  along  with  his 
anchor  job  on  UNC's  mile  relay 
team. 

Every  few  years,  Carolina  comes 
up  with  a  track  great — Chunk  Sim- 
mons, Bill  Albans,  Jack  Milne, 
Jim  Beatty,  Scurlock  looks  like 
the  next  Tar  Heel  great  to  Coach 
Dale  Ranson. 

He  lost  only     to     the     Olympic ;  Gantt-Luft,  6-2,  6-2. 
stars    in   indoor    meets    this    year'  Doubles  Pairings: 

and  since  going  outdoors  has  been  Cox-Garren  v.  Bottoms-Robbins; 
practically  unbeatable.  He  turned  Bank-Newsome  v.  Solomon-Yion- 
in  the  ninth  best  time  in  the  na- 1  oulis;  Carter-Scarpa  v.  Burt-AUrcd; 
tion  in  the  half  mile  with   1:52.8 1  Blackwell-Burns  v.  Lawrence-Jack. 

and  has  neared  that  standard  sev-  j  

eral  times.  In  two  440  yard  runs 
in  a  dual  meet  against  Duke  last 
week  he  bettered  his  own  UNC 
quarter-mile  record  twice  with  a 
pair  of  48.4's.  His  times  have  been 
steadily  improving  and  observers 
feel  he  has  a  good  chance  of  mak- 
ing the  1960  Olympics.  It  would 
have  taken  a  lot  of  baskets  to 
equal  that. 


No  Charge 

No  admission  will  be  charged 
today  for  the  ACC  track  trials. 
Tomorrow  it  will  be  50  cents  for 
students. 


DUSTY  TREASURE 
FROM  N.  C.  AHICS 

We've  just  finished  another  old 
book  buying  trip,  and  the  Ihclvcs 
are  bulging  with  books  too  numer- 
ous to  list. 

Com*   Treasure-Hunting   Nowl 

THE  INTIMATE 
BOOKSHOP 

205  East  Franklin  St. 
Op«n  Till   10  P.M. 


Practice 

The  intramural  department  has 
announce^  that  there  will  be  a 
Softball  and  horseshoes  practice 
held  here  this  afternoon  at  4  o'- 
clock for  the  two  teams  com- 
peting in  the  Big  Four  Day  activ- 
ities. Softball  practive  will  also 
be  held  Monday. 


Sabre  Fencing 
Here  Tonight 

Continuing  the  series  of  three 
evenings  of  individual  competi- 
tion with  the  sabre  bouts  be- 
ginning at  7  p.m.  tonight  in  Grah- 
am Memorial,  the  Carolina  Fenc- 
ing Clu'b  offers  trophies  to  the 
three  top  winners  in  overall  bout 
score. 

Each  man  must  meet  all  the 
others  in  his  weapon  and  the 
bouts  are  open  to  the  public.  Last 
Friday  night's  foil  bouts  saw  Bob 
Clay  take  first  place  in  a  tie  with 
Mike  Collins  who  placed  second 
The  tied  bout  score  was  resolved 
by  counting  touches  received.  In 
third  place  foil  was  a  newcomer, 
j  (}eof  gc  Haddad. 

;  Tonight's  sabre  match  should 
prove  interesting  with  some  sea- 
soned fencers  returning  to  test 
their  skill  with  the  aspiring  nov- 
ices. The  list  of  entries,  thus  far 
includes:  JauKS  Wdlliams,  Ncal 
I  Kelly,  Don  Corbin,  Mike  Collins 
,  Bill  Mudd,  George  Haddad,  Jim 
i  Proctor,  Al  Deal,  Frank  Parker 
j  and  Jay  Wilson.  Officials  will  be 
'  Dr.  Robert  Hiller  of  the  Physics 
i  Dept.,  David  Evans,  grad  student 
I  in  law  and  P.  E.  Barrow,  fencing 
I  coach.  Bouts  will  begin  promptly 
at  seven  and  spectators  are  wel- 
comed. 


CHUCK  ERICKSON 

.  .  .  golf  coach 

be  a  better  rounded  outfit  this 
year  than  the  team  that  copped 
first  prize  last  season. 

It  is  definite  that  a  new  in- 
dividual champion  will  be  crown- 
ed over  the  weekend,  as  last  year's 
individual  winner  Buzzy  Basinger, 
formerly  of  Carolina,  dropped  out 
of  school  at  the  end  of  the  last 
semester. 

The  defending  champs  should 
once  again  have  strong  sentiment 
in  their  favor  as  to  the  team  with 
the  top  individual  performer.  .\ny 


Howard  Johnson  Restaurant 

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PETE 

THE   TAILOR 

"Specializing  in 

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WE'LL  BUY  ALL 
YOUR  OLD  BOOKS 

•  Live  Texts 

We  pay  top  prices  for  texts 
that  will  be  used  again  at 

U,N.C. 

•  Dropped  Texts 

We'll  search  the  market  for 
a  spot  to  salvage  ^me  of 
your  loss  when  a  text  is 
dropped. 

•  Enjoyable  Books 

We  can  use  books  you  no 
longer  want  on  your  shelves. 
The  next  fellow  that  comes 
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THORNTON  WILDER  AND  WALTER  WINCHELL 

THORNTON   WILDER.  "A  distinguished  production  and  a 
revelation  of  new  possibilities  in  the  mofion  picture." 
WALTER  WINCHELL :  "Imaginatively  produced,  beautifully 
played." 

N.  Y.  TIMES  AND  DAILY  NEWS 

NEW  YORK  TIMES:  "Spectacular  and  awesome  show." 
OA/tV  NEWS.  "'^•^1^'^  Stunning   and    imaginative." 

N.  Y.  NERALD  TRIBUNE  AND  DAILY  MIRROR 

N.  Y.  HERALD  TRIBUNE:  "Primeval  power...  It  still  hypno- 
tizes us." 

DAILY  MIRROR:  "Topnotch  . . .  handsomely  mounted  and 
splendidly  enacted." 

WORLD  TELEGRAM-SUN  AND  CUE  MAGAZINE 

VVORID  TELEGRAM-SUN :  Brilliant,  arresting  ac^hievement." 
CUE  MAGAZINE:  "It  overflows  with  compassion  and  pity, 
grandeur  and  beauty." 

GILBERT  SELDES  AND  CLIfTON  FADIMAN 

GILBERT  SELDES:  "It  is  one  of  the  handful  of  great  movies 
ever  made." 

CLIFTON  FADIMAN:  "This  production  of  a  sumeme  work 
of  art  is  in  itself  a  work  of  art."  IIb. 

...AND  fLifil SAYS: 

'iXCELLENT  .  .  .  Time  does  not  trim  down  ttie  terror  of 
trve  tragedy!" 

The  TYRONE  GUTHRIE  production  of  Sophocles' 


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Leave  end  of  June— return  earty  August 

.I?!r2"*'"*"  Pa««ats.  meals, 

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■"'«»;j*^7>n«'Chll«  tour- Reduced f«f«     ! 

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U.N.C.   Library 
Seriiln    DaiJt. 
Chapel    Hill.    U.    C. 
8-3X-49 


WEATHER 

Partly   el«udy   and   warm.    High 


•5. 


3rj)  c  3)aitu  11  ^at  Mtti 


Autonomy 


Tha  legislature  gave  it  a  J«da« 
kiss  says  the  editor  on   page  twa. 


VOL.  LVil,  NO.  185 


Complete  (A=^  Wirt  Servie* 


CK4(^EL  HILL,  NORTH  CAROLINA,  SATURDAY,  MAY   11,  1957 


Offieti  m  Graham  Mtmahal 


FOUR  PAGES  THIS  ISSUi 


Evans  Agrees  With  Legislature's 
Action  On  Umstead  Park  Incident 

His  Personal  Opinion 
On  Segregation  Issue 


At  Press  Dinner 


4  Seniors  Win  Journalism  Awards 


Carolina  Serenaders  At  Woman's  College 

Shown  above  are  the  Sigma  Phi  Epsilon  fraternity  group  which  traveled  to  Woman's  College  Tues- 
day night  to  serenade  three  girls  who  were  recently  pinned  by  members  of  the  Carolina  fraternity.  Harry 
Holding,  Curtia  Daughtry  and  Jeff  Corbin's  girls  were  the  ones  honored  by  the  singing  travelers. 


Exum  Wins  Law  Scholarship 

James  G.  Exum.  Jr.  has  received    successful  candidate  for  the  pres-    a   member  of  the  Beta  Club, 
an    Elihu    Root-Samuel    J.    Tilden    idency      against      Rutherford      B.       He   is   currently     president     of 
Scholarship    for     three     years     of   Hayes.  Phi  Beta  Kappa  and  a  member  of 


study  at  the  New  York  University 
School  of   Law. 


Recipients  of  the  awards,  which 
are  valued  at  $7,200  each,  were 
announced  recently  by  Dean  Rus- 
sell D.  Niles  of  New  York  Uni 
versity. 


Four  rising  seniors  in  the 
School  of  Journalism  ware  award- 
ed $300  scholarships  on  a  basis 
of  academic  acHiavamant  and 
need  at  the  annual  awards  din- 
ner of  the  Press  Club  Thursday 
nght. 

Stanley  L.  Brennan,  Birming- 
ham, Ala.,  received  the  Quincy 
Sharpe  Mills  Scholarship.  This 
award,  named  in  honor  of  a  1907 


graduate  who  was  on  leave  from 
the  New  York  Sun  at  the  time 
aff  his  death  in  Franca  in  1918, 
was  made  for  the  firit  time.  A 
bequest  to  the  School  of  Jour- 
nalism from  Nancy  Sharpe  Mills, 
his  mother,  provided  funds  for 
the  award. 

John  D.  Ashford,  Scotland 
Neck,  won  the  Louis  Graves  scho- 
larship;   Thomas   M.    Byrd,   Mt. 


Olive,  the  Gerald  W.  Johnson 
scholarship;  and  Raymond  P. 
Smith,  Chapel  Hill,  the  O.  J.  Cof- 
fin Scholarship.  Journalism 
Foundation  income  provides 
funds  for  these  three  scholar 
shops. 


Ike  To  Speak 


♦      Thursday    evening,    the    Student 

I  l>egislature  passed  a  special  reso- 
lution amending  the  Long  cenaure 
The    resolution    which    had    been    pre- 


The  awards  and  other  academic 
recognitions  were  an 
Dean  Norval  Neil  Luxon. 


the  annual  Men's  Glee  Club  Awards 


Recipients    of    the    grants    are  Phi    Eta   Sigma    (scholastic   honor 

young     men     with     distinguished  society),  the  Order  of  the  Golden 

scholastic   records     who.      in     the  Fleece,  the  Order  of  the  Old  Well, 

opinion    of   the    selection    commit-  and  the  Order  of  the  Holy  Grail 

tees,    show    unusual    capacity    for  He  also  is  the  floor  leader  of  the 

unselfish    public    leadership.  ways  and  means  committee  of  the    BanQuet.  which  was  held  at  7  p.rn. 

Exum   was  chosen  by   the  com-  student  legislature.  [yesterday  at    Brady's    Restaurant. 

mittee    for   the      Fourth     Judicial        Exum    has    also    served    as    vice ,     Supplementing    the    awards    pro- 

Exum    will    graduate    from    the   District,     which     includes     North  president    of    the    Psi   chapter    of   gram    was    the    presentation   of   29 

University  in  June  and  begin  his  '  Carolina.    Members    of    the    group  Sigma  Nu  social  fraternity  and  as  i  Certificates  of  Merit    and     a     sur- 

law  studies  at  NYU  in  September     were  Chief  Judge  John  J.   Parker  chairman     of     the     Men's   Honor  '  prise  pre.sentat ion  made  to  a  deserv- 

R:)Ot- Tilden     Scholarships     are    of  Charlotte.  N.  C:  Admiral  Fred  Council.  |  ing  senior  member  of  the  dub. 

awarded  annually  to  two  outstand-    erick  J.  Bell,  executive  vice  pres-        New    York    University's    School       Presented  with  the  Moat  Vakiable 

ing  college  men  from  each  of  the    ident   of  the   National  Automobile  of   Law  was  founded   in   1835.   Lo-  i  Member  loving  cup  for  1956-57  was 

10    federal    judicial    districts.    The    Dealers    Association.    Washington,  cated      at      historic      Washington  '  Charles    Shoe,    a    sophomore    from 

grants  are  named  for  two  famous   D.  C.;  and  Dr.   Bertel   M.  Sparks,  Square  in   Manhattan,   the    School  j  FayetteviHe,    who    served   a.s    busi- 

NYU    alumni;    Elihu    Root    (Clas.s    professor  of  law  at  NYU.  has   an    enrollment   of   more   than    ness  manager  for  the  club  this  year 


Charles  Shoe  Awarded  Glee  Club's 
1956-1957  Most  Valuable  Trophy 


The    presentation    of    The    Most  |  Publicity  Chairman;  Hunter  C.  Till- ,  to    senior    James    Chamblee.     The 
Valuable  Member  trophy  highlighted  I  maB;    H.    Franklin    Brooks,    Secre- '  gift  was  an  enscribed  set  oi  book  :  later  Tuesday  night: 


WASHINGTON,    (AP) 

White  House  yesterday  fixed  next  viously  doomed   to  quiet  death   in 

Tuesday  evening  as  the   time   for  committee. 

President  Eisenhower's  nationwide  Yesterday,   Student    Body  Presi- 

I  radio-TV  speech  in  support  of  his  dent  Sonny  Evans  released  a  state- 

nounced  by    I  $71,800,000,000    spending   budget,  ment    relating    his    views    on    the 

I      Press   Secretary  James   C.   Hag-  situation,  which  had  its  beginning 

i  erty    said    Eisenhower   will    .speak  when  a  Negro  student  of  the  Uni- 

'  from  his  White  House  office  for  30  versity    was    ousted    from    segre- 

minutes,   starting  at   9   p.m.   EDT.  gated    Umstead    Park    two    weeks 

I    The  address  will  be  carried  live'  ago. 

I  at  that  time  by  NBC  TV  and  rad-  Expressing  his  concern  over  the 

]  ioT  Mutual  radio.  ABC  radio,  and  implications  of  action  taken  by  the 

CBS  radio.  Legislature,  Evans  said: 

>.        ,         ,                          J     »u-  "I  want  to  make  it  clear  at  the 
Hagerty     also     announced     this 

schedule     of     delayed     broadcasts 


outset   that   anv   views  I   have   on 


<ary;  Zane  E.  Eairgle,  President;  ;  ends  presented  for  •outstanding 
James  W.  Cham,blee,  student  Con-  ;  .service  for  four  years."  Chamblee 
ductor  and  Dr.  Joel  Carter,  Direc-  j  sei-ved  as  Student  Conductor  this 
tor.  year  and   filled  numerous  positions 

Special   guests   Hoke   S.    Simpson   in   the  club  during   his  four   years 
and  Donna  B.  Patton  were  present-  '  as  a  baritone. 

ed  Honorary  Member  Certificates  i  A  review  of  the  organization's  ac- 
for  their  guest  appearances  on  I  com.plishments  this  .\ear  and  a  dis- 
tours  dwring  the  year. 

A  surprise  presentation  w:as  made  \  ident  Shoe,  terminated  the  banquet.  '  actually  speaks. 


this  problem  are  my  own  and  in 

.„„_,,    ...         ,  ,_  T-T^fT.  i  no  ^^ay  repre.sent  the   opinions  of 

A^C  TV  starting  at  10  p.m.  EDT, '  „*  j     «    o  .  .  j  -. 

^^no  o^T    4    .•        .  r,  ,-  Student    Government    or   students 

and  CBS  TV  starting  at  ll:lo  p.m. 
^,_  on   this  campus. 

"I    believe     that     almost     every- 

Hagerty  said  he  wanted  to  em-    one  on  campus,  including  most  ol 

phasize     that     the     while     House    the    members   of    the    Legislature 

had  no  criticism  whatever  of  net-    wcffe  embarras.sed  and  hurt  by  the 

works    which    will    not   carry   the    incident  that  occurred  at  Umstead 


cussion  of  future  plans,  led  by  Pres- ]  ad djress   at   the    time     Eisenhower    Park. 


of    1867)    who  served   in   the   cab-,      Exum  graduated  from  Snow  Hill    700  day  and  evening  students. 

inets     of     William   McKinley   and    High   School,  where  he  was  presi 

Theodore    Roosevelt;    and   Samuel    dent  of  the  student  body,  editor  of 
J.  TilSen  (Class  of  1841)  who  was  '  the  annual  and  the  school 
governor  of^ew   York   and   un    captain  of  the  football  team,  and 

House  Honored 


r^^  Would  You  Like 
To  Be  A  Editor 


Wilson  And  Hal  I  ford  Are 
Chosen  As  GM  Directors 


Applicants   for   the   positions   of 
editor  and  managing  editor  of  the 


and  was  a  leader  in  stimulating 
interest  for  the  club  during  the 
past  two  years.  Shoe  was  recently 
elected  to  the  presideaey  of  the  elufb 
for  tibe  coRuag  eohonl.  jneaor. 

Certificates  of  .«ei-H,  an  inova- 
t'on  for  the  club,  were  awarded  on 
the  t>asis  of  "faithful  attendance, 
cooperative    attitude,    and    musical 


Hoke  Simpson  s   Number  1 
Proves  To  Be  Hot  Record 


By  BEN  TAVLOR 

In   2:17   minutes   a   Cokuual   disc 
tells   the  story     of     UNC's     finest 


By  H'  JOOST  POLAK 


posium  $1000  and   a   bill   appolnt- 


be    highly    commended,"    Campbell    compile.     Thi^ee    or    fooir    good    re- 

said  in  a  telephone  interview  Wed-  |  hearsals.  a  session  of  linking  Rosen- 

nesday  j  biuth,     Brennan.     Quigg.     etc.     witli 

contributioijs"     to    tho.se    members  i  jjoyj.    jn   sports    since    Charlie   Jus- j      "Numtoer  One"   tells  the  .story  of  ,  the   proper    woi-ds.    and    c-onvincm? 

new  campus  humor   magazine  can  :  having  been  in  the  club  a  minimum  !  tice    n,ad^    •  ChooX^hoo"    a    house-    Carolina's    basl(etballers     in     their    *-^^"'^^"  "J  /,.  ""^"^  ^"f /'"!," 

secure   applications   from   the  sec-  ,,   .,,,   semesters.    Those   reeeivln.  !  ^,,  ^^se  a  decade  ago.  \  ^^,  ror  the  NCA.A  championship.    ^^  :rh^es  i"  moTJntrcmtu" 

Malcolm  D.  Campbell;   Erne.st  P.  1     -Number  One,"  recorded  by'Caro-  \  The  individiral  feats  of  "Rosy,  Pete,    ^he  disc.  ; 

Fre^land.  Jr.;  DarreH  B.  Hawkins;  |  liiw's  own  Hoke  Simpson,  with  the  ,  Joe.  Bob  and  Tommy"  are  described  I  ^^^.^^    wondering    whe- 

entle    remarlcs  '        ■^  '    ■  ,..-.. 

tlier  or  not   there  is  a  flip  side  to 


retary  in   the  student  government    the   certificates   were: 
office,    it    was    announced    yester- 
day. 

Anyone    interested    in    applying   Kenneth  L.  Jame; 


James  W.  Kin-    "Three  Bumrs  and  A  Drum"  quartet. 


editors   of   the   for  these  positions  have  been  urg-   ney;   R.  Graham  Matthews.  Librar- 1  is  what  we  speak  of.  Those  of  you    about 


as    well   as    a    few    ; 
"Wih  "     The 


refrain.     "Tar 


!  "Number  One."   Well,  thei^e  is,  and 


jzrzn^''j;:z  .>  i  :"^e;":.„r„TTub,i::tLs  to ...  ea  ,„  ™„,ac.  c,..^..  hu„u„..o„  j  .„  R»^n  o.  p..«os.  ...  ^.^  i  «*» -- •"<■- ",,t^r  ,tz:  i  rr^rt  °il"  '-''"''  \ .-« <»■'""«-  -en  .o  >«,«,„■  ^ 


in  Thursday  hight's  meeting  of  the    Publications    Board, 


Student   Legia-lature. 

The  bill  called  for  the  strong 
censure  of  North  Carolina's  discri- 
minatory State  Park  regulations. 

After  the  announcement  by  Ways 
and  Means  Committee  Chairman 
Jim  Alford  that  the  original  bill 
had  been  held  over  in  committee, 
and  would  not  appear  before  the 
body  until  the  first  Legislature 
meeting  next  fall.  Rep.  Whit  Whit- 


Both  were  acted  upon  favorably. 
Whitfield    also    introduced    to 
the  body  a  resolution  comnoend- 
ing  retiring  UNC  Chancellor  Ro- 
bert B.  House  for  his  many  con- 
tributions to  the  University.  The 
bill,  prasing  House's  selflessness 
and  long  service  was  unanimous- 
ly passed  by  the  body. 
Vacant  three  and  one  year  s-eats 
on   the   Graham   Memorial's    board 


at  the   Chi  Psi   Lodge   for  further  i  G.  Sapp;   Ben  W.  Taylor;  James  P.lciate  the  f«-t  that  it  relates  in  fast-  |  throughout    the    number 

lofty  position  UNC  now  holds  as 


.   ...   __^_  _,  I  ■  •  •         f  fh    I  duct   of   the   iniagiuation   of    Camp- 

information  and  pick  up  and  sub- ;  Tyndall;    J.    David    Ward,    Jr.   and,  moving  st5^e  the^acquisition  of  the       ^^   writing  the   music   for  'Num- 1  bell-Simpson.     "Mountain    Dew 


mit    applications    before    Wednes 
day. 

The  new  humor  magizine,  which 
will  replace  the  now  defunct  Tar- 


Robert   M.   Barrow. 

L.  Roy  Cain;   Robert  A.  Furtado;  I  nation's  best  basketball  team 
R.   Don  Gray;   Donald   L.   Murphy; 
Jerry     G.      Purgason,      Litoanan; 


all    five    of    the    group    Rock,"    a    rock-and-roll    version    c' 


nation,  is  a  quarterly  publication,  Charles  B.  Shoe,  Business  Manager; 
which    will    function      under      the  '  Lewis    J.    Hardee.    Jr.;     Ralph    S. 


luspices  of  the  Publications  Board.    Harrington;  Donald  C.  Nance.  Vice  i  record's    popuSarity. 


ber    One.' 
.     .  ,  joined    forces   and   imaginations    to   tlie  old   original   echoed   througlmui 

Just   how   wdl   IS   It    seUmg,   ^0"!^^^  ^.^^   ^j^^   recorded    tune. 'the  Appalachian  hilLs.   is  the  sister 

ask?    OrvUle    Can^pbeU.    <^^'^^^^    ^^^^^-^y^^     Campbell     concocted     the   selection  ta  "Num?>er  One."  It  pro- 

Cotonial  Record  Co.  here  "»  ^-'^^P'  l  ...^^^    jj  ggi^  records  mean  any-  i  vides  a  note  of  contrast  and  at  the    know  that  the  fact   the  issue   was 
el  Hill,   had  tills  to  say  about   the  l  ^^.^^    ^^^^  ^^^^  ^^  ^.^  ^^^  ^^^^    ^^^  ^.^^  ilUistrtaes  in  earnest  the 


"However,  whether  or  not  stu- 
dent government  should  involve 
itself  in  censuring  our  State  Lefis- 
lature  is  a  debatable  question,  and 
1  am  certain  that  any  people  who 
think  deeply  about  the  far-reach- 
,  ing  implications  of  official  cenaorc 
by  student  government  would 
agree  with  the  Legislature's  decis 
ion  laist  eveninsr. 

••Students  can  Jet  themselves  b* 
,  heard  and  e.^pre.«  their  opinion? 
in  any  way  they  desire  and  I  hope 
they  will  take  the  liberty  in  mak 
ing  certain  that  student  opinJon 
in  this  case  has  not  and  will  not  be 
misinterpreted. 

•"The  Umstead  Park  affair  is  one 
of  those  unfortunate  things  which 
can  and  will  happen  under  the 
existing  legal  paradox  of  North 
Carolina's  laws  goveVning  sueh 
areas,  and  the  solving  of  the  prob- 
lem will  take  the  thought  and  dia- 
cussion  of  ail  leaders  of  our 
time. 

•'Whether  or  not  I  agree  or  dis- 
agree makes,  no  difference,  but  I 


combination. 


field  rose  to  place  in  consideration  !  ^j  directors  were  filled  in  an  elec- 
a   considerably   milder   substitute,  j  ^j^j^^^g  ^^g  y^g^  post  was  won  by 

The  new  bill,  officially  introdu-  |  (,j,^,jg  Wilson,  who  defeated  Ca- 
ced  by  Whitfield,  Tom  Long,  Jer- ,  ^^^  ^^^^^  ^^^  j^o  other  by  Sonny 
ry  Oppenheimcr  and  Al  Goldsmith,  Hallford,  who  was  elected  by  ac- 
expressed  deep  regret  at  the  em-  ,  ^lamation  of  the  body. 
bara.,-iment  caused  the  Cosmopo-  j  Legislature  speaker  Don  Furado 
litain  Club  and  its  members  by '  ^jj^^^^g^j  ^hat  a  special  session 
the  Umstead  Park  incident.  j  ^^  ^^e  Legislature  would  meet  next 

Whitfeld  called  for  and  was  Thursday  night  to  take  action  on 
granted  specJUl  orders.  The  bill  ^j^^g^^  ^J^^y  President  Sonny  Ev- 
was  put  to  a  vote  and  passed.  26- '  ^„g.  appointments  to  government 
5.  The  dissenting  minority  was  di-    offices 

vided  into  those  who  felt  the  bill  |  

too  weak  and  those  who  favored 
no  action  at  all. 

Other   bills  acted   upon  were   a 
bill    granting    the    Carolina    Sym- 


Positions  of  editor  and  manag- 
ing editor  of  the  publication  will 
be  open  to  interview  next  week 
by  the  board  which  will  consist  of 
the  present  editors  of  The  Daily 
Tar  Heel,  the  Yackety  Yack  and 
the  Carolina  Quarterly,  in  addi- 
tion to  two  presidential  appointees 
and   two  members  of  legislature. 

Interviews  will  take  place  from 
8-10  p.m.  Thursday  in  Woodhouse 
Conference  Room  and  from  4-6 
p.m.  Friday,  if  necessary,  the  an- 
nouncement  reveale{J. 


President;     W.     Richard 


vocal  abilities  of  the  group. 


Free  Flick  Tonight 

Tonight  at  7:30  and  10  pan.  i» 
Carroll  Hall,  Seven  Brides  For 
Seven  Brothers  will  be  shawB  as 
a  portion  of  the  Graham  Memorial 
Activities  Board-sponsored  Free 
Flick   series. 

Starrfaig  Howard  Keel  and  Jane 


Peterson,  |      "Over  500  have  l>een  sold  in  Chap- 

I^j  jjjjj   in  1^5  ti,an  ^he   week  the  |     "The  record  Is  selling  as  well  as  j     Campbell   stated   W^ednesday  that 

record  has  been  out.  And  the  pace  |  any  record  in  N.  C.  now .  There  is   the   vocal    talents   of   Simpson    and 


j  does  not  seem  to  be  slacXeiung. 
]     It  seems  evident  that  if  the  rec- 
lord  continues  to  sell  at  its  present 
I  rate,    it    will   not  only    .'jpread   the 
fame  of  UNC  and  Us  poised  basket- 
ball (greats,  but  also  the  notoriety 
of    the    guitar    wellding    freshman 
from  Larch nK>nt,  N.  Y.,  Hoke  Simp- 


Powell.    the    film    Is     a     mnsical   !  son. 


comedy   which   won    a   namber  of 
Oscar  awards  several  years  a^. 


Senior  Invitations 

Seniors  who  have  not  yet  pick- 
ed ap  graduation  Invitations  have 
been  urged  to  do  so  as  soon  as 
possible. 

Ray  Jefi'erlea.  Asft.  Dean  of 
Student  Affairs,  annoanced  yester- 
diiy  that  between  50  and  75  sen- 
iors have  not  yet  acquired  their 
bivltations,  pointing  oat  that  they 
are  already  paid  for  and  must  be 
in  the  mails  in  the  next  few  days. 

He  said  that  thoee  who  have 
not   already   picked    up   their    in- 


Chemistry  Dept. 
Makes  Awards 


Solans  Give  Symposium 
$hOOO  For  Next  Year 


ru)  doubt   now  that   many  thousands    "Three  Bimis   and   A  Drum"  would 

will  be  .sdld  because  the  impact  of    probably  be  u.sed  by  Colonial   Rec- 

the  feat  performed  by  the  team  is,  ordvs  again. 

still    on    the    minds    of     Tar    Heels !  ■        .    ,     •       i  w 

,,    ^         ^  ,,       ..  With    that    remark,    it    looks    like 

everywhere,     Campbell  said.  .,,     rr^       ,„         ^u      <-u     •• 

•All     The     Way    Choo-Choo       may 

The    record    it.self     required     an    soon  have  to  make  room  for  a  part- 
amazingly  small  amount  of  time  to    ner — ••Number  One!" 


even  brought  up  and  discussed 
will  indicate  that  .students  are 
concerned  with  the  rights  and  Hb- 
?rties  of  other  students  once  they 
are   accept ?d   to  the   University. 

"As  president  of  the  student 
body,  I  would  like  to  take  this 
opportunity  to  express  my  apolo- 
gy and  sincere  regrets  to  the  Cos- 
mopolitan Club  and  to  any  in 
dividuals  who  have  felt  embarrass- 
ment  over   the   recent   occurrence. 


The  Student  Legislature  appropri- 
ated the  sum  of  $1000  to  the  Caro- 
lina Symiposium  Thursday  night  af- 
,  „,  ,  ,  ...     ter   the    bill    had   passed   favorably 

of  the  Journal  Club  meeting  of    he  ^  ^^^  p^^^^  Committee  and 


Undergraduate  awards  in  chemis- 
try were  presented  at  a  meeting 


Chemistry   Dept.    yesterday.    Win- 
ner of  the   senior  award   for  the 


was  y  •osented  to  the  floor. 
Symposium     Chairman     Frank 
1956-57   school    year    was   Ronald    ^rowther  and  Treasurer  John  Ke.T 


G.    Garman,   who    was   presented 
with  the  Venable  Gold  Medal. 


by  May  20th.  when  the  last  general 
meeting  will  be  held. 

The  Program  Committee  moved 
at  a  previous  meeting  to  incor- 
porate the  Weil  Lectures  with  the 
i.ymposium  as  they  were  in  1956. 
Dr.  James  L.  Godfrey,  Chainnan 
of  the  Weil  Lectures  Committee,  will 
call  a  meeting  of  this  groun  in  the 
near  future,  and  propose  that  next 

by 


were  present  a^  the  Legislature  to 

speak   for   the    prooosed    bill   if  de- 

The  junior  award  was   made   to    j^^^^  ^.^^^  ^^^^^^  ^^^    ^^^  -^  ^^^^  y^^^..^    ,^^^p    ^^    formulated 

Stanley     Williamson.   The     award   ^^ithout  formal  discussion.  and  included  in  the  Symposium, 
stipulated  a  prize  of  $20  worth  of       -i^is     appropriation     brings     the  I     "If   the   present   enthusiasm  and 

books  of  his  own  choosing.                 jy^^jg  ^f  t^e  Symposium  to  approxi-  cooperative  spirit  Ls  maintained  *>y 

Two  sophomore  award.v  went  to   lately    $1450.    Chairman    Crowther  our  group."  said  Crowther.    "1  fur- 


vitaUons    should    slop    by    at   his     R.  j.  Cowan  and  L.  L.  Lohr,  who   ^ays  that  the  present  financial  goal  i  see   one   of    the     most     significant 


office,  203  SMith  BaUding.  to  do 
so.  A  limited  Munber  of  invitations 
will  be  available  for  those  seniors 
who  have  not  previously  ordered, 
he  anRi'>iinced. 


GM'S  SLATE 


Tha  only  activity  listed  for 
Graham  Mainbrial  today  is: 

Class  Group,  11  a.m.,  Roland 
Parker  2  and  Waodheusa  Con- 
faronca  Koonii 


received  engraved  copies  of  the  ^^f  ,|,p  1953  presentation  wUl  prob-  {  events  in  the  university's  history  of 
Organic  Textbook  and  whose  names  gbiy  ^e  $5000.  Last  year,  the  total  '  the  past  25  years.  We  realize,  of 
were   also   to   be   enscribed    on    a    funds  reached  a  high  of  $3400.  |  course,  the  diffkulties  encwintered 

plaque   in  the  Chemistry  Library,  j     Earlier    Thursday    afternoon,    the    in  any  such  endeavor,  but  this  has 


Seven  students  tied  for  the  fresh-  Program  Committee  of  the  Sym- 
man  awards  with  A-plus  averages,  posium  met  for  the  second  time. 
They  were  presented  with  "the  '  and  a  general  theme  was  adopted 
Handbook  of  Chemistry  and  Phy-  for  next  year.  Crowther  said  that 
sic  J."  Recipients  included:  B.  H.  it  is  the  hope  of  the  committee  to 
Berryhill,  J.  A.  Gardiner,  William  further  exploit  and  finalize  this 
Hopper,  R.  L.  Kushner,  R.  G.  theme  by  the  end  of  next  we^,  and 
Lewis,  B.  W.  Roberts  and  Clifford  j  present  the  results  to  the  General 
C.  Simpson.  Symposium  Conuoittee  for  approval 


not  and  will  not  restrict  our  op- 
timism. I  call  upon  every  member 
of  our  combined  community  to 
contribute  to  this  .spirit  and  give 
assistance  to  the  Symposium  mem- 
bers when  the  time  arises.  1^ 
reverberrations  of  this  Symposium 
are  going  to  be  far  reaching,  I  can 
assure  you." 


Car\)Una  students  prol>ably  re- 
niember  tlie  Belafootenstyle<l  per- 
former from  his  api>earanc€s  at  the 
Carolina  Calvacade  of  Talent  last 
semester,  or  his  special  giiest  work 
with  the  UNC  Men's  Glee  Club  on 
their  spring  tour. 

HLs  most  recent  song  stylings 
beneath  Davie  Poplar's  shady 
limbs  should  further  refresh  the 
memories  of  those  who  may  have 
forgottf^n  the  calypso  warbler.  Now 
he  is  making  a  bid  to  increase  the 
scope  of  his  audience.  With  "Num- 
ber One"  out,  he  may  do  just  that. 

Although  not  a  member  him-self. 
Simpson  reached  into  the  vocal  ta- 
lent grounds  of  the  Men's  Glee  Club 
and  came  up  with  a  quartet  to  back 
him  up  which  leaves  little  to  be 
desbred  in  respect  to  blend  and 
harmony. 

Ken  Aivord,  a  freshman  txsxm  St. 
Petersburg  Beach,  Fla.  booms  out 
the  bass.  Jerry  Purgason.  a  sopho- 
more from  Greenstooro,  N.  C,  car- 
ries the  lead.  And  the  'elder"  of  the 
group,  Ralph  Harrington,  a  junwr 
from  Sanford.  N.  C  ,  supplies  the 
hiigSi  tenor. 

The  rhythmic  bongo  nuisic  eman- 
ates from  the  fingers  of  sopho- 
more Roy  Cain,  the  fourth  member 
of  the  quartet.  Recently  the  group 
dubbed  tliemselves  "Three  Bums 
and  A  Drum,"  which  is  now  their 
offkial  title. 

'"Kie  boys  do  a  very  professional  i 
jA  <a  both  aongs  and  they  are  to 


Three  Bums  And  A  Drum' 

Sh«wn  abeva  is  Hoka  Sinntson,  left,  wtio  ha»  re:orded  "Numbar  One,"  a  song  abevt  the  basketteti 
status  of  this  school.  The  recording  is  on  a  Colonial  label  and  has  sold  very  wall  the  past  week  AIm 
shown  in  tha  picture  ara^  loft  to  right,  Kan  Alverd,  Jarry  Burgason,  Ralph  Harrington  and  Roy  Cain. 


^Aei  TWO 


rfVI  OAILT  TAR  HflL 


SATURDAY,  MAY  It,  1W7 


tA1 


Student  Autonomy  And  A 
Legislative  Judas- Kiss 

The  Student  Legislature  demonstrated  a  distinct  lack  of  fortitude 
at  Thursday  nija^ht  s  session. 

Student  lawmakers  were  called  upon  to  vindicate  the  University 
from  all  responsibility  for  an  odious  and  prejudicial  incident,  and  they 
turned  their  backs. 

1  he  incident  was  the  denial  x)i  state  fwrk  hictlities  to  a  University 
student — I.eroy   Krasier— purely   because  of  his  race. 

The  Lonj;  Resolution,  which  hit  the  crux  of  tlie  whole  dispicable 
problem  by  censming  application  of  state  parks'  policy,  was  conven- 
ient h  pigeon-holed  by  Ways  and  Means  Chairman  Jim  Alford  so  that 
legislators  .might  be  spared  die  seeming  hardship  of  speaking  their  coji- 
\ictioiis. 

The  argument  that  disagreeing  with  the  State  General  .\ssembly 
in  this  area  would  be  "biting  the 

supported  the  resolution,  through 
his  party's  membership  in  the  leg- 
islature. 


hand  that  feeds  us"  is  particularly 
absurd  and  gutless. 

Ihe  (iencral  .\sNenil)ly  does  not 
feed  <iur  minds— though  the  Stu- 
dent Legislatures  lily-livered  ac- 
tion would  appear  to  indicate  the 
contrary.  Nor  are  state  lawmakers 
entitled  to  dictate  convictions 
merelv  l>ecause  thev  control  the 
purse  strings. 

If  student  representatives  conciu" 
Willi  I  he  prejudicial  policy  which 
denied  a  i'ni\eisity  student  e<]ual 
usuage  of  the  I'msiead  State  Park. 
then  they  should  stand  firmly  (MI 
their  feet  and  speak   their  minds. 

1  hey  should  not  pat  members 
ol  the  C;osmojx)litan  Cllul>  oh  the 
head  and  say: 

We're  so  awfully  sorry  that  our 
state  subjet  ted  an  organization  with 
international  representation  to  a 
di>pical)le  display  of  southern 
bigoirv.  W'c  ajxjiogi/e.  lint  we 
(an  t  di>agree  with  an  mijiist  regu- 
lation. Om  .minds  are  tied  to  state 
legiilatixe  purse  strings.  Well  sell 
our  soids  tor  a  dollar  appropria- 
tion. " 

The-  n;iilv  Tar  f4eel  \vas  partic- 
ularly and  ( onspi(  iKJusly  support- 
ing p.issa^c  ol  the  Long  Resohi- 
tion.  But  if  legislators  agreed  with 
the  stale  parks'  prejudicial  policy 
and  subsecjuenth  disagreed  with 
the  resolution,  they  might  have  at 
kasi  li.id  ;4Uts  enough  to  stand  up 
and  s;i\  so. 

It  is  a  blatant  nnKkerv  (jf  stu- 
dent respH^nsibiliiv  that  they  pig- 
e(>n-h«^d  tlu'  nieastire  to  prevent 
ha\ing  to  speak  their  convictions. 

Studitit  body  President  Sonny 
Fx.ms  remarked  earlier  upon  heai- 
in<j;  that  the  censuring  resolution 
was  slated  for  introduction: 

'Tlie  legislature's  growing  up 
larlv  this  venr." 

I..iter  he  questioned  whether  the 
icst>lntion  was  hitting  the  'crux'" 
•  if  the  piciblem  and  suggested  a 
'  teinperiny;'"  of  the  measure. 

We  wonder  whv  President  Evans 
didn't   assert    his   leadership,   if  he 


The  Daily  Tar  Heel 


The  ofHcial  student  publication  of  the 
Publications  Board  of  the  University  of 
North  Carolina,  where  it  is  published 
daily  except  Monday  and  examination 
and  yacation  periods  and  summer  terms. 
Entered  as  second  class  matter  in  the 
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the  Act  of  March  8.  1870.  Subscription 
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ter. 


Editor               

NETT,  BASS 

Managing  Editor 

BOB  HIGH 

\ssociate  Editor  .„ 

NANCY  HBJ. 

Sports  Eklitor 

._        BnX  KING 

Ncwy  Editor  .  .^ 

WALT  SCHRUNTEK 

Business  Manager 

JOHN  C.  WHITAKER 

AdyoiiisinK  .Vanager         FREID  KATZIN 

NEA\S  ST.^FF- -Graham  Snyder,  Edith 
MacKinnon.  Ben  Taylor,  Patsy  Miller. 
Sue  Atchison. 


EDIT  STAFF— Whit  Wtokfield,  Anthony 
Wolff,  Stan  Shaw. 

♦ 

BUSINESS  STAFF— John  Minter,  Mari- 
an Hobeck,  Jane  Patten,  Bucky  Shu- 
ford. 


SPORTS  STAFF:  Dave  Wible.  Stu  Bird, 
Ed  Rowland,  Jim  Crownover,  Roo 
Milligan. 


Subscription  Manager 
Circulation  manager 


Dale  Staley 


Charlie  Holt 


Staff  Photographers Woody  Sears, 

Norman  Kantor,  Bill  King. 

Libr«naiM-..Sue  Gicluier,  Marilyn  Strum 


Night  News  Editor 
Night  Editor 


. Bob  High 

Manley  Springs 


Or.  on  the  other  hand,  we  won- 
der if  Evans  didn't  concur  with 
the  legislattire  in  its  soul-getting 
action. 

Rep.  Charlie  Wilson  of  the  Uni- 
\ersity  Party  conspicuously  fails  to 
meet  the  requisites  of  leadership  if 
he  dislikes  voting  upon  ati  i.ssue 
merely  because  it  might,  as  he  so 
inaptly  piw   it.  'raise  a  big  stink.  " 

CltJinersely,  Wilson  does  make 
an  extrciiK'ly  good  folJower  when 
he  asserts  that  a  University  student 
isn't  entitled'  to  disagree  with 
biased  state  policies  merely  because 
of  his  student  status,  but  must 
blindly  adhere.  Such  blind  ad- 
herence is  the  f(Kxl  upon  which  a 
dictatorship   feeds   and    nomishes. 

Rep.  Rudy  tdwards  of  the  Stu- 
dent Party  has  tagged  the  (urrent 
legislative  assembly  most  ajjth. 
F.d wards  said: 

"I  hate  to  think  the  legislature 
is  going  to  become  a  gutless  or- 
ganization, refusing  to  face  respon- 
sibilities coming  before   ii.  " 

.\  gutless  organi/ation  seems  a 
highly  appropriate  tag. 

It  is  hoped  that  the  legi.slatme 
will  demonstrate  more  responsible 
at  tion  as  it  is  called  upon  to  make 
decisions  for  the  student  body 
throughout   the  <nrrent   assembly. 

Studenr  atitonomy'Vas  given  a 
judas  kiss  riiuisday  night.  .\n- 
other  similar  denial  and  shirking 
of  res}X)nsibiIity  might  prove  to  be 
a  kiss  of  death. 

We  shall  hojje— along  with  all 
thinking  I'niversitv  students— that 
the  legislature  will  redeem  itself 
as  the  current  assembly  i^  recon- 
Nciied  next  fall. 

The  past  legislative  assembly 
(onsidrablv  added  pre.stige  to  the 
legfivlature  by  passing  a  record- 
breaking  luimber  of  measures.  But 
the  current  assemblv,  if  Thursday 
night  is  indicative,  will  be  a  bird 
of  an  entirely  different  feather. 

For  the  sake  of  student  autono- 
my—  in  which  newly-inauginated 
Consolidated  University  President 
Friday  reaffirmed  his  faith  in  his 
inatimiral  address  \Vednesday — we 
shall  attempt  to  rerriain  optimistic. 

We  shall  sincerely  hope  that 
future  actions  will  obliterate  an 
ignominious,  though  already  at- 
tached tag: 

(iutless  organizaticm. 

Postmaster's 
At  It  Again 

Post  -  Mangier  Sunnnerfield  is 
apparently  delighted  with  himself 
and  his  initial  coercive,  browbeat- 
ing attack  on  Ccyigress. 

Sinnmerfield  was  successful  in 
his  recent  sitdown  strike  which 
brought  a  .S4 1  million  appropria- 
tion irrto  his  postal  coffers.  Thus  he 
has  Ijecome  power-drunk  and  pro- 
jxises  to  repeat  his  Peronistit  tac- 
tics unless  Congress  adds  -,S  mill- 
ion dollars  to  the  Post  Office  ap- 
jjropriation   bill. 

This  will  temporarily  suffice. 
says  Summerfield,  but  at  least  70 
to  90  millions  must  be  dumped 
into  postal  coffers  shortly  to  get 
him  through  the  current  fiscal 
year. 

If  Browbeating  Summerfield 
could  see  l>eyond  his  nose,  he 
would  have  proposed  a  budget 
commensurate  with  his  needs  in 
the  beginning. 

New  he  should  devote  his  ener- 
g^  toward  promoting  postal  ef- 
ficiency—not coercing  Congress. 


WISE  AND  OTHERWISE: 

Goad  President 
Rests  Plenty; 
Ike  Is  Great 


'It's  Easier  If  You  Keep  Your  Eyes  Closed' 


GUEST  EDITORIALS: 


By  Whit  Whitfield 

A  recent  editorial  verbally 
chastized  President  Eisenhower 
for  his  lengthy  and  all  too  num- 
erous vacations.  More  than  im- 
plied were  the  many  serious 
ramifications  of  this  problem  as 
far  as  the  editor  is  concerned. 

The  President's  holidays  are 
not  to  be  taken  lightly  however, 
for  they  are  importarU  signs  of 
executive  foresight.  The  only 
real  problem  is  the  hardship  that 
the  Postoffice  Department  en- 
dures. They  never  know  where 
to  deliver  the  executive  mail. 

•  •  • 

A  good  president  needs  a  va- 
cation often.  It  follows  that.  Eis- 
enhower is  a  great  president,  or 
so  it  would  seem  from  the  num- 
ber of  vacations  he  takes. 

Last  -week  former  President 
Harrv-  S.  Truman  was  in  Wash- 
ington, and  remarked  to  news- 
men as  they  passed  the  Whit? 
House.  "I  wonder  who  lives 
there  now?'  (who  does?)  Speak- 
ing further.  Truman  said,  "If  I 
had  taken  that  many  vacations 
you  (the  newsmen)  would  have 
boiled  me  in  oil."  This  is  prob 
ably  true,  for  he  .WAS  a  Demo- 
crat you  know. 

•  .         •  • 
Actually,  having  the  president 

away  on  vacation  so  often  is  one 
way  of  insuring  his  safety;  the 
enemy  has  only  one  chance  in 
four  of  finding  him,  as  a  rule. 
An  enemy  plane  would  certain 
ly  be  embarrassed  in  Washing 
ton  if  the  President  were  in 
Denver,  Augusta,  or  on  his  Gettys- 
burg farm,  now  wouldn't  it?  If 
the  Ground  Observer  Corps  wa5- 
doing  its  duty,  the  plane  would 
be  annihilated  before  it  couM 
make  the  rounds. 

By  the  same  token  an  assas- 
sination plot  would  be  foiled. 

•  •  • 
Besides  this  definite'  advant- 
age, Vice-President  Rickie  Nixon 
is  getting  the  feel  of  the  Pres- 
ident's office  during  Eisenhow- 
er's absences.  He  is  expected  to 
fill  this  position  as  soon  as  he 
can.   is  he  not? 

Nixon  has  frankly  admitted 
that  the  rigors  of  the  president's 
office  are  so  great  that  Eisen- 
hower should  take  as  many  vaca- 
tions as  possible  in  order  to 
maintain  his  health  and  well-be- 
ing. 

This  seems  diametrically  op 
posed  to  Eisenhower's  pre  -  elec- 
tion speeches  in  which  he  stated 
that  he  would  not  run  if  he  diti 
not  feel  that  he  could  devote  the 
full  amount  of  time  and  energy 
that  the  job  required. 

Then  we  are  to  assume  that 
the  job  does  not  take  so  much 
time    and    energy   after  all.    My 


I'il  Abner 


From  The  Miami  Student: 


Current   Educational   Trend: 
Neglects    Uncommon   Man? 


t. 


In  .\merica.  much  emphasis 
has  been  placed  on  the  doctrine 
of  sanctity  of  the  common  man. 
but  in  our  administration  of  this 
democratic  principle  we  must 
guard  against  the  danger  of  for- 
getting the  uncommon  or  excep- 
tional man. 

This  danger  is  especially  ram- 
pant in  the  field  of  education. 
One  of  the  new  trends  in  ele- 
■lentary  «Ed  secondary  educa- 
tjon  i.s  lo  px'ovide  special  classes 
for  slow   learners. 

Thi."!  trend  is  certainly  a  step 
in  the  right  direction,  but  in 
their  zeal  to  equip  the  average 
and  below  average  student  to 
cope  with  life,  educators  often 
overlook  the  exceptionally  bright 
child. 


guess  is  that  those  who  have  held 
the  position  before  were  only 
pretending  to  be  busy.  Maybe  it 
is  only  a  part  time  job,  like  the 
Student  Aid  Office  offers. 
*  •  • 

We,  the  people  of  America. 
should  be  glad  that  the  President 
is  taking  frequent  vacations  to 
insure  his  health  and  long  life. 
A  sad  state  we  would  be  in  if  he 
were  to  die,  and  leave  the  cares 
of  the  world  on  the  .shoulders  ol 
Richard  M.  Nixon. 


There  is  a  tendency  in  our 
schools  to  try  to  force  all  stu- 
dents to  conform  to  the  average. 
This  is  partly  due  to  the  fact 
that  it  is  x-ery  difficult  for  the 
teacher  lo  deal  individually  with 
children  of  all  intelligence  levels, 
so  she  must  teach  for  the  aver- 
age child,  hoping  that  the  dull 
one  will  catch  on  and  the  bright 
one  will  not  be  too  bored. 

This  results  in  the  fact  that 
the  United  States  fails  to  utilize 
to  the  fullest^  extent  one  of  its 
most  valuable  resources,  the  ex- 
ceptional mind.  Other  counlrie.--- 
with  less  democratic  school  sys 
terns  have  a  much  better  record 
along  this  line. 

It  ^as  usually  been  assumed 
that  the  bright  child,  while  he 
may  have  been  overlooked  to  a 
certain  extent  during  his  earlier 
schooling,  comes  into  full  bloom 
during  his  college  years,  when 
under  the  stimulating  atmosphere 
of  the  university  he  is  at  last  able 
to  utilize  his  capabilities  to  the 
fullest. 

Tliis  assumption  is  probably 
true,  at  least  to  a  large  extent. 
Even  state  universities,  such  as 
Miami,  which  are  designed  to  give 
everyone  a  chance  for  a  higher 
education,  also  offer  a  chance 
for  the  superior  student  to  show 
what  he  can  do. 


However,  as  more  and  more 
people  go  on  to  college,  there  is 
a  danger  that  our  universities 
will  become  more  like  advanced 
high  schools  and  less  like  insti- 
tutions where  the  nation's  really 
good  minds  have,  a  chance  lo  de 
velop. 

During  the  next  d«cad», 
American  universities  will  have 
to  adapt  themselves  to  their 
new  role  of  educating  the  grew* 
ing  masses  of  young  men  and 
women  who  are  suddenly  will- 
ing and  able  to  come  to  college; 
and  at  the  same  time  cvntinuft 
their  old  role  of  giving  the  su- 
perior intellects  a  chance  of 
utilize  their  abilities. 

If  America  is  to  maintain  her 
role  as  the  leader  in  social,  lit- 
erary and  scientific  advance- 
ment, she  must  utilize  the  best 
brainpower  available  without 
abandoning  the  democratic  prin- 
ciple of  an  education   for  all. 

In  order  to  do  this  she  mu^ 
revise  her  policy  of  caring  for 
the  exceptional  child  to  include 
not  only  the  exceptionally  dull 
but  the  exceptionally  bright. 

The  public  schools  must  lay 
the  groundwork  for  this  accept- 
ance of  the  "uncommon  man,'' 
but  the  ultimate  responsibility 
must  fall  upon  America's  col- 
leges and  universities. 


By  Al  Ctpfi 


\V'!  ^ 

^;-' 

-V/ 

^ 

/S'GH.?-ITALUJS  RELAX£S     ) 
V    MAH  BRAIN  "TUXX  AT      J 
V-PEACEFUU  VIEW— ^— -^ 

f^J'                       1 

w4i^           Ll^ll 

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^\          »»   la*.  U  J.  H>  0*..^  -^  •««••<                 <* 

5-11    1 

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Peg* 


Bv  Walt  Kelly 


A  Perspectus  Of 
The  Publications 


N.  C.  State  Technician: 

For  the  past  several  years  there  has  been  much 
controversy  each  fall  about  tidc«ts  te  footbaU 
games.  Each  year  a  hasty  plan  is  drawn  up  and  ac- 
noanced  ta  the  stadents  about  mid-season.  It  seems 
that  this  is  a  very  fine  example  of  very  poor  plan- 
ning. 

Tliere  is  one  mont.h  left  in  the  present  school 
year  "nie  proldem  of  date  tickets  and  tickets 
in  general  should  be  ironed  out  now,  rather  than 
next  year.  The  students  have  a  right  to  know  be- 
fore nexi  year  at  registration  whether  they  are  go- 
ing to  have  tickets,  ttckel  books,  or  Identrfic^tion 
card*  to  get  into  the  State-Garolina  game — which  is 
the  very  next  day  after  registration. 

The  Student  Goveramert  in  the  past  several 
weeks  has  recommended  both  that  students  have 
identification  cards  (instead  of  ticket  books)  next 
year  and  that  date  tickets  be-  available  for  SI.OOl 

The  Athletic  Council  must  now  make  a  decision 
on  these  recommendations.  It  seems  that  it  is  the 
duty  of  the  Athletic  Council  to  meet  immediately 
and  make  some  decision  on  both  of  these  matters. 
Of  course,  the  Council  could  wait  and  hold  its 
next  meeting  after  school  is  out  and  leave  the  stu 
dents  uninformed  on  any  decisions  until  next  year. 
We  hope,  however,  that  they  will  iHgt  follow  such 
<>  <ourse. 

Many  students  now  have  the  opinion  that  $1.00 
date  tickets  are  definite  and  that  they  are  a 
*'sure  thing"  for  next  year.  This  is  not  the  case, 
however.  One  dollar  date  tickets  are  not  definite 
. .  in  fact,  -we  hate  heard  that  the  Chancellor  has 
"Said  that  there  is  ver>-  little  chance,  if  any  at  all, 
that  we  will  have  them.  (And  if  the  William  & 
Mary  game  is  sold  to  the  Shriners,  how  much 
chance  ?s  there  of  getting  a  ticket  for  one  dollar 
lo  that  game?) 

Those  who  are  opposed  to  the  $1.00  dale  tickets 
say  it  is  financially  impossible.  They  point  lo  the 
tact  that  nearly  one-half  the  Stadium  would  be 
filled  with  people  who  were  pajing  less  than  a 
third  of  what  the  tickets  could  be  sold  for  to  others, 
and  say  that  just  last  year  the  football  team  went 
^18.000  in  debt. 

As  for  the  identification  cards,  there  is  the 
problem  of  getting  them  ready — ^with  photographs 
— while  the  student  is  registering  ...  or  at  least  by 
the  football  game  the  next  day. 

Admittedly,  the  Athletic  Council  has  two  prob- 
lems here.  Not  in  spite  of  these  problems,  but  be- 
cause of  them  do  we  request  that  the  Council  meet 
as  soon  as  possible.  The  problems  should  be  re- 
solved and  the  student  body  should  be  informed 
before  school  is  out  of  any  decisions  made. 

The  Miami  Hurricane: 

Tliat  college  students  have  a  monopoly  on 
foolishness  is  a  world-renowned  fact.  Any  mature 
adult  will  readily  tell  you  about  the  idiocy  of  gold 
fish-eating,  p^nty  raids  and  the  like. 

Is  this  such  a  monopoly,  hoiwever?  A  local  pap- 
er recently  featured  an  articlv  about  a  fellow  who 
wanted  to  set  a  world  record  for  staying  under- 
water. We  realize,  of  course,  the  importance  of  stay- 
ing underwater  as  far  as  fish  are  concerned,  but 
aside  from  the  possible  theory  of  colonizing  the 
bottom  of  the  ocean,  why  humans? 

Another  favorite  pastime  of  non-college  stu- 
dents used  to  be  flagpole-sitting.  Tfee  logic  behind 
this  inane  endeavor  also  escapes  us.  PossiWy  a  more 
accurate  study  of  the  solar  sj'Stem  may  be  obtained 
if  one  is  fifty  feet  closer  to  stars  several  billion 
light  years  away. 

Add  to  this  the  adult  carousel  riders,  people 
who  push  peanuts  with  their  nose,  ad  infinittma, 
and  what  have  we  got?  Merely  the  knowledge  that 
no  particular  group  can  say  that  they  are  less  fool- 
ish than  another.  Or  more. 


I 


The  Cavalier  Daily: 

Another  bill  to  repeal  the  poll  tax  will  be  intro- 
duced to  the  (General  Assembly  this  year.  Support- 
ers of  the  rep*eal  movement  predict  that  this  year's 
try  will  fail  as  have  others  before  it.  It  is  unfort- 
unate that  Virginia,  which  is  hailed  as  the  cradli- 
of  democracy,  should  tolerate  so  undemocratic  an 
iii9lrHiB«Bt  as  fihe  poll  tax. 

Two  theories  are  advanced  explaining  the  pur 
pose  of  Virginia's  poll  tax.  One  states  that  it  is  to 
keep  Negroes  and  poor  whites  away  from  the  ballot 
box.  Tlie  Other  says  that  it  is  to  keep  the  vote 
small  so  that  carefully  organized  groups,  which  have 
paid  their  taxes,  can  wield  greater  power  in  gen- 
eral elections.  Both  are  repugnant  to  the  most  basic 
principles  of  democracy. 

ftrobabiy  the  single  argument  in  favor  of  the 
tax  which  could  approach  validity  is  that  its  pay- 
ment is  within  the  means  of  all — ^the  annual  rate 
is  only  $1.50.  It  Is  not  the  amount  which  holds  down 
Virginia's  vote,  it  is  the  trbuble  of  paying  it 
Citizens  who  live  in  one  place  and  pay  state  property 
taxes  can  pay  the  poll  tax  at  the  same  time,  but  per- 
sons who  move  around  and  have  no  holdings  upon 
which  to  pay  a  properly  tax  must  show  what  amounts 
te  great  initiative  to  get  their  poll  tax  paid.  It 
usually  requires  a  special  trip  to  city  hall  for 
registration.  With  complications  like  this  in  the 
path  of  our  voting  privilege,  it  is  easy  to  understand 
how  Virginia  stands  fifth  from  the  bottom  of  all 
states  in  percentages  of  eligible  voters  casting  bal- 
lots. It  is  a  disgrace  to  our  aiate. 

Text  books  of  this  University  teach  us  that  • 
democratic  principle  just  as  important  te  us  as  Ma- 
jority Rule  is  Regard  for  Minority  Interests.  This 
second  principle  seems  to  have  flown  to  the  four 
winds  in  r»cenl  years,  not  only  in  the  case  of  the 
poll  tax  but  8190  as  it  concerns  the  great  issue  of 
racial  segregation  facing  us  today.  Perhaps   facts 
such  as  these  should  be  made  plainer  to  the  mem- 
bers   of   the   General    Assembly   whose   contiatted 
support   of   the   poll    tax   seems   to   perpetaate   il& 
existence  in  Virginia  law. 


G01 

Coil 

BOG< 
four-vear 
tavo    RoJ 
day  on  tl 
new  fX'*i 

Ne«  bl 
downliill  I 
hind  tdni 
stampede 
onstratorl 
ty  died  i\ 

Rojas 
power* 
tar>-   junf 
Gabrtol 

There 
being   rul 
by  plane  I 

Cnsui 
oppositioi 
pealed    t| 
lionwidc 
the  junt 
ism. 

The    ct 
munists 
ing  new 

Paris, 
promised] 
ficer    thj 
be  held 


Free  Gl 


1 

& 

t 

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12 

1.' 

14 
IS 

1«. 


in 
20 


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IS 

at 

40 
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n,  ifsr 


SATURDAY,  MAT  1l>  1«$7 


THE   DAILY -TAR  HEBL 


FAet  THRIt 


wa  much 

football 

p  aad  ao- 

It  MeJDS 

oor  pUo- 


l  !8«\-er»l 
nts  htLYC 
s)  next 
■>  S1.0QL 

decision 
It   is  the 

ncdiatelj 
matters, 
hold  its 
:h<'  !.tu 

c\t  year. 

!•«'  such 

ut  SI  .00 
aiT  a 
h*  case, 
definite 
eI!or  has 
r  at  a.]. 
lUiam  & 
H  much 
<>  dollar 

?  tickets 
t  to  the 
Fould  be 
than  -! 
I  others. 
•31  went 

i>  the 
tographs 
least  by 

Ko  prob- 
but  be 
:il  meet 
d   be   re- 
in/ofined 


Govermnent 
Collapsgs 

BOGOTA.  Colombia.  (AP)— The 
four-year  dictator^ip  of  Gem.  Gus- 
tavo Rojas  Pini]|a|:.ttollapsfd  to- 
da}*  on  the  rocks  of  his  greed  for 
new  power. 

New  bloodshed  accompanied  his 
downfall.  Soldiers  advancing  be- 
hind tanks  and  wielding  rifle  butts 
stampeded  a  crowd  of  joyous  dem- 
onstrators before  the  capitol.  Thir- 
ty died  in  the  panic. 

Rojas  turned  his  presidential 
powers  over  to  a  five-man  mili- 
tary junta  headed  by  Maj.  Gen. 
Gabriel  Paris. 

There  were  reports  Rojas  was 
being  rushed  out  of  the  country 
by  plane. 

Cristanto  Cardinal  Luque,  whose 
opposition  helped  oust  Rojas,  ap- 
pealed to  the  people  over  a  na- 
tionwide radio  hookup  to  support 
the  junta  in  the  name  of  Patriot- 
ism. 

The  church  warned  that  Com- 
munists were  interested  i.n  creat- 
ing new  disturbances. 

Paris,  as  president  of  the  junta, 
promised  on  his  Jionor  as  an  of 
ficer  that  popular  elections  will 
be  held  next  vear. 


I      PhHanthroptc  Society 

Jim  Tolbert.  a  rising  senior  fixxm 
I  Morganton,  was  recently  elected 
;  president  of  the  Philanthropic  So- 
ciety, in  a  close  election  over  John 
Brooks,  it  was  announced  y^ter- 
I  day. 
I 

I  Also  elected  to  top  offices  in  the 
j  honorary'  speaking  society  were: 
:  Jess  Stribling,  president,  pro-tem; 
I  DavW  Matthew^s,  ,pai-limentarian ; 
I  Don  Jacobs,  treasurer;  and  Ronald 
'  Pruitt,  critic. 
I 

!     Elizabeth  Dent  was  named  clerk; 

Jack    Lewis,    representative   to   the 

I  Carolina  Forum;   Don  Jacobs,  rep- 

■  reseatative  to  the  Debate  Council; 

and  Don  Gre^-.  sgt-at-arms. 


Pharmacy 


Sponsors 
For  1957 


t'^ri  ^\'^rr-r 


j  PHARMACY  AWARDS  j 

I  Pharmacy  Awards  Night  will  be  i 
;  held  at  8  p.m.  Monday  in  the  au- ' 
j  ditorium  of  the  School  of  Phar  j 
I  macy,  it  was  announced  yesterday.  I 
1  The  studient  winners  of  special  ^ 
awards  for  pharmacy  students  wil!  i 
!  be  announced  and  presented  by  \ 
j  Dean  E.  A.  Brecht.  } 

I     The  Awards  Night  program  will ' 
I  be  held  with  the  last  meeting   of 
j  the  Student  Branches  of  the  North  I 
i  Carolina     Pharmaceutical      A.:,'.iOc.  | 
'  ind  the  American  Pharmaceutical 
I  Assoc,  for  the  school  year. 


I     RSCAT-ADE    ^^°^^^^'^    1 


EARLY  AMERICAN 
OLD  SPICE 


DItIRT  MOWER 


Toilet  Water, 

Dusting  Powder 

3.00 

Liquid  Petals 
Cream  Perfume  1 .25 


FRIENOSHirS  GARDEN 


Free  Gift  Wrapping 


Phone  9-8781 


DAILY    CROSSWORD 


ACROSS 

1.  Lons:- 
auifering 

S.  Title  of 
respect 

f .  A  layer  ot 
•kin 

10.  Type  of  car 

12.  Egypti«a 
goddess 

13.  Ridicule 

14.  Mail's  nam* 

15.  Pal* 

It.  Game  of 
cat's  craAt 
<H.I.) 

17.  Music 
not* 

18.  Mottled 

20.  Compass 
point 
(abbr.) 

21.  Exit 

23.  River  (It.) 
25.  Two-spot 

card 
2«..Applc  dri«k 
29.  Masurium 

(•ym.) 
SO.  RidiBf 

academy    ' 

11.  River 
(Chin.) 

|S.R(q>«  witK 

runninf 

knot 
35.  Eskcr 
34.  Employ 
38.HaU! 
a».  Falsehood 
40.  Correct 

42.  Malt  kiln 

43.  Stand  up 

44.  Cuss 
49'.  Trees 
4<.Mklt, 

fecvermfe* -> 
DOWN 
1.  Communi- 


2.  Assam 

silk- 
worm 

8.  Type 
measuTM 

4.  The  un- 
known cod 
(Hindu) 

5.  Meager 

6.  Electrified 
particle 

7.  Book  of 
the  Bibla 

t.  Fencing 
swords 

9.  Having 
indicators 

11.  Indian 
13.  Forbids 
15.  Sagacious 
18.  A  nut 


19.  Sup- 
pose 

32.  Alco- 
holic 
beve- 
rage 

24.  Poem 

26.  Pack- 
ing 
box 

27.  Self- 
inter- 
ested 
peopla  V 

28.  Places 
again 

30.  Set  in 
motion 

31.  Koran 
chapter 

32.  River  (.Fir.) 


YMtcrdsjr's  Asiwer  . 

34.  Fertile  spots' 
in  deserts 

37.  Wicked 

39.  Narrow 
roadway 

41.  Doctrine 

42.  Lubricate 
44.  Exclama- 
tion 


Sponsors  for  the  Pharmacy  Dance  arc  top  t 
cttc  Niven  with  Donald  J.  Miller,  prsvident  of  the  s 
ut,  president  of  the  sophomore  class;  Miss  Becky  M 
Chi;  Mrs.  J.  S.  O'Daniel  witn  Mr.  O'Daniel,  presiden 
M.  Hinton,  president  of  Kappa  Psi;  Miss  Janice  Pip 
dent  body;  Miss  Sue  Sheek,  president  of  Kappa  Epsil 
with  Mr.  Huckaby,  president  of  stuaent  branches  of 
Francis;  and  Miss  Nancy  Stiiwell. 


o  bottom  of  each  row  (left  to  right):  Miss  Ann- 
tudent  body;  Miss  Betty  Thomas  with  John  M.  Lanr^ 
anos  with  Gene  R.  Dutton,  president  of  Phi  Delts 
t  of  the  freshman  class;  Miss  Ann  Taylor  with  Hugh 
es  with  Dayve  Priest,  secretary-treasurer  of  the  stu- 
on  with  William  H.  Taylor;  and  Mrs.  B.  T.  Huckaby 
NCPA-APhA:    Miss   Shirley    Bumgardner    with    Bill 


Trials  Start       |  Cohan  And  Baseball 


On  'Bloodbath' 

MUNICH,  Germany.  (AP)— The 
prosecution  last  night  demanded 
a  prison  term  of  two  years  and 
three  months  for  former  SS  Col. 
Gen.  Sepp  Dietrich  for  his  role 
in  the  Nazi  "bloodbath"  purge  of 
1934. 

Prosecutor  Karl  Weiss  called  for 
conviction  of  the  former  elite 
guard  general,  and  former  SS  Col. 
Michael  Lippert  on  charges  c4  as- 
sisting in  the  execution  of  Nazi 
Storm  Troop  Leader  Ernst  Roehni 
and  six  of  his  aids. 

Weiss  asked  that  Lippert.  ac- 
cused of  assisting  in  the  jail  cell, 
execution  of  Roehm,  be  sentenced 
to  two  years. 

Weiss  summed  up  the  case  af 
ter  the  court  moved  to  Stadelheim 
prison  to  watch  an  enactment  of 
the  1934  execution.  About  200  per- 
sons lost  their  lives  in  the  purge. 

Lippert  pointed  to  a  spot  about  j 
10  yards  from  the  cell  where  j 
Roehm  was  executed,  and  said  he ! 
stood  there  during  the  execution  | 
by  guards. 

Dietrich,  commander  of  the  Ber- 
lin SS  Battalion  from  which  the 
firing  squad  was  drawn,  led  the 
way  to  the  courtyard  wall  where 
he  said  six  of  Roehm's  aides  were 
killed.  Dietrich  claims  Adolf  Hit- 
ler's order  to  have  the  six  shot 
was  lawful. 


WUNC-TV 

6:29  Sign  On 

6:30  Yesterday's  Worlds 

7:00  Delinquency 

7:30  Frontiers  To  Space 

8:00  Aft  and  Artists 

8:30  America  Looks  Abroad 

9:00  Sign  Off 


CLASSIFIEDS 


Anthony  Wolff 
PLAYMAKERS  "PEER  GYNT" 
Tonight  is  the  second  performance  of  Kai  Jurgenson's  translation 
and  adaptation  of  Ibsen's  drama.    Mr.  Jurgenson  himself  discussed 
his  achievement    on   yesterday's   Editorial    Page;   the   review   of   the 
current  production  appears  there  today. 
TELEVISION 
1:15— Channel  2— Baseball  '    "**^ 

The  Milwaukee  Braves  versus  St.  Louis  Cardinals  from  St.  Louis 

Channel  5 
The  Cincinnati  Redlcgj  meet  the  Chicago  Cubs  in  Chicago. 

6:30— Channel  11— Rock  and  Roll 
New  York  disk  jockey  Alan  Freed,  one  of  the  prime  movers  in  the 
R&R  craze,  piays  host   to  Antly  Williams,  Ivory  Joe  Hunter,  Lavern 
Baker,  and  Charlie  Gracie.  If  you  plan  to  watch,  you  might  hold  your 
dinner  to  a  rninimum,  or  skip  it  altogether. 

7:00 — Channel  2 — Jackie  Gleason 
The  Fat  Man';;  guests  tonight  are  Morey  Amsterdam,  veteran  pop 
vocalist  Jerry  Cooper,  and  a  sniall  herd  of  chimps.  If  he  is  in  form, 
Amsterdam  is  likely  to  be  worth  the  price  of  admission. 
Channel  5 — Perry  Como 
The  Liberaces,  George  and  Smiles,  visit  with  Perry  tonight,  bounc- 
ing back  after  a  hard-earned  flop  at  the  Palace.  As  if  this  were  not 
enough  comedy  for  one  hour,  the  Wiere  Brothers  are  also  on  the  bill. 
8:00— Channel   5— "Mr.  Broadway"  (Musical) 
This  is  the  musical  biography  of  George  M.  Cohan — •  Broadway 
legend   who  was  an  actor,  producer,  playwright,  -song   writer,  and 
song-and-dance  man,  often  simultaneiusly. 

Tonight's  show  is  written  by  Sam  and  Bolla  Spowack,  authors  of 
"Kiss  Ma  Kate";  included  are  seventeen  of  Cohan's  songs.  Including 
"Give  My  Regards  To  Broadway,"  Yankee  Doodle  Dandy,"  and  "Over 
There." 

Miokay  Rooney  stars  as  Cohan,  supportod  by  Garry  Moore,  Jamas 
Dunn,  Gloria  De  Haven,  June  Havoc,  Eddie  Foy,  Jr.,  and  others. 

The  dances  are  staged  by  Peter  Gennaro,  one  of  B  oadway's  bright- 
est young  stars,  and  he  appears  in  one  number.  Sidney  Lumet,  who 
deserves  an  Oscar  for  his  direction  of  "Twelve  Angry  Men",  is  the 
director. 


FOR  INEXPENSIVE  LIVING:  27' 
Nashua  Trailer  —  has  bath  tub, 
shower,  pwch,  oil  heater,  added 
room,  connected  to  utilities  and 
septic  tank.  One  mile  ^ut  on 
airport  road.  Call  8472.  $2,300. 

COOD^lTSEirKflNMORE    VACU 
~  urn  cleaner— $25.  Cair9-6621  be- 
tween 1  &  3  p.m. 


Gastonia  Boy 
Award  Winner 

A  Gastonia  student  has  been 
named  winner  of  the  Andrew  A. 
Bershak  Intcrfraternity  Scholar- 
ship for  studies  at  the  University 
of  North  Carolina  at  Chapel  Hill. 

William  Floyd  Sayers  Jr.  is  re- 
cipient of  the  $2,000  grant  made 
available  by  social  fraternities  at 
UNC  in  memory  of  the  former  foot- 
ball player  and  scholastically- 
distinguished  UNC  student. 

Bershak.  a  member  of  the  efass 
of  1938,  died  of  a  kidney  ailment 
in  1943  while  serving  as  assistjmt. 
coach  at  the  University. 

This  year's  recipient  was  chosen 
on  the   basis  of  character,  finan- 


Thanks,  Dad 

BALTIMORE,  (AP)— A  Mother's 
Day  card  that  puts  in  a  plug  for 
father  was  quickly  sold  out  yes- 
terday at  a  downtown  stationery 
store. 

Designed  for  hubby  to  send  to 
wife,  the  front  reads: 

"You  rate  a  lot  of  credit.  Dear, 
in  one  way  or  another  ..." 

The  inside  winds  up: 

"But  remember,  if  it  weren't  for 
me  you  wouldn't  be  a  mother." 


cial  need,  and  ability  as  shown  in 
scholastic  record  and  extracurric- 
ular activities. 

His  activities  include  member 
of  the  Key  Club,  student  govern- 
ment and  ^National  Honor  Society 
at  Gastonia  High  School;  chief 
marshall;  member  of  DeMolay;  and 
an  Eagle  Scout. 


Covering  The  Campus 


WESTMINSTER  FELLOWSHIP 

Tlie  spring  retreat  of  the  West- 
minster Fellowship  will  be  held 
this  weekend,  it  was  «mnouBced  re- 
cently. The  session  wfil  'be  held  at 
Fort  Caswell,  and  according  to  the 
announcement,  wiU  feature  pleasure 
with  business. 

Cars  will  leave  Y-Court  at  1  pjm. 
Everyone  interested  m  particlpat- 
iog  in  the  pi\)gram  has  been  xu^ged 

to  c<H*tact  Jim  Merritt  at  8-9174. 
WAA  PICNIC 

The  anaual  W.  \.  A.  pieaic  will 
be  held  Tuesday  at  5:30  p.m.  at  the 
outdoor  aool  near  Woollen  Gym,  it 
was  announced  recently.  Ed  Crow's 
band  will  entertain  and  awards  will 
be  presented  after  supper. 

Awards  will  include:  sorority  and 
dormitory  cups,  pla<|ues  for  intra- 
mural winners,  individusd  mono- 
grams and  stars,  and  outstanding 
I'cpresentative  and  senior  awards. 

Following  the  picnic,  the  Splash 
Club  will  present  its  annual  water 
pageant.  Itie  entire  student  body 
has  been  invited  to  attend  the  show 
which  begins  at  8  p.m. 
PSYCHOLOGY   CONVENTION 

Members  of  the  P^chology  Dept. 
here  attended  the  semi-annual  con- 
vention of  the  North  Carolina  Aca- 
demy of  Science  at  Wake  Forest 
last  week,  it  w'as  announced  recent- 
ly. 


Participating  in  the  program  were: 
Drs.  John  D.  Kelton  and  John  F. 
Dashi^l  who  presented  research 
papers;  Dr.  W.  Grant  Dahlstrom 
v/lao  particiipated  in  a  panel  dis- 
cussion; Dr.  E.  Baughman,  Dr.  'Rtel- 
raa  Thurstone  and  Dr.  Dorothy  C 
Adkins. 
ART  EXHIBITION 

The  2dth  Annual  North  CarcUna 
School  Art  Exhibition  is  currently 
showing  at  the  Person  Hall  Art 
Gallery.  The  exhibition  includes 
^1  items  chosen  from  over  1000 
entries.  It  was  open  to  students  in 
grades  1  through  6  and  includes-  a 
variety  of  crafts  and  media. 

The  exhibition  will  continue 
through  May  19  and  the  public  has 
been  invited  to  attend. 


Kappa  Sig  Elections 

Richard  E.  Frazier,  a  rising  jun- 
ior from  Goldsboro,  N.  C  was 
recently  elected  grand  master  of 
the  Kappa  Sigma  fraternity. 

Other  newly  elected  officers 
are  Pawling  S.  Steward,  grand 
procurator;  Ira  M.  Hardy,  grand 
scribe:  John  R.  Griffin,  grand 
treasurer;  and  William  S.  Michael, 
grand  master  of  ceremonies. 

Also  elected  were  M.  Marshall 
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chairmen;  James  F.  Roberts,  so 
cial  chairman;  George  W.  Wray. 
German  Club  representative:  and 
Hal  M.  Miller.  IFC  representative 


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Watch  It,  Suh 

BALTIMORE,  (AP)— Field  Mar- 
shall Viscount  Montgomery,  who 
won  renown  by  capturing  a  fox, 
says  he  would  have  fired  both  Gten. 
Lee  and  Ggn.  Meade  if  the  Civil 
War  commanders  had  been  under 
his   command   at   Gettysburg. 

The  69-year-old  British  Marshal 
who  outfoxed  the  "Desert  Fox,'" 
Gertnati  Field  Marshal  Erwin  Rom 
mel  in  World  War  H,  addressed 
the  English  speaking  union  at  a 
banquet  here  Thursday  night. 

He's  been  reading  about  the 
battle  of  Gettysburg  and  he  let 
it  slip  that  he  would  have  sacked 
both  Confederate  and  Union  com 
manders  if  they  had  beeti  his  su- 
bordinates. 

But  today,  Montgomcrj-  decided 
discretion  was  the  better  part  of 
valor  and  when  asked  to  elaborate 
on  his  statement  said  he  would 
say  no  more  until  he  has  toured 
the  battlefield  this  weekend  with 
President  Eisenhower. 


forest  Fires 

Forest  Fires  ravaged  northeast 
timberlands  for  the  fifth  consecu- 
tive day  yesterday.  They  disrupt^ 
fed  the  plans  of  thousands  for  out- 
door weekend  trips. 

Rain  brought  a  measure  of  re- 
lief to  Maine,  New  York  and  Ver- 
mont. But  elsewhere  there  was  no 
sign  of  a  break  in  a  dry  spell  that 
has    turned   forests    tinder-dry. 

Historic  Plymouth.  Mass.  where 
the  Pilgrims  landed  in  1620.  was 
saved  from  destruction  for  the 
second  time  in  two  days.  Fanned 
by  35  m.p.h.  winds,  the  flames 
crackled  to  within  a  few  hundred 
jTTTds  of  Jordan  Hospital,  the  on- 
ly one  in  Plymouth. 

Some  3.000  firefighters,  some  of 
them  volunteers  from  am.ong  pris- 
oners in  the  Plymouth  County  jail 
and  others  from  communities  as 
far  away  as  70  miles,  finally  got 
the  fire  under  control. 


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THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


SATURDAY,  MAY  11,  1^57 


ACC  Track  Field 
Cut;  Finals  Today 


Gerald    Strickland,    Duke;    Cledith 

Oakley.     North   Carolina;      Roland 

Payne.    Ntorth    Carolina;    Richard 

McCallister,  North  Carolina. 

Shot  put — Ed  Cooke,   Maryland, 

52  feet,  4  in.  New  conference  re- 
todays  finals  which  will  start  on  |  ^^^^.  ^j^  ^^^^^^  gj  j^g.  set  1956 
Fetzer  Field  at  2  o'clock.  !^y  ^^^^^^.  ^^^^  gpeer,  Duke;  Nick 

Maryland  had  the  greatest  num-lj^^^^   Maryland;  Frank  Call.  Vlr- 


By  DAVE  WIBLE 

Yesterday  afternoon  at  the  ACC 
track  and  field  trials  the  cinder- 
m<-*n  of  Carolina  qualified  thirteen 
men  as  the  field  was  cut  for  the 


ber  of  qualifiers  with  twenty-three. 
Duke  was  next  with  fourteen  and 
then  came  Carolina's  thirteen. 
South  Carolina  and  Virginia  each 
had  four.  Clem^-on  had  two.  State 
had  one.  and  Wake  Forest  had 
none. 

Yesterday's  competition  rewrote 
the  record  book  three  times.  Don 
Goodroe,  a  sophomore  from  the 
University  of  South  Carolina,  set 
a  'new  mark  in  the  120  yard  high 
hurdlej.  His  14.4  time  broke  Duke's 


ginia;   Phil   Dupler,   Duke;   Harold 
Outten,   Virginia. 

440— Buddy  Mayfield,  South  Ca- 
rolina, :49.1;  Dave  Leas,  Maryland; 
Dave  Scurlock,  North  Carolina;  R. 
W.  Matthews.  N.  C.  State;  Stan 
Strauss,  Maryland;  Bob  Kline, 
Duke. 

lOO— Dave  Sime,  Duke.  :9.8: 
Steve  Scheck,  Maryland;  Wesley 
Baynes,  Maryland;  Bob  Jonuon, 
Duke;  Bob  Honeycutt,  Duke;  Jim 
Varnum,  North  Carolina;  Dyer 
Joel  Shankle  and  Clemson's  John  ^^^^^  j^^^.^^  Carolina.  Moss,  Honey 
Steedlys  co-held  record  of  14.7.      |  ^^^,  ^-^^  ^^^  ^^^^^^  ^^  ^^^^  ^^^^ 

Another  Gamecock.  Dick  Bartu  ,  j^^^^  qualifying 
Iski,   threw  the   javelin  a     record  i      groad  jump-Ed  Brawley.  North 
breaking  208'  10"  to  top  Jack  Lad- ,  ^^^.^j.^^  gl  ft.  9  1/2  in:.  Ken  Rose- 
ncr's  last  year's  champion  and  re- j  ^^^^^    ^^^^  Carolina;  Eddie  Un- 
cord from  Wake  Forest.  ACC  throw 
of  206'  7  12". 

Ed  Cooke  of  Maryland  was  the 
third  record  writer  when  he  put 
the  shot  52'4"  to  break  his  own 
.\CC  record  of  51'5  12"  he  set 
last    year. 

It  looks  like  there  will  be  many 
more    records    to   fall    today   with 


yd,  Maryland;  Perry  Elliott  Thomp- 
son, Maryland. 

120-yard  high  hurdles —  Don 
Gootlroe,  South  Carolina;  :14.4  new 
conference  record;  old  record.  :14.7 
held  by  Joel  Shankle,  Duke,  1955. 
and  John  Steedley  Clemiwn,  1956; 
Lyndon  DeBorde,  North  Carolina; 
and  Jim  Starboard,  Perry  Moore, 
duels  as  Carolina's  48.4  quarter- ;  j^^  ^^^^^.^^  ^^^  £,1^^,^^  Thompson, 
will  again  be  against  the  Mary  ;  ^j,  ^^  Maryland, 
land's  quarter-miler  record  holder  |  Discus-Ed  Cooke.  Maryland,  149 
Dave  Leas.  In  the  880,  Scurlock  i^j  g  in.;  Henry  Davenport.  Virgin- 
will  again  be  pitted  against  Mary  ,-3.  ^^^^.  gpeer,  Duke;  Nick  Leras, 
land  record  holder.  Carl  Party  last ,  Maryland;  Harold  Outten.  Virginia; 
years  champ  and  Scurlock  both  p^ji  soudieri.  Duke, 
won  their  heats  today  and  one  ofj  gSO-Bob  Peter,  Duke,  1:57.5; 
them  if  not  both  is  expected  tolpg^^  Scurlock.  North  Carolina; 
lower    the    conference    mark.  \^^^^^   p.^ty.   Maryland;   R.   W.    .Mc 

Tar  Heel  coach  Dale  Ran^n  dis-  pg^^jj^  j^^^^,,  Carolina;  Chester 
closed  yesterday  that  Carolina's  steckel.  Maryland;  Ben  Williams, 
Jim  Beatty.  ACC  record  holder  in  ,  j^^^^j,  Carolina, 
the  two  mile  and  a  big  threat  to!  220-Dave  Sime.  Duke.  :21.4; 
set  a  new  record  in  the  mile  to- 1  j^y^.^  Moss  North  Carolina;  Steve 
day.  will  run  in  only  one  event  j  gcheck.  Maryland;  Dave  Leas 
this  afternoon.  j  Maryland;    Bob   Kline.   Duke;    Bob 

The    Sunnnary:  1  Johnson,   Duke. 

Javelin — Dick  Bartulski.  South'  220-yard  low  hurdles — Larry  Sal 
Carolina,  208  ft..  2  in.  new  confer-  mon,  Maryland,  :23.7;  Don  Good- 
ence  record;  old  record.  206-7  1  2, ;  roe.  South  Carolina;  W.  C.  Sim 
set  1956  by  Jack  Ladner,  Wake ,  mons.  Clemson;  and  Perry  Moore, 
Forest;  R.  P.  Snyder.  Clemson.  Also ;  L^e  Duncan,  Jim  Starboard,  all  ol 
broke  old  reconl  with  206-8  to^s;   Maryland. 


Baseballers  Face  State 
In  Big  Test  Here  Today 


By  BILL  KING 

Today  i^*  do  or  die  day  for  the 
«'arolina  Tar   Heels. 

Coach  Walt  Rabb's  gallant  base- 
l>allei:s  have  battled  right  down 
to  the  proverbial  wire  in  the  At- 
lantic Coast  Conference,  and  today 
they  face  the  biggest  test  of  the 
season  against  the  State  Wolfpack 
in  Emeson    Stadium  at  3  o'clock. 

Carolina's  8-4  conference  record 
is  a  good  one — but  only  a  win  to- 
day will  keep  them  in  the  runnng 
for  the  ACC  title.  Then  they'll  have 
to  win  a  makeup  game  with  Mary- 
land in  the  regular  season  finale 
to  gain  a  tie  for  first  place  in  the 
conference. 

Meanwhile,  league-leading  Duke 


will  view  this-  afternoon's  affair 
with  keen  interest.  The  Dukes  have 
finished  their  regular  season  play, 
turning  in  a  card  that  shows  10 
victories  and  four  defeats — good 
enough  for  top  birth  in  the  ACC, 
for  a  few  days  anyway. 

The  Tar  Heels  now  trail  Duke 
by  one  game.  Two  victories  would 
give  them  an  identical  10-4  con- 
ference mark  and  necessitate  a 
playoff  vviih  the  Blue  Divils  for 
the  right  to  represent  the  ACC  in 
NCAA    competetion. 

But  the  Tar  Heela-  are  not  think- 
ing about  playoffs  at  this  point. 
Coach  Rabb  will  have  to  throw 
everything  he's  got  at  State  and 
Maryland  and  worry  about  a  play- 
j  off  later. 


WF  Golfer 
Leads  Pack 

Wake  Forest  golfer  Sonny 
George  fired  a  four-undcr-par  67 
to  take  a  two-stroke  lead  over 
teammate  John  Gerring  yesterday 
in  the  fir.vt  round  of  the  Atlantic 
Coast  Conference  golf  champion- 
ship at  the  Old  Town  course  in 
Winston   Salem. 

The  Deacon  ace  carded  a  32-35 
score  over  the  familar  par  71  lay 
out.  John  Gerring.  another  top  Doa 
con  linksman  came  home  with  a 
35-34 — 69,  good  for  second  place 
in  the  initial  round  of  the  tourney 
which  concludes  today. 

The  favored  Carolina  Tar  Heels 
dropped  behind  in  individual  play 
as  -number  one  man  Buck  Adams 
went  one  over  with  a  36-36—72  to 
lead  the  Tar  Heels,  Adams'  score 
put  him  in  fifth  place,  five  strokes 
behind  the  leader. 

The  Tar  Heels,  out  to  defend 
their  1956  title  and  hoping  to  keep 
the  individual  champion.-.hip  in 
Chapel  Hill,  found  the  going 
rough.  Walt  Summerville  fired  a 
73  as  the  second  best  man  for  the 
Tar  Heels.  Buzzy  Basingcr  won  the 
individual  trophy  for  UNO  last 
year. 

Virginia  placed  two  men  in  the 
top  five  as  Jordan  Bell  and  Glenn 
Mitchell  shot  a  70  and  71  respec- 
tively. 

Carolina's  Tommy  Langley.  Tuf- 
fy  Henderson,  and  Bobby  Ruffin 
all  had  74's  for  the  Tar  Heel  golf- 
ers. Don  McMillan  was  one  ■stroke 
behind  at  75.  followed  by  Tar  Heel 
John  McKee  at  76. 

Aubrey  Rothrock  and  Larry 
Bell  came  in  with  a  77  for  the  Tar 
Heels.  Mac  Patton  and  Gene  Look- 
abill  were  tied  way  down  the  line 
at  82. 

Th*   Summary 

Sonny  George,  Wake  Forest,  32- 
35—67 

John  Gerring,  Wake  Forest,  35- 
34—69 

Jordan  Ball.   Virginia.  35-35-70 

Glenn  Mitchell,  Virginia,  38-33— 
71 

Bucky  Adams,  North  Carolina, 
36-36—72 

Jerry  McFerren,  Maryland,  40- 
32—72 

Joe  McCarley.  South  Carolina, 
35-37—72 

Tommy  Helms.  Wake  Foresl,  36- 
37—73 

Walt  Summerville.  North  Caro- 
lina, 36-37—73 

Dick  Siderhowf.  Duke.  36-35— 
73 

Tuffy  Henderson.  North  Caro- 
lina. 38-36—74 

Ralph   James   Jr.,    Wake    Forest. 
36-38—74 
Gene  Sapp,  Wake  Foreat,  37-37—74 

Tommy  Langley,  North  Carolina, 
38-36—74 

Bobby  Ruffin.  North  Carolina. 
37.37_74 

Don  McMillan.  North  Carolina, 
3540—75 

Bill  Beeson,  Duke.  38-37—75 

Dickie  Melton,  South  tarolina, 
38-37—75 

John  McKee,  North  Carolina,  40 
36—76 

Al  Bullingston,  Clemson,  38  38— 
76 

Paul  Sackett,  Virginia,  37-39—78 

Alex  Efird.  N.  C.  State,  37-39— 
76 

Bruce  Schaefer,  Clemson,  38-38 — 
76 

Jack  Benson,  Duke,  38-38 — 76 

Bobby  McCarty,  South  Carolina, 


Netters  Beaten  In 
ACC  Tournament 


DURHAM.  N.  C,  — <AP—  The 
University  of  Maryland  v/as  as- 
sured of  a  champion  in  the  Atlan- 
tic Coast  Conference  tennis  tour- 
nament as  it  placed  two  of  its 
stars,  Jackson  Yang  and  Dave 
Freishtat,  in  the  finals  to  be  play- 
ed here  today. 

Yang  gained  hiy  chance  for  the 
title  when  he  defeated  Duke's  big 
Don  Romhilt,  6-2,  6-2,  and  Freish- 
tat earned  a  slot  in  finals  play  by 
downing  Duke's  third-ranking  play 
er,  Leif  Beck. 

Pairings  for  the  doubles  finals 
are  still  undecided  as  one  semifi- 
nal match  remains  to  be  played  to- 
morrow. The  Blue  Devils  have 
nailed  down  one  half  of  the  ca/d 
with  the  team  of  Beck  and  Rom- 
hilt. 

The  Dukesters  defeated  a  Caro- 
lina team  of  Bank  and  Newsome 
in  a  clocte  three  set  match  that  end- 
ed 6-2,  5-7,  6-4. 

If  the  powerful  Maryland  com- 
bination of  Bucks-Freishtat  can  gel 
by  Wake  Fore.st  pair,  Burt-Allred, 
there  is  a  chance  the  Terps  can 
sweep  the  tournament. 

Quarterfinal    Singlet: 

Beck  (Duke)  over  Stoever  (Va.), 
6-0.  6-2;  Freishtat  (Md.)  over  Bucks 
(Md.)  6-3,  2  2  (rebault);  Romhilt 
(Duke)  over  Berkley  (Va.),  6-0,  7-5; 
Yang  (Md.)  over  Black  (UNO,  6-3, 
2  6,  6  1. 


,  Semifinal  Sincles: 

Freiahtat     over  Beck,  6-1,     6-2; 
Yang  over  Romhilt,  6-2,  6-2. 

Second  Round  Doubles 

Bottoms-Robbins      (Duke)     over 

Cox-Garren   (WF),  6-4,  10-8;  Bank- 

Newsome    (UNC)    over    Solomon- 

Yionoulie    (NCS),   6-1',   6-4;    Yang- 

I  Kammerer   (Md.)    over   Theos-Cal- 

!  laway   (Clem.)   default:    Freishtat- 

I  Bucks  (Md.)  over  Stoever-Berkelny, 

(8-10,     8-6,     6-2;     Black-Livingston 

I  (UNC)  over  Williams-Rude  (Duke), 

1 6-4,     8-6:    Burt-Allred   (WF)     over 

I  Carter-Scarpa     (Clem.)   7-5,     10-3: 

i  Lawrence-Jack  (Duke)  over  Black- 

I  well-Burns  (USC)  8-6,  4-6,  8-6. 

Quarterfinals  Doubles: 

j  Beck-Romhilt  over  Bottoms-Rob- 
bns,  6-1,  6-0:  Bank-Newsome  over 
Yang-Kammerer,  6-2,  6-3:  Burt-Al- 
lred over  Lawrence-Jack,  6-3,  4-6, 
9-7:  Freishtat-Bucks .  over  Black- 
Livingilon,  3-6,  6-0,  6-2. 

Semifinal  Doubles 

Beck-Romhilt     over     Bank-New- 
Bomd,  6-2,  5-7,  6-4. 

Fnal  Pairings: 

Freishtat  V.  Yang. 

Beck-Romhlt  v.  wnner  of  Bucks- 
Freishtat,   Allred-Burt    match. 


364(^76 

Keitt   Hane,   Clemson,   40-36—76 
Buzz  Outteo,  Virginia,  41-35—76 
Terry  Atkins,  N.  C.  State,  36-41 
—77 

Dick  Mason,  Maryland,  39-38—77 
Jack  Rinehart.  Virginia.  39-38— 
77 
Tate  Lanning,  Duke.  38-39—77 
Bo  Claxton.  Wake  Forest.  38-39 
—77 

Aubrey    Rothrock,    North    Caro- 
lina, 38-39—77 

Larry    Bell,    North    Carolna,    38- 
3»— 77 


PATRONIZE  YOUR 
•    ADVERTISERS    • 


Herb  Score  Is 
Progressing 

CLEVELAND.  (AP)  —  Herb 
Score,  23.  Cleveland  Indians'  pitch- 
er who  was  hit  in  the  right  eye 
by  a  line  drive  last  Tuesday,  con- 
tinued to  improve  yesterday  in  a 
hospital  room  full  of  flowers, 
baskets  of  fruit,  and  stacks  of  let- 
ters and  telegrams. 

The  star  southpaw  siiii  didn't 
know  if  his  injury  will  affect  the 
vision  in  his  right  eye.  Doctors 
may  be  able  ^o  make  the  exam* 
ination  today. 

"•His  condition  continues  to  im- 
prove," reported  Drs.  Charles  T. 
Thomas  and  Oon  Kelly.  "The  hem- 
orrhage in  the  right  eye  is  clear- 
ing. The  swelling  on  the  right  side 
of  the  face  and  eye  is  almost  com- 
pletely reduced." 


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with  his  new  ^ 

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MY  FAIR  OXFORD 


Scene:  The  London  drawing 
room  of  Profeiisor  Moriariiy 
Kitchener,  philologist  and  elocu- 
tionist. As  curtain  riaes,  Kit- 
chener is  singing  and  dancing. 

Kitchener:  Why  can't  the  Eng- 
lish learn  how  to  speak?  Hey? 
Why  can't  a  woman  be  like  a 
man?  What?  Why  can't  any- 
body  grow  accustomed  to  my 
face?  So? 

Enter  Gaishy  Donothing,  a 
chimney  sweep. 

Donothing:  P'arn  me,  Perfi- 
zer  K,  oi  w'd  loik  tao  iprn  'ow 
do  .spike  e'en  batterwise  thun 
oi  spike  naow. 

Kitchener:  Ugh!  (Aside)  Yet, 
he's  a  challenge.  {To  Donoth- 
ing) All  right,  loathsome,  in 
six  weeks,  you'll  be  speaking 
well  enough  to  go  to  the  Coro- 
nation Ball! 

Six  weeks  later. 


Donothing:  Sao,  Prayfooser  K, 
can  yez  thank  what  me  spikes 
gentmanly  aynuf  naow?  Do 
we  be  gung  to  Coronation  Ball 
towgedder? 

Kitchener:  Oh,  my  Aunt  Sally, 
the  blighter  hasn't  learned  a 
thing.  I'm  lost.  But  wait.  I'll 
dress  him  in  a  Van  Heusen 
Oxford  cloth  shirt.  Then  he'll 
pass  as  a  gentleman  for  sure! 
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CHAPEL   HILL,   NORTH   CAROLINA,   SUNDAY,  MAY   12,   1957 


Offices  in  Graham   Mewufial 


FOUR   PAGES  THIS  ISSUC 


World  Briefs 

Queen  To  Visit  U.S.; 
Red  Students  Rebel 

MEIMPHIS,  Tenn.,  (.fl  — Sim  T.  Webb,  fireman  for  Casey  Jones 
on  his  last  run,  is  critically-  ill  with  a  tufnor  doctors  say  may  be  a 
result  ot  injuries  suffered  in  the  wreck  of  the  '•Cannonball  Express." 

Webb,  who  is  83  today,  leaped  from  the  engine  at  Casey  s  orders 
when  the  Illinois  Central  engineer  saw  he  was  going  to  hit  a  stopped 
train.  It  happened  near  Vaughn,  Miss.,  April  30,  1900. 

Casey  stayed  with  the  engine  in  a  vain  effort  to  halt  the  train. 
A  song  about  the  wreck  j,«wept  him  to  immortality. 


Mothers  Of  The  Year  • 

Today  is  Methar'a  Day  and  tha  thraa  abowa  mothers  have  been  chosen  as  Mothers  Of  The  Year  In 
fhis  vicinity.  Left  to  rl«ht  are:  Mrs.  W.  M.  Lackal,  Carrboro  Mother  of  the  Year;  Mrs.  Victor  Humph- 
reys, UNC  Mother  af  tha  Year  from  Kenan  Dorm;   and  Mrs.  O.   E.    Brown,  Chapel  Hill  Mother  of  the 


'Quarter  System  Was  Good, 
Says  Math  Professor  Mackie 


WASHINGTON,  -JP  —  Early  October  has  been  selected  for  the  long 
reported  visit  to  this  country  by  Queen  Elizabeth  II  and  Prince  Philip. 

This  was  learned  yesterday  from  persons  familiar  with  the  ne- 
gotiations that  have  been  under  way  for  months  between  Washington 
and  London.  The  British  Queen  and  her  husband  are  expected  to 
spend  about  10  day^-  in  this  country. 

This  will  be  the  Queen's  first  visit  to  America  since  she  ascended 
I  the  throne  in  1952.  She  and  her  husband,  then  the  Duke  of  Edinburgh, 
I  were  here  in  1951  as  the  guests  of  former  President  Truman. 

It  is  expected  that  the  Queen's  formal  acceptance  of  an  invitation 
from  President  Eisenhower  will  be  received  here  in  two  or  three  weeks. 
This  will  be  the  signal  that  all  the  myriad  details  for  a  state  visii 
have  finally  been  worked  out  with  the  British  foreign  office. 

Elaborate  secrecy  has  marked  the  negotiations  ever  since  they  be- 
gan, as  is  usual  in  such  cases,  but  it  is  expected  that  the  royal  visit 
will  include  other  cities  besides  Washington. 


Splashes  From  Meet 


All 


By    BILL    KING 

that    remains    nuw 


can    Jim   Beatty   entered    only    the 
the   two-mile  run  because  of  an  instep 


"We  lived  under  the  quarter 
system  very  happily,  and  I  regret 
that  w?  went  into  the  semester 
system,"  Dean  E.  L.  Mackie.  pro- 
fessor of  raatn.  said  while  recall- 
ing his  33  years  of  teaching  at  the 
University. 

Professor  Mackie.  who  started 
as  an  assistant  professor  in  1921, 1 
has  been  an  active  msmber  in  the  ■ 
growth  and  development  of  UNC. 

In  1947  Dr.  Mackie  was  instru- 
mental in  the  establishment  of 
Phi  Eta  Sigma,  freshman  scholas- 
tic booorary  fraternity.  Together 
with  Dr.  William  S.  Wells  and  the 
lat?  Dr.  Sartitiel  T.  Emory.  Dr. 
Mackie  organized  the  Order  of  the 
Old  Wall. 

The  Order  of  the  Old  Wdl  was 
established  jiiii].  ti^  id«iLthat  "too 
iitWir  ^l^lcc"!^  flting-flons  in  the 
UnivCTilty  and  too  little  recogni- 
tion forthcoming."  ' 

Dr.  Mackie,  speaking  of  the 
past,  saw  that  jjie  felt  that  the 
work  bad  tended  to  betome  eas- 
ier over  the  yf|ars  amd  the  text- 
books were   less   comprehensive.   ' 

He  fclK  this  ^ange  was  partly 
the  result  of  the  semester  system. 
He  explained  that  under  the  se- 
mester system  there  were  more 
class  periods  alloted  to  each 
course. 

TTie  quarter  system  is  also  eas- 
ier on  the  graduate  students  who 
are  part-time  inaftructors.  he  add 
cd,  for  it  gave  th«m  more  time  to 
study  during  the  weekend. 

*I  don't  believe  that  the  alti- 
tude of  the  students  has  changed 
overall.  There  has  always  been 
the  good,  bad  and  indifferent  stu- 
dents." he  commented. 

He    said    he    believed    that   the 
tremendous   increase   in   the  num- ; 
ber  of  students  has  kept  the  facul- 
ty from  being  as  close  to  the  stu- ' 
dents  as  ^hey  were  in  the  past. 

"I  think  that  the  Honor  System 
is  still  -vtrorklng  very  well.  There  ; 
may  be  tendencies  to  underrate 
it."  he  said.  When  doing  graduate 
work  at  Harvard  in  1920.  Dr. 
Mackie  said  they  were  under  the 
proctor  9>'8tem  which  he  did  not 
think  was  fitting  for  graduate  stu- 


dents. 

A  veteran  returning  to  UNC 
"looks  like  a  different  student  in 
some  cases."  he  commented.  Dr. 
Mackie  stated  he  had  found  most 
veterans  to  be  more  serious-mind-  ] 
ed  than  the  average  student. 

In  1917  Dr.  Mackie  got  his  A.B. 
bachelor  degree  from  the  Universi- 
ty. While  a  student  he  was  a  mem- 
ber of  the  Amphoterothen  and  the 
Golden  Fleece,  the  only  two  hon- 
oraries  on  the  campus  at  the  time. 

During  his  university  career  h? 
was  a  member  of  Phi  Beta  Kappa.  I 


From  1952-1955  he  was  chairman 
of  the  South  Atlantic  District  of 
united  Phi  Beta  Kappa  chapters. 
During  1956-59  he  will  be  secre- 
tarj-treasurer  of  that  organization. 

He  taught  at  Clemson  from  1917 
to  1919.  and  got  in  the  army  for 
and  eight-month  tour-of-duty  at 
Camp  Jackson. 

He  got  his  Ph.D.  at  the  Univers- 
ity of  Chicago,  1927. 

Collaborating  with  Dr.  V.  A. 
Hoyle,  Dr.  Mackie'  published  a 
freshman  mathematics  textbook  in 
(See  MACKIE,  Page  3) 


BEIRLIN,  \!f^  —  Communist  East  Germany  was  reported  cracking 
down  last  night  on  122  rebellious  college  students  with  a  demand 
that  they  .fwcar  loyalty  oaths  or  face  permanent  expulsion. 

The  students,  making  up  the  entire  third  year  class  of  the  veter- 
inary college  of  East  ^erlin'.s  Humbolt  University,  were  described  here 
as  staging  la.  t  week  the  biggest  open  strike  against  East  Germany's 
Red' regime  since  the  Worker.-'  Uprising  of  1953. 

Usually  reliable  ynderground  sources  said  aU  were  temporarily 
ousted  from  the  rolls  of  that  school,  a  center  of  anti-Communist  agita- 
tion during  the  Hungarian  Rebellion  last   fall. 


Varied  Musical  Theme 
Jo  Be  Presented  May  14 


By  MARY  ALYS  VOORHEES 

A  program  ranging  from  16th 
century  chamber  music  to  a  work 
of  the  North  Carolina  composer. 
Edwin  J.  Stringham.  will  be  pre- 
sented May  14  when  the  55-voice 
University  Chorus  appears  in  con- 
cert at  .Hill  Music  Hall. 

Directed  by  Dr.  Wilton  Mason, 
the  concert  is  the  17th  in  this 
j'ear's  Tuesday  Evening  Series  and 
is  open  to  the  public  without 
charge. 

After  opening  the  program  with 
"Lamento  D'Arianna"  by  Monte- 
verdi, the  audience  will  be  brought 
back  to  the  modern  day  with  five 
songs  by  the  contemporary 'Eng- 
lish composer,  Vaughan  Williams, 
sung  to  the  words  of  the  English 
mystic  j>oet,  George  Herbert.  Ed- 
gar vom  Lehn  of  Burlington,  a 
graduate  assistant  in  voice  at  the 
University  who  has  appeared  in 
many  concerts  around  the  state, 
is  the  baritone  soloist. 

Quillian  White,  a  graduate  stu- 
dent 'from  West  Palm  Beach,  Fla. 
will  be  featured  as  soprano  solo- 
ist for  the  next  portion  of  the  pio- 
gram,  a  group  of  traditional  Negro 
Spirituals. 

A  highlight  for  local  concert 
gDers  will  come  when  the  chorus 
performs  "Ave  Maria"  by  Edwin  J. 


Stringham.  who  makes  his  home  in 
Chapel  Hill.  Widely  known,  this 
work  was  used  by  the  Westminster 
Choir  on  a  nation^'ide  tour  as  a 
representative  American  work  and 
as  the  final  number  on  every  con- 
cert  program. 

!      The  major  work  of  the  evening. 

;  a  concert  version  of  Offenbach's 
"Tales  of  Hoffman."  Act  1.  will 
conclude  the  program.  This  vers- 
ion  makes   use  of   brilliant  choral 

'  writing  and  engaging  lyric  pieces 
in  Offenbach's  most  sparkling 
manner. 

'  Characters  in  the  story  of  Hoff- 
man's love  for  Olympia.  the  me- 
chanical doll,  are  Jan  Saxon,  col- 
oratura soprano  of  Charlotte  who 

I  was  district  winner  of  the  Nation- 
al Federation  of  Music  Clubs' 
Award,  as  Olympia;  Gene  Strassler 
of  Appollo,  Pa.,  tenor,  as  Hoff- 
man: Martha  Fouse  of  Chapel 
Hill,  Soprano,  as  Nicklausse:  James 

'  Chamblee,     senior     voice     student 

;  from  Fayetteville  in  the  baritone 

:  role   Spalanzani;  and   Russell  Link 

I  of  Jamaica.  N.  Y..  tenor,  making 
his  singing  debut  as  Coehenille. 
This  is   the   second   appearance 

j  of  the  chorus  under  the  direction 
of    Dr.    Mason,     who     spent     last 

I  year  studying  in  Italy  on  a  Ford 
Foundation  Fellowship. 


Maryland  Takes  First  Place 
In  Conference  Track  Meet 

UNC  Trackmen 
Take  Second 

By  DAVE  WIBLE 

The  Maryland  Terrapins  success- 
fully defended  their  ACT  Outdoor 
Track  and  Field  crown  yesterday 
afternoon  on  Fotzer  Field  as  they 
overcame  the  mi.serable  weather 
and  sloppy  track  to  capture  .>vven 
individual  championships  and  83^ 
points. 

The  team  champion.ship  far 
from  ouLshowed  the  performance 
of  second  place  Carolina's  amaz- 
ing sophomore  Dave  Scurlock.  The 
6-4.  180  pounder  from  Greensboro 
ternoon  made  the  track  slow,  and  the  day  and  the  fans  and  runners  ^-as  presented  the  Robert  A.  Fct- 
the  pole  vault  stick  and  javelin  had  all  kinds  of  ingenious  contri-  zer  Award  for  the  outstanding  per- 
slippery.  vances    to    keep    off    the    rain.    A    former    in    the    meet     Scurlock    is 

Maryland  walked  off  with  the  couple  of  the  Maryland  runners  the  third  per.son  to  receive  this 
earn  champion.s-hip,  followed  by  had  a  blanket  strung  up  on  four  trophy.  The  other  recipient.v  arc 
.'aroiina.  Dave  Sime  was  his  usual  javelin  sticks  and  viewed  the  ratca  Dukes  all  time  greats.  Joel  Shank- 
magnificent    self    and    the    crowd  ,  dryNand  confortably.  ,  i  le  and  Dave  Sime. 

.aid  to  heck  with  the  weather  and  '  '      Scurlock  ran   hs  way  to  two  in- 

•ame  anyway.  i      Somebody  in  the  stands  was   of   dividual   crowns   by   winning    Iwth 

-^-, I  the    opinon    that     the     wet    track    the  440  and   the   880.   These   were 


thousands  of  foot  prints  still  em- 
bedded into  the  water-soaked  cin- 
ders on  Fetzer  Track. 

But  yesterday  afternoon  numer- 
ous athletes  repre^-enting  every 
school  in  the  ACC  were  sloshing 
through  the  mud  and  hitting  the 
hard  sawdust  as  they  cleared  the 
pole  vault — for  this  was  the  an- 
nual conference  track  meet. 


injury  suffered  in  the  Penn  Relays.  • 
The  foot  was  hurting  before  the 
race  even  started  but  Jimmy  de- 
cided to  run  anyway.  He  drftpped 
out  on  the  fourth  lap.  It  was  a  sad 
way  for  the  modest  little  man  to 
end  a  great  college  cereer,  but 
Jimmy,  whose  heart  is-  as  big  as 
his  body,  had  no  excuses.  "I  cer- ' 
tainly  can't  complain,"  he  remark- 


Records  were  hard  to  come  by  ed,  "I  had  a  profitable  four  years." 

as   the    rain    that    fell    from   early  

morn  til   about  4:30  yesterday  af-       Improvisions  were  the  order   of 


Carolina's  great  little  All-Ameri 


(See  SPLASHES.  Page  4) 


A  New  Peer  Gynt'  Is 
Excitingly  Performed 


By  ANTHONY  WOLFF 

(Due   to   lack   of  space   in   the 


Betts  At  Matrix  Society 


Doris  Bttts,  nationally  acclaimed  novelist,  spoke  here  last  week 
before  the  Matrix  Society  at  Its  banquet  at  the  Carolina  Inn.  Betts 
is  shown  speaking  to  Mary  Moore  Mason,  left,  during  the  course  of 
the  luncheon.  Joy  Brown,  president  of  the  Matrix  Society  is  shown 
behind  the  featured   speaker.      A    King-Sears    photo — Woody   Sears 


New  Magazine  Positions  Open 

Applicants   for    the   positions   of   at    the  Chi   Psi   Lodge   for  further 
editor  and  business  manager  of  the   information   and  pick  up  and  sub-j 
new  campua-  humor^  magazine  can    mit  applications  no  later  than  Wed- 
secure   applications    from    the    .sec     nesday. 

retary  in  the  student  governmenl  |     The  new  humor  magazine,  which 
office,  it  was  announced  yesterday,  j  will  replace  the  now  defunct  Tar- 

/Vnyone  interested  in  applying  nation,  is  a  quarterly  publication, 
for  these  positions  have  been  urg  '  which  will  function  under  the 
ed  to  contact  Charles  Huntington  au.-pices  of  the  Publications  Board. 


ueekend     editiwis.     The     Daily 

Tar   Heel   is  miable    to   present  ! 

the    full   reinew    oj    the   current  \ 

Playmaker      production     during  I 

the   1-uri    of    the    show.    A    fuller  j 

consideration     of    "Peer    Gynt"  i 

■uill  appear  Tuesday.)  : 

The    "Peer    Gynt"     on     view     at, 
tiu>  ^'''are^t    Theatre    is    a  .breath- : 
taking   .«ucces.s:    in    a    new    transla- 1 
tion    and    adaptation    by    Director 
Kai    Jurgenson,     Ibsen     has     been 
lifted     from     the     academic     stag- 
nancy   of   past   American   versions 
and  given  color  and  grandeur  and 
poetry. 

The  four  main  characters  arej 
beautifully  played.  Ken  Lowry  j 
plays  the  title  role  with  grace  and  I 
vitality,  and  almost  any  one  of' 
his  scenes  is  far  better  than  any- 
thing the  Playmakers  have  done , 
thi.s   year   up   to   now. 

A.«  th?  Button  Moulder.  Al  Gor- , 
don    is    wonderfully    sophisticated; 
and   sure   in   movement   and   voice. ! 
Beltina     Jinette.     playing     Peers 
mother,    is   convincingly   wretched, 
torn    between    love    for    her    son  { 
and  despair  at  his  life.     As     the  | 
temptress,    Amanda    Mciggs    casts  I 
a    spell:    she    is   grotesquely    .sens- j 
uous,    dancing    and    acting    boauti- ; 
fully   and    making   the    very    most 
out  of  a  very  nice  part. 

The     production     is     theatrical 
from   beginning   to  end.   and   good 


I  theatre  as  well.  Weather  per- 
j  mitting,  the  Forest  Theatre  is  the 
I  place  to  be  while  this  show  is 
running. 


GM'S  SLATE 


Sunday:  Young  Friends,  9:45- 
11  a.m.,  Grail  Room;  Quakers,  11 
a.m.-l  p.m.,  Orail  Room;  West- 
minister Fellowship,  9:30-10:45 
-«^^  Parker  Loui>9«  Nos.  \,  7j 
Con>m«mity  Church,  11  a.m.-I2 
p.m.,  Parker  Lounge  No.  1;  New- 
man Club,  7-8  p.m.,  Pmrker 
Lounge  Nos.  1,  2;  Presbyterian 
Church,  9:30-11  a.m.,  Parker 
Lounges  Nos.  2,  3;  Publications 
Board,  4:30-5:30  p.m.,  Parker 
Lounge  No.  3;  Symposium,  4-6 
p.m.,  Woodhouse  Room;  Student 
Party,  9-1 1  p.m.;  Woodhouse 
Room;  Presbyterian  Church, 
9:30-11,  Rendezvous  and  A. P.O. 
Room. 

Monday:  Board  of  Directors, 
4-6  p.m.,  Grail  Room;  Dance 
Committee,  7-8  p.m.,  Grail  Room; 
Grail,  Room:  Grail,  9-11  p.m., 
Grail  Room;  Student  Party,  7- 
8:30  p.m.,  Parker  Lounge  Nos. 
1,  2;  A. P.O.,  7-10:30  p.m.  Parker 
Lounge  No.  3;  Debate  Council, 
4-5  p.m.,  Woodhouse  Room;  Stu- 
dent Traffic  Committee,  b-11 
p.m.,  Woodhouse  Room  and 
Council  Room;  Sociology  Class 
179,  12-1  p.m.,  Rendezvous; 
A.P.O.,  7-10:30  p.m.,  A. P.O. 
Room. 


great  wins,  hut  his  top  perform- 
ance was  his  anchor  leg  for  the 
winning  mile  relay  team.  He  ran 
a  48.4  quarter  as  he  came  from 
behind  in  the  last  turn  to  take  the 
lead  from  Maryland. 

Maryland  was  not  threatened  at 
all  for  the  crown,  almost  doubling 
Carolina's  47*2  points.  Duke  was 
third  with  32*2.  South  Carolina 
had  24»2.  Virgnia  23*4.  C'.cmrfon 
had  13.  Slate  had  '-j.  and  Wake 
Forest  the  remainmg  .\CC  .school 
was  pointless. 

Their  was  only  one  new  record 
set  in  the  meet  yesterday.  Soutn 
Carolina's  Dick  Bartulski  set  a 
new  javelin  record  with  a  206  2' 
throw.  Running  records  wert  not 
feasible  wlh  two  inches  of  mud 
on  the  tiack.  .Marrland's  Burr 
Grimm  new  champion  in  the  mile 
and  2-mile  fell  that  the  conditi<m 
ot  the  track  made  four  .second,  dif- 
icrinre  in  hi.s  mile  lime  which  wa.s 
4:15.8. 

Jim  Beatt>-  running  in  his  last 
track  meet  as  a  represent ive  of 
Carolina  entered  the  2-mi;e  to  de- 
fend hi?  title,  but  a  injured  arch, 
which  had  made  it  doubtfull  if  he 
would  run  at  all  forced  him  fo 
drop  out  of  the  race  midway  in 
the  fourth  lap. 

Dukes  Dave  Sime  thought  of  by 
many  as  the  'worlds  fastest  hu- 
man." made  a  clean  sweep  in  the 
two  events  he  entered.  The  red- 
head pounded  through  the  mud  for 
a  96  100,  and  a  21.1  220. 

See  Track  Summaries  Page  4 


Notice 

The  Carolina  Playm'aker's 
Peer  Gynt  will  run  through  Mon 
day  night  as  a  result  of  a  post- 
ponment  due   to   rain   last  night 


1957  Activities  Announced 


New 
Need 


GMAB   President   Benny 
Of  Student  Support  In 


BenRy  gliomas,  rising  senior 
from  Jloryen,  N.  C  was  recent- 
ly namled  president  of  the  Grah- 
am Memorial  Board  of  Directors. 

Other  Graham  Memorial  Ac- 
tivities Board  executive  officers 
include  vice  -  presidents  Gerry 
Boudreau,  rising  senior  from 
Augusta.  S.  C;  Lloyd  Shaw,  ris- 
ing senior  from  Statesvillc,  N.C.; 
Mike  strong,  rising  senior  from 
Rhinebeck.  N.  Y.  Martha  For- 
tune, fitjtn  Brevard,  also  a  ris- 
ing senior,  VHll  serve  as  secre- 
tary of  GMAB. 

Thomas,  outstanding  in  camp- 
us activities,  is  a  memlber  of 
tfte  Grail,  Order  of  the  Old  Well. 
Campus  Orientation  Committee, 
Delta  Sigma  Pi.  He  is  also  a 
dormitory  manager  and  is  maj- 
oring in  accounting. 

The  purpose  of  GMAB   is  "to 


provide  entertainment,  recrea- 
tion and  service  for  the  entire 
student  body,"  Thomas  said.  As 
many  activities  as  possible  are 
planned  to  appeal  to  the  varied 
tastes  of  students. 

"If  every  student  cannot  find 
at  least  one  of  our  activities  in- 
teresting to  him,  then  we  have 
failed.  We  have  to  plan  and  car- 
ry out  as  many  different  activi- 
ties as  possible  in  order  to  in- 
terest every  student,"  Thomas 
stated. 

Thomas  commended  outgoing 
president^  Tom  Lambeth  and  his 
staff  in  their  past  year's  pro- 
gram. He  stated  that  he  planned 
to  continue  that  program  and 
expand  it. 

Plans  for  the  coming  year  in- 
clude: free  bridge  lessons;  free 
dance  le.sson's;  free  billiards  in- 


struction; talent  shows;  film  ser- 
vice; Petite  Dramatique;  various 
forums  with  the  faculty,  admin- 
istration, townspeople  and  stu- 
dents; free  weekend  combos  in 
the  Rendezvous  Room:  free 
dances  in  Cobb  Basement:  free 
juke  box  mu*ic  in  the  Rendez- 
vous Room;  receptions  in  Grah- 
am Memorial  and  on  the  lawn; 
conduction  of  various  polls;  pub- 
lication of  the  campus  calendar 
each  semester;  sponsoring  tourn- 
aments in  such  things  as  ping 
pong,  billiards,  bridge,  chess, 
checkers,  and  other  games;  the 
annual  Mardi  Gras;  plans  and 
production  of  Sound  and  Fury 
(maybe  twice  a  year);  Petite 
Musicales;  jazz  music;  musical 
programs;  free  flicks  and  many 
other  intere.sting  activities. 


Thomas  Explains 
Program  Success 


"Although  the  physical  facili 
tics  of  Graham  Memorial  are 
limited,  the  activities  which 
Graham  Memorial  Activities 
Board  can  sponsor  are  unlimit- 
ed,"  Thomas   said. 

"We  are  in  the  process  right 
now  of  selecting  committee 
chairmen  and  committee  mem 
ibers  for  the  forthcoming  year 
Applications  will  still  be  ac- 
cepted It  the  beginning  of  the 
fall   semester,''  he  further  said 

The  Graham  Memorial  Activi 
ties  Board  is  made  up  of  14  com 
mitties:  recreation,  film  servK*' 
and  drama,  forum,  dance,  publici 
ty  office;  receptions  and  decora- 
tions, polls,  calendar,  tourna- 
ment. Mardi  Gras.  Sound  and 
Fury,  music  and  free  films. 

As     the     university's     student 


union,  the  Graham  Memorial 
Activities  Board  is  one  of  the 
largest  student  organizations  on 
campus.  It  comes  in  contact  with 
every  student  on  campus,  ac- 
cording to  Thomas. 

"It  takes  a  large  number  of 
interested  students  to  do  the 
job  expected  of  us.  The  work  is 
most  rewarding  and  .self  satis- 
fying,"   Thomas   .said. 

"We  hope  to  get  a  new  stu- 
dent union  building  in  the  near 
future,  but  until  then.  Graham 
Memorial  will  be  utilized  to  its 
maximum,  and  I  encourage  each 
student  to  use  Graham  Memor- 
ial and  participate  in  its  activi- 
ties. 

"Remember-v-it  is  your  stu- 
dent union,"  Thomas  conclud- 
ed. 


1957-58  GM  Activities  Board 

Shown  above  are  the  new  members  of  the  Graham  Menvoriai  Activities  Board  for  1957-58.  They  ar«, 
left  to  right:  Benny  Thomas,  a  junior  from  Morven,  president;  Lloyd  Shew,  junior  from  Statesville; 
Mike  Strong,  junior  from  Rhinebeck,  N.  Y.;  and  Gerry  Boudreau,  junior  from  Augusts,  S.  C,  all  vice- 
presidents;   and   Martha   Fortune,    junior   from   Brevard,  secretary.        .\  King-Sears  ph-.'t<>^     \\ Otidy  Sear< 


^Act  rwo 


TMI  OAILT  fAl  HIIL 


iUl«5AY.  MAY  1),  m? 


iuNOAY, 


REVIEW: 

CAMPUS 


Editorial  Synopsis: 
People  And  The  Week 

I  lu-  Daily  lai  Heel  t onuiuiued  editorially  upon  these 
iNMicN.  ani<)n<>  others.  (Uiiin;;  tlie  past  week: 

(1)  I  hi  ■  taiuerous"  Middle  Fast  and  Jordanian  Kin<^ 
Husseins  h>i I inj>  «»l  nationalistic  Kj^Aptian  President  Nasser's 
jMi\\rr-"4rab  s<  heme. 

>'J)  (io\.  Hodges'  proposal  toi  ioutMin«4  the  states 
<ar|>otate  tax  NtiiKturt-  and  the  lesnltant  attraetioti  ot  in- 
dustiA  uhi(h  it  pKunises. 

(•{)  The  new  Progressive  Kra  which  the  inauouratioii 
of  \onni'.  cneri>etit  \\  illiani  liidax  as  Cionsolidated  rni\ers- 
it\   prt-Nidt-nt   promises  to  usher  in. 

(4)  I  he  pathetit.  ragged  moppet  of  the  (ampus— 
(>rahani  Mtinorial— and  the  administration's  ■negativism" 
toward  its  operation. 

(;,»  Student  autonomy  and  the  'Judas-kiss"  wliieh  the 
legislature  gave  it  fnfailing  to  \ote  upon  the  Long  Resolu- 
tion. 

•  •  • 

h   is  a  uni\eisall\  recognized  political  maxim  that: 

Half  the  word  jret'dom  is  it'sponsihUity. 

Ihus  siKiessttd  student  self-go\ernnient  is  completely 
de}Hndein  upon  the  willingness  of  student  leaders  to  as- 
sume- a  «  loak  of  respotrsihle  ac  ti<»n. 

Sue  l»  leaders  must  not  hesitate  when  tliey  aie  called  ujxm 
to  sjx-ak  lor  their  constituents.  \ct  they  should  not  prostitute 
all  their  comic  lions  and  capabilities  merely  to  retain  their 
ele«  tihilitv. 

Siudeiu  go\enuneni  at  the  I'niveisity  boasts  a  long  and 
pt«»ud  tradition.  Ihioughoui  the  years,  students  ha\e.  at 
ti.nes.  failed  ic*  lullill  obligations  inherient  with  the  right 
of  auiononious  opeiaiion:  but  they  have  consistently,  when 
tlu-  chips  were  down,  responded  bv  shouldering  their  just 
lesponsibilities.  1  heir  response  has  given  the  athninistra- 
ticMi  laith  in  the  iniegritv  of  students — tcj  the  poiiu  that 
ncuK-in<uiguratc-d  Ptcsident  Fridav  included  in  his  inaug- 
ina!  .ulcirrss: 

■  \\\-  nnist  (U\elop  the  great  training-ground  of  .self- 
g^fivernmcnt  Tn^'ifi't' "sliicfeiits/' 

Students  ha\e  proxen  thev  coidd  carry  the  ball,  and  the 
administration  has  passed  it  to  them. 

•  •  • 

Manv  colleges  and  unixersities  throughout  the  nation 
h.i\e  an  established  student  judiciary  wheiel)y  Honor  C'ode 
«»llendeis   max    be  disciplined  bv   the  stduents  themselves. 

But  few  institmions  allow  students  to  ap|)ropriate  and 
allcM'ate  stu<ieiu  fees  amouiuing  to  .Sioo.oOo-plus  j)er  year. 
Sue  h  is  the  ease  lieve  at  the  I'uiversity. 

This  |M)wer  of  the  purse  is  immeasuiable.  But  it  also 
puts  an  added  tremendous  amoinit  of  res|)onsibilitv  on  the 
-,o  student  legislators  who  are  charged  with  its  care  and  al- 
hnaiion. 

•  •  • 

I  he  executive  bianch  ol  student  government  also  has 
an  iiualc  ulaf)le  amount  of  |K)Wer.  Fh  chief  executive  is 
em|)owered  with  vast  ap|>ointive  jjowers,  veto  power  and 
general  administrative  diuv. 

•  '    •  • 

Thus  students  alreac^y  have  vast  autonomous  powers. 
They  cMily  have  to  exerc  ise  them. 

Thursciav  night's  Student  Legislature  sessicm  was  a 
mcH  keiv  of  a  great  self-govei  iiing  tiadition— a  tradition  whic  h 
has  furnished  three  |Tiesidents  h)r  the  National  Student 
AssiM  iation  in  its  scaiu  decide  of  existence. 

Lawmakers  were  called  upon  to  take  action  on  the 
cnntroversi.d  Long  Resolution  censuring  application  of  state 
parks  policv  which  excluded  a  I'niversily  student— Leroy 
Fi:isiei— fiom  the  I'mstead  Park  picnic  groimds  pinely  be- 
ta i>se  he  is  a  Negro. 

Instead  ol  deciding  |H)stively  or  negatively  on  the  meas- 
tue.  legislatois  were  loo  lily-liveied  to  take  action  at  all.  but 
dcHMUed  the  meastire  to  quiet  death  by  pigeon-holing  it  in 
Wavs  and  Means  (Committee. 

Fhis  is  a  blatant  denial  of  responsibility  which  wouhi 
make  past  student  leaders  sue  h  as  former  student  body  Pres- 
idein  r»ol)  ^'oung  ashamed  to  admit  they  were  even  con- 
nected with  such  a  gutless  group. 

Fhinking  studeius— proud  of  a  gteat  self-governing 
tradition — sincerely  liope  the  present  leg^islative  assembly 
will  redeem  itself  of  its  "gutless"  label. 

Lyes  will  be  cast  hopefully  at  the  lawmakers  when  they 
reconvene  next   fall  to  terminate  the  present  assembly. 

'I  here  is  onlv   room  lor  impiovement.  .      / 


Cfje  Mailp  f^r 


The  official  student  publication  of  the  Publications  Board  of  the 
I'niversity  of  North  Carolina,  where  it  is  published  daily  except  Mon 
day  and  examination  and  vacation  periods  and  summer  terms.  Entered 
as  second  class  matter  in  the  post  office  at  Chapel  HilL  N.  C,  uader 
the  act  of  March  8,  1870.  Subscription  rates:  Mailed.  $4  a  year.  $2.50 
per  semester;  delivered,  $6  a  year,  $3.50  a  semester. 


Editor 


NEIL  BASS 


Associate  ESditor  *. 


NANCY  HEX 


Managing  Editor 


BOB  MGH 


Sports  Editor 


BILL  KING 


News  Eklitor 


WALT  SCHRUNTEK 


Business  Manager 


._  JOHN  C.  WHITAKER 


PERSONALITIES  OF  THE  WEEK: 


TJf4|  (CAMPUS  WEEK: 


Miss  Julia  Ann  Crater,  Vivaciotrs,  C^able; 
Miss  Kit  Whitehurst,  Versatile,  Inekistrious 


\'ivacious  and  exceedingly  (apaf)le. 

Keenly  witiv  vet  sincere  and  devoted  to  campus,  ser- 
\i<e. 

A  lover  of  life  and  a  bright  leader  among  the  coed 
segment  of  the  campus. 

Outstanding  in  schofastics  and  ^xtra-ciirriAdar  gov- 
enm>ental  activities  both  at  Woman's  College  and  at  the 
I'niversitv. 

-Miss  Jidia  Aim  Crater,  newly-elected  chairman  oft»the 
Wcmien's  Residence  Coinuil — cfiief  reg^datory  organization 
among  women  studeius. 

¥  ¥  * 

Julia  .\nn  ran  unopjxised  for  c  h^irmanship  of  the  \VRC".. 

This,  in  itself,  attests  that  women 
students  put  complete  faith  in 
her   competence. 

A  leader  both  at  Woman's  Col- 
lege during  her  first  two  years 
of  higher  education  and  during 
her  first  year  here  at  the  Uni- 
versity. Julia  Ann  hails  from  the 
Capital   City— Raleigh. 


During  her  two  years  at  Wo- 
man's Colleg«.  Julia  Ann  served 
as  president  of  her  freshman 
class  and  as  student  government 
treasurer  during  her  sophomore 
year.  Athletic  as  well,  she  was 
a  member  of  the  WC  Swimming 
Club. 

Since  coming  to  the  Universi- 
ty Julia  Ann  has  this  list  of 
achievements: 

Membership  in  the  Student 
Legislature,  chairmanship  of 
that  body's  Rules  Committee, 
secretaryship  of  her  Delta  Delta 
Delta  pledge  class  and  secretar.v- 
ship  of  the  entire  sorority  for  the 
coming  academic  year,  member- 
ship on  the  Women's  Residence 
Council  and  now  chairmanship  of 
that   group. 

In  the  academic  field.  Julia 
Ann  will  marshall  at  this  year's 
graduation  ceremonies  and  has 
an  overall  "B"  average — no  mean 
accomplis.hment  in  light  of  her 
manv   extra-curricular    activities. 


The  Residence  Council  is  the 
legislative  body  among  women 
students.  Composed  of  presidents 
of  sorority  houses  and  women's 
dorms,  the  council  formulates  all 
coed  social  rules,  grants  late  per- 
mission, etc. 


A  synoptic  view  of  Jtflia  -\nn 
Crater  is: 

An  outstanding  and  respected 
leader  among  women  students, 
vivacious  with  a  deep-abiding 
love  for  life,  sincere  and  devoted 
to  service  for  the  entire  campus, 
athletic  yet  a  superior  student, 
capable  possessor  of  many  re- 
sponsibilities yet  reliable  and 
diligent. 

^  leader  in  every  respect. 
Well-liked    by   her  fellow   stu- 
dents. 

Miss  Julia  Ann  Crater. 


MISS  JULIA  ANN   CRATER 
.  .   ,  chairs  WRC 


THE  STATE'S  WEEK: 


Driver  Training 
And  Mosquitb§§ 


Everything  from  mosquitoes  to 
driver  training  crept  into  the 
state  news  this  week,  climaxed 
by  the  inauguration  of  the  na- 
tion's youngest  university  presi- 
dent, William  Friday. 

The  General  Assembly,  as  in 
weeks  past,  accountecl  for  most 
of  the  other  outstanding  news 
throughout  Tar  Heelia. 

Legislation  providing  driver 
training  in  all  the  State's  high 
schools  survived  a  crucial  test 
in  the  Senate  Thursday.  Ap- 
proved 40-3  on  the  second  read- 
ing, the  bill  moved  to  within  one 
step  of  becoming  law  after  crit- 
ics of  the  measure  almost  suc- 
ceeded in  dragging  it  back  to 
committee  for  a  few  amend- 
ments. 

In  other  legislative  matters  the 
lawmakers  continued  the  con- 
troversary  over  the  extension  of 
Charlotte's  city  limits  and  pro- 
posed a  bill  to  decide  whether 
a  convention  will  be  called  to 
draft    a    new    state    constitution. 

If  the  bill  is  approved.  Tar 
Heel  citizens  would  decide  in 
the  1958  general  election  wheth- 
er to  call  a  convention.  If  the 
people  favored  calling  the  con- 
vention they  would  elect  100 
delegates — one  from  each  coun- 
ty, to  draft  a  constitution. 


Devoted   to  better  self-government  and   self-discipline. 

Efficient   and   industrious. 

Outstanding  chief  of  the  judiciary  organization  among 
women  students. 

Clomhination  stholar  and  golf  enthusiast. 

Future  math  teacher  of  unimpeachable  integrity. 

T^iiss  Kit  Whitehurst.  newly-elected  chairman  of  the 
Women's  Honor  Council.  , 

•  •  W 

Kit  has  proven  outstanding  at  both  institutions  of 
higher  education  which  she  has  attended— Hollins  College 
and  the  I'niversity. 

During    her    two-year   educational    sojourn   at   HoUins, 

Kit  was  on  the  Dean's  Academic 
List  for  three  semesters,  a  miem- 
ber  of  the  Campus  Guide  Com-' 
mittee  and  a  leader  in  the  orien- 
tation program. 

ftince  comiag  to  the  Univers- 
ity last  fall,  she  has  been  active 
in  the  Young  Women's  Christian 
AsscKiation,  in  her  sorority — Pi 
Beta  Phi — and  in  the  women's 
judiciary  branch,  which  she  en- 
tered through  election  to  a  seat 
last  fall. 

*  •  '• 


Kit.  who  hailf  from  the  Old 
Dominion  (Virginia),-  is  charged 
with  governing  over  an  organiza- 
tion with  the  following  juris- 
diction, enumerated  in  the  Stu- 
dent Constitution: 

'•The  Women's  Council  shall 
have  original  jurisdiction  in  all 
cases  of  violation  by  women  of 
the  Campus  Code,  Honor  Code, 
and  all  rules  except  those  cases 
properly  under  the  jurisdiction 
of  the  Student  Council,  Hgust 
Councils,  and  Dance  Committee. 
It  shall  hear  appeals  from  House 
Council   decisions." 

Thus  the  young  lady  will  ap- 
parently have  her  hands  full 
throughout  the  1957-38  academic 
year. 

•  •  • 

According  to  those  who  know 
her.  Kit  is  as  effective  on  the 
links  as  she  is  pounding  the 
gavel  at  council  meetings.  As  a 
golfer,  she  reportedly  holds  her 
own  with  the  best  coed  linksters 
on  campus.  Apt  demonstration, 
it  may  be  concluded,  that  Kit 
is  versatility  unlimited. 


MISS    KIT   WHITEHURST 

.  .  heads  Women's  Council 


• 

111  Abnar 


Concerning  outdoor  matters 
the  Senate  Wildlife  Resources 
Committe  gave  unanimous  ap- 
proval to  a  House-passed  bill 
whkh  would  add  $1  to  the  cost 
>of  hunting  and  fishing  licenses, 
increasing  the  fishing  fee  from 
$3.10  to  $4.10  and  the  hunting 
feet  from  $3.10  to  S4.10. 

And  while  on  the  outdoor  mat- 
ters the  lawmakers  went  to  war 
with  the  troublesome  salt  maroifa 
mosquito  in  the  form  of  three 
bills — one  continuing  the  Salt 
Marsh  Mosquito  Study  Commiss- 
ion, another  following  up  the 
recommendations  which  were  the 
fruit  of  two  .years  work,'  while 
the  third  permits  the  establish- 
ment of  local  mosquito  control 
districts,  if  they  become  necess- 
ary. 

•  •  • 

.\  few  short  hours  before  the 
inauguration  of  President  Fri- 
day in  Raleigh  on  Wednesday, 
death  claimed  a  prominent  East- 
ern North  Carolina  newspaper- 
man and  political  figure,  Rep.  J. 
Roy  Parker  Sr.,  professor  emerit- 
tus  of  the  School  of  Journalism 
here  at  Carolina. 

Stricken  Monday  morning,  the 
6i-year-old  publisher  of  four 
weekly  newspapers  and  state  rep- 
resentative from  Hertford  Coun- 


A  resume  of  attributes  sur- 
rounding Kit  might  read: 

Unselfish  leader  who  subordi- 
nates forwarding  her  own  cause 
to  service  for  the  campus,  a  versa- 
tile young  lady  of  impeccable 
character  and  integrity,  outstand- 
ing yet  with  humility. 

The  University  has  just  reason 
to  boast  of  such  an  outstanding 
member  of  the  current  student 
generation. 

Miss  Kit  Whitehurst.         .    '^.. 


ty,  succumbed  to  a  heart  ailment 
Wednesday  in  the  Roanoke- 
Chowan  Hospital  in  Ahoskie. 

•  ir,  _' , '  .0 

■Portraits  of  former  Governors 
O.  Max  Gardner  and  Clyde  fe. 
Hoey  will  be  presented  to  the 
state  at  a  joint  session  of  the 
General  Assembly  on  May  23. 


jrw'r 


•y  Ai  Capp 


^rtati^uration.  Jazz 
Afid  A  Reversal 

The  l^njversity  qI  No^th  Carolina  entered  into  a  new 
progressive  phase  last  week  when  William  C.  Friday  was  m- 
augurated  president  of  the  Con.soh'dated  l^jj^versity. 

Student  government  at  the  University,  entered  a  new 
phase  also  when  it  chose  to  circumscribe .  an  opportunity 
to  speak  out  forcefully  and  in  a  positive  manner  against 
segregation.  ,,^,,  •.,,,.         .4*, 

On  the  one  hand,  the  Xlnivefsity  readied  itself  for  an 
era  of  forceful,  liberal  aiiminijitration,  w^hile  on  the  other 
student  government  siiffered  what  some  have  termed  its 
worst  reversal  on  the  segregation  issue  in  10  years. 

Triie  inauguration  of  Presuieht  Friday  in  Raleigh  Wed- 
nesday served  to  highlight  aii 'industrious  career  of  service 
arid  ;ulministration  to  the  ttniversity.^. 

Impressive  ceremonies  featuring  outstanding  figures  of 
the  state  and  country  Joined  an  audience  estimated  at 
8,000  to  take  part  in  the  tbrraal  t^cognition  of  Williain  Fri- 
day as  leader  and  administiator  of  the  tliree-fold  university. 
;,  Governor  Hodges  presided  over  the  program.  Dr.  Frank 
Graham,  himself  ah  cfx-^resi'dent  of  the  University  and 
currently  a  U.N.  mediator  was  among  the  first  to  officially 
welcome  Friday  to  the  rolls  of  leadership. 

Gordon  Gray,  'another  ex-president  and  current  Di- 
rector of  the  I ^  "S.  office  hf  Defense  Mobilization,  in  his 
words  of  welcoihe  described  the  new  J)resident  as  a.^ian 
of  "deep  moral  conviction,  unimpeachable  integriry  .  .^and 
capacity  for  growth." 

Hundreds  of  outstanding  administrators,  facility  Mem- 
bers and  state  an<j  national  figuies  were  on  hand  to  add 
further  prestige  and  significance  to  the  ceremonie*.  .i   ' 

In  his  acceptance.  President  Friday  .  reaffirmi^a  his 
uitentions  to  fulfill  the  capacities  of  hb  office;  to  ^-train 
vouth  for  the  most  loyal  and  enlightened  citizenshTp>  "and 
to  develop  and  strengthen  the  great  training  ground  of 
self-government  by  students.  -i  -. 

Thursday  evening,  student  govertiment  was  presented 
with  a  definite  opjjortunity  to  demonstrate  its  capacity  for 
•  leadership  to  prove  its  worth  as  a  training  groiir>d  for  self- 
government. 

Thursday  evening,  the  Long  resolution  censuring  the 
policy  of  Umstead  Park,  recently  in  ousting  a  Negro  student 
of  the  University  from  the  state  park  grounds,  was  doomed 
to  an  unobstrusive  death  in  committee.  -    ^ 

The  student  legislature  rcapitidated,  however,  and  in 
a  watered-down  version,  offered  and  p»assed  an  amending 
resolution  to  the  original  censure  movement. 

Student  Legislators  pas.sed  a  resolution  instead  ex- 
pressing "deep  regret  to  both  the  Cosmopolitan  Club  and 
its  guest,    Ixroy   Frasier." 

Student  Body  Presid^it  Sonny  Evans  on  Friday  is«ued 
a  statement  reflecting  his  conc-urrence  ^vith  the  action  taken 
by  the  legislature.  ^ 

He  posed  a  question  as  to  "whether  or  no^Kitident 
government  should  involve  itself  in  censuring  our  Siaug-.r^r^** 
Legislature  in  a  debatable  question,"  and  added  that  "any 
people  who  think  deeply  about  the  far-reaching  implica- 
tios  of  official  censure  by  student  government  would  agree 
with  the  Legislature's  decision." 

All   was  not  grave  apd   ceremonious  during   tlie  past 
Aveek  however.  At  the  outset,  the  UNC  campus  primped  for 
the  annual   Parents'   Day  celebration,   which   would  J»ring        » 
hundreds  of  visitors  to  the  campus. 

And  hiJndreds  of  curious  parents  did  come  to  grander 
the  red-bric^k  walks,  to  visit  the  Well-kiiown  and  tradition- 
laden  buildings  aiid  sites  around  campiis,  and  to  hold  pic- 
nics on  the  green,  tree-lined  expanses  known  as  Caixjlina. 

A  day  of  scheduled  activities,  culminated  by  a  facility- 
administration  reception  and  a  concert-on-the-lawn  \^  set 
aside  for  visiting  guests  and  parents.  The  day  ended  se- 
renely and  visitors  retired  from  the  campus  imtil  next 
Parent's  Day  at  UNC.  . 

Tuesday,  Rev.  A.  L.  Kershaw,  famed  contestant  cfri  the 
$64,000  Question,  spoke  before  several  hundred  Y-Ni.ght 
observors  at  the  outdoor  picnic  imder  Davie  Poplar,  which 
featured  food,  religion  and  jazz. 

Rev.  Kershaw  told  his  audience  that  a  relatioii$hip 
does  exist  between  religion  and  jazz;  that  the  blues  and 
pop  songs  give  j^eople  a  true  meaning  of  life. 

Friday  evening,  "Peer  Gynt"  opened  in  picturesque 
Forest ,  Theater  for  the  first  of  three  scheduled  p«iorin- 
ances.  Presehted  by  the  Playmakers  and  directed  by  Prof. 
Kai  Jurgenson,  the  play  opened  its  three-day  stand  looking 
forward  to  a  successful  and  promising  series  of  p>erform- 
ances,  *    - 

THE  WORLD'S  WEEK: 


#fi 


i 


BATHERS  FLEE 
FROM  INCREDIBLE 
LIZARD  OF  OOZE 


Hundreds  of  horrified  bather? 
Fled  in  panic. when.fbom  the 
sUme  of  LaKe  Eeriejrose  a 


THEW    V 
MERELV  ^^ 
FRIGHTENS 
CHILLUM 
WHUT  DOMT 
BEELIZE 
THAR  IS  NO 
SUCH  THINGS.* 


SOm 


A/y„  sPiroR's  i)FFK:ei  —-1 


Pogo 


ByW«ltK«lly 


tlwi  plan  ^Icalin^  rt  fivrni  u^.. 


Advertising  Manager 
Night  Editor 


FRED  KATAIN 


Vk  could  (fuMrl  th«ij» 
cpoc^ned.  pland  by  fnu 
in^  in  ihe  hole  «>Jv^  <-* 


mli5hkat<-h0,ho,  a6  vou  say. 

i^,WO,'fNP»P-ANC?  IT  VyOULP 

Oii9irzMMi0  tf  f ,  pur  ~j 


Woody  Sears 


Post  Offtce,  Husseiri 
And  A  First  Grader 

Postmaster  General  Siunmerfield  again  made  the  news 
this  week  as  he  told  Coiigress  Wednesday  that  the  Post  Of- 
fice Dept.  will  again  order  cuts  in  postal  service,  effective 
'July  I,  unless  the  lawmakers  vote  him  an  extra  70  to  90  mil- 
.  lion  dollars  for  fiscal  1958. 

.,  A  brooding  quiet  settled  over  the  Middle  East  after 
Young  King  Hussein  won  his  fight  to  keep  his  throne  and 
thus  helped  keep  the  lid  on  a  situation  which  could  spill 
over  into  a  dangerous  local  war.  .\lthough  the  quiet  is 
teiUporary,  the  Middle  Fast  problem  has  eased  iAcS^the 
background  for  the  time-being  even  thciugh  the  impxii*!  Jnce 
of  the  hsue  has  not  faded. 

Russia  wariied  West  Geriuany  again  that  the  afrtiing 
of  its  Budeswchr  with  atdmic  weapons  would  have  "grave 
c  onscqiiences."  "W^est  German  Chaiicellor  Xonrad  .\4fn- 
auer'readed  angrily  to  the  first  note  sent  him  whicM  said 
^Vest  Germany  woiild  become  a  "virtual  graxeyard  '  if  artned 
with  atomic  weapons. 

The  four- year  dictatorship  of  Gen.  Gustavo  Rojas 
Pinilla  collapsed  this  past  week  on  tlie  rocks  of  his  greed 
for  new  f>ower.  The  government's  fall  brou^t  bkxxiihed 
to  the  capitol  in  Bogota,  Colombia.  Rojas  turned  the  irins 
of  the  government  over  to  a  five-man  military  board  and 
it  is  rumored  that  he  fled  the  courttry  by  plane. 

ANN  ARBOR— A  first  grader  explained  to  his  mother 
how  his  class  routed  the  eneiriy  in  organized  warfare  with 
another  class.  "\Ve  talked  the  girls  in  our  roota  intd  kiss- 
ing the  boys  in  the  other  army. " 


Gray    Mer 

an»ounc?d] 
to  be  bdcil 
iitfll  at  8 

The  jui 
tre  covet* 
sented  w-itl 
the  prcspnj 
lowing  th?| 
in  her  hor 
Faculty  L 
ium 

Given  a^ 
chapter  of 
in  m*Tuor>| 
an  Jlurnna 
to  the  idt'j 
fied  The 
is  made  od 
ship.    Ieade| 

Making 
the   fourth  I 
William 
Pre.sid«'Ot 
I'niversily 
program 
Carmichac  •] 
will   speak 
the  award 
the  reripied 


To  Whoi 


M< 


THI 

MS 

Op 


II  \H7 


SUNDAY.  MAY^1J,.1*57        • 


THt   DAILY  TAR   HEEL 


^-a^  in- 

i  new 
nunity 
icjainsi 

lot  im 

oihcr 
ird   iu 

Wcd- 
r\icc 


no  of 
'ed  at 
m  Frj- 
frsiiy. 
Frank 
and 
it  ta!l> 

It    Di- 

in   his 

-*  and 

mem- 
o  add 


his 
-train 

nd   nC 


ntcd 

tor 

1  self. 

is»  the 
udent 
>omed 

nd  in 
i>ding 

I     CK. 

>  and 

i^iied 
taken 

liient 


any 
ipiica> 
a«ree 

p  -past 
-d  for 

>rins; 


dcr 
:!  ion- 
Id  pic- 
Txilina. 
actih>- 
set 
led  ie- 
1    next 

an  the 
-Ni»fu 
u'hich 

anship 
e>   and 

iresquc 
ftorni- 
l>rot. 
ookin<> 
rlorm- 


new^ 
Of 
fciivc 
o  mil- 


attcr 
r  and 
i  spill 
liet  i» 
the 
nJtwe 

tmiinj; 
Srave 

h  uid 
aimed 

Kojas 

^leed 

cxMied 

r  ^ins 

d  and 

not  her 
e  with 
o  kisih 


Announcement 
Of  Gra' 


Winner  of  ihe  JOSI  Jane  Craige 
(;ray  Memorial  Award  will  be 
announced  tonight  |t  a  ceremony 
I .  be  held  in  Morehead  PlatetA- 
aim  at  8.  *  "        "  " 

The  junior  coed  recipient  of 
tre  coveted  fiward  will  be  pre- 
sented with  a  silver  card  tray  at 
ihe  presentation.  Immediately  fol- 
lowing the  ceremony,  a  reception 
.n  her  honor  will  be  held  in  the 
Faculty  Lounge  of  the  Planetar- 
um. 

Given  annually  by  Beta  Chi 
chapter  of  Kappa  Delta  sorority 
m  memory  of  Mrs.  Gordon  Gray,  I 
.in  alumna,  the  award  is  a  tribute 
:o  the  ideals  which  she  exempli- 
lied.  The  selection  of  the  winner 
;s  made  on  the  basis  of  scholar- 
ship,  leadership,   and   character. 

Making  the  presentation  f  o  r 
the  foiurth  annual  award  will  be 
William  D.  Carmichael,  Vice- 
President  and  Controller  of  the 
University.  Ah6  included  on  the 
proiiram  will  be 'Miss  Katherine 
c  armichael.  D^an  of  Women,  who 
will  speak  on  the  significance  ©f 
the  award  and  the  basis  on  which 
the  recipient  is;  selected. 


To  Whom  It  May  Concern 

HAPPY 
MOTHER^ 


I>AY 


THE  INTIMATE 
BOOKSHOP 

3^  E'St^FcaRklin  St. 


Chinese  diHb 
Presents  Show 

j      The  Chinese  Student   Club  will 
I  present    a  *  special    matinee    show 
;  in  the  Carolina  Theater  at  lO'a.m. 
tomorrow,   it   was  announced  yes- 
terday, ^^    .      :  /  ■-•  .i- 

Included  in  the  program  will 
be  films  depicting  "United  Activi- 
ties of  Colleges  Students  in  For- 
mosta,"  "Double  Ten  in  Republic 
of  China,"  and  "Popular  Celebra- 
tion  of    Chiang's   Birthday." 

A  recently  formed  organization 
on  campus,  the  Chinese  Student 
Club  attempts  to  promote  interest 
in  current  and  concurrent  world, 
affairs.  • 


m 


idc 


PAVt  TNini 


le 


(Continued  from  page   1) 
1940. 

.  From  194446  Dean  *Mackie  w^s 
Dean  of  Men  and  from  1946-48 
Dean  of  Student  Affairs.  Since 
1948  he  "has  been  Dean  of  Stu- 
dent Awards. 

Presently  Dr.  Mackie  is  treas- 
urer of  Phi  Kappa  Delta  house 
organization  and  a  Purple  Legion- 
naire in  his  fraternity. 


PHARMACY  AWARDS 

Pharmacy  Awards  Night  will  be 
held  at  8  p.m.  tomorrow  in  the  au- 
ditorium of  the  School  of  Phar- 
macy, it  was  announced  recently. 
The  student  winnei^  of  special 
awards  for  pharmacy  students  will 


be    announced  and    presented   by 
Dean  E.  A.  Brecht. 

The  Award  Night  program  will 
be  held  with  the  last  meeting  of 
the  Student  Branches  of  the  North 
Carolina  Pharmaceutical  Assoc, 
and  the  American  Pharmaceutical 
Assoc,  for  the  school  year. 


SERVE  YOURSELF— 


FACULTY  CLUB 

Dr.  Isaac  Taylor,  of  the  School 
of  Medicine,  will  speak  on  "Ant-  i 
arctic    Experiences,"     at     1     p.m.  | 
Tuesday    at    the    Carolina    Inn,    it ) 
was  announced  yesterd^. 


EVERY  SUNDAY 

5:30-7:30  P.M. 


At  Th« 


RANCH   HOUSE 

HOME  OF  CHOICE  HICKORY-SMOKED  CHARCOAL  BROILED  STEAKS 


^'tr^fc.j'.'! 


M// 


TkU  u  urtut  •  CMccptiM  of  dMractan  m  filai  VMr»ioa  of  "Oorfipws  R«x."  Tho  lewerinc  fifuro  U  tko 
traclc  Innc  of  tho  tiUo,  pUyo4  fcy  DookIm  Cuopb*!!.  At  oxtromo  rifht  u  Croon,  bretKor-iB-Uw  of  tko 
laug.  Bolow  h«  U  Tiroaioa,  (bo  bKod  pro^ot.  lo  eontor  i«  Qu««o  Joeatta.  At  Uft  tho  ahopkord  io 
kanariod  by  tho  dork  clookod  firuros  U  proTO  King  Oodipaa  oakoewiofly  kilUd  kit  fatbor  aad 

Morriod  ki»  oiotkor. 


IICNAI*  ZUIil. 

laeiT  «. 


Saher  Labor 


•ICN1I0  riMT. 

>«■  jotf  iTATi  eoiLtai 


Covering  The  Campus 


PHARMACY  MEETING 

All  pharmacy  students-  are  ex- 
pected to  attend  a  special  meeting 
at  the  School  fo  Pharmacy  Wed- 
nesday at  7:30  p.m.,  it  was  an- 
nounced yesterday.  Mrs.  H.  C.  Mc- 
Allister, Sec.  of  the  North  Caro- 
lina Board  of  Pharmacy,  will  ex- 
plain the  requirements  and  the 
procedure  tar  obtaining  pharma- 
ceutical experience  during  the 
summer.  I 

The  announcement  further  stat-l 
ed  that  12  months  of  official  drug 
store  experience  is  required  in  ad-  j 
dition  to  the  degree  of  Bachelor ; 
of  Science  in  Pharmacy  for  elegi-  ■ 
bility  for  the  Board  examinations  , 
to  obtain  licensure  as  a  pharma- ! 
cist.  .  I 

DEDICATION  SERVICE  I 

Rev.  Richard  L.  Jackson  will  give  ' 
an  address  at  4  p.m.  today  at  de-  j 
dication  services  for  the  new  par-  i 
ish  house  of  the  United  Congre- 1 
gational  Church,  located  at  211 
West  Cameron  Ave.  | 

The    buildng    includes    a    large,  | 
central  fellowship  hall,  a  bank  of ! 
five    calssroom     areas,    a    church 
parlor  and  a  modern  kitchen.  Each 
room  harf  an  outside  entrance. 

Rev.  B.  J.  Howard,  who  was  pa^i- 
tor  of  the  church  for  14  years  will 
also  participate  in  the  dedication 
services.  Rev.  Harvey  L.  Cames< 
pjc^sent  pastor,  has  extended  an 
"Open  House"  invitation  to  all  per- 
.sons  in  the  Carrboro-Chapel  Hill 
community. 

WAA   PICNIC 

% 

The   annual   W.A.A.    picnic  will 

be  held  Tuesday  at  5:30. p.m.  at 
the  outdoor  pool  near  Woollen 
Gym,  it  was  announced  recently. 
Ed  Crow's  band  will  entertain  and 


awards  will  be  preseptqd^  after 
super. 

Awards  will  include:  sorority  and 
dormitory  cups,  plaques  for  inti"a- 
mural  winners*,  individual  mono- 
grams and  stars,  and  outstanding 
representative  and  senior  awards. 

Following  the  picnic,  the  Splash 
Club  will  present  its  annual  water 
pageant.  The  entire  student  body 
has  been  invited  to  attend  the 
show  whicVTWs'gThs-AtMl't>  AV''      ' 


WHEN  THE  FISHING'S  FINE,  the  gent  in  our  Stickler  spends 
all  day  in  a  dory.  He'll  take  along  tons  of  tackle  and  buckets 
of  bait— but  if  he  forgets  his  Luckies,  watch  out!  By  the  time 
he  gets  to  port,  he'll  be  a  mighty  Cranky  Yankee!  You  see, 
you  just  can't  beat  a  Lucky  for  taste.  A  Lucky  is  all  cigarette 
. .  .  nothing  but  fine  tobacco — mild,  good-tasting  tobacco 
that's  TOASTED  to  taste  even  better.  So  why  fish  around? 
Try  Luckies  right  now.  You'll  say  they're  the  best-tasting 
cigarette  you  ever  smoked! 


WHArS  AN  ATTHACriVe  WOIK  OF  AtTI 


JUD  PRiirNC*. 
II.  or  COLOKAOO 


Fetching  Etching 


WHAT  IS  A  WOODEN  MQCat 


OoJken  Token 


•CTTT  nttURty 


iJM 


'^^^' 


WFtL'BUY  ALL 
YOUR  bio  BOOKS 

•  Live  Texts 

We  piy  top  prices  for  texts 
that  will  be  usedL:'tgain  at 
U.N.C.  '  1p-  ■ 

•  Dropped  Texts 

We'll  search  the  market  for 
a  spot  to  salvage  some  of 
your  los:;  when  a  text  is 
dropped, 

•  Enjoyable  Books 

We  can  use .  hcffiks  you  no 
longer  want  oa.  your  shelves. 
The  next  fellow  that  comes 
along  may  find  AenV  as  de- 
"  lightful  as  you  did  a  year  or 
so  ago. 

When  Exams  Are  Over, 

There'll  Be  Gree^  Money 

Fbr  YbO  At 

THE  JNTUVIATI 
BOOKSHOP)5^ 

aOS  Ea»t  Franklin  St. 


STUDENTS 


»1 


A  Week 
Nothing  Down 

Buys  The  Finest 
The  REMINGTON 
QUIET-RITER 

The  Finest  Typewriter 
Money  Can  Buy. 

LEDBETTER- 
Pf  CKAto 


WHAT  IS  AN  ANGRY   HSHt 


Snarlin'  Marlin 


WHATS  A  MAN  WHO  STEALS 
•Atr  aOTHESt 


Diaper  Swiper 


itmit  wiooLt. 
U.  OF  c»Liro*iii* 


WHAT  IS  A  PAST  SEARCH? 


Brisk  Fri$k 


Dflll    IIU««LC>,  j*. 
U.  99  ALAIAHA 


WHAT  ARE 

veA 

1 

SMAU  JOINTS  f 

f 

jA 

Bom'  Kneeo 

acOKIA  TKH. 

TIME'S  RUNNING  OUT!  We're  still  shelling  out 

$25  for  every  Stickler  we  accept — and  we're  still 

accepting  plenty!  But  time  is  getting  short — so 

start  Stickling  now'.  Sticklers  are  simple  riddles 

with  two- word  rhyming  answers.  Both 

words  must  have  the  hhiiu-  number  <y{ 

syllables.  Send  your  St ickiers,  with  your 

name,   address,   college,    and    clas.s,    to 

Ha)}py> Joe-Lucky,    Box    67 A,    Afount 

Vernon,  N.  Y.  And  send  'em  sfxtn! 


Luckies 
Taste 

Better 


•'IT'S  TOASTED"  TO  TASTE   BETTER  .  .  . 

CLEANER,  FRESHER,  SMOOTHER! 


©A.  T.  Co.        Product  oj  (JAe  i.^niiA<£an  {J(}v<iaeo-<xmuxa7tu^  —  Uwxueeo-  is  our  middle  name 


IF  YOU  YEARN  FOR 
WORLD-WIDE  TRAVEL... 
and  are  capable  of  executive 
responsibility... the  U.S. ; 
Air  F6rce  has  a 
chailengjing  and  rewarding' 
job  for  you 


U.S. 


Ttiere  are  few  other  jobs  open  to  you  as  a  woffiito  of  «cecuttve  abibfy 
that  offCT  the  opportunity  for  responsibility,  job  equality,  worldwide 
travel  and  adventure,  than  as  an  officer  in  the  U.  S.  Air  Force.  Now,  for 
the  first  time  in  years,  the  Air  Force  oflFers  direct  oomtmssions  to  those 
who  can  qualify.  If  you  make  the  grade, -you  will  embark  on  a  <au-eer 
that  fits  in  ideally  with  your  talents.  YouTl  have  a.  diance  to  serve 
yourself  while  you  serve  your  coimtry  well.  Investigate  your  chanoef 
for  a  direct  commission  in  Ae  U.S.  Air  Force  today. 


MAIL  THE    cduPON    NOW    FOR    FULL    INFORMATION    ON 
YOUR    OPPORTUNITIES    FOR    A    DIRECT    COMMISSION. 


iVAF,  P.O.  Box  2200,  Wright-PattersoR  AFB,  Ohio  \^    -^^  ^  ,  »*f.M.«. 

neaac  send  me  more  information  on  my  oppottiudbes  for  a  DIRECT  COMMISSION 
as  a  WAF  officer  in  the  U,  S.  Air  Force. 


AIR 


ADDRBSS- 

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rAtI  MU« 


\ 


THI  DAILY  ^TAAHtlL 


SUNDAY,  MAY  12,  1957 


ANNOUNCEMENT  BY 

Illinois  College  of 
OPTOMETRY 

Applications  for  admiaaioa  to 
dssses  beginning  September  9, 
1957    are    now    being   receivecL 

Three  year  course 

of  professional  study 

Leading  to  the  Degree  of 

Doctor  of  Optometry 

Requirements  for  Entrance: 
Two  year«  (60  semester  hour*  or 
eqnivalent  quarter  hrs.)  in  spe- 
cified liberal  arts  and  sciences. 

WRTTE  FOR  BULLETDf 
TO:  REGISTRAR 

ILLINOIS   COLLEGE 

of  OPTOMETRY 

3241  So.  ICcbigu  Ava. 

Tecfanotogy  Cestar,  Caitcage  IC.  OL 


Deacon  ^ol!fers  Sweep  ACC  Tourney 


Baseball  And 
Tennis  Called 

The  rain  which  fell  in  this  area 
yesterday  forced  a  postponement 
of  the  Carolina-State  baseball  game 
and  the  Atlantic  Coast  Confer- 
ence tennis  finals  in  Durham. 

The  all-important  baseball  game 
between  the  second-place  Tar 
Heels  and  the  Wolfpack  will  be 
played,  weather  permitting,  in 
Emerson  Stadium  here  tomorrow 
afternoon  at  3:30. 


'Gerrinci  Is  Top  Man; 
Tar  Hei^ls  In  Second 

WINSTON-SALEM,  N.Ci.  (AP)— |ning  total  last  year.  And  Gerring's 


The  tennis  tournament  ,which 
has  been  dominated  by  Duke  and 
Maryland,  is  also  scheduled  ior 
tomorrow. 


^ji|j^ 
^i& 


Milton's 
Graduation  Give-A-Way 

Gala  give-away  to  show  our  appreciation  for 

your  continued  confidence  and  patronage. 
Entire  stock  nationally  advertised  baby  cord  and 
pin  check  wrinkle-shed  cotton  suits  reduced 
from  $28.75  to  $18.99 
Our  wash'n  wear  nationally  advertised  suits  in 
blend  of  65%  dacron/35%  cotton,  reduced 
from  $47.50  to  $34.99 
Imported  burlap  sport  jackets  reduced 
from  $29.95  to  $18.99 
Dan  River  baby  cord  ivy  trousers,  regularly 
$5.95,  1  pr.  $4.00,  2  pairs  for  $7.50 
Khaki  trousers  in  black,  olive,  and  khaki;  cotton 
baby  cord  trousers  in  blue,  tan,  and  gray— 

regularly  $4.95;  1  pair  $3.75, 

f  2  pairs  $7.00 

Large  group  bermuda  shorts.  Including  our 

$1 1.95  made  in  England  imported  India 

Madras  —  at  half  price 

Pant  heaven  —  take  your  pick  of  any  dacron/ 

cotton  trouser;  we  carry  cords  or  poplint- 

Regularly  to  $12.95— give-a-way  price 

-  $9.99 

Three  lots  of  trousers— chocolate  brown;  oxford 

brown;  black/brown  or  navy— thf  1st  dacron/ 

wool— the  last  two— all  wool  tropicals— your 

choice  at  half  price* 

1  i  give-a-way  on  our  in>ported  from  Holland 

Tweka  polo  shirts— buy  one  for  $3.95,  get 

second  one  for  1  i 

Belts— challis  wool  elastics— values  to  $3.00 

give-a-way  price  —  $.79 

All  Bermuda  Hose  —  Half  Price 

Long  sleeve  batiste  ivy  button-down  shirts  —  | 

regularly  $4.50,  T  for  $3.50 -or  3  for  $10.00 

Large  group  of  our  regular  long  sleeve  ivy  sport 

shirts  in  sleeve  lengths  —  regularly  $5.95  and 

$6.95  -  $2.00  off 
Don't  put  off  .mother  single  day  getting  your 
dress  or  casual  shoes— you'll  never  get  a  better 
opportunity  — 

Entire   stock  of  our  rubber  soled  genuine 
shell  cordovan  shoes  —  regularly  $20.00  — 
take  your  pick  in  all  sizes  at  $10.99. 
Entire  stock  leather  soled  wing-tips  —  regularly 

$20.00  -  Now  $13.99 
Our  handsewn  loafers— guaranteed  against  rip- 
ping til  they  are  resdied— very  soft  and  good- 
looking— rich  mahogany  or  black— regular- 
ly $11.95  —  give-a-way  price  —  $8.99 
Entire  stock  white  buck  shoes,  regularly 
$14.95  -  now  $9.99 
OTHER  INTERESTING  ITEMS  TO  BE  ADDED  DAILY 

Lady  Milton  Shop 
Offers  The  Following  Give-A-Ways 
Entire  Stock  Of  Our  Non-Hathway  Shirts,  Pres- 
ently Reduced,  Further  Reduced  To  Half  Price 
All  Our  Evan-Picone  Irish  Linen  Skirts  Presently 
$14.95  -  Rectuced  To  $7.50. 

All  our  Scottish  cashmeres  $10.00  off 

Imported  from  Scotland  skirts  further  reduced  to 

40%  off 

All  our  other  wool  skirts  including  cashmeres 

—  half  price 

Entire  Stock  Heavier  Weight  Bermuda  Shorts  — 

Half  Price 

Entire  Stock  Pedal  Pushers  —  Half  Price 

OTHER  GIVE-A-WAYS  TO  BE  ADDED 

All  Sales  Cash  And  Final— All  Alterations  Extra 

Closing  Cuplioarb 


John  Gerring  of  Wake  Foi^  ^st,  by 
his  own  descripton  "in  troui'Ie  and 
out  of  trouble-  all  the  way,^'  shot 
a  one-over  par  72  yesterday  »*  O'** 
Town  Club  to  win  the  Atmmtic 
Coast  Conference  Individual  «Golf 
CPhampionship  with  a  36-hole  ti'tal 
of  141.  \ 

In  a  day  of  soaring  scores — oni  y 


141  was  two  strokes  more  than 
fiuzzy  Basinger  u^ed  in  grabbing 
the  individual  ci'owa  a  year  ago. 

Helms,  the  soph  from  Morgan- 
ton  tied  Tdth  Tommy  Langley  of 
Carolina  for  the  fourth  position. 
Both  had  146'ar.  Langley  won  the 
Southern  Conference  title  in  1952 
before  entering  the  Pfevy  for  four 
years.  He  and  McCarley  were  the 


two  in   the  field    of   60    equallet 
par —  the  21-year-old  Gerring  lerfvl  two  to  equal  par  71  yesterday. 
Wake  Forest  to   its  second   feaml      Buck  Adams  of  Winston-Salem, 
championship  in  three  years.  The\playing    for    Carolina,  took  sixth 


Deacons,  with  a  fourman  total  of 
580,  finshed  eight  i^okes  ahead 
(tf  defending  champion  Carolina. 
Gerring,  whose  father  is  club 
pro  at  Union,  S.  C.,  led  teammate 
Sonny  George  and  Joe  McCarley  of 
South  Carolina  by  two  strokes. 
George,  the  former  Wake  Fnre.«!t 
football  captain,  rided  ti  «  42  M 
the  front  side  yesterday  but  came 
back  in  34,  one  under,  for  a  76. 
He  was  the  first-round  leader  with 
a  67. 

Troubled  by  poor  iron  play,  Ger- 
ring played  "gorilla  golf,"  as  he 
put  it,  to  post  hs  35-87-72  on  the 
6,519-yard  course  which  was  pelt- 
ed by  rain  mo^  of  the  day. 

Wake  Forest's  title-winning  quar- 

tet     was    composed     of    G«rrihg, 

1  George,  Tommy  Helms  and  Ralph 

j  James  Jr.  Helms  had  a  73-72-145 

and  James  a  74-77-151. 

Finishing  behind  the  runner-up 

'  Carolina  team  were  Virginia,  602, 

<  Duke,    610;    South   CaroUna.   612; 

I  Maryland.  615;  Clemson,  626;  and 

N.  C.  State,  828. 

Wake  Forest's  team  score  of 
580.  12  strokes  over  par,  was  six 
swings  higher  than  Ctrollna's  win- 


%pot  with  72-74-146.  Jerry  McFer 
xi^n  of  Maryland  had  72-75-147  to 
deadlock  Jordan  Ball  of  Virginia, 
7a.\77-147  for  seventh.  Completing 
the"  top  ten  were  Bobby  Ruff  in  of 
Car*  lina,  74-74-148,  and  Glenn  Mit- 
chell   of  Vir^nia.  71-77-148. 


Splashes 

(Co«V'n««d  from  page  1) 
wouldn't  a'ow    Dave    Sime    down 
any."  What^  the  heck,"  mused  the 
fan,  "he  onV  touches  the  ground 
about  twice  Vnyway."  .    •; 


Two  small  ifvolored  boys  stood 
watching  the  x^i.nish  of  the  880. 
When  Duke's  J'e^ss  Peter  came 
acrosis  thrd  and  ihen  collapsed 
one  of  them  turned  to  the  other 
and  said:  "Man  that  cat's  tified." 


\ 


Some  of  the  officials  aad  sports- 
writers  down  on  the  infield  had 
come  prepared.  .They  wene  <;Iad 
in  "high  water  pants"  which  sti  uek 
them  about  five  inches  above  the 
ankles. 


■BP^P" 


ELIZABETH    ARPEN 


. . .  the  safe 
depilaiory 


All  in  all,  it  looked  more  like  a 
carnival  than  a  track  meet.  Some 
of  the  people  there  apparent^ 
went  back  to  grandmother's  old 
hand-me-downs  in  dressiac  for  the 
event,  (they  were  smart). 


Trade  Summaries 

Broad  j^mp  —  l.  Eddie  Lloyd 
Maryland.  .  2.  Edward  Brawley 
Carolina.  3.  Ken  Rosemond,  Car 
olina.  '4.  Perry  Moore,  Maryland 
5.  W.  C.  Simmons,  Clemson.  22  ft 
3  in. 

Shot  put— 1.  Ed  Cooke,  Mary 
land.  2.  Larrj'  Speer.  Duke.  3 
Frank  Call,  Virginia.  4.  Nick  Leras 
Maryland.  5.  Harold  Outten.  Vir 
ginia.  52  ft.,  4  in.  new  conference 
record,  set  in  qualifying  yester- 
day. 

Discus— I.Ed  Cooke,  Maryland. 
2.  Harry  Davenport,  Virginia.  3. 
Larry  Speer,  Duke.  5.  Nick  Leras, 
Maryland.  149  ft.,  7  in. 

Javelin— 1.  Dick  Bartulski,  South 
Carolina.  2.  R.  p.  Snyder,  Clem- 
son. 3.  Gerald  Strickland,  Duke.  4. 
Cledith  Oakley,  Carolina.  5.  Ro- 
land Payne,  Carolina.  208  ft..  2  in. 
new  conference  record,  set  in 
qualifying  yesterday. 

100-yard  dash  — 1.  Dave  Sime, 
Duke.  2.  Jim  Varnum,  Carolina.  3. 
Steve  Scheck,  Maryland.  4.  Wes- 
ley Baynes,  Maryland.  5.  Bob 
Johnson.  Duke.    .09.6. 

220-yard  dash  —  1.  Dave  Sime, 
Duke.  Steve  Scheck,  Maryland.  3. 
Jim  Moss,  Carolina.  4.  Bob  John- 
son. Duke.  5.  Dave  Leas,  Maryland. 

V  44-yard  run— 1.  Dave  Scurlock, 
Carolina.  2.  Buddy  Mayfield,  South 
Carolina.  3.  Dave  Leas,  Maryland. 
4.  Bob  Kline,  'Duke.  5.  Stan 
Strauss,  Maryland.  :49.1 
880-yard  run— 1.  Dave  Scurlock, 


,i 


Carolina.   2.  Ben  Williams,   Caro- 
lina. 3.  Bob  Peters,  Duke,  4.  Ches-  j 
ter   Steckel,    Maryland.   5.    R.    W.  j 
McFadden,  Carolina.  Ir55.5.  | 

120-yard  high  hurdles — 1.  Doni 
Goodroe,  South  Carolina.  2.  Jim 
Starboard,  Maryland.  3.  Lee  Dun 
can,  Maryland.  4.  Perry  Moore, 
Maryland.  5.  Elliott  Thompson, 
Maryland.    :14.6. 

Mile  ryif— 1.  Burr  Grim,  Mary- 
land. 2.  Jim  Whatley,  Carolina.  3. 
Carl  Party,  Maryland.  4.  L.  B. 
Newman,  Clemson.  5.  Charles 
Flemriling,  Maryland.    4:15.8. 

Two-mile  run — 1.  Burr  Grim, 
Maryland.  2.  Wayne  Bishop,  Caro- 
lina. 3.  Billy  Latham,  South  Car- 
olina. 4.  W.  S.  Tyler,  Clemson.  5. 
John  Reaves,  Carolina.     9:25.8. 

220  low  hurdles — 1.  Larry  Sal- 
mon, Maryland.  2.  Jim  Starboard, 
Maryland.  3.  Perry  Moore,  Mary- 
land. 4.  W.  C.  Simmons,  Clemson. 
5.  Don  Goodroe,  South  Carolina. 
:23.9. 

Mile  relay — 1.  Carolina  (Dyer 
Moss,  John  Sylvester,  R.  W.  Mac- 
Faddin,  Dave  Scurlock).  2.  Mary- 
land. 3.  Virginia.  4.  Duke.  5.  South 
Carolina.    3:22.0, 

High  jump — 1.  George  Hogan, 
Maryland.  2.  Tie  between  Jim  Ma- 
cedon,  South  Carolina,  and  Jim 
Booher,  Duke.  4.  Six-way  tie  among 
M.  R.  Phillips,  N-  C.  State;  James 
Bryant,  North  Carolina;  Douglas 
Bukelew,  Virginia;  William  Lyons, 
Carolina;  Perry  Moore,  Maryland; 
Richard  McCallister,  Carolina.  5 
ft,  11  in. 


Howard  Johnson  Restouinant 


STUDENT   SPECIALS 


Barbecued   Chicken 
Choice  Steak  Sandwiches 

SERVED  ^'^^    ^'^  ^'^' 

dfcKVtu  8:00-11:00  P.M. 

^^Landmark  For  Hungry  Tarheels" 


#1 


'  The  rain  wa^.*  probably  good  for 
the  "second  runners. "  Their  time 
improved,  probably  because  they 
wanted  to  stay  as  close  tx>  the  front 
as  possiMe  in  order  to  avn»H  »bp* 
ting  spUshed  With  mud.  llw^  «f 
them  got  it  anyway  and  some  of 
the  runners  were  spattered  beyond 
recognition. 


iTcam  unwanted  hair 
off  face...amif 
\egti  in  ■ccondf 


BIG 
VA  OZ.  SIZE 

200 
flmiax 


FAST  .  .  .  smooth  on;  seconds 
later,  rinse  offSIeek  with  warm 
water  and  see  hair  disappear 
leaving  your  skiip  smooth  and 
delightfully  fragrant. 

EASY  . .  .  apply  Sleek  with 
your  fingere^e  a  pure  cream. 
No  awkward  a{^lic8tors,  no 
elaborate  preparations,  no  mess 
to  clean  up  ^terwards. 

EFFECTIVE  ...  on  delieate 
areas  around  mouth  as  well  as 
arms  and  legs;  remores 
smoothly  every  trace  of  un- 
sightly hjlir.  You'll  stay  smootn 
longer,  too,  for  Sleek  disoour- 
ages  hair  growth. 

Safe  . . .  Sleek  has  been  pi^ed 
dependable  and  antiseptically 
safe  on  the  most  delicate  dtins. 
Pure,  mild  as  the  ioest  faee 
cream,  it  treats  even  tender 
face  skin  gently. 

TESTED  .  .  .  saloa-tested, 
time-tebted,  EK^abeth  Arden's 
Sleek  is  a  gentle  effectiTe  cp^ek* 
acting  depilatory— a  balaaoed 
beauty  pPCparatioa.Try  it  soon. 


The  track  shoes-  will  be  put  awai 
until  another  season  and  let's  hope 
it  doesn't  rain  again  at  the  nexi 
one.  Even  .    '• 


~-  — '  • "  '* 


'/ 


\ 


New  Yorkers  Are  Talking  About  Tyrone  Gitbiie^ 
Mifiificent  Prcduction  of  'OEDIPUS  UV 


THORNTON  W!iDER  AND  WALHr  WINCNEU 

THORNTON  WILDER:  "A  distirmuished  production  and  a 
revalation  of  n«w  possibilities  in  the  motion  pictvra." 
WALTER  WINCHELL:  "Imaginotivdy  produced.  beoutifwMy 
played."  • 

N.  Y.  TIMES  AND  DAILY  NEWS 

NEW  YORK  TIMES:  "Spectacular  and  aw«som»  show." 
DAILY  NEWS:" '^'^ "if  "if  SUmn'xng   and    imaginativt." 

N.  Y.  NIRALD  TRIBUNE  AND  DAILY  MIRROR 

N.  Y.  HERALD  TRIBUNE:  "Primeval  pow«r...H  »«ll  Hypno- 
tizes us." 

DAILY  MRROR:  "Topnotch  . .  .  handsim*ly  mounted  end 
splendidly  enacted." 

WORLD  TELEGRAM-SUN  AND  CUi  MADASME 

WORLD  TELEGRAM-SUN:  "Brilliant,  arresting  ach!evei««nf. ' 
CUE  MAGAZINE:  "it  overflows  with  compassion  ond  pity, 
grandeur  and  beauty." 

GILBERT  SELDES  AND  CLIFTON  FADIMAN 

GILBEkT  SELDES:  "It  is  one  of  the  handM  of  great  movies 
ever  made." 

CLIFTON  FADIMAN:  'This  production  or  o  supreme  work 
of  art  is  in  itself  a  work  of  atf." 


...ANDQRISAYSr   * 

'IXCELLENT  .  .  .  Time  does  not  trim^  down  the  terror  of 
irv9  h'ogedy!" 

Th«  TYRONE  GUTHRIE  predKtiaa  •(  SephecUs* 

IN 

EASTMAN 

COtOR 

(Urnns  Vm  PiMSmi,  OaUria  SkakMHeaw  twttul  n«m  f ratfuMd  by  iMaitf  Kiymt 


TODAY 
THRU  TUESDAY 


c^nictrFSr 


JohnStmih 
DCcLhotrtas 


(OR)  l«W1D  ttS>»a«  HEAD  VmHCXrr  HALF  TRtWG.^ 


Hack  near  the  turn  oT  the  century  (17th,  that  is),  Captain  John  Smith 
mod  0ome  of  his  sidekicks  were  exploring  ye  Ctiickahonainy  when  8om,e  of 
his  troops  started  to  sprout  arrows. 

WeD,  Smitty  and  his  squad  got  in  a  few  good  licks,  but  the  weeds  were 
Aill  of  redskins  and  they  were  soon  hauled  in  to  see  the  Top  Dog  Indian 
• . .  Powhatan. 

*^Snith,"  thundered  old  full-of-feathers,  "I'm  tired  of  you  puncturing  my 
in-tewa;  we're  going  to  do  a  disappearing  act  with  your  head!" 

•Wild,  man,"  said  the  good  captain.  "A  Uttle  Rock   n  Roll,  eh?"        v'' 


fe 


/ 
/ 


1rt»  humor  was  lost  on  the  chief,  and  he  was  aU  set  to  shorten  Smith  by 
abaat  nine  mdies  when  in  walked  Princess  Pocahontas  ...  a  nifty  little 
number  who'd  been  out  scalping  tickets  to  Cleveland  baseball  games. 

Pokey  sized  up  ibe  situation,  and  screamed  (in  perfect  Iroquois)  "Man  it 
looks  like  my  ship  came  in  . . .  that  beard!  That  outfit!  That  build  t  nu 
Daddy-O— qmre  that  cat!"  ^^       ^ 

Tokey,"  said  Dad,  "How  many  times  have  I  told  you  not  to  come  messin' 
•round  here  during  initiation!  We're  playing  to  a  full  house  and  now  I 
have  to  refund  all  those  beads."  But  be  was  pretty  sweet  on  the  kid  arJ 
laid  aade  the  meat  cleaver.  '  ^^ 


IWeO,  Captain  John  was  so  happy  about  his  reprieve  he  broke  out  a  h.»«i       - 
9i  Budweiser  . : .  and  popped  for  the  tribe.  ^^ 

MORAL:  When  you  want  to  treat  tK«  tribe  (or,  better  yet,  doa$olo  with  a  squaw),  make  U  Budweiser. .  .the  chief  of  bmrel 

Budweiser. 


'i« 


KING  or  BBBRa 


ANHBOBER-BUSCH.  WC  .  OT.  LOWS  .  NEWARK  .  LOS  ANOBLB8 


-_  -    <e..'9^f^' 


t 


.WEATHER 

^•rtly  cloudy  and  -warmer  with 
•c«tt*r«d  thundar  show«rs.  Ex- 
PMt*d  high  to  M  to  90. 


VOL.  LVII  NO    187 


tJ  W  C  Litjfafy 
Serials   Dept 


W  llaity  il^at  Met  i 


Complete  (JPi  Wirt  Strvlet 


CHAPEL  HILL,  NORTH  CAROLINA,   TUESDAY,  MAY   14,    1957 


Office$  in  Graham  Mewunial 


LIBERTY 

The   editor   says    logislaters    aro 
oncreaching  upon  it  on   page   ^«ro. 


FOUR   PAGES  THIS  ISSUE 


Top  Women's  Honorary  Taps  In  Secret  Pre-Dawn  Rites 


Bob  Young  A  nd  Truman  Moore  Win  Achievement  Awards 


Parker  And  Abernethy 
Awards  Are  Announced 

By   MANLEY    SPRINGS 

Robert  Terry  Young  of  Ashcville  has  been  awarded  the  John  J. 
Parker  4r.  Medal  for  Unique  Leadership  in  Sturent  Government  ac- 
cording to  an  announcement  made  yesterday  by  Sam  Alagill  of  the 
office  of  Student  Affairs.  Truman  Ellinwood  Moore  of  Myrtle  Beach. 
S.  C.  received  the  Erne.-t  H.  Ab*nethv  prize  in  Student  Publications 
\Vi»rk. 

The  Parker  Medal  is  given  an 
nuall)  by  Judge  and  Mrs.  John 
J.  Parker  in  memory  of  their  son. 
John  John.ston  Parker.  Jr..  class 
of  1937  (  who  rendered  distinguish- 
ed and  >iacrificial  leadership  as 
president  of  the  Student  Council 
if.  one  of  the  critical  years  in  the 
historj-  of  Student  Government.) 

This  medal  is  awarded  by  a 
special  committee  appointed  by 
the  President  of  the  University 
to  that  member  of  the  graduat- 
ing class  who  has  demonstrated 
most  clearly  the  "highest  quali- 
ties of  leadership  in  perpetuating 
the  spirit  of  honor  and  the  pro- 
cess  of   student   self-government." 

The  Abernethy  Prize  was  esta- 
blished in  1941  by  Ernest  H.  Ab 
cmethy,  class  of  1922.  of  Atlanta. 
Georgia.  It  is  an  annual  award  of 
a  plaque  and  fifty  dollars  in 
cash,  which  is  to  be  presented  to 
the  stu<|ent  who  is  adjudged  by  a 
commit^  to  have  done  the  "most 
dtMiocUvc  work  during  the  cur- 
rent year  in  the  field  of  student 
pirt)liratio&s." 

Bob  YoiHig  is  past  president  of 
student  government  and  is  a  mcm- 
l>er  of  the  Order  of  the  Old  Well. 
Order  of  the  Holy  Grail,  and  Or- 
der of  the  Golden  Fleece.  He  has 
been  a  member  of  the  Student 
Parly  for  four  years  and  the  stu- 
dent legislature  for  three.  Dur- 
ing his  freshman  year  he  was 
elected  president  of  the  Freshman 
Fellowship. 

He  was  vice  chairman  of  the 
Carolina  Forum  Treasure  of  the 
YMCA,  class  president  during  his 
sophomore   year. 

As  a -junior  Bob  was  president 
of   the   Graham    Memorial    Activi- 
(See   PARKER,   page   3) 


Bob    Young 
Parker   A  loard 


Truman    Moore 

.   Abernethy  Award 


Oppenheimer   Named 
Asst.  Attorney  General 


student  Body  President  Sonny 
Evans  ha$  announced  the  appoint- 
ment of  ierry  Oppenheimer  to 
the  port  of  Assistant  Attorney 
General. 

Oppenheimer  will  assist  Attor- 
ney General  Sonny  Hallford  as 
one  of  the  top  functionaries  in 
the  president's  caibinct  and  will 
act  in  a  capacity  to  investigate 
and  prosecute  all  offenders  of  the 
constitution  as  well  as  assist  and 
represent  the  president  under  the 
campus  constitution. 

Oppenheimer,  who  is  a  rising 
junior  from  Birmingham.  Ala- 
bama, was  welcomed  to  the  new 
office  by  both  HsUford  and  Ev- 
ans who  lodked  to  him  for  sub- 
stantial accomplishments  and  con- 
tributions to  student  government. 

Said  President  Evans  upon  mak- 
ing    the     appointment     late     last 

OM'S  SLATE 


Dot  Prassly 
gracious  manner 


Lucinda   Holderness 

.   .   .   )ugh   ideala 


Connie   Whittaker 

siticere    and    perceptive 


*  >"''S8flf««-»?*^'^F^>^'p.s  ^- 


Carse  Replaces  Reibel 


V- 


^  Lydia  Moody 

nndei  standing  spirit 


James  (Skipi  Carse.  a  19.57  gradu- 
ate of  the  Vale  Divinity  School  has 
!  t>een    named    as    the    new    associate 
;  secretaTy  of  the  YMCA  to  replace 
John  D.  Riebal  who  rcL-ently  vacal- 
I  ed  that  position. 

Carse  will  take  o\'er  the  .post  ef- 
fective July  1,  at  which  time  he  will 
assume  and  share  responsibilities 
for  YMCA  and  VWC.A  activities  on 
the  UNC  campus  with  ■  Claude  C. 
Shotts.  G«negnftl  Secret  ar>'  and  Anp 
E    QuMeu.   VWCA  directur 

The  position  of  associate  secre- 
tary includes  supervision  cf:  fresh- 
man camp  and  freshman  groups; 
house  discussion  and  study  groups; 
community  prcgrajns  as  the  hospital 


and  youth  center.';:  and  those  groups 
an    dimlividuals    interested    in    vvoi 
ship  pi»granis. 

A  native  of  Evaitston.  Illinois 
Carse  did  under;:ra(iuate  work  at 
Northwestern  rind  Ohio  Weslcyan 
Lnixersities  before  entering  the  Vale 
Divinity  School.  He  majored  in  Eiu 
Ijsh  and  partifLpalt>d  in  varsity  foot 
ball,    wrestling   and   track. 

The    24-year-old    as.sociate    secrt 
^Ij^y,  aa  a  gradiHite  student  at  Yalc 
li^ld    a    -siiTiLLar    p.wition    to    the    ^ 
post    as    Graduate    Sccretar\    of   the 
Vale  Christian   .As.sociation.    His  du- 
ties and  capacities  were  similar  to 
those  which   he  will   be  e.vpected  to  I 
fulfill    as   associate   secretarv  here. 


Miss    Faison 
service   in   dignity 


Miss  Dorothy  Pressly  Is  1957  Winner 
Of  Jane  Craige  Gray  Memorial  Award 


Th«  foilewing  activities  are 
schedulfd  for  Graham  Memorial 
today: 

Orieotation  Committe,  4-6 
p.m.,  GraH  lUom;  Women's  Res- 
idence C««mcl|,  4:45  p.m.,  Grail 
Room;  Uoiyortity  Party,  7-11 
p.m.,  Roland  Parker  Lounge  Nos. 
1  and  7:  University  Club,  7-8 
P  m.,  Roland  Parker  Lounge  No. 
3;  Symp«Mum,  3.6  p.m..  Wood- 
house  Conference  Room;  Dance 
Class.  MM  p.m..  Rendezvous 
Room;  tympesium,  4-6  p.m., 
A.P.O.  Room;  A.P.O.,  7-9  p.m., 
JlP.O.  R^om 


j  week: 

I  "Because  of  the  possible  expan- 
j  sion  of  the  Attorney  General's  of- 
fice, it  is  essential  that  we  have 
an  individual  of  tbp  caliber  and 
unquestionable  ability  to  assist 
Sonny  Hallford  in  his  work. 

"Jerry  has  been  recognized  by 
the  Golden  Fleece,  the  Grail  and 
the  Old  Well  for  his  leadership 
and  service  on  campus,  and  I  have 
the  utmost  confidence  in  his  ca- 
pabilities and  interest  in  doing 
an  outstanding  job." 

In  addition  to  his  recognition 
by  campus  honoraries.  Oppenhei- 
mer was  recently  elected  presi- 
dent of  the  (5ld  Well  and  has 
chaired  and  organized  the  1957 
Campus  Orientation  Committee, 
which  is  responsible  for  present- 
ing an  introductory  program  to 
the  incoming  freshman  class  next 
year. 

He  has  been  active  in  the  stu 
dent  Legislature  and  is  a  member 
of   Zeta   Tau   social   fraternity. 

Welcoming  his  new  assistant  to 
office.  Attorney  General  Hallford 
said  yesterday:  I 

"I  think  we  are  indeed  fortun- 
ate   to   have   a    person    of   Jerryj^ 
caliber   and    integrity  to   serve   in ' 
this  position.  Jerry  has  proven  his 
capabilities    and    I    feel    we    can ' 
make    great    strides   next    year   in  | 
compiling   statutes   of   past   years  | 
and  examining  other  areas  related 
to  the  constitution.  I 

"I  am  looking  forward  to  the 
work  at  hand  with  such  an  able 
a.ssistant  as  Jerry."  he  concluded 


By    EDITH   MACKINNON 

Miss  Dorothy  Pressly  is  the  19,57 
■winner  of  the  Jane  Craige  Gray 
Memorial   .\ward. 

In  a  ceremony  held  Sunday  night 
in  the  Morehead  Planetarium.  Miss 
Pressly  was  announced  the  recipi 
ent  of  the  coveted  award  made  t>j' 
Beta  Chi  chapter  of  Kappa  Delta 
sorority. 

Given  in  memory  of  Mrs.  Gordon 
Gray,  a  Kappa  Delta  alumna,  the 
award  Is  presented  as  a  tribute  to 
the  Weals  which  she  exemplified. 
Miss  Pressly  i."  the  fourth  UNC 
coed  to  be  honored  in  this  way. 

University  Vice-President  William 


I  D.  Carmichael  made  the  presenta- 
tion to  Miss  Pressly.  who  was  chos- 
en on  the  t>as.is  of  scholarship,  lead- 
ership .and  character.  Miss  Kath- 
erine  Carmichael,  Dean  of  Women. 
.>jpoke  on  the  significance  of  the 
award  and  thi?  qualities  for  which 
Miss  Pressly  was  selec-ted. 

A  reception  in  honor  of  the  re- 
cipient followefl  the  p:-esentation. 
The  ivceiving  line  Included  Miss 
Pressly.  Dean  Carmichael.  I>r.  and 
Mrs.  W.  C.  Pressly,  William  Car- 
michael, Mrs.  Kay  Kyser.  Kappa 
Delta  Aliminae  .Advisor,  and  Miss 
Edith  MacKinnon,  Kappa  Delta 
President. 

The  Raleigh  junior  has  had  a  long 


record  ol  leadeishi;)  and  honorary 
])i;sitions  during;  her  college  career,  i 
A  uraduate  of  Peace  College  in  j 
Raleigh.  Miss  Pressly  served  as 
president  t>f  the  junior  class,  vice- 
president  of  the  day  students,  and 
president  of  the  Honor  Court.  I 

Named  ■.Miss  Peace"  in  her  .sen- 
iir  year,  she  was  also  selected  by 
the  faculty  as  the  outstanding  mem- 
ber of  the  senior  class  and  elected 
to  membership  in  Phi  Theta  Kappa, 
the  junior  college  Phi  Beta  Kappa. 

Since  transfeiring  to  UNC.  Mi.ss 
Pressly  has  bei»n  elected  secretary 
of  the  student  l>ody-  and  social 
chairman  of  tlie  junior  class.  A 
member  of  -■Vlpha  Delta  Pi  sorority 


she  has  served  as  pledge  song  lead- 
er and  corres;}(inding  secretary  of 
the    group. 

Other  extra-curricular  actixities 
on  the  UNC  campus  have  included 
positions  as  dormitory  representa- 
tive to  Women's  Residence  Council 
and  representative  to  Graham  Me- 
morial Board  of  Directoi-s.  Along 
with  -Miss  Jackie  .•Mdridgc.  Miss 
Pressly  w^s  chosen  as  the  U\C  ex- 
( hange  student  to  Sarah  La\\Tence 
College.  I 

A   sociology   major.    Miss   Pressly  j 
h«i)es  to  work  in  the  field  of  voca-  ] 
tional   coun.seliiig   and   guidance   fol- 
lowing  graduation. 


4  Juniors,  Graduate, 
3  Honoraries  Selected 

In  the  early  morning  hours,  five  co-eds  and  three  honoraries  were 
tapped  into  the  Valkyries,  the  highest  honoi^y  organization  for 
women  on  the  University  campu.v.  In  the  secret  pre-dawn  ceremonies 
traditional  to  Valkyrie  tappings,  these  women  were  recognized  for 
their  development  of  the  ideals  of  character,  scholarship,  leadership, 
sound  judgment,  creativity,  service,    and   inspiration    to   others. 

Those  being  so  honored  were: 
Misses  Francco  Ellen  Reynolds, 
sophomore  religion  major  from 
Newton;  Dorothy  Byrne  Pressly. 
junior  psychology  major  from  Ra- 
leigh; Adelaide  Lucinda  Holder- 
ness. junior  religion  major  from 
Greensboro:  Constance  Elizabeth 
Whittaker.  junior  English  major 
from  Whittier.  Calfornia;  Lydia 
Ann  Moody,  graduate  student  in 
education,  from  Siler  City:  Anne 
Queen,  as.sociate  dii-ector  of  the 
YWCA,  from  Chapel  Hill  and  Can- 
ton; Georgia  Hicks  Fai„^.>n.  head  re- 
ference librarian  (retiring),  from 
Chapel  Hill  and  Clinton:  and  Eliza- 
beth Louanna  Kemble.  dean  of  the 
School  of  Nursing,  from  Chapel 
Hill. 

Citations  read  to  the  tappccs 
were: 

MISS  REYNOLDS:  •  .  .  .  .  One 
who  is  recognized  for  her  numer- 
ous and  meaningful  contributions 
to  many  areas  of  Carolina  life.  As 
a  person,  h^r  genuineness,  spon 
taneity.  and  deep  source  of 
strength  have  permeated  her  -re- 
lalionship  •.  making  a  decried  im- 
pact on  ail  who  know  her.  Her  in- 
fluence and  degree  of  service  have 
been  particularly  felt  in  the  work 
of  the  Campus  Christian  Council, 
the  Lutheran  Church,  and  the 
Wttnans  .\lhletic  Association. 
where  she  has  put  into  action  the 
ideals  for  which  she  stands." 

MISS  'HOLDERNESS:  "  .  .  .  . 
Recognized  for  the  high  ideals 
which  she  has  manile.-ted  in  her 
daily  life,  her  eagerness  to  scr%'e 
the  campus,  and  her  co-operative 
spirit.  Am  active  interest  and  en- 
thusiasm have  been  shown  in  her 
participation  in  the  VWCA.  her 
sorority,  and  the  Honor  Council. 
Dean  Kemble  ^^'   s<^'^  §'^'"8  ^"d  gracious  spirit 

recognized   leader  (see   VALKYRIES,  page  3i 


Miss   Queen 

given   unselfishly 


Oppenheimer  ; 
Old  Well  Prexyl 

I  Jerry  Oppenheimer.  rising  senior  : 
I  from  Birmingham,  Ala.,  was  elect-  i 
i  ed  president  of  the  Order  of  the  Old  j 
Well  Thursday  during  the  initiation  | 
I  of  63  students  into  the  honorary 
j  organization. 

I  The  business  administration  major 
is  also  a  member  of  the;  Order  of 
j  the  Golden  Fleeee,  the  Order  of  the 
I  Grail.  Zeta  Beta  Tau  fraternity,  a^nd 
I  Chairman  of  the  1957  Campus  Orien- 
tation  Committee. 

I  Other  officers  of  the  honorary  are 
'  John  Kerr,  vice-president,  and  Ben- 
ny Thomas,  secretary-ti-easurer. 
Sonny  Hallford.  Kelly  Maness.  and 
Charlie  Tompkins  were  chosen  as 
members  of  the  Executive  Board, 
with  Gene  Whitehead  and  Jim 
Preston  as  alternate  men^bers. 

The  Order  of  the  Old  Well  was 
founded  here  In  1949  for  the  purpose 
of  recognizing  nad  honoring  campus 
sei%'ice.and  accomplishment  on  a 
point  basis.  Whereas  the  Golden 
Fleece,  the  Valkyries,  and  the 
GraH  select  tlielr  honorees  on  -an 
intangible  appraisal  basis,  the  Old 
Well  honorsi  those  juniors  and  sen- 
iors, both  men  and  women,  who 
achieve  at  least  a  certain  miniinum 
number  of  pt>ints. 


School  Of  Pharmacy 
Recognizes  Students 


Eleven  awards  and  honors  were 
presented  last  night  to  outstand 
ing  students  of  the  School  ol 
Pharmacy    here. 

The  awards  were  presented  in 
connection  with  the  fTst  meeting 
this  school  year  of  the  students 
branches  of  the  N.C.  Pharma 
ceutical  Assn.  and  the  American 
Pharmaceutical  Assn. 

Announced  as  recipients  of  the 
awards  by  Dean  E.  A.  Brecht  were 
the    following: 

The  Lehn  and  Fink  Gold  Medal 
for  highest  scholarship  was  pre 
sented  to  Miss  Shirley  Weaver 
Bumgardner  of  West  Jefferson. 
She  also  received  the  Kappa  Ep 
silon  Award  for  being  the  out 
standing  woman  student  as  sc 
lected  by  a  committee  of  stu 
dents   and   pharmacy   staff. 

The  Buxton  Williams  Hunter 
Medal  for  scholarship  and  campus 
citizenship  was  presented  to  J"^ 
Ephriam  Smith  of  Connelly 
Springs. 

The  Student  Body  .\ward  i" 
the   form  of  a   mortar  and   pestle 


plaque  was  presented  to  Donald  | 
Joseph  Miller  of,  Raleigh  selected 
as  the  outstanding  graduating  | 
student  by  a  stutlent  committee. 
He  also  received  the  Key  to  the  j 
Outgoing  President  of  the  phar-  j 
macy  student   body. 

The  two  Merck  Awards,  con-  [ 
sLsting  of  two  useful  reference ' 
books,  were  presented  for  note  i 
worthy  achievement  to  Renus  Ed- 
gar Rich  Jr.  of  Morganton  and 
Gerald  Kelly  Harrington  of  San! 
ford.  ' 

The   Bristol   Award    in   the   form 
of  a   medical   dictionary  was   pre  I 
sented     for     noteworthy     achieve- 1 
ment   to  Charles  Peter  Copses  of  j 
Charlotte.  I 

The  Pharmacy  Senate  Award,  a 
gold  cup,  for  loyalty  and  .service  I 
was  presented  to  Maurice  Edward 
Underwood  of  Wilmington  as  se 
lected  by  a  committee  of  students 
and  faculty. 

The  Rho  Chi  First  Year  Award 
for  highest  scholarship  during  the 
freshman   year   was   won   by   Miss 
(See  PHARMACY,  Page  3) 


Counselors  To 
Meet  Tonight 

Jerry  Oppenheimer,  Chairman 
of  the  Campus  Orientation  Com- 
mittee announced  yesterday  that 
Men's  Orientation  counselors  will 
meet  at  7:30  p.m.  today  in  Ger- 
ard   Hall. 

George  Ragsdale.  Chairman  of 
the  Honor  Council,  will  address 
the    group.    Oppenheimer    said. 

He  added  that  the  meeting  is 
compulsory  and  that  '"no  coun- 
.selor  can  adequately  fulfill  his 
duties  unless  he  is  present  at  the 
meeting   tonight." 

An  important  portion  of  the 
program  will  be  the  presentation 
of  the  orientation  week  schedule 
which  will  be  explained  and  out- 
lined for  all  members  of  the 
spring    orientation    program. 

Oppenheimer  requested  that 
everyone  be  punctual  in  order 
that  necessary  business  be  com- 
pleted and  the  meeting  concluded 
at   the  earliest   possible   lime. 

Orientation  counselors  will  be 
responsible  for  instructing  and 
welcoming  the  Freshman  class  of 
1957  to  the  campus.  They  in- 
struct and  present  the  Carolina 
Campus  and  Honor  Codes  to  in 
coming  students. 


Day  Of  Rec 
ROTC  Unit 

A  day  of  reckoning  came  to 
members  of  Air  Force  ROTC  De- 
tachment 590  Thursday  in  the  per- 
i'm  of  a  Federal  Inspection  Teatn 
from  AFROTC  Headquarters  at 
Maxwell  AFB,  Alabama. 

Federal  Inspection,  which,  is  one 
of  the  major  events  of  the  AF- 
ROTC here  each  year,  is  designat- 
ed to  determine  whether  ROTC 
units  around  the  area  and  countrv 
are  satisfactorily  accomplishing 
the   task   a.ssigned   them. 

Most  of  the  drill  sesj-^ons  after 
Christmas  each  year  arc  devoted 
to  the  proper  execution  of  the  pro- 
gram for  Federal  Inspection.  The 
troops  are  primed  and  expected  to 
be  at  their  best  for  the  occasion. 

For  basic  and  first  year  advanc- 
ed cadets,  this  is  probably  the  mo.sl 
important  event  of  the  year.  Sen- 
iors forego  the  >-pit-and-shine  awe 
of  the  inspection,  however,  and 
look  forward  to  .June  4  in  the  For- 
est Theater  when  they  receive 
their  commissions  in  the  USAF. 

The  Federal  Inspection  team  this 
year  was  led  by  Inspector-in-Chief 
Colonel  S.  L.  Crosthwait.  His  staff 
included  Lt.  Col.  Dolan  and  Major 
Herron  during  the  tour  of  the  de- 
tachment. 

Inspection  ceremonies  were  held 
during  the  regular  drill  period 
Thursday  on  Fetzer  Field.  The 
actual  in^-pection  ^'as  preceded  by 
a  cadet  briefing  Wednesday  morn 
ing. 

Following  the  individual  inspec- 
tion of  cadets,   a   review  was  re- 


koningFor 
Concluded 

ceived  by  Col.  Crosthwait.  With 
him  on  the  reviewing  stand  were 
members  of  his  staff;  the  local  de- 
tachment staff  officers;  Dean  John- 
son of  the  General  College:  Gen. 
<Ret.)  F.  C  Shepard.  UNC  Mi!itar>- 
AdvLser:  and  the  .■\ngel  Squadron 
led  by  Miss  Pat  Dilhm. 

At  the  conclusion  of  the  »"che- 
duled  review,  the  award-winning 
UNC  Drill  Team  presented  a  series 
of  precsion  movements  under  the 
command  of  Capt.  C.  R  Harring- 
ton. 

The  day  was  punctuated  with  a 
thunderous  roar  of  relief  and  ap- 
proval when  official  announcement 
was  made  that  drill  had  been  con- 
cluded for  Detachment  .590  until 
next  year,  .same  time,  same  place. 

JenrettDies 

PORTSMOUTH.  Va  .  .^> — James 
Joseph  Jimmy  Jenrett.  Univer- 
sty  t)f  North  Carolina  athlete. 
I  died  here  early  Sunday  from  in- 
juries suffered  in  an  F,a  -tcr 
Sunday   accident    at    his   honoe. 

Jenrett.  former  Churchland 
High  School  athlete,  was  a  mem- 
ber of  the  freshmen  footbafi 
team  at  North  Carolina.  The 
220-pounder  played    tackle. 

Neither  Jenrttf.s  family  nor 
doctors  at  the  hospital  at  which 
he  died  would  reveal  the  nature 
of  the  accident  in  which  Jenrett 
was  involved. 

Funeral  servces  will  lie  held 
today. 


^AGI  TWO 


TMI  DAILY  TAI  HllL 


rUiSDAY,  MAY  14,   1957 


Liberty  Restriction  And 
Sex  Sensationalism  Curbs 

"('otijritss  shall  )nake  no  lan'  .  .  .  abridging  frefdotn  of  sl/eeih  or  o\ 
the  jut's.s."  Aiti(  If  1  ol  the  Blil  of  Rights  ol  tlie  I'nited  States  Constitu- 
tion. 

"Fiffdoru  of  Ihe  press  is  one  of  the  greatest  bulwarks  of  liberty,  and 
lheiefn)}f  ougiit  never  to  be  restrained,  but  every  indix'idual  shall  he 
held  responsible  for  Ihe  abuse  of  the  *•«/««'."— Detlarat ion  of  Rights 
i»l  the  SLitte  ()!  North  ("aroliua  Constitution. 

I  here  has  long  been  a  problem 


a>  to  where  to  draw  the  line  be- 
tween atteptable  and  n(»n-att  epta- 
ble  literature  on  oin  nation's 
newstands. 

r.ut  the  Ntnth  Carolina  House 
«>l  Kepreseniatixes  is  treading 
upon  tiindainental  and  (onstitu- 
tionallv  guaranteed  rights  when 
it  passes — carte  blant— a  bill  bar- 
ing the  Nale  or  exliibition  ot  'ob- 
stene   literatuie"'    in   this  state. 

Annrding  to  the  bills  provis- 
ion>.  detei initiation  of  the  ol>sten- 
n\  to  the  descretion  of  (duntv 
judges,  y 

V\'e.  like  niaiiv  otlier  t  iti/ens. 
are  (fisniavt;d  at  the  tr.ish-nionger- 
ing  Milgaiitv  upon  whieii  many 
of  the  current  inaga/ines  (onuner- 
ciali/e.  Ihe  sex-enipliasi/ing  sen- 
sationalism of  several  of  the  "hush- 
hush"  periodicals  is  absolutely 
despic  able. 

r>ut  any  regulatory  measure 
dealing  with  mass  media,  com- 
nuntications  or  general  literatine 
iuu>t  be  eniirelv  specific  with  no 
IcMJpholes  into  which  pettv  pre- 
judices mav  creep:  and  into  which 
disciiminatory   actions    may   seep. 

We  have  faith  in  the  memf)ers 
of  our  states  judiciary.  But  this 
In  a  go\ernment  of  laws  not  of 
men. 

.\  bill  cinieinlv  pending  before 
the  Soinh  Carolina  (ieneial  As- 
sembly accenttiates  the  necessity 
»»f  s|)ec  ificallv  stipulating  the  pro- 
visions of  any  measure  which 
woidd  cramp  freedom  of  expres- 
sion. 

Ihe  South  Catcilina  bill  would 
make  ir  a  crime,  pimishable  bv  a 
>-,.<M>o  tine,  lor  ariv  theater  to 
show  a  mcjvie.  "Island  in  the  Sun," 
.1  tilm  dealing  with  imegration  in 
a  community  in  the  British  Indies. 
Ihifs  a  pai^TcTfhrv  pn)\incial- 
minded  county  judge  might  think 
Chaucer  treacled  on  propriety  a 
little  when  he  allowecl  his  miller 
fiee  \erbal  rein.  Another  might 
be  disma\c(l  at  .Steinbeck  s  lealis- 
tic  language  as  he  provided  words 
lor  his  transitorv  Oakies.  Still  an- 
otlu!  would  indid)itably  be  alarm- 
ed b\  Kaulknerian  dialogue  or 
Hemingwav's  ale  oholistic  retreat- 
isnv 


The  Daily  Tar  Heel 


The  official  student  publication  of  the 
Publications  Board  of  the  University  of 
North  Carolina,  where  it  is  published 
daily  except  Monday  and  examination 
■nd  vacation  periods  and  summer  terms. 
Entered  as  second  class  matter  in  the 
post  office  in  Chapel  Hill,  N.  C,  under 
the  Act  of  March  8.  1870.  Subscription 
rates:  mailed.  $4  per  year.  $2.50  a  semes- 
ter: delivered  $6  a  year,  $3.50  a  semes- 
ter. 


Editor  -   NEIL  BASS 

Managing  Editor  BOB  HIGH 

\s.sociate  Editor  .    NANCY  HIU. 

Sports  Editor     - .  -    BILL  KING 

New.,-  Bdit^r  WALT  SCHRUNTEK 

fiiisines5~Manager   JOHN  C.  WHITAKER 
AdvcTiisinii  Manager        FRED  KATZIN 

NEWS  STAFF— Graham  Snyder,  Edith 
MacKinnon,  Ben  Taylor!^  Patsy  Miller, 
Sue  Atchison. 


EDIT  STAFF— Whit  Whitfield,  /»nthony 
Wolff,  Stan  Shiw. 

BUSINESS  STAFF— John  Minter,  Mari- 
an Hobeck,  Jane  Patten.  Bucky  Shu- 
ford. 


SPORTS  STAFF:  Dave  Wible,  Stu  Bird, 
Ekl  Rowland,  Jim  ^rownover,  Ron 
Millisan. 


Subscription  Manager 


Dale  Stalej 


Circulation  manager 


Charlie  Holt 


Staff  Photographers Woody  Sears, 

Vorman  Kantor,  Bill  King. 

LiiH-anans.  Sue  Gichner,  Marilyn  Strum 

Night  News  Editor Bob  High 

Night  Editor - Woody  B»m^ 


In  short,  we  simply  don't  trust 
the  l)rand  of  provincialism  which 
is  consistently  propounded  by 
mativ  of  our  state  officials. 

W'e  wonder  Avhat  the  end  re- 
sult will  be  if  a  handful  of  of- 
ficials are  given  authority  to 
screen   the  state's  literature. 

Is  there  an  omniscient  group 
with  mentality  to  determine  just 
what  the  einiie  state  shcndd  be 
subjected  to.  as  far  as  general  lit- 
erature is  concerned— an  all-power- 
ful. Godish  group  whicit  shotdd 
die  tate  before  the  state's  citi/enry 
c-ould    read? 

Obviously   there   is  not.     *' 

The  state  Constitution  empha- 
sizes the  necessity  lor  lesponsibil- 
itv  for  the  abuse  of  the  same." 
(fieetfom  of  the  press.) 

Thus  es(>ecially  nauseating  scan, 
dal  magazines  and  (Pornographic 
periodicals  should  be  specifically 
banned  frotn  sales  in  the  state.  Or 
at  least  a  definite  and  c-onc:rete  set 
of  standards  should  he  promulgat- 
ed from  which  judges  could  not 
de^  iate. 

Bm  to  give  a  handfull  of  judges 
blajiket  authority  to  determine 
what  !s  fit  for  the  states  minds 
is  blatant  mcxkeiy  of  fieedom  of 
expression   and   demcHratic  actioji. 

Ihe  (.eneral  .Assembly  should 
either  completely  kill  tlie  lil)erty- 
restricting  ineasme  or  specifically 
enumerate  standarcjs  of  accepta- 
bility   for    literature. 

CoMstitiiLion.il  guatantees  may 
not  be  trod  upon  if  our  state  and 
nation  are  to  remain  healthy  and 
demcHratically    free. 

"Freedom  of  the  press  is  one  of 
the  greatest    bidwarks   of   liberty.  ' 


Of  Mothers 
And  Of  Men 


Ihe  .\sscM  iated  Press  story  of  a 
little  crippled  lady  who  was  sav- 
ed from  a  Florida  to  \'ermont 
hitchhiking  tiek  through  the  gen- 
erosity of  an  \'n  Force  veteran  is 
a   tribute  to  magnanimity  of  man. 

The  little  lady's  courageous  at- 
tempt to  leach  home  after  years 
of  i>arely  eking  out  a  living  in 
Florida  is  a  tribute  to  the  courage 
of  womaidifK)d. 

It  is  a  bright  tribute  to  all  hu- 
manity that  the  materialistically 
subordinated  world  pauses  for  one 
day  to  pay  homage  to  mothers 
everywhere,  and  that  a  bright  spot 
of  generosity  is  demonstiated  on 
such  a  day  to  a  little  lady  who  has 
cared  for  2fi  fr)ster  childlen  dur- 
ing her  hfetimc. 

.\  certain  cynical  percentage  of 
our  popidation  would  smirk  at 
the  sentimentality  of  paying  tiib- 
ule  to.  motheihood. 

Vet  the  greatest  of  institutions 
in  our  social  order  is  the  home. 
.\ih\  the  greatest  stabilizing  force 
in  the  home  is  assuiedly  the  ten- 
der care  of  a  mother. 

No  amount  of  mechanization 
can  possibly  supplant  the  lc>ying 
carress  of  a  tnother  lor  her  child. 
.Nor  can  any  son  or  daughtei— no 
matter  their  scnial  status,  whether 
they  be  murderers  or  traitors  — 
ever  completely  Irjse  the  position 
of  affection  which  they  hold  in 
tlie  mind  of  their  mothers. 

She  only  remend>ers  the  blue- 
eyed  baby  who  was  so  |>erfect— the 
f>aby  whose  warm  smile  will  al- 
ways dominate  her  mind. 

To  mothers  everywhere,  our 
most   laudetory   words. 

.\n  irieplaceable  institution. 


Wise  And  Otherwise: 

The  New  Era  Of 
Superlatives  & 
That  Cigarette 

Whit  Whitfield 


The  Prodigal  Father 


How  many  people  pause  to  con- 
sider the  incrsctulity  of  the  phrases 
of  the  prcHnotion  expeits  in  oar 
modem  media  of  commiuiication? 
(i.  e.  radio,  television,  maga- 
zines  and   journals,  i 

.\s  an  example,  let  u.s  take  the 
crgarette  commercials. 

American  Tobacco  Company 
avows  among  other  things,  that 
,'Luckies  taste  better,  cleaner, 
fresher,  smcwther."  .\ls<).  'Luckies 
are  the  best  tasting  cigarette  >'ou 
ever  snnoked."  One  question  that 
comes  to  nund  is.  what  do  they 
taste  better  than?  Rabbit  Tobacco, 
com  sdlk.  or  potato  peels  to  be 
sure.  iMit  wiiat  else?  They  don't 
say. 

They  aJso  plainly  staff  that  "To- 
bacco is  our  middle  name."  Now 
this  is  indeed  a  raw  bit  of  geniu.<< 
and  keen  perception. 

Fiu-tlier.  in  their  Pall  Mall  ad- 
vertisements they  state.  "Don't 
miss  the  fun  .of  smcrtiing."  Have 
ycHi  ever  heard  of  .such  a  thing'.' 
This  bit  of  advertising  master- 
piece simply  means  tliat  if  you  are 
lx)red.  Pall  Malls  ai-e  the  answer. 
Light  one  up — (hey  are  loads  of 
fun! 

.\merican  Tobacc-o  is  not  thi-oush 
yet.  Their  latest  addition  to  the 
family  is  Hit  Parade.  "Your  taste 
cant  tell  the  filters  thei-e."  Otv- 
vious'y  the  man  wiio  wrote  this 
one  has  never  <imoked  one  before 

Liggett  and  Meyers  is  not  to  be 
outdone.  Their  Chesterfield  ads 
ask  the  question,  "Do  you  like 
yoiu'  plea-sure  big'.'"  What  has  this 
tt)  ck>  with  Chesterfields'.'  Or  ai-e 
they  implving  that  their  cigarette 
is  biggirr  than  the  others'.' 

The  "Live  Modern  "  motif  of 
L&.VI  is  the  worst  yet.  They  imply 
that  \ou  are  old-fashioned  if  you 
do  not  smoke  their  brand.  "Full 
exciting  flavoc-.  "  This  means  that 
with  the  fun  of  Pall  Mall  and  the 
excitement  of  L&M  one  never  need 
be  lx>red  again. 

The  last  of  the  big  three.  R.  J. 
Reynolds,  swears  that  "Winstons 
taste  gocxi  like  a  cigarette  shoiUd." 
In  this  case  the  question  arises 
as  to  who  is  foolish  enough  to  eat 
Win.stons  to  find  out? 

Camels  simply  .states,  "Have 
a  real  cigaj-ette."  Do  they  mean 
that  other  smokes  are  imitations, 
facsimiles,  or  just  plain  non-exis- 
tent? Whatever  they  mean,  if 
sounds  like  a  lil>eloius  crack. 

Dr.  Cai-y  Middlecoff  says  that 
"Viceroys  have  the  smoothest 
taste  of  all  "  All  what?  Does  he 
meiLn  that  because  he  is  a  pro- 
golfer  and  a  champion  that  Vi- 
ceroys will  do  the  same  for  us. 
or  does  he  mean  that  because  he 
is  both  of  these  and  also  a  den- 
tist that  he  should  be  i^cognized 
as  a  tobacco  expert  also.  It's 
quite  possitrie  that  Viceroys  have 
the  smootest  taste  to  him  because 


Lll  Abnsr 


FROM  THE  DAVIDSONIAN: 


An  Assertion  For  More  Stringent 
Honor  Code  Regulatory  Standards 


Suggestioits  ha\e  been  made 
which  wou-ld  substitute  suspension 
from  CoHege  for  violation  of  hon- 
\>r  offenses  in  place  of  the  now  ex- 
isting mandatory  dismissal  jxuiish- 
n\ent.  Honor  offenses,  as  defined 
by  th-&  Student  Body  Constitution, 
refer  to  those  violation*  kivolving 
lying,  cheating,  and  stealing.  , 
•  •  • 

The  DAVIDSO.\l.\N  opposes  any 

• 

he  has  no  ta.ste  buds.  Who  knows? 

Phillip  MoiTis  must  have  giv- 
en up  .and  fired  all  their  ad  men, 
becau.se  all  they  say  is  "New  Phil- 
lip Morris  gives  yx>u  a  Natural 
smoke."  Tlie\-  don't  elaborate  very 
.much  on  what  a  natural  smoke 
is,  but  they  don't  make  ai>surd 
claims  either.  Miiybe  they're  giv- 
ing up  the  ghost. 

Now  there  is  no  better  way  to 
finish  than  with  Marlboro.  Be- 
fore the  adve'it  of  the  tattoo,  Marl- 
lx)i\)  was  a  cigarette  for  women. 
The  tattoo  was  added,  and  over- 
nighr  Marlboro  rankc>d  favorably 
with  other  filter-tips  Why'.'  That 
Is  a  gcx)d  question,  because  the 
average  smoker  does  not  own  a 
ranch,  do  >tce!  work,  or  fight 
Mau-.MaiLs,  nor  is  he  tattooed. 
"Filter,  flavor,  fllp-toip  box  "  is 
a  lovely  alliteration,  but  it  can 
never  replace  the  tattoo  for  .sales 
effect. 


movement  to  modify  the  existing 
Honor  System  with  respect  to 
minimizing  the  penalities  for  honor 
of  fenses . 

SuwJoitei's  of  the  proipose^  nwve 
base  theii-  arguments  on  two  fac- 
tors. First,  permanent  disntissal 
from  Davidson  witli  no  chance  for 
readmission  virtually  denies  the 
involved  student  admission  into 
nuin.v  colleges  in  the  nation. 

•  •  • 
.Modification  adherents  viev/  this 

as  unfair.  We, hasten  to  point  out 
that  personal  honor  is  a  thing  of 
too  great  magnitude  to  be  trifled 
with.  If  David.'K)n  supports  the  ad- 
mission of  a  c-onvicted  student  to 
another  institution  by  permitting  , 
him  to  iieenter  Davidson  at  a  later 
date,  then  it  Ls  being  unfair  to 
both  that  institution  aiid  to  its 
own  standards 

If  an  honor  .system  is  to  work 
at  all  it  mxust  be  ab>solute.  for  hcMi- 
or  by  its  very  iiatiuv  is  absolute. 
Honor  cannot  be  made  a  hali-way 
affair. 

•  •  * 
Secondly,   those  who  adx-ocate  a 

wider  use  of  temporary'  suspension 
point  out  that  tliis  penalty  was,  in 
fact,  invoked  by  the  Judicial  Re- 
view Committee  of  the  faculty  in 
one  case  this  year.  Fears  were 
voiced   that   this   precedent   might 


result   in  a  loss  or  power  by  the 
Student  Council, 

The  faculty  has  always  had  the 
right  to  review  Council  decisions 
but  has  exercised  this  right  oiriy 
when  requested  to  do  so  by  eithei 
the  student  involved  or  the  Coun- 
cil. There  is  no  reason  to  believe 
that  Xhey  will  abuse  this  power 
any  more  in  the  future  than  tliey 
have  in  the  past.  The  i>artlcuiar 
case  in  point  was  one  of  admitted- 
ly unusual  circumstances. 

•  •  * 
Relaxation  of  the  permanent  dis- 
missal penalty  faces  oth«r  dangers. 
First,  there  is  the  possibiJity  that 
justice  might  t>e  too  often  temper- 
ed with  mercy  thus  resultiac  im 
too  frequent  use  of  the  minimum 
penalty. 

.\,gain.  such  i>elaxation  might 
make  some  students  wiling  to 
take  more  chancres  in  their  respon- 
sibilities  to  the   honor  system. 

•  -^  • 

The  DAVIDSONIAN  believes  ti»at 
the  sti^ngth  of  the  honor  system 
exists  in  its  exactness,  its  rigidity, 
and  its  appeal  to  the  best  within 
each  student.  The  system  as  it 
presently  stands  in  i^gJird  to  pen- 
alties for  violaitons  has  ser\'ed  the 
School  well  in  the  past  and  no  evi- 
dence has  l>een  given  to  indicate 
that  it  will  not  continue  to  do  so. 


• 

By  A\  C%pp 


—  The  g»rl  is  rxjmd  — 


SHE'S  THE 
POLICE  CHIIEF'S 
DAUGHTER-y 
SHE  TEACHES 
SUMDAV 


THATS  -4HuPD^.r-  IT 
ALL  R-WGHT.*:''— IT 
WAS  RKAk— 

T-Tfltmuaf  lOAL.r 


Pogo   '^ 


By  Walt  Kelly 


/I'MAHTTUl,?  4J1^ 
NgAB$l6WTBPF^lOoR 


•^ 


If  I  PINP 
MVWAV 


flTl'Ollbl*    ,     ' 

9ee  vMet" 


Art,  Poetry  In 
New  'Peer  Gynf 

Anthony  Wolff 

Henrik  Ibsen  has  suffered  a  strange  fate  in  this 
country:  he  is  acltnoiwledged  a  genius,  and  his  plays 
are  cited  as  primary  influence  in  the  development 
of  the  modern  theatric,  font  they  are  seldom  acted 
professicmally. 

The  fault  i^s  been  with  Ibsen's  translators,  who 
in  their  academic  pursuit  of  accuracy  have  foresak- 
eu  the  art,  and  often  the  sense,  of  the  plays.  The 
results  have  been  obi^cure  in  places,  and  most  def- 
initely un-poetic. 

It  is  no  overstatement,  then,  that  Ibscft  fairly 
crries  out  for  a  sensitive  and  true  translator,  one 
capable  of  faithfully  reproducing  his  work  in  a 
modern  American  play,  a  dramatist  rather  than  an 
academian,  an  artist  instead  of  a  scholar. 

Judging  by  'Pew  Gynt,"  it  is  quite  possible  that 
Kai  Jurgensen  and  Robert  Schenkkan  have  done  the 
trick.  Due  to  the  exigencies  of  commercial  publish- 
ing, it  may  well  be  that  their  translations  of  Ibsen 
will  not  be  publicly  released:  but  If  they  are  all  a^ 
fine  as  his  "i>eer  Gynt,"  and  if  the  Pla>'makers  potv- 
ers-that-be  have  the  vision  to  take  advantage  of 
them,  their  versions  of  Ibsen  will  considerably  bol 
ster  the  Playraakers'  declining  eminence. 

The  translation  of  "Peer"  is  excellent',  and  in 
some  places  it  is  superb:  poetry  has  been  translated 
into  poetr>'  with  rewarding  regard  for  the  ticklish 
business  of  idiom.  Every  line  is  both  pleasing  and 
straightfowardly  meaningful,  and  the  .smoothness 
ot  the  speech  causes  and  permits  the  action  to 
flgw. 

This    new    "P«»r    Gynt,"   departiiHi    so    freely 
from   Ibcn's   structuring  of  tht  play,    has   repro- 
duced instead  the  most  important  elcmertts  of  all 
—  Ibsoh's  collection  and  his  artistry. 
In  the  adaptation,  the  cast  has  been  cut  to  six 
major  supporting  characters,  who  provide  the  color- 
ful,  dramatic   tapestry    against    which   Peer   lives, 
struggles,  fails,  and  is  judged. 

Peer  is  a  character  cirawn  bigger  than  life:  he 
is  to  be  carefully  examined  and  greatly  enjoyed. 
The  audience  is  invited  to  watch  a  dramatic  fairy 
talie;  as  with  all  adult  fairy  tales,  the  protagonisit 
Is  an  incarnation  of  some  part  of  the  human  spirit, 
and  as  such  there  is  no  real  sympathy  between  him 
and  an  adult  audience.  This  is  not  to  say  that  the 
aduience  does  nek  identify  itself  with  Peer,  but  the 
recognition  of  Peer  as  a  vital  part  of  every  human 
being  must  come  with  thought. 

Peer  L*  the  symbol  of  that  part  of  man's  sen.se 
tvhich  can  so  easily  betray  him  into  compromise  and 
the  "easy  way".  He  is  basically  a  good  and  .noraJ 
man,  t>ut  he  is  forced  by  his  own  weak  character 
to  alienate  himself  from  the  world  in  which  be 
desires  so  desperately  to  perform  greatly,  Ke  be- 
comes "sufficient  unto  himself. "  the  epitome  of 
the  egoial,  lying  to  himself,  blindly  rationalizing 
his  failures,  and  betraying  those  he  loves.  His 
psyche  perverts  his  destiny,  depriving  him  not  only 
Of  greatness,  but  also  of  any  worthwhile  sin;  he 
compromises  himself  into  limbo. 

Kon  Lowry  is  very  believable  and  often  mov- 
ing  in  the  tirto  role,   playing   it   with    passienat* 
voico,   grand   gestures   and    uninhibited,   graceful 
movomont.    At   his    weakest   in   the   love   scenes, 
hit  acting  is  oven  there  equal  to  any  dorio  by  a 
Haymaker  thit  year:  at  his  best,  in  tho  iHMning 
scene  and  in  the  second  act,  he  is  magnificent. 
Aj  the  Button-Moulder,  Peer's  antagonist  in  the 
outer  structure  of  the  play,  Al  Gordon  is  effective 
and    amusing.   The   firmness    and    sophistication    in 
his   characterization  contrast  brilliantly  with   Lov^ 
ry's  romanticism  and  passion. 

Acting  and  doncing  in  the  triple  role  of  Grttn- 
tlad,  Anitra,  and  Hag,  Amanda  Meiggs  gives  a 
thoroughly  exciting  performance.  She  is  an  ir- 
resistibly soxy  creature,  and  she  performs  with 
exuborance  »n4  wit. 

Bettina  Jinette,  playing  Peer's  mother,  is  very 
moving  in  her  interpretation  of  a  woman  torn  be- 
tween love  for  her  son  and  deep  despair  for  his 
wasted  life. 

On  the  debit  side,  there  are  two  scenes  in  par- 
ticular which  lose  drama  and  meaning  through  both 
inadequate  acting  and  misdirection.  The  wedding 
party  scene,  important  because  it  demonstrates 
Peer's  alienation  from  the  rest  of  society  Jiid  also 
sets  the  love  theme,  suffers  badly.  The  choreog 
raphy,  which  should  set  a  gay  mood  at  the  outset 
is  weak  and  stilted:  Stan  Shaws  broad  overactmg 
through  the  whole  scene  spoils  much  of  it. 

James    Sechrost   the    Bridegroom    partially   re- 
^ems  the  fault  here  by  some  clever  comic  antics. 
In  the   scene  in   the  Hall   of  the   Goblin   Kmg 
some  of  the  mo^,i  revealing  lines  in  the  play  are 
lost  m  the  comedy  of  Peei:  with  his  trousers  down 
and  a  tail  on  his  rump.  The  goblins  in  this  scene 
are  amusing  at  first,  out  they  are  too  prominent 
their  constant    and  undirected   activity  further  ob 
scures  the  drama  of  the  scene. 

As  the  Goblin  King,  David  Small  i^  often  mut 
fled  and  unintelligiWe,  and  he  loses  the  poetry  ol 
his  lines. 

Yvonne  Parker's  choreography  is  good  only  in 
spots:  It  IS  best  when  it  is  performed  by  Amanda 
Meiggs.  but  It  is  difficult  here  to  tell  whether  Mis* 
Meigg-  and  the  sensuality  of  the  theme  are  not  more 
compelling  than  the  dance  itself.  The  rest  of  Miss 
Parker's  work  is  too  involved  with  grotesque  con- 
tortion to  be  very  expressive. 

Tho  music    for   the   production   is    excellently 
concoivod  and  conducted  by  Jool  Chadabo.  With- 
out  being   obtrusive,  it  states  the  mood   and  ac- 
cents tho  pace  of  the  action.  His  diroction  of  th« 
ehorous  is  less  successful,  and  much  of  the  sym- 
bolism of  their   appearance   and  Peer's   response 
to  it  is  obscured  by  the  loss  of  the  words  to  the 
hymn. 
Tommy  Rezzuto's    sets   are    simple   and    severe, 
and  the  imaginative  use  of  unadorned  horizantals 
and  verticals  affords   the  players  plenty   of   room. 
fa  their  obvous  practicality  and  economy,  however, 
the  sets  fail  to  add  to  the  mood  or  the  meaning  of 
the  play. 

Lou  Goldstien's  lighting,  on  the  other  hand, 
is  creative  and  exciting;  its  only  fault  is  that  in  set- 
ting the  mood  it  sometimes  fails  to  illuminate  the 
scene  adequately. 

In  sum  tho  production  is  thrilling  theatre  and 
beautiful  poetry.  Thore  is  delight  for  the  eye 
•nd  Mr,  mi  Hr  tho  mind  and  emotions  ■•  woll. 


TUCSOA^ 

Phi 

The    Ph 
meet  for 
ter   tcmigt 
whether  o^ 
should   be  I 

Newiy 
Tolt>en  vki 
ing  for  thi 
day  invitej 
to   attend 
debate 

He  poin^ 
the  last 
enter   and 
expects 
fail  wi:h  a] 
program 


BatistI 

Strii 

Dacrol 

Drip- 

Halai 

Wool] 

Silk 

lAnoti 
Specie 

lAli  w^ 
Worsi 

iFamot 
faylof 

ptherl 

llmpoi 

I  Specie 

[One  fi 

B.  D 

Famot 

Dacroi 

Sumi 

Impoi 


DA 


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Rr.^t 

TUE^AY,  MAY  14,  1«7 


THT  DAILY  TAR  HSEL 


PAGE  THRIt 


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m  this 
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Phi  Society  Meets  | 

The    Philanthfopk   Society    will: 
meet  for  the  1^9  time  this  semes- 
ter  tonight    to    debate    on    a    bill 
whether  or  not  the  Federal  budget 
Nhould  be  drast^c^ly  cut.  j 

Newly     elected  "  President     Jim  ; 
Tolbert  will  preside  over  the  meet- 
ing for  the  first  time  and  yester- 
day invited  all .  interested  persons  < 
to  attend  and   participate  in  the 
debate. 

He  pointed  out  that  this  will  be  ' 
;he  last  meeting  of  the  spring  sem- 
t>ster  and  added  that  the  society 
expects   to  resume  activities  next . 
fall  with  a  ne\y.and  more  complete 
program. 


PHARMACY 

(Continued  from  page  1) 

Virginia  Hanus  Carswell  of  Spring 
Lake. 

The  M.  L.  Jacobs  Award  for 
excellence  in  Pharmlceutica!  Or- 
ganic Chemistry  was  won  by  Da- 
vid Ramsey  Davis  Jr.  of  Wilming- 
ton. 

In  presenting  the  awards  Dean 
Brecht  complimented  all  of  the 
students  in  the  School  of  Pharm- 
acy calling  attention  to  the  fact 
that  54  students  or  22.4  per  cent 
had  earned  scholarship  during  the 
fall  semester  to  earn  places  on 
the  Honor  Roll   and   Dean's   List. 


Stevens-Sheperd's 

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DAILY    CROSSWORD 


ACROSS 

1   Pierce        - 
3  At  a        ^  J 

distance 
9  Dog's  coat 

10  Title  of 
respect 

1 1  Food  from 
heaven 

12  Eiilin; 
uteruii 

14  Chest 

15  Arabic 
letter 

17  Revise 

18  Toward 

19  Clear 

21  Negative' 
reply 

22  Half  an  em 

23.  Excla- 
mation oi^ 
*orroin-      '' 

24  tnclosurt 

25  Cuckoo 

26.  Saah  i  Jap  ) . 
28  ^uton 
30  Too 
32.  Thua 
34.  Overhead 
93  Alight    ,.. 

Itmch 
t<  Sxcla. 

mation 
87  Apportion 

39  Pronoun 

40  Wager 

41  Well  done! 
4.1  Bntices 

45  Mimicked 

46  Send  forth 

47  Rational 
Arithmetic- 
al proWema 

DOWN* 
City  tPa.) 
Cutern     . 


4.  A  South 
American 

■    5  Qtiestfon 
•    f.  Punished  by 
ajudfe 
T.  Dry 

5.  Purify 

11  Companion 
13  Boys' 
^        achool 

(Eng  ) 
IC.  A  hum. 

mingbird 
19  Carting 

vehicle 
20.  Kind  of 

triangle 
24.  Greek 

letter 


25.  Indefi- 
nite 
article 

27.  Ameri- 
can 
editor 

28  Speech- 
less 

29  Musi- 
cal 
dramas 

31  Statute 

32  Pieces 
of 
p^per 

33.  Food 

for 

horses 
35  Number 


Bsun  nana 

arana  Eswf^n 

'3:na     UDnaaa 

fam     aaprcraaa 
caaHin   nrinn 


\f»ttri»y'»  Aiitwfr 
38.  Cloth  from 

mulberry 

bark 
40.  Hat  rim 
42.  Poem 
44  Earth  oven 

(Polyn  ) 


48 


Water  Pageant 
Tonight  At  8 

Bowman  Gray  Pool  will  be  the 
site  of  a  co>lorful  and  imaglnaiive 
Water  Pagent  tonight  to  be  pre- 
sented by  the  Splash  Club  and 
featuring  nine  gracefui  and  intri- 
cate  swimming   formations. 

A  unique  and  imaginative  use  of 
color  and  precision  swimming  for- 
matlonrf  will  combine  the  talents 
of  20  girls  to  round  out  the  pro- 
!  gram  which  is  scheduled  to  begin 
at  8  p.m. 

I  The  show,  which  is  comprised 
'  of  nine  individual  numbers,  will 
I  be  introduced  by  "Stars  and  Strip- 
'  es  Forever,"  featuring  12  members 
and  under  the  direction  of  Pat 
Anderson  nad  Edie  Drexler. 

Also  on  the  program  are  "Moon- 
light in  Vermont,"  with  Ingie  Clay, 
Janet  Bannerman,  Punkin  Coe  and 
Kay  Hannan;  "Manhatten,"  with 
Mary  Margaret  Williams.  Shirley 
Downing,  Sara  William.son.  Bami 
Bourne,  Pat  Anderson  and  Helen 
Walker; 

"St.  Louis  Blues,"  with  Kay 
Smith,  Fiances  Reynolds,  Ann 
Burt.  Pat  Anderson,  Ingie  Clay, 
Janet  Bannerman,  Punkin  Coe  and 
Kay  Hannan;  "Chinatown,"  with 
Frances  Reynolds,  Ekiie  DrexJer, 
Mary  Williams,  Shirley  Downing. 
Bertie  Hastings  and  Sara  William- 
son; 

"Hawaii,"  directed  by  Bami 
Bourne;  "Giant."  drecited  by  Ellen 
Pemberton  and  Marye  Clendenin; 
'Basn  Street  Blues,"  directed  by 
Diana  Aihley:  and  "Hark  the 
Sound"  directed  by  Ann  Burt, 
which  will  feature  the  entire  cast 
and  provide  the  finale  to  the  even- 
ing. 


Valkyries 


(Contimied  from  page  1) 

have  served  to  enhance  her  leader- 
.:.«hip.  which  has  been  felt  ia  many 
areas  of  the  campus." 

MISS  PRESSLY:  ".  .  .  .  One 
whose  gracious  manner  and  strong 
character  have  greatly  influenced 
all  who  have  come  in  contact  with 
her,  on  and  off  the  campus.  Her 
active  interest  io  fellow  students 
has  been  reflected  by  her  many  un- 
selfish contributions  to  dormitory 
and  sorority  life,  women's  govern- 
ment an,d  student  government  ac- 
tivkie:}.  She  jus  been  able  to  exert 
a  strong  influence  throughout  the 
campus  because  her  spirit  of  help- 
fulness and  cooperation,  her  un- 
derstanding and  concern  for  others* 
and  her  sincerity  of  purpose  have 
remained,  undaimted  by  success 
and  honors." 

MISS  WHITTAKER:    '.      .  .  One 

who  has  proven  herself  outstand-' 
ing  in  many  ways.  A  strong  leader, 
she  has  taken  an  active  part  in 
the  student  work  of  her  church, 
in  her  sorority  activities,  in  her 
dormitory,  and  in  the  life  of  the 
campus.  She  has  a  sincere  and  per- 
ceptive interest  in  her  fellow  stu 


ly  recognized  leader  in  nursing  ed- 
ucation, Miss  Kembie,  by  her  de- 
votion to  the  highest  principles  of 
the  nilrsiiTg  profession,  ihjer  un- 
ceasing eneriegs,  and  her  courage- 
ous ieadership,  has  goided  the 
School  of  Nursing  consistoitly  to- 
wards the  highest  of  professional 
standard*.  Through  her  sincere  in- 
terest in  people  and  by  her  per- 
sonal example,  she  inspires  in  her 
students,  as  well  as  her  associates, 
the  desire  to  attain  the  highest 
ideals  of  character,  scholarship, 
and  service.  The  influence  of  her 
positive  leadership  will  long  be  felt 
in  the  School  of  Nursing,  in  the 
University,  and  throughout  the 
state." 

MISS  FAISON:  ".  .  .  .  Although 
retiring  this  year  from  thirty-three 
years  of  service  to  the  University 
f-campus.  Miss  Faison's  work  in  the 
Reference  Library  wU  be  long  re- 
membered by  both  faculty  and  stu- 
dents. Her  gentle  personality,  her 
willingness  and  eagernesif  to  help 
— no  matter  how  trivial  the  prob- 
lem— her  dignity  and  quiet  leader- 
ship are  the  qualities  which  have 
endeared  her  to  the  University  and 
i  which  will  stand  as  a  constant  ideal 


Covering  The  Camptjs 


dents  and  their  welfare.  Having  a.*        ■ •    *•  ».  ,,     ,-• 

,        ,     .        .  .^.  "^    """"'e  «•   for    inspiration.    Above    all.    Miss 

keenly  inquisitive  mind,  she  stands   ^  •  „„v    u        .  r    ^ 

,   .      '         o"»""o   Faison  s  character  mirrors  perfect 


Parker 

(Continued  from  page  1) 
ties  Board,  a  member  of  the 
Sound  and  Fury  committee  and 
the  Wesley  Foundation,  and  was 
on  the  Graham  Memorial  Board 
of  Directors.  Director  of  Student 
Affairs  Samuel  H.  Magill  said  in 
a  letter  to  Young,  "Never  have 
I  experienced  the  maturity  and 
sensitivity  to  University  problems 
and  life  that  you  have  exhibited, 
and  I  have  always  had  the  utmost 
confidence  in  you  and  your  ad- 
ministration.", 

Truman   Moore   was   chosen   for 
his    outstanding    work    as    photo- 
grapher   for    the    Yackety    Yack, 
UNC  yearbook.   He  has   served   as 
1  a  member  of  The  Daily  Tar  Heel 
,  and    the    Yackety    Yack    for    two 
'  years.    He    was    also    on    the    staff 
{  of      Tarnation    during   his    junior 
j  year.    This    past    year    he    was    a 
!  member      of      the      Pre.ss      Club. 
Moore's    photographic    work    was 
"of  distinctive  ^character  and  gave 
a   unique   touch   to  the  yearbook." 
The  Abernethy  Award  Commit- 
tee   departed    from    usual    proce- 
dure   and   commended    two    other 
students  for  outstanding  work   in 
the   field   of  student   publications. 
Tom  Johnson  was  commended  for 
the    Yackety    Yack    and    Bill    Bob 
Peel  for  the   Daiyl   Tar   Heel    for 
two  years. 


as   an  example  of  high  scholastic 
achievement." 

MISS  MOODY:  "...  One  who 
has  shown,  in  the  quiet  and  hum- 
ble execution  of  her  duties,  a  deep 
and  active  interest  in  the  students 
with  whom  she  works.  Her  pres- 
ence and  influence  have  been  felt 
in  her  position  as  graduate  coun- 
selor in  the  dojjmitory,  where  she 
has  displayed  sincerity  and  toler- 
ance and  has  proved  quick  to  sense 
the  needs  of  those  around  her.  Her 
genuine  warmth  and  understand- 
ing spirit  have  inspired  the  confi- 
dence of  others  and 'have  made  her 
leadership  and  guidance  effective 
and   meaningful." 


DR.  KEMBLE: 


ly  that  spirit  of  helpfulness — that 
glad  and  quiet  accomplishment  of 
tasks;  and  it  is  for  this  reason  that 
the  University  of  North  Carolina 
can  never  forget  her." 

MISS  QUEEN:  "...  One  who 
has  served  the  campus  in  her  posi- 
tion as  Executive  Secretary  of  the 
Y.W.C.A.  in  such  a  manner  that 
her  influence  Was  been  felt  in 
every  pha.se  of  the  organization 
and  in  the  purposes  for  which  it 
stands.  In  her  work  with  foreign 
students,  she  has  given  unselfish 
ly  to  their  betterment  and  has 
acted  with  a  tolerant  and  sympa- 
thetic understandng  accepting  their 
beliefs  while  holding  firmly  to  her 


.A  National-own  deep  convictions. 


Dr.   Elisha  Mitchell 
Honored  Here  Tonight 


PICNIC 

The  annua]  Phi  Delta  Kap(pa  pic- 
nic w-m  be  held  for  members  and 
guests  Wednesday  on  Fetzer  Field, 
ii  was  annoiuiced  yesterday.  Games 
will  be  played  from  4-6  pjn.  and  a 
barbecue  dinner  will  be  served.  Tic- 
kets may  be  purchased  f«>m  mem- 
bers! of  the  ticki^  committee. 
PHARMACY  MEETS 

H.  C.  McAllister,  secretary  of  the 
N.  C.  Board  of  Pharmacy,  will 
speak  before  a  special  meeting  of 
the  School  of  Phanmacy  tomorrow 
at  7  p.m.,  it  was  announct<i  ye^er- 
day. 

All  pharmacy  students  have  been 
urged  tp  attend  the  meeting  which 
will  explain  the  requirements  and 
pnx;edure  for  obtaining  pharmaceu- 
tical experience  during  the  year. 
FACULTY  CLUB 

Dr.  Isaac  Taylor,  assistant  profes- 
sor of  medicine  here,  will  speak  be- 
fore the  UNC  Faculty  club  at  the 
Carolina  Inn  at  1  p.m.  today  on 
"Antarctic  Experiences,"  it  was  an- 
nounced yesterday.  Dr.  Taylor  is  re- 
cently returned  from  "Operation 
Deepfreeze  I"  and  only  resumed  his 
regular  teaching  duties  last  week. 
WUNC-TV 

Todays   schedule   for   WUNC-TV, 
rhe  University's  educational  televis- 
ion station,  is  as  follows: 
12:45    Music 

Today  on  the  Farm 

Dreams  Come  True 

Sign  Off 

Music 

Geography  for  Decision 

Legislative  Review 

News  and  Safety 

Discovery 

Of  Boolis  and  Peoi>le 

Sports 

German  Course 

Ski  Tricks 


MiteheU  Society  in-  the  Carolina  Inn 
at  6:30  pAO-  today.  The  public  has 
been  invited  to  attend  the  speecli 
and  anniversary  cerenKMiies,  whfch 
will  take  place  after,  dinner. 
CHORUS  CONCERT 

Baritone  Edgar  Vom  Leho  will  be 
featured  in  Hill  Hall  at  8  p.m.  to- 
night by  the  University  Chorus  Con- 
cert. The  concert  wiU  t>e  open  to 
the  public  and  all  interested  persons 
have  been  invited  to  attend. 
MUSICAL  MEET 

Mr.  Harriss  Mitchell  will  speak  to 
a  meeting  of  the  American  Music 
cological  Society  at  8  p.m.  tonight 
at  8  p.m.  in  Hill  Hall,  it  was  an- 
nounced yesterday. 


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WE'LL   BUY   ALL 
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0    Live  Texts 

We  pay  top  prices  for  texts 
that  will  be  used  again  at 
U.N.C. 

•  Dropped  Texts 

We'll  search  the  market  for 
a  spot  to  salvage  some  of 
your  loss  when  a  text  is 
dropped. 

•  Enjoyable  Books 

We  can  use  books  you  no 
longer  want  on  your  shelves. 
The  next  fellow  that  comes 
along  may  find  them  as  de- 
lightful as  you  did  a  year  or 
so  ago. 

When  Exams  Are  Over, 

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Story  of  Milk 
Twins  On  the  Ohio 


CLASSIFIED  ADS 


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M  «»IL 


Dr.  Archibeld  Henderson,  Ken- 
an professor  emeritus,  will  be  the 
featured  speaker  at  a  meeting 
honoring  Dr.  Elisha  Mitchell  at 
7  p.m.  tonight  in  the  Carolina 
Inn. 

In  addition  to  the  speech  by 
Dr.  Henderson,  a  display  of  early 
19th  century  scientific  instru- 
ments and  added  ceremonies  will 
be  joined  in  recognizing  the  100th 
memorial  to  Dr.  Mitchell. 

Dr.  Mitchell,  a  respected  and 
beloved  scientist  and  minister  had 
visited  "Black  Dome'  Mountain, 
as  Mt.  Mitchell  was  once  known 
-several  times  and  had  establish- 
ed the  fact  that  the  mountain  was 
the  highest  summit  ea«t  of  the 
Rockies. 

He  was  on  a  further  journey  ol 
exploration  and  verification  when 
he  was  caught  by  a  thunderstorm  | 
on  the  mountain.  As  he  groped 
his  way  down,  it  became  dark,  and 
he  slipped  and  fell  to  his  death. 

Eleven  days  later.  Dr.  Mitchells 
body  was  found  and  carried  to 
Asheville  where  it  was  buried. 
Friends  of  Dr.  Mitchell  had  his 
body  reburied  later  on  the  sum- 
mit of  Mt.  .Mitchell  which  is  to- 
day owned  by  the  University  ol 
North  Carolina. 


j      Presiding  at  the  ceremonies  to- 
night will  be  Kenan  Professor  Ar- ! 
thur   Roc   who   is   director   of   the 
J  UNC  Institute  of  Natural   Science 
iaiul.  chairman  of  the  society. 

I  Dr.  Everett  Palmatier  will  ex- 
i  hibit  scientific  instruments  which 
'  were  brought  to  Chapel  Hill  in 
1823  by  Pres.  Joseph  Caldwell 
who  went  to  England  for  the  ex- 
press purpo.se  of  bringing  back 
back  useful  modern  equipment  to 
be  used  by  Dr.  Mitchell  and  other 
UNC  scientists  here. 

It  was  stressed  in  an  announce- 
ment yesterday  that  extra  seats 
will  be  available  in  the  Inn  ball- 
room for  those  who  wish  to  hear 
Dr.  Henderson  speak  at  8  p.m. 


U.N.  Review 
Miracles  From  Earth 
Final  Edition 

ELISHA  MITCHELL 
Dr.     Archibald     Henderson     will 

speak  before  a  meeting  of  the  EUsha 

Y  Conference 
Session  Today 

The  Conference  Committee  ol 
the  YW-YMCA  will  meet  at  4  p.m., 
Wednesday  in  the  Cabinet  Room 
of  the  "Y"  building.  Intere^,ted 
students  have  been  asked  to  attend. 
Those  interested  but  unable  to  at 
tend  the  meeting  may  contact  Mar- 
garet Daughtridge   at  8-9134. 

"The  year  1957-58  seems  to  pro- 
vide the  right  opportunity  for  a 
fall  conference  as  well  as  a  spring 
one.  It  is  hoped  that  this  confer- 
ence at  the  beginning  of  the  new  | 
school  year  will  heir  to  increase 
active  and  enthusiastic  member- 
rfhp  of  the  "Y".  Miss  Daughtridge 
said.  Suggestions  pertaining  to 
speakers,  discussion  topics  or  plan 
ning  will  be  welcome. 


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TO  BE  OR  i^OT  TO  Bl* 

PhilOBopher  Berkeley  did  innit 
,      That  only  thiitgs  we  see  exist. 
But  if  what's  real  is  what  I  see,  , 

When  I'na  not  looking,  who  is  me? 

MOtALt  You  know  it's  real  when  it's  the  BIG,  BIG 
pleasure  of  Chesterfield.  More  full-flavored  satisftctioii 
from  the  world's  beet  tobaccos.  PLUS 
King-iize  ifiltor  action  ...  a  better 
tobacco  filter  because  it's  packed 
smoother  by  ACCU»RAYI 


CliosteifleM  Kliis  has  •verythlngl 

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1 


Lucky  girl! 


Next  time  one  of  her  dates  bring  up  the  Schleswig- 
Holstein  question,  she'd  really  be  ready  for  him. 
Ready  for  that  test  tomorrow,  too  ...  if  that  bottle  of 
Coke  keeps  her  as  alert  tonight  as  it  does  other  people. 


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$  «.5S 

(plus  tax) 

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TR  AILWAYS 


The    route    o(   the    Tti«u-I 


I 


t  i 


■^i^>^i^iW 


■T  r  -.  T  V. 


;«-'• 


PA«I  pout 


TH#  DAILY  TAR  HllL 


TUESDAY,  MAY   14,  IfST 


Tar  Heels  Down  State  3-2  To  Stay  In  Title  Contention 


Watch  For  The  Opening 

Of  The 

Chapel  Hill  Barber  Shop 

Owned  &  Operated  By 
BILL  COLVILLE 

(Form«raliy  Associated  With  Villag*  Barber  Shop) 

Saturday,  May  18 


r  JSl^ 


Everybody  meets 
at  the  BILTMORE 

With  studenU  everywhere,  "Meet 
Me  Under  the  Clock"  is  a  tradition! 

It  means  "that  special  weekend"  at 
New  York's  most  convenient  location  .  .  . 
rood  times  in  the  famous  Palm  Court 
Preferred  for  its  special  services  for 
students.  Write  the  College  Department 
for  reservations.  No  cab  fare 

ae^eisary— direct  private  elevator 
from  Grand  Central  Station. 

(^^BILTMORE 

^MMNsen  Avetwe  •»  Mrd  ft.,  M.  T.  17,  N.  Y. 

Qthir  MALTY  HOmS  — TA^  Bttxelav  A  Park  Lam 
Harry  M.  Anholt,  Prendmt 


MILTON'S 

SRADUAJION  GIVE-A-WAY| 

lEntire  stock  year  round  Sport  Coats  and 
Sujts-V^  Off  .     .^ 

Isala  flive-a-way  to  show  our  appreciation  for  yoor  continuedj 
confidence  and  p)itrona«e. 

l^ntire  stock  nationally  advertised  baby  cords  and  pin  check] 
wrinkle-shed  cotton  suits  reduced  from  $28.75  to  $18.99. 

|3ur  wash  'n  woer  nationally  advertised  suits  in  blend  of  65%  | 
dacron/3S%  cotton,  reduced  from  $47.50  to  $34.99. 

(imported  burlap  sport  jackets  reduced  from  $29.95  to  $18.99. 

loan  River  baby  cord  Ivy  trousers,  regularly  $5.95,  1   pr.  $4.00,| 

2  pairs  for  $7.50. 

t 

khaki  trousers  in  black,  olive,  and  khaki;  cotton  baby  cordl 
trousers  in  Wue,  tan,  and  fray— regularly  $4.95;  1  pair[ 
$3.75,  2  pairs  $7.00. 

Large  group  bermuda  shorts,  includng  our  $11.95  made  in  Eng- 
land imported  India  Madras— at  half  price. 

|pant  heaven— tako  your  pick  of  any  daeron/cotton  trousw;  wel 
carry  cords  or  poplins— regularly  to  $12.95— give-a-way| 
price — $9.99. 

■Four   lots  of  trousers— chocolate  brown;   oxford   brown;  black/l 
|brown  or  navy— the  Ist  decron/wool- the   last  three— all  woolj 
tropicals — your  choice  at  half  price. 

|lc  give-a^ay  an  our  Imported  from  Holland  Twoka  polo  shirtf 
buy  one  for  $3.95,  got  second  one  for  Ic. 

Iselts  —  challia  wools  9r  elastics  —  values  to  $3.00  give-a-wai 
price  —  %  .79.' 

Ul  Bermuda  Hose  —  Half  Price. 

jtong  sleeve  batiste  Ivy  buHon-down  shirts — regularly  $4.50,  1  for| 
$3.5Q— or  3  for  $10.00 

Large  group  of  our  regular  long  sleeve  ivy  sport  shirts  in  sleevel 
lengths— regularly  $5.95   and  $6.95— $^00  Off. 

[oon't   put  off  another  single  day  getting  your   dress  or  casualj 
shoes— you'll  never  get  a  better  opportunity- 
Entire  stock  of  our  rubber  soled  genuine   shell  cordovar 
shoes  —  regularly  $20.0»— fake  your  pick  in  all  siiesj 
•t  $10.99. 

Entire   stock   leather    soled  wing-tips— regularly  $20.00 
Now$l3.99. 

Our  hand  sown  loafers — guaraafeod  against  ripping  til  theyl 
are  resoled — ^very  soft  and  good-looking — rich  mahoganyl 
or  black — regularly  $11.9S--glve-a-way  price — $8.99. 

Entire  stock  white  buck  shoes,  regularly  $14.95  —  Now  9.99.| 

OTHER  INTEIliSTING  ITEMS  TO  BE  ADDED  DAILY 


All  Sales  Cesh  And  Final  —  All  Alterations  Extra 

IClof^ins  Cttpfioari 


D^con  Hurler  Baseballers  Have  One 
Is  ACC  Leader    Left;  Raugh  is  Winner 


GREENSBORO,  N.C.  —  (AP)  — 
Right-hander  Bill  Lovingood  of 
Wake  Forest,  who  got  his  fourth 
decision  just  last  Nveelc  to  move 
into  contention,  yesterday  became 
the  new  pitching  leader  of  the  At- 
lantic Coast  Conference  with  a  per- 
fect mark  of  4-0  and  a  brilliant 
earned  run  average  of  0.58. 

Dick  Burton.  Dukes  lefty  star, 
thus  slips  to  second  after  leading 
the  league  last  week,  and  Duke's 
Harleigh  Fatzinger  and  Carolina's 
Jim  Raugh  also  challenge.  Burton 
has  a  5-1  record,  Fatzinger  4-1  and 
Raugh,  the  erstwhile  Carolina 
righty  is  8-2. 

Burton's  earned  run  average  of 
1,05  is  second  in  the  conference, 
according  to  ACC  service    bureau 


les  by  lead-off  anan   Darris   Brad- 
I  show   and   <*nterfielder   Dick   Hun- 
ter. Hunter  threateived  to  score  but 
was  cut  off  at  the  plate  on  Bomber 


By  BILL  KING 

The  Carolina  Tar  Heels  punchtid 
across  three  runs  in  the  first  foi'k" 
innings  and  righthander  Jim  Raugb 
throttled  the  State  Wolf  pack  yester- 
day as  the  Tar  Heels  clung  grimUv 
to  their  chances  of  a  tie  with  Duke 
for  the  ACC  title  by  defeating  t«io 
Wolfpack  3-2  in  Emerson   Stadium* 

The  Tar  Heels  carried  a  2-1  iitl- 

vantage  into  the  top  of  the  seco)J(J 

inning,    but    for    awhUe   it   seemed 

that    the    game    would   have   to   be ) 

.          ■  .  J     .  .  K'hird  when  the  rains  came 

postponed    aigain    as    a   tremendous,*"""  .   .    .    „ 

rain  soaked  the  playing  field  in  the  i 

second.  ,\fter  forty-five  minutes  de-  j 

lay,    however.    Umpire    Beck    said  { 

"play  ball"  and  the  Tar  Heels  went  I 


Fiiosh  Runners  In  Big-A 
Meet  In  Durham  Today 


By    DAVE   WIBLE 

Undefeated  in  four  meets,  Caro- 
lina's   yearling    trackmen    will   go 


Hill's  throw  to  the  piate  after  Ed  '  to  Durham  this  afternoon  to  par- 
annual    Big-Four 


figure.-,     and     Fred     Gebhardt     of  j  out  and  won  their  ninth  conference 
Maryland  (5-3)  has  the  third  best  ;  game  against  four  defeats, 
era  at  1.60.  Raugh  is  forth  at  1.69  j     ^j^^  ^^^  ^^^^  ^^^  ^^^^  ^^^  ^^g. 
and  leads  the  conference  in  strike 


outs  with  75. 


ularly   scheduled    game   remaining, 
a   makeup  game  with  Maryland  on 


Burton,   who    has    been    plagued    ^^npsday.  Coach  Walt  Rabb's  club 


by  a  sore  arm  much  of  the  season, 
boasts  a  sensational  control  record, 
having  walked  only  nine  batters 
in  54  inings. 

Herb  Bu^-h  of  Virginia  (5-4)  is 
second  to  Raugh  in  strikeouts  with 
74  and  last  week  pitched  the 
league's  first  no-hitter  of  the  sea- 
son against  South  Carolina. 


PATRONIZE  YOUR 
•    ADVERTISERS   • 


needs  a  win  over  the  Terps  to  tie 
the  Blue  De\'ils  <10-4)  for  the  con- 
ference leadership.  Thie  would  call 
for  a  playoff  between  the  two  to 
decide  the  title. 


Wyant  had  grounded  siiort  to  first*. 

The   Tar   Heels   came   right  bac/ii 

with  two  runs  in  the  hcnne  half  of 

the  first  with  Roger  Honej»cutt  frirn- 

ishing    a    ringing   double   ilo   center 

after    Chuck    Hartman    ha<i    le-d-off 

with  a  double  and  Don  Lewis,  had 

drawn  a  base  on  balls. 

State   had    runners   on    fiistt   and 

In  the 

i,.tcond   but  Raugh  was  able,  to  re- 

tin*   the   side   without   damr»ge. 

Ifiugh  was  not  in  really  t  »p  pitch- 
ing a'orm  until  the  ninth  when  he 
bore  dow»n  and  got  the  side  out, 
with  tv»o  strikeouts  and  an  infield 
groundtn'.  But  the  senior  righthand- 
er was  .Masterful  enough  to  stop  the 
Wolfpack'  in  the  clutch<js  Avhen  Coach 
Vic  SorrtJll's  crew  left  at  least  one 
man  on  in  every  inning  except  the 
.sixth. 

State  hui-ler  Roger  HJagwood  pitch- 
ed a  fine  ^ame.  giving  the  Tar  Heels 
only  seven  hits,  while  the  Wolfpack 
collected  •eight  off  Raiugh.  It  was 
H'agwood'te  second  loss  against  two 
wins. 


U 


TODAY 

KISMET 

Starrina 

Ann  BIyth 
Howard  Keel 


rr 


The  run  that  eventually  proved  the 
difference  yesterday  came  as  a  re- 
sult of  a  single  by  rightfielder  Don 
Hill  in  the  fourth.  Bomber  HUl 
started  the  inning  with  a  walk  and 
moved  to  second  on  Jim  Legettes 
sacrifice.  Hill  then  hit  a  single  to 
left-center  and  the  Bomber  came 
home  with  the  third  Carolina  run, 
Unis  enabling  Raugh  to  get  his 
eighth  win  of  the  year.  He  has  lost  j  'jCreej^jnore.  3b  .._ 
two.  I  Hurst,  ss 

'  Hagwood,  p 
a-Bazonis     .. 
Totals     . 


Hunter,  of 
Wyant,  lb 
Kennel,  c 
Hafer,  If  - 
Hill,  rf  


The  Wolfpack  jumped  off  to  a 
quick  1-0  lead  in  the  first  frame 
as  a  result  of  two  consecutive  trip- 


Starts  Wednesday 


WMl 


BATTLESHIP 


BunMt 
axatm 
\ieAsajK 


'ptmfi  by  iAY  Wm 


Massey  Leads 
Schoolboys 

By   JIM   CROWNOVER 

Durham  High  sharpshooter  Odell 
Massey  played  a  superb  rouafd  of 
golf  on  a  wet  Finley  Golf  Course 
yesterday  to  take  the  halfway  mark 
lead  in  the  state  high  school  golf 
tournament  with  a  three-under-par 
69. 

Massey  was  closely  followed  by 
Ronald  Mann  of  High  Point  with 
70,  and  Larry  Beck  of  Kinston 
with  71.  Rounding  out  the  top  five 
with  even-par  72's-  were  Ed  Justa 
of  Rocky  Mount  and  John  Scronce 
of  Asheville. 

Scronce  was  aided  by  three 
other  Asheville  boys  in  taking  the 
18  hole  lead  with  a  296  four-man 
total.  The  296  included  a  74  and 
two  75's  in  addition  to  Scronce's 
72.  Asheville  at  present  maintains 
a  nine-stroke  lead  ovfer  its  clo.scst 
competitor  Raleigh.  One  stroke 
back  of  Raleigh  at  306  is  Reynolda 
High  of  Winston-Salem. 

The  prep  stars  continue  tlieir 
tournament  with  a  final  18  hole 
round  beginning  at  10  this  morn- 
ing. 


Ttie    Box: 
N.C.  Stat»  AB    H    O  A 

Brada-haw,  2b  5    2    5    1 

4  10  0 
4     0    3     3 

2  0     7     1 

3  0     3     0 

4  2  3  0 
4  10  4 
4     13     1 

.3101 

.10     0     0 

.34     8  24  II 

AB    H    O  A 

4     11 

3     1 

3     1 

1     0 

3  1 

4  1 
3  0 
1  0 
3     2 

25     7 


Carolina 
Hartman,  3b 
Lewis,  2b  — 
Hudson,  cf  _ 
Shook,  If    _- 


ticipate    in    the 
meet  at  Duke. 


The  meet  scheduled  to  begin 
at  3'  o'clock  is  the  frosh  answer 
to  the  varsity  conference  meet. 
Last  year  the  Carolina  freshmen 
totaled  more  points  than  the  oth- 
er schools — ^Duke,  Wake  Forest, 
and  State — combined.  Things  do 
not  look  quite  as  brigh't  this  year 
with  the  Duke  frosh  fielding  a 
very  strong  squad.  The  Carolina- 
Duke  freshmen  competition  found 
Carolina  on  top  by  only  one  point. 
The  Tar  Babies  have  handed  both 
State  and  Wake  Forest  one-sided 
defeats  this  season. 

Rounding  out  the  season  as  Tar 
Babies  will  be  such  outstanding 
starts  as  Corwles  Liipfert,  Fick  Au- 
thor, W^ard  Sims.  Bob  Cooke,  and 
John  O'Neal,  to  name  only  a  few. 
Liipfert  has  been  a  top  miler  and 
880  man.  He  *t  a  new  freshman 
record  in  the  mile,  and  he  has 
been  only  a  few  tenths  of  a  sec- 
ond off  the  880  record. 

Autihur  has  been  the  Tar  Babies 
top  distance  man.  He  has  yet  to 
be  defeated  in  the  two-mile.  Sims 
is  the  Tar  Babies  work  horse.  He 
is  a  12-6  pole  vaulter,  a  21-plu3 
broad  jumper,  and  a  top  notch 
hurdler    in    both    the    lows    and 


highs.  Twice  during 
Sims  has  taken  firsts 
of  these  events. 


the    season 
in  all  four 


Cooke,  and  O'Neal  are  out- 
standing Javelin  men.  O'Neal  set 
a  new  freshman  record  at  the 
Carolina-State  meet  early  in  the 
season  only  to  have  it  broken  by 
teammate  Cooke  at  the  Duke  con- 
test. 

The  entire  squad  is  well  round- 
ed and  will  give  the  varsity  much 
depth  next  year.  Today's  meet  will 
mark  the  last  of  Carolina  track  as 
a  team  effort.  This  weekend, 
there  will  be  an  AAU  meet  at  Ra- 
leigh where  many  of  the  Caro- 
lina cindermen,  both  fifeslim,T>n 
and  varsity  will  go  after  indiyid- 
ual  honors. 


Big-4   Day 

The  annual  Big-4  sports  day  car- 
nival will  be  held  in  Raleigh  this 
afternoon  starting  at  2  oclock. 

The  meet  will  have  intramural 
entries  from  all  of  the  Big-4 
schools,  tvents  wil  be  held  in 
badminton,  golf,  softball.  ping 
pong,  horseshoes,  handball,  and 
vollyball. 


NEW  OFFICERS 

Mrs.  J.  T.  Gobbel,  corresponding 
secretary,  and  Mrs.  Charles  Bream, 
treasurer,  are  two  of  the  officers 
recently  elected  by  the  Woman's 
AuxDiary  of  Memorial  Hospital,  it 
was  announced  yesterdav.  Their 
names  had  been  ommitted  in  a  pre- 
vious announcement  of  new  officers. 


27  14 


ALAN     CLIFTON      SOPHIA 

LADD  WEJ^  LOREN 


BOY  ON  A  DOLPHIN 


OnbmaScoP£ 


iMum     Auxis  MMore  •  loaa  mstkm. 


Honeycutt,  ss    ... 

Raugh.  p   _ - 

1.  Hill,  lb 

Legettc,  c 

D.  Hill,  rf 

Totals 
a -Fanned  for  Hagwood  m  9th. 

Score  by   Innings 
NLC.  State  no  000  000-2 

Citrolina  200  100  OOx— 3 

1^ — Bradshaw,  J.  Hill,  Hartman, 
Lewis,  I.  Hill.  E — Honeycutt,  Ken- 
nel,' O.  Hill.  RBI— Hunter,  D.  Hill, 
Honej'futt  2,  Hurst.  2B — Hartman, 
Honeycutt,  Lewis,  J.  Hill.  3B  — 
Bradshaw,  Hunter,  Hagwood.  S  ■ 
Hudson^  Legettc,  Honeycutt.  DP — 
Carolna  1.  LOB — State  9,  Carolina 
7.  BB  Off— Hagwood  4,  Carolina  7. 
SO  By— Haywood  5,  Raugh  5.  HBP 
—Hagwood  (Shook).  T— 2:10.  U— 
Beck,  Nevvlle  and  Brinkly. 


BRUSH  UP 
WITH 

College 
Outlines 

New  And  Used 

The  Intimate  Bookshop 
205  East  Franklin  Street 

Open  Till  10  P.  M. 


WHY 

Throw  Away  Those 
Old  Worn-Out  Slacks? 

Let  us  convert  them  into  ber- 
muda shorts.  We  will  take  out 
the  pleats,  and  make  you  a 
real  ivy  league  pair  of  ber- 
mudas,  complete  with  back- 
strap.  All  at  a  price  so  low 
that   you   won't   believe   it. 


PETE 


THE   TAILOR 


"Specializing  in 


Ivy  Leagueizing" 


Carolini) 


ALSO 
LATEST  NEWS 
NOW  PLAYING 


COME  AND  GET  IT! 
IVe  Still  Got  ESSO  EXTRA 

^  at 

Downtown  Prices  For 
Regular  Gas 

and 

My  Regular  3^  Under  That 

Plus 

Bring  This  Ad  and  Get  1  Cent  Off  Per  Gal.  Gat, 

5  Cents  Per  Qt.  Oil 

Credit  Cards  Honored  Again 

At  The  Students'  Friend 

WHIPPLPS  ESSO  SERVICE 


MILTON'S 
Give-A-Way 
Graduation 

Lady  Milton  Shop 

OFFERS   THE 
FOLLOWING   GIVE-AWAYS 

Entire  Stock  of  our  Non-Hath- 
way  Shirts,  presently  Reduc- 
ed, further  reduced  to  Half 
Piice. 

All  Our  Evan-Picone  Irish  Linen 
Skirts  presently  $M.95  —  Re 
duced  to  $7.50. 

All  our  Scottish  Cashmeres  — 
$10.00  Off. 

Imported  from  Scotland  Skirts 
further  Reduced  to  40%  Off. 

All   our  other   wool   Skirts   In- 
cluding   Cashmeres  —  Half 
Price. 

Bermuda  Shorts — Half   Price. 
Entire  Stock   Heavier  Weight 
Bermuda  Shorts  —  Half  Price 
Entire  Stock' P^dal  Pushers  — 
Half  Price. 

OTHER  GIVE-A-WAYS 

TO  BE  ADDED 

All   Sales  Cash   And   Final- 
All  Alterations  Extra 

Clotting  Cupboarb 


Howard  Johnson  Restaurant 

STUDENT    SPECIALS   -        : 


•T  -Vr 


Barbecued    Chicken 
Choice  Steak  Sandwiches 

2:00—    5:00  P.M 
DBKVtu  8:00-11:00  P.M. 

''Landmark  For  Hungry  Tarheels" 


WASH  and  V^KAR 

LONDON  FOG 

...the  malm  coat  you  need 

The  weatherman  may  he 
wrong,  but  you've  Alwraiya. 
right  in  this  lightweight 
LONDON  FOG  all-weather 
coat.  Smartly  tailored  of 
Calibre  Cloth,  an  exclusive 
super  blend  of  Dacron  and 
fine  combed  cotton... wind, 
rain,  and  wrinkle-resistant. 
Washes  in  machine  or  tub... 
4^ip  dri?5  overnight.  Cploii: 

WHITE  AND   NATURAL   $29.75 
CAP  TO   MATCH   $3  95 

JULIAN'S 

COLLEGE  SHOP 


ONE   DOLLAR! 

Helena  Rubinstein's  Color-Tone  Shampoo 


Once-a-year  offer  only!  2^^  size,  now  1 

Wash  your  hair  with  dazzling  color!  Helena  Rubinstein's  fabulous 
Color-Tone  Shampoo  is  not  a  dye,  but  extra  creamy  shainpoo  plus 
certified  color.  Its  special  new  conditioners  make  your  hair  silky  and 
soft.  There  is  a  "custom"  G)lor-Tone  Shampoo  for  every  ^hade  of  hair: 
BLONDE-TONE  adds  golden  lights,  red-head  gives  a  fiaming  aura.' 
BROWN-CLOW  lights  up  "plain"  brown  hair,  brunette-tone  adds  jet 
highlights  and  warm  depths,  silver-tone  halos  grey,  white  or  plftuMin 
hair,  corrects  yellowing.  Silk-Sheen  Cream  Shampoo  conditioit  dry, 
damaged  hair  to  healthy  lustre — no  fed.  tax. 


50 

pUutax 


PNONi 
f47t1 


PRCe 
DiLIVERY 


tJ.^.C.  Library 

Serials  Bent. 


8-51-49 


Hill.    N.    C< 


'iX 


tt. 


WEATHER 

Partly  cloudy  and  humid.   High 


®)  c  Daily  H^Tat  Keel 


VOL.   LVtl   HO.    188 


Vompiete  {/Pi  Wire  Servie* 


CHAPEL  HiLL,  NORTH  CAROLINA,  WEONESDAY,  MAY  15,  1957 


Offices  m  Graham   Memorial 


NEGLECTED 

The  administrafian  ovarloekt 
the  students  %ayi  thf  editor  on 
page  two. 


FOUR   PAGES  THIS  ISSUE 


Winner  Of  Jane  Craige  Gray  Award 


Shown  above  is  Dot  Pressly  receiving  the  Jane  Craige  Gray  Award  for  the  most  outstanding 
iunior  frtmn  W.  D.  Carmichael,  vice-president  of  the  University.  On  the  left  of  Miss  Pressly  are  her 
parents,  Mr.  and  Mrs.  W.  D.   Pressly.  Also  shown  is   Edith  MacKinnon,  right,  who  is  president  of  Kappa 


Delta 


(hf>  which  sponsors  the   award. 


A  King-Sears  photo — Bill  King 


Delta  Kappa  Epsilon  Given 
First  Robert  House  Award 


Delta  Kappa  Epsilon  received 
the  R.  B.  House  Award  presented 
to  "the  oiTt<»taiiding  fraternity  on 
campus"  Monday  night  at  the  IFC 
meeting  in  the  Library  Assembly 
Eoom. 

Retiring  Chancellor  R    B.  House 
was    present    to    give    the    award 
to  Zeb  Weaver,  preudent  of  DK^. 
Before  presenting  the  award  he 
said   that  he   was   proud     of     the 
fraternities    on    the    campus    and 
had    enjoyed    working   with   them, 
according  to  John  Kridcl.  who  is 
in  charge  of  the  IFC  public  rela- 
tions. 

The  Chancellor  also  said  he 
thought  fratemitees  provided  a 
way  for  a  boy  to  mature  while  in 
college  and  he  /tit  honored  by 
having  the  tfward  named  for  him. 
Bill  Redding,  president  of  the 
IFC.  introduced  the  Chancellor. 
Ray  Jefferies,  one  of  the  judges, 


winning  fraternity  was  announced. 
The  tr.-phy  will  be  kept  by  the 
DKEs"  for  a  year,  and  then  the 
cup  will  be  awarded  a?ain.  The 
name  of  the  fraternity  winning 
the  trophy  will  be  engraved  each 
year  on  the  base  of  the  trophy  on  i 
different   plaques. 

The  fraternity  winning  the  tro- , 
phy  the  most  times  during  the 
next  eight  years  will  retain  it.  ' 
'There  has  been  a  need  for  .such 
an  award,  and  it  i.s  hoped  that  it 
will  become  the  most  coveted 
award  that  a  fraternity  can  re- 
ceive,' Redding  stated. 

The  trophy  was  awarded  on  a 
point  basis  with  scholarship  count- 
ing 30.  Campus  representation  in 
extra-curricula  activities  scored 
at  the  most  22 V^  points. 

IFC  participation  carried  a  max- 
imum of  17 ij  points.  For  partic- 
ipation   in   intramural    athletics    a 


./ 


V 


as  15  points.  — * 

Social  activities  count  no  more 
than  10.  and  house  appearance  at 
the  maximum  was  .5  points.  The 
DKE    .score    was    not    announced. 

"We  would  like  to  publicly  thank 
the  judging  committee  of '  Ray 
Jefferiek.  assistant  dean  of  stu- 
dent affairs:  S.  M.  Magill,  director 
of  student  activities;  and  George 
Easer.  chairman  of  the  faculty 
committee  of  fraternities  and  so- 
rorities," said  Redding. 


was  present.  Only  the  name  of  the    fraternity   could  receive   as  many 


Announcement 

student  Body  President  Son- 
ny Evans  yesterday  urged  all 
interested  persons  who  wish  to 
apply  for  the  position  of  Execu- 
tive Secretarj'  of  Student  Gov- 
ernment to  call  his  office  at  4351 
and  leave  his  or  her  name. 

This  position  will  be  vacated 
effective  June   1,  Evans  said. 


Xhi  Psi  Sweetheart' 


Libby  Nicholson  Honored 


A  crowd  estimated  at  between 
70  and  7,5  persons  were  on  hand 
at  the  annual  Chi  Psi  Banquet 
last  night  to  crown  Miss  Libby 
Nicholson,  a  sophomore  from  High 
Point,  as  "Chi  Psi   Sweetheart." 


I  Miss  Nicholson 
with  a  bouquet 
Beauty"  roses  by 
president     of     the 


was  presented 
of   "American 

Tom  Coolman. 
Alpha    Sigma 


W6rld  Headlines 

Gas  Rationing  Ends 

LONDON — (AP) —  Britain  tonight  ended  gasoline  rationing  in  a 
swift  follow-up  of  its  decision  to  use  the  Suez  Canal  again. 

The  MacMillan  government's  action  appeared  designed  to  mollify 
angry  Tories  who  have  bitterly  denounced  as  a  "capitulation"  Britain's 
acceptance  of  Egypt's  terms  for  running  Suez. 

Prime  Minister  MacMillan's  Suez  policies  will  face  the  test  of  an 
opposition  socialist  censure  motion  in  ithe  House  of  Commons  in  a  two- 
day  debate  beginning  tomorrow. 

AMMAIJI,  Jordan  — (AP) — King  Hussein  has  refu^-ed  an  invitation 
to  an  Miti-Communist  Arab  "summit"  conference  in  Baghdad. 

A  palace  announcement  of  the  young  Icing's  decision  was  made 
shortly  after  Foreign  Minister  Samir  Rifai  had  told  a  new  conference 
the  invitation  had  been  received  from  Hussein's  cousin.  King  Faisal  of 
Iraq,  and  King  Saud  of  Saudi  Arabia. 

The  refusal  waj  announced  in  Amman  shortly  after  Jordan  sources 
in  Baghdad  said  the  Jordan  king  already  had  left  Amman  for  Baghdad 
by  plane. 

No  reason  was  given  for  Hussein's  decision.  The  wording  of'  the 
palace  statement  hinted,  however,  ihat  still  unsettled  conditions  in  Jor- 
dan prevented  thp  king  from  leaving  the  country  at  present. 


Ninety  Recognized 

Beta  Kappa 

Top  Honor  Fraternity 
Inducts  64  From  State 


By  Phi 


Commencement 

Candidates  who  expect  to  re- 
ceive degrees  during  commence- 
ment exercises  this  spring  have 
been  urged  to  be  present  at  4:15 
p.m.  tomorrow  in  Memorial  Hall 
for  a  briefing  relating  to  the 
upcoming  graduation  exercises, 
it   was  announced  yesterday 

Dr.  J.  C.  Lyons'  said  that  he 
"strongly  urged  everyone  who 
considers  himself  a  candidate 
for  a  degree'  to   be  present. 


Ninety  s-tudents  here  received  recognition  for  their  academic  work 
last  night  when  they  were  initiated  into  Phi  Beta  Kappa,  national 
scholastic  fraternity. 

Phi  Beta  Kappa,  which  wa.s  founded  at  the  College  of  William 
and  Mary  in  1776,  had  its  Alpha  of  North  Carolina  Chapter  established 
here  in  1904.  Juniors  and  seniors  who  meet  the  requuements  in  schol- 
astic achievement  and  character  are  eligible  to  become  members. 

Of  the  90  scholars  initiated  into  the  honorary  thi.;  year,  a  total 
of  64  posted  from  the  Old  North  State,  with  the   remainder  divided 


Miss  Van  Weyk 
To  Be  Pictured 
In  Fashion  Mag 

Sarah  van  Weyk  who  has  been 
selected  as  one  of  the  "Ten  Best 
Dressed  College  Girls  in  Ameri- 
ca," will  be  photographed  this 
week  for  the  August  issue  of 
Glamour   magazine. 

Fashion  editor  Meg  Markley  is 
arriving  today  to  supervise  the 
pHotographing  here  on  the  camp- 
us. The  nine  additional  winners 
are  also  being  photographed  at 
their    respective    schools. 

These  winners  include  Gregory 
Cox,  Stephens  College,  Columbia, 
Mo.;  Dinah  Park,  Texas  Western, 
El  Paso,  Texas;  Claire  Groger. 
UCLA.  Los  Angeles.  Calif.;  Caro- 
lyn Rice,  Oregon  State,  Corvallis, 
Oregon;  Norma  Lozier,  Eastern 
New  Mexico  U..  Portales,  New 
Mexico;  Sally  Reilly,  Mary  wood, 
Scranton.  Pa.;  Joy  Iteller.  West- 
ern Marsrlflti^^.  Westminster.  Md. 
Linda  Williams.  Averett  College, 
Danville;  and  Joy  Brook-s,  Bar- 
nard, N.Y.,  N.Y. 

In  addition  to  being  photograph- 
ed for  the  August  issue,  these  girls 
will  be  entertained  in  New  York 
City  the  first  week  in  June  and 
will  model  in  Glamour's  August 
College  Fashion  Show  on  June  5. 


Administration  Speaks 
On  Dormitory  Program 


Interest  and  numerous  questions 
concerning     the     proposed     Cobb 
Dormitory  counselling  experiment  i 
to     be     implemented     next     fall  j 
brought    forth    a    prepared    state- 
mcnt    by    the    Office    of    Student' 
Affairs  yesterday. 

Concerning  the  program  which ! 
will  provide  specialized  counsell- 1 
ing  supervised  study  periods  and ; 
other  assistance  in  academic  areas 
for  the  445  students  living  in  the ' 
dorm,  the  statement  indicated 
that:  ; 

"The  program  is  designed  as  an ' 
inital  attempt  to  generally  im- 1 
prove  dormitor>'  life  on  the  Uni- 1 
versity  campus.  No  student  must , 
live   in   the   dormitory   if  he   d(Jes  I 


initial  attempt  to  generally  im- 
prove dormitory  life  on  the  Uni- 
versity campus.  No  student  must 
live  in  the  dormitory  if  he  does 
not  wish  to  participate  in  the  pro- 
gram." the  statement  yesterday 
pointed   out. 

"No  rules  or  regulations  will  be 
created  at  this  time  for  Cobb  resi- 
dents. This  task  will  be  assumed 
by  the  residents  of  the  dormitory 
in  consultation  with  their  coun- 
selors, one  of  whom  will  be  on 
each  floor. 

"It  is  anticipated  that  regular 
IDC  rules  will  apply  until  Cobb 
residents    determine    their    own. 

The  statement  indicated  that  the 
counselors    will     be     available     m 


BARBARA    DOAR 

.  .  .  iiMHual  head 

DoarToHead 
I  Sorority  Book 

I      The  Panhellenic  Council  recent- 
*WBt  afTalTB.  the  program   will  act]  "who  will  give  special  attentioTi  toj]y  chose   Barbara   Doar.  a  journal- 


not  wish  to  participate  in  the  pro-  i  the    dormitory    for    approximately 
gram  "  i  ^^  hours  per  week. 

According  to  WMIliam  D.   Perry,        ^    addition,    the    Athletic   Assn. 
chairman   of   the   Division   of   Stu-    will     provide     another     counselor 


pro.'ing 


as    a    model    and 
for  undergraduate  .social  and  'aca- 
demic life. 

The  plan  will  provide  four  coun- 
selors, one  for  each  floor  ,who 
will  be  available  for  individual 
help  or  group  instruction  in  math- 
ematics, the  sciences  and  other 
subjects. 

"The  program  is  designed  as  an 


center '  athletes   living   in    the   dorm."   His 


primary  concern  will  be  with  aca- 
demic and  training  matters.  Ath- 
letes will  not  be  segregated  in 
any  particular  section  of  the  dorm. 
Students  interested  in  living  in 
Cobb  next  year  .should  immediate-: 
ly  contact  James  E.  Wadsworth.i 
Director  of  Housing,  the  announce- j 
ment  concluded. 


UNC  Cheerleaders  Also 
Have  Spring  Practice 


•  J.I 


MISS  LIBBY  NICHOLSON 

,  crowned  At  Chi  Psi  Banquet 

Photo  by  Lavergne 


chapter  of  Chi  Psi.  She  was  then 
serenaded  by  the  brothers  with 
"Sweetheart   of  Chi  Psi." 

This  year's  sweetheart  is  cur- 
rently running  for  the  "Miss  Fash- 
ionplate"  award  and  was  an  en- 
trant in  the  1956  Homecoming 
Quc9n  Contest.  She  is  pinned  to 
Nick  Fislier,  a  former  president  i 
of  the  fraternity.  | 

Guests  at  the  affair  included 
Charles  Bernard,  Assistant  Dircc- 
to  of  Admissions,  Ray  Jefferies. 
Assistant  to  the  Dean  of  Student 
Affairs,  and  Walter  Spearman, 
professor  in  the  school  of  Journal- 
ism and  Chi  Psi   Faculty  advisor. 

The  banquet  is  a  traditional  af- 
fair at  the  Chi  Psi  Lodge  and  ac- 
cording to  spokesmen  from  the 
fraternity  one  of  the  highlights 
of  the   social   year. 

Last  year,  Miss  Libby  McDow- 
ell, who  was  sponsored  by  the 
Chi  Psi's  in  the  Miss  Chapel  Hill 
Contest,  was  the  Chi  Psi  Sweet- 
heart. 

Newly    elected    officers    of   the 

fraternity  for  the  coming  year  are 

Tom    Coolman,    president;    Jerry 

'    Sowers,  vice  president;  Jim  Long, 

secretary;  John   Lasley,   treasuref. 


By  MARY  ALYS  VOORHEES 

Those  Jack-in-the-box  contortion- 
ists who  may  be  .seen  cavorting  on 
the  campus  from  tin>e  to  time  these 
spring-like  days  are  not  unfortunate 
lads  and  lassies  suffering  from 
the  whitehot  bites  of  the  terrifying 
Mexican  Fire  Ants. 

Nor  are  they  Elvis  Presley  addicts 
going  through  new  gyrations  of  "AH 
Shook  Up." 

They're  the  UNC  cheer-leaders  for 
the  coming  football  season  indulg- 
ing in  a  little  spring  practice  just 
as  the  footballers  they  hope  to  lend 
encouragement  to  come  next  au- 
tumn. 

Elimination  try-outs  have  been 
completed,  and  a  board  has  select- 
ed seven  new  cheerleaders  to  join 
the  rive  veterans.  They're  working 
on  new  cheers  now  and  hoping  for 
a  new  color  combination  for  the  fall 
games. 


I  napolis,  a  rising  senior  with  a 
wealth  of  ex,perience,  who  recently 
waus  elected  by  the  student  body. 

Newcomers  are  Carter  Jones  of 
Durham.  Jack  Childs  of  Wil.son.  Ina 
Gee  Ridley  of  Coiirtland,  Va.,  Am- 
cW  Garvin  6f  Aiken.  S.  C.  Gail 
Willingham  of  St.  Petersburg,  Pla., 
Nan  Schaeffer  of  Tuscaloosa,  Ala.^ 
and  John  Whitty  of  New  Bern. 

Veteran  cheerleaders  who  will 
be  on  the  squad  again  next  fall  are 
Patsy  Poythre.-is  of  Chapell  HUi, 
Tom  Davis  of  N'ashville,  Amy  Morse 
of  Eugene,  Ore.  and  Harold  Wil- 
liam.son  of  Sims. 

Bol>b(j'  Sessonis  of  Raleigh,  Martha 
WiUiford  of  Fayetteville  and  Jii  Ju 
I  Stokes  of  Hertford  were  chosen  al- 
I  temates. 


GM'S  SLATE 


Rush  chair.,  3-5  p.m.,  Grail 
Room;  PanhellerHc  Council,  5-6 
p.m.,  Grail  Room;  GM  Board  of 
Directors,  4-6  p.m.,  Roland  Park- 
er Lounge  No.  1;  Jehova's  Wit- 
nesses, 8-9  p.m.,  Roland  Parker 
Lounge  No.  1;  Interfraternity 
Council,  9-11  p.m.,  Roland  Park- 
er Lounge  Nos.  2  and  3;  Ways 
and  Menas,  4-5:30  p.m.,  Wood- 
house  Conference  Room;  Soci- 
ology Class  179,  12-1  p.m..  Ren- 
dezvous Room;  Bridge  Class, 
4:30-6    p.m..    Rendezvous    Room. 


ism  major,  to  edit  the  Panhellcnit- 
Handbook  for  1957-57;  the  hand- 
book servci!  as  the  sorority  rush- 
inb  manual. 

Miss  Doar  plans  to  complete  the 
manual  by  the  end  of  the  sprinj^ 
semester. 

"I  want  to  prepare  a  handbook 
for  the  incoming  rushees  which 
will  present  the  idea^  of  the  Pan- 
hellenic Creed  so  that  they  will 
know  exactly  what  is  meant  by 
being  in  a  sorority,  what  is  expect- 
ed of  them  during  rush  and  in  the 
phases  of  sorority  fife.  '  Miss  Doar 
saW. 

The  handbook  will  contain  pre- 
liminary information  for  the  rush- 
ees —  all  the  precedures  and  reg- 
ulations, even  what  to  wear  to  va- 
riou.-  functions.  Sorority  life  will 
not  be  stressed  as  much  as  the 
rushing. 

Miss  Doar  also  said,  "I  want  to 
put  forth  this  informaton  in  a 
(See  DOAR,  Page  3) 


up  among  students  from  the 
north,  east,  s  :;uth  and  we.st  of 
the    United   States 

Dr.  R(bert  M.  Lester,  executive 
director  of  the  Southern  Fellow- 
ships Funds,  addressed  a  ban- 
quet .session  at  Lenoir  Hall  which 
followed  the  initiation  Dean  J. 
Carlyle  Sitterson  of  the  College 
of  Arts  and  Sciences  introduced 
Dr.   Lester. 

Taking    part    in   the    ceremonies 
were    officers    for    the    past    year. 
cho.sen    for    their    academic    rank- 
ing: James  G.  Exum  Jr.  of  Snow 
Hill,    president:    Cla.Mon    W.    Dav- 
idson   Jr..    Mooresville.      and      Jo- 
anna  H.   Scroggs.   Chapel   Hill,  co- 
vice-pi*?sidents:     and     William     S. 
.McLean,      Lumbcrtion.      recording 
secretary.    Dr.    Ernest     L.    Mackie 
of    the    faculty    served    as    corres- 
ponding   secretary    and    treasurer. 
Initiates     from     N:»rth     Caro- 
lina   include    Erwin    T.    Avery,    B. 
Bailev    Liipfert    Jr..    Isabel    MacK. 
Madry  and  John  L.  Schulti..  Win§- 
tonSal-m;       Janet       A.      Brooks. 
Claudius    LeRoy    Carlton    Jr..    Jos- 
eph   M.    Clapp,    A.    Kelly    Maness 
Jr..   Mary   Ruth  ;Mithen.    and   Hen- 
ry   C.    Turner.    Greensboro. 

R<»bert  B.  Conrad.  B«jijr  C. 
LJoyd.  Thomas  Hugh  I'pton  Jr. 
and  Robert  K.  Yowell.  all  of  Ra- 
leigh; James  F.  Doar.  Graham 
D.  Holding  Jr.  and  Louella  Rob- 
inson. CharlottL-;  Robert  L.  Fowl- 
er Jr..  .Mary  Carolyn  Green.  Ray- 
mond A  Jolly  Jr..  John  Curtis 
Parker  and  James  A.  Williams 
Jr..  Chape!    Hill. 

Others  from  North  Carolina 
are  Charles  H.  .^Vshfcrd  Jr.  and 
Dorothy  Coplon.  New  Bern.  Ed- 
die C.  Bass.  Farnnille;  Rich<i;°d 
von  Biber-stein  Jr..  Burgaw:  Roy 
D.  Boggs  Jr..  Valdes?;  William 
S.  Bost  Jr.,  Greenville:  George  W^. 
Bryce  Jr..  and  Walter  R.  Sam- 
cels,  Hamlet:  Robert  B  Condrey 
and  Malcoln  O.  Partin.  Enfield; 
James  S.  Dockery  Jt..  Rulher- 
fordton:  E!i  N.  (. Sonny i  Evans. 
Durham;  Jo:l  Fleishman  and  Sal- 
ly   .Vlelvin    H  rner     Fayetteville. 

Byron    W.    Grandjean.    Thoma.s- 
villc:       I.      R.      Slirling     Haig     11. 
(See    TOP    HO\OR.    Page    3> 


If  p.-esenl    plans   go   through,   the 

.  boys    will    be    clad    in    tlieir    usual 

I  white  trousers   and   blue  sweaters. 

j  while  the  girk  are  expecting  to  don 

jnew  outfits   consisting   of  Carolina 

j  blue  highwaisted  princes.s  line  jump- 
season  wiU  be  Frank  Black  of  Kan-  ,^,    ^^    ^^.^^    ^^^   ^^^,    j^^^,^^^ 

— I  marked  with  UNC  insignia.  In  cold 

weatlier  they'll  top  their  outfits  w  ith 
white  sweaters. 


Head  cheerleader  for  Ute  coming 


Senior  Invitations 


Surprising  as  it  seems,  even  the 
have  i  sweaters  don't  keep  these  jumping 
Jacks  and  Jills  warm  when  cold 
weather  sets  in.  To  face  the  ele- 
ments out  in  Kenan  Stadium,  the 
boys  don  "long  handles"  and  two 
pah^  of  SOX.  and  all  pile  on  extra 
sweaters  and  glovses,  with  the  girls 
adduig  scarves. 

A  lot  of  hard  work  goes  into  the 
preparation  for  leading  the  cheers 
at   the  football    games,   with   each 


Senior  who  have  not  yet  picked 
up     graduation     invitations 
been   urged   to   do   so  as   soon  as 
possible.  * 

Ray  Jefferies,  Asst.  Dean  of 
Student  Affairs,  announced  re- 
cently that  numerous  seniors  have 
'  not  yet  acquired  their  invitations, 
pointing  out  that  they  are  already 
paid  for  and  must  be  in  the  mails 

I  in  the  next  few  days. 

cheerleader  giving  about  15  hours  of 
He  said  that  those  who  have  not  |  his  or  her  time  each  week  for  prac- 
already  picked  up  their  invita-  tice.  arranging  and  leading  pep 
tions  should  stop  by  at  his  office,  rallies,  and  of  course  decortaing  the 
203  South  Building,  to  do  so.  A '  goal  posts  and  leadmg  the  cheers 
limited  number  of  invitations  will  I  come  Saturday  afternoon.  They  also 
be  available  for  those  seniors  who  come  back  to  the  Hill  10  days  be- 


have  not   previously 
announced. 


ordered,    he 


tore   school    starts   in   the   fall   for 
long  twice-a-day  practice  sessions. 


Cheerleaders  For  1957  Football  Season 

Front  row— left  to  right:  Ina  Gee  Ridley,  Court  land,  Va.;  Gail  Willingham,  St.  Petersburg,  Fl».; 
Arnold  Garvin,  Aiken,  S.  C;  Frankie  Black,  Head  C  heerleader,  Kannapolis,  N.  C;  Amy  Morse,  Evgtn*. 
Oregon-  Patsy  Poythress,  Chapel  Hill,  N.  C;  Nan  S  :haeffer,  Tuscaloosa,  Alabama.  Back  rw*  —  left  to 
Durham,  N.  C;  Jack  Childs,  W  ilson,   N.  C;   Harold   Williamson,  Sims,   N.  C  ;   John 


right:  Carter  Jones, 

R.  Whitty,  New  Bern,  N.  C. 


A  King-Sears  Photo— Bill  Kins 


#A«I  TWO      " 


mi  OAllT  TAK  MitL 


WEDNESDAY,  MAT^TS,  }Hf 


Momism,  Segregation  And 
The   Neglected   Students 

"AH  }i,oi'frnnu'nt,—indftd.  every  human  benefit  and  enjoy- 
iiient,  every  virtue  and  every  huituin  act. — i.s  founded  on  comfno- 
ini.se  and  barter."— Film und  Burke. 

It  secnis  apparent  iliat   the   Division  of  Student  Affairs  is  dead-set 
upon  initiating  its  pampering    supervised  counseling"  program  in  Cobb 
Horinito) V  next  semester. 
Ihus  wc  reiterate: 
Ihis  monistic   coddling  and  sup- 
tiAision  is  not  connnensurate  with  It  has  been  intinfated  that  Uni- 

the    I'niversitys    lil>eral    tradition  versity   officials     don't     especially 

—a    tradition    whidi    pius   the   stu-  care     for     this    segregated  housing 

dent  on  his  own  and  makes  for  in-  pattern,    but   fear   that   a    member 

dependent   and   self-reliant  citizen-  of  the  l^niversity's  coach  staff  will 

rv.  appeal  over   their   heads— to   influ- 

,.•      1      •    I  1       I      .       J  ential  alumni— if  they  dont  allow 

We  don  t   hke  the  trend.  ,  ■        .  ,  ,  •   i        j 

,  1        •        ■      u     J-  his  athletes  preferential  and  segre- 

r\en    more   alarmnig:    is   the   di-  j  i         • 

.      .  "  gated  liousing. 

visions  statement:  .  "  ,.,     ...        "    .„.  ,, 

...                        J    .1                 1  ^^e   hke  a  willing  team  as  well 
It    IS    anticipated    that    regular  ,  -n  c  i 
,         ,                  V-           I       1           11  as  the  next  guy.  Pressure  from  the 
Interdormitorv   Council   rules   will                   •         i  i-       .            ■       .  i 
,             1   r^   I  1           J           J  general    public   demands   that   col- 
ippiv    until   CobI)   residents  deter-  ,            .  /   .      ,        ,       .    ,  , 
'■         ,                  ..  lege  athletics  be  elevated  to  a  pro- 
mine  their  own.  i      •        i     »  . 

,-,  ,         •  r      1  lessional   status. 

I  he    primarv    hiiu  tion      or      the  n    .       i  i       i       • 

.,     .      '         ,  ,  -1  But  when  a  coach     begins     re- 

Men  s    Interdormitorv   Council,   as  •        n    •        •.  i-  •  i 

,        ,  .       ,      ^,      ,         ,,         .  vamping  Cniversity  traditions  and 
stipulated  in  the  Student  Constitu-  •         .u        j    '•    • 

.  ^     .  -    coercing    the    administration    into 

tlOll.     is:  11-1  r  «•  •        • 

,  ,         ,.,.  establishment      of     discriminatory 

....    to   make   rules   a  fecting  •         •    ,.    .i         .u     •   -i   •  ji 

,  ,  .      ,         .       .      ..  "^  housing,  then  the  tail  is  assuredly 

conduct  or  men  in  dormitories.  , •         »i       j         ■  i  •   i 

,.      ,             ,r                             .,,   ,  Avagging    the    dog    m    our    higher 
Student   se-oox eminent  wi      i>e         j    "    •        i  '  •       • 
,        ,                            .              ,        r  educational   organization, 
reduced    to    a    stale    ol    anarchy    it           i„     u   ^.  i      »•   ii       .i  i 
,.,..,,,                      .    •     ,             In   short,   we  dont    like   the   ad- 
each  mdiMdua    dormitorv     is     al-           •■.„..■'              u        i     i       ... 
,         ,              ,      .                    ,  minisnation  s  nexv  brand  ol  mom- 
lowed   to   make   its   own   rules,   re-  •            j      „^  »•        n   . 

,,         ,.  ^  ,,,r.  1  '^"1  and  segregation.  But  we  recog- 

^ardless  ol  central  InC  regulatums.  ,-,        c-j^,      j     d     i         .i    » 

::     ,  J.       ...    ,  '^.  ,  ni/e.    like    Edmund    Burke,    tiiat 

Such     a    disunihed    oroanizational  .     •      c        j  j  „ 

...  ,    .       IT  government    is    founded    on    com- 

V  heme  is  leminisc  lent  of  the  shift- 

,  -       .      •      1    o  promise, 

mn    and    uiueiiain    I  nited    States  '     r~,  ...  -r 

^  1        ,        »        ,         f  1  bus     we     will     compromise  it 

<'o\ernmenf    under   the   .\rtic  es  of       •,         ■  -j      .    f  .i      n    • 

7.      .    ,  dormitciiv  residents  favor  the  I  ni- 
Contecleiaticin.  ■     .  ,,,.  ,    ,• 

r    ^.      ,  ....  \ersitv  s  new  cixldling  and  discnm- 

l)ne<t(»r    of    Student     .Activities  •      »         .       j 

.,.,,,  •  ,     ,         ,         J  matorv  trends. 

.S.im    Maiii      has   said   that   the   ad-  „    ^     ,         •  •  .  .,_     ,  ^,.i  i 

.    .         "  1  ,    ,        1  out   dormitors'   residents  should 

m.n.siratioi,  pn,.nulgated  the  plan  ,^^   .^„^^^^,^^   ^^  ^^  ^,,^.^  ^^^^j, 

cue  to  chaotic  conchtions  in  .Mens  ^^^,^^^    j^^^^,^^    ^^,^,^    .^    far-reaching 

c  c.rmitones    which    were    not   con-  ^^,^,  ,1  ,-,  instituted. 

due  ixe  h.  studv.   .Magill  said  furth-  ^^^^^  j^.^^.  ^^^  „^^,  ^^^^^^  ^,,^^^ 

cr  th.it  students  had  been  explain-  ,  ji„„,  ^o  the  Divisicm  of  Stu- 

m-    their   p«»or   scholastic   averages  ^^^|^    Affairs' 

to   parents   bv     saving     thev     just  (,/ That  dormitor>'  residents  be 

,..uldni   siudv     ,n     noisv     doimi-  ^^„^^^^.^^    ^^^    ^^p^.^^^    j,,^.;,.    ^^^.^j,,^^ 

"*V.^'^   .    ,  ,  •    •        .  <>»  t'le  dual  "supervised  studv"  and 

\\..    bebexe  this  is.  o    course,  la-  ,^     ,     .^^^^    housing    proposals 

nonai/at.on.    But    il    there   is  gen-  ^,^^        j^    ^,^^j^   ^.^,^,    ,.^h  ;,,,._  the 

ei.d  cbssat.sfaci.on   wM.  dormitorv  ,„terdormitory  Council.     " 
d,MipIinaiv   conduions.    tlie   Inter-  ^._,^    .-j-,^.^^    cspeciallv    fine    tradi- 

doMuiiovv    Council    should    be    m-  ,i„„,  _  ,^,,h    as    ncm-prelerenti.d 

lormed;  and  it  should  realbgn  and  ,,^,,,,i„  „    |,^    compromised    to 

siren-.then    us  oroanization  please   one   megalomaniac    individ- 

Ihi-      adiuinisiration      snouldn  t  ^    , 

jus,    Mc-p  in  and  tremf  m»  student  "'\,^^^-^    „„aents   are   allowed   op- 

amononn.    I  he  least  it  could  do  is  ^^^,^,„,i^^.    ^^    ^^  ^,,^5,    ,enti- 

,0      allow      dnrmitoiy      residents.  ;„^„j^-^,„   ,,,^  J^^.  ^,,,^,,j  . 

through    the   IDC.   opportunity    to  ^^,^    ^^,^  ^^^_^^   ^,^^^.   ^,^^.^  ^^ 

express  then   op.num  on  the  Ini-  ^^  ^^^-  ^^^.^    prevision    in    the 

veritx  s  new  superMsed  coun.seling  ^j^,,^.„,^„j  released  yesterdav  by  the 

'"'I'm      ,.  .   .      ,  v«  •  Division  of  Student   .\ffairsr 

I  lu-  D.Ms.on  ot. Student  Affairs  -x^  .t^dem  must  live     in     the 

IS   also    implementing   its   P  an  /«r  ^i^„.„^^„^.  j,  ,,^  d,,^^„.,  ,,;,,,  to  par- 

sc-Tegatec   housing  in  the  fall.  Con-  ^^^^  .^^  ^,^^.      .,„,•• 

irarv  u,  a  1  non<bsc riminaroiy  tra-  .f,^^^.^.  ,^^^^  ,^^j;^  ^  ^^.^j,,,,^  ^.^^^.,^.^1 

d.t.ons.    the    entire    football    team  .^^   i.„i,ei.sity  ,x>licy. 
will  be  housed  in  Cobb  Dormitorv.  ,^    .^    especially    despicable    that 

.\s  we  have  said  f^etore.  it  rs  m-  ^.d^.i,,;,^,^^^,^       officials       would 

JmitcK   benefuial  that  all  students  ^^^^^   consider    implementing  such 

Ix-  allowed  freedom  of  association  ^   t^^.^eaching  new  svtem  without 

-whether  they  be  athletes  or  fresh-  ^  ^^,^^„,^i,     ^^e  student  Ixidy  proper, 
men  or  seniors.  ^  et  the  administra-  ^j.^^j,;;,  .^,,^  segregated  housing 

tic.n  persists     in     establishing  this  ^^.^    ^.^^    ^^^^^^   commensurate    with 

neu     preferential    and    discrimma-  j,,^  ,1,^^,^,  .^^ditions  for  which  this 

!!!?_.T^^''2'""— '^''"-' I'nixersitv  has  ostensibly  stood  for 

^  so  many  years. 
TkiA  nrtllw  Tnr  HoAl  ^'<>*^'>    Dormitory    should    stand 

ine  uaiiy  lar  neei  ^^  ^^^.^^^^  _^,,^  ^^,.^^  ^^  an  empty 

The  official  stucient  publication  of  the  mausoleum    until    the    administra- 

Publications  Board  of  the  University  of  tion  takes  its  new  fantastic  piopos- 

North    Carolina,    where   it    is    published  al   to  the  students, 
daily    excrept    Monday    and    examination 

and  vacation  periods  and  summer  terms.  ■  IP' 

Entered  as  second  class  matter  in  the  i    ^IJI*Ol4^         ■    Of 

post  office  in  Chapel  Hill.  N.  C,  under  ^»*i*"  ^'^        t    %^M 
Ihc  Act  of  March  8,  187e.  Subscription 

rates:  mailed.  $4  per  year,  $2.50  a  semes-  ^^  ^W\i^%%.i^^WY\^^Wy^ 

ter:  delivered  $6  a  year,  $3  50  a  semes-  A\dl  1^  V6III W  1 1 1 
ter.  . 

. — ,\ie  wt  to  be  so  concerned  with 

Editor  , ..     NEIL  BASS  ^y,,,^^  ^.^J^^^.^  ^^„  ^j,^  .^^^^^^^  Genera- 
Managing  Editor                      BOB  HIGH  tion?"    • 

T r- — ~- -, .  „„v  titi  t  F'^'^     outstanding     coeds     were 

Associate  Editor      NANCY  HILIi  •        .    •  ,       ,^. 

tapped    into   the    highest    women  s 

Sports  Editor  BILL  KING  honorary     on     campus     yesterday. 

New»'  Editor  WALT  SCHRUNTEK  former     student     bodv     Preident 

Bob     ^'oung    and    Yacketv    Yack 

Bu^ines.  Manager  JOHN  C  WHITAKER  photographer  Truman  Moore  were 

Advenising  Manager        FRED  KATZIN  recognized    for    excellence    in    stu- 

NEWS  STAFF-Graham   Snyder.   Edith  d^"'  government  ami  publications 

MacKinnon.  Ben  Taylor.  Patsy  Miller,  respectively.   Miss  Dot  Pressly   was 

Sue  Atchison.  Manley  Springs.  awarded     the    Jane    .Craige     Cray 

Memorial    .Award    fc^r     "ideals   ex- 

EDIT  STAFF-Whit  Whitfield,  Anthony  emplificd.     %  students  have  be^n 

Wolff.  Stan  Shaw. ^^^^^^   .^^^  ^^^  Ordtr  of  The  Old 

BUSINESS  STAFF— John  Minter.  Marl-  Well  for  "sery'ice  and  accomplish- 

an  Hobeck,  Jane  Patten.  Bticky  Shu  ment"   on     a     point     basis.     The 

Jord.  School   of  Pharmacy  has  made    1 1 

SPORTS  STAFF:  Dave  Wibie.  Stu  Bird,  awards    for    academic    excellence. 

Ed    Rowland,    Jim    Crownover,    Ron  Ninety  students  have  been  induct- 

Milligan.  ed   into    Phi    Beta    Kappa.    Delta 

Subacription  Manager  __  Dale  Staley  ^^PP?  f P*"^"    ^"^^^""^   ^""'J!' 
I 1  ceived  the  R.  B.  House  Trophy  as 

Circulation  manager   —    Charlie  Holt  the  outstandii^  fraternity  on  camp- 

btaff  Photographers  Woody  Sears,  "*• 

Norman  Kantor,  BiU  King.  ^^'^at  better  tribute  to  an  enter- 

- — prising  generation  of  students. 

Ubranans    Sue  Gichner,  Marilyn  Struin  p^e    Daily    Tar    Heel    extends 

Night  News  Editor Boti  High  heartiest   congratulations  to    thejig 

Ni4i»t  EdUor  ___  Woody  S«arf    all. 


WISE  AND  OTHERWISE; 

Semesters  And 
Weekends  To 
J<eep  Us  Pure 

Whit  Whitfield 

Since  the  fall  of  1953  and  the 
return  of  the  semester  system 
the  siAject  has  become  a  peren- 
nial gripe  among  students.     . 

Some  people  are  not  aware  of 
the  real  reasons  for  the  change 
According  to 
The  Daily  Tar 
Heel  of  that 
fall,  the  two 
main  reasons 
^  for  the  change 
were: 

The  students 
were  not  de- 
riving the  full 
Ibenefits  of 
their  education  under  the  old 
quarter  system,  and  the  facili- 
ties of  the  university  were  not 
being  used  to  the  best  advantage 
on  the  five  day  system. 

Now  these  are  very  plausible 
reasons  for  the  change. 

Because  the  latter  reason  i.* 
more  nebulous,  we  shall  consid- 
er it  first.  The  facilities  of  the 
university,  broadly  interpreted, 
include  the  classroom  buildings, 
laboratory  equipment,  and  spec- 
ialized equipment.  It  would  seem 
that  under  the  quarter  system  the 
facilities  would  be  used  by  more 
student  more  often  than  undei 
the  semester  system  even  with 
Saturdays  excluded. 

The  former  reason,  however, 
has  many  favorable  ramifica- 
tions which  are  more  easily  un 
derstood.  What  is  meant  by  "full 
benefits"  would  be  something 
like   thi.s: 

Under  the  semester  system 
a  student  acts  in  this  capacify 
six  days  per  week  ihstead  of 
five  on  the  quarter  system.  Sat- 
urday  classes  prevent  many 
people  from  leaving  campus  on 
the  weekends  that  otherwise 
would.  This,  in  effect,  makes 
a  prison  of  sorts,  especially 
for  those  who  live  so  far  away 
that  a  thirty-six  hovr  trip  is 
not  feasible. 

At  the  same  time  it  is  a  boon 
to  the  campus  stores  and  Lenoii 
H;ill,  not  to  mention  the  down 
town  merchants.  Besides  the  ex- 
tra day  in  which  restaurants  and 
cafeterias  make  moijey.  t  h  e 
clothing  stores  get  sales  that 
would  otherwise  go  to  hometown 
merchants. 

That  this  is  more  expensive  to 
the  students  is  not  as  important 
as  the  advantage  in  being  here 
as  full-time  students,  or  so  it 
seems  to  the  trustees.  Also,  let 
us  not  forget  the  money  spent 
by  the  parents  and  friends  of  stu- 
dents who  pad  the  pockets  of 
the  university  and  the  downtown 
merchants. 

Not  the  least  important  rea- 
son for  the  change  wat  that 
parents  could  be  reasonably  aa- 
sure<l  that  their  "children"  are 
not  cavorting  around  the  state 
on  weekends,  but  safe  in  Chapel 
Hill  away  from  trouble. 

This  is  very  important  to  us 
as  students  whether  we  re- 
alize it  or  not.  It  keeps  us  from 
the  sins  of  the  world,  and 
keeps  us  pure  for  our  parents 
when  we  return  home.  Nmv 
this  is  an  excellent  gesture  on 
the  part  of  the  Trustees.  Let 
us-  Itvitf  up'  tier  their  expectations. 


ril  Abn«r 


'Don't  Worry.  I  Don't  Think  There's  Anything  in  There" 


GUEST  EDITORIALS: 


►«eri  T«»«  ij*.«»i»sie^».-'   Tfir  •• 


SAUSBURY  COLLEGE  PIONEER: 


The   Current  College   Generation: 
Is   It  Abreast  Of  World's  Tide? 


While  Catawba  students  are 
engnossed  in  SGA  elections,  May 
Day  plans,  and  basehall  games, 
a  committee  is  meeting  in  Lon- 
don to  discuss  the  solution  to 
prablem.s  which  jnay  well  affecl 
the  fate  of  the  world. 

Representatives  from  the  Unit- 
ed States,  the  Soviet  Union,  Brit- 
ain. FYance,  and  Canada  have 
joined  together  to  form  the 
United  Nations  Disarmament 
Subcommittee.  Their  aim:  to  re- 
duce the  nuclear  arms  (both 
atomic  and  hydrogen  weapons) 
race  and  ultimately  to  turn  nu- 
clear science  only  into  peaceful 
fields. 

•  •  • 

United  States  representatives 
on  April  2  brought  up  the  idea 
that  the  use  of  nuclear  materials 
for  military  purposes  be  halted, 
beginning  April  1.  1958.  and  that 
this  measure  be  enforced  by  in- 
ternational inspection.  According 
to  this  suggestion,  negotiations 
would  begin  September  1,  of  this 
year  in  order  to  reach  interna- 
tional agreement  on  this  plan. 

On  the  same  day  that  this  rec- 
omm^dation  was  presented,  18 
of  the  leading  nuclear  .scientists 
of  West  Germany,  including  four 
Nobel  Prize  winners,  issued  a 
statement  deploring  the  develop- 
ment of  nuclear  weapons  and  ad- 


vocating an  immediate  halt  to 
military  use  of  atomic  and  hyrdo- 
gen  energy.  In  the  words  of 
these  men,  "Today,  the  popula- 
tion of  the  Fede/al  Republic 
(German.v)  could  tw  wiped  out 
jby  spreading  radioactivity 
through  hydrogen  bombs.  We  do 
not  know  any  technical  means  of 
safeguarding  large  masses  of 
people  against  that  danger."' 

To  these  18  men,  nuclear  weap- 
ons presented  a  threat  to  the 
welfare  of  humanity.  This  idea 
was  immediately  picked  up  by 
the  Soviet  Union,  who  cheered 
the  statement  happily,  emphasiz- 
ing the  harmful  effects  of  radia- 
tion and  radioactive  ail-out  from 
the  U.  S.  tests  of  Christmas  Is- 
land and  from  the  proposed 
British  hj'drogen  weapons  test  in 
July.  Conversely,  no  mention  was 
made  of  the  unusually  high  ra- 
dioactivity reported  in  Japanese 
rain  as  result  of  recent  Russian 
tests. 

•  ■*■  * 

Germany,  on  the  other  hand, 
listened  to  the  words  of  the 
scientists  in  near  horror  because 
of  the  implications  that  such  a 
suggestion  would  have  on  the 
nation's  political  life.  Chancellor 
Konrad  Adenauer  spoke  the 
following  day,   a-tating   that   dis- 


armament is  a  political  matter 
and  not  one  to  be  determined  by 
.scientists,  even  though  skilled 
in  their  own  fields.  The  complete 
retreat  of  Germany  from  develop- 
ing atomic  weapons  would  place 
the  country  as  an  easy  prey  in 
the  path  of  the  Soviet  Union.  "In 
other  words,"  as  Chancellor  Ade- 
nauer stated,  "that  would  mean 
the  dissolution  of  the  whole  de- 
fense wall  of  the  Western  world 
against  Russia." 

These  problems,  reflecting 
conflicting  ideas  and  points  of 
view,  cannot  be  solved  easily, 
even  by  national  representa- 
irives  appointed  by  the  United 
Nations.  Men  responsible  for 
reaching  such  important  de- 
cisions must  be  completely  in- 
formed on  world-wide  matters, 
must  keep  their  minds  open  to 
opposing  points  of  view,  and 
must  be  able  to  judge  for  them- 
selves the  values  of  the  con- 
flicting ideas. 

We,  too,  must  do  our  part  by 
being  aware  of  international 
problems  and  their  effects  on 
us  and  on  others.  Thousands  of 
miles  may  separate  us  from  a 
conference  table,  but  they  can- 
not separate  us  from  the  con- 
sequences of  the  decisions  made 
around  that  table. 


By  A!  Cepik 


A  Perspectus  Of 
Publications 


THE  MICHIGAN  DAILY: 


I 


Censorship,  particularly  of  newspapers,  books 
and  motion  picture^.',  has  become  a  very  controver- 
siaJ  subject  in  recent  months. 

A  wide  variety  of  organizatioiis  and  "decency 
committees"  has  lately  arisen  to  do  battle  against 
whatever  they  choose  to  defiae  as  "indecent"  or 
"obscene." 

State  legislatures  and  local  law  enforcement 
agtiicies,  often  under  pressure  from  thes«  self- 
a{^ointed  guarcUacs  of  the  public  welfare,  have 
passed  obscenity  laws,  banned  books  and  closed 
burlesque  houses  —  for  the  public  welfare.  Many 
of  these' laws  and  bans  of  one  &<ort  or  another  have 
been  declared  unconstitutional  or  unlawful,  but 
this  doe,in't  seenr  to  have  dampened  the  current  en- 
thusiasm for  censorship. 

Cimsorshtp  properly  directed  and  adminis* 
teredo  is  ws«fw!  and  often  necessary.  When,  how- 
ever, a.  groMp  of  self-righteous  purists  set  them- 
solvoe-  up  to  dictato-  pvWic  morality,  to-  impose 
fhoir  own  moral  cedes,  their  own  definitions  of 
"imdttnsft"  thoir  own  tastes  in  litor«t«Mir  and  en- 
tertainment on  tho  entire  populace  titaf  vielote 
the  rights  of  all-  of  ue  to  chooso  for  ewrsetves 
%vhef  we  shall  read  or  see. 

Censorship  aimed,  for  example,  at  protecting 
children  from  exposure  to  indecency  is  justifield 
— children  are  not  capable  of  properly  clioosing  for 
them^ves  or  distinguishing  products  of  atn^  author's 
imagination  from  reality.  Too  many  c«.;asorship 
groups,  however  seem  to  regard  the  average  Ameri- 
can adult  as  an  intellectual  child  who  also  must 
be  protected  from  his  own  indiscretion  ,Qf  lack  of 
discrimination. 

Again,  ceni«orship  of  publications  which  thrive 
on  gossip,  tearing  doiwn  reputations  and  libeling 
individuals  cannot  be  argued  against.  Such  publica- 
tions themselves  infringe  n  the  rights  and  the  pri 
vacy  of  others  and  deserve  to  be  condemned.  Scan- 
dal magazines — the  most  notorious  of  them  "Con- 
fidential"— fall  into  this  category. 

But  when  self-appointed  "protectors  of.  the  pub- 
lic morality"  take  upon  themselves  authority  to 
"protect"  the  public  from  even  such  coQtepporary 
greats  as  Hemingway,  Huxley,  Steinbeck,  Buck* 
O'Hara  and  Orwell,  they  infringe  on  the  personal 
freedom  of  all  of  us. 

Even  such  extreme  censorshp  <#reuld  be  ac- 
ceptable were  it  limited  to  merely  sctoening  and 
recommendation.  There  is  little  room  for  obfect- 
ien  to  someone  simply  suggMtiijg  thet  a  certain 
book  or  movie  would  be  better  net  read  or  seen, 
or  alerting  us  to  the  moral  evils  in  our  environ- 
ment. 

But  too  many  of  our  censors  refuse  to  stop 
there.  They  endeavor  to  force  us  to  conform  by 
forcing  out  of  our  reach  all  they  consder  unfit  for 
our  consumption  —  threatening  and  organizing 
boycotts  against  theatres,  publishers  and  dealers^ 
all  without  proper  justification. 

Censorship  in  its  place  is  a  fine  thing;  censor- 
ship, mistaken  and  misdirected,  is  as  dangerous 
as  that  which  it  seeks  to  protect  us  ag^st. 


THE  N.  C.  STATE  TECHNICIAN: 

The  Student  Government  voted  unanimously 
against  a  resolution  last  week  which  had  previously 
been  accepted  by  the  Faculty  Senate. 

The  resolution  which  the  legidlative  body  voted 
against  was  the  proposed  new  cut  system.  Under 
the  new  cut  system,  which  the  Faculty  Senate  pass 
ed  about  a  month  ago,  a  student  would  be  ^required 
to  get  an  excuse  from  a  class  from  the  professor 
whodc  class  he  wished  to  cut.  That  is,  no  longer 
would  there  be  a  centra]  office  from  which  excuses 
would  be  obtained.  The  cut  system  would  be  a  di- 
rect student-professor  relationship. 

The  theory  of  the  new  cut  system,  quite  basical 
ly,  is  that  the  individual  pr<rfessors  know  best 
whether  a  student  can  afford  to  cut  a  class.  Another 
factor  may  have  been  that  State  is  getting  too  big 
for  one  person  to  have  to  grant  excuses  for  the  en 
tire  student  body. 

The  Student  Government  has  token  a  stand 
,  lust  opposifo  to  that  of  the  Faculty  Senate.  This, 
we  believe,  shows  the  healthy  atmosphoro  whkh 
preveils  here  et  Stete.  When  the  students  dislfkt 
end  disagree  with  the  Faculty  and  ca>*  stand  up 
•s  a  body  and  say  that  they  disagrot.  without  fear 
of  reprisal,  there  exisH  a  situation  "pregnant  with 
possibilities  of  progress." 

As  for  the  action  the  Student  Government  took 
on  the  measure,  we  are  in  agreement  with  il.  A 
student-professor  relationship  is  not  the  best  solu- 
tion to  the  problem —  it  is  merely  one  solution. 

There  are  other  solution;^  which  are  worth  fur 
ther  consideration.  The  student  could  be  required 
to  get  an  excuse  from  his  advisor.  This  mi^ht  kill 
two  bu-ds  with  one  stone — the  student  would  have 
a  chance  to  see  his  advisM-  mwe  than  be  now  does 
—and  maybe  more  than  about  half  tlie  students 
would  know  who  their  advistir  is  that  way  .  ,  . 

Anothw  solution,  which  is  bettw  yet.  is  to  have 
each  school  grant  excuses.  This  could  be  handled 
through  the  dean's  office  of  each  school.  This  would 
spread  the  work  of  writing  excuse»— which  m  single 
person  must  find  extremely  boring  and  laborious 
—over  several  people,  none  of  whom  would  be 
over'burdened  by  the  duty. 

Cortainiy  tht  problem   needs   further   study.  . 
The  system  proposed  by  the  Faculty  Sonet*  over- 
looks one  further  point.  The  studAnt-prof^ser  re- 
iationship  could  become  all  too  personal  .  .  .  with 
rhf  ftvd»nf  gn  th^  losinf  end. 


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/  (Contimt^  from  foge  1) 

\Asheville  and  Rome,  Italy;  Wil- 
liam J.  Hall  Jr^  Kannapolis;  Mar- 
vin L.  Ho^lr;  Svmbuty;  G&agfi 
W.  Holden  jf  and  John  H.  Zolli- 
coffer  Jr^  Henderson;  Bruce  C. 
Johnson,  Conway;  Roger  C.  Jones, 
High  Point;  John  H.  Kerr  III.  War- 
renton;  William  H.  Kouri,  Shel- 
by, 

Robert  A.  Linn,  China  Grove; 
G^n^t  H.  Little.  Wadesboro;  Rob- 
ert W.  Long  Jr..  Rich  Square; 
John  D.  Marriott,  Battleboro;  Ger- 
ald M.  Mayo,  Falkland;  Holland 
McSwain  Jr.,  Franklin;  Jasper 
Louis  Phillips  Jr.,  Kinston;  Carl 
<i.  Pickard  Jr..  Asheville;  James 
Y.  Preston.  Matthews;  Edwin  M. 
Rascoe.   Reidsville. 

Anne  F.  Stalvey.  Lumberton; 
William  E.  Stewart.  Marshville; 
William  P.  Tally,  Angier;  Stephen 
J.  Trachtenberg,  Jacksonville;  Les- 
ter E.  Waters.  Plymouth;  Lila  L. 
Welsh.  Monroe;  Lucius  P.  Wheeler 
Jr.,       Washington;       William     H. 


»y  PETE  IVEY 

Advocating  a  national  university 
dedicated  to  training  scientists,  en- 
gineers and  other  technologists  sore- 
ly needed  in  tb»  atomic  a>rms  race 
wKh  RussiiB,  Dr.  Archibald  Hender- 
aon  Tuesday  necomm^ided  a  twen- 


Initiates  from  out-of-state  in- 
clude Diana  D.  Ashley,  Green- 
wood, Miss.;  William  H.  Baddley, 
Water  Valley.  Miss.;  John  T.  Bar- 
to,  Salisbury,  Conn.;  Larie  K. 
Brandner.,  Arlington,  Va.;  Mary 
C.  Corley,  Orangeburg,  S.  C; 
John  F.  DeVogt.  Naples,  Fla.;  Ann 
A.  Ellison,  Ft.  Thomas.  Ky.;  James 
G.  Harrison  Jr..  Charleston,  S.  C; 
Marian  E.  Hobeck,  Virginia  Beach, 
Va.;  Mary  E.  Jefferson,  Danville, 
Va. 

Hill  C.  Johnson.  Moroton,  Conn.; 
Frank  M.  Malone  Jr..  Atlanta,  Ga.; 
EJvalyn    F.    Hosterman,  Baltimore, 

Mr.;   Donald    W.   McGregor,  Long- i  shortage  of  scientists, 
meadov/.    Mass.;    Don    H.    Miller,       Speaking   to   the  Elisha   Mitchell 
Cedar  Rapids.  Iowa:  John  A.  Mraz,  |  Scientific  Society  at   the  leOtti  me- 
Chicago,  111.;   Elizabeth    S.  Parker,  j  morial  meetmg  to  Dr.   Elisha  Mit- 
Greenville,  S.  C;  Martha  A.  Rich- 
ardson, Midlothian.   Va.;    Betty    J. 
Riley,      Onancock,      Va.;     Joanne 


Dr.  A.  Henderson  Calls  For  Science 
University;  Government  Operated 


Covering  The  Universify  Campus 


gineering-technology  university  it- 
self. Pro  f.Henderson  aduooated  also 
branches  of  the  institution,  near 
Pittsburgh.  Detroit,  Sah  Francisco, 
Atlanta,  and  Birmingham. 

Henderson  based  his  i«c»mimenda- 
tions  on  "the  ext.*"aordinary  dearth 


Saunders,  Norfolk,  Va.;  Carolyn  H. 
Seyffert,  New  Castle,  Pa.:  Norman 
S.  Smith,  Virginia  Beach,  Va.;  Joel 
A.  Snow,  St.  Petersburg.  Fla.; 
Charles  V.  Tompkins  Jr.,  Alexan- 


White    Jr.;    Sanford;    and    Donald  j  dria,  Va.;    Leo    C.    Wardrup    Jr 


L.  Wright,  Ruffin. 


Middlesboro.  Ky. 


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DAILY    CROSSWORD 


AC1IOS8 

1 .  The  Imi-est 

poHit 
6  Crou-d* 
to.  Ifiiere 

11  Ason 
of  Adam 

12  Degraded 
13.  Nuclei  tif 

■tarch-i|««m 

14  Bushel,   , 
fabbr.) 

15  Tailed  aMi- 
pnibiatM 

17.  Bakiirtf 
knife    t     . 

19.  Wound 
mark 

20  Medtf  or 

«« 

J8UIIUI 

(aMir.). 
21.  Weaken* 

2.1.  Girl'a  nam*' 

25  Muse  of 

lyric  poetry 
17.  Put  out 
30  Title  of 

respect  (pi  ) 
32  Wild  OX 
33.  Argent 

rabbr.) 
35.  Secular 
37.  Raqoast  for 

payment 
St.  Repulied 
4l'.  Sodiunn 

<synn > 

42.  Incite 

43.  Boasts 
45  Penny 
4C  GtacisI 

47.  Sinfinc. 

411  Oboeinc#  ' 


OOUIW 

1.  Resembling 

a  cloud 
l.Win» 

3.  Aplaic 

4.  Notions 

5.  lioae  weifht 
«.  Hindu  title 
7.  Newspaper 

item 
S.  City  (Bras.) 

rcut 

12.  Mistreat 
1«.  Man's 

Micknama 
18.  Java 

tree 


22.Typ« 
of 

dag- 
ger 

t4.  Dis- 
patch 

3S.  Spoken 

28.  Father- 
land 

It.  African 
river 
(pass.) 

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tree 
<Braz.) 

84.  Insurgent 


Huuu  naaE 
nana  naE^ 

lis    QllBaQ    2]B 

rnsonn   nmtiiiH 


SataNsr's  Aatwar 

36.  Stop 

39.  Confined 

40.  NolJleman 
44.  Man's 

nickname 


ty  billion  dollar  iostitution  be  set  \  of  scientists  in  the  United  States." 
up  by  private  fouodations  and  run  |  The  nation's  supply  of  scioitists  is 
by  the  U,  S.  government.  i  "entirely  inadequate  in  an  aige  of 

"The  Iiivisiible  Oisis"  is  the  galloping  technical  (research,  ap- 
phrase  Henderson  used  to  describe  \  palling  atomic  and  nuclear  power 
the  nation's  plight  in  relation  to  the  |  which    has    been    untriggered,    and 

the  irrestiable  advance  of  automa- 

tior." 
The  retired  mathemattic  p!rofess<»' 

stated  that  "llie  U.S.S.II.  is  now 
chell  at  the  University  of  North  Car- ;  our  pace  maker." 
olina,  Kenan  Professor  £meritus  '  He  said  Joseph  Stalin  and  Tttvw>««" 
Henderson  referred  to  President  j  Communism  "jeered  at  our  pno- 
Geoj^ge  Washington's  gift  in  1794  o.'  j  fessions,  pious  but  specious,  of  lib- 
50  shares  of  Potomac  Company  erty  and  equality;  and  we  hastened 
stock  to  establish  a  national  univer- :  to  compel  integration  by  judicial 
sity.  Despite  numerous  attempts  to  ',  fiat." 

start  a  national  imiversity.  Congress  j  He  added:  "Only  a  few  days  ago, 
has  not  apsM:x>ved.  the  last  Soviet  atomic  explosion  was 

"In  view  of  the  present  menace  estimated  at  li  megatons;  and  our 
to  our  national  safety,"  said  Hen-  greatest  now  are  of  the  order  of 
derson,  "I  earnestly  and  strongly  16  to  18  megatons  .  .  .  With  aU  the 
recommend  that  this  Society  in  con- :  magnificient  gifts  of  the  great 
junction  with  the  Institute  of  Natur-  '  American  foundations  ...  it  is 
al  Science  afipoint  a  committee  to  estimated  that  only  about  one-foiulh 
study  recommendations  ...  for  of  the  competent  youths  who  de- 
establishing  the  greatest  scientific,  sire  to  pursue  the  study  of  science 
engineering  and  tcchnologkal  in-  at  the  higher  levels  can  be  pro- 
stitution in  the  world."  vided  for  .  .  .  The  American  situa- 
Dr.  Henderson  induded  in  his  |  tion  becomes  daily,  nay  hourly, 
recommendation  the  establishment ;  more  alarnting.  It  has  been  called 
of  a  great  scientific  center  at  UNC,  j  'the  invisible  crisis'  in  science.  Ed- 
at  a  cost  of  a  million  dollars.  |  ucators,  industrialista.  publicists 
In    4KkUti(Hi    to     the    science-en- 1  are  clamonng  for  effective  action. 


Tlie  situation  is  more  than  a  pre- 
dicament: it  is  a  plight." 

The  $20,000,000,000  proposed  by 
Prof.  Henderson  would  be  raised  by 
private  endowment,  tout  the  opera- 
tions of  a  technical  university  would 
be  the  responsibility  of  the  nation- 
al government,  just  as  it  cnaintains 
West  Point,  Annapolis  Bad  the  Air 
Force  Academy. 

Prof.  HI&ndersiHi  iH*aised  the  per- 
sonality and  achievements  ol  "Dr. 
Klisha  Mitchell,  who  was  a  science 
professor  at  Chapel  Hill  And  Jell  to 
his  death  on  Mount  Mitchell  ia  1857. 

Dr.  Henderson  presented  his  lec- 
ture on  Elisha  Mitchell  in  five  parts, 
as  tile  five  parts  of  a  G<reek  dnazna. 
He  ps«sented  Dr.  Mitcb^  88  '^Uie 
scientists  and  protagoniBt*  end 
niomas  CUngman  as  "tibe  aataflon- 
ist  and  politician." 

HendersSn  presented  mathema- 
tical evidence  to  prove  Dr.  Mit- 
cbdl's  claim  that  be  had  measured 
Mount  Mitchell  and  showed  tiiat  it 
was  the  highest  peak  east  of  tiie 
Rockies. 

In  his  address  Henderson  also  re- 
vealed for  the  first  time  in  history 
docimientary  i>roof  that  North  Caro- 
lina was  the  first  stale  ia  the  nation 
to  conduct  a   geoioigical  survey. 

The  meeting  here  tooigiht  was  one 
of  several  observances  during  thi^ 
centennial  of  Dr.  Elisha  Mitchell's 
death.  A  oeremony  is  ischeduled  ifx 
June  27  at  the  summit  of  Mount 
Mitchell,  at  'wbich  time  D.  Hiden 
Ramsey  of  A^ieviUe  will  make  the 
main  address. 


PICNIC  I  OUTDOOR  SWIMMING  i  gressive   Party,   c«msisting   of    six 

The    annual    Phi    Delta    Kappa       The  outdoor  swimming  pool  win  j  contest  games,  represents   the  f i- 

picnic  wUl  be  held  for  members  j  be  (H>en  from  now  to  the  end  of  j  nal  General  Meeting  of  the  Asso- 

and  guests  today  on  Fetzer  Field. 


Dear 


(Continued  from  page  1> 

clear,  concise  manner  so  that  rush- 
ing will  not  be  confusing  to  new 
[  coeds." 

She  ha^.-  had  considerable  experi- 
ence with  editing  and  with  art 
work.  Mss  Doar  announced  that 
she  will  be  her  own  art  editor. 
Patsy  Miller  will  serve  as  assis- 
tant editor. 

Miss  Doar  is  a  rising  senior  from 
Raleigh  and  a  member  of  Tri-Delta 
sorority. 


Sev^n  Vie  For  Title  Of 
1957  Miss  Chapel  Hill 


Bulletin 

R.ALEIGH,  (AP)— The  Senate 
yesterday  killed  a  bill  which 
would  have  permitted  sterilization 
of  women  having  more  than  one 
illegitimate   child. 

The  sponsor  ot  the  bill,  Sen. 
Wilbur  M.  Jolly  of  Franklin  ask- 
ed t}ie  Senate  to  kill  the  measure 
after  it  had  adopted     an     amend- 


The  successor  to  Libby  McDowell 
as  Miss  Chapel  Hill  will  be  named 
at  the  eighth  Chapel  Hill  Beauty 
and  Personality  Pageant  this 
Thursday  evening  at  8  o'clock  in 
the  Chapel  Hill  High  School  Au- 
ditorium. 

Latest  to  seek  the  crown  of  Miss 
Aonerica,  via  the  local  pageant 
elimination,  is  Patricia  Ann  Dillon, 
third-year  blonde  Carolina  coed 
from  Statesville.  She  and  other  par- 
ticipants in  the  event  will  be  judg- 
ed on  the  basis  of  talent  pr^senta- 
ti(Mi,  plus  appearances  in  bathing 
suit  and  evening  gown. 

The  new  Miss  Chapel  Hill  will 
be  provided  with  a  $200  scholar- 
ship check,  a  wardrobe  from  J.  B. 
Robblns,  and  will  represent  the 
community  in  the  Miss  North  Car 


Force  ROTC  sponsor.  For  her  tal- 
ent presentation  she  will  play  the 
piano. 


Games  will  be  played  from  4-6 
p.m.  and  a  barbecue  dinner  will 
be  served.  Tickets  ms^y  be  pur- 
chased from  members  of  the  ticket 
committee. 

SIGMA  XI 

Sigma  Xi,  honor  society  for 
science,  will  hold  its  annual  ban- 
quet and  initiation  Friday  at  6 
p.m.  in  Lenoir  Hall.  Dr.  Doak, 
chapter  president,  will  speak  at  8 
p.p.  in  Venable  Hall,  room  207, 
on  "The  Chemistry  and  Pharma- 
cology of  Some  Organophosphor- 
ous Compounds." 

FOREIGN  FILM  COMMITTEE 

The  GMAB  Foreign  Film  Com- 
mittee will  meet  Friday  at  4  p.m. 
in  the  Roland  Parker  Lounge  of 
Graham  Memorial.  Films  to  com- 
prise next  year's  progrma  will  be 
selected.  EX-eryone  intereo-ted  has 
been  urged  to  come  and  help  se- 
lect next  semester's  films. 

FASHION 

Miss  Meg  Markley,  a  fashion 
editor  of  Glamour  Magazine,  will 
visft  UNC  this  week  to  supervise 
a  fashion  photographic  project. 
Pictures  will  be  made  of  Miss 
Sarah  Van  Weyk,  recently  listed 
among  the  10  best  dressed  coeds 
in  the  nation. 


the    school    year    from    2-5   p.m.,  I  elation  for  Aging  and  CommUhity 
weather  permitting.  If  the  outdoor  j  Relationships  for  the  current  year, 
pool  is  not  open,  then  the  indoor  j  AH  interested  persons  have  been 
pool  will  be  open  at  its  regular  j  invited  to  attend, 
hours.  I WUNC-TV 

MUSiCOLOGICAL  GROUP  |     Today's  schedule  for  WUNC-TV, 

The  Southeastern  Chapter  of  the  the   University's  educational   tele- 
American     Musicological     Society  i  vision  station,  is  as  follows: 
will  meet  today  for  the  last  time  1 12:45    Music 
this  year  at  8  p.m.  in  room  108 1   i:00 
Hill  Hall.  Mr.  Harris  Mitchell,  pro- ' 
lesifor  on  leave  from  the  Univer- ! 


sity   of   Georgia,   will    speak.   Mr. 

Mitchell   is   a   Ph.D.   candidate   at 

UNC. 

SOCIAL  GAMES 

Dr.  Harold  D.  Meyer,  Miss  Vir- 
ginia Gregory  and  Professor  Doug- 
las Sessom^  will  supervise  a  "So- 
cial Game  Party"  at  the  Louis 
Round   Wilson   Library   Assembly 


1:30 
5:15 
5:30 
6:00 
6.20 
6:30 
7:00 
7:30 
8:00 
8:30 
9:30 


Room  Thursday  at  8  p.m.  This  Pro-  i  10:00 


Today  on  the  Farm 
Careers  for  You 
Music 
Mathematics 
Legslative  Review 
News  and  Safety 
Your  Community 
Industrial  Artisan 
Land  I>own  Under 
Carolina  Churches 
Russia:  Past  and  Present 
Coal  Country 
Final  Edition 


THE  OUTSTANDING  NEW  DEVELOPMENT 
IN  SUN. SCREEN  CHEMISTRY.  .  . 


Free  Flick 

The  Graham  Memorial  Film 
Series  will  sponsor  "You  Can't 
Take  It  with  You,"  tomorrow  at  8 
p.m.  in  Carroll  Hall. 

The  free  flick  this  Friday  is 
"Titanic,"  with  Clifton  Webb  and 
Barbara  Stanwyck,  to  be  shown 
at  7:30  and  10  p.m.  in  Carroll 
Hall. 


olina 
July. 


Pageant  .at    Burlington    in 


Other  Entrants 

The  other  entrants   to  date  are 

o- 
lyn  Wise,  Mary  Lewis  Rountree, 
Judy  Dockery.  and  Ina  Virginia 
Ridley.  The  public  is  invited  to  at- 
tend the  pageant,  which  will  be 
who     have     illegitimate    children  conducted  strictly  on  judging  rules 


ment  which  would  have  permitted  jjancy  Royster,  Jane  Brock,  Car< 
sterilization  of  men  who  fathered 
more  than  one  illegitimate  child. 

The  Jolly  Measure  was  aimed  at 
getting  at  the  problem  of  women 


Poteat  To  Be  Honored 
With  Informal  Dinner 


and   then   depend   on   public  wel 

fare  funds  for  their  support. 
j     Jolly  said  the  amendment,  offer 
,  ed  by  Sen.  Ed  Lanier  of  Orange, 
!  "destroys   the   purpose   for   which 

I  introduced  the  bill." 
He  spoke  after  several  senaton 

had  taken  the  iloor  to  speak  out 

against  the  measure. 


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for  the  Miss  America  selection,  ac- 
cording to  Ty  Boyd  and  J.  D. 
Wright,  co-chairmen  of  the  Jaycee- 
sponsored  program. 

A    drawing    for    •   w««k's    ac- 
cemmedations    at    th*    Sarasota 
Beach    Hotel    in   Sarasota,    fl»., 
will  be  held  among  tieket'hold- 
ers  to  the  pageant,  end  ettend- 
anc*  is  not  necMMry  to  winning 
this,  it  was  netad. 
Miss  Dillon,  2L  is  a  member  of 
Tri-Delta  sorority,  which  is  spon- 
soring her  Pageant  entry.  A  his- 
tory major,  with  the  objective  of 
teaching,  she  is  a  member  of  the 
Woman's  Honor   Cooncil   and  the 
Pan-Hellenic  Council.   In   addition 
I  she  is  a  member  of  the  Yackety- 
Yack   Beauty    Court    and   an    Air 


Students,  ex-students  and  friends 
of  Dr.  William  H.  Poteat  will  be 
interested  to  know  about  an  in- 
formal dinner  in  his  honor  at  Le- 
noir Hall  tomorrow  night  at  5:45 
p.m.  The  large  dining  room  up- 
stairs will  be  the  location  and  those 
attending  will  get  their  trays 
downstairs  and  proceed  upstairs 
for  the  dinner. 

Dr.  William  H.  Poteat  is  well- 
known  to  the  students,  having 
most  recently  been  considered  as 
a  candidate  for  the  position  of 
chancellor. 

His  leaving  the  University  and 
the  state  will  end  a  long  line  of 
Poteats  wiho  have  served  this  state 
in  education  through  several  gen- 
erations. Students  and  friends  who 
desired  to  show  him  their  appre- 
ciation for  his  outstanding  teach- 
ing abilities  and  sincere  interest 
in  students  are  honoring  him  this 
Thursday  evening. 

Anyone  who  wishes  further  in- 
formation about  the  dinner  may 
contact  Pebley  Barrow,  Phyllis 
Kraft  or  William  Mudd.  The  en- 
tire  program   is   scheduled   to   be 


bronztan 


PROTECTS  EVEN  AFTE»  SWIMMING 


•  Exdusiv*  tilicoM  ittgndiaiti,  'Dwrs-SN"* 
f  ivM  len^Mt  luitiwg  mm  fnt»tKa» 

•  Onlf  •••«  or  H»«  apfiMilMV  mmmM 
during  a  full  day  In  Hw  mm 

•  Will  ii«f  stain  twit* 

•  h4eii-9rMty  .  .  .  mmi  «m'»  atidc  125 

•  Sofa  even  for  baby's  >faHcB>a  skill  JL  pi^s  to* 

•  PromotM  o  bcoutilul  bronza  tan  , 

•nd  prm^H  pMiMg  ^^  ^^^^  ^  j-,— 

•  Smart,  unbreakobU  plostk  container  ru^moetu^coi  0>y>uo» 


FREE  DELIVERY 


PHONE  9-8781 


DR.  POTEAT 

.  .  .  to  be  honored 

vitations  are  being  sent  and  every- 
one who  wishes  to  come  is  cordial- 
ly invited  to  attend — friends,  ex- 
friends,  students,  ex-students,  fac- 
ulty and  townspeople. 

Bill   Mudd   will   serve   as   toast- 
master  general  and  Dr.  Poteat  will 


over  by  7:30  p.m.  No  special  in-  be  invited  to  speak  briefly. 


Dr.  Anderson 
Given  $23,000 

The  National  Institute  of  Dental 
Research  <rf  the  U.  S.  Pufaiic  Health 
Servtoe  has  granted  <23.000  to  Dr. 
Carl  £.  Anderson,  associate  profes- 
sor of  biologioal  chemistry  and 
Nutrition  in  the  University  of  North 
Carolina  Schools  of  Medicine  and 
Dentistry.  • 

The  money  will  :be  used  lor  a  two- 
year  study  of  the  effect  of  inge&test- 
ed  flourides  on  liver  lipid  metabol 
ism. 

Specific  objectives  of  the  pro- 
posed research  are::  1.  to  deter- 
mine whether  fluorides  interfere 
vfith  normal  liver  liipid  metabalism 
or  with  the  distribution  or  function 
of  liver  eiuyunes:  2.  whether  fluo- 
rides of  various  concentrations  will 
aggravate  an  atready  fatty  or  toxic 
Uver;  and  3.  the  effect-  of  fluorides 
on  the  liver  lipids  and  enzymes  of 
succeeding  genertaions  of  animals. 

Dr.  Anderson  will  be  aasisted  in 
this  work  by  Dr.  Claude  Lee  Yar- 
bro,  instructor  in  'Inoki^al  chemis- 
try, and  Bradford  Miller,  research 
associate  in  biologies  chemistry, 
both  of  the  UNC  School  of  MediciiDe. 


EASTWOOD  LAKE 

NOW  OPEN 

Swimming  -:—  Fishing 

Sandy  Beach 

Relax  And  Enjoy  The  Summer  Sun 
First  Left  Turn    Past  Brady's 


:i 


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For  Fmt,  ConvenJenf  Service 

Bristol-Kin9S|»ort 
Jolins^n  City 

LOUISVILLE 
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and  many  oMier  points 


Call  5160  (Raleigh)  or  Your  Travel 
Agent  For  Reservations,  Information 


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B.D.  Striped  Sport  Shirts 5.00  3.95 

Imported  Wool/Dacron  Pants       19.95  14.95 

Stretch  Cotton/Nylon  Hose  __       1.00  .69 

Knee  Length  Batiste  Pajamas  _-     3.95  2.99 

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Imported  Shirting  Dress  Shirts        5.95  3.99 

Cotton  Summer  Blazers 27.95  19.95 

All  Wool  Fbnnel  Suits 55.00  39.95 

Fine  Milan  Straw  Hats 7.50  5.00 

Famous  Make  Summer  Slacks      12.95  9.95 

Special  Table  of  Ass't  Spt.  Shirts     5.95  1 .99 

Lady  Manhattan  Shirts 2.00  off  each 

Famous  Make  Summer  Suits  _..    43.95  34.50 

Assorted  Group  of  Belts 2.00  .99 

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PA«I  POUI 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


WEDNESDAY,  MAY  15,  1fS7 


Tar  Heel  Baseballers  At  Maryland  Today 

iRabbmen  Need  Win 


K 


ING'S 
ORNER 


By  BILL  KING 


DTH  Sports  Editor 


KINGS  KORNER— 

With  the  conclusion  of  the  conference  track,  tennis,  and  golf  cham- 
pionships over  the  weekend  and  yesterday,  the  lion's  share  of  the 
Carolina  spring  sports  -xrhedule  is  finished.  Only  the  baseball  season 
is  stil!  open. 

Ail  in  all  Carolina  teams  did  wail.   Each  taams  had  its  upt  and 
downs  and  each  had  its  thrills  and  sorrows.  Tho  «onfor«nc»  meets 
ended  the  1957  competition  and  another  season  has  been  recorded 
in  the  record  books  of  the  young  Atlantic  Coast  Conference. 
TRACKMEN    LOSE 

As  was  epxected,  the  Tar  Heel  trackmen  finished  second  to  Mary- 
land in  the  outdoor  track  meet  held  on  Fetzer  Field.  The  powerful 
Terps.  who  get   their  points  by  placing  consistently,    have  won  the 
meet  every  year  except  one  since  the  inauguration  of  the  ACC. 
Carolina  fans  watched  sadly  as  little  Jinuny  Beatty  closed  out 
his  fabulous  career  on  a  sad  note.  Beatty  was  entered  in  the  two- 
mile  run  but  had  to  pull  out  after  a  mile  because  of  severe  pains 
in  his  instep.    Jimmy  made  a  gallant  try  but  the  injury  which  he 
sustained  in  the  Penn  Relays  two  weeks  ago  was  too  much. 
While  Tar  Heel  track  fans  watched  Beatty  in  his  la^A  collegiate 
meet,   they   also,  saw  a  couple  of  fellows    just   getting  started — and 
destined  to  rewrite  the  books  of  Carolina  track. 

One  of  them  was  a  tall    lanky  ex-basketball  star  who  moved 
over  the  cinders  like  a* glider  coasting  to  a  stop  on  the  runway. 
Dave  Scurlock  was  the  man,  and  in  this  graceful,  easy-going  soph- 
omore from  Greensboro,  track  experts  in  the  area  see  potentially 
one  of  the  finest  runners  in  a  long  time.  Dave  copped  first  place 
in  the  440  and  880  and  was  selected  the  outstanding  performer  of 
the  meet. 
.Another  sophomore.   Wayne  Bishop   of  Greenville  ^ave  the  fans 
good  reason  to  cheer  as  he  ran  a  fine  two-mile  before  losing  to  the 
great    i'urr   Grim    of    Maryland.     Bishop    is    another   potential    Caro- 
lina great.  He  was  an  outstanding  freshman  star  but  had  to  go  easy 
this  fall  due  to  an  injury  suffered  at  the  first  of  the  season. 

The  Tar  Heels  had  other  outstanding  men.  The  loss  of  Beatty 
will    hurt,  but  Carolina  has  some  fine  prospects  and  should  be 
even  better  next  season. 
The   Carolna   golfers  went    to  the   annual   conference   tourney   in 
Winston-Salem  over  the  weekend  bearing  the  title  of  slight  favorite 
to  defend  their  1956  golf  title. 

As  things  turned  out,  the  Tar  Heel  linksmen  could  not  over- 
come a  powerful  Wake  Forest  con>bo  which  was  playing  on  a 
familiar  course,  the  Old  Town  Club. 

Two  Deacons  led  the  field  and  two  others  weren't  far  behind.  John 
Cerring  replaced  ex-Carolina  star  Buzzy  Basinger  as  the  top  ACC 
Golfer  and  teammate  Sonny  George  finished  in  second  place.  Tommy 
Helms  and  Ralph  James  followed  closely,  and  this  was  too  much  for 
the  Tar  Heels. 

Actually,  Carolina  faded  considerably  in  the  latter  part  of  the 
■eeeen.  it  flnrafcerf  thirteenth  as  a  teem  in  the  Southern  Intercol- 
legiate Tourney  in  Athens,  6a.  held  a  week  before  the  conference 
tourney. 

Chuck  Erickson's  club  had  played  consistently  up  until  the  two 
post  season  tourneys  but  after  that,  scores  soared. 

It  must  have  been  a  disappointing  second-half  season  for  the 
Linksmen  who  were  supposed  to  have  the  most  well-rounded  out- 
fit in  the  conference.  Golf,  however,  is  the  most  unpredictable  of 
all  sports  and  about  the  pnly  thing  the  Tar  Heels  can  do  now  s 
to  work  hard  to  regain  the  title  next  season. 
Looking    at  some    brighter  aspects  of  spring  sports   at   the   Hill, 
Carolina's  bustling  tennis  team  has  given  promise  that  in  the  next 
year  or  so  Carolina  tennis  will  be  back  to  the  position  which  it  held 
for  years  up  until  this  season — as  one  of  the  best  in  the  nation. 

True,  the  Tar  Heel's  record  didn't  come  to  close  to  matching 
the  1t-Lmark  that  last  year's  fine  team  posted.  But  the  netters 
simply  were  without  the  nten  who  established  this  record. 
The  Tar  Heel   netters  underwent  radical  changes  during  the   pe- 
riod of  a  year.  Practically  all  of  the  great  1956  team  was  gone  either 
by  graduation  or  academic  problems.  The  Tar  Heels  got  a  new  coach 
early  in  the  season,  and  Valdimir  Cernik  haa-  won  the  respect  of  his 
players. 

Tennis  at  Carolina  should  definitely  be  on  the  upgrade  next 
year.  Cernik  will  get  a  chance  to  start  anew  and  should  be  able 
to  make  great  strides  in  rebuilding.  He  has  some  fine  prospecH 
on  hand. 


Area  3  Title 
To  Be  Decided 
At  Gastonia 

The  ACC  champion  will  get  one 
of  the  four  places  in  the  NCAA 
District  3  championship  tourna- 
ment opening  May  31  at  Gastonia, 
N.  C.  George  Washington,  South- 
ern Conference  Champion,  may 
get  one  place. 


To  Stay  Alive  In  ACC 


By  BILL  KING 

With    spirits    and    hopes    hign. 
Carolina's      hustiyig      baseballers 
once  again  go  ail  out  for  a  tie  with 
the  Duke  Blue  Devils  for  the  At- 
lantic Coast  Conference  leadership 
as    the    Tar    Heels    take    on    the 
Maryland   Terps   in   College  Park, 
Md.  at  3:30  this  afternoon. 
The  Tar  Heels    have    had  their 
teams  in    backs  to  the  wall   for  two  week.s 
event  *at  ■  now,  but  the  firing  squad  has  been 


The  Southeastern  Conference 
will  furnish  one  of  the 
the  double  elimination 
Gastonia.  Georgia  Tech,  Eastern  |  firing  blanks  as  Coach  Walt  Rabb's  | 
champion  of  the  Southeastern,  de-  j  club  continuously  comes  through  j 
feated   Alabama,  Western   winner,  I  with  tite  chips  down.  | 


This  afternoons  affair  is  the 
last  regular  season  contest  for  the 
Chapel  Hil!  contingents,' but  a  vic- 
tory today  would  give  the  Tar 
Heels  an  uphill  tie  for  first  place 
in  the  ACC  with  Duke  which  fin- 
ished its  season  a  week  ago  with 
a  10-4  mark.  Carolina  is  now  9-4. 
Thij  would  mean  a  playoff  lor 
NCAA  representation. 

In  the  first  meeting  between 
these  two  clubs  the  Tar  Heels  won 
a  thriller  as  Roger  Honeycutt  de- 
livered a  game-winning  single  in 
the  l>ottom  of  the  ninth  inning. 
This  afternoon's  game  is  a  make-  ■  son 
up  game  of  one  which  was  orig- 
inally set  for  mid-season  but  was 
postponed  becauo-e  of  bad  weather. 

Carolina  has  already  played  one 

game  since  the  Blue  Devils  ended 

their   season.  They   squeaked   by 

N.    C.    State    here    Monday    after- 

1  noon  3-2  in  one  of  the  most  thrill- 


in  a  three-agem  title  playoff.  Tech 
has  announced  it  will  not  take 
part   in   NC.^.A.   play   however. 

Walter  Rabb,  Carolina  coach 
and  head  of  the  NCAA  District  3 
baseball  committee,  said  Alabama 
might  get  the  bid. 

One  at  large  team  will  be  se- 
lected by  Rabb's  committee  to 
complete  the  field  at  Gastonia  to 
determine  the  district  representa- 
tive in  the  college  "V;orld  Sege? 
June  8-13  at  Omaha. 

Rabb  said  Florida  State,  Gram- 
bling.  La.,  College  and  Georgia 
Teachers  were  under  consideration 
for  the  pasition. 

He  stressed,  however,  that  the 
field  was  not  limited  to  tbese 
three.  Coaches  of  teams  with  out- 
standing district  records  are  in- 
vited to  send  him  their  records 
and    information   concerning    their' 

teams   before  next   Monday  to  re- '  '"^   contest    in    Emerson   Stadium 
ceive   consideration. 


to  the  wind  this  afternoon  in  an 
all-out  attempt  to  finish  the  regu- 
lar season  in  a  first  place  tie.  The 
Tar  Heel  mentor  will  start  either 
right-hander  Don  Saine  or  lefty 
Joe  Morgan,  but  there's  a  good 
chance  that  Raugh  will  be  number 
one  man  in  the  bullpen  for  Caro- 
lina. 

Big  Jim  pitched  against  State 
on  Tuesday  and  Rabb  will  use  him 
today  only  withe  reluctance.  But 
this  is  the  big  one  for  the  Tar 
Heels,  and  should  Saine  or  Mor- 
gan, neither  who  have  gone  the 
distance  this  season,  weaken  Rabb 
will  probably  call  on  his  ace  in 
the  hole. 

Should  the  Tar  Heels  win  with- 
out Raugh,  that  will  put  them  in 
excellent  a-hape  for  a  playoff  with 
Duke,  as  the  righthander  will  have 
had  his  rest  and  should  go  against 
the  Blue  Devils  in  the  playoff. 

Carolina's  starting  lineup  today 
should  see  Bomber  Hill  at  first, 
Don  Lewis  at  second,  Roger  Hon- 
eycutt at  short,  and  Chuck  Hart- 
man  at  third. 

In  th€  outfield,  Joe  Shook  will 
be  in  left,  hard-hitting  Dick  Hud- 
in  center,  and  Don  Hill  in 
right. 


Dromatiques  To 
Have  Program 


The  Petites  Dramatiqiies  will  pre- 
-sent  the  second  in  a  series  of  pro- 
grams   to    be    held    Sunday    night, 
the  lounge 


Notice 

AM  students  are  requested  to 
check  in  their  baskets  and  lock- 
ers, and  remove  all  personal 
equipment,  (shoes)  before  they 
leave  school.  All  baskets  and 
lockers  will  be  cleaned  out  at 
the  end  of  summer  school.  Stu- 
dents will  be  assigned  new  bas- 
kets and  lockers  at  the  begin- 
ning of  the  Fall  semester. 


this  season. 

Maryland  is  currently  in  sev- j  May  19  at  8:00  p.m. 
enth  place  in  the  conference  of  Graham  Memorial, 
standing:*,  but  it  is  probable  that 
the  Tar  Heels  will  have  to  face 
Maryland  ace  Fred  Gcbhardt  this 
afternoon.  By  Rabb's  own  admit- 
tance, Gebhardt  is  one  of  the 
finest  hurlers  in  the  conference.  It 
was  he  who  tangled  with  Tar  Heel 
ace  Jim  Raugh  in  the  first  game 
between  the  two  schools  and  the 


Tar  Heels  had  a  tough  time  beat- 
ing the  strong-armed  right-hander. 
Rabb  will  have  to  throw  caution 


The  program,  entitled  "An  Even- 
ing oj'  Tennessee  Williams",  wiU 
consist  of  two  one-act  plays  by  the 
well  known  .American  playwright. 

The  first  is  entitled,  "HeUo  From 
Bertlia."  an  early  play  of  the  au- 
thor directed  by  Lloyd  Skinner.  In 
the  cast  Miss  Nancy  Stephens  will 
take  the  part  of  Bertha,  .Miss  Hope 


WAA  Makes 
Annual  Award 

Tri  Delt  and  Carr  Dormitory 
were  presented  trophies  at  the 
W.A.A.  picnic  for  being  the  out- 
standing sorority  and  dorm  partici- 
pants in  W.A.A.  Other  awards  in- 
cluded momograms  and  stars, 
plaques  for  intranmrals,  and  Out- 
standing Representative  and  Sen- 
ior awards,  and  recognition  of 
House  mother  interest. 

The  following  girls  were  awarded 
monograms:  Patsy  Smith,  B.  J. 
Savage,  Winifred  Mairtin,  and  Sue 
Gichner. 

Winning  stars,  for  an  additional 
hundred  points  were:  Nancy  Shu- 
ford.  Joan  WUlsey.  Ann  Burt,  and 
IVances  Reynolds. 

Plaques  for  intramurals  included: 
Volleyball  —  Tri  Delt;  Dance  —  Tri 
Delt;  Swimming — Alpha  Gam;  Bas- 
ketball—Alpha Gam;  Shuffleboard— 
Elanor  German,  Smith;  Golf— Kitty 
Edsall,  Smith;  Table  Tennis— Joan 
Willsey,  Carr;  Tennis— Betty  Meloy, 
Spenser;  Tennis  Doubles — Ida  Rob- 
inson and  Diana  Ashley.  Tri  Delt; 
Badminton— B.  J.  Savage;  Badmin- 
ton Doubles— B.  J.  Savage  and  Carv)- 
line  Roberts,  Smith;  Archery— Pace 
Barnes,   Tri  Delt;    Softball. 

Patsy  Smith,  Trudy  Lefler  and 
Sue  Gichner  were  awarded  the  out- 
standing Senior  Awards. 

Outstanding  Representative 
Awards  were  presented  to  Winifred 
Martin  and  Frances  Reynolds. 

New  Officers  for  W.A.A.  are: 
Francis  Reynolds.  President,  Pat 
Anderson.  Vice-President,  Emily 
Sommers.  Secretary.  Kay  .Smith, 
Treasurer,  and  Helen  Walker, 
.Awards  Chairman. 


US-Russian  Track  On 
Home  And  Home  Basis? 

By  KE.V  ALVTA  \     Krupin  wrote  on  .\pril  10  that  the 

CHARLOTTE,  May  14  OPv-Picked  ^  Soviet  would  like  to  have  a  70-man 
track  teams  of  United  SUtes  and  i  American  squad  compete  in  a  three- 
Russian  athletes  may  meet  in  a  .  day  meet  at  Moscow  next  July  12- 
"home  and  home"  series  spread  14,  with  the  Rtissian  team  return- 
over  two  smnmers  if  arrangements  '  >ng  the  visit  next  year, 
under  discussion  are  completed. 


I  Sparger  as  Goldie.  Mi.s.s  .Amanda 
Meiggs  as  Lena,  and  Miss  June 
Craft  .as  the  Girl. 

The  second,  a  companion  piece 
to  "HeUo  From  Bertha,"  i.s  entitled 
"This  Property  Is  Condemned." 
The  play  is  directed  by  Taylor  Wil- 
liams, and  stars  Miss  Bettina  Jin- 
nette  as  Willie,  and  IJoj-d  Skinner 
as  Tom. 


Maas  Wins 

BOSTON,  (ff)  —  Detroit's  Duke 
Maas.  a  slender  righthander  who 
couldn't  win  a  ^ame  for  the  Tigers 
in  1956.  posted  his  fifth  triumph  to- 
day by  blanking  the  Boston  Red  Sox. 
2-0.  on  a  sparklii\g  five-hitter. 

The  26-year-old  Maas,  struck  out 
six  and  walked  only  one  while  al- 
lowing  only  one  Boston  runner  to 
reach   second   base. 


Pictures  of  the  varsity  track 
team  will  be  made  this  afternoon 
at  4:15.  All  members  are  urged  to 
be  on  hand. 


Massey  Wins  Tourney 


By   JLM  CROVWOVER 

Odell  Massey  of  Durham  High 
School  fired  his  second  straight  69 
for  a  record  138  total  to  take  the 
Mate  high  scluxri  golf  toiuTiey  on 
Fiidey  Course  yesterday  afternoon. 

Trailing  Massey  weie  Ed  Justa 
of  Rocky  Mount  with  141  and  Larry 
Beck  of  Kinston  and  Ronald  Mann 
of  High  Point  at  146. 

The  Lee  H.  Edwards  Maroon 
Devils  of  Asheville  had  all  four  of 
it«;  team  members  in  the  top  15 
and  ran  away  with  the  team  crown 
with  a  36  hole  total  of  597.  They 
were  followed  by  Raleigh  at  615. 
Winston-Salem  at  616  and  Rocky 
Mount  at  620.  Myers  Park  and 
Greeo^Mro  at  621  and  632  respec- 
tively. 

Massey.  the  Dmiiam  Hi^gh  senior 
ffamered  five  birdies  in  bis  three- 
under-par  round  yesterday.  His  138 
sccere  not  only  toiqied  the  state  re- 
cord, but  also  bested  by  six  strokes 
the   winmog   round   in    last    year's 


tournament   won    by   Vem    Stanley 
of  My«rs  Park  of  Charlotte. 

Beck  is   the  son  of  Avery  Beck, 
the    gc»lfing    pro    In    Kinston,    and 
;  former  circuit  player. 


Dan  Ferris,  secretary-treasurer 
of  the  Amateur  Athletic  Union  of 
the  United  States,  and  K.  Krupm 
of  IVIoscow,  president  of  the  light 
athletic  section  of  the  USSR,  have 
exchanged  letters  as  a  followup  to 
their  talks  during  the  Ol.N-mpics  at 
Melbourne  last  winter.  Ferris  has, 
written  Krupin  that  he  expects  to 
be  able  to  give  him  the  AAU  deci- 
sion on  the  proposed  meets  by 
June  1. 

Louis  J.  Fisher  of  High  Point, 
third  vice  president  of  the  Nation- 
al A.AU.  in  Charlotte  for  last  night's 
quarterly  meeting  of  the  executive 
committee  of  the  Carolinas  Assn.  of 
the  A.AU.  had  topies  of  letters  ex- 
changed between  Ferris  and  Krupin 
in  recent  weeks. 


He  proposed  that  20  Oly-mpic 
events  be  held,  eliminating  the 
marathon  and  50-kilometer  walk. 
The  American  team  would  remain 
in  Russia  eight  days. 

Ferris  replied  to  Krupin  on  May 
2  with  a  suggestion  that  perhaps, 
to  reduce  expenses,  the  teams  be 
resti'icted  to  50  members. 

Ferris  .said  the  national  track  and 
field  committee,  the  foreign  rela- 
tions committee  and  executive  com- 
mittee of  the  A.AU  would  be  polled 
by  mail  and  the  result  of  their  vote 
on  the  matter  should  be  ready  for 
announcement   by  June   1. 

The  chief  difference  between  the 
proposals  of  the  two  groups  ap- 
pears to  t>e  in  the  matter  of  ex- 
ix?nses. 


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»  tJ.H.C.  Ltbfsfy 
^sjials  Dspt. 
pal  Hill, 


ri\ 


EISENHOWER 

His  fireside  chat  should  only  b* 
a  starter  says  the  editor  on  pa9e 
two. 


CHAPEL    HILL,  NORTH  CAtOLINA,  THURSDAY,  MAY   16,   1957 


The  Box 


Offic€t  M  Grahmm   Mtmohml 


HOUR  PAGES  THIS  ISSUE 


N.  CAROLINA 

Lewis.  2b      . 
Hud^-on,  cf    .  , 
I.  Hill,  lb  ... 
Shook,  lb 

rioneycutt,    ss   3 

D.  Hill,  rf   _ _.  4 

Hartman, 
Saine.    p 
Maultsby,  p 
Ajcock,  p 
Raugh,    p 
Legette,'   c 

Totals 


3»     U     25 


MARYLAND  Ah 

Bolen,    ss   ... 0 

MaxwelJ.  ss   5 

McDonald.   3b  5 

Dare,   lb  _    3 

Reitz,  rf   3 

Johnson.  2b  5 

Ale.\.    cf  4 

B'champ.  c ,...,.    4 

Hintze,  If  J"  ...  . .      3 


Gebhardt,  p 
Bobb.  p 


Loses  Chance  For  ACC 
Beaten  By  Terps,  8-7 

I  Carolina  Gets  16  Hits; 
Maryland  Scores  I  n  9th 

COLLEGE  PARK.  \!(i..  Ari-Dnkc  buUcf  iiitf>  1l»« 
.Atlantic  Coast  Conleiciui'  l»;jMi).tll  ( lianij*iiiiiNiii|)  \cstov(l.iy 
as  .Xoi'Ii  Carolina  missed  a  (lian«c  hi  tio  ilif  liliic  l>c\ils  by 
losing  to  Matyland.  .S-7. 

North  Carxjiina.  ufcHii^t;  into  today'  .•aiuc  with  a  i)-|  K'airiie 
rcHoid  against  Duke's  lo-j.  i.s  now  <)-;,  lor  the  \eai.  I  he  .\<»i  th 
Carohna  loss  ren»o\ed  the  possibiiitx  ol  ;i  j)lavon  and  Duke 
will  go  to  the  NC.\.\  eleininations. 

The  hall  game  was  tied  h\  North  Caiolina  .nid  won  by 
Maryland  in  the  nintlt. 

♦     Joe   Shook    led   off   for   the   Tsr 
Heel 


^EA^R-Y  ENTRANTS— Aspirants  for  the  title  of  Miss  Chapel  Hill— all  Carolina  coeds—rehearsed  last 
nipht  f^  |h*s  evening's  eighth  annual  Chapel  Hill  Beauty  and  Personality  Pageant,  to  be  held  at  8 
e  clock  M*  the  Chapel  Hill  High  School  audito^^ium.  The  winner  will  be  selected,  strictly  according  to 
Mws  Ammnc»  ludgmg  rules,  and  will  represent  the  Confimunity  at  this  summer's  state  finals  of  th»  Miss 
America  Pageant.  Each  entrant  will  make  an  even  ng  gown  and  bathing  suit  appearance,  in  addition  to 
•  talent  jKMentation.  Left  to  right  are  Martha  For  une,  Judy  Dockery,  Nancy  Royster.  Jane  Brock  and 
M^ry  LKum  Rountree.  Not  shown  are  entrants  Pat  Dillon,  Ina  Gee  Ridley,  and  Clara  Tucker. 
News  Leader  Photo 


Sa^'5  Georne  Raasdale 


System  Is  In  Good  Shape 


The  S\>UW)  'HoiKM-i  is  in  better 
.-hape  r^  acw  than  .it  has  been 
in  a  long  *iiae.'  George  Ra^sdale. 
( bairman  ,«#  «t^  Honor  Cr-m' il  t  M 
a  meeting  of  orientation  counselors 
Tuesday  aisht. 

In  view  o{  that  I'act  *e  even 
decWed  oat  to  have  the  traditijn.il 
Honor  System  Eai^plwsLs  Wem  this 
sprfaiig,"  he  said.  \ 

He  evTjiaiacd  that  the  newt  paper 
article*  and  infcnral  .speeches 
iiave  rria4e  it  unfeasible  to  have 
this  week.  Tlie  Honor  Svstem  hjs 
ifoen  >H)  pLsilively  pie.sented  that 
we  tiiou4<bt  it  injudicious  "to  run 
it  into  the  ground." 

In  his  twen*v  minute  speech  he 
empiuisired  tik*  pwrttve  attitude 
that  he  waoted  the  orientation  coun- 
M  !oi  lake  in  presenting  the  Honor 
System  to  the  new  students 

"Vou  aie  working  with  men  who 


can  as  easily  be  led  wrongly  as 
they  can  be  led  rightly."  he  said. 
He  stated  tJiat  some  counselors  had 
formerly  -defamed  the  -Honor  Sys- 
tem." 

'.More  student>  have  turned  other 
.students  ia.  this  year  than  last  year, 
pnd  more  .students  have  turned 
Uicmsclves  in  this  year  than  last 
:ear,  ■    he  told   the  group. 

He  said  that  thp  system  was 
sti-ong.  but  that  it  was  up  to  the 
C.I 'tntat'cn  counselors  to  teach  the 
f'-cshman  the  fundamentals  "so  that 
tiiey  would  become  stronger  men." 

Rcg'dale  placed  special  emphasis 
on  "those  violations  which  have 
'jreviously  been  wrongly  called 
'fringe  violations.'  " 

He  asked  the  counselors  not  to  use 
the  term  fringe"  as  it  connoted 
the   offerses    were    not    as    serious 


Lee  Award  To  Be  Given 


The  .Mjeaker  explained  thej-  were 
less  fiequent,  but  "They  are  not 
less  serious." 

Tlie.se  violtions  he  namt'd  as 
bils'.fying  the  class  rolls,  signing  a 
false  naime  to  a  library  card,  plag- 
iarism. j9|^  illegeal  laooratprj-  col- 
laboration. 

SuggestLni(  that  the  counselors 
tell  the  new  students  to  take  alter- 
nate seats  for  exams.  Ragsdale  al.sd 
warned  the  cx«unseloi-s  to  te!l  their 
students  who  might  study  together 
not  to  sit  near  each  other  during  a 
test. 

A  student  should  never  t>e  misled 
into  thinking  that  he  is  helping 
another  student  by  n\)t  reporting 
him."  lie  stated. 

He  said  that  the  counselora  must 
tiuild 


Totals    _  34     10     27 

North    Carolina  300  300  001 — 7 

Maryland  510  100  001—4 

f  R— Hudson  2,  I.  Hill.  Shook  2. 
•  Hartman,  Legette.  Maxwell  2,  Dare 
j  3.   Reitz,   Johnson,   Aley.    E^Hart- 

tnan,  Shook.  RW— I.  Hill.  Shook, 
j  McDonald.  Johnson  2.  Aley  Hintze. 

Reitz,  Hudson  2.  Dare,  D.  Hill.  2B 

—Dare.  Aley.  SB— I.  Hill.  Ma.\wcll. 

SB — Dare  3.  Hintze,  McDonald.  D. 

Hill  &- Reitz.  Honeycutt.  Left— 
j  Maryland  8.  North  Carolina  9.  BB 
i  — Bobb    2.    Saine    1,    Maultsby     1. 

Raugh  1.  SO— Gebhardt  3.  Bobb  5. 

.Mault.-by    2.    Aycock    3,    Raugh    1. 

HO— Gebhardt  10  in  4.  Saine  5  in 
I  2-3,  Aycock   1   in  4  2-3.   Bobb  6  in 

5.  Maultsby  3  in  2  2-3.  Raugh  1  in 

13.     R-ER— Gebhardt     66,     Saine 

5-5,  Maultsby  2-2.  Aycock  0  0. 
I  Raugh  11.  HBP— By  Gebhardt. 
I  Honeycutt.  WP— Maultsby  2.  W— 
'  Bobb  (6-5).  I — Raugh  (7-3).  U— 
:  Moore.   Fontana.   T — 2:25. 


Water  Pageant  At  Bowman  Gray  Pool    v-^  ;>  ' 

Mary  Margaret  Williams,  Shirley  Downing,  Sara  Williamson, 
Bami  Bourne,  Pat  Anderson  and  Helen  Walker  run  through  "Man- 
hatten,"  one  of  nine  presentations-  by  the  Splash  Club  in  Bowmafi 
Gray  Pool  Tuesday  evening.  The  program  featured  unique  and 
imaginative  uses  of  color  and  precision  swimming  formations  and 
the  combined  talents  of  20  girls. 

A  King-Sears  photo—Bill  King 


'Open  Parks  To  Everyone 
Baptist  Union  Tells  State  ^^^ 


Reaction   to   the   recent    UnLsteSid    cas  jxisition  as  a 


Mollef  Tries  To  Resign 

Fails,  ^i^^— Premier  Gu\-  .Mollet 
5;aid  last  night  he  feh  France  had 
lieen  deserted  b.v  tlie  United  States 
and  Britain  on  the  Suez  i.s.sue.  He 
■attempted  to  i^sign  after  16  montlHi 
in  office,  a  post  war  recoixl  in 
France. 

Persuaded  by  Pi-ejsic'ettt  Rene 
Cot.\'  to  stay  in  office,  the  prem- 
ier and  the  eabuict  then  decided  in 
h.  stormy  session  to  ask  the  U.  N. 
Secuj-ity  Council  as  s«k>n  as  ixissihle 
to  order  Bgy>t  to  obsene  the  six 
principles  it  appixjx'ed  la.si  October 
for  .safeguarding  fi-ee  pasiige  to  all 
nations  U'rough  the  Suez  Canal. 

Mollet  indicated  he  feh  he  should 
resi'gn  t>ecause  his  leadersh  ]>  had 
isolated  F'rance  on  a  \'ital  issue. 

In  a  statement  to  newsmen,  the 
pi-emier  indicated  he  fe'i  most  keen- 
ly the  decifiion  l^y  Britain — France's 
partner  in  tlie  ill-starred  Suez  in- 
A'asion  la<l  fall — 1*>  bc-w  to  Kgvptiaii 
President  .Yasser's  terms  for  <»pei- 
ation  of  the  canal. 

The  Bntisli  gOA-ernment  has  au- 
thorized Bi'it.lsh-flag  shij>s  to  u.se 
the  canal  again.  pa>Ti»g  tolls  in 
sterlbvg  to  Egj-pt  and  without  pi-o- 
test. 


with  a  walk  off  Stan  Bobb. 
the  first  given  up  by  a  Maryland 
pitcher  in  the  game.  K  )gcr  Honty- 
cutt  sacrificed  Shook  •  to  .second 
and  Don  Hill  singled  to  center 
.scoring  Shook  from  .second  for  a 
7-7  score. 

Maryland's  daring  Howie  Dare, 
who  holds  the  ACC  record  for 
stolen  ba.ses.  upped  the  record  to 
31  in  the  ninth,  rkare  .stole  sec- 
rnd  after  getting  a  walk  to  open 
the  inning,  then  stole  third  after 
Dick   Reitz  struck  out. 

Jack  Johnson's  drive  over  the 
head  of  rightfielder  Don  Hill  let 
Dare  walk  hume  with  ea.se  for  the 
winning  run.  Johnson,  who  could 
have  goni>  all  the  way,  got  credit 
for  a  single. 

North  Carolina  ended  the  sea- 
son 14-10  against  .all  oponents. 
Maryland  Ls  11-12  over-all  and  6-8 
in  the  conference.  Today's  vic- 
tory was  the  fifth  straight  for  the 
Terps. 

Maryland  got  to  starter  Doo 
Saine  in  the  first  frame  for  five 
run.-  and  add^d  singletons'  in  the 
second,  fourth  and  ninth.  The  Tar 
HeeLs  had  tijken  a  three  run  Icjul 
in  the  fop  (>f  the  firsi  imiy  to  hat'e 
to  scramble  back  in  the  fourth 
for  another  trio  of  markers  to  tif 
the  coolest. 

Of  the  16  hit.-,  onb  one  wa.5  fo** 
extra-bases  and  it  was  a  triple  by 
Ivalee  Hill. 


Park  incident  whereby  a  Universitj-  :  of   denwcracy 
student   was  ousted    from   the   park  ,  world, 
givimds    because   of   raiciai    coasid- 
up  the   idea  of  trust    in   the  orations    was    voiced    y'esterda>'    by 


working  cxam*:ie 
the   e\  cs    of    the 


the    State    Legislature 


The  Irene  F.  ^ee  Cup  will  be 
awarded  to  the  most  outstand- 
ing senior  coed  f^r  1956-57  at  a 
presentation  to  be  heM  Sunday 
in  Spencer  Hail  at  5  p.m. 


All  Degree 


Candidates 


Be  At 


Memorial 


Hall 


Today 
At  4:15 


First  given  in  1955,  the  award 
ir  made  by  Mrs.  Irene  F.  Lee,  of 
Chapel  Hill,  who  was  the  first 
hostess  of  Cornelia  Phillips 
Spencer  Hall.  Spencer  was  the 
first  dormitory  for  women  stu- 
dents on  the  UNC  campus. 

After  23  years  of  service,  Mrs. 
Lee  reytired  in  1948  and  con- 
tinues to  reside  in  the  commu- 
nity, where  she  takes  an  .active 
interest  in  campus  activities. 

The  senior  winner  of  the  cup 
is  chosen  for  her  display  of  in- 
itiative, cooperation,  leadership, 
character,  industry,  persever- 
ance, ideals,  judgment,  depend- 
ability and  scholarship. 

Selection  committee  for  the 
award  includes  Miss  Katharine 
Carmichaely  Dean  of  Women,  as 
chairman,  Ray  Jefferies,  assist- 
ant to  ^he  Dean  of  Student  Af- 
fairs, and  four  student  mem- 
bers: 

Ed  Sutton,  Golden  Fleece  rep- 
resentative. Bill  McLean,  Order 
of  the  Grail,  Miss  Penn  An- 
thony, Panheilenic  Council,  and 
Miss  Carol  Jones,  Women's  Resi- 
dence Council. 


niJKls   of    the   .leM'   men   and    give   llie   Baj>tist   Student    Uoion  here   in 
them    the    "opportunity   to    be    hon-    a    letter    to 
orable  "  -  j  in   Raleigh. 

"Beliefs   which   have    lasted   ages 

j  now   rest    with   y'ou.    The   regenera- 

jtion  of  these  time  tested  beliefs  is 
a    solemn    duty    which    belongs    to 

j  \ou.    We    must    not    let    this    great 

j  tradition  of  Honor  pass  from  the 
University  scene,"  he  said  in  reach- 
ing  his   conclusion. 


I      "We    further    fee!    that    this    stu- 
dent's being  denii>d  entrance  to  the 
l-ark   was   in  effect   an  abridgement 
j  of   his    status   as   a   student    at    the 
I  University  as  well  as  a  violation  of 
'his  rights  as  a  person." 
'     A    letter  enclosed   with   the    re.-=t)- 
lution  was  addresL^ed   to  The   Daily 
.  Tar    Heel    Tuesday    indicating    that 
I  at    its   last    meeting   the   Exe;utive 
.  Council     of     the     Baptist     Student 


Stated  in  the  letter  was  a  resolu- 
tion calling  for  the  North  Carolina 
State  Legislature  to  act'  to  open 
all  state  park  faclMttes  to  all  citi- 
zens of  the  state. 

Recalling  the  effects  the  incident 

I  liad  not  only  on  the  in<Hvidu-al  and   L'nion    voted    to   .send    its   appraisal  1 
'  i 

The    orientation    counselors    were    i^iroup  involved,   but  the  citizens  of   tf»    appropriiite    ct>mmitU'es    of    the 
"iven    schedules    which    were    then    *^is    state   and   countrj',    the   letter    State  Legisla4ui"e.  | 

explained    by    Jerry    Oppenhcirner.  !  statcnl   tliat:  j     Surrounding  the  removal  of  Uni-  | 

chairman    of    the    orientation    com- j      "In   view  of  the  large  proportion    versity  Student  Lero\-  Frasier  fi-om  j 
mittee.  j  oi  overseas  students  in  the  group,    the  park   several   v\eeks   ago   while  j 

^ J  we  feel  tliat  this  incident  has  been    he  was  the  guest  of  the  Cosinopoli   ! 

exiceptlonally  detrimental  to  Ameri-  tan    Club,    the    .story    and    incident  j 


received  notice  in  .several  state  and 
h.cal    ncwspai>ers. 

A  jes»>luti\jin  requiriing  censure 
action  was  introduced  to  the  Stu- 
dent Legislature  here  by  Kep.  Tom 
Long  shortly  following  di-sclosure 
lit  the  incident. 

Two  weeks  ago.  the  original  resi>- 
1  lit  ion  met  a  quiet  death  when  it 
was  decided  to  retain  it  in  com- 
mittee un4il  next  year.  The  Legis- 
lature recapitulated,  however,  in 
an  amending  re.solution  expressing 
deep  regret  to  the  individual 
^roup  involved." 


Dr.  Andrews  To  Retire 
After  20  Year  Career 


• 


Audit  Board  Meets 

I 

{     The  Student  Audit  Board  wili  meet 
'  Friday   to   intei-\iew   applicants   for 
the  position   of  auditor  of  the  Stu- 
j  dent  Activities  Fund  office. 

I  The  meeting  will  be  at  2  pjn.,  it 
I  was  announced  yesterday  hy  chalr- 
i  man   Brandon    Kincaid. 

Anyone    insterested    in    the   iposi- 

tion  has  been  asked  to  contact  Kin 

'  caid   at   89115   or   call   the    Stucteni 

I  (ioyernment    office    and    leave    his 

najTie   and  <phone   number. 


English  Flunks  I 
Must  Take  Labi 

Students  who  failed  the  English  j 
Proficiency  Test  given  .recently  will  ! 
be  required  to  attend  a  remedial  1 
Ehglish  laboratory  dntil  .s-uch  time  ' 
as  they  can  make  a  passing  grade  j 

m  the  proficiency  lest,  according  to  j 

;:n    announcement   released    by    the  | 

General  College  offi-.-e.  | 

This   remedial   course,    known   as 

he  composition  conditioning  labor-  j 
atory.  is  offered  through  the  Exten-  ; 


1957  Miss  Chapel  Hill 
Will  Be  Named  Tonight 


A  new  Miss  Chapel  Hill  will  be  grace,  personality  and  talent.  Each|,|g„,^ 

announced  tonight  at  8  o'clock  at  will  appear  in  a  bathing  suit  and  j     This 

the"  .seventh    Chapel    Hill    Beauty  evening  gown  and  will  perform  in 

and  Personality     Pageant     in     the  a  three  to  five  minute  talent  skit, 
high  school  auditorium.  Co-chairmen    J.     D.    Wrii'ht    and 

The      winning     queen,     judged  'Ty    Boyd    said    that 

among   a   field    of   eight    entrants-  t«"kets    have    been 


y  Needs  Grad 
Counselors! 

.Ap!)!icatLons  for  inter\ie\\s  for 
graduate  orientation  coun.selors  are 
tK)\\  available  in  .Mi.ss  Eleanor  Rig- 
gins'  office  in  the  Y  building.  These 
i.pplicafions  will  be  available 
through   May   18. 

The  (traduate  Club,  sjwnsored  by 
the  YMC.A  and  YWCA.  recently  an- 
nounced that  it  he.s  taken  over  this 
;>i"oje;t    of    orienting    giaduate    stu- 


is  the  fii"st  time  that  the 
(Graduate  Club  has  handled  thus  pro- 
ject. It  has  been  <arrie<t  out  before 
jy  Sam   Magill's  office  and  by  the 

nearly      250  j  (^arnpij^   Orientation    Committee. 

old     for     the!      .^Kccording    to    Mi^s    Kle;inor    Rig- 


sion  Divi.sion   and   requires  an   ad-  j  will  receive  a  $200  scholarship  for    pagt'ant.  Tickct.s  may  be  bought  at .  {.i^s.  graduate  counselor  for  the  Y 


Jitional   tuition   fee. 

Registration  for  the  CC  lab  Is 
handled  tlirough  the  Extension  Di- 
vtsk>n  in  Abemethy  Hall.  The 
'harge  for  the  course  is  $10.00. 
Students  who  enroll  for  the  class 
AiU   meet    the   first    class    meeting 

fter  registering. 

The  lab   meets   in  201   Bingham: 

Monday— 7:30   to  9:30  p.m.—   Tues- 

.ay— 4:00  to  6:00  pjn.;   Wednesday 

—7:30    to    9:30    p.m.;    Friday— 4:00 

'  to  6:00  p.m. 

Students  who  failed  the  profici- 
ency test  will  be  required  to  attend 
two  meetings  of  the  latooratlry  eaicb 
week  unto  the  composition  condition 
has  been  removed. 

Work  must  be  succes-sfiitly  com- 
pleted before  the  alfected  students 
rr>ay  graduate.  "Oie  General  Col- 
'ege  has  urged  all  students  who 
nust  attend  ^  elabs  to  begin  at- 
;endence  in  the  immediate  future. 


any  school  of  her  choice,  a  ward- 
robe and  will  represent  the  com- 
munity in  the  North  Carolina  pag- 
eant at  Burlington  in  July. 

The  contestants  will  be  Jane 
Brock,  freshman  from  Atlanta, 
sponsored  by  Kapp?  Alpha:  Ina 
Ridley,  junior  from  Courtland.  Va.. 
sponsored  by  Delta  Kappa  Epsilon: 
Nancy  Royster.  freshman  from 
Chapel  Hill,  sopnsored  by  Alpha 
Delta  Pi;  Mary  Lewis  Rountree. 
junior  from  Sunbur>'.  sponsored 
by  Alpha  Delta  Pi:  Martha  For 
tune,  junior  from   Brevard,   spon 


a  booth  downtown  in  Chapel  Hill.  Jorry  Oppenheimer.  Chairman  of 
A  drawing  for  a  weeks  accom-lthe  Campus  0:ientati(m  Committee, 
modalions.  worth  $100  at  Sarasota  '  considers  the  new  plan  a  good  one 
Beach.  Fla..  among  the  ticket  hold  I  because  the  graduates  will  know 
ers  will  be  held  at  the  pageant.  At-  1  the  needs  of  the  other  graduates  and 
tendance  is  not  neces.saij  for  wm-  I  .should  be  able  to  plan  a  more  fit- 
^•*8-  \  ting  program  for  them  than  imder- 

Entertainment    at    the    pageant .  graduates  ct)uld. 
will  be  provided  by  recording  .stars  \     The  following  are  heading  up  the 
Pee  Wee  Batten  and  Johnny  Dee.    tnientation    program:     Bill    i;)eaton. 
Judges    foe'  the    contest    will    be   president    of    the    Graduate    Club; 
Frances   Jarman.      Raleigh     Ding-    Bob  Rennick.  chairman  of  orlenta- 


man  and  Dick  Cooper. 


tion:  and  Tom  I>onnely.  chairman 
ol  the  counselor  selection  commit- 
tee. 

The  orientation  will  start  on 
September  16,  just  two  da\s  lx*fore 
school  starts.   Plans  for  orlenUitioB 


NROtC  On  TV 

Carolina's  Naval  ROTC  unit  will 
sored  by  Phi  DelU  Theta;  and  ,be  saluted  on  ABC's  television  pro- 
Clara   Tucker.    Chapftl   Hill,    spo"    gram  ".Navy  Hour"  this  Saturday. 

sored  by  Poe  Motor  Company.               Each    week    the    program   .selects  '  are  already  in  prgress.  A  dance  is 

The  contest,   run  by  tlie  Junior   one    of    the    53    univei-sities    parti-  planned    for    Sepember    16    for    all 

Chamber  of  Commerce,  will  be  on  cipating  iai  the  NROTC  progiam  to  rew  ajid  old  graduate  students.   A 

the    exact    standartl-.s    of    the    Mi^^  !  feature  on  their  show.  The  program  picnic,    lours    of   the   cannpus,    and 

America   contest   The   contestanls  vill  be  televised  over  station  WTIK  departmental     meetings     are     aiso 

will    be   judged   on   ciiarm,    poise,  in  Dui-ham  from  1:05-1:30  p.m.  planned. 


Dr.  J.  C.  -Xndivws  \i(  thv  Univer- 
sity of  .North  Carolina  Sc-hool  of 
MedifiiK'  A\iJl  retire  on  July  after 
a   20-year  teaching  career  here. 

He    Ls    oro'essor   of    l>io;hciui>:r\ 
and  i  and    nutrition.    Wh=le    most    of    his 
I  woik    lurs    been    with    medical    sui- 
!  tlents.    Dr     .^nc'rews      has      taught 
Ihundi-eds  of  students  ai  the  Univer- 
sity   who    were    studying    iji    other 
fields  taf  science. 

Came  Here  ie   Mil 

He  joinetl  the  staff  «f  UNC  in 
1937.  coming  here  from  the  Univcr- 
-it.v  ot'  Penusvl'.auia.  He  rectM\e<l 
'liis  B.S.  degi-et^  ft'om  the  State 
L'nivej-siiy  of  Jowa  und  a  Ph.D.  de- 
gree fixmi   Columbia   Univer.sit,\ . 

He  also  is  an  honoraj-\-  professor 
of  the  University  of  Guatemala. 
Dr.  Ajjdrews  wan  sent  there  to 
teach  by  the  U.  S.  State  Department 
in  11M4.  He  retunied  tJ)ere  by  a  JX'- 
ciue.st  oi  the  Central  Ameriian 
scihcol  U)  teach  again  in  1948.  He 
niotlcsth  attilbutes  hi.s  popularits 
at  tlie  UniN-erjsity  of  Guatenvala  to 
his  ability  to  "deliver  lectures  in 
\e!-.v  poor  Spanish,  instead  of  fol- 
lv)wing  the  .-Vmerican  custom  of  lec- 
turing In  EngUsh."  He 
!ier  of  the  Gu-atemala  .\cade,in>  of 
Science. 

Dr.  .\ud:-ews  is  a  native  o*  In- 
diana and  taught  at  the  University 
of  Peiuisylvania  for  15  >ears  before 
comiiug  to  UNC. 

DepressioB 

He  recalls  Uiat  wlien  he  cfime  to 
UNC  In  the  <lepression  year  of  1937 
the  S^ihool  of  Medicine  was  a  two- 
>ear  .school  located  in  Caldwell 
Hall,  Dr.  Andrews  estimates  that 
since  lie  has  been  at  L'NC  he  has 
taught  1.400  medical  students,  not 
including  dental  students  and  stu- 
dents in  other  courses  of  basic  sci- 
enc-e. 

Two  jears  a®o  Dr.  Andi'ews  was 
sent  to  Formosa  as  a  consultant  in 
'biochemistry  there  for  the  two  me- 
dical schools  of  tliat  couiitr>-. 

Dr,    .Andrews    and    his    wife    will 


OR 


ANDREWS 

ends  career 


GM'S  SLATE 


j         (See    ANDREWS.    Page    6) 


The  following  activities  are 
scheduled  for  Graham  Memorial 
today:  ' 

'  Debate  Squad,  4:30-6  p.m., 
is  a  mem-^  q^,;,  Room;  Student  Council, 
7-11  p  m.,  Grail  Room;  GM 
Board  of  Directors,  4-6  p.m..  Re- 
land  Parker  Lounge  No.  1;  Uni- 
versity Party  Caucus,  6-7:3'' 
p.m.,  Roland  Parker  Lourtg*  No 
1;  Carolina  Symposium,  3-6  p.m., 
Roland  Parker  Lounge  No.  2;  In- 
terfraternity  Council,  9-11  p.m.. 
Roland  Parker  Lounge  Nos.  2 
and  3;  Student  Ptrty,  6:30-7: IS 
p.m.,  Roland  Parker  Lounge  No 
3;  IDC  Court,  6-7  p.m..  Wood- 
heue*  Conference  Room;  Fi- 
nance Committee,  4-6  p.m., 
Woodhouse  Conference  Room; 
the  Professional  Interfraternity 
Council,  7-8  p.m.,  Woodhouse 
Conference  Room;  Humor  Mag. 
Board,  8-11  p.m.,  Woodhouse 
Conference  Room;  Rules  Cofn- 
mittee.  4-S  p.m..  Council  Room: 
Women's  Honor  Council,  6:30-10 
p.m.,   Council    Room. 


W-W 


PA6I    TWO 


THE  DAILY  TAR  Hiet. 


THURSDAY.  MAY   16,   mj 


THURSi 


The  President  Spea|<cs 
Yet  Mutual   Aid   Suffers 


"(.«M>d  defense  is  not  ihfap  de- 
fense."' President  F.isenhower  told 
the  nation  in  a  s<»nie\vhai  prmrast- 
iitSited  toast-to-*  (wst  television  and 
radio  hioadeast  Tuesday  night. 

The  president  isstred  his  Hronit; 
appeal  in  an  eHoi  t  to.  save  his  rer- 
i»rd  $7i.S  billion  bud)»et  which  is 
tunenilv  tniderooin^  (ongi'^ssion- 
al  >!ashin<;. 

*  It  is  oiM"  sintfie  Iiojh'  that  the 
.\u5usia  minded  thief  eve<iiti\e 
hasn't   w.iiied   t<M>  late. 

AsMiredK  the  piesident  present- 
ed stronsj;  e\  ident  e  to  siipport  pass- 
aue  i»t  almost  \\  billion  dollars 
ca»Tna)  ked    lor    national    defense: 

f\  I  1-  iiiluer  planes  uhic  h  cost 
S-^oo-iMM*  se\en  \ears  a|:»"o  now  cost 
one   Mu\   one   half    million   dollars. 

<•.'(  .\n>;nie  enei<;v  costs  four 
limes  as  nnii  h  a  it  did  in    i()j<>- 

Prcsideiu  Kisenhower  was  also 
riitht  in  his  asseition  that  the  I'nit- 
States  has  alwavs  been  miserablv 
luiprepared  for  its  major  wars  and 
|ic)li«e  acti<»ns  siit  h  as  the  Korean 
(ontii*  I.  * 

Bni  we  leel  the  fvetpie^itly  \atation- 
in'4  » hie!  e\e<inive  sl»<mld  have 
ntore  torK-luIlv  stressed  his  mmnal 
setinitv  iforei;4;n  aid)  pio«>ram  and 
its  tremendons  im|)ortante  as  a  de- 
terrent to  the  tfrowth  of  int^'ina- 
tional  ('ommnnism. 

The  Senates  special  (onnnittee 
studvinj;  the  S4.400.ooO.ocM)  pto- 
mani  has  nnccncred  some  imp)rt- 
ant   l.uts:  • 

(It  It  cost  approxim.itely  seven 
rimes  as  imu h  to  keep  an  American 
riflcrn.m  on  the  jol)  as  it  does  a 
(omp.irahle  Hiiure  in  allied  coun- 
tries. 

riuis  we  ac  tnallv  save  monev  bv 
helpin"^  to  n)ilitarilv  ecpiip  otn  re- 
li.ibie  allies  in  their  lii^ht  aj^ainst 
|>;n.i>iti(    ('.onnnunisni. 

•J:  \|)pr()\iu>atelv  one  -  tenth  ol 
I  he  snuHial  >ec  urity  proj»Tam  is  de- 
voted to  economie  assistanre. 


.\nd  it  is  an  accepted  fact  that 
the  hollow  words  of  red-tainted  ora- 
tors strike  with  more  permanent 
force  on  a  hollow  Asiatic  or  Euro- 
pean stomach.- 

('^)  Approxinwtely  seventy  per 
cent  of  the  dollars  labeled  "foreign 
aid"  nevej^  escape  the  borders  of 
the  Ihiited  States. 

• 

Such  dollars  melielv  pav  for 
American  goods  and  services.  And 
not  only  docs  snch  finaixial  assist- 
ance convert  nations  so  aided  into 
markets  h)i  American  industrial 
and  agricnltural  surpluses,  but 
some  600.000  jobs  are  attributed  to 
these  expcfKlitines. 

It  is  evident  that  foreign  aid.  ini- 
der  such  terms,  is  as  beneficial  to 
tlie  Tnited  States  as  it  is  to  thcKse 
cc*nntries  aided  immeasnreably  by 
it. 

In  resume,  the  president  should 
fight  most  vigoroiislv  and  unrelent- 
ingly for  salvation  of  his  foreign 
(and  domestic")  aid  program.  He 
should  also  fight  for  strengthening 
of  the  I'nited  Slates  1niorniati(m 
•Ageiicy. 

The  USI.A  is.  of  course,  nothing 
more  than  a  propaganda  agencv. 
But  theie  is  nothing  so  raluable 
in  a  cold  war.  such  as  is  currently 
being  waged,  as  the  force  of  prop- 
aganda. Russia's  ridiculous  version 
of  President  F.isenhowers  "Open 
Skies"  inspection  proposal  empha- 
sizes the  necessitv  for  combating 
comnnniist   propa.ganda. 

.\ud  the  time  is  assuredly  ii|>e 
now — with  Russia  satellite  relations 
being  what  thev  are  and  iiuernal 
shifts  such  as  the  de-Stalini/ation 
t<»  fxiint  to^for  effect i\e  ex|)loita- 
tioi'i   of  propagandist i<    tactics. 

It  is  our  m«»t  siuceie  hope  that 
.\iling  Kisenhouer  hasn't  waited 
too  late  to  save  his  mutual  security 
and    rSlA   jjroposal. 

Foreign  aid  means  assistance  to 
Anieric  ans. 


BSU   Covers   For   Gutless 
Student  Legislative  Action 


Ihe  liiiversitv  Baptist  StudeiU 
Inion  Kxec  ini\e  (.oimcil  has  walk- 
ed where  the  Studeiu  I.egislatiue 
feared  to  tread. 

I  he  Igislature  allowed  the  Long 
Resolution  —censuring  application 
ot  slate  parks'  policy  which  denied 
a  l'ni\ersitv  studeiu.  1  .erov  Fvas- 
ier.  eiurance  to  rnrste.td  State  Park 
pureh  bet  ause  he  is  a  Negrt)— to  die 
in  connnitiee. 

The  BSr  F.xecutive  Council,  on 

The  Daily  Tar  Heel 

The  official  stuflent  publication  of  the 
Publications  Board  of  the  University  of 
North  Carolina,  where  it  is  published 
daily  except  Monday  and  examination 
and  vacation  periods  and  summer  terms. 
Entered  as  second  class  matter  in  th^ 
post  office  in  Chapel  Hill.  N.  C,  under 
the  .\ct  of  March  8.  1870.  Subscription 
rates:  mailed.  $4  per  year.  $2.50  a  semes- 
ter: delivered  $8  a  year,  $3.50  a  semes- 
ter. 


Editor 


\fanjging  Editor 


neil  bass 
'bobhigh 


Associate  Editor 
Sports  Editor 


NANCY  HILL 
"bill  KING 


New.--  Editor 


WALT  SCHRUNTEK 


.Business  Manager  JOHN  C.  WHIIAKER 


Advertislni  Manager         FRED  KAfZD^ 

NEWS  ST.aFF— Gra.iam  Snyder,  Edith 
MacKinnon,  Ben  Taylor,  Patsy  Miller, 
Rue  Atchison.  Manley  Springs. 

EDIT  STAPT— Whit  Whitfield,  /.nthony 
Wolff,  Stan  Shaw. 


BUSINESS  STAFF^ohn  Minter,  Mari- 
an Hobeck,  Jane  Patten,  Bucky  Shu- 
ford. 

SPORTS  STAFF:  Dave  Wible,  Stu  Bird. 
Ed  Rowland,  Jim  Crownover,  Ron 
Milligan. 


Subscription  Manager  _. Dale  Staley 

CirculatioB  managen Charlie  Holt 


Staff  Photographers  Woody  Sears, 

Norman  Kantor,  Bill  King. 


Lil)rarians .  Sue  Gichner.  Marilyn  Strum 


Nigh?  News  Editor 
Night  £ditor 


B«b  High 

Woody  Seara 


the  other  hand,  has  admirably 
passed  a  lesolutiou  which  recpiests 
that:  I 

■*.  .  .  the  North  Carolina  State 
Legislatuie  act  to  open  all  state 
park  lac  ilitJes  to  all  citizens  ol  the 
state." 

Copies  of  the  resoliuioii  are  be- 
ing torwaided  to  the  state  Cieneral 
Assembly. 

J  he  Daily  Far  Heel  wholeheart- 
edly endorses  the  liSl'  resolution. 

It  is  indeed  encouraging  to  see 
that  one  .student  organi/ation 
doesn't  teel— as  the  Student  Legis- 
latine  did — that  anything  but  blind 
adherence  to  pnrejudicial  state  laws 
would  be  "biting  the  hand  that 
leeds  us." 


Excellence: 
Two  Congrats 


Fhe  Daily  Tar  Heel  extends  its 
most  hearty  congratulations  to  Del- 
ta Kappa  F.{)silon  Fraternity  up>n 
its  leripieiice  ol  the  R.  B.  House 
Award. 

Fhe  Dekes  have  demonstrated, 
as  their  selection  as  the  oiustand- 
ing  Iraternity  on  campus  attests,  a 
laudable  willingness  to  participiue 
in  the  extra-curricular  life  of  fhe 
I'niversitv  and,  at  the  same  time, 
outstanding   scholastit    prowess. 

It  is  fitting  that  such  excellence 
slusuld  be  rewarded  bv  presenta- 
tion of  a  trophy  bearing  the  name 
of  one  who  has  given  so  unselfishly 
to  the  University  for  so  many 
years — retiring  Chancellor  Robert 
Burton  House. 

\]\  fiaternities  shoidd  attempt 
to  enudate  the  Dekes  spirit  of  par- 
tici|>arion    and    excellenc»e. 

.\nd  the  entire  University  should 
pay  tribute  to  a  devoted  servant: 

Chancellor  Bob  House. 


WiSE  AND  OTHERWISE: 

Campus  Stores: 
Lay  Your  Prices 
/Down,  Babe! 

Whit  Whitfield 

A  perennial  source  of  concern 
in  Student  Government  is  the 
profits  of  the  campus  stores  and 
where  the.v  go. 
■  The  profits 
have  been  an- 
nounced  as 
ab<)ut  $40,000 
1  0  r  la.st  year, 
most  of  which 
will  go  towards 
s«lf-lielp  schol- 
ars!? ips.  V 
Some  people 
are  not  satisfied  with  this  an- 
swer, however;  and  these  are 
the  ones  who  also  wonder  wh.v 
the  priccis  are  so  high.  Ours  is 
not  to  question  the  whys  and 
wherefores,  but  to  blindly  ac- 
cept statements  of  the  powers- 
t  hat-be. 

What  is  wrong  with  paying 
thirty-six  or  forty-two  cents  for 
a  sarall  notebook  that  you  can 
get  for  about  half  the  price  else- 
Vhere?  Nothing.  I  submit — at 
least  .vou  get  a  big  'UNC'"  on 
the  cover  which  tells  other  peo- 
ple in  your  classes  what  school 
you  go  to.  And  that  IS  nice. 

Looseleaf  paper,  legal  paper, 
and  memo  pads  are  all  economi- 
cally priced.  (In  the  downtown 
stores). 

•  ♦  • 

The  big  gripe  is  the  textbook 
prices  however.  The  usual  rule 
is  to  give  a  student  about  half 
of  what  he  paid  for  the  books 
only  fourth  months  previously, 
knowing  that  the  book  will  be  in 
use  the  next  semester.  Then  the 
price  is  placed  at  about  half 
again  what  the  first  student  was 
paid,  .'\fter  a  few  days  the  book 
is  sold  to  an  unsuspecting  stu- 
dent who  has  paid  possibly  two 
dollars  rent  on  the  space  the 
book  took  up  on  thc^  .>jhelf.  The 
question  is.  who -got  gyped,  th* 
first  or  second  student? 

They  do  offer  values  however, 
for  bud.uc>t-min<k'd  .student.^.  For 
instance,  water-soaked  (not  wat- 
er-marked )  looseleaf  pads  are  on 
sale  now  for  very  reasonable 
prices.  They  were  left  chU  in  the 
rain  obviously,  and  would  not 
sell  for  the  original  price.  In 
point  of  fact  they  couldn't  be 
given  away,  but  the  campus 
stores  are  selling  them  for  half- 
price.  It  ssems  that  someone  is 
always  ready  to  sacrifice  for  the 
student.s.  ' 

Another  cau.se  for  concern  is 
the  demand  for  some  of  the  prof- 
its from  the  vending  machines  in 
the  dormitories.  This'  is  ridicu- 
lous. After  all  why  should  they 
.share  the  profits  with  students? 
Why  should  the  campus  stores  be 
concerned  with  the  students 
troubles:'  They  have  a  business 
to  operate,  and  a  business  can 
not  show  a  profit  by  giving  away 
money.  Is  this  not  true? 
*  •  * 

Ours  is  not  to  question  why, 
but  only  accept  the  reports  of 
the  powers-that?be.  and  be  thank- 
ful that  we  have  the  opportunity 
to  buy  those  articles  with  "UNC" 
stamped  on  the  front,  or  -Book 
Ex"  inside  the  front  cover.' 

•  . 

L'il  Abnar 


''How  Dar«  You  Treat  Americens  The  Waiy  We  Do?' 


GUEST  EDITORIALS: 


CONNECTICUT  DAILY  COURIER: 


The  Battle  Of  Bermudas; 


Relaxing  restrictions  on  Ber-. 
mudas  will  V'  the  subject  of  a 
bill  which  will  be  brought  up  in 
the  Student  Senate  this  Wednes- 
day nigbt.  The  bill  will  recom- 
mend that  the  WSOC  permit  co- 
eds to  wear  Bermuda  shorts  af- 
ter 3  p.m.  inside  living  units  on 
weekdays.  The  bill  is  only  a  ree- 
ommendafion.  however,  as  the 
flnal  decision  is  with  the  WgCiC. 

It  i.s'  about  time  that  this  mat- 
ter came  up.  As  the  bill's  spon- 
sor has  claimed,  a  restriction  on 
coeds  such  as  this  is  medieval 
and  absurd.  Bermuda  shorts  are 
attractive,  and  they  are  .socially 
acceptable.  They  are  cool,  easy 
to  wear  and  wasih,  and  they  are 
practical.  Judging  from  the  num- 
bers of  girls  that  wear  them  on 
the  one  day  a  week  Bermudas 
are  permitted,  they  are  quite 
popular. 

Argum«ntt  uitd  afainat  the 
w«arin9  «f  B«rniTudM  in  th* 
past  havt  bean  tha^  thay  »f 
sl«ppy,  io«k  tarribia  en  som« 
girts  and  ara  in  bad  tasta. 
To   say   that   they    look   sloppy 


is  possibly  true  in  some  cases, 
but  in  tho.se  same  ca.ses  don't 
those  girls  look  sloppy'  in  regu- 
lar outfits  too.  There  is  nothing 
intrinsic  in  a  pair  of  Bermudas 
that  makes  them  look  sloppy — 
it's  the  person  wearing  them, 
and  that  .same  person  will  make 
anything  she  is  wearing  look 
sloppy.  Perhaps  Bermudas  look 
casual,  but  this  is  no  justifica- 
tion for  saying  flatly  that  no  girl 
may  wear  them  any  day  but 
Saturday  without  a  raincoat  ov- 
er them. 

Tha    tacond    argumant,    that 

*from    »n    aasthttic    standpoint 

soma   coeds    iust    look    terrible 

in   Bernnidas  certainly  may  be 

true. 

But  it  is  also  true  about  al- 
most any  piece  of  clothing  ever 
worn,  from  sabre-toothed  tiger 
skins  up  to  the  present  day.  Some 
girls  look  terrible  in  sweaters 
but  does  this  justify  outlawing 
them  for  all  girls  six  days  a 
week?  Some  girls  look  terrible 
in  modern  bathing  suits,  but 
doe.s  this  justify  passing  legisla- 
tion   against    them?    Don't    most 


girls  have  enough  sense  to  shy 
away  from  clotlies  tbey  look 
terrible  in?  If  they  don't,  they 
wouldn't  spend  half  as  much  time 
in  front  of  mirrors,  and  they 
wouldn't  spend  half  as  much 
money  on  the  latest  fashion  mag- 
azines as  they  do,  in  order  to 
look  their  best. 

The  third  arfumant  —  that 

Bermudas  are   in     poor     social 

taUe  —  is  rtdicuteus. 

The  only  comment  necessary 
to  make  about  this  claim  is  that 
if  it  is  true  someone  had  t>ett'ei 
pass  the  word  to  style-conscious 
magazines  such  as  Vogue  and 
Seventeen,  and  to  supposedly  re- 
spectable schools  such  as  Vassar 
and  Smith. 

,  Undoubtedly  some  student  sen- 
ators and  WSGC  members  will 
come  up  with  some  equally  in- 
valid arguments  against  permit- 
ting Bermudas,  even  in  the  lim- 
ited sen.se  that  this  bill  recom- 
mends them.  There  have  been 
criticisms  in  the  past  that  neither 
of  these  organizations  represent 
the  students.  Let's  not  let  it  hap- 
pen on  this  issue. 


ILJU.4|.jl:»vi^U  4LI 


EXTRA!! 


LIZARD  OF  OOZE  NO  FAKE7! 

This  newspaper, 
doiibting  the  wild  rumors 
(spread  bij  storitiS  jn  tixis 
nesvspoper)  that  an  enor- 
mous, llzard-liKe  creature 
was  actuaiig  seen  emero 
ino  from  the  ooze  CDf 
LaKe  Eerie,  sent  its  oce 
photographer  after 
proof: 

With  reluctance, 
distaste  and  horror, 
we  are  now  forced  to 
admit  the  6tx>nj  is  true. 


WE'VE  RXWD 
PRINTS  OF 
ENORMOUS 
FEET  IN  THIS 
AREA.  HAVE 
VOU  SEEN  A 
MOISJSTER 
AROONJD? 


NO,SUH-AN'  \ 
VS/HILE  WE  IS  N 
Olsl  TH  SU80ECK 

o'enofwous 
feet;  has  vo' 

SEEN  MAN 
CHILE,  TllsJV, 

aroun'-?- 


Pogb 


iisr   cs^ 


THE  WOUg  fj  CAN  H«A$»    ^ 
40MfONg  ^g^Ntf  AigUNP- 
'•i«TWAT>1^  WltftyCATT 

Off6€,v^iNS.fefAMO»  - 


By  Walt  Kelly 


\e  -TOO  eruPip  ID  PiNP  THf        y 


mitmy  »#"T, 


s 


A  Prospectus 
Of  Publications 


The  Davkbonian: 

Tailor  made  suits,  interest-free  loaas»  racing 
stabl«8,  plush  Palm  Springs  homes,  and  k«t  union 
records  *re  the  symbols  of  a  situation  l&iat  has 
^hoeked    the    American    people    in    the    past    few 

moirths. 

«>-  f  ••  .  .  .  ■,  ■  ■ 
t,  f%jC  have  seeo  Messers  Beck.  Brewste^,  and  Hof- 
ia  /the  real  stars  of  ttje  show)  parade  before  the 
witness  Mand,  Wbije  they  did  not  i.ay  all  tliat  they 
misht  have,  their  testimony  brou^;;  to  the  public 
view  the  fact  that  in  the  councils  ot  Big  Labor,  too 
few  men  hold  too  much  power. 

■  .     •  '  '  H 

At  present,  tbe  AFL-CIO  bas  a  monofM>ly  over 

;the  nation's  labor  unions.  Tbis  giant  labor  organiza- 
tion can  cripple  the  American  economy  on  a  few 
hour's  notice.  And  the  amazing  fact  is  that  the  czars 

of  Big  Labor  are  protected  by  present  federal  laws. 
■«   ■ 

Yes.  it  is  legally  okay  for  Big  Labor  to  do  exact- 
ly what  th«  anti-trust  laws  say  that  Big  Business 
cannot  do.  Moreover,  the  entangling  hand  of  the 
Ie4fral  goyern,ment  has  broi%bt  organized  labor 
under  lis  protective  wing.  '  • 

Fortunately,  the  Taft-Hartley  Act  of  1947  cor 
rected  many  of  the  injustices  of  the  Wagner  .\ct 
of  lft35  which  gave  rise  to  Big  Labor.  Nevertheless, 
a  large  and  powerful  union  organization  still  enjoys 
special  and  paterna^stic  government  protection 

For  so.l<H)g  the  pendulum  has  swung  in  favor 
of  Big  Labor.  It  appears  that  the  reforming  con- 
science of  the  American  people  will  demand  that 
it    now  swing   the   other   way. 

In  1890,  the  Sherman  Anti-Trust  Law  helped  to 
put  Big  Business  in  it^  proper  perspective.  Before 
much  longer,  there  must  be  reform  in  the  field  of 
Big  Labor. 

First,  labor  unions  should  be  put  under  the  anti- 
trust laws.  To  our  way  of  thinking,  it  is  just  a.<i 
wrong  for  the  unions  to  get  together  to  paralyze 
America  as  it  is  for  the  manufaeturer.>;  to  combine 
to  fix  prices. 

Next,  the  union  high  command  should  be  de- 
centralized by  returning  to  the  locals  much  of  the 
coAtrtri  and  power  to  call  strikes.  The  power  and 
right  to  strike  should  rest   "closer  to  home." 

Finally,  all  of  the  stales  should  adopt  'right  to 
work"  laws.  The  right  not  to  join  a  union  (or  any 
other  organization  for  that  matter)  is  the  perrogra- 
tive  of  every  man.  The  power  to  force  man  to  join 
a  union  (else  lose  his  job)  is  ♦yranny. 

The  Labor  Movement  in  .\n)erica  has  made  great 
and  noble  strides  in  tn-  past  few  decades.  Some 
of  its  achievements  ha^  been  slow  in  coming  and 
long  needed.  Neverthel*Hs.  the  near  absolute  powec 
that  Big  Labor  commands  today  is  both  dangerou.s 
and  unnecessary. 

It  is  up  to  the  people  through  their  State  and 
federal  officials  to  bring  Big  Labor  into  line  with 
present  day  concepts  of  democratic  ideals  about 
economic  and  political  liberty  It  cannot  be  ex- 
pected to  reform  itself  any  more  than  Big  Bu&inesi 
was  able  to  reform  itself. 


Th«  Daily  Californian: ' 

Unless  IFC  and  Panhellenic  do  something  witJi 
it,  the  Executive  committee  resolution  on  discrim- 
ination will  mean  nothing. 

The  resolution  outlines  a  new  method  of  work- 
ing agaiust  racial  and  religious  discrimination  in 
fraternities  and  sororities — a  "watchdog"  committef 
which  would  require  each  of  the  Green  bouses  to 
report  annually  on  their  progress  toward  the  elim 
ination  of  discrimination. 

But  the  resolution  is  no  more  than  a  request  !<> 
IFC  «n(l  Panhellenic  to  set  up  this  committee 
Nothing  more.  It  is  not  an  order.  There  is  no  force 
o  flaw  behind  this  resolution,  just  as  the  Shaffer 
resolution  was  only  a  request  to  the  University  to 
take  action  on  discrimination. 

In  effect,  the  ASUC  is  asking  fraternities  and 
sororities  to  take  the  initiative  in  rooting  out  dis 
crimination  from  their  midst. 

It  has  been  said  that  the  powerful  national  Pan- 
hellenic association  will  not  permit  the  local  organi- 
sation to  join  in  the  formation  of  the  "watchdofi ' 
committee  on  this  campus. 

The  reason  given,  in  a  wire  to  the  local  Pan- 
hellenic president  from  a  national  Panliellenic  of 
ficer  was  that,  since  the  ASUC  has  no  connection 
with  tbe  University's  Panhellenic  association,  Pati 
hellenic  could  not  recognize  any  action  taken  by 
the  Associated  students. 

To  say  the  least,  it  would  be  disappointing  to 
see  IFC  and  Panhellenic  fail  to  assume  their  re 
sponsibility. 

Any  legalistic  objection  to  Panhellenic  partici 
patioQ  i.s  easily  refutable. 

The  national  Panhellenic  officer  tacitly  assumed 
that  Executive  committee  was  trying  to  legislate 
this  special  committee  into  existence  when  she 
«aid  Panhellenic  should  not  recognize  ASUC  action, 
because  tbe  matter  was  not  properly  in  ASUC  "jur 
isdiction."  We  repeat,  there  is  no  attempt  to  legis- 
late against  our  fraternities  and  sororities. 

It  was  not  only  in  the  "legal"  jurisdiction  of 
the  ASUC  to  take  a  stand  against  discrimination,  it 
was  also  in  its  moral  jurisdiction  to  suggest  a  plan 
of  action  to  the  agencies  which  must  in  the  end 
deal  with  the  problem— IFC  and  Panhellenic. 

L«t's  take  the  problem  of  dlscriminatien  from 
tbe  realm  of  the  legalistic,  and  put  it  in  the  reaJn> 
of  the  moralistic,  where  it  belongs. 

And  when  the  moral  queation  is  considered. 
IFC  and  Panhellenic  can  do  nothing  else  but  to  act 
on  the  Executive  committee  resolution. 


»hip«   aij 

♦ormar 

otherk. 


Fo 

Asl 


hi< 


^t 


I^$7 


racing 
nmoa 


I  Hof 

re  tiM 

at  thty 

pablir 

AT.  too 


ly  evw 
(aftiza- 
a  f«w 
ciars 

al  laws. 

exact- 
tutiBess 

at  the 
labor 

^7  cor 

fT  Act 

tbeless. 

eajojrs 

tiOB. 

favor 

[  coa- 
nd  tliat 

^Iped  to 
Before 
field  of 


t>e   de- 

of  the 

rer  ftnd 


te  and 
ae  with 
at>out 

be  c«- 
Busine&» 


inf  wttii 
diacrim- 


itiT's  and 
out    diA- 


THURSDAY,  AAAY  16,   1957 


THf  OAILT  TAR  HWL 


FAOI  THMt 


Robert  Ruark  And  His  Teachers 


-ii' 


Rol>crt  C.  Ruark,  third  from  left,  is  establishing  two  scholar- 
ships at  the  University  of  North  Carolina  in  honor  of  four  of  his 
former  pi^^fessors.  One  of  them  was  the  late  Oscar  J.  Coffin.  The 
others,  shown  above,  are  left  to  right.  Prof.  J.  P.  Harland  who  teaches 


Four  Fields  Cited  By 
As  Basis  For  Starting 


archeology;  Prof.  Wallace  E.  Caldwell,  ancient  history,  and  (extreme 
right)  Prof.  Phillips  Russell,  former  teacher  of  creative  writing  and 
journalism. 


Robert  Ruark 
Scholarships 


(Author  of  "Barefoot  Boy  With  Choek."  ote.f  I 


VALEDICTORY 


.■vT.t.'i  .'<:??; 


With  this  column  I  complete  my  third  year  of  writing 
for  Philip  Morris.  i 

It  has  been  my  custom  in  the  final  column  of  each 
yeai-  to  forego  any  attempts  at  humor,  because  you,  dear 
readers,  have  had  your  f unnybones  so  frozen  by  the  cold 
wind  of  impending  final  exams  that  it  is  futile  to  try  to 
get  a  laugh  out  of  you;  and  because  in  this  last  column 
of  the  year  we  are  sa,ying  goodbye,  and  goodbyes  are 
occasions  for  sweet  solemnity,  not  slapdash  foolery. 

'Today  my  heart  is  full.  I  am  grateful,  first  of  all,  to 
Ihe  Philip  Morris  Company  who  make  this  column  pos- 
sible. They  have  given  me  a  completely  free  hand  in  the 
choice  of  subject  matter ;  they  have  not  tampered  in  any 
way  with  my  copy ;  they  have  been  unfailingly  courteous 
andh^pf  ul.  I  wish  to  take  this  occasion  to  extend  heart- 
felt thanks  to  the  makers  of  Philip  Morris  for  their  most 
touching  kindness,  and  to  notify  them  that  if  we  renew 
our  association  for  another  year,  I  shall  require  a  sub- 
stantial increase  in  salary. 

Second.  I  should  like  to  tender  my  thanks  to  you, 
dear  readers.  A  writer's  life  is  not  an  easy  one.  There 
are  an  appalling  number  of  hazards -a  drought  of  ideas, 
for  one ;  catching  your  necktie  in  the  roller  of  your  type- 
writer, for  another -and  when  a  writer  is  blessed,  as  I 
have  been,  with  an  audience  as  alert,  as  bright,  as  intelli- 
gent as  you,  dear  readers,  then  he  must  take  his  hat  in 
his  hand'and  his  necktie  out  of  the  typewriter  and  humbly 
give  thanks. 


♦  Robert  C.  Ruark,  author  and 
columnist  and  North  Carolina  na- 
tive, said  the  reason  he  is  setting 
up  scholarships  in  the  name  of 
four  specific  professors  at  the  Uni- 
versity of  North  Carolina  is  be- 
cause what   they   taught  him   has 

i  stuck  wih  him  longer  and  more 
effectively  than  the  things  he 
learned   in   other  areas   of  study,  j 

The  professors  who  will  be  me-  j 
morialized  by  scholarships  estab- 1 
lished  by  Ruark  are  the  late  Oscar  j 
J.  Coffin,  who  was  Dean  of  the  i 
School  of  Journalism,  Prof.  Phil  | 
lips  Russell  who  taught  Ruark  i 
creative  writing.  Prof.  Wallace  E.  \ 
Caldwell,  who  teaches  ancient  his- 
tory, and  Dr.  J.  Penrose  Harland. 
classicist  who  teaches  archaeology. 

Archeology,  ancient  history,  ere  i 
ative  writing  and  newspaper  crafts- 1 
manship — these     are     the     things 
Ruark   declared   have    adhered    to 
his  mind. 

"I  remember  much  more  that 
I  learned  there  than  I  learned  in 
calculus,"  he  said  at  a  luncheon 
here  in  his  honor. 

However,  he  was  reminded  that 
perhaps  he  had  acquired  knowl- 
edge of  mathematics  without  know- 
'  ing  of  it.  Ruark  has  multiplied  a 
weekly  wage  of  $12  a  week  in 
the  newspaper  business  to  rather 
astronomical    dollar   mark    figures 


as  a  columnist  and  writer  of  nov- 
els. 

Arcording  to  tcnative  plans  an- 
nounced by  Ruark  who  is  at  pres- 
ent visiting  in  North  Carolina — 
two  scholarships  will  be  establisji- 
ed  beginning  in  the  school  year 
1958-59. 

Each  scholarship  will  be  award- 
ed to  a  rising  junior,  and  the  an- 
nual amount  awarded  will  be  $1,- 
000  for  the  junior  year  and  $2,000 
for  the  senior  year. 

One  award  in  journalism  will  be 
given  in  the  names  of  Oscar  J. 
Coffin  and  Phillips  Russell,  and 
the  other  award  in  humanities  will 
be  given  in  the  names  of  W.  EL 
Caldwell   and  J.  P.  Harland. 

The  selection  committee  will  Ix; 
composed  of  the  Dean  of  the 
School  of  Arts  and  Sciences.  Dean 
of  the  School  of  Journalism.  Dean 
of  the  Institute  of  Humanities,  a 
representative  of  Mr.  Ruark's 
New  York  agency,  and  another 
representative  to  be  named  by  the 
Chancellor  of  the  University. 

Mr.  Ruark  intends  to  turn  over 
to  the  University  the  expenses  out 
of  his  current  earnings.  He  stated 
that  later  he  proposes  to  establish 
the  scholarship  on  a  permanent 
basis,  and  he  said  he  expects  to 
bequeath  to  the  University  the 
villa  which  he  owns  near  Barce- 
lona in  Spain. 


stim/iju/T 


ta-h^  Uinodan  'f/m/^M'hrhem  /eMr^.  ^ 


This,  dear  readers,  I  now  do.  Thanks  for  being  dear. 
Thanks  for  being  readers. 

Finally,  I  wish  to  thank  the  tobacconists  of  America 
who  make  it  pcssible  for  us  to  buy  our  Philjp  Morris 
Cigarettes  by  the  pack.  If  there  were  no  tobacconists, 
we  should  have  to  buy  our  Philip  Morrises  direct  from 
the"  factory  in  boxcar  lots.  This  would  present  grave 
storage  problems  to  those  of  us  who  live  in  dormitories 
and  other  substandard  dwellings. 

I  hope,  by  the  way,  that  you  have  been  to  your  tobac- 
conist's lately  and  bought  some  Philip  Morris  Cigarettes. 
1  have  been  trying  to  beguile  you  into  smoking  Philip 
Morris-  Cigarettes  by  means  of  what  advertising  men 
call  the  "soft  sell."  Indeed,  I  have  occasionally  gone 
beyond  the  soft  sell  into  the  "limp"  or  "'flabby"  sell.  I 
hope  my  pulpy  merchandising  has  had  its  effect,  for  here 
i.s  an,  enchanting  cigarette,  pure,  natural  pleasure,  a  joy, 
a  jewel,  a  haven  to  the  storm-tossed,  a  bower  to  the  weary. 
And  in  addition  to  being  a  haven,  a  bower,  and  all  like 
that,  Philip  Morris  is  a  boon  to  the  alfeent  minded.  No 
matter  which  end  you  light,  you're  right! 

And  so  goodbye.  Go  in  peace,  go  in  content.  May 
gopd  fortune  attend  your  ventures,  may  love  and  laughter 
brighten  the  comers  where  you  are.   See  you,  hey. 

•  Max  Sholman,  1967 
/«'•  t^mn  a  great  pleasure  for  us,  the  maker*  of  Philip  ^otritt 
to  bring  you  this  monument  to  the  aoft  tell  each  week.  TUl 
next  year,  goodbye,  good  luck,  and  good  smoking-with 
matural  Philip  Morri»,  of  corrtM! 


Seventh  UNC  History 
To  Be  Released  Soon 


By  PETE  IVEY 

Seven  recognized  "histories"  of 
the  University  of  North  Carolina 
have  been  ■written,  the  latest  one 
to  be  published  May  18,  written  by 
Dr.  Louis  Round  Wilson. 

Six  histories  of  UNC  at  Chapel 
Hill  are  listed  in  Dr.  Wilson's  pre- 
face: 

1.  Dr.  Kemp  Plummer  Battie's 
"History  of  the  University  of  North 
Carolina,"  was  written  in  two  vol- 
umes, in  1907  and  1912. 

2.  Dr.  R.  D.  W.  Connor's  two- 
volume  'A  "bocumentary  History  of 
the  University  of  North  Carolina," 
told  of  the  evenfs  leading  up  to  the 
establishment  of  the  University  in 
1793— up  to  1799. 

3.  Dr.  Archibald  Henderson's  'The 
Campus  of  the  First  State  Univer- 
sity," dealt  especially  with  the  phys- 
ical plant  of  the  University  from  its 
earliest  times  to  1951. 

Mrs.  Spencer 

4.  Mrs.  Cornelia  Phillips  Spencer 
comiposed  *'Pen  and  Ink  Sketches 
of  Chapel  Hill"  and  '"Old  Times  in 
Chapel  Hill"  each  giving  la  limited 
but  graphic  view  of  the  University 
in  the  19th  century. 

5.  Arthur  Stanley  Link  prepared 
a  bachelor  of  arts  thesis  in  1941, 
"A  History  of  the  Bidldings  at  the 
University  of  North  Carolina." 

6.  Prwf.  Henry  MJcGUbert  Wagstaff 
wrote  "Impressions  of  Men  and 
Movements  at  the  University  of 
North  Carolina"  published  in  1950, 
describing  the  University's  develop- 
ment  from  1795  to  1914. 

Kemp  Battle 
When   people   mention    a   history 
of  the   Unifversity,   the   first  thing 
that  pops  into  the  mind  is   "Bat- 
tie's    History,"    the   furst   irf   those 


named  above.  K.  P.  Battle  was 
President  of  the  University  after 
it  reopened  in  1875,  and  his  detail- 
ed account  of  life  at  the  University 
from  that  time  to  the  early  years 
of  the  20th  Centiuy  are  brought  to 
life  by  anecdotes,  lively  descrip- 
tions and  intimate  glimpses  of  fa- 
culty and  students. 

In  the  seventh  history  of  the  Uni- 
versity Dr.  Wilson,  who  is  a  master 
craftsman  with  a  professional  de- 
dication to  accurracy  and  complete-, 
ness.  gives  the  history  of  UNC 
during  the  period  of  its  greatest 
growth— from  1900  to  1930. 

Although  it  concentrates  on  that 
three-decade  era.  it  is  apparent  that 
the  book  was  written  in  the  middle 
1950's,  and  Dr.  Wilson  brings  up 
to  the  minute  many  facets  of  Uni- 
versity life  that  characterize  the  ad- 
ministrations of  Frank  P.  Graham, 
Gordon  Gray  and  William  C.  Fri- 
day. 

No  Comparison 

It  is  not  fair  to  compare  his- 
tories of  the  University  and  say 
which  one  is  best.  Each  of  them 
have  iiad  a  unique  ndssion,  deal- 
ing with  pmods  in  history,  or  set- 
ting forth  certain  aspects  of  life  in 
Chapel  Hill. 

From  the  viewipoint  of  modern 
historians,  Dr.  Wilson's  book  is 
sure  to  be  given  solid  assessment 
as  a  wx>rk  of  distinction,  and  of  in- 
tegrity. It  is  complete,  it  is  honest, 
it  is  lively,  it  is  coomageous,  it  has 
a  fervent  appeal  for  North  Carolin- 
ians and  it  contains  enEghternn^it 
for  those  who  are  concerned  with 
itlie  history  oC  educatkm  in  America. 


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TMC   DAILY   TA«   HEEL 


THURSDAY,  MAY    H, 


SPRING  EXAM  SCHEDULE 

According  to  the  Central  Office  of  Records,  the  time  A  an  ex- 
amination may  not  be  changed  after  it  has  been  fixed  in  the  schedule. 

No  student  may  be  excused  from  a  scheduled  examination  except 
by  the  University  Infirmary,  in  cas€  of  illness:  or  by  his  General 
College  faculty  adviser  ©r  by  his  dean,  in  case  of  any  other  emer- 
gency compelling  his  abirence. 

All  8:00  a.m.  Classes  on  MWF  _/ Wed.,  May  22,  8:30  a.m 

All  10:00  a.m.  Classes  on  W/jfF Wed.,  May  22,  2:00  p.m. 

.\ll  Trench,  *=Gennan  and  ^Spanish  courses 

numbered  i,  2,  3,  3X  and  4 Thurs.,  May  23,  8:30  a.m 

All  11:00  a.m    Classes  on  TTHS     Thurs.,  May  23,  2:00  p.m 

All  10:00  a.m.  Classes  on  TraS  Fri.,  May  24,  8:30  a.m 

All   11:00   am    Clares  on  MWF  Fri..  May  24,  2:00  p.m. 

All  3:00  p.m    Cla.sses,  *Chem.  21,  *BA  71 

&  72.  and  all  classes  not  otherwise  provided 

for   in    the  schedule ^_„ Sat.,  May  25,  8:30  a.m 

All  8:00  a.m.  Classes  on  TTHS  ^ L Sat.,  May  25,  2:00  p.m 

All  2:00  p.m.  Classes  on  MWF.  *BA  130  .....    Mon.,  May  27,  8:30  a.m. 

.All  12:00  Noon  Classes  on  MWF         Mon.,  May  27,  2:00  p.m 

All  2:00  p.m.  Clas^'es  on  TTHS 

Econ  31.  32.  61  Si  70  Tues..  May  28,  8:30  a.m. 

.All  12:00  Noon  Classes  on  TTHS,  all 

Naval  Science  and  Air  Science    ^- Tues.,  May  283*2:00  p.m. 

All  1:00  p.m.  Classes  on  MWF,  *Pol. 

Sci.  41.  *Econ,  81       Wed.,  May  29,  8:30  a.m. 

All  9:00  am.  Classes  on  MWF .. .  Wed.,  May  29,  2:00  p.m. 

All  9:00  a.m.  Classes  on  TTHS  Thurs.,  May  30,  8:30  a.m. 

All  E.\ams  resulting  in  conflict?  froir 

Common  Exam  .scheduled  above  _ Thurs.,  May  30,  2:00  p.m 

*In  case  of  any  conflict,  the  regulary  scheduled  exam  will  take 
precedence  over  the  common  exam  (Common  exams  are  indicated  by 
an  a.sterisk.) 


Student's  Music  To  Be  Presented 


By  MARY  ALYS  VOORHEES 

Stuc'ents  and  local  towTispeople 
will  have  an  opportunity  to  hear 
the  woiics  <Jf  several  students  in 
the  U.NC  .MiLsic  Department  Sun- 
day. May  19.  at  8  p.m.  when  a 
■program  of  original  compositions 
is  presented  in  Hill  Music  Hall. 

Being  performed  in  most  cases 
for  the  first  time,  .some  of  the  com- 
positions were  done  for  class  while 
many  others  were  written  on  the 
students'  own  time. 

'Peer  Gynt' 

One  number.  Peer  Gynt"  Suite, 
was  originally  composed  for  the 
Carolina  Playmakers"  production, 
"Peer  Gynt."  and  recorded  to  fur- 
nish   background     music      for      the 


I  play.  However,  for  the  Sunday  coa- 
I  cert,    composer    Joel    Chadatie    of 
JNew  Yc*-k  City  has  rearranged  the 
'  music    for   orchestral    suite. 
j      Another    of    his    composition.s    ap- 
pearing   on    the   program    is    Fan- 
;  tasy  for  Violin"  and  Piano  for  which 
j  he  will  play  the  piano  accompany- 
!  ing  Harvey  Miller  on  the  violin. 
I     Tcm  Rice,  a  graduate  student  in 
I  music  who  has  writen  many  works, 
j  is  the  author  of  another  outsVanding 
mimber  being   performed.   Sonatina 
for  Piccolo  and'  String  Bass. 
High  And  Low 
A     very     unusual     sonatina,     the 
j  work   iipes   the   highest    and   lowest 
j  insitrument.s    in    an.  orchestra.    Earl 
Slocum    will    perform    the    piccolo 


'  |>art  with  Rice  playing  the  string 
bass.  The  author  of  a  number  of 
works  for  stringed  instruments. 
Rice  is  also  the  composer  of  Suite 
for  Cello  and  Piano,  which  wiU  be 
"performed  by  him  at  the  piano  aoA 
Mary  Gray  Clarke  on  the  cello. 

Otiier  numbers  to  be  heard  ai« 
[  Chorale  Prelude  for  the  organ  and 
•'Agnus  Dei"  by  L-ee  Bostian. 
graduate  student  fporn  ftalet;^; 
"This  is  the  Day  the  Lord  Hath 
.Made."  a  chorus  number  by  John 
Shannon  of  Charlotte:  Prelude  for 
Brass  Choir  b.v  Eddio  Bass:  and 
"Evening^^ng. "  Nigfit  Wanderer's 
Song"  and  Sonata  for  Piano  hy 
Harvey  Miller  of  Salisbury. 


WE  LL   BUY  ALL 
YOUR  OLD  BOOKS 

•  Live  Texts 

We  pay  top  prices  for  texts 
that   will   be   used   again   at 

IJ.N.C. 

•  Dropped  Texts 

We'll  search  the  market  for 
a  spot  to  salvage  some  of 
your  loss  when  a  text  is 
dropped. 

•  Enjoyable  Books 

We  can  use'  books  you  no 
longer  want  on  your  shelves. 
The  next  fellow  that  eomes 
along  may  find  them  as  de- 
lightful as  you  did  a  year  or 
so  ago. 

When  Exams  Are  Over, 

There'll  Be  Green  Money 

For  You  At 

THE  INTIMATE 
BOOKSHOP 

20S   East   Franklin   St. 
Open   Till    10   P.M. 


NROTC  Awards 
Given  Cadets    | 

Captain  A.  M.  Patterson,  USN. ' 
Commanding  Officer  of  the  Naval 
ROTC  Unrt  and  Professor  of 
Naval  Science  here,  presented 
medals  to  the  members  of  the 
UNC  Naval  ROTC  Rifle  Team  at 
a  ceremony  held  on  Fetzer  Field 
at  noon,  Tuesday,  May  7.  j 

The  individual  medals  were 
awarded  to  each  member  of  the 
rifle  team  for  winning  first  place 
amlvng  participating  NROTC  Units 
in  the  Third  United  States  Army 
Area  Collegiate  and  Interscholas- 
tic  Rifle  Match.  The  other  NROTC 
Units  participating  were  the  Uni- , 
versity  of  South  Carolina,  Duke 
Univeristy  and  Vanderbilt  Uni- 
versity. I 

Menrbers   of   the    winning   team 
are: 

E.     W.     Butchart,     junior,     of 
Greensboro,   team    captain;    S.    G. 
Putnam,   Jr.,    senior    of   Washing- 
ton. D.  C;  D.  G.  Johnson,  Junior, 
of  Walnut  Cove;    F.    C.    Porcher, 
j  junior,  Mt.  Pleasant.  S^   C;  A.  A 
1  Hutchison,     sophomore,     Winston- 
',  Salem;    F.   E.   Wirkus.  ,Jr.,   sopho* 
j  more,  Baltimore,  Md.;  M.  L.  Col- 
lins.  freshman.  High  Point;  D.P.L. 
I  DooJey.    freshman,   Raleigh;    S.    S. 


Harry  Kear  And  His  Successor 


Harry  K«ar  is  shewn  above  with  Mrs.  William  Barry  of  the  UNC  Athletic  Asseetation  for  whom  Ketr 
been  auditor  for  16  years.  Mrs.  Barry  succeeded  the  'little  known  gentleman'  as  auditor  of  Student  Ac- 
tivities Fund. 

Kear,  Not  Generally  Known, 
Yet  Still  A  Familiar  Face 


Harry  Kear  is  a  man  not  gen- 
erally known  to  North  CaroUniaiiis 
at  large,  but  mainly  to  several 
generatk>ns  of  students  at  Chapel 
Hill,  and  only  those  students  who 
have  taken  part  in  campus  gov- 
ernment and  extra-curricular  ef- 
faia-s  in  the  University  the  past  two 
decades. 

But  to  those  students  Harry  Kear 
has  been  a  familiar  figure  at  hi.s 
accoimting  sheets,  checks  and  de- 
,posit  slips  at  the  Graham  Memor- 
ial Student  Union. 

He  has  worked  for  the  Student 
Activities  Fund  in  the  University, 
and  he  retired  two  weeks  ago  af- 
ter 21  years  of  service  to  students 
and  to  the  University. 
Big  Business 

Student  government  is  a  .size- 
able business  in  the  University. 
Students  handle  their  own  busi- 
ness afairs;  they  vote  fees  upon 
then\selves;  they  support  a  prv)- 
gram  of  sj>ecial   activities   at  the 


"Mini 


A'fNCr  ORUb  STOSF 


DAILY    CROSSWORD 


ACROSS 

1  Sought  out 
by  a  tiellboy 

6  Biblical 
name 

11  Musical 
drama 

12  Spartan 
magistrate 

13  Shabby 

14  Pacify 
(obs  ) 

1.5  A  Pope 

16  Smoothins 
tools 

17  Music  note 

18  Drench 

19  Of  the  sur- 
face (med  ) 

22  Pennie 

25  Oriental 
country 

26  Mirror 
reflection 

28.  Boy's 
nickname 

29.  A  restoring 
Sl.TTirash 

32.  Sun  god 
33.'Landed 

•state 
36  Hawk 

parrot 

38.  Once  more 

39.  River  <  Af  r. 

41.  Threw 

42.  Open  a 
bottle 

43.  Canvas 
shelters 
Endures 

DOWN 
A  lap  dog 
(colloq.) 
Muskhofe. 
an  Indian 
Factor 


4.  Ttierefore 
6  Unit  of 
-time 

6.  Supplantin( 

7.  In  a 

-  ^vertical 
line 
tnaut.) 

8.  Chai-lie 

.a 

4lctective 

9.  Stockings 
10.  God  of  war 

16.  Hawaiian 
food 

17.  An  event 

18.  Bird  ipl.) 
20.  Edge 

21  Ahead    . 


IS.  Cry 

of 

a 

crow 
23  Agent 

in 

culture 

media 
14.  A    . 

tissue 

<anat.> 
S7.  Pronoun 

30.  A'n  age 

31.  Swoon 

33.  Foolish 

34.  Bye 

35.  Chief 

36.  Sharpen 
a  raaor 


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£ 

m 

\M 

Girard,  freshman.  Gastonia;  and 
D.  L.  Murphy,  freshman  of  Stokes 
dale.  I 

The  team  is  coached  by  Master  j 
Sergeant  William  H.  Lanier, 
USMC,  of  Boynton  Beach.  Florida, 
assistant  to  the  Marine  Science  In- 
structor. 


Graham  Memorial.  "Hiey  nin  a 
daily  r^wspaper  and  other  pub- 
lications. The  fund  handles  the 
money  of  the  Athletic  Association. 
Harry  Kear  handled  about  $1,500.- 
000  u-orth  of  funds  during  the  cur- 
rent year. 

He  was  born  Feb.  17.  1891  in 
Van  Wert,  Ohio,  and  came  to 
Washington,  N.  C.  to  live  in  1910, 
after  he  had  attended  West  Vir- 
ginia University.  He  was  a  mem- 
ber of  Beta  Theta  Pi. 

In  Washington  he  coached  the 
lii^h  school  football  te<am  and  was 
a  member  of  Masonic  bodies  from 
the  chapter  through  the  shrine. 
He  was  a  steward  in  the  Metho- 
di.st  Church,  was  a  captain  in  the 
National  Guard  and  Vice  Pi-esi- 
dent  of  Washington's  Rotary  Club. 
School  Teacher 
He  met  his  wife  in  Washington, 
a  school  teacher  named  Annie 
Laurie  Baucom.  She  is  a  native 
of  Raleigh.  [ 

Harry  learned  accounting  by  | 
taking  a  correspondence  coui'se,—  . 
several  of  them,  in  fact.  He  learn- 1 
ed  about  ledgers  and  cash  books.  ■■ 
applied  for  a  job  in  the  account-  ^ 
ing  department  of  the  University 
and  got  it. 

In  1941  he  transferred  from  the 
University'^  main  accounting  'of- 
fice to  the  Student  Activities  Fund. 


auditing  the  accounts  for  the  or- 
ganizations on  the  camipus.  in- 
eluding  fratemitie.s,  .sororities,  and 
other  student  groups.  Student  gov- 
ernment is  a  big  operation  here 
with  a  .student  legislature,  a  con- 
sitution,  and  a  budget.  Mr.  Kear 
has  toeea  custodian  of  the  iHidget. 

Veteran 

Harry  Kear  is  a  veteran  of  both 
World  Wars,  serving  the  fiirst 
time  in  France  and  the  second 
time  in  New  York  City.  The  Rears 
have  a  daughter  who  was  a  .stu- 
dent in  the  University  just  after 
World  War  11.  She  is  .Mr,"^.  O.  A. 
iRitch  of  Kinston. 

Harry  Kear  was  honored  by  a 
5>airty  here  this  week— a  gathering 
of  appreciative  people  recollect- 
ing the  faithful  work  performed 
by  a  quiet  little  man  who  retires 
iww  at  the  age  of  66. 


THOR! 

PLAY 

'  The  C 
tion  (>{ 
■ally    MH 
tomorrow^ 

celled   ur 

Accord J 
lllf    perfc 
ait  due 
rectly  cf.^ 
fee  and 


STICK   DEODORANT 

For  absolute  security,  all  day,  every  day. 
So  quick  and  clean  . . .  melts  in  instantiy. 
Gives  you  Social  Security  in  just  3  seconds  I 

1.00  plus  iax 


SH  liLf  ON 


.in  I      JuU.        Vk,J 


,»*  «!%-<'■' y^' 


to 

a  young 


At  Graham  Memorial 


Another  On  Bridge 


man 


-.rt  f  ^■' 


37. Indian 

•  (Peru) 

39  Young 

bear 
40.  Goddess  of 

harvests 

(It.) 


44 


This  Week's  Winners  ) 

1st— Mr.  and  Mrs.  J.  M.  Penney    ; 

2nd— Mrs.    C.    R.    Riehman    and    I 

Mrs.    Harvey   Williamson         '  i 

3rd— Col.    Thomas    Taylor    ^nd    | 

"      Mrs.  Amy  Snelling  j 

Duplicate  Bridge  .  .  .  Each  Monday  j 

-Night    —    Graham    Memorial      j 

7:30-10:45  j 

North  i 

S:     A-Q-2  I 

H:     A-K-Q-.F  I 

1):     Q-J- 10-9-8-7 

C:     None  | 

South       V  j 

S:     None 
H:     10-9-8-7-6 
D:     A-K 
C.     A- 10-9-8-6-2 

Opeiving  lead:  King  of  clubs 
Contract:  Seven  hearts 
The  above  is  a  hand  which  is 
bristling  with  winners,  yet  a  hand 
which  will  be  mi.splayed  by  a 
good  number  of  bridge  players. 
Actually  the  hand  can  be  brought 
in  against  the  most  freakish  of 
distribution  breaks  in  the  op- 
ponents' hands.  If  declarer  can 
just  get  by  that  opening  club  laad 
without  being  ruffed  by  East, 
he's  home  for  sure  with  his  grand 
slam  contract.  Heres'  how: 

Declarer    wins    the    first    trick 


with  the  ace  of  clubs.  He  leads 
rf  heart  over  to  dummy  (and  one 
opponent  shows  out).  He  then 
leads  a  low  spade  and  trumps  it 
iji  his  own  hand.  Back  to  the 
dummy  he  goes  with  anijther 
trump. 

Now  he  leads  the  queen  of 
spades  and  ruff's  ;•  In  his  own 
hand  (due  to  the  ruffs  of  the 
crucial  plays  of  the  hand.  De 
clarer  picks  up  the  third  out.'itand' 
ing  trump  by  leading  back  to  dum- 
my.- Declarer  is  left  with  a  high 
trump  in  dummy,  none  in  his  own 
hand  (due  tot  he  ruffs  of  the 
queen  and  two  of  spades).  He  now 
leads  that  last  trump  and  duscards 
the  ace  oj  diamonds. 

The  opponents  are  now  out  of 
trumps  too,  so  declarer  leads  the 
ace  of  spades  and  discards  the 
king  of  diamonds  under  it.  De- 
clarer then  takes  the  rest  of  his 
tricks  with  the  high  damonds  in 
dummy. 

Notice  also  that  if  at  trick  one 
declarer  discards  anything  but  a 
diamond,  the  hand  is  lost  (assum- 
ing all  these  hypothetical  worst 
splits,  that  is). 

Next  week  is  Master  Point 
game.  All  are  urged  to  attend.  We 
promise  no  hands  like  the  above. 


Kll 


with  the  world  on  a  string 


■■*■ 


N.C 


ony  Presents 


Pops   Concert  Sunday 


The  North  Carolina  Symphony 
will  present  a  "pops"  concert  here ; 
Sunday  afternoon.  Majr  19,  at  3:20 ! 
p.m.  In  the  Forest  Tlieater.  The  \ 
concert  will  be  given  as  a  bonus  | 
for  the  1957  season,  which  marks  \ 
the  25th  anniversary  of  forma-: 
tion  of  the  symphony. 

Walter  Carringer,  a  distinguish-t 
ed  young  tenor  from  Murphy  and  | 
N^w  Yorjc  who  is  making  12  other 
appearances    with     the    orchestra 
this  season,  will  be  the  guest  art  j 
ist.   Carria^er  has  been  a  tenor  | 


soloist  with  the  Robert  Shaw 
Chorale  on  six  Transcontinental 
tours.  He  has  given  concerts  in 
Town  Hall  and  Carnegie  Hall  and 
made  nation-wide  appearances  on 
radio  and  television. 

Carringers  numbers  will  open 
the  second  part  which  will  include 
selections  from  MendeLssohn's  ora- 
torio, "Elijah,"  and  the  operas, 
"Don  Giovanni."  by  Mozart,  and 
"Tosca, "  by  Puccini,  with  the  ad- 
dition of  Lehmann's  "Ah,  Moon 
of  My  Delight" 


This  June,  the  graduates  of  our  engi- 
neering and  scientific  .schools,  pockets 
stuffed  with  job  offer.s,  ha\  e  "the  world 
on  a  string."  f 

But  there's  another  "string"  attached 
to  this  fabulous  situation:  A  man  can 
only  accept  one  job  offer.  ^  ■'.  . 

How  can  the  graduate  make  up  his^ 
mind  wisely  about  his  vital  decision?    1 

We're  not  going  to  try  to  tell  you.  i 
And  we're  going  to  resist  the  tenipta-  ■ 
tion  to  point  out  the  many  advantages 
of  working  for  IBM -much  as  our 
company,  like  every  other,  needs  top- 
notch  engineering  and  scientific  talent  ' 
We're  merely  going  to  leave  you  with 
one  thought  that  may  help  you  make 
your  decision:  .W* 

IBM's  President  has  stated  this  pol-' 
icy:  ".  .  .  /  want  this  company  to  ba 
known' as  the  one  which  has  the  great" 
est  respect  for  the  individual"  " "  ""^ 


>; 


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IBM 


INTERNATIONAL 
BUSINESS  MACHINIS 
COBPORATION 


IMTA  PROCCSSiNG        < 
MIUTARV  PRODUCTS 


ELECTRIC  TVRIWRITIR*  ' 
•NC4A4.  CMttMMCMIM 


'TiMcnuiPMarr 


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THURSDAY,  MAY  16,  1957 


TMt  OAILT  TAt  Httt 


PAOU  ^tW 


HaUi 
r  John 

i:    and 


PLAY  HAS  BEEN  CANCELLED 

The  Caroling  Playmaker  produc- 
tion of  Sanlre's  '-iSo  Exit."  origi- 
nally scheduled  to  be  presented 
tomorrow  at  8  p.m.  at  the  Play 
maker's  Theatre,  has  been  can 
celled  until   next   fall. 

According  to   an    announcement 
th?   performance  has   been   called 
off  due   to   financial   problems   di- 1 
rectly  concerned   with   the  royalty 
fee  and  end  of  semester  tensions. 


j  WOMEN'S  RSEIDENCE  COUNCIL 

Women  s  Residence  Council  naa 
I  announced    its    1957-58    executive 
i  board  and  chairman  for  the  sum- 
1  mer    school    session,    according    to 
Julia    Ann    Crater,    council   chair- 
man. 

Serving  on  the  board  next  year 
will  be  Margie  Holland,  vice  chair- 
man; Mott  Butler,  secretary;  and 
Martha  Parshley.  treasurer. 

Marjorie  Staub  has  been  ap- 
proved as  council  chairman  for 
both  summer  sessions. 


\ 


Italstarts 
when  a  saioi^s 

left  hoMliig  the  baby! 

UT  uwis  nooucrtoiis  ^ismi, 


BATTlfSHIP 


in 


COlOR  ^ 
SSASCOPB^ 


W  J*y  uwn  •  Pr.AK.rf  fcy  ANTONY  DAwaoaoum 


LAST  TIMES 
TODAY 


KIPS  TURNED  ROCK-N-ROLL  WILD 
-AND  THE  HOUSE  OF 
CORRECTION'  THAT 
MAKES 'EM  WILDER! 


rTHElAW^S       ! 

0R^BBEBS 
WH0I«)V€1N  ! 

OH  KIDS 


THE  SCREEN  TURNS  A 
SEARING  SPOTLIGHT  ON 
A  DUMPING  GROUND 
FORTEEN-AGEUONS'!    ,o„,y,,y.b„t 


PKCSENTf  O  BY 

WARNER  BROS. 


iMJUiEmDOREN] 

UlRINEI-SnNJniilsmiiioNBUftNnT 

1  "*•-    QpENs   TODAY 

CAROLINA 


Threfe  Award  Winners    **•«"»"•  1"^;,^^ 
Announced  By  Mackie 


The  winners  of  three  awards 
were  announced  by  Dean  .of  Stu 
<ient  Awards,  E.  L.  Mackie,  yester- 
day. 

Jim  Gooden  Exum  of  Snow  Hill 
and  Mary  Ann  Keater  of  Shelby 
I  are  the  recipients  of  the  Algernon 
Sydrtey  Sullivan  Award;  Miss  Elis- 
abeth Sternes  Parker  of  Green- 
viHe,  S.  C.  will  receive  the  Archi- 
bald Henderson  prize  in  mathe- 
matics. 

Harvey  Peck  of  Durham  is  the 
recipient  of  the  Phi  Beta  Kappa 
award. 

The  Algernon  Sydney  Sullivan 
Award,  given  in  several  a-outhern 
schools,  is  presented  by  the  New 
York  Southern  Society.  It  was  es 
tablished  at  UNC  in  1928. 

It  is  presented  to  the  man  and 
the  woman  of  the  graduating  clas.s 
"who  have  best  demonstrated  an 
attitude  of  unselfish  intere.-t  of 
their  fellowmen,"  according  to  the 
UNC  Catalogue. 

This  award  is  not  to  be  based 
upon  .scholastic,  athletic  or  other 
collegiate  attainments. 

The  Archibald  Henderson  prize, 
established  in  1908,  is  -'a  gold 
medal  given  annually  to  the  un- 
dergraduate judged  by  the  Depart- 
ment of  Mhthematics  as  having 
demonstrated  a  high  order  of 
mathematical  ability  and  shown 
the  greate.?*  promise  of  originality 
in  the  field." 

Established  in  1941,  the  Phi 
Beta  Kappa  award  is  a  grant  of 
$150  given  by  the  local  chapter  of 
Phi  Beta  Kappa  National  Honor- 
ary Fraternity. 

The  recipient  of  this  award  must 
be  a  rising  junior  (eligible  for 
self-help  work)  and  must  have 
made  the  highest  scholastic  aver- 


age of  those  in  this  category  dur- 
ing the  freshman  and  sophomore 
years. 

The  committee  which  awarded 
the  Sullivan  prize  was-  composed 
of  Dean  Katherine  Carmichael,  Dr. 
Vinton  A.  Hoyle,  Dr.  William  Pea- 
cock, Raymond  Jefferies,  and  Dean 
E.  L.  Mackie. 


Interviews  for  positions  on  th« 
new  campus  humor  magazine  will 
take  place  in  Woodhouse  Confer- 
ence Room  from  8-10  p.m.  today, 
it  was  announced  yesterday. 

Positions  open  are  the  editorship 
and  business  editorship.  All  ap- 
plicants will  be  interviewed  by  a 
board  which  will  consist  of  the 
present  editors  of  The  Daily  Tar 
Heel,  the  Yackety  Yack  and  the 
Carolina  Quarterly  in  addition  to 
presidential  appointees  and  two 
memlHsrs  of  legislature. 


Grail  Awards 

Three  seniors  and  one  freshman 
were  recently  awarded  academic 
recognition  by  the  Order  of  the 
Grail. 

Each  year  the  Grail. gives  these 
awards  in  an  effort  to  (promote  high  ! 
scholarship  on  the  campus,  an  an 
nouncement  stated. 

The  awards  this  year  went  to\ 
Marion  Griffin  of  Davidson  for 
the  senior  athlete  with  the  high- 
est academi  caverage;  to  Jim  Mon- 
teith  of  Sylvia  for  the  senior  self- 
help  student  with  the  highest  aca- 
demic average;  to  Sam  Wells  of 
Reidsville  for  the  senior  in  stu- 
dent government  with  the  highest 
academic  average;  and  to  Jack 
Rap?r  of  Oxford  for  the  freshman 
self-help  student  with  the  highest 
.academic  average. 


Campus  News 

ASIAN    STUDIES    GRANT  ' 

Wesley  H.  Walla<>e  of  the^  Dept 
•of  Radio,  Television  and  Motion 
Pictures  has  l)een  awarded  a  Japan 
Society-.\sian  Foundation  Scholar 
ship.  An  a.<5slstant  professor,  Wal- 
lace will  take  part  in  the  fourth 
annital  Program  in  AsMan  Studies  t<i 
be  held  at  Duke  University  Jul.\ 
19  to  August  24.  His  work  will  b( 
in  the  area  of  political  science,  in 
duding  studies  of  Japanese  civiii7n 
'ion  and  Far  Eastern  jwlitlcs. 

OPERA   BROADCAST 

The  final  broadcast  for  this  sprln- 
of  'Let's  Listen  to  Opera,"  o\'ei 
the  University  radio  station  WUN( 
will  be  a  performance  at  8  p.m 
Friday  of  Clmarosa's  "The  Secre' 
Vlarriage,"  it  was  annoimced  yester- 
day by  Norman  Cordon,  commenta 
tor  of  the  program. 

SOUTH  AFRICAN  VISITOR 

Dr.    Clarence    Merskey   of    Cape 
town.   Union  of  South   Africa,   is 
visitor  this  week  at  the  Unfversil 
School  of  Medicine.  He  Ls  travelir 
in  the  United  States  under  a  Reel 

.'eller  Traveling  Fellowship. 
vIEDICAL   SOCIETY 

Dr.  Charles  E.  Flowers  of  tlw 
University  School  of  Medicine  ba; 

een  elected  a  inemlber  of  the  Nort 
Carolina  Obstetrical  and  Gynecolo 
?ica.l  Society.  The  elect!ton  wa; 
made  at  a  recent  meeting  of  th 
society  at  Southern  Pines. 
.SCHOLARSHIP  INTERVIEWS 

Final  interviews  for  .scholarsihip 
in  radio  and  televisi<Mi  here,  award 

>d  by  Jefferson  Standaitl  ^Life  In 
njrance  Co.,  wUl  be.  held  in  Mon 

-.ead   Planetarium  today. 

Two  scholar!*ins  will  ibe  awardec" 
one  for  radio-television  engineeriii 
It  State  College,  Raleigh,  and  on 

or    creative    radio    and    televisio 

tudies  here.  , 


ClASSIflSD  ADS^ 


GOOD  USED  KENM§R£  VACl 
urn  cleftner— $20.  Call  9-6621  b- 
tween  t  h.  3  p.m. 

FOR  SALE:  HARLEY  Di^VIDSO? 

IBS  motoreyele.   Excelletit  een 
dition.  Call  £d  Uutchins  8-9053.  |* 


EASTWOOD  UKE 

NOW  OPEN 

Swimming  -:-  Fishing 

Sandy  Beoch 

Relax  And  Enjoy  The  Summer  Sun 
First  Left  Turn*  Past  Brady's 


Staff^Meefing 

Daily  Tar  HmI  staff  mtmbcrt 
have  b«Mi  urged  to  b*  prttM 
•t  an  tmportiMit  •n4-efth«-y«ar 
staff  maatifif  ta  ba  haM  in  tha 
DTH  offkfs  at  3  |».in.  taday. 
» 


BRUSH  UP 
WITH 


College 
Outlines 

New  And  Used 

The  Intimate  Bookshop 

205  East  Franklin  Street 

Open  Till  10  P.  M. 


SENIORS 

WATCH  THIS  PAPER 

TOMORROW  FOR  A 

VERY  IMPORANT 

ANNOUNCEMENT  FROM  US 

CONCERNING  ONLY  YOU 

Town  &  Campus 


Something  Special  At  J.  B,  Robbins 
TODAY,  May  16th 

COLE   of  Cdiifornia 

is  knitting  tlieir  personal  expert    on  Swim  Suits 


Miss  Joy  Christopher 


Consultant,  adviser  and  Model,  will  be  at  . 


J.  B.  Robbins 


all  day  Thursday,  May   16tli  to  discuss,  advise  and  model   Cole  of  California 

Swim  Suits 


You'll  be  worth  a    (^juOOL 
rajah's  ransom  in  a 
Samarkand  awimauit 
by  Cal«  af  Califarnia  at 


La^ge  collecti<m  of  Cole  of  California  Swim  Suits  in  many 
style.',  colors,  fabrics  await  your  inspection. 


We   are   happy    tnd  proud    to   be  Cole  of  California  franchised 

representativer  in  Chapel  Hill— For  better  fit,  for  more  freedom, 

and   up-to-the-minute   styles   and   original  creations  we   heartily 

recommend  Cole  of  California. 


Have  You  Voted  For  The 

FAiMbfi  QUEEN? 

Centelt  Closes 
Saturday,  AAay  19  .  .  . 


shaping 
draping 


Double  indemnity . 
aswinis^it  with 
fashion  and  figure 
insurance ! 
Drenjn  colors      '*- 
in  Lastax.  10-18. 
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Who    Will    Be    Miss    Chapel    Hill  ? 

C    -•  .        •      ■-     -  -■   ^        ■: 
irS  A  GOOD  BET  THAT  SHE  WILL  BE  WEARING  A 

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WMm  tfx 


r»9  DAILY  TA«   HllL 


THURSDAY,  MAY  U,  1W7 


Dale  Ranson  Was  Instrumental  In 
Improvement  Of  High  School  Track 


By  DAVE  WIBLE 

Friday  morning  and  afternoon  is 
State  Hi5h  SJiool  Track  Champion- 
ships times  on  Fetzer  Fi^  with 
119  incps  participating  in  this  tbe 
fourty-third  such  meel 

High  school  track  has  always  been 
at  a  low  ebb  in  North  Carolina  and 


I  it  has  been  "reflected  on  the  state's 

,  colleiges.   A  good  exatmle  of   this 

j  is  the  dominance  Maryland  has  had 

j  in  this  sport.  The  Terrapins  situated 

in  an  area  where  track  is  a  major 

sport  in  the  high  scIkmI  had  little 

trouble   regaining^  the   ACC   crown 

'  last  weekend. 


Howard  Johnson  Restaurant 

STUDENT    SPECIALS 

Barbecued   Chicken 
Choice  Steak  Sandwiches 

2:00  —    5:00  P.M. 
SERVED  8:00- 11:00  P.M. 

"Landmark  For  Hungry  Tarheels'* 


BELK'S 

BRINGS  YOU  THE  BEST 


collars  a 
scoop  in 
PebbleRib* 
cotton 
faille 


2 


98 


5n)p.n5r,.;ff 


Lo\  ely  u  ay  to  treaty  our  day  and  date  skirts!  Shipn  Shore 
fishion-styled  with  low-collarcd  necldinc  -  ending  in  a 
big  bf-autiful  button!  Cool  continental  combed  cotton  - 
delights  in  suds!  White,  pastels.  Sizes  2S  to  40. 
Come  sec  all  our  new  Ship'n  Shores . . .  casuals,  too.       'rm 

fashion  checks  into  summer 

with  nO'iron 
Dacron-cottonf 


lAblES 

CATAUNA  SWIM  SUITS 


Ye*,  do  go  near  the  water!  Sun- 
ning or  swimming,  you're  set  for 
fun  and  flattery  in  these  beauti- 
fully styled  CATAUNA  swim 
suits  .  .  .  many  styles  and  colors 
to  choose  from,  at  BELK'S. 


Cotton-Lastex 
$10.95-$!  9.95 

Othsrt  S3.9I  Up 


/Belk-Leggett-HortonCa/ 


Cool,  clear  uindow-panc  checks  —  smart  reflection  of  your 
fashion  know-how!  This  Ship'n  Shore  Travelmate*  is  | 

perfection  —  won't  pill  or  fuzz  —  will  stay  beautiful.  Just         i 
rinse,  drip-dry  and  don.  No  need  to  iron.  Nothing  works  like    | 
this  blouse  does!  Bright  checks  on  white.  Sizes  28  to  40. 
See  other  new  Ship'n  Shore  no-iron  Travelmate^,  from  3S) 


ITigh  Sclwol  track  is  now-  on  an 
ui>grade  in  the  Old  North  State 
largely  due  to  tlie  effon's  o,"  Caro- 
Jina's  own  head  coach  Dale  Ranson. 
When  Coach  ilaiJ.5on  became  tirack 
coach  at  Carolina  in  1953,  he  real- 
ized that  high  school  track  was  not 
-what  it  should  be  in  tliis  area.  There 
"tt-ere  onlv  fifteen  hgh  schcol  tracks 
in  the  state. 

Coach  Ranson  pi-ecceded  to  do 
seme  hip g  about  t!ie  situation.  He 
started  a  campaign  by  sending  let- 
ters and  Infcrxnation  to  cver><>ne 
•who  could  help  high  school  track: 
track  coaches,  .school  ^rincip'es.  and 
sports  WTiters. 

He  campaigned  on  au  idea  which 
he  firmly  bekives:  everj'  school  iw 
patter  how  small  has  at  lea«t  one 
•boy  that  !.>  fast,  one  boy  w'th  en- 
durance, one  boy  that  has  spring 
land  can  jun>j>.  and  one  bov  that  is 
s'lrcitg.  With  this  nucleits  in  mind 
Ransr«  sent  tp  700  ix-gh  scliools  an 
outline  for  a  tr?.  k  meet  that  could 
be  run  on  a  football  field. 

The  modified  meet  has  5C'eii 
events:  the  100  yai^  da.'^h.  the  400 
yard  relay,  the  880.  the  niilc.  the 
high  jump,  the  broad  jump,  and 
the  shot  put.  The  can-^aign  =s  pay- 
ing off  for  Ranson  and  the  state.  \ 
good  e-vanvple  is  Can>lina's  own 
Dave  Scuplock.  Stiurlock.  the  ACC 
ciiami>Jon  in  the  440  and  880.  went 
ito  Greensboro  Senior  High  S  hool 
where  there  is  no  track,  bxit  there 
is  a  track  team.  The  team  works 
out  on  the  schools  football  field. 

The  prc^am  has  paW  off  for 
the  state  in  that  there  are  now  over 
60  tracks  compared  to  the  15  of  four 
years  ago.  The  seictional  meet  in 
Rale  gh  this  year  found  more  par- 
ticipants than  the  State  meet  of 
four  years  ago. 

Coach  Ranson  feels  tliat  the  time 
for  harvest  has  now  come,  Uiis 
year's  me«t  v\1ll  be  the  most  tnlent- 
ed  in  North  Carolina's  h'story. 
There  is  one  ooint  the  Tar  Heel 
metor  wants  to  make  clear.  Tlic 
bo\s  that  participate  in  the  meet 
Friday  need  to  be  encouraged. 
Ranson  wants  the  Carolina  students 
to  watch  the  home  town  boys  and 
encourage  them  to  use  their  talents 
at  Carolina. 


Lacrosse  Squad 
In  Final  Today 

This  afternoon  at  4  o'clock  the 
newly  organized  Carolina  lacrosse 
club  will  play  its  second  and  final 
game  of  the  year  with  Duke  on  the 
east  end  of  Fetzer  Field. 

The  team  which  is  not  a  recog 
nined  Carolina  squad  played  at 
Duke  last  month.  The  Tar  Heel.- 
although  leading  at  the  half  were 
downed  7-6. 

■ 

Lacrosse  is  a  recognized  Duke 
sport  with  regular  practice  and 
school  equipment. 

Some  of  the  Carolina  player.; 
had  never  seen  a  lacrosse  game 
before  they  played  in  that  game. 


Frosh  Trackmen  Take 
Dual  Meet  Competition 


Monogram  Meet 

Ther*  will  b«  •  Monogram 
Club  mooting  tonight  at  7:30. 
Sweator*  will  bo  givon  to  lotter- 
mon  in  cross  country,  football, 
and  soccor. 


By  DAVE  WffiLE 

The  Tar  Baby  thinclads  uuc'efeat- ' 
ed  in  duel  meet  'competition  this  I 
season  completely  overwhelmed  the  j 
frosh  of  State,  Duke,  and  Wake  For- 
est w"hen  they  captured  nine  of  a  1 
possible  fifteen  first  places  in  Tues-  i 
day's  Big  Four  meet  at  Duke. 

Cowlcs  'Llipfert  and  Wai'xJ  Sim:s 
each  got  top  honors  in  two  events. 
Lllpfert  ran  a  blistering  4:21.3  mile 
and  then  came  back  to  take  the  2- 
mile  in  10:12.3.  A  Jim  Beatty  ty:>e 
of  per|k>rjnance. 

Sims  placed  first  in  the  220  yard 
ow  hurdles  and  the  broad  jump. 
His  hurdle  time  was  :24.6,  and  he 
broad  jimiped  20'9".  He  was  sec- 
;)nd  in  the  high  hurdles  and  the 
p>le  vault. 


Neai  Chappell  ran  a  fine  880  for 
the  Tar  Babies,  he  won  by  a  few 
inches  over  Duke's  Tommy  Baze- 
more.  Chappell  passed  the  Duke ' 
man  in  the  home  stretch  finishing 
in  1:57.6. 

Carolina's  Robert  Sherrell  and  Iice 
Shaffer  tied  for  first  in  the  hfeh 
jump  at  6  feel.  Wade  Smith  wrs  the 
Discus  winner  with  a  124'9'/^".  In 
the  shot  put  Charlie  Cotton  was 
first  with  a  44'  heave. 

The  .  scoring  was  for  individual 
honors  with  no  team,  points  tabulat- 
ed. This  wa.s  the  last  conference 
lompetition  for  the  Tar  Babies. 
Next  Saturday  afternoon  and  night 
the  yearlings  and  the  Carolina  var- 
sity will  enter  the  annual  Carolina's 
AAU  meet  at  Raleigh. 


Yankees  Beat  { 
Athietics,  3-0 

NEW  YORK,  (AP)— A  couple 
of  walks  and  some  inept  fielding 
in  the  first  inning  spoiled  a  g:>od 
pitching  performance  by  Ned  Car- 
ver yesterday  and  gave  the  Yan- 
kees a  3-0  victory  over  the  Kansas 
City  Athletics  behind  the  five-hit 
pitching  of  Tom  Sturdivant. 

All  the  Yankee  runs  came  in  the 
first  inning  on  only  two  hits  off 
Garvcr.  Thereafter  the  Yanks  could 
get  only  one  more  off  the  A's 
starting  pitcher  and  two  off  Rip 
Coleman  kfter  Garvcr  was  lifted 
for  a  pinch  hitter  in  the  seventh. 

Sturdivant,  who  has  pitched  two 
shutouts  and  hasn't  allowed  an 
earned  run  in  his  last  three  games 
was  in  command  all  the  way.  Yes- 
terday's performance  brought  his 
earned  run  average  down  to  1.15. 
He  has  allowed  only  5  runs  in  5 
starts  while  winning  2  and  losing 
2. 

Two  of  the  Yankee  runs  were 
unearned,  due  to  a  throwing  error 
by  Joe  Demaestri,  the  A's  short- 
stop. His  high  tos.-.-  put  Joe  Col- 
lins on  first.  Then  Garver  walked 
Mickey  Mantle  and  Yogie  Berra, 
filling  the  bases.  Bill  Skowron 
drove  in  two  runs  with  a  hit 
through  short  that  looked  like  a 
routine  single  but  went  for  a 
double  when  the  A's  left  second 
base  uncovered. 


Golf  Pics 

Varsity  golf  picturos  will  bo 
mado  this  aftornoon  at  4  o'clock 
#t  Finloy  Courso. 


And 


rews 


(Continued  from  page  1) 
» 
make  their  home  in  Conway.  N.  H. 

collowing  ihis  retii«ment.  They  al- 
ready hssve  a.  summer  home  out 
from  Conway  and  ■will  purchase  a 
winter  home  in  Conway.  They  are 
the  iparents  of  two  children  and  the 
grandparents  of  five. 

Future  Plans 

"I  also  exjpect  |o  devote  some 
tliAe  to  fruit  raising  aiKl  systematic 
forestry.  My  summer  plaee  is  over 
100  acres  of  woodland  with  oiver 
«  mUe  of  lalbefrant  (property,"  Dr. 
Andrews  said.  "^I  «3so  hope  to  take 

II  ^    active    part   in   the   civic    and 
I  /educati<Htal,aflain  of  ttte  conununoty 
and  vfork.  with  childrNi's  proigrams, 
nBspeclally  in  the  field  of  ^lence." 


izod's  importtd  French  lisle  wash- 
able sport  shirt,  flattering  fit,  In  nine 
virile  colors,  always  fresh  lookinf. 
"tr«  -shape"  ribbed  collar  and  cuffs, 
l|n|thened  "stay-in"  shirt  tail. 

$7.95 

Rod,  Hoothor  Groy,  Navy,  Black, 
Carolina  Bluo,  Olivo,  Tan  Hoath- 
or,  Whito  and  Canary. 


JULIAN'S 

COLLEGE  SHOP 


Milton's  Graduation 
Give-A-Way 


Pant  heaven — take  your  pick  of  any  daeron/eotton  trousor  we 
carry — baby  cords  or  poplins — rogularly  to  $12.95 — sale  price, 
$9.99. 

i'  '•'■''       '  . 

1c  sale  on  Twoka  of  Holland  polo  shirts — solids  or  horizontal 
stripos— 1  for  $3.95,  2  for  $3.96. 

Er>tiro  stock  rubbor-soled  cordovan  shots — regularly  $20.00— 
givO'a-way  price — $>0.99.  n 

Entire  stock  nationally  advertised  cotton  suits  in  cords  and  pin- 
chocks— rogularly   $28.75— now  $18.99. 


*      Many  Other  Noteworthy  Reductions 
ALL  SALES  CASH  AND  FINAL— ALTERATIONS  EXTRA 

iWilton'ij 
Clothttig  Cupboartr 


^    Give  a  Jewelry  Gift 
for  Lasting  Pleasure 
and 
Beauty 


Parker  and  Sheaffer  pon  and 
pencil  sets,  both  for  mon 
and  womon.  , 

$8.75  To  $25.00 


Beautiful  cuff  links  and  tie 
clip  sets  that  will  please  any 
male  graduate. 

$2.50  To  $24.50 


See  the  Wide 

Selection  of  Gifts 

for  the 

GRADUATE  at 

Wentworth  &  Sloan 


« -^ 


Jewelers 


BARGAINS 

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SHOES 

Black  &  Tan 


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Here  L'  the  shirt  that  you  have  been 
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Here  is  the  biggest  once  in  a 
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find.  The  latest  thing  in  college 
styles  .  .  .  lightweight  ftti 
spring  and  summer  wear,  with 
three-button  coat.  Wrinkles 
smooth  oyt,  easy  to  wash  and 
iron,  and  it  needs  no'  starch. 
Retards  perspiration  odor  and 
resists  mildew. 


SPORT  SHIRTS 

Short  sleeve  sport  shirts  by  Statler. 
made  from  the  finest  "Highland  Park" 
fabric,  RESILIENT  wrinkle-resij-lant 
cotton,  form  fitting  for  greater  cmofort. 
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Relax  on  the  beach  or  on  the  lake  this  summer  -with  one    of 

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suits  are  fully  lined,  with  zipper  fly  and  built-in  supporter.  They 

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PARKING 


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^>t^ 


OPEN 
FRIDAY 
TIL  8:30 


WEATHER 

F«r  and  cooler.  High  75. 


waasoLS  sen*  -^'^ 

wDatly  it^ar  3iccl 


STOLEN 

One  radio  and  honor  with  it  sayt 
the  editor  on  page  two. 


VOL.  LVII     NO.  190 


Complete  OP)  Wirt  S€rviet 


CHAPEL  HILL,  NORTH  CAROLINA,  FRIDAY,  MAY  17,  1957 


Of1iet$   in  Grohom   Memorial 


POUR   PAGES  THIS  ISSUE 


In  Mitchell  Memorial  Speech 

'Hero   And   Villian    Pictured 


Colorful   excerpts   from   Dr.    Hen- 
speech   are   herewith   pre- 


to  this  time. 

The  villiim  of  the  piece  was  Thom- 
as Clinsrman.  the  man  wlio  ques- 
tioned \\lK>ther  EU«ha  Mitc^hell  had 
ever  artiiallv  rlimbej  to  the  sum- 
iriH  of  the  tallest  mountain  ca'st  of 
the    Rockies 


Greek  !  trained  as  n^n  in  all  branches  of 
knowledge.  jg:  W 

One  of  his  daughters  at  the  age 
of  ei'ght  had  read  twice  the  first 
eight  books  of  Caesar;  and  was 
also  versed  to  some  extent  in  geo- 
graphy, 'arithmetic,  botany,  and 
history,    especially   of    Roman    and 


HU^"^  ^"^  ^^  Wiiian"  were    of    many    an    antagonist 
Pictured    by   Dr.    Archibald    Hender- ,  tragedy.  • 
^n    in    his    memorial    speech    this 
week   in   the   lOCth   anniversary  ob- 1  derson 
servnce   of   the   fall   by   Dr.    Elisha  I  rented 

Mitr^ll   f,xm,   -Kack  Dome"  June  \      The  elevation  of  seholarly  stand- 
*'■  lards   at   Chapel    Hill   by  the  irrup- 

DSgging  tho:-Dughly  into  docu-  *'^"  ^^  ^^^^^^  barbarians  from  the 
nients.  Henderson  disclosed  facts  ^^^'t^'  «as  jocularly  noted  by  Dr.  j  Bibliical  events;  and  when  another 
about  Dr.  Nfitcheils  explorations  ^*^li^"i  Hooper,  head  of  the  classics  daughter  took  lessons  in  Greek  un- 
on  MtHint  Mitchell  that  were  not  f^«^Par!ment.  esjiecially  because  of  j  der  Nicholas  Marcellus  Hentz. 
presented  fuHy  and  scientifically  up    '^'^^  introduction  into  the  curriculum  |  professor  of  languages,  he  soon  dis- 

cf  the  fearsome  subjects.  Conic  i  covered  that  .she  knew  more  Greek 
Sections,  suggesjtive  of  surgical  05>er-  j  than  he.  To  his  wife,  whUe  on  his 
st^ons.  the  name  for  Analytic  Geo-  j  geologizing  tours,  concerning  the 
nietry.  and  Fluxions,  suggestive  of :  three  girls,  then  five,  three  and  two 
a  dread  disea.se  (as  indeed  it  was  '  respectively,  he  wrote:  "Push  tl>e 
for  the  juniors  and  seniors*.  Che  girls  along  in  their  learning.  Be- 
n:>me   for  the  Calculus."  coming  convinced   as   I  travel  this 

I  "He  had  a  very  definite  philoso-  ctnmtr>',  of  the  importance  of  edu- 
Of  Clingman,  Dr.  Henderson  said,  phy  of  education,  whi:  h  he  set  forth  cation  I  cannot  help  becoming  Im- 
'He  was  arro<:ant.  '•nin^nated.  in-  in  occa-sionai  o.^mohlets  and  news-  patient  to  have  that  of  my  daiigh- 
solent.  and  cursed  with  ."he  rieadl.v  i^aoer  articles.  Mo<t  conspicuous  ttrs  effected  as  rapidly  and  as 
malady  of  hubris,  overweenin-s  was  the  convict'on  that  women  from  thoroughly  as  may  be." 
pride,    which   b!-ought    the   downfall    earlv    years    should    l>e    as    highly       "Whenever  any  puzzling  or  cr:.3>- 

"^  "  tic   question   artse  on   the   campus, 

the  querist  was  advised:  "Ask  Dr. 
Mitchell."  On  one  oc(«sioa  when 
ho  was  scheduled  to  deliver  a  lec- 
ture before  the  North  Carolina  Agri- 
cultural Society,  a  friend  exclaim- 
ed: "Til  wager  Dr.  Mitclwll  begins 
at  the  Garden  of  Eden."  land  so  he 
did— beginning  in  tlie  Garden  of 
Eden,  passing  through  Egypt  and 
Canaan.  Greece.  Rome,  and  Great 

(See  HERO.  Page  3) 


World  News  QfjQfjrel  lor  House  Announces 


Encyclopedia  Of  Jazz 
On  Entertainment  Slate 


The  Student  Entertainment  com- 
mittee wi!l  feature  The  Encyclope- 
dia of  Jazz."  Iva  Kitchell.  Jan 
Peerce  and  The  Pittsburg  Sntti- 
phony  Orchestra  on  Us  pnogram 
next  v^ear.  according  to  Larry  Har- 
ris, chairman  of  tlie  committee. 

"I  belitne  that  we  have  a  verj' 
outstanding  .<9chedule  of  programs 
for  next  year  because  of  the  hi^h 
quality  and  great  variety  that  is 
cifered.  ■    Harris   saitl. 

The  Student  Entertainment  com- 
mittee is  <et  up  by  Graham  Memor- 
ial to  provide  free  e 'ucational  as 
well  as  entertaiiTing  programs  for 
the  entire  shident   body. 

The  "Encyclopedia  of  Jazz," 
scheduled  for  October  24.  will  fea- 
ture Leonard  Feather,  a  renowned  ' 
authority  on  j»tx.  E\er>'  phase  and 
style  of  jazz  will  In?  aiMilyzed  through 
Feathers  narration,  and  the  audi- 
ence will  be  entertained  while  they 
learn  how  jazz  evolved. 

.Artists  featured  with  Feather  in- 


]  elude  the  Jimmy  Guiffre  Trio,  Don  ' 
Elliott.  Osie  Johnson,   Dick  Hyman,  ■ 
Sonny   Stiff.    Bob    Enevokisen.   Jim- 
my   McPartland.    Lucky    Thompson  , 
and   Jimmy   Rushing.  | 

Iva  Kitchell.  to  appear  December  I 
3.   oerforms  a   one-wcman   show  as 

,  a  dance  satirist,  making  fun  of  all 
t>  pes    of    dances.    The    appropriate  i 
costume,    hair    style    nad    make-up  | 
chariges  are  all  made  on  stage,  so  | 

,  .vou  can  feel  the  mood  change  from  j 

one  dance  to  the  next.  i 

Jan    Peerce.    .Metropolitan    Opera  j 

soloist,  will  appear  February  6.  He  | 

also  has  ;performed   on   radio,   tele-  / 

I  vision,  in  movies  and  has  made  fec- 
ordings.    His    prv>gram    cortsists    of 
varied  classical  and  operatic  selec-  i 
tions. 
The   Pittsburg  Symphony  Orchesr- 

tra.  to  appear  March  10.  has  es- 
tablished its  unqualified  right  to  be 
considered  one  of  the  greatest 
orchestras  of  the  United  States.  WiJ- 
li&m  Steinberg  directs  the  orchestra. 


Tornado  Kills  19 

SBLVERTON,  Tex. —(AP)— The 
most  deadly  tornado  of  the  sea- 
son's violent  Texas  weather  smash- 
ed through  thi^  town  Wednesday 
night,  leaving  a  heavy  toll  of  dead 
and  injured,  many  of  them  infants 
and  children.  j 

State  iiolice  today  set  the  toll  of ! 
known  dead  at  19  after  searching 
hospitals  and  mortuaries  in  a  70- j 
mile  area. 

They    also  counted    58   persons ' 
ho!<pitalized.  Persons  on  the  scene 
said  as  many  as  80  were  hurt  but 
not  all  needed  ho.-pital  care. 

Unofficial  estimates  of-  property 
damage  ranged  beyond  5758,000. 

"People  died  without  even  know-| 
ing  what  happened,"  said  Elverti 
Stephens.  There  was  no  advance 
warning,  although  20  or  more 
tornadoes  danced  acro.ss  Texas 
during  the  night,  many  in  this  vi- 
cinity. 

Silverton.  a  farm-ranch  town  of 
857  people,  its  utilities  ripped  out 
and  ankle  deep  in  mud,  could  not 
care  for  the  dead  and  injured. 
The  bodies  and  the  victims  requir- 
ing hospital  care  were  sent  to 
Amarilio,  65  mile.-?  to  the  north- 
west, Plainview,  Lubbock,  and 
other  towns  and  cities. 


Four  New  Faculty  Members 


GM'S  SLATE 


Activities  In  Graham  Memorial 
today  are:  Carolina  Symphony. 
3-6  p.m..  Grail  Room:  Student 
Government,  3-5  p.m.,  Roland 
Parker  Lounge  No.  1;  Fencing 
CluJ),  7-11  p.m..  Roiand  Parker 
Lounges  1,  2  and  3;  Foreign 
Films  Committee,  4-6  p.m.,  Rol- 
and Parker  Lounge  No.  2;  Stu- 
dent Audit  Board,  2-4  p.m., 
WoodhoUi-e  Conference  room; 
Humbr  Magazine  Board,  4-6  p.m., 
Woodhouse  Conference  room: 
Dance  Committee  Court,  4-5:30 
p.m..  Council  room;  and  Sociolo- 
gy 179,  12-1  p.m..  Rendezvous 
room.  , 


Vote  Of  Confidence 

LONDON— (AP)— Britain's  con- 
servative government  survived  a 
Labor  Party  attack  on  its  Suez  poli- 
cies last  night  and  won  a  com- 
fortable vote  of  confidence  from 
the  House  of  Commons. 

A  Labor  motion  censuring  the 
government  for  "damaging  Brit- 
ain's prestige  and  economic  inter- 
ests" was  defeated  308-259. 

Prime  Minster  Harold  MacMil- 
lan  delivered  a  mild  speech  end- 
ing a  two-day  parliamentary  in- 
quest into  consequences'  of  the 
British-French  invasion  of  Egypt 
last  fall.  He  told  the  crowded' 
house: 

"It  wouW  be  fotrtb^h-to  dtny  that 
we  have  had  a  .setback,  but  it 
would  be  equally  foolLsh  to  exag- 
gerate it,  either  at  home  or,  more 
especially,  overseas." 


World  News  Briefs 

RANGOON— (AP)— As  the  Bur- 
mese national  anthem  was  play- 
ed in  a  Rangoon  movie  theater 
yesterday  a  spotlight  scanned 
the  audience.  Police  arrested  46 
patrons  who  didn't  bother  to 
stand  up.  If  found  guilty  of  dis- 
respect to  the  flag,  shown  on  the 
screen  during  the  anthem,  they 
can  be  fined  up  to  $250  or  im- 
prisoned up  to  one  year 

CROTON,  Conn.—  (AP)  —The 
USS  Skat*,  the  nation's  third 
atomic-powered  submarine,  slid 
smoothly  down  the  ways  shortly 
after  noon  yesterday,  a  $50,000,- 
000  bundle  of  nuclear  energy. 

Under  Secretary  of  Navy  Wil- 
liam B.  Franke,  the  keynoter, 
said  she  was  a  "symbol  of  Ameri- 
ca's power  for  peace." 

The  ways  were  the  same  as 
those  used  three  years  ago  by 
the  pioneer  Nautilus,  and  later 
by  the  Seawoif,  the  265-foot 
Skate's  older  and  bigger  sisters. 


Sigma  Nu's  Honored 

Sigma  Nu  graduating  seniors  were 
honored  at  a  banquet  Wednesday 
night,  with  Dr.  .Archibald  Hender- 
son as  speaker. 

Retired  UNC  professor  of  mathe-  j 
matics.  Dr.  Henderson  spoke  on 
■  follow  ing  one's  impulse."  The  ' 
George  Bernard  Shaw  biographer  | 
and  writer  of  Southern  and  North  | 
Carolina  history  supplemented  his  i 
speech  with  glimpses  of  his  colorful  j 

life.  -        ! 

I 

Annual  awards  were  also  present- ' 
e<i.    Jim    Exum    received    the    Out-  . 
standing     Brother    in     Psi    Chapter 
award  and  the  award  for  the  out- 
standing   achievement     in    scholar- 
ship by  an  active. 

The  Outstanding  Intramural  Athle- 
te went  to  P^oy  Singleton,  with  Pete  | 
Brake      winning      the     Outstanding  1 
Pledge   award. 

Ashe  Exum  received  the  award 
for.  the  outstanding  scholastic  athi- 
evement  by  a  pledge. 


116  To  Graduate  From 
Public  HealtK  School 


A  total  of  116  students  will  re- 
ceive degrees  and  certificates  in 
public  health  during  the  June 
graduation  of  the  University  of 
North  Carolina,  according  to  an 
announcement  by  Dr.  E.  G.  Mc- 
Gavran.  dean  of  the  UNC  School 
of   Public   Health. 

The  UNC  School  of  Public 
Health  is  one  of  10  institutions  in 
the  United  States  approved  to  of- 
fer advanced  training  to  special- 
ists in  public  health  and  preven- 
tive medicine. 

The  students,  residents  of  North 
Carolina,  2^  other  states  of  the 
country,  and  of  18  foreign  coun- 
tries have  completed  graduate 
level  training  in  one  of  the  nine 
specialized  fields  of  public  health 
practice,  according  to  Dr.  McGav- 
ran.  They  are  now  qualified  to 
staff  key  positions  in  state  and 
local  public  health  departments, 
voluntary  health  agencies  and  in 
hospitals,  health  centers  and  a  va- 


riety of  community  health  agen- 
cies. 

Among  the  graduates  will  be  13 
physicians  trained  to  fill  admin- 
istrative posts  in  health  agencies, 
six  non-medical  administrators,  39 
public  health  nurses,  21  engineers 
and  sanitarians,  and  23  health  ed- 
ucators. The  remainder  of  the 
graduates  will  be  comprised  of 
statisticians,  laboratory  workers, 
nutritionists  and  specialists  in  ma- 
ternal and  child  health. 

The  1957  graduating  class  will 
bring  to  944  the  number  of  de- 
grees awarded  by  the  UNC  School 
of  Public  Health  since  1940.  In 
addition  to  the  graduates,  during 
the  1956-1957  academic  year,  555 
other  students  of  the  University 
received  instruction  from  the  fac- 
ulty of  the  school  and  an  addition- 
al 1165  persons  outside  of  the  Uni- 
versity participated  in  short 
courses,  seminars,  and  po^s-t-grad- 
uate  courses  given  by  the  faculty 
of  the  Chapel  Hill  institution. 


Appointments 
In  Math,  Law 

Four  new  faculty  members  in 
mathematics,  law,  business  admin- 
istration and  classics  have  been 
announced  by  Chancellor  Robert 
House  and  approved  by  Pre*-.  Wil- 
liam Friday  and  the  Board  of 
Trustees. 

Named  to  posts  and  new-  duties 
effective  within  the  next  few 
months  were  Billy  James  Pettis, 
professor.  Department  of  Mathe 
matics;  Daniel  H.  PoUitt,  assoc. 
professor.  School  of  Law;  J.  Boyd 
Flynn.  a.-sistant  professor,  Schcol 
of  Business  Administration;  and 
Henry  Rudolph  Immerwahr,  assist- 
ant professor,  Dept.  of  Clasics. 

Prior  to  these  appointments,  the 
Chancellor's  Office  had  also  re- 
leased a  report  on  periionnel 
changes  which  contained  recom- 
menflations  for  10  leaves  of  ab 
sence,  recommendations  for  nine 
appointments,  notification  of  five 
re.signations  and  notice  of  one 
death. 

The  two  reports  comprise  a  sig- 
nificant analysis  of  the  administra- 
tion';; approach  to  a  current  prob- 
lem concerning  changes  in  Uni- 
versity personnel  which  has  been 
punctuated  in  past  months  by  the 
exodus  of  sereral  outstanding  fac- 
ulty members. 

The  appointment  announcement 
yesterday  served  to  define  one  of 
the  first  answers  by  the  adminis- 
tration to  the  recent  personnel 
problem  at  the  University. 

Dr.  Pettis  as  professor  in  the 
Dept.  of  Mathematics  will  take  up 
his  new  duties  on  August  1.  He  Ls 
a  former  instructor  at  both  Har- 
vard and  Yale  and  resigned  as 
rh«MiiMi  of  the  Tulane  Unlvrarstty 
Mathematics  Dept.  to  return  to  the 
University  here. 

He  hold»  his  M.A.  degree  from 
UNC,  in  addition  to  the  B.A.  from 
Wofford  College  and  the  Ph.D. 
from    the    University    of    Virginia. 

Dr.  Pettis  was  visiting  lecturer 
at  Princeton  University  in  1949-50. 
He  has  been  on  the  Tulane  facul- 
ty for  10  years  and  holds  member- 
ship in  mathematical  associations 
in  America,  Australia,  Canada  and 
France. 

Daniel  PoUitt  received  his  A.B. 
from  Wesleyan  University  in  1943 
and  hi.-,-  LL.B.  from  Cornell  in  1949 
when  he  returned  to  Washington, 
D.C.  and  entered  private  practice. 

During  the  next  five  years,  he 
was  a  law  clerk  to  the  Judge  of 
the  U.S.  Court  of  Appeals  and 
taught  law  at  American  University. 
Since  1955  he  has  been  on  the 
faculty  of  the  University  of  Ar- 
kansas Law  School. 

Flynn,  a  native  of  Washington, 
N.  C,  was  graduated  from  David- 
son College  and  completed  his 
master's  degree  at  Wharton  School 
of  Busines-s,  University  of  Pennsyl- 
vania. Since  1950,  he  has  taught 
at  Ohio  State  University,  working 
toward  his  Ph.D.  degree. 

Immerwahr  was  born  in  Breslau, 
Germany,  and  was  graduated  from 
the  University  of  Florence,  Italy. 
He  took  his  Ph.D.  at  Yale  where 
he  has  taught  for  the  pa.st  10  years. 

(See  HOUSE,   Page  3) 


Russian  Subs 
Seen  Recently 

DETROIT  —  (AP)  —  Admiral 
Jerauld  Wright,  supreme  com- 
mander of  North  Atlantic  Treaty 
Organization  forces  in  the  Atlan- 
tic, said  yesterday  that  Russian 
submarine  activity  in  the  Atlan- 
tic  is  increasing. 

"Russian  subs  have  been  sight- 
ed recently  in  all  parts  of  the  At- 
lantic," Wright  said  in  an  inter- 
view. 

Wright's  comment  came  a  day 
after  the  U.S.  aircraft  carrier 
Franklin  D.  Roosevelt  hit  a  sub- 
merged object  off  Florida  and 
reported  development  of  an  oil 
slick  at  the  spot  afterward. 
Some  sources  speculated  the  car- 
rier possibly  hit  a  submerged 
submarine,  damaging  or  sinking 
it. 


^^ 


Highest  Scholastic  Averages 

The  Order  of  the  Grail  recognized  the  above  persons  as  having 
the  highest  scholastic  averages  in  their  certain  clac-bification  this 
year.  Left  to  right,  Sam  Wells,  highest  average  in  Student  Govern- 
ment; Jim  Monteith,  best  grades  in  senior  self-iielp  students;  and 
Jack  Raper,  highest  average  in  freshman  self-help  students.  Not  pic- 
tured is  Marion  Griffin,  who  had  the  highest  average  of  all  seniors 
in  athletics.  A  King  Sears  Photo — Bill  King 

To  Be  Announced  Soon 


Miss  Fashion  Queen 


The  suspense  will  soon  be  over—  i 
Miss  Fashion  Queen  Ls  to  be  an-  j 
1  jounced  the  latter  part  of  May.  \ 
according  to  J.   B.    Robbins.  i 

Six  attractive  coeds,  all  previous 
Miss  Fashionplate  winners  are  vy-  , 
ing   for   the   title   of   Miss    Fashion.! 
Qiieen  and  the  accompanying  prize  i 
ol  an  entire  ensemble.  i 

Pictures    of    the    contestants    are  ! 
I  DOW  on  display  in  Robt>ins'  window. 
j  Any  studeiit,  msde  or  female,  may 
vote  for  his'  favorite. 


Solons  Save  $80  Million 


'An  Evening  Of  Tennessee  Williams' 

Shown  above  is  Amanda  Meiggs,  who  portrays  Lena  in  a  play  to 
be  presented  Swnday  night  at  8  p.m.  in  the  lounge  of  Graham  Me- 
morial. The  play  is  the  first  of  two  plays  in  observance  of  "An 
Evening  Of  Te«mesMe  Williams."  The  play  in  which  Lena  appears 
U  entitled,  "Hallo  From  Bertha."      A  King-Sears  photo— Woody  Sears 


WASHINGTON— (AP)— Congress  i 
wrapped  up  and  sent  to  the  White 
House   today   its   first  big   money 
bill  of  the  year,  and  Sen.  Lyndon 
Johnson  (D-Tex)  proclaimed: 

"We  have  saved  $80,363,000  for 
the  taxpayers  in  the  first  of  the 
15  annual  appropriations." 

The  $3,884,927,000  bill,  to  fm- 
ance  the  Treasury  and  Post  Of- 
fice departments  and  the  tax  court, 
was  $80,363,000  smaller  than  Presi- 
dent Eisenhower  had  asked. 

His  newesl  appeals  in  support 
of  the  budget,  voiced  in  a  speech 
to  the  nation  Tuesday  night  and 
in  his  news  conference  Wednes- 
day, developed  little  if  any  effec- 
tive  response. 

Other  bills  nearing  final  action 
are  carrying  cuts  averaging  8  per 
cent  under  White  House  requests, 
and  even  deeper  slashes  have  been 
predicted  for  some  items  like 
foreign  aid  which  are  yet  to  reaph 
either  the  House  or  Senate. 


The  Treasury -Post  Office  bill 
was  dispatched  to  the  \yhite  House 
— '"put  it  on  roller  .skates,"  John 
son  jokingly  suggested  to  Senate 
clerks — after  the  Senate  accepted 
a  minor  House  amendment. 

The  total  included  $891,467,000 
for  the  Treasury,  a. cut  of  $22,364. 
000  under  White  House  figures; 
$3,192,000,000  for  the  Post  Office, 
a  cut  of  $58,000,000;  and  $1,460,- 
000  for  the  tax  court,  with  no  cut. 

Sen.  Dirksen  (R-Ill.)  predicted 
that  the  Post  Office  will  call  for 
more  money  before  the  year  is 
over.  To  that,  Johnson,  the  Senate 
Democratic  leader,  replied: 

"I  will  not  look  with  sympathy 
fm  any  supplemental  request." 

The  House  Appropriations  Com- 
mittee meanwhile  approved  a  $78,- 
470.285  bill  to  operate  the  House 
and  related  agencies  during  the 
year  beginning  July  1. 

This  total  repersented  a  cut  of 
less  than   3  per  cent   from   over- 


all requests,  as  compared  to  the 
8  per  cent  average  cut  made  in 
previoys  bills. 

On  the  general  question  of  ad- 
ministration  spending,   Sen.    Gold- 
water  (R-Ariz.)  said  it  ought  to  stop 
"looking  for  things  to  do  for  peo- 
j  pie"    that    add    to    the    taxpayers' 
jload. 

I  And  an  analysis  of  the  first  roll- 
j  call  vote  to  be  taken  in  the  Senate 
;  on  an  appropriation  bill  since 
j  Esenhower  went  "to  the  people" 
I  showed  14  Republican  senators  on 
his  side  and  23,  including  the  par- 
ty's Senate  leadership,  against  him. 

This  showing  was  recorded  in 
the  61-15  margin  by  which  the  Sen- 
ate, against  Eisenhower's  advice, 
voted  United  State*  information 
agency  $53,800,00  less  than  the  ad- 
ministration asked. 

The  amount  voted  was  $90,200,- 
000,  which  was  $15,900,000  less 
than  the  House  voted. 


Olsen  Delivers 
First  Lecture 

Dr.  Robert  E.  Olson  of  the  Pitts- 
burgh University  Graduate  School 
of  Public  Health  delivered  the  first 
annual  Adam  T.  Thorp  Memorial 
Lectiu-e  here  Wednesday  at  the  Uni- 
versity School  of  Medicine. 

A  professor  of  biochemistrj-  and 
nutrition.  Dr.  Olson  spoke  on  ••Myo- 
cardial Metabolism  in  Health  and 
Disease."  He  has  studied  the  chem- 
istr>'  of  the  heart,  and  is  •'interest- 
ed in  finding  out  how  a  normal  heart 
uses  chemical  energy,"  he  said.       i 

Dr.   Olson  described  experiments  j 
v.'hich  indicated  that  the  proteins  of  I 
the  contractile  unit  were  altered  in  ' 
.stmcture  in  sitates  of  cardiac  failure. 
He   stated  that  the   use  of  fuel   by 
the  heart  in  heart  failiu-e  dki  not 
appear  to  t>e  changed. 

The  lecture,  presented  for  the 
first  time  Wednesday,  is  a  memor- 
ial to  Adam  T.  ••Skeets"  Thoi^i  III 
of  Rocky  Moimt,  who  was  se\en 
years  old  at  his  death  late  last 
summer  in  an  automobile  accident. 

"Skeets '  Thoro  was  the  son  ot 
Dr.  Adam  T.  Thorp  II,  a  1956  grad- 
uate of  the  UNC  School  of  Medicine. 
Dr.  Thorp  is  now  ser\'ing  intem- 
kship  at  Bethesda  Naval  Hospital, 
Bethesda.  Md. 

Thus  year's  lecturer  i^ece^ved  his 
PhD.  in  biochemistry  at  the  Uni- 
versity of  St.  Louis  and  his 
M.D.  from  Harvard  University 
School  of  Medicine. 


The  contestants  are  Mis-es  .Mar-  Mis.s  Fa-hionj:!atc  for  January, 
tha  Williford.  Barbara  Honey.  Mary  Mary  '•Pee  Wee"  Batten,  is  a  sen- 
••Pee  Wee"  Batten.  Libby  Nichol-  ,  ior  from  .Mt.  Gilead.  She  is  a  radio- 
son,  Jane  Stainbac-k.  and  Sai-ah  Van  tilevis-.on  major  and  a  member  of 
Weyk.  j  Kappa  Delta  sorority. 

The  ensemble  to  be  .awarded  the  i  Libby  Nicholson.  Mi-s  Fashion- 
winner  consists  of  an  entire  outfit:  ',  I-'ate  for  Fcbruar>-.  is  a  sophomore 
dress,  hat.  bag,  gloves,  shoes  and  '  "^"^in'^'  student  from  High  Point. 
ij,^^  j  She   is    a    member   of   .Mpha    Delia 

J  Pi   sorcritv. 

;      The     March     M.s^    Fashionplate. 

I  Jiine     Stainback.     is     a     scphonmre 
n»alor  from   Fayetteville.    She   is   a  |  „^i„g    ..^.^ent    fronWacksonvflte. 
junior  and  a  meml;<-'i-  of  Delia  Dt>lta       . 
D&lta   sorcritv.  j 

Barbara  Honey,  Decemijer  Miss  ;  .Miss  Fashionoltste  for  .April.  Sarah 
Fashionplate.  is  a  .sociology  major  Van  VVevk,  is  a  >unior  from  Win- 
from  Charlotte.  She  also  is  a  jun-  netra,  III.  She  1.=  an  English  major 
ior  and  is  a  member  of  Kappa  Delta  ;  nd  a  member  of  Pi  Beta  Phi'soror- 
sororit.v.  iiy- 


The   November   Mis   Fashionplate. 
Martha    Williford.    is    an    edut.-ation 


Activities  Session  On 
Emerson  Field  Next  Fall 


By   PRINGLE   PIPKIN 

The  Activities  Session  next  fail 
will  be  held  during  a  picnic  on 
Emerson  field  the  orientation  com- 

j  mittee  in  charge  of  this  project  an- 

:  nounced  yesterday. 

I  Each  organization  on  the  cam 
:  pus  will  have  a  booth  or  display 
'  on  Emerson  Field,  and  there  will 
be  representatives  of  the.*j  groups 
!  to  tall<  with  the  new  students. 
j  September  17. 

'  "These  booths  will  provide  an 
excellent  opportunity  to  contact 
the  .students,"  Miss  Libby  McCord 
commented. 

\      At   the   session    there   will    be    a 

raffle.  From  five  to  ten  pn7.es  will 

'■  be  given  away;  the  total  value  of 

;  the   prizes  is  around  $100.   To  get 

the   prizes-   the   students   will    have 

I  to   register  at  one    of  the  various 

i  activities'  booths. 

j      The   committee   urges   all   acti>'i- 

!  ties  which  have  not  contacted  one 

'  of  its  members.  Miss  McCord.  Bob 

Carter,  or  Al  Goldsmith,  to  please 


■  do  so  s,ncm  so  that  activity  will  be 
represented. 

•We    hope    that    thiy  will    be    a 

,  very    good    activities,  session,    but 

it    can    only    be    so    if    there    is    a 

continued  interest  and  enthusiasm 

expressed."  said   Miss    .McCord. 

Last  year  the  activities  wa.,-  held 
in  Len.>ir  Hall  during  the  after- 
noon, and  fruit  drinks  and  cookies 
were  served. 

Miss  McCord  said  that  this  year 

i  those  students  who  will  participate 

as  representatives  will  not  have  to 

return   to   .school   a.>    early  as   last 

year. 

The  following  oreanizati.  ns  will 
be  among  those  represented:  the 
Glee  Club.  The  Carolina  Quarterly, 
the  Philanthropic  Literary  Society. 
Sotmd  and  Fury.  Alpha  Phi  Omepa 
(service  fraterni-yi.  The  Dialectic 
Senate,  and  the  Yacltety  Vack. 

Others  are:  Young  Democrats 
jClub.  YMCA.  YWCA.  Alpha  Epsj- 
;  Ion  Delta.  The  Daily  Tar  Heel,  the 
i  University  Party,  the  Student  Par- 
,  ty,  the  Debate  Council,  and  the 
'  Cardboard. 


Aldridge  Wins 
Beauty  Title 

Miss  Joan*  Aldridg*  has  b«en 
crowned  Miss  Chapel  Hill  of 
1957.  Miss  Aldridge  is  a  gradu- 
ate student  here  and  was  chosen 
to  represent  Chapel  Hill  in  the 
Miss  North  Carolina  contest  in 
Burlington  m  July.  The  new 
Miss  Chapel  Hill  did  a  recitation 
on  "What  She  Wanted  Out  Of 
Life,"  to  place  ahead  of  Miss 
Jane  Brock  and  Miss  Martha  For> 
tune,  who  finished  second  and 
third  in  the  judging  respective- 
ly. Den  McMiiiian,  a  member  of 
Delta  Kappa  Epsilen  fraternity 
wen  the  drawing  for  a  week's 
accommodations  at  Sarasota 
Beach,  Fla.,  w-orth  $100. 


Oklahoma  Flooded 


OKLAHOMA  CITY— (AP)— Nor- 
thern Oklahoma,  already  under  as 
much  as  12   feet  of  floodwater  in 

j  places  and  with  five  people  dead, 
braced     tonight    for    an     expected 

i  record    overflow    tomorrow    along 

j  the  Cimarron  River. 

I  Torrential  rains,  ranging  up  to 
i  lo.07  inches,  fell  last  night  in  the 
j  Cimarron  Watershed,  inundating 
I  the  town  of  Dover  and  sending 
j  high  water  into  partj  of  Enid. 
I  Alva,  Hennessey  and  Waynoka. 
I  Many  roads  in  the  area  were  clos- 
1  ed.  Communications  were  cut  in 
j  some  places. 

!  The  Tulsa  River  Forecasting 
i  Station  warned  all  communities 
;  and  residents  adjacent  to  the 
I  Cimarron,  which  winds  south  and 


eastward  from  Waynoka  in  the 
,  northwest  to  Keystone,  near  Tulsa 
:  in  the  northea  t.  to  "move  to  safe 
,  elevations"    in    preparation    of    "a 

maximum  flood  of  record." 

More  than  3.50  persons  were 
jpvacuatcti  from  their  homes  al 
:  Dox'er.   and   others    at   Enid   in   the 

northwest  moved  out  as  the  f!'>od- 

waters  moved  in. 

1  Chester  Cunningham.  under- 
sheriff  of  Blaine  County,  identi- 
!  fied  two  of  the  dead  as  Mr.  and 
,  Mrs.  George  Seneker.  89  and  83. 
<  who  live  seven  miles  ea.st  of 
j  Okeene  on  a  farm. 
i      He   ;-aid    Mrs.    Seneker   went    to 

their  cellar  for  a  jar  of  jelly  and 
'■  was   overcome    by  gas  fumes.   He 

said  the  husband  tried  to  rescue 
,  her  and  also  was  asphyxiated. 


iffknt:  I 


PAGE    TWO 


THI  DAILYlTAK  HfIL 


1^  >  ii 


FRIDAY,  MAY  17,  1M7 


Please  Return  My  Radio  Or 
The  Honor  System's  Great 

Dear  Editor: 

Someone  has  taken  something  from  my  room  that  I  value  very 
niiuli.  It  is  a  small,  red  portable  radio  of  German  make.  It  was  given  to 
me  bv  mv  brother  whom  I  have  not  seen  for  nearly  two  years.  The  radio 
means  a  lot  to  me.  and  I  woidd  like  very  much  to  have  it  back. 

If  the  person  who  took  it  wants  money,  I  am  willing  to  pay  him  to 
wive  it  back.  I  promise  I  will  not  cause  him  any  trouble. 

I  beg  wlioever  tcK)k  the  radio— please— give  it  back  to  nie. 

man  Ragsdale  doesn't  take  honor 


Mens  Honor  Council  Chair- 
man (.eorge  Ragsdale  might  b^ 
right  when  he  asserts: 

rhc  (Honor)  Sytem  is  in  bet- 
ter shaiK'  right  now  that  it  has 
been  in  a  long  time." 

Hut  we  Feel  that  the  system  — 
and  the  general  right  of  tudents 
u)  disciphne  themselves  —  is  the 
l)acklM»ne  ot  student  self-govern- 
ment, riius  ccmstant  etfyrt  should 
be  niade  to  strengthen  it  and  ele- 
\ate  its  imp)ortance  in  the  stu- 
deuts'  eves. 

Ragsdale  told  orientation  coun- 
elors.  with  whom  lies  the  tremend- 
(^us  resjx)nsil)ility  of  inculcating 
into  a  thousand-plus  group  of 
Ireshmen  the  tradition  of  honor 
up<)n  which  student 'government 
i>   built,    that   an     Honor      System 


lightly: 

"Beliefs  which  have  lasted  ages 
now  rest  with  you.  The  regenera- 
tion of  these  time-tested  beliefs  is 
a  solemn  duty  which  belongs  to 
vou.  We  must  not  let  this  great 
tradition  of  honor  pass  from  the 
I'niversity  scene." 

This  passage  does  not  sound  like 
tlie  chairman  who  feels  that  stu- 
dents are  ^  aware  of  the  Honor 
System  that  an  Emphasis  Week  is 
not  necessary. 

Chairman  Ragsdale  should  not 
have  created  the  impression  before 
orientation  counselors  that  stu- 
dents are  sufficiently  aware  of  the 
Honor  System. 

The  alarming  fact  that  faculty 
members,  not  sttidents  tfiemseives. 
turn  in  the  large  majcnity  of  of- 
1  niphasis  Week  would  be  running   'fenders   indicates   that  there  is   no 


tlie   m.ltter     into  the  groimd." 

Such  conij)lacenc:v  shoidd  not 
deep  into  anv  discussion  of  the 
priceless  Honor  System.  Ragsdale 
obviouslv  has  the  potential  leader- 
sliip  which  is  recjuisite  for  success- 
Inl  (jperation  of  the  Honor  Coun- 
cil. The  (onchisioTi  of  his  AV'ed- 
ne^day  t.ilk  emphasi/es  that  Chair- 


room  for  complacency. 

Letterwriter  Alvin  AVhite  ob- 
\iouslv  doesn't  agree  uith  Cliair- 
man  Ragsdale  that  the  Honor 
System  is  in  such  great   shape. 

There  is  no  compromise  for 
lionor. 

Alvin   White 
2 1  -,    Everett 


Ross's  Tuition  Hike  Bill 
And  Proper  Pigeon-Holing 

The  now  intamous  Ross  Bill  hiking  out-of-state  tuition  S200  is  cui- 
lentlv  hung  in  committee. 

The  bill — named  for  its  introducer  Rep.  L.  H.  Ross  of  Beaufort- 
must  be  pnHessed  by  the  Ceneral  Assembly's  Higher  Education  and 
Joint  Appropriations  Committees  before  it' reaches  the  House  of  Rep- 
re.seiuatives. 

Obviously  the  bill  should  remain  pigeon-holed  in  committee — pre- 
ferablv   for  a  decade  or  longer. 


The  ConsoKclated  I'niversity  ad- 
ministration has  gone  on  lecord 
as  opposing  the  tuition  hike  for 
non-Tar  Heels.  I'niversity  faculty 
members  —  both  on  the  graduate 
and  inulergraduate  levels  —  have 
registered  their  disapproval  of 
Ross's  prox  inc  ial-taiiued  exclusion 
bill,  students  have  voiced  their  dis- 
agreement. 

Is  it  possible  that  General 
.\s.semblymen  can  cotupletelv  ig- 
nore such  concrete  opposition 
from  so  many  interestecl  in  the 
growth  ot  higher  education  in  oiu 
^taler 

Invaluable  contributions  are 
made  to  the  I'nixersitv  and  to  the 
state  proper  4:)v  non-native  elements 

The  Daily  Tar  Heel 

The  official  student  publication  of  the 
Publications  Board  of  the  University  of 
North  Carolina,  where  it  is  published 
daily  except  Monday  and  examination 
and  vacation  periods  and  summer  terms. 
Entered  as  secropd  class  matter  in  the 
post  office  in  Chapel  Hill.  N.  C,  under 
the  Act  of  March  8,  1870.  Subscription 
rates:  mailed.  $4  per  year,  $2.50  a  semes- 
ter: delivered  $6  a  year,  $3.50  a  semes- 
ter. 


Editor 


NEIL  BASS 


Managing  Eklitor 


BOB  fflGH 


Associate  Editor 


NANCY  HHJ, 


Sports  Editor 


,  BILL  KING 


New^-  Editor  WALT  SCHRUNTEK 

Business  Manager  JOHN  C  WHIIAKEB. 


Advertising  Manager    .    FRED  KATZIN 

NEWS  STAFF— Gra.iam  Snyder,  Edith 
MacKinnon,  Ben  Taylor,  Patsy  Miller, 
Sue  Atchison.   Manley  Springs. 

EDIT  STAFF— Whit  Whitfield,  Anthonj 
Wolff,  Stan  Shaw. 

BUSINESS  STAFF— John  Minter,  Mari- 
an Hobeck,  Jane  Patten,  Bucky  Shu- 
ford. 

SPORTS  STAFF:  Dave  Wible,  Stu  Bird, 
Ed  Rowland,  Jim  Crownover,  Ron 
Milligan. 


Subscription  Manager 


Dalb  Staley 


Circulation  manager 


Charlie  Holt 


Staff  Photographers  Woody  Sears, 

Norman  Kantor,  Bill  King. 


Librarians    Sue  Gicbner,  Marilyn  Strum 


Night  News  Editor Bob  High 

Night  Editor Manley  Springs 


of  the  popidace  lured  here  by  oiu" 
higher  education  set  up.  This  ele- 
metu  of  contributors  shoidd  not 
be  frightened  awav  by  too-higli  and 
discriminatory   tuition.* 

The  Ross  Bill  should  perman- 
ently remain  in  its  present  posi- 
tion —  in  committee.  Legislatois 
should  not  have  to  devote  their 
valuable  time  to  stich  trifling  ex- 
amples of  provincialism. 

Ugly   Men, 
Organize! 

In  this  season  of  Miss  Modern 
\'enus,  .Miss  Chapel  Hills  and  The 
(;irl  I'd  Like  Most  To  Be  Ma- 
rooned On  an  Island  VV^ith,  a  logi- 
cal question  arises: 

\Vhat  ever  happened  to  the  l^g- 
liest   Man  On   Campus  Contest? 

If  feminine  pulchritude  is  to 
imiversally  recognized,  why  not 
masculine  lack  of  same? 

Obviously  such  a  contest  would 
be  hotly  contested.  And  the  male 
segment  oi  the  campus  woidd  be 
provided  a  route  to  somewhat  du- 
bious fame  and  fortune  as  females 
—  through  various  and  sundry 
competitions— are    provided    now. 

What  greater  distinction  to  write 
home  to  loved  ones  about?  \Vhat 
mother  or  father  wouldn't  cherish 
telling  their  closest  friend  with  a 
loud  and  proud  boast: 

"Mv  .son  was  voted  the  ugliest 
man   at  Carolina.' 

Let's  face  facts.  Many  male  stu- 
dents pass  four  years  here  without 
making  Phi  Bet.,  without  being 
elected  to  publicized  positions, 
without  leaving  their  foc;|tprints 
on  the  academic  sands  of  time. 
Yet  many  of  the.se  same  students 
have  one  attribute  which  is  denied 
due  recognition. 

They  are  ugly— downright  ugly. 

Denred  just  fame  and  recogni- 
tion? If  so,  organize  and  assert 
your  rights. 

The  road  to  distinction  should 
be   Opened  for   all   qualified. 


Freshman^s  Impression 

Curriculum  For 
English  Majors 
Needs  Revision 

GRAHAM  SNYDER 

The  first  year  has  nearly  passed 
tqr  the  fireshman.  What  of  tbe  flrst 
year?  instead  of  the  complete  awe- 
dream  and  the  abundant  naiive 
zest  which  he  had  when  first  ar- 
rived, there  is  now  a  little  dis- 
illusionm^it.  complemented  by  a 
field^  of  new-found  things,  of  books, 
of  places:  for  instance,  on  the 
campus,  in  a  walk  around  the 
great  rectangle  bordering  the  clasis 
buildings  on  an  unpeopled  Sat- 
■  lu-day  "afternoon  when  the  leaves 
colored  and  fell  in  October,  quick- 
ened and  budded  in  late  April. 
♦  *  ♦ 

But  there  was  one  major  thing 
acquired  that  had  not  been  there 
so  njuch  before  the  freshman  came 
to  tTNC;  that  was  a  directed  fa- 
culty of  questioning,  everything — 
a  faculty  gained  through  the  grind 
of  classes,  read  books,  and  piles 
of  scribbled-on  papers;  a  faculty 
of  building  structures  of  belief, 
dfisbelief.  criticism,  denunciation, 
w]iile  trying  to  keep  the  mind 
open.  .\nd  this  was  the  good  thing 
about  having  a  professor  around 
hanci\-:  when  thought  and  held 
opinion  grew  boggy'  with  enamor 
of  oneself,  it  was  ver\-  gcKxl  to  feel 
the  quick  sharp  pain  of  an  in- 
structor quietly  pinpricklng  a 
windy   argument. 

Ha\'ing  now  de^-eloped  over  the 
-  year  the  mode  of  intelligent 
question,  new  contemplating  the 
sharpness  of  (he  blade  of  doubt. 
— I  now  venture  to  try  out  Its 
whet.  It  is  a  g)wd  thing  to  ex- 
periment— so  please  stand  tall 
while — I  probe  the  academic 
sptoe. 

This  flowery  introduction  Ls  di- 
rected to  a  consideration  c4  the 
lack  of  attention  given  to  potential 
english  majors.  whlJe  in  their 
freshman  \-ear.  Let  us  look  first 
at  the  freshman  english  program, 
that  great  .structure  of  learning 
designed  to  teach  diligent  fresh- 
men, briefly,  how  to  read,  -wrtte. 
think,  and  argue. 
,  EnglLsh  one  and  two  are  built 
chiefly  around  two  textbooks.  Tlie 
student  is  ■sthown  in  the  first  book 
dWerent  tMxs*  of  prose  and  giv- 
en an  introduction  to  the  styles 
and  tel-ms  of  argument.  In  ettg- 
lish  two  this  is  developed  on  a 
broader  scale,  given  over  t»  more 
particular  and  intric^ate  tv^)es  of 
prose  and  argumentation.  In  both 
books  there  ai-e  carefully  selected 
articles,  essav^  and  fanwus  argu- 
ments to  illustrate  each  style  dealt 
with  by  the  editor  of  the  bcwk. 
Questions  are  framied  arootKl  the 
selections,  and  one  stls  through 
many  a  class  pericxl  answering 
them. 

•  •  • 

•  But  before  going  further  with 
this  descriptkm,  let  us  go  back 
a  year:  what  was  the  approach 
for  teaching  English  in  high 
school?  From  the  ninth  grade  fand 
here  I  take  the  North  Carolina 
school  I  there  was  u.sed  an  inter- 
related scries  of  four  large  texts 
which  were  composed  of  selec- 
tions from  the  wxitings  of  every 
■grest,  or  near  great,  American  and 

English  writer,  with  a  short  bio- 1  english  one.)  I  am  a  little  critical 
(graphital  sketch  of  each  writerl  of  the  program :  for  english  majosrs 
included.  The  peak  of  this  teach-p  i  think  it  is  a  painful  burden;  it 
ing   method   was   reached   in    the     smacks  of  retrogressive  teaming. 


"Confidentially,  Which  Of  Us  Do  You  Think  Is  Ahead?" 


TH€  MALES  RETORT: 


CONFER  e/^JCE. 

PRO<4RAM 


twelfth    grade    with    a   review   of 
English   literature,  and  a  rigorous 
course  in  theme-writing. 

The  student  Jtathered  in  his  head 
a  smattering  of  "Paradise  Lost." 
remembered  the  first  three  lines 
of  "Endymion."  and  went  clodging 
off  to  the  trnUerrity  for  more  ex- 
plorattonr 

Clunk,  clunk,  clunk!  After  pick- 
ing lonefieH  up  off  the  floor  of 
a  new  tKR^emeai  level,  one  now 
found  oneself  in  a  desk  In  Bing- 
ham Han  ardously  leami>g  what 
a  paragraph  was  and  iMW  one 
went  about  composing  one  of 
tbe  things,  once  or  twice  maldnjf 
a  foray  into  the  area  of  theme- 
writing.  The  me  bright  spat  Hi 
the  whole  weary  time  cliiiie  in 
the  latter  part  of  the  year  when 
one  WHS  made  to  read  •  kiiok 
and  make  a  report  on  it.  f^- 
♦  *■  it    .^ 

One  now  clambered  up  to  Eng- 
lish two.  elevating  himself  great- 
ly. The  art  of  writing  a  passable 
theme  was  no'vv  taken  up  in  class. 
The  result  of  the  studj'  was  to  be 
the  fruit  of  fourteen  tiiemes.  "raere 
was  more  interesting  reading,  lo- 
gic was  touched  oo — ^and  there 
were  more  questkms. 

This  is  briefly  a  review  of  the 
Freshman  English  program  <I  ex- 
clude engli}*  21  and  thobe  fresh- 
men   fortunate   enough   to  escape 


.r 


There  is  basically  nothing  wTong 
with  this  plan  of  teaching  eoglisii 
to  freshmen.  Intelligent  men  do 
not  waste  good  printer's  ink  «nd 
paper  to  edit  &uch  textbooks.  The 
program  is  a  good  one — J'or  busi- 
ness majors,  mathematicLsuis,  and 
scientists.  But  not  for  the  English 
student  and  possibly  not  fbr  the 
philcsophy  major. 

U  a  person  had  decided  before 
he  came  to  the  Uniiversity  he  want- 
ed to  major  in  Ep^lsh,  is  it  not 
concetvable  that  he  might  .  have 
a  working  knowle<lge  of  how  to 
w'  r  1 1  e  acceptable  paraigrapihs, 
themes,  even  research  themes?  It 
i£  lo  read  great  books  and  pocfi^ 
and  to  WTite  about  books  and 
great  poetr\-,  that  the  student  of 
Eogiisji  searches  t^  unle&s  be 
were  majoring  ia  a  stndy  of  eng- 
lish graftunar.  It  is  to  read  the 
books  fashioned  by  genius,  to  know 
the  joiy-cry  of  finding  something 
said  for  the  first  time:  this  is 
•wliat  be  came  fbr. 

•  •  ♦ 

Ah.  giood  gentlemen  of  Bingham 
Hall,  thene  is  need  ifor  a  change. 
But  in  •w^iat  form?  I  would  sugges't 
one  of  two  waj's:  a  coiu:se  in 
selected  readings  of  novels  and 
short  stories  comparable  to  Eng- 
lish 32;  or  better  j-et,  a  comphre- 
Ihensive  two-semester  course  in  the 
freshman  year  adequately  cover- 
ing the  lives  and  parts  of  tlie 
works  of  major  British  and/or 
American  writers.  Akmg  this  line. 
1    am    thinldftg  of  a   two-vtdume 


wxwk,  "Major  British  Writers,"  I 
do  not  know  many  texts;  tihere 
ma^'  be  better  ones. 

Theme-wriMng  and  argumeniti- 
tion  could  be  well  covered  in 
either  of  these  two  types  of 
courses.  The  discussioa  matter 
would  be  more  interestinf  and 
fr>ur  or  five  fat  research  themes 
and  other  reports  could  replace 
the  English  two  cooaterpart  •( 
Oieme-writtng  If  there  was  neces- 
sity for  altering  it. 

With  sitcb  a  background  knowl- 
edge, the  english  major  could  pas.s 
on,  skipping  english  21  because 
he  would  prdbably  later  take 
semester  courses  in  Shakespeare, 
Milton,  and  Chaucer,  emetg^Sig 
onto  a  piain  his  sophomore  yter, 
"Where  he  Tpoold  ioiow  a  gPeat  deal 
more  about  a  few  wTiters  that  he 
later  wanted  to  study  in  lengtb. 
For  the  plain  of  literature  is  vast 
and  rich  and  four  years  is  not 
enough  time  to  encompass  and 
fully  know  a  small  acre  of  it. 
•  •  • 

I  thi<ifc  there  is  (his  definite 
need  for  exptaUting  the  cur- 
riculum to  (9ster  the  student  <rf 
English.  An  English  iastnicto*' 
said  to  me  last  fall:  "We  iraift 
to  do  an  we  can  to  encourage 
f^eople  to  major  in  English.*' 

I  would  hark  to  this  lM^>e,,but 
I  would  say  to  it  sadly,  that  I 
Uiink  the  encMiragemevt  is  m- 
cHrectnL 


Pogd 


«f 


^ 


By  Walt  K«liy 


M/ff  I  Men  «l«««MHO«W '  MKf'tSiJf^^^ttt] 


Bermudas,  Coeds 
Off  The  Pedestal 


Editor: 

In  resfMBae  to  an  article  on  coeds  and  their 
wanting  to  wear  Bermuda  shorts  to  class,  I  have, 
a  1^  comments  and  observation;:  to  make. 

M^ny  girls  fail  to  realize  that  tre  men  hold  an 
old-fashioned  view  of  women.  I  know  today  witk 
ewrything  tending  to  lean  toward  the  nao^^rp 
view,  our  old-fashioned  ideas  are  old-fashioned,  but 
never  the  less,  we  still  cling  to  them.  We  see  our 
women  on  a  pedestal  high  above  men — clothed  ii 
all  their  innocence  and  beauty,  towering  over  as 
with  morals  and  petite  ways  not  equalled  by  men. 
A  statue  of  ffesh,  vivacious  life  unapproachable  and 
celestial.  A  Southern  belte  praised  and  admired — 
lo  be  the  lady  of  the  honse  and  example  for  our 
children. 

But  girls,  yon  are  nudging  dreaming  men.  Why 
wake  us  from  our  beautiful  "sleep  and  dreams?  What 
a  horrid  thought  to  wake  up  one  spring  morning 
and  look  around  and  see  our  idols  smashed  and 
broken — no  statue  above  us — only  the  empt>'  ped- 
estal. What  a  horrid  thought  to  look  up  in  history 
class  and  see  the  dream  girl  j'ou  have  been  ad- 
miring all  semester  come  busting  into  class  clad 
like  some  tomboy  from  yester  year. 

No,  no,  no,  I  say.  Don't  wake  man  from  hit  old- 
fashioned  slumber.  Let  us  hold  dear  ovr  dreams  of 
you.  Raise  your  standards  of  dress — increase  yoor 
potential  beauty — shed  not  the  petals  that  surround 
the  heart  of  tihe  flower  nor  bend  the  stem,  so 
beauty  fails  to  reach  our  eyes. 

Increase,  ln<^^se,  I  sty,  the  ways  of  woman- 
hood. Raise  your  standards  to  enable  us  to  raise 
ours.  Forget  comfort.  Is  that  such  a  price  for  ad- 
miration? 

Please,  fair  maidens,  reconsider  yotp"  ideas  on 
this  matter.  Realize  that  not  only  do  you  discard 
yoiu*  dress  for  Bermuda  shorts,  but  also  our  admira- 
tion and.  desires,  our  feelings  and  inner  thoughts, 
our  hopes  and  dreams. 

And  let's  face  it,  girls,  Some  of  you  ain't  got 
the  legs  to  wear  the  dam  thuigs. 

Sonny  Ferboa 


Editor: 

To  the  -warm  coeds,  especially  Starjr  Alys  Voor- 
hees,  who  would  prefer  to  wear  swft^led  Ber- 
muda walking  shorts:  -^ 

U  you  thinks  skirts  are  hot.  trf  HMring  pants 
as  most  of  the  male  students  are  wejmug  because 
I  still  believe  that  skirts  are  cooler  tfc]^  trousers, 
so  why  should  girls  complain?  -%! 

In  addition,  the  brief  blouses  thai  yad  wear  are, 
I  presume,  cooler  than  the  shirts  f^  we  men 
wear.  Besides,  you  look  too,  too  iM-ftfy  in  what 
you  are  wearing  now,  so  you  wouldn't  dare  change, 
would  you?  Ha,  ha. 

O.  Bu  Eckh«ff 


Reader  Defends 
Creativity     i 

Editor: 

Much  has  been  said  about  the  seeming  lack  of 
creative  talent  on  the  UJfC  campus.  Most  of  the  dis- 
cussion which  has  appeared  in  The  T^H^  Tar  Heel 
has  been  concerned  with  the  relatively  giSaall  aaaouAt 
of  student  writing  in  recent  issues  of  *->e  Carolina 
Quarterly.  The  staff  of  the  literary  magadne  defend- 
ed its  choice  of  material  by  stating  that  the  qaantity 
and  quality  of  compositions  submitted  by  the  stu- 
dents left  much  to  be  desired.  Tlie  staff  was  un- 
doubtedly justified  in  its  actions  and  yet  we  must 
believe  that  there  are  students  on  campus  who  are 
capable  of  producing  (and  haX^e  produced)  high  cali- 
bre writing  worthy  of  publication.  It  may  be  that 
many  students  with  the  talent  somehow  lack  the  in- 
centive to  write  or  the  pride  necessary  for  bringing 
their  work  into  the  puMic  eye.  This  writer  does  not 
feel  that  there  is  a  lack  of  creative  talent  in  any  of 
the  fine  arts  on  the  UNC  campus,  but  the  prdblem 
is  in  bringing  the  talent  into  the  open. 

The  recent  winnin  ogf  a  national  scholarship  and 
the  winning  of  a  second  prize  in  the  Henderson  Belk 
art  competition  held  recently  at  the  Mint  Museum 
in  Charlotte  by  a  UNC  art  student  James  Brewer, 
has  called  attention  to  the  amount  ot  successful  work 
being  done  by  students  in  Ihe  Art  Department. 
Three  other  students  won  prites  in  the  Charlotte 
competition  and  works  of  art  done  by  students  are 
often  exhibited  in  art  shonrs  with  gratifying  re- 
sults. An  (m-campus  exhibition  of  student  works  to 
open  during  commencement  will  show  that  there  .is 
no  lack  of  talent  in  student  art. 

This  coming  Sunday,  May  IS,  will  bring  to  the 
public  compositions  of  students  in  the  Department 
of  Music.  A  program  of  student  works  has  been 
arranged  for  the  purpose  of  acquainting  the  Uni- 
versity and  townspeople  with  ^ome  of  the  student 
talent.  (It  uill  also  be  an  opportunity-  both  for  tbe 
composers  to  hear  their  works  performed,  some  of 
which  have  not  received,  a  previous  puMic  per- 
formance, and, '  in  some  cases,  for  the  composers 
to  perform  them  before  the  public.)  The  works  to 
be  given  are  a  good  representation  of  what  is  be- 
ing done  by  UNC  music  students.  The  pieces  are 
quite  varied  in  form  and  in  style,  ranging  from  an 
organ  chorale  prelude  in  the  style  of  Bach  to  a 
sonatina  for  piccolo  and  string  bass  in  contemporary 
style.  The  composers  represented  are  three  under- 
graduates (a  sophomore  and  two  juniozs)  aad  three 
graduate  students. 

It  is  hoped  that  this  program  uill  create  an  in- 
centive for  some  of  the  student  bod>'  to  put  their 
own  creative  talen^  to  work,  not  only  in  music,  but 
in  the  other  arts  as  well.  To  wish  for  a  general  stu- 
dent retuissance  is  to  ignore  the  broad  and  varied 
nature  of  this  institution,  but  to  hope  for  more  op- 
portunities for  the  display  of  student  works  in 
Iitj?rattu:e,  art,  and  music  is  to  a^  v«ry  little. 

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r«4»AY,  MAY  l|^ll^7       , , 

Annual  Capers  Event 

The  Carolina  Playmakers  will 
hold  then-  asnaal  Ca^p  Saturday 
night.  May  18,  aUMO  p.m.  ift  the 
Pl^^malcers  TheatcF  The  public  is 
invited  free  of  chargOi  to  the  dra- 
matic group's  aiAiih  |ftlri<s)|u«  hi 
Its  pSirt  season  s  program. 

Titles  of  the  skits  include,  "Four 
on  a  Brae,"  ''Hedda  Goblin,"  and 
"Strangler  in  the  Sand."  The  pro- 
gram is  written,  xllreeted,  and  act- 
ed by  students  who  have  worked 
on  the  Playmakers'  productions 
during  the  year.  In  charge  of  the 
evening's  perforinajice  are  Miss 
Nancy  Christ  of  ISfewirk,  N.J.,  and 
Ted  Parker,  of  Clinton. 

Following  the  skits  will  be  the 
presentation  of  a9tard»  by  Samuel 
Selden,  Director  of  the  Playmakers 
and  Chairman  of  ■  the  Department 
of  Eh-amatic  Art  Mr.  Selden   will 
present     the     Playmakers     Mask! 
Awards,   Master  Awards,  Alumnal  \ 
Award,  and  the  J(*eph  D.  Feldman  | 
Award  in  PlaywTfting.  I 

ClASSIFiED  ADS 

GOOD  USED  KENMORE  VACU- 
um  cleaner— $25.  Call  9-6621  be- 
tween 1  &  3  p.m. 

FOR  SALE:  HARNEY  DAVIDSON 
165  motorcycle.-  Excellent  con- 
dition. Call  Ed^fiutchins  8-9053. 


THI  DAILY   TAt   HEK 


PA9%  mm 


Sctbei  Appointed 

student  Body  President  Sonny 
Evans  announced  £he  appointmeBt 
of  Arthur  Sobel  as  the  new  Chair- 
man of  the  Elections  Board  to  re- 
place Ralph  Cummiugs  in  that  posi- 
tion. 

In  aniMnincin?  the  appointment. 
Evans  said  that  Sobel"  brings  to  the 
'Board  two  years  of  experience  and 
a  great  understanding  of  the  prob- 
lems which  face  the  Board  with 
each  election. 

I  have  a  great  deal  deal  of  faitih 
in  his  leader^hiip  and  administra- 
tive abilities  and  I  know  that  he  will 
do  a  fine  job  next  year,"  the  student 
body  president  said  in  conrfusion. 

Other  members  appointed  to  the 
board  were:  Ra^ph  Cummings,  Tom 
Overman,  Bob  Furtado,  Judy  Davis, 
Wajme  Anderson,  Dick  FYazier, 
Susan  Mayhue.  John  Minter,  Tog 
Sandn^.  David  Sloan.  Denton  Lotz, 
Leon  Holt,  Ed  Rmvland,  and  Libby 
Straugn. 


Covering  The  University  Campus 


EDITOftiAL  WRITERS  MEET 

Harry  Golden,  editor  of  the 
Carolina  Israelite,  will  be  the  fea- 
tured speaker  Saturday  night  at 
the  concluding  banquet  of  the 
eighth  annual  Carolina  Eklitorial 
Writers  Conference  meeting  here 
this  weekend. 

The  two-day  conference  begin- 
ning Friday  will  bring  together 
representatives  of  the  state's  pews^ 
papers. 


i  ADMir^TRATlON   COURSE 

I      Graduation     exercises     for     the 
j  third  annual  municipal  adminia-lra- 
!  tion    course    at    the    Institute    of 
I 'Government  here  will  be  held  Sat- 
j  urday    morning    at    11:45    in    the 
I  Joseph  Palmer  Knapp  Building. 
{     Highlighting   the   exercises  will 
I  be    a   speech   by   Gen.   James   R. 
Townsend,  Greensboro  city  manag- 
er,  and  the   presentation   of   the 
George  C.  Franklin  Award  to  the 
most  outstanding  graduate  of  the 
course. 
BAND  PARTY 

The  University  Band  will  hold 
its  spring  picnic  at  Hogan's  Lake 
Saturday.  All  members  driving 
cars  and  all  members  and  dates 
wishing  rides  have  been  requested 
to  meet  behind  Hill  Hall  at  5 
p.m. 
BAKE  SALE 

Alpha  Gamma  Delta  sorority  will 
sponsor  a  bake  sale  today  starting 
at  9:30  a.m.  at  the  Electric  Con-i 
stniction  Co.  An  announcement 
stated  that  proceeds  from  the  sale 
will  be  donated  to  the  Cerebral 
Palsy  fund. 
ROTC   SALUTED 

UNC's  Naval  ROTC  unit  will  be 
featured  on  ABC's  radio  show, 
"Navy    Hour,"    Saturday    at    1:05 


EASTWOOD  LAKE 

NOW  OPEN 

Swimming  -:-  Fishing 

Sandy  Beach 

Relax  And   Enjoy  The  Summer   Sun 
First  Left   Turn    Past  Brad/s 


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5 

9 

10 


ACROSS 

Co<l  or 

Ann 

Equipment 

Mansion 

A  <y!  limed 

name 
12  Bury 
1.1  Middle 

14  Throw 

15  H«wk 
parrM. 

16  Exrla- 
mation 

IT  Public 

notire 
18  God  of 

flocks 

19.  Bog: 

20.  Occur  ., 

23.  Poet 

24.  Rests 

26.  Social  group 
28  Expressed 
^1  Dned   i^rass^ 
32  Cherished 

animal  ■ 
M.  Music  not* 
34.  Man's 

nickname 
3.%  Swiss  nver  * 
.16.  Enjirrossed 
38  A   U.  S. 

Pre.sident 

40.  Boat  crane 

41.  Doctrine 

42.  Abrasive     '  ■ 
material 

41  Teutonic 
character 
44  Facilitate 
DOWN 
l.St.  Laur-    •/ 
ent's 
country 

2  In<?ect* 

3  Writer 
of  verse 

"  h^ 


4.  Mistake 

5.  Street 
urchin 

6.  Charles 
L«mt> 

T  Hiplp 
T8  Slice  of 
-  baron 

,9.  Book  of 
the  BiUe 

11.  Booth 

Ham|>> 

■hire 

town 

1*  Vitality 
19.  Speedy 

21.  Entreat 

22.  Enclosure 


airniTO  D3r?3sa 
r3n![5vra      rill? 


23.  Man's 
nick- 
name 

«5  Place 

26.  De- 
fraud 

2T  Scal- 
ing 
de- 
vice 

39.  Domin- 
tovi 

30.  Short, 
simple 
song 

32.  Pairtieii 

35.  So  be  it 
*  36.  Incarnation    40.  English 
of  Vishnu  river 


Tsot^rtey'*  Aaa'wor 
37.  Birds  as 

aciasa 
S9.  Father  of 

liMivcnii  </ 
<Babyl.> 


Warnocic  To  Speak 

Professor    G.    J.    Wamock     of 

Magdalen  College,  Oxford,  England 

j  will    speak    on   the    topic    "Sights 

I  and  Sounds"  in  the  Faculty  Lounge 

i  of  the  Morehead  building  tonight 

at  8  p.m. 

'  Professor  Warnock's  address  is 
part  of  a  two  day  program  whch 
is  being  sponisored  .lointly  by  the 
;  Philosophy  departments  of  Duke 
',  University  and  the  University  of 
i  North  Carolina. 

On  Saturday.  May  18.  Professor 
Wamock  will  speak  in  the  Philoso- 
phy Seminar  room  of  the  West 
Duke  Building  on  E^st  Duke  cam- 
pus concerning  "Matter  and  Ma- 
terial Things."  The  address  will 
begin  at  3  p.m.  in  the  afternoon. 


p.m.  over  WTIK  in  Durham. 
FIRST   PLACE 

Ten  cadets  compoii'ing  the  Naval 
ROTC  Rifle  Team  here  received 
medals  this  week  for  their  first- 
place  win  in  regional  rifle  com- 
petition among  NROTC   units. 

Team  members  are  E.  W.  Bulch- 
art,  Greensboro,  captain;  S.  G. 
Putnam  Jr.,  Washington,  D.  C;  D. 
G.  Johnson,  Walnut  Cove;  F.  C. 
Pofcher,  Mt.  Pleasant,  S.  C;  A.  A. 
Huftchison,  W5nston-Salem;  F.  E. 
WirkUs  Jr.,  Baltimore,  Md.;  M.  L. 
Collins,  High  Point;  D.  P.  L.  Doo- 
ley,  Raleigh;  S.  S.  Girard,  Gastonia; 
and  D.  L.  Murphy,  Slokesdale. 

Capt.  A.  M.  Patterson,  USN, 
commanding  officers  of  the  Naval 
ROTC  MAit  at  Chapei  Hill,  preheat- 
ed the  medals  at  a  noon  cereraony. 
The  rifle  team  is  coached  by,.1dfts- 
ter  Sgt.  William  H.  Lanier,  O^lkDD, 
of  Boynton  Beach,  Fla.  ^> 

LECTURE  TOUR  ' 

Dr.  B.  L.  Ullman,  Kenan  pro- 
fessor and  head  of  the  Depl  of 
Classics  has  left  Chapel  HilT  for 
a  lecture  tour  abroad. 

On  Hay  9  and  10  he  lectured  at 
the  University  of  Stockholm  and 
will  speak  on  May  27  and  28  at  the 
University  of  Fribourg  in  Switzer- 
land. He  will  then  lecture  at  Uni- 
versity College,  London  Univer- 
sity. 

After  this  seriesp  of  lectures, 
Dr.  Ullman  will  proceed  to  Italy 
for  further  research  especially  in 
the  libraries  in  Rome  and  Flor- 
ence. 

Dr.  'Ullman's  lectures  abroad 
will  be  on  "The  Last  Fifty  Years 
in  Medieval  and  Classical  Studies" 


and    "The    Transmission    of    the 

Texts  of  Catullus". 

WUNC-TV 

Today's  schedule  for  WUNC-TV, 
the  University's  educational    tele- 
vision station,  is  as  follows: 
12r45 — Music. 

1:00— Today  on  the  Farm. 

1:30— Engineering  Visits. 

5:15 — Music. 

5  30 — Opera  History. 

6:00— Magic  Lantern. 

6:15— News  and  Safety. 

6:30— Dreams  Come  True. 

7:00— Scrence  Fair. 

7:30— Making  Musk. 

8:0a-*now  Your  Schools. 

8:30— Prelude. 

0:00— Racing  Heritage. 

9:30— Miracle  (rf  the  Can. 
10:00— Final  Edition. 


Hero 


(Continued  from  page  1) 
Britain,   and    cSwerfully   ending   his 
journey  in  the  adjoining  county  of 
Chatham. 

".\s  a  botanist,  he  was  familiar 
with  the  works  of  the  famoiLs  botan- 
iists.  Andre  Michaux  and  his  son. 
Francois  Andre  Miebaux,  who  had 
made  a  number  of  tours  through 
Western  North  Carolina,  from  1789 
to  1802;  and  were  pirofoundly  im- 
(prcssed  with  the  height  of  the  peaks 
in  that  region.  It  is  saki  that  in  June, 
1789,  tJhe  elder  Michaux  climbed  the 
"Yellow  Mountain"  (perhaps  Roan), 
jubilantly  sang  The  Marseillaise, 
'and  expressed  the  extravagant  con- 
victton  that  thi.<;  peak  was  "la  plus 
haut  montaqne  de  toote  d'Ameri- 
que  Septentrionale"  (the  highest 
peak  on  the  American  continent)." 


With  this  ad  and  $1.00  WailM- 
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member  of  your  family  en* 
BX10    Inch    silvertene    portrait. 

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Waller  Studio 

343  W.  Main  At  5  Pts. 

Durham,  N.  C. 

Durham's  Only  Down  Town 

6ro«nd  Floor  Studio 


WE'LL  BUY  ALL 
YOUR  OLD  BOOKS 

•  Live  Texts 

We  pay  top  prices  for  texts 
that  will   be   used   again   at 

U.N^. 

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We'll  search  the  market  for 
a  spot  to  salvage  some  of 
your  loss  when  a  text  is 
dropped. 

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The  next  fellow  that  comes  j 
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CHAPEL  HILL  BARBER  SHOP 

SATURDAY -MAY  18 

Meef  Bill  Colville . . . 

(Manager) 

We  are  happy  to  announce  the 
opening  of  the  Chapel  Hill  Bar- 
ber Shop,  owned  and  managed 
by  Bill  Colville.  Mr.  Colville  has 
been  a  practicing  barber  in 
Chapel  Hill  for  ten  years,  being 
associated  with  the  Village  Bar- 
BiLL  COLVILLE  ber   Shop,   and    more    recently 

with  the  University  Barber  Shop.  Prior  to  that  time  he  resided  in 
Raleigh,  N.  C.  * 

Mr.  Colville  feels  that  the  people  of  Chapel  Hill  need  a  bar- 
ber shop  thelt  offers  them  ample  parking  space  for  their  cars  so 
that  they  may  visit  him  without  the  necessity  of  walking  several 
blocks  from  a  parking  space,  if  they  are  lucky  enough  to  find  one. 
He  promises  to  continue  the  high  type  of  service  that  has  be- 
come a  byword  with  him  in  his  work  in  Chapel  Hill. 


GIVEN   AWAY   FREE 
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OPEN:  8:30  -  5:30  M6nday  through  Saturday 

1 13  W.  FRANKLIN  STREET 

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z' 


House 

(Continued  from  page  1) 

His  professional  ass>3ciatidns  in- 
clude the  American  Philological 
Assoc.,  Archeological  Institute  of 
America  and  the  Hellenic  Society 
in  England. 

The  Chancellor's  April  report  to 
Pres.  Friday  included  the  name  of 
Gordon  W.  Blackwcll,  Kenan-  Prof, 
of  Sociology  who  resigned  as  of 
June  4  to  accept  appointment  as 
Chancellor  at  the  Woman's  Col- 
lege. 

Also  designated  to  resign  this 
year  were  James  Quinter  Wenger, 
Asst.  Prof,  in  the  School  of  Indus- 
try who  "resigned  to  take  advan- 
tage of  greater  financial  opportam- 
ities  in  the  New  York  area;  and 
Emmanuel  Gitlin,  Asst.  Prof,  in 
the  I>epartment  of  Religion,  who 
resigned  to  accept  a  position  at 
the  Perkins  Sd»«»l  of  Theology  at 
Southern  Methodist  University. 

Not  listed  in  the  report  was  the 
resignation  of  Dr.  William  Poteat, 
wbo  anniHinced  his  resignation  ef- 
fective September  for  a  position 
elsewhere. 

Leaves  of  absence  were  recom- 
mended in  the  Chanceltor's  report 
fof  the  following  members  during 
the  1967-58  academic  year: 

F.  Furton  Jones,  to  study  at  the 
Institute  of  Advanced  SttKJies  at 
Princeton;  John  S.  Cleyten,  t<o  ac- 
cept a  Danforth  Foundation  Grant 
for  study  at  Emory  University; 
Robert  A.  Pratt,  to  accept  an  invi- 
tation to  puri'ue  research  at  the 
Institute  of  Advanced  Studies  at 
Princeton. 

Edgar  Thorne,  to  continue  hi.s 
work  toward  a  Ph.D.  degree  at 
Harvard;  Gordon  Fyfe,  to  continue 
work  toward  a  Ph.D.  degree  at 
Syracuse  University;  John  Ehle,  to 
accept  a  Visiting  Associate  Profes- 
sorship at  New  York  University; 
Jobs  Gillin,  to  accent  a  VisitiAg 
profeswr'Hiip  at  CiilumlMa  Uwvw- 
sity. 


SENOIR 


N. 


TODAY    AND     TOMORROW    ONLY! 


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SENIORS: 

This  is  our  way  of  expressing  our  gVatitude  to  you  for  your  patronage  during 
your  four  years  at  the  University  of  Nor  th  Caroh'na.  We  want  to  take  this  oppor- 
tunity to  wish  you  all  the  luck  that  you  ca  n  possibly  have.  We,  the  University  and 
Chapel  Hill  will  all  miss  you  very  much.  We  hope  that  you  will  come  back  and 
visit  us  often  in  the  future,  to  relive  some  old  memories.     . 

Bob  Cox  -  Monk  Jennings 


PA99  MIM 


THi  DAILT  TAR  flltL 


FRIDAY,  MAY  17,  ^H7 


State  High  School  Track  Meet  To 
Get  Underway  Here  This  Morning 


At  11  a.m.  today  on  Fetzer  Field 
cindermen  from  twenty-nine  North 
Carolina  high  schools  will  begin 
participation    in    the    State    High 


WHY 

Throw  Away  Those 
Old  Worn-Out  Slacks? 

Let  us  convert  them  inte  b*r- 
muda  shorts.  We  will  take  out 
the  pleats,  and  mdk*  you  a 
real  ivy  league  pair  of  ber- 
mwdas,  complete  with  back- 
strap.  All  at  a  price  so  low 
that  you  won't  believe  it. 

PETE 

THE   TAfLOR 

"Specializing  in 

Ivy  Leagueixing" 


School  Track  Championships. 

This  morning  there  will  be  qual- 
ifying trials  in  the  high  and  low 
hurdles,  and  the  100  and  220  yard 
yard  dashes.  The  finals  will  be 
this  afternoon,  starting  with  the 
field  events  at  2  o'clock.  The  track 
finals  will  begin  with  the  high 
hurdles  at  3.  The  last  event,  the 
mile  relay,  is  on  tap  to  start  at 
4:20. 


BRUSH  UP 
WITH 

College 
Outlines 

New  And  Used 

The  Intimate  Bookshop 

305  East  Franklin  Street 

Open  Till  10  P.  M. 


IMPROVE  YOUR  GOLF 


At 


Westwood  Golf  Course 


9  PAR-3  HOLES 


OPEN: 


DAY  AND  NIGHT 


PARWAY    DRIVING    RANGE 
AND  MINATURE  COURSE 


HILLSBORO  RO. 


DURHAM 


ICE 


The  Rock  Pile 

(Carlton's) 

Now  Offers 

CUBE  ICE 

7  FOR  EVERY  NEED 


Small,  Medium  and  Large  Bags 


'c^ 


Carolina  coach  Dale  Ranson  said, 
"I  am  very  glad  that  we  have  the 
job  of  being  host  to  such  a  fine 
group  of  trackmen  and  I  only  hope 
that  they  will  all  come  to  Caro- 
lina." The  Tar  Heels  now  have 
many  state  high  school  champions 
on  the  squad.  All-American  runner 
Jim  Beatty  was  at  one  time  the 
high  school  champ  in  the  mile  as 
was  freshman  star  Cowles  Liipfert. 

Jim  Moss,  Carolina's  dash  man, 
was  state  champ  m  the  100  and 
220.  Middle-distance  star  Dave 
Scurlock  was  title  holder  ip  the 
440  and  the  88a  Louis  Glascock  is 
another  Tar  Heel  who  held  double 
honors  in  high  school.  The  speedy 
freshman  holds  the  state  high 
school  record  in  the  low  hurdles, 
and  he  tied  the  state  record  in  the 
highs. 

In  today's  meet,  there  will  be 
awards  given  to  the  top  four 
places.  There  will  also  be  a  team 
award.  La=(t  year  Myers  Park  of 
Charlotte    took  team   honors. 


Yank  Swinging  Not  Coniined 
To  American  League  Parks 


Yanks  Win  As  Turley  Blanks  As 


NEW  YORK— <AP)  —  A  husky 
delicatessen  owner  today  accused 
New  York  Yankee  outfielder  Hank 
Bauer  of  belting  him  one  in  the 
nose  as  Bauer  and  five  of  his  team- 
mates were  living  it  up  in  the  wee 
hours  at  the  Copacabana  night 
club. 

"They  were  feeling  no  pain, 
either,"  claimed  the  alleged  victim. 
20-pound  Edwin  Jones,  40,  who  ad- 
mittedly had  enjoyed  a  few  drinks 
himself.  He  wound  up  with  a  brok- 
en nose. 

However,  Bauer  denied  that  he 
hit  Jones  and  no  formal  police 
complaint  was  lodged  again^  the 
baseball  player.  Indeed,  as  the  dust 
settled,  Jones  said  of  the  solid 
single  to  his  schnozz: 


But  Yankee  fans  die  hard.  Jones, 
after  his  broken  nose  was  patched 
at  a  hospital,  shrugged  off  his  law- 
yer's signs  and  said. 

"I'll  still  go  to  the  Yankee  games 
....  I've  been  a  Yankee  fan  since 
I  was  a  kid  ....  I  love  the  guy, 
anyway.  I  ain't  going  to  make  a 
case  out  of  it." 


NEW  YORK— (AP)— Bob  Tor- 
ley,  a  last  hour  pitching  replace- 
ment for  Whitey  Ford,  threw  a 
four-hiter  at  Kansas  Cit)^  last 
night  as  the  New  York  Yankees 
won  their  second  successive  3-0 
shutout  from  the  Athletics.  The 
victory  enabled  the  Yankees  to 
stay  within  a  half  game  of  the 
league-leading  Chicago  White 
Sox  who  whipped  Washington 
8-3. 


Turley,  making  only  his  sec- 
ond start  of  the  season,  struck 
out  eight  and  walked  five.  He 
issued  two  of  his  passes  with  no- 
body  out  in  the   second   inning 


but  a  triple  play,  started  by  Tor- 
ley  himself,  on  ^BPPOS'ns  pitcher 
Alex  Kellner's  aMentpted  sacri- 
fice bunt,  pull«d  him  out  of  oi»« 
of  the  two  jam*  he  was  In. 


The  Division  of  Health  Affairs  of 
the  University  of  North  Carolina 
was  estaiblished  for  the  punjiMse  of 
integrating  and  correlating  the  work 
of  the  Schools  of  Dentistry,  Medi- 
cine, Nursing,  Pharmacy,  Public 
Heakh  and  the  North  Carolina 
Memorial    Hosjiital. 


TODAY  -  SATURDAY 

HUMAN  IN  SHAPE 
ONtlT!   "-         -^"^ 


"I  don't 
from." 


know  where    it   came 


He  added  that  he  had  been  told 
!  Bauer  delivered  the  blow. 

"I  didn't  hit  him,"  Bau^r  insist- 
ed. He  admitted  he  had  toyed  with 
I  the  idea  after  someone  in  Jones' 
I  party   threw  out  a  nasty  remark. 

I  "Nobody  ever  touched  nobody.' 
I  was  the  comment  of  Yankee  catch- 
er Yogi  Berra,  one  of  the  cleanup 
men  in  the  exchange  of  words  be- 
tween Bauer  and  Jones. 
I  Jones*  lawyer,  Anthony  Zingales, 
stop  by  Dean  Mackie's  office  to  j  nevertheless  declared:  "We  are 
pick  them  up,  reminding  them  '.  proceeding  with  a  civil  suit  against 
that  the  pictures  have  been  paid  Bauer  and  the  Copacabana  for 
for  from  initiation  fees.  $250,000." 


OLD  WELL   PICTURES 

Jerry  Oppenheimer,  recently 
elected  president  of  the  Old  Well, 
said  yesterday  that  Old  Well  pic- 
tures are  now  available  in  306 
South  Building. 

He  urged  all  recent  initiates  to 


Fencing  Tonight  At  G.M. 

Tonight  at  seven  in  Graham  Memorial  the  Carolina  Fencing  Club 
will  hold  their  final  match  of  the  series  of  three.  The  weapon  will 
b«  duelling  sword  and  the  entries  thus  far  are:  Jantes  Williams,  Neal 
Kelly,  Don  Cerbin,  Mike  Collins,  Bob  Clay,  George  Haddad,  Jim  Proc- 
tor, Bill  Mudd,  Ah  Deal,  Paul  Clark  and  Frank  Parker. 

Last  Friday  evening  in  the  sabre  competition  Al  Deal  placed 
first  with  eight  wins  and  no  losses.  Bill  Mudd  was  second  with  seven 
victories  and  one  loss  and  in  third  place  to  complete  the  trophy 
winners  In  sebre,  was  Jim  Proctor  witt»  a  five  won-tt»ree  lost  record. 
The  officials  for  tonight's  intramural  individual  fencing  competition 
in  ep««  are  Luke  Forest  of  the  grad  school  in  Physics  and  Pebley 
Barrow,  fencing  coach.  Tonight's  winners  will  receive  trophies  for 
the  first  three  places  and  the  public  is  cordially  Invited  to  see  the 
cenvpetition  b*ginnni9  at  7  p.m.  at  Graham  Memorial. 


A  Big  Weekend  For 
The  Teams  At  NCAA 


XONS' 

TURNED 

ROCK-N-ROLL 

WILD! 


NEW    YORK— (AP)— Three    col- 
lege baseball  conference  champion- 


MILTON'S 
GRADUATION 

GIVE-A-WAY 


Dan  River  baby  cord  trousers — 
regularly  $5.9S  —  1  pr.  for 
$4.d&— 2  for  $7.50. 

Shoe  heaven — entire  stock  rub- 
ber soled  cordovan  shoes  — 
fully  leather  lined,  reduced 
from  $20.00  to  unbelievable 
$10.»9. 

Handsewn  calfskin  loafers  re- 
duc*d  from  $11.95  to  $8.99 

Many  ether  out  of  this  world 
spAcials 


Clotbins  Cupboard 


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«TEVBK«*  8HBPH8RX) 


ships,  each  carrying  an  automatic 
entry  into  the  National  Collegiate 
Tournament,  may  be  decided  this 
weekend.  Four  already  have  been 
i«ttled  and  one  tournament  l>erth 
was  left  very  much  in  doubt  when 
the  Southeastern  Conference  said 
it  had  no  represen-tative  team  to 
play  in  the  tournament. 

The  NCAA  championship  will  in- 
volve from  24  to  32  teams,  depend- 
ing on  the  number  of  at-Iarge  en- 
tries invited  by  district  selection 
committees.  Twelve  major  confer- 

.  ence  champions  qualify  automati- 
cally. District  playoffs  will  reduce 

j  this  field  to  eight  for  the  College 
World  Series  at  Omaha,  Neb., 
June  8-13. 

Duke  captured  the  Atlantic 
Coast  Conference  title  this-  week 
when  Maryland  knocked  Carolina 
out  of  a  chance  to  tie.  The  Blue 
Devils,  whose  coach,  Ace  Parker, 
figures  they  have  a  good  chance 
for  the  national  title,  are  slated 
to  play  in  the  four-team  District 
3  tournament  at  Gastonia,  N.  C. 
May  31-June  3.  but  the  other  thrpe 
entries  still  are  uncertain. 

Georgia  Tech.  Southeastern  Con- 
ference champion,  declined  to  en- 
ter because  too  many  of  its  play- 
ers were  ineligible  as  four-year 
men  who  had  played  varsity  ball 
as  freshmen.  Runner-up  Alabama 
has  a  Far  Eastern  trip  scheduled. 
Mississippi  State  is  a  possible  SEC 
representative. 

George  Washington,  which  won 
its  second  straight  Southern  Con- 
ference title  with  a  17-2  season 
record,  hasn't  indicated  it  will  en- 
ter. The  Colonials  stayed  out  last 
year  because  of  an  examination 
conflict. 

Other  qualifiers  so  far  are  Tex- 
as 17-4,  Southwest  Conference 
champion  for  the  31st  time,  and 
Colorado  State  15-3,  qualifier  for 
the  national  tournament  for  the 
eighth  time. 


Rosy  Enlists 

DURHAM,  N.C. —(AP)_  Caro- 
lina's    All-America     b^ketball 
.  atar,  Lennie  Rosenbluth,  enlist- 
ed in  the  Army  Reserve  yester- 
day. 

Rosenbluth  said  the  enlistment 
would  not  interrupt  his  basket- 
baU  career.  The  lanky  ace  led 
Carolina  to  an  unbeaten  season 
and  national  championship  this 
year. 


MEGS  MLMER  •  ALLISON  HAYES  AUTUMN  RUSSEU 

,     _,     .    _  _        trjpvn  wnniirTinii 

-  PLUS  - 

MEDiCALCHAMBER  OF  HORRORS! 


starring  tha  platimim  powerhouse! 

1  MAMIE  VAH  DOREN 

NOW   PLAYING 


Carolina 


JULIAN'S 

DACRON  AND  COTTON 
"WORSTED-WEAVE"  SUITS 

WILL  WASH  AND  HANG  DRY   (3  HOURS)  FOR  WEAR 

WITHOUT  PRESSING  EXCEPT  FOR  OCCASIONAL 

"TOUCH-UP" 


.it>iVICTOI>iO«r  ANN  DOWN  CHARLOTTE  AUSTIN 

Wi.t'.tti  b{  U^WOMi  T  MARCUS '  ProdioKl  b;  SIMJUUMAN 


Howard  Johnson  Restaurant 

'  STUDENT    SPECIALS 

Barbecued    Chicken 
Choice  Steak  Sandwiches 

2:00-    5:00  P.M. 
8.00-11:00  P.M. 
landmark  For  Hungry  Tarheels" 


SERVED 


Attract! <^e    patterns 
normally  to  be  expected 
in   superfine   worsteds   are   per- 
fectly   adapted    in    these    blends   of 
imported  cotton  and  dacron  in  discreet 
screen    dot   and    striped    patterns.    All    are 
tailored    in    the   three-button,    single   breasted 
model    with    lap    seams,    regular    pockets,    and 
hook  vent.  Plain  front,  slim  cut  trousers. 


Desert 
Tan 

Olive 

Dark 

Blue 

Mixture 

Stripes 

And  Solids 

$42.95 

Covert 
Mixture 

Black                      Black 

Faced 

Brown                     0*'ve 

Flannel 
Gray 

Julian' 


D'ive  with  core  .  . .  everywhere !_ 


More  to  be  provd 
o/-The  B*l  Air 
Sport  Co«p«  mitk 
Body   by  FMmc. 


laves  to  cut  loose  and  cover  the  miles! 


If  you're  looking  for  a  real  "escape  artist," 
a  car  that  loves  to  step  out  and  get 
away  from  it  all— well,  it  just  happens 
that  Chevy  was  bom  with  that  urge. 

If  there  ever  was  a  car  that  loved  to 
cut  loose  and  cover  the  miles,  it's  this 
one.  Yet  it's  90  easy  to  handle  that  it 
even  makes  city  traffic  seem  a  bit 
lighter  and  parking  pkices  a  bit  bigger. 

Chevy's  pretty  easygoing  out  on  the 
highway  too.  Not  pokey.  Far  from  it. 
You  find,  for  example,  there  isn't  a  hill 
around  that  can  make  it  breathe  hard 


—not  with  Chevrolet's  high-perform- 
ance V8  on  the  pulling  end.  You've  got 
up  to  245*  horsepower  here  for  the 
biggest  helping  of  driving  pleasure?  found 
in  the  low-price  field! 

Chevy's  new  Positraction  rear  axle 
(optional  at  extra  cost)  adds  stiU  more 
pleasure.  It  delivers  greater  power  to 
the  wheel  that  grips,  not  the  wheel  that 
slips.  You  have  surer  control  and  better 
tracticwi  on  any  road  surface. 

Stop  by  your  Chevrolet  dealw's 
before  another  good  driving  day  goes  by. 


GET  A  WINMNC  DEAL  CM 
THE  CHAMPION! 


•OptJooBi  at  axtra  cost.  270-h.p. 

IU8tis>«rtormai>c«  engm*  mfo 

awatebt*  li  Mtni  coat. 


Only  franchwcd  Chevrolet  dealers 


dispiay  this  £aniou8  trademark 


See  Your  Local  Authorized  Chevrolet  Dealer 


•Mu«a|tefij.-'^r 


m.c. 


'»^i 


WEATHER 

*'«rtly  CkHHtY  •nd  Warmer. 


2r()  e  3)atty  i|  ^at  Med 


CoTBptete  (ifO  Wire  Seme* 


CHAPEL  HILL,  NORTH  CAROLINA,  S«"URDAY,  MAY  li,  1957 


Tom  Lambeth  Named 

GM  Director 


/  By.  PRINGLE  PIPKIN 

Thomas  Willis  Lambeth  was  na- 
med to  repiace  Miss  Linda  Mann  as 
the  acting  director  of  Graham 
Memorial.  Sam  Magill.  director  of 
student  activities,  .announced  v-es- 
terday. 

The  announcement  came  after 
Lambeth  had  been  recommended 
by  the  Gra^aam  Memorial  Board  of 
Directors  for  the  position,  and  the 
recomraendation  had  been  approv- 
ed by  Chancellor  House. 

Action  on  naming  a  permament 
director  was  postponed  pending  an 
informal  review  of  the  Graham 
Memorial  situation  by  the  incom 
ing  Chancellor  Aycock,  according 
to  Magill. 

Still  being  actively  considered 
fcr  the  position  are:  William  Rion. 
James  Burgoyne.  Charlie  Gibs(>n 
and  Chester  A.  Berry.  1 

Magill  went   on  to  say   that  the  ' 
hiring  of  a   permanent  GM   Direc- 
tor must  wait  until  the  role  which   Ject   in   the   early  summer.    He   is 
the  student  wUl  play  in  the  future   expected  to  determine  the  advisi- 
has  been  decided  by  the  incoming    bility  of  hiring  a  permament  direc- 
Chancellor  Aycock.  'tor.  his  status  in  the  University,  and 

The   incoming  Chancellor  is  ex  |  the    prospect    of    getting   a    larger 
pected  to  begin  work  on  this  pro-  i  student  union   building. 


TOM   LAMBETH 

.  .  .   ne.ic  director 


All  the  various  aspects  of  GM 
program  will  be  reviewed. 

During  the  past  twenty-five  years 
there  have  been  15  acting  directors, 
Jim  Wallace  held  the  position  for 
the  iongest  time.   1953-56. 

Student  Body  president  Sonny 
Evaijs  said  that  the  quei-tion  was 
originally  raised  about  the  status 
of  the  student  union  when  the  GM 
Board  of  Directors  began  to  try 
to  find  a  permanent  director. 

Tom  Lambeth,  who  will  assume 
his  duties  the  first  of  June,  will 
enter  the  graduate  school  to  study 
history.  This  year  he  will  graduate 
from  UNO  after  majoring  in  hi.-,- 
tory. 

During  the  past  .vear  Lambeth 
"  f  s  a  member  of  the  Golden 
Fleece,  the  President  of  Graham 
Memorial  Activities  Board,  an  ac- 
tive member  of  the  Student  Party, 
a  member  of  the  Old  Well  and  the 
Holy  Grail. 

"Tom's  experience  as  a  student 
here  in  running  the  Gritham  Mem- 
orial program,  and  his  recognized 
abilities  make  him  a  capable  person 
to  guide  the  GM  ufogram  until  we 
(See  LAMBETH.  Page  3) 


OMoor  Legislative  Meeting 
Under  Davie  Poplar  Ends  Year 


During  an  open-air  session  undej 

Davie  Poplar  the  Student  Legisla 

ture  Thursday  night   approved   all   scsdon  before  they  were  unseated 

of  Student  Body  President  Evans' 
appointments  for  student  govern- 
ment poc'itMns  except  those  for  one 
committee. 

The  Legiaittfure-  aA&o  |>os3ed- 
bills,  both  .Introduced  by  Bob  Car- 
ter. One  will  add  the  business  man 

ager    of    the    Carolina    Handbook 

to  the  present  membership  of  the   ture  representative  to  the  Carolina 


the  legislators  that  they  were  only       Members  of  the  University  Traf- 
allowed  one  unexcused  absence  per  \  fie  Committee  will  be:  Ralph  Cum- 

mings  (chairman),  Andrea  Stalvey, 
Erwin  Fuller  asked  if  the  Long  David  Mathews,  and  Jenky  Jenkins. 
Resolution  was  not  due  from  the  j  The  Campus-  Traffic  Board  will 
wa.vs  and  means  committee,  but  be:  Tom  Overman,  (chairman). 
Speaker  Furtado  said  the  meeting  |  Hu^h  Pritchett,  Bill  Kendall.  Louis 
was  a  .^pwL«H9iis9iiiii,  mi  the  bill  ■TetrHT;  Tom  Poole.  Norman  Kan- 
will  not  be  released  until  next  fall. '  tor.    Charles    Coley.    Pat    Gregory 

Speaker    Furtado    named    Tally  j  and    Sarah    Jane   Shaw. 
Eddings  to  be  the  Student  Legi:,la-  i      The   Honor  System   Commission 


Rush  Rules 
Announced 
For  Summer 

Rules  To  Apply   Till 
Start  Of  Orientation 

Summer  rush   rules   for  the   24 
social  fraternities  on  campus  have 
been  announced   by  Jen^   Oppen 
heimer.    chairman    of    the    Inter- 
fraternity  Council  Court. 
i      The  rules  will   apply   from   the 
end    of    this   spring    semester    un- 
,  til    the    beginning    of    orientation 
I  September  12. 

i      Summer    rushing    is    to    be    in- 
!  formal   and    the   rules   will    affecl 
'  only  those  men  who  have  not  at- 
tended    the    university    during    a 
formal   rush   period,  according  to 
Oppenheimer. 

"During  the  summer  the  above 
mentioned  men  may  not  eat.  sleep. 
!  or  drink  in  a  fraternity  house,  nor 
'  may  a  fraternity  or  individual 
I  fraternity  member  spend  money 
;  for  the  entertainment  of  such 
i  men  either  in  Chapel  Hill  or  the 
I  surrounding  areas".  Oppenheimer 
'  said. 

j      Penalty   for   infraction   of   these 
,  rules   will   be   suspension   of   rush 
j  privileges   for  a   period   to  be  de- 
j  cided   upon   by   the   LF.C.   Court. 
The  I.   F.   C.   adopted   these  reg 
ulations  May  13:  they  will  be  en- 
i  forced  by  the  summer  LF.C.  Court. 
'  Copies   of   the    rules   will   be   sent 
to    each    chapter,    and    it    should 
be     re-emphasized    that     the   fra-  ■ 
;  ternities    are    expected      to     keep  | 
j  within    the    spirit   as   well    as    tlie  I 
letter  of  these  regulations,  accord-  i 
in  Oppenheimer.  i 


GADFLY 

He's  a  lonely  beast  says  the  edi- 
on  page  two. 


OffietM  m  Graham   Memorial 


FOUR   PAGES  THIS  ISSUE 


Mi 


ond  Issue  Would  Place 
Two  New  Buildings  Here 

Renovafionis  Also 
On  Priority  Listing 


FOR  YWCA  HANDBOOK 


I'  To  Have  Co-editors 


It  wa.s  recently  announced  by  the  YWCA  that  Miois  Mary  Moore 
on  and  Miss  Martha  Fortune  will  serve  as  co-editors  for  the  YW 
ha  idbook  which  will  go  out  thijj  summer  to  all  of  next  year's  in- 
co  ling  coeds. 

Thi.s  is  the  first  time  for  seVeral  years  that  the  YW  ha^-  had  a 
ha  Idbook.  According  to  Miss  Mason,  the  Y  feels  that  other  campus 
ha  idbooks  do  not  have  the  space  to  give  the  incoming  coeds  the  pic- 
tufe  ot  all  activities  that  the  Y  sponsor^'  and  consequently  the  coeds 
ive  on  this  campus  with  little  or  no  idea  of  what  the  YW's  role 
them  is  on  the  campus. 

The  handbook,  according  to  the  editors,  will  contain  information 
al4»ut  what  each  committee  of  the  Y  does.  In  the  back  of  the  handbook.s 
1  be  detachable  interest  preference  cards  which  the  girls  can  mail 
to  the  Y.  This,  according  to  Misj  Fortune,  will  inable  the  Y  cabinet 
mbers  to  know  what  girls  are  interested  in  working  with  them 
their  phase  of  Y  work.  It  will  also  enable  the  Y  to  work  with  the 
incoming  girls  on  a   more   personal  basis. 

Both  editors  are  members  of  the  Y  cabinet.  Miss  Fortune  serves  as 
Pdblications  Board  representative,  and  Miss  Mason  as  publicity  chair- 
man. 

Miss  Fortune  is  from  Brevard  and  is  a  member  of  Alpha  Gamma 
Delta  sorority.  Mi^^s  Mason  is  from  Roanoke,  Va.,  and  is  a  member  of 
Al;>ha  Delta  Pi  sorority. 


a  I 
U4 


in 
m 
in 


publications   board. 


Quarterly  and   John  Brooks  to  re- 


The  second  bill  appropriated  $10   present  the  Legislature  on  the  Ca 
to  the  Womans  Residence  Council    rolina  Forum, 
to  pay  its  audit  fee  for  the  fiscal 
year  1956-57. 

Carter    i<aid   these   bills  correct 
ed  "oversights"   in  previous  legis- 


will    have    Charles    Huntington    as  j 
chairman.  The  other  members  are 
George    Ragsdale.    Glenn    Pickard. 
Gary  Cooper.  Ken  Hall.  Mason  Wil- 
The    appo-ntments    which    were ,  kins.  Tucker    Yates.  David   Evans, 

approved   by   the   Student  Legisla-   Hugh  Patterson   and  Charles  Ash- 

ture    are:    Summer  School      Mens   ford. 

Honor     Council.  Sandy     Saunders; 


Old  Well  Fix 

J»rry    Oppenheimar,     recently 

-•tectvd    |»r*»fd«nt      ef    rtt«      Old 

Well,    said    yesterday       that    Old 

Woll   pictures   are   now   available 

In   306   South    Building. 

Ho  urged  all  recent  initiates  to 
stop  by  Dean  Mackie's  office  to 
pick  them  up,  reminding  them 
that  the  pictures  have  been  paid 
for  from  initiation  fees. 


;  Progress  Made  Toward 
Partial  Disarmament 

WASHINGTON.    (AP>  — Harold  also  taking  part  in  the  conference 

1  E.     Sta.ssen      yesterday     reported  Stassen   said  a   plan     now     being 

I  fresh    progress   toward     an      Ea.st-  considered   would   call    for   mutual 

West  agreement  on  partial  disarm-  reductions    in    weapons,    manpow- 

ament.  er   and     defense     spending,     plus 

I      •JThere    is    no  question    that    we  aerial   inspection  of  defined  zones 

I  are"  closer  to  agreement  on  a  first  in   both   the   West  and   East.  | 

st«^.    a    small    cut    in    armanlerits.  '      Stressing    that    "many    difficult 

than  we  were  when  I   was  here  at  issues"    remain    to    be    settled,    he 

Easter  time."    the   administration's  said    he     was     "neither     optimistic  j 

disarmament    chief   said    upon    his  or  pessimistic."  But   it  was  at   this  ' 

arrival   by  plane   from   London.  point    that   he   commented    on    the 

Negotiations    with    Ru.ssian    rep-  progress  of  the  last  four  weeks. 

resentativcs    have    been    going    on 

in  the  British  capital  for  the  bet- 
ter part  of  nine  weeks.  Briti.sh. 
French  and  Canadian  officials  are 


,  ».         -ni.     *  -     u-ii  I    /  L  ^  I      The     remainder   includes-:      Don 

Ration.  The  two  bills  were  passed   (chairman).  Everette  James.  Henry  j  p^,^^^^^    ^^^^  ^^^.^    ^^^^,^^  p.^ 

-.    ...  -_ _  Harris.    Craven      Brewer,   Douglas 

Clark.  David  Evans,  and  Jeff  Hare. 
Nancy  Turner  will  be  the  repre- 
sentative of  the  Nuiving  School  on 
the  Woman's  Honor  Council. 

Andrea  Stalvey  will  be  the  see- 


by    "special   orders"   which   mean 
they  were  brought  to  a  vote  at  the 
same  meeting  at  which  they  were 
introduced  without  passing  through 
the  ways  and  means  committee. 
The  Legislature  returned  to  Pre- 


sident Evans  his  recommendations  retary-treasurer  of  the  student  body 
for  the  High  School  Honor  System  j  during  the  first  session  of  summer 
Committee.   .<so   he   could   give   the   school, 
matter  further  study.  i  -^ 

The  new  key  which  Speaker  ol 
the  Legislature  Don  Furtado  tried 
to  use  to  open  the  Hall  of  the  Phi- 
lanthropic Literary  Society,  the  re- 
gular meeting  place,  would  not 
work.  The  Legislature  then  met 
on  benches  near  Davie  Poplar. 

Miss  Julia  Ann  Crater,  chairman 
of  the  rules  committee,  reminded 


tman,  Allan  Pultz,  Dick  Robinson, 
Sue  Atchinson,  Doris  Peter,  Bobbi 
Madi.son.  Sarah  Van  Weyk,  Cindy 
Segraves  and  Betty  Kell. 

The  members  of  the  Victory  Vil- 
lage Affairs  Commission  are:  Al 
Alphin     (chairman),    Ernest    Aus- 


Editors   Meet   Here 


9  Appointed  To 
Ivans'  Cabinet 


(See  OUTDOOR.  Page  3) 


Founder's  Day,  Parties 
Mark  End  Of  Semester 


5  In'Ukited  By 
Honor  Society 

Five  seniors  and  three  graduate 
students  were  initiated  into  Kappa 
Tau  Alpha,  journalism  honor  so- 
ciety, Wednesday  evening  at  the 
home  of  Dean  Norvai  Neil  Lux- 
on  of  the  School  of  Journalism. 

Seniors  elected  are  Joy  W. 
Brown,  Myrtle  Beach.  S.  C:  Dor- 
othy Coplon.  New  Bern;  John  W. 
Kilgo  and  Donald  M.  Seaver.  Char- 
lotte, and  Carolyn  H.  Seyffert, 
New   Castle.  Pa. 

Kilgo  and  Seaver  hold  the  Gerald 
W.  Johnson  and  Louis  Graves 
Scholarships  and  Sanford  the 
Ashe vi lie  Qitizen-Times  Scholar- 
ship this  year. 

Students  'most  be  in  the  high- 
est ten  per  cent  academically  and 
must  have  at  least  an  over-all  B 
average  and  a  B  plus  in  journal- 
ism courses  to  be  eligible  for  the 
hoBor. 


By    SUE    ATCHISON 

MAY  15  was  Founder's  Day  for 
j  the  Alpha  Delta  Pis.  The  occasion 
{  was  celebrated  with  a  buffet  sup- 
i  per,  attended  by  present  actives, 
i  pledges   and   Chapel   Hill    alumni. 

The    supper    was    followed    with    a 

short    program    which    included    a 

reading  of     the     "Last   Will   and 

Testament"    and    the    "Prophecy" 

for  their  graduating  seniors. 
THE  ALPHA  GAMMA  DELTA'S 
I  were    busy    yesterday    selling    the 

cakes   and   cookies   that  they   and 

their     alumni     baked       Thursday 
I  evening.    The    proceeds    from    the 

sale  went   to   their   altruistic   pro- 
ject— the    fight     against    cerebral 

palsy. 
DURING  THE  PAST  two  weeks 

the  Chi   Omega's  have   been   busy 

entertaining.  On  Sunday.  May  5th, 

they  gave  a  tea  to  honor  the  fac- 
ulty and  then  later  in  the  week*  For  Commencement  Plays  I 


Delta  Theta's  took  a  serenading 
j  tour   around    campus   to   serenade 

the  girls  pinned  to  their  brothers 
i  Those   sprendaded   included:    Beth 

Buie,  Roberta  Chapin.  Susan  Don- 
j  aid,  Barbara  Johnson,  and  Fay 
j  Smith. 

RECENT  PFNNINGS  include: 
i  Barbara  Herr  to  Glenn  Holt;  Pat 
I  Wilson    a    Pi    Beta    Phi,    to    Jim 

Carraway    a    Pi    Kappa    Phi;    and 
I  Karen  Hansen  an  Alpha  Delta  Pi,  | 
I  to  Ken  Clark. 
j      WEDDING  BELLS  will  soon  be 

ringing  for  the  following  engaged 

couples:  Sherry  Puckett  an  Al  { 
^  pha  Gamma  Delta  engaged  to  Bob 

Ratledge  an,  Alpha  Kappa  Psi 
I  and    Bettina   Jinnette   engaged    to 

Phillip  Williamson. 


Tar  Heel  newspaper  editors 
will  meet  here  this  weekend  for 
the  eighth  annual  North  Carolina 
Editorial    Writers  Conference. 

The  conference  will  bring  to- 
gether the  state's  top  newspaper 
representatives  for  a  series  of 
panel  talks,  a  critique  of  editorial 
pages   and   a   business    session. 

Highlighting  the  session  held 
yesterday  was  a  panel  discussion 
last  night  on  the  topic,  "Three 
Years  After  the  May  17  Supreme 
Court  Decision — What  Next  in 
North  Carolina." 

Don  Shoemaker,  editor  of 
Southern  School  News,  Nashville, 


Tenn.,  moderated  the  discussion. 

This  morning  newspapers  and 
their  editors  will  hold  editorial 
critiques.  Editorials  will  be  cri- 
ticized by  groups  which  have  re- 
viewed samples  from  the  state's 
daily  and  non-daily  papers.  A 
business  session  will  be  held  this 
afternoon. 

State  Sen.  J.  Spencer  Bell  of 
Charlotte  will  be  featured  speak- 
er Sunday  at  a  Luncheon,  com- 
menting on  the  new  plan  to  study 
and  overhaul  the  state's  adminis- 
tration of  justice. 

Editor  Harry  Golden  of  the 
Carolina  Israelite  will  speak  to- 
night at  a  dinner. 


Nine  members  of  the  president- 
ial   cabinet    were    named    recently 
by  Student  Body 
Evans. 

Named  to  assist  the  president 
in  an  advisory  capacity  during 
Brooks.  Ralph  Cummings.  Whit 
the  coming  year  were:  John 
Whitfield,  David  Biren,  Al  Alphin. 
CarolVn  Wisler,  Betty  Huffman. 
Sarah  Van  Weyk  and  Gerry  Bou-> 
dreau. 

Upon  announcement  of  hLs  cab- 
inet  appointments,   Evans  said: 

"Each  individual  realizes  the 
potentialities  of  the  Cabinet  as 
the  executive  arm  of  the  presi- 
dent and  I  am  certain  that  their 
active  participation  next  year  will 
be  of  great  assistance  to  Student 
Government."  , 


President  Sonny  i  7  and  concludin 
second     session 


After  Waiting  Three  Years 

Report  From 


«dL<«)'->; 


A  »V  i 


Campus  Stores 


Try-outs  To  Be  Monday 


GM'S  SLATE 


The  following  activities  are 
scheduled  for  Graham  Memorial 
today: 

Faculty  fiewcomers,  8-12  p.m., 
Roland  f^i^har  Lounge  Nos.  1, 
2,  3,;  CiaM  Group,  11  a.m.,  Ro- 
land Parker  Lounge  No.  3  and 
Weodhevae  Conference  Room. 


they  gave   an    appetizer   party  for 
all  the  new  initiates  of  the  sorori- 
ties on  campus.  | 
TOMORROW  MORNING  the  Del-  j 
ta  Delta  Delta's  are  going  to  give  ' 
a    breakfast   honoring    their    grad- ' 
uating    seniors    and    members    of 
their  alumni.                                        j 
A    SENIOR    FAREWELL    party  I 
was  given  Wednesday  evening  by  i 
the   new   initiates  of  Pi    Beta   Phi 
i  for  the  graduating  members.  Dur- 1 
j  ing    the    evening   skits    were    pre- 1 
sented  by  the  undergraduate  metn-  i 
i  hers    and    each    graduating    senior  I 
I  was    presented    with    a    silver    Pi  I 
j  Beta  Phi  spoon. 
1      THURSDAY     NIGHT     the     Phi] 


Tryouts  for  two  one-act  plays 
which  will  be  presented  during 
Commencement  Week,  June  3.  will 
be  conducted  in  the  Playmakers 
Theater  Monday,  it  ^as  announced 
yesterday. 

Both  plays  have  been  produced 
on  the  Playmakers'  stage  in  the 
past,  the  announcement  said.  Miss 
Page  Williams'  "The  Spaceman 
Cometh"  will  repeat  it's  April  per 
formancc  with  the  same  cast. 

Parts  will  be  auditioned  for 
"Miss  Carrie,"  by  Mi»s  Kit  Single- 
ton Monday  afternoon.  The  play 
contains  parts  for  five  women  and 
one  man.  the  announcement  farth- 
er indicated. 


A  report  from  the  Campus 
Stores  Committee  yesterday  indi- 
cated that  the  Student  Govern- 
ment has  received  long-sought  in- 
formation concerning  breakdown 
spending  of  campus  stores  and 
enterprises. 

Over  a  period  of  several  years, 
student  government  here  has  at- 
tempted to  solicit  information  from 
campus  stores  concerning  the 
actual  breakdown  of  profits  in 
the  various  phases  of  these  enter- 
prises. 

Recently,  the  Campus  Stores 
Committee  was  supplied  with  the 
first  such  report  of  breakdown 
spending  in  the  long  history  of 
student  government  requests. 

The  report  of  the  committee  to 
Student  Body  President  Sonny 
Evans  indicated  that  from  total 
profits  derived  from  campus 
stores  which  include  the  Book  Ex 
change,  the  Scuttlebutt,  the  Cir 
cus  Room  in  the  Monogram 
Club,  the  Y  book  counter  and 
fountain  and  campus  vending  ma- 
chines, a  total  of  $45,000.  or  -'■j  ol 
the  profits,  were  turned  over  to 
the  Student  Aid  Division  to  be 
used  for  scholarships. 


A  total  of  $10,000  derived  from 

Scuttlebutt  and  ^  Monogram  Club 
.  exclusively,     was    earmarked     fof 

athletic    grants    and    aids,    the    re 

port  further  indicated. 
!  Of  the  entire  total  profit,  ap 
I  proximately  33%  was  meted  out 
\  for  improvement  and  operating  ex 
I  penses  of  the  enterprises  included 
Sonny  Evans  reported  .yesterday. 

however,  that  the  report  is  still 
I  lacking  in  necessary  and  vital  sta- 
I  tistics.  pointing  out  that  student 
':  government  has  been  promised  a 
'  "^'"■P  complete  financial  statement 
!  b.^'  the  end  of  this  fiscal  year 
■  (-'uly    ] ). 

!  Particularly  emphasized  by 
j  Fvans  as  a  field  of  interest  to  stu- 
I  dent  government  was  a  detailed 
I  accounting  of  each  store  and  en 
j  tcrprise  as  to  the  manner  and  per 
et-ntage  each  provided  toward  the 
I  Student  Aid  Fund. 

Contained  in  the  Stores  Com- 
mittee report  was  a  statement  in- 
idicating  that  the  upcoming  fin- 
ancial repoft  to  the  committee 
"would  reveal  the  amount  of  pro- 
fit made  from  vending  machines, 
books,  supplies,  the  Circus  Room, 
Scuttlebuh.   etc. ' 


In  the  discussion  of  vending 
machines,  the  report  pointed  out 
that:  "For  some  time,  it  has  been 
the  feeling  oi  many  students  that 
vending  machine  profits  are  de- 
rive^ from  the  entire  student  body 
and  that  they  should  be  return- 
ed to  the  individual  dormitories 
foF  the  advancement  of  their  so- 
cial facilities  and  upkeep  of  t.v. 
sets. 

"Last  .vear  the  specific  request 
mentioned  in  the  preceeding  para- 
graph was  presented  to  the  com 
mittee  and  forwarded  to  the  Trus 
tees  for  action. 

Business  Manager  C.  E.  Teague 
said  that  "as  far  as  he  knew  no 
meeting  had  been  held  on  the  mat- 
ter and  added  that  a  request  for 
a  meeting  of  the  Stores  Commit- 
tee of  the  Board  of  Trustees  should 
go  to  the  chancellor  who  can  pas.s 
his   request   for  such   a    meeting." 

Evans  said  yestei'day  that  he 
will  take  the  necessary  action  as 
suggested  in  the  report  by  the 
Stores  Committee.  Members  of 
the  Stores  Committee  has  been 
comprised  of  Bob  Young.  John 
Brooks  and  Sam  Wells  during 
the   academic   year   1956-57. 


UilLs  lo  aiiiliori/e  is.siiaiuc  ol  .Sio  million  in  ImukIs  in- 
ti(>(iu(ed  in  the  (.cncral  .Assembly  Wcdiu'sday  would  pvoxidr 
lor  two  new  biiikliir^s  and  a  renovation  on  the  tainpus  ol 
ilu'  I'liivosity  here. 

I'wo  hills  weie  inlioduced  siimdtaneousK  in  ilu-  Hoiim" 
and  Senate  hv  .Sen.  Nelson  Woodson  ol  Rowan  and  Rep. 
1).  r.  Falls  ol  Cleveland,  diairmcn  ol  the  Senate  .md  House 
rinaiuc  Committees. 

. ♦     The  mency  raised  from  the  pro- 

pos:>d  bond  issue  would  provide 
SI. 150. 000  for  a  pharmacy  build- 
in".  $222,000  to  remodel  Howell 
Hall,  and  $1,125,000  lor  a  physics 
building. 

Tentative  plan«  here  call  for  the 
School  of  Journalism  to  take  over 
the  present  pharmacy  building. 
when  the  prop  \sed  building  for 
the  School  of  Pharmacy  is  com 
pleted. 

Elsewhere  in  the  Con.solidated 
University.  State  College  in  Ral- 
eigh would  receive  .$262,000  for 
utilities,  repairs  and  expansions. 
und  S>1,!25.1M)0  for  a  classroom 
building.  Woman's  College  in 
Creensboro  would  gel  SI  million 
tor  a  classroom  building. 

The   remainder   of  the  SIO   mill- 
ion   would    be    distributed    among 
other    state-supported    institutions. 
j  ,  These    projects      are     listed      as 
priority    in    the    legislation    intro- 
duced '^  Wednesday.     The     priority 
list  was  adopted   by   the  Joint   Ap- 
propriations    subcommittee.     Most 
oi    the    proiects    ii.sted    in    the    bill 
,  are     "must     items.  '    according    to 
;  Universifj    officials. 

.Members     of     the     Con.'solidated 
tniversily     administration     here 
were    not    available    for    comment 
yesterday.       Retirinii       Chancellor 
Robert  House  said  he  h..d  no  com- 
ment  until   the  nicasuic  comes  up 
i  for  a  vote. 
•    The   bonds   provided    for   in   the 
mea.sure   would   be   i.ssued    without 
a     referendum     (;n     the     question 
;  They  would   be   20-ycar   bonds. 

The  bond  issue  was  recommend- 
ed recently  by  G.v.  Hodaes  in  or- 
der to  make  10  million  in  surplus 
state  funds  available  for  pay  raises 
;  for  teachers  and   state   workers. 
The    bills    were    referred    to    re 
spective    finance    committees    fol- 
I  lowing    their    intr-diKtion. 


MARY    ALYS   VOORHEES 

.  .  .  editor  of  weekly 

Miss  Voorhees 
Win  Head 
Summer  Paper 

Mary  .Alys' Voorhees.  journalism 
major  from  Raleigh,  has  been  se- 
lected editor  of  the  Summer 
School  Weekly  by  the  Summer 
School  Activities  Board. 

The  paper  will  be  published 
weekly  on  Frida.vs  beginning  June 
with  the  end  of 
summer  school. 
Sam  Magill,  director  of  .student 
activities,    will    serve    as    adv-sor. 

"The  purpose  of  the  weekly  is 
to  give  an  overall  view  of  summer 
schorl  life  including  campus  or- 
ganizations, social  activities  and 
sports.  / 

"Not  only  do  we  want  to  just 
print  the  news 'but  also  to  present 
it  in  an  interesting  and  entertain 
ing  manner."   Miss  Voorhees  said. 

The  editor,  a  rising  .senior,  has 
had  considerable  experience  with 
publications  in  the  past.  .At  U>iC 
she  has  been  social  editiir  for  the 


(See    VOORHEES.  Page  3) 


Alumni  Assoc. 
Very  Pleased 

Members  of  the  Senior  Class 
-Alumni  Committee  are  greatly 
pleased  with  the  response  of  class- 
mates to  their  solicitations  to  join 
the  L[niversitys  Alumni  Associa- 
tion. They  report  some  300  senior." 
as  having  already  accepted  the  .-\s 
sociation's  invitation  to  become 
regular  dues-paying  members  at 
the   special    first-year   rate   of   $1 

Designed  as  a  first  step  in  or 
ienting  and  organizing  the  ".Alum 
ni  Class  of  '51,"  the  committee 
enlisted  the  active  help  ot  nearl.\ 
r>0  additional  seniors  as  they  un 
dertook  to  solicit  personally  every 
classmate  in  the  on-campus  pha.se 
i)f  enrollment  just  concluded. 

Seniors  living  in  town  and 
those  away  fram  Chapel  Hill  this 
semester  will  be  s  liicited  via  mail 
(luring  the  final   week  of  .school. 

In  their  announcement  of  solici 

tation    results    to     date.     Co-chair 

men  "Pokey"  McSorley  and  Luth 

er  Hodges.  Jr.  expressed  gratitude 

(See  ALUMNI.  Page  3} 

Announ<;ement 

Veterans  have  been  reminded 
by  Gen.  Shepard's  office  to  fill 
out  May  applicahons  before  leav- 
ing school  this  semesier. 


6  Initiated  By 
Matrix  Society 

Six  members  and  one  associate 
member  were  initiated  into  the 
Matrix  Society  Thursday  evening 
in   the  Library   .A.s.sembly   Room. 

The  initiates  includ'^d:  Joy 
Brown  of  Myrtle  Beach.  S.  C, 
outgoing  president:  Teg  Humph- 
rey of  Richmond.  Va.;  Jackie  Haith- 
cock  of  Kannapolis:  .loan  McLean 
of  Weaversville:  Winifred  Martin 
of  Charlotte;  Ruth  Rush  of  Ashe- 
boro:  Dell  Hcylc  of  Durham,  as- 
sociate member. 

Mrs.  Guion  Johnson  and  .Mrs. 
W.  S.  Caldwell  of  Chapel  Hill. 
ilumni  of  Theta  Sigma  Phi.  na- 
"ional  womens  journalism  sorori- 
ty, performed  the  initiation  cere- 
mony. 

The  club  Ls  primarily  for  women 
journalism  students,  but  women 
outstanding  in  campus  publications 
'  and  planning  to  enter  the  field 
I  of  journalism  after  graduation 
i  may  be  a.sked  to  join.  The  require- 
'  ments  are  a  B  average  in  joumal- 
I  ism  and  an  overall  C  average 
i  scholastically. 

\  Jackie  Haithcock  v.as  elected 
iresidcnt  of  the  club  for  next 
year  by  acclamation.  Othere  of- 
ficers are  to  be  elected  in  the 
fall. 


Seniors,  Look! 

Youll  need  six  cents  worth  of 
postage  to  mail  tho.se  graduation 
invitations    this    year,    .seniors. 

A  three-cent  stamp  isn't  suf- 
ficient postage  to  dcfrav  mailing 
charges  for  the  bulky  invitations, 
post  office  officials  pointed  out 
yesterday. 


PACI    TWO 


TMI  DAILY  TAt  HiEL 


Tfl/.firTJ     .''.".v 
ore  :'cz 


SATU1»AY/MAY  It,   m7 


intellectual  Timidity  And 
The  Lonely,  Little  Gadfly 

"  riif  true  tcaihcr  dfjends  his  fJuj/Hs  Uf^ainst  his  oii'n  ^ersonnl 
infhifrii*'.  Hf  »/<.v/>/>rv  sflf-disf)  list.  He  guides  their  eyes  from  hiiii- 
srlf  to  the  sjtirit  that  quickens  him.  He  will  have  no  disciple."— 
Aimis  Kionsixi  Alcott. 

M.nu  ha\t*  (oinnieiited  upon  srudent  apathy  as  it  pertains  to  pai- 
tii  ipation— or  ilif  hu  k  ot  it— in  extra-<uni(  ular  work, 

Uut  Ifw  haxf  troubled  to  connnent  u[M)n  apathy  as  it  pertains  to 
iiiiereM  in  s<holastit   achievement— or  the  distiiKt  lack  oi  same. 

C.onteinino;  siii  h  disinterest,  it  is  highteninglv  appalling  to  lonsist- 
iiuK  witnesN  i  lasses  in  wimh  a  professor  didaclieally  spins  a  little  web  oi 
knouled'^e     upon     whi(  h     students 

I  liiiib.  with  little  effort  or  toil,  to      ster's  Dictionary   with  their  -diplo- 
an  at<epied  or  jiassing  le\el  of  ata-      mas.    Then    i^iu  h   onadnates    miaht 


deniii    prowess. 

Such  professors  prescribe  small 
doses  ol  learning  whiih  enable 
lethargic  minds  to  just  get  f)y.' 
IVui  there  is  a  (onspicnons  failnre 
ti»  pro\«»ke  and  stimulate  these 
same  miiuls  Ironi  sometimes  som; 
nambnli.stic   states. 

W  I-  would  prestribe.  <»n  the  oth- 
ei  hand,  a  stinudating  dose  of 
atafJemic  puigative  whi<h  would 
pi()\oke  students  i(»  think,  think, 
tiiink. 

Su«  h  .1  purgative  is  not  to  be 
found  in  patent  doses.  It  nuist  be 
an  adapt.d)le  p  n  r  g  a  t  i  \  e  which 
w»)uld  piu  minds  to  work  with 
fMii'4ii.int   (omments  such   as: 

Our  te\tlM»ok  offers  these  defi- 
nitions and  patterns.  Do  von.  ^ts 
studeius.  ieel  that  the  author  is 
presenting  a  valid  .irgtnnent  and  a 
tompletelv  t  lear  lield  ot  tacts.  It 
\ou  agree,  state  yoiu"  expository 
reasons.  If  \(»u  disagree,  state  \<>ur 
c'\|M»sitorv    reasons." 

Intellei  tual  timiditv  means  muih 
more  than  failing  t<»  participate  in 
^ener.d  <  lass  work.  It  (Oimotes  a 
general  tone  <^f  complacency  which 
extends  t«»  affairs  of  government 
.uu\  e\ervd.«v  li\ing. 

IiUcIIectual  timiditv  is  blind  ac- 
tept.ujte  of  current  trends  and  cul- 
tural patterns  regardless  of  their 
\alidit\  or  adecpi.uv. 

Intellectual  tiniiditv  is  the  fail- 
uu-  of  student  legislators  to  sjieak 
out  on  .1  prejudic  iai  state  law  mere- 
1\    because   it    is  a  state  law. 

Ituellectual  timiditv   is  a  blatant 
failure    to   accept    the    res|M)nsibili- 
ties   whi(  W   are   thrust    upon  us  by 
an  ever  c  hanging  anri-  firiKriwic  civ- 
ilization. 

Intclleciu.il  timiditv  is  unques- 
tioning acceptance  of  the  written 
word.  The  attitude  that  because 
s4»iu«-  Miatler  is  down  in  black  and 
white,  it  is  a  cold  fac  t  which  should 
Ik-  assimilated  bv  our  minds  with- 
out re.is<»ning  oiu  and  testing  its 
xalidiiv. 

Motu.ii'^ne  said  a  well-made  he.td 
was  to  l>r  (lesiied  oxer  a  well-filled 
i»n»*. 

If  stuffing  the  head  with  a  series 
of  non-correlated  facts  aiul  figures 
which  will  enable  one  to  "just  get 
bv"'  a  course  is  what  we  seek,  then 


retreat  to  a  private  corner  and 
memorize  an  innneasurable  amount 
of    inc  ideiual    intelligence. 

This  plan  woidd  not  only  save 
studeius  an  incalcuable  amount  of 
time  and  trouble,  but  it  would  al- 
so cotisiderablv  trim  the  ^tate  s  al- 
ienation   for   higher  educi^tion. 

On  the  extreme  pole  from  the 
complacent,  intellectually  timid 
student,  there  is  the  student  gad- 
fly ,wJio  onlv  lights  laboriouslv  and 
aggravatingly  upon  a  topic  oidy 
when  he  feels  a  sting  would  height- 
en his  prestige  with  the  professor 
and  chalk  up  a  few  biownie  points 
on   the  grade  book. 

sSuch  a  gadfly  for  the  sake  of  be- 
ing a  gadflv  is  a  pest  who  bogs 
tlown  a  class  with  irrelevant  cpies- 
ticms  to  whiih  tlie  anwer  is  ob- 
vious and  despicably  imimagina- 
ti\e. 

Such  self  -  appointed  frondeins 
are  a  pain  to  all  concerned. 

But  the  geiuiine  intellec  tual  gad- 
fly is  an  invaluable  addition  to  any 
class.  He  provokes  the  professor 
who  should  himseM  be  provoking 
thcMights  among  his  students.  He 
stimulates,  by  consistent  poignant 
stings,  the  intellectuallv  timid  fiom 
their  mental  cocoons  of  complac- 
encv   and   blind  acceptance. 

Intellectual  assertion  is  more 
than  a  method  of  elevating  one's 
]>osition  in  a  grade  fniok.  It  is  a 
nteiual  framework  which  extends 
to  and  |>ernieates  througJi  everydav 
existence. 

ScHtates,  Joan  of  .\rc .  and  so 
on  through  the  ages,  were  perse- 
( lued  h)r  thinking  differeiulv — for 
cpiestionitjg  the  jK)wers  that  be.  \'er 
cicativitv,  upon  whic  h  our  c  i\ili/a- 
tion  must  base  its  piogress.  depends 
upm  ladical  assert icms  which  pio 
voke  imtovations. 

Anything  but  blind  adherrance 
to  the  written  word  and  eager  mast- 
lication  of  the  intellectual  ntorsels 
handed   from   professors  on  direct- 


it  ujiuht  Ik-  suggested  that  high  ed  spcnms  may  be  labeled  pseudo' 
s4h(K)i  graduates  be  given  an  Kn-  iconcKlatic  and  radical.  Biu  Christ 
c\clojM.ida    Uiitatniic.i  and  a  Wef)-       wasn't   exactly  patted  on    the  back 

bv  Pontius  Pilate  when  the  Roman 

governor  of  Judea's  power  was 
threatened  by  a  hiunble  yet  all- 
|)owerful  innnovaticm  —  religious 
faith. 


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The  official  student  publication  of  the 
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Editor 


Managing  Editor 


NEIL  BASS 
'  BOB  fflGK 


^sscK-iale  Editor 


NANCY  HIU. 


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BILL  KING 


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WALT  SCHRUNTEK 


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Librarians    Sue  Gichner.  Marilyn  Strum 


Night  News  Editor 
Higiit  SOiiox 


Bob  High 

llaaley  Spruiii 


Intellectual     timidity     is     more 
than  blind  acceptance. 

It  is  a  threat  to  the  progress  of 


Creativity— upon  which  all  civili- 
zations aie  built — is  at  stake. 


Coeds:  What 
An  Invention! 

Oiw  most  sincere  congratulations 
to  the  new  Miss  Chapel  Hill— Miss 
Joanne   .Aldridge. 


The  fact  that  judges  were  ob- 
viously com|)elled  to  seiious  delib- 
eration before  selection  fiom  suc:h 
an  outstanding  list  of  entries  in- 
dicates that  feminine  pulchritude 
is  flourishing  in  Chapel   Hill. 

Hearty  congratulations.  tcM),  to 
the  rininers  up — Miss  Jane  Brcx:k 
and  Miss  Martha  Fortune. 

The  einire  entry  field  is  a  trib- 
me  to  Chapel  Hill  and  the  Uni- 
versity. 

Afaybe  it  wasn't  such  a  bad  idea 
to  open  the  University's  doors  to 
tlie  fairer  sex  back  around  the  turn 
of  the  century. 

Such  a  decision  should  have  only 
come  earlier. 


WISE  AND  OTHERWISE; 

Semi-Erectus 
Or  Architecture 
Re-Classified 

Whit  Whitfield 

In  reply  to  a  column  by  An- 
thony Wolff  last  week.  I  must 
defend  the  architecture  of  the 
campus.  His  critique  was  well 
written  and  sincere,  but  there 
were  many  fallacies  which  I 
would  like  to  point  out.  Since 
my  vocabulary  is  as  limited  as 
my  knowledge  of  architecture  I 
must   write   in  the   vernacular. 

•  •  • 

The  campus  architecture  is 
unique  in  that  it  is  so  varied, 
yet  shows  superb  planning.  Take 
l*^*«^^«^for  instance 
'  the  dormitories. 
[Most  of  them 
are  classic  Box- 
i  inian.  They  are 
not  particularly 
flbeautiful.  b  u  t 
i/tlianks  to  F.D. 
,  R  ,  they  are 
ipractical  in  that 
Ithey  all  have 
rooms  in  them.  Other  buildings 
which  have  the  same  or  similar 
design  are  Graham  Memorial, 
Saunders.  Murphey,  and  Bing 
ham.  Most  of  these  are  not  avail- 
able for  rooms  however. 

Cobb  dormitory  is  of  the  Con- 
tempcM-ary  '"H"  design,  which  is 
a  refreshing  relief  from  the  re.st 
of  the  dormitories. 

Phillips  Hall;  Peabody,  Battle- 
Vance  -  Pettigrew,  Bynum,  and 
Caldwell  are  more  nearly  Ante- 
diluvian  than  anything  else. 

Woollen.  Swain,  .\bernathy, 
and  Venable  are  ante-bellum 
(Pelloponesian  War).  Hill,  Per- 
son, Howell.  Davie,  and  the 
AKimni  Building  are  traditional, 
whereas  Manning.  Bynum,  New 
East,  and  New  West  are  Classic 
Carolus. 

Hill  "X".  "Y".  •'Z-.  as  well  as 
the  Air  Force  buildings  and  Cald 
well  .^nnex  are  all  Contempor- 
ary Sylvian  in  design.  Bingham 
•X"  and  "Y"  are  both  Old  Eng- 
lish. 

The  Tin  Can  is  in  a  classifica- 
tion all  its  own.  being  Metallus 
Semi-erectus.  It  is  one  of  the 
few  such  edifices  m  the  whole 
world.  Of  this  we  can  be  justly 
proud. 

It  is  not  completely  fair  to  us 
as  stucjents  to  accept  .Mr.  Wolff's 
remarks.  We  have  a  distinction 
here  not  to  be  paralled  anywhere 
else  in  the  known  world,  that 
distinction  being  the  motley 
conglomeration  of  buildings 
which  typefies  the  Carolina  Way 
of  Life. 

The  pseudo-intellectuals  of  the 
campus  would  really  have  it  no 
other  way  than  the  way  it  is  for 
to  them  the  architecture  of  the 
campus  i:>  a  means  to  an  end 
and  not  an  end  to  itself. 

•  •  • 

If  you  have  bothered  to  read 
this  far  then  you  have  undoubt- 
edly noticed  that  1  have  not 
pointed  out  any  fallacies  in  Mr. 
Wolff's  column,  partly  out  6t 
respect  for  his  superior  com- 
mand of  the  knowledge  of  arch- 
itectare.  and  partly  because  I  got 
lost  in  the  first  paragraph.  If 
the  terms  were  new  to  .some  of 
you,  don't  be  disturbed  for  they 
have  just  come  into  use  recent- 
ly. 


'Remember  All  Those  Nice  Peanuts?" 


A  RETORT: 


FROM  THE  SULLINS  REFLECTOR: 


Colleges  Have  Lost  Their  Purpose? 
And  A   Dictionary    For   Podges 


Are  American  state  universi- 
ties slipping?  Dr.  .\rthur  Bestor, 
historv-  professor  at  the  Univers- 
ity of  Illinois  and  president  of 
the  U.  S.  Council  for  Basic  Edu- 
cation, claims  they  are. 

» 

In  an  article.  "We  .^re  Less 
Educated  Than  50  Years  -Xgo." 
Bestor  poitots  out  sev«ni>  funda- 
mental weaknesses  in  American 
universities. 

••T  h  e  trouble  with  today's 
schools  is  that  they  have  lost 
their  .sense  of  purpose.  They  are 
undertaking  too  many  worthless 
curricular  and  extra-curricular 
activities.  The  result  is  that  un- 
es.sential  activities  are  squeezing 
out  the  basic  subjects  for  a  large 
number  of  eur  sludent-s*. 

**A  first-rate  student  can  get 
as  sound  an  education  in  a  state 
university  if  he  comes  properly 
prepared,  if  he  knows  what  he  is 
after  and  if  he  makes  hin»self 
work.  But,  the  state  university 
doesn't  insist  on  thtse  three 
things  as  most  privately  endowed 
colleges   do." 

Foreign  students  who  come  to 
American  universities  are  amazed 
at  the  low  stanrfards  of  intellect- 
ual training  that  we  expect  from 
stndents  who  enter  our  universi- 
ties. 

"Pulbright  .scholars  on  ex- 
change to  the  U.  S.  were  all  im- 
pressed with  the  facilities  for  re- 
search in  America,     and     wer« 


equally  amazed  at  the  skimpy 
training  of  the  students  who  were 
being   offered   these  resources" 

The  theories  and  the  influence 
of  our  professional  educators 
seemed  especially  odd  to  these 
exchange  students.  They  expect 
.secondary  education  to  embody 
the  views  of  the  learned  world 
and  to  deal  with  fundamentals, 
not  to  be  pursuing  one  fad  after 
another. 

To  better  the  situation.  Be- 
stor proposes  to  refuse  ad- 
mission to  students  who  come 
poorly  prepared.  He  believes  this 
would  have  a  healthy  effect  on 
the  public  schoohs.  too.  Also,  we 
should  eliminate  the  kinds  of 
courses  and  programs  that  exist 
only  to  let  mediocre  students 
get  by.  Bestor  believes  that  col- 
leges that  concentrate  on  quali- 
ty rather  than  numbers  will  pull 
ahead. 


.\lpha  —  U.sed  to  mean  half  of. 
Ex:  .\lpha  pint. 

Beta  —  Synonym  for  ought  to." 
Ex;  You  l>eU  beat  it  before  the 
cops   come. 

Gamma  —  Baby  talk  for  giand- 
ma.  Ex:  What  big  teeth  you  have 
Gamma. 

Delta  —  Used  in  cards.  Ex:  He 
delta  hand  of  pinochle. 

Epsllon  —  .\  laxative.  Ex:  Go. 
get  me  a  nickel's  woiih  of  epsllon 


salts. 

Zeta  —  To  repeat  a  phrase.  Ex: 
Zeta  again. 

Eta  —  To  devour  (singular).  Ex: 
I  eta  siab  of  horse  meat. 

Tlieta  —  To  devour  fplura!).  Eht: 
Theta  whole  cow. 

Iota  —  A  duty.  Ex:  Iota  .slap 
your  face. 

Kappa— .\ 'pair.  Ex:  l^oae  girl* 
are  a  kappa  pigs. 

Lambda  —  .\  prfgilist  phrase. 
Ex:  So  I  lambda  guy  or  da  saoet. 

Mu  —  Love  -softg  of  a  cow.  Ex: 
Mu..  Moo. 

Nu  —   Recent.   Ex:    What's  mi? 

XI  —  Dialect.  Ex:  Xi  in  love? 
I  Ls. 

OmicroR  —  Expressiim  of  pain 
when  dancing.  Ex:  Oudi!  Onri- 
txtrn. 

Pi  —  The  greatest  American 
dessert.  Ex:  Give  me  a  piece  of 
cherry  pi. 

Sigma  —  Part  of  a  warning.  Ex: 
Watch  out  or  I'll  ^gma  ck>g  on 
you. 

Upsilon  —  .^n  explanation.  Ex: 
See  the  acrobat?  Upsiloned  on  his 
head. 

Phi  —  Expressed  condition.  Ex: 
I'd  go  away  phi  luld  the  dough. 

Chi  —  Slang  Pw  man.  Ex:  He's 
a  devU  of  a  chi. 

Psi  —  What  they  do  during 
dramatic  situations.  Ex:  He 
heaved  a  psi. 

Omega  —  Part  of  a  prayer.  Ex: 
Omega  good  girl  outa  me. 


By  AS  Cspp 


/  -THERE'LL  BE  AT 
LEAST  HALF  A  MILLIOM 
PEOPLE,  FLEEIN'  IN 
PANIC— SCREAM)  n; 
FlGHTttsl'  AN'  Ta*iMPUN' 
OVER  HELPLESS 
WOMEN  AN' 


Pogo 


By  Walt  Ksffy 


Reader  Asserts 
For  Renaissance 


Edit«r: 

We  can  see  it  growing.  'We  can  see  it  advancing 
steadily,  just  as  our  parents  saw  the  Nazi  conquest 
systeiAati^ffy  engulf  the  free  countries  of  Euro||»e 
during  the  ItfSO's.  The  serpent  of  moral  degrada- 
tion, even  more  than  the  Soviet  threat,  is  ^  con- 
stricting each  of  us  radividually  and  all  of  us  as 
a  nation.  We  see  it  growing,  because  its  hallmarks 
and  effects  stare  at  us  from  all  sides  as  iPe  live 
'tt'tim  day  to  dky.  But  we  are  still  livmg  aceord- 
%g  to'  a  Tertfeargic  doctrine  of  appeasement  to  this 
'ihoA^r-— jTist  as  U»e  Western  powers  pacifically 
'watched  "Irtfler'  do  his  -worst  in  overcoming  other 
Tiaf fbiis. '^Bat'eten  more  liilficalt  to  stem  than  a 
fanatical  'mffrtai^y  regime  is  this  slow  poison  wirtch 
ictmcewis'eaeh  '»ne  of  us  personally. 

Tfie  reBgiOtts  and  ethical  strength  that  settled 
this  laiid  '•with  your  forefathers  is  greatly  responsi- 
ve for  their  iuccess.  Their  faith  and  standards 
gaVe  them  coafage,  which  we  (with  our  TV  and 
fraternity  "parties)  don't  seem  to  need  right  now. 
'ttor  'god  these  days  is  "the  secure  family"  ideal. 
God  fits  Into  fhis  overall  deity  only  as  long  as  we 
al^e  able  to  Justify  our  own  wills  by  His. 

For  the  great  part  we  do  just  what  we  jolly 
well  want  to  do,  not  as  yet  having  neaped  real 
strength  and  courage  in  a  trial  of  per.(;onial  survival 
(sach  as  that  struggle  rendered  by  the  British 
people  during  the  Blitz).  But  unless;  we ^ "get  on 
the  stick."  we  are  really  going  to  need  soo^^ing — 
and  it  won't  be  there. 

Yes,  we  do  what  we  jolly  well  please.  "And. 
following  the  type  of  psychology  t3iey  teicraroaod 
here,  all  we  really  aim  for  these  days  is  satisfaction 
of  our  basic  needs.  Our  passions  and  sentiments, 
our  basic  needs  and  our  whims:  all  these  are  satis- 
fied to  the  overflowing  through  the  standard.^  we 
accept  these  days.  Even  the  most  poverty-stricken 
and  hard-working  student  in  this  university  will 
admit  this  if  he's  honest. 

Now  I'm  generalizing,  and  so  I  must  allow  for 
the  many  exceptions  w^ho  are  on  their  toes  religious- 
ly, morally,  and  as  far  as  realizing  thci|-  dity  and 
potential  is  concerned.  But  although  one*1ttj^  hon- 
estly be  one  of  these  exceptions,  he  mus:t  admit  that 
this  trend  is  so  strong  that  it  is  ruii^ng  -us  col- 
lectively and  individually.  , ''^ 

And  why  will  you  admit  it?  A  steacfy  moviegoer 
sees  a  excellent  graph  of  our  moral  standards.  Just 
look  at  the  amount  of  sex  and/or  "hlood  and  guts" 
that  comprises  most  of  our  motion  pictures  these 
days.  Buxom  blondes  are  big  mooey-makers  for 
Hollywood.  Sensuous  squirming  by  tbese  undressed, 
undulating  young  ladies  becomes  very  real  for  tlic 
male  moviegoer.  The  happy  little  home  is  the  -goal 
of  many  women  addicted  to  soap  operas.  A  -ten-year- 
old  boy  roams  the  neighborhood  with  a  toy  pistol 
inspired  by  war,  cowlK>y,  and  gangster  movie^  comic 
books,  radio  and  TV  programs,  and  influences  from 
his  peers;  and  many  soon  graduate  to  switch-bLade 
knives  used  in  all  seriousness.  Sex  and  the  romamie 
love  ("I  can't  live  without  you")  theme  are  pro- 
claimed to  us  from  juke  boxes,  movie^  .iJMraturc 
and  even  a<fvertisements  for  deodorants.  And  it 
creeps  up  on  us  so  innocently  that  we  accept  it 
without  question. 

Moderati'j  of  these  aeH-tndolqeBces  which 
America  advertises  and  presses  upon  ^  sons  and 
daughters  is  not  bad.  n  the  individual  will  realise 
that  potential  iiarm  accompanies  the  encouragie- 
ment  to  "buy  this"  and  "drink  tliat."  to  read  Ptey- 
hoy  (the  magazine  for  real  men),  to  depead  on  a 
member  of  the  opposite  sex  for  your  wbole  spirit- 
wal  support  and  existence,  to  roar  recklessly  down 
hightrays  in  those  dandy  toys — family  car*— md  to 
"really  live"  self-indulgently,  we  ar«  ^fe^  Many 
people  do  realize  this,  and  do  not  follow  where 
signboards  lead  tliem.  >  - 

In  truth,  many  organisations  are  moving  to 
bring  us  down  to  earth  (e^.  ehoTches.)  Perhaps 
churches  often  afford  cis  luH^  extremes  m  their 
complete  condemnation  of  modern  ideals;  but,  just 
as  the  feudal  system  and  Puritanism  bad  their 
faults,  so  the  modern  moral  tendency  toward  more 
unrestricted  satisfaction  of  animal  drives — undirect- 
ed— can  harm  us  to  the  exteirt  that  Imperial  Home 
was  in  its  lethargy:  complete  corruption  and  down- 
fall. 

Let's  profit  by  the  mistakes  of  the  Romans.  Let's 
tighten  out  s^nse  of  duty  and  faise  our  onpieasant 
problems;  let's  question  the  standards  presented 
by  H<Alywood  and  "The  American  Way  «i  Life;" 
let's  find  a  faith  and  live  np  to  it;  and  let's  "seek 
the  troth,  come  whence  it  may,  cost  iffaat  ft  will!" 

What  kind  of  an  America  MH  we  (ive — proudly 
or  ^amefaUy,  bat  irat  indiffefentfy-^to  our  ehil- 
dren?  ^  ^jj^J 

Cherloa  V.  Cevoll  Jr. 


Rameses   IV 


How  the  University  administration  can  impjse 
a  supervised  study  schedule  on  Cobb  residents — even 
if  it  is  on  a  volvmtary  basis — is  beyond  the  com- 
prehension of  those  who  beKeve  fit  tbe  rigltt  of 
student  autonomy.  Such  a  practice  is  fai-  from  the 
liberal  traditions  for  which  this  University  ostensi- 
bly stands. 

The  Graham  Memorial  Board  of  Directors  cho<tae 
weU  in  naming  Tom  Lambeth  sUMknt  union  ^- 
rector.  But  it  is  a  ratJier  unusual  situation  when  a 
temporary  director  is  named  to  succeed  a  temporary 
director.  We  still  hope,  though  we  kncKv  not  how, 
tkat  a  permanent  director  will  be  namdd — one  of 
these  old  years— one  of  tliese  old  years. 


iAfUtOAi 


to  ail  com: 
soHcitar* 

Cortnnent 
effort  thr 
are  great!) 
tations  ref 
Office  *»o 
a  final  re| 
every  ietuf. 
opportunity 
AJB<'CiationJ 

A  i2mor 
ship  b<  gin.^1 
who  join 
Dtirtng  ftie| 
tbey  will 
alumni  mal 
supplement^ 
members 

of      Ass  >CI3t 

so  receive 
and   local 


11 


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SATUtoAY.  *(UY<  11^1957. 


THft  DAILY  TA«  HEIL 


^A»f  THAM 


S 

ce 


nqafst 

con- 
«  ai^ 
(marks 
live 
•crwrd- 
A  this 
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other 
tan  a 
«Mrh 


(Contitmed  fvtmi  yag«  1> 

to  all  committee  members  and  area 
.oHcitors.  I*"^ 

Commenting  on  tne'committee's 
tfort  the  co-chairmen  stated,  "We 
ure  greatly  enco)u-M«d,^by  .solici- 
itions  reported  Ai  *tlie  AMmni 
Ofiioe  so  far.  'Wifi.jjjpn  to  issue 
^  final  report  when  we  feel  that 
rvery  senior  has  been  crffered  an 
opportunity  to  jq^^i  the  Alumni 
Association." 

A  12-months  period  of  njember 


Covering  The  University  Campus 


ADMINISTRATION  COURSE 

Graduation  exercises  for  the 
third  annual  municipal  administra- 
tion course  at  the  Institute  of  Gov- 
ernment here  will  be  held  this 
morning  at  11:45  a.m.  in  the  Joseph 
Palmer    Knapp   Building. 

tfighlighting  the  exercises  will 
be  a   speech    by   Gen.   James     R. 


Townsend,  Greensboro  city  manji- 
hip  begin^s  Jun^  1  %r  alfseniors  S^*"-  ^"**  ^^^  presentation  of  the 
.vho  join  the  ftssa^tAion  now.  i  ^'*°'"Se  C-  Franklin  Award  to  the 
During  th«ir  year  of  membership  1 '"^s^  outstanding  graduate  of  the 
ihev  will  receive  tO  iiSsues  of  the    ""*'"^* 


ulumni  magazine  ■  with  football 
supplements  after  each  game.  All 
members  may  vote  in  the  election 
01  Association  officei^.  They  al- 
>.)  receive  notices  »f  class  reunions 
jnd  local  alumni  -miietings. 


BAND  PARTY 

The  University  Band  will  hold 
its  spring  picnic  at  Hogans  Lake 
today,  it  was  announced  recently. 
All  members  driving  cars  and  all 
men»bers  and  dates  wishing  rides 


Mdar^s 
^'  ittd 

Ttleal 
as  we 

iolW 
4  mi 
orviTat 
BriUsk 

t  on 
htmf— 

And. 
irtHiBd 
action 
raent^. 
»atis- 
s  wr 
tricken 
vill 


for 

ifimas- 

t  that 


'  jpirit- 


Mii  to 

VmiT 

wh«r» 


their 
jvst 
their 
"4  mare 

■dJTCt- 

tl  name 
down- 


f  Ufe;" 
•itt!" 


«r  «li2- 


I  M. 


And  y^CHTcon  moke  it  even 
greoteri^^  if  your  gift  is  from 

Wentworth  &  Sloan 


have  been  requested  to  meet  be- 
hind mil  Hall  at  5  p.m. 
ROTC    SALUTE 

UNCs  Naval  RGTC  Unit  will  be 
featured     on  ABC's  radio     show, 
"Navy  Houc"   at    1:05   p.m.   today 
over  station  WTIK  in  Durham. 
EDITOft»AL  WRITCRS 

Harry  Golden,  editor  of  the  Ca- 
rolina Israelite,  will  be  the  featured 
speaker  at  the  concludi^  banqaet 
of  the  eighth  annual  Carolina  Edi- 
torial WritCTs  Conference  tonight. 

The  two-day  conference  begjn 
Friday.  It  is  designed  .to  bring  to 
gether  representatives  of  the  states 
newspapers  for  formal  talks  on 
the  condition  of  editorial  writing 
throughout  the  state. 
OLD  WELL  PICTURES 

Recent  initiates  have  befin  ur- 
ged by  Jerry  Oppenheimer,  presi- 
dent of  the  Old  Well,  to  pick  up 
initiation  pictures  which  are  now 
available    in   306   South   Building 

Outdoor 

(Continued  from  Page  1) 

tin,  Jack  W.  Floyd,  Al  Brown,  Bob 
Spencer  and  Ed  Brown. 

Miss  Lucinda  Hoiderness  will  be 
the  female  representative  on  the 
Student  Council  and  will  sit  on  the 
Council  when  it  hears  cases  con- 
cerning the  violation  of  the  Con- 
stitution or  dealing  with  violations 
of  the  Elections  Board. 

The  Traffic  Advisory  Committee 
next  year  will  be:  Jim  Rose  (chair- 
man), Jim  Johnson.  Toni  Overman, 
Stewart  Lanham.  Phyllis  Krafft, 
Marian  Dickens.  David  Parker,  and 
Jack  Spain. 

Ian  McBryde  an*  Libby  McCord 
will  head  the  Campus  Chest  next 
year. 

Arthur  Sobel  will  be  the  chair 
man  of  the  Elections  Board;  the 
other  members  are:  Ralph  Cum- 
minga.  Tom  Overman,  Bob  Furta- 
do,  Judy  Davis,  Wayne  Anderson. 
Dick  Frazier.  Susan  Mayhue.  John 
Min*er 


(Dean  Mackie's  office). 
WELFARE  CONFERENCE 

Dr.  Reuben  Hill,  research  profes- 
sor in  family  life  with  the  Insti- 
tute for  Research  in  Social  Science 
here,  will  speak  on  "The  Chtoiging 
American  Family — Its  Challenge 
for  Social  Welfare"  before  approx- 
imately 3000  delegates  Wednesday 
at  a  National  Conference  on  So- 
cial Welfare  in  Philadelphia,  Pa. 
The  six-day  conference  wiH  run 
from  May  If  through  22.  The  theme 
of  the  84th  annual  forum  is  listed 
as  "Expanding  Frontiers  in  So- 
cial Welfare." 
BOOK  PUBLISHED 

A  volume  of  the  Yale  Journal, 
of  Biology  has  been  published  in 
memory  of  the  late  Dr.  John  P. 
Peters,  father  of  Dr.  Richard  M. 
Peters,  a  faculty  member  of  the 
School  of  Medicine  here. 

The  book  was  edited  by  Dr.  Louis 
G,  Welt,  professor  of  medicine  here 
and  was  published  in  book  form 
from  a  volume  which  originally  ap- 
peared in  December. 
SWIMMING  POOL 

The  outdoor  srwimming  pool  will 
be  open  from  now  until  the  end 
of  the  school  year  from  2-5  p.m., 
weather  permitting,  it  was  announ- 
ced recently.  When  the  outdoor 
pool  is  not  open,  regular  hour.- 
wUl  be  observed  at  the  indoor 
pool. 
WUNC-TV 

Today's  schedule  for  WUNC-TV, 
the  University's  educational  tele- 
vision station,  is  as  follows: 

6:29    Sign  On 

6:30    Latin  Americas 

7:00     Delinquency 

7:30    Frontiers  To  Space 

8:00    Art  and  Artists 

8:30    Sign  Off 


Beautiful  watches  in 
•II  styles  and  makes: 
Buleva,  Hamilfbn,  El- 
gin, Omega,  and  Rotex. 


Student  To  Be 
hi  Assembly 

Miss  Laila  Apiro  KTiury.  a  UNC 
Student  from  Jordan,  will  be  one 
of  42  foreign  graduate  students 
selected  to  participate  in  the 
Williamsburg  International  As- 
sembly at  Williamsburg  June  9 
through  12.  it  was  announced  re- 
cently. 

As  part  of  Colonial  William.s- 
burg's  educational  program,  the 
Assembly  will  evaluate  how  well 
America  lives  up  to  its  democratic 
ideals.  In  sessions  on  the  political, 
cultural,  social  and  economic 
scene;  student  partipants  will  com- 
pare American  ideals  with  the 
realities  of  life  in  the  United 
States. 

Ten  nationally  prominent  Amer- 
icans will  .serve  as  discussion  lead- 
ers and  eight  American  students 
who  are  planning  to  attend  schools 
abroad  will  act  as  hosts. 

The  foreign  .students,  now  study- 
ing al  35  colleges  and  universi- 
ties throughout  the  country,  were 
selected  from  applicants  to  par- 
ticipate in  the  Assembly. 

They  come  from  40  countries, 
including  nine  which  have  won 
independence  .since  World  War  II. 
They  have  all  been  in  this  coun- 
try for  at  least  one  year  and  are 
planning  to  return  shortly  to  their 
homelands  to  put  to  use  their 
American  training. 

Discussion  leaders  at  the  As- 
sembly will  include:  Prof.  Dumas 
Malone  of  Columbia  University; 
U.  S.  District  Judge  Luther  W. 
Youngdahl;  Editor  Ralph  McGill 
ot  the  Atlanta  Constitution;  and 
President  Kenneth  Holland  of  the 
Institute  of  International  Educa- 
tion. 


Jones  Named  President 

William  George  Jones,  a  rising 
senior  from  Louisville.  Kentudcy, 
has  been  elected  President  of  Al- 
pha Phi  Omega  campus  service 
fraternity  for  the  fall  1957  semes- 
ter, it  was  announced  yesterday. 

Elected  to  assist  Jones  were 
George  Bryce,  first  vice  president ! 
and  Bob  Cowan  and  Avery  Thorn-' 
as.    second   vice   presidents. 


Voorhees 


(Continued   from    page    1) 


WE'LL   BUY  ALL 
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state  (albbr.)  35.  Tardy 


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(Continued  from   page 

hire   a    permanent    director,"    said 
Student  Body  I»resident  Sonny  Ev- 
ans. I 
Tom  Lambeth  could  not  be  reach-  ] 
ed  for  comment  about  his  new  po- 
a'ition. 

Miss  Linda  Mann,  who  graduated 

from  UNC  in  1956,  started  in  her 

position    of  Director   Of     Graham 

Memorial  August  of  that  year.  She 

is  from  Hollywood,  Fla.  and  plans 

'  to   leave    from   UNC   June    1    for 

California;   she    is   not   sure  what 

iwork  she  will  do  there. 

I      "It's    really   been     a   rewarding 

I  and  quite  stimulating    experience, 

probably  one  I'll  never  have  again, 

and  I  have   enjoyed  it,"  said  the 

retiring  acting  director. 

She  explained,  "I  guess  the  best 
thing  about  it  is  all  the  people  you 
get  to  meet."  While  Miss  Mann  was 
director  of  the  Petite  Dramatique 
group  and  the  Mardi  Gras  celebra- 
tion were  added  to  GM's  activities. 
"We  have  tried  to  present  things 
that  we  thought  the  students  would 
want  right  at  that  moment."  she 
said. 

"I  hope  they  can  get  someone 
permanent  and  whose  business  is 
oftion-ttirectinc  and  can  help  to 
work  toward  getting  a  new  union 
building  as  soon  as  possible,"  Miss 
Mann  stated. 

She  felt  that  the  best  thing  to 
do  in  relation  to  a  new  student 
union  would  be  to  draw  up  a  pros- 
pectus to  be  presented  to  the  State 
Legislature  to  get  the  money  for 
the  new  building.  In  such  a  pro.; 
pectus  she  thought  the  ideas  and 
desires  of  both  the  directors  of 
Graham  Memorial  and  the  students 
should  be  incorporated. 

The  new  director  will  have  the 
job  which  is  to  supervise  the  main 
tenance  of  the  Graham  Memorial 
Building  and  to  act  as  an  advisor 
to  the  Activities  Board. 

The  director  will  also  work  as 
a  coordinating  and  unifying  ele- 
Wnt  in  the  GM  program  and  a  lia- 
son  between  the  Activities  Board 
and  its  prd^ammmg  of  outside 
events. 


Gilbert  Rothstein,  rising  senior 
from  Raleigh,  has  been  named  bus- 
iness manager  of  the  weekly  for 
his  second  consecutive  year  and 
Bill  Cheshire,  journalism  major 
from  Hillsboro,  has  beon  selected 
managing  editor. 

Other  slaff  members  and  their 
positions  include:  Nancy  Hill,  his- 
tory major  from  High  Point,  and 
Patsy  Miller,  journalism  major 
from  Kinston,  associate  editors; 
Mary  Moore  Mason,  journalism 
major  from  Roanoke,  Va.,  news 
editor;  Bill  King,  business  major 
from  Charlotte,  chief  photogra- 
pher. 

*  Several  positions  are  still  open 
on  the  staff,  and  the  editor  point- 
ed out  that  although  experience  is 
helpful,  it  is  not  essential.  "In- 
terest, I  feel,  is  the  main  require- 
ment,"  Miss  Voorhees  added. 

A  staff  meeting  will  be  held 
Friday,  June  7,  the  first  day  of 
summer  school  classes.  The  Sum- 
mer   School    Weekly    will    occupy 

the  offices  of  The  Daily  Tar  Hftel 


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SATURDAY,  MAY  H,  1W7 


5.T*-. 


K 


ING'S 
ORNER 


By  8IU  KING 

DTH  Sports  Editor 


Great  College  Career 
Over  For  Jim  Beatty 


By  JIM  HARPER 


Baseballers  Finish  Good  Second 

Carolina's  heartbreaking  loss  to  Maryland  Wednesday  brought  an 
end  to  the  Tar  Heel's  official  ACC  schedule  and  put  the  Tar  Heels 
in  second  place  in  the  final  conference  standings. 

But  th*  Tar  H«*ls  hav*  nothing  to  b*  ashsnwd  of..  Pre-saason 
polls  had  them  ratod  as  low  as  fifth  placa  and  nobody  except  Walt 
Rabb  and  his  ball  club  figured  they  could  ntake  a  bid  for  the  title. 


Spectators  at  the  ACC  track 
meet  at  Fetzer  Field  last  Satur- 
day saw  the  final  performance  of 
one  of  the  most  prolific  athletes 
ever  to  grace  the  campus  of  UNC. 
True,  it  wasn't  much  of  a  crowd. 
Neither  was  it  much  of  a  perform- 
ance. But  as  James  TuUy  Beatty 
dropped  out  of  the  race  and  limp- 
ed across  the  infield  to  the  bench, 
there  was  not  one  in  the  crowd 
who  thought  him  a  beaten  man. 

Tliough  in  the  last  race  of  his 
I  college  career  he  failed  even   to 
finish.  Beatty  is  surrounded  by  an 
!  air  of  victory  which  cannot  be  de- 
nied. 
Carolina  did  make  a  bid  for  the  title,  however.  And  a  gallant  try 
it  was.  A  win  Wednesday  would  have  given  the  Tar  Heels  a  tie  for  \    . " 
first  place  in  the  ACC.  But  that  is  all  by  the  boards  now. 


By  modern  standards,  Jimmy  is 
great,  truly  immortal,  run- 


ner. He  has  set  no  world's  records. 


Rabb,  "A  Fine  Group' 


Rabb  was  recallng  the  season  in  his  office  Wednesday.  Naturally 
his  first  thought  was  )he  Maryland  game.  "We  just  couldn't  quite  keep 
the  wheel  turning,"  he  apoke.  "W^e  just  needed  a  little  stronger  pitch- 
ing." 

The  Tar  Heel  mentor  praised  his  boys  highly.  "I've  never  worked 
with  a  finer  outfit,"  he  spoke  proudly.  "The  boys  did  all  I  asked 
of  them.  They  hustled  and  worked  hard  together  all  season  long  and 
they  certainly  have  nothing  to  be  ashamed  of." 

Pitching  was  perhaps  the  Tar  Heel's  most  prominent  weakness 
o»ier  the  season.  Only  Jim  Raugh,  who  finished  his  college  career 
Wednesday,  could  be  counted  on  to  go  a  full  nine  mnings.  Relief  pitch- 
ing was  fine.  The  Tar  Heel's  had  an  abundance  of  snort-game  men.  One 
more  starting  pitcher  might  have  meant  the  difference. 


Bill  Wilhelm,  Unsung  Hero 


One  of  the  unsung  heroes  of  the  Tar  Heel's  fine  season  was  assis- 
tant coach  Bill  Wilhelm,  Wilhelm,  a  graduate  student,  worked  hard 
wiih  the  club  all  aeason  and  won  the  respect  and  admiration  of  the 
members  of  the  team. 

Rabb  eomplimonted  Wilhelm  Wednesday.  "Bill  was  invaluable  to 
me."  commented  the  Tar  Heel  ehieftian.  "He  meant  a  great  deal  to 
our  ball  club  and  to  our  shewing  this  seaaon.  It  was  a  pleasure  to 
work  with  such  a  fin*  person." 

Carolina  will  be  better  next  season.  Tliert  are  fine  prospects  among 
this  year's  freshman  club  and  there  was  plenty  of  talent  on  the  varsity 
which,  with  experience,  will  aid  the  club  next  season. 

The  Tar  Heels  loMos  will  bo  heavy.  Such  men  as  Raugh,  Dick 
Hudson,  Bomber  Hill,  Chuck  Hartman,  Don  Hill,  Tom  Maultsby,  Don 
Seine,  and  Joe  Morgan  will  graduate  in  Juno.  The  gap  which  this 
capable  greup  will  leave  is  a  big  one.  But  Rabb  is  optimistic  He's 
tired  of  finishing  second  best.  Next  year  could  be  the  Tar  Heel's  year. 


Yankee's  May  Be  Crumbling 


Are  the  New  York  Yankees  falling  apart?  Has  th6  glamour  of  being 
a  member  of  the  illustrious  Yankees  given  the  members  of  the  team 
a  superior  comi^ex. 

Recent  incidents  indicate  that  the  best  team  and  organization  in 
baseball  is  slowly  wearing  around  the  cuffs.  The  New  Yorkers  are 
not  the  Yankees  of  old — not  even  of  last  year. 

The  recent  night  club  incident  involving  several  of  the  Yankee's 
top  players  has  infuriated  Casey  Stengel.  He  benched  Whitey  Ford  and 
Berra  immediately  following  the  news  that  the  two  plus  Mickey 
Mantle,  Hank  Bauer,  Billy  Martin,  and  Johnny  Kucks  had  been  involved 
.n  a  night  club  brawl  which  sent  a  New  Yoric  delicatessen  owner  to  the 
''  ipital  with  a  fractured  nose,  broken  jaw  and  arm  and  body  bruises. 

Now  there  is  a  report  that  Stengel  might  even  trade  Martin  to  the 
Washington  Senator*.  Also  mentioned  in  the  trade  was  third  baseman 
Andy  Carey. 

Stengel,  in  his  disciplinary  action,  might  be  making  the  worst  de- 
cision of  his  long  career.  Losing  two  valuable  men  like  Martin  and 
Carey  will  be  extremely  detrimental  to  the  Yankees. 

Probably  the  storm  wHI  subside  as  soon  as  Stengel  has  cooled 
off  a  bit.  There  will  probably  bo  sohm  stiff  fines  handed  out  but  the 
old  professor  will  think  twice  before  he  makes  any  drastic  changes. 


JIM  BEATTY 

.    .    .    college   career   ends 

He  has  not  yet  run  a  four-minute 
mile.  Yet  in  his  four  years  at  Car- 
olilria.  Jimmy  has  accomplished 
much  more  than  all  this.  He  has 
become  a  great  athlete. 

Arguments  never  end  as  to  what 
makes  a  great  athlete,  but  they 
all  boil  down  to  one  qualification 
— determination.  Of  this  quality, 
Beatty  has  an  endless  amount.  On 
the  track  he  is  all  business,  with 
only  one  thought  on  his  mind — 
win. 

And  win  he  does.  In  his  three 
years  of  varsity  competition,  he 
has  accumulated  no  less  than  elev- 
en Atlantic  Coast  Conference  re- 
cords. He  has  also  participated  in 
many  meets  outside  the  confer- 
ence, and  holds  the  two-mile  rec 
ord  for  the  Penn  Relays. 

Jimmy  came  to  the  University 
in  1953  already  a  good  prospect 
for  track  stardom.  In  his  last  two 
years  in  high  school  at  Charlotte  j 
Central,  he  had  won  the  State 
Championship  in  the  mile.  In  high 
school  he  had  also  run  880.  but 
upon  entering  college  he  began 
running  cross-country  and  both 
one  and  two  mile. 

As  a  sophomore,  Beatty  started 
collecting  records  by  winning  the 
ACC  Cross  Country  championship 
That  winter,  he  commenced  what 
was  to  bp  a  rivalry  of  long  stand- 
ing when,  in  the  conference  in- 
door meet,  he  edged  out  Mary- 
land's Burr  Grimm   for  the  mi'e 


crown.  In  the  same  meet  he  also 
won  the  two  mile  event.  In  April 
he  added  to  his  growing  string  of 
victories  the  conference  champion- 
ship in  the  outdoor  mile. 

In  his  junior  year,  Beatty  once 
again  took  top  honors  in  the  in- 
door one  and  two  mile.  In  the  lat- 
ter event  Jimmy  gave  evidence  to 
his  greatness  when,  after  trailing 
State's  Mike  Shea  for  seven  laps, 
he  turned  on  the  steam  to  cross 
the  finish  line  some  fifty  yards 
ahead  of  the  State  ace. 

Last  summer,  Jimmy  was  chos- 
en as  a  representative  of  this; 
country  by  the  State  Department 
to  take  part  in  a  good  will  tour 
of  the  Scandinavian  countries. 
There  he  participated  in  numer- 
ous meets  winning  many  races 
and,  at  the  same  time,  performing 
his  primary  mission  as  ambassador 
of  good  will  from  the  U.  S. 

Perhaps  Beatty's  best  day  on 
the  track  came  last  February  at 
the  ACC  Indoor  Meet  in  Raleigh. 
There,  for  the  third  straight  year 
he  won  both  the  one  and  two  mile 
events.  In  both  races,  he  and 
Grimm  fought  neck  and  neck  all 
the  way  only  to  have  Beatty  burst 
ahead  in  the  home  stretch,  bring- 
ing the  cheering  spectators  to 
their  feet. 

It  was  this  same  Burr  Grimm 
who  went  on  to  win  the  race  last 
Saturday.  It  was  this  same  Jim 
Beatty  who  limped  off  the  field, 
defeated  only  by  physical  difficul- 
ties. The  determination  was  still 
there.  Still  there  was  the  heart. 
There  was  no  defeat,  just  disap- 
pointment. 

At  graduation  this  June,  Jimmy 
Beatty  will  leave  this  University 
in  body  only.  Behind  he  will  leave 
the  memory  of  a  great  athlete — 
a  great  man. 


Rosenbluth  Won't  Play  Pro  Ball  This  Year 


CH/VRLOTTE,   (AP)— All-Ameri-Shavlik  I  know  how  tough  it  can 
ca  Lennie  iRosenbluth  said  today  be. 


he  hop  es  he'll  be  able  to  play 
professi  onal  basketball  with  the 
I>hiladel  phia  Warriors  in  the  1958- 
59  seasoTi.  but  won't  try  it  this 
year. 

'Rosenb  buth,  who  led  the  Caro- 
lina Tar  Heels  to  the  national 
champion;  ihip  last  season,  said  he 
will  serve  six  months  in  the  Army 
under  the.  Reserve  plan,  for  which 
he  voluntjRered  Thursday. 

As  for  Philadelphia  in  1958-59, 
"It's  going  to  be  tough  to  make 
the  team*,"  he  remarked.  "After 
seeing  wiiat  happened  to  Ronnie 


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i  nouncement  has  been  made  as  to 

whether  he  is  interested  in  tbem 


Shavlik,  a  second  team  All 
America  with  North  Carolina  State 
in  1955-56.  failed  to  make  it  with 
the  professional  New  York  Knick- 
erbockers. 

Rosenbluth  was  here  in  connec- 
tion with  the  marketing  of  T-shirts 
bearing  his  name. 

He  said  he  would  not  preoict 
another  undefeated  season  for 
Carolina,  but  added  that  the  Tar 
Heels  should  retain  the  national 
championship  next  year,  'especial- 
ly if  Wilt  Chamberlain  quits  Kan- 


Howard  Johnson  Restaurant 

STUDENT   SPECIALS 


Barbecued    Chicken 
Choice  Steak  Sandwiches 

2:00-    5:00  P.M. 
SERVED  8:00-11:00  P.M. 

landmark  For  Hungry  Tarheels" 


/ 


Players  Fined 

CHICAGO,  (AP)  —  President 
Will  Harridge  of  the  American 
League  yesterday  fined  outfielders 
Ted  Williams  of  the  Boston  Red 
Sox  and  Mickey  Mantle  of  the 
New  York  Yankees  $25  each  for 
bat-throwing   incidents. 


MILTON'S 

GRADUATION 

GIVE-A-WAY 

Many  tnanks  for  your 
enthusiastic  response  to 
our  give-a-way  specials 
now  going* on.  We' 
continue  these  values 
through  next  week. 

Clothing  Cupboarb 


The  producer  wiM  brought  yom 
Marton  Brando  m  "On  tho  Watorfronf" 
now  brings 

BEN 
GAZZARA 

to  the  screen  in  hm 
electrifying  portrayal  of  "4 

I JULK  WUSOW  win.  Mum  mcmmi  •  GRma  pepparo  •  pat  HirtetE  •  Arthur  storc«  «<  mmes  oisgii 

SAM  SPtEGQ.  MWOWmoiiS  .  Sowi  n*,  by  CALDER  WILLINGHAM  Bned  on  his  ncvei  »o<l  pliy-'W  HAN*' 
if  X^*  D««cM«T  JACK  GARFEW  •  rrsduccd  by  SAM  SPIESEL  •  *  COLUMBIA  P1CTUK     ^ 

LATE  SHOW  TONIGHT 
Regular  Showing  Starts  Sunday 


SFMettt0 


ive 

gef  fu//  exciting 


...smoke  L*M 

flavor 


Carolini) 


Jar  Heels  Run 
In  AAU  Tohite 

Twenty-seven  Tar  Heel  track- 
men, frerixmen  and  varsity,  wil^ 
be  among  the  entries  in  to- 
day's Carolinas  AAU  track  meet 
at  State  College. 

Carolina  stars  Jim  Beatty  and 
Dave  Scurlock  will  be  included  in 
the  listing  of  the  leading  runners. 
Beatty,  who  has  had  quite  a  bit 
of  trouble  with  an  arch  injury, 
will  run  in  either  the  mile  or  the 
three-mile.  He  said  yesterday  that 
he  thought  it  would  be  the  mile 
but  would  not  be  sure  until  to- 
day. Scurlock  will  run  his  special- 
ity the  880.  He  will  also  run  the 
anchor  leg  for  the  T»  Heels  top 
notch  mile  relay  team. 

Tlie  meet  will  feature  some  of 
the  country's  besl  Dice's  track 
flash  Dave  Sime  will  run  in  the 
100  and  220,  as  will  North  Caro- 
lina College's  great  dash  man 
Vance  Jl<rt)inson.  Olympic  champ- 
ion Lee  Calhoun  and  his  hot  chal- 
lenger Elias  Gilbert  are  entered 
in  the  120-yard  high  hurdles.  This 
race  promises  to  provide  many 
thrills. 

CaroUaa's  relay  team  of  Jim 
Moss,  Dick  MacFaddin,  John  Syl- 
vester and  Scuriock  will  be  among 
the  favored  in  that  event,  l^e 
team  won  the  ACC  title  last  week- 
end. Wayne  Bishop  and  Everett 
Whatley  will  carry  some  of  Caro- 
lina's strength  into  the  distance 
races.  Bishop  will  run  in  the 
three-mile  and  Whatley  will  enter 
the  mile. 


HOW  DID  THAT 
SCHOOL  TEACHER  EVER  GET 
CAUGHT  IN  THE  MIDDLE  OF  A  MOB? 
P. 


Prim,  proper.  #^  pretty  teacher 
gets  part-time  job  in  night  club. 
Meets  rough,  tough  ex-racketeers. 
This  could  be  the  night . .  ,^ 
for  a  kiss  on  the  lips, 
a  dance  in  the  dark-L        i 
or  a  gun  in  the  ribsl 


i-y 


^^Hg^ll^ 

,.m         Heartht 

i^^^^^^Hj 

iW           aonga  in 

fABUUOUS^^"^ 

mt           M-GM 
m^  Raeorda  album 

IN  HIS  FIRST 

FItM  ROlEI 

MG-M  PIIS8KNT3 

JEAN  ^     PAUL 

Simmons  •  Douglas 

ANTHONY 

FRANCIOSAu. 

I  This  Couuo  Bb 
Thus  Night 

IN  CINKMASCOPB 


LATE  SHOW  SAT.  NIGHT 
SUNDAY— MONDAY— TUESDAY 

CAROLINA 


JULK  WILSON  '  mil  OM'Jm  RONOai 

J  CAMOl  WISH  •  Mf*a  CAMPOS  •  2ASU  PITO 

WD  fUY  ANTHONY  in  MS  MKHESTU 

U»»  mii  tt  ISOBEL  UNNART  •  kw  iM  «hm  k«  coitau  unit  emt 

IMtCTEfi  W.IOKIT  WS£  •  Nooyca  (f  JOE  PAST[RNAX  .  tn  m^.u  pictuk 

Plus 
Cartoon  "THE  HONEY  MOUSERS" 
LATEST  NEWS 


\ 


I- 


And  this  summer... get  acquainted 

with  the  modem  L^M  Crush-proof  box 

that's  ""taking  over"  on  campus! 

Get  with  it!  Now  you  can  get  your  L&M's  in  the  newest, 
most  modem  box.  ..the  L&M  Crush-proof  box  that 
closes  tight . . .  protects  your  cigarettes ...  or,  if  you  prefer, 
enjoy  your  L&M's  in  famous  packs -King  or  Regular. 
Yes,  get  the  fiill,  exciting  flavor  that  makes  L&M... 

• . .  America's  fastest-growing  cigarette 


©  !»67  LiGCCTT  £  MTEB8  ToBACOO  Co. 


'Y^ 


W J  A  t  H  E  R 

Partly  CtolKly   and   Warimr. 


arj)  c  Daito 


Med 


BUTTERFLY 

A  buterfly  in  your  stomach,  »«« 
page  2. 


VOL.   LVJI,   NO.   192 


Complete  (^  Wire  Service 


CHAPEL    HILL,   NORTH   CAROLINA,   SUNDAY,   MAY    19,    1957 


OffietM  in  Graham   Memorial 


FOUR   PAGES  THIS   ISSUE 


The  New  GM  Activities  Board 

Shown  above  is  the  new  Graham  Memorial  Activities  Board  as  announced  by  Benny  Thomas, 
president  «f  GMAB.  Front,  left  to  right;  Russ  Link,  music  committee;  Betty  Huffman,  receptions  and 
recreations;  Mary  Moore  Mason,  recreation  committee;  Martha  Fortune,  office;  Betty  Reece,  tourna- 
ment; D9U9ie  Logan,  publicity;  and  Seamon  Gottlieb,  film  series.  Back  row,  left  to  right:  Thomas, 
president;  Lloyd  Shaw,  calendar;  Bill  Jones,  forum;  Gerry  Boudreau,  Mardi  Gras;  Jack  Lewis,  polls; 
Frank   Lowe,  music;  Mike   Strong,   free  films;   and   Cecil  Hartsoe,  Sound  and  Fury.  > 


TO  MOST  OUTStANDlNG  COED 

Lee  Award  To  Be  Presented 

The  mosl  o^u^•tandirvg  senior  coed  thapel  Hill,  who  was  the. first  hos-  c'inc  Camiichael,  Dean  of  Women, 
will  receive  the  Irene  F.  Lee  Cup  in  tess  of  Cornoiia  Phillips  Spencer  The  rest  of  the  eommittee  is  com- 
?  ceremjuy  at  5  p.m  in  Spencer  Flail.  S.jencer  was  the  first  dormi-  ptised  of  Ray  Jefferies  .assistant  to 
Hall  th:?   afternoon.  tory    for   women    students,    on     the    the    Dean    of    Student    .\ffairs.    and 

The  winner  if  the  cup  is  chosen    ^>*C   crn:i)us.  ,  four  student  membei"*: 

inr  her  dis'ilay  of  initiative,  cooper-  ]  Retiring  in  VMS  after  23  years  of 
aiion.  leadersiiip.  character,  indust-  servwc.  Mrs.  Lee  now  •  resides  la 
rv.  prr.^everawv.  ideab.  judgment.  Chapel  Hill  \\ht»re  she  takes  an  ac- 
riei>endabilit\    and   scholarship.  |  ti\ e  interest  in  camous  activities. 

The  award,  first  given  in  1955,  will  |  Chairman  of  the  selection  com- Uiellenic  Council;  Miss  Carol  Jones. 
be  miide  bv  iAre.   Irene  F.  Lee  of  i  niitlee  for  the  axVard  is  .Miss  Kath- ,  Women's  Residence  Council. 


Ed  Sutton,  Golden  Fleece  repre- 
sentative; Bill  .McLean.  Order  of  the 
C:rail;    Miss   Penn     Anthony,      Pan- 


Women, 
Men  Paired 
Next  Fall 

Orientation  Groups 
Have  Six  Functions 

The  men's  orientation  groups 
will  be  paired  with  the  women's 
for  six  functions  next  fall.  Jerry 
Oppenhcimer.  chairman  of  the 
i  orientation  committee,  announced 
yesterday. 

Last  fall  the  mixing  of  the  men 

and  women  omentation  counselor.'^ 

!  and  their  groups  was  encouraged 

'  but  this  year  there  will  be  definite 

assignments   for   each   counselor. 

As  it  is  now  planned  the  men's 
groups  will  attend  with  the  women 
at  the  picnic  and  activities  session. 
the  dance  on  the  lenais  court,  the 
Chancellor's  reception,  the  wel 
coming  assembly,  the  student 
government  meeting  and  the  fac 
ully  panel   discu.ssion. 

This  fall  the  transfer  students 
will  come  at  the  same  time  that  \ 
freshman  do.  The  grad  students  | 
will  be  given  a  program  by  the  [ 
Graduate  Club  under  the  direc- , 
lion  of  the  orientation  committee.  ; 

The  faculty  panel  discussion  is 
an  addition  to  the  old  program. 
Four  professors  will  talk  about 
the  .academic  side  of  life  at  Caro- 
lina  and   explain   in   general    what  ; 

"will  be  expected  of  the  student.^  ^  ^^ ere  ursod  tod;^- to  accept  their  re- 
and  what  they  should  expect  of ,  t«p3n.sibility  to  mould  and  to  lead 
the  professors.      '  i  public  opinion  in  the  intei-est  of  im- 

The    activities   session    has   been  I  P'"«^*'ti   administration  of  ju.stice. 
combined  with   the   picnic.   Oppen-       M  a  liMuheon  .session  of  the  North 
heimer  explained  that  there  would  ;  Carolina    Editorial    Writers    Confer- 
be  more  informal  and  eooler.  ence,  J.  Spencer  Bell  of  Charlotte. 


Spring  Exam  Schedule 

According  to  the  Central  Office  oi  Records,  the  time    jI  an    ex 
amination  may  not  be  changed  after  it  has  been  fixed  in  the  schedule. 

No  student  may  be  'excused  from  a  scheduled  examination  except 
by  the  University  Infirmary,  in  case  of  illness;  or  by  his  General 
College  lacu)ty  adviser  or  by  his  dean,  in  case  of  any  other  emer- 
gency  cumpelltng  his  abjence. 

All  8:00  a.ni   ^.'iasscs  on  MWF         "Wed.,  May  22,  8:30  a.m 

All  10:00  a.m.  Classes  on  MWF       jf  J*^?.     "Wed.,  May  22,  2:00  p.m. 

All  'French.  Kiennan  and  'Spanish  courses 

numbered  1.  2,  3,  3X  and  4     ._ Thurs.,  May  23,  8:30  a.m 

All  11:00  ajn    Classes  on  TTHS  .^ Thurs  ,  May  23,  2:00  p.m 

All  10:00  »an.  Classes  on  TTHS  iLi._.,_ ,._  Fri.,  May  24,  8:30  am 

All   11:00  a.m    ria„*3es  on  MWF' ..!_ _.LTri..  May  24,  2:00  p.m 

AH  3:00  p.m    Classes,     Chem.  21.  *BA  71 

&  72.  and  all  classes  not  otherwise  provided 


GM'S  SLATE 


Michael  And  Springs  Will 
Head  Humor   Magazine 

Four   Publications 
Slated  Next  Year 

William  S.  Michael  Jr.  and  Manley  M.  Spring.-  have  i»cen 
named  editor  and  business  manager  respectively  of  the  new  campus 
humor  magazine  which  will  replace  the  now  defunct  Tarnation. 

Michael  and  Springs  were  appointed  Friday  to  the  top  two  po.-.- 
itinns  on  the  new  humor  publication  by  a  special  board  consisting  of 
the  present  editors  of  The  Daily  Tar  Heel,  the  Yackety  Yack  and 
the  Carolina  Quarterly,  in  addition  to  two  presidential  appointments 
and  two  members  of  the  Student  Legislature. 

The   new  editor  lists   as  previous  i 
experience   for   the  position  editor-  |  major  with  a  "deep  appreciation  of 
vliip  of  his     fraternity     newspaper,  !  s.  J.   Pereleman.    James    Thurber, 


editorship    of    the    Hartford    Y.MCA  |  Max     Schulman.     et     al."     Michael 


MANLEY   SPRINGS 

.   )ici(    business  maiiauer 


magazine  and  work  with  the  Fiction 
I^oard  Quarterly. 

He  lists  himself  as     an     English 


Editors   Responsible 
To  Mould,  Lead  Public 

North  Cai\)lina  newspaper  editors    Chairman  of  the  NT  C.  Bar  .\ssocia- 

tion  Committee,  which  is  making  a 


is  a  special  student  and  a  member 
ot   Kappa   Sigma   fraternity. 

Springs  brings  to  the  position  of 
business  manager  previous  exper- 
ience on  the  business  end  of  news- 
paper work  with  the  Ma.verSpark. 
his  high  school  newspaper,  and  dur- 
ing the  pa.st  year  has  acted  in 
capacities  as  Night  Editor  and 
Night  News  Editor  of  The  Daily  Tar 
Heel. 


BILL    MICHAEL 

.   .   .   rip?r   edtfor 


Symposium 

Will  Meet 

At  Library 


Sat,  May  25,  8:30  a.m 
Sat.,  May  25,  2:00  p.m 
Mon.,  May  27,  8:30  a.m. 
Mon.,  May  27,  2:00  p.m 


Tues.,  May  28,  8:30  a.m. 
Tues.,  May  28,  2:00  p.m. 


for  in   the  schedule 
All  8  00  a.m.  Classes  en  TTHS 
All  2:00  p^.  Classes  on  MWF,   -BA  130 
All  12:00  Noon  Classes  on  MWF 
All  2:00  p.m    Clasjia  on  TTHS 

'  Econ  31.  32.  61  i  70 
All  12:00  Noon  Classes  on  TTHS,  all 

Naval  Science  and  Air  Science 
All  1:00  p.m.  Classes  on  MWF,    Pol. 

Sci.  41.     Econ.  81 
AM  9:00  a.m.  Classes  on  MWF 
All  9?00  a.m    Classes  en  TTHS 
All  Exams  resulting  in  conflicts'  frotn 

Common  llxam  scheduled  above 

=^In  cVse  ot  any  conflict,  the  regulary  scheduled  exam  will  take 
precedence  over  the  common  exam  (Common  exams  are  indicated  by 
an  asterisk.) 


Wed. 

Wed. 

Thurs., 


May  29,  8:30  a.m. 
May  29,  2:00  p.m. 
May  30,  8:30  a.m. 


Thurs.,  May  30,  2:00  p.m 


M-m  ^.cifKi'y^igSLL'v-^^ 


The  .following  activities  are 
scheduled  for'  Oraham  Memomal 
today. 

Young  Friends,  9:45-11  a.m., 
Grail  Room;  Quakers,  11-1  a.m., 
Grail  Room;  Westminister  Fellow- 
ship, 9:30-10:45  a.m..  Roland  Park- 
er Lounge  No.  1;  Con^munity 
Church.  11-12  a.m.,  Roland  Park- 
er Lounge  No.  1;  Presbyterian 
Church.  9:30-11  a.m.,  Roland 
Parker  Lounge  Nos.  2  and  3;  Pre.s- 
b.vterian  Church.  9:30-11  a.m.. 
Rendezvous  Rcom  and  .\.P.O. 
Room. 

The  following  activities  are 
scheduled  for  Graham  Memorial 
Monday: 

Siudent  Entertainment  Commit- 
tee, 4-5:30  p.m.,  Grail  Room; 
Dance  Committee.  7-9  p.m..  Grail 
Room;  Grail.  9-11  p.m..  Grail 
Room;  Student  Party.  7-8:30  p.m., 
Roland  Parker  Lounge  Nos.  1  and 
2;  Debate  Council,  4-5,J«m..  Wood- 
house  Confeivnce  Room;  Student 
Traffic  Conunittee.  8-11  p.m., 
Woochouse  Conference  Room:  So- 
ciology Class  '79.  12-1  p.tn..  Ren- 
dezvous Room;  Bridge  Club,  7-11 
p.m.,   Rendezvous   Room. 


A  Bet  Has  Been  Paid  Off 

Coach  f=r»i»k  McGuire  is  shown  holding  a  skin  from  the  Univer- 
sity of  KaasM'  Sif ma  Phi  Epsilon  fraternity  who  bat  the  local  chap- 
ter that  Ml*  ter  1le«!ft  would  lose  the  NCAA  chanipionship  and 
the  loser  af  <#m  bet  was  to  have  a  skin  adorned  with  the  final  score 
and  send  H  to  the  winning  chapter.  The  evidence  Is  clearly  shown. 
On  the  right  of  McCuire  is  Dick  Spivey  with  Jeff  Corbin  on  the 
loft. 


Soions  Appoint 
NSA  Delegates 

The  Student  Legislature  Thurs- 
day night  confirmed  the  appoint- 
ment of  the  delegates  to  the  Na- 
tional Student  Association  Con- 
gress who  are:  Whit  Whitfield 
(chairman),  Joel  Fleishman.  Son- 
ny Evans,  Don  Furtado,  and  Neil 
Bass. 

The  alternates  to  the  congress 
will  be:  Jerry  Oppenheimer,  Bob 
Carter.  Tom  Waltci*,  BUI  Redding 
and  Dot  Pressly. 

Student  Body  PrM^denl  Evans 
said  of  this  delegation,  "I  feel 
that  we  have  a  delegation  that 
will  represent  tfie  university  and 
student  government  as  it  deserves 
to  be  represented.'' 

The  legislature  approved  the 
Summer  School  Woman's  Honor 
Council  of  Katherine  Coe  (chair- 
man). Martha  Fortune,  Cindy  Se- 
graves.  Amy  Morse,  Majorie  Stal- 
vey  and  Bobbi  Madison. 

Gary  Greer  will  have  a  three- 
year  seat  on  the  Oraham  Memor- 
ial Board  of  Directors  by  the  Stu- 
dent Body  President's  appoint- 
ment. 

Representatives  absent  from  the 
meeting  Thursday  night  were:  Bill 
Baum,  Herb  Greenblatt,  John  Ray, 
Mike  Weaver,  Misses  Kitty  Corr. 
Shelia  Cronan,  and  Val  Von  Am- 
mon. 


Drama  Group  Presents 
Plays  Tonight  In  GM 

The  Petite  Dramatiques  will  present  the  second  in  a  series  of 
programs  to  be  held  tonight  at  8  p.m.  in  the  lounge  of  Graham 
Memorial. 

The  program,  entitled  "An  Evening  of  Tennessee  Williams," 
will  consist  of  two  one-act  plays  by  the  well-known  and  popular 
author. 

The  first  play  to  be  presented  is  entitled,  "Hello  From  Bertha," 
an  early  play  of  the  author's  written  while  he  lived  in  St.  Louis,  the 
setting   of   the   play. 

This  play  is  being  directed  by  Lloyd  Skinner.  In  the  cast  are 
Nancy  Stephens  as  Bertha  (Miss  Stephens  made  a  sensation  re- 
cently as  Marian,  the  evil  woman  of  the  world,  in  this  year's  Sound 
and  Fury  presentation),  as  Goldie  will  be  Hope  Sparger,  who  play- 
ed the  hilarious  Meg  Brockie,  the  man-hungry  Scotch  girl  in 
"Brigadoon'  and  also  has  taken  parts  in  "Caligula,"  "Anastasia"  and 
"Child  of  Two  Winds"  in  which  she  got  experience  for  her  present 
part.  Amanda  Meiggs  is  Lena  and  June  Craft  plays  The  Girl. 

The  second,  a  companion  piece  to  "Hello  From  Bertha"  is  en- 
titled "This  Property  Is  Comdemned."  This  play  is  directed  by  Tay- 
lor Williams.  In  this  play  are  Lioyd  Skinner  who  among  his  other 
numerous  roles  starred  in  the  first  Petite  Dramatique  presentation 
of  "Caligula"  as  the  mad  emporer.  He  has  also  been  in  "Desire  Un- 
der the  Elms"  this  year  and  "Stranger  in  the  Land."  In  the  past 
years,  he  has  also  been  in  "Even  the  Gods,"  "Seventeen"  and 
"Prometheus  Rebound." 

Miss  Betinna  Jinnete,  who  directed  "Caligula"  and  has  appeared 
In  a  major  part  of  "Peer  Gynt"  and  also  has  been  in  two  other  plays 
this  year,  will  star  as  Willie. 


.■-tudy  of  the  state's  judicial  system,  I      He  is  a  freshman  fmm  (fharlotte 
stre.ssed  the  importance  of  consttnKv    ^'^   ^.j,gs   additional   siting  exper- 
tion  criticisjn  on  the  part  of  news- 
papers   and    dei-lai'ed    that    "worse  I 
IKjppycock  was  »e\'er  peddled  any- 
where   than    the    public    conception 
that   the   courts   are  a  m.\stery   be- 
\'vn<l  comprehension  of  the  laxTiian.  "  ' 

He  was  introduced  by  Hal  Trilbble, 
.\ssociate  Editor  of  the  Charlotte  Ob- 
.scrver   and    Chainnon    of    the    Coin- 

IVrence's  Program  Contunittee.  I  such  n^agazines     a«     the     Harvard 

"ItnivtfiKm"       JTLampoon. -the  MIT -Vtjodo.  tJte  WiM- 

EJcpIaining  that    new.fpapers   must  '  iam.s  Purple  Cow  and  the  Yale  Rec- j  tend    this    meeting'^  £or    there    will 
bear  the   blame  for  seeking  sen.sa-  j  ord>  -I  be    a    final    discu.ssion    and    adop- 


ienees     with     several     publications  ; 
among  bis  qualifications. 

During  the  course  of  his  inter-  ] 
view  for  the  position  as  editor,  Mic- 
hael 'ndit-ated  that  he  would  like  to 
?ee  the  nvagazine  grow  in  size  anci 
stalui^e  so  that  some  day  it  might 
command   a    oosition.    if   not   above. 


General  Committee 
Meets  This  Monday 

The  General  Committee  of  the 
Carolina  Symposium  will  meet  f<»r 
the  last  time  this  Monday  May  20, 
1957,  in  the  Assembly  Room  of 
Wilson    Library    at    4    p  m. 

All  -nyiiubers    are   urged    to   at- 


tionalism    in    reportin.g    the    courts, 

particularly  at  tlie  police  court  level, 

.        , J  »u  ..   ..  .    .     ^.     ..  i  "have     become 

he  changed  that     savage  injustice 

,.        .  .•       ,  ,      _.    I  real  rib-tic 

i."-  often  done  in  quoting  from  plead- 
ings without  carefully  printing  den- 
ials simultaneously.  "This  is  also 
true  for  testimon.v  from  one  side." 
ho  contuiued.  "The  adverse  testi- 
nion>'.  even  though  publu^hed  the 
next  da.\ .  does  not  counteract  the 
accusations  in  the  mind  of  the  pub- 

I'C." 


He  added  that  these  mag'azines 
s.vnon,%mous  with 
kling.  in  good  taste,  hum- 
or and  are  indeed  indicative,  if  not 
the  can  ^e  of  t'he  zest  for  living, 
.school  spirit  if  you  please,  which 
exists  on  the.'^e  canr^mses." 


I     He   advised   that   a   few  hours  of 

stud.v    and    training   for    the    person 

\.ho  handles  court  news  would  nvake 

!  a  world  of  differeiK-e  in  the  quality 

oi   his  iTix>rtmg  and  urged  that  tlie 

I  best   staff   members   with   sufficient 

I  training  to  give  intelligent  accounts 

'  of  what  g;ies  on  should  ')e  assigned 

to  cover    "this  most  important  phase 


Springs  said  .vesterda.v  that 
"with  the  help  of  a  capable  and 
industrious  staff,  I  am  sure  we  can 
publish  a  finanL'ially  as  well  as 
humorously  .successful  mrgazine." 


(See  EDITORS,  page  3) 


Get  Your  Yackety  Yack 

Yack  editor  iommy  Johnson 
has  announced  that  persons 
wishing  to  pick  up  their  year- 
books Monday  may  do  so  at  Gra- 
ham Memorial,  the  Student  Un- 
ion  Building,  after   3  p.m. 


tion  of  the  theme  for  1.958.  Two 
proposals  will  be  offered  and  a 
vote  will  be  taken  to  determine 
which  of  the  two  will  be  develop- 
ed  by   the   .Symposium. 

.Anyone  who  has  attended  at 
least  one  of  the  previous  meet- 
ings of  the  Symposium  group  is 
eligible  to  attend  this  meeting 
.Tn(J  participate  in  the  voting. 
There  has  been  some  difficulty  -n 
di>;tributing  the  notification  of 
this  forthcoming  meeting,  and  be- 
cause of  this,  many  of  the  partici- 
pants may  not  receive  notices  in 
the  mail.  Chairman  Frank  Crowth- 
or  said  that  he  hoped  to  contact 
all  of  the  members  before  the 
meeting,  but  urged  everyone  to 
attend,  even  if  further  notification 
is  not  received  bv  Mondav. 


University  Recieves  $5  5,500  Grant 


By    CHERRY    PARKER  j 

A  S55,500  grant  from  the  Falk  ' 
Foundation  to  the  University  of 
North  Carolina  will  make  pQSsible 
a  unique  three-year  program  ot 
field  work  and  participation  in 
politics  for  students  in  the  De- 
partment of  Political  Science. 


such   as   study   of   a    primary   cam 
paign   for  state  office. 

Bureau  of  Records 
In  the  laboratory  anal.vsLs,  field 
work  projects  will  be  planned 
tools  prepared  foy  data  gatherings 
and  analysis  of  d  ^cumentary  ma 
tcriiils  will  take  place.  UNC  has 
one   of  the   most  complete   collec- 


The  program  will  begin  in  Sep-   ^.^^^  ^^    „^,.^^^    ^^^^^   ^^^     ,^^^, 


lember,  1937. 


public   documents   anywhere.   Thi> 


The  foundamental  piu-pose  of  this^;  is   due   largely   to   the   University's 
program  is  to  sharpen  the  interest    joint  sponsorship  with  the  Library 


Shown  above  art  Lloyd  Skinner  and  Betinna  Jinnette,  who  star, 
in  the  second  one-act  play  to  be  presented  tonight  at  8  in  Graham 
Momorial.  The  play  is  entitled  "This  Property  Is  Condemned"  and 
it  directed  by  Taylor  Williams.  Skinner  also  diracts  the  first  play 
to  be  presented,  "Hello  From  Bertha,"  in  "An  Evening  of  Tennessee 
Williams," 


of  undergraduate  students  in  poli- 
tics and  to  deepen  their  under- 
standing of  the  processes  essential 
ti  maintain  a  free  democraiy.  It 
is  expected  that  the  interest  thu^ 
stimulated  may  lead  to  more  freq 
uent  choices  of  careers  in  politics, 
government  service,  journalism  and 
in  teaching  and  research  in  polili 
cal  science. 

.\t  the  outset  of  the  program 
impact  will  be  concentrated  on 
courses  in  politics  and  political 
parties.  In  these  courses,  tech 
niques  which  are  still  new  and 
largely  untried  in  college  level 
courses  in  political  science  will 
be  developed. 

Some  of  the  new  instruments  of, 
instruction  are  +ield  work,  labora 
tory  analysis,  personal  participa- 
tion in  politics  and  the  increased 
use  of  consultants  in  the  cla.ss- 
room  and  lab. 

The  field  work  will  con.sist  of 
.systematic  observation  of  politi 
cal  behavior  iji  real  life  situations, 


of   Congress  of   the   State   Records 
Microlilm    Project,    a    project    di- i 
reeled  Utr  10  years  by  Dr.  William 
S.  .Jenkins.  The  serving  and   main- 


tenance of  the  public  d<K-uinent? 
rollection  is  the  re>p.>n.';  bility  of 
Dr.  William  R.  Pullen.  also  of  the 
iclitical  science  department.  The 
University  offers  many  other  as- 
sets  f  r  research. 

By  way  of  personal  participa- 
tion in  politics,  students  will  br 
encouraged,  directed  and  guided 
in  attaching  them<eivcs  to  the 
csmpai.gn  staff  of  candidates  run- 
ning in  their  home  districts 

In  the  summ^T  of  19.">8.  the> 
may  serve  as  'interns'  in  th?  of 
fices    and    campaign    headquarters 

(Sec  UNIVERSITY    Page  3) 


Mary  Moore  Mason   and   Martha    Fortune,  shown   above,   were   re- 
cently named  Co-Editors  of  the  YWCA  Handbook. 


PAOI    TWO 


THt  DAILY  TAR  HtBL 


SUNDAY.  MAY  If,  \H7 


tUMDAV, 
MtVI  Y< 


Editorial   Synopsis: 
People  And  Week 

The  Daily  Tar  Hcfl  loiniiitnifd  editorially  upon  these 
issues.  ainoM.»  othevs.  duiiiig  the  f>ast  week: 

(1)  A  l)ill  pendino  before  the  Cieneral  Assembly  which 
l)ans  tl»e  ale  ol  obs<eiie  literature  on  state  newstaiids  aud  ihe 
threat  m  Ireedom  oi  the  piess  whidi  it  imposes. 

(•-')  1  he  liiiversitv  s  uew  pro|>osed  ■"supervised  study" 
priK»rani  lor  Cobb  Dormitory  and  the  tone  of  momistic 
pamperiiijEi  ol  whicli  it  reeks. 

(0  Ailiii<;  President  Kisenhower's  firfside  chat  Tues- 
day nii^ht  and  the  threat  whith  congressional  budget  slashing 
poses  loi  his  entire  progrant. 

(4)  Ihe  necessity  for  strengthening  the  Honor  System 
through  an  Hotnor  System  Kmphasis  \Veek. 

(-,)  Inielledual  timiditv  and  the  staritv  of  scholastic 
gadflies  wlio  do  more  than  blindlv  adher  to  textlx)oks  with-' 
out  (juestioning  ilieir  \aliditv. 

•  •  • 

Two  extremely  encouraging  reports  appeared  in  The 
Dailv   lar  Heel's  (olunms  this  week: 

II)     Addiii<nia]  fat  iilty  appointments. 

(2)  Introthu  tion  of  fiills  in  the  state  House  of  Rejv 
resentati\es  antluni/ing  issuan<e  of  Sio  million  worth  of 
txnuls  whit  h  woidd  provide  finids  for  two  additional  campus 
buildings  and  conversion  of  the  current  pharmacy  building 
into  a  new  St  h(M>l  of  journalism. 

Sen.  Nelson  \\<H»dst)n  of  Rt)wan  and  Rep.  B.  T.  Falls  of 
(!le\el;tntl  !ia\e  tientonstrated  t)utstanding  recognititm  of  tlie 
limittd  plusital  fat  ilities  whiih  are  stifling  the  growth  of 
hiuhet  edutation  in  the  state  in  their  introduction  of  the  au- 
thori/ation  bills. 

The  inundating  and  swelling  tide  of  eint)llment  either 
necessitates  limiting  entrants  intt)  higher  edutation  tn  con- 
strut  lion  of  atltlitionil  facilities  tt)  atcomt)date  the  tide. 

riie  Dailv  Tar  Heel  unalterablv  oppt)ses  any  actit)n 
whith  would  extlude  any  segment  of  the  states  citizenrv  frtmi 
its  instiimions  t)l  higher  learning.  Thus  we  wht)leheartedly 
entltjrse  anv  measure  whith  enlarges  the  I'niversity's  facili- 
ties. 

The  tDnspitiiouslv  regretable  part  t)f  the  l>ill  is.  how- 
ever, that  no  pr<»\ision  was  made  h»r  ctmstructitm  t>l  a  new 
rni\ersitv  student  iniion— a  student  unit)n  ct»mparal)le  to  the 
on  whit  h  State  College  stiulents  noAv  enjt>y. 

,\«iother  regretable  and  lamentable  sitiialitm  is  that 
sut  h  appropj  iation  of  desperately  needed  funds  h»r  addiiitMi- 
al  nmstrut  tion  undoubtedlv  )eop;irdi/es  the  ht)pe  that  state 
teachers'  salaries  will  be  hiked  a  netessarv    uj.'ti   per  cent. 

The  state  t«»flers.  cpiite  naiuralfy.  can  ntu  ct>ntiinie  to 
be  emptied  withoiu  an  extortionate  niise  in  taxes.  But  the 
l.eneral  .Vssemblv  must  letogni/e  the  tremendt)us  imptnt- 
ante  of  adetjuate  ethuational  facilities  thrt)Ughtnu  the  state. 

(;eneral  Asseniblvmen  must  put  edurntion  first,  tor  it 
is  the  basis  from  whit  h  all  else  springs. 

riuv  shoidtl  Ixnh  jjass  the  new  authtM  i/atitm  bills  and 
imrease  teat  her  s  salaries  itj.-^i  per  tent,  the  figure  rectnn- 
mendetl   bv   the    Board  of    F.ducation.   Kducatitm    nuist    mrt 


PERSONAUTY  OF  THE  WEEK: 


THE  CAMPUS  WEEK: 


sufler 

i 


Miss  Sarah  van  Weyk:  Vivacious  And  Petite;   Valkyries,  Urrt^eiEd, 
Coed  With  A  Bright  Modeling  Future  .  .  . 


Peg  Humphrey  And 
Truman  Moore 

Sarah  van  Weyk,  Ed  Sutton, 
and  Mebane  Pritchett  will  vow  it 
all  fiappened  quickly. 

Assemble  a  mass  of  photograp- 
hers, newspaper  reporters,  curi- 
ous spectators,  children,  dogs,  a 
bermuda  clad  New  York  fashion 
.photographer,  a  bustling  fa:>hion 
editor,  Sarah,  Ed  (awakened  frtmi 
an  afternoon  nap  ten  minutes  be- 
fore) and  Mebane  in  warm  tall 
woolens,  broiling  hot  Carolina 
sunshine,  a  race  against  time  and 
a  plane  .  .  .  and  you  have  a 
Glamour  photographic  sitting  at 
UNC. 

Sarah,  one  of  the  "Ten  Best 
Dressed  College  Girls  in  Ameri- 
ca" as  selected  by  Glamour  fash 
ion  editors,  wil  appear  in  the  Au- 
gust ik-sue.  As  the  photographers, 
representing  three  state  newspa 
pers  worked  and  watched  Sante 
Forlano  work,  society  editors 
scurried  around  taking  notes. 

Forlano,  one  of  the  nation's  top 
fashion  photographers,  kept  up 
a  steady  stream  of  chatter  as  he 
dashed  from  camera  to  model. 
"No,  No,"  he  cried,  "You  mu.>>t 
wave,  not  move  your  arm.  You 
see  friends.  I  must  have  anima- 
tion. You  must  smile  with  your 
eyes.  Don't  just  show  your  teeth. 
That's  right.  Hold  that." 

A  small  intense  man,  Forlano 
resembles  James  Mason.  He 
works  quickly,  yet  he  keep.-.'  his 
subject  at  ease  with  his  contagc- 
ous   good   humor.    Sarah    reacted 


in  professional  style.  The  banter- 
ing bermuda  clad  photographer 
kept  a  Rolei  in  his  hand,  a  Gra- 
flex  on  a  tripod,  and  a  shutter 
clicking  constantly.  It  was  almost 
a     comic     scene,     with     Forlano 


MrSS    SARAH    VAN   WEYK 

.  .  .  future  model  ivith  Ed  Sutton 

standing  on  fop  of  a  black  case 
peering  down  into  the  camera 
and  waving  hia-  hands,  shouting 
directions  to  the  three  student 
models  posed  by  the  steps  of  Ken- 
an dormitory. 

Margaret  Markley.  the  sun- 
burned Glamour  fashion  editor, 
wearing  a  beige  sheath,  mt)ved  in 
an  efficiently  rapid  manner.  She 
constantly  fixed  Sarah's  hair,  re- 
touched her  make-up,  pinned  her 
clothes,  adjusted  jewelry,  substi- 


tuted handbags  and  manipulated 
the  red  collar  of  a  blue  sn^ht  top- 
ping Sarah's  red  and  navy  skirt. 
While  Forlantf  took  pictures,  she 
stood  behind  the  camera  and  pro- 
fessionally   studied   each   pose. 

Then  as  quickly  as  they  came, 
they  departed.  The  plane  for  New 
York  was  leaving  the  Raleigh- 
Durham  airport  at  5:20.  At  4:30 
the  shooting  session  ended.  They 
ha.-'tily  flung  equipment  into  a 
blue  convertible,  and  headed  for 
the  Carolina  Inn  where  they  were 
staying  for  the  afternoon.  They 
arrived  at  the  airport  five  minu- 
tes before  take-off  time.  "We 
wish  we  could  stay  a  few  days," 
they  said,  as  they  raced  for  the 
plane.  "Its  so  beaiutiful  here." 
Such  is  the  life  of  the  fashion 
people. 

On  less  hectic  days.  Sarah,  a 
junior  form  Winnetka,  Illinois, 
enjoys  the  life  of  a  normal  Caro 
lina  coed.  An  Engli.vh  major  who 
plans  to  teach,  she  is  a  member 
of  Pi  Beta  Phi  sorority,  serves 
on  the  Honor  Council.  Carolina 
Symposium,  and  participates  in 
the  chorus,  YWCA,  and  student 
government.     . 

For  about  eight  years  the  fash- 
ionable Carolina  coed  has  design- > 
ed  and  made  a  major  part  of  her 
wardrobe.  During  the  pa.it  two 
summers  she  has  served  on  the 
college  advisory  board  of  Mar- 
shall Field's  in  Chicago  and  mod- 
led  in  their  weekly  fashion  shows. 
Sarah  has  a  definite  wardrobe 
plan.  Several  times  a  year  she 
takes  complete  inventory  of  her 


wardrobe  and  does  extensive 
shopping,  and  always  has  a  i^eci- 
fic  purchase  in  mind.  ISafah  ad- 
mits she  is  conservative  and 
sticks  to  "basic  simple  good  sty- 
les." "I  never  buy  a  dress  for  jU:rt 
one  occassion,"  she  states. 

Sarah  claims  she  "lives  with  a ' 
steam  iron."  She  polish'es  her 
shoes  constantly,  keeps  them  all 
in  boxes,  always  hangs  up  doth- 
es.  keeps  sweaters,  handbags  and 
other  perishable  accessories  in 
plastic  bags,  us-es  clothing  bags 
for  woollens,  and  hangs  special 
dresses  on  aqiia  paded  hani^ers. 

During  the  winter  months,  Sa- 
rah bases  her  fashions  on  Mack 
and  navy  with  some  red  ensem- 
bles for  color  intere.st.  ^e  dotes 
on, tweeds,  imported  woollens," fur 
blend  sweaters.  For  suminertime 
wear  she  prefers  blue,  '^er  fa- 
vorite warm  weather  outfits  in- 
clude several  sun  dresses  with 
matching  sweaters  or  jackets  and 
a  black  and  red  tartan  plaid 
Wazer-skirt -bermuda  s<»t. 

Sarah  dislikes  wearing  hats  and 
keeps  her  accessories  to  a  min- 
imum, wearing  only  simple  but 
dashing  earrings  and  braclets. 
She  never  wears  necklaces. 

Durins  the  first  week  in  June 
Sarah  will  fly  to  New  York  as  the 
guest  of  Glamour  Magazine 
where  she  will  be  interviewed, 
appear  on  tjelevision,  attend  par- 
ties, and  participate  in  the  Glam- 
our August  College  Fashion  Show 
on  June  5. 

A  Carolina  coed  turns  profes- 
sional  model! 


THE  1957  YACKETY  YACK: 


Annual  Combines  Delicate  Proportion,  Balance 
Imagination  And  An  Artistic  Sense  Of  Beauty 


THE  STATE'S  WEEK; 

Tax   Revision,  And 
Unmarked   Cars 

Bill  King 

Tlu'  .St;itf  V.ix  .Stiuly  C'.oininissitui  ret oniinendetl  a 
Avitle  ri'\ain|)in'4  of  the  .Nt»rth  C'.an)lina  tax  striutuie  la.st 
week. 

Fortv-tluee  thanf>es  were  rettMumeJided  bv  the  (oin- 
niissitin.  all  ol  wliith  (ioxenior  Ht)d<;e.s  tailed  lor  in  his 
ie\emie  })rt)|M)sals. 

.\  (onij)leteiv  ie\aiiiped  tax  .stnittiiie  is  expected  to 
come  trtun  the  s»ib-(t>nmiittee  deliheiatitnis  within  the  next 
tw«»  weeks. 

(;«><k1  news  to  Ntntlj  ('.an)lina  .Speedsters.  Tlie  State 
lli«»hwav  Patiohncn  have  as  yet  nut  received  tlie  unmarked 
tars   tlie   legislature  retemly    told    them    they   may    use. 

There  were  rumors  tliat  some  uinnaiked  cars  were  al- 
leady  iji  use.  Mtnor  C.timmissioner  Kd  Stheidt  said,  "We 
li;t\f  not."  when  inhirmed  ol  tliis.  Commissioner  Scheidt 
wetii  on  to  say  that  it  wt)iild  he  about  July  i,  before  any 
luniiarked  tars  would  be  put  into  use. 

Bills  to  lutliori/e  issuance  t)f  Sio  millitm  in  bonds  in- 
trtHltited  in  the  (.eneral  .\ssembly  \Vednesday  would  pro- 
\ide  hir  tAvo  new  campus  buildings  heie. 

Ihe  money  raisccl  frtjin  the  propised  bond  i.s.sue  would 
pio\itle  Si.i-,o,<K>t)  for  a  pharmacy  buildino,  $222.ocx)  to 
reuKxlel    Mowell    Hall,  and  .S  1,123.000  for  a  physics  build- 

Elsewhere  in  the  consolidated  rnivevsitv.  State- College 
in  Raleigh  would  receive  .S2(»2,(K)o  for  utilities,  repairs  and 
exj>ansions.  and  .Si.i2r,.o<M)  lor  a  t  lassrcnmi  building. 

Ihe  remainder  of  the  .Sio  million  would  be  distributed 
among  the  other  state-supported  institutitms. 

Woman's  College  in  (irecnsboro  will  get  .$1,000,000 
for  a  tlassrot)!!!  building. 

This  btmd  issue  was  letonmiended  recently  by  Gov. 
HiKlges  in  order  tt)  make  $10  millitm  in  surplus  funds  avail- 
able ft)r  pay  raises  for  leathers  and  state  workers.  The  bills 
were  leferreil  10  the  respective  finance  committees  follow- 
ing tiieir  intit»dut  tion. 

W'\^  Bail|>  Wax  1^1 

The  official  student  publication  of  the  Publications  Board  of  the 
University  of  North  Carolina,  where  it  is  published  daily  excejJt  Mon- 
day and  examination  and  vacation  periods  and  summer  terms.  Entered 
as  second  class  matter  in  the  post  office  at  Chapel  Hill.  N.  C,  under 
the  act  of  March  8.  1870.  SubscriptiOE  rates:  Mailed.  $4  a  year.  $2.5(r 
per  semester;  delivered,  $6  a  year,  $3.90  a  semester. 

Editor -      N*^  BASS 

.  ___ ifj^CYmUa 


Neil  Bass 

The  1957  Yackety  Yack  is  tru- 
ly a  tribute  to  the  artistry  and 
yorkmanship  of  its  entire  staff. 

Laurels  are,  of  course,  especi 
ally  due  to  Eklitor  Tom  Johnson. 

Editor  Juhn^n,  with  able  as- 
sistance from  the  magic  lenses  of 
Abernethy  Award  winning  pho- 
tographer Truman  iMoore,  has  ad- 
mirably combined  a  delicate 
sen.se  of  proportion  and  balance 
with  an  artistic  sense  of  beauty 
which  leaves  little  to  be  desired. 

The  1957  annual  is  organized — 
like  its  1956  predecessor —  in  a 
chronological  time  .sequence. 

From  September's'  orientation 
program  to  June's  graduation,  the 
pattern  of  year's  activities  falls 
logically  into  place  with  only  a 
negligible,  occasional  strain  to 
categorize  the  administration  and 
various  organizations  according 
to  a  time  scheme. 

Tlie  Yack  is  dedicated  to  Depl. 
of  Religion  Chairman  Dr.  Bernard 
Boyd  —  "as  teacher,  counselor, 
friend  —  you  have  inspired,  guid 
ed,  understood  us  .  .  ."  The  dedi- 
cation is  the  first  since  the  1954 
Yackety  Yack. 

Out:>-tanding  features  of  the 
book  include: 

(1)  A  generous  456  pages,  jnak 


Lli  Abn«r 


ing  it  the  longest  book  since  the 
1950   annual. 

(2)  "Firsts"  which  include  in- 
dividual units  on  fraternity  and 
sorority  rushing,  student  govern- 
ment elections,  summer  schoiil 
and  the  .Maval  R.O.T.C.  summer 
cruise. 

(3)  Longer,  more  informative 
captions  for  picture^-,  a  uniform 
scheme  of  picture  identification: 
categorization  of  related  organi- 
zations within  small  units  (i.e 
fine  arts,  publications,  student 
government.) 

(4)  Awarding  of  special  recog- 
nition to  seniors  through  the  use 
of  black  drapes  for  senior  girls 
and  a  picture  portfolio  at  the  end 
of  that  class  section. 

(5)  Individual  pictures  of  first, 
second,  and  third  medical  stu- 
dents; and  the  listing  of  activities 
for  Pharmacy  School  seniors. 

The  organizational  genius  of 
John.son  is  equaled  only  by  the 
photographic  imagination  of  staff 
photographer  and  editorial  assis- 
tant Truman  Moore. 

The  Yackety  Yack  Beauty  .Sec- 
tion demonstrates  Moore's  photo- 
graphic imagination.  Not  only 
does  photographer  Moore  capture 
the  natural  beauty  of  those  pic- 


tured: Queen  Martha  Williford 
and  Misses  Marian  Dickens,  ,Ca- 
role    Coopwoodj    Judy    Dockeiy, 


TOM   JOHNSON 

...  edited  1957  Yack 

Patsy  Poythrcss.  Jackie  Aldridge, 
Nan     Schaeffer,     Doris     Adkins, 


Margery  Lindeman,  Lucinda  Hol- 
dernei's.  Sally  English,  Libby  Mc- 
Dowell, Pat  Dillon,  Marian  Dud- 
ley and  Rc*erta  Chapin;  but  he 
—  through  the  use  of  imaginative 
backdrops  and  representative 
poses  —  captures  a  part  of  their 
personality.  Moore  took  SflS  of 
the  book's  550  pictures. 

Editor  Johnson's  sense  of  pre- 
cise yet  flexible  balance  is  dem- 
onstrated by  positioning  of  pic- 
tures and  accompanying  captions 
and  write-ups  in  uniform  yet  im- 
aginative patterns. 

The  work  of  other  staff  mem- 
bers. Business  Manager  Gordon 
Hall;  Miss  Judy  Davis  and  next 
year's  editor  Whitehead  who  serv- 
ed as  managing  editors  and  co- 
beauty  editors;  Tom  Boyette,  pho- 
tographer; and  many  others  can 
hardly  be  underemphasized. 

The  1957  Yackety  Yack,  all  in 
all,  has  surpassed  tradition.  It 
has  not  radically  departed  from 
past  formats  and  patterns,  but  it 
exhibits  a  photographic  and  or- 
ganizational aptness  which  shall 
remain  a  tribute  foi  many  years 
to  come. 

Assuredly  its   excellence  is    a 
standard    which   will   be   sought 
after  next  year  and  the  next  and 
the  next. 


-  #y4(  FATHEApil^-VOU  PREYED 


durS;^ 


TH'R«0  BOTTOM .»'.''-  . 
VOU  SIAPTED  TH  PLAMIN' 


Pogo    ^^ 


AsMciate  Editor 
Managing  Editor 


BOB  HIGH 


Sports  Editor 


BILL  KING 


News  Editor 


'WALT  SCHRUNTEK 


Busint>ss  Manager 


JOHN  C.  WHTTAKER 


By  Walt  KttUy 


iftcr  con- 

riod  ot 

tliirds  6f 

hints  is 

the   re- 


Reports,  Awards,  GAA 

Walt  Schruntek 

The  selection  of  an  acting  Graham  Memorial  Director, 
a  long-sought  report  from  the  <rampus  stores,  a  special  reso- 
lution by  the  Baptist  Student  Union  on  the-  »geent  Um- 
stead  Park  incident  and  the  announcement  of  special  awards 
to  Outstanding  campus  personalities  hdd  the  limelight  for 
brief  moments  on  the  UNC  campus  last  week. 

Tom  Lambeth  was  named  to  a  temporary  position  a.« 
GM  Director  Friday  to' replace  Miss  Linda  ^^aiyv  who  va- 
cates the  post  effective  June  1. 

In  naming  Lambeth  to  the  directorship,  hmvever,  the 
GM  Bodrd  of  Directors  noted  that  incoming  Chancellor 
William  Aycock  is  expected  to  review  the  necessity  of  main- 
taining a  pernianent  director.  ^__ 

The- office  of  president  of  the  student  body  spent  a  biity 
week  appointing  an  assistant  attorney  general  m  ^txiy  Op- 
penheimer  and  naming  'a  cabinet  of  nine  memli^rs  whidi 
was  underscored  by  the  release  of  ^  long-sought  financial  re- 
port of  break-down  profits  by-caraptts  stores,        _ , 

Noted  in  the  report,  which  had  been  f el 
sistent  prodding  by  student  government  over 
years,  was  an  accounting  which  indicated  that 
the  total  profits  from  the  stores  vnd.  vending^ 
plowed  back  into  the  Student  Aid  Division  '     ,. 
maining  one-third  is  meted  out  for  improvementi^l^  operat- 
ing expenses.  ^ 

The  report  was  not  a  full  accounting  of  store  pvotits, 
the  student  body  president  said,  adding  that  a  more  com- 
plete tabulation  would  be  forthcoming  next  faH,3i^ 

The  Umstead  Park  incident  which  was  'prominent 
throughout  the  campus  last  week  came  up  again  for  con- 
sideration when  the  Baptist  Student  Union  sent  a  resolution 
to  the  State  Legislature  calling  for  the  opening  ai  all  state 
park  facilities  to  all  citizens  of  the  state. 

Contained  in  the  resolution  was  "a  statement  pointing 
out  the  incident  as  "exceptionally  detrimental  to  Americas 
position  as  a  working  example  of  democracy  in  the  eyes  of 
the  world." 

Early  in  the  week,  five  coeds  and  three  honoraries  were 
tapped  into  the  Valkyries  in  secret  pre-dawn  ceremonies. 
.Named  to  the  highest  honorary  for  women  en  campus  were 
Misses  Frances  Ellen  Reynolds.  Dorothy  B.  Pressly,  Adelaide 
Holderness,  Cx)nstance  Whittaker,  Lydia  X^xjdv.  Ann 
Oueen,  Georgia  Faison  and  Elizabeth  Kcmble. 

The  John  Parker  Award  for  Unique  Leadership  in  Stu- 
dent Government  went  to  Bob  Voung  and  the  Ernest  Aber- 
nethy prize  in  Student  Publications  work  was  awarded  10 
Truman  Moore.  ; 

(An  .\side  to  the  campus  from  the  editors  of  the  Daily 
Tar  Heel  and  in  the  public  interest.  Exams  start  Wednes- 
day.) ,.  , 

T»«  WORI^'S  WfEK: 


A  Child's  Plight  Ike's 
Budget,   Instability 


Advertising  Manager 


FRED  KATAIN 


j^ight  Editor 


Mauley  Springs 


Bob  High  *  - 

The  world  this  week  was  capitavited  by  a  seven-year-old 
boy  who  Thursday  fell  into  a  newly  dug  well  in  hfs  father's 
backyard.  Benjamin  Hooper,  Jr.,  was  rescued  early  Friday 
night  after  sftending  some  23  hours  in  the  shaft  which 
pinned  in  the  youngster. 

The  wenther  played  havoc  with  tlie  western  states  this 
past  week  as  a  tornado  roared  through  Texas  and  caused 
millions  of  dollars  worth  of  damage  and  took  19  lives.  Floods 
hit  Oklahoma,  12  feet  in  depth  in  some  places,  as  rain  kept 
coming  down  at  the  rate  of  13  inches  in  two  days. 

Congress  sent  to  the  Wliite  House  Friday  the  Jirst  big 
money  bill  of  the  year  and  Sen.  Lyndon  Johnson  said  that 
ithe  American  taxpayers  were  saved  $80,000,000  in  the  fijst 
15  annual  appropriations. 

The  VTnited  States  laundied  their  third  atomic  sub- 
marine this  week  and  Undersecretary  of  Navy  William  B. 
Franke,  the  keynote  speaker  for  the  event  said,  "The  USS 
^kate  is  a  symbol  of  Amierlra's  power  for  peace."  In  the  con- 
nection with  submarines,  Admiral  Jerauld  Wright,  supreme 
commander  of  North  Atlantic  Treaty  Organization  forces 
in  the  Atlantic,  reported  in  a  speech  in  Detroit  that  Russian 
subs  have  been  sighted  manuvering  in  the  Atlantic  and  their 
amsity  is  increasing. 

In  tfie  Mother  Cdtintry,  the  Labor  Party^. Attack  c*i 
Britain's  conservative  government's  plan  on  the  Suez  Canal 
situation  restilted  in  a  vote  of  "CMifidence  for  the  conserva- 
tives from  the  House  of  Commons.  Prime  Minister  Mac- 
Millan  started  the  row  ^vhen  he  acknowledged  that  Egypt's 
President  Nasser  has  control  over  the  canal  and  that  Brit- 
ain should  comply  with  the  ruling  set  forth  by  Nasser  for 
the  time  being. 

In  South  America,  the  Colombian  government,  headed 
by  Gsutavo  Rojas  Pinilla,  fell  after  a  four-year  dictator- 
ship. A  military  junta  promised  to  bring  oindl^r  to  the  coun- 
try and  the  two  parties  of  the  southern  natioii  asked  for  pru- 
dence, calmness  and  i'etum  to  normalcy. 

After  months  6f  working,  Queen  Elizabeth  of  Britain 
has  announced  plans  for  her  first  visit  to  the  United  States 
since  ascending  to  the  throne  in  1952.  It  is  expected  that  the 
visit  by  the  royal  family  of  The  United  Kingdoui  will  in- 
cUide  other  cities  than  Washington. 

Communist  East  Germany  cracked  down  on  12*  rebell- 
ious students  last  week  who  rebelled  against  the  Red  regime. 
The  students  (A  Humbolt  ITniversity.  all  in  the  third  year 
class  of  the  veterinary  college,  staged  the  biggest  uprising 

against   the  spreading  of  Communism  since   the   Workers 

Uprising  o£  1953. 


HOME  OF 


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8U*I0AY,  Mi^Yn  Jf57 
Sitve  YOURsitF— 


THl  DAILY  TAR  HffL 


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rr.  the 
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lirds  of 
lines  is 
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open I- 

profits. 
Ve  fom- 

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innng 
rnra's 
vr.i  of 


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Lr  Daily 
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father's 
'  Friday 
!    which 


ites  this 
!  caused 
.  Floods 
rin  kept 

lirst  big 
lid  that 
thr  first 

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EVERY  SUNDAY 

5:30-7:30  P.M. 


At  Th« 


R^a^H   HOUSE 


Kilinger  To  Be 
IFC  G>urt  Head 


Pete   Kilinger.    Phi   Delta   TTifita^ 
has  iseen  appointed  the  ciiainpan  of 
Interfraternky     Council    Cb^  -  -for 
!  Summer  School  1957,  Jerry  Oppen- 
HOME  OF  CHOICE  HICKORY-SMOKED  CHARCOAL  BROILED  STEAKS   heimer,  chairman  of  the  IFC  Court, 

amiounoed  yesterday. 


fiASTWOOD  LAKE 

Swimmfng  -:-  Fishing 
mi  Sandy  Beach 

l^eftx'And   Enjoy  The  Summer   Sun 
^irst  Left  Turn    Past  Brady's 


THE  Ol^TSTANDrNG  NEW  DEVELOPMENT 
IN  SUN-SCREEN  CHEMISTRY  .  .  . 


FROTECK^BVEN  AgTER  SWIMMING 

*  EjMi«t)v*  klicoiw  ioflradicfit.  "Ovfo-SiT* 
(ivM  lonflMt  la«HM9  MM  protactiea 
yoM'v*  cvwr  known 

*  Onty^  «••.  f  two  appBcMttom  n««d«d 
during  a  fvll  day  in  Hm  «wm 

*  Will' not  stain  tuitt 

*  Nofv^roosy  .  .  .  Mnd  won't  sMck 

*  Saf*  •¥•«  for  baby's  dolfeot*  skin 

*  Premotos  a  beautiful  brenx*  toa 
oiyd  pravwnts  pccliog 

*  Swart,  wnbroakobl*  plastic  contoinor 


■125 

-*-  pius  tax 


*Trod»  Mari—oeHvt 
tf«nr  d«v«'op*d  br 


Oppenheimer  and  Bill  Redding, 
president  of  the  IFC,  have  selected 
the  court  for  both  sessions  of  sum- 
mer sc^hool. 

"Their  major  responsibility  will 
be  to  enforce  the  IFC's  sunlmer 
rush  rules,"  Oppenheimer  trt'ated. 

The  rules  said  that  "f^m  the 
end  of  the  spring  semester  until 
the  beginning  of  orientation  no  man 
v.-ho  has  not  ibeen  through  formal 
rusrh  at  Carolina  can  eat.  sleep,  or 
drink  at  a  fraternity  house." 

A  fraternity  or  individual  fratern- 
ity members  may  not  sp^nd  money 
for  the  entertainment  of  th^se  men 
in  Chi^>el  Hill  or  the  surrounding 
areas. 

Those  on  the  IFC  court  for  both 
sessions  of  summer  school  arc: 
Smith  Bradfield.  Phi  Gamnaa  Delta; 
Ben  Levy,  Zeta  Beta  Tau;  and  Bill 
Michael,  Kappa  Sigma. 

During  the  first  .session  Tom  Cool- 
man,  Chi  Psi;  Chuck  Flack,  Kappa 
Alpha;  and  David  Moye.  Sigma  Nu. 
will  serve  on  the  court. 

During  the  second  session  they 
will  be  replaced  by  WaJter  Brown. 
Sigma  Alpha  Bpsilon;  .Urn  HiHiman, 
Sigma  Phi  Epsilon;  and  Bill  McVi- 
car,  Sigma  CW. 


Preakness  Won 
By  Bold  Ruler 

BALTIMORE,  (/PI  —  They  let 
Bold  Ruler  run  his  r«ce  yester- 
day in  ttie  81st  Preakness  Stakes 
and  the  Wheatley  Stable  celt 
humbled  the  Calumet  Farm's  fav- 
ored Iron  Liege  in  Maryland's 
great  3-year-o!d   classic. 

In  as  thrilling  a  race  as  has 
ever  been  witnessed  at  this  old 
cavalry  outpost  Eddie  Arcare, 
Sunny  Jim  Fitzsimmons  and  Co. 
got  partially  even  for  the  licking 
Iron  Liege  handed  them  Iswo 
weeks  ago  in  the  Kentucky  Der- 
by at  Louisville.  Not  since  1948 
and  Citation  has  a  Derby  winner 
copped   the    Preakness. 

Vice  President  and  Mrs.  Nix- 
on were  among  the  c^'owd  -of 
32,856  which  jammed  Old  Hill- 
top and  screamed  with  excite- 
ment as  Bold  Ruler  took  the 
lead  going  into  the  backstreteh 
and  led  the  parade  home  by  two 
big  lengths  over  Willie  Hartack 
and  Iron  Liege  in  the  $113,800 
gallop. 


Covering  The  Campus 


SWIMMING  POOL  I 

The  outdoor  swimming  pool, will  | 
be  open  from  now  until  the  end  j 
of  the  school  year  from  2-5  p.m.  | 
weather  permitting,  it  was  an- 1 
nounced  recently.  When  the  out-i 
door    pool     is     not  open,  regular! 


'Will  And  Trust'  Winners 

UNC  La^^■  Sc^hool  winners  in  tiie 
1957  Will  and  Trust  Drafting  Con- 
test, sponsored  by  the  American 
Trust  Company  of  Charlotte,  are  as 
follows:  Joseph  Duane  GiUam,  of 
Thomiasville,  winner  for  the  best 
entry  in  the  state  and  first  place  in 
the  UNC  Law  School;  and  Benjamin 
S  Marks,  Jr..  of  Greenstooro.  winner 
of  second  place  in  the  UXC  Law 
School. 


hours  will  be  observed  at  the  in- 
door pooL 
WUNC-TV 

Today's  schedule  for  WUNC-TV, 
the  University's  educational  tele- 
vision station,  is  as  follows: 

Sign  On 

Man  to  Man 

Sunday  School 

The  Puppets 

Organ  Prelude 

Church  Service 

This  is-  The  Life 
12:30  H,  Sign   Off 
6:29    Sign  On 

Big  Picture 

Great  Ideas 

Shakespear  on  TV 

Men  Toward  Light 

Music  As  A  Language 

Sign  Off 
LAST  MEETING 
Mr.  Harris  Mitchell,  a  professor 


9:44 
9:45 
10:00 
10:30 
10:45 
11:00 
12:00 


6:30 
7:00 
7:30 
8:15 
8:30 
9:00 


on  leave  from  the  University  of  the  American  Musicological  Sod- 
Georgia,  and  Ph.D.  candidate  here,  jety  Wednesday  at  8  p  ra.  in  Roo« 
wrill  present  a  paper  entitled  "The  1 106  of  Hill  Hall.  This  will  be  the 
Coming  of  Age  of  the  Horn"  be- ,  last  meeting  of  the  organizatioo 
fore  the  Southeastern  Chapter  of  j  for  the  academic  year. 


FREE  DELIVERY 


PHONE  9-8781 


DAlLt     CROSSWORD 


ACROSS 

1  Walking 

stick 
5  Mast 
9  Measuring 

stick 
10.  Biblical 

nam 
12  Anc 
Italian 
langu 
13.  A  ba 

14  On  to 

15  Auxiliary 
verb 

16  Hawaiian 
^      bird 

17  Compass 
point  jHubhr.) 

18.  Pale,.     , 

19.  Gain"" 
20  Threei'-  ' 

leggtd  Stand 
23  Dutch 

painter 
24.  Quaij^d. 
26  Hastened 
28  Greek'^    ■' 

islands' 
^1  Concta^^d 
32.  Skill 
23  Sungda" 
34.  Land 

measure 
33  Herb  (If.  I.) 

36  Level,  . 
38  Gazed  open- 
mouthed 

40.  Coronet 

41.  Not'fi:»ffi 

42.  WildM««p 
rindJJ 

43  LooK^«t 

44  Flexeff' 

DOWS 
1  Defeated 
Indian  .i     : 

ftjhter 


2.  Tropical  dog 

3.  A  tide 

4  Sea  eagle 

5  Country 
(Afr  ) 

6.  Beseech 

7.  Ri^yer  (Fr.) 

8  Si^ng  back 

9  CJt  5f  meat 
11.  Man's  name 

^(poss.) 
i*  AtteFrtie 
'    •islamd 
18  Striking 

success 

(Slang) 
19.  A  river 

(Near  E^st) 
21.  Frosted 


22.  Seed 
ves- 
sel 

23.  Fe- 
male 
fowl 

25.  Non- 
sense! 
(slang) 

26  Chases 


QizjD  cgya  hqb 


Oppenheimer  Announces 
Summer  Counselors 

Six  men  will  serve  as  counselors 
for  Summer  School  Orientation,  ac- 
cording to  a  recent  announcement 
by  JeiTy  Oppenheimer.  chairman  of 
the  campus  orientation  committee. 

They  are: :  Cra\-en  Brewer.  Gene 
McDaniel.  Bill  Michael.  Jim  White. 
Sam  Scott  and  Keith  Sniith. 

Summer  school  orientation  will 
take  place  June  5  and  6.  and  will 
be  a  modified  version  of  tl»e  fall  pro- 
gram, including  testing,  physicals, 
registration,  Student  Government 
meetings,  the  Chancellor's  recep- 
tion. Honor  S>'stem  convocations, 
campus  tours  and  a  welcoming 
dance. 

The  men's  counselors  will  have  a 
short  oi-gamzational  meeting  Tues- 
day night.  June  4'  at  7  p.m.  in  the 
Orientation  office  of  Graham  Mem- 
orinl,  said  Oppenheimer. 


University 

(^roTJtmiied   from   page   I) 
of  candidates  for  congressional  and 
state  offices. 

Consultants 

Consultants    in    classrooms    and 

labs  will  be  an  important  feature 

of   the    new    program.   Classrooms 

will  be  opened  to  persons  -vyidely 

experienced   in    practical   politics, 

1  Political   party  leaders  and   elect- 

ied  officials  will  be  invited  to  dis- 

I  cu.ss  intimately  with  small  groups 

I  of  students  their  experiences  and 

;  insights    bearing    on    the    political 

process. 

t'our.scs   will  be   opened   to   ad- 
vanced   undergraduates   and   grad- 
uates.   The    Falk    grant    will    pro- 
vide for  five  graduate  fellowships 
annually,    parti<il    support    for    an 
additional       professor,       expens-es 
I  and   fees  of  consultants,   expenses 
,  of  internships  and  field  work,  lab 
;  equipment  and  supplies.  -jS^ubsidies 
I  for   extracurricular   activities,   and 
administrative,  secretarial  and   of- 
I  fice  supplies  cost. 


I  with  hi 


L....§PM- 

Ever  stoce  Jack  bought  his  new 
Sooic  CAPRI  phonograph  at  the 
local  college  score  —  he's  become 
(he  biggest  B  M  O  C  ever.  You  * 
can  join  him  and  be  die  biggest  ever, 
too,  foe  you  can  buy  a  CAPRI 
phonograph  for  as  Uqic  as  $19.9$. 


This  mooch's  special  is  the  CAPRI 

994  •>  a  twin  speaker  high 

idelicy  portable  with  4-speed 

Webcof  automatic  changer, 

hi-fi  amplifier  in  attractive 

fwo-tooe  Forest  Green.      •«iy  ^59^^ 

at  y*w  local  doolf. 
SONIC  INDUSTRIES,  INC.  '19  Wilbur  Street,  lynbrook,  N.Y. 


By  •ppomtintnt  pwrveyon  of  soap  to  tlw  iatt  Ki<ic  G«or|t  VI,  Vartfity  a  C«.,  IM., 

SUPER -WETTING 


Yardley  Shaving  Foam  keeps  the  beard  saturated  throughout 
the  shave.  Gives  a  professional  shave  in  one-half  the  time.  (1 


YARDLEY  OF  LONDON,  inc. 

V«HU«y  products  for  Ameriet  srt  crMted  in  Enfland  tnd  flmtlMd  in  Mm  U.S.A.  froK  tk* 
orifinal  Enflish  formulae,  combining  imported  and  domestic  ingradiaMs.  G20  Hflh  Ave..  N. Y.C. 


YARDLEY  PRODUCTS   AVAILABLE 

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Hope  Sparser  is  shown  above 
ar  shs  appears  in  "Hollo  From 
Bertha"  tonight  in  Graham  Me- 
morial lounge.  Miss  Sparger  is 
portraying  Bertha  in  the*  first 
of  two  one-act  plays  to  be  pre- 
sented in  observance  of  "An 
Evening  of  Tennessee  Wiltiams." 


CLASSIFIED  ADS 

GOOD  USED  KENMORE. VACU- 
urn  cleaner— $25.  Call  9-«621  be 
tween  1  &  3  p.m. 

BEAUTIFUL  COTTAGE  FOR 
rent  at  Ocean  Drive  Beach  first 
two  weeks  in  June.^  Sleeps.  12, 
reasonable  rates.  Contact  Daily 
Tar  Heel,  9-3371. 

LOST:    SMALL,    WHni~WmE- 
haired    terrier,    one   brown  ear. 
Answers    to    Sapphire.    Reward,  j 
Call  Earl  Wynn,  9474  or  9-2741. 

WOMAN  GRADUATE  STUDENT 
writing  thesis  desires  room  for 
the  summer.  Would  consider 
caring  for  vacationing  professor's 
home.  Contact  Daily  Tar  HeeJ, 
9-3371.  j 

FOR  SALE:  '36  MODEL  8'  KEN- 
more  (Manufactured  by  Kclvina- 
tor)  refrigerator.  Reasonable,  by 
graduating  senior  couple.  Phone 
3196.  I 


^^Bu^ness  and  pleasure  do  mix..." 


ROBERT  H.  WENTORF,  JR.,  Ph.D.,  University  of  Wiseonsin,  1951 


LOST  -TORTOISE-SHELL  FRAME 
sunglasses,  in  library  or  pine 
rooifj.  May  15th.  John  Cogswell. 
Contact  information  desk,  Grah- 
am Memorial.  Reward. 


"Until  I  joined  General  Electric's  Research  Labora- 
tory in  1951,  I  never  realized  .science  could  be  such 
a  challenge  —  or  so  much  fun.  My  job  involves  re- 
search in  physical  chemistry  —  the  investigation  of 
new  ideas  which  can  lead  to  new  and  better  products 
people  can.  use.  In  a  company  of  this  size,  I  have  the 
unique- advantage  of  having  the  tools  and  facilities  I 
need  and  the  experience  of  others  close  at  hand.  And 
in  return,  of  course,  I'm  expected  to  apply  myself  to 
the  best  of  my  ability  in  each  new  job.  As  I  see  it, 
if  a  big  company  like  General  Electric  invests  time, 
money  and  faith  in  my  creative  ability,  and  if  I  re- 
spond by  creating,  then  we  both  ,beneifit.  To  me,  at 
General  Electric  business  and  pleasure  do  mix." 


The  achievements  of  31-year-old  Robert  Wentorf 
speak  well  of  his  ability  to  make  the  most  of  the  op- 
portunities offered  at  General  Electric.  He  recently 


created  borazon  —  a  completely  new,  diamond-hard 
substance  which  promises  far-reaching  effect  on  in- 
dustrial processes  and  everyday  living. 

There  are  more  than  27,000  college  graduates  at 
General  Electric.  Each  is  provided  the  opportunity 
for  self-development  in  the  hope  that  his  creative 
ability  will  bring  forth  new  ideas.  As  General  Electric 
sees  it,  these  new  ideas,  stemming  from  man's  native 
curiosity,  will  lead  to  the  development  of  countless 
products  as  yet  undreamed  of  for  our  nation's  defense 
industries,  and  homes. 

A  physicol  chemist  at  Oonorol  Electric  conducts  studies  of  th« 
atomic  strwcturo  of  matter,  and  of  the  way  atoms  and  moloculo« 
interact  under  a  wido  variety  of  conditions. 


?kgmg  k  (kir  hks^  !mfoii9nt  hwitcf 


GENERALiiELECiaLC 


f  A9I  POUt 


THl  DAILT  TAR  HML 


SUHDKT,  MAY  ^%  1»57 


DTH  Recognizes  Top  Afh  letes  Of  Y'ear 


First  Annual  Selection 
Chooses  Four  Seniors 


Four  Carolina  seniors  bave  been 
elected  as  the  first  winners  of  the 
Datl^-  Tar  Heels  'Tap  Athletes  of 
The  Year   RecognUikm." 

Daily  Tar  Heel  sports  editor  Bill 
King  announced  j-esterday  that  Ed 
Sutton.  Lennie  Rosenblutb,  Jim 
Beattj-.  and  Jim  Raugh  had  been 
re;.t>gnized  by  the  Tar  Heel  for 
tlieir  "outstanding  oontributions  to 
piWetics  at  Carolina."  King  further 


m  Carolina  historv-.  The  lanky  scor- 
ing ace  from  Greenville,  Tenu.  re- 
wrote the  scoring  books  while  a* 
Carolina.  Rosy  was  called  "every- 
bodv's  All- American"  this  past  sea- 
son when  he  led  his  Tar  Heel  team- 
mates to  the  National  Basketball 
Chi?inpiionsh;p  this  past  season. 

Rosenibluth  was  drafted  by  the 
Philac.eplliia  Warriors  of  The  Na- 
tional  Basketball    .\ssociation   and 


5tated     that     the     reoogmtk>n  was  •  hopes  to  begin  his  career  with  the 
based  on  leadership  .sportsmanship 
and  all-around  ability. 

Sutton,  the  scholarly  hal&ack 
t  rom  Cullowee,  was  the  top  perform- 
t-r  for  coach  Jim  Tatum's  football 
i -am  iast  season  and  has  been  an 
ouutanding  figure  both  in  athletics 
end  campus  life  dusiog  his  four 
>vars  at  Carolina. 

The  big  halfback  is  a  pare-med  stu- 
dent and  will  play  professional  foot- 
ball with  the  Washingtim  Redskins 
w  hile  attending  a  Tennessee  medical 
school  in  the  off-season. 

Lennie  Rosenblutb  is  ci^led  hy 
many  the  greatest  basketball  player 


pix>s  in  1958  after  fulfilling  his  oth 
ligatioi^  to  Uncle  Sam.  He  will 
wed  Pat  Oliver  of  Mt.  Airy  June 
Lst. 

Jim  Beatty,  the  little  runner  from 
Charlotte  is  a  three-time  All-.\mer-^ 
lean  and  recently  finished  his  great 
career  as  a  collegian  in  the  ACC 
track  finals. 

Beattj',  like  Rosenbluth,  holds 
ipractically  all  school  records  as  a 
distance  runner.  He  came  to  Cato- 


nm 

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■^^^H^C^Im 

HjHtii 

^^^^Bk 

HHH 

^^^^^HI^^^^^I^^Bb^ 

I^H^^^^^^I 

^^^^■rai^^^^^^^^^ 

^hh 

^Hh^^b 

s 

iBm 

^^^HpR^^\^-^n^^   N.^ 

N^^^^  i.^^i^|Wj 

^^^-  '.^ 

'^         '^^ 

^^^^^'*  - 

^ftSk^H 

■■Hllil 

Pictured  above  are  the  four  men  who  have  been  recognized  by 
The  Daily  Tar  Heel  a$  "The  Top  Athletes  of  The  Year"  at  Carolina. 
In   this   first    annual   selection   the   Tar    Heel    picked,    reading   from 


left  to  right,  Jim  Beaty,  Jim  Raugh,  Ed  Sut  Ion  and   Lennie  Rosen- 
bluth. 


Intramural  Banquet  Here  Monday  Night 

The   Intramural    Department   has   te^niity  trophys  given  to  the  outstand-  i  conditions.  The  last  award  is  award- 


announced  that  its  annual  Managers 
.■^w'arcs  Banquet  will  be  held  Mon- 


lina  as  a  highly  regarded  prospect  i  day  night  at  6:30  in  the  recreation 

and  s'.nce  that  time  has  lived  up  to  :  room  of  the  women's  gym. 

£nd  beyond  the  fondest  exi)ectations  I     Bradj's  will  sen'e  barbe-que  and 


Boston  Beaten 

BOSTON,  (AP)— Massh-e  Que  Zer- 
rial  unloaded  a  three-run  homer  and 
two  doubles  at  a  pet  target.  Fen- 
way Park's  left  field  wall,  yester- 
day in  boosting  Kansas  City  toward 
a  7-5  victory  over  Bostcm. 

Zemial  who  "owns"  the  towering 
barrier  here,  doubled  to  *2je  foot  of 
the  wall  to-  one  run  in  the  first 
inning. 


Yanks  Lose 
In   Ninth 

NEW  YORK.  (-\P)— Red  Wilson, 
a  late-inning  replacement  for  in- 
jured Frank  House,  sin{ped  to  scchc 
Al  Kaline  m  the  ninth  inning  >-ester- 
day  for  a  2-1  Detroit  victory  over 
the  New  York  Y'aakees. 

The  Tigers,  only  club  to  hold  a 
season  series  edge  over  the  world 
champs  Uist  year  .tiHis  jwropt  tiie 
two-^ame  series  at  Yankee  Stadium 
and  made  ^  three  out  of  four  over 
New  York  this  season. 

Wiison  canoe  into  the  game  in  the 
last  of  the  seventh  alter  House, 
whMe  homer  tied  the  score  in  the 
Hrst  of  the  seventh,  w^as  struck  on 
the  throat  b>'  Afickey  Mantle's  foul 
tip. 

Kaline's  sii^Ie  opened  the  win- 
i-ing  rally  against  Don  Larsen.  Af- 
ter Kaline  took  second  on  a  passed 
ball  by  Yogi  Berra,  Wjlson  singled 
down  the  left  fi^  foul  line  for 
the  winning  run.  FoHowteg  a  walk 
to  Al  Aber.  Detroit  winaer  on  relief, 
Larsm  was  repiaecd  by  Bob  Giim 
Mibo  retired  the  side  after  loading 
the  bases. 

Aber  took  over  in  the  eighth  when 
the  Y'anks  loaded  the  bases  on  start- 
er Paul  Foytack,  but  oouMn't  score, 
ft  was  the  second  victoiy  for  the 
lefthanded  bullpen  artist. 

The  Y'anks  got  to  Fo^'tack  for  a 
run  in  the  second  vrtien  Bill  Skowron 
hit  a  ground  rule  double,  Gil  Mc- 
Dougakl  beat  out  an  hrfiedd  single 
and  Larsen  singled  timMi^  the  box. 


of  his  coaches.  Jimmy  piians  to  con- 
tinue his  track  work  upon  gradua- 
tion. 

Jim  Raugh,  like  Sutton,  is  known 
almost  as  much  for  his  campus  ac- 
tivities as  he  is  icx*  his  baseball 
ability.  The  senior  righthander  from 


brunswick  stew  prior  to  the  a^vard- 
ing  of  honors  foi*  outstanding  intra- 
mural work.  The  most  cherished 
award  to  l>e  presented  is  the  team 
trophy  given  to  the  gi'oup  that  has 
compleid  the  greatest  number  of 
points  through  the  year.  There  will 


Rosemoot,  Pa.  has  been  a  vital  cog  \  be  three  such  trophys  given,  one  to 
in  Oarolinas  baseball  exploits  i  ^^^h  ol  these  divisions,  dorm,  fra- 
throughout  the  last  twx>  seasons.         j  lemity.blue.  and  fraternity  white. 

Raugh,   who   finished  the  seaison       Also  ihere  will  be  dorm  and  fra- 
with  ^i  8-3  record  for  the  Tar  Heel  I 
basebaUers,    is  considered   a   great  i 
major  league  prospect.  This  year  he  j 
was  perhaps  the  best  hurler  in  the  ' 

Atlantic  Coast  Conference.  Raugh  is  j  (Contimied  from  page  1) 

expected  to  sign  a  professional  con-  j 
tract  soon. 

The  Daily  Tar  Heel  offfers  a  hearty 
salute  to  these  four  men  and  wishes 


Editors 


them  much  success  as  they  continue 
their  careers  as  great  athletes  and 
great  men. 


No  Track 

Due  to  The  Daily  Tar  Heel's 
deadline,  the  AAU  track  meet 
h*ld  in  Raleigh  yesterday  and 
last  night  does  not  a|>pear  in  the 
Tar  Heel  today. 


of  the  government's  activities  so  far 
j  as  the  vast  majority  of  our  citizens 
are  concerned." 

Challenge 
He  challenged  the  popular  concept 
that  responsibility  for  administration 
of  justice  rests  with  the  legal  pro- 
f<i*-sioii  when,  particularly  in  North 
Carolina,  it  is  the  lay  voter  who 
5elects  judges,  court  attaches,  solic- 
itors, clerks  and  other  personnel, 
and  legislature,  composed  of  lay- 
nK-n.  which  makes  the  laws  by  which 
judges  and  lawyers  must  Idve. 


ing  participant  in  intramurals,  the  !  ed  to  the  manager  who  does  an  out- 
outstanding  manager,  and  the  out-  1  standing  job  e\  on  though  his  team 
standing    manager    under    existing    might  not  win  a  contest  all  year. 


Howard  Johnson  Restaurant 

STUDENT   SPECIALS 

Barbecued    Chicken 

Choice  Steak  Sandwiches 

2:00—    5:00  P.M 
SERVED 
^EKVCU  8:00-11:00  P.M. 

**Landmark  For  Hungry  Tarheels" 


earolirn 


WE'LiL  BUY  ALL 
YOUR    OLD  BOOKS 

Live  T  exts 

We  pay^'  top  prices  for  texts 
that  w  ill  be  used  again  at 
U.N.C. 

Dropped  Texts 

We'll  "search  the  market  for 
a  sppt  to  salvage  some  of 
year  loss  when  a  text  is 
dro(ifped. 

Enjoyable  Books 

We  can  use  books  you  no 
lomg  er  want  on  your  shelves. 
Then  next  fellow  that  comes 
aloi^g  may  fSnd  them  as  de- 
lightv'ul  as  ytou  did  a  year  or 
so  ago. 


When  Eb<ai«is  Are  Over, 

There'll  Be  Green  Money 

For  You  At 


s 


^AVE  YOU  TRlEdi  W 
tHIS  EASYTEST2!  §1 


Here's  an  interesting  way  to 
test  a  summer  shirt  for  cool- 
ness. Have  your  friends  truss 
you  up  like  a  barbecued  pig 
and  put  you  on  a  spit.  Thien 
have  them  light  a  roaring  fire 
underneath  you.  Then  get 
somebody  to  keep  turning  you, 
slowly  and  deliberately,  over 
the  crackling  fiames.  Do  you 
feel  the  heat?  Do  annoying 
beads  of  perspiration  break 
out  on  your  forehead  and  neck? 
Are  you  uncomfortable?  Does 
your  collar  wilt,  wrinkle  and 
curl?  In  fact,  do  you  generally 
dislike  the  test? 

If  anyone  of  these  things 
happen,  you're  not  wearing  a 
Van  Heusen  Century  Sheer, 
the  summer  ^hirt  that's  about 


?f' 


the  coolest  you  can  buy  and 
which  features  the  famous 
one-piece  soft  collar  that  can't 
wilt  or  wrinkle,  no  matter 
how  hot  or  humid  it  get.3. 

The  Van  Heusen  Century 
sheer  Shirt  is  the  summer  ver- 
^  sion  of  the  great  Van  Heusen 
Century  Shirt.  It's  made  of 
pique,  that  featherweight,  cool- 
weave  fabric,  launders  beau- 
tifully and  (we  repeat)  it's 
impossible  to  wrinkle  its 
collar.  Takes  no  starch  either, 
so  it's  always  soft  and  com- 
fortable. See  it  at  your  campus 
haberdasher.  He's  got  the 
Van  Heusen  Century  Sheer 
in  several  collar  styles.  $4.00. 
Phillips-Jones  Corp.,  417 
Fifth  Ave.,  New  York  16,  N. Y. 


WE  ARE  THE  EXCLUSIVE 


VAN  HEUSEN 


DEALER  IN  CHAPEL  HIU 


Town&  Campus 


Braves  Clout 

AOLW.XUKEE,  (AP)  —  A  batting 
spree  that  included  Iwane  nuts  No. 
10  and  11  and  four  itins  batted  in  by 
defending  National  League  bat 
champion  Hank  Aaitm  Hdped  Mil- 
v-aukee  to  a  6-5  virtory  over  Pitts- 
burg 3^esterday  and  put  tbe  Braves 
back  on  the  be^  of  the  iea^ue4ead- 
ing  Redlegs. 

Tiie  decLiion  before  18,850  fans 
at  County  Stadium  gave  Lew  Bur- 
dette.  calVed  in  wh«n  starter  War- 
ren Spahn  was  lifted  lor  a  pinch 
hitter,  his  fifth  victory  against  two 
losses. 


Advertise 

In  The 

Daily 

Tar 


I 


YPITVI  PROtABLY  HEARD  of  torch  songs  (music  to  cry 
by),  Air  Force  songs  (music  to  fly  by),  and  Aloha  songs 
(music  to  bye-bye).  The  Lucky  Strike  song  is  music  to 
buy  by:  it's  a  pretty  ditty  that's  devoted  strictly  to  Luckies. 
NaturaUy,  that  makes  it  a  Cheerful  Earful!  It  reminds  you 
that  Luckies  are  tops  and  that  better  taste  is  the  pleasin' 
reason.  Luckies'  taste  comes  from  fine  tobacco — mild,  good-^ 
tasting  tobacco  that's  TOASTED  to  taste  even  better.  So, 
as  the  jingle  says,  "Light  up  a  Lucky,  it's  light-up  time!" 
You'll  say  it's  the  best-tasting  cigarette  you  ever  smoked! 

Luckies 
Taste  Better 

-ir$  TOASTED"    TO   TASTE   BETTER  .  .  .  CLEANER,   FRESHER,   SMOOTHER! 


•a.  T,  Co.       Product  of  <jffiti  J^rwucaav  Jv^!uae»<Mnyxa7^  —Ja^ieeo-  is  our  middle  tiamt 


^ 


w,th  MARK  RICHMAN  •  GEORGE  PEPPARD  •  PAT  MINGLE  •  ARTHUR  STORCH 
.«-  JAMES  OLSON  •  SAM^SF^IEGEL productions 

OPENS   TODAY 


1 


.     WEATHER 

Fair  and  warm.  Rain  Wednesday. 


1£|1«  1«   «• 


tir^ 


Srt)  eDatte  S^Tar  Heel 


VOL.   LVU,   NO.   193 


Lomviete  i>P)   Wire  Serine* 


CHAPEL   HILL,   NORTH    CAROLINA,  TUESDAY,  MAY   21,   1957 


Officet   in   Graham   Ifemortol 


CARPETBAGGLR 

Editor  associates  with.  Sec  page 


EIGHT  PAGES  THIS  ISSUE 


*^^ 


New,  JusJ  0>*e  More  Thinq 

It  sounds  simpte  according  to  Sante.  Photograptier  Sante  Forlane 
gives  student  models  Mebane  Pritchitt,  Ed  Suttm,  and  Sarah  y/an 
Weyk  last  minute  instructions.  Under  the  sizzling  Carolina  sun- 
sSine  by  the  steps  of  Kenan  dorm.  Glamour  Magazine  took  pictures 
for   their  August   issue. 


Michael  Releases 
Humor  Philosophy 

"The  art  of  clunking'"  will  bo  azine  was  issued  yesterday  by  both 
expounded  as  a  .basic  principle  in  Michael  and  Springs.  The  editor 
the  fortiiLominy  campus  humor  and  business  manager  will  meet  ir 
magazine.   reLcnLi>-   elected    Editor    Roland-  Parker   1    at  4  p.m.   today 


Bill   Michael  said  yesterday 

"VVe  intend  to  illustrate  the  ad 
vantages  of  complacency  througn 
this  philosophy, ■■  Michael  said, 
adding  that  he  would  lambast  and 
lampoon  such  publications  as  The 
Daily  Tar  Heel  which  are  misin- 
formed on  the  subject. 

.Michael  pointed  out  that  he  and 
hi  •  staff  would  attempt  to  make 
of  the  i<e«  humwroiugitzine.  which 
will  r  place  the  financialty  dis- 
solved Tarnation,  a  "subtle,  dia  ^^  „ 
bolical.  witty  and  (we  hope)  sol--  'Portable, 
vent  publication." 


with  all  persons  intereoled  in  work- 
ing with  them. 

Reiterating  his  interest  in  see- 
ing the  magazine  "grow  in  size 
and  stature  so  that  it  might  some 
day  command  a  positieiiequal  to. 
if  not  above,  such  magazines  as 
the  Harvard  Lampoon,  the  MIT 
Voodo.  the  Williams  Purple  Cow 
and  the  Yaie  Record,  '  Michaei 
said  that  he  was  fir.t  and  fore- 
most   concerned    with    making    it 


Ho    lU-ged    the   student    body    ti 


Whai  Is  This  About? 
Read  It  And  Find  Out 

By  WALT  SCHRUNTEK 

In  a  few  short  weeks,  the  offices  of  The  Daily  Tar  Heel  will  be 
invaded  by  coeds  bent  on  the  ea„y  task  (some  tnink)  of  publishing  a 
newspaper. 

Women,  asserting  an  increasing  drive  for  equality — and  then  some 
— ir  a  "Man's  World"  (pardon  the  misnomer,  please)  will  avail  them 
selve;  of  an  opportunity  to  soil  manicured  hands  with  snarled  type- 
writer ribbon  and  smudges  of  printer^-  ink. 

They  will  come  to  the  task  before  them  dedicated — knowing  full 
well  that  they  can  and  will  put  out  a  better  paper  than  their  mis- 
guided and  inefficieni  predecessors. 

They  will  come  filled  with  confidence  that  they  can  reorganize 
thi  apparent  confusion  of  publishing  a  newspaper.  They  will  brin^ 
order  to  chaos.  '  '        « 

Their  heads  will  be  swirling  with  ideas  for  improvement  and 
'heir  crusade  will  approach  magnificance— for  they  come  to  save 
.1  "urnal:  •  n! 

Indeed,  the  Summer  Quarterly  will  be  an  instrument  whereby  a 
row  and  fresh  approach  to  journalism  can  be  expected.  The  highly 
ofiicient  female  will  prove  her  worth — she  will  show  the  doubter.s 
Our  coed  novvspaperw(;man  may  enter  a  closer,  more  profound  re- 
lationship with  the  reading  public,  bringing  it  those  intimate  and  sig- 
nificant insights  as  t)  why  Pres.  Friday's  wife  wore  blue  at  the  Hi^- 
riry  Banquet  Sunday  when  Mrs.  William  Aycock  dressed  in  aqua- 
iiarine. 

She  mav  lash  out  editorially  for  the  necessity  of  painting  South 
Building  a  deeper  orange  next  year,  reasoning  that  the  trees  are  ex 
pected  to  bloom  a  paler  green  according  to  prominent  biologists  from 
our  own   B  )tany  Department. 

She  may  (occasionally)  »ee  .some  need  to  take  a  stern  measure 
to  the  summer  school  crowd  which  is  notorious  for  its  beach-party 
altitude,  arguing  apathy  and  sheer  laziness  (tch,  Ich). 

She  may  (and  some  of  us  shudder  at  this  thought)  decide  to  estab- 
lish character  in  the  unkept,  untidy  offices  of  the  Tar  Heel.  Flower- 
fi'led  va.-es.  pictures  artistically  hung  and  white-frill  curtains  would 
hardly  be  inconceivable  innovations  to  the  feminine  mind. 


Aldridge,  Young  Named 
Outstanding  UNC  Alumnj 

Both  Selected  By' 
The  Senior  Class 


Joy  Earp  Wins  Lee  Cup 


Same  Time 
In  Library 
For   Exams 


I      The    L.    Round    Wilson    Library 

Miss   J.  y    Frances   Earp    of   Ral-    been  president  ot  Curr  Dormitory,    announced   yesterday    tbat    normal 

eigh  was  named  the  mo.st  outstand-    chairman  of  vespers  for  the  YWC.\,  [  opening  and  closing  hours  will  be 

She  may  do  these  and   nnre  (space   limits   further   conjecture  on    ^„^    senior    woman    at    UNC    Sun- ,  a  member  of  the  Independent  Wo- ,  maintained    during    the    next    two 


the  subject)  but  we  who  leave  these  offices  to  return  again  the  fall, 
leave  respecting  and  admiring  her  nevertheless.  We  leave  with  some 
apprehensioh  too,  lest  these  efficient  young  women  do  prove  their 
superior  worth — lest  their  crusade  doe:^-  succeed. 

We  go  in  fear  (some  of  us)  for  our  jobs,  for  what  if  they  do  suc- 
ceed?  What  if  they  d)   save  journalism   and    raise   it   from   the   "bed 


day    when    she    was    awarded    the  ,  mens    Council,    vice    chairman    of ,  weeks    of    final    examinations. 


Irene    F.    Lee    cup    at    ceremonies 
held    in   Spencer   Hall. 

The   award,  first   made   in   1955, 
is  given   by   Mrs.   Irene   F.   Lee  of 


of  inefficiency  in  which  it  has  rested  so  complacently?"  What  if.  after    Chapel  Hill,  who  was  the  first  hos- 


all.  we   have   been   wrong  these   many   years? 

What  calamity.  What  disillusionment.  What  fanta.y 


What  rot. 


Miss   Still   Is   Honored 


less  of  Cornelia  Phillips  Spencer_ 
Hall.  Chancellor  Robert  B.  House' 
made  the  presentation. 


the  rules  committee  of  Women's '  Special  hours  will  be  observed 
Residence  Council,  a  member  of :  Saturday  for  the  convenience  ol 
the'  Orientation  planning  board,  |  those  who  wish  tj  use  library  fa- 
a  member  of  Valkyries  and  Valky- 1  citi'Jes  the  announcement  indi- 
rie  Sing  chairman.  I  cated.    Saturday,    the    doors    will 

Chairman  of  the  selection  com-;  "I^"    ^t    7:45    a.m.    and    close    at 


Michael    was    naaied    Friday    to  "bear  with  us  in  this  venture,  and  K'vening.                ^_        ^              .      Symphony  Orchestra,  She  has  g..-^ 

the   top   position  of  the  new  pub  above  all   to  BUY   the   magazine."!      ^'    Jan  P.  Schinhan.  her  music    en    .several    recitals    at    UNC     and 

hcation   with    Manley    M.    Sprin.s  Business  Manager  Springs  added  l  P'-of«ssor-     Pi-esented     the     award    will   present  another  one_  May  26. 

who  was  appointed   bu.siness   man  his   support   to   this   comment    and 

acer-    The    editorial,    writing    and  remarked    further    that    "with   the 


mittee    for    the    award    was    Mis 

Katharine    Carmichael.     Dean      of'      ^"^'"^    ^^e    interim    period    be 
,  Women    who    was    assisted    by    a    t^"^^"  ^-^^  spring  and  summer  .ses 

'       The    cup    is    annually    awarded    committee    made    up    of    Ray    Jef-^*""*^   the   following    schedule    will 
to   the   coed   who   is   "judged    out- i  feries.    assistant    to    the    Dean    of  ^^  ^^^^^^*''^- 

Maoding  in  initiative,  cooperation,  ;  Student    Affairs   and   four   student  j      ^^t"  ^""'^    ^-  ^   ^■'^-   ^^  ^   P™- 
The    Percit,p»C.^    Weeks     Award,    in  an  airtomobilo  accident  on  New  v-^adrt^hip,      character,      industry) '  members:  *■  j  Sun..    June    2    2-5    p.H|r:    Monday 

presented    annua'lly'  to    the    most   Years  Day  of  1949.  i  perserverance.     ideals,     judgment.        Mi.ss    Penn    Anthony,    represent- '  ^"^f   ^    through   6.   3  8   p.m.;    ana 

outstanding       graduating       senior        Miss    Still    is    an    extremely    tal-    dependability    and    scholarship."       ing  the  Panhellenic   Council:   Miss 
sti'dont.    was   given    to    Miss    Mar-    ented   pianist,   having   appeared  as  |       .\iis.s   P:arp  attended     the     Hugh    Carol  Jones,  representing  the  Wo- ,  P '" 
jorie    Still    of    Hillsboro.    Sunday    .soloist    with    the    Morth    Carolina    Morson  High  School  and  the  Peace    men's  Residence  Council;   Ed  Sut- 1 

Junior   College    in    Raleigh    where    ton,    f jr    the    Golden    Fleece;    and    "^^ 
she  was  active  in  student  affairs.    Bill  McLean  for  the  Order  of  the 
Since   coming    to    UNC  she   has    Grail. 


business  „taff  Have  as  vet  not  been    help  of  a  capable  and  industrious 


during  a  dinner  at  the  Sigma  I'hi        As     winner    of     the     Percy     C. 

Epsilon    fraternity  housr.  Weeks  .\ward,  Miss  Still  received 

The    award,    began    in    1949    by    a    check    for    25    dollars    and    had 


n^med.  -=5taff.  I  am  .-ure  we  can  publish  a  i  Delta   Chapter   of    Sigma    Phi   Ep-    her  name  engraved  on  the  Weeks 

An   invitation  to  all  persons  in    financially  as  well 'as  humorously  j  silon.  is  a   memorial   to   Percy   C.'  cup    which   is    (^l^ed    in    HilL 
tercsted   in   working   on   the   mag-   successful  magazine."  |  Weeks,  a  Sig  Ep  who  was  killed    Hall.         .'  "        ^W    *  *     ; 


Honor  Council  Suspends  Two  Students 


Review:  Two  Williams 
One-Act  Plays  In  GM 


resulted  from  action  taken  by 
Men's  Honor  C:uncil  during  the 
past  month. 

According   to   a   report   released 


'most  depressing:  it  concerns  a  tu 
'  ercnlsr  prostitute  who  dotes  on  the 
n'cmory  of  her  first  seducer.  It  is  a 
pitile.-s  piece  of  playwriting:   Berth; 


By    A.NTHONY    WOLFF 

The  Sunday  evening  produttion  o 

two   Tennes.see   Williams   one-acter: 

Two    cases    of    suspension    have    Council   and   was   suspended    untir  of    us    is    more    than    capable.    It    that   the   spirit  of  honest  conduct   by  the  Petites  l>iam<itic4ues  was  m 

February  of  next  year.  '■  would  be  a  terrible  thing,  indeed.  '  is    throbing    within    the    heart    of   up  to  their  debut  production  of  Cali 

Ragsdale   also  reported  that  the    to    mar    a    fine   year    with    a    ser-    the    student    body,    and    I    believe   3"la,  but  it  wiis   still  .good  theatre 
Council     has     had      several   other    ious  mistake  now."  j  that   those   aspects   of  personal  in- 1     The  first  play.   "Hello   From  Ber- 

cases  which  merited  indefinite  Rag.sdale  stated  that  "student  tegrily  shall  continue  to  command  tha."  was  the  weaker  of  the  two. 
probation  because  of  the  fact  that  government  has  reached  heights  the  actions  of  us  all.  until  the  :  i'nd  the  blame  for  its  faults  lies  both 
yesterday  by  Men's  Honor  Coun-  ^,^„  students  involved  turned  not  heretofore  attained.  The  cheat-  temptations  which  surrodnd  exams  v.'th  t'.ie  author  and  the  production 
cil  chairman  Gecrgc  Ragsdale.  ane    i;,emselves   in   to   the   Council.  ing  ring  is  gone,  and  I  hope,  for    .shall  be  put  aside  in  defeat  at  the   The  play   it.self   is   Williams  at   hi 

student    has    been    suspended    for       The  Honor  Council  Chairman  in-    good.   We    have    purg?d    ourselves    hand  of  honesty  itself." 

cheating  on  several  Naval  Science    ^.j^^ipji  ,„  j^jg  report  remarks  con-    of  that  which  cannot  exist  side-by-  j 

quizzes,  lying  to  his  instructor  and   pgrning  the   work   of  the   Council    side  with  honesty.  Cases  have  been  j 

later   to   th°   Council.   He   was  su-^^^^j.  ^^^,  ^^^^  ^.^^^   ^^  emphasized    fewer  this  vcar."  i  Free    FliCK 

spended   until  February.  1958.  ^j^^    ,.^^^^   ^^^^   personal    honor    is        in   speaking   of   the   Honor  Sys- 1      Graham    Memorial    will   sponsor  J'as  no  redeeming  features  to  make 

Another  student  has  been  su-  put  tp  a  S3vere  test  during  exams,  tern.  Ragsdale  said  he  thinks  tliat  one  more  free  flick  before  the  her  a  .sympathetic  eharacter.  Like 
s^icndcd  for  stealing  food  from  a  and  I  hope  that  each  student  on  it  i„.  possible  that  "we  shall  have  end  of  the  spring  semester.  May  so  many  of  WiUiams'  creations,  sht 
local  eating  establishment.  He  this  campus  shall  meet  that  test  very  few  Honor  System  violations  24,  at  7:30  and  10  p.m.  in  Car-  '«  a  drab  and  j^olting  piece^^: 
readily  admitted  Ij's  guilt  to  the    and  pi^s  it  because  I  believe  each    during   exam.s,   if   any.    I    believe   roll  Hall. 

Coeds  Aren't 
Really  Scared 

By   A    COED 

One  by  one  stragglers  gather- 
ed at  Graham  Memorial  until 
there  was  a  congenial  mob  of 
UNC  i-tudents,  yelling  and  wav- 
ing arms  about — and  not  always 
their  own  arms. 

Annuals  were  to  be  given  out 
at  3  p.m. — but  the  mob  came  at 
2  p.m. 

Coeds  shied  away  from  the  so-  | 
called  Carolina  gentlemen  for  a  | 
change.  Most  of  them  just  stood  I 
at  safe  distances  on  the  Plane-  ■ 
taruim  step^  or  inside  Ciiahani 
Memorial. 

The  men  had  a  great  time, 
however.  They  were  big  enough 
to  battle  through  human  ob- 
•'•t'des  and  come  out  smiling 
with  nice,  thick,  paper  cover- 
t'ci  V'acks.  Meaiiwhut;  coeds  ob- 
served their  techniques  envious- 
ly- 
Feminine  initiative  finally 
came  through,  though,  when  the 
coeds  trapped  well-meaning  mas- 
culine friends  into  going  to  get 
their  annuals  for  I  hem. 


;ui)ai4e.  and.  a-;  u.sual.  Williams  has 
10   hope  for  her. 

Whatever  the  merits  of  the  play, 
t   is  a  problem  in  direction  and  in 

ctirg.  The  latter  chore  was  handled 
one  too  well  by  Llo\d  Skinner.   In 

n  aUempt  to  avoid  the  overpower- 
iig  and  unbearable  unpleasantness 
if  the  plao',  he  burlesqued  .several 
tf  the  lines:  ho  got  his  laughs,  but 
p.  getting  them  he  violated  Wil- 
iam's  . regrettable  intention. 

Miss  .\ancy  Stephens,  as  Bertha. 
>ia\  ed    her   ix?le    very    convincingly 

(see, REVIEW,  page  7) 


Mis.s  jcaii  j.  ■jiukiL'"  .Aldiid^i-  iind  K(»l)Cii  1.  "Boir 
'S'oitiii:;  ha\c  been  named  ".Nfiss  .\Iimina"  and  "Mr.  .Munimis' 
ol   tills  year's  graduating  (lass. 

riicv  will  receive  tertititates  of  .iwavd     :it      the      inntial 
iiltitinii  linulieon  to  be  held  here  jinie  s-  The  biiicheon  Kill 
)c  attended  by  alinnni,  seniors  and  tlieir  p;nents. 

The    I'niNeisitvs    (ieneviil    .Vluinni    .Vsmi.    aniin:il!\    pre- 

— : ♦sents   award   certificates     to     tfre 

two  members  of  the  graduating 
cla.ss  who  in  the  course  of  their 
campus  careers  best  represented 
"those  qualities  which  symbolize 
loyalties  of  the  "good  alumna"  and 
the   "good   alumnus'.  " 

Miss  Aldridge  and  Young  has 
served  this  year  as  secretary  and 
president  of  the  student  body. 
They  pian  to  be  married  to  each 
othi-r  in  .^ugu.^t. 

Young  said  of  the  award.  "It  is 
the  most  rewarding  thing  that 
could  happen  to  us.  especially 
since  we  plan  to  make  it  a  per- 
manent  "Mr.   and   Mrs.'  ' 

Miss  Aldridge,   an   F:nglish  edu- 
cation major  from  Winston-Salem, 
is    a    member    of    the    Valkyries. 
highest     women's    honorary,     and 
the   Order   of    the    Old    Well.    Her 
activities  here  have  included  mem- 
bership   in    .Mpha    Gamma    Delta 
sorority,    of   which   she    was   presi- 
den^   of    her    pledge    cla.ss.    mem- 
bership   on    the    Women's    Honor 
Council;   Student    Legislature,    stu- 
k-nt      body      presidents      cabineL 
Vackety    Yack    beauty   court,    aad 
(he    Cfaaptfl    Hill    slu.i^'nt    coirmit- 
tee    to    pliTi    the    inaiiguralion    o[ 
President    William    C     Friday. 

She    .served    this   year   as    chair* 
man  of  Campus  Chest  and  a  mem- 
ber of  the  orientation   committee. 
(see  ALDRIDGE.   page   7} 


10:45   p.m. 


Friday.    June    7,    7:4.5    a.m.    to    H- 


GM'S  SLATE 


Orientation  Committee,  4-6 
p.m.,  Grail  Room;  Humor  Maga- 
zine, 4-6  p.m.,  Roland  Parker 
Lounge  No.  1;  University  Party 
7-n  p.m.,  Roland  Parker  Lounge 
Nos,   1    and  2;  Dance  Class,  6:30- 

8  p.m.,  Rendezvous  Room;  A. P.O., 
7-9  p.m..   A, P.O.   Room. 

Graham  Memorial  will  observe 
its  jusuat  hours  through  exams 
until  June  3.  It  will  be  closed 
June   4    and    5,   opening   again   at 

9  p.m.  on  June  6,  and  remain- 
ing open  through  both  sessions 
of  summer  school. 


Last  Issue 

With  today's  issue.  The  Daily 
Tar  Heel  discontinues  publica- 
tion until  Sept.  13.  The  editor 
and  entire  staff  wish  the  student 
body  success  on  final  examina- 
tions. We  look  forward  to  serv- 
ing you  again  next  year. 


Bird  Watcher's 
Meeting  Frfday 

l!y    JOH.V    FOSTKK    .SLMLA.N 

Tile  first  nieCiii;.:  ul  the  Bii-rl 
Wa;i.her"s  Society  will  meet  in  the 
C"(  ker  .Arboretum  on  Friday  after- 
liojn  .Mav  32.  Tlvs  wili  i>e  an  orgaa- 
izationaJ  meeting  to  elect  officers 
;  nd   committi>e  head.s   for  il»e   eom- 

I  ng  yt  ar.  .Ml  th<xse  j">c6ple  intc;"ested 

j  11   joining  the  socie<y   will   Ije  coa- 

!  .-i'lered  at  t'lis  time  also. 

i  The  "luriMise  o.  ihis  ors^ani/.ition  u 
ti  \\E:,h  birds  and  nothing  else 
Seme  people  have  been  under  the 
in^)iesicn  t!ia  tM:b\ersi\e  activitic 
have  been  underfoot  in  the  past,  but 
ti'.i.s  is  not  true. 

-Meeting  time  w;'l  !)e  at  4:30 
Plea.se  be  promH. 


Some  Watch  And  Some  Work 

Yesterday  when  the  Yackety-Yacks  came,  the  truck  backed  up 
tc  th«  rear  of  Graham  Memorial  and  those  poor  boys  who  were  the 
first  in  line  really  worked  for  their  yearbooks  as  they  had  to  help 
unload  the  transfer  truck.  Even  some  of  the  people  in  line  didn't 
f»^l  it  was  worth  the  effort, 


May  I  Have  Your  ID  Card? 

Tha  Yacks  ware  givan  out  inside  the  Rendezvous  Room  yesterday 
while  the  students  filed  past  the  open  windows  on  the  side  of  GM. 
Shown  above  is  an  eager  student  who  is  coming  through  the  win- 
dow.  For  what?  Maybe  the  qirl 


DKE,  The  Outstanding  Fraternity  On  Campus 

Zeb  Weaver,  president  of  Delta  Kappa  Epsilon,  receives  the  first  Robert  B.  House  award  presented 
to  the  most  outstanding  fraternity  on  campus  by  the  pers6n  honored  with  the  naming  of  the  trophy. 
Chancellor  R.  B.  House.  The  trophy  will  be  kept  for  a  year  and  then  will  be  awarded  ag»in  After 
eight  years,  the  fraternity  winning  the  trophy  the  most  times  will  retain  it.  The  award  was  presented 
last  Monday  night  at  a  special  banquet   honoring  the  winning  frat.  


MCi   TWO 


TMI  DAILY  TA»  HHL 


wj-^   ••■•   .:.  ^  ; 


TUeSOAY,   MAY  J1,    1»57 


Tu£i 


An  Evaluation  Of  1957-58 
And  Governmental  Strides 


As  campus  jTo\fin  mental  and 
soiial  ((nt>s  (ome  to  a  siilxtiied  halt 
aiMJ  a<'a<lemits — examination  week 
—settle  jnore  dominantly  into  the 
linit-iiviiit.  there  is  afforded  an  ex- 
rrllent  op}K>rtuniiv  tor  palliation 
i3  the  past  atademit   year. 

Student  oovevnment  made  tre- 
mendous strides  under  the  apt  iea- 
(leiship  of  President  liob  ^ounj>. 
Its  preNiiiie  liiew  both  in  the  eves 
M  the  administration  and  the  stu- 
dents. 

President  Yoini*;  l>e*>an  (Hi  the 
rioht  l«M»t  with  installation  of  civ- 
i)  ser\ite  tvpe  examinations  Avhith 
<;ui<led  his  seletion  of  app<»intees. 
Other  examples  of  initiative  were 
his  unpret  edented  assertion  for 
hiiiher  factdty  salaries  in  an  ad- 
drtxs  In-fore  the  Student  l.c<;isla- 
Hire  and  revision  and  clarifieation 
of  the  student  Constitution  inider 
the  direition  o\  .\tt«)rnev  (ieneral 
S.uti   \VelIs. 

Ihe  most  >ii>n.d  a<  t  of  Vounjj,  s 
administiation  was  his  letomnien- 
dati«.n— ihvouj'h  the  Traffit  .\dvis- 
or\  ('.<immission— for  limitation  of 
•auilent  tar.>  and  initiation  fees  on 
Ntu<tent  » ars. 

Ihe  niajoi  shortroutinj;  of  the 
YtHinin  ailministiation  lies  iti  the 
fact  that  no  further  a<  tion  was  tak- 
en to  remedv  the  (on^ested  paik- 
inj{  situation.  But  R«»me  wasn't 
built  in  .1  day.  Votuii;  has  laid  the 
«;ioundwork.  It  is  n(»w  up  t<i  his 
siu  lessor  Somiv  l\.«ns  to  coirsmut 
upiMi  it. 

Herein  lies  wliat  we  feel  is  the 
most  siijnilitant  obligation  Presi- 
dent K\ans  has  to  the  student 
Uk1\  dutin.1  the  lomin^  M)'>7".'»''^ 
atadi-mi*    veaf. 

It  wav  undeisto«Kl  that  litnita- 
lion  ol  automobiles  for  freshmen 
and  sophomotes  without  a  "C ' 
axeiasje  was  to  be  oidy  a  temjioia- 
r%  ie>tii«tion.  It  wa<  also  stipulat- 
es? that  aiuoinubile  registration 
tee>  were   to  be   used   to  (onstruit 


additional  parking  lots. 

Thus  President  K\ans  should 
begiti  his  administration  by  re- 
doubling efforts  to  apply  registra- 
tion fees  loward  construction  of 
additional  parking  facilities.  Such 
facilities  would,  in^turn.  result  in 
the  lifting  of  automobile  posses- 
sion. 

Another  important  problem 
upon  whidi  F.vaus  should  consoli- 
date his  ehnts  is  the  student  union 
ikituation. 

The  piesent  strutture  is  gross- 
ly inadetpiate.  The  lack  of  a  per- 
manent director  is  a  serious  im- 
pediment to  progress.  Such  an  un- 
settled situation  destroys  unity  of 
action  and  makes  for  general  dis- 
lontinuitv. 

Kxans  shoidd,  as  he  has  proimsed 
to  do.  reconmiend  administrative 
(hatiges  which  woidd  elevate  the 
imion  director  to  a  position  com- 
patable  to  the  diicitor.of  student 
activities,  housing  and  admissions 
heads  to  transpire  this  sunnner. 

The  president  shoidd  also  be- 
gin immediate  work  on  prepara- 
tion of  a  student  union  prospectus 
whith  he  also  promised,  during 
the  campaign,  to  prepare  during 
his  aditiinistration. 

Student  goveriunent  has  been 
suctessful  during  the  current  aca- 
demic vear.  The  prestige  afford- 
ed student  autonomy  has  been  en- 
hanced. 

The  handwriting  is  on  the  wall 
for  student  self-government  if 
gtuless  actions  such  as  the  failure 
of  the  Student  I.egislatuie  to  speak 
out  on  the  I'mstead  Park  exclu- 
sion incident  characteii/e  the 
Kvans  administration. 

We    optimistically    hope    for    a 
ic)-,7--,8     student     iidministration 
winch   will    not   only   ecjual    Presi- 
dent   ^'oung's    successful    adminis- 
tiation,  but  will  surpass  it. 

The  }>otential  is  available  if  it 
is  only   presented  and  cultivated. 


A  Magazrne  Is  Born... 
And  Humor's  Revived 


riie  DaiK  lar  Heel  salutes  the 
birth  of  a  new  campus  pid)lica- 
tion. 

In  the>e  times  of  hustling,  bust- 
ling impel  vMialitv.  the  greatest 
gnaul  against  neuroses  .md  genei- 
al  fiustiation  is  a  simple  laugh— 
at  voursell  or  with  others.  It  is  an 
exer-t»»-lH--sought   |ranai  ea. 

Thus  it  is  es}>e<  iallv  fitting  that 
a  (anipus  humor  magazine  —  a 
MUiessor  to  the  now  defunct  Tar- 
nation —  l>e  !)orn  to  provoke  and 


The  Daily  Tar  Heel 

The  official  student  publication  of  the 
Pimlirations  Board  of  the  University  of 
North  Carolina,  where  it  is  published 
daily  except  Monday  and  examination 
and  vacation  periods  and  summer  terms. 
Kntered  as  second  class  matter  in  the 
post  office  in  Chapel  Hill.  N.  C,  under 
the  Act  of  March  8.  1870  Subscription 
rates:  mailed,  $4  per  year,  S2.50  a  semes- 
ter: delivered  S6  a  year.  $3.50  a  semes- 
ter. 


EDITOB 

Peanuts 

MANAGING    EDITOR 

Schroder 

-vssoc.  EDrroR 

Fuss  Budget 

SPORTS    EDITOR 

Flinnv 

NFWS  EDITOR 

Charlie  Brown 

BUSINESS   MANAGER 

Beethoven 

ADVERTISING    MGR. 

Linus 

NEWS  STAFF— EdTth  Snyder.  Graham 
Taylor,  Ben  MacKinnon.  Pasty 
Springs.  Manley  Atchison.  Sue 
Miller. 

EDITORIAL  ST.AFF  —  John  Foster 
Brink,  Stan  Musial.  George  W. 
•Tony"  Wolff. 

BUSINESS  STAFF— Mohn  Jinter.  Mar- 
ian Mobeck,  Pane  Jatten.  Shucky 
Buford. 


SPORTS  STAFF  —  Dan  Daniel.  Roscoe 
McGowan.  Red  Barber,  Mel  Allen, 
Yin  Scully. 


SUBSCRIPTION  MGR.       Louella  Parsons 
CIRCULATION  MGR. 


Harlie  Colt 

PHOTOGRAPHERS    —    Kinglish,    I.    C. 
Moore.  Clark  Kent.  Captain  Marvel. 

UBRARIANS    —    Hedda"  Hopper,    Kim 
Novak, 


Nisht  News  Editor 


Bob  Drank 


Night  Editor 


Bed  Springs 


initure  this  all-})owei  ful  laugh. 

In  patterning  his  magazine.  Ed- 
itor Bill  Michael  has  mentioned 
comparable  public  at  ion.s  which 
"have  become  svnonynious  with 
real  rib-tickhng.  good  taste  and 
humor  indicative,  it  not  the  cause 
of.  the  /est  for  li\ing  .  .  .  which 
exists  on  these  campuses.'' 

Michael  appaiently  is  approach- 
ing his  editorship  with  a  realiza- 
tion that  campus  humor  magazines 
must  Ir"  raucous  enough  to  pro- 
voke interest,  yet  at  the  same  time 
tempeied  bv  the  prescriptions  of 
propriety  and  just  plain  good 
taste. 

^Vith  this  realization,  Michael 
should  have  little  tiouble  with  the 
rni\ersity   admitiistration. 

Regarding  his  relatiotiship  with 
the  administration.  Editor  Michael 
has  said,  in  effect,  he  intended  to 
piill  no  punches  as  far  as  satiriza- 
tion  is  concerned.  Since  satiriza- 
tic>!i  of  college  and  univeisity  ad- 
ministration has  been  a  big  theme 
aiiMMig  humor  magazines,  Michael 
was  wise  to  note  that  anything  or 
an>ix>dy  that  existed  upon  such 
"wheezy"  ground  that  it  could  not 
stand  a  little  fun-poking  needed 
investigation  anyway. 

The  uew  editor  is  right  again. 
.\nd  we  feel  that  Michael  has  stat- 
ed a  universal  truth. 

Congratulations  to  the  new  edi- 
ted and  his  business  manager, 
M.uilev  Springs,  .^nd  general  con- 
gratulations to  all  resfjonsible  for 
the  magazine's  formation  —  Tom 
Long  for  his  idea  and  the  Student 
Legislature  for  its  sponsoring  ap 
propriation. 

May  the  publication  be  long- 
lived. 


Letter  Policy 

\Vc  regret  that  a  ninnber  of  let- 
ters to  t>je  editor  were  excluded 
from  print  due  to  space  and  time 
limitations.  Such  letters  will  be 
returned  to  the  Avriters,  We  urge 
that  students  expiess  their  views 
in  such  letters  as  frequently  as 
possible.  .All  letters,  signed  ^nd  in 
good  taste,  have  been  and  shall 
always  be  printed. 


Wise  And  Otherwise: 

Sure-Fire  Way 
To  Beat  Exam 
Week  Problems 

Whit  Whitfield 

In  the  event  that  there  is  any- 
one interested  in  aitudying  for 
exams  during  the  next  few  days, 
here  is  a  simple  fcH-mula  consist- 
ing of  ten  rules: 

(1)  get  a  book  in  hand  —  any 
book  will  do.  you'll  see  why  it 
doesn't  make  any  difference 
later,  the  importance  of  this  rule 
should  not  be  underestimated,  a 
l>ook  is  the  paramount  objective 
in  learning,  (at  UNC  at  lea.st.) 

(2y  find  a  eomfortabi*  plac*  in 
which  t»  study.! 
one  that  is  com- 
paratively quiet, 
such   as'  the  li- 
brary,   bus    sta-{ 
tion.    tempi 
room  or  thai 
goody   sh  o  p,^ 
whichever  y  o 
prefer. 

(3)  torn  on  •  radio  or  television 
set  i#  tiMre  is  one   available,   by 

learning  to  overcome  the  handi- 
cap provided  by  the  noise,  your 
powers  of  concentration  will  im- 
prove immeasurably,  if  there  is 
no  radio  or  tv  to  be  had,  then 
sing  loud,  this  accompli^-hes  the 
sMne  purpose,  but  requires  con- 
siderable effort  on  the  part  of 
the  individual)  which  you  could 
do  better  without 

(4)  sit  for  long  periods  of  time, 
except  for  coffee  breaks,  flicks, 
•f  cetera,  this  makes  a  tremend- 
ous impression  on  thod-e  who  hap- 
pen to  see  you, 

(5)  stay  up  as  late  as  possible, 
preferably  all  night,  this  is  by  far 
one  of  the  most  important  rules 
to  remember,  for  one  reason  it 
makes  for  bloodshot  eyes,  after 
a  quiz  you  always  should  speak 
to  the  instructor  and  the  road 
maps  are  indicative  of  a  good 
night's  study,  another  reason  for 
this  rule  is  that  it  makes  for 
good  gripe  material,  or  at  least 
conver.vation.  for  instance,  after 
you  flunk  the  quiz  you  can  tell 
about  how  you  stayed  up  all  night 
studying,  don't  do,  this  too  often, 
however,  because  you  only  sho^\ 
your   lack    of    intelligence. 

(5Va)  if  yoo  can't  stay  up  of 
your  own  accord,  then  take  sev- 
eral dexedrine  tablets,  an^  have 
s*me«ne  tie  you  to  the  chair,  this 
is  more  impressive — it  is  pathe- 
tic, all  your  friends  will  ^ympa- 
thize.  some  may  even  cry. 

(4)  feel  as  sorry  for  yourself 
as  possible,  and  cuss  the  profes- 
sor as  often  as  you  like,  he  proba- 
bly doen't  like  you  anyhow,  it's 
probably  because  he  is  bald  and 
you  have  beautiful  curly  hair, 
yeah,  that's  it.  he's  just  jealous 
of  your  hair,  and  he  ain't  no  yul 
brynner.  that's  for  sure,  cussing 
won't  improve  your  studying  any 
but  it  will  increase  the  flow  of 
adrenalin  which  will  help  keep 
you  awake. 

(7)  always  take  your  notes  to 
cfas  with  you — the  mere  the  mer> 
rier.  this  shows  the  professor  and 
your  clasmates  that  you  are  mod- 
est enough  to  admit  that  you 
don't  know  it  all,  and  at  the  same 
time  shows  that  you  are  a  good 
hard-working  s-tudent, 

• 

L1I  AbiMT 


Emptying  The  AAailbag 
Retorts,  Retorts,  Etc. 


The  HilltoD: 


Dear  Editor 

In  Friday  mornings  DaHy  Tar 
Heel  Editor  Bass  has  written  an 
editorial  about  some  misconcep- 
tions, most  of  which  apparently 
exist  in  hos  own  mind.  In  this 
editorial  he  quotes  a  speech 
which  was  made  Tuesday  night  to 
the  orientation  'counselors  and 
then  makes  this  comment:  "Chair- 
man Ragsdale  should  not  have 
created  th  impression  before  the 
orientation  counselors  that  the 
students  were  sufficiently  aware 
of  the  Honor  System," 

It  seems  that  this  impression 
which  the  editor  has  gotten  would 
be  quite  hard  to  come  by  con- 
sidering the  fact  that  he  was  not 
even  present  when  the  speech 
was  made.  No  such  impression 
was  given.  I  am  sure,  to  the  stu- 
dents present  at  the  meeting.  I 
did  in  no  sense  imply  that  Car- 
olina students  could  not  improve 
the  Honor  System.  Nor  did  I  say 
that  the  System  was  functioning 
ideally  or  that  it  could  not  he 
improved.  If  these  things  are 
said  about  it,  they  are  said  by 
the  editor,  and  not  in  any  sense 
by  me, 

.  No  statement  was  made  about 
the  present  perfection  of  the 
Hanor  System,  for  it  is  not  per- 
fect. I  did  sa.v.  however,  and  if 
the  editor  had  been  there  or  read 
a  copy  of  the  speech  he  would 
no(  have  misconstrued  my  state- 
ments to  the  efect  that  the  Hon- 
or S.vstem  was  in  better  shape 
now  than  it  had  been  in  a  long 
time;  and  that  those  of  us  who 
care  a  great  deal  about  it;  and 
I  am  sure  the  Editor  is  one. 
though  it  unwise  to  run  it  into 
the  ground.  It  is  possible  to  do 
this  with  anything,  and  the  Hon- 
or System  is  no  exception.  Hon- 
or Ls  not  something  with  which 
you  hit  people  over  the  head 
It  is  not  something  to  be  jam 
med  down  anybody's  throat.  Hon- 
or has  to  be  taught,  and  taught 
gently.  Man  mu.st  be  led  to  a  con- 
ception ,of  honor  if  he  is  to  grasp 
it  at  all.  The  Honor  System  does 
not  work  ideally.  The  Editor  is 
the  only  one  I  know  who  thinks 
I  said  it  did. 

We  are  trpirv^jto  help  the  Hon-* 
or  System.  We  do  not  polle  fun 
at  it  or  at  the  efforts  and  judge- 
ment of  those  who  are  concerned 
with  it.  We  do  not  run  headlines 
about  it  like  the  one  run  on  Fri- 
day which  read;  Please  Return 
.My  Radio,  or  The  Honor  System's 
Great. 

The  Honor  System  IS  great.  As 


the  Editor  .said,  it  is  the  back- 
bone of  student  government.  It 
is  a  great  deal  greater  than  some 
things  to  which  man  often  pays 
attention. 

The  editor  used  the  word  "com- 
placency" twice  in  his  editorial. 
If  there  is  cK)mplacency  here 
about  the  Honor  System,  doubt- 
less some  of  it  arises  from  the 
misconceptions  which  are  spread 
about  it.  No  omplacency  exists 
within  the  minds  of  efforts  of 
any  of  us  who  decided  not  to 
have  an  Honor  System  Empha- 
sis Week.  Nor  have  we  adopted 
the  "leave  well  enough  alone " 
policy.  We  are  trying  to  guard 
against  the  possibility  of  the  stu- 
dents tiring  of  the  word  "honor." 

It  is  the  job  of  the  Editor  to 
criticize,  and  if  he  did  not  exer- 
cise his  duly  in  this  position 
which  he  holds,  we  ^ould  all 
feel  that  he  was  not  doing  what 
he  should  do.  But  we  do  object 
to  criticism  which  is  groundless. 
Each  of  us  is  a  stock  holder  in 
The  Daily  Tar  Heel  because  each 
of  us  buys  a  copy.  We  have  the 
undeniable  right  to  ask  for  the 
truth  and  likewise  the  unques- 
tioned  right   to  object   when   tiie 

editorial  page  reflects  unground- 
ed   opini )n. 

I  repeat  again;  The  Honor 
System  is  in  good  shape.  It  hu 
come  a  long  way.  and  it  has  a 
long  way  to  go.  It  is  not  perfect. 
Someday  I  hope  it  will  be.  We 
did  not  want  to  take  the  chance 
of  harming  it  by  runrrtng  it  into 
the  ground.  Those  who  are  mis- 
informed about  it,  as  the  thief  if 
that  red  radio  obviously  is,  don't 
reaJl.  They  don't  hear,  and  they 
don't  care.  When  they  are  gone, 
we  shall  have  a  better  Honor 
System.  These  people  are  the 
kind  who  don't  come  to  any 
speeches  anyway,  they  don't  read 
the  Daily  Tar  Heel,  and  they 
probably  wouldn't  have  partici- 
pated in  the  Honor  System  Em 
phasis  Week  anyway. 

George  R.  Ragsdale.  Chairman 
.Men's    Honer   Council 
(It    is    obvious    that    we    could 
net  have  convnented  had  we  not 
bed   eccess  to  the   crux   of   Rags- 
dele's  speech.  We  ere  convinced 
however,  that  The  Daily  Tar  Heel 
and  Chairmen  Ragsdale  are  work- 
ing    te**'erd     the     same     goal  — 
strengthening  the  Honor  System. 
We  wish    him   every   sucess    and 
pledge     him     our     wholehearttd 
support. 
—The  Editor) 


The  Story  Of  A 
Neglected  Man: 
Freedom  Fighte 


Nancy  Hill 


•  • 

Retort  To  Covell: 
Sex,  Gangster  TV 


Deer  Editer: 

In  answer  to  Mr.  Covell's  col- 
umn in  Saturday's  Daily  Tar  Heel 
— sir,  I  don't  quite  understand 
you. 

You  say  that  Americans  ignore 
God  unless  to  satisfy  their  n^iiras. 
I  presume  it  follows  that  you 
believe  that  God  created  us.  If 
you  believe  that,  then  he  must 
have  created  our  "passions  and 
sentiments,  our  basic  needs  and 
whims."  If  He  created  them,  why 


must  we  suppress  and  refuse  to 
satisfy  them? 

I  think  that  most  of  the  people 
who  watcih  those  sexy  movies  and 
gangster  TV  shows  do  not  run 
right  out  and  imitate  them.  I 
doubt  that  even  the  imperial  Ro- 
mans would  have  done  so. 

Most  of  your  letter  is  confus- 
ing and  does  not  follow  its  own 
arguments.  But  I  would  like  to 
know — why  are  these  whims  and 
passions  to  be  overcome? 

Katherine  Severance 


The  Hungarian  revolution  is  a 
dead  letter  for  the  most  part  in 
the  American  mind  and  the 
American  press.  It  becomes  in- 
creasingly hard  to  find  ways  and 
means  to  bring  Freedom  Fighters 
to  the  United  States,  ironically 
because  some  have  violated  their 
refugee  status  to  provide  invalu- 
ble  propaganda  material  to  the 
West  in  its  fight  againa't  Com- 
munism. 

Such  a  person 
IS  a  North  Ko- 
rean, odd  as  it 
may  seem.  We 
heard  this  story 
,lrom  Barry  Far- 
cer, a  Daily  Tar 
lieel  editor  of 
some  years  back 
who  recently  re- 
lurned  to  the_ 
»..i..vc^  oiaiea  irom  Austria  and 
the  Hungarian  border. 

At  the  time  of  the  revolt  last 
October,  there  were,  according 
to  Barry,  some  400  North  Ko- 
rean Communist  youths  study- 
ing in  Hungary.  They  were  the 
pick  of  the  crop — died  in  the 
wool  Communists.  The  one  in 
-this  story  had  fought  for  the 
Reds  in  Korea  when  he  was  16. 
On  the  night  of  Oct.  24,  when 
Hungarian  students  were  meet- 
ing in  Budapest  to  plan  the 
demonstration,  at  first  orderly, 
which  was  to  take  place  the 
next  day,  another  meeting  was 
in  progress. 

At  thi.>'  meeting  were  the  North 
Korean  students,  "^hey  had  a 
choice  to  make:  they  could  tell 
the  Authorities  of  the  plans  which 
they*  knew  were  being  made, 
they  could  do  nothing;  or  they 
could  join  the  Hungarian  students 
in  revolt.  To  a  man  they  decided 
to  take  up  arms  with  the  Hun- 
garians. 

The  Koreans  fought  valiantly. 
.\nd  when  tallies  were  eventual- 
ly made  across  the  border  in 
Austria,  it  was  found  that  four  of 
the  reported  400  had  escaped  to 
safety  after  the  fighting.  They 
had  cvaped  separately  —  each 
thought  he  was  the  only  one  liv- 
ing. 

The  one  with  whom  Barry  talk- 
ed was  anxious  to  tell  his  story 
to  the  free  world. 

This   Korean  could  conceiva- 
bly have  been  admitted  to  the 
United     States    as     a     refugee. 
(Embassy    officials    in     Vienna 
said  there  was  no  Korean  quota 
under   which    he   could    enter.) 
But    he    violated     his     refugee 
^status  by  making   tape  record- 
ings of  his  story  for  Radio  Free 
Europe  and  the  Voice  of  Ameri- 
ca. 
There   remain   only    two   possi- 
bilities for  his  entrance  into  this 
country:  for  a.  special  bill  to  be 
passed    by    Congress,    or    for    an 
American    university    to    request 
that  he  be  admitted  to  the  United 
States  as  a  student  there. 

He  is  now  in  a  refugee  camp 
near  Vienna.  He  ia-  in  particular 
danger  from  the  Communist  sec- 
ret police.  He  is  part  of  a  sordid 
story  of  which  much  has  been 
told,  but  of  wliich  the  part  he 
could  tell  would  be  particularly 
dangerous  to  Communism, 


.^tM    '••<*4. 


• 

By  Ai  Capp 


-ri 


AH'M  GLAD  AH  GOT 
THIS  OOB.  NOT  MAJsry 
IS^-V'AR-Ot-D  Ktt?S 
GITS  TO  WEAR  A 
MILLVUN-DOLLAR 
MONSTER  SUIT.I'" 


^•f* 


By  Walt  Kally 


Censorship  And 
Civil  Liberty 

George  W.  Wolff 

America  balances  precariously  on  the  brink  of 
wai .  Huge  allocations  for  defense,  countless  hours 
oi  re.jarch  into  the  art  and  the  machinery  of  war, 
and  irretrievable  years  from  the  lives  of  her  young 
men — all  are  dedicated  to  the  protection  (rf  freedom 
from  aggression.  At  the  same  time,  Americans  raise 
only  a  murmer  of  protest  against  the  loss  of  their 
evcential  freedom  right  here  at  home. 

This  essential  freedom  is 
really  a  cennplex  of  rights, 
liberties,  aind  responsibilities, 
without  which  the  whole  li»t 
of  American  freedoms  is 
meaningless  and  inoperative. 
The  complex  includes  free- 
dom of  speech,  press,  inquiry 
%nd  expression:  all  of  these 
'-^*  -reedoms,  or  rights,  ars  »^v- 
-ified  or  implied  in  the  Bill 
P?'.*^  'S  of  Rights  and  they  ar*  a  part 
of  the  foundation  of  this  nation.  They  are  seriously 
limited  hi  America  today. 

The  violation  of  the  right  to  free  speech  is  pe*" 
haps  the  least  obviou..-  of  all  the  infringements  on 
American  rights.  There  is  as  yet  little  open  action 
on  the  part  of  any  group  to  forcefully  silence  an- 
other. But  the  pressure  to  quiet  speech  which  u 
not  in  keeping  with  current  mass  sentiment  is 
present  noyethelesa*. 

The  effect  of  this  presure  is  evident,  for  instance, 
in  the  attempt  by  the  CBS  Network  to  inhibit  new* 
broadcaster  Eric  Severied's  outspoken  commentary 
on  current  events.  The  pressure  is  focu.sed  closer 
to  home  in  the  violent  objection  to  freedom  on  the 
editorial  page  of  this  newspaper;  this  objection  has 
resulted  in  recall  elections  and  the  move  toward  a 
"new-spaper  which  will  give  the  students  what  they 
want" — a  euphemism  for  no  newspaper  at   all. 

Freedom  of  the  press — the  right  of  a  newspaper 
to  seek  out  the  facts  and  present  them  honei^tiy 
for   public   scrutiny — is   aL-o   seriously   challenged. 

Recently,  the  government  has  announced  its  as- 
sumed right  to  censor  the  news  in  .i  far  les  subtle 
fashion.  Secretary  of  State  Dulles,  involved  in  the 
senseless  bu.-iness  of  preventing  the  entry  of  Ameri- 
can newsmen  into  Communist  China,  has  found  it 
expedient  to  redefine  the  right  to  freedom  of  the 
press.  According  to  the  Dulles  interpretation,  the 
Constitutional  guarantee  of  freedom  of  the  press 
applies  only  to  the  publication  of  the  news,  and 
not  to  the  gathering  of  it.  This  \h:  nothing  less  than 
an  attempt  to  establish  the  government's  right  to 
censor  the  ma^s  media.  Similar  censorship  has 
been  going  on  in  other  areas  for  many  years,  but 
this  is  its  first  recent  appearance  in  regard  to  the 
pre. -5.  ? 

Censorship  is  present  on  the  state  level  also,  and 
the  best  example  of  this  is  the  recent  bill  granting 
North  Carolina  county  judge  the  power  to  remove 
from  sale  any  publications  which  he  deems  unfit 
for  puWic  consumption.  The  legislation  is  aimed  at 
curbing  the  sex  and  scandal  magazines  which  have 
flooded  the  newsstands  in  recent  years,  but  the  bill 
neither  states  nor  implies  that  the  censorshij/  power 
vested  in  the  judges  is  limited  to  these  publications. 

It  is  doubtful  if  the  magazines  in  que.^-tion  ever 
corrupted  any  mind,  and  so  this  itgislstion  is  in 
one  sense  a  plain  example  of  the  American  prac- 
tice of  legislating  against  the  symptom  rather  than 
the  cause  of  malignancy.  But  even  if  these  sup- 
posedly noxious  magazines  were  poisoning  the 
minds  of  Americans,  there  would  still  be  no  justice 
in  censorship;  under  the  American  ideal  of  free- 
dom and  democracy,  we  are  saddled  with  the  good 
and  the  bad,  and  the  two  go  together  in  every  area 
of  democracy.  The  only  way  to  eliminate  the  bad 
in  our  society  is  to  educate  the  population  to  the 
good.  Thij  does  not  mean  to  indoctrinate  them  with 
chauvinistic  phrases  and  lies,  but  rather  to  firmly 
equip  them  with  the  ideals  and  responsibilities  of 
democracy. 

This  obviously  involves  an  educational  institu- 
tion far  superior  to  the  existing  system.  But  it  in- 
volves much  more  than  that,  for  no  education  is 
worthwhile  without  the  corollary  freedom  of  ex- 
perience and  inquiry  through  which  an  education — 
and   freedom — can   be   validated. 

Censorship,  however,  impinges  severely  on  educa- 
tion also.  In  every  area  of  thought  and  inquiry 
Americans  are  often  insulated  from  tho^e  intellec- 
tual experiences  which  make  democracy  meaning- 
ful. In  South  Carolina,  a  five  thousand  dollar  fine 
hac*  been  legislated  as  a  punishment  for  any  theater 
owner  who  shows  the  coming  Harry  Belafonte  film, 
"Island  In  The  Sun".  The  reason;  the  movie  treats 
a  problem  in  race  relations,  and  involves  a  close 
relationship  betv/een  a  part-Negro  man  and  a  white 
woman. 

Such  cersorship  restricts  both  the  citizens'  right 
to  free  inquiry,  and  also  the  artists'  right  to  ques- 
tion the  order  of  things  and  to  comment  on  It.  The 
government  and  pressure  groups  engage  in  book 
burning;  several  groups,  including  the  Catholic 
Church,  arbitrarily  condemn  movies  and  books,  all 
in  an  attempt  to  restrict  the  intellect. 

Underneath  all  ef  this  o-vri  censorship  1$  another 
presure  even  morf  detrimental  to  the  netien,  for  it 
effects  mainly  the  "thinkers"— these  wfie  |re  best 
•quipped  and  motivated  ?e  use. freedom  to  the  na- 
tion's td^itnU^:  This  pressure  demonic  tha;  an 
individual  suppress  the  principles  and  ide^  which 
•re  meaningful  to  him,  that  he  tecrifice  Hiem  en 
the  altar  of  conformity  to  the  intMi«ible  bwt  power- 
ful   public    morality. 

Thus,  Arthur  Miller,  one  of  America's  f«w  nota- 
ble playwrights,  must  face  contemot  of -Congress 
charges  for  refusing  to  identify  friends  ^nd  ac 
quaintences  suspected  of  being  C«>mmunilts.  The 
entertainment 'industry  is  plagued  by  a  jpacklist 
which  keeps  many  people  out  of  work  an^  denies 
credit  to  many  others.  (The  author  of  tb^^  scripts 
for  "A  Place  In  The  Sun",  "Five  Fln^f^'.  and 
"Friendly  Persuasion"  is  a  blacklistee;  sipce  his 
listing,  he  has  won  one  Oscar,  been  nommited  for 
another,  and  been  cheated  out  of  a  third  by  means 
of  an  Academy  of  Motion  Pictures  bylaw,  passed 
e  -pecially  to  avoid  any  further  embarrassment  from 
this  talented  pariah.) 

America  looks  across  the  seas,  anxious  to  further 
freedom  in  foreign  lands;  and  in  her  own  back  ya  d, 
freedom  feltvrs. 


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TUESOA^r,  MAY  21,  1957 


THi  oXIlY  TAR'HttL 


PA6I  rPtttf; 


'Afy  6/g  Brothers  Friend 


^  ^EN  .TAYT.OR 

Her  fritnds  call  her  "Pee  Wee," 
and  although  she  has  been  enter- 
taining all  her  life — more  or  les.s— 
this   it   her  first   record. 

Naturally,  this  is  in  reference 
to  Carolina's  own  Miss  Cecelia 
Batten  and  her  recent  record.  'My 
Big  Brother's  Friend.'.  v.'hich  is 
currently  making  a  name  for  it- 
self in  the  highly  competitive 
world  of  revolving  discs. 

"It  vton't  be  her  last  thouj^h." 
.«ays  prVille  Campbell,  owner  of 
Colonial  Records.  "The  response 
to  "Big  Brother"  has  been  terrific 
and  thS  girl  sings  like  a  real  pro."" 

Now 'that  is  as  good  an  indica- 
tion of  a  job  well  done  as  the  live- 
ly senior  from  Mt.  Gilead.  N.  C. 
could  receive. 

"My  Big  Brother".^  Friend"  is 
faist  on  iUs  way  to  national  prom 
inence.  rapidly  pushing  itself  to- 
wards the  top  rung  in  the  ladder 
of  ratings  fixed  by  the  nations 
disc  jockeys. 

A  reoent  issue  of  Binbotud  mag 
azine.  revealed  that  Pee  Wet"s 
record  received  a  rating  of  87.  or 
about  tops  for  that  magazine.  Com- 
menting on  the  arti.st  and  the  tune 
Billboard  said  that.  "This  tune  is 
right  up  the  alley  of  today"s  young- 
er set,,  The  lyrics  must  reflect 
man^'  teen-age  feelings  about  an 
'older  man".  Likely  to  be  a  strong 
.song,  with  .several  versions  in  the 
works.,  and  Mi.ss  Batten  has  a  sim- 
ple, effective  reading.  Has  a  real 
chance." 

Like  prai.ses  echoed  from  an- 
other nmsieal  in.jg,  too.  The  moody 
ballad,  according  to  Cash  Box.  is 
destined  to  become  a  best  seller. 

■*The  Colonial  label  comes  up  with 
an  e.vciting  new  feminine  vocal 
ist  named  Cecelia  Batten.  The  lark 
has  a  warm  sound  as  she  fashions 
a  strong  teenage  ballad  on  this 
debut  disc.  Commercial  stuff  that 
could  step  out.  Watch  the  song 
and  the  lark.""  the  publication  said,    and  a  Baby  Ruth"'  and  "Sittin 

Johany  Dee.  author  of  "A  R«se   the  Balcony"  fame,  composed 


MISS  PEE  WEE 

.  .  sings  like  a  pro 


in 


lyrics  for  Cecilia.  Both  Johnny 
Dee  and  Campbell  are  very  excit- 
ed over  the  way  Pee  Wee  sing.s 
the  song,  and  with  good  reason. 

The  song  laments  the  woe  of  a 
teen-ager  who  is  swayed  by  her 
big  brothers  friend,  although  she 
realizes  their  age  difference  leaves 
her  to  only  sit  back  and  swoon 
when  he  comes  around.  Appar- 
ently, this  is  what  the  '"younger 
set""  experiences  fairly  often.  But 
if  the  words  aren't  the  thing,  the 
clear  and  strident  quality  of  her 
voice  offers  intriguing  and  nich- 
ing comfort. 

A  tender  song  of  young  love. 
Before,  occupys  the  flip  side.  Writ 
ten  by  Joe  Tanner.  Co.<;h  Bar  ten- 
dered^ it  a  high  B  rating  in  its 
April  issue.  i 

Although  having  had  no  real 
profe.ssional  experience.  Cecelia 
has  been  entertaining  .since  her 
high  school  davs.  She  accompanies 
herself  on  the  ukelele,  and  she 
gives  you  the  feeling  that  she 
could  really  fall  for  her  'Big 
Bmther's  Friend.""  | 

Popularity  and  entertaining  and  | 
the  uke-  followed  Cecelia  to  Chap-  i 
el  Hill  and  UNC.  While  here,  she  ! 
has  held  one  of  the  top  roles  in  ; 
almost  every  musical  production 
present?d  in  Chapel  Hill  over  the 
past    two   years. 

Her  singing  and  acting  ability 
were  put  to  good  u.se  at  Stevens 
College  in  Missouri,  where  "  she 
spent  her  first  two  years  of  col- 
lege. Being  a  commedian  extra- 
ordinary and  her  full  sense  of 
humor  has  made  her  one  of  the 
most    popular  girls   at    UNC. 

Cecelia"s  serious  about  a  musi- 
cal career.  There  will  be  other 
single  releases  and  also  an  album 
on  Colonial  during  the  next  three 
months,  according  to  Campbell 

In  the  meantime,  "My  Big  Broth- 
er's Friend"  should  make  htr  a 
recording  star  of  the  first  magni- 


TELETYPE      Medical  StudentsTo  Get  Hoods 


Photographer  Sante  Forlano  puts  last  minute  touch  to  Sarah  van 
Weyk's  hairdo.  Miss  van  Weyk  is  being  photographed  for  the  August 
issue  of  Glamor  Magazine.  The  UNC  coed  was  recently  named  one 
of  the  10  best  dressed  college  women  in  the  nation. 

Photo  bv  Truman  Moore 


the  tude. 


University  Students  In  U.  S.  Are 

re- 

More  Mature  Than  Those  In  India 


Bky  FRANK  WAMSLEY 

University  students  in  the  United 
Stales. are  more  arown  I'p  and  ma- 
ture th^n  are  those  in  India." 

Sush!l  Dutt.  physics  lectm^r  from 
Liuknow  Unixersity  in  Lucknow 
India,  mad*?  this  statement  while 
visiting  the  campus  of  UNC  this 
week. 

"The    reason    students,  here    are 
more  iftnature,"  Mr.  Dutt  continued, 

is  that  I  hey  are  taught  from  a 
\er>'   early   age   to   be   independent. 


versities    where    they    are    S'tudying 
',    he   un  ergraduate    couises    in   gen- 
!  :ral     edrication     in     particular.     .\c-- 
1  ;.crdin4  to  DuU.  the  professors  hope 
I  t )    learn    the    fundamental.s    of    our 
'  edu;  Eticnal    system    at    the    univer- 
sity level   and   recommend  the  sys- 
tem be  a^lopted  ultimately  in  India. 
"The    Indian    systerfi    as    it    now 
-tands  is  modeled  after  tiie  En<»lish 
;hoo!s   an. I   is   too   .-pix-ialized   and 
restrictive.""  Dutt  .said.- 

'Our  ituden;s  do  not  get  two  years 
cf  generjil   education   before   enter- 


In  India  the  b*ys  and  girls  remain  ;  ing    their    i^peci-alized    field    as    is 
clepenrfent    on    their    parents    much '  dene   here."    Dutt    continued.    "This 


longer" 

Dutt  i<  one  of  24  Indian  profes- 
sors v'tsiting  the  campuses  of  dif- 
ferent universities  unde^  the  spon- 
isorshrp  of  the  U.  S.  State  Depart- 
jnent.  -the  .\inerican  Council  on  Edu- 


is   v\h>2t   we   vviuld    like   someday   to 

nstitute  in  India." 
Dutt    had    mthing    but    words    of 

;raise  for  the  .'••tu.ent.s  he  had  met 
■jn  .Ai^c'ican  campuses.  "They  have 
a    vilal:'.y    and    li;a    like    nothin.g    1 


■tation.  and  the  Indian  Mini.stry  of  i  'lave  seen  before.  They  work  and 
Fklucat.on.,  The  visiting  profe.-sors  j '::lay  hard  —  I  can  only  admire 
are  participants  in  the  Fore';?n  Lead-  ;    '"em."" 

er-Speflalist  Project  in  General  Ed-  '  Since  arriving  in  Washington,  the 
vcation  of  the  International  Educa-  ;  iKrrt.  brown-skinned  profe.s.sor  ha.*- 
lional  Exchange  Service  of  the  De-  i  visited  Syracuse.  Cornell,  Harvard. 
piPtment  of  Slate.  M.I.T.,    Yale,    Princeton    and    North 

Dutt"s    coUeagues    have   scattered  1  Carolina  Universities.  From  Chapel 
all  over  the  country  to  various  uni-  [  Hill  he  will  continue  on  to  Vander- 


!)ilt    University    in    Nashville.    Ten- 
nessee.    ^  1--  -...    .j. 

Teaihuig  methods,  especially  the 
4se  of  audio-visual  aids,  inrrpi-essed 
Dutt  greally.  'The  .\  m  e  r  i  c  a  n 
school.^  are  much  bigger  and  better 
tlian  anythiiv.;  India  can  yet  afford.  '  , 
iie   concluded.  \ 

A  trcmenuously  incrcasLig  popu- 
lation and  a  shc.rtage  cf  food  are 
India's  tw.)  bi'j  oroblems  which 
must  '^c  solved  before  full  attention 
:  an  be  eoncentriited  on  problems 
-;u'  h  as  sc-hooling.  t 

"The  Indian  government  has  l)e- 
?:un  a  pre  gram  of  education  in  all 
he  villages  thro.  ;,^hout  India  to 
teach  the  people  about  birth  con- 
trol."" Dutt  .said.""  We  also  are 
tfaching  the  farmer  methods  of 
scientific  ^ultivtciion  to  improve 
:  fieage   yields.""  t 

When  told  that  a  fight  is  currently 
uiideruay  in  .\orth  Carolina  to  get 
i:etter  jiay  for  teachers.  Dutt  could 
well  .sympathize.  *In  India, 'teach- 
ers arc  also  amoiiij  the  lowe.s.t  pjiid 
of  the  professions. "'  he  revealed.       { 

Dutt    is    marr-ed    and    has    three 
children.  This,  .he  said,  i.s  about  the 
,  =ize  of  the  average  Indian  family. 


.Indian  Educator  At  UNC 

SwuhU  Pu«,  phV»'e*  Iwturer  from  Locknow  Uni  versity  In  Lucknow,  India,  is  pictured  above  as  he 
tii*em%»*  Q«n»rml  College  structure  with  Dean  C.  P.  Spruill.  Dutt  is  one  of  24  Indiap  professors  visiting 
the  campuses  of  different  universities  under  the  sponsorship  of  the  State  Dept.,  the  American  Council 
on  lifueafldn  and  the  Indian  Ministry  of  Education.  ^ ^ ^ 


EASTWOOD  LAKE 

NOW  OPEN 

Swimming  -:-  Fishing 

Sandy  Beach 

Relax   And   Enj6y  The  Summer   Sun 
First   Left   Turn    Past  Brady's 


,  Eds: 

I      Unplan  relay  X15RA  with  XGR 

with    XGR:    X17RA    Carol    L<i    BB 
head  and  box:  XIWS  ELNS;  XllRA 

Democrats. 

!  CH 

i  May  20    CrG1020PES  NMN    X 

\  X3WS  ' 

!  CORRECTfON 

i  In  X2WS,  Editors,  pis  make  last 
j  graf  read  X  X  X  at  11:30  a.m.  for 
j  Asheville-Hendersonville.  They  will 
j  fly  XXX.  Sted  Ashevile-Hender- 
!  son  as  sent. 

WS 
Mav  20  BI  1G20PES  X  NiM 


BRUSH   UP 
WITH 

College 
Outlines 

New  And  Used 

THE  INTIMATE 
BOOKSHOI* 

Open  Till  10  P.  M. 


Hoods  will  be  pfesented  to  medi- 
cal students  graduating  from  the 
Sehool  of  Medicine  at  an  exercise 
-Monday.  June  3  at  2:30  p.m.  in  Hill 
Kail.    • 

'Dr.  W,  Reece  Berryhill.  dean  oi 
the  C.\C  School  of  Medicine,  will 
preside  at  the  progr'^m.  The  in- 
vocation will  b^  given  by  the  Rev. 


Charles   Hubbard   oi    the    "Cniver^rty 
.Methodist    Church. 

.\n  addrpss  wil)  bg  given  by  Dr. 
';i.ibert  .A."  Ross,  head  6T  the  De^- 
rta-rtment'  of  Ob.-.tetr!is  and  GNTteco- 
logy  of  the  Sc:ioe»l  v>f  Medictne.  Iri 
Tigert  Sell  HI.  presiden;  of  the 
.^en.or  class  of  Norflok.  Va..  also  w.lF 
c-^r-pear  o"  t'^^  program. 


COME  AND  GET  IT! 
I've  Still  Got  ESSO  EXTRA 


at 


Downtown  Prices  For 
Refgular  Gas 


and 

'My  Regukir  3f!-Under  That 

Plus 

Bring  This  Ad  and  Get  1  Cent  Off  Per  Gal.  Gas, 

5  Cents  Per  Qt.  Oil 

Credit  Cards  Honored  Again 

At  The  Students'  Friend 

WHIPPLE'S  ESSO  SERVICE 


NOW VICE  ROYCOMES 

RACKACES 


'^■j%!^,-^i. 


T  f'l  *. 


C  1957.  Brown  S;  \ViI!iam>or.  Tobacco  C^rp. 


Viceroy  has  the  smoolhest  taste  of  all ! 


SMOOTH ! 

From  the  finest  tobacco 
grown. '.Viiiieroy  .selects 
only  the  Smooth  Flavor 
Leaf.  No  other  will  do ' 


^        EXTRA 
^    SMOOTH! 


F  ach  Smooth  Flavor  Leaf 
is  siKciatty  Deep-Cured, 
golden  brown  through  and 
through,  for  extra  smooilmess 


SUPER 
SMOOTH! 

Oiilv  \icerov  smooths  each 
pufi"  through  20.000  filters 
made  from  pure  ccHulose- 
soft,  snow-white,  natural! 


Moi  r>ou« 


THE   DAfLY   TAR   HEEL 


TUESDAY,   MAY  ft,    1957 


TUfSDi 


Chancellor-Elect  Aycock  Is  A  Man  Of  Talented  Versatility      ^ 


'  '      ''    By  PETE  IVEY         '     ' 

William  i>ianuey  Ayicock  is  a  n»ain 
ct  taknted  versatilityt 


ANNOUNCEMENT  BYi 

Illinois  College  of/ 
OPTOMEO^RY/ 

Applications    tor    admission  %to 

classes    beginning    February  \  4, 

1957    and   September    9,    1967 

•re  now\  being  received. 

Three  year  course    ; 
of  jM-ofessional  study 
Leading  to  the  Degree  of 
Doctor  of'  Optometry      | 

Requirements  for  Entrance  i 
Two  years  (60  serrsester  hours  or 
eqjivalent  quarter)  hrs.)  in  spe- 
cified liberal  arts  (and  sciences. 

WRITE  FOR  BjULLETIN 
TO:  REGI^RAR 

ILLINOIS   COLLEGE 
of  OPTOMETRY 

3241    So.    Michiglin   Ave. 
Technology  Centev,  Chicago  16,  III. 


The  41-year  old  Chancellor-elect 
of  the  University  of  North  Carolina 
is  re^arced  by  colleagues,  students 
and  neighbors  as  both  a  scholar  and 
K'.miniiirator.  j>ossessing  a  ccmhin- 
ation  of  weH-balanced  qualities. 
They  cite  inslanccs  to  prove  it. 

'"He'iS    an    early    riser. "    said    a 

'e'low    law    professor    in    Manning 

Hall.    'He  gets  to  work  sonietimes, 

a  couple  of  hours  ahead  of  anyone 

clSe.   1  remember  during  one  sura- 

Tier  school  when  he  was  undertak- 

ir.g  a  new  ccurse.  He  got  up  at  four 

or   five  o'clock   in   the  morniiiig   to 

'  mnke  sure  he  was  wiell^prepared." 

I     "He  has   an   abundance  of  drive  i 

!  -ind   defcrm  nation,  "    said     auoU:e.- 

j  faculty  member,  "yet  he  is  relaxed, 

'  friencay  and  has  a  quick  smile  and 

ready  wit.*  ' 

i  • 

His  students  declare  that  in  teach- 
ing luw  he  is  painstaking  and  lucid. 

j  He  plunges  deeply  into  the  detail- 
ed work  of  his  rwofeiision  and  does 
not  -pare  himself.  Yet  he  takes  t'.e 

.ime  to  l>e  a   good  neighbor  and  to 


COLLEGE  DAZE* 


Most  studies  of  students  at  college  disclose 

That  boys  and  girls  aim  at  quite*diiferent  things. 

The  boys  learn  new  angles — add  strings  to  their  bows; 
The  co-eds  would  rather  add  beaus  to  their  strings! 

MORALt  Why  be  high-strung?  Relax  with  the  BIG,  BIV  X 
pleasure  of  Chesterfield  King!  More  full- 
flavored  satisfaction  from  the  world's 
best  tobaccos.  PLUS  King-size  filter^ 
action  ...  a  better  tobacco  niter 
because  it's  packed  more  / 

smoothly  by  ACCU.RAY! 


Ch«tt«rfl«M  King  hat  •varything! 

*$50  gon  to  Bob  Armknecht,  Dartmouth   College, 
for  kit  Cheater  Field  poem. 

S30  for  nvry  phUoaophictU  verm  ocrepted  for  publi- 
cation.  CHetterfieid,  P.O.  Box  21,  New  York  46.  N.Y. 

e  LteaMt  k  Mm  Tatieeo  Ca. 


From  all  of  us 


fc-Y  t  ».  » 


*«       7  r  f 


iV 


WENTWORTH  &  SLOAN 


JEWELERS 


Come  m  and  see 

our  wide  selection 

of  beautiful 

Graduation  Gifts! 


Chancellor-elect  And  Mrs.  VViiliam  B.  Aycock 


Shown  above  is  incoming  chancellor  William  Aycock  with  his  wife  Grace.  Aycock  will  replace  Rob«rt 
B.  House  as  Chancellor  of  the  University  of  North  Carolina  in  July.  The  41  year  old  chancellor-elect, 
in  addition  to  being  an  established  teacher  of  law  and  administrator,  lists  among  his  honors  the  Silver 
Star,  Bronze  Star  and  Legion  of  Merit  for  outstanding  performance  as  an  office  ir  World  War  II. 


devote  affectionate  attention. to  hLs 
family.  He  has  served  a.s  president 
Ui  the  PT.\. 

His    brilliance    as    a    student     is  i 
testified  to  by  iiis  former  le>ache."s,  | 
his  superior  intellectual  endowments 
are    t'.-.e    ft:  ;t    things   mentioned    in 
i.ny    conversation    here   about    Bill ' 
.\y.c-ock.  I 

His  purely  schalarship  achieve- 
aients  are  amplified  by  liis  prac- 
tfcal  side.  For  example,  he  did 
jTiu^h  of  the  actual  construction 
work  in  buiL  ing  his  house  in  Chapel 
Hill;  he  tends  u  garden  in  the  mun- 
mer.  | 

Family  Man  ' 

Onte  a  friend  noticed  that  the 
grass  in  the  Aycock  front  ^  yard 
was  ntt  doing  .^o  well  because  the 
hildien  had  been  rompuig  on  the 
lawn.  Peihaps  if  the  chilriien  stay- 
ed off  the  lawn  awhile,  the  grass  , 
would  grow .  the  neighbor  suggest- ' 
ed.  i 

Bill   Aycock  laugiied.     "Right   now  j 
I'm     raising     children."     he     said.  ' 
"When   I    get   through  raising   chil-  j 
Chen,  111  start  raising  grass." 

His  devoted  family  life,  as  shown 
by   th.ut   remark,    was   recipiXK;ated  | 
the  day  the  .\ycock  family  left  hcftne 
or   Reiieigh    for   the   selection  pro-  I 
jedure  by  the  board  of  tiiistes.   It 
i'ad  ibeen  stressed  to  the  children  | 
that    theii". father    might    or   might: 
not  be  named  Chancellor  at  Chapel 
Hill.  1 

Nancy  .Aycock,  10  years  old.  said, 
"It  makes  Ho  ciflerence  what  they  ! 
do.   You    will   always  be   my   Clian- 
-.  ellor  ■■ 

Judgment  I 

Those  « ho  know  Bill  .\ycdck  best  | 
stress  his  quiet  c-curage  and  good 
juc'gment — fcliesc  combined  with  abi-  j 
lity  to  make  quick  decisions  when  1 
i;eccssary.  As  an  illustration  they  ' 
..aint  to  his  World  War  II  record,  i 
.\s  a  training  officer  at  Fort  McCel- 
land,  .MalMana.  he  helped  prepare  , 
Japanese-American  troops  for  com-  | 
:.jc:t,  troops  tliat  later  perforimed  so  i 
notably  in  Italy. 

Early  in  December  1944.   he  went 
lo    Germany,    as    a    battalion   com-  | 
.nander  in  the  346th  Regiment  of  the  | 
87Ui  Infantry  Division. 

His  first  combat  experience  came 

a  few  cays  after  his  arrival  in  Ger- 

T.any     On   DeciMiiber    16.    1944,    the  ' 

German    Ai'my   massed    its    troops 

and  hurled  them  at  the  advaocing 

Allies  in   the   Battle  of  tlie   Bulge. 

lii  tht    fighting  from   December   16 

to  December  25  when  tlie  Germans 

\'.  ei-e    findlly    re  raised.     Lieutenant 

Colonel   Aycock's   performance  was 

I  recognized  by  the  SUw^r  Star  medal 

for  bravery  in  action. 

j     Later  as  an  advance  infantry  unit 

.rf  General  George   Patton's   Army 

at    tlie    time   of    the    March,    1945, 

)icak  through  of  the  Siegfried  Line, 

1  orders    were    issued    to    Liehtenant 

Colonel   Aycock's   battalion  to  stop 

j  until  everyone  else  could  catdh  up. 

I  He    also    was   decorated    with   the 

'  Bronze  Star  Medal  and  the  Legion 

or   Merit. 

Grace  Mewbom  Aycock 

When  mast  Chapel  Hill  people 
I  mention    Bill    .\yc»ck     they     add. 


"Dont  leave  Grace  out.  She's  an 
important  part  of  the  BUI  Aycock 
»  toi-y." 

Mrs.  Aycock  is  the  former  Grace 
Mew'born  of  Snow  Hill.  She  attend- 
ed Duke  University  a  .vear  and  was 
:;raduated  from  Woman's  College  of 
ti:e  University  in  Greensboro.  She 
vvafi  May  Queen.  The  Aycock  s  were 
married  in  1941.  Their  two  children 
"re  William  P.  Avcock  II  and  Nan-: 
:•}•  Aycock. 

'The  .Aycock's  are  good  neigh- 
bors," declared  the  pfofessor  v\iho 
lives  next  dcor  to  them.  "Tliey  don't 
pry  into  your  busin&ss.  but  if  >'ou 
reed  them  because  of  sickness  or 
ther  emergen<-y  they  aix'  rtght 
tJ:ere  to  help."  Mrs.  Aycock  has 
i'cen  a  den  mother  in  the  Cub 
S.outs  and  her  v\x)rk  with  the  school 
.ibrary  has  been  exiceptional. 

WTien  he  came  back  to  school  at 
Chapel  HUl  to  study  law  after  the 
v.ar,  the  Avx.-ocks  lived  at  Victory 
Vllage,  the  temporary  war-time 
M  ooden  housing  built  near  the  cam- 
■.>us.  Mian>-  students  expect  the  new 
Chancellor  to  bo  especially  under- 
standing of  students  housing  prob- 
lems, their  self-he]4>  w^ork  and  their 
.scholarly  as  well  as  their  extra- 
1  i.iTicula  activties.  For  Bill  Aycock 
Jias  excelled  in  all  of  tlicm. 
A  Hard  Worker 

From  the  tirae  he  was  12  years 
old  he  has  always  had  a  job  to  do. 
Curing  his  boyhood  in  Selma  he 
uoiked  in  a  grocery  store,  a  filling 
strtion,  in  a  drug  store  and  on  a 
•livestock  farm.  At  State  College  he 
earned  a  part  of  his  expenses  by 
v.orking  in  the  college  book  store. 
He  was  President  of  the  Student 
Body  at  State,  and  was  a  member 
■M  Blue  Key  and  of  Golden  Cham. 
He  received  his  baclielors  degree  in 
cducayon  at  State  in  1936.  He  was 
21  years  old.  He  emered  the  Uni- 
\ersity  at  Chapel  Hill  Uiat  same 
year  and  in  June  of  1937  he  receiv- 
ed the  master'.s  degree  in  history 
vmd  political  science. 

The  next  tliree  years  he  taught 
Jiislory  in  Greensboro  High  School, 
aivd  dud-ing  the  summers  he  at- 
tended Duke  University  at  one  time 
»?nd  Harvard  University  another. 
Later  he  was  with  the  State  Head- 
quarters of  the  NYA  in  Raleigh,  help- 
ing to  set  up  vooational  projects, 
nnd  there  he  remained  untii  he  en- 
tered the  Army  in  January,  1942, 

It  had  always  been  Bill  Aycock's 
ulfjnate  goal  to  study  law,  and 
this  he  did  v*'hen  he  was  separated 
urom  the  Army  in  1945.  He  was  edi- 
tor of  the  Law  Review,  and  was 
graduated  in  Feibruary  1948,  with 
the  degree  of  J.  D. 

What  has  prof^sors  tliougbt  of 
Ills  ability  was  evident  in  their  ac- 
tioii.  He  was  invited  to  join  the 
fa:C':ulty,  and  he  accepted  in  1948. 
Previousiy,  he  had  enjoyed  a  brief 
taste  of  teaching  when  one  of  liis 
professors  came  down  with  laryngi- 
tis and  couldn't  talk.  Xycock  taught 
the  class  from  the  notes  supplied  by 
the  professor.  He  liked  the  teach- 
ing experience.  "I  think  teaching, 
more  than  anything  else,   gives   a 


man  a  chance  to  develop  his  own 
talent,  "  he  says.  "You  nave  more 
control  over  your  success  or  failure. 
It's  reall>-  up  to  the  individual  to  be 
a  good  teadier  or  a  bad  teacher. 
Law  is  constantly  cliangdng  and 
dev-eloping.  aiul  the  teacher  has  to 
stay  up  to  date,  it  is  a  constant 
xJiallenge  to  keep  up  and  improve." 

Other  institutions 

Aycock  tJilnks  it's  a  good  Idea  to 
teach  at  other  instiiutions.  as  well 
as  at  Chapel  Hill.  This  year  he's 
teaching  at  the  University  of  Vir- 
ginia. One  i-ecent  summer  he  tau^it 
at  the  Univei^sity  of  Te.xas.  In  Texah 
there  is  a  c-ertain  unique  custom 
of  surpi'King  the  visdting  pi-ofcssora 
on  the  final  day  <rf  their  tenure. 
On  tlie  last  day  in  class  at  .\usUn, 
one  of  the  students  suddenly  chal- 
lenged Professor  .Aycock  on  a  point 
of  law. 

'You  say  yxm  are  right,"  said 
the  student,  "birt  the  book  doesn't 
cgree  with  you." 

He  read  from  the  book.  "Now  are 
we  to  believe  what  you  say,  a  visit- 
ing professor  from  North  Carolina?" 
tlie  student  asked. 

"Well.  I  believe  I  am  right  about 
it."  .said  .Aycock 

"Then,"  saiid  the  student  angrily, 
"I  suppose  wo  ,<may  as  well  tear 
up  the  book  and  thi-ow  it  away." 

The  student  tore  the  book  in  two, 
And  threw  it  on  the  floor. 

Instantly  there  was  a  commotion 
in  the  class.  Two  oUier  students 
alx)se  and  ocgan  shooting  revolvers. 

Then  it  daw  neU  on  Aycock  that  a 
joke  was  being  pulled.  He  had  been 
forewarned  tliat  something  was  (go- 
ing to  happen,  but  he  was  not  cer- 
tain what  it  was  to  be.  In  fur  then 
ceremony  he  was  given  a  lO-gal- 
lon  Texas  hat. 

Military  Law 

At  Ciiapel  HUl,  i>rof.  Aycock. 
teaches  three  main  courses:  federal 
Jaw,  property  law  ana  military  law. 
AjTock  him.self  installed  Uie  mUi- 
tary  law  course  at  Chapel  HiU.  That 
is  what  he  is  teaching  at  Virginia 
tliis  jeaa-.  He  is  co-author  of  a  book, 
"Military  Law  Under  the  Uniform 
Code  of  Militciry  Justice,  written  in 
collaboration  with  Colonel  Seymour 
W.  Wurfel,  now  judge  advocate  of 
the  Fifth  Corps  in  Germany. 

He  has  taught  at  Chapel  HUl 
since  1948,  and  during  one  summer 
he   was   personal   assistant   to  Dr. 


Frank  P.  Graham.  United  Nation's 
representative  to  India  and  Pakis- 
tan. Last  year  during  the  ateence 
of  Dean  of  the  Law  School  Henry 
Brandis.  Ajx^ock  was  Acting  Dean 
of  the  Law  School. 

The  Aycock's  are  memetors  of  the 
Ccmmunty  Church  in  Chapel  Hill 
Hv  is  a  member  of  the  N.  C.  Stale 
Bar,  the  North  Carolina  Bar  Asso- 
ciation and  the  American  Bar  Asso- 
ciation. He  has  been  a  member  of 
the  Chapel  HUl  Zoning  Board  of  Ad- 
justment. 

When  the  trustees  of  the  Univer- 
sity set  ciiit  to  find  a  man  of  bal- 
anced scholarly  and  administrative 
abilities,  they  hoped  to  discover  a 
man  with  those  tiiialities,  and  any- 
thiijg  e.xtra  he  possessed  would  be 
90  much  ihe  better.  In  Chapel  HUl 
today  the  consensus  is  that  the 
I*resident,  selection  committee  and 
trustees  have  chosen  well,  for  they 
have  a  scholar  who  has  also  proved 
his  administrative  capacity.  Be- 
sides this,  his  thorougiincss  in  teach- 
ing, his  publications  activity,  his 
onscientious  determination  to  work 
hard,    his  devoted   family   life,    his 


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Next  Saturday 
Is  Poppy  Day 

Poppy  Day,  sponsored  by  the 
Aanerican  Legion  Auxiliary,  will 
be  observed  in  Chapel  pill  on  Sat- 
urday, according  to  an  announce- 
ment made  by  Mrs.  John  J.  Keller 
Jr.,  President  of  the  local  Unit, 
'and  Mrs.  R.  T.  Madden,  Poppy 
Chairman.  On  this  day.  memb<jrs 
of  the  Chapel  Hill  Unit,  assisted 
by  members  of  the  Y-Teens,  will 
sell  poppies  .on  the  streets  in 
Chapel  Hill. 


sense  of  humor,  and  his  ability  to 
make  himself  clear  are  the  extras 
that  assure  the  University  of  North 
Carolina  at  Chapel  HiU  of  new  and 
vigorous  leadership  in  the  best 
raciitiion  of  the  University. 

WUliam  B.  Aycock  was  ibnrn  in 
Ijucama,  N.  C.  October  26,  1915,  the 
ion  of  the  late  William  Preston  Aj'- 
^ock  and  Mrs.  .Ayc-ock.  The  family 
lived  in  Sekna  where  W.  P.  Ay- 
-ock  was  a  lawyer  and  judge  of 
recorders  court.  His  mother*  still 
lives  in  Sekna.  . 

A  further  tribute  to  his  jadgmcnt 
^nd  agility  was  signified  by  a  law 
>chocl    coUeague    who    said.    "Bill 


Aycock  is  the  kind  of  man  ^^  caa 

I  be    dropped    into   almost    any    kin  I 

of  situation  and  land  on  his  feet." 


O 


.>..«i^.>».^.^..»..»..»ii»  ■•■■ 


George  L.  Coxhead 

U.N.C.   -42 
Campus  Represenlative 


t 


NEVy  YORK  LIFE 

INSURANCE    COMPANY 


Hill    L,^] 
1m   Ihr 
•t«d«fM 
IM  er?' 


GREETING  CARDS 

r///ir  EXPRESS   yOUR   WISHES.' 
-  SINCERE        'f^i^^^^l^y 


COMPLETE  SELECTION  OF 
GRADUATION  AND  FATHER'S  DAY  CARDS 

Sutton's^ 


DRUG  STORE 


To  i/k  Qradiudes  of  1957  •  •  our  sihca-e. . . 

We  have  enjoyed  serving  you  since  we  moved  into  Shapel  Hiii.  •: 
We  know  that  you  will  be  a  great  success  in  the  field  which  you.^^^  . 
have  chosen  for  your  life's  work.  We  want  to  take  this  oppor- 
tunity to  wish  you  the  very  best  in  the  years  to  come.  We  sin- 
cerely hope  that  you  will  come  back  to  "The  Hill"  often,  and 
when  you  do,  be  sure  to  come  by  and  chat  with  us  for  a  while. 
We  will  miss  you  and  all  that  you  have  done  in  your  four  years 
at  Carolina.  Again,  the  very  best  of  everythi4ng  to  each  and  every- 
one of  you.  ;  .        "  '  I 

ana  .  • . 

'  .J 

I     to  each  and  every  one  of  our 

wonderful  student  customers . . . 

We  want  to  take  this  opportunity  to  wish  you  all  a  very  happy 
and  wonderful  summer,  and  we  are  tooking  forward  to  seeing--*' 
you  again  next  fall  in  Chapel  Hill.  It  has  been  our  pleasure  to 
serve  you  in  the  best  possible  way.  We  have  made  many,  many'V 
friends  in  the  short  timie  that  we  have  been  in  Chape!  Hill,  and 
we  certainly  count  you  among  our  best.  If,  in  any. way,  anytime, 
we  can  be  of  service  to  you,  do  not, hesitate  to  call  on  us. 


Belk-Leggett-Harton.Cd. 


!•»    1fS7 


y 


TUESDAY,  MAY  J1,  1957 


THE  DAILY  TAR  HEEL 


PAGE  FIVf 


t 
itiv« 


•ANY 


.RDS 


le 
Iry 


Dpy 

and 
me. 


Carolina   Gets   Lions   Share 
Of  1 70  Southern  Fellowships 


Frr  the  second  year  iu  a  ixiw. 
(he  Uarversi.y  of  North  Carolina 
has  walked  away  wkh  the  lion's 
5  hare  of  170  grants  awarded  by  the 
South^n  Fellowships  Fund,  leadisig 
all  inst  tut^ons  in  the  nation. 

UXC  was  the  top  ciioice,  with  35 
i3"aduate  scholars  electing  to  do 
advance  rcseart-h  or  study  or  take 
advanced  teacher  training  at  Chapel 
Hill.  La^4  year  UNC  also  wias  first 
in  the  icnow^hip  choices,  wilh  27 
student:-  conving  to  Chapel  Hill  of 
;36  ^ants  made. 

Second  in  line  in  this  year's 
se'ections  was  the  University  of 
Tev.-is  Nine;een  of  the  fellows  nam- 
ed choaiK^^Ml  uniN-ersity.  Duke  Uni- 
verst>'  »a>  third  with  15.  Tulane 
w.--;  .'r-irth  with  10.  Oklahoma  Uni- 
versity. ODhinobia  University  and 
Iiar\ai-<J  University  were  tied  for 
fifth  plfece.  six  selectees  going  to 
c^h  of  tliose  universities. 
PIlD.  Aspirants 

Xinety-ftwr  persons  in  Southern 
ccl!f-gcsi*  i^  universifties  received 
fellowship  awards  for  graduate  re- 
search ^  study  leading  chiefly  to 
the  dtxriorate  degree.  Of  these  the 
94  sclecied  to  attend  the  foUowlog 
instituiibns: 


University  of  Nwlh  Carolina  . .  15 

University  of  Texas 10 

Columteia    University 5 

University  of  Florida 4 

University   of   Oklahoma 4 

(ComeM,  Harvard,  Syracuse,  Wis- 
eonsitti  and  Yale  each  have  three, 
and  '29  other  institutions  were  chosen 
by  one  or  two  students.) 

Teaching  Fellowshipfi 

Seventy-six  persons  were  awarded 

collegie  teaching  career  fellowships 

for  next  year,  and  tiiese  and  the 

institutions  they  selected  ^>lk>w: 

Universiity  of  North  Carolina  . .  20 

Ihike  Utuversity 14 

University  of  Texas 9 

Tulane  University 7 

VanderbUt    University 6 

15    other    institutions 21 

Outstanding  Scholars 
The  SouthCTm  Fellowships  Fund 
which  is  an  agency  of  the  Rocke- 
feller Foundation's  General  Eduoa- 
ion  Board  makes  awards  to  out- 
standing graduate  scholars  in  south- 
em  institii'tir...  Those  selected  may 
attend  any  college  or  university  in 
the  nation,  or  in  some  oases  may 
attend  institutions  ia  foreign  (coun- 
tries. 
The    fellowship   awards    for   ad- 


When  Tests  are 
over  and 
classes  are 

-     done 

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You'll  fenjoy  today's  copy  of  this  publication 

«i 
much  more  if  you'll  get  up  right  now  and  get 

yourself  an  ice-cold  bottle  of  Coca-Cola. 

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•  IMIk  IW  C0CA40U  COMPANY 


vanoed  stiidy  or  research  range  in 
anxmnt  from  $1,500  to  $3,200,  with 
additional  sums  to  cover  tuition  and 
:*ees.  Stipends  for  teaching  fellow- 
ships  are  $1,000  for  the  first  year, 
with  extras  lor  tuitkm,  fees  and  for 
dependents. 

Snce  those  selects  choose  the 
college  or  university  most  likely  to 
equip  them  best  for  their  futiure 
careers  in  the  lacademic  world,  the 
fact  that  the  University  at  Chapel 
Hill  was  picked  more  frequently 
than  any  other  institution  in  the 
country  is  significant  of  the  regard 
which  graduate  students  hold  the 
gracuate  and  reseiffch  and  teacher 
teaming  opportunities  at  Chftpel  Hill. 
Significance 

The  -meaning  of  .the  grants  anc 
the  recoignition  that  has  come  to 
the  University  was  heralded  today 
ijy  Dr.  Louis  Round  Wilson,  Kenan 
Professor  and  author  of  the  book 
Ipujxlished  yesterday  "The  Univer- 
.iity   of   North   Carolina— -1900-1930." 

Professor  >yiilson  said,  'the  im- 
portance of  the  presence  of  these 
scholar  and  students  in  the  Univer- 
sity lies  in  the  f6ct  that  from  the 
beginning  the  University  has  the 
opportunity  to  select  a  specially 
qualified  grous)  for  its  teaching  pro- 
-am and  for  its  fellow  institutions 
In  North  Carolina  and  in  the  region. 
This  importance  is  accentuated  by 
the  flood  of  students  that  the  Uni- 
versity will  have  to  take  care  of 
In  common  with  other  insititutions, 
all  of  which  are  going  to  be  con- 
fronted with  securing  instructors, 
and  in  view  of  the  competition  of 
industry  land  the  federal  service." 
Research  Triangle 

Dr.  Wilson  added  that  the  Uni- 
versity of  North  Carilina,  in  colla- 
boration with  olfver  institutions  of 
the  state,  have  got  to  "'man  the  Re- 
search Triangle."  The  decisions  of 
this  high  percentage  of  doctoral 
'Candidates  and  prospeotifve  college 
teachers  to  come  to  the  University 
and  other  institutions  in  this  state 
is  a  gratifying  sign,  he  declared. 

Dr.  Wilson  also  recalled  the  mes- 
satge  of  former  President  Harry 
Woodbum  Chase  in  1930  to  the 
Board  of  Trustees: 

"The  University  of  Ninth  Caro- 
lina has  attained  la  position  among 
the  significant  institi>tions  for  high- 
er education  in  America  ....  At 
preciseiy  tlve  time  yfben  the  State 
and  the  South  are  being  brought  in- 
to competition  in  sudi  definite  ways 
with  the  remainder  of  the  country, 
the  University  has  come  iivto  a  pos- 
ition in  which  it  can  offer  to  South- 
ern youth  a  training  that  docs  not 
.shrink  from  measurement  by  na- 
tional standards." 

Legislature 

An  effort  is  being  made  now  to 
maintain  the  standards,  declared 
Dr.  Wilson,  the  reputation  which 
the  University  at  Chapel  Hill  liolds 
in  the  eyes  of  scholars  in  the  South 
is  a  reflection  of  tbf^^  standards. 

The  General  Assembly,  now  in 
session,  has  .programs  before  it  for 
strengthening  the  graduate  program 
€md  raishig  faculty  salaries  at  UNC, 
a  prime  purpose,  being  to  put  the 
faculty  salary  scale  here  on  a  firmer 
foundation  which  would  enable  the 
University  to  hold  on  to  faculty 
members  who  mi^  toe  tempted  to 
leave  for  higher  paying  jobs  at 
other  institutions. 


Sigma  Xi  Picks 
Hoteliing  Head 

Dr.  Harold  Hoteliing  has  been 
elected  president  of  the  Caro- 
lina chapter  ofthe  Society  of  Sig- 
ma Xi  for  1957-58,  succeeding 
Dr.  Geogre  O.  Doak. 

'Dr.  Hoteliing,  who  is  professor 
of  statistics  and  associate  di- 
rector of  the  Institute  of  Sta- 
tistics here,  was  chosen  at  a  busi- 
ness session  last  weekend,  fol- 
lowing the  annual  initiation,  at 
which  37  full  members  and  30 
'associate  members  were  admitt- 
ed. 

Other  new  officers  are  Dr. 
"ITiomas  Butler,  professcM"  of 
pharmacology,  vice  president; 
and  Dr.  Virgil  L  Mann,  associate 
professor  J  of  geology,  treasurer. 
Dr.  Walter  H.  Wheeler,  assisUnt 
professor  of  geology,  was  re- 
elected secretary. 


Old  Well  Pix 

Jwry  Oppmtheimer,  rectntly 
•lectad  president  of  the  Old 
Well,  said  yestercSiy  that  Old 
W»ll  pictures  are  new  available 
In  306  South  Building. 

He  urged  all  recent  initiates  to 
ttap  by  Dean  M««lcie's  office  to 
pkk  them  up,  remimling  them 
that  the  pictures  have  been  paid 
for  from  initiatieo  fees. 


Stewart  Is 
Winner  Of 
Med  Award 

The  annual  awards  have  been 
made  at  the  School  of  Medicine  in 
connection  with  Student  -  Faculty 
Day. 

The  William  deB.  MacNider 
Award*  went  to  Edwin  Lewers 
Stewart,  a  second  year  medical 
student  of  Greenville,  S.  C. 

This  award  was  established  by 
the  second  year  class  of  1950.  It 
consists  of  public  commendation 
of  a  sophomore  medical  student 
who  is  elected  by  his  classmates 
because  he  possesses  various  in- 
tangible traits  of  good  character 
which  were  typified  by  Dr.  "Billy" 
MacNider.  Dr.  MacNider  was 
teacher  and  physician  at  UNC  for 
•"1  years. 

The  Professor  Award,  establish- 
ed last  year  went  to  Dr.  A.  Price 
Heusner.  This  award  is  voted  each 
year  by  the  members  of  the  sen- 
ior class  of  the  School  of  Medicine 
to  the  professor  who  has  contri- 
buted most  to  their  education. 

The  Professor  Award  went  last 
year  to  Dr.  John  T.  Sessions  Jr.  of 
the  School  of  Medicine. 

The  winner  of  the  MacNider 
Award  last  year  was  Benjamin  E. 
Thompson  of  Rocky  Mount. 


With  Volume  Of  Journal 


Yale  Honors  Dr.  Peters 


Meg  Markley,  Glamour  Fashion  Editor  puts  the  final  touches  on 
th*  boxy  jacket  of  Sarah  Van  Weyk's  suit.  Miss  Van  Weyk  has,  been 
salacted  as  one  of  the  ten  best  dressed  college  girls  in  America 
and  will  appear  in  the  August  issue  of  Glamour  magazine. 


UNC  Professor 
Speaks  Before 
3  Thousand 

A  University  of  North  Carolina 
sociologist  will  address  some  3.- 
000  delegates  Wednesday,  May  22, 
at  a  National  Conference  on  So- 
cial Welfare  slated  to  be  held  in 
Philadelphia. 

Dr.  Reuben  Hill,  research  pro- 
fessor in  family  life  with  the  In- 
stitute for  Research  in  Social 
Science  here,  will  speak  on  "The 
Changing  American  Family  —  Its 
Challenge  for  Social  Welfare." 

Dr.  Hill  will  present  the  high- 
lights of  the  many  rapid  changes 
that  are  taking  place  in  present- 
day  family  structure  and  commun- 
ity life,  with  specific  reference  to 
implications  for  social  work. 

The  six-day  conference  will  run 
from  May  19-24.  having  as  Its 
theme  "Expanding  Frontiers  in 
Social  Welfare."  This  will  be  the 
84th  annual  forum. 

Other  North  Carolina  delegates 
include  Dr.  Weston  La  Barre  of 
Duke  University,  where  he  is  as- 
sociate professor  of  anthropology, 
and  Dr.  Ellen  Winston,  North  Car- 
olina's Superintendent  of  Public 
Welfare. 

Dr.  La  Barre  will  speak  on  "Soc- 
ial Work  as  a  Force  in  Produeing 
Cultural  Change"  and  Or.  Winston 
will  participate  in  discussions  on 
"The  place  of  Welfare  Agencies  in. 
the  Total  Community  Planning." 


Piano  Virtuoso 
To  Play  Here 

Lily  Keleti,  Hungarian  born  vir- 
tuoso of  the  piano,  will  play  as 
guest  recitalist  at  the  Piano  Clinic 
for  Teachers  and  Students  to  be 
held  here  this  summer. 

Dr.  William  S.  Newman,  who 
will  direct  the  clinic,  announced 
that  the  clinic  is  fortunate  indeed 
to  have  the  internationally  renown- 
ed Miss  Keleti  participate  in  the 
clinic.  The  session  will  be  held 
from  June  24-27. 

The  clinic,  sponsored  by  the 
UNC  Extension  Division,  is  de- 
signed to  help  teachers  and  stu- 
dents who  wish  to  keep  up  to  date 
in  the  piano  world.     « 

Miss  Keleti  is  professor  of  pi- 
ano at  Portland  (Oregon)  Univers- 
versity,  having  first  taught  piano 
in  this  country  at  a  West  Virginia 
college.  She  has  concertized  wide- 
ly in  Huiigary,  France,  Germany, 
Austria.  Spain  and  Italy. 

A  holder  of  many  degrees,  Miss 
Keleti  is  a  graduate  of  the  Marie 
Therese  State  Lyceum  for  Women 
of  Budapest,  the  Hungarian  State 
Royal  Academy  of  Music,  the 
Hungarian  State  Franz  Liszt 
School  of  Musical  Art  and  has 
studied  with  such  famous  per- 
sonalities as  Isidor  Phillipp  and 
Mischa   Elman. 

Since  1951,  when  Miss  Keleti 
came  to  Portland  University,  she 
has  been  acclaimed  one  of  the 
leading  pianist  of  the  times.  Her 
technique  has  been  described  as 
''impeccable,"  '"superb,"  "stun- 
ning" and  "phenomenal." 

Miss  Keleti's  first  months  in  the 
United  States  were  not  pleasant 
ones.  She  had  to  work  in  a  cos- 
tume jewelry  factory  where  she 
earned  only  $23  per  month.  But 
even  diuing  these  trying  times 
she  continued  to  practice  every 
day. 


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A  volume  of  the  Yale  Journal 
of  Biology  has  been  published  in 
memory  of  the  late  Dr.  John  P. 
Peters,  father  of  Dr.  Richard  M. 
Peters  of  the  facuhy  of  the  Uni- 
versity of  North  Carc^ina  School  of 
Medicine. 

The  book  was  edited  by  Dr.  Louis 
G.  Welt,  professor  of  medicine  of  , 
the  UNC  School  of  Medicine.  The ' 
young  doctor  is  an  associate   pro- 1 
fessor  of  surgery  here.  { 

The  volume  of  the  journal  that 
was  recently  published  in  book 
form  originally  appeared  in  De- 
cember. ^ 

The  various  authors  of  the  art- 
icles contained  in  the  book  have 
refused  to  accept  royalties.  In- 
stead, the  money  will  go  to  the 
John  P.  Peters  Memorial  Fund. 
This  fund   will  be   used  to  stage 


annual  memorial  lectures  at  Yale 
University. 

The  articles  are  written  on  sub- 
jects in  the  field  in  which  Dr. 
Peters  was  interested.  All  of  the 
articles  were  prepared  by  investi- 
gators who  were  trained  in  Dr. 
Peters'  laboratory  at  New  Hsven. 


With  this  ad  and  $1.00  Wallar 
Studio  will  make  for  you  or  any 
member  of  your  faniily  on* 
BX10    inch    silvertone    portrait. 

O^r  regular  $7.50  value. 

Waller  Studio 

343  W.  Main  At  5  Pts. 

Durham,  N.  C. 

Durham's  Only  Down  Town 

Ground  Floor  Studio 


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ith  his 


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l^_  SONIC 

Ever  since  Jack  bought  his  new 
Sonic  CAPRI  phonograph  at  the 
local  college  store  —  he's  become 
the  biggest  B  M  O  C  ever.  You 
can  join  him  and  be  the  biggest  ever, 
too,  for  you  can  buy  a  CAPRI 
phonograph  for  as  Uttie  as  $19.95. 

This  month's  special  is  the  CAPRI 

550  —  a  twin  speaker  high 

fidelity  portable  with  4-speed 

Webcor  automatic  changer, 

hi-fi  amplifier  in  attractive 

two-tone  Forest  Green,      only  *59'* 

at  your  local  dealer. 
SONIC  INDUSTRIES,  INC.  '19  Wilbur  Street,  lynbrook.  N.Y. 


See  Our  Complete  Line  Of 
SONIC   PHONOGRAPHS 


How  to  roll  a  box  car  Southern  style 


THE  rings  this  railroader's  holding  are  Timken* 
tapered  roller  bearings.  Mounted,  instead  of  ordi- 
nary friction  bearings,  on  freight  car  axles,  Timken 
bearings  reduce  friction  so  much  you  can  actually  roll 
the  car  by  yourself. 

Reducing  friaion  to  a  mioimum  enables  Timken 
bearings  to  eliminate  the  hot  box  problem.  No.  1  cause 
of  freight  train  delay.  They  roll  the  load  instead  of  slid* 
ing  it.  And  that's  why  the  Southern  Railroad  has  started 
to  go  "Roller  Freight",  with  415  of  its  freight  cars  on 
Timken  bearings.  One  of  58  railroads  making  the  big 
switch  to  "Roller  Freight"  to  speed  shipments,  by 
eliminating  the  hot  box  problem,  cutting  terminal 
bearing  inspection  time  substantially.  And  when  all 
railroads  go  "Roller  Freight",  they'll  save  an  estimated 
$224  million  annually. 

The  Timken  Company  pioneered  the  use  of  roller 
bearings  for  freight  cars.  We're  looking  for  young  men 


to  pioneer  improvements  like  this  with  us,  help  find 
new  places  to  reduce  friction,  speed  up  machines.  Men 
who  want  to  grow  with  the  world's  largest  manufac- 
turer of  tapered  roller  bearings.  Men  w^o  will  work 
hand-in-hand  with  the  railroads,  and  with  the  people 
who  make  aircraft,  automobiles,  construction  and  farm 
machinery. 

We  think  you  might  find  profitable  reading  in  our 
booklet,  "Career  Opportunities  at  the  Timken  Com- 
pany". Drop  us  a  card  at  The  Timken  Roller  Bearing 
Company,  Canton  6,  Ohio. 


umpn 

TAPmO  ROLLER  BEARINGS 


Timken*  beorings  keep  America  on  the  GO . : :  and  ^  keep  soigf  ||  w)ua  iw  |«  witli  thft  lioiicea  Com|Nny 


^^v«a 


^^^^m^iw^^^ 


^Aoe  SIX 


THi   DAILY   TAH  HIIL 


TUESDAY,    MAY   t\.    1»57 


High  Men^i  Honorary 

The  Order  Of  The  Old  Well 


IMPROVE  YOUR  GOLF 
At 

Westwood  Golf  Course 


9  PAR~3  HOLES 

OPEN: 
DAY  AND  NIGHT 


PARWAY   DRIVING   RANGE 
AND  MINATURE  COURSE 

HILLSBORO  RD.  DURHAM 


^  On  the  right  if  •  picture  of  the 
members  of  the  Order  of  the  Did 
Well.  Shown  m  front  of  their 
namesake  are,  reading  from  left 
to  right  on  the  front  row:  Mike 
Weinman,  Dave  Connor,  Bill  Mc- 
Lean, Joe  Waiser,  Jerry  Oppen- 
heinwr,  Don  .Stein,  Ken  Bryant, 
Tommy  Johnson,  John  Bilich, 
Bobby  Newton,  Mack  Cherry  and 
Kelly  Maness. 

Standing,  left  H»  ri9ht,  first 
row:  Gene  Whitehead,  Charlie 
Daniel,  Eddie  Bass,  Don  Jeffer- 
son, Nancy  McFadden,  Barbara 
Moore,  Jeanne  Siiiay,  Jackie 
Aldridge,  Esther  Ballentine, 
Carolyn  Green,  Kathy  LeGrand, 
Martha  Richardson,  Martha  Bar- 
ber, '  Billy  Dent,  Shirley  Bum- 
gardner,  Annette  Niven  and 
Forbes  Ramesay. 

Second  row,  standino  left  to 
right:  Gardner  Foley,  Ed  Willing- 
ham,  Jo  Ruffin,  Pat  Hunter, 
Nancy  Shuford,  Charles  Tomp- 
kins, Ed  Lipman,  Sonny  Evans, 
Dick  Sirkin,  Lee  Ann  Curtis, 
Jim  Preston,  Gordon  Bishop, 
Teddy  Jones,  Doug  Cantrel!., 
Jim  Armstrong,  John  Kerr  and 
Curtis  Daughtry. 

Back  row,  left  to  right.  Ralph 
Bentley,  Sonny  Hallford,  Snyder 
Pate,  Benny  Thomas,  Joe  Smith, 
Dave  Ward,  Jim  Beatty  and  Co- 
lin McMillian. 


New  Professor 
In  Med  School 

Dr.  Peter  Paul  Vaughn  ....» 
been  named  assistant  professor  in 
the  Department  of  Anatomy  o! 
the  School  of  Medicine   here. 

This  announcement  was  mad** 
by  Chancellor  Robert  B.  Hoa^e 
with  the  approval  of  President 
William  C.  Friday  and  the  Tvr 
Board  of  Trustees. 

Dr.  Vaughn  is  3  native  of  A! 
toona.  Penn.  He  Te«iijgJg||iM  B.A 
degree  from  Brooklyn  Wllege  in 
1950.  His  M.A.  degree  was  award 
ed  in  1952  and  his  Ph.D.  degrct- 
was  given  in  1954.  bolh  by  Har 
vard  University.  ^    t^ 

He  was  a  teaching  fiiltw  at  Har 
vard  1950-52  and  an*"?nstructor  a! 
UNC  during  1954-56.  During  thf> 
last  academic  vear  he  was  an  a*, 
sistant  professor  at  ^e  Universi 
ty  of  Kansas..   1         .^_ 

Cramming 
for  Exams? 


OLD  GOLD  ANNOUNCES 


WINNERS! 


1 


St  PRIZE 


(AU-exp«nse,  40-ilay  tour 
of  the  world  for  two 
or  $5,000  In  cash) 

DAVID  L^HENDRIE 

University  of  Washington 
Washington 


2    A  PRI7P    I  |3rd to 6th  PRIZES 
nCl    r   HI  Ait      II        /7.dav  ail-axoense  Dald 


(10-day  all-expense  paid 
trip  to  Paris) 

JOSEPH  LEONARD 

Lehigh  University 

Pennsylvania 


(7-day  all-expense  paid 
trips  to  Bermuda) 

D.  RICHTER 
Univ.  of  North  Carolina 

MARTIN  H.  HACKER 
Northwestern  Univ.,  Illinois 

RICHARD  PRAIRIE 
University  of  Chicago 

!  RICHARD   D.   POMERANTZ,   JR, 
Cornell  Univ.,  N.  Y. 


7th  to  16th  PRIZES 

(RCA  Hi-Fi  Mts-IMARK  IV) 

JAMES  MARTIN 
Univ.  of  Detroit 

DONALD  Y.  DAVIS 
IJoiv.  of  Florida 

T.  NBIL  DIVINE 

Maai.  Institute  of  Tech. 

JANK  SPABTH 

Middlebury  ColL.  Vt. 

WILLIAM  T.  SMELSRR 
Univ.  of  CaUfiomia 

HAROLD  I.  LEVINB 
Univ.  of  Chi>»Ko 

RAMON  JIMKNEZ 
U.C.L.A. 

CHARLES  HAMBimO 
Temple  Uaiv.,  Pa. 

PETER  a  HOCKADAY 

Yale,  Conn. 
PETER  08TRANDER 

ColumlHa  Univ.,  N.  Y. 


17th  to  36th  PRIZES 

(SlOO  Brooics  Brothers 
wardrobe  certificates) 


JOHN  L.  NEKK 

Univ.  of  WaMhincton 

ROXANA  ALfiBEHO 

Nat.  Call,  of  Ed..  nHnoit 


LARRY  A.  BARON 
M.  I.  T. 

RICHARD  A.  HU«HE3 
Lehigh  Univ.,  Pa. 

LESLIE  KERT 

Univ.  of  Micfaigaa 

JEROME  H.  WISEMAN 
Temple  Uttiv..  Pa. 

EDGAR  W.  8CHULZ 

North  Dakota  Agric.  Coil. 

CHARLES  M    ROSENBIJVTT 
Colombia  Univ..  N   Y. 

MARVIN  RAY  LENZ 
Texas  Umvenity 

ELIOT  GLAS8HRIM 
Wesleyan  Univ.,  Conn. 

DEAN  NEHER 

Univ.  oTKansas 
LEON  ZUKROW 

Marquette  Univ.,  Wim, 
PETER  AVAKIAN 

M.  I.  T. 

G.  L.  JORDAN  ' 

Texas  A.  &  M. 
DENNIS  A.  JOHNSTON 

Grinnell  Coll.,  Iowa 

J.  S.  WESKR 

Harvard  Univ.,  Mass. 
GILBERT  SHAPIRO 

Cidumbia  Univ.,  N.  Y. 

MANER  L    THORPE 

Univ.  of  California 

MAUR1%;  DANIHKR,  JR. 
Univ.  of  Illinoia 

BRRNON  F.  MITCHELL 
Stanford  Univ.,  Cal. 


50  additional  PRIZES 

(S25  Broolis  Brotiiers 
wardrobe  certificates) 

ROBERT  G    KESSLER 

Duke  Univ.,  N.  C. 
JOHN  BIENFANG 

Univ.  of  Colorado 
PHILIP  R.  PRYDK 

AmhvrHt  CoU.^  Mass. 
CARL  G.  WEISENFEl/b 

Columbia  Univ.,  N.  Y. 
GAIL  SLAYHAUGH 

Mount  Holyobe  CoU.,  Maan 

ROBERT  VONDRA.SKK 

Univ.  of  Colorado 
GEORGE  R.  BEDKLL 

Columbia  Univ.,  N.  Y< 
FRED  1X)WNSKNU 

l.ehiK>i  Univ..  Pa. 
RCXJER  J.  SMITHE 

Uuiv.  of  Michigan    . 
STANLEY   WO.HnCK? 

Harvard  Univ.,  MaM. 
WARREN  R.  BROWN 

I>?high  Univy,  Pa. 
DON    I..   HEAKD 

Yale  Univ.,  (U>nu. 
ROBERT  MAIJ-;C 

Univ.  of  CThicago 
HUNTER  WIUSON 

II.CL.A. 
DAVE  VANTREA.se 

WiuihiiiKton  Statu  CoU.,  Wa«ih. 
BILL  BU(«AN 

Waahington  State  Coll..  Wash. 


OIiDeiD 


Look  for  tjie 
smart  new  pacic— 

OLD  GOLD  FILTERS 

Exclusive  "Flavor  Fresli"  process  gives  you  the 

best  taste  yet 

in  a  filter  cigarette! 

r,  195/ 


©  1957,  Harry  H.  Hollister 


ROBERT  ARZT 

M.  I.  T. 
DOOLRY  .SCIPLE 

Cornell  Univ..  N.  Y. 
DAVID   M.   BLOOM 

Columbia  Univ.,  N,  Y. 
WILLIAM   W.  BUCKLEY 

Univ.  of  ('aliforpia 
ROBERT  LirnXJN 

Univ.  of  WaHhiuKton 
iJkWRENCE  J    BUUGE 

Marquette  Univ..  Wis. 
GARY   LRR  SMITH 

Univ.  of  MinneHota 
FUKDKRIC  J.   MASBACK 

Hyrai-iwe  Univ..  N.  Y. 
KARL  .1.  WKT/KL 

(■«>rKCt.own  Univ.,  Wnahington,  D.  OL 
WILLIAM   A.   MrCOMH 

MichiRaD  Stiite  Univ. 

CLIFFORD  T.  STEWART 

iJeuver  Uuiveraity 
GILBERT  D.   MEAD 

Univ.  uf  ('aUfornia 
WILLIAM   L.   EAR1.EY 

Univ.  of  Illinoia 
HOWARD  A.  GUT/.MER 

San  Diego  State  Coll.,  C«|, 
EVK  COFFIN 

« "olorado  A  &  M  f  ;oU. 
STEPHEN  P.^HIl.L 

Stanford  Univ.,  Cal. 

DoNAi.,n  Dubois 

U.C  LA. 
VKLLO  EKILANE 
M.  I   T. 

STEPHANIE  SCHWARS       i  " 

Smith  ColL,  Maaa. 
PAUL  W.  SMITH 

U  ni v.  of  Oklahoma 
WAIWIT  BLTDDHARI  .  ■;   \ 

Univ.  of  California 
ROBKUT  J.  McRAE 

Montana  State  Univ. 
JOHN  GlLLIGAN 

Marquette  Univ.,  Wia. 
JAMES  C.  POPE 

Uuiv.  of  CaUfi>rnia 
ALBERT  L.  SALTER 

Univ   of  California 
GORDEN  Y.  S.  WU 

Prin<jeton  Uuiv..  N.J. 
JACK  C.  SCOTT 

Texas  A.  &  M.  CoU. 
S.  M.  ENSINGER 

Dartmouth  ColL.  N.  H. 
WALTER  RRICHERT 

Stanford  Univ  ,  Cal. 
JAY  ELSAS 

Trinity  College.  Conn. 
RICHARD  L.  THERRIEN 

Univ.  of  Kentucky 
KENNETH  LANGLEY 

M.  I.  T. 
FRANCIS   vVINDORSKI 

Univ.  of  Minnesota 
TOM  TOLHEhT 
Univ.  of  Ok 


67  Inducted  Into  Membership  Of 
Society  Of  Sigma  XI  Friday  Night 


Thirty-seven  scientists  at  the 
University  of  North  Carolina  were 
taken  into  full  membership  of  the 
Society  of  Sigma  Xi  at  the  annual 
initiation  banquet  Friday  night,  at 
which  30  other  persons  were  ad- 
mitted as  associate  members. 

Dr.  George  O.  Doak,  who  has 
been  president  of  the  UNC  chap- 
ter during  1956-57,  presided  at  the 
banquet  in  Lenoir  Hall  and  gave 
his  presidential  address  at  a  pro- 
gram following  in  Venable  Hall. 

In  his  address  Dr.  Doak  dis- 
cussed research  progress  within 
the  Venereal  Disease  Experimen- 
tal Laboratory  in  Chapel  Hill,  of 
A'hich    he   is  '«ssistant    director. 

Dr.  Doak  explained  that  since 
1943,  when  penicillin  replaced  ar 
icnic  drugs  in  the  treatment  of 
syphilis,  scientists  have  been  de 
veloping  drugs  which  are  com- 
pounds .of  phosphorus  and  testing 
them  against  organisms  which 
cause'  syphilis  and  other  diseases. 

"Many  of  these  drugs  show 
promising  therapeutic  properties,'' 
'}r.  Doak  reported,  "but  at  this 
'ime  we  cannot  .<;ay  that  they  will 
be  of  any  value." 

Dr.  Doak  explained  that  the  re- 

i3arch       with       organophosphorus 

'compounds   has   a   double   object: 

(1)    finding  the  life  cycle   of  the 

rganism   Which   cause  .syphilis  by 

inding  which  drugs  are  effective 

p  destroying  it;  and   (2)   finding 

Iriigs  other  t)ian   penicillin  which 

might   be  non-toxic  and   might   be 

iscd  in  cases  \j'here  penicillin  can- 

lot  be  used,  such  as  patients  with 

•J  sensitivity  to  penicillin.  i 

Dr.  Doak.  who  joined  the  UNC 
faculty  in  lf>;8.  is  a  native  of 
'.'anada  and  took  his  doctorate  in 
pharmaceutical  chemistry  at  the  1 
University  of  Wi.sconsin.  For  10 
years  before  he  came  to  Chapel  ! 
Hill  he  was  a  research  asociate 
at  John  Hopkins.  j 

Those  initiated  into  full  society 
membership,  ^all  of     whom     have 
shown  excellence  in  scientific  re- 1 
search   as     faculty     members     or 
graduate   assistants,   are   listed   by  j 
departments:  I 

Biochemistry— Robert  L.  Golby 
and  D.orofhy  Dickey  Schottelius; 
Chemistry— Joseph  Y.  Bassett  Jr., 
Bprlin  C.  French.  John  N.  God- 
frey. George  B.  Hoey,  John  K. 
Ruff.  Rudolt  W.  Schmid,  and  Will- 
iam G.  Scribner. 

Experimental  Medicine — Ceorge 
R.  Cannefax  and  Joseph  Portnoy; 
Geology — Linn  Hoover;  Mathemat- 
ics—Komarath  Padmavally;  Med- 
icine—Kerr  L.  White  and  Daniel 
T.  Young;  Parasitology — Hilton  T. 
Goulson  and  Charles  W.  Kim; 
Pathology  —  Walter  R.  Benson; 
Pediatrics  — George  K.  Summer 
and  Patricia  Z.  Thomas. 

Pharmacology  — Jchn  W.  Pear- 
son. Gabiel  F.  Tucker  Jr.  and  Wil- 
liam J  Waddpll;  Phafmacy— Nich 
olas  H.  Batuyios,  Earl  T.  Brown, 
and  Cosmo  A.  DiFazio;  Physiology 

Charles  L.  Johnston  Jr.,  Donald 

A.  Olewine.  and  Charles  D.  Wood; 
Psychiatry  —  Shepherd  Liverantj 
Psychology— Richard  de  Charms 
JV.  John  D.  Kelton  and  Howard 
Leventhal. 

Sanitary  Engineeriiig  —  Gilbert 
L  Kelso;  Statistics— Seymour  Geis- 
%er  and  Shanti  S.  Gupta;  Zoology— 
Eloise  E.  Clark. 

The  30  associate  members,  who 
vill  tie  eligibfe  for  full  member-    : 


j  ship  later,  are  as  follows:  Bio- 
!  chemistry — David  J.  Holbrook  Jr.; 
i  Chemiiitry — Gary  P.  Hildebrand, 
James  H.  Holloway.  John  T.  Mac- 
Queen.  John  J.  gandall,  and  Har- 
old M.  Taylor;  Geology — Thomas 
G.  Clarke,  Paul  A.  DePaulis  and 
Fritz  K.  Johnson. 

Mathematics — Luther  T.  Conner 
Jr.,  James  H.  Keller,  Joseph  P. 
McAllister  and  David  P.  Stantord; 
Physics— William  C.  Mallard;  Psy- 


chology— Bobby  J.  Campbell,  Pa- , 
tricia  M.  Fossum,  Esther  B.  Foster. 
John  T.  Hammack,  Arthur  L.  Mill- 
er. Lois  C.  Saute,  Daniel  L.  Stix. 
Robert  L.  Van  de  Castle,  and  Mar- 
tin S.  Wellach.  | 
Sanitary  Engineering  —  George 
F.  Lee  and  Samuel  D.  Shearer; 
Zoology — Jessie  D.  Caston.  Philip 
J.  Crutchfield,  Carl  C  Hendrick- 
son  Jr..  Rudolf  S.  Scheltema  and 
Joan  C.  Walsh. 


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lively  dazzle.  It 'conditions  your  hair  to  good  healtlt  so  thttt  it  feels  like 
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ounces.  Five  glamorous  months  of  hair  care  (far  average  shampooing), 
regularly  2.50,  now  just  1.50  plus  tax. 

There's  a  Color-Tone  Shampoo  for  every  shade  of  hair: 

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ihool 

■.i.ighn  has 
Iprofcssor  in 
lAnaTomy    of 

»n-i     mad« 

H     Hou8e 

President 

M   thf"   UNC 

»::vr    of  Al- 

'^loge  iff 
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|f  11  von — A 
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Auakener 
'li:«t  exam 
■  a  Iternoon 
\  lo»  k  cob- 
»olK>/  ^ivea 
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to  Dormal  i 
ileiy! 


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o 


TUESDAY,  MAY  21,  \H7 


Tift  DAILY  TA*  MffW 


PA6I   SffVIM 


Semors,  You  Can  Still  Join 
The  Alumni  Assn.  for  A  Buck 


Seniors  may  still  J,3in  the  Gen- 
eral Alumni  Association  at  the 
special  rate  of  $1  if  they  bring 
their  dues  to  the  Alumni  Office 
in  the  Carolina  Inn,  it  was  an- 
nounced yesterday  by  Luther 
Hodges,  Jr.  and  "Pokey"  McSor- 
ley.  Co-chairmen  of  the  Senior 
Class  Alumni  Committee. 


The  formal  on-campus  enroll- 
ment cf  seniors  in  the  Alumni 
Association  has  been  concluded, 
but  the  committee  hopes  that  any 
seniors  who  may  not  have  been 
personally  contacted  will  join  the 
Association  and  "add  to  the  grow- 
ing strength  of  the  Alumni  Class 
of  1857." 


Here's  Wishing 

Each  Of  You 

Good  Luck 

In  Your  Exams 

and 
A  Wonderful 


Review  In  Graham  Memorial 


(dnating  and  bizarre  character. 
I     For  the  second  time  tihis  semes- 
ter,   the    Petltes    Dramatiques   pro- 


( Continued  from  Page  1) 

until  the  iU-concei\'ed  icoonic  relief, 

she   'projected    Bertha's   <agony    so  .         _.  .  .      .^    . 

r-_    f  11    ^i.  ^  ..  •-  «  1  duced  eKcitkig  and  entertauuKg  tne- 

fOTcefuliy  that  to  watch  her  was  ex-  '  ""^^^  ^v«..«.*5  «      ^  -& 

.rueiating.  Unfortunately,  much  of 

het  perforroance  was  hidden  by  Miss 

Hope  Sipiarger.  who  pianted  herself 

fu^mty  and  $ta>'ed  pirt:  another  fau.t 


Still  Wins  Music  Award 

Mist  Marjerie  Still  is  being  presented  the  Percy  Weeks  Award 
as  the  ntost  outstanding  senior  music  major  this  year  by  Sigma  Phi 
Epsilen  president  Curtis  Daughtry.  Dr.  Jan  Schinhan  is  shoiwn  en 
the  right.  He  is  Mist  Still's  mutic  professor. 


^- 


Vacation 


The  Intimate  Bookshop 


205  E.  Franklin  St. 


Open  Till  10  P.M. 


»  a 

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il 


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ONE 
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BEFORE  THAT  LONG-AWAITED 
VACATION,  COMPLETE  YOUR 
WARDROBE  AT  BERMANS 
FOR  THE  MEN: 

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Wash-Wear-No  Press 

Slacks 

Wash-Wear-No  Press 

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Very  Thin,  Very  Cool 

Ivy  League  Cords 

Shirts 

Short  Sleeves 
Pob  Shirts 

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Tennis,  Play,  Dress  Keds 

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Leather  Camp  Moccasins 

For  $3.48 

Pajamas 

Short  Sleeves  —  Knee  Length 
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Bathing  Suits 

FOR  THE  CO-EDS: 

Bermudas 
Shorts 

Peddle-Pushers 
Bathing  Suits 
Shoes 

Summerite  Canvas  Washable  Play  Shoes 

Blouses 

Ship-N-Shore  $2.98  Up 

Vacation  Luggage: 

Samsonite— Lady  Baltimore— Canvas  Car  Bags- 
Trunks-Other  |«w-Prife  Ly^§«f|« 

BERMANS 

OPEN   ALL  DAY  WEDNESDAY 


CLASSIFIED  ADS 


.APARTMENT:  JUNE  TO  SEPTEM 
ber.  Contemporary  design.  Three 
roms  completely. furnished,  even 
to  the  beer  in  the  icebox.  $75 
monthly,  includes  wator  and 
light.  Call  85021. 

GOOD  USED  KENMORE  VACU 
urn  cleaner— $25  Call  9-6621  be- 
tween 1  &  3  p.m. 


BEAUTIFUL      COTTAGE      FOR 
rent  at  Ocean  Drive  Beach  first 


in  rhe  direction. 

Miss  Sparger,  as  th*  Madam,  was 
"acting  all  th«  way,  and  in  many 
.  'a.es  {he  strain  was  obvious.  Ho: 
lines  were  eleariy  spoJcen  and  the 
interpretation  was  fine,  but  she  was 
altogether  too  forced. 

The  se:ond  ptay,  '"This  Property 
Js  Con.emned"  is  mu^h  ea.sier  to 
take  than  •'Bertha;"  the  characters 
re  just"  as  sordid,  iperiu-os  even 
more  so.  biH  the  styte  is  le-^s  op- 
pi-essive. 

Lloyd  Skinner  was  merely  ade- 
quate, if  that,  as  the  youny  ijoy.  Bet- 
tina  Jinnelte,  as  the  adolescent  M-ho 
has  inherited  a  condcnmed  Jioi;.^ 
i3JKl  her  sister's  many  lovers,  pre- 
sented one  of  the  mo.^t  sensitive  and 
accurate  characterizaf.ons  of  the 
i^fcst  >Tear.  If  her  interpretatJon  was 
'  methirtg  akin  to  Carol  Baker's  Ba- 
hy  DoU,  tlve  similarity  is  excutable: 
{he  way  Williams  writes  these  per- 
verted, horrible  creatures,  there  is 
not  mil  r  h  else  to  be  done  wi.h  them. 
Taylor  Willianas'  <'lrevtion  was 
i^ood,  except  that  f'e  voU-me  was 
has  served  this  year  as  president  too  low,  and  many  of  the  Unes  were 
of  the  student  body.  He  served  his  3B,audit1e.  The  stage,  bare  except 
freshman  year  a.s  president  of  the  f<,r  a  ladder,  be^^ame  an  intimete 
YMCA  Freshman  Fellowship,  and  ^pot  suitable  fbr  the  teUing  of  se^ 
a  member  of  the  Student  Legisla- Wts  and  the  revalation  of  a  fas- 

ture.  i  -       .- _^ 

rtcrved  In  the  legislature  in 


atre.  Ihey  did  not  do  nearly  so  well 
>  this  time  as   they  did  witih   "Cali^ 

gula,"  but  perhaps  that  is  too  much 
I  to  expect.  This  experimental  group 
i  'ivas  provided  a  vitality  wiiich  has 
!  been  sadly  lacking  in  every  Play- 
j  maker  7>roduction  this  year,  with  the 
I  actable  exception  of   "Peet  Gynt." 

and   the  audience   aroreciated   it. 


Get  Your  U.N.C. 
N0.1   BASKETBALL  TAG 

DOWNTOWN   AT  THE 

UNIVERSITY  BARBER  SHOP 


Aidridre 

(Continued  from  page  1) 
Miss  Aldridge  is  currently  practice 
teaching  in  Chapel  Hill. 

Young,  who  plans  to  enter  Duke 
Divinity  School  in  September  to 
study  for  the  Methodist  ministry. 


2nd    BIG   WEEK 


STEVENS 


MAY   SALE! 

REDUCTIONS  YOU  CAN'T 
AFFORD  TO  MISS! 

STEVEKS- SHBPHBRD 


He 

his   sophomore  and 


junior  years, 


two   weeks   in  June.   Sleeps   12, !  was    president    of   the    sophomore 


reasonable  rates. 
Tar  Heel,  93371. 


Contact   Daily 


LOST:  SMALL.  WHITE  WIRE- 
haired  terrier,  one  brown  ear. 
Answers  to  Sapphire.  Reward. 
Call  Earl  Wynn.  9474  or  9-2741. 


WOMAN  GRADU.VTE  STUDENT 
writing  thesis  desires  room  for 
the  summer.  Would  consider 
caring  for  vacationing  professor  s 
home.  Ci)ntact  Daily  Tar  Heel, 
9-3371. 


FOR  SALE:  '56  MODEL  8*  KEN- 
more  (Manufactured  by  Kelvina- 
tor)  refrigerator.  Reasonable,  by 
graduating  senior  couple.  Phone 
3196. 

STOLEN:  ~A  ~  SMALL  ~  GREY 
statue  of  a  kneeling  boy  from 
a  garden  at  315  E.  Franklin  St. 
Sentimental  value  attached. 
Reward  for  information  lead- 
ing to  return.  Call  Mrs.  Andrew 
Patterson  at  8-7651. 


cla.ss,  vice-president  of  Joyner,  and 
vice-president  of  Everett,  vice- 
chairman  of  the  Carolina  Forum, 
president  of  his  Wesley  Founda- 
tion Sunday  School  class,  presi- 
dent of  the  Graham  Memorial  Ac- 
tivities Baard,  his  junior  year,  and 
a  member  of  GMAB  his  senior 
year. 

Young's  honoraries  include  mem- 
bership in  the  Order  of  the  Grail, 
The  Order  of  the  Golden  Fleece, 
The  Order  of  the  Old  Well,  and 
Amphoterans. 

Young  and  Miss  AWridge  plan 
to  live  in  Durham  following  their 
wedding  in  August.  Mi.ss  Aldridge 
will  teach  in  Durha.m  High  School. 

Miss  Aldridge  and  Young  were 
i.amed  as  "Miss  Alumna"  and  "Mr. 
Alumnus*  by  a  special  faculty 
c  mmitlee  headed  by  Dean  Brnesl 
L.  Mackie.  They  were  am>ng  a  num 
ber  of  seniors  nominated  for  the 
honors  by  secret  balloting  at  a  re- 
cent meeting  of  the  senior  class. 


Hene'dto  qourt.;' 


\i 


\ 


We  are  very  happy  to  have  served  you  while 
you  have  been  at  Carolina.  We  wish  the  gradu- 
ating class  the  most  and  best  possible  in  every- 
thing jthey  do.  And  to  our  other  many  customers, 
have  a  happy  summer,  and  we  will  be  looking 
for  you  in  the  fall.  To  all  of  you  .  .  .  Thank  you 
for  making  our  stay  in  Chapel  Hill  such  a  pleas- 
ant one. 

PETE   THE   TAILOR 

"Specializing  in  Ivy  Loagueizing" 


Ck$$of 


We  certainly  hate  to  see  you  leave  us.  We 
only  hope  that  you  will  come  back  and  see  us 
often.  '  ' 

to  Everyone  Else . . . 

We  hope  that  you  have  a  wonderful  summer 
and  come  In  to  see  us  if  you  are  here.  If  not,  we 
are  looking  forward  to  seeing  you  this  fall. 

During  the  Summer ... 

We  will  continue  to  give  you  the  biggjest 
bargains  in  records,  Hi-Fi  equipment,  and  every- 
thing^ 4lse  tl->at  we  handle. 


I^B^ 


207  E.  Franklin  St. 


THE   WINNER 


Miss  Campus 
FASHldf^i   QUEEN 
'  1957 


Congratulations  to 

MISS  LiBBY  Nicholson 

Of  Alpha  Delta  Pi 

elecieB  by  majority  vote  to  reign  as  the 

J.   B.   Robbins     Fashion    Queen 

For  the  1957-58  School  Term 

Miss  Nicholson  will  receive  as  her  crowning  reward 

;  A  CoHii^lefe  Ensemble 

.     ^«. ^^*  ,  .,   ^      Consisting  of 

*  tymi  *  HAt  *  BAG  *  GLOVES 

*HOSE  *  SHOES 

rfie  voting  was  terrific,  and  we  congratulate  the  following 
Fashion  Plates  for  the  hundreds  of  votes  cast  for  them  .... 

MISS  MARTHA  WILLIFORD  AAI$S  BARBARA  HONEY  MISS /'PEE  WEr  BATTEN 

MISS  JANE  STAINBACK  MISS  SARAH  VAN  WEYK 


of  Chapel  Hill 


•   i 


^^PV^^^V^i^^^^^^^*^^^ 


i«  «  «  V  « 


PAGl  EIGHT 


THl   DAILY   TAR    HBBL 


TUESDAY  M^Y  21,  1957 


Blue  Devils  Will  Meet  Generals 
In  First  Round  Of  NCAA  Play 


UNC  Marble  Team  Takes  Its 
Third  Southern  Championship 


Chuck  Dressen  Gets  NL  Players 


GASTONIA,  (AP)  —  Duke    and  quest  and  came    up  with  the  first   p.m.  game,  the  winner  moving  into 


r«e    \Va    lington    will    be    first   round  pairing  d"  Duke,  ACC  cham- 
the    NCAA  pion.     and     George     \Va  hinglon, 


r. 

round    opponents    in 

}  isu-ict    3    baseball    tournament's 

first  round  here  May  31. 

U  alter  Rabb  of  the  Univers'ty 
of  Carolina,  chairman  of  the  six- 
man  district  selection  committee  in 
charge  of  the  tournament,  said 
that  Dr.  O.  K.  Cornwell.  Atlantic 
Cuast  Conference  secretary-treas- 
iTpr.  made  the  draw*  at  Rabb's  re- 


Southern  Conference  titleholder. 

Their  game  will  be  played  at  S 
p.m.,  following  the  noon  opener 
between  the  two  teams  a.s  yet  t J 
be  selected  for  the  toiu-namont.       | 

The  afternoon  lo.sers  will  meet 
a*  6:30  that  night,  the  loser  of  that 
game  to  be  eliminated.  The  after- 
noon  winners  will   meet    in   a   ? 


CAROLINA 

LAST  TIMES  TODAY 
SCHOOL TEACHER^i^TANGLES  WITH  MOBSTERS! 


JEAN  SIMMONS 

PAUL  DOUGLAS 

ANTHONY  FRANCIOSA, 


THIS  CoiJJJPt:; 

BE  TKB^ 


,  C  'v<e-'AS«,oPC 


WEDNESDAY-THURSDAY 

The  inside  story  of  the 
past  rise  and  hard  fall  of  one 
of  the  greatest  of  all  funny  men  i 


DOMID  m ' 

OGONNORBLVrH 
THE  BUSTIR  KffAfOi^ 

Sianv         rB 


ARTHUR  UNKNOWN 

,.      ,.     ,  •     .    .u  ,       Carolina's     loaded     (?)     marble.'^ 

the   finals   against   the   winner   ot '  ,     .  ^    »./    uiaiun. 

.    ^  .u     .  _,  •  team  racked  up  an   overwhelming: 

a  game  between  the  two  survivors,  i  _,  _  ,      ,     ,  .    ,,.  v^i  vvutiiuiut, 

*  \  '  ,31-3  lead  at  halftime,  then  coa.\£cl 

Rabb  said  that  he  hoped  to  an    to  a  66-32  decision  over  the  Emory 

nounce  the  two  other  tournament   and  Henry  thumpers  yesterday  a( 

teams  within  the  next  day  or  two,   ternoon  at  Hogan's   playground. 

following  a  committee  vote.  j      The   Tar  Heels   thus    won   thcii 

»    .          ,          tu      c     .u      i        'third  Southern  Marbles  C^ampion- 
A  team  from   the   Southeastern   _. .     .     , *  i     „      ,     . 


'Jjnference  and  an  at-large  team 
remain  in  to  be  selected.  Georgia 
Tech  and  Alabama,  the  No.  1  and 
2  Southeastern  teams,  are  not 
available  for  NCAA  play. 


ship  in  four  years.  Actually,  Lo.-* 
't.v.  All.  Univcr.ity  of  Waco,  Texas 
was    declared    the   winner   out    at  i 
Hogan's     last     sea.  on.     but     their  i 
championship  was  nullified   when ' 
it  was  learned  that  there  number 


ORIVC-IN 


RESTAURANT 


J»£TERLORRE:'— "*- 


RHONDA  FUMING 


S**lMM>«SHMa    8n(MkS««St«*i    annia  ti  s«a  SM««i  M  Iceri  : 


E   PARICINO 


THIS  WEEK'S 

SPEC5AL 

NIBBLE   BURGER 

FRENCH  FRIES 

MILK  SHAKE  or  FREEZE 

all  fcr  68c 
Chat  'N  Nibble 

1.S  Miles  from  Campus 
GREENSBORO  RD. 


FRIDAY-SATURDAY-SUNDAY-MONDAY 


Now 


THE  MOST 

PASCINATINO 

LOUSE  VOU 

EVER  METI 


Playing 


at  the 


roarin9 
excitement 
of  America's 

exciting, ^The^rif  L^ib^J^   ^^^M 

era -and  *"j?^P  .:,  ssfes=s;3 

JAMES 
STEWART 
asLINDY? 


one  shooter.  Knuckles  Corey,  was 
!  ising  a  steel  marble,  which  every 
one  knows  is  strictly  against  the 
rules  of  the  conference  and  heck, 
he  .'hould  have  known  better  any- 
way because  somebody  caai  get 
hurt  when  one  of  those  steel  jobs 
hits  a  grit  and  jumps  up  in  some- 
body's eye. 

W^H.  an>"vvay  what  I  was  telling 
was  that  Carolina  just  overcame 
1  the  Thumpers  in  the  first  half.  The 
Tar  Heel's  number  one  man.  Dirty 
Dohscn.  won  11  red  marblei-,  3 
blues  and  4  browns  in  the  first 
round  of  his  match  with  Jud  Stet 

n.  a  transfer  from  VVaybelov 
Normal    Institute   in  Houston. 

Thi.>  save  the  Tar  Heels  a  big 
load,  and  so  after  three  brews  (r 
least  they  said  it  was  only  three 
'  the  number  two  and  three  men  of 
Carolina,  Cheat  Simp.- n  and  Hon 
-^st  Abe  Austinbaum  just  tore  the 
Thumpers  all  to  heck.  Emory  an^i 
Henry  scored  their  three  points  by 
a  penalty.  The  officials  never 
could  exactly  say  what  the  penalty 
was  because  they  had  brought 
their  own  refreshments.  It  was 
something  about  somebody  steal- 
ing somebody's  marbles. 

If  you're  wondering  what  hap- 
pened in  the  second  half  keep 
wondering  because  this  reporter 
iidn't  have  catsup  bottles  in  that 
ittle  briefcase  he  was  carrying. 

All   this   writer   knows   is    that 

1  about  four  hours  after  the  match 

i  started,  there  was  the  score  posted 

!  on  a  flattend  out  beer  can  at  the 

end  of  the  pier. 

(editors  note:  Name^  in  this  ar- 
•icle  were  fictious  and  any  simi- 
'aritv  to  person's  livins  or  dead  i.s 
perfectly  all  right  with  us  .  .  . 
Gulp!!) 


WASHINGTON,  (AP)  -^  Charley* 
Dressen  looked  back  to  his  old  Na 
tional    League    stamping    grounds 
yesterday  for  the  first  player  shuf- 
fle in  his  new  talent  scouting  post  \ 
with    the    Washington    Senators.     | 

The  maneuver  brought  infielder 
Ro(Jky  Bridges,  Cincinnati  castoff, 
to  Wa.'hington  via  the  waiver 
route.  To  make  space  on  the  rosier 
for  the  29-year-old  Bridges,  the 
Senators  dispatched  shortstop  Lyle 
Luttrell  on  option  to  Seattle  of  the 
Pac'fic  Coast  League. 

The  Senators  announced  the 
transaction  while  Dressen  was 
still  in  New  York  on  the  first 
player  expedition  in  his  job  as'  as- 
sistant to  club  President  Calvin 
Griffith.  Dressen  reportedly  was 
talking  with  officials  of  both  the 
Yankees  and  Cleveland  Indians. 

Bridges  played  under  Dressen  at 
Brooklyn  in  1951-52.  A  Dodger 
coach  at  the  same  time  was  Cookiv 
Lavagetto,  who  replaced  Dres:'2n 
as  manager  of  the  Senators  two 
weeks  ago. 

Cincinnati  dropped  Bridges  from 
its  active  list  to  get  down  to  the 
25-player  limit  last  week.  In  f  u- 
nrevious  seasons  with  the  Reds  he 
had  served  primarily  as  a  utility  in- 
fielder. Luttrell  came  to  Washing- 
ton from  itif  Chattanooga  farm 
'ast  summer.  He  batted  .209  in  17 
games  this  spring. 


AM.ICim.MM 
HNKHQMMti. 
HFfMt 


4e 


WEDNESDAY 


PHstNTEo  BY  WARNER  BROS.m 

Cinemascope  anc  warnerColor 
hours  of  shows 

1 :00— 3:27— 5:54— 8:21 
ADMISSION    75c 


IOCK'rNUtrs."TKSIIUKS'' 


RWfl* 


MAY  28 


IJERCMANS  HACK   ami  BIN(..«i.hh,.r 


to  nrtg  . . . 

THE  BELLS  OF  ST  MARTS 

INOBIir  BERGMAN  ^l^-BING  CROSBY  E- 

W-««  mmr  »r  t^JOttW  MKWCAi a,  hta  1r.ni    to*  Mk«M 

MAY  29-30-31 -JUNE  1 

WELCOME  HOME 
ANDY  GRIFFITH 


This 
isth? 

exciting 

new  face 

for  the 

screen  from 

famed 

star-maker 

Elia  Kazan 

who  gave  you 

Marlon  Brando 

Jimmy  Dean 

and 

Carroll  Baker. 

Andy  Gmffith 

starring  in  the 
ELU  Kazan  production  of  BUDD  SCHUIBERG'S 


in  «he 


A  SUNSCT  PRODUCTION,  An  AMERICAN-INTERNATIONAL  PICTURE 


THURSDAY 


KERR 


"^EV.-    •    M/\W 


The  Proud 

arid 

Profane 

vistaYisioh      . 


FRIDAY  -  SATURDAY 


ANTHONY 
OUINN 


Acmdmmy 

Awmrti 

WInmrl 


wmtWKtwn 


It  rides 
a  trail 
no  Western 
ever  rode 
before! 


ANDY  GRIFFITH  WILL  APPEAR  IN  PERSON 
QN  THE  $TAGE  AT  3  P.M.  FRIDAY.  MAY  31st. 


SUNDAY  r- MONDAY 


THE  YOUNG  STRANGER 


JAMES  MacARTHVR  •  KIM  HUNTER  •  JAMES  DALY   I  Ji 

m.JAUBSGREGPRY  •  WHIT  BISSBLL  •  JEFF  SILVER 

Wtitm  iV  nOBSItT  DOZtSK  •  Pridtad  H  STVA8T  MILLAR 
DwtM  %  JOHM  rtANKBS'HBHIKIt 

ALL  COMING  TO  THE 


JNCING   WINNERS 

Winnert  in  tha  duelling  tword 
competition  in  the  foncing 
matches  fust  concluded  here 
■were  Bi!l  Mudd,  first  place,  Don 
Corbin,  second  place,  and  Neal 
Kelly,  third  place. 


Wesley  Wallace  Given 
Summer  Scholarship 

A  Jai>an  Society- -Asia  Foundation 
Scholarship  has  been  awarded  tu 
Wesley  H.  Wallace  of  the  Depart- 
ment of  Radio,  Television  and  Mo- 
tion Pictures  at  the  University. 

Mr.  Wallace,  an  assistant  profes- 1 
!  sor.  will  take  part  in  the  fourth  an- 1 
nual  Pix)i?ram  in  .A^ian  Studies  to 
be  held  at  Duke  University  July  19 
to  August  24.  His  work  will  be  in 
the  area  of  political  science,  in- 
•■•luding  studies  of  Japanese  civiliza- 
tion and  Far  Eastern  politics. 

A  UXC  facul;y  member  since  1952, 
j  Mr.  Wallace  holds  a  B.S.  degree 
}  fn>m  N.  C.  State  College  and  an 
i  M.A.  from  the  University  at  Chap- 
icl  HQl. 


Take  A  Break;  See  A  Flick 

According  to  the  Central  Office  of  Records,  the  time  A  an  ex 
aniination  may  not  be  changed  after  .    has  been  fixed  in  the  schedule. 

No  student  may  be  excused  from  a  scheduled  examination  except 
by  the  University  Infirmary,  in  case  of  illness;  or  by  his  General 
College  faculty  adviser  or  by  his  dean,  in  case  of  any  other  emer- 
gency compelling  his  abj«ncc. 

All  8:00  a.m.  Classes  on  MWF       Wed..  May  22,  8:30  a.m 

.Ml  10:00  a.m.  Classes  on  MWF       ."W'ed..  May  22,  2:00  p.m. 

.Ml    French.  'German  and  "Spanish  courses 

numbered  1,  2.  3.  3X  and  4  r Thurs.,  May  234  8:30  am 

All  11:00  am    Classes  on  TTHS      Thurs.,  May  23,  2:00  p.m 

All  10:00  a.m.  Classes  on  TTHS         _ _  .  FSi.,  May  24,  8:30  am 

Ml    11:00   am    Cla.-ses   on   MWF  Fri..  May  24,   2:00   p.m 

All  3:00  p  ni    Clas.ses.  =  Chcm.  21.  'BA  71 

&  72.  and  ail  classes  not  otherwise  provided 

for  in   the  schedule  Sat.,  May  25.  8:30  a.m 

All  8:00  a.m.  Classes  on  TTHS  Sal.,  May  25    2:00  p.m 

All  2:00  p.m.  Classes  on  MWF.  "^BA  130  _  Mon.,  May  27,  8:30  a.iv. 

All  12:00  Noon  Classes  on  MWF - .,  Mon.,  May  27.  2:00  p.m 

All  2:00  p.m.  Clas^-es  on  TTHS 

*Econ  31,  32,  61  &  70  Tues.,  May  28,  8:30  a.m. 

.Ml  12:00  .Noon  Classes  on  TTHS,  all 

Naval  Science  and  Air  Science      _ _      Tues..  May  28,  2:00  p.m. 

All  1:00  p.m.  Classes  on  MWF,  *Pol. 

Sci.  41.  *Econ.  81  -  _ -.  Wed.,  May  29.  8:;i0  am 

All  9:00  am.  Classes  on  MWT  __  Wed.,  May  29,  2:00  p.m. 

All  9:00  a.m.  Classes  on  TTHS  — ..  Thurs.,  May  30,  8:30  a.m. 

All  Exams  resulting  in  ccnflictj  from 

Common  Exam  scheduled  above  _  v  Thurs..  May  30,  2:00  p  m 

♦In  case  oi  any  conflict,  the  rcgulary  scheduled  exam  will  take 
precedence  over  the  common  exam  (Common  exams  are  indicated  by 
an  asterisk.) 


Howard  Johnson  Restaurant 

STUDENT    SPECIALS 

Barbecued    Chicken 
Choice  Steak  Sandwiches 

2:00-    5:00  P.M. 
SERVED  8:00-11:00  P.M. 

"Landmark  For  Hunqrv  Tarheels" 


Gongialulanons 
>^  Class  of '57 


And  to  each  and 
every  one  of  you. 
Happy  Vacatio"  to 
a  grand  bunch  of 
customers  >vho  we 
have  enjoyed 
serving.  We  are 
boking  forward  to 
5?>eing  many  of  you 
this  summer  and 
next  fall. 


Julian' 


t&tiop 


The  Kiglit  Of    maaamaaBmam 


The  Bachelor  Parfy , 


The  story  of  five  ordinary  men  on 
a  stag  dinner  that  exploded  into 
an  angry,  drunken,  hilarious  binere. 

If  you're  a  woman  one  of  these  fire 
is  your  husband,  your  boyfriend, 
your  lover- if  you're  a  man  < 

one  of  these  five  men  is  you! 


nit,iii.<uicism»«i 


BaflliBlor  IWrl;^ 

DON  MOIllttYLt««  «iw  ««fj*«ii 


MMM<  m  uanu  «>msts 


I  yii<n«—.  nt  row* 


STARTS 

WEDNESDAY 

MAY  29 


MILTON'S 

3RADUATION  GIVE-A-WAY 

CONTINUES  THROUGH  THE  END  OF  MAY 
Entire  stock  year  round  Sport  Coats  and 
Suits-V3  Off 

Gala    give-a-way    to    show    our    appreciation    for    your    continue; 
confidence  and  patronage. 

Entire    stock    nationally    advertised    baby    cords    and    pin    check 
wrinkle-shed  cotton  suits  reduced   from  $28.75  to  $18.99. 

Our  wash   'n  wear  nationally   advertised   suits  in   blend   of   dS'o 
dacron/35%  cotton,  reduced  from  $47.50  to  $34.99. 

Imported  burlap  sport  jackets  reduced  from  $29.95  to  $18.99. 


Jan   River   baby  cord    '.■^,' 
2  pairs  for  $7.50. 


trousers,   regularly  $5.95,    1    pr.    $4.00, 


(haki  trousers  in  black,  olive,  and  khaki;  cotton  baby  cort 
trousers  ir  blue,  tan,  and  gray — regularly  $4.95;  1  pair 
$3.75,  2  pairs  $7.00. 

.arge  group  bermuda  shorts,  includng  our  $11.95  made  in  Eng 
land  imported   India  Madras — at  half  price. 

.'ant  heaven — take  your  pick  of  any  dacron/cotten  trouser;  w 
carry  cords  or  poplins — regularly  to  $12.95 — give-a-wa- 
price — $9.99. 

Four    lots   of  trousers — chocolate  brown;   oxford    brown;   black 
irown  or   navy — the   1st  dacron/wooi — the    last  three — all   wot 
tropicals — your   choice   at   half    price. 

c  give-a-way  on  our  imported  from  Holland  Tweka  polo  shirts- 
buy  one  for  $3.95,  get  second  one  for  1c. 


)elts  —   challis  wools  or   elastics  — 
price  —   $  .79. 

II   Bermuda   Hose  —  Half  Price. 


values  to  $3.00  give-a-wa 


atge  group  of  ojr  regular  long  sleeve  ivy  sport  shirts  in  sicev 
Je.grh J— regularly  $5.95   and  $6.95— $100  Off. 

in't   put   off  another  single  day  getting  your   dress  or   casu< 
shoes — you'll  never  get  a  better  opportunity — 

Entire  stock  of  our  rubber  soled  genuine  shell  cordov. 
shoe^  —  regularly  $20.00— take  your  pick  in  all  siit 
at   $10.99. 

Entire  stork  leather  soled  wing-tips — regularly  $20.00  - 
Now$13.99. 

Our  hand  sewn   loafers — guaranteed  against  ripping  til  the 
are  resoled— very  soft  and  gsod-iookinB— rich  mahoga 
or   black—regularly   $11.95 — give-a-wey  price— $8.99. 

Entire  stock  white  buck  shces,  regularly  $14.95  Now  9S 

OTHER    INTERESTING    ITEMS  TO   BE   ADDED  DAILY 


All  Sales  Cash  And  Final  —  All  Alterations  Extra 

Miltm'si 
Clottitns  Cttpboarti 


1*.-*'